HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-24 - Orange Coast PilotC·f1ANGI COUN TY CAL lrC llNIA 25 CENTS
'ACTUALLY. l'M UNHAPPY'
Newport 's Rocky ;\pkt
By PHIL SNEJDE&MAN
Of .... 0.-, """ .....
Rocky Aokl oucht to be a happy man.
A hlS)l school and college wrestlln1 champ in
Japan, be competed ln the 1960 Olympics.
He's eooe from buaboy to board chairman of
Bepihana of Tokyo, running 50 restaurants in the
U.S. and 25 in Japan.
He socializes with Muhammed All and Flip
Wilson.
He's a world-class backgammon player and
has produced Broadway plays and a film.
An avid power boat racer, he won the
Bushmilla Grand Prix at Newport Beach in 1978.
HE'S WRITTEN FIVE business books In
Japan. including one that made the best seller
lists.
The last time anyone counted. he was worth
$40 million.
"Actually, I'm a very unhappy person." Aoki.
42, said Wednesday during a meeting with re-
porters in a Costa Mesa restaurant. "I'm a very
insecure person "
Aoki claims political or economic crises may
be on the horizon. and even his good fortunes could
take a tum for the worse
But when he begins talltin1 about the com·
petiUve drive tb,al bas characterized his business
career ·as well as his sporting exploits. any
evidence of depression vanlahes.
,"I think winning makes happiness." said the
"Winning makes happiness.
hazardous competition helps overcome
fears."
diminutive bUt1inessman, a Japanese citizen.
"WHEN I RACE IN AN offshore power boat,"
he says, "l forget about my business problems for
two hours.
"I have 50 restaurants here. and I have SO
headaches."
Some would say he also has a death wish.
In 1979, he was aboard a l,300·horsepower rac·
ing boat that was ripped tlpart by waves off San
Francisco. Aoki almost died from his injuries.
Doctors removed his spleen and gall biadder
and performed bypass heart surgery. He has un·
dergone additional operations to repair nerve
damage in his leg and wrist
Aoki's doctors have ordered him to give up
<See ROCKY, Page A2)
'AFRAJD OF HEIGHTS'
But in balloon race
0.11., .. ,._,_
FIERCE COMPETITOR
·Winning ts Happiness·
Man who struck priest tells why
D efendant in Seal Beach case testifies on own behalf
By DAVIDKUTZMANN
01 ti.. Oelty 1'1141' S\aff
Ignoring the advice of his
lawyer. murder defe ndant
Ronald Spring testified in his
own defense. describing how a
buarre 8-year search for a
woman he once knew "casually"
led to his assault on an elderly
Seal Beach Catholic priest
: But Spring, 33. a square-jawed
Vietnam veteran who served in
t.Jie Air Force, said Thursday he
never meant to harm or kill
Father Felix Doherty when he
punched him at the rear door or
~he rectory of St. Anne's
Catholic Church in February,
1980.
The defendant , a dvised
against taking the witness !itand
&y Chief Deput y Public
(>efender Ronald Butler. saad he
struck the 64·year·old cleric in
the head when he believed
Father Doherty had rebuffed
him
"I THOUGHT he was putting
D'le off as far as th'e information
l wished." Sprang told jurors in
Orange County Superior Court
Judge James K. Turner's
courtroom.
Father Doherty. who was
treated by Sea l Beach
paramedics for a small bead
wound after the assault, col-.
Father Doherty when the cleric
told him to go around lo the
front door.
Believing he was being re·
buffed. Spring said he ··stepped
closer" to the priest. who was
"I went to push him (the Rev. Doherty) out of the
way. In the rush of the moment I struck him."
lapsed and died several weeks
later from brain iojuriu as-
sociated with the blow.
Spring, a Long Beach resident
who worked at several odd )oba,
said he wanted to discuat mar-
rying the woman he wu seeking
when he drove his chopper-style
motorcycle to St. Anne's on Feb.
9 . 1980.
THE DEFENDANT, who said
Father Doherty had given him
food and laundry money on pre-
vious occasions. testified that he
attempted to talk with the priest
at the back door of the rectory.
However. because he was
wearing his motorcycle helmet.
Spr ing said he misunderstood
st,anclinl in the doorway boldinc
thf screen door open.•
"I went to push him oul of the
way," the witness said. Thia re-
1ulted ln the elderly cleric ltftfng
bis rlght hand and knocklne Spr·
ing's hand away.
.. In the rush of the moment."
Spring s8id. "I struck him."
ASKED BY Buller if he bad
any intent to harm or kill the
priest. the accused murderer
said he hadn't. "It shocked me.
what I had done." he said. "I
knew whal I'd done was bad
" Spring said he had been look·
ing for a woman named Twyla
Suggs sin ce 1972, when he
Judge flays editorial
Brands article on rapists' sentencing 'irresponsible'
Presiding Orange County
Superior Court Judge Robert E
Rickles. in an unusual and un
precedented defense of another
JUdge, lashed out at editorial
criticism of the sentencing of
three Vietnamese rapists sent to
prison for 100 years or longer.
Reacting to comments in ~
Orange County newspaper
editorial that said the sentences
"verged on viciousness." Judge
Rickles said Thursday fellow
Superior Court Judge Francisco
Briseno was to be commended
for his handling of the case.
"I feel <the editorial 1 was ir·
responsibly done because It was
done without any investigation
whatsoever." Rickles said
RE ALSO labeled the editorial
as being "intemperate" and "in-
accurate."
The newspaper. the Orange
County Register, had questioned
the length of prison terms
banded down by Briseno last
week for three of foor teen-age
refugees . convicted or multiple
kidnap. rape. robbery and sex·
ual misconduct counts stem·
ming from six rape incidents
last year
Sentenced to l18-year state
prison-terms were brothers Bo
Quoc Pham. 18. and Dung Quoc
"The editorial was also in-
t em pe rate and inac-
curate."
Pham. 18. A third defendant,
Minh Quang Nguyen, also 18.
was given a 100-year term.
' A FOURTH DEFENDANT in
the case, 17 -yea r -o ld Tung
Thumh Le. is undergoing
diagnostic studies at the
CaUfomia Youth Authority.
Formal sentencing for Le, a
minor. will take place in about
three montba.
Because slate law requires
that two-thirds of a sentence be
served before a prisoner
becomes eligible for considera-
tion for parole. the sentences
• mean that the eld est three will
remain in prison the rest of their
lives
Rickles said Briseno couJd
have piled on even more years
because of the numerous counts
on which the defendants were
found guilty.
THE PHAM BROTHERS and
Nguyen were convicted by a
jury on more than SO felony
counts. Le was found guilty on 40
charges.
The presiding judge said man-
datory sentencing laws passed
by the state Legislature would
have required prison terms of
more than 250 years ror the
Phams and 246 years for
Nguyen.
Le, he said, could be sent to
state prison for 186 years when
he returned to court in three
months.
RICKLES CLAIMED pros-
ecutors could in fact appeal the
jud1e's sentences because they
<See VIETS, .P .. e AZ>
thought he spotted her in a
Chicago bus station in the com·
pany or two priests. •
He said he had originally met
the woman in Long Beach in
1965 just before entering the
service
Believing she may have
become a nun, Spring said he
visited and called numeroaa COO·
venu over an eight-year period.
"I was concerned with her
happiness and well-being," he
testifled.
OF OBSCENITY ladeJt
telephone conversatlons he
made to Cbicago church offtclals
only days before Father Doherty
was usault.ed, Spring said be
was intoxicated, angry and lone-
ly when he placed the cans.
Jn those taped conversations.
Spring told church officials "to
clean oul" convents in Chkago
and send Miss Suggs back to
him.
Otherwise. he had said. he
would "stomp" a church official
if nothing was done.
Jn an earlier. unrecorded call
<~e PRIEST, Page AZ)
o.flyl"l•IUft .....
DEFENDS SENTENCES
vudge Robert -Rickle1
Where does human life · actuaBY
WASHINGTON CAP> -There
is llO actentific evidence to prove
wtfen human life actually
beainl. a Senate subcommittee
taldna testimony on propoaed
abortion legislation was told to-
day. ••1 have no quarrel with
a.nJone'1 ideaa on this matter, so
lo• aa they are held out not u
1clinUflc t~. but •• person.I
.,.ef1 bu4d m perlOUI Judi·
mtall," Dr. lAqn E. ftOHnberi.
prof euot W h9Bla8 •eaeUCI at
th Vile Unldl"llty School bt
11t·-dtclne, told th• Sen•t•
l&tittcluy Committee'' 1ubcom-
mltt oe 119 pe ol
po1fera.
"Sdence, per ••· doesn't deal
with the complex quality called
'humanness' any more than tt
doe• wtth such equally complex
concepts as love, faith or trust."
.,...., ...............
R.onoJd Spring testifies "I knew what I'd done wa1 bad," but said
he MVer meant to harm or kill Catholic priest who died after
being !truck in Seal Beach a year ago.
,
Shakeup promised
after nuke mishap
TOKYO CAP> The president
of the Japan Atomic Power Co
went before a parliamentary
committee today with has head
bowed to apologize for his com ·
pany's failure to report a
nuclear accident labeled the
worst in Japan ·s history
Shunichi Suzuki promised lhe
legislators there would be a
personnel shakeup in his com-
pany. and an "utmost effort" to
find the cause of the radiation
leak that came lo light last
week. more than a month after
it occurred.
HE ALSO SA ID safety
measures at the plant would be
reviewed and tightened.
Govemment officials are still
lnvestiaating the March 8 Inci-
dent at the Tsuruga nuclear
power plant. 192 miles west of
Tokyo, in which 56 workers were
exposed to radiation while clean-
tn·g up a spill of radioactive
water.
begin?
favor of anU-abc>rtion forces led
malnly ln the Senate b1 Jesse
Helma, R-N.C., who 1ponaored
the bill.
" SEN. MAX BAUCV8, D-
Mont., the 11nlor minority
i!nember on the 1ubc0mmtu.t,
did not au.nd Th\&r1Clay:1 hear·
that
The mishap was revealed dur·
ing an injury to determine the
cause of hagh radioactive read·
ings in seaweed in a nearby bay.
The mishap and the com·
pany's failure to report it have
stirred public furor in nuclear-
sensitive Japan, and fears of
contaminated marine life have
disrupted the Tsuruga area fis·
hing industry , despite as-
surances by officials that there
is no danger.
SUZUKI, APPEARING before
the Commerce and Industry
Committee of the lower house ol
the Diet, or Parliament, testified
that about 16 tons of radioactive
water overflowed because of
"technical and human error."
before a valve was closed.
ORANlil COAST 1111111
Night and momin1 low
cloudinea with hazy after-
noon sunshine oo Satur·
day. IAWS tonight 52 alon"
coast, 58 inlan~.
INSIDI TODAY
\.
.
It I I
Ir
I
Mortgq~
' Method would 'wreak hav.ac', g,rou~ 'Says
't!tr ~J WASIUNGTON CAP) -Anew bad to open lituf~~ff9 for. o erextend tbemaelvea when
cype of morta¥e. wb.lcb con-ftnancllllf l&l'•JPedl_aVUi:. bl,\l!n&IMV''· umer ll'O'IPI lay could IDM• loag lllOClatlou cw tlM ne ~raJ Rom.e Lo•n a.nt
forectoeure likely for unwary t11ht bome-loan money Board, by a S.O vote ftunclay.
ome bu,yen~also.; lendersto have dried up almost completebt. authorized federally chartered
:alse bol 10 • monlbly pay-But CON1umer 1roupa HY the savlnp and loan aasoclatlons to
enta -or ~roue t.Mlr total new type of mortcaae could .offeropel)-eaded, adjustable-loan bt -uottenauveryat~1. "wr .. ktota•havoc .. In the boul· mort1a1ea. Under su~ an
Govemmeci.t ortMals Hy they 101 market and cause people to •lrffment, a lender could ralae
.ncl~'s deficit
5.6 billion
W'ASIDNGTON (AP> -The government's deficit the
rat six mont}).s of fiscal 1981 is $65.6 billion, more than $10
Ullon above the Reagan administration's projected deficit
or the entire fiscal year ending next Sept. 30.
Since federal spending and tax collecting are not spread
... evenly over the year , the deficit does not necessarily mean
the predicted shortfall of $.54.9 billidn will be surpassed,
Treasury Department officials said Thursday.
Treasury's monthly statement said the government
spent $54.2 biWon in March while taking in $44.6 billion.
That brought spending for the first six months of the fiscal
year to $327.8 billion compared with receipts of $2162.2
billion.
"Rattlers' ioolf are
:ivorries 'society'
'· SANTA CLARA CAP) -A
'daredevil who plans to jump into
f! tiny wading pool teeming with
rattlesnakes has landed smack
in the middle or a dispute with
the Humane Society.
The stunt. to be performed
Saturday by "Captain America"
lo promote a Santa Clara carpet
company, bas drawn the venom
of the Humane Society of Santa
Clara Valley.
"First, there 'a a lot of stress
to the prairie snakes being put
into water obviously cooler than
their native d esert ." said
Humane Society Director War-
r en Broderick. "Jt 'll be ao awful
shock to their system. '
"SECONDLY," BltODEaICK
sa id , "they are not aquatic
anima ls. They'll probably be
thinking they a re drowning."
Gary Ferry, a representative
for the carpet company, said he
doesn 't think the stunt is cruel to
the snakes.
"This will be a lot easier on
the snakes, than, say, a rodeo is
on horses and cows." he said.
The Humane Society dis·
agrees. and promises it will try
to get a court injunction to stop
the show, and if it can't do that,
it will picket the event.
Captain America -otherwise
known as physical fitness ad-
vocate Alan Jones, of Daly City.
was unavailable for comment.
THIS WILL NOT be the first
time he has attempted the atmt.
Recently, in Seattle, he dove into
a pool of rattlesnakes and flesh-
eating piranha fish. He cut hUI
hand as he entered the pool, and
the fish went into a frenzy.
It took 80 stitches to put Cap·
tain America back toietber
again.
Broderick said the dive is not
only bad for the snakes, but it's
a lso bad for children who may
watch it
"We don't think it's at all pro-
per for children to wltne11 tbb
and then posslbly go out and try
It," said Broderick. "It's also
dangerous. There's always the
possibilit y that some snakes
could escape."
' .,..,.......,
SEEKING KIN -Two residents of Cuidad Delgado check
the corpse of a ~ctim of El Salvador's c1vu war in tne
city's cemetery. Bodiet are routinely dropped off at the
cemetery where local residents come to check for miss·
ing relatives.
a home buyer's monthly pay.
ments, ralae the total of the loan
or lenathen the llfe of the loan in
tandem with lncreuea io
market interest rates.
The lender also could lower
mortgage payments.
Market rates, such as the in-
terest on shorter securities,
have been highly erratic recently.
Ellen Broadm1m, attorney lor
Co nsumers Union, said of the
bank board's acl;ion, "They're
turning owning a home into a
game or chance" m which many
buyers would face foreclosure if
interest rates rose quickly .
However, board members said
financially troubled lenders must
be given greater flexibility in de·
signing loans if mortgages are to
remain available
Many S&Ls lost money the past
year or so because they h~d to pay
interest rates as high as 15 per-
cent to attract deposits. while be-
ing repaid for older home loans at
ratesof6percentor lower .
"We'simply cannot continue to
have savers s ubsidizing bor-
rowers." said board member An·
drew Di Prete.
He called the relaxation of the
loan agreement rules "long over-
due."
The house-construction in·
dustry also has been hurt by high
mortgage rates. now averaging
close lo 15.5 percent.
In theory, S&Ls might offer the
new mortgages at lower rates
since they could raise payments
later if market interest rates sur-
ged.
"I think this regulation will
make money available for hous-
ing," said John Dalton, a board
member.who was chairman until
recently.
Consumers will be protected
because of competition for loan
business. he said, contending that
''if an association doesn't offer a
loan instrument in the best in-
terest of the borrower. 1 think.
very simply, his compet'ition
will.''
The new regulation, which
ta kes effect next Thursday. will
not affect existing mortgages
And board members said they do
not expect the new type of
mortgage to completely replace
traditional fixed-rate, fixed-term
home loans.
Richard Pratt, the new board
chairman, predicted there would
be "a good deal of activity" in the
new type of mortgage. but would
not be specific.
Th~ new ruJe directly covers on-
ly federally chartered savings
and loans -about ha lf the na-
tion's 4,400 S&Ls -but Industry
representatives said many slate-
chartered associations also will
be included through state lie-in
agreements. S&Ls make a ma·
jority of the home loans in the
United States.
The relatively few federally
chartered mutual savings bankl
also are included.
The new regulatipn provides
that a aavblp Institution and •
home .buyer would aaree to tie
future mortgqe-rate increases
or declines to one or more than a
dozen approved indexes, such as
the discount rate for Treuury
bills or the. avera1e private
mortgage rate as computed by
the bank board.
If the chosen rate rose 2 percen-
tage points during a designated
six-month period, for example,
the bome loan rate could be raised
by the same ap'lount.
Decreases in rates would affect
loans the same way as increases,
with no limits on bow far the
chosen index could push pay-
ments up or down except aa
agreed upon by the lender and
borrower at the time the loan is
closed.
Viet veterans
. day planned
The U .S . Congreai has
declared Sunday a national day
of recolJlf Uon for veterans of the
Vietnam confllct.
Tbe Orange County Board of
Superviaora baa declared Satur·
day. u Vietnam Appreciation
Day. especially booorlDI tbe 300
count1 realdents wbo died in Ute
conruc:t. The same day baa been
dealpated by the Costa Mesa
City Council.
Realdentl are ursed to fiy
their nap on both days ln honor
of those whe served tn the war.
From Page A1
PRIESt! • • •
., ........
• •
were not touab enouah under provltlom of the law.
What dlJturbed him moat, the
pre1ldin1 Judae Hid Thursday,
w111-be newspaper'• description
of the aenteociD1 u "verst.n1 on
vlcioutne1a."
"Judie BrtMno made a beJrt·
1earch1n1 deellloa, '' .be 1aJd. for
which he wu now beln1
criticized WljuaUftably.
Ken Grubbs. the Re1l1ter'1 ~ltorlal paae editor. said after
Rl lea' preu conference l.n
Santa An• that die Jud1e'1 reac•
tloa' to the editorial was "intern·
perate" ltaelf.
G&UBBS SAID be had no
plabs to retract the editorial, en-
titled "Cruel and Unusual
Pun6-bment," and 1tuck by lta
lnUmaUon that the sentences
could provide incentive for
rapists to klU their victims.
"We don•t want to aee that
syndrome develop," Grubb aald.
Deputy District Attorney cart
Armbrust, who prosecuted the
four rapists, said he believed the
editorial "was outraeeoua,..com-
pletely outrageous."
CARY AND BRIDE -Cary Grant is shown with his bride,
publicist Barbara Harris, 30, in a photo taken at a salon
opening in Los Angeles last June. It's the fifth marriage
for the 77-year-old former actor.
Armbrust, who had urged
Briseno to sentence the defen-
dants to the maximum -more
than 300 years each -sald (he
Judge had showed "considerable
leniency."
JUST AFTEll lhe senteMings,
however, the prosecutor had
said any prison term between
100 and 500 years was academic
since it meant the convicted
rapists would stay in prison the
remainder or their lives. 27 5 farm workers
held after raid
O th e r comme nts in the
editorial also drew comment
from Rickles. especially those
which noted that the six victi ms,
aged 14 to 21, had "each re·
covered from the ordeal."
U.S. Border Patrol officers
took into custody about 275 fa rm
workers suspected or being in
this country illegally Thursday
during a raid on two Irvine
strawberry fields
taken into custody were loaded
onto four buses and taken to the
Mexican border
The judge said nearly all the
victims were s uffering from de·
bilitating psychological prob·
lems result i ng from thei r
A Border Patrol spokesman
said about 35 offi cers were in-
volved in the raid which lasted
from 10 a.m. unt1l ll a.m at the
fields near the junction or the
Sa n Diego and Sant a Ana
freeways.
The spokesman said the raid
was the firs~ in Orange County
an about a year. He said immi-
gration ofhc1als recently lifted
a ban on "farm checks ."
rapes
-DAVID KUTZMANN
Hussein wounded
The spokesm an said about
h alf the people working m the
field ned when the offi cers drove
up Reportedly those who were
Keportedly reprt•sentatives of
the state and U S. tl~pa rtments
:Jf agriculture were prei,~nt dur-
ing the raid . T he deported
workers can collect the wages
due them by applyin g to the
Mexican consul, the spokesman
said.
DAMASCUS, Syria CAP) -
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
was wounded in an assassination
attempt last month, an anti·
Iraqi newspaper claimed today
There was no immediate com-
ment from Iraqi offi cials.
From Page Al .
ROCKY AOKI DEFIES FEAR • • •
boat racing, so the restaurateur has turned his
sights skyward.
He will be competin1 in the 1981 Gordor
nett Balloon Race. which lifts off Saturday at Mile
Square Park in Fountain Valley
But even this type of competition is not
without its dangers.
IN A HOUSTON .BALLOON race last week,
Aoki "s craft landed atop parked cars, and the
sportsman broke two ribs.
"Ir you want to win any race, you have lo take
chances." Aoki said.
He claims hazardous competition also has
helped him conquer some fears.
"The reason 1 went into power boating was
because 1 bated water," Aoki said. "I couldn't
even swim at the time.
"And I'm still afraid of heights. That's why
I'm flying hot air balloons "
Still. Aoki likes to cut the odds by spending
lavishly on safety equiptflent and support crews.
Competing in the Gordon Bennett race this
weekend will cost him $50.POO, he says, including
the $34,000 he spent for the Halloon it.self.
IN THE GONDOLA WITH Aoki will be
veteran aeronaut Ben Abruzzo, who was part or a
trio that made history in 1978 with the first trans-
Atlantic balloon flight.
Aoki also teamed with Abruzzo and two other
pilots last month lo an attempt to make the first
balloon flight across the Pacific.
Weight miscalculations and liftoff problems
forced a, PQSlponement, but Aoki hopes lo try the
Hazardous tlip again in November
History-making balloon flights were probably
beyond the imagination of young Hiroaki Aoki. the
son of show business parents growing up in post·
war Japan.
Aoki said some of his competitive drive comes
from fighting his three brothers for food off the ta·
ble. He team ed wrestling, karate artd running in
order to stand up to street gan~s.
After competing in the 1960 Olympics, he
moved to New York City lo study hotel and
restaurant management . He sold ice cream from a
truck and took m enial jobs in restaurants where he
could get by with little English.
IN 1914, HE OPENED his first Benihana
restaurant in New York with savings and a $20,000
loan.
Today, his restaurants do millions of dollars in
business.
Aoki admits his da redevil activities generate
valuable publicity for his restaurants.
But beyond this, the businessman says the
cha llenge or sporting contests and the thrill of win-
ning continue lo lure him.
"I have no fear of dying," he says. "I've been
living a very scary life for many years now. It was
probably more dangerous selling ice cream in
Harlem
"If I worried about dying, I'd probably worry
about Living, too."
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' ' ..
............
Veteran actor Richard Harm applie1 makeup for reheor~ai of "Camelot.''
The Lerner and Loewe production is scheduled to open at the Pantages
Theatre in Los Angeles tonight .
Tattoo leave&
1Jl's 'Fan1my'
Herve VUJecbabe, the 3-
foot-11 act.or wlio plays Tattoo
on "Fantasy ls land," said be
will not return to work on the
ABC series until the work-
ing conditions are changed to
protect his health and safety.
Columbia Pi c tures
Television resumed filming
the popular series for next
season on Wednesday. The
show. like many others.
began production early
because of the threat of a
directors' strike this sum-
mer.
He has been replaced by
Wendy Schaal, who had been
the goddaughter of Roarke,
played by Ricardo Mon-
talban.
Tbe son of the late Dake
EU.la.._ Jays a song wlll be
born next week when friends
and rana 1ather to celebrate
what would have been Ell-
ington's 82nd birthday.
The m"5iC is the tune of
"Duke's Melody," an in·
slrumentaJ Ellington wrote
in 1972.
The words are those or
Cherry Robins, wife of a
clothing manufacturer, who
was invited by a recording
session organizer lo hear the
Ellington Band record the
lune
The record wasn't releas~
but Mrs. Robins didn't forget
it, and six months ago wrote
words for ll.
Sy Oliver's band and
vocalist Buddy Smith will
perform it for the first time Tuesda y. at midnight.
Actor IU~h•rd Bunoe nu
undergone 1pinal surgery to
correct a painful back condi·
lion and was list~d ln
satisfactory condJtion., a St.
John 's Hospital
spokeswoman said ln Santa
Monica.
Burton, 55, who had been
suffering from what was
diagnosed as •·severe de·
gen erative changes of the
cervical spine" had to leave
the touring company of the
musical "Camelot" in late
March.
Dr. Henry V. Dodge Jr., a
Los Angeles neurosurgeon
and Ors. Mason lhll and
Emory Hopp, both or-
thopedists, performed the
''cervical laminectomy." a
removal of th.e posterior arch
of a neck vertebra, said
Burton's physician , Dr.
Robert Hatcltenon.
"
.. ~ ..........
Entertainer Paul Simon. left. and his date Carrie Fisher chat with her
father Eddie Fisher at New York's Savoy music hall following a
performance by Count Basie. \
Six die in storms
Fair weather d~ over most of country
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Pete McCloek•Y. a f our·tenn
San Pranel1co •J'•• con-
1re11mao who 1aloed note u a
Vietnam war ~rltlc, told
llttenen ln Newport Beach be'•
the onty Republican who can
''retire Jerry Brown." ,
''And if notbln1 eJse," be
qulpllff, "that aeem1 Ulte a
worthwhile reason to hU\ for
1-enator."
McClolkey, who lives in Palo
Alto, is an announc~ candldate
for tbe U.S. Senate aeat held by
his Republican colleague, S. l .
Hayakawa. Gov. Brown, baa
stroniJy hinted he'll also seek
that seat in 1882.
The congressman brought his
campaip tour to Pacific Mutual
in Newport Center Thursday,
speaking to more than 200
employees.
Hia observations on aasues
were quick and blunt:
-On Hayakawa: "He was .
voted by his colleagues u the
least effective senator. Sam
would lose to Brown."
-On handguns: "We seem to
have thJs wild-west concept that
we have to own ha.bdrum. Sod•· ty would be better off if um in·
1trument lolt its ma1lc."
-On abortion: "My position
ll that aonmme.nt shouldn't ln·
trude l.nto tbla matter. Women
are capable of maklot that
choice. .
-On retu1ees: "We're payln1
the pri~ of tbe Vietnam war. I
believe these people will be a
driving and a positive force ln
our society.
"There ts a saturation point,
sure, but there's no way we can
tum our backs aft.er what we dJd
in Vietnam for eight years."
-On Reagan's eeonomlc
plan: ''I support it 100 percent.
If we don't .start cutting we'll
have double digit inflation and ·
the penalty of that will be
greater for citizens than any
possible program cut.a."
McCloskey, who will be ln
Ora~ge County until next week
speaking and attending seiveral
functions, agreed that the 1982
Senate race is likely to be a con·
gested one with Rep. Barry
_,.11, ~I ... SUH
BLUNT ANSWERS
Pete McClolkey
Gates opens re-election drive
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of ... ,,...,.,..., ....
Orange County Sheriff·
·coroner Brad Gates already is
campaigning for re-election in
1982
And he already has at least
one opponent.
Gates, ~urrently in his second
term as sheriff-coroner, raised
more than $48,000 toward his re·
election effort with a Santa Ana
Country Club party earlier this
month.
His early opponent is George
P. Wright. a Santa Ana CoUege
instructor who ran for the office
in 1978.
Wright. who announced his
candidacy in March, said he ts
making the early move because.
"I· m trying to get the sup port or
the pubUc without the traditional
Madison Avenue packaging that
many Orange County politicians
use, and that takes time." • • •
REP, ROBERT Badham, R·
Newport Beach, bu been named
a delegate to the North Atlantic
Aaaembly by House Minority
Leader Robert Michel.
The Assembly is composed of
elected repre11entaU.ves or the
government.a of the 15 nations
that make up the North Atlantic
Treaty Or1anizalion <NATO>.
The As se mbl y meet s
periodically to discuss matters
of mutual concern Its next
meeting is scheduled for May in
Venice. Italy •••
BADHAM, ALONG with
fellow GOP con&ressmen
William Dannemeyer. R
Fullerton. and Dan Lungren. R·
Long Beach, are sponsoring a
May 4 conference on business
oppottun1ties and foreign trade
a t the Anaheim Convention
Center
ll 's being planned 1n conjunc·
lion with chambers or com
merce in the 39th, 40th and 34lh
Congressional Districts and the
San Onofre
session set
The Atomic Safely and L1cen
sing Board has ·scheduled a pre
hearing conference for Wednes-
day in San Diego on the licensing
by the Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission of Units 2 and J at the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station
The conference Will begin at 9
a .m . at the US. Tax Court.
4·S·19 Fede ral Building, 880
Front St. The conference is open
~o the public
Discussed wiJI be the seismic
safety of the pl.ant.a· location and
emergency planning, including
evacuation tn the event of a leak
of radiation.
Units 2 and 3 are 1.100
megawatt generators located
a bout three miles south of San
Clemente Both a re currently
under construction, with com·
pletion scheduled by the end or
next year.
PARKNEWP
Departments of Commerce and
Oerense
Reservations are bein g
handled by Mrs Darlene Knoop
i n D an n e m e y e r ' s o CC 1 c~ .
telephohe 992·0141
* * *
IRVINE CITY C"OUNciL.
members Larr y Agran and
Mary Ann Gaido have been
named to the 1981 fin ance coin·
millec for the OemoC'rat1<.' Party
1n Orange County
* • •
COUNTY Sl'PERVISOR Har
riett Wieder of Huntington
Beach has named three re11i·
dents of the 2nd Supervisoriftl
DistriC't to the county's C1tizeos
Advisory Committee for Update
of the Master Plan for Riding
and Hiking Trails
Mrs. WiedC'r said she tapped
Connie Mandie. Phyllis Traylor
and Bob Mattox for the commit
tee .. because of their long r~·
ognized interest [n enhancing
and preserving the county's trail
system."
All three are from Huntington
Beach. * • •
LYNN TUR~E , secretary·bf
the Orange Co ty Republican
Central Com mittee, has ap·
pointed Lynn Dowty of Newpart
Beach as her alternate.
Mrs. Dowty 1s coordinatot.f the Bergeson Boosters. a fin ·
ci a I support group for
semb l y w oma n Mari n
Bergeson, R-Newport Beach.
$3. 3 million heist J
record bank job?
TUCSON <AP> -Four tnaaked eunmen who knew t.belr
victims by nickname. over-
powered a janitor and bank
inanaaer and drove ore with $3.3
million, apparently the largest
cash haul from a bank heist in ·
the oaUon's history.
ror the manager to arrive when
a white van painted to look like
a telephone company truclt
pulled up alongside him.
According to a copyright story
in the Tucson Citizen, VJrgil said
two masked men jumped into
his truck, one on each side, and
grabbed him. He said he kicked
one In the chest before they each
put a handgun to his temples.
WASIUNOTON (AP> -For
tb• ltnt tisnt •lq~ the Korean
War, the Defeue Department \a
cop1lderin1· the development of
o home·tront state mlllll• to U ·
1ume emeTCency dutlea lf the
National Guard b mobJUied.
"We've &ot to make 1om1 kind
of provision for stale troops
when the National Guard Js
called up tn a war," said a
senior official. ·
"The governors can't be left
without forces to deal with civU
disturbances and natutal dis-
aste,..," said this official, who
asked to remain anonymous.
One of the main Pentagon con·
cerns, it was indicated, la to as·
sure wartime protection of U.S.
production plants against the
threat of terrorist sabotage.
lll 1Dd ~ call oa them to p eo~ w'ttb ertsa ln tbeJr atatet.
But ooee the Guard li mobilized
by the fecleral govemrnent, 1ov.
•rnora lose control of those un-
lta.
• In the ablence of a peacetlme
draft, the National Guard
virtually· ii certain to be
mobllfU:d early in any future
war <:rills.
Pen~aon aptclalists said cen-
tralized ptaniitng for a postlba.
millUa to replace the Natloaal
Guard at bolDe "has fallen lhto
disrepair" slnee the Korean Wu
nearly 30 ~ars a10.
'
IN A 81111-'AaY for Congreu
o( the atudy's purpose, the Pen·
taaon P'rt lt WI w•Y::
''Became the threat to the in-
ternal security of the naiJon will
escalate durinc inoblllratlon, a
non-deployable, stay·behind
't\ome defense' force wil\ be
needed to usume th~ National
Guard's peacetime mi11ioo of
'protectlna life and property and
preaervin1 peace, order and
public safety wltbln the United
States.'
•'This effort wlU assess the
potenUal terrorist threat to the
industrial b,ase, and evaluate the
current status of 'g(>vemment
anl.lnduatry program• to defend
"11lnst that threat.
F0Uowtn1 the 1tudy, th• Pen·
taaon told Con1re11, ''policies
and re1ponalbUftJe1 will be de-
vtloped and l11ued.''
OFFIC~ conducdn1 the
study aald Uw) federal 1ovem-
ment has ample l~&al a\ltbority
to take t.be lead tn thJ1, but they
made clear tbey intend to
coordinate with 1ovemon, who
traditlonall,y are 1ensitlve about
their pero,atives and wary of
any ~rceived federal effort to
encroach on their 'pOwen.
"We'll deal with tbe 1ovemon
and inform · them of the op-
portunltles that will ~ opened
up to them," a Pentagon oUicial
said. •
•'These guys did their
homework. These guys are
proi," said police spokesman
Mike Walsh after the robbery
lhla week of a First National
Bank of Arizona branch by the
gunmen -two m Halloween
masks and two with stocking
hoods.
Chuck Hemann, First Na-
tional spokesman in Phoenix,
said that an audit . re-
vealed that $3.3 million was
taken by the robbers Bank of·
Cicials at first had declined com-
ment on the amount taken,
although sources close to the in-
vestigation had estimated $2.S
million was involved.
"The next thing I know these
two guys s natched me out of my
truck still pointing the guns at
m y head and threw me into their.
van," he said. He said he was
tied and gagged.
lie said one gunman kept call-
ing him "Charlie," and they re -
ferred to the bank mH.nager,
John H. "Bud" Grainger Jr .. as
"old bald-headed Bud." He said
the robbers threatened to kill
Ulem and their wives unless
Virg\I and Grainer cooperated.
In peacetime, governors
•·own" their Nationa l Guard un·
Tbe alm of their atudy t.ht~ said, LI to •void reJ)ftltion 91 ,
problema 1Wh~Ch ,arose in org~.
bing, equipping and manning
militia units in World Wan I
and II and the Korean War. No
such "stay-behind" force was
· Bypass surgery may
be worth the nwney
'\
Authorities said janitor
Charles Virgil. 30, was sitting in
his pickup truck in the bank
parking lot before 7 a m waiting
wrnrnrrrn
Virgil said the men stuffed the
money into a long black laundry
bag, three knit fisherman-type
bag~. a travel bag and several
bank sacks in less than 20
minutes They loaded the van
and then fled.
48-year Reichstag
fire case ended
BERLIN CAP> The West
Berlin Supreme Court has closed
the book on the 48-year-old case
of a Dutch communist convicted
and executed for starting the
Reichstag fire in 1933. The fire
shocked Germany and helped
propel Adolf Hitler to absolute
power
that decision on the record
The JUSllces ruled there could
be no further litigation 1n the
matter
J M van der Lubbe's case
"was based on assertions that
are meaningless on the question
of the arson" itself. the court
ruled
uw .........
COURT SPECTATOR -The first-known baby to be born in
the United States of a contract surrogate mother sits next
to stuffed rabbit during court proceedings in which child
was made adoptive son of his father's wife. The name of
the child has not been released because of sensation sur·
rounding birth six months ago. The court ruling was
made this week in Louisville. Ky
The court threw out the Dec
15. 1980, decision of a lower West
Berlin court. which had over·
turned the original Nazi convic-
tion of Marinus van der Lubbe.
Van der Lubbe was beheaded
in 1934 after a s how trial. The
Nazis used the fire as a pretext
to round up communists. and to
crush free trade unions and the
rema1mng leftist oppos1t1on
U.S. inflation drops
Van der Lubbe's brother. J M
van der Lubbe of Amsterdam.
had tried since 1955 to have lhe
verdict erased and appeared to
have won a victory with last
year's decision.
But prosecutors. in an ap-
parent effort to avoid a f\nal
verdict that could leave the gov-
ernment liable for reparations
payments, moved to keep the
case open.
A lower court had ruled in 1968
that Van der Lubbe was wrongly
sentenced to death. but upheld
the Nazi court's verdict of guilt
for starting the blaze in the
parliament bu1ld1ng . Wednes-
day's verdict appeared to leave
WASHINGTON cAPl The
nation's cost of living increased
at an annual rate of 7 S percent
1n March , bringing inflation
belo"' double-d1g1t levels due
mainly to moderating energy
prices. the Labor Department
n•ported.
The department ·s Bureau of
Labor Statistics reported a 0.6
percent seasonally adJUSted rise
1n the cost of living for the
month. substantially below the 1
percent increase registered in
February and the lowest one-
month increase since July U~BO's
0 1 percent.
The bureau said the slowdown
m energy prices resulted in the
sm allest increases in
transportation and housing costs
in seven months The Consumer
announces a new program
2nd TRUST DEEDS
•No prepay/Auumeble • 1..-. SI 0 OO<HSOO 000
• fMI lund•no
• !IC> veer Amonllecl
Uo lo 1 S V" Repay
• 0-.. /Hon Owrw
• Swing lo.n1
Purc:h•M Mo,...,
Call Wil ham B Mitchell
Call today lor QUOle • No ot>hgatton
(714) 975-1128
rrons notionol tunding
trans notional~
trans na1loool f\lldlng
trans noflOnOI ~1ng . )
' Price Index stiowed that energy
prices continued to rise in
March but not by nearly the
margin of the previous two
months
Fuel oil prices rose 2 7 percent
in March. following increases of
7 S percent in January and 8.S
percent in February, depart·
ment officials said Charges for
natural gas and electricity rose
O 8 percent. compared wilh in-
creases of 1 percent and 1.4 per-
cent earlier in the year.
REAGAN administration of·
fic1a ls and some private
economists had been predicting
that energy prices would
moderate as spr ing a rrived.
Prices had shot up in January
and February because of the lift·
ing of controls on domestic
crude oil prices and the high
cost of foreign oil But the
March figures were lower than
many economists expected.
Department officials said the
Consumer Price Index rose to
265 1 in March, which means
that goods and services costing
$10 m March 1967 cost $26.Sl last
month. Th<' figures released this week
also showed that the index
increased by 11.2 percent from
the first quarter of last year to
the end of this year 's first
quarter '
THIS MEANS some 36 million
Social Security rec1p1ents will
get an 11.2 percent cost-of-living
increase in July.
N-M's new menu in
The Zodiac: That's
Incredible Just one more reason to come
®~ Save$230
Blltety
Operated Electrical
Sy91tm
Sunday-shopping with us.
Each Sunday between 12 and 4. indulge in
a buffet of famous N-M desserts: all you can
eat. 4.95 . And N-M's Wine Bar and medley of
hors d "oeuvres: all you can eal. 6.95.
Before you go browsing, slop in for lunch !
The Zodiac. Middle Level. Newport Beach.
WASHINGTON CAP > Con·
troversial heart bypass surgery.
the expensive operation that de-
tours blood around blocked
vessels, appears to be worth the
money, according to a new
study.
But some heart experts and
health economists said this week
that the operation still may be
overused. consuming more than
its share of s hrinking health
dollars
$pecialists from around the
country, including physicians.
lawyers and economists, dis-
cussed coronary artery bypass
surgery thjs week.
THE CONFERENCE, con-
vened by the National Center for
Health Care technology. Is a
followup to one held last fall at
which experts concluded the
operation has proven medical
benefits.
After the latest conference.
participants will develop a state·
ment on the economic. social
and ethical implications of the
s urgery, whi ch involves
transplanting blood vessels from
other parts of the body to the
heart.
·'Coronary artery bypass graft
surgery, al least as it applied to
patients with symptomatic cor-
onary heart disease, appears to
be a reasonably cost-effective
use or health care resources,"
said Dr. Milton Weinstein of the
Harvard University School of
Public Health. ...
!if /lNr 'NE decade>. bJP•
lions b.ave become the type
.. 0 ~rgery ptttormed
most frequently in this country.
according to Dr. Seymour
Perry, director of the National
Center for Health Care
Technology.
Greased pig quick
EAST BRUNSWICK, N.J .
(AP> A young pig, coated
with grease, led police Sgt.
Gerald Marino and two
employees of a local shopping
mall on a slippery IS-minute
c hase through squealing
shoppers who gathered to watch
the roundup.
Dr Elliot Rapaport of the
University of California at San
Francisco said the cost of the
diagnosis, surgery and Collowup
varies around the country.
"As a national average today.
it is reasonable to project that
the entire work-up and manage·
ment of the average surgical
case 1s in the neighborhood of
$15,000 to $20,000, Rapaport told
the meeting, and "insorance
pays around 80 percent of the
bill . ..
Hinckley
undergoes
mental tests
WASHINGTON (AP > -John
W Hinckley Jr .. accused of al·
tempting to assassinate Presi-
dent Reagan. has undergone
four hours of medical testing at
a university hospital near the
prison where he is being held. a
Justice Department spokesman
said.
Department spokesman John
Russell said that Hinckley was
moved this week from the
fede ra I correction institution at
Butner, N.C .. to the Duke
University hospital in nearby
Durham.
The tests. which included a
brain scan. were requested by
lawyers defending Hinckley
against a charge of attemptmg
to assassinate Reagan on March
30. Russell said
He said he did not know the re·
suits of the tests, and Hinckley's
attorneys were not available for
comment.
Russell said the testing was
done at the university ~cause
the Butner institution does not
have ~pment for a brain
scan, a'test which can be used to
detect a tumor and other dis-
orders.
After the tests. Hinckley was
returned to Butner, where be 1s
being held for up to 90 days of
psychiatric testing . Russell
said that for security reasons no
announcement was made of the
tests beforehand.
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.,
50-}lear sentence
given in .. boriibirig
SAN FRANCISCO -(AP> A
former Iranian police chief con·
vict.ed of bombln1 an Iranian .
student meeuna at 84trkeley hu
been sentenced to the maxl!JfOm so years In a. feder•I prison.
O~eb. 18, a jury convicted
Naser Almanelh, 29, of Santa
Clara on two counts each or
making and possessing bombs,
one count of damaeine a build·
ing and a sixth count of attempt-
ing to damage a building. It ac·
quitted him of a charge of
threatening the hfe of former
President Carter
THE CONVICTIONS stemmed
from the Aug. 20 bombing of
Berkeley High School and
Almaneih's plans to bomb an
Iranian meeting at San Jose
State University.
U.S. District Judge Spencer
Willtllms. in imposing a sen-
tence Thursday of 10 more years
than the gove rnment had
sought, said he wanted · his sen-
tence to "speak loud and clear."
"We have no room in our
society for terrorists. whether
home grown or imported." he
said. "If for one moment we ac-
cept . tolerate. excuse. condone
or justify acts of violence. such
as those for which tbls defendant
has been· found guilty, ·our free
society as •e know wUl cease to
exist."
One of 300 persons who fied
from. the Berkeley Hleh School
buildln& was injured when two
bomM placed in the foyer ex-
ploded. A plan to bomb an Ira-
nian gathering at San Jose State
Ul\iversity on Oct. 3 was nipped
with AJmaneih's arrest on Oct.
2.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Greg
Wa'rd claimed during
Almaneib's trial that the former
police chief under the late shah
of Iran wanted to he lp overthrow
the regime of the Ayatollah
Rubollah Khomeini and return
to Iran as a police official.
THE DEFENSE attacked the
credibility of the government's
main witness, Amir Ehdaee, 39.
a former member of Savak, the
shah's secret police. Ehdaee
testified Almaneih made the
born bs, did au the planning 'and
planted them.
Almaneih testified that he was
al a San Francisco night club
watching belly dancers the night
of the Berkeley bombing.
., .........
Sen. S.l. Ha~wa. R.Calif., fle/t) .tU with ambcu1ador nominee
John A. Gavmat hearing.
Gavin testifies
WASHINGTON <AP) -Actor
John Gavin, nominated to be
U.S. ambassador to Mexico. dis·
puled a suggestion that the
country is endangered by
Soviet·Cuban Marxism.
·'The Marxist ideology is in·
deed espoused by a certain sec-
tor," Gavin said. "But I believe
on balance we need not fear for
the security of the Mexican
Republic ...
The disagreement developed
at Gavin's confirmation hearing
before the Senate Foreign Rela-
lions Committee.
Gavin said he gained ex-
perience in Latin Amen can af
fairs as a special adviser to the
Organization o f Ame ric an
States· secretary general from
1961 to 1965.
Gavin said he believes Presi-
dent Reagan nominated him
because he agrees with the pres-
ident that "it's time we cleared
up the misconceptions and mis·
understandings th at exist
between lhe United States and
Mexico."
LOS ANGELES <AP> -AC·
n ess Underwood, a colorful
newspaperwoman whose career
as city editor or the Los Anceles
Her•ld ExamJl)er spanned 17
years, has filed a SUO million
defamation suit over a book that
said she helped the late eangster
Mickey Cohen steal $1 million.
Defendants include The New
York Times Book Co., which
published "The Last Mano.so," a
book by Ovid Demaris about
former mobster Jimmy Fratian·
no. Also named were CBS' "6C
Minutes." which reported on
mate rial in the book, and Los
Angeles r adio station KMPC.
which ran an inte rview with
Demaris.
THE SUIT filed here
claims the book and subsequent
interviews falsely stated that
Ms. Underwood aided Cohen by
printing a fabricated story in the
Los Angeles Herald· Express
(the forerunner of the Herald
Examiner> in 1948 stating that a
ship loaded with arms for Israel
had sunk. The story. the book
c laimed, was a coverup to allow
Cohen to pocke t $1 mill.ion in
donations he had raised to pay
for the arms .
Ms . Underwood, 78, said no
s uc h article was publis hed and
tha t s he didn't even know Cohen
in 1948
J~wa with the milUon talJed at
the benefits and then told her the
boat sank. A few unknown peo.
ple died, some were 1aved. and
she prtnta it on hls say.Id. I
says, 'Mickey. congratulationa.
You've Just pulled o(( the big·
aest, cleanest acore ltve ever
seen made.' "
CARYL WARNER, Ms. Un·
derwood's lawyer, said the only
story about a ship full of arms
that could be located in the old
Herald-Express or any other
newspaper library was one stat·
lng that a ship laden with amu
and destined for Begin 's Irgun
Zvai Leumi unde rground was
blown up on a TeJ Aviv beach by
the Israeli army. Begin's group
had been opposed by the fledg·
ling Israeli government because
it resorted to terronst tactics.
Airport
seen boon
to valley
PALMDALE <A P 1 -An
estimated Sl billion in direct
economic benefits and a 100 per-
~ /'
II I nc
, .
'"
'1'
.1
I Woman 's strip-search caUed routine
According lo the book and
tran::.cnpts of 1nterv1e "s . Fra
t1anno didn't trust Cohen to keep
his hands off the $1 m11l1on.
\.\ h1ch he purportedly collected
at the urging of M e n i.1ch 1m
Begin. al the time head of an un
de rgrounq movem ent and pres
enlly Isr ael's prime m in1ster
cent population inc rease could 1 •J
be c reated for the Antelope
Valley 1f the long.planned :-J
Palmdale International Airport t
1s built. a new report indicates
The report, released at a Los
Angeles Board of Airport Com·
m1ss1oners m eet ing he r e. -
estimated that c·onstruction of
FREMONT <AP1 Fremont
police say the strip·search or a
woman who fai led to pay a
ticket for not li cens ing her dog
was a routine procedure de·
signed to kee p contraba nd out of
the city jail.
She has launched a letter
writing campaign to the Fre·
mont City Council. the mayor.
the governor of California. the
American Civil Liberties Union
a nd Pres ident R ea gan -
because. "I thought people
s hould be aware that this was
going on."
early on Dec. 5. "here s he "as
fingerprinled, photographed and
kept in a holrung area without a
restroom
the airport "ould generate : ,
31 .600 to 36.300 additional jobs
for the area 30 miles north or
The book quotes Frat1anno as
saying, "See. hes got this broad
at The He rald . Aggie Un
derwood S he 's a bag editor
there. and this broad would walk
on hot coals for Mickey Pnnt
any he gives he r . The way I
see 1t, Mi ckey called her and
made up a story about buyi ng
guns and ammunition for the
doy, nto"n Lo!. Angeles .
The hoard ha::. a('qu1red 17.700 ·r
acn•s adJacent to this Antelope ;i
Valley c·1ty at a cost of over $100
But Marlene Penny, the 29.
year·old mother of four who un-
derwent the search in December
1980. called it "unbe arably
frustrating."
Mrs. Penny said her encounter
with police began last fall when
s he was issued a citatio" requir·
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
EVERYTHING IN STORE GOES!
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INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CASE •28'340
FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION
T • "9Y cred•ton .+Mt 2~ ....,..
HANDMADE ORIENTAL RUGS
tftCt'*"' WI ma. ~ Wife be ,,... if' •It 9'tea 9ft4' ........ tr-OM ....... ""I
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INFORMATION: (213) 709-0026
Mrs. Penny said that a woman
poli ce officer told her she was to
be searched "Whe n she f1r~I
said. 'Take your clothes off.· I
laughed ."
T he ACLU. which is handling
the protest. said litigation harl
not been filed.
m 1 llwn for constructio n of the
uirµor1 If work on the airport is
begun by 1985. lht• re port stated.
it would ha ve a n annual
µassl·ni::er volume of I million by
!990.
Discover
Great Earth
Lo-w Prices.
------------------·--------------------------------------VITAMIN C I Get into the ! NATURAL E
. ': GRFAT SHAPE DIET 11 < >ur l'\l lu"' l < l\ 'I I .mo
lhl linnl n.1111r.tl I
79 4f'I. I • 100" .. n.uural tJhkt -I plu, 11 $4 ~::~ ~;~~r.il .,.. I no h .1rmtul drug!'-or lJffl'llll' I Jntiw .. illJnt' 99
llHI uh' I • m.tkt·, '·our '1omad1 ll'l'I full 11 llHI 1Jh' W/Couoon Only E•o,,•• 4.:10 /11 I w 'Coupgn On•y h11or .. 4/3011 1
••••••••••••••••••• on k'1' tootl p••••••••••••••••••
LECITIIIN 1
1
• natural nui<l d im1n.11or tltt1'hn 11 AC jIDQPHILUS
.tw:tr t':\ll'" '>\';Jlt•r \H.'i~ht n
19 grain capsules I too rahfl'I' I your friendly bacillus!
• nn·l·.,-.;i~ l11r rhl· hc1lth ~99 I $g99. I $}99 of l'\'l'n hunwn n:ll I I
I(){) Cl~!'> I •• 100 l ';ql!I W/Couoon Only E~o•r•• • "' I NfCouJ!O.n o~ EAj)il'M 4/30,111 \V!Couoon Only EaplrM 4i30/11
500 mg.
--·-·······-··----... ------------------... ·----------------F~~~~~~~~~~~~, Miller's I B-12 ! BABY BEEF
c "lecu t . 1 Unproc~ed I 50 mcg. I LIVER
f '\\-\. p~ J. -.. .. e :.: BRAN $219 I 99~ I ~~~~~ncli\'C:f $1.29 ·~ I .J-J J/ ~ , An ut:c:llcnt 11oun:c: I ,.. I 100 n :gc:tahle '· ons~ ufdkl:ll)' fiht'r .250 lah.'i 100 IJh' I t:OdlC:cJ tahlcts ~~ ~i W/OOllPOn Only Eal*• •,oolli I W~Only~~~,., I w~ Oftiy e..,.,.. •!3011' ;··\')L>,1 •.. '..f o-~l'I ·······-····-------------------------···-··········-·-·· ~ I-lysine I BALANCED B I E LOTION I . I 500 mg. 1 CO:MP14EX 50 mg. 1-4000 i.u .
:m r...-.cntl:.il amino
acid ~ l'\'C:l')il<Kl}''11
1alkJ~ about It.
IOOtahll
w
·I I $3~ II ~1,~,'~~~~inour flt.499 I
spc:d:&I formulation ~
100 lllOs
4/30 t
• I
,.
I'
New airpqrt access
plan seems promising
~ a considerable amount
of wranallna, it finally appears
that an acceptable plan to reg·
ulate entry of commercial jet
air carriers at John Wayne
AJrport is neartn1 completion.
A plan now emerging from
the offices of county airport of·
flcials and supervisors has
several positive aspects.
First, it would protect the
legitimate interests of A.ir(;a1 and
Republic Airlines, the two car·
riers which have provided
service the longest in Orange
County. Second, the plan would
recognize that Frontier Airlines,
which was permitted to begin
service at the airport last year,
has made a sincere effort to re-
duce noise impacts. Frontier, like
AirCal and Republic, has plans to
purchase the DC-9 Super 80,
which experts say will be sub-
stantially quieter than the
DC-9-308 and Boeing 737s now
operated at the airport.
The plan would not protect
the interest of Western Airlines.
Nor s hould it. Western's
performance in Orange County
can only be viewed as lackluster.
Like Frontier, Western re-
ceJved a 1,>lece of the Oran1e
County action last year. But lt
has yet to make a subetanUal
commitment to noise reducUons.
It bu no plans to purchase the
Super80s.
The proposal would favor
Pacific Southwest Airlines, the
only carrier in the nation that bas
taken delivery of the Super 80s.
As airport insiders see it, flights
that Western now possesses
would he turned over to PSA ii the
plan is adopted.
The plan, as now envisioned,
would cause little disruption in
airport service (two Western
flights to Salt Lake City would be
eliminated}. In fact, service
would probably improve, because
PSA would start service on the
heavily traveled routes to San
Jose and Sacramento.
At this point, the plan looks
good, far better than two earlier
proposals that either would have
caused substantial service dis-
ruptions or could have been too
complex to effectively imple-
ment. The proposal merits a
favorable decision from
supervisors.
Public service costly
Time was when our cititen-
la wmakers were supposed to be
just ordinary folk , employed or in
business for themselves, neither
richer nor poorer than the
average taxpayer, nor boasting
rich and influential friends and
supporters.
Figures on campaign expen-
ditures in California's 1980
primary and general elections
compiled by the Fair Political
Practices Commission show all
too well that money is becoming
the name of the political game.
Even when Jesse Unruh
called money "the mother's milk
of politics" he could hardly have
foreseen the heights to which
political expenditures would rise.
The $35.8 million spent by
candidates for the Legislature in
the 1980 elections was an
overall increase of 71 percent
over the costs of the 1978 elec-
tions -that's in just two years!
In the Assembly the increase
was even more startling -84
percent over 1978. Senate races
showed a more modest 24 percent
increase.
In their battle for the
speakership of the Assembly.
both Leo McCarthy and Howard
Berman bad the distinction of be·
ing the first two Assembly mem-
bers to spend more than $1
million apiece. Each spent more
money in 1980 than did all of the
candidates for the Assembly in
1958.
The $35.8 million total
represents an average of almost
$360,000 in campaign costs for
each legislative seat -and this
is just for a single legislative dis·
trict, not a statewide office.
FPPC Chairman Tom
Houston describes the 1980 cam-
paign as "something akin to an
arms race" and predicts cam·
paign costs near the $100 million
mark by 1982 if this trend con·
tinues.
Small wonder newly elected
legislators begin their fund·
raising efforts for the next cam-
paign almost as soon as they
have been sworn in. This is no
game for the simple citizen who
dreams of being a "public ser-
vant" -not if he wants to win
and hold an office.
When minutes count
Concern recently arose over
emergency medical treatment
procedures at Disneyland, the
Orange County amusement park
that each year attracts more
than 10 million visitors from
throughout the world.
With that many people visit-
ing the park, there are bound to
be incidents involving illness or
injury, in some cases, death.
In the past six weeks, two
Disneyland visitors have died.
One man was stabbed and a
woman suffered an apparent
heart attack.
Both incidents raised ques-
tions. Paramedics were not sum-
moned and the victims were
transported to a hospital in Ois-
n e y land 's own emergency
medical transport vehicles. The
vehicles are not equipped with
red lights and sirens.
These facts are not meant to
imply Disneyland did not provide
treatment. On the contrary, reg-
istered nurses provided on-the-
spot treatment to both victims
and accompanied them in the
ambulance-like vans to the
hospital.
While def ending the treat·
ment it provided and the overall
quality of its emergency medical
procedures, Disneyland has hired
a firm to maintain a ready-to-roll
ambulance -one equipped with
red lights and sirens -at the
park durin~ operating hours.
•
This approach makes sense.
Disneyland, during peak periods,
can be a very difficult place to
travel from because of traffic
congestion. Llghts and sirens can
speed transport and perhaps gain
the seconds and minutes that can
prove so critical in emergency
situations.
Opinions exprused In the space above ar~ thOse of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, CO$ta Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
6-42-4321.
L M. Boyd/Man'• work
Women do at leut ball the 1\llo
drivln1, m,.ybe more .. Insurance com·
panles ,_,they're better risb, too. So
bow do you account for the fact that
there are '° relatlvely few wolllen •ho drin for pay? Never mind, I know why. Tbe unjust tradlt.lcn wu
lbat anytime a Jo6 aeu tedu1tfted
from cuual to prof es1lonal, lt teJldl to become man•1 work. Cooklnt, tot" ln-
ltance. Or meat cutttna. E~en. to
some degree, piano playing.
Quick, name the only aartcultural
product that irowa lt. seed on the out-
1lde of lts fruit. Come on, tbe
1trawberry, the strawberry.
Men are cnaef; man is kind. Men
are creedy; man ls 1eneroua. Men are
mortal; man ls lmmortaJ. Tbf late
AdJat E. Stevemon said that.
I
Guatemala next on aid list?i
WASHINGTON -The conflagration in
El Salvador is spreading acrOAs the
border into Gµatemala, and the Reagan
administration is already drafting plans
to provide the Guatemalan generals with
military equipment.
The administration is expected to
JUStify this increased involvement in the
turmoil in Central America on grounds
that the Guatemalan guernllas are get
ling support from Cuba by way of
Nicaragua. But there is another. more
compelling reason that will not be
menliohed: Guatemala has oil Though
still barely tapped. its oil deposits could
make Guatemala a rich country in a few
years .
Former President Jimmy Carter cut
off military aid to both Guatemala and El
Salvador to show U.S disapproval of
their military dictatorships. But last
January, he resumed military assistance
to the embattled Salvadoran junta. which
had replaced the old dictatorship 18
months earlier
PRESIDENT REAGAN increased the
arms shipments and dispatched milltary
advisers to El Salvador in the belief that
the Soviets are fanning the names of re-
bellion there. Secret intellJgence reports.
including intercepted messages. link the
Kremlin to the Cuban-Nicaraguan
activity.
Now I have learned that Reagan win
soon resume military aid to Guatemala
which. unlike El Salvador. is still ruled by
the same repressive mihtary rf'gime
lntellililence reports exist wruch will
buttress Reagan's decision to make
Guatemala yet another arena of East·
West confrontation. My associate Bob
Sherman has seen a confidential Defense
Jnlelligence Agency analysls. which re~
ports:
··A tape recording recently captured in
a skirmish with Guatemalan guerrillas
Q
-Jl-Cl-1-ID-IR-10-1 -~
has provided convincing evidence of
Cuban and Nicaraguan complicity in or·
ganizing, directing and supportinlil the
Guatemalan Revolutionary ~ovement
'Socialist' countries may have already
been contacted to supply arms and
supplies. which are to pass through Cuba
and Nicaragua before being forwarded to
Guatemala."
IF THIS HAS a familiar ring, it should
Captdred documents established the hnk
between Salvadoran guerrillas and Sov·
iet·bloc nations. which justified the
Reagan administration·s anti ·
communist alarums and excursions in El
Salvador.
The DIA appraisal claims that
guerrilla strength in Guatemala is
''minimal. and "only s mall-scale in·
surgent actjvityis '-!Uicipated tn the near
term " M y sou r ces say th e
adm1rustrat1on hopes that renewed U.S
military aid will help the Guatemalan.
generals eradicate the leftist rebels.
before they have a chance to grow into a.
real threat. 1
The stakes m Guatemala are high. A!
confidential State Department cable las1!
month spelled out the 011 prospects this
way : ··The optimistic view long held by
most oilmen tis> that Guatemala does in
fact possess significant reserves on the
order of the Alaskan north slope.··
Although Gautemala expects to pro
duce only about 15.000 barrels of 011 a day;
this year. the cable notes that a petroleum'.
consultant has advised the government it:
could be producing a million barrels a:
day within seven or eight years "1f ap :
pro priate dnlllng incentiv es are:
adopted ·· ;
WHAT WORRIES the admin1strat1on
is that the UR1ted States may be losing out!
1n the international competition to de-1
velop Guatemala's huge petroleum re·I
sources Several years ago. Guatemala!
asked for U.S. help in exploiting its oil re l
se n •e s. but got n o \\he r e The.
Guatemalans turned elsewhere The!
State Department cable notes that .. U .S i
companies have been edged out by <thelj
French 1n promis ing exploration areas " I
Rut the Guatemalans have once again!!
asked for L' .S. help, and our embassy m
Guatemala City has urged a ravorable
response, noting that experts behc\-e1 Guatemala ··could supply 10 percent of·
U S import needs within six to eight
years
Computers replace smoke-filled rooms
Earl WateN l.t on vacation. Thu column u
written by ha cuaodate Dan Blockbum.
It is a rare politi~l issue that can rise
above all others in the hearts of
legislators. Reapportionment is one
such issue.
This is the process which occurs
every 10 years following the census and
which draws new lines for California's
45 congressional districts and 120
legislative distl'icts . The re ·
apportionment procedure is a classic
struggle between the "haves" and the
"have-nots" at times requiring the state
Supreme Court to referee. It is an at.
tempt to provide residents
representation by an individual who
most closely represents the will of the
majority of the district.
With so many diverse interests at
work In the formal reapportionment
process it is small wonder that the
simple drawing of lines on a map would
become the subject of bitter polilical
wrangling.
COMPUTERS NOW aid in.the work of
reapportionment and much of the raw
political power that once was vested in
the hands of a few street-wise
politicians is now dispersed among
many. That fact however does little to
alleviate the exercising of unfair
advantages by those who can figure out
how to do it.
The matte r of equitable political
r e presentation is germain lo the
principals upon wbich this nation was
founded . It is imperative that
flll WITIRS
politicians elected to office represent as
c losely as possible the nee<,ls and
viewpoints of their districts That
makes it vital for those with an interest
in such ethereal topics to enter into the
process and aid in the drawing of lines.
It is interesting to watch the
• representatives of certain minority
factions influence on this decade's re·
apportionment. Never before have the
black and Hispanics been so well or-
ganh:ed and so potentially able to
participcate in the division of the state.
Armed with sophisticated computer
t ec hnology and talented politicat
scientists, ethnic groups are moving t~
protest existing districts and seeking td
c reate new ones whe re minority
candidates can be more easily elected. i
Recently Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown. a San Francisco Dem(}('rat. told
a Southern California crowd that he wa~
inte rested in helping create ~ new His•
panic dominated Assembly district in
Los Angeles. He ran into a buzz saw of
opposition from the Senate in the form
of the President Pro Tempore Davict
Roberti. a Los Angeles Democrat whq
made 11 clear the Senate wouJd make it~
own decisions. •
THE LEGITIMATE fea r s oC
minorities is the pra c ti ce of
gerrymandering. whereby the party iri
power carves out the districts to iJ.i
advantage at the expense of the o
p~rty . •
the days are gone when power bar
would simply sit down in smoke-fill
rooms to divide the spoils of ttdistrl
ing, but the potential for abuse stiU
ists under the guise of compl
technological methodologies.
In soine disputes losing .is really winning
How can you win when you lose? This
is a hard riddle, but it was propounded
and answered well over 2,000 years a10
by Epicurus In llttle over • dozen
words :
'·In a philosophical dispute. be &•ins
~
m1n11n11 ~
I
moat. wbo ls deteatod, aillce he le1rn1
most."
U you bave taken a wron, poa1Uon on
a queation, and someofte bests y0u ln
· the arpmertt, you ate not a lour but a
lnoer -for ~ •re betwr otl tbu Jou
were before; you have fatiMid more
tban your opponent bu. You heve
Jearned eometblnt you did not know: be
baa not.
nant end triumphant. \
This ~nd of winning is really losin1.
if the facta are not on our side. Thia is a
debating victory, an oratorical contest,
not a mutueJ determination to seek for
the truth together -which is what all
honest and productive arguments must
be.
Most dlsputation.s are fruitless at best
because the contestants want to in·
struct. not to learn; to persuade, not to
iJ:lvesU,ate; to feel jusUfie4, not cor-
rected or reproached or convicted of et·
ror. And the more heated the con·
lroversy, the r.iore both entagon1'ms
loH •ilbt of reality, of reason, and ol
i"e common objective to di1cover
where the aood resides.
construed as a slap in the face. It
wounded vanity and not a ~al for t
thttl feeds the names of most such
troversies.
DIFFERENCES of opinion are
portuniUes for learnin&. new footho
for chanie and growth, vaJuable
erclsea for minds grown slugaish
characters grown smug. But not on4!
a thou.sand uses them for such creatl
purposes; not 1, not you -and I wo
about old )!:picurus himsell.
! ,
Lamps'
finish worn
DEAR PAT DUNN : I hav e two
silver-plated table lamps that were given to
us years ago. 'Rae protective finish has worn
off and ln places the silver coating is down to
the base metaJ. I waa given a SUO estimate to
have the lamps replated several years ago,
and I know it would be more now. Do you or
your readers have any suuestiona on ~ow to
make these lamps attractive again? l hope
there's some metallic spray treatment or
somethlng!
M.B .. Irvine
-
Normandy Metal Reflnlabera, located at
Cannery Village In Newport Beach, 11 oae of
the few remaining antjque 1llver replatlng
firms ln CaWomla. Its spoke.woman w~rns
agalut ulllg any me\al reltorer H It may
damage the remaining sUver coadng. She
suggests you bring &be lamps in to have them
evaluated by th• shop's owner, Scott
Sarkisian. You can make arrangements by
phoning 675-3132.
Food compl.ainl
DEAR PAT DUNN. What government
agency handles complaints about canned or
packaged foods?
G W . Newport Beach
Report the problem to the manager of
the store where you bought the product and
then contact the manufacture r . If you
become Ill after u llng any canned food,
notify the county Health Department Im-
mediately. If you do not become Ill but have
a complaint about canned food <other thao
meat or poultry). or packaged foods, contact
the Food and Drug Administration In Los
Angeles.
When making a complaint to the FDA.
give a description of the Impurities found In
. the Item , the manufacturer's name and ad-
,, dress, the manufacturer's code numbe r
" stamped on the itt'm indicating packaging
plant location and the size orthe item.
If the FDA determines your complaint
merits Investigation, a sample will be collect·
ed for analysis, and you can expect to be
notified of the results.
H your canned meat or poultry has an
impurity or irregularil) that originated from
the manufacturer or slaughterhouse and has
been inspected through a federal plant lthis
usually will be indicated on the-can>, contact
the U.S. Department of Agfkulture. 620
Central Ave., Building 2F-Room Ill ,
Alameda, Calif. 94501.
· Banned children's irear sold?
D EAit READERS: The Consumer
Product Safety Commission ls wanJn1 coo·
sumers who are purcbasln' children's
sleepwear to look for the fiber content labels
and avoid purchasing any garments made
from acetate, trlacetate or blends.
These garments wert' manufactured
before 1978 when such fabrics were almost
always treated with the flame retardant
TRIS to reduce flammability. TRIS·treated
children's sleepwear has been a baoned
ha&ardous product s ince 1977, as the
chemical is bellev.-d to cause cancer.
CPSC also recommends that consumers
not buy children's sleepwear without a label,
especially at bargain prices.
The commission would like to hear from
consumers who can confirm or estahllsh
strong evidence that TRIS-treated sl.-e pwear
is being sold from specific outlets. The toll·
free number is (800> 638-8326.
• ·Gor o problem" Then wnle to Pot
'-"I Dunn Pat will cul red tape. getting
' "' .l. the an.rniers and oclum you need to
solve inequities an government and
business Mall your queshoNr to Pot
Dunn . Al Your Senna. Orange Coo.st
Dally Pilot. P 0 Box 156<J. Cosio Mesa. CA 92626 As
many ~tters as posinble will be onawered. but phoned
mqu1nes or letters not including the reader's full
name. address and buimesr hours' phone 11umber
cannot be cmisuUred This column appears daily ex-
cept Sundays ..
' '8v One Frame .a ta., ~alar Prlee, Get;~a .Secoad
FnUDe That eon. the S.me or Le.. for une Centi
·Here's how our frames can work for you.
Finished art work
of your own.
'7our number from
• the lOK race,
• ove notes L he once sent to you,
A needlepoint that
you have sewn.
The ribbon when you
won first place .
The day you finally
said "J do"
Choose a frame , and we've got plenty,
The second one will cost a penny.
Just be sure the second frame
ls priced below or costs the same.
The mirror that
you etched by hand .
A picture of
your kitty catty.
'7our hair when it
• was long and wavy.
A poster of
a far off land,
A baseball cap
from Cincinnati.
Unde Davy
in the Navy.
So make your good cents work for you.
Buy a frame and take home two.
The second's just a penny more
At any Aaron Brothers store!
(Items shown in frames are fictitious creations and exist only in the artist's imagination.) Custom framing and labor not included.
Aaron Brothers Art Marts
l2B ANAHEIM 222 N. Beach 8tvd. • COSTA MESA 1714 Newport Blvd. • ORANGE 1812 E. Katello Ave. \Zlm
LAGUNA BEACH 190 S. Coast Highway • SANTA ANA 1126 E. 17th. St. NoM.1100 Pho .... ordn•
ttef'n\ Umtt.U •o \tock El TORO 24350 Swartz Or. • HUNTINGTON BEACH 7470 Edinger Ave. ""_,
-----'i'Ht: MALE MAN--------.
an unusual discount store
CORDUROY SUITS BIG SPRING rSALI
3 Piece ............. : $9900
2 Piece .............. $7 900
Jackel Only ..... , .... $ 5 900
LEATHER BEL TS
value to S15 .
LIS SPORT SHIRTS
Spire. Kennlnglun
VELOURS value toS:W .
, S IS KNIT SHIRTS
Spire1 Rogue to S20 .... , ..
S6.99
$9.99
$17.99
..... 89.99
CORDUROY TOPS
regular S30 . . . ,, ...... . 814.99
$7.99
........ sl.99
CORDUROY JEANS
regular Sl8 . .. . . . .. .....
CATAUNA SWIMWEAR regular to Sl5 . . . . . . ..... .
SAVE
UP TO
50%
TIES $4.99 Broncm1. Balanrme
NAVY PEA COATS S19.99 H. 0 . Lee regular S37 50
SIS SPORT SHIRTS $9.99 Arrow-Brigade to $18
STUISBIE JEANS $16.88 value to 124 . . . . . . . ..
KNJTSIDRTS .
Van Huesen. Robert Bruce $9.99
FLANNEL SHIBTS Van Heusen, CampUJ to S20 ............... $9.99
:'£~~~::.~~ ............... S12. 9!J
R-------IHOW BIZ -
Liza Mlnoelll
performe d to
f standing ova-
tlona thia week
despite havine a 2 miscarriage
l Dec . 31. The
popular singer
underwent
routine tests in
an Atlanta, Ga.,
hospital then did
a show.
WASHINGTON 1(AP> -All '-'· YHttpdve arm ot ec.,,.. 1t ree-
om mencUu that tbe~ Peatqm take
1tepa to .. there ii no repltl&o of an
incident lalt May ln whlcb tn1Utary
tran.port planel were uaed to fly 411
memben of the Air Natloaal Guard
to an unofftclal bowHn1 tournament
in Nashville. Tenn.
In a letter, the Gea,ral Accountlnt
Office urted Detenae Secretary
Caspar W. Welnber1er to have the
chief of the National Guard Bureau:
-"lnvesUgate the clrcumatance1
surroundine the lli1hts In question.
·-
Bureau DOUcy
-"!Mk reimbursement, where
appropriate, from lhoae puND••n
who were OD UDIUthorized flllhtl to
and from tbe NHhvllle bowlln1
toumame.-t.
-"Arrao1e for periodic lnternal
audlll of the UH of aircraft to
transport pasaen1era to and from
sporting events. Auditors ahould ar-
range to visit the sites of widely at·
tended sporting events."
-
or retired air 1uard1men but not
aancllooed by t.be Penta1on.
The COit of the ruihta to the IOV·
ernment wu ut. at ttot,2'0.
Two round trips were made to
Nashville from Cbicaio; Charlotte,
N .C.; Wilmington, Del.; Milwaukee;
Suffolk County, N. Y., and Willow
Grove, Pa. One round trip apiece
from Minneapolla, Minn.; Hayward,
Calif.; Van Nuys, Calif.; Cheyenne,
Wyo.; Great Falla, Mont., and St.
Joseph, Mo., were made, the GAO
aald.
quealloned the need for and relaUve
value of the tralnln1 provided," tbe
GAO aald.
In hia letter to Welnber1er, GAO
official D.L. Scantlebury included
copies of memoranda last fall
between then-Aulatant Defense
Secretary Robert 8 . Pirie Jr., and
Lt. Gen. La Vern E. Weber, chief of
the National Guard Bureau.
Pirie said the bowUn1 nilhta ap·
peared to be "a flagrant violation" of
resulaliona and asked for a report on
whatwouldbedone. ·
" -"Issue formal reprimands to
It those who authorized the fli&hta con·
trary to Defense and NaUonal Guard
GAO lnveatleaton determined 11
Air National Guard planes and one
Air Force Reserve plane were used
for 18 round·trip flighll carrylnt 431
paasen1ers lo the bowlln1 tourna·
ment, an event open only to active
Tralnlng waa cited as justification
for 11 or the 18 ru1bt.s.
"Based on additional information
obtained on some or those fiights, we
In his reaponse, Weber said he
shared Pirie's concern over proper
use or aircralt and that the aituation
was under review.
'LIMITED QUANTITIES • NO RAINCBECKS
I-Gallon Plants
•Sale $ }97 reg. s299
include. seranimume, daieiee, mar~erite
and pelarwoniwm
Umited to atock on hand
Steer Manure
Only 88c reg. s1 49
300 b981only
One Man Inflatable Boat
$}}97 Special
24 only
SPECIAL ·-
Beach Cruiser
s9999
SO only
All other bike.a in etock
15% rq. price
Beach Chairs
Sale $544 reg. 869 7
50 Only
Beach Towels
Sale s3ss reg. •549
40 Only
31/2 H.P. Side
Discharge Mower
sale
s12991
12 Only
reg. '16999
Other mowen
u low aa •89•1
: * * COUPON * * : * April 25 only Jt • • : Hot Dog and Pepsi : .. ..
: 50c !
it 10-3 PM it
it • . .. ********COUPON****••***
WAVESTM
s11 oo
Men's Knit KleenexPaper Towels s/s shirts 100 count 2-ply
reg. 11~20.
96 Only
Canvas Handbags
Sale$ 3oo reg. s511
24 Only
2 for 1 1°0
Limit I 6
SPECIAL
Pepsi $} 59
6 pack.. 12 oz. can -Limit 2 6-packs
~G~A~R~D~E~N~S~~~O~P~~~T~~~~~S~~~~~~~~~~~~O~N~S~~~~ ~~FA ................. 23997
:n.~t PLANTS .......... I 2/' 1.00 ::N'S :i9ft'~s SHIRTS ............... 600 r~ i~:·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 2999
: 1----------------
10 -26.99 1588 CWTRES HAMPER (Pffn) ...... .
100 -Special
.KITCHEN TOWEL'i ............. 66c
~DO~;~~~~S . . . . . . . . . . . ...• 397 :.kN.;it~~NEL PAJAMAS ........... 6°0 ~~SET · ..................... 399
9
7 DRAPERIES AND
8-1T8H9·R9
0
9 !,112M0H!,·ER 15997 ~EtE~~THTUBESOCKS ......... 497 OWLTABLES .................... 199 t----C_AR __ P_E_T_I_N_G ___ _
SIDE w w · ·· · · · · · · 3997 1997 15 -'100-'135 5000 · 250 -l.9918x22.. 99 6 -199.99 Portabl,.T~n Burn.-r 159 9 7 MEN'S FALL SUITS . . . . . . . . . . . . . DIRECTORS CHAIR . . . . . . .. · · · SCATTER RUGS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . c
GAS GRILLE .... . . . . . . . . . 35 -•32 Mi.st>• S/ } 000 449.99 29997 .i8 -2.00
2 -199.99 12· 16997 TERRYCLOTH LOUNGERS ......... c399oNTE99MPORARY SOFA .··.·.·.. CHAIR PADS .................. 1.00
POOL PACKAGE ... · · .. · · · · · · 12 ,,. •500 · 27997 100 2 00 -.... 00 CONTEMPORARY W~EAT . . . - . 1 00 15% olf all pool accf'Hori.-11 MISSES SLIPPERS ................... 2 TOSS PILLOWS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •
3 -229.99 31,ii H.P. 18997 48 -Special MiHf"ll 388 OME IMPROVEMEN 30 -1.39 Multi-color 7 5 REAR BAGGER MOWER . . . . . . . . PEASANT TOPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H T SCATTER RUGS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . c ~J5:.\~G~~ :~M:R .......... 21997 ~oa:·ZU'~~sw ................... 2°0 .. 1_5 __ -1,-.-8-8_B_a-.. -,.ry-~--ra-tec1-----9-9-7--1 ~R-P~L9iows ...................... 3 88
200 -13.99 50 Ft. 997 65 12 99 SMOKE ALARM · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 35 -18 99
GARDEN ROSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MEN'S WESTERN SIDRTS ........... 9 97 500 -1.69 109 BED WT ......................... 1188
10 -49.99 3997 72 -11.97 897 PROPANE TANK ..................... 72 -Spedal 200
UTILE BARBEQUE ............ . MEN'S DENIM JEANS................. 40 -49.99 3/8" 3488 ASSORTED PANELS ................ .
25 34 99 16 inch · 4 97 Wra~ler and Tnu Style Weetern Boob VSR DRILL · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 100 -69~
30 TRICYCLE : ........................ 2 25% off the regalar price. 4 -69.99 Wet/Dry 4888 • DISCONTINUED TILE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . c AU other~~-and -m aets .,__ ______________ __.SHOP VAC OUTFIT · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · F 8 99 r
... ~ PJJ 9 179 99 10 D 200 t. -• t. 400/ 15%orldM"r~larprice. MAJOR ,APPUANCES TOOLCHEST ... r~~~~ ........... .12488 ~~~~=!!~~·50%~rit~·~·· lar h.
8 -Special 3 88 1--=:=~::o::"'!':'=~::-;"""~~~~'7!---------------, 4 -349.99 1.5 cu. rt. 29988 FOLDING DOOR ................ ····· TELEVISION, S
MICROWAVE OVEN .............. 5 -99.99 4988 VACUUMS SPORTING GOODS 3 -519.99 33987 nRESCREENS .............. : .... . ----------------t 30" GAS RANGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 -24.95 lnaulate-d 128 8 1 _ 7 Cycle 88 ATTIC DOORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1000 -Special 1 50
AUTOMATIC WASHER ........... 299 Sq. 159.99 13997 3 B1tNK9~A)s;~~PTAPES ..... .
1 -339,99 4 Cycle 87 EVAPORATIVE COOLER ········ I -39. nc or1. 9988
GAS DRYER ..................... 269 Beg. 359.99 27997 BLACK a WHITE T.V ............. .
5 -649.99 21 cu. rt. I 49988 EVAPORATIVE COOLER ........ ~oJ:9:.:. ~~·l·n·c·~ ~~: ......... 24988
REFRIGERATOR ················· 1 -379.99 7 Cycle 29997 1 -449.99 19 Inch Port. 33988
l -599.99 16 cu. rt. 42987 EVAPORATIVE COOi.ER. · · · · · · COWR T.V ..................... .
REFRIGERATOR .... ············· 1 -699.99 25 Inch
459
88
2 -669.99 18 cu. rt. 45987 FINE JEWELRY CONSOLE T.V ................... .
REFRIGERATOR .. ··············· ....._---------------t 1 -899.99 25 Inch 69988
3 -559.99 16 cu. It. 44988 12 -Special Selection 7988 REMOTE CONSOLE T .V ......... .
REFRIGERATOR ................. 10 KABAT DIAMOND RING · · · · · · · · 1 -999.99 25 Inch 84988
3 -719.99 21 cu. rt. 59988 §pedal Selection 588 REMOTE CONSOLE T.V ......... .
REFRIGERATOR BA Tl'ERY OPERA TED CLOCK · · · · · · · 1 329 99 . . . .... .. .. .. . . . . -• 28988 25-50% oil Gold filled and CONSOLE STEREO ............. . ' I t---------------t, ----~.:F~lJRNI:,:~,:TIJRE.:..:::.==---r--1Sriter;r~UngruSr,llvr;:e;rr;Ea~rri~ni•~· ~----, 1 -299.99 Stereo 25988 • AUTO ACCESSORIES ·-HOUSEWARES COMPONENTPACKAGE ........ .
2 -369.99 Stereo 26988 129.99 -Y-..rCJaoice 7997 & DOMESTICS COMPONENT PACKAGE ........ .
SELECT TABLES ........... ···· .. · 1----------------t 2-399.99Ste~ 32488 ~!9n~ S~G ........... · ........ 9997 ~~9C~N:2. ~~· ..... : ........... 1299 COMPONENT PACKAGE ........ .
449.97 -7 Pe. 3 4991 8 -66.99 7 Pe. 34as t..1u2i~~ ACUUM ............. 14988
DININGBOOMSET ............. (UJBALUMINVM ................. 1-249.95 15988 :90:i~~c.RT ................. 29991 M;K 2i..=P8 ..................... } 24.ft .UPRIGHT VACUUM ............ ! .
199.99 . 13997 10 -R94J. 24.50 -Oneida 1888 2 -229.95 8eU Propelled 18988 VELVET SWIVEL ROCKER . . . . . . . 5 Pe. eosnss SET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UPRIGHT v ACUUM .........•...
'
19 -119.99 9991 MOTOCROSS BIKES ............... .
18 -37.99 4 Lb. 1897 SLEEPING BAG ................... .
30 -Special Coleman 2488
PROPANE LANTERN .............. .
50 -89.99 7x7 44 97 PACK TENT ...................... .
12 -129.99 7 497 EXERCISE BENCH ................ .
~.~~~~~4. ~~: ... ' .............. 3997
:u:~rcLE ....................... 749 7
6 -599.00 29900 IMPERIAL MOPED .............. .
38 -21.99 Portable I SSS AIR COMPRESSOR ................ .
S2 -26.99 2188 AUl'O VACUUM .................. .
~~·:tri ~~· ..................... 7as
t .
\
\
A ghost from the past is this 1937 chain gang in Bibb County. Ga .. abolished 40 years ago along with the lash and the rock quarry
Georgia's hell-hole horrors slowly corrected
ATLANTA <AP) The lash Is
gone. The chain gang was
abolished 40 years ago. The rock
quarry prison, wh~re ang_ry
prisoners turned sledge ham-
mers on their own le&s a
quarter-century ago. turns out
vocational training instead of
crushed rock.
The most obvious horrors
have vanished in the decades
since Georgia's hell hole prisons
burst into newspaper headlines
and flamed across movie
screens to focus a burning. na·
t1onal outrage upon the state.
Rut today. Georgia prisons
still are far from models and ring
with echoes of past neglect.
ONLY THE S TRICT in ·
s1stence of a fedrral court has
moved the state to begm un·
dcrtakmg a scnes of reforms
that stand to ~ the most far-
re ac hing ever for a prison
system on ce cons idered the
most notorious 1n the land.
Among the reforms:
No more huge prisons hous-
ing 2,000 inmates such as the
sla t e's largest and m ost
dangerous. Re1dsv11le Future
prisons will be limited to 500 or
600
New prisons will be bu.ill in
urban end suburblln areas. They
had been placed in backwater
hamlets where lhe labor pool
was composed chiefly or rural
whites who were hired to guard
a prison population or mostly
urban blacks.
The state 1s remodeling the
specter that is Reidsville. rip·
ping o ut dormitory walls ,
sandblasting the interior and
building rows of sirl gle cells
watched over by central guard
stations
GEORGIA . DESPITE its
piecemeal attempts at reform in
the past, holds more prisoners
per 100,000 population than any
state m the country. in prisons
which are underfunded. un·
dcrstaffed and. in some cases.
ovl'rcrowded
Racial t urbulrnce lingers.
physical violence 1s common;
medical treatment 1s uneven:
r e habilitation 1s limited and
guard morale problems boiled
up into a work stoppage at
Reidsville last year
All the problems o f the
system. and many of the steps at
reform. come to bear al
Reidsville. a fortress that rises
suddenly from the sun-baked
plains of southeast Georgia.
"Reidsville's always been the
focal point of the system. It's
always been the major facility.
It's always been the major
problem. It was always too big.
We had the worst of the worst in·
mates It was greatly over-
crowded and greatly neglected."
SO SAYS DAVID C. Evans. a
o netime state budget analyst
who became Commissioner of
Offender Rehabilitation on the
same November day an 1976 that
a bloody race riot at Reidsville
left three inmates dead and 15
m;ured. He was the third com-
missioner in six years
The system he inherited was
beset by racial tension behind
the bars and by overcrowding •
The roots lay in the early
1970s. when state computers
were still signalling a downward
trend in prison population. So
the administration of then-Gov.
Jimmy Carter brought a halt to
prison construction.
The computer signal was faul-
ty The prison population shot
upward in Georgia and most
other states, and the state Board
of Pardons and Paroles was
forced to release hundreds of
prisoners early so that room
could be made for new arrivals.
At one point. prison guards
were jamming 80 to 85 prisoners
into dormitories built for half
that number with only four
toilets and four shower heads. a
former prison official recalls.
A SYSTEM THAT held 8,216
prisoners in ,July 1972 ballooned
to 12,000 by 1980, earning
Georgia the distinction of in-
carcerating more prisoners than
any other state 256 7 per
100.000 population.
State officials rushed a special
appr opriations bill through the
General Assembly to add six
prisons and renovate four others
at an eventual cost of about $100
million.
They turned to probation as a
means of cuttmg the prison
population and hired additioncil
probation officers. The number
or people on probation increased
from 19,000 in 1972 to 38,000.
The pe.rcenlage of offenders
given probationary sentences.
and thus kept out of prison
altogether, rose from 43 percent
in 1975 to 56 percent in 1979
Another blow came from
a federal court suit that attract-
ed lltUe notice among the dozens
routinely filed by inmates.
It became known as the
"Guthrie" suit -named for a
convicted murderer serving
time in Reidsville -and
evolved into a complex civil
rights case that brought full de-
se~ regation to the prison at
Reidsville.
White and black inmates had
been confined at Reidsville for
years but separately At the
start of the 1970s. blacks out-
numbered whites by 6-0 percent.
and a growing sense or black
militancy -e:itpressed in pic-
tures of the Soledad brothers
a nd Angela Davis on cell walls
pervaded the prison
There were periodic outbreaks
of violence when the suit led to
full desegregation an 1974,
culminating in the 1976 riot when
Evans became commissioner
and in a subsequent riot in 1978.
which also claimed the life of a
guard
The court responded with an
order lo segregate the pnson for
a cooling-off period, and then or-
dered it integrated again.
In the process l ' S Dis -
tract Judge Anthony A Alaupo
of Brunswic k i ss ued or-
ders banning racial d15tnmma-
tion. requiring guards to JUSlsfy
any use of force. compelling
drastic improvements 1n li ving
cond1t1ons for prisoners. a nd or-
der 1 n g the s tate to spend
millions of dollars converting
Reidsville from dormitory-type
housing to single cells.
With no remaining options. the
state began responding and the
taming of Reidsville. 1f not an
accomphshed fact. at least 1s un·
der way
When $46 m1lhon in construe·
lion work is completed. the state
plans to move lo a new manage-
mentsystcm for the facility
The setond step complies "'ilh
lhe policy outlined hy Go\'
George Busbee.
"There <ire lo be no more
2.000 man snsl1tut1ons "'here
men are treated as part of an
overwhelming mass of unkno"''ll
and dangerous individuals."
Busbee says. "All new prisons
are to have capac:1t1es of no
more than 500 lo 600 offenders.
which should insure that offen-
ders do not get pushed off the
side"
I"
' AVAST 111ERE. LVBBE&: In aU the years yow:
falt.bful correspondent hu hun1 aroun4 tile oeem
Iron~ rve developed two special interests tn boatl.
One ~ lf I'm oo lt and the other 1111 I'm lootln1 at lt.
U I'm on it, I am very interested ln the fact that
it doesn't leak.
If I'm lookins at fu) it, I want it to be pre-·
~-·~ . My persona I b'
yacht meets both of· MURPHllll .ireA't'. these demands. She's Ill n '~ ~~ I l a pretty thing sitting _______ .... _...__
there, leaning up
against the garage wall. Most important, it doesn't
leak when I'm in it because I hardly am. Upon rare
occasions when we plan a sailing trip, I can almost
always talk one of the youngsters into doing the row·
ing. Uthe youngster does tbe rowing, then there isn't
room to get me in the boat. ·
Therefore, no worries about leaking.
AS FOR PEOPLE who llke to get into the boats,
this coming Saturday marks the weekend that really
is. It's the annual Newport Harbor to Ensenada
yacht race. Six zillion yachts will be out there, all
trying to get across the starting line at the same
time.
They should make a marvelous vista for. sailboat
lovers lining our shoreline from Newport to San
Clemente. Unless, that is, all the yachtsmen decide
to sail straight out to sea in order lo capture favora-
ble breezes. Or the fog rolls in. Or they call off the
race for lack of interest.
This has pever happened.
;rhe esteemed boating editor of this sterling
ThegoodahipEgabrag anchored.off CcutnoPoint.Catalinallland
journal, Al Lockabey, gets pretty excited about this
race every year . I've never really understood why.
lt always ends the same way.
ONE BOAT WINS. All the rest lose.
Anyway, I try hard to please Al Lockabey by
studying up on boats so I can tell the difference
between ketch-rigged yawls, yawl·rigged ketches,
twin cat amarans and double-ended bellybusters.
Why only today, I was scanning through the
Avalon newspaper . the Catalina Islander , and the
picture of this unique-looking vessel dominated one
page. The caption beneath the photo explained that
this particular King of the Sea was the "Egabrag," a
frequent visitor to Catalina Island. When photo-
g r aphed, the Egabrag was anchored off Casino
Point.
I studied her low-slung stern, her silhouette im-
age, her bow·heavy cabin structure. I wondered how
our esteemed boating editor would classify such a
unique vessel?
BUT THEN l READ ON. l learned from the cap-
tion that the vessel's name ''Egabrag" is Garbage,
spelled backward.
Egabrag is a garbage scow.
"It is returning to American waters after spend-
ing several weeks in the Republic of Panama," the
caption writer explained.
Republic of Panama? What's going on here?
ONCE UPON A TIME around here, we already
had more garbage than we knew what to do with.
Now we're importing it?
Well anyway, no sense studying this yacht in any
detail. I really don't think Egabrag will be compet-
ing in the Ensenada race.
Her fumes might cause that first cancellation.
CRITIC -Loui84 Kennedy, ·
wife of former hoa.teg'e
Morehead C. Kennedy, told
some news executives tbia
week that many of their
methods for covering major
events like the Iran hostaee
story were "time wasting
and exhausting." She said,
for instance, that many
hostage families received
phone calls with the same
questions from people work-
ing for the same organiza-
tion . She spoke in
Wa~hington, D.C.
11 classes ·
offered
in CPR
Coastline Community College
will offer 11 nine-hour classes in
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
<CP R > at various locations dur·
ing May.
The class is designed to train
individuals in the techniques of
CPR and obstructed airway
maneuver to sustain life until
medical help arrives.
Upon completion of the class,
participants are certified in ac-
cordance with the standards or
the American Heart Association
and the American Red Cross.
Advance registration is ad·
vised as enrollment is limit ed.
The following is a listing of
d ate, time, and location of the
classes:
M•Y '· • • ....i 11 from S JO to I JO p.m. •I Bell Pl.,.. c:.omp.ny, ~ 1rvlM Aft ,*-'
8 e..:f\.
-~Y•-1 lrom n .JOIO' p"' M " ..........
St•I• HO$C>IUI, 2501 H•l't)or 81Vd • Cost. -t,Uy • tnwn I • m. to s p "'· et Or-eo.t
YMCA, 2300 Vnher\lty Of., ... wpor\ e .. cl\. t,Uy 12 end 1' from 4:30 tot p.m. et McDon-
nell °""91• A•troneulk •, Bulldlnt IJ.1, SJ01 Bolw A.,.., Huntln9(on Beec:ll
-May 14 -tS tro.n I • m to 12.JO p.m. et Felrv1..,.. 5wt• Ho1C>lwl, 2501 H•rtior BIVll •• C.O.w
M41M -Mey 1' from I e.m. to S p.m et ,,,... VerOt
Lu rnl1>9 CMlt.,.. 2'tO Mew Ver Cle Drive ~'I.
Cotl•MH&
M•v 19, 2', -Jllfle 2 from 1 to 10 p,m •I
Gr .. nt>roo« ....,._,,.,. Auoc..,tlOft ci.--.
111n s.nw Joenen• St., F-••ln V•ll•Y·
-M•'r 1D -21 from_, to 4.JO p.m. •I
I' etrvlew Si.Le H05C>l1411, 1501 H•r110r BIVd., C.0.141 ~ ..
M•Y 1D, 27, etld J.,,.. l from I lo 10 p.m . •t
Ho•o HOlPH•I. JOI N•wPorl Blvo., '"-" 8••<" -M•Y JO from I •.m lo S p.m. •I Or-CoMt
YMCA, ?JOO Vnlftr\lty Or • COl141 ~ ...
AOOilo-1 1nlorm.tlon m.., lie OC>4411MCI l>y
c •lltn9 Bev BoyO •I Coutlln• Communoly
Coll999, 9'3-1044
Savings urged
SACRAMENTO <APJ -The
Senate tax committee has ap-
proved an $80 million biU that it
hopes will encourage people to
open or expand savings accounts.
The bill would let taxpayers take
a deduction of $200 for an in-
dividual or $400 for a married cou-
ple fo r Interest earned on savings
accounts
·$23,000 just to get by
: Labor Dept. says family of 4 needs $34 ,409 to live 'higher'
WASHING'{'ON <AP>-lt costs
· the average American fam\ly
· of four more than $23,000 a year
: juat to maintain a moderate
·· standard of living, the Bureau of
Labor Statistics says.
Tbe Labor Department said ~ that 4 family compris ing a
( husband, non-working wife and
> two children needa $23.134 ror an l "intermediate" standard of liv-~ ing, ba.sedoo last fall's prices. f That was up 12.8 percent
: from an estimated $20,517
~ needed the year before.
. THE DEPARTMENT alao
; calculated that an American
• family of four would need $34,409 i a year to maintain a "higher" ! standard of Uvtne. up 13.S per·
; cent from $30,317 a year a10. i Tbe family would need $14,044 to
• nialntaln a ••Jower" living stan-j dard, up 11.6 per~ent from
: Sl2,S8S a year aeo. ·
: The bureau surveyed 25 m~r
: cl U ea . It s b o w • 'd tti a t
E Anchoraie. Hollolulu, Boeton1 : New York and t.be District or
Columbia are the co1Ute1t
plaC!'ea (or a f amUy or fO\b' to
maintain a modera.t.e 1taDdai'd
o( llvl.Df.
Tb• atudy at the ''In·
termediate" lev.l 1boWed \t cOlt
, the hY'POtbetlcal famu; ol tour fU,ti2· 'lo-eaAaUin that
modente IWIDI ln Aac:boteili.
Sucb • ,__~ needed '29,tll••
)'Hr In Honolulu, •21 ,02t bt
Bolton. •.1• in New Yort, aod
$25,203 in Washington, the na·
tton 's capital.
THE HO\JSEHOLD budget
dollar went further, the study
showed, in Dallas, $20.766;
Atlanta . $21 ,131 ; Houston,
$21 ,572 and St. Louis, $22,248.
Annual family budeets needed
for a "higher'' standard are Jed
by HonoluJu, at $44,396, followed
by Anchora1e, $42,125; New
York, "2,7~; Boston, $41,306.
and District or Columbia,
$37 ,398. Dallas r equires the
s mallest budget , $30 , 771,
followed 'by Atlanta, $31,229;
Houston, $31,519 and Cincinnati,
$32,353.
A... For a "Jower'' standard of Uv-
1µ1, a family needa the most
money in Anchorage, $20,987;
Honolulu, SJS,480; San Fran-
cisco-Oakland, $15,735; Seattle·
Everett, Wash., $15,384, and
Washington, D.C., $15,392.
Li/ e expeCtancy ,
drogS 3Y2 months
NEW YORK (AP) -
American life eJtpectancy has
fallen for the flnt t.lm• alru!e
1181, an inaurance compJny re· port~. It Hid an Americur born
in t• can antlclpate Uvln1 73.8
YHrt, or about 3~ months less lban one bom in im.
and 74.7 for her 10-year old sla-
ter)
Tbe fl•urea, compiled by
Metropolitan Llfe lnlurance Co.,
cannot be rtad .. teptaenUna •
trend, said Fredert~ Seltzer,
head ot the company'• tt.8U.tica
bureau.
MEW
SRI NETS Once In A
Lifetime
O~portunityr
Some Items
Below CostJ . SJ99" FIOM .
NEW & USED
PIANOS &
ORGANS
Choose From
~ai, Kimball,
Hammond,
Wurlitzer.
Currier.~
Thomas·Vox.
MEW
HAWAI
GRANDS
4 Otlly
PRICES SLASHED!.
••
NEW THOMAS-VOX
ORGANS
FROM
539999
Ol'tER NEW AMO USED -UPTO
\. YiOFFI
BRIMHALL MUSIC CO.
3 9 4 I b South Bristol, Santa Ana • Phone 7 5 I • I I 2 I
Accross tr.. SOMlll Coast Plaza • M..-conter of S.ltflower & lri1tol
\
Pearl Jewelry Caravan
Save 40%
Save 40o/o
on entire
stock of lustrous
pearl jewelry.
Select from earrings,
fine cultured pearl
necklaces and rings.
Sales prices efffctive
Aprn 25th to M'y 10th.
Sp~ial 5. ~9 .
OIAR ANN LANDE1\S.: How 1J\ the workl
do I de-1 With lhla? It ta ktpin1 me. I r6-tl your ~lumn every day looltln1 for a 1ollJ6oG t
bou1ht your Ency~lopedla. t have aone to
counselors. I have t1llce4 wtlh cleraymen. (Our
teen-a1er refuses to 10. > I have found no belp
for ollr family or our daughter, who ls the
prob~m. .
• have evldence that 1be ts uslng drugs. She
says everythln& is just flne with her life. She ls
perfecUy satisfied wjth \hings as they are and
says that 1 must be null to be runnlnl all over"
lookin1 for "help."
For&ive me it 1 sound incoherent, but a dear
friend of mine it tn the depths of despair -and
J can see myself in her plac4!. Her teen-age son
shot himself yesterday and died. Of coune. he
was involved with drugs . Last year our
neighbor's daughter did the ume t"1n1.
There must be som ething 1 can do. There
I ~ew research
reenter opens
UC Irvine has opened a health research center m
;the Centerpointe commercial comple_x m Irvine.
. Call ed the Southern Occupattonal Hea lth
!Center, the facility was established to train health
iprofessionals, conduct occupational health re
sear ch, provide patient services and store a re
;positor y of information about ha zardous t •. che,rni cals. ! The state-supported institution is to serve as a
'community resource for dO<!lors. corporate medical
• ·directors. workers· com pensation admm1strators
and lawmakers interested in occupational medicine.
•said a UC I spokeswoman.
. The one-story facility at l9722 MacArthur Bl vd
houses a referral chnic, fa culty and staff offices.
;analytical chemistry laboratones and research
'facilities in industrial hygiene, occupat1on<1l health
• engrneenng and \.\-orkphysiology
As part of its outreach program, the cente r prn
vides services suC'h as consultation lo occupational
health phys1c1ans and nurses. consultation in occupa
lional health engmt•enng. examin ation of workers
\\ ith potential ocrupallona 1 disease. C'valuat1on of the
work envi ronment 3nd a resource center for books.
bas to be a way to Jet pe•ce in lbls family.
Believe me, every day is torture.
My h"'8band an" 1 are good Christian peo-
ple. I don't know what we have done to ca~e
our child to turn out like this. Where wlll lt all
end? Rlght now I can identUy with the Biblical
character wno cried, "My God ... my God ...
wby t)ave you forsaken me'>" -A MOTHEH IN
PENNSYLVANIA
Dear Mother:· First, let me &ell you, God
has not forsaken you. Tbe probJem you are bav·
Ing with your teen.ager la Dot .a punbbment
: 1 Journals and nt>w-;le tters pertaining to otcupat1onal Center to tram professionals
: •health
! ~;Fish group needs aides
... : ..
·:
I
The Fish Organ1zal1on 1s in net·d of male or
·: female volunlC'crs 1,4l deliver mobile mt>als lo shut '. :: ins or to drive the elderly to doctor appointments
Mileage will be reimbursed Call 642 6060 for in
formation
l wHO NEEDS YOU?
The Voluntary Action Center can provide con•
taclll for volunteers needed in the following areas~
Children in day care centers need e,xtra hands
l<1 hi:' Ip .rnd <"'l'.trd Ill\ t' from \OluntC'ers
Suriilus ><irn c·an be luml•d into laprobes b)
\'OluntC'(•rs working at home Call to donate
Clenc·;,tl help 1!> needed in several agencies in
Orangl' Count~
:\lan·h or Dimes needs Spt>akers to te ll groups
Jnd organt:t1:1t1ons about their work.
Travl:'ll'rs Aid in Westminster needs anyone
w1 1llng to give a Cew hours a week to belp
transients "'1th food and lodgmg
Interes~d volunteers should call the Volun-
tar\• AC'llon Cente r at 898-0043 for more lnforma·
twn ahuut an~ of thl· above opportunities
Officers slate chili cook off
Anyone who fC1 ncies him or herself a chili chl'f
may apply to compete i11 the Huntington Beach
Pohce Officers Association Ch1h Cookoff June 13
and 14 an Huntington Beach
Sanctioned by the lntemataonal Ch1h Society.
the cookoff winners will proceed to the Cali fornia
State Champ1onsh1ps later in the summer
Entry fee 1i. $25 \.\h1ch allows a h\e person
OCC offers Paris
and credits, too
Students of French can improve their
language skills and enjoy a vacation with a fit'ld
study course orferf'd by Orange Coast College this
s ummer
A no-frills month m Pans "'111 include three
classes Cl week with free time lo sightsee to learn
cultural and histon c3l facts about France
Susannah Antink will teach the courSl'. which
costs Sl.625 for roundtrip airfa re. pnvate accom
modat1ons and two meals a day
Registration deadline 1s Ma) JO and interested
s tudents can call the OOP OCC Field Studies Of
fice at 556-5693
Italian film slated
Vittorio de S1ca's classic glimpse of Italian
culture, "Marriage, ltahan Style," screens May 8
al 7 : 30 p m in Room 313 of the Saddleback
College Main Campus Science/Math building.
The rilm, s ponsored by the co llege 's
Humanities and Languages Division. 1s m Italian
with Englis~ subtitles, according to Saddleback
Ita li an language instructor lrt>ne Jones
le<1m to (•nter J\dd1t1onal badges may be
purchast•d for SS. <1llo"'i ng entry lo the cookoff
This Sunlla~ mt>mbers of the Huntington Beach
Polin• Dt•partment will compete to see who will
represt'nt ttw llAPD in the .June cookoff
Fur more information call Ron Mitre at
962 9597 or 968-9690
They'll give 'posswn
his own momunem
WAl 'SAl', ~·1 ... t AP J You could call it the
annual Choclav. hatl'hee Broadsm1le Possum Au e
tum cmd Cookoff Out selling. cooking and eating
1m:-.'>om-. of tht• broadsmilt• hreed is not the only
purpOl'>l' of the t:\"Cnt
M ~tly, peopll' ~ath er at the lnternat1onal
Possum F:xpositwn and Auction in this Florida
PanhC1ntlll• town each summer simply to celebrate
the s1>t•c1cs while <''<Changing recipes
This ~ t'ar. th<') also hope to erect a possum
monuml•nt
"'Wt• atkno"' ll•dge a debt of gratitude to the
possum.' Dallon Carter. chairman of Wausau's
Funda~ Possum Festival .. Their presence helped
assure thl• survival of some of our early settlers
and pro\ 1ded a nou n shmg food s upply for the
area's hard pr<'Ssed Jobless during lhe Great
Deprl's~ion of the 1930s ...
A Ire adv, Sl.200 has been collectf"d tor a
monument· The Fundav fest kicked in Sl.000
from last year's possum auction. and Carter's
group l'Xpects this summt•r's auction to fatten the
fund
Monl'y from the possum festivals normally go
into the community developmentfund.
,j , p,,,,. \1>111 1 'im1 t' IC)() { ----------------......
RUFFELL'S
UPttpLSTUY
~ ...... ..._.. ......
1912 HAHOl ILVD.
COSTA MISA-14 .. 1116
Johnston &. Murphy
AFTE,A HOURS ore eoreUy
aofted of eof1 rjqv• t.other,
wlt+.f\I~~
~ The t0ft podded
nole provides wollr.9
comfort ii' Bone. Novy
and Ton.
N -~ .. ll·lt •.m .. 11.11 ........ _ ...........
rroaa God. llo1'8ver, I ca• &ell )'Oii dlat uver la
&lie U nan I've ~ rlU..f till• colu.•• 111,,e I recelnct so maay ltUen rroe u1ut1Jaed
pare.ta who are Hlf•rt.1 die 11me a,.aJet you
deacntte. The oeUoa th& you bave "doae
tometblai" to cieltl'Ve Wt pala la DOllM'llte.
Thete IS help ror. you, alld I 1haU delcr1be It
lb de&all ln my column teWuled for Moaday,
April %7, In fact, I llave devoted tbe entire col·
uma co tbe problell\ amd a liollldoa. Tbe re11on I
caaa°' na It today 11 bffaue diere would aot be
room for dial letter aad &lab 0¥. too.
Haag la Ulen and doa't cle1palr. Bluebltdl
will •Jill a1at.. Truet me.
DEAR AN,. LANDERS: In a recent column
you advised a reader, "If your husband is con-
tinually late, leave without him -even if it
mean15 aomeooe will have to take a bus or a
taxi. So wti_at?"
That response irritated me so that I had to
write to you and complain. I am not upset tb1t
people do keep OM another waltln& <and lt
always seems to be the aame on~ who la11>, but
your ignorance about rural Arrt~rica le ahock·
Ing.
I Uve in a remote comtr of Maine. No one
around here has seen &JlYlhiftl reaemblln1 a bwi
or a taxi since the stagecoach dilappeared. I do
like much of what ygu write. but this reference
was a specific example or how half the people ln
the world have no idea how the other half Uve.
It 1oes beyond the mode of transportation. It In-
volves the lifestyle of the rich, the middle-class
and the poor . I hope you will accept this
criticism in the spirit intended We all need lo
eliminate the narrowness or our lives. -A
BRIDGTON OBSERVER
Dear Brldg: I am guilty 11 charged. How
rlght you are! Thank you for hauling me up
short. I needed Ulal.
Cancer: Smell the flowers
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1981
By SVDNEYOMARR
ARIES <Mar. 21 Apr. 19> ·Cards are on table -
fa ce up. You learn where you stand and what to do
a bout it. Focus on career . a mbitions, relations with
"authority fi gure " Assignment is c larified
Aqua n us. Scorpio. Leo natives play key roles
TAURUS <Apr 20 May 201 Emphasize com-
munication you'll bridge distance. social and
language barriers. Relations hip gets on a more
"practical" level Imprint style Telephone call
could set your heart aflutter! Gemini. Vi rgo, Sagil
ta rius natives figure prominent I)
GEMINI (May 21 -June 201: Make concession to
family member Ht:at•h out for understand1n~. com
panionsh1p llighltght diplomacv Accent on credit
cards. mtl'rest rates and money d1scuss1ons You 'll
get tuxur) item wh1rh beautifies surroundin ~s
CAN('f:R 1June 21 July 221: Go stow enough lo
··smell the fl owers .. Define terms , meanings
steer clear of sch<.·mes. nefarious "characters ..
Focus on public1l~. partnerships. legal maneuvers
and marital ~lalu.'> Pisces and another Cancer pla~
ke~ roh.'s
· LEO <Jul)23 J\ug 22 1.Conlaclsmadev1awork.
hobby. !>JX!c1al 1nten•sls will now pay dividends You
ffil•et challt•nge and t·ml:'rge v1t'tonous Mont'). pro
motion ;ind Jen l' dominate personal sct'nano
Capncom. l'ann•r persons figure prominently
VIRGO 1 Aug 23 Sept 221 Important task, pro
tl'tt i!> completed Arit's aids tause Emphasis on
emottonal responses. affection , debts that are re
p:.11d . rom•rnte In matters of spetulat1on. sti ck \.\ ith
num~r9 Popularity increases
LIBRA 1Sepl 23 Oct 221 Nt>"' startstrl'ngthens
position. Take chance on your own abilities. talents
Creative reso4)'ces s urge forward Property. securi
ty. Ca mily relationships command spotlight Leo.
Aquarius natives C1gure prominently
SCORPIO <Oct 23-Nov 211 Ideas chck and
combine with intu1t1on Relallvl' in transit com·
municales in vestm('nt opportunity Cancer.
HOROSCOPE
Capritom. Aquanu!> nall\es figure prominently
Ml•mber of oppos1t<.' sex l'Xpresses feelings an
"'touching ·manner
SAGITl'ARJUS 1 Nov. 22-Dt•c• 21 I : Focus on in
l'Ome. valuabl<>s. s pt•c·ial ee1lls tommun i<•a tions
You rec'l'l\'e "unusu:.il" 1nv1tC1t1on Perso11at hon zons
<•xpC1nd You locall' \.\-h:.il had bN•n lost or stolen
(;<'m an11s In\ ol ved (iood monc•y ne"'s '
CAPRICORN I Dl•t 22-Jan. 191 : Past mistakes
and manv dl•bts \\ 1 ll be t•rast•d Folio\.\ through
on mit1al 1mpn•ss10ns Trust yourself' Timing. inner
feelings <ff<.' on targl•t Populant) ancreasl'S. people
J re eager to hear ~o~r views
AQUARll'S tJ an.20-Feb 181 Analyzt'informa
tum receivl'd from confidential sources Somt•one 1s
tr) ing to tt•ll ~ ou something Knov. 1t. respond ac
c·ordingl) Gl•mmi. Virgo. Sag1ttanus nat1\es figure
prominently !\1em bc•r of opposite· st•x arlH·ulates
feelings lk rcceptiv1 ·
PIS('t-:S 1Feb. HI !\1ar 20 l Surpnsepc.trtyor g1ft
domtnale!> agenda Famtl~ m<•mlwrs an· 1nvol\ed
and harmon) repl,H"<''> ren·nt d1ssenswn Taurus.
l.1 bra natl\ 1•s f1~urc· prominently Ac·cl·nt on des1rt's.
hopt'S. w1sh<•s and i.:ood nc·v. s c·om·t•rning ca reC"r
Winter brings colds, flu
Q UESTION: I have always wondered why I get
more colds in the winter Can you help me?
ANSWER: It 1s true that colds and flu are far
more frequent in the wjnter months The word "'in·
fluenza" comes from the Italian "influenza di
freda." meaning "influenceoflhe cold .··
Manlund has long been aware that cold air
brings with 1t s ickness The reason 1s that the germs
<v1ruses1 that cause these ailments are most active
m winterish temperatures
When 1t is warm tor very coldl the germs are m
act1 \ al(•d
In Arctic areas. where people are '"frozen m" Cor
the winter. the cold and flu viruses are paralyzed.
In the SJ?ring, when the ice thaws, the germs
again become active and the infections begin
Another factor"' h1ch contnbutes to the problem
1s that many homes are overheated The high heat
dries the mucous membranes of the respiratory
tract and mC1kes them less resistant to 1nvas1on by
germs
Keeping the the rmostat at 681s not only good for
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
energy conservation but will keep you and your fa mi
Iv healthier · While on the subject of colds. I would llke to state
that I hi ghly recommend the annual rtu shol. With all
the bad publicity the ~"'inc fh-' progra m received.
many people becam<' afraid of routine flu 1mmuniza
tion. The vC1ccines usl'd :.ire an no way related to the
swine flu vaC'cine. and are perfectly safe
Dr .luhn D Rose o pract1tumer in Seu.'JX)rt Beach
u.•elcomes 1murqU€stwns !Wail request~ In Ask the Doctor
f> () BoI 1560 Custa f\frso 92626
Post Office goof causes probkm
Due to an error by the post office in Santa
Ana, many ticket reservations for the prevue gala
of the Festival of Leaming and Performing have
been returned to senders
Chairman Mrs Edward Schumacher has
asked that anyone wishing to attend the part~.
* MOWOPIH•
Everything handmade or handcrahed
l•wttMI t wfhdpllows
COMSl~DESIGH
11>'1 w..ict1n Of s..... t02 ~ -
'4MJll
WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE
Complete women's heaJth care provided by
experienced board certified obstetricians
and gynecologtsts.
scheduled for Monday l'VPning at the South Coast
Rl'pertory ThC'atre in Costa Ml•sa rema1l resl'r va·
tions
More information JS "'ell a!. resen·at1ons can
be obtained bv t•alling Mrs SchumaC"her at
557 5661 or Mrs ·John Brenner at 543-0543
nancy's animal house
Keep your dog healthy
'J.'. with Science Diet pet food
;If: \ at our everyday low,
~~ · ~ '• ,,, low prices! •t \ . \ ~~' ,.: .~1,· *NOW JUST IN* J. '1
I ' I' . .( ·~ •
·,
1
• • •• • ~ Old English Sheepdog
: ... ' Cairn Terrier
Yorkshire Terrier
Lhasa Apso
Cocker Spaniel
• ' American Eskimo ' .' l ,, .
I •' ':! ..
REE VET VISIT
FREE IQOK 0 ... CARE A ... D TRAINING
All have had shots
t.
'
I
I I l ·1
I
I
•. t: t ..
' ..
l
=· ,.
~ ,
i
.,,
.I
"P J putted everything out of all thole hancl:»ags
on your bed."
hy 1/'i,
HWMf'etd you oet the new paw ttoot?"
MARMADUKf; by Brad A'!derson DENNIS THE M£NACf; Hank Ketchum
'~ L 11·'lt
\ ~ ·l
SHOE
HI'S 001j JN HIS *'11P5t'ULN:HIN9
A Ft~ A'm'CK UFON .4 ~
fUOVS J:N!MV ~~
~ ONf?
(f JJIJJIJJWJf
l'M SO MAD AT
SLUGGO
()•-·....,· --
~ GOROO by Gus Arrio la
''If he starts to huff and puff, open
the door and let him Int"
"Look at him go! I bet he could make a
JILLION DOLLARS doin' that on tetebision!''
SOY··
i,ALK ABoor
UNFRIENDLY
NEl~HBo~s ...
49 Alter
50 Plant lo\IN
53 e.llpoint
54 Dubs sa Somt ••1m-
p1es
8 1 Melody
82Qc>M
63 Rutllan
coop
.. Small. Sutt11 as ·Jane -
MNOvel
t?E~
DOWN
I
BOCJNCE'' HE~e's MY
,ADDRESS ... KE'EP IT AANDY.
UHtTEO Future S~
Tl'lufld~·a Puutt SoMd
QC) 'fO\) MfAM 1'1°, \..OIJ\$£? u.lEl.L' ~ow ~0()\)'f LOMC.lt?
tt> '*"1 UAL.\:f l&>ANf 'fo WILL '(OU 14A-.'E: A LJJN.l"
&o 001" 11.>rf14 •£ 1~ SRUK ~fll 1
fOa8nTEaeaW.a•Oall
NO SUPPER, l\?.l.£?
SUPPER GOOOOD l
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
eu1" 1-r's A COMPANY' we'Re GONNA ee Po1N '
euSINE!SS W t'f'H !
'.
I, CUNNlflfl
DAVID BARllY OF Manufacturers Hanover
Trust feels the prime rate may Call by summer.
probably to 15 percent from its current 17.5 per-
cent. Despite recent increases, Barry's expecta·
tion is widely shared.
So is the other view. Says William Sullivan Jr.
or The Bank of New York. ".Dnmatic progress
t-0wa rd lower interest rates seems improbable,
and continued challenges on the upside seem
likely."
Such mixed markets and mixed feeli}tgs
seldom persist very long, tr only because economic
decisions aren't indefinitely postponable. Sooner
or later borrowers make decisions, and rates rise
or fall.
Like some of their counterparts who dea1 with
corp-0rations, many home mortgaae lenders feel a
decision won 't wait beyond this summer, and some
a re convinced that rates will fall.
OTHER RESEARCHERS, s uch as Sindlinger
& Co., a Media, Pa., data firm, think such notions
are a~urd. Sindlinger has gone so far as to refer
to "dny sucker wi ll still thinks interest rates are to
come down."
So indistinct are tbe trends, however. that
ana lysts reviewing the same material can see tbe
economy moving in different directions.
At the investment firm of Goldman Sachs, for
example, they see the economy "shifting to a
slower growth path." with a "downshift" in hous·
ing. foreign trade and p-0ssibly federal budgetary
stimulus.
The indistinct patterns , and the equally in-
distinct fo recasts, reflect rather than foretell.
Answers, when they come, will be based not so
much on professional forecasts as on individual
pe rceptions or how sound or dangerous the
economy is. and how strong are the needs of bor·
rowers. I Panel probes
:food buys
i
-.
WASHINGTON (AP> -A Houae subcommat-
tee on small b\lSiness is looking into allegations
that the Agriculture Department is following cum-
bersome and sometimes wasteful procedures in
buying food commodities for donation to school
lunch programs.
Rep. Andy Ireland, 0 -Fla., chairman of the
panel, said he will begin hearings next week on the
role of small businesses in the department's com·
modity procurement process.
"Small bus inesses have complained t.o the sub-
com mittee that there is a lack of competition for
and growing concentration in the bid awards made
by the USDA for meat , p-0ultry. fruit and vegetable
buys made," Ireland said.
"THEY ALSO HAVE. told me that the same
problem exists in the processing of USDA com-
modities. As a result, I have scheduled several
hearings to explore this issue." Ireland said two
days of hearings will be held on Aprit-28-29. Wit·
nesses will include school board members, school
food service directors and several small-business
operators.
A subcommittee staff member said al least
one .....more day has tentatively been added for
sometime next mont h to give Agriculture Depart-
ment officials. including Secretary John R. Block,
an opportunity to testify.
Currently. the department spends about $1
billion ' a year on a wide variety of food com-
modities which it then donates. to schools, nursing
. homes and other institutional programs.
A BACKGROUND PAPER accompany ina
Ireland's announcement included a list of allega.
lions that the subcommittee's staff gleaned f.rom
I ; interviews with Small-butlness people, food service
o((icials and others. The allegations charge that the
Agriculture Department:
-Buys frozen gr.ound pork and frosen ground
beef in M-pound blocks when the commercial trade 1 ' sells the same product in tubes weighing 10-15
pounds. The physical requ1rementa of handling 1ucb
blocks are a problem.
-Buys whole turkey1, several 20-pound
turkeys to a case. Most school diatricta can't uae
whole turkeys because they are labo~inteQllVe, so
they must be processed.
-ShiPI railins to 1cbool diatricll in 1.kunce
t)oxe1. "Can you lmaaine \he labor cost of open.ill&
several hundred such boxes to use t.be rallta. in
baking? Once agaln, school d.lstricts would sWl
use raisins but not the way the USDA aup}>llea
them." ,
-Occulon.itY supplies cheddar cbeeae in
r
·~·pound blocu ''which rrequeatl1 make tbeir way
to vocaUonal educaUon scbooll •here they aft
1ubdJvic1ecf ualna band saws."
TRi1 aEPOltT SA.ID, "Anodrier pr0blem lt
bow to open, '* and dllpoee of the t.bousandl ot
No. 10 cant In wblcb U&OA l\q>pUe1 commodltl11.
It l1 not lD'tcommon for t.'.~bool rood-MrVlee clJnc-• tor to have to open lumdredl of No. 10 cut to 1ene
°'1e11\eal."
'
.
Working out busines~' bugs
Actually, the sophisticated-looking
"spider'' at left isn't a spider at ap. Lyn-
da Manning checks an assembly for an
advanced e lectronics s y s t e m at
R a ytheon Co. 's Special Mi crowave
Operation in Northborough, Mass. The
unit's ''feet" contain components to con-
trol the ' flow or microwave energy in
1radar systems.
DISPLAY THROUGHOUT THE MALL
APRIL 24-28
SOUTH COAST ~PLAZA
\
You might mistake the figure above
for the latest in punk rock tickling the
keys of a way -out musical instrument.
Actually, it's a So uth American fire ant
being used to dramatize the small size of
a device called the 64-K Random Access
Memory, built by Western Electric in Al-
lentown , P a .
\
Jiik, Construction Co., Se Francisco,
•Wrdeci a *85 million contract to li'luor
......... A Co111tructloa Inc. tor addl·
W.•l· PrOduced water treatmeut tacillUes in
th• olhproduction fields at Prud.boe Bay, ~IHkl. The aame Fluor subsidiary received
a $4 mllllqn CQntract from Getty Refining "
Marketlnt' Co., Tulsa, Okla., to modemite
and expand it.a Bakersfield reflbery.
Fluor al.so announced that Empreaa de
Cobre Cerro Colorado, S.A., has entered into
ne1otiations with Fluor Mlnlnl 6 Metala lac.
to develop the Cerro Colorado copper
ore body in Cbiriqui Province, Panama. • • • Newport PharmaceatlcalJ lntenatJonal
Int. of Newport Beach annoooced lta post-
effective amendment to its re1istration state-
ment pertaining to its 8 percent convertible
preferred stock, convertible warrants and
Class 8 warrants riled with t.fie Securities &
Exchange Commission Jan. 21 was declared
effective April 16. • • *
Directors or Beckman Instrument.I Inc.
declared a dividend of 9 cents a share pays
ble May 2S to shareholders of record May 4.
The company. which manufacturers
analytical instrumentation, elector.products
and consumable chemical products for
medical, industrial, environmentaJ and scien-
tific applications, has 20,403,000 common
shares outstanding.
* * * Telecommunications division of Westera
Digital Corp. of Newport Beach has an·
nounced a new bus·oriented asynchronous re-
ceiver /transmitter (BOARTl -the WD1983.
The 28-pin plastic or ceramic LSI device 1s
expected to improve timing r'equirements
and software performance. • • *
Mlcrodata Corp. of Irvine has settled its
litigation against Pick and Associates Inc
and others . Mi crodata is a worldwide
manufacturer and marketer of business com ·
puter systems. key-to-disc entry data entry
equipment and computer penpherals
* * * Comprehensive Care Corp. of Newport
Beach has purchased Alcenas Hospital, the
largest freestanding alcoholism hospital in
the Pacific Northwes t . The 82-bed fac1ht.t is
located in Kirkland. Wash .. northeast of Seal·
tie
* .. * Artelonic Corp., U S affiliate of Shell
Canada Limited, has opened a Southern
Ca lifornia sales offi ce at 41 21 Weste rly Place.
Newport Beach , lo market its family of offi ce
information systems
.. * * Nuclear Medical Sy~lems Inc . has reached an agreement in pnnciple to acquire
the assets and business of West Orange County
Laboratories Inc. based in Anaheim, for a
purchase price of $1 .4 milbon The purchase
will be payable in a combination of cash a nd
Nuclear Medical common stock
West Or:rnge County Laboratories
operates diagnostic clinical laboratories
ser vicing-various Southern Callrornia
hospitals pri manly withm Orange County
Revenues currently approximate SI 8 mulion
annually
* * • EECO Inc. of Santa Ana reported net m
come for the first quarter ended March 31 of
$335.000. or 13 cents a share, on sales of $9.2
million. This compares with net income of
$827 ,000, or 34 cents. on sales of $11 1 million
for the corresponding quarter last year Net
income from the prior year included 3 cents a
share from discontinued operations * • •
Beckman Instruments in Fullerton sales
for the third quarter rose 10 percent to $155.4
million from $141.1 million a year earlier .
Net earnings rose 8 percent during the same
period to $8.2 million from nearly $4 million
On 4 percent more common s hares. per-share
earnings increased lo 43 cents in the third
quarter from 41 cents
Beckman also announced it has reached
an understanding in principle with lrcon Inc
on Beckman 's acquisition of the Skokie, lll.,
m anufacturer of industrial temperature
measurement and control instrumentation
for an undisclosed number of Beckman com·
mon shares • * * ""8percorp. of Tustin's nme·month sales
incr.eased 30 percent from $7.6 milHon to $9 9
million for the period ended March 31
Profits during that period rose 'l7 percent
from $715,500 to $908,000 with earnings per
share up from 59 cents to 67 cents.
Marc Bernstem displays hunewproduct, 'Toot,' tM late1t chic fad.
Benefit hike due
WASHINGTON CA PI -The na-
tion's 36 million Social Security
benef1c1aries will get an 11 2 percent
~ost·of-livmg increase in July that
will boost the ave&;age retired
worker's monthly check from $337 to
S374. a $37 increase.
first quarter of 1980 to the first
quarter of 1981.
The 4.1 million aged, blind or dis-
abled persons drawing Supplem~ntal
Security Income SSI welfare benefits
also will get an 11.2 percent increase
in July
The annual automatic across-the·
board increase was triggered by
today's relea se of the Consumer
Price Index for March rt reflects the
11 2 percent 1nflat1on rate from the
The benefit increase -the 12th for
Social Security beneficiaries in the
past 13 years -will cost the
beleaguered trust fund $15.4 billion
more in the year ahead.
Drilling firlll' s
earnings skyrocket
Smith lntemat1onal Inc of Newport Beach re-
port ed record revenues and net income for the
first quarter ended March 31
Revenu<'S increased 66 percent from the first
quarter or 1980 to $261 9 million Net income rose
72 percent to $'l7.5 million. Earnings per share in·
creased 56 pe rcent to $1 20
In October 1980. Smith International acquired
the McEvoy compames . The acquisition was ac-
countt•d for as a purchase The application of
purchose accounting had an adverse effect of 13
<:ents per s h;ue on the first quarter of 1981, due
pnmanly lo amort1lalion of the inventory step up.
AS OF MARCH 31 the amortization of the in
ventor) step up "'as s ubstantially complete
Commenting on these record results at the
company'!-> annual meeting. Jerry W. Neely,
chairman, president and chief executive officer.
said the dramatic increase in oil and gas drilling,
part1cularl~ an the domestic market. had sustained
strong demand for Smith's dnlling products and
services.
Domestic sales for tbe first quarter iocreased
77 percent from the first quarter of 1980 to $169.S
m11l1on. accounting for 6S percent of total re-
venues Foreign and export sales rose 49 percent
to $92.4 million.
Neely also said Smith's net margin on sales
had improved sigmficantly, reflecting an on-goine
shift in its product mix toward more profif&ble,
premium products; better utilization or facilities
and assets and tht spreading of fixed coell over •
larger revenue base
Siidac, Smith Internalional's measure of
domestic dnlling activity, showed an 18 percent in-
crease in the number of wells drilled durine the
first quarter of 1981 from the like period in 1980 lo
17,100 wells and a 17 percent increase in footage
drilled to 78 5 million feet
ALSO AT THE annual meeting. Sm 1th Intem a ·
l1onal's board of directors declared a quarterly
C'ash d1v1dend of 20 cents per common share
payable May 29 to shareholders of record May 15.
The add1t1onal 4 cents share is a 2.S percent in·
crease from the previous quarterly di vidend of 16
cents a shan•
1 n announcing the board action, Neely s aid:
..This increase is consistent with our dividend
pohcyof reasonable increases on a regular basis."
'
ARE YOU PAYIMGTOO
MUCH FOR YOUI HEALTH IMSUIAMCE7
•1 .000.000
GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL
Fer 9'IPh c.-: 640-6071
COLLECTO S
CORNEA •
Rer• Coln• & Stampe
GOLD & SILVER
o. .. c, .... ..,, .• • 111 ..... c1.s11.-
l<r~encl• flllaple l.tah 1aoeor-JOf'e ...
f0%$11"9f .... ................... -...
Coll .. -...... (114) He eelSO
South eo.at ...._.. Vlll•e• ................. ,_ ........... c:..,....,
Cell 142•5'78.
Put • te.w word• to worll for ou.
Set"Y"Ql ....,_ Sllf'tl fl VOUt 000'
IC•~ g..,,. -"' v...,, A•HI
CotTAMUA&41 •1289
lat ........ ~ ..... '°" ~95-0401 • 2-C:.-.~ CS•~ lll9p -,. M """~·I
MUTUAL FUND
BEaNSTEIN DECLINES to dis-
close Toot's contenll, except to aay
lt'• a compound of tngredienta now
fouod lo over-the-counter diet ptU..
"Our aales have been tremendous.
fie wm do S2C> million this year," be
e.othu.tea.
The 37-year-old Bernstein became a millionaire two yean ago with a
natural stimulant taken in pill form
called "Zoom," also sold in health foo4 stores.
Zoom. We dJdn't set anywb r. wtth Zoom, and we haven't taken 1 poli-tton on thb one."
In an apparent att.mpt t<> avoMI
te1al compUcatlons, the Toot i
pack.ace warns buyen not to ln&ett. ,
the powder.
"I'm sellinc lt aa an tnce~:·
Bematetn says wttb a stral&ht face. !
''I do not recommend that anybody J
tn1es.t the product ... I al•IU'I in··
tended to bring an tncenae into tho ·
market. That it's belne used in other
ways ii a commentary on our ,
times."
The term "Toot," by the way, l1 ,
slang meaning to inhale or "snort" !
cocaine. And moat Toot buyen ap·~ 1
parenUy are snorting it in the same .
manner users take coke. ·
BERNSTEIN CONCEDES he's
snorted Toot "to see what it was
about," but he declines to say
whether he's ever tried cocaine. "It
did have a slight numbing effect; It
suppressed hunger, and I was buzz.
ing, '' he says of his product.
Bernstein, who calls himself .. a
Hi• second product. natural tran-
quJllier pills called, "Relaxu," has
registered more moderate sales.
"I found out that people like to go
up; tbey don't like to go down." says
Bernstein.
Toot, he says, has surpassed the
Zoom phenomenon in public
response.
·-.merchandising entrepreneur," takes
credit for funneling back into the
economy millions of dollars that
might otherwise go into the illegal
dope market.
"WE HAVE HAD thank-gou callB
and letters from people all over the
country who said they were spe,dlng
hundreds of dollars a day on co-
ca ln e ," he says. "Now, they've
switched to Toot, which costs them
$10 a package."
·'Eighteen percent of the economy
in this country is underground," he
says. "Something should be done to
bring this money back into the
economy.''
He stresses that Toot is safe and so
far has shown no ill effects on users.
"lf in any way I thought it was
harmful or detrimental to the public.
I would pull this product orf the
market." he says.
The U.S . Food and Drug Ad·
ministration 1s t aking a hands·off
position on Toot, at least for now .
"We're aware of it," says Elaine
Roentgen. a consumer affairs officer
for the FDA. "It's being sold by the
same man who made/a fortune wi~
Meanwhile. Bernstein is con·
templating new business vistas . He's
now at work on a new children's
toothpaste
Conott •·•> Cenfld IJ.01 Eq Inc 21.1' Eacll lS 71 M•91I J1.°'
Al!un lld • 21 FlcMI It.IS
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UPS AND DOWNS
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NLI M -• ) N 1 I NL p I 1 ' ,. NL ~r~ ;:: 't:~ ~-~ ~~ .I> Prr.:! 1 :o:~ NL SIF~~·;;. 10:~. NL HNLL Tu Ea J.IJ J.16 MOHY F 11 .. jJ..M Ta Fr9 1$1 NL Slfl'rm 81 tl... NL
Sloe-21.A.J ll.SI MSa Fd It 01 NL Pro Sarvlcft SIStrMi 111¥
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NL :•lelfd fo:: =t ~~°:'~ :·~ ;·~ p~~ ~ f'-701 SI~'=' ~;/fl
NL // Grtll IUO 14.o2 Mutval of ~ Con¥ 1>.a U 111 l' H Mod 11.a 14 .. l =t JP ln<O 7.lf 1.tl """' t.n NL 1111 £q 17.12 II.ti Tmpl 01 Lo. ••• I
NL 1::~ H-:. .. ~ NL ~~o:: rn rn t:.-1 it: :; n ~~1 t':.. :::: rn: :
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NL ...... I.SI '·" NHUT ff.J7 NL tnwat 10.tt 11.U Tuclr Fd lt..lt NL TH Ea t.05 t.M Net A¥1t 10.tl NL ()pin 14.lO U .41 TwnC Gt 1U1 Hl
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C.n Gr
•
Another rare metal roller couter -thlt oae lo aoldandallvercolD•1lnv~''-aadel'Way.
The lure: Asaln, lt'• areed. G1tn1 ln cow bave
fWl u percent to $0 percent a year. '#ltb 1maU
"downside rbk," you are told. P'or1tt tbat 1old
buUlon prices plunged ln 1880; lenore lb ti.lr-ral•ln•
history of the slide ln allver prices. •
Gold and 1UYer coin• are difterent1 tM "Coln
b\lg1" say: artistic, like palntinp: ana in Um•~
amount.a, like land. And tbe numi.matk pusb lJ 1h ft·
iag into high gear.
-AGIA.NT
food firm
(General Mills>
owns a big W ~t
Coast coin
"gallery." A
IY -(-lll_Pl_IT_ll-r: ..
major conglomerate <Warner Communicational re·
cently bought Franklin, an important mlnt. A New
York Stock broker (Bache> bat just acquired
Jackson Precious Metals, an Ohio smelter.
-THE $.10 MILLION auction of Johns Hopkins
University'!> Garrett Collection was completed a
short while ago. Yale has sold a single, fabled 178'1
Brasher doubloon for $MO.OOO. The institutions are
seeking ways to help sol we their financial problems
-t'OREIGN NATIONS ~RE issuing increasing
amounts oC "bullion-type" coins: South Africa's
krugerrand, Canada's Maple Leal, Mexico's SO-peso,
Austria"s 100.corona. Even China is into "coins.''
~ AT LEAST TWO rare-coin mutual funds have
been creakd. Some banks now sponsor numismatic
Keogh and IRA plans. Coin dealers are hiring -or
calling themselves "investment counselors.~·
-ONE VETERAN DEALER estimates 40 per·
cent of h15 business today 1s with would·be investot-s,
against 5 percent in 1970.
With all Lhis going on. how can you lose? Ouch!
··coms have become a multibillion dollar busi-
ness. and regrettably. t he industry has attracted its
s hare of shady operators." says David L. Ganz,
legislative counsel to the American Numismatic As·
sociat1on
"I N THE PAST DECADE, coin robbenes are up
200-300 percent." echoes Glenn Smedley, another
AN A official . Police are pleading for local-state laws
to regulate coin dealers
Other problems include: coin a ltering. misgrad.
ing. m1s1dentifieation. coin damage <i mproper handl
ing, cleaning, mounting. storage). high purchase-sale
markups, expens ive insurance, outright counterfeit·
mg And all this on top of plain bad timinfi!
And despite the puffery, coin values can drop -
drastically A roll of so-called "walking Liberty"
half.dollar.. recently sank almost 60 percent in two
years, from $5,000 to $2.100. Buying and selling can
cost 10 percent to 20 percent each way Yes, you can
lose on coins . . easily.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ,,:eT~u:~:'~ ~ .... Dow J-• •YG•
STOCKI
ao Ind °-' Hlth ~ c-ChQ '
1001 . .S. 1022..13 IOOl.ft 1010.17 + J.U fl ~.t:J 441.JO 411.U 4«1.D-J.J7 IOUt 107.'9 105.11 IOU1 OA1
AMERICAN LEADERS
:llO Tm
IS Utl 6S Stk '''"'" Tren
192.IS ..... 3"00 Jf1 n -O.Of~ . ...... t~:=
·~ Utllt
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORll. (API A.pr. U
Advan<ed 0.Cllned Uncll•n~ Tota l IHuH
Now lllOfl• New lowt
1M<A T A.I.Ilk DID
T~ ••s -1'21 Ill
JO
NEW YORK IAPI Apr IJ
•'6.JOO .
I
• Pre1i1 • "~Jc; ,.,
J171 'rm », ,
Prev f
'dv•nc..r roci.~ ";Jo :
0ec11oeo JOI n11
Jnc,,antp<t 111 1911 ro1a1 tuu.1 m ml 'lew lllgM SI »i
... w ·-· 10 ·1
~ill~l'° ::::-~.U.S. de1llMit
llont. I
Lew »-» c.,.U a poljnd.
llM 4)1,lt (HllS •pound. o.11 .... ed 1
Tlfl $4.l .... Ntelall Wwlt. com,Ml"t• Ill :
A_._,, 1• CHIU• poUnd, N Y :
M•rcwy ... 20 00 r-r Ila ...
Pl•tl-...... OOtroyo~. N.Y.
SILVER T,_....,
H•nctv • Har....,,." 1 220 r-r lroy ounce I
GOLD QUOTATIONS TllunMy !
1.-: m1uftl1111111•1111 ~.50, off SIO.JO.I
L••'"' •ll•rnoon ll•lng MN SO, oft $12.50.
~arh: ftt.,_ 11,,l111»U.U,Ofl IO.J.S. • ~·-: '"""' ~.oo, ott u.oo. I ~tffldl: Ille •"-fhl1119, M17 00 .....
Sll.00, '*00_.tel
Me•lf & M••-•: 0111y cl•lly quol• ...... ,.,, Ofl lll.50.
1:11...-..1 only dltlly qllOle Mee.SO, Sia.JO.
I: ....... : only dally ~ lelH'IU
UOl.04,0ff,tUO. ~
SYMBOLS
. -
-··AOl·¥0 BILL MAXEY -euc:··¥0 ~; . =~ ~ TOYOTA ~ ~ 18881 BEACH BLvo:'~~~·-HUllTINGTON BEACH ---c
l'HOMI tU-OUt •
, ..... ~' 599 14,,,_,
OYER INVOICE SALE
ON ALL 1981 210s AND 310s IN STOCK
Ask To See Factory Invoice -If you don't buy your Datsun
from Newport Datsun, you are paying too much.
LAST CHANCE
••• SAAISlll
SAVINGS LIKE
NEVER BEFORE!
NEW '80 900EMS (2298B) SJ0,.400
NEW ·•90 ILE , (17275' SJ J,5JO
NEW '80 900 = (217561 SJ I, 946
NEW '80 900 := <191•21 SJ2,957
IURRYI THESE WON'T LAST LONll
,,,,,,,,,,~,·If
SALES • SER\'ICE
LEASING
•Alfa Romeo•Peugeot•Saab
848 DOVE STREET
N .. rtBeach
752-0900
I '
• . '
JOHNSEVANO
·Rallls iii poSition to wheel and deal
Tuesday is the NFL draft.
It's a time when the strong get stronger1,lhe
mediocre get better and the worst become tolera·
ble.
For years the Rams have kept themselves con-
tenders by being shrewd draftsmen. Last year was
no exception, either, as eight new faces were on
the roster at the beginning of the 1980 campaign.
As a matter or fact the Rams had so many
changes (19> in '81 they were openly criticized for
breaklog up a Super Bowl paf'\iclpant from the
year before.
Still, the Rams managed to finish in second
place 10 th' NFC West, compiling an 11-S record
and a playoff berth in the process
The Rams. again, have a lot or cho1ces Tues·
day -15. in fact. m the first 12 rounds The dif-
ference this time seems to be lack of space,
however. as only 3·5 players figure to crack the
squad . . if that ma ny.
Just who the Rams are going to take with their
first pick -the No. 9 choice thanks to an earlier
trade with Washington -Is anybody's gueH.
Naturallr,. who's available and what needs to
be rilled wtll take top pnonty when G(!neral
Manager Don Klosterman, Coach Ray Mal&vasi
and Director or Player Personnel John Math put
their heads together some time around 7 a.m .
Tuesday when New Orleans is expected to make
George Rogers of South Carolina their No. 1 pick a nd
an instant millionaire In the proces_s. , or course, the rumors ctrculattng are stagger·
ing And, yes, the Rams a re involved in a few.
The most noted whispers deal with another
trade that would put the Rams in a position to
draft eithe r second. third or fourth The teams in
those slots are the New York Giants. the New York
Jets and Seattle, respectively
Of the three, Seattle would seem like the best
bet They need bodies and the Rams have a sur-
plus or picks.
Just so you don 't reel cheated -and in case
·~-........ The Dodgers' Davey Lopes slides safely into second base ahead of throw to the Padre•' Mike Phil.lips
some or these do come true -here are a few of the
rumors Cloating about and you can decide for
yourself which ones have validity and which ones
don't!
the No 2, 3 or 4 slots so they can pick UCLA1
halfback Freeman McNeil. You see the Rams arl
under the silly notion their top need ls a runnin'
back.
The Rams will trade Bob Brudzinski and
their No. 9 pick to the Giants for tl)eir No 2 •
Their other need because of their situation
-the Rams will trade their first, a third and a
fifth round pick for the Jets' No. 3;
with Brudzinski and Jack Reynolds -would be for
a linebacker.
If McNeil is plucked before the Rama can get
him then the club agrees with the latter assess1
ment and will presumable opt for either Pitts•1
burgh's Hugh Green or North Carolina's Lawrenc~ Taylor
see above for Seattle;
San Francisco is going lo trade quarterback
Steve De8erg and Its No. 8 pick to St Louis for the
Cardinals' No. 5 choice,
the Rams will trade Brudzmski to Buffalo
for a No. 2 pick and future cons1derat1ons,
Miami and Minnesota are both putting
together deals for New Orleans' No 1;
After that it's up for grabs. The Rams would
hke to get a running back. a linebacker. a tight
end and some help on the defensive line.
the Rams aredumpmgTerry Nelson,
Pat Haden 1s going to stay with the Rams
whether Vince Ferragamo signs a contract with
the team or not
Those four picks would be just about what the
club needs. too.
* * • As of today, here is Tuesday's drafting order
Reportedly. the Rams are trying to jockey into <See SF.VANO, Page C2>
LA's coDleback kid
Sutcliffe re tu ms to form in Dodger win
LOS ANGELES CAPl Not
too many third year major
leaguers will ever be considered
for comeback or th e year
honors. but Los Angeles right·
hander Rick Sutcliffe might this
season
Sutcliffe. 24 , was the National
League's Rookie or the Year m
1979, compiling a 17 JO record
and a 3 46 earned run average
The sophomore 1m x struck in
spades last year as Sutcliffe was
just 3·9 with a 5 56 ERA.
SO FAR THIS spring the 6-6.
200·pounder has re\'ertt•d to his
1979 form In his third start
Thursday night. Sutcliffe stifled
San Diego on five hits over eight
innings as the Dodgers · topped
the Padres 3· 1.
Sutcliffe. 2-0, has pitched 211 a
1nn1ngs this season , ullowing on
ly 16 hits a nd four runs while
walking fi ve and striking out
nine.
Against the Padres. he came
within three outs or his first
complete game, which would
ha vc equaled his output in that
department last year Steve
Howe came on m relier after Oz.
zie Smith walked on four pitches
to lead off the San 01ego ninth
and retired the side to pick up
his second save It was the third
walk given up by Sutcliffe. who
struck out four.
''Everybody would like lo go
nine and I 'll l'(O nine before
long " said Sutcliffe after his
team's 11th wm m 13 games this
season "It's JUSl a matter of
getting the breaking ball O\'er
"THERE'S NO REASON for
me to go out there and walk the
leadorr hitter in the ninth. I
v. asn 't really tired. tl was just a
matter or not getting the ball
over the plate."
In addition to getting the vie·
tory, Sutcliffe put the Dodgers
aheud to stav with a two·out
s ingle to center 1n th(' second in-
ning off losing pitcher Rick
W 1s e The sohd s hot drove in
Pedro Guerrero v.ho bunted for
a base hit and stole sl'c·ond
") lake a lot or pnde m m y htl·
ling." said Sutc liffe . "He
ch a l~nged me with a fastball
and I'm a pretty good fastball
hitter "
Thl' Dodgers made tl 2·0 m the
s ixth when Dusty Baker blooped
a s ingle to right. stole second.
went to third on catcher Terry
Kennedy's throwing e rror and
scored on a single by Steve
Garvey. Los Angeles got its final
run in the seventh inning on a
single by Mike Scioscia. a
sacrifice. and a two out single
by Ken Landreaux
THE PADRES GOT their run
on Jerry Turner's pinch homer
with two outs in the top of the
eighth. only their third home run
1n 1-1 games this season San
Diego's other four hits were
... 1ngle..,
"Rick pitched an outstanding
gam e," said Los Angeles
Man ager Tom Lasorda "The
pitching's been outstanding. jusL
sup('r We 're winning and we've
got three or four guys who aren't
s~1ngmg the bat )el But that
~111 come ..
The Dodgers are hitting only
246, but Sutcliffe 's performance
lowl'red the staff's ERA to a
ml•as ly I 47.
"ll 's tough lo win with only
one run and five hits." said San
Diego Manager Frank Howard,
v. host-team brought a 2 06 bat-
ting average into the game.
"But I can't be cr1tical, the'
response that my players have
given has been super
"Nobody tries harder than the
players and nobody is more dis·
appointed than the players.
Sooner or later. they're going to
have to start hitting better or
we 'll have to make some
changes We're letting some
ver y fine pitched games get
away from us ."
The Dodgers will bid for theit
12th wm or the young seaso
tonight when Bob Welch Cl--0
faces San Diego's John Cu ·
(0 2 l The teams square of
agam Saturday night and Sun
day with San Francisco the
moving in to Dodger Stadium fo
a three.game set Monda
through Wednesday
Soviet water poloists' goals don't get lost • in the translation
1980 Olympic champs are so tough, even the other communist teams shy away from the solemn bear
By ROGE R CARLSON
Of Ole o.11'1' l'tle4 S&aft
Zatsev, the delegation leader of the Soviet party.
LONG BEACH The Soviets. blue·clad. grim Speaking through interpreter Viatcheslav
Skokc. the ma!Sive former water polo player con·
tinued as the Soviet athletes began warm-ups in the
Long Beach pool Wednesday evening:
on grim.
Physical. methodical and lo themselves, .the
1980 Olyrtlpics water polo champions.
Even the other com munist teams -Hungary,
Yu1osla-ti,, Bulgaria. Cuba -tend to shy away rrom the solemn bear.
Despite their demeanor they possess similar
goals in the D Fina Cup tournament, which begins
Sa\urday here al Long Beach State, an eigbl-
natton water 1>0lo invitational hosted by the United
States entry 'fhiCh includes the top five finishers
at Moscow.
"This is the first major competition and it's
under your roof. It's the first year of preparation
for the Olympic Games and our main task is to
test our newcomers, to test the new rules and to
test this new place."
The new rules consist or an expansion of play-
ing time from five to seven-minute quarters,
something most feel will benefit a team with
physical tendencies, in addition lo depth.
The Russians meet Australia in Saturday's
op ener at 11 a.m., th~n tackle the United States na·
tional team Sunday eveniog (8:30) in a match of
major interest.
Will it benefit the Russians? "That's ver y dif·
ficult to say," said the 6-5 authority. flanked by his
interpreter and another man (presumably a
security sort).
"We haven't had the experience lo see and it
could be a difficult problem. It's difficult to say,
maybe we can (say l laleT. Maybe it will be just as
·'After t h e Olympics we h ave m any
newcomers without good experience," says Uri
Rams threatened
·use of LA name may bring fee
SACRAMENTO CAPl -The
Loa Angeles Rams would have
to get permission from the city
of Los Angeles, and perhaps pay
• fee. to use the city's name now
that the football team has
moved to Orange County. wider
a bill approved Thunday by lbe
l(ate Assembly.
The vote was 41·26, the bare
majority ln the 80-member
'9wer house. However, an oppo-
nent from Oran9e County asked
permission to take a second vote
aomeUme in the future before
tbe blll can advance to the state
Senate.
The bill. AB502 by Al·
mblymJD, Mlke Roos, D·Los
An1eles, would prohibit a pro.
• fe11lon1l 1porta team from uains •e name of a city or county it it
loe1n't play home 1amea there.
\nm could aet city or coun-
ptnnwion and the city or
tOWGt.f ..could ae•otia a te. tor lfte:• al ttJ Dlft'le.
Rfooe said Los Anaieles loll tz
million a year in sales tax.
leases and employee wa1es
when the National Football
League team moved to Anaheim
from the Los Angeles Coliseum
last year.
Assemblyman R ic hard
Robinson, D-Santa Ana, object·
ed that the biU showed the Loll
Aneeles CoUJeum waa a "poor
loser" and said it would set a
"horrible precedent."
I
He noted that the Los Angeles
Tlme1 pubUsbes editions in
Oraqe Count1 and San t>l$
and sun ealll ltaelt Ute LG8 ·
An1ele1 Timet. He aald the
Detroit. Llona play in Pontiac,
Mich ., and the New York GlantJ
play lo New Jeney.
'"l t-eally don't care what the
LA Ram.a call themaelv... lt'a
up to~"'*"· 1 'fish tM)'
would Identify U..mHlvet more
cloMly with Ol'anp Coulil>', but
I Jm not fotft to fo them;'"
Robinson sa1d. 1
RAC!I SUNDAY -Brian
Redman, a 44·year·old
.Enaliabman, hu come very
close to death several times
in his career but aay1 life
would be hollow without rac·
Ina. He will cC>mpete at
lllve tde In UI• Tim••·' Toyota Enduro Sunday.
I.
useful to the United States team. The U S 1s very
good, it has very good physical fitness."
This is the f1rsl time the Russians have seen
the American poloisls s tnce the I Fina Cup, when
the U.S. finished second to qualify for the Moscow
Olympics.
SJnce then, or course. a lot has transpired. in·
cludln1 the Ame rican boycott or the Moscow
Olympics because of the Russian invasion of
Afghanistan.
"f'UJul," was the delegation leader's reaction
to America's boycott. ''They (the U S l are a
strong team and w~ have waited to play the U.S.
And they (~ U.S. team> wanted to play, very
much . We know they wanted to come."
Australia team manager Les Kay, whose
team, along with the Spaniards, was also here to
tune up for ,SatQl'day's opener, put the American
boycott in a better perspective.
"We were more concerned about our own posi-
tion , frying 'to do the best we could at the Olym.
pies." said the Australian
·'The only thmg it really served was that
made 1t a little easier for the other teams. T
Americans were in AuslraLia earlier .in the ye
and we thought they had medal possib1Ulles."
That initial Fina Cup in l!n9 found the Sovie
finishing fourth, a maJOr surprise, but the Sovi
leader never really addressed the reaction or que1•
lion regarding a disappointment to the finiah.
"That was an important tournament. but
knew there was a more important toum a me
ahead <the Olympics l "
Every team is 10 a rebuilding process, inclu
Ing the Soviets. but they are very protective of an
information relative to strength or wea~ness
their squad.
What has become evident is that 33·year·ol
two-time gold medalist Aleksande Kabanov will
one of their major ttirusls.
The Soviet star became available for a sho
<See WATER POLO, PageC4)
Surf soWid for Sounders?
Step one in team progress plan is beat Seattle
!f1i1~1J!fDEN
When the CaUfon,tla Swf an-
nounced that Tom l.llledal bad
been hired u direc:tor of team
operations earU,er Ulla week the
NASL club also established a
"team pl"Ogrtla crite1b!•
The plan, according to
Lilled.AJ, be9in.a thla 1euon with
a balldlnl year. The co-.1: 111ake
tbe North Amerlcall Soccer
Le11ue playoffs .
B)' year four, lbeJoal ls to win
the Soccer Bowl an j.he national
cbamplonsbip.
Tbere'a no qlltstion the SUrf 19
loolrtn1 ahead Jual a ~it\~ ~ don't .thlnk they'll be llOOIUDl
beyond .ton11bt''1 ba"I• '1'ltb the Suttle Soullders (8) at AllUelm
St 4lwn. ne Surf brlniJ I 1·3 NCOfd
In tb6 1ame1 and the tKm't
p.-rm .. • wUI " ctol 1cruUnfled by LIUedal, whoH
Job l1 to simply produce a wtn-
('
Seattle's offensive attack.
Bond, a versatile performe
can play ellber central defen
or right fullback.
"We're toing to have .to a
tack. 'Ibat's the only way )'•
can beat a team like Seattle,
says Surf Coach Peter Wall.
key, Wall aay1, la to 1but
Hudson and not allow him
"dictate the same."
The hi1h·sCC)rln1 SOunden
rive al a po0r Ume for the S
Losers of three or th•lr " tour, lnclud.inl a 3·2 lief eat
dlvlltonal toe Loe Ana•les 1 w"~' "the Surf la slowly ove
.I
Concepcion. Drliseen lead R~s
QllCWutl'• Dm1iii !Clim••~-drove ln
ltlr .. ru1111 aod ~ ott.111• •rovlMd the
.. 'Holtz on marquee -
1111! •
iane·wtnnlnl:lllt . Ma~IM lOUI
innlnl 1'lunUY ...-.. .. ~ raJ.
Jy the Redl to a M~
over tht 1t.rutclbal ftMatm Astral. Iet1 Grtn.y opened
the 10th with a 1in1l• off re-
lie v er Dave Smltla, took
second on a fteldlnc error
and scored on Drfe11en'1
1in1le . . . CluU CbambU.
doubled home two runs In the
fifth tnnlna, breakina a 3.3 tie Concepcion
•.:it won't happen soon and helpln& Atlanta to a 7·3 victory over Sao
FranclJco. The dee!lslve flfth·tnnina rally besan
with two out whtn Claudell Waolqtoa ttn1led
arld Wen' tb third on Bob Hon er'• llngle
. . . The gaml between the Pittabur&h Pirates
and New York Meta was postponed 6ecauae or
inclement weatffer and no makeup date was an-
nounced ... In the Amerioan Leaaue, the
Cbica10 White Sox awept a double-header from
Baltimore, winnlna 18·5 ln the opener and 5.3 in
the ni&btcap. In the fint game, Chet Lemoa
drove ln four runs and Bill AJmoa and Gre1
P ryor collected three each to power a 26-hit at-
tack. Harold Balnea delivered a two-run single
in the fifth inning or the nightcap . . . The
Toronto at New York Yankee game was
postponed because or rain . . . Gene Teaace
slammed a seventh-inning home run to power
the St. Louis Cardinals to a 9-8 exhibition vic-
tor y over the University or Missouri.
/"I
From AP dbpatchea
I • LJTrLE ROCK , Ark. -Lou Holli's name
' won't be on the Las Vegas marquee this sum·
mer.
Even though playing Vegas for a week is
1 one thing the Uruversity of Arkansas football
1 coach wants to do, he bas turned down an offer
to do two shows a nlght.
"There are a lot or different reuons I de-
cided not to do it," he said. "My calendar is re·
ally filled. The offer came at the wrong time of
the wrong year."
Holtz has a national reputation for one·
liners, is In big demand as a banquet speaker
and was a hit on the Tonieht Show a few years
ago. The offer for the Las Vegas show came
about because an agent was in the audience
' when Holtz said playing Vegas was one or about
100 things he wanted to do.
"He had a firm bld and even sent a con·
tract," Holtz said. "l thought it would just be
something that would be run to do. I don't even
know what I would do."
Baseball today
On this date in baseball in 1962:
Holtz said that 15 years ago, when he was
an assistant coach at South Caro~ina. he made
up a long list of what he would like to do that
most people don't do
"When I made these up, it just seemed Like
fantasies but they became goals, .. be said.
Strikeout k.ing Sandy Koulax of the Los
Angeles Dodgers fanned 18 Chicago Cubs
en route to a 10·'2 victory.
On this date in 1945:
Senator A.B. "Happy" Chandler was
named Commissione r of Baseball, s uc·
ceeding the late Judge Kenesaw Mountain
Landis.
He broke the goals into categories such as 1 education, sports. entertainment, spiritual and
financial
Today's Birthday:
New York Mets pitcher Pat Zachry is 29.
For Holtz, many of those dreams have
come true.
"When you reflect upon it. goals are what
cause you to get up in the morning and do things
' you don't want to do," he said "If you're bored J with your hfe. you JUSt haven't set enough
t ~oals
Dunaway has New Orleans lead
'SkJp Dwlaway, a decided longshot who got
into the tournament as the third alternate , put
together an eight-under-par 64 and took a two·
stroke lead Tbursday after the hrst round or the
New Orleans Open golf tournament. Veteran
DeWltt Weaver, a club pro for the last 10 years,
was second at 66 Laguna Niguel's Mark
O'Meara was tied with Pat Lindsey fo r third at
67 . A plan that would split the PG A tour in·
to two separate circuits will be presented to
golf's touring players by Commissioner Deane
Beman the Associated Press says. The plan
would split the tour into two equal segments to
be called, possibly, the American and National
tours. Beman says he doesn't expect the plan to
take effect until 1984 or 1985. "It's super." says
Lee Trevlno. "ll 's the salvation of the tour."
says Jack Nicklaus.
Quote of the day
Donna Horton White, after sinking a 25·
foot putt in an LPGA tournament while
seven months pregnant: "That putt was so
good I could feel the baby applauding."
Superdome next for Pirates?
PITTSBURGH Dan Galbreath, president
of the Pittsburgh Pirates, said he will meet here
Sunday with a New Orleans group that
"desperately'' wants a baseball club in the
Superdome Fitzpatrick. Mass running well
Interviewed Thursday at his ramily's Darby
Dan farm near Lexington, Ky., Galbreath said
he has no current plans to move the Pirates.
RIVERSIDE John Fitzpatrick of San
But the ftttsburgh club 1s suing the city of
Pittsburgh over maintenance costs and other
lease matters at Three Rivers Stadium.
Diego ancf Jochen Mass or West Germ any paced
opening-day prac t ice runs Thursday at
Ri verside International Raceway for Sunday's
Los Angeles Times Toyota s ix-hour IMSA En·
duro.
Tho r n t on signs
to p lay at UCI
UC Irvine basketball coach
Bill Mulligan filled his last two
lcholarships Thursday by sign·
lng Bob Thornton, a 6·8 forward
from Saddleback College and
John Capener. a 6-6 forward who
last played for the University of
$an Diego.
'Thornton averaged 6. 1 points
ptr game for the Mission Con·
11rence champion Gauchos
"I think he 's got great poten·
tial," said Mulliga n . "I think
bf II be a helluva rebounder."
J ,Caoener averaied 20 points
~r game at Torrey Pines Hieh bl Del Ma r and then played one
1fason at USD before leaving on
'11 two-year mission.
From Page C1
SU RF SOUND?
Wall opted to use Edison High
graduate Steve Hellmich in the
nets. The Surf coach may have
to wait until today to decide
whethe r it will be Mayer,
Hellmich or Mike Mahoney.
One American who will be
healthy for tonight's game is de·
fender Joe Clarke who has sulfl·
ciently healed after a knee injury
sidelined him for the early part
or the season.
•
JU"P MOTii: Ali.r I-991'nff. IN 5'lrl tin
11111 lhrM .,els, two o1 u..n 1<or..i ..., ~
Aw ell#M. -orner ic..t lletf• MS Ille,.._,
w ..... .,. .. -llat \Ot.Q ..... ·--II comff '° ICll>l'l"ll QOAI~ He d ied Sl-n't -
from II y.,.. out -ins I l"9 Aztecs H.,. •-pie . In _,,., lrol'll offlu mow. Gerl' •••H• hfl been eleveled from eet1lilet1I
ijl aseball standings
l
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Wett Dlvlalon
W L Pct. GB
~dgen 11 2 846 -
A'.tlanla 7 5 .583 31"2
Cincinnati 6 6 .500 4112
San Diego 5 9 .357 61'2
$;ln Francisco S 9 357 61"2
Houston 3 10 .231 8 ·1 East Dlvlalon
ontreal 8 2 .800 -. Louis 7 2 . 778 ,_,
hiladelphia 7 5 .583 2
ew York 4 4 500 3
ttsburgh 4 4 .500 3
bicago 1 10 .091 7YJ
...
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Oakland 14 1 .933
Chi cago 7 3 .700 4''l
Angels 6 7 .462 7
Texas 5 6 .455 7
Seattle 4 9 .308 9
Kansas City 2 7 .222 9
Minnesota 2 9 .182 10
East Division
Cleveland 6 3 .667
New York 7 4 .636
Boston 6 4 .600 YJ
Detroit 7 S .583 YJ
Milwaukee S 4 .~ 1
Baltimore 3 6 .333 3
Toronto 3 9 250 4\.'J
ni.911111'• IC-CN<etD lW,~W
TwMto et .... Ycwt. •·· "'"' Oflly ..,.,_ K"9dll ... T.-y'I._..
A ..... CT~• •II el Ml-Mte (..._I'll
l·tl Cltlc.tll IT'*" Ml et Oelrolt l"'try .. I
Te.-• ci..~wtl Ml •I Clewtand ((Mr'-, .. ,, II
T.,.,...(..,._.1 .. 1elNewYn1.HMl•ll.
n K•-City 104lle 1.01 et Mllw_,11 .. tll<*ll
1·11," Oelll.ll,,. CNOnllUI et IHttM CAl!Mlt WI, 11
Oflly ..,_. W:llMUIM
• • •
oener•I m•MQef IO 99Mre1 mene~r. 8111
DewMft ret.IM Ille litle, prnldent of the Surf
o.feno.< ,,_ Pelll.._.., e<Qulr9d late I.st
MHon, "'" ....--•ucceulul .,_ '-"' IOllowlnQ • 1•11 -•1111 ,,,. Indoor MHOn, •ftd ,,
no• renebllltellno Mldllelder V"•'
Herae..-. -nit wll•, ar-.i we•c-their
""'Child,. CMUQhlff Dof"n SAh;rCMy
U.S. need s a win ·
GOTEBORG, Sweden <APl -
The United States ice hockey
team . with revamped lines and a
growing zest for the open E\U"O-
pean s tyle. faces a showdown
with Finland for the top spot in
the 8 pool of U1e world cbam·
pionshi ps.
The Americans need to win
against Finland Saturday to win
the pool and finish in fifth place.
-Kuhn says owners are right .
DALJ..AS -Bueball ~ ....
Kuhn UYf be wUI not lean ca tbe club "'911fl
t.o relax their po1llloa in tbelr coatract ..,.
wltb the playen Juat for the we of avoldla1 •
threatened 1trike.
"Tbl• UJM the ownen ,are clearly rt•bt,"
Kuhn 1ald cturtn1 an interview broadcut Tbun·
day nlpt on radlo atatlon KRLD·AM .
Kuhn said be expects the fiery rhetoric
between the ownen and the playen' HIOda·
lion to continue ri1ht up until the May 29 strike
deadline aet by the players.
Tbe playen voted to walk out after club
ownen unilaterally Imposed a plan to com·
oenaat~ teama that lose ce~aln players throu1h
basel>all '1 free a1ent reentry draft.
The playen • 1roup, btaded.~y Marvin Mlller,
contend that the ownen • plan W\U rMtrict the r~
agent market by dl1coura1in1 clubl from ae·
gressively pursuing free a1ent.1.
·'I have publicly been oo record for a long
time aa bellevtn1 that there ahould be com·
pensatioo of aome kind," Kuhn said ln the ln·
terview taped Wednesday.
''When a San Die10 loses a Dave Winfield,
for example, they ought to get a guy back that
they can play.'•
Winfield played out hit option with tbe
Padres tut year11and aiened a multi-million
dollar contract with the New York Yankees.
The Padres received nothing.
·'The clubl bareained tor the right to com·
pensation last year and they should have It."
the commissioner continued. "Anybody who
looks for me to put the heat on the cluba to
water down the provision that's now In effect in
order to get a settlement ls looking to the wrong
guy. I'm not going to do that."
Anderson ahead in decathlon
UCLA's Mark Anderson, one of America's
top hopes for a decathlon gold medal in the
Ot1mpics three years ftom now , ahot out to a
176-polnt leld .alter five event.a in the Mt. San
Antonio Relays decathlon Thursday . . .
Young Blc:ky Rudd of Chesapeake, Va .,
smashed the MartJ:nsvUle Speedway Grand Na·
tiontJ qualifylna record and won the pole posi·
tion for the Virainia 500 stock car race Sunday
. . . The highest court of'intemational auto rac·
ing declared the controversial Lolua 88 Grand
Prix car ille1at ... Ma rk Sellen, son or
forbler jockey Jolla Sellen, suffered a possible
broken back and broken shoulder in a spill dur·
ing the third race at K ee neland
. . . Professional baseball will join Sunday in
national recognition or Vietnam veterans
... Bobby MJlJer scored two goals as the U.S.
hockey team trimmed Holland. 7-3, and came a
ste p closer to winning the B pool in the World
Hockey championships ... The San Diego
Chargers say they've signed USC wide teceiver
Billy Mulllm . . . Shlrley MuldoWDey set lhe
pace in the first round of qualifying for Sun·
day's National Hot Rod ssocialion Southern
Nationals with a S.94 second run at 240.64 miles
per hour . . . Pittsbureh Steeler wide receiver
Theo BeU was sentenced to a one-year probation
for his conviction on simple assault charges.
Television, radio
TV: Basketball -NBA playoffs (Kansas City
at Houston >.11 :30p.m .. Channel2. Tapt>d.
RADIO: Baseball San Diego at Dodgen,
7:30 p.m., KABC (790 >
Ironwood.
SPORTS BRIAK
('°f 10 on!J>: ,
1. New Orleans: 2. New Y°" et.-; 1. 1'41• ••
York JIUi •·Seattle; 5. St. LouiilJ •· 0Ne9 )ay; 7.
Tampa Bay; I. SU Froelleo; t. aam: 10. Ctn·
cbmali. • • • I 'm not a acout, and a lot of variables are ln'
volved, but here are the mo.t likely flnt 10 picka
Tuetdaf (not ln any particular order>:
Halfback George Roeen. South Carolina;
Halfback Freeman McNell, UCLA ; Defe11•ive
back Ronnie Lou, USC; Defentlve back Kenny
Easley, UCLA; Linebacker Lewrace Ta~lor,
North Carolina; Linebacker Hqh Green, Pitta·
burgh ; Llnebac.ker £. J , J\lnlor, Alarnama:
Tackle Keith Van Home, tJSC; Fullback Randy
McMtllan, Pittsburgh; Wide receiver David
Verser, Kansas. • • • I wondered how long It wu 1oing to take
Nelson Skalbania to 1et disgusted wltb Fer·
ragamo's games and impose a deadline of his own.
If Ferragamo hasn't decided by Monday, then
the Montreal Alouette• don't want any part of him
either.
Good for Nelson!
Fake marathoner
caught in Boston
BOSTON (AP> Despite the precautions
against another Rosie Ruiz incident in this year's
Boston Marathon. a male runner jumped into the
end or the race course before the official winner
crossed the rini9h line, a Marathon official says.
The man, said Scott Mc Fetridge on Thursday,
·•was ushered out by security personnel so fast his
head was 1pinnin1."
The intruder never was identified. but bis pres·
ence was evidence that there was n.o fool -proof
way to prevent such intrusions. said McFetr'idge,
supervisor or officials for the rue and ad·
ministrative assistant to Marathon Director Will
Cloney.
Winner of the race was Japa•ese Toshihiko
Seko.
Bast brothers top
cycle field tonight
Mike Baat heads the field for toni&ht's weekly
speedway motorcycle races at the Oran1e County
Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa.
Bast, a seven-time U.S. champion, lus won
two of the three scratch main events tht. year and
appears headed for a nother oulllan4iftg season
with the sidelining or Alan Christian with an in ·
jury.
Joining Bast on the program will be brother
Steve, Mike Cur06o, David DeTemple. Dave Sims
and Lance King.
A match race between Steve Bast and Curoso
will be featured tonight along with the full card or
24 heat races in both handicap and scratch com ·
petition.
Mike Bast returned to speedway racing this
year after a year's absence on a voluntarily re·
tired basis He appears faste r off the blocks and is
riding with more confidence than in any previous
season.
Gates open at 6:30 with Lhe first race at 8.
Tue Reason is The Locati\
·and much
much more!
VISTA VILLAS PHASE II OPENING
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of superior golf. .. 14 courts for day or night tennis. . 30 immac·
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cured lawns ... above it all on a high plateau. Thar's why Arnold
Palmer chose Iro nwood as his place to relax in the sun
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'49·200 Moripoe& Drlw. P.lrn Oettrt. CaJlfornta 92260 ·Tel1714) H6·0SS1
I
• Southwqrd, EmeOJ, Andrews aid Fountain :Valley triumph
Thlrty-el1ht schools, lncludin1
10 rrom tho Oranae Coa1~ area
and Jodlvlduala t.9pped b na·
tlohal leader Davld A1bford of
West Covina Jn the low hurdles
(36.5 for 300 meters), converee
on Tw;tin Hleh Saturday for the
Tustin Relays, which beein at
9:30 a.m. with the llnt field
event, followed by running at 10.
In c I uded tn the fi e ld are .
Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa,
Edison, Estanc ia. Fo untain
Valley, Huntington Beach,
M ar i na, O cea n Vi e w ,
Westminster and Woodbridce.
Defend ing champion Serra
brings its blue·chlp sprinters and
is the favorite, a lthough Foun·
lain Valley Oed by sprinter Steve
Southwardl. West Covina and
Santa Ana Valley are also con·
s1dered contenden for the title.
Among the pole vaulters an-
ticipated are the Cl F Southern
Se~t1on's No I (Villa Park's
Paul Peters. at 14·7> and No. 2
(Marina's Pat f,ustig, al 14-51"2 l.
The relays feature some of the
top teams in the Southe rn Sec·
t ion. ::>ul'h as S('rra (42.6), Ocean
V11•w 11:.i I l. Millikan (43 3), San-
t a Ana Vallev (43.6 ) a nd
Lynwood c l:J.7l ·
Foun\aln Valley'• Barona kept tb•Jr
Suns.et Leaaue track and field record WI·
blemished with a 92 ... victory our idlaon
Thursday afternoon while/ lfuotin1ton
Beach was stoppln1 Newport Harbpr,
85·42.
In other meets iovolvJn1 area teams,
Unjvenity stopped Estancia, 99·37; Costa
Mesa topped Irvine, 74-62; Ocean View
w•s beate n by Loara , 75-57; and
Capistrano Valley won ove r Lac una
Beach, 88-47.
Here's bow it went:
Foun~aln Valley 92, Edleon 44
Steve Southward captured the 100 and'
220 yard dash events for the Barons In 10.1
and 22.8 while Rod Emery was a winner in
the 440 with a good time or 50.4 and Todd
Andrews captured the hurdle races In lS.4
and 40.2.
Andrews also placed second in the high
jump while Emery was a wiMer In the
long jump for the Barons who lead the
Sunset League with a 4-0 record.
Emile Harry placed second in the 220
a nd the triple jump fo r the Barons .
Htn. Beach 85, Newport Harbor 42
Kevin J efferies continued his assault on
the weight events for Newport Ha rbor but
it wasn't enough to offset the depth of the
Oilers.
Jefferies ,won.the shot put by more than
seven feet with a heave of 53·7. then came
back with a victory in the discus with a
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. . PUBl.I(' ~OTIC E PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUllHESS H7JIA
N4ME ST ATEMI! HT ~ICTITIOUS aUSIM•SS "CTITIOUS aUlll .. lS
I Ile to11nw1no Ptr\On " doing HAMI STATIMIMT HAME STATIMIHT
l>u""'"" "' Tfl• to1tow1ng s-non 11 clolnQ bull· Tiie tottowl1>9 1Mr-.1 er • ootn11
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(OM r'AN 'f 11•0 L Logen Street, SERVICE, 10101 Sieler ... ..-... , ~loi, PLAZA, 1S10 llrool<lloOow Drtw, Suite
Co••• M•·u CAl1fnrnl• ,,.,. FounlelnVettey.Colllornlot21Ga. 200, Seftl• ANI. Celllornje tvOS
Roth.l•d lloitino•lo 1140-1.. 1..-JOHN I ERNARO CUSAC~. till Tiie 8Mr•O Chllclr ... , Tr..11, t/O
Sl•ef>t (O\leMna.C •ltlorn1•'"" PrHIPenle Orlw, Huflllnglofl hecll. Donota GfOI,,..., Tru. .. , lloeera a.
Cofllornlo t2'4I Well•. 161 Souell Flgwroe Sire ... LM
r ~I\ bv\ln•h " "'''"'"led l>y ... Tiii• buliM H "Conctucled by .. In AngelH, C.lllornl• •• , loo1vodual divleluet. HerlJen w l(elmlle<ll, 10~ S,..,
r11<,,.rdOoihnQ\ltY JOhn8 C\L\00 11ego Orll••· Ht•OO•I 8 ••<11 .
1 "'' •l•lrmenl WO\ hl•P wllfl lflt Thi\ \tolement •H flied with the CMll0<nlo '2MO Counh (lfdtOI0•"'10"Counlyon"p"I County Clerk of Orengo County on Ho"'*' A. ZoNer. lSIO IA Serre.
I. 1~11 "Orll ). "11 L.o9un1 Hiit~, Cotllornle tJUJ
'1S-~""" Th• 1(-""'-'· • Colllornl• PvOll\twd Or•rtQI' C.O. .. D•oly P110t PubltUwd Or-CoH I 0.lly Piiot, Pertner\hlp, ON 8'-N>ll-Drive.
Al'"' 10 II 1• M.oy 1 1'f 1 tUO 11 "P"I 10 11. H _,I 1'11 17~ s.tita A,,., Colffcwnle t l70S
PUBU C NOTICE
Gtor91 w. C.l!Nmt, JIJ22 Mon --terey St,.... Soul.II ~. C:Otllcwnlo PUBLIC NOTICE nm T"h Du~IMU " Conclu<l•d by •
HOTICI! TO CONTllACTOIU ----eeneret pertnenftlp
CU LING P'Oll •tos l'ICTITIOUS au1u .. u ~ "'· Celtlloml
•<llO<. Oo\tro<I COAST COM Tl>lt ,........,. WM llted with I ..
lw\UHll'l'LOLLE.C.EO•STRlt;T HAMeSTATaMaNT Co.inly Clerk of Dtaft99 Coolftty on
U•o O•M!h"" 1 OO o clock pm of Ille The foll...i.t "°"°" 11 clotftg INSl-Ae>rll 2, 1 ...
Whd.1yulM.ty 1'111 M U H l'lft111
Pl•<• 04 8•d ll~•IPI Olllce .. ... Sl<AH-4.IHE. 11SS ANMlm. c Pwltllsllld Or-Coe•• O.lly Piiot
Purt na.onqAQtnl MoroM'l "-rrlnCoe\I Mno.C:Otlfpmta niu. April ti, 17,2•,,..., I, 1•1 17Jt.tl
Communoty (olltQt 01\lrltl, tllO Or..-y ~tltlp su" .. "· llSS
Ad•ml Avr (O\IO MeU ANlllelm. C. .. Mew. C:OlllOf'nlo "262' ProJMI l.,..,ltlluhon NI,,,_ Nt• Tllll ~ h concN<;9d Illy on I"·
Or1n9t (o.nt COll•Ot C,ym Donce OlvldU•I PUBLIC NOTICE
'loor Bod"~ c;......,., It. si.-
Placr Pltn• ••• Of'I ltt• Ofll<• of Thi\ ~ WO\ llM wllll ir. .. ,.,J Dtreclor o! PhY\lttl Fa<ollllH Pltn Ceunty Clerk of Or .... County Oft MOTICllOI' PUltLIC IALll
llonq, '""'' comm..n1ty Colt-DI\ Apr II IJ, 1•1. Oii ~.., 1. •••. 01 10 oo om., at 3170
1r1c1, 1J10"c1am•A.,. .CostoMeH,(" 1'1""9 "lrwey Avenue . Co~t • Meu.
t.!Ut PublllMd Of .... CNlll OeH., PllO(. C.lllOf'nlo t»», Copltlr-HOiion.ti
NOTt(EISHEREBVGIVENlhollfle A#H. 1',2A.May 1,a.,1•1 111H1 8••111, lhe M<wrtd "''' loWICler Ille ebO••-tl•"""'SChoot Dt•lrklofOrenge ucuflly a grHmenl ... cuted by
County, Colltorno•. acttne Dy ono FH l'll0,,.111• Furn1lurt Menutecturlno """"9" It' Go .. rnlng 8oora, PUBUC NOTICE Compeny, •Ill sell 11 ouollc ouctton to ~ • r • t n • r I• r r • r • r r •cl Io • • Ille tllghffl l>IOde< •cw t t lh, H robl• at '"Ol!>TRICT" .•lltrectlveypto,l>Ulnol -tl'le time of u le, without w•rrenty of
.. ter lllan Ille aboV•·>lated lllM, MtlW l'ICTITIOUI aU.lMlllS tlUe, ll!AeU or IMr<honl~llly In OC·
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ldtntlllH1<1bOve,•ncl\lllll lM -Md EXPERT EXPORTS. UIH <Ollt lerol. !MIO cOtlt ltret to lie re·
and 011t>ttcly relH! otoucl •I ,._ Obov.. Alceter 0r1 ... 0."9 Point, Coll,.nlo moved rrom Ille oremltH Delore Moy 11a1P<1t1 ..... andptoc• n ut I, "" Tt1ertw1111>etnoclel>O'llraqulredlor F~ANCES OEHLSEH DE ~A Tiie cOll•terat con\llU of oll op-
to<ll wt or bid oocum..,u to oueren••• TOllRE, JaSf Atcuor Drlw. o. ... pll..,us. -•tut. tooo. moctlln•
'"' return In good condition wftllln 10 Polnl, Cotllomlo t»2t. IOOll, .._IH, meter le la, hunllure.
'boy••H•rtllel>kl-nl119dol• Tiii• .,.,.,,. .. It conclu<tecl •Y ., In· 1t1ture eciutoment, ~·.,... t l\Oltel\
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1 Tiie DtSTRICT llolllblOlnedf"""'tt. PUBUC NOTICE tDlreclor ol Ille Depertment of '"· .
CIVSltlol ltlla(lof>I Ille generel pre•ell· ---------------
tng reteof perdlom..._ 1,.0.leUlllty
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Oftt· ... 11 I 11 t ll•ll lie M01141111terY ~IN CO..·
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11 ••.t• ""
PUBLIC NOTICE
ton or 173-0, Ibo.rt of hi• beet effort tor tbe
Halon.
Newport's ~rek Turner wu a triple
winner in the 880 (2:01 .8), mile (4:37.2>
and two-mile (10:02.t ).
Runtinlton Beach's Richard Brim, a
junior, won the 100, 220 and lon1 jump for
the victorious Oilers. •
Lo.,a 75, Ocean View 57
Ocean View's Les Tate was a double
winner in the mile (4:30.3) and two-mile
'IJUCK
(9:62.0) but the Seabawks weren't able to
ma tch the depth of the Saxons. Tate ia re-
portedly in the best shape of the season
right now.
nln1 race with exception of the low
hurdles.
Coat• Meaa 74, Irvine 12
, Costa Mesa continued undefeated with a
4-0 Sea View Lea1ue mark while Irvine
dropped It.a tint decialon or the aeuon and
11now3-1.
Bob Grego won the low hurdles ln 31.9
and waa second in the pole vault while VIC?·
tor Herrera was a winner ln the 880.
Eagles laOOed
Cara Francy and Vi cki Simpson of
Estancia were named lo the fi rst team
girts All·CIF 3-A basketball team today
with teammate Bronwyn Hand picking up
third team honors.
Not every aalltn1 yacbi in
Southern California will t
h e aded for Ensenad• th
weeke nd U the Souther"
Califomla YacbUne AHoclation
calendar can be believed.
Molt of the acUOll for stay-at·
home will be of the one·deslp
variety for 1maJl boats.
On the local scene, Newport
Harbor will host a one-deaien re·
g atta Sa turday after the
Ensenada fleet has departed.
In the Loa Angeles-Lone
Beach area Little Ships Fleet o
Long Beach wilt be conducting
an Ensenada Stay-at-Home re·
gatta for Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet yachts.
Another good 440 performance by Rick
Moser (Sl.6) and a fast relay lap (50.0>
gave the Seahawks another shot in the ,
a rm.
Francy and Simpson are both seniors on
the Eagle team that went to the ClF
semifinals before losing to Alta Loma.
61-58.
F rancy averaged 18.3 points a game
while Simpson hit 12.3 per outing. Hand,
also a senior, averaged 11.0. Estancia had
a 23·4 record.
Two clubs will conduct regal·
tas In the Santa Monica Bay
area. South Coast Corinthian!
Yacht Club will send a fleet of
PHRF yachts to the Catalina,
Isthmus Saturday in the second!
race or the Bay Series. and will
conduct a one -design regatta,
Saturday and Sunday. Santa'
Monica Yacht Club will ho ld an'
intraclub regatta. ,
Unlvemty 99, Eatancla 37
Rich l{jmball returned to action for the
first time this seaaon and captured the 330
low hurdles in the good time or 40.8 for the
Trojans.
Brad Meyer was a double winner for
University in the mile and two-mile dis
tance races.
The Trojans improved their Sea View
League record to 2·2 and won every run·
El Toro High, runner .up in the Sea View
League to Estancia, placed Robin Holmes,
a 5·9 junior with a 22.S·scoring average, on
the fi rst team and senior Angela Rock on
the third squaA....Rock, at 5·9. averaged 15. l
per outing.
Gahr High, the 3-A cha mpion had
juniors Toni Eld ridge and Michelle McCoy
named as co-most valuable players.
Most of the competitive actionj
for one-designs will be at San
Diego Yacht Clu b whe re the'
Cal·20s, PCs, Solings and Stars
wall race for their various neett
championshi ps. -------------------.,
CASSEm OR 8· TRACK
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Sports on TV
~ngels televised twice
Saturday's TV, radio
TELEVISION
9 a.m. (5) -TENNIS -Eliot Teltscher vs.
Peter Fleming in the WCT Challenge Cup, taped in
MOhtreal.
Orange Coaat Collete wu able to maintain lta
two-same lead in the South Cout Conference
chase wlth a victory over Santa Ana Thunday to
hlghU&ht community colleae baseball action. · tn ot..ber play. Golden West fell a run short to
Santa Monica, whUe Saddleback needed a tl\ree·
run homer in the bottom of the ei1hth to defeat
Chaffey.
Here's what happened:
Orange Coatt 3, Senta An• 2
'l'be Pirates improved their record to 10-3 in
the conference with a hard·!ou•ht win at Santa·
Ana.
OCC broke out to a 1 ·0 lead in the fourth inning
as Reggie Montgomery doubled to c,nter. took
third on an out and came home on Ed Farrell's
sacrifice fly.
The Pirates added to their mar1ln the next in-
ning as catcher Dan Dix lilted the ball over the
fence in left.
Tbe Dons closed the gap to 2·1 with a run or
their own in the fifth, but the Pirates added the in·
surance tally in the eighth as Farrell's single to
center brought home Larry Lee, who had opened
t¥ frame with a hit
Kelly Slmon, who pJcked up the victory, went
~ lnnin&• before 1tvin1 way to Mike Hocan, who
ran into a little trouble ID the ninth •s the Dom
scored a nm and.had the tytn1 run at flrat with two
outs.
But Hogan was able to retire the next batter
on a popup to preserve the victoty.
S.ntll Monica 3, Golden Weat 2
The Rustlers couldn't hold a 2·0 lead as the
Corsairs scored three limes in the bottom of the
B4SEIULL
fifth and then held on to win.
The Rustlers jumped out ot a 1-0 lead in the
first as Steve Springer scored from second base on
a single by freshman Chris Schultz.
GWC got another run in the third as Keith Hall
singled, was sacrificed to second, went to third on
an error and scored on Springer's single.
That appeared to be all pitcher Mark Stone
... -
would need, too, until be fell lnto trouble in the
flftb.
Worklns on a no:.bltter aitd with one out
already in the books, Sfone wu touched for three
slnt1es and a double for three nma.
Pitcher Re11i• Wyatt made It 1tand up and
the Conain moved into nnt place durtn1 the
second round of Southern Cal Conference action
with a 3·1 ~cord.
Golden West dropped to 2-2.
Saddleback I, Chaffey I ·
The Gauchos rebounded from deficit• of 4-0
and 8-3 to pull out the win.
With the score lied at six 1oin1 into the bottom ot the eighth, Russ Lee wu hit by the pitch and
Pete Harrell followed with a single to 1et the stage
for Ben Amaya.
Amaya promptly sent the first pitch over the
left field wall and the Gauchos had a three-run
cushion.
Brad Kinney. who came on in relief in the first
inning, went the rest or the way to pick up the win.
Amaya finished the day going 3-for-5 with three
runs scored and four RBI.
lOa.m. (4 )-BASEBALLWARMUP.
10:15 a .m. (4 J BASEBALL -The Cincinnati
Reds vs. the Astros in Houston.
MV High
hosts top
• This Weeks Special
DESERT HORIZONS 11 a.m. (51 -ANGELS BASEBALL -The
Angels meet the Twins in Bloomington, Minn.
1 p.m. (4> GOLF Second round play in
the Legends of Golf tournament.
2 p.m. (7) TENNIS The semifinals or the AJan King Tennis Classic. taped in Las Vegas.
3 :30 p.m. (21 SPORTS SATURDAY -Mat-
thew Saad Muhammad (29-3-2> defends his WBC
light heavyweight title against Murray Sutherland
(31·2 l in a scheduled 15 round bout taped in A:tlan-
tic Caty, NJ Also: The Oxford-Cambridge boat
race, taped on the Ri ver Thames in London. (7> -
PRO BOWLING -The finals of the Fires~one
Toumamentof<.:hampions. taped at Akron, Ohio.
swtmmers
De fending champion
and host Mission Viejo
High is hos ting the
eighth Mission Vi e jo
swimming invitational
Saturday at Marguerite
Swim Center in Mission
Viejo and as has been
the custom , enters as
the team to beat for the
team championship.
Among the entries are
s uch swim powers as
Mt . Ca rmel (Sa o
Di ego>. Mira Costa,
Montc lair, Newport
Harbor, Newbury Park,
Capistr ano Valley,
Buena Fountain Valley
1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE
Leather covered sealing area, AM IFM stereo with
tape player & Cadillac wire wheel covers
C798UDS> $9895
COUNTRY CLUB
Drive through the aa1n inlu thi& preUiRious
residenlial and re..:rea1ional enviro nmenl in beautiful
Indian Wells ... and see the luxurv ho mea. the clecant 3 -lev~
dubhuusc, S 1ennis couru, 28 1wimmin& pools and 1herapy spas, and
one of the mosl challencing profcuional coif courK'I
anywhere (Ga y Brewer golf directo r) . on 2 74
lake-doned acres where it's summertime 1he
year·ro und. 12 .. financing (12.7 .. APR) Ii availahle
l all o r wri1e 1oday for a brochure or an appoin1men1 w see 11
Homes from $236,000 to $376,000
Walker & lee
l:xdu,ivc ~In Asent
44976 S1. Helena Court, Indian Well•. C'aliforn1a 9226<.'
(7 14) 568-0207
S p.m. (7> -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -
Thomas Hea rns (30-0 > defends hi s WBA
welter eight crown against Randy Shields (38·6·1>
in a scheduled 15-round bout, taped in Phoenix.
Also: A preview or the Kentucky Derby, spotlight-
ing the key horses and personalities in the 107th
"run for the roses." And the Dlue Grass Stakes,
taped April 23at Lexington, Ky. (28) -SOCC.:t;K. and Corona del Mar. lfQ'llliillll • ••• y .. , • ·~ , ~ •• '· n .., • ..,t,•~•· .... , ••• ""' ,, .•• , .... • .. • '• r If •·• •"•' .. , •t<i• • 1
RADIO Newport Harbor en·
ters with breaststroke Baseball Angels at Minnesota, 11 : 15 a .m ..
KMPC (710); San Diego at Dodgers. 7 p.m .. KABC
(790).
and individual medley ~-------------------· ........ ~---'----"'---------------------
ex p ert J ohn MoHit,
Auto Racin~ Tam es Toyota Grand Prix His·
toric Car ruccs. 2 pm . KLAC (570 l.
Sunday's TV, radio
TELEVISION
10 am. !21 NBA PLAYOFFS The Boston
Celtics meet the 76crs 1n Ph1laedelph1a. (501 -
SPORTS AMERICA.
11 a.m (51 ANGELS BASEBALL -The
Angels meet the Twins in the first game or a
double-header an Bloomington. Mann . (50 > -SOC·
CER MADE IN GERMANY.
11 :30 am (41 SPORTSWORLD -Dale
Earnhardt and David Pearson are among the
dri\'ers entered an the Charlotte 300. taped Also:
The L'S . Japan and Romania are a mong the
countries part1c1pating in the men's competition or
the lntemat1onal G., mnasttcs Classic
Noon I 11 > THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL .
. 12 30 pm 12>• NBA PLAYOFFS Kansas
City al Houston (7 l WOMEN'S TENNIS -The
finals of the MurJant WTA championships, taped
at Amerha Island Plantation. Fla
I p m. (4 I GOLF Final round play in the
Legends or Golf tournament from Au stin, Texas.
2:30 p.m. 17> AMERICAN SPORTSMAN -
A<?tor Martin Sheen aids in the relocation of three
trained Afri can e lephants to their homeland. Also:
Elhel Kl'nned v a nd her son Mic hae l join
yo ungsters from the New York City Police Athletic
League on a white-water rafting adventure on
Maine's Kennebec River. (22) -SOCCER.
3:30 p.m. (7 > WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -
The national championship sprint car race, taped
at Rossburg, Ohio Also : The Duke Kahanamoku
surfing classic. taped orr the north shore of Oahu.
Hawaii RADIO
Baseball Angels at Minnesota (double·
header>. ll:t5 am .. KM PC (710>; San Diego at
Dodgers. 1 p.m .. KABC <790>
Auto Racing Times-Toyota Grand Prix of
endurance from R1vers1de lntemational Raceway.
9 a.m ., KLAC (570 1.
<The Dally Pilot Is not responsible for late
changes.>
From Page C1
WATER POW • • •
Interview following the two-hour tuneup when the
R,utsians became more relllvPd during t~e initial
ibterview and reversed an earlier "nyet ' to a re-
quest to speak with one or their athletes.
But the Russian athlete added little to any in·
sight into the Soviet's program or its attitude.
"Yes. the Long Beach State facility is satisfac·
tbry," said the Moscow natl ve.
while Mi ss io n Viej o
banks on Doug Barker.
freestyler John Larson.
sophomore backstroker
Powell Hamilton and
distanice s tar Ch ri s
Weist.
T he Diablos have won
this invitation in each of
the seven previous years
and the girls' team is
also favored , with
freesty ler Ma r ybeth
Linzmeler and 14-year·
old freshman Tiffany
Cohen paving the way
Prelims gel unde r
way at 9 a.m with the
fin a Is set for 2
Ivy alumni
set to race
Eleven boats, sailed
by a lumni or seven Ivy
League colleges and uni·
versities. will be sailing
a race-within-a -race in
th e Newport t o
Ensenada race.
The l vy -Ensenada
race has become a tradi·
lion in which none of the
competitiors could care
less how they do in the
overall Ensenada race
statistics so long as he
or she beats another Ivy
League school
l vy League entries in
this yea r's race include
Army, two from Brown.
Columbia, two from
Co rn ell, Dart ·
mouth/Penn, two from
Harvard a nd two
from Princeton. All ex·
cepl three will be sailing
under the Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet
mea s ure ment rul e .
Yachts range from the
Catalina-30. Talaria (a
Brown entry) to the 75·
foot sc hoon e r .
Shearwater Calso from
Brown>.
But that was really the only question be would F b J)
answer with any conviction. Another, such as who oot a
appeared to be his team's major competition in
tournament, drew the following from the in-•
terpreter: sign ups
·'This Is an important tournament -first
because it la the place of the 1984 Olympics. Signups for Newport
SecOJldlY. all or the strongest teams in water polo Be a ch J uni 0 r A 11 .
are here. This ia the highest level of competition." American football will
Asked 1' he felt any special pre11ure to be held May 9, May 30 ~rtorm well while in American waten, the Soviet and June 6 at Newport
star, who has been with the national pro1ram Harbor and Corona del
alnce he was 16, simply reiterated the previous Mar blitl schools from·
statement -that competitlon was tops Jn thll 10·12 for boye ln five
tournament and every 1ame wowd be tough. dlvtliom. ranging ·from
The Soviet leade~ made no promises wt\en ~ aa• 8·U.
s•ld he would see wha\ be could do about an Ua· Youb11ter1 are re-
tf)'Vlew with one of ht• players and aa it tp~ qulnd to uve a $15 re·
out, Kabanov became available only when the par· llltraUop fee and paren·
ty was lD the proce11 of leavin1. , ui approval, in penon
When the Soviets made their tint entry aDd a preferably. ~uesl for an Jntervtew wu ma~ the ftnt Cl'*· Pracllct! beiln• Aui. ~n came from the Ruulana: 10
"What newspaper are )'OU from?" ·
The Oran1e Coaat Daily Pilot apl)arently clld
! 1trtke any nerves and u tht lnltlal lntentew
ded, they departed for tbett coaeblnl duties UD·
fied-to the extent tbM U. t.bird man pretent·
me With a wat.r polo pa from U.. '80 GalQet.
Ntit •me tbe workout, 101Dt arwu from the
Ill maMl'ft'. tom• lhrtrtidn&·llke i4!0rtel "*" a 1Ulmma1e u nrurw lroin UM American,
alijiA and Spaoi•b team IOoUd on, tbt ex·
to U. ehOwen and ftDal'1 Uil:'lut·mlftute in·
tew ,,Sth the team caPtatn.
•
t •
OH WHAT A FEELING!
Ownef's of b,<>ta's luxurtOUs Cresslda row have even more
to feel good abou1 The Allstate Insurance Company announced
that the Cresslda has earned a reductloo 1n coM1SIOl'l and
comprehensNe pmmums ranging from 10 IO 25 peicenl •
Allstate cited favorable past loss experience as one key
reason for the rate reductioo Another is Cresslda's teeent design
changes. which aie expected to make the car less vulnerat>le to
damagl) in an accident .•. less costly IO repair If damage does occur
Mot9 lcM9 on~ SlalW
The newest member of theT<¥>ta llne-ttle total economy Starlel-
wllt be saving ifs owners insurance money too. Due IO Startec's
ION suggested manufacturer's tetail pnoe, Allstate has placed It
in their lowest-rate colliSIOrl and ~ve iruiorance
C8legoty for 1981 C81S.
Saving moMYI Lower-cost insurance
tS just one of the 188SOl"IS Oflhing
a Toyota Is such a good feeling.
~TOyoea dealer can
point out a IOt mofe. Stop
in 10 see him soon!
')
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JlOLH-1.llenC>one&eer (H), 41.0; 2 Toy
CHI, 41.l ; J. Potdtnon (NI, 41.7 •.
440 reley-1. HunllnQlon 8eech, 44.•.
Mii• recey-1. HunllngtOll 8eec11, J:l7.I
HJ-I 8ell (HI, W ; 2. Perrlsll CNI, W ; l.
Glem (NI, W .
lJ-1. fl<'lm (H), ~. J, Mllte,.,...ler (HI,
»S; >. Uedo INI. 17-10.
T J -1. S.ttertleld IHI, 41.J, 2 Wtrd 00,
<ICMYI, l . Toy IHI, Jt\10°"
PV-1 OI-IN), 12•; 2. 8e1Mn CN),
tJ•; l . U..Clne 1111. 11-0.
SP-I. Jeft«los (NI, U.1, t Moore (HI,
*-2; J . .._.,,(HI, U... '
OT-I. Jeffef ... Ill, 17M; 1 K-lck
1Hl, 1Jt..o; J. .......... (H), 127·1.
~ 1&, Ge.-View JI
27
Orange Cout OA.ILY PILOT/Friday, Aptil 24, 1981
28 29
p I 24
..... hw, 111~ ,.,. *' """" 7 35
Saturday
25
• .... at Twms, 1115
P~es at llilltf1. 1 -<tJ
28
·••<fwifts.11:15
POeslt ..... 1.~ • .... It A's. 7:30 ~" ........ 7:35
•atA's, 7:~
Qilts at ....... 7.35
•ttA's, 73'
Gins at ....... 7.35
M -1. Emwy CUI. t:OU; I. CllQYltt ~
CUI, 1 07.t; J. 0-. (U), l :OI ...
Mlle -1. MeY't< tUI, 4:11.7; 2. McC. .....
(I.), •:•.t; I. Kufltl 011, 4!4J.6.
2 .... 11e -1 ,_.,.., CU), 10:0I.&; t. 1._,,
IU), IOtW; J.-Car1flyCal, IO:•..I.
120+4H -1 . .._, IEI. ,.,7; t. $1..,dt (U),
16.1, J Smltll IEI, 11.J..
SJOLH -f, KlmHll (U), 40.1, 2 ..... eru
!al, 40.t , » ~ IUI. 42.2.
440 reley -1. u,,,,,.,.,.,, o.!
Mlle ..... y -I Unl-.lty, J.41.S-
HJ -1. M<l..Mlllllln (U), s-tO; J. 8"c<Ole
IUI, S .. , 1 SimilJI IE>. M
Pl/ I. Srnlttl 1&1. 11-4, 2 Wellr,IM IUI.
lt-0, l . Net_, IUI. t~.
U -I. a..-!Ill. 1..,. J. ~ !UI, 1•1.J ...... ,11,..a.
T J -I Gen (U), ~, 2. hrne• (El.
JMO, l SC-lUI. V-4 '
SP I MorrltM (UI, 4M.,._; t M<Alpine
IEI, •~. l HUI IUI, tS.1~.
OT -1 Hiii (U), IJ7 I, t. llttaler IEJ,
Ul·t. 3 Wenlleff CE), UJ.7
C.Ml-14,1""""'" 100 -I. 8rOCkl!IQtOll UJ, 10.4, 2. Herrl'
Ill, 10.S. >. Hted (CMI. 10.1
UO -I H.Wrlt (I), U I; 2 8roclllnalaft
Ill, U.,I, J. a.1 .. r ICMl, 2>.3.
'40 ~ I Glil,,.r (CM), SI S. J. Allen (CMI.
u.o. 1· c-t"'"· SJ.I. MO -1. ~rtr• ICM), I, Sl.4; 2. Allen
ICMI, t:'9.t, J, kroen Cll, 1 Ot.2.
Mlle t. Howerd ICMI, 4:JD.t ; 11 Olb,_
Ill.• Jl.O. J LeCrouo ICMI. 4:.i.4.
l ·mll• I. LeCroue ICMI. 9.41.•, J
Olbloull. Ill, t .43.t; t. S.tterwhlt• (II. t : .. .I
110HH -I. Jone• "'· I••; l . 8ryco Ill,
17.J, :I. Gr-CCMI, 17 •.
»OLH -I Gt'-ICMI. 39.9, 2 Allen
ICMI. 42 0, l J-Ill, 4J I
440 ,..l•y -I Irvine, 44.1.
Mlle reley I. Coste Mew, l .32 2
Pl/ -I VUvrrvm Ill. 12 ... 2 Gr090 IC~M. 12.0, l ElllOWll (CMI, 12.0
OT I He~lle ICM), l,.J, 2 INIM Ill
llJ •. J Sly.-nkl CCMJ, 1u.•
SP I Slyper"'I !CMI. 4-S, l Gill Ill.
d '· l Me-(CM), 4J.IO T J I 8rt<O Ill, 40 7...,, 2 H11rk1nl Ill,
40 t , l H........,. ICMl. l7_...., lJ I Hemeclll CCM). 1' II, 2 Bryce Ill.
1' •. l L•rlL1n Ill 19 .. .\1.
HJ I Mllloll lCMl, •.O. 2 Nl•Oll (CMI
S•.> H-ICMI.~
t.eplstr-Veltey-. ~ ... o 41
100 1 8ryent !Cl, 10 4, 2. Cone CCI, I I 4,
) CllONlult (CJ, 11 4
J:I0-1 Foa CCI. n .•. 2 er, .... , ICl. 2h.
l TflOrton ILl, ltt
440-I A-.1111 ILi, SJ.O, 2 Moffeu IU.
U 4, J KH>QJIOfl ICI, Sl.5
MO I -.1111 (LI. 1 O~ J. 1 Guyer Ill,
1 O~ l, J H_.d (LI. 2 07 t
Miit I H.aoQerO ILi, I 01 0, ? Guy ..
Ill. 5 01 O, l H°"lt.on !Cl, S JtO
1 mllo I H-rd IL.I, 10 "3 o, no te<ONI
or third
l?OHH I. Thonon (LI. 14.9, 2. Golrw>
IC1, 11.t, no111lrd.
llOlH I Thor\Oll IL.I, 39.9, 2. Klr>QSI°"
CCI, 41 2, J. Geirw• (Cl.« 0
•40 roiey I Cec>lllr-Voll•Y. 44.9
Mil• r•llY I Cepl\lr-Velloy, l U 0
HJ I Tllo<'°" Ill, t I~. 1 WHlerfielO CCI, I I. no lllirO
lJ I M<Elllerwy CCI, ..... 1 H.oney !Cl.
II t• >, J Gelrwt CC). 11 11
r J '· Devin CCI, ll.J. 2 K1119U011 (Cl.
H 1, l 9--ICl.lS-0
PV 1 McEl"-v ICI, 101, J. e...... CCI, 10-0, no llllrd
SP I IM!l !Cl SI-ti, 1 S.-y ICJ,
St-1•1.] WMCer110IO ICI ...........
OT I -.erfleld CCI. lt2 S. 2 s._.,
CCI 14J t, J Her...-!CJ 14>-t
High achoo I tree II
araun
IOOyerd,-IMW•IMutrJ,t.4w,• •. llrown
IMwir>, •.S., t 7, T-ISe<rtJ. •I, Grllfin
IM1lllk1t11). • 7w '911, All.., IB<llclwlft Pen.J,
• lw, 10 0
100 -"" -Gr•,..,,, IC.entonnl•ll. 10 Sn. Todd IS.nel, 10 lln. Oel•m4• cPo.-1,
10 Un. Utler tCrnp11, 10 • Alle n IElaen-),tO.I
200 rnetan Gt'•llem (C.entenn1e 11. JI.I,
Atllford CWHI OWINll, JI SOW, 21 Jc, Allen
(El•enllow••I 21 Stwn, JI.Un, 8re.,.
M•U.11 (MYW), JUc; T ... (S.rrel, Jl.7c;
ouien: 10c-.. 1-1,J1.ew,u .u .
•00 ..,.It,• Gr•ll•m IC•ntenn1•1J •7 S
W•rt tc.ant•nn1•1J. 41 1k., Brown (Muir•,
•• I, Jon .. IC.l>rtllol, ta 1n. Town .. no ILB
Poly I. 4145
.. melOr> Co• (LB Wll.onl. I II ••
1'\onroe llA B•PllSll , 1 SJ u . King
IHewlnOf',,.I. I SJ•. !HllrinQ (Le H•br•i.
I S• 1. Tnom.i•CS.n1eB.,IMlro1, 1 54 Jc
1,SOO moc .. , ... l .. r ltEdllOnJ, J:SLO; 1
Devi\ !Compton) l S4.9. Co• (LB Wllsonl,
l 51 8 . Al-1n\on IM1r• CMl•I .• 00 •• Gunn
fW1lnu11.• 01 0
Mllr G•ll ..... r(CoreNMIMerl,4 U .7;
r11om•• IS.nt• S.rbor•I. • 16 •. voien (El
MoCMn•J, 4 :IO S, Co• ILB W1l'IOnl, • ?I•.
Slrol.,., (I'~ Vellef), 4 U.Jn 011-.n
KOii• IC..-•c Merl, 4 U .0..; T..,..r
(Newper1H.,...l,4 U .....
l,000 mec ... , -Y'ff IU1'1vonltY), t .4L2;
C.rilllll\\ ISoutl\ Torr•nc•>. a 4 In, ,.I.....,
IM•ler 0.IJ, t 41.S.; A,,_. ILi PolyJ,
I •9 t . W11C>11 (CMlyOll, Seueu•I, l .Sl .. 1,
Olt..r> ••tM.et«OoO,t :St. ...
1 mll• Thome• !Sent• l«ber•J, t 21>.s;
G•llet-IC..-..C-1,t:u.t; &~
1r ... 11te111 Vetleyl, t :a .t. _.,.cl tt>ene
H1lh l. ' ,. '· Reynol<R IC.merlllol,' "t; Otl'IOn .. t-.CAMterOell,•:U.ta.
I 10 mote< .. H -l ev• llleulrl, U 7, AU>tord
IWOI Cov1nel, Ill, Helo ~lleJ, U.l,
Hort IS.rvltel, 14 I, K'erllo OilUulon 11,.)ol.
01n.r• ~-1r--..vet1eyl,••.J..
)JO meter lH A5hford IW••I Covin•),
l• Sc, KnowlH CBlelrl. 36 tc. Crhm•n
CRlvenlde PolyJ, ll Oc, Hele CK•loll•l. l7 1.
K•rllo(.WulOn\111101,n •7c.
400 me,., reley -Muir. O .t<, Cotnpton,
•2 Oc, Lii Poly, O.IS, C.enl•nnl•I. 42.~. s ..... •1 4<
1,.00 meter reley -W l•nnl•I, 3 lt.00,
Mulr,.J:lttlc, LaPoey.J 17 2tc; Te"'910CI·
ty. J 1'.S, PeMdent , J 19 .. <n; 011\ers·
l'e11ntel11 V•lley, J: M.6kll.
HJ ""'"°" (lelVM 8oecll), t-11; &or..
ntr llnQl•-1, •·II, Cairo ( Plvs X >. P-11
c EdQewoodl, Wlcller (Mllllll•nl, •·10.
Olher\ Hert IS.rvllel,t ...
LJ r eve !Muir I, 2M.,,, Alll.ln1 CWelnuO,
Jl-•i.-.. Motlt90fMry l&enr>l119I, 23-4; Br-
IS.rr•l. l).2V., Cllu•hev (Newbllry Pel"kl,
,, 10'"
T J T•vt IMulrJ, •1 11"-, Powell
(Edgow-1. 41 I.,,, lrQOI(' CS.rrel, 41 r,
Hell I ,.elm Spr\flO'I, .._7, Jeuo (S.nte Anel, ........ s .....
Pl/ Peten (\/Ille Pen.), t•I. '-""t
CMerlMI, •144\'t; Mullin• (Covinel, l•J.
Aeed (LO\ Amlgou, 14 2, TomllnHn
(Mllllken). l•I
SP Ill (Ho9o'"I. tH, Freiler (Mte._
11a11oyl, U·> • .Nft«lea I~ ... ,.,,,
M-1; KYlelllulN Pel"kl,~. N .. 1111"'°"),
57-•
OT -~ C.....,.., N•-1, 11•11;
OobOltlt Ch1Tti1191K, IU ... <rnll, ltl•t ;
Wttlertle4cl (ClllilMr-Valley), llMI; CU
CN ... 1"1, ltt.11; llre1~ CMW'-Vttleyl,
lt 7•11, OllM"' tteMlrlO l"•11tl .. tN
IH<ll},I.... 4 Hott. *'-IN .i.e., 11~ w......,.; c-convertef~fN.
(CeftleMi.11, ll tw, 12.•t, WIMlon IJwelnl,
12.0.
2GO meiera -McOrra C~el, MAc;
J.n..-10.eyJ,U.Jcn; "•wrMr1 CW .. f.,..
rMKel,a4.7W,U .S.
-~-KtlloftlWelflVtl,St n. CW1M
CCulverCJty),P ,tc:Hell (l8PolyJ,S7 kn
IOO meters -Elllen (Sent• lorberel,
,.tU<; OW.. CU.-. 9Mclll. 1:11 .. ;
....... , (Uttl•ertllO, I : IJ.S; Ollle":
i ........ CCM10,l: 11.Jc.
1.SOO metera -c-IAl•,...,,YI •• ts.a, ,._w IU9WW11tYI, •:a ... ; Buue (Arroyo
Gre . .-1, • • 911, OU." !left ,_ Dell,
•:st ....
Mlle -Heli.11 IS...-», 4 ff I , Me-
I Bwonel, • St.•. "l•1t1er IU•lwo"UYI, S: ... U.
l .000 -ten C-(Al-y), t .Sl.t ,
81rrlM (U1'1....Wly), tt.•.•; McCloll-
IS.n Merc .. 1, to J• s
2·mll• -Meton ce.-1. 10 .. s. ~1 CS.creel ...,..,,, 10 ~. HUiett cs.,...1.
tO. n 3, Otlloo: 8errce1 IU11t .. nttr),
":tJ.71.
1• -U4 -Mlllt IU•lwralty), 14.J; Cn.nc!ler IEIW-el, U SI, HenSOfl CB-..),
u .•w. ua
lOOmeter lH-KollOll IW•lnull, 44 7<, Loe
ISoulh Torrencol ... 4<. w111i.m, IS."llU'I. ... sc
400 mol« recey Muir, .. lO. GenoVie.
41.2c, L8POIY.ta.Scn
1.•00 meler recey -Nort~ Torrence,
J. S4 71, Welr>ut,l 57.7; G""ealoe. l St >t.
HJ -Walk•r !Hoovorl, S·l "1; Mtlh IU1'1Yenltyl,H ;Cooll(Wll ..... J,) •.
lJ -Prye <L B Poly). ••·Sii>. Kellon IWelnut).1 .. 2~. Sno.. lMulrl. 11·2
SP -K••••••lll• IFullortonl, 50-l\lo,
Costenzo IS•u11u,I, •• 01..,, Bredtllew CS.UQU•l.•2-1 .....
OT -Norton (M1ulon Viteo I. 1•• J
K••l•w•ll•• 1F~11er1on1 . ••• J, M111i
IU11lversltyl. 1-.11, Ot!Mn Ly .. Ketltt
ClnlneJ, 1»-1.
Neto; •-IM •i9ell. •--wllOlllllf, c-<O•ver1"tl-.
NBA pleyotf•
COHf'llAENCt l'INAU , ............. ,
EH\trft Cefllor eftC e
T..W11ot•toem.
BO•lonet Phll-IPlll• (Mri .. heO, I I I
~ey'10.mo
BO•lon •I Phlll<IOI0111e
w-.y'•Ge<ft•
PlldeCWIPf>t• et Bo•ton
f'r~y. Mey I
Bo"on •I Pr111-1ph1•. 11 neouery
s..,..,,Me,>
P1>11eo..tpNe •I llostOfl, II necouefy
........ c...ter-•
T ... tM'tO.me
Kan,••C1ty•tHDY>lon lf>eriHllOO, I II _,.,Ge<ft.
I( •n .. , C1ly et Houtlon
Wll ...... ey'10-e
Ho11'1on .. K•-City
f'rl4ey, MO I K•nte• C1ly ., Houtlon II nee ..... ,. -y.MeyJ
H°"tton II K•~• City II ne<.u.ry
High school women
Clf' .. A
rcrs.1T-c11e,.1 Mfllor !Rlftrt•cle Poly ... J • .Ir l,
CMri Gr-IS.ml ll•lley. '"4 Sr), -rle
Connolly IC..lwr C1ly. •-O, Sr l, Terri Per
rooll C8 u..-. • O Sr J, Cllerlolte J-
ICompton, t I, Sr I, Ctr>Oy 8<1111~-ISM
111\er<o•. s 10 Sr I, Tr•cy Longo (Sen
G•brl•I . .-0 Sr ), l(erOfl Stnollor IAl ...... 1,
S·IO, St I. Foye Pe1911 (LOnQ 8ee<ll ""4y.
s-t. Sr J, CAltlly Owen I Bueno, S-4, Sr I.
M1cl>Ollt Seney (S.,. Glb•lel, S •.Sr I. Sere
l~wli I R1wn•ct. Poly. 5 t Sr l
S.C.MTum
OebOor BleO (Simi Velley. ~.Jr l. l(en
Jondle ISi JO>oph, Le-ewooO S·•. Sr.).
Cyn1t1lo Cookt lComolOll. S II, Sr J, Olrll
Wy~lnewMJ (-t.eln Velley, S-1, j,,J; Meir
Gell•Qller IRlvor>1do Poly. 5 11. Sr ).
R•mor>• EQQOnOOrlor IOo' Pueblo• . ._O,
Sr I . Deirdre Dvnc•n (1no1ew00d, S·ll, Jr I,
Sll•n-Meyen IE<ll,..., S .... Sr.I: Mery
Mon•rl"° (SC Jo .. ph, 5 J, Sr l, Re""
Overton (~v•n1de Po1y. S.t, Jr I, Volerle
O•lln IArcecll•, St. Jr I
TIMrd THm
lorri W1tfle" llonci S.ecn Poly, t-l, Sr I,
Vaneu •• Potter (A1vfr~O·t North, ~t1 Jr),
All1\o,, Hat .. hne CS.n G.c>r1tl, )-1', Jr),
Mery Perur IP111• X t.0, Sr I. "4ery i'-
~· ,,,._ Del, ~IO, Sr), Jiii ._,_
IAlll•mllr•, ._,, Sr l, C.t~y ken ,,._
Alveraldo, 1·7, Sri, Merle11110 8•1-
(l'ownleln V1llef, I I, Sr l ; Cl\erluo
Bremond llnQlewooo S o. Jr I. Jeo1e
Cr .. ch ICAOf'lllOI S 7 Jr J
MO•I Volu.tbl• Pl•Y., Cheryl Miiier
IRlvtr•oeMPolyJ
Brttlah Herd Cou11
,.,~ ........ , "1<-•....,s1.,....
Belon Ter«ry 001 Rey Moore, w . .-1;
Tom•• Smid def Cllrhlopl\e Aot•r-
lletulln, •·2. •·2. Tlll•rrv Tu••-def
Jeremy Bet ..... 2 • .-0, OomlnlQW &eclel
dol RDl»r1 Rolnlr>Qer, \ 2, 7·S, Bu,ter -
tum d•f. 0..0f'lol Urpl, M ,. I.
Alen King Cleaalc
le1LHV ... sl
~ ...... , ... ...
lven L-1 def. Terry-· 7·S, :H, W ;
Roscoe T.,,,,.r def Aevl Aeml,..1, 7•, M,
Brien Teether Clltl Mel ""'<ell, ._,, W,
Jollll A.,.111\ Clltf. Tom Gulllk-, M , t ..J
HASL
SASTaAM DIVISION
• L or OA ... ""
Cosrnot • • .,,1,,... J I 10 l 10 »
J I t 4 t 24 MontrHI
TofOftlO I I J J J a
0 • • •
M*Ttfa•M OIVISIQtt
P'ortl .. ....,...• l 1 • )
Atl•"1• 2 t t 1
Tempelley 2 2 1 t
Jec-..-vlll• t • s 10
CUffaAL OIVISI~
Twl.. J I 1
0.11.. 2 2 J
Clll<•llD I J
MIM .. Ole I I 2
WtESTlltM DIVISION
Sen 01990 J 2 I • S.i\ JOM 2 1 S S
lo•AnoeleS 2 1 • Swt lllt
NOATHWEST DIVISION
lloncouver l 1 3
S.•111• J • s
Por11e'10 1 1 S
Edmonton o
JO
10
It
• 14
• t4
2 12
t •
2 •
• JO s 17 • •• 3 •
2•
23 " C•IQe ry 0 3 I S I I
Sia POlntl •re ew•rded tor• reQuletlOn or overtime vie tor1 Four potnts for • snootOVt
'llCfor., OM bonu~ paint for every QOilt
\cored •llf\ • m•,.•nwm of lhrM per 9ame
Ho bOnYI Po~nt 1$ •*•'CMd fO< overtime or
tnOOIOUI Ql)ell
TIMl.W.y'1 G•mtt
No 11•mo1 t<lleOuled
TOftltllt'1G•,.... ~ .. rt v> S..me •I A..-1m Sl•d1um
J•<UOflVllle •IT •mp• Bo
Surf 1tat11tlc1
IT"'-1111 ~I U )
"l•yer o ...... I
L•urit Aoran.tm\ 1
K•• Sl•lltft ' Stove Mo-• • 0
llld•I FerNnclel ) 0
Meri. L1no..y l 0
Cllerll•C-e 0
V••mir Ftrn.anoes 0 Jon_,.n Stn.trm.enn 0
Mannt Ntw.\ 0
Cre111 Alltft 0
GrehemO.I•• 4 0
Pe111 Cel\111 ' 0
Stove S.erQO.,,I • 0
Tony Cruoo ) 0
John Cr•..,, 1 0
Alen M•Y•" 1 0
Totol1 J
Oppone1111 lot•I• •
0..111-rs
• • 0 4
0 1
1 1
1 I
I 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
S II
' 21
.... ,.,
Ale11 M•yet
M1-eM-.y
Sieve Hellmi<ll
Tetell
Opponents totolt
G•mea I I,~ ...
2121100
I I 0 I 00
IJOJ.00 .,..,,so
•12J701S
Koy Q--··· ·-Mtb, P-IOUll Poonts Gcwllktepe" 11.tY \-WVt'\ Q-90AI~. M
"'utouh • ..,.--9Qroali •e••nsl •"•' ~
Community college awlmmlng
TOPSTA'l'l lilAA«S
(Til ........ ~IUJ
400 medley reley -1. Fullerton, > Jt t , 2
OleltlO Vellty, J .17 2; l . Wnt Velley, J •. 7.
• Modulo, J:41 s. S Corrllot. J 41 o . Ottotn: t. ~c-. J:t6.I, It. ~
CHll, J:4'.t; 11.~Wtst,J:0.6.
1.000 Ir .. -I Cuter IWHI ll•ll•yJ,
• 36 •; 2 Woll .. , ( Oi!IOIO Vallty).. HJ. l
B•H ty 10111on•l, 9 H .•; • Jell••
CFulltrlon). 10 02 9. S Ryttecl' IMode•tol.
IO;Ol 7, c>a.n: 1. AllllN• l0el•t1 Wnt).
11:07.•; •. ·-..... 15•-kl, 11:ft.J;
10. Lln411ollft IS.ddlee1clll, lt:U.t ; 12.
.. lchlt I~ Wttt>. 11.16.4; 14. Wet.-·
IM'I•< (Gel-WMC), 10:21.l .
200 !roe I Brown I 0101>10 Vetloy),
I •••• 1 Welliver (Ou10IO V•llol. I 4l.l , J
J•ltn IFullorlon), I o 1. • ltnl•O
l1'\odnlol I 0 4, S. l'ujlmure CS.,.·
.. lelletkl, I U .S. OllM". IJ. tte .. hen
10.1 .... W ... l, 1.47.l.
SO r.-.. -t MlOdloton 101.t>IO VelleyJ
21 2, 1 W.H•ver IOIM>IO V•lloyJ. 21 t . l
"eltn-IOr ..... GN•ll, 21.t; • Brown
t01•blo VelleyJ, 21 •. S Jelltt I Fullerton I.
?• • 0111«'1 tJ_ Jnt.tr (Golden Wttll, U.L
100 indo 1 Welll'I•' f01eblo V•ll•YL
I SI 1, 2 Jeff ff I Full•rton). I 5t.O, l
lton•~•lo CFulltrlOnJ 1 00 ). • I.Ow•
fModutoJ. 2 01 I S. l'wjlmu• IS•,.
tloMclll, 2 11.l.
100 IJy I W•ll1ver IOlilblo VelleyJ
I ~ 0, 2 Ozun CP•lomerl. I S6 4 J Cert.r
(WHI ll•lley), I S6 7, • Twbote IOl-
1/elleyl. I St.7, S SllOrl (WHI llell•YJ
I S1 4 Olll9n: u . l'ujlmw• l~M<ll,
1 OJ.J.
100 b•-1 Tl\orefl Cl>let>lo Volleyl
I '4 9, 1 WelllvH (0.el>IO Velleyl. 2 01 2, l
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Jim Bor'ber
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Bodell ll Al<hud> 6S, Webber. St •
Oenlel' ti
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Women's aonbell
HIGH SCHOOL
Cy,...N 4, OU•n View I
Ocun \/low 000 000 O~ s
Cypreu 000 202 .__. 2 o
Wlllle end S.luer. AQWlrre etlO 1/11111.
ltllOft t, He"""r1 H•r1oer I
Edi.on 220 ?12 0-4 l
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COSTA MESA HEADQUARTERS
Photos in our ve rsat ile
shQwrooms indicate how helpful
they are for choice of colors.
/abrics and materials . . in ·
carpeting or other floor cover-
ings and draperies
• • •
'
'•
-·: WE OFFER
I I , I
.THE ORIAJEST
. ( • .. VARI · . ~ OF
' I
TEXTURES AND STYLES
FASHION AND COLORS
CARPET DRAPERIES
VINYL FLOORING
AND WOOD PARQUET
OVER
~ (;el/fury of Cf:xperierice
JoaNBLOESEa "
GABPETCo.
OVER
~ {;eritury of &rvice
OVER
{ ~ {;eiitury of 'rrost
,1
~
• Contract • Residential • Commercial
o.
Sylvester Stallone
goes undercover
in 'Nighthawks' ... D3
CEREMONIES HIGHLIGHT RENAISSANCE FAIRE
Celebration time at Chipping-Under-Oakwood
By MICHAEL DOUGAN
Of Ille o.llJ ~ ... Staff
IL is a celebration of spring. an escape from
the gloomy death or winter. a rejoicing that the
world returns to bloom and promises mighty
harvests.
And. hkc ever} spring. the local feudal lords
have proclaimed a truce in the area or Chipping-
Under-Oakwood. some 40 miles <or 90 leagues >
from London. so that the Renaissance Pleasure
Faire will not be marred by bloodshed.
But we don't need a charter ticket to get there
Just a httle gas and a lot of 1maginal1on will place
Orange County residents nght an the heart of this
Elizabethan fe~t1val. transported an time and
space to contt•mpornr) Agoura
The Pleasure Fairt• 1s a fa1thrul recreation of
the gatherings that "ould occur annually some
450 years ago. atcord1ng to founder Phyllis Pat·
l(' rs on.
Part1c1pants all 3.000 of them are required
to dress an autht•nt1C· costuml'. tr('ate a character
complete with naml' and background and speak in
the dialed or lht• pt•asa nls and courtiers of the
period. s he said
In many respects. the fair(' is not unlike
carnivals today. But visitors quickly note a signifi·
cant d1rterence It ·s rather quiet. There a re no
loudspeakers blaring disco. no sputtering gasoline
engines. no screams from thrill rides, no flashing
lights. It all seems 10 ..• civilized.
Of course. civilization is the ver y thing
Elizabeth brought to En1land durin1 her tS-year
reign. It was then the Renaissance blossomed
there , a nd trade with other lands increased.
prompting Caires such as this (they were, as much as
anything. designed to promote commerce at the
c ross roads>.
The faire, which opens tomorrow and runs
weekends (including Memonal Day> through May
31. includes t>OOtns and games 1toss a nng arouna
the unicorn's horn. slay the dragon. climb the rope
ladder. dunk the monk 1. food like turkey legs and
bangers and English ale
Entertainment vanes from the pompous to the
peasant class Minstrels will stroll the field. sing·
ing and µlu yi ng harps. pipes. shawms and
sackbuts. Puppeteers. magicians. Jugglers. dan·
cers anct acrobats will perform throughout the
grounds
Eac·h day as rl'plcte with processions. begin-
niog with the St Aubrey's Guild parade. then the
Call ·o the Faire march and the Peasant's Plant·
ing Parade Most magn1f1cent as Queen
Elizabeth's Progress. when the monarch enters
the fairgrounds borne an a sedan chair. surrounded
by ladies and courtiers and greeted by trumpets
and shouts of "God save the Queen "
New this year as the Elizabethan Grand
Tournament of Horses. with equestnans compel·
ing for cash and handcrafted prizes
Other compet1t1ons include costumes. the-
Celtic Race of Strength. Celtic dancing. "Em
broider a Handke rchief for the Queen ... Mothering
Day cakes. madrigals. sea monster creations.
nautical knot tying. fine works of art ( cepresenting
Sir Francis Drake's "Golden Hand 1. and consorts
lopen to groups of fiv e or less playing recorders.
viols. t'rummhorns or sackbuts with music dating
before 1603 1 For information on the contests. call
1213> 999-3021.
The Rena1 ssancl' Fair<' grew ou t of a.
children's thealt•r group taught by Ms. Patterson
In Laural Canyon during th{• summer of 1963
The former history, English and drama
teacher said she "found a picture of a traveling
players· cart at a market place I wanted to go to
1t fthe m<Jrkc•ll <Jnd I 1·oulcln 't thank of any way to
go to one unlt•ss I µut 1l on mvself ..
She set o ut to put on a market day
performancc h~ lhl' ch1ldrcn. but decided. with her
ex husband Hon to uctd food, dnnk and a few
t' rafts atcms
In short time soml' 500 people had become m ·
\'olved The first faire dre\.\ 3.000. about the same
number a!> no\.\ part1c1pate an costume
Toda~ under h<•r non profit outfit called the
Lanng Jhstor) Ccnlre. Ms Patterson "(Orks with a
full-tame staff of 35 lo 1>roducc the Renaissance
Pleasurt• fair<.• an A~oura an 1dc•nt1cal event near
the Mann Count\ lo\.\n of Novato and an annual
Dickens Chnstm:1s Fain· an San FranctSC'O
The Soulh<•rn Cahfornw f;im• "'111 run for sax
"eek ends from 10 ;i m to 7 p m Tickets are $8 95
for adults. S3 75 for chtldren undt•r 12 or $18 75 for
a season l1tket On Mt•monal Oay. children under
12 "'Ill bt• adm1ttc•d frl't' when at'compan1ed by a
paying ac1ult 1 Vnr group sales. call 12131 851 -9750.1
To reHh ChippinJ! l 'nd<·r Oakwood, take the
Ventura Frc•ewav Wl':>I to the Chesebro Road exit
Follow the s igns to fatrt' parkan~
.Just kel'p an c·~ l' pc•t>lt•d for high"' aymen
I The Renaissance Faire has become her stage
..
'I
I
Bv JOEL C. DON
Ortlle OallJ P'ilal Stall
Although she aspired t o
become an actress. Jutt-th Kory
couldn't get a part an "her high
school pl;iys
So when the first Renaissance
Pleas ure Faart• was held an 1963.
she Jumped :it a role as an
Elizabethan pe:is:int selling
oranges.
Every year since. nary a fair
performance has she missed
In her long sta n ding
e nga gement. Ms . Kory has
played characters of all sorts an·
eluding a pregnant lass who
would chase after male patrons
-especial l y ones with
gir lfriends or wives -cooing
"Dost thou remember me?"
Some years a hefty.sized "older
brother" would help nab a fair·
goer or two.
During the past seven fair
seasons. Ms. Kory has donned a
more stately role as the Lord
Mayor 's wife. heralding lht! dai-
ly ceremonies proclaiming the
fair opened
When not performln1 at the
Agoura festival, she takes her
16th century role to a carbon·
copy fair held In Ma.rin County.
She also perforflh at the
Dicke,.. Christmas Fair held in
the heart or San Franclaco.
As a staff e ntertaln e r -e.cf u c at or to r the 'L I v In g
Hl1t0Ty Centre (LHC >, the
fton·pront orianfiation that
sponsors the three talrs, Ms.
Kory also vl1tt1 schools and community 1rot.apr1lvlng people
a taste of the l•ctnda, folklore
and Ufestyles of bY1Qne days.
A• a it-year vet.eran Ma. Kory
alao bu the tuk -1lon1 wttn
about 15 other tralnen -of
ffteenini and teachlq the • to 1,200 perf ormen ho wlll celebnl.e U.e 1plrlt of Queen
Ellaabeth 1·1 En1land.
That often apeant br••klnc ln
n<'"' C'nmers an to thl'I r oldl'
English roles In a regal and
c;omet1mes ba"dv Britain and
at the faar·s dust) ranch s ill'
north of Los Angeles. there's
little room for sh~ness
·'This 1 the fair> 1s not for
people "'ho want to be ob
servers.' said the 46 )ear old
Ms Kory. who is staying with :i
frt('nd in Costa Mesa "If you
want to observe. you go to lhe
fair (:is patrons! But it's so
contagious that you want to
participate."
For six consecutive weekends
beginning April 25. fantasy role
playing consumes the casl of
hawkers . roustabout s.
entertainers. ladies of fine
breeding. noblemen and the
queen 's retinue. Even the
merchants selling handcrafted
1 le ms perform w 1th lj.n
Elizabethan flair. "
Performers are required to re
search their characters in de·
tail. Daylong workshops are
held for three consecutive
weekends at the fair site
followed by a two-day dress re·
hearsal weekend. In all. a
performer s pends at least 64
hours preparing for his part.
During t h e worksh ops ,
trainers whittle down the 1,800
applicants approximately In
h a lf. Some are professional
actors. others have never ut·
tered a word on stage.
"We really are unique because
we haare people from all walks of
life," Ms. Kory said. "The men
and women do other lhlngs dur-
ln1 the week. This 11 an op-
portunity for the m to take a role
and le am htstory."
Altbc>uch the LHC can provide
aome costume matertalJ, m01t
performer• .allake their own.
some paformtfl, ahe aaid, will
1~nd u muct) u Sl.000 on their
ratr wardrobe.
•'People 1et a great deal of '~
plt•:i.,un• "hl•n th<.·~ put on l'OS·
tumcs and pretend to be so·
meom• l'lsc>. sh<' said "You can
he a p<•asant or a noble or a mad·
dll· (•las~ ml•rchant
'IL s hi<t' "hat "c dad when we
wert' kuls playing cops and
rohhl•r-;. no" wl' get to play
Ehzabeth<ins.' she said
Throu~hout the 1ntl'rv1ew. Ms.
Ko rv woulcl break into an
Engi1sh accent. her eyes would
sparkle and you'd swear s he'd
J usl popped out of scene from a
Shak('spcare play
She said performers go so far
as to lrarn geography. history
and the rank and class system of
the tim(' Many know their
fantasy role parents and family
lineage
.. People need to play more
and education can be fun ... she
said. of the cast's extensive pre·
parallon "I'd lake to see people
gro" and discover themselves
and s h are themselves with
others ...
She noted during the week,
school children will be shuttled
\Jp to the Agoura site for the
LHC's "Workshops In the
Woods ... Children are treated to
performances and Ellzabelhan
culture by staff members.
When s he's not ·acting as the
Lord Mayor's wife, you'll find
Ms. Kory directing a pa1eant
each day to hlghJlght the varioua
handlcrafl guilds. A panel of
esteemed gentlemen will Judie
various crafts.
And she's also putt1n1 on a
Lady Godiva a h o w . where
audlence members will appear
on stage. Ms. Kory wlll be ll&hl·
ly attired u the main character
aqd all will team bow to lower
their taxes.
Never at IOu for creatinj new
fair char~c n , &h. Kory con·
eluded, " consider m1self a
proflcle fool amonc other
thln11."
i
• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, Aprll 24, 1981
"BEHtNO "rH• MASQU~" •n orlfl•• Pf•Y bV UCI or-.at• -1Udent Jim Harrison, wut be
performed '" th1t \JnlversJty's StudlO ~he•tre In i.m the Fine Arts Vlltege at a p.m. Thursdav·
11iSaturday, Aprlt 30, May 1·2. TM play concemt
~, '-' ~ c.omlng of Christ In the-. century
c1>1 nd prcibeems He t.c" tr.y11i9 to betwe Hts uo·tct• as S.1tlor wiU) His ptrtlk.a exlllenc• as a
,.,.,,.nan In a technotoolul 1DCaety. Fot lnform6-
~ Sl1 RINO C:ONCBRT by the Orange Coast
Col ltQe ChOr•le and C~ber Singers, CCMt·
ducted by Richard Raub, wilt spotlight Han.. "
del's "Ohclt Oomlnus" Saturday at 8 p.m. In
the OCC Auditorium. General admiulon, $5.
'HE PACll'IC SYMPHONY RCM a
"1recild by Keith Clark, wm fohHdht
w1.tlon ?all ~17. "{ ,.,
• SOkNst Ceclt• l,.ltad In her Wfft ea.st debUt Siaftdjy, A~I a at 7:30 p.m. If\ Fullertan's
Plummer: Aeldltorfum. MJ11 LlcM, "r I• ttw first wlrww of Ute prestlgJous Ltventr tt Gold
Medal In 10 ~eat"s. She,_,111 play Mdz.a 's 11th ll11•11THE PAISLfY COMVUT18LE" continues
•1'for five weekehds .ti the Huntington Beech
''Playhouse In the SHcllff VIiiage center on :·'Main Street at Vorkte>Wn Avenue In Huhtlngton
·n·•eeach. Curtain times et 8 p.m. Fridays and ···!•Saturdays. Tickets at 8'1-.4465.
.. 'BABES IN ARMS" nens nightly except Mon-
days at varying curtain times ti.rough May 10
at Sebastl•n's West Dinner Pl•yhouse, 140
·· 1.Avenida Pfco, SM Cternente <•92-9950).
~'ASHES," a downbeat dr.am• ab<Mrt a couple's · desperate attempt to ~ve a child.! contlnuts
through Aprlt 26 at South Coast Repertory's
Second Stage, 65.S Towh Center Or., Costa
Mesa (967-..030). Performances nightlV except
Mondays at 8: 30 <weekend matlnes a1 3),
"GIRL CRAZY," an old-time musltal comedy,
continues at the San Clemente Theater. 202
Ave. Cabrlllo, San Clemente, until May 2.
· · Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 p.m.
I (492..()465).
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
s 1 oo OFF SPECIAL
towards purchase of any
pancakes, wattles, or
u omef ettes c
T 6 a.m.·2 p.m. dally ~
0 s1o:P~!k_~ .. ~ 0 u °""' ....... tt11
THE COOKERY RESTAURANT ~
500 W. Coast HkJhw-y, Newport hoch
ecro11~ ..... -.,ci.
646-6909
Store Hours OPEN 70AYS 6AM -2PM
Plano C.oncerto. Thi$ s the symphony' flnal cqncert of the subsc riptlon season.
"INT.RLUDES FOR ORCHESTRA/' a ~
by Karl Kohn, wt II be conduc~ by the COfnl
po1tr fn • Chapm•n College SysnphO#ty OrcMstra co,lcert Tuesday, April 28 at 8 p.rft .
IJ"I the O\•pman College Auditorium, 333 N. •••sseU, Orange.• Kohn Is composer' '" res--fdltnceat Pomona Colt~. . ·• t.
f I THE 08'ANGE COUNT YOUTH Symphony
Orchestra wlll present a c0ncert at-' p.m. Sun-
day, Apr II 26, In th• Chapman Coll4t,9e
Auditorium, Orange. For lnformatJon, (:Mt
997-677-' or 997-6871. •
THE IRVINE SYMPHONY wi1~91'1orm at 2 p.m . Sunday, ~ii 26, at t~ Tun:lt Rf>ck Com·
munlty Center In Irvine. Ad~1oft.ti-,ree.
f , •
THE CHAPMAN COLL.li~I Chamber Orchestra and Chapman CO&te91 Sfngers wlll
be heard In concert April 2", • p.m. In Bertea
1 FOR THE HOJTEST .
ENT.EB.TAINMENT
IN ORANGE COUNTY
... Go to the
~~
Aprll 24-25 Aprtl 28 Aftemoon
• JAMES HARMON BAND
April 26-27-28
• GEORGE BUTTS
April ~30 -May 1-2
• JACK MILLER
2406 NEWPORT BLVD.
NEWPORT BEACH 675·2Z44
Dance at 9ai Stpte, Fullerton
;HL_~33 N. <;tassell St., Orange. The
f'or.mance 11 fciie. For Information, call
..a7• .. -METROtlOLITAN OPERA AUDITION win-
ners from Orange County will Slfl9 f•vorlte arias and selections from "The King and 1 11
"Carou.se'" and "The Man of La Mancha" ~t the Laguna Moutton Playhouse, Laguna Be•ch at 8 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $10 each or $16
a pair. For Information call 449-1S33 or
640-7317.
A BARTOK FESTIVAL by UCl 's school of fine
arts Is set for 8: 15 p.m ., Wednesday and Thurs-
day, April 29 and 30. The concerts will feature chamber music by Hungarian composer Bella
Ba(~Ok performed by UCI facuttv members, student~ and guest ar,tlsts. :tickets are $Sor $8
'for bolh performances. Cal1~17 .
LIZARlffH llOWARl>'S
CURTAIN CALL DINNER THEATER
PROUDLY PRESENTS
Rodgers & Hammerstein's
TUE. NITE SPECIAL
YANKEE POT ROAST
DINNER & SHOW
~ . •11 95
RESERVATIONS l-(J14) 838 l 540 EHter-Full Menu 2 Dinner Performance• z 690 Et C .. m 1110 ReAI Tu""' =
S.nlot Ao11 F-wv Newpol! Ave Oll••mP
9,lc 1v~1~j(, U/f rJt1i1i)J# orange County's
OF
MAY 3, 1981 1-5 P.M.
Imported Boskets from China. India . Tai icon
Assorted lndnor and Outdoor Plant s
S1lk Floicer Arrangements -Cut Floirers
LOVE Birds -Interior and Exterior Design
Exquisite and l nique Porcelains
L'nique Willow Furniture
f!fk rJaJen ~a/ace
2088 SO. COAST HWY.
494·1074 LAGUNA BEACH
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
of the
FESTIVAL OF LEARNING AND PERFORMING
• cordially invius you to attend
A PREVUE GALA
Monday Evening, April 27. 1981
Honoring
NADINE CONNER
MONA PAULEE MARTIAL SINGHER
Artists of Metropolitan fame
Presenring
CHARLES ROE
Baritone, Ntw York City Opera
wirh
JAMES MASSENGALE -HENRIETTA PELTA
renowned pianists
and fearuring
THE FESTIVAL SINGERS ANO PIANISTS
South Coasr Reper1ory Theatre
655 Town Center Drive
Costa Mesf:!, California
I
ns.oo per perion
IncLude1 polt-conctrt rupptr Reaervatfonl 543--05431SS7·5661
A public Hrvfct 1ponror1h1p of th~ Dall11 Piiot
own
~to Vegas.
a
$40 •ound '"P· f ..../ :0 mustc. Ca•peung.
With free parktng Refrigerated
1n Buena Park galleys A1rllner-
and Fullerton. Then $2500 style restrooms And the
straight through to full attention of our on-
Las Vegas. non-stop m ONE board attendant.
4 V2-5 hours. And, please. WAY In Las Vegas. our termmals
forget past "bus rides.' Fun-are the Barbary Coast on the
Bus promises to pamper you strip, and the Four Queens
with on-board luxury never downtown. (We can book rooms
before found on the ground. Our here, too. 1f you like). Come
First Class Groundllners ~give back when you're ready. We run
you the ultimate in airlmer com-daily schedules, seven days of
fort. With first-run 'i'"'il.nfr'~ the week. We're
motion pictures. l:F~~ ICC licensed and
Reclining seats. CaJ £'. Rese . insured. And ex-
Reading lights. I aor n'allOJl.S clusivelyyours,
Earphone stereo [714) 635•1390 Orange County!
BILL MEDLEY
FORMERLY OF THE
RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS
PRESENTS
CONCERTS IN MAY
AT MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT
The moet Intimate ahowroom In th• country
"THE ORIGINAL"
"COASTER'S"
Singing their hits from the SO's
TWO NIGHTS ONLY
SUNDAY, MAY 3rd IPll a 11PM
MONDAY, MAY 4th IPM a 11PM
BILL.MEDLEY
IN CONCERT
WED. MAY 6th
THURS. MAY 7th
·One Show NMel 9 P.M.
Tu•IClap: ........ , PNMnta ap.det "'°" Caelnt of the be9t "POOf"l"tl 1tM9 In ctte bu ...
,.eH, teetuftnta .. JUI.II DEES''°" nftM onr,.
Two ehowe nfiety, •11 P·"'· ~ Jetn Jule a her orHy group of frlendt. C9'er, lerbra •• ,...... Deir ,arton, ..., De•. .._. .. ,
Wlntere. C.... ....... for an eWft1ftt Of hM a
hollo. '1Wlln•H one of th• QraatHt IM·
,,. ....... of ALL TI•tt
.
A ..... NO DANCe COttCllltT et C.I St.rte,
F.ullerton, wltt be hlthllg'1.t•.d _by a
performance of modern dMc:e c:~apher
Murray Louis' "Bach Sul•.''.-T_ ... ~fffttvat runs Thursday, Apt-II 30, througlt Sun.UY May 3 In
the Little TNtlter on campe.a. Cur'U~ tlrM ls 8 p.m. except 5 p.m. SUnday. For tickets or In·
formation, calt t1i:w1.
-GALLERIES---........_-
ART HISTORIAN Ronald Steel Wiil examine "T~ lmqtHSICMtlltl Tr•tuan.. li'I • IKtu,..
Thursdey, April 30 at I •. m.. t the ~na
&each Museum of Ar\, 307 c:mH Or. Cati ~94-6531 . •
THE JUBILEE SINGERS, With' a repel1o1re of
spiritual$, Q05J»81~ c19h•pso, worksongs and
musical theater num~•t )Niii appear et a p.m.
at Saddleback Colleo., Miiiion Viejo, ln.. the Fine Arts Theeter. Tfckets sa. 1
NELSON RIDDLE end his~ OKMlitra wilt
perform at 8 p.m., Suncsav, AprU 16, In the
Orange Coast College Auditorium. 'fkkets $12.
Ca II 556-5527. .
A GREEK SONGl'EST. featuring fl~•
fr aternltles and sororities slRQ1"9 tunes from
"Fiddler on the Roof," "Gruse," "Music
Man," "My Fair Lady" and "Oliver," goes on
the boards at UCl's CraWtord Hatt SUnday,
April 26 at 7:30 p.m. Program will raise funds for Big Brothers-BlgSistersofOrangeCounty.
JIMMY BUFFETT and the eorar Reefer Band will play at 8 p.m . Thursday, April 30, in the
Anaheim Convention CentJr. Alt seats are re·
served at $9.SO and $11.sb. For reservations,
call 520-9111.
Real
Cantonese Foll
eat here er
take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRYINE
Committee tor Arts presents
DENO GIANOPOULOS, PIANIST from UC
Berkeley Saturday. May 2. 8 pm. Concert
Hall Selections by Schubert. Beethoven.
Brahms. $5 General $4 Other Students UCI
Fae/Staff Sr Ctt UCI Alumni $3 UCI Stu·
dents
CALIFORNIA CHAMBER CHORALE A com-
munity chorale ensemble Saturday May 9
8 pm Concert Hall Selections from the
Hena1ssance baroque c lassical. and modern
eras $5 General, $4 Other Students, UCI
Fae/Staff. Sr Cit . UCI Alumni. $3 UCI Stu-
dents
For further 1ntorma11on c all 833-6378 Tickets available at
the ASUCI Box.Mon ·Fri 9 30am to 4pm 833-5549
DID YOU FORGET
YOUR SECRETARY
DURING NATIONAL
SECRETARY'S
WEEK?
, 1.l&PPPAUEa ..... ...., ..........
SylveateJL StttUone and Billy Det Williama
atrut th.rough "Nighthawks" with ·the aame ultra-
hlp, street-mean shuffle that Richard Pryor and
Gene WUder got lauahl with in "StJr Crazy," and
•hough the result ls Just as comical It's also unin-
tentional. They're playtne undercover New York
City cops after an unemployed terroriJt belleved to
be beading for their cltf, where an Interpol direc-
tor tells.them he'U be seeking "press coverage."
MOVIE REVIEW
Armed with nothihg more than a photograph ol
this "Wolf gar" taken before hla l>lutlc surgery, -
Stallone and Wllliam1 descend into the New York
night to find him.
Although this is a preposterously silly idea for
a story, it does get worse. A feeble string of
"clues" leads Stallone and Williams· on a tour of
city discos, where, illuminated in the pulsing
strobes, they see a sinister set of eyes. Wolfgar!
The unemployed, publicity-seeking terrorist shoots
a few disco dancers and gets away.
'· . BE'ANGLBS f()r that love by playtn1 bls own
features acina.t the graln of"'-part! Jn "Rocky"
•we were auppa.~ to recognize that beyond R~ky
Balboa'• smafbed face and rotten language was a
hero with a heart of 1old. In "Niahthawka" we're
supposed to recognize that beneath the beard. at asset aild hopelessly f raudtllenl unde~over 1arb
he wears, Deek DeSilva ls a cop with principles.
The problem ls that Stallone doesn't know when to
qult t.he schtlck and let us like him unbeaten, un-
1amished. Ue does both the opening and. closing
icenes ol "Ni&h\hawks" ln drag and all th.e ones lo
between ln the most conspicuously foolish attire
lmaginab•e -he's the JnOSt attention-1ettlDI Un· derco~er cop I've ever seen -(even ln the mov-
iea). It's~ embarrassing performance.
The 01akers of "Nig'hl.hawk·" may be 1hort
on movie-making talent but they're long on
calculation and the calculation here ls called t. v. Fr-om the openinf quick-cut fram~ and jumpy,
aimlessly dramatac music. we can feel the men-
tality of television closing in around us. "Night·
f
hawks" ls nothlna more than a two-hour televltioo
show in both concept and execution but It's sc'ary
because television didn't just influence iti it l'eve
birth to it. You can sense the commercia breaks,
you can see the stoc.k television characten. 'YOU
feel Ute relentless, thouahtless act.ton that lt t9ke1
to fill up a cops and robbers t.v. episode. Even
more insultin&ly you can see the word "residuals"
ringing in the producer's eyes as Stallone and
Wiiliams start wearing baseball caps with the
acronym for their unit ("A.T.A.C."> emblazoned
across the tops. Do the toy stores have them yet?
Has the television st\ow been cast yet? Are there
any Sylvester Stallone "Nighthawks" dolls in the
stores yet ? "Nighthawks" isn't just a movie, it's a
mass culture product of the most lame and regret·
table kind.
Of course, even the mass marketers can't sell
a complete s ham, so "Nighthawks" may a p·
propriately sink from its Qwn weight. Wh en it
does. directing credit goes to Bruce Malm1,1th.
writing credit goes to David Shaber and Paul
Sylbert and credit for staying away from a dis·
aster goes to anyone with the good sense to do it
EVEN IN A movie lacking all authenticity,
Stallone and Williams stand out as lacking more
authenticity than anyone else. Stallone ls an actor
who projects so little that he demands close-ups -
if he's not race to face with the camera lens, we
may miss a big moment. But the closer we look at
him the duller he gets; his expressions are uni·
form, Wlrevealing, deeply uninspired. Stallone is
an egotistical actor. but his selfishness goes far
OCC exhibits Parker photographs
Sylvester Stallone in ·Nighthawks'
Open 7 Days
Highest Quamy COCKTAILS Nao" Moxom P«>J'cP~
VIC GARCIA
COMES ~ME
Don Jose 1s proud to present. direct from Laa
Vegas. one of the finest guitars 1n the country
ST.ARTIHG APRIL 211:30 P.M.
9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTl~OO BEAOf 962-7911
A VERY SPECIAL
JAPANESE RESTAURANT
Award winning traditional
jJpanl'.,l' l.Ut~int' and
<,upl·rb wt•.,tt>rn·.,tvk i:.pecialtil'S.
'll)Ur l.ivontl' ~l·atood.
l hit kt>n, and .,!t>.ik Dt'licatc
.,uupi:. and deliAhtfuJ
.,,,l,1lh lmpl'rcabll' "l'rv~ct.' in
.1 mti~t bcJut1tul ~citing.
Oic;cm'l'r Yamato ..
J 'l.'r\ "Pt't·i.11 J1nin~ t'XPl'nt'nCt'
uBJDato
60 Fashion Island
Newport Beach I 644-4811
Century Plaza Hotel
277-1840
Works by Boston photographer Olivia Parker
will be on exhibit May 5 through June 12 in the
Orange Coast College Photo Gallerv.
The Photo Gallery, located in OCC's Fine Arts
Building, is open Monday through Friday from 8
Make your weekends "special"
with a magnificent champagne
brunch overlooking Newport
Bay. Smorgasbord buffet. only
Sl.15 l !>4 50 under 12)
S....., 11:00 ..-. • J:OO p.a S.., I 0:00 ..-. • J.-00 p.&
;Wi'8EIJ9!PJ
On the Wetetfront
In Lido Manne VIiiage
Newport Beech
873-4700
~olden ~~;;~ ~-,n~ ~ t ',-..
fiiie,,iragon ·---
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DtSHES
Specializing In Chinese A lo C.Orte Dishes
Lunch Dinner OaiJv • Food To T~e Out
4715 C..,._ • ~ 20JJ H..-. lh•d.
750-7171 • 750.5098 COSTA MIS4
...... ,...... 642-71,2. 631-ttl I
a.m . to S p.m. and 6·9 p.m . Admiuion is free.
Parker's OCC exhibit focuses on her recent
work. Most of the photographs were made durina
the past five years, and many of the works ap·
pea red in David Godine's 1978 photo anthology.
titled "Signs of Life."
A Family Shopping/Dining
& Entertainment Center
NEW
BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY
PILOT for lnform•tlon
regarding th• county
requirements for
using a Fictitious
Bualneaa Name.
642-4321
EXT. 332
Diiiy Pilat
Be1t DtJl'JWd
H iclcory Smo~d
Rib. You'aie
E11erE~n!
Y'all Come Down
MONDAY TALENT
NIGHTS
Stan Orlow
MC & LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT
FORT~EEVEHING •
Amaieu~ call /or tip.,,_ JIOVI!
Tueaday -Saturday
No,. Appearla1
WHl1EUNE
FEVER
Tue1.-8at.
Longhorn Saloon r,Kr. ::.
F eaturea: · r,1r:~.
Live Country Mwic · ,
Z-. llarperlle ftwy • MIHI•• Vltljo • 495-1900
FOR :YOUR DINING & ENTERTAINMENT PLEASURE
Albertson's • Bank of America ·· Biibo Bagglns • Coco's/Reuben's • Command Performance
Dolphln Hair Fashions • Edwards Cinema • Fash'n Splash • Hamburger Hamlet • Ice Capades
Mesa Verde Florist • Mesa Verde Travel • M1one·s • Music Market • Photography by Jeffrey
Southern Callfornta Optical •Spa Lady• Swensen's • Vicki's Sunshine Factory
..
'
BY NOD ft'ANL£Y .,._,...., .........
It aee~ to mt no rites of sprtn1 are more
ftrmly entrenched 1n our lives today than award
procrall'll. And their variety and abundance, wben
lt comes to the rettaurant lndustry, ls reachil\I the
point of outahlnJng the theater and motion plc·
turea.
Thb week we can areet the news -perhaps a
bit chauvJnlatlcally -that California leads the
country with tbe most (60) 1981 Mobil Travel
Gulde Four-Star Award wlMers.
In a commendable 1howtn1 bound to 'boost
local pride, Oranae County nal>bed a total of rtve
awards. So honored were the Marriott Hotel,
Newport Beach; Five Crowns. Corona del Mar;
Cbanteclalr, Irvine; Newporter Inn. Newport
Beach and Chez Cary, Oraflie.
Statewide, 32 restaurants, 20 hotels, six motels
and two resort.a received the Four·Star Award,
giving them the dlsUnctlon of ··outstanding -
worth a speclaJ trip."
These plac~s were selected from more than
21,000 inspected and rated in 4,000 cities and towns
ln the United States and Canada. There was a total
of 485 winners nlltionwide.
The Four-Star Award ls one of the most covet-
ed in the food and lodging industry. Ratings are
determined by trained field representatives who
personaJly inspect all establishments, by local and
regional consultants, letters from the public and
TtlE CANNERY
SEE THE
ENDENADA RACE
ABOARD CRUISE VESSEL
"ISLA MUJERS"
SATURDAY. APRIL 25
11 :00 -2:30
---•---
SUNDAY BRUNCH AND
HARBOR CRUISE
BRUNCH FROM 9:00 A.M.
CRUISE FROM 1 :00 -2:30
CALL 675-7522 FOR TICKETS
. HIUORIC.
WAT£RFROfff RllfAURlHt .
;3010 LaFAU1TE, ttEWfJORT BEACH
llSmlYATIOMS 714-47~1777
~Gjohn8i]ver~
Fish&
Chicken
·oinne,
$2.49
Our crispy fish flllet from the ic:y
North Atlantic and two boneless
whltemeat Chicken Planks~ ...
wtth fresh cole slaw and golden
fryes, that's a wtnnlng combination.
Mark Davidson at Bob Bums
•·Mv Funnr Valentine"'
'"Th" Ladv os • Tnunp'" ·Poor J°"nnv On., ""OIA'0
'
"I Wl\h ( Wer., 1n Lon Ag•10"
Ana More'
Every Tu15d1v thru Sund1v Evening\
(714)-492-9950
MAK E HESE RVATIONS
~~Stbasttans~~
OINN[K PLAVHOU'l
AtctieGRAND HOTEL
PRE SENTS
DENNIS JAMES
VIRGINIA MA YO
&ALANYOUNG
In the hilarious new comedy
ay Ron aanc and Sam Bobnck
FIVE WEEKS ONLY
April 7 • ~y 10
MAKE RESERV.btONS
Dl11n'r
From FIH p.rn.
EHrytl•r
714 772-7710
N•WPGAT 1'otio·
Prime Rib
au jus
&
lo<"l<lal/1
1:~rrydny
Four • Tte'O
by a MobU Gulde commlttee that revlewa all flnd·
tn1•.
All l'lltlhts are baa.,d Ob a atringent checklist
ot·1ome 100 item• undel' the 1eneral cateiqrtet of
cleanliness, maintenance, quality of fuml1h1011.
fac.llltles and 1taff .ervlce.
A Four-Sur hotel or motel, for example, must
have larger than averaie 1uest room1, fuml\ure of
high quality and all eaaenUal aervicea. Extenalve
recreational ractutles are required at resort.a, a
factor accounting tor two Callfomla winner• -the
Lodge at Pebble Beach and Marriott's Rancho Laa
Palmu, Palm Spri.nas.
Restaurants are reviewed for such detailJ as
distance between tables, table sett.Ina and com-
pleteness of wine cellar, In addition to food quality
and it~ preparation. Also, the 1taff must be
courteous and well-trained.
Anyone for a "special trip" to the Newport
Marriott, Five Crowns, Chanteclair. Newporter
Inn or Chez Cary? •
RENEWING ACQUAINTANCE with an old
friend -after too lon1 an ablence from lbe local
entertainment scene -is the popular pastime
these Sunday and Monday nights al Bob Burns
restaurant in Nt:wport 's Fashion Island,
That's because the featured entertainer is
Mark Davidson, a musician of almost legendary
proportions whose lime of packing the area's
lounges a~l but dales back to the debut of the
IL 2 for I SPECIAL 1w11t1 tt111..,
Order 2 lndlen Curry Dinners end pey only
tor hlghe11 priced dinner
5930 Wnt Coast HlcJhw
M•wport leach• 646-4202., 646-t 3
SI EAi< & ALASKAll
KING CUI LEGS
... the Nfatf~ CC»ntintl(t
R I Oi.'f\/" I 11111\MA fWllVXN ., I JAA .. , ,..,.,..,.........,.. ..............
I
, Now / edwards LIDO CINEMA HlWPOtn' ILYD. AT YIA 1.90 '-PLAYING HEWPORT HACH 67J .. l50
s1.,.,r111 H.M. Wynant
llaa Roblnaon
Patti Colombo Ar1 Kou1tlk
Book Sy
Wllllam F. Brown
Mualo & L.yrlc1 By ·
Criar11e Smalla
horselest c1rri11•. Well . . . Pord'a Id.tel
maybe .
Still e1rryin, oa u t.bouab be wu bo"' to th,
keyboard, Man -backed by Al Meb1fl17 on •tt·
inc bua -•* oa ••hlbtttn1 ~ atyle and sraet that Jeavet him wltb few performlng peen In tbeae
p~.
tbt ran1e coven • few new 10Di1, a lot of old
son,i, and J-number of Muk'a OWf'I tunes. It'• hard
.to lnl11tne mualc more Ideal for Ustenina and dln·
ln& . . . no dancing except, perhaps, in the
shadows of the mind.
Mark's enjoyment of '(bat he'• doln& •how• ln
every word and 1e1ture, too. He uya, ln fact, be
baan't had ''so much fun playlni •Ince the early
day a of the Sea Shanty and the Chef's Inn.·· <Which
does , indeed, prove that he aoea back as far 81 aorue of the rest of us.>
. Sassilt Al can't be faulted for bis contribuUons
to the proceedln&s either. And be appears two
other nights with Vina Harmer, wbo ls the reaular
Tuesday through Saturday attraction at Bob
Bums: •
lrtventive aa well 81 polished musicians, Mark
and Al together get some surprialn1 momenta 10·
in& when amadng thin&s happen. In this case
hearing is believln& Sundays from 5:30 to 10 p.m ..
Mondays from 7:30 p.m . until mldni&bt.
Open daily for lunch, brunch and dinner. Bob
Burns is localed at 37 Fashion Island, Newport
Beach. Teleehone: 644-2030 .•
__ ,.
....,.,Miit.
CAVIUUN (PQl ua · 1..-• •M • • "• 11 • ,..,.
-1AHM1Nkl·li:aa-.. , .,....,.. ..
11 l'acWlty ··~J tJl»l...O
............
CAVEMAN (POI ,, .. , ............. , ..
, 'TILt•,. ... -.. .......... -.....
THE HANO IA) ., ............. ,.,.
.. ..,.,.,.. .., .............
I . $C _, CK-•••-c:oecO#~
.. 8'-o BREAKER MORANT (PO)
4CM·1S14 --••·•" .. , ....... , ........... ...
......,., .... "'
CAVEMAN IPO) &Af .................. , .. _,_._
--AU.-MAMA IOLITA CON
IL 7VIDAI
.. ..
-~, ..
·!
....
A giant of courage
who faced an t:mpire
., and drew tht: line ...
' 11
..... 1;h~11,.ll 1h111t 1lt•tl "'fto ... U .. •11f"t.-11I"' tf1•-U'tl"hll(t'a.(ltlf l.t;k lh•tof1•.,.....lll
ti+ lh.-tkrl M .. t lhl 10'111 ..... lf"I., lh\.tll ftr11•11 It•••'• I •'" h " I., ~ "'
.. , "'• .6111 1 ••• ,, .1 .. ,.11 ,.1 t• , ,, .1 "-''"•'-•~r,1111(Mod Mulhn.1r
I< t 41H • ,,., Ill 'i A1 f"1•h1•..,tll'\ '4Allh--• t .. null
l1Hh •rd t"" tbu •,..,.,hit _, "''"t' ...... ~., ..... ·•• -.. "' k ...,,._ • .....
.,.~.., ... ..,~. . ... .., ... ' PC • ...,....._,_ll'tl.ol:
... ..__.. -~v-... •f't ,, .... -,___~ .. --.............. ~
,~~~~==========~~~~
SEVBN YEAa ACRE ...... ca•
ce&u•b&•._.,.
tl1ll preu releau. th1t accompanle<I tbla dllk
took snat PA1U to teli U1 tbat YES, R0tanne c .. aa
ii &rylbl to forae • m&.11lcal cueer ln 19" 1ba4Pw ot
her. lepndU')'. father. Johnny, and artist·writer·
P.N,lducer hasbeftd Rodney Crowell.
YES. the JI.. year-old •ln•er, who was railed In
Ventura when her parents divorced, hat the
lil1tant name NCOOlUon.,
YES, she perfi>tmed with ber hall·•iater a• a ~ackup-act to her father's atap shows. And YES,
doors opened q_uickly to recordin1 sesalons that led
to her tlnt Colt;ambia album. "IU&ht or W"°"'·"
By the time you get to the fecond to the
Jut paragraph of the. release, you're suppotedly
convinced that Rosanne Cash doesn't han1 on
aoybod1's coattails. After all, the preH agent tells
us "Seven Year Ache" 11 Ro11Me'1 "serioua eon·
tentlon tor her own deflJ)ed place in the music
world."
So why did tMy aend alona a black·and·whlte
1lossy that, mlnus the boldface name caption.
RECORD REVIEW
would pus for a L~da Ronstadt look·alfke con-test?
Listen to the album for the answer.
There's no doubt that Roeanne Casb is 1ood.
She knows her qountry mqslc. The cuts from her
LP are upbeat, refined. and. at times, remarkably
brilliant.
Yet remove the labeh1 from both sides of the
BEYOND THE REEF
A •lory of pae ...
DAYTON KA'NE MAREN JENSEN
~t11P1Arn LOUIS LA RUSSO II NIO JIM CARAHATSOS
disk and you'd reaUy be hardpresaed not to •HP.
"A new Ronstadt album.''
It may Just be a little premature to uy
Rosanne has defined her own place when ahe
comes packaaed with a Jumble ol excuaea for her
name and a phot& that tells us that YES. you too
can have the look of the gal who brou1ht us ·•Blue Bayou.··
Sending us another pbot.o and firinl her press
agent won't do the job. There are no excuses left
wl\,en you put the )>latter on the turntable.
An album that sounds like a clone is just a nov·
elty. H Rosanne wants everybody to forget her
paternal lies. she's going to bave to find another
way to grab hold of her new niche in country
music -JoelC. Don
John Boorm•n • EXCALIBUR" llA~D D~ fHt llOvtl "TIKOYO Al'tD HIS SHARK" "CLtMtl'tT RJCtttR
raoouao" RArrAtLLA DI'. LAURll'tTJIS Dlllr.clOll l'RAl'tf{ C. CLAM
N1~I T '1'TY' Ht~n M1m'n · N1Cholu C l•y • C """w lung/ii• P•ul G•ollrey ... Nicol W1lllilmson
h«ull•• Prnduun. Edg.ir f C.r~ ... ~rt A E1vn>1•1n· Dtr«ted ... Prockic:td., John Bo<>nTun
Scrttnpl•y., Rt"I'" P•lknb.-tl( ... J.>hn Elaomi•n
Back when women were women,
and men were animals •••
~~
~Rtf?'!l!!l!B 0-1 Adilplt<l lrom MAiory, I,; Mori• DArthur •. f{,..,po PAll<'nt:...rl(
-~~:91:.!:C::::-
LA MIRADA
DRIVE IN
\ ·--... ~·--· ..
JM
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By TOM TITUS ............ llllfl
Tbe name Geor1e Genbwin prol;ably nnt
bJinlJ to mind tbe Immortal .. Rh•Plod)' ln Blue••
or tile adnUllat.ln1 stralnl of "An American in
p.,11. ·• Here, lndied, was a ciant In American
JJ\Ul&c. tt•a dc>uMful that Genhwin is quite 10 revered
fol' hlJ eoetrlbutions to the muai.eal comedy "Girl
Cra»)'!' tven thouah the score includes auch stln·
INTERftlSSION
dards u "I Got Rhythm" and "Embraceable
You," thiJ blt,of fiuff waa to Gershwin what "The
Blob" waa to the career of Steve McQueen.
&EAaDNG BACK a half century. the San
Clemente Community Theater is revivine tbla
featb~i&bt musical, trimming ita excess fat to
flt it into a comfortable two-hour time alot. It's a t:Vt aimpllstic u a result, but it's entertaining
oontheleu.
Director Bil Gekas hu done some· Interesting
sureery on the script, localizing the Old West dude
ranch tp San Clemente and inaertin.1 a "gay
caballero" number that would have made
Gershwin wince. He's alao managed to hoke up
some of the more melodramatic moments, though
not quite enough In retrospect.
Gekas and choreographer Darlene Carpenter
have managed to get most of the 18-member cast
on stag~ for/some rather stilted production num-
bers, which are limited by the matchbox
dimensions of the Cabrillo Playhouse stage. What
the players lack In ensemble talent, they com-
pensate tor Lo comic enthusiasm.
AS IS OFTEN the case in musicals of this vin·
tage, the most memorable performers are the
second bananas -Ingrid Starrs as a showgirl with
"Ot•L CllAZY"
A m11$IUI trr. 0.0...,.. -Ire Genllwk), Guy Bolton end J«ll Mcc:-.n,
dlr9Ctecl"" au a.us. euoclele dlre<1W ..... Oii-. ~e Jo 4M Wiiii-. <........,...,.,OM-~. IOUndend llgfll lly OWh
Gol\ulft, pr--by lht SM O.,,_. ~ty T-ter ~
llV°"I" s.twa..,. et I p.m., Sunde.,. et J p.I'/\. .,.,.... #Ny Jet llW c.Dnlle
Pl•Y-.112 ,,,.,. Cabrillo, S... Clemente. "---Ions '92-.
TM• CAST Denny. . • • • . • .. .. • • . • . . . . • . ••• Jim v 111 ... t1
Molly . . . . .. .. •• • ....... .. • .. ............... C.rol.,.. ~tt• ~~~.. ·::::::::: ...... :::::::::::::::: ·:::::::.: ·: ·::::. ·=~=
Lenk . . . . . . "' • .. .. .. • .. • . .. • . ............................ Okk Hkllll,. Snalte Eyes .............................................. Olfto Pal&UI = ... : ·::. ::.::: :··: .: . . ... :: . ·:::::::::::::. ::::: J"a:i!c.!:'.;:
t.C:-1.-:: ::· .:~ .. :::: .. : .. : ... :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::= r=~ ·::: ... :::::::::::: ·: ·::::::::. ·:.: ·::. ·: . : ·:: . ·::::::::. ~~~ .. ~:
Cact11s.. ..... .. .. .. .. . ... •• .... • ....................... OonOdeH
Sllm . • • • .. • • . . • .. •• .. • • .. • .. ....... , ................. Gery V91MCO
lndlen Gl•ll .. , . . , .............. , ... , ......... Tray -SI.Ky A_,
The UnlvenatY of c.olfomla Irvine .,,.....n
FREEMAN DYSON
w ... sc1ay. Afr12tt11
4:30 p.m. Mr. Dyson will autograph his
book Dis._. ..... u.n .... in
the University BoQkStore
8:00 p.m. Lecture: "Science for Science's
Sake: Public Support of
Astronomy."
Science Lecture Hall
Lecture ticket• available at ASUCI Box Office: S1
UCI 1tudent1: t2 faculty. staff. UCI Alumni
Allociatlon memben. and other ltudenta; S3
general admlulon. Coaponaored by the
Department of Phy1lc1 and Student Affaf,..
L.ecturet.
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
Including
!BEST PICTUkEI
...... ....,.,..
...... V1lfO l3C).'990 --·· .. ,,.. "'~ ...... cmmi ... T
----91·'9»
...._._,..TW H"'*"'°" 8Ncll ... a-o:lea u.-........ °'111'91 639-1770 . .._...,.
.. ,.. ••• ,._ml
eyes for the hero ind Sal Gall.lane> as 1 cab drlv~
who sUcu around to become 1 reluctant sherltf.
Miss Starn' sense ol showlnanahlp and Galliano's
comic tlmln1t are both flnt rate.
Jloi Vlllantl lJ pby1leally perfect for the role
of tbe playboy sent w"t to ''roufh It'' and aet hla
mind off the opposite sex, but hi.I enthusiasm could
uae some fanntnc. Carolyn Hoekstra, 1 button-cute
actress with a pouty, expressive tace, doet well u
the cowatrl who lassos him and addl aome fine
vocal work.
Al Villanti 's ri\lal, Kevin Loni is too clean cut
and 1980's·colffured to ~ believable. Dick Nicklin,
on the other hand, is hl&bly effective as the seedy.
mangy villain, with some comic assistance from
bis young sidekick, Dino Palazzi. a bit of a show
stealer.
· THE BALANCE of. tbe cut, ~sorted cow· po~es and dude rancherettes, funetlona well under'
some dimensional handkf P'. with ?d-_ura Barker
and her cohort.a, Marti Srnetta and Cynde Wootan,
impressive in their "Andrews Slaters" assipment
as vlsitine manhunters. Youn& Tracy and Stacy
Ramos aet the scenes prettily and associate direc·
tor Lee Cblldress peps thinp up in a brief and un-
billed cameo.
For tbia production. and presumably tb(>se to
follow, the theater has altered ita cmain time to 8
o'clock from 8:30 Thursday through Sat-orday.
nlgbta, with Sunday rnalinees icheduled at 3 p.m.
"Girl Crazy" runs through May 3, with a weekend
extension possible, at the Cabrillo Playnouse, 202
Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. •
THE SADDLEBACK Company Theater is pre-
paring for its 1981 summer season at Saddleback
College, and has announced auditions on May 3 tor
supporting roles in its two productions, "The
Sound of Music" and "On Golden Pond."
Roles available In the June-July production of
"Sound of Music" include three nwu, the butler,
the housekeeper, the countess, one boy in his late
teens. two boys 11 and 14 and five girls age.s 5, 7, 9,
13and16.
Speaking parts are open for the family comedy
"On Golden Pond" for a young man 13 to 15', two
men in their late 30s to mid·40s and a woman in the
same age range.
BROADWAY ~ND TV actress Susan Watson
will star as Maria in "Sound of Music " while
Wiley Harker and Iris Korn have been signed for
the leads in "On Golden Pond."
Juvenile auditions for both shows will be held
from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the main theater of the
Mission Viejo campus. Adult tryouts are scheduled
from 2 to 6 p.m.. with additional information
available at 831 -4747 or 831·4650.
1=·•11.;;.ot'1tlJlowu l
azY tttl All ....... Clell .... n... ,._,......, . ......,
* MIDNIGHT MOVIES * 110 COl!elllf ••D _.._
1n1nr r rnN '-'• *•' Tnt·S~~·eD1AHtS·Tnr·SAttt
JIVE ON STAGE
SAT\JRDAY -7:00 P.M.
STEVE NOONAN
s .... A ....
Apr. 24-JI ................. .-s..-.ro1ce
Offlcen' AtMC ......
Vwt.fy Sllew A,w.26
ModM I Creft S..w
Apr. 25-26
The only thing greater than their passion for America ...
was their passion for each other.
RINGO STARR
"CAVEMAN" C'OI
'
"NIGHTHAWK ..
(R) •
I "UONOF
THE DESERT" CNI
I "THE POSTMAN
Alit'#AYS
RINGs TWICE" jRI
• 1 · 1 "THE JAZZ ' Sl~EA'' (PO~
-... ,_......... I "ALICEIN
WONDERLAND"
''AMY''"' -Cl&D---~ I "RAGING IMILL" c11>
'fOAT Af'IACHE"
I •
I "ORDINARY PEO.Pt.E"
"TRIBUTE" (")
I "mA CRAZY"
"USED CARI" "" -(.$
__ .._ ....
•H"'~' c ..... -...... ·-""'' .....
. '
The momter -re·
LEVIEWS Ugtous and ethnic ln·
tolerance -la not dead
but we are ill dan1er of
forgetting about it, ac-
tdln& totMpe1ta on a spedaJ eflition of "Voter'•
i~Une" to air tonight at 9 p.m. on KOCE, Channel
Host Jim Cooper Is joined by two camp sur-
n1 a rabbi from the wiesenthal Center ln Loa
ieles and a Christian minister from Newport
-ch to discuss the need for keeping IQemol'les of
Holocaust alive and evidence that anti·
qiltiam remains a part of our culture.
1 T~t evidence makes a disturbing Hat :
aatlkas and hate 'T'essages swabbed on the
eiJenthal Center; vandalism In a Jewish
metary In Commerce; an anon fire at the
mple Beth David In Temple City: destruction at
Temple Beth Sharon in L.A ; vandali1m and
ft directed against a Jewish resident of Mission
ejo on Rosh Hoshan~: three seoarate incidents
vandalism at a Westminster temple -all within
past year. ,
1: (Cooper does not see this as an upswelling in
ti~Semitism, however. "l really think the vast
ajority of people are incensed and offended by
Uiat.crap," he said in an interview.> ~:. Still, all of his guests insist that what hap·
;ined in Germany could re-occur unless it is· r•
'lembered. . . "Sixty percent of the population are too young
bave a first-hand understanding of what Nazism
ft. ant to the world," says Rabbi Abraham Cooper
the Wiesenthal Center.
••. ''YoWlg people today are simply obhvious to,
ti. e insensitive to, history, .. adds The Rev Robert
ftepard Jr., pastor of the Christ Church by the Sea
~ited Methodist Church in Newport Beach and a
Member of the National Conference of Ch ristians
i' nd Je\\(5 "It is extremely important that we
ersonalize history with the help of the Christian
ommunity.·•
1 The camp survivors. Magaa t3ass of Los ~ngeles and Mel Mermelstein of Huntington
\feach. have personalized history by going into the
classrooms. displaying the numbers tattooed on
~ei.r arms and relating their own ternfying ex
pJ\rtences ..
• Mn. Bass, who was interned in Buchenwald as
a youth. tells or seeing a crying baby sliced 1n half
~· a German guard and vowing to kill the first
German child she saw. But when that opportunity
came, she says, she did not murder the youngster.
who was starving; she simply shared her bread
Mermelstein explains why he has revisited
Auschwitz, where he was impnsoned. 10 times and
brought back as many grisly souvemers. He dis-i plays a post uted to support the electrified fence
1 around the camp. J Mermelstein would like to see funds available
to send American students to Auschwitz to learn J first-hand what happened.
Rabbi Cooper claims the lessons to be learned
1from the Holocaust are broad in scope
"What happened during the Holocaust was not
t:'ust a matter or Jews ancl Germans ... he explains
['Not all Germans were Nazis, not all Nazis were
(Germans.··
A giant of a man
against a general
seeking glory ...
a spectacular
adventure of
archenemies
in battle.
I
Nazi camp survivor Mel Mermelstein
The program is particularly relevant to its au-
dience in Orange County , with one of the country's
fastest-growing Jewish populations.
There were 3,000 Jewish families in the county
eight years ago. Today there are 14,000 families
consisting of 50,000 people. according to the local
Jewish Federation Council.
But the message here is not only of concern to
Jews. As host Cooper notes. millions of Christians
died in those camps too.
.. Jews have often been the first victims or
persecution," says Rabbi Cooper .. They've never
been the last ..
House tours set
Tours featuring "historic homes and studios"
and "charm houses" are scheduled during May by
the Laguna Beach Museum of Art.
"Laguna's Historic Houses and Artist Studios"
will be explored by author·histonan Kathy Les in a
lecture and bus tour at the Laguna Beach Museum
or Art. 307 Cliff Dr.
Scheduled in conjunction with t!i~ "Laguna
Legacy" exhibit, the lecture will be held on Thurs·
day. May 7 at 8 p.m Cost is $2.50 for members and
$3.50 for non · members.
Bus tours will depart at 10 and 11 :30 am. and
I p.m on Saturday. May 9 with limited space at S5
per person Tickets and information for both
events are available by calling LBMA education
director Suzanne Paulson at 494-6531.
Ms . Les, survey cooi-dinator for the Laguna
Beach Historic Survey aimed at resear~hing
pre-l!MO buildings within the city, will discuss ear·
ly art colony architecture as it parallels activity of
early artists.
A second bus tour, sponsored by Village
Laguna. wi\l highlight "Laguna Beach Charm
Houses" on Sunday. May 3 from noon until 4 p.m .
Tickets, at $7.50, are available through Village
Laguna, P.O. Box 1309, Laguna Beach, 92651.
WEST COAST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT N
•Orange CINEDOMI 614-2111
DAILY 8100 PM SAT~ 1:00 • 4:30 • 8:00 PM
./.
Orange Coaat DAILY PfLOT/Frfday. Aprll 24, 1981 • . -· ..... ··~
That 'Mii iost for centuries
W~y Buy Someone Else,
By Somebody~ ~~L -
When you can have YOURSELF T odayl By Hendrik •
BRONZE
A 20 MINUTE s1n1NG
WILL PRODUCE
A MASTERPIEa
THAT WILL LAST FOREVER
PEWTEfl
nE PAST OF THE FUTURE
IS ~RE NOW. CREA n YOUR OWN
F.AMIL Y HEIRLOOM
LIFE CAST SCULPTURED PORTIAITS
STONE
"
ARE
''AFFORDABLE"
Call 494-6922
(FOR APPOINTMENT)
Jltnbrtk of. &guna 1427 s Coos! Hwy logono Beach
llllCMAn CA-# .. THE HANO ..
;;~ ~·o.,~•• :. ~j
-.LCA.-
11THE HAND "
P\.Ul(ltl CllAllUa--
•
cars•bikes•
•skateboards*
trucks.baby
carriages •tea
carts•trikes
rol lerskates •
walkers•toys
•wagons••••
scooters*hot
rods• coupes•
trailers•hard
tops• convert-
ibles• motor
homes*lawn
mowers*limos
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's••••
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 and a
friendly ad·
viser will
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
J
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M'll ';hr lrl IN.._. ... ,., .... "Qllnoof· .. .
.~ .... ~
Tiie oooioetlltOfl ~
~ '°. !tie COUfl.. try'• top """ ICflool ~ tr, • tour ol tlle ~
• eoollle ,._.. Ill Howton;
Mf'I ~ wlttl • on mo'lln9 at • ~ CMt:
capt. c-ot an ~
..
KHJ 88: 00 -''Romanoff and Juliet." Movie with Peter Ustinov and
Sandra Dee about the ctau7hter of an
American ambuaador wbo aUt In love
with the son of a Russian ambuaador.
KOCE 8 9:00 -·•voter's Pipeline ...
Newport Minister Robert Shepard and
Rabbi Abram Cooper, an Auschwitz s\lfl.
vivor, discuss the Holocaust.
eOA.oNIWI
.-m..tea I =llWCaACIW.
****''TIMt~OI Pf ...... 8ao¥lk" ( 1t7') .. .,.
Un .,_,, Heel 1Mt1Y.
• DAta"""" ~ JUdoM ... end
~ Heye9, S~a and
Varnell. Murphy ~-and
fkr! LOM!an G.-t T ...
naMllfla ··~MC NIW9
tl:OO. Wl'tNM TO THI
80TTOM MTHI MA
"TheLobetatMan"
~· (1t12) etwllto-llf* L.M, ,.._. kNll .. , ...
ltlO ~
•• "'1Con91" (ftl1)
MlcflMI G°"9fl. Margo
JofV\e 1:111 NIWI .. -00 .,.,. • * "CerlbbeM"" ( 1962)
Joftn P....,_. Ar-. OMI,
~---
l -INIRillMft-~
"°" Ind ionoewttr. Jolin Em'*Y ~. glallt
...._~. KCET 810 : 00 -''Greene and
Greene:" Turn-of-the-century designers
whQ changed Southern California's ap-
pearance.
·~ • IWWTTA
..........
1.-00 (I) --......,..._
' • "°°9(81 12:30 8 MIONICIHT INCW.
' .. , •• NOii ..,.....WOMAN
COl!eol lootl*I e-.,.
being llx9CI by aonMIOOa
who llM Ci9w 1· aped an
lrnC>lant ~ him to
temporarily control I ha mocor mo-•••• of atll-....._
A retlrad ~ °'""'*'
trial to take en.roe 9' an
ln-t~
Hott•. The 8ae 0..
GUMl1· Jeiry Laa LNI.
Gladya Knight end tlle
Pipe. com•dl1n Frank
Walker. Johnny Nut\, Jim
WM"*1)'. Sll ... ar Davia
(R)
I ~
ITAftTM><
COMMUNITY
f!lm.o,()<
t
I TIC TACDOUGtf
M0A•a•H
Trapper, coached lly
Hawti•. en..,.. the 1n1ar-
cernc> bOlllng ·-· to .,,_,t the 11anater of •
~tllu!NMW
AIDING HIGH --John Denver escorts
soprano Beverly Sills into the outdoor life
in "John Denver -Music and the Moun-
tains" tonight at 9on Channel 7.
• GOOOT.-
A dlsp1r1glng remark
about Geotge WUhington
-MlcttNI to be --pended trom act1oo1 ID THEHeW
~
An Hploratlon Into t"8 dll-
larancee bet-medi-
cine prllCllCeO In Laoe and 1 1"8 United States. • Lao-
tian parent leern1 •bout
1"8 lmporten<;e of alter-
l!Chool Ii.Id lllP• lor ha<
dllUQhler
lI!) ElECTNC co.,ePAHV
(RJ Cil CUNEWI
(II A8CNEWS
8:30 0 J01<£R'I WILD
• WELCOME IACt<,
l(OTT£A
Gabe ~II that Irle
s-lllOO• tlltge • • .. 1.1n
10 prol .. I lhe lood tn the
cetat-'-
• 9EHHVHIU
Benny p<-lf Ille Franc:tl
entry or tile Europeen
SongConl•I
&'1 KCET NEW88EA T
lI!) STUDIO IEE
Pina St Louis kid•
operate ,,,.., own ·-••u
r1nt. 1 South CerOllna
tamlly run•• vir>eyatd (RI
Cl) NEWS
CHANNEL LISTINGS
<Ill IARHEY MIU.EA ~ualng lo enforce an
avic:tlon OtOet landa S..-
"9Y In Ille clepar1mental
dogl'lou ... and the men of
the 12111 are leoad wOh
malling a futl-.cale uaaull
on tile rvn-down hotel
(Pall 21
e:&a IJ EDITONAL
7:00 tJ C88 HEWS 0 N8CNEW8 U HAPPY DA VS AGAIN
B1cllerono over bills
th1ea1en1 Al's and Foni,.·s
plans 10 1eopen ArnOld's
0 ABCNEWS 0 BUU.SEYE m M0A.8'H
The oppres1lve Ko<ean
..... , gets 10 evaryon<t
especi•lly K11n9a<
41) STAEETS OF SAN
FRAN08CO
A public d411ender atmosl
lo-lier Illa bec:IUN stl8
be!-lier Cli«ll II not a
murd.-ar
6i) OVEAEA8Y
Gueata J1m Backus end
htS wtla Hanny (R)
lI!) MACHEJL / LEHREll
REPORT
TIC TAC DOUOH
!ti) MERV ORtff'lN
G.-ts. °'"°" Wettea. Std c-r
II KNX T 1CBS) L0.., A.nQt>I.-...
Q KNBC 1NBC1 Lo.., Anqp1,...,
8 l<TLA ilnO I Lo'> A nQ"ll"'>
II MBC rv 1ABL1 Lo, A11·1•·••'" f "F MB 1CB<;1 S.1n D•t'CJP
() l<f\J f'v' 1 ln<l t l u<, A11 It' ,..
'~ "cs T I AHC1 Sdn o.. l ID I< TT\I 1 lnll l U" Anq1•lo•
41) 11.C.,OP TV t lnc1 1 L oc, An J•""""
ff) 1<( ET T\. PBS! Uh Anqo• , • .,
~ 11.0Cl rv PAS1 H .111 • 1• • ~., , '
7:30 tJ 2 ON ntt TOWN
Ho•t• Stave Edw1rd1,
Melody Rooere A touctllng
•tort Of hOw norm• kid•
entart81n the Nndlcapj)ed.
a China bronze ••NbU
D 'AMILYfl'IUO D IHANANA
GuMt Ben E King
0 T&.ETONe G FACE. THE MUSIC GI AUINTHE.FAMILY
A rnidnlghl argument al
the Jartat'llOnl aplllt OY9r
tnlo Iha Bunke< hOuNhold
fll MACHEIL I LEHRER
AEPOft"T mi 8USIHE.U
EXCHANGE
Moving PrOduct The
problems ol Illa rllllway.
1n1pp1no •nd 11uck1no
tnduatrlea are axamin«I
w11h amphUia on prodUC1
tr ansportat Ion
(I) BAIO>U
San 0..00 Pad<• •• Loa
Angelae Dodger•
8:00 tJ THE INCMDl8U
HUl.K
lntanM r9dla11on lrom 1
ma1eor11a cau-Oavtd
Ban,_ 10 be trapped In
the torm of Ille Hutt. (P1111
l)CR)
D MAAP£A \IA.U..EY PTA
Rumor. •111'1 llylng wnen
Stella 11 overhM>rd telltlng
about ··teHlng a rabbll
lest (Al
D MOVIE
•·~ ··Two-Lena 81ac1t1op"
(19711 James hylor. War-
ran OatN Young oh•l-
lenge• Old 10 • croaa-
country car race
0 9 llEH80H
Benson and the oove!no•
lake over Iha con11ol1 01
Iha ~ lhey are lravelt
Ing In when their pllOt cot
laPMe (R) 0 MOVIE • • * ·~ Romanort And
• Loe ANllll •MB
IN llllYllW I
~I: ca.t. Aobel'tL
• WAU. mmT WUJ<
''AMI.Mii ~ AMOlng
8e1ween Tiie Line• ..
~ • ......,, J Golub,
pert .... o.loltle Heelllna &
s.i..
uo D 8lOCQM
A llOlehot CM drtvw (Terry
Br~I ._up wflh a
mechenic: 10 tra\'91 the
IMldi -toed rlldng Circuit of
rural Arnerlc:e.
8 0 rMAWGGIAL
tfOW
Diane ...,na her lather"•
iww girlfriend i. • woman
ahe w.it to high ld\Ool
with (RI m CAAOl. llUMETT
AHOFNENDI
Gueet Alen King. 8a CID WAIHIHGTON
WHK IH AEV1EW
HO tJ THE OUl<U Of
HAZZAAD
B<Hll Hogg'• good !Win
blot'*. wno wu deciated
19gally clMd by Hogo yMta
ewller. shoWll UC) to cletm
hi• sh•r• of an lnlle<ilanc.
(RI
0 m£ GANGSTER
CHftONICl.D
Luciano. Leeker a nd
Sl•g•I"• op•r•llon 11
thrNlened by rrval 08"0-
alefS. • go~I com-
m111lon •nd l•ud1no
llm<>tlgll themMIYM 8 9 JOHN DEHVIER:
MUllC AHO THE
'MOUNTAIHS
8ev9tly Sllll. ltzNllt Perl-
man and J-GaJw•y
)Oln John o.n-W\ • musi-
cal~ taped •I~.
COIOredo
• r.teW GAlmN
G.-t• °''°" Wettea. Sid c-. Yakov Noy. Bev«·
IMO-. • •U. V GRAHAM
CMJIAOI
• WALL fTAEET WES<
· Annuet Reporl• Reading
Between The llnae"'
Guaat Steven J GOiub.
part'* Oelo<lla HukW\I &
Sell• mi VOTER'S PIPfUHE
Hoel Jim (;()Ope( ax.,,,.,_
tile recent rlM ln eel• of
anu-~ttsm 1n 11119 IOOk
at HOlocaull Month w1ttt
gufft Rablll Abr•m
Cooper
..... aACRAMINTO
W&K•MWE.W
Holt Murril)' Fromson
10:00 8 (I) THE OUKU ~
HAZZAN>
Luke and Bo lalta Uncle
.iesM"I adYiOa and try IO
heic> out 10m8 ,_ neigh• bot•. unaw8'a of the prob,
lem1 they are watlllng into
(R)
DO• NEWS 0 (11 ABCHEWS
CLOeEUP
""The Apoc;alyPN Gama
An Update'" M8'th•ll Fra-
dy 1.1pd•IH an Hiiia< doc-
umeotery on the MX m11-
1lle ayalam and rlPOf'tl on
the growing uncertalrillH
of the armt race It r•Pf•·
Mnll SI THE IHOEPelDEHl
EYE
"Gr-And Gr_,e A
prolll• of two Southern
C.Ulornla d-.gnera whoM
get\IVI changed the land-
scape of turn-of-tt>e-e.n-
tury Souti-n C111t0tni•
lI!) 8U. MOVEAS'
JOUAHA1.
JOMPh Campbell Myth•
To live By· Campbell COY•
ar1 soma of ,,,. se>ec11tc
myth• Illa!. lhfOUQh tna aoea. llava provtded many
~ ot tile worlO with "*' mythOIOQIC81 tound•
1ion1 tPart 2)
10:30 GI HEWS
• IHOEPINOINT
NETWONC N1W1
• nw.emoNI
A ci<oflia ol Jim Woode.
Joan Lyan1 and Richard
C..rOll •• all dleaOleO peo-
Pla oorrantty ltY!nQ In the
community and holding
IOb•
11:00 8DDCIJ9 NEWS 8 ITARTAEk
Captlln KIMI talla pray 10
•n all9n woman'• lov•
tMr• wlllcn anllava him to
her wlH
0 HEWI. VW£D GAME GI M0 A'S0 H
Chartat becomes the moat
unpooular m•n In camp
when ha rac.IYM 1 winter-
ized polar IUll lrom hll
paran11.
• 11EHH't' HIU
Benny •• Fred Scullle pre-
Mnt• ht• veu1on or lhe
Orenga BIOseom St>Ktal tJll DICK CAVETT
Guest l ewis Thomas
(Part 2 of 21 ~ SHEAK PREVIEWS
The Liie Ano Death Of
Black Fiim•" Roger Eberl
Ind G-Stike! !Illa a
IOOk at why Illa t11a of lllml
by tor •nd •bout btac1<
A"*ic.ti• haa ended
11:ao tJ Cl) NaA
8A8KET8AU.
IC•n u • Clly •• Ho .. ston l\Apeo.1..,1
II TONIGHT'
Guest hOll Bob N9Wt>1rt
Guest ~arles Grodin
JOHN DARLING
1:00• VOVAOETOTHE
80TTOM ~THI lfA
""The Menllsh'"
0 NVCHC
~THE
~8EVOHO
HOlll Damian S1mp110n
and Slacy Hunt d~
wllchcrall wtlh gua111
Babel!• 1no D•nn11
Moore
ti) INOEPEHOENT
HETWOAIC N£Wa
t:toG VIOEOW£8T:
IAa<STAOf PASI 0 AOAM-12
1:301'1 NEWS
ti) MOVIE *'"' 00Terr11~·· (1lle41 Rod
Lauran. Slave Dr•• ..
1:40 G MOVIE • • *'"' "Kale1do"ope'
( 19661 W•rren Beallv ~unnah YOt~
2:00 G EDITOfUAL
II COMEOV 8HOf> 8 MOVIE • * • Frenchmari s
C1eak0 I 19441 Joan Fon
•••M Arluro Oe Coroova CD MOVIE
• • ·web Ot \110ience
( 1969) Stell Hataey Mar
o•rat LM
2:06 tJ MOVIE
• • The Love-Ins
( 1967) James MacArthur
Susan Olive<
2:300 NEWS
3:00tl) MOVIE * * Ntghl 0 1 Thf! Blood
HO.I Femendo Del AIO.
• UNIVEMITY Of THE
AM
t:tl ....... THAT TEACH uo KI09WONJ)
I THAT"aCAT 9 IT"IYOUlll ......
I DAVEY AHO GOUATH
SPEAKOVT
• AOMP£11 AOOM fD CAPTIONP) A8C
NlWI Cll VOtCEOf
AGRICUi.TUAE
7:00 8 DUSTY"I
TAEEHOUIE II OOOZSLLA I HONG
KONG PHOOEY 8 PACOETT£AS
Holl Rey GO<Ulles
0 ®} 8UPEAFRIENOS
0 HOTFUOOE m TUANA80UT fill lAHOUAOE
Cl) TV-eLOOK8Al
l.EARHINO
7:30 tJ MAAJ..0 AMO THE
MAGIC MOVIE MACHINE
0 BIG 8U.Jf MARBU 0 GIGGLES~
HOTEl
g) ELSlfHTAA't' NEWS
ti) GETTIN" OVS. ' fill \/EGET A8lE 80UP
(I) KIDSWOAU>
1-00 tJ (}' TOM AHO JEAAY 0 THE FUHTSTOHEB
0 THE AiFu:MAN 0 @) PLASTICMAN I
8A8V PLAS O UFO
g) MOVIE * * * Picnic I 1956) W1I
l•am HOiden Kim Novak
Q) SPEIAL PEOP\.£
fll) REBOP(R)
by Armstrong & Batiuk
LOOK, ~e ... i"OM K~ rT'S A
COMPE"TTTl\IE BUSINESS!
The Dail~· Pilot supports and encourages your. participation in
Orange County's 11th Annual ~ ~super\\·alk of Lo\·e"
I
JOIN SUPERWALK SUND A y I APRIL 26
\\'AL K A :\1 ERIC A S l ' PER S l . :\DAY
fundraiser for the battle agai n st birth
d e fect ~ is the :\larch of Dimes· largest s ingle
fundrais ing event .
C0~1E \\'ALK WITH cs I
Join in the fight against birth defe cts b y
participa ting in t he 32 kilomete r '20 -mile '
Super\\.alk . the second annua l Team\\7alk .
th e fiv e a nd t e n kilometer runs 0r the S500
d onation one-m ile Executi \·e \\' a lk .
R a y 1\1 a I a \" as i . Sup e r \\1 a I k
Chairm a n . will walk with the
H o nor a r ~
Executive
Harbor l\'1unicipal Cou rt in Walk from
~ e \\ p 0 rt B e ach t 0 th e Chant <.>c l air
restaurant in lr\·inc f0r brun c h . th en t nu r
the 32 km r 0ute t0 cheer 0n th0sp \\ ~1 l l-.in g in
the 10ng run. "
All of this happens Sunday morning . Ap;·il 26
a t the Orange County Harbor l\iluni cipal
Court f ac ilities. 4601 Jamboree R oa d .
a.m .
with
R egistration is from 7 a. m . t o 10
Runne rs pay a 53 e ntry fee o r S8
T -s hirt. a nd dis tance \\·a lke r s \\·ill earn
pledge mon e~·. For more inform a tion. call
( 714 ) 979 -2270 .
REMEMBER. BIRTH DEFECTS CAN BE PREVENTED
A public service sponaonshlp of the OaUy Pilot
I tJ
l
I l I ...
FRtOAY
APRt~ 2A~ 1981 *
OBITUARIES
CLASSIFIED
Make your own wishing well
Here's a decorative and practical garden
center that's full of rustic charm. The "old oaken
bucket" may be planted with nowers and attrac-
tive pots can lme the ledges
The well also serves as a novel centerpiece ror
outdoor entertaining Use the bucket to hold ice.
the ledge for horh d'oeuvres. beverages and so
forth
The 'bn cks' for this easy project a re cut from
standard lumbt>r sizes c available at all lumber and
home centers 1 The.re's no messy. tricky brick·
la ying necessary Redwood or red cedar are rec·
om mended as both require little maintenance.
The ru1t -s11.e pattern lists the necessary
materials along with step by step instructions and
photographs This 1s trul} a conversation piece
and someUung that will last a lifetime
To obtain the WISHING WELL Patern #371.
send S3.00 !includes 1st class postage & handling L
Or you can order our C23 PACKET <9 different
lawn and garden pro1ects including the wtshing
well 1 for only S6 50 Send check or money order to
Steve Elingson. c/o:
Orange Coast Daily Piiot Pattern Dept.
P.O. Box 2383
\Ian Nuys, California 91409
GOOD IDEAS' 112-page PATTERNS FOR
B£TTER LIV ING pictures 600 woodworking &
handicraft projects $1 75 I includes postage>.
Trees give beauty to lawn
What lawn wouldn't look better with the added
dimension of a shade tree or two or perhaps a
rtowenng Cherry or Peach" Trees add height and
beauty to tne landscape and placed singly or in
grQups in a healthy, green lawn. their ornamental
qualities are obvious
To achieve the best performance from both
lawn and tree. two steps should be followed. These
are simple procedures. best understood if you con-
sider you r lawn and tree as competitors for the
same nutrients Nitrogen. Potassium and
Phosphorus hght. air. and water Each must re-
ceive its fair share or one or both will suffer
THE FIRST ST E P 1s to provide a grass free
planting site for your tree. Remove a two to three
foot diameter circle of turf from the trunk area.
This will prevent turf roots from competing with
your newly planted tree. Turf roots cao grow q uite
deep into soils . stealing water and nutrients from y~r tree roots.
This turf frt•e area also acts as a buffer zone
against any possible lawn mower-tree trunk con·
rrontal1ons A lawn mower can lake a fai r sized
chunk out of the bark and severely weaken a
young tree The turf free area also means the end
of hand lnmming around the trunk
THE SECOND STEP 1s lo provide deep water
to the tree Build a "atcnng basm out to the edge
of the grass free circle and apply water slowly so
1t has a chance to sink deep into the soil. Mulching
the watering basin will d1scoura~e weed growth
and conserve water
By watering your tree deeply. its roots will
grow down instead of up lo the soil surface.
Surface roots of improperly watered trees can
eventually damage the appearance of your lawn
causing large. bare spots
By foflowing these two simple steps, your
landscape can boast or the ever popular combina-
tion of lush lawns and healthy trees.
Anything /or green l~wn
~ICKLNSON , N.D .
tAiP > -Some people
will do anything for a
lush. green lawn. and
rancher Lyle Wyckoff
drives 52 miles every
day to keep his front
ya rd the envy o f
Dickinson.
The brown, s ickly
lawns in Dickinson at-
test to the drought
soµthwest North Dakota
,,. ....... CL--•~ ....... ,.. --··~ ...,..._ TUISDAY , ....
Elvis gets ·~wn rOse
By EARL A.RONSON .. , .......... .
The name of the Idolized late entertainer Elvia
Presley ls being memorialized by a lovely rose.
Oneida Nern of Fort Wayne, Ind., told me
about the Elvis Presley rose after reading my col-
umn about. the three All-America Rose Selections
for 1981 -the Bins Crosby, Marina and White
Lightnin'. She reported that a small rose with a
big name "Elvis" has been hybridized by W.W.
"Whit" Wells, a member of the American Rose
Society, and would be marketed in Presley's home
town of Memphis. Tenn . by the PaUo and Garden
Shop.
··Elvis is a pert little rose with a perfect bud
that opens into a red bloom with a touch of while
at the very base of the petals," wrote Miss Nern.
She reported the Memphis Foundation h~s had
a statue of Elvis made for a park and expressed
hope that the Elvis rose would be planted there
She said Presley club fans knew about the rose but
the general public didn't
A LAWN MOWER using a safe r. flexible.
monofilament line, instead of a steel blade. will be
available next spring.
The producer. the Toro Co mpany, says it cuts
open grass areas, trims weeds and cuts around
stationary objects. The electric Lawn Mower·
TRIMMINGS
Trimmer cuts a 20·inch swath .
''The cutting mechanism consists of the coun-
ter-rotating discs powered by separate heavy-duty
electric motors. Two monofllament lines are at-
tached to each disc. The lines are advanced and
trimmed to proper length as they wear down.
Lines are easily replaced by the operator at low
cost when necessary." a spokesman said
The flexible lines extend three-fourths of an
inch beyond the mower wheels. functiomng as a
trimmer as we11 as a mower. reducing the need for
additional cosmetic trimming after mowing.
The 35-pound machine is said to be quieter
than a gasoline engine. and adJustments allo"' a
grass cutting range of 11 2 to 3 me hes in grass
height. A folding handle facilitates storage
TORO'S LIGHT-WEIGHT portable Hose &
Re~I. introduced last year, has a newly-designed
cassette to accommodate both nght-handed and
left-handed users. It will be offered with 25, 50 and
75 feet of hose
Any quenes abou! gardening problems must be ac
companied by a stamped. self addressed envelope.
Far Earl Aronson 's .. Associated Press Guide to
House Plants." send $1 to /louse Plants . AP
News/ealures. 50 Rockefeller Plaza. New York. NY
/()()20
Flower shOw is readied
T he San Clemente Garden Club Standard
Flower Show 1s set for Saturday and Sunday from
I to 5 p.m in the San Clemente Communil)
Clubhouse at Del Mar and Seville.
The public 1s invited not only to attend the
show but lo enter a favonte arrangement. potted
plant. hanging basket or cut specimen in the show
com petition.
Professional arrangements. award-winning
plants and horticultural exhibits will be presented
during the two-day show. and some of them will be
offered for sale.
A special category for youth entries has been
arranged. and ribbons will be given for best en·
tries in several youth catcgon es. The show is free
For more information call 498·2698.
T HE MONTHLY meeling of the Harbor
View Hills Garden Club Is set for Wednesday,
featuring a guided tour of the planting facilities
and gardens of Disneyland
Mrs. Edward Romeo is chairman of the event, assisted by Mrs . V1rg1l Robinson t'or more informa-
tion call 644-5552.
R ARE PLANTS su~h as Rt>l·htenena
Ca rdinalts of South Amt.•nca and the pnm1t1ve
Cu 1cab v.ill be offered for sho" and sale at Laguna
Beach High S<:hool parking lot Suncla) from 10
am to3 pm
The sak 1s sponson•cl ll\ the Fnl·nds of the
Hortense Miller Gardt•ns and pro<·tt.'ds "'111 sup
port those gardens
Also offered for sale "'II bt· a \'Jnt.•I\ of <:aet1.
succulents. flowering fu<:hs1ds and ann.uals Tht·
show 1s frl'<' and thl' public· 1i. \H·kome to uttend
Plastic liners
cut water loss
To reduce water loss from wood or clay con-
tainer plants when the weather warms. remove the
plant and line the container with thin plastic This
v. ill cut down on mo1slun• losses through the sides of
the container Do not. however. seal off the drainage
hole m the bottom of the container
May 1s not too late to start another planting of
gladiolus Late glads are more susceptible to thnps A than early ones. so dust the corms with an insecticide
d1scuss1on on orchid cactus and other before planting a nd spray onceort w1ce a fl er the tops
epiphytic plants will be led by Sherman Gardens are six or seven inches above the ground experts Saturday at 9 30 a m in Sherman Gardens 1r.=====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.. __ ...;;;;-;;;;;-_..:,__;-;;;;_ ____ _
of Corona del Mar The program is free and open
lo the public THE PLANT PUSHER
LOW. LOW PRICES FOR: A workshop on "Indoor Plant Ca re~'.1 will
be offered at Sherman Gardens 1n Corona del
Mar Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 1
The basics of plant identification, choosing
planting materials for various household condi· 1
lions. watering and transplanting will be covered
by a Sherman Gardens horticulturist.
* HOUSE PLANTS ALL Kl~S
* BASKETS, ALL STYLES * CLAY & CER.Al'/\IC POTS
Registration in advance is required. and the 1
fee is $12 For more information call 673-2261'
524 West 19th Stre.t, Costo ~ta. Ca. 92627
(7141 548-0797
• • • • • • • •
Daily Pilot
classifieds
work for
you.Call
642-5678
for quick
cash sales.
!Nursery Special]
Climbing
CECILE
BRUNNER
·ROSE
Well-known
favorite
climbing
rose bush.
Blooming almost
continuously with
clusters of fragrant
pink, baby roses.
All-time favorite.
Martha Washington
GERANIUM
6 FOR 9.97
14" POT 1.79]
h~s suffered for more
• than a year. The city IG---' ' b kJ• has passed an ordinance : uruener 8 c ec •st forbidding any water-! ing, in an attempt to
!. Set lawn mower blades at 3-4'' to sttetcb conserve fast-dwindling
he time between waterings by an extra 3-4 water supplies.
ays. This helps reduce evaporative Josaes. Wyckoff, who ranches
a stretch of prairie 26
Property Wng Sold
NURSERY
liquidation SOie
Summer blooming
pelargonlums. Very
colorful variegated
flowers. Great In
containers and mass
planting.
• The abillty or your carden son to absorb m l l e • n o r t h o r
'ater can be increased with organic soil Dicklnaon, is importing
mendments and chemlcal aoil penetrianta. the water h~ needs. /
. Evel'y day, Wyckoff
• Divide En1Uah primroaet every three hops into a red pickup
un or ao aa soon as they flnlah their spring equipped wlth a 50 ·
loom. • gallon water tank. He
drives to hl• Be.llJel"
• Have you checked out one of the newest ranch, llUa up, drives
wer introduction• to the-1arctenin1 public ln back and douaea hl•
t<:ent yean? It'• the New GWr>ea impatient lawn,
Ith multi-colored follaae and larae, britht "I want tM 1reenest owen. lawn,, In Dicklnaon," he
• OrfanJc matter introduced to nower beds
erore, plantlns wlll lmprove aeration and
olature,, re&entloll and the lertWzer will slve
oun1 plaata a bealtl\y bocm.
expla ned .
1 I .
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PUBLIC NOTICE ~':"~>.':::C:::':4~·= ":.ttATtiW..., PUBUC NOTICE :~~-~" _. CllilMY Md auta •~11tt.11,i..M1r1111191 tffMt :re:':=,~":,::.~~-=...-::~..,__..,....,.. '"1:':.·::~/~tr,'.at=.:'1'.r~ PUBUC NOTIC& NOTIC&OP ,.,kJCMLUt• Cllllomia. twti<....,..y -.itr-.4 •• IHA•UNO TI41 SON .t.WWUY, NOTICE Off OE~TH Off cttr., c.ta Mt11. _.,.,or .... , HOTIC.15Hl,.W•YOIV•Hllleta ,.1.__.1..,wn: ""~.c..--.CA....._ VIRGINIA L.. R08£ATS •i.te Of '9111W111e. ••,...,,...,.. -~~1""'"!'!.,.o'..,'"!."!!!°'~Clt; 11&t1• ,_.., ,......_, lAt" et a ... c11...,_lt1r11110!'l!~r1J•,, .. ,,. ... ~.,~~.·; AND OP PETITION TO ,....,. '"..._".,...a°' Ml.. Plcttnoua•ustMU.. ---I ti -., -ta _ .. _. ai.<11 ~I ti C.-etl ,,.i,, WI UW Cl ~~ ...-<ttl~ ...._ r-* ef Or....-NAMI ITAT•MaNT Mey 4, Itel, 111 W C-11 CllMillw'• t; et N~wpett .. acll, C.u"t\o et Ma.AIM tltlWr, ~Volley, CA ADMINISTl!R ESTATE -rc.tllfwftl&. Tlw ,....,..,. ...,_ '' .._ tauJol
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..... I •••••• 0,.. p., <I I ". . JflWIMY, fM.. Ind contingent C(edltors of M .... Callfonlle. 'Attlal'llW .. lllW<:•. GM~ .. -~,c::,~n:-11 .. ct: ,.... ... 01-.. t.OSl .... MJ; mer• u"'-"'' TMt :..:-i-~~-ICll .... Virginia L. Roberts and , ........ , .... '"'" .. cJIKl•lm• Tiii• IMl!w. It~--" .. I" I -.... --~ ... _.. C«ldluen."' -a-11 .. : 411 DelMle•-. ... eor-C-ty c.1er11 et~-~, P• rsons who mar, be ..., t1a0111tr .... .,.., ""°"-' .. •1w1..., . ... ,._ -..,,. del Mar CllllfOnlla. _.,.... \lie street ...._ -" .,_, ~ • ._.. J. 0'8rlell
_., .. ....,. -wt1111n u. Cltv., re,.,,.; .. ..._ ,.,. "" 1ewtw1 _., "'-'" u. '"' otherwise lnteresled n the dHl11Nt1ian. 11 .,.,, .,_ ,,.,.."· I Tll•• ......_.. -fl,.. •"11 ,,.
c:a.taMHL• 1 • ..... UflllMS&.9'9t•Uftflr1Nt1Mo1 P.,..1.,..°'""' CM• o.ii~ ,....., wllland/orestate: 1otct ....... , .. ,.,..., -•IUJitU' c_,, 0er1i o1 ~ ... c.witr.,. HO,!_I~!_! """™ "OIV HU:-' H I•, ., 11•rt CHll Olld O•l•"ce '"-'114, "-t,e, ''· '"' IM.Mt A petition has been filed COV.MU'lt., •• , ....... .,... •• Of'""" """" •. ,., ., ............ -p1aco,M1pe,_ "" evldeftced '' 11ete H c11re11 '' .._., --... 1111oo1, ,......,.. Utle, ,._..ion, er PltMl1
l•rus.d tM'f ..... ., -" .. Mard °' Mor1909utor Trut1 De9d., tlle ~-· by Dr. Frank E. Roberts eMumbr-.. , lncludl"l f-. cllOf'_.• ,.....,,.,_ o..,.. cee11 Oeltr Pltot. tlWCltyOUKll enU.•for~ ,, • ...... ten.-.:Mtel-' 111c1 PVBUC NOTICE In the Superior Court of efld u-of~T...-Mdef111e ~1110,11,14,MOyt,1'11 ,..._., m•tler~ to be ._.ltad •"" * 0 an""' County requesting tr111t1 crMl«l bY Wld Deed et Tn..1, t• ----------••L••N P. PftlNN•Y.Cl'Ya.nt lld1 ... ollers .... ·,II wrltJne Olld r --pay .... -•nine pt'lnc:lpel ..,,,. ... Put>ll•,.,, Or ..... CAI Delly PllOt, wlll llo rec.el-•ll.lle•fw-ld.-tlu PtC1'mousausu1au that Or. Frank E . Roberts , ... note ........ °' MIO O...ol TrvU PUBLIC NOTICE A~ll 24• • 1•1 im .. , ., •"Y ,,,,. atter.,.. 11n1 pu1111c.e11on ,.... n•T••••T be appointed as personal 10 wu. u..M• w1111 •-• ui.r-----------
lier-.,... ..,.... date°' sa1e. o.c.cs. TIM ~._.... ~ 1' do"'9 WSI· r e p r e s e n t a t I v e t o fl'Olft Howme-••. ••at 14 perc ... t ••CTmous •UMNHI 1111'11"" .. '"'"-'"· "" .. ~~~Ovl!llV SUMMl!A SCHOOL, administer the estate of ... r ... """' .. ......,,.,... '" .... ... NAMllTAT•M••r ~ 9wllw, c:-.aw 11111• <Oita end..,,. edv•-of ,. 111-Tiie 1o11-1,.. '"'*'' ere dolfl{I ............. .-..~•• 4tt "•,......St., Mewpott eoa<11. CA Virginia L. ROberts (un· '''"'· 1M>a1._, .. :
HOTICl INVITINO llDS THOMASM.GEISlll t~lirw ~"-II,., 411 Hlnll"'", der the Independent T'lle llenellclor; Ulldifr sold Oeod ol DELYHH EHTEttPttl:r.ES, Jt• eMI.......... 4000Ma<Artllllr8htd. • _.. ... Adml Isl tlon of Estates Tr1<tt llerelol-Ue<ul•d •f\d de· JOM111,C.O.loMeso,C.At2'3' NOTICE IS Hl!AE8V GIVIH 11\el Newport BN<tu, Ca. t2MO H--18Mcll, CA'MI. n ra llwered to Ille lllldltrtloMd O •rlt\efl Ke,.nelll l .. Coller, 4H N. ... , .. .,,._..., Wiii .. f9Ce1Yod ..., PllOlltfled 0r.,. Coellt Dally Piiot. Tiiis ~ ,, c--..CIM by '" Ill· Act). The petition is set for Decler•tloft tll dtf.:Ult end~ lor Newport e1wc1 .• "'---' ... "' CA tlle City ol O.lo -... 10 wit: Tiie Cl· ~II 24, "·May 1, , .. , 1'3W1 ., .. ,_';.;,.,, sn.-co11111e hearing In Dept. No. 3 at Ml•, end I _,...., HOik• of Oeleull f2'6a
ty c-11. P.O. 8o• ll00, eo.1o MeM, Thi• llt.lltlnwnt •• tlled with the 700 Civic Center Drive, •net EtKtlcin to Seo. Tiie llllde•''lll'ed O•r•ld Alldrew e.drotl, l•ftt C•llforlll• ..-. °"or belfore \ho l>ollr I f S <•1<Md Mid Notice ot Default •r>d Atllel, trvlna, CA n114 of 11:00 e.m. °" ,,,, .. r, ,,,..., u, 1"1. PUBLIC NOTICE County cie"'.,•" ti,"''· West, In the C ty o an ta Etec11on '°Sell 111 oe recorded 111 111e O-ld I!_,,. eai ... rt, n4 J-.
1t 111e11 .. tho retpe111tlt>lllty of t11e Old· Plillll.,.. Or01191 c...-o.u~'= Ana, California on May 13, co""'" .,,.,. 11w •••• pr-rty " c .. 1• M.._, CA m:a. der •• d911ver Ill• Old to Ille City A~ll 2A ,,,., t • IS "" 1 ..... i 1981 at 9: 30 A.M. lo<•led. Tiii• IM>•I ..... I• COf\d~ted by • ci.rk'• Office.,., -pr-•-<eel NOTIU OP •UUl T......... • • • • IF YOU OBJECT t the Oelecl. """'" 12. ,., Qenoral ~. time. 810Utlll • "'*'<IY ..,....., •M CIKa.'111•ttlU.C.C.> o, lllALTYTIT\.a COMPANY, LTD. Kerwwtll L. GOiier read • ....., •• tl.00 O.M., or .. -PUBUC NOTICE granting of the petit on, ., a.Y. IUllllaei Tiii• • ......_. ... lllod wlttu ""' tMrHtta• •• prectkel>le °" l'rlcley, TO w .. oM 1T "'"'" cOHC£RH: you should either appear P11tall"'*f <><OftOI C0-\1 Oolly Piiot cou"ty Cterk of 0r .. oe Cou"1r on
AUy u. "'' '".,,. c:-.cu CNmN•~ Hotiu ''........, 01-10 u. CredltOr• at the hearl"" and state A.IN'lf 2•· MaY•. 11• 1•1 ,.,..., ,_.,, .. 14• "" Cltr Hell, n Felr Orl"'9, C.lO Mne, ol CUSTOM fOWINO, INC., a PICTITIOUl8USIN•U ~ t"I" t "I P'Ue1tll California._,., fOf' flle IWnlANltt M Celllor"to CO'P9tellOll, Tr8"sleror, NAM• ITAT•MaNT )'OUr 0 9C OnS Or I e p.,011"'9d Or ..... CO.JI O.lly Piiot,
ueo111 AHD MATIEAtAL TO AeATE • ._. _1,..... ~· ,, u11 ...._ r11e1o1_,,,. __ l•"°'"001n1· written jections with the PUBLIC NOTICE A~ll 11. i..Mer 1.1, 1w1 ~~t_N~EJ,~5 w~~Hi~£~:Ec~,~~ ~~::.· c .. 1o0r Me .. ~~~~..!~· ~~ • o u A" o, H 0 •Ho court before the hearing . -----~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
......,ty.. -· _. ........ .._ ..... ttEctt•'"Tl<>HAl. s"'ttv1c11s,,... w. Your annaarance may be OF COSTA MESA AdOll ...... Mtt el 11\el e Ill* ,,....,., It ot19U' t.o tie -• ,._ -------------------------11 '119 ~Hice•'-,,..,• GOlalMll <tt mec1e to w1NSTOM c. ANDERSON, 0< • .,..,......,...._.,ao.c11.u.~. In person or by your at· Ille Offlu of llw Purc,._11'1 A .. nt et T f -Wei Odd it T ......... Wailac. ......,.,._ 71M W t
11 "•" 0.-1 .... eo.1o Mu•. ea111orn1a •an•-:':.:.... .._;:'".. • ~-0<...,,1-.. . .....,.,, ao.c11. CA ftMO. orney · G '11-JJMll-....... ~--•• .,..,_... Tftlltllnl-••<-lecltt•Mlft. IF y 0 u ARE A t ••d• •-lie ret........i to tlle et1e11-tr o1 or.,., SC... Call~ ' ay Consen UonoftNOlyClerk,wlllllnMldllme Tllo..._,.,'° .. tr-'enod ,, dl-.-J. CREDITOR or a cont ·
olmll. 111 • Mo'-d ......... ldentllled IO<aled et 1117 •oer ••o··, Cotta Tllll ~..=-'."!. llled wllll IN ingent Creditor Of ,the de· ~:,:.::,:!.'!:o;!!.",,,!~1:'• ttem ~:-· Cf:""~ M orange, St•I• or c0..,.1, c•••k o1 0 ,.,.09 c-1, °"' ceased, you must file your • d d Ea<11 1>1c1 .,.." s.,.<lfy eac11 •"" s.f:'~1.,..,",_'"oenera1 AP'11n,1t11 claim with the court or
PUBLIC NOTICE
·age p on ere •nry Item a\ Mllortrl lft Ille tPe<ltk .. u All 1.-.otd ..,...owe-IJ, Ila· PUOllaNd Orenge Coelt 0.11:'=. present It t~ the personal :::.·,,~r.,:.nd ~ =~:,;: ~';.= !:~!~~rue',~ "';'ow~': Apr ll l•. ,,,., u . u. 1•1 tt1M1 representative :iSPp<>lnted
1n tr.. 01c1, -fa11ure 11> ... f0r111 a"' •Nc . ...., loUted .. 1111 .. ..., "O"'. --• by the court w1th1n four
LONDON <AJ» -A government-appointed
committee has recommended lowering the age of
consent for homosexuals from 21 to 18, saying 18·
year·olds are mature enough to take responsibility
for their sexual preferences.
But the Policy Advisory .Committee said the
age of consent for women to engage in sexual in-
itercourse should remain at 16 "to protect young
;girls who are not mature enough to cope with sex-
:ual relationships and all their consequences. _
. "Premature sexual experience may expose
such girls to physical, emotional and social
'harm.'' the committee said in its report.
11em 1n fM apeclflcetton• .,..,, .. Cost•,,,..._ c:-.4y o1 °'-· sc... ot PUBLIC NOTICE months from the date of :~~·= ::::! ~ ... r:~: ~~~;"'0:~-11•r .. li<Ole<I to ~TI-;; IMIMNHI ~~~~,~~~'se~til~t~~ ~~
•M ... rtleslnte,..1oec11111ho~-1. ~~iuorniaUr11to1 ... c-rcie1c-NAMSITATSM•NT the Probate Code of
y• ,.. ....--.... <tl4n•'°' Tll fOll lne _,... II lielne ...... 11111ebldl•o.,•corpon•1on .... t.t11e T111aou1ktr.,1torw111 .. conwrn· ..... ~ •. -.-·-· California. The t ime tor
Mmn Of.,,. otrlc:en -"" •lell •11 meted°"• efMr tlW IJVI °"" o1 Mer SANORA 1.voNs -AAT1Sf, JtJYll flllag claim s w ill not ex-
•er .. ...-ton-."°'1119<"'110f'ott•1c''°" ""· •lld ctelm• mo " 11f•d •1 Atweueo Pio<•, N•wpon ••uh, p lre prior to four months and •lleu...t ,,_. ,,,_ .... ., WELLS FAAOO 8AHK, N.A .. Ete,_ Galllo•"'•'*'· f
m1n1 119n II Ill• bid '' Oy • C>epartlMf't, Re: Eterow Ho . .o-m2, S."4reeorow l't'Ofl• JUl'>AtwereclO from the date o the hear·
IM""""'"' or • folM ve11twe, lt.t• W.O H•-' Cent.ef Ori,.., Sula 12:IO. Piece ..__. .. Kl\: CA t'M6t. Inn noticed above. Ille " ...... -.cactr ..... ot •II eener•I H r1 .. II c:-t f Or • ----• .. ... ,,,,." .,..i jol"I "'9llt1<rert II Ille ewpo K • Y 0 .,.., Tlllt Di.-1,... lac~tod by -'"· Y 0 U MAY EXAM I NE ,..... Sl•I• of Callforftla tllMO. · dlwld.,.l • t bidder h • sol• proprleton11111 or All <lol"" ~ 11e _.,_et""' S-oc L,..,.• the file kept by the cour .
• ,,.,,,., -lly 111e1 dlDel 11us1 ..... ..,. •dd••n °" ""' 11111 .,., ., Mer ""'· r111, a.......i •• meci w1111 ttw If you are Interested in the
-.r • ncuuo..s ....,.., tho old "'-11 tie ""1e" 111e bulk 1r.,.,., •''° '"""°" c-1, c1er11 ot 0r .. oe County .., estate you may file a re· In lho reel notne ol h •'-' •II" • Ille trefttt.r of llqwr tic-, I" Wfllell '
dHltaMllon '°'-'"II -•llO "OeA <•M,a11c1eim.nw .. uoa.-o1.,,..prtor AP<ll n . ••1· "....,.quest with the court to re· Cllle ll<tlllova lleMe)"', provided, to Ille dete _, wtlkh 11'9 llQuw lluftw p'*lf"'9cl Or-. CO.IC o.ilf Piiot Ceive Special notice Of the
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
"°'""•r. no llct"*---1 .. It trot1ll'W,.. "" tM ~ of ' i t f t t t u-u"'"" hr• I•• ,.,,,_1 reelttr .. Al<-41<......, ~ A.-112• . .._., 1, •. u. 1•1 , .. 1 .. 1 nven CKy o es a e a sse s
________ -_-_-:_-_-"1foflw1111111e0r...,..c-i1yttec..,..r. Solaros.....:tolMtrM...,..,.11 -and or the petitions, ac-
in <•M o1 c.orpcw.U..., 1i.c1udlo .,,. """-----..., PUBLIC NOTICE c o u n t s and r e po r t s Honor told
~ Coast Guard Lt (j.g. I
! Gary L Bagaas. son of
. Arthur W and Lois E
: Bagaas o f 6922 C<trla
,Circle. H untington
: Beach. has received the
, Commendal1on Medal
He was cited f or
participation in the
: rescue of lhe 519 sur
: vivors from the Dulch
: cruise ship Prinsendam
: which caught fire and
. sank i n the Gulf of
, Alaska in October 1980
DEATH NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE "•"'•• of t11o ...... , ..... Secreterv. oy Tr~ for u. ""-.,. ... Lott _ described In Section 1200.5 ------TreH.,._r____ pell lf-.-frwn .. .00.0. .... : • Tiie Cl..., C-11 ef .... Cl..., ot eo.i. Cuti .... T-..... fllC. l~A ~. PICTITIOUI IMlllNHS of the Cal1forn1a Probate ~ICTITIOUI •UllNllQ
~ITATU"INT
Tiie fol._lnt __, It ""''"9 DllM
nota •• CUSTOM CA~PET CAAE, JU"· Eerl,.em StrMI, 0•""99. C•lltornl• ., ...
PA UL Oe I• Torr•, JJS H Eerlllem Slrffl. 0<•"99 C.1110•111• .,..,
Tiiis buUneu I~ c.ondu<totd Oy.,. '"" dl.,lduel , ... Dot,. ,.,,.
Tllll >I01-I -~ 1119CI •Ill\ IN
C°""'fY Cle•-of Or.,._ County °"
NleM ,...,_ -''-"to ro1e<1 -Y C•teMHo.Callforftl•taa. "AManATUHNT Code .
.... e11olft. DMeO AP1IJ1.1•1 Tllof_._.,,.__,h_ne..,..· Robert P. Fry Jr. At-DATED ..... llJo,tt•• Wl_C......._,,....... IWUH t L , 8, th PUOll-OranootCooUO.llyPllot, L.AOO IHVESTM£HT ()()MPANV. torney. •w, 00 ,
A1><112•.1•1 ,.._ .. , Pw11.-0r.,. c-.. 0.111 Pttot. 44 C•"'°" 1••9"411 Dr•"•· He•110rt Mitchell, Str•nge & Smith,
Apr1m .1w1 193IH1 ~:r~~-., c..ron iu-3200 Bristol, Sult• 650,
-------or1wa,"-1 .. ocJ1,CAt-.o Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PUBLIC NOTICE .T111, ~" <-te0 by.,.,,.. 641 ·0217.
c1n OP: l'04.INTAIN VAlLIY duwi-.a1. Published Orange Coast
"''-'"°"Ntt. tUPa1t10.cou1tTOPTH• T1111 :=:~ 111ee1 •1111 1119 Daily P ilot. April 17, 18,
HOTtC•INVITf .... IOS ITATIOPCAUPCMINIA Cou"IY Clerll of o,.,,119 C..."IY Oii 24, 1981 1848·81 l'ICTITIOUl•USIH•U l'Olt TH• CIONITltUCTION OP INANO POlt TMa A-prll 20, ltll. -------NAMa STATIMIHT SLATat• Ava .. ua l'llOM IUC&.10 COUNTY OPOttANOI l'IMalt Tiie foltowtne ,...._, ere 001"0
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~,....,.
Publl"'9d Or-C°"\I Oally Polot, Ap• II. 24 AMf I t. 1911 11-1
PUBLIC NOTICE
STttll•T TO THI SANTA ANA IOHHrE, a11.1sev, ••LLV •111Sev. '"""_°'.,,.. c.o..1 o.11, Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE .,..,,.,.M• N72J21
,.,,... 1t1va11 PATRICIA •111sav. Aprll t4,Mey 1,1. u. "'' tt.U.et T SH1ATS PLVS, 2001 ue-""'' NOTICE OF DEATH OF A:,~~:~~ 2~= ~.:~Delly,:~; ""°': .. c:,:~· ..u Pl:.•"tlff9 ~ PUBLIC Non-ICE PICTITIOUI •ullN•U "':1!~~r ~1.'·,~r;:.r. "9rl•. E I L E EN c. s TR 0 c K
Aprllt, 1•1
NOTICE IS HEAE•v OIVEH 11\et 1111101H1A ANAYA •k• VIRGINIA v• NAMalTATIMINT lrwtne.CAmts. AND OF PETITION TO
'""City c-11 Of,,,. Cltyol "-"l" AEEL, DetenOent. ----Tll• 1011ow1ne ,.,.o.,, ••• c1o1n9 K•1t11 J. ~l<k. uo Eaa• CO<'t••. •oMt NISTE R ESTATE V•l .. y, Colllornl• ""'" re<el ... MaHd ....... ,.. PICTITIOUS auSIN•IS l>u1IMN es: ScoflMl•I•, AZ IS2Sol "' pr.,_ellutltlltllel>OUrM2:00p.m,on APPLICATION POii OllDaR NAMllTAT•MaNT PHOEHIX IUttOEIU. •02 Tiii• l><lalnen It conclu<led by• NO. A-108381. Monoey, M9y 4. t•1. lor tho tOllatr..c· 01 It ICTINO PAYMallT OUT OP Tiie ld_I,,. .,.,_. It 611'"8 butl· Wulmlnller A,..n .. , WHtml"ater, llmlled -1,.rslllp T O a I I h e i r S , "°" of Slate<' Avo11 ... f,..,,. luclkl TH• tlttlAL UTAT• •OUCATIOft, MHH: C•llfornl• rc ... 1 F a_,, d "
Strffl IO IN Softta Ma ., ... r, I"•· ••SIAltQ4ANO"•COY••Y PUNO THI! SOURCE.•• So. H•reor, SM· c ........ 11 ... p P:r-lokl•. "" r .. 1 .... ,_, .... 1119CI •1111 ,,,. beneficiaries. ere 1\ors cordlll\o •'"' t11e plant ofld -clllce· 11«11• ,..,, et ............ •• ta AM. CAt2~. lllllefleld on .... H..,tl"9tOll a.oc11, coun1, Clark or Orange G"""''' on and contingent creditors of 11ona.P•-11-1111e,.._...,..., ... ,.......,.ea., JerrvA . ._,1 .. ,,.,,. .. 0r •c..1,Co11ton110._. Apr111.1w1 Eileen C. Strock and der MalOCI C_, -~I lie OC< .... • Plelntlff ,,.,_ ........ •P•Ocetlort Santa AN. CA '2707. Pete P:r-.klt, *' Llltlofleld I'll... h be !MllloCI Or -M Ille forunt ol l>lclder'1 for erdor dlrect.'"9 peyment for llw Tiiis ...,,_. ll conduc .. d by.,. '"· Or Ive. Huflll,._ lloecll, Callforllfa PuOll-OrM91 C.ooll Dell, Piiot, p e r' S 0 ~ S IN 0 ma .Y SIGMAN :tl'r\'ICl'l> v.111 be he ld al Bait
. ,
HELENA c SIGMAN agl' Berge~on-Smith &: Tuthill
70 resident of F..I Toro. Ca WeslrlJH Cha~I Mort_uar) ·
, Passed awa\' in Newport Graveside services v.1.Jl · l Bearh Ca on Apnl 22. 1981 held on Mond.ay. Apnl 27
She v. as born 1n Idaho Falls. l981 ut Rose Hills Cemet~ry.
Idaho on March IO. l91l She Idaho Falls .. ldahQ Serv1c
IS sun I\ ed b\ 3 duughlers under the d1r~ct1on of Ball
• · . . BergPrOn·Sm1lh & Tuth1I \ \'Onne Harns of S.1nlu Anu w l hff Cha""I Mortuarv Ca . Canta W1ll1ams or es c •" ·
Costa :\1esa. Cu and Lor of Costa Mesa 646·9371
ra1ne Ta\ lor oC El Toro Ca . EBERHARDT
a I s o s· u r \ 1 \ e d b ~ 9 M A R G l ' E R I T E
grandchtldrt>n I I jlreut SPRAGL'E EBERHARDT.
grandchildren and 1 sister pussed av._ay on April 21.
Valt>na Millard or Idaho 1981 She 1s survived by a
falls Idaho Prl\ illl' daughter Shirley Kaueztz of
Nev.port B ear h . Ca ..
----------..... · grandchildren Palncia Eyer
.. curny r-4roo oy Section 1111.01., •••• Ell* Aec_, ,,_ -... dtwlduot. ~ ""'" 10, 11, 14, ,,,,,., 1, 1w1 111 ..... 1 otherwise interested 1n the
'"" 5"<111<.etklnL "'' "'-" ,,.11 1 .... '"°'· Jerry A. w-Tiii• llull,,.u 11 c-uct..s oy • wi 11 and/or estate: Oe merkeCI "P,.OPOSAl OH 110..--t,tm,e t~ Tllla ....._was llled •1111 Ille Qellffel~. A tT h bee f"led PltOJECT NO. 44S2," .id lie mellod .,. .. ..,..,... lly INs ,_, '" levor ~ Co.,nty Clerll ot Oronge Ceunty °" c-antlne P. FrwMakls pe I 100 as Zn I Mdellv-ao•io11e111t11e11MOS~ p1elflt11t•....,......,.._V1tto1N1A ,..,..1u2,1., T1111 ......,_,••med w1tt1 .,,. PUBLIC NOTICE by Arthur Van andt tMC1tyC1erti•therotrl<••111Nc11r ANAYA eu v1 11101H1A ANAYA ~....,.. c ... 111., c1er1t o1 Or-~Y °" ___ Strock in the Superior Hell, 101001t•r A-. et or...,_ ttEl!L lor flJ,.1SAO CO"'PMH..,.., April u .1•1 C t f O C t t11eriour-.e1..clk111im.e11 •• d•m•••• 109.111er w1111 1111eru1 P11t1n.-0r..,..eoe.i0e1tyPttot. ,., .. ,.. 1'1CT1nous•u11Nau our o range Aouhn Y WlllM llWlktr--................ ltue•Hft •t tM ..... rete fl'Olft HOV· Apr11J4.Meyl,l,IS,1WI 1"7-41 P111'1l.-OrM91CoollOollyPllot, NMdlTAT•MINT requesting that rt ur c1ee1eroo 11y IN a" C1ert1. ~· .,,. .. , 1, 1m .intll ,...._Said luoe-Apr 11.u .. -y1.1,t•1 110 .. 1 Th• 1011ow1ne persona •r• ooint Van Zandt Strock be ap-ono ,,,. llUll4k -11tw1t• to• "'9-' met1t 11 -fWll 1><1a1ne&1 ea t d e s on a I a1111e cM<1arat1111 • sa1c1 prapeuft, 21 ™ ,....,_ 1, -on•~ PUBLIC NOTICE WE~ ,..., ~1., A-. po 1 n e as P . r All .,... to r-.cei...o. •Ul"lllMd • ..-ot Ktlofl wftkll .,_ .. _A.,..., PUBLIC NOTICE cost• Meta. c.111ori\le n.v. r e p r e s e n t a t 1 v e t o
de<lu .... will .. ~"' IN City s. "7SMd0c--..J, 1'75. f'ICTITIOUllUllNIU HliHltY PllCHl!tt, .. 0.llelele adminis ter the estate of
Cieri< to IN C'"' ~r -UW Q · 11 T..._,.,..._ ".,_on Ille lllAMalTATIMSlfT PICTITIOUS9UllNlll Drlwe.o ... cie..orovo,ConlorM~ Eileen C Strock Ne wport
t1An.,.,,.,.forcheclllfl9_,..,,.. treuc1.~tlM-dKelto1 Tiie 1011..t1>9 ,.......,, er• 601110 ..,..ITAT•Ma•T ori.!T.:1~.0J!.~;.~!>!.!-.• .. r•t Beach, °CA (under the to tlW Cl..., ~II at Ill r...,,., _. defenclantwN,.llCieftlldHreal.-. l>us!Ml&H. TllelOl'-""tP•noonlsdol11Ql>u.llneu ..... • ..... jourMd ....U119011MI' tt, t•t. , ... _._ Wiid/or llf'OlleY and wtulle OCEAN CHAttTEttS. J Cer.-rtote , Tllla t>utlnetl It <onductecl tly • I n d e p e n d e n t
Prtorto--lt11-11,u.-.,.,.........,._..,WllktlM1dt1<-Pl -a.ec11 CAnwo f 0tMralpertNnlllp Admin1stratloo of E states trktof•-•ll-*""l•KtDntlltllwHrtqvlre<ll.ielddefeMaftlllele ez•.--.-· ' · 1.c.c..271 uiecu.,.,C.te-. .....,,yW.PllcMr ) T t"tl . tf ootaln o Nl""911<.enM lrom Ille City llcell Mfll#NIW.....,.._2. Mer .. Hottefl A.tMrna, 104 LINMI , ... , C•lltornlo. n.27 Tlllt st.ai-t ... 1119CI wllll Ille Act • he pe I on IS se or
of P:~Volleyl"ec.corOeMewlt:ll fl TN.,._,. .. U. ocluel -H _ _.llNdl,CAftWO. llllllOAT IOH COHTltOLLEtt C°""'Y Clerlo ot OrWltte Coullly Oii hearing In Dept. No. 3 at '"" ,,_aln ve11ey Ml#lktpo1 c-, 01rec1 tou 11111er•d by Pl•I"'"' H:~~'i,!~~~·~. Llll4• hi•, ~1~1!;11~~~ec. LA .... eo.1o -. Apr111.1w1. 700 Civic Center Drive
ve1wne '· Tiiie s. cno.t•,.. ''°' afMll t11rouo11 .,. trllMI, mlln-t..u.., Thi•..,.._. 1s c.onouc-.d •v •" 111-•oe.n "" 0 11ot11. vt Luec u,., PUMU West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 s.oe. Clee•ll or con .... .ion of uutt fYflds lt'r di Id PuOllMed Orange «:beat Oallr Piiot,
'" e<CCW'\Mftea w11111,,. ,.. .. 1stooe.t .., ..... .,,. 1as1J,.1s.oo. w ... ,Me,.,. H. AO.UN co;~~.~1~:,::;7 .... ., _ Ap•1110, 11. 24, ,,_.Y 1, '"' , .. , .. , on May 6, 1981 at 9 :30 A.M.
l 1
rtaClllOfHUS
18.l POADW A Y
MORTUAIY
110 Bro•dway
Costa Mesa 6'42"9150
of Ot•nver. Colorado. Mirhael
\\' Ryan and Fred R .. Ryan or Cosl11 Mesa. Ca and 4
grea t -grandchildren
Private Memorial Service
will bC' held on Friday. April
24 , 1981. Pacific Vie"'
Se<t1-tno101m,1nc:w11vo,eft11e SIP1el11tllil1no\111e..,..o1defoll. Thi' lltaternent wes ,,1.., w11111,. tnolwl_.. IF YOU OBJECT to t .. e L.aeor CAlde ...... SUit•"' Callton!I•, d ... I or IN,..._.., ,......_ .. ".,. M Cle lo ot Or "~·-1 ii 111ec1trCOu11c1tof111eo1ye1"-'loln auclltpOllM. countr ' .,... ........, '°" tto0erttt.Cll1•ll granting of the petition, V•ll•Y -.,., ......... Ion •K•rlalflecl .. A• of tho .. l. of tlllt ...itcotlOll, ·~II 22, '"'· Tiii• ,..._, ... llled wilt! Ille PUBLIC NOTICE you Sh''"ld either ap .... ar I I '
IALnlHGUOH
SMfTH I TVTHCU
W'ISTCUff CHAf'll
427 E 171h St
Cos1a Mesa
646-9371
,_Cl laOntHI INfYMI' WOITUMY
627 Main St
ttlnt~ach
-• I •-_, "-I I .. _ __,......, • "· -d Pt"1tl Cou11ty Clerk ol 0r.,.. Cou"tY °" ""' "" ,,.. .,.. • ., .. 11,,. ,_ Y re .. "'.., ....... P1• 11111 • ...... r~ ..... ..--_., P1<bllllled OrlNIQe c.ooac Delly Piiot, .. Arn•.''"· at the hearing and state eecf't <rett of \rpe ot -kn1e11 or Hlhlectl4n Of lllelr IUCIOmetll. I 2 Me I t IS "" ' 1 .... 1 ...., C-•
rMClle"I< ....... t.o ••e<ute .... c-1 71 PlelMIHt ...... .,....., ......-... A~ I •• y • • . Pullllllled Or ..... «:beat 0.11:1=. HOllTH O••••• JU DICtAL your objec tions or file
1rec1 •llkll w11111e -ordeo fo ffle auc· and M•dt Vie to11ow1111 -"'-• -p•,.uc NOTICE "41rll "· 11, u. Mey'· "'1 m ... t. 11tn111u written objections with the <•HM .......... Pr.,,oui,,. ..... 111 '"""'''"'0 •-Ntn~•• ~0 1111...,........,a_ court before the hearing. cle»lllcet .... , MOt ll'f'llded lw 01 re·•l ....... V).....,.,,.OIMOrllef'tlftlt.... .. ......... ~ ...
OBERTO '°""'°" _., "°' .. , ... ,,_tho,..._ ...... "',....., ,.,_, Pl'Oll«tY ., ••CT1T1ou1 euetHN PUBLIC NOTICE PL.AtNTll'P: c & w AC'TIOM 11•H· Your appearance may be M A R y MAL AN o ru•"'.....,, dltfermlNtloM '°' t11t e111er .. ..u11 ... te-.te1c1orot11111ff NAMAllTAHMIHT TAL.S, 1HC. In pe rson or by your at· Or~ '-"'Y ~ .... ~,..,..., lftlOlllfedkoftllfllWl\llllmellt. Tiie tellowl119 '"''°"' ... aol119 oaP:liHOAHT: llllTA OlllAP••; torney 0 R E RT 0 . r ~ I den l 0 r tll• u ""•d Slat" o.,.,,,,.,,., ., Il l AA ...., ..... ,.,._,. ••• .....,_ •• ., l'fCTITIOUI •u...... oou lllW'Ololgll X.lt, I F . y 0 u A R E A
Corona del Mar. Ca Passt'd UOor, -""ftll ·-' allell INY .. rKOrOtcl"' .... Off-.. IN c.untl P'OTOPttOOI', 24JS INIM 11 .... "C", ....... STAT•M&MT '"''"'' .... &'f'oy on April 21. 1981. She , .. , t11a" *"" ••tae11111e11 l'e .. rel RICM*r•htot11ettho1ot._,,.,_ C:O.t•Mell.CA"ltl7. Ttte tellowtft9 ,.,._or• ootne t\IMMOlll CR E OITOR or a cont·
ls sUr\'h·ed by son a nd Mlr>fmumw... 11•1 Jo,.~arwll1e,J.SJ1 ... 1ne11 ... IMltlMUea: CAtllNUMaatlt.....,. ingent creditor of the de·
daughler·in·law Carl and m:: ..... .,.wi;i,:;::;~,::'7.~19
... ~;':=~\!'l;.;;.:~:. "c;~.=~=·,.ss ,,..,... _.15s .. ~~~":Y~Tl!':!~s::, ';!:~: •OT~~-;:-,_-:.= c,e
1
aalsmed, Y
1
outh mthuestcfolluerytouo'r Janel Obertoof Oranae. Ca .. '"'"'.._."'IN c11y ... •• ~ Jlfl,n ,, ....... ,P ... ...._ Aft."C",c.MAllMM,CA..U. Calllw!Mtftlolf I,.._.._...,....._,_ w
1 arandson John Oberto ol ac~f:: .. .,. .,,. """'''""'• 91 «•> l"fal•tm• 11e .. , CalltH • Tiit• ..,_ I• ,.,.._t.-91 • J-.,,i c. ...... a.u eiw tear, ..... • 9"' ............... present It to the personal
Corona del Mar. Co .• 1tand· ::"ca:=.:::::::::!"lt<t =:e-U:C::.'::-~1:0:::-.: ..-r.i=~-,.. c .. =~=:f,':zs 11: ":':"".,-...., .. .,...,,....,ku•a11 representative appointed
dauahters Mrs. Carla 1e10.~1"'t'-l.Ktl ... ,.,,.,,._,...,'"Y,.....,. ,,., • ...__._n .... 1111 c:ar-... Mtr,Cll,-...:-er • ...,._.,.,.1111,_,,..,.._.. by the court wlthlll tour
Schwer or 1'wltln. Ca .. Mn. ll'llllt .. ~"' -----...,., 11\Mf .. Mldc:: ell .. c-·· aen.., ~---c-.ty Tlllt.....,_llClftduCWltyallmlt-•• 11r~1, .. lllal y~r wrltle months from the date ol
Laura Falcon and Llu :E:;:7.=:..n....,.. eff ~~ oM1w =--•11 tt.•t11. •w """":c...._ ~"J:.':'::.":..9:':':i first luuanc:e of letters as bolh or Or101e. Ca . ,.,.,...-. .. ....,.., ,,. .... ~elc..tHwNa: N>i..,_o-.....,ca..to.11111'1 .....,. .. .._ ,, .,...,,.......,_.."'-provided In Section 700 of
and 31reat-gran<1<fauibten1 u•11M....._.a111recu.Mf1teef C-' M •-'-ca"• Atlrllt4,Mart,1,u.n11 t11M1 T11i.......,...,... •11• •""a. ........... -.... .....,... tne Probate Code of
She hat bffn a refldeot of cit,r.::,:.~1~·....-.,_,ftc ~'::C:::-'9~'::"'"' c-•• C>etk .. 0r.,... c:-cy °" :.....,. •• ...., ...... Cellfornla. The time for
corona del Mar. Ca •lnce .._ .. ..,......,...._.,.. .-..._"' 1161 • aotllllM. -PUBLIC NOTICE -111..,""· .,..., 11 ::_-=.. .. "1t1or"-•• flllno (!alma wltl not ex-lt3'1 SM waa a member der ,....-. tMt r11a Pl•11• ... ,.... ., ,...., ve11te:1e -e11 .., ,.. "'*I.._ o..-. c.... Olilv Hit. "" ..._.. ............... _..,.. plr• prior to four months
th•
0
Yrienda of the Oaai• o =:..,~:~,.:.._.~ ~-=~-= P:;..."M:=."..'T" ,..,,.11,1.,~1.a.1"' 11s.e1 =~ :.,~.:::;.:-.,•::; t
1
rom tM
1
d1te of the Mar·
Newport Beach. Ca .• ., ... ,......,. ... ee.1 ~---......... '"• ,..._._ ..,_.,.•Hit lletMI.~ ... ,....., ... , ...... ngnotcedabove.
S.rvlces wUl be held on Prl .. ,..... Mii -.~ -u •r-* tMrCJ1 .... ._..,'"· ....,_. P11BLIC NOTICE t. TO THI Olll'tHCWfT: A dvt1 YOU MAY EXAMINE
day. Aptll2A. diet at2:00PM =~""'""t_.._..,..wltt M er::::.e:~:'J: 1,t~..:ar'~,i;._r=.-:=:i· ~;"=';u.--:.::. ..... ::: tn
1
ft fll• kepttby tt'!.clouttt_:
at th• Pacific VJew Chapel. •~ ... ""°'"""' nm. f'tcTmOUtMllMIM INt ~,.......,.....,. • •.-you lrt In •re~ wv n. ,,. Entombmtnt Pacl'lc Vl.-~OMl .. tMCltUf ., f'lalllllfff ._. ... ...,..., .... Cr•• tltffl!lllL• , .... llm,_ ................. '" llW ... --.. -"'Ill ... •st1t1, you mav tu• • ,.. Memorial Par~ 1 P•clfi • .,...,...... ....... ,,.,...,,_.._.••rt"•""~"' flttcll " .. 11•· Tiie ,., ... , ... ..,...,.lit•~ t11ew1111t111t-'•"'1111¥1~ quest wlth the court tor•·
View Mortuary.: NewPor o ... r=r~~'"·c.i•'9nil• ::" .... ~=::::-~~·-= 11'::•~11., .~ii""· 1.1•.,, ~~ao u1utanNG w ~~ ::-'.J:!~ •· c
1
elvt ~Oflll ~~c.t Of the Beech dJrectort ,,..1.,.. Or..., Coett Dllll~ NM., ,.._.,..,.,,"ie""' . c.tH•rlll• ·~ .. """""''' .,,.,.~..., MIOCtATU. •1'11 ~ ..... ., .. ......,.,_. _ _... nve"'""' Y ts"'"' • au.ts
· ..,.,,..,,.,. ,......, Wtt\lf'Otl& "'"""",,,..,-.. ••...._ "'°"· °""'9J, c.tMltMll P111• Oat Mar,~--.. , • ..,.,. ~..-• ..,.......,......,....,and of the .,_.lUOf\S •c· 11----------..;:..-----------------.j •cewt,.,... ............... ..... cat,..,.....,, .. ,...., ............ -~•11"'-0 t d , .. t .......... C11111Wt11t111r...,• T11••• ...... 11<MMtM.,• •11 ... ......_.,.....,1,,..,< .. ,_..11 _,...... • .,,.1.11,, .. c un sen repo. s •~-~--~--~~--~~~~~~~~----~,._...,...._ ...... , ..... .._. ..,.... .. ...,......,.. •iM .. : ClllfilrrMI ~·""4. "'°' ....._...,..._,.,,,._., dHcrlbed In SKtlOf\ 1* ...... ~ ... ..._..,~.. cn.,....11 ,. ... 0.1 Mer, L.•_..,.. Nla1tet, r,...., ............ •~Of the C.Uf0ml1 Pn:MNtt =·~,::-,...::.lllllM~ l :,a.:, ~"::.. It_.. ... -., • ~1'I01on.wa,._ C~...._w & w--•~• ..... "" ... ,,...... TI.ti ......... -....... (9"1W..... -• ......... _ _.. .... -~~ .. ..., •"•""· ~-. ..,I,._... 1~\u..._, .. 111 ._.,
•
p,••..,..,. _. --. ....... ~ 'r:.:' a Tlllil....:. w == • .... ~ ;tewer ':l:r.'• &lea :a. a, 1 lh':!!!P.-,.....,_ 11 •••t. c..tr aen •Or----.• -.--.. Ai19111LCA , ........ ....,:"' _..,...._ ....... .._ -..... ·. "' ........ 0r.,.c..u
Mortuary directors
-·-... ---.. ~ ------.. Lew, 9y;
a...:..=..;.;.;....;.._--...._ ...... _..;.....__.....,. ........... ~ ,~ ..... -..0.-.,...... .._.a....., ......,~c:i..~......, ~Cll9to.e .. ,..., 11v~Aorf11t~·11.24
:'llilliitlilioaoi ... .._.-.,-..-....__, AM1••t.a.11to• ~ -.-~-..... 1'.14.-t;ftett:-..' ....... •·"·9'...,UNI .-., 1tl1 ~i
.....
THE REAL
ESTATERS
,., ...... ....,.~
"' AU teal H&ate ad· ~' Ytt'thtd in tbll TIRMS, TIRMS
Only LS% down for tbll
ouutandlnf nearl)'' new
condo. 2 Br + den, faml-
1 y room, view ten-
nil/pool. A sreat buy at
s210,ooo.
M'Wlj)lpel' ii JUbjec\ to
tbe Federal Fair Houa·
lnl Act ol 119 which
malle1 lt WepJ to ad-
v.US. "allY preference,
llmttaUoo, or dlt·
erlmlnaUoo baaed on SEA CO VE ~~ .......
race, color , rell1lon. PROPERTIES
"' MX, ot utJona1 oHtJ,n,
or an Intention to make __ 7 _14_-_6_3_1_·6_9_9_0~
..
. "
..
..
aoy 1ucb preference.
limitation. or dis-GIANT
crimlnaUon. ·' HOME! Thia newspaper will not A must see! Covered en-7oo-<>3H
knowlnfly accept any try to lhls magnificent 5 YOU CAlllo..I SEE advert sln1 for real Bdrm3balbhome.Huge "
estate which I.a in viola· family room, brick BLUE
Uon of the law. fireplace, formal 4ini.n1. -------•I Buillin. breakfast bar. PACIFIC Beautiful pool and From this Cameo separate spa. Gas BBQ EIJlOIS: A.ctwerthen and fire pit. Many, many Hi Ch I and a beauty llMMIW dltdl .._.. 9ch extras. Only $189,900. Priced to sell, $339,000. Only 103 down wllh . delly ..S nport .,,_ Call for more details. owners assiatance. One
ron I tt =••If· Tiie 546"2313 level 3 Bdrm plus huge
DAILY Pl.OT•-. yard.Callnow.673-l550
:::•~o!:""N~tttt"!~------------i '~~~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
45.LOTOWC ht
3 Bdr, 2 Bdr duplex, spa.
3 blk1 from water Call
Tim Rbooe631-12166
R&'M~
H t:Al.TllHS
OCEAHNONT
2 Bdrma, 2 ba. unf\lrn
New 18SOyrly.
IAYRONT
3 Bdrm. l ba, unfurn .
Mml cond. $850 yrly.
CHANNEL NOHT
3 Bdrm. 2 ba, unfum. S750yrly
associated
BAOKEAS-PEAL TORS
lOl'. W Sotb .o ()'t \t>b l
ASSUME
LOW'ltorT. LOAN
Assume 163.000 loan al
10~•%, owner wtll carry
2nd and 3l'd No qualify
ing ! Sharp 3 bdrm
home Family room and
2 fireplaces Only
Sl32 ,SOO Call now
979-5370
ALLSTATE
~----------~jllm------------i REALTORS UNBEATABLE ENSATIOMAL
3 s!~~~':.~ re· BACHELOR
modeled beauty ' PAD!
Complete with covered Somerset townhome.
patio plus fantastic ~ot Fantastic ~iving area
tub. Pricedtosellqu1ck with free standing
aOtSPI !".:.0005~T/SU 1 5 1 rireplace. 6 stained gl~ss "" ,,_ M • windows. Plantation 21 12 I~ shutters. 2 Bdrm, mir·
Coala Meaa rored master suite. 21f2 Call~2313 baths. A must see.
•ise.900. 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
COSTAMISA
511-SIZS,500
OWMB SAYS Sa.L
Not an add-on or con
veraion. A real 5 Bdrm
family home m ooe or
Costa Mesa's nicest
a reas Handymans de
light. Call now and save• .
~
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631 -6990
EASTSIDE
4-PLEX
Fixer! All 2 Bdrms.
walk lo all shopping
Fantastic investment
Only 1225,000 Call for
more det.aila 548-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
WESTCUFF
VACANT
Reduced 1 25 .000.
Desperate owner says
bring all offers No
quallfylng. Low down. ' Bdrm slnlle 11.ory home,
totally upgrad~. Call
for more details.
THE REAL ESTATERS
DWUX
3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace. built-ins. Ex·
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay $285,000
642-2253 eves.
associated
BROKERS RfALTOR S
202'1 W S :ilb oo 6'' lbot
NODOWM!
OR SI0,000
DOWN!
Owner will carry 190.000
AITD or no down. owner
will help you buy. "You
must qualily for loan" 3
Bdrm. 1"'2 bath. up·
grad~ Double garage,
call for more details
S46-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
MEWl'OUHGHTS
Deluxe townhouse
duplex. 3 bdrm + rami-
ly, 2 i,, bath each unit.
Frplcs, all built-ins,
decks & patios. Park-
1 i It e landscaping
SELLER WILL HELP
FINANCE! $295,000!
YOUR IEST VALUE
1"4 CAMEO SHORES
Lowest price<j fee ~11m
pie opportunity. Great
assumable 1st TO En
joy afternoon sun and
views from wood deck 3
beautifu l private
beaches OoJy $5.49,000
Call today, 673-SS.SO
THE REAL ESTATERS
OCEANFRONT
COMDO
NEWrol'T CUST
4 Bdrm 2.,._ Ba, F.R .
pool, tennis •spa All Roy 5@.3566or~
Whelan
Real Estate
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment! Two
2 Bdrm units. one with
fireplace' Current tn·
come-$740 mo Financ
ing ! One year home pro
tectlon plan 1ncld
Hurry. Uus won 't last'
646·7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
WATEIFROMT
CONDOS
HUNTINGTON
HARBOUR
Purchase with S"'., down
on fantastic terms
Brand new. cpt'd ,
draped ON THE
WATER. Guarded gale
entry, views, 2 car gar.
Pool and tennis. 2 & 3
BDRMS AVAIL IM
MED. FromS~.ooo
Ca 11 7 HI 556-\leoo 1--------@ lalboa lay Prop. .......
• 675-7060• MEW Oil.EANS ---------•! NEW LlSilNG, 2 Bdrm SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114-631-6990
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
--------1 2 bath, 1 story condo
WESTCLIFF
S 129,500
near 17th St. shopping.
Extra large yard uper
condition. Call Liz
Beazley for appointment
to1ee.
642-5200
The bllblY decorated
condo! 2 Bdrm. adulta
' only. Clubbouae and
1wlmmto1 pool. 2 CAR
l·· GARAGE. Super aharp.
7 Onl7 tll7,IOO. CaU for ,,, more detalll, 14f.2J13
S65oo total cub needed
to close esc~. Least
expen1lve condo in
Newport Beach .
Privacy, adult.I only.
Call for more details.
546-2313 j PETE BAR RETT
.. REA LTY
10
1
J(•
' . ,,
THE ~EAJ ...
E STJ\.TERS
" ..... ...., ...... s I Br for OffL Y tm,000.
"' 0..« "'1 IDCIUvatecl. .. S•belt oo down. or
THE REAL ESTATERS
·--COLE OF HEWPORT 1141.TOIS
251 S E. Cocnt Hwy., c.r-., W.-
675·5111
f1fiil4 ~zm
EASTSIDE SHHWOOO ESTATI
• OFHttEO IY DCHM.0 ,,.,,. * Beautiful Colonial home.
• 2600 sq.ft. on 15,000 lot. * Buccola & Bdrm 3 bath. * Walk in closets, sundeck * 2 fplc 's, great workshop. * Owner financing to $133,000 at 12'h
MESA NORTH
Pride of ownership 3 Bdrm, 2 full
baths, form a I dining room, low
maintenance yard so you can spend
extra time in the spa. Large
assumable loan at 81rl''lc interest. Open
House Sunday 1·4, 994 Cheyenne.
MESA Va.DE
Decorators delight. Prestigious home
and neighborhood. Beautiful tree-lined
street. Oversized lot. with very lush
land s ea ping for tranquil s etting.
Owner w1 II help with financing. 4
Bdrm, 2 bath. game room, priced at
$174.900.
WOODSIDE VILLAGE
2 Bdrm~. 2 baths. lower unit. One of
eight in complex that has front and
rear yard As sumable low interest
rate loans. Priced to sell at $86,900.
OFFERED IY BIU LUPIS
THE REAL ESTATERS
OCEAMFROMT
Duplex. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba up-
per, w1tb aundeck plus 2
Bdrm 2 Ba lower with
separate raised palio
deck &oth units are
com plelely furnished
with a decorator's touch
4 + car garage and fan-
tastic fi nanci.ng Take
over $426,000 loan ln-
c lud1n1 12~~-for 30
years. AslungS649,000
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670 -------
CUL ..IJE-SAC
4 Bdrm, air conditioned
home. Neal and tidy. Br
ing a paint brush and
save' $95,000.
ri!R~~4~~
546·2313
ASSUMASUS
One of Irvine's moat
beautiful Deerfield
homes. Lavl1hly de·
corated tbru-out. 4 Br
2Yaba. CrmJ dining rm +
study. Sec. system
Comm. pool and tenms
Attractive financing
$232,500.
C......,21/Swf c .. 5't-4100
FOR DETAILS
~21.
Lose something valua·
ble., Place an ad an our
Lost and Found C'OI
umns That's where peo
pie look when they'\ e
round an item of value
SEE AND BELIEVE
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One half block to major
s hopping centers. Cement
drives , air conditioning.
microwave oven . tras h
compactor. large walk-in
closets. Garage with opener.
Pool and 2 jacuzzis.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380W.Wila.
ColfaMeaa.CA
714/631-5055
FrOM SI 36,000
SPYGLASS-PASTORAL VU
$495,000 .
OffwlRcJ ..... lea1e/optioft ..,._ •
this Hewporttt Model wit\ 4 Md,
fo ... rt11. di•·'"'-ho.. wltll f111hrlor
....... ytkJlm&MOn.
BAYFRONT CONDO-lARGE
$610,000
Mon '°°"' ..... ...., ........... 2 IM4 + ..... ,.... ........ n.c. ... ..,n.a.w..11...-...1.-.
•.wpon-..11
901 Dover Drive Harbor v!eW Cent.er
042-8236 644-6200
WHAT MORE COULD YOU Aste FOR7
Beautiful Oak floors, over 30 trees, a
pool and spa, 2 fireplaces. 4 bedrooms,
2112 baths, family room, move-in
condition, good financing. What more
could you ask for? Price? Only
$375,000.
U~l()U~ ti()M~~
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 EHt Coot Hlahw•v. Coron• del MH
WI HA VI 47 Of THI HST AGIMTS IH TOWH
MOTICE ;;top'' Take time lo relax
how Daily Pilot Class· and shop at home lt·s
1fied ads display their simple with Daily Pilot
messages with leg1b1luy Classified Ads And 1f
and impact? Our ads. you have somethuig to
we are proud lo say, re ~ell , call a friendly
ally get results Phone Classified Ad·V 1ser at
642-5678 642-5678
LIVE ON LIDO ISLE!
Speclal properties fM a.tyone who
wants Hie unique lifestyle of Co4lntry
Chab ll•hUJ ift a water orlHted
cOIMMlftlty. All tt.• best recnaffonai
actMffe1 a.oUable: ~cyclRg. to~
t .. 11, boatlnCJ. cl•IMMIN a;ctl•ltl••·
rt1ta•ro•h Clftd shopph•CJ! Loh of
frieftc:ly ,... wtlo c_.. about their
cCMNn1111lty lftdle tt.11 a •acGtion home ••ert day.
tlJNEYMOON COTTAGE= $299,000
2 ...... 2 berth. pcrffo ... .,.. ••• ,.,
EXEC. CORNER-VIEW $675,000
2-story, l bdnn, fom ""'INICh "'°"·
CONTEM ·PORARY 2 Story
$475,000
SpoclCM11 4 Id"" wtltl MW dee.or.
ELEGANT BAY FRONT++
S2,400,000
MOCJftlflcent Sir + total lulury.
can for details Oft ... above
And . . . We HCl\fe Others.
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC
R~AI l~TAJf
631-1400
llt¥tHE n1tRACE
Back on market. A newly decorated
3 BR. or 2 a nd Den home in move in
condition. Lovely view of oc~an &
harbor from very private deck &
spa. $305,000.
Ol'EH SUt-IDA Y I :00 to 5:00
· INNEWPORTCENTER
644-9060
UGI.Mi ·~MSAfU,IS"-8ClUSIVI
ON at• C~NYOM ~ COUISI
Spe~tacular Deane Hdlnes
"Versailles•• located on large8t lot of
all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf
course view! Pro·fessiona ll y
landscaped yard with mature trees in
a private park-like setting including a
lovely lge pool & huge spa +an
attractive gazebo. Gated front
courtyard entry w/fountain. Marble
floor in foyer with glittering
chandelier. 4 Bedrrm, den. formal
D.R. & 412 baths. Priced right at
$825,000. Call for appointment.
WISLEY M. TAYLOR CO.. UAL TOIS
2111 S•Joocp.NlllNd
"EWl'ORT C1"11R. M.I. 644-491 0
LIDO ISLE
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional 3 bdrm, 3 bath home.
newly decorated . Priced to sell
quickly al $475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. $420,000.
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT
Panoramic view at wedge, from
prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom
home. 3700 ~q . ft featuring marine
room . entry, living room, dining
room. built-ms. etc. $1 .38.5.000.
IAYFRONT
We have se veral fine homes with pier
& slip, starting at Sl.500,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bay\1tf.· Dr •n· NB 675 6161
VIEW
LOT
$20.000
CALL
DIAMA V. PtETEMPOL
THE REAL
ESTATERS
t9E
SEDllE ELllRS CO.
OVER 55 YEARS Of SERVICE .
SUPER SPYGLASS
Two Stories Of Excellence. Sunken
Living Room With Fireplace &
Beam Va u I t c d Celling. Large
Family Room. Full Length Hearth.
Wet Bar. Plus A lf uge Bonus Room.
Sellers Will Assist In Financing.
Pool S 1zl' Lot . Shown By
Appointment As king $565 ,500. A
"Joy Of Newport·· Listing.
LIDO ISLE
Easy Fina nc:ing Near Community
Bea c hes. C lubhouse & Tennis.
Large Quiet Corner Lot With
Traditional Three Bedrooms. Plus
Great Guest Quarters With Bath &
Bar, Or Hilliard Size Recreation
Room . Bl'autifully Landscaped
Lanai & P atio Expandable Lot.
$4 25 . ()()()
WOODBRIDGE, IRVINE
Best Financing Available. Large
Assumable 30· Year Loan Al $11.75%
& Owner Will Carry Second Trust
Deed. Des irable Three Bedroom.
Single-Le vel With Large Enclosed
Patio . Great Starter Unit Or
Inves tment Enjoy All The
Amenities Of Woodbridge. Owner
Motivated. $108.900.
BLUFFS •
. Bluffs ' Best Buy. Great Starter ;
Unit, Investment, Or: Last Home. :
Sharp Two Bedroom End Unit !
Overlooking Lovely Greenbelt. ,
Near Community Pool, Park & ,
Shopping Center. $145.000. 1
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'-==-=.......,-==-_......~ EXECUTIVE HOME fOI'
MIS4 '9IDI tbe eatunlllt. Quiet Cul-
;· ~ MOl1M de-He, wooded lot In ·,; ~ ~a· BRAND NEW LISTING Fountain VaU,ta finat
Jaamlne Creek deconltor 4br, atrium model, famll)' communtty. 4Br
•--'• ... llillli'•"•'----•I home, plan 1 on sreen· !c,115m1000.,:_ Ap.,_~ ..... Dun9101-2"i!Ba, farm din, tr1 klt, belt imm.c. $305"""' De....,,._, -fam tm. Walla ol 1tu1
"""' aocn .. NUT YllWI Lush wOoded aeWDc w /teeluded yard, patio
and ar•· Two Jevela include 4BRS, forma dJnlng rm, family rm, 1ame
rm, bar, office/library and G:fmet ldtehen. 1.ioveJy, quiet 1treet. ,000.
Helen Wood. 6"-6200 (Fll) ·
Hlnf OH M•••IT Freshly painted exterior 3 Bra 2 baths Cambridge pJan
in Greentree -choice of jpterlor color
and carpet w /quick purchase -
Private yard w /fruit bearing trees -
$139,000 includes land excellent
financing available to quafified buyer.
$139,000 Sandie Fix 644-6200 (Fl2)
·~---)l 901 Dover Drtw K&rt>or vi.w Cent.er
Ma-8238 844-8200
FAM.QUS POOL & SPA HOMI
Highly_ upgraded 4 Br 2~ Ba
Northwood home. Used brick galore
in driveway, entry & surrounding
pool & spa. Separate family room,
dining room and kitchen nook. Hi'b
assumable loan PLUS owner will
assist in financing. $241,990. Carol
Kokol. 731·1214.
_. brlnl the outdoon In. Of. c"J:~ ~-::'. M0-81G 3 + lllJS ~~u!t~~ ~ Associates, Rea1ton
1 Thia private estate bu llVIMETlllACI llUST SELL tbJa darl· TA LAURETTA CIR. ml!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I[!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
CALL NOW 551 -4400
DONALD M . BIRD
been profeuionally es-F1X9 lnl bollle m Horth Colta Ast ~1806 = a
• panded. The charm of 4 Br, bonu.a room 6 ll•a.On)ytlll,000. --''--------1 HI ... .ASHMAal
:· warm woods, beautlfu.1 1parklin1 pool. Superior • R8D CARPET· H ... ktl• .._.. I 040 4Br home wisp., xlnt.
' French doon lead to an location. Won't last. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. St•.ooo. 552.-..0.
extra lar1e Hvln1 room, Prln. only. Grea Aatle 754-1202 J Sn l.AteMAU ., c~~~. ~~!°~a! 79-1221 OSPElNd I HWOUS~ duntll ~:,!i/:.~··~~: •STAITEI H•£
kitchen. Larae pool in .0 e e.. • Y 1 ed. ttOllC &1i1U1Da~le tn.1 Flestble flnancln1 on
separate eocloeed area. 2 ·30·lpm, Sat/Sun A1kln1 Stst,900 Faatl tJlil 2 Bdrm Greentree
Electrtc1.._olfert.otal 10-lpm. 4br, l~ba , •crow.Bkr1183-13'T7 filler. Owner will help a privacy. Newly olfered. hardwood noon, new with cost. Call for de-
• A mu1t to aee. Only •--1-.-... CH-..,.-------i paint , cpt, drapu, FOUIPLEX u.u.
'795,ooo. -~ plumbiJll •w.ooo. m AU ·-··-·-2 Br 2 8 · Xlnt 1hape, privacy 6 Senate St. Cll 541-1731 or .......... " • a, e 1:.r.,_r_fi
' Exceptioo&J commluion park Ina. Owner will 831-1171 good renta, no vacancy
split lor liaUnl oriented finance. $90,000 dwn.•--------factor. Price '115,000.
1 realtor u1oclatu. Good rate or retura MESADB.MAI Loanll .. 111D•ble.
Beautlfu.lolflce in choice Broker Cbrll 957-1568 Be'autitul ranch style ... McCellmd
> I .. l TY
,. • 1 )0()0
TUl1\BOCI
WATBFIOMT
Woodbrldee pri me
Lakefront location.
Views forever. 3 Br, 2s,.\
ba, pvt 1pa, nex. financ-
lna. Spectacular! Of·
fered ,at ~.too. Call
552-1100 and ask for Lynn Noah.
ToW11&C...try
RHllon SSZ..1100
Univ . Prk Vllla1e II
Beaut 3 8d., bonua nii.
Julllard, 1rnblt toe.'
Good finandn1 & terms. $159,000. Agt. Mary. ::.:~on. Hne 2 open-2 unill 00 II lot, 3 bdr 2 4br, aa, 2000 aq. rt., 631-1266
ba , 2 bdrm 1 ba, 4 nicely dee., xlnt neitbborbood, nu 1ara1e1. Broker. drapea/carpet, hou1e R&'M*. 759-1616
In , ur 857·2060
,_f7_5-0563 __ • ____ ---i will sell illelf. $137,500
-MKrtll CMTaYB4CMJSH Terms. Prin. Only. "llllUU DWLIX 545-7091. --------
IJ'S LOADED! 9 mOll old 4br, + 2br UD· OpenSat/Stm 12-5;
48drm,3ba,formaldln-It. 015,000. 709-709~ JJIJ.,..._
fl ~ \I I "I<"
IMTIDAIMB"S
Beat priced 3 8clrm. 2 ' ba, fami~ rm. Open DEERFIELD TOWNHOME house Sa Sun 1·5· 5372 3 Bdrm 2 Ba or 2+ den, Sierra Roja. C/2 I Mlwport c.tr a1l1ty, end unit w/lota of
,4•51157 privacy, Ira backyrd.
•------~----• Thia house bu many ex·
T&a• .a.CE traa 6 la very clean. Lrg
.......................
1'Ml9tMll
Weatbered cedar •bat•. &bi\ w. CU.tom dealpecl I bdrm, fam
rm, 2 batbl. Exten.llve
uae of wood 1la11 • ceramic tile. Beam celJ.
ln1. frDlc,$111,000. lliuicn Realty
('IU)-.ont.
CUSTOM
'
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11' I I
•LIDOfl&.I• Lcwe17 J8r, • bome. Beautlfully nmodelecl
•IO .... GOO w)tb
t flHpcibl. ()&Jen ~!Sall. Sun. 1•.1tt Via .eUa.
<>wn.tl Alent: ~
14QIAY a Bdrm, 2 bMll home
plua Ideal mother-In-law quartera. Compl.
wlb•th. SD>,000.
toyMce.6 ....
141-7129 LA•UMAISTATI
ll8piflcml. Bdrm COD·
temporary bomi'wlth breatbtakin1 coastline
view. Tucked away on
private road, offerlna
complete aeclu1ion. f714t 494·1177
Sparkl(n1 1ourmet
HIWPOIT CllST
110 de1 ocean view.
Prime location. Pool, tennil, 1pa. Open house
Sat/Sun 1·5 at 15 Swift Court. kitchen, aun drenched L1 ... ....... I 052
breakfast room, 4 decu •••••••••••••••••••••••
and much more. Truly a Spac 3Br 2~ ba 1500 ft
La1una paradi1e. condo. View, ale, frpl,
SG5,000. cio.e to abopl. 9V•% In.
C/21 Hewporic.tr
·~5357
don osen
r • 11 •r'
LAGUNA BEACH
4'7-48411
h 10,090. Own / All
131-7046"
.....
HOA .. HOSmAL
l Bdrm, completely
fumllhed ooodo. Walk to
Ll ... KS POI~ beach. Security, pool.
" "• Priced below market at OPEN SAT/SUN u.e s112,ooo. Open hoUle Sat
On 14 Fairway, Plan C, 4 & Sunday 1·5 at 200
br1 3~ ba, 2 fam. rm1. McNeil, Unit 106.
braf1t rm, 3 car ear. C/2 1 t..1.-rt,. __ MW Drll'U UU,500. Auume ,..wpor ~
" KNiii • ·~ ·~5357 Oc l .. _ ol ru~.. 1 .... 000. ~3 lnt. loan. --------
HD.I"""' ·...,way. !!!~~ E. Nine Drive UDO ISl£ i.; blk to beach. A home __
with that charm that ii --------• hard to find. 2 Bclrm1, Hew,......_.. t OH IY OWHB
dlnin1 area, frplc, patio, •••••••••••••••••••••• Luxurious 6 bdrm, 5 ba, I d d p · 'tudy , family rm . .~ yar · rivacy. HEIGHTS COHDO Separate l•undry & -·*· Q I ' I On DOHHA MOMOOI u et Npt H1t1/Chf· aerv ce room. 2 lo<s.
fhaven condo w/pool fl Swimmin1 pool. View of • ..._. 494-1011 aaraae. Great a11uma· the bay. Laree auuma-
1131-8440
.. llADYTOM>
Plana •nd permits is·
sued for addition of 2nd
unit. to thia beautiful
north end Laguna cot·
tage. Seller will carry all
ftnancing. $225,000
ble financlnl. No quali· ble loan fl owner .-ilJ
fy l n1 . Gre1 Astle carry some paper
758-1221. ~.000. Call675-7027
R&'M~
Ill-\l.TlllCS
REDUCED TO
SEU.
601 UDO
Southern California's
premier high rise con-
dominium. Spectacular
view of Newport Bay
Total 24 hr security.
Highly upgraded with
all amenities. You've
'ing rm, family rm, 3 Orc hid . 151 ·9135 3Br, 2Ba llesa Verde
"'fireplaces, 3 car gar. ,_Own __ l_B_K_R.__ area. Solid linanctna. by
View of oce.n and walk-1------~!'ll~own~~e~r.!S~m~,500~'.:.:· 551-~:!:11~7~4
,.......,
211ty CallfomJa Clualc.
2000 lq. ft, 4br, Zba, 20 x
24' famUy rm w/wet bar,
nifrt1eratcr 6 pool ta-
ble. Try 10~ down !
$144,500.
llOIUUll a11umables & no quali· Out1tandin1 Cardiff fying. $132,500. Opn Hse THIEi FOR THE
model in University sat /sun 1 o. 5 . 1 PllCE OP OMI
Owner will carr y
$195,000 on thia 1pacio111 multi-level architect '1
home in Npt Hgt.a. 2600
sq ft deaianecl for family
living. $380,000. Joyce
W altze. 631-121118.
R&'M~
lot to see it to believe it!
100.000 with S250,000 or
assumable financing at
12. 75% int. Principals
only
ing distance to beach. ·~ullABLE LOAN Pan Temace. 2 8clrm 2 s .. _ Ba + loft bide-away. nowuo:irry.SS$.1B32 House , apartm~nt , With k5,000 down, lhia ~
beauty can be yours to-3 br home or lleu
day. Call now. SJ6.9311 Verde. Sua,tOO. Bob Al-
--------• 1tudlo located in Woocll Great locatl•li. pool, JUSTUSTED Cove area. Walk to
1reenbelta, flnllbed OPEN SAT 1·5 beach . Xlnt creative SEAWIND PORTOFJNO.
H ~·\I 1• •H"
' ALLSTATE !.::.:,~~t. t«-llll or · TAMAIACI(
YIUAMCOM>O
3br, 1 ~ba, enclosed
1ara1e. Try S25K down. owe •104,too. Hi1h
comp. SlOS,900.
~~·fo~ ~~ to see. Unlvenlty Parlt 3 br, 3 t~rma available. $279,500 remodeled, tuebly up-
ba. Prime loc. lmmac. graded, 4Br, 48a, super
-3 br + den, E. Side
REAl. TORS llDUCIDI twnbae, bu ramblln1 ~--;. I ... ( H
LOWDOWH
Versaillea 1 bdrm/studio
• penthouu condo with
' 1,.r1e HIUD18ble loans.
• $109,900. Call today
: 97~5370.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
Owner will carry part ol creek. A11um. loan.
flnancin1 on this out· SU6,900. Bob Allen, act,
1tandln1 cuatom duple~. 964-Ul8lorlll2-7505.
'141 block to the beacb. 4 •--------
bdrm front unit; 3 bdrm rur. Private patios. On-
ly k95.000.
EASTSIDE
3 br, l ba, lge lot.
S933/mo. U500 dn. sm,ooo. Trade? Owner,
631-5476.
Special Conalderatlon
Given
To Prtndp&es.
I \
' ; .. t r Y
I)( I 1 /000
Taltltadllwg•
0.,_L..t
2 1tory, 4 bdrm, dlnln1
rm, added den w/wet
bar, 1tep1 to park,
comm. pool 6 tennis. M-aum a b[e loan. Owner
MAUIY STAUfflll
SIA UOH llALTY
'7J.SJS4 MISA VBD1 will a11ist in financin1. I I<
I r 'f _...__ ______ , 4br, 2+ batba, xlnt loca---------Ut0,000. Fee . A1t,
1024 tion w/manyext.ru. Lae y ow 64()..554!0. ••••••••••••••••••••••• p r o f e ' I Ion a 11 Y B NER·3Br, l~Ba, •---------•
--c:o. ........ ~-.......
IAYCUST
Attractive three
bedroom home .
Cathedral ceillnp in llv·
Ina and dinin1 room.
Oak plank floortn1. Cozy
fire-place. Huie covered
patio. Pool alze yard .
0....-moUv•ted. llake elfer. See Gayle Amato « A1lu Mt.or. tal0,000.
'31·7JOO H.1.
10o7
.
· HERITAGE
'( t ,"\I I I '' 1'-,
1-------• landscaped b•ckyard $107,800. 961·2644 or * •ESTAJESI. MISA YIRDI w/auto 1prlnklera fl _95_7_·217_7 _____ _
4ftlX room for a vea 1arden. PIOI .a. 9W. S .a.LI Sln1le 1tory attached HOUie lncludel 2 ''C ,.., ,. ,.. home in fabuloul Wood-
Eslatln1 low intereat oak bar, built·ln Popular Hunt. VII 3 8d brlda-E1itates. Huee I linancln1. Pride of ahelvea, trench doon, 1116 Ba bome w/new backyard, all the Wood-
ownerahifi. Lar1e 3 priv patio w/ apa off belie carpet. Abo add-brid1e amenitlea and u-
Bdrm + amlly room maater au.Ile. Built·ln oo aoo aq ft room• total-aume a bilb loan. Owner I ownen unit and three 2 dbl oven, micro 6 ice ly remodeled kitchen wlll conalder belp on
Bdrm 2 bath unit.a. All maker. lluat aee to an. w/blt·ln microwave aecondary financln1. Include bulltina, r S l l I t••"'OOO preciate. Open Hou.ae oven. pee a a arm ... ...,, . flreplaca and encloled Sal/Sun 1·5 3182 Country 1y1tem, newly painted
1ara1ea. EKcellmt con-c I u b Dr. S2 35, o o o uterior 6new bot water Tbe larJeat model in dltlon. For more in-•--t.. $•""'..,.. ,_C W b I d Owner/ Ast. ....... ...__. v... in o o r I e formation, call 540-11.51 TD w/25"-dwn at ~ Eautes-2300 aq ft of lux-
' ! . I HERITAGE OWtm amortised over IO yn. urioua llvinl space and
LIA..,.AUA Callll!B-MIO. your own pool and 1pa.
Clean Ellltlide I Bdrm Ii ~-PricedtoaellatSllM,900. --------• with cov'd paUo, BBQ • p • Almoat St00,000 in ••· OWC STRSHT and a 1ara1es. Don't ·--1 aumableftnandnl.
N01E wait, .. u __ ( ~1]""°"•11dge
REA LTORS
A11ume lat TD w/2 llESA VERDE 4 Br. a IY OWMH Ruhu
S20,000 dwn for t.bll darl· Ba. with pool, beautiful· 4 br, 2 ba. Allwn.ble. 551 3000 int E.1lde 2 Bel condo ly landacaped • ea11 Approx. tu,ooo •t · w/lr1 brick frplc. Cosy care yard. o.aer will lO'f/I"'. F'rpje, new paint ff2t •rr111u Pllwy, lrwln~
1tep-down llvln1 rm, coaalder V.A. Sl.29,900. • crpt. f1Zl,ti00. 982-8136.
ntc~patio.JoyceWalt.Je D. Bourke Realtor. PIOIATISALI
631121111 546-9950. Cbarmin1 ~lQw
5 Bdnn at lleaa Ve'1W 3Br,2Bat137,d'OO.
Country Club. OWC. ._LeOanl
'350,000. by owner. OPENSAT/SUN2·5.
545-5001 Teel Hubert R1tr 7Sz.<Tm
--------1-------~ v .... ,.,_.._.5 Hwlk1tw
WOODBRIDGE
Muat 1el1 brand new
Petera '2 Plan. 4Br,
JBa, cloaetolake.
Open Sat/Sun 12·5 13. "w arminaprln1 •242.500 Alt. 645-9850 dy1. 675-9857
eves. 4ft.11·$3•• OR T~J: roa R.E
COSTA lllCSA BLUP'PS
... ,.,...... "..... 1042
Summertime fun ttarta ••••••••••••••••••••••• ________ 1 bere for 1our f•mll1 ea Ida• w .........
wttb private pool• ape. BeauUful 968 E:aec 4
llovertptmto*tlov-bdrm .. ~=-=·_ •••••• llNTAl.HOMI ......
LOW NY.cJAnvE .... "'' SUCCllS llAl.n
IMYISTM
LOCAnott sa.a,. I ldrm eoedo lD
11 .. Verdlt. Prtetcl to
MllDOWlt ..... Call
A••• llcCulaa4
•11~1Bdrml -· -·-Ba bome. At ODl)' bar, bit-ID bbq •
tm,soo k'• ....,. been man1 otW am.mu.. euler to tMq than opw mcl. a bUll yard that
We recommeDd quick bacb to a beautiful
aetioa pull. Jwt 2 yn oldt · Brolter,-.aia
....... ......,. ______ _
cood_ owe 2nd. us Se· 4'7-5494 · b •·
quoia Tree. Vilu Realty ii--------· view• Y owner ... 79,000 (213)939-33216. _64().. __ 164_3 -----
Sell idle items 642-5678
. ....
WANTAcnON?
Classifed Ads 642-5678
Have somethuig to sell ~
Classified' ads do it well
To Mot her With Love ....
l.c>vf has a way of r~luming to iU aourc. On tti111 •JM'<"IUf <la•
thf love you have given Is returned wilh a 5JK'<'l•I ml'"Ut'
o( wnmlli T•ke a look Se~ how much you Art' lfnt•d
*Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
BL'\J FFS BARGAIN
3 bdrm twnhme. Walk to
everytbtng: pool. tennis.
schools. park, shopping
Agt. 675-5930. 640-8146
I
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••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••• -••••••••••~••••••••,. ' ...... .,_ ... _.u HOll&POllR......, .... 1 B'"" ....... " br '"'I . • ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0. Y•W•A .._ _ _.. ""'£ s Br 2 ... , tree lined at ln .-..n. DQJ. • • .. ., •
1 TllMSTmMS · 11.AS'TSIDllJ a Aptaffdablenow. 4 Bdrm. "50. Fenced w91tcllff, nlce tor patJo. Yrt, 1-1. Ref 41
Condo S4000 cub to tbe "---I bdnD •lam l\Z•lot, ............ Byweekormooth. yard 6 1araie. Kida • q>J/1ml tam. S775. Incl dep. $700. 6SZ·IS4S "
I u11pn1 ht la 2nd CUSTOM HO..-~ auumable f£nanelnt ffl: :t::;:-1 price Ateat.f7M170 pm welcome. '84-zse8 1rdnr. Nopeta,648-291 _lf5._t_Jl'7 _____ _
!-D. s , a~.'· aba. at Completely custom home, clean and c .11.,D:Boulbllealtor • · B1a Can)'Gll Condo abr, or'7S.21Tl.Ast..nofee.
VenaUJea · 111-»77 immaculate 2 private brick patios, 541-.-0. Whelan decorator rum view ...... _ .......... frplc lam 2 br, den. 2 ba. Walk to Euluaive ~~t · 1· · 3 B 3 B • ' ...... w.......... • beach Tennil • &>901 Beacbreatal.,..,..-....... _HAllOR VIEW spacious iv10g rm, r, a, .._..,, ''tr IJIO pool1, tennis , lae rm, l mt to bdcb. No priv.sl501'e.M0-5.21Z; if 17~aTSA. HOMES gourmet kitchen and all the goodies ............. _ ......... fleal £State hlOO mo . .._ peta.$700mo.t62-1375 noana. l·T23-0llOI S-..._
Portonno mdl w/4Br 2~ Plush-carpets. walking distance to the SPECIAL LAND SALi! " .. " ..... $ t Id JSTY EXEC HOME Cepl*-lln
Ba ln ·-main house Beach & Water. Doo't tniss this one Off~ lob, Mono ··--.... ·~····················· • ~ b 2 ba HARBOR RIDGE·3Br. ··········-·········~ booua .:;' w/loft Is fu.ti for $265,000. Ba1 area. S5tto E·Z Near~~un-..... Pl ' h 3207 i car l~ '1 r, · 3Ba. •kMiy, view decU. 2Br 2Ba ram rm fenced,
, Ba adJoln tbe garage. tenn1. beaul. views ol tta, 2 car Id. er park. •"•••••••••• .. • .. ••••• ~"fa l ·• ::-brm,; J • c • pool, le n n 11 • back yrd enckJMct 2 car
PtJrfeclarr111&ementfor J QUAii,. PLACE tbe Pacific: ()nan, TSLINVSTllT 842-llOS Steps to beach. cute Ad c, c e;11· c 1 U ,000/mo. 875·4071, far. Vehicle 1tora1e~
in·law1, kid.a, olflce or PROPERTIES r.tero Bay • Cl.)'Ucoa. lbdnn. uW paid. Yeu· OK~.:SO. :t i!!t 0 : Ui-9089 47 SI mo lit, l u t •
studio. Lra yrd accented 675-7231 for appt to see. 4 PLD-Stt2.IOO IJ. 210 '4th St. fSSO. dep no.u700wner llG CANYOH aecurity deposit req.
by an lnvft~ spa. Allk· .\it. All 2Br. MS aq ft. each. 173-7154 all 3pm. Avail · · 758-2565; 32106 Via de ln1 ...... ..,,,.. •u.oooo 752 1920 a-~-._.._ u •·t Ellchalve, full security, Oli .._,.._. ~. U· • ...... ,,..11,11.., 1400 ...,.,a~-mce., -1 -ay.... lBr 00 Ocean Ave. kOO beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba. va
1umable loan. Owner .. •••••••• .. •••• .. ••••• book·upa in ea. unit, C ..._. ......._ 1222 mo . Ocean view , Pri l _ _. t b •· S-------1-2-1-0-wlll consider 2nd. Call eom m unity -pool. -1r111---NC>-3900 va e yan.i, we ar • .... ._
Tom Bat'OD558-t400. MIWPOltT Westminster Good 11• •••••••• .. ••• .. •••••••• · fireplace, many other ............... ••••••••
R&'M*
IH '.f TflH!->
'Oreat 4 Bdrm on comer
lot with room for RV.
boat, etc. $279,000,
owner financed. 645-1103
VILLA IALIOA
Outstanding View !
Corner top foor unit.
Lease option. $5,000 op-
tion mone,Y. $850 mo.
Xlnt terms. Agt. 760-8617
t Office bulldlnc. aumable tons term 4 Br+ maid'• quarters. 2br, lba, pr, or bch & amenities lncludlna Beaut.3br,2ba,frplc,all ~i~·Bn'f"6;u:r;~ flnancln1. Prine only. ~i!!~\O:•~o~PY~~:.~~ bus atop uoo l mo ~::t'A=n!1~11~1°~ new decor. Drive by.
675-6181 .\ll.5»-0lZS S 2ooo f rno . Koop . 980-S610610DelawareSt. 6'2·5757 eves" wknds. :t:1!~t~.~=·
IASTSIDI C.M. 831-lM. All· HwtW-,_644_·888_9_· ___ _
, Ce .. h!'J Loh/ 14 prime unlta all 2 Bdr. 2bdr ba H....._. 3242 H A R 8 0 R R I D G E 2 Blkl from So. Cat Plaza, Cryph 1500 lot abe iiiiiib Prln on· m , .1 , frplc, beam ••••••••••••••••••••••• . CONDO 8 or 12 mo. Jae. $600 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · cellln1 patio 1e50 SlSO d Xlnt cond. 551~ Cremation companion ly. P'or •PIJl call John de A~ail M. 1 A 't Lux Con ° on Lagoon 3 br, 3 ba. $1,SOO mo.
niche, Paclfic View Coa.ast.68l·121111 on~. 1~ao.a.y · PP 2
1
8arr. !~bam! f~!c:~~ Steve, 640-9345 or s-ttiL.,... 3116
M i l P .. •s20 · __, · ,,,,.,.,...-..~. 752·1920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• emor a ara, • · ........ ~ 840-6309. OCEANFRONTHOME 673-"49Z eves aft. 7pm. 2 new coodol m lol Live S'YM.ASS In... 3244 BLUFFS Pina condo 4 O'loob pvt beach 2 br
2 Cemetery ploU Pacific In ooe, reat « Ml1 the 4Br3balnSpy~Hlll ••••••••••••••••••••••• br, 2YJ ba No pet.a. S82s 2~ ba, den, din. rm. l&~ Vlew M-.iorial Park. otber. Seller will finance witb mouutain view. Pvt Woodb ·d N. B .... mo. 760-1573 deck $1200/mo. 499-2253, 2Z2·l990aftSPM. I at 1133 for 3 years. crtyrd, 2 frplcs ri ie •~4 r..ua 499.5021 ~ ---------I 641·19111, 831~1. ast. $1650/mo. ,· ~pemor. family home. ,_ ________ ---------This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda Co-1rcW -.,/m VILLA BALBOA 2bdrm Co.do i I lmi t
Ocean :J.ronl
Isle. A private guarded Community in Property 1600 8 U. L.A SH0,000 nr USC. CS1'M IAYRlONT Waterfront Homes. Inc l\.'I ba. ocean vtew. avail Uafw .... d 3425 LIDOISlE the heart of Newport Beach. Boat ••••••••••••••••••••••• GrS17,000,try2S3 dnor Avail furn. 11 desired. Realtors 63l·l400 onshorttermSSSO/mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Low down, low pay slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or submit. Bkr540-0llOI Slip for 2 lge boat.a. 3 WOODBRIDGE 3 Br. n . LIDO ISLE 2 bdrm 2 ba Bachelor CONDO vacant,
ments. Clean 4 Bdrm Trade. MISSIONVIJO 1---------1 Bdrm,4ba,3frplca,2 Ba. Condo. 15151mo. LUXURY CONDO SSOO /mo. Newport
family borne. ready to TAXSH&Ta kitebena,paUoanddeclt Wrk ,714)833.6029 $850/mo Beach978-0423
move Into today Great We are developers so submit land or SHOPPING CNTR. 4UMITS on Bay. Security Ra m a . H om e LIDO ISLE 2 bdrm, t o/. c reatl•e terms Ca ll . 10 STORES 1y1tem.S3200/mo. <213,4...,.....,,. ba home 12000/mo 2bdrm, 2 car car, covered
patio. I/• mile to beach.
Access to pool • court.I.
$57S H.B. (213)~796.
(714 )675-49Cll.
673-3002,aaent other Real Estate to owner Jim . mana1e· SAMC&.Bten"E ___ ............., _______ , yrly
Thompson. menl avaUable. 3 yrs Upstairs units with WafvtflowtH-. Woodbridge coodoS650 BA YSHORES large 2 BR old. kS0,000 down. Full Ocean v•-1 ••-000 homeinlllnt cond.Only price 11,400,000. Prine. aoaiinSil.n: lltn.IK 631-1400 3br. t ~ba . redwood WaterfrontHomes.lnc.
S26S,OOO Prine. only only. Agt.644-11613 C7l•>4t3-0202 ._1040 _________ , deck pool, spa, tennis . .._R.e.al•to•r•s---63-l·.1400-
please.645-4419; 642-1517 17141121-1210 12131591-1363 : ,._ _______ IOldCdu ZBR d f 1 lake MacArthur Group ,.. Newport Crest 3bdrm,
-rr;;;;u llOOt 35"3710 Co•do•W-Tow .. ,_ ... • en, Pc. 97S·1188 2"2ba, ocean view, over· HAllOIVIEWnOME .-..._....,. 1700 FIX &S vE patio, 1ar. $500-$750. --------1Bluffa, 3 br, 21,', ba, very 1 .. .
"Moolego" 4br, 2ba . Fee ••••••••••••••••••••••• A., I May/lune Only. 552·0748 Woodbridge4.br, 3ba, air pvt end unit , upgraded, ooas tennis courts,
Land , loan as11um . !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ o••-... ..a a 6 4 unita priced to Avail June 15. $895/mo. leaseSl000.759-0415 frplc, close lo beach. 675-2139 1: ~·-. move now! Sellen want Spac. 3 br, 2 ba home w. 552·1269 18SO/mo. 842-1272.
HARBOR VIEW ·3Br
Carmel, usumable In,
solar poof/spa, corner
lot, R. V. pad. 127S,OOO.
Owner fin. M0-032S
or,Oln"UMITY
Unique chance to buy a
1S 3 interest 1n a General Partnership &
"OWN " a sharp 2br,
2~ba . townhouse 1n
.. Eastblulf" $108.SOO
terms Open Sat/Sun
Owner/Broker 640-S298
I br Versa1Uea penthse
imported tile throughout
$122.000. TSL Properties
00·1603
Townhouse coodo on bluff
in Newport Beach with
easy walk to ocean &
beach. Ownership of 3
bdrm. 2~ ba unit Incl
lge pool, Jacuui. saunas
& lighted teMis courts.
h89.000 with SS0,000
down. Ask for Susan
640 ·3796 or Bruce
760·606-0 days; 851·2205
eves & wlmds.
*SI 0,000 DOWM•
Beaut. 3 br, 3 ba. lrg fam
rm. Lrg bckyrd Open
house Sun. 2300 Heather
Lo. 631·0517.
IECllATIYE
Quite inexpen11ve
Located in tbe
establi•bed N.8 Bluffs
community. A charmlnc
3 bdrm, 1 sty home
w/oew apples in a large
kitchen. We have a
purchase plan ror you
which may include a
. budget for cus1omizing
your new.home. For Hie
by owner (wit\ co-op).
For delalb or appt to
view. call 758-1800. Open
house Sat. 1·4pm.
1961 San Bnlno.
N e w p o r t B e a c b f l + j So of ff H erbor View Ho.ff Venallle1 2br, Zba , quick escrow. rp c ac, · wy, 3 Bdrm, 2 ea. family Watch the surf from t.hia Uo frpk pool J -•. 1 , ~s.;,,,.8,?WOlt, 67~2.869, Woodbridge, SBr, 3Ba. beaut. 1 Br condo. $800
•a_...,.OF'IHfWrDl"#ff qw1c_k2 aa1e01. 0By110wnem r • C..MeM JU4 :1:r~~:':-!~~:~ _A-'g'-e_n_t._&u-_9980 ______ 77_2·_305_3_. ------D MACNAB~ REAll'Y &~ra,;,r • Ocean 'v1:!·. ~ v,.,.,,..,., Prescott Model. Fm rm ~:ide~e~~~,~~ mo. 1st, laat + sec.
I • • r · ••••••.•:•Br•-2::••ba•·.~·~··1 peU. 11095. Alt541·S032. '21J)Gl-'IM 714/Ml-0763 • ~ erk ~~~~~~~~~ii---------Lux, 38r condo, 1,'1'1ba,
%787 BriJltol St. patio, frplc, bltn ldtcb, 1750 Woodbridge Village, IAYSIDI COVE patio. elect 2car 1ar. ... *'19 Pr If I tr JOOO C dbl 1ar w/opnr $710. 13 Wood'""'ve. '"". 2Br C 0 M D 0 I t e. close to So Cout Plaza Ut401STIUCTED VIEW Of ME~OIT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa. A ... -~ w •.. .. $59S 1 ,,.n.. RooSay971-5370 bse, adjacent to lake, feb•I••• •lew of • par... ae. HAllOll! Charismatic charmer on fee APPlaVALUY AC, backyd, drpa, tit _549-_ozs_s _____ _ land w/spa, alarm system, custoni Near new 4-Plu, z l4YISTOltSCHOICI Nice clean 2 Br. 1 Ba. bltna, spa, pool. tennis ...... md ...... Ex-
built, recently redecorated, new bdrm, 2 bath eaeb unit 11 Unlta, eo.ta lies• encbd 1ara1e. k5o, lit, crt.a, ,213)&37-8339 cetleat weterfro•t MEWrotrTCOMDO
expanded deck. Irvine Terrace finest ;!'t:o~bi~ e;':r~ zooedforatCcncb. !>:!n~e~~%1:5'4 ---------1 c .. p1nwtt11poolmd s....., llr-wcwlr location . Hele n Wood $895,000. SlSS,000. BUI Grundy, 38drm , 2Ba House ,,..., ... ....._Lo•efr, 9 • t e -Ma a 1
644-6200. <FI3> Rltr,1'1U111. :!.~.~':'.fte!ft: 3bdrm, 2ba, frplc, range, =~~";ed/~',a/:tic::.n~ r'-2 ...._ ..d ..... ...._ A.-. _________ 1 546-tlSO. car. yrd, aniU/1. lat+ UOO/ mo. n o pet s! D ..... ,.. md lcp ble loua-O•fy
IALIOA rEMIHSULA! 2BR beach home OCIAM YllW aec. Se75. MZ-0113$. 930-s787 or833-t9'19 b•lcoay/ deck. S•c. SI 5,000 ctw.. Yln)We
only steps from beach. Spacious DW'l..IX °'#::*,~J;t' 2550 •Zbr,Z~ba.Twnha.1700. --------1 1y1t••· leh. nq. O ' Ir I e • A 9 t
family rm w /skylight, fplc and new Drutlc reducUon 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frplc, pool. apa, garage. IENTALS S2000 per .o. Y....ty 673-I 123 carpets . $342,000. Joyce Edlund brand new Balboa OfflCllLDG. ,_MJ._3232 __ . -----~~~.12"1,~a :~ tu. loat 1llp for W_D_B_G--c-on_d_o_._L_e_a_s _e
642·8235 ( Fl4) duples.. lit owners~ 17 ,000 1/f 1 + ac of Nr nu twnbae3 BR3 Ba 3br 2 ba. $675 l01M>af, •pfM litre. 1695/mo 2 Br. 2 Ba. Call ~r~e,.c~:~ ~!!rt~8: ground. JI.lit oil hwy s Pvtyard,2carelecgar. 3br.2....,ba S850 Wut.tftowtHOMH after6pm.Ml-218t,agt.
RED TILE ROOF Spacious 4 Brs home on beach. Large 3 bdrm, 3 Oceanside. Szso,ooo will * ...... / 1 "'--3br.2ba. Furn h250 .......... -. I t I · · H handle. 1~1723 Bkr _,, mo. lit, aat, ~. corner o w mountam view. uge bathpluaZ~.2 bath. 759-l<IM,all7s&-l234 631-1400
bonus rm, wet bar. brick patio for Owner wOl 11al1t lo le tlf .. cr-~
Family Condo. 1 mi. frm
bcb. w. Bluff, CM 2Br.
11,',Ba, all amen. dys,
•--------1 962-4454 ; eve. 64S-e06S
•Llt40AISLI•
entertai · g & I · t d w -3 8d 2 Ba Laurel Point 'I. nm ow mam eoance yar . financln1.S425,000. t.lxSdlecl.G. townhome. s1sol mo. c.c-J?.L~ ...
Quick possession possible. $299,500 4IUnill.3br,2 ba.4 yn Avail. Si l. Diana. fi~~1;ur
Joyce Edlund ~2-8235 (FlS) youn~. 11,.200,000uaum. 6ll-l.266. Ait ~c.r;
S9'WJ)Ol't BMcb M 3 tnl. 1~1723 Bkr.
901 Dover Drtve HarborVle'WCent.er ---------Secluded 2Br, lBa patio ~·8600
042.8236 644.6200 ~~~~~~~~~!New Mobile Home 3Br. home, pool, adlls. no 1: 2Ba, rrplc, redwood l"tll, $525 mo 24S3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 91rwp11J Drlf'U deck. cedar •bake .•id· Oran1e Ave, aee Mgr 't573CAMNSDl:IRVl"E , AM I OIO It.II IK,,lll,ll Ing, or lake & 1ltling Apt 8 . UMlqUE 15~ down and auwne kl,900. Terms or trade 1----------1 Rental Irvine. 2 bdrm no P I t4 T H 0 U S E ••••••••••••••••••••••• loans . Three adjoining 499--3816 3 bt. 2\.'I ba. condo. 2 car pets avail May 1st. S6sO
COMDO SUBMIT: 3 bedroom con· TRIPLEXES In CdM on __,. aar .• deck, patio, pool, Owner 640-4639
with boat docl. pool. do in McArthur V1Ua1e. OffantldeolPOI. lt..tals 1700. 54MOl3 Beautiful luarded com· New Woodbridge cottage securitcy .!;,_~1~ .. dbeg munlty . Gor1eou1 l d PW51 d 1 H0
.:::::·;.·· .. ·•;.••d••••••• 4bdrm,2ba, home, 2 br, 2 ba, a le,
ocean, a........ • ay parklike grounds. Loll wo up exes an -· r .. S650 frplc, 00 pets, lge encl.
view . Fee land. S4so,OOO. of recreational faclllUea. triplex ln a row oo 11th " ••••••••••••••••••••••• \ 548-7!79 yd, $700. 7~1841 Smith-Meyer, Bia'. St, Balboa Penlnaula . .._..,......_. 11'9•----'------i ---------•
640-5357 541-71 I J Close to South Cout Only l lol from sand and ....................... Newport Hta. duplex, 2+ I.Arm• leodt
Fott aBCT Woodbridge condo, 2 BR,
S + Maid's+ Den+ SBa cl~e to pool, lge brick
+ Lota More! 2sty. 4500 patio, $600 mo. 833-9186
sq. fl. docb for (3l 60' aft6pm. -
boats. private guard Irvine Oran1e Trtt Adlt,
gated .commty the most 1 bdrm/loft 1 ba k7S: prest1g1ous island 1n 964 6520 '
Newport Beach Call __ · __ . ------
Darlene (714)828-1280 or Brand new Turtlerock
(213)598-1.3153. Our office Irvine 2br. 21,;ba, LS2S o~s 9-S Monday ihru 11 q f t . po o I / t e n ·
Fnd a Y. nls /$8()0/ mo 844-51959
Plua. All olfen beard. urf. Abeohltel rt DO bd h d _.
S J u 9,500. TARBELL , 1 · Y P me U ISLE cba.nnln1 3 rm1, aar, uge yar . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1
• -BKR. "~l.,_ properties. bdrm, z bath. playroom. IS50/mo. 840-7114. Oceanfront rentals S6oo C-'-...._ I 071 ___ _.. __ u_,., __ --1 Just remodeled. 11650 •· Adi l ._.... 2 B 1 ba ll c .. 'ld mo. • up. ta on Y · •••• •• ••••••••••••••••• DUrt.IX wMll Dodi mo to mo. Bill Grundy, r • • ama '" 499.3816
3Mn..Fr ....... IHI lttale for 30' boat. 17Ul6l. welcome. '550.
873-3614 TWO 3 Bdrm homes. ---~------1
Beautiful 2 Br. Condo ----------1 Monthly $900. Good for
Rome in Bil Canyon, 2br, l~ba, dbl 1ar, lge family or couples ahar·
1011 COW'M view, pool " yard, cblldren/peta OK. I .............. ng. fully furn. Lease or moo· ....... ......., LOCJ941 Y11acJt I.I
497-1761
'
..
• · H.L•tFINEST
SpaoJ.h EltateLlvtn11
Beautlf\11 park·llke 1ur·
rfundln11. Terraced
• , , pool. Sw\lcen 1u bbq,
~ 1par~Un1 fountalna. •---------• 2Br.1Ba,SU:Slmo.
LOST : Gold Bar
Bracelet, tn1rav•d. an ARD! Sentlmeqtal
value, N.8,, C.M. arN.
1'2""°7 Nuey, '73--3
evn. \
, S p a e i o u 1 too m s . Spacious I Br Duplex c 11 k d
" Separatt dlnlns uea. $426. Pool fr laWldry tac. • w Y•
W • I It • I n c l o 1 e t 1 • 5411-11558 759-4l'13
l\omellkt kitchen & 2 II, 2 IA. W /GAR. cablneta. Walk \o Hunt· 3 Br. 2 Ba Valencia. Cathedral ce1I. lplc,
lntton Cent.er townhou1e. 2 children dabwshrJ_!alcooy Pool
1 Bedroom.furn, k40 OK. No pets. S525. Sierra & apa ~ mo. Adult.s
2 Bedroom.furn, S510 M1mt. Co. 6411324. only, no pets. 2650Harla
Adults, no pets. - -549-2447
UUUUea Free' IHSTAMT IH! HEW_L_Y_D-ECOI.
LA QUINTA H"'RMOSA 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt., carpets.
r.. drapes, laundry room. l Br. aas pd, encl gar
I.
r
Found : on 4/15, nr Slater
Ar Beach, white puppy,
AUit, Shep. type
te0-2494
Pound : Vic. 23rd /
Newport, reddish brn
med. 11 dol. Fem, nurs
Inc. SU·SCMa 1·5
16211 P•rbJde L.n, l blk Adul•· only. nope•· On· d l waaher. pool Adults W of ~ach, 3 bl ks S of '"" ""
1 Edinger. Jy S3S5 mo. 642·5073. Rmmate to ahr lrt 3 Br 8700 aq ft office +
847·5"4l TSL MGMT 642-1603 D r L..& --3126 Oceanfront for Winter VERY NICE room . house, CM. sm. Resp. warebol.lff, Irvine In·
LARGIUWAID
Lost lo Huntington
Center . l&e bei&e plastic
tackle box. Dark brown
handle Cootenta valua-
ble dental supplies. No
questions asked. 892-6603
---mto 0 -Rentala. Furnished 4r $_,./mo Priva•• ba' .. •· f F Pl du1t-'-1 Call •~·1"H We ta id 2 B 1 i.; b •••••••••••••••••••• ••• """' · .... ui • pre er em. eoty or ,.. . _. .,... or L•• • .._. 3741 s e r .. a, lor 2 b bal OW .unlum.Broker875-4il2. entranu. Nr. D.P . privacy. 760·0991 , lnquirelfaroeiCo.16753
••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts, drpa, bu1ltlns. I r. cony. . Harbor ~°"3W •7• -K·lly Noyes "1 """'" B .. rs w ! . deck, gar, Yr lse. S475 c ean. com laundry & NO FEE! Apt. 4i Condo ·......,. · " ..--"' • .......... • · t>!~:b ::C':!ityprivjt~ 760·0489&7~00>9 wshr. gar. nr ocean rentals Villa Rental.a. Hotek,.._.. 4100 •••• Coop Invited.
Br. !~lly furn.• l:~ry 661-0252 675-4912 Broker ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.r•..t 4ll0 MES .&.
•. MobU. Home. 642·1802 IHSTAMT IH Bachelor apt. all utils pd, OCE "'MFRO~ Balboa, Inn oceanfront. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A ·~OMS E·aide, 2br lba, pool, "" "' Low wlnteT rat.ea. Daily Drywall On.lab, 30ft Jona lllJDUSTRIAL • laundr y rm. am child 3 bl ks from P C H · Furn 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 or weekly. Kitchenette. front & rear doors. dbl "
' BEAUT. 2 br, oceanview, OK . TSL Mgmt. 642-1603 S300/mo. 831 1873 car garage with office, S90 Ir up. 675-8740. drive aceeuM6-41.52 PARK
hi-fashion decor, huge, ~SliBllU Lge 2br. l'.ltba. balcony, washer & dryer lncld. GaraaeonPenlnaula aorgeoua Ir, Sl,000 mo ~ frpk. s4751mo A v a 1 I . N o w ¥early, Hotel Apt. Room, , Avl.5-lto7·U.499·2227 661.8437 Wkly/Mnt.hly kltchenettelrbat.h. Utlla btwn.12lhlrl3lhSt.
• APARTMENTS -------TSL MGMT. 642-1603 paid. $280 mo.+ aeeurt. 875·7876or5'7·4200.
:s220 Furn 11m cozy bach Beautiful lands~aped 2 Br. 1 Ba. nu paint & - -ty deposit. 2306 W. Offlcel..... 4
nr bcb. Utll pd. No pets garden apts. Patios or carpet. Avail now s395. E. Bluffs Condo. 481'. Oceanfront, Newport •••••••••••••••••••~~~
7t I W.17 .. St.
Coat• Mita. Callf.
642-4463
Madaerel Rah Mt.).
SINCE 1981
lat4'2nd TOI, ~K-SlM +
Owner/Non Owner
SFRaA:Condos
Commercial & lnduatrlal
PETER DOBBS
640-60111 873-9043
Want Investor for Npt
bayfront home. Give
well secured lat or 2nd
T.D. Agt, 876-6161.
FOUND Male Cocker
Spaniel Gold Color Vic
Gretchen Lane. 4/3/81
775-0109
FOUND Surfboard, near
Warner/FAwardJ, H.8
last weekend 847·5516
eves.
• 1 Reap emplyd adlt deck11 P~I & spa. Cov-Call Darlyne 661.1162 or 38a. sundk. pool, S87 Beach. 873-054. nJLLSERVICESUITE. 1980 sq. ft. Unit .avail.
• 494·4200. eredparkmg.Adults.no 494.3672 mo 645·34H, (213) ORANGE CO AST May lat . Carpel!!,
pets 541 4460 SEA WI FINANCIAL CENTER drapes wet bar. •336-34•
WGllf 21-220/o YWd7
On your T.D.'a Notes
SSRaiaers-lnves\oraSS
LOST: Pet Weasel Ferret
<looks like a Nielson ) is
tame Reward! Call
842-7777.
'•
'·
•NewportlHcJI 3769 2BR, l Ba 1470 H...tiftgtoRleoch 3840 C-li 1 , 2845 MeH Verde Dr. E. aq. ft. •Leasing office Call DeMiaon Assoc
673-7314 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR , 2 Ba $48().$485 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r Haven. 1804 Clay, 2 MOTEL c ·-hrs Mon lhru Fri 8-4
Luxury 0 c ea n front 398 W W1lsoo, 631·5583 BR 1 Ba, fplc. no pets. 16• osta Mesa. ••"5 per Sat 10·2. Weekly 2or3Br Comp SSOOmo.67S.0349 w mo.+ aecurttydeposlt. ---------•Purchase of 2ND TD 's • eek~rentals now lncludea all uUJ .• use or s....___ 4550 furn inc ld linens I BR S40S ·1 __ .. • ..... ...,... arranged For details &40.47&4 161 E 18th, 642.0856 Beaut 3 br. 2 ba, Crplc. 1 avai · * ....... up. llbrarylco~!erence & ••••••••••••••••••••••• call
---blk beach $675 Adults.1 :~':!°:. TV. •Phones in telephone aniwerln~. Approx 6000sq ft m 960·1957 Broker
Fantastically fum15hed 3 BR. 2 Ba Sssq • ' & 1 BA P•"0 Aot\ no pets Savage Wilde & 2274 N rt Bl d C M Secretarial area avail Fountain Valley nr San ---
\ownhoUH, with ~an 2 BR, 2 Ba ssoo • 0·\~••\"t'' & 680 Co 675-6606 ewpo v · · at Sl75 per mo James E. Dieeo Fwy. Sl.320/mo. s 100.ooo ~ at 20'7, re-
view. Tennb oourt, pool 151 E 21st, 548-2~ • P' ! ~. " ,. ~------64&-7445 Dung er A tto rn e Y Call John 556·9360 or tum Call broker. Mark
S92Slmo. 760-9117 • ·•. ~: 11,:,~\'~, ~' WESTCLJFF 2 Br. l"'2 ba LIVE IN NEW PORT 957·1414· 5'8-7533 Conley, 963-8377
Bachelor S360 • 5rtw 1 G•tn townhouse Adults only, BEACH FOR SlOO PER 1617 Weatcllff. N 8 Want 1--"'aliW~ 2250 Vanguard Way no pets IMO mo 1728 WEEK 64s.0440 financial inat 1~.f. _... _,_ 4600 S20,000 2nd TD. 20"1" mt S40--96l!6 or 548-2408 Bedford Lane 548-7533 . """• ••••••••••••••••••••••• All due 13/mo Secured
Lost : Cat, Himalayan
Seal Point, Sat in Top or
World area, Lag Bch
REWARDU4·2536 aft 4
Found. Stray dog
NptHgts
546-3238
Lost M 7 mos Kitty. or
wht. wht chest. ID tag
646·1571
-----On b -5........,....,. 4200 lat.noor.A&ent 54i.so32 American family of 4 20 units 673·6720.
EASTSIDE. clean 2 BR. ve Y 509 Femleaf. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ICOLLCIHTH from Brussels looking 544·0333 <Pnvate lender enrl gar. S425 mo + Bd. 2') Ba. nu bldg, 4 car Furn. 2bdrm Mesa condo. ..._,_... for house In Laguna, preferred.) Le'i~e I FOUND Fem Dalmat1on
very th i n v 1C'
W ardt Ell.ls 962·3688
security 251 16th Place. 2 & 3 Bedro o m s gar SllSO/mo Avail. avail. 6/27 thru 8122 "'°YT ..,., CdM or Newport nr bch
Apt s. no pets Call S4oo.s450 KJds OK, no 51 1. Ask for Darrell s5251mo. Call Answer Eleaant executive suites to rent or trade for 3.4
9793848 pets please Water Pash 631-1266 Ad#4(6,24hn,64Z-4300. In prestige location. weeks In August . _ _ _ __ Wtt.h complete support Airmail·Hasltin, Avenue REQUIRED
FOUND 2 Doberman
Pincher. about I yr old.
H B. area 846-4938
FOUND. Ladies Silver YEAR·AOUND FUN
Social Ac l•••f•P\ D
•ect '' • F •PP <,1Jri<1ay
Brun( h • 880 \ • P,1r
l•P\ • Ptu~ mu1 n morP
Sharp 2 BR18ain4-plex, Trash Paid Carport ewport Beach House. services Hamolr 17 'A' 1180
679 CenterSt No 7 $400 964-2S66 or 973·297 • Agt · Summer Weekly Rental 714/851--0681 Brussels Belguim. •••••••••••••••••••••••
963.6,,.,1 no fee 32.2.374.1223 AMowtc......m 510 R~MRC watch. vie Goldenwest &
Edinger, H.B Identify
848-7756 .>.} 39th St. ""blk from und, HEWroaT CEHTH
com pl. rum. off street Full Service Suites
R t:Al.TllRS 2 Bdrm. 2 ba. rpts. drps.
di w. end ~ar. 8e11 c:h & 5
Points area S431J mo
842-8032
••••••••••••••••••••••
GREAT RECREATION
Tpnn·~ • r re1-> L ,..,_,,tr
1pro & rirr hut •'
Hf',)llt1 Cluh' •'),JU"·•,
Hyor 1mu\~.Jq" • 5w·m
m rg •[Jr ' ng l'l.1• q1·
BEAUTIFUL APART
fttENTS > "Q·•·' • & I BeJr " • i ,.
• t.O'-i•1 i.."'
• "" .jp s
:} I f.
f ,, ~t ... tJ
.... • ........ 4~
p• ""''
Oakwood
Garden Apartments
Newport Beach/So
I' l(J 'bl" C:,t
.. • , j ....
2 Br I Ba rrpl c ,
dshwashr, crpts, drps.
gar $46() C M 821 1890
I Br with loft , re!, stove. La;ge 3 BR 21., ba, with
poo l 283 A\ocad o garage Kids & pets
Hayloft Apts C M 1440 welcome I mile to
821 1890 ocean SVOO mo 964 2937
I Br with ref, stove. gar
S325 240 A\oc ad o
Ha ) lo ft Apts C M
821 1890
2br. J ~,ba. 610 Joanne St
t M no chlldren . sma ll
dog considered $4 25
642 7344
• 2br condo, nr S ('
Plaza, S A SSOO. no pets .
S49 3232
Large l Br w garagl' ~
blk s fro m b earh
S380 mo lst mo+ S200
dep req Call S36 7S42
Century 21 SURF
Avail now 2 Br 2 Ra up
s tair!>. frp lc. di.hwr.
b al c ony & ~arage
Wate r t rash paid I
child. no pets S4 75
964 2566 or 973 2971 Agt
-no fee
7141 642-5113
Newport Beach/No
880 rv •P $400 2br F ... s1de. Adults.
no pets En Gar 548-9441 .
5514177
SF:AS PRAY 2Br. 2ba .
frplc Ht>i.· & secur11 y
Nr beach S64:>. 891 6396
---------· 2 br twnhse . 11-, ba, agt
rt' t.1'
1714 1 64S· 110•
Oceanfront 2br, lba , gar,
frplc. wkly until June l
$300 751 6147 .
(213)331·5417
Peninsula, !!leJ>ll Lo sand
carport, no pets. S400 -mo 5597222 (9-Sonly l New pluiih 2245ft sq fl 3
-level 2bd & loft 21 .ba, 2
3 br dplx, Nwpt Hgts, mble frpl. hie Roman
S500/ mo, 1st & last tub, wet bar, w dryer
+ dep 557-9186 JOft prt gar. m1 to bc:h
846·4152
parking, taking reserva. $ $ I blk lo ocean/bay. year tionsS40-8113:2evesonJy CUTCOSTS
ly,S750 mo1ncl ulil.blt· Allyouneedforone
ins. 3 Bd , Avail Si l. VocaffoR._.. 4250 monthly fee! 835 2844 • • • • • • • • • ••• •• •• • • • • • • • ~5470
--•NWPT OCEANFRONT
l Br Vers ailles pen· & Lido Isle bayfront, •DELUllOfACIS•
thouse. SS2s /mo, lease W /sml boats. Wkly 1 room. from $235/mo.
or lease opt.ion 968-5133 873-SURF No lease required 2112
l\M ----------1 DuPont Dr Adj
---R..tahtoSIMre 4300 Alrporter Hotel
3br. 21-,b<t, ideal for 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-3223. ~12
s1nl(les, 2 frplcs. atrium Moving? Avoid depc»il.5
w watt'r!all. dbl gar, 283 & cut living expenses'
Kn o x St S850 m o Professionally since
675 1458 for appt 1971
CdM Deluxe Swt.es, AC.
ampl pka. util pd 2855
E. Cat Hwy. 87s..6900
17tt.STIHT
Desperate Christian Cou· ------
pie w/2 small children i---------· Yfill clean, paint howie or <ilAHD OPEMIHG
apt. for some rent. THE COOKERY
556·0998 RESTAURANT
------·---• 500 W Coast Hwy
4650 •••••••••••••••••••••••
<Across Crom Balboa
Bay Club) Open 6AM
3PM. BreaJtfast·Lunch
Open 7 days. S Acrea. 10 mi from Palm
Springs. store your boat. •--------• trlr of what have you for Loaf & FCM9d -5300 S50 mo. Also self cont'd camprs welcome to •••••••••••••••••••••••
vacation. View of tram
Call Answer Ad 11360.
642-4300. 24 hours
2bdrm 11 ~bll. adults. no
pt>l!>. S395
548 2682
HOUSBUTES
832-4134 Costa Mesa 3 rm swte, _, I AIC Plenty of parklnf. ._....,., l.Tfff * Shcnd UY"'g• Ra..u
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Cal~ Ocean View. spac, lux·
ur1o u s 2 BR 2 Ba
V e r s a1llf s All
amenities S750 S57·1997
Co I •~ 11 545 1q. ft. $400 per mo. · unse ors ..., persona Y Realonomics 875-8700 • • • •• • • • •••••••••• •• • • • select your compatible ---------........
rmmte to 11ult your FULL SERVICE SUITE . Opportwlity 5005 642-5671
hfestyle. Shared· Living. O R A N G E C O A g T ••••••• ••••••••••••••• .1---------•I
833DoverDrSulte31 NB FINANCIAL CENTER EUROP~"'~ DELI
Steps to bch 2 BR t Ba. _ 631·1801 2845 Mesa Verde Dr. E. '°""" LOST· Lg Orange cat.
f I ,.,, 1 •6• Cos' ta M-a. 5 .. are Greatest H.B. location. altered male, WAS P c. dbl gar. patio ..,30 Rmmte wanted to shr lte ,. .... n Health forces sale. John · bl 11 mo yrly 968-a...,., condo nr S.C. Pla'"a. 350 sq fl office with wearing ue co ar °""" • . Cox Agt. 631·121Ei6 "Gu 1 " REW A RD •OC~"' ... FR~-Sauna, pool. jacuzzi. another Re~ltoror c6mp ~ ""' * Private bat.h. Available other small bualneaa. A B A r e q u i re 1 3 546·8437 _
Fr pie. panelled. patio. I May 1st. s250 + ex· $250 per mo. +security, managen. ~75.000/yr Lost 4ts: Fred Dobie pup.
I br. S575/ mo. 642·0045 penses. Call ss7.JS.27 or lncludea utJla. It phone potential. Co. car upon Reward. For mfo or re
eves 759.0060 a n awe r In I · 0th er qualifyin1. 543-0902 tum ss7.4236.
-, services avail. 957·0701 .
SCRAM-lETS
ANSWERS
Mumn Jewel
Groan -Blouse
WELFARE
Younaster. "Mom. I
spent all my allowance
How can r eam some
money'" Mom "As far
as I'm concerned you're
unemployed " Son
'How about s ome
WELFARE then'" ------r~oRals 5)50
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
PartyD.c:ft'S.
•972-1345•
MC & VISA Accepted
COVER GIRL * O&ITCAU. • 953·0778 MC/VISA
•FOXY LADY•
OUTCALLONLY 2 br furn Lge patio 2 BR twnhot.J.M!. Livmg
S4001mo or StSO wkly to rm D 1n1 n g area .
June 20. Summer wkly, kitchen. fplc, gas &
F: Blurts Condo. 4Br,IF 1 · , ...,. d II 3Br,2Ba.dm rm&ll\rm. 3Ba !lundk pool IS.SO emae,mtd20a\osha:re .. say. ~.-.Trvst Mort9~.Trvst
frplc. dishwasher, nit·e m o .. 6 4 S 3 4 7 4 3~rm , 2ba. 760-9573 Vic-Prime Newnnrt Center D•ed1 5035 Dud1 5035
VISA MC
• 972-1131.
yrd S595 mo $300 !le<.' I (213 )54.l 4460 lona. -...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96J.8842art5 30 • -------1 Of!lce apace w/a~c-
HOUSE 1, blk lo bch 2br. NEAR AIRPORT t.cular ocn view foraub-
S400-S450 873-4243 water, attached garage.
•OCliHFtlOMT po~I. Jacuzzi. laundry
Get away today, watch Cac on property Adults.
the waves & whales 1 Dix no pets Avail 1mmed.
2-4br, compl furn Xlnt S500 + S275 security
toe. 673-SUR f'. 673 7677 631 4984
~ewh Q\11et I Br I Ba New
Uat. Mlhed c rpts & drps Good
••••••••••••••••••••••• easts1de Loe Mature Chwral 3102 Adults only S325. 147 E
••••••••••••••••••••••• 18th St 114, C M
A"MTS FOR REHT H.B., N.8 , Costa Mesa Unfurn 2 br. 1 ba ls..t &
Lux ne" 2br. 2'iba
t"nhmt'. pool Jae ten
ms. sec gate on la.l'oon
962 1398 evel>
lbr Townhou.o;e, built 1m.
fr pie. pool spa tennis I
m1 to bch N11 peh $475
847-8758. 848-9916
WALK TO BEACH
Bachelor. gas & water
paid. stove refrig, 5325
mo 536 2456 or 536 7979
Somethlftg for Everyone last mo rent.+ S200sec.
Bach. to 4 Br Unfum depo11il S3SO mo. 787 W
Apta. Certain locations Wilson, apt B Agt.
offer : Pool , spa . 552·5510. DELUXE21R21A
fireplace. laun. room, Near beach . new .
beamed c e I 11 n J s. The fastest draw in the wrfplc. & patio, encl
1ara1ea. alt built·ms. West. · .a Dally Pllot gar. D I W . laundry
Garden & Townhouse Classified Ad:._~2·56~-facil., ideal for room
desl1n. mates Adults $465 TSL MGMT. 642-1603 H...tMC)toel hoclt 3140 960-4614
..... , .. ,. • ... 3107 ....................... -
••••••••••••••••••••••• I •aso UtU pd. lBR Duplex.
417 E. Bay Ave. Balboa
No peta. 547-IUS
** 1 BR, yrly. utll, tar.
on tbe bay. View.
Upatalrt. lmmac
'71-itu .... Open Sat
l·S, au U,ewaw
1 BR. yrb', S•. 81.k to
_,.ach. wl .. r.,•. llap. a4lt or cpl MS-SWl
Kennebunkport?
lsn·t that the horse that won
The Triple Crown in '727
~fD~
lba, fnced yrd. frplc 2 Prof. F shr 2br, 2ba lux lease. 107hq ft. 760-9'2CM
car gar $800/mo yrly twnhse. C.M. area
642 8216, 846-3567 675•363&; 5.57-5'84
YEIS .... LLES Female to ahr 3Br furn. _, S175 + util. Non·smoker. Lovely 2 br, 2 ba, former 642.3738
Office Space In counul·
ing & ~ycho therapy
eroup New medical
complex. Clse \o Hoag
Hospital SZOO/mo
( 213) 284 ·32163 m o d e I . ,de oo rat o r ---------
tou ches. clubhouse & Male 33 wanu fem rm.
amenities, 1599 Sandy, mte full priv. S275/mo. Newport Buch location.
642 6149 __ incluUl.544>-.l.200ext34 MacArthur at Jam·
Bac h. un11 on water SPACIOUS !urn home boree, l2Se aq ft, Sl.2S t'I.
S300/ mo Own / Agt with refined MATURE per mo. Utlla " maln-833·2650or873~9 _ adult, non·smoker. Lov· 1_te_n_a_n_ce_lnc_l_._85_1_·1_7_11 __
Sharp l Bdrm apt m Npt; ely area·Dana Pt. Suite off Pacillc CoHt
Heights. I adult no petal 493·3115. Hwy, nr Chart House.
132.Smo 642 7745 NB. 340 sq.ft. S4oo per · 13br Nwpt Bch hae, S200 mo. Call John 549-2117
1 br, yrly. gar. prka. mo, lat" last, ~ ulll, 1----------1
steps to beach. S4001mo. nonsmoker, avail. May Dix Nwpt Bel\ Airport Of.
673-39Sll ~-6899 1. 645-9634 flee, 1500 IQ ft. Sl. per aq
. --ft.146-4419
MIWPOIT llACH
Convtolent Peninsula ~atfoo acrou frotD Cl· t1 Hall. EaecutJve 1tyle
offk•• wffuJJ services •uU. from 11.5 sq.n.
and up. No le11e re·
quired. Cal.I ~8002 for
lnfo.rmaUoa. ............. 44IO
ofow % Rate
2nd Trust Deeds
Low cost equity loans avail. $20,000 to
$150.000. 18 yr. loan. Assumable.
Owner occupied.
BANKERS NAT'L MORTGAGE CO ..
(714) 731·5844
An established O.C Mortgaie Bankmg
Company
I
•• SPIRITUAL
READINGS
IOam·lOpm Fully Lic'd.
492· 7296 or 49'l·ll034 l8U
S Camino Real, San
Clem
AlUM1'1S
MASSAGE SPA
Be pampered by 16
Beaut Girls Open
10AM ·4AM 7 days.
Phone 645-3433
1HE
GirHriends .
•ESCORTS•
Ho..../ Offla/Hotel
• 759-1216-• . * 529-lllJ. Wfra. NowHirill&
MC VISA
IXOTIC ISCOITS
•111-1946•
ServiQI all of O.C.
WHT temale, blue eyed,
utrtmtly attraetlv.,
shapely. 5'5", afttc·
Uonate, sincere, 52.
Dfflre wtaJUi.Y man to
1poll mtl Wrlte: CS
UOO, COILI Mesa, 12G'r•
I J>.tve a technique t.l\•l
could b t~P 1ou r•·
member dreams. Send •a to DreMm. P.O. Box.
IOU Olend&l4t, Ca. 11201
SHE e oaT s 11 ·
NOD&LINO ..... "
~~.~~ ..... ?!~
Q-.1llfled cHdlctate1
•u•t po••••• ual1Uulfnumerlul
abUlty Ud mu9* ~able
lo fudic* tl'f enht wH.la alnlmal
SAUIHf.f II &kt 1 ..., ft,alt, al·
traeUv• mw bed ts MU.
•tore ..,, laid•• •P· pliuuo.I for fUll Ii Jll
•U. pndioaf la mark·
lnt/receMq potltlon
exp belphal aiult be en·
Uautlaetlc • ••II ·
II
I. ACc:Me&.aa ............ llac.ba.a t pOlitJoe ._ fOt an &e· ttc cit.It with 1 yr a ...
periac., Dul* lnclUCS.
Hper¥lika. AbUltJ to ly. Straton ... 179711---------
comaualat. efhdiv• Armatrog Ave.. Jrv. ~;t'ft:c~ ~.~ !:OE. A Kmavb lod.,
RespouUIA¥U• 1Dclude1-Co_. ------1
,AIR ·~· a~ ...... APGRe•• ratlei and ian tnc M8MCAL
POllcl.. and endorse· hll • Dltrme troot olc. llC.nOMIST
"'~ecta duttu. Xlnt mnta. Buay Cf.P. io F.V. Pel Jnternat'l. mtt1. flrm
"---rda..•---·· need• Rec e p · '9neftla ii WOltiftl COD· Con.tad:
de. wtt.b • li'Owlnl COin· Dl!BBIE l'OWLER pa;l,tA~~: 714-111-1414
11· 11o0~Ave
In1De IMA
(71')5*GIS1 JnauraQCll Compeny or
. a1M1AALOMCI ~~~J:
. Law office needs 400Ceotn1Tower
measea1er to do 1eoeral Oraqe, Ca.
office dutlea abo, mutt Equl OpportQIUty
-bav• a pod car! Salary 2mpioyer 11/F + mileap. Call Candy ,.. _______ _
Ul·OS33.
...,. • ..... ••-u.a. Uoalat/Typtat for froo\
llEI>lCAL hl1 or put. ---------dealt. Handle pboaea.
tl me, front off l ce. PB SOM PllDA y sreet vlllton. 4Swpm re-TramcrtblQc aWJr. pre-Over the counter sale•. q'd. Accuracy • ,must.
f d.&e.MOO. Boatatore.G1·2810 Non-1mk.n. only. Call: Mn. Coplan, 559·8901. MEDICAL •Plctweff fr1 IMS Equipment, 280S TIAMSCRllEI Picture frarae abop Barranca Rd., Jrvlne. SM.IS . Secretarial
need• per1on ex· _E_O_E _______ Jmmed. partt.lmeopen· SALES SEC'Y
Work at bome, top pay. perienced in all ph.ues s """PERSON f Inc for Reader Ad With a younfi d""'•mac Requires minimum 5yn of picture framln1 . R.E. AL.,,.., or ,,~ a c ute boipltal ex. 5.Sf.U22 Hles, excban&e., lnvest-representative for wide computer bl Ung sales
perience in all pbues or 1--'·--·------menta. Hlgb comm. New sales posit.ion. Gd. com· organization. Must have
medical dictation. Mon.· p,.--..._.T__,..,. • P /T oE(.k Newport pany beoe:ftta. Apply in xlnt. verbal skills, ..._. ------p lfl R 3683 person : Pennysaver, clerical or eecretarlal
Secretary
bec.Secnhry
luuraace ru.1-$.,_._. Cbrlstlan. Early, __ a_c_c_._._645-___ ._ 1660 Placentia Ave., experience. CaJJ Linda
MEDICAL childhood educ. counes IESllYATIOHIST C.M. Mon-Fri., l·SPM Devorkln at Safeguard --------
ToPrHld1NI
Fin . Svce1 f irm,
Fashion Island, needs
top·notC!h exec. secty.
for very busy, challeng·
ing pos. ! Strong exper. &
typ/sh skills a must.
Non-smltrs . please.
Xlnt. dental/medical
benfta. Call: 71•..64().0123
•SH•ID•MPT. ~ma. •du.-.c..-.. ,.,...,..
SHO& 8ALSS ·
cblld1/t .... F·PIT. •A·
p'd .,....., brl,, lottn· th••· benefit•. Cblldun•a 8oot•ry
144·3'14 lb.11Jlt9r
SHOPl'IMM8
Learn en,....vinl ff other
macblne1. Company
benefiu • sooct Potential for rt11\\ penon. SlZl
RedHlll,C.M .
Sm l oU company has P /T
(2 dys> openiJll for eood
typlna 1kills. 1ood w\lh
numbera, aome exp. re-
q . d. 64()..8500
STOCOIOIR
TllAJMH
College rrade. Oppty in
Nt!wport Beach area for
hard working en·
thwuasUc ind.iv. Send re
aume to· P.O. Box 430.
Marlton. New Jersey,
08053 a1M1AAL OPACI
Appliance aervice com-
. pany. HHvy phonet,
' light typtoc, bookkeep. WANTED! RECEPTtoNIST or exper req'd, P/Ume. u ood Health Care Systems w.9181 Neat, attrac ve, g SALES LADY · 1i--------STR ... IGH..euER Busy Ne.-Center of· 1---------personality. Phone ex· f luai hild · (714)957-1121. "" • U"'I --· or exc ve c ren s --------SECRET•RY for aluminum for""'-11 Ina experience. Ask for
J>enob. 142--0240.
flee. responaible, en-ftlllSS PaSOH perience. Interviews bo Uq e So Cit Plaza Se A .... Immediate career OP,; thuslastic, typing. PIT· Fully qua)l(led offset. 12·4pm, Tuesday -L;M~GAsIN.~. cretary We have an immed Experience requir ed
GIMIAAL OFACE
Looking for a very in·
tereaUn1 part time job
In pleauot office?
Clerical. for mature
penson. 1.ocation P .C.H.,
Npt. Bcb. Exper. a
muat. Accurate typing,
no shorlhanll . 20 hr.
week includes Sat 6 Sun.
Call: M&-7431
portuoity la available FIT 8'0-D!3 Min 3 years experience. Friday. full & part·Ume. LEGAL SEC'Y opening for a full time Able to read blueprinu for EXPERIENCED --·---·----Davidaon 701 , Ryobi Salary commensurate Sales Jmmed opening in our secretary In our cor-& meuurio1 lnatru·
Life, Pfoperty and MIDICALASSIST. with T51. Darkroom a with experience. Harle-Now hiring Assistant growing Irvine omce. porate headquarters to menu ls\ & 2.nd ahltU
Cuualty Aeeot in the Front/Backolflce.CdM plus.Forint.e.rview,caU quinDlnnerPlayhouae, ManagerTrainees.Min. Civil practice with assist the Office Apply Aluminum Force
New port and Co1ta area. '7J.8200 855·1137. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd.SA. 6mo. exper. Call for In· Smilnimum 2·5 yea,{'5 ;xp Manager with various SCoa.n'taS02AnEa .. AS14to9~40~t~. Meaa area. Dual Ucenae ---------1----------979·SS11 . terview : 642-l.23l. a ary open ca ran duties typing (60+wpm ,,
preferred but not Medical, full time front Production, full lime I------------------1_833_·36_22___ accurately), supply or· _E.O._E _____ _ n~ceuary. J.A:ada P~ office position. Mission person foe Prod. Dept. IESTAUUHT SALES PERS 0 N . SECIETA.aY dering & mventory. fll· TEACHER's Aide want vtde~. Jroup msurance Viejo. Execulive & Packing & handling Sandwich Maker hf.s mature. P/time & some Le . 1 . ffi ed ing, etc. Excell salary & ed Exp 5 mornings.
provad. ·Excellent ~P. medical. secretarial ex· hosiery. Crystal Crea· I 7AM ·3PM Mon_.·Fra. wknds 673-2634 ff~·~ a\tlVe 0 icet ne 60s benefits with future 9 12. afternoons 4.6 portuo1ty for aggresa1ve per. including insurance lions Appa.rel63l·S414 646-8883, caU anytime e icaen secre alry 1 growth potential Must Susan. ,,_u..8820 individual. billing. 495-lOMI I SALES P/T wpm a cc u r a e Y • be non.smoker & have .....,.
General ...... ..,c ..
hllOW .....
S.c..ttw~
1 yr. exp. Ciraveyard
Wefftw/W......._
1 year dinner house exp.
405 nl\es, 5PM· l 1PM
For appointment
cont.act:
lOHALD AJJ.Stnt
2 I l-701-2300
GW
GllEA TWESTEllH
SAYINGS
PRODMGRTRAJNEE Restaurant Mornings necessary for pleas ant te leph one car For immed. in
M•11tsnecse Great op ..... ·y for a ta"'e Meye.rhof's, primary v o I ce S 114 0 I mo . t 1 11 C ~ 5"9~ ·.-, ,. ...L. fabric at.ott Call Gen· Resumes· PO Bo11 3lS1, erv ew ca . aryn 6 mornings a week . charce indiv w/mech suppli.,.. al good food to 646-4040. Whalen at 714·~~9
7AM-9AM. Excell. driv· skills. Work well w/peo-the Irvine corporate ------=---Newport Beach. CA C
ing rec. req'd. Apply· pie Salary open . communityneedspeople SA&RSP/T 92663. MCS, IN •
Penny1aver . 1660 ~11882 for sandwich making, Weneed3sbarp people SECllETilY Z960S DalmlerAve
Placentia Ave .. C.M. sample food prep. Mon· with fashion background Santa Ana, Ca 927~
MODBJMG,
Comm 'Is, films. ex·
tras .. SCAS needs new
faces, all aees. 957·0282.
N to work in our men's & immediate opening/full· Equal Opp Emplyr PIODUCTIOH Fri, 8·3pm. 0 e x· time SouthLagunaarea .._ _______ _
St t women's dept. Salary + ,.. TUIMH penence nee ar s 1 r propert• owners as-. I c JI s commission, ca I or , Rubber hose products. man mum. a us1e s o c 1 a t 1 o n ~--------must pass co. physical SS7·6232 appt. THELOOtC Shorlha nd/speedwrit· SECIETAIY
including back X ray. _R_ES_T_A_U_RANT ___ F-/T-. p-/T-I &U-&'500 1ng . good typing re · If you're a competent
--------
Taking applications quired Must be outgo~ secretary & a good or·
btwn 8 It lOAM only. aandwicPhl mand& cocunt,er SALES r&SOHMR ing, personable & eajoy ganazer . we neded you St ra t ollex . 17671 help. au e a e. a busy office dealing If k for contemporary retail you can la e a Arms trong Ave .. Irv. Gary's Deli, 7S2·S40l stor e Only career· with members & pubhc. personal interest 1n
Aff\rmative Action Mora
Pleau call for appt. Equal Opportunity ~IGHT ... UDITOR 645-1358, Mon-Fri , Ems*>Yer " ""
9:30-SPM 1--------•I 642-lO:l> EOE. A Kendavis Ind., RETIJLCl&J( minded, mature women Excellent benefit s . chenldeadUnes &deta1J.
GUAUS
Full & part time. ALI
areu. Unllorma fum'd.
Ages 21 or over, retired
welcome. No esper. nee.
Apply : Universal
P'roteeUon Service, 12218 w. 5th St.. Santa ,4na.
Interview hn: • 12 6 t_.,
Mon·Frl.
Rana Gliders mfr needa
gn1 laborers.
547-1344
HEAD
alOUMDSl(IB'B
Head groundalteeper
needed by Huntlnrton Beach City School Dist.
•· 12 mo. Polition. Exper.
pref'd. ll,233 to Sl.533
depending on exper. Ap.
ply: 735 14th St., H.B.
536-ISSl
Health Food store
salespera.on, part or full
time. Acceptinc applica·
tioo1. ~9537, S48-6968.
·--MOMEM•uas P/T
Over 21. M·F, 3-4 hrs
day. Sandwich shop at
beach, H.B. 538-7272.
.-H 0 M E W 0 R K ER S ·
Editorial work In your
home for am publisher.
Steady wort-10-30 hrs
·per wk. Prefer BA. Call
·l-1 for appt.132--0BSS
HOST/MOSTISS
Full 6 part time availa·
'ble. App?k in penon . 3-SPM. J ftoaer, 400
So. Coast wy, Laguna
• Beach.
HOUSICUAMllS
Exp, own tram 540-0857
••• HOUSECLEANERS
ToSS/br,car.~123
Houeteeper/Companioa
Live In or out.
~2J009.
Jewelry at.clAinSo. Coast MOTHER'SHELPER Co. n--... apply. Must be ex· S900/mo Niguel Shores oriented business ad· Pl d b · h ---------Coat.a Mesa· Stationers, """" Co · •----· t aza nee 1 rll t SPECIALraSOH PIT Hone Dept. Clerk to per'd . Salary .plus mmuruty"""""'la ion vert1s1ng. we have a
person for office duties. We are looking for a workforPETCOArumal W~ll~iO:!~h A5~·.;1 ~·~~ comm. Pleue apply in 1,.t7iiiiliii4iiii)4iiii9iii3·iii0l.22iiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I pos1t1onyoucangrowin· ~tclM special persoa to help Supply Su-rmarkets. person l~l2onJy. person or call: Apropo, 1• to with one or O.C 's
with our 2~ yr old ban ..-844-2652 or •29 Fuhion *•SECRET AJUES * * I ea d 1 n g advert 1 s i o g JIWUY SALIS dicappedlGll. . Apply 3033 Britto&, C.M · llH le land. Npt. Bcb. EOE Sh80/ RE/FunSlB,000 a1enc ies Interested?
Exp pref but will train. Vaned fainlilyduties ln·1_5"-_2'22 __ ._____ ASSISTANT S4<L/Super/2yrS12.600 .._9'7•9-•1•000------Apply ln penonJ_ Kirk clllde help with our older p / T l M E he l p f 0 r DIRECI'OR SALE5 Accountant} Oes$19.200 ,... Jewele~J 2300 Harbor chlldren also but with women's 1peclalty shop. OFNuRSFS REPRESENTATIVE Exec/shl001e<>rp$18.000
Blvd,C.•. e~phasuon~totalcom· Fashionlaland.No expr. Day hrs . flexible Party plan program. E11pd ComultantOurs
IUTCHIHHB.t m1tment to bi1 welfare. nee. 75~'95llOtoapm. schedule. Ask for MC'S. work own hrs It earn lop Lb Reinders Agy, Inc
PREP,COOK6 CHEF Trainlna helpful, but not,_________ Wong Grand Avenue money. wlll tr a an . 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE
Experienced. Tbe Quiet necessary u we train OUALITY COMltOI. Conv. Hoap., 1730 Grand Everything supplied. Newport/833-8190/Free
W n.oM and expand the ri&ht II a r In e hardw are Ave., Lo°' Beach. (213) Merchandile. &M-5Ul8 oman,..,.. ,&t0-7440. person. Full time manufacturer need s 59'7·8817 -----------------
LEGALSECRETARY emplo~ with com· Q.C. Inspector-shipper. __ .. ••· ••••• I .1·1y P1•1ot N t Ct 'ood t ing paoy and com· Light driving. Saa ling Salling Instructor n.-.ed P r, YP mena\lrat.e aalary. Must ~1 in Npt Bch. 25-Z7' crwa· skills, flexible hrs, be dependable. Call knowledge he pful. Call ing sailboats. Wknds •
salary commensurate. Mrs. Canfield 3 to 6 pm. for appt. 546-1101. Santa now, full lime summer. •• General aSSl•anrnont e 5'.S-1$55 Moo thru Friday _AD_•_. _______ 6'65·7100 " 6'"'""
Le I a I sect y . Ex. _67_S_·-a1_29_____ IECEIVIMG CLltUC ,_______ • Secretary to •
perlenced, Xlnt skills. HEWSPAPBS Fu l 1 \Im e Reta 11 • •
salarynea .• onlhewater Deliver LA Time• to clothing s t ore. Ex· SALES e fl8CUtiYe Office • e
In Newport Beach h I B lb perlence preferred. L d •-.-.a..•--~ I ed' I om es n a o a Hours 8:30-S ·JO Mon.· ea I~~ • mm 1ate open ng for versatile ind1v1dual e <7t4>67S-9680 · Peninsula. 3:30am-6am. Fri. Call 6'4-S070, ask for SS0,000 to $60,000 yearly. Must be capable of handling fast paced.
LEl.!...ALSCTRY ~114m13o. +. 548-3441 or Katie. lfyoucansell • vaned.and interesting duties for newspaper. ...,"" .....-Home & commercial • executive & personnel adm11USlrator Call •
Experienced ·for smaU IECEPT10HIST/ security systems • 642-4321 . Ext. 277 for appt •
N.B law ftrm. Word pro-Nuninc SECllTAIY Topcommlss1on$'s
ceasing expr. desirable. HURSES AIDES Paid to professional ag· • Editor's Secreta •
CaJl&M-4471 1:30-3:30pm & part.time fc~~:::a:feaf:~f~.:~!i greuive. salesperson. • fJ • 3:30·7:30pm. Country Training leads for LEGAL SEC'Y Club Con val. Hosp. d":J!:.n~~~~;~rsy.!{~edg. quallfled persons!. Call •A challenging opportunity is being offered by8
South Coast Pla.za area S49-3061. " for an apP'l. Mr. Zim· • the Dally Pilot for someone with thee law firm. Experience Salary + benefits. Call: merman intelU,ence. wit and skills required t.o be
preferred, but not Nursing 714·494·ll.S7 C714l54t.a'6t e settetary to the editor It's an interesting8
necessary. Good typing HUISIMG llH llCEPT10NIST lldlo htc.. • poelllon requiring the tools of the trade -80 8
skills. Litigation law. 7-3:30f.m. Pvt 41 bed A • wpm dictation. 70 wpm typing, dictaphone -6'1·0217. Conva . H01p. Immac. Telephones, light typ· ~~~~~~~~~•and the abtllty lo ahlft mental geara on short e ---------1 with Jd staffing. Santa lng. Call Robin 752-6211 • not.Ice. The benefits are generous, the pay 8
LEGAL SECRETARY Ana Hu. S.A. MS-3081. IECWTIOMIST SALES • reuonable. Applications being aceepted only . Lagun• Hilla recent through appointment by cal.li.DI( 642·4321 Calif Probate ex per Office Assist. Part/Full Receptioruat. COMtiaCIAL • ext m . 8 ~euary. Xlnt tyJ>inl • Need enercet.lc FIT help Typin&. light bookkeep. Tired of sellina bouaes 7 • , •
S/H skills req. Call Mrs. for errands, uroxlmau ~!1t~ H= ~1~~~ :!::~1:e=~ =:~~ e Accounts P~ e W l n s low for a ppt. duties le odd jobs. Car 851-1651. skill• to manace broker flJllllf'fi
837-1060 req. E .O.E. Call Ad iit· i---------commercial ru1 estate. • Book .. eerw • ---------1 ter H41, 24hn. &U-4300. lllC.nOMIST e ft ~. •
LIGALSCTIY PART-TIME Neat. attractive, .good ~i~.~~:ufl:~. $~;!~ A full-time position is ava1Jable for accurate O C Ai..-area Ex-pe-"'nality. Phone ex· _,,. lit ,__ • person with at least two years experience in • p;'d In i;;;,· ,.._..ii nPh. Need six key people to pe'r'"'ience Interviews benc11la; e u ... urance; • processing accounts payable for computer.
bate. Lite ~eepf~i. fill positions. WUI train. 1 2 . 4 pm : Tues d a Y. health Insurance & den· • input. cash reporting and disbursement.
Sa la ry commeniurate Call 919-93118. Friday, fulJ.Ume. Salary ta1 plan. Contact Ken, schedu.ling and forecasting. Wi~repare
w/expr. 71•1&»9124 _..·TIME commemu.rate with ex-fl75-6700. • ~~ dpeposlts. Must. possess cood oalffice e
.-1· perience. Harlequin Din· 1 s........ ermanent pos1t100 with g s ary.
Llc'd CM rffc• 2·3 days/week in desi&n ner Pla.yhoule, 3S03 S. Sales ac delllfery driven and company paid beneflL'I Call : 642·4321,
Needed ror poeiUoa u showroom. Some typing. Harbor Blvd• S . A. needed. Immed open-Ext. 277 for sppt. •
make· UP artist at the eo.ta Mesa. 831-1050 919-SSU ings for inotlvated ~ •
SECRETARY
Customer Service exp
Order processing. type
50+wpm , qu o tes .
phones . Irvine mfg
S40·8894 . aslt for K .H
SECURITY OfflCH
0 C C Campus. tem
porary. part·time. on
call, swing/graveyard
S6 5S·S7 06/hr Contact
Coast Communit y
I Colleges. 1370 Adams
Ave. Costa Mesa. 92626:
556-5947
E 0 E .. M1F
SECURfTY GUARDS
Openings for qualir1ed
individuals Good start
ing pay Refundable un·
1form deposits 978-7243
& 638·8191
SECUlrTY GUARD
Mon thru Friday, 12 to 8
AM Benefits 499-1175,
499·1177
Sec'y
N.I'. NOF OFC
Needs J lnt typist, top
skills non-smkr salary
ope~0-2912 _ _
Sec'y/ltecept.
for engineering co. Typ-
in g, xlnt sala r y &
benefits 957~96 _____ ,
Sales
Self Green World is look·
1n1 for aggressive,
motivated ind1vlduels
for interior plant sales .
Base fee and com ·
mission paid. XJnt op-
portunity to make cood
mQney, have fun and be
on your own Ca II
898·0300.
TEACHERS
ASSISTANT
Specasl classes for ban
d1capped adults. 2 yrs.
college exper. req'd . Ex
cell vacation 4£ in·
s urance benefit s
Wkdys 8.30 to 4PM
United Cerebral Palsy
Assoc . Santa Ana
S46·S760
T eadwr'a Aide
Preschool. exp 'd. Full
ume 642-0Ul
TECHMICIAM
Wanted for service &r lo
st.allalton ol photo pro
cesso r . Some
mechanical & electrical
exp required. (714 )
898-0290 ------
Telephone Sales
WORKATHOMI
Ca ll Garden Grove
530·S220
TELEPHOHE soucrras
H1nng now for summer
Work 3-9 Mon-Fri. No
exp nee No aelllng Call
966·01SI aft lpm.
Telephone
"40 .. ftlaSOH
P I T phone ferson
needed lo cal & set
app'ts for busy Solar
Energy Co. S4 SO/hr +
bonus. Ask for Al:
LIQUIDYME
EHEttGY SYSTEMS
54S·6793, 7S4·~
Tet. .... SalH
Exciting vacation club,
promoting for resort
condos, needs 3 to 6
bright, responsible, am
bilious peo ple Gd
phone voice nee. Guar
against comm. Wkly.
paycheck 3 pit shifts
avl Call . 9-5, Moo-Fra .
S4J.. 79S7 or SU8137
TOOU'USHRS
California baaed drillmg
contractor seeks grow
ing foreman for Hunt·
mgton Beach rigs. Xlnt
salary & benefits. Send
resume: PO BOX 2508
Bakersfield CA 93303 or
call (80S)327·S736 -----
Travel
EXCLUSIVE
Nwpl Bcb travel agency
Mi nimum 2yn exp.
w/travel a1ency. Saber
acts ONLY. Oontact
Gaylene 6'$. 7771 ~:rrc.~~chfo~·1r:: ,_P_A_R-T--T-IM-E-,eo-er-al-of-.1 ..:..:..::ll:...:IC:::.:IPT:....· -/TYPt--S-,-rle. Can ea.Uy earn over ·-Classified Outside Sales •
HoH•~H,er Aide, ,_te_rv_le_w_<_213_)Z7_"57 __ s_-t Oce, varieddutiel In law Newport Beach law of· lO/hr. Call Craig aft.er .Salesperson to handle Real Eatate e ---------1 Have somethin1 to sell?
.. otc. MO.-oo Roanna l pm: 951·28'2. .Development accounts and automotive. ••hre for elderly Liceoaed Real E1tate •---------1 flee. Pay commen.urate accounts. Must have at least 2 yeara ·:WJ.W••.. 1aleapel"IOll to 11t new PAIT·TM 1-•-lth_a_b_ill_ty_._ ..... _6400 __ . __ 1SALES Full time, .eitperlence. Salar,Y plus comrn.iuion. Must e
_' _.. .... 141-3611 cocadomlnha.ina.1131.a&l Kl.lit be people orknted lllC~OMtST re1ponalble female to .have car, mUea1e paid. Excellent company •
.. ~ • amblUom, over 18. Hair Hlon work Tues-w 0 r k 1 n wo m ~ 0 ·a beneftta. For ~polntmenl for Interview, call
HSEKPR·live in. 5 day1. Ucbt factcry work. flex Call IUcbard 875-51115. Sat. Irvlne ~Ul be a c h.,, ea r s h 0 p . • 642-54S1&, ext. 2 · •
• 011. 1peakinf, DOD· bra, FT/MF. 980-6755 • •
1mo1ter. 2 t o dlera. -.our ._. ,,__ aac.rtOMIST •-------n... Time Evec.n~
Anaheim Hilb. Rell. I" .mn •-Oranfe eo. aiJ'port area Salea • f'"• l 111 • req.t74·5UO Liquor Clerk, mature, C1w11•1T0111tt law irm Neb r~r-~llATHOUltS e 'Ca •11•1Y_... e
evea. Full or part·Ume. C.-riln Lite typinf pref' ., .Adult• wi'tb, ouUtandln.& attractive . , IMSUIAMCI Abo &toe* Clerk, part· Adulta wttb outatand1n1 pbooea fl root ore. tAM-JPM • pe.nonaUUu who enjoy working wtth 10.15. CLmKISIC'Y tllne. c..an Tom f7t.'7"4 atlracUve penonalitlel 1:»5:30, ll·F. Aak for or 1U1' old youths. Start at SUOboUr. 2J>m thru ~P:roperty7Cuualty. 1_d_•JW..__. _______ 1 to1pepdl.5hnperweek Patty or Lauren, 4MtrM e~'::!\3~~=: ea:t 3.a. Ask for Lori ••
Penout U.. ••'£[ UlaUOl' ~ tall• pen. couu•Uac youth a1ea Ul-1005 e e ,,::=1~:::.0. · ~i:u.co;ta 11 .... t1.;.~~z::~i~~s:S'--,-IC-9'!10MI---,-,--• ~ .. t~~n~:!: e Metor laatl , e
l:»S:.:r!.·..;. a~ immed =~• ex11u • adapt 1our work• N-ort Beai •
J'rl. Nl:U. ext. 143. .for rilltt penoo ln our u:.:t;~ a i.~ ~f,:; • Tht Dally PU~b~ a mot.or route •'vallablt •
AatfotlM\. btll 1'~p& eni.~ ofc. ID a TlN arwtation e1n tbe Par'lc Newport; a1a Canyon atea o1 e c...e "6-807 •a.let ottlft MU ,...., .~ Jkacb. Approximately lU ""n • , ,... home • ba ..., time .ad •hou.W llk• rrom ooe to -. and 1a b1f
-".
___ • ._!!. ............. _.. lo cto. "°"r.: a:• to a:ao PM •~· e
.--tOI' JCNr ••mu.r. --, ~ J'rt. and l :IO to 7:11(> AM Sat. 1ni.
ODlla-...ca. or~~. W•• •sun. £arntnu appro•lmateJy PI0.00 & q a I 1 0 pp or t . P•J aourl)' watt• .moatbly. P'o:r ~•It C!ODt.ad lt;lft lll:ll\aDC1.
ZlnplOy1r comm..._, e • eo.-i betW•• tbe houll·lO:OO and 12:00 e
t.oe ANOa.18 TDID • All dally. •
uu la•now•r An. • ~C.... 1 C.11. 9 .... ~ • 3IO w. Str.t
.CO.ta Meta, CA • ~~~~~~~L:..~....!!~~__;::.!I iii.I QpportMftlty Employer , ••••••• •
Want Ads Call 642·5678 Classified ade do lL well.
WJadow Washe r
perienced, P IT,
trans. 646-9780
YARDMAN
Sat. 9·4. BotUes, t.ool1,
collectables, b1hld
Items, poll " plants.
11'2 Victoria Pl, C.M.
'Tl HOlida CB171 tl00. Rd
ra~ 19ata.ln 1'10" 115lb
S1JO,bel1D1tll5190o ..
1~---------1:~~~~~.:':!!~!
76VWCAMPll
---------• Dynamite WHtlalla pop.top. 4 speed. Only
'9,000 mU.. (441WXA) tOIO Sitt I
JIMMAIUMO
YOUSWA•Be
18711 Beach BJ vd.
WICANSBL
YOURl.Y.
5»UCN
RENT: 21' lux. fl)tr
home. Sips &, aelf·cont.
U75/ wll. + 8' ml.
N0-85&5.
72' DISCOVERER 25',
flb.rllH, 1treamllne.
beaut. Sipe. 5. Just ~·
IUrbilhed. Lut chance.
movin1. l3l).l41.2 .
lte9 ()pen Road cab-roof
air, 1lp1 6, PB, PS, auto.
13495.142·2087
A.to SH'Yke, ,_.. .
Por tool rental hrm
Ne.t appearance. iood
handwriting, benehts
Will train. Apply 19
Newport BJvd. C.M. or
Z2eOO Lambert -1203
Tori>.
3 PC. Drexel Bdrm set,
bdbrd. nite atd, bureau
SSOO. ~1-63119 alt SPM
Wrought Iron table 6 6
4 Family ! Antique Furn,
lae amounts of misc,
haehld Items, Sat only
9·2 18021 Gillman Irv.
~-8800
Non-profit ore needs
your boat, plane, car,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 13' 1980 Capri Cyclone 176 KZ400
& Acceueriet t400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
for ..
DatsunZ
motor
+ other' pcrh 76~5.l7
Gara1e Sale: Sofa, chn, Prof soccer 6 foosball
beds, load• of misc eame. 5150. Ami Fm eome antiques 2300 Port Aberdeen Pl N.8 . Sat. stereo 6 beaut. cabinet.
Apri125th IM SlOO. 494'7997
Marine Electrician Sailboat racing rigged,
new cond. 11200 cost
S 1600 new 67S.2480
Xtras. nutlres/batt
Aals,kSOfirm
S4Mlt2
tOlO 14' AMF SUMASH S400 646-4647 '78 Honda Hawk. xlnt
SO bp elec. start Suzuki 16' Hobie Cat. Good cond.
0 .B en1. Sl.500 Boat & T ·1 bo $2000 trailer free w/sale of raa er. cat ~· or
cond .. sooo ml, best or
fer. 675-3972
WANTEDTOBUY
Ori ver side door for
'67 VW sedan S46--l879
Ri1ht front fender for '67
VW S2.5
~1879.
eng DaveM2-4Ml bat orr. Sheila, call · 7 8 6 s 0 YAMAHA 8 wheels and llres
559-9133. Ben 552·9794 SPECIAL low mileage All 14"saze --------Mmlcat ~UGE SALtu,Furn.1 tatr : ills IOIJ
---------Cairn Terrier 11 mos old. Cstm So. American bar &
W ESTllINSTER
ABBEY
male-lookin1 for fun stool. value Sl,000. Mwit
family Sl006'2·263S sell $600. 548-7871 MAR IN E GAR AGE •--A-SI-' SlOOO OBO 67S.18S2 after 768-5837
SALE ~. ,_, 6 -------
ANTIQUE MALL Male AKC lriah Setter, Chrome & glau & con·
amps, toya, c . es, ap-1•••••••••••••••••••••••
pliancea, Ila'«> & much CONN Director trombone
more! Sat/Sun 9-4, 41 with case. Excellent
Dogwood, Irv. (Univ. condition, SlOO. 67S.8052
Se a g u 11 outboards Docks 9070 -A..to1forSG6e
S bot t "'.6· ••••••••••••••••••••••• HONDA C'TllO Trail. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• avons. a . e c ..... · d Daily UM. f'ri IG-9 loves kids Sso 14 mo tempoury, S rooms of R di dsSal/Sun con 2,000 m1 . 9Smpg, IMPORTANT e an BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT k7SIOBO 833-1.a.5. NOTICE TO CIOMCI Tuesday old 642·0862 Xlnt (um. Bdrm. l.J v. & Park> .ss2-.a54 after6PM. 11751 Westminster Ave din Sell by p1ec:e
Garden Grove 5.5-4-6103 1Golden Ret puppies, 7 Washer/dryer 857·4487 h d I NPT BCH.25'-35'. READERS AND Su-5 .... .., 15 p.2cyl,Yanmar et1e .78 H d cvouvo 1 .--AA.& FLUTE. Silver Selmer wl reverse geer 11,650 642-4644 on a A.N\I 0 ma ADVERTISERS
Hand carved Chinese
chest, S49S.
53&-9'39 eves
wks, shots. wonned. ch
line, AKC 833-1418 Wood frame glass top
chow table, 2 for S100
Free puppy Chow/ Victorian iron hall tree.
S hepherd 12 wks , SlS0.631·:1Yl9.
Camper shell . ace Metro ll586S.Gdlorstu· Completely overhauled $1600ortrade4sm pu The price of Items skates. 1url boards, col-dent. SlSO. 963-3039 Yanmar Mulel w/21'..W JO' Dock Power Boat or w'camper. 546--0659 advertised by vehicle
or TV, clothes. Sat & Sun Tabernacle Mast. No ---dealers m the vehicle 9·3. 2338 Colgate Dr .. Offic• f•..._• Ir new generator wt starter overnighters Sl60/mo. '48 Whiner motor c:ycle c:lass1fied advertising
CM Eqlll,....t 1015 wiring. $900 811 is 7S2·2S84,&M-4767 Brand nu cond Only IO columns does not an
h s e b r o k e n . c: u t e --------
American Oak.glass door Michelle 557·9'55 MUST SB.L
bookcase, Princess -.---5 paec:e Medit. bdrm
dresser, s heet music AK C English Spranger suite, I 1 k e new .
cabinet, submit offers Spaniel, liver & wht sacrifice. Best oHer.
-------_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64S 1028 ; 642·3287 mis Must see to believe elude any applic:able
HUGE ~ARAGE SALE s m i t h . c 0 r 0 n a loot~. ioww-9040 Boat Slip .WANTED 24' S5,000. (702)82.5-9173 taxes, li cense, transfer
215 Ceca~ Place. Costa typewriter, Model 300. ••••••••••••••••••••••• with parking for local re· ,79 yam aha XS400F' lOK fees. financ:e charges. ~sa. Fn, Sat, Sun 9-4 Good condition. St SO. 1971 Sl<lr JACK sident. 642·3'05 aft 5PM mis. Backrest, nu tares fees for air pollution con·
Call Dalebout Bay & , • W trol devic:e cert1ric:ations Furn. & brlc·a ·bra.c . Beach. Ask for Janel 24 w /traller Xlnt . ANTED: ~hore moor-Bst0ff644-4461 or dealer documentary
18480 Santa Leonora Cir Smith 631.7300 financing. Call Gary or mg or manna space for ,73 HONDA Trail 90 1400 preparation charges un·
67S-8172 anytime female 731-4710 Dys . 642·4773 ; Eves · -----------
Sohd Oak Partners Desk, fToff to You 1045 642.:...965!· cle, F V. Sal. only, 9-5. • · Don 631-1400. 10xl7' catamaran eves less othel'Wlse specified
--------Wooden desks, StOO, . . ----497-3914 or S.0.4190, ext orig mi. Ss75 by the advertiser 60x43 Beautiful l:Of\d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ch r 1st 1 an woman SS
Must sell·need room ssoo M Mmi Schnauzer: also rum, accept g1fls
Firm. 847 1323 M Sha Tzu AJI shots To or will pay small pay·
Gara1el yard Sale, Sat. 6 secretary chairs sso 77 Tri HuJI, lJOhp Volvo, JO ~72
Sun. 9·2. Antiques, col· TRS 80 basic 11 with P~ 17t.4,', all brand new Int, ---- ----Aftff.,_1/
----good home 642·5l02 ments June 7Sl·0496 Antique square grand lectablea, rum .. rugs, gram,s7so&manyother incl trailer S4300. MotorHa.MS,S•I MotorHon.s,SCllff/ Claulci 9520
depression glass, re· items. 851.1711. 840-3410 R...t/Storoge '9160 R...t/Storage f I 60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• piano. Circa 1880 S 1500
Anllque Hall. 270 E 17th
~ta Mesa 548-3111
Antique roll top desk &
cbr, appraised S 1550,
mutt sell S8SO 548 7871
Pvt Sale Fine Jewelry
lkt Opal. Lucien Picard
Gold watch Original
palnlln1s. Olis, wtr clrs
etchlngs Plc:asso. Dah,
Paul Blaine Henrie.
Clyde Zukh. Miguel
Dominguez, Linda
Ro1era & others Pr
oriental lg bronze Urns
Bronze. porcelem. bas
que fi&urines Old Lon
don Pub clock on Mghny
ped estal BUI China
Cabinet wlblt in ladies
desk. French Marble
coffee tbl Pr sil k
cbineae rugs Pr brass
lamps+ more 639-7128
ABBA ANTIQUES
WboleaaleWarehouae
HOWOPEH
tAM-6'M
Com~Park
331)3Harbor Blvd
C.M. 7SMI070/Ma-9366
(Next to405 Freeway)
Purebred 11,.<ayr Cocker 7't sofa, burnt orang;
Spaniel wlpapers Very good condition S7S/best
lovable 646-21631 , °!Otse offer 847·5843 aft S.JO
cords, china & pottery, . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 4 6 F' or d Wood i fl .
toys & much more 418 2 desks-1 wl typewnter 261 LymBan ~~s~~e DO YOU HAVE Oai..JE restored. St3,500. ALSO Dabha, CdM return. 3 olfice cbn. 1 as:is~Y67~2968 s " '29 Model A Town Sedan.
COLLIE r --------aec'y cbr, 1 b.Jgbback wor Of THESE? 4 dr. restored Ideal for w papers, ree Pr Henredon Scene II GA R A G E SA LE d S lo good home. 2 yr male curio ~ab•n-•, new, cn.t F d . swivel chr all in 1ood Boat partner wanted 24' st u en l IO . 5 o O , m"'"" .,., uro1ture iahes , d iJJ•-.. .._off 67S6161 96.J 4721 con • w "'""'e ~t er Sea Ray Sundancer 1978 · _ _ 12000 ea Sell pr for clothes, toolt, all kinds be --'d •-· lted must ...,. •pie up Im mac , Npt Bch boat .,__La....-.. 1050 $2500 673-6286 of &oodaea 820 Center b A ·129 c .. "1708 "'"'~ Y pn _. slip Sl30/mo +Sl900
••••••••••••••••••••••• Elegant Meti bdrm set. ~t 'C M Sat/Sun S-S -r.+t 1017 Call ~7 9327 * * I BUY * * sohd oak. king hdbrd, YARD SALE Sat 412.5 !••••••••••••••••••••••• Eld Mako 23. '77, nu trans, Good used Furmture & trpl dresser & pr n1te 2320 en Ave, Costa
1
3 SNAKES; 2 Pythons & 1 in
Applianc:es OR 1 wall sell stands 673-62.86 Men,. Water skals, Avon Boa. All nice Also . uph, blmlru, pa t. Full
II bl I fis h. VHF 24Clsp OMC, or SELLforYou Sol~d oak t>edr set wl k co ecta es. c othing, large snake cage. S32S. IB S!0,0006'7S-4483
MASTERS AUCTIOM • n gs• z e water bed TV" more _548_-_,_96_7 _____ _
646 ... 616, lll-'625 18oo10BO 642 7423 Sat 10..4 H~ Wood Sofa. lvoung Amazon redhd
----lamp1, antq braas parrot complete with I& I IUY RlllMnuRE Twin bed wath mattre11 faucets. desk etc. 28 cage USO. 646·1869
Les %7·8133 and box sprangs Gd Roclt ROH Way (Univ. 142.3850
13' FlbergJua boat, trlr
adjustable for 16' boat.
Johnson o/b 35h.p .
S700/ 0 BO 548-~
. . . --cond Best ofr. 640-6479 Pk l Sat. . ----------1 B11 red S shape chair. ----Suller-created Cockatoo '78 21' Whalecralt Nova,
3'xa·. xlnt cond, 1150. 8' Maple Capt's chair S2.5. Garaie aale Antique w ca 8 e tame· XL, fuJJy equip w/trlr,
wane sofa, ,1150. plush Yellow bamboo· like bed dept.hnnder rattan seOO/OBO m l39ll ' V8 Volvo en1, 2MH.P.
960 6487 dinette tbl & 4 chrs. like c he'at many boat 6 · lllce new SU,000 642-2928
----nu hoo. Sean 1irls wht baehld. misc 3248 Min· P'-os Ir e>rg.a 1090 day1, evesm.0443
Must sell butc:her blk tbl, dresser w/mlrror SSO. neaota CM ·(corner of •••••••••••••••••••••••
4 cllrs. S225, 2 dressers. Matching desk w/chrSSO Ca) WURLITZER 1 tt '56 18' Century, excell. nite stand & mirror S22S or bst orrer. 642•3223 , sp ne e con d . S 15 00 I 0 B 0 .
& more. 975 02~3 art. --MOVING! Garaie Sale: model «10, two 44-note 642-0671. By Appt.
6PM Dining room table. 6 items from tor.$400. 285 keyboards, 13 pedal ---------i
--chairs, 3 leaves & buHet. 8 r 0 ad way c . M . notes, auto tone control, Ta6ie O•erP.,..ata Dmm1 Tbl uruque Maple S2SO Ph ~5002 Sat/Sun 8-6 earphonejack. aolld ma-Nodown
can beuaed6 slus mcl · pie wlmatchinr bench. '80 23' IMP Cuddy
pads J 11 n ens S 4 00 (9 ..... Stile 1051 J.wetry 1070 S400 caab or ks() de· Cabin. Only a<>hrs on
646 2652 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uver,ed. 547.lMS en1lne. Mercruiser 260
---1 GIANTGA..R.AGESALE Beautiful diamon d out drive Fully fitted
Bassett din rm table Sat. Apr2UrSun Apr218 horseahoe brooch, 14K 5'6" A.B. Chaff Loui1 out. PP 548-73:s.5
w leaf. 3 side chairs. 1 lo . 3 Sm a.pp l ., whiteiold.&f.2..4087 XV. Ampico .reproduc-Bau/recreation boat, arm c:ha1r, xlnt cond, kitchenware, pictures, ing & grand piano. com· •
S200 64&-73S8 decor itema, lampa. Mhcel••-1010 pletely restored" reblt. many xtru. bell offer.
clothln1. ETC .. ETC., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plano originally bit ln 838-7l07 6'SOFA
•We w1 II pay $500 advance
•Stability -8 yrs. in the business
•Net up to $250 per week
Our company presently has 2.6M In advance,European "Fly-dm1e ·
contracts and wlll peak at 4. 7M
y...,.Round 1..-... IHot
Just Summerl L ... loeb-
We're The Experts
We encourage you to compare us ww1
others -Come in and check over our RESERVATION CHARTS
We Heed More 1979-81
M1n1·Motorhomes & BubDl•Top Van Conversions
Please Call or Write for Info On Leaseback of Your ()Mi RV or
1963 T Bard, wht ext .
blk wht ant. AC. like
new $280() 543-~
· 52 P ot Ca bro 1 let .
c:hass1s !115039, 90<(
restored Only serious
buyers need to r ail
714 774.6757
·73 EXCALJ BUR
Show car, S19.SOO firm
Sl0,000 cash. assume
lease, $200/mo. 673-7360
190t Olds Replica, $1500
or best offer. '62 Olds
F'&s convt. & '62 Starfire
F8S, both for S500.
631 3929
'48 Whizzermotor cycle
Brand nu cond. Only 10
m Is Must see to believe
ss.ooo 1702182.5-9173
'48 Studebaker Land
Cru1str Xlnt cond Sell
or trade 493-4761
95l0 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Dune buggy & trail~r.
clean. new eng .
-Like new, green pattern, Aotlque Estate Sale. SlOO 645 298S
Sat/Sun 1.500 Irvine Ave, - ----
ETC. Most thinp nearly Cookware. 2IO pc 1t.lnles1 1921. Like new·eood ln· 18' Bay Crw.ser wi red &
new . Nr O.C. Fair· steel waterleu. new, vestment. Collectors w ht ca n 0 p e t 0 p
ground• 557·99'78 won In contest, re1. k45. item Asking s20,ooo. Character Boat Parade
• RV Rentoll, Inc. .. , .. 15092 Harvard Ave
Irvine. Ca. 92714 (714)559-~
545-7996
4 Wheel Drfns 9550
Npt Bch ---.,,. .. " 1010 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HARBOR AREA
APPLIANCE SERVICE We buy used appliances ··We sell rec:ond. 1uar.
appliances. · 549-3077
tlUY AflPUAMCIS
I.fl 967-8133
P'rltldare w/bottom
fre.ur. 68"x32" Olive
Green S75. 54().3811 , art 8
561-1139.
G·E dbl oven ranae. 1
oYen 1elf.cJeanln1.
harvest 1old. suo.
851·5114 or f7S-03t t
GIANT RUMMAGE aacriflce 979-93&8 Hammond Organ & winner' Slip avail.
SALE&SWAPMEET IEDWOOOZX6's. Plano Center CdM . S2800IOBO 673·7873, Selling enllre house full
or furniture for living
rm, bdrm & dinin~ rm.
Everything near new,
must sell lmmed orrers·
c an help w/delivery
Sal. 9·2. Food. aames, Xlnt decking. 8-20' long. 644-8930 673·7677
Gisler 6: California. mill. 55t/ft. 646-988S loah, M..._ loah, M...... lcHlh, M--at1, M ......
C.M. anytime. ..!-!r.'~ ...•.. !~.~~ .. ~~••••••!!.~~ .. ~~~••••••!!.~! .. ~!!'~ ...... !~.~! 549·9010
boolt fair, bake sale. New load jwit in from ----------1 b
-----1 Two Family Garage Sale. Swap family tennis club
Early American maple 1979 Cad. Seville, furn, membership In Irvine
bdrm set , dbl bed, clothln1. children'• toys. for 1 orSSOo.833-3415
bookcaae hdbrd, mjrror movln1, lO/y'! of ac· Rua 10' X 12· Brown
& dre11er , desk & cumulation. Fri. 9-3pm, border, aquara/clrcles
matching swivel chair. Sat t -3pm. 1121 Port ln bri1ht autumn colors
548-"92. Stanhope. N.B. · Suo . ...,_21152
8 PC BDRM SET Gara1e Sale. Jt'1 a Bil· Lo ....... .
Helium Bouquets de·
livered . Perfect for
every occulon. 673-4419
Twin bed• wlhdbrd1, lie. 5()t to 1. 325 Either
dre11er. lamp tbl. desk, St, CM. (2 bib So. of
cabinet. white fonnica 20th, jUll E. ol Santa
tops, nocadol gold Ana St). SatoolyM.
bues,2matcbln11wivet Authentic plnball
chn. 1ood cood. '300. M 0 V l N G S A L E • machlu, late 80'1, 1ood
Muat sell by '128. cblldrena dotbela. Lob coad.S250.~*5
640-702IN.B. ol fllltc. M Sat• Sun.--------
152 ..... uen Street, GENUlNERUBJF.S
Sell with EASE! eo.ta ..... 11 .. del OolyhOpeutonel
Cla11lfled Ads 642·5671 Mar bom9. ..,_
The leader for 1981. • •
•••••••••••••••••••••••
lt71SUIAIU
4X411AT
This 4 wheel drive baa
low mites, is a strong
runner & is priced for a
quick sale! (365TDX).
MAKIOFFH
Olfer &ood Um.t 4/Z7 /81
TIMMOHS
VOLKSWAGIH
3940Cherry Ave.
LONG BEACH
(OPEN SUNDAYS)
1714112f·ll01
'74 4wd SCOt.rr bu l«t of
mile•. muat sell $2500
firm. Xlnt int. 875-52117
'71 Jeep pickup truck,
air, p1, pb, dlx cab,
12"0. PP, 1'1..-W
'7 4 Chevy •X4
w /ever1 th t n1 ,
Sloclll&Dd Camper shell,
catm lnt, duel 1u ta.Db,
body/en1 •Int cond ••
$4000491-5154
1981 T010ll .
TERCEL SEDAM
n c I udes 4 speed
Equ1pm.ent. I bucket seats .
trans m 1 s s ~ 0 ~Y side moldings &
pinstripes. ~dings . (238747). ~iw4l99
....
1981 TOYOTA
COROLLA SRS Equ .!~nfl!~~~.;~~~~'.
bucket seats. P 11 moldings. pinstripes & wheel we
1640$6261
1981 VOLVO . DL
2 Door Sedan . Automatic •
transmission, power steering, power
brakes, p1nstr1 pes, wheel well
moldings and morel (195177).
1981 VOLVO
DL
4 Door Sedan . Automatic
transm isslon and fully factory
equipped! (618254).
1981 VOLVO
DL
2 Door Sedan. 4 speed transmission.
e>ower steering, power brakes, wheel
well moldings. pinstripes and morel
(197825).
To£ TOYOTA
Equipment PICKUP
transmission includes 4 speed
Pa.nel, cnro~eo~e toucn tailgate
mirrors and ~mper, Del Bar •, $Ped (012888).lly factory
d9¥d TOYOTA
E!iPment N PICKUP
transmission '"gludes 4 speed
chrome rear .b el Bar mirrors
tailgate Panel umper, one touch
equipped. (0261 ~~f fully factory
$6306
1981 VOLVO
DL
5 Door Station Wagon. Automatic
t(ansmission, power steering. power
t5,:akes. pinstripes, wheel well
~ldlngs & morel (338338).
l
I
00/080.
!town Co. •HM.
'1-Ford 150, 17K ml.
.. Ice body, hyd.1ate.
250/0BO. Davi•·
wnCo.Ml-1114.
Ford 16' Oatbed, 1~
cood cood., S311do.
41561
Find what you want in
Daily Pilot Classifieds.
.... Used l.lltos. UHd ...........................................
1 tlO CADllJ.AC
COUPE DE vtLU
(60'ZSJ)
1979 CADllJ.AC
ELDORADO COUPE
(605655)
1978 CADILLAC smw
(798U0S)
t 977 CADILLAC
SEVILLE
(870SPK)
197' UMCOLM COMTIMIMT AL MAn Y CB24VPX)
~· ... °"""P_c-ttw 2825 Hartlor Blvd.
COSTA MESA ·
97f.2100
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
ANDTRUCkS
C OMM Ell
CHEVROLET
"""'I.HI .. , 111\"
•i:--1 \\1 ~"'
546-1200
'71 AUDI IOIO lid mllut•1
1Uver ..,.We, tull lu 6
pwr pach1•, urf. . -~ee••1 aoto, am/Im
. ,,. ..... CHI, •1000 141-1804
r' .v• wbldl PIM '1• AuclJ r•. xlt eon. ForYourCarl •m/hn tt.rfO. llUlttee·
JOHMSOM & SOM t1.•. Klm•1'a D1..nu•r ....... 'TJ DATSUN ~ t+t.
map, a/c, stereo, mt ~~~!!~~~~
U.C• Uercwy IMW . t712
2126 Harbor Blvd. ••••• •• •••••••••••••••• 'hltMs.t.
coad. 5UG41, 1-... .. _ ... eves 'Tl me. :m. ama. llmt 1-~-~~~----4 llel.IJfr~Q.OfU.MCN
'71 Dal.IUD l!mO, CHI ml. dy1 ,~~-Costa lleaa · S.0-5UO w.,.,
OVER ........
For Your Good
VW, Poncbe or Audi
. .. ... ·-. -. ( ~ ~ ...
VW -PORSCHE-AUDI
"5E. CoutHiway
at Bayside Drive
Newpqrt Beach 673-0900
Premium pricea
paid for any I.med ear
(forelp or domelltlc >
in 1ood oondlUoe. .
SeeU1Flntl
TOP Dollar for old can
running or not.
646-~
For'IbeS.t
Buy Or Leae Deal
ID Oraqe County ...
Come S.. Ua Today!.
&
OMLYnt c ..... ,...,, ........ u
%1402 ........ ,".
-~· IJI· CIOled Sunda1 '
alnt eood, muat tell. '7t 3000 Sunt0-of,
bOOo. S.Jl74 am/rm. $11.aoo/Wlll
'7lllOWGN,am/fmcM1 trade.sGSl.Na-71111 1
root rack, uld.nf U700 ._ --'edo, wbl w/aaddle ' 411-152'1 •• -• ,_....__.,._ ____ -f lat, a1nt Hed. SUOO.
·11 Da~ 1100 P u • 14&-'1!093 d11, H4-1n1
nma, tJSll "~ evet 1
49'7·2133 '71 2808! I .I, new ea1.
'79 320i Topaz, wen eared .... t1JI pain~ batt. •tires. Mint
for please call. ~16 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~d.873-6311J 2140UhriruerttePkwy. rorappt&c>1ee. ... .... T 1•4•-D11
...... Viejo "... A ~' llBZ '71 aoc bht/blu,
Aveeyftwy.uil '7IB11\1rm,a1atcona.t lW7t, xlntcond, 10 ml, alnt c ond s2.ooo mi (ofU P'reewa1> 1pd anthracite 1ray-priced for lmmed. sale. .. ,_,1 ......_ ,... .,.....,. • IJl·Z040 4tMt4t belle. 34,000 mi, Sll,ooo. 494~77&,'2!2'3 •11·""" uuu ........ _...
CJoeedSundaya PP, 842-3433. • J '11 x19 ... coad am/fib '11. ~I>. 4 dt9edan, sun-
'71 BllW DK. Full eqft. tape .:..,.. tainl.
0
10 mpt • ~~:~.:i c!ctST'~
Nu tires • clukh . .,..u SHOO. Call AnewerAi <213>..._.m dy1 c'n4)
malftl. rcrcl. Mint cond. .,_, .. ~. sst•• eves/wlmd1.
Bat of r . Wk n d I eve '7I ·-R 1: .. .a.. h•t 9 1 u • llOAOWAY 714/511-4015 ~ any ...... c ""ry MUSTSELL!!
SANTA .... reel, Jtla( cood. AM/ FM '80 MBz 3000
8 •&3171 C.,n f715 stereo, llU radials, 31K Llc.1AHGe17 15\-7700 .a · · ••••••-••••••••••••• .. • ml,12800. ~
TH(UlTIMAlfllfllV*OllllACHIHl 1,1,CAPIJ ... fJJJ tif61 f744
•USED IMW1• Thia coupe baa aa ••••••••••••n••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
·1as.30lA <542'1> automatic traoa.. pwr. visrr YOUI 1 t7t M$1 '79120i (75IO) 1teerin1. air cond .. " IOADS18
'11120lAS/R ('109) oustotn iaterior, 4 eyl. OIAHelCOAST Newlop,AM/FM stereo
CR E VIER
'IOS111Asunrf. (0013> en1ine & ruru great! H ~D _.. tape, excellent condi-'IU20iA (0115) (31511Y0). Vf"llll A uon, one owner car 6
C-..ciS••11• ONLY $3595 MIAD~AITllS tow mites <40679G >. HIGH IUYH !Amlos. '11p a iec1
Top dollan for Sports ••••• • •••••••••••••• ••• Ca~•· Bu~. Campers, /.ff••-t705
914 •• Audi s ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIRA.CU MADA TO •yru MOW S1411 '71 SJ&A 21.SO Harbor Blvd. A • • • Offer Jood t.b.ru 4/271111 Ask for U/C MGR Alloy wheels. alereo COSTAMESA UNIVERSITY TlttttOMS
c auelle, power win-645-5700 SALES6SERV1CE V01 ~ ... #'!..-.. dowa, 13,800 or111nal --------~""--11:11"" JIM MAil.iMO LEASE
VOLKSWAGEH DIRECT' • 18711 Beach Blvd • miles, exceptionally .73 GoodCond 73K~i OLDSMOllLI 3940CherryAve.
n 1 c e ! PRICED T 0 S?.000/0BO ' HONDA LONG BEACH H UNTINGTON BEACH
142-2000
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAN
USED CARS!
SELL!! (9VPY) 54S-969'7eves 4iMCTIUCIS <OPEN SUNDAYS>
CrnlerMoton 21150HarborBlvd 17141121-1301
lat & Broadway D.._ 9720 COSTA MESA 11 ~
1911 ALFA.
SPIDERS
Santa Ana 835-3171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.~t O -S'' ~ Dynamite British racing IEACH IMPORTS 761MW 1t HOMO green "B" roadster. lts
8411 Dove Street 2002 4 apeed. Very clean OVER lNVOICE Dynamlle CVCC 1 epeed '..!.!.RH ea k y c I ea n .
NEWPORT BEACH local car. (121RKJ.) SAU hatchback. Clean, low (NU"J )
75J..0900 .$569' ON ALLZ!Olfr310. miles. (134WRN> Sll'5
'71 R--JIM MAltlMO IN STOCK!!! S3HS JIM MAI.IMO ~• YOU:SWA.-. Plua dealer added a c-YOLKSWAGEH Yll.OCICOUPI 11711 Beac:b Blvd. ceaaortea. Can subject JIM MAI.IMO 11711 Beach Blvd. Red with bladt IDterior. to Pfk>r sale. Sale ends VOLISWA.a. 14 •• -... Grun di& 1tereo, air 14Z.2000 4/rT/11 at cloM of busi-18711 Beach Blvd _ .. _,,
eond .• GoU1 wbeela ... lm· 1--,..-...... --.-.---· MU. Ad mwt be pre-14Z·UOO o-1 t746
maculate! (l7CllS).M Li aented at time of 1--------;.~;~•••••••••••••••••• OMLY •.a795 ,_.Ofy_. =... '7t Prel~. am/fa\ '7• 0.-1 Manu, berfun· .. IMW .._ h11 Or wi ~0ATSUt4'. radio,, Sep, mooo root. ..-.0,~ ... -·~ ri " ..-~, dy,vin,tw,,$2,009. -·---Le.e c...... -!>Ke~ Xlat rood sa-42$7 955-1S98 ~=-:~ McL--IMW!! NEWPORTBEACH 76HOMDA--t741
640 6444 hy Orlw IJJ.UOO CVCC HATCHIACIC ~~! .............. .
'71 SPRINT VELOCE,
fUuy equtp'd, a.Int. road.
Best ofr. over .... 000.
5S7-021111
ly Ow,._,._. 71 DATIUM ZIOZ Hondamatic radio •NA LEAS• 17141522-1333 Dynamtte41peed coupe. healer C I ea n ! Dl~.I GolAI beauty. Very clean. (124RRT) """-I
(l!f{JDD> SZ6ts 711MW
Dynamite 2IClll2 2 door
1 Have somfthioa to aell? AutomaUe, air, ltereo. S6HS JIM MA.lttMO
JIM MAllMO VOWW A4iEH I ti I PEUGEOT TUllOs ~=====~~ Classified ads do it well. ·Low mils. It'a 1queaky -clean. (41JNKQ) ~ u .. d IA.Mto•. u .. d ••••••••••• !~-~~~ .. ~ ........ ~ ... ~~~ ........... ~ ... ~~~........... JIM~~L ~~~~;................. .....••..••. ~~
YOLISW ACHH 18Tll Beach Blvd.
ll'7ll 1*dl Blvd. 141-1000
.__ __ l _a.._1_000 ___ 1910 ( door A ccotd. llACH IWORTS
848 Dove Street
NEW POttT BEACH . ,
.. '
YOLUWAMH
18711 Beaeb Blvd .
14Z.1000
lt711MW zoozcoUPI
Automatic t.ram., air
cond., All-FM •lereo
ca11ette and LOW
llliMe! (...CA).
ONLYSIHS
MIUCUMAJDA
21.SO Harbor Blvd.
COSTA•ESA
641-1700
7tlMW
Dynamite 2 door
automatic. Air, stereo.
Slk . Very c l e an.
(471SYH)
$74tl
JIMMAllMO
YOLUWA,HH
11111 Buch Blvd.
14Z.ZOOO
lt71DATSUM
IJIOGX
G~. lllnt cood . tabc>.
551-95.·aft 4 pm.
lJftbacll model with • '79 Accord LX. 2dr. Air,
speed trans .• air cond.. auto, Am/Fm case, ps,
All/Fii radio, rear pb. Rec IA'· 17,000 ml. shadow ft only n ,ooo 16,aoo 87~00 miles! <209VZZ). ,_..;.._._· _____ _
M':1~s.:z::. .~.r.!' ............ !?.~~
21.50Harbor Blvd. '67 la"'ar 3.11 llK US all COSTA MESA ori1. very well main·
641r 1700 tained Must Sacrifice
r 846-IS70
'11 E·type2+2Vl2.
11 .•orit mi.
IG-2191
71%-0HO
74~
DllSIL 504 sunroof •edan. 4
speed fr .tereo. Papers
o n fre s h en1ine .
(059LP'F)
1m1
JIMMAUeO
YOLISWAea.
18711 Beach Blvd.
142·2000
t7SO
TH EvOORE
ROBINS
FO RD
/( f>O H/111 ~<10 IHVO
(l)'>lll Ml ~A (>•ll fl,11(l ---
JR
. ROY
R CARVER
ROLLS-ROYCE
IMfJ•m"'ff HewHr1 lkacll \.__ _ __,..,.....
ClOSfO SUNDAYS
C.onnier·Delillo
CHEVROLET
HUNTINGTON BEACH
USED 1:11 & USED · TRUCI
INVENTORY SALE! 1-
CHEVROLETS
ILUI YOU MODEL 100• SAYI
'80 Camara 197!1.l s72g511 s1110"
'80 Corvette 1t11• /S}43801D S981'1
'79 Chevette ••169 s355011 s42511
'80 Camara .... s7035u Sl48511
'80 Monza . ., .. S5465ll SJ6611
'80 Camara "'36 S850Qll s975u
'79 Impala .. 1 •• s530011 S8Ql 11
'79 Nova 19703 '493018 '731 11
'79 Malibu t9tfl6 s52gooo '88100
'77 Malibu 10119e s3535u SJ3600
OTHER MAKES
'79 Bonneville 10611 ssg1500 '1316°0
'80 Trans/ Am ·-'8650°0 s1025u
'78 Olds Cutlass ·~ .. m ssgo511 SI 10611
'79 Fireb1 rd ••1M S6195 11 '905 11 . '79 Pontiac •Otl7 s612s•0 Sfi2611
77 Cutlass 1992• s4sgoo a Sfi05DO
'79 Cadillac 19114 S1QQ6Qll SI461 00
79 Buick •088:1 s7035 oo S836ll
77 Cutlass ·-$ s39g500 s53511
'79 Buick "'" s7050°0 sg25oe
TRUCKS & VANS
'79 Chev Luv 4x4 0 73J '655000
'78 Chev 4x4 P .U. -s500500
'79 Chev Pick-up •9143 '7490 90
'79 Chev Pick-up "'91 '548511
'79 Ford 'h Ton Pick-Up ... SS300°0
'74 Chev 'h Ton Pick-up S282011 .
IMPORTS
'77 280Z .... TolJ> '6820''
'77 Celica .. , s47501 •
'78 Trium~ TR-7 *'1 sss9011
s95po
s53ooo
s97ou
sg5011
s72511
s321•1
s22111
Sl)} 11
SI21511
SM.I r11c1
$6175 11
s13399••
'3125 11
'555011
'469911
s752511
s449911
s4199u
. s4399u
s3199u
s4499eo
SJ62511
S4699"
'529011
s5599•o
s3975u
sg59911
S6199°'
s3450~1
S6225°1
559911
s5475 11
S6525"
'462511
S557511
s249911
S659911
s439911
S467511
10 VW VAHAGON
'L ' Model automatic
with stereo. Save!
(~2737)
Sltt5
JIMMARINO
VOLISWACHN
1871J Beach Blvd.
142-2000
ORA NCH COUNTY
VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
in Oranae County!
BUY or LEASE
DIRECT
-------1 10 120 Garden Grove 81 77 VW SCIROCCO Garden Grove 530-9190 Dynamit e Pearl
metallic 4 speed Xtra ~-----
clean , shows loving 75 VOLVO
care (079681) I Dynamite 242 4 sPffd
$4695 I A i r c o n d 1 l 1 o n e d
JIM MARINO Original sharp car .
VOL.OW AGBI <003023>
18711 Beach Blvd. U9'S
142-2000 JIM MARINO
VOLKSWAGEN '60-'65 VW left & right 18711 Beach Blvd
door, '73 left door. S5o 142-2000
each. Western style whl i--------
rims for Super Beetle 1980 Volvo DL, lOK mi,
$20ea . ~~ AM/FM stereo, AC, xlnt
'79 VW Westphalia
Xlnt cond, lo m1, sips S,
steteo, am/fm tape
deck, Ice box : sink, elec.
hook·up & more. S9800.
Call 8111 o r Clair e ,
831·5350.
11 VWDllSEL
'LS' Model S speed. Fae·
tory air, s unroof,
ca11etle, auxiliary t.aok.
Only sooo miles. FulJ
warranty. Slate grey.
Dynamite! (1BOR969)
S79'5
JIMMARINO
VOLKSWAGBI
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
Super Beetle, '72, new
reblt eoa., good ml., sun-
rf, $1800. 673-1210
74YWDASHa Deluae 4 door wagon. 4
speed w i th air .
Dynamite! (6441.IO)
S21t5
JIMMARIMO
VOLICSW A'iEN
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
'79 VW Westlalla Cmpm-
ble. Stove, refr, am/Im
cas1, sleeps 5, 2lmpa, lo
mis. SS$00/0BO n1hta
1'1~.
•ea VW. reblt 1600, dual
earbe, cuatom in • out.
Saerifice$3000. a.tuo
1'70 VW Camper Van,
new ••.• szaoo.
NMMO,Jlm
cond. $9,000. 646-7596
lf77IUICIC
SIYHAWK cou" Llftback JDOdel with an '71 EL 001lADO BIAll-
autom atlc trao1., air RITZ · Leather lnterior,
cond. Ult wheel Is rallye tilt, cruile. Uc. 47800F
wheel.. (93'1TJC). -k750 • Jolmloo "Soa
OMLY SJ 195 LiDcotn Mercury • eo.ta
MIUCU MAIDA lleu 540-5aO
2150Harbor BJvd.
*Brand New 81 Chevy
Impala Four-door!
No 720716309 Wtlh auto Only .
trans overelnve pwr 8 •
steering & brakes. rae110,
radial whites. 11lt wheel. $809 air cond . etc
No . 1a391so31 with Only •
4 -spd trans , pwr.$6798 1teenng & brakes. radial •
whites. tinted glass. V6 •
engine. etc ......_ _________________ ~
•Brand New '81 Chevy
Caprice Classic Four-door!
No. 1769/6231 with air Q ly
cond . auto trans.. n
AM/FM, sport mirrors. '879 wire wheel cove,.., speed
control. ove<-drrve and
more
•Br111d New '81 C•vy
Malbu 4-Dr. Statiln W111n!
• :
f
DOWM DILIYIU AMY
YINCU IM STOC&J PUis TAX ... uc .. sa
ONUP.CHDIT •unuot
MOCt•rT7
•MIWIM
CALOOIMIA7
•HIWOH
YOUt JOU
• SHOITOM
DOWMPAYMIMT1
•SLOW
CUDIT Hl$TOlY7
•MIUTAIY7
WEE CAN H LP!
MIW 1910
FIESTA
2 DOOR SEDAH
PINTO
l DOOR lUMAIOUT
5 11~ 5 126~
(Stl< 24'51){356740) !Stk. 27161(174'8971
fl• ...... IM & --•• 1tOO -!or to Ii• -,_ & - -l t2'M -'°'to ~c---....--pl ....... -·--~,....-t1115100p1W-·-...
-Ollet't9d ...,_I ....... -1712' " -,.__ a.....o ----1122" Of ,.,,. 112"1o.
HEW 1911
•
0 ESCORT SDtbB![
(Stk. 0432)(206'71)
II• oh.e 1&1 & I--112'•-lor IO "'°"'"° c .. n --111221 13 pl"' l&JI ~ .. nM a -._ Oolloned pey,.,.nl ptlc. -8'36e 31 -ti~
MEW 19 I
FAIRMONT
2 DOOR SEDAH
5 149~
MEW 1911
COURIER
514!42™
(Stk. T0073) (505090)
"" p•uo ._ & --t t4.241_.,lor10
"'"""'" CUI> --lf7f7.23 ...... ta. --. ~ :.~ .... Oelwred ,..._1 ----.m
MEW 1911
MUSTANG
2 DOOR SEDAM s1sr-
(Stk 0520)(167761\ (Stk. 0481)(113314')
11• o11.e...., a --,,.,oo""""""" eo 11• pi...• 1 - -11u.11 _ ..,., =-~::-_;; ::-.:i.=:. ':; =~ ~.:;:.;:.::~-=':":-=~
MEW 1981
GRANADA
2DOO.S9AM
5 155~
($11< 033-4) (110377)
"" pl .. l&JI • ~--l t6$ .. -"" '° "°""" C0611 P<OC. -162" 4A pi .. .._. -a --()ollw..O ....,._.., --110 °'"" t7 -•• ,,.,.
MEW 1911
VAN
Et 00 CARGO
5 165~
(Stk TP211 J (35565)
,, .. pl ..... 1--11M•-1oreo
-.tno CW!.,,_ -.... M pl.-IH -I dOC ... DelwTed ......... ,.,.... -110.11• 00. _ ,, .,,,.
MEW 1982
EXP
l DOOt SPORT COUPE
5 18~HTH
(Stk 0542) (105805)
fl• plo.-..... ·--11• .. -"" '° --c.... ..--m 111• _ .._. -·-.... .,...,,,..~ pllc.-112_ 1Ml3. ""111.lll!o>
NEW 1911
PICKUP
Ft 00 STYLESIDE
5 158~
(Slk T04'94) (24'876) ~~~~ ·~.::=:-..: ... ~P9r'W"·--~21131."'4112"11.
MEW 1910
LTD
2 DOOR SEDAH
5165!!111M
(Stk. 2321 }(111774')
11• pl.,. IP & --lt16• -lor IO .....,. c;..,, P'IOe -•m St 114.,. 1u, -& -. .. o.1 .. ..o_.ipnco-110 ... IO """'._°"
1911
T-BIRD
TOWMLAMDAU 5 274~
(Stk. 0115) (116067)
'1M pl\<I tu & ....._ _,, 12707 -... 10
,__ ~pr1ee -110.ns•o1 ... --a -... o.tlrred IMIJ.-.t,.,.... -111..11•• ..,,. .
ROBINS-READY TRADEINS
OVER I 00 TO CHOOSE FROM!
....................•.. ...................... ...................... ...................... ... ._ ................ . ~~ .~~ ~ ~~~ ~~
C:_.. "17ct..NW tf20C1"'"* " ...... ff ttsist•1 tfll ...................... ...................... .................•..... ...................... ...................... . ..................... .
C ... Hll ''NC.WO "11lapela8t.1'P· AC, IHOWIOOMC:OMD. 'llPAIRltONTwtdll.• ••• ortt. ~.It blue,
•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Air, atdcllDatie, powtr P81P8; Xliltcioed. -.0. '11T·TOP ...U., • eJt, pwr • ...,. hdtoP, •qt, fOOd cood, ,. C841 DMM&. atvr oa 1tetriQ. rr,•1 aUltl, Call....,,,.. Power bnk•, powu tac. a.to; tra.., ·uc. t..a.-.n
tlvr. Ill Hlrll, xJnt (.VE() . wtadow• ,.,......,.... BIO.·--J---
eoad, tOg ml, tHOO. ..,. ~:~La~. wltb ult/ttleeeopla1 • '-~ ~ · M•t111."' I door, •lnl
tTl-mt Ba,.,..tmpol'.ta Imo na.me ,,. · tlttrl:/ "'"'· air. Costa ...... -eo.4 •• blllt otter. Pvt
'11 ILACXCAD IJl.JJI I . t9JI er::ow •:f:t:a;:z llM• Ha ,pt1.Ml--;IM-tm
Loaded.uil taoo -v• •I• --'r--·u-•utom•Uc &raDI •••••••••• ..... • .. ••••• •Mu.tans, daaaic. JO:I • ... I .. ,..., -~ ... ...,, ....................... • 77 •-01M ... uto pb II ....._ ;abtt ~ IDllll1 atru, "1t LE BARON WAGON wb.lte wtth Bur&UIM!y lo· ~ -.. • a • pe, • am m 'TJ St Ult X1nl CC>Od t~ .... ....-r Town It eouot,.y rib tmor. rr,aoo llUNa. Im· J tt black/black taa tc a•' , r u o • • l n t,
1y lov dtd / nd J root rack IMtl 6 maculate tbno1at I Mdan. Lollded ud cm1J 1'00 080.toa.I
m11 asuO:. •::e.ooa~ 'Tl CAMAl\O XIDt. CC>Od. wtnd~a. IC"al'Nt.111 · ::':a.:a.io~~ Ad t!;OO:.~sito;: =-OWl••fall ttll Mi-0518 lluat .... S.. ~ · Jobmoa II 5oa ' . <•RSK> ' ••••.-••••••••••••••u•• ...... Unc:oln ... tcury ·Colla H33 14"1 '12 DELTA ROYAL rwu
1'77 IDV, blu., clean. l'T7 C with T lleHNO-faO .... ••••••............ JIMM+ee? excellentllOOO. '
1barp. •o50. PP. lllntalQTtowbe .top. '7I CORDOBA wtt.lt IUD· "7SC0\10AJlXll-71eatur· ,.. ..,.._,.. ~-5402af\er6pm.
T51·4f42 dya, S5t·587' con Ma. .. r. roof AM/JJ& 1tereo lnt 'P•r. wtndon, fae-YOLllSW.._. '71 Toronado, loaded. evea bH~tlluJJv -ulp-d'. to.ry air eond., 1tereo. 11711 Jltach Blvd. d
'M Cad. Sec14n DeVille, Qey...... H20 Lie. ZOHN ':'t4tii • ~!fm.:,2~~ ~ 14Z..2000 :t~•t c:•:-:0 ~ 1 ~a~vd~
119, pb, alr. elec window1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobaton 6 Saa Lloeoln I ll•rcury . eo.ta Mesa '71 TOWN SEDAN fuUy tl.500/080. tu-5845
& 1eat, am/fm radio. re-511 US FllSTl Mercury · Calta Mesa S40-MIO loaded, lncl. power wln·
cent valve Job" like new We have a aood .election S40-5UO ,.,. COUG dow1 " ae1t1 . Lllll· '90 Curt•• Bram Sed.
tiNI. Loob pod rwu o l N E W-• USED ff JO W AR XR·1 wttb uriou. ! Uc. muKH . S7500 or take over leue 1ooc1. s1ooo. 54MI08. cbevroletat ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~d!~u~;~ S5Sll50 . Johmon • Son ::~~~.::,~d, vs.
1'73SdV,xlntcood.$1500. 7,~0LM $7950 · Jobmon ill Son ~:~=ury . Coeta • ......._ 9917 COHHEll
CHEVROLET L l It e new I eat her. MAB IY Liocoln lilerCUI')' · ea.ta _________ , ... _
Michelina. 8'2-6361 D )' D. ID l t. c: 0 up. . Mesa 54C).5a() W..trick ,, .. , ~······················ Loaded I All the toya. _ _. , ••••••••••••••••••••••• 80 PINTO with economy
."'\.,. j far l llli or H1.
••r-.l\\11'-I
SU-1200 ffl7 -======= Sharp. ClAJHf17) ,.....,. "40 '70 Maverick, 2 dr 3 ipd, ~. cyl • pwr 1le~rlnP,, SMtl •• ••••••••••••••••••••• aood ruonl.n& cond saoo Ford Fader)' Driven .
., .. l.t.4
U_,C..JI
'71Ch., .. c .... zza,.y ..
Stereo, mat whee11,
power windows " door loch. 33,cpl mllet.
(SSlVQE)
$5995
w.tWt •IM uaaauA '75 Torioo 4Dr, auto, PIS, 957-6057 ' radio Lie. 169ZEP -
CLEAN '73 MONTE ,. ---P /B, A/C nu tlrH k797 · Johnson & Son
CARLO. Sliver w / YOUCSWA•.. clean, PP Slets: Mffcwy "'°Lincoln Mercury .Costa
burtundy interior. Air 11111 Beach Blvd. 551·2889. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Meu 540-5630
cond., AM/Fii cu.ette. 142-2000 '80 LTD WA,,..rv.i . "Ford ORANGE COUNTY'S '79 Squire Stat Wg~. aut; power br.U., 1teertn1. vv., F9415T Sl.500 7t8-SU'7 •n MARK V with full Factory Driven", roof LINCOLN-MERCURY 14K ml, xlnt cond S3950.
---------• power incl. Ult, c..W.e, rack, air cmd., 1tereo, DEALERSHIP S48-1486or640-2415
'79 Cbevette. lo mi, al e, air. Lie. OTZZX!: · S5779 · Lie. 854ZGZ · '6997 · rowffoc 9961
auto, tilt, very clean. Johuon Ir Son · Uncoln JMohDlon & Soo ~coin ~--li'Jf.dcl•« ••••••••••••••••••••••• 966-1285 Mercury · Costa Meu ercury · Costa Meu ~ T~ ~ • '78 Boanevlll.e 4dr Sedan .
'78 Chevette, 4 dr, 4 apd, S40-5630 54().563() LINCOLN·MERCtJRY gd cond. Must sell
a le, AM /FM, 17,000 '79 MARK V beautiful 73 LTD Waaon, 460 en1. l&·l8 AutoCent.erDr Sacrifice d)'11 : 1164·6468;
mi's. $3900. 963-6583. metallic: with carriage AM /FM stereo, PS, PB, SD Fwy.1,.k Foreet exit eve1: 964·5355.
---------1 roof fully lo.lded full •Ir. Sm. 5'7-4749 .~1:,..'j:o '65 Tempest. runs good,
'70 Caprice, ~· J>9, pb, po~er arouf .
0
Lic ., new tires, $67S Must
am/fm radio, UOO or S87WWG · USO · Eager buyers read lbe '79MARQU1S4doorw1th aell.Krll,751·5100
beltoffer. llM-4809 Johnaon It Son Uncoln Clau1fled ads every factory air AM/FM
'nNOVA Mercury · Costa Me1a day .If you have stereo. Llc .. 627YBO '74Ventura,6 cyl,auto.
BESTOFFER S40-S630 something for sale_. re-SS650 . Johnson " Son new brakM, good mpg, ~5602 ach ~heJ' rut and a.nex· Lincoln Mercury . Coat a xlnt buy. Suoo 839 0175 _ 642·56'78 pensive y,call&U-5678. Mesa5'0-~ evu, 898-018S_dys
Ailto1, Mew 9100 Aado1, Mew 9100 Aado1, He• 9100 •76 Montego MX auto '78 FIREBIRD Esprit
•••••• • • • ••••••••••••••, •••••• •••• ••••••••••••• ••••••• • • • • • ••••••••••• ••••••• •• • • •••••••••••• radio, a / c., new batterY x.lnt cond loaded w JC .
NEW I 2 MERCURY LN-7
57995
, .. llll*IOJ
I
MEW '81 MERCURY L YHX s5
I
MIW '10 MllCUIY JIPHYI
56397
$1300 ~4935 traa. pp 549-9444 da)S.
SS2·7013 eves
'78 MON ARCH with --
AM /FM stereo, pwr n.-dtrtMrd 9970
windows, factory air ~·•••••••••••••••••••••
cood . Lie. 008UNQ . '11 T Bird, lo m1lea1?t'.
13"7 . Johnson & Son loaded. new top & t•rl's
Lincoln Mercury . Costa 557·8888
Mesa 540-5630 '73 T bard. loadt'd,
'80 ZEPHYR with only
11 ,000 miles, 4 cyl. .
Xlnt shape Si750
pp 963·6!r7S
bucket seats, stereo. '82 T . Bird. Xlnt l'Ond.
Lie. 801ZEE · $4797 · Low mileage S6000, call
Johnson & Son Lincoln 492.01s2
Mercury · Cost Mesa 540-5630 v... 9974
Mllshmtc) 9952 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'78 Mu•t•ng II Ghia, dk
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f AIDA\' APRIL l4 1Sint ~ A r.., , t . ' , • ) ) ~ ( t N I ~>
' . Fe~r ·can't keep ' Aoki frQrn iltinger
'ACTUALLY. I'M UNHAPPY'
Millionaire Rocky Aoki
Adventurer swapping boat for balloon
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OttMo.itf"91Mlltt
Rocky Aoki oueht to be a happy man.
A high school a nd college wrestling champ in
Jap-an, he competed in the 1960 Olympics.
He's gone from busboy to board chairman of
Benihana of Tokyo, running SO restaurants in the
U.S. and 25 in Japan.
He socializes with Muhammed Ali and Flip
Wilson.
He's a world-class backgammon player and
has produced Broadway plays and a film.
An avid power boat racer. he won the
Bushmills Grand Prix at Newport Beach in 1976.
HE'S WRITTEN FIVE business books in
J apan. including one that made the best seller
hsts .
The last time <1nyone counted, he was worth
$40 million.
"Actually, I'm a very unhappy person," Aoki,
42, said Wednesday during a meeting with re-
porters in a Costa Mesa restaurant. "I'm a very
1nsecUtt person."
Aoki claims political or economic cnses may
be on the horizon . and even his good fortunes could
takl-a tum for the worse
But when he beg.ins talking about the com-
peUUve drive that has characterized his business
career as well as his sporting exploits, any
evidence of depression vanishes.
"I think winning makes happiness." said the
"Winning makes happiness.
hazardous competition helps overcome
fears."
diminutive bw;inessman, a Japanese citizen.
"WHEN I RACE I~ AN offshore power boat,"
he says, "I forget about m y business problems for
two hours.
"( have 50 restaurants here. and I have 50
headaches."
Some would say he also has a death wish.
In 1979, he was aboard a l ,300·horsepower rac-
ing boat that was ripped apart by waves off San
Francisco. Aoki almost died from his inJuries.
Doctors re moved his spleen and gall bladder
and performed bypass heart surgery. He has un-
dergone additional operations to repair nerve
damage in his leg and wnst
Aoki's doctors have ordered him to give up
<See ROCKY. Page A2>
'AFRAID Of' HEIGHTS'
But m balloon race
O.lly " ... ,_
FIERCE COMPETITOR
·wrnnmg 1s Happiness'
Man who struck priest tells w .. y
Defendant in Seal Beach case testifies on own behalf
By DAVID K UTZMANN
Of t,,. o.llJ ~ltec SI.tit
Ignor ing the advice of his
lawyer , murder defendant
Ronald Spring test1f1ed JO his
own defense. describing how a
bizarre 8 -year st•arch for a
woman he once knf'w "casuall y"
led to his assault on an elderly
Seal Beach Catholic priest
But Spring, 33, a square-jawed
Vietnam veteran who s~rved in
the Air Force. said Thursday he
never meant· to harm or kill
Father Felix Doherty when he
punched him at the rear door of
the rectory of St Anne's
Catholic Church in Febr uary,
1980.
The d efendan t , advised
against taking the witness stand
by C hi e f Depu t y Publi c
Defender Ronald Butler, said ht
struck the 64-ycar old clen c in
the head whe n he believed
Father Oohert) had rebuffed
him
"I THOl'GllT hE· "as pulling
me off as far <1s thl' mformat1on
I wished.'" Sprmg told 1ururs m
Orang<' County Superior Court
Judge James K Turner's
courtroom
F a ther Doherty . who was
treated by Seal B eac h
paramedics for a small head
wound after the assault, coJ-
Father Doherty when the clent
told him lo go around to tht•
front door
Believing he w<1s being re
buffed, Spnng satd he "ste pped
closer'' to the priest, who was
.. I went to push him rthe Rev. Doherty) out of the
way. In the rush of the moment I struck him."
lapsed and. died several weeks
lat er from brain injuries as·
sociated w1th the blow.
Spring, a Long Beach resident
who worked at several odd job&,
said he wanted to discuas mar·
rying the woman he was seekin8
when he drove his chopper-style
motorcycle to St. Anne's on Feb.
9. 1980
THE DEFENDANT, who said
rather Doherty had given him
food and laundry money on pre·
v1ous ()('Cas1ons, testified that he
attempted to talk with the priest
;.it the back door of t he rectory
However, be('ause he was
wearing his motorcyde helmet .
Spring said he misunderstood
standin1 in the doorway holding
the screen door open.
··1 went to push him out or the
way." the witness said. This re-
s ulted in the elderly cleric llftina
his righ\ hand and knock.in& Spr-
ing's band away.
"Jn the rush of the moment."
Spring sald. "I struck him."
ASKED BY Buller H he had
any intent to harm or kill the
priest. the accused murderer
said he hadn't. "It shocked me.
what I had done," he said. "I
knew what I'd done was bad ..
Spring said he had been look-
ing for a woman na med Twyla
Suggs s ince 1972, when he
Judge flays editorial
Brands article on rapists' sentencing 'irresponsible'
Presiding Orange County
Superior Court Judge Robert E
Rickles. in an unusual and un -
precedented defense of another
Judge, lashed out at ed1tonal
('rilic1sm of the sentencing of
three Vietnamese rapists sent to
prison for 100 years or longer
Reacting to comments m an
Orange County n('wspaper
editonal that said the sentences
"verged on viciousness." Judge
Ri ck les said Thursday fellow
Superior Court Judge Fran('isco
Briseno was to be commended
for his handling of the case
"I feel <the editorial\ was ir
responsibly done because 1t was
done without any mvestigalion
whatsoever." Rickles said
HE ALSO labeled the editorial
as being "intempe rate " and "in·
accurate."
The newspapH. the Orange
County Register~ had questioned
the le ngth of prison terms
.. anded down by Briseno last
week for three of four teen-age
refugees convicted of multiple
kidnap, rape. robbery and sex
ual misconduct counts stem
ming from six rape incidents
last year
Sentenced to 118-year state
prison-terms were brothers Bo
Quoc Pham, 18. and Dung Quoc
"The editorial was also in-
temperate and inac -
curate.··
Pham. 18. A third defendant.
Minh Quang Nguyen , a lso 18,
was given a 100-year term.
A f'OURTH DEFENDANT in
the case. 17 -yea r -old Tung
Thumh Le, is undergoing
diagnostic studies at the
California Youth Authority.
Formal sentencing for Le. a
minor. wUI take place in about
three months.
Because state law requires
that two-thirds of a sentence be
ser ved before a prisoner
becomes eligible for considera-
tion for parole. the sentences
.
~
mean that the eldest three will
rem am in prison the resl of their
Ii ves.
Rickles said Briseno could
have piled on even more years
because of the nume rous counts
on which the defendants were
found guilty
THE PH~M BROTHERS and
Ng uyen were convicted by a
jury on more tha n so felony
counts. Le was round guilty on 4-0
charges.
The presiding judge said man·
datory sentencing laws passed
by th~ s tate Legislature would
have required prison terms or
more than 250 yea rs for the
Phams a nd 246 yea r s for
Nguyen.
Le, he saJd, could be sent to
state prison for 186 years when
he returned to court in three
months.
RICKLES CLAIMED pros-
ecutors could in fact appeal the
judge's sentences because they
<See VIETS. Paie .\2)
thought he spotted her in a
Chicago bus station 1n the com·
pany of two pnests
He said he had ong1nally met
lhe woman m Long Beach in
1965 JUBt before entering the
service
Beltev1ng she may have
become a nun, Spnng said he
visited and called numerous con-
venta over an ei&bt-year period.
"I was concerned with her
happiness and well-being," be
testified.
OF OBSCEN ITY laden
telephone conversations he
made to Chicago church officials
only days before Father Doherty
was assaulted, Spring said he
was intoxicated, angry and lone-
ly when he placed the calls.
ln those taped conversations,
Spring told church officials "to
clean out" convents an Chicago
and send Miss Suggs back to
him.
Otherwise. he had said, he
would "stomp" a chur('h offi cial
1f nothing was done.
fn an earlier unrecorded call
<Sf'e PRIEST, Page A2 > -------
O.Uyl"lletl...,.,_
DEFENDS SENTENCES
Judge Robert Rickles
OellY ...... ~Ronald Spnng testifies "I knew what J 'd done ttXU bad," t:mt 1aid
he ner>er meant to harm or lall Catholic µnest who dted after
be~ng struck m~eal Beach a year ago.
Russ grain embargo
lifted by Reagan
WASHINGTON <A P > Press·
dent Reagan said loday he 1s hft·
in g the gr ain embargo agumst
the Soviet Union
ln a stateme nt read to re
porters at the Whit(' House. the
president said he was lifting the
embargo "after weighing all op
tions carefully and conferring
fully with my advisers."
R ea d by deputy press
secr etary Larry Speakes. the
s tatemen t al so referred to
Reagan's opposition as a pres·
1denlial candidate to the em·
bargo and said the decision to
lift the ban was delayed out of
concern the Soviets might "mis-
t a k e nl y think it indicated
weakening of our position ."
THE EMBARGO was imposed
by fonner President Carter in
response to the Soviet military
move into Afghanistan.
The Reagan statement began,
''I am today lifting the U.S.
Jjmitation on a ddit ion al
agricultural sales to the Soviet
Un ion "
The statement said the ad·
min1strntwn consulted wi th U.S.
a llies befon• lifting the embargo.
Durmg lhe presidential cam-
paign. Reagan argued that the
e mbargo forced farmers "to
bear an unfair burden" fo r a
policy he also contended did lit·
tie harm to the Soviet Union
AFTER REAGAN took office,
Secretary of State Alexander M.
H au~ Jr. led those who argued
agains t lifting the e mbargo
while Soviet troops were poised
for possible intervention in
Poland
During the first three months
of the Reagan administration,
both the president and Haig
have been &harply critical or the
Soviets.
ORANGI COAST lllTHlll
Night and morning low
cloudiness with hazy after·
noon sunshine on Satur-
day . Lows tonight S2 a Iona
coast, S8 inland .
Gro"!lps fear · mortgage foreclosures INSIDI TODAY
T~ IWnaiuance P~re
F'aire. mmmt celebrattori oJ
E lU:obdhan E1t01and, OJ>eftl
thu weeknd tn AQWra. For
a comi*t• pNtMt.D and o WASHINGTON CAP> -A new
type or mortgage, which con·
sumer groups say could make
farectosure Ultely for unwary
home buyers. will allow lenders to
ralse borrowers' monthly pay-
monta -or increase their total
cabt -uoflen as every 30daya.
Government officials aay they
b~d to open l1>an pracUcea for.
f .. ancially .t,nppea tav\nal aM
Joan auoclatlOfl,S or f lse alreacty
tllht hOme·lffll SMne wOUl4
bavedrteCSup lmostcompl~.
Jiul couume,r iroue-._, tbe n4w type of rnortaaae could· ''wreu..ittnee ... mu.e .. lnt market and cauH people to
overextend tbemaelvea when have been highly erratic recently.
buying a home. Elle Broadman, attomey for
The Federal Home Loan Bank Con1umera Union, said of the
Board, by a 3-0 vote Tbunday, bank board'• act.ion, "They're
authorised federally chartered tumine ovmina a bome into a
savlnp and loan usociatlons to g•me ofcbance'' ln which many
offer open-ended, adjusfable·Joan buyen ~d face toreclo.u.re U
mort1a1e1. Under 1ucb an lAteres(~roeequlckty.
agreerneat, a tencr.r ~UJd raise ffowever, boardmemben 1a1d
a home ~er'• moftthty pay. flnasidalb' troubled lellden mUlt ~e•t.. ralie U.. t.ot.l 9f t~ lieu b6 alffln (Nater ftHiblllt.y in de-
or lenl\ben tbt lile of the loan in 1tantn1 Joana lf mort1a1es a_re tO tende~ ~•th lncrtt.tH lb rell!aiD~~ble.
market bariit r1ta. M'an1 IOll money the p-.t
Tb• Mlider alto could lo~ 1••ronobeca111etbt1laadto.,_, mo=~~•ntl. .~,~-Interest ratea .. '.blfh aa u ~ ii • audl u tile tii· cent to1mtaet tlepottti, whlJllli be· ter .. t on 1borter 11curitle1, in1repaldtorolderbomelo1n11t
ratesof8petcentor lower.
"We simply cannot continue to
have savers subsldhina bor-
rowen," said bbard member An-
drew DiPrete.
He called the relaxaUOn ot the
loan agreement rules "lon1 over-
due."
The house·constructlon int
du1U)' allobu '*Ii burt bybtp
mort1a1e ntea, now averafina
cloaetoJS.Spercent.
In theory. Sl&LI rpl•bt off tr the
n'w inortsa1es .t fowtr rata
alnc• \bey could ralH payments
later lf manat WUMt rat. IW'·
1ed.
"I think this reculallon will
make mooey avaUable for hous-
ing," aald John Dalton, a board
member who wa.s chairman wttU
recently.
Conaumen will be prQtected
because of compeUtlon for loan
bu.stnen, be ea\d, contendln1 that
''i/ an auoclaUon doeen 't ofter 1 ,loan lnltnunept In th~ belt In·
terat o( ~ borrower. I &NP,
very 1lrnply. bl• com~tJtio11 wm.•·
The new re1ulatlon, which
lakea etr~t next Thuna.ay, will not afrect C!>d1Una mortcai•.i
'look at IM life o/ a 'faire'
maiden, He WHke11der,
Page DI.
11811
An e Collnty J at,l iOiDaM
f 1elrt1 a second trial on mui'der
ebarlea.haa .died trom beact,;~
n.eq 11\JW't• h~ tulle red ..S Dt
ll &etfeved to M an auack by
another priaoner in a oourthoU1e
holding cell.
Michael Charles Bottoma, 22.
of Lont Beach, who was found
unconscious Monday by OranJte
County Sheriff's Departmentdep-
u U u, died at UC Irvine
Medical Center Thursday night.
I Bottoms, acc1&1ed bt fat.Uy
atabbtng bis wife near Dl•·
ne)'lUMt lut year, had beeo oo
Uft•tqppe>rt ayatem.1 at. UCL
SHERIFF'S LT. Wyatt Hart
said wbat is now a homicide Jn.
veaUgaU~ is nearing coinple·
tlon.
About 15 other prisoners were
with Bottoms ln the basement
holding cell of the Oran1e Coun-
ty Courthouse in Santa Ana
wbm ibe uaau,lt took place.
"Everybody la the ceD la a
lutpe~t." Hart Hid. I
Deputlea found Bottom•
sprawled on the cement noor of
the c.U when be did not re.pond
to hi• name belna caUed at
prise>Mn were beinl taken ou&
fo~lowtn1 a lunch break Monday.
THE MV8DER defendant had
been scheduled to go before
Orange County Superior court
J'ud1e .Kenneth E . Lae for pre·
trial motiom that day.
BoltOJDI WU to face I l«md
trial oa murder chart• after • Superior Court jury laat January
deadlocked ln dellberationt re·
sullit?I ln a mJ1trial.
The Lonie Beach man had been
accuud of fatally stabbln• bia
wife. Virginia, 19, durin1 ·an
argument at a liquor store near
Di•neyland laal JW\e.
Hollinden to quit posts .
.,. .........
..... ~ATLANTA/ GRIEF -Doris Bell (left) weeps on the
shoulder of an unidentified friend at the funeral of her
15-year -old son, Joseph, in Atlanta today. Joseph is the
... 1 .24th victim in Atlanta's series of missing and murdered
., c hildren (story, Page A4).
Shakeup promised
~fter n uke mishap
Fountain Valley City Coun·
cilman Al Hollinden made it
known today that he won't seek
te-election for the city council or
reappointment to either of the
two transportation committees
on which he serves.
Hollinden, a member of the ci·
ty council since uno. has served
on the Orange County Transit
Distril.'t since 1973 and the coun-
ty Transportation Commission
since 1977.
Program manager and in·
structor at UC Irvine's Institute
of Transportation s tudies.
Hollinden is conside red one of
th e county 's experts o n
transportation Issues.
Hollinden is known for sug·
gesting many of the policies
eventually adopted by the
transit district and, on a lesser
scale, the transportation com-
mission.
A ledger dated April 20 was
made public today m which
Hollinden informed Bob Haskell,
executive director of the Orange
County, League of cities. that he
won't seek reappointment when
his combined terms on the
transit district and transports·
lion commission expires on June
30.
The league selects two
representative• to each commit·
tee . Since Hollinden's term on
the city council expir'es next
year, he would have to resign
the transportation posts at that
time if he were reappointed.
Hollindeo said he'll remam ac·
tive in transportatipn issues and
a nticipates an "accelerated re-
search role" at the University.
'TOKYO IAP> The president
'i11' the Japan Atomic Power Co
went before a parliamentary
('t\tn m1tlee today with his head
howed lo apologize for his com -
pany"; failur e lo r e port a
1 uclear accident labeled the
~vrsl in Japan's history
personnel shakeup in his com-
pany. and an "utmost effort" to
find the cause of lhe radiation
lea k that came to light last
week. more than a mo nth after
it occurred
Life beginning mulled
PLANS TO RESIGN
AlHoUmden
HE ALS..O_SAID-sa fet y
measures at the plant would be
reviewed and tightened.
Panel told no evidence proves when life starts
.' s'hun1chi Suzuki promised the
legislators ther e would be a
Denlal floss
eruls «XJman's
~tadio nwuth'
,AUBURN <AP1 The woman
14tl)ose dentis t accidentally
t;peated a crystal radio in her
rnouth says she "regained her
~"01ty" b) rorcmg dental floss
tl(;t ween two d1Herenl metals
The \\Oman tele phoned Al
npck, news director and chief
.~perator of radw station KAHi.
that her d e ntis t confi rmed Thursday that tKe tempora ry
~e talhc C'ap next to a gold
c·rown ""as indel'd the rea son her
1 et· th and 1a" hctd vi brated with
rock dnd roll music for two
days
She• told Buck s h e's a
~randmother and hates rock and
roll mus1r. which 1s about the
only kind that KA Hi plays, Crom
ho m lo sundown .
A dav earlier when her dentist
was out of town. the woman
n.;ked Huck to turn down has
5,000-watt trans mitte r or play
c;oft music Ruc•k declined.
•• ,.'6he said the dentist offered
Thurs day to replace the metal in
· ~hl· temporary crown, but s he
<frdmed. saying the dental noss
'>llould hold until her regular ap·
pointment Monday to get the
nl'W gold crown
Government offi cials are still
investigating the March 8 inci
dent at the Tsuruga nuclear
power plant. 192 miles west of
Tokyo, in which S6 workers were
exposed to radiation while clean-
ing up a spill of radioactive
water
The mishap was revealed dur·
ing an injury to determine tbe
cause of high radioactive read·
mgs 1n seaweed in a nearby bay.
The mishap a nd the com·
pany's failure to report 1t have
stirred public furor in nuclear ·
sens itive Japan, and fears of
contaminated marine life have
disrupted the Tsuruga area fis·
hin g indus try, despite aa·
surances by officials that there
as no danger
SUZUK.I, APPEARING before
the Commerce and lnduatry
Committee of the lower houte of
the Diet, or ParUament, testified
that about 16 tons of radioactive
water overflowed because of
"technical and human error."
before a valve was closed
OC Jewish unjt
moves offices
J ewish Fami.ly Service of
Orange County has moved to an
oHice in the Jewish Federation of
Orange County buildings com
plex. 12181 Buaro Street. Suite G ,
Garden Grove:
For information about services
and fees. call537 4980
WASHINGTON (AP> -There
is no scientific evidence to prove
whe n human life actually
begins. a Senate subcommittee
taking testimony on proposed
abortion legislation was told to
day
"l h ave no quarrel with
a nyone's ideas on this matter. so
long as they a re held out not as
scientific truths, but as personal
beliefs based on personal judg·
ments." Dr Leon E. Rosenberg,
professor of human genetics at
the Yale University School of
Medi cine . told the Senate
Judiciary Committee's subcom
mittee on the sep a ration or
powers
"Science. per se. doesn't deal
with the complex quality called
'humanness' any more than it
does with such equally complex
concepts as love, faith or trust "
ANOTHER WITNESS, Dr
Alfred M. BongiOV81JD i . pro-
fessor of pediatrics and ob-
stetrics at the University of Penn
sy l van ia , told the panel.
however : "I have learned since
my earliest medical education
that human life begins a t the
t ime of conception."
Bongiovanni added. · · 1· submit
that hum an life is present
throughout this entire sequence.
from conception to adulthood,
and that any interruption at any
point throughout this time con-
stitutes a termination of human
life "
The two test1f1ed during the
second day or h earings on
legislation to redefine life as
. p A1 be~lnning at conception. The _om age
I ,.
t~OCKY AOKI DEFIES FEAR ...
~~t racing. so the restaurateur has turned his Weight miscalculations and liftoff problems ~ihts skyward forced a postpone ment, but Aoki hopes to try the
,_;. · He will be com peting in lhe 1981 Gordon Ben· hazardous trip again In November.
.-~tt Balloon Race. which lifts off Saturday at Mlle History-making balloon flights were probably
;~uare Park m Fountain Valley beyond the imagination of yo\Dlg Hiroaki Aoki, the
""' But even this t y pe of competition is not son of show business parents growtng up In post·
twithout its dangers war J apan.
:~.· Aoki said som e or his competitive drive comes
.. f-lit' IN J\ HOUSTON BALLOON race last wee k, from fighting his three brothers for rood orr the ta·
""• ok1 's craft landed atop parked cars, and the ble. He learned wrestling, karate and running in
•!·$1Sortsman broke t"'o ribs order to stand up to street 1tanp.
: "If you want lo win any race. you have to take After competing in the 1960 Olympics, he ~trances ." Aoki said ·moved to New York City to study hotel and
f'. He claims hazardous competition also has restaurant management. He sold ice cream from a
lped him conquer some fears. truck and took menial jobs in restaurants where he
"The reason I went into power boating was could get by with little English.
cause I hated water." Aoki said. "l couldn't
en swim at the time
• ''And J'm still afraid or heights. That's why
flying hot air balloons "
IN 1M4, HE OPENED bis fi~t Benihana
restaurant in New York with savings and a $20,000
loan.
Still, Aoki Likes to cut the odds by s pending
ishly on safel y equipment and s upport crews
Competing in the Gordon Bennett race this
• tekend will cost him $50.000. he says. including
.$34.000 he spent for the balloon itself.
iN THE GONDOLA WITH Aoki will be
\eteran aeronaut Ben Abruzzo, who was part of a
\rlo that made history in 1978 with the rlrst trans·
Atlantic balloon flight.
Aoki also teamed with Abruzzo and two other
pilots last month ln an attempt to make the first
balloon night across the Pacific.
OAA,.06! COAIT
I'
MAtN OFFICI
TodllY. his restaurants do millions of dollars in
business.
Aoki admits his daredevil activltiea generate
valuable publicity for his restaurants. ,
But beyond thiJ, the bu.sineasman says the
challenge of sport.int contests and the thrill of win· ning continue to lure him.
"I have no fear of dying,'' he says. "I've been
living a very scary Ufe for many years now. It was
probably more dangerous selling ice cream ln
Harlem.
"I! l worried about dying, I'd probably worry
about livlng, too."
From Page A1
PRIEST •••
1.
Daily Piiat
Thomu P. Matey
l'l.MlfW
:ao WHI ..,. SC., c.-ta .-..... CA. Mell...,_: ... IM,C.u MeM, CA._.
to church official Peltir Foote
Jr., Spring threatened "blood
and death" if bla demands were
not met, accordJna to previous RobltrtN WM<S .........
,, M. Thomu KMYll t ...
• ~Mu,phlne
li CNriee H, Loot ........ ~, .....
aemerd Sdlulman ~ car1 Cclrateneen .-......oi.....
Kenneth N . .Goddard Jr. ~.......,
.
testimony by Foote. ·
"I'm certain my lhreata were
of an Jdle nature." Sprlna aaJd
Thunda,y.
Fer ry gr.oun«led
SEA'l'TLE (AP) -Crewa &lied
barse1 and cran11 lo rock (ree a
commuter terry that ran airowd
fn PusetSound, rorclnctb• evaca· UOD rif tlO papencera.
legislation would give an unborn
fetus the sam e cons titutional
rights as those already born.
Sen. John P East, R-N.C.
began the hearing by asking that
the public.' "reserve judgment on
the nature. quality and ex-
te nsiveness of these hearings
until the final end "
CRITICS OF THE heanngs
have charged that they were
stacked with witnesses who op·
pose abortion
East said he believes that by
the lime extensive hearings on
the leg1slallon are completed.
the public will conclude that
"we did do it fairly. openly, ex·
tensively and exhaustively.·•
The prospectively long and
brutal battle over the i>roJJOtlal
to give fetuses con s titutl«Jnal
rights opened Thursday. and six
members of a women's libera·
lion group we re arrested on
charges they disrupted the hear·
in gs.
Among the eight witnesses
scheduled to testify today, only
Dr. Rosenberg was considered a
supporter of legalized abortion.
There were complaints that
East had tilted the heanng in
favor of anti-abortion forl.'es led
mainly in the Senate by Jesse
Helms. R·N C .. who sponsored
the bill.
SEN. MAX BA UCUS, D
Mo nt., the senior m ino rit y
member on the s ubcommittee.
did not attend Thursday's hear·
ing but pr otested that
Democrats were d e nied the
right to call their own witnesses
From Page Al VI~T RAPISTS • • •
were not tough enough under
provisions of the law
What disturbed him most. the
presiding judge said Thursday.
was the newspaper's description
of the sentencing as "ve rging on
viciousness."
"Judge Briseno m ade a heart-
searching decision," he said. for
whi c h he was now being
criticized unjustifiably .
Ken Gr ubbs. the Register's
editorial page editor , said after
Ric kles' press conference in
Santa Ana that the judge's reac-
tion to the editorial was "intem-
perate" it.sell
GRUBBS SAID he had no
plans to retract the editorial. en·
title d .. Cruel a nd Unusual
Punishment.'' and stuck by its
intimation that the sentences
could provide i n centive for
rapists to kill their victims.
"We don't want to see that
syndrome develop," Grubb said.
De puty District Attorney Carl
Armbrust. who prosecuted the
four rapists. said he believed the
editorial "was outrageous, com·
pletely outrageous."
Armbrus t. who had urged
Briseno to sentence the defen·
dants to the maximum -more
than 300 years each -said the
JUdge had showed "considerable
leniency."
JUST i\FTER the sentencings.
however. the prosecutor had
said any prison term between
JOO and 500 years was academic
since it meant the convicted
rapists would st ay in prison the
remainder or their lives.
Other comments in the
editoria l also drew comment
from Rickles, especially those
which noted that the six victims.
aged 14 to 21. had "each re·
covered from the ordeal."
The judge said nearly all the
victims were s uffering from de·
bilitaling psychological prob·
lems resulting from their
rapes.
-DAVID KUTZMANN
Snake s tunt
draws venom
o f society
SANTA CLARA <AP I -A
daredevil who plans to jump into
a tiny wading pool teeming w1th
rattlesnakes has landed smack
in the middle of a dis pute w\lh
the Humane Society
The stunt. to be performed
Saturday by "Captain America"
to promote a Santa Clara carpet
company, has drawn the venom
of the Humant! Society of Santa
Clara Valley
"First, there's a lot of stress
to the prairie snakes being put
into water obviously cooler than
thei r nati ve desert," said
Humane Society Director War
ren Broderick. "It 'll be an awful
shock to their system
"SECONDLY," BRODERICK
said. "they are not aquat ic
animals. They'll probably be
thinking they are drowning "
Gary Ferry. a representative
for the carpet company, said he
does n 't think the stunt is c rue! lo
the s nakes
"This will be a lot easier on
the sna kes, than. say. a rodeo is
on horses and cows." he said.
The Huma ne Society d is
agrees. and promises it will try
to get a court injunction to stop
the show, and if it can't do that,
it will picket the event.
Captain America -otherwise
known as physical fitness ad-
vocate Alan Jones, of Daly City.
was unavailable for comment.
THIS WILL NOT be the first
time he has attempted the stunt.
Recently. in Seattle . he dove into
a pool of rattlesnakes and nesh·
eating piranha fis h . He cut his
hand as he entered the pool, and
the fish went into a frenzy.
SPECIAL PURCHASE
BERVEN CARPETS
"Radiant Point"
li mited quantity
5,000 yds.-8 colors
UL TRON NYLON:
.;
including
padding &
1nstollotion
A MOST RECOGNIZED AND RESPECTED SYMBOL OF QUALITY IN
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..,._..........
Veteran actor Richard Harm appliea makeup for rehear1al of "Camelot."
The Lerner and Loewe produetion ia scheduled to open at tM Pantages
Theatre in Los Angel.es tonight.
Tattoo I.eaves
7J"1 'Fama.y~
Herve VUJecbalae, the 3-
foot-11 actor who ptaya 'fattoo
on "Fantasy Island," said be
will not return to wQrk on the
ABC series until the work-
ing conditions are cban1ed lo
protect his health and safety.
Columbia Pictures
Television resumed filming
the popular series for next
season on Wednesday. The
s how, like many others,
began production early
because of the threat of a
directors' strike this sum-
me r.
He has been replaced by
Wendy SchHI, who had been
the goddaughter of Roarke.
played by Ricardo Mon-
talban.
The son of the Jate Due
Ellington s,.ys a sona wm be
bom next week wbeh friend.I
and fana gather to celebrate
what would have been Ell·
lngton's 82nd birthday.
The music ls the lune of
"Duke's Melody," an in-
strumenta l Ellington wrote
in 1972.
The words are those of
Cherry Robiaa, wife of a
clothing manufacturer, who
was invited by a recording
session ~anizer lo hear the Ellington and record the
tune.
The record wasn't released
bul Mrs. Robins didn't forget
It , and six months ago wrote "
words for it.
Sy Oliver's band and
voca list Buddy Smith wall
perform it for the first time
Tuesday al m idnight
Actor RJeb.ard 8aJ1oa bas
undergone spinal suraery to
correct a painful back condi-
tion and was liste d in
satisfactory condition, a St.
John's H os pital
spokeswoman said in Santa
Monica.
Burton, 55, who had been
suffering from what was
diagnosed as "severe de·
ge nerative changes of the
cervical spine" had lo leave
the touring company of the
musical "Camelot" in late
March.
Dr. Henry V. Dodge Jr., a
Los Angeles neuros urgeon
and Ors. Mason Hall and
Emory Hopp, both or·
thopedists, performed the
"cervical lam ineclomy," a
rem oval of the posterior arch
of a neck verte bra, said
Burton's physician, Dr
Robert Hutcbenon.
.............
Entertainer Paul Simon. Left . and his date Carrie Fisher chat with her
father Eddie Fisher at New York's Savoy music hall following a
performance by Count Basie.
U.S. coasts get ·rain
Light snow falls over parts of Great Lakes
<:oast,a1, ioomher
NllJl\t -mornlftO •-tk>lldl""s Hert ouMNne SMlinMY etlar,_,,
Coutel -S2, lnlend M. Colillel
111011 mid~. ln1eno mkl-70.. Weter .,.
Ehewllere, llollt vanebl• winos
n1011t ano morning lloun. Souttlwnt
to west winds to to ti ,,,... In .tlltr·
noon. Wnterly •wetl t to 2 l••t Inner
we .. ,. lnc..-slno to 4 to • fftt ta
lrenM outer wet.,• Mostly cl-y
U.S. swnmary
SllOWers - -tltunde"torm1 covert<I 1"e P•llk Hon-t eno
Ille A II antic eo..-H rly t...S.y
Tll.,e ello ...,.. -widely tcet· terM t-..Storrn. .,,,., Ml\llllenl
r ... , L.1911 -1e11 -""'of , the west«n GAet l..Mlon. '
Rein "I' .. ~ lo •lit-from
Hew EnOtend ln1o o.t-•re -wlll
reecll ecrou the -Greet L.Un and lrom Mktw..., tlll'OUQll muc.11 of Kenl11<1ly.
.::::.::.. -S'-•••tt Stet••"•'' Occlv4e4 .. mmm --· ===
llary af..,_ SU-lne Sallinla'(.
TIW Hat~I Welt,,., Servi<• II rorecHUno S.t11r .. y's high t•m·
pareturn In the .0. for -tal" •reu, 1' to M In cOMtal alld In·
l.,medlete ve11..,., In V. IOI In V.
Antelo,. Yelle!' -llW IOw fOI 111 Iha
Tll--fftl wlll rwmllle ecr•• ft«tllern Florlde end .-n1 T ... ._
And "'-" wlll be IUtWred from western Mont•n• ecrou ldallo, Mojave o..r'I, end IS '° " In ._
"-tllee1t !Wvacla end tM ~.Cllk · cleMrll.
Hor1tlwe51 eo..t. ,.,
r .... ,......,.. -.... ,,.,Ion •t i empemturel
ti •. "'. PST lllunday •MOM ''°"' t1 I lfl Grand Farh, H.O , to 7t In Ml Le ~
,..._nla AIMl!y 41 If .6J
Antuciue 74 4t
Amarillo
·-lllo
AtlMlle
Alla11tcOy a.ttlmore •1rm' """"' •11n1arck .....
... llOl'I . ._ ...... ... ,,.to
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CIMlnneU
1• .. 73 44
tJ " ., 54
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11 " 72 SI •1 •t " . .., ., 4.5 ...
Udifomia Soulhem Cal.ifomia mrf report
67 " 24 .. 41 .1'
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15 44 as 10
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.. 45 to .. 72 70
n " 70 St
74 " .oi ~ ~ .. ,
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42 M .11
76 4S .It
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The la.I cla'( Of PKHk ltMCMrcl
. TltM Wt -.,_.., Orlnll fair
.... Iller ·~ .... -.,., ...... ...... d°'* -i.w cloYlll.lft flltM •"• mon1111t ....," from uastal -taint ._._._ T9""'9f"aturet
"*'kf M lligflCI'( COOi#.
............ ~ moon, tidett
....... Dir
I 2 IW I 1 IW 1
I I W ..
TM Lot ,.,,.. ... ., ...... <-tel 2 J w
#d "'' ............ vallo'(S ~ ._.
Pet. llcCIOlkey, a four-term Sa• rranclaeo area con-
1rw1mu wbo fained note u a
Vtetaam war crltle , told
U.teaen tn Newport Beacb be'•
the only Republican wbo can
"retln Jerry Browft."
"Aod if nothlnl else," be
quipped, "that teems like a
worthwhile reuon to run for
1enator."
McCloekey, who Uvea in Palo
Alto, la an announced candidate
for the U.S. Senate seat held by
bla Republican collea1ue, S.I.
Hayakawa. Gov. Brown has
atroncly hinted he'll alao seek
that seat la 1982.
The congressman broupt hil
campaign tour to Pacific Mutual
ln NeWpe>rt Center Thursday,
speaking to more than 200
employeejS.
His observations on lsaues
were quick and blunt:
-On Hayakawa: "He was
voled by hil colleagues u the
least errective senator. Sam
would lose to Brown."
-On handguns: "We seem to
have this wild-west concept that
we have to own bandll&DI-SOcl.6-
ty would be bett.r off lf th1I m·
1trum..U loll ttl maitc."
-On abortloa: ''M)' oomtloo
ts ~at pyemment •bowdD't ln·
trude into tbll matter1 Womee
are capable or maldna that
choice. -On ref"'eea: "We're paytn1
$! price of the Vietnam war. I
ilieve theM people wtu be a
vln1 and a po1iUve force in
our 1otlety.
''There ls a saturation point.
sure, but there's no way we can
tum our bacu after what we did
lo Vietnam for eight y,ears. ''
-On Reagan's economic
plan: "I support it 100 percent.
If we don't start cutting we'll
have double ditit inflation and
the penalty of that will be
greater for citizens than any
possible program cuts."
McCloskey, who will be in
Orange County until next week
speaking and attending several
functions, agreed that the 1982
Senate race is likely to be a con:
gesled one with Rep. Barry
Dall'( ~lleCMelf-
BLUNT ANSWERS
Pete McClolkey
Goldwater Jr. and several other
prominent politicians likely to
compete.
Gates opens re-election drive
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of die o.Mr ~lee SUH
Orange Co unty Sheriff·
'coroner Brad Gates a lready is
campaigning for re-election in
1982.
·And he already has at least
one opponent.
Gates. currently in his second
term as sheriff.coroner, raised
more than $48,000 toward his re·
election effort with a Santa Ana
Country Cl ub party earlier this
month.
His early opponent is George
P. Wright, a Santa Ana College
instructor who ran ror the office
in 1978.
Wright, who announced his
candidacy in March, said he is
making the early move because.
"I'm trying to get the support of
the public without the traditional
Madison Avenue packaging that
many Orange County politicians
use. and that takes time."
* * *
REP. ROBERT Badham, R·
Newport Beacb, has been named
a delegate to the North Atlantic
Assembly by House Minority
Leader Robert Michel.
The Assembly is composed of
elected representatives of the
governments of the 15 naliorui
that make up the North Atlantic
Treaty Organf~ation <NATO ).
Th e As semb l y m ee t s
periodically to discuss matters
of mutual concern. Its next
meeting is scheduled for May in
Venice, Italy .
* * *
BADHAM , ALONG with
fellow GOP con g re!lsmen
W i llia m Dannem eyer . R·
Fullerton, and Dan Lungren, R-
Long Beach, are sponsoring a
May 4 conference on business
opportunllies and foreign trade
al the Anaheim Conven tion
Center
It's being planned in conJunC·
San Onofre
licensing
session set
The Atomic Safety and Licen
sing Board has scheduled a pre·
hearing conference for Wednes-
day jn San Diego on the licensing
by the Nuclear Regulatory Com
m ission of Units 2 and 3 at the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station.
The conference will begin at 9
a .m . at the U.S. Tax Court.
4·S·19 Federal Building. 880
Front St. The conference is open
lo the public
DiscUBsed will be the seismic
safety or the plants' location and
e.mergeqcy planning, Including
evacuation in the event of a leak
of radiation.
Units 2 and 3 are 1,100·
megawatt gener ators located
about three miles south of San
Clemente. Both are currently
under construction. with com·
pletion scheduled by the end of
next year.
•• tion with chambe rs of c~-
merce in the 39t.h. 40lh and 34th
Congressional Distncts and the
Departments of Commerce and
Defense
R eser vati o n s are being
handled by Mrs Darlene Knoop
in Da nnemeyer 's office.
telephone 992·0141
• * *
IRVINE CITY COUNCIL
members Larry Agran and
Mary Ann Gaido have been
named to the 1981 finance com
mittee for the Democratic Pari.y
an Orange County
* * •
C'OliNTV SliPERVISOR Har
ra e tt Wieder of Hunt1ngto11
Beach has named three re&1·
dents of the 2nd Superv1sorial
District to the count)' 's Citizens
Advisory Committee for Update
of the Master Pl an for Riding
a nd llikang Trails
Mrs Wieder said she tap~d
Connie Mandie, Ph yllis Traylor
and Bob Mattox for the comrrut
tee "because of their long ~·
ognized interest in enhancina and preserving the county's trail
system ··
A 11 three are from H unltngton
Beach.
* * * L VNN TURNER, secretary of
the Orange County Republican
Central Commm1ttee. has ~P·
pointed Lynn Dowty of Newpqrt
Beach as her alternate
Mrs Dowty is coordmalor of
the Bergeson Boosters. a fanan
cia I s upport g roup for As ·
semblywoman Marian
Bergeson. R Newport Beach
PARK NEWPORT
Yo~r private world
of plea$ure
in the rriiddle of evecywhere.
Life at Park Newport is a com ..
bination of privacy when you
w'nt' it. social goings-on when
you're in the mood. and exhlt-
arating recreation when yo4
feel rusty. ,,
. I
BARNSTABLE, M1u11. <AP>
-A Roman Catholic priest hu
been fined *1 aftor being held ln
contempt of court for refu1tn1 to
• reveal details of a convenatlon
he had with a man accused of .
•t•lin1 a 2-year-old boy to
Cleath.
The Rev. Wiiiiam Costello
termed the fine "a small price
to pay to aafe1uard the secrecy
of the confessional and the con·
nctentialit,y of priestly advice, ••
the Rev. Peter Conley, a
,1pokesman for the Boston
Wocese, said Wednesday.
Suspect sough/,
in bank heut
TUCSON <APJ Aulhonties
were seeking a fugitive once
described as "an underworld hit
man" for questioning in the dar·
• Ing bank heist or a record $3.3
million in cash, a newspaper re·
ported.
The Arizona Daily Star said in
. today's editions that sources
close to the investigation said
llobert Krebs, also known as
John L. Kelly, was being sought
ln the holdup al a branch of the
First National Bank of Anzona
'Mother keeps
custody of aoru
LIBERTY, Texas (AP) -A
Jury has decided to let former
Texas House speaker Price
Daniel Jr. 's two youna sooa re-
main with their mother, Vickie
Daniel. who is charced with
murder in the shooting death of
her husband.
Mrs. Daniel and her slater-In·
law, Jean Daniel Murph, who
brought the child custody 1ult,
s at silently In the courtroom
Thursday as state District Judie
Sam S. Emison Jr. read the
verdict.
Apology told
in 'huggings'
CHICAGO <AP ) City
Schools Superintendent Ruth B.
Love has apologized for a hoax
about electronic bugs in her of
fice and car. but Mayor Jane
Byrne says she 1s not wholly
satisfied .
The mayor called the episode
"rather disgusting" and said
that despite the apology tht.'re
are "at least 15 unanswered
questions" about the matter
Protestants warn
IRA of backlash
BELFAST <AP ) Protestant
extremists, angered by Roman
Catholic rioting spurred by the
death fast of a jailed Irish
R e poblican Army member .
thratened today to retaliate
against the I RA and its sup
porters.
The threat of Protestant
backlash raised fears of new
sectarian violence 1n this
British-run province. where
Roman Catholic militants have
promised lo unleash a campaign
of terror if hun~er striker Bobbv
Sands. 27, dies He was reported
near death on the 55th day of his
fast at Maze Prison . outside
Belfast.
Sihanouk to!~
PEKING (AP > Former
Cambodian head or stale Prince
Norodom Sihanouk announced
today he will join with his old
enemies the Khmer Rouge to
fight the Vi etnamese in his
homeland. but will be "only a
simple member" of the effort.
not a leader.
SporaJic firing
told in Lebanon
BEIRUT (AP > -Sporadic fir
mg today between Syrian troops
and Christian militiamen
threalened.-a shaky cease-fire in
Beirut and lhe eastern city of
Zahle. as Christian gunners bat·
tied Palestinian guerrillas over
night in southern Lebanon.
Despite the intermittent truce
violations. authorities said the
cease fire was holding in the
capital and in the Christian city
JO miles to the east .. but they
said Bt>irut's airport and harbor
remained closed because of
sporadic shelling
Biggs free ·man
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP1
Ronald Biggs, the British Great
Train Robber, walked out of tbe
Rio airport today a free man,
with a guarantee from the
Brazilian government that he
can continue to reside in this
South American country.
announces a new program
2nd TRUST DEEDS
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SPACE CENTER. Houston
<AP> -Altron1ut& Job.n Youns and Bob Crippen are pualq
their "UHd" apac-nblp Cohun·
bl1 to a new crew, unofllciallY
endln1 • three·Y••r uaoct.Uoo
with the craft tbat often tried
their patience before earnJog
their clowtn• respect.
"J hope you take care of ·it,"
Youns 1ai6 Tbunday as be and
Crippen transferred C<)lumbia '•
"key" at a newa conference ln
Houston.
THE NEW commander
couldn't resist klddln1 YoUJli,
the »year-old veteran o! five
space trips.
''Would you buy a used
spaceship from this man?"
asked Joe Enale. "It's been driven only by an
old auy from Florida, who didn't
10 more than 20,000 miles an
'Psycopath'
ruled out
by Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP> -The al-
leged ''psycopath" identified by
civil rights leader Roy Innis as a
figure in the child murders case
"has been located, interviewed
and ls not considered a suspect
at this time." Public Safety
Com missioner Lee Brown said
today.
"We do not question Mr. Innis'
or his witness' sincerity, but as
has been the case in a number
of instances. what was believed
to be valid information did not
tum out to be that way after in·
vest1gation," Brown said.
HE SA ID that to his
knowledge. the Congress of
Racial Equality, a civil rights
group of which Innis is staff
director. no longer has its
purported suspect under su~
ve1 1lance. He said "that was the
case yesterday and I assume
that is the case today."
Brown also said Innis had
been advised of the legal conse-
quences he would race if CORE
investigators chose to make a
citizens' arrest in the case.
Innis said Wednesday that if
no arrest were made by l p.m.
on Saturday, his supporters
would "m ake the collar"
themselves. However. Innis said
this morning that he had
withdrawn his surveillaag
teams from the suspect for 72
hours "to allow police to conduct
their own investigation."
INNIS announced at a news
conference in Atlanta Wednesday
that CORE had "broken" the case
by finding a "psychopath''
resp.ons1ble for at least six of the
killings. Innis said CORE had the
person under s urveillance.
Slaton said the publi c state-
ments by Innis would probably
hurt the police probe "a great
deal"1ftrue
Slaton said he reared that
CORE surveillance would tip off
the person being watched.
At the news conference, Innis
produced an envelope he said con-
tained a picture of a suspect and
spoke or a witness who allegedly
had information about the SUS·
peel.
bour, and it h11 only I00,000
mUHon it."
Youn& and Crippen Ht the
tone for tbi canf erence. biterlac-
inl a tert.. of Jokes and cme·
Hoers with tbeJr report• of
Columbl1 '1 • 'pbenomen•l''
performance. on Us melden
ntgbt earlier thla month.
They bad a ri&bt to be n1-Xed
and relieved. For all thoee yean
they had watched and waited,
aweaUna out on~s ace 1h~e problem after er -uttle
technical t.hin1• at f nt, tben 1he
en1lpea, tben the thtrJ11aJ tiles.
The laur;>cb date, od1tnally eet
for March lt'll, ilippftd -and
•lined -and 1.llppeL~'. -
11'-lnally, lwo Y••tt late,
Columbla roa* ibl<> orbit on
April 12. After 54~ virtually
fl1wlet1 boun, Youn• and Crip-
pen broupl tt ba~k 19 a picture·
perfect Jan dip• 016 •n arid
nmw"f Jn Calltornta'1 Mojave
Desert.
The world'• first r~flyable
apaceshlp WQ back on Earth, to
be refurbl•hed artd tak•n up
a1ain.
HfT WOllKED llke a dream
all the way.•' Crippen said
Thun:,:r. ''John and J Just Ht
back enjoyed It."
Yount, tbe normally tacit um
commander, couldn't contain
·the tupe1l.athe1 . As be
described UM performance of
each of lbe 1yatem1, he 1pilJed
out ''suP9rb • . . fotuUc . . .
terrific . . . remarkable,"
Since t.betr return to Earth,
the astrona~ bave been closet·
ed with the exJ>erts. dlscuulng
the flllht ln detail. They will be
called on for more information,
and there wiU be a trip to the
White House and other public
appearances.
COUNTER PROTEST -Pro and a nti-
abortion groups protested outside con-
gressional hearings Thursday on plans for
legislation to redefine life as beginning at
. .. _.......,.
conception Six protesters inside the hear-
ing on Capitol Hill were arrested when
they stood on chairs and shouted. "Stop
these hearings." Sessions resumed today.
Work of the devil?
TV program viewers see topless
COCOA, Fla. CAP l -It's not every day that you tum on
your TV to see evange list Oral Roberts and are grP.eted, in·
stead, with a bunch or topless women cavorting across the
screen.
There was no way to determine how many of the cable
ch a nnel's potential 125,000 viewers tuned in to the Christian
Broadcast Network Wednesday night, said Florida Cable
TV regional manager Orlando Brillante.
81.n' HE SAID HE received only one irate phone call.
"There was one call reported to me about a woman be·
ing very emphatic about it," said Brillante.
He said the station has a viewing potentiar or 125,000
subscribers
THE MOVIE WENT on for 111~ minutes, before return-
ing to robed gospel sin gers, one Merritt Island viewer, who
asked not lo be identified , told the TODAY newspaper or
Cocoa.
Florida Cable TV officials said a glitch in a remote an-
tenna station in Brevard County was responsible for the
mixup . The National Christian Network shares
transmission facilities with Escapade, a New York pay-TV
channe l. which was feeding the topless movie.
''We've taken steps to be sure it never happens again,"
said Brillante .
Cabinet meet
attended
by president
WASHINGTON CAP> Presi
dent Reagan, giving himself
"his own go-ahead," returned to
the White House offi ce wing to·
day to preside at a Cabinet
meeting
He entered the Oval Office
shortly before 6 :45 a m. PST for
the first time since he was shot.
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes, an-
nouncing the president ·s plans.
also said Reagan would fly by
helicopter to Camp David Satur-
day afternoon and is planning to
stay al the presidential retreat
in Maryland unti l Monday after-
noon
"He expressed a wish to get
out among the dogwoods and
fresh air on the mountainside,"
the spokesman said. Speakes said Reagan expected
to spend about 30 minutes at the
Cabinet meeting. No agenda was
announced, but it was expected
to focus on whether to lift the
em bargo on the sale or U.S.
grain to the Soviet Union
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Western Mrilines
asks workers' aid
LOS ANGECE~ (AP> -
I F:lnanclally allln1 Weatern
Airlines Jnc., wblcb reported a
first-quarter Iota of $1.7 million,
has askeCI its employees and
, mana1era t.o accept a one-year
wage freeze be1lnnlng May 1 in ·
order t.o save the company $20
million.
Ho~ever, the largest of the
five major unions, which
together represent 90 percent of
Westem's work force, rejected
Thursday's proposal.
Western, which los t $29.6
million last year, has been hit
hard by airline industry de·
regulation. Similar airlines with
lower labor costs and more fuel-
efficient aircraft have been al-
lowed, through deregulation, to
compete with Western on many
of its routes.
Actor venl.s anger
HOLLYWOOD (AP> The
on ly major actor to appear
before a congressionul punel in-
vestigating drug abuse castigat-
ed the committee for spending
money on such an inquiry and
said he WflS "incensed" at "in-
nuendoes that imply this in-
dustry is d~·oriented." Money s nt on the hearings
could be ' etter expended
School aids diea
WILMINGTON <AP> -A
23-year-old school monitor was
fatally stabbed near Bannin1
High School when be tried t.o
break up a fight between two
groups or youths, police uld.
Detectives said none of the
juveniles involved in the fi&ht
were students at Banning Hip
School.
HolJup try /alal
POMONA CAP> -A man who
reportedly attempted to rob a
Go Lo gas station was fatally
shot and his 14-year-old ac-
c om p Ii c e was arrested,
authorities said. A police officer
was wounded irl the incident.
Ronald Deer, 30, was shot to
death after police pursued him
and a companion on foot.
No money was taken.
Judge corwict,ed
SAN RA FAEL (AP) -Mono
County's only Superior Court
judge, con victed by a Marin
County jury of obstructing police
officers. has vowed to fight the
conviction that led to a S500 fine.
.,.w .........
MUSEUM READY -The Sonoma of the North Pacific Coast
Railroad, looking as it did in late 1800s, was center of at·
traction at the California State Railroad Museum in
Sacramento Thursday during a tour. The museum, featur-
ing 21 restored locomotives and cars, will open May 2.
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Vice
President George Bush, st.and-
inc in for Presldeat Ronald
Reagan at a h iCh·pdced
Republican Party fund-raiser,
said the president, whose health
la mending, bas the right pre·
scrlption for the nation's
economic recovery.
"It's a radical concept," Bush
said Thursday night or Reagan's
controversial economic
package. "But I urge you all to
stand behind this program. He
needs your help, and we can
second-guess it later."
"AT LEAST WE have a presi-
dent who will do what he said
be 'd do," said Bush, who
decried the special interest
groups he claims are "nickel
and diming the program to de-
ath."
He drew loud applause and a
standing ovation from the crowd
of some 1.200 Republicans who
paid $1.000 a plate to attend the
dinner.
The gathering included many
Reagan personal friends. mem·
bers of his "kitchen cabinet"
and celebrities who interrupted
several limes with applause as
Bus h made his pitch for the
Reagan plan lo cut spending.
taxes and regulations.
the hlatory or the state's party, 8 featured a pre-dinner cocktaJI
part>: •t Murdock's M·room Bel-
Air mansion tor those whb bad
paid Sl0,000 for a 10-seat dinner
table. ~.a
A -
THESE BIG donors Included o~
executives of Rockwell Jntema-. too
tional Oorp., Atlantic Richfield, .~,..,
Union Oil, Litton Industries Inc., i '•
the firm of Carter, Hawley, Hale •l:\'J
and others. . ,,..,
There was heavy security at IT
the Century Plaza Hotel, where n-i• ..
guests at the fund-raiser dined .q r
on duck pate, veal coosomme •IJ l
and beef tenderloin. :-.b:
Yawns greet
'Gate' film
• reopening
H~.
•.t
, I
ff 0 L L Y W 0 0 D ( A P l •, •
"Heaven's Gate" reopened in a "•'
s h o rte ned version and was "' •'
g reete d with restrained ap-•••
plause, a few walkouts and a ''l'
parade of pickets. 1111•
The troubled $36-million film .i f
third most expensive after •.b';
"Cleopatra" and "Star Trek" -.,,,1
closed the Los Angeles lntema-1 .~
lional Film Exposition on Thurs-• 1
day night . 1
bolstering the
narcotic s
-igenc1es. the
b o r d e r
patrol." Greg
Morris told
th e panel
Thursday as
it wound up
two days of
controversial
Tavern brawl won by Dog
Bush denounced those who ac
cuse Reagan of being against
the poor and minorities, saying
the Reagan plan would benefit
those groups
THE Al' DI ENCE. included
Rcagan·s daughter. Maureen,
and her f1ance, Dennis Ravell.
as well as such celebrities as
Fr ank Sinatra . Cary Gr ant and
Charlton Heston
The pickets . from the !,
American Humane Association,
complained about the film's . --
b rut a Ii t} to animals in U i
cock fights and scenes of falling ~ :
hearings. MOu11
Morris had told reporters out
side the hearing room he
thought a McCarthy like ·•witch
hunt" might be under way.
SAN DIEGO <AP> A 49-
pound pit bull terner was being
held by a nim a l co ntrol
authorities after Jumping into a
barroom brawl to defend his
owner from an attacker and bit
ing both.
"I hope he <the dog I won't
come out of this looking like the
bad guy," said .Mike Dillon. 30,
of San Diego, owner of the 5·
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
EVERYTHING IN STORE GOES!
Office·=~!...-::~!.~.,,.,.,... •.
year-old terner, named Dog. "It
wasn't Dog·s fault. He just got
excited when he saw what was
happerung and j umped in.
·'They Cp1t bulls > have gotten
a lot of bad publicity because of
Illegal dog fighting in Mexico."
Dillon said
Dillon said the bar's owner
asked him to help break up a
fiS!hl inside, but a man followed
DI lion outside whc re Dog "'a~
tied up and the fi ghting re
sumed. with Dog JOmmg 1n
Dillon was hospitalized after
the fi ght while his attacker was
treated for bites and releast'd
Dog faces a hearing next week
to determine whether he should
be re leased to his owner
Dillon says Dog .. was JUSt try
ing to be a good guy "
The cha1 rm an of the l'Hnt. in
dustna!Jst David Murdock. re
ported the gala had provided the
state Republican Party with $1 I
m ii hon earmarked for a bat tie
to gain control of the California
Legislature.
The fund·raiser. the b1~gcst in
horses . ' i or the film's notables. only ;
director \\nler Mi chael Cimino ..
appeared at the reopening He
was una\.a1labl e a fter the
screening
Al C1mino's request. United
Artis ts withdrew "Heaven's
Gate." and he tnmmed it from
three hours and 40 minutes to
t\\O hours and 12 minutes
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New· aiqJ9rt ap.cess
plan seerm protn~ing .
After a considerable amoWJt
of wrangl1n1. it finally appean
that an acceptable plan to re1·
ulate entry of commercial jet
air carriers at John Wayne
Airport ls nearing completion.
A plan now emergin1 from
the offices of county airport of.
flciala and supervisors has
several positive aspects.
First, it would protect the
legitimate interests of AirCal and
Republic Airlines, the two car·
rte rs which have provided
service the longest in Orange
County. second, the plan would
recognize that Frontier Airlines,
wbich was permitted to begin
service at the airport last year,
has made a sincere effort to re·
duce noise impacts. Frontier. like
AirCaL and Republic, has plans to
purchase the DC·9 Super 80,
which experts say will be sub·
stantially quieter than the
DC ·9·30s and Boeing 737s now
ope rated at the airport.
The plan would not protect
the interest of Western Airlines.
Nor s hould it. Western 's
performance in Orange County
can only be viewed as lackluster.
Like Frontier, Western re·
celved a piece of the Oran1e
· Collllty action Jut year. But it
has yet to make a aubetantlal ' commitment to nolle reductions.
It bu no plans to purchase the
Super809.
The proposal would favor
Paclflc Southwest Airlines, the
only carrier tn the nation that has
taken delivery of the Super 80s.
As airport inaiders see it, flights
that Western now posse11ea
would be turned over to PSA 1f the
plan is adopted.
The plan, as now envisioned,
would cause little disruption in
airport service (two We1tern
flights to Salt Lake City would be
eliminated). I n fact, service
would probably improve, because
PSA would start service on the
heavily traveled routes to San
Jose and Sacramento.
At this point, the plan looks
good, far better than two earlier
proposals that either would have
caused substantial service dis·
ruptions or could have been too
complex to e ffectively imple·
ment. The proposal merits a
fa v orable decision from
sui>ervisors.
Public service costly
Time was when our citizen·
lawmakers were supposed to be
just ordinary folk, employed or in
business for themselves. neither
ric her nor poorer than the
average taxpayer, nor boasting
rich and influential friends and
supporters.
Figures on campaign expen·
ditures in California's 1980
primary and general elections
compiled by the Fair Political
Practices Commission show all
too well that money is becoming
the name of the political game.
Even when Jesse Unruh
called money "the mother's milk
of politics" he could hardly have
foreseen the height~ to which
political expenditures would rise.
The $35.8 million spent by
candidates for the Legislature in
the 1980 election s was an
overall increase of 71 percent
over the costs of the 1978 elec·
tions -that's in just two years!
In the Assembly the increase
was even more start.ling -84
percent over 1978. Senate races
showed a more modest 24 percent
increase.
In their battle for the
speakership of the Assembly,
both Leo McCarthy and Howard
Berman had the distinction of be-
ing the first two Assembly mem·
bers to spend more than $1
million apiece. Each spent more
money in 1980 than did all of the
candidates for the Assembly in
1958.
The $35 .8 million total
represents an average of almost
$360,000 in campaign costs for
each legislative seat -and this
is just1or a single legislative dis-
trict, not a statewide office.
FPPC C hairman Tom
Houston describes the 1980 cam·
paign as ··something akin to an
arms race" and predicts cam·
paien costs near the $100 million
mark by 1982 if this trend con·
tinues.
Small wonder newly elected
le~islators begin their fund·
raasing efforts for the next cam·
paign almost as soon as they
have been sworn in. This is no
game for the simple citizen who
dreams of being a "public ser·
vant" -not if he wants to win
and hold an office.
When minutes count
Concern recently arose over
emergency medical treatment
procedures at Disneyland, the
Orange County amusement park
that each year attracts more
than 10 million visitors from
throughout the world.
With that many people visit·
ing the park. there are bound to
be incidents involving illness or
injury, in some cases, death.
In the past six weeks, two
Disneyland visitors have died.
One man was stabbed and a
woman suffered an apparent
heart. attack.
Both incidents raised ques·
tions. Paramedics were not sum·
moned and the victims were
transported to a hospital in Dis·
neyland 's own emergency
medical transport vehicles. The
vehicles are not equipped with
red lights and sirens.
These facts are not meant to •
imply Disneyland did not provide
treatment. On the contrary, reg-
istered nurses provided on-the·
spot treatment to both victims
and accompanied them in the
ambulance -like vans to the
hospital.
While def ending the treat·
ment it provided and the overall
quality of its emergency medical
procedures, Disneyland has hired
a firm to maintain a ready-to.roll
ambulance -one equipped with
red lights and sirens -at the
park durin~ operating hours.
This approach makes sense.
Disneyland, during peak periods,
can be a very difficult place to
travel from because of traffic
congestion. Lights and sirens can
speed transport and perhaps gain
the seconds and minutes that can
prove so critical tn emergency
situations.
Opinions expr.ued In the space abOve are th<>se of the O.lly Piiot. Other views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and anlsts. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L M. Boyd/Man'• 1rork
Women do at least half the auto
drivln•. maybe more .. Insurance com·
pante.s say they're better rlakl, too. So
bow do yoo account for tbe fact that
there are to relaUvely few women
wbo drtve tor pay7 Never rnlDd, l
know wby. 'Jbe unjuat trldlUoll wu
that anytime a J® 1et1 redalitfttd
from c .. ual to piotes1klft1l, lt tendl to
become 01an'1 work. Cooklal, for In·
stance. Or meat cu~. Ev.n, to
ORANGE COAST
l1ilyPlat
aome desree, piano playtne.
Quick, name the only ap1cultural
product that 1rowa lta aeed on the out·
side of ltl fruit. Come on, the
1trawben)t, the strawberry.
Meo an cruel· man la kind. Men
are 11'Md1; man i.. 1enuoua. Mtn art
mortal: man ll immortal. 1be late
Adlai E. 5tevent0n said that. \
.
Guatemala next on aid list?
W ASHJNGTON -The conflagration In
El Salvador is spreading across the
border into Guatemala, and the Reagan.
administration is already drafting plans
to provide the Guatemalan generals with
mi 11 tary eq ulpment.
The administration Is expected to
jus tify this increased involvement in the
turmoil in Central America on grounds
that the Guatemalan guernuas are get·
ting support from Cuba by way of
Nicaragua. But there 1s ano~her. more
compelUng reason that wt.11 not be
mentioned: Guatemala has oil. Though
still barely tapped, its oil deposits could
make Guatemala a rich country in a few
years.
Former President Jimmy Carter c ul
off military aid to both Guatemala and El
Salvador to show U.S. disapproval of
their military dictatorships. But last
January, he resumed military assistance
to the embattled Salvadoran junta. which
had replaced the old dictatorship 18
months earlier .
PRESIDENT REAGAN increased the
arms shipments and dispatched military
advisers to El Salvador in the belief that
the Soviets are faMlng the names of re-
bellion there. Secret mtelhgence reports.
including intercepted messages, link the
Kremlin to the Cuban-Nicaraguan
acUvlly.
Now I have learned that Reagan will
soon reaume military aid to Guatemala
which. unlike El Salvador. iutillruled by
the same repressive military regime
lntelli~ence reports exist which will
buttress Reagan 's decision to make
Guatemala yet another arena of East·
West confrontation My associate Bob
Sherman has seen a confidential Defense
Intelligence Agency analysis, which re·
ports:
•·A tape recording recently captured ID
a skirmish with Guatemalan guernllas
G.
-J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -~
has provided convincing evidence of
Cuban and Nicaraguan comphc1ty ID or ·
ganiiing. directing and sup~rtinl( the Guatemalan Revolutionary Movement
'Socialist· countnes may have already
been contacted to s upply arms and
s upplies. which are to pass through Cuba
and Nicaragua before being forwarded to
Guatemala."
IF Tm s HAS a fa miliar ring. 1t should
Captured documents established the hnk
between Salvadoran guerrillas and Sov
1et·bloc nations. which just ified the
R e agan administration 's anti
communist al arums and excursions in El
Salvador.
The OJA appraisal claims that
guerrilla strentth in Guatemala is
m inimal, and •·only s mall-scale in -
surgent activity la anticipated in the near
term .. My so urces say th e
administration hopes that renewed U S
militar:,• aid will help the Guatemalan
generals eradicate the leftist rebelt
before they have a chance to grow into CJ
real threat
The stakes m Guatemala are h1R}l . A
confidential State Department cable last
month spelled out the oil prospects this
way : .. The optimistic view long held by
most oilmen <is> that Guatemala does in
fa ct possess significant reser't'es on the
order of the Alaskan north slope ··
Although Gautemala expects to pro-
duce only about 15.000 ba rrels of 011 a day
this year. the cable notes that a petroleum
consultant has advised the government it
could be producing a million barrels a
day within seven or eight years "1f ap-
p ro p ri ate drilling incent1 ves a re
adopted ··
WHAT WORRIES the adm1n1 strat1on
is that the United States may be losing out
in the international compet1t1on to de·
velop Guatemala's huge petroleum re-
sources Several years ago, Guatemala
asked for U S help in explo1tmg its oil re·
se rv~. but go t nowhe re The
Guatemalans turned else"here The
State Department cable notes that .. U S.
companies have been edged out by <the>
French in promisi ng exploration areas ...
But.the Guatemalans have onC'e again.
asked for U S help, and our e mbassy in
Guatemalct City has urged a favorable
response. noting that experts believe
Guatemala · 'C'ould supply 10 percent of
t: S import needs "ithlD six lo eight
years "
Computers replace smoke-filled rooms
Earl Waters u on vacatwn. ThU column '"'
writtm by hil a.atociate Dan Blackbum.
It is a rare political issue that can rise
above all others in the hearts of
legislators. Reapportionment is one
such issue.
Thia is the process which occurs
every 10 years following the census and
which draws new lines for California ·a
45 congressional districts and 120
legislative districts. The r e·
apportionment procedure is a classic
struggle between the "haves" and the
"have-nots" at times requiring the state
Supreme Court to referee. It is an at·
tempt to pro vide residents
representation by an individual who
most closely represents the will or the
majority of the district.
With so many diverse interests at
w.ork in the formal reapportionment
process it is small wonder that the
simple drawing of lines on a map would
become the subject of bitter political
wrangling.
COMPUTERS NOW aid in the work of
reapportionment and much of the raw
political power that once was vested in
the hands of a few str eet-wise
politicians is now dispersed a mong
many. Thal fact however does little to
alleviate the exer cising o f unfair
advantages by those who can figure out
how to do it.
The matter of equitable political
repr esentation is germain t o the
principals upon wh.ich this nation was
fo unded . It is imperative thal
IUl WATIRS
politicians elected to office represent as
closely as possi ble the needs and
viewpoints of their districts. That
makes it vital for those with an interest
in such ethereal topics to enter Into the
process and aid in the drawing of lines
· It is interesting to watch the
representatives of certain minority
fa ctions influence on this decade's re·
apportionment. Neve r before have the
black and Hispanics been so well or ·
ganized and so potentially able to
participate In the division of the state.
Armed with sophisticated computet
t echnology a nd talented poli t ical
scientists. ethnic groups are moving to
protest existing districts and seeking to
creat e ne w ones where m inority
candidates can be more easily elected.
Recently Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown. a San Francisco Democrat. told
a Southern California crowd that he was
interested in helping create a new His·
panic dominated Assembly district in
Los Angeles. He ran into a buzz saw of
opposition from the Senate in the form
of the President Pro Tempore Da vid
Roberti. a Los Angeles Democrat who
made 1l clear the Senate would make ita
own decisions
THE LEG I TIMATE f ear s of •
min o riti es is th e practice of
gerrymandering. whereby the party in
power carves out the districts to its
advantage at the expense of the other
party.
The days are gone when power barons
would simply sit down 1n s moke-ntled
rooms to divide the spoils of redistrict·
ing, but the potential for abuse still ex-
1 s ts under the guise of complex
teehnologlcal methodologies.
In s~1ne dispu~es losing is really winning
How can you win when you lose? Thia
is a hard riddle, but lt was propounded
and answered well over 2,000 years a10
by Epicurus in little over a dozen
words :
"In a phllosophlcal dis~ute: ~
~'~ ~ IYlllY IAHll
nant and triumphant.
This ltind of winning is really losing,
if the facts are not on our side. Thia Is a
debatine victory, an oratorical contest,
not a mutual determination to seek for
\he truth together -which la what all
honest and productive areuments must
be.
Moat diaputatlom are fruitless at beat
because the contestants want to ln1 atruct, not to team; to persuade, not tq
investigate; to feel .)usttfled, not cor·
rected or reproached. or convtcted ot er· ror. And the tnore heated the con·
troveny, the r.iore both ant.1onltm1
lose stabt ot ruUty, of rHeoa, and ol
the common objective to dl1cover
'•here the aood reatdet.
-
construed as a slap in the face. It l$
wounded vanity and not a zeal for truth 1:
that feeds the names of moat such cod-
troversles.
DIFFERENCES of opinion are e>e-
portunlties for learnine. new footholds
for chance and 1rowth, valuable e&•
erctses for mtnda erown sluieJsh add
charact6rs grown smug. But not one Ip a thousand uses them for auch creative
purpoeea; not I, not you -and I wonder about old Epicurus himself.
r
l
lb PATalCll KENNEDY o1 ................
Nancy Hernandes was pleased
with her new Huntington Beach
home dwin1 the ~re-sale lnsptt·
Uon laat year, but when she later
took a Shower ih the upstain
t1athroom she says soapy water
leaked through and drenched
her downstairs kit~ben table.
And when she flushed the
toilet, things got worse, she said.
''THE TOILET overflows onto
the floor and leaks Into the
downstairs hall," complained
Mrs. Herna ndez. She said a
plumber told her there's cement
in the pipes.
•'When we take a shower
Swim
program
reduce d
Tht! HWltington Beach recrea·
lion department has eliminated
public swimming at the Marina
High School pool this s ummer
and has increased fees for city.
sponsored swimming and sports
program
Because the financially
troubled Huntington Beach
Union Hi gh School District has
increased the summer rent for
its pools from $200 to $700 week
ly. city offi cials decided lo lease
only the Edison High School pool
this year
POOLS WILL BE a vailable to
the public this summer at
Edison, Golden West College
and the city's gym downtown.
accordJng to city officials.
Recreation fee increases in·
elude:
-Recreational s wimming
from 50 cents to Sl
Swimming lessons up $2.
They will range between $14 and
$16
-Youth baseball. football and
basketball from $10 per person
to $13, $14 and $18 respectively
-League adult softball and
basketball teams from $225 to
$240 a season
Three man basketball from
$35 to $45 a season
Registratio n for c ity
sortball tournaments from $75 to
$100
THE CITY COUNCIL. ap-
proved the fee increases Mon -
day to ~eep pace with operating
costs to insure that recreational
programs remain self
supporting For information on
the city's recreational activities
call 536·5486.
City officials say more than
30,000 swimmers use the city
aquatic program annually, and
more than 2,400 youths play city·
s ponsored baseball. basketball
and football
Softball 1s the most popular
adult activity with more than 470
teams last year There were 96
adult basketball teams in the
city leagues last year , officials
say
HB library
board expands
The Huntington Beach ,city
Council has expanded the City
Library Board from five mem-
bers to seven members and is
accepting applications for the
additional positions.
The volunteer advisory board
gives the Cit y Council sugges-
tions on library policy, Including
recommendations on cultural
programs sponsored by the
library.
Selection of the two additional
members tentatively is
scheduled for next month, when
the ol'dinance takes effect.
Appointees cannot b e
employed by the city or bold
public office in the city.
the water leak.I tbrou1h tbe ll&bt
rlxture onto tbe table
downstairs. It's ridiculous. We
paid S16$,000 for this house and
nothine woru."
Fortun.ately, she says, the
house has two bathroom•.
Mrs. Hernandez Hid •"e soon found that other bollleowners lo
the new 43-house Olive Part
tract bad complaints too,
although not as serious as her
plumbing problems.
Five of the homeowners ap-
pealed to City Council for help
earlier this month, claiming the
builder was hard lo get in COO·
tact with and wouldn't return
calls or letters.
The homeowners complained
of rainwater seeping into the
carpets or their sunken dens, UJ.
designed kitchens, cracking
floor tiles, and missing
baseboard moldini.
CITY BUILDING inspector
George Bendlin checked out the
homes last week and said he
contacted the builder Robert
Stellrecht Jr. to reach a solution.
Bendlln S!lYS af the problem11
aren't fixed to the satisfaction or
the homeowners, the matter will
be turned over to the state con-
tractors board.
Stellrecht, contacted by
telephone. said be wasn't aware
of the complaints until BendJin
called him. He said if the com-
plaining homeowners are ''nit-
picking" and if they aren't
G ARDEH G ROVE FREEWAY
MILE
SQUARE
PARK
Here's how to get to Mil.e Square Park, scene of the 15th
anniversary running of the Gordon Bennett Balloon Race
Balloon race set
Mile Square girds for record crowd
Huge, brightly colored globes
filled with hot air or helium will
carry manned gondolas into the
s kies above Mile Square Park in
Fountain Valley thls weekend
during the second Otanae Coun·
ty running of the Gordon Ben-
nett Balloon Race.
The event is billed as the '15th
anniversary edition of the ~
test . inaugurated in 1908 by
publisher James Gordon Ben-
nett.
The race was canceled by the
outbreak of war in 1939 and re
mained dormant until Califonua
balloonist and scientist Thomas
Heinsheimer resurrected the
HB to lease
medical van
to Valley
Huntington Beach won't get a
windfall profit from its agree-
ment to lease Fountain Valley a
used paramedic van for $1 an-
nually
But the lease allows FoWltain
Valley , Sea l Bea c h and
Westminster to have a readily
available backup emergency
vehicle 1f t h eir primary
paramedic vans break down.
Ray Picard. Huntington Beach
Fire Chief, recommended the
lease to stre ngthen the backup
system of the "joint powers"
agreement. which calls for the
four West Orange County cities
lo assist each other in case of
emergency.
Huntington Beach, the largest
of the four. has two primary
paramedic vans and one backup
vehicle, while the other three
cities h ave one primary
paramedic van each.
The used van. which will serve
as the backup, is worth about
$14,000, Picard said. mostly
because of expensive medical
equipment aboard.
Huntington Bea c h has
purchased a new fully equipped
paramedic van for $39,000 with
federal Housing and Community
Development funds. according
to city offtclals.
event three years ago in Long
Beach.
THE RACE was moved to
Mile Square. a more spacious
launch location. last year and
drew !;ome 25,000 visitors to the
one-day event
This year, a second race has
been added to the schedule of
events, with activities scheduled
both Saturday and Sunday.
Balloon race activities will
take place in the triangular
shaped flight field in the center
o f the park The balloons
themselves. however, will be
visible in the open park space
outside the fenced flight area
and 1 n the s u r r o u'n ding
neighborhoods.
Entry to the Gordon Bennett
grounds Wlll be at the north end
of the park, on Edinger A venue
between Brookhurst and Euclid
streets.
The park 1s near the Warner
A venue ex it or the San Diego
Freeway or can be reached by
leaving the Garden Grove
Freeway at Brookhursl and
traveling south.
THE DAILY admission pnce
is $5 for adults. $2.50 for c hUdren
age 5 to 12. and free for toddlers
Tickets can be purchased
thr ough Ticketr on or at the
gates
Race organizers are planning
an early bird bonus. Beginning
at 7 a m., free tethered balloon
rides will be offered at the race
grounds. Free rides will con-
tinue as long as winds permit.
The Gordon Bennett race
itself, a distance competition,
will feature Uftoffs between noon
and 6 p. m. The contest will in-
clude 12 entries from the United
States and other nations, includ-
ing France, Poland, Switzerland
and Japan.
On SWlday, the first Fountain
Valley Classic balloon race Is
planned. rn this event, 18 piloUI
will try to land as close aa possi·
ble to designated targets within
100 miles of the pa~k.
Activities on t.M balloon rac~
grounds will in.elude bands,
military unit performances,
souvenir booths, vintage aircraft
and classic automobiles dl•·
plays, and food concessioas.
-PHlL SNEIDERMAN
Mayor leayes. h .ospithl
satlafied wit.b repaln be'U buy
bac~ their homes at the same
price they paid.
"I don't know how tbeae
houses pusecl city lnspectloa,"
said Clan:ace Pruden. a retired
plumber who ownJ a $130,000
single-story home In the tract,
louted off Slater A venue and
Gothard Street.
PRUDEN SAJD rainwater en-
ters his sunken den through the
walls.
Hts wi'!e Shirley pointed to the
stove located at a right angle in-
ches away from the kitchen sink
aod complained that she almost
burned her arm when she tried
to boil water and wash· dishes at
the same time.
Will interest rates
continue to rise
or fall? . . BS
0
a
''These complaints really
aren't unusual," said buUdi.og
inspector Bendtin. "The contrac-
tor has built a lot of homes in the
city and says he'll make the
necessary repairs. But it seems
there are a few personality
clashea here and I'm in the mid·
die trying to smooth the
waters."
STELLRECHT said he "tries
to please everybody," but
"the re are a couple old gals over·
there that every time you tum
around, they want you lo fix
something."
He said lhe rain leaking into
sunken dens "most or the lime
I • gnpe~
can be attributed to the way the
homeowners have done theiz;
landscaping." He denies that the
kitchens are poorly designed. 1
He also said that one or htS:
workers sent to repair Mrs.·
Hernandez's home lert when she
insulted him with angry com-·
plaints.
"We don 't hide from
anybody," Stellrecht said. "If
they've got complaints caused
by our faulty work m ansh1 p,
we'll fix them.
··But some peoplt' are un
reasonable. I've told a couple or
them that if they don't like their
homes. v.t>'ll bu) them back "
Pendleton airpo~?
SCAG study provides new boost
f O! regional terminal proposal
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEID..
Of ll• De6ly ,. ... SU!lf
New impetus for development
of a regional airport on the
Camp Pendleton Marine Corps
base in northern San Diego
County is being given in a report
prepared by the Southern
California Association of Gov
emments.
Planners for the association
,tiave concluded that an airport
at the base could be an accepta
ble alternative to an earlier
SCAG proposal that major. long.
haul facility be constructed on
an offshore island near the Los
Angeles and Long Beach
harbors
UNDER THE Camp
Pendleton proposal, the regional
airport -similar in size lo Los
Angeles International -would
be constructed near Oceanside
at the south end of the base.
Planners estimate the Camp
Pendleton airport would cost
about ~ million. well below
the $2.S billion estimated for the
offshore facility
Locating the airport at Camp
Pendleton, which is bisected by
the heavily traveled San Diego
Freeway, would benefit resi-
dents in both Orange and San
Diego coWllies. SCAG planners
say.
. And they point out that loca-
tion of an airport at the base
would reduce some of the de
mand on John Wayne Airport in
Orange CoWlty and Lindbergh
Field in San Diego County.
HENRY WEDAA, a Yorba
Linda city councilman who
cbairs the SCAG aviation com
mittee. said it will still be some
Ume before a final recommen-
dation is made on whether to
pursue a regional airport at
Camp Pendleton or off the Long
Beach coast.
'Universe'
t opic for
wo rkshop
Four experts on the stars and
planets will take part Saturday
in an all-day workshop entitled,
.. A Saturday Astronomy Hap-
pening: Project Universe and
Beyond."
The event, sponsored by
Coastline Community College,
KOCE·TV and tbe Orange Coun·
ty A1tronomers. will be held
from 9 a .m . to 4 p.m . in lhe
BrasiUa Rooms at the Sheraton-
Newport Hotel, 4.54S MacArthur
Blvd., Newport Beach.
The·fee is $15, which includes
lunch.
Participants will include Dr.
George Abell, a UCLA es·
tronomy professor and teat·
book author; Dr. Ed Krupp,
director of the Griffith
Observato17 ln Los An1eles; Dr.
Ben Mayer, a Loi Anaelea buai·
nessman and amateur
astronomer; and Bill Netll, pro.
ducer of tbe "Project Univene"
series seen on KOCE-TV.
Reailtration will be accepted
al the door.
Antarctic~ t opic
in slide-lecture
A 1...,-.part allde •d ~ure
Mria racunn1 A.Dta..NUea and
E...., bland wUI belin at '1 tontl)lt Ila l'IM Arts 222, at Golden
Well Coll•I• ln Huntlnaton
Be•~b.
llon lnfonnatlon about the
frM tel1el .&a ••a.ti.able from &.be communttJ aervlua office, .....
He said further investigation
of the Camp Pendleton proposal
is needed, terming existing data
"very preliminary."
A major. 1r not the major
stumbling block to location of an
airport at the base could be re
s1stance from the Marine Corps
The corps traditionally has re
Jected any suggestion thcit part
of the base be used ror an
airport
YET UNKNOWN 1s how the
Camp Pendleton proposal \'Ill
afrect the work of a S~.'paratc· rl'
gional airport site selel'tion
s tudy authonted by the Orange
County Board of Supervisor!>
The 11 member comm1llt·t· 1:.
made of a six prominent hus1
ness leadC'rs and appointN•s of
the five board members
SCAG 1s a regional gO\ern
ment organ1tation ~ h1l'h 1s
made up of South<•rn
Ca lifornia's l'itws and l'ount1es
HB police nab · 2
i n armed robbery
Huntington Beach pohce ar
rested two suspects early today
in connection with the robbery or
a Westminster restaurant late
Thursday by masked gunmen.
In HWltington Beach Jail on
suspicion of armed r obbery
were Alfredo Abraham Reyes.
26. of Garden Grove, and Keith
Klein, 24, of Santa Ana.
Westminster police Lt David
Wiggs said two men, one wear
ing a monster mask, the other a
ski mask. entered the Taco Bell
restaurant. 7192 Westminster
Ave., at 11 :45 p.m . The men
brandished a shotgun and a
handgun and ordered employees
into a rear freezer. Wiggs said.
He said the men then took $107
from the cash register and ned
Shortly after midnight. Hunt-
ington Beach police responded
to a report of an attempted store
robbery and stopped a car con
laining Reyes and Klein near
Magnolia Street and Edinger
A venue, Wiggs said.
The pair reportedly matched a
description given by victims in
the Taco Bell holdup and were
jailed on the robbery charge
Police said today they were
av. ailing a warrant to search the
suspect:.· car rur "'capc>ns 0r
loot
YMCA. camp
signllps set
f o r Saturday
Registration for s ummer
camp sessions planned b} the
West Orange County YMCA v.111
be conducted Saturduv at llunt·
1ngton Center, 7777. Edinger
A\'<! . beg1nnin~ at 9· 30 a m
SC'ssions will 1ndude dav
camp for ages 5 to 11 res1dc•nl
Camp 0<.1kes for agl'!> R to 12. a
one week sports camµ for ages 8
lo 13. a one v.N•k R1~ Rear T(.'cn
Camp for ages 12 to 15. IO one.
week caravans for ages 12 to lR.
three mini-lra\el c;im p!-> for
ages 8 to 12. and \ <ir1ous mini
excursions
Camp schedules can be p1ckrd
up at lht• YMCA at 7262 Garf1<·ld
Ave from 8 :30 a.m lo ti pm
Monda} through Fnda~ or 9
a m to 2 p m Saturd;n s
.. ..
..
I•:
.:
Ill I .
l .
..
I
'
AVAST THERE, LUBBER: Jn all the yean your
ratthful correspondent has hung aro~d the ocean
front, I've developed two special lnteresta in boata.
One is if I'm on it and the other la if I'm lookin1 at it.
If I'm on it, I am very interested in the f->t t!Jat
it doesn't leak.
If l'tn looking at ·~ lt, I want it to be pre-
tty. • ..
My personal . · ~ yacht meets both of· -~
these dem~ds. She's TOM MURPHllf ,~ /
a pretty thing sitting ------------there, leaning up
against the garage wall Most important, it doesn't
leak when I'm in it because I hardly am. Upon rare
occasions when we plan a sailing trip, I can almost
always talk one of the youngsters into doing the row-
ing. If the youngster does the rowing. then there I.an 't
room to get me in the boat.
Therefore, no worries about leaking.
AS FOR PEOPLE who like to get into the boats,
this coming Saturday marks the weekend that really
is. It's the annual Newport Harbor to Ensenada
yacht race. Six zillion yachts will be out there, all
trying to get across the starting line at th& same
time.
They should make a marvelous vista for sailboat
lovers lining our shoreline from Newport to San
Clemente. Unless, that is, all the yachtsmen decide
to sail straight out to sea in order to capture favora-
ble breezes. Or the fog rolls in. Or they call off the
race for lack of interest.
This has never happened .
The esteemed boating editor ot this sterling
The goocl!h1p E gabrag anchored off Casino Point. Cat alma I 1land
journal, Al Lockabey, gets pretty excited about this
race every year r·ve never really understood why.
It always ends the same way.
ONE BOAT WINS. All the rest lose.
Anyway, I try hard to please Al Lockabey by
studying up on boats so I can tell the difference
between ketch-rigged yawls, yawl-rigged ketches,
twin catamarans and double-ended bellybusters.
Why only today. I was scanning through the
Avalon newspaper , the Catalina Islander. and the ·
picture of this unique-looking vessel dominated one
page. The caption beneath the photo explained that
this pa rticular King of tbe Sea was the "Egabrag," a
frequent visitor to Catalina Island. When photo-
graphed, the Egabrag was anchored off Casino
Point.
I studied her low-slung stem . her silhouette im-
age, her bow-heavy cabin structure. I wondered how
our esteemed boating editor would classify s uch a
unique vessel?
BUT THEN I READ ON. I learned from the cap·
lion that the vessel's name "Egabrag" is Garbage,
spelled backward.
Egabrag is a garbage scow.
"It is returning to American waters after spend-
ing several weeks in the Republic of Panama," the
caption writer explained.
Republic of Panama? Wh at 's going on here?
ONCE UPON A TIME around here, we already
had more garbage than we knew what to do with.
Now we're importing it?
Well anyway, no sense studying this yacht in any
detail I really don't think Egabrag will be compet-
ing in the Ensenada race.
Her fumes might cause that first cancellation .
CRITIC -Louisa Kennedy,
wife of former hostage
Morehead C. Kell{ledy, told
some news executives this
$eek that many of their
meth<>M for covering rnaJor
events like the Iran hostage
story were "time wastina
and exhausting." She said,
for instance, that many
hostage families received
phone calls with the same
questions from people work-
ing for the same organiza·
tion . She sptke in
Washington, D.C.
11 classes
offered •
in CPR
Coastline Community College
will offer 11 nine-hour classes in
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
<CP R> at various locations dur·
ing May.
The class is designed to train
individuals in the techniques of
CPR and obstructed airway
maneuver to sustain life until
medical help arrives.
Upon completion of the class,
participants are certified in ac-
cordance with the standards of
the American Heart Association
and the American Red Cross.
Advance registration is ad·
vised as enrollment is limited.
The following is a listing ol
dale, time. and location of the
classes:
loMr •. •, -II ll'Wl"I S. • to I:• ""'· Ill 11 .. 1 Pl-~y. ,._ Irvine A ... , ..._,
llHC:h
Mar• -1 '""" n : •to• '·"'· • l'eltvlllw Stale HO'PllAI, 2!01 ...,_ 11...S .. C.IA ,..._
Mey t from I e.m. to S t."'i'?1°' .... ONll YMCA, 2DIUftlwnlty Or. l9KA
-/oMy ., -It ,,_, •. Ji .. ~-"'· Ill l*0... ... 11 Oougi• "'1tOMUtl<t, IWlldffte 1).1, SJt1
llolw A,.. , HllflllllGtOft llHC".
-May u -u '""". a.m. to 12:• p.tft. .. Fairview SIAte .._llAI, Ul1 Ha,_ lhd., a.Ill ,,.. ..
Ma, 1' '"""I •·"'· lo S p.lft. •I ,..... V..... Lurn•no c.en..,.. 2"0 Me.a 'II•'* Orm ~t. CM1a-M -Mey It, 2', .... J-2 Iron\ 1 to lO ...,,._ Ill
Gr .. nt>rooll 1-r• A~lalloft ""*"-, 11222 SanlA Joel*\• St., F-i.ln Valley. Falrv~"v: S~t~~1~1~':c=.:::~~vl:C..:1 -M May », 21. -J..,.. l lrcwn 1 IO IO -.m ... Hoeg Hotpllal, JOI Newport llvd., Newporl , .. "' -May • ffOf'I\ I e.m. to, p m. •I Or.,.. C.O..
YMCA, 2lllO Unlwrllly Or , C.IA llMM Addll~1 lnlom••llon m•y • --II\' t•lllng a .. Boyd •I coulllM Comlftllnlly
Coll-.tU-2044.
Savings urged
SACRAMENTO <A P > -The
Senate tax committee has ap·
proved an $80 million bill that it
hopes will encourage people to
open or expand savings accounts.
The bill would let taxpayers take
a deduction of $200 for an in-
di vldual or $400 for a married cou-
ple for interest earned on savings
accounts
~23,000 just to get by
i
!Labor Dept. says family of 4 needs $34 ,409 to live 'higher'
I
: WASHINGTON <AP>-lt costs $25.203 in Washington, the oa-
:the average American family tion·s capital.
a nd District of Columbia .
$37 ,398. Dallas r equires the
smallest budget , 00,771 ,
followed by Atlanta. $31.229 ;
Houston, $31,519 and Cincinnati,
$32,353.
tof four more than $23,000 a year
ljust to maintain a moderate
:standard of living, the Bureau of
1 Labor Statistics says. t The Labor Department said f that a family comprising a
1 husband, non-workln1 wile and
two children needs $23,134 for an I "intermediate" standard of llv·
• ln1, basedonlastfall'sprices. ! That was up 12.8 percent
i from ail estimated $20,S17
, needed the year before. • I
THE DEPARTMENT also
calculated that an American
family of fQ\lr would .need $34,409
a year to maintain a "hither"
standard of Uvlna. up 13.S per-
cent from $30,317 a year aao.
The famUy would need $14,044 to
maintain a "lower" llvln1 ttan·
dard, up 11.6 percent from
•12,585 • year •10.
Tbe u 1urveyed 25 maJor
cltle It ahowed Uiat
Ancho e, HonoJulu, Boston1 New and th• Dlltrict ot
THE HOUSEHOLD budget
dollar went further, the study
s howed . in Dallas. $20,766;
Atlanta, $21,131; Houston.
$21,572 and St. Louia, $22,248.
Annual family budgeu needed
for a "higher" standard are led
by Honolulu, at $«,396, followed
by Anchorage, $42,12S; New
York, $42,73e ; Boston. $41,306,
For a "lower" standard of liv-
ing. a family needs the most
money in Anchorage, $20,987 ;
Hono lulu, $18,480; San Fran-
cisco-Oakland. Sl5, 735 ; Seattle-
Eve rell, Wash., SlS,384. and
Washington, D.C., $1S,392.
Life expectancy ,
drops 31/2 months
NEW YORK CAP) -
American life expedancy baa
fallen for the flnt Ume tlnce
1988, an lDI~ c:ompuf re-
ported. lt tald aa A1a.rtcan bom
lD 1980 can a.ntlctpate livbll 78.8
11ara, or ab(>ut I~ mOlltAI leu
tbaa one born ln lt'1t.
and 74. 7 for her lO·year old 111-
ter.
The figur!~i compiled by
Metropolitan ure lnJurance Co.,
cannot be ~ad u repreaentlnt •
trend, uld Frederic 6eltser,
bead of the compu7'1 1taliltle1
bureau..
Once In A
Lifetime
Opportunity I
Some Items
Below Cost!
NfW & USED
PIANOS &
ORGANS
NEW
KAWAI
GRANDS
4011r Choose From
Kawai, Kimball,
Hammond,
Wurlitzer,
Currier.
Thomas-Vox.
PRICES SLASHED!
NEW THOMAS-VOX
ORGANS
FROM
539999
OTHER NEW AND USED -UPTO
0 %OFFI
BRIMHALL MUSIC-CO.
3941 b South Bristol, Santa Ana • Phone 7 51-1 I 21
Accross from S.... c:o..t ,._. • N~ corwer of St111flower Ir lri1tol
Pearl Jewelry Caravan
Save 40%
Save 40o/o
on entire
stock of lustrous
pearl jewelry.
Select from earrings,
fine cultured pearl
necklaces and rings .
Sales prices effective
April 25th to May 10th.
a Sf ·-
Columbia are th• co1tll11t
placea for a famlly of lour to maintain a moderate 1talldard
orUvtq. llleµ,,pc,Utaa'11'l1UN1forlt'79 ~~----~----....,.---------------------------------------------------~ differ flom federal teMtl Of that Tbe 1tudy at the "in•
l termedlate" level 1bowed ll cost
the hnotbetlcaJ f amlly of four Ut,812 to nulntaln that
moderate livlnl ln Anchora1e.
Such a faotily needed '28,• a
year in Honolulu, '21,021 ID
:SO.ton, QS,741 hl Naw York. and
year bleaUle the eoaa.-, re-
Hlc:utat.d tbem Ga .. bMll ol
the U. c:enlUI, M HAd ftW'I•
day. 'lbe CenlUI ftlQl'tl tnd&eat-
td 'bat eathnated populat1oa
1rowtb for the 11an .Wween
lt70 and lHO •u aearb, I mllllon ioo low. ..,...., .... ..., .... _....__...,. ________ _....,._...,..-..._ __ ..;. ___ ...,...._.-._~
-
'
' I.
,
8 T M tg
15
~
I U I
1'' ..
10'·
J6'4 + JO' ... 12 . 1'1. ~
10''o 2711>-J\11.
...
'•
'• '•
' 1• ..
'.
''• '• ... '. I
,,
"' "' .. .... . . . ,,
"' ..
VI .._ '. '· ,,,,
Another rare metal roller eouter -OtLI oa to
aotd andallvercoln "laveatine"-!a\8Mlerwa1.
The luro~ AcaJn, Lt'• 1reed. G Jn eotna have
run 15 perctnt. to $0 percmlf. )'elf, with 1m.U
"dowldld riak," you are tol . F0T1el tbal sold
bullion pricea plunged ln 1980: tinore the balr·raS.lna
history of the slide Ln silver prices.
Gold. ud sllver eoJ,.. are dlf[eMnt. the "coin bugs" say: artistic, UJCe painUngs: and In Umlted
amounts. like land. And the numlsmatlc pUJh LI 1hlft·
ang Into high
ae?lr.
-A GIANT
fo od firm
<General Mills>
owns a big West
Coast coi n
"galler y.' A
I -Y-lVl-1 -,.-IT-II-~ __________________________ .......... ,
major conglomerate (Wa rner CommumC'allons> re·
cently bought Franklin. an important mint. A New
Yark StoC'k broker < BaC'he> has j ust acquired
Jackson Precious Metals, an Ohio s melter.
-THE $30 MILLION auction of Johns Hopkins
University's Garrett Collection was completed a
short while ago Yale has sold a single, fabled 1781
Brasher doubloon for $600.000 The institutions are
seeking \""l)'S lo help sol.-e their financial problems.
-FOREIGN NNt~NS ARE issuing increasing
amounts of "bullion~ype .. coins : South Africa's
krugerrand, Canada's Maple Leaf. Mexico's SO·peso,
Austria 's JOO-corona. Even China ls into "coins ."
-AT l.EAST TWO rarl' coin mutual funds have
bt>cn c·n•all·d Somt• banks now sponsor numismatic
Kt·ogh •md I RA plans Coin dealers are hinn~ -or
calhn~emselH·s ·investment counselors
-ONl~ VETERAN DEALER estimates 40 per-
cent of h1<i business today is with would be investors.
against !> percent an 1970
With all this going on, how can you lose? Ouch!
"Coins ha\e becomt· :.i mult1b1llion dollar busi-
ness. and rt>gretlably, the industry has attracted its
shan• or shadv operators." says David L Ganz.
leg1slatl\l' n>unst!I to the Amencan Num1smat1c As-
suc1at1<1n
··1N TllE PAST DECADE. coin robbenes are up
200 300 percent... echot's Glenn Smedley, another
ANA official Police are pleading for local-state laws
to reguliill' com dealers
Otht·r problems include coin altenng. m1sgrad-
1ng. mis1dl•nt1hcet1on, coin damage 11mproper handl-
ing . cleaning, mounting, storage1. high purchase-sale
markup~ exrwns1ve insurance. outright counterfe1t-
1n~ And all this on toµ of plain bad timing
•\nd de>i..p1te thl· puffery. C'oin values can drop -
dras tl(·ally A roll of so c·alll'd .. walking Li berty"
ha lf doll<trS rel'entl} sank almost 60 percent in two
}ears from S.5.000 to S2 100 Buying and selling can
cost 10 1wrct'nl l<i 20 pertt.•nt each way Yes, you can
lost.· on coins easll~
.. C()an allenng ran bt-illustrated with a 1916
Mt.•rc·ul'\ type dime," sa~s ANA's Smedley "In ·un·
c1 rcu l~1tt•d ' condition. 11 s worth $30·$40 But add a
tim ·o· <Ot>nver MmlJ and its 'value' is S2,500."
· With 14 official and confusing quahl) grades. a
coin con can rate a piece JUSl one j?rade higher. or
lower. triple or <'ripple its price. depending on
whether he's buying or selling
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORKIAPI FIMI Dow J_, .. Ol for ThurMlav. ~ 73
STOCKS
AMERICAN LEADERS
01»"1 HIOI\ Low C-C"O
Aclvenuo 0.Cll...O
Unc:henoea ToY I luues New hlOflt
Ntw lows
WMAT AMO 00
NEW YORI( I AP) Aor IJ
, 40v•nted • 0.<hrt•d .Jn<h•no<"O rotal IU u•• "'""'"OM 'i•¥w tows
METALS
Tod•y
l20 JOI
711 IJ1
51 10
p, ••
o~ ,,, , .. m l:J •
c..-as-cenh • ~. u.5. destln.-llons.
LeN »-ll c.nu a ~
ZllOCC U'4 cents e _,,,.,•ti~
TI• M ltll Metals W•• <-lie 1110.
Al-._.,76Gafl0•POW!d.N Y
l'l.ttl-"44' 00 troy OJ., N Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
l 1
;
•tWAOt•YO
llWCll
LOCATIOll
~
'
BiLL MAXEY
TOYOTA
tJ...-.~-'S#'IO.,.,.., I
18881 BEACH BLVD. ~..:::.-IUllTINGTON BEACH
LAST CHANCE
••• SAABSlll
SAVINGS llKE
NEVER BEFORE!
NEW '": ... S ~, 510,400 •E• ···~ ... (17275) SJ J,510
•OW ··icrM = ~.,,., s11,t46
NEW 'IO 900 .:= (,.,.., 512, 957
llRRYI · llESE WM'I LAST L•ll
\
',,,,,,,,,=;·.I
SALES • SER\'ICE
LEASING
~Alfa Romeo•Peugeot•Saab
~ J848 DOVE STREET
EQUAL HOUSING
• OPPORT UNITY
,...,,._,, Motlce:
All real estate ad-
vert I 1 ed In this
newapeper it aubject to
the Federal Fair Houa-
lnl Act al 1lea which
mates lt WesaJ to ad-
vert.iae "any pttference,
llmHatlon, or dis-
crlmlnaUon bHed on
race, color, religion,
tell, or national origin, or an lntention to make
any aucb preference, limitation, or dis ·
crimlnation."
This newspaper will not
knowin11Y accept any
advertising for real
estate which Is in viola·
lion of UH! law
••••••••••••••••••••••• .,,,,,
O.....wtl~ a Bdrm Cliff Haveo
beauty. Owner a alder aU N&IOIUlb~ •
fen. 2SPAS,cme •
one outdoor . 2
fireplaeet, u.aed brtck
enlertaiDera PoOI area.
Cabana, ftra C'in1. view
S1'ROLLTO
NEWPOR.T
BEACH
Chrmiol 4 Bdrm. Coi¥
UvlD1 tOOf8 feature1 ;
wood b""'*'a ftreplace.
Owner wW belP rmaiice. Ool1 Szot,900. Hurry,
call17~
THE :REAL ESTATE RS
Saddleback Mountains,,_ ______ _
Faablon Ialand, li1bta.
Newly remodeled, new
kitchen. Call today for
appointment.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
71 4-63 1-6990
TEIMS.TBMS
Only LS% down for thla
oulltandin& nearly new
condo. 2 Br + den, fami-
1 y room, view len-
nia/pool. A great buy at
S210,ooo.
GIANT
HOME! A must see! Covered en ___ 7C>0·'>3 33
try to this maenifi~nl ~ YOU CA .... SEE Bdrm 3 bath home. Huge ,..
family room, brick BLUE lireplace, ronnal dimng
--------1 Buihin breakfast bar p ACIFIC
Beautiful pool and From this Cameo
separate spa Gas BBQ EllOllS: Ad¥etihen and firepil. Many, many H 1 g h I ands beauty Pnced to sell, $339,000 llMMlld ce.dl ttwW Och extras. Only $189,900 Only 10% down w1lh dely .... rwport _,.. Call for more details owners assistance. One
ron I••• •llhty. TM 546·2313 level 3 Bdrm plus huge
DAILY PILOT aH-11 yard. Call now, 673-8550
~~~.: .::.::::! 11-------1 f l4tifM
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Gwral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
451 LOT owe 1st
3 Bdr. 2 Bdrduplex, spa,
3 bills from water Call
Tim Rbooe631·1.266
R&'Mtte
REAi.TORS
OCEAMFttOMT
2 Bdrms. 2 ba. unfum
New. S8SOyrly
IAYRlOMT
3 Bdrm. l• ba. unfum
M mt cond. S850 yrly
CHAMHB. FltOMT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum
S750yrly.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
lOH W 8alboo &ll )bbl
ASSUME
LOW IKT. LOAN
Assume $63,000 loan at
lO~•"<. owner will carry
2nd and 3rd. No qualify
1ng' Sharp 3 bdrm
home Family room and
2 firepluces Only
Sl32 ,500 Call now
979 5370
ALLSTATE
-------~~~~~~~! REALTORS
UNBEATABLE
BARGAIN
3 Bdrm Costa Mesa re
model ed beauty '
Complete with covered
patio plus fantastic hot
tub Priced to sell quick
It Sll0.000.
OPEN SAT/SUM 1-5
2.l lZI ....
COCILa Mesa
Call M6-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
COSTA MESA
5 11-S125,500
OWMEI SAYS SEU.
Not an add--0n or con·
version A real 5 Bdrm
family home in one of
Costa Mes.a's nicest
areas. Handyman.s de·
bght Callnowand save•
~
SEA COVE
PROPERTIE S
71 4 -63 '-6990
EASTSIDE
4-PLEX
Fixer ! All 2 Bdrms.
walk to all shopping.
F1ntashc investment
Only $225,000. Gall for
more details. 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
WESTCUff
VACA.HT
Redu ced S25 .000
Desperate owner says
bring all offers. No
qualifying. Low down. 4
Bdrm single story home,
totally upgraded. Call
ror more details.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
The hiahly decorated
coodo! 2 Bdrm. adulll
only . Clubhouse and
awlmmina pool. 2 CAR
GARAGE. Super sharp.
Only SU'J.100. Call for
more detaiJs, 646-2313
THE ~EAL ESTATE RS
H ..... Vllw..._
ENSATIONAL
BACHELOR
PAD!
Somerset townhome
Fantastic living area
with free standing
1 fireplace. 6 stamed glass
windows. Plantation
shutters 2 Bdrm, mir
rored master suite, 2"'2
baths A mus t see
SL59,900. 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
DIWLEX
3 bdrm. 2 bath uch uml
Fireplace, bwlt·lt\S. Ex
cellent rental area Near
beach & bay S285.000
642·2253 eves
associated
OROl<ERS-·REAL TORS
lOH W Balboo 6 71 )061
NO DOWN!
OR SI0,000
DOWN!
Owner will carry S90.000
AITD or no down, owner
will help you buy .. You
must qualify for loan" 3
Bdrm. 1 t,; bath. up·
graded Double garage,
ca 11 for more details
546-23lJ
~HE REAL ESTATERS
HEWPORTHGHTS
Deluxe townhouse
duplex. 3 bdrm + fam1
ly, 2"2 bath each unit
Frplcs, all built ins,
decks & patios Park
like la ndscap1ne
SELLER WILL HELP
YINANCE' $295,0001
lolboa loy Prop.
YOUR IEST VALUE
IM CAMEO SHORES
Lowest pnced fee s1m
pie opportunity Great
assumable 1st TD En
JOY afternoon :.un and
views from wood deck 3
beautiful private
beaches. Only S549,000
Call today. 673-85:'>0
THE REAL
ESTATERS
O C EANFRONT
C OMDO
NEWPORT CIEST
4 Bdrm 21 .... Ba, F.R ..
pool. tenrus & spa Agl.
Roy 540-3666 or 646-0686
Whelan
Real Estate
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment' Two
2 Bdrm units. one with
fireplace! Current in
come S740 mo Ftnanc
mg• One year home pro
tecllon plan 1ncld
Hurry. ttui. won 't last•
646 7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
WATERFRONT
CONDOS
HUNTINGTON
HARBOUR
Purchase with 51'1r down
on fantastic terms
Brand n e w, cpt 'd,
draped ON THE
WATER. Guarded gale
entry, views, 2 car gar.
Pool and tenrus 2 & 3
BORMS AVAlL lM
MED FromS299,ooo
Ca U 714/ SS&-9600
IHlton
•'75-7060• HEW Oti.IAHS
1--------•I NEW LlSTlNG. 2 Bdrm
WESTCLIFF s 129,500
S6SOo total cub needed
to close escrow. Least
ex pensive condo in
Newport Beach .
Privacy, adults only.
Call for more details.
546-2313
THE :REAL
E STATERS
2 bath, 1 story condo
near 17th St. shopping.
Extra large yard super
condition. Call Liz
Beuley Cor appointment
to see.
j PETE
' BARRETI ··· REALTY
GREAT lNV&STMENT
3 BR 1 Ba, S72,IOO. At·
sumable financlnl fl i-----•--1111 seller •/a lso carry .,. ..... ,,..,, paper. Call for terms.
Call to Ne lbill super 5 752-6'99
bdrm .... In ffu"bor
a Br ror ~Y '2D,OOO. OWoer very mot1v1Wd.
Submit o• dow11 or
trade.
View Hom•. )°a mily n7n.-.-i rm , J car ,.,...., extra Plan LJl DS4Nly Ina• lot, con.enlent •· ~
location. Reduced to
$111,7IO.
l114t '7M4o6
fllJI 4.1 .. .IUI
MARaOll
REALTORS
615-Hlt
COLI! OF HEWPOIT REAl.TOIS
2 51 5 l. Coast Hwy., Corono ~ Mer
675-551 I
ti@itJ.4 546-23 I l
EASTSIDE SHERWOOO EST A TE
OFHRED IY DONALD PFAff * Beautiful Colonial home.
• 2600 sq.ft. on 15,000 lot.
• Buccola 5 Bdrm 3 bath. * Walk in closets, s wideck
• 2 fplc 's, great workshop. * Owner financing lo $133,000 at 12ct
MESA NORTH
Pride of owners hip 3 Bdrm. 2 full
baths. formal dining r oom, low
maintenance yard so you can spend
extra time in the spa Large
assumable loan at 812"{ interest Open
House Sunday 1·4, 994 Cheyenne.
M ESA VBU>E
Decorators delight. Prestigious home
and neighborhood Beautiful tree-lined
street. Oversized lot. wtth very lush
landscaping for tranquil setting.
Owner w1 II help wt th financing. 4
Bdrm. 2 bath. ~ame room. priced at
5174.900.
WO ODSIDE VILLAGE
l Bdrms. 2 baths. lower wtlt. One of
t.·1ght 1n complex that has front and
rear vard Assumable low interest
rate loans Priced to sell at $86.900.
OFFERED BY BILL LUPI S
THE REAL
ESTATERS
OCEANFRONT
Duplex. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba up-
per. with sund~k plus 2
Bdrm 2 Ba lower with
separate raised patio
deck Both units are
completely furnished
with a decorator's touch
4+ car garage and fan·
tash c financing. Take
over $426,000 loan in·
elud ing 12~•'1 for 30
years. Asking $649,000
JACOBS REALTY
67s.6670 I I
4 s£!~ ~rE:~~1oned I
546-2313
ASSUMAILES
One ot Irvine's most
beautiful Deerf1eld
homes Lavishly de·
corated thru-out. 4 Br
2"2ba, frml dining rm +
study Sec system
Comm pool and tennis
Attractive financing
$232,500.
C"'-J21/Swf
CalSSt-6100
FORDETAJLS
home Neat and t.tdy Br ----
mg a pamt brush and Lose something valua
save' $95,000 ble'' Place an ad in our
Lost and Found col ~, .... RED CARPET umns That ·s whert' pen I.I 754-1202 pie look when they\l' Cound an item of value
SEE AND BELIEVE
The ver y finest buy in the
Harbor area New 1650 sq. ft.
condos . 5 minutes to beaches.
One half block to major
shopping centers. Cement
drives. air conditioning,
microwave oven , trash
comp a ct or. I a rge walk-in
closets Garage wjth opener.
Pool and 2 jacuzzis.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380W. Wiboft
Costa Mesa, CA
7 14/631-5055
From SI 36,000
SPYGLASS--IASTORAL VU
$495,000
Offft"tnt flexlbe. .. aM/optioR ""'-°"
fftlt Mewporter Model wltll 4 bed,
fa111.rM. dl•.rm. home with l•terlor
gardeft, sllrtJthh & MOre.
BAYFRONT CON~GE
$610,000
Mon """" ..... :.-:-:. .............. 2 Md + deft It patio ... 1\C. IMt .., ••all W.Mlt leaH/ ....
..................... ..-......
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT,f'tlday, April 24. 1981
R MACNAB·RVN: REAll"Y u .-..... --
CHOICI S'YGLASS llMI
COAOHA DIL MAI Electric driveway gate opens to
mountain & ocean views. Approx one third a cre, 3 BRS, l~ baths plus
family rm or den. Computer
controlled security system plus many
superb amenities. 3 car garage
w /opener, beautifullr landscaped.
Great terms! Owner will carry AITD.
C~ll for details. $519,000. Includes
land. Bea Arnold 644-6200.
lfewi>Or' -.Ch
001 Dover Drive Harbor View Cent.er
642-8236 644·6200
WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK FOR?
BeautHul Oak floors. over 30 trees, a
pool and spa. 2 fireplaces. 4 bedrooms.
2 1:.! baths, family room, move-in
condition. good financing. What more
could you ask for? Price" Only
$375,000.
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Lui Coul Hlghw•11. Corona del Mar
WI HJ. VI 47 OF THI HST J.CHMTS IH TOW"4
MOTIC E
how Daily Pilot Class
1fied ads display their
messages with leg1b11tty
and impact? Our ads.
we are proud to say, re
ally get results Phone
642·5678.
:>top'' Take time to relax
and shop at home It':.
simple with Dally Pilot
Classified Ads And 1f
you have somethl1lg lo
~ell. call a fnendl)
Classified Ad V1i.t•r JI
642·5678
LIVE ON LIDO ISLE!
Sp•eial propertiH for •yone who
wants Hte Uf'lique lifestyle of Country
C lub tl•ln9 in a water o rient e d
community. All the bfft rec:reatiOflol
acH•iHtt au ilable: bicyding. iocJcJlncJ,
teMis, bootlftCJ, d ubhouse actMtles,
nsta uranta ond 1hopph19! Loh of
friettcly peopa. who ~ .._,. their
cOVWNlftlty make this o •acaffon home
e•ft'Y day.
HONEYMOON COTT AGE: $299,000
2 ldnll. 2 bath, paHo CRI CJ"Hltet 'f
EXEC. CORNER-VIEW $675,000
2-story, 3 bdrm, fam nn. mudl "'°"·
~ONTEMPORARY 2 Sto ry
$475,000
Spacious 4 Bdrm with M W decor.
ELEGANT BAY FRONT ++
S2,400,000
Magnificent Si r + total luxwy.
Call for details 0tt the cmov•
And ..• We Han ()then..
WATERFRONT HOME~. INl
RIAi f~lATF
2436 W Coast Hwy
Newpon Beach
IRVIM E TERRACE
631-1400
Back on market. A newly decorat~d
3 BR. or 2 and Den home in move in
condition. Lovely view or ocean &
harbor from very private deck &
spa. $305,000.
OPEN SUHDA Y I :00 to 5:00
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
IUGAMT "'VHSAtulS"-UCW5'VI "
ON llG CAMYOH GOU COUISI
Spectacular Deane Homes
''Versailles .. located on largest lot of l
all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf
course view ! Prof~ssionally
landscaped yard with matu~. trees in .
a private park-like setting including a '
lovely lge pool & huge spa +an
attractive gazebo. Gated front !
courtyard e ntry w/fountain. Marble '
floor in foyer with glittering !
chandelier. 4 Bedrm.s, den. formal •
D.R. & 4 1~ baths. Priced right at:
$825,000. Call for appointment. :
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO.. IEAL TOIS '
21 t I San Joocp. .... Road
NEWPORT CENTER, M.I. 644-49 t 0
LIDO ISLE
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional 3 bdrm 3 bath home,
newly decora..ted Priced to sell
quickly at $475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ·
ceilings. $420,000
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT
Panoramic view at wedge, from
prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom
home 3700 sq ft. featuring marine
room , enl ry , Ii v1ng room. dining
room. built-ms. etc $1.385.000
BAYFRONT
We have several fine homes with pier
& s lip, starting at $1.500,000.
Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bays1dr Ortvt-N B 675 -6161
VIEW
LOT
$20.000
C ALL
DlAHA V. rtETEHPOL
)
DIA MA A. PIETEHPOL
546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
cae::
SEDBBI ELllRS ca .
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
SUPER SPYGLASS
Two Stories Of Excellence. Sunken
Living Room With Fireplace &
Beam Vaulted Ceiltng . Large
Family Room. Full Length Hearth,
Wet Bar. Plu~ A Huge Bonus Room.
Sellers Will Assist In Financing.
Po ol Size Lot . Shown By
Appointment. Asking $565.500 A
"Joy Of Newport .. List mg.
LIDO ISLE
Easy Financing Near Community
Beaches. Clubhouse & Tennis.
Large Quiet Corner Lot With '
Traditional Three Bedrooms, Plus .
Great Guest Quarters With Bath & •
Bar, Or Billiard Size Recreahon
Room Beautifully Landscaped
Lanai & Patio. Expandable Lot.
$425.000.
WOODBRIDGE, IRY1NE
Best Financing Available. Large
Assumable 30· Year Loan Al $11.757<
& Owner Will Carry Second Trust
Deed. Desirable Three Bedroom.
Single-Level With Large Enclosed
Patio. Great Starter Unit Or
In vestment. Enjoy All The
Amenities Of Woodbridge. Owner,
Motivated. $108.900.
' ILUFFS I
.Bluffs' Best Buy. Great Starter!
Unit. Investment, Or Last Home.•
Sharp Two Bedroom End Unitl
Overlooking Lovely Greenbelt.
Near Community Pool, Park &
Shopping Center. $145,000. l
'(!) ·--··-•11i•-to•
~PML Y S ILIOO Dew.
pa alee IBr 1tarter DU .. .., CD ...... flome. Call aieat for r-..,. "' term1ta.JOO.lt7-tmor Below tbs HWJ, compl. ,v ... -..uJ remodeled. owe 2nd UD· •-------1 der h00,000. Call Tim ---------• Rbo«Ma1·1*
I
\j'I '• IH 11 I' I
f;tf'q I '
/
• Bdrm 2 Ba, ... b&r.1-------' l7001qft.~C•1Jttoo fa•t•Y.., 1114
t 8dnn I Ba 1700 ft ••••••••••• .. •• .. ••••••
uawD• ~ ao. 'd'.,.: STAIMID •LASS
$UO,ooo CHATIAU Seautiooal I Br, 2~ Ba
I Bdrm 2 Ba. "T" plan, condo, aew c~t,
1100141lOWC.•w.too ceramlcW.and ot
ltaiDed alaM. •w.ooo
Anne llcCaaland
Al·lm
R&'Mt«
fl ~ \I f 1 • H"
:;;_;:.;:;...;;;:::z::;;..;;;;...;==:.__.~ EXECUTIVE HOllE for
MIS.A YmD1 tbe natw-a&t. Quiet CuJ. MOlr'IM de-aac, wooded lot la
tM8• BRAND N1.'W LISTING Fountain Vally'a flnest
...., -tbr, atrium model, family community. 4Br
1•1111 J~mlne ~1 decorator •w.500. Alt Beth Dun· 2~Ba, form d!n, Ira kit, •-------11 .... me, p.... on green· combe957.-o7; ID-1101 fam rm. Walla ol cJau belt lmmac. '305,SOO brtn1 the ou&doon in. Of. ,,.M01A1~! ADILC'!al~ • 1
1
NO-G4S 3 + Mlll_I$ fend at s.zw.soo. Open ~ v.--IV _.. • DUIRll Frt-Sun J.2...4. l8U5 SAN· Thia private estate baa I INI 1 IUUUl'CE MUST SELL Ul1I darl· TA LAURETIA CIR.
been proleuiooally ex-: F1Xa inl bome la Nonb Costa Alt •llOil
paneled. 1be charm ot 4 Br bonus room ai Mesa. Only $111,000. ---------
warm wooda, beautlful apan'Una pool Superior Ill RED,.. ...... PET Hwlla;• '-di I 040 French doors ~ad to an location. W~n'l laal. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
MIW 0\4 MAlllT Freshly painted
exterior 3 Brs 2 baths Cambridge plan
in Greentree -choice of interior color
and carpet w /quick purchase -
Private yard w /fruit bearing trees -
$139,000 includes land excellent
linancing available to qualUied buyer.
Sl39,000 Sandie Fix &U-6200 CF12>
•.,wpon~
901 Dover Drive H&ttx>r View Cent.er
642-823e &M-8200
IPICTACU' AL ___ .,,_...;;.__ __ ---4 .. rift'• • catal.., --...
01~ Nt.J CH be 10Uft la tJUa ua..-.111u. aw.r. ...... W.U locat·
LoweR priced 1 bdrm+ td la a tood family
loft condo. v., ab neltbboJ'bood • com·
ead unit. ••· c Va· pletel1 ~ Ill· cut a.od bu lod box. alde • out. Good ftouc.
C/11 Mcw ... tC*. tn1.hll.100.
..... Jl7 76N767 A. &o~~'!..
!Ml .. MI.... 1041 tloee to pool 6 fl'vator.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Senaatlonal llO decree -.1.u .. .-vlewa • 1or1eou1
'" ~--CatallDa Slalaeta. 2 atory W •• t bered cedar wttb fireplace Is deek. abakee, tbat ia. Custom sm ooo dell--a bdrm, tam • . ....,.. WIST ... :'e !,1>~ Extenatlua Iv: Situated dlrec:tly oa loll
coune, lhil 2 bdrm up. ceramic We. Beam cell-per unit haa lovely
ln1. frt>le. Slt5,000. vie.a. Owner may help liliuJoa Really tb fin <TW~. wiandlll. A lood
1 ____ ...__,,,----I buy at $1.M,IOO.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CUSTOM ~ LA•UMAISTATI
FAIULOUS POOL & SPA HOMI
Highly upgraded -4 Br 2~ Ba
Northwood borne. Used brick galore
in driveway, entry & surrounding
pool & spa. Separate family room,
dining room and kitchen nook. Hi~h
assumable loan PLUS owner will
assist in financing. $241,990. Carol
KokoJ . 731·1214.
CALL NOW 551 -4400
DONALD M . BIRD
Associates, Realtors
llapillcent4 Bdrm COD·
temporUf bome wlth
breatbtUUll coastline
view. Tudled away on
prlvate road, offering complete aeclualon. 17141 494-1177
Spark lint gourmet
kitchen, sun drenched' 11911•..... 1052
breakfast room. 4 decu •••••••••••••••••••••••
and much more. Truly a Spac 3Br 21,; ba 1~ rt
La I u n a p..a,u di 1 e . condo. View, al e, frpl,
1695.ooo. close t.o shop!. 911•% In.
1110,000 . Own /Agt
831·7°'8 don osen
r ... i11or'-
LAGUNA BEACH .wr-4848
LINKS POINT
OPEN SAT/SUN 12-6
On #4 Fairway, Plan C. 4
br, 3~ ba, 2 fam. rma,
brkfat rm, 3 car gar
Hlewt A.SSUMAll I
4Br home w/apa, xlnt.
cood. 1188,000. 552.eMO.
NW BEACH 1391.5 00. A11 u me WA TaROMT 1164,000, ~~% ml loan
Woodbr id1e prime Oceanaide ol highway. 31931 E Nine Drive
Lakefronl location ,,... blk to beach. A home 493-5289
Vlewa forever. 3 Br. 2~ with that charm that is -----
I .
RVM*
,. ' '' ', \11"-
•LIDOISU• Lovel1 IBr, IBa bome.
Beautifully remodeled
2Yn a10. kM.000 with lllnt financln1. Open House• Sal. Sun. 1-5. 111
Via Vella. ~er/ Aaent : fJ73.0D7
IAQIAY
I Bdrm, 2 bath bome
plua ldeal moeher-ln-Jaw
quarters . Co mpl.
w/batb. szao,ooo.
lloyMce-6,Dr. 1-.nzt
MIW,a.TCUST
180 de1 ocean vie w.
Prime location. Pool,
teMia, apa. Open bouae
Sat/Sun 1-5 at 15 Swift
Court.
C/ 2 I Mtwpori c.tr
640.5357
--~
HOA5HOSPITAL
l Bdrm, completely
fumlabed c:oodo. Walk t.o
beach. Security, pool.
Priced below market at S112,ooo. Open house Sat
le S unday 1·5 at 200
McNeil, Unit 106.
C/ 2 I Newport Cw
640-SJ57
UDO ISLE ex~a lar1e Uvm1 room, Prin. only. Greg AaUe 754-1202 2 STY &.AteMAllC c~~~. ~ ~-i: 1•1221 OPEN HOUSE until ~:~if2~aiD~·:~~: •STAITEI HOME
kitchen. Larie pool la 8 0 l d 1 Week d a '1 1 ed. $t03K auumable ln. I Flexible financin1 on
ba, pvt spa, nex. financ· bard lo flnd. 2 Bdrms. Newport leoclt I 069
in1. Spectacular' Of. dining area. frplc, patio, ... ••••••••••••••••••••
fered at 1~4.900 Call fncd yard. Privacy HEIGHTS CONDO
IYOWMB
Luxunous 6 bdrm,~ ba,
atudy , family rm
Separ ate laundry &
service room On 2 lot.s.
Swimming pool. View of
lhe bay. Large assuma-
ble loan " owner will
ctr ry some paper
'895,000. Call 67S-7CJZT
separate enclosed area. 2:so.9 pm, Sat/Sun Asklnl $1St,IOO Faal l th.la 2 Bdrm Greentree
Electrlc1atesof'fertotal 10·8pm. 4br, t'iA!ba , eacrow.Btr8G-1377 flJ:er. Owner will help 552-1800 and ask for 12:90~ ........ MOMD-Quiel Npt Hgta/Chf
p;vacy. Newly offered. hardwood noora. new wilh coct. Call for de·
A muat to aee. Only a•.aCH--_ paint. cpl, drapea, FOUIPLIX talla.
Lynn Noah. "nA -Chaven ccndo w/pool & Towa& Co.try l..tton 4'4-1011 garage. Great usuma-
l'195,000. -~ plumbinl SU.5,000. 1583 All unit.a are 2 Br. 2 Ba, Xlnt shape, privacy ai Seoate St. CM 541-1731 or Sood renll, 9'> vacancy
ExcepUonalcommilalon parking. Owner will 831·"71 factor. Prih SW,OOO.
aplit for lilllnl oriented finance. Sto,000 dwn. •---------rea ltor a11oclatea. Good rate of return. MESA DB. MAR Loan II .. umable.
Beautiful office in choice Broker Chria 957-1..588 Beautiful ranch style ._. Mcc.a...I ::.:~on. Have 2 open-2 unlta 00 la lot, 3 bdr-2 4br, 2ba, 2000 aq. ft., 611·1266
759•1,1, ba, 2 bdrm 1 ba, 4 nicely dee .. xlnt nel1bborhood , nu 1ara1e1. Broker. drapea/carpet, houae RVM~·
875--0563. will aeU it.ell. Sl.37,500 10 '1 I •I!"
Terms. Prin. Only . -cAIEflll CMTIY IMGIJSH
IMftlX 545-7091. ---------
IT'S LOADED! 9 moc old 4br. + 2br u.n-Open Sat/Sun 12-5;
4 Bdrm, 3 ba, formal din· 1l SH5,000. 709· 709t,; l2 tJ 0-...
Ing rm, fa mily rm, 3 Orchid. 851 -9135 3Br, 2Ba Meaa Verde
n rep la cea, 3 car gar l:Own;;;;' BiiKmiiiRii. -~~!l-;°;(ja~re~•~-~So~Ud~f10~an~c~ln~1~.~b~y Vtew of ocean and walk-1• owner. Sut,500. 55&-TI74
ing dlllance t.o beach. .. C>C>Ull .. n• .,. LOAN With kS,ooo down, lbw ~ ~ beauty can be yours to-3 br home or Meaa
day. Call now s.36-9311 Verde. 1111.IOO. Bob Al· len, aat. H4·1811 or ALLSTATE 1112·
1
S06. _ 3 br + den, E. Side
REAL TORS llDUCB! twnbae, bu ramblin1
LOWDOWN
VeraaiUes I bdrml1tud10
pentbouae condo with lar1e aaaumable loans
1109,900. Call today
979-5370.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
Ownerwillcarrypa.rtol ~reek . A11um. loan.
financln1 00 th.la out-1118,900. Bob Allen. •it.
1landln1 Cllltom dup~JL 964· Ullll or 9112. 7505. t,; block t.o the beach. 41---------
bdrm front unit: 3 bdrm E •stslDE rear. Private paUoa. On· "' I ....... 000 3 br. 1 ba, lie lot. y.ug, · S933/ mo. '9500 dn.
MAUIY STAUfflll Sl.25,000. Trade? Owner,
SIA UOM llALTY 831-5478.
1~~~67~J.~l~J1~4~~ MIS.A YaDI 1= 4br, 2+ batba, xlnt loca·
Dn'BTAIMB-S
D&IGHT
2aty CaWomla Clualc.
2000 aq. ft, tbr, Zba. 2IO x
24' family rm w/wfA. bar,
refri1erator ai pool ta.·
ble. Try lO'Je down !
$144,500.
TAMA.IACI vt&.&.A .. coeeo
Sbr, l~ba, encloaed
aaraae. Try S25K down. owe Sto.,100. H11b
comp. $1(18,IOO.
lion w/many extra•. Lae BY OWNER·IBr, l~Ba.
••••••••••••••••••••••• profe11lonally • 1---------i landscaped backyard el07,IOO. Hl·2844 or
1024
COMMERCIAL
LOT
3 contiguoua Iota. zoned
C2 in San Clemente.
Office building plans
available. $298,800
MISAYllDI w /auto aprlnklera fr _95_7_·_217_7 _____ _
room for • vee 1arden. House incli..Sel 2 frplca,
oak bar, buUt·ln book
ahelves, freneb doon, prlv patio w/ apa off
maater aulle. Built-lo
dbl oven, micro • lee
maker. llmt .ee to ap-preciate. Open House
Sat/Sun 1-5 31.12 Country
Club Dr. '235,000
Owner/Ast.,.
4-ILD
Exl1lin1 low interest
flnancln1 . Pride of
ownerahlp. Lar1e 3
Bdrm + family room
ownen unit and three 2 Bdrm 2 blth wllta. All
Include builtins,
fl.replaces and encloMd
1ara1n. Excellent COO·
dlUon. For more in-
formation, call :WO.Wl
0\¥"9
LIAV..illA
Clean Eut.lide S Bdrm
1-----------1 witb cov'd paUo, BBQ
OW C STRGHT and a 1ara1ea. Don't NOTE wait, call atent 5i&8-42CM
· ~.. HERITAGE
REALTORS
A11ume lat TD w/2 llESA VERDE 4 Dr. 2
S210,000 dwo for this darl· Ba. with pool, beautiful·
ln1 E.slde 2 Bd condo ly landacaped • eaay
w/lr1 brick frplc. Coiy care ya.rd. Owner" wUl
atep-down Uvln1 rm, con1ider V.A. Sl21,900.
nlcepaUo.JO)'ceWa.tbe D . Bourke Realtor.
131·1* 546-9950.
PIOIATISALI
Popular Hunt. Via 3 Bd l~ Ba home w/new
bell• carpet. Alto add·
OD 900 aq fl room • tot.al·
ly remod~ed kitchen
w /blt-la mlcrowa•e ove o . 81>9clal a larm
1y1tem, IW'lfl)' painted
nterior ai new bat water
lank. $120,lllO. CIWC lit
TD w/Z5'Je chm at ~
amortlJed over ao yrs.
Call lb 55-IMOO.
IYOWMlll
• br, 2 ba. Auumable.
Approx . '75,000 at
107/l'Je. P'rDk. new paint
• crpt. SUZ,500. 182.-ae.
PIOIATI SAU
Cbarmlncbunlalow
5 Bdrm at lle1a Verde J8r,2Ba$1J7~.
Country Club. OWC. IBLeilanl
SU0,000. by owner. OPENSAT/SUN2~. 545-5001 Ted Hubert Rltr 7U.f1m _________ ,_;:...=...:..:..:;:.. _____ _
leofton 552· 1100 ,_________ ble financin1 No quali·
I f yt n&. Gre1 As tle
Univ Prk Vi lla1e 11 758-122'1.
Beaut 3 Bd, bonus rm,
Julliard. 1rnb11 1oc • ---60-1-u·o·o--
-Good financing & terms
TUll1\8tOClt 1159,000. Agl Mary Southern California's
...... Dr 857-2040 8)1-8440 premier tugh rise con
Best priced 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, faml~ rm. Open DEERFIELD TOWNHOME bouae Sa Sun 1·5· 5372 3 Bdrm 2 Ba or 2+ den,
SierTa Roja. agl sty. end unit w /Iola of
C/21 Mtwpotf C• privacy. lrg backyrd.
1 ____ 6_4o.5 __ l_5_7 ___ 1 This house hu many\rx
TRB• ,.CE traa & ii very clean: Dre
IEADYTOCiO Plana and permits is·
sued for addition of 2nd
unit. to this beautiful
north end Laguna col·
tage. Seller will carry all
financing $225,000
R E D U C ED T O dom\nlum. Spectacular
S view of Newport Bay B.l Total 24 hr securily
0 w n er w i 11 car r Y Highly upgraded with
$195,000 on this spacious all amenities. You've
multi-level architect's fol lo see it t.o belleve it•
home in Npt Hgt.a 2600 700.000 with S250,000 of
IQ ft designed for family auumable financing at living. 1380,000. Joyce 12 75"'r mt Principals
Weitze. 831-12186. only ~ a11umables & no quali·
Ouhtandln1 Cardiff fyina 1132.~. Opn Hae THIEi~ THE
model in Unlveraily Sat /Sun 10 5 1 rllCEOFOHE RVMtte Park Terrace. 2 Bdrm 2 s Ba + Iott hide-away. nowberry.s.59-1832 H ouae, apartment. studio located in Wooda Great location, pool. JUSTUSTID Cove area. Wal k to
1reenbelt1, flnlabed OPEN SAT l 5 beach. Xlnt creative SEAWIND PORTOFINO·
Ill-\I fllll'-
1ar•fc•· A must t.o see. University Park 3 br. 3 terms available. 1279.500 remodeled, hllbly up·
ba Prime loc lmmac 1raded, 48r, 48a, auper . -.
0-~ '··>'·Ii
l;I ·d I y
. ,'. 1 /000 T....__.._, ••
Oa,_&...d
2 at.ory, 4 bdrm, dlnlnl
rm, added den w/wet
bar. 1lep1 to park,
comm. poo1 ai t.ennls. As-
a um able loan. Owner
will assi.t ln financin1.
Ul0,000. Fee. A1t,
840-5560.
*•ESTATES!
cond owe 2nd. 118 Se· 497.5494 view. by owner k 79,000
quoia Tree V15ta Realty •--------640-t643 (213)939-3326 ----
Sell idle items 642-5678 WANT ACTION'
Clasaifed Ad!! 642-5678
Have something to sell '
Classified ad!! do 1t well
To Mot her With Love ....
IAlvr hU •way of rrtumong to 1u aour<'r On lhlA \fW1'1UI d.1•
th.-lovr you h1vr ttivrn ·~ rrturnfd with• ~l>('('l~I m"''~ll•' or warmth Tekr a loo« ~e ho,. mu<'h you •rt> fn\1-<l
Sln1te atory attached
home in fabuloul Wood·
brtd1e Eatat.es. Huie •
backyard. all lbe Wood· I bridge a.menilles and aa· --~-_,.~ . ..,
aume a hlP loaJl. Owner I will conalder help on
secondary flnancin1.
$165.000.
The lar1est model in W oo dbr idge
Eatatea-2300 aq tl of lux-
urious livinl apace and
your own pooJ and apa.
Priced to ael1 at SlN.900.
Almoat 1100,000 ln H ·
1umable ftnancinc.
\\bod bridge
Reahu
551·3000
'92111.runn Pkwy, lrvbit•
WOODBRIDGE
Muat aeU brand new
P91tera t2 Plan. 4Br,
JBa, cloeetolak'e.
Open Sat/Sun U-5
#3 .... w anninlprin1
$242$0All.
145.9150 dya. 875-1857
evea.
*Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
BLUFFS BARGAIN
3 bdrm twnbme Walk t.o
everything pool, tennis.
schools, park, shopping.
Agt 675·se:.l, 640-8146
IAYCUST
Attractive three
bedroom home .
Cathedral «tllnp ln liv·
ing and dlnin1 room.
Oak plank f1oorln1. Cosy
flre·pla~. Huae covered
patio. Pool 11.ze yard .
Owner motivated. Make
offer. See Gayle Amato
or Allan Minor. '310,000.
H 1·7JOO M.I. 4PUX-l,_h
ORTRADEJOR R.E
COSTA lll:SA BLUFFS
V A/IBMS "=f::' 1042 Summerthne f11n atarta ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ .....__ ___ ~
here for 1our family • •l•H Wttt ...... .. ~, t •• 1007 ., .................... .
• CUSTOMHOMI
.... , I ...
StePI to k1 and beach. nu. beau&llul ..... bom•
teatuns: JBdrma, famt.
r'OOOJ. end llbrvJ. 2~
atlla, ceramic UI•
\lllnoat. • nnplact•, 0 a k cable et '..L~ •111.-.u. l&aiMcl ..... wtnclow, ~ cloon,
•••••• llMTALHOMI . ......
LOW NZOATIVE
149-7"' SUCCISS MALTY
wttb private pool • apa. llove rtllit in to UU. lov· BeauUlul MS Exec. 4
ely refurtabed a Bdrm 2 bdrm home. EleSaat wel
Ba bome. At only bar, blt·ln bbq luicle • •uuoo tt'• never been maa1 otW amenltlea euier to buy tban now. lnd. a bup 1a.nt tbat
We recommad qllick bacb to • beaatUul
action. park. lust a rra old! Broker, mt11Z ....... . ..... .......................
INYIST ..
LOCAnOM
Sharp z Bdnn C!DDCSo In
II•• Vtnte. Prtcecl &o aell now at-.-. CaU
ADDI lltCUllDd 111·~ 1---------
RVM~
' I
• paUot aoilanW.• l•Hlt and beHUful ,.,. off .......... Of·
find M tim,•. hr' H .,....~to Mt, call
lit-Ull ....;...,_;._....;....._......;...~__;,~
.... MOl1M ............. ,.. llM loe.._ Lilw ID·
._. lit TD. Pftct 1'9-
cltlHd to•M1.-.
HFRIT~GE
11 I f' I ft 1f1•
~11/lwf :.~ .• ,.. ....
Nune/tom~ Heb
part Um• employment la pri~ laome or boep. Qualuted caadldatea s-..a-u......a •-T LC -1 m 11 t t P o t • e a a
r-"--w • · ... aDalyUcal/1u18'trlcal
1 ; tbe •ldefb'.145-lGS AlUty ud mmt be able
Http W..eM 7100 to funetaoa eft~tlvely ••• .. ••••••• .. •••••••••with mtntmal ACC. e&.91 tupervbloa. AbW')' to
--J 11 .. »-Jn comm•• .n.ctlve: auc o...., ·-c. baa ly, both vat.lly and lD
apoe1tionopenforanac-wrltto1~b a mu1t. dC clerk wtUl l yr ex-Rear.Dal •-cl··..a-1 _________ 1 perieace . .Dudee lnelUCS. ... .,...
AIR anal)'91', audtUna rat •I and luuln1 MBMCAI.
..i. reporta • aeoeral poUclea and endorse-P'Wl fr p/Ume froot olc. llCB'TIOMIST
acct1 duUH. Xlnt mentl. Bt.aaJ G.P. in F.V. Pe1 lnternat'I. m.ktc. firm
beoeftta • worttna coo· board 6 Im. m-e111 o e e d a R e t e P · di. with a srowtq com-CGotact: tionlst/Typtat ror front
peny. Apply la penon. DEBBIE FOWLER MEDICAL r\&11 or part---------desk. Handle phones,
TheJally &pr Inc 114-IU.1414 tlme, front office. PHSOM ... AY greet vwton . .Swpm re·
l70'2GWetteAve Traucrtblo&aper, pre-Over the counter sales. q'd. Accuracy a must.
'1n-ine IMA rd. "5-NOO. Boat store. &'U-2810 Noo-srnkrs. only Call: C71•>~ lnl1&ranceCompanyof Mrs. CopJan. SS9·6901.
NortbAme:rica MEDICAL •PlctweFf * g IMS Equipment. 2805 &IM-..a.OfflCI 500Jo9Uthlbin 98 .._MSCRllER Picture rrame allop Barranca Rd., Irvine.
Law ofllce ••ed • tOtCeotralTower 1 ~ oe e d a pera on ex · EOE mesaen1er to do 1eneral <>ranee. c.. 1 ?.!!~1~ ~:... topum P5~ny · perienced in au phases _R_E_S_A_L_ES_P_E_RSO __ N_f_o_r
offtce duties a.bo, must Equal()pportunity ._.. .. ·-........_ 1 or picture framing . · · havea1oodcarlSalary Employerll/F acute hospital ex· 558·1"2. sales,excbanges,invest·
+ mlleaie. can candy •--------petience in all phases ol ---------ment.s. High comm. New 851-0633. medical dictation. Mon.. Presct.oolTeocller & P/T olt . Newport ---------1·------•-•I Fri. &-5. 768-3500. Christ I an . Ear I Y Pacific R.E. 645-3683.
C'ilMlltALOFACI lnauranee MEDICAL childhood educ. courses RESERVATIOHIST
Appliance service com· WANTED!" RECEPTIONIST or exper req'd. P/tlme. ood P.any. Heavy phones, 642-9181 Neat, attractive, g ~lbt typbaa, bookkeep-Buay Newport Center of· ---------personality. Phone ex-
lal experience. A.sit for Immediate career op-flee. responsible, en· PRESS PERSON perience. Interviews
Dennis, 6'2~. portunity la available thuaiastic, typtna. PIT-Fully quallrled ortsel. 12 · 4 pm , Tuesday ·
for EXPERIENCED FIT. 641>-2023. Min a yean experience. Friday, full & part-lime. C'iENRALOfflCE Life, Propertv and -M-ED-IC-... -.... -oR5-1-S-T-.-i Davijison 701, Rypbl Salary commensurate Looking for a very in· 1 ,_ -with T51, Darkroom a with experience. Harle· teresUng part time job Caaualty Agent la the Front/Back office. CdM plus. For lnterview, call quin Dinner Playhouse,
lo pleasant office? Newport and Coata aru.873-8200 855·1137. 3503S.Harbor8lvd,SA.
Clerical, for mature Mesa area. DuaJ license ---------1----979·5.Sll.
iJ
Orange Coliat DAIL y PtLOT~rfday. April 2•. 1981
SALES Secret.aria!
lrnmed pert ume open· SALES SEC'Y
In& for Reader Ad With a y<1'.mg dynamic
representative for in1lde computer billing sales
sale. position. Gd. com· organization. Must have
pany beoefitl. Apply in xlot verbal skills.
person: Pennyaa ver. clerical or secretarial
1860 Placentia Ave .. experience. CaJI Linda
C.M. Mon·Fri .. l-5PM Oevorkin at Safeguard •-------•
SALES LADY Health Care Systems ~----·-• -_.-.-.
for exclusive c.-hildren's <7I4>95V·U2l.
bpuUque. So. Cst Plaza Sec.-retary
LE MACASIN, 549-~ LEGAL $EC'Y
Sales lmmed opening in our
Now hiring Assiitant growing Irvine offic.'e.
Manager Tramees. Min Civ al prac.-tic.-e with
I mm1mum 2·5 years exp. 6mo. exper Call for n· Salary open call fran terv1ew. 642· 1231 833·3622
SEW ING llACHINI!
OPERATOR
Sa.U loft esp, 01·1M2
•SHIHl ... o.T.
OrderRUer
t day wll, Co. bea m.1eeo
SHOE SAL.ES ·
chJlda/teen11, F·P/T, ex·
p'd penon, hrly, lncen-
t l v e 1. benef6'1 .
C hildren'• Bootery
64-4~ Mr. llUwr
SHOPTIAINH
Learn enanvina & othtir
machines. Company
beoerlta 41 lood poteotiaJ
for rl&hl peraon. 3121
Red Hall , C.M
Sml 011 company has PIT
(2 dys l opening for ,1ood
typing skills. 1oocl 'with
numbers, some exp. re·
q'd 64().8500 ------
STOCDIO«a
TIA.IN&
College g:rada Oppty. in
Newport Beach area for
hard work1n1 en-
thusiastic indiv Send re· sume to. P.O Box 430.
Marlton. New Jersey,
1*>53
STRAIGHTENER
for atuminum forgings.
Experience required.
Able to read blueprints
& measuring instru-
ments 1st & 2nd shifts. Apply Alummum Forge
Co.. 502 E Allon St.,
Santa Ana 549-4075
EOE person. LocaUoo P.C H., preferred but not Medical, full time front Production. full time 1---------
Npt. Bch. Exper. 1 o~ceasary. Leads pro· office position. M~slon person for Prod. Dept. RESTAURANT s ALE s p ER SON .
muat. Accurate typing, v1ded, CJ'OUP Insurance Viejo. Executive & P1c.-kln1 & handling Saodwkh Maker hfs mature P/tame & some
no shorthand. 20 hr provld~. Ex~llent ~P-medical, secretarial ex-hosiery Crystal Crea· 7AM-3PM Mon .-Fr1 wknds 673-2634
SECRETARY
Legislative office needs
erfic1ent secretary 60
wpm a c.-rura t el).
pleasant telephone
vo i ce S114 0 mo
Resumes PO Box 3151,
Newport Beach, CA
92663.
T~ACHER's Aide want
ed Exp 5 mornings.
9 12, afternoons 4·6
Susan. 64().8820 week includes Sat & Sun portwuty ror aggres51ve per. including insurance tion• Apparel 631-5414 I 646-8883,-call anytime
Call: 7431 individual. billing. 495-1060 I
General
TIM ltAoo hy Clllb ............
SK.ttv~
1 yr. exp. Craveyard
For appointment
CCllltact:
RONALD AALSETH
ZIJ.701·2300
GW
MESS&IGER 6 mornings a week.
7AM-9AM. Ex~U. driv·
ing rtt. req'd. Apply.
Pennysaver. 1660
Placentia Ave .. C M
PROD MGR TRAJNEE Restaurant
Great oppty for a take Meyerbof's, primary
charge indlv w/mech supplier ol good r~ to
skills Won well wi pe<>-the Irvine corpor'ate
pie Salary open communityneedspeople
540-8882 for sandwich making.
PRODUCTION MODB.IMG, TRAINEE
Watter/Waitrnt CiRUTWESTEllN Comm'ls, films. ex Rubber llose products,
S ---.5 tr as ... SCAS needs new t h t 1 year dumer house exp An"9' , mus pass co. P ys1ca
simple food prep. Moo·
Fri . 8-3pm No ex-
perience nee. Starts
minimum. Call Susie
5.57·6232
405 nites. SPM·llPM ' races. all ages. 957·0282 Including back X-ray.
ArrirmativeAction Taking applications
Please call for appt EqualOpportunity MOTR btwn II & lOAM only.
645 -7358, Mon-Fri. Empioyer MIGHTAUDITOR St ratoflex. 17671
9:30-5PM 1~~~~~~~~~1 6'2·3030 Armstr.ong Ave., Irv. 1: ---------EOE. A Kendavis Ind ,
GUARDS Full & part time All
areaa. Uniforms rum'd.
Ages 21 or over. retired
welcome. No exper nee
Apply : Universal
Protec:Uoo Service, 1226
W Sth St , Santa Ana
Interview hrs 9 12 & 1 4,
Mon-Fn
Hang Gliders mfr needs
gnl laborers
547.1344
HUD
CiROUNDSKEIPH
Head 1roundskeeper
needed by Huntington
Beach City School Dist
12 mo. poelt100 Exper.
preC'd. $1,233 lo Sl,533
depending on exper Ap-
ply: 735 14th St .. H.B.
$36-8851
Health Food store
salesperaon, part or full
time. Accepting applica-
tions. ~9537. ~6968.
HOMEMAKBS P/T
Over 21 M-F. 3-4 hrs
day. Sandwich shop at
beach,H.B.SJ&.7272
HOME WOR KERS
Editorial work 10 your
home for sm publisher
Study work· lG-30 hrs
per wk. Prefer BA Call
~1 for appt. 832-0965
HOST /HOSTESS
Full & part lime availa·
ble. Apply lo person
3-5P M. Jolly Roger, 400
So. Coast Hwy, Laguna
Beach.
HOUSECUAHERS
Exp, own trans 540-0857
HOUSECLEANERS
To $5/hr, car. ~51.23
Jewelry store in So. Coast MOTHER'S HELPER Co.
Plaza needs bright SPECIAL~OH PIT Hone Dept. Clerk lc;
penon for olrice duties. We .are looking for a work for PETCO Animal
540-90&6 special person lo help Supply Supermarkets JIWUY SA.LES ~th our 2~ yr old hif'n· Apply 3033 Bristol c M dicapped son. · · · Exp pref but will train. Varied famlily duUea m _s.s_-_24_22_· -----
Apply in penon, Kirt elude help wttb our older p / T 1 M E h e I p ( o r
Jewelers. 2300 Harbor childre~ also but with women'• specialty shop
Blvd, C.M e D_lphasis on a total com Fashion Island No expr
llTCH&f HB.P m1t~eot lo lus welfare nee 759-995110 lo 6 pm
PREP.COOKic CHEF Tramm& helpful, but not necessary u we tram Experienced. The Quiet and expand the r11ht Woman,CdM.~7440. person. Full lime
LECALSECRETARY employment with c.-om
Npt Ctr, cood typing pany benefita and com
alt ills, flexible hrs, mensurate salary. Must
salary commensurate. be dependable. Call
545·lSSS Mrs. Canfield 3 lo 6 pm,
Legal Secty , Ex·
perienced, Xlnt skills.
salary neg .. on the water
in Newport Beach
(714)675-11690 .
Mon thru Jtraday
675-8729
OUALITY CONTROL
Marine hardware
manufacturer needs
QC Inspector shipper.
Light driving. Sailing
knowledge helpful. CalJ
for appt. 546-1101 Santa
Ana
RESTAURANT FIT, PIT
sandwic.'h man & counter
he lp. Plaza de Cafe.
Gary's Deli. 752-5401
RETAJLCLHIC
Costa Mesa Stationers.
270 E. 17th St.. C.M
Fulltime. Apply an
person 10.12 only.
RN
ASSISTANT
DIRECTOR
OFNURS~
Day hrs, flexible
sc.-hedule. Ask for Mrs
Wong Grand Avenue
Conv. Hosp .. 1730 Grand
Ave , Long Beach. (213)
597·8817
Sailing Instructor needed
in Npt Sch. 2S-2'7' cruis·
ing sailboats . Wknda
now, fulJ time summer
645-7100
SALES P/T
Mornmgs neceaary for
fabric.-store. Call Gerl
646-4040. ------SALESP/T We need 3 sharp people
with fashioo background
lo work in our men's &
women's dept. Salary +
commission. call for
appt
SECURITY OFFICER
0 C C Ca mpus. tem
porary. part tame . on
ealJ. s wing /graveyard S6 55.$7 06/hr Contal·t
Coas t Communit y
I Colleges. 1370 Adams
A\e, Costa Mei.a. 92626
556 5947
1::0 E .MF
SECURITY GUARDS
Openings for qualified
individuals Good start
mg pa) Refundable un
1form deposits 978 7243
&638 8191
SECURITY GUARD
Mon thru Fnday, 12 to 8
AM Benefits 499 1175.
499· 1177
Sec'y
H.l .PROFOFC
Need!> xlnt typist, top
!ik1lls non smkr salary
opert 640 2912
Sec'y/R.cept. for engmeenng co Typ
1ng. xlnt s alar) &
benefit~ 957 6596
Sales
Self Green World 1s look
Ing for aggressive.
motivated individuals
for interior plant sales
Base fee and com ·
mis11ion paid. Xlnl IJP·
portunily to make f(ood
money. have fun and be
on your own . Call
898-0300
---
TEAOfERS
ASSISTANT
Special classes for han
du:apped adults. 2 yrs
college eltper req'd Ex·
cell vacation & 10
surante benefits
Wkdys 8 30 to 4PM
United Cerebral Palsy
Assoc . Santa Ana.
546 5760
Teacher'•.,.
Preschool . exp'd. Full
time 642·0411 ----
TECHMICIAM
Wanted for service & In·
stallation of photo pro·
cesso r Some
mechanical & ele<"trical
exp required (714)
898 0290
Telephone Sales
WORK AT HOME
Ca ll Garden Grove
530 5220
TELEPHONE
SOUCITERS
Haring now for summer
Work 3-9 Mon·Fri No
exp nee No selling Call
966·0151 aft lpm -----
Telephone
"4 OHE rBlSOM
P 1 T phone person
needed to call & set
app'ts for busy Solar Energy Co. S4.SO/hr +
bonus Ask for Al:
LIQUIDYHE
ENERGY SYSTEMS
545·6793. 754.0535
TelephoMSClllH
~xc1ting vacation club.
promoting for resor t
condos, needs 3 to 6
bright, raponslble. am
b1t1 ous peopie Gd
phone voice ne<'. Guar
against comm. Wkly
paycheck 3 pit shifts
avl Call 9-5. Mon-Fri .
543 7957 or S43-8137
TOOL.PUSHERS
California based drilling
contractor seeks grow-
mg foreman for Hunt·
mgton Beach nas. Xlnt
ulary & benefits. Send
resume PO BOX 2508
Bakersfield CA 93303 or
call (8051327-5736
Travel
EXCLUSIVE
Nwpt Bch travel agency
Minimurn 2yrs exp.
w/travel agency. Saber
agts ONLY. Contact
Gaylene 646-7777
Want Ad~
---Have something to sell?
rail 642 5678 Classified ads do It well.
aohool end on
Saturday g 'ettlng new
customer• for the area••
leading newspaper. Big S Plus
Pf:lzes .. trips end bonueee..
C411•Ce..c. 642-4111, atll 1·
Equal Opportunity Em~
1~~~!~!11~&-I~~~~;~~!··~·· ............... =~' ~ ~ .............. , .......... 1111!
~f!!!!!JD!!l!!J~tj ti (a> HCllil&>t 1 •n !! ·········-··....... 141iriitl-:"(1)1'tll • l~~~~!!:!!.!!Lt oll.~~-!fr.u. ~~~~a.
~ ... ill.,..._ Ex~ l.rlr alto for h ~....,_,:.;...,:,.;...~....1 Uoaa,~ta.u eampor. Gl·STn 1
(_,., rt •'
...... 'Ta Honda CB1'11 .... R4 :llMMA*O raco~1tio•·1•
,......WliMIYedlh YOUllWAMM •uo. 115•7114 '
' UNlftlTS 'TO. Tw 1.ttll a-cJ'iBlvd. Moter)t-., S./ ~ ••· rwc. N.a· t4J.JOOO .... ,,.... t "' carpMa, ~ toya, ft. From Nortb S.aut.tfuJ Cob' ~1 t Y" al~ oiya. MX •ie.soo· ...... •••••••••••••••••
overytl)la• ... Used tl2.fOU mlu. -llabltno LD. Carollu. lat oner. lat ;raty. rre. OU .... , 11 ncun :.,, hd. CAM PER SHELL· Fib WI CAM SILL
btkk, plttvo wtndow•, Q>• Coif lrdu. l :lOH>·4pm, Mrve.s~m. 141.f*171f. f/8~.0-. Cbryt.' Dodae S&e~lde truck YOUI l.V.
carpet.I, aU applianHt, ~·alt cd a:~~ AprlU16& 1* Stockllnd SbeU for SUPER C(U)l~· .... *11!1 C, .U,, Hy ff• b>O . .,..,_alUPll. 5158-1*
lAvelort, IDUlt be IOIM SSl..U.O GIANT OAllAGE SALE. HUil truck perfect 'i4/ SAi,&. ~ at. ~· 76 'IW CAW'a
by Snnday 4/21111. ' ,_..,,~1 1nlac.25t eood.'400511MJ7 ..... tllf.J~t)'. !;p: • 1"'!'17;35 D)'namlto Wt1thlla •ENT: 22' lua. mtr
l'JS.1725. Col'dlr' co.ch Mt. QleeO to $Jel. IM lN. 211'1'2 Wt dft 'IYJI MS Ill. lilt! · pop-\op. 4 1peed. Only home. Sipe 6, Mlf·cont.
ptU. J'oriptervtew call UOll•l"'ln dttle froat biclt-aW A love M•t. BaM~JQ,Eutblulf l~J ICW Generator W.JJtllSLCll >. • ....,...,-, 105 49 •• mU..(WWXA> U'f5/wk. + I• ml. -.im . door• w /de•otator Utaut.0.5*025t atf:'.f»ltlO T ICODliD En1lao on .... c.r t TV -I •h .... ,.............. ssm M0-1515. . '" -tallerS2000 • 0 • -ct · ~nfiAC21'M'80A1'S JIMMAllMO --------nrtST hardwareSlOO.m.5211 Wa~, ktq u, aolld Larae Oil Palnth111. SS1"181 Co n•ole. Wa'C1-ut llJ!mo.~ptepald ·--72' DISCOVERER 25',
& ¢1'e w/alopt.QI, upboJ. retrtc Freodl Scooee Cabinet. t 912· , r!'OIO S•-J •--'-""''-YQ~..,.A6Bf liberclaa. 1treamUoe.
Personal Une1 Dept.1C••-1r1r•• "4fs.tl21S.54.MIT6 Ptak '0epniu.1oa 11.,.·. HvydutyGaffer•SaWer C •ila-'allp la-m;>iZM.~ 181UBeach8lvd beaut. Sipe. 5. Ju.st r•
IM'llran"" A&Y. Apply in 111'1•1 ' 103 Cott-... , wab.rl ... -u 2 1pd roof top Evap. B Radio and Ao ... .,..... • _.... 142-2000 fW'biahed. Lut chece,
~ r~ .nn1 wvuu ""' lot1 of 1tuff. 519 COO ••~.-.rwu ~~ ~-~ ~. • • movin1 8»1412 ~raon: 333 N. Newport····················· ..... •-" .. ___.. ···-r -..-. \UI • I ·-...... ·-""~11-• r .-..... ~--l> •o
.,N.8 . Movie camera w/proJec· bdrm tel, lint eend, Ma tu rite CdM · Fri .w.'1~ \ •• ......... _ .......... II CA BOVERCAMPER
TYPIST tor, Sm. Allo, 15MM St000/080. Call Aftlwer U:. Set M • · CAR PHONE, dbt cood ..... A Mll'tlt t..M.r 14 '*. 1tlt coo race $475 or best offer. 1969 Open Road cab-roo(
,., days pet week. Vaca· ;:::n:c:,~ !:too.;p,AJ::. Ad t415, M2-G>O, 24 bra. · • • · !o3:° 1 ;~only fl95 1, • ,,.. ready . r .. t 2 ~alla, HB-seo2 air, 1lps a. PB, PS, auto,
tJon relief. Apply at · 559-0260 evs/wknd Antique Oak Dlninc Tbl Sat. f..4. Bottles, toola, P · ..... :£................ rnao1 x~P/Pf75-ll6a. 6 pack camper shell Sl41>5. 8"2·206'1
1MO Placentia. Costa w/6 cbra, $500. AoUque ~ollectable~. ~a bid Brun1wick l " •late •••NI fOf CffEOYLEJ:Offibott 31' $200, TroHen. Ulllty 9110
lleaa Dot• 1040 J>ump n-80 $750 (1) t.emv•1• ... ~Pl CpManta. bumper pool tbJe •••••••••••••-•••••••• .... c-•-... Ah .... 000 631·3829 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• V'•• ' 1142 "..,.... · · I I th h.lrd l xlnt 18' Whl "" .....,._ a•-. ..-.. C I Wladow Washer Ex · KEESHOND Pu AKC UhrsofaS50087J..442A ' w ea er n tewater caaoe. PP. (7U)l7S.8CM7 Motorfuct.... 9140 o emao •eraa traHer
porieoced, P /T. own Champ sire. M'f:: Pet.; 8' Print Green " White Anaual Multl-famlly-cond 17~7. Like •e~~ Oace b3 LiltJtlme Oppty ............... ~....... :!~ S::O~c:ir~~~eci
lran1.648-lml0 a how . Pvt pty . DavenportSlSS c~a. colfee lbl, <la-FOG MACHINE Sl25, M'di~ellloop w moor· • •MOPED•
YARDMAN 213/697-l.3t5atl6pm. S4M86S bee,mucbmlac.Sat.8-4. worka areat . Tom Non-prom or1. needs lnlinNwptBay.ioaded. ·so Puch Sport MKll. AlltoS.,-.lce,rcrh ·
DOG TRAINING IN D7 Platte, C.M. M0-7223 Mon. thru Fri., your boat, plane, ear, Shoe~ •alllna aa~ on xlnt cond, $600/best or-& A~UPOriet 9400 J'or tool rental firm .
Neal appearance. good
handwriting, benefits.
Wlll train. Apply: 19
Newport Blvd. CM. o
22900 Lambert-1203 Et
Toto.
YOUR HOME 3 PC. Dreul Bdrm. set, LARGE GA.RAGE SALE no Tuesday. etc. Libttal tax deduc-daYita, oomplete, + on· fer. 548-8117 (1'nal •••••••••••••••••••••••
Obedience ~~~1~'!tt5~1~eau 10796 El Puo St_, F.V. Power mower• edaer ~~~-~anta1u . shore mooring w. 13'6" Mofof"cwdn/ ForlClle
ProblemSolvinc llotorcycleparta,kn1ck-,200, wuber • dryer Boston Whaler, pre· S !:t.n · flSO Datsun z
AAA HOME DOG Wrought h'oD table It 6 lmacb, clothes. Sat & $125 each. HS-SIM& lotlh. M .... c1 •c•/ !;~!!!,!oc. Total '40,000 ..... ~.................. mot
TRAlNtNG. a.'2155 chalrt, lonoa.I din.in& rm Sun. 9-5. S....,lu fOZO .,.,._ Or
table, 8 c brs. call 4P'amllyl AntiqueFum. Maytaggu~rSUS.8' •••••••••••••••··~·•••• 13· 1980 Capri Cyclone •761(%400 +.,..._.pcwts
SAMOYED PUPPIES. evs/wkods.49&-0772 I I la Herculon Sofa SlOO. Ac-MarineElectrtcLan Sallboat racma rigged, 761-5137 Merell••... AKC 4 wuold. AvaJJ at ll t!!b~m=· ~at moa~y cordian $45. 2 Twin beds, Desi1n/Uwtalllrepair new cond. 11200 cost Xtras, n~/batt ---
•••• .. ••••••••••••••••• wks, Pvt pty. Holly, HardwefodChinaCabinet ,.2 18021 Giiiman Irv. $3Sea. 2AnUqueclocks Qual.worit.549-2S20eve. Sl600new6'7S.2480 Asis, firm. WANTEDTOBUY ......... 1005 760-6006lvenua. Xlnl cood $75. Vinyl ssi..8800 $100 &c $~or will trade 541-1192 Dnvers1dedoorfor
••••••••••••••••••••••• . couch S20. ~5402 aft for lg cbaio saw. 548-0063 loah, M.-14' AMF SUHRSH '67 VW sedan 546-1879
W .._.TED Donie duo 1eek home. 6pm. Garaa· Sale ·. Sofa, ch-. E•lipn 11 f 903 S 0 ------An TO IUY brothers, •ae 2. Shellie· "' '"' Prof soccer & foosball •••••••••••••••-•••••• 40 '4 ... 4647 '78 Honda Hawk. xlnt Right front fernier for '61
I buy o Id I u n s. Basinji, seldom bark, White Freocb Prov 5 pc, beds, loads ol misc. game $150. Am/ Fm 50 hp elec. start SUlwtJ • cond .. 5000 mi , best or VW $25.
dJamoods. ivory, jade" watchdogs, ut yt fOOd. bdrm Ml.. Slagle bed. :::d::~:f'.' :t; ~~~ stereo & beaut. cabiod. 0 8. ene. Sl.500.,. Boilat & ~~~;:t~n! ~~3972__ __ S46-l879
collectibles. Call (714) Linda. 64().4.580, 536-6188. '225. M3'tm Apnl 2Slh 9-4. $100. •N-7997 tr•ller free w1 nle of tat t ofr., fteUa, tail : 7 8 6 6 0 y A M AH A
972-4926 & ull for Dane. Cairn Terrier 11 mos o~d. Cstm So American bar Ir w.lcal ent. D&.ve 64'2~. 559-9133. Beta~,_ SPECIAL low mileage 8 wh.:f.~4~res
male·lookina for fun stool,ulueSl.,000.Mtist HUCE SALE-Furn.I IMlt s•s 1013 MAftlN E-G.ARAGE ._ .......... c.a-i 1100008067S-1852after 768-S837
WESTMINSTER family. SlOO&U-!1635 sell $600. 5'8-787l limps, toys, dotbes, &J>-,••••••••••••••••••••••• ML[ ._., ~ 6 _ _ -;r __
ABBEY pllance1. sbereo & much CONN Direct.or trombone Seagull outboa~s. Dodi• 9070 ----Allto1 for>cme
ANTlQUE MALL Male AKC Irish Setter. Cbrome & glass 4r co&· more; ~aVSwi 9-4. 41 with c11e. Excellent avons. Satlot, etc. S46 •••••••••-•••••••••••• H~f.A2~1~.r~;plng~ •••••;•M••P•O•R••T•ANT••••••••• D~~!s~!~9 ~~:i= ~-14 mo. ~:r:~i:::.~·.:i:.':J!. ~ ~!k~~~v . (Univ. ~1:!~1~~~-$100. 675-8062 Redlands Sat/Sm BOAT SLJI~ F6.R RENT $8'75/080. 833-1485. NOTICE TO
1l751 WestminsterAve --din . Sell by t>lue. s•-s ... •• 1Shp.2cyl,YeroaarlfNd NPTBCH.25'-!35'. .71 Honda rvfUV'o lo mi READERSAND
Garden Grove SM-6103 Golden Ret. puppies, 7 Washer/dryer~7-4487 VT-~ FLUTE. Silver. Selmer wl rev~se ctier ~i.sso. ~ '-~ ADVERTISERS wks, sbou. wormed. ch. Camper sh ell, Ice Metro #5865. Gd for atu· Completely overhavled $1600 or trade 4 sm Pu The price or 1tem1
Hand carved Chinese
cbest.klllS
hne, AKC.1133-1418 Wood frame ilass top skates, surf boards. col· dent. Sl.50. 963-3Q38 Yanmar deisel w/!f( w 30' Dock f>ower Boat or wl camper. 54&-~9 advertised by vehicle
chow table, 2 for $100. orTV,clothes Sat&Sun new generatorwlst.arte~ Tabernacle Mast. No dealers m the vehicle
5•9'J9eves
Free puppy Chow /
Shepherd 12 wks .
hsebroken . cute
Victorian iron hall tree. 9-3. 2338 Colgat e Dr .. Offlc•F•llifw•& wiring . Uoo as ls . ovdnigh(en $160/mo '48 Whiner motor cycle d ass1f1ed advertising Sl.50. 631·~ CM. Ecpli,..., 1015 645_1028 M2·328'7 752-2584, 644-4767 Brand nu cood. Only 10 columns does not 1n.
____ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • mis. Must tee to believe e lude any applicable
HUGE GARAGE SALE m i t h . C 0 r b n a ao.ts rowtr 9040 Bo~t SUp WANTED 2'' $5,000. < 702)825-9173 taxes. license, trarurer American Oak-glass door Michelle 557-9455 MUST Sa&.
boollc•ae. Princess s piece Medit. bdrm dresser. sheet mus ic AKC English Sprmger suite . Ii k e new .
cabinet. submit offers Spaniel. liver & wht sacrifice. Best offer.
21.5 CecU Place. Costa typewriter. Model 300. •••••;•••••••••-••••• .. with parttingfor local re· •79 Yamaha XS400F lOK fees. finance charges,
118'a. Fri, Sat. Sun 9-4 Good condition Sao. 1971 SICIPJACt(. sJdent. ~:M05 aft SPM mla. Bacli::rest. nu tires fees for air pollution con·
Furn. & bric-a -brac. Call Dalebout Bay & 24 ' w l traller. Xlnt WANTED: Shore moor-BstOH644-6461 troldevicecertificauons Beach Mk for Janet ( or dealer documentary 1.8480 Saota Leonora Cir· Smith. s.:s1.7300 inanclnc. Call Gary or lnl or marina apace for preparation char"~ un-875-8172 anytime female. 731 4710 Dys 642-4773; Eves :
Solid Oak Partners Desk, FTff to YOll 1045 642·9656_. ____ _ i F V Sa onl "5 Don 631 1.00 1-11· ta '73 HONDA Trail 90 WOO ""'" c e, . . t. Y. ~ . · · v,. ca maran eves. less otherwise specified
Wooden des ka. U 00. •77 T . Hull ........ Vol 497-3914 or 54()...4190, ext prig mi SS7S by the advertiser 60x43 Beautiful cond •••••••••••••••••••••••Chris tian woman SS
Must sell·need room $500 M M mi Schnauur · al5o Cum. accept ci/U Garace/yard SaJe, Sat. & secretary chairs $5-0 n • .....,.p vo, Ill 54().6472 --
Sun. 9·2 Antiques. col· TRS 80 basic n with pro'. 17\'i', all brand saew int. - - - -~s/ lectable~. rum .. russ. aram.s7so•maoyother Incl trailer. hJOO. WotorHo..n. Sale/ Motor Homes, Sale / ClGnka 9520
depression glass, re· ltems.8Sl·l7ll. IW()..3410. l ... /SIClfOtt fl60 R...t/Storage f 160 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Firm. 847-1323 M Shi Tzu All shots To or will pay small pay-
----good home 642-5102 _ menls 'une751·0498 Antique square grand
piano, Circa 1880 $1500
Antique Hall. '270 E. 17th
Coeta Mesa 548-3111
Purebred 1 ""1yr Cocker 7ft sofa. burnt orange. cords. china & pottery, . •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '4 6 F o rd Wo od e S I I v 21 Lyman Lapatrake 1 • pame w papen ~ry good coodiUoo S75/belt ~a • much more. 418 2 deah·l w/typewriter Claa1lc Bay Boa&. Needs DO YOU H .._VE ~E ~est.ored. $13.SOO Al.SO lovable&46-2163l;Oemse olfer847-SM3aft5:30 Dablla.CdM return, 3 office chn, 1 work $S00~21S8 " """ 29ModelATownSedan,
I ----sec'y cbr, 1 bJchback · · OF THESE?. 4 dr. restored Ideal for Antique roll top desk & COLlood.I E how pape2 rs, raJree Pr Henredon Scene ll G A R A G E S A L E · 1wivel cbr all in aood Boat partner wanted 24· s t u dent $I O. 5 0 0
chr. appraised $1550. tog me. yrm e. curio cabinet.s.new,t'OSl Furniture dishes , cond,willt.Uebestoffer SeaRaySundancertm. 6756161 muatsellSSS0.~7871 963·•721 ____ $2000 ea. Sell pr for clothes. t.ocXs, all kinds muatbeaold&pickedup lmmac., Npt Bcb f)oat
--ir...-u....--IOSO $2500 673-fl286 of cood1es. 820 Center by Apnl 28 5'0-1708 1 s / S Pvt Sale: Fine jewelry n.n..--.r ---------St c M Sat/Sun9-5 --· • 1p 130 mo + ltoO. 19ct Opal, Lucien Picard ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elegant Metz bdrm set, .. · · · r.n IOl7 Call 557.9327
Gold watch Original * * I BUY * * solid oak. king bdbrd, YARD SALE Sat 41p . !••••••••••••••••••••••• Mak 23 .77 paintings, otls. wtr clrs Good us-.. Furniture & trpl dresser & pt nite Z3l20 Elden Av~.· Costa 13 SNAKES; 2 P)1hooa & 1 ho bl ',_, '.::t,,tran.sF u' ... h P 0 I "" d .,..,.,. ,,..,..., M W-•--_._ A B up · m..... • u .,.c rngs 1casso. a 1, Appliances-OR I will sell stan s v•............, eH. &LCJ aans. von oa. All nice. Also . fath. VHF 240bp OMC.
Paul 8la1ne Henrie. or SELL for You • So . k bed -~ collectables, clothing, large snake cage. S325. 18 SIO.OOOS1~
Clydt; Zulch. M 1gu,1 MASTERS AUCTIOH hd ~a r set w · TV & more. _ ~4967 Dominguez Linda ingsize waterbed I ---------•13· F'be et boat t l
Roeers a, others Pr 646-1616, 133-9625 $8001080. 642-7423 Sat 10-.. Hrd. Wood Sofa. Young Amaion redhd adj~ta~le-:!r 16• ~~
oriental lg broqze Urns 1 IUY RJltMfl'UU T--: bed .lb--lamps. antq brass parrot complete with lg Johnson o/b 35h.p . Bronze parcelein bis win W1 • mauress faucets. desk etc. 28 cage $350. 646 1869 17001080" .. 0 .,...,.,
f • Old. Lo Les 9S7-8133 and box springs Gd Rock Rose Way <Univ 00.3850 ---
doque p1gbunneslock. M h n cond. Be11t ofr 64().6479 Pit> Sat ------n u c on g ny Big red ·s· shape cbair. -----Su.ller·crested Cockatoo '78 21' Wha~ 'Nova,
pedestal Btfl China 3'x6'. lllnt cond. $150 8' Maple Capt's chair $25 Garage sate· Antique w cage tame ' XL. fully equip "'ti-Jr,
Cabinet w/blt-in ladies wine sofa, Sl.50, plush Yellow bamboo like bed dept.hfi~r rattan $600/0BO mt396 · ".'8 Volvo eng. 2S5H P.
desk . French Marble 960-6487 dinette tbl & 4 chrs. like che.at many boat & ---· hke new $12,000 '42·!928
coffee tbl. Pr s ilk nu 1100 Sears girls wht hsebld. misc 3248 Min-rta.o1&0nJ-t 1090 days,eves731-0443
cblnese rugs. Pr brass MU$t sell butcher blll: tbl. dresser wt mirror $$50. nesot1 CM (comer of ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·se 18. Century, excel!
lamps+ more.639·7128. !i~hr~~!~ !i~~:;;s Matchmgdeskw/chr 50 Cal WURLITZER spinette cond SlSOO /OBO
& more. 9'1S.0253 art or bit offer 642-3223 __ MOVING! Garage Sale. model 4410. t~ 44·note ll42-067i. By Appt. .
ABBA ANTIQUES
Wholesale Warehouse
HOWOPEH
.9.AM· 6PM
Commerce Park
3303 Harbor Blvd
C.M 751-2070/848-9366
(Next to405 Freeway)
Antique Estate Sale.
Sat/Sun 1500 Irvine Ave.
Npl Bch.
6PM Dining room table. 6 items from 1~.s..oo. 285 keyboards, 13 pedal
---chairs, 3 leaves & buffet. B r 0 a d w a y c . M . notes, au~ tone control, Tall• O•er r..-.at1
Dining Tbl umque Maple $2SO. Ph. S46-5002 Sat/Sun 8-6 earphone Jae~. solid ma-No down can be us4!d 6 s1zea. tncl ----------pie w/matching bench. '80 23' IMP C udd y
pads I I 1 n ens $ 4 O O. 5~ S. IOSI hw•lry 1070 $400 cash or k5-0 de· Ca bin· Only 30hrs on ~-2652 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• livered ~7-lMS engine. Mercrul5er 260
----1 GJANTGARAGESALE Beautiful diamond out drive. Fully fitted
Bassett din rm table Sat. Apr2S&SunApr2e houeahoe brooch 14K 5'6 " A.B. Chase Louis out. PP S48-73SS
w/lear. 3 side chairs. 1 1 o . 3 s m a pp I .. white gold. 642-4067 XV. Ampico reproduc-Bus/recreation boat.
arm chair. xlnt cond. kitchenware, pictures, mg & grand piano, com-
$200. 646-7358 decor items, lam pa, Mhcel• I018 IOIO pletely restored at reblt. many xtras. best otrer.
------clotblna. ETC .. ETC .• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Piano originaUy bit in _838_·_7_l0'7 ______ -1
6' SOFA ETC. Most t.bing.s nearly Cookware. 2IO pc stainless 1921. Like new-good in-UI' Bay Cruiser •Ired "
Like new, green pattern, new . Hr O.C. Fair· steel , waterless. new. ves tment. Collectora w h 1 ca n 0 p e t 0 p .
S100 64!°>-2985 1roundl 95'7·111J78 woe iii~. reg. $445. item A11kln1 120,000. Character Boat Paude
Gl .. ...-R'Ra .... ,GE iacrlftce.979-Qlll Hammond Organ & winner! Slip n ·1i'IJ. Selhng entire ~e run nJH Vin~ Pt c t Cd M
•We Wiii pay $500 advance
•Stability -8 yrs. in the business
•Net up to $250 per week
Our compaf\y presently has 2.6M tn advance Eurooean 'Flv-drive
cootrects and will peak at 4 7M
v .... lo.ct 1..-..u IMot
Jnt 5-wrl IAaM locb-
W•',.. The bpcfofs
We encourage you to compate us Wltn
others -Come in and check over our
RESERVATION CHARTS
We Heed More 1979-81
Mlnr·Mo torhomes & Bubble-Top Van
Conversions Plaate Call or Write for Info On Le .. back of Your Own RV or .
-AV ~ntol1, Inc. iilf I 15092 Harvard Ave.
Irvine. Ca. 92714
(71 4) 559-4446 of furniture rar living SALElt.SWAPMEET llDWOODZX6'.. ano en er · S21100/0BO 67!-7171 ;
rm. bdrm a. dinlhl rm. Sat. •2.,Food, ,~. Xllll deeldni. 8-20' lpng. 6«-8930 1_67_3-_7_47_7_.....__,__~--1 .. ------!------------'
"' h. · bOok lalr, Nft 1.at. ~ load just in (n>m '' ..:..~ • t; .i. ...............
.... 9Cft 1010 .......................
HARBOR AREA
APPLIANCE SERVICE
We buy used appliances
.. tweaell~. guar.
s:..veryl mg near MW, Glaler Ir taurorila, ahU. ss•f(\. 6'46·9885 aoe~ ~ ....__ 411uat sell immed. Offen· C.M. ab1(1n'te. ...,....,.._ ~I .. , • 9030 E........... 9030
can help w/delivery _...;.... _______ •••••••••••••••••••-•• ••••••• ............... •••••-l•llr•••M••••••• ••••••.,.-•••••••••••••
appliances. 549-3077 S49·90lO Two Family Garage Sale. Swap family lauli8 club ••••••••lli••••••••llll•••••••••llll••••••••
Early American maple 1979 Cad. Seville, rum. membership In Irvine
I IUY APPUAMCIS La 967-8133
rrl1idare w/bottom
fneier. 99"x32". Olive
Green S75. 50-3811 ; art 6
bdrm set. dbl bed. clothln1. children's toys. ror ?orSS00.833-841.5
bookcase hdtml, mirror movla1, lO/yn of •C· Rue 10· X 12· Brown
& dress er. desk & cumulaUoo. Fri, f.3pm, bc>rder square!/ circles
matching swivel chair Sat 9-3pm. 1121 Port lo Drlehl autumn colors
548.9992. Stanhope. N. B. tuo. 8"-3SS2
I 556-1139. 8 PC BDRM SET Garace SaJe. tt'• • Bii·
G·E dbl oven range, 1 Twin bed• w/hdbrds, fie. 5or to ?. m F.etber
I I dre111er. lamp tbl, dealt, St, CM. (2 bib So. ol
Lo .... ,,.
Helium Bouquet• de·
livered. Perfect for
every occasion. f7S..U19 oven u f·c eanin1. cabinet, white formlca 20lb. Just E. ol Santa
b•rveat cold. Suo. tops, avocado/1old AnaSt).S.tooJyt--4.
851·Sll4or975-0311 bHes, 2 matcbin11wivel .., A u &be n li c pl n ball
Portabledlllhwuher. chn. good cond, $300. M 0 VJ NG o ALE. machine, late eo•a. tood
XlatCobd. Mu at sell by -4/26. cofblld~~ ~is~ coad.S2ll0."5--
Ml.9'1D 6'0·7028 N.8 , m .. e.. . o•.uwnv• R''BIES
---------1----------1 15% lla1ollan Street, .,nuuu.. .., C.ta ..... --del Oblyb>perctonel ... ,.~ ....-
The leader f ot 1981. • •
Affordably·
lnexpensi1e-~~~
1963 T ·Btrd. wht ext,
blk wht int, AC. lake
new S2800 548-2080
·52 P o r Cabro lle t .
chassis 1115039. 90%
restored Only serious
buyers need to call
714 1774·6'757
'73 EXCALIBUR
Show car. $19,500 firm
Sl0.000 cash, assume
lease. s2ootmo 673·7360
1901 Olds Replica. $1500
or best offer '62 Olds
F8S convt & '62 Starfire
F8S, both for Ssoo
631-3929 .
'48 Whizzermot.or cycle
Brand nu cond. Only 10
mis Must see t.o believe.
ss.ooo (702)~9173
'48 Studebaker Land
Cruiser Xlnt cond Sell
orlrade 493-4761
Rec,..affoftd
V.t.iclft 9530 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Dune bucgy & trailer.
clean. neweng.
~7996.
4 Wltffl Drh" 9SSO • ••••••••••••••••••••••
lt71SULUU
4X41RAT
This 4 wheel drive ha1
low miles, is a strong
runner & la priced for a
quick sale! <JSSrDX>.
MAIEOffH
Offer good thnl 4/Zl 181
TlttttOHS
VOLUWAe94
3940 Cherry Ave.
LONG BEACH
COP EN SUNDAYS)
C7141121-IJOI
'1' •wd SCOlTl' hH lot.I of
miles, must sell $2500
firm . Xlnt lnt. 87S.S2J67
'73 J eep pickup truck,
air. p1, pb, dlx cab,
S2950. PP.Ml-8984
•.
I
I' I
8)' PKl!:DEIUCK SCHOSMEllL
Of .. DM!r .........
New impetu.a for development
of a regional airport on the
Camp Pendleton Marine Corps
base In northern San Diego
County it being ctven in a report
prepared by the Southern
Califomla Association of Gov-
ernments.
Planners for the a11oclaUon
have concluded that an airport
at the hue could be an accepta-
ble alternative to an earlier
SCAG proposal that major, long-
haul racillty be coostructed on
an offshore island near the Los
A!' 1eles and Lons Beach
harbors.
UNDER THE Camp
Pendleton proposal, the re&lonal
airport -similar lb ii.le to Los
An•eles Intematlonal -would
be constnacte4 near Oceanside
at the south end of the base.
Planners estimate the Camp
Pendleton airport would cost
about $820 million. well below
the $2.5 billion estimated for the
offshore facility.
Localing the airport at Clmp
Pendleton, which is bisected by
the heavily traveled San Diego
Fteeway, would benefit resi-
dents in both Orance and San
Dleco counties. SCAG planners
say.
• And they point out that loca-
tion of an airport at the hue
wobld reduce some of the de-
mand on John Wayne Airport ln
Orange County and Lindbergh
Field in San Diego County.
HENRY WEDAA, a Yorba
Linda city co\mcllman who
chairs the SCAG aviation com-
mittee, said it will still be some
time before a final recommen-·
dation is made on whether to
.,...,~ ............. ~-
Proteders boycotting Coon bft1' C:01'TJI ftQ'M in Santa Ana, ob;edfng to the diltrlbMting compan11'a
inool~ in covnt11-~ r«JICling day. Proceeda of eomt go to Sitton HOJM.
Recycle protest light
Despite flap , Teamsters donate $500 to facility
About ·75 people came out al
lunchtime Thursday at the Santa
Ana Civic Center to protest an
Orange Couoty·sponsored re-
cycling day involving the Coors
Distributing Co
Others. however. didn't seem
to mind that Coors was helping
in a recycling drive to raise
funds for construction of a new
facility for the Albert Sitton
Home
OFFICIALS SAID they raised
about $138 by recyc ling 354
pounds of aluminum.
Not to be outdone or to look
like villains the Teamsters
Union donated $500 to the new
facility, called Orangewood. on
behalf of all organized labor.
Later an the day came another
su rprise Santa Ana busi -
nessman Ron Adams. who owns
an insulation company. pledged JS ,000 to the Sitton Home Adams
apparently was upset about the
protests. officials said
Health fair
to feature
free tests
Free medical teata. Informa-
tion booths and optional blood
teals for $7, will be available at
South Coast Medical Center Sun-
day durtn1 Health Falr txpo
'81.
The free health screenlq will
be held from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. in
the South Laguna hpspital's
parklnl structure.
Coors has been a boycott
target of labor and other special
interest groups since about 1978
At issue have been some of the
company's labor prac tices.
which opponents claim are un
fair or undignified.
THE PROTEST of the recycl·
ang day. however. brought some
s ha rp response from county
leaders who a rgued that Coors'
participation was not politically
motivated.
Supervisor Bruce Nestandc is-
s ued a written response Thurs·
day a fternoon to Mary Yunt.
secr eta r y.treasurer o f the
Orange County Labor Council.
''I fully understand and
respect any group s nght to reg-
ister protests." h e said .
However, it is obvious that you
had no desire to resolve the is-
sue but rather chose to use this
event to publicize your conflict
with the Coors Brewing Co. The
self.serving exploitation of this
charitable event for your selfish
purposes was wrong "
Pat Brown raps
Reagan's record
By GLENN SCOTT
Of , ... Delly ,.. ... SUff
Former Gov Edmund G.
"Pat" Brown pamted his less-
than ·rosy pic ture of Ronald
Reagan's first 100 days as presi-
dent on Thursday for Cal State
Fullerton students.
8 ut Bro wn '!I attack on
Reagan's policies was prefaced
carefully to avoid hard feelings
after the recent assassination at·
te mpt. Brown said he met
Reagan at a luncheon In
Washington, D.C., just two days
before the shooting and found
Reagan gracious.
RE AlSO cate,orbed Reagan as one of tht! three best preaktm-
ll al communi cators in bis
llfellme, the o thers beln1
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
John Kennedy.
BROWN'S CRITICISMS cov·
ered virtually a ll of Reagan's
n ew policies. from foreign
policies to defense spending to
presidential appointments.
Secretary of Stale Alexander
Haig drew special notice for
what Brown described as his
hawki s h aUitudes toward
military intervention.
"He failed in Vietnam and
now he apparently would like to
repeat h is mistakes in El
Salvador," Brown told the stu·
dents. "I don't know about you,
but General Haig rrt1htens me."
MANY OF THE spectators
1a ve Brown a standing ovation
after his speech.
Brown met reporten aft.er ~
s~ecb wtt.h a shake of h1a head.
"It wu touch, wun't it?" he
said. "But I don't think anybody
elte bu been aaytn1 it."
punue a re1lonal airpo" at
C•)DP Pendleton or off the lAnl BeacbeoMt.
He said ~r invettla.Uon
of the, Camp Pendleton propoeal
la needed', terml"I exlltln1 data
·'very preliminary.'~
A major, if not the major
stumblinl block to location of an
airport at lJle base could be re·
s~tance from the Marine Corpe.
The corpe traditionally bas re-
jected any suHeation that part
of the base be used ror an
airport.
Yet unknown is how the
-I
Will interest rates
continue to rise
or fall? ... 85
Camp Pendleton proposal will
affect the work of a separate re-
&lonal airport tile aelectlon
study authorized by the Oranae
County Board of Supervisors.
The 11-member committee is
made of a aix prominent buai-
ne11 leaden and appointees of
the five board members.
SCAG ls a regional govem-
m en t organization which ia
made up of Southern
Califomla's cities and counties.
Among those on the commit·
tee are influential friends of
members of President Reagan's
administration -association•
that could prove helpful should
officials decide to pursue con·
atructlon or an airport at Ca
Pendleton against any obje
lions the Marine Corps mi&
raise.
The first meeting of the bl
ribbon panel has not yet
held.
Study of sites for a region ·
airport to ease the burden ~
Los Angeles International an
other smaller airports h as bed"
under study by SCAG for three
years.
South Laguna annex
study difficult task·
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... Dlilly " ........
There will have to be a lot or
public meetings, reviews, pro·
test hearings, and perhaps even
a n e lection before Laguna
Beach's southern border ever
extends to Aliso Creek.
That's the contention of Local
Agency Formation Commission
officials who say the process of
annexation is a lengthy. com-
plex matter.
The Issue was raised this week
when a group of South Laguna
residents told Laguna Beach
council membe rs they would
like their unincorporated area
brought into Laguna
SPECIFICALLY, THE group
wants Treasure Island Trailer
Park, Blue Lagoon. Lagunita
and Hobo Canyon above the
Alpha Beta shopping center -
all of South LaRuna to Aliso
Sy~arnore
changes
sought
Laguna Beach will ask Orange
County offi cials to amend an
agreement in which the city re·
ceived $1 million from the coun-
ty for land in Sycamore Ha lls
The 1978 agreement called for
a $1 million advan(f from the
coulUy for future nght-of.way
for the proposed San J oaquin
T ransportation Corridor and a
regional park within the 522-acre
city parcel
The city purchased Sycamore
Hills three years ago and still
owes about $7 million.
In order to pay orr a major
portion of the mortgage, the city
has worked out an agreement
with Baywood Development Co
of Newport Beach for sale of 62
acres near Leisure World for
$5.4 million.
And while negotiations are
continuing on that land sale. the
city bas been notified of a small
hitch in ita agreement with the
county.
A condition for the advance of
$1 million stipulates that there
will be no residential develop-
ment in Sycamore Hills.
County Environmental
Management Acency ofricials
reminded the city of this fact
after receiving a letter from
Laguna Beech City Manager
Ken Frank stating the Baywood
development would not interfere
with either a proposed regional
park or the transportation cor-
ridor.
Baywood proposes to build
nearly 300 towt\houses on the
62-acre parcel off El Toro Road.
But Frank said neaotiatina a
revised a1reement with the
county should pose no problem,
mainly because it was Lacuna
Beach that requested the ban on
reatdenUai development ln the
first place in order to preserve
the rreenbelt.
Creek brought into the city.
City officials are putting
together a '"quickie" report to
d eter mine the services that
would have to be provided to the
new area. as well as the rev·
enues the city could expect to
receive as a result of annexa·
lion
That prelim10ar y report is due
back before the City Council
May 5. The council will review
the city's findings, and may ad·
vise LAFCO members of its in ·
le nt to annex a portion of South
Laguna
The Local Agency Formation
Commission will be looking at
Laguna's sphere or influence on
May 13 The revie w is done
routinely every three ye1lrs or
say no decision on the South
Laguna annexallon request can
be made by mid·May
IT'S JUST NOT that easy,
says Ken Scattergood, a LAFCQ.
spokesman who said the earliest
an annexation could lake place
would be three months
He said at least 5 percent or
the registered voters in the umn
corporated area must sign peli·
lions. to be included along with a
formal application to LA fCO
Ro ge r D e rryberr}. a
spokesman for the South Laguna
group. says 200 signatures have
been collected so f . a d he
says that's well a e the LA F-
CO requ1n·m en . estimating
fewer than 1.000 regis tered
voters !Jve in the area
The group must a lso include a
map and legal descnpt1on of the
territory. as well as a wntten
Justification for the rt'ques t ,
Scattergood said
IF l.AFCO approves the re-
quest. public hearings must be.
scheduled before the Laguna
Beach City Council
Antlwny 'departs
Hoag Hospital
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony has
c h ecked out of the Mental
Health Unit of Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach 15
days after he allegedly beat his
wire, Elaine. and inflicted a
superficial guns hot wound on
her ~ad.
Anthony, who c hecked out
T hurs day , rem ains under a
court order to visit her only at
her invitation, but friends of the
Anthonys says the two have rec
o n ciled a nd Mrs Anthony
doesn't intend to testify against
her husband.
Anthony was admitted to the
Mental Health Unit on April 13
a fter being released on his own
r ecogn izance from Orange
County Jail. where he was being
he ld on charges of assault with a
deadly weapon and use of a
handgun in the commission of a
crime
The 50--year-old mayor of
Irvine is to be arraigned on
those charges May 1 in Ha rbor"
Municipal Court. He was un·
available for comment today.
ORANGE COUNTY District
Attorney Cecil Hicks. whose of·
fice intends to prosecute An·
thony with or without Mrs An·
thony's cooperation, has recom-
mended that Irvine Ci ty
Manager Wilham Woollett Jr.
not release a report that ex·
plains what police were doing in
the 35 hours it took to arrest An·
thony.
The delay in the arrest led to
questions in the com munity
about Irvine Police Chief Leo
Peart's handling of the incident.
Woollelt has commended
Peart 's actions and 1s following
Hi cks' recommendation not to
release the report tha t provides
a chronology of those actions
On Apnl 11. 24 hours a fter be
ing admitted to the Mental
Hea Ith Unit, Anthony was at ·
rested on suspicion of assault
with a deadly weapon a nd
placed in the Jail ward of UC
Irvine Medical Cente r
Anthony was transferred to
Orange County J ail on April 13
and later the same day Judge
Robert Polis ordered him re
leased on his own recognizance.
Woman files suit
over catsup bottle
A woman who claims she
found bita of glass in a bottle of
catsup she bought in an
Anaheim supermarket bu filed
a $15,000 suit a1ainsl the market
and the H.J. Heins Co.
Delora Duffy said in her suit
flied 1bunday in Orange County
·superior Court that she noticed
the pieces of elus after she bad
consumed some of the HeJnz
catsup. No direct injuries result·
lng from the glass were m~
tioned in her suit.
She is seek in I bi Us for
medical examinations an~ for
punitive damages. J,:
Ms. Duffy said she bought the
catsllp al a Ralphs market QJl
E a s t L i n c o 1 n A v e n u e iJt
Anaheim last April 20 and d.i.t-
covered the glus on April 28. •
Health teata include heaJth his-
tory. bei&bl a.nci wei&bt, blood
pressure, a nemia, vlaio• and
heaJtb awareness.
For '7, particlpanta can take a
b 1 o o d Vu t tor d '8 bet es ,
cboluterol, tri&lyceridea,
ld.dney ctlaeue, U\ler ailment,
cout, a.. ud a dozea other all-
meau. The b'°°4 te1t oop:nally
eoata about $100.
The praise stopped theie..
Brown said Reacan'1 tax-
cuttlng proposals J.Ocluded In the
Kemp-Roth Bill wouJcl lfave dis·
astroua effecu. He lam~ the theory that the country's
economy will rebound bJ civlna
"ma11lve .. tax cut1 to 'tbt
m d:JJlpfiln docks at Dana point . -:
For more lnfonnaUon. call tile
bolpltal at 499-1311.
BIOOdniobile iet
wealthy. ~ The plan, be aatd, "lt almply
'an outraaeoua blatant a•v•• .. , t01the rtdl."
Decl')1DJ tho current awtuct.
that •ovenmerrt lt .omtthlnc to
&et .. oft )'OW' back," Brown Hid
other IPllMl1u cut.I wm even· tuau1:.~crtppft th• country'•
tapabllltlei Cb 9'vaoee.
Mammal rests 4 hours, but returns to ocean
'IY •l'Cftl with t* antmal n. a
dolpbl.G bl'uM from th• Nit of
t••cbool.
"
AV AST THERE, LUBBER: In all the yeais )'OU?
f althful correspondent hu bung around the ocean
front, I've developed two special interests in boats.
One la if 1 'm on it and the other ta If l' rn lOOking at it.
If I'm on it, I am very lnterested in tbe fact that
it doesn't leak.
IC I'm looking at ~ it, I want it to be pre·
~· •r M y p e r s o n a l I"'-'\
yacht meets both of· ~I-.
these demands. She's TOM MURPHllf ~ /
a pretty thing sitting _________ ..... .-._
there, leaning up
against the garage wall. Most important, it doesn't
leak when I'm in it because J hardly am. Upon rare
occasions when we plan a sailing trip, I can almost
always talk one of the youngsters into doing the row·
ing. If the youn~ster does the rowing, then there isn't
room to get me m the boat.
Therefore, no worries about leaking.
AS FOR PEOPLE who Uke to get into the boats,
t.,his coming Saturday marks the weekend that really
is. It's the annual Newport Harbor to Ensenada
yacht race. Six zillion yachts will be out there, all
trying to get across the starting line at the same
time.
They should make a marvelous vista for sailboat
lovers lining our shoreline from Newport to San
Clemente. Unless, that is, all the yachtsmen decide
to sail straight out to sea in order to capture favora·
ble breezes. Or the fog rolls in. Or tbey call off the
race for lack of interest.
This has never happened.
The esteemed boating editor of this sterling
The good ship Egabrag anchored OJ/ Co.nno Poinl, Catalina I &land
journal, Al Lockabey, gets pretty excited about this
race every year. I've never really understood why.
lt a lways ends the same way.
ONE BOAT WINS. All the rest lose.
Anyway, I try hard to please Al Lockabey by
studying up on boats so I can tell the difference
between ketch-rigged yawls. yawl-rigged ketches,
twin catamarans and double-ended bellybusters.
CRITIC -Louisa Kennedy,
wife of former hostage
Morehead C. Kennedy, told
some news executives this
week that many of their
methods for covering major
events like the Iran hostage
story were "time wasting
and exhausting." She said,
for instance, that many
hostage families r eceived
phone calls with the same
questions from people work·
ing for the same organiza·
tion . She spo ke in
Washington , O.C.
11 classes
offered •
in CPR
Coastline Community College
will offer 11 nine-hour classes in
Ca rdiopulmonary Resuscitation
(CPR> at various locations dur-
ing May.
The class is designed to train
individuals in the techniques of
CP R and obstructed airway
maneuver to sustain life until
medical help arrives.
Upon completion of the class,
pa rticipanls are certiried in ac·
cordance with the standards of
the American Heart Association
and the American ~ed Cross.
Advance registration is ad·
vised as enrollment is limited.
The following is a listing of
date, time, and location of the
classes:
Once In A
Lifetime
Opportunttyl
Some Items
Below Costt
NEW & USED
PIANOS &
ORGANS
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Kawai, Kimball,
Hammond,
Wurlitzer,
Currier,
Thomas·Vox.
NEW
KAWAI
GRANDS
40111y
NEW
SPINETS
F&OM
5799
PRICES SLASHED!.
NEWTHOMAS-VOX
ORGANS
FROM
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OfHER NEW AND USED -UPTO
\. Q Y20FFI
BRIMHALL MUSIC CO.
3 941 b South Bristol, Santa Ana • Phone 7 51 ·I 12 I
Accrou ..._ SOlllllll Coast Plcaa • Mew conter of S.":flower & lristol
Why only today . I was scanning through the
Avalon newspaper, the Catalina Islander , and the
picture of this unique-looking vessel dominated one
page. The caption beneath the photo explained that
this particular King of the Sea was the "Egabrag," a
frequent visitor to Catalina Island. When photo-
graphed. the Egabrag was anchored off Casino
Point.
1111., •. •. -11 "'°"' s.• .. a:•,...,._• t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;:;;:;;;:;;:::=::=========================:; attl Pl-~y. awl> lrwlM ........ ..._, I t'
•
I studied her low-s lung s tem, her silhouette im·
age, he r bow-heavy cabin structure. I wondered how
our esteemed boating editor would classify such a
unique vessel''
BUT THEN I READ ON. I learned from the cap·
tion that the vessel's name "Egabrag" is Garbage,
spelled backward.
Egabrag is a garbage scow.
"It is returning to American waters after spend-
ing several weeks in the Republic of Panama," the
caption writer explained.
Republic of Panama? What's going on here?
ONCE UPON A TIME around here. we already
had more garbage than we knew what to do with.
Now we 're importing it?
Well anyway. no sense studying this yacht in any
detail I really don't think Egabrag will be compel ·
ing in the Ensenada race.
Her fumes might cause that first cancellation.
IHK"· M•y•-7lrom1J JO to~'·"'·•,...,.... Sllll• tt~I, 2'01.._,__ ~. C.-le ...... Ma,• from a•·"'· lo S ,._,,._at 0r._ 0...
VMCA, llDOUniwoHy Or ......... rt 9MCll.
Mo 12 -"trom • » '° t P."" .i -~ nell ~IM ..._.ks. kllcllftt 1>1. SJ01 801 ......... t1Ul\tlf'41*\ ......
,,. .... -1$ "°"'. ··"'· le 12:• -• F•tr~ltw State HOOC>flel, 1'01 ... .._ 81 ...... , C.le
Mew
May " '""" a •·"" I• s p.m. at ,,_,.. v.dt LHr"l"9 (Aftte<. 1"° -V•'* Or"'9 EMI, CCXI• Mew.
M•y "· 1', -J..,. 2 '""" 7 '° to p.m . .i GrHnbroo& •-rt AMO(lelioft C--. ,.,,, ~~1e20Joe.:"t,5:;~",~•!'.i· ..,,,.,
Fairview Stele Ho.W>llel, tlOI ... rtlor llwd., c:.:!\ 111\eW I
May 10, 11, -JUM > friln\ 1 lo 10 p.m. •I
Hug Hospll•I, JOI Newport 81.,;t., *wsi-n a .. c,.
May JO lrom a• m. to S p.m. et Orentit o..t
v M CA. tJOO uni .. rsay Or., Colla Mesa.
•e1c11uone1 lntormetlon "'4IY lie Gll(al-11y
<•ll1ng Bev .trbyd et C••stllne Community CollitOe, 9Ul044
Savings u9ged
SAC RAMENTO CAP> -The
Senate tax committee bas ap-
proved an $8() million biJI that it
hopes will encourage people to
open or expand savings accounts.
The bill would let taxpayers take
a deduction of $200 for an in·
d1vidualorS400for a marriedcou·
pie for interest earned on savings
accounts
j$23,000 .just to get by
I
;Labor Dept. says family of 4 needs $34 ,409 to live 'higher' • : t~. WASHINGTON <AP l It costs
:the average American family f of four more than $23,000 a year
·just to maintain a moderate ! standard of living, the Bureau of
~Labor Statistics says.
l The LabOr Department seid
that a family comprisine a
husband, non·working wife and
two children needs $23,134 for an
"intermediate" standard of liv·
inl, based on last fall's prices.
That was up 12.8 percent
frq.m a n estimated $20,517
oeeded the year before.
THE DEPARTMENT also
calculated that an American
lam Uy ot four would }leed '34,«>9
a year to mainUln a "hlcher"
1i.ndard of living, up 13.5 per·
cent from $301317 a year aao.
... 'be family wowd need $14,°'4 to
maintain a "lowu" llvlnl stan·
dard, up U .t percent from '12,585 a year aao.
The bureau surveyed 25 major
cities . It ahowed th at
Anchoraae, Honolulu, Boston,
New York and lhe Di•trict of
Columbia are the coatUeat
placee for a family of four to
maintain a moderate standard
olUvl.ni.
Tbe study It the "lD·
tennediate" level 1b0Wed tt COil
lbe hriothetlcal taD1'1Y Of four 12e.eta·-to maintain t~at ~,_. BitDI iB A.Dea.or.... ~.-..• a fliDIJi DMdld -~··a rear c.1'9 llOllohaJu, "7 ,0Jt In ...._, ... T• In lf•¥1 Yort, and > •
$25 ,203 in Washington. the na·
lion's capital.
THE HOUSEHOLD budget
dollar went further, the study s howed, in Dallas, $20,766;
AtlaJJta, •Zl , 131 : H ou1ton,
$21,572 and St. Louis, $22,248.
Annual family budgets needed
for a ''higher'' standard are led
by Honolulu, at $44,396, followed
by Anchorage, $4 2,125; New
York, $(2,736; Boston. $41,306.
and District of Columbia,
$37 ,398. Dallas requires the
smallest budget, $30,771 ,
followed by Atlanta, $31,229;
Houston. $31.519 and Cindnnati.
$32,353.
For a "lower" standatd of liv-
ing, a family needs the moet
money in Anchorage, $20,98'7;
Honolulu, $18,480 ; San Fran·
clsco·Oakland, $15.735; Seattle·
Everett, Wash., $15,38-C, and
Wa~hiflllOn, D.C .. $15,392.
Life expectancy ~
drops 3 112 months
A lirl COUld look forward to
Tl .5 ye.an ot Ult, comMnd wtt.b
71.I for ~ born t.b• 7eir before
and 11f.1 tqr her JO.year old •ii· ter. ' · ,
Pearl Jewelry Caravan
Save 40%
Save 40o/o
on entire
stock of lustrous
' ' pearl jewelry.
Select from earrings,
fine cultured pearl
I
necklaces and rings.
Sales prices effective
April 25th to May 10th.
'
• •
I I
·-------------------------------
Dlllll l:lllT
.>
FEATURES
I COMICS
STOCKS
83
84
87
mill interest rates
continue to rise
or fall? ... B5
D
0
:·
·Bal Isle bridge repair stirs tempers
87 STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Oeltr ..........
Tempera nued and an1ry
wordJI were exchan1ed Thun·
day when workers repairlna the
81\boa l1land bridse closed orr
the l wo-lane struclun lo traffic
for 20 minutes.
Shopowners along Marine
Avenue on the island reported
that irate. h o rn·honkina
motorlata waitin1 lo cl'Oh the
bridge began yellinc 1t the
workers at one point.
Police were called when a
number of driven began settin1
out of their cars •nd ap·
proachi111 bridce workers.
Merchants said they feared fiat
fights might break out.
''I called the police because a
bunch of driven _were really
harasalog this one fla1 womao,"
said shop employee Donna Held.
"It was a total meas."
A number or merchanu sug·
seated that bridge workers were
asking for trouble by cloeing
down the bridge and holding up
moloriats. The bridge project,
which has slowed traffic on the
island for months, is a sore point
witb Balboa Island merchants
and resident..
"It wu really poor planninl
on \he worken' part," 1u11ested
one island bulineaaman. "It sot
crasy. People were yelllns. driv·
ins all over the place -I was
just ,,.,aitinS for a fight."
The closure. a city official
said, was called so a cement
truck ~ould maneuver.
The contractor on the bridge
job, Peter Kiewit and Sons.
could not be reached for com·
ment on the closure.
Lloyd Dalton, a Newport
Beach city engineer, said the ci·
t y was not forewarned of the
closure. "We kind of wish they
wouldn't do things like that.''
Dalton su""ested. "It's a very
dHficull proJect but you can't
just close down the bridge."
He said he was informecl that
bridge workers did as mu~h yell·
ing as the motorists did ~~
Police. who said the see~ had
calmed when they arrived. re·
ported they did their best to cool
tempers a nd get motprists
across the bndge -qu1cktJ .·
SCAG ey~s airport
New report favors ~endleton location
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of Ute OMlr ...... St.fl
New impetus for deveJopment
of a regional airport on the
Camp Pendleton Ma rine Corps
base in northe rn San Diego
County is being given in a report
prepared by the Southern
California Association of Gov
e mments
Planners for the assoc1at1on
have concluded that an airport
at the base could be an accepta-
ble alternative to an earlier SCAG proposal that a maJor.
longhauJ fa cility be constructed
on an offshore island near the
Los Angeles and Long Beach
harbors
Under the Ca mp
Pendleton proposal, the regional
airport -similar in size to Los
Angeles International -would
be constructed near Oceanside
at the south end of the base
Planners estimate the Camp
Pendleton airport would cost
about $820 million. well below
the $2.5 billion es timated for the
offshore £acility.
Locating the airport at Camp
Pendleton. which ts bisected by
the heavily traveled San Diego
Freeway, would benefit rest
dents in both Oranj?e and San Diego counties. SCAG planners
say. . And they point out that loca
lion of an airport at the base
would reduce some of the de
mand on John Wayne Airport in
Orange County and Lindbergh
Field in San Diego County.
He nr y We daa . a Yorba
Linda city coun ci lman who
chairs the SCAG aviation com·
rnttl<>e. said 1t will still be some
time before a final recommen-
dation 1s madt' on whether to
pursue a rt-gtonal airport ill
Camp Pendleton or off thl· Long
Beach coast
He said further in\ est1gatwn
of the Camp Pendleton proposal
ts needed, terming ex1st1ng data
'"very prcltminary ·
A maJor. 1f not thr maJor
stumbling block to lot'atwn uf an
airport at the base could be re-
s 1stan('(' from tht' Manne Corps
The corps l rad1t10nally has re
Jetted an)' suggestion that part
of I ht• base be used for ;in
airport
Detty ............ .., LM ,...,._
Prote$ters boycotting Coors beer carry signa in Santa Ana, objecting to the dtstributing company'&
involvement in county·sponaored f'eCJIClino da11. Proceeda oJ eoent go to Sitton Home.
Cl\lplanner
Roberts to
quit post Anthony departs
Hoqg Hospiial
Recycle pr,o~est light. , .
I
Despite flap, Teamsters donate $500 to facility
About 75 people came out at
lunchtime Thursday at the Santa
Ana Civic Center to protest an
Orange Gounty s ponsor .!d re-
cycling day involving the Coors
Distributing Co
Others. however. didn't seem
to mmd that Coors was helping
in a recycling drive t<1 raise
funds for construction of a new
facility for the Albe rt Sitton
Home.
Officials ~ai d they raised
about $138 by recyc ling 354
pounds of aluminum
Not lo be outdone or to look
like villains the Teamsters
Un ion donated $500 to the new
facility. called Orangewood. on
behalf of all organized labor.
Later in the day cam e another
surprise. Santa Ana bus i·
nessman Ron Adams. who owns
an insulation company. pled~ed
$5.000 to the Sitton Home. Adams
apparently was upset about the
protests. officials said
Coors has been a boycott
target of labor and othe r special
interest groups since about 1978.
At issue have been some of the
company's labor practices.
which opponents claim are un-
fair or undignified.
The protest of the reo:cl
in~ dav. however. brouj?hl some
s harp response fro m county
leaders Supervisor Bruce Nestande Is·
sued a wntten response Thurs·
day afternoon to Mary Yunt.
secret ar y.treasurer of the
Orange County Labor Council.
·'I full y unders tand and
respect any group's nght to reg-
is t e r prot ests," h e said .
However. it is obvious that you
had no desire to resolve the is-
sue but rather chose to use this
event to publicize your conflict
with the Coors Brewing Co. The
self serving exploitation of th.is
charitable event for your selfish
purposes was wrong "
27 5 farm workers held
Suspected illegal aliens taken in Irvine fields
U S Border Patrol offt cers
look about 275 farm workers.
suspected or beini in this coun
try illegally. into custody during
a raid on two Irvine strawberry
fi elds. A Border Patrol spokesman
said about 35 officers were in-
volved in the raid which lasted
from 10 a.m. until ll a.m . Thurs-
day at the fields near the junc-
tion of the San Diego and Santa
Ana freeways
One of the fields raided Thurs-
day belongs to the Irvine Com-
pany. Company s pokesman
Je rry Collins said that about 45
workers were arrested.
"We didn't lose enough people
to really slow down the picking
and we're working with a full
crew now," Collins said. He said
Celebrate UCI has
plenty of activity
There will be plenty lo do this
weekend at the UC Irvine cam·
pus. whkh is located in Irvine
near the intersection of Campus
and Univenlty drives.
The events include:
Career Fair~
set in Mesa
Tbt dowotown Coata Meu
Kl.rula Oib 11 co-1poosor of UN
•Hill,
the Irvine Company requi res
workers to show a green card,
known as an '"amica" among
farm workers. before they are
hired.
He added that some cards are
found to be forgeries. "We really
have no way of determining
whether a card is legitimate or
not." Collins said.
The Border Patrol spokesman
said about halr the people work·
ing in the fields Oed when the of-
ficers drove op. Reportedly those
who were taken into custody
were loaded into four buses and
taken lo the Mexican border
after processin1.
The spokesman said the raid
was the fint ln Oran1e County
in about a year. He said imml·
graUon olfidab recently lifted a
ban on "farm checks."
Reportedly repreaentatives of
the state and U.S. departmentl
of aartcult.ure were pruent dW'
lna the raid. The deported
worlt•ra can collect the wain
due them by applying to the
Mexican consul, the apokesman
aald.
..
Familie& 101J8ht
to hos teachen
Tb• 41ner1c1n Host Found1tioG
fl looktnc tor Oranse Cou.nty
famlUes tntereaUd ln bOIUna 1 teec~!f..£.r#D Europe duriq S'¥b-
or A.._..(~ loi'tlther a 1·10daf vii-
lt, OT 110-:14 d&J ltaJ.'
AppUeaU.. m\llt be ••bliiltted
W1\h\o tbe next f•w wffb and
m 11 be obtained by pboiilAI
~·S7ll.
Costa Mesa's director of plan·
ning and development services
has restened to accept a more
lucrative position in the pnvate
sector .
Charlie Roberta, 42, of Yorba
Linda tendered hla realanaUon
Thursday. effective May 15, but
said today he'll slay with the ci-
ty through May Z2 at the request
of City Manager Fred Sorsabal.
Sorsabal said assistant plan·
nmg director Douglas Clark. 36,
of Huntington Beach will as·
sume Roberts' vacated post.
Roberts s aid he has accepted
a position with Willdan As·
sociates of Anaheim He'll be
vice president of tha t firm's
Envista planning division
Willdan Associates is one or
three firms u~der contract by
the city to d~~ building plan
check operations ~hen the build·
ing department. one....of Roberts'
departments. 1s fa~g work
overloads.
Roberts joined the c1 m July
1975 as planning .dir tor and
became the head of both the
planning and building depart·
ments when they were merged
in April 1979.
Several building department
emplovees res igne d in the
months following. including act-
ing building director Bill Kumer
who is now with the City of
Garden Grove.
Roberts said today he is leav-
ing his $343,000·a -year post
because of "an opportunity for
some personal advancement and
one that I can't pass up."
He added, "It wc&s a very dif·
ficult decision to make, though,
I 'II teU you. I have realJy en-
joyed my employment with the
city. my association with the cl·
ty employees, the Planning
Com mission and the City Coun-
cil."
County slates
parish youth
oountry fair
The Catholic Diocese of
Ounge will bold ill 1nnual
Youth Festival and Country Jo'alr
Saturday at M11on Re&lonal
Park ln Jl'Ylne.
The daylona event wUl bestn
1t 10 a.m. and end at g p.m.
Featured will be same boothl,
r-.laya, coo.teat.I. llve elltertaln·
ment and food bOOtbl. V artom pa.rilh youth mlllltll'J
1rousw lD the county will apomor
the act.lvlti•. A.-outdoor mu• will be celebrated by prt•tl m>m th.rouchout tM COWltY at' p.m.
A f• of $1 wUl be charaed (or
parklna wide lbt park. All
famlU• and youoa mlnl1try
1rou119 are lllvttecl to take put In tb• ulebratton, Naton
Retlooal ~_,. cu be reac:bed bf takllll U1 Sae Dle10 ,.,..._., to t.be Cul..er Ort.-ex·
lt and tun.lftl r1#
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony has
c hec ked out of lhe Mental
Health Unit of Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach ts
days after he allegedly beat h.is
wire. Elaine. and in(licted a
s upe rficial gunshot wound on
her head. Anthony, who checked out
Thu rs day. remains under a
court order to visit her only at
her invitation. but fri ends or the
Anthonys says the two have rec
on ci led a nd Mrs . Anthony
doesn't intend to testify against
her husband.
Anthony was admitted to the
Mental Health Unit on April 13
after being released on his own
recognizance fro m OranJ(e
Co unty Jail. wh ere he was being
he ld on charges of assault with a
deadly weapon and use of a
handgun in the com mission of a
crime. The 50-yea r-old m ayor of
Irvine is to be arraigned on
those charges May t in Harbor
Municipal Court He was un
available for comment today
Orange County District
Attorney Cecil Hicks. whose of
ft ce intends to prosecute An
thony ~th or wi thout Mrs An
thony's coope'ratioh . has recom
m e nded t hat Irvine City
Manager William Woollett Jr
not release a report that ex
plains what police were doing in
the 35 hours 1t took to arrest An
thony The delay in the arrest led to
questions 1n the community
about Irvine Police Chief l..<:'O
P ea rt ·s handling of the incident
Woolle tt has com mended
Peart 's actions and 1s foJ\owing
Hicks' recommendation not to
release the report that provides
a chronology of those actions
On April \I . 24 hours after be
1ng admitted to the Mental
Health Unit. Anthony was ar·
rested on .suspicion of assault
with a deadly weapon a nd
plared m the Jatl ward of UC'
I rvtnc Medical Center
Anthony was transfe rred tu
Orange Count y Jail on Apnl 13
and later the same day Judge
Robe rt Polls ordered him re
leased on his own recognizance
CdM bank buildi,ig
to dim nighl lighls
Bank offi cials have agreed to
turn down the lights at their
Corona del Mar headquarters
after neighbors complained that
light was shining into their
homes at night.
The agreement was reached
Thunday evening after city of·
Cicials threatened to revoke use
permits for the Banx of Newport
at 2101 East Coast Hiehway.
Residents along an eastern
edte of Irvine Terrace told city
officials they'd been after t.be
bank for month.a to tum off or
dlm light..
One resident claimed the bank
was so brtaht at night t.t11t It
looted like "a car lot.••
City officiall aaJd tbe bank
hid cllmmed li&htl ••veral times ·
but that homeowner• weren't
utlafied.
ln reacblDI the aareement
Tbunday, Newport Beach ~8:_k ftinl commlnionera u'ed
offlclaJI to tum off llcbtl. tn tbelr parkinl lot. to awttch off the
bank'• alp and to cllm n&cbt
U•bt.1 iD tbe bUlJcll.nC'• leeOad
and tJdtd floors.
AdditkmaUY, the buk WW bit
req ultecl to do land1capln1
aroliDd 1 w.U that !•Pal'atel
homeowners from the bank prop-
erty The landscaping is ex-
pected to help block out the
homeowners' view of the bank.
Burglar uses
hacksaw in
Balboa theft
A burglar armed with a
hacksaw crawled through' an air
vent lnto a Balboa Peninsula
amusement arcAde Thursday_.
sawing the locks orr a s~fe and
rtfllna 43 electronk gamef.
The thief, owners bf the
Balboa ArCade told officers, get\
$2,500 in cub from the safe ano
an uncalcula'ted amount ot
coln11e from the ~achines. ·
lnyesti1at.ln1 offtcen 18)' tho
bur1lar entered the amusement
center at 908 Edsew1ter Av•. by
un1crewtn1 an 1lr vent plate
abo•e a doOr and crawlln1 into
the bulldiiai~ ·
Once lftll!dit~Ucc dalM, the
lntrudlr c~ over the cell•
ter'1 "80illiln~' eac:IWM add • pried open an GMft door. The
buralar. pou~ 111, ••wild Off
1n•ral padlc>Ckl 1ee"1'hil the
1af• and tbell loCated lte~ to tbe
coin box•• of the ;ame
mac:hl.Del. .,
11 AVAST THERE, LUBBER : lli all the years your
f altbful correspondent bas hung around the ocean
front, I've develoJ>Fd two special interests in boata. 1 One ls if I'm on it ¥d the other is if I'm looking at it.
If I'm on lt, I am very inte.rested in the fact that
it doesn't leak.
. If I'm looking al ·~ it, I want it to be pre-
. tty. • fk
M y p e r s o n a l ,, /:'ti\
''yacht meets both of· ~r
these demands. She's TOM MURPHINf ,~~' /
a pretty thing sitting ------------t h ere, leaning up
against the garage wall. Most important, it doesn't
leak when I'm in it because J hardly am. Upon rare
occasions when we plan a sailing trip, I can almost
always talk one of the youngsters into doing the row-
ing. If the youngster does the rowing, then there isn't
· ·• room to get me in the boat.
Therefore, no worries about leaking.
AS FOR PEOPLE who like to get into the boats,
this coming Saturday marks !he weekend that really
is. It's the annual Newport Harbor to Ensenada
·yacht race. Six zillion yachts will be out t Plere, all
trying to get across the starting line at the same
time.
They should make a marvelous vista for sailboat
lovers lining our shoreline from Newport to San
Clemente. Unless, that is, all the yachtsmen decide
to sail straight out to sea in order to capture favora-
ble breezes. Or the fog rolls in. Or they call off the
race for lack of interest.
This has never happened.
The esteemed boating editor of this sterling
.The good ship Egabrag anchored off COS1no Point. CataltM f slond
journal, Al Lock a bey. gets pretty excited about this
race every year. I've never really understood why.
rt always ends the same way.
Q
ONE BOAT WINS. All the rest lose.
Anyway, I try ha rd to please Al Lockabey by
studying up on boats so I can tell the di!ference
between ketch-rigged yawls, yawl-rigged ketches,
twin catama ra ns and double~nded bellybusters.
Why only today. 1 was scanning through the
Avalon newspaper, the Catalina Is lander. and the
picture of this unique-looking vessel dominated one
page. The caption beneath the photo explained that
this particular King of the Sea was the "Egabrag, 11 a
frequent visitor to Catalina Island. When photo-
graphed, the Egabrag was anchored off Casino
Point.
I studied her low-slung stern, her silhouette im-
age. her bow heavy cabin structure. I wondered how
our esteemed boat mg editor would classify such a
unique vessel.,
Bl!f THF.N I READ ON. l learned from the cap-
tion that the vessel's name .. Egabrag" is Garbage,
spelled backward.
Egebrag is a garbage scow.
"It is returning to American waters after spend·
ing severa l weeks in the Republic of Panama, 11 the
caption writer explained.
Republ!c of Panama? What's going on here?
ONCE UPON A TIME around here, we already
had more garbage than we knew what to do with.
Now we're importing it?
Well anyway. no sense studying this yacht in any
detail I really don't think Egabrag will be compet-
ing in the Ensenada race
Her fumes might cause that first cancellation.
CRITIC -Louisa Kennedy,
wife ~f former host age
Mo~ad C. Kennedy, told
some news executives this
week that many of their
methods for covering major
events like the l ran hostage
story were "time wasting
and exhausting." She said,
for instance, that many
hostage families received
phone calls with the same
questions from people work-
ing for the same organiza-
tion . She spoke in
Washington, D.C.
11 classes
offered
in CPR
Coastline Community College
wall offer 11 nine·hour classes in
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
(CPR l at van ous locations dur-
ing May
The class is designed to train
ind1v1duals in the techniques of
CPR and obstructed airway
maneuver to sustain life until
medical help arrives.
Upon completion or the class,
participants are certified in ac·
cordancc with the standards of
the American Heart Association
and the American Red Cross.
Advance registration is ad-
vised as enrollment is limited.
The following is a listing of
date. time, and location of the
classes:
M•, •••• -11,,..... 5 .• to •:• --.. Bui Pl-°"""""''· -lrvlM Aft.,..._, 8e6(1\ Mey• encl 1from12 JO lo• p.m. • ,,......,....
Sl•t• HOte>ltel, JJOI He,_ l1¥d., C.ta ~ "'•••'"'"'I e.m to 5 p.m et Or .... 0... YMCA, 2JOOIJlll,,...lllY 0., He ..... rt llNC"'
Me' 17.,.., It ll'Olft •.• lo."·"'· .. -~ nell °""91• ,ui.r-uu. a..tldlfte l>·I, SID1
Bois• Aft , H...tl"91°" .. ecll
Me' 14 -u from •• "'· to n:• ,. ...... f elr•le• Stele .._ii.1, UOl HertlOt aML, c.ta
Mew
M•' ,. lrom I • "'· 10 5 p m. el MeM v...-
l urnlf>9 c-i... 1"° Mllw Verde O.IW Ee&\,
CO\te "'4'w..
M•, ... a , -J .... l from 1 to 10 p.m ..
GrHnt>r--M" A160<Mllloft 0~ 11271 !>ante Joe_,e SI., F-leln Valley.
Me' 2D -ti lrom ,_, to 4.311 p.m . 8'' Fetr•lew !l\ale HO>c>ltel, UOI Kart.or 81-.G , C..IA
AMM
M•r 10. 11. -J..,,. J """' 1 lo 10 p.m. et
Ho•o HO•pOl•I, )01 Htwpo•I 81•0 .... _n Beech M•1 JO l•om I• m lo 5 p.m . el Or-CO..
YMCA, 7l001Jnherol1, O. .. Colle IMM.
Addlll-1 lnform~lon may be obtained by ,.111no Be• 8o'd et Coulllne Commun11, Coll~.~»14
Savings urged
SACRAMENTO CA P > -The
Senate tax committee has ap·
proved an S80 million bill that it
hopes will encourage people to
open or expand savings accounts.
The bill would let taxpayers take
a deduction of $200 for an in-
d1 v idual or~ooror a married cou-
ple for interest earned on savings
accounts
:$23,000 just to get by
: Labor Dept. says family of 4 needs $34,409 to live 'higher'
, WASHINGTON (APJ It costs
: 'the average American family
: of four rnore than $23,000 a year
: just to maintain a moderate
: standard of living, the Bureau of
! Labor Statistics says. ! The Labor Department said
; that a family comprising a ! husband. non-working wife and
' two children needs $23.134 for an j "intermediate" standard of Uv-
J Ing, basedon lastfall'sprices.
; That was up 12.8 perce nt
l from an estimated $20,517 i needed the year b4:Core.
I T H E DEPART M ENT also
i calculated that an American ~ family of four would need $34,409
f a year to maintain a "higher"
, l\Ultdard of living, up 13.S per-
J
~,from $30,317 a • year aeo.
1•!tfamlly would need $14,044 t.o
miU1laln a ''lower" Uvlng stan-
1
""'1 up 11.6 percent from Jf~ a year ago.
Tbe bureau surveyed ZS major
cities. I t showed that l Anchorage, Honolulu, Boston, J New York and the District of
( CoEbia are the coallieat 4 pla for a family of four t.o J ma a moderate standard
ol Uvln1. ! T h e 1tud y at t be "ln· i termedlate" tevel showed ll cotl
• the bY'POtlMtlcal family o( four
l! U~'IU : to maintain t h at
"11\ .. •n t. Uvinl ln Anchoraae. ~a family needed $28,488 a
1e.1r lo Honolulu, t2'7.02t in
Bottoo, Re,7'9 ln New York. and
$25,203 in Washington. the na·
lion's capital
T H E HOUSEHOLD budget
dollar went further, the study
showed , in Dallas, $20,766;
Atlanta, $21, 131; Houston.
$21,572 and St. Louis, $22.248.
Annual family budgets needed
for a "higher" standard are led
by Honolulu, at $44.396. followed
by Anchor age. S42,125; New
York. $42.736; Boston, $41,306.
a nd District of Columbia,
$37 ,398. Dallas requires t he
smallest budget, $30,771,
followed by Atlanta, $31,229;
Houston, $31,519 and Cincinnati,
$32.353.
For a "lower " standard of liv-
ing, a family needs the most
money in Anchorage, $20,987;
Honolulu, $18,480; San Fran-
cisco-Oakland, $15,735; Seattle·
Everett, Wash .. $15.384. and
Washington, D.C .• $15,392.
Life expectancy
drops 3 112 months
NEW YORK <A P) -
American life expectancy has
fallen for the flnt Ume stnce
1968, an insurance company re·
ported. It said an Amerlcan bom
in 1980 can anllclpate livlq 73.8
years, or about 3~ months lest
than one born in 1979.
But \he Uf e expectancy wu a
full three yean 1reater than tn
lt'10.
For a new·bom boy, Ute ex·
p.c~ wu 10.1 yean. com·
pared to 70.2 lD 11'1 aQd $7.1 la
1970.
A airl cOuld look fonrard w
77 .$ yean of life, comp~ trit.b
1'7.t for one born t.be year Won .
and 14.7 for her 10-year old sis-
ter.
'
Once In A
Lifetime
Opportunity!
Some Items
Below Cost!
NEW & USED
PIANOS &
ORGANS .
NEW
KAWAI
GRANDS
40111J Choose From
Kawai. Kimbal~
Hammond.
Wurlitzer,
Currier,
Thomas-Vox.
PRICES SLASHED!
MEWTHOMAS-VOX
ORGANS
FROM 539999
OTHER NEW AND USED -UPTO
\ Y20FFI
BRIMHALL MUSIC CO.
3 9 41 b South lristel, Santa Ana • PhOtle 7 51-1 121
Accrou fro.a S..-. eo..t ,._. • M..-coner of S.llflower & lri1tol
Pearl Jewelry Caravan
Save 40%
Save 40C}'o
on entire
stock of lustrous
pearl jewelry.
Select from earrings,
fine cultured pearl
necklaces and rings.
Sales prices effective
April 25th to May 10th.
Special 5~ 99
Ear Piercing by a reglatered nurse
In our Fin~ Jewelry Dep•rtment
\
One day only, Saturd•i, Aprll 25th 11 am-4 pm
Includes
I
t
Another rare metal rolle~ coaster -this one in
eoldandsllvercoin "inveatbll' -is underway.
Tbe lure: Again, it's greed. Gains in coins have
run 15 percent to SO percent a year. with small
"downside riisk," you a re U>ld. Forget that gold
bullion prices plunged in 1980; ignore the hair-raising
history of the s lide in silver prices. .
Gold and sitver com.t are different, the "com
bugs" say: artistic, like painli!"gs; ~nd in .limi~d
amounts. like land. And the numismatic push ttl shirt~
ing into high
gear
-A GJANT
food f irm
<General Mills J
owns a big West
Coast co in
S -Y-LVl-A -PO-RT-IR-~
"gallery." A . .
major conglomerate <Warner Communications I re·
centh bought Fra nklin. an important mint A New
York. St ock broke r '811c he1 has just acquired
Jackson Precious Metals, an Ohio smelter
-THE $30 MILLION auction of Johns Hopkins
Uni vers1tv's Garrett Collection °"as completed a
short whiie ago . Yale has sold a single. fabled 1787
Brasher doubloon for $600.000. The institutions are
seeking \\ays to help solwe thei r financial problems
--FOREIGN NATIONS ARE issuing increasing
amounl~ of "bullion-ty pe" coins : South Africa's
krugcrrand. Canada's Maple Leaf. Mexico's SO· peso.
Austria's 100-corona. Even China is into "coins."
-AT LEAST TWO rare-coin mutual funds have
been ereated Some banks now sponsor numismatic
Keogh and I RA plans Coin dealers a re hiring -or
calling themselves -"tn\'Cstment counselors "
-ONE VETERAN DEALER estimates 40 per·
cent of his business today is with wou ld-be investors,
against 5 J)erct:nt in 1970
With all this going on. how can you lose? Ouch!
"Com~ have become a multtbillion dollar busi-
ness. and regrettably. the industry has attracted its
s hare or shady operators." says David L Ganz,
legislative counsel lo the Amencan Numismatic As-
sociat101)
"IN THE PAST D ECAD.E, coio robberies are up
200·300 percent." echoes Glenn Smedley, another
AN A off1c1al PolJC:t> are pleading fo r local-state laws
to regulate coin dealers ·
Other problems include: coin altering, misgrad-
mg. misidentification , com damage <improper handl·
ing, cleaning, mounting, storagei. high purchase-sale
markups, expensive insurance, outright counterfeit,,.
ing. And all this on top of plain bad timing.
'
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
t,S0,100 1 132,900
W?,000 169,JOO
S10.SOO s.J.400 S47 ,800
443.100 «J,600 43'1100 437,100
•?2.700 Jn,100
377,SOO m .100
2S11 • 1'-lS'. • "' 101. .-...
111• .. 1 ,,1.. 1 , lt" -+ •• .,.,, '•
~•v. • ,, )A" . 1 • ..
JO>• 'I"' 60•.. •• .. , .. "'
"''·• t\ott 13 SJ~ 1•1
UPS AND DOWNS
H•..W I Pl•11 R-d> 2 llTMto Inv l c;e.-Sct ' SllellrO 3"' J Murpfly011 6 Miii Br.Oty • 7 Publl~ll Incl I Co4-Ind t Flrller Fds
If ~l'lld Or II Svc
1J IHkallll l, i~:i.~0Z 1S Marlon LM '6 A!ft"p Corp
11 ~lfl! FeOe<
Ul'S
LM1 .cr.g Pct 1'MI l'o Up ll 0 2~ ~ '• Up 11 I 22 + 211, Up It •
J6V. • l'"' Up •I 31'!4 t 2119 Up '0 XJ\4 + 7119 Up I• ~ + '" Up l.S 11 .. • ... Up I I 17 • • ,._ Up 1 t 14 + 1 Up 11 11 + 1'4 Up I S ~+I'll! Up 71 U~ + ~~ Up 11 II~ ! I l(o Up ·1 1 [4 .. ~ I 'll Up 10
'1'1 + "' Up • I 30'11! • 14\ Up • S OOW#fl
l E"~~:r:. Lall= ='r.! 2!!1>(1 ,,'.:l l :111nflft l\lo -V. ~ i
4 IOTI\rw • J1\lo -J\4 ~ •.7 s ""'"'"•,.,,. 41 .. -Jllo '·' 6 Wacl<Jlllilt ~-1\lt U 1 ,,.,..,... , ... -~ u : ~:,.,. ~-~~ = \4 ~ J1 to l"m•• _., 10lh -• off , .. It f01tllOfO SI -:I Off S.0
12 'led"• o p u" -211o ~ 4s,o II Gr1flR.tv s -Ito .i , .. ~"'°'' ,,,. J "' ....
;: l~~~n l~ : 2"' 8:: U
• #lehtelt 112V.. -i11t . °" u
C!Y£9J!t -~~-~
., .. eelM, ~ wml ..... ~
!lflctt.
.,,,........, I ny ... ,., ............. . .....,...,,t~-..1u11.a.-.u..o. ,..,_,. ........ ...., ........... .
-A ....
"-t ..... I.< ....... , ·-·nit' N ' ..... ..... oo.
l«W~CN"J -S-___ ,..
..... al h '°" '-I act ... A-._.. ~ -trod"'G n.noonafty ••,,..,,..,.,
.r._rOll t~.200 11''> il, Intl llnkt'01 11k,OOO 3"' + 'lo HouOllTr td,100 lllo l !lo N•w !>roe 1U,600 1"-• 1 o .... , "" 121.AOO 10"' • •• W•"9 8 121,lCIO 00' • 1 "-Syntn CO<p 10l.SOO 4'3~ • 1 ~ Oorch\tGu 13,.IOO 16~ t. GulfCan o 77,000 21111. '.\
Tech<t Ta~ 74 ~ ... • '-'
METALS
C..... lS~tenUe poo...i, U.~.-11,... tlorH
LH• »-JI c..-ts a_..,,
lhtc 4.l\lo Gents •~. 4tllwred
Tl• .... 1117 lilel.all W•ll <°'"410t1 .. ID
Al•m'-1• unu a pound, H Y
l'l•tl-~.00 1"'T 01., H. Y.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~: INmlne n111no "'us .... u.u.
Le .... ; ··--,,.,,,. ............ ~ l'ul•: e1w,..., 11x1no UIA.16, Ufl MIA
f'rNk9-t: ll•1t-o...-..c11 ... a.o1.
Z11r!Ctl: i.te ., .. ,_ fl•lnt "'2.00, ..
ll.00; SMS.OOa«ed.
H••d' a H•,.,..••· enly dally qwte
...,, jO .... " 00.
• .,.._.... only ...... , ~ ..........
16.00 .
• ........,..: Ot\ly ""' ..-.-r1c.e, IJ1'.21, uP .....
SYMBOLS
LAST CHANCE
NEW 'IO· tolEMS
••• '8011.E
NEW '80 900 :=
••• SAABSlll
SAVINGS LIKE
NEVER BEFORE!
•
(22988) s 1 0 ,400
(17275) SJ J 1510
(217~) s 11, 946
.NE• '80 980 := ,,...,, 512,957
HIRRYI 111ESE WM'T LAST LMll
f11tl1oriz••d
SALES• SUc\'ICE
LEASING