HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-27 - Orange Coast PilotI I t
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I
1:
I 87 JEFF PARK~~
otUleDelly ..........
Stories have done a lot of people a lot of good. TJ!n kept
Scheherazade's bead lntact, they provided William
Shakespeare with a decent living and they've deU,bted peo-
plea round campfires for years.
Motorist.I cited for traffic infractions all .-m to have
stories too, and a &ood many of them show up in the Harbor
Municipal Court's Traffic Divt.ion to tell them totheJadge-
uaually in hope of getting their fl.nea reduced or the charees
dropped.
THE'Y CAN BE TEAll·IER&JNG, gut-wrenching, side·
splitting, mind-boggling, serious, funny. feeble ~r juat plain
.dumb-butthey'reotferedupjoattheaa~e. •
Some are not terribly tmaginativ~ A yoµng man (l'Olll
I
She's our 'Mis$'
.. ~.,,.,.......
STATE QUEEN -Lisa Schuman, 18, of Cypress reigns as
the new Miss California for the International Beauty
Pageant. The animal psychology student at Golden West
College was chosen Saturday at Knott's Berry Farm.
I 00 flee gas leak
in railroad tank car
FONTANA (AP> -More than
100 residents were evacuated to·
day when deadly chlorine gas
leaked from a railroad tank car
loaded with hydrochloric ~cid,
but firefighters said the gas
cloud was quickly and saJely dis·
peraed.
No injuries were reported.
"The wind was very light,
fortunately.'• said inspector
Jarpes Rodgens of the Central
Valley Fire District .
"Hydrochloric acid l1 10 concen·
trated and ao volatlle just a tew
gallona can cause havoc.••
The leak wu reported io a
spanely settled, unincorporated
area west of bere, aboot :50 mne.
eut of Loe Angeles -shortly
after 7 a.m. and deputies Im·
medJately began tbe evacuation
of a balf·mlle area, Abernatbie
aald. I
The tank car, loaded trltb
30,000 1allon.a of acid, waa on the
Sante Fe Railroad track abii
Hemlock Avenue when the leak •
occurred.
"We believe while they weN
1wltchlna can around it •\Olbed
around and there wu a leak,"
A Lapa a .. ch at.toratJ told
Pollet thlt mo... than $1,000 in
1Uver •• taUn from hil bomt
ckirtiiCtbeweeil.ad.
ltoyffaUer, wbolive:s lat.belD
block of Temple HUll Drlvt, Hkt
tti• a;w.,..-n entered bJt homt
tbrou1b a bathroom window wlllle WU IW&J . ...
Rodgers said.
He said firefighters used
water to disperse the gas cloud.
Chlorine gas, colorless but
with a p\D\gent smell, is emitted
when the acid is exposed to the
air.
Rodgers said the evacuated
residents would not be permitted
to return for several hours.
·'We'll keep the area clear un-
til we're sure there's no danger
to residents," be 1aid.
Newport Beach 1tood before tbe com~tuloner recaUy.
dressed in a pink bod 1hirt, khaki trouaen and camel·
colored top-aiders. Cb•rged with 1o1n1 e.s mph ID a ~ mpb
zone, be stood erect and 1lncerely explalned tbe probl4sm. "l
"I had just had an eye operotion and I couldn't
3ee too well and wanted to get home /aJt."
just 1ot a new Porsche," be said, "and it won't 10 any
slower." . Kia nne was not reduced and be paid it wtthout further
complaint.
'A middle-age~ man spread bi1 le11 confidently
and.crossed b1a arms. charged with speeding on city 1treet1
APPEAL DENIED
ln Newport Beac,h. "I own a small co.rporation," he aaid. "I
,.u on the verge of a bll mereer and for•ot•bout the speed limit."
B1s fine was not reduced and he requested t•o weeu to mate the payment.
Someatorleaarequiteimastnatlve:
One yowia man complained that a •l'11 in a parktn1 ~
said "~mentRequired " buUouDd no meten to pay. He spt a parllmaticketanyway.
"I left some money f n an envelope oa the wlndahield b"' 1omeoaetookit, ·•be said. "Andi goUtJclretanyway."
n.tJud&enduced the ftneandtbemanfelt better.
"IODDLE-AGED WOMAN EXPLAINED heraP"dlna
ticket this way: "I had Just bad an eye operaUoo and I
couldn't see too well and wanted to 1et home faat," atie eald.
<See TRAFFIC COUtT, Pase "2>
• • CODVICtIOD stays·
•.·.,.}\'io-
lrvine
concept
backed
a, 11ce.uo oa£EN Of .. O., .........
Ne1otiaton from the Ctty of
Irvine and the Irvine Compaoy
say "conceptual a1reement" bu been reached on a develop-
ment agreement for the 480-acre
commercial center the COIJlpany
wants to build.
Councilman Bill Vardoulis
said the agreement, which bas
to be approved by the City Coun-
cil and the company's board of
directors, is aimed at guarantee·
ing that the commercial center
won 't be a drain on city
finances. CONVICTION ST A YS
Patricia Hearst Shaw
..... .,.....
ATTORNEY VINDICATED
F. Lee Bailey
,.
Interest ·.
conflict . ...
. jn doubt .
WASIDNGTON (AP> -Tbe
U.S. Supreme Court left lntai:t
Patricia Hearst Shaw'• 19'18
bank robbery conviction todq,
turnlne away areumenta that
famed trial lawyer F . Lee
Bailey gave her "insufficient"
legal help.
The justices. without codl·
ment, refused to consider ruli.dg
that defense lawyet;s
automatically fail to give ade-
quate legal help when thfty
agree to write a book about :a
trial before it begins.
UNDER THE conceptual
ai;treement, the company would
guarantee $38 million in tax rev·
enue for the city during the 10
years in whtch 1t is to be bUilt
and $5 million every year
thereafter.
In return, the city would agree
to let the company develop the
center as it wishes within the ex·
isling zoning requirements.
British, rioters
clash in Ireland
Today's action, however, doie
not end Mrs. Shaw's attempt to
overturn her ·bank robbery cct'l·
viction. Her new lawyer wnI
have a chance to convince (e
federal judge that Bailey's COP·
duct "adversely affected" Mns. ,
Shaw's chance or acquittal.
MRS. SHAW, represented by
San Francisco lawyer George
Martinez, charges that Bailey
created a conflict of interests
when contracting for the
p~bli~hing rights of·' book about hts client and her trial. The 480-acre commercial
center. to be built on the
"Golden Triangle" of land
formed by the Santa Ana, San
Diego and Laguna freeways, is
to include three major hotela, a
1. 75 million-square-foot regional
shopping center and four million
square feet of office space.
CITY OFFICIALS have been
concerned that the Irvine Com-
pany intends to first build the of-
fic:e apace, now ln high demand,
and bold off on the construction
of the retail space.
This conern is based on
the opinion that offices tend to
(8ee CENTER. Pa1e AZ)
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
CAP> -British police arrested
20 prominent supporters of IRA
hunger striker Bobby Sands to-
day after a day of rioting in
Belfut and clashes with police
in London. Sands, in the S8th day
of his hunaer strike, was report-
ed sinkinj toward death.
Sinn Fein, the Jrisb
Republican Army's political
front said those arrested were
senior memben of the National
H-Block Committee, wblcb is or-
ganizing a campaign backing
Sands' crusade for political
Teen killed
by train in
East Irvine
prisoner status for IRA convicts
in the N -shaped prisoQ cell
blocks.
A police spokesman confirmed
the arrests. but would only say
the detainees were "belng ques-
tioned about their activities."
THE SINN Fein spokesman
said Tom Cahill, the committee
chairman, and leaden of com-
mittees in Lurgan, Armagh and
County Londonderry were
among those arrested.
Today was the 58th day of
Sands' prison fast, and hia
weight was reported to have
dropped from 155 pounds to 95.
Spokesmen for the Irish
Republican Army said he nearly
died Saturday night after a
heart attack but refused medical
help.
An authoritative 'British
source told The Auociated
Pre11 that Sands wu In "ex-
treme danaer, .. allppinC In and
out of consclousneu. Docton
wett at hl9 bedside ln the Haze
Prison's bolpttal winl.
"He appears to be 1lnlrint
quite fut," 1ald the source, who
declined to be ldenUfled. "Hll
eyeai1ht and bearln1 are
aeriouaty impaired."
Her Supreme Court appeal
contended that the conflict de-
nied Mn. Shaw of her right to a
fair trial.
"We submit that the issue pre-
sented herein goes to the heart
of our judicial system," the ap-
peal said: "The potential or ap-
pa rent violations of several
American Bar Association dil·
clplinary rules and canons of
professional conduct as the re.. --
(See PA'ITY, Page AZ>
111111 COAST WEATHll
·F a l r a n d w a r m e r '·
throu1h Tuesday. Lowa -:
tonl&bt 52 a1ona the coast, '
58 inland. Hl&bl Tueac:lay
mJd 1oa to Jow eoa.
111111 Jiiii
.. ., .......
•
... _i
Ct •
-5 ' .... 1119 ..
I
t
WASHINGTON (AP> -A U.S.
....,..-,c ... me Court juaUce 1ald to-
4ay tbe nation'• cou t ~uah mnecenary dela~ -~ rn.t.r.Un1 effort.I to tm~ ~ dfalh pen.tty. •
Jn a blittertn1 opinion. Justice
William H. Rehnqulat blamed
tbe tederal court.I for deJaJill•
qd Umitin1 the 4eatb penalty's
j~poaitlon 11lnce the Supreme
C.urt ruled ln 1V16 that It can be
a ,:oMUtutlonal punishment.
"Wben IOClely promlffi to punilb by death cen.iri erim&b.ll conduct AQCf then the cOurti~rtalJ I
to do eo, the court.I not OG1Y Jene the determit effect of tbe
tbrea' of cuttal punllbment, they Undermine the lntepit)' of
the entire crtmlnal ju1Uce
s,atem," Reh.nQullt aald.
Hi• oplnlOlt 1pc>ke ollly for
himself.
"What troubles me," Rebn-
quilt said, "la that thla cou.n., by
coutuu; tluertnc wltb the
plli'clpMt laid down . . . IA lf'fe,
to••t.ba' With UM natural niue. tance of 1tate and federal Judi•
to rule •IQat an tAmate 91t~
ath row, bal made lt riltWIDJ
tmp<>11lble for atatel to enforce
with rea1onable promptneH
their con1tltuttonally valld
capital punlabment atatutet. •·
He added: "In Atlanta, we
oannot protect our amall
cbUdren at play. ln the nation's Rel1nqulat'1 remaru came u
From Page A1
PATTY •••
suit of the prohibited contract . . . C9'l1d never be other than
an actual conruct of interest.
The dau1hter of newspaper
publisher William Randolph
Heant and blJ wife, Catherine,
Mrs. Shaw waa convicted of
p11rtlclpation ln the 1974 armed
robbery of a San Frandseo
~fl:lk·
MRS. SHAW WAS 18 when on
Feb. 4, 1974, two months before
the ban~ robbery, ahe was ab-
ducted from a Berlteley apart.·
ment by a group ca1Un1 itself
the Symbionese Liberation
Army. Prosecutors said Mrs.
Shaw subsequently embraced
the group's ideology .
After her conviction and un·
successful appeals carried all
the way to the Supreme Court,
Mrs. Shaw served nine months
of a seven-year sentence in a
federal prison. She was released
in early Ur79.
Although she faces no further
time in prison, Mrs. Shaw re-
portedly wants to clear the "con·
victed bank robber" stigma
from her name.
CAA POOLED -EJ Toro homeowner Ken
Smith was awakened at 5 a .m. today by
sounds Qf a car smashing through a block
wall and l~ding in the pool in his back yard
at 23611 Rangoon St. Driver Roy Dietz, 28,
was listed in good condition today at Sad·
dleback Community Hospital.
· Bailey was fired as Mrs.
Shaw's lawyer after her at-
tempts to stay out of prison
failed. She then appealed her
conviction on grounds that she
received lmufficient legal help.
According to court documents,
Mrs. Shaw accused Bailey of
pursuing "his own interest in
publication rights, rather than
her interest in acquittal.·•
.
One balloon
/,ef t in race
over Monlana
The field of Gordon Bennett
Balloon Race entnes still aloft
was trimmed to one this mom-
i ng, with restaurateur Rocky ADkl and pilot Ben Abruzzo
sighted above Billings, Mont ..
more than 1,000 miles from their
Fountain Valley liftoff.
A race spokesman said the
pair's balloon, the Benihana,
was at 18,000 feet in altitude,
moving east at 50 miles per
hour The spokesman said Aoki
and Abruzzo had set their sights
OD an East Coast landing
The Benihana 's distance made
it the likely candidate lo walk
away with this year's Gordon
Bennett trophy.
The 10 other helium-filled
balloons that took off from Mile
~uare Park Saturday afternoon
..yere reported down at various
sites throughout the southweat.
.No major injuries were re·
ported.
From Page A1
IRA ...
members visited him Sunday·
and said he was "extremely
weak."
Pesticides danger
in housing probed U.S. DISTRICT Judge William
Orrick turned down Mrs. Shaw's
appeal. But the 9th U.S. Clrcuti
Court of Appeals on Oct. 17 or·
dered Orrick to restudy the ap·
peal in light of a 1980 Supreme
Court decision.
WASIDNGTON CAP> -The
Army Times and its companion
newspapers reported today that
thousands of families may have
been exposed to pesticides wblle living in military housing.
Pentagon spokesman Bill
Caldwell said the Defense
Department is "studying the
matter to determine whether we
should commence a large-scale
inspection and monitoring pro-
gram for military housing un-
its."
The copyrighted story said the
problem involves some 31,000
sets of quarters constructed the
last 25 years all over the country
on concrete slab foundations
with forced air heating and cool-
ing ducts in or under the s labs.
MANY CIVILIAN homes have
also been constructed in this
manner, according to the report in Army Times, Navy Times
and Air Force Times.
The newspapers said the
danger arises when the
chemical ch.IOr<fane is used to
control termites.
Caldwell said that use of
chlordane in this particular type
of housing was banned by the
Defense Department on May 19,
1980.
ly drill into the ducts, and then
can be spread through a building
by the furnace or air condition-
in& blower.
Military and civilian experta
don't agree on how much ex-
posure to the chemical is
dangerous. the papers said. But
they reported that the Centers
for Disease Control says large
doses can be deadly and
smaller ones may attack the
nervous sytem.
At least one former
serviceman has filed suit claim-
ing injuries associated with the
chemical, the newspapers said.
Texans tops
in world
chip tossing
BEAVER, Okla. (AP>
When the chips are down, you
can always count on a Texan for
a superlative effort.
That decision, ln a case called
Cuyler vs. Sullivan, said a
person's criminal conviction
may be overturned if he or she
can prove "an actual confiict of
interest adversely affected (the
defense ) lawyer 's
performance."
The 9th Circuit court, refusing
to adopt an automatic rule re-
garding lawyers who contract
for book rights, told Judge Or-
rick to determine whether
Bailey's conduct "adversely af·
fected" his performance in
representing Mrs. Shaw.
Mrs. Shaw, arguing for an
automatic rule that would not
require a finding of adverse ef·
feet, appealed to the Supreme
Court. Her appeal was opposed
by the Justice Department.
"What.ever the soundness of
the automatic rule Jrfn. Shaw
proposes, we believe it would be
premature for the court to coo-
s i de r it here," government
lawyers said. Representatives of the Lone
Star State took three out of four
events in the World Cham-Security changed
pionship Cowcbip Throwing Con-test over the weekend in this FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. (AP)
Panhandle town. Over 3,000 fans -Security cbangff will be made
turned out to see the chi~ fly. at the Cuban refu1ee relocation
Tbe court left totact Wayiie
Carl Coleman'• murder convtc-
tlon and death 1enteoce for tlll
role la the deal.bl of six mem-
ben ol the Alday family May 14,
1973.
Coleman was one of four men
From Page A1
coftvlcted for th• munletl. R!I
appeal, rejected lD tbe Georli•
cOWU, ucued tbat he WU de·
nied a fair trial atnce under ttaw
law be wu not allowed to 1ub-~na Wttnena from faltMr
away than 150 mUet from the
alte of b.11 trial.
The appeal alao contended
lbat UM trial Jud1e'1 in.IUUe·
tlona to Juron created aft lm·
proper presumption of autlt that
shifted the burden of proof to
Coleman.
TRAFFIC COURT • • •
The judge cringed, shook his head, smiled and fined her the
full amot.mt.
A hefty man was cited for running a atop •i&n and made
bis ca~tbis way: "I live atthetopofa hill and my car doesn't
run too good so I need a runnine start to make it up. So I didn't
reallystopatthesign." The commissioner suggested that the man fix his car,
stop atstopsigns, and asked him to pay the full fine.
One man had failed to register his car for nearly the
whole year. "I lost my job," he said. "Then 1 got thrown ln
jail. My lawyer got me out of jail butitlook all my money. As
soon asl getunemploymentl'llregi.stermy car."
Thejudge gave him two weeks to pay his car registration
and the fine.
A YOUNG MAN, PACKAGED in designer clothes and
sporting a fresh permanent, had been cited for apeeding.
"I'm a private detective," he said boldly. "l was following
someone when a cop pulled us both over and wrote us both
tickets. Speeding is part of my work."
The judge commiserated and ftned him the whole
amount.
"I plead guilty to running a red light, but with an explana-
tion," one woman said excitedly. "Never, never in my life
have lseen a light tum redsofast!"
The commissioner expressed sympathy and levied the
full fine.
FOR EVERY STORY THERE'S a comeback from the
judge or traffic commissioner hearing the case. Glenn ~ ..M.a.hlerof H.ubor Court is a polite, good-humored fellow, and
even when be hears a tall tale, he's politic in tbe way he ig.
no res the explanation.
One rather curt woman said that "everybody waa going
toofastandnGone got a ticket but me. It was my unlucky day
tbatweek.''
"Well, consider the other six days of that week your luclty
ones," Mahler said.
''How about lowering the fine because I had bad luck?"
she asked.
''No." he said. "But I will give you a chance to go to traf-
fic school and keep this off your record.'•
"Okay." she said reluctantly. "Better than nothing "
EVEN THE JUDGE'S MERCY or helpful advice isn't
always accepted by the adamant story.teller. One man said
that he was cited for parking Mth hi.s tires more than 18 in-
ches from the curb, and that he wanted a trial to prove bis in-
nocence.
"I'm not guilty," he said. ·~ause there were extenuat-
ing circumstances."
·'Were your tires moretlian18inches from the curb?"
"Yes."
"Noone has ever been found not guilty of that charge yet
If the officer measured the distance and it was over 18 Inches,
you '11 be found guilty and fined, forfeiting the chance to go to
traffic school and have this taken from your record," Mahler
exolained.
"l want a trial."
"l'LL SET A DATE, BUT I'll remind you again that no
one has ever been found not guilty of this charge in this
court,'' said Mahler.
After a long pause the man decided to flead not guilty
and Mablersetthetrialdate.
Some stories are considered instant classics. Mahler's
favorit.estorywasonetold by a man who'd alven a false name
to an officer when be was stopped tor a violation. But the ali a.s
turned out to have a number of outstandinl warrants and the
man was arrested and booked.
The commi.ssioner asked him if he'd learned anything by
using someone else's name when being questioned by an of-
ficer. The National H-Block Com·
m1ttee, the group whose leaders
were arrested overnight, ap·
pealed Sunday to Irish Prlme
Minister Charles Haughey to in-
tervene on behalf of the 27-year·
old guerrilla, who was elected
this month to the British Parlia-
ment after campai1ning from
bis prison hospital bed.
He said the Air Force bas been
aware of the problem for some
time and had done studle. which
indicated only low levels of the
chemical in housing unit.a .
Bill Walter of Sandsop, Texas, centerhereatlerviolenceAprillO
captured the men• s open that lnjured6l people and caused d.ivislon~~a~row~l~~~~a~~~u~t~~oo~,ooo~~in~d~a~m~~~e~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
5 inches.
"Yes," the man said, "I've learned not to UJe that name
anymore."
The committee said it believed
the Irish leader could force
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher to agree to the demand
of Sands and three other hunrer
slrikera in the Maie by threat.en·
ing to expel Britain'• am-
bassador to the lrilb Republic,
Leonard Figg.
Pilot killed
TEHACHAPI (AP> -A Hemet
man was ldlled when bit Ulht
plane crashed Oft a fOl·lbrouded
mountain about one ball mile
froro Tebacbapl Alrport,
authorities said. The victim wu
ldentlfled today as Dick
Craml)tcn, 29.
OflANGI COAIT Dilly Piiat
The General Accounting Of.
lice has also looked Into tbe
problem, Caldwell said.
T EBMITE CONTROL
chemicals are aenerally placed
in the 1round around a founda·
tioo and squirted into holes
drllled in the foundations of
homes. .,,..
Accordilll to the articles,
chlord&M can aet into the forced
air ducts tbrouih cracks or
when ext.erm\naton accidental-
Arson blamed
LOS ANGELF.8 (AP> -Anon
baa been blamed for a $300,000
fire at the Jefferson Hi&h School
aymnulum and la belna in·
vestigated u a ~•lble cause of
a 113,000 hotel blaze.
In the women's open division,
a 92-foot toss by Pam Ingram of
Wellington, Texas, took honors.
In the championship class -
the competition for those who
advanced to the meet through
winning contests in their own
communities -the men's win-
ner was Thane Wright of
Levelland, Texa~. with a throw
of 137 feet, 5 lnches.
Kay Hankins of Prairie Du
Sac , Wla., took the cham-
pionship class for women by
hurlin& a chip 9J feet, 5 inches.
From Page A1
CENTER • • •
be a flnancial drain on city
aervlce1 and retail t~nds to be a
aalea tax revenue boon to the
city.
Under the proposed a1Tee-
meat, ~ city would waive \la
n1ht to force the company to
ftnt develop the retaJl portJon of
the center.
IP r«um, the compa_py would
iuarantee that tb• coun~.erdal
center MuJd be • flnaoetal plua
t.r the city.
'lbree mu.rilered
SACRAM£.NTO (AP> -
Le1l1la..._ once 11alD di.let.Ill
CaJlfomlus' ravorit• 1ubJect -
can -thla wee.Ir wben they COG·
1ldn bU1a tC) ••eeten "lemon"
cafj and tl&bten lnautance re·
qulrementa.
Lawmaker• alto con1tder a
subject futilely brouaht up after
evety 11111alnatlon attempt:
bandaun control.
They look at diaclpllne and
1mokin1 in achooi., Ucen1in1 of
mldwlvea, the teachlnl of ter-
rorla m, Nat:l 1wa1tlkaa, El
Salvador and raccoons.
IT'S ANOTHER busy week in
the Legislature u senaton and
Assembly members with bills •
with any coat that they want
P•ssed lhil year must 1et them
out of the first committee by
Friday. Bills that don't make It
can't be passed until 1982,
without a two-thirds vote.
Most committees have long
a1endas th.is week and several
have scheduled evening meet-ings.
The "lemon" car bill, to be
heard Tuesday in the Assembly
Consumer Protection and Toxic
Materials Committee. is another
attempt to give car buyers some
recourse when they buy a car
that spends all its lime in the
shop.
THE AUTHOR of AB1787 ,
committee Chairwoman Sally
Tanner, 0 -EI Monte, got her bill
through the Assembly last year.
but it was killed m the Senate
,.,. ..........
SOIL SWIRLS -Unaware of the results, a Lexington
County, S.C., farmer created an abstract work of art, vis-
ible only from above, while driving on one of the farm's
fie lds.
It would require automakers
to give the buyer either a new
car or money back if the car was
plagued with one major problem
four times or was out of service
20 days in the first year
A hall dozen car insurance
bills disliked by the industry are
before committees in both
houses the Assembly Finance,
Insurance and Commerce Com-
mittee on Tuesday for Assembly
bills, and the Senate Ins urance
and Indemnity Committee on
Monday for Senate bills.
Media blmned for TMI
WASHINGTON (AP1 A
nuclear power c riti c says
newspapers hold partial
• responsibility for the 1979 acc1 ·
dent at the Three Mile Island
powe r plant in Pennsylvania
because they promoted nuclear
power rather than question it.
Daniel Ford, an economist for
the Union of Concerned Scien
tists, lold the American Society·
of Newpaper Editors that gov
ernment nuclear officials had
urged science writers to pro-
mote nuclear power -"which
they went out and did."
John Troan, editor of the
Pittsburgh Press , defended
n ewspa pers' coverage of
nuclear power. noting that the
record of economists such as
Ford at forecasting the future
was less than perfect.
Midwest has wet look
Showers also fall on California, Northwest
POINT CONCllPTION TO THll
MEXICAN llOllOIEll ANO OUT 60
MILliS -Sn\MI craft edvl-y OW< ovter ••ten wom Point CAlfK•P41eft
to S.11 ~ 1-'-lflctudln9 mid
S.111• ---· ciw-1 ,., "°"~ •111<11 IS m • knOtS wttll • t• 1• 1-
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"Th• American dream of
home owpel'9b.lp la 1Upptn1 out
or reach," declared Mary Alleen
Matheia, 3Znd Dlatrlct vlce
• preaidtl\l or tbe California
A11ocrauon of Realtors.
She wu addreHinl a Hunt-
ington Beach Cit)' Hall audience
1atbered to hear 1ovemment
and private sector represen-
tatives dJ1cua1 housing pro-
blems in West Orange County.
Tbe forum wu 1ponsored by
the Huntinston Beach ·Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors.
•s. MA THEIS said several
eroups are competine for the
dwindling Dumber of affordable
bouaine unlta: youn1 adult.a.
born during the baby boom, who
are preparin1 to buy their first
homes; newcomers 1treamin1
into California from other
states, and increasing numbers
of divorced and sinale people
who need their own residences.
First District Orange County
Supervisor Roger Stanton said
excessive government regula-
tions have hampered the natural
process of supply and demand.
•'The more controls and con di·
t14D1 you _p~ce oa a produe.r,
the more 41ftleult It 11 for blm to
pr9duce ht• product -be lt
bou1ea or ballpoint pena," Stan·
ton said.
He waa critical of the ln·
cluslonary zonlne and resale
control policies adopted by the
county.
TBE8E RULES state that 25
percent of most new hou.s1n1 de·
velopmenta must be priced
within ream of famlllea wtth modest lncomes -$30,000 or
leas.
Tbe county also baa placed ~
ule control.a on these affordable
bomta for 30-year periods in
wblcb they muat be resold
wltbln the ".Uordable" price
ran11.
Stanton critiCized long-term
renle controls, uying they
eventua.IJy could reqaire that a
home be sold for $100,000 leas
than its neighbors, which have
increased naturally in value. James LogaJ\, president of the
Huntington Beach-Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors, •aid
the absence of affordable hous-
ing ls upsetting the entire home
purchase chain.
He said many young families
cannot afford to buy existing
1 ~ .. ~ "' bolftH. A• a rHult. more4~
establllbed hmillea cannot ftnf,.\
buyers When tbey want to move
into more expenalve or 1811•~
homes. ~
LOGAN SAID that until tnna~
tlon la cur.bed, realtors wlU bavr,i
to rely on "creatlve flnanctnc•~.)
to help famlllu purcbas~
homes.
Stephen Kohler, community
development specialist for the
city of Huntinston Beach, said
the &low pace of housing con-
struction makes {t crucial
keep emtin& residences in g
condition.
He 1ald Huntinaton Beach
µs'loa federal funds to he~
downtown homeownen obtain
low·lnterest lo~ to repair their
houses, amon1 the oldest an the
city.
John Erskioe. executive assis-1
tant to 2nd District Orange
County Supervisor Harriett
Wieder, said an adequate suppl •
of affordable housing ls cruel
to the economic health o
Orange County.
He said modest incom
employees who work in Orang
County must have places to liv
within reasonable distance&
from their workplaces._
Midge Costanza slated at GW
By 0. C. HUSTINGS
Of-o.llyPl ... IUfl
Midge Costanza, the highest
ranking woman in the Carter
White House, will be the keynote
speaker dunng Women's Week,
May 10-15 at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach
Ms Costanza, 48, assistant to
President Carter for public
liaison. will speak May 11 on
"Governme nt is Born of
Politics "
Her talk 1s scheduled for 11
a.m. in Forum l on the Golden
West campus. Admission is free.
but sealing is limited, college of·
ficials advise. ••• AN0111ER SPEAKER during
Golden West College's Women's
Week will be consumer advocate
Ralph Nader.
He'll kick off the week's ac-
tivities with a talk on "The
Citl1en.s Movement in Artierica
-The Quest for a Democratic
Culture.."
His talk la set for 7: 30 p. m
May 10 In the campus gym-
nasium. Tickets at $4.50 per
person may be purchased at the
door or at the college ticket of-
fice. ••• NADER ALSO is to appear
May 8 at Cal State Fullerton .
He'll talk at 7:30 p.m. in the
Pacific Theater, 2500 E .
Nutwood, just south of lbe cam-
pus.
Tickets at $3 per person are
available in the lobby of the
University Center. ••• ASSEMBLYMAN NOLAN
Frizzelle, R-Costa Mesa, bas in-
troduced two new measures in
the Legislatu.re.
His AB 21"'7 would authorize
special personally designed
license plates for classic and an-
tique motor vehicles.
And his AB 2198 would exclude
in1uries as a result of earth-
quakes from workers' com-
pensation coverage. ••• LOOK FOR state Senate Dis·
trict 36 to be carved up when the
Legislature gels around to re-
districting.
The district currently
represented by John Schmitz, R·
Newport Beach, is one of the
bigMst in the stale m terms of
poi)alation.
According to state Senate staff
members, the ideal populatiort
for a senate district 1s 591,714.
The population of Schmitz'
Orange and San Diego County
district 1s 814,909 The figur~
are based on the 1980 U.S.
Census • • • FOUNTAIN VALLEY
chiropractor James D. Petrikin
has been appointed chairman of..
the Orange County Chiropracti<l,
Society's Political Action Com-
m itte \
Horse center out
Orange County officials ba.e
called off work on a feasibility
atudr to examine prospects for
bui dlni a 1984 Olympic
equestrian center in the south
county.
The Los Angeles Olympic
Organizing Committee has
awarded a contract to the Los
Angeles Turf Club to host moet
of the equestrian events at the
Santa Anita race track in
Arcadia.
Robert Wingard, a program
manager for the county En
vironmental Management Agen-
cy. said he has given a termina-
tion notice to a private planning
firm . EDAW Inc. of Newport
Beach, hired to prepare the
study
Eyeing the possibility of at·
tracting outside money to
finance the facility. the county
Board of Supervisors ap-
propriated Sl0,000 on April 8 foi;?
the study. ...'·
Wingard said EDA W will t>e.:
paid for its cosUI to date, but.
predicted the county will recoup
most of the fllnds because ooun~
ty officials delayed preparation
of the study until receiving a
more definitive response from·'
the organizing committee ~1
He said he didn't know how 1
much the county will get back, "
The supervisors were eager to'·
go ahead with the study becaust'
plans already call for an
equestnan center in the Aliso
Viejo Greenbelt near Lagun~·
Niguel Park.
Wingard said the facility is
planned to be leased to a priv~te,
party with the revenue paymg
for maintenance of the open''
space '
Without outside help, the
fa cility probably, won't be built''
for five to 10 years, he added.
o...ir w..ry own stroight 1aj cuff<Ui P9nte
...
..
,
' .•
.. • .
! ...
f'Z
,..
' ~
-: '
· .
fter boib men have beta
fHtuted a1a1a and •1•lD lD
new• 1torlt1 over tbe PHt
Hveral montha.
St~man hu been tbe man in
tbe news with tbe numben, the
polnt man ln ex)>lalnln1
Rea1an'1 economic propoetlt.
At director of tbe Offlce of
Mana1emeat and Budcet, the
former Mlchiean ~man
ba1 fained t.be reputation ol the
chie budiet·cutter bl a buqet-
cuWU adminlltraUaa.
ln &be wake of the abortive at-
tempt to kill Rea1an, Meae
could be seen on the televlllon
screen Ume IZld a1a1n, explain-.
........
GUARDING ROAD -A l~year-0ld guerrilla, armed with an
automatic assault rifle, guards the road between Tejutepe·
que and Cinquera in Cabanas, El Salvador, about 65
kilometers northeast of San Salvador. He said be joined the
subversives two years ago, but refused to give ~name.
Our exclusive sport shirts
in cool cotton broad~loth ..
These short-sleeve sport shirts arc only at
Brooks Brothers, in a smooth cotton
broadcloth that· feels almost silky. A good
looking complement to Summer trousers.
Pleated' pocket. Choose from white, medium
blue, navy, pink, ecru or yellow. Sizes 14Y2 to
161/i. $29.SO
" lS'fA9U$MfD 1111
i•I tiow 1mootbl1 tbe ad·
mtai1tratioa •H funcUoaia1,
bOw then ... no loN of CODtroJ
ol 1ove~ent ln ertall.
H.ll title II COQQHJor to UM
,PNlideDt, but tome UYt tald
bl.I· power makea him Ult prllrii
minlJter · to Rea1an th• Phil· dent.
D SPITE TREia role• and power, however, the P_9.bllc
doesn't know much about either ma.o.
Just under o.oe out of seven
Americana -U percent -know
about Meese. Fully 85 percent ot
the public says they don't know
enoueb about him to have an
opinion, the latest A11oclated
Pre11-NBC NeW1 poll 1aid.
-
MYSTERY MAN
DaWd Stockman
€hinese
professor
lauds Nixon
GREENCASTLE, 'Ind. <AP) -
Richard Nlxon't effort• to
restore diplomatic relatiom Wltb
China may have prevented. a
war between tho United stata
and communist oatlOftJ, a war
the United States "probably
would b.ave lost," a Cblntte
Journalist and p.rofe.11or 1ay1.
Hubert S. Ltan1, who teaches
at the University of Nanldq,
told a Depauw Univeraity
luncheon Tuesday that the
People's Republic of Oblna
would .. welcome the former
president if he were appointed
ambusador to that Asian na·
lion.
Reagan pUslies 'ecOnomic plan
W ASIDNGTON <AP> -Ronald
Reagan ls turnine up the beat 011
behall of bis economic proeram in
hopes of making Congre111ee the
light.
The biggest boost in tem-
perature is to come Tuesday, the
day after the leeialaton return
from their two-week East.er re·
cess.
That night, in his first public ap-
pearance since he wu shot March
30, the president wW go to the
Capitol to appeal to a joint session
of Congress for favorable acdoo
on his budget and tax·cut pro-
posals.
It's the sort of dramatic ap·
pearance the former ffoU)'WOOd
actorloveabest.
THE NATIONALLY broadcast
speech ii certal.o to draw even
more public attention than usual
aa the nation loou for itself to see
the extent of Reaaan's recovery
from the bullet wound in the cheat
inflicted by a would-be aaausin.
It will enable the president to
re-emphasize bis commitment to
paaaage of his program while he
and bis congressional audience
are aware that millions of
Americansarewatchlne.
"He feels it ls partlculQly im-
portant that be outline bis views
as bis program moves toward in
the lealalative process," said
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes.
THE ENTl&E lobbying effort
for the economic program bas
been a case study on what
Congress can expect from the
Reagan White House when it
becomes committed to an all-out
press for approval of a program.
The White House has distribut-
ed to top administration officials
a blue-covered booklet entitled ··President Reagan's Program
for Economic Recovery.''
Called an "executive briefmg
book," the document contain& a
simplified explanation of the
highlights of the tax and budget
programs and also includet a
sample speech that begins, "It's a
pleasure for me to be here today."
Who knows how many times
this week that speech was de-
livered in congressional di.9trlcta
across the country as the ad·
ministration dispatched Cabinet
members and congressional al-
lies to drum up support for the
program. Most of those speakers
were sent into districts represent-
ed by conservative Democrats
considered likely supporters of
the Reagan program.
Life goes · on amid the bullets
BEHtUT (AP> -Fatima
Hallan, her hu.!band and seven
children live in a battlefield on
the Green Line border between
Moslem West Beirut and the
Christian East. In more than six
years of on -again-off.again
warfare. they have learned to
live with the boom of heavy guns
and the lethal threat of snipers.
"We know exactly where the
shots are being fired from," said
the 37 -year·old Lebanese
Moslem housewife. "We are
used to it. In the early da)'ll,
many people were killed
because they did not know bow
to bl• from bullets and shella.
Now we know."
I spent iWednesday ni&bt with
the Husans in their apartment
in Chiyah, a Shiite Moslem
neighborhood on the southern
fringe of the capital. The desert·
ed. dirt-littered streets are lined
by buildings scarred and broken
by years or fighting.
PEOPLE DO not walk on the
streets of Cbiyah. They run.
Lik.e the Hassans, most resi-
dents of Chiyah are refugees
from another war in southern
Lebanon. But there is little dif·
ference between them and the
Christian families living eut of
the Green Line frontier,
Together, they make up the
100,000 people who are caught in
a battlefield with nowhere to go.
As I sat with the Husam in
their parlor, sipping sweet tea
and t.alldna about the war, the
stutter of sniper fke was pick.Ing
up outside. Soon Christian
artillery nre started crashing in-
to the neighborhood, and Syrian
gun batteries nearby began fir·
ing back across the line.
The house shook with the con·
cussion of incoming and outgo-
ing fire. But the Hassans rushed
to their balcony to see what was
going on.
SURPRISINGLY, everyone in
the neighborhood seemed to be
on their balconies. I saw an old
man calmly eating fatoush. a
spicy Lebanese salad . and
another puffing on a water pipe
Both seemed oblivious to the
battle.
The shelling and machine-gun
fire became more intense. I saw
one shell explode about three
blocks away. Armed men ran
throuah the .streets. shouting for
residents to get inside. Fires
broke out in several nearby
building.s. and the air began to
fill with black smoke
It was then that we ran down
the stairs to the basement shelter. ·
Pi ct ures of A yatollah
R uhollah Khomeini. I ran 's
Shiite Moslem spmtual leader.
were plastered on the walls of
the 60·by-75 foot basement
There was one bathroom. two
water tanks and no windows. It
was lit by four weak light bulbs
Altogether, there were five
families in the shelter, about 50
people
WE SAT ON mattresses and
dirty rugs scattered on the con·
crete floor. UnhJce some more well-to-do
residents of Beirut. the Hu1ans do not stockpile canned rood 1n
the shelter lnstead. they had
bread, eggs. cheese. yogurt and
cooked lentils, prepared by the
women in the morning when
Beirut is usually calm.
With reasonable minimums and shorter terms
so you don't have to tie up your money for 21h years!
.,..
Commercial Credit now offers Money
Market rates with just a $~<XX> minimum and
a 3 month term for our t90 Day WQnder"
thrift certificates~ And only $500 minimum for
a one year term. Or, if you want passbook flex-
ibility, we pay 8.50% annual interest com-
{>Otlll<led quarterly (8. m, yield) on Super
Thrift accountB of $1,CXX> or more. .. 7% annual
rate (7.18% yield) on~ and up.
'nlese ptans pay 25% to 45% higher in~
E!!t ratts than Federal law allowa on compaz:a-
ble plans at bank& and aavinp & loan associa.
tions. Call for our current thrift certificate
rates. .
And if you need to withdraw early, you'll
earn ~ annual interest. ~ com~n,
banks' and aa~ & loana reguire forl~
ure of up to 6 months' interflat; ao you COUid
actiially ~ b8Ck LE3S than yoor origiruil
• inveetmentl
-~·.,....
SACRAMENTO <AP> -"Gov . ldmUIMl Brown
Jr.'• boualna taak force reeommendl tb1t tlM 1t1te 1tlow 1t leaat two HP9rimental "o•w cltlet"
where affordable bou.tln1 would M tlltouraced.
The cities would have to include at least one• fourth moderately prteed boullnl and would be ex·
empt from cunent local 1ovemment approval re·
'qulrementa for formation of new clUea.
' Tbe Tuk F.orce on Affordable Houtlna. In Ill
lotertm report to Brown, envbloned 1uch dtlea u ''planned communities" where people would Uvt
close to work sites, schools and recreation.
TUE PANEL, chaired by developer Nathan
SbapeU and lncludin1 some environmentali1ta and
1overnment officials, preaezpted numerous recom·
mendaUOOJ on solvin1 what it called California 'a
hoUlini crisis.
They included:
-Lettinl local governments overlook some
potential environmental damage caused by Jll• de·
velopment of affordable boualnc.
-Probibltlq communiUea from using open·
apace ordinances to block cooatruction of afford•·
ble bomin1. -~equlrinl full environmental impact re·
port• only for development in designated
"environmentally sensitive" areaa. Earliest morning departure .
SURVIVOR -Douglas Friman, relaxing in his Los Angeles home, -ENCOURAGING local 1overnments to allow
development permits to sidestep the local planning
commission.
learned in December 1974 that a nodule discovered on his larynx
was malignant. In January uns his larynx, along with the voice box
it contains, was removed, an operation which saved his life. Brown issued tbe report along with a state·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ment saying the re~mmenda~oM would h~~
Jury convict8'--
border officer
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A jury has convicted U.S.
border patrolmaJf Donald Oliver of wrongfully
transporting a young Mexican woman and receiv·
ing sexual favors.
The woman, now 21, testified that Oliver told
her to wait at the border gate in 1977, then took her
to his home Oliver said he was off-duty at the time
and tried only to help her
The 36-year-old officer was found innocent on•
two other counts or transporting or the alien
woman, a count of harboring her, receiving a
bribe and soliciting a bribe by promising to let her
stay in the Un ited States.
Oliver was allowed to remain Cree pending a
May 26 sentencing date set by U.S. District Judge
William B. Enright.
Gay deputy sues cily
SAN FRANClSCO (AP> -A gay Monterey
County deputy, severely beaten while visiting a
gay bar in his off.duty hours, bas filed a $1 million
claim against the city of Monterey lor the way
police handled his case
Don Tombe claims police Ignored standard
procedures after be informed them be was
murged by four heterosexual men in January.
Tom~ suffered a broken jaw and lost four teeth in
the attack.
He said the officers failed to offer bim medical
aid, refused to give him a ride to tbe station to
make a statement and offered no help \o a second
man injured in the scuffle.
One of the suspects, who told officers that
Tom be had pinched him, was offered a ride to the
station, Tombe said.
Bingo ruled legal,
CLOVIS !AP> -Bingo will be legal in this
Fresno County city if the games are run by
charitable organizations and are open to the
public.
The city council Monday adopted an ordinance
allowing charitable bingo games and mandating a
$50 permit. A similar ordinance was repealed last
year on grounds that it was too hard to enforce.
Police Chief Gerald Galvin said the new or·
dinance requires record keeping which the original
one failed to do.
P08ters rejected
FRESNO CAP) -The city council backed
away from a vote that would have permitted anti·
draft registration posters on municipal buses.
The Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom is suing to have the advertising hang
on Fresno Transit buses.
School chief oust.ed
LANCASTER CAP> -Lancaster School Dis·
trict Superintendent Kenneth Almeida bas been
given a compulsory leave of absence by district
trustees after ht was charged with alleged lewd
conduct by the district attorney's office.
The 49-year-old admin.iltrator was arrested
last Friday afternoon after being placed under
citizen's arrest by a security 1uard at a depart·
ment 1tore in Lancaster. The guard told in·
veatifaton that Almeida alle&edly made lewd ad·
vances toward him while both men were l.n the
store'• restroom.
Contact lenses
fail for shark
state and local governments take action to lD·
crease the production of lower-cost housing. Most service to Denver.
4 flights daily.
Refund
frauds
doubted
State court to hear
conjllgal visit case Just call your travel agent and say you want to fly
Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060.
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -A state official
says most consumers
aren't trying to defraud
the state in seeking re·
runds for Levi Strauss
I11c jeans they bought
ff he San Francisco
based manufacturer has
agreed in a price-fixing
suit settlement to pay
California consumers
$12 3 million ror jeans
they bought between
1972 and 1976. The state
was to seek today final
approval of the plan
from San Francisco
Superior Court Judge
Ira Brown.
The state has received
1.4 million claims in·
volving 4.6 milUon peo·
pie and 35 million pairs
of men 's and boy's
jeans.
SAN FRANCISCO ( AP> -Whether the
state's conjugal visit program for prison inmates
should be extended to unmarried inmates will be
decided by the California Supreme Court.
Th~court has granted a bearin1 to Ray Cum·
mings, a San Quentin inmate who wants his friend
Susan Cummings, 27 . and. her daughter to be able
to take part in the family Vlsit proeram,
Cumminp says be was denied such visit&
because he and Ms. Cummings ''elected for
personal reasons to structure their relationship
outside the realm of legal marriage or adoption."
They are not related, despite having the same last
names.
Cummings, who is in hi1I 405, said the state
Corrections Department, the Marin County
Superior Court and a state Court of Appeal turned
him down because their situation involved no
"legal marriage, adoption or b}Ood relaUonahip"
as required by the 1tate Penal Code.
The couple bad lived together from 1971 to
1978, when Cummtnes wu convicted of murder and sentenced to ~. and the 10-yeu-old prl re·
aards him u her father, Cummlnp aald.,He said
be considers them hi.I "family."
"Looking for something good to read?
''Want to read about the world? Your own
neighborhood? Sports? Movies? How about
music, travel, economics-even the weather?
''Well, you don't need a shelf full of books to
find all those good things.
''They're all right here in these pages, fresh
every day in your local newspaper.
"I'm Ed Asn~r-and I think there's something
for everyone in the newspaper. It's even got
television listings-so you '11 never miss the oest shows-like 'Lbu·Grant! ,,
, • -.:
j
Ollce a1aln a dJaqu1et1n1 proposal to Increase the ~rmttted number of daily de· parturm at John Wayne Airport
ts scheduled for coulderatfon.by
the Oran1e County Board of
Supervisors.
Several months a10. before
1upervlson adopted the airport
master . plan, board Chairman
Ralph Clark proposed that the
daily maximum number of jet
departures, now fixed at 41, be
increased to 62.
The proposal enraaed ~
Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose
district includes both the airport
and its expansionist foes. Riley
was particularly incensed
because the master plan called
for an increase to 55 flights but
only -and only is the operative
word -if overall noise impacts
were reduced through the in·
troductlon .of new and qwattt
alrcr&ft.
Clark withdrew the 82-fll&ht
proposal after reacbln1 11ree·
ment with Riley that the 'item
could be reconatdered tiler adOp-
tlon of the master plan.
So qpw the item i1 back.
Supervisors will be uked Tues-
day to blre a conaultlna firm to
produce an environmental im-
pact report on the 62·flight pro-
posal.
That the matter would be
considered by the board so soon·
after adoption of the master plan
is ludicrous. None of the plan's
objectives has yet been achieved.
Noise levels have not yet
dropped.
The board should promptly
drop the 62·flight proposal and
work to achieve what's en·
visioned by the master plan.
Worth thinking 'about
Last week on the 11th an· niversary of Earth Day, former
activist, now presumable-
candidate for something Tom
Hayden, told a crowd of UC
Irvine students that their future
is bleak, environmentally.
That's nothing new for
Hayden, who likes to latch his
Campaign for Economic
Democracy onto environmental
issues, but it is somewhat in·
teresting to consider what has
become of the environmental
movement in the past decade.
The students who marched
around the campus celebrating
the first Earth Day were re-
garded as well·meaning but not
very practical youngsters.
But it was not too long before
older folk began to worry about
the outlook for our lands and
waters and resources.
All sort of laws seeking
cleaner air, purer water and un·
trammeled forest lands were
passed. But soon the environ.men·
talists were being jeered at as
"bugs and bunny people," "tree
people,'' people who worried
more aboOt tiny fish and en·
dangered birds than man's need
for housing, jobs and economic
growth.
The environmental move·
ment served to alert us to the
danger of using up our resources
too rapidly and damaging
natural wonders that are ir-
replaceable. But today there is
an increasing tendency to take a
more "practical" view. College
students are more interested in
aiming at good jobs with' good
fringe benefits than walking
around praising the earth.
That may be unfortunate.
Appointees of the new ad ·
ministration in Washingtom
already have come out in favor of
expanded development of pro·
tected f-ederal lands, extended
offshore oil drilling and modifica·
tion of protective regulations on
everything from pesticide use to
automobile e~ton controls.
Hayden's gloom and doom
predictions about the nation's en-
vironmental outlook probably are
somewhat exageerated -inten·
tionally so for impact. But it
might not hurt to have a few
more young people thinking
a bout the future of the earth they
soon will inherit.
ID frauds need control
One of the major problems in
controlling illegal alien activity
in this country has been the ease
of counterfeiting the ubiquitous
Social Security card which now
serves as acceptable identifica-
tion for everything from getting a
driver's license to getting a job.
But suggestions that Social
Security cards be replaced with a
non ·counterf eita ble plastic
model raise howls from those
who fear that this might become
a "national identity card" -as if
our official number were not
already recorded on everything
from our bank accounts to our
tax returns.
The seriousness of the prob-
lem was pointed up this month
by Health and Human Services
Secretary Richard Schweiker.
Ordering tighter controls on
the millions of Social Security
cards issued each year -7
million new numbers and more
than 4 million replacements -
Schweiker said his investigators •
found nearl.)t half the Social
Security cards issued last year in
New York City and Washington
went to aliens, 20 percent of
whom were found to be in the
country illegally and therefore
not entitled to work.
His initial control will be re·
movaJ of blank cards from the
agency's 1,300 field offices and
setting up a central computerized
issuance system. That could be
some protection against the mis-
use and counterfeiting of blank
cards.
Schweiker also said there
will be closer contact with the
Immigration and Naturalization
Service to verify the status of
aliens seeking Social Security
cards.
This is the very least the gov·
ernment can do before it slaps
P.f:nalties on employers for hiring
illegal aliens. More effective
would be replacement of all ex·
isting cards with non-
counterfeitable versions.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex -pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is tnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71<0
642·4321.
L.M. Boyd I PagmUni and Lincoln
Already mentioned that Abraham
Lincoln had Marfan's Syndrome, an
ailment tha\ gave him that exceed-
inll)' lanky loose -Jointed look. It -can
lead to fatal compltcation1, true
eooup. Peculiarly, thoueb, there's
al nast one instance In which
Marfan's Syndrome helped. Nlcolo
PaianlnJ, thou1ht by many to bave
bffn the 1reatest violin lit ever, wu
10 afflicted. And the medical analysta
say now that if such had not been the
caae, 0 Pa1anlnl probably couldn't
ha nn1ered or bowed so well.
I t 'A computer 1tudy of major Jeaeue
baHbaU pl~en 1bo:ws that third
basemen Uve longer than thoee who
put in moat of their careen at other
positions. Short.atop1 come in second
ln this lon1evlty checkup. Pitchers
wind up at the bottom of the list.
Q. In the matter of hotdop, what's
the difference between a Chib&lahua,
a Dachshund uwl a Poodle?
A. A Chlb'Uabua It covered Wttb
chlll aauce, a Dathsbund wltb
1auerkraut, a Poodle Wit.b tboppid
onions. Which do you prefer? Tbiu
I'd like the 11uerllraut dot, lf it 4Wn't
'
et the bun all toll>', wbleb It doee.
oobad. •
Soviet group key to peace
WASHINGTON -A small, super·
secret group of old men -seven or
eight at moet -bear responlibility for
the Kremlln's decision on military in-
tervention in Poland.
This gray-haired, gray-clad inner tir-
cle of Communist Party elderw is known
simply as the Defense Council. Its de·
liberations in the Byzantine elegance of
the czarist council chambers produce
decisions that affect the peace and well
being of the whole world.
LITTLE IS fCNOWN about the
Defense Council. In ract, ita very ex·
istence was not officially acknowledged
until-1976, in a passing reference to Sov-
iet President Leonid Brezhnev's role as
council chairman. The Soviet conslilu·
lion published the following year in-
cludes a brief mention of the Derense
Council, staling that it is "rQrmed" by
the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet.
A special Defense Intelligence Agen-
cy appraisal. tilled "USSR : Defense
Council's Role in Decision Making."
contains everything our expertl know
about the secret group. The appraisal,
wbich was shown to m1 a.uoclate Dale
Van Atta, is just four pqea Ions-
. Here'• a sunimary of wbat ou.r ill·
telligence experts have been able to
learn about the council:
It is "the main coordinator of de-
fense-related activities or all govern-
ment bodies, providing key reeommen-
dalion.s on defense policy to the Polit·
buro and ensuring that party policy is
correctly executed by state organs."
-The members of the Defense
Council. as near as the DIA has been
able to determine, include Bre1hnev .
Defense Minister Dmitri Ustinov. a
civilian technocrat; Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko ; Premier Nikolai
Tikhonov, re placing the late Al exei Kosygin, hls longtime boss; KGB boss
Yuri Andropov; Nikolai Oga rkov.
military chief of staff. and Leonid
------------·~~ JACI AIDlllDI ~
Si:nimov, chief or the Military Industrial
Command. Yakov Ryabov was believed
to have been a member, until he was
dumped from his post as Communist
Party secretary for defense affairs
-WITH THAT lineup, the Defense
Council has undeniable clout. As the
DIA report puts it, "Since key Defense
Council members are also the top Polit·
buro personalities most concerned with
mlllta.ry·poUUcal issues. <it.a> recom-
mendations are probably almoet H ·
sured or party approval. .. ln fa ct,
sources said, there is no known instance
of the Politburo overturning a maJor de·
cision by the Defense Council.
-"The Defense Council occupies an
intermediary role between the highest
party and 1overnment organizatjons in
volved in national security affairs.·· the
DIA concluded "It provides top-level
coordination for all government ac-
t1v1t1es relating to derense. establishing
lhe general guidelines for Soviet military development "
-"THE COUNCIL PROBABLY re-
views Military Industrial Commission
decisions that authorize the design, de -
velopment and production or major
weapons systems. Derense Council ap-
proval may also be necessary for anv program revisions .. ·
The Defense Council also has a key
role m overseeing the "'ay Communists
Party policy 1s actually earned out by
the military and 1n the formulation of
that pohcy
What it all boils down to 1s that the
Soviet Defense Council apparently com-
bmes the functions of our National
Security Council, defense secretary and
Joint Chiefs of Staff But the repeated
use of such fudge words as "probably"
and "implies" and "may" 1n the DIA
analysis betrays the basic uncertainty
that surrounds our Kremhnolog1sts' as·
sessment of the secret group Our in-
telligence experts can make educated
1ueases, but, in the end, t.bey are still only guesses.
One thing emerges clearly from the
DIA report, however· Seven or eight old
men in the murky depths of the Kremlin
hold the fate of mankind in their hands.
An en-or of judgment by the Soviet
Derense Council could blow up the
world.
A lawyer who def ends social outcasts
With the pouible exception of maybe
once in a whUe driving 58 mph 9fl a 55
mph highway, I don't plan to break any
laws, but lf I ever committed a major
crime and got caught, I'd want Edward.
Bennett Wllliams to derend me.
If I had to pick the 10 rnoet Interesting
Americans, he'd be on my list, and I've
never even met him.
Williams has been appointed defender
of the man accused of shooting Presi·
dent Reagan. Williams ls so good as a
criminal defense lawyer that we'll have
to be careful he doesn't end up convinc-
lni us that Reagan shot Hinckley. He's
that good.
BE OWNS THE Baltimore Orioles
bHeball team and he s president of the
Wuhington Redskins.
He was a strone backer of Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy ln hll bid for the
Democratic nomination Jut year. and
aft.er that seemed ·impracUcal. he tried
to JiHer the DemocraUc convent.Ion in
a way that would h:ive produced the •
nomination for b1.a friend Ed Muallie.
Hl1 name ls always In the pApers as
having played tennis with Dinah Shore
or Art Buchwald and be 1eema t.G 10 to
a lot of partl5.
In 1plte of all that actlvt\¥, Edward
hnnett Williams' true love is the law,
and he ha1 a pbiloeopblcal view of it
that not many lawyers share. He is ob·
sessed, for example, with the Idea that
a lawyer has en obligation to defend the
most despicable criminal who comes to
him and aallt for help.
In 1980 he detended Igor NeJekh, a
Russian employee of the United Nations
I~''
-AND_Y _RDD-11-Y -~
who wu Indicted on charges of spying
for the Soviet Union.
''DEFENDING AN alleged Soviet apy
in an American courtroom is an open
invitation to be widely misunderstood, ..
he said, "but popular misunderstandin1
is often the license fee criminal lawyers
must pay to ply their trade."
Williams has aloo defended such all-
American heroes as Sen. Joe McCarthy,
madame Polly Adler, Jimmy Hoffa and
gang boss Frank Costello.
He is driven by the ethical-
philosophical compulsion he bas to take
on unpopular people, and defending
sodleone accused of trying to aa-
1uainate the President of the United
Stat.a Isn't gotn1 to make bim a lot of
friends around the country.
So why does this nice Catholic boy
who graduated from Holy Cross College
and loves all·American 1amea defend
these people whose crimes seem in-
def enslble to the rest of us?
Well, he bas this 1illy respect for the ·
law. He belie\·es every man has a right
to a fair trial and a defen1e lawyer, just
Uke the law says he should have. He
believes that a lawyer is defending a
human being, not the crime be may
have committed.
It isn't hard lo 1ue11 bow Williams
will defend the man accused of trying to
murder President Rea1an. I have a
book Williams wrote in 1982 and I was
looking through it last ni1ht.
IN WILLIAMS• book, he quotes a
great Judie named Jerome N. Frank:
"Society must be protected ataimt
violence and, at the eame time, avoid
punishing sick men wbo1e violence
drives them, beyond thelr own controls,
to' brutal deeds. A society that does not
restrain the dangerous madman lacks
common sense."
Williams will almost certalnly prove
that John Hinckley Jr. wu driven by
something beyond hi• own control, to
shoot President Rea1an. With Williams
at his side, it is unlikely he'll be convict-
ed of anything.
Tracking the origins of English oddities
dtaclplea rMatthfto 5:J4J. a. Burkt, the
Brltltb statesman, addlnt to lbe tbr.e
e•t•lel of the realm, lb• preu hmo~
important. than all of t.bem. •• t. J'ollow-
ln1 a Roman beUef that UM antldOte for
a do1 bit. wu to bum the hair ot ~. of.
fendtn1 dot.
••1 DIDN'T HA VE· no special
teacher. It was j ust a gift," he
recalled.
CbOOse toPr. own money plD.!
DIY-11/Dlf-O'IJT DJTEREsr
oa Cbecldag Accoaats
"THE ONLY HABM 1 ever
did was to myself. But other
than that, I have no reerets. I
met a lot of good people," he
told an interviewe r several
1ears ago. "I ain't gonna tell
nobody that 1 haven't did good ln
the music business."
Later, he told an interviewer:
''That record of 'Crazy Blues' by
Mamie Smith, it was one or the
first blues records made . I could
just bear it ringing in my head. I
said to myself, ·1 don't know any
music, but r can play that.'"
Interest
compounded on
yo1Jr dally balance!
No monthly charge
lf your balance Is
$750 or morel
Nominal fee of
$3 per month if
your balance 1s
tower!
No minimum
for those 62
and overt
His career began spectacular-
ly during the era or ·•race"
music with a 78 · rpm disc en·
titled. ·"It's Tight •Like That:•
a nd ended quietly almost 30
years ago,
Sadly, both he and his music
mieht have endured. But in the
early 1950s, disheartened by the
deaths of his wife, Frances, and
his pianist , Big Maceo Mer-
riweather, Red laid down his
guitar and started telling his
troubles to a bottle.
At the same lime, the hard·
edged, amplified blues from
Memphis and the Mississippi
Delta were fast overtaking the
music of men like Tampa Red
While many of his finest blues
survived, it was through the
more modem interpretation of
mus icians like B B King,
Elmo r e J a mes and Li t tle
Walter.
HIS DRINKING problem had
faded by the late 1950s, but so
had most of h is m oney and
almost all his desire to play He
left a hospital fratl and
somewhat senile and lived
several years with an old friend
on the South Side, the two sub-
sisting on meager government
checks and what little money
dripped in from Tampa's
royalties.
When the blues enJoyed a re
vivaJ during the mid-19605 at col·
Jege campuses and small clubs
across the nation, Tampa was
nowhere to be found.
TIME PASSED HIM BY
Tampa Red reca~
did, he was a total wreck," said
Blind John Davis, a pianist
who'd recorded with Tampa and
was his informal caretaker t.he
last 10 years
·'Oh, he could still play and his
voice was good and strong. He
had the same power. but it Just
seemed like he'd lost all interest
after Frances passed," Davis
said "He never did do much
good after that "
THE END FOUND Tampa in
a nursing home. forgotten by an
but a few fnends and devotees,
smoking cigarette after hand·
rolled cigarette It wasn't
always hke~hat
Composed and performed in
1928 by Tampa and "Georgia
Tom " Dorsey who later made
his mark writing gospel music
for Mahalia Jackson, "lt's Tight
Like That" was the first in a
string or commercial hits that
wou ld make the .. Guitar
Wi zard" the most prolific blues
artist of his lime
He released more 78s, over 150
Toting a guit~f pick~ up at a
pawn shop, he moved to Chicago
in the 1920s, wbe~ hi.I adopted
Florida bometoWJt and the shade
of bis skin earned hi m the
monicker "Tampa Red."
Through the 1930s and '40s, his
apartment on the South Side was
fike a shrine for the blues, with
music and musicians spilling on-
to the boulevard and acr6ss the
street to a club called H&T's.
INSIDE, HE'D run a bot·
tleneck up and down the frets of
his Gibson tultar, which might
have anywhere from one to four
strings, and sing in a warm,
lively tone. Often, he accom
panied himself on the "jazi
horn'' a kazoo with two horns
hung around his neck by a metal
r ing.
His lyrics usually wore a bit
ing, but playful commentary on
the battle of the sexes and were
fu ll of double-meanings.
He explained why he wasn't
more explicit: "After all, kids
hear these things. J think
anybody should be able to hear
them. If some people get a joke
out of them and have some fun
with them, fine. But the words
s ho uldn 't force a joke on
anybody who doesn't hear it."
Cuban gays get funds
LOS ANGELES 1AP1 A
\
or '11ME-PUN INTEBESf
on 30-moath and 6-moatb Certtftcate Accoants
Call ua for th/1 week'• high ratfal
Penalty for early withdrawal on term accounts.
·-~~--t~~===== ~gadl/19
A SSOCIATION
BALBOA BRANCH
600 E11t Batt>..aou'-verd, Bal~u. CA 92661 (714) 673-3701
Additional offices ln
Laguna Beach. 494-7541 • Laguna Hills 586-5100 • Belmont Shore (213) 438-9-421
San Clemente ... 492-1195 • Lake Elsmore . 674-2191 • Murrieta.... 677-5632
Laguna Niguel ... 496-1201 • Olive/Orange . 998-8400 • Balboa Island .......... 675-3212
Glen Avon 681--0111
''Whel) J came bac'k from the
road, it took me three or four
years to ftnd him. and when J
federal grant to help relocate
gay and lesbian Cuban refugees
was allotted to an international
association of predominantly
homosexual chutches head -
quartCTed in Hollywood.
government ·s Cuban Haitian
Task Force and will be used by
the Universal Fellowship of
Metropolitan Community
Churches to establish halfway
hou ses in San Francisco,
Chicago -and Baltimore. church
officials said .
Save money and shopping time
Read tlw Daily Pilot The $375,000 granl 1s from the
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Creedy eland couldn't wait /Of' Kame Wiley to pour groin out of .ack on to Lion Count"!l Safari road. Twuted horm pro.
fide right of iooy to feed bag /Of' thil African cmte~ that prefn-1 mf:neTCJl..packed pellet• Jo abundant Bermuda grass.
~afari's appetites untamed
;i
Grass, neighbors tempting but 3,000 pounds of food used daily
' ~By JOEL C. DON
Of, .. O.lly ...... , .. ,,
Cheetahs are such fussy eaters that
hey'd just about put your finicky house
ellnes to shame
But even with nearly 700.mouths to feed,
he folks at Lion Country ~ari manage to
eet nutritional needs as well as a host of
.,alates. In captivity, wild animals reqwre a little
xtra care. So when the cheetahs demand
elmer horse meat, they get at.
' .. THEIR FAT REQUJK2MENT is
almost nil," says wildlife director Lee
Keaton. "If cheetahs get a large excess of
it in their system, 1t becomes toxic m their
livers and kidneys
"Anytime you see a fat cheetah. you're
seeing an unhealthv cheetah ··
Feeding time begins early each morning
at the Irvine animal preserve By the time
the first cars roll through the 3 5-mile
route, most of the wildlife are Just about
finished chomping on oat hay and gobbling
down horse meat
Zebra-striped Jeeps. with protective
steel bars for windows, hlake the rounds
through each animal sa nctuary .
• Carnivores naturally arc separated rrom
• herbivores to prevent the lions and
c heetahs from stalking a livelier
breakfast.
ALTHOUGH NATURAL vegetation cov-
ers the 300 acres. hoofed animals such as
the giraffes, elands, gazelles. impalas,
zebras. buffalo. goats and sheep prefer
takeout food : oat hay. alfalfa and vitamin
and mineral packed feed pellets
"The nutnl1t1onal value of grass goes
down over the years." says Keaton. of the
Bermuda vanely providing much of the
park's greenery. "We don't use 1t fo r feed·
ing because the animals have enough
nutrition without it."
Black and grizzly bears get the best of
two worlds in their diet : whole body
chickens and mackerel in addition lo hay and feed pellets
IT MJGHT BE SIMPLE to stock up on
groceries for a family of four. But when
your family numbers in the hundreds. wild
animal park employees tap a valuable
source in local supermarkeu.
"We 're set up to where we work with ~roduce mana.aers and anythina they dl.f·
CBTd t.re'U take If there isn't a.by spoilaee,"
he explains. "If the produce ls not used in
a couple of days. we'll discard it anyway."
Food from supermarketa has ~be
carefully screened. since you never know
when a twist-tie, staple or other foreign
matter might· find its way to the animal
food bins
"IT'S EASIER THAN buying off the
she lves." Keaton says, of using leftover
produce. "You would be surprised to see
it. Some of the stuff I eat I don 't know
why they throw 1t away " .
All totalled, Keaton estimates Lion
Country serves up nearly 1,800 pounds o(
oat hay and alfalfa per day plus 900 to
1,000 pounds of feed pellets.
Bears will consume about 25 pounds of
mackerel a day and the park's cat popula·
tion Wlll chow down about 150 pounds or
raw meat.
When you have a stubborn eater -
especially among the hons and cheetahs -
park officials can resort to what they call
a "starve day'' to help mold an animal's
eating habiU to the daily feeding schedule.
"If we have a starve day," Keaton says,
"the other six days they get a little more.
Bat I generally find it's not necessary to
do."
Lions require about 10 pounds of
meat per day. But it's difficult for feeders
to ensure each cat will get his daily por·
lion so officials rely on the fact that a lion
who acts hke a hog one day will diet the
next.
Feeding the park's bird population pre·
sents a more difficult problem.
Seagulls and migrating waterfowl take
their toll, gobbline up a sizable portion of
bird seed allotted for the park's feathered
boarders.
"We've tried to discourage them
(seagulls> from being here." says Keaton.
"The seagulls are difficult to eliminate
because they are protected birds so there'•
very little that we can do with them."
·'During the winter months the ml·
grators come and we gel an incredible
amount of coots. Canadian geese and
mallards, .. says Lion Country employee
Linda Brockhoeft.
''Normally we feed t&e birdJ 150 poundJ
of grain. That doubles with the seasonal
migration of freeloaders.
That's the only way we can ensure that
our birds will get the right amount to eat,"
she continues "Basically when there's no
one al the beach and there's no garbage
for them to get into, they come over here."
Ground squirrels and jackrabbits also
have been known to take advantage of the
easy pickings at the animal park, adds
Keaton.
But Darwin's survival of the fittest law
seems to have protected one area from mi·
grating birds and rodenta.
"We've found there's a limited popula·
lion (of freeloaders) where the eheetaha
are and a very larg• population where we
have herbivores," Keaton muses.
conserver
WASHINGTON CAP) -Ben·
Jamin Franklin didn't call it
day liaht uviq, but be favored
movtnc the clocka ahead in the
summer to avoid the un·
necessary buming of candles.
Sometbine about a penny
earned, It seemed.
It took 150 years for that
ener1y-savtne idea to take bold,
as lt did once more at 2 a.m.
Sund~ when most of the states
spran1 forward an hour to ob-
serve Daylight Saving Time.
They'll fall back, remember.
on the last Sunday of October.
The only exceptions are
Arizona, Hawaii and most of In·
diana, where state officials have
decided to keep Standard Time
throughout the year.
AMERICANS FIRST found
themselves with DST during
World War I and then again dur·
ing World War II. In 1966,
Congress established a national
DST, although states may ex·
empt themaelves.
Jn recent years, says Robert I
Ross, the government's expert
on time zones, the longer
daylight hours have been hailed
as a way to con.serve energy.
Ross. a Transportation
Department lawyer, has urged
an expansion of DST to eight
months, saying such a move
would reduce electricity con·
sumption by the equivalent of
100,000 barrels of oil a day.
Legislation calling for eight
months of DST ls before
Congress.
For now, however, the law re· quires DST to be imposed from
the last Sunday of April to the
last Sunday of October. And
that's why clocks and watcbea
across America were moved
ahead over the weekend.
ADVOCATES or DST arsue
that in addition to aavin1 eneflY
it ·baa reduced traffic accidenta
durlnt mom.in& rush boiirs and
provided longer hours for
recreational activities after
work.
"And people Juat like it,"
added iw.s;n an interview.
But America's experience
with DST has been far from
smooth.
Farmers have long com·
plained that the change in time
hurtl millt production and, says
Rosa, some people complain
a bout the change on religious
grounds.
''They feel Daylight Saving
Time is wrong, that it's un-
natural," he said.
Ross said his office gets "hun·
dreds" of letters and phone calls
complaining about DST.
"We answer them all." he
said. "And we get a lot of
horoscope qvestions. Was I born
on Standard Time or Daylight
Time""
DESPITE THE crit icism.
Transportation Department sur-
veys show the public generally
favors DST and some legislators
have pushed to impose it year
'round. That wouldn't be a good
Idea. says Ross.
Year·'round DST was in force
during World War II and strong-
ly opposed by some. And Ross
remembers Jan. 6. 1974, when
because of concerns about
energy conservation the Nixon
administration ordered an early
start for DST.
The sun rises so late in
January that virtually everyone
had to get up hours before dawn,
Ross recalled. Parents were
worried about children finding
tbelr way to school, traffic acci·
dent.a increased and many peo·
ple bad a harder time getting up
for work.
In Bismarck, N.D., for exam·
ple, sunrise didn't come until
9:28 a.m. that January.
Lottery booming
after frond bared
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -It
was a simple scheme: rig the
Pennsylvania Lottery drawing
so a few people could eet rich
quick and nobody would be the
wiser. It was a little too simple .
No one got rich, and eight peo-
ple found themaelves facing an
array of criminal charges. The
fatal flaws, investigators say,
were ignorance of the lottery
system's intricacies -and
greed.
After several months' in·
vestiaation, a state grand jury
accu.aed the eij.bt of riHlnl the
April 24, 1980, Daily Number
drawtns at WTAE·TV Ln Pitta·
burgh.
rowed $32,000 from a bank to
buy tickets. Peter and Jack
Maragos and Perry were busi·
nesa partners in a food vending
business.
Peter Maragos also testified
that he and Perry discussed the
scheme over the telephone and
at the church they both attend.
He said after the drawing, he de·
livered a total of $35,000 to Perry
at two meetings -one at a
cemetery and the other behind a
shopping center
INVESTIGATORS SAY the
accused were apparently UD·
aware the Lottery Bureau's
computer system recorded the
sales for that day -revealing
unusually heavy betting pat·
terns on the numbers "4" and
"6" in the Philadelphia area.
As the evidence mounted, the
four Mara1os family members
a~reed ln December to be state
witnesses -living tbe prosecu·
tlon ila fll'at inside look at the al·
1e1ed compiracy.
In return for their testimony,
Peter and Jack Maragos
plea,ded 1uilty to reduced
cbarteJ in the hope of 1alnin1
flve·year probationary ten· teneel. Under a almllar agree. meat, cbar1ea a1aimt Jam~
end Jean Maraeos would be
dropped after they testify for the
atate.
Part of ~e a1reement in·
volved Ute Jlara&OI family mu• ln• raUtutlon, and officlala aay
tb11 have recovered more than rroo.ooo lD cuh and unredeemed
wtftn.1D1 tkbta.
.
\
UPDATE no•· WASlllNGTON -Wheo1 lut
we left lllchael Lawler. )'ot.ithful, intrepid Oranee
Coaat attOtliey who left the comtortt of 1and and
1urf to teek h1I fortune in the nation'• capital, be
wa• fbinl a restroom. Doli't you remember? U• lt ~-th1a waY,: L.P'~r brtdly ~ mlaaed Im Wulahi;ton ambitl'* ane~ lnauaurauoa of our new president to vacatloo at. ttie Super iBowl-ln New Orleana.
Then be had to
grab a Jet flight from ~
New Orleans to · ·· •-Atlanta and then on -
back to Capitol mu. ------~ ....
He bad a ticket but J811111P.fflll ~ "1 be bad no seat. -~
Tbua Mlke ,
always noted for rapid innovation, wandered onto
the aircraft and locked himself in the john.
HE MANAGED TO KEEP the ''.occupied" sip
ln place duririg the enttn fllaht. He arrived in
Washington witli leg crampe ancf watercloset phobia
but otherwise, it was an enormous Jet victory. '
He 11 no lon1er called Michael along the
Potomac. He ls known as "Jetting John" Lawler.
Anyway, the saga of Lawler of Newport »each
Goes to Washington now continues. His latest coup
was getting to help promote the klddies' Easter egg
hunt on the White House lawn.
''Hundreds of kiddies up to age 8 showed up,••
Lawler enthused. "We were all prepared to assure
Newport hero dreaming up anothn White Houae caper
that the little darlings wouldn't go stomping around
and crush all the eggs.
"We used wooden eggs." ..
As an astute type of Newport wheeler-dealer
who would never get trapped into tak.ina{ a wooden
nickel, you have to have some admiration for
Lawler coming up w1tb wooden Easter efgs.
Because of hlS outstanding success m runnin~ a
wooden Easter egg hunt, the young barrister got m-
vited to actually have lunch at the White House.
"111ERE'S NOTJDNG WASTEFUL about this
administration," he declared. "We had hot dogs for
lunch."
You may think this isn't much of a success story
for a guy who had to ride a john to Washington. But wait~ It gets better. Lawler has also landed a real
job.
He is now with the Solicitor General's Office of
the United States Department of Justice. He is
neither riding in small rooms with plumbing nor roll-
ing wooden·eggs. He is actually working as a lawyer.
Lawler was told that at the ripe old age of 27.,.he
was one of the youngest barristers ever to latch on
with the department, particularly straight out of law
school.
HE•S BEEN WRITING some briefs for the U.S.
Court of Appeal. It bas been reliably reported that
he finished writing one the other day and his bosses
actually liked it. Right now, he carries the title of
special assistant United States attorney.
You may not think much of Lawler's story but I
am mighWy impressed. Very few ex-surfers end up
hovering around the White House, writing appellate
briefs1 riding in airplane toilets and rolling wooden
eggs on the chief executive's lawn.
Just think about that.
It's a long way from John to Justice.
DBAR ANN LANDERS :
Please prlnt thl1 for . tboH pannta wltb the "unreacbablt,
mlxtd·up, always-la-trouble.
t.een·•1e.r." J mow where they
ate eomi.DI -..from. Illy buaud
anct I hav•~ there, and tbere
ll DO hell like lt. we, too. _..,. d .. perate and
without hope, Our IOD WU •
bum, in dtbt': 1teaUn1 from UI,
on dru11. breakln1, up the
tumJture, cunlq and hlttina UI.
We we~ balde ounelve1 wltb
anxiety and fear. We tried every.
thln1 Jo P..leue him and notb1Dt
worked The nicer we were, UM
wonehel(>t.
Finally, we called the police.
They 1ave ua the phone number
of ao or1anhatton called
"TOUOHLOVE." From thal day
on we beea~e members of a
community network of panmtl
who are 1ucee11fulb' coplal wlth
the unbelievable behavlo~ that
their kldl an dllblq out
Btfore we came to
TOUOHLOVE we were a1bamed
·and felt weak and 1ut1ty because
WI couldn't ltand up to our IOD.
We t~t oobod)' ln our com·
munity bad failed to mllerably
a1 parentl. 11len we m.t other
memben ol TOUGHLOVE, and
knew we were no lonaer belp-
lea1. We had the 1upport of other
parenta, the police, the acbooll,
the cou.rta and~ rebabllltaUon r
facllltlea. We didn't ba-ve to
0
Virgo: ·Examine
other possibilities
TUESDAY, APRIL ZI, 1181
By SYDNEY OMAaB
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19):
Separate fact from Illusion;
temptation will be placed in your
path. Define terms, comprehend
meanings. Friend who promiffs
much may actually be 1uffertn1
from "financial embar·
aaament, ..
TAORUI (Apr. 20-May 20):
Focua on promotion, production,
ability to handle added
responsibility. Prestige ia oa
HOROSCOPE
upswing; persons in authority
make room for you at top.
Business booms!
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 20 ):
Perceive potential. Emphaaia on
travel, education, expansion of
personal horizons. You'll
complete important transaction.
Long-range legal procedures will
favor your effort.a.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Emotional responses tend lo
cloud logic. Knpw it, draw bead on
financial prospects ,
requirements. Hold off on
partnership arrangements. Study
Aries message for valuable hint.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Avoid
skipping eaaentiala. Become
familiar with legal rights,
permissions. Check license
requirements, strive to regain
sense of direction.
SC08PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Chan1es occur ln clomeatlc area.
Individual cld8e to you makea
numerous requesta. Adhere to
conaervaUve coune. Period of
confinement provea temporary.
Patience and persiateoce are twin
allle1. Act accordtn1ly I
8AGITl'AIUV8 (Nov. 22·Dec.
21): Focus on home environment,
domestic adjuatmeota, special
conaideratlona, anniversary
gifta. You can now mate valuable
acquisition. Taurus, Libra,
Scorpio natives play key roles.
Family member will cooperate.
CAP&ICO&N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Co\Dlt your chanset Avoid
sell·decepticn. Protect valuables.
Techniques will be perfected.
What appeared to be a "lost
cause" will boomerana in your
favor.
AQUA&IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Emph.aaia on business
transactions, initiative, success
via original approach. Personal
scenario hiiJiligbt.s satisfaction
in money and love. Cancer,
Capricorn natives figure
prominently.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20):
Flurry of activity occurs behind
scenes. Important people discuss
your proposals. You're due to
gain wider audience, valuable
advocates. Hold fast to prin-
clplea.
Guitarist to
entertain
TOl1GllLOYS ••• r• .. c-.o ... 9'id1 ,... '" w\JI nve&. .. kM~ ,., .. • ...... ,... .... ~-···· retpee& -.,. new., ..._.1
belplHUHI, lad•llHte IH
brtberyf
TOllGllLOVE Matlan , .. to
feee dlit e..W., hb a ltU4I,-.
ma•• cooperaUoa aad ••et
cltalleN•· lt71 ud David Y•~ tlMt
louden of TOl1GBLOVB. u1:
0 We Dow bow betpleu , .. feel
wbeo J'GUI' ldd a. a. trMble. Yoa
are not aloae. Maay pareaCa la
you commuHy are llavl•I
1lmllar ,pioblem• ud alM feel
llola&ed, pllty ud ullametl.
••Write to T0t1GBLOVE,
Cotnmaalty Senlee Poadadcm,
P.O. Boa 1t, ~llen•llle, P1.
18Mt, or p.laoae (%15) 1....U.
We are here &o belp yoa. ••
Bl!J,e Angels will
highlight ·show
EL TORO -The U.S. Navy
Preclaion Flight Demonstration
Team, Blue Angela will again
hlihlilht this year's El Toro
Armed Forces Day and Open
HOUie set May 2-3. .
It was Jtme 15, 1946, when the
Blue Angela flew their first
1H1bt demonstration to "dem-
onstrate precision techniques
o( naval aviation" to naval
personnel. Today, after 35 years,
the 1981 Blue Angela accomptiab
essentially the same mission.
As "Amba~sadora of
Goodwill" the Blue Angela take
naval aviation to the public as a
means or demonstrating the
quality of men and equipment
comprising the U.S. Naval
service. When traveling abroad,
this role is expanded as these
young men and women
represent the U.S.
The 16 officers and 74 enlisted
personnel who <.'Omprise the
Navy Fli~ht De monstration
Squadron strive to set a stan·
dard of perfection for its con·
temporaries in naval aviation,
thus enabling our Navy and
Marine Corps to continue to pro-
duce the finest aviators in the
world.
Early January finds the
"Blues" moving to their winter
training hpme at Naval Air
Facility. Bl Centro. The Im·
perial Valley provides the ex-
cellent weather condiUooa and
training environment for the
"Blues" to prepare· themselves
for the upcomin1 aeason.
For the next eo to 70 da)'11 all
hands devote total conceotratioo
to boning fiying skills to the fine
edge of perfection required to
carry on the Blue Angela tradi·
tion. The pilots tly twice a day
seven days a week, with each
day beginning at 5:30 a.m. and
ending in the early afternoon
with the remainder or the day
occupied with a self-imposed fit-
ness program.
By mid lo late March. the
squadron is ready to debut the
s kills and teamwork.
This year's open house and air
show is scheduled for noon
Prior to the Blue Angels '
performance. visitors to El
Toro's air station will aiao view
a Marine air-ground team dem·
onstration, the combined El
Toro and Camp Pendleton Sport
Parachute Team and the aerial
acrobatics of Chuck Wentworth.
Dozen~ or military aircraft
will also be on display for up·
close inspection.
The gates will open at 9:30
a.m . on both days with the ac
tual air show performances
beginning at noon .
Vl&GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Examine various possibilities;
find reasoqs for recent eventa.
Member of opposite sex aids in
resolving dilemma. Be ready for
quick changes, revision of plans
and adjustment or employment
shirt. Gemini la in picture.
Sinaer and guitarist
Serge Kerval will bel~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~4 featured Thursday at 8 ~
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Your
arrections tend to vacillate. What
seemed a routine procedure will
be revised. Accept challen1e. be
analytical and take nothing for
granted. Aquarius, Scorpio,
Taurus natives figure
prominently.
p .m . by the Allialfce
Francaise de la Riviera
Callfomienne.
Well-known ln France,
Kerval made bis
American debut in
Louialana in 1975. Tick eta
are t.1.
The meetins will be ln
Bridle Hall of thell ........
Congregational Church,
341 St. Ann's Dr., Laguna
Beach. 1111 .. mlllll
The Change Starts When You Do
The Time To Start Is Now
The Place Is "Powers"' Change It All!
D, a mat it dlly 1mptt•v'• th•• wa "I yt "'
lr~i~ IPe• an.1 ap()t'a In otl1P•' W(>" ma~" llV·
ChctttQfl Easy and run f•.tf->n in ... "•f--'t(.1\,1-' (.ld\'Jo ... ~
A t1 rlassf'~ 1a11n1faf11r 1 ,,1 ttQP .tnrt nP,...<1\
ORANGE COUNTY
13 Town & Country, Or.11n~4'
17141 547·8228
Jolln Robert Powers
Tiie Om1in•I 8Pauly 4 lnoo1r;r Develoomanl 5rwr••''''"
Motivation and Theater C-Ombines for a Hit
Hot.el from 1 t.o 6 p.m. One of the fea·
tured speakers will be Kelly Lange,
Emm.v Awaro winning N.B.C. News
Anchorwoman. Ms. l..anp'a 1egme11t
ol the show will be directed at helping
women become more suoeessful. Her
topic wiU be •Risk 'laking. an Essen·
tiaJ t.o Succesa~ Lange worked her
wa.y from helicopter traffic reporter
to one of.California's first network
anchorwomen and co-host of the
"'Sundlt" ahow. She will share her
• ..,. t.o8UCCeSL...
AllO appearing in the May 3 show
of "Breaking Free" is Dr. Bobbe
Sommer. noted ~ist. She
wi11 apeak on the ee.ential inai-edienta tor developing su~sful relation·
shipe. Sommer haa ass1st.ed 1houaanda
of women to obtain, maintain.and SWt-
tai n creadve Ute scyl patterns o(
success.
AllO appearil'll Sunday will be Jo
Anne Astrow. President of the
American Federation ol Comedians.
Her televiaion credit.a includt ·M~k
& Mindy." "Knotta Landtnr~ and
•OaJtat' She hu appeaed il'I aver 100
teteVtlion commerdal& Ma. AltroW'a
topic It ll'J.'ht Power ot Humor.". She
will explain humor In terma of a
~l ~Ye tool for women
toemplof to•tbeir ~·
ROundlna out the ca1t ii Dr. Si<Nx
RulJUl,adoetM"t>ebtvloial~~l'ICe.
who perfonna tht rol8 " the lhoW'a Mind GUide. and Pat AUtin h rioW(l ~and falnllYccunatk>r. OoOra~ at~ p.m. Thi ihow belin1 prornPtJY at l p.m. 'Jltic.ta are
f.48.00. Ptidl includ• woirirbook.
mu.IC --fruit bUftiL 'rtekeca ~ be~ at &ht aoo.-cm a 11*18 """'11AM bull. Due lO .aunct
11'9Nlt It It neom~ thll .._._..,..,Jhuih'Qm• ~i:v:::r.:sil: ....... 1 ... -:-.. r "1.1%.. ... ..
lklailNd.
l
8,_.lng Free II the ll'ft8lh hit
that blends theater wtth
motlvdon.
You'll hear women 1fpeakers
whoyou will be able th identify
with. You'll discover how to
shed your frustrations and ex·
pand your horizons.
It's the kind of show you
won't w~nt to end ... and the
best part is that It boesn't; it
goes hOme with you.
fiousewlvee end pareer women equally sing the
lhow'I pralsts. Whether )'9!I
want to team the ma~!! lkllls of e high aOhle\lef
you WMt to put hat'Mony I to
yoOr 111• ... there'I tomethlng
life changing for tMtf)'One.
I "I hafta watch 'General Hospital' for Grandma
I whlle she's on the phone."
1.ffp '1·21
11
,.
GARFIELD
"I hate Mond1y1."
•
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
t--1~
"Spring fever."
t f"l/-27
!
f;
"If your. Mom served LIVER all the time, you
woutdn t be ask1n· what a cat is GOOD tori"
by Harold Le Ooux
TH~ I~ THE CE~T NleWT~ ~EEP l'VE HAD IN MONT..0!
lT'f> WON0£RFIJl..' l'U. Df
DOW~ lN A cJIFfY !
ANPTO GIVE
POes A HARP WAV1'000
by Jim Davis
.. whereas in tn. event of
'tel'Of'lt subleasinq, see
poro9roph 1~ above ...
I'M GOING TO PLAY
BASEBALL WITH
SLUGGO
HEli ! THERE'S A
NE.OJ &IRL IN 6fU()()
HALl !
BRABBLE
~N, I lbil11' WP
llM'f'41\4i M?R.~'S
LUMt ! ~ 1'A&.KS 1bO
F'A"'f l
wow! r OOt--YT
B8-tEV£ IT! .SHE.'5
PE.RFE.Cf !
by Tom K. Ryan
by Ernie Bushmtlfer
DON'T
FORGET
I TIED A STRING ON MY
FINGER TO REMIND ME
SHE '5 lH€ C:,tRL..1'Uf.
A~!:J DREAMED
Aeoor ! •
by Gus Arr'iola
by Tom Batiuk
! JUST NE.VER
E.XPE.CTED ANL.>r~/N&
UKE 1Ut6 DURI~
('('f..) WAKI~ MOORS I
by Kevin Fagan
~n~~ ... wil'l~
l&lAN1"~ .. ~ "0 ~ ~
UcA~ ~t ~s -wo
1ll.K 1tlo r~-r!
Tb• .Livenarrl• Foundation, 1be reported
proudly. l1 "the beat alcohoUc Nhabllltatlon
faclUt)' tn America," with a ~cord ol paUent re-·
covery at 81-),lus percent. Mlu McCambrdlge
herself la a recovered alcoholic. .
. She dlscuaus her booze problems and a
multitude ot other matters in ber new autobkr
craphy ':The Quality of Mercy," Times Books,
$10.95. She airs a le" 1ructees, -calntt 1ucb fltutes
as William Friedkln, who denied her 1creen credit
for .. The Exorcist," and Joan Crawford, who
treated her abominably qn "Johnny Guitar." Both
figures discovered sh& ~ no pusbower to tontend
with.
The ~ctres:i was In the middle.of a 30-clty lour
(or the book,~ new experience for her: "Wben I
was in movies, they always ~t someone like
Joanne Dru on personal appearances; I was the
mean lady in the movie "
'Superstar'~' Judas
perfor~ at CSUF
Jy MICHAEL OOVGAN
Of .... OeltJ '"'-lfatf
Carl Anderson's managers are fond of. refer-
ring lo him as "a star on the rise." He's certainly
got the stuff for it.
Anderson is a singer of remarkable range and
endearing personal warmth. both of which were
4emonstrated in bis most recent Orange County
appearance at The Pub on the Cal Stale, Fullel'ton
campus (be bad earlier opened for Willie Bobo at
the Golden Bear>.
ANDERSON is something more than just a jazz
(or rock or bluelf or reggae or ballad) singer. His
background is theatrical (he played Juda in the film
tJesus Christ, Superstar"> and he brine• hia acting
lent.a on stage with him, delivering bb soogs with
and gestures and facial expressions that un·
derscore the meaning oft he lyrics.
Unfortunately, the first of two sbowa was
inarred by a aound system that didn't allow Ao· ~erson full rlexibility in bis music and by a small
crowd of jerks whose persistent babbling drowned
out the tunes until Anderson stopped lbe show and
asked them to shut up.
ANDERSON is backed up by the My Man Fred-
die Band, an assemblage of drums, bass, guitar and
lots of keyboards with a crisp, frisky sound.
Anderson at times sounds a bit like Stevie
Wonder, particularly on the song "Cryin' Through
the Night." That's understandable -Wonde r
wrote that number specifically for him.
At times, though, Anderson's voice takes on a
whole new lint, particularly on his blues and reg-
gae numbers. It is this vensat,jlity tb4t makes him so entertaining
Anderson holdS forth on weekends in the Bia
Bia Cafe in Los Angeles. But bis promoters are
pushing for maximum exposure elsewhere, which
means he wiJJ probably be playing more Orange
County gigs. Let's hope so
8HOWTIMES-
Weekday1 7:00 I t:30 P.M. H
Sunday 2:00-4:2CM:40-t:OO
She adnlltt9d belnt • reluctant memOliitt. ~~
undettoOk t.be boOll: at tbt bebjst of Hew Yol'IL\
Tlmu bookl, thn balked after wrlUn• three chap.
tors. ·•1 quit, I wa1 .i private pertee, l dOD't like
voyeUrilm oa elthet •Ide," •he told her ed.ltora.
The1 •Met•talked her back tO the typewi'Uer wttb
assurances abe could do It her •Y· '
"It won't be chronolosicaJ, It won't be well·
oraanlzed.'' she told them. "I'm not that way, and
my life has not been that wly."
Indeed "The Ouallty of M~ny." 1omettme1
seems a. chaoUc u her life hal aometlmes been,
but lt b also an endeartn1 portrait of a 1urvtvor -
just barely. Surprtsfn11Y. the atoey of her lone dea·
cent into akohoU.m w8' not the most difficult part
LOW RIDER -Maura Barker and Don Odell
go in for a little horseplay in a scene from
George Gershwin •s "Girl Crazy," now play-
ing at the Cabrillo Playhouse of the San
Clemente Community Theater, 202 Ave.
Cabrillo. For reservations call 492-0465 after 3
p.m.
.,...,OtUQA ••• u ....
~OPHl~TIC4T£D. PR{J(JRAMMINB ..
RINGO STARR
"CAVEMAN" CN1
"NIGHTHAWK"
(A) ;I "UONOF I THE DESERT' ,,...
i
... ALWAYI I "THE POSTMAN
... NGa TWtCe" (ft)
I ............
Beaulilul ~IBrBO M~ia
Now~ Marine Wealhor-
~look MarkBI-Roporl~
Con~umer Reporl~
ot her writlft1. -"Tbe mo.t pabiful thlDa to neall wu leamia1
tfte truth about Santa Claus at th a1• ot 5," aha
1aid. "A.lcoboU•m b • temW.~m. but it la a disease that can be dealt With. lsut dla1llualonme1't
la aom~ elte. •• · •
Miss McCambrtd1e coofesaed 1he became
wearfy of con1tant queatlonlnl about ber
alcoholism. "Would reportera always aa~ Mary
Tyler Moo,. about her dlabeteat0 Still, aht ll ln·
tensely proud of the Llvenptn roundatJoo and her
role wttb tt; she lJ an active, not Just an honotary
president, abe said.
,,
"One of the thin11 I did wu Nname the detox·
ificatloo department," 1be 1atd. ''That sounded
harsh to me, and l thoupt we 1bould call it
Primary Care. That, after all, ii the keynote of the
place. We have 72 patJenta -and we're always at
capacity -with 74 on the staff.
She recenUy appeared on .... eci:nent of CBS}• "Mapum P.J." and enjoyect•u. But she added: "I
don't think the Hollywood community la interested
in what I can do. That's all rieht. I've never looked
tor a job in my lite~ and I'm not aoing to 1tart now.
I have plenty to keep me bUsy. l do plays and I
sometimes do a one-woman abow of readings.
"One of the things l enjoy most la going to col·
leges and stepping into plays with a cast of 21·
year-olds. That's exhilarating."
WUT COAST ... (Mtflf lNGAClMOIT NOW SHOWING
• Or~ CINIDOMI •Cotto Meta. MAllql TWIN
.U-HN •11-JIOt
~¥1<>0 •MO"' ..,., _ 100 • .oo • 100 • uo""' -------....... _... ............... ~PAC.,tC'S~E ~-........ v-~~Mol
Ool'I 12.lO • ~ • 7-00. '°''~,...
,..I ,-IC&l-ts-.. -u-,1-rw-...=:~:'.:: :;.~:.~ -.. -"-'"-,-.. -.-MC-u....,I
• ...... , .... [J]I OOL.8¥1'T't..:> 1· .o...., """'• ~-... ........_.
Read all todays news everyday in the Daily Pilat
... --.. ·--OP~ IMIAKVt MO"AHT {PO) _, .. .,,.
M-11:1t•U.·-·-
_.,. __
CAVEMAN ll"OI ~ ................. , .. _,_ __
.
'
. • t • ,I
'
-EVW-.. , .. ._. ...,_WOMAN ... WomM...,.._
Woftd .._ ... -.Y~
-... '1Nllklftt" ... ....
I TIOTAO~
M•A•a•H
,......... .. ~ llll\IMllMlt ,... a ..,
......... tlll't tunnet • ............ ~ . « ..,.i.r-u. """'*' -··-Oft,.., • lllCMI
··~ •'Mofter, w-,,,. Gwll" (ttlt) Joe*
~. QTi Ht.WI* "°'" ......... ..,., of In ..... ••UD11•....,.._
...... to -...11111c11s ............ '° .. .. e P.&MMAZINI
"" ....... the wottd
... --r900rd !flat ..,.... In lf80'dy. I ~
1-...... 11191. blM
thllt .... "''*"' ~ Hlrwy ,__ to ... •
wounded ~ pllot fO
home. • 80CID,_
J.J.. .,. ...-. )'Olln9 att-
...... ~edbyaman ""° ~ to baoolne 1111
patron.
• ,AODNITOH WR
Paddington 1111111 lh•
baldl. teechal Mr. CUny a
ta.on Md 0-10 !tie
par1' tclf a cono.t with Mr
Onltler,
HIGH NOTES -Geor1e 'urns joins Paul
Simon (above), Steve Lawrence, Eydie Gorme) and othen to present "Live
from Studio 8H -100 Years of
America's Popular Music" tonight at 9 on Cb8l)Del 4.
~ ~wlll,...
"""' Mowii'lo.t ·--•• •i. ''Tiie Nun'• Story''
(f'IM) AA#., ~.
,...., Rftd\. A )'Olln9 nun
llltlf\dl.. "°"' her con-.,... ""'*' Ille ~ r. In"'-halt9d tor IN
9f*"Y during Wofid Wiw u.
I. =oc:ie..NIY
MCNIWI
e::IO JCMCa'8 WILD
Wl!l.Oo. liM*.
KOTTBl
~*' gNe9 all hie peh to
wtllfl I oounMIOr .... '*" he'• not wnart
enough 10 be I ....
• ....V.-..L
lilMy taktll ~ baCtl to
IN da\18 of ''How The w .. w .. won."
I !Cc.T NIWlmAT
enJOK>I&
"Honor Danol" An Ala-
bama dlbutanle, an Olli.
l'IOma Indian end o....·a
YouUI On Thi Molle ChOlr
ara~.(R)
(I) NIWI
(f)MMEY~
"JKll Soo. A ~
llw'"
... , EDfTONA.l.
t• C81NIWI
CHANNEL LISTINGS
I ~-=YIAAAIN Ncflle ~ FonDt to
atar In ttle tltll ro6e of 1
funck1'llng pei lorn•-
of'.....,._,.
I NICNRWI
~
He9vy C*U8111M arrWlng
at the oompound c;,..te
--Pfoblarnl tor .... ut\11 ~ tlwy .,.
~out of pan10thll • 8TIBT80if-MN ,,..*-CO
A .....,_, lt1.ndlng •
~lion~ he""'
k-.cl I lhap4ily flhcNllll«
who lured l*n IO lier
llOUMboal.
• CM!ftlAIY
"O<Owlng Older: Thi Ned
20 y..,,.. a-ti: Gr8Y
Panther IMdlr Maggie
Kuhr\: Conor1Hm1n
~~(R)Q
• ~/Ul!HflP
MP'OflT
(I) TIC TAO DOUGH 0 ....VGAlff'W
Gueeta: Glori. Loring.
8 KNXT 1CBSI Los Angeles
D KNBC 1NBC1 Los Angeles 8 ICTLA 1lno I Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV tABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBSI San Diego
G KHJ TV (Ind I Los Angeles
@l KCST (ABCI San Diego
• KTTV clnd I Los Angele!>
• KCOP TV(lnd I Los Angeles
tD KCET TV 1PBSl lwos Angeles
Ii> KOCE TV tPBSI Hun11ngton Beach
NEW YORK -Aside from an
occasional pa.as at the form -
ABC's three-part treatment of
John Steinbeck's "East of
Eden," for in.stance -the com·.
mercial networks don't invest
much time or money in the
dramatization of classic
American literature.
And1when they do, it's with a
partic\llarly commercial flair;
ABC l1l"Omoted "East of Eden"
with a bare-shoulder shot of the
star, Jane Seymour, fondling a
ribbon at her cheat.
Public TV. despite a good deal
of lip service, has relied -heavily
on the British for dramatic pro-
gramming, with an occasional
noteworthy exception like the
discontinued "American Short
Story" series.
Lonnie ~. J~ l.9no.
81a1r Fantngton Danoen. 1':IO. I ON THI TOWN
Hoete: St1111 Edward1,
Ml6ody Aogere. A looll II a
Jumbo Jet c:r9W .. !Ny
prepere lot a fight to
To61yo.
• AGtfT Ma< wrTH
~YID HOMMITZ
T oplc:a: Ught II.-c;om-
rnarc:lala; polloflOUI plenta
In IN hofne; pawn lflOP
;';9'...w.
Cellfomia Ang9ll II Oell-
land A'a
• HOLUWOOO
9QUfJa G 'fta THI MUIK:
• AU .. THa,AMll.Y
Archll trtee lo get 11nine
Loranzo a fob • • book· ... ...,.. at hll plant
• MACNEIL/ l.Df,_,.
NJl'OAT
G ONCEUPONA
CLAlllC
"The Tlli9m1n" King Rlc:fl..
ard, reallzlng 1111 Crwadll
haw f9111d, malt• Illa
pe-. with ~ and
Kenneth end oftlt• l(M. '*" Edltl\'1 hand In mar-
rlalgl. (Part 8) (R)
(I) P.M. MAQAJiNE
An lttempt It the wotld
w•ter 191«1 recotd tllal
lfldlcl In tragedy; I Yol\ln-
\1« mo111er·1 rnllll bank
thct llllol tnfenla IUMvel
llOI 8 (I) PAIVATI
llMJA ...
Judy apolill lier eocial
........ a metl:twnallar to
c.ptllirl Lewie and LIWll'1
o6d ..,,., c,.,a.n lltad-
d!Ddl.
.9119AT
, •• liJNUUNC8
"Orft!llndy Conduc;ta
Tct11lllo111ky" Euo•n•
OnNndy c;on4ucU the
PNladelpfllll Oro-1ra ..
an .._ T ollalkowtly pro-
gf atn fea~lng 'ilollni.t
ltzhllk ~ .. OUM!
IOloi.t.
• QWILllQWUN
OOlmJY TMIATM
"Tllll ...... ( 1815,l 0-.
""-he .. 1111 lllro In •
bar* rOOt>ety. 1:::tO. Cl) lHI TWO OIF UI
NII\ end ar.n~ boll\
... and Ny ""' -going 10 bl out of town for lhl
weelcend. then boti ..cum
10 1111 1j)8111Mnt tw WMll •
end lfylta.
• CMOL IUMETT
ANDfWINDI
s.Jta: "Whlpluh.'' "Thi F-*t .
• MOYtl
• •~ "Con•y l•land"
(tMll eetty Grable. C-
AorMro. A lutCloul lewrn
1'9* ~ Iha obtec1
of ad«•llOn for two men
on COl'll)' lllland In the .., •
~teoo..
9:00.(1) M•A•t•H
Qnglr f ... Into I d-c>
dlpr9Ulon after rlCIMng
• "Olar John" i.tter from
hla p-wlfe l..rlerne. (R) I LM f'ROM IT\JDIO
~100 y..,.. Of Am«lc:9'•
...., Mullc:" G..-t•
lrdldlr'O George eum..
P-1 Simon, Sarah
v augl'lan. Henry Manc:lnl
_,....,_.,_,, Or9gOrY
.._ jOln oornpow I con-
The Corporation for Public
Broadcasting bas committed
$7.5 million for dramatic produc-
tion over the next three years, of
which $2 million was made
available immediately for pro-
gram proposalll from public TV
stations 81)d lndependent pro-
duces. Programs produced with
the $2 million could become part
of the "Playhouse" aeries.
In addilio6, the CPB says an
additional si.' million will be
made avathrble lf the four-
member CODbtium can raise $4
million from PBS member ala·
lions.
William Perry, whose Great
Amwell Co. is producing the
Twain series for Nebraska ETV,
has begun U> tap • new, largely
Ignored source of financial sup-
port.
In fact, the Carnegie Com-
mlssioo on the Future of Public
Broadcuting suggested, u re-
cenUy a.a 1979, development of
"a pool of writers far compara-
ble to that in the biehly praised
British system."
Jane SeymouT, ftar of
televilian's "Eut of Eden."
The series ti.ad its debut lut
year with "Life on the Misalaaip-
pi," and contlaued earlier this
month with a dramatization of
Twain's abort story, "The
Ptjvate History of a Catnpaien
that Failed."
Despite an increasingly
1loomy fiscal atmospbere, two
Public Broadcaatina Service
projects -the Nebruka Educa-
tional TV network'• Mark Twain
aeries, and "Playhouse," belDa
developed by a four-member
consortium offer some bot>e
for the future.
"PlaybOUl'9," supported by
three stations -WNET in New
York, KCET in Los Angeles and
WGBH ip Boston -and tbe
South Carolina ETV network,
was conceived u public TV's
lint weekly, loo1-nmnld1 aeria
of American-made drama. The
ahowcue sertes ii aebeduled to p~mlere in t.bt fall ..
"We're takinl one play at a
time," Perry 1ays. "Havine
eompleted tW9, we're matine a
third , 'Tile Mysterious
Strangel".' wbitb we're doine in
Austria. And rm sanguine about
the fourtb, 'Tbe Innocents
Abroad.' .. We still need the money from
JCOOP.e 8:00 -,.,,_ Nun'1 Story."
Movie about a devoted nun who bealna
to doubt ber vows 1tan Aud.rel Hepburn
and Peter F1.ncb.
ABC G 10 ·00 -"ABC New1
Closeup." fii "Near Arma1eddoo: Tb~
Spread of Nuclear Weapom In tbe Mid-
dle East," Manball Frady reveala new
Information about the bomb.
duct0t JacK Oloct Ind IN
~ American OrdlMtt9
In • OllatwaUon of the p8lll
c•nlury ol Am•rlcan ,__
•OU EICAIC
DMMt
(~Danny"*-'·
ert1l1 --1111 tof'I ~ to be _...., by 1111 ,_
~ of "tlnltelling"
Otll~dtug~
• .-VGM'PIN
Gu.ta: Glori• Lorino.
Lonnl9 Shorr, ~ Lano,
... Ftrmgton Oanmn.
.. Fftc:M, 9otl Higa
..... TOllWCI
~
A llk>grlC)hlc ponralt of
llzhtlll Plf1rnan II Pf-1·
ld.(~J •
.... (I) HOU8I CAUi
A ~ luttllng In the halll of KeMlngtOn ,,,,_
IN tarn9I It.If "*7\betw
Into a PMic. (A)
• WIJICAH
l.l"UTYll .. ,..,,..._. .. 10:00. Cl) LOU GIWfT
81119 -what goee on 11
1111 T rib for hlr ang .. on • ••orr about ... 1111 tw1r..._
menl on the jc». (R) •9 AllCNIWI
QO.•
.. .._, ~ Tiie
the nudes l8pltaUona of
..,..., lnlq. Uby9 and Pall·
lmnand,.......~
~ "' •• cfol-' 11 lfortNltlOft
allouttlle19omb.
I ....
M.CATMZ
W9lrn CClfnd nan-. a
hlmlory of the lllllftd of
AJcatrta f9cuelnO on ltl
-... mulmum MCUrtly
pt1IOh "°"' 1834-1"3. ........ •••W NITWOMNIW9
• MMIUU IC.
TMIATM
""--Aaquln" Thi
aplft1 of "*-'• d--1
hulblnd Cemltlll pollol-.
--, aapact of lier mar-
riage 10 Laurent (Part 3)
11:001••C1>0 .... STMTMC
Kini. SI** and McCoy •
find them.._ on a plan-
et that •-blea Elttll In
1111 cMyl of andlnt Rome.
I NIW\.YWID GAME
w•A•t•H
A c;IHn11Y IOldW llfta 1111
4017th'I epjrltl, but Cot.
Pott• remelnl down in the
dumC>I •....v~ Benny ~81• 1111 Mtll ~ OI Nuc:Mw Weep.
one In Thi Mlddle EM!''
Mlflhllll Fraay repor11 on I
JOHN DARLING
blrthdey In • hOIPlll --rounded by beautiful ,,....
IHIS IS ME ON ~ OF nE ~ 5TA1'E &UIL.DING •••
~MDIGHJ
-· ·ACI: -A cal flor .. lrofft en
alien 1PN hip 9lndl Ille
Alpfla cnw on • rnlMlon of
mercy, bul the~ nMd
lnOl'9 than the ~ can
lftord to ofter. • 111 ,Nff,..., Ill.MD
A bleutlful -WIO lelf
In '°""' wtttt .., Aoartl•
~ to the lllMd lo
,_tNr---.(R)
..... OQ ..... I
IMfl<lll 1~
The IMF enoegee 1111 lld o1
•~aurgeon
lo dleer~ an illtem•flonaf dr"O ring.
· Tuettday'•
Qaytime Movie. 1
12:a0I=
~ Brttt Ekland, --
try a#ioer T.O. ~d,
~Waldl.
• OHi ITIP lrfONO
"t..gKy Of Low" Mart-
-lntenda to trlWI by
train tow~ •• but Ille
ticket ........ lier. tic*·
et to SeMide.
12:40. (I) HAM'( 0
Harry II ~ for fnlKder
but can't prove hla Inn<>-
~ lllll1hou1 first ~Nlt-
1~ out ol jlllf. (R)
1:00• MOYIE
•• "Colon1do Sunelt"
( 1939) Gene Autry A man
~ 1111 c:lllM ol
lew and order In tlle Oto
Wiit G NYCNC
"'•IOMIJU., THE
WON..O 91YONO
11:00. ·~"Pall Of Thi Sad-
dle" ( 1938) Jofln Wll)'M,
Rey Corrigan
11:aG. **'Ar "For-
Arnbll"' (Part 2)(194n Llfl-
da Oemlll, Comal Wiida .
. -AFTERHOON-
1~. **•'Ar "One FOOi in
...._, .. (1Mt) Fl'9dric:
Mltd'I, Mar"'8 Scott. A
mlnletlf and hie wife f-I
--of llatdahlpl wit/I
coureg9 Ind lor11tude
,.. •••• "Johnny Come
lately" (1CM31 "-Cag-
IW)'. Mer jorie Main. Two
..ieran ~pub
~ jOln IOtcee ., • flgllt
¥"•1 • local town .,_,
l:aG D * * * "P•t Altd Mike"
(11152) Spene« Trec;y,
K1tlllrlnl HlpC>Um.
by Armstrong & Batluk
IHOeE ~ 'THE H16H POIN'T5 OF Wf"f "TRIP/
.by _U.S. teieVision
W aahlngt.on," says Perry, wbo
baa relied heavily on grant.a
from the. NaUonal Endowment
for the Humanities -$650,000
for "A Campaign that Palled"
-''but we're tumin1 U> thole
overseas to take up some of the
financial slack."
broadcasters are not uncom-
mon, though the result normally
speak.a with a noticeably Bri\iah
accent.
case. Perry spent Sl.7 million,
for instance, on "Life on the
Mississippi."
''We're making arrangement.a
with Austrian TV," he says, "to
shoot "lbe Mysterious Stranger'
south of Sahburg, in a gorgeous
old castle." Production i•
scheduled to begin ln June -Co-productions with foreign
There's a clear leuon in
Perry's approach to funding at
leut the third production in the
series which baa proven a mite
expensive for public TV in any
Placebo shows lightweight
By PETER J. BOYE& ,,,.,....,........_
LOS ANGELES -ABC is dis-
pensing some more placebo
television, airy TV fill that car-
ries a tiUe and ha.a stars and OC·
cupies a spot on the schedule but
really doesn't exiat at all.
:rbe idea behind placebo
televiaioo, which baa become a
specialty at ABC, la U> fool the
viewer into believine he's get-
ting a real TV prosram when in
fact there's nothing coming
across the tube but a aelatln
capsule that disaolves away un-
der the slightest acruUny.
You might have seen ABC's
newest su1ar pill, "Aloha
Paradise." Then aealn, you pro-
bably wouldn't remember. Thia
show. a spring tryout r.roeram,
wouldn't reliater an mage if
held next to a mirror. lf "!A>ve Boat" lJ Muzak you
can see, "Aloha Paradise" is
but the illusion of Muzak you can
see. It comes from Aaron Spell·
ing, who is ABC's placebo
pusher. He also makes "Love
Boat.'' "Fantasy Island" and
"Hart to Hart," which together
weigh less than a butterfly
jockey.
"Aboba Paradise's" non-
storiea flit about the edges of sit-
com and drama without ever
quite takine the plunge into
either. Debbie Reynold.a does the
Ricardo Montalban-Gavin
MacLeod number, playing chip-
per Hawaiian resort hostess U> a
relentless group of vacaticnin1
zombies, bloodleaa etandard-
isaue TV guest atan who come
equipped with problems that can
be resolved palnleuly in an
hour.
Ray Bolger and Phil Harris
appeared one week as a couplJ
of old pals who try to snooker'
each other in pursuit of a dame
(Harriet Nelson). The routine
was much better accomplished
by Spanky and Alfalfa in a 1936
"Little Rascals" short.
As in "Love Boat," the lead
character is supplied witb aasis;
tants, who seem t.o roam around
the set sheepishly wonderln1
whether they really get paid for
this. One of them is Bill Daly,
the hilarious, classic goof from
the old "Bob Newhart Show."
His act is reduced U> imbecility
here.
One of the little vtenettes in-
volved Daly's vialtin& nephew,
a 24-year-old millionaire whole
success lpspired this line from
envious Uncle Curtis:
"I'm 41 and all I own is five
1hirts and a touter."
I '
-~;
----~ . );if I\ ,,~,
Bucher choice
brings boycott
SAN PIEGO (AP> -A group of retired
military officers plans to boycott a Fourth of July
• parade, saying they are offended by the selection
of the former commander of the captured Navy
s py ship U.S.S. Pueblo as grand marshal.
A spokesman for the committee organi&ini the
event said he tried to get former Iranian boatqe
Richard Morefield of San Diego as arand marshal,
then asked U . Cmdr. Lloyd Bucher to officiate.
"ANY CRITICISM OF COMMANDER Bucher
is unwarranted. He represents all modem-day
hostages as well as anyone. He deserves to be
honored," added parade committee spokesman J .
Boyd Stephens.
"Nobody favored the idea of honoring
Bucher," said retired Navy Capt. John Van Sickle,
one of those opposing the
choice. "No officer, except
Bucher. in the history of the
U.S. Navy ever gave up his ship
without a fight.
"I object to Bucher being
\lumped in the same category as
our Iranian hostages. He did not
do the honorable thing. He did
not stand and fight," Van Sickle
said.
: auoeH Buch e r , who Ii v es in
Poway, a suburb north of San Diego, said he will
ride in the parade anyway.
"HELL, l'VE BEEN HEARING the same
thing for years," he said.
"What do they want me to do, stand on my
head and catch flies'>"
The Pueblo was seized off the Korean coast
Jan. 23, 1968, by North Korean gunboats. After a
sailor was kmed by a gunboat volley, Bucher, de-
ciding he was outgunned, surrendered.
The crew was held captive until December
1968, when they signed spy confession.s while the
U.S. apologized for the incident.
FOR THE RECORD ........
ST. J0511'H HOSl'ITAL
"'" 7 "'°' •nd Mn l.Arry Gr..iy, H""I·
lngton Be.ch, girl
Mr .,,., Mo. INl'll "-· H ..... lnQton 8H<h,boy .
Mr •nd Mr• A~ CoUlr,., Coll.II
MeM,glt1 ......
Mr •nd MrL 0.yton 0.9r, H""I·
•neton a..a., glf1
A41"17
Mr •nd MrL ~I-· f~
i.oln Vell•Y. 91rl .,.., ..
Mr. and MIL AIWI 19uc111, Hunt-tneton a..a.. glr1 .,.., ..
Mr • .,., MrL J-.,_,, C.ta
llMM,glr1 .._....,.
Mr •nd MrL Ted RI.ck, Cal.II llMM, girl
Mr .,,., Mo Ml<..... KllMIHn,
Hvnllngton IMcfl, boy
Mr. •ncl NtrL JdWI laKllllM, lr.lne,
glrl ...-u
Mr •rlod Mn. 5e"'9n -.... HW!t· lntton e..ci., boy
Alrl'11
/IN. and Mr1' ~ f~, H.,...
tl,..ton e..o., twtn elrts
Mr. •nd Mn. o.nnl• Jotlnltan, Cata
NlllM,glrt
Mr. •ncl Mn. Denver Orlnkwlne,
H11ntlnglOll 8Mdl, girt
for OC
Low unemployment rate linked to skyrocketing housing costs ; positions staying vacant . . )
lh IODI CADENHEAD Of .. Olllly ..... ....,
Economi1tl are takin& a dim view of Oranae
County's expected 4.9 per<:ent unemployment rate
next year, saying the low figure la due to a
.1borta1e of skilled labor.
In a UCl/UCLA sponsored aympoeium Friday
economlata from bQth univenltiff warned that the
unemployment rate suggestl that county busi-
nesses a.re not rmdine eno gb workers to meet
their needs.
"Apparently housing costs are so hlah that
many people cannot afford to move to Or-.ige
County and therefore some Jobs are 1otng un-
filled," aaid Jerome Baesel, usiatant professor of
management at UCI.
"nDS MAY cause a slowdown or even a
decline In the economic growth or Orange Coun-
ty,'' he added.
David Sholman, assistant professor of ad-
ministration at UC Riverside, predicted that the
high cost of housing in Orange County wlll puah
the county out of the lead as a growth area, to be
replaced by Riverside, San Bernardino and Cen-
tral California.
Despite the gloominess of the county housing
forecast, which showed prices climbing 13.5 per-
cent compared to the state average of 10. 7 percent,
most of the news for the county was optimistic.
The report presented at the second annQal
"UCl/UCLA Economic Forecast: Orange County
Update 1981" showed the county outpacing the
state in the areas of employment, aerospace and
construction.
By comparlaon, 131,500 new homea will be A pessimistic view 1bowa the prlme int,erest
bullt 1n the ltate this year. with 174,TOD forecast ln rate bov~rtne at 11 percent, unemployment
1962. A slow recovery is predicted in the statewide avera&ln1 1 percent a nd 1lu11bb economic
construction industry with a 5.8 percent gain ex-arowth.
pected in 1982 followed by a 12 percent lncrea1e Jn In a meetina earlier this month with federal
jobs predicted In 1983. budaet director David Stockman, Kimbell eave his
Penonal Income for Callfomia will remain support to the Reagan administration's plan, but
conaistent with the rest of tbe nation, with a 12.3 added be didn't think it would work euUy.
percent increase this year and a 13.2 percent jump "We would like to Join the president and say
in 1982. that inflation will melt away," said tqmbell. "But
Looking al the national economic picture we don't think it will." •
economlsta presented three possible scenarios that ..,.
could result rrom Reagan's proposed tax cut.a of 10
percent over the next three years.
Larry Kimbell, associate professor of manage-
ment at UCLA, gave a 15 percent chance to the ad·
ministration's forecast, which shows inflation in·
creasing only 5.9 percent In 1983, the prime rate
dropping to 11.3 percent and wage-price increases
dipping drastically.
A MORE likely probability, as5erted Kimbell.
would show Inflation rismg 8 3 percent in 1983, the
prime rate dropping to 12 percent and hourly com·
pensation dropping only slightly below 10 percent
in 1982 and 1983.
CO CTORS
CORNER R.,• Coln• & Stemp•
GOLD & SILVER
"'"" Cl. $11.U umrr IMSIJINeE
"Our 24th year"
~ · Auto & Homeown&rs
Off shore oil backed
From the Business Wire
SANTA BA&BARA -Offshore petroleum de-
velopment mus• provide an important share of
America's future energy needs, said Georae M.
Keller, vice chairman and chairman designate of
Standard Oil Compan) of California. in an outlook
on energy.
Keller spoke during a seminar at the Universi-
ty of California at Santa Barbara.
Lower Your Overhead,
Earn More Profitt
.. ,.. ~ .. -......... ~l:-· Quotes By Phone
HOWEVER, real estate activity has declined ,,_._ __ ... f&au~ Mtttauo1~r . . c.e................. 191 ... 1-~ sharply and employment in the pubhc sector ts ex· (nc) 551-6150 ClllP
Answer Network can help Increase your
profits by lowering overhead. With Answer
Netwnrtt's shared-overhead concept, you
wlll ha~ ll'tallablJ every office aervlce you
nHd, Including your own phone number peeled to level off in the county. South CoHt Pleze Vlll•g• President Reagan's planned 6 percent in-· -..... "' 541-5554.,. 1U-l07 <•·---c:-,.,_1 ltl4~·CosteMtta crease for defense spending is expected to have its ~===========12:~====~=~~ greatest impact on the county's aerospace in·
dUt!ltry.
Other highlight.a of the report showed the coun-
ty constniction industry slowly recovering from
43,000 jobs in 1981 to 48,000 in 1982. Jobs in
aerospace will jump from 83,000 this year to 86,000
in 1982.
Recovery for the housing slump will be slight,
with 11,000 new homes built this year and 14,300
planned in 1982. compared to the all-time high of
30,500 in 1976.
EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14
NEWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
PUBLIC SALE l'\.~• .... T...0
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St Loe 111&~1
s.,,,_ -Si.m 01 YCM 0oor
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the coat of expensive facllltles and atall.
COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS
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UT. 723
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HURRY! 6 MORE DAYS! r----C.'aatl\JG 8U)lncl» flnnmn-n.ii.carn----.--.
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On Sat .. Mery 2nd -OHL Y I Oc on the dollar
Come in early while selection is greatest. All items
to be sold first come first serve
In Business To ·Make Business Happen
At Creative we have the money you need
Loans from $25,000.00" for any business or
investment purpose .
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker .
•All loans secured by a comb1nahon or
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U 25 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 (71 '4) 752·7923
._..,.
Mr. •net """ Tosll Ono, 11unu,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ... <11,boy WHBOYOU BUY OUR Of FIDO Mr. and Mn. K9NWVI Soft'wnerf'-14' Hunt"'9t0n a..ca, girt ... ,.
Mr. •nd Mn. JdWI CMll, .._.lngton
.. .ell, boy
MllMOM COMMU"ITI'
MCIU'ITAL -.a• Mr. and Mn. .,...... .,_.._, ...
Jutn c.iMr-. girt
"'9rdl 17
Krl•ll su .. 1111e S.•twlcll, Sen Cl-··-Mercll• Ml. llflCI Mr&. Oef'9ery ..........
-It*> c;..piltr-. boy
l!Mrcll • Mr. enet ws. SleWn 1,.11, Hunt·
1119\0n lleecll, glrl
llMrell• Mr ..... MIL CNrlH ~ Ill,
Sowth Laguna, boy
Mlf'cll1'
"'°'·end Mn. R-41 Moy, 1AtuM .. ,..,.. ..•
Mr .• ,,. Mn. Terr•ll Wlllle1111,
L.-N191111.llO"t ""''' Mt, .... -.. WI'"-~ Ill, 0...-.......,
Mr. IM Mrt. Wll..,_ 0. o-4t,
~ ....... .. Mt ........ ~, ........... JUMc.Ml,...,'9J ...... Mr ..... Mrto. .,...., HwNold, ...
ClerMnte,tlrl
/IN. elltl Mn. Dell .. I "-*Ml• ..,. ,_~My _..,
Ml ........ Rklll"1 .._,, L.e911M
~ ....... .
""· .. Mn. Ilk ..... ....... .,....., .. ,., ........ o.tt.~~..--.-.. .... ...... ,..., ...... I. .... ~ 9MOI,....,
THE TRUTH ABOUT
FUNERAL PRICES
In greater Ormlge County
At Harbor Lawn Mortuary people are important. We believ~
that every family deserves a perfect final tribute. 'lbe family
selects the type of service it want.5 and the price to be paid.
............ : ........ 5325
ComPUTBR WUGBTTHO
WHOlBDBRD
oomeanYt
, I ..
11ERE ARE .
(tl Read all today's
l1J newstt every day
Local, county, state, national and
international events come to \!~ur
doorstep in the bright, __ _
light and lively Daily
Pilot.
®Keep an eye on
l6toeal ~overnment
No other newspaper brings you
more news of your city council ,
planning commission , -=-~-
school and college
districts and county
government.
. ~ Laugh, ery o.-get
. ~smart
)
To keep up ,,vith .
all that's happening
bi your community
you need·the
Daily PilOt
-~·every day
•
.
REASOrtS Wl1Y. • •
.' , · /l)Follow your team
'17/ The sports action ·at 15
Orange Coast high schools, three
community colleges, UC Irvine
and Cal State campuses is
regularly reported by .the
Daily Pilot sports ·staff.
Keep up with nation-
a II y ranked college
and pro teams, too!
--'-../
B Save '!one! an~ c!J shopping time
Real values on items from apple-
sauce to zippers are advertised
every day in the Daily Pilot.
Because the ads are from
firms in this area,
you save time, ef-
fort and .money.
. ,
•
I '
~Enjoy your Sunday
~Family Weekly, color comics,
TV Week, the latest news and
'features about your community,
your money and you highlight
the interesting reading ~
packaged in your ~
Sunday Daily Pilot. ~
Enough to read -FAMILY '-.J UJEE"LY.:
and enjoy .
fii} Tune in. to the
{/ latest TV logs
The latest, most ac.curate
ie1evision guide is published
each weekday in the Daily Pilot.
On ~ndays, TV Week ~. w
charts tne tube .. w ~ E
in convenient, ~
easy-to-find · ~' ~~,.~
listings. l r.
642-4321
-------·----~--·
111111 ~~.. :
""'"o'u u ··---liilllliill~
I
I
C>llfll"'I-....-.. -----
"J .G.! Thia i. C.R. over at T.R.L. and W .... you know,
V .P. in cbarse of 0 .C.D .... well, hold on, l'U UM a
Mntence that makes ltnM ln a ml.nute."
DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I get
some good Information about how to form a
food buying co-op?
J .W., Newport Beach
"How to Form a Food Buytai Clab" la a
very lalormatlve pabUcatJoll ucl &lie prlee la
rllbt -It'• free. It c011talu plclellaes ud
&lpa oa bow to form aad operate eoofera&Pe
buyl•I clubs, wlUa leformatlom oa "e
cooperative movemee' ID Calllorala u4 or·
1aaflatl0aal optlou. Request a copy by writ·
Ing to Food Co·Op PablJeaUom, Departmeat
of Coaaumer Affalu, P .O. Box 31,, Sacramento t580Z.
Another booklet, the "Food Co-Op Dtttc·
tory," Is available free from the above ad·
dress. It tells about cooperatives throughout
the state, with e11eattal lalormatlon about
each. The directory Is also useful to farmers
wishing to directly market their crops.
Sublet guidelines
DEAR PAT DUNN: Do I have to ask my
landlord's permission to sublet my apart-
ment to another tenant?
R.H., Costa Mesa Most agreementa allow you to Hblet oa.ly
with the landlord's written couent. Some
landlords will accept the ttat directly from
the subtenant. But you are still rHpoulble
for paying the rent, unleu the subtenant'•
name replaces yours on the agreement, or a
new agreement Is written.
Water-saving aiJs
DEAR READERS: Was your state ID·
come tax a palafuJ e:rperlence lid• year!
You can ease tbat pala next year by tak·
lag advantage of a law allowtng state IDcome
tax credlta or up to $3,0M for lastalllag ap·
proved water-savla11y1tems la your bome.
The state Department of Water
Resources aay1 the 1ystem1 alao can mean
direct moaey savlags ID water and e•ern blll1.
Authorized last year by Aue111bly Bill use, the tax credlta cover part of tbe coat of
lnahlllng rain water and &ray water
1y1tem1, flow red•cera for alaowen a•d
faucets and low-nuah tolleta.
Gray water sy1tem1 reclaim water from
baths, sbowen and 1a.k1 for laadscape Ir·
rlgatloa. Water from ralD water 1y1tem1 -
collecton aad claterm -alao woald be ued
for landscape lrrlgattoa, whicb accoata for
about bait tbe water used ID Calllonta
bomea.
The tu credit for 11D1le-famlly res-
idences 11 55 Qerce•t or cotta to a maxlmam
credit ol '3,0M. For multiple realdeacea, u
owner lnstalUn1 a 111tem cottlng at least • M,MO can take a tax credit ol bdwee• ZS per.
cent aad 5' percent.
EUgibWty 1aJdeU11e1 for the tax credit
ba ve been developed by the Depart meet of
Water Resources and tile Department of
Healtb Services. Coptea are avaUable from
Alan lagllam , Departme•t of Water
Reaourca, Dlvuloll of Plana1D1, P.O. Box
SSS, Sacramento tsSeZ.
DEAR PAT DUNN:" one •lHJ>ina potl·
tlon more "h!tUul" than othen? My mother ~ tells me I lbOUld 1leep on my ~ck *•use J
#Ul rut better. She'• Hid tb1a for yean and
I'd like to know (t there'• any vaUdity to her theory.
W.F., La1una Beach la't modaer always rl,.tf la ~ cue,
o•t medical aatllorttlet back .. a.er ad.tee.
A Rat ... ·&lle·back, ltreteW-08& ....,. ii
t•e k9t · ••1 .. sleep to 1et SM ••aa .. • beaeftti for &lie Ume apnt 1'91&1111. ~ ...
t611 padlae li¥et Hell l•ppor& .. aM ~r. M
all IDMCleJ cu relax. Lap ... 1WO al otaau are acramped, drnlaU. 11,m..
peded ud SM aplM la f.'°""' ....... A ••all, flal pillow placed at _., 1oar MU
·alto la advlied bJ .. ntttal" ·~ espe...u; '
(JACK 4NDERSON) 11•111 p•11at
REVEALS In the
~\lor('. }"'or_t~a~ e~lYf!
»U'tLS u re ot sa tzstactzon .
The Canslen, of Buford, Ga., were
drivtnc from Atlanta to ArkU11u
when he pulled into tbe 1tetlon here.
He went inside to cit a map. She
woke up and went to the restroom.
Cansler returned to the car and con·
tlnued the trip, and didn't realize his
"I'm More ....
satisfied!'
t
\ ,..·" . . .. •,
•' r' r
...
I
t
I Joe Vargas of the United States passes as Soviet Serge j K otenko f 7 J de /ends in water polo competition Sunday.
Reggie says no
to 'candy tag'
LOS ANGELES (AP> -When
Reggie Smith -plays, things
generally happen. However, the
Los Angeles right-fielder has
been relegated to a pinch-hitting
role because of a shoulder
operatlon which ended his 1980
reaaon pre~aturely .
.. It's tough sitting around,
dealing with the anxiety, getting
just that one at-bat," Smith said
Sunday after he delivered his
fu-.t bit of the season, a run-
1corin1 double to give the
Dodtel"lt a 3-2 victory over San
Die to. ' '
to hit the cutoff man," be said.
•·But that's not playing. I was
fighting the urge to play at any
cost."
Smith pointed to two develop-
ments that altered his plan.
·'The acquisition of Ken Land·
reaux relieved some of the pres·
sure," pointed out Smith. "We
were too right-handed and,
besides, he's a good hitter. And
then Pete (Pedro Guerrero>
showed that he can play every
day."
The Dodgers star~d their win·
ning rally in the eighth asainst
reliever Gary Lucas, 2·2, when
Steve Garvey led off with a
single. Ron Cey sacrificed and
after Guerrero walked, Smith
batted for catcher Mike ·Sciotcta
and doubled to left-center.
Left-bander Jerry Reua11 1·1,
pitched a eomplete same victory
for Los An1elea, acattering
seven hita.
Tilt.: DODGD8 toolt a 2..U
lead a1almt Sin I>M10 1tarter
Juan Eicbelber1er wtth a nm 1n
the fifth, when SCloecla 1m1le4
and ~entually scored on an tn--
fleld out, and •nother ln tbe
1btth oo suceealve 1tn1lea by
Dusty Baker, Garvey and Cey.
Hamann waa credited with nine saves and .Jon
Svendsen scored from 15 meten with six Hcondl :
left to live the U.S. a a.1 halftime lead. A.od Peter
Campbell came up with a couple of critical
steal.I.
But it wu Robert.loo who held most of the of·,
fenaive abilities. 1
In addition to a steal, aalat'>n Svendlen'a 10•1
and a blocked shot, it was Robert.son 'I lC).metern
bullet with two aeconda left in the third quarter,
that knotted the score at 5. I
Earlier he had scored on a pair of six-on-five
situations, when the U.S. swept into a •·2 lead.
The Sovieta, however, were quick t.o ret.allatet
in the third period and three quick soab in the last'
four minutes of the quarter turned an American
lead into a game of catchup in the final atania. t
The Soviet coach said his team pre11ed a little
more in the flurry of the third quarter when the"
game was turned around, but said there wu no,
particular cha.nge in strategy. t
Shooting percentapa from the field showed,
4-of-14 for the U.S .. in addition to 1-of·2 penalty1 <See SOVIETS, Page C2>
Minnesota
out Witt ( ed)
Forsch on mound in Oakland tonight
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP>
-Three months ago, all)
Angels rookie pitcher Milte
Witt bad was a dream. Following
Sunday's two-bit, 7 ·l victory over
Minnesota in the first game of a
double-header, however, be may
have much more than that -a
permanent spot in the Angels'
starting rotation.
•'Before spring training be was
just scheduled to throw batting
practice," said Angel Manager
Jim Fregosi. "We knew be was a
prospect, that the stuff was there.
He earned his way onto the club.•'
WITT, A •·7 native of
Calilomia, stopped the Twins on
Roy Smalley'• triple ofl the 1love
of left.fielder Juan Beniquez in
the fourth innln1 and John
Cutino's two-out homer in the
bottom of the ninth, which ruined
bis abut.out attempt.
Minnesota won the second game 5-2, thanb to a two-nm
homer by Smalley and some era!·
ty knuckleball pitching by
Fernando Arroyo.
Ken Forsch (2·0) will take the
mound tonight when the Angela
visit the fast-charging Oakland
A 'a and St.eve Mccatty (3-0) in a
game that wiU be televU!ed on
Channel Sat 7 :30.
.. I'm just happy to be with the
team and I 'll take the win," said
Witt, who walked only two and
On TV tonight
channel 5 at 7:30
struck out six. "During spring
training, I thought my chances
were really slim. I was just trying
to make an impression for ne~
year."
The Angels backed Witt with a
four-nm fifth inning. Benlque1
opened the fifth with a double and
took third when Bobby Grich
bunted but pitcher Roger
Erick.son tried to nip Beniquez at
third and the throw was late.
BERT CAMPANEalS singled
home Beniquez and Grich took '
third Grich then tried t.o 4e0re
from third on Rod Carew'!l
grounder to short but was cau~t I
in a rundown. Ericksob ended up
with the ball, but tagged Grieb I
with the wrong hand alter Grieb
had fallen about 10 feet from the t plat~. I • Grich got up and was able to
score before Erick.son recovered. 1
Rick Burleson then singled in
another run for a 3.0 lead and Ed
Ott drew a bases-loaded walk two
outa later to force in tbe fourth run.
Smalley's second-game homer,
his fifth of the year. came off
hard·luck loser Jesse Jeffersoa
following an error by Campaneru
at third base. Jefferson allowed
only five hits in seven innings and
four unearned runs.
ARROYO, THE Twins' fill!)
starter, checked the Aneels oo
five hits tbrousb se~n lnninp
before lettine Dou1 Corbett mo~
up. Arroyo said be u.ed th~
knuckleball for the'tirat time anCS
llked the result.a. r
"I threw it about eight or nint
, tJmea and eot three or four outt
with it; that's not bad," be aald. "l:.5!:tea the hitters another pitcb to about.
Tbe Twins also scored in ~
•lSth on Smalley'• •fntle and I
doubJe by Glenn Adams. ....,.!
neaota added a pab ot lnlur~
run• in tbe .qbth wben Hoek~ Powell rucMd nnt oo a tbro •
)DI error by Burleson an
11cored on Cutlno'a trlpl
Adama ·scored CuUno witb
sacrifice tly.
Tbe ADa.}I HONd in thf ~" CaNw'~',JlB.I iloib._ aDd carW
aJ1o ICONd In the elpth aft4li'
doubllq ., .. and comtD1 home
oe Dan Font'• aro.der one latV.
h ..... , elm. La foUr 111 • Md ......... 9Cac&end ti
h1u &un<t.y tb IHd '0
&eatlle, , for UM A'IJt~':f:.,~
ti sames. Keou1b. a lf""8te ot Corona deJ
Mar Htlh, won hla tObrib c= ... ~·m• vic-
tory In foiu atarta atvbt1 Utt land 1talf U bi
18 cama ..• Ted II••-drove 1n four nmJ and GOrmua ~m11 and Pa111 M r Dc>tked
PD'ates considering
move to Superdome?
in · two apiece lo l~ad
Milwaukee to an 11-1 wln
over Kansu City . . . M1U
Kar•nwe'1 •1'ttl• climaxed•
three·"1b ninth lM.ln• th•t
cataputted Cleveland to a ,_,
wtn over Texas . . . Due
StJeb pit~hed a seven-hitter
and consecutive doubles by
Erale WllJU and Lloyd
Moseby eparked a hl·o-run
From AP Dlapa,cbet
PI'M'SBURGH (AP) -A couple •
of fans seated ln the sh•ndl at Three
Rivers Stadium wore black T-sbirta
lettered in cold with "New Orleans .
Pirates.''
To some baseball fans here, a Pirau move
to Louisiana might seem as unlikely u the
statue of Hall of Famer Honus Wagner steppln1
down from its pedei.ttd outside Three Riven
Stadium and hitchbiklng out of town.
third lnnlng that gave blm Ktough
bis first runs ol the seuon u Toronto edted the
New York Yankees, 2-1. Stieb, 1·3, bad pitched
23 consecutive innings without gettln1 a run
from the Blue Jays . . . leny Remy rapped a
two-run single i.n the eipdl§apd later scored from second base an a J <. ny, 1'ey-But Cliff N. Wallace, general manager of
the New 0Tleans Superdome, visited here Sun-
da¥ to discuss a possible franchise move with
the Pirate owners, who are suing to break their
stadium lease.
~ng a three-run rally which gave ton a 7-S
ictory over Baltimore ... Bob Mollaaro
rove ln two runs with a pinch-triple ,and the
Chicago White Sox extended their winning
streak lo six games with a 5-4 victory over
Detroit. handing the Tigers their seventh
straight loss. Molinaro, batllni for Gres Pryor,
tripled to right to put the White Sox ah~ad in the
seventh inning.
"I can assure you that New Orleans is not
taking the possibility lightly," said Wallace,
who met with Pirate President Daniel
Galbreath and his father, Board Chairman John
Galbreath.
Both sides stressed during a news con-
ference at Three Rivers that tJte Pirates have
no present plans to move.
Wallace, who spoke first. placed his own
tape recorder beside a pile of media recorders.
apparently as a safeguard against being mis·
quoted
Erving fa.st finish paces 76ers
"I have been told again today by the
Galbreaths that they do not want to leave Pit·
tsbuq~h. but I hope that ... New Orlea'1s is
certainly in the running should considerations
be necessary in the future,'· said Wallace.
Philadelphia's Jull111 Ervlni
scored the last six points of the game
as the 76ers beat the Bost.on Celtics
107-lOS Sunday and took a 3-1 lead in
their best-of-seven National Basketball Aasocia·
lion Eastern Conference final playoff series.
The victory was preserved by Bobby Jo.et in-
terception or a long i>ass intended for Larry
Bird in the final seconds and be held it to the
end . . . Houston's Moses Malone, contained
by Kansas City ror three games, became a
dominating force once again, fighting for 42
points and 22 rebounds as the Rockets defeated
the Kings, 100-89 lo take a 3·1 lead in their
Western Conference championship series.
Malone ignored the Kings' double-teaming tac·
tics and pulled the Rockets through a pair of
Kansas City rallies. The two teams meet again
Wednesday night in Kansas City.
"l am not interested in leaving Pittsburgh,"
Daniel Galbreath said after watcfling the
Pirates lose 3·2 to St. Louis before a paying
crowd of 8.139
Quote of the day
Jack Buck, St. Louis Cardinals an·
nouncer, talking about the yacht of New
York Yankees owner George St.einbren·
ner: "It is a beautiful thing to behold, with
all 36 oars working in unison."
From Page C1
SOVIETS BEAT US • • •
shot attempts, while the Russians
gotoff22shots. h1tt1ngs1x
Unable ll> really get anything
going toward the Soviet intenor.
the us spent most or the game
lookmg for the opening from the
perimeter. and the Soviet defense
reacted well. sealing off most
avenues
Women's IOK
set May 10
The Capist ran o Beach
C hamber of Comme r ce is
s ponsoring th6 fourth con
secutive women's lOK run Sun
day, May 10
Laguna Beach's Sue Petersen
is helping to coordjnate the run
which will start and end at the
Capistrano Beach Park.
Entry fee for the pre-race
deadline Is $6, which includes a
women's T-shirt Fees for a SK
run for men and women. and
women who wish to participate
In the lOK run without T-shirt.
are $3.
Appllcallons may be obtained
a t the Capis tra no Beach
Chamber of Com merce. The
pre-race deadline is Friday. For
more information, call 496·1017
or 484-2506.
The Russians, whodon'tg1vean
inch and charge on every de·
fens1ve opening, played a tough,
physical game, true to the scout·
ing report.
But Nitzkowski said the bruis·
ing battle wasn't much diUerent
than any other in this tournament.
·'This is a contact -and col·
lision game," said the U.S.
coach.
Nitzkowski called the overflow
crowd the largest to ever witness
an Amencan water polo team in
action.
.. It was a great night for water
polo."hesaid
It wasn't, however, the greatest
night for the team or the fans,
after being teased with that 4-2
American lead.
In other action Sunday. 1980
Olympics si lver medalist
Yugoslavia upped its record to 2-0
with a 10·9 victory over Spain
( 0-1-1), Australia dealt winless
Bulearia a 15·8 loss and Cuba
(1·0·1) recorded its first-ever vie·
t"rY over Hungary (0·2) with a 9-8
declslon.
The crowd. incidentally, was
bursting the seams or the
bleachers l l>"J hours before tbe
game and the ticket omce was
shut down with still 45 minutes .
before theopenlng s1>rit'lt.
The So'tiets will be back in ac·
lion tonight (7) against Bulgaria
in an expected USSR rout, while
Spain and Hungary open lt at 4,
followed by Cuba and Yugoslavia
at5:30.
Kevin R.obert!on
OCC captures
d~uhles title
OJAI -Lort ~hoettler and
Cari Garfield of ·orange Cout
College captured the doubles
championship in the women's
community college divl.slon of
the Ojai tournament and the
Pirates took home the flra.t place
team trophy.
Scboettler and Garfield de-
re a ted a team from Santa
Monica in the finals, 4·6, 6·3, 6·1
Sunday to give Oranee Coast its
second team Utle In four years.
HE SPORTING HOUS~
Where Health le a Way of Life •nd Conditioning le• Way of LlVtng
MEMBERSMI
SPECIAL
JOIN US BEFORE APRiL 3oth
fORASum.EAS
De~ Z• ... 1&r8id bli hlb,
knotted lft • AD and •'*'" twice \o
lead San ~clteO to ad M dtdilOG
over AUlnta and ~· '"'"P ot their Sunday NatloAal i.easue double-:beader. ,,.
Glanta W(IO the llrst 11me. S-1, u £ ... CdilU
deUve a 1l1.tb·Lnn1"• doublf and Jed a.rt
1lu11ed a homer In the Hwnth . . . 1-0
Ma•MI ltit 111-ftnt major lea1ue hom run, a
three-nm blaat bl th• aeventb
innln1 to tead Montreal to a
7·8 victory over the New
York Mtta and a aweep Of
tbelr twin bill. Tb• J:xpoa won the· opener, 8-4, u Ella
Valea\bae and Gary Caner
cracked twoorun bomen and
llay Ban• fired a six-bitter
... ~ Wallla1'1 lint·
innlng leadott home run,
alone with the eight-hit Evom
pltchinl of .Bob Kaepper, enabled Houaton to
breat • fou.r-eame losing streak with a 1--0 win
over Cincinnati . . . Mlke Scllmld&'• iowering
two-nui homer triggered a four-run third inning
to lead Pblladelphla to a 6-2 victory and und
the slomp-ridden Cbicato Cube tumblin1 to
their 12th stnigbt loas. The Cubs are now one
loss away from a team r«<>rd of 13 set in 1944
. . . Pinch-hitter Ttto Lao.drum broke a ninth·
inning tie with a run-scoring single off G..at
Jackson to give St. Louis a 3-2 win over Pitts·
burgh, The win ran the Cardinals' winning
streak to eight games.
Moses wins 58th straight race •
catgary ousts Philadelphia
A rusty Elwin Mo1ea had to come •
from behtbd to keep his winning'
streak intact, and James Saaford
won the 100-meter dash in Sunday's
Flames took advantage of '
PIDLADELPHIA -The Calgary liil
Philadelphia penalties for power play
goals by Willi Plett, Ken Houston and
top events of the Mt. San Antonio Relays track
meet. Moses, running his fint hurdles of the
year, was clocked in 48.61 seconds for tbe 400·
meters, giving tum his S8th consecutive vie·
tory in tile event . . . The Pittsburgh Pirates,
suing the city over their stadium lease, got
some sweet talking from the New Olllieans
Superdome ... Eleven Stttcbea overtook the
pace-setting Miibty Return on the backstretch
and won the Mervyn LeRoy Handicap feature at
Hollywood Park .
Television, radio
Kevin Lavallee Sunday night for a 4·1 National
Hockey League playoff triumph over the Flyers
that boosted the Flames into the Stanley Cup
semifinals for the first ti me ever.
Following are the top Sf)Orts events on TV
tonioht. Ratlnos are: / 1 ' ~ excellent; ·" / "
worth watching; 1 1 fair; / forget 11
[(I] 7:30 p.m., Channel 5 v v v
Baseball today BASEBALL: Angels at Oakland.
On this date in baseball in 1971: Announcers: Don Drysdale, Bob Starr and Ron
Fairly.
Pittsburgh Pirates' slugger Willie
Stargell blasted bis 11th homer of the
month ... a major league record for April.
On this date in 1968:
Baltimore's Tom Phoebus no-hit the
Boston Red Sox 6--0.
The Angels tangle with the amazing Oakland
A's with Ken Forsch (2-0) going against Steve
McCatt't (3-0) In tonight's series opener. The
Oakland club has an amazing strino of complete
games pitched (15) while compiling an early·
season 17 · 1 record.
Today's Birthday: RADIO Toronto Blue Jays Infielder Willie
Upshaw is 2". Baseball -san Francisco at Dodoers, 7: 30 p.m ., KABC (790); Angels at Oakland, 7:30 p.m .,
KMPC (710).
Todiiy's the day
Alouettes to sign Ferragamo
NEW YORK (AP > -
Quarterback Vi.nee Ferragamo
and wide receiver James Scott,
two National Football League
free agents will sign with the
Montreal Alouettea today, an
official of the Canadian Football
League· reportedly aaid Sunday
night.
Bob Geary. general manager
of the Alouettes. said Fer·
ragamo was to sign with the
C FL team late Sunday night,
"but we got lied up with the
lawyers," according to ABC
Radio Sports. "But we will be
signing tomorrow (Monday )
morning."
Geary was alao quoted as say-
ing that, Scott alao will be in
Montreal today to sign with
the team.
"I'm more excited than I've been in you don'( know how
many years.'' Geary said. "I've
been here since 1969 and we've
bad some long, lone years and
some long games. But Mr.
Skalbania (Nel5on >, the new
owner o( the Alouettes has come
in here and bas changed the
whole attitude and direction or
the team.
"Now we have one of the top
quarterbacks in Ferragamo and
one of the lop receivers in
Scott."
The Alouettes have called a
news conference this afternoon.
Ferragamo reportedly will
sign a three-year contract worth
Sl.2 million.
Alouettes own e r Nelson
Skalbania , who was in
Philadelphia Sunday night to
watch his Calgary Flames de·
feat the Philadelphia Flyers and
advance lo the National Hockey
League semifinal, was expected
to arrive in Montreal early to· ·
day.
Naval Academy
wins JFK Cup
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP> -The
U.S. NavaJ Academy sailing team
won collegiate yacht racing's
Kennedy Cup on Sunday, winning
six or seven weekend races sailed
in 44 -foot yawls on the
Chesapeake Bay off Annapolis.
It was the fourth time the
midshipmen have won in the 17
years of competition for the cup,
symbolic of the national cham-
pionship of college large yacht
racing.
Runner-up for the cup was
Princeton University. followed
by USC. Orange Coast College
finished eighth
Baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West DhilloD
Oakland
Chica so
.Ugels
Texas
Kansas City
Minnesota
Seattle
W L Pet. GB
17 1 .N4
10 3 .789 4'h
8 9 .471 8YJ
6 7 .462 8'h
3 9 .250 11
4 11 .Z67 UY!
4 12 .250 1.2
East DIYlatoa
Cleveland 7 4 .831
Boston 7 5 .SU
Milwauk~ 7 5 .583
New York 8 8 .m
Detroit 7 8 .487
Baltimore 4 7 .3M
Toronto 5 10 .833 ~--.... , ... --....1..s
~J. Dltrltt 4 9"toll71~-s T.,.._ i, Vortl t C....,.._.•,-•~ Mow-.."· "-CIW' C>eklWt.IMftfe• ·~._ 4ll9tfit (Pllifkll N> at ONllM tMcClittY Mj,
II s..ttle(~l-1).CMj ........ , ....
t•) II Chk......,... , .. , • ...,,_.. (~ o.u," H-,._... C~1·0 M Otftlt c....-, l·t>,
II
..,_ (TWrea 14) .. T•-(Metledi 14). I ' Ollfr ...... ~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgen 13 3 .81.3
Atlanta 9 7 .563 4
Cincinnati 8 7 .533 4~
San Francisco 7 11 .389 7
San Diego 6 11 .353 71>"J
Houston 4 12 .250 9
East Dlvlalon
Montreal 11 2 .846
St. Louil 9 2 .818 1
Pbtladelphia 10 5 .667 2
Pittsburgh 4 6 .400 Sl>"J
New York 4 7 .364 6
Chica10 l 13 .071 lOl>"J __.,...._ °"""" •. s.p .... 2 MoMr..t•r~ Vor1l ._. St.~J,1"1 .......... 1
~·~···~2 ..... ~ 1, CiftclRM(l t
5911 l'rlr!ICIKe M, "''*"' 1·.S ,...,.,._
SH l'r•nctaco (Ortrll11 14> ot .,..._,.
CVeleN.-+.),n
M•fltt'HI (011111~"-1•1 9\ '1111Nt111Ne (lhitl!WftJ.U,e
Oftlr """!~
Pirates
battle
Mounties
Orange Coast College has only
lost two games in a row twice
this season in the tough South
Coast Conference baseball race,
and the Pirates are coming off a
5·2 setback at the hands of Cer·
ritos.
That's bad news for host Mt.
San Antonio Tuesday when the
Pirates arrive with bats in hand
and the fences in sight. OCC .
10·4 and leading the conference
by one game over Cerritos, can
inch closer to the title with a win
Tuesday.
In two previous meetings, the
Bucs have routed the Mounties,
13-0 and 10-5. Either Kelly Simon
or Mike Hogan will get the start·
ing assignment on the mound.
and both have beaten Mt. San,
Antonio this year.
Meanwhile, Golden West a
game out of first place in
second-round play in Southern ·
Cal Conrerence, is at LA
Southwest Tuesday.
The Rustlers, with Ron Hen-
dricks coming into his own in
the starting rotation, have
moved into a four-way logjam
for second place. Rio Hondo
( 4-1 > leads the second round
with a 4·1 mark.
LOOKING FOR AN OPENING -American
poloist Carlos Stephens looks for a hole in the
Soviet's defensive web Sunday night at Long
Orenge Coeat College Seminar
THE HISPANIC
EMPLOYEE
A Cultural & Business Perspective
An intensive one·day workshop to provide a clear
perspective ot the Hispanic employee and the rote
he wilt ptay as a consumer
Saturday, May 2
Orange Coast College
Fine Arta Bldg. 119 -9 a.m. • 3 p.m.
2701 Fa1rv1ew Road Costa Mesa
Registration Fee: $45.00
Vlu·Meetercerd·lnformetlon -558-5880
AD\/ERTISEMENI
Open To All In Ma y
'John Doe' Hits Jackpot
In Monthly Oil 'Lottery'
ONl ARI O. CA L IF
(Special) Hundred~ of
average cll1Lens "111 "''"
011 leasc nghts 1n drawing'
conducted by the State of
Wyoming Some may
achieve overnight weah h
by selling their right\ 10
011 companu:s and re1,un-
1ng lifelong royalties
lncred1bh. most will mk
no more than 51 5 and a
minimal service fee 10
enter the little-known
program that offers eHr)
American the opponun-
II) to compete w11h g1an1
oil companies for leases of
puhltc land~
Information and entr)
detail\ arc a"a1lablc from
The H. Kirk Sanders
Co , Puhhc Lands D1v-
mon. Bo' 3697, Ontario.
C'ahr 91761 (2032 Carol-
ine) Plea~e enclo\c SI for
pmtagc and handling
0ffic1al entry cards will
be ru,hed b:,, return mail
10 perm11 }OU lo meet the
Ma) fihng deadline
LEASING?
19.81 · M~~:s
HERE!
MANY MODELS ON DISPLAY
FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE DELIVERY.
WE LEASE ALL MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS.
"Wf 'Vf GO T WHAT YO U'RE iO OK IHG FOR ..
..... .._,._
RIVERSIDE (AP) r-Jobn Fibpatricll and 'im
Bua by bad 10me problem. wlth their Poncbe Turbo
ln the late tolria, but It didn't atop tbe pair from wlD·
ntna the third annual Loa Alllelea Tim• Toyota •ls·
Hout Enduro ••nt at tbe R.lvenlde lnwrnaUcmal
. Raceway.
Fltapa.triek, of Enalanct, and Buaby, of L.,una
Beach, averaaed tot.%17 m. ob Sunday to Dip John
Paul, Jr., and bl.I co-drlvina latberby U .1821ecoadl
after leadlna by more than three lape with ln1 than
30 minutes to ao.
A PES&Y OIL LEA& alowed Fit1palrtck and
Bua by, but ln the end they bad jmt enou-" 1peed to
hold off the Paula, of LawrncevWe, Ga.
Third wu the tea in of Brian Redman of En1land
and Bobby Rahal of Cbic.,o ln • Poncbe Turbo.
They were three laps beb.lnthewinnen.
Fitzpatrick and Bua by took over the lead for the
final time on the 13Sth lap of the 198-lap event. The
winners, who earned f.18,050, led for 93 lapa and at
one time they had u much aa a four-lap advantage
over the Paul car, althouah that wuonlytempor1ry.
The youneer Paul, who started on the pole, was
credited with the fastest lap in the race over the
3.3-mile Riverside Raceway course. Late in the day,
he was clocked at 117.682 mph in his Porsche Turbo
as be charged up in hia final sprint.
Finishing fourth waa the team of Ralph Kent
Cooke of Los Angeles, Roy Woods of Oklahoma City,
Okla., and Bob Garretaon of Mountain View, Calif.,
In a Ponche Turbo. They were nine laps behind at
the finish.
FIFJ11 WAS THE TEAM OF Hurley Haywood of
Jacksonville, Fla., and Bruce Leven of Seattle,
In a Porsche Turbo. They were also nine laps
down at the end. Sixth was the team or David Hobbs
of England, Marc Surer of Switierland and John
Morton of El Segundo in a BMW M-lC. They
were lllaps behind,
Delp hurls no-hitter
Tammy Delp pitched a perfect game in the
first game or the championship finals and Golden
West ColleJ(e came on to win the title with a 4.3
win in the second game over Mesa, Arizona to cap-
ture the Golden West lnvitRtional women's softball
tournament Sunday.
The GT non·turbo eharpd Winn•"' weN Oavld
Cowart of Tampa, Fla., and Keoper Miiier of
Pittlford, N. Y. drivlnt a BMW M·l, who flnllhed
1eveatb overail. They were l5 lapa behilld at tbe
end .
''l waa 'Wry happy wlth Bua by ln tbe ear,'' aaid 1
Fttapatrick, the IMSA GT champion and winner of
the Riverside race laat year. ''It wu a 1ood team ef·
fort.
"When we aot the lead, I atarted belne a little ...
conservative. My lap Umea were not that terrific, but
neither were those ofanyoneelH."
ACl'Oa PAUL NEWMAN, drtvins • Turt>o... •
char.red DataWI, dropped out of the race after com· ,
pletlng only 23 laps with a broken tranamisalon and a
fuel leak. .
In a companion event, the Champion Spark Plug
Radial Sedan Challenge, actor Gene Hackman a pun
and hit thew all at tum aix early on and dropped out of
contention.
Surf's Chrisbnas
coIDes early in SJ
Special to tbe Dally Piiot
SAN JOSE -The California Surf will take a vic-
tory any way it can get one and Sunday afternoon
here, a gift goal at 61 : 2' by an Earthquake player
was enough for a 1-0 triumph for Coach Peter
Wall's charges.
The goal is a disputed affair but lt counts re-
gardless of the mannel' It is recorded in the books.
Steve Moyers of the Surf was nearby and claims
he was the o~e who beaded the ball into the net.
But the official scorer gave the credit to Tony
Powell of the Earthquakes. In either case, it
counts as the .only goal scored in the game for
either side llrftl gives the Surf 2' points, good
enough for second place behind San Diego in their
division.
"John Cr aven played well for us on defense,"
Wall said after the game. "He did a good job in or-
ganizing our defense and keeping them calm and
down to serious work.
Delly ...... "'-tty Gery,.,,..,_
Beach State. Russia captured a 6-5 victory. For
story, see Cl.
Delp pitched three games Sunday to get the
once-defeated Rustlen to the title. She defeated
Chabot, 5-0, in a morning game, then after her no-
hitter, had seventh-inning he lp from Kim Nutter in
the winning finale.
For her efforts on the mound. Delp was named
most valuable player of the tournament involvmg
most of the top community college teams in the
s tate.
"We might have run the ball a little too much
toward the end of the game. We should have been
paying more attention to our passing. But I feel we
improved over Friday night and I'm certain we
will improve for Wednesday night's home game
with Vancouve r.··
San Jose scored a goal that was disallowed with
12 · 25 remaining. A high kick aimed at Surf goalie
Alan Mayer as he was going out to intercept
caused the decision.
Famous Simon & Schuster author-lecturer-investment counselor Robert G. Allen says-
~ mi to my city in the United States. Take
away my Wallet.Give. me SUJ000 for I~
expenses. And in 72hours111 buy , •
an excellent piece of real estate I ·~.JC
using none of my own money; I~
\ iiifiilJ'",.._..
"In other words. you don't have to be
rich to buy a single family home or an
apartment building-even in these times
of inflation, tight money, and high
interest rates. You can strip me of every-
thing most conventional thinkers feel is
absolutely essential to buying real estate
-cash, credit, a steady job. and a
strong financial statement -and I 'II still
be able to buy as much property as I
want. (It's actually easier in so<alled
recessionary times, and 1 won't end up
with big negative cash nows. either!)
"How? Because I understand creative
financing! That's how I bought most of
the real estate I now own -the real
estate investments that have made me
wealthy. And YOU, too, using the
PROVEN, SAFE, HONEST principles
that will be outlined in an introductory
'NOTHING OOWN' scmlnar (abso-
lutely NO COST OR OBLJGAT10N),
can buy real estate with little or no
money down. l HATE REAL ESTATEI
I really do ... but l know of no other
way where you can start with nothing,
learn some b&ic facts iD~ short time,
and then with a little time and effort
make 1ots of money in just a few years.
Yes, EVEN IN TODAY'S TOUOH
MARKET, you can create real wealth
for yourself, and-in five years, if you
follow my plan~ -retire with a UDl·fnlc
income of up to $25,<XX> a year. (You
could have made a million dollars in
gold in the past couple of years, and
you would have only needed a half·
rrul1io11 dollars to start with. I didn't
have the half-million, and my guess is ...
nciLher do you!).
"My introductory seminar (no cost or
obligation) describes a complete program
that ANYONE can learn lo use-a pro-
gram that includes over .50 specific crca·
tive financing techniques! (My successful
as.sociatc, who gives the introductory
seminar, will clearly explain TWO of
these techniques in detail.) Even if
you're a limited4ollar investor, you can
start your own program toward financial
independence by foUowing the HONEST,
SIMPLE mcthbds I have personally de-
veloped-the techniques that have
enabled me to &:quirt several millions
of dollars worth of real estate in just a
few years and made me a real MIL·
LIONAJR.E at the qt of thitty-<>ne. It's
the same approach I have taught thou-
sands of lllCCeSSf ul real estate investors
all over America, and ibese methods
work BEST in ~ooary t.Unes.
"l Yt'lnt you to know that £VERY man
or woman in this country-plumbers,
docto~,secretarles,teachc:n,salesmen,
studmU, rdirea, etc., of any qe, no
rnatttr how cashi)OOI" they may be, can
PROSPER dwina a reccakm usins my
'NOTfflNG DOWN' prosram. O'w
recetved success lc:tt«S from J)IOl>le
swtina at the • of n!neUen, u IMDtY·
flve, and everywhere in between.} It'•
the MODBRN ~ ot the da)ltics,
and YOU CAN 00 IT TOOi
"In the 'NOTHING OOWN' introductory
seminar you'll discover how to find the
BEST buys (often in your own baclc
yard); how to locate the 'Don't Want.er'
who'll do ALMOST ANYTHING to get
rid of a property (many more show up
in a recession); how to borrow at 6'10 to
907• interest when the prime rate is over
13'!1; two specific NEW creative finance
techniques; how to buy even if your
credit rating is terrible; how to AVOID
PAYING TAXES-LEGALLY. You'll
learn about 1100/e financing (buying
with 'NOTHING DOWN' and getting
cash baclc); how to overcome your fear
of investing (I think fear is the uaJ.icst
four-letter word); how to establish an
investment plan; how to use leverage to
magnify your return on investments;
how to &et rid of problem real estate
without losing money; how to pyramid
your buried asseu into MILLIONS.
"At this point you may be sayina; 'It
sounds pat. but .. .' If that's your
reaction, I want you to know that
comina to my i.DtJ1)ductory seminar is
totally without risk (there's NO cost or
ohlipdm to buy &A)'tbin&). You'll hear
about, how you can easily lelm my entire
invatmcilt J)(Olr'alD, and you'U learn
MANY SPECIFIC NBW THINGS you
's P.M. -MONDAY, AP&IL mt.
never knew before. My brothc, Dr.
Richard Allen, is a specialist in adult
education. After nine years on the facuJ.
ty of Johns Hopkins University. he has
joined me to develop the most COM·
PLETE, EASY-TO-UNDERSTAND,
WORKABLE teaching methods avail·
able, so that you can qwclcly learn and
actually begin to talce the steps that will
bring you to financial indcpcndence. It's
working now for thousands who have
already learned my TESTED, PROVEN
METHODS ... and it CAN WORK for
you!
"Please take the time to come to my
introductory seminar (They all st.art at
8 P .M., but COME EARLY ... we often
run out of chairs!) It's a terrific multi·
media learning expcricnoc conducted by
my successful associate, and, apin.
there's ABSOLlJTELY NO COST OR
OBLIGATION. The ninety~minute
seminar will introduce you to some life-chanaina f ICU that should revolutionize
your plans for the future. The introduc·
tory semln.an are ONLY at the locations
and on the dates noted below. Don't
wait to buy real estate ••• buy real estate
a.od wait! Thanks!''
~(,.~
~ • • . .
"' "
NA~l.IAOUI
MN ~re I , '•~o'llJ.1ua1 . ,.,.. .,,, ...
"lcMft,N > : 1 0 ~D J t t I O.IMlth,• J 1 0 Molldty ,.rl 2 t t 0 lt11.J"1t;d 4 0 I I O.T11tm1,ct 0 0 0 0 ...... -.a J , 0 0 .. kff,lf 4 1 , 0 LIKM> 0 0 0 0 Gt,..,..,lb 4 I 2 0
.. 1 .... r,Jlt 4 0 I 0 Cey.. J t t 1
.. M.1b J010 Guerrer,ct JOOO
l!dwr••·" 4 o o 1 Scl•cle,c 1 I I o S-1.,,.r,c Joo O lt.Smllll,tlfl I 0 1 1 Ecllltf9'.tl 2 0 0 0 Y....,.C 0 0 0 0 1umac,p11 1 o 1 o ltu_n,.. a • I o
kftllll.$11' 0 1 0 • "'"''·" ,J 0 , 0 1"111111116.» 0 0 0 0 Tei.11 JO 2 7 2 Tott11 • J 10 ~
kenllfl ......
Saft Diego 000 000 111>-oJ
LH Ange... 000 011 01._a
D .. -SM D1a9e I LOI -San 0 .... S,
Loi ......... 21 -C.y, "" J-. It.
Smlll\. Ja -aeaer S -II-•· Cty, a...
Richardt. .... .,.... ...
7
t
M II 811 88 IO
1 2 2 4 1 I! lclltllltrVtr
LUCtl (L, 1·21 ...... ,. ...... ) I I 2 0
11 ... u (W, 1-11 t
T -2 • A -it,J.23
Car•IMll J .. ,,. ... 2
SI Louis b 100 011-4 IO 1
Plt\111<1... 100 001 111»-2 S 1
Marti,.&. Eoelen 171. Keal Ill, Sutter (ti
anti Porter; Scur,.,, Tellulve Ill, JtcklDf'I
(t) •nd HIC061t . W-«HI, 1-0 L-JacktOft,
... H•-44.L.ou11,H .... rtu m A-t,I ..
"llllTOAM8 .............
Hew York 001 001 011~ • 2
Montreal JU 001 010-I 12 > Zachry, l'•I<-Ul, Miii•• (6), R•ardlln
• (I) •ncl Tr...,lno. lurrla and CMter -lurrl1, J.I L~"''· ).I Hlb~rMI, \/t l•Mlne U l. Carl•• 141, New Yor k,
Kingman CJ>
S8ClOMO GAMa
..... 7,Mett•
New York 001 001 004--.. It O
Mtnlr••I 301 000 Jla-7 II I Sw•n, H..,.,,..n Ill. lturClon 17) -
Hoclllff, ~. Le• Ill. lellnun l•I.
,ryman (t i end Ra-.. W-S.ncltl"IOft, M .
L-lwan, l>-2 HRa-MOnlreal, Dawton "'· Manuel 111. New York, Klnemen 2 141
A~1 ... 7
.. 111111••,Ci*tl
Pllll-•PN• 010 400 ID0-4 10 0
Clllca90 100 010 111»-2 I 0
ly\lrom, McGr•• Ill end lloofte, CaudHI,
M•rt1 UI. Kr•...: Ill, EHIWlck 171, ~Illa
Ill •nel 81ackwell W-8y11rom, H>. L-
CalHllll, ~1 HR-Phll•Clelphla, Sctvnldl (S)
A 10,0'l
Allrttl,"-'
Cincinnati 000 000 000-0 I 0
HOullOft 100 000 OOa-1 0 I
Solo, Hume (II encl O'IMrry, Nol•n Ill.
Kn epper •nel A•lll>Y W-KI'•-·· 2.0 L -
Solo, I l HR-Houston Wa111no Ill
A 11'21
.. tHT GAMI
04a•l,lr•Vffl
All•nta 000 oot O~I 1 I
San l'ranclKo 000 otl tta-4 • I
Pwrry, OM* (7), 8rtcllord Ill. Manier
Ill •lld Pocorobe1 Aleotaneler, Mint°" Ill
.... Mar W-Al••ander ).I L-Ptrr11. l•l.
$-Minton m HR-Sall l"ranc:IKO, Oen
111 HCO ... OGAM• GlaMi l, .,...,.,,
All•nl• 000 JIO 001 -~ 1 I
Sen Frtnc:lkO 000 Ill 10•-4 II 0
101191, llr•dlorcl 161. M•hler (1) •n<I eeMCSlcl, Wr\lllO>, Holland Ill Level .. (71
•"Cl 5_. w-.11.no 1 1 L 8o9o• ,.,
HRt-All•nte. Murphy Ill Horne r Ill
A 14,16'
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ana-197, Twln11
l'IHT04Ma
CALIPOltMIA MINHUOTA tltrlli.I ••r11a1
earew,111 '2 2 1 Waro,11 ' o o o
lurlesn,ta ' o 1 I WlllOft9,lb • O O o
Oa 11l"rd,rf s O O O C:.tllno,lll • I I 1 • Lyftn,Cf , o • o 5melley,u • o I o
laylor,4n 4 1 o o Acltrru.dh l 0 0 O Oll.c , 0 2 1 Gooclwn, lb 2 O O O
.. ftlquz,ll , 1 1 0 Halclltr,cl J 0 O 0
Grlcll,2b 2 2 O 1 J Ohftaln,c1 ~ : ~ ~
Cmpnrt,lb l 1 I I ~n~ .. :~.c I O O O
To1a11 ,.. 7 I ~ Tolll• 1t t 2 1
k«••YIMlfltl C:.lltornl• 000 CMI 110-1 MlnnHO\a 000 000 tol-1
IE -Irle"-L09 -Callfomla 10, Mlf>.
-••1.21-llaftlQutr JI-Smaller Hll-
Caallno 111. l -Grlcf\.C:.mpa.,...11.
CalHefNt I" M II aa II IO
Wll\(W,11) t J 1 I 2 •
Ml .......
l!flckMWI (L,0-2) ·~ J 4 VtrllM¥tft 4V> J J l 4 0
HI .. -.,., v.,,__, (Orlclll WP
Ver,_...,,.... T-2: II.
....... ,.....
0 01.... 200 ti) ___, " • St•lll• 010 010 000-4 • t
l("ullll and Helllll; "''""'-Clertl '61,
11ew•er m -Ne"°" w~ 44. l.-Parr•t1, 0·1 Hll1-5t•llle, 11111 (SI;
Oakltftd, Rntrl1111 Ill, Mvrplly (81.
A-IS,5'2.
11•1u1,0r ......
lotlon 021 000 1-7 11 0
lalllMore 401 000 ~ t 0
ecktnWY .,.. Alltft..,; 1'91mer, ,..._ oar• m. ,..._.,, 1t1 .,.. °"'"9Y· w-
Ecur11ey, 2·1. L-Stodt1are1, M . Hlll-
lattlm-, Slneltton ISi; ... ..,. Alla-m .• _,,.,....
11111 UYI l. Y-..e I
Toronto 002 • oot-1 7 0
H .. 'l'orll 000 GGO 010-1 1 0 Slltll end Mtilt; VftdtrWeod, l lrCI Ill and
O•tu, w .. 111 (I). W-Stl•b, l·I. L-
Ufl4ler .... :o-2. A-J7,J06
WlliltllNl,T .....
c111caoo 010 ooo D--d • o
O.lr•ll 100 111 ~ IO 1
l1lfnt, Farmer ltl and l.IMaft, Hiii (t);
Witco•, Studer 171, LOiiar 171 end Parrllll.
w -aur,., 2-0, L-Wllc.11. 2-2. S-flar""' m. Hlt-oetrolt, P•rrltll m. A-UAIO.
.,.._.. "· 11..,.1.1 K.•nat1 City 001 000 000-I t I
Mllwauue 020 201 U.-11 IJ 0
LHftard, K. lrett 111, ltrtftlY" t11 and
Groll; Lt~h. Cle¥el-ttl ... llM-
W-Lercll, J-0. L-LeOfltrCI, t.). Hltl-
Mllwtukee, Simmon• Ul, Thomu (0.
A-14,"'9
l ...... 4,llM99"J
T .. H 012 000 OG0-4 10 I
Clnel•nd 000 010 00>-4 t 0
MatlMk, Kern (I), JollftlOft Ill •ftd
SUn411tr11; 11-;lewn -Dlu.. w-11,1e_.., !,·l L.-J-,0-1.A-IJ,m
Top 10
AMllltlC4M LaAOU8
G Al It K f"R.
SlntlelOft, aaitlrnon II J1 t 17 .Mt
unotora, 9oltGft 12 4.5 I lt .en
l(emp, Oetroll IS M 4 a "11
L JOllntG>, CNceeo t 11 • 11 1111 lurro.,gM, SNtl.. t JI S 12 .117
Flt.k, CNcavo II M I 11 .m z..,., s.atue 1• 11 • n rn
Dlu ,Clelotl-11 la a 12 ...
Ev-, BollOft 12. '1 II IS :tS7 V•rrter, Cle¥el-II Joi I It .JSJ
"-11-Armn. C»llland, •. S1"91tton, ltl\I,,_..,
S, Sm•l .. y, Mlnnetola. S, lltMl, S.attlt, S;
Tlloma1. Mllwaukae, '· Nettlal, New Yotll,
'· "'"· """911, 4; Fllll, Cllclaeo,' 11-...WI• ArmH, ()el&lend, 22, Flsll, CN'890. 14;
loWrPfly, Oel&,_, ta; Smalley, M.._tolt,
12. Ly1111, ........ II. .......,.,1 ....... )
1(""911. o.111.-. .... Noni•. Otll~. ''°· Hort,°"'-• M , M<Gattr, 0.-...,.,
J ·O' Walla, Cl9'1elt ft' 2·•: L•rcll, 111mw ........ 2.0, .._-. ........ M ; ..,.,_, CNC-. J.O, K"""*'· Oa&leM, M.
lllATlOMAL L-GU8
0 A• It " """ Collll'\A, Cl1><lnNIU IS S7 II 2A .A21 fl~ftn, -Yortl 12 Cl • 1' .• llOM, Ptlll--"'• U .S t U ..,
Henderto11. OKlaoo u • J lt .• R•IMI, -trMI IJ !O 10 lt .ao Da•.on. _... u .. 11 11 .,
Hern•ndel, St Louil 11 .. I 1' .,.
MedloO, Plttsllu'9ft ' 31 2 II .m Ca rter. -•Ml II 4J 11 1S .J4'
Mo•••··· Olk.-• 2' 2 10 ,,.,, .._._
sc11mldt, PllNadtllllll•, s . car...-, ,,,_..
trul, '· De__,, MontrMI, '· Klneman.
New Yori<. 4. ~. PltttburYI,' ._ .......
~llmldl, Plllladtltlflla, U; c.ancepckwl,
CIMl11nall, 11, Ganey,~ 11; CatW.
Montreal, II, ...,-,, St. LOY!•, II; HencMcll.
51 Louil , 11, Mu'DllY, Au-.. II; Calllall. San Franc:IKO, II. ""''"'"'"._ ..... , va1 .. 1IM4a, DM9ff•, 4-t; .. nde•-·
MontrMI, M , Ctrltafl, "" ..... ""'9. M ;
SorenMfl, SI. \Auls, >.o; ....,..., ~ >·•: Rooen. Monlreal, 2·0; llllode11,
Pltllbur911, J-0, ltl1><on, St. L.oul1, 2-0;
Sl'tlrley, St ~. J.O; Ctmll, AllaftW. M :
ler111yl, C!Mlnnall, 2-0, K~, H--·
l-0; Jlltel"'9, a.d9tn. I ...
ICBA ... ndlna1
W L T •• CAI Stale Full•r10n 12 2 0
LOyOla II S 0 I 1.""1 IMcll SIN t 7 0 4 PtppoNI.. ., • 0 41111
UofS...Dlteil • 7 t M
UC lrvlN 7 t O • UC Seftla ... ._.. 4 12 1 t
C.I Stott Lo1""91oe J II 0 t T~1.._
U. of SM Dia9D et Gal llMt .. ultenDll Cal State._... ltacll al ,..,._rc11 ..
Ca l Stet• LOI Anoelff at UC l•t• ...... ,.
Loyol9-M9..,.._I al UC lrvlM
T_.,.. .....
Oelet!IW.• 1.11 ....... lt ............ L.-,,....... LA H..-ret ..... Mlllke
""""""'cc"~·
• &. ..
' 1 I t I a I 1 a • 1 a ' 1 t I t 1 4 4
1 4 4
........ CoftfereftOe
IOVTil•llN OIYlt.ICNll
• L. .. ..... _. ti 7
'-10 .... CC t t '" ~ ··~ ... ._, 'It • •TM•"N OIVllfO.. Sen..,_.. 11 7
Clllw " 7 ",,,.,.,. ' t t
Olattay • 12 ' '-"Y'•--~ .. ~ ..
... ._ .. OIMfey ............. "" ~ .. left Dlt9DCCalCltrw
Wtttml-.. ...,.
,.Ollfttoln Valley
Marina
Huntlfttllaft leecll ...... _.,...,,..,. T__,.,._
W L ,. 1 ••
• J J ' . ' ' 1 •
' 1 ' I t t
EClltOft .. Wellmllwt.er (J:1')
,_t.aiftValltyat....,.,.Ha"-CJ:U)
Hllfttl ..... llMdtltL ~rtnaat e1a1r fllelll
Il l
Rlverakle Eftduro ,.ce Top llnl.,_,.. lft ~y'1 Lot ,........
T1 ...... r.,.. • .......,. eftdutt at uw 1~111
ltlv .. tlcM l....,MtlMal It_..,,
I. JOIW\ RtlP*lek, ........ ... """ lv»y, ~ 11«11, ,..,_ .. Turtle, ttt
1-"6.7 1o1.a1 lnllta, IOf.217 "'9fl ·-...
lP90CI. 12.1 eac..1111--of vtcwy. 2. Jeflft ...... ~11111, Ga., ...
JOlln P-. Jr .. u-eltille, O..,,.....,...
Turbo, l" 1-
J. ll°'*'Y AaNI, CNU90, and 9'1M It-
"""• H ...... l'eB, Ill., ,..,_ .. T...,_,
1'71..,a.
'· lob 0.-rel-, ""°""""' View, Calll., Rtlllh K-C.OOU, Loi,,.,.._, -9'e¥
W-•· Oil-CJIY • ...._ .. T-, t• .... t. Hurtey Haywoocl, JtCl-1tllle, l'la.,
-l rwcm L.awft, S..ttle • ...._ .. T...,., , .. 1.,..
6. David t-., E......, Mete....,,
Swlllarland, llftCI ---· 81 -.-. IMW M-IC. 1• 1-. 7. Onldc--1, T ...... Pia., .. ._
Miiier, .-.~. N.Y~ IMl#M-1, 11• ...... I. Al~"-• Mlerftl, l'i.., TeR¥ Oard9, 111111..nl, l'la., .,. ..w-a..., ..._., l'la.,
9MW M-1, 1111-.
t . Chrla Ctrtl, a.-ty Hit .. , --'"" A4lam1, Loi.,.._, Ma!lla, 171 ..,.._
10. car• MlfWI, c.,... """'-~
l!rstacl, ...,.."" Hllll, Md C:.'-~ LOI Aftt9!0t,. Jl'wlcN Turtle, 177 1-.
II Joe 09vler, S-. Alie,.,.. Al u-.
Jr., A1""""*""'9, IMW M•I, 1741-. u . ,..,.,... carney, wlclllto, •lld Dk.II
0.1te,,..,,. Wklll .. , ~ vc. 174 ..... I). Sam .._.,, .,__, C-....... ,...
Stiff, Slllll,_., N.J., ~ l X T ..... , 171
lap~.
14 Olonplanl -.1, Mllafl, Italy, ...
Jocll•ft Mau, Col09M, WHt ~-·· PoncMT-, 171 .....
" ltogw ~· ... ~. s.c.. .... A,_ ,._, ll•lt6tll. N.C., llMma
ltX·7, 160 lapa.
J
Coll9clecrew
lat ...... 0.. oi-11
Vartlty •ltM -1. UC l,.,IM , •:17.0; t
ttontord, •:21.1; J. U. IMI Dlet9. 6:U..t.
Junior nrtlty t'9lll -I. OrOfttll Coell.
•:tt.O; 2. UC lrvlM, t !•.I; J. U. Sell ()legf, •=•s.•. 'r•MMTwl •lllllt -1. Or .... ca.., •:•.1.
2. 5\afttord, • 1'U, J. U Ian Dlteil. •:SU; 4.
UC lrvlne, 1·00.t.
Novi• ettM -1. Oranet Coalt, •:a.o; 2.
UC Irvine, 7:0..t.
N•vlce '--I. 0r.,.. Ceatl, 1.00..t, 2.
1ta11tord, 7: 27.0.
Zillgitt and Wri3ht MERCEDES -JAGUAR -
VOLVO .
insur.mct agcnttt and broken
Manufacturers:
Insurance costs rising•
Contact us for competitive quotes on Proper
ty. Liability. Difficult Products Llabihty
Commercial Auto. Group Lth and Medical
111 well a s Wo rker 's Compens atio n
lnaurance
Bob Guffin
3')J1 Mac Arthur Boulmrd
Newport lkadt. (.a 92660
C7W>7SMOS5
SPECIALISTS
"'9e 011 Fihrw/$14.tl OH C .....
CHICK OUI CO...mTIVI NICIS
ARST Ii GRAND ARCO 835-4849
1222 L I st loff I Fwyl ... bce,t 1-.
PUBUC NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE
8·1739
SYNOPSIS OF THI! ANNUAL STATEMINT Atuka ..... 1c AJIUr•nc. eompe .. ,, ... , .. .,,
Stt"t# AncfMW4tl!J Alalka MIOI Year •ncMd Dtumber 11, 1MO
Tot.I actmlttld ass.ts $109, 1I0,678
Total ll•bllltJes 91,117,594
Speclal surplus funds 0 !l!!ll!!•s==:11:11!!!1!!!!::::::===~!!tJ C•Pltal SMifd-up/Guer•nty C•plt•ll StatutorY Deposit 1,024,090 .Gross pald·tn and contributed · 1urplus 1,75' ,"'4
Uf\asalgned funot (1urplu1) · 1.Jl1,560
Surplus as regen:fs pollcyholeltn 17 ,363,GM Income for tM YHr ~51,163 Olsbur11menu for tM VHr S2,S90,112 We hereby certify that the •bow ttemt .,.. In
1cc:ordance with U\e. Annu11 Statement for the
year WICMd December 31, 1980 made to the Insurance
Commissioner of the State of C.llfornla, pur1u1nt to
l•w.
•
~ ........ , ...
MYf' ... T_, 0., ( ...... W..U • 18-1111• IClllt (f'_....,..11 ta-o.lle Ml~llal c-.., Atlt.!J H 'lllltl ,..._all
......... ,, ._""' Keltiiir (~II o~.,...._,...._...,,k ......
let co..-. WttCll Ja~ca "IC'lfftlttllft CMaM, Ari.LI; fOaUY YtNlll COtrrl ... I; C-
lteelOtl' """91119r INWM, ArlLl; ,_.Ila
v11c11a C0Wi•t11 "'"' e1e11tat'd tMna, .r.rla,I ; IHll.-0..lrff , ...... ,....._ ... ,.
Wetet polo
II PINA CUf' TO\l"NAM•NT ,. u.e a.oca ..... , ...... _,.... ..... . le-"' ... "-" ltuUlt I 0 4 14
Uftllad S&ala I J 2 t--d
"u.la "°'"" ~ I, l(allll-I, 1¥-I, ,.,,_ .. ,au. 1, MaftCIJttlltr '·
TretJ .... I . U111lod Sta\H 1Corl119 RoMr\lon 4,
S~I.
4t-e-J,OOO • OTM8•1COllH y.....,.,,..10, s.eln t
Auttralla U, ..... rla I
Cuba '. Hllfloery • TOMl ... T'llCK80UL8
4 p.m.__,n "''· HUftlltrY J::ao-c.Ala ¥1 YU90tlavla 1 p.m .--....rla vt. ltutal•
t . JO-Au.tralla ¥&. Vnl"41 Sta\H
NBA otayoffa
ClONPllti"NC·l PINALI , ..... .._,
aAST8 • M c::ot1 fl a It a ltCI ,....., •• iCar.a
PllllaeltlpNa 107, .. Ion 105 IPllll-lpN• ............ ,." ........ .,. . ._
Phll-pNa•I ...... ,.,...,.,o_
lot_ .. Pllllade•• (lfMCe ... rrl ......,, .. ,,
PhlladMpNa al iloltofl (If MCttMry)
\\, W•IT••N c::ottP•ll8MC• ..... .,.,1car9
How•..., 100. K•nsa• CJtr H '"-1 ... _.... •11 ....... .,..o-"--.. K.,_, CJly ...... .,. . ._
lta-Otyat......., IN M<_.,I .......... ,.
"'-1IOll M "-'City (It MC~)
NHL
QUAltT81tl'INAL. llOUMD , ............ , ......, •• ac.r..
Ca ... ,., •, ""'"*•• I ICA ... rr wlM _.....,,
laMll'INAL ROUND , ............. , T....,.,._
MY lt ..... MNYl..-.a Ml~alCaieWY ,,...,..,,._
NYll ....... atNYlll ...... t
Ml-.alCaloarY ....,..,..o_
HY l1 ........ atNYltt19rt ......,. .. _
cai .. ryetMl-T.....,,a..,.
HY lll~at NY Rt119trt
Ctl .. ry al MINWIOta
~y,May 7
NY 1ta1111era o\ NY lllanfera (If ftOC....,.,,
MlflMlotaal Celvary Ut MC-ry) ....,...,Meytw s.i.r. a..r 1t
HY llltftdert at NY lttftterl (II
MC....,.,)
C:.teory .. Ml,_IOta (II ,__yl T....,,.._,,.
Ny "'"'"' a t NY ltlt ftdert (If N(....,y)
Ml,_...al~y(Knec.....-,1
LPGA toumament
(.at e6r Ml• If ..... Ale.)
.. .,. ~ llS,000 '7·11---
J•M l laloell, M.IOO 70~
Allee Miiier, '7 .000 714W7-J07
Donna ~.u.ooo 11.1~10
.. atty H-. $3,700 71-72.......:tl
N•n<y ~I-Hon, IJ,700 1....._.~11 ,._, lartlttt. 12.IJO 71.704~2
Katlly Mar1111-12,710 7).71...a-412
Katlly Mer1111, '2.710 1).71~12
llelM Hand, U,710 71·724t-212
Marva SWMl!eflekl, S1,7JO 70·72·7~1
Janet A1t11. 12,no 1"*~1
LYM,,...,,,.. S1,t311 1,..._7o--212
l(alfty ,....._all, Sl,'20 71·7M1-1'1J
Catlly lteynolda, Sl,'20 11 ..... 1~11 Jud'f ltanklft,S1,M2 74·12*-'H K.,..0'9'~ .. ,AC2 1 .. 11~• a-a MUt»lla,$1 ... 2 16*71-114
Seftdra l'•I.._, SI.Ml 7~71-414
. JoAM Wttl'lllm, 11 ... 2 70-71-1~14
OW'lt J-. II.OU 7).7.....a-JIS O.l*le _,.11,$1,0&S 7Hl-6t-21'
H.I . Duntr. SI.OU 7>-71 71-215
JoAM Car,.r, Sl.IM' 7Mf.71-2U
Myra V111 Ho.-9, $1,G45 71-7Hl-11S
J-\ Col-., SI.OU 71-70-74-215
NASL ......, •• lear.a
krt '· San .i... 0 C.-4,T ...... yl
Fer1 UIUdtrda .. 2, At-. 0
WaalllftllOI> 4, TorOftto 2
Portland 2. ea1..,., 1
ECl-4, $NII .. J T ......... ._
Noga"'"~ T--y'•O-Clllc ..... MontrMI
Surf at•tl•tlc• sare..,...-
c a11tornl• 0 I -I
S...JOM 0 0-0
Scorlftl -I. Own totl ITOfty -·· San JoM),tl 2' Sholl -Wt 17, Saft JOH It; S.Vff -Surf
(Mayff) 7; Un.,.. (Hewlftl •; ...... -
lurf 20, San JOM It, OfflldH -Surf S, SM JoM 5; c;ornar klcu -5'111 •. ta11 J ... s.
At1eft0an<e -11,.6*5.
8fffteh H•rd Court ................ ...........
Yl<tllf fW.tl ......... T-IY. '4.._.. _. ........ .....
J• CMtt• ...... AIMldl. f.j, ........
Le11nd•toumement c....--1 ............ ""' ~ ... ,_., .--.. w. ...... . CLA•ff ..._,".-, ~-wlflt ...... ,
0.-..l'IMll
L.tlttr•Kell "-•II ci.t. Tom OllMf•
It ... , T_,.._, M, ·~
Wom9n'• toumement CltMMtlal ........... , ...... ....... CIHll Suri L.layd dtt Mtrtlllt
Nnr.tlle¥9, H, M . (Li.yd wlftl .n.-,
NtWttlllMI wlnl 116,0001.
Olef toumam9nt
f'ldllc·tt ..............
i
I
Tim Mayottt Citenfof'dl 11et. Scott Dalltl -!
<Stanford). 14, •·2.
O....fl ... 11
Jeff "'-Mika Falllerll CSlantorCI) *'·
Jollll oav1 .. 11a1,. w11 .. n11orw tUCLA), '"'·
..2 ... 2. _.., ........................
Cllrl1 Dvnll dof. GleM ,..lrollk, M , M .
OMMetfl1•19
Jerry Ven Ll,...·Ttltl LtMard dtt. ll.-n
Von'I Hof..Daue Adler, 7-S, 74. ._, ............ , ......
Tin• Mocllll\llll Cltt. LI....., Mone, .. 2,
24 ... 2 . .,_. ............ o......
Mor-SUI Armel*'· Cherie l(ay·ltelllfl
Kelln ... 2, .. 2.
ca aitt~-~....-..
Scllotttl«4Wflelcl (0r"'9f Coaltl ... . Mlcfltal~ IStlU Monleal, 4-4, ..a ... ,.
T .. m teert1: 1. 0r .... Coast, 11; 2.
Fullertffl, II, J. PUldena, 10.
Holiywood Park
IUNOAY'I 1181ULTI
,.,,. ...... ., ...., ..... -... I
l'lrtl race -Fl"\ s-(Mcc.trrOlll,
S.JO, 2AO, 2.CI, Arc:ovllle (lhlrada), •.oo,
J.00; El Tiburon (Gllllvan>, s.oo.
Second race -Ca11dy'1 Va lenll11e
(Hewlty), UO, •.JO. JAG; .. y LIM Olrl
(Cfl..,....I, 211.CI, tAO, \/a lllna l lue 111'1~
col. J.ao. n dally double 11·101 oelCI
lll.40. '-
Tlllrd race -1-MarM\ 0.."'4' (H-ieyJ,
S.60, J.JO, 1.211. T'aHI< Patter11 (M<H•,...l. 6.00, SMI, a.Stmlnole Kid (~ll'<tYI, SAO,
J.20, 1.20; e -c-ltd " uacta 12-11 paid 167.50
l'ourlh rau -Dorcaro 10.•-• .. .,.>. :M.ao, u.:111. JMI, L'Oh••-(H•wltyl, JAO,
l .to; H-allOll Sand (Pl1><ay>, J.20. Fiith race -Jel't Dell• IPl11eay1, 6M,
J Ml, JAG, Terra Mita lMcHar11 .. >. I'°·
6 .0, Trkky Fl11HM (Wini-I, II.to lJ H eel• ,, .. ,paid 5111.00
SI•'" roca -Early Sell .. , (Pl1><•r>. SAO. l to, 2 . .0, Kine of the Ra<>eh (McHa,.....),
• .0, J .O. Sllmmll llun CMcCarron), 2.IO
~venlh race -Fencr Mis.a 1si-mallar),
It.to, .. 40. S 00. OIKonlr (0.1....,., .. a.,.l,
S 00, 4 JO, Oracln (Haw .. yl, • 20 U eucla n .. 11>ald JD so. n Pl'" SI• 110-2.J..+2.21 l>eld ,,.,.n oo
wllh lhr• wlnnlnll tlclle\t hi• lloott). '2 Pick Six contolallon IM'ICI MO)AO wllll 117
wlnnlno Ikkela Cllw 11or ... 1. E l9htll race -El ....... Stl\Cl•H IH•• .. YI.
II 40, •.Cl, • 40; Glor._ So"9 (Toro), JAO,
l 40, s..-Time Guy (McC:.Honl,' 211
Nl11111 race -Le!IQy tMc>Ur9.,.1, II Cl, •.oo. J 40, H•' 0tw111 (McCtrronl, 2.IO,
2.40, Lett Go to EdW•rOI (C.ntan-1, l IO.
U Hecla (S-J> pelcl 51' 00.
Allenoanca 40,ll7
Misc.
w .. tceftd tren••dlon•
IOCC81t .._,......, leccw LHt ..
ST. LOUIS nEAMl!ltS -llllMd Mtlwlr
Scll•.,.1'1:1. IOllllt, to•__,,.., c-racl.
Women'• gymnHttce
IOUTM co.llT C:OfU111t8NC•
Qeflllllt •• , ....... c..s..1>1..--.al
THm tcorff: I. °'Himont, l».IS; 2.
Or•,. C-ll, IU.70; J. Goldltfl W-. 122.0S;
4. "" DlatD Meta. 106.05. aa1a11ee 11tam -I Hoffman <Or.,..
Coa111I, t.O, 1"1-eatrd• -t. J-
(Orot"'*"I, US; Uneven perallel INIA -
I. Olllwrt tGrolamorrtl, .... , v ... 111ne -1. s.r1,., (Ooicl9n-), .. ,,.
All·•~ -1. ~ JOl'lftton 10-
mofttl, ~.JO; 2. Lrnn Hotfmtft (Or ...
Coaal), IUO, J. Tert T.-(0r"'911 CN•l,
11.10; 4. °"" Olll..ert (~).JUD;
S. Terri Mamlltt (Or .... Coaltl, JIM; 6.
14!Mft Sllrlneer IOoldllft Wnll, Jl.il.
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE t
NOTIC• OI' l'llOPOllD CNANeal ...
TK8 "a•UL.ATIONI O• TK8
D•f'UfMSNT
OP .. OOOAMOH"ICUL.TU1t8 .. ........... .,,., ...
WOMIN HONORED -Among women named most influential in
1980 by the Panhellenic Council at the Univenity of Southern
California are Princess Grace of Monaco, actl'ela Goldie Hawn,
former Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, Finl Lady Nancy
Reagan, Britj.sb Prime Miniater Margaret Thatcher and Nobel
Peace Prize Winner Mothef Teresa. Othen listed were Los An1eles
Rams owner Georgia Frontiere, psychologist-author Irene
Kassorla, Philippines Flrst Lady Imelda Marcos, and actress·
1ln1er Barbra Streisand.
Re<igan Thatcher Morher TereMJ
Viet refugee total Beach ban
up in Hong Kong on Frisbee
reversed HONG KONG CAP) -The number of Viet-
namese refugees arriving in Hong Kon1 has in·
creased this year but officials say another masa
exodus i.s unlikely.
They reported 1, 7o.& Vietnamese reached here
b~ boat between Jan. l and April 12, compared
wath 1,064 from January to the end of April in 1980.
New arrivals told immigraUoo officials that
the increase is largely due t.o worsening Jiving con·
ditioru1 and forced conscription in Vietnam.
Pot issue not on lxdlot
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Another inJtiative to
soften California 's
penalties for marijuana
possession has failed to
make the ballot.
Secr etary of State
March Fong Eu said it
was the sixth time since
1972 that an initiative to
cut marijuana penalties
has failed.
The measure ,
sponsored by Edwin
Adair III of Sunland,
would decriminalize
''pos s ession
New ruling
transportation or
cultivation of marijuana
for personal use '·
Adair turned in only
26,574 signatures, all in
Los Angeles County.
Signatures of at least
346,119 registered voters
were needed to qualify
the initiative for the
June 1982 ballot.
Under current law,
possession of an ounce
or less of marijuana can
result in a fine of up lo
$100. Possession of more
than an ounce can lead
to either a jail term and
fine or a pri so n
sentence, depending on
the amount and othe r
circumstances.
GALVESTON, Texas
(AP> -Frisbee lovers
have gone on a fling,
forcing City Council
members to back down
from a beach ban on the
flying plastic discs.
An ordinance ap-
proved in March made lt
illegal t.o play FrUbee or
ball w ithout prior
permission from a
lifeguard but council
memben amended the
measure to include only
games using bard ob·
jecta. ··Beach lovers no
longer have to have
permwloo to have fun
anymore," lamented
Pete Fredrikseu, a
forqier councllman and
chairman of FLING -
Fun Liberation in
Galveston -after the
original ordinance was
passed.
But the Frisbee lobby
managed to persuade
. the councU t.o change its
mind so that now. as
Fredrik.sen put it after
the amendment passed,
"Galveston beaches are
safe for run again." SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -A irower who
obtains workers throu1b
a farm labor conlHctor
can be held responalble
if the contractor
interferes with a
worker's ri1bts, tbe
state Supreme Court bu
ruled. The 4-2 decision
by ActiDI Chief Justice
Ma thew Tobrioer upheld
enf orcement of an
Atrlcultural Labor
Belations Board ruUna.
-:i=.' s~~~lA-aebi~· .... ....
IA1T%18•BOfll
SNTt4 & TVTMIU
WISTCU.. CHAPll
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
6'6-9371
PIHCI leOTMaS
' SNrntl'MOlnU.aY
627 Main St.
t-tAnt~ach
j .\~
-.., OAT L ~ -----
•r.=i:...o~ _:, ::
low .., '°"" lour ~ -·
I WHRTOY I
' 11 I I I I
I "TI\sl'Wt7c; \mm .. r r I' r I' I
·~~AN=Lmm I I I I I J
SCRAIM.ETS Anewer1 In CtaMlflce-
tton 1002
PVBUC NOTICE .......
NOTICll Of' TaUST•&'I ~· ~TO..__ .. , .. , ..
NEW
BU81NES8MEN
· Contee\ th• ' Y
PILOT ..fof tnfoe, on ,...,c1ng the oo.1ntr
retaulrement• for
uttng • Ptottt1ou1
· 8u1tn ... Neme.
~ DT.132 I
5
' 7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D·
· 1NDEX
, ..... , .... Cal
642·5&71
IMDFllWl ~:.: .. ·:··.::;. ~ •. : .. :· IN ·-..... .. i5 !QUA&.: HOUSING . . . . = . OPPORTUNITY ............ \ .. & :: .. : ..... : r~:.: .. :.·:;
AM • •••• -... . .... w........ 19 ............... :::
IW.ESTtU W..,.fwl.i. · ~~ C.•ttial 1 C..-1••-=;'~=··· ~._F,,
*"" "-'"''' ~-. ....... Del«\,hlot\ ~~~ OllltlllUr,.. ~l:S.::: R..i&ouuw....i IOTA LS
, •.. ...,, .......
All real eat.Ate ad·
verthed lo tbl1
newapaper II 1ubjeet to U. Pedenl Fair lfoul.
lq Act al 19 wbicb
mak• lt lllepl to ad· vtrtlM "an,y preference,
llmltaUoo, or dll· crlmloaUoo bated on race, color, rellaloo,
Hll, or a.aUonaJ ortatn.
or an lntmtioo to make
any aucb preference,
llmltatloa, or dh·
crimlnatioo."
't'bla newspaper will not
koowln1ly accept any advertisln1 for real eatate which it in viola-
tion of the law. ....... ~ ........ ~ ....... rw..u.i ~Pion ~" .. u.r ~"6111 ~uar ~,.,.,..
~, ........ lllllllli ........
~u .. r Alb=-,.,.. rw. w Uftf ._
"-16 loard ......... -... a-....... ......... ROlltall
Vetlltio9 R.-&11 ._...."' .... Ow-for Roat 011\ttR...ul ~--., llldiollrial l\othl f:w.--..., "4Malo
IOSOtESS, INVEST·
.. -ICZS 11111 ---.. --.. .. '"' 4UO
UDt 4J»
UDt
BIOIS: Actterthen
....... cMcll ...... ...., -,..,... .,.. "°" h ........ ,. ,....
DAILY PILOT •1 •11
labllty ... .... first
l•cerr•ct IH.rtlo• ...,.
!: ~--~1111111!119--•I :;: Ho•nfwS.
~ ...................... . = ,....,... 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MOil, FINANCE lG05 EASTSIDE =~ 1 :~ 4-PLEX =-:T....:"'• : Flxer ! All 2 Bdrms •
ll-.y walltod• ~ walk to all shopping. •wu..-.Tn·1 Mm F I •-uwcruE .. TS, antaetic nveetment.
-" U111 "' Only $225,000. Call for POSONALS & more details. ~2313
LOST & FOUND
SIOO
Ult ----.. -
--.u --.. -----... --975 -----~ ----... -.. .. --------tllO
fiat fiat rt• ti.It tltD f11' n•
THE REAL ESTATERS
V11W o ..... w11 CS'f'Y
3 Bdrm Cliff Haven
beauty. Owner will COD·
alder all reuoo.able of· fen. 2 SPAS, one indoor,
one o utd oor , 2
fireplaces, used brick entertainen pool area.
Cabana, ftre rtn1. view
Saddlebacll Mountains.
Fublon lalaDd, light.I.
Newly remodei.d, new
ldtcbea. Call today for ·~m~
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631 -6990
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
The hilhly decorated
coodo! 2 Bdrm, adult.I
only. Clubhouse and
awimmllll pool. 2 CAR
GARAGE. Super aharp.
Only $117,9(1). Call for
more detaila, 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS -1---------•Jt -----ll1'0 --
OCIAMROMT
i Bdrms, 2 ba, unfurn.
New. S850 yrly.
IAYNOMT
3 Bdrm. 1 ba, unfum.
llmt cood. '950 yrly.
CHAMMB.MOHT
3 Bdrm, I ba, wum.
'750 yr)y.
associated
0111 1-I IJ ', l.lt h 1 .. ( .ll '1
• .,.. '"'I I' II
GIANT
HOME!
STROLL TO
NEWPORT
BEACH CbarmlDI. lldna. CosJ
UvlD1 ~ featutee> wood ~ ftteplacc.
Owner .w Mlp nau~.
Only ::O*· Hurry, tallf'f
THE :REAL
ESTATE RS
CASA DB.110
leallM Mlw C1•du Xlftt terma. in. interest
for a yean. 12lJZ £d,
~.~~-cloae to Harbo~
OPEN WEEKENDS 1~5
641-1'91; 831"'3161, •It·
YOU CAN SEE
BLUE
PACIFIC
From t his Cameo
Highland• beauty .
Priced to sen. 1339,000.
Only 10% down with
owners auiatance. One
level 3 Bdrm plue bu1e
yard. Call now. 67MS50
THE REAL
~STATE RS
CAREFUL
IT'S LOADED!
4 Bdrm, 3 ba, rormal dm· ing rm, ramily rm, 3
rireplacea, 3 car gar.
View of ocean and walk-
ini dlstance to beach.
With $45,000 down, this beauty can be yours to-
day. Call now. 536-9311
ALLSTATE
\• REALTORS
SEMSATIOMAL
BACHELOR
PAD!
Somerset townbome.
Fantullc livln1 area
with free 1tandlna
fireplace. 6 atalned &lua
windows. Plantation
abut.ten. 2 Bdrm~ mir· rored master suite, 2Ya
batha. A must see.
$15t,900. 54&-23U
THE :REAL ESTATE RS
NO DOWN!
OR $10f000
DOWN!
Owner will carry 990.000
AITD or no 4own. owner
will help you buy "You
must q11allfy for loan". 3 Bdrm, l~ bath, up·
1raded. Double 1arage, call for more details.
~2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
~ .......
Take over •.ooo loan and owner will carr y a
2nd OD this IJ'Ut 4 bdrm
beauty. Only $129,500.
C•ll now mmo.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
WESTCLIFF
A mutt._, Covered en·
try to t.bll maplftcent 5
Bdrm 3 bath home. Hut•
family room, brick
fireplace, formal din1n1.
BulltlD breakfut bar.
Beautiful pool and
Mparate •P9· Gu BBQ
and llnJlll. liaay, maG7 utru. Ollly SUt,900.
Call for mon ctet.U.. ••
NI-ml
Sf29,500 '8500 total cub netdtd
to close e.crow. Leatt
expeoahe condo lo
Newport Beach .
Privacy, -adult.I only.
Call for mon detalll.
54&-281'
THE REAL ESTATERS
THE REAL
ESTATERS
PMNIULA POINT IMCllloNr r.anOFamlc vlew at wedae;lrom prime
arae lot, ,4 bdnn, 3 bath cuatom home.
J'lOO aq. ft. reaturt.na tnarll\e room,
entry, llviDI room, dtplbg room,
buJJt.lnJ, etc. ,1,385,000.
IAYNONr
We have several fine homes with pier &slip, starting at $1,500,000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALT OR
i I ., I. I ,. • t' ~ • ) t I (J !
~
I, o/ rJ11wpar/
REALTORS
'71-1111
CAllll OPPORTUNITY Jal.; e
frOtFHslYe 9d ......,, '"' ...... flra
lxcelMt H••lt.r.. tdi1 H , A._..•• efflcet md loh ef pwo .. 111 d •tltluc• ......... c .......... v..-, .. ,11-1111.
COLI OF NIWPOIT llAl.TOIS
21111. c .... ..., .. c.-.. w..
671-1111
...
LANI COLOMM. NOMI
'Five bedroodl, tbree bath, dormers
and paned wiodows: Ut• new earth tone decor, terrific ftnancln& and
walking diatanc• to MeH Verde
Co~ntry Cbab. ~ true value at $249,000.
U,._l()UI: H)Mf:i -
REALTORS,675-6000
1443 !Mt eo..t Hip-.y, Cw-del Mar
WI MAYI 47 OJ THI ld'r MIMTI tM TOWlt.
GOLICOUISI
4 Br home direct on
Men VerdeC.C. The on·
1Y thlnl' better than the
view 11 the 10.H "' financtn1. Call John.
&#-50N
MIATASAPIM
Deacribea th1a a Bdrm 2
bath condo In Woodl1de
vmaae. overlooklna
pool and park .
Beautlfully up1raded
carpet• and floorin1.
TAKE OVER
EXISTING FINAN·
CINO AND OWNER
WILL CONSIDER CAR·
RYING 2NDTD. Aikin& •,500. hr ao appol.nl·
ment to He, eall 5t0-ll.51
!. HERITAGE
RE/\UORS ,:,:tt.~~Je=m ~!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! house la the crown Jewel i:;
of Spyflau Hilt. i--------Decorated in a tradi·
Uonal 1tyle, It features
ete1ant wallpapen, win· ~
dow covertna-. carpet •111•
wood noorin&. You can --enjoy the 1pectacular 7 ... .,,
ocean view from the •
IAYCllST YOUlllSTYALUI Uvina room, or muter , ........ Cc:M ... I kitchen, famlly room,
Spectacular 4 bdrm. IM CAMIOSHOllS aulte and from the $221.000
bome on quiet au.et. Lowest priced fee •ilD· custom pool and spa In Walk to bay « beach.
Pool, formal dlnln& rm., pie opportun.lty. Gnat t h e e l e 1 a n t I y Great locaUoo. 2 Bdrm.
lar1e paneled 1ame a11umable lit TD. En· landscaped baclr yard. 1 bath, ~place In the
room wlth ,ool uble and joy afternoon aun and 1925.000 II vln& room. Flexlble
prof e 11 Ion a I bar . vlew1 from wood deck. 3 D.M. W.-'d IJty term1.
Perfect home for ao ac-be a u t if u 1 p ri Y ate 644-ttfO 75'·1616
UvefamUy.SMf.500. beachet. Only SMl,000.1--------~~~~~~~~
Calltoday,87M550 EAST S&DIRXB i::
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
A Division or CAMEO SHORES Harbor Investment Co , Outatand.in& ocean view
ASSUMI
LOW Mr.LOAM
A11ume '83,000 loan at
lCW.%, owner wlll carry
2nd and 3rd. No qualify.
Inf! Sharp 3 bdrm
home. Family room and
home on fee land. 3
Bdrm, family room,
formal dlnlnl room. $ Ba. Gor1eou1 pool.
Larae lot i.n prestl&ioua
area. S725.000
2 Cireplacu . Only ,
1132,500. Call now
979-5370
What a meu ! Brina i---------palnt brushes. shovelt llC.nOMIST .• and rakes and make $$$ for prestiae Lido real
OD tbll barpln. Only estate omce. Handle .. -ooo w • 1 t c II phones Is executive level
-· · 00 t as · a cllenta. Lite typloe skilla now. & fillne required. Wall,
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714.631.6990
MISAYaDI
673-7300.
IAYCllST CUITOM NOMI
Deslped for entenalftln1 and famil)'
Uvtiia.' lledrooma. hU&• llvlni room, lar1e f o.rmal IUnlnr and f•mib' rooms.
Gourmet kitchen. Ma1ter aulte
separate froni other extra·l•ra•
bedrooms r1eaah1a privacy ln
pool-1lted b ck yard. Great t.erms.1
$395,000. WUUY M. TAYLC»a CO.. IMLTOll
2111S•J_... ........
MIWN?IT CINTll. M.& 644-49 IO
LOWDOWN
Venaillell 1 bdrm/1ludfo
pentboUM condo with
lar1e Ul'nnable k>ana. SlOl,tOO. Call today
9'/9."70.
ALLSTATE
ltEALTORI
OUTSTANDING
SELLER PJNANCING
AVAILABLE
Dramatic Alta Vista
contemporary 3
bedroom, 2\.'J bath home
wilb 1weepint ocean and
nortl) cout views. Super
financin1 on th1.I one!!
-000. 41111-33!1
Lingo •"'b""'
cmHOMI
3 Br 2~ S., den l year
old condo. No. C.M .. 1740
1q fl, decorator'• de·
ll&ht, aaaume lat, owe
2nd. $177.500
EASTSIDE C.M.
3 Br 2 Ba, vaulted cell·
inp, frplc. corner lot, owe w /20% dwn.
Sl•ll~
IEACH DUPLEX
2 Br l Ba & 1 Br 1 Ba.
Fee land, walk to beach.
OWC at 12~% Int.
w l'!H'lo dwn. $220,000
C.M. TRIPLEX
Three 2 Br 1 Ba unit.I,
1ara1e1, patios, 1ood
location • income, owe
w /$50,000dwn. $185,000
EASTSIDIVA a Br 1~ Ba. family rm.
alley aeceaa, 2 frplc,
Meda TLC. SlJl,000
OWNm
DISMtATI
Corona del llar Duplex.
Huce owners unit. 4 car
aaraae. Submit all of·
fen now. MUltaell! .
@
' SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631·6990
SAMDDOLLAIS
Thil 8 Bdrm 2Bdrm
duplex preeenta a areal
Investment opportunity
ln West Newport. The
location ol thla property
Conly 2 Iota from the ocean and 1tepa to t.he
bay) coupled with the
unbelievable flnanclnf
make thla olfertna re-allaUc and 1mart. A.Ill·
J.n1 only rim.ooo. ............ ...,
'7W700
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment! Two
2 Bdrm un.lta. one with
fireplace! Current ln·
come-'740 mo. Ftnanc·
Inf! One year bome·p~
tectlon plan lncld.
Hurry. thla won't laat !
646-7171
THE ~EAL ESTATERS
S3 597.50
•
UNDEI llAll£T
••••••••••••-••••••••• ~!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~I Collet• Part Syracute owe STl&HT = PlanfeatureeJ~tt MOTE BY OWNEll·IBf. lll4Ba, den. 2 Ba. larp faau.ay
Auume lat TD w 12 •101,100. Hl·H'4 or kitchen. Aikin& tood'a
$10,000 dwn foe uu. dart· 1157.21577 under market. Call tbr
lnl .!.aide 2 Bd condo --------• d«&lla.
w /lra brick frplc. Cozy C OMVBTllU
1tep-down Uvin& rm,
nice patio. Joyce Waltu
131-Ula
RVMta}(
111·\fl••H-.
COLDENT•H
COllDMllUMS
Larae private deckl " paUoe. Only 3 left. Xlnt
term1. 13% interest for J yean.
2000 MEYEB PLACE
OPEN DAILY 12·5
641-lltl; 131·'311, ast.
llESAVERDE
Cute lbr pool home. 10"4
dn, very Ip 1~ auum.
loan. Prln . only .
All/owner, -.nu.
POUMUX BY OWNER
Xlnt Flnancina ! $.110,000
875-0073, (714)~'41.23
MISAVIDE
Mornt
BRAND NEW LISTlNG
<tbr, atrium model.
$165,500. Ail Beth Dun·
com be 9S7-6507 ; 963-9101
EASTSIDE
3 br, 1 ba , lge lot.
$933 /mo. $9500 dn.
$12.5,000. Trade? Owner.
631·5476.
EASTSIDE
3bdrm, 2ba. den. (am
rm, flex. financing.
Owner /agl. Call
831-404.5.
$40 000 ON owner tin ftnaoce. 3
hou.aes on a lot. East.aide
Co1ta lle1a Only
$179,000. Call MS-9161
3 Bdrm 3 Bath home.
Eully coavertlble to 5
Bdrm. Great location,
JUlt over 1 mile to lM beach. 2SIO 14. ft. for ___ ..;..__.;......;;;;...;;;;;;=_,_
0011 DISCOURAGat
$175,000
751·3191
c:::.. f ,. I t i I
~f'llf1l 11l<f11•,
•.ooo. Rare 1 br, 1 ba,
Vllla Padf\c condo. A1t.
91f.229'7 .
DIPUSSID7
DISAPPOIMTIDt
Thlak you will a .. lr
find that 3 bdrm bode
you really wut •t a
price you can artordT
Don't diapare, we luate
Just what you have lHltn
1ooldn& for at $1.lt,OCID.
Jt'a In a coovenient loea· Uoa. HilbJy upsudtd.
Owner 11 offerllla
ieoeroue t«ms to help
)'OU purchue.
------1~7lCAMM~fRY ..
SIA Wlte w JPO°'-
De1lanera •Br. 2\.'J Ba. MO qUAIJFYtMCit
p o o I h o m e . N r UMIVl&SITY PA.Ill
Brook hunt I& Atlanta 0ng $29,500 down. Love-Reduced to S.Ul8,000. l dif _,..,,_,
2700 S:.CHSIDI
y ar r u......, in Ter·
race. Cath. ceilings and
Cuatom 4 r, 38a w/pool we t bar provide an
& spa, 4 bllts to the bch eleaant setting for enter-
$197,500. tainina. Cozy k>ft /den. 2
DUTCH HAVEN Bdrma. and oversz 2 car
Sharp 38r, 2Ba nr Beach far. SUB,000.
& Warner. $1U,900. Tow" Ir Cow ht
ASSUMI VA leolton 552. 1100 Like new •Br, 2Ba•---------
w/$62,000 VA loan at L.,_a leocll 1041
ll\.'J%. $117,900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.LP1ofe11h ... PANORAMIC
t6J.ll77 Ocean view. Spectacular ~~~~!!!~~~~I entertainment family home. 4 bdrm, uunl.
OCIAMROMT
2 br. 2 ba condo. OlltreH
sale. $179,000. R&H In·
vestments, 752·2197
room for pool. Owner
will help r111 $435,000.
Al\. Darlyne, 831·31118 or
494-3672.
$173.500
ALLSTATE
Sl41,tOO
Hundreds of flowers
everywhere and sun
filled room1 make this 3
BR home a must to aee.
Call now !orddalla.
DOVBSHORIS
Elegant four bedroom
home. Dram.Uc entry of
carved wood and ltallan
foulllHd marble. Ruse
livlna room. Cosy black
walnatt fireplace. Im· •---------pre 1 a Ive 1ourmet
kitchen. Lovely family
and dlnina room1. Pool.
Spa. BBQ and pool 1ide
bar. Stimulalln& view of
Upper Bay •15.000.
ia all,you bave to put
down on these 2 bdrm
homes. Xlnt opportunity
to buy! Seller want•
quick ule! ! Only
S71 ,t50. 759·1501 or
OPE N HOUSE
REAL TY
/
1044 Ocean view. 3 bdrm.
deck1, yard, frplc, lm
maculate. Agt, Darlyne,
831 ·3888 or ~3672 REALTORS 714 7()()·93J3
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES
UCWSIYB. Y UA9
A popular PALER MO model with a
pool in Harbor View Homes. Prime
comer lot across from the park.
Four BR. 2~ baths + Family
Room. Amenities include built·in ·
bookcases. A super value. $284,900.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
. Ill:
llDlll ILlllS CD ..
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
MIWPOaT HMNTS flatlWLIX
Located On Quiet Street Near
Sbopplh1. PExcellent Condttlon.
Good Rept Income. Minimum
Vacancy Factor . Four
Tow-Bedroom Unltt. Auumable Loam. Intpect With Offer. Reduced
TOSl$0,000.
CI)
SEA COVE PROPERTIES 6ll·7l00 M.I.
714-63 J ·6990
SEE AMD BELIEVE
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New l~ sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One half block to major
shopping centers. Cemenf driv~s, air conditioninf,
microwave oven, tras t
compactor, large walk·' n
closets. Garage with open•' r.
Pool and 2 jacuzzis. '
. WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
JIOW.W._ c. ... w....c•
714/631·1011
,,._ •• 36.000
CURB AP~t~l.IOA ISUM
T..;HIC lee._ ...... illli .... .
~2..-y.1..._.., ..... .. ..,..._,,., ............ ,~ :.lf!" .. ":tr" ..... .. Tw. ...-W.-...wAliiil
.................. 20.000:
$410,000.
IALIOA TU'UX
2-2 Ir 1 B~L ~.ooo dwn & we tblnk me 1eller la hall
cuckoo-be wanta low
Interest payments! Ask· ma t2e0.ooo ,
752-'1J73 ~~~~~~~~ WALKER&LEER.E. =
JACOBS REALTY
615-6670
LOVELY
FAMILY
HOME
GREAT INVFSl'MENT
3 BR 1 Ba, 172.900. Aa·
1umable flnanclna &
seller w /al10 carry
paper. Call for term1.
752-6499
Planlll~ty
Io excellent nel1bborbood. C1oH to ..... ,.._.. I 006
the city·~ center. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Near schools and y Beach Hide-a-Way
tnn1portaUon. Huie clae to water on the
room• tbruout. Lar1e laland. Fum.ltbad • re-
fa mil 7 room with acly to mcwe-ln! Perfect
Swed i•h fl replace. for a a\lllllDtl' in tbe 1un.
Beautiful ata1Ded ataa• Best of all owe at 124lG..
wlpdowa in 2 of the S 2 11 • 5 o o. V . I • P .
balhrooma. Sparldin1 < 2 1 S ) 9 5 7 • o o o a o r
pool wlth cover, do& run. (213)790-0871evea.
etc., etc. Seller hlahty .. ~ Io•• motivat.d, and will 1ell -••
VA. Come to the Open
ttou1e on Sunday.
752·1100
THE !<EAL ESTATERS
llVIMI TlllACE
FIX&
Jll, 2 t/JIA COMDO
Almost New! Frplc,
Balcony. Patlo· Yard,
$130,000 Owner will
finance PP ONLY (213)
373-5704
3br, 2ba, "Hillcrest"
Home Sl.21,500.
557-Bll -------MISAvmtDI
Sharp a Bdrm on comer
lot . Featurlo1 2
flreplacu, new room,
copper plwnbln1 and
mucb cnon. Owner will
carry the ftnaacini and
wm alao sell VA and
FHA. Prtc:.l at $138,000.
Call J40.. U5l
:. HE RITAGE
REALTORS
IMDOOl5'A s .. ut. 2 sty 3 BR, family
room and spa room on cul de uc near all
1chool1. Ast. M&-4380;
642""'7
••••••••••••••••••••••• VA TERMS
On thll 1pacloU1 2 Bdrm
Greentree home. Needs TLC but baa creat poten· tlal. Priced to 1ell at
Sll.t,500. Call for info.
~--;. I·: 1\!\j( t I
I, I ,\l I Y
I •' • I /( ll 10
Hl6H ASSUMULI 4Br home w/1pa, xlnt.
cond. si•.ooo. 552-eMO.
THISHAUS ,
Weathered cedar
ahaku, that is. CuatobJ
deslaned 3 bdr'm. lam • rm, 2 baths. Ext.enalve
use of wood 1la11 Ir
ceramic We. Beam cell· ln1. frplc. $185,000.
Mlaakln Realty
( 714 )4N-0731.
WAUtOllACM :J
Ocean view. 3 bdrm ~
brand new home . ~
Stylites, brdwd flot>fl. •STAITEI HOM£ Owner will help Ila . ~
P'lexlble flnaocln1 on iu:a~aiaaoc4SM-3512.
tbia 2 Bdrm Oreent.ree1---------rlxef'. Owner will help DUPLD PlllRJ
with ce»t. Call for d• OCIAM VllW
talla. Brina your paintbruah •
broom toaaveSSSoatb!s
dlrty daw1! ! Prime
Laauna Beach dupl•• ~-J:.\1\:('lf
I\ I 11 I l V
I •1 l j /(}()()
, ....... dl .. 11'
0. ... ......
2 1tory, • bdrm, dfnin1
w /attached 1araae. sub-
uilt offer! 759·1501 or
752.7173
rm, added den w /wet REAL -TE bar, 1lep1 to park,1-----.,...-~A __ _
comm. pool&temlia. Al· PIOl•'PIE s•LI 1umabfe loan. Owner Alllt A
4 .Br, bonus room &
1parkllna pool. Superior
location. Won't tut. Prln. only. Gre1 Astle
7»1221 wlll aaslat In nnanclna. Excel. ocean view.
LIASIOPnOM $210,000. Fee. Alt, Formal dinina, 1~ ba12 OCIAIROMI' Luu.rioua custom COD· 840-5580. bdrm1, tamlly rm di' ltd RVMt-X CBbod ice corner dbuplex. 3 do. 1700 ICI· ft. z frplci, 3 --------1 bdrm. HOUSE IS ON 2
rm , 2 bat up. 2 bdrm, 2~ bat.ha. '800 * *TKr• LOTS + ADJOINING H ~ 'I I I,,,..., Bdrm,2bathdown.Can mo.SllS,000.64.2-4GS. llKW VACANT LOT. BtlJ
convert to • lar1ar Jumlne Cnek ~rator Esceptjonal2 Bdrm 2 Ba Hparate or to1etb~. i
bome. SELLER W1LL JM>m• plan 1 00 iren· ••••••..., 10J4 towohome froaUn• on Unlled Calif. Ba~ l
ff EL P f IN AN CE I 'belt ~mac ~ •••••••••••••••H•••••• quiet treellned lrHD· Trult Dept. W•·'7 •.0001 .:n45 owe, auume K VA. a belt. End mUt. 1r1 patio or714/151-Sm. l•I~•• l•J Prop. br, 2~ ba, Monterey w/brick BBQ. Alaawn• S1'IALI ..·,~:u..·A. UOOl.tl21/~ :..~~ 'nburon, act. ~~t='loua.Hurry, WMITIWA111~ .,,.,..., ~ SBdla.,roomror
CDM corr... ....................... ff• ~•rttlte s.o....
I' ,. ... ~ tMO I) . Low dowa. $110. •
PUISM:O.. IM1'11f.._'S u• leak•
01' I 8r I INl bome wttb D.....n 55l•JOll
11 o lated ma• t tr 2:ft1 Califoril1a ClauJc. ,.,._a ""'·'""IM
bdrm/P&t'W. ...,..tor J0009(l. ft. 4111', 2be, JOX la-la•,...._. + I br M'famlbrm•tnU~ar, ~•·· AA1 way you Nfr11ernor • ~ le· ~rtN It · al'• cbann• bit. Tl')' 10~ down I ,.,, \IP to dat~ aad Sl6'.IOO.
MHUruur dffOra'". Priold=,ooo with T AMAIAQC •cu,_,,. ';;,;,'7i vau .. co1•0 .... 7111 abr, 1\tba, tlltlottd ........ ,.,., .-c down. owe: t10.,t00. 1111h eemp.ts•.•
M ii •--*........_ . Oltiletlffl..._.. ........ Ha .... WIM h••• H11111U•._ .... d .._...U ........ d .,_ ............. •••• .,._. -Ha•" hr ~ t4o.Ma For Sde •••••• • •••••••••••••••• •• ••• • • •••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••• • •• ••••• • • • •••••••••••• • •• • • • • • • • • • •••••••• • • •• •• • • • • • _,. ••••• •••••••••
.. ., .... •0 •••-•••0 •• .............................................. Moltle...... t.c ... f'I~ 2000 C....W... 1224L1 11f9dt .. JZ41Newportleeclt l26t L .... .._.. >1•1
.............. '"' .... ••• .... 1069 ..,. We 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• er. .............................................................. . ..••.....•............. .. . ·-··-········ · •• • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• APNVALUY I br, 2~ ba. ccodo, l ear OeNJlfroot rt:ntai. ~ Eitchulve Newport Waterfrool .. prlvat•
SPYGJ,ASSRJMI Trailer at bcb SH,900. Near new •·Plu, a 1ar., deck, patio, pool, mo. 6 up. Ad.lb Only. Beach rent.a.I properties. beach, teeW'ily, pool.%
1b.ts 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda
i . A private guarded C.Ommunity in
heart of New rt Beach. Boat
ps for (3) 55'·70' ~chts. For Sale or
de.
We are developers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner Jim
Thompson.
17141121-1210 121JJ 5tl-IJ6J
llOOJ 35~3710
CUSTOM HOME ..wrolT
lmmaculate custom home, 2 private
brick patios, spacious living rm, 3 Br, 3
Ba, gourmet kitchen a nd all the
goodies. Plush carpets, walking dis·
tance to the beach & water. Don't miss
this one for $265,000.
J QUAIL PLACE
PROPERTIES
752-1920
n MACNAB·RVIE REALTY . u ......... ,. __ _
ILUFFS IAIGAIMI •BR home w I outstanding greenbelt
\otation. Many mature patio plants
provide private garden atmosphere.
Large living rm w /fireplace. Price
includes washer, dryer and
r~frigerator. $199,000. Joyce FAlund.
(F84).
•nrpon -..Ch
901 Dover Drive Harbor View Center
642-8236 644·6200
Superb 4 bdrm family T.erm1, OWCorlr..S. bdrm, 2 t.tb each unit $700. 5'o-40l3 489·3816 675·6565 RTSA. Br. fully rum Luxury
home. Prime coodJtlon -.su . wttb rtreplace, encto.ed Secluded .,_ 1B lo Former model Nl1uel -Mobile Home. M2·1802 and location. Partial paUo, double 1ara1e. .._' a pat Sborea houae. 3 BR 2 Ba. WESTCLIFP AREA I Br _o_r_97_~_054S _____ _ ocean . city lit)rtl view. AdJta H001qft JBr,2Ba $ll5,000. Bill Grundy, home, pool, adltt, no condo, pool. carpt, new BE UT 2 br le
Computeriied security sunporcbf'ocdsnloCM Rllr,9'7S.atl. pell, $525 mo. 2453 yard. Gate 1uard. Nr appl, spacious. Very A . , oceanv w. ocnair,5•PkMS-1882 Oran1e Ave, see Mer pool, tennll, beac h . private· AdJt.tonly ssoo. hl·fash1on decor, huce.
syatem tbrouihout. Apt B. Adulta. l800 i.e. Owner. 675-GMSors:G-3&22 gorgeous tr. Sl.000 mo.,
Some financinl avalla· Mobile Home at the bcb OCIAN YllW 4ll9·3638 Avl. 5-1iv7-15. 499-2227 •
ble. $Wl,OOO. In Nwpt. Quiet youn& DW'LD Newport Hta. duplex, 2+ THI IUIFFS
C/ll MtwportC.tr. people'• pk. $10,500. Drutic reduction on bdrm1, 1ar, buae yard. EMEIALOIAY 4 bdrm1, Z baths, super S220 Furn ~m coiy bach
640.5157 760-6767 541.2090 brand new Balboa ~/mo.~7114. 3 bdrm, 2 ba. ocean clean Yearly lease $950 nr bch. UUI pd No peta. U~U'Wltl New Mobile Home, duplex. utowners200% 2 Br, 1 ba, aDlall child view, 1ardener Incl. mo."Agt,67J.~, -!94~4~ emplyd adlt .
.,.TV i El M derreclation. Grut rel\· I .,..,. $1250 mo. 1 yr lse. Don, ___ ---• t .. THOUS E oceanv ew. orro 1 we come._,. c Id II B k Large38drm2bahome --76 ,. " Beach Park, ap 70. 28r, ta area. lOO feet rom 873-381' 0 we • 8 n er' ~vely yard. Westchfr Newport a..cll 1 f COMDO apace rent $175 mo. 20 yr beach. Large 3 bdrm, 3 '99-lS20. $980 mo 646-6789 or •••••••••••••••••••••••
with boat dock, pool, 18 SSllOO -..31116 bathplua2bdrm,2bath. 2br, ll,\ba, dbl aar, l1e LG-•H• 1250 ,, ... 1103 Luxu r y Oceanfront eecur1'ty + i•o dea e. • . Owner wlJJ aulat in yard ch'1ld-/....t• OK T ~ w kl 2 3 8 Comp .. 0 " fin cln e....cooo • • ..... ........ . • • ••••••• • •• ••• •• •••... ---ee y or r .
ocean, Catalina & bay 10 X 45, to be moved. Xtnt an I ·-. . 1875. 6'2·9'28 Attractive 3 Br. 2 Ba. In Small Bluffs Condo. 3Br. furn . inc Id II n e n s .
view. Fee land. MS0.000. cond. New cpta, 98000. Laguna Village. No pets 2Ba. available now $125 640-4784
Smilh·Meyer, Bkr. 67,_3826 Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba, Cam SS9S 0 ~-4072 mo 640 5998 640-5157 S<tl-71 I J rm, atrium, aar. w. elec. m · · _ Fantastlrally furnished
----------.C.Ch Prop1ftr 1350 dr. across from park, Lag1mta M9'1t 3252 Harbor View 3Br & den townhouse. W1th ocean
ll t e•front Condo I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1tlnt loc. Yrly lease. $800. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M a n y upgrades view Tenrus court. pool
$433-,000, $400,000 fin· SPECIAL LAND SALE 751-7328 4bdrm, 2ba, frplc, gar, in $9501mo 760-°"51 $925 /mo 760-9117
assume Bkr cooper•· Oceanview Iota, Morro 6 u LA $140 ooo nr USC lovely neighborhood ----
tion 873-0248 Bay area. $S990 E·Z Gr 117 000 ~y2.5% dn 0; 3bdrm, 2ba, lam rm. den, $735 lease mcl gardener, IAYCREST A~etlh
HARBOR VIEW
Excellent 4 bdrm 31,-z
bath Portofino with
famil y roo m and
secluded bonus room on
quiet street. Close lo
schools and shopping.
All new carpet. BUY OF
THE WEEK $339 ,SOO ree
terms. be~~ views of submii skr540-060B frplc, SISO/mo. Avail nopets 499-4721. Lovely 3 Bdrm. den & UftfunNslwd
the Pac1f1c Ocean, · now.Call63.l-4CMS. family rm Just re •••••••••••••••••••••••
Estero Bay & Cayucos. FIX & SAVE! 3 Bdrm 2 Ba fireplce nu New 2br, 2ba CONDO, decorated Gorgeous pool G...-al 1102 675-7239 for appt to see. frplc, ocn view, tennu, •-spa $lfi00 A"t Agt 3 & 4 units ~riced to kitchen micro k1·da "' " ••••••••••••••••••••••• • · courts $72S/mo 644·5951 673·6413 •--L.-._ ...... 1400 move now! Se lers want okay approx May 4 days, 64S-93&9eves A9'TMTS FOR RENT
--11 iYGpluq quick escrow 549·7267 New 2 stor> condo pen H B , N B . Costa Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·. 1.. Mlssloft Viejo 326 7 thouse Ocean & moun Something for Everyone NEWPORT I NEJA~~, Lovely 3 br, 21At ba, bit ••••••••••••••••••••••• lain views. 2 + dl'n Bach to 4 Br Unfurn.
9 0 ff ice bu 11 ding . I ins. dbl gar. Few steps lo HOME FOR RENT Security gate guarded Apt:.. <.:ertam locations
$4.25.000. Hurry won't Cl.llfljl'.~' ocean -canyon view 4 Bdrm S600 Fenced community SIUOO offer Pool . spa.•
las t ' Bill Gru nd y , 714 6410763 $150.631·5751 yard & garage Kids & 675·9132675-9113 fireplace. laun room.
675 6161 B S EXEC''""'VE HOME pets welcome. 964 2566 be 1 m e d c e 1 I 1 o gs. 2787 ristol l. v •• 973-"""'I A t f garages. all built Ins
'* ' R It COllNIMrdal Costa Mesa. CA So. Coast Plau area. 4 or '"' g ··no ee Santa AM 3280 Garden & Townhouse Cote ea Y Property 1600 br. 2 ba. ram & din. rms. Newport leach 3269 •••••••• ••••••••••••••• design
& Investment ••••••••••••••••••••••• M-·~ i-ft-..--' new micro kitche n ,••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 3br.2ba,Crplc,aU TSLMGMT 6421603 LA"S777 _.a_~ d new decor Drive by -_ u-.v-SHOPPIMG CENTER Retort ' 2400 crpt.a, rapes & tile Dbl Npt Crest rondo. 4 Br 2', 2317 S Lowell. S600 mo lolboo ,.tnilnulct 3107
DOVEaSHORES
Breatht1king ocean.
light and mtn views
from thtS large one of a
kind home. Beautifully
decorated & landscaped
with a sparkling pool on
ext ra large l ot. 4
Bdrooms. 4 Baths. Many
outstanding quality
features.
RCTc1ylorCo
,,.Jll ')'li)t1
21,500 sq n. Glendora ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar., frplc, pool , Ba , split level. dbl lst,l:tsl+$150.644.5069 •••••••••••••••••••••••
New, pUy leased. Sc~ed. TRIPLE MOBILE HME redwood deck. $795, 1st. glatralgel •Ledue95S8007 9fw..m30 -S350 Utll pd lBR Duplex income $197,000 on triple lge ram rm, w/wet bar. last & S400dep. 50-5560 s · as "' ep. · ""' 2 Blks from So. Cst Plaza. 417 E Bay Ave Balboa
net leases. Owner must 2br . 2ba, 6 fruit trees, 3Br, 2Ba, enclosed patio, Hort.or View 6 or 12 mo lse. ~mo No pet:. 547.1.1!)5 sell Sl,600,000 Agt util shed much more Xlnt cond SSl 4540 ( 2 1 3 l 5 5 3 9 5 s 2 0 r 5..., ... 9 · wshr /dryr hook-up. tB50 Gracious famtly home 2 -c-.i1a...--. •--h 3111
(714)844-3278. ..., .... 1 mo Agt. M.S-2411 s t o r Y 4 b d r m Sotlttt LOCJlmCI 1216 •• ~~.'::":.':~••••••• ---------°1 of C~ 2550 Lat., lrh. Airy !'~t~i.s~~~~\s!t ~~ ·~~A~~~;;~~;_:;;· 3B.r. 2Ba. bttns. frplc. ocn .
H w &-L......t-et ropet'fy & brand new split level l pets. 2015 Port Bristol 0·1 ... be h 2 b view, S475 mo 832-6520 • ..._ ... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• & 2 br conclo9 in water· Cr Call Elaine 644.5997 ooas pvt · ac • r. dys. 661 1730evs l.ALIOA ISLAMD OFFICE ILDG. 2'-2 ba, den. din rm, lge ------Mar'"e Ave . high vis· oriented project. Pool. or 640-5357 deck, S1200/mo 499·2253. Corofto del Mer 1122 ... 17 ,ooo s If l + ac of j bit · f l dbl ibillty location on prime ac, ·IDI, rp c, · 499-5021 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1round. Just off hwy 5 aar. w. opener. Teri, 3 Br 2ba, tree lined st in•--------corner Has existing re-Oceanside. '250,000 will 331 ........ 751-9187 West cliff, ni ce for •Small coxy collage 2 Br, 2 Ba duplex wtsun· tail business plus two ... _ di .. -1123 ..... .._.., • deck. 411 Poinsetta. J . SS.SOOOO ... n e.1._. .... r cpl/sml fam. $775. incl lbdrm, lba,stone frplc. SiOO /mo. Iyr lse. •
uniU. • · .._ PoW 1226 grdnr. No pell, 6'6-2389 close to ocean. S700/mo. 675 0124 Jackie
WATERFRONT le&lllMS.~ ••••••••• .. •••••••• .. •• W-4486 * ~~~TE t.I a 5d1ec1. •J. Oceap • bWI view 3 BR br, den, 2 ba. Walk to -odo Mesa JIM
,._,._ 631•1400 48 Units. 8 br, 2 ba. 4 yrs condo, fpk, W /D, tennis, beach Tennis & pool CCNtdotnW....S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wahtflowt_,,....1 youn1.$1..2110.000aaaum. pool.SSOO.Act.498-5980 prlv.$750l&e.640-S2'72.1f UafwMshed 1425 .
~:::::::;:::::::;:::::::;::=::=;;;;:;;;;;::=-
WltlaloltDock t~"" lnt.1-4D-l'123 Bkr. no ans. 1 72J.-0601 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $450. 2 BR. patio. pool.
Could be Newport's ---------•CW.e to marina 3bdrm, Bachelor CONDO vacant. Adlts, no pets 325 J 17th loweatpricedwaterfronl IUSIMISS New llobile Home 3Br, 1\Alba , frplc, yard, ll~CAHYOH $500 /mo Newport ~6465137afillAM
home with income unit 0"°""'"'1Y 28a, frplc, redwood MOO /mo. Townhouse. Exclusive, full sttunty, Beach 918-0423 _ 2 Bdrm condo, Lak~hore too! Call for Info . deck, cedar shake aid· '95·448CS.• beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba
1.82 in Newport Beach loca· Ina or •-.. e .._ s .. "nf 1---------Private yard, wet bar & 2bdrm. 2car a•r, covered adlt complex Com pl.
Broker, 963-.S lion OD PCH. 50' (roo· su:too. T':'nna °7>r ti.~-............. 3240 fireplace, many other patio, "' rnile to beach. rec fac1l Nr So Cst
taae. Great lease 499-3818 •••••••••••••••••••••••amenities including Access topooJ&<courts Plza $495/mo s.56·8232 WIDE~ SP.ACES $160,000. lmmac 3Br, 2Ba. cul-de· Maids room. $1450 mo ~75 H.B. 1213)925-4796. or $40 0770
Roomtoroamonthisci-Watwtf1CMI~ lHtah sac. frplc, paUo, 1690 Call Anthony wkdys (714)6754902. ~BrEas•~ide Small but
ty rancho! Over one half lllC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 847·'525 alt 3PM. 642-5757 eves & wknds -"' I 1 6'4·8889. Watch the surf from this cozy w !lots of neat wood r~~~ ~at~ds~r::i~;eeis~ Ul-1400 Hones f'wlllalled 4bdrm, 2\AJba, frplc, wet· I beaut. 1 Br rondo S800 ~. 551-1660.
secluded setlln& Im· ••••••••••••••••••••••• bar, 1 block beach. No Golf Crse 3 bdrm 3 ba mo. 1st, last + sec.
maculate older 4 Bdrm Co•doMilli'""1fTow1t-Hewportleoch 3169 pets $725/mo 964-2283 + den &i bar $1100 772·30S3 E Side Bachelor.
H .. AHTS CO ... DO TERMS TaMS home caU to see hovMsfortalir 1700 ••••••••••••••••··~··•• .,105 ,_ 6'5·7605or6'6--1713 ----(urn unfum, S230 mo t • " c d h t th LIDO ISLE cha mmg 3 " -Lux. 3Br condo. i •,ba, ulll pd ~4461 f Quiet Npt Hgts /Clif· e~~s~i~l~i:s & 0
2 nd 642-5200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm, 2 bath, pl~yroom . 3 Bdrm, 2\AJ bath. 1700 BLUFFS Plau condo. 3 patio. elect 2car gar . -, ----fh•~en condo w/pool & T D 'S 2b 2b t DESPSATE! Just remodeled. SlSSO sq. fl. Triplex. Formerly br. 2•.-.i ba No .pets SllOO close to So. Coast Plaza 2Br. 1 2Ba Townhouse.
garase. Grul assuma· "Ve.:SaUles/ ~;n a Newport Be a c h mo to mo. Bill Grundy, owner's unit. Ideally mo. 760-1573 & Park 5595 15 e Pvt patio. gar , adults no t
ble,. flnancan.g. No quail· Versa i Iles 2br. 2ba . 675·6161. located for duldren l6SO 549-0259 -~ts_ $465. 548-7510 ! fJln1 Greg Astle HARIOR VIEW pallo. frplc . pool, jac. mo. Immediate OC·,_ _______ _
i l.22i. Harbor & Ocean View. HUI IUCH cupancy. 963-81.82. •LIHOA 15&.E• Family Condo. I m1 frm 3 br: 2 ba. crpls, dnpes. ~
I HOMES quick sale. By Owner Apts avaJlable now. FOR lfNT bch. w Bluff, CM 2Br, patio, carport, no pets .. • i~ •. PBoartoinfint~-~ .. 'f.!4hoBrua2~e~. ~~~~~~~~~ S 1 3 2 'O O O f 1 rm · 8y week or month. 25TY EXEC HOME 5 +Maid's+ Den + 5Ba l....,8a, all amen dys, $485 645·9966
• -·-" ""' ......... <213>821·7949 Agent,675-8170 3 car gar .. 4 br. 2 ba, + Lots More! 2sty. 4500 962·4'54: eve. 645-6065 E Side lge quiet 2br. • I • t bonus rm w/loft & Cull J._ Dwleaes/ formal din .. ram. rm, sq. ft docks for (3) 60' patio. lndry rm, adults , Ba adjoin the garage. C pl"-1071 O•fh SaM llOO 3Br house for rent. easy frplc, clean. Beach & boats. private guard Woodbridee condo, 2 BR. no pets $485673-3600 i ailUCED TO rerfecta~angem~ntfor ... ~ •• : ...................................... aBcchessFtoshppn$8gcontrs& Adams. Temp. reloc gatedcommty.lhemost close to pool, lge brick '
SB1 ~~d;:\~~~~:~~~t~ lMllesFrMortM HEARTHESAHO ~.7312·~5 /mo. ~~.~·17~~!~:.st + ~ree-!~iog:~u:e!~l~n~~fi patio, $800 mo. 833-9186 Spacious2Br$365. Pool& i
own er w i II c arry by an mviting spa Ask· wnH 0CUH VIEW lol>oo P-. o.pln ' Darlene <7141828-1280 or aft 6pm laundry ~9556 l ~.000 on this spacious ing $342.900. $1.50,000 aa· lcmc~ ,,_ SeE•ccoenlldesntto3 8thReownwaeter~s· Hoftea Uwfw•at.cl 2bbr, lba,\ gar,Snr500bc1h 4i (213)598-1363.. Our ortice Bra~d nebw Turbtlerock • mtUtl·level architect's sum able loan. Owner __.. ,. us 1 op mo opens 9-~ Monday thru Irvine 2 r. 2'n a. 1525 Lite. trite, Airy holile In Npt Hgta. 2600 will cont1ider 2nd. Call ''home-like" unit & 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-5610610 Delaware St. Friday. sq . ft po o I I t en -& brand new sphl level 1 .,.. ftdesi--t forfamlly Tom Ba!Ul.558-Over 3,000 sq.ft. or BR. 2 ba, rental unit. G ... ral 1202 nis/SBOO /mo644·S959 & 2 br condos in water· -.. .....,.. elegance. Exclusive new Ideal for home & In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... II TM•IM u50
Uvblt. $8),000. Joyce bomea. from SS~~OOO. come Cloae to Newport Lease with option tD buy, a ----------FOR RENT: Condo Mis· oriented project. Pool, ' W:11tie.Ul·1286. 14~~rinancinJavail. · · d ..,_,. 1219~ be1utiful home In Pool.Park,nrBeacb. IAYSIDICOVE sionLake.CoontryClub jac. blt-U\S, frplc, dbl t
Charter Rlty ldnvest. ;ran sy~'c . Upland with pool Ir spa. ~5111 C 0 M D 0 w I t h D.H.S $15, 2 n1ght.s $225 7g5al~918w7 opener Teri ..
Great 4 Bdrm on comer
lot wlth room for RV.
boat. etc. $279,000 ,
owner financed. 645-1103
496·8122 831·8811 nleyM. .. ,_.. 0 • Call Mon·Frl. {7141 '"'--124.. k "'"'2 718L ] l..aton 644-4910 -"' feb•loH view of w ·""' ·4 yons. ------* 4br, 2ba, auume ap. 953·11822 or Sat /Sun, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...t ~ Ex br, 1 •,,ba, 610 Joanne St.
prox. $81K at 11 "4%. lltcotmerrop9r+J 2000 m4>SJ8.2SL8. WoodbridgeNlce4Br3ba water ...,...-• TowaltouM C.M. no children, small
Frplc , Sprinklers.••••••••••••••••••••••• a1to41Pat••• 3207 · super family home. c•ll••f waterfroftt U~ 3525 dog considered. $425 _,.,, o co-...a..a wtt11pool9d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 7344
Xtras ! $1.39,900. Broker HEWPOIJ BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• -m . r-3br 2''-b fa rm lg ------..... 7020 h Waterfront Homes Inc pri.,......._ ... __ ... Lo.,.iv . .,.., a , m , e --4-teps to beac cute ' · ...... --. .... ,, master bdrm w/deck, 2 • !br condo, nr S.C.
LIDOISLI IOIO 15% down and auume lbdrm, utll paid.' Year· Realtor• 631-1400 tpoefoln 2 ...._ .ct patios, formal dining Plaza, S.A. $500, no peta. Lmoewn•·d.oClw~';.;o: Jd~~ ~•~••••••••••••• k>Rans . ~adj~~· !.?:.~! aft4-4th St. AS.S3011• WOODBRIDGE 3 Br, 1v. ... D .... ,.... area w/wet bar, spiral 549.3232 .
.. -1-.-------•IT IPLEXrA>inCUJllon 01.r•-. !pm. va Ba. condo. S,S75/mo. ltalco•y/clecll. Sec. stairs, frplc , gar,'---------famlly home, rudy lo 1• oceaosideof PCH. Mayl.st. Wrk (714)833-IOU b 1 f Newport HgU area. BR twnboule. Uvln1 &llATTllMS PLUS _., ...... _ ll2J Ram a . ff 0 me •YI •· • 1' re41. avail 5/1. $800/mo. rm Dlnlnf area ,
Lovely 2bt, lba home. t d I d 1 .... -· --SZOOO per .._ YHrly 548-3365 r t •-Low down payment, wo up exe1 an ••••••••••••••••••••••• (213)498·8080 I I f ; kitchen. Pc, eu •
OWC! 1 triplexinarowonlilth " aid' ---------1 IH, oat t Ip o i---------water, attached garafe,
St, Balboa Penlntula. Br + m 1 quartera. Woodbrldie, 58r, 38a, JO,_..,..,fleatr&. * •Vltla1e Walk 28r pool, jacuui, laundry
•.W.. Wftl It.In Onll. 11:•and ~ ~:!~\O:•doSpy=~ Preacott llodel. Fm rm W.....,, .. "-" l~Ba. dbl Oar, 2 patios, fac. on property. Adulu, '"!!!!!!!'!!!!!'!l~ ... !!!!!!!!IU!!!!~~!I su · Y P e u o o o 1m 0 • K 0 0 p . din rm, a /c, Zfrplc, har ........ .... ~~ •• n:~.!~~~m~ no peta Avail. immed. i: properties. &31-121!6. Al\. car, aun dues, P'dor. no 631•1 ·-8 0 F 1 s,soo + $275 security.
•--------peta. $101115.Alt5'1•503'l, I~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ ._$4.._..0_o __ ' _· __ a_tr_v_e_w_/1 ,63_1·_4984 _____ _ BY Owner. OWC, 3 br, DUPL.D WtMt Dock Zbclrm, lba, fl'plc, be•m 1;;: .J'eferttrom ad-6354 ,_
frplc, dbl pr. 1)2,500. for 30• boat. ce1ll.na. 1>9Uo. "5Q. $150 Woodbridp 4br, Jba, air . Bluff a cObdo I br l ba Quiet 1 Br. I Ba. ~ew
2530 S. Parlr Dr, Santa dep. Av.U II~ 1. App't Avail June 15. •tmo. waab /dry , re'trii: 1&.11-41m111-. crpt• • drpa. GJ>od
Ana. onlJ. 75t-Sll580. 552·1261 '850/IDo.~ ••"•••• .. •••••••••••• eutalde Loe. Mat1Ate
MANY M.ANYMOREI
C/ll Marne.er 640-U7
-ltMI...... 3706 Adulta only. St125. 147 E.
pac. 3 br, 2 b9 bocne w. •••••••••••••••••••••• 18th St. #4, C.M. 2'5e + Jae, So. o1 H-•Y, barmln1a private. lBr. 2 bd 1 ba ftp .a••~ ..,, · ..,.,_., 11'1-• 1Ba. Nllh qlt.y . .Ladry. rm • • .._
f7s..t7'2 • 5 7 s / m 0 . yr 11 . bwahr, nu ~/drapes,
(710t'15·H8' evu. aara1e.MSO.l2MllO.
(211)'50-105\
a
Spacioua a Br Dppl•
tm. Poolfclaundryfac. •---------•---------1 &a-tase epe lo bth a BR 1 Ba, Fem to 1b, w /Hmt lbd
fpld, dbl t;·d:,Uo. '830 Irv Condo 11\IDY st.r•• a Br. 2 Ba., Val ncla. mo. yrly. $tr5§741'Morell-07M townhoiuo. a children -----------1 ________ _
OK. No peg. $L\25. Slerra •OCllAM PIOMT• rem . .Rmmt.e wanltO,
ll1mt. Co.Ml·lJU. Frplc. panelJed, patio, 1br 4 84 bo111e. $2101--------_,
•• Art Aec...-y oo. loi.rior
8PJRl111AL cMlltaa W., tullor pt.
READINGS rtalr for deeorat1n1. --------• :.'T2J.°':' ALl~~ WUl tralD.184111.
Low rate homeowner S. Camtno R.eal, San AIMll\blen/Eleetronlca
Clem lmmed. openln1 for
f\aal UNmbly poNUon. i-----------1!•--------1 E s p w I t h a I r
JIM
Miwf P.ll .. r..... ' THE acrewdrlver deelrable.
hMi IOJI GI H s..;_....a_ Small friendly Co. llrj~~~!'!!~~~~ ....................... r I hhlua oeean. ~aesz ask for
.., ..... 8 .__ lbr, ~75/mo. M2.00.5 +utU. Aftl,17S.*5 PERFECT w•YNt 2 r, 1"11 .,., eve1
cpt1, drpa, bul1Un1, 1 Fem 1br apt. ~ rent '115 O .._
deck. 1ar, Yr lie. $C7S E. Bluff• tondo, 4Br, + uUl. ref req Aft L c"' TION
1.0.CMIUr180-otOll 3Ba, aundk, pool llSO 8:30pm Ns-47.0 40I ~/ mo . 145 ·3474 WOODlllDGE , ...... ~c.. •ISCOITS• _w_ .. _·-----~!•111ea•n1r•1n-,----
..._/OMaJHeW Aaaembler, Ftr, 1ome MIW ACCOUNTS (213)541..... II or F, Newport CNSt 3 H.... d. 91eetiB.All br Townboule. Tennia, Z210 S4a. flf.
· ' Bach. unit on water. Jae. Utll incl. SJ50 mo. D .... .Mc.e.
APAl'neCTS g:~o~/Alt. M2·31150or~18. C>Hh .....
ProfH•JooaJ ex~utlve
1ullea w /comJllete aup-
port aervlcea. For
further information
552-)030. All·
All typea ol real •tate
lnvestm.U atnee IN.
Speck•-. ..
WTDs
642·2171 141-06 I I
* 7 S9· I 2 I 6 * electrical Maembly ex-Newport Beach ~ bu * 529-1113 * per. pref. $t/hr. aome openln1 for New Ac· overtime may be nee. counta Couneel«. New. 24.Hn. Now Hlrtnt ._26511 Accu., IRA/K.eoth. col· Beautiful landacaped or 8 h'-_, .. · .,,, __ .__ A/C 1arden aptt. Patw or ac .,r ....... -s ,.,... llC VISA ---------"1 lectlool, Ii NOW Accta.
decka. Spa. Heat pd, Sha~p 1 Bdrm apt in Npt u.nfum bedrm w/ba 6 979 9997 Ca•••rdll c 0 v e red pa r 11: 10 1 . He11hta, 1 adult no peta lite ktcbll priv. Prefer • ..... 4471 MKbnl ..... MhJ.
SlNCEllll
1-~d TDI, *50K·S1M +
Owner /Non Owner
SFRI 4t Condot
Commercial• Industrial
PETER DOBBS
exper. req'd . Salary ASS8 .... S commemurate with ex-
Adults, no peU. $.125mo. 642·7745 off St. parltini located nr ruLL SERVICE SUITE · •••••••••••••••••••••••
2BR,18a $470 405Fwy.SSOM7Bob. O RANGE COAST Store Space tor leaae.
2 BR, 2 Ba "80-1485 s.te AM 3110 M /Fem, 25-.0, no bad FINANCIAL CENTER ~ aq. ft. Ii 1260 aq. ft.
DOTIC ISCOITS
•551-1946•
Servtna all o( O.C.
Loc. lllaaioa V~ co. per. Full inturance
nffd1 Auemblen w /2 beneflu & paid career yra. exp. Candidatea apparel. Pleuecall:
398 W. Wilson, 631·5583 ••••••••••••••••••••••• h bi•· .. n. 2B f 28'5 Meaa Verde Dr. E. an Huntlniton Beach.
m111t have &d. manual Ma. Denny Parilla
dexterity, 1d. eye1l1bt, 71~ a .. · ~ a, am c M Sh F l e x l b I e l e r m 1 EASTSIDE, clean 2 BR, Extra 11 2Br 2ba condo. rm, pool, Jae, home nr H, oata •a. are 2131598.7202 · MG-t018 173-9043 You can document t.hoee
intereatin1 memoirs,
autobloaraphy ., etc
NOW. l will help you. M.
stevena, 1·527-91154.
neat ln appearan'ce & de· MIWPOIT IAUOA
pend able. Work la in Ure SA VIMGS & LOAM encl &ar. $425 mo + Patio, 1 a r, poo I , So. Coaal Plasa. Uae ~o sq rt office with ·
security. 251 16th Place. was hr ldryr, prof paint-2Br. $375 Ir half utll. another Realtor or comp Sbopa, 1tora, bobby, 312
Apt. B, no pets. Call ed, new drapes. Adulta. Ref'a req. 54()..822S other 1mall bu1lne11. sq.ft .. 12• hi w /lie dr. •
Want Investor for Npt
bayfront home. Glve
well secured i.t or 2nd
T.D. Af\,8'7Hl81.
support medical elec· E o E
tronica. Gd._ beneriJ•.1~~~!· ~· !·~· ~~~
978_3848 Cloae to Ml Sq Prk. S250permo.+1ecurlty, 210 aq .fl. w /•ink. Only re1pon1lble1~
--------775·0529,631-1088 Near beach rum, Wat.er Include• utU1 .• phone 5'8·7248 penon1 Heldn1 perma· 1·--------nent emplymt. need ap· DmaPolllt Jl26f•tlR JltO incl, 9H·0818 work, an1werln1 . Other1---------
•••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831·2263 holne. Steve. 1ervlce1 avail. 957-0701 ..... trial...... 4500
1 or 2 br, ~lcony , O.W., Security aptl, lbdnn & Fem 21·35 wanted to 1hr 9-Sdally. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Purchase ol 2ND T.D.'a
arran1ed. For detail•
call
WHT Female, blue eyed,
extremely attractive,
shapely, S'S'', artec-
llonate, 1incere, 52.
ply. Call: Mra. Parelll,
581-3130 * BANKING
De1lre. wealthy man to ---------1 Our Newport Center or-apoll me! Write: CS Alaembly fice baa an immediate
clean, cotn laundry 4i 2bdrrn, util pd, adulta, 2br 2ba Irvine $250 1 25 '• f ~7~~ '~f8tt~~e~~ ligi ~~~l252~ar, nr ocean. ~! /,.!!•· From '375. +1br utll. SS2·0S04, ' • "'fo l ID Redondo Cr. "Q". Hunt INI0-1157 Broiler
....., • .-..,. &46-3379 Bch. 842-2834
2 Br, 1 Ba, nu paint & .,.. luweats r. • bad NEWPORT $100,000 note at 2IO"k re-
tW'll. Call broiler, Mark 6800, Suite A-198, Costa ILUI JIAM J09S openln& roe· a
'"o AOUL T ~~-LIV ING
• t & 1811 P1110Apo
carpel. Avail now $395. or Uafw•it.d 3900 M/F to shr 2 bdrm apt
Call Darlyne 661·1162 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• acro11 from Fashion HARBOR 494-3672 bland. $330 /mo. Incl. -------S E A W I H D utila. Call Paul, ~8937. 1 ......... ~ Jl40 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• VILLAGE M/Fabr2braptF.V.SZOO 3035~Ft. New 142 bdrm luxury + ~ utll. 81B-2801 daya
adult aptl lo 14 plan.a 9:30 PM ·wlmdl anytime Plmb
from $440, 2 bdrm from I.my Views SSOS + poola, tennia, Peninsula, 1tep1 to aand, Prf•llh Patios waterfalla, ponds! Gas buae 2br, need 2 room.-
COSTA MESA Conley, 90&377
I 5000 sq rt. New in· $20,000 2nd TD. 20% int.
I d u 1 t r i a I . F i r e AU due 18/mo. Secured.
1prinll:Jered. 18' clear , 20 unll1 . 873-8720,
truck door , heavy 544-0333. (Private lender power, a /c office. Good r ed ) cornm'I potential for _p_re_e_r_r_. _____ 1 auto-related busine11. Call George Campos,
752-8011.
Meu,92SZ7
I have a technique that ./W AllHOUSI
could help you re· ./FACToaY
member dreams. Send I ASS8•LBS
S2 to Dreama, P.O. Box
5062 Gle*1e. Ca. 111201
E S
SHE
C 0 R T S
MODELING
Long 6 short term H ·
1i1nment1
A. V AlLABLE NOW ' Call or come by.
• 01sn*'"'-'' & 880 '
• Pao• & Rrc Room
for cookl.nl It beatlna mates Ull 7171). 12SO/nio. Loh of Wllldows
paid. From San Die10 675·8625, 6'.S-5123 r...u.g ..... MESA
Frwy drive North on For the bUalneu man
ac 2102 Bu1ine11 Center
Dr .. #208, Irvine,
833-1441 ~ 271167 Cabot
Rd., La1una Ni1uel.
831·0542 or l&W Beach Blvd., USOE, Hunt·
••••••• ···········s··,·o·o· ____ 1_1_1-_t_tt_t __ _ Aw•c•• wls • G110fn l I OOHIP••O
• JQ9 10 Buen & Snop1
S G
SEA ENVIRONMENT
9bJl ttAMll TO N MB
%] 4'>00
Beach to McFadden Shr CdM house w/cple, 1 Who waotatoma1Cea INDUSTRIAL ....................... ---------1
tben West OD McFadden child. muter br, pvt ba, &oodimpreulon. p •RJ( sc11u I~
to Seawlnd Village. pref. F. walk to beach. W09,Lolt. A ~·~
(7W893-5Ul8. $250/mo.173-7359 Cal Todimyf ANSWERS
SWEETHEARTS
•ISCOltTS• ~HOURS
Vila/MC 529-1927 Root1t1 4000 M/F to •hr 2Br condo, 1714)675-8662 711W.17t11Sf. Worthy-Bertb---'=--------••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious. NB $300/mo. ---------CostaMtsa.C•. Flute-Chrome-
La1una Beach Motor lnn, Mlke646-21898 Newport Beach location, 642-44'3 MOWER
985 No . Pacific ~oast C:. 1 Mac Arthur al Jam· He'• not much or a
Hwy. Laauna 8eacb. ;f.., 4350 boree, l2S8 sq ft, $1.25 ft 1980 aq. I\. Unit avail. 1ardener. He ull:ed for
Dall.Y, Weekly. Kil_chen ••••••••••••••••••••••• per mo. Utllt & main· May lat. Carpels, the dlrectionl oo bow t.o
inrton Beach.
NEVERAFEE
IELL~-·~·
S EA v•CE S
E.O.E. M/F /H 2 & 3 Bedr oo ms .
$400-$450. Kids OK. no
pets please Water/
Trash Paid Carport
964-2566 or 973-2971 Agt ,
no ree.
available. Low wmter D II fi . h 30fl t tenanceincl.851-1711 drapes wet bar. •336-lf< •ue bl1 new push
rate•. 4N-S294 rywa uua • on& ------1 IQ. fl. •Leuln1 office MOWER. E•p'd cle·-'-" lady•-'-. front & rear doort, dbl s · ff p ·f· c t hrs. Moo thru Fri 8-4. •---------,. .....,. JUUll Room with lutchen driveaccesaM&-4W uate o aca ac oas Sat.10.2. &F.-d 1300 ln1forafew1ood1teady
AUTO MICHAHIC
E•perienced! Prefer
certified. Salary
+comm. Guar. l3SO wll:.
Apply ln person. Union
78, 3928 E. Cout Hwy, Hwy, or Olart Houae. ---------Jobi. Reas . ret'1 .
T .....
( 30 Hra. per week l
Experienced not re·
quired-Trauun& will be provided.
Wells Fare<> Bank offers
outatandlnc benelita and
con1enial worll:in& at·
mospbere. For more lo·
formation please call:
D...._or ,,_
7 I 4·640-6900
5,,.,,0 115 :
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
660 Newport Cent.er Dr.
Newport Beach, Ca.
Equal Opp Empl m ti lb
2 Bdrm. 2 ba. cpts, drps,
d /w, encl gar, Beach & S
Points area $430 /mo
842·8032
privle1es Adults only Stora1e only sin1le, aafe NB. 340 IQ.ft. $400 per ~· 4110 ....................... 491-MIO
"62-7520 Ir secure MO. 724 James, mo. Call John ~2117 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i---H-O_U_S-~-lTflN--G--OdM !~~~~~~~
---Small rum 1 rm 1uest C.M. 673-rnl'1. Dix Nwpt Bch Airport Of. Approx. 8000.q ft. in Ir BABYSITTING
Large 1 Br w garage, 4 house, pnv entrance, . fice, lSOO IQ n.. 11.. per aq Fountain Valley nr San fOlllJ ADS Bank in a BANKING
b I ks r ro m b t> a ch earden quiet 16()/wll:. S1n1le Gar, lockable, for ft. 1146-4419 Dle10 Fwy. Sl,320/mo. B-9084
$380/mo 1st mo+S200 -•-~_._11s_1_s ______ 1 stora1e. not parll:ana ---------1 Call John 558-9360 or AIE flE£ Mature Lady &eeltin1
dep. req Call536-7542 _f7_Sl_m_o_._846-_23119 ___ -i MIWPO«TIEACH , _548-_7_533______ Gen. office work in So R o o m . k t t c b e n ·-f\.ll. If you are a mature an dividual seeking a full
time Teller position.
Irvine Savln11 11 in·
tere1ted in you. Pleasant
wor lt'i n 1 cond I tlona,
&ood aalary Ir benefit
packaae. Ellperienct preferred. Apply In
penon between tht
houri or lOAM t o
12Nooo. at:
TfilER
Century21 /SURF privaleau. Newport Storaae Garaee. sinale, Convenient Peninaula ....... W-.cl 4600 .,m; C.M. area 3-t day wll:
--Bcb 9x20, Costa Mesa. sso locaUon acrou rrom Ci· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 ....... 71 medical Ben. 7yrs last A• o•tst-.dllNJ op-
pon.tlty .... for -ladl•ldHI wltla sis
Avail. now 2 Br 2 Ba up mo. 642·4907, wkdya i..s. ty ~all. bttutive •~yle American family of 4 ..,__ job. Sally 642-1883 after
stairs. frplc. dshwr, 642-6811 ortacea w/full services rrom Bruuela looking I~~~~~~~~~ Spm.
balcony & garaae Hotek Mohh 41000fflcel..tcil 4400 avail. From 215 sq.ft for houae in La1una, LOST: LI Oran.1e cat, i---------
Waler/lrash paid. 1 ••••••!•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••and up. No leaae re-CclMorNewportnrbch 1 d 1 WAS Exec.1ec'yii.eeutravel· lllHtlll r;••ID• T..,.
exper ;•c•. Aa o ................... child, no pets $475 Balboa Inn oceanfront. •DELUXIOFACIS• qwred. CaJl873-3002. to rent or trade for :u !et:;i~I :11!ee'eollar. ln1 companioo, social
964-2566 or 97l-2971 Agl" Low winter ratea. Dally 1 room' from $235/mo. ...IWPO«T CINTH wee II: I in Au I u It . .. G u I .. . REW A R D aec'y J>0911ioo. Write Ad no fee. or weekly. Kitchenette. No leaae required. 2172 "" Alrmall-Haakln, Avenue #193, Dally Pilot, Box
SEASPR-A-Y. 2Br. 2b,-. ttOlrup.675-874-0. DuPont Dr . Adj . Prof. bualneu office•, Hamolr 17 'A' 1180 548-143'1 154IO,C.ll.92S27 co••_,..,. t.,.nol ••• c• offer H• cellHt ..._..., -4 Airporter Hotel. l000-5lOOsqft.Canbuild Bru11ela Belguim L t Ct HI I •---------• frplc . Rec. & security Yearly, Hotel Apt. Room , to ault. New .l.nterion at · 0• : a • ma ayan Need temp. office help? Nr beach. 1145. 891 6396 ltllchenelte & bath. UUl.s , __ w._322_3_._9-_l2_____ no coat. Atrium, cov'd 32•2·374·1223 Seal Point, Sat ln Top of Avol4 hip atency fees. IRVlNE SlcL AS.SN.
18552 MacArthur Blvd. bt•flta. ...... folll• agl. paid. ~mo. + aecuri· CdM Deluxe Suilea, AC, prk1 Ir ocean viewa. Call 2 reap females looltinl to World area, Laa Bch. Ind. Aft. 8111).(1Z10eves.
ty depo1il. 2306 W. ampl pk1. util pd. 2IS5 TlmSloat,7S2-80ll. re n. l /ab are on REWARD494-253llaft 4 tt.fpW-.d 7IOO
Irvine, Ca. 9271.S
752-JSOO
EOEM/F
...,._. ...... ,,..
3Br, 2Ba, din rm & bv rm.
fr pie, dishwasher, nice
yrd 1595 /mo S300 sec
963-8842 af\ S:JO
Oceanfront, Newport E. Cat Hwy. 675-6900 IRAMD MEW Peninsula. 833-5153 dy1 ; Lo9t: 11\.it mo old Brindle •••••••••o••••••••••••
Beach. 87M1S4. 17,. STRllT MEDICAL/DENTAL 173-0309eva Pll Bull, F, bet. superior ACCOUMnMe -------•
Coste Mne offtce.
Coatect SHllLIY
&ILlllT to a 1 ....
• laleniew .,, a .. ...... Lux new 2br. 2l;ba
twnhme, pool /Jae/ten·
011, sec gate on lagoon
96Z·1398eve9
lbr Townhouse. built-Ins,
(rplc, pool, 1pa/tennl1. 1
mi lo bch. No pets $475
847-8758. 848-9916
28r, lBa. new cpU, drps
& paint. encl patio,
separate garage, $415
mo. A vaal now 898-llPO
aft6:30PM
SEA LAii
MOTR
•Weekly rental1 now
avan .... and up.
•Color TV • Pbonea in
room1.
2274 Newport Blvd. C.M.
~7"5
LIVE IN NEWPORT
BEACH FOR $100 PEit
WEEK.~
s .... r ..... 4200 •••••••••••••••••••••••
&.og.o IHCh 3141 Fum. 2bdrm Mesa condo,
•••.,•••••••••••••••••• avail. am lhns 1 122. S.S25 /mo. Call Answer Luxury 2bdnn, 2ba, view, Ad t44& 24hn 642-4300. open beams, frplc, '97S ' '
incl uUI. May discount Newport Beach House.
for services. 494-0068. Summer Weekly Rental
Mewport leach JIH Mb St. ~ blk from tand,
••••••••••••••••••••••• compl. furn, off atreel
1 blk to ocean/bay, year· parkln1, tak1Dt reserva-
ly, $750/D"Oincl. utll, bit· Uont540-181Zevesooly
Ina, 3 Bd, Avail 5/1. ¥...._...... 4ZIO
1135-2144 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•NWPT OCEANFl\ONT l Br Veraalllea pen· It Lido 191• bayfront,
lboue, 9525/mo, leue W /1mJ boata. Wkly.
or leue option ~5133 fn.SURP
All. •-~~~--~~~--•
br. 2~ba, ideal for a ....... !-.~ .. !?~
1ln1les, 2 frplca, atrium ....
w /waterfall. dbl,.,, aa Rmm\9wlllledtotilt11•
Knox St. .,50/mo. condo ar S.C. Pleaa.
175-HSlfarappt. Snaa, pool, JHHI\.
2bdrm, l~ba. adult.I, no ,...., $Jn. ..... Priva~ a.m. A .. llaba.
... , l•t. szso + ea· ,._.., Call llT·m'I or
15f..OOIO
NO PEEi Apt. It Condo Male U waot.t fem rm·
NS>tala. VUla R.eotali. ml• Ml priv. tnl/1Do.
t'JS-•JJ Brcbr • &Qel utll. Mf.lJOOt1U•
eo.ta Mesa. 3 rm auite, Xlnl hlgh traffic, bi&h Mhcel••om Ii Nwpt Blvd nr Hoa1 CLm Banklnl
A/C. Plenty of parlrlne. visibility Joe. w /water ..... 4650 Hosp. 931•5474 Exp In bank rec '1. TELi.Ei
54.S 1q. rt. S400 per mo. vlewa, allowance for Im· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lo9t : F white Cockapoo, Genera! postint • 10.ll:ey Full Time RealonomiCI 875-11700 ~rovementa. Call Tim SAcrea.lOmifromPaJm Brookbur1t Ii In -by touch req. Xlal I l 7"" ""'11 f 1 No experience nee. Will oa . .....--. Sprlnf•· ltore your boat, dlanapolJa, H.B. -.*3 bene ita. Sa ary com-train. P09Won avail. 10 IMPERIAL
BANK BEST RATE
in
lrlr o what have you for meuurat.e w /abWty. Nr DANA POINT'S Beat SSO mo. Af.o aelf cont'd Found: Ln1 hair U1er · O.C . Airport. Call our South Coul Plaza
location. 250' Sl7S mo. campu weleome to atripe Ylll Cal, Npt Bch SO-H22. The Ruat1 office. Call:
utlb incl OUOOl vacation. Vlew·of tram. <Blu.ffa). 7»-0752 Pelican, 2882 McGaw. Kalh~1ey
... 1--Call Answer Ad #360, lrvi.ne.
HS ToWllc.hrDr. c .........
.. lllrVRt 642~300. U boun. FOUND: Fem DalmaUon ---------
UICUTIYI SUrTI v I c . Bro o II: h Yr 1 t / Acct1 Clerk, Proceaa In· CAUfOllllA CAt2'26
71~1-JJOO
lxt. Z6Z Equal Opp Employer •JanitorialService • rul~e~:~~':_!~a~~~ .. a.11sjllrfflt/ Garfield 1162-tm ::~::.·u::~;..:~~~:~~
Utilities Included Io ca t e d near 0 . C . Allmce • di• mall, ability to work FmJAL
•AdJacentt.oAirllOrt Airport. 752.-0lll . •••••••••••••••••••••••FOUND: 2 Poodlea mil w /f11ure1 a muat. • Rfflaurant Row _ _;_ ______ •••11• pupa Dob6e mix Cbow S.. .... It Lem
•Acceu to 3 Major BAYFRONT, OppOl .... lf 1001 mix.' Schaauae; mix, 540-7UIAKend&v1alnd. a5TownCenterDr.
Fw)'I. NWPI' BCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Whl Cocltapoo, Sbeltie, _E_._o_.E_. ------Cotta ..... Ca 93826
Barmaid wanted, niahta,
Buckin1ham Palace,
Capo. Beach. U6-90S3,
418-5478. Orfl f la Equal ()pportunlty cupace or e For Sale: FubJonable Cocker mix, Setter, ADMINSEC'Y Employer 833-8813 646-4ill9 boutique. Prime area, Chihuahua, Ir Terrier Expandlna reaearch "!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Nwpt Bcb area., Send '11· mix. Jrvloe Animal Care firm need.a verutlle, .;:; B e a u l I c I a n 1 Ir
------------------, qulrieatoboll"°5; P .O. Center75'-JT34 career-minded in · Manlcurt.ta with cllen·
Bo l,._ ,,..._._ M divldual lo provide Banklnl tele; be aelf-employed,
Use .,.,,,. M service
when placing your ad •.. a
Dally Piiot ad number will
appear In your classified ·ad . we take your messages
2-4 hours a day ... you call
_in at ~our convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to vour ad ••.
this service Is only $7.SO
week. For more tnforma-
Uon and to plac ypur ad
call 64~5678.
x _,; .......... eaa FOUND ·. Bird pleaae I a. bo 921127 aecretarial 1upport for LOAM SICll'f AIY p ea your own ur1.
· identify .Administrative Local Newport Beach Flrat clau aalon.
•7933 Secretary. Excel. typ-11vln11 • loan baa Im· 557·2234. W 9fft .._ d Gold R 1.n1. ab. • ability to or· med. openlq for a Loan ------~. ----Rewar : M . el. ia-'•• ----•-•-•-ftla a Sec-t•"Y. lleaJ •tale BKKPR-SECY <Exper.) Mta.C.. "Rusty", C.11. area, no ui-•uaw .... • '"' ... , p rtt.i • hr Aaaiat 7 yean ila Nineae, net-u ,_., muat. Call for appt. loan esper. prefernd. • • me · ·
lln1 appros. 22~ pr ,_co_a_r_. ---·----1 Newport Pharma· Pachslni for nil.MC. olc1DIJ'ln1m.buayprop
year. Priced at only roUND: Wallet ln front ceutlcala,., W. 11th St., Salary commenaurate :1mt·:U olc :;:-ta
'64.950.SeDerMPIUb-ofCdMPaROftlce.CaU N.8.MJ-'1511,at.4T with nper. Pull ID· •aN. ~mWkcl~
mlt all often. 152-1830 Ir tdenUfy. l1J..NIZ na. ---------1urance btMftb 6: peJ.d N · oo-.-er, YI carwr apparel. P1HH IG..-r 75t-taldays. Adv. ~·la'" call· ,..,. _______ _ ·s ... OeM!Panala BOOltltEZPl:a hall
1u.te eos dlarp lot taM rueb
;;:··.:;;.:;·:::;·;; PEOPLE "1~1~0~~ =ra:;:i~~:,1;
meet broad-minded MEIDED ,.. "'"='o• .... -0,.0 , Nwpt Belt tff.
woman tf.40 yn. for ... ... Re•poad to: (IU)
mutual hm Valentine IMMBMATIL Y I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! '71-U. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I at.o&SO Upto 1;: · SS 89 H •• ,....a.t ...... ..... frmt • r. A.IP Uowftclla biilllf\ll.
HJI Oirle or ~full or a to' cbJI 1l1t wt. lira. •••••••• .. •••••••••• .. .-n.Ume. will t ·I. apply at: lltO
.11111111.__.. .... ._. ... _.._ ... ~ll!'lll-lllrlllll-l'I train. CaU lrlil. PlattnUa Ave., Cotta aru.a ..... u1i.1• b Iii•• •~
IJll
tlYEI~ FEE
, " Tellirs
".I Growin9 compony
j .WS 1hre• 1ndividuof t
Wllh bcri. savings &
~ C/I thtif I & loon
&dgound to joln their
friendly 1toff. Good
investment potential.,
benefits & start1n9
a SC]lay to $1 .200.
Call Carry
~ 972-9955
• 11616 E. '4th St , SA
Secretary
Key position for
lecretory w1 th nice
dppeoronce & good
typing in beautiful new
coiporote offices of
SQ\finqs & loon. Abiliry
to work in fost·poced,
rbpidly changing
etlvironment with real
estate developers &
• mojor contractors
Company p rovides
excellen t penel1ts.
advancement porent1al
& starting salary to
$1,250.
Call Carry
972-9955
1616 E 4th St., S.A.
Cashier
Growing company
needs b1-l1ngual.
Spanish sp ea~•ng
1nd1v1duol w ith
cashiering baclground
~ nice appearance l0t
1hs South Santo ""°
spot Starring salary to
$850
Call Carry
972-9955
1616 E. 4th St. S.A
Branch
Manager
Beautiful Sovmgs &
Loon seeks
experienced branch
manager to 1oin its
• ~~ 4toSJ I b1"
~ny 1s noted for
rts long term
employees ~ exc!'lllent
benefits Company
offets •tarring solory 10
$1 500.
Call Carry
972-9955
1616 E.. 4th St S"
Assistant
Manager
Fluaa Cem,.ny
Rapidly grow ing
c.ompony seeks
individual w11h thrift &
loon or finance
COl"(lPQny background
& on eye rewords the
futixe Company offers
eacellent benefits &
starting salary to
$1 500.
Call Carry
972-9955
1616 E 4th Sr .. SA
Savings Officers
Bu•lneuman ~eeka p/t
aaaoclate ln wbole .. tc.
supply. 7N-l742
*CAI DllVBS• CLIElk TYPIST
CheckerCab Work ln beautJful aur·
770-0222 roundinp at the harbor •---C-... ---... -..... ---i 32-40 bra/week. Pay
14/T •All" commensurate with exp. Needed Weekends , Requires aood typln1
stron1 rood-wine service skills, bookkeeplna &
back1round send re· general orflce exp.
aume t.o: Ben Brown's Please apply Tuea tbru
Restaurant 31106 Coast Sat. Dana Pt. Marina
Hwy. So. Laiuna 921677 Co , 24701 Dana Dr
Car Wash help, full or _o_an_a_P_t -----
P tr, apply in per&<>n, Cock ta il Wa iter /
Metro Car Wash, 2950 Waitress, tUah volume
Harbor Blvd, C.M. house-Orange Cnty
Airport area, only de· CASHIER pendable & exper nd ap-F /T position avail. 1 c II bet 2 & Salary commensur1Ate P y, a w 5pm with exp. Apply in Mo~·Fri. Aak for Carole
person. Metro C ar SmtthS49-8728.
Wash,~ Harbor Blvd. Companion to live-Ill with
C.M e Ider I y woman ,
Cashier for dining room, housework. Must have
apply lo rood manager _c_a_r_. 54_8·_3386 __ . ----
John G1lde , Hotel
Laguna, 425 S Coast COMPANION, remale.
Hwy, L.B. 4.ik·lUl. live an l days/wk , Sat &
Sun. prererred. care ror
CASllERS
UTVTEM
MARKETS
For 2nd & 3l'd Shins
We promote to manage-
71 yr old lady on walker
Own car. 833-0379
COMPUTER
I' A YROU CUllK
Wil l train Bkpa
know ledge help(ul
Ref's nee Hrs 9 S
Call 642-9955 btwn
9AM IOPM
ment & supervLSion from -------
within
WANT A CAREER?
Costa Mesa
111 Del Mar
631-9421
Laguna Beach
494.9233
Huntington Beach
962-9116
CLERICAL
JOIN THE
#I TEAM AT
OSHMAN'S
SPORTING
COMPUT!lt OPER.
Ill<
Join us on the beaut.
Monterey Pe111n1ula.
Knowledge of utilities &
job control language.
IBM 371>-138 exper. re-
q 'd . Min . 2 yrs. Di.st·
inguisbed co. awalt1
your prompt responae.
Call or write: Michelle
Peerson, The Marshall
Group Personnel
Service, Ocean & Lin·
coin, P 0 . Box A·l.
Carmel. Ca. 93921, (4()8)
~-5700. "Free to Appll·
cant"
GOODS . Immediate full time and CO~Y Clerit f /lime, Mon·
part time openings exist F.i:i. 8-S. $3.75 hr Must be
at our divisional offices. fnendly, resp., & able lO
The selected individuals comm u n 1 cat e w I l h
for these entry level cus t omers In a pro·
positions will be detail ress1onal manner. Org
minded and have some Co . airport area
c lerical experience 957-0648
Hours are nexible. ---------
Please apply in person
to ·
OSHMAN•s
SPORTING G-OODS
3300 S. Fairview St.
SANTAANA
714·SS7·9881 EOE M /F
COSMETICIAN
Needed for position as
make-up artist at a
Newport Beach salon
Mus t be li c'd (2131
654-6155.
COUMS&OR
Day camp. June 29-Aug
28. 10am-3:30pm wkly
Previous experience de·
sired. S4 25·$4.75/hr
Clerical Niguel Shores Com
HEIEfTIS!! munit y Association,
The job of your choice. ,_49_a-_o_122 _____ _
All skills needed Top . N r •
~VICTOR
'• • ,, I• lo 'S'
I. ;
Npt Bch 556-8520
Equal Opp Emplyr M IF
CLBICAL
AuthorlHUon operators
p/tlme, all hrs, flex.
schedules, min. 20 hrs.
$4.01 t.o start.
Tymahare
Transaction
Services, Inc.
24Q Dupont Dr., Irv. E.O.E. KIF
COUMTBHB.P
Briiht, energetic person
needed for busy deli &
ham shop. Poeaibillty
for advancement for the
rlaht person. Contact
Stan at 673-9000.
Counter Help, F rr.
Kusier's Cleaners
548-4243
COUMTBl HELP
Sandwich shop. Costa
Mesa area. 646-lOOC (9·3>
USTODIAN-Irnmed
openlna ror exper detaU
oriented custodian In
quallly FulUoo l•land
retall clotbln1 atore.
Full-time poaltfon w /al·
tractive aalary "
benetlta. Call Ray
•Cl-ert•c•a•i-----•I 844-50'70
WHIM YOU THIHI
TIMPOLUY
TM•m.a.Y
CUllS
llCrl'IOMISTS nPtm
SICaTAlllS
WOID PIOCISSOIS
DATAIMTIY
DILIVBYt##
Dependable penoo, pett
Ume, Tues 6 Thun. ror
elannln1 llrm ln Irvine.
contact: BeV,1414820
Donut shop. Early AM
shift, no exper nee. App-
ly: Dlppity Donuts, 1854
Newport Blvd. C.M.
EHGIMIB,ITECH.
TEMrOLuY
Electronic
engmeer /technician for
debugging/te&llflg of
new Mil spec:. circuit de·
velopmt. Must be U ·
per'd. in design of switch
mode power supplies &
analog circuiLs. RF ex·
per. desirable. 3 mos
job with growmg laser
co Independent contrac·
tor status (cOOJJullantl
acceptable Potential for
permanent employ·
ment. Call : 493-6624
EOE
GEN'L OFFICE
Good typmi skills, work
varied, electronics firm.
Advanced Kinetics 1231
V1clor1a, CM &.D E
Call 646-71~
G la moroua pcMlltion for
several attractive
persons to teach & sell
Skin Care for a NaUonal
Cosmetic Co.-Earn 112
& up per hour Com·
m l11 ion1. Al10 need
Mana1ement Trainees
For App'l call 752-7939
between m-3pm
UNDERWRITING
ASSISTANT
This position, which sup
ports the efforts of our
underwriters. requires
LEGAL SECRET ARY
3 yrs exper Family
Law. 2 attorney ore. Will
be workmg m Lakewood
area . Needed 1m
mediately Gd benefits
Sl,000 to Sl.200 DOE
Call. Sheree. 540·6055,
Coastal Personnel Agy .
2790 Harbor Bl . C M
Never a ree EOE
MODBJMG; II
Comm ·1~"" film•,, n -
tra• ... SCM needJ w
racea, all aga. 957..:,..<sf!·
MOTS. .•
MIGHT AUDtTOR Mz.30~
Nuralo1 ·~
MUISlS AIDES 7:30-3·30pm & p11rt time•
3 30 1 . 30pm <:outlt r")
Club Conval H~'fl1 ,j
I "'
Part Time
Coun~Hnq Youth
Ccrriers
successruJ expenence in ~~~~~~---1 ratana commercial in-
Adulti. with 011t·la11dm~
attrat·trve l)C'r .. 1111.111111·-..
to spend 15 h1 s p1 r "'<'"~
counsehnR )1111111 111• ..
10 15 I-:\ l'llll•J!" (I.
Weekend-; \\.11l.1hl•· ~~
per ~k l kit
2 30 S 30pm \!1111 \tit II
Fri 642 4321 l"ICI '4:1
Ask for Lon surance policies
Qualtrted candidates
mu s t posses s
an a ly t 1cal /numerica I
ability and must be able
to function effectively
with minimal
supervision. Ability to
communicate efrective·
ly, both verbally a nd in
writing, is a must
Responsibilities mclude
rating and iss uing
policies and endorse·
men ls
Cont.ct DEBBIE FOWLER
7 I 4-SSa.1414
IHA
lruaurance Comp.any or
North America
500 south Mam
400 Cen.tra.J Tower
OranierCa. Equal Opportunity
Employer M /F
Liquor Clerk, full & part
trme Cost a Mesa
549 1422
Live.Jn babysitter & lite
housekeeping on Balboa
Island separate Irving
quarters provided call
Gay 675 2545
MATERIAL
HA MDU NG
lmme d opening for
parts clerk, rubber hose
products, muat pass co.
physical Including back
X-ray Taltlna apphca
tion1 btwn 8 &l lOAM on
ly Stra toflex, 17671
Armstrong Ave , Irv
EOE A Kendavla Ind .
Co.
OrancJe Coas.t •
Daitv Pilot •
330 W f1u, Sl 11·..t
Col>la Mesa. c '.1
E q u a I IJ 1J p 11 r t,
Empl11yt•1
Part Time
STUDENTS
HOMEMAKERS
Earn ex t ra mon1·~. workin~ p 1hm1• 1n yt1iir
own home. 10lrod111•1111:
the New Dmly l'1lot l•i
The Orange Coast Art>;1 •
Set your own hours' Call
Weekdays between \pm
& 8pm. 900-1~
MEDICAL PART Timi! Day~ An.-.
Full & p/\lme tront ore serv No exp nl'• C:JIJ
Buay G.P ln F V Peg 543.3333 Eot•:
board & ins 979-9111
P B X 0 P r-,; H \ I ~) lt
Medical Office, P /time telephone ans i.l'rvm•
clerical avail ln Newport day & relief graveyarcl
Beach Doctors ore Pa shift will tram $42-li117 tlent b1llinge. collec '
uone, appt scheduling PY SON FRIDAY
Ex per pl'ft'd. 646-0267 needed for uff1cc 111
MEDICAL F\Jll or part
tim e. rront o rrice'
Transcribing exper pre
rd. MS 9400.
MEDICAL
RECEPTIONIST
Busy Newport Center or
rtce. responsible, en
thuslastic, typing p rr
Ftr 640-2023
Medical
SECRETARY
F.V aurqeon requires
exp'd front office sec'y
Ins billing, pegbrd &
dictalyplng nee Some
back office exper
helpful Call 833 3173 for
interview
Irvine Mu ~t ha\e
transportalion f111 ..,,
rands . help with :-111111
office dulle~ Minimum
32 hrs per wt•Pk <':ill
btwn 8 30 5 , t\1•r1
979.2724
l'ERSOH FRIDAY
Over the t•ountt•1 sale'>
Boat store. 631-2$1!0
*Picture Fnaninq
Picture frame .,;n op
needs persun <'"<
penenced rn all 11ha"l'~
of p icturl' fr;in1111i.:
558 1522
PRESS PERSON
Fully qualif1l'd nfl<><>l
Mm 3 yeurs e:q.>f'nf'n1""
Davidson 701 H) ;IH
Medical. full lime front With TS1 l>;.iri.fll'!ll ' I
omce position M1ss1on plu!I For tnlPr\ ICW. '"'" VieJO Executive & 85S 11 37
medical, secretarial ex per lncludlng Insurance Prod u l'l 1011 I u II II ml'
billlng. 4~1060 person for l'rnd Depl
MEDICAL COURIER
Mu st h ave own
tranafortation & be
famil ar with Calir
freeway 1ystem. Mon
Fri. 9-Spm. 768-8500
Packing & h.1ndrin1•
hoar er y Crystal Cr'"'
lions /\ pparel 631 Ml 1
PRODUCTIO...t
TRAINEE
Rubber hose pm1lucts,
mu11t pass eo physH·al
Medical Including bat·k X·l':O'
Fuhion Island G.P. Takina applic;ltlnnl\
seelta eitpulenced btwn 8 & tO/\M ~
front/back ortlce starr S tratoflex , JtG71
for part-time .tt vacallon Armstrong /\ve , .u,1
covera1e. 844-0081. EOE /\ Kenda vi" Jnd
----''-------1 Co.
P rr Horse Dept Ch•r°K to
work for PETCO /\nunill
\
Help yourself to a
HeaPlf\g selection of
Qualified Hopefuls
in the DAILY PILOT
H ELP WANT ED ADS
-.cl 1100 Help W-..d 7100 Help W-..d 7100 Help W..e.d 7100 Help Welllhd 7100 Help WIMIH 7100 Help W..ted 7100 Hetp Wmftd 7100 Alltiqw1 1005 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• McB'TIOHIST I
SECHTAIY
Lapna ad agency nda
pef1onable ind1v1dual
..,or front olc Diversified
du,lies. accurate typing
Safiry + benefits Call'
714.494-1157
REC El'TIONIST
Telephones, Light typ.
Ina Call Robin 752 6211
RECEPTIONIST 1'1ea•. attractive, good
personality. Phone ex·
perience. Interviews
.1a..t4 pm . Tuesday
,Fri.day, full-time. Salary
Q>IU/llensurate with ex.
perlence. Harlequin Din
ner Playhouse, 3503 S
Marbor Blvd . SA
V79·S51 l.
IECEPT.fTYPIST
Newport Beach law of.
free. Pay commensurate
with ability 644·6400
QCEl'T'IOHIST I
SECRETARY
Con.ulllng firm Ill look·
ins for sharp. energetic
It positive person to han-
d~ busy phones Must
type min . 50wpm
64~11.174
HCEPT10HIST
Wldr or without typing
neffed. Top pay Tem-
ponry " full lime Call
Tod Services at 979·8900
Restaurants
Acceptina cook & day
wait. apps Apply Mon-
Thur. 3.5 at Reuben E
Lee ; 151 E Pacific
Coast Hwy, Nwpt Bch.
RESTAURANT F'T, PIT
sandwich man & counter
he lp Plaza de Cafe
Gary's Dell, 752·5"401 ---
RESTAURANT
Food service worker.
over 18, Wlll tram for
meat sheer & portion
control Approx 7 hrs .
Flex. starling time.
lOAM-lPM, Mon·Thur.,
6A M· 1PM Sun Lori's
Kitchen. !rT17 S Harbor
81., S.A !r1&-0747
Sales
$36,000 +
BEVERLY HILLS
Health & Nutrilion Corp
settina up operations in
O.C Need key people for
Supervision & Training
Full/Pa rt lime. Wi II
train Xlnt. career or
supplement Call.
9·5PM, Mr Zuckerbrod
at 973 8443
ales
GllUTHOUIS
9AM-2PM
Sales & delivery dnvers
needed. lmmed open
mas tor motivated peo-
ple Can easily earn over
SlO hr Call Craig alter
lpm 951 2642.
SC TRY ,A.EGAL
0 C Airport area Ex-
pr'd m bus . corp & pro
bate Lite bkkpg. Salar)'
commensurate w expr
714 833·9124
Secretarial
SALESSEC"Y
With a young dynamic
computer billing sales
organization. 'Must have
xlnt verbal skills, Join the Los Angeles clerical or secretarial
Times Circulation Team experien~. Call Linda
SECRETARV Church ,
p /time 2S hrs a wk.
Mon-Fri. Typing, gen.
ore. exper Mature CdM
644-0145 Mon-Fn
SECllETAllY
Ir you're a competent
secretary & a good or-
ganizer, we neded you.
I( you can take a
personal interest 1n
chent deadhnes & deta1l-
o riented business ad-
vertising, we have a
Po&ilion you can crow ln·
lo with one of O.C. 's
leading adverti11n1
agencies Interested"
979-7000
SECURITY wUARDS
Openinas tor qualified
ind1v1duals. Good start·
in& pay R.efUt1dable un·
1form depo61ls. 978-7243
&638-8191
SECURITY wUARD
Mon lhru Friday, 12 lo 8
AM Benefits 499-1175,
499-1177
Sec'y
H.l.PaOFOFC
Needs xlnt typist, top
skills non smkr salary
open 640-2912
SERVICE STATION
TEACHERS
ASSISTANT
Special cla&Jes for han
dlcapped adults 2 yrs
college exper req'd Ex
cell vacat ion & in
s uran ce benefits
Wkdys s·JO to 4PM
United Cerebral Palsy
Assoc . Santa Ana,
546·5760
Teac....,.'s.Afde
Preschool. exp d f-'ull
lime 642·0411
TECHHICIAM
Wanted for service & in
1tallalion ol photo pro
cessor . Some
mechanical & electrical
exp required 1714 >
898·0290
Telephone Sales
WORK AT HOME
Call Garden Grov~
530·5220
TOOL.rUSHERS
California based drilling
contrartor seeks grow
mg foreman for llunt
mgton Beach ri~s X.lnt
salary & benefits Send
resume PO BOX 2508
Bakersfield CA 93303 or
call <805 1327-5736
Travel
EXCLUSIVE
Nwpt Bch travel agem•y
Minimum 2yrs exp.
w /travel agency Saber
agts ONLV Contact
Gaylene 645-7777
& adapt your work Dnorkm at Safeguard SECRETARY TRAVaAwEHT
RetailSales schedule to your Health Care Systems Customer Service exp Telephone Exp 'd comm'I agent
WYMDHAM-l.ElwH l,.1n·resatyTle1m~orCk1.5rch~a·~~~ l714l!57 ~12_1 _ Order processing. type SEWING MACHJNE rHOME '8tSOM needed for fast growing
ATTENDENT
Partttme evenings. Ex-
perience nee Apply 1n
person· Union 76, 3928 E
Coast Hwy, CdM.
~ 50+wpm , quotes . OPERATOR P 1T phone pers on OC Travel Agency. DIAMONOS,IHC. sales office near your Secretary phones, Irvine mfg. Saillof\exp.631·1842 needed to call & set Apollo exp pref. Cheryl
RnAILSALES home&havemorettme LEGAi.SEC'Y s.o.8894,askforKH •SHa-~o~. app'ts for busy Solar 833-0492 MAHAWIMEMT for your family .. studies . lmmed opening in our ..-... ....,.. u-1 Energy Co $4.SO •hr +
Career opportun1t1es or leisurely penods. We growing Irvine offi ce !•--------• Orderliller bonus AskforAI TYrESmElt w1thexc1llngexpansion pay hourly wages & CJVll practice with Secretary 4 day wk,Coben Ll9UIDYHE CO MP UGRAPHIC
minded company commisslOflS mm1mum2-5yearsexp PlatfonnS.C:'y. __ 979-7660 EHHwYSYSTIMS EQUIP. xlnt working
Following 3 very suc· LOS ANGELES TIMES Salary open call Fran Typing ~. Sh prefd SHOP'hAIMH s.5.6793• 75"4.Q5J5 1 conds. pay, benefits The
cessful yearsofmarket-1375 Sunflower Ave 833·3622 Comm 'l loans Hvy. Learnengraving&other -ComposingRm 9'79·3SU
ing research & product C.M. SECUT'"RY public contact & ma chines. Company TelepboneSales T -...t.Ja ...._
testin& we are now in the ~0301 "' documentation Min. 1 benefits & good potential • $300-$600/WK • ype ...... ,. •·---.. posiliontotraln!orsales Small office. Typing, yr exper Salary DOE. for right person. 3121 Wholesale products, Min. 3 years experience
management positions EqualOpportunity bookkeeping and Major medical Call : Red ffill,C.M. largedlatrlbutlngfirm. 1n b ot h areas .
for our expansion pro-Employer phones lrvine. SS6-2323 Fred, ~. Coastal lmmed. openings, good Quadratek Capable or
aram projected to com· ---Personnel Agy, 2790 pay/Co benefiu, rapid full-charge Art Dept.
men« in the rail or 1982. Sales SECUT ARY Harbor 81 • CM Never a ST A TIOHARY advancement. No exp Darkroom expenence a
0 u r com P a n Y HEL, WANTED! lmmedllteopening/fuU 1~fff~·~E~O~E~~~~~~ Store in CdM needs neceaury. Earn while plus For interview, call 1pecialiia ln markeling Telephone sales. No ex· tame. South Laguna area 1_ salesperaon F /time. 5 learnln&. Several omce 855·1137.
1u own unique "Contem-per. nee Excell. co. property owners 81. Se days. Xlnt working con· locations t.o choose from TYPIST IECEPTIOHIST porary Claulc:" jewelry benefits Commission 1 0 c I a t 1 0 n cretary ds Especially fme clien-Call aft.er lOAM 534-9325.
Plitt time Mon.Fri. MWll deaigns executed in 18 r.roaram & profit shar-Shorthand /speed writ-OPPORTUNITY tele. Phone 644-7482 for Personal Lines Dept
WANTED TO IUY
I buy old guns.
diamonds. ivory, jade &.
collectibles Call (7141
972 4926 & ask for Dane
Antique square grand
piano, Circa 1880 11500
Antique Hall. 270 E 17th
Costa Mesa 548-3111
Pvt Sale f'me 1ewe\r)
19ct Opal, Lucien Picard
Gold watch Original
paintings. oils. wtr clrs
etchings Picasso. Dall.
Paul Blaine Henrie.
Clyde Zulch. Miguel
Dominguez. Linda
Rogers & others Pr
oriental lg bronze Urns
Bronze, porcelem. bis·
que !1gunnes Old Lon
don Pub dock on Mghny
pedestal Btfl China
Cabinet w blt·m ladies
desk. French Marble
coffee tbl P r. silk
chinese rugs Pr. brass
lamps + more 639-7128
ABBA ANTIQUES
Wholesale Warehouse
HOW OPEN
tAM-6,M
Commerce Park, #Cl
3303 Harbor 81 vd
CM. 751·207011148-9366
<Next to405 Frffwayl
AppllCMC.. 10 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b bl •. Karat Gold with the n1. Apply In person.· appt. Telephone lnsurance Agy. Apply in e •persona e .. well Ing, good typlna re-333 N N rt a roomed, & enjoy meet-principal emphasis on Pe n n ya aver. l 6 6 0 quired. Must be outgo-1-'-"--------LAY OH THE HACH person· ewpo HARBOR AR EA
lnJnUtepublic Requires dJamonden1a1ement& Placentia Ave., Costa ing,persontble&enjoy We hav e job op · STOcmOKER AU.DAY 81.,N.8 APPLIANCESEIWICE
l ooa apellrno & pen· wedding rlnp & feature Mesa a busyr office deallna por tunillea suited lo TlA.lt& lO I _ _., t . We buy used appUances • pieces of jewelry It is ----------your skills, experience 4r mm ...... a e operungs --we sell recond, guar. rna'11hip. No typlna h 5 .... &.it with members It public wor'-schedul-College grads Oppty. in Short applicatJon. Work TYPISTS Pfw>Ae experience pre· important to note t at _. Excellent benefit• ... SECRET .. ARJ-ES Newport Beach area for S.9pm. Mon-Fri. talkiqa appliances 549-3077
I d F II experien ce in the lmmed ..art time open-...,,.., N' I Sh h d '-I a -• pbon Dee erre u company ..-_,,,mo. 1gue ores •PBXRECPTS. ar wora n. en· onourtae e p Reglstert.odayfor local llUYAPPUAHCES beufita. Apply. Pen-)ewelr)" buai.ne&1 is not in I for Reader Ad Community Aasoc1ation. •GEN. OFC. CLERKS lhuslastlc lndlv. Send re· voices pre re r red temporary asslanments Les 9,c:7.8133 nysaver. 1.,,.... Placentt'a nece11ary. Key at-reftresentativetorinslde (71•)•9 .. 0122. sume to· PO Box 430 13 3c:/hr guaranteed .,
uuu • • .... Please com'"' by (or an · · ' · ., " ' 55 ~ A CM tributes wi ll be a u es &:Woo. Gd. com-"" M lt N J 'l 7 ve., · · d inlervlewor call·. a r on, ew ersey, more money eas. Y Fr1'gidare w /boltom· sensitivity tor goo pany nefits. Apply in ---------080S3 'bl Co b 3 L
--··::\·------·' t l l t & p ••SIC1ET'"•1 .. S•• 54"'-0400 poss1 e. me y en-Lin-: freezer. 69"x3Z'' Olive • •• as e. a p easan person . ennysaver. -.. .,.. Ent 1180 N. Coast Hwy,
aec.-nOMIST I rersonable manner. a 1660 Placentia Ave . ShSO/RE/FunSUl.000 I ' STRAIGHTEHER N Laa Bch. Wk dys at Green $75. 54().31111 ; aft 6
G>llL FIUDA Y ffn sales dnve • abili· C. M Mon· Fri .. 1·5PM s.tli./Super /2)'rS12.800 VICKI HESTON f for aluminum tor1ings. 3pm Fint come. first rt~ l'ftsOHNU SUMCU _556_· 1_1_39 _____ _
Ir h I ty & the wllllneness t.o --Accountant/Oe&Sl9,200 • -E i i d h ed ,.u &rt' a s arp, n harmonize 4r relate well SALES I M R KT G -I •..,...t....a......... xper ence requ re ir________ 3723 llrch S...__·t Portabledllhwasher, telliaent. mature lnd1v S hi hi hi Exec/1hUlO/corpS18,000 ---Able to read blueprints ...-XlntCond tooll::lna for full lime pos with other people. Ex· earc ne for g Y· Expd. Consultant Ours <Spec1a1Wna In & measurtna instru· Tele .... Sale1 Hewoonleoch ·
with variety. Irvine Sav· cellenl salary com-motivated pel'80fl or cou· Liz Reinders Agy, Inc. Temporary Clerical menls. lit & 2nd shifts. Exciting vacation club, t 0 .E --S48-999'l
inti i• Interested in you. mensurate wtlh ability. pie wllllng to develop 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE Penonnel> Apply Aluminum Forge promoting for resort l~~~~~~~~~~I AMClftO Refri-1 ato.
lilGat have &d typln& To a r r al n,g e ro r a own business. 559-S.57 Newport/833-8190/Free Co. I 502 E. Alton St.. condos. needs 3 to 6 i: .-.. S300 ,,...673-9344~
skllla. Exper. aa a PBX persona nterview eve• 18004Skypark 81. Santa Ana. 549·4075. brl&hl, responsible, am· • 1nS1
ODet. helpful. Apply at: ptlueaarste Mcooopr~a~~ ':.~: S_a_l_ea_______ SICUT"'llY Suite235 Irvine E.O.E. bltloua people. Gd 3-4 days per week. Vaca· • ~ ~, S "' phone voice nee Guar lion relief Apply at·
•HlVINESAVINGS Bruce Lambert · Now hiring Asslatant Leading Irvine Com-I•--------• EACH ER'• Aide want· aaalnst comm. Wkly 1660 Placentia, Costa
Electric dryer. us«l 3mo.
$100. dya 5"48-5747; all 5
543.9924 U.W lbcArthur Blvd. Telephone (7H)M4·0501. Manaaer Trainees Min merclal lnduttrial Real SICllTA.IY ed. Exp. 5 mornln11. paycheck. 3 p/t ahlfts Mesa
•trvlDe,CA.92715 llTAJ1.CLBK Smo. exper. Call for In· Estate company haa Excell. oppty. ror sharp 9·U , afternoosa1 4·8. avl. caU: t-5. Mon-Fri .. lfcyclH IOJQ. E o .E. 11/F n.... ndabl'"' sil-""'-"n _te,,_r_v_le_w_: 642-__ 123_1.___ openlnf for a sctry. Lite 1al to wort ln rhut-pac~1 suun. 840-M20 MS-7957 or543-8137 ..,..,pe '"' ... ,...."" S/H req. Ex per la essen· Newport Beac comm . t-------------------needed. 10-5 Mon· Fri. S A L E S P E R S 0 N • t I a l . Sa I a r y c om . real e1tate ore. Excell. ·· 6' _______ ._ _______ _
• •llCB'TIOMIST Will train. Apply in mature. P/Ume It some men1urate with exper. typing & dlctapbone
Intanat'I. mkta. tlrm ~raon Pier I. 2710 wknd1. 87J.JS34 cal l Georg I a at 1 k i I ls r e q u tr ed.
I\ At d 1 R e c e p • rbor Blvd. CM SALB P/f Co rporate Re ally. Challeotlnl poaltlon for
UMlatlTypiat ror front Sallinl lutnactor needed '75-0IU rilht ,laJ. Call: Lalla, den. Handle phones, We need 3 abarp people w.2'00
..-vl.aitcn. ~re-In Npt lkh. 25-'rl' crut. with ra1hloo back1round -------···~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~ q'd. Accuracy a m1.1at. lnl uUboat1. Wknd1 to work in our meo't ft _SICllf AIY / 1:: ~ ~ _, c 11 now, full Ume 1ummer. women'• dept. Salary + 1 ·--~--l:lh~tt . ..,..y. • : MS-7100 commlulon, c•ll for ..-...-~ , Coplan, W-ltOl. ------:----• On I y de d I c ate d , 'DI~ Equlpment, 2805 appt. motlv•ted, • eon1lltent
•IOli' .._nca M .. Irvine. SALIS T~L_.~ appJJcanLI need a~ly.
C-.••ca•• _..._ Exper. ln real •t.ate re-
V'l' --1---------1 la&ff fltJd helptul, but R. E. SALJ:SPEBSON for Tlred Of Mlllnj bouael 7 not necesury-excell. rld,aebanaes.lnv•t. days a ••tt Wt need Sala ·--ta oppt~wU" ex Clft.. Rllh comm. New ooe Uc.,._ &o IMm the UNTAL • P.~1 (Is c: ' rnlc or:
'1t /T ola. N•wport •kill& to manaae broltu COMIULTAMT'S 1ania~Uoo, outed In J>tdfle as...,__,, rommerdal real •tatt. 8tt~Der •1 a-. n ta rio u n ta i o Va II u .
I Income from t:Qtmt f'umlhU't SboWroom In *-9080
MYATIOMIT •hilt JOU lftl"n. Siper WettmhHl•r •••~ ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
attrac:ttv•, iOOd beMftw: We '1lilurante: career °"""*' PlflCJll •11111111-liliilllliiiliilill•• &JIT. ""°"* a · btakh bwurance • •· for eatry Intl 1191. 1n U•. Jnter•l••• &al'Dlan_. Qidad K•, bome turnl••••••· , .. , 1'\IHi&J· f7l.frlO lnWMT'llilc.atfCllr81a ..
fdd&1. full• ptrt.UtlM. t!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f lar,.t fwa fiilQI co a ....... lilt 1 '1 COIDJHelllnle Meda •allftli ...... ............. ,..,... • .... ...,,,... tQand·
Willllr: Pla7bo111N, lQ mtt . ....,,.. p.,.....
C ......... Yf.l.A. re[ WWt.nia; .. lar.~'-
!Jllall. ~· • ..._.!.t'QU ···-----'"'!'--~-or •l&lm•. 11..-.a.t;~ .. l :IO •,_,II..,_.
ttll. eo.taitt awr llUll.m-cml
---------1 ...................... . TYPISTS Schwlnn1~11· 10 apd
CLalCS Varally Dlx 18", $80.
We have 20 opentnaa ln Girl•• LU Chick SUn·
the Irvine area. TOP fray,~. Offer. '42·0268
PAY! Work accordln& to your1cbedule. MX RACING BIKE
CAU THOMAS for 12 yr old Is up. Webco
641•1144 frame, Redline fork•.•
1~~~~~~~~! 1ood cond. '75 OBO . r:: 8'15-3131
WAITR~/WAITER ........... ,..1021
W /car for wlclter baaket •••••••••••••••••••n•• lunc:h 1e rvfce . ~
t :J<H:IOPM, Mon·Frt. llDWOOO 21,6 I
Earn SlU.SUO wltl)'. Xlllt deckiJll. •• 1001.
Muat be oea.l penooa· New load JUll ID from
b1t • enerseu~. t?t-074'1 mill. 15 .. /ft. "'·•W
an IOAll for al)pt.. _a_QYtJ"'--_m_•_· -----
DUTCH DOORS (I)
le"aAdll"llOeacb.
eTMm
5 pc solid wood waler
bdrm aet, xlnt cond,
$1000 /0BO. Call Answer
Ad 11465, 642-GlO. 24 hrs.
BARWICK DATSUN
\on Ju on C opl\h Ol>O
831-3 3 11
WANTED!!
c ... :-
T «Ja1c111 .
ror'lbtBen
Bu1 OrLe ... De&J lnOr..,.County ...
ComeS..\JtTodayl.
&
SA•EWI
BMW
2M02 llarsuerit• Pkwy.
lllulon Viejo
A 'itry Plrwy. ex.it
(Ort 5 Freeway)
IJ 1·2040 49Mt4t
$5995
Call JI• Hop
M .. L.
or ClOMd Sun4•Y'I
Cre ...... Motors
• 135-3171
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
AMDTRUCIS
COHMElL
CHEVROLET
~ ll..rh .. 1 Ith"
,., ~·1 '\'I ~-"\
SU-1200
miracle
mazda
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos Call u s
TODAY!!!
Earle Ike
13631 H., llOI a.'ICI
G.11ctien Growe ,. • ..._DD
Tep Dollar
Paid
For Your Car'
JOHNSOM & SON
La.c•U1rcwy
2626 Harbor Blvd.
CREVIER
UCUMlllClllll. • 9 1ST aHOAOWAY
SAffTA AffA
'13 2IOC. xmt ccad. lluat • 8 7 B u G . G 0 0 d
aeU S7500/0BO 7$2-24(M traruportatioo. AM /FM
dy1; 552·5'1'7 evea. I trk. SJ,200, Ul-91Z1 .~ . 831•
'78Camaro 835·3171 '71 280SE U, new en1. '71 VW '11 Sqrbck. Beaut '"'u~r11111•no111v1Ho .. 11cH1Mt. palnl, batt.•Ura. Mint motor, • ctn body
1_coo_d_. S7_lM_SB __ l ___ 1 873-1'82; 97~25'5
•USEDIMW1*
'78UOiA (5421) '72, 220D, 'dr Sedan, IUD·
roof, manual trans. One
Owner, xlnt cond rr ,SOO.
(213)698-4111 dya, (714)
~-0146 evea/Wlmds.
'7S convert .. yellow. ori1.
owner, body &ceoa. naw·
leas *5300. Donna dys
549-1233 eves 75.2·8380
Air, automatic, power
•leering, 27,961 mile•.
1812VEI)
'798201 (75e0)
'79 320tA SIR (7089) ·ao 528lA 1un.rf. (0013)
'11320iA (0115)
__ C~lo!:Md~~~~~-ILate '77 Mercedes
'76 Rabbit, clean,
$2800 /0BO.
~3173
$4fU
Barwick Imports
131-lll I
!77 Camaro with T.top.
Mant cond. lowner.
M4-26C» '715JOIA 450SEL, 1ilver/black,
Alloy wheel•, stereo 1or1eoua, w. everythin1. C MN\ ......... / '61 Bug, Xlnt, maaa. '87 overt, new top. new cauette, power win· ....,., + _.. mo, assume Mi h Ii d · I dows, 13,800 orlalnal lea1e at Ui.\3 lnl. for ss atereo, nu wht paint, c e n r a 1 a s ,
mllea, excestlonallb mos . Owner anx . $159S.538-M56 Am/Fmcua,wirebub-caps, 6 cyl 250 eng. auto
nj ce ! PRI ED T .iM·l095 '73 SWEAIUG trana, 66M m1 , Xlnt S£LL! ! (889VPY) ',--..,..------,-7-4_1_1 upd, radials, very nice, cond. $3500 497-2ll6
Cl.s~~rro= ••••••••••••••••••••••• 61K mi, ~640-9049 .._;,:;.... ttZI
Santa Ana ~3171 LEASE '73 VW WISTFALIA •••••••••••••••••••••••
The Most lbcltiltc)
PariOfYow
IMWPW'daMOr
L•OM CCMllld ..
DIRECT' A factory pop·top SEEUSFIRST!
• camper bus'. upd, xlnt We have a good selet'tion
1981 PEUGEOT
TUUOs
cond, .StK nu, mu.st sell 0 r N E w & u s E D
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848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
Vol•o t772 •••••••••••••••••••••••
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IN ORANGE COUNTY !
ORAMGE COUMTY'S PoncM
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'79 320i Topai, well cared
for please call. 41M-0511
for appt toeee.
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POISC .. lt7t
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(200388). Ask for Duke
orJllke.
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ROBINS
FORD
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tO'>lA M l SA '• l} Oc110
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1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
646-tlOl 540.9467
OIAMM COUMTY
VOLVO
Lar1e1\ Volvo Dealer
ln Oranae County t
BUY or LEASE DIRECT '78 BMW m . xlnt cond, •
spd, anLhracate 1ray ~~~~~;:.mi, $21,000 ··-~_7_1~-~-·_i_~_. _S4_~_0_0_1o_w_;"_o_. Pft:mt:.•
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cond .. AM /FM ca .. ette,
power brakes, steering.
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'79 Chevette. lo ml, a /c,
auto, lilt, very clean.
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Power brake•. power
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with lllt/telucopin1
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AM /FM 1tereo, rear
window defo11er,
automatic tram. Snow
white with Bur(undy in-
terior 27,000 mUes. lm·
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ORANGE COUNTY'S
AMUT
LINCOLN-MERCURY
. DEALERSHIP
~ 67&.tl"-•
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18·11 Auto Center Dr.
Coata Mesa 540-5630 '76 Dal.IUD 8210, 4.2M ml,
xlnt cond, must aell.
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'A Javelin SST 343 cu In,
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SD Fwy·Lk Forest nit
IRVINE
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OVER
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For Your Good
VW. Porsche or Audi
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445 E. Cou\ mway
at Bayside Drive
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'711610 WON, am/fm CHI
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~
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"~
,.
~ .·
·= ... ~ ,
.. ..
..
. ..
• • (
f...
(
~ • ' ' ~· i ~ • !· ..
L
~ •
I i
'.)
Tl\e spirit of Marlboro ,. in a low tar cigarette.
LIGHTS
LOWERED TAR f, NICOTINE
81 IEl'F PAUE& of .. ~ .......
Stories have done a lot of people a lot of 1ood. ~)'kept
Scheheraaade'a bead Intact, they provided -fiUUam
Shakespeare with a decent Uvt.n1 and they've deU1h peo.
pie around campfire• for yean.
Moton.ts cited for traffic Infractions all 1eem fo have
stories too, and 11ood many of them sbow up in the Harbor
MunlclpalCourt'• Traffic Divilion to tell them totbeJudee-
uaually in hope or 1etting their fines reduced or the cJlar1ee
dropped.
THEY CAN BE TEAB-JE&IDNG, gut-wrenchin •• tide·
s plittin,, mind· bogglin&, serious, funny, Jeeble or Jus\ plain dumb -but they're offered up just the sarnt.
Some are not terribly imaginative: A youn1 min from
Newport Beach stood before tbe commissioner r.cently,
dretlei lriTu!f!:ink lrod shirt, khaki trouaen and camel·
colored top-1 ers. Cbar1ed with 1oin1 85 mph In 1 5.$ mph
1oa•, tie a erect and sincerely explained the problem. ·'I
''I ~ just had an eye operation an4 I couldn't
see too well and wanted to get home fast."
just 1ot a new Porsche," he said, ••and it won't go 1ny
slower." ·
Hll floe was not reduced and be paid it without further
complaint.
A middle-aged man spread bis legs confidently
and crossed ttfs ~rms, charged with speeding on cit y streets
in Newport Beach .. "I own as.mall corporaUon.'' be aald. "I
waa o~ the verge of a big mereer and for1ot about the apeed
limit. tt
Hit flne was not reduced and he requested two weeb to
make the payment.
Somestoriesarequiteima,maUve:
One young man complained thlt a si1n in a parkin& )<it
aald "Payment Required" butfoWldnometen to pay. He sot
aparklngticketanyway.
"l left some money in an envelope on the windshield but
someone.took it," he said. "Andi 1ot1 licketanyway."
The judge reduced tbe Cineandtbe man felt better.
A MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN dPLAINED her speedin1
ticket this way : "I had JU:St-ttl&d-an eye operation and I co~ldn't see too well and wanted to 1et home fast." she said.
/ (See TRAFFIC COURT, Page AZ>
t
Hearst guilty
CAR POOLED -El Toro homeowner Ken
Smith was awakened at 5 a.m . today by
sounds of a car smashing through a block
wall and landing in the pool in his back yard
at 23611 Rangoon St. Driver Roy Dietz, 28,
was listed in good condition today at Sad·
dleback Community Hospital. Smith said this
was second car to smash wall.
Aoki soars toward win
I
Lone balloon left in Bennett race headed east
The field of Gordon Bennett
Balloon Race entries still aloft
was trimmed to one this mom·
ing, with restaurateur Rocky
Aoki and pilot Ben Abruzzo
sighted above Billings, Mont.,
more than 1,000 miles from their
Fountain Valley liftoff.
A race spokesman said the
pair's balloon, the Benihana.
was at 18,000 feet in altitude,
moving east at 50 miles per
hour. The spokesman said Aoki
and Abruzzo bad set their ,sights
on an East Coast landing.
The Benihana 's distance made
it the likely candidate to walk
away with this year's Gordon
Bennett trophy.
THE 11 OTHER helium-filled
balloons that took off from Mile
Square Park Saturday afternoon
were reported down at various
isitef throughout the southwest.
No major injuries were re-
ported.
The Benihana was the li\St en-
try to float skyward Saturday,
beating the 6 p. m . liftoff de·
adllne by five minutes.
Most or the balloonists were
blown toward Nevada by the
weekend winds and touched
down SWlday. '
The Rosie O'Grady, piloted by
Bob Snow and Joe Killinger,
both of Orlando, Fla., stayed up
until 4:25 a.m. today, when It
landed near Mytow, Utah, some
624 miles away. The pair placed
second in last year's Gordon
Bennett race.
The first balloon to lift off on
Saturday, Destiny, piloted by
Californians Fred Krieg and Jay
Sutherland. floated to Colorado
City; Ariz.. before landing Sun-
day evening.
A race spokesman said the
Swiss entry Emil Messner, pilot·
ed by Regula Hug-Messner and
Dick ·Higbie, an attorney from
Newport Beach, had a rough
landing in heavy winch near
Piosche, Nev. The pair were re-
ported to be in ~ood condition.
L"ST YEAR'S Gordon Ben-
nett winners, Jerry Tepper and
Corky Myen. both of Denver,
came down in a dry lake bed 45
miles northwest of Las Vegas in
Cloud Dancer II Sunday morn·
ing.
Mile Square Park was the
scene of additional liftoffs Swt·
day. as 16 hot air balloons and
, four gas balloons took part in the
first Fountain Valley Classic. In
this race. pilots were required to
name a target and land as close
to it as possible
Race officials said today that
Ken Frank piloting Remax ap-
pears to be the winner in lhls
contest.
Frank named Imperial Golf
Course In Brea as hls target and
landed at the site. ·
One Fountain Valley Classic
gas l>alloon piloted by the all·
women team of Nikki Capland
and Lesley Pritchard, was re·
ported still aloft today a bout 20
miles east of Big Bear Lake.
COOL AND CLOUDY weather
was blamed in part for the
. modest turnout Sunday. the sec·
(See BAILOON, Page AZ).
4,500 joiri Dimes .. wallc ,
Record turnout raises $300 ,000 to fight defects
fl.!fo!,V.!. ~aBLE
Tbousandsofwalken,nmnera
and onlooken. many cOnllDed to
wheelchatr1) crowded into
Newport Be1cb Sunday for the
day-Iona March of Dimea
"Superw11.k."
A virtual potpourri of eventa,
th• annUal fuDd·railint effort at·
tracted nearly 3,500 walkers,
more than 1,000 runners and
another JO Ora_,,. Couoty
cllpJtariet who partlclpated hi a
$500•a•penmt, ODe•mlle uas.e
Trek."
It wat the ~ tutnout in
Oranae Co•tY talilol'Y lfor a llarch Oc1 Dlm• walk wttb • •Um.a •.ooo ra1Hd to belp eombat blrtb detfft.I.
.DAYS KIL&Y, a •1•ar~ld
Claremoat man, wu the ftnt
penoa o.& Of U. MartlllS lite
for the nmnlna event, rollint
wen Jhead of tbe crowd In b1a
wheelchair. He fintabed the 10
kilometer event while 30-year·
old Frink DUarte of Santa Ana
posted the top time. ·
The IO·kllometer walldnf
event, which started and ended
at tbe Hai'bOr Muillctpal COurt and wound throu,b N•wport and
lrvlne, drew the most particl·
panta. ~ were aeot out late
in the day to ptck up 1tra111en.
Tbe tCH:alled "Exec Trek" at-itMted .._, ~n TOlll
Rile7. RoleJ' Btutoft and Ralpb Clari• w.u .. oru,. Coal lt1181MON llartan Berpaoa ad
Hale• PriaHJle. Rama bead
coach by Mala•UI, bio60n'7
cbalrmu Ot tbe annual walk, allo ... Oii hand.
ua asamvu.JM bJ a .11.nne Co1" ba•l"fldai bud;
cut a atrai1bt line to the Chan·
teclalr restaurant for brunch.
Ol)e of the walkln1 part.id·
panta., wheelchair-bound Chep
1Cral of Newfort Beach, re· celve~a cla attention from aeveral rvlne policemen. Of.
fleer · kreaa 1ave tbe youth
hit 1>9Uce SWAT hat while a ,.Uow OMcer 1n1pped plcturu
and wilbed the boy f \lCk.
"T)lat kid JUit tears me MP.'' eomm•t.e kreaa. 1•He'1 here
every year. Laat year he wu w11111a1, •aow lie'• ln that
cbalr.•• J
Ora.qt COUtlty pedlatrtclan
Staal,: ~ Mt up a "foot aid
ellnte' Iii a itaft bOlllDI cell at tbe~.
Dr. K .. tl. wbo Hid tb•r• ••N ..._ Ptaler fti'l&·.ikt lta· • tlo.. ll081 Ute 10 kllOnaeter
CW WAI&, Pa .. Al)
verdict stands
Bailey's
.defense
adequate
WASlilNGTON (AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court left intact
Patricia Hearst Shaw's 1976
bank robbery conviction today.
turning away auument• tbat
famed ~r~I Iawyff F . J.." Beiley pve her ••lntutfl.._"
legal hetp.
the juatices, without com·
ment. refused to consider rilling
that defense lawyer•
automatically faU to &ive ade·
quate legal help when they
agree to write a book about a
trial before it begins
Today's action, however, does
not end Mrs. Shaw's attempt to
overturn her bank robbery con·
viction. Her new lawyer will
have a chance to convince a
federal judge that Bailey's con·
duct "adversely affected" Mrs
Shaw's chance of acquittal.
MRS. SHAW, represented by
San Francisco lawyer George
Martinez. charges that Bailey
created a conflict of interests
when contractin g for the
publishing rights or a book about
his client and her trial.
Her Supreme Court appeal
contended that the conflict de·
nied Mrs Shaw of her right to a
fair trial.
"We submit that the issue pre-
<See PATTY, Page A2 )
CONVICTION ST A YS
Patricia Heant Shaw
...... 2
ATTORNEY VINDICATED
F. Lee Bailey
Agnew told to pay
Maryland $248,7 3 5
ANNAPOLIS, Md . CAP> -
Former Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew was ordered today to pay
the state of Maryland $248.735, a
sum the judge said represented
money Agnew allegedly accept·
ed as kickbacks while governor
of Maryland.
The amount that Judge Bruce
G. Williams ordered Agnew to
pay includes $147,500 in
kickbacks, plus $101,235 in in·
terest
Williams ruled that the
evidence clearly shpwed Agnew
violated his public trust by ac-
cepting kickbacks and that be
had an obligation to repay the.
people of Maryland for violatinl'
their trust.
The state tried to subpoena
Agnew as a witness, but
Williams ruled he did ·not have
to testify In the civil suit filed by
three taxpayers. ~
A federal investigation of the
alleged kickback scheme result·
ed in Agnew's no-contest plea to.
a charge of income lax evaaiOn
and his resignation as vice P~·
dent Oct. 11, 1973. He paid abo!ll
$160,000 in back taxes, pen.alti$
and interest to the state add,
federal government.a in 19'14, ae·
cordin1 to his lawyer, Thom•
R. Harrison.
The state bas never tried to
prosecute Agnew, but Harrllol\
aald criminal char1ea ltill coujd
be flied.
Evelyn Howard, pulling son Jason and pal James Stone, stro/ls
« al.ong Jet frey Road, about halfway point of 30 ktlometer event.
From Page A1
WALK. • •
walking path. estimated he
would likely treat more than 500
• people for blisters or cramps by
the end of the da~
1
Sunday's "Supen' alk" was
held in conjunction with more
tha n 1.000 s imilar March of
Dames ,,.,.ents <icross the coun
try.
From Page A1
.PATTY .•.
'r1ented herein goes to the heart
or our judicial system." the ap
.peal said · Tht• potential or ap
parent '1olat1ons of several
American Har Association dis
c1pl inar~ rules and canons of
professmnal l'Onduct as the re
suit of tht• proh1b1ted contract
rould nt•\ ~r be other than
:..n aclu<.tl eonfl1t·t of intt·rcst
The claughtt•r of ne .... spapcr
p ubllslwr Wtll1am Randolph
Hearst and has wife. Catherin~.
Mrs ShJ\\ "·•'> con,1cted of part1c1pat1on in the 1974 armed
i'obbcn of a San Francisco
.-bank ·
MRS. SHA" WAS 18 -when on
Feb 4. l!Yl4. two months before
the bank robberv. she was ab·
duct<'d Crom a Berkeley apart
JTH'nt b) a group calling itself
\h e Symbion<'se Liberation
Army Prosecutors said Mrs
Sha\\-subsequently embraced
. Lhe group's ideology
After her conviction and un·
successful appeals carried all
the way to the Supreme Court.
Mrs Shaw served nine months
of a se .... en-year sentence in a
federal pnson She was released
~n early 1979
A I though she faces no further
time in prison. Mrs Shaw re-
portedly wants to clear the "con-
.victed bank robber" stigma
from her name
.
Bailey was fired as Mrs.
Shaw's lawyer after her al·
te mpts to stay out of prison
failed. She .then appealed her
conviction t>n grounds that she
t'eceivcd insufficient legal help.
According to cQurt documents,
Mrs. Shaw accused Bailey of
pursuing "his own interest in
publication rights, rather than
her interest In acquittal."
U.S. DISTRICT Judee William
Orrick turned down Mrs. Shaw's
appeil. But the 9tb U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals on Oct. 17 or·
dered Orrick to restudy the ap-
• peal in U~~t of a 1980 Supreme
Court dec1s1on.
ORANGE COAST hllyPllat
Thoma P. Hat.y ,,__..
~N.Wted
Light winds
mark finish
at Ensenada
By ALMON LOCKABEY ~llJ1"119C8MU .. ¥ ....
ENSENADA -The 34th annual
Newport·to-Ensenada yacht race
was dragging to a close at 10 a.m
here today under cool and
thrc-atening skies with Little or no
wind onTodosSantos Bay
The weary race committee had
recorded 559 finishers an hour
before the finishing deadline with
20 boats still struggling to finish
(See earlier reports on Page Cl. l
More than 650 boats crossed the
starting line off Newport Beach
Saturday, but Light winds along
the 125-mile course took their toll
and nearly 100 boats abandoned
the race al various ports along the
\\a)'
It will go in the record books as
the s lowest Ensenada race
Race officials were busy at
noon computing the winners of the
24 1>erpelual trophies which were
pr£>sented at the usual gala
ceremoniesat3p m
Mesa crash
kills biker
A 37-year-old Garden Grove
man was killed in Costa Mesa
Sunday when his southbound
motorcycle hit a curb at Placen-
tia Avenue near Swan Street
Officers reported witnesses
saw David Lee Bishop lose con-
trol of his motorcycle and hit the
curb after riding at s peeds
estimated at up lo 80 mph
Accident investigators said
Bishop. who wore no helmet and
died of massive head inJuries.
was thrown nearly 125 feet in the
6: 10 p.m. accident.
He was pronounced dead al
the scene.
From Page A1
BALLOON • •
ond day of balloon race act-
ivities at Mile Square Park.
More than 5,000 people paid lo
attend the race Saturday, with
several thousand otben on band
to assist in tJ!e liftoffs and con-
cession sales.
Thomas Heimhelmer, who ln
1979 reortanized the Gordon
Bennett Race, which bad been
halted in 1939, aaid he waa
pleased wtth the two.day pro-
ceedlnga, despite attendance
figures that Cell below expect.
tlons.
Heinshelmer atld the race wW
return to FOUl\taln Valley n.ext
April.
NoJnjwies were reported
"The wind was very light,
fortunately," aald lnapedor
Jam ea Rodters of the Central
Valley Fire District .
·'Hydrochloric acid is so concen-
trated and 110 volatile JUSl a few
gallons can cause tu-voe."
The leak was reported in a
sparsely settled. unincorporated
area west or here. about SO miles
east of Los Angeles -shortly
after 7 a.m. and deputies im-
mediately began the evacuation
of a half-mile area. Abemath1e
said.
The tank car, loaded with
30,000 gallons of acid, was on the
Sante Fe Railroad track along
Hemlock Avenue when the leak
occurred.
"We believe while they were
switching cars around it sloshed
around and there was a leak,"
Rodgers said
Al'Wir.-.
5 llurt
in Irish
bombi~
B~LtAST, Northem Ireland
<Al'> -A bomb placed in a hi·
Jacked truck exploded today in a
Catholic district of BeUast, in-
juring at least five people and
heighterung tenaion aa I RA guer-
rllla Bobby Sands, ln the 58th
day of his prison hunger strike,
was reported sinkine toward
death.
A police spokesman said two
police officers were among the
casualties, but said he could not
confirm an unofficial report that
one policeman was killed.
The bomb was set in a truck
hJJacked in central Belfast and
driven mto the Roman Catholic
Andersontown district. police
said. There was no immediate
claim of responsibility for the
act
Bri.tish police a17ested 20
prominent supporter'S of Sands
today after a day of noting 10
Belfast and clashes with police
m London
He said firefightus used
water to disperse the gas cloud
Rodgers said the evacuated
residents would not be permitted
to return for several hours
STATE QUEEN -Lisa Schuman, 18, of Cypress reigns as
the new Miss California for the International Beauty
Pageant. The animal psychology student at Golden West
College was chosen ~aturday at Knott's Berry !"arm.
Sinn Fein. th e Irish
Republican Army 's political
front !>atd those arrested were
senior members of the National
H Block Committee. which 1s or·
ganizing a campaign backing
Sands ' crusade for political
prisoner status for IRA convicts
1n the N shaped prison cell
blocks
A pohce spokesman confirmed
the arrests , but would only say
the detainees were "being ques
tioned about their activities "
From Page A1
TRAFFIC COURT TALES BOGGUNG • • •
The judge cringed. shook his head , smiled and fined her the
full amount.
A hefty man was cited for running a stop sign and made
his case this way. "I hve atthetopof a hill and my car doesn't
run too good so l need a running start to make it up. So I didn't
really stop at the sign."
The commissioner suggested that the man fix his car,
stop atstopsigns, and asked him to pay the full fine .
One man had failed to register his car for nearly the
whole year "I lost my Job." he said "Then I got thro\\n in
Jail My lawyer gotmeoutofJa1lbutittookallmymoney As
soon as I get unemployment I 'II register my car · ·
The judge gave him two weeks to pay his car registration
and the fine
FOR EVERY STORY THERE'S a comeback from the
Judge or traffic commissioner hearing the case. Glenn
M abler of Harbor Court is a polite, good-humored fellow, and
even when he hears a tall tale, he's politic in the way he ig-
nores the explanation
One rather curt woman said that "everybody was going
too fast and no one got a ticket but me It was my unlucky day
that week:·
"Well. cons1dertheothers1x days of that week your lucky
ones." Mahle r said.
"How about lov.enng the fme because I had bad luck?"
she asked.
"No." he said.·' But I will give you a chance to go to traf·
fi e school and keep this off your record "
·'Okay." she said reluctantly "Better than nothing · ·
EVEN THE JUDGE'S M•:RCY or helpful advice isn't
always accepted by the adamant story teller One man said
that he was cited for parking with his llres more than 18 in-
ches from the curb. and that he wanted a tnal to prove his m·
nocence
"I'm not guilty." he said "Because there were extenuat·
ing circumstances."
''Wereyourtires more than 18inches from the curb?··
"Yes."
"Noone has ever been found not guilty ofthat charge yet
If the officer measured the distance and it was over 18 inches.
you'll be found guilty and fined, forfeiting the chance to go to
traffic school and have this taken from your record." Mahler
explained .
"I want a trial."
"l'LL SET A DATE, BUT I'll remind you again that no
one has ever been found not guilty of this charge in this
court," said Mahler.
After a long pause the man decided to plead not guilty
and Mahlersetthetrialdate
Teen killed
by train i~
East Irvine
An 18-year-0Jd Garden Grove
man was killed Saturday ~lght
when he was struck by ti 1Los
Angeles-bound Amtrak traµ, in
~aat Irvine, Oran1e Colinty
Sheriff's Lt. Andy Romero said to-
day.
Lance Dennis Hardin, 18, of
13121 Nelson St., Garden Grt>ve,
and two companion? were walk-
mg along the railroad tracks at
9:30 p.m. alter leavln& Oranae
County International Raceway on
foot tdgotoa llquorstore, Romero
Hid.
Tbe e.nclneer on Amtrak 583
told authorities he aaw three men
on thetracb and sounded bb hom
and htt the brakes.
Romero Hid Matt Meyer, 1$,
an~n.ce Hau1en, •18, both of
Ga <ic'ove, were able to jump
out Of the path of the. ltaln but
llardlll wun•t able to 1et out of lbewa)'.
He 1ald ~ apparenll)' dktn't
bear the lnlft bntil .. the latt Ii. tut:••
Some stories are considered mstant classics Mahler's
fa vorite story was one told by a man who'd given a false name
to an officer when he was stopped for a violation. Butthe all.ts
tu m ed out to have a number of outstandmg warrants and the
man was arrested and booked.
The com missioner asked him if he'd learned anything by
using someone else's name when being questioned by an of
fi cer
"Yes." the man said. "I've learned not to use that name
an} more "
SOME DEFENDANTSBELIEVETHATthe lite rary ap
proach is better than an oral defense One Huong Tri Luong
wrotefromStockton in his defense for a speeding t1ckPt he got
inOrangeCounty
"Dear Whom I Concern,
"Jn deep ot my heart I want to say very sorry ab<iut my
v1olationofdav20ofDec . 1980 This 1s thefirsttime
"The reason I was run fast because that day was my wed·
ding day and I must be on lime at church for mass. I come
from Philadelohia 1ust movedt0Ca1Jfom1a two months 1 hve
at Stockton and marnage celebrate at L A of Cahfom1a
"This letter I write to you. I would like you to forgive me
this \'iolahon of exceeding max speed hmll and because I'm
poor and unemplo~ menl so I ha\ e no money to go to Newport
lkach for appear al the court
"PLEASE FORGIVE TO ME ab<>ut this absence
Forgive to me about thts '1olat1on. 1 promise never run fast
again."
Mr Luong enclosed a copy of his wedding invitation to
show that he -was indeed to be wed that day Mahler had
mercy on the newlywed and reduced the fine.
A Lebanese American gentleman invented another
classic Cited for making a U tum from a lane clearly
marked with a "NO U-TURN" s1go, he approached justice
donning a heavy Lebanese accent, an animated delivery,
and told the judge:
"I IN THIS COUNTRY FOR ONLY two months been and
I come to the sign and ask myself 'am I to tum?. am I not to
turn?, am I to tum?. am l not to tum?· And the sign says lo
me,'NO!YOUTURN!Solturned"
"I knew he'd let me off when Isa-whim laughing." he said
later "Hethoughtit was hilarious"
Mahler does not suffer fools in his courtroom, although
he can rarely keep a bemused smile from his face when a de·
fen dent launches into a whopper.
"1 take creativity and delivery into consideration when I
hear a story," he said wryly. "But only when I think they're
telling me the truth ..
Elizabeth Taylor and daughter Mana Taylor·Burton
arrive in New York by train from Washington.DC.
for openmg of actress' Broadway play. "The Litt le
Foxes ...
Casual is the word for Ted Kennedy Jr . spotted at
Xenon Disco m New York Saturday nzght sporting ci
feather earrmg
Wa)'Dt' I .. llari. a l' S ron
gressman who wa!> forced
from office bv a sex scandal
is expected lo spend five or
six day!> in the hospital re
covering from cancer sur
~er~ his <>urg,'on '>:11<1
Hays was in good rond1l111n
at Ohio Stalt• l 0 nl\t·r s1 t\
Hospital 1n Columbu~ after
s urgery for canct•r of the
neck.
The Worth Bingham
Award has been given to
Ralph Soda of Gannett News
Service and to Jonathan
Neumann and Ted Gup· of
The Washington Post. the
White House Correspondents
Association announced.•
Soda won for his seven-
month mquiry into manlpula·
tions of the world silver
mnrket Neumann and Gup
were l"ited for a five-part
series on conflicts of in·
lercsts and waste in the
federal contract making pro-
cess
First place m the Mer·
riman Smith Award for re· porting under deadlme pres-
sure went to John Palmer of
'\J BC , ""ho was cited for cov-
era~c of the aborted raid to
rt·scu1: the Ameriran
hostages in Iran
I n sh actor Peter O'Toole
'>J~S hl' hopes to make a
mo\ 1e m South Africa ··just
as -;oon as I get a chance"
cl l' s p 1 t e t h e t h r e a t of
blat•khst1ng
Groups opposed to the
wh1tt• minority ruled nation's
racial separation policies
ha V<' sought lo blacklist
sports figures and enter-
tainers who perform here.
0 'Too le visited South
Africa after a photo safari in
Botswana
ff t• refused to comment on
South Africa's racial system.
~a:.1ng "'My own country
has got its own problems and
anyway, I'm not a moralist."
Former Adolf Hitler depu·
\~ RudoU Hess. a pnsoner of
his former World , War II
enemies nearly 40 years.
marked his 87lh birthday ma
British m1htary hospital
Eastern regions stormy·
Colord:do basking in record warmth
Coastal iveather
F•lr •nd w.,.mer lhr<WQll f ue•Oey
Coesta1 lows lonlOht Sl Co.ste l n10111 T~y low 10 mid /Ot lnl•n<I
1.., st. 111911 low llOs W•t•r n
Ets.wher•, vn•ll cr•fl •d•ltorY
I0<1191\1 In CMa< wetar Oll Po"'I Con
G•P<lonto:t.!Ciement• ltl•nd.wlnd•
-MH g..-...Uy Oe<rU\lnQ V•rl
• .,,~ wln<H WHI lo --... 1. lo IS
ltnolt T.....o.ty eri.rnoon ••Ill 2 10 )
fool -•I IO-HI'"'""
V.S. summary
S1-9" .-ftCI """"'9,.torm• \Pru<! lrom UM RocklH 10 the Mid jltl•ntoc
Coett Wdirv, de"-AlnO much or tM
netlon
Eerl't ~lnO t~r•torm\ ••i.o br°"911t QUM'I' wllld• tn Iha nor111
cantr•t st•'" "ac•rd~•.,.racor-suno.y
In Mftr .. O*>fildll Cltlet es • 111911
D<•uvr• ~ ~ tem1>er•lur••
Into Ille IOtend tot.
0.11v.,. ,_wci • lllOfl ol &•. ecllp• t,. Ille mMll tel lor April l• Ol ll
degt'ffs If! ltSS TM m•rcury 1111 tO In
Pu.Ille, er•lftv the rt(O<O ol IS •I"° Mlln1'55.
Lai.r 104ay. 111oWeo and ll\IHl-
derttomi1wwe HPKllld ov ... tlle lip-per Mlltl11lppl V•ll•Y end tllf
llOrlhern plains to the celllretflockt.s Stlowers elto wer• loracesl I« IM up
oer Ohio V•ll•r-!M>Ulnoirn Flor Ide,
with • c!Mllce ol rain •tono Ille coe&tl
ol Wetlllng-tlat.endOr-
Ttmo-ralures eround the Miion
Hrlylocs..,,r....,from301nTr• .. rM
City, Mich .10111n P'-'>1•.
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II Wtrmlr19 tr-It ••oecte<I fuell-
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wllll l•w clOuds uceot •10!\il ,,,.
COHI Hr1y In Ille mornlnQ,
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cont•I •lld lnlermlldl•l• Ut ltyf, In
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movnulns ... to the mid to u-~
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cMMr1•, n lo JI In coastal .,.ll•'r'S,
end )1 to •7 In lower-rb
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71 ., .,
a ,.
.. Th• Amerkan dream of
home ownenbip ls slipplna out
of reach," dee Jared Mary ~Ueen Mathei•, 32nd District vice
president of the California
Associatlon of Realtors.
She wu addressing a Hunt·
lngton Beach Clty Hall audience
1athered to bear aovemmenl
and private sector repreaen·
ta ti ves d1scu11 l'lou1tn1 pro·
blems in West Orange County.
The forum was sponsored by
the Huntington Beach ·Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors.
MS. MATHEIS said several
groups are competing for the
dwindling number of affordable
housing units: young adults.
born durin~ the baby boom. who
are prepanng to buy their first
homes; newcomers streaming
into California from other
stales, and increasing numbers
or divorced and single people
who need their own residences.
First District Orange County
Supervisor Roger Stanton said
excessive government regula·
lions have hampered the natural
process of supply and demand.
·'The more controls and condi
tlons you place on a producu.
the more difiicl.llt it is ror him to
produee h1-product -be it
houset or balb>oint pens," Stad·
ton said.
He was critical of the In·
clu•ionary zoning and resale
control policies adopted by the
county.
THESE RULES state that 25
percent of most new housing de·
velopments must be priced
within reach of families with
modest incomes $30,000 or
less.
The county also has placed re·
sale controls on these affordable
homes for 30·year periods in
which they must be resold
within the "affordable" price
range.
Stanton criticized long.term
resale controls, saying they
eventually could require that a
home be sold for $100,000 less
than its neighbors, which have
increased naturally in value.
James Logan. president of the
Huntington Beach-Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors. said
the absence of affordable hous-
ing ls upsetting the entire home
purchase chain.
He said many young families
cannot afford to buy existing
bomet. As a ruult,
established families cannot t'
buyers when they want to
Jnto more expensive or
homes.
' LOG.\N SAJD that untU•tAll·iUDl!S
tlon is curbed. real~ors wlU
to rely on "creative Cinanc
to h e lp families purch
homes. "'
Stephen Kohler, comm
development specialist Jor
city of Huntin&ion Bea~h .
the slow pace of housing
strucllon makes it crucia
keep existing residences l1t
condition • ~
He said Hunungton Sta
using federal funds to lJJ~biii"
downtown homeowners o
low interest Joans to repalr t
houses. among the oldest I~
city
John Erskine·. executive ·
tant to 2nd District Ota
County Supervisor Har
Wieder, said an adequate np
of affordable housing is c
to the economic health.
Oran~e County t
lie said modest inc!i
employees who work in Or
County must have places to~
within reasonable distan
from lhe1r workplaces
Midge Costanza slated at GW ...
By O. C. HUSTINGS
Of Ute o.llr ~lee SWfl
Midge Costanza. the highest
ranking woman m the Carter
White House, will be the keynote
speaker dunng Women's Week.
May 10·15 al Golden West
College in Huntington Beach
Ms Costanza, 48, assistant to
President Carter for public
liaison, will speak May 11 on
··Government i s Born of
Politics."
Her talk is scheduled for 11
a.m . in Forum I on the Golden
West campus. Admission is fr~.
but seating is limited. college of-
ficials advise • • *
AN0111ER SPEAKER dunng
Golden West College's Women's
Week will be consumer advocate
Ralph Nader.
He 'II kick off the week's ac·
tivities with a talk on "The
Citizens Movement in Amenca
-The Quest for a Democrat1r
Culture.··
His talk is set for 7 .30 p.m
May 10 in the campus gym
nasium. Tickets at $4.50 per
person may be purchased at the
door or at the college ticket of.
lice. ••• NADER ALSO is to appear
May 8 at Cal Stale Fullerton
He'll talk at 7:30 pm 1n the
Pacific Theater , 2500 E
Nutwood, Just south or the cam·
pus.
Tickets at S3 per person are
available in the lobby of the
University Center. • • • ASSEMBLYMAN NOLAN
Frizzelle. R-Costa Mesa. has in-
troduced two new measures in
the Legislature
His AB 2187 would authonze
special personally designed
license plates for classic and an-
tique motor vehicles
And tus AB 2198 would exclude
in1unes as a result of earth·
quakes from workers· com
pens at1on coverage. • • • LOOK FOR state Senate Dis
lrict 36 to be carved up when thl'
Legislature gels around to re
districting.
The distri c t currently
represented by John Schmitz. R
Newport Beach, is one of the
b1g~cst m the state in
population
According to st<itl' Sl•nate'
members. the ideal popu
for a scnak d1stnl'l 1s 59
Th<' populatrnn of Sch ·
Or.ingl' and San D1e~o C
d1stnrt 1s 814.909 The Og
are hased on thl' t98CI L'
Census • • •
FOLNTAIN VA. ch1roprat"tor Jam<.'s D Pet
'has been appointed chat
the Orange County Chirophlc
Society's l'ol1IH:al Action '
m1lle
Pickin', garglin'
cap ramp festival
COSBY, Tenn <AP> Don 't
be too surprised if there's a run
on mouthwash today in this town
nestled among the Smoky Moun·
tains.
The vile odor of ramps -
those Appalachian wild onions
that fool the mouth with a sweet
taste -was in the air Sunday on
Kineauvista Hill.
"if you see some laughing. a
little bit of handshakmg and a
howdy-do. that's what's it's all
about goodwill,'" MM
Bullard observed as he played
host al the 28th annual ramp
festival. ""The world needs more
of 1t "
THOUSANDS HA VF. flocked
each year since 1954 to the
festival w honor th~ ra
was no d1fferent Sunday as
dreds of east Tennesseea~s:
folks from nearby state•
in the sun to hslen to c
mus ic. eat barbecued c
and hoe cakes and tease
tastebuds with ra" or c
ram1>
To "'ash do" n tht• gruh.
chst'rt't.'l drank beer and ¥.111
w hill' th1• Jd\'t•ntu rous sip
moonshmc. ,..
•·If you <.'al it. )OU ~cu~;
sure vour w1frs does u~
won "l ·SIN•p "'1th you.''
warned on1• rtlv sli cker
his first ta~tl' of the mo~-·"'·,,,_ ...
delicacy "It's stron,l.!er l
garlic and 10 times stl"O
than an onion ··
our w.ry own straight 1aj cuff<Z.d rents
MUle8 reopen
PIKEVILLE, Ky. (AP> A
few non-union rnlnea ln eastern Kentucky'1 coalfields reopened
today without reports of trouble
from United Mine Workers pickets now ln the 32nd day of
their strike, authorities said.
Search ended
MIAMI (AP> -The U.S.
Coast Guard has ended a 21h·day
search for six small boats said
to be drifting ln the J'lQrida
Straits wltb 40 CubJil exllee
aboard. An aircraft and three
Coast Guard cutters 1cabhed
5,000 aquare miles ol ocean Sun·
day, but I ailed to turn tp any
s1JIJ of the boats or tbetr
p111enaers.
Bmdy8aUI
mental,ly <dert
WASHINGTON (AP )
James S. Brady, the White
Ho\Jse press secretary, spent
two hours sitting up on Sunday,
the White House announced to-
day in a report on his recupera-
tion from surgery.
The press secretary. who was
wounded in an attempt on Presi·
dent Reagan's life March 30,
was described by his
neurosurgeon , Dr. Arthur
Kobrine, as being at the
sharpest mentally since he was
h.os~italized.
Giscard in front
by small margin
PARIS (AP> -The first round
of the French presidential elec·
lion ended with President
Valery Giscard d 'Estaing lead·
ing Socialist Francois Mitter·
rand into the runoff May 10 by
less than 600,000 votes, or 2.02
percentage points.
The outcome may depned on
how successful each one is in
courting support from the can·
didates they defeated Sunday
Khada/ y in MOtJOOW
MOSCOW CAP > -Libyan
leader Moamrnar Khadafy ar· rived in Moscow today for talks
that were expected to focus on
political and military coopera-
tion between Libya and the Sov-
iet Union.
,
DEAD AT 54 -Singer Alice
Lon Bowling, the ori2inal
·'Champagne Lady•,. oo
Lawrence Wei.k's television
show has died at the age of.
54. (
High court
upholds law
on abortions
WASHINGTON CAP > -States
ma y outlaw abortions
performed outside of hospitals
for women more than three
months pregnant, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled today.
By a 6·3 vote, the justices up-
held such an Indiana law.
The newest abortion con·
troversy to reach the justices
first arose in Indiana shortly
afte r the nation's highest court
legalized most abortions eight
years ago.
The 1973 decision, based on a
woman's constitutional right to
privacy. said state governments
cannot interfere in any way with
a woman's choice to have an
abortion during her first three
months of pregnancy.
The ruling said governments
may seek to protect t he
wom an 's h.ealth during the
second trimester, and may
move to protect fetal life only
during the final trimester.
8£f RUT. Lebanon CAP> -
Syrlao troop• and Lebane11
ChrisUan mJUtiam n b•ttfed to·
day tor an artlllny post th~atening the headquarters of
Syrian (orcea in Lebanon.
Meanwhile, 20 Paleatlnlans and
Lebanese were reported killed
and one Syrian MIG·2S crashed
into a mountainside during
Israeli air attacks on southern
Lebanon.
A police a~kesman said one
person wu k•lled and three were
wounded in new nahtina along
the 3-mile·lona line aeparatlne
the Moslem and Christian sec·
tors of Beirut as Israeli jets flew
over the capital.
A GOVERNMENT spokesman
·said a comprehensive Syrian·
Christian cease-lite would be
declared Tqesday. The cease·
fire, the 21.St this month, calla
for the reopening of Beirut Jn
ternational Airport and the de
militarization of Zable in ea.st
Lebanon and the central moun
tain peaks of the Sannine range,
he said.
He said details of the cease·
fire accord would be announced
art.er the am1a1 tn Beirut Tuel·
dayaOf Synan Foreign MbllJter
Ab ul Rallm Khaddam for
another attempt at resolvt111 the
confrontation
The Israeli military command
sald its planes attacked buea or
two guerrilla groups in Vasser
Arafat's Palestine LtberaUon
OraanlzaUon, including a tank
depot run by pro-Syrian guer-
ri 11 aa at El Hallli, a mile
northeast of the port city of
Tyre. ·
THE PLO SAID the jets hit
eight villages scattered across
the south. The Palestinjans said
they fired surface-to-air missiles
at the Israelis, but there were no
reports of bits
Meanwhile, witnesses said
Syria used its air force for the
first time against ~e Lebanese
Christian militiamen that Syrian
troops have been attacking smce
April 1.
Villagers in Kfarbidiane said
two Syrian jets repeatedly
strafed Ghorfat al-Franssawiye.
or Frenchman's Refuge, a
m ounta intop Christian
stronghold eight miles west of
the Chrlttlan elty of Zable.
!l"here were no reporh of
casuattJea. ,
Ghorf•t al·P'ranuawlye, an
observation post bunt by the
French ii\ World War ·u. over·
looks the Christian city of 200,000
which has be~n undtr Syrian ·
steae for the past 2G days.
AS THE VILLAGERS at
Ktardlbiane talked to reporters,
Syrian artlllery peppered the
village, sending everyone scur·
rylng tor shelter . Christian bat·
teries returned.the lire.
The shellinf died down in the evening after wo umts of the reg-
ular Lebanese army moved in
between the Christian and
Syrian positions. However, it
was not known if the' move was
part of a new truce plan.
·'The latest round of fighting
m central Lebanon began April 1
when Christian Phalange Party
militiamen moved into Zahl~
from Chnstian stroneholds to
the west. The Syrians, wbo lee
the presence or the pro-Israeli
Phalangists as a threat, ordered
them to withdraw Crom the city
20 miles from the Syrian border.
. . . . _, ,~ ,., .
Flights delayed
The Indiana Leglsla1.ure later
that year passed a law which.
among other things, required wup protested parental consent for abortions
performed on unwed minors and
LONDON CAP> Hundreds of
NEW DELHl, India CAP> prohibited out-0f·hosp1tal abor·
Afghan exiles marked the t.b1l'd tions for women more than three
flights in and out of London 't
Heathrow Airport were delayed,
diverted or canceled today when
air traffic controllers staged a
si,.,.hour strike for more pay.
anniversary of the bloody coup months pregnant that brought the first Marxist re-The law made 1l a felony for a SPRING IN ENGLAND This is the scene
gime to power in their homeland doctor to perform an abortion. in Cotswolds, near Gloucester. today after
4PW .........
snow fell. and driftl> of more than five feet
deep blocked hundred s of roads in the West
Country a rea with a peaceful protest today in other than a first·trimester one. an arctic storm swept down from the north
rront or the Soviet Embassy. away from a hospital over the weekend Up to ei~ht inches of
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With reasonable minimums and shorter terms
so you don't have to tie up your money for 2112 years!
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Commercial Credi.t now offers Money
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a 3 month term for our "90 Da~ Wonder"
thrift certificates. And only $500 minimum for
a one year term. Or if you want passbook ftex-
ibilitx, we pay 8.~ annual interest com-
pourt&d quarterly (8. 77% yield) on Su~
Thrift acrounts of $1,000 or more. .. 7% annufil
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These plaM pay 2.6% to 4.5% hrgher inter..
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And if you need to withdraw e$rly, J.OU11
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\
WESTMORLAND (AP> -Demoli·
\ion of devastated downtown com·
merc:ial buildinas continued today u
residents of this Imperial Valley
farmina community cleaned up In
the aftermath of a strong earthquake
that caused an estimated $1 million
dollars damage but no injuries.
Followinc Sunday's 5.6 Richter
scale temblor, nervous city officials
who have felt the cround Jiggle
beneath their feet for days beeat.11e of
"swarma" of s1Daller quakes ordered
the demolition of 10 commercial
buildings damaged beyond repair to
prevent further structural collapse.
In nearby Brawley one resident
said, "The ground J\l.lt keeps 1)la1t.
ing. Some people here are reaUy scared."
••THERE HAVE been a great
number of smaller ones -so many
that we just can't keep track. The
seismograph just keeps jiggling and
jiggling," said Dennis Meridith. a
apot~man for CaUfomia I01Ulute of
Techilol01y In Pasadena, notlnc that
at least M> quakes above mapltude
3.0 have rattled the area since Friday
evening.
A team of Calte"ch se'9moloelats
were examinlDg flasurea in the earth
to detel'm.ine which earthquake fault
caused the tremor, said Meredith,
n oting that scientist• think
"swarms" relieve pressun! and pre-
vent a major quai,_e, while <>then
believe they precede a big jolt.
Sunday's jolt damaged more than
two-thirds of the 900 homes in
Westmorland, a communit} of 1;epo.
Five badly damaged houses rm
condemned and their occupants
spent the rught elaewhere aa city of·
ficials declared Westmorland a dis·
aater area.
Mayor Ron Rodriguez said the city
would file for state and federal dis·
aster relier today, not10g that
tlamages could go higher than the
preliminary Sl million figure.
A We.rtmorland grocery story ii cleaned up
after an eart!Jquake rocked the Im~rlal VaUe11 farm town. Three famaues were left homeless •
after the quake knocked houaes off tlum f ou.ndatiom.
Burglary crackdown? Secretary
test due
at college SACRAMENTO CAP> -The
Assembly Criminal Justice Com-
m I tee wants to crack down on
burglars, despite what members
call the enormous expense or Im
prisonment
In an unusual Sunday heanng,
the committee voted 10·0 on the
burglary measure. AB1007 by
Stockton Democratic As ·
sem blyman Pat Johnston, send·
ing it to the Ways and Means
Committee. It also advanced a
num berof other ant1-cri me bills
The committee met Sunday,
and has heavy agendas today and
Tuesday. in order to meet a
deadline requiring all bills to be
out of p<>licy committees by May
1. Committee Chairman Terry
Goggin, D-San Bernardino.
described Johmton's ABI007 as
"probably the most expensive
billwe'veeverconsidered "
North coast
drilling~?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -In· terior Secretary James Watt.
saying the nation needs to ex·
plore the size or its resources, is
hinting he may allow oii_explora·
lion along the Northern
California coast. despite state op.
position.
Jn a San Francisco E¥aminer
i'nterview published Sunday.
Watt said the nation's wealth of
natural resources is or no vaJue
··unless one knows thee xtent and
nature, dimensions or that
wealth"
Low turnouJ.
forUpar<Uk
LOS ANGELES CAPJ -Lack
of publicity and the threat of rain
we.re blamed for the low turnout
of about 20,000 people ror the Los
Angeles Bicentennial Parade
The 21fJ -hour proce1s1on
through downtown Los Angeles
Sunday honored 200 years of
transportation and featured
Model A and Model T Fords. cov-
ered wagons, horse-drawn car-
riages, Edsels and fire engines.
Derai.lnrem
muse probed
CITY OF INDUSTRY (APl -
Twenty-three cars of a heavily
laden Southern Pacific Railroad
train derailed while traveling
through an industrial area here,
authorities said.
Southern Pacific officials are
still investigating the ca use of the
derailment Sunday, which
spilled lumber and other building
materials out of the ovtrtumed
cars. said Tony Adams.
spokesman for the railroad
Restored train
in Sacranremo
SACRAMENTO <AP > -The
restored Southern Pacific steam
locomotive No. 4449 pulled into P.
crowded station to take its place
for the nine-day Railfair celebra-tion
The wh1sthng. snorting 4-8·4
Sunday pulled 15 cars and 3SO
passengers from Portland. Ore ..
. where volunteers had polished its
orange. red and black s tripes.
The 1981 certified pro·
fessional secretary ex
a~ination will be given
at Golden West College.
in Huntington Beach,
May 1 and 2. starting at
8:30 a.m.
Applications for the
1982 exam are now being
accepted. Additional in
formation is available
through Joelene Mack.
secretarial/office ad
ministration instructor
at Golden West
Hayden scored
at polls, too
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
Two things make this spring's elections
different from the usual run of routine municipal
balloting.
First, Tom Bradley scored an overwhelming
victory that may virtually guarantee him the
Democratic nomination for 1overnor next year
The same day marked another significant
victory for the p<>litican whose score in most
statewide popularity p<>lls is at the opposite end of
the spectrum from Bradley's.
TOM HAYDEN WASN'T EVEN ON the ballot.
but virtually every voter in Santa Monica knew he
was behind the slate of four candidates sponsored
by the Campaign for Economic Democracy. The
. slate won a majority on 'D ll ' J • D • CAUfORU.A the Santa Monica City a as Star lm av•S 111 Counc!I, ass~ring -., FOCUS Hayden s organization
fi nd dead ho
~~~~s;ilofthecityforfour
For Democrats. Bradley's winning a third 0 u at -me ~erm as mayor of Los Angeles has more obvious
importance.
LOS ANGLELES
CAP> Veteran actor
Jim Davis, known lo
viewers around the
world as the tough old
oil baron and indisputa·
ble head of the Ewing
clan in the p<>pular CBS
series "Dallas ," was
mourned by fellow cast
members after he died
here in h1s sleep at the
aae of72
Hts wife of 32 vears,
Blanche, round him
dead Sunday afternoon
in their Northridge
1anc:!h home where the
actor bad been taking a
nap, according to Ruth
Marsh, a cloae friend.
Davis' death, coming
aa friends and. work as·
soctates were pulling for
his recovery from an ab·
dominal operation, was
bound to bit hard atnone
the actors, deacribed u
a "very cloee·Plit caat" I
by ~icbael ..Orwunan,
pu bJlcl&t for actor
Steven ~Y. Kanaly
plays Ray. Krebbt, the
ranch foreman aod 11·
l••IUmate son ol Da~la
ctiaracter, .tock Ewtn•·
ones. but he will be
greatly missed.·•
Ms · Gray, who plays
Sue Ellen, the wife of
the villainous J .R. Ew·
Ing. recounted having
admired Davis' work for
years. and established a
close rapp<>rt with him
from the day they met
on the Dallas set, her
publicist Richard Grant
said.
The party 's seven·year dominance of
California politics ia threatened by the con-
servative trend that swept Ronald Reagan into the
White House.
"We can't afford to be quite as fractious next
year as we've sometimes been in the past." says
Charles Manatt, the Los Angeles lawyer who is the
new Democratic national chairman.
BRADLEY'S PRESENCE MAY BE JUST
what his party needs, especially in a year when
Republicans appear likely to stage a fratricidal
primary involving the lieutenant governor, the at·
torney general and the mayor of San Diego.
Bradley has a record of scaring off major op-
position, especially among Democrats. He hasn't
faced a major opp<>nent since 1973, when he won in
a field that included then-Mayor Sam Yorty,
current state Treasurer Jesse Unruh and former
Police Chief Tom Reddin.
State Sen. Alan Robbins in 1977 and the
washed·up Yorty lhls year were far from the only
ones who coveted the mayor's office. A year aao.
for instance, the. field of prospects for tllis year's
race included several potentially strong
candidates, including Police Chief Daryl Gates,
City Controller Ira Reiner and Councll Zev
Yaroslavsky, who nad amassed a '300,000 war
cnest several months before be dropped out of the
race last fall.
They were all scared off by Bradley, leavin&
only Yorty to sta1e a token candidacy.
If BradJey can do the 1ame thing next sprin1
amon1 the atate'a Democrats, he'll carry a unllled
party into the pbematorial nmoff.
MEANWHILE, HAYDEN'S V·ICTOaY IN
Santa Monica marked a 1ubetantial 1olld.ificatlon
of hll baae Of power.
His CED orprusatlon had never before taken
control ol any clty and R•yden will use the victory
leu for bl• per1on1l ad~aneement than ror
furtherance of bla oraanlntion'• pro-tenant, anti·
peattclde u.d pro.split roll tuatlon po1lUona.
Tb• Win, combined wttb C!D'1 ee>ntrol of
almost OM·fourth of the memben of D4imocraUc
cowaty ceattal tommlttea al'Odnd CaUfomla, will
puib tM pUty or1anbatloa lartMt to tM left by
demomtrataq that tenant.a and Odau 1roupa CSD
appeal• to can be cleetaln f attors ln .ome
el.cuoat. •
Thal WIU atv• li•)6m a Podium tiOfD wtalcJa to pu1b hli vlew1, deaplte &it · documntff Ull·
poputar1ty ~--· molt CalllonUDI. Md * louder Ha,_., YOlee ·~~rat., ,_,
fatter a tatpl be~-... DIOUllt· Inc •tta<'b on U,. 0.mOCl'llll • 9 • .....,. halt·
llni•· -----
~ ... o c ................. .......
Earalap can be exceUeat If you
1e& enou,i. orden. Aureulve tellen eaa •coop up commltalona rugtng
from bet•eeo 10 and 40 percent, com· mandla1 I comtartable Income.
But many people in direct saJes are
Interested only in 1upplementing
another income and do just that.
If a sense of freedom on the JOb is
important and if you enjoy meeting
people and seeing new places, direct
se~Ung could be better than you may
thmk. And age, of course, is or no
consequence.
BUT BE CAREFUL about choos·
ing the company whose products
you'd sell.
The Council of Better Business
Bureaus warns against being bilked
by pyramid selling schemes These
require you lo make a significant in
vestment and to recruit large
numbers of new salespeople
investors For details. enclose a
s tamped. self·addressed envelopt.>
with your request for "Pyramid Sell·
ing Plans .. to the co111ncil at 1150 17th
St . NW., Washington.DC. 20036.
While you don't need college tram
Ing to be good at direct sales. vou do
need initiative and persever<lnce
Fielding the nays, insults <md doors
s lamrned·in-the·face is eaSlt'r If
you vie" 1t as only business and
grow a thick skin
You can sell on a Pl'rson to person
or party-plan basis
IN THE FIRST method. you go
from door·to-door demonstrating the
product. takmg order<; and pa) ments
.. 11d gleaning leads for customers.
Party plan sellers demonstrate prod
ucts to groups of friends at
someone 's home. often whtll' tht>
group enjoys refreshments. al each
gathering, the sell er tnes to book
new parties Jl other homes
You may have to carry heav> box
es of sample cases and dnve or walk
long distances regardless of the
weather And you can l'xpcl'l sales to
fall in slump seasons
Upgrading costly
LOS ANGELES cAP > An
estimated S65 m ill1on would be>
needed to upgrade 716 structures. in
eluding 100 buildings leased or owned
by Los Angeles County. lo meet
standards of a proposed earthquake
safety ordinance. at•cordmg to a
county committee report
\
But lf you can earn enough durina ' your peak aelUng perihds. you may
still find the yellow brick road across
direct.sales country
--l READER. SERVICE: Members o/ Che 1 Direct Sell.mg AllOCialion are ftrml thaJ I
-a"b1cn~ to e11toblt.hed bume11 ethic•. 1 Tp receive a rM111ber1h1p directo"JI and a J
tea/let lhaJ dtscmses business opportuna-l IJI fraud, entUled "Promt1e1: Check 'em
Out." &end your postcard rtquelt to ~ r
at Box 1560, Coata Me1a. CA 92826. A1k
for "Otrecl Sales "
•
Gun-bomb
barrage set
for 3 days
I
I.
CAMP PENDLETON CAP)
Marine jet fighter planes and
artillery will take part in three
days of live fire training in both '
day and night conditions this
Wt>t'k
Art11lery fire and bombing
runs will b<>gin al 11 a. m each
da>. starting Tuesday. and will
last until 9 p.m . a spokesman
S~lld.
The exercise 1s tntended to m
crease coordination between air
and ground s upport fare Taking
part will be Jets from the 3rd
Manne Aircraft Wing at El Toro
and arlillt·ry from the 1 llh
Manne Regiment. 1st Division
based at Ciimp Pendlc>ton
Heaviest artillerv and bomb
ing runs "111 take p·lat•c near the
middle or this sprawling buse
'Walk' aids
Dimes March
LOS ANGELES I AP >
Pledges of $1 75 million to fight
birth defe(•ts were raised in
Southern Cahfom1a dunng the
·annual March of Dimes
WalkAmenca, including $742.000
in Los Angeles County
Some 32,000 "alkers
part1c1palt-d throughout the
area, of whom almost one third
10.437 walked their 32
kilometers here
Officials said one of the big
gest rundra1sers was former
West Covina Mayor Ke n Chapell.
TAX SHELTERS
& Go, • Real Es101e • M
;10,,,ps ·~l~
DIDUCTIOHS UP llo-Y. TtH· Yu.a
GUAl.D L 10%.All Rt4ANCIM. SRYfCU
7 I 4/"44-JI07
Earliest morning departure .
Most service to Denver.
4 flights daily.
Just call ~ur travel agent and say you want to fly
Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060.
Flight increase plan
·1mtimely, unwelcome
Once again, a dlsquieUne
proposal to increase the
permitted number of dally de·
partures at John Wayne Airport
is scheduled for considerauon. by
the Orange County Board of
Supervison.
Several months ago, before
supervisors adopted the airport
master plan, board Chairman
Ralph Clark proposed that the
daily maximum number of jet
departures, now fixed at 41, be ·
increased to 62.
The proposal enraged
Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose
district includes both the airport
and its expansionist foes. Riley
was particularly incensed
becau.se the master plan called
for an increase to 55 flights but
only -and only is the operative
word -if overall noise impacts
were reduced through the in·
troductlon of new and quieter
aircraft. Clark withdrew the 62-nJ1ht
proposal after reaching agree-
ment with Riley that the item
could be reconsidered after adop·
lion of the master plan.
So now the item ls back.
Supervisors will be asked Tues·
day to hire ..a conaultine flnn to
produce an environmental im-
pact report on the 62·fllght pro-
posal.
That the matter would be
considered by the board so soon
after adoption of the master plan
is ludicrous. None of the plan's
objectives has yet been achieve~.
Noise l evels have not yet
dropped.
The board should promptly
drop the 62·flight proposal and
work to achieve what's en·
visioned by the master plan.
Worth thinking about
Last week on the 11th an-
niversary of Earth Day, former
activist, now presumable-
candidate for something Tom
Hayden. told a crowd of UC
Irvine students that their future
is bleak. environmentally.
That's nothing new for
Hayden. who likes to latch his
Campaign for Economic
Democracy onto environmental
issues, but it is somewhat in·
teresting to consider what has
become of the environmental
movement in the past decade.
The students who marched
around the campus celebrating
the first Earth Day were re-
garded as well-meaning but not
very practical youngsters.
But it was not too long before
older folk began to worry about
the outlook for our lands and
waters and resources.
All sort of laws seeki ng
cleaner air , purer water and un-
trammeled forest lands were
passed. But soon the environmen·
talisls were being jeered al as
"bugs and bunny people," "tree
people," people who worried
more about tiny fish and en·
dangered birds than man·~ need
for housing. jobs and economic
growth.
The environmental move-
ment served to alert us to the
danger of using up our resources
too r apidly and damaging
natural wonders that are ir·
replaceable. But today there is
an increasing tendency to fake a
more "practical" view. College
students are more interested in
aiming at good jobs with good
fringe benefits than walking
around praising the earth.
That may be unfortunate
Appointees of the n ew ad -
ministration in Washingtom
already have come out in favor of
expanded development of pro·
tected federal lands, extended
offshore oi l drilling and modifica·
taon or protective regulations on
everything from pesticide use to
automobile emission controls.
Hayden's gloom and doom
predictions about the nation's en-
vironmental outlook probably are
somewhat exaggerated -inten·
tionally so for impact But it
might not hurt to have a few
more yo4ng people thinking
a bout the (uture of the earth they
soon will inherit.
ID frauds need control
One of the major problems in
controlling illegal alien activity
in this country has been the ease
of counterfeiting the ubiquitous
Social Security card which now
serves as acceptable identifica-
tion for everything from getting a
driver's license to geUmg a job.
But suggestions that Social
Security cards be replaced with a
non · counterf eita ble plastic
mode l raise howls from those
who fear that tbis· might become
a "national identity card" -as if
our official number were not
already recorded on everythiI)g
from our bank accounts to our
tax returns.
The seriousness of the prob-
le m was pointed up this month
by Health and Human Services
Secretary Richard Schweiker.
Ordering tighter controls on
the millions of Social Security
cards issue d each year -7
million new numbers and more
than 4 million replacements -
Schweiker said his investigators •
found nearly half the Social
Security cards issued last year in
New York City and Washington
went to aliens, 20 percent of
whom were found to be in the
country illegally and therefore
not entitled to work.
His initial control will be re-
moval of blank cards from the
agency's 1,300 field offices and
setting up a central computerized
issuance system. That could be
some protection against the ~·
use and counterfeiting of blank
cards.
Schweiker also said there
will be closer contact with the
Immigration and Naturalization
Service to verily the status of
aliens seeking Social Security
cards.
This is the very least the gov·
emment can do before it slaps
P.enalties on employers for hiring
illegal aliens. More effective
would be replacement of all ex-
isting cards with non ·
counterfeitable versions.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex-pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7t4)
()42-4321 .
L.M. Boxd I Paganini and Lincoln
Already mentioned that Abraham
Lincoln had Marfan'a Syndrome, an
ailment that gave him that exceed·
lngly lanky loose ·Jointed look. It can
lead to f al al complications, true
enou1h. Peculiarly, thouah. theN's
It l east one instan u in whlcb Marran•a Syndrome helped. Nlcolo
P••anlnl, thoolht by many to have
been t.be srealftt vloUnlat ev r, waa
10 afflfded. Alld the medical analyata
Hf now tliat It auCh had not l>Hn Ult caae. P•aantnl probably couldn't
bav• ft".'itted or bowed ao weU.
basemen live longer than those who
put in most of their careen at other
positions. ShortatCJ'ps com e ln second
ln lhia lonaevlty checkup. Plt.chen
wind up at the bottom of the Uat.
Q. Jn the matter or hotdo1•. what'•
the dl!terC?nce beMween a Chihuahua,
a Dachshund ua a foodl 1-..
A. A Chlbu8Jiua ii covirtd with
cblll eauce, a D1cb1hund with
uuerJcraut, a Poodle with chopPed
onlona. Wbicb do you pref er? 1bin.k
I'd Uke the aauerlrnut doc. If It dlctn't
fet the bun aU IOIJY, wtilch lt does. 'l'oo bad.
T9'oma1 P .... tty
Pubtl.,
T"4lliNIK•vH
Edlt4r
l
Soviet group key to peape
WASHINGTON -A small, super·
secret group or old men seven or
eight at most bear responsibiltty for
the Kremlin's decision on military in-
ter vention in Poland
This gray-hatred, gray clad inner ctr·
cle of Communist Party elders is known
simply as the Defense Council. Its de·
libe rations In the Byzantine elegance of
the czarist council chambers produce
decisions that affect the peace and well
being or the whole world
LITTLE IS KNOWN about the
Defense Council In fact, its very ex-
istence was not officially acknowledged
until 1976, m a pass mg reference to Sov-
iet President Leonid Brezhnev's role as
council chairman The Soviet conslttu-
t1on published the following year in-
cludes a brief mention of the Defense
Council, stating that it 1s "formed" by
the Pres1d1um of the Supreme Soviet
A special Defense Jntelhgence Agen·
cy appraisal. lilied "USSR: Defense
C.o uncil's Role an Decision Making."
contains everything our experts know
about the secret group. The appraisal,
which was s hown to my associate Dale
Van Atta. is just four pages long.
Here's a summary of what our In-
telligence experts have been able to
learn about the council
It is "the maan coordinator of de-
fense·related act1vit1es of all govern·
ment bodies. providing key recommen-
dations on defense policy to the Polit·
buro and ensuring that party policy is
correctly executed by state organs.'·
.
The members of the Defense
Council. as near as the DIA has been
able to determine. include Brezhnev.
Defense Minister Dmitri Ustinov. a
civilian technocrat. Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko, Premier Nikolai
Takhonov. replacing the late Alexei
Kosygin, has longtime boss, KGB boss
Yuri Andropov . Nikolai Oga rkov.
militarv chat>f of staff. and Leontd
G
-JA-CK-AN-D-IRS_O_N -~
Sm1rnov, chief of the M1htary lnduslnal
Command Yakov Ryabov was believed
to have been a member, unltl he \o\as
dumped from his post as Communist
Party sel'retary for ddensc: affairs
-WITH THAT lineup. the Defense
Council has undeniable clout. As the
DIA report puts it. "Since key Defense
Council members are also the top Pohl
buro personalities most concerned with
military-political issues. (lts) recom·
mendatlons are probat>Jy almost as-
sured of party approval .. In fact.
sources said. there 1s no known instance
of the Politburo overturning a major de
cisaon by the Defense Council
"The Defense Council occupies an
intermediary role between the highest
party and government organizations in
volved in national security affairs." the
DIA concluded "It provides top level
coordination for all government ac
llv1t1ts relating to defense. estabhshang
the general guidelines for Soviet
military development."
-"THE COUNCIL PROBABLY re·
views Military lndustnal Comm1ss1on
decisions that authorize the design, de·
velopment and production of major
weapons systems Defense Council ap-
proval may also be necessary for an)
program revisions ..
The Defense Council also has a key
role 1n overseeing the way Communists
Part> policy is actually carried out b~
the military and m the formulation or
that Polley.
What it all boils down to is that the
Sov1N Defense Council apparently com
bines the funrt1ons or our National
Security Council, defense secretary and
Joint Chiefs of Staff But the repealed
use or such fudge words dS "probJbly
and "implies" -.nd "ma> .. an the OJA
ana lysas betrays the basic uncertainty
that s urrounds our Krcmlinolog1sts' as
sessment of the secret group. Our in
t.elligence experts can make educated
guesses, but, in the end, they are still
only j!uesses
On(• thing emerge~ clearly from the
DIA report, ho\\ ever: Seven or eight old
men in the murky depths of the Kremlin
hold the fate of mankind ln their hands
An error of Judgment by the Soviet
Defense Council could blow up the
world .
A lawyer who def ends social outcasts
With the possible exception or maybe
once In a while driving 58 mph on a 55
mph highway, I don't plan to break any
laws. but if I ever committed a major
crime and got caught, I'd want Edward
Bennett Williams to defend me.
If I had to pick the 10 rnost interesting
Americans, he'd be on my list, and I've
never even met him.
Williams bas been appointed defender
of the man accused of shooting Presi·
dent Reagan. Willlams is so good as a
cruninal def~nse lawyer that we'll have
to be careful he does n 't end up convinc·
ing us tha t Reagan shot Hinckley. He's
that good
HE OWNS THE Baltimore Orioles
baseball team and he s president or the
Washington Redskins.
He was a strong backer of Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy in his bid for the
Democratic nomination last year, and
after that seemed Impractical, he tried
to jigger the Democratic convention in
a way that wo11ld h3ve produced the
nomination for his friend Ed MU3kie.
His name ls always In the p~pers as
having played tennis with Dinah Shore
or Art Buchwald and he seems tG go to
a lot of parties.
In spite of an that activity, Edward
Bennett Williams' true love is the law,
and he has a philosophical view of it
that not many lawyers share He is ob
sessed. for example, with the idea that
a lawyer hu an obligation to defend the
most despicable cnmmal who comes lo
him and a3ks for help
In 1960 he defended Igor Nelekh, a
Russian employee or the United Nations
-AND-Y-RDD-Nf-Y -~
who was indicted on charges of spying
for the Soviet Union
"DEFENDING AN IUleged Soviet spy
in an American courti""oom is an open
invitatioo to be widely misunderstood,"
he said, "but popular misunderstanding
ls often the ncenae fee criminal lawyers
must pay to ply their trade."
Williams has alco defended such all
American heroes as Sen. Joe McCarthy,
madarne Polly Adler, Jimmy Hoffa and
gang boss Frank Costello.
He ls driven by the ethical ·
philosophical compulJioo he has to take
on unpopular people, and defending
someon e accused of tryina to as·
saaainate the. President of the United
States isn't aoing to make him a lot of
friends around tbe country
So why does this nice Catholic boy
who graduated from Holy Cross College
and loves all-American games defend
these people whose crimes seem in
defensible to the rest of us?
Well, he has this silly respect for the ·
law. He beUe"·es every man has a right
to a lair trial and a defense lawyer. JUSt
like the Jaw says he should have He
believes that a lawyer is defending a
human being, not the crime he may
have committed
It isn't hard to guess how Williams
will defend the man accused of trying to
murder President Reagan. l have a
book Williams wrote in 1962 and I was
looking through it last night.
IN WILLIAMS' boQk, he quotes a
great judge named Jerome N. Frank:
·'Society must be protected again.st
violence sod, at the 6ame time, avoid
punishing sick men whose violence
drives them. beyond their own controls,
to brutal deeds. A society that does not
restrain the dangerous madman lacks
common sense."
Williams will almost certainly prove
that John Hinckley Jr. was driven by
something beyond his own control, to
shoot President Reagan. With Williams
at bis aide, it is unlikely he'll be convict·
ed of anything.
Tracking the origfus of English oddities
My column earlier thlt year, on U\e
odd and irrational idioms every
lan1ua1e 1enerates, prompted me to
try to hunt down 19me ol the dtdVI·
tloM. The fruit.I of UWs labor bave been
commtncled into t.bJa Qul1.
1. From what old 1ct.Mty did the
phrase ''ht baa 1hc>t hit bolt" come
down t.o us? •
2. Why ls 1n offlcl•l aovernment
~-
If~
disciples f Motthft» S: lfJ. e. Burke, the
Bt'itiah 1tate1maa, addln1 to the three
••lat" ot the reaun. th• press "more . important than an or tbem." t. Follow· l~c ll Roman belltr that't.ra. antidote for
a d~ ,f?lte we• to burn the ha.Ir ot I.he of· feo~lfle. dOI.
CHICAGO (AP> -With the
sun 1Moin1 warm overhead,, they put Tampa Re d In tl\e
around without so much as a
. beadatone to D\ftfk the apot.
His age wa1 iioywhere from 73 to 81 wh n a heart attatl felled
him a moQth 110, and the
sparsely attended servltea
seemed a cnael and obscure way
for one. of tbe 1reatest tea ends of
the "bl~" to meet his maker.
But it't likely Red wouldn't .
have minded ..... tirpe had passed
his music by once and he was in
no mood for a revival when the
opportunity came.
1lto1etber, than 1uch artt.ts 'ai
8 le Smith, Li;tltnln' HQPklnl:.
Bi11BlU BrOon.iy and John LM
Hooker.
Tampa Red waa born in
Smlthavlllo. Ga., sQmetlme
between UIOO and 1908, hi1 oven
name HudaOn Woodbridge. His
parents died when be was young
and he moved to Tampa. Fla .• to
live with bit •randmotber •. 1t
was there that he "learned" bow
to play.
"I DIDNWf HAVE no special
teacher. It wa1 Just a gift," he
recalled.
Choose~ own money· pin!
DAY-IN/DAY-OUT DITERESf
OD Cheddag lccoants
"THE ONLY HAR~ I ever
did was to myself. But other
than that. I have no regrets I
m et a lot of good peopl~" he
told a n interviewer several
years ago. "l ain't gonna tell
nobody that I haven't did good in
the music business "
Later, he told an interviewer :
''That record of ·crazy Blues· by
Mamie Smith, It was one of the
first blues records made. I could
jwit hear It ringing in my head. I
said to myself, 'I don't know any
music, but I can play that."'
Interest
compou11ded on
your daily balance!
No monthly charge
1f your balance 1s
$750 or more•
Nominal fee 01
$3 per month if
your balance is
lower•
No minimum
for those 62
His career began spectacular·
ly during tht era of "race"
music with a 78 rpm dis<: en-
titled, "It's Tight Like Tltat"
and ended q u1elly a 1 most 30
·years ago.
Sadly, both he and his music
might have endured. But in the
early 1950s, disheartened by the
deaths of his wife, Frances, and
his pianist, Big M aceo Mer
riweather . Red laid down his
guitar and started telling his
troubles to a bottle
Al the same time. the hard
edged. amplified blues from
Memphis and the M1ss1ss1pp1
Della were fast overtaking the
music of men hkt.• Tampa Red
While many of his fint•st blues
survived. 1l IHIS through thl'
more modern inlt.•rpn•tat1on of
mus1c1 ans llkt• B B King.
Elmore James and Litt le
Waller
HIS DRINKING problem had
faded by the lat<' 1950.s. but so
had most of his mon<'v and
almost all his d1.:s1n· to pla~ lk
left a hospital frail and
somewhat Sl•ntle and lived
several Yl'ar:-: ,, 1th an old fnend
on the South Side, the two sub
sisting on meager government
checks and what httl<' monev
dripped 1n from T..impa;s
royalties
When the blues enJoyt•d a re
v1val during the m1d·l960s al col
lege campuses and small clubs
across the nation. Tampa "'as
nowhere to be found
TIME PASSED HIM BY
Tampa Red recalled
did, h~ was a total wreck," said
Blind John Davis. a pianist
who'd recorded with Tampa and
was his informal caretaker the
last 10 years.
"Oh, he coul!i s~ill play and h,is
voice was good and strong. lte
had the same power, but it just
seemed like he'd lost all interest
after Frances passed." Davis
said "He never did do much
good after that "
THE END FOUND Tampa in
a nursing home, forgotten by all
but a few friends and devotees.
s moking cigarette after hand·
rolled cigarette It wasn 't
al"' ays hke that
Composed and performed in
1928 b~ Tampa and "Georgia
'J om' Dorse\ who later made
his mark writing gospel music
for Mahalia Jackson, "It's Tight
Like Thal" was the first in a
string of commercial hits that
would make the "Guitar
Wizard" the most prolific blues
artist of his time
He released more 78s. over 150
Toting a euitar picked up at a
pawn shop, he moved to Chicago
in the 1920s, whe~ his adopted
Florida hometown and the shade
of bis skin earned him the
monlcker "Tampa Red."
Through the 1930s and '40s, his
apartment on the South Side was
like a shrine for the blues, with
music and musicians spilling on-
to the boulevard and across the
street to a club called H&T's.
INSIDE, HE'D run a bot·
tleneck up and down the frets of
his Gibson guitar, which might
have anywhere from one lo four
strings, and sing in a warm,
lively tone. Often. he accom·
panied himself on the "jazz
horn" a kazoo with two horn
hung around his neck by a metal
r1n,1r. His lyncs usually were a bit·
mg, but playful commentary on
the battle of the sexes and were
full of double-meanings.
He explained why he wasn't
more explicit: .. After all. kids
hear these things . I t hink
anybody should be able to hear
them If some people get a joke
out of them and have some fun
with them. frne. But the words
s houldn 't force a joke on
anybody who doesn't want to
hear it"
Cuban gays get funds
LOS :\NG ELES <AP 1 A
\
~co
or '11ME-PIAN INTERESI'
on 30-month and 6-montb Certificate Accounts
Call ut for thfl week'• high rate•/
Penalty for early withdrawal on term accounts
~-=== BALBOA BRANCH
600 Eaat Balboa Boulevard, Balboa, CA 92661 (714) 673-3701
Laguna Beach .
San Clemente
Laguna Niguel
Additional offices 1n
494· 7541 • Laguna Hills. . . 586-5100 • Bolmont Shore .492·1195 • Lali:eElsmore .674-2191 • Murrieta.
. 496-1201 • Olive/Orange . 998-8400 • Balboa Island
Glen Avon . . 681-0111
(213) 438-9421
677-5632
675-3212
"When l came back from the
road. ll took me three or four
years to find him and "'hen I
federal grant to help relocate
ga) and lesbian Cuban refugees
was allotted to an international
association of predominantly
homosexual churches head·
quartered in Hollywood.
government's Cuban·Haitian
Task Force and will be used by
the Universal Fellowship of
Metropolitan Community
Churches to establish halfway
houses in San Francisco.
Chicago and Baltimore. church
officials said
Save mone~ and sfwppzng tune Read the · Daily Pilot The S.175.000 grant 1s from the
I
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Greedy eland couldn't wait for Kame Wiley &o pour groin out of IOCk on to Lion Count71[ Sa/an road. TWt$ted honu pro-
v1de Tight of way to feed bag /OT this African antelope that pre/er• minrnll·pocked pellets to abundant Bennuda grew.
Safari's ~ppetites untamed
Grass, n eighbor s t e mpting but m onthly food bill is $35 ,000
By J OEL C. DON
Of tlM Dell1 ~let si.11
Cheetahs arc such fussy eaters that
they 'd JUSt about put your finicky house
feUnes to shame
But even with nearly 700 mouths to feed.
the folJ(s at Lion Country Safari manage to
meet nutnt1onal needs as well as a host of
palates.
In captivity. wild animals require a little
extra care So when the cheetahs demand
leaner horse meat. they get it
"THEIR FAT R EQUIRE MENT is
almost nil," says wildlife direetor Lee
Keaton. "If cheetahs get a large excess of
it in their system. it becomes toxic an their
livers and kidneys
"Anytime you see a fat cheetah. you're
seeing an Wlhealthv cheetah "
Feedmg time begins early each morning
at the Irvine animal preserve By the time
the first cars roll through the 3.5-mile
route, most of the wildlife are JUSt about
finished chomping on oat hay and gobbling
down horse meat.
Zebra-striped jeeps. with protective
steel bars for windows. make the rounds
t h rough eac h anim a l sa n ctua r y .
Carnivores naturally are separated from
he rbivores to prevent the lions and
cheetahs from s talking a livelier
breakfast.
ALTHOUGH NATURAL vegetation cov-
ers the 300 acres, hoofed animals such as
the giraffes. elands. gazell,es. impalas.
zebras, buffalo, goats and sheep prefer
takeout food · oat hay. alfalfa and vitamin
and mmeral-packed feed pellets
"The nutntillonal value of grass goes
down over the years," says Keaton, of the
Bermuda vanety providing much of the
park's greenery "We don't use it for feed·
ing because the animals have enough
nutrition without at."
Black and grizzly bears get the best of
two worlds in their diet · whole body
chickens and mackerel in addition to hay
a nd feed pellets.
IT MIGHT BE SIMPLE to stock up on
groceries for a family of four. But when
your family numbers In the hundreds. wild
animal park employees tap a valuable
source in local supermarkets.
"We're set up to where we work with
produce managers and anything they dis-
card we'll take If there Isn't any spoilage,"
he explains. "lf the produce is not used in
a couple of days, we'll discard ll anyway."
Food from supermarkets has to be
carefufly screened, since you never know
when a twist·tie, staple or other foreign
matter might find its way to the animal
food bins
"IT'S EASIER THAN buying off the
shelves ... Keaton says, of using leftover
produce. "You would be surprised to see
it Some of the stuff I eat I don't know
why they throw it away "
All totalled, Keaton estimates Lion
Co untry serves up nearly 1.800 pounds of
oat hay and alfalfa per day plus 900 to
1.000 pounds of feed pellets. The monthly
food bill is estimated at $35,000.
Bears Wlll consume about 25 pounds of
mackerel a day and the park's cat popula ·
lion will chow down about 150 pounds of
raw meat.
When you have a stubborn eater -
especially among the hons and cheetahs -
park officials can resort to what they call
a "starve day" to help mold an animal's
eating habits to the daily feeding schedule.
"If we have a starve day," Keaton says.
·'the other six days they get a little more.
But I generally find it's not necessary to
do."
Lions require about 10 pounds of
meat per day. But it's difficult for feeders
to ensure each cat will get his daily por
lion so officials rely on the fa ct that a lion
who acts like a hog one day will diet the
next.
Feeding the park's bird population pre·
sents a more difficult problem.
Seagulls and migratm~ waterfowl take
their toll, gobbling up a sizable portion of
bird seed allotted for the park's feathered
boarders.
"We 've tried lo discourage them
(seagulls) from being here.·· says Keaton.
"The s'\agulls are difficult to eliminate
because they are protected bards so there's
very litUe that we can do with them "
"During the winter months the ma
grators come and we get an incredible
amount of coots. Canadian geese and
mallards." says Lion Country employee
Linda Brockhoeft.
"Normally we feed the birds 150 po unds
of grain. That doubles with the seasonal
migration of freeloaders.
That's the only way we can ensure that
our birds will get the ri ght amount to eat."
she continues. "Basicall y when there's no
one at the beach and there's no ~arbage
for them to gel into. they come over here "
Ground squirrels and 1ackrabb1ts also
have been known to take advantage of the
easy pickings at the animal park. adds
Keaton.
But Darwin's survival of the fittest law
seems to have protected one area from mi-
grating birds and rodents.
"We've found there's a limited popula-
tion (of freeloaders) where the cheetahs
are and a very large population where we
have herbivores," Keaton muses.
.
Police brace.
Upsurge feared i n FV activity
by busy 'drive-in' burglar y gang
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of ... OMty ..... SUff
Fountain Valley polfce are
bracing for an armed gang that
crashes stolen cars through
store doors or windows. grabs as
much merchandise as possible
within about 90 seconds and
escapes on a nearby freeway.
B'ob Mosley, Fountain Valley
police detective, said the Los
Angeles-based gang is suspected
of 11 clothing store burglaries in
the city since January.
He said the gang is known as
the "Rolling 30s Crips." They
are based near Compton and
have several l)undred members,
mostly black males between 14
.and 40, he said.
HE SAID TWO of the stolen
cars usually accompany a main
vehicle during a bur~lary One,
serving as a lookout, contains
gang members armed with
shotguns. The other is a secon-
dary escape vehicle that waits
at a selected location in case the
burglars are interrupted and
flee on foot.
"They're very organized."
Mosley said. "They know where
the police station is, they only
stay m the store for 90 seconds
and they never hit more than
three miles from a freeway "
He said usually it takes about
two minutes relay time after an
alarm is tripped for Police to
know of the emergency By the
Suspect
.-Lin slaying
surrenders
By J ERRY CLAUSEN
OI llM Oall'f ~lot Si.ft
One of two Costa Mesa men
sought for questioning in the
April 13 shooting death of
Placentia hair s alo n Carl
Lawson. 31, has turned himseU
over to police.
Investigators said today that
18 -year-old Samuel Monsoor
walked into the Costa Mesa
police station on Fair Drive at
about 6 p.m. Saturday accom·
panied by his father. Frank
Monsoor of Palm Springs.
YOUNG MONSOOll was ar-
rested on a warrant issued for
suspicion of murder and held
without bail at the local jail. lie
was scheduled for arraignment
m Harbor Municipal Court to·
day, investigators said.
Police said they still seek 23·
year-old Rami Darwiche on a
murder warrant.
Darwiche, a meat company
delivery driver, and Monsoor. a
convenience market employee,
shared an apartment at 2775
Mesa Verde Drive East.
LAWSON'S BODY was foWld
in his car parked April 14 in a
Santa Ana industrial area park·
tng lot.
Two witnesses told Santa Ana
poliee a few days later that they
had seen a scuffle and heard
shots late April 13 in Jojos
Restaurant's parkin g lot on
Harbor· Boulevard in Costa
Mesa.
Valley hir~
amhitect for
police site
time the police arrive at the
scene. the burglars are gone. he
said.
Fountain Valley authorities
are taking precautions. but
Mos ley declined to elaborate.
TH E SUSPECTED gang ac·
tivity first came lo light m
January when five of its mem·
bers were arrested and charged
with burglarizing Miller's Out·
post, at Brookhurst Street and
Edinger Avenue, Mos ley said
Three of the suspects were
Juveniles, including one girl. The
othe r two were males in their
20s, police said
Citizens ha d called poli ce
about suspicious activity near
the store and the suspects were
arrested coming out of the shop.
Mosley explained
But since January, more than
$14,000 of merchandise has been
stolen from fou r clothing stores.
some repeatedly burgla rized in
that time. he said
Millet's Outµost and the Wild
West Store <on Warner Avenue
near Magnolia StrC'et1. each
ha v<.· been burglarized four
limes th1:. :.ear Mosle y said
M IKE 'S MEN 'S & Bo,·s
Wear on Magnolia near Talbert
Avenue. has been burglanzed
three tames and the Cahforma
Cowboy on Magnolia and
Warner. has been hit once. he
said
Last year. Huntington Beach
police reported 23 commercial
burglanes committed by a d1f~
fercnt Los Angeles-based gan~
using the same methods .
But Huntington Beach poli ce
detective• Ma rty O'Reilly said
there onl y has b<.•en one in that
city this year lie attributes the
decrease to the fact that four
s uch burglaries were stopped
and suspects arrested last year.
He said patrol units just hap·
pened to be m the area and that
high speed fteeway auto chases
preceded three of the arrests.
·'I think the word got out that
we were catchin g them ."
O'Really said
2 HB m e n hurt
in cycle c rash
Two Huntington Beach men
remained hospitalized today
with serious injuries after the
motorcycle they were riding
spun out of control on Gothard
Street between Ellis A venue and
Main Street and slammed into a
van.
Leonard J acq uez . 30, a
passenger. and Jeffrey Lujan.
21, the driver of the motorcycle.
were reported in serious condi·
lion
~
UPDA'm F&OM WASlllNG'ION -Wb• 1ut
e left Michael L'awler, youthful, lntrepld oran,. • Cout attorney who left the eomtorta of aaiil and
IUi'f to seek his fortune m tbe oaUon'I capttal, be
wu fJ.Yinl a restroom. 00ni you remem.,.? • If not, it happened WI way; Lawler brlefb'. clia·
mined hit Washlnaton amb(Uons after lnau1uraUm
of our new president to vacatloa at the Super Bowl in New Orleans.
Then he had to . ·
irab a jet fll1ht from b.)
New Orleans to ·~ Atlanta and then on ~\ ~~cta:g ?&~~!t ~~ ml IDIPHlll .~'t/ he bad no seat. -~ ~'
Tbua Mi/e , always noted fo rapid innovation, wandered onto
the aircraft and locked himself In the john.
RE MANAGED TO DEP the "occupied" ai1D in place during the entire flight. He arrived in
Washington with leg cramps ancf watercloset phobia,
but otherwise, it was an enormous jet victori.
He is no longer called Michael afong the
Potomac. He ii known aa .. Jetting John" Lawler.
Anyway, the saga of Lawler of Newport 8each
Goes to Washington now continues. His latest coup
was getting to help promote the klddies' Easter egg hunt on the White House lawn.
"Hundreds of kiddies up to age 8 showed up,"
Lawler enthused. "We were alJ prepared to assure
Newport htn'o dreaming up anotMr White Houu caper
that the little darlings wouldn't go stomping around
and crush all the eggs. "We used wooden eggs."
As an astute type of Newport wheeler-dealer
who ~uld never get trapped into taking a wooden
nickel, you have to have some admiration for
Lawter coming uv With wOOden Easter e~gs . Because of hm outstanding success m running a
wooden Easter egg bunt, the young barrister got m·
vited to actually have lunch at the White House.
"111ERE·s NOTIDNG WASTEFUL about this
administration," he declared. "We had hot dogs for
lunch." You may think this isn't much of a success story
for a guy who had to ride a john to Washington. But
wait! It gets better. Lawler has also landed a real •
job.
He is now with the Solicitor General's Office or
the United States Department of Justice. He is
neither riding in small rooms with plumbing nor roll-
ing wooden eggs. He is actually working as a lawyer.
Lawler was told that at the ripe old age of 'Z7 ,..he
was one of the youngest barristers ever to latch on
with the department, particularly straight out of law
school.
HE'S BEEN WRITING some briefs for the U.S.
Court. of Appeal. It has been reliably reported that
he finished writing one the other day and his bosses
actually liked it. Right now, he carries the title of
special assistant United States attorney.
You may not think much of Lawler's story but I
am mightily impressed. Very few ex-surfers end up
hovering around the White House , writing appellate
briefs , riding in airplane toilets and rolling wooden eggs on the chief executive's lawn.
Just think about that.
It's a long way from John to Justice.
who a.re 1uccaafull) topln1 wtUI
the unbelievable bebavtor U..t
their ki4i are dilbint out
9efore we came to
TOUGULOVE we were ubamed
and felt weak and fUllty beeauH
•• couldn ~t ltaDd up to our SOD
W• u.oupt nobody ln our com·
, mu.nlt)' had faJJed so mJaerably u parent.I. Then we met other
membtrt ol TOUGHLOVE, and kn••· we were no l<>naer help. lei•. We bad the •"'port of other parents, the poUce, the 1cboola,
the cdu.rtl and the rehabilitation faclllUes. We didn't have to
Virgo: Examine
other possibilities
TUESDAY, APRIL ZS, 1181
By SYDNEY OMAaa
ARIES <Mar. 21 -Apr. 19):
Separate fact from Ulu.1ion;
temp(ation will be placed ln your
path. Defme terms, comprehend
meaninp. Friend who promiffa
much may actually be suffering
from ''financial embar·
assment."
TAVRVS (Apr. 20-May 20):
Focus oo promotlon, production,
ability to handle added
responsibility. Prestige is on
HOROSCOPE
upswing; persons in authority
make room for you at top.
Busine~s booms!
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Perceive potential. Emphasis Oil
travel, education, expan1loo of
personal horizons. You'll
complete important transaction.
Long-range legal procedures will
favor your efforts.
CANCER (June Zl-July 22):
Emotional responses tend to
cloud logic. Know it, draw bead on
financial prospects ,
requirements. Hold off on
partnership arrangements. Study
Aries message for valuable hint.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); Avoid
skipping essentials. Become
familiar with legal rights,
pe rmissions. Check license
requirements, strive to regain
sense of direction.
SCOaPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Chahles occur in dome.tic area.
Individual cloff to you makes
numerous requests. Adhere to
col'laervative course. Period of
confloemeot proves temp<>rary.
Patience and persistence are twin
allies. Act accordinaly !
SAGrlTA&IVS (Nov. 22·Dec.
21 >: Focus on home environment,
domestic adjustment.a, special
considerations, anniversary
giltl. You can now make vaJ~ble
acquisition. Taurus, Libra,
Scorpio natives play key roles.
Family metnber will cooperate.
CAPRICORN <Dee. 22-Jan.
19): Count your chanae! Avoid
self-deception. Proti!ct valuables.
Techniques will be perfected.
What appeared to be a "lost
cause" will boomerang in your
favor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Emphasis on business
transactions, initiative, success
via original approach. Personal
scenario higblighu satisfaction
in money and love. Cancer.
Capricorn natives figure
prominently.
. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20):
Flurey of activity occurs behlnd
scenes. Important people discuu
your propoeals. You're due to
gain wider audience. valuable
advocates. Hold fast to prin·
ciples.
Guitarist to
eiftertain
UU'ow 9'!1J.,._ *• wi CU4I we havt to tonUeue to ta•i hll
a~e. 'We laid dowli a wbOle ~ Mt Ol Niel ud cave b1m •
riOic:e. He~ to STAY
I'm endollo1 a Utile plmpbl t
that tell1 you more about
TOUGHLOVE. Pleate, A ,
share tt with your readen. It
tbe 1reatest tbint tbat could
have happened to ua. ud we
want to Ip~ the word. Thanks
tor your h.elp. -FOR£VER
GRATEF'Ut. IN BUCKS COUN·
TY,"PA. Dear Fe»ftnr: It u l wbo am
1ntefQI. BleM yoa for 1bdq.
Here •• aome faeta.
TOVGHLOVE II a 9rocra• &o
ltelp pa,_tl 1'M •re trMbled
by &heir &eea-agen• behavior ta
1cllool, wldllD f.be fasnlly, &Mir
involvement wttb dl'Uf•, alcohol udU-law.
Blue Angels will
highlight show
J.:L TORO -The U.S. Navy
Preelllon Flight Demonstration
Team, Blue Angela will again
bighUlht this year's El Toro
Arrued Forces Day and Open
House set May 2·3.
It wu June 15, 19", when the
Blue Angels flew their rint
flight demoMtratlon to "dem·
onstrate precision techniques
of naval aviation" to naval
personnel. Today, after 35 yean.
the U181 Blue Angels accomplish
essentJally the same mission.
As ''Ambassadors of
Goodwill" the Blue Angela take
naval aviation to the public as a
means of demonstrating the
quality of men and equipment
comprising the U.S . Naval
service. When traveling abroad,
tha role la expanded as these
young men and women
represent the U.S.
The 16 officers and 74 enlisted
personnel who comprise the
Navy Flight Demonstration
Squadron strive to set a slan·
dard of perfection for 1t.s con·
temporaries in naval aviation.
thus ena bling our Navy and
Marine Corps to continue lo pro
duce the finest aviators in the
world.
Early January find s the
"Blues" moving to their winter
training home at Naval Air
Facility. El Centro. T he Im·
perial Valley provides the ex·
cellent weather conditions and
training environment for the
"Blues" to prepare themselves
for the upcoming season.
For the next 60 to 70 days all
bands devote total concentration
to honing fiying skills to the rme
edge of perfection required to
carry on the Blue Angela tradj.
lion.
The pilot• fly twice a day
seven days a week. with each
day beginning at 5:30 a.m. and
ending in the early afternoon
with the remainder of the day
occupied wiijl a self-imposed fit-
ness t>roeram.
By mid lo late March. the
squadron is ready to debut the
skills and teamwork.
This 1ear's'Open howse and air
show 1s scheduled for noon.
Prior to the Blue Ange ls ·
pe rformance, visitors to El
Toro's air station will also view
a Marine air-ground team dem·
onstrat1on. the combined El
Toro and Camp Pendleton Sport
Par achute Team and the aenal
acrobatics of Chuck Wentworth
Dozens of military aircraft
will also be on display for up.
c lose inspection
The gates will open at 9 30
a m . on both days with the ac-
tua I air show performances
beginning at noon.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>:
Examine various possibilities;
find reasons for recent events.
Member of opposite sex aids in
resolving dilemma. Be ready for
quick changes, revision of plans
and adjustment of employment
shift. Gemini is in picture.
Sioter and guitarist
Serge Kerval will bel·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ featured Thursday al Sr
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Your
affections tend to vacillate. What
seemed a routine procedure will
be revised. Accept challenge, be
analytical and take nothing for
granted. Aquarius, Scorpio,
Taurus natives figure
prominently.
p.m . by the Alliance
Francaiae de la Riviera
Calllomienne.
Well-known in France,
Kerval made bis
American debut in
Louiaiana in 1975. Tickeu
are SS.
The meeting will be in
Brid&e Hall of the
Congregational Church, 341 St. Ann's Dr., Laguna
Beach.
The Change Starts When You Do
The Time To Start Is Now
The Place Is "Powers"! Change It All!
l>tan-1,)llf ttllv I~ Of ..,. 1h•· #fld'!I .,,.\J
1r..-J" f1--~1 '"'' ltOOt'd '' fltr'l:f•r' W• ti ma.,•·"''· "hanop [a,.,. ,tntl F ul"'I •• .., •. , 1h1· •••t·rr,\P 1 lrt''''
A11 rla\M•\ '"' '•'Pr1 f .,, ,, -tq•· .Jr-,"'"' h
O RANCE COUNH'
II J Jown & Country, Or•nKf'
1714> S47·8ll8
)ohn Robert Powers
1#)1"• ''tl'r'ldi 8••Aulr' A 1m,,~fi .>1•v1•1iuprn~n1 ,.,., d oJ\ I
Motivation and Theater Olmbiries for a Hit
The talk of the t.own is a new !>.how
called ... Breaking Free~ Over 700
women p~ked the South Coast Plaza
Ball room to see the premiere of
"Breaking Fre4!~ the world's most
innovative motivational program.
Designed exclu.~ively for women. it
combined theater with motivation.
The program premiered I.he inno-
vative concept o( using the right and
letl brain to maximiz.e the learning
experience. The show is unique in that
it combines high intensity manage.
ment skills into an easy entertaining
program formal
The41J, hour show is alive with toe-
tapping music and inspirational mes·
sages. The saJient points of proO'}inen~
women speakers are punctu"tsd with
&I ides and-humorous film seaments.
The Theater of the Mind presentatfon
is shown on '° feet o€ screens that
dance with color and sparkle with
~. .
Prior to the production of the~
one yeat waa spent in rtsearch.
Ac.cording to 1h9w roouctt Bill
t'.aweett. ".OVir 1*lO irit.erviewa were ~ f1Ver U\e QM.ed Statei to
d*nTllne the anatomy of ldcceat r
Womth:' With the help of nOCed IJllY·
• choloirilta Ind behavlorilta. tne find· i"'9 were distilled d(».n to euy to
apply pri11Ciplel t.t.t are shared wnh
U. IUdtence.
Or. Slieux Harlan, the show\ mod-
erator. eommcnted. "All Hminar
IUMid~ ttceive a workbi>Ok that ~them with as .. weej dally
ditt f()f IUCtlell. Each .,, &J(ire are
~~-~ d.i WiUMlptl*-~ ·~ .. .Wbritndbtll'lti*M4-.-
9"1'JOM ~4!w PNSnm ,.,.,a. mu11c11 -.ot lhl .mire
' _,lfttllaha*'.Nl~fathll ............ bt~pnork> dilw*'Clrillta~~thtt itll.-SirillNXOl'Wft~t-e
•• tkn dilft_. a& tM n...r«thellW,.aa r.a•.-Dr.
Hotel from 1 ~p.m. One of the fea·
tured speakers will be Kelly Lange.
Emmy Award winning N.B.C. News
Anchorwoman. Ms. Lange's segment
of the show will be directed at helping
women become more successful. Her
topic will be •Risk Thking, an Essen·
tial to Success7 Lan~ worked her
way from helicopter traffic reporter
to one of California's first network
anchorwomen and co-host of the
"Sunday· show. She will share her
itep& to auccess.
Also appearing in the May 3 show
of "Breaking Free" is Dr. Bobbe
Sommer. noted psychotherapist. She
will speak on I.he e$sential ingredients
for developing auccesstul relation-
thipa. Somtner has &Misted thousands
of women to obtain. maintain.and su!t-
tain creative life etyle patterns of
IUCIC.'el&
Also.•1>1lfartni Sunda.y will be lo
Anne A.atrow. President of the
A~rican Federation of Comedians.
Her television credits include "Mork
& Mindy," .. Knotts Landing:• and
•0aJ1a&~ Sho la appeared in om-100
teleVision eom~ M& Astrow's
toplc la "The ~ of Hu~ She
will explain humor in terms of a
pawertul pen1Ja.ive tnol tor women
t.oemplo)itOpt.their ~.
Roundinr o{at the C11t ii Dr. Siooit
Harlan,adoctoro(behavSOraJlcleriee.
whO pirlomui &ht l'olt <I the ihOQ
Mlnd Gaidt. end Plat Allen the~ ~andfarili\ymun.lof.
0oor-a., Ill 12:30 ~ nw *"' be«fna pt'On'lptly at lp:nf ~are ~.00. Pm inelud• wotkllOok.
........ ind fruit~~ lllUbllAt•~--.-. ~,.:Helt.~ ''° adriAH
:ft1tenlt ~· recommended Uiat ,.,.._. •I , .. ~
' .. ,... ... $~Md ad4lo tilfDI! hd!W~ ~IU\lt ti;
cat1l1'1 t..:o11 Mo'1bl\ at Womenw
INtrn&Uol&l '8ut u ~*'•• '1lt) 711!8102. W..-~and Vi•
~
Breaking Free ta the smash hit
that btendt theater wtth
motivation.
You'll hear women speakers
whoyou will be able to identify
with Youtll discover how to
shed your frustrations and ex·
pand your horizons.
It's the kind of show you
won't want to end ... and the
best part is that It doesn't; it
goes home with you.
Housewives and career
women equally sing the
show's praises. Whether you
want to leam the management
tkllls of a high achiever or It
you want to put harmony Into
your life ... there's something
life changing for everyone.
You caa't tell lnythln1 by t name. ~ake Gilt It
Western Jndustriea. It'• not Mldquan.,rtd 111)'wbere
near a sulf; nor doe. tt bave a rreat pte1eece iA the
West. It is, ln fact, band ln New York Clty. aear CH·
tral Park. From U»ien. under the aefb of Charles
Blubdom, it operates what. we l1a1hlntlY call a con·
1lomerat.e, mean1n1 lt owns companlea aU over the
place -here, there and everywhere.
So why is it called Gulf & West.em! Because in '\)
1958, when BJubdom began hi.I sptee of acqW.itions.
one ol his first catches wu • Houston automobile
part1 maker
Bluhdorn hit ~ upon Gulf &
Western as tbe
logical name, '-~' ~~~c1r::agket~~! 1111111n111nz~'+
parts there on .--
the Gulf of fit!exico and then ship them west. That was the start
of an auto parts distribution buaineas called A. P .S.
But it was also the start of the Gulf & Western con·
glomerate, as Bluhdorn found that he liked to buy
companies.
SO HE BOUGHT a lot of them. In all parts of the
country -and some outside the country. In all kinds
of industries -manufacturing, mining. service.
finance, agriculture. Bluhdom likes to buy and sell.
Ao Austrian immigrant, he made his original
fortune, before he was 30, in the commodities
market, a perilous arena for the neophyte. ,
Result : you may not know the Gulf & Western
name but you're probably famibar with many of the
companies that belong to this company They in-
clude: _ -Consolidated Cigar. th~ nation's biggest cigar
maker (Muriel, El Producto. Dutch Masters)
-Kayser-Roth, the nation's largest hosiery
maker (Kayser. Esquire, Supp-hose. MoJud. No
Non sense, Interwoven)
-Simon & Schuster. one of the nation's largest
book publishers (Summit, Pocket Books. Fireside.
Monarch, Julian Messner>
-COLE OF CALIFORNIA, one of the largest
swimwear and sportswear makers <Catalina, Going
Places. Sandcastle). -Madison Square Garden, the New York .City
sports arena that brings with it ownership of the New
York Knickerbockers basketball team and the New
York Rangers hockey team.
-Paramount Pictures. one of the major movie
and TV film companies. · -Those are jUAt a few of the Gulf & Western
satellites. There are also sugar cane fields in the
Dominican Republic. New Jersey Zinc. the
Washington Diplomata soccer team, the Arlington
Park racetrack outside of Chkaeo. Bostonian shoes.
Purity napkins, Associates loan offices and Capitol
life insurance.
AS YOU SEE, any&ing goes. So why not coffins?
According to the Federal Trade Commission
<FTC>. funeral homes bought about 1.8 mHllion
caskets in 1979, paylng approximately $540 million
for them. That's appuenUy enough of 'a market to at·
tract Charles Bluhdom.
Gulf & Western entered this recession·proof busi·
ness in 1978 when it bought Simmons Casket. a comn
maker. Liking what it saw. G & W followea this up in
1979 by acquiring Wallace Metal. a Richmond. Ind.,
maker of "knockdowns" or unassembled coffin parts.
Then, still liking what it saw, G & W last year
scooped up the nation's third' largest maker of cof·
fins, Boston's National Casket. ' As a result. G & W may now be the nation's
largest maker of coffins and the FTC thinks that's
too much. It has accused G & W of antitrust viola·
lions by buying its way into the coffin market.
While G & W apparently considers coffins a good
business for the future, it's giving up on candy. G &
W bought the Schram candy business for $4.3 million
in 1973. ft -had been alling and Bluhdom thought thut
he couJd work som e magic with the company,• just as
he had with Paramount Pictures. which w,as flat on
its back prior to being acquired by G & W.
Gold metals quotations
liflld
By Tbe A1aocl1&ed Pre11
Selected world gold prices today:
Loodoa: morning fixing $488.75, off $5.75.
Loodoa: afternoon fixing $483.00. o(( $11.50.
Paris: afte~oon flxin1 $518.69, off $5.47.
Frankfurt: fixing $488.02, off $5.99.
Zmtcb: late afternoon fixing $488.00 off .... oo· ..,91.00 asked. . • .,, ·.,,
Handy fr Harman: only dally quote $483.00, off $11.50.
En.1elbard: only daily quote $483.00. off $11.50.
Eqelbard: only datly quote fabricated $502 32 off $11.96. . '
Sil aw"
Hinely & Hannan, SU.180pertroy .ounce
Mn_,.
NEW YORK (AP> -J5pot nonferrous metal prices
today.
COfPer:~~·SO centa a pound, U.S. dettln1Uoa.a.
Lead ... Ctnla & poUQd.
Z1* 43'r4 cent.a a p0und. dedvered.
Ttlli '6.614' Meta.Lt Wffk compo1ite lb.
Ahualaam 79 cents a OOul:ld, N. Y.
MettVT $0).00 per tluk. .
Pla&lawm $449.00 troy 01., Jll, Y.
. .. ' t
"J .G.! Tldl la C.R. O¥er at T.R.L. and W .... you know,
V.P. lft cbara• ol O.C.D .... well, bold on, I'll UM a
~ lbal mak• ._in a mlnut.9."
DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I aet
som e good inform atloh aboul how to form a
food buyifll co-0p.,
J .W .• Newport Beach
"How to Form a Food Bay•1 Clab" b a
very lllformathe publluticla ud die prtce b
rt1bt -It'• free. It comtalu pldellan ud
tips oa bow to form and operate coopentln
buying club1, wltb lnformaUo• on Ute
cooperative movement la California ud or·
1anbaUonal optioDa. llequeat a copy by writ·
ID« to Food Co.()p PubUutlou, Departme11t
of Consumer Affairs, P .O. Boa 311,
Sacramento 158t%. .
Another booklet, tbe "Food Co-Op Dlrec·
lory 1" la available free from the above ad·
dreaa. It tells about cooperatlvn tbroa1hout
the state, with eHeotlal lnformatloa about
each. The directory la alao useful to farmers
wishing to directly market their crops.
Sublet guidelines
DEAR PAT DUNN · Do I have lo ask my
landlord's permission to sublet my apart-
ment to another tenant.,
R.H., Costa Metia
Mo.st agreement. allow you to sublet •ly
wltb the ludlord'• wrlttea COIUellt. Some
IHdlords wtll accept tbe ret1l dfrtttly from
the subtenant. But you are still retpoulble
for paying the rent, uless the 111Mnut'•
eame replaces youn oa tbe 11rttment, or a
aew agreement la written.
Water-laving aUlll
DEAR READERS: Was your 1tate la·
come taa a palaful eaperleace tlUa year?
You unease that pala aeld year by tak·
lag advuta1e of a law allowta« state llleome
tax credit.I of up to "3, ... for lutalU.1 ap·
proved water·aavlag ay1tem1 la your bome.
The state D e partment of Water
Resources HY• the 1y1tems allO caa mean
direct money aavla11 ID water and eaer1y •ma .
Au&borlaed IHt year by Auembly Bill
1151, tbe tu credit. cover part of the tOlt of
ln1talllng rain water aad 1ray water
1y1tems, flow reducera for abowera ••d
faucet. and low.nu.ab toUeu.
Gray water 1yatem1 reclaim water from
baths, 1bowen and 11Dka for lanclacape Ir·
rtcaUoa. Water from rain w1ter system• -
eolJecton ud clateraa -also wCHllcl be aed
for landscape lrrtaatloe, wblc:b accoa:eu for
about half the water used la Callforala
• IM>mes.
Tbe tu credit for 1l•1le·famUy rea·
ldeaces la SS Qercent of cotta to a masl••m
credit of "'·"'· For rnaldple rulde•c:es, u ow•er lutalllnt a 1y1tem CCMS&bil at lean M .... caa take a &Ill credit of between %5 per ..
ceat and 51 percent.
EUOblllty guldellDea for the taa credit
bve bttn developed by the Departmea& of
Water Re1011rce1 and tbe Departmeat of
'ealtb Services. Cople1 are nallable from
41aa fa1bam, Departmemt of Water
lleaourcea, Dlvltk>D of Planala1, P .0. Box
388, Sacramento 9580%.
r,,. I or sleep
DEAR PAT DUNN: Is one 1leepin1 potl·
lion more "restful" than othen? My mother
telll me I should 1leep on my back. bec1U1e J
will rest better. She's said th.la for yean and
l 'd like to know if there'• any validity to her
tfleory.
W. F., La1una Beach
IR't IDOC.ber llWaJI rtOilf la .... HN, moaa medical a.U.Orttla bad '!II' a..r adytee.
A nawa·dte·b•e• • .,,...... ... ,..ue 11
, .. bell& •• , .. 1leep .. pt .......... .
~aeftta for die U•• 1pn& ....,:11et1 .. ................ Hjfoit&OU.'WJ• all •melet e .. relaa • ....,. ... 1w..da11 =:' an 9Cn•"4. etlaladla II •. •· dill die .,._ II ,...,.tl.Y al ..... A •••~ :::=-place.1 J• _.., JflU aMk .... .. . ~ .. ....,.,,,.., .........
(JAC:9' ANDt.:aKON)
9'EVIA\.I In tlM
.Wort. f "or that ex tra
nzeas u re o( sa tisj(zction.
The Canalen. of Butora, Ga., were
drlvini trom Atlanta to Arkauu
. when he pulled into the •tallon heri.
He went in.aide to aet a map. She
wolle up and went to the restJ'OOm.
Can1ler returned to the car &Qd con·
tinued the trip, and didn't realize hi•
"I'm More
.satisfied:~
' '
~.,~ ........... .., .. , .. ....,..
Joe Vargas of the L'nzt edStates passes as Soviet Sergej Kotenko r 7 J defends in water polo competition Sunday.
Reggie says no
to 'candy tag'
to hit the cutocr man,'' he said.
"But that's not playing. I was
fighting the urge to play at any
cost "
Smith pointed to two develop·
menls that altered his plan.
·'The acquisition of Ken Land·
re aux relieved some of the pres·
sure." polnted out Smith. "We
were too ri&ht-handed and,
besides, he's a good hiller. And
then Pete (Pedro Guerrero> sho"'.~d that he can play every day. •
The Dodaen started their win·
nine rally in the et1htb 11a1n.st
reliever Gary Lucas, 2·2, when
Steve Gatvey led off with a
elngJe. Ron Cey sacrificed and
arter Guerrero walked, Smith
batted for catcher Mlie Scioscia
and doubled to left-center.
Left-bander Jerry Reut1, 1-1,
pltched a complet.e ••m• victory
for Loa Ahteles, 1catterln1
seven bit..
THE OODGE•& took a 2·U
lead qalnat San Dle•o starter
Juan Eichibet1er with a nm tn
the flfth. w SClo.cta 1lnaled
and •vent tcored on an ln· fleld out, and enother ln the
aJxth on 1uec .. 1lve 1ln1lea by
Du1ty Baker, Garvey and C.y.
Hamann w11 credited wttb nine aav .. and J~
Svendten scored rrom 15 meten with six 1econdl
Jett to live the U.S. a 3-1 balf.Ume lead. And Petef
Campbell came up wlth a couple or critical
1tealt.
But it wu Robertaon who held moat or tbe qf ~
fenalve abllltlea.
In addition to a steal, aa1tat on Svendsen'• •ofl•
and a blocked. ahot. it waa RobeiUon'a 10-mei.tr
bullet with two seconds left in the third quart.er
that knotted the score at 5. ,
Earlier he had scored on a pair of •ix-on-five
altuatlons, when the U.S. swept into a 4-2 lead.
The Soviets, however. were quick to retallaft
in the third period and three quick 1oal.a ln the la t
four minutes of the quarter turned an Americdn
lead into a same of catchup in the rtnal atanza.
The Soviet coach said hla team pressed a little
more in the fiurry of the third quarter when t~
game was turned around, but uid there was no
particular change in strate1y.
Shootine percentages from the field ahow~d
4-of-14 for the U.S .. in addition to 1-of-i penalty
(See SOVIETS, Pa1e C%)
Minnesota
out Witt ( ed)
Forsch on mound in Oakland tonight
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP>
-Three months ago, all
Angels rookie pitcher Mike
Witt bad was a dream. Following
Sunday's two-hit, 7·1 victory over
Minnesota in the first game of a
double-header, however. he may
have much more than that -a
permanent spot in the Aneels'
starting rotation.
"Before spring training he was
just scheduled to throw batting
practice," said Angel Manaeer
Jim Freaosi. "We knew be waa a
pro1pect, that the stuff was there.
He earned his way onto the club."
WITT, A •·1 native of
Callromia, stopped the Twins on
Roy SmaUey's triple off the 1Jove
or Jeft·fielder Juan Beniquez In
the fourth lnnlna and John
Castino's two-out homer ln the
bottom of the ninth, which ruJned
his shutout attempt.
Minnesota won the second
1ame 5-2, thanks to a two-nm
homer by Smalley and some craf.
ty knuckleball pitclling by
Fernando Arroyo. ~
Ken Forsch (2-0) will take the
mound tonight when the An1els
visit the fast-charging Oakland
A's and Steve J\kCatty (3-0) tn a
game that wUI be televised on
Channel 5 at 7:30
''I'm just happy to be with the
team and I'll take the win," said
Witt. who walked only two and
struck out six. "During spring
training, I thought my chances
were really slim I was just tryine
lo make an impression for next
year."
The Angels backed Witt with a
four-nm flfth Inning. Beniquei
opened the fifth with a double and
took third when Bobby Grieb bunted but pitcher Roger
Erickson tried to n1p Beniquez at
third and the throw was late.
BERT CAMPANERIS singled
home Beniquez and Grich took
third. Grich then tried to score
On TV tonight
channel 5 at 7:30
from third on Rod Carew 's
grounder to short but was caught
in a rundown. Erickson ended up
with the ball, but tagaed Grieb
with the wrong hand after Grieb
had fallen about 10 feet from the
plate.
Grich got up and was able to
score before Erickson recovered.
Rick Burleson then singled le
another run for a 3-0 lead and Ed
Ott drew a bases-loaded walk tw•
outs later to force In the fourUI
run .
Sm alley's second·eame homer,
his fifth of the year, came off
hard-luck loser Jesse Jefferson
following an error by Campaneris
at third base. Jefferson allowed
only rive hit.a in seven innlnp a.Gd
four unearned runs.
ARROYO, THE Twlns' fit\,b
starter, checked the Aneeta Oil
five hill throueh seven lnnin&4
berore lettina Dou1 Corbett m.6P
up. Arroyo· aald be used tht
knuckleball ror the first time aild
liked the result.a.
ow.,_ dfove la four
runt ani· ••U • ~•tteriW • hit.I &Wt91 to Oat!Md ·Ptilt SeatU.. K tw Ui1t 11 11th wlCtory la
11 ••mtt Keouab; • 1r•d• ~ CorOU del Mar HJ81 Woft'.fria fou~ ~ .... 11mt VIC" tory lft fo\lr 1tartl 1i~ tbt.OUlaad 1taJf 15 In 11 f amea • . . TM 11116~ drove ln four runa
an GOrmu 'homH and Ptal •lllOr bOcted
Pirates considering
move to Superdome?
in two 1ple~e to, lead
MUwaukee to ao 11·1 wla
over Kanau City • . . Mike
Harcrove'• •inll• climaxed a
three-run ninth innJol that
catapulted Cleveland to a c..a
win over Texas . . . Dan
SUeb pitched a seven-hitter
and con5ecutive doubles by
Enle Whitt and Lio)'•
Moseby sparl<ed a two·r'\ln
.l'rom AP Ollpatebu
PITI'SBURGH (AP> -A couple ••
of fans seated in the stands at Three
Riven Stadium wore black T·abirts
lettered in gold with "New Orleans
Pirates.·•
To some baJeball fans here, a Pirate move
to Louisiana might seem as unlikely u tbe
statue of HaJl of Famet Hobus Wagner stepping
down from lta pedei.tal outside Three Rivers
Stadium and hitchhiking out of town.
third Inning that gave him KeOVQla
his first runs of the seaaon as Toronto edged the
New York Yankees, 2·1. Stieb, 1·3, had pitched
23 consecutive innings without gettine a run
from U.e Blue Jays ... Jerry Remy rapped a
two.run single in the eighth inning and later
scored from second base on a sacrifice fly, key·
ine a three-run rally which gave Boston a 7·1
victory over Baltimore ... Bob Mol1Daro
drove in two runs with a pinch·triple and tbe
Chicago White Sox extended their winning
streak to six eames with a S-4 victory over
Detroit, handing the Tigers their seventh
straight loss. Molinaro, batting for Gng Pryor,
tripled to right to put the White Sox ahead in the
seventh mning.
But Cliff N. Wallace. generaJ manager or
tbe New Orleans Superdome, visited here Sun·
day to discuss a possible franchise move with
the Pirate owners, who are suing lo break their
stadium lease.
"I can assure you that New Orleans is not
taking the possibility lightly." said Wallace,
who met with Pirate President Daniel
Galbreath and his father. Board Chairman John
Galbreath.
Both sides stressed during a news con·
ference at Three Rivers that the Pirates have
no present plans to move
WaJlace, who spoke first, placed bis own
tape recorder beside a pile or media recorders.
apparently as a safeguard aeainsl being mis·
quoted.
Erving fast finish paces 76ers
"I have been told again today by the
Galbreaths that they do not want to leave Pit·
tsbur~h. but I hope that ... New Orleans is
certainly in the running should considerations
be necessary in the future, "said Wallace.
Philadelphia's Juli~• Ervlag
scored the last six points Of the game
as the 76ers beat the Boston Celtics
107·105 Sunday and took a 3·1 lead in
thear best-of-seven National Basketball Associa·
tion Eastern Conference final · playoff series.
The victory was preserved by Bobby' Jones in-
terception of a long pass intended for Larry
Bird in the final St!COnds and he held it to the
end Houston's !'loses Malone, contained
by Kansas City for three games, became a
dominating foree once again, fighting for 42
points and 22 rebounds as the Roclcets defeated
the Kings, 100·89 to take a 3·1 lead in their
Western Conference championship series.
Malone ignored the Kings' double.teaming lac·
tics and pulled the Rockets through a pair of
Kansas City rallies The two teams meet again
Wednesday night in Kansas City
"I am not interested in leaving Pittsburgh,"
Danie l Galbreath said after watching the
Pirates lose 3-2 to St. Louis before a paying
crowd or 8.139.
Quote of the day
Jack Buck, St. Louis Cardinals an-
nouncer, talking about the yacht of New
York Yankees owner George Steinbren·
ner · "ll 1s a beautiful thing lo behold, with
all 36 oars working in unison."
From Page C1
SOVIETS BEAT U.S. • • •
shot attempts, while th<' R uss1ans
got off22shots. hitting six
Unable to really get anything
going toward the Soviet mtenor.
the U.S spent most or the game
look mg for the opening from the
perimeter. and the Soviet defense
reacted well. sealing off most
«inenues
Women's IOK
set May 10
The Capi s tran o Beach
C hamber of Commerce 1s
spon so ring the fourth con
secutive women's lOK run Sun-
day, Ma y 10
Laguna Beach's Sue Petersen
1s helping to coordinate the run
which will start and end at the
Capistrano Beach Park
Entry fee for the pre·race
deadline Is $6. which includes a
women's T·shirt Fees for a SK
run for men and women, and
women who wish to participate
in the lOK run without T-shirt,
are $3.
Applications may be obtained
at th e Ca pi stran o Be ach
Chamber of Comme rce. The
pre race deadline is Friday For
more information. call 496·1017
or 495-2506.
The Russians. whodon'tgive an
inch and charge on every de-
fensive opening, played a tough,
physical game, true lo the scout
mg rer.IOrl.
But Nitzkowski said the bro.is·
mg battle wasn't much different
than any other in this tournament.
·'This is a contact -and col·
hs1on -game," said the U.S
coach.
Nitzkowski call ed the overflow
crowd lhe largest to ever witness
an Amencan water polo team in
action
"It was a great night for water
po lo." he said
It wasn't. howeve r, the greatest
night for the team or the fans,
afl<'r being teased with lhal 4·2
American lead.
In other action Sunday, 1980
Olympics s ilver m edalist
Yugoslavia upped its record t02·0
with a 10.9 victory over Spain
(0·1-1 >. Australia dealt winless
Bulgana a 15·8 loss and Cuba
( 1-0-l > recorded its Ci rst·ever vie·
tory over Hungary <0·2l with a 9-8
decision.
The crowd. incidentally, was
bursting the seams of the
bleachers l 1i'z hours before the
game and the ticket office was
s hut down with still 45 minutes
before the openin$t sprint.
The Soviets will be back in ac·
lion tonight (7) against Bulgaria
in an expected USSR rout, while
Spain and Hungary open it at 4,
followed by Cuba and Yugoslavia
at5:30.
K evm RDbertson
OCC captures
dQuh les title
OJ Al -Lori Schoetller and
Cari Garfield of Orange Coast
College captured the doubles
c hampionship in the women's
community college division of
the Ojai tournament and the
Pirates took home the first place
team trophy
Schoettler and Garfield de·
feated a team from Santa
Monica in the finals, 4-6, 6-3, 6·1
Sunday lo give Orange Coast its
second team title in four years.
MEMBERSHI
SRECIAL
Evan1 leada Olant,.nblU •••P
Dama& :ev ... '41WeCi four Mt,
knoelted ln • rua aJid'.•coted iwtce tD
le.d Sin ~taco t6 ID 1-5 detli~
9,l er AUanUI and I ••HP Of tbflr Sund11 NaUoaal Le•I• double-header. Tiii
Giant.a woo the nnt aame, 3·1, u E ... c-.
delivered 1 llxth-lnnmc double and Jaek ~
tlUfled a homer ln th• seventh ... Jftff
Maauel hit hil flnt m1Jor lea1ue bome run, 1
three-run blast In the seventh
Inning to lead Montreal to 1
7·8 victory over the New
York Meta and 1 sweep ot
ttielr twin bill. The Expos
won the opener, 8·4, u EUii
V•leDtlae and G•'7 Carter
cracked two.nm homers and
Ray BUit.i fired 1 six·h~r
. . . Denny W•lU••'• first·
inntn1 leadoff home run,
alon1 with the ei&ht·hit Evon•
pitching of Bob hepper, enabled Houston to
break a four·1ame loaln1 streak with a l ·O win
over Cincinnati . . . Mike Scbmldt11 towering
two-run homer triggered a lour·run third inning
lo lead Philadelphia to a 6-2 victory and send
the slump·ridden Chicago Cubs tumbling to
their 12th straight loss. The Cubs are now one
loss away from a team record of 13 set In 1944
A TUSty Elwln Moses had to come Ill
Crom behind to keep his winning
streak intact. and Jamee Sanford
won the 100-meter dash in Sunday's
. . Pinch·hltter Tito Laadrum broke a ninth-
inning tie with a run·acoring single off Granl
JaclllCIG to eive St. Louis a 3·2 win over J'itts·
burgh. The win ran the Cardinals' winning
streak to eight games.
top events of the Mt. San Antonio Relays track
meet. Moses. running his first hurdles of the
year. was clocked in 48.61 seconds for the 400·
meters, saving him his 58th consecutive v1c·
Lory in the event ... The Pittsburgh Pirates,
suing the city over their stadium lease, got
some sweet talking Crom the New Orleans
Superdome . . Eleven Stllcbes overtook the
pace-setting MiV.ty Return on the backstretch
and won the Mervyn LeRoy Handicap feature at
Hollywood Park.
Calgary ousts Philadelphia
Flames look advantage of '
PHILADELPHIA -The Calgary Iii
Philadelphia penalties for power play
goals by Willi Plett, Ken Houston and Television, radio
Kevin Lavallee Sunday night for a 4·1 National
Hockey League playoff triumph over the Flyers
that boosted the Flames into the Stanley Cup
semifinals for the first time ever.
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are " , , • excellent, , , "
worth watching, ' " ta1r ; " forget 1t.
(&l) 7:30 p.m., Channel 5 v v v
Baseball today BASEBALL: Angels at Oakland.
On this date in baseball in 1971: .Announcers: Don Drysdale, Bob Starr and Ron
Fairly. Pittsburgh Pirates ' s lugger Willie
Stargell blasted his 11th homer of the
month ... a major leaaue record for April.
On this date in 1968:
Baltimore's Tom Phoebus no·hit the
Boston Red Sox 6-0.
The Angels tangle with the amazing Oakland
A's with Ken Forsch (2-0l going against Steve
Mc Catty (3-0l 1n tonight's series opener. The
Oakland club has an amazing string of complete
games pitched (15) while compll1no an early·
season 17·1 record.
Today's Birthday: RADIO Toronto Blue Jays infielder Willie
Upshaw is 24. Baseball -San Franetsco at Dodgers, 7: 30
p.m., KABC (790); Angels at Oakland, 7 :30 p.m ..
KMPC (710).
Tod8y's the day
A louettes to sign Ferragamo
NEW YORK (AP >
Quarterback Vince Ferragamo
and wide receiver James Scott,
two National Football League
free agents, will sign with the
Montreal Aloueltes today, an
officiaJ of the Canadian FootbaU
League reportedly said Swiday
night.
Bob Geary, general manager
of the Alouettes, said Fer·
ragamo was to sign with the
CFL team late Sunday night.
•'but we got ti~ up with the
lawyers." acco7ding to ABC
Radio Sports "But we will be
signing tomorrow (Monday>
morning."
Geary was also quoted as say-
ing that Scott also will be in
Montreal today to sign with
the team.
"I'm more excited than I've
been in you don 'l know how
many years," Geary said. "I've
been here since 1969 and we've
had some long, long years and
some long games. But Mr.
Skalbania <Nelson), the new
owner or the Aloueltes has come
in here and has changed the
whole attitude and direction of
the team.
"Now we have one of the top
quarterbacks in Ferragamo and
one of the top receivers in
Scott."
The Alouettes have called a
news conference this afternoon.
Ferragamo r eportedly will
sign a three year contract worth
$1.2 million.
Alouettes owner Nelson
Skalbania, who was 1n
Philadelphia Sunday night to
watch his Calgary Flames de
feat the Philadelphia Flyers and
advance to the National Hockey
League semifinal. was expe<'led
to arnve in Montreal early to
day
Naval Academy
wins JFK Cup
ANNAPOLIS, Md <AP) -The
U.S NavalAcademysailingteam
won collegiate yacht racing's
Kennedy Cup on Sunday. wmmng
six of seven weekend races sailed
in 44 foot yawl s on the
Chesapeake Bay off Annapolis.
It was the fourth time the
midshipmen have won in the 17
years or competition for the cup,
s ymbolic of the national cham
pionship or college large yacht
racing.
Runner·up for the cup was
Princeton University. followed
by USC. Orange Coast College
finished eighth.
Baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
Oakland
Chicago
Angela
Texas
Kansas City
Minnesota
Seattle
W L Pct. GB
17 1 .944
10 3 .769 4'h
8 9 .471 8'h
6 1 .462 8'h
3 9 .250 11
4 11 .267 ll'h
4 12 .250 12
East DlvlaloD
Cleveland 7 4 .636
Boston 7 s .583
Milwaukee 7 S .583
New York 8 6' .571
Detroit 7 8 · .-WT
Baltimore 4 7 .3&4
Toronto 5 10 .333 ......,..14-.
A ..... P..a,iw-... H
Cllll: ... 5, Dltrolt. ..... ,, ....._.. s
T.,.,...2.HewYnl , ......... , .....
MllW .... It, IC-1City1
O.llllMt,SNttlt• , ..........
...... ,,.._,..Ml 11t OHteM C*CMly HI,
" IHtlle C....,... 1-21 et MllW ... (HMt I .. ) II ~ l .. l'lel 1•) M ........ ,,.....,
.. n .11
H-Yn (~ Ml .. 0.tnlt , ... ..., 141,
II
e..teft C'Ttmli t•I ,_ ~-CMll*ll 1-11, 11 °"" ..... ~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
. West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 13 3 .813
Atlanta 9 7 .563 4
Cincinnati 8 7 .533 4'h
San Francisco 7 11 .389 7
San Diego 6 11 .353 71·4.t
Houston 4 12 .250 9
Eaal Division
Montreal 11 2 .846
St. Louis 9 2 .818 1
Philadelphia 10 5 .667 2
Pittsburgh 4 6 .400 S'h
New York 4 7 .364 6
Chicago 1 13 .071 lO'h ......, •• lci9fw
~I, SM OteQo a
Mol>tr ... ._7,-Yortl ...
St l.o.llt J, Plttllluf1ll\ 2
Pflll .... llN• •• °"~ 2 HouslOll 1, ClndnMtl 0
S-Fr1ntltco H, AtlMle f•S
T9*r'IO-..
Se11 Francia<• COrlffl11 1·11 et .,..._" CVelen1 ... e .... >. n
Mel\trHI (QvllltklOll r' et 111111-llfl!e (Allt"-HI, ft °"'"--~
Pirates
battle
Mounties
Orange Coast Co llege has only
lost two games m a row twice
this season in the tough South
Coast Conference baseball race,
and the Pirates are coming off a
5·2 setback at the hands of Cer-
ntos
That's bad news fo r host Mt.
San Antonio Tuesday when the
Pirates arnve with bats m hand
and the fencer in sight. OCC.
10 4 and leading the conference
by one game over Cerritos, can
inch closer to the title with a win
Tuesday
In two previous meetings, the
Bucs hav<' routed the Mounties,
13·0 and 10·5 Either Kelly Simon
or Mike Hogan will get the start-
ing assignment on the mound,
and both have beaten Mt. San
Antonio this year.
Meanwhile, Golden West a
game out of Ci rst place in
second·round play in Southern
Cal Conference, is at LA
Southwest Tuesday.
At Saddleback, the first·place
Gauchos e ntertain
Southwestern With an 11·7
mark, Saddleback has a chance
to send retiring Coach Dick
Stuetz out with a conference
champions hip.
All games are set for 2:30.
DMty ,....,. -.wGe"Y.....,_
Greedy eland couldn't wait for Karrie Wiley to pour groin out o/ .ack on to Lion CountTJi Sa/an rood. Twuted horns pro-
vide right of way to feed bag /err thU African antelope that prefers rniM1'aL·pac~ pellets to abundant Bermuda grass. l' \
Safari's appetites untamed
Grass, neighbors tempting but monthly food bill is ~5,000
By JOEL C. DON
Of t• Delly Pli.t Stall
Cheetahs are such fussy eaters that
they'd JUSt about put your finicky house
relines lo shame
But even with nearly 700 mouths to feed.
the folks at Lion Country Safari manage to
meet nutritional needs as we ll as a host of
palates.
In captivity, wild animals require a little
extra care. So when the cheetahs demand
leaner horse meat, they get it.
"THEIR FAT REQtJl&EMBNT
almost nil," says wildlife director Lee
Keaton "If cheetahs get a large excess of
it in their system. it becomes toxic in their
hvers and kidneys
"Anytime you see a rat cheetah. you·re
seeing an unhealthv cheetah "
Feeding time begins early each morning
at the Irvine animal preserve By the time
the first cars roll through the 3.5·mile
route. most of the wildlife are just about
finished chomping on oat hay and gobbling
down horse meat
Zebra striped Jeeps, with protective
steel bars for windows. make the rounds
through each animal sanctuary.
Carnivores naturally are separated from
herbivores to prevent the lions and
cheetahs from s talking a livelier
breakfast.
ALTHOUGH NATURAL vegetation cov
ers the 300 acres, hoofed animals such as
the giraffes, elands. gazelles, 'impalas,
zebras, buffalo, goats and sheep prefer
takeout food oat hay. alfalfa and vitamin
and mineral-packed feed pellets
"The nutrilltional value of grass goes
down over the years,·· says Keaton, of the
Bermuda vanety providing much of the
park's greenery ··we don't use 1t for feed-
ing because the animals have enough
nutrition without 1t. ··
Black and grizzly bears get the best of
two worlds in their diet: whole body
chickens and mackerel in addition to hay
and feed pellets.
IT MIGHT BE SIMPLE to stock up on
groceries for a family of four. But when
your family numbers in the hundreds, wild
animal park employees tap a valuable
souree in local supermarkets.
"We're se up to where we work with
produce managers and an)'lhing they dis-
ear~•· ake if there isn't"eny spoilae ·•
he explains. "If t.he produce is not used in
a couple of days, we'll discard it anyway."
Food from supermarkets has to be
carefully scteened, since you never know
when a twist-tie. staple or other foreign
matter miebt find lta way to the animal
food bins
"IT'S EASIER THAN buying off the
shelves," Keaton says, of using leftover
produce "You would be surprised to see
it Some of the stuff I eat I don't know
why they throw it away "
All totalled, Keaton estimates Lion
Country serves up nearly 1,800 pounds of
oat hay and alfalfa per day plus 900 to
1,000 pounds of reed pellets. The monthly
food bill is estimated at $35,000.
Bears will consume about 2S pounds of
mackerel a day an~ the park"s cat popula·
tion will chow down about 1~ pounds or
raw meat.
When you have a stubborn eater -
especjaJly among the lions and cheetahs -
park officials can resort to what they call
a ''starve day" to help mold an animal's
eating habits to the daily feeding schedule.
"lf we have a starve day," Keaton says,
"the other six days they get a little more.
But I generally find it's not necessary to
do.··
Lions require about 10 pounds of
meat per day. But it's di Hi cull for feeders
to ensure each cat will get his daily por-
tion so officials rely on the fact that a lion
who acts like a hog one day will diet the
next.
Feeding the park's bird population pre-
sents a more difficuJt problem.
Seagulls and migrating waterfowl take
their toll, gobbliQI up a sizable portion of
b1rd seed aHott.ed for the park's feathered
boarders.
"We've tried to discourage tbtm
(seagulls> from being here." says Keaton.
"The seagulls are difficult to eliminate
because they are protected bird.a so there's
·very little that we can do with them '
"During the winter months the m1-
grators co~ and we get an incredible
amount or coots, Canadian geese and
mallards," says Lion Country employee
Linda Brockhoeft.
"Normally we feed the birds 150 pounds
of grain. That doubles with the seasonal
migration or freeloaders.
That·s the only way we can ensure that
our birds will get the nght amount to eat,"
she continues. "Basically when there's no
one at the beach and there's no garbage
for them to get into, they come over here.''
Ground squirrels and jackrabbits also
have been known to take advantage or the
easy pickings at the animal park, adds
Keaton.
But Darwin's survival of the fittest law
seems to have protected one area from mi-
grating birds and rodents.
"We've found there's a limited popula-
tion (oi freeloaders) where the cheetahs
are and a very large population where we
have herbivores,'' Keat.on muses.
Facility would get $1 million annually
By ST£\tE MITCHELL
O{ .. Dtlly .........
A bW that would see mOMy
generated (n>m rent.a in Crystal
Cove State Park stay In the
south Orange County park has
been approved by an assembly
comdlittee.
The bill, AB 628, by Aa·
semblywoman Marian Bereeson
(R -Orange County) would
stipulate 'that rents from El
Morto Mobile Home Park, the
Crystal Cove cottage colooy,_and
Suspect
in slaying
surrenders
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .... O.lly ...... SUff
One of two Costa Mesa men
sought for questioning in the
April 13 shooting death of
Placentia hair salon owner Carl
Lawson, 31, has turned himseU
over to poHce.
Investigators ;;aid today that
18-year-old Samuel Monsoor
walked into the Costa Mesa
police station on Fair Dnve at
about 6 p.m . Saturday accom·
panied by his father. Frank
Monsoor of Palm Springs
YOUNG MONSOOR was ar·
rested on a warrant issued for
suspicion of murder and held
without bail at the local jail. He
was scheduled for arraignment
in Harbor Municipal Court to·
day. investigators said.
Police said they still seek 23.
year-old Rami Darwiche on a
murder warrant.
Darwiche, a meat company
delivery driver, and Monsoor, a
convenience market employee,
shared an apartment at 2775
Mesa Verde Drive East.
LAWSON'S BODY was found
in his car parked April 14 in a
Santa Ana industrial area park·
ing lot.
Two Witnesses told Santa Ana
police a few days later that they
had seen a scuffle and heard
shots late April 13 in .Jojos
Restaurant's parking lot on
Harbor Boulevard in Costa
Mesa.
COSTA MESA investigators
said the witnesses came forward
a fter reading of Lawson's
multiple·shot murder and sur-
mised t.he death may have been
linked with what they had seen
and heard.
Investigators said Lawson's
acquaintances led them to
believe Monsoor and Oarwlche
may be involved in the shooting
and, armed with warrants,
began searching for the pair.
Meanwhile, investigators said,
Monsoor's father remained in
contact with hi s son by
telephone and told police the
young man planned to give
himself up.
The search, supported by an
all-points bulletin seeking the
two and their small pickup
truck, led to Sacramento and
Detroit, investigators sald.
The hunt now is focused on
New York City where Monsoor
told officers he last saw
Darwtche before decidini to Cly
back to California and ••get it
over with."
Investigators said Monsoor
claims be did not shoot Lawson.
Biker dies,
rider hurt
in crash
operators of the horse ranch
stay within the park.
Currently, rents from the
three enterprises are lumped in·
to the state's General Fund
budget and disbursed throughout
the state.
Mrs. Ber1eson said that by
keeping t.he estimated $1 million
pet' year in rents in Crystal Cove
State Park, development
schedules could be accelerated
by as much as two years
because funding would be as-
sured.
Terming the bill "an unusual
piece of legis lation ," a
spokeswoman from the
Assemblywoman's office said 1t
should make the new park seU-
sufficient and encourage better
management, ''assuring that the
tremendous demands for main-
tenance, security, fire and police
protection would be met."
Spokeswoman Julie Froeberg
said the bill ties the revenue to
its source, making s ure it re-
mains in the park where it was
generated and "we will not need
to depend on the legislature to
get the park moving ''
Mrs Froeberg said the bill,
which received Assembly
Water, Parks and Wildlife Com-
mittee endorsement last week,
now goes to the Assembly Ways
and Means Committee.
Funds could be used to con·
struct restroom s and other
facillt1es, and perhaps pay
salanei for rangers and other
state personnel who will work in
the 1,900 acre park, located
between Corona del Mar and
Laguna Beach
School fund
plan due
tonight
The Laguna Beach Educa-
tional Foundatinon will meet
tonight at 7 ·30 to discuss future
fund-raising events for the local
school district
The foundation, formed more
than a year ago, will review a
$7 ,500 consultants' report that
outlines means of raising funds
for academic programs wittun
the Laguna Beach Uqified
School District.
Some foundation members
have complained that the 32-
page report is incomplete. and
are expected to ask officials at
Development Management As-
sociates of Newport Beach to
present more information when
the panel meets tonight.
Also to be discussed is the pro·
posed committee makeup or the
foundation.
The public meeting will be at
district headquarters, 550 Blu-
mont St
Watch Team
akrt key
in arrests
Two San Diego men were ar-
rested in Laguna Beacb aft.er a
Neighborhood Watch member
called police to report a sus-
picious car on High Drive.
Motor Officer Mark Miller re-
portedly arrived in time to see
the two men leave a vacant
house, purportedly carrying a
television set and a pillowcase
full of silver.
Anested a short distance
away and charged with suspi·
clon of burglary Saturday were
David L. Manning, 18, and
Richard L. Evertt, 21, both of
San Diego, police said.
Police said the men allegedly
broke into a parked car on
Brooks Stnet, taking a wallet
and cash, then went to a South
Lacuna hardware store where
they reportedly took a pair of
boll cutt.en while the clerk was
not Jooklne.
Police said the two men drove
to Cliff Drive later.
Both were J>etn1 held In
Oranee county JaU with ball set
at $10,000 each.
t
-RE' MA.NAG~D TO DEP the ·~eupied .. 11111 tn .place during the enUtt flltbt. He ardvtd in
Washington with lei cramps ana waterclotet phobia,
but otherwise, it was an eoormoua Jet. victory. He 11 no lonier called MfohaeJ along the·
Potomac. Be ii known as "Jetttn1 John" Lawler.
Anyway, the aaaa Of Lawler of Newport Beach
Goes to Waahinston now continues. His Jate.t c(Kll>
was getting to hel1>.promote the klddies' Easter egg
hunt on the White House lawn.
''Hundreds of kiddies up to age 8 showed up,''
Lawler enthused. "We were all prepared to assure
that the little darlings wouldn't go stomping around
and crush all the eggs.
"We used wooden eggs."
As an astute type of Newport wheeler-dealer
who would never get trapped into taking a wooden
nickel, you have to have some adrrilration for
Lawler coming up wtth wooden Easter eegs.
Because or bis outstanding success in runninl{ a
wooden Easter egg hunt, the young barrister got m·
vited to actually have lunch at the White House.
"'111ERE'S NOTHING WASTEFUL about this
administration/• he declared. "We had hot dogs for
lunch."
You may think this isn't much of a success story
for a guy who had to ride a john to Washinfton. But
wait! It gets better. Lawler has also landed a real
job.
He is now with the Solicitor General's Office of
the United States Department of Justice. He ia
neither riding in small rooms with plumbinl nor roll·
ing wooden eggs. He is actually working ~ a lawyer.
Lawler was told that at the ripe old age of 27...be
was one of the youngest barriatens ever to latch oo
with the department, particularly straight out of law
school.
HE'S BEEN WRITING some briefs for the U.S.
Court of Appeal. It has been reliably reported that
he finished writing one the other day and his bosses
actually liked it. Right now, he carries the title of
special assistant United States attorney.
You may not think much of Lawler's story but I
am mightily impressed. Very few ex-surfers end up
hovering around the White House, writing appellate
briefs, riding in airplane toilets and rolling wooden
eggs on the chief executive's lawn.
Just think about that.
It's a long way from John to Justice.
DSAll ANN t;AND'CBS.~
Pl••H priat tbf1 for thoH
parHU WlUi UM "hllu'Mcbable.
mbed·u». al,,ar•·l•·lrouble. teen·ye.:." f ao• W!Mi,.. ~
tre eoinlh1~rs:c>m MY Ju .. nd md I have bMD t.M,.., and then ts no bell Uk• tt. We, too, wue de.perate and .
wHJtout llQPe. our 10D • ., a
bum, m debt. ~ from 111.
oo druc•. break••• up,,•tbe
furnltun, c~ Pd bltU., ...
We wer. bellde oune1vd wU.b
anxMt.y aiMt tear. We ti1ecl every-tbln•Jo p)eue bim ud 1iothlns
worked 1bie' nlcet ~e were, tho
wonebetot.
Finally. we called the Police1 They save ~ the pbooe number
of an or•anlutlon opJled
"TOUGHLOVE." P'rom tbit dQ
on we became me1nben ot a
COJDmunity network of pareut.e
I TtlESDAY, APRIL b, 1181
By SYDNEY Ollila
ARIES Olar. 21·Apr. l9>:
Separate fact from Jlluaioq;
temptation will be placff ln your
path. Define terms, comprehend
meanlnp. Friend who prom.IJel
much may actually be aufferina
from "financial embar·
assment."
TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20):
Focus oo promotion, production,
ability to handle added
responsibility. Prestl1e is on
HOROSCOPE
upswing; persona in authority
make room for you at top.
Business booms!
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Perceive potential. Empbaai& on
travel. education, expansion of
personal horizons. You'll
complete important transaction.
Long-range legal procedures will
favor your efforts. ·
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Emotional r esponses tend to
cloud logic. Know it, draw bead on
rinan cia l prospects ,
r equirements . Hold off on
partnership arrangements. Study
Aries message for valuable hial.
LEO (July 23--Aug. 22): Avoid
skipping essentials. Become
familiar with legal ritbts,
permiulons. Check license
requiremenu. strive to re1ain
sense of direction.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22l :
Examine various p6aalbllittes;
find reasons for recent events.
Member or opposite sex aids in
resolving dilemma. Be ready for
quick changes, reviaion of plans
and adjustment of employment
shl(t. Gemini is in picture.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Your
affections tend to vacillate. What
seemed a routine procedure will
be revised. Accept challenee. be
analytical and take nothing for
granted. Aquarlu1, Scorpio,
Taurus natives figure
prominenlly .,,
wbo an 1ucceufutl1 ~ln1 with \he unbeli.yable behavior that ~r tida art dlihiA• out Before we came to
TOUGHLOVZ we wen uhamed
and tell nall and pailty becauae
we c~'t ltuad up to our IOG.
We ~ nobOcly lo our tom·
mu.lilt.Y W Ii.tied to mllerabb'
•• pa...-. 'l1>eD we met other meinlMn of TOUGRLOVE, and
kliew we were no loa•er belp-
le11. We bad the 1upport of other
pareuu, the police, the acboola,
the COWtl and the rehabllitaUon
faclUUa. We didn't. bave t..o
BCO&PIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21):
Cbanps occur ln dome.Uc area.
lpdividual cloae to you makes
numel'OQI requesta. A~here to
conaervative coune. Period of
confinement proves temporary.
Patience and persutence aretwla
allies. Act actordinllY I
SAGJTl'A&IVS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Foaa on home environment,
domestic adjustments, apecial
con1ideraUons, anni ver1ary
cma. You can now make valuable
acquiaitlon. Taµrus , Libra,
Scorpio naUves play key roles.
Family member will cooperate.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Count your change! Avoid
self-deception. Protect valuables.
• Techniques will be perfected.
What appeared to be a "lost
caUff" will boomerang in your
favor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Em p hJa sis on business
transact.ions, initiative, success
vta original approach. Personal
scenario hlghll1ht.s satisfaction
in money and love. Cancer,
Ca pricorn natives figure
prominently.
PISCES (Feb. 19·Mar. 20):
Flurry of activity occurs behind
scenes. Important people discuss
your proposals. You're due to
gain wider audience, valuable
advocates. Hold fast to prin·
ciples.
Guitarist to
entertain
throw oer -Olll, mor did we baY• to CGeUatli to tile a.JJ •'*'•· We laid doW1) a -.ball new Mt <A niJel ud iav blin a
choice. He cbaile to ST A Y.
l'm ~aln1 a UttJe pamphJet
that tell• you more about
TOUGHLOVE. Pleate, Ann,
•hare It wttb your readen It I.I
the 1reatt1t tht111 tbat could
have happened to us, and we
want to 1preld the word. 'l'laailkl
tor your help. -l'OREVER
GRATEFUL JN BUCKS COUN·
TY, PA. •
Dear l'on.er: I& le I wllo aJD 1rac.t.a. BleN ,.. for .itartq.
Here are eoae ram.
TOUGBLOVB II a pnlf8m CO
ltelp parem. wbo an &H•led
by ~ feell·••era• beba•k»r bl
acbool, wftltiD die f amlly, t.llelr
laYOlvemem wttla dra,., alcollol
udt.Mlaw.
!Jl!le Angels wilt
highlight ·slww
EL TORO -The U.S. Navy
Preclllon Fllaht Demoo•tration
Team, Blue Angela will aaafo
bitbli&bt this year's El Toro
Armed Forces Day and Open House set May 2·3.
It was June 15, 1946, when the
Blue An1el1 flew their first rue ht demonstratlafl to . 'dem·
on1trate precision tecbn\quea
of naval ayiation .. to faval
personnel. Today, after 35 years,
the 1981 Blue Angels accompliah
essentially the same misaion.
As "Ambas·sadors of
Goodwill" the Blue Angels take
naval aviation to the public aa a
means of demonstrating the
quality of men and equipment
comprising the U .S. Naval
service. When traveling abroad,
this role is eapanded as these
young men and women
represent the U.S.
The 18 officers and 74 enlisted
personnel who comprise the
Navy Fll~ht Demonstration
Squadron strive to set a stan-
dard of perfection for its con-
temporaries in naval aviation,
thus enabling our Navy and
Marine Corps to continue to pro-
duce the finest aviators in the
world.
Early January finds the
"Blues" moving lo their winter
training home al Naval Air
Facility, El Centro. The Im·
perial Valley provides the ex-
cellent weather conditions and
training environment for the
"Blues" to prepare themaelves
for the upcoming season.
For the next 80 to 10 day1 all
hands devote total concentration
to boning flying skills to the fine
edge of perfectlon required to
carry on the Blue Angels tradi-
tion.
The pilots Uy twice a day
seven days a week, with each
day beginning at 5:30 a.m. and
ending in the early afternoon
with the remainder or the day
occupied with a self-imposed fit·
ness program.
By mid to late March, the
squadron is ready to debut the
skills and teamwork.
This year's open bouse and air
show is scheduled for noon.
Prior t o t he Blue Angels'
pe rformance, visitors to El
Toro's air station will also view
a Marine air-ground team dem-
onstration , the combined El
Toro and Camp Pendleton Sport
Parachute Team and the aerial
acrobatics of Chuck Wentworth.
Dozens of military aircraft
will also be on display for up.
close Inspection.
The gates will open at 9:30
a m . on both days with the ac-
l ua l air show performances
beginning at noon.
Sinter and auitarist
Serge Kerval will bel~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~4 featured Thursday at 8 r,
p.m . by the Alliance
Francaise de la Riviera
Callfomienne.
Well-known in France,
Kerval made his
American debut in
"Louia1ana ln lt75. Tickets
are $3.
The meet.lnf will be in Bridle Ha I of tbeU9'1•.._
Con1re1ational Church, DIJlll-Allllll
341 St. Ann's Dr., Laguna
Beach. llllMlill.,_
The Change Starts When You Do
The Time To Start Is Now.
The Place Is ··Powers"' Change It All'
01~maf!f:a11y 1mptt11t• "'*' ~af you
ln<lk lf1p1 dntt ap(>ftctl ''' nfr!Pf\ Wf" H malt• Hh
~hanq<> ( •\y and F vn ,.,..,, ""' '''"'C">'' cia'"'"
All r ta~""' ta1tn11•f) lo t"PHf dQ.P llnt1 n,.,_.,'h
ORANGE COUNTY
#}Town & Country, Or~nJlf'
17141 547-1221
John Robert Powers
''"' O"fl'""'' 81>,111/y A ltntf(Jfl DP•t'l(lpmenl ';/>t't1JI•"'
Motivation and Theater C-Ombines for a Hit
The talk of the town is a new 8how
called. "Breaking Free:· Over 700
women packed the South Coast Plaza
Ballroom to see the premiere of
WBreaking Free:· the world's most
innovative motivational program.
Desigped exclusively for women. it
oombf ned theater with motivation.
The program premiered the inno-
vative concept of uainll' the rillhl and
lel'l brain t.o maximize the learning
, experience. The show is unique in that
it combineti hill'h intensity ma~
ment skills into an easy entertaining
program format.
The 411, hour 8how is alive with t.oe-
tapplng music and Inspirational ~
Balft. The salient pointa of prominent
wome1' epe.akerure punctuated with
alidet and· humorou1 film ~t&
The Theater of the Mind praentation
ls shown on 40 led. or screens that
dance with color and sparkle with
mmedy.
Prior to the production of the show.
one year wu s~nt in research.
Accordlnr to 1how producer. Bill
fawceu. •over ~ ln~rvklw• were cOndueted over thO United Statel io
~lne the anatomy of IUCCela for
women:' With tht help of noted PIY•
~arid beh&Vlori.a: the nnd-
inp were dlatilled down to eM)' to
apply princlplea thatare.nar,d with
the audlenct.
Dr. Sioux Harlan. UaNhow'• mod· 'erator. commented,; .. A1F1tminar
attend ... rectl a woncboOk thit
providelJ them w.ith a ilx weiek dailY
diet tot .uceea 'Each da.Y there .,.
'PNciibldlpltialdriUJMd~
tHMWillWPOwn 1111n.-dlillna.
APln. 1ht ....., cit• Wt brain/
.;,htbrlln iltlbt ....... ~
tvn)'OM .ueidlq tfW ......,..m
riOttvfd a fftllliil :=lllilntitt .... cif &M.a..itTlle dmllthl& dii...--...-~ ....... dffnt.. ~-hmtndwot ...... ~"*~ Chi ~ofO.Mind P'•• ~Dr.
BrellkJng Free ii the lfNllh hit
tNlt baenda theater wfth
mottvatton.
o.u., l'llel --., o.y ,,._..
Greedy eland couldn't watt /OT Karrie Wiley .'I pour groin out of JOCk on to Lion Counlf1l Sa/an rood. Tun.sled horns pro-
vide nght of way to /eed bag /OT this Afric~elope that prefer• minerol-pocked pellet.s to abundant Bermuda gross
Safari's appetites untamed
Grass , neighbors tempting but monthly food bill is $35,000
By JOEL C. DON
01 •• 0.111 Pilot s ... ff
Cheetahs are such fussy eaters that
they'd just about put your finicky house
felines to shame
But even with nearly 700 mouths to feed,
the folks at Lion Country Safari manage to
meet nutritional needs as well as a host of
palates.
In captivity, wild animals reqwre a little
extra care. So when the cheetahs demand
leaner horse meal. they get it
"THEIR FAT REQUIREMENT is
almost ml," says wildlife director Lee
Keaton. "If cheetahs get a large excess of
1t in their system . 1t becomes toxic in their
li vers and kidneys
··Anytime you see a fat cheetah. you're
seeing an unhealthy cheetah."
Feeding lime begins early each morning
at the Irvine animal preserve By the time
the first cars roll through the 3.5-mile
route, most of the wildlife are JUSt about
finished chomping on oat hay and gobbling
down horse meat
Zebra-striped jeeps. with protective
steel bars for windows, makl' the rounds
through l'ach animal san c tuary .
Carnivort's naturally are separated from
herbivores lo prevent the lions and
c heetahs from s t a lking a livelier
breakfast.
ALTHOUGH NATURAL vegetation COV·
ers the 300 acres. hoofed animals such as
the giraffes. elands, gazelles, impalas.
zebras, buffalo, goats and sheep prefer
takeout food · oat hay, alfalfa and vitamin
and mineral packed feed pellets
"The nutrihtional value of grass goes
down over the years,'' says Keaton, of the
Bermuda variety providing much of the
park 's greenery "We don't use it for feed-
ing because the animals have enough
nutrition without it."
Black and grizzly bears get the best of
two worlds in their diet: whole body
chickens and mackerel in addition to hay
and feed pellets.
IT MIGHT BE SIMPLE to stock up on
groceries for a family of four But when
your family numbers in the hundreds. wild
animal park e mployees tap a valuable
source in local supermarkets.
"We're set up to wher«!"'We work wUh
• pro4uce mallagers and an)1hlng they dis·
card we'll take if there isn't any spoilage,''
he explains. "H the produce ls not used in
a couple of days, we'll discard it anyway."
Food from supermarkets has to be
carefully screened, since you never know
when a twist-tie, staple or other foreign
matter might find its way to the animal
food bins.
"IT'S EASIER THAN buying off the
shelves," Keaton says, of using leftover
produce. "You would be surprised to see
it. Some of the stuff I eat I don't know
why they throw it away."
All totalled, Keaton estimates Lion
Country serves up nearly 1,800 pounds of
oat hay and alralfa per day plus 900 to
1,000 pounds of feed pellets. The monthly
food bill is estimated at $35.000
Bears will consume about 25 pounds of
mackerel a day and the park's cal popula-
tion will chow down about 150 pounds of
raw meat.
When you have a stubborn eater -
especially among the lions and cheetahs -
park officials can resort to what they caU
a "starve day" to he lp mold an animal's
eating habits to the daily feeding schedule
"If we have a starve day," Keaton says.
"the other six days they get a little more.
But I generally find it's not necessary to
do."
Lions require about 10 pounds of
meat per day. But it's difCicult for feeders
lo ensure each cat wi ll get his daily por-
tion so officials rely o~ the fact that a lion
who acts like a hog one day will diet the
next.
Feeding the park's bird population pre-
sents a more difficult problem
Seagulls and migralin~ waterfowl take
their toll, gobblinl up a sizable portion of
bird seed allotted for the park's feathered
boarders.
"We've tried to discourage them
(seagulls) from being here." says Keaton.
"The seagulls are difficult to ellminate
because they are protected birds so there's
very little that we can do with them ..
"During the wmter months the m1
grators come and we gel an incredible
amount or coots, Canadian geese and
mallards, .. says Lion Country employee
Linda Brockhoeft.
"Normally we feed the birds 150 pounds
o( grain. That doubles with the seasonal
migration of freeloaders.
That's the only way we can ensure that
our birds will get the right amount to eat,'·
s he continues. "Basically when there's no
one at the beach and there's no garbage
for them to get into. they come over here "
Ground squirrels and Jackrabbits also
have been known to take advantage of the
easy pickings at the animal park, adds
Keaton.
But Darwin's survival of the fittest law
seems to have protected one area from mi·
grating birds ~d rodents
"We've found there's a Umiled popula-
tion (of freeloaders) where the cheetahs
are and a very large population where we
have herbivores." Keaton muses.
Mesan jailed
gun death' • ID
By JERRY CLAUSEN
OIMleDelfr ...... Mfft
bne of ~wo Costa Mesa men
sought for questioning in the
April 13 shooting death of
Placentia hair salon owner Carl
Lawaoo, 31, has turned himself
o"-r to police.
lnvesUgators said today that
18-year-old Samuel Monsoor
walked into the Costa Mesa
police station on Fair Drive at
about 6 p.m . Saturday accom-
panied by his father, Frank
Monsoor of Palm Springs
YOUNG MONSOOR was &t-
rested on a warrant issued for
suspicion of murder and held
without bail at t he local jail. He
was scheduled for arraignment
in Harbor Municipal Court to
day. investigators said.
Police said they still seek 23-
year-old Rami Darwiche on a
murder warrant.
Darwiche, a meat company
delivery driver, and Monsoor, a
convenience market employee.
shared an apartment at 2775
Mesa Verde Drive East
LAWSON'S BODY was found
1n his car parked April 14 in a
Santa Ana industrial area park
mg lot
Two Wllnesses told Santa Ana
police a few days later that they
had seen a scuffle and heard
shots late April 13 in J ojos
Restaurant's parking lot on
Harbor Boulevard in Costa
Mesa.
COSTA MESA investigators
said the witnesses came forward
after reading of Lawson's
multiple shot murder and sur·
mised the death may have been
linked with what they had seen
and heard.
Investigators said Lawson's
acquaintances l ed t hem to
believe Monsoor and Darwiche
may be involved in the shooting
and, armed with warrants,
began searching for the pair
Meanwhile, investigators said.
Monsoor's father remained in
co ntac t with hi s son by
telephone and told police the
young man planned to give
himself up.
The search. supPorted by an
a ll -points bulletin seeking the
two and their small pickup
truck, led to Sacramento and
Detroit. investigators said
The hunt now 1s focused on
New York City where Monsoor
told officers ht.' last sa\\
Dar~ 1che before d£>ctding to fly
back to Cahfom1a and "get 1t
over with"
Investigators s aid Monsoor
claims he did not shoot Lawson
Commercial center
agreement reached
By RICHARD GREEN
Of .... D.UV Pllet $ ... If
Negotiators Crom the City of
Irvine and the Irvine Company
say "conceptual agreement"
has been reached on a develop-
ment agreement for the 480-acre
commercial center the company
wants to build.
Councilman Bill Vardoulis
said the agreement, which has
to be approved by the City Coun·
cil and the company's board of
directors, is aimed at guarantee-
ing that the commercial center
won't be a drain o n city
finances.
UNDER THE conceptual
a~reement, the company would
guarantee $38 million in tax rev-
enue for the city during the 10
years in which 1t 1s to be bu11t
and $5 million every year
thereafter.
In return, the city would agree
to let the company develop the
center as it wishes within the ex-
isting zoning requirements.
The 480-acx:e commercial
center. to be built on the
"Golden Triangle" of land
formed by the Santa Ana, San
Di ego and Laguna freeways. is
to include three major hotels, a
l 75 million square root regional
shopping center and four million
square feet of office space
CITY OFFICIALS have been
concerned that the Irvine Com-
pany intends to first build the of-
fice space, now in high demand,
and hold off on the construction
of the retail space
This concern 1s based on
the opiruon that offices tend to
be a financial drain on city
services and retail tends to be a
sales tax revenue boon to the
city.
Under the proposed agree-
ment, the city would waive its
right to force the company to
first develop the retail portion of
the center.
In return, the company would
guarantee that the commercial
center would be a financial plus
for the city
Three men arrested
in Mesa lJar blaze
Two Costa Mesans and a
Cudahy man allegedly involved
in a fight with a bar manager
early Swiday morning were ar-
County man's
body found
in NB channel ' The fully ciothed body of a
Capistrano Beach man
was discovered, Sunday
morn.Ing Ooa~g jb a boat sllp
near Delany's ltestaurant on the
Rhine cbanQel in Newport
Beach. Authorities identified the man
aa Edward Commodor Hod1e
and lilted the probable cause of
death as accidental drownini. Hodse, whose body was
1potted by t~ men at abotrt 8
a. m.. wu ntportedly last seen
oo April 21. OfflclalS aaid It ii
beU Yed man waa a f'ilb·
erman who recently bad been ataylna aboard a Newport
fl1hi11C vessel and servtni u
cook '
Police 8eize two
in htvhle bailq
rested later in the day after the
Seabreeze Bar was set ablaze
Arrested on charges of suspi-
cion of arson were Javier Ur·
quiza Garcia, 27. of 653 Cove St.
and Jesus Bolonos Ayola, 26, a
College Drive resident, both of
Costa Mesa , and Miguel
Villaneva Busti Ito, 23. of
Cudaby.
Pofice said the three drove
slowly past the Costa Mesa bar
at 541 W. 19th St. after its front
was doused with fl ammable li-
quid and it erupted in fl ame at
about 3:50 a .m .
Witnesses who said they
saw three men drive from the
bar after an explosion and nash
of flame -later identified the
three suspects' car as the one
that sped from the scene, ac-
cordlnl to police.
Officials estimated damag~ to
the bar at about $2,000.
Each ot tbe three suspects ia
. belnl held lD Costa Mesa jail on
$25,000 bOod.
Mesa crash
kills .biker
i , ,
'
. .
f
I
!) ;
~
l
UPDATE FROM WASIDNGTON -When tut
we left Michael Lawler, youthful, lntrepld Orante
COa1t attorney who left the eorntorta Of sand and !";
surf to seek h1I fortune in the nation's capital, be
was ny1na a restroom. Don't you remember?
It not, it happened thil way: t:.awlir bliefbt dil·
mleaed his Waabtncton ambiUom after inauaurauon of our new president to vacation at the Super Bowl In
New Orleans.
Then be! .had to ...., ·
grab a jet flilht from ~ New Orleans to
Atlanta ~d then on ~~
back to Capitol Hill.JD --11-M-U_R_P-Hl-N-f ,54~. He bad a ticket but • ' he had no seat.
Thus Mike, •
always noted for rapid innovation, wandered onto
the aircraft and locked himself in the john.
HE MANAGED TO KEEP the ••occupied" ..sign
in place during the entire flight. He arrived In
Washington with leg cramps and watercloset phobia,
but otherwiae, it was an enormous jet victory.
He la no longer called Michael along the
Potomac. He is known as "Jetting John" Lawler.
Anyway, the saga of Lawler of Newport lieach
Goes to Washineton now continues. His latest coup
was getting to help promote the klddies' Easter egg
hunt on the White House lawn.
"Hundreds of kiddies up to age 8 showed up,"
Lawler enthused. "We were all prepared to assure
Newport hero dreaming up another White Hoiue caper
that the little darlings wouldn't go stomping around
and crush all the eggs.
"We used wooden eggs."
As an astute type of Newport wheeler-dealer
who would never get trapped into takini{ a wooden
nickel, you have to have some admiration for
Lawler coming up with wooden Easter e'gs. Because of his outstanding success m nhming a
wooden Easter egg hunt, the young barrister got in-
vited to actually have lunch at the White House.
"TIIERE·s NOTHING WASTEFUL about this
administration," he declared. "We had hot dogs for
lunch." You may think this isn't much of a success stocy
for a guy who had to ride a john to Washington. But
wait! It gets better. Lawler has also landed a real
job.
He is now with the Solicitor General's Office of
the United States Department of Justice. He is
neither riding in small rooms with plumbing nor roll-
ing wooden eggs. He is actually working as a lawyer.
Lawler was told that at the ripe old age of Z1 ... be
was one of the youngest barristers ever to latch on
with the department, particularly straight out of law
school.
' DE~R ANN t:ANDERS:
Please print tbl1 for those
pannta with the "unnatbable.
mixed-up, alway1-ln·ttouble
teen-acer." I know where they
are comJ.oa! from. My buid
and I have ·been there, and there
.la no bell UM It.
Wo, too, were dea~'Le and
without hope. Our IOD. wu a bum, lft debt. 1teallq from \II,
on dru11, brealdo1 :fof'be tumttw., cunJns ~ ht UI.
We were belJM ounelvea w1tb
anxiety and fear. We tried every-
thtn1 to pleue him aocJ nothlnC
workect The nicer we were, the
worae be 1ot.
Flnally, we called Ute police.
They 1ave U1 the pbone number
of an oraaniaatlon called
''TOUGHLOVE." From tbat day
on we became memben of a
commwlity network of parenta
J
I
who are 1ucc:eaafutl.i COPlnl with ~· unbelievable behavtor that
ttielr kJda ire dliblnC out Before we came to
TOUGHLOVE we were a1bamed
and felt weak and 1uUty becaute
we couldn't stand up to our ICID.
We t,boupt nobody ln our com·
munlty 6ad failed ao mlaerably
u parentl. Then we met other
membera ol TOUGHLOVE, and
knew we were no lon1et belp-
leH. We bad the 1upport o'"tl>tber
parentt. the PQlice, the 1cboola,
the coun. aiid the rebabWtat.lon
facllltie1. We dtdn't ~ bave to
Virgo: Examine
other pos~ihilities
TUESDAY, APklL ZS, 1181
By SYDNEY OM.ARR
ARIBS <Mar. 21·Apr. 19):
Separate fact from illusion:
temptation will be placed in your
path. Defme terms, comprehend
meanings. Friend wbo promises
much may actually be suffering
Crom "financial embar·
assment. ''
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20):
Focus on promotion, production,
ability to handle added
responsibility Prestige is on
HOROSCOPE
upswing; persons in authority
make room for you at top.
Business booms!
GEMINI (May 2l·June 20 >:
Perceive potential. Emphasis on
travel, education, expansion or
personal horizons. You 'll
complete important transaction.
Long·range legal procedures will
favor your efforts.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Emotional responses tend to
cloud logic. Know it, draw bead on
financial prospects ,
requirements. Hold off on
partnership arrangements. Study
Aries meuaee for valuable hint.
LIEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Avoid
skipping essenUals. Become
familiar with legal rights.
permissions Check license
requirements. strive to regain
sense of direction.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21):
Chane-ea occur in domeatlc area.
Individual close to you makes
numerous requesta. Adhere to
conservative coune. Period ot
confinement proves temporary.
Patience and persistence are twin
allies. Act accordincly !
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec.
21): Focus on home environment,
domestic adjustments, special
considerations, anniversary
gilts. You can now make valuable
acquis\tlon . Taurus, Libra,
Scorpio natives play key roles.
Family member will cooperate
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Count your change! Avoid
_self-deception. Protect valuables.
Techniques will be perfected.
What appea red to be a "lost
cause" will boomerang in your
favor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18>:
Emphas is on business
transactions, initiative, succeas
via .original approach. Personal
scenario highli&hts satisfaction
in money and love. Cancer,
Capricorn natives figure
prominently.
PISCES (Feb. 19·Mar. 20):
Flurry of activity occurs behind
scenes. Important people dlscuss
your proposals. You're due to
gain wider audience, valuable
advocates. Hold fast to prin·
ciples.
Guitarist to
entertain
'
..
Blue Ange/,s will
highlight slww
EL TORO -The U.s: Navy
Precisio6 Flight ~emonstration
Team, Blue Angela will again
hlgbligbt this year's El Toro
Armed Forces. Day and Open
House set May 2-3.
It was June 15, 1946, when the
Blue Angels flew their first
flight demonstration to · 'dem-
onstrate precision techniques
of naval aviation" to naval
personnel. Today. after 35 years.
the 1981 Blue Angels accomplish
essentially the same mission.
As "A mbassadors of
Goodwill" the Blue Angels take
naval aviation to the public as a
means or demonstrating the
quality or men and equipment
com prising the U.S. Naval
service. When traveling abroad.
this role is expanded as these
young men and women
represent the U.S.
The 16 orricers and 74 enlisted
personnel who comprise the
Navy Flight Demonstration
Squadron strive to set a stan·
dard of perfection for its con
temporaries in naval aviation,
thus enabling our Navy and
Marine Corps to continue to pro·
duce the finest aviators in the
world.
Early January finds the
"Blues" moving to their winter
training home at Naval Air
Facility, El Centro. The Im·
perlal Valley provides the ex-
cellent weather conditions and
training environment for the
"Blues" to prepare themselves
for the upcoming season.
For the next 60 to 70 days all
hands devote total concentration
to honing flying skill& to the fine
edge or perfection required to
carry on the Blue Angels tradi·
tion. 'fhe pilots uy twice a day
seven days a week, with each
day beginning at 5:30 a.m. and
ending in the early afternoon
with the remainder or the day
occupied with a self·imposed fit·
ness program
By mid to late March, the
squadron is ready to debut the
skills and teamwork
This year's open hoUBe and air
s how is scheduled for noon.
Prior to the Blue Angels'
performance. visitors to El
Toro's air station will also view
a Marine air.ground team dem·
onstratson . the comhined El
Toro and Camp Pendleton Sport
Parachute Team and the aerial
acrobatics of Chuck Wentworth.
Dozens or military aircraft
will also be on display for up·
close inspection.
The gates will open at 9: 30
a m on both days with the ac·
tual a ir show pe rformances
beginning at noon
HE'S BEEN WRITING some briefs for the U.S.
VIRGO <Aug . 23·Sept 22 ):
Examine various possibilities;
find reasons for recent events.
Member of opposite sex aids in
resolving dilemma. Be ready for
quick changes, revision or plans
and adjustment of employment
shift. Gemini is in picture.
Singer and guitarist
Serge Kerval will bel ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ featured Thursday at Br
Court of Appeal. It has been reliably reported that
he finished writing one the other day and his bosses
actually liked it. Right now, he carries the title of
special assistant United States attorney.
You may not think much of Lawler's story but I
am mightily impressed. Very few ex·surfers end up
hovering around the White House, writing appellate
briefs, riding in airplane toilets and rolling wooden
eggs on the chief executive's lawn.
Just think about tha,t.
It's a long way from John to Justice.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Your
affections tend to vacillate. What
seemed a routine procedure will
be revised. Accept challenge, be
analytical and take nothing for
granted . Aquarius, Scorpio,
Taurus natives figure
prominently
p.m . by the Alliance
Francaise de la Riviera
Califomienne.
Well-known ln France,
Kerval made his
Americ an debut in
Louisiana in 1975. Tickets
are $3.
The meeting will be In
Bridge Hall of the
Congregational Church,
341 St. Ann's Dr., Laguna
Beach.
Motivation and Theater Combines for a Hit
The talk of ttw t.own 1~ a rww show
l'alled. "'Breaking Free" 0\'er iOO
women pack<'<l lhe South C:oa.<1l Plv.a
Ballroom to ~ee the premiere or
wBreakinll Frtcae'.' the world's most
innovative motivational program.
DeRigned exclusively for women. it
rombined theater with motivation.
1ne Pn>JlT'am premiered the inno-
vative concept of ui~ing the right and
le~ brain t.o maximiie the learning
experience. The ~how it1 unique in that
it combines hillh inwnsi~~ manaJre-
ment skills il)ID an easy entertaining
p~mfomml
The 41h hour show is alive with t.oe-
tapping music and inspirati<mal mes-
S&f't!S. The salient pointa of prominent
women speakers are punctuated with
slides and humorous film segments.
The Theater o( the Mind presentation
is shown on 40 feet of ICrtens that
dance with color and aparkle with
comedy.
Prior to the production of the llhow.
one year wu apent in research.
According to 1how producer. Bill
Fawcett. "Over 1200 interviews were
conducted over the United States to
determine the anatmny of llJCCC!!.S tl>r
women:' W\th the help ol n<Md Pl)'·
choloPta and behaviorist& the .flnd-
inp were di Ulled dOwn to ~)' to
apply princlplea that are ahared with
theaud~rw:..
Dr. Sioux Harlan. the ahow'a mod-
rator, commented. "All 1tminar
ati.rideet rece1vt a workbook that
pnwide1 tbem· with a ix week daily
diet !cw Ill~ Etch day there are
P"llCribtd ""'ial drllll and acre that Mil help dilin'i attain their t*tra. .\Pin. chi tJ*"1 o( I.he left bralt'I/ rlah\ trim wot be employed bec9uM
' • evtryone atwt\dfns lht prosram
r..-eMCI a ri1alW :cot the entire .,.r1u;e lhbw. n. A 11bi la tl*
lM ........... be ....... --lo
..... HielhiciWtti ...... ;:.': 1wn....m,.....,n•1 ............. ~ .. o. ,,_....,.,. Mlnclploa1 11t1m• ~
Hotel from l to 6 p.m. One of the fea-
tured speakers will be Kelly Lange,
Emmy Award winning N.B.C. News
Anchorwoman. Ms. Lange's aegment
oft.he show will be directed at helping
women become more successful. Her
topic will be MRisk Taking, an ESM?~
tial to Success~ Lange worked her
way from helicopter traffic reporter
to one or California's tint network
anchorwomen and co-host of the
"Sund-.y" show. She will ahare her
steps to suc.ceu.
A.L9o appearinf in the M-.y S show
of "Breaking Free" is Dr. Bobbe
Sommer. notecj psychotherapist. She
will speak on the essent.iaJ ingredients
for developin• succeuful relation-
ahfps. Sommer hat a.stlisted thousands
of women to obtain. maintain. and Ill•
taln creative life style patterns of
success.
Also appearina Sunday wiJI be Jo
Anne Aatrow. Preaident of the
American Federation ol Comedian&
Her televiai<m credit.I include "Mork ·
& Mindy." "Knotta Landini:' and
"O&llU'She hUappeared in over 100
television commerciaJs. Ma. Altrow'a
topic is ~ Power of Humor:" She
will explain humor in terms of a
~erful ~vt tool for women
to employ to~ their~.
Roundlna out tht CMt II Dr. Sioi.tx
Harlan.: a doctor rl. behavioral tNnc:e.
who perlorma th& role al the ~
Mind Guidi and Pat Allen the nOtfd
rnaniaQ9arid tamllv couliietor. OooriOI*' it 12'.00 p.m.The.,.,,
'*'~ pro111J'Uy al 1 p.m. ~Ml
S48.00. Priee ln(Jud• ~~.
music tape and fruit buk Tickttl
wlll bf told a& &lie dOol' on a 1J*!e
evaUablt batf •· Du• to advarict
lnC.NI\ It ~ NeOmmendtd Ula\ CW..bt purJ t Ii' la *Mia..
~~-.adl.... , ...................
cantnr IAl1 Monon at Womtn41 1r1 ................. ('7M)
7&1~ ....._ CNtllW VIia
~
The Change Starts When You Do
The Time To Start Is Now ..
The Place Is "Powers"! Change It All!
01.-mnt•• '"".mo,,, ... ~ ti'•·..,.,,,. 'f""'
.;"\to fPf•I ,.ntt JPOf-'d, f11 ti'\µ'\ WP II l'T'tdlllt' Int
r ,,AflQP [ d\y ;line) F' ,,, •'T"••n fh•' ,,,,,,r,y. (•'1\\t_.°"
AH (.11}'\\f'\ l1t1IOO•cJ fr ~'HJ' ,1q• .. dnrt nf-'t-frt\
ORANGE COUNTY
#) Town & (ot1nlry, o,.,,~
(714) >•7·82l8
John Robert Powers
I'"'< >r•U"*4'' 81\tJul~ ..\ INldtJ~ ~vPIOJ)(nOnt c;,,.,., 1.)1
Brellktng Fl"ff Is the lmMh hit
tMt blends theater wtth
motfvetlon.
You'll hear women speakers
whoyou will be able to identity
with. You'll discover how to
shed your frustrations and ex-
pand your horfzons.
It's the kind of show you
won't want to end ... and the
best part Is that It doesn't; It
goes home with you.
Houaewtve1 and career ... women equally ting the
ehow'I pratses. Whether you
want to learn the man.agement
aklll& of a h gh achiever or If
you want tQ put harmony Into
Your llfe ... tt.ere's something
life cha~fng for everyone.
You can't tell ariytbjng by a name. Tate Gulf &
Western Industries. It's not headquartered anywhere
near a gulf; nor does It have a treat preHDce in Lbe
West. It is, in fact, based in New York City, near Cen-
ltal Park. From there, under the aegis or Charles
Bluhdom, it operate. what we laughingly call a con-
glomerate, meaning it owns companies all over the
place -here, there and everywhere.
So why la it called Gulf & Western? Becau.e in
1958, when Bluhdom began his spree of acquisitions,
one of bis first catches was a Houston automobile
parts maker.
Bluhdorn htt ~ upon Gulf & •
Western aa the l o
logical name, -....i.--------tw ~' ~~lfdr~!ket~~! lllTll lllllllTZ 4.'+ parts there on ____________ _.;:i..i..-...c-
t he Gulf of
Mexico and then ship them west. That was the start
of an auto parts distribution business called A P.S.
But it was also the start of the Gulf & Western con·
glomerate, as Bluhdom found that he liked to buy
companies.
SO HE BOUGHT a lot of them In all parts of the
country -and some outside the country In all kinds
of industries -manufacturing, mining, service.
finance, agriculture. Bluhdom likes to buy and sell.
An Austrian immigrant, he made his original
fortune, before he was 30, in the commodities
market, a perilous arena for the neophyte.
Result : you may not know the Gulf & Western
name but you're probably familiar with many of the
companies that belong to this company. They in-
clude:
-Consolidated Cigar, the nation's biggest cigar
maker <Muriel, El Producto, Dutch Masters).
-Kayser-Roth, the nation's largest hosiery
maker (Kayser. Esquire. Supp-hose, Mojud, No
Nonsense, Interwoven).
-Simon & Schuster, one or the nation's largest
book publishers (Summit. Pocket Books, Fireside,
Monarch, Julian Messner)
-COLE OF CALIFORNIA, one of the laraest
swimwear and sportswear malt.en (Catalina, Coln&
Places. Sandcastle). ·
-Madison Square Garden, the New York .City
sports arena that brings with it ownership of the New
York KnicJcerbockera basketball team and the New
York Rangers hockey team.
-Paramount Pictures, one of the major movie
and TV mm companies.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW V()N( ~-a-. ---,,.. .-W VOi'* ~I -.__ ,_, .,._ -,,.. ~-.. -----p.:.. -1..--Y---1Nd'ft9 ftllJOnell)' 114 ....... -.,..,..... -tredonG .. ~ 114 --
ll'tl loll~ 17',IOO >• -"' Tm Cert> W ,100 ""' . " =:::sT 1 uo.100 11111t -·" ITr 112,JOO :M• ~·-'"' + .. ""' Proc 105.taD ~ . "' t;r,•Roeb 20Vr .. :m 27 +·Iii 1"9UVm SYI 70,JOO 1,,_ +i " r~ ='-"' 61,100 ~ J11,2GO ... "' -,. Gt • ,.., .. .200 '"' + -ao,100 t!; .... ttf<:aft II 5'1,AOO 21V. -.. tit f:~ ·-+t Co It + "'
..... ,... •1,600 ., ,,,., 1 ... 100 S7\lo -IYJ "IOW09"t' ".ACID Jt"4 + '"' ' Corp m.200 » + ~ METALS G9ftl 121,JOO .,,. .. -.
mMt mMO Ullo + ... _... ?JI.JOO ~~ = ~ -..-~· DA,= CitlCMWI 211, 2Slilt -"' ~~c.entso_.i,u.s _,_
'°""' UM ..... cents o _.i.
UPS AND DOWNS Ilk 42\lo cents. pouftd. dell-
T• _._.,.~,W•ll ~11 lb.
... "'°""Clo') -,;,. -lit .... -..
A*""....,.1• cents•~. H. 'f . -...re.,., $410.GO pff 11•111 •
... .,. ..... ~ llOclll --.. , .. _ 5'f',00 '"'--· ... '(. =-~ ION ":,IM -: '*i..::.::.: --==--~ ... ~ .... SILVER _,. ,.,_.... c-.c.,:•• ,.,. ----~ ..,...._...,.. -..-. "" HOftCl,&A......,,.s11.160perlre'f..-. No mo YTM +°& Pel.
l~A t:: 1U l~r:l -~ ·5 II.A
112 + Up 10.> GOLD QUOTATIONS 2~.-... + Up 10.t
.... pf .:--: Up u Up u S.lt<ttd wwtd Vold prkea loOOy: J~~~ '"' . "' Up 1A =. " Up a ~: ~ll•lnt ... 7S,oMSUJ.
+ IYt Up ... ...._, e1'9.-fl•l119 MU .... off ==·· JIWI + n: U. 1.l SlUO ft~c.v ._+I Up 7.t l'Ofia: ......... tllllfl9Ul ......... UA7 mt:':~ ... ~ ....... , llllillt .-.a. off u. ... tt~ l:i + IYt tl ltlfiO: .... ~ fl•lftt ....... fl/If
+ flt Up ..... sue;..,, • ....,,
+ ~ "" u H•••' a Mor-•: e111y ••"' ._.. oom:.· -"-u ..C.IO, .tu11..-.
...... ~ Pct. ........... , tlllY doll' .,.... ..... ""' ,-.. ~ •11.JO. =r-E p • ......,..: Oft1f c1o11; .-. tobr1catllll
UOUI, off $11.9'. =l" ,j , -.~ .. , SYMBOLS ==m 1:1 != 'll tl =-== ........ ,...,~ ----=~ I -. -"' s -t -tYt s M -Yt t
,
.,
' ' ..
!I
I
,
I
"J.G.? 1'bia la C.R. OYW at 1'.R.L. ud W .... >W bow,
V.P . in chart• of 0.C.D .... well. beld on, 11J UM I
Mntenc. thlt maktl MDM in a mlnut.e."
DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I 1et
some good information about how to form a
food buying co-op? ..... J . W., Newport Beach
"How to Form a Food 8uyta1 Clab" II a
very tnformatlve pubUcatloa ... IM prttt II
rt1bt -tt'a free. It coatatna 1mclellaea ...
tips oo bow to form and operate ceoperatln
buyin1 cluba, with laformaUoa oa t11e
cooperative movement ID CaUfonda ud or·
1anlz1tlonal optloaa. Requeat • eopy by •rtt·
lnl to Food Co·Op PubUcatlou, Departmeat
of Consumer Affairs, P.O. Box JU, Sacramento t580Z.
Another booklet, tbe "Food Co-Op Dlrec·
tory," is available free from Ute above ad·
dre11. It teUa about cooperatlvea tbroagboat
the •late, with eaaeatlal tnformatloa aboat
each. The directory la also uaefal to farmers
wishing to directly market their cropa.
Subl.et guideline•
DEAR PAT DUNN : Do I have to uk my
landlord'• pennlaslon to aublet my aPllrt-ment to another tenant?
R.H., Costa Mesa Mo.t a1reemenu allow yoe to nblet oaJy
wUb ~ laadlord'a •rtt&etl eoeaN&. Some
landlorda wUJ accept tbe rat dJftdly frea
the aal>Uaaat. Bat yoa are atJU reapoull>le
for paytn1 the rent, ulna ta.e nbtetaut'a
Dame replacea youn OD the a1reeme11t, or a
new agreement i• written.
Water-aaving aida
DEAR READE&S: Was your atate ID·
come tax a painful e:1tperleace tbJ.s year?
You can eaae tbat pala next year by t•k·
Ing advantage of a law aJlowilll ata&e ~me
tu credJu of up lo P .... I« tutallla1 •P·
proved wa&er·1avln1 ay1tema ID your ._me.
The atate Departmeat of Water
Reaourcea 1ay1 tbe 1y1tem1 allo cu meaa
direct money 1avln1s Im water 18d ner17 blll1.
Autbortud l11t year by Alae•bl)' BIU use. ~ tax crecllta cover part of d9e cen el
lutallln1 rain water aad 1ray water
• ayatema, flo• redacen fer 1llowen aad
fauceu and low.null tolleu. •
Gray water ay1&em1 reclalqs water froa
baths, abowen Hd alaka fer la.dMape Ir·
rigatloo. Water fro1D rala water 111&eaa -
collecton and clateru -allo WOllN '1e me.I
for lancbcape lrrt1atloa. whldl ace!Ma&a for
about ball the water uaed I• Callfenta bomea.
Tile tu credit for ... ,Je.famlly rea·
idences ii SS Qercnit of co.ca to a aaxlm11111
credit ol *3.•. For mulUple reslcleaeea.. aa
owner 1.aat.aUJn1 1 •ymm e.dll1 at leaat
M, ... can take 1 tax eredJt of~wen IS,.,.
cent and 5t perceat.
EUitblUty faldeUaea for &Ile tax crecllt
have been developed by tbe Depanan& of
Water RHOurcea and tile Dep1rtmeat of
Heattb Servlcn. Coplea are avaUable from
Alan la1bam, Departmeat of Water
Reaourcea, Dlvl1loa of Pluudaa. P.O. Box 388, Sacramento t58t2.
TqM for 11,eep
.-
lvlorc. For tJz at extra
n1easu re f~( satisj(1ction.
He went lmide to get a map. She
woke up and . went to the restroom.
Can•ler returned to the c8J' and con·
tJDued the trip, and-didn't realize hJa
"I'm More
satisfied!'
'
~· ... , . '.
·,. ~· ·· ... ' . ~';
...