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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-28 - Orange Coast PilotI 'BY STBVB MAaBLE ..,. .. ..., ......... The ·~·bed.room, waterfrcot boUJe co Bayabore Drive bean 1anall ieaemblanee t4> the place whereJobDWayneusetobanabta •,Qt. The Dutel• mansion, perhaps the most f amom piece ot teal estate on the Newport Harbor, ts cluttered with t>oarcls, Daill and workmen.theeeclays. The lddney.,baped pool bu been drained and the peaked.rools have been.knocked down. THE llAMBUNG single-story house with ill million dollar view · of the bay ii iettin& an overhaul. Workmen on the project aay a second floor ia being added. A 680·square-foot maid's quarter also is being bOilt. 'tiut the renovation work trig- gered rumors in Harbor Area real eatate circles this month that the house at 2686 Baysbore Drive was being tom down. ·'The.re's hardly anythln1 left,•' commented one Newport qent this week after taking a bay tour. But accordir\g to Marion Buie, pr~ MacNab-lrvine - the realty fa.rm that bandied" the sale of the Wayne home last year. o.11, .... ,w. ........ John Wayne tDCU a perfectionUt about hi.I sing~-story mansion unth its mi.llWn.doUar view of Newport Bay. bought the famed home with the intention of extensive remodel- ing. •'The place bas been remodeled three times already," remarked Buie. "When Wayne was there, he added nearly 9,000 square feet. The current owner ,_is just modernlzingita bit." · was not mcluded in the sale of the house. BUIE SA VS it 's his undersland- ing that Mrs. Il ettingen. who cur· rently resides in Beverly Hills. in- tends to occupy the waterfront house when remodeling is com- plete. Mra. William J~ Bettin{len ii "modernizing" /""11n WCJYM hmne. When 1econd story i8 /inuhed ~ mid-aummer, pool will be refilled and roof will be re- built. New garage i8 in foreground. the rumonareonly rumors. Buie said the present owner, Mrs. William John Dettingen, Mrs. Bettingen bought the estate for $3.47 million. The ask- ing price had been $4.7 million. And that was just for the house, the land being on a lease option. Wayne's boat, the Wild Goose, "The house was in good shape already," Buie said "\\'aynl'" as a perfectionist of sorts. He kept the place in perfect sha p<' I le liked everything in working or der." Rogers No. I NFL draft • m From AP Dlsp1tche1 NEW YORK -1980 Heilman Trophy winner Geor1e Rosen ol South Carolina, as expected, was U.. No. l aeJe.oUon l>Y. ~ New Orleans Saints in ~tOCJat s 46th National Football Lea&Ue draft. Roura. a 6·2, 220-pounct tailbact, led the nation in rushine last sea.son with l,m yards, averaging 161.9 yards per game. Two UCLA players, runnin& back Freeman McNeil and safe- ty Kenny Easley ,..were t.be third and fourth players tab~ in the draft. McNeil was selected by the New York Jets and Easley by Seattle. The Rams, drafting ninth, picked linebacker Mel Owens of Michigan. Owens, who made seven quarterback ucks last season. was the fourth~ out.!lde linebacker drafted in 4the ftrSt nine pi~ks. Here are the first-round picks: 1. New Orleans -George Rogers, rb, South Carolina. , 2. New York GlanU • Lawrence Taylor, lb, North Carolina. 3. NW' York Jets -Freeman ;.,·-·rb,U ' . atUe -e ... e ' a. UCLA. .J. , ..... ~.._ 5. St. Louis ~. ,, .J Alabama. I, Green Bay -IUcb Campbell, qb, CallfOrnla. 7. Tampa Bay -Hu1b Green, lb, Pittabur&b. ~. San Francisco -Ronnie Lott, db, use. . 8. Los An&eles -Mel Owens, lb, Michigan. 10. Cincirmati -David Verser, wr, Kansas. 11. Chicago -Keith Van Horne, ot, use. 12. Baltimore -Randy McMWan, fb, Pittsburgh. 13 . Miami -David Overstreet, hb, Oklahoma. 14. Kansas City -Willie Scott, te, South Carolina. 15. Denver Dennis Smith,· safety, use. <See DllAfT, Pace AZ> Flight may give pair balloon record By PIUL SNEJDE&MAN CN ... Deltf ..... llMf had been one of the• 'luxuries" tbe pair jettlaoned to prevent a col- llslon durln& tbefli&ht. "We al1D09t boulhl the farm near Salt Lake City," Abruuo sald ... We got cauebt ln a Avere downdraft that almostaent '11 into the aide of a mountain. We bad to baUastnearlyeverythinc.'' BEST OF SHOW G~orge~1 Marines need a good boy? 7 too young NORFOLK, Va. (AP> -the Marine Corps may know bow to spot a good man early, but il was just a little too early in tryin1 t.o recruit Justin Ferguson. A letter from Marine Corps headquarters in Wasbinctoo in- vited the 7 -year-old athlete to Join up at a starting salary of S400 a month. •'Little boys like to play AnnY,'' Diane Ferguson said of the letter her sori received. "But be wu U · t.ound~ they'd pay .'1im '$400 a month. He'd beonefQrfree." Tbe Marine Corpa ~uldn't ex· pla1ntbe1Upup. _.# Spring . ruled gu;ilty death of priest • ID 8 GI.ENS SCOTT ~~ ..... aald Spring wb on trial Or1U11e county Superior Court i-.. .. !hM~J:~ = to "*' IU!JlY ot secClOd dellW mU,fder fD • tbo FebruuY, 111!>. deaUI cl Seal Beach priest Fdlx Doherty. '' W• only took one vote." Juror Le.He Splndelman of Fullerton said Monday after the trial. Sprlna a as.year.old Air Force and Vietnam veteran who worked at odd jobs, faces a sen· tence of from JS years t.o lite in prison for the felony. The seven· ~an, five-woman jury also con- victed him of a misdemeanor vandalism charge. DRF.SSED IN a blue velour 1>ullover shirt, Spring sat almost motionless during the proceed- ings. His glance moved from thf: front of the room only once wben a rear door opened and laughter from a hallway filtered into ibe courtroom. Parked in the room between the defendant and Judge James Turner was the green and black motorcycle Spring was rte.Uni on Feb. 9, 1980, when he was ac- cused of slugging Father Doher· ty at the rear door of St. Anne's Catholic Church. The priest was treated for a small head wound at tbe time. Ke died severaJ weeks later of brain Injuries. Sprtna testified last week t.bat be bad punched Father Doherty "in a rush ol the moment" when be believed he was .l>eiDI re- buff ed. DUD. plliClelrnan, the juror, said taPed telephone conv~ruliona in "6ich Sfrine bad threatened Ctitca10 eburcb 'officials bad been slenlftcaot in the delibera- tions. Sprln& · bad prom laed to "stomp" a church official lf the long-lost dream girl were not found in a convent. . Turner set a sentencing date for Friday, May 29 at 9 a.m. 8PRING'S attorney, Public Defender Ronald Butler. told Turner be would make a motion at that time for a new trial. Butler objected to Turner's de· ciaion t.o let the jury consider the second-degree charge. · Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter originally sought a first- d e 1 ree murder charge, but Turner said evidence was lnsuf. ficient t.o substantiate it. l>allJ ...... '""" -GUILTY OF MURDER Ronald Spring Homes for 40,000 ~planned in Irvine By RICBA1lD GREEN Of ... Deltr ........... The Irvine Coqipany has un- veiled conceptual plans for the construction of 15,900 dwelling unit• -enough housing for 40,000 people -in the City of Irvine. Sites for a hospital, a cine center, parks, scbooll, offices apd commercial facilllle1 are also included ln the proPotat mad• public Monday by Irvine Company Vice Pres.ident tom NltlHn. Tbe development, 11 r~anned on 2,101 acres ol nauan now in oran1• vcvn and row ci:oPS qortb al tlM San Dte10 Freeway tn ent.ral mne . • because the city doesn't have enough planners to process both proposals at the same time. Nielsen said t.he filing of con- ceptual plans ror the new villages is only the firs t stage of a lengthy review by the city •t•ft. city comm1ssions and the Clt~ Council. Hf: SAID that if all goes well, houses could be ready for oc· cupancy in the two vlllaees by 1985. <See HOUSING, f'a•e AZ> j ··~· ........ GRIEVING Hazel Matthews Williams is escorted from the funeraJ of her son, Michael Mcintosh, who was the 25th victim in Atlanta's string of slayings of young blacks. Reagan vs. Congress televised tonight WASHINGTON <AP) Pr-Hi- dent Reagan, capitalizing on ris· ing popularity since last month's assassination attempt, re· assumes public command of his budget battle tonight with an ap- peal to Congress to stop talking and start acting. (Channels 2, t and 7; KMPC, KFWB, KNX ). Aides said Reagan will tell a joint session in the nationally televised, 6 p.m. PDT speech that Congress must s hed the "old and comfortable way" because .. a day or dec1s1on is near" for ha! lax and spending cul proposals "High taxes and excess spend· ing growth crea ted our economic mess," one source said Reagan will say "To fail to Curb boosts le<Ul in poll SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Lt_ Gov. Mike Curb has increased his lead in the race for the 1982 Republic a n gubernatorial nomination. pollster Mervin Field reports. In an early April poll of 435 California Republicans, Curb was preferred by 41 percent, while Attorney General George Deukmejian was favored by ~ percent and San Dleeo Mayor Pet,e Wilson by 21 percent. Curb had been preferred by only 3S percent or those polled in a similar January survey by Field's California Poll organjza- tion. It lasted Wilson at 23 per· cent and Oeukmejian at 21 per cent Power limited? SACRAMENTO CAP) AnAs- sem bly subcommittee has voted lo limit the stale savings and loan comm1ss1oner's power to reg· ulate savings and loan associa- tion mergers act will delay -even longer and more painfully -the cure that must come." The speech, expected to last about 15 minutes, comes u the administration program ls pick- ing up speed with Congress nearing key voles this week. Conservative Republicans on the Senate Budget Committe neared agreement on a revised budget blueprint. and House Speaker Thomas f>. O'Neill Jr. said enough Democr ats may croes over lo give the president a vie· tory in the House. The address is Reagan's third on the economy but his first public appearance since be was shot March 30. It comes on the eve of bis lOOth day in office, and the selection of the well of the House is intended to focus the drama of Reagan's re-emergence on the forefront or the fight for his economic pro- gram, which already appears to be picking up speed as Congress nears key votes this week. One White House official, who asked not to be identified, said the president's attitude is: "Look, we've talked about the economy. We've analyzed it. Now is the time to do something. Now it's time to take the courageous measures to get the economy back on the path." The president, who is not yet working full time in the Oval Of. fice again, was puttins the final touches on the speech loday. He worked on the messa1e al his Camp David, Md., retreat over the weekend and met with his speech writer, his con· gressional lobbyist and the depu· ty chief of staff when he re· turned lo the White House on Monday. The speechwriter, Ken Khachigian, took the notes Reagan had made on a draft and was preparing a clean copy C9r the president's final approval lb. day, according lo deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes. Interest hiked I 0 '!~?~<~!~'!~'!. banks and•••-l ings institutions will be able to pay as much as 14.292 percent interest on $10,000 six-month savings certificata. The rate, which bad been 13.871 percent, is set at a mu- Jmum of 0.25 percent above the rate on short-term securlttes marketed by the U .s. Treasury. Twenty·JSix·week securities were sold Monday at the weekly auction at an average discount of 14.042 percent, up from 13.621 percent on April 20. The latest rate wu the btihest in eight ween. ORA,._COAIT Dilly Piiat Tt;ANTA CAP) -JUlt u pollc. were diddiftl not to ldd Jlmm1 Ray P~1.t:••ne to a Ult Of,.Jl'ala1.D Del ln1 JOWll bluu, t.be body of UM 21·)'Hl'-o&cl .... found noatla11n. river-the flftb body to be dumped ln an area . river lo Jeu than a month, police ••Y-I A few houri later, Public Safety Commlulooer Lee· Brown.-aald that the death of the 5-foot-7, uo. pound man will be lnveati1atec1 by the tuk force ptobln1 the 25 death• and diaappearancea, wblcb be1an 21 moot.bl a10. The cause of Payne's death waa not determined immediately and medical officials said bla body. found Monday, borenoobviouain- juriea. An autopsy betan tbiJ mornlna at the Fulton County medical examiner'• orfice. Meanwhile, another youo1 black man of alieht build wu re- ported mlaslne today by hia mother, but police said bis cue waa bein1 investi1ated by the mlasine persons unit rather than the task force. Herman Pittman, 21, wu tut aeen Monday evening when be left home to get a beer, omciala said. He stands S feet 6 and wei1hl 140· pounds. Police are worried about a change in pattern, Brown said, because "we now have four adult victims of homicides. Previous to that, all the victim• were under 16, the youngest beine 7.' • All the adult cases have similarities, including the 'tact that the bodies were found Jn rivers, hesaid. ··our people are trying to de- termine what this means," he said. Payne wu lut seen April 22 as he headed for the Omni sporting and entertainment complex ln hopes or aelling some old coins, accorC1tn1 to bis sister, Evelyn .. Payne's body, tangled face· down in a fallen tree, was spotted by two fishermen, about the time police were deciding not to put hil name on the list of cases being in- vestigated by the special task force. Brown said police had been given information that Payne had been seen alive. He lived about a block from the home of Patrick Baltazar, 11, who was last seen alive at the Omni. Ballau.r's body was found Feb.13 ln a DeKalb County office park. Like 13 of the other victims, Baltazar had been asphyxiated. Six of the last seven victims were asphyxiated or probably asphyxiated, authorities said. The cause of one victim's death was unknown. Cheerleader 03kingaid for injury SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Leading cheers is enough of a job to warrant recelvina workmen's compenaatlon, says a former UCLA cheerleader who wanta the state Supreme Court to order pay· meot for a knee injury incurred in the name of spirit. Karyn Rust filed a petition Mon· day seeking review of a Court or Appeal order refusin1 to overturn a Worten Compensation Appeal BoardJudee's ruling against her. Ms. Rust filed a claim Oct. 6, 1977, allegtne she received an in· jury arlaine out of employment durtna a 1976 rally at the Loe Aneelea Coliseum. At the time, Ms. Rust wu a member ol the UCLA "Spirit Squad" -a &roup or 15 male and female cheerleaders who received UD· iforms, paid trips for away.from· home aporta events, Cree ad· mlssioo to games and "the honor of representing UCLA and n· posure to the public In a favorable light. .. 'Old' bandit strikes agaiii in Costa Me&a ·~--..... WARMING UP -Don Cron (left.) and Guy Hoelzer, stu· dents at M08s Landini Marine Lab in California, walk a seven-foot dolphin around a holding tank, helping revive it after it beached Itself near 'Monterey, apparently the victim of too cold water. It will be released to sea later. Shuttle ends trip back to Canaveral CAPE CANAVERAL CAP> - The apace shuttle Columbia, perched atop a Boeine 747 jumbo jet, completed Its trip back to Florida this momine, touching down nottarfrom the spot it blast· ed into space two weeks ago. The spacecraft ferry, which took off from Tinker Air Force Base ln Oklahoma City early to· day, touchea down to the cheers of a small group or spectators, said NASA spokesman Rocky Raab. He said the Columbia will be re· moved Crom the back of the 747 this afternoon and taken into the orbiter processing building for exhaustive tests. From Page A1 DRAFT • • • 16. Detroit .Mark Nichols. wr, San Jose St. 17. Pittaburgh Keith Gary, dl, Oklahoma. 18. Baltimore -Donnell Thompson, dl, North Carolina. 19. New England -Brian Holloway, ol, Stanford. 20. Waabington -Mark May, ot, Pittsburgh 21. Oakland -Ted Watts, db, Texas Tech. 22. Cleveland-Hanford Dixon. db, Southern Mississippi. Strike settled at Lake Tahoe SOUTH LAKE TAHOE <AP)- A bitter, ll·month strike at the Sahara-Tahoe Hotel-cuino hu been setUed with a two· year coo· tract for' about 600 fC>Oii and bevera1e worken, unJon official.a aay. The aareement Is a · 'aiVtlficant beeinning" for ne1otlatlons at other south shore casinos, union spokesmen said. The Sahara· Tahoe, owned by Del Webb Inc .. remained open during the db· pute. .. We're going to go over 1t incn by inch, stem to stern,.. Raab said. The shuttle left Tinker soanng into a clear blue sky with tt>" mercury at 64 degrees The night to Florida·s Atlantic coast lasted about3'h hours. Although Tinker was closed to the public this morning. thousands of people watched the take·off from nearby highways. The shuttle arrived there Monday to a cheering crowd of about 200,000 Oklahomans. The sightseers backed up traffic a bout two miles on Interstate 40 , which runs by the sprawling military base in southeast Oklahoma City The overnight stopover was in tended llS a refueling stop for lhe shuttle's carrier The final leg of the piggy back flight took the jet and its precious cargo over Greenville, Ark , Jackson and Meridian, Miss . Selma, Montgomery. Troy and Dothan, Ala.; and Tallahassee, Ocala and Orlando, Fla . to the space center. The shuttle rocketed into space on April 12 and made a perfect landing. on a dry lake bed in California two days later Its takeoff from Edwards Air Force Base was delayed some three hours while technicians in- stalled a strut to secure a 17-paece aluminum tail cone to the shuttle The white cone fits over the shut tie's rocket engines and reduces drag. The departure from Edwards had been delayed six days as ground crews encountered minor but time-consuming problems with the complex servicing pro· cedure. Before the Columbia could leave, its fuel lines and bays had to be cl~ansed of explosive fuels, Its systems shut down and the entire 100-ton ship rechecked. "Everything that could hap· pened to us happened, but we're glad it happened on the ground, not on the flight," said Donald K. "Deke" Slayton. a former astronaut and shuttle test flight pro er am manager. • . I NlelJen aald VHJa1e 12 wlll be 11ared primarily toward adults. He explained that the atate ia re· luctant to allow the buUdlng of • 1cho9l1 in the area which ii beaet by nou1e and the craah potential or airplanes that fly out of nearby E1 Toro Marine Corps A1r Station. The Irvine Company wlll spend ltbout $20 milUoo to build a storm channel for San Diego • Creek and to rellllgn the Southe rn California Edison ' power Unes that now bisect the area and travel north along Jef· frey Road for the Village 12 pro-1 ject. Nielsen said the company wanta to place the lioe• along Sand Canyon A venue and the Santa Fe Rallroad tracks. A TOUGHER problem faces the Irvine Company plans for Villaee 14. Nielsen said . He said that roadway development plans for ttiat village caJl for Jam-' boree Road lo extend through the Tustin Marine Corps Helicopter Station and connect lo the Santa Ana Freeway So far, Marine representatives have opposed the plan Nielsen said negotiations l'On· tinue with the Marines and he said that pending the resolution, he is hopeful the city will ap- prove at least a portion of the proposed development in Village 14 li e also said there is a possibility thut company plan· ners <:an get plans accepted without the roadway through the helicopter station A MORE general problem fac- ing both village proposals re volves around lht•1r fanan('1al v1ab1hty Caty planncn. say that rc~1dt'n­ tial developml•nb cost more in Cl t.> st•rv11·1·s lh Jn Lhe \ pa} in po~t f'ropos1t1on 13 taxes Sales tax revenue 1s tht· baggc!.l source of fund mg for tht> City of I rvam· N1t>lsen adm1tkd that mu<-h of the compan~ s re'i1dt·nt1al de velopmt•nt plan-. hinge on whethl'r t•nou~h !>ale~ tax generating commcrcwl rac1ht1es can be developed He claimed that by the mad 1980!> the• rompan} will be devC'loping I rv1nl' Center a 480 -acn• ('ommt·rt1Jl center bounded by tht' S<.t nla Ana, San Dat•go and Laguna rn·t•ways TO OATI-:. howl'\'C'r, no maJor dcpartm<•nl store~ ha\ e com - mitted to build an the "Super Shopping !\tall t'O\ 1~1oned <ts part or lht· rt•ntN, N1ebc•n said The l'll) or In 1ne has a popuh.1twn of about 70,000. The I n an<' Cit.> GenPral Plan. the document that outlines develop- ment an thl' l'lt)' calls for an ul- timate populatwn or more than 200,000 J>('Oplt• In the s tart of next rentun Beads stolen from casket FRESNO <AP) Someone stole a string of rosary beads from an open casket of a man who was stabbed todeath h ere Police said Monday that a cou· pie entered a mortuary chapel, appare,lly to view the body of Rafael Suarez, 23, then hurried away when a relative of the vic- tim arrived. The rosary beads were discovered missing, and an attempt had been made to remove Suarez' wristwatch, polices a.id. Suarez was f-0und near a freeway overpass Wednesday with a stab wountl an the stomach from a fight No atrests have been made. -· -I Princess Grace of Monaco stands with director Sam Wanamaker at a New York reception spomored by the Engliah Speaking Union of the United Statea. Princess Grace later attended a benefit~ormance of ''Acting Shakespeare" for reconstruct' of London's Globe Theater. Actor Robert Duvall jokes with Guardian Angel member Lisa Evers at a di$co party in New York City re- cently. The Guardian Angeb are young peo- ple who patrol crime areas to deter vioLence . aey McCall laJa bll toUD· tl')'·w tem al.Qlt,q taretr a. l.kyrocket.J.n. tbaakl to the 1paee1hip , 6aUtd .. Bt.atorr Colutn a." McCall, 22, a ftre-aprtnk14!r lnauUer. recorded tbe trlbute uac.d to wake utronauta Job Y ... a and Boben Crt_ppea from thelt first m1ht'1 sleep ln orblt April 13, and alnc• then, he aay1, h1a career bu had a "180-decree turnaround. from alow to extra fut." Many radio ataUona want to play the aon1. be aaya, newapepen and m11azinee want to know bis ftory, and be'• in demand for TV abowa. Until now bis 1in1in1 career wu limited to church and hieh school choin; be hadn't even worked the ni&htclub cit'iuit. Does pianist Uberace real· ly favor construction of an $80 milllon shopping center· condominium-hotel complex across the street from his luxurious La Casa de los Cloisters estate in Palm Springs? Well, it's certainly hls sig n ature flamboyantly s~awled across 12 lines of a pJtitlon favoring the develop· menl, with a sketch of a grand piano and candelabra and the message "Good Luck with your Project! March 1981" underneath But Liberace's house manager insists it was a "big mistake." George Lllneraa says hls boss lS opposed to the project and only signed the petition because he assumed it was a protest against the huge con- struction project A poll published indicated that there was nearly an even split of those who sup- port and oppose the idea of Britain's Prince Charles be· ing made governor.general of Australia. The poll, conducted by the Gallup organization for the Sydney newspaper the Sun, showed 47 percent or the 2,031 persons polled were against Charles as govemor- general, and 4& percent ap- proved of the idea. Queen Margretlae U of Den· mark and herh~band, Pri.Dtt Henrik, visited 81roshima and placed a wreath before the Peace Park memorial, offer· in1 a sUent prayer to the 140,000people killed in tbe first atom bomb attack. The queen did not conceal her horror when Mayor Takeabl Araki described the atom bombing in 1945. of· Cicials said. The royal couple then visited the peace memorial archives which d.ia· plays photographs and other relics of the nuclear attack. Northern U.S. rainy Southern Atlantic coast unseasonably hot Coastal irealher l'olftt ~Ion lilt IN MeidCMO -*' -M to rnl .. t -O..r owt ... cae1t• _ _.. trom di l'olft\ Con· ce•llon •• S.n Clemente hl•n• nortltwHI 10 norllt wind• ,,_,., c11Mr•.Ufl9 Ir.I'll 11 '° llO .._.... elwl c-lllMd .... 11-1., decrHtl ... 1...-.n. • 1 Mt .... ., ... -'-'· Ow• ,_ ...... IOC.M ... ,.,.. .. .,,..u ... .,...~..._. ~lwttll21•)..f ...... _ ... OIMfWlt9 litM .... 11.,1 ..... wl-IMf'llltte '-' ~ ......,..., • to ti 1u11b IN• .. ._. W.. to _.,.._. _., I lo I feet. Meatl., , .. , .... Olofllltlanltflt. U.S. swnmary FORECAST NATtONAl •tAfMl8 SH¥1Cf NOAA U I D• t et <••••••• n .. 11 17 ti SI u .. .. • IS 17 By GLENN 8CO'IT O{ ... Dllty,.......,. Now that Oran1• County T ran1porlatlon Co Jn mlaston memben say they've cot tf\e ball rollln1 for more state fund· ing, they've declde4 to elve it • few more whack.a. Commi.tlon members declde.d Mondey to aee further con· ce11lom f.rom Caltrant omclata in Sacramento to fund hlibway pro Jedi ln the count.y. 1f adopted, the lateat aet or proJecta orieinally turned down by Caltrana could boost tbe county's share of state hiJhway funds from 10.6 to almost 12 per· cent of the state fun<b allowed to counties in Southern cauromJa. ORANGE COUNTY has about 13.2 percent or the population in Southern California. The propor· tion ot f\Ulds doled out lo each county, however, is based on transportation needs rather than population. Commissioner Ralph Clark, also a county supervisor, persuaded other members Mon· 1ay to lobby Caltrans planners to include improvements to the Sani.<1 Ana Freeway to the list of needed projects in the county from 1983to1987. Thote Improvement.I, ettlm&t· ed to toet S82 mil.lion, would slve the county 11 .9 percent of Southland f undlng. "I can't undentand CaltrllN' rulatance t.o improvlnl the lifelltte between Loa Angeles and Sao Diego counties," Clark added. The state method tor fimdin8 Caltrans districts and coulftlea ls compllcated. Needs studies based on selected projects are uaed as a basis for delerminlna percenlages of Unspecified fund· ina. THE FUNDING represent.6 70 percent of the money spent by the state on highways. The other 30 percent, which generally goes toward large con stuction pro· jects, is controlled by the gov· e rno r -appointed California Transportation Commission. Orange County initially was to receive only 6.5 percent of the Southland Caltrans funding, but that figure was revised more than a week ago after com· mission aides visited Caltrans offices in Sacramento. Clark was ready to seek • Caltrana Dtre.ctor Adriana Gian· turco'• nrtna after the lint re· port came out. He was more conc:lll1tory alter revisions were made. But Monday, with ln· lere4t raised once a1aln in seek· ina modtrlcatlon•, Ctark wouldn't afve up the pollUcal preasure. "LET'S NOT RULE out the possibility that we may dustlng off tbl.s resolution (to fire Gian· turco> ln the future if things , don't work out," he said. Meanwhile, Caltrans District 1 Director Hein1 Heckeroth got the usual .. nice try" looks after he tried to convince Clark and other commissioners that the Sacramento office was trying to treat all counties fairly. "l want to assure the com· mission that the program bas been applied as uniformly throughout the state as possi- ble.'· he said. The commissioners told lhei executive director, Thomas Jenkins, to make a personal trip to Sacramento to emphasize the C'Omrnission's position . Jenkins said he'd probably go in a few weeks. Deputy protests shift Given jail duty as 'punishment' for actions? An Orange County Shenff's deputy is protesllng reassign- ment to jail duty ~ pwushmeot on allegations that he used poor Judgment io handling a rape case in Dana Point . Telesfor Chavez, a deputy for five years, has Joined the As· sociation of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs to file suit in Superior Court seeking a court o rder preventing S he riff· Coroner Brad Gates Crom re· assigning him from patrol duty. Ho wever. Superior Court Judge Edward Wallin last week dented a petition for a tern· porary restraining order stop- ping the jail duty. A hearing for a preliminary injunction is scheduled on May 13. IN THE SUIT, the lawyer for the deputies suggests that work· in& in the jail is. nau.ratively. Inn burglar flees with jewel haul A burglar. who reportedly broke into rooms at the Newporter Inn while hotel guests were out dining escaped with more than $15.000 worth of jewelry. The intruder. police said, broke into two rooms Saturday ni~ht at the Newport Beacb hotel. using a tool to pry open doors. Sylvia Schenkmen, a New York resident vacationing in Newport, told officers a jewelry box was taken from her dresser The box, officers were told, con· tained $12,050 worth of rings and bracelets. Shirley Hall, a La Habra school teacher. told police the thief grabbed a $3.000 coral and turquoise bracelet ~ well u her membership card to the lntema· tional Arabian Horse Associa· lion not much better than living 1n at. Jail duty is generally con· sidered by members of the AOCDS as the "least desirable assignment the sheriff-coroner can make ," said attorney Gregory Petersen The deputies claim that a 1979 agreement spelling out working conditions doesn't list reassign- ments as one of four allowable disciplinary actions. They claim the alternatives are reprimands, suspensions, reductions in class and terminations Department administrators. however, argue that reassign· ments are necessary at times to ease sensitive personnel prob· lems. ACCORDING TO THE re assign ment notice issued Chavez, his April 3 punishment stems from an Oct. 22 incident when be was patrolling the south county. The deputy, while off duty, ia aHeged to have given a rape vie· tim a can of Mace, or tear ea.s. for protection even though she was not licensed to use it. The notice also includes a complaint·-strongly denied by Petersen -that Chavez made advances lo the victim. Petersen said the allegataon has yet to be investigated and added that Chavez had not done "anything but just try to be a nice human being to a rape victim." Assistant Sheriff Ro~Grif fin said Chavez' su rior.s believe the deputy use poor judgment. but still can be a ood officer as long as he ca be transferred to the jail where he'll get closer supervision "WE THINK he can be very amenable to this ty pe or re training," said Griffin He noted that the rape victim and her boyfriend. who filed the complaint. didn't want any sane lions taken against Chavez "Of course," he added." they really don't have the choice " According to the reassignment a ~--~·----------------------_:.----------------------• "' "' ,. D 11 S1 ,,. ., a • • $2 .. ts .. • • SS " SI 11 " • .. • d d S1 :1 J6 ., • d • .. ,, .. ® EiEM WISE . . ,. nouce, the incident took plac~ somethinfil like this ) Chavez went to the vacum's Dana Point home after she re ported the rape. She wouldn't file an official report. but want·• ed to talk He returned to her • place aftt>r he was off duly and• took her to his home in Laguna • Beach ! The complaint alleges that he; tried lo kiss and hug her, but• Chavez denaes at. lie drove her· home the same night and left the can of Mace with her along with1 his per.;onal telephone number' an d address. the complaint / reads 51 arrested • m protest against arms EL SEGUNDO CAP) -Fifty· one demonstrators again.st the arms race have been arrested for "intentional acts of civil dis· obedience·· at Rockwell lntema- tional's corporate headquarters including a Unitarian minister who chained himself to the front door. The Rev. Phillip Zwerling or the First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles and 14 members of his church chained themselves together as part or a day·long protest Monday involvin g 150 demonstrators. The protest was against "ris· in~ militarism and the needless proliferation of nuclear weapons," according to Nancy Mintie, a spokeswoman for the Catholic Worker, one of the groups that organized the pro- test The 51 who were arrested were booked for investigation of trespassing and obstruction and al I but eight of them were re- 1 eased on their o wn re · cognizance, said police Lt. Maurice Colyar. without the slide pruentations It loses some of the impact. AA usu•I. the followlng fiW dayt were devoted to the continuing education of the Society'• members. We attended gemological lab ••••Ion•. ••mlnar• and lectute9 on the lndu.try•a t.-.a davelopments. Special clinics were Mid by Instructors w4th expert!• In a partleular fi91d of gemology. W• had the opportunity to l•arn about the very lai.t dlJCQYcwiet In the o-m world. l round It very etlrmilatlng and elltcltlng. I'm eure th• anthu•lnm I h4'V9 '°' •ttendlng th• concWw i. ai90 d1J9 to trM m~ chance to get to know ao "*'f won<*ful J>«lPle from all S*1s ot the countty ~o .~,. 'fff lnteraat• In th• ta clnatln.g •clenoe of gemology.(jW• cannot h•IJ> but , .. ,,.. rem ~ other aven In the lf1f0rf'Nll dltc&dalona w• h'"" at the lunc'*>n• •nO dlnnatt on tt. tcnedul•. Whan w• t•..._ QJlt tOQtttttr, ~"talk af'lop" •· rot' • , • . rNtnty ~-we nnd our ca,.., 90 1~ttno I w.IOO"'-th'8 oPPOf'Unlty aaoh yta't •o relnf0t~' •nd Iner••" "'Y ttnowa.ctee of ~encl of the~ lncNttry. •n tO doing, 1 tn\..., Ible to Mr¥e my cu1tomert better end to continue to d•••n • th• truat and ciOnf~ ther havt round In me end my firm. SPRING IN ENGLAND -This was the scene in Cotswolds, near Goucester, Monday after an arctic storm swept down from the north .... .,..... snow fell , and drifts of more than five feet deep blocked hundreds of roads in the West Country area. eover the weekend. Up to eiJ:rht inches of ~Pffbeat bills comi~al "'Many state lawmakers enjoy light-hearted debate btJ • niay the Associated Preas ,Vf> State lawmakers are scanning ,,t~e lakes, forests and flatlands or If America, trying to slap their state :;eal on everything from fish to r fossils to games and booze. '' • Legislatures are cons idering nomaking catfish the state fish of 11Q!tansas and Iowa, Paul Revere's ~J(avorite rum the slate rum of U•IMassaehusetts, and bocce, an •'i!ta lian bowling game, the state '111.ame of New Jersey :,, 'fhe bulldog s hould be the ''•st at e dog of Geor g ia, one lawmaker says Anothe r in Colorado is propos ing that Blue Gr ama be the state grass A Massachusetts bill would make 1d" Massachusetts," a tune by Ario hGuthrie, the state song 01 ti . A BILL IN NEW JERSEY ••would make th~ knobbed whelk '>l lthe state shell. And two South Carolina senato rs h ave in- troduced a resolutton to make -J,he square dance the state dance Of course. legislation concern- ing taxation and spending oc tupies most state lawmakers' t1 me. but offbeat legis lation adds a bit of comic rehef Colorado's Senate has ap proved a bill des ignating the stegosaurus. a dinosaur, as the st ate fossil Fossils have ap peared on other statehouse floors as we ll Mi ssissippi lawmakers a re cons1dermg a bill to make a prehistoric whale t he s tate fossil T he whale roamed the warm seas that cov ere d Mississippi about 60 billion yea rs ago. and the bones of such a beast were found m Yazoo County IN NEW MEXICO, a 50-pound dinosaur named coelophysis edged ou t a 77 yea r -old lawmaker lo become the state's fi r st official fossil During a light-hearted debate, the oldest Now, 1 YODCan Learn To Coa&rol Yoar Headaches Help ror many peuons 1ufferlA1 from mlaraine, c:Juat.er or lenalon headachea la now PQlslble. The H~dache Treatment Center of Oranae Cowlty orten an lndMduaUy t.aUored Pl'Olr•m providin1 accurate dt11noel1 fOUoW94 by cOJtCtroed care whlcb ma1 '"~Ide biortedbtci lralnlna.t'duc1Uoa. and cafef\11 \lat or OOll·b•blt for10l111, bl1btr •~Inc, anU·h•IMIM'M mlldlcatlon. member oC the Legislature, Rep. William O'Donnell, said he was "honored and overwhelme~" by bis nomination . The dinosaur won anyway. While not necessarily frivolous, some other bills pend- ing in stale legislatures are definitely unus ua I. Fourteen representatives in S o u t h C a r o I i n a a r e .c o · sponsoring a bill to make it il- 1 e g a I lo interfere with a bloodhound "in hot pursuit" or a criminal. South Dako t a lawma kers killed a bill that would " have outlawed pay toilets in all public buildings after learning it would pertain to only one toilet in an airport terminal in Sioux Falls. California Assemblyman Dick Floyd has introduced a bill to re· quire people convicted of drunkeo driving t.o perform 20 hours of community service while wear· ing bright orange T-shirts that say "Drunk Driver Community Service " NOT ONLY WOULD the offen- ders be embarrassed . but they'd also have to pay for the T -shirts. In New York s late, some legislators with long memories want the state to spend $200,000 to study bringing big league baseball back to Brooklyn. The Dodgers fled lo Los Angeles almost 25 years ago. Pundits are calling 1t the "Bring Back Dem Bums" bill. Nevada is considering legisla- tion to make it a crime to wheel grocery carts home. Another bill would he lp ranchers avoid lawsuits from encroaching sub- urbanites who don't like the odor of cow manure. StifCer penalties for cnminals are in the works of many states. ln Oklahoma. two novel Ideas Cor dealing with criminals were s uggested. One would allow rapists to shorten their prison terms by volunteering to be castrated. Another would allow convicted murderers the option of being executed by lethal drug injection, now the prescribed way in Oklahoma, 9r dying the s ame way their victims died .. THE TRADITIONAL "till death to us part" nuptial promise would be revised by a bill being considered in Alaska. Under the proposal, the man and woman sign a piece of paper, detailing how long the marriage will last. If either partner decides not t.o re- new the marriage, it is dissolved automatically Lawmakers in Michigan are considering a bill that would re- quire all official documents re- ferring to state residents to call them "Michiganians." That, of course. bas raised the ire of peo- ple who prefer "Michigander." Michiganlan supporters say Michigander is sexist. A legislative committee in Minnesota has appr~ved a bill pro hi biting coed wrestling teams. Under pressure to allow sports opportunities for girls, one school had a team or both girl and boy wrestlers, but other schools refused to wrestle them. A BILL THAT ·WOULD make it a misdemeanor to harm a police dog or horse never made it out of an Indiana legislative committee. And a measu~ re- quiring car lights lo be on whenever windshield wipers are on d ied on the House calendar. The Hawaii State already has passed a bill requiring all pets to be owned by an adult. Sup- porters say it ls aimed at curb- ing cases of neglect by making an adult legally responsible for the pet. But state Sen. Dennis O'Connor said it flew in tbe face of •'the American tradition of boy owning dog." N-M's new menu in The Zodiac: ~ust one more reason to ~me ,Sunday-shopping witli us. I ' I I '' I I ' "·' . ' ' . I Raped girl, 10, gives birth to son TAMPA, FJa. <AP > -A 21· year-old baby 1ltter bas been sent to priaon fol' ti yean for rapine a pre-teen itrt who wu too f rllhte.oed to tell anyone un- til a doctor ditc<>vered ahe wu about to have a baby. Theodore R. Harrell, convict- ed of sexual battery last month, was sentenced by Hlllsboroush Circuit Judie Harry Lee Coe. The Judce retained the ri&ht to veto parole tor 83 years. The unidentified 1irl, who &ave birth to a healthy 10D Jut July, told the 12-person trial JllrY about beine raped at knllepolnt by Harrell, her older 11.sUz:'• boyfrlen'9 who acted as her ba bysltter. ACCORDING TO testimony, the child wu raped three times in a three-month period by Har- rell. She was 10 at tbe time. For 71h mooth5 the sby little girl didn't know she was pree· nant. Neither did her family, friends or teachers. "That's tbe last thing someone would think, .. said her older brother. "She was on the chubby side. That's why it was 71r!i months before we detected it." It was a Sunday momlne in the fall of 1979 when Harrell, babysitting for her and his own baby daughter, locked the front door. Her older sister had gone to work. "I TRIED TO RUN. He grabbed my a rm at the backdoor. 1 was c r ying. J couldn't scream because he had a knife at my throat," the young girl told Tampa Tribune re- porter Yvonne Shinhoster, who spent weeks getting to know the youngster and told her story in Friday's newspaper. When her father and sister came home that day, she said, she tdld them nothln1. "I wanted to tell her, but 1 was too 1caNCI." She said Karrell had threatened "to 1et me and my •later." Months later. 1be beean hav- inl cramps in phy•ical educa- tion clua. The palna continued and abe waa taken to a doctor. wbo dJqnoeed the pregnancy on Jun• 4, 11'80. The lirl told her Camily. And •be told tb'm why she was scared. She took, and pasted, a poly(raph teat. THE COUKT800M e'lt · perience was traumatic. ••1 don't want to do It a1atn," she said. "I don't like people startni at me." Harrell depied fathering the child. Fred Bucldne, a former assis- tant state attorney ·who pros- ecuted Har~ll. remembers the embarrassment that sometimes brought tears to the girl's eyes. "Can you imagine the weight this 10-year-old had to carry? Can you imagine the weight of the fear . . . the weight of not being able to tell anyone?" he asked. The child's mother, a diabetic, died of heart failure in 1979, when the girl was nine. NOW 1%, THE GIRL has moved from the house she shared with her father and sister and is living in another part of Tampa with an older brother who bu daughters her age A childless aunt and uncle from New York are trying lo adopt the baby. Asked what she considers the best thing that has ever hap- pened to her, she says, "Being born, I guess." The worst? "Go· ing to court. Having a baby. Those are the worst things in my life." DEAD AT 54 -Singer Alice Lon Bowling, the original ''Champagne Lady " on Lawrence Welk's television show has died at the age of 54. High court upholds law on abortions WASHINGTON <APl States m ay outla w abo rti o n s performed outside of hospitals for womeo more than three months pregnant, the U S Supreme Court has ruled By a 6-3 vote Monday, the justices upheld such an Indiana law. The ne west abortion con- troversy to reach the justices first arose in Indiana shortly after the nation's highest court legalized most abortions eight years ago The 1973 dec1s1on, based on a woman's constitutional nght 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 1-0ok :Jnn R~stdurdnt 8~ s-teorant Weds. thruSat11. Hut-Sutt Raltton NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact the DAILY PILOT tor Information regarding the county requhemenu for ualng • Flctltlou• Bualn ... Name. 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'IPt:N 7 OAVS • II arn 10 10 Pll 750-3565 _,A Superb Adventure In Dining 61/<&#N'a tTAltAN CUISINE •Courtesy Boot Slips •Banquet and Private Party •Facilities with Bay View lt31 W•tC-CfDP••J Nn~rc a-dl,c.l8-* • l Of'ang Coatt DAILY Pll'..OT(Tuetday, Aprll 28, 1981 ~uake damage hits $1 ·million . WESTMORLAND (AP> -Demoli· tlon of devastated downtown com- mer cial buildings continued today as residents of this Imperial Vatley farming community cleaned up In the aftermath or a strong earthquake that caused an estimated $1 million dollars damage but no inJuries. Following Sunday's 5.6 Richter scale temblor, nervous city officials who have felt the ground jiggle beneath their feet for days because of "swarms" ot smaller quakes ordered the demolition of 10 commercial buildings damaged beyond repair to prevent further structural collapse. In nearby Brawley one resident said, "The ground just keeps shak- ing. Some people here are really scared." ~ spokesman r·or Callfom ta Institute of Technology In Pasadena, noting that at least 40 quakes above masnltude 3.0 have rattled the area since last Friday evening. A team of Caltech seismologists were examining fissures in the earth to determine which earthquake fault caused the tremor, said Meredith, noting that scientists think "swarms" relieve pressure and pre· vent a major quake, while others believe they precede a big jolt Sunday's jolt damaged more than two-thirds or the 900 homes in Westmorland, a community of 1,600. Five badly damaged houses were condemned and their occupan ts spent the night elsewhere as city or- ricials declared Westmorland a dis· aster area. Mayor Ron Rodriguez said this .,.wt ........ "There have bee n a great number or smaller ones so many tftat we Just can't keep track The seismograph JUSt keeps jiggling and jiggling," said Dennis Meridith. a . week the city would rile for state and federal disaster relier, noting that damages could go higher than the preliminary $1 million figure. A Westmorland grocery story is cleaned up after an earthquake rocked the lmvenal Valley farm toum. Berkeley left defeated BERKELEY CA P> Only tn Berkeley would an electoral sweep by moderate liberal Democrats be branded a "tum to the nght '' But then . this 1s the center of student act1v1sm where Ronald Reagan won JUSl 15 percent of the vote m 1980, while a Com munist Party member running for city council in 1975 received 35 percent. So when four Democr ats run- ning on the All-Berkeley Coali· lion ticket troun ced four Berkeley Citizens Action leftists last week, some called it a con· servative shift · strate61St Harry Weininger#d1s BCA council m embers and agreed: "The reason we won 1s Mayor Gus Newport end with that we were extremely well the 1983 election organized" The leftist push into city The city's pariah Republicans, politics started dunng the cam fearful of c~ntinued leftist gl\lns. pus acu' ism and anti war move swallowed their distaste and vot ments of the 1960s ed for the moderate Democrats Republicans. vastl\ outnum- on the ABC ticket. local political bered in registration. a lmost observers say. Students. long a vanished from local elective of- stronghold of support for the f1 ce The mainstream Berkeley BCA , failed lo turn out at the Democratic Club battled the left polls. ·1 The victory by ABC's James unt1 it \\as stunned by the BCA Sweeney, Gilda Feller, Andrea Vl('tOry of 1979 Washburn and Leo Bac h was a The moderate Democrats. major setback for the B~A . Republicans and other groups \--- Secre tary test due at colle g e The 1981 certified pro ft>ss"ional secretary ex amrnat1on ~ill be ~1ven at Golden West College in Huntington Beach Ma) I Jnd 2. starting Jt 8 30 om A rphcal ions for the 1982 exam are now being accepted Add1t10nal 1n formation 1s available through Joelene Mack. s<>crNarial 1off1ce ad min 1stration instructor at Golden West whose candidates also tend to be say they combined in the All· Democrats, but more liberal Berkeley Coalition to prevent a "There's no question the coun-than those of the ABC. BCA takeover this year. Coke ruling try has turned to the right, and I don't think Berkeley is divorced In 1979, BCA captured three or So the Republicans flocked to SAN FRANCIS C 0 from that atmosphere," said four council seals a nd the the polls, but the leftists stayed I AP> A cocaine dealer Police Review Commission mayor's office. This year. they home. can be charged with Chairman Walter Edwards, one needed only one more council • • Rep u b 11 cans in u n . murder if his customer of the defeated Action can-seat to gain a majority precedented numbers turned dies of an overdose, the didates. Instead, they're on the out," BCA campaign mapager California Su prem e But co a l 1t1 on P q I 1t1 ca I defensive. Tbe terms of all three Rich Schlackman said. Court has ruled ~~~~~~--~~~~~-~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~ vi LONG TERM TO l!I YRS SllORT TER~ TO 5 YRS ~ *LOANS* S 0 r.l r VERY COMPETITIVE RATES ~ ~ O~ HEAL E!-.'TATE 2nd&. 3rd TD~ g:. ~ ~-(714) 851·1840 DAYS --" C .a. \\ EF.KE:'llOS 759.9553 :\IGHTS ~ i 0 RANGE COAST EQUITY FUNDS~ '°'.\11 N SIO 000 TO SI .000.000 S ECl 'RED BY REAL & r.l U se a D a ily Pilot Penny Pinc her Ad to· se ll ite m s und e r $100. 3 I ines for 2 days on- 1 y $1 .50 a day . Sorry, no commercial ads allowed . Charge your Penny Pincher Ad or use your Visa or Mast er Card. 'Dallas' star1im EJav· found deaJ, at home LOS ANGELES (AP> -Veteran actor Jim Davi.a, known to viewers around tbe world as lb• touch old oil baron and indiJputable head or the Ewins clan in the popular CBS series "Dallas," w11 mourned by fe llow cast memt>ers after he dled in hla sleep at the age of 72. His wife of 32 years, Blanche, found him dead Sunday afternoon in their Northrtdse ranch home where the actor had been taking a nap, according to Ruth.Marah, a close friend. Davis' death, coming as friends and work as- sociates were pulling for his recovery from an ab· dom lnal operation , was bound to hit hard amons the actors, described as a "very close-knit cast" by Michael Druxman, publicist for actor Steven Kal)aly. Kanaly plays Ray Krebbs, the ranch foreman and illegitimate son of Davis' chara<'ler, Jock Ewing. "HE WAS A father to all or us," Oruxman quoted Kanaly as saying "He was one of the finest men I ever met," Kanaly also said in a statement. "I always ad mired his courage and his spint " "Losing ham was like losing a real member or our family," said actress Linda Gray tn a state ment rrom her home in northern Los Angeles County. "l really don't know what to say Most or my thoughts will be private ones, but he will be greatly missed." Ms. Gray, who plays Sue Ellen, the wife of the villainous J .R. Ewing, recounted having admired Davis' work for years, and established a close rap port with him from the day they met on the Dallas set, her publicist Richard Grant said "NOT ONL 'V have we lost the man who creat ed the character of Jock Ewing, bul I've also lost one of my dearest and closest friends." said Leonard Katzman. producer of the number-one rated "Dallas ·· Lorimar Productions spokesman Tom Bishop said Davis had been on the job filming "Dallas" until late last month when he under~ent surgery for a perforated ulcer. "We completed production for the season Apnl 9, so he really only missed one episode," Bis hop said That episode 1s scheduled for broadcast Friday But Grant said the cast had been not1f1cd about a "'eek ago that Uav1s· cond1t1on after the surger)' was not good ACTOR LARR\' Hagman, ~ho plays J ock's son. J R . left for a vacation tn Europe at the end of last \\-eek and could not be reached for com ment A memonal service was scheduled for 1 p m Friday al Encino Community Church in the Los Angeles suburb of Tarzan a . In addition to his wife. Davis is survived by his mother and two sisters The Davises had only one child, Tara. a teen-ager who died in an automobile crash several years ago. The 6-foot-3-inch Davis bad appeared tn more than 150 films and 300 television shows by the time he look the role of the silver-haired. gravel-voiced Jock Ewing. He analyzed his best-known role in a I 979 interview "I think Jock had his day." he said DEADAT72 Jim Daw Gun-bomb barrage set 3 days CAMP PENDLETON <AP > Marine :·e t fight e r pla n es d artillery will take rt in three days of live fire trammg in both day and night conditions tfli• week A rt1 llery fire and bombing runs will becin at 11 a .m. each day, s tartmg Tuesday. and \\-ill last until 9 pm., a spokesman said The exercise is fo . tended to increase coordination between air and ground support fire Taking part will be Jets from the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing at El Toro and artillery from the 1 I th Marine Regiment, 1s t Division based at Camp Pendleton. R e primand? FRESNO <APl -The Fresno County district attorney intends to reprimand some dep· uttes in his office for Ig- noring policies on traffic citations WHEN YOU HAVE SOMEONE SPECIAL IN MIND ... Lavish her with our exclusive ribbon rnlnk vest . Feather- light elegance for all her special occasions. 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SU llO(rS 'MtsUrn[ 'NEWPORT BEACH tt;i.t~ officials· back rail travel inclj I Pretldent Re••an '1 budset u Ill eutten have proposed removin& three v W · $240 m.llllon, almost one-third, lf wo IW It.a· trom the ~ million budget taons in Viejo an~ aougbt by Amtrak to maintain Laguna Hilla, aJon1 .other ,qationwide passenger rail opera-stops in San Diego Couniy. tions in the coming year. In recommendin1 fUnd· Amtrak officials say that in1, Ms. Gianturco sail ~ c=ould mean cutting off almost all ridership throughout the 1a: fassenger rail services in all but creased 21 percent l ear1 he northeastern corridor while intra-state a • av~ between Washintton, D.C. and dropped 5.5 percent auto .Boston. < trave1 showed only a 2 percent in- But Cal.U ._.,...,.._.!41;...~Pl'13'11l•ued U.uaual5 Ing a pessi~tic view of e percen rate. future of railroading in the state. Since the Los Angeles-San Last week the California Dieao tra1ii run ia among the Transportaticm Commission gave bu1iest in the west, carrytna tta blessing td a recommendation about 1.3 million paaseneen a lrom Caltraqs Director Adriana year, state officials apparently Gianturco that $4.4 million be set believe lt will survive any cuta in uide for a trio of rail-bus sta-the Amtrak budget. tions in Oranfe County. Also backing adequate Am· The stations would serve the trak funding is a resoluUoo in the busy Los An~eJes-San Diego Am-state Legislature cltina the trak nm and would be located in dramatic increase in train An ah e i m , Sant a An a and ridership in California and the Oceanside. need for additional train service, A new f 41cility in Anaheim and Urging Congress to maintain would be built at a cost of about and support a national passenger $1 million and existing stations at railroad system. Santa Ana and Oceanside would If the new administration and be complete~ upgraded to ac-Congress are genuinely interest· commodate trains, long distance ed in promoting public transit as buses and county and local buses, an energy-conserving medure. along with parking for autos and this is no time to pull the tracks taxis. out from l.Ulder Amtrak. Amtrak cites demand Meanwhile Amtrak President. Alan S. Boyd has come up with some statistics t.o support the argum e nt for ad~quate passenger rail funding. For ex- ample: -In the month of March. typically a low ridership month. more than 6,000 persons had to Jtland on Amtrak trains because 1t was not poSsible to satisfy the demand for seats. 1 -AB of April l , all coach ~nd/or sleeping accommada· ;uons had been completely sold out -on 645 trains operating between April and September, most of them outside the northeast cor- ridor. -On the same date, 13,500 persons had placed their names on waiting lists at Amtrak res· ~rvation centers seeking space if available. -Last August, more than 400,000 persons were denied space on Amtrak's Chicago-Los Angeles, Chicago-San Francisco and Los Angeles-Seattle routes because they were sold out. Last July 340,000 would-be train riders were unable to obtain accom- modations on the same nms. -Amtrak's five reservation centers handled a record 22 million calls in fiscal 1980 and reservation offices must be modernized to handle the volume of calls. Given statistics like this, it may be quite difficult for Congress to accept the ad· ministration's contention that the demand for passenger rail travel no longer exists. Amtrak jokes to the contrary, there's apparently no shortage of customers. Selling job overdone? Advertising, publicity and year is spent by government public relations have come to agencies on producing.films and play a major role in the audio-visualaids. ' American economy. They serve a No doubt this is befpful to purpose, introducing new prod· m aiiy citizens. But today ucts and new ideas and enabling libraries, free classes and industry and business to keep in booklets published by private touch with the community. .,..~-~ineu.-are readib' av..ailable to But President Reagan's -VI· most consumers. fice of Manag.ement and_ Budget The OMB rightly asks ll the ls on target m concluding that federal government has any busi· government does not need . to ness becoming so deeply involvel spend so much money on selling in all this public relatiom ac· itself to the public. tivity Each year the Government · . Printing Office chums out hun-President Reagan now has dreds of thousands of free o~dered a freeze on the produc- booklets advising consumers on taon . of .all new g.overnment everything from organic garden-pubhcallons a~d films. Each tng and making dried flower ar-a~ency has until J':11Y 15 ~ sub- range men ts to preventing mil pl~ for .cutting this self· automotive rust and canning promotion. fruits and vegetables. It's not a bad idea. Uke all ' The Defense Department governmental activities, it will alone publishes 645 different only continue to grow until pamphlets and has a large film someone steps in with the pruning library. More than SlOO million a shears. • • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the D•llY Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of thetr authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. 8ox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7U) '42-4321. iLM. Boyd /History of a road A crew sometime back dua a bole , ln a Milwaukee street. On top were 1everal inches of uphaJt from re· aurlaclnta of modern times. Next , was a thJclr sheet of coacrete from a 1928 road. Beneath tbat wu a-thiok· packed stretch of brlckt from a 1909 'road. Under that wu an eta.bt.f.nch layer ol cedar block• from an Ul95 I road. And be~ that was a Sincb bed of •ravel from an i• road. 'PUt's bow lt la. Even tbe pertod at µie end ol U'1i sentence wu Inherit· ORANGE COAST DlilJ Pllbt1 ed. We walk in t.he waya ol our ancestors mostly without r..tbtn1 how deep their work. To strike the a.U. aboard sblp l~I •so meant to atop all the actioa. lt'a frotn this that the labor mov•ment 1ot the expnga\on to "•trike.'' # lt'a customary In Japan for ~ telephc,.,. caller, not the party who pick• up tho rec:etfff,Ao say hello nnt. TIUM'Ntl P. Haley Thomes Keevil Editor .. rtNlr• Kr.1*9' Edttonal P• EdtW ' -- Living standard dips slowly DETROIT -Recently the papers here ,carried a story saying that Farmer Jack, Michigan's largest supermarket chain, had asked its union t.o give back the rights to an upcomlng pay raise due under a contract which has another year to run. The second and third large&t grocery chains in the state had already petitioned their unions for a similar concession. Business is bad. Naturatly Michigan, with its de- pendence on a half-demolished car in· dustry, is in worse shape than most places. Throughout all of the industrial Midwest and Northeast, however, we are seeing unions and their workers be· ing pushed into the Epoch of the Give- Back. the voguish euphemism for a pay cut WHEN THE CUTS are taken by the employees of nationally advertised brands Like Firestone Tire and Braniff Airlines some attention is paid to the event. Every lndlcallon, though, ts that the same thing is happening among the lesser·known Farmer Jacks in ever widening economic and geoeraphic circles. Everybody is cutting back. They 're even closine down oil refineries because capacity ls In excess of foreseeable customer demand. This is not unaduJt.eratedJy bad news. In fact. the people who are ta1ting cuts or at least being forced to forego raises may find things a mlte better than they now fear. This frantic management ef- fort in so many companies to cut or hold down wages and salariea is owing less lo capitalistic greed than a recoanition ll is getting_ very tougb to pass on rises in th~ cost or goods to the rinal purcftaser. Consumers have become ex· tr~ely 'price conscious and are refus· ing to buy if it means they have to pay more. In short, the signs are pointing to a hefty drop in the ~flalion rate Stiffen- ing customer resistance to higher prices, the gentle fall in interest rates as well as employer pressure for give· ,,..., • 1 ... f, -VDl_H_Df-fM-111--~z, backs betoken an end to double·dlgit in- rl alion in the next few months. Thus the pay cuts may be less horrific than they would be if inflation were to continue at the present rate., NEVERTHELESS, with inflation or without it, the gradual decline in most people's standard of living which began in the early '70s will continue Call it working harder to stay even or call it the pauperization of the employed, the process baa been ·going on long enough now so that reporters are beginning to interview people on the subJect. Iver Peterson of tbe New Y.or.k Times recent- ly got t.bJs quote from the president of a United Rubber Workers local in Indiana: "There's a move oo to lower the standard of living of the working people . . I can't imagine that the working class of people will tolerate it much longer. We're easily excitable; we could turn rebellious overnieht." Blue-eollar rebellion is not a high probability bet. Even in the Great Depression it took American industrial workers years of wage cuts and un- employment before they got riled up and even then it was moderate rilin& up. focused at conspicuously mean and nasty corporations. not at the structure of American ~lit1cal economy. The lesson of the 1930s wasn't that our blue- collar workers were dangerous when pushed but that they were surprisingly docile and disinterested in the re· volutionary mating calls of the antl- cap1talist left. THE OCCASIONAl. article about what the natives in lhi,Steel mtlls will do 1( they get their warrs cut too far ls more a reflection of wha1 the wealthy 10 percent fear than what workers intend. Yet tbe past is an uncertain guide, for our America is different from the one that saw its standard of livmg drop so sharply half a century ago Ours is not a bump but a dnft off from prosperity like the slow awaken- ing from a golden dream. People have been slow to realize the extent or tbe de· tenoration of their poslUon and evC!I'\ yt!t think or it as a temporary reversal. not an historic change in the nation's life and prospect. ln the Depression the most docile of the docile were the unemployed wrute- colJar workers -the bookkeepere artd the secretaries who were relative4f few in number. Now we have millioos lh "the new class," as the cadres of cdl- lege graduates have been called, people who have always expected life to b¥ good as a matter of right conferred on them with their diplomas. As the give-back era stretches on into the ·aos and these people find out they are in the same boat as the checkout clerks and the baggers at Farmer Jack. there's no knowing in what directiorts our politics wiU go. 'Home concerns' sometimes far away To the Editor: Your April 15 editorial, "Home Con- cerns First," regardln1 my two tripe to W asblo&lon, D. C . was troubling became lt failed to appreciate the full· range of responsibilities placed on a local elected oUi~ial. • Yes, borllie aotlcem1 do eo a,d each day I •ttetnpt to maxi m efforts on bebaU of Ql)' c~\O.ta in Orange County. Obvlowily, the rt- detant amount of thla tlrne ia Ia Orange County. However, many of the policy and tax allocation decialoos .. f-• • fecting my constituents are not made tn Santa Ana but in Sacramento and Washington FORTY PERCENT of thia year's county budget was funded by the federal and state governments. Aside from the importance of these funds to Orange County ror social programs, highway construction and other programs. federal and state regulatloos have a direct impact on Oranee Co1.mty. Two examples are tbe EPA cutoff in sanita- tion and highway project funda, and the FAA'• desire to open up John Wayne Airport to as many commercial jet flight.a u the macket wlll boar. There ate times when die influence of an elected 0Mch1t It of grt,at impact . Your editorial seem4;d to acknowled1e Ulla in Ila~ "travel to W~~ .•. may evett k etpfUI ln. !niltlne where he can lobby for leghlaU0n that would benef\t Ute county.·' · Because Of ab pa.It aaaoclatlon with President ae;can and bis lltlf ... well a1 slx yean experiellc• tn. the at•te As- 1embly1.1 _~~ to enjoy ace in the White HOUN and SacraDtento. 1'lm lo turn .,rov14" >Qll1At'tunltlet to b Ip ex· pedite matte11 of concern to our Oran1e County community. Orange ~unty ba1 probletm tbat cry out fOf 1oh&ion. It la my duty to 1elae every oppottuntty to mulmtze our et· feeUveoua and focua attention on our cone.rm. To do le11 would tlfl nealeet· tnf tbeM ura~t home concuna. BRUCE NESTA.ND!: Supe"bor, Tblrd Olatrict. City of Irvine. One almost hu to dab the tea.rs from one'• e1.es aa we read about the ''unfortunate" incident which occurred to Mr. Anthony. What about the unfortunate "inci· dent" which occurred to M.ra. Anthony? She ,.... eg -bea._.. and shot Jf t " • her scalp. It was only because Mr. Anthony was a poor shot that she was not killed by this man who the news media la now depicting as a saint. ONE OF the articles stated that an in· terview with Mrs. Anthony bu not been allowed because it might influence pros· pective jutors in an Impending trial. Why then are interviews with Mr. An· thony okay? We have the feeling that Art Anthon)! is (Oin( to come out of thi11 thing smelling like a rose. What wlll the verdict be? His alibi will be the streaa of the weighty decisions and demands up- on the time of a man ln public omce. It would appear that an individuaJ who saw combat u a rifle platoon leader as well as a fl&hter pilot could handle tbe heavy pressures o( public office ln a ci· ty lhe aize of Irvine. We further believe that the new a media la doln1 a 1reat lnjustlce by de· pictin1 this man as a 1ood and 1entle person. Good and 1entle people do no& beat up their wtvea and aboot at them wltb a 45 cal. p&tol I MR. & MRS. G.E. DAVIS To the Editor: . l learned ol ~ recent inclcM>t lnvolv- tns Irvine Mayor Antholly While on a re- cent bwlneu trip to San Mateo. A\ tbe llme J wu .. ddeaed bot upaq tetumlll1 became ·~•ect at U.e aewaJ)lper at- leaaUon oF~mlP Md deb1 lD atreat and proHcu&lce by Chief Peart. Art I haft noa tor 1DIQ1 yea.n. I b.an ~Wm but we have rare.l)o WHILE YOUNG vultures Joolcini to make names for themselves are aakllij "tough"questiom abouttbelackofpreti releases, lack of swat team style ids· mediate arrest, and soon, I can only aak: 1. Don't we want a police departmetlt composed o( people who can be rrtendi and nei&hbors first? · 2. Don't we want a police chief whb would not stoop to dragging our namil and reputaUons through the mud for thf sake of political gain or press appeue· ment? 3. Don't we want a police chief wbd ·does not overreact and lose good jucfi• ment in a crial.i 1ltuatlo11? Ultimately, the real te.st or Chl-t Peart's actiona will be: l. Did the timin1 of bi• •ctlo~ minlmiu the daneer to Art and otbent 2. Waa the law enforced? 3. Did hla action and the action f>t others assist those wttb problema ln 1el· Una help? To an extent, this aeems t.o be "~ year of tM jackal." Do not be fooled ! dl1coura1ed by thla amall but voe croup. I feel that I apeak for many my Mends and nei1b6ora as well u fOI' myHlf. ROBERT J. WEST Former Ootmcllmab.1 City of Irvine I i ' .; , 20 rl\lfA CIGAR[ ITfS · ... ,,,.. ... .;,., .... -··,~· LOW TAR CAMEL QUALITY LOW TAR CAMEL Q UALITY I / .. / / I • ' • • LOW TAR CAM EL.QUALITY. 20 CIGARETTES ( '. .. ~I I { 1\ ~ J()2 tab. 1oh J~ ~sH qfS J J9d 08 1 ~ni I Jul .1T 2J1 011 .w i26 ·011 I ~ud G"IJ n A •'.)() O~I 1i 1&8 '>ti 10') ·ud ·)fh r.r.1 .I/\ I()"-' 1 L cq nc ' n& .JJJJ' nq qA, )rU on 9~ no '19' :H uq lq ;iA uq ')U >m IOJ 'lil ai o~ tq~ ?.Ji lq 1b od V9 1ru 61 ua nl,J • 1qO ,,q .1>9 t~~ I -, ! ' I , I I I • , PVBUC NOTICB PUBLIC NOTICE ---... CTITI~ 8UllN8N .. AMaSTAUMaMT Tiie i.iio..1119 ~-er• H lflt 1>1a1ne .... : LUCKY ONE, 1'7S2 -Arthur •hrll., Suite no, lrwlne, C.lllornla t211S lruce e. Noft, 1f 7SZ MKArtllUf' •1•11., s..1i. no, 1rwlM, C.tlfOfnla t21U Om« W. l-.. tf1S1 AMcArtll•lf •1w11., lull• HO, lnllne, C.lll°"'la fJ71S Tllll IM.laliwu II C.-0\Kl..S bY e ......... _....,..,.... 9'\0CeLHoa Tiii• --1 w• 111911 •Ith the C11ut1IY Clerti ol Or91t99 C-ty on Aprll I0, 1•1 .. , .... "UOlllhecl Or .... Coast Dally Pll«, ~ U ,tt,a,MayS,1 .. 1 l~I PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINllU NAM• STATUUNT T II• 1011-1n9 pertot11 •r• doh•9 bul lMHAI RAPIO GRAPHICS. IOl1 Raven- crt11, S«tta Ana, California t170S S.rn W. Vujnov, 127S2 Woodlewn, Tualln, Calllornle nito PtJBUC NOTICI PUBLIC NOTICE Nl19MI "CT'ITICIUI IUllNHS NAM• ITAT•M•NT The IOll-1"9 .,.....,,., ere doln9 butJnau ••· $0UTH COAST STATIOHERS COM PANV, J5'0 c.ci111ac Aven .... COii• ........ c.llfornl• ••• S & C Offl<• Prod ucts Inc , • c..i 1tornle corporeliof\ u'° C.Olllec Avonue. C-ta Me .. , C.111.,..nle ••• Thi• -....... (oncluc9d by • tO< -•!loft. S&COltlce"'-t',ln< "-!er O Stoen. Socr•arv Tiiis 1-..-.t .... llleel wltll ,,,. OBITUARIES PtJBUC NOTIC8 "'1'1TIOUI MlllMU. .._ITAHMCNT Tiie letlowl119 ,.,_,, •ro .. lftf .... M'I ... L ' J TllAIL•ll IAL•I 4 •••vice, tOSt s. ..-.......,•rf. a.ite '-"' Cellfor..._ ,_.. , L~ ~ 1!111\, 1141151 TllMll Circle, l'-ttln Velley, Celllern1• ttf.. • JllM CM-l!lli._ lltsl T11..i Clrclt, l'-t•ln v.11..,, Celll~11lll m• Tllh bu•lneu 11 ,_ut led by • ltf'Of el Plll'1Mf.,.... JMNC 1!1111 11111 -..-1 •u lllod with Ille C.Wlll~ Cl.,k 01 Or.,. .. County on ""'II a, ltll "'"'" P11bllaned Or.,._ Coa11 Oally Piiot, .,.11 1, u. 21, 21, "" ,.,..,, PUBLIC NOTICE ----.. NOTI ca 01' $AL• • Notice I• her•blt VIV.rt purtuent .. aoctlon1 J071 -JOT? ot the (.lvlt Coot ol Ille Slele el Ca llfOrnla 1 ... ""-det1l91\ff, HARIOR TOWING wlM Mii Al P<IDl lC e.otllan, et ... W. ITt• St , Coote Mew, CA ttttJ. el 11 • "' on Tllurldey uw 1111 def ot Me.,, tt•~ lhe loll-lne dOICtl--1Y, • wll lflO c11e wrol•I rno lor no IX .. SA•I .... Llun• No 11'XZW CA 1 t10 c 11ewro1e1 moto r "o 11( .. 1',•t .. t.le lie..,. No "ll(ZW CA h id .... is for 1,,. --· of .. ua lylnv lien ol uw -•lgned ro.. un .,.,d !Owing -ttorava <h«et• 1n u.. etn<MHll of \1,000.ot toQethe< with cosll of adve~l""9 end • ._. .. , of u le Oeted "'" t1th dey ol APfll, ttll Kand«e J Gall '°"'11y Cl•rtt of or ... go County °" Puou.-Or-C:.0.•I 0.1ly Ptlol, 1'1 .. W Aprll 21, t•t APf"ll 11. l•t PYllll.-0rAn9" (AMtl O•llY Piiot, ""'°":II, May S, 12, It,'"' lttJ II PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUJ IUllNll'.SI NAME STATU~&NT HIGH RISE RIDE -Louisiana State Trooper Arnett Heintz is lowered on a stretcher from the top of the SO-story One Shell Square office building in New Orleans during a ""wire-... high-rise rescue rehearsal by the state police tactical un- it. Heintz' ride to safety from 726 feet took one minute and 25 seconds. Cll•rl•• W C-, IOll Ravencrut, Santa An.e, Callfornl• t210S T 1111 bu11iwu 11 t.onductad by • venera1~. O..r lff W. Cooll Thl1 •I.element wn llled with the Counly Clerk ol Oreft99 County on Aptll I0, 1•1 NS7M7' FICTITIOUI IUSIN&U MAMI STATllMetn Tho IOll-1"9 IM'""'' are 0011'\9 t>ll MU ti• NEWPORT PACIFIC INVESTORS, L TO HV, ,,, ... Skr Par .. Clr<lt. 5'111• 1tS, lt~tne, CA '211S Newport lrwnlcw> V, I 714' ~ky Per' Circle, S..11.1 HS, lrvtne CA 921 IS TI>• followlno per'°"' ••• do1nO tHHln•n •• T 'NT SILK$CREENEAS, 1 .. 11 No ¥"•• •venue. lr..,lne, C•IUorn1• ""' C•••v _11,.,... T_,, ... 1101 w .. 1 Stevens, • UI, Sant• An•. C•ltlornl• '2101 Marines finish 100-niile hike DEATHS ELSEWHERE D ET R O I T 1AP1 EUzabeth Hughes Goss~tt. 73, the last sun I\ ing t•h1ld PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •LISINESS MAMIE STATEMENT Tiie lollowln9 per...,,• •r• doln9 bu\lne1'•' THE PARTS FINDER, ls.II Las Luna1, WHlmlntter. C.litOf'rw• t*l Harri-. ,,.....,'°'' S.rvl<H . Inc., • Calllornle cor-•tlon. 15'41 L.aa luna1, Westm<nst.,, ~lllO<nl• n.13 Tllll l>UMnou ti UMfduclod bf e CO< Pofalton CAMP PENDLETON (API -A Marine bat- t alion or S30 o fficers and men completed a five-da y 100-mile tra ining hike across hills. highways and deserts from the Salton Sea m full battle pack, a spokesman said H•rr1MI'\ lnventot't ServK:n , J ames W Harri•.., of the lat e l S C:h11.'f I •nc Justicl' Charles E' ;m s lluJ?hes and foundl'r of thl' ThlS st.111..-1 wH llled lll'lth the Counlr Cl•rk ol Oren~ Covnly on Aprtt l 1te1 Led by battlton commander Lt. Col. J ay V Sullivan, the blist er footed Mannes reached the gates at Camp Pe ndleton where the lst Manne Division band s truck up "The Marines Hymn." l'tlarine spokesman Lance Cpl Tom Nowakczyk said one soldier dropped out of the gruelling, hot and dusty trek through 80-degr ee desert te mperatures . Shortly after arriving at the ir base, the men of the 3rd Batta lion, 5th Regiment and Isl Marine Divis ion trooped to the 11 a rea parade field, the size o f fo ur footba ll fields, passing in re view before 1st Divis ion comma nde r MaJ. Gen . James C Day After a revie w pass before 5th Regime nt com - mander Col J ohn I Hopkins. the ba ttalion r eached its base wher e it was m et by families and com - mended by Sullivan for " a magnificent jo b." L S Supn•m1.· Court 111 torn·JI Soc-wt\ dtl'd S:itur dJ\ PARADbE V1\Ll.EY Ari1 •AP Bl'rnard Sako"'lt1, i4 rha1rman of Sako"1lz lnl' a foshwn ston· ehOJIO d1l•d 1-'ndJ\ :'\\'ACK !': y ~A I' I t:d" ard "Eddie" Sautt•r, 66. com 11osl'r arr;1ng\•r fur Bf'n n) G1todmJn .ind olht'r big b.ind leadt'r.. In the 1930s an<I J940s ;ind lall'rfur Hro.icl" .iy sho"s dwd Tue!\da\ of 3 hl'Jrl .itl.il'k lWASHINGTO'\ (i\P1 "tff'Mt Put>h"'9d Orengo cout D•llr Piiot. Aprll 7 U. 11, 29. ltll 162 .... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICllTIOUS IUilMESS NAME STATEMENT Th• toll-lnt per'°" " dol1>9 Du\I· "'-'' ., SHEWARD &. SONS a. SONS. Newporl Fabric. Hardware Al soc tales, Culllco, 222 11\t SlrH I , Htwport lleiKll Celllornl• tMJ h•rv A Sheward, 2'l& 8aysnoro. Nawporl Beach, C:.lllor,,I• n .. 3 T n1t """""'s I• conduc led by en '" CllYl<lue l f•rrv A Stww•rd Tiiis 11.iement w•• Ill.., w1t11 the Counlr Cltrll of OrM9 CO<lntr on Aprol 11 ''" .. , .. ~ Publ\Sllocl Or....,. Co .. t D•llr P iiot, AP• 21.a.Mers. 12 '"', 1111.e1 PUBLIC NOTICE The marching Ma rines burst into cheers after Sullivan announced four-day passes to soldiers rank- ing from pnvate through sergeant a nd three -day passe s to o fficer a nd st aff non-comm1ss10ned of fic ers ,\{is Bohlen. 68. "'d"" of .1mbaS!tador ChJrlt•s E I Boh ll•n died of ranc·t·r in hl•r home Wl'<lnt•sda' I M·m• DEA TH NOTICES CON"ELL 0 RR I N WI I.SON l'O~ !\ELL. pas11sed ;i"a' on i\ pri I 23. 19(11 JI home in Laguna lltlls. Ca Ill' al tended l'CLA and Lo) ola Law Sc hool lf e "as e mployed a l Ge n eral Dynamics tn Pomona, Ca He is survived by his loving wife Jane <Kenn1cott1 Con· nell and d.au ghter Michael Connell Perkins. son in law Robert M P e r kin s a nd grandchildre n. Jason and Prentice Perkins, brothers R P Connell of Oakland. Ca and Or J Robert Connell of Sheridan. Wyom ing Private services will be held at sea for lhe fam1I} al Newport Bearh. Ca In heu of flo" ers donations would be a p prec1at ed lo lhe Orange Counl} Founding Chapter· National Kidney Foundation of Southern Cahrom1a P 0 Box 8411. Newport Beach Ca 92660 FISHER DOROTllY S F ISHE R. resident or Coron11 del Mar. Ca Passed a"ay on April 25. 1981 Survived b\ son and UL n IHIGllOM SMITH & TUTHILL WHTCUff CH.VIL 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-9371 NICI •OTHHS SMfTHS' MOITUAIY 627 Main SI HunhnQlon Btt11ch 536-8539 ,,•·· I l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS DETR . N.lMf n ATEMl.Nl OIT 1AP1 Mtn r11e '°''-'"' iwnon,. dOl"'il """ nle Sims MrGhf'e, 711 "ho """ •• <lauj!hler in la" Fre<'m<in W ;.ind Ha1el \\ Fisher of C:oron.i del ~ar . Ca riled a la"SUll rn lht• 1940s VENDI NG P ROGRESS co .• 11•1 that pa\ed the \\ii~ for inll• ~=yWey,Unltl Anatteirn,Celllornla gralcd hou.StnR d1l'd Thu re; w.111arn E long, Jll2 Bell• RI"•' day ~1r7•;s•· Ha<•encM He'911h , ca11lor,.1e d a u g h t e r 1 n I a " :\1 r s Eleanor F isher of Palm 0 1.'sen. Ca . 7 J?randrhildren und 5 great grandchildren Private family services will be held on Wednl'sday. Apnl 29. 1981 a l the P acifi c· View Memorial Park. In lieu of flowl'rs the fa mily re- quests memon al conlribu· lions be made lo the Hoag Me mon al Hospital Canrer Research Fund Ento m b· ment Pacific Vie" Memon al P ar k . P ac ific View Mortuary, Ne"port Beach. Ca directors NORWALK Conn IAPl Reubf'n Maur), Ill. P u l1Lzer Prize l4-10n1ng formrr c h11d ed1t oria I writer of the New York Dal ly News from 1926 lO 1972. died here Thursday Mickey's • l.Dlage on clock to we KESLELHl'TH CLEMSON. S .C <API G l. A D Y S E L I 1· II K ESLELHL'TH. resident or . o~a po tee ar~ ca · Huntington Beach Ca 1n g I t 'th e Mi c k ey f'dSSl'd a"a~ on Apnl 23 M ouse ca p e.r ·• bu,t 1981 She 1s sur\ hed b\ her authorities still d o n l son Jack M Jentzsch of kn ow who turned t he Huntington Beach. Ca. a nd T illman Hall clocktow er Wilham Gerald Jentzsch of a l Cle m son Unive rs ity Carpentersville llhnots and into a giant watch bear· 9 grandchildren. and 2 th · r W Jt gr1>at grandchildren. ;,ilso a in.g ~ image O a sister E\l~hn Kottman ol Disney s famed rod~nt. Burban k ·Ca Fun e r al Pranks te rs put painted serv1tes "ere t•onducted on ca rdbo ard b ea r In g Sund a\. April 26. 1981 at Mickey's image on each Pier ce Brothers gm1ths' side of the re d bric k Chariel with Rev Herold tower. T h e portraits Ha mbley officiating . Inter· were t a k e n down by m e nt at Good S he phe rd campus employees. Cemetery Pierce Brothers I r f · · I Smiths' Mortuary directors n an u n o 1 c 1. a 536·6539. state m e nt, unlve rstty REED s P o k e s m a n R o s s FREEMANA.REED.res-C ornwall said. "We ident or Newport Beach . th i nk c ampus p o lice Ca Passed away on April h ave a s uspec t . D 25, 1981 Bo rn in Los Duck ." An geles. Ca. on April 24. Un iversity police in· 1898 Beloved husband of s is t that they are still Dorothy S. and Cathe r or f Tiiis Du\lneu 11 (onctucled by.,. In· dlwldual Wllllatn E LDn(I r1111 11t1e..-1 was llled with the Cot.1!\ly Cl•tk 01 Orenve Counly on Aprll 9, ltll 1'1"914 PuDllSllocl Or-Coe•I O•llr Piiot, Aor u . 11, ll, Mays.,,., 11 ... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS auStNISS NAMI STAffMllNT Tiie lollowl119 .,.,...,. 11 dOln9 busl· ....... MACK&. ME ENTERPRISES, 71l Marouarlt• "-· Coron.e del Mar, Cal "°'"'•"'25 Al"'°" M. Orr, 71J Mar9uerlte "··-· car-dial -.. c..11•-· mu Tiiis ---I• -acs by *' In. lll•kluel. A~M.On T~t ............ -lllod wltll tr.. Coun1., ~ OI Or ..... c:.ouM'r °" April 10, 1"1 .. ICTITIOUI aUSINllSS NAMI! STAYIEMIENT Tiie IOll-11'\Q pttrson Is OOW19 l)uJ4- neu es RO AD s ENO, 1n o H•wporl 8oulewerd, Cllmi. ..,..w, C.Hlornle. 0 Foley W iiton , Jt40 Charlem-one, LOftQ Beac:h, C.lllornla. This bull""' Is tonclu< lted bf ., In· dMdual D,Foloy W11""1 Thll .iat-1 WH llled with tlle County Clerk of Orenve Counlr on 4Prll a,'"' '1SM411 P11bllthed Or-Coast D•lly Piiot, Aprll 7, ••• 21, 21, "" t .... I PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICTlllOUS IUllN•U NAMa 11' ATllM•NT TM totlolttltfte ...,_ II delftt Ml· ........ THIE ~E OOCTOll, 42.t. hit 1111> Sltoet, to.ta Mete, Callfornl• f24V, PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSIMISS NAMll STATEMENT .. 1Me7t Publl"*I O.anvo CoH I 0.lly Pllol, ~pr 14. JI, :ze, Mays, ltll 11M-el PUBLIC NOTICE TM• business h conduCleO Oy • llrnltea P#'lnerjllop Newpof't ln ... l lOf ~\I Oaru f e1rorot11er Gone<•I Portner Joey Ar>n• Thorn... 1101 Wul St1v1n• o UI 5.enta AN , C..1tlorn1• '1701 l hit bUilM U " conducted by ..,, In e11.1aue111'u>Oan<I &. w11e1 Cr••O M T_,,., ~=:~OllOwlng per ...... •r• OOl"9 Dull l'ICTITIOUI .-Usi"Nau~ Tiii• llA........,,I wH ltled wllll 1"- Counly Cler' ol Oren91 C.Ountr on Aorll 22 1"1 rn" il•t........,,1 w•.s flied with rtt• Cot.1nly Cl•r~ ol Oren~ counly on APrtl J. 1'1111 THE CARGO SHOP ISHA NAMllSTATIElltl•HT w 1nt•r vr .. n Pl•<• Cotl• Mesa, Th• 1011-1no _....., 11 Cloin9 Dull· Calllornla tU» "-"•I l ee R T11omp1on ISHA YELLOW PAGES REFERENCE Wlnler9ru n Place Coste Mt .. , MAP CO, 111 W 11th Slrwt, Sutte JS, C•llforn1am • Cost•~.Calltor1tl•n.JJ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Tllomu !' Tllompto" ISStA Grt'iiD"Y Jamel C.Sllern.,, WDI w 1 .. 1er9reen Piece, Co•I• Mn a, c11r1111ne 0.1we, Wtti111er C.lllornl• SU .. llll<>I' COURT 01" CALIFOllNIA COUNTY 01" ORANGE Or-~y~C-1 C•lllo•n••'2tJI to60S l'ICTITtOUS IUSINISS NAMI! STATl!MENT Tll1J busoneu " conaucte<I Dr • Thi• .,.,..._1 I> <-..Cle<! Dy en 1n T"-IOllow1119 OOP<""1 I• OOlnO OuM , .. ClYk ~ Onve, Wttl genera l i»rtnenlllp dl•ldu•I r-. F T_,,p.on Grev ~11.,,_ MU e\ 1 S...U ...... C.•ltwMa tVll AL OEN INTERNATIONAL J0t MARRIAGE OF Mer9.,.<11e A...,.. C....ona 0.1 ..,.., j PET 111 O N ER S v MI N u u or lM R T-..o'°" Thi• st.1-1 w• 111ec1 with ttw Tit" ll•lemenl wu 111...i wllh Ille Counly Cltrk ot Oren~ County on Coun1rC1er11o10r-CounlyonAor11 Aprll10, "" f'lS- C.lllor"'• nus PATOOMBAL PRISCILLA A LOE NI RE'!>PONDE:NT '>•ll•c•u.o McMVRfRY. ~ _,Q ... rlle Avenue PATOOMBAL Corona 0.1-•, C.lllorrw••ll.li SUMMOHS Cl"AMILY 1..AW) 11, ltel 1'1.U.U Publlsned <>enve C:0.11 Delly P11ot, PuDllshed 0r""9' Coesl Oetlj Piiot. I Apr 14, JI.,. Mil• s '"' '1l6-41 AP• lt 2t Mar S 11, 1 .. 1 IUH I Tllh butlneu II condu(led Dr • CASE NUMIEll DI~ "'"".., --1ne"ntp I NOTICE• PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS aUSIMlU NAME STATllMl.NT Tiie IOllOWln'il per-. 11 OOln9 Du•I M .H •i U I AME RICAH M UFFLER SE R VICE, l b ) GOOO GUYS MUFFLER Sl!RlllCE. ltSt HerDor al•CI , Cos It Me .. , Celllornte t»J7 Cecll C Slept1en1, S Wllll•wood W•Y, lr•lna,Ca lllor1W•f171S Tiiis bu\IMU "Condueltd Of en In dlvl<lu•I C C. Sl<tDIWnt Tlllt Ital-I WH llled Wllll 1he County CteB o1 Or-Counly on April 11, '"' '1Ml4t PuDll1ned 0r9"91 ,.,.,, D•llf Piiot Apr 11.11 M.tr> 11 "" 1•1 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE ... CTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI! nATElillNT T"" lotl-lrtO i>etson IS dOlnO buSI nett ., PICCADILLY PARK CAFE ... , Borell Slrttl, ~· 0 , Newport BHCll. C•lllorn1e Ronalcl O er.iv. tlS Idaho. La H•bte, Callfornle~I Tiii• .,.,..,,... II <ondv<•d Dr •n In <ll•ldu.,I R-ldO Crel9 Thi• sla...,_t w•• 111• with t,,. County Cterti of Or-County on A,rll "·'"'· .... 0 .. llJIONAL IS C ROW SIERVIC:H ... o .••• ,,.., S..\e AM, CAii-• tl111 '169)41 PubllSllocl 0r""'911 Coe1t Dally Piiot, Aor 21, 21, Mays. 12, '"' , ..... PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUllN•SS MAM• ITAT&M•NT Th• loOOWlno pen.an I• doln9 !Mill· ....... BITS AND PIECES, 140$ W. Balboa BouNr••rd • 4, N•lll'POrt ••a<ll, elllotn1•""1 lorl Kay Lay,..., 1~ w a.111oa BoYleYerd, • 4, Newport l••cll, Celllornlaf2Ml. Tllll ....,_ II cenduc:ted llY ... In· dl•lllual Lori K•r urror Thll 1~ wM 111911 wl\tl Ille County Clerll ol Or.,gie County on A!1'11), 1M1. ... PuOll.-Or .... Coett Dally ~llol, AfWll 1, U, JI, 11, 1'91 16J1 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PrlHllla McMurtry y.., ""ve....,. _.s T,,. ,..,rt m•r ln11 sl.li-t wu llled with ,,,. dK•O .,._,1 ,0., .,._, ,..,r "'"' f'ICTITIOUSIU.iNt:U County Clerk ol Oren~ Counly on •Hrd ""'"' ,.., ,._. wtllll1t JO NAMIEITATl:MllNT Ap rtl l•, "ti do1 It .... U.. ll!fOf',.,.llOfl -- • 1 11• lollow11>9 per wnt •rt <101n9 '''"" U ,.., Wllll • -k the actvlo ot .,. buslnau ., PuDlls'-0 0r9"91 C.O.tt D•llr Pllol .• 11., ... , In UVI rnetter, '°" •-Id de OUN RIGHT CAT ERIHC., 1'2S APrll lt, INiy S ll, 19, 1"1 1911 II •• ~r•tn"lf M tllal ,_ r-•• o~ 1 rwlne •A, ~IA M.s•. Ca lllornl p1u.i11e, 11 •ny, may w 111 .. ..., 11rne. .,.,. I PUBLIC NOTICE AVISOI D••ld S<otl Cr•wf0<d, 101' Na Usled II• lldo dern•nlledo El llortel A-, COii• Me .. , C•lotornl• lrilH11tal puea 4e<ldlr ,_,. Ull 11~ Goroon Brr•n l •l9lllon, i.H NS-7M111 e111111e11cle • --..... Ull. ,._ltda lt•ln• 81.a , COile MelA, CeHlornl• STATIEMIENTOl"AIANOONMINT dentre ti. .... ._ L .... lnlwm•<-t1•1' 0' USI! 0, 11,.. 119,.. °V''' bus1neu 11 conduct.o Dy e l'ICllTIOUS MISINIESS MAMI SIU•'*'-... ocltar.t t -je w llrnlled i»"'-llt•P Tiie lollowlng pe<-.1 -ed lh• ,... • ...__ .,. ••Le •-• .._ ... Oevld s CrewfOl'<I use ol ltw ,lkllll°"'I bualMU n•rn• lt•<•rle 111..,•-'•l•,..••t•, de •II• Tiii• .. ......_. wn llled with the SHANOI S DILi •I 1111 I . ..,.,..ra w ,_,ta e •lefkleA • Counl'f Clerk of Or.,Oe County ..,j •rltlol, C .. le Mew, Collfor.Wo .._., ......... _.. -r._u1r...: • "prll io. "'' f»Z.. The llclll'-Dulln.IU n.1-, ,IMt ... l"lffe711 relorr..,., eDow wn llled In CO<lnl'f I TO THE RESPONDENT Publlsned o.-. C.oeSI 0.1ly Pllol on t 12119 Th• ""l1hono" ,,., tiled • Del•hOCI Aor U ,ll :llMilfS ltll l1J1 .. I MRIER SHAHOI ltlO Porllcon<e•nl"9 your marriage II 10V t•• _ -Cern•y Pl.t<.• N•woort l ••<n tottlt•r~w1tMnJO O.y1 oflhe PUBLIC NOTICE C•ll~~~E••;~INE • ANO ltlO ..._ d•I• lh•t ""' \ummoM " w rv..a ol\ ~H 1 ~r1 you 1our CMiwU m..y cw tnter.o •n4 C•rn•'Y Pl•c• Hewoort 8ea ct\ '"'" court ITWY entef' • tuOQ~nt to~ Sl AT IEMl.NT 01" AaAllOOMMIEllT C•+•lorni• 91'60 and t•1n1n9 on1Uft< h•• or oU.1 or<M" COl\-0, USI 01' "" l)odjnft\ ••s < u<I.., DY .,. cern•nv dt•1Slon ol or-rrJ •po ..i l'ICTITIOUI IUSINESS MAMI. l~lvlClu.,I \UPPo•I Child tu>IO<ly t l,.IQ >u.,;•I, TM following per >On ,.., llbendone<I 111' stat-I w .. "'.., wlllt Ille •llo•no ••• c°'n •nG """ oll••• rp IN use of Ille ll<llh~A Du>Aneu ,,,.me Counly Clerk 01 Oren9f Counly on Itel n ,,.., bt 9renled by IN court THE SHOE DOCTOR. '32A E•Jl MercnJt t•t The 9errwsll-nt ol ••ve• l•~•nQ o1 17111 SlrH I, Cool• Me.. Calllornl• f'l ttw monn or pr-rly o• Oll>e• court f?U7 • )l.alulory Flltng Foe U 00 •lllhO"lt<I OrOCH<I•~ may .OIM> '~ Tll• Flctl1'°'6 8uSlnets N•rne re· P..r>ll-0rltn9' C-)I Delly Pllol. wll rerre<I to ·-WH fifed 11' ~""'99 Aptll 2I, May S. 12• It.'"' 1"7 .. 1 D•t•d -r<ll ll, ltll Counlr onS-1-111 L ... A B•encll Scott Ed .. ard HolmH, 1050 Ee\t PUBLIC NOTICE Clerk, Ocun Front, 8a1Doe, Celllor,.1e t7 .. I By JH nnlne Gelo>. Tiiis DuMM'lS .... <anducled bY *' °"1>UIY Individual. "ICTITIOUS auStN•SS .... ED J "LEMING, 11$0. S<ott HOime~ NAMI STATU•l•NT 1101Wll~re14.._, 11JI F- Thls 1t•t-t WAI rlled wit,. the Tiie loll-lrtO person II dOlnQ bUM LH A ........ (<Mii-a tllll County Clerk ol Or.,ga County Ott nan el (till JU.CJQ AP<'ll>,1•1. KATH L EEN A ZACCARIA, PubHlhe<I O.enve Coe\IOallrPllol, 1'1>7W c.on ... 1-. 5MtO Or...,.._.pe, • lta, Apr U , JI 11, Mey S, "II 17" .. I Publl.-Oranvo c::oest Oallr Piiot, u Pel"" Cot-..la.a APf'll 7, 14, 21, a, ttll !US-ti KATHLEEN ANN lACCAltlA. -----------J600 Of'••---·.,., Le ... ...._. PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS aUSINllS NAMa STATIMllNT Tiie loOOWlrtO IMl'IOll Is CloittQ buSI· Mat•t: TRAOE MASTERS, 1471 Trask Aveft\lt, W.Stml.,.tor, C.lllotnla t»a R•Y-E. SenclMJ, Mn TrHlt Avenue, W.Strnlnsler. C.llfornl• tMa Thia butlneu Is C'Ondllc Wd br ., In· dlwldu•I. ,...,._ £, Sanmet "rlllt tl.11-t .... 1119'1 with Ille County q~rk .. 0r.,ve Cout1ty on Merell 1', 1'11. "'~ PvblllNd Ortngt C.0.11 Oallf PllOI, ~. 14, 21, a, M.ey S, 1''1 17.WI PUBLIC NOTICE Collto1'111•.st.. 11111_.k~•ao.,.,1n° wklual. KatN.-. Ann la<CM la Tlll1 ........,. w• 111.0 wltlt the unly O •rll Of o r .. gie County Oft II 24, ltll ,......, Pwbll1/t9111 Or .... CMtt Delly PllOt, II a. Ma., S, It, It, lf'1 l.,,..t PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTIT10llt MntN•U NAMe STAT&M .. lT The foltowlno --It ,,....,. IMnl· ....... CAL·AR ~NTUt .. RISIS, 2IUSA Pl•<•"ll• A venue, Coil• lileu, c.c 11., .... n.11 JOHN F CXJMllll. mM Placenll• ,.,.n ... , <:.oat. Me-W, C.tllornte tau1 This bullneu 11 C-.Cl_.,'f en In· jlvlCIUal Jofln F °"""" Tiiis AM-' w• fllod with l11e County O•rk of Or.,et County 0tt 'prll 24. Itel. ,, .... Publll.hed OrMQtt C.0.SI Oally Piiot, 'prll ,., Mays, 12, It, t•t ,.., .. , PUBLIC NOTICE l'IGTtT10UlhllM•M • NAMl ITAT•M•NT Tiie follOl#lfl9 ...,_, I• dOlft9 bull WUH. ISLAND REALTY CO., 4tt Parll ,.,.nue, IMtlbc>e ltl8'18, C~llfor11le '2M2. ROaERT HALL Jll., U Gol.U Pa int Ori••, Corona d•I Mer, C:•llfomlL Thia !lull.-. II <OllduCIHI by.,. I~ "•lchaal. PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •U51NES$ NAME STATllMINT Th• followlrtQ persons ••• do1nt bullMHQ rt EX METAL.$ AHO ALLOYS. SOS Cll'f P•r--y Welt, tth Floo< Orenve, C•llfomtet2* L.t.ilo Allw'I WWburton, .SO} C1ly ,..rtrw•., We11. flll Floor, Or.,."", Celllornle f2* JooC .,_,,, 1*5 SNr,...n W•Y. Hwlll Hollrwooll, COfllornle tl60S L_,., 81-. 11605 Sherm•ll w • .,, Henh Holly•-· C.lllor"'• •ltOS Tllla buslMU II cOftOucled by + toMr•t pert.....,nlp Letllo J W•rbu...- Tllll \IAl-nl wM lllOCI •Ith the Counly Clerk 01 Oranoe Counlr .,. Aprll IO. t•t .. Utt/' Pt.1bll"*I 0.-Coe\I Ollll'f Piiot Apr 14, JI, :II, Mily S, 1•1 173).4'1 PUBLIC NOTICE N·1Ul4 SU .. llltle>I' COURT 0' CALll'ORNI~ COUNTY O' OR ANOE , In 1"-Matter of the AjlCIClcellOn of EVETTEMARIE PHELAN lorCNllQ9 of Herne Vir ginia A Reed and Brad searching or a s us pect Mas ters, rrandfather of as we ll as ror clues. J .. CllVI Slll11t, s Union Hiii, ~-----------­ "CTlTlOUS ltUllN•SS NAM• ITATllM•MT Tiit 111'""'9 _._ I• dolftt bull· ll_,HellJr Thia 14---Ill .. wltfl IN County Clor1t of Ortr19t 0tu"'Y Oii 'prll U , 1"1 ,AaAC:YaW ....,IJALPAIM Cen9let'{ Mortuarv Chapel-Crematory 3600 P.Crhc View Drive Newoort Beach 644·2700 NcCOlt..al MOaTUAl•S LIQIH\a Beach 41M-IM15 LIQuna H1ll1 78&-0933 s.n Juan C.p11tr•no 495-t776 Chris Martin. Big Brother to Chief J3ck Ferguson Mike kay Freeman rr · says police are looking quested n o m e moria l for a pro "Whoever did services ln lieu of no--ers it sure is talented." the CamHy suggests dona- tion• to Big Brothers or Oran a• County. a\IDOLPH WILLIAM L. RUDOLPH, resident di South Laguna. Ca. Paued away on April \9, 1981 Dom on September is. )923 In Loi An(elel, Ca .. Sul'\'l\ttd by h\a w{fe Leslie, a dauabter Serl Gole Rudolph of Oavl1, Ca. and p,artnU Mary and Leo Rudolpfl or La•un• Rllla, Ce. ,..inorial scrvlcee were heht on l"rid1y, April 24 . PUBUC NOTICE . H 1 a\ P ctlle Yle,.; ll•motbl Put, N1wport _____ ,.___..o.;.;-...~ ~dh, ca ...... ""· 8nace A.. Kurrtt otftdalb\I, P.ac:lftc View Moitua17 dtncto,.. C-. Collfornlo "74S Tiiis -Inna Is c-.C1ecl by., In· dlY!dlHll J• °"" """' Tllb ....._. -Ill .. otltll Ult li'ICT1flCIUI •UStMIU NAMalTAT .... NT Tiie tot_,. ,_..... la •Ille 1111 ... H : -··· 4MaUllOIY'S ELECTRIC, tO Cort11all• Drive, Co11t M•••· Cellr.tn10..-. COtlllty cien ef OfMQoe c.uMY en ' VITAMIN O, 4ff\I) Juml"•· .. ,.., • C.llfoml• nus. ••••rll A 011lroee, 4ttllt Ml'llllle, ~-.... Mor. c.11,.,.... Orwlllo ,.,.,..,....,, t<IS ~ Orl¥t, Coale IMM, Colllonile ta3'. ._,llt. 1"1. .. , .... l'll"lllled Or .. C..I Qelly Pl-. ,... .. , , 14, ti, .. ,., 1~ PVBUC NOTICE Tlllt _,_.la COlldUOM lty .. ln-•M•••· Orvfllo .Alnllwwfy Tllll IUIW'llOM •es 111411 wlUI Ille ee.intr c.lffll ef 0reft99 ce.inty °" AP'lll.l•t. ,,,..,.. ~Olhllltll er-.. c..te Oelly Pllet, Ii'\ ... ._,117114,2t.ll, Hll 1'2MI P\14111.,_ or-. c:.oott Dolly ~llM, 11 r, H,t1, It, 1•1 IUMll , PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ,., .. , PtlbllsNd Or .. C..1t Oelly .. ,..._ Aprll 11, flMy S, 12, "· 1 .. 1 ,_., PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,.., l'K:TITIOUI MKIMHS lllAM8 ITATIM8NT Tiie l911owlnt Pft'aeM •ro llolllt I bEAR PAT DUNN: l've been thinking about filling out the donor slicker on the back of my driver's license so my organs could be used for transplant in case of my death. The only thing I would like to know before I go ahead with this is exactly how it is de· termined that the body is dead before organs are removed W. P., Costa Mesa In CaUfornla, body or organ donatloaa cannot occur until the body is certified dead by one doctor and confirmed by another. The members of the transplant team cannot be the doctors who certify death. Death la determlned to have occurred when: brain activity stops; breathing stops; the pupils are dilated; and there are no reflexes. The body is c hecked for the above responses at four, six and eight hours after death appears to have occurred. During this time, blood continues to be circulated through the body by a m echanical respira~r. After eight hou111 or no signs of Ufe, the oody Is certified as dead. Pregnani righu told DEAR PAT DUNN I just learned that I am pregnant. and I'm concerned that I may Jose my job because my employer might de- cide I would have to take too much time off or that I may not be able to do my work properly the last couple of months before the baby ts born I've heard that pregnant women have certain rights when they are employed, but l don't know what they are. Can you tell me? P.F .• Irvine The federal Pregnancy DtscrimlDatlon Act and California law iuaraotees certain rights to pregnant women. You cannot be re· fused a job because you are pregnant, as long as you can perform the m-.)or hmctlooa of that job. You must be permitted to work as long as you are able to perform your job. If you are unable to perform the functions of your job, you have the same rights as "di•· abled" employees. including alternative a&· signments, disablllty leaves and leaves without pay. You may take a leave·of·absence for up to four months. Unless you have informed your employer you don't intend to ttlurn to work, your job must be held open for you on the same basis as for employees on sick or dtublUty leave for other reasons. Apprenticeships wry DEAR PAT DUNN Can you tell me what's involved m an apprenticeship pro· gram? I'd hke to know how many trades of. fer apprenticeship training and how a person qualifies C.L . Costa Mesa The costs of training ln apprenticeship programs usually are paid by employers. The lnstrucUon combines clas.room leNOD• with on-tbe·Job learning under tbe aupervisloa of experienced journey workers. Programs last anywhere from one to sb: years wttb an average of three and four years. · . Apprenticeship program• cover more tban 700 akJJled trades and crafu ID au major lndaatrtes. Sometimes they'~ aet up by Joint eom mlt.teet of ualou and employers hi u a&- te•pt to plaa for needed atil .. ud tra1a1D1 across u entire tadutry. AppUcaau for appreallcesblpt aeed to be at lealt tt yeart old and play1kaUy able to do tbe job. A• addJtJooal quaJlllcaUou, tome 1pomson require a bJgb tclool diploma or equjYaleacy certUlcate. O&ben reqaln tbe eompletlon of certain matJI and ademce cou,.._; nm otben.are mo'*9 Interested IA related work ttpelience and voeadoDal or la· datrbl aria eoanes. AppUe= aaaUy eH better &heir chucet for aeee ce by taktla1 eoanes at a eoinlllulty co ce or trade acMoL For more detalled lafoJ'll\atto.I, as-a are Uaalfy '* eoucee. Allo, ~ BtanH ol AppreatJcea,lp aad TralalAI •f tile \J.8. Departm.t ot Labor caa P'"'6e HIDH"' OTIHIUtloM bJrtn1 appm.tt• AU tM de-tatl1 .,.. mekMled ia iu U.S. Depan•eat Of taber't .ew Moklet, "Apprt11U-"1•: a.., H W•l'A for YOlll.'' For a free , wrtte dtit eo. .... , lafora•'loil ceacer, p&. MU, ·--Cole. 11•. WASH1NGTON (AP) -Two men who walked 818 mllea to ralH Pl()dey for a memorial to Vletnam veter&DI did it because the con1truetlon "bu to be done,'• on of them ta.Id at the completion of the trek. , . .Kim Splain, 28, ao unemployed truck driver who offered tbe brief rea· 100 for tbe march, and Junior Wyatt, 34, an unemployed bartend•r, aet out from Jackaonvllle, Ill. on March 1 for the alt. of the memorial OD the Mall in Washington between the Lincoln Memorial and the WasbinitOO Monwnent. Ceremonies marking National Recognition Day for Vietnam Era Veterans were tlmed for their arrival. Splain, who 1erved ln Germany \ durlns tho Vietnam War, and Wyatt tumed over a check for SS$0 from Am erl~an Le1lon Pott 279 ln JacktonVille to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. Tbey could not ban· dle cub donatlona on their march and naUonal American Lesion stat· fera aald they did not know how muclf1the pair raised ln pied'" witlt the help of loc"ll veteran•' groups along the way. 1 Alto1ether, the fund bu railed more than $1 mHUoo for the estimat· ed f7 million coet of the memorial. Selection of a winner in a dellan competition is acbeduled Maye. President Reagan '1 proclamation • in markln, the day, read to the au. dlenco of about 100, 11Jd, "No ono should doubt the nobility of the ef. Ion" made by thole who served ln Vietnam. The proclamation allo said, "It will take more than leavlnf tt up to the federal covemment'' to solve veterans' problem.. Tom Pauke.o, dJrector·deslenate of ACTION, the covemment 11ency for volunteers, said hi• aeency sooD woulct'bealn a pUot pro1ram In a few areas using staffers wlth Job•, counselll)I and other •ervlcea. Pauken balled the Wyatt-Splain walk as upboldinf •'the rm est principles of volunteerism." Road toll steady SACRAMENTO <AP> -Some 5,489 people died on California hiabways last year and the death rate remeined steady, the Hllbway Patrol said. The death total fell by 14, or .3 percent. from the 1979 total. heres why you ought to switch to ....,· . FIDEL'lY FEDERAL VISA~ If you hold any of the above VISR cards. you are either paying a tee tor the card ot up to $15 a year. Or, you're paying a substantially higher annual interest rate than with a Fidelity Federal VISA. With a Fidelity Federal VISA. there is absolutely no monthly or annual tee. Compare all fees and interest charges of the above banks with ours. You'll find our costs are lowest at Fidelity Federal. In addition, you get all the advan- tages ot the Grand Award. Irs Fidelity Federal's complete package of banking services, inclucJ!ng a 5~ % service charge-tree Checking Account, VISA and Overdraft Protection up to $5,000 each and a $200 Check. Guarantee Card for quaillyj.ng customers. Plus other tree services such as copying, notarizing, travelers checks an~ many more. So, compare the charges on your own VISA:with Fidellfy Federai·e VISA. Then come see us. We'll be looking for- ward to helplrig you swtt~. p.,,,,. ............... I ( \\A penny for thoughts." "Make it a quarter, Mommy, and we're in business." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "We just never told him he's supposed to hate cats!" JUDGE P J\Bl{EB GABI' I ELD OHCE AGAIN I VENTURE INTO T\o4E WILDERNESS IN SEARCH Of ~R'r' ~s t Pl1tn 5 Wtttll#M ta.ctl•'• ~ , .. PllW'!Y - 15 Four ""*'1Utt "Wait a minute! If my Mom's gotta pay for that busted 1ar of pickles ... give us the pickles!" by Harold Le OoU>< I Ml(;Ml .M;l DfCIDE TO ~EA. PERMANENT ~f{OfRAl~NCER FARM~! by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson l Pt..lT )bt.J, iHE ~S'C> CROSS , AND THE C~URCH ALL oN iHe S.AME 1-INE OF MY INCOME TAY. FORM ... ~ '~A 8BOE I REALLY SHOULD SAY SOMETHING INTERESTING- WHAT KIND Of A ~ 00 I ~1AND Wl1H -mE NE1Al GIRL.,l<EU..£< 1-WHE.N I HAVt A ~ fHm /V\Al<Eb ME. I.DOK t...IKE BOZD iHE rr sr1u.. N€£05 m BE A L.Oi FL.Af1"ER f ~~ DBA•Bl...E Dr.'Wtlson made ll dl&Jl:an on the blac}(-rd lllustrllt\ng how f et molecules are S'IT\- the s\zed. by Ernie Bushmiller ---ETC.,ETC. ---AND HERE'~ SOME MORE GOOD GOS SIP--- by Tom Batiuk MA4BE I HAVEN'T 8€.EN -mPJNG Efl()()(;,H OIJAR1t.R5 m rr ltf NIGHT ! by Kevin Fagan I W&~S ""°" C.OULD 9,'( 'f'AA'f' 1'"4~ ~A~ U£N A. S\.eUJ ~"' t1Ews11M£. ART VOLPE, a public affaln specialist for the Army Tank- Automotive Command in War- ren, Mich., said rlam call for an initial order e 15,000 or the replacement vehlcles -far short or the 100,000 or so that wouJd be needed to replace all the jeeps and other vehicles that are to be phased out. ~ "That's q_uite a way down the pike," Volpe said. [ And the jeep which received BUT TBE NEW vehicle - dubbed the Hi&h Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle lo Army-ese-is necessary to catch up with changine technology, he said. Made.)»• AM General Corp., a subsidiary of American Motors Corp., the military jeep has re- mained essentially the same, out- side of gradual changes in aucb thins• as body panels and sua· pension systems, since it was in- troduced during World War II, Volpe said. Since then, the Army bu been busy introducing new weapons systems and some of them, aucb as rocket and grenade launchers, .,. ......... Th. world-famoua jttp u daUned for°" honorabW dUcharge from th4! Army a.s modem tDOrton needs mandaU MtO type• uf wldcW•. TM miJita1JI has~ 61 companja to nbmit ...... THE JEEP'S replacement vehicle wiU be diesel-powered with an automaUc tranamiaaioo, a 2,~-pound capacity and a cruising ranie of up to 300 miles without refueling. In addition to carry in& soldiers, lt will serve u a weapon• carrier, communlcatlons equipment car- rier, ambulance and utility vehi- cle. At a coet of between $20,000 and $21,000 each, the replacement vehicles will be less expemlve than new modela of the more specialized vehicles they replace. And the Anny expects to save oa maintenance and oper ational cost.a by having a single type of vehicle instead of three or lour. ''We have to look toward getUng the most for the dollar," Volpe said. Reagan fills CEA vacancy W ASfUNGTON (AP) -The Reagan a dministration has filled the remaining vacancy oo the three-member presidential Council of Economic Adviaers with the selection of J erry • Jordan. dean of the manage- ment 3chool at the University or New Mexico, administration sources said. A formal White House announ-· cement on the appointment of Jordan, 39, is not expected for several weeks, however, pend- ing completion of FBI security checks, said one source, who re- quested anonymity If confirmed by the Senate to the $52,750-a-year post, Jordan would be the council's economic forecaster. with princlpar respons ibility for developing predictions to prepare revised budget figures and providing an official outlook for economic ac- tivity • Orange Coast DAILY PfL~/Tuetd•y, Aprtl 28, 1981 . ... , ......... LET'S BE FRIENDS -A oewbom coJt iJI in- troduced by Dr. Christopher Scott to a pet coekapoo at a Tanana ranch this week. Rob- bie, the colt, 4~ bands, will be a miniature horse valued at between $10,000 and $25,000. Heroin pain relkver Drug more effective than morphine for cancer WASHINGTON CAP>-Astudy using heroin to relieve the pain of cancer patients shows the tirug is effective and could be approved for use in terminal cases, scien- tists say Researchers at Georgetown University's Lombardi Cancer Research Center say heroin 1s as good a pain reliever as morphine and may have some advantages in some cases The researchers found heroin to be 2'h limes as potent as morphine in relieving cancer pain. Therefore, less than half the dose of heroin is required to pro· duce the same amount of relief as a dose of morphine, they say. ''I seeno reason to discriminate against heroin as a drug," said Dr Philip S Schein. chief of medical oncology at the center. "It l5 not necessarily that much be tter than what is already available, but it works and 1t would give us another option in treating cancer pain," Schein said in an interview. Schein and his co·investigator, Dr W1l1Jam T Beaver, professor of pharmacology, will present the results of their trial this week at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting He roin has not been available for legitimate medical use in lhe United Stales since 1924, although it is widely used in England for the treatment of cancer pain. Authorities have been reluctant to approve the medical use of such widely abused drugs as heroin and manJuana But cancer pa tlent advocates insist that dying victims of the disease should have access to any available drug that can be used safely to relieve pain or the discomfort of cancer treat ment This pressure recently Jed the government to approve the use or man1uana and its derivatives for t reatmg nausea and other side ef feels of cancer therapy. And the Food and Drug Admmistraticn. which approved the heroin trials. also is considenng lifting some restrictions on this drug. -~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil __________________________ -------...... ........ ..... announces a new program 2nd TRUST DEEDS •~\>repay/A...,_ • F.sl lunO•~ • 30 .,..., Amortued UPIO 1S yrs R_., • Loen a 10 00(>-1500 CICIO • 0-..(Non Ownw ·S-ng Loan1 Pv<chaw~ Call Wilham B Mitchell Call 1oe1av lor quote • No oot.ga1ton irons nottoOO! tundlng f714l )75-1128 ~E~=~ Open To All Jn May 'John Doe' Hits Jackpot In Monthly 011 'Lottery' O'HARIO. C ALIF (Special) Hundreds of average c1111ens will win oil leRse rights 1n drawings conducted by the State of Wyoming Some may achieve overnight wealth by selling their rights lo oil companies and retain- ing lifelong royah1es. Incredibly. most will risk no more than SIS and a minimal service fee lo enter the litele-known program lhal offers every American the opponun- tty to compete w11h giant oil companies for leases of public lands. Information and entry details are available from The H. K1rlt Sanders Co.. Pubhc Lands D1v- 1sion, Box 3697, Ontario, Calif 91761 (2032 Carol- ine) Please enclose SI for postage and handlina. Official entry cards will be rushed by return mail to permit you 10 meet the May filing deadlin\. ; • 27reasons 9. 1821 West Orangethorpe Avenue. Fullerton 10. 9591 Chapman Avenue, Garden Grove 11 . 3 166 Admiralty Drive, Huntington Beach 12. 15672 Springdak• Street, Huntington Bea(h 1 3~ 299 Ocl'an Avenul'. Laguna Bea< h s nBan in 14. 11262 Lo~ Alam1to-. Boul<>v.ud. Lo'> AIJmilo' 15. 26821 Trabuco Ro.id. M1.,~1on V1e10 I b. 4101 MacArthur Boulpvarcl, Newport Be,Kh .. 17. 1016 lrvineAvenue, Newport Beach Us. 1. I 701 E. Katella Ave .. Anaheim 2. 5640 E. Santa Ana Canyon, Anaheim 18. 500 Newport Center Drive. · Newport Beach 19. 3444 Via Lido. Newport Bealh 20. 345 East ChapmJn Ave., Orange 21 . 2680 North Tustin Ave,, Or,1nge 3 1141 N. State College Blvd .. Anaheim .. 4. 290 S. Stale College Blvd., Brea r;, 8968 Knoll Ave., Buena Park ... 6. 3333 Bristol St.. Building B. Co~ta Me'>a 7. l 7430 Brookhu!"!.t Slret.>t, Fountain V.1lley 8. 190 I N Euclid SI., Fullerton 22. 160 E. Yorba L1nclJ, Pl,Kent1,1 23. 31872 Camino Cap1.,tr,1no. San Juan Cap1'>lrano 24. 801 North Main SI., San1.1 Ana 25. 1500 E~Warrwr Awnu<•. Santa An,1 26. 2127E. l 7th~lrl'<'I, SantJ An,1 27~ I U41 NC'wport Awnu<'. Tu .. tin If you're a Bank of America customer, sign up for your VERSATEL® card at any branch. If you're not a customer, we can't think of a better time than now to make Bank of America your bank. Call toll-free 1-800~362-7152. Want more information? m BANKOF'AMERICA . BANK OF AMERICA NT&SA • MEl.tSEA FDIC \ ' . A camouflage-painted B-1 bomber, its wings swept lxu;k for supersonic flight, cruises over the Southern California desert near Edwards Air Force Base. The sleek jets could LC. Col Fred Fi4dler, director of tM U.S. Air Force'• B·l te.ting program at Edtoorda Air For~ BG#, itcndt ~a hanger at the boat wtth one of four prototwe• of the warplane fwtM boclcgfPU"d. be at the threshold of a new age under the Reagan adminsitration. B-1 ho er ne~ EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE. CAP> -Like dinosaur in a caft, rour huae B-1 bomben e.,,,_b in · • cavernous hancer Mn, wawn1 ror their second a~·at Rrvival. Two of the expensive and con- trovenlal B-ls frequeat,ly roll . out of their Jal(' to soar high over the desert at more than twice the speed of sound, or lo skim jlll\ ~ feet above the scraggly JOibua trees at 600 mph. The otber two prototypes are in "'fiJable storage," for now. '°rom a sudden extinction "trrouebt by former President Carter, the sleek computerized jeta could be at the threshold of a aew age under tl~e defense- cOl\scious Reagan administra- tion. FllOM A FLYER'S point of view, "it's a very impressive airplane," sais Lt. Col. Fred tiedler, director of the Air Force's 8-1 testing program at Edwards Air Force Base. f 'I The 8 -1 is an extremely sophisticated weapon with com- puter-driven systems to hide the plane close lo the ground, con- fuse enemy radar and accurate· ly aim its nuclear arms. It w~ designed for a singlf\ purpo5e: to penetrate enemy territory and, in Fiedler's words, "put the crosshairs on tar1et and do the job." The B·l ls about the same len1th, 151 feet, as the aging 8-521 it was supposed to replace. but 1t can carry roughly twice as much armament and is sup- posed to have a longer range. AND THE BOMBER, with its win1s mounted on swivels, can take off and land on much shorter runways. The wings swinl out to full extension for maximum lift at take-off, then sweep back into the stubby, swept-wing configuration of a fighter for top efficiency at supersonic speeds. Tbe plane's real strenlth ls at treetop altitudes, where it bidet from radar by automatically skimmin1 hills and valley& . . With the terrain-aensint system in charge, "lb.e pilou don't actually fly the airplane," Fiedler said. "They monitor the airplane and it Oies automatical- ly . . . if it sees an obstacle, it commands the plane to climb over it." The B·l , Fiedler said, "doesn't have any defensive weapons. Our primary defense Is to avoid being detected that's why we fly so low and fast '' BUT AFTER investing some $4 billion in a research and de- velopment program that pro- duced the four prototypes, the Carter administration canceled production plans in June 1977. Former defense secretary Harold Brown said the ad - ministration decided to save billions of dollars by concentral· ing instead; on developing the cruise missUe, which existing B·S2s could be modified to han- dle. A bomber armed with a cruise missile, which has a ranJe of 1,500 miles, would theoretically need to fly only to an enemy's border, thel) release lts mis- siles and return home. The B-1 's opponents argued it was far too expensive and would be virtually obsolete in this age of computerized warfare. But the Air Force wanted the plane and moat strategists seemed convinced of the need for a manned bomber. Attempt. to're- vlve the profram have surfaced peri~cally ln Congress. THROUGH IT all, the B·l never really died. The two operatiqoal prototypes Jtept sail- int over the desert, lonint more than 1,500 nyint hours since the first B-1 was delivered to ~dwanta on Dec. 23, 1974. "We're tf)'inl to 1et informa- tion to put into the computen to answer the question: ls it feasi- ble to develop an airplane of this category to penetrate enemy territory ln the f\lture?" Fiedler said. Fielder, though obviously im- pressed with the B-1, would not discuss broader strategic issues Hal Ralklen, vice president for strategic systems at Rockwell International, which designed and bwlt the B-1. had no such re- luctance. ·'I was shocked al the decision to discontinue it," he said. "I've always thought we needed a manned bomber -a penetrator. The manned bomber provides a judgment factor" that's not available with a long-range mis· sile. "I HAVE A LOT of respect for the B-52s," he. said. "But the comment is made that some of the pilots are younger than their airplanes," which range in age from 2i> to 30 years. Had production pr~eeded on the B-1. the contract for a full fleet or 200 bomben mi1bt have been worth well over $20 billion. Rockwell, a ctant aerospace firm, is expected to five the Air Force a final proposal soon for a new bomber based on the B-1. Raiklen said he's encouraced by Reagan'• election and hla in· crbsed military budaet. '•we feel ,there may be momentum for a new 1tratecic bQmber," he said. .' OV.E&TU8E8 Pao• EL8EWBE&E: All Routh¥• wbo weldl up at.eel 1eulpturea ilnd thua overbe8ta oftidall at Colta Mesa City Hall, is dr1w- ln1 IOJDe Wle~ IUPPC)rt'these dai•• . :You rememtift All llOWihan. don t vou? Not toO 1001 ate), he wa1 just a plain steelyard o~ator down on S~or Avenue ln Me1atown. But then cme day, he erected a tail, thin at.eelwort at the f nmt of bis . -fu) home. MuniclJ>al ~ ~ operatives cried rou11 • alle&\ril that All baa , • ,_ Just put u-. an We1a1 ______ .,.__ /.'<4' -structure. Jll lllPllll ,~11 : it w:=-:isc~~:C: · tower, complete with a waterfall nmntng down its sides. Hailed before authorities for his asserted ron•n& transgression, Ali b•bbled a lot at the city lawmakers and probably didn't improve his 1ltua-tion. Later, however, the zoning and building ca.ueitlon be~ame more interesting when Rowlhan abruptly claimed bis work was actU~ art. The city's official position said art or not, it look~ like a structure, felt like a structure and therefore, must be a structure. A.IAS, THE WHOLE ar~ent is now headed in-to the courts. Roushan b bemg hailed before the bar of justice on charges of contempt of earlier court prohibitions, on failure to comply, and other weary legal arguments. Meanwhile, the prayer tower grew a set of steel wings behind it. Then Ali added bis latest bit of nose- Art for Ali'1 solu on Colta Me.0'1 Supn;or Avenue ( thumbinlit at municipal authority with a masterpiece of 30 feet called "Volcano." While adinittedly, Ali Roushan sometimes ir- ritates the citizenry when be gets too vocal, there are a number of observers who think bis alleged artwork looks pretty nice out there on Superior Avenue. SOME HA VE COMPARED it favorably to other steel sculptures, like "Vestige," that was given the boot from the Main Beach Park at Laguna Beach. Others have suggested it's a lot nicer to look at than rocks or rills or butterfly hills. Even certain folks who claim to have no ap-preciation of fine arts sug~est that whatever Ali erects on Superior A venue is bound to be an im- provement over the present landscape, where rust- ing auto bodies and other aging castoffs tend to fill the vision. ONE WAG EVEN quipped that if you figured Superior Avenue was the development standard for Costa Mesa, then the City Seal should carry the side view of a rusting 1939 Chrysler Airflow. Or maybe a DeSoto bumper with a tin can stuck on each end. AnYway it looks like neither Ali nor City HalJ. are willing to give quarter, so his waterfall prayer tower? steel winf s B.?d volc~o are all beaded for Supenor Court. n view of this, Roushan did draw this unexpected ally. Are you ready? His surprising support came from the inland city of Brea. Brea's newspaper only last wee"k recounted ln somewhat of a lament, the troubles that have visited Rousban as he attempted to beautify bis home city. The Brea oaoer. in its editorial, also noted that Brea has suffered the reverse problem with art. Thal is, the paper alleges that every Ume some developer wants to erect a new building in that com- munity, the city authorities look around and ask him where its art is located. PUSHING TO UPGRADE the Brea civic image, it was alleged that City Hall wants space in front of every stntcture for a sculpture. And they seem to smile even more heavily on developers who fill the space with something of an art form. Art bas thus become a Brea passion. The Brea ecjitorial suggested, "Roushan pack lQ> bil weldimr tlos and art and move to Brea ... Brea just might be the place for Roushan to relocate." 1bis position, if taken officially by the Brea municii>al authonties, should atve Costa Mesa civic authonUes pause. . ARE TREY IUCKJNG the next Pica110 or Rembrandt iQ the teeth? What ii Rousban turns out to be the only artist history remembers from our era? c.o.ta Mesa could end up ta.kin& the artistic pratfall pf the century. Ju:st tb1nk of history remem· berina Costa Mesa only because the clt~ was up-atagea by Brea. DIUEfTS -Gen. WiWam Westmorelaad, former Army chief of staff 1 says women shouldn't be arafted for .the armed services because if a man and a woman are in a foxhole together 0 tbey're goin• t4> be maldng love, not war." He said "any man of gump- tion" does not want women to fight their wars. Slain son iars model to morn NORTH MIAMI BEACH, F1a. (AP> -To his invalid mother, Gary Doyno was the model son, cooking her brealcfut and car· ing for her day and ni&bt since .rbe wu crippled 21 years aeo. She never knew he had another life. Gary Doyno1s body was found by a family friend early April 3, slumped over a safe in the living room as his mother lay in the bedroom . Police s ay he was a drug dealer. "WE BELIEVE HE was ripped off for drugs and money,'' said de· tective Ray Nazario of the Dade County homicide squad. "He was dealingbeavily in narcotics." Mra. Doyno, 58, was struck by a car when Gary was 5 years old. After spending a year in a hospital, the diyorcee came home to her yo\Dlg son. He "cooked my breakfast and used to carry my wheelchair and put it in the trunk of the car,•' she recalled. When her son was 7. he insisted she learn to drive a spedally eqttlpped car. "He gave me stren&th," abe said. "We went throygh so much together." DOYNO, 2', apparently went to sleep about 11 p.m. April 2. About midnight he was beaten. forced down a flight of stairs and shot to death, police said. Mrs. Ooyno told police she heard a loud noise and called a friend who reassured her , saying she must have heard dogs knocking over garbage cans. The friend later came over and found the young man's body. Police did not determine what the killers took. A $500 bUl was left in the safe and $20,000 was un- touched on a chair in Doyno'1 room. Investigators and Mrs. Doyno said Gary muat have known his killers because the house had a doorbell and in· tercpm. "If beopenedtbatdoor, it had to be a lriend on lbe other s lde," his motbersaid. N AZABIO SAID the killers •'knew his mother wu there and that abe couldn't get out of bed withoutbelp." Mrs. Doyno baa offered a $10,000reward in the case. "They kllled hi m like animal," she said. Workaholic ineffective . BERKELEY CAP ) Workaholics may be more trouble than they are worth, a University of C alifornia psychologist'• study indicates. Rather than being the most productiv e employees, workaholics tend to ruin their health and lose their job ef. fectlvedeSS, with a DUTOW focua on work to the exclusion of all ei.e, accord1n1 to a 1tudy by Charles Garfield. -------AIOUT s51•suPERI 9 7DINNERI Good '°' nine piece• of juicy, golden brown Kentucky Fried Chlellen, with four roti., • 1a109 col• •law, a latge malhed potalOH and a "*'lum 9rawy. Umlt two oflM '* PUfChaM. Coupon good on.I)' for c:omc>lnatlOI> •l'lllW dartt Ofdat9. CuatOl'Mf paya all appllceble "'"tall. CIC Prices may vary at par· llclpatlng •ocallons Gooo only In Southern Calllomla where you see Ame11<:1'1 Fl•vOfU., Window Bann• GO .URMET MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD · FRESH Northern Red Salmon Whole or Ralf ...................... 3.18 lb. We wlU glacUy fllet your salmon for no extra cha rge DELANEY'S NOW HAS A LIMITED SUPPLY OF FRESH SWORDFISH. SO GOOD WHEN BROILED OR BARBECUED. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and top choice beef aged at least 30 days to the peak of r-erfecllon. Fre.1b Frozen Local Grown Rabbits 1.98 lb. Center Cut Chuck Roasts . . . . . . . . . . 1.49 lb. Boneless Bolled Beef Roasts ........ 2.98 lb. Ball or Wbole Sprtag Lamb cm and Wrapped for yoar Fnner ...... 1.89 lb. All meat items purchased at Delaney's are Freezer Wrapped and properly marked for your ea&) freezer identification FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE ( 150.00 min. please I MORNING FRESH 'i>RonucE . LOCAL-GROWN LARGE SIZE SWEET JUICY STRA WBERBIES . 3 Full bskt.s $1.00 For your complele catering 'lervice. from a complete sit down dinner· part) 10 part) tra~ s dt'hvered lo your home For mformalton call Delaney's CATERING Department. ask for Tom Martin DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanf'y's Prive~ Label Champagne c750m1l 1 ?.75 ea. or 33.00 pt'r cast' Bolla Soavt' 1750 mil 1 3.t5 ea. Bel Arbres CbeniD Blaac 1750 mil 1 J.st ea. Canadian O ub 1 One ht er• 9.H ea. Sco1esby Scotcb (750m1l 1 5.55 ea. <One Ur.en. . 6.115 u. All hquor and ~ ine plus tax 1 Delaney's now featuring lresb pasta. Jelly Belly's, the Official White House z 0 ~ ::::> 0 (.) I Your order is under complete refrigt'ralion from our store to your door in our reln gerated trucks Call in the morning and your order ~ 111 be delivered lo your home the same afetmoon Jelly Bean ......................... 2.39 lb. Tbh ad effective Wed., '129 thru 'l'ues., 5/5 DELAllEY'S Pepsi 1% pk. reg. or diet . . . . . . 3. 79 plus tx ~ Store Hours 9·6, Oosed Sunday ?9ZO Newport Blvd., Newport Beach TWO W·EEKS OML Y FREE SPINAL SCREENING EXAMINATION & X-RAYS APRIL 27th thru MAY 8 The Yarwood Chiropractic Office of Costa Mesa is sponsoring a Spinal Oleck-up and Scoliosis Screening program as a public service. This service wilr inclt1de consultation, examination, x-rays (if indicated) and a report of findings. By appointment only. Call 646-0516 Monday ,.,,.ough Friday. CDNSUlTATION .,.. c ............ . .. ..... ,..,,........., -'!.• .......• , ... _ -. ... , ..., ,...... .. .,.... ••l•rlH er etlaer apl••I CH.UH-1-4 .... ... ,..... ..... Cl ....... ... d•~••r wlll ••II• rece-11•1tHas ,..,_ •• , ......... .,. , ..... , .... ...... ..... X-RAYS ~ Met ell petlHh r•tt•lrf ............................. ...... ~ ... .. .., ................... , ......... .,,,ff .... ..... ·:••at ......... .,.. ................ ...................... ............ ~., ........ ................ ,,,.,. ...... ,. REPORT OF ANDINGS .I -A fhr tile tlector lae.t cerrelotetl yo•r fladl•t• ....... , ............ ,. .. _....._ 9M x~,_ CH. ,. • ..., .. ,.. w9 rec9"e • report of fl•4l•t• ••d NCD 11 ··-WcofH lay , ....... c ..... EXAMINATION* l?CK.EL, WHO HAS a real estate syndication businen of bis own, says Lorenzo plans to plunder Continental if be aalns control, a charge the Tl chairman haa denied. "The combtn•tion he proposes would have debts of $642 million. You tal<e the best year in Cont.inental's history and the best year in Tl's his- tory and combine them and they couJdn 't even pay the interest on that kind of money." Eckel assert- eli in an interview. "There's only one option Lorenzo would have when he got ihere and that's to take our airplanes and sell them to pay the debt he acquired to get control or us," l\e said. "We have $1.2 bilUon worth of airplanes and he gets control for $93 million. That'• w . Tlial'f three ~ontha 1alary for µ1, '<.dd you bet w6 retent it. And you bet we're J<>int to rl.e up and fllht a1aln1t lt.'' , ECKEL, A WESTLAKE resident who flies 72'1s tor Continental, joined the Mr Force after graduating from Utah's Brl•ham Youn1 Univeni- ty. Long aeUv• in pilot attain, Eckel becomes almost messianic when he talb abQut the CEA ef· fort against Lorenzo. "Rightness ls a1ainst blm," said Eckel. "We will not fail regardleaa of bow many things go wrong for us. We will continue to fight for the right to protect the sweat equity we have in our com- pany. I expect Lorenzo to fltbt ~ loot as be ~n. but I also perceive from bis actlmu that he's get· ting a little scared. He's goln1 to lose Uris time and I think he senses that." THE CEA PROPOSAL, which involves the formation of an Employee Stock Ownenhip Plan which would buy enough newly issued Continental stock to take control or the company, came about after Eckel heard a radio commercial about ESOPs while driving home from work. He thinks the concept of workers owning a majority stock in- terest in their employer is cerlaif.\ to spread. "It's wrong for a company that was as strong and as beautiful as Continental Airlines .. to be picked off by a speculato~." he said. "l think Irvine firm to ,contest suit Computer Automation Joe.: an Irvine-based minicomputer manufacturer, has said it will "vigorously contest" a lawsuit filed against it by a former customer. AMF Inc ,of White Plains. N.Y. The comp~ said the complaint, flied at t:.S District Court Dayton,· Ohio, appears to seek dam ages of at east $13. 7 million, including $10 million in punitve damages. or in the alternative, $10 million in compensatory damages. plus counsel fees and costs Damages sought in the complaint apparently are based on claims related to minicomputers shipped from Computer Automation to the AMF Electrosystems Division in Vandalia, Ohio, during 1977 and 1978, som e of which AMF alleged were defective. Computer Au tom at ion President D. H. Methvin said the company regards the com plaint as being "wholly without merit" and that the firm would pursue a course or vigorous legal action in responding to the lawsuit. He declined further comment "until our attorneys have had an op- portunity to review the complaint and file an ap- propriate response." Meanwhile, the Commercial Systems Division of Computer Automation this week completed the shipment of 16 SYFA systems valuea at more than S2 1 million to Commonwealth Edison of Chicago for the utility's SYFA distribution processing net work m use at all or the maJOr generating sta- tions of the Midwest utility Commonwealth Edison is one of the nation's largest pubh~ ut1l.tties wi th approximately 50 per- cent of its generating capacity derived from nuclear power * * * A Fluor Corp. subsidiary is nearing comple· lion of a contract to provide engineering and pro- curement for a $13 million modernization of Phillips Imperial Petroleum's crude unit at Teesside, England. The w·ork is being performed by Fluor <Great . Britain) Ltd., London. The project is scheduled to be completed In June, when the new equipment will be hooked up during a scheduled refinery shut-<town period. Fluor also announced that U.S. District Judge Leonard B Sand last week denied the motion by Jessie Sheinberg, a St. Joe Stockholder, to enjoin ~Juor's tender offer for 45 percent of St. Joe Stock. Paul Eckel head3 the recently formed Continental Employees AHocwtwn. TAX SHELTERS Oil & Go\ • Red E•to'~ • "'' Stomp• • ~t leow>q DIOUCTIOHS UP 510% THIS TIA.I GUAl.D L KOl.M AMAHC~ SlllYICIS 714/~1501· EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 DailyPil~ $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • lnt•r••t onlv SNv-ent • lnc:oa• • Co•••«Mll •Jle•Mlentlel • w .. ldy co-•t-nt• • NOfttWV f•n~lft9• • 6 -••.,• to 3 v .. n • So•tlilern C.tlfornu ( ' 't It loan Information •en1ice f ,, ,,,, '" It ' I fh'' \ .. (714) 759-1515 AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE 230 Newporl Cenler Ort•e Design Pl~,,. Newpon Beach Cahforn1a 92660 A NEW CHAY8'"'R CONVERTIBLI -When . the last U.S.·bttllt convertible rolled off a Cadillac assembly line in April 1'16, there were those who said the convertible was ,., ......... dead. The Chryaler Corp. plant to troduce a LeBaron convertible for 1982. The front-wheel-drive vehicle will sell for around $13,000. Automakers on recovery road Industrywide losses still expected to be sizeable -USE OF OllAL Communication, or the ability to make effective verbal presentation.a. -Positive Regard, "the ability to express belief othem' ablllties to perform and to improve." -Managin1 Group Process, or the ability to stimulate others to work effectiYely to1ether in group settlnp. ~ DETROIT (AP> -U.S. automaken tumed to rebates to boost aalea in the first quarter of 1981, but the rebates alao increased industrywide losses to u much u $600 million, accordin1 to industry analysts. At the same time, however, analysts say lm- provlna sales and cost-reduction efforts by the automakers are signs that the induatry may be re· c:overtne. General Moton Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. are expected to report their fint· quarter earnings thls week, and the company 1tatements -except GM 's -are expected to be drenched in red ink once again. =~r~~=~!~=~~~~~!~~r~=i~=~l--[=~~~~~·~=~ ·~MAOONTINUUWN~t~~reme ~Rs Bo"~ CORNER financlal difficulties," said Arvid Jouppl, a f)• ~ • R•r• ColM & .. ,... Detroit-based analyst with John Muir le Co. '"fhe ~ft I· rr.1, 11tr3 ~.. OMPUTERB GOLD& SILVER factors are interest rates, price hikes ... and the --.... a-.-.. ..._ .. ,.. fact, in FQrd's cue particularly, there were not 1st In Featu_... Perfonn•..,._ Price! ~~= .=. ~ ovuaeu earnings to offset the loasea." , I vu, ... """' .... Loi ...... -· American Motors Corp. led the parade or tint· :'..:.:-,.= ..n quarter re~rts April 17 when it announced a loss TRS-80 MODEL Ill ..,, ... _.... ... _.. of $52.7 rrullion for the quarter that ended March .... ;;._............... 31. c ~ ~- ,, CD -~ ~ I ' ', • ·. , .:-:> •: -i· ' . . ~ . -- -~ • Compect lot.a,.ted Dfflan With IJullt-ln 12" Monrtor Flta EllaHy on • O.tlctop • Oyer 80 Re .... to-Aun Progr.-n1 to 9hoose From, Or Wrtte Your Own .Programs For Buafnen 6 Penonal UM • E111y Internal Expansion to 48K and 2 Dllk Drives f.•••••••••llllP' • The Perfect Sl8rter from sggg Computer That Growa with Your Needs RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS..SO COMPUTERS TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000. AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS ANO 0£ALERS. CHECK VOUA LOCAL PHONE IOOK FOR LISTINGS. .':. ' • ,,. ' ',\ •, o M~• .; l.o. •. '.' • •, ~ .............. . c:.1 ... -..... (714)111- Souttt Coat Plaaa YIH-V• ..__ .... ... ,....__ .... c-,_, Gft«I men ... ~Ea.en,_ clW'QICI l"te --"' "'9 ~~ ..--~ n... e I ll"Odllm ~ IO men .. 1'°t'Ol'9 EdeOn In ... -,.,.. onemen-•IW99~ '*'°'4rY -""' • oec.lt Cl ,..,. ,,,... 1'1CO°OO'_, • no_...,,.. now ~~.=.::===:::=:::;:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--11 ~~--·~ SEMINAR: TRUST DEED INVESTMENTS. Find oot how yoo can lncnma yoor cash now. Be an educated investor-tak~ trle time to investigate the investment potentials available to you. We'll talk about current trust deed Issues, and answer ye>ur quest.ions about trust deed Investments. Ouestiol'\S like-! • What are the benefits of a TO Investment? • How Is yield calculated? • How secure are TD's? How to Beat the Tax lnllation Power Cum No one really plal'\S to fall, but people often fall to make plans. Thars why wfire offering you this opportunity to personally take control of your financial future. Find out how you can- • Increase your spendable income • AEtcfuce ve>ur current income tax liability • Protect youl"Self from lnftation Long BeaCh Seminar Join us wedneeday, April 29, at the Golden Salls Inn. Capri Rooni at 6285 E. Pa'Clflc Coast Highway, in Long Beach. 7:30 PM. Newport Beach Seminar Join us Thurlday. April 30. at the Marriott Hotel In SaJon A (Pacific Ballroom), Newport Beach. 7:30 PM. • • Tl'oa *"'10IOgy can corar1rlle ,... 8llh0 0I P<#ra........,.-i...~ ~~°'­pr-..--· IV' ........ ""~,.....,,, _....., ·~ Cl~ $eparlh0n ta9l'Ce9 .... -be Ille- e--\GJ .._ n.om. Ea.en ........ ,,. -IDclU1Q tor Pl'9CJr'6 ..... ftled"' ~,. ~ ..-.c~~ -·••rt..l!P --~---------J OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS Jouppi said he expected OM to report a profit of about $150 million for the quarter, while Ford and Chrysler would lose -Ford about $380 million and Chrysler about $275 million. ' THAT WOULD MEAN ari lnduatrywlde loss of about $538 million for the quarter, $80 million more than the $458 million total loss the automaken re- ported in the first quarter last year. In the first quarter of Ul80, GM made a profit , of $155.7 million and AMC showed a Sl.3 million profit. Ford lost $165 million and Chrysler lost $450 million. David Healy, an analyst with the New York ln- veatmeat bankiDC ft.rm Drexel, Bum.ham, Lam- bert, estimated a total loss near $600 million for the quarter. He expects a greater loss for Ford - about $450 million -and a smaller ,loss for Chrysler -about $250 million. But he said the overall condition or the in- dustry is improving. The losses are milder than they were for the middle two quarters or lut year for au com- panies." Healy s aid • SI.nee lOGO A.D •• tMf'e baft ...., four estnmety km1 "wav•" ol lnllal1on 1Q EUIQpt and AmtJtu, eacb about 100 yean tn leqtb. All have shared "• common rfu'thm ud a eomr:noa cbloaolol)'." AU hav• followed "a commoa pattern of i.latln prlc. increa1e1 ao4 a commoa sequence ol absohate • movemenu." And all bave been alike lD ''common cau.ae1 a.ad common consequences." JUsbl now, early ID tbe decade of the 1-, we are reachiq toward the c:Umu of the fourth wave.. While the • ~ 4readed coa· chi1lon of tbi1 fourth wave ''lt ---------· not yet in •lib~ m1111 Plllll ~~ the blatory of .1111 ~ ~ earlier price movementa aqcests the end cannot lie far iD the future." These are among the profoundly dpmcant, and in many ways alJo profoundly borrifyin& findln&s of historian David Hackett Fischer, writln1 in a recent issue af "The Journal" of tbe· Institute for Socioeconomic Studies headquartered at White Plaina, N. Y. While each of the waves -occurrtna during the 13th, the 15th-17th, the 18th and the 20th centuries - baa been extentively studied on Its own, never before baa any historian attempted, u Fischer has. to compare and interreJate the four. (Fischer is chalrman of the history department at Brandeis University and Ls nationally known as author of "Aring in America."> WllA'I' lS SO P&OFOVNDLY aipiticant about Fischer's analysis ls the waJ"Dini, both stated and implied, that the United States (and Europe) has been dead·wrong in its economic policies, particularly under Presidents Nixon. f•ord and Carter during recent years. Instead of "coolln1" the economy, persistent efforts to control innauon have had the op,posile and unintended result of drivina prices higher. The ,explanations? Eacb cycle, Fischer points out, bas been preceded by a huge increase in population, a resultin1 ballooning ln demand for goods, a straining to the limit of producUve capacity -and then. inflationary monetary-borrowing policies. IN TBl8, THE fourth wave, U.S. government policies in recent years have "inteDJifled" infla. tionary preaaurea. Fllcber completed hta studies betore President Rea1an took office . .Reaean's top advisers ma).' no1 have read h1s report, depreuin1 but potentially of enormous value to all and each of us. JM \ff~ 1'1 ,_, Ul 81 o'i 'llN IW ,I ~ ' ). 1 mommtl in "Heaven'• Gate." The • million 1pent OI\ the inovle wereo~ wUted u far .. the look ot tt aoea -Cimino'• re-creatJoa Of tum-of· the•nntuey Johnson CounlJ II liJ lt,.lf an 1m· pre11he accompli1hm•nt. Two 1.:enet ln particular, the opeJl1N party at Harverd and the clostn1 slau&bter In the Wyom1n1 hlllt. are da• · line pageant. on tllm. Cimino Jmna• a strange 1en1e ol order to 1uch naturally chaotic events: the dan~l"I 1weep with the arace and pr.cblon of a ataeed mualcal <borrowlna froan DePalma. Chnlno'• dancers move rt1bt to left across the acreen ~le the camera the oppoelte direction - the efleel la devastattn1ly hypnotic). Even In the battle sequt:nce there's a aenae of ci.rlty and rhythm in wbat"1 happenlng! Cimino brtn11 ua In· aide the action but never obtcurea It -we're alwn1 aware that the knocked Off at a rate tle. pro1res1et, IO doe dr.ad. Ctmtno'1 muddled thinklq aerved hltn lnad· vertantly well in '"The Deer Hunter" (people are •till trytna to naure out what he wu ·•11ylna"> but in "Heaven's Gate" it's tndec~t eapo1ure. If be were to work on a smallttr 1cale he'd be more popular wlth the lqdustry that finances him and he might be forced to work a little more aubatanee in- to his scripts before the cameraf roll. My sym. pathles go to Cimino for the grllltnc "Heaven's G'ate" got in New York beCBllH t.be mm "'leased last week la not a bad one. Somebbdy ought to p,ut a decent script into his hands. LA director at Hollywood BOwl Kris Kristofferson, who acts best when he says ' Cimlno's talent and paaaion are for scenes, not ideas.and there are dozens of beautifully realized LOS ANGELES CAP> -Loa Angeles Philharmonic music director Carlo Maria Giullni will be back from Italy. where bis wife Is recover· Ing from a stroke. in time for hu four scheduled appearances at the Hollywood Bowl thia summer. a Philharmonic sp0keswoman ha1 announced. Giulini cancelled all of bis spring engagements with the Philharmonl,t -including a tour of Mex- ico ani:i the U.S. thar begins in May -after his wife of 40 years, Marcella, was stricken by an aneurism at the base of the brain last December at their home in Milan . Spokeswoman Norma Flynn said the or- chestra's executive director, Ernest Fleischmann, and board vice chairman OUve Behrendt recently returned from a visit to Gluhnt in Milan. and they reported that the 86·yeor-old maestro haa been helping Mrs GiuUm with her physiotherapy dany, and that she has recovered fulJ use of her limbs. Before returning to the U S in July for the Hollywood Bowl 'a 60th anniversary season, GiuJinl plans to conduct a concert in Rome in June with the Academy of Santa Cecilia orchestra. Mrs Flynn said least, says very little as Jim Averill, one of tbe ... Ann~Malinees----Oaily·.~,~~~~~~~~--.r.i'.Trn~~T'rn~~=-~ ''Cinematic * IAIGAIN SPICIAL * dynemlce.'' ALL llATI s2.oo ALL DAY l•ery Mlnday a ,.,.. .. ,, m~~,E cn~~::m PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE .. MOTlca OP IAL• OP ll•AL PllOPallTY AT PlllVAT• SAL• NO.Ptt .. m PUBLIC NOTICE WISl COAST P•EMllU fNGAG[MINT NOW SHOWING • OronQe CINIDOIH • eoe10 MMe. HAllOR TWIN 6W-21U Qt-HOI !>AA YI 00 a t!IO l'M '-'' 51>i 100 • .tOO • 100 e 060 flM ••••• llO\' ............. .,.._ .. , £'PACIFIC'S~DOME ~ ,..,.,., .. ., • .,. ,...,,_ • 2iti"6-l.401 Dall\l l:UO • 3M>• 100 • 10_1_a_PM ___ ~ -,-1(.-.-.,-Cl<l-IA_l_f _r .. ~l't.!c:".:·: ;:r..:..~ ... 1 PIHOA•UICIS ....... ,, ... CIJ(~IW )• ..,.....,,._.,~CHnOo_..........- PUBLIC NOTICE MOTtca TOca•DITOH OP IUU( TllAMSP•ll <Ilea. "" .. ,,., u. c. C:.) NOCk• 1• 1Wf'90\l 9I...,. to tredllon ef Ille •llllln l\.ned lrwolf.,or INI e ...,._ lr-1er Is _.. to 1M "'-., personet prop•'"' ll•r•l"•fl•• OIKrllled. Tiie ,._ -"'41NU ·-... el IN In......, lr...U...Or .,, NATH4N QYON, 45.S l..06 ........ LAllUM .. .Cll, C.t lforfti. '2651 Tiie lacou ... 111 c.111om• ot '"' t lllol •lllO(.Mllvo off It• or ll(lntlPOI ~· ""' offko of IN lntOllded ,,.,,.,., .. , ••:-. All efller DutlflOH 1111-. Md ff· PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC:m T9 CIDtfTllACTOH CAUJ ... Nil alDS St_, 01w1C1 Hwlt"'9'on IMCll Clly St~ Ollltk1 a id DudllN . 2 o•ooc11 p.m. of fie 7111 ... al #Illy,,.,. Ploce al Bid RK•llll-l'llrcllet .... 01110, 1is 14lll st,...1, """''"111"" .. ecll, CM!fwnle. Project ldlftllll<llClen "-; New ,.,., l'eclllty, Ploc:• Plen• .... on lllo. Olltrkl Of. flee, 1JS 14111 Strool, H111111n1ton -..Cll, CMlloml• ...._ Y(Mlli WOM'.f 'I.All A .uuT°fl THE HOWLING (ll) , ........ , ......... .. ... .... _ .. .. OOl"lAflflltH CAVEMAN (PO> ................... ,,. IMOA•-··---""°" T TLl•N (Si\11-'J=) ANY~~~~~:;,~ .---.. ·--"'~ 81t£AKlll MOltANT (PO) ...... ,. .. .., . ... ,_.,ti ....... -. -. _..,_ ... CAVEMANlflGI ' ... , ... ~ ............ , ... _,,.. ... dre1u1 11ud •Y lllt lnltndtd lrontfel'Or wltNn .,,,... .,..,.. lost pett 10 1er OI k""wn to Ill• Intended tran•I--: -· NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN tNt Ille abo~ ki-1 Olstrkl of 0•111118 County, C.tllonll•, oc:tlnt b't al'\O tllrouOll 111 Governing &oerd, heroln•fUr referred 10 •• "DISTRICT". wlll recallle up to,""' ,mctr':!~~~~~~~:~~=~:~:-111~11 .... latw tlwl "" ._... .. 1.-ti-, • ......... 1:1f, ... lun, ......,. ......... . TllO ,,._ ond 111111.-a edllr•• ol lllO lflttfldM llWW!tne .... : HOWAllD PellL•Y, -C:-1 VleW °'"'•· UlgllN .,_,., c.tltomlatas1. r11a1 tM PAPtr'tY pertinent llwele la clHcrltled '" ........ H : CN....-9ltt ,. ..... b1ck lo< tllO -•rd of• tontrect IMP'OflTANT NCMICll CMtlDlllN UNllfl 12 flUI ,., ,,.. ....... projott. •10. "'811 IM recalWd 111 tllO place 14enllll0d ·-· MCI tll•ll .. -Nd end lll*kly , ... eloud ot t11e lbon· 1tel0d 11me..., pface. TNl'9 111111 IM a (omll!Od) *-'! ro· q<1lred tor MO> 191 Of bid dot.lotlMfttl to .,.rAlll• Ille 1'91Wft In good Condition wltflln (omlt'811) do)'I eftor IN bid ... ftlft9- E•Cll ~ "'"" conform end bO rt1410f\MW ill IN tOl'lrOC1 dK .. .....,b. l!oc:ll bid llltll lie ocum...,.ltil b't 1118 toc\lftl'I' rlfffnel la ID "'8 contract ~111"1Wftb .id b't lN 1151 of Pf'~ ''*°" troc:ton.. TN DISTRICT,_.... tN rlfht l• rtjt<t ony et>d ell blOI o< to woi•• tltly 1rr99111erlllol « lnlonnalltlet In .,y lllda o< In llW lllddlne. TN DISTRICT .... CIOtalNd from 1111 Olreellor of Ille OeoertlMfll of 111- -trlel ReltllleM IN ea-al Pf'tVAll· Ing role al per di-waeos In Ole lot.ellty In Wllkll Ulla work 11 It IM perf.,med for toc:h croft M tvoe of woRmAn neeclld lo HK"te tN Ctltl• troc:t. T-rltln or• on Ill• et llM Dl5'AICT oHke IO<•led el 7H I.ill Slr•1, Huntington .. acll, CA '2Mt. C.lfl mey IM olltelntd on reqllftt. A copy Of ,_ rllln allell be potwel •I Ille joO site. Th• IO<tQlllng K-lt ol per diem ...... bel9d upon • -king .. y el t lgllt 111 llGIKL TM ,_ fW llOlldey •ncl ovwtl--• .,..II llO •I IOMt llmo •ncl -NII. fl "'911 Ila "*'4MOl'Y U11011 tlle CON· TltACTOft lo Iii'»"' lllt' COllft>llCt It tw1rGH, 11111 l4lofl 1111y MleonlrKtor llnder lllm, lo pay nol ltl8 tllelt Iha llld tpeclfltd rtMH 1to 111 """"'" '""""" • """' '" lllO ''*"'"" .. "" unwoc:t. No llkfl:lw _., •lllldrew 111111111 tw • .,.,led -.uity Ctol .. .,. ener IN ....... ,... ... ~ ...... A .. ymonl Wlf Ml I . .,.ffof'IMll<o MM whl" 111 ,.....,_ "* .. 1.,c11o llon If .. O!Woct TN ~"""' ._. """ .. Ill "" ,.,. Mt' ,... Ill tllO tlftlrKt---.. ~--. -. ....... v.-~ Olrtl ~ ,. .. , .... Or-. CMtl Delly l"llOC, ~II• llld Mlf S, ltlf ltlHI ...---·u.-MAlllA IOLITA CON IL 1 VIDAi "THl!f" ..,...l'ltUllt , .... ""' ''fM)OIE.AN AOMANC£" -1"1111• lltlt ·~­"RAGING 8ULL" 1911 """' . "ELUHANTMAN" I· I I I ..., ll \ \ ........... °'"" RIAGAM TALKI TO CONOMll. • WOOCJ11RWOllAH WIUI• lfl~ .. 1191tln9 1 ... ~--"'· llMI IUbutbln oommuni.. ty, OllM .. -wflllilng Into wonci.r W°"*9t IPwt I) -• flNif"( Oil't9 ~-....... •OOD-..-.nc Oii. "' .... .._ .. Ml-..~ l.Ofi ltCfl Medi • .,... .. ar.n. *" '° rwr't Anfft Prtwlt• '*'lie (R) .MOWI ••'4 ~ ......... L0¥9'" ( ft17) Line TIW!*' ........ La111ln9 A worn1n Ut\lltloWll.. mwrtaa '* fltlf•bfOtMI' • '.M.MMIABNI A WOIMn WM dlot-. orll)lle Atttwllfo City 4- thowa; • 110-~·0ld 9'/engalltt; !(.thy a..i. Wiii teWlw "Tiie Thief ... • MOYll • • • "Aufl Slletlt. Awl o..p" 11068) an Gat>la. lwt ~. A llUbfM. rln• crew la divided ~~find"*' °"""" • Mtl*I oft the oOllt °' ..,.,, • NfNA I TIC TAC DOUGH .. •A•a•H eeooor-... F1ofldl Ind ... ... &hit IMre II,_...._ Thl*M Ind .. -...., """. ~ dllfel•- WRONG RABBIT -Snoopy puts OB the dog with magic in a new animated special "It'~ Magic, Charlie Brown" at 8 tonight on Channel 2. "Ute On A S.WI nv.ed" 6-1 In ~ and elo'lw motton, ..,._,. r9¥Wll • dellcai. ll'llOI Ind tia.lty -find 1111 811\Ulng -~ of ll!MtylM. (Al •• a..ecTNC ~Nlr(9Q Cl) C.NIWI (flt MCNIWI Uo. JOKIR'I WILD • Wll.COlom 9ACK. K°""" 4 e.blrlno le ~rvown .ner. tn. s-1tiooa hold .,.. elecllon lor ... IMd- 91'. (Plltl 1) • llNNVHIU. 9IMy mall• a llUC)WINW· -et the allge I« • comic: ~~. • ~NIWIMAT G ITUDIOIU ··~no" s..tt1a·1 <lf- Llka c.--oraper• lor a rice: • young 1ctor axpWne whet .... ""'" and ~·=he 1tege (R) ttt llAMEY MIU.P Two .,med hoodlum• lrw9da o.. 8qUed room but a.rney .,.. llttla tJma lor "*" becM-. • bomb .. CHANNEL LISTINGS about lO go oft In I buld-- 1 ecroee the street 1:11 IDITONAL. 7:00 C8e N1W1 N9CNIW8 • HAWY OAY8 ABAIN Only the FON -to understand wtlln Rlc:Ne dtope out of IChool to run off with a bMutlful -I AllC..WS ~ Cllarlas -hefoic proportion• aft• reYIVlng • ~ patient -"h ,_, -. e .,,...,.MIAN M+.NCl900 A corns ~ Mii out to find who robbed him ...,.,, his 1119·1 ....... -ltOlen. SI OYPEMY "Frlenda Al Any Age" ~ Molly Picon IRI ID MACNEIL I Ll!HM1' NPOftT C1) TIC TAC DOUGH 1J KNXT tCBSI Los Angeles D KNBC 1NBC1 Los Angeles B KTLA 11no 1 Los Angeles D l<ABC TV IABCI Los Angeles Cl) 11.FMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ TV (Ind )'Los Anqetes (J)) KCST (ABCI San Diego GI KTIV pnd I Los Angele~ m KCOP TV pnd I Los Angel~s t1l) KCET TV I PBSI Los Angeles '1!l KOCE rv t PBS1 Hun11ng1on Beach Program gets late reprieve By PETER J. BOYEa A~T ........ -~ LOS ANGELES -Somewhere, "United States" is smiling. "The Associates" is avenged. "Peter Chase" is enjoting a vicarious victory. Is there a canceled·TV-shOw heaven'!. If so, hosannas ring out. "Hill Street Blues" has been saved. NBC. you done good . . which reminds me -"Eichied'' thanks you, too. Despite horrible ratings, a brutal time period and the label of critics' darling -the kiss of death in television -"Hill Street Blues." a series that deserves to live. ls going to. NBC gave Mary Tyler Moore Productions a renewal on the show, which means that it will have at least 13 chances next fall to woo viewers. This time. the good guys might win. When a producer of a eood television show says, "It just hasn't found its audi"nce," he's usually copping an excuse for failure. But when Grant Tinker, MTM chief employs the phrase re- gardin~ "Hill Street," il rings true. NBC ls only just now giving the show a real shot oo the schedule. movlne its repeats from Saturday night -where aoy comer was murdered by ABC's "Love Boat" -"Fantasy Island" tandem -to Tuesdays, where it wtll probably land next fall, too. ...... Fred Silverman and bis chief programmer aren't being aJtruatic here; "Hill Street" isn't ju.t eood TV, it's commercial TV. The downbeat ele· menu to this realistic cop show are carefully tem- pered bJ characters and situations of such breadth and ailnple comic appeal that success seems in· evttable. That'• the difference· between this shQ..w and Ill timW QMIAH Gueeta lmpertll P81- Show Gir11. Mlton a.n., .... c.n •. Aogat ' Rog. .. 7:.IO 8 2 OM TM! TOWN Holla: SI-Edwarda, Melody AClgat'a A dcHt· yourMlf Hdlywood moYla tour, -of the more -' L09 Anoeln rM- teuranta. D FAMllY l'El.O 8 IHANANA ~: Johnny Peyoheok DEVeOMLOI A"'G"U Hoeta· Inez P9droza. Paul MO)"« G FN:;E THE MU8tC ID ALL IN TM! FAMtl Y Glo<la la thrown l(llo 1 ••••• ot cornptata lhOck when Mltce unvella hlf lutu.-e plen1 tor the Stlvlc family • MACNEl. / l..EHMA AEJl'O«T iii) NEWI Cl) ,. .M. MAGAZINE A woman """'° c:hor90-g<9')hl Atlentlc Coty dence 1how1, a 110-year-old l'langeliel 1:00 8 tr8 MAGIC, QiAN.JE 8AOWN Anlmelecl Snoopy • 1>1111 hlmaelf u "The OrNI Houndlni" and pull on e mag.c snow tor 111e p ... nutagang D L080 Perkin• mlalekenly lnvolVM hi• felk>w li'wmen In 1 Charity swindle mul- ermlnded ~ • l>Mutltvl Orienlel woman. • WVSTIJW ··s.o-m Crtbb: Son. thing Old, Something NHr" Sarg•ant Cribb IUSIMC\I that 1111 old man hM lallan '<ltc:tlm to a mar- rl~f or-orolll acnam. . (Part 2)Q (I) TI4I MXT9'I "Hooltad" 9 "A"l:MMIWON ~ Hott John Beatty . l:IO 8 PUllP THI! MAGIC DRAGON .,nlmaled A magic dtagon flelpe a young boy acqun ,.,. -•iota grow- ing up. IRI 89 LAve.HE& 8HIN.IY L-. Shirley, Lanny I and~ gr.. their own ~· and var1ed expla-nallone u to how ,.,. lour demollehad • motel room (RI Ii ~IUANETT ~,....,. Sidi "Miidred Flere9 ... Cl) LATIN~ t:OO 8 Cl) MOYIE 'We're Fighting Badl" (Premiere) IC.WO Mahen. Peul MoCr-. A group of .,._ Yot11 City youthl bend together to light crime In their netvnt>omood. D Htu. 8TAEET BUJES Local merc:henta, upaat CYV« en alarming crime wave. tUI• mau ... a Into thelf own hands and wort! C¥Y9' e young thief (RI 89 THREE'S COM" ANY Jack tmperaon•I•• a Michael Conrod of "HiU Street Blue1." other worthies that have vanished from network schedules after lighting fires in the eyes of critics and programmers but leaving Nielsen familles cold. Tinker and his producers have ideas to make "Hill Street" even more accessible without blunt- ing its edge. For one thing, they might lose that in- novative method of storytelling that strings some plots through several episodes. That's an experi- ment to be worked from a position or success. "I'm delighted," says Tinker, "It's not been the biggest ratings winner to date -or, as we like to say, 'It hasn't found iUI audience yet' -but NBC clearly bas faith th a tit will." . Cheers to NBC for that. F91'9WMd dlef IO 011t I Job II • ~ reltllU'MI. I"> • ....VCIM'PIH au..u· Imperial P.a.c. Show Gltle. Miion .... .... C.,,., Aogat & Aoo- •r. Mvtr•y L1ng11on, s~ w1n11ow, t.tataa Warftllld. • MV8TIJW "SetgMtlt °'1t>tl: Some- tfllng Old. Somallllng N-" SlfgHnt Cribb ~ that en old men llM lallan vtctJm to• mer- r~lor-l)'ollt ICtlem4I (Pwt2) • NfNA "Lita On A S•WI TtirMd'" 8-1 In ~Ind "°"" motion. ~ ,........ a dallc:at• gr-and l>Muly -end an lml2lng erray of U~(R) ..ao 8 9 TOO Cl.ou llOA COWORf Sari tllkM It upon harMl1 10 help • oot'9ga Irland gradual• Into manhood. (R) 10:00 D .,.0 wou:E A rl'lan who Wll llCCUMd of murder ate•I• one of Naro'• prize orchid• and holda 11 ho1tega In excnange for Naro'• help In pr~ hll lnnocenee •••Cri> Nl!WI 0 ltt HART TO HART Thi Hartl' lawy9r llCheln. 10 """"' Jonetl\an Ind then tau -.. WMltll lndlllewlf9. . ,,......,. "Roy lltown Md AlrM auc-09" Thi• New Vcwti-Mlad ~ Alcat'I mU9icel ll\Mfllbte J)91· lorme In ,,... •tyta of ~ .. ,_ -. _...,.... .. , .. , wttl\1moderndall0e~f tMr•tooneotu.~ ''Flew 0a CelmitO." I 10:IOI .... -· . .,..., ~ ..... • VIC 8M08f'a .nlMa~ n4I M'UM <If.The-VOiiey" Vic lr'lodan helpa ..,.._. ovareome mt '-of going Ip the net during • ¥Olll¥ Ind dem- C>n9trllM wtlat to do once you gel there. IDTHEa4M11ANI "The Birth Of Europe" Sember Gucolon• dl9c:ullM9 lhl rlM of Iha barballena end their ••Pl- dll~ through Europe 11:00 II DD Cl> 9 NEW& 8 IT AR TMK The EnterprlM i. t>om- t>arded t>y lllan tt>ermonu- CIMt mlaailM when It II Mnt to -di tor • miu- i eclantlat. N!WL VWED GAME M"A•l"H Hawkeye • .,... 10 heel a wounded I<«-. woman JOHN DARLING · -flWllGH1'-1&e0• WOVll *•°" "Hlttar" ( 1H2) ~ lll'd BaMNr1, Mario El'l\CI A~ln...._.. . tlon la gi_, lo Hltlar'• llnal day9 of l>OWll' h06ed up In a bunk• forlt-with hie ~ eo MOY'E • • ·~ "One Summar Love" 11971) ~ Brldg- ... ~ Sarandon A young man iw. with an undertylng IMr of hie own potentl81 for vlolanQe • GUNllllOKI . .....,... ..oeeai 12:IO G TOfi,IOMOW GUHll: former 81•1• OapartmMOI 8')0k .. n11n Hoddlng Cat1« Ill; Hope Cook• • ONE STU lnONO "The Return" Lieutenant Helnmllz and S.r~4'nt K"'9dl IMd a arnalf ~trot °" • rouu,,. "''"'°" In KO< .. 1:000 NYCMC ~~ WOfllD .VONO ·~ HMllng Power·· H<*I• Demian Simpton, Stacy Hunt ~· Jean 0<1n1n. Leonori W•d•••d••'• o.,, ...... ,. • ., .... 11:00. ·~ "LawlaM Frontier"' 11935) John Wayne, ShatW T«ry. 11:aG CJ * * • "Fllher'I UtUe • OMdend" (t951) S~ Tracy, JOln Bannatt. -AFTERHOON- 1 12:00 &I) * * •;, "The OauQhl« Of Roa1a O'Gtady" (1950) June Hever. Gordon Mac:Rea 1:00 ID * * •;, "My Girt TIN" 111148 I Liftj P..,.,.,. s.rn Wanemekar a:aoG•••"~ Slodl"" p95t) Judy Glf· land Gane Kelly by Armstrong & Batiuk 'Enos' plays for 'laughs NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) -Sonny Sbroyer's wholesome manner ii u real as bi.I southern drawl and toothy 1rin. Hla love for hia audience is as genuine as his tale or growine up in the small. south Georgia town where hl&h school football is almost as important as church and family. Jt may also explain the success of "Enos" -a television comedy about a southerner turned Los Angeles cop and his black side kick, Turk. "I like to make people happy," said Shroyer, in Nash ville for a weekend appearance at Opryland. " 'Enos' is a fun show that people can have a good tome watching. They forget their problems when they watch the show, and it's not serious." Now ending its season on CBS, "Enos" is a spino£f from "Dukes of Hazzard" -the tire squeling, redneck comedy that has become one "The way I look at it is you got to get a lot of nos before you gel a yea. Everytime 1 'd get a no I'd think, 'Great, I'm that much closer to a yes," Shroyer said, breaking out one of his broad smiles. Aft.er colleee. a friend in Atlanta asked Shroyer to pose tor a Coca-Cola advertisement. "I made the back of the Georgia-Georgia tech football program. After the eame. I saw a fellow with a bunch of programs and I said, 'I'll give you a dime for every one or those. I have a lot of aunts." After a few bit parts, Shroyer got his big break · in the movies when he landed a role in ·'The Longest Yard" starring with Burt Reynolds. The 6-foot-2, 200·pound Shroyer is returning to Valdosta where he'll wail to hear If CBS will air "Enos" next year. The show and Shroyer were nominated for a People's Choice Award. 'of the hottest TV shows with children. --------------------- When Warner Brothen approached Shroyer with the idea of making "Enos." the actor said he had his doubts. But after producers promised to let him return to "Dukes" iI "Enos" flopped, Shroyer agreed to make the show "I had a job with 'Dukes.' you see," said the 45-year-old Shroyer sporting hls LA police uniform while lunching al one of Nashville's chiquer restaurants. While everyone else at the table sipped Perrier and white wine. Shroyer ordered a tall glas of cold milk. "Aller we abot the pilot, my a1ent called me at home in Valdosta Ga . .and said 'CBS likes it. They want to make il a series.' 1 said, What'! Tell me that again real slow," Shroyer said lauehing. After the third time, Shroyer said, It sunk in. Shroyer said it took him a long time to get used to success. - MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE n. __ o1,.,....,.,,o _ ___ ....... -,o1 ..., ___ _..,,,.,...,~ ri'J Au. AOU AOMITTEO l!:!I -··"- AU. a m N40 111 '•u.ea 111cvv1 1'Hl HN.. 0/1 ™I MOTIOl4 l"ICTUflr COOE Of Kii MOULATION You can Charge DAILY '91.0f • ClaHlfled Adi 642•5671 RINOO STARR "CAVEMAN" CNt I" NIGHTHAWK" (A) I "UONOF THE DESERT'' CNt I "THE '°9TMAff ALWAYS RINGS~·· (R) 'HEAVEN'I QA,.. .. (,_ 7:00. "" I l ., l, band led the way when Riley aave a loud whistle ahd fhe command, "F.oreward, ~arcb!" Signs alont the route similar to the old Burmasbave ada encouraged walkers to persevere. One read, "JC yota're feeliqa thint)I and \he q)d legs are sore, dC?n't give up hope - it's-;ast half a mile more." A ND FOR anyone who felt guilty about the Superwalk distanc, runners dasbini past, another sign said. "1.'xecutive walkers, a special breed. They believe persistence is better than speed." Guests aareed the most touchine moment was provided by Chep Kral. a former March of Dimes poster child, wbo rabed '2,500 and attended with his parents Marlene and Don. Alt.hough he did most of the mile in a wheelchair, Chep covered the last part with crutches and determination, not neceasarily in that order. The Marin~ band played the theme from "Rocky" as he a rrived to applause, and more than one handkerchief came out of a pocket. B RUNCH AT the .Cbanteclalr ';Vas cham,pagne, fresh fruit, Eggs Benedict and chocolate cherry cake, after which Riley pre- sented each executive with an official "Order of the Battered Boot" to prove their stamina in the hike. (Ofriaial time for the walk was placed at "about ~e mile an hour," and communUy leaders were warned they ha<L to complete the walk by Monday noon or~ disqualified from brunch I I James Roosevelt surprised Riley wi{h his own award and thanked him for his efforts in organizing the walk I McNaman. Keith Costello, Tom and Tom· .. mle Wilek, Tom Peckenpaugh with d•u1hter Amy and Tom and Ginny Haley. Other 1uest.s were Judie Frances Munoz, Roser Stanton, Marian Ber1esoo. Maj. Gen. John Cox, Ralph Clar~. Ray Malavu{ of the Rams, ahd vtce lbyor Donn Hall of ~ta Me ... HARRY BABBITT waa the man Ol tbe evenina Saturday when the NewPOrt· Bafboa Rotary Foundation presented its fint ~nnual Ro·Charity at the Mariott Hotel in Newpo'rt Beach. · " Guests paid $50 each for an evenlne of dinner, dancing and auctions while honoring Babbitt, a former entertainer who moved to Otanee County 20 yeua aeo. He haa con· trtbuted ht. talents to more than 200 chartta• ble events. The evenln1 began with a silent auction on such varied items as a week in a HawaUan condominium, an antique Chintse plate and window wutun1 service. (Steve Piper, chairman of the event, was high bidder on funeral services, accordlna to one announcement>. Alter a dinner of prime rib, auests heard Rotary President Jim DeBoom joke that the guest of honor, Babbitt, "has a front row seat at the Marriott for the first time." The audience gave Babbitt a stand· ing ovation which be claimed was his first in P..oceeds fn>m the evening -will ~ to the Rotary's support or community acUv1Ue1 such as the Newport Beach Arts Festival, FISH. Newport's track meet, Hoag Hospital's nursing education , YMCA, Harbor Area Adult Care Center and Arbor Day tree plant· iog at local schools. Among the contributing walkers were Ken and Toni Oliphant. Jack Hamey, Charles and Nora Hester ... Jim a nd Oralee E:recTrek marchers gather behind Chep Kral for the March of Dames Supenrolk. Jim DeBoom f left) presents Rotary Club award to Harry Babt:ntt whtle Mrs Babbitt look3 on. On~ hair-raisin' expetj.ence after another My husband was un'usually quiet at dinner the other night and when 1 asked why he said. "I knew you wouldn't notice.·· "Notice what?" ·' ll 's not 1 mport.ant. · · he said "Then why did you bnng 1t up?" "IF you really LOOKED at me once in awhile, you'd know ·· "Know what?" "I went to a barber today mstead of my hair stylist. u ·s cheaper and besides I'm ready to look my age "He spun around "Whatya thank?·· "It looks like you just got a haircut. .. 1 "Are you serious?" he said, slamming down his cup. "I don't want to walk around looking like I've just gotten my hair cut·· "You didn't mind 1t when you got it styled and tl looked freshly blown " "That's different," he said ... Men like hair that looks like it's Just been blown and mussed, but no one wants a haircut that looks like yo u've just had a haircut " He wasn't always this temperamental I knew .She's just arwther buddy DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am an eligible bachelor who has never encountered a situation like this one Will you please interpret it for me? I was v1s1ting in the home of a friend when two 4elightful women came by to drop off a package. I was especiall y attracted to one I will call Marietta The next day I was told Marietta had made an mquiry about me and was favorably impressed. Happily, J phoned her for a dale the following ·Saturday. Marietta and I have gone out together several · Umes. She is wonderful company. extremely in · tellieent and I am eager to bP more than just her friend. The problem : Marietta told me last night tbat a romance between us would be unthinkable. he reason: I am a carbon copy of her aeceased brother. She said. "Your eyes, your complesioa, your voice, everything about you reminds me so tnucb of my brother that going to bed with you would be like committing incest." I have plenty of "pals.•· I want a sweetheart What do you think of this situation? -D.B. Dear D.8 .: MarieUa baa probably decided the chemistry lsn'& right and has come up wltb the perfect non·Judgmen&al cop-out. Keep looklDI UD· le11 you are willing to settle for another pal. DEAR ANN LANDERS: In a recent column- you encouraged men to buy their wives personal gifts, like perfume. jewelry and satin night1owns, instead of dishwashers and vacuum sweepers. You meant -.ell, but that advice sure wasn't for everybody. My ex-husband had a heart of gold. He loved to buy me expensive presents. For our fifth wed· ding anniversary he came home with an enormous diamond ring I made him take it back because I knew damed well I woul~ be ducking the collection agency for months to come. I would have bee.n thrilled if Instead he had brought me a few bills marked "Paid In Full." After 14 years we split because he couldn't re· sist buying on credit and I couldn't stand being hounded by bill collectors. Please tell people these matters should be set· tied before marriage. -TOO SOON OLD, TOO LATE SMART Dear Too Late Smart: Your letter ou1ll& to be lDcluded ID every handbook for marrta1e Jrepara- Uon. 'lbuk.I for wrt&ln&. ·hr.a: Changes are due ednetday, Aprtl zt, 1981 ARJES CMar. 21-Apr. 19): Persons who took ~ )'Ou for granted could be in for 1tartlin1 .revela· oas. You are stronaer than some ml1ht an· clpate Know it, elevate aell-esteem. \>ou're due r 1trea~r enll1bt.enment. TAtJBUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Look beyond ap· him before he was a "standing" . in the days when he thought herbal was a tea. Before he had hls own hair dryer and wrote to Sweden demand· ing they give the Nobel Pnze for science to the in· ventor of Grecian Formula I couldn't help but thmk what I had been through with him : the enlistment crew cut. the sheep dog shag, the Doris Day bangs. the Dorothy Hamill swirl, the Hamlet helmet. the Prince Valiant number and bis fur-face expenence I once watched him nurture three strands of hair until they measured 13 inches long. Then he teased them. btaided them, and coiled them carefully over a barren patch of scalp to make it IOI CITrlEHS SPECIAL 25°/o OFF ALL sa M-., TllH~ WM. <Mr HAIR HAMDLHS ·--·MM41• Peppermint Potty RUFFELL1S UPHOLSTERY S.nfr-s.•M ..... 1922 HAHOl ILVD. COSTA MISA-141-llH look like top-of the line-plush carpel. I watched him part his hair from ear to ear. hrush tl for"ard and live a tortured existence in fea r of drafts I told him yesterday. "Stop stewmg around about your hair. I find you devilishly attractive. Your hair has an Alexander Haig quahty a no, nonsense hi gh over the ears. stubby al the scalp. revealing bald spots of age which I respect · · This morning he "'as on the phone "1th his hair stylist "Could you work me in for a tousled Donahue bl ow dry today? You don 'l understand Two men approached me yesterday and surren- dered This is an emergency'" . I I r- 1 I I CLASS I f!I ED ' Sugar Ray Leonard admits he's worried about nl!Xt fight. C2. A deal Ferragalllo couldn't ·t11r~ down ·Rams say they're still deep at QB with Haden, two others on roster MONTREAL (AP) -The Montreal Alouettes made strone-armed, free -aeent quarterback Vince Ferraiamo and neet-footed receiver Jame! Scott offers they couldn't refuse ... and they didn't. It waa a difficult decision for Ferragamo to make, but the gifted signal-caller said he was offered a contract with the Canadian Football League club that simply was too generous to turn down. •·It was a very emotional de· cision and one that was hard to deal with,'' said Ferra1amo, who signed a four-year contract worth an estimated $400,000 per season. ·'There was a lot or stress and strain involved," said the 27- y ear-old Ferragamo, who played out his option last season with the Los Angele1 RJIDI of the National Football Leaaue. "I was malting very little pro- gress in contract talk• with the Rams and I met with a man - Nelson Skalbania -who made things pouible and gave me an offer I couldn't pus up." Skalbania, the 42-year-old sell- m ade millioniare from Van- couver, ~pleled bis purchue or the Alouettea from Sam Berger earlier Monday. Skalbania had announced April 1 that he had signed Fer- ragamo to a four-year personal services contract, but since then the official signing has been an on-again, off-again happen.in&. "It's been a long ordeal and I know it's kind of anti-climactic now, but I'm glad to be here," said Ferragamo. "I'm looking forward to doing the best I can here "Los An1eles ls a very &ood organbatlon, and I'm really 10- ln1 to miss the guys on the team, but I am excited to be here. "I know it's a team effort, and I'm ready to do the beet I can to brin1 a champiombip back to Montreal." Ferragamo said be doean't think he will bave any trouble adjusting to the Canadian game, having watched it since he was a youngster. •'The games used to be televised back home and I'm kind of aware of what's going on," he said. "I think with the wider field we'll be able to open up the offense and have a good, sound passing attack. "We are very disappointed that Vince Ferragamo chose not to sign with the Los Anceles Rams. but we wish him the best, .. 1ald Rama' General Maoaaer Don Klosterman in a prepared statement. "Every ef- fort wu made to sign Vince but w~ could not come to term1. •·Pat Haden will be our quarterback and be bu proved that be'a a winner. The IOM of one player will not break the Rama. We wlll have a very auc- ceuful season in 1981. • • "Naturally, we're sorry to see that Vince bas made th1a de- cision because we wanted very much for him to be a Ram and we tried very bard to aicn him ln the last year," said Jerry Wilcox, the director of public re- lations for the club. "It ha not come as a surprise to us that he signed in Canada because his agent informed us two weeu ago that he intended to go to Montreal. We wish him the best of luck up there.'• Ferragamo, a key flrure in tbe Rama' advance to the Super ~wl following the 1979 aeaaon, ayed out his ) option and came a free aceht tut Feb. 1. Wilcox indicated that whether Campbell was cboaen or not, the Rama didn't feel like they are hurtina at quarterback without Ferra1ramo. "We have three pretty good onea, we feel," said W~ox. "While acknowledging that Fer- ragamo bad a great year last year1 we're probably still as deep at that position as anyone in the league. "We've got Pat Haden. who helped us lo three division championships as a starter. We've aot a proven veteran quarterback with a lot of years of experience in Bob Lee, who'll be back. Vince Ferragamo Baylor co1nes alive Homer gives Angels win despite triple play OAKLAND <AP) -The Angels have stopped the Oakland A's -at least tem- porarily. "It's an important series, and important for us to win. If a team could go through a season and lose only one game, they'd be tough to beat.·' AngeJs Manager Jim Fregosi noted Monday night. The A's brought a 17-1 record into the game whicb opened a 13-game homestand. They pro- vided some excitement, includ- ing a triple play, for an en- thusiastic crowd of 41, 760 before falllng 3-2 to the Anget.. "IT WAS THE same story as the other loss -no offense. We had three hits this Ume and not many more (seven) in the lou to Seattle," said the A's Mike Heath, who was robbed of a home run in the eighth lnnlog when Juan Beniquez made a catch at the left field fence. "Even if we lost a couple of games in a row, I don't see how the fans could get down on us," Heath added. "We're still play- ing exciting baseball. "When you're 17-2, 'slump' is a foreign word." spring, but tonight I had four good at-bats," said Baylor, who was the American League's Most Valuable Player in 1979 and had injury problems last season. KEN FORSCH, ONE of the many a4ditions to the Angels' pitching lataff this season. im- proved his record to 3-0 with the three-hitter in besting the A's Steve McCatty, 3-1. "I IU1ew I'd have to hold them down to a few runs, because their pitching staff is just so fan· tasti'c," said the right-hander who evened his career major league record, now 81-81. The A's other loss, against the Seattle Mariners eight days earlier, also was by a 3-2 score. Tonight, Steve Renko goes against the A "s Brian Kingman. off to a 2-0 start with an 0.81 earned run average. In Wed - nesday's final game of the series, the.Angela will face Milce Norris, 4-0 with a 1.64 ERA. Dodger pitcher Fernando Valenzuela wa& out at the plate here, and so were the Giants all night long. Don Baylqr, hitting .058 before the game, drove in his first run of the season with a sacrifice ny in the se<:ond inning, homered in the fourth to break a 2-2 tie, and lined into the triple play in the sixth. "I haveh't hit the ball well all NORlllS, WHO agreed to a new five-year contract last week, signed it Monday. He's probably in the $500,000-a-year salary range now, but he says money wasn't the only reason be decided against taking the option of becoming a free agent at season's end. "lt was beneficial for me to R~gers top draft pick 1 NEW YOR'!HAP> -The New Orleans Saints opened the 46th N atiooal Football League draft today by selecting running back George Rogers of South Carolina, the 1980 Heisman Trophy winner and fourth lead· inc rusher in college history. Rocera made an immediate appearance next to NFL Com- missioner Pete Roielle at the podium, holding aloft a Saints' helmet. "I'm too excited reall)I. to say anythlna," said Ro1era. "I'm certainly aoing to 1tve my best every time on the field." The Ne.• York Giant.I, with the second pick, wasted no time in •electing linebacker Lawrence Taylor from North Carolina. The New York Jets •ere next and they picked UCLA nmninS back Freeman MeNeil. Valenzuela gets up for g8me by sleeping Amazing Dodger southpaw records another shutout ~fter siesta LQS ANGELES (AP> -It was a World Series atmosphere that gripped Dodger Stadium. Fans were arrivin& as early as three hours before the game and more than 100 members of the media were on hand to witness the latest performance of the remarkable Fernando Valenzuela. So where was Valenzuela, the rookie Los Angeles left-hander, while all this was 10- ing on Monday night? "HE'S GE1TING UP for the fame, all right," said Dodier short.atop Bil Russell. "He's in there on the trainer's table, sound asleep." The 20-year-olcf Valensuela wu wide awake a little later as he eo11tinued bis in- credible performance on the mound and at the plate. Valenzuela shut out the San Francisco Giant.I 5-0, allowtq aeven bits. Valenzuela bu started five eames in hil brief major leacue career and won them all, four via shutout, and in '5 innin&• this year. he has allowed only one ea.med run. Monday nicht's performance lowered his earned run average to 0.20. With his third straight shutout, be ~ a string of 28"11 scoreless lnn\ngs. "Webster bas no words to define bim." said Lo6 Angeles second baseman Dave Lopes , who helped to preserve Valenzuela's latest shutout with a running, over-the-shoulder catchJlf a fiy bail in the second inning when tbt Giants had run- ners at first and third and nobody out. THE CROWD OF 49,418 accorded Valenzuela numerous slandinc ovatiooa. on the mound as be strunc out one shutout innlne after another, and at the plate, where he collected three of the Dodaera' 11 hits and also knocked in the game's fint run. "He's entitled to all that acclaim," said Lopes. "He's done tblngs no one else baa done. He's a slat'. He owm the city rtcht now. He's a super tid and a •reat pitcher." San Francisco Mana1er Frank Robluon, referrinc to Valemuela'1 dart- ing screwball, said, "He throws a pitch you don't see too often, and when you do see it, you don't know what to do with it." San Francisco outfielder Jerry Martin, who bad two of the Giants' seven hits, said, "He bas more poise than any 20· year-old I've ever seen -that ii. if be really is 20." AFTE&WAJtD, Valenzuela, throulh an interpreter, said. "1 feel gnat, no I wasn't tired, I went to my screwball more toward the end of the ea.me ... On Im 1 hittinJ be'• batt!n& .438 for the seaaon with seven bits in 16 al-bats, • Valenzuela laucbed and said, "No, I've never been a &ood hitter. But I like to bit, aod I try to hit well." He ain,led ln the third lnn1n8 but even- tually wu thrown out at the plate ~r Ken La.ndreauxtiad 1tn1Jed to center. In the rou.rtb, the Dodgen finally aot to loser Tom Griffln, 1·2! after tbe San Fran- ci1co ri&ht·bancler baa retired the flnt two batten in the innin1. , T1toubled Bell unJJ~ ·of f o,otball fe.ture at Kansa8 \ a'bOWcl" hi oa-aeaioo cODdlUGG· toe Pl'OIJ'amt. lb• th1QP JCerwlD Ben abou.ld bne been dolD1. l hadn't. bee 1etttna out. 1oclall1. B'lt tliat ,ruo't .a mucb ol lt u back home. Tbtn•• ban ealmed down, tlut 1 am 1Wl ~ to have· to 1t.raltbten tb.lnll out b&Ck tbere. 0 stay here, because we've got, a dynasty gomg," Norris said com paring the 1981 A· s to the team which 10 years ago won tbe first o f five consecutive American League West titles. The 26-year-old pitcher said, "We're a younger team than the A's were then, and we've got more talent. too.·· M cCatty was the loser but pitched has fourth complete game and the 16th of the year for the A's staff. THE A'S TOOK a 2-1 lead~ the bottom of the second, wi one run scoring on a groundout by Mitchell Page and the other on a single by Shooty Babitt. The -\ Angels tied the score in the third on a single by Rod Carew. a dou- ble by Dan Ford and a run- scoring grounder by Fred Lynn. In the sixth. with the Angels' John Harris at second base and Ed Ott on first, Baylor lined to shortstop Rob Picciolo, who ran to second to double off Harris and thew to first to complete the first triple play in the American League this season In the bottom of the eighth, left fielder Juan Beniquez robbed Mike Heath of a home run by leaping against the left field wa:ll and grabbing a ball that would have cleared the fence. Beniquez went into the game in the eighth as a de- fensive replacement for Hartis j I I t"rom AP 411pakbd HOUSTON -RelanU.. World • Boxbur Council welterwet&ht cb&Gl· pion Su1ar Ray Leonard want& to add the World Box.in& A.uoclatioG junior mlddlewellht crown to biJ trophy cue, but be aald Monday 1ettinc past WBA cbamp Ayub Kalule will be a difficult chore. Leonard, steppinl up one wei1bt claulflca· tion, wib meet Kalwe June 25 aa pa.rt of a double-barreled maln event that will include World Box· log Aaaociation welterwei1bt champion Thomas Hearns, also a possible future op~ nent for Leonard. ''When l see blm (Kalute> fight, it mates me wonder why I ever picked boxing as a profession, the man is awesom~. ·• Leonard Leonard said. "I'm in excellent shape and I'm going to slay that way because this wlll be a tough fight." State Assembly sticks to decision SACRAMENTO -The state /u· [i] sembly, for the second time in lesa 4 • than a week, voted Monday lo pro- hibit teams like the Los Angeles Rams from using a city's name after they've moved from the city. The vote was 42·33 to send the measure, ABS02 by Assemblyman Mike Roos, D·Los Angleles, to the state Senate. The Assembly had voted •Cl·26 for the bill last Thursday. but an oppQnent bad asked for a second vote. The bill would forbid professional sports teams from using the name of a city or county if they don't play home games there. lt would re- quire such a team to get permission and would let a city or county charge a fee for that permission lt is aimed at the Rams, which moved its N ationaJ Football League franchise to Orange County last year. ·'They've stolen our team and they've stolen our fans," Roos said. "Why should t.bey be al· lowed to use our name"" Quote of the day Blackie Sherrod, columnist for the Dallas Times Herald. on a complaint by Atlanta BravE:!> owner Ted Turner that salaries in baseball are too high "That's like Al Capone speaking out for gun con trol .. Pirates to New Orleans: butt out PITT'SBURGH A federal suit m· seeking to stop the city of New O rleans and the Louisiana Superdome from luring the Pirate baseball team from Pittsburgh was filed Mon· day by Mayor Richard Caliguiri. "To put 1t very bluntly, this suit is being hied to serve notice on the city of New Orleans and the management of its Superdome to bull out or this city's present contractuaJ dispute with the Pirate management," said Caliguiri l'he Pirates, claiming they've lost $7 mill ion since moving into Three Rivers Stadium in 1970, are suing the stadium authority to nullify their lease, which has 30 years to run. Baseball today On this dale in baseball in 1971 : Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves belted his 600th career home run off Gaylord Perry of the San Francisco Giants. • On this date in 1961 At the age of 40. Warren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves rired a l ·O no-hitter against the Giants. Minor leaguer hurls no-hitter Mike Jones, a 21·year-Old left- ban•, tossed a no·hiller to lead Oma.l to a 2-0 American Association victory over Iowa Monday night. The closest Iowa got to a hit was a foul ball in the sixth inning . . Yanntck Noall, France's best player and ranked 13th in the world, withdrew from the quarterfinals of the World Cham· pionship of Tennis finals an hour before bis match in Dallas because of bicep tendinitis . A young man who spent 47 days in a coma after he fought an unlicensed amateur boxing match, has died without regaining con· sciousness. Vic Ayvadao. 21, of Duarte. col· lapsed March 10 after the fight in a saloon The Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League have bought the ne1otiating rights to Tom Clements, a tbird·string quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs The Chicago Bulls signed veteran forward Dwight Jooes to a multiyear contract . A federal judge approved settlement of two class· action s uits involving more than 9,000 Amencans seeking refunds after they canceled plans to attend the 1980 Olympics in Moscow . . And McC\ltcban, whose teams at the University of Evansville won five NCAA small· college championships in 31 years. was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame . . The Mobil Corp.. whlch earlier announced that it was going to back the national track-and·field champiooships, said that it was also going to fund an outdoor track Grand Prix. Television, radio TV: Vic Braden's Tennis for the Future. tO ·JO p m . Channel 28 RADIO: San Francisco at Dodgers, 7 :30 p.m . KABC (790 >. Angels at Oakland. ?·JO p.m . KM PC (7101 Baseball KMPC (710) WEDNESDA V RADIO Angels at Oakland. I 30 p.m . Boxer was given injections Challenger Shields says he used legal pain-killer PHOENIX CAP> -ChaJlenger Randy Shields may have violated World Boxing /usoclation rules Saturday by laking painkilling drugs before his welterweight title fight again.al champion Thomas Hearns. Shlelds' personal physician, Dr. Richard Sis- son, d.lBclosed Sunday that the No. S chaJlenger re· cei ved eight injections or Novocain In bis left 1houlder prior to the bout. But Shield's father·trainer, Sonny Sheilds, said lt wae Xylocaine and cortisone, not Novocain, and that \he druJJS used weren't acainst the rules. Both aald the injections were an effort to relieve a stralned muscle and tendonitis. Melvin Ziegler, the WBA's supervisor for the fllht._1~d lf a painkiller were used, Shields violat· td W DA rules and would have been disqualified. Ztuler said that if Shields did take painkillers ~fore ille .ftebt, "be'a putting himself ln jeopardy. He'I 1dlnltting he did 1omethlni illegal." lbltldl, 25, lost to the 22-)'ear-old Hearns in tht 1Jt,b round when rin& pbyaician Charles D. Like rul«i that three cut.a over Shields' eyes were too 1evere to allow him to continue. lillan, a friend of the Shields family, said be dminlltlrtd the numbing drug Saturday morn· •01. Ht aald Shields' shoulder condition was com· moa lD boxlnl and ta cauaed by heavy tralnln1. !luon leld Sblelda bad "three or four areas that ftrt "'1 verY tender" and tbe 1botl "Just took t.b tda :lt-• tbe pain. llilftft laad aald Sunday that "my arm Datbtrtd ... I've had a probMm wtth ll for over a mMth, 11 OI htd11 he had Hid be bad LnJured a abd\ddtt two ~ before tbe nattt when be fell •hJli f\IMlaf, Lake said Monday he bad seen no signs or Shields' having received any injection prior to Saturday morning's physical and weigh.in. "He passed hls pbyaical, and I did the anatomical part of it," Lake aaid. "I took hold of his shoulder and squeezed it. He didn't respond to any tenderness or soreness. And he didn't show any problems to the arms." Shields' father said he asked bi• son not lo 110 into the ring Saturday but that the boxer responded, "No way. It only hurts a little bit/' ''The kid's got too much guts to quit," the elder Shields said. "To know Randy, Randy would not pun out." It's Nugie Too crawling to win By ALMON LOCK.ABEY ....,, ................ ENSENADA -Jim Nuaent of Balboa Yacht Club skippered his Ericson·35 sloop Nuele Too to an overaU victory ln the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet div.islon of the Newport to Ensenada yacht race Monday. The win gavt hlm the Preaident of tbe United Sta tea trophy for tbe belt time in the bl11est neet In the race NuSfe Too waa a Clus D entry. Winner of the Prdldent of Mexico trophy for best corrected time ln t.be lntemat10e1al Olf1bore Rule DlvtllC)ll was Chrbtine, an M·foot sloop tailed by Fred Prelu, Paclnc Mariners Yecht Club. Prleu llto pt.eked up Ute Newport Ocean SaWoa J... aoctauon :tphy tot the nm monobu.U 1•cbt to ftilltb. • • Wtaner t the NOSA trophy for UW ftrtt yacht tO tlnt•h wu Macbete, a 40-foot catamaran aau.d by ~lick Swart and Warren Seaman Of Offabore Cru~ Club (tbla 1acbt wu flnt UTOMOUllJ ldll)tlfied u be.bll wled b) u Oftllte .Cout Collete crew). The 1loweat race In the hlltoQ' Of t.M u;,,.,.. old eYtDt draaed to• dOI• at U a.m. Moad., wttb about a doMm t•cbU atiD .. c:eoamect tor: Tb• nc, eommtu.. 1Ud ute......, ltNt. ...,.. prob•• •= Ute ·~•teb 1• 1aellt1 wb1a.1aa111 ... nee ·-·w·w ....... TM fieit came • • Miida> W /at t p.m . ... ..., J'Wltb tM .....,.-=-•tiOn ., • •••rdl oaU.. ..... ofu.ttiMO . • t;(Jl~!!~f\I LONG BEACH -American water polo -lt'• a' fruatnt· lnl 1ame to be•ln wltb, U1e American •Jftem of compet· tna aaainat others with a dlf· • ferent aet of na.let mak• lt even more difficult and Stanford llnlvenily sophomore Jamie 8er1eson la In a typical dilemma. TIM e~bt·nation 11 Flna Cup competition h•re at Lone Beach State enten lta fourth day of competition with the United State• tackline a danaeroua Spmlah outflt at 8:30 tollowina Monday's conquest of Australia. For Bergeson, it's the 1&me old tug-of-war that has plagued the United States since someone decided it WU a &ood Idea to IO for the gold medal at an Olym· pies with a 1roup of all·stara agaiMt the team-oriented com· munists of eaatem Europe. IN A NUTSHELL, Bergeson's life and future consist.a of more than playing water Polo -the luxury of competing has its limits. The 20·year-old product of NewPort Harbor High is working on an engineering degree and the class load isn't easy Neither is the responsibility toward blending into the A mer1can water polo team an easy load. "The coach (Monte Nitzkowski ) may think I'm not as serious about thlls because l 've missed so many practices," says Bergeson. "Weekend practices are tough to make dunng finals. l un derstand the problem. we haven't worked out that much." While the American teams gel a few solid practices in on weekends when the athletes can hop a flight and spend the weekend alternately in the north (Bay Area> and the south (Long Beach State). the Russians. Yugoslavians. Hungarians. Italians . East Germans. Bulgarians and the like. are practicing on an 8·S basis. with nothing standmg in their way "Trying lo get an education and play water polo at the same time is difficult," understates Bergeson. "THE NEXT two years I've just got to work it out and hopefully the coach will be pa tient with me. Water Polo, you know . is a year·long sport and by now. you can really feel burned out But I enjoy the game. especially for the physical contact. J Uke the man to-man confrontation." The Los Angeles Olympics in August of 1984 come some 15 months after Bergeson 's scheduled graduation from Stan· ford and he says the timing could not be better for him "ll 's a year to dedicate myself," he says ·Bergeson was a member of the 1981 NCAA championship Stanford team, which revolved around the spectacular play of ex· Foothill High goalie John Gansel, and success seems to have followed Jamie, since the day he decided to follow his brother's (Garth> footsteps. "l began swimmine when I was six," says Jamie. but because of Garth's success Cthe latter was a Cl F 4·A Player of the Year for Corona del Mar High in 1970>. l thought maybe it would run in the family ''Bill Bamett got a hold of me when I was about 11 or 12." Sf?ORTS BREAK I WATER POLO I BOATING ( Jamie BergelOn Bamett, the NewpQrt Harbor High and Jumor National team coach, molded Bergeson into a two.time Cl F 4·A Player or the Year, and is still considered the big influence "He taught me a lot , more than anyone," says Bergeson "And h~'s a good friend " BERGESON'S ROLE in the United States attack 1s as a driver. constantly moving and driving on offense. putting the pressure on the opponent and counter·attackmg. almost an ex elusive offensive role, which suits him fine One or his ma1or problems IS one that bugs a lot of water polo players playing with emotion, yet having th e disciphnc to react to low blows without damaging the team or himself It's also one of N1tzkowsk1's concerns about this young American team as it continues preparation for '84 · You ha\(~ lo play with finesse.·; says Nitzkowski "Playing with e mo tion and finesse can bt> tough The kev 1s stability. cons1steno and ucUcal dl1clpUne." "THE BEF£8£E wtll alWIYf see the re1pon1e," 1ay1 Bereeson. "You have to wait for the right time to pay someone back. I believe ln gro11neu if it ls to your advantaae. but nothing blatant. "You have to adjutt to the referee. Sometimes you have to go very conservatively, other times you can get away with things. You have to find out, then pace yourself." Bergeson's devotion to aquatics lies only with water polo swimming takes a backseat. But he doesn't feel raw speed is a problem, al all. "For 10 yards I can swim u fast as anyone, and that's pretty much what a drive consists of," >ays Bergeson. THE FRUSTRATIONS of waler polo in general, for most players, hes with the officiating, which makes basketball or root· ball appear pale in comparison when considenng the effect the officials have on the game. And on the international scene. well. ask an American diver "hat he thinks of com· munast scorers. Sometimes it's Just flat ridiculous. Ne vertheless, they're a fact of life and Bergeson expands on this phase of the game: "The referees' influence ran change the game so. and l think the Euro· pean refe rees like lo play to the crowd's interest, to keep the potential runaways close. "l t 's probably one or the reasons why the game has more support Ln Europe " A'!. fo r lh1s tournament, the first of three ma1or events prior to the '84 Olympics (the others being the World Championships in Ecuador m 1982 and the Ill Fina Cup 10 1983 >. Bergeson say<> his goal 1s simply to play the best he can And as e\ 1denced by the Americans' record through the first thn·e rounds. that hasn't been too shabby Hamann sparkles Motions enough for U.S. in 9-5 win LONG BEACH Emotion less, but st.Jll with enough raw talent to win by just going through the motions, the United States put Australia away. 9·5, Monday mght in Il FINA Cup water polo action at Long Beach State. setting up tonight's duel with Spain ( 8 JO) as the fourth night of the eight-nation tourna ment unfolds The highlight of tonight's four game salvQ comes at 7 when un beaten Yugoslavia, the Moscow Olympics silver medahst. tangle with the unbeaten Soviet Union. the gold medalis t in the '80 Games. ''It was about what l expect ed," said United States Coach Monte Nitzkowski, following the American's routine victory over the Australians "We were very tired physicalJy and emotionaJly from last night <Sunday's 6·5 loss to the Russians>. and it showed .. The U.S. got off to a quick start, as it did with Bulgaria Saturday, but th ls ti me it wasn't a one-man scoring show (Kevin Robertson >. as J oe Vargas, Jon Svendsen and Drew McDonald each scored to pace a 3·0 lead, an American advantage that would never dwindle to less than three goals after it was ex· panded to 4 I, still in the first quarter Va-rgas and McDonald each fini shl•d with three goals and Mc Donald aJso accounted for a couple of first half s teals Goalie Steve Hamann's play was perhaps the highlight of an otherwise dull game. as he was responsible for nine blocks at the net. including a spectacular save on Australia's only penaJty shot "We weren't crisp mentally and our offense was young - and tired tonight." said Nitzkowski. But we were in com· mand from the start and that was important "And, we won." Tonight's oppQnent, a wlntess (0·2·1}, but dangerously quick Spanish crew. is led by Manuel Estiarte, who along with Georgi M sh venieradze of the Soviet Union, is a co-leader In goals scored through tbree games (}0). Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Wes1 Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 17 2 .895 Chicago 10 4 714 4\AJ An1ela 9 9 .500 7'12 Texas 7 7 .500 7'12 Seattle S 12 .294 11 Kansas City 3 9 .250 lO'r\ Minnesota 4 12 250 ll'r\ East Dlvtatoa Cleveland 7 -4 .636 Milwaukee 8 5 .615 New York 9 6 .600 Boston 7 6 .538 1 Detroit 7 9 .438 2'r\ Baltimore 5 7 .417 2Yt Toronto 5 11 .313 4Yt ......,..s.c.... -.....a.Oek .... 2 Seattle I,~ I 110 lflln"'911 MU..._ .. Tennte 112 IMlfttltl ..... ,,... .. '*-, • N-V-'ll, o.v.it I ,,_.., ..... <>My..-......... ,.., .. ._.. ~CT•-·.,, .. ONIAN nu..-, .. , II o Mett .. CCS.VWI et,._... Cll~•t> r......-c~t·tlet~c~ Ml II Cltk ... 10...H)M~U..~ ~City C....,._.. .. 0 at Cit.._. C 1'°.l.: v .. tMM ,.,. .-,,..,..., c~ 141,11 .... c~•n •n-cJeMJMt-11,11 NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Dod1ers Atlanta Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Houston 14 3 824 - 9 7 563 412 8 7 533 5 7 12 .368 8 6 11 .353 8 4 12 .25(} 91, EHl Dlvtslon St. Louis 9 2 .818 •; Montreal 11 3 .786 Philadelphia 11 5 688 1 Pittsburgh 4 6 .400 S New York 4 7 .364 S'h Chicago 1 13 .071 10 M9Mrt'•k-.,....,. s, Sell l'r.nc 11<0 o ,..11.....,....s.~,...,, °"'' ..... ~ , ... ,..o- Slll l're11<la<• fjl\llll•Y 0·21 at o.-,.,, 'SS:~L~t~·,~Of\ ,.., .. CIW< ... 11<rvu-o.o Me11trtel (L.ta 0·11 el ll'lllledelpllla (Ol•ltl-\•l),11 • H-loll CM-NI at .Atl~ {,.,.,__ \·\),II S..q-..IWl1tNl .. Cl11ClftMtl l~C-•V, II ~I ....... Ul11Mtt1 t4l et Ntw Von. llcMt •2),11 . .. I i I I r FOR THE RECORD I GOLF "' I I . ' .. . AMERICAN LEAGUE Anoeta '• A'• 2 CAUPOll .. 11' O.t.•LAJtD .,... .., .. Ce,_,111 4 I I 0 H ... n ",tt lo I I • ..,.._,. 4 0 I 0 H••lll,< 4 0 0 0 f'oN,rt 4 0 I 0 '91,.,,....,,. 4 0 0 0 L,ylWl,<I • I l I Grn..a l I • 0 ... rrlt,tt • O 1, 0 Armel.Cf • O I O 8M14W.lf 0 0 0 0 "''"'"'·" 4 l l 0 on,c > • 1 • ,,..... 2 o o 1 .. ,._ .dll , 1 I t 8Mltl.Zll l 0 ' I Grk ll.lt> J 0 I I "'k<l<llo.• 2 0 I 0 e~ • o o • JoM~ • .-. 1 o o o Staftky,• 0 0 t 0 Tei.11 D J I l Totoll JO t l 2 "' .. .., ...... Cellforlll• on 100 ....a o..11M oa ooo ~ I -HMV> 2, Gtltll, Pl<clolO, 8.wleMf\. DP -c.llfemll I TP -0.llllfld I. L08 - Cllltonll• 1, ()Mleftll • ta -'"'""· ~·· ''""'· Font. "" -''''°' 111 se -ou. He"*rton. S Ott, P ... SF -laylOr C.I.._.. If' M II aa 11 IO l'oncll CW. W I t l 2 2 I 4 Oall\IM M<Celly IL. J.11 t I l l 2 4 HIP -!IV Forldl C~I. T -2:f0. A -'1,7 ... v.-..1, Tleillnl .... Y0tll .ooo 000 JOO-) I 0 Detroit OOI 000 100-1 S 0 G11klry, Gou..-1t1 1111c1 W.ctll; MIOJ, ,..,,.., m -P•rrllll. W--G<lldrY CJ.II. L- l•llo I H I S-Gouetil IS). Hll-- Yorll, O.nl U I , Oelroll, Parrltll CJI A-21.417. ,,..,_..1,y .... J Salllle 000 000 110 s--4 II 2 Ml,,...-., 000 lOO 000 0-) 11 2 IMllll-• ......,.""' Ctl llllcl Herron, W l- 1,., Wiii-, c,oaptor CIOI -lvt~•· W- A"ll•non (I I) L-C-r CO·ll. Hll- s..n•. lltll C.l, tlaftdl• Ctl .t.-11,074 on-..s,....,.1ea2 Cl\lc-.o ooo 100 ooo--t n 1 lelUl'ftOt"O 011 010 ota-1 10 0 l•rrlo6. Hoyt m Hl<ll.e'I' m. u,.,, Cll -Eu1.... M<Gf'eew. Mar11N• etl ""' Gr.,..m. ~y W McGr-ecw Cl·ll L- l•rrlo1 Cl 11 S ""•r\lnu Ill Hll- Cllk .... LuOMal IJI. .. mmore, Gr- 111 A-11,77' ................. 8'Hl0ft 000 000 000 -0 8 I r.... 200 004 1a.-10 14 o Torr•i, StanleY 111 -Al'-. -lcll "'" Suftdbw~ W -.skll !Ml L-l -91 CH I Hll-Teut, Bell UI A-11,tU. Ir_.. ...... ,.,., TorOfllO 000 200 lot 000--l 7 J IWlll•...... 000 o:ao 000 001-' " ) LHI. J eck-IS), Gervin Cll) -wtllll, wllm• " .... e .. 1er1y 111. Flft9trs 111. e1 .. e1"'4I Cit) ""' Sim"'°"'• Vosl. W- Cltvel-CHI). L-GINI" C0-11 . A-4 • .a. NATIONAL LEAGUE OodQen5,0l•nt10 SAN "tlANClfcO LO• AMGSL.al MrllW NrllW Moro•n.21> , 0 0 0 L..-•.11> 4 I I I e abell,JI> 4 O I o Lanclru,cl 4 o l 2 Clark.rt J o o o lleker,11 4 O O O Evans.lb 4 o I o Garvey, lb • o I o Hert'IOon,11 4 0 1 0 Ce r.JI> 4 0 0 0 Mortin.cl 4 O 1 O G"°n wo,rt 4 I I O MIJ.< 4 0 I 0 SclaM:I•,< I I I t LeMoatr.ss 2 o o o 1111ue11,.. • 1 2 1 Wlllfrd.1111 I 0 0 0 V•leflll•.P 4 I J I GrlHln,p 2 0 0 O s1.-...,.. 1000 llreltll1111.P 0 0 0 O • r ..-.1. JI o 1 o To ... 11 J:I s 11 s Scer'9 lty ....... ~ FranclKo ooe ooe __. LMA,_i. 000 eGI *'-S OP LA* ~ 2 L08 -Siii Fr- <llKO t , LA "'-'" 12 11 -0...,,.....,, G•noey. SI _...,,, L~. u"*-. s -1..GP" ... f'r-lln IP M II I.II II to Griffin IL. I 21 • t 4 • I 8l'elnl11111 2 l I I 2 Lie._.. Vateftl"911 IW, s-41 t I 0 0 4 1 WP -Grlttin Pll -SctoKle T -1 Sol A -4',47'. ......... ,, . ._.., ,,...,,, .. , 100 000 000--1 • 0 """-I~ 200 100 Ob-I , 0 G111llck.-.. S..O 111 -Certer, A.ittl'Hll encl 11-. W A11tll"'"' C).I). L -Glllllcll.IOll Cl-II A 21~. ToP 10 1-..M ... Uatllats) AMtl"ICAN LIAOUE G Al II H ""\. Sl"91•10ft, Bolttmor• U 41 t 21 .Sil L•nst0<d, 8oslon , ll et t 20 40I Kemp, o.trolt 1• ie 4 U JJI HarrOfl, SMl\le 10 D J U ,.. a11rrouons, Seattle • ,, s 12 ., ltsll, So<tnle I 7 M 10 U .J1t lerMranl, Clll<aoc> u l4 t 11 .J7S Even1, -ton IJ .. II II J1ll Dla1, Cle..eland 11 U l It .JM l/eryn r, Clewl-II l4 1 11 m "-"-Arm ••· Ookla nd, • ZIO , S.etlle, •. SlnoletOfl, llalllmore, J. S"'•llo , Mln- net.ota, S, ~. Mllw-M. 4, Hetl\at., He• York, 4, f'e,.., A• .. h , 4; Fisk. Clllc-.• __ ..._ .. Arma•, Dell.-. 21. Flill, e111<090, "· M11r p11y, O.ktencl, IJ, Lf'lll, ........ 12; Smelley, /W,,,.aot.a, 12 f'tllt ... lltKllMMI KeOlllll\, 0..1....S. 4-0, M. Ho<rls, j)allatld. 4.0; f'-'. .......... M : Hoyt. Chk'90, H . Walla. , ...... .,.... 2.0, LMCll. Mn ......... t .O; 811f'M, Olk .... 2.0, Kl,.,,,..., Oe*taftd, t.o. NATIONAL LaAOU• OUM II P'ltt. Cotti"'· ClflCIMoetl U S7 11 2• .41 "''""· .... y °" IJ • • " ... ...... l'Nlodltlptli• ,. .. 10 27 ·"' Hot*•-·°"'.., .. JO J ,, -... , ..... _...... .. Sf 11 20 .110 HorMflClel, st . .....,., ti 44 I 16 .»4 MedlO<k, Pl~ t l l 2 II ,US Mor•let, Cllk-.c» t 1' t 10 .>CS S\a\111,...,,. Y°" 11 44 > 1S .a.1 Mceri.. PNi.-lptll• u •1 • " .MO .._ ... k-i.t . ......_.....,..,Si. c.rtof, ~ ,,..,., •: o.-. MoMrM1, •; 1u...-. Mew Yent,4; 'T-...n, ~~. 4. ._ ..... a. klUftMlt, "'llldtl••• U ; c.nc..,c ... , Clllcll!Mtl. II;~.~ 11; c..-, ............ 11; ...,,., St. .......... 11; H..-.Cll. SI. I.Mii-. 11, '*""""'• Atlllltl, H ; c.MI\, Sall f'rMCt.c., II. ,,_ .... Ct-.C..._) Ye-.-. • .,....,._, M ; s---. ~ H . C:.14111\, l'tll~-"'•· M ; ~M.~M; .............. H ; .... ,.. M•11troel, I .. ; "~"· l"l....,._, t .. ; 1t•e11, "-"-It• M ; wrtey, I&. i.-et. M; ~A ...... H : ...... CllldNIMI, w. ~ .......... . M ; ....... ~W. NewDort to EnMnlid• ~IMALaHULn Pr ...... I 01 MOko T,..,..., UOll-AI -I. CllrllllN, F .... Pt'elu, PMYC; 2. .. .... Jim Ll_r._.., ave ; 3. Temetlty, T .. Kerr, llCYe ; 4. Warrl0t, 81.,.I allCI c.-t, I CY C; S. Jetstream, J erry Simoni" LllYC .. Secntery ot Mealcan Hen TroPflt llOA-8 1 -1 l..Olll, Wl\lt O.vl1, COAYC, t. Lewlly, HWlll MCGiii, PMYC; S. Memle, 1..ewl• -Smith. e VC; 4. -l<lllO -. 8 ob L•n•, L8YC, s. e adenu, Cerl Elcllenl-. so ve. Secretory of Maalcen ForelOll Atfelrl AelallOM 'Tr<IOY Cl~.CI -I Hot II-. c .. 111ion •"" w 11-., ttHYC. t Po r-... Ktall .->d Hibbl, AHAYC, J. llufflM, ...... Ou ter, BVC. 4. Intrepid, Oele11ra and SclllCll .. r. llYC S. Hot Po\lto, 1111 Cor11H\. SOYC U S. Co .. \ Guerd 'Tro plly CA,.clenl Mariner Fleet! -I. IOnlla, Goldie J--"' LIC v . 2 P<lnceu , J olln C•••or.,..., WHOA, l. O--a. IUclllrd Alllff, SSYC; • Sund•. Gfaham G•-· ave. s s..... Sura""'-J ""'" Hosy, PllYC. PrH l .... 1 ot 11W Unllll<I StalH Tr....., IPHAf·Ol -I H .... TOO, Jim H.,..m, llYC. 2. Great et.cape. Hemllton .,._.., l(HYC, 3. PtlQrlm, Fr-All<lf.,.., SOYC. • Krtstln. HarOlcl Kolwk k, NYeLD. S. Hel· cyon, ~ uwrence, SDYC. V S S.Cretery ot !>late Trophy l .. HRF-AI -I Drllwr. S<llOflel<I .,,., GarCIMr, LllVC. 1. The So.ore•. Kevin Cor\Nlly, SI YC; J Werrlor. OovlCI Sl.e!Nr, LBYC; 4. Melolo, llol>erl Loek•, e &YC. s. Me1q11erac1e. Tt11wley -Lanoll, VEHYe U.S. Sacret.aryot .... vy Troplly CP'HllF·EI 1 _ ... ,,. t>ennh Pe,.,,.n, sov c. 1. HUtller, Alea 8aket', eOAYC, a. "-''°· Enrlc;o Vent11r•, SMYC; 4. TrH GordO, Price, HHbl<k .,,. P11rca11, ICVC, j , Ulorla, Melvin Wiiis, COllVC. Gowerno( ol ll•l• Celllornl• 'Treplly (PHAF.CI -1. u--.. ONflanll~ PBYC, 1. C..kl\ n. JoM encl 1..ellle CllB. wvc. J. Sall SMiier, loO &ov•. PCYC; 4 80flavent11re, T Mat-. CAPO IYC, S. Tem per, llay Bootll, IYC. Governor OI caiuond• Troplly CPHllF·ll -I P-~ ..... and J-ft MCI(-. sove. 2. COl'-'Y. ,,,_ o.1r, cave. J. 59eftdrltt. Fel--C"'1l, Sl..I YC, 4. Oanerd Bou•vllt'CI, Cliff Jarvll, AHAYe , S Oellver.nai, ..... ""'""· VEH ve . Mayor Of Newport T,..., IPHllF·f l -1 Gr•J Mell•<. Jon C""rclllll, l!VYC; J. Hlabn, 8'1111111 --· CYC, J. Or .. e 1ouom, Mlk• Kl,.,,.y, LllVC, 4 s.-MN, Oe""ll ~y, CllYe, S f lrw Cr-1. ,._t GIH!a<,VYC. Mlyor Of E~ T'"°""y (l"Hltf441 - I. S\erfln, Bert H•l-•1~11..: VYC, 1. Fl,....rlll. Miu ........... CAl'U IYC; .. Aalfl 0-:., ... C-11, KHYC; 4. Oalrw • LUllO, PMll F~. DPYC, S. s.-.4. ,...,. Dutton. OPYC. EMO-~ ol C-<• ,,,_., (P Hllf·JI -I Mlooa, Den I.,_., WHOA. 2. Dane 1119 ..... .Joe Ge<llenlt, AHA YC; ). Hampt/>ire ADM. °"""' ·-"· SSYC, •• Ala ._, II.ea Oberlle<k, PVYC, S. Heu. W .G. SebeS!len, FYC. Emltlfl FMnlly T ........ ., IPHllF-0) -I. Jlf· ,., 11, Aon w-. v vc; 2. 11.,,.1.u.n, 1111 Fordlane. VYC, l Dllldellan, llol> Grllftlll. LllYC, 4 lmc-1-. Jim W'l'ftff, MPYC; S seoc, &""9 w.11er1telfl, LllYC Conv•rw Wwrde"'°" Troelfly CPHllF·ll - I.Sc-I Tl9tr, lloO Str•no. CAP'O vc, 1. Splndrlfl, Aly Hayes, PMYC; J. Ser-. John WllH•. OPYC, 4. Micanopy, Peul Oefr•llH, ANA YC; S. Leo, 0.0,,.. W-. SOSNA Cllll Cl\apmln T ropt\Y C50RDI -1 0. ll•nce, llk llerd N-11"9. SSVC, 2. T...neml. O•vld Gray, CYC, l ApllrOdlle. J im G r11enwald, SDYC; •. eomadlenne, CAI 811rQer1. SWYC, S. 91.,. 8 1aLH , E .... ,. Pe"',."· SOYC HOSA T"""'' lllNI yacht to llnlM) - M•cllette, J kll Swart ancl Warren Sa--. occ Porter Sine.lair Troe>'IY (llrlt 11,.... llUll ye<lll to 11n1>111 -Owl•llllO, Fr .. Pt'elll.. PMYC Alie• Puttall r..,,. lflnl cet-an w. llnl1hl -Maclletll New Y-Ya<1'4 Chob Tr_., ltln t •lntM llull dh•lded rlQ lo l"'hlll -Mir-• .JdWI scr•i>~. SOYC. L•halna i'ecM CIUO Tr ..... ., Clim PHllF yeclll to llnl>lll -Drllter, Scot .. 14:1 ..,. Gerdner, LllYC. Joi\" CeU•y TrOC>fly (llrll "'Hllf' U "=tl t9 llnistl) -Ae ... la\loll, 11111 For"'-• VYC. NOSA 5'1it<lal 'Trjlpy Uet4 yecllt to fitlllfll -El11sl.,., A-1 1,,,,,.1,CHINS. Joflf\ OMWf Tr°""' CM Ylne 1"9 - lfOPfl'I' wl-sl -~ Dle90 Ya<lll e 1uo. NHL playotlS NMIPIMM. llOCIMD , ........... , T_.....,._ HY A.,..nMMY I~ Ml,.,..... 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Tr .. i-CllUMl•I c.r.. ...... ~La,,... ni. ....... . Hoyw-lc..I .... lucMI, .. 1 ..... t11 1..1-...u ... , .... $hore, t-4, .. , . ~. .. 1. Jlm!Ma ICdMl -· t-4. M , 6-1, M ; Geru CCdMI, -. M , W , .. ,, H : ..._ ICdMI -· 6-1, •.O. M , 6-1. .,...... Em•,_.._,, IC4MI <lei. Grlffl,,.K'-V, .. l ... J. def. O' ... len-Of'l-tt. w. 6-1; I!• lnt-S..lllv"' (CdHI qlllt, 7-4, 6-4, -· .. 1. ...,. U.-8MClllCll\, ... ~11Vl u.,.... D ........ (l.8) leM '° _ ............ .. ............. CarllCll'I, 6-2, .... Ha...-Z. .. I; k-.b Cl..81 lost, U , U , -· W , M ; P'IUl<lllfll (LI) io.t, M. M , 4-4, -· ... ; lrwmli.td CLBI i.t, 2-4, .... -• ..._ ~ 0.-. LHCll•JllnfCllt CLll def. St•pfl-· Mallery, .... w. def. ,._.I(. CM'ltml. ... ,, W , ,.,.,..,~""' Cl.II, lo.l, U, .... ._i11, .. 1 ... 1 ..,.. .. ,._.... "....., s" ....... L.-r-CMl ""· SMllflWI, M , .... lo s.M, .... lost to ~"*In. H , dlll'f. ~ M ; H-•I CMI -· M , ........ 2. M ; Cl- IMI -· J.S, M , M . M ; Oleffln IMI ..... 1-4.~7,21,-.M. ~ •1c.,._.SHt"' CMI llef. c...,1..- 811<...,_, 74, 74. e.t. Mii'-·"-W. M ; C-.HlltieY CM! i.t. .. 7, ~1. -· .. 1. ..... Misc. GOLF 1975 the World Cup m atches were held on the course." Just the opposite of the situation in Egypt. "When I went there, they said, here's 10,000 acres. take what you want to build a course. lt was three miles from the pyramids. Egypt is a very poor country and hadn't had any contact with the outside world until 1974. They had their money buried in cans in their backyards." Jones has also designed a course for Russia. ·'They had a guy ln charge of the profit center who had been in the diplomatic corps. He found tbe only way he could conduct business when he was abroad was on the golf course. so he learned to play and was hooked 011 the game. "When he got back to Russia, he worked out a deal that took him five years to gel started then another three to find a site. "He had to ask pe rmission lo learn to play the game when he was representing Russia in other countries and he needed permission for a site at home. They offered three sites one of 20 acres (it takes 120·150 acres) and another a long way away from Moscow "Then they found one 40 miles from Red Square The forestry department wanted to re· move the trees and the conservationi3ts wanted to keep them. They finally had to map every tree and pick out the ones to be removed. It is hard to design a cour.searoundtheexact numberoflrees that are left . . . "They fina lly sta rted c011Struction a year ago last summer and l was there in October I felt a distinct chill in the air al the time. They had ap· parently decided the detenle wasn't worth it and at the moment the project is stopped -at least I think it is. "You know. if we could only get their generals out of the sand traps in Afl)lan.lltan and into the bunk.en ln oscow, lt would 90lve a lot of \he probh!ll\I." Jones bu desifned th new Salt~reek coun in South Laguna Beach for the AV"'1 Corporation and was on hand recently to oversee the project. • • • LAGUNA NIGVEL'S MARK O'MEA&A is well on the way to becoming the rook.le of the year on the PGA tour and he continues to inch closer and closer to bi:I first victory. He reached a playoff lo Tallahauee a week ago but had to settle for a tie for second place. He has finished ln the money 11 times in 14 starts with 'four top 10 placements. O'Meara's money total now stands at $54.176. easily the high m._rk amona the 1981 rookln . Plu01er mnong UCLA entrants Pre.race favorite F rancie Larrieu will have her hands full Sunday, May 10 when she races the challen~e of University High's Polly Plumer in the open mile at the UCLA Pepsi Invitational track meet. Plumer, the premie r prep miler in the nation. will chaUenge a tough field which includes Leann Warren. Maggie Keyes. J an Merrill. Linda Goen, Alem any High's Vickie Cook and La rrieu . Larrieu is a six time AAU l.500-meler cham· pion and a two-time Olym pian Merrill is a former American record holde r 10 the 1.500 meters and an Olympic medal finalist m the same race at the ' 1976 Montreal Olympics Alemany's Cook needed personal best 4:25.9 to mp Plumer m a photo fini sh early this season. Her time equated rou~hlv to a 4 .45 mile Brun8D8kysentdown From AP dispatches Tom Brunansky, the 20-year -0ld outfielder who started the opening game for the Angels, was op· tioned lo Salt Lake City Monday and the club called up first basem an Joh.n Harris. Brunansky had appeared tn 11 games for the Angels but hit only 152 with three home runs and six RBI. Harris, 26, played m 12 games for Sall Lake City and had eight ext ra base bits and 10 runs 1 batted in. He was hitting .306 in the Pacific Coast League and hls 15 hits included five doubles. two ' triples and one home run Rustlers, Bucs _M_E_R-cE_D_E_s-_JA_G_u_AR ___ v_o_L_vo-l · SPECIALISTS \ 1 \· . . ~l'!tb ll ~on Rltet-•/$l4.'5 OH ChalM)e win in so J 1 a cHEc• ouR cohftTITIVE rR•cES 1 Golden West and Oranee Coast colleges pulled ARST ' GRANO ARCO 8354049 i off contrasting victories in community college 1222 E. ht loff 5 Fwy> 8-5 Except Sua. 1• softball action Monday, with the RuaUers walking all over East Los Angeles. 14-0, and the Pirates I need.ini 10 innin&• to nip Cenitoe. 2·1. :.:=============;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,I At Ea.st Loa Angeles, the tired RusUen. com-ing off a champion.ship in their own tournament Orange Coast College Seminar ,. last weekend, improved their Southern Cal Con- ference record to 10-1 and overall mark to 21·10. TH E H IS PAN IC G WC had played six sames in the last three I days, including a 4·3 victory over Mesa College EMPLOYEE 1 (Ariz.) in the title contest of its own tourney Sun· day. But the Rustle rs showed they still had something in them, as Laurie Bird had two hits, in· eluding a double for three RBI, and Nancy Mercado bad two hits for two more RBI. Freshman Jamie Honratb, meanwhile, crusied through seven innings, allowing a harmless fourth· inning triple. Honrath, from Marina High, struck out 10 East Los Angeles batters in r~rding the win. At Cerritos, Jan Culp went the distance and scattered seven hits as OCC nipped the Falcons. The victory improved Coach Barbara Bond's squad's record to 19·6 overall Van Horn to attend Cal Poly , A Cultural & Business Perspective An 1nlens1ve one-day workshop to provide a clear perspective of the Hispanic cmployeP and the rot~ hP will play as a con5umer Saturday, May 2 Orange Coast College · Fine Arts Bldg. 119 - 9 a.m. • 3 p.m. ~ 2701 Fa11v1ew Road Costa MPsa Registration Fee $45.00 Visa-Mastercard-Information -556-5880 llOTtQ 10 Cll*TllACTOtll CALI.I .. flOtt lltDe tcllMI Clltfrlcll ~r ..... ltYk .... CN*ICL 114 0...11111 t .. c. .. ._,,. sf .. "" .... " Met. "''' ""• ti ... "'".. ._.!CNt .. Office, JU 14111 ii,._,, M1111ll11-1111 -..11.c.i...-. """,... ........... ,.... -· C:e11tcre&e 1'1-t , 0.Ytr ~lf411e .,,... "* ..... .,.. ................. . .,.......... ,,. 1'111 ,.,..... .. .. . lllltM '-"" Callfwllll • .. OTIC:S II MUllV OIVIN t"-1 Ult •~ lcllMI Olllflcl et Or ..... C'.Nlty, CAllloNlla, ectllle 11Y J M llltewfl Ji. Offtnllftt ... , •• •• ,. ....... , •••• ,, •• l• I I -''OllT .. IC'r', Wiii ract f.,. *' te, llUt noC , • .., tllM ......... ,_ u .... , ..... _...fer 1119 elrlltf'O tf • <Mttet ., .... ....,. .... tKt .... 111111 .. •«el* "' .. ~· ldttltlflM ....... -~ .. ~ ~ l'Wllllctr rtM ....., _. tM elleY•· _.141..., time lllCI piece. Tll«e wlll M e UOOO .... It r• 41Ulr.cl for HUI •t of bid-~· te t"'ren• IN ,.llltll Ill IDOd COIMlllM WIU.111 10 o.n lltff ,,_ bid oClll\1119 elate. l 1cll blO mual conform 11141 be rellPOfttl¥e IO Ille (Olllrec:t doc-nll II</\ llld allell • ec:coml*\"41 9y Ille M<IH1ty ,.,.,,_,IO In .... COlltrec:t -ume""' -bl' u. tttt of pr~ ~OlllrlttllrL Tiie OISTIUC:T r-v .. ,,.. ''°"' to rejlct ell)' w ell bid• or lo wetve a11y ,,,....,1.,llMI w lntormellll•t In OllY 11141• or In tM bldOlne Tiie OISTIUCT hit llllWned from ,,. Director ol ttlt C>etNtrtment of In· Clwlrltl "•lt1lolla Ille e-ral prevail· 1119 rate of per diam weoe• 111 the ..i.1111, 111 WlllCll 1111t wor11 I• 10 be ,...rformecl for tech craft or type o1 ~·--oeca lo .. acute lllt COii· ltect. TlleN rat• .,. on Ille el the C>ISTlllCT oftlu localed .. ns , .. ,, .. lrMI, H\#ltlllg\Oll e .. ch, CA '2'41. Cotln mer be obtained on requtt•. A cop, of lhMa ratM thall .,. polled at llleJOlltlte TM far9'0inll t<NOule o1 .., dl.m Wqtt It l>IMd upoll a WOOl119 Clay Of !11111 Cll l\Ourt. Th• rete for holiday elld overtime work tlWlll be •I lutt tlmaallCl-·IWlll 11 thall • mencletory ._Ille CON· T"ACTOll 10 -ltw contract It -•rded, -._ ant a..o<ontraclDr ullder fllm, to pey not , ... then ttw « aid tpeclfltd retet lo all workman employed bl' tllem l'l llw u.c:ullon of IN contrect No Ill-mer •llhOf-hit l>kl for a ,.rlocl ol .iny 1601 c11n alter Ille ........ Ml 1er 111e _..1119 of IMdt. A fNIYmenl bond allCI • perform1110 ~ wlll be requlreo prior IO uecu -,loll of !NI <Mllrecl The SMyment bend shall be 111 ti» from Ml forlll In ttw c011lractdK..,,_., Gonrlll119 loard ly Norma Vende< Mol.n Cler"!I Pullllthed Or*9 C:O.tl 0.11, Piiot, Aprll n -Nilf S, 1 .. 1 ,.._._., PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF ELSIE FRANCES HOF· FMANN HOUGAN AND OF PETITIO N TO AO· I MINISTE R ESTATE NO. A108S92. I To all heir s, beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditors of I Elsie Frances Hollman jiougan and persons who may be otherwise interest· -ed 1n the w ill and /or I estate: A petition has bt!en filed by Rumont W. Hougan 1n the Superior Court of l Orange Coonty requesting that Rumont W. Hougan pe appointed as personal representative to ad · m1n1ster the estate of Elsie Frances Hoffman Hougan (under the ln- ~ependent Administration f Estates Actl The pet1 ion 1s set for hearing 1n Dept. No. 3 at 700 C1v1c "tenter Drive, West, in the City of Santa Ana , California on May 20, 1981 at 9 JO a .m . IF YOU OBJECT to the g ranting of the pet1t1on. you should either appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the (:Ourt before the hearing . Your appearance may be in person or by your at· torney. .IFYOUAREA CR E OITOR or a cont· ingent creditor of the dee eased, you must file your claim .with the court or present it to the personal representative appointed by the coort within four months from the date of first Issuance of letters as t:>rovlded in Section 700 of t he Probate Code of California. The time for tiling claims will not e><· p1re prior to four months from the date of the hear· lng noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE \he file kept by the coort. ff you are interested in the ,state, you may file a re- (luest with the court to re- cel ve special notice of the inventory of estate assets f nd of the petitions, ac- ~ o u n ts and reports described In Section 1200.S of the California Probate Code. Evelyn M. Houganr At· torney a t Law , 70 4 ~olnstttla Avt., Coron• del Mar, CA t2'1S, (714) '40-77tt. Publfshed Orange Coast DtllV Piiot, April 28, 29, May S, 1981 1983·81 ; PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllNIU NIUl4t tfATeMIU•T Tiit .. ,,_,.,.,_ lt..._Wtillltt .. • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I- F I E D l\ftnf-.twf'f'n«l\h t ., Poot J.e1•I "°'''•' Looi. t<>Und PuMH1al,• Wt•l• luta• Tr., .... SERVICES 'wntrt Uir~tA) EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION "'"°""" lft,lrwtM')ft JOit w •ftlf'f1 . lltlt> "'"'""" "' •• MHCHANDISE """'I-· A~l•n<•~ " .......... ::!?;11:; Mettrt•lr. f,amt,., • t.qu1pmt'nl <••· Ooc• rt ... U1 \I.JIU turn1turt (_,., •• " '8lf' ttor..-. llou-t.o .. •h Jf'Wi<t"lr)' '-'""'llOf" Martun.rr) M1w-ttll•IM"OW• M~U•M'OU.) \\ant.cf '41ui.tc-t l ln•tnm~nh Ofhrf' fwrn 6 t.;.qu1p P~• :!':: ~~:~~=-!>purto ... G-• Stort Rtttwref\l Ber ~·l!ct.o.H1Y1 Sl•reo BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT ~ .. , 8o•l• Mt1N SH•1C'• lloou llhrOM l:qw1 p llo.U p_., llo.U R•nl Ch•ner llotlo S.11 lot!> !lllpo Duck• lll>ao ~ • Siu ..,... *-••• TIANSPOITATION Aarrrat\ C•mpen,S..I• flenl tlectrl< l'•n ==-~~"~· M-Hm•1>&i• Rt•I Tra1l.-n Tr•vtl ~;~~~~~·!"i.,,. AUTOMOBILE G~ol . AAOQtta (.'la.UICI R.ercffaltOe Vtlurl•• 'i9<>"• ..... llod• •w""'On>tt rr...-u VllllO Au11>1Au1nc .\u101Waa1n AUTOS, IMPORTED General AU• Romeo Audi Au.Un Heal•)' BMW l.•pn er.-Ottoun rerrarl ,. ... , llond• JaJYilt ~nnGt'lte IAlllberclllM libldil M•n•d•• BeM MO er. .. ,.,.,_ Ponclla ,.,. .... 11 11,o!to Rt)'tt • , .. • llO\ff ~~ VCJ1Nwa1H VOi•• EQUAL HOUSING • OPPORTUNITY , .... .....,. Maffw: All r eal eahte ad- vert ii e d ln t b le Mw1paper is subject t.o the Federal Fair Houa- lnl Act cl 1.911 wblcb makea lt Wept t.o ad· verthe "any preference, lim ltatloo , o r d is- c rimination baeed oo race, color , rell1lon, &ell, or national orllin. or an lntenllop to make any auch preference, limitation,• or di•· vfmlnaUoo." CUL.:-SAC • Bdrm air Conditioned horn•. Neatan4Udy. Br mi a paJnt bruth and 'i':E~·~PET 754 .. 1202 LOVELY FAMILY HOME ln eitce l lent nel1hborhood. Cl08e t.o the clty aboppinf center. Near achoo 1 and trao1portatlon. Huce room1 thruout. Lar1e family room with Swedish fireplace. BeautifUl stained 1lu1 windows In 2 of the bathrooms. Sparkllnc pool with cover. dol nan. etc., etc. Seller hlibly motlvated, and will sell I COULD HA YI IOUGHJ THAT PIOl'llTY Ye.IS AGO FOi. •• How many times have you heard that said? Here is a home ~ Fullerton w /potential unlimited -411 that is required is a creative buyer or developer. This 3BR, 2 bath, pool and view home is FLEXIBLY priced at $389,000. Sits among homes of equal & higher value. Possibility of a lot split. So bring your horses, or tennis raquets (rm for court> & very little down payment. Seller will listen to all offers. Lorraine Ja-ckson (F85) b'Y1ne Campus valley Cent.er WOOdbrtdge V1llate Center 762-1414 651·8700 TbU newspaper will not koowlof ly accept any a d vert 1101 for real eatate wblch le in vlola- Uoo of the law. VA. Come to the Open ~~~~~~~-~~"'"'"' H ou1e on Sunday . ~ 11001---------111 .. :uoo :MOO --.. Wt .. 1100 ----4100 030 UGO 41'0 EllOIS: AdffrttNn ..... clledl ..... cWly ... = .. ron 111••• . n. DAILY Ptl.OT •1-11 lalbllty fw ... tint l•corrtct l•aertlo• Giiiy. ::: .................. . t400 -Uot ·~ 4toO 4'30 )100 )l!ct loalO >3llO ~ - HHMsfwS* ;;;.:;;.:.;··········i(;;~ ............ ~·······r·1 EASTSIDE 4-PLEX Fixer' All 2 Bdrms. walk to all .shopping. Fantastic investment. Only $225,000. Call for more detalla 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS -SENSATIONAL BACHELOR PAD! = Somerset townhome. noo Fantaatic llvin1 area with free standing fireplace 6stained 1lalll windows. Plantation shutters 2 Bdrm, mir- rored muter suite, 2~ baths . A must see. $159. 900 546-2313 1110 ti:IO •uo tl411 ... lllO '"' tlllO NlO THE REAL ESTATERS 752·1'100 THE REAL EST,P.TERS ONE YEAR OLD Beat locaUoo, stepe to pool & volleyball UNDER $100.000 Perfect starter home with 1reat aasum•ble loan. Call now 751-3191 C:::. ~~ . l C T ~Pf~OPI H lll '1 EASTSIDE COSTA MESA The hiihlY decorated condo! 2 Bdnn, adults only Clubhouse ind swimming pool 2 CA R GARAGE Super sharp Only 1117,900. Call for more details, 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS OCIAHROHT 2 Bdrlha, 2 ba, unlum . New. SBSOyrly. IAYROMT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unlum Mint cood. ll50 yrly. CHAtOB.ROHT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. unfum $750 yrly. associated 8110~E 11 "> llfAlTOll S l•JJ' W iu•b,11 t.' 1161 GIANT HOME! A must aee! Covered en- try to thla magnificent 5 Bdrm 3 bath home. Huie family room, brick flreplace, formal dinlna. Bulltln breakfast bar. Bea u tiful pool and separate spa. Gu BBQ and fire¢\. Many. many extras. Only $189,900. Call for more detalla. 546·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS ~ ~--~-~~~-....... DUP\.11 .......... -i 5j ___ U_S_E_T_H_E__ a bdrm, 2 bath each unit. -Fireplace, built-Ina. Ex-= DAILY PILOT cellent rental area. Near -"FAST beach " bay. 1215,000. RESULT" 142-maevee. SERVICE DIUCTORY For Result Service Call 642-5671 ht. J22 as sociated OP11..-tu1> RFl\1f(JJIS, ,., : \'\. It •'' '1 " , 11. ,, I Hive 1om ethin1 you want to aell? Claullled ad& do It well. 642-5678. STARTING A NEW SUSINESS? NO DOWN! OR $10,000 DOWN! Owner wiU carry 19(),000 AITD or no down, owner will help you buy "You muat qualify for loan" 3 Bdrm . tt,; bath, up· graded. Double garage, call for more details. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS CASA DEL RIO ,,.,...... Hew Condoa Xlnt terma. 13% lnt.erest for 3 yean 12132 Ed inger close to Harbor Blvd OPEN WEEKENDS 10 5 841·1981; 631-4361. agt WESTCLIFF SI 29,500 $6500 tot.a.I cash needed to close escrow Least expen sive condo in Newport Beach Privacy, adults only Call for more details S4e-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS t 'l•O/o LOAM Thia 3 Bdrm home has been completely re decorated. Many utras Assume 9 1,.~ loan Price. Sl~.ooo Call to day 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS ---1 STIOU TO MEWl'ORT llACH Charming 4 Bdrm. Cozy livln& room features, wood bumln1 fireplace Owner will help finance. Only S209,900 Hurry, call 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS '°'°'!to! OWCSI 0,00 Gorceoua cuatom ea te. ocean & harbor vlewa. ultimate delliD and de· coratlnc. 4 Bdr m, 3'11 Ba, fo rmal d ini n g . 11,495,000. Owner will carry Sl.100,000. Yot1C•5" Tlle.._l'oclfic From this Cameo Highlands beauty Priced t.o sell. S339,000. Only 10% down with owners aua.st.ance. One level 3 Bdrm plus huge yard Call now. 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS YOUl IESTVALUE IM CAMIO SHOIES Lowest priced fee aim· pie opportunity Great auum1ble lat TD En· joy afternoon aun and view• from wood deck. 3 beautiful private beaches Only 1)49,000. Call today, 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS GREAT INVESTMENT 3 BR 1 Ba, $72,900 As· sumable financing & seller w /also carry paper Call for terms 752·6499 PtanN~alty Use the Daily Pilot "Fast Result" service directory Your service 1s our Sptt1alty Call 642-5678 ext 322 Want Ada Call 642·5678 RE$1DENTIAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES LUXUIY UVIMGo In the 601 Lido Park Tower. Gorgeous 2 BR. corner unit on the 7th floor . Breathtaking views of the bay & ocean. Safe and secure with the fi nest security system. Pool, spa, billiard & card rooms + your own sauna. $775,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 • •••••••••••••••••••• IAYCllST AT ITS HST Best val ue. in the area. cust om everything, pool. jacuzzi, six bedrooms, skylights, 3 fireplaces, and financing too good to be true. A must see at $489,000 Fee. U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 Eut Cou t Highway. Corona d!I Mar WI HAYI 47 OP THI llST ..-n'S .... TOWM W L S I .L Y N TAYLOR CO HEJ\ LT OHS !-.t 1w1· 1 !J'H a!GAHT ''VERSAILLES"-IXCLUSIVE OM llG CAMYOM GOLF COURSE Spectacular Deane H omes "Versailles" located on largest lot of all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf course view! Professionally landscaped yard with mature trees m a private park-like setting including a lovely lge pool & huge spa + an attractive gazebo Gated front courtyard entry w tfountam . Marble floor in foyer with glittering chandelier. 4 Bedrms, den, formal D.R. & 412 baths. Priced right at $825,000. Call for appointment WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 2 I I I San Jo ..... Hlls Road NEWPORT CENTER. M.I. 644-491 O 2 UNITS $94,900 Super Investment' Two 2 Bdrm wuts, one with fireplace' Current in come-S740 mo Fln1nc in&' One year home pro- t e c lion plan incld Hurry, thl.s won't last' 54&-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS The fastest draw m the West . a Daily Pilot Classified Ad 642-5678 I ~ ---~~ IAY, Enchanllng J Bdrm cotta1e with plantation shutters. used brick , sunny patios. ln one of our finest communities with prtvate beach. pool and tennis $370.000 -- CE llDBll ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE OUTSTANDING IA YFROMT HOME Lovely Custom-Built Home On Promontory Bay. Living Room. Formal Dining Room, Den /Library, Spacious Master Bedroom Overlooking Bay Has Fireplace & Luxuriously Appointed Bath. Three Other Bedrooms & Maid 's Room & Bath. Pier & Slip For Large Yacht $1,850,000. EXrAMDEO "E" PLAN Lovely Turf Courtyard Entrance. End Unit. Three Bedrooms Plus Large Family Room. Eating Area In Kitchen. Master Suite With Extra Closets. Three Patios For Indoor-Outdoor Living. Storage Galore. Great Financing. Large Assumable Loan. $254,900. A "Joy Of Newport" Listing. MIW USTIMG • UffS Tastefully Decorated Th ree Bedroom Two Bath Trl-Level. This Is A Highly Desirous End Unit On A Cul-De-Sac. Call Now To See. $175,000. (5) --............ • lailyPi~at Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please . Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. CAREFUL IT'S LOADED! 4 Bdrm, 3 ba, formal din· Ing rm, family rm, 3 fireplaces, 3 car gar Vlew of ocean and walk ing distance to beach With $45,000 down, this beauty can be yours to· day.Callnow 5369311 ALLSTATE REALTORS llGFAMILY llGHOUSE 5 Bdrm 3 .Ba, Mesa del "'"Mar. $45,000 dwn buys It! Agt, Rich. 540-3666 Whelan Real Estate EAST SIDE FIXER What a mess 1 Bring paint brushes, sho11t.'ls and rakes and make SSS LIDO ISLE HOMIS Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home. newly decorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Nt'wly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilrngs. Great for entertaining. $420,000 PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT Panorami<: view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft featuring marine room, entn. Ii ving r oom, dining room, hutll ms. etc $1 ,385,000. IAYFROMT We have several fine homes with pier ~'(c '>hp, s tarting at $1,500,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boyrnfo Driv•: N B 675 6161 $139,000 Won't last Call ----... ------------• on this bar gain Only I now @ 1 SEA COVE l PROPERTIES 714-63 l -6990 MESA VERDE $141,900 Hundreds of rlowt·rs e verywherl.' ,inti sun rilled rooms make th1~ 3 BR home a mu~t to see Call now for details @ SEA COVE PROPERTI ES 7 l4-631-6990 OWHER DESPERATE Corona del Mar Duplex Huge owners uml 4 c3r aarage Submit all or. fen now Mustsell1 @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 Remember Mother's Day May 10th Send a message to Mom via the Dail} P1lot"s l\l other's Day Page Your message will ap pear in a prelt) flower box For information and t o pla!'e your message call "42 5678 TODAY! Cutom Country &KJ. This custom home 1~ be ing constructed m the suard gated community t)f Harbor R1d~c lln· believable views of the ocean and city hght!< The home·reatures 5 bedrooms, family room, ljbrary, pool and spa. txpert craftsmanship and features abound in Ulis elegant home Call for an appointment to aee the site and plans D .M. Marshall 644-9990 MESA DB.MAR 3 Bdrm, 3 Ba. ramily rm. 0001. 2·aty $179.000 5 Bdrm, 3 Ba. family rm. pool, RV access. 2 frplc, owe. s164,900 t Bdrm, 2 Ba, wet bar, 100 sq rt. owe $132.ooo • Bdrm 2 Ba, 1700 sq ft uaume loan. low dwn. '130,000. REALTORS 67S.55f I C HARMING COM DUPLEX. Walk to beaches, schools and shops from this immaculate duplex. 3 Bdr wjth F.P. and 2 Bdr rental unit. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 25 IS E. Coast Hwy., Corona c»f Mar 675-5511 __ I 1.o~I' ~omelhing valua Just moved Into town. hi(' Plac·e an ad in our Then get acquainted wit Lo\l and Found col th e Classified Ads urru1s That's where peo-They're the easiest wa 11h' (<IQk when they've lo find Just the items an fowiu an item or value ~erv1ces you need! - PENINSULA POINT-SUPER Walk to lay & oceen froM thl• 5hlnc)ted beauty. Completely MW a & out & loods of r00tn for the farily. Spadom 2-ttory with ~d & groo•ed ftoon, h.ams & WClnftfft. L~ l bed. 3 ba. I~ tarn.rm. + din.nn. $444,500. NEWPORT CHARMER-POOL Super family area °" a qylet atrfft. ~ pool and deck °'" ift a M<iu*d back yard surrounded by cyeettery. ape.. ll•in9 room with Mwfy remadtltd ldtchett. Two bedrooms + dttt that could h. 3rd bedroom. S 185,000 fee. WATFRfRONT HOME-.,, INC HI Al I "'TAii . '· . .. .. '~ 2436 w Coa!.1 Hwy Newport Beach SEE AND The very finest buy in the Harbor area. Ne w 16.50 sq. ft. condos 5 minutes to beaches. One h al f bl ock to major s hopping centers. Cemenf drives, air conditioning, microwave oven, tras l compa <'t or, large walk-n closets. Garage with open.' r . Pool and 2 jacuzzis. ' WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS , JIO W. WlllOft • CodeM•M,CA 714/631-5055 ft-OM St 36,000 l I' I I' I G l S E IC I I r I ' OM CAMALROMT Lr1e 3 Be 2 Ba home Beautiful patio leads )'OU to your own sandy beach. Only 12:59,500 JACOBS REALTY '7M670 ~ 75 .. 1111 ILUFFS IEAUTY On ly $225,000 buys beautiful 4 Bdrm end un 1t Picture perfect &. re ady to move 1n Newly listed 759-1616 RS'Mfl< H EAi.TORS MESAVSDE Exec 5 Bdrm 3 Ba home w /beaut. pool in pvt set· ling Lrg assu mable, low interest loan Tim Rhone 631-1.266 Agt GOLDEN TOUCH CONDOMINIUMS EMTERT AIMER'S DBJGHT 2aty Caltlorrua Classic ~sq . ft, 4br, 2ba. 20 X 24' family rm w 'wet bar, refrigerator & pool la ble Try IO'"r down ' $144,500 TAMARACK VILLAGE COHDO 3br , 1 1,ba. enclosed gara1te Try S25K down owe s104 .9oo H1gb comp $106,900 Special Cons1derat1on G111en To Principles f· Al l<l \I R i-.~1\11. 84a..1466 *•TREES E1tcept1onal 2 Bdrm 2 Bit townhome fronting on q u1et l reehned ireen· bell End un1l, lrg patio w 1bnck BBQ Asssume low interest loan Hurry, \l<On 't la:;t 1 Wotldbrldge Re airy 551·3000 19?11 llurun• a f>I.~'. In tnt· UNDER MARKET College Park Syracuse Plan reatures 3 Bdrm + den 2 Ba. large family k1t<"h<'n Asking IOOO's ( under market Call for detail-. Ocean :J.ronl This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on I;Jn~a Csle. A private guarded Commwuty in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for <3> 55'-70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. We are developers so submit land .or other Real Estate to owner J1m Thompson _________ , Large pnvale decks l!t ---------" REDUCED patios Only 3 left Xlnl • =-=; RANCH REALTY 551 -2000 S I 00,000! terms 13% interest for 3 43 ASSUM.AILES No quatirymg-small dwn payment~. lo\\< inlt'rt>sl rates. no lo.m point-'> 2 J 1714) 821-1280 lll31 591-IJ6J 1100) 352-3710 OCIEAHFltOMT Y~·M EYER PLACE Choice comer duplex 3 OPEN DAJLV 12 5 Bdrm . 3 bath up 2 ,,.11991 631 4361 t Bdrm. 2 bath down Can ""' ' · • ag & 4BORM ro"'nhome~ in lluntinl(ton Hcal·h. HO QUALIFYING! convert to ii larger home SELLER WILL H ELP FINi\NCE at l3' I $795,000' lalboa lay '"°P· REALTORS •'7>7060• Onlet 1n1J1 81'1y ! '~~ -1, '" r<8"':J1 ~ S1._.llt,> IUAL t.SrArt (l(IUINCC SJ"fCC , ••• DOVER SHORES Your own htlle world this selling of solitude. serenity and privacy is the perfect compliment for the hvma area in eluding three bedrooms, s paci(Uf11ving room, dtning room and fam1Jy room The rear yard IS an absolute dream with spa rklln1 pool . ex · tensive decklng and lu>t· uria nt plantings S49S.OOO. '31-7300 H.I. M ESA VERDE Fountain Vaill'' ari·a~ UNIVERSITY PARK Call now Im mort• de Spacioui. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba ta ill> Uni) $2!1.S<WJ down Lo,•e pool home under markt>t I~ C.1rd1fC model 10 Ter al $135,900 Includes ~ SOLDEuwtST ract• C'.tth re1hng!> and $96.000 or ass um able I '1ftl "'t·t ha r prov 1de an loans . Tim Rhone> REALTORS ch:!(anl wttmg rorcnler- 631·1286 Agt ·~ •. , ~ '-ASSOCIATES tam1nl( Coly loft den 2 -M ESAVERDE I Hdrm~. and OH•rsz 2 l'ar I 848-8588 !(ar $138.000 Cute 3br pool home 10' • •--------• Town & Country dn . very lge 11>'1 assum Realtors 552-1800 loan Pr1n only Agl towner, 966-17 LS UNITS Triplex & four pleK in 0 S FOUR-PLEX ~ood Oran~c <'ounl\ DECORAT R BY OWNER area A:.~umJtJh· lo.in. DEUGHT Xlnt Financing I owe I j l p j? r J d t' !> l hr u 0 u t SJI0,000 i Beaut1rul batk >an.I 675·0073, (714)345 4l23 GOLOENWEST ~·:~h l>~)~,t~~r~ c~u teln~ MESA VB.DE REALTORS !!amt:<' l' • years ne"' HoaTH ··~ .~ ~ASSOCIATES Assumable r1nanc1n~ BRAND NEW LISTING 848-8588 a~a1lahle This condo 1s 4br, atrium model , ---------i oHered at $148.000 Call $165,500. Agt Belh Dun 540 1151 com be 957-6507; 963-9101 10% J + BONUS financ1mi tills 84 On MUST SELL th.is darl ly '•• mile to beach near i-i--------Brk ·hrsl &. Bushard -----in& home in North Costa Spac ious sgl story 4 SPECTACULAR Mesa. Only $ll8,000 Bdrm • La Questa" VIEW of mountains and -~· HERITAGE • • REALTORS CUSTOM HOME NEWPORT Immaculate custom home. 2 pnvate bnck patios. s pacious ltving rm. 3 Br. 3 Ba. gourmet kitche n and all the goodies. Plush carpets. walking d1s- tanl'e to the beach & \\ater Don't miss th1~ one for $265,000 QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES HEIGHTS CONDO Quiel Npt Hgts /Clif· Chaven coodo w /pool & garage Great assuma· ble financing No quail· fy1ng Greg Astle 759· 1221. RVM~ Rt:Al.TllHS 752-1920 llVIME TEUACE POOL Ir VIEW A coiy 3 bdrm home with formal dlnin& rm and pool. Highly expan dable view or harbor and ocean. A great hating at only $330,000 644-7211 • RED CARPET Super clean w stunning lake 2 master bdrms, 754 1202 prof decor on cul de sac den and 2•, ba Plan C m GIMHIPa•a'lllla 1007 --"'---• lot.Askmg onlyS\64.900 Turtle Rock R idge REDUCED Sal ro l /Jn NIG(l [lAIL[Y & A55UCIA1 P·1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t·--------Call 645 7221 Profess1onally decoral , ............ Pnme area near bay and beach Tlus custom 3 Bdrm home IS contem porary bwlt with lots of wood and glass, 2 f1replacts , double garage. covered patio and much more 642-5200 A PETE BARRETT '"· REALTY Corotta dtf Mar 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVINETERRACE FtXER 4 Br. bonus room & sparkling pool Superior location Won't last Pr\n. only. Greg Astle 759-1221 Jasmine Creek decorator home, plan 1 on green- belt Im mac $305,SOO ~8145 IEACH DUPLEX Xlnt shape, privacy & parking. Owner will finance 990.000 dwn Good rate of return. Broker Chris 957-1568 2 unlls on lg lot. 3 bdr z ba , 2 bdrm 1 ba , 4 carages Broker 67S.0562. llST IUY IM ARIA Charming duplex, b y owner. rza.500. Assume $104,000 at 1H4~. So of hwy, 2 Bdrm + bacb . 213 /430·9156 FIXER 3br, l~ba home with room for 2nd unit. So. ol 5 IDaM W H~ R.-ty I ed. <'t•nt ral i11r cond1llon- POOL HOME 1n~ (o'ully assumable Terr if I c ri nan c 1 n g i---------1 loan Best location m lbe available Large 2 story SEA WIND wjPOOL ent1rt• development family home with lovely Designers 4Br. 211 Ba. ~.1100 pool, enclosed courtyard po o I h o m e N r and separate master Brookhur.;t & \llanta suite downstairs All lhis Reduced to $168.0llO ror only Sl45.000 Call 2700 S/FICHSIOE 540·1151 for more 1n Custom 4~r. 3811 w pool formation & spa, 4 hlks to thr hc-11 ·~-'.HERITAGE • • REALTORS EASTSIDE 3 br, l ba. lge lot S933 1m o $9500 dn S125,000 Trade' Owner 631·:>476. $40 000 ON Owner t.:m nnance 3 houses on a lot Eastside S197.SOO DUTCH HAVEN Sharp 3Br 2Ba or llt•,tl"h 1 & Warner $11.2,900 1-+SZ3 CAl!tPUSl>t·/RVINE ASSUME VA Like ne"' 4Br :rn .. I - w $62 ,000 \' \ loan JI JLa9Ufta le-och I 048 9'i'"', Slli.900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R.E. Profffsioftals THE SHA.ICES 963-837'7 We:ilhl'red l~edar shakei-. that 1s Custom des11(nt>d 3 bdrm. film rm 2 bath.~ Extensive use of ""ood glas:. & cen1m1c tile Beam ce1I IOR. frpk $165,000 OCIEAHFltOHT 2 br, 2 ba condo D111tre:o;~ sale. $1 79,00J R&H In vestments. 752-2197 Costa Mesa O n lyt--------~ M 1ss1on Realty !714>494-073\ $119.000 Call~9161 JN\'t-:STORS JO', down on ""ood and !(lass O wn e r wtll carr y S\95,000 on ttus spac1ows mull1·level arl'h1tect 's home 1n Npt Hgts 2600 SQ fl designed for ramily 1 hving $380,000 Joyce Wallze 631· l.266 RS'M~ REALTORS Great 4 Bdrm on comet lot with room for RV, boat. etc $279,000, owner financed 645-1103 LIDOISlE Low down. low pay· ments Clean 4 Bdrm family home , ready lo move into today Great creative terms Call 1---------1 673 3002. agent PARTY IN HARBOR VIEW Smashing family room with wet bar Unbeheva· ble beautiful enter- tainer's patio. S Bdrm Sommerset on fee land Absolutely immaculate m ove 1n cond1t1o n Creat ive f1nanc1ng available. ~,,RED CARPET IL 754-1202 HARIOR VIEW HOME "Montego" 4br, 2ba. Fee La nd , lo an assum 675 2139 1 br Versailles penth.se imported tile throughout $122,000. TSL Properties 642-1603. . . OPEN HOUSE LAND MARK 2 stry 4bdr, 217 ba. 3 car Rar New an out $156.500 built in finan 963 8377 cu~tom quiet canyon ~~~~~~~~~ gencroui. use of tile huge deck!. Privacy. Townhouse condo on bluff in Newport Beach witb easy walk to ocean 6 beach. Ownership of S bdrm, 21"2 b• unit incl. lge pool. jacuzzi. saunu It liehted teruus courts. $189,000 with $50.000 down Ask .for Susan 640 ·3796 or Bruce 760 6060 days: 851-220$ eves & wlcnds , REAlTY /' HR. 21/21.A CONDO Almost New! Frplc, Balcony, Patio.Yard, $130,000 Owner will finance PP ONLY (213) 373.5704 3br, Zba, "Halecres t'' Rnme $129,500 557-3881 *ASSUME VA 9 1/JO/o $268,000 4 Bdrm + I:\<• ba $79 000 L Viii-R. I VA 1st al $773 Pl Tl L P OCJIMG .._,. • $120,000 Possible 1or:,. _ 4!7·!?61 down Prine only Rkr. Laquna N~ I 052 751·6836 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnhtt --1044 No quallfylflg Very low ••••••••••••••••••••••• down. very low pay· VA TERMS ments 3 Br 2•,, Ba con· do. over 2000 sq ft. $142,50<> Beaut parklike selling Pnn. only Agt 494.4572 CONDO W /VIEW 1 Bdrm. Si!O,ood dwn will move you i.n Assume loans $1 37,500 Rae •SIO,OOODOWM• Rodgers 631-1.266 Agt. Beaut 3 br, 3 ba, Lrg [am IDO ISLI! rm. Lrg bckyrd. Open * L '"* house Sun. 2300 Heather Lovely 2Br, 3Ba home Ln 631-0517. Beautifully remodeled 1---------2yni ago. MM,000 with xlnl financlna. Open House: Sal. Sun. 1·5. 119 VI• Vella. Owner/Alent. 673-0697 UHl9UE PIMTHous• COHDO On this 1pactous 2 Bdrm Greentree home Needs TLC but has great poten· tial. Priced to sell at $119,500. Call for info. with boat dock, pool. ucurlty + 110 dee ~ --i.--------1111 ocean, Cat.a.llna • ba1 IAQC IAY view. Fee land. ff.50,000. e HANCH fff AL TY ~5 1 2000 HIGH ASSUMAILI 4Br home w /spa, dnl. cond. S169,000. 552~. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath bom• Smlth·Me)'er, Bkr. plus Ideal mother-ln·law 641)-1357 541-711 J quarte r s . Co1qpl. 0 "'ARY E w/balb. sz:io.ooo aterfroot Condo f C NTEMPOnn L Roy Mcc:..le. ltltr. '9H,OOO, $400,000 f\n. NlGUELLIVlNG ' HIUma. 8kr cooper•· Thia cu1tom detianed 541-772 uon f7s-Q248 .. home w\th 4 bedrooms. 1~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~iiii~iiiiiiiiii~iiiii 2~ baths and 1uper BLUFFSBARGAIN Hwy. Atllln& S280 000. 1----'------- 160·I520 Stephen *STARTER HOME views ol the iolfroune 3 bdrm twnhme. Walk lo is perfect for the laraei bin ........i te nta actlve family. Large aa• everyt f : ...,..., n ' Meyen,Bkr e ..... ..._ 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·~11, ''" ! ii ,, ',(I 1 1 I', Fleltlbl• ftnancln& on OU. 2 Bdrm Greentree fixer. Owner will help '*1th co.t Call for de· tall1. 1umable loan available. icbool.I, park, •bopplot. A1t. 1'1&·5830, M0-11'6 SU9,500. a.1720 AllOR YllW HOM!S Po11oftno mdl w /tBr 1~ Ba tn t.M main houl~1 booua rm w /1ol\ • run Ba ed.tokl the _1ara1e. ~rteel a~aUOt' ln·lawsL tldt, otftce or 1tuclio. 1..Nccented t.y ao b\ apa. Mk·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ Int fM2,IOO. ,000 .. i;; ltUnabla loan. ()Wner wUI cou$der Ind. Call Tom B&roDU.NOO. AnuYALUY Slid I a., F.P., 1uqe, N•ar new 4·Plu, I JMIJo, arill. now. lit 6 bdrm, J bet1l nctl UDit iut .... IO.mo wJfia\l:o?:i :a=~ MeM i11• 11,000. 8UJ Onuad~, ·~•••••• .... • .. •••••••• 1u-.~1. ~· JBr,m ~"me.I ... t1o. l'rplC, bltn kltcb, ' .~~AEAUY ------' HAllOR YllW HOl tts LMSI • l .... to,._.. 4JOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Movlnt? Avoid depol!ts 6 cut Uvina expmsea! Profeulonally 1loct> 1171. HOUS84ATES aa....134 · dbl 1ar w /Opor. '750. OCIAM NW -> Bon Sa1 m"'70 DWLll . ~:or:-~~-------~• Dr11tlc Nductlon on ~m. Iba, frplc, ran1e. Single story "Monaco" model w /2 Brs, den. formal dinJ.na rm. Avail 5/1. Close to park. school, shopping & pool. Only $900/mo Donna Godshall MIWLY DlCOI. 1 Br. cu pd. encl 1•r OCEAMRtOHT d/wuher, pool. Adulu Furu. 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 IU-5078. car 11rap with office . 1~--~------.1----------1 wa1her ~ dryer lnckt. •S..__U•"9* Counaelon to personally H lect your compatible rm m te to suit your llfe1tyle. ~red·Livlna 833 Dover Dr Swte 31 N 8 brand new Balboa i 1u,yrd.avall5/1. lit+ duplex. 11& owaen _,,,. Me. 9175. ~. 644-6200. (F86) FantaaUcally fuml.abed 2 Bdrm condo, Laba.bore A v a I I N o w towahoule, w!tb oeean adlt complex. Com pl. Wkly /Mnt.hly. · 831-1801 ---Rmmte wanted to shr tge de9reelalion. Great reo· • Zbr 2'-'ba Twnbll '700 W area. 100 feet hom p 1' poot' · · beach. Lua• 3 bdrm, 3 rp c, 'apa, 1ara1e. 11..,art -..ell 901 Dover Drive Harbor View ~nter vtew. Tnnll c:owt. pool. rec. facU. NJ' So. Cal TSL MGMT 842-1603 condo nr S.C. Plau Sauna, pool, Jacuul. Private bath Available May 1st $250 + u penses Call 557-3527 or 759·0060 ~~-------1 bath plU1 2 bdrm, 2 bath. r-&0-__ aaaa.....,.... ______ 1 642-8236 &K-6800 -.Stmo. 791).tU7 Pba. $495/ano. 556-8232 ====''= ......... -----1 ors.co.cmo Cliff Haven, l8CM Clay, 2 11----------' BR l Ba, (pJc, no petl. 2Br, 1 ~Ba Townhouse. '500 mo. 875-0.1411 Owner wJll Halat lo br, 2~ ba, condo, 2 car finandn1. klS,000. car., dedt, patio, pool, Log.a hoc:ll 32411 Harbor View 3Br .tr den. ••!!11!1 ..... --11111!--•I '700. 540-aa ••• • • •••••••••••••••••• M a n y u p a r a d e 1 1---1u_d_ed_2B_r-. -lBa--p.-t-10-1 EMERALD IA Y S8501mo. 160-0&.S1 He1lh1 I I¢~ He. tit\' I;-;-:; ~: :1 Ill home, pool, adlu, no 3 bdrm, 2 ba, ocean pets, $525 mo. 2453 view, aardener Incl. IAYCRIST Pvt patio. gar, adults no WESTCL .,,... -----petl. "65.548-7510 Irr 2 Br. I~ ba -+---------1 townboUle. Adults only, a br, 2 ba, CrpU, drapes, DO pell. CSO/mo. 17~ patio, carport, no pets Bedford Lane 548-7533 Fem to shr w 1i.ame 2bd Irv Condo many xtras 1275 857 0795 or 857-0794 "86.645-99611 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~I Oranae Ave 1 ...... M $l2SO mo. l yr lie. Don, Lovely 3 Bdrm, den • i::;; • """ ar Coldwell -Banker , family rm. Just re· YUR·.-OUND FUN: DUPUX-M.1. r-A_pt_B_. -------• '99-1320. decorated Gorgeous pool Soc111 Achv111es 01 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~Near beach, two 3Br un-ewport Hts. duplex, 2+ 1;.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-. -. ---.-.-.~---J & spa. $1500. A1t 1ectn1 . Free Sunday BY Owner, owe, a br, ~L21N~~ ";J~3 bdrms. gar, huge yard. WOOOSCOYI _67_3-_64_1_3______ ~;~~~~se!~~;!~; ---------IOcean View, spac, lux E. Side lge quiet 2br, u r i o us 2 BR 2 Ba patio, lndry rm, adults V e r s a i I 1 e s A I I no pets 14&'5 673-3600 amenities $750 ~7 1997 Fem Rmmte wanted shr 4 Bd house $270 + utal Alt 6. 675 3045 Fem shr apt 1 2 rent $165 + ut1I rer r eq ,\fl 6 30pm 645-4740 rk]dc, dbl pr 182~. ..rnv ..... ~ __ l_m_o_.~_78_14_· ___ 1 2br, 1ech.lded rare cot· LIDOIS&.1 Spacious 2Br1365. Pool & Steps to bch 2 BR 1 Ba, ZS30 S. Parll Dr, Santa U L A ..,40 000 USC t fi f-1A be 3 bd GREAT MCMATIOH laundry fac. fplc, dbl ear. patio l630 · · •A • nr · child • e, '.,_, open am rms + coovertlble Tennis • Frd Lessons Au. Gr$17,000,try25~dnor cellna,cedarbathroom, den on wide lot w. tie ----------1 b · .,.__ I 1 l ti .,...,,. (pro & pro shop I• 2 ftM.--Reel Elhih au m1t ...., 540-0608 ove y pat o. ~/mo. pa o. _.,_/mo. Lawson Heallh CtubS•Sauna • _,_... 1-----------I Call Trish or Bonnie Really, 675-4.562. H"" •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• liu PHO~IX b l~b dbl I days 833-8847 or evea ,vromaw oe•Swim ..-.a..11-u_ n ....,. r, a, ear, ae Newport "'errace, 2 BR 2 ming. 011v1ng Range -.._ yard, chlldren/petl OK. 49'1·2278 A' 548-9656 mo yrly. 968-8283 2 HUGE Bedrooms 1n auper location. Fully carpeted, built-ins, around floor Adults. no *OCEAN AtONT * Frplc, panelled, pauo. lbr, $.575/mo 642·0045 eves M o; F, Newport Crest J br Townho~ Tennis J ac Ulll incl SJ.5<I mo 642·3850 or 646· 11169 llfiiw S. 1100 10 units, perfectly main-1875. 64.2-942B '~~~~~~~~~ Ba, .end unit. Pool, park. lfAUTIFUl APART· ... ,.••••••••••••••••••• t · ed •-·u h I settma '650 lat & sec MENTS· S1ng1es 1 & Trailer at bch $14,900. r~~~nce~ owner WI e P Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba, ram. Log.ma H• 1250 646-4139 ; 642:1Z72 · 2 Bedrooms • Fur peu. $350mo. ~11 1-----E. Bluffs Condo, 4Br, I Newport Heights 2br, 3Ba, sundk, pool $850 M /Fem , 25-40. no bad habits 3Br 28a, ram rm. pool. J3C, home nr So Coast Plata L'se 28r 1375 & half utll Ref's req 54().8225 Terms, OWC or trade t · •••• ••••••••••••••••••• r11shed & Unfurn1sheo S 160 000 rm, a r1um, gar. w. elec. 3 B 498-3816 , dr, acrou from park, Attractive 3 Br. 2 Ba. in r . 2 Ba. Pool & •Adull llvmg •NoPels G dot lac. Yrly lease.18()(). La1una Village. No pets. J acuni. Pre1tlglou1 • Models Open daily P.\LM SPRINGS AREA. reat rental area near 751.7328 S59S mo. 67-4072. Harbor View. $1100/Mo. 9 to 6 2lr 2ba. 4 yra old. Com pl Civic Center. Lav-a M'--' lZSZ Call 768-0&M. Oakwood htm. On 9 hole exec goU 556-2660 3bdrm, 2ba, ram rm, den, ..,..... G d ... course in adlt park. frplc, $850/mo. Avail •••••••••••••••••••••••"Br. 3 Ba. Large Home. ar en ,.partment1 Vlew San Jacinto now.Call63l-404.5. New 2br, 2ba CONDO, Westcliff.$1000/Mo.Call Hewportleath/So. 638-9300 ask for Virginia. frplc' ocn view• tennis 768-0654 · 1100 161h St Lovely 3 br, 2~ ba, bll· courts $725/mo M4-S951 • Adlts 1400sq rt. 2Br, 2Ba w , dbl oar. Few steps to _d_•~Y_•.;...• ~----9:199--...::.e_ves:.::._ _ _. Super Luxury 1 story 00•'' •1 161111 "' house 00 Santiago Dr. 4 t71'1 '42·5113 ':iia[:,~f=~~~ j FIX & SAVE! ocean-canyon view. MhaJo. Ylefo lZ67 Br 3 Ba. with separate Newport S.ach/No. -$750. 831-5751 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t bdrm 3 Ir 4 units priced to mas er suite an 880 1rv1ne Iba, encl.Id gar.. $425. m o 6 4 5 3 4 7 4 548-4262 (213)541-4460. ~cmaPoW 3126 Bach. unit on water. •••••••••••••••••••••• $3.00/mo. Own/Agt or 2 br, balcony, D.W.. 833-26SOor67J.8849 1 clean, coin laundry & 2br, Iba, Harbor View wahr, aar, nr ocean. w /pool ..,,,,1 661"°252. ~~ 2 Br, 1 Ba, nu paint fc carpet. Avail. now. $395' Steps lo the bch. lge 4br. Call Darlyne 861-1162 or 2\AJba clsed in paho, yr 494-3672 ly. $950/mo 673-2507 MW to shr 2 bdrm 1.1pl a cross from Fashion Is land $330 mo 1nrl utils. Call Paul, 640 8937 Male1fem 5 br. 2 ba hse nr S C!.l Plaza Fr"'\ Sp;i, S225 + sh;ire ulll 641 4913 New Mobile Home, move now! Sellers want 3 br, 1 ba house, new HOME FOR RENT m o s t e I e a a n t 111161~· oc•anview-EI Morro I quack escrow paint inside&out, ocean 4 Bdrm lllOO. Fenced neighborhood. Family, <71•1 MS-ll04 11410 & $430 · Spacious AINI 3110 Male 33 wanl-. rl'm r111 mle fu ll pn' $275 mu In( I Ulll 770 792k Ill S46 12001.'XI 3-1 Beach Park, sp 70 2Br. / view ya rd . pref. yard & garage Kids Ir Living & Dining room . 2Br. apts Nr Dana ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1pace rent$175mo.20yr ·~',..,........... newlyweds.t6SO+ottla. pell welcome. 964-2.566 1 Wallpaper & carpets . Harbor. One w/ocean be. $59,900.499-3816 NEI~ 64.5-3000 or9'13-2S71. Ait..noree. I lhru·out. $1950/mo. A 1 llf I vu. 25081 La Cresta Dr. a1tJn1r1JM in· M.wport leodt 126' 7141759-8974. ~U .. =• s I Owner 4lM-6M8 10 X 45, lo be moved. Xlnt '+""'~ 3226 ....................... •vwlllte.d I._ '--' cond. New cpts, lllOOO, 7141641·0763 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N t C t condo B Harbor Ridge, 2 br, 2 ba ....................... , l...,....lwll ll40 873-3826 2787 Bristol St •Close lo marina 3bdrm BP rei II '4 r 2"'1 condo bot tub Sl900 mo Gwrol ll02'•u•ueuuueuuuue • a , s p t level, dbl • • Costa Mesa, CA l~ba , fr~lc , yard , oarage. 'Aase _,,,,/mo. 548-7896eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRIPLE MOBILE HME ..:001 h • LA: -"' •-::C H!1.!.0•· own ouse ~l. last & dep 957·"'303 ,,_...•MTS Foa UNT Jae ram rm, w/wet bar, • ....,...,.. ~ LIDOISLE 2br, 2ba, 6 rnut trees, UMITrC H.B .. N.B.,Coeta Mesa utll shed, much more. ~ .M. leocll 3240 Hort»or ¥1.w 3 br, 2 ba, lge patio, on SomethinJ for Everyone I '"0 ADUL T ~~. LIVING Extra lg 2Br 2ba condo Patio . gar . poo l . washr /dr)'T, prof paint ed, new drapes Adults Close l o M1 Sq Prk 775-0529, 631 1098 Hr. So, CoastPlmo 2 Br l ba. gar. children OK. $435 /m o Agt 851·0424 14 units. E·side, pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gracious family home 2 xtra-wide kit, avail. now Bach. to 4 Br. Unlurn. • 1' 2 811 P1t.o Agl\ 536·9491 10"'1'4 financing. lmmac lBr, 2Ba, cul.de-s l o r y 4 b d r m thru summer. Act fast-Apts. Certain locations : ~:,~~~~~'"R!o~aos 3190 27) r old rem wants l•J -.hr ne"' shJrpl~ dl'rtirJtt'rl Condo 1n Woodhr1fl)!l' w rem 25+2br l'zb .. r r p I c . "' d ., h d r , 1· r Amen ind por1I tenn1!> lilke~ & park:-'li1111 ''"kr µlt'a~e S.1'l!l mo • 1 utll Ask for Jan 75'1 5!-on., or 55!1 0457 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAMHMY YILUGE Steps to the water. 2 Br, 2ba, sunken tub 1n master bath. Pool, pets are allowed. Price re -luced to 162,500. Owner 8 uniu. near new house w n rentals sac, frplc, patio, 9690 Furnishing avail at no won 't I a s t ! 0 n I y or f er: Pool , spa . • Ca•0tn l inoscao•no mo.•u7.a""'aft3PM. extra $1200/mo tse No $1100 /mo. Virginia firepla ce, laun. room, J 8 s curity apts, lbdrm & '" _, pets 2015 Port Bristol O'Brien, agt, 673-1323. beamed c e i I Ing s , : s:~ 10 1 ~'1: & noos 2bdrm, utal pd, adults, F to :.hr 3 hr clph ct""' t11 bea ch, xlnl rl.'nl c· oil 675 912aar1 Ii 4bdrm, 2'>'Jba, frplc, wet· bar, 1 block beach No pets. $725 /mo. 964-2283. Cr. Call Elaine 644 5997 garaees, all built-ins. no pets From $375. or 640-5357 3 Br 2 Ba oceanfront Garden & Townhouse 836-5506. TSL Investments 642·UKl3 - ---home, nu paint, drapes. design. 3 Br 2ba. tree lined st in Xlnt cond. Patio & yard, TSL MGMT. 642-1603 parfntetlh Ftlntish.d OvtofC~ KIDSOIC Wes tcllff, nice ror furn or unfurn . orU.....,.Wd ]900 Prol"rty 2550 3 Bdrm, 2'1'.a bath. 1700 cpl /sml ram S775 incl Sl150/mo. Owner may lal.oa,e1 ' •• 1107 & ..................... .. ar.lCious. M 211 wants 11•111 tt1 ,111 :: h r 2 b J J p I I' \f ~60 mo M2 71il I t·\ ,., WATERFRONT grdnr No ....... "~"2389 rons1"der ..,.;ftter r-• -1. ••••• •••••••••••••••••• 2 3 B e d r o o m s S E A W I M D ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq. ft. Triplex. Formerly ..... -'""" -u• ...... $400-M50 ICjds OK HOMB OFFICE 11.DG No pets please. Lloyd at S350 Utll pd. lBR Duplex. . ' no • owner's unit. Ideally 2 br, den. 2 ba. Walk to 417 E. Bay Ave. Balboa pets plu.se. Water I VILLAGE REAL ESTATE l 7 ,000 s t r 1 + ac of localed for children S6SO beach Tennis & pool Jacobs Realty. 67~0 No petl. ~-lW Trash Paid. Carport. 631-1400 ground. Just ofr hwy 5 mo Immediate OC · 964-"~or-"'"°"l Agt Ne~ l•-" bd I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;s pnv $750 lse. 640-5272 ; if ._J ......... lll..,.~I • •• ~ QU nn UJCUry Oceanside $250.000 will cupancy. ~182 no ans. 1 723-060l S-"-.,.. .. ,_.._.JI I I no fee. aduJt apU 10 14 plans handle 1~1723 Bkr i---------c-..a.-JZ71 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 from $440, 2 bdnn from 2STY EXECHOME ..,... .. _ 2 Bdrm jba pts d EXCITI llG CAHYOH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br, 2Ba, bltns, frplc, ocn · • c • rps. $.505 + pools, tennis. • NG• l...tfM S.. Die9o 3 car gar., 4 br, 2 ba, Exclusive full secunty 3 BR, den, 2 ba. refriJ, 2 view, 1475 mo 832-6520 d i"!· en gar, Beach & 5 waterfalls. pood.sl Gas 9.lxSdled.GJ. formal din , fam rm. beaut1fut '3 Br 3 Ba'. car .far .• $650 Act. dys.661-1730evs !_~180nt32s isrea $430/mo for cooking & heating TIM 1.pC.. 48 Units. 3 br, 2 ba 4 yrs rrplc, clean. Beach & p GI 49f>..64S8 ~ ..-paid From San Diego 1976 Kl d S1 200 ooo Adams. Temp re toe ravate yard, wet bar & ona, ; 122 de4 ..._, llZ2 . Frwy drive North on 2Ba, ligh~g~7,~g I~~~ ~~.u~~nt i.4J3..112~~~~ OK . $850, l.sl & last + firepla ce. manyt other 5-fa"-3210 •••••••••••••••••••••••Larae 1 Br w igarage, 4 Beach to Mc Fadden d. · dep 770-1170owner aMm.edn •ties •nSlc uding ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br 2 Ba du-•ex w/s"n· b I ks from bea c h then West on Mc"'adden trung area, 21 yrs + to N a1 s room 450 mo • .,. .. .,..,. ,. qualify Small pet ew Mobile Home 3Br, Call Anthony wkdys Beaut.3br.2ba,frplc,aU deck 411 Poansetta . ......,/mo 1st mo+S200 to Seawind Village welcome. 2Ba, frplc, redwood •ZIRTWNHM$450 642.5757 eves & wknds new decor Drive by $700 /mo. lyr lse . dep.req.Call536-7542 <714 )893-5198 I.st lww "'Toww deck, cedar shake sid· Pool, Park, nr Beach 644 8889 2317 S. Lowell. t&OO /mo. 675·0124 Jackie Century 21/SURF 1Wl4 Royal Lancer 24x60. ang, nr lake & skiing 963-5191 . lat, last+ SLSO. 6'4·5069 4000 •••••••••••••••••••••• .,.1 900 Te ....... c or trade On Golf c--3 bdrm 3 ba 1124 SEASPRAY.-2Br, 2ba, 2. Br, 2Ba. W/family rm, 4~99·3816· •• ..., No l.se req. Brand new '""" 2 B1'-r f I R . + den & bar 11100 .,.s romSo.Clt Plaza, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rp c. ec. & security. aguna Beach Motor Inn. an Lag Hills nicest 5 star - -CONDO else to bch, rec 645_7605 or646-l7l3 6 or 12 mo. lse. lllOO mo. Nr beach. 1645. 891~ 985 No. Pacific Coast pk. 21 yrs+ to quallfy. Rmca..-.'--. area, tennis, sec. gate Xlntcond.551-4540 \Nemtfleld aat. Hwy, Laguna Beach $39,000. Al8o :1X>x60 2Br, Grevn Z700 avail now only SBSO /mo. BLUFFS Plaza condo 3 • 1-.;;;__--------: Daily, Weekly, Kitchen 2Ba w/fam nn +encl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (213)833·1369 days, · SotlHtL_,.. 1216 FAMILY Arri. 3Br,28a,d.inrm&Uvrm, available. Low winter porch. 129,SOO. (213)831-5734eves ~~ 27~b~73No pets. S800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new beautiful Ira frpk, cf15hwuher, nice rates 494-5294 CLASSIC llVIRSIDI . · OCEANFRONTHOME apt, for famlUes with 1 yrd. SZSiS/mo. • sec. MOllLEHOME Jiatlated!ll5 +acres in Clean 4br, 2ba, great loc O'looks pvt beach, 2 br, or2ch1Jdren.Nearpark. 963-8842aA5:00 Room with kitc hen prlvleges. Adult.a only SALIS navels and valenclas. Nr the beach. 1695. VILLA BALBOA 2 bdrm 2"'1 ba, den, din. rm, lge Heat paid. No pets. 2706 Harbor, Ste206-A Located in the Arlington Malloy Rltn, 960-4342. l 'h ba. ocean view, avail deck, $1200/mo. 499-2ZS3, 12Br, l Ba. ttTO S,."'59~7 Area 2 miles south a( lhe .__ 3 on short term S850/mo. 499-5021 3118W. Wilson, 831-5583 .,._ • fwy. Potential fut "-244 subdl . . _,, 000 ure ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE 2 bdrm 2 ba •Small coty cotta1e. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Maple St. Lux new 2br, 2~ba 962-7520. twnbme, pool/Jac/ten· 1-------- nil, 1ec gate on lagoon R o o m , It I l c h e n 9Q-1398eve. privileges, Newport Bch. Ac,.... tor Sal9 I zoo VlalOD. -· . Woodbridge Nice 4 Br 3ba ~~m~ Ry c 0 ND 0 lbdrm, lba, stone frplc, Adult, rerrta. no peu. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17141 671-4400 . super family home. LIDO ISLE 2 bdrm, 11,, close to ocean. '700/mo. Quiet. u 1s. Sierra lbr Townhouse, built·ina, 642-61111 IZIJI '21-2121 S850tmo. .,.. 495-4486 * M frplc, pool, spa/tennis, 1 1--------IUMCHOSAN'TA Fl w ba home 120001mo. . amt.Co.841·U24 dy&·-toshrbome HARBOR aterlrontHomes,lnc ml lo bcb. No pets $475. ......,, 400 ACllS Realtors 831-1400 YTIY COIMlaa' ' Spac•--39 Du I 847-8758, ~9916 W/other lady. t2SO /mo A _.. f u.·_ w1,..._.. .... , -r p ex . l 1 pproveu map or 84 11 •·-•-~ Poollrlaundryfac. ----------1 me uti ; ktt It laundry Estate Lot subdivision Woodbridge, 5Br, 3Ba, Waterfront Homes, loc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-915.56 2Br, lJ)a, new cpts, drps priv. Own Br & Ba CM +120acresforfuturede· Prescott Model. Fm rm Realtors 631-1400 BachelorCONOOvacant, 1-----------1 & paint, encl patio, area. 642·1828 'art 6, velopment. All Rancho din rm, a /c, 2 frplc, 3 car l~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I $5 0 0 I mo. New po rt separate 1arage. 1415 893-7S94 Mrs Orr. Santa Fe servica. Roll-gar, assn ctues. grdnr, no Beach 978-0'23 meatiBJIU mo. AvaU now. 898-1190 1----~ ........ --- ing country side accen-~~~~~~~~ pets. Sl095. Ag\541·5032. . ' afU:30PM Rem .......... r tuated by yr-round run+ •LIMOAIS&.I• 2bdrm,2carpr,covered AP~S ---------' ..,.,..,._ ning 1tre11m. One of a ...tah Woodbrid1e 4br, 3ba, air FOa IEMT patio, ~ mile to beach. B l 1 Waterfront condo in .. ,_d L .. .,... f ... d Ava1'I June lS -, c: + Ma1'd'• +Den+ "Ba Accua to pool •. -·--. eaut ru landscaped ffu .. t H----I Ml..._,S n... .... .. · no>• o a •lD · ••••••••••••••••••••••• · _.,., mo. " 0 " -H "' .. .,... ...., aarden apta. Patioe or ..... · .. ......, w ocean UllH llflJ Priced to sell at $42.SOO fwlllie.d 552·1269 + Lots More! ~ty, 4500 ..-75. .B. (213)925-4796, decks. Spa. Heal pd, vu + ulUng, tennis, M4fY loth per acre or approved••••••••••••••••••••••• Wood d sq ft. docb for (3) 60' (714)67~. covered parklna. pool, Jae. Ideal beach Sendameuaf,etoMom map may be purchased w__..._. •169 ew bri ge cottage boats, private guard Adults.no..-•. livtn1inuniquelBr,den separately ,_...' • home. 2 br, 2 ba, a /c, gated commty the most Lux, 3Br condo, l~ba, 2 BR, 1 Ba .... -'""'70 •loft. '750. Eves/Wllnds via the Dai Y Pilot's SOUTII. COAST ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc, no...-., lae encl. i patio, elect 2ar 1•r, .. Mother's Day Page. LIDO ISLE .. _nnin .,..... .. prest gious island In 2 BR, 2 Ba .,.""-'""'"c 213/592-247~ y 111 LAND CO c.,. g 3 yd, '700. 7SO.l.84l tlose to So. Coast Plaza _..,._ -----·-----J our message w ap-(71~) ~·1,..,,;,.., bdrm, 2 bath, playroom. NDewl port Beach. Call & park . $595 I le. 388 w. Willon, 831·5583 2 Br 1~ ea. au pd, MU\ pear in • pretty flower • -.,,.._, Just remodeled. $1650 3 bdrm 2 ba Willows ts.SO ar ene <714>828·1280 or .. ..,.,., box. For information ---------i t B·u (213)598-1363. Our office 1_54_9_·025_9_. ______ 1 TSIDE, clean 2 BR, + l3SO depo1lt. Crpts, d ..... HP'raplrfJ 140C moo mo. I Grundy, inct1ardener.rencdbck ~n• 9.5 Mo~y thru encl 1ar. $425 mo+ drapes, blt·lnl. McFad-an to place your ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-6181. yd,nrscboollM1·1019. riday Family Condo, 1 mi frm rl den or Beach Bl. message call 642-5678 HIWPOIT 11o.1ir.•a•R•CH bch. w. Bluff, CM 2Br, ADULTS, no pets .• _____ ! _____ 1 i--'---;;;UU~--,1~~~~-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ secu ty. 25116th Place. TODAY 9 Orri b II I "--. a-••5 l\AJB 11 d Apt. B, no peu. Call .-$US,OOO.c~ur:;. ·dw~~·i ~uw=~'=O:h.· 2Br. l~ba.1 -~ 3 Br, 2~ ba condo. Back 962-.:S.;8eve~~ya, 1-9'1_9-_384S _______ -1 _sn. __ 4894 __ o_r_&46.924 ___ 3 __ -t. Is, Motets 4100 14Ut ! Bill Grundy, Agent,675-8170 28R.2ba. '80C> Bay & ocean vu . BR twnhoule. Uvina lBr,lrl-leveJTownbome. alboa Inn ooeanrront. 6'7~UU 1--__;:'--'------1 3 Br. 2~ ba. ~ SllOO/mo Aak for Ron. oodbridge condo. 2 BR, rm . DI n l.n 1 are a, Frpt~. bit-ma, pool, spa, Lo in :::-----:--:----~ 3 Br. 2 ba. $1250 FURN 752-5111 close to pool, lge brick •a--•-.......... N w W I.er-rates. Dally ---------t' '5ClO kltchen, rptc, , .. & -. ...... car, nr ""''· o or weekly. KJtcheneue. Family home, 3 br. 2 ba, :;;;m. mo. 833-f)B8 water, attached 1ara1e, ~:.1f475 . 847-8758; l-'-teo_&_u_,p:...._67_5-87 __ 40_. __ _ frplc, pool, tennis, pvt i--'--------1 pool, Jacuul, laundry comm. 2 blb ocean. Brand new Turllerocll fac. on property. Adulu, $1000 /mo. 546-«>20 lrvlne 2br, 2~ba. 152$ no pet.a. Avail. lmmed. • q . rt . p 0 0 a I t en . $500 + S21S HCUrit1. Exclualve Newport nll/tlOOtmoe.t.-5851 t31_... Beach renta.J properties. t-'--;...__;.;..;_;_;;.;;..;;.:.:..:;:;__.,_ _______ --1 87MS45 RTSA. Yearly, Hotel Apt. Room, Avail. DOW 2 Br. or a Br. llllchenette It bal.h. Utila Apt. Frplc, d•b••br, paid. $280 mo. + aecurl· 1ar. lor2childrenOK, ty depo1it. UOI w. no pet1. Water /lrHb Oteanfront, Newport paid. $.475 • USO. Beach. '7S-U54. ..._251eor~2'71. Aat .• t----------1 DOIM. SEALAll MOTR •Weekly rentals now avail. ••and up. •Color TV. •Pbooee ln room1. 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. Nonsmokt't to ,hr .1 hr houst-in Woodltnd.,:• $280 857 a«r. c1fl lip111 Male f'emale enJo~ II\ mg an m) plush, m1llwn dollar waterfront home• 111 Bunt HJrbour f11•r11 nel!ollabl,, l!41i 1 l:l'i 2 Bdrm Jµt 111 H.1lt1<1,1 sn·, until June ISth I 111 n"l ind fi75 7!111 Ft•ma le 30 "''" .,h<1r1· fu rnished 2hdrm apt 2nd bdrm not lurn"ht•tl Pool. $200 + l 'lll C \1 A v a 1 I no w 6 4 5 0 IJ I Patrica aflt!r 5pm Garaqe1 for•...t 4350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Storage only single. s;ife & secure $40 724 James. C M.673-7787. Single Gar, lockable. for s torage, not park1 n~ $75 /mo 646-2389 LAGUMAIUCH S:SO/mo Trish or Bonnie days 833·8847. eves 497 2278 Office R...tal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FULL SERVICE SU ITE ORANGE CO AST FINANCIAL CENTER 2845 Mesa Verde Dr E 116. Costa Mesa 1375 per mo + secunty deposit Includes all ulll . use of librar)· /conlerence & telephone answering Secretarial area avail at $175 per mo James E Dung e r At torn ey 957 1414 1617 Westcllfr. N.8 . Want financial inst 7000S.f 1st. floor Ageot 541 5032. KOLL CENTER NEWPORT Ele1ant executive suitea In prestige location, With complete support services 714 /SSl-0681 BEST RATE f In NEWPORT BEACH 600 to 4200 Sq. Ft. •J anltorial Service & UUllliea Included •Adjacent to Airport • Rataurant Row •AcceH to a MaJot Fwyt. 833-8813 •DILUDOMCU• 1 room, mm $215/nlo. No lease required ~71 DuPoot Dr . Ad{· Alrporler Hou • eaa.ms.~12 • . • • • " \ • PILOT TRAINEES Earn your wings down under in friendly Auatralla. Ex~tonal training. reasonable cost. enjoyable visit . Call Bill Hawkins. 957-8317 aft 5 p.m. Tap. lalltt,Jaa. D.cuclH, Aft'Obk. I~ Co...+ry & WHhnt,, HawGliaR & loto. Dorothy Jo Dance Studio ZS IS i. Ctt. Hwy, CdM Dorottty Jo•-• 2411 l. Ctt. ~wy. C41M I .. • BAU.ET• T/llP • JAZ.Z • TRIM TO RHYTHM •CHILDREN • TEENS• ADULTS ................... Clatlet I f'11 Y..tt.w. A.••• I 1wr=c:...leedi 1o1111fw;·OJ~ ,."'., ~.-- -t6Z·5440- , ................•...•......• i PRIVATE HOME! ! TUTORING ! • • • (Serving You Since '62) : . , . i BASIC SUBJECTS ! e READING • MAnt * STUDY SKILLS • • • • ALLMiES • • • • AND •1 : ALL GRADES : • • • Mr L Robenson. M A e Jftlllffw lcrYly : 01rector/Teecher : ................................ . ., 673-3420 ••••••••••··.·•••••••••• Retttah 4475 '••• •••••••• •••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Peelflce 1111...,... ... Color c911wltatlo• -....u..... ..... coklr-... cotMeffct a werclro~e for th• tahll ... Cati 645-1301 f« lttfo. The Pnvate school dedicated 10 Academic Act11evement Tr•ditional 3 R's Small Classes Sotrd Study Habit' GradesK-8 Transportation • Extended Day DANCER~CHOAEOGRAPHER-MASTER TEACHER JAZZ· TAP -BALLET-MODERN BEGINNER-PROFESSIONAL 641-8403 3723 BIRCH, NEWPORT IEACH · DeFore Excites O.C. Jimmie Defore. choreographer and Master Teacher, creates excitement and enthusiasm with his performance oriented style of 1azz and his contemporary classy jazz style tap His studio offers many levels of Jazz, Tap. Ballet. Modern. Ballroom, Country and Special Technique Classes for the finest in dance training for all leve~s and ages. Office R...tal 4400 ~o.....rcial : 5 5 I ·5646 : PERFECT ops, stores, hobby, 312 lnlttff1 gn. Trwt LOCATION ~~~t 's~· ~-w~g/es~~: •• ~~ •••• ?~.~~ .. !~! .......... ?~.~~ ~.'!.~.~ ...... !!~~ ~~~.' ......... !~.~~ ~~!.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~,.~~ ..... !!~~ 405 Fwy./ 543.7249 E M P~OYMENT Aey, Purchase ol 2ND TD 's Found : Bird of prey, Good looking man to Al DE Work w than-Harborlt~d. llCIM1triallt...tal 4500 estab d . 12 yrs Beach ' arranged For details please identify Kliat meet br oad minded dicapped aduJts Must Banking 2280 Sq. Ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. Furn. included call Williams (7l4):KS-5459 weman 25-40 yrs. for be strong, willing to as· TfilER D ...... office. $575 Approx. 2000· Jn · Low overhead. 646-6229 960-l9l57 Brokh mutual fun Valentine sis\ in tasks such as 0 ---1.a.....--a. dus'l /Orfice 18101 eves&wlcnds. ----Found: blk&wbtMSpr 631-0450 toileting, feeding, gen. FullTlme ....... ~ .. .,.... -· s No experience nee Will A/C Redondo Cr '"Q" Hunt MOMytol.oca 5025 $20.000 2nd TO, 20% lnt mger pan. mix, older, C ll STACEY With c~eanup. ~cell. vaca-train. Position avail. in Bch.842·2834 ••••••••••••••••••••••• All due tB/mo. Secured. C.M.549·1514.640-7'13 a t1on & in s urance our South Coast Plaia 979 9997 ---20 units 673·6720, DaytimeEscortService benefits . United ----· COSTAMESA 2IMITD&.o.s 544·0333.(Privateleoder FOUND : Collie I AfternoonDelight Cerebral Palsy Assoc .. office Call· FULLSERVJCESUITE 5000 sq ft. New in· SlOO,~ to $2:1(),000 18% preferred.) ShepherdMalemix. Vic 5~1 Santa Ana,546-5760 Kalh=rgey 0 RAN GE C 0 AST d u s t r i a I F 1 re + potnt.s. Call. Bkr., Santa Ana848-5l17 STACEY Formerly With FINANCIAL CENTER sprinklered 18' clear, 963-5788 AW•cr ts/ SCDIU Int' "FANTASY" is Now 2845 Mesa Verde Dr E truck door, heav y Low rate homeowner P~/ ~hl W i t h ' ' T H E 116, Cost.a Mesa Share power., ale offict;. food loans, $10,000 le up. Any Lott & f.m..d a~ GIRLFRIENDS" NB. 350 1q ft office w1lh comm I potenll~ for purpose, short or Ions ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~"~~ 759-12UI anotberRealtororcomp auto-related bua1ness. term 71418118-7532 tt&'-d 5300 Candor-Si.Die ---------- other 1mall business Call George Campos, · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Diner-lnward - $250 per mo + secur•ty, 752·8011 _ ___ CREJJIY( $ ROWING includes utils & phone 0 n e secretary to a n s w e r 1 n g O t h e r MESA 3 Day Funding U needed another: "My dale was ANIMAL HOSl'IT AL Perm F ff position in· cl uding Saturdays, c l eaning, bathing , 1eneral assistance. minimum age 18 yrs Irvine 552· 1513 CALIFORNIA FEDWL SH"'91&Loca 695 Town Center Dr Costa Meu. Ca 92626 ANSWERING Serv. No. Equal Opportwuty exp nee. Part & full Employer All ............ ~ .. r:.: •• .., ........ . llfHYlclfft wl.. ti• .-...,.._.._y..,. expetfeac•. At • IHclff "'tM fll•clil co••-"r· lmperfif lank c• offer ~ celt••t ..._. .. •· NMfftt....._. ... . todGy "' .......... ._ Coafa Meta offfCe. Coatact SHIRLIY GILIHT to.,_,. • a.terYl.w a.,alll ....... - IMPERIAL BANK 695 Towtt C..tef' Dr. . CostaMHa, CA'2626 7 I 4-641-UOO bt.262 Equal Opp Employer BANKING TELLERS CAREERS YOU CAN COUNT OH! GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS h as Im · mediate openings for TELLERS on a FULL Tl ME basis 1n our NEW PORT BEACH Branch We are seekmg mature dependable people with pre' 1ous financial io· slltut1on experience or c ash handling ex- perience but we will train qualified ln- d1v1duals Public con- tact background Is helpful Knowledge or 10 key and light lypmg is requ111ed We offer t•ompel1tive s alar1e:., excellent benefits and work in a beautiful office Please apply in person: GW GRUTWlSTBlH SAYINGS 450Newport Cetlhrbr. Newport hoch AA /EOE/M/F ·• ·~ :t ··ti:! I • ~t· J. services avall 9157-0701 1.._.DUSTRIAL No pymnt 1nS specaal~t fOUllJ ADS terrible. Not only did he &-5 daily. J"'lll Homeowner loans a lie about the she of his PARK cinch I LC loan amount AK nlrr yacbt, but be made me AFTERNOON •DELIGHTS• H ... /Offb,1Hoh4 * 529-4631. tJme. Mtn. typing req'd . I~~~~~~~~ 631-0140 EOE B e a u l I c I a n • 11 Newport Beach location, MacArthur al Jam boree, 1256 sq fl. S1 25 rt per mo Ut1ls & main tenance mcl 851 1711 NEWPORT IEACH Convenient Peninsula location across from C1 ty llall. Executive style offices w /full services avail. From 215 sq.fl . and up No lease re quired Call 673-3002 -..--- NEWPORT CENTER Prof business offi ces. 1000-5100 sq fl. Can build to suit New interiors at no cost Atnum, cov'd prk1 & ocean views Call Tim Sloat, 752-SGl I IRANDMEW MEDICAL DENTAL Xlnt high traffic, h1gb visibility loc w /water views. allowance for 1m provements Call Tim Sloat, 752-8011 AIRPORT UICUTIVE SUITE Several offices avail In full service exec. suite located near 0 C Airport. 752-<819 BAYFRONT, NWPTBCH Office space for lae 64&-4419 17ttlST,CM 1241 sq. ft. omce retail s pace. Sublease from out.aolna tenanta. S7• sq. ft. Immed. occupancy. A/C. Plenty of parking. Call Realonomlcs 1'15-6100 Office lo share Coata Mna. suomo. Al·32m specialist Land, apts, ft&. f~ do the ROWING, too.'" 2• Hrs Now Hinn1 MC VISA Banking 111 w.11d. Costa Mesa. Calif. 642-4463 rentals, comm. lst, 2nd P.JL Lost: Pet Ferret (looks & 3rd TD's Call Dick, ~ I~~~-~~~~~ Bkr 556-7341 642-5671 lilte weasel), "Nielson" r: ANTIQUE Shop, Laguna Beach requires resp. & honest yng. person, leav- lng school or older lo as- s1St with running quality antq. shop. Call: 494-2272 Ta.La Newport Beach oftlce seeks eitper'd full hme Teller Typing & JO-key add . For further in formation & interv1e\I. call: Manicu.nst.s with cllen· tele; be sell-employed, pick your own hours. First c lass sa lon 557 2234 ~Tn11t 1 _________ 1 is lame. Reward ! Call .842·7777. . · Dffcl1 SOJS - 1980 sq rt Urut avail ••• r.~;•••••••••••••••• Lost. Cat, Himalayan M a Y ls t Car Pel s . Sattler Ml-C Seal Point, Sat In Top of drapers weLel ba~ •336ff·i34< All tynoc ;,'";:'al :;late World area, Lag Bch sq l * asing o ce . _.-v • REWARD494 2536 ft 4 hrs Mon thru Fri 8·4. tnvestmentssince 1949. · __ a __ Sat. 10·2. SpecWbflwJ In Lost · 11 '1'a mo old Bnndle Storage 4550 2adTD1 Pit Bull, F, bet Supenor ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-2171 545-0611 & Nwpt Blvd nr Hoag r -Hosp. 631·5474 Approx 6000sq l in Widow bas money for Fountain Valley nr San ZND T .D. ·5 any size FOUND Wallet. In front g~~f0 J!~w,;' 5~:~m:r above $10,000 No credit of CdM PO!!l Office Call 548 7533 I, no pnJty For action & 1denl1fy 673-9432 eves ~~~!! ~~ ... !~~~ -~-:..:.;_lii_m_~_G_T_6_7_3_· 7-3-1 l ::~-:i-:"-Y;_ris_h_Se_lter, while chest CdM Reward 640-1499 American family of 4 Mack.,... Rah Mtg. from Brussels looking SINCE 1981 Found : Husky, male, whl/black. Flea collar. NB . near 19th St 675-6508 .nottah 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIRST LADY Escort. Models Party l>ancH"t. * 972-1345. MC & VISA Accepted COVER GIRL • OUTCALL• 953-0778 MC NISA fo r house m Laguna. lsl&2nd TDs. SSOK S1M + CdM or Newport nr bcb Owner /Non Owner Lost Turqo1se bird i---------to rent or trade for 3.4 ~ SFlb &Condos necklace in Lag Bch FOXY weeks in August. COmmercial&dndustnal 4/16 REWARD eves ~UTCALL~I: A1rma1I Haskin. Avenue PETER DOBBS 494-2722 VISA MC H 1 mo ir 17 •A' ll 80 640-6016 673-9043 Brussels Belgu1m. . Found stray dog in * 97Z..l Ill* 32.2 374.1223 Want investor for Npt Newport area. i------------------• bayfront home Give 548-3238. •• Mlsc•HCIMOUI well secured lit or 2nd '----------SPIRJTIJAL R•ntah 4650 T.D. Agl, 67~61 Found . yellow Lab mix, READINGS ••••••••••••••••••••••• S Acres. 10 ml from Palm Springs, store your boat, trlr of what have you for $50 mo Al&o seU cont'd camprs welcome to vacation. View of tram. Call Answer Ad 11360, &t!-4300, 24 hours. ........ ,llM .. t/ Flll-.c• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ Oppoe..., 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• male . Australian 10am-10pm. FullyLic'd. W..t 2 l·ZJO/o Yleld? Shepherd tri-color 492-7296 or 492·9034 1815 On your T.D.'s Notes female . Old Engllsh S. Camino Real. San 1$Raisers·l~vestorsSS s h e e pd 0 g • m a 1 e . Clem CalJ Dennts0n Assoc. Schnauzer mix, m ale . ::;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;; 673-7314 Newport Beach Animal ,. Shelter. 644-3656. THE Girlfriends •E,CORTS• Ho.e/Offbj'Hot91 * 759-1216 * • 529-1883 * Win. Now Rhine MC VISA ls there an aUract1ve, in telligenl, affectionate, lrim, 1ecure lady under '8 who doesn't. reel her freedom & independence threatened by a 1 on l potentially permanent relationship with a trim, 6' sincere gent? If there is please call Bill at 730-6277 at\ 6PM SILVA MIND CONTROL Inspiration and lechn1 ques for a better, richer life Easy, practical. powerful 3,000,000 en thus1asllc Graduates Free lecture 731 9430 Remember ·Mother's Day M.., IOttt Send a menage to Mom via the Daily Pilot's Mother's Day Page Your message will ap- pear in a pretty flower box. For information and lo place your message call 642 5678 TODAY! Art Accessory co. interior design sales, full or pt. Flair for decorating. Will train. ~916. Brian Taggart 644 7~ WESTERN FEDERAL SAVINGS J 4 Corporate Pla:ia Newport Beach, Ca . E.O.E. M /F Assem biers /Electronics lmmed. opening for ftnal assembly position. Exp with air screwdriver desirable. I~~~~~~~~~ Small friendly Co. or 1--------• ocean ~3632 ask for Banking Wes --------HEW ACCOUHTS Assembler. Frr. som e Newport Beach S&L has electrical assembly ex-opening for New Ac counl.'I Counselor New per pref $4/br. some Accts., IRA/Keogh, col overtime may be nee lections, Ir NOW Accts _898_·_~_sa ______ , ex per req 'd Salary commensurate with ex --------•I per Full insurance ASSBill BS benents It paid career Loe Miasion Viejo co apparel Please call needs Assemblers w /2 Ms Denny Parisla yrs exp Candidates 714-645-6505 must have gd manual dexterity, gd eyesight, MEWPO«T IALIOA neat in appearance It de-SAVINGS & LOAN pendable Wort is In Ure E.O.E. support medical elec· I~~!!!!~~~~~~ tronlcs. Gd. benefits. 1 ________ _ Only responsible persons seeking ~rma­ nent emplymt. need ap- ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli, S81·3830 * BANKING ··~& ,,..,.. .... ••••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ~~~~!!!!~~~~! Our Newport Center of. BOOKKEEPER rulJ charge for horse rancb operation. Computer e~­ pe r desired Salary open Nwpt Bch loc. Respond to (213) 873-1338 Bookkeeper Assist. Perm P tT . Mon-Fri. Exp req Lite typing, 10 key Pleasant work- ing cond m N B ad a'gency" Non smoker pref. 833-8435. looltkHDincl C'-rtl A /P knowfedie helpful. 3 to 4 days per wk Hrs. 9-5, apply a l 1660 Placentia Ave . Costa Mesa I -----,y lookkffpiacJ Cterll Full time, exper helpful but not nee Many com- pany benefits. Apply at: 1660 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa .. ·~i Brite. assertive people to ,, leach make up, skin •A care. Will train. 146-9952 Businessman 1eeks p/l associate in wholesale 1upply. 754-174.2 d . ... Jobs Wamhd. 7075 nee has an imntedlate ••••••••••••••••••••••• Assembly opening for' a tl ;.>, I Car Wash help, full or :~j J'(f, apply ln penon, Metro Car Wuh, a5b =-Ex perlenced not re-H -"'-Blvd C M *CAI DRIVSS• Checlter Cab 77().0222 Exp'd clean!nt lady look· ILUI -....... JOIS ln• for a few aood •leady "~ ~:..to Reaa, ref'1. I WAllHOUSI HOUS~ITt'ING l fACTOIY • BABYSl'ITING 'ASS.....as qulred-Tralnlng will be ••vvf ' ' ' Teler (30 Hrs. per week) m-tON Lona " lholt term ... provided. Cuh1et for illnlna rooo:i, '-l For Sale: Fuhlonable bouUque Prime area, Nwpt Bcb area. Send in· qulries lo box '905; P. 0 . Box 15e0; ea.ta Mesa m27. N__,. ..IA be1 • 1 l c 11 m e n t a . EXOT1CISCOITS _. temp. um~ P • AVi\lLA8L.SNOWI Call •1$1.1946• . AY01d hJcb ..-ncY fees. orcomeby: apply to rood mua,er John Glide, H•t•l La&ol\a, 415 S. Coalt Hwy,L.B .• 1151. lad. Aft. MO-allO.va. 2102 BualneU Center For Leue Approx 2000 Sq Pt Prim• Office Space. Ground Floor. ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;4; Faatrlon Ialand'sr- Corpora\A! Plau A~a. $3600/Mo. +Yr LeaH Phu Option. Ca II Seni.nt allofO.C. -t I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Bookkeeper Full cbaf'8, Dr., •201, n"f ne, 1= JO /bu wkly, •7 /br. Nl-1441 or rzm C:.bot Flnaactal statement, Rd ·..z.. .~a1una Ntauel, .,..1100. Broket'. 4410 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For ilton • ornce apac. aina~nta. Ito te Z700141 Pt. kESA VE1U>E bR l'LAZA -imMeaaV-Jl!,C.M. 14MIJJ WCMft"- 1 yean ~C:.,, net.- tin& appro• 22~ pr year. Priced at only "4,950. Seller HY• aub- mit all often. 752-1J20 U CPA 131-wu « ttm Beacb r.no tuei. up. Bl\#d., tJJOE, Hunt· at; N4-o'10. l.!'lftoo Batb. W...-1 71Gq NJ:VERAn:g ...................... i1.~.7~!t fora .,~ad DAILY Pl..Of f!r •YICI •• DIUCTOIY DO JTNOWI AMllars-lre Your D.Uy Pilot SeNlce Dtredory RepnsentaUve &42-1671, nt JI I All Around Carpenter Fin~h & Rough Free Est. John 979·4529 or 775·8082 The fastest draw in the West . a Da1ly Pilot Classified Ad 642-5678. ROOAMG All types, repairs . declts Free estimates Call Bob 548-0769 Make your shopping easier by lllllng the Daily Pilot Class1!1ed Ads. , ..... ~ 'l ······················~ LOCAL SANDBLASTER : LJc, Ina, reu. No Job tocf- bl1 /1m all. 8'(). 7908 s.c.-fhr 5p1... ll ;;.-;~-;;'··············~ BW'llU• nre•Scannen• Safea • Phyalcal Bar- riera C.M./N.B. AS ~1· ii Whtdow Cl1 x 'n g ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··Let The Sunshine In'' · Call Sunshine Window Cleaning, Ltd 5'8-8853 Have something you want to sell? Classified ad.a do 1t well. 642·5678. I ~~!':'::! ..... !!_~~ ~~-~.. 7100Help W-.d 7100 .W, WMt•d 7 100 Help Wanted 1100 H.ap Wflllftd 7 100 Help W..e.d 7100 H.tp Wmftd 7100 tfflp WClllhd 7100' •~.~c~·~SH~~.~ER~s~.-· ~------·.·.·.·.· ·;.·.;· . . . . . . . . ... .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . .. . . . . . .. ·.·IT· .c. ·= .H.:.:.. .• . .M. ·E·D··1c·. :: ·c· ·ou·. ·.·.IE.·.·. . ..................... . "' CLE-TV9IST Dental Hygienist forbUSYI•--------• ·---------1Housekeeper wanted, ,........... .......-_ _ ,,,.. office near So Coast FILECLERIC must be able to slay PREP.COOK&CHEF Mu st have own PartTime Hew lr•h•• •••ch Pleuey Semiconductors Plaza ~4SS3 GENERAL omcE overnight some wkends, Experienced. The Quiel lransrortatlon & be STUD&fTS Mertlet •w w.a.... M in Irvine Is seeking a Large insurance agency reference 846·3640 or W CdM fa mil ar with Calif HOMIU...ll"'.,.,.S -...., clerk typist. Applicant I•--------• has Immediate openrng Register today for local 891 2671 ext 12 om an. · 640-7440. f -'"" A ~ ........ lllw, wtl trak must type 40-45 wpm & D rt t c.-.~ for fast. energetic file temporary assignments reeway system Mon Earn extra money . 17 411••9570. epa men """'re 1 k p 'd L A N D S C A P E ~· 9~pm 768-8500. working p/lime in your -have 10-key ex per ~erfi Cai I company 557 M.H: Housekeeper CONSTRUCTION posi-own home, introducing Previous office exper a Thn. "D" Dept. u.::ne ts at· Linda at -uu't\I Senior citizen needs lion. Must have all Medical the New Daily Pilot to CASHIER plus Please apply in 549·8161 r-n.. Lin-woman for lite hsekeep-round exper. Top pay & Fashion Island G P The Orange Coast Area ' F IT position avail person . An exciting, fast grow 1----~~~~~~ LJ \• ':a ing 5 monu per week. benefits. Please call seeks expe ri enced Set your ownhours'Call Salary commensurate PW SEY mg retail ro. is now h1r FOODSERVICE TEMPOAARYPfCISONNHSUl'lllCtS Rer's req Must have (714 ) 768-47 51 from front /back offi ce staff Weekdays between 4pm with exp Apply in SEMICONDUCTORS mgfullllme &partl1me Reslaurantworker,over car546·9768before7pm 9AM·3PM. forpartllme&vacat1on &6pm .~IS27 M C 1641 Kaise A 1 help, male & female 8 11 r l72l lirclll Stnet coverage 644 0381 person . etro ar r ve., rv 1. w1 tram or meat H ~•--.....&.. IHJ...,.._,...,. LEG'*''SCTRY Wash, 2950 Harbor Blvd ----~~~~~~ M a n a g e m en t O P sheer & portion control • 0 -gw' '"'" ""-MEDICAL CM Cock ta i I W ai t er I :~l~n:~:~~ t,::ia~~ Approx 7 hrs Flex .. E. FORB'EISON Experienced -for small RECEPTIONIST Clerical HHEITIS!! The JOb of yoor choice All skills needed Top pay-Never a fee • NptBch S56-8520 Equal Opp Emplyr M /F Clerical Waitress, rugh volume 5PM. Wed. thru Fn . s tarling lime, lOAM· l~~~~~~~~~~j 5 dayriweek 3 louJ~eaArsll cN.:_8sinla:efixirmpr. Wd!}ll'.dapbrlo-e Ptr pos1uon 13 dys pr lPM, Mon·Thur , 6AM· Ge.o..a -~ expe ence req n:u. "'" "' ~.. k I bl f h ouse Oranoe Cnty Saddleback Valley '""" ~1 v D bi Call"u.~...,., w l avai a e or exper " lPM Sun Lori 's an orn mac nes ,......,.,, 1 Airport area. only de· Plaz.a, 23710 El Toro Rd . Good ty~ stills, work Id u 1 t k medic a reception 1st d bl •-d El Toro. 2~0383 Kitchen, 'XTT1 S Harbor varied, electronics nrm p n ° w LEGAi. c:iuo•y Respons1b1lll1e. include pen a e "'exper n ap-Bl .SA 9'T!M1747 olycarbonate, ABS. ~ ply Call betw 2 & 5pm ~~~~~~~~~~ Advanced Kinelics 1231 SAN and S t y rene RECEPTIONIST front 0Cf1cedut1 es 1n Ftn Mon Fn Ask for Carole I•--------· Ft-oat Detll CIHb Victoria. CM . E O.E Steady year round pos1. Some exp. req. general Vly oHice on Wed & Fn. Smith 549-8728 DESIGN F ttlme & p /lime 1_c_a_ll_6"-__ 11_ss _____ 1 lion. No layoffs. major omce duties. 831·S333 + 1 additional day m Companion to Live m with elderly woman, housework Must have car 548-3366 OM PANION. female, hve in 2 days/wk, Sat & Sun. preferred, care for 71 yr old lady on walker Own car. 833-0379 •Cot11DGNoll/ ... .,,.._.,._. .... £EB S.c-'lw, p ..a..... G RA ND M 0 T ff E R company Very clean en Fashion Island omce ~"~ -··r 1·-v1ronmeot. I LEGALSECRETARY Requires xlnt com Mrg co m Mw 1on V1e10 Hotel in Laguna Call NEEDED· I Ive· in CAMllO MFG. Laguna Hills recent munication skills. ac area needs exper 1n 494 9436. housekeeper desired for 760 Cla A H Calif Probate exper curate lypino. & 1.2 yr~ electrical connectors, F 0-,, --2 boys ages 6 & 11 1 Y ve, B " hermeti c sea l s . ront ice Mature, 833-22Zl (WofBch , necessary XJnttyping& recent fronl ofhce ex transducer design com person for eye doctors S ofGarlield) S/H skills req Call Mrs. per. Excell salary & ponents materi~ls & omce Dictaphone, typ-Greeters needed for 1 E 0 E M /F Wi ns I 0 w for a P pt benefits. Apply Contract methods. mg. receptJonisl Salary Welcome Wagon. Posi· INJECT. SETUP 837·1060 SlaHing of America, Duties Include design, neg HB area. Ml-2933 lions open for dvic· (2 years exp > --L-EG--Al.-SCTR---,--i 17601 E 17th Sl, Tustin drarting, matenals teal· minded sell-starter O.C Airport area. Ex · or call 714/838-800(). We ing • R&D projects Full-time Brollerma!I• Flex. hn. Good earn-INJECT. MOLD pr'd ln bus, corp. & pro-are not an a1enc y. PART Time Days. Ans ser v No exp nee Call. S46 3333 EOE P B X 0 P E R AT 0 R _.,.. telephone ans servk-e. day & relJef graveyard shift. will tram 542-6747 PERSON RUDA Y needed for oHice in Irvine Mus t have transportation for er· rands . help with some office dulles Minimum 32 hrs per week Call btwn 8 .30·5. Keri 979-2724 PHSONRIDAY Over the counter sales .• Boat store. 631·2810 ·-PIX a.c...tto.i1t Laguna Beac"h mfg co. needa sharp person ror oor front ore. to operate switchboard, open & route mail & as1ist with Per sonne l Dept, wotltload. Type SOWpm min. PreVlous clerical exper. desired 4 day work wk. We ofrer gd pay fr beoeflu Call for appt. Telooic Berkeley, 714-494-M>l. E.O E. Mature, lorelderly lady. Light housekeeping, some cooking. Live in weekends. Permanent Mec hanical Engineer· day or nlte. Apply m ings . Cati Louise •All bale. Lite bookkeeping. E.0 .E.M/F. ing degree pref'd pe,..on, Mon·Fri, 3-5pm. Reynolds· 549-3215. <2yearsexp.) Salary commensurate Qualified candidates 2607 W Pacific Coast ut, 2nd and 3rd srutta, w/expr. 714 1833-9124 MESsa.GH ' PESTI CIDE SPRAY • Clerical WHEN YOU THINK TIEMPORA.IY THlt«ICBJ.Y CLBICS llCEPTIOHISTS TYPISTS SECUTAAIES WOID PROCESSOIS DATAEMTaY We are not an employ· men\ a1ency. We pay yqu to work when & wftere you Wee. Jr lnlereated, call or come by. U0.2 Bu1ine11 Center D,1 ., #201, Irvine, qt.1 .. 1 or 21957 Cabot R . , La1una Nt1uel. ·0542 or 161S2 Beach vd.. UIOE, Hunt-lqtton Beach. • ~l!~~· S48·3688 COSM111CIAN Needed for posltJon as make-up artist al a NewPort Beact~ salon. Must be lic'd. (213) ~-6155 COUMSB.OR Day camp. June 29-Au1. 28. 10am·3·JOpm wkly. Previous expenence de- sired . $4 .25-$4 75 /hr Niguel Shores Com· munity Auoc1ation , 493-0122. ------- send resume lo. Mrs Hwy, N.B.646-0201. GUARDS other trainee positions ----------1 6 mornings a week. J a n s . 2 3 8 9 1 VI a --. --. Full &: part time. AJJ available. Ll9UOR CLBJ(S 7AM-9AM. Excell driv- Fabricaote, Suite 603, FULL Time, p/t.ime. Ans areas. Unilonn5 fum'd. CAMllOMFG. for new store near O.C ing rec req'd. Apply: MiAsionViejo,Ca.92691 ~!v8000NoEeOxEp nee Call: Ages 21 or over. retired 7601C!AyAve.,H B. Airport. Exper . nee. Pennysaver, 1660 ~~~~~~~~~~.,..... I N ot PlacenUaAve .. C M. _ we come. o exper. nee. (W. Sch, Wine knowledge pref 1--------- DESK CLERK-NIGHT GENERAL Ofc Reeept. Apply : Universal S ofGarlield). Good pay for good help. MODBJ .... '-!., AUDITOR for hotel m Gd phone personality & Protection Service. 1226 E.O E M/F Steve, ~1195 "• l .,,,._En 1 1 W. 5th St .. Santa Ana. -----------------1 Comm 'ls, films, ex-La gun a Bch. Ex per yp1n1 SIUWO try eve Interview hrs 9-12& 1·4, INSPECTORS Liquor Clerk. tuU & part· tras ... SCAS oeed5 new NCR 4200 mach Call pos Irvine area Call Mon-Fri. 3yrs minimum exp time . Costa Mesa faces,allaaea.957-0282 <714) 494-6:1n Sandra, 556-8620 w I c Io se t o I er an c e 549-1422. GEM IR AL OF C HARDWARE SALES machintn.1. sheet metal MOTB. Donut shop Early AM 1hlft. no exper nee. App- ly! Dippity Danuta, UIS4 Newport Blvd. C.M. Drtipery Wortlroo. Nee<fa tabler. hemmer Experienced. Mon · Thurs .. 7·5. 30 C M 642.1843 AA/Ar FuJI lime/part Ume. Ap-fa b Knowledge of Live-In babysitter & lite MIGHT AUDITOR c 0 n 1 lruct1 0 n 0 r ply in person. Crown layout. blueprints, & in· housekeeping on Balboa 642-~ a u l 0 m 0 t 1 v e ex P . Hardware. 3107 E Coul apecllon reports Paid laland separate living , ________ _ necessary Oppty lo Hwy .. CdM lns, holidays Apply at quarters provided call HURSE R E I Gay 675-~ learn. IBM system 34 Health F ood store lcmar n11neer na. ----------1 Mature woman aide lo computer, good pay, salesperson.part or full 11535MartensRlverClr MAlBIAI. care for handlcapped good wo~king cond1· time. Accepting appllca-Fountaln Valley HANDLING alert lady Must have tlon1 Join our team. lions 548-9S37 r.~o.,...... (714)641-0280 car to accommodate col-Call WT·3102m Oran1e ,...,.....,._, lmmed. opening for lapsible wheelchr 9to5 c OUMTEI HB.P Bright, energetk 'person needed for busy deli & Driver GEHIRAL OFC ham shop Possibility M h f' . lmmed. flt """"Ilion, de· HUYY&"''lllP. parts cleril, rubber hose $4.50 per hr NB loca-·~ wuraoce products, must paas co. tion 545-395l MECHANIC ,,....... ._. physical including back · ---for advancement for the eyer o a, primary ..- right person. Contact supplier of good food to s>endable Individual to Stan al673-9000 Irvine corporate com-assist marketina & m u n I t y , ne e d s a general office, good typ- Counter Help. Ftr. responsible delivery ln1 & variety or office Kuster'sCleaners person tod.riveourvan. akil la required In 543-4243 Good driving record dynamic work environ. necessary Mon·Frl, ap-ment. Newport Marlene COUMTEI Har proximately 8: 30-2pm. En1lneer1n1. 645-3632 Sandwich ahop. Costa Starts mioulmum. Call GEHHAL OfflCE Mesa area. 646-1004 (9-3) Suale 557-6232. F /t dars, accounting, CUSTODIAN·lrnmed DRUG ll COSM ETIC genera ofrice dutlea, openin1 for ex per detail CLER K. 4 o hours xlnl benefits call Bob oriented custodian In M 0 u 1 t 0 n p l a z • _77_o._1_n_s_L_._R ____ _ quality Fullion laland P h a r m a c y • M r . GIMH.AL OFAC:I retail clothing a tore. Dreyfus. 7a..3714 Law 0 ff1 c e need 8 Full-Ume position w /at· i----------1 mesaenaer to do aeneral t. r a c ti v e •a I a r y & offlte duo-atao m t ben eflta. Call Ray have a.;:;; earl S..:, &W-5070 + muea,.. Call Candy 851-0ISS. •EHEU&. OfflCI Looklnl few ••very in· ie.-tln1 part tlme Job In pleaunt offlceT Clerical, for mat ure penon. Loc.Uoa P'C.H., Npj . Bch. Exper . a mull. Aoeurat.e typln1, no 1borthand. 20 br. -.ek lncl..W Sat ff Sun. Experience with cranes, X-ray. Taking appllca-Nuraln1 cats, loaders. Vacatlon, s-ri·· To $16,100 lions btwo 8 "lOAM OD· HURSIHG RH benefit.a, holidays. Con· Au I l ex P n e c • ly. Stratoflex, 17671 7.3;30pm. Pvt •t bed tact Neil Kemey, Huao knowled1e ol data proc. Ar mstrong Ave .. Jrv. Conval Hoep. lmmac. New-Proler Co. 901 New N.B. CEOE. A Keodavis Ind., with gd stalfln". Santa Dock St.' Terminal lrvlne Personnel A1y. o A Hts SA 549.-1 Island. (213)831-0281. 488 E. 17th St. Costa · na · · · ...,., . Meaa Mature person for P ff Office Assist. HOMEMAICBS r /T Sui e 224 642-1470 work. morninga, figure Need enerietlc F rr help Over 21. M-F. 3--4 hrs control salon, Npt Be~. for errands, xerox/mall day. Sandwich 1hop at 8f.2.Jao duUea & odd Jot>.. Car beach, H.B. 531>-7272. MllMCAI. req. E.O.E. Call Ad sit· HOST JHOSTISS Full ll p/time Croot olc. ter 1447, 24hn.6G-4SOO. 8 ea u {I f u I ne w Buy G.P. in F.V Pe1 Optical technicia n w • t e r •caped con . i----------1 board " lns. m.9111 . needed for Sl&ht Intlru· domlnlum trart t. seek· N WW lo• "poliabed" lD· Medical Office, P/Ume ments. oup.nec. dividuall to sreet pro-clerical avail in Newport train on job. Must &>. 1 p e c t l v e buy e ra . Beach Doctors ofc. Pa-lood • /handl.. 2523 W · P0tlUon req~ attrac· Uenl bHUn11. collec-PCH, NB. 646-3275. Uve ap~ Ir ablU, Uont, appl. IC!bedul.1&\1. lY to c.ommunlcate well Exper pref'd. ~ with people. Applicant.a muat be avallabte to MEDICAL work weekendl. Uc. or RECEPTIONIST Buar Newport Center ot- ftce. re.Ponalble, en- tbuatutle, ~. P tr· ,. /T. M0-2023. Palnter wa n te d , reaponalble, own tran., Call Wayne ltM22l6 OPERATOR-Exper. w /pest c ont rol ap-, pUcalor lie. Top pay & benefits. Please oall (714) 768-47519AM·3PM .. Photo booth attendut..,.. afternoons . Phone 640.7293. •rlctweFt I 1. P ic ture frame sliop'. n ee d s person f;X · perienced in all phases' or picture framing. 558-1522. PLANTS Interior & exterior maintenance, full-ti01e, company benefits, muat have good driving re~• cord.S45~. Pr .. chool Ttocher C hr istian. Earl y childhood educ. courses or ex per req'd. P ;time. 642-9181 ------- Production. full time person for Prod. Dept. Packing " handlin g hosiery. Crystal Crea- tions Appare1831-5'14 r~OM STA.MT • Need t'Ull or part-Ume. No exp. ~ary bur an eye for detal1 • •bill· ty to worlt at a fut pece la required. Boob oo Tape, lnc. 711.C W. 17th St. C.M. 56S525. raOOUCTIOM , ,., .. Rubber bDle P"du , must PUI co. pb.Jafear includln1 blldr, X·ray. Takln l appUuUooa btwo I • lOAll talJ. Stratolle1, nn t Ara.atro~;e.. In, EOE. ~ vb loci., Co. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday, April 28, 1981 ~ ~"-~~ ..... ?!.~ ~ •• w ............. · ... ' •• '."·· ••• !!~ ...... ?!~ .~.!~ .... ?!!'! ••• !.-.=! ••••. ?.'~ •0sM~ll!!.~nY.,. H.•.'.' •• w~ •••••••• 1 •• 10.o.Attt1q • L 1001,Dogs 104011u ....._ '"' ...... ,,. ..... .,,_ ... . .. . . . . ..................... ······················· ...............•... 1Wif lea.a....:;.-:-.&.; 1. SALIS IAUSr,tr Expandlnc rettarch Tt>lephuJl Pvt ._ It"' !'mt Jtwelt . Sprm er Spaniel AKC. 11 T -U111t" ' ....-.. u-·-W• Dffd a aurp,..,.... firm .needs \ltraatile. • ) wb, ft'nule. •II shot "'8m >'P' A~-* Is da1 -•.,• tritlaf.,._beck IWDd urur minded In· LAY OH THE IUCH l!tcl Op~I l.u~·1 n flc11rd 957 07t2orG46Wl& . IQ. all .au ••It. •"9· All!Pb',Moo· JIWllaf'. to work la ~r m~'t It dlvldual to provide AU DAY Gold ll tch Ur1glnal -----~ • llC•iK»MST '11av, M It ....-ll 1°"'*'9 1r0men'1 dep(. 8a.lal'1 + aecre,tar11l support for 110 1mmedtate optnm11 paint111iui 111111. wtr. clri; "-•to Y• 1045 Ntat, att.radlv•, lood Lt•; 111 B. PaeJfJc f'u1J Uoit, .,.... ol&btl, comin111lon, call for Adm In I 1 tr at I v e 8hort a11J>ilc1t1on Work «ch1111:1> J'11 w1'>0, l>~h. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pe~IJ¥f. PboM U ·• CoaltHwy,NWJllkb. c-11 for a~ Cho appt. Secretary. Excel. t)'P· !\ •lpm Mon t'ri. talkllla r.-ul ~l.11111 lll'1111 L• IAMIOO rtrlenee. IJat•rvlewt lllTAUIANT i-..tr1,&o. PIUa THl&.00. ina, sh & abWty lo or. 011 our lelephont! Deep Clytle Zuld 1, M1)(ut>I Yourut&dil.64.2·5()7~ 1 ·4pm, 1'\Haday. N'"-.,. ..._... -· ._;.:... Ml-1k2 144.~ aanit.e&maintalnfilesa v u 1c e s preferred Don11nru1•1 . l.1n d u - -~.1 ,.•11••...;.-C!!-•-:..v --..--.,... mu1t Call for appt •3 35/hr "uuranteed, Rot1L1r ,\ olht:r., Pr f"r1:ckl•1, !19', Dalmn· ::_-:...:=~.:..~:. help. A~ tn -.-, •~ Saleape-wan•_. 'or • • ... .. ,,,_ ... __ wn.u _ .......... ..,. • .._. """' •• Newport Pharma · more mone)' e.i11ll 1111 .. n l.lf II! hmn1r l'rn~ lion Spayed, ~hot.Ii Gd perleoce.JlarillQulnDtn· lfoe.-P · J.J pm, on •lllATHOUaS 1ttraeUvewom.n'11boe ceuUc&ls.WlW UllhSt. pussibJe. Come by a Bw1111" 1xHlTll•111 b1~ w 1 k1ds le doe ~ ner p~ asoa s Seafood 1>ect Reuben dept. ln Fashkm hland. NB &t2 7511, ext 47 F.nt ll80 N Coast Hwy, tfut' 11£1111111.. 0 111 1.on 17 U l646 7048 Like new Httll&o l.' rhn. coffeo tlJI . t:nll li31 Int S<>fa bl•1l, 71,·, 1:ustOlll built, blk/11roiy pattern, l!d l'Ond, S'l:l 114-1 6.'i79 -,.- Q11EF.N lllOE I\ BEll> 1.1 K f: NEW. 195 1162 7't!>l Harbor Blvd, S .A: ~0~·Jf~.EN:'!~~ fAM-JPM f'ull or part-Ume. Ex· ------N Lag Bch Wk dy:. ut 111111 l'ut~.1",1..011 Miihn> t7f.5111. Beacta. or perJence preferred. SECRETARY Jvm First come. f1r~t p •cl1·-.1 ,lf 11 tr1 1'h111a To Jed hom~. Jo"em neut K11v ~' ,~.1terl>f'd. Oak 4M-fPM 840-'7110. E c II "'Y f b h11 ed t .1h11 d ,, l1l1 111 lath es German Shepherd 1) r fn urw> SSO llCB'r. ll"WIMST x e op~ or s arp 1 . " " 1 \t t Charlene 642 1828 1 Newport riJieh.iaw of. tao.raat S•leaperson for plant &altoworltinfust-paced T dt1 p hone Soltuton l•!>" ,,1C111·1 .ir1le J11!1:12!1J:IPultliPM ftce.l>a1 eommenaurate PNlp/BrollerCook,man Join \b• Los Aoaelea P/f&. It NewportBeachcomm 'I 1'1t•eded1mmed.1alt'IV To l:011 '."' 101 •;r i.i lk hmlhttt 1050 Ciara tS• 8051 llb bill or woman . Cl•an 'nmeaClttulaUonTeam ~~lG-6p;M. ends. real estale ofc . Excell '11.ork 3·9, Mon-1-n "'11 d uw s ... 111!!S 1 .~ 11':1 ~" ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••~••••••••••••••••• • 1 tJ.~, 1 k.llcben, pleuant worlr • adapt your work typ1n& & dlclaphone """P'!rtent."e nt'l "111 .,,.11 lJ ru ps + 1111111' t1.r.i 1t~>w * * I BUY * * All in "ti t·omt K!t ""'uch, llC--ST coad , ...... houra pay ... I c b. d u le t 0 y 0 u r s A L .,. s p E R s 0 N s k . I I d r ,.. "' _..,,_... , """4 , • ""' , 1 s require 1n g . <.:all a ter lpm ApplloncM 8010 <lor.tl l'w111 h1:cl, nllsc. Hair salon work Tues· beneflta. Pbooe CM."50. llfatyle. Wort Shn/da)' mature. p /lime & some Challengtng pos1t1on ror •)l;t; 0151 (,ood uttt•t1 "11rn1lutt' & Sal. Jrvlne752-f1'1 oe~Aun .. ..-F/f, P/f in • Times ClrculaUon wkn<h. 673-21634 right gnl Cati Laila. •••••••• •••••••••:••••• A11phan('es Oil I wall M'll M K '/H!IJ .-~.. ivu ... a aalea offtce near your 1---------..; 833 2900 TOOLPUSHERS llA II I.OH \In.A ur SF t L fm You J I 1071 d lcb • te bom •ha I ,\1'1'11,t\<'F!-iFH\H'I,. '' twl'ry llCB"f'IOliilST •an w man COUD r e ve morel me ----------1----------1 1 .d1fornw ba,1'<1 ilr1lhn" .. 1, 1 , 1 1 MASTERS A.UCTIOH •••••••• •••••••••••r••• help Pla11 de care for your , .. _nu ltudlea Sal .. .. • I \ l~l*1 1111' 1.111n:1t TYPIST . · or leiaW'ely~oda. We ea SECURITY GUARDS l'"ntractor "1'"b .:row \\1 d tn·1·11ntl i•uar 646·8686,833-9625 SILYERDOUAR$ lmmed o--'~1 exlatt Gary'• DeJ1, 753-5401 pay bour•u wa1•1 • ll8'CTAL 111,.: foreman for llunl tt1•111t.11H ~ 111111 19 Ill "1 .. ,.1 to xlnt rond, ......... ...., ... .. CO .... SUl.T Openinos ror qualified I B I ... , l I 8UY r.a.R .... ITURE h . fbr rltbt:,rc=: In our RESTAURANT commlaaklna. " AMTS snd1v1d~al!. Good start 11111 on eac i ni:' ' n '"" "" \;11111u-. II,,,., ~1 IOO vrw btn Nw Center ofc. Food ae~i"e wor .. er, Breu n e r · s Rents •l.i ry & ~1wf1l. Stond f BUY PPLIAHCES l.t·' '1'17 HLIJ 11ltl ~. 111 t·•r. en c·an • • ... • ing µa} Refondable un PO UOX ?S 8 8'4·2$07 over a. will lrain for LOS ANGEL~TIMES Futnlture Showroom ln iform dt'JX>Slt~ 978 72431 1' 'ume ~ 0 1.o•:. '1·17 ll t:JJ ,\ II!\ "' I I \ ,, " 4 '6. Westminster seeks 11·1kersf1eld l'\ 'fl:lllJ 11r Ii Sill',\ 1,12 1:m11 ?ll11111r., llC..,OMIST meat slicer " port.loo 1S75 Suonower Ave. career onented person & 638 81111 1 >111805>327 57~1ti F, 1r 111 , , , .,. hnl 1 "m t.1J..1· nt•\\ /.'I 1 ·11 11.1u·r 11. Leadlnt llort&aie Com control. App~x 1 hrs. C.M. Cor entry level Pol. In -- -lre1·n1 111 ,,c•' Ollie Slllll 1;.1!">:.."1t'.1 l 111q111• t ll\I; 1:111nen aeeka experienced re· P'lu. at1rt1n1 time, 540-0301 home furn1sh1ng s SECURITY GUARD Tr.1vet Gr<'1·11 f ,' .111 bill ah 6 11 1 ·' 111 i r. rt II i n g ceptioolal 10AM·1PM, Moo-Thur., E l=unit Breuner's is California's AMon thru FndJI>. 12 to 8 EXCLUSIVE ~'.16 111'1 '.\ Jlt•1 ht>tl k 11w "'· sohd I W<:T :11 \\SJ I MKG H••nPI~"' "'AM-IP .. Sun. Lori'• qua Y M Bener1u.. 499·1175 "IOl ' ~1011111" u•1hol 1 -~ v • E largest furn. rental co & 499 l\wpt Bch tnivt.>1 ui.:t•n1•y I " · ,.. ' h .11 t•IH /I ~111i, nng. Lit• typlne required Kitchen, lUT1 S. Harbor m yer needs qualified sales & 1177 MI n Im um 2y i e x P Porl ai.1, ' 11· ... il'-111·1 '>t•h·~ $1Z'i '>4!i .i.r. i; 51.'! 7:1!"t1i Bam·Spm.~1055 Bl.,S.A.m-0747 Sales m&mt staffforexpand Sec'} ''travel agem·, Saber \ 1'' •1111 I ln k R I ONLY I I nr• "I'' 'o\lt 1'"Hlw<1L•·1 l11"'»t111111l q11,1ltl\lllret· HILPWAMTEDI f'1gmw·ut.t etalexhp.pre· H.l.PROFOFC ·'."ts1 645 7 t ••u .111 • tidr111 ~•·t . ~1111 ""1111. i·cJ •;\1'1'1111 ~-:oH•t lct llCIPTIOMIST LAWAIM Deluxe ofc -OC airport area, phones. type (50wpm), Gen, ofc, ad· min duUea. Gd Ben Barbara 152-7561 llTA&.CLIU Dependable salespenon needed, 10-S Mon-Fri Wlll train. Apply in person Pier I. 2710 H&rbor Blvd. CM T•leph---aa•-. No ex d 1 ram M. r ·de· Nee"·. xlnt tyn1·.·t 1<'1> '··•Y eoe 11 ' I L'I •11 1111 c II "' "'""' -d' .... .. ,, • r. ,., 11 I ' II 1·il :!11111 "' 100 II I \(IS\\1'1 '"' ... •11 11 1 I• ,, ,. o~iy Cer. nee. Excell. co. pen In/ 11 on exMper Full !ik1lb 11011 !imkr s;ilun or. \ J 1·• 1· I ' · '"' Or P t m S t TR Ava AGENT • llM •• ,j Ii ,oil i I -, ,.., •\"' r •111 '' II·' "l.'11 , ••. , 11111• I • 111 '"'0". enefits. Commluion e. on a · open ll4tl 2!:112 ~ :1tK ' I ·' """° Program & profit sh r 9-5 :30 & Sun 12 Noon· I'd ··1111111 I •1.!t "' I \11111111" ll.11. 11111111" l ht '"11··~·tlo .. ~·· 8080 a . 5P M Contact: Cindy 1i. ·c11•d f11r r.1 .1 I "'""I.! ,.. r ~··... , .. ..,.., 101. Apply in person Mt' Us , 891 2388 EOE SEC ·y /RECEPT. r I \ Bic yc:h 802 0 " " I hr ' •• \nt1•1 • • •••••••••••••••••••••• Pennysa\ler, 1660 Fu ll t1mt> \a r1 t·d r,,,,. 1'•11' 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'11111p 1111.!.•11 ~,,,., 11• rtEDYfOOO 2X6'1. R ·1s Pl · c 1~~~~~~~~~~ d . .ii..,.,., 11· 1 '"' ,,1 etat ales acenlla Ave , osta i: utu•., tq11ni.: 5'H ur 111.12 '.1 111 .. .r 11111 , .. f.1 :io~•1 1.::i 11:!1 ~ Fast action. high Mesa SALESTRAINEIS ~a1111.1t1u11JI .. k1lb I'"" f , \, 1 ,, '( 1111 do, k 111 ,., loog. •"' , 111.,d 1.a l u1 from RE~~O~ volume retail leather i----------Establis hed Chevrolet pit' <1111·n11·d Ach .inn TYPESETTER '' ' 'i •oods store In Laguna SA.LES d I h . mo•nt o pp11rl un1 t' 1\ll>t 1·.1 1 1111 I' 111111 I I I I Ill 1•il1111 .... ·1 • 11 jl l!J' .dtllll'I '· •\\ l I -111)11 .... :-;, 11 l'I t •I :: 100 •••• 1 h''~. 1111il ' 1.tt1 ~88.S T.....iMg..-. NBa-a 1 ed e a e rs 1p need s 1 ''I 1 1 '.,... ....... •"' · n-ach o--'-mature •· mm . part tame open r' lllt' ~ iam "-'1 11 1 ·om > 1 >. 6311500 °"" .._... "' · f R d '"d moti vated people in II I ~ J\ t I , \l11t " 11 •.1111-: • e"p. salesnaraon for rng or ea er " l d I rn• r1' ,, tili1 I I r ·1·1 1 • ..--representative for Inside erestt' in at aspeets of 1 ' µ.n ~ '1' 11 11 ~. 11... 11 1 llC..,.OMIST Thurs, Sat• Sun. If you sales P011ilion. Gd. com auto sales Contact Gary SELi \\'ON f"t 'Ll .11 \1 J-. • 11 1111s111l.'. H111 • •'' 1 11 1,11 d Le~ Bclkons II• 111111 I 1 I'll I'> de· ~ o1 ,. 1111 :'lt .. 1, h•l1 r11 "I Athert'i'--~~-enjoy sellin&. see Gayle pany ... __ 11 .... pply in We bb (714)4!M-113J or i-:arn f6 Stoprhr "' _,_.. at Un Bel Di on top level ""'"" "" " <714)546·9967 t·a11 ~ 052".! 1u1:. I' 'I l 1" I hu1 ' "'•1111 .• to iK~· \\. d .. 't SucceaaruJ new public•· of Villaee Fair Mall. person : Pennysaver, lion lootinl for youn&, 1660 Placentia Ave SCTRY /LEGAL SF\\ 1r-.;c; ~1\Cllll'lll' attractive girl with Mlli4 SW. dCoast HwyFo!1 C.M. Mon·Fri., l·SPM 0 C Airport ,·irea Ex n Pnt \ ron I\ p I e a 1 a n t p b 0 n e on· e or on r1 penonality. Lite typin&. l().Spm. SALES MA.HAGY pr'd 1n bus . corp & pro S;11 l luft •"<p fi3 t 1842 adnrtialn1 aeency & i----------Career In the import bale. Lite bkkpg Satar) builder contact. Lookinl Sailing Instruct.or needed business now available' commensurate w l'Xpr TYPISTS CLERKS '" for • dlvuw ;ob " op. ln Npt Bch 25-27' cru.is· Jr you think you're worth _!14 /833-9124 portunity for rapid ad· in& sailboats. Wltnds $750-SlOOO a week & are Secretarial vancement. CaU 540-1107 now, fuU time summer motivated to earn even S ..,LES SEC'Y Irvine. 64.S-7100 more, caU today for ap ""' polntment. Parttime With a young dynnm1r IECIPTIOMIST Wttb or without typing needed. Top PIY· Tem· porary le full lime. Call Tod Services at IJ'n.8900. ru 11Ur available also. Only computer b1thng sales ~ SS.hungry need apply. organszat1on Must have C OMtii&CIAL 675-5299 (Ma. Carlson) x Int verb a I s k 111 s . Tired of sellini houses 7 ----------1 clerical or secreta rial days a week ? We need SALES MNGI. experience Call Ltnda one licensee lo learn the Career in the import tnvorkm at Safeguard IECIPTIOMIST skills to manage broker business now avail' If Health €are Systems Full time Mon-Fri. Must commercial real estate you think you're worth (71 4)957-1121. be peraooable & well Income from memt $750·$1000 /wk, Ir are 1roomed, & enjoy meet· while you learn. Super motivated to eam even SECRET ARY lnl the public. Requires benefit.a; llle insurance. more call today Cor appt. Small om re Typm g, aood I pelllng & pen· health insurance & den-p rr avail. also. Only SS b 0 0 k k e c p I n g 8 n d mansbip. No typing taJ plan. Contact Keo, hunary need apply phones . lrvme 556-2323 .Phone experience pre· 615-6700. 67S-S299 Ma. Carlson (erred Full company 1~~~~~~~~~~----------!'lEC RETARY Churc h. benefits. Apply: Pen· 1: Sales p /time 25 hrs a wk nyaaver, 1660 Placentia Sales & delivery drivers Now hiring Assistant Mon·Fr1 Typmg. een Ave., C.M. needed. Jmmed open· Manager Trainees. Min otc. ex per Mature CdM log.a for mot.ivated peo-6mo. exper. Call for in M4·074S Mon·Fn llCWllOMIST I 611LMIDAY lf you are a sharp, in· t.lllaeat, mature lodiv loolrina for' full time poa. with nriety. lrvlne Sav. lnp la interested in you. Must have ed. typill& sltllla. Exper. u a PBX Oper. helpful. Apply at: lRVlNESAVlNGS 18552 MacArthur Blvd. E Irvine, CA 92715 E.O.E. M /F llCB'TIOMST for presUae Lido real estate office. Handle phonea &: executive level cUeota. Ute typing skills &: fillnl required. Wall, 613-7300. pie. Can easily earn over lerview: 642-1231. SECnrr••_y_ -- $10/hr Call Craig atter -· '""' lpm: 951-26'2. Trade your old stuff fo Immediate opening/full· new 1oodies with a time.SouthLagunaarea WantAdR.esulls 642·5e78 Clasalfledad.6'2·5678 properly owners as· ----------i soc 1 a t1 o n ·••••• • Daily Pilat I Classified Advertisitg : •Supervisor for Classified Deeartment • •Experlence necessary Excellent company • ebene~its . Salary commensurate with . Shorthand 1speedwrtl· Ing, good typing re quired. Must be outgo ing, personable & enjoy a busy office dealing with members & public Exc ell ent bener1ts 18()01mo, ~iguel Shores Commumty Assoc1at1on (714 )493·0122 • expenence. For appointment for interview, call 642·4321, ext Z77 • •--------*•SECRETARIES•• Pyrl/Fun NartySl5.600 • • • General Assigmart • : Secretary ta : • Executive Office • •immediate opening for venatile individual • • Must be capable of handling fast-paced,. T75,Shl00 f'lgS16 .200 Bank /T651LonnsS14.400 Accountant Deg$19,200 Expd Consultant Ours L12 Reinders Agy. Inc 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE Newport 833-8190/Free • SHIPPIHG DEPT. I >roh-r f11l1•1 I d,1\ \\I.. ("11 IH'll 'I \j ?hli41 STATIONARY t •• \ • ~ ' 'JOI! 1 h I I\ 1111 "" l t I I \' \I. 11rl.. ,11 I •I cl I llo I '< llt'd Iii C ALL THOMAS 641-1144 Rf \ '· .. S\Ol t' Ill L tJ 'It llt:t•il' i,cJ l1·•11t·l ... 1111 f llllll"' 5 <la)'' \Int \\111kinK nm ----------d-. Es1wnall~ hnt' dlt>rt tt:le I' hone 644 7\1$2 fur appt STOCKBROKER TRAINEE (.'ollrKe grads Oppt y 111 Newport fkaeh arPa r11r hard wu rktnlo{ e n lhUSIJSlll' IOdl\ Send ft sumf' lo P (I Bc1>. 430. Marlton. :'\ew Jeri.t'v 08053 \ \ ITIH'<.,'.-. \\ \ l I I 1 ,, r for \\ • > • r I II n (' h 'I I I I I ~11 I :!01'\1 :\1 11 I I 1 I 1rn $1 2~~1 ·11 "~II IJ U!>l bt llt'Jf '~I O JI I 1 li• & ener).:1'111 •11•111717 Ill \llAM for .1pp1 Doq kl .• I I .• ., I I 'I. WAREHOUSE/ <'.11. DELIVERY PERSON I '" .1 ' I 1rly rl'nlJI lu11• F'T 1.1111 Ill PT ,,.,.1, ::!ll.!:11 STRAIGHTENER I ,, "l•Ort Bh l ( " ( " l'!r aluminum fori;!lnl(<, \\ 111111 \\ ~ ,, 111 , 1 , I'" E.xpl"'rll'nce required 111 n1'<•<I 1• 1 11\\ 11 Able lo n!Ald hlut'prsnti. r ti.JI; •1, • ., & n11•a i.11ring 1nstru I 1,, menls Isl & 2nd i.~1fts M~rchondi~ I 111.,1111 Apply Alum mum Forge 1····• •••••••••••••••••• i Co 50:! E Alton St Antiques 8005 1" Sant •1 t\na ~49 4075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• " 11 EOI'. 1WAMTEDTOBUY '1,'.11 Tt;ACll ER's A1dr want I 11 u ~ o I ol 1 1111 ed 1-;xp 5 morning' .nwnd.., 11"1 \ ).otl•· II. 9 12. JflPrn1111n'i 4 h • 1llt"l°l1 hl1•.., 1 .ill 1i1 11 Su:.an &Ill 1182(1 1 :t 1'12fi &. a'~ 11•1 t 1,1111• T t-:.\Cllfo:HS \SSISTA'.'IT Sµet 1a I rlJ1t!'>t'' fur han dt<'<JIJJll'<l ,1dults l ~ r ... n>lltKl' t'"\~r rcq ·,1 Ex t' r II \ ·ll· <1 ll 11 n & 1r1 ~ u r a n 1 1• h " n 1• f 1 t .., \\ k ch ' K :Ill to 11' M l nito ·il < t•r1'11ral Pal~\ J\., It ll I 54ti '.".7filr S;i nt .1 \ n .1 T eac~r'1 Aide Pre:.1·h11ul l''<P d Full '111111111> sq u.111 i:1.111rl 1, 1•1 11111 C1rt jJ , .. )jll SI tfMI \11t1que ll.11l , 'ill I 17th I I 11:.la \lt''>J J l/I 1111 l. Automatic IJ :l ' .. 1111 .11; lr ll'. lrdh1d I .I \I I l p f ,, 11• "' I (, I ' •111 •· 1 IJhtl I ,3 1,'~J 1•1 .,.,1111 • •k I" dt ; I \\ k attn ol-. 802 5 ·····••···•·• • .JCJO l X.6'~ I It ' +I ·'"II I 8 040 .... ,.,. .•.....•. II~ I I t \'. ,, 'l t ht• t) ~l~I 111111 lot'' .1~·1 \I. ol••tlw1I I'll 111ld (/J• 11•', n111pl.·r1 ~ ~' 1, I 1orf l'I I 1 l 11:"'1 H \ I 11\ :\ I 1 ll N I I l II I t\111' ~' "' ... 11,. "" ... , ... .. 1l1.1v.1'I , ,,.. t Ill 111111 11 \, r ' ,1 r , 1 1 • , t for \•I I .• ti '.,I ~ .. 19 •,I f l ' I I • l'I 111 ~.S ':' •t ' utu•• 'I 11111•1 sl'll. free ' .. II l It I I ' , , I ' • ' (' , ' \ I 1 I d1eer 11rver \Kl I , ,, ' •• I ,., I ,\ '°'"' 'I ti ,, 11·· •Ill 1r II "' I I l'l 1111 fl1111 1111 1\1 ;dl •ll l·l1·1l1 I• I t 1 ,,,,11 tdt, t l l'• lk• r ' ,d i • I I I 1 Ot•d , 11• ~so • 111 11lo1 I"\ 1 t Hllt·n 1)11• • n ,.., II 1111 11111 h ••l\l'S qU;ll 111.tlt11·"· I' '• L• h 1 J I t I ~I 'tll II 11 0 11• 'I J!Up \h 'I' I 1111111 1,,11 Ul:ll:l:! . IV.owl •I• I.. "-' 1 h •II , '.t .... 1., \1•1111\\ ,'<.-11,11 I,,., 111 r1 I ru11dl1 li1·rl r1 1111" ,'( 1•1,d ~ '11!• I l l'l 111 .. ;!•~><1 1----------: '-••1 ·1 ldllH' \41•• ,-.. •. H II •TOOMUCH• 1" 1 rs tocked 1·p11d 1t wn \1 \"..,T SELi. •,our in u·ntor) \l < 1 .... 1 l>r H1·-;t IJl I 1• 1 ' No n·;t~onahlt• ol l1·r rt>fu,.,•11 11-.H\tS \VAll./\Hl.1' lj B ristof Furn. 966-0473 \nl'I l>P!-~ 'iJI rlfH I' ii I ·•':'o \1 1 '1;iu~ht1111 -l- ,,,,r·, l rlr 111111111 1ol \\1lder ~l•Mr :: l '.11111 111 • S2llea. •d'' I I~> I 11\ 'I \I I l• I ••I ~'50 I 11 1 ti ' I 111 S:'50. I l l I ... 11'\I Remember Motfrer 's Day May t Otft r Sf•nrl .1 1111•· .. 11!1• II) Moen- 'I I I h1 ll,111\ 1'1fbt't \.1111 ",.I .. II ,I\ p ~ ,., . ) lllll I ,ljll' Wiii ap. 111 • 1•11 \t\ flower 11 "' lll JllOO 1 .> u ur 11 tl '.ill78 SECURITY ... CONVF.NIE 'J f' Door Operatorc; hy St u Jl t:'v IECIPTIOMIST • varied and interesting duties for newspaper . Jnteroat'I. mkte. firm • executive & personnel adrrunlstrator. Call:. n e e d s R e c e p . 6'2-4321. Ext 277 for appt t.ionlat/Typlat for front I • desk. Handle phones, e ereet visit.on. Uwpm re-·-Classified Outside Sales • SECRETAJlY Leading Irvine Com merc1al lndustnal Real Estate compan y has opensng ror a sctry Lite S/H req Exper IS essen ttal Salary com mensurate with exper Call Georgia at Corporate Realty llm1· 1;-12 nu1 I TECHMICIAH Yi anl1:1t for '>t'rvw1· & 111 stall;Jt ion 11r photo pro r e ...... '' r S 11 m c mt>chan1t al & t>lcctn,·;d I exp rl'l1u1rt>d r711 1 898 ()~JO LOWEST PRICES I N O RANGE COUNTY q'd. Accuracy a must. S Noa-amkra. only. Call: • alesperaon to handle Real Estate . Kra. Coplan, S59-&90l. .Development accounts and automotive 1 S accounts. Must have at least 2 years • ( M EqulQ!Ilent, 2805 e experlence. Salary plus commission. Must. Barranca Ka., Irvine. have car, mileage paid Excellent company EOE .benefits. For appointment for interview, call . -- ----- R . .E. SALESPERSON for • 6'2·56'78, ext 277 • 1--------• 975·0888 sales, exchangea, invest· • • Secretary menta. Hl&h comm. New Part T1'me E • . Exec. Secretary • P /T ok. Newport • V8RIOfS • To P'resideftt PacificR.E.64.$-31183. • Ca-1•1Y .... C...f.r.a • Fin Svces firm , .ISHv•--sT .Adults with outstandin1 attucttvee Fashion Island, needs """'"""' • ptnonalltles wlfo enjoy wort.in& with 10-15. top-notch exec. secty. Neat, aUractlve, lood year old youths evenings 6-9pm. Call 642·4321 for very busy, challeng· penooaUty. Pbooe ex· • ext 343 between 2pm to Spm. aak for Lori. • lne pos ! Strong exper & perlence. Interviews • typ/sb skills a musl. 12-tpm , Tuesday. Motor R-111e • Non -smkrs . please. Friclay,tull•part·Ume. • UUW • Xlnt. dental/medical Salary eommemurate • N rt n.......a. • benft.a. Call: 714-640-0123 "1th experience. Harl• · 8~0 UGAll quin Dinner Playbouae, • 't'be Dally PUot t\aa a mot.er route anllable • 1503 S. Harbor Blvd, S.A. • in the Patt Newport; Bit Canyon area of • 97f.551L .Newport Beach. Approximately 113 J)lpen. and thould take h'om one to one and a half R•poulble peraoa for e&oura to do. Houra: s:ao lo 5:30 PM Mon. e PIT Interior plant main· etJi:rou•b Fri. and 5:30 to 7:00 AM Sat. and • teaaaee. E.ap. not Sun. Earoln11 apprHJmately $HO.DO oeeeaaary. o.rn trans. e mont.bly. For detalll coatact Bryan Holland e -.oia eat&U-4121 between the boun 10:00 and 12:00. AM dally. IUTAm•MT • 0 ~--· • Sand•leb aulter bfa • ~,~· • TAll·al'~M MoD.•Prl. -••em, ealawtlm• e 330 W. ay Street e e Costa Mesa, CA ' e e Equal Opportunity Employer e •••••••••••••••• . -.._. ... .....,...._ '• . • 1: Claaalfled Ada. your one- atop 1hoppln1 center. Telephone PHONE PERSOH P T phone perso n 1 needed to r ail & sN app't:. for bu~> Solar F.ncrgy Co S4 SO/hr + I bonu!'> A~k for Al LIQUIDYME ENERGY SYSTEMS S45·6793. 754,0535 Usl' lht> l>ailv Pilot ·•Fast Rt•i;ult · scrv1r1• d1ret tor> Your service 1o; our specially. Call 642·5678 ext 322 · N • Are N ever U nder sold " STAN LEV .. .... c ~- Day or Night Prompt, courteous conscientious service . Springs• Hc:rdware •Garage Doors • R pairs 14' AMP SUMASH ~ MMl41 1013 ta' Koble Cat. Good eond. ,..,,,.•••••••••••••••••• Trailer c:at box. Sl750 or SpKlol ,.._II Low...._! 19104 .. -11 ... m iracle mazda r, Ceiltii ...... 641-1700 WANTED! Late model Toyotu and Volvo•. Call U I TODAYlll 11 "'scaocco SJCU.INO YOUR D >' n •ID l U Pe Ir l ll&WIRCP~~t metallic 4 speed. Xtra ll_.....,S n.., A• clean, 1b ow1 lovla• .... · !l"'J TOP DOU.Aa SS ca,... (0'1'11881) ., __ d .. ..,~·~ ... om ·caUJ&ck Baeou M6H "1SU • w ... JIM 1&•tOMS JIMMAllMO vla tbe Da 1 Pilot'• t .. Otl'IS YOLISWAW Mother'• n_. Pa•e 1-0 u--'---Blvd. Your m__,.-wUl •P. TM..._.._..._. •• .-........ 11711 Stach Blvd. pear ln a pretty nower --. COSTA M~ e4Z.2000 box. For information P.rtOtY_. Ul-1211 m.9300 •---------•and to place your IMW,_ c••• Or MARI HOWARD meau1e can s.t:!·H78 L ... CGiildle 'Ts :.llOC:. Xlnt cOod. Must VOUlSWAG84 TODAY! Mc ...... IMWU sell $7500/0BO 752.2404 Luse aelectloa or AMC tt05 11110ra.... dy1; 552-54T7evea. Volkawaeens with c:om· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •" 0...,.... ,._. dr .,_,_ petltlve pricee. '75 HORNET Wan. auto, r '72, 2200, 4 a.>Wlln, IU.D· -··--.J /f In ... lil!illll)iliiiil~l.ai ... 1111 t-----------1 Owner, Jl1nt cond $'1,500. YOUtSWAGlH. INC .... ...._ UMdc.ntl ·11a. ...... C--roDIT·Tep Stereo,1\. mat whe~fJ, Po•tr wlndoft It dOor ~kt. 33.000 ll\llft. (351VQE) . $5995 ~ ~lr9CtoEtrom1~ bat ofr . .snua, call :.W1uo;;euoo.·~~ 551-tw, Ben56Z·f7N IP•. OMIOfADel PmtrE: SUv•. Selmer 11' 1pruce, lap •trake ~ 15885. Gd for atu aaUboat w/trlr. Both lm· mac. llade in Norway. D.,_PkllU,'• Tn_.,_ Sa•~ M• C7 I 4J 522-SJJJ roor, manual trana. One ~~ liJ~ :!es.~~ cu•. x t 71 IMW (2J3)81Mlm dys, (714) 534-4100 '89 Rambler Stat. wan. Dynamite 20IR I door. 1_w..o __ ua_evea __ 1wknda ___ . _ run.a but needs loU of•------------- Automatic, air, stereo. Al 9744 ,!!7rden31 HaGrrboovre work sz:io/OBO. 960-1089 Mat. $150, IOI039 Salls •lnt. '2500. ~ .ct llO •• , ,.,.. ... 01111eafw•=• • c-.1 • 1015 heh ...... ....................... S b ••••••••••••••••••••••• It ·Co rona I 9070 BARWICK DATSUN So" Juo" Cop""..,., 8 3 1-3 311 =rlter, M.odel JOO. BOAT SUPS FOR RENT C•U oc::.~t!~~DBa•:5t NPT Bc:c;s~·· 1-'--.-c-... -.-.... -.. -,-- ... eb. Mk for Janet 1---------1 LUY l/>19 SW. Stdth,&a:l-7300 . WANTED: Shore moor-with dual rears! Ideal ,.._ 1017 lnf or marina apace for for landscapers, etc. • ••••••••••••••••••• lOslT' catamaran eves. (Ser. 6056). 3~AKES; 2 Pyt.bona & 1 497·3914 or MG-4190, ext OMLY $5ttl Boe. All nlc:e. Also -,_30 ________ 1 HOWAIDCM'tl'Oltt lats• snake cage. $325. IOATSUPS DoveltQuaUSt.. S0.41167 For rent 646-«l9 NEWPORT BEACH ... ()rps 1090 .J llJ..0555 ••• ••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beac:niUp. , Ch Lu id LITZ"'R l t Im med. avail. 79 evy v step.a e, c. , ap ne te C ll 'l'\ ~ AM /FM lape, pl.oalripe, model 4410, two «·note a om sharp. 61~1.S kel'boarda, 13 pedal '9tpc.tt ..... n~. auto tone cootrol, •••••••••••••••••••••••Chevy Luv '80 LoD1bed. eaapbonejac:k, aoUd ma· S-./ AM /FM casa. stereo, pie w /matcbini benc:b. r.un. t I JO 16K ml, camper shell. tMO c:uh or $45-0 de ~. Call Ans. Ad #361 U v red. 5C'7 • lMS • • • • • • • • ••••••••• • ••• • • h 642· 300 24hrs 76 YW CAMPB ,_P'----4----- 5'111 A.8. Chase Louis Dynamite Weetfalia '74 Toyota PU, ~.000 ml, XV. Ampico reproduc-pop.top 4 speed. Only rblt eng nice cond .. nu i,.g &rand piano . 49.000mllea.(441WXA> tires . Camper shell Cclenpletely restored Ir $5H5 $2500 5J6.6456 (98301Tl rdlt. Piano originally JIM MAlfM() blt m 1921 Like new-VOLISW '-LRU '76 Toyota PU, t.ool box, l ood mvestment CoUec· A .. ..,.. good tires. 59M. $3250 . 18711 Beach Blvd 990 ft tots item Askin& 142-2000 613-5 a .4 Ub.ooo . Hammond! ·79 Toyota SR s Sporn OrJan Ir Piano Center CAMPER SHELL-Fits Truck. 5spd. am /fm Cd)f. 644 8930 __ Dodge Step-aide truck stereo cass. steelbelted Beautiful Yamaha up $200. 493-7309all 5PM. radials, bucket seats, n1M Piano. lyr old, Motorcvdn/ 50,000 mi. warranty W p. I n u t $ 2 7 0 0 Scoofwn 9150 Blue, xlnt c:ond 36,000 O.t-t>646 7048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mi. Call Dan 556-1613 or --558·4822 Kejboard elec piano, Yams, Kawa, Bultaco. · __ _ Rhodes 88 key X Int Dirt $300 ea orr. 2430 Hol-'69 International pickup ao,µn d . $450 /offer lyLneN.B.645-l496 w/hydr/lift&atenutires 07$-2641 --SU z UK I T250, 2 c y I nu paint 64S-Z707 SporffllcJ Goods 8094 Street Bike xlnt cond. '76 Ford F 250, great ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~960-6481 shape. tool box, $3800 Prof. fl?odel hvy duty ,71 Triumph650TR6C. gd 080 Brad 588 2880, elec:. bicycle exerciser. cond Call F1'ed after 990-1149 poo. 613-3826 6pm 631-464.S •-.71-D_a_ts_un_PU-. Xln-l cond ..!~======~=!...! Low mlles. lt'a 14uealt1 • uo PORSCHES dean. <4=~> •••••••;•;;;;•••••••• _7_1_VW __ sca_a_oc_c_o_' ~.;J~~1::t n~~· ;.i:l JIM MAIUMO Dynamite Briu.b raclna Dynamite Brazil Brome s e I l t h l 1 w e e It VA.I at-....... freeo "B" roadster. Ill beauty. 4 speed, factory $1695 /080 160-9204. WANTED _ _.,,,,A 1 queak 1 r 1 ea n . air, stereo. Very clean. 751-1121 18711 Beacb Blvd. (G6TRH) C895UPT) 1-------- AJJow UJ the opportunity 1 ___ 1 __ 4_J.._J_OOO ___ ~ SJltl $5695 ·a Javelin SST a.a cu "'· to conaidert.be purchase JIM MA.llNO JIM MAllHO air, auto, Id cood. ~ or trade-in of YoUr clean OIAMGICOUMTY"S VOLISW4•94 YOU.SWAG94 Beatolfer494-M3 Ponc:lle. Check with Ua Ol.OIST 18711 Beach Blvd. 18711 Beacb Blvd. t91 O Today! ~ • 14J..ZOOO 14Z..2000 ,,, Dlllar Paid For Your Car! JOHMSOH Ii SOH Liiie~ 2626 Harbor Blvd'. Costa Mesa ~G-5630 We Poy OYER .... look For Your Good VW. PoncheorAud1 . ~ -, ~ ...... . .. . ~ • ·11 MGB mint $t(l95 1t vw scaaocco 6 7M29 l SUver beauty with fac:· Sale.·Service-Leuina Roy Cm-Yer,IK. P...,..t '741 Rola 'lloyce BMW •• •• •• ••••••••••••• •••• 1540 Jamboree Newport Beach ~ 761MW 2002 4 speed. Very clean LEASE DIRECT ! tory air Ir stereo. Super clean. (4-\SUBl) $64'5 JIMMAIUMO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 14Z.2000 local car. CJ..23RKL) 1981 PEUGEOT '60-'6S vw left & n,bt SUH TUUOs door, '73 left door. $50 JIM MAalMO eac:b. Western style whl VOUCSW4•1H IEACH IMPORTS rima tor Super eeeue 18711 Beach Blvd. 1148 Dove Street szo ea. S48-9744 142-2000 NEWPORT BEACH 'ALL INDOOR VW - ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7f ........ Cpe. Automatic, slereo caaeelt.e, power steer· Ing. power brakes, elec:· tric: windows & seats. air, cruise. wire wheel covers. leather interior. Ult. (1154211 $1195 REASON BUICK 909 N Grand Santa Ana !)47-91 IS Caprl '715 ___ 7_5_2..o9 __ oo __ -t PORSCHE OFF ROAD ••••••••••••••••••••••• SWAP MEET Saturday '71 ·Reaal, sunroof. new 1 ·73 Good Cood, 73K ma, 74 PIUGEOT N11ht May 2, Orange Co radials. 50,000 m1, S3250 $2CXX>JOBO DIES& Fairgrounds, Costa ~3-5990af\ 4 1 S45-9697eves 504 sunroof sedan 4 Mesa. 24 hour 1nro 'IO .,L~ C 1----------1 speed & stereo Papers 714 /498-9l77 ~•r-00"' pe. '16 Capri Ghia, V6, 1ulo, on r res h en g i n e V 6 . a u t o m a l 1 c I I t fasl I.le (059LFF> '79 VW W-lfalla Cmpm· transm1ss1on,rad10, Vw.PORSCHE·AUDl a c , x 0 ' ' ~ r>""" """3876 •-ts ble. Stove. refr, am/fm power stei!nng. power 445 E Coasl Jfiway ~· ..,_. · JIM MA.a.Mo cass, sleeps 5, 2i.mpg, lo brakes. au, ult. sport at Bayside Drive Dcrts. 9720 VOLISW"'~...... mis. $8500/0BO wheels (7~191 Newport Beach 673-0900 ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ,,_ • ......,. $5995 ~ 18711 Beach BJvd 67S-4.560. Premium prices I DA TSUM 210% ... ~~2000 D ite • ......A co "" ..,.,.. '68 VW. reblt 1600, dual paid for any used car , nam .. 1...,.... u,._ ( foreien or domestic 1 Gold beauty. Very c:lean. p he 9750 carbs, custom in & out m good condition. C839UDD> •~•••••••••••••••••• Sacrilic:e PlOO 968-9110 See Us First! • S69t5 JIMMAIUMO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 1970 VW Camper Van, new eng., $2200 646-4340,Jim '71 VW 411 Sqrbck. Beaut. REASON BUICK 909 N G r and Santa Ana 547 .9115 142-2000 POISCHE 1979 928. Fully loaded. 15,400 ori1. mi., xlnl cond. in- side & oUt Blue book wholesale la $26,375; our sale price la $26,775 (200388) Ask for Duke or M.lke. motor. & cln body. '78 Buick elect.ra limited 673-1482, 645-2372 Fully loaded Tan w/tan THEODORE ROBINS '75 convert., yellow. orig. owner, body&eng. Oaw· less $5300. Donna dys ~9-8233 eves 752-&160 velore mt. Uc nu Sac S3 ,000 540 6548dys . 546-8691 al\ 6 Ask for Bruce Scuba Eqwp, xlnt cond, Motoc-Hw.. Sale I mags. tool box, S3250 AMos.. l•f oirW MU sep or 5'50 080 all 1--"/S'--9160 494.7743 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 Electra LJrNt.ct FORD 61< • ...,1 """ ·--r '16 Rabbit. clean. 70b0 HAA60il BLVD CO!>TA MHA 641 0010 ,.. .. ..., ........................ 73 Oats~ p U R~ gd G••rtll $2600/0BO 4 door, stereo tape, '78Camaro Air, automatk. power steering, 27.961 miles,· (882VEI) $4tll Barwiclt Imports l lt·llll '87 Covert, new top, new Michelin radials. Am /Fm cass, wire hub- caps, 6 cyl 250 eng, auto trans, 66M mi. Xlnt cond $3SOO. 497·2116 Cltevrolet 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEE US FIRST! We have a good selection of NEW & USED Chevrolet.I! COMHRL CHEVROLET ~ l1.1rhor 111"1 1 ·c IS'I \ \I fS \ 546-1200 -M..tW! CLEAN '73 MONTE CARLO Silver w burgundy Ulterior Air cond . AM FM cassette. power brakes, steering. $1500 768-5837 '70 Caprice, air. ps. pb. am lfm radio. SSOO or best offer 964·4909 '68 Chevy Caprice eng m xlnt cond $3001080 642 8875 '74 Vega Wagon Eng nds work S400 or bst ofr 646-5604 -----Continental 99 30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76LIHC004 MAJUC IV Dynamite coupe Loaded • All the toys Sharp < 1AJH611l $3495 JIMMAllHO VOUCSWAG&I 18711 BeJach Blvd 842-2000 TY,lodk>, WE C ........ SEU. Must sell. SI.JOO •••••••••••••••••••••••1\!,~~~;ii!~~~~ 645-3173 power steermg. power "'" 11 ' ---------1 brakes. ele<.'tr1c wan MIR, St.no 1 091 y OUR R. v. ~ Rem•mr+ar 57 BA Clean runa well, dows & seats. air cond1-••••••••••••••••••••••• ;.:•••••••••••••••••• 559-''""" -Clauic: $4300 /0BO '61 Bug, Xlnt. mags, SHOWROOMC ......... O. ~ '80 Da•-un 2IOZX auto t ht t tionang . crutst!. till "'" 9932 t1ful Color TV, 2 yr '76 El Camino New M .._.., ft.tr ..., • • 960-9$31 s ereo, nu w pain · l6SSWRD> .75T TOP wrnty Free dehvery RENT 22 ' lux mtr paint, wheels & tires lumw $ -1 ;i:::!.:~~~k GI ANT IND 0 0 R $1.595.5~ $7495 Power brakes. power SH8 646-l786 home Slpg 6, self-cont PS/PB/AC SlOOOstereo MCfJIOlta w/red int.er. Priced to '73 BUS/cu.st campr, nu wmdows,powersteering loah Ii MarW $27 5 /wk + 8• mi. systm Xlnt cond S3SOO Send 1 message to Mom p O R S C H E b r k 5 • c: l t c b / en g with t1ll 1telescoping -......__, ~8585 536·4142 via the Daily Pilot'• sell by p'Yt party. Sl.2,500. SWAPMEET. May 2nd . w/custom int. $2960Alan s teering wheel, air. ~r· .... ~ y 9570 Mother's Day Paae. ,_c_all_646-4629_______ 24hrlnfo,498-9171 673-5018 AM 1 FM stereo. rear •••••••••••••••••••••••72· DISCOVERER 25', Clltl Your m-•ade will a.._ GN f window defogger , 4 ttl r-• 90 IO • • •• •• •••••••• ._. " .. '16 610 W • am/ m cus '73 911 Taroa. CIS inJ' . 5 ,. •111 fiberglas, streamline, ...... • • • pear In a pretty nower ... '71 Scirocco, air, 4-spd, automalic trans Snow ••••••••••••••••••••••• beaut. Sips. S Just re-·71 Dodge Van auto, p /s, box For Information roof rac:JIG..~ $2700 spd, air, sepia brown, AM /FM casa .. clean, while with Burgundy in· i!J' 1 Whitewater canoe rurbi.shed. Last chance, P l b. reg gas, $l495 and to pl ac:e your $12,000. 497·1.lk5 $5000 Firm. 951·6250 terior. Z7,000 miles. Lm Lilce ne~~967· moving. 831}1412 . 646·1678· 640-0U7 message call 642-5618 '78 280Z, am/fib, a/c:, 4 ,599,1 Xlnt Cond, lthr int. maculate thruout' $8100 ......... TODAY' pd 1 t _ .. u. ooo ml r • 11 •REDUCED• 754·6790 or Answer Ad ... ......._ tr---'-,_.. Must sell ·72 ~ ton Dodge · s • x n ~"'· -· · alloys, must se Nof'l ·profit org. needs ~ ..... ~cce1-1a!-c•• 9400 Van.Gd br.akes. tires Ir ....... 1~ 9705 must sell 1mmed. 98950. 846-2304 '19 convert, yellow w. '68 Riviera, FM rodlo, #209,642-4.300 -24hrs. "" ---wn """ --851 l 't'M d a 552.Q98 ev bllt top, S920(). 673-8735 $500 firm. 497·2406 dys: R...........a 9940 yoar boat, plane, car, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crager Rims, nd.s ena ••••••••••••••••••••••• · _.. Y • · • 7 1 p 0 r 1 c: he 9 1 4 97 4331 rvru etc. Liberal tax deduc· For.. work. $900/(irm. Call Ll!!.ASE 9725 532001080 615 _1109; VolYo 9772 4 · eves. -••••••••••••••••••••••• t1 on advantages Datsun z 673-1371. t;A ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631.6300 ext 14 Ive rnsg. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·71 Riviera Cpe '75 Torino 40r, auto. P /S. 2111654·2341 Aaltos W.twcl 9590 DIRECT! '73 850 Spider, lo mi, ---------#I YOLYOOEAL&l Autom1Uc: trans .. stereo P /B, A I C. nu lires. 'f~TED' 15· Fiberglass motor ••••••••••••••••••••••• conv. or hd top Stereo. '16 Pouche ,9118, oak IN ORANGE COUNTY! tape, power steerina. c I e an . PP S l 6 9 S rawingdorycall + ..... ~ WEPAYTOPOOLLAR 1911 ALFA maa•. like nu, S2650. 1reen, $13,950. Days . power brakes. electric 5Sl 2889 4~.499-5314 7 ... ~7 for top used cars _ss_1._1_m _______ 7418-705l;eva.11151·1111. SALIS-SBVICE windows Ir seals, air, 13 LTD Wagoo, 460eng, -JI f I d ti SPIDERS ........ D.'"'"''"'--cruise. vinyl top. M FM PS PB --------• ore gn, omes ca or '75Xl9, xlntcond. am/fm lolh loyce 9756 """ ._,_.~ A I stereo, . , A N Redcraft Many Riaht front fen«kr for '61 classics lf your car is tape, new paint, 30 mpg, ••••••••••••••••••••••• OVERSEAS DELIVERY C546WCP) air $925. 547.4749 ,Qtraa, 40+ Seagull eng, vw S25 extra clean. see us IEACH IMPORTS __,,,./obo.&75-UlS •1or•LER IN US A EXPERTS $4795 1dsond $1050 ~0079 546-1879. FIRST? 1148 Dove Street ........, LI' • · • '60 Galaxy Xlnt running M. · ~ NEWPORTBEACH HCMMlo 9727 JR{ ROY IAJILllKE cond Needs fender &t tu ••c~ 8 wheela and tires 75z,.o,oo ....................... CARVER VOLVO radiator siooo or best ke YU20 All 14"slze VISrT YOUI offer 497-3967 •t ••••••••••••••••••• 1-"""" k ROUS·ROYCE Ul66 Harbor Blvd. ,_.....,, '13 GTV. FM radio, new OR .a. .... GE CO •sT COSTA MESA • ._ __ ._ 9945 Marine Elec:t.ricaan tires, Just tuned. Dy """ "' IMeJa.....,... --DJHian/\mtall/repai Parting out '67 Cbevelle, 1 497.2406. ev. 497...:ot HONDA \'----'~• .. <" 646-tlOl 540.9467 •••••••••••••••••••-•• . worit. 549-2.520 eve. 396, upd, 12 volt rear # ht o,...., C~ CLOSED WNOAYS 75 VOLVO 11 UMCOLM end, '66 VW trans axle. 2925HarborBlvd IMW 9712 HEADqtlAITERS ---Jet black /black tan !:~ ..... !~~~ Challenger duel ex-COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOD .ayi.1.1. Soab 976 ~1~a~l~en~t f 05~· adlllac tttS sedan. Loaded and only 71 ·-J•CI(. t-h_a_Wl_t .-:-49&---:-'1323-:-. ____ 1 ___ 9;_7.:........:.9_-2;.:...:.5..:.0_0__ For'nle Best "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 42,000 mUes. Shows lov-~ "" BuyOrLeueDeal UNIVERSrrY Original sharp car.••••••••••••••••••••••• ing care inside &: out .a.: "'/trailer. Xlnt forS-. WAHTED!! JnOrangeCounty... SALESlrSERVICE LEASE (003023) COHT~TIMG (468RSK ) nc:in1. Call Gary or ComeSeeUaTodav!. DIRECT I S3HS CA.Dll.UC? $4995 631-1400. IMPORTANT CleGt l...,,ts & OLDSMOIU • JIM MAltlMO We apedalize In leaaea JIM MAIJMO Nc.mCETO TopDoalcr HOMDA VOL•SWAGEH for t he business ell· partner wanted 24' READERSAND Paid!! · •' GMC'ftUCKS 1981 Sill 18711 n·-cbBlvd. ec:utive&profeulonal. VOLKSWA(HH = Ray Sundancer 1978. ADVERTISERS d ....,. 18711 n-ac:h Blvd. Call Jhn ...__ or II AC 2850 Harbor Blv · TUU""'-14•2000 L S.lectlolt ""' mac:., Npl Bch boat The price or Items M• L_...__ ".....-SAD EB I COSTA MF.SA ~ ,... •'9t 142-2000 •*' SUO/mo + $1900. advertised by vehicle • -54.,_9640 Of Mew ltll Clil557·932'7 dealers ln lbe vehicle Cre•lerMofon BMW IEACH IMPORTS OIAMCHCOUMTY Cmllact claulfled advertising 835-3171 71 HOteA 848 Dove Street VOLVO Mow e.. Sfodf ' WbalecTaf\ Nova, luUy equip w Ltrlr, Vol.o en&. 2.SSH.P. oe" 112,000 142.2921 ,evesm~ columns doea not In· 28402MarperitePkwy. DynamiteCVCC5apeed NEWPORT8EACH LaraestVolvoDealer ~ elude any applicable Mi.uion Viejo batc:hbadt. <;lean, low 75 .. -oo in Oran&eCounty! • taxes, Uceme, transfer Avery Pkwy.exit mUea. (J.MWRN) N-VY BUYorLEASE (eea, finance cbar1ea, (ofr5 Freeway) Pttl '73 Saab, 4 cyl, 96GL, less DIRECT feet for airpollutioo con· 131·2040 4tM94t IM ........ -.. "' 000 I l Z600HAl1xx Btvd trol dnlce cert.lftc:aUon.a C&oeedSUDdays J lllVUW"""' than ""• act. m • n Cose-'~. 54(>.QIOO °" dealer documentary VOUSWA4HM to5 f 3 i°:d/ 0 ~·. 0~[ i ~t~:::'I·~"· "1 .. ~~-=-•f:..'!:.'l,,.~_.12'1~,. 11~!!!!!!!!~!!!!~ preparation cbar1a Wl· 18711 Beach Blvd. ' i,.: lea otberwiM epecl.fled 14Z..2000 McGowan, 60-4431 • e "11 Cad DJ.el, ilvr 00 bytheaclvertiler. l----------1days;642"l97eva. 1Jvr, all extru, xlnt '79 Preh &de, a m:,; eyot. 9761 10120GardenGrove81 cond, SOit ml, $9000. radio, 51p, moon • ••••••••• .. •••••• .. •••• Garden Grewe 530.9190 67$-8827 X1llt cond. S3MZS7 10 TOY OT A '11 BLACK CAD ltH 4 door Acco rd. 4 1'9tea Loaded, u 1.1. "500 G...en. Wint ccod . ..,ao. r door 4 1peed. lt. '• 175-llOll 551-889$. alU pm. clean I lt'1 dynamite. <MOZEE) PHI JIMMUINO YOUIWA ... ll1U Beaeb 81¥d. IU.2000 '79 Linc. towoc:ar, loaded, dnl cond., xlnt main· talhed, $9900/0BO. 831·8031 8-5 wkdys only. Mercwy 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S ANIST LINCOLN-MERCURY D £.ALE.RSfflp l • By 8TEV£ MARBLE · of .. D.ity ......... The six-bedroom, waterfront house on B911hore Drive bean small resemblance to the plac. ,vhere John Wayne uae to ban• bis bat. The DuU's mansloo, perhaps the most famous piece of real estate on the Newport Harbor, ia ~luttered with boards, nails and worltment.besedaya. The kidney-shaped pool has been drained' and the peaked roofs have been knocked down. THE RAMBLING single-story house with ita million dollar view of the bay ls eetting an overhaul. Workmen on the project say a second floor is being .added. A 680-square-foot maid's quarter also is being built. But the renovation work trig- gered rumors In Harbor Area real estate circles this month that the house at 2686 Bayshore Drive was being tom down. •'There's hardly anything left," commented one Newport agent this weekaftertaking a bay tour. John Wayne was a perfectionilt about hil lingle-1tory manlion with its million-dollar view of Newport Bay. bought the famed home with the lntentlon of extensive remodel· ing. •'The place bas been remodeled three times already." remarked Buie. "When Wayne was there, he added nearly 9,000 square feel. Tbe current owner ~ just modernizing it a bit.·· was not included in the sale of the house BUIESA YS it's his understand· ing that Mrs. Bellingen, who cur rently resides in Beverly Hills, in· tends to occupy the waterfront house when remodeling is com· plete Mrs. William John Bettingen is "modernizing" former Wayne home. When second story is finished by mid-summeT, pool will be refilled and roof will be re- built. New garage is in foreground. But according to Marion Buie, president of MacNab-Irvine - the realty firm that handled the sale or the w ayne home last year. the rumors are only rumors. Buie said the present owner, Mrs. William John Bettingen, Mrs . Bettingen bought the estate for $3.47 million. The ask· ing price had been $4.7 million. And that was just for the house, the land being on a lease option. Wayne's boat, the Wild Goose. "The house was in good shape already," Buie s aid . "Wayne was a perfectionist of sorts. He kept the place in perfect shape He liked everything in working or-der .. Airline offers OC access plan Not happy with a proposed five· year time span for gaining equal acceaa to John Wayne Airport in Oran1e Countf. =ls...{or Pacific Soutbw~ s~ve aubmittedtheirownaccessplan. In lheproposalofferedU>lft i bers of the County Boatd of Supervisors, PSA could 1atn fUll status at the airport in three years. ·An afde to 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley said t.o- day that the PSA plan may have some merit and will be examined carefully. Al the heart or the issue is the tact that PSA is the only airline in the UnitedStates-andoneortwo in the world that already is fly. ing the quieter jet aircraft called for in the airport master plan. Because of that, PSA leaders want the county to open up all available flights to competitive bid after three years. The airline · with the quietest operation would gel preference. Two county proposals, one from Riley and another similar one from Airport Manager Murry Ca- ble. don't open all nights to bid- dine unWflve years. The supervisors are scheduled to take action on an akctsa plan ·!i . ay 5 m . PSA public relations Man~er 'Mu1ery Craig sa1cl -toft1·11et company has been trytiqtb'eatet the Orange County mprket for years. She said PSA 11 IJ>lan lets current airlines ser£n' the airport remain, butrorc tbemto becompetitiveatanear erdate. ·'The plan lets othert airlines compete fairly," she saicl. "Right now, AirCal bas a monbpoly on that airport." • · She said AirCal la !tie only airline that links Oran•~ County with the San Francisco Bn Area. She noted that the Seutbern California-to-Bay Area com- mercial air corridor is the busiest in the world. PSA DOW mes four DC-9 Super 80s, will have a fifth by next month and 26 by the end or 1982, s~ said. The county master plan for ex- panding the airport includes pro- visions that daily commercial flights can increase from 41 to SS if quieter jets are used that reduce thetotalamountorjetnoise. Flight m~y give :pair balloon record By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of-~""' .... ex caped l~ury, sbeaaid. The pair returned to eartb anx- ious for a good meal, having en- dured 36 hours without food.i"ood <See BALLOON, Pa1e AZ) I GUILTY OF MURDER Ronald Spring Marines need a good boy? 7 too young NORFOLK.,... Va. <AP> -The Marine Corps may know how to spot a good man early, but it was just a little too early in trying to recruit Justin Ferguson. A letter from Marine Corps headquarters in Washineton in· vited the 7-year-old athlete to Join up at a starting salary of $400 a month. 0 LlttJe boys like to play Army,·· Diane Ferguson said of the letter her son received. "But be was as- tounded they'd pay him $400 a month. He'd beoneforfree." The Marine Corps couldn't ex- plain thesUpup. Spring ruled guilty death of priest • ID • Ronald Spring waa on trial ln o~ ~ty suo.rtw Co for nine days. but it t.oolt b.b jury l e hours to f d gi d-de ln the. February, i.O, death ol Seal &ta<!b priest Felix l)oberty. "We only took one vote." juror Leslie Splndehnan of Fullerton said Monday after the trial. Sprlog, a 33-year-old Alr Fon::e and Vietnam veteran who worked at odd jobs, faces a sen- tence of from 15 years to life in prison for the felony. The seven- man, five-woman jury also con· victed him of a misdemeanor vandalism char,~e. DRF.SSED IN a blue velour pullover shirt, Spring sat almost motionless during the proceed- ings. His glance moved from tht front of the room only once when a rear door opened and laughter from a hallway riltered into the courtroom. Parked in the room between the defendant and Judge James Turner was the green and black motorcycle Spring was riding on Feb. 9, 1980, when he was ac· cused of slugging Father Doher· ty at the rear door of St. Anne's Catholic Church. The priest was treated for a small head wound at tbe time. He died several weeks later or brain injuries. Spring testified last week that he bad punched Father Doherty "in a rush of the moment" when he believed be was being re- buffed. He said be had. vlslted the -e..... ~ or t1Sa ..imt11111NJ~· search for a woman he ad dat-ed... 9Ab' (H)"-1 years before~ ye tli9\t81\t thi Woman ml&ht ue a nun. Spindelman, the Juror. said tape<l telephone conversations in 1Mld Spring )lad tllceatened Chicago church officials had bee.n silJlificanl m the delibera· Uona. Spring had promised to (See PRIEST, Page Al) Homes for 40,000 planned in Irvine By IUC,llARD GREEN Of ... .,....,""',..., ,., The Irvine Company has W'I· veiled conceptual plans for the construction or 15,900 dwelling units enough housing for 40,000 people -in the City of Irvine. Sites for a hospital, a civic center, parks, schools, offices and commercial fac1hlles are also included in the proposal made public Monday by Irvine Company Vice President Tom Nielsen. The development is planned on 2,101 acres or flatland now in orange groves and row crops north of the San Diego Freeway in central Irvine. TWO DISTINCT planning areas -Village 12 and 14 -are encompassed by the plans of the Irvine Company. primary laild· owner in the city. vma1e 12 is bounded by the San Dleto Freeway, Jeffrey Road, Irvine Center Drive and Sand Canyon. VIilage 1' is bounded by the h'eeway, ltvine Center Drive, Culver Drive and Irvine Industrial Complex-West. Company representatives tried to file the conceptual plans for both villages with the city Friday but the proposals are a<> larte that the city's Community Development Department WOUid only acree to betln work on plans relative to Vllla1e 12, aaid department spokesman Jobn Murphy. He sald plam for VWaae H mtst be beld ln abeyance bffause the city doesn't have 1tF:Runen to PJ'OC .. both pro at the aaate time. e1Mila Said the lluna of con· ~•P.tUll plaDI fOJ the new .uli ..... Gnly the flnt ..... Of a I~ nvle• b)' tM clt1 taff, ett1 commlAIOftl and the Ctt1 Ooiandl. tRVINE C NTER DR. oau,,....,,... PROPOSED VILLAGES Flank existing Woodbridge The Irvine Company will spend about $20 million to build a storm channel for San Diego Creek and to r ealign the Southern California Edbon power lines that now bisect the area and travel north along Jef- frey Road for the Village 12 pro- ject. Nielsen said the company wanta to place the lines alone Sand Canyon Avenue and the Santa Fe Railroad tracks. A touaher problem faces <See HOUSING, Pa1e AJ> DUllil CUii IUTlll Sunny Wednesday. Lowa ton111\t 56 at the beach • 62 lnland. Hltbs Wednes- day 72 to 76 alona the coast, 80 to 8S lnland. j GRIEVING Hazel Ma tthews Williams is escorted from the funeral of her son , Michael Mcintosh, who was the 25th victim in Atlanta's string of slayings of young blacks. From Page A1 HOUSING • • the Irvine Company plans for Village 14 , Nielsen said He said that roadway development plans for that village call for Jam- boree Road to extend through the Tustin Marine Corps Helicopter Station and connect to the Santa Ana Freeway So far, Marine representc.llves have opposed the plan Nielsen said negotiations ~on­ tinue with the Marines and he said that pending the resolution, he 1s hopeful the city will ap prove at least a portion or the proposed development in Village 14 li e a lso said thl'fl' 1s a poss1b1hty that company plan- ners can get plans accepted without the roadway through the helicopter station A MORE general problem fac mg both v11laie proposals re volves around their f10anc1al v1ab1llty City planners say that res1den t1al developments cost more in cit\ services than the) pay in post Proposallon 13 taxes Sales tax revenue 1s the b1g.:est source of funding for the Caty of Irvine Nielsen admitted that much or the <·ompany's res1dent1al de vclopment plans hinge on whether enough sales tax generatrng commercial facilities can be developed H e cla im ed that by the mid·l980s the company will be developing lrvtne Center, a 480 acre commercial center bounded by the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna freeways. TO DATE, however, no major department stores have com· milted to build in the "Super Shopping Mall" envisioned as part of the center, Nielsen said. The City of Irvine has a population of about 70,000 The Irvine City General Plan, the document that outlines develop. ment m the city. calls for ah ul timate population or more than 200.000 people by the start or next century Beads stolen from casket FRESNO (AP> Someone stoJe a string or rosary beads from an open casket of a man who was stabbed to death here. Police said Monday that a cou· pie entered a mortuary chapel, apparently to view the body. or Rafael Suarez, 23, then humed away when a relative of the vic- tim arrived. The rosary beads were discovered miaaina. and an attempt had been made to remove Suarez' wristwatch, policesa.ld. Suarez was found near a freeway overpa11 Wednesday with a stab wound tn the 1tomach from a fi&ht. No arrests have been made. 6iijiii1at Santa Ana winds whip foothills By tbeAssodated Pre11 An unseasonal dose of Santa Ana w1nds drove tree branches onto electrical lines and caused power outages in foothill areas today as warm springtime tem- per at u res h eated up the Southern California area. More summe r-like weather with temperatures in the mid 80s to low 90s was forecast through Wednesday except for mountains and deserts, which are expected lo have variable clouds with a chance of thundershowers And forecasters predicted con- lmued high winds in the foothills. More than 19,000 Southern California Edison and Los Angeles city Department of Water and Power customen in the San Fernando Valley, La Canada-Flintridge, Altadena, Tu· Junga, Sylmar. Monrovia and Montebello areas were without power durmg morning hours to- day. some for less than a minute andothersforfivehours. 1 Typically, sa id Edison spokesman Russ Hawkes, "Wind gets the Imes swinging back and forth and they clash together. That creates a short circuit. When that happens you have an inter- ruption for less than 30seconda. •· But in other cases, he said, tree branches swaying in the wind knock lines down and electrical power is cut for longer periocia. Today's power outages lasted less than a minute for 6,000 Edison customers. Power was out 21.h hours for 3,000other Edison users, Hawkes said. and for five boura for 10,000 homes served by the Department of Water and Power. according to DWP spokesman Jerry Pfefferman From Page A1 PRIEST • • • "stomp" a church official if the long-lost dream girl were not found In a convent. Turner set a sentencing date for Friday, May 29 at 9 a.m. Spring's attorney. Public· De fender Ronald Butler, told Turner he would make a motion at that lime for a new trial. Butler objected to Turner's de- cision lo let the jury consider the second·degree charge. ·' Deputy District Attorney Dave Caner originally souitit a fint- d e g ree murder charge, but Turner said evidence was insuf- ficient to substantiate ij, -BY GLt'fiN SCCYrT Cop 8hoots man SAN GABRIEL (AP> -A man who had apparenUy tried to rob a savings and loan office was shot and killed by a policeman. • ATLANTA (AP,) Just • pollc• wue Ctedd1n1 not to lid4 Ji y Ray PaJne'• am• to• Ult Of zs alal.D and ml,.lDc YGWlt black•, the body oftbe 21.year;ol4 WHfoundnoatlncin a river-the fifth body to be dumped lo 1n area river In leas than a month, police lay. A fewhoul'IJater, PubllcSatety Commillloner Lee Brown aald that the death of the 5-foot-7, J.30. POUDd man wUI be investigated by the task force probiDI the 218 deaths and disappearances, which beaan 21 moot.ha ago. The cause of Payne's death was not determined immediately and medical officials said his body, found Monday. bore no obvious in- juries. An autopsy began tbia morning at the Fulton County medical examiner's office. Meanwhile, another young black man of slight build was re- ported missing today by bis mother, but police said hi.a case was being investigated by the missing persons unit rather than the task force. Herman Pittman, 21, was last seen Monday evening when he left home to get a beer, officials said. He stands 5 feel 6 and weighs 140' pounds. Police are worriiltd about a change in pattern, Brown said, because "we now have four adult victims of homicides. Previous to that, all the victims were under 16, the youngest being 7. '' All the adult cases have similarities, including the fact that the bodies were found ln rl vers, he said. ·'Our people are trying to de- termine what this means," he said Payne was last seen April 22 as he headed for the Omni sporting and entertainment complex in hopes of selling some old coins, according to his sister, Evelyn. Payne's body, tangled face- down in a fallen tree, was spotted by two fishermen, about the time police were deciding not to put bis. name on the list of cases being in- vestigated by the· special task force. Brown said police had been given information that Payne had been seen a Ii ve. He lived about a bl<><:k from the home of Patrick Baltazar. 11, who was last seen alive at the Omni. Ballazar's body was found Feb.13 in a DeKalbCounty office park. Like 13 of the other victims, Baltazar had been asphyxiated. Six of the last seven victims were asphyxiated ot probably ( asphyxiated, authorili_es said. The cause of one victim's death was unknown From Page A1 BALLOON • • had been one of the "luxuries" the pair jettisoned to prevent a col- lision during the flight. "We almost bought the farm near Sall Lake City," Abruzzo said. ·•we got caught in a severe downdraft that almost sent us into the side of a mountain. We bad to ballaatnearlyeverythlng." THE WINNING aeronauts were reported on their way to Abruzzo'• hometown, Albuquer- que, N.M., today, and are ex- pected to return to Southern California Friday for the Gordon Bennett Survivors Banquet. Both men have survived their share of death-defying adven- tures. Aoki, the 42-year-old owner or the Benihana of Tokyo restaurant chain, took up balloon racing after be waa almost killed in a 1979 power boat accident. A Japanese citizen, Aoki also has been a champion wrestler and backgaromon player. ABRUZZO, 50, made histof')' in 1978 as a member of the team that made the first trana- Atlantic balloon flight. He was aboard the winnin& balloon ln the 1979 Gordon Bennett race and set a new Gordon Bennett endurance record in tbe 1980 race. The paJr were the last to lift off at Mlle Square Saturday afternoon, boplna to avoid the Qlid·dQ' beat that would cause their beUum balloon to exp.Cc!. Eleven tu balloons from the United States and other natlcma competed in this year'a Gordon Benpett race. The uornoial 1econd·plate winner ls the Rotie O'Orady, plloted by 80b ~Snow and Joe Klttln.ser, both Ol>OrlandO. na. TbJ• ballooo toucbed dOwD lfOD· day monuni near MJton, Utah; about 824 miles from Jauaeh p0lnt. .... , ................. ON TRANSIT BOARD Jame• R.oofevelt Roosevelt appointed to OCTC James Roosevelt of Newport Beach has been appointed to succeed Zika Djokovicb of Santa Ana on the Orange County Transportation Commission. Roosevelt, 73, is a former con- gressman from San Marino and Arcadia. He will assume the four-year post as a public representative in two weeks. He is the eldest son of former Preside nt Frankltn Delano Roosevelt DESPITE HJS legacy as an elected official, he will be the only one of the five com- missioners currently not holding elected office. By joining with Irvine City Councilman Bill VardouUs and County Supervisor Thomas Riley, Roosevelt will give Riley's 5th District a majority j on the panel. Riley nominated him, but the selection was no easy task. Roosevelt had been the leading contender among four nominees since late last year. but never received more than two of the four votes during balloting by the incumbent commissioners. He needed at least three. · To break the stalemate, com- missioners agreed on April 13 to use a scoring system in which nominees received three votes for first place, two for second and one for Uurd. DURING balloting on Mon- day. Roosevelt received nine points -two firsts, a second and a third. Runner-up Charles Maloney received six. Ada Mae Hardeman got five and Djokovich got four. The transportation com- mission is responsible for coordinating countywide issues. Two of its members. Riiey and Ralph Clark. are county supervisors . Two others. Vardoulis and Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley. are represen- tatives of the Oranee County League of Cities. Holllnd,n said last week be won't seek reap- "'POintmeot when his term ex- pires on June 30. A lawsuit to recover S.19,812 ln lesaJ fees deducted from the Orange County Board of Educa· lion'• county accounts by the Board of Supervisors h 1cbeduted to be filed Friday ln Superior Oourt. The suit, prepared by Dave Larsen of the Rutan and Tucker law firtn, will seek to void a uns contract between tile board of education and County Supervisors for eounty letal services. It also will seek the return ol money deducted for tboae services subsequently, said Fred Koch, assistant county schoob superintendent. The agreement for leial services, Larsen said today, was approved in May 1978 and called for a tranafer of pan of the coun- ty's tax rate to the school board to pay for the service. When Proposition 13, the prop- erty-tax-cutting initiative, was approved by voters the following month, each government entity was more or less frozen to its established tax rate. The transfer was never made, Larsen said. Koch said today that the school board consistently has re- fused to pay tor: legal services because it contends the contract is not valid because not transfer- ing the lax rate resulted in loss of income to pay for the work. When the Board or Supervisors ordered County Auditor-Controller Vic Heim to take $479,612 from county educa- tion funds for Orange County Counsel's services. the school board voted 5-0 to sue the supervisors. Before Proposition 13, Koch said, it made little difference wblcb asency controlled tu ~· fund• for eervic ... However, 1ub1equent tranafen or lack of tramfen ol money reaulta in an income 'aln or 1011 for entities involved because of the tax freeze. : WbUe the county 1uperinten· ~ dent•s office contends the faUure to transfer tax base to the schools program voids tbe 1978 cootract1 Orange County • Cou111el Aarian Kuyper'• o(ftce d~aerees. < John Anderson, d41puty county ; counsel, contendl the tax 1blft b l not a qiajor part of the contract. Followtni Proposition 13, be said, the schools office carried legislation to Sacramento to secure funds for audltina. lesaJ and other services because ol In- come cuta. That leeislaUon was approved, Anderson said. "As a result," he said, "the County Superintendent got $287,000 for county legal services the first year." That allocation continues, he added. "They (education office of· ficials> are great ones for going • to the legislature for funds of one sort. or another. And they have some or the highest paid administrators in the county,·· Anderson said. A court judgment in favor or the school board, be said, would Just give the County Superinten· dent's office more money to spend on something else. "And I guess it wouldn't really break the county." he added. The county Department or EducatJon budget is about S30 million this year . The annual Orange County government budget 1s about $600 million. Reagan vs. Congress televised tonight WASHINGTON (AP I Presi· public appe:1rance since he was dent Reagan, capitalizing on ris· shot March 30 ing popularity since last month's It comes on the eve of his lOOth assassination attempt, re day in offi ce, and the selection of assumes public command of his the well of the House is intended budget battle tonight with an ap· to focus the drama of Reagan's peal to Congress to slop talkin& re-emergence on the forefront of and start actmg <C hannels 2. 4 the fight for his economic pro- and 7; KMPC. KFWB, KNX> gram, which already appears to Aides said Reagan will tell a be p1ckmg up speed ¥ Congress joint session in the nattonally nears key votes this week. televised, 6 p.m PDT speech One Wtute House official, who that Congress must shed the asked not to be identified, said "old and comfor table way" the president's attitude is because "a day of dec1s10n is "Look, we 've talked about the near" for his tax and spending economy We've analyzed it. cut proposals. Now 1s the time to do something. "High taJces and excess spend-Now 1t 's time to take the ing growth created our courageous measures to get the economic mess,·· one source economy back on the path." said Reagan will say "To fail to The president, who is not yet act wilJ delay -even longer and working full time in the Oval Of· more painfully -the cure that flee again, was putting the final must come." touches on the spf!ech today. He worked on 'the message at The speech, expected to tut his Camp David, Md., retreat about lS minutes, comes as the over the weekend and met with administration program is pick· his speechwriter, his con- ing up speed with Congress gressional lobbyist and the depu- nearing key votes this week. ty chief of staff when he re-· Conservative Republicans on the turned to the White House on Senate Budget Committe neared Monday Gas ~hike due? agreement on a revised budget 'l'h.e speech writer, ·Ken blueprint, and House 'Speaker Khachigian. took the notes SACMM NTO CAP> -The Thomas P . O'Neill Jr said Reagan had made on a draft and Senate Finance Committee hu enough Democrats may cross was preparing a cle&.Q copy for approved a pill to add two cents over to eive the president a vie-the president's final approval to- to the gasoline tax and boost tory in the Houae. day, according to deputy White driver's license and'vebicle reg-The address is Reagan's third House press secretary Lari')' ,......:.i~str~a_u_·oo~r_ees~·~~~~~~~~~o~n:--t_h_e~e_c_o_n_o_m~y~b_u_t~b~1~s_T_1_rs_t_spea~k~es~·~~~~~~~~~ ' Princess Grace of Monaco stand3 with director Sam Wanamaker at a New York reception 3J)Cmlored by the Engli3h Speaking Union of the United States. Princeas Grace later attended a benefit performance of" Acting Shakespeare'' for reconstruction of London's Globe Theater. Actor Robert Duvall jokes with Guardian Angel member Lua Evers at a disco party in New York City re- cently. The Guardian Angela are young peo- ple who patrol crime area! to deter violence. Does pianist Uberace real- ly favor construction of an $80 million aboppina center· condominium-hotel complex across the street from bla luxurious La Casa de Joa Cloisters estate in Palm Springs? Well, it's certainly his sign ature flamboyantly scrawled across 12 lines of a petition favoring the develop- ment, with a sketch of a grand piano and candelabra and the message "Good Luck with your Project! March 1981" underneath. But Liberace's house manager insists it was a "big mistake." George Lllneras says hls boss Is opposed to the project and only signed the petition because he assumed it was a protest against the huge con- struction project A poll published indicated that there was nearly an even split of those who sup- port and oppose the idea of Britain's Prince Charles be- ing made governor-general of Australia. The poll, conducted by the Gallup organization for the Sydney newspaper the Sun, showed 47 percent of the 2,031 persons polled were against Charles as govemor- general, and 46 percent ap- proved of the idea. . -----------------------Queaa Mar1mJae U of Den· mark and her husband, Prtace Henrik. visited Hiroshima and placed a wreath before tbe P eace Partt memorial, offer- ing a silent prayer to the 140,000people killed in the tint atom bomb attack. The queen did not conceal her horror when Mayor TalleabJ Araki described the atom bombing in 1945, of· ficials said. The royal couple then visited the p eace memorial archlves which dis· plays photographs and other relicsofthenuclear attack. County adds freeway to fund request By GLENN SCOTT O( ... o.My ........... Now that Oran•e County Tran1portation Commission membens aay lh4ty've rot the ball rolllne for more state fund· lna. they've declded to alve ll a few more whack.a. Commissloa members decided Monday to see further con- ees1ionl from Caltrans official.a ln Sacramento to fund hlgbway projecta in the county. If adopted, the lateat set of proJecta oric\llally tumed down by Caltrans could boost the county'• share of state highway runda from 10.6 to almost 12 per- cent of the state funds allowed to counties in Southern Calilomia. ORANGE COUNTY has about 13.2 percent of the population in Southern California. The propor- tion of funds doled out to each county, however, la based on transportation needs rather than population. Commissioner Ralph Clark, also a county supervisor, persuaded other members Mon- day to lobby Caltrans planners 'o include improvements to the ~anta An;> Freeway to the list of nl.!eded projects in the countv from 1983to1987. Tbose Lmprovemeou. estamat- ed to c<111t S82 million, would give tbe county 11 .9 percent of Southland fundin1. "1 can't understand Caltrana' reaiatance to improvlo1 tbe lifeline between Los An1eles and San Dlego counties," Clark added. • The state method for fundina Caltrana districts and counties LI complicated. Needs studies based on selected projecta are used as a basis tor determining percentages of unspecified fWld· inc. THE FUNDING represents 70 percent or the money spent by the state on highways. The other 30 percent, which generally goes toward large constuction pro- jects, is controlled by the gov- e rnor·appolnted California Transportation Commission. Orange County initially was to receive only 6.5 percent of the Southland Caltrans funding, but that figure was revised more than a week ago after com- mission aides visited Caltrans offices in Sacramento. Clark was ready to seek Caltrans Director Adrian• Gian- turco'a firina after the first re- port came out. He was more conelllatory after revisions were made. But Monday. with io- ter~st railed once agaln in aeek- 1 n a modlficatlona, Clark wouldn't give up the political pressure. "LET'S NOT RVLE out the paasibillty that we may be dual· ang off this resolution (to fire Gianturco) in the future if things don't work out," he said. Meanwhlle, Caltrans District 7 Director Heinz Heckeroth got the usual '"nice try" looks after he tried to convince Clark and other commissioners that the Sacramento office was trying to treat all counties fairly "I want to assure the com· mission that the program has been applied as uniformly throughout the state as possi ble, ''he said The commissioners told their executive director , Thomas Jenkins. to make a personal trip to Sacramento to emphasize the commission's position. Jenkins said he'd probably go in a few weeks. Deputy protests shift Given jail duty as 'punishment' for actions? An Orange County Sheriff's deputy is protesting reassign· ment to jail duty as punishment on allegations that he used poor judgment in ha ndling a rape case in Dana Point. Telesfor Chavez, a deputy for five years. has joined the As- sociation of Orange County Deputy Sherilfs to ftle suit m Superior Court seeking a court order preventing Sheriff. Coroner Brad Gates from re- assigning him from patrol duty. However, Superior Court Judge Edward Wallin last week depied a petition for a tem- porary ~training order stop- ping the jail duty. A hearing for a preliminary injunction is scheduled on May 13. IN 'nlE SUIT, the lawyer for the deputies suggests that work· ing in the Jail Is, fliuratively, not much better than living in it. Jail duty is generall y con- s idered by members of the AOCDS as the '"least desirable assignment the sheriff-coroner can make ." said attorney Gregory Petersen. The deputies claim that a 1979 agreement spelling out working conditions doesn't list reassign- ments as one of four allowable disciplinary actions They claim the alternatives are repnmands. suspensions, reductions in class and terminations Department administrators, however, argue that reassign- ments are necessary at times to ease sensitive personnel prob- lems. ACCORDING TO THE re- assignment noti ce issued Chavez, his April 3 punishment stems from an Oct. 22 incident when he was patrolling the south Inn b I county. notice. the incident took place something hke this Chavez went lo the v1ct1m 's Dana Point home after s he re ported the rape Sh11 wouldn't file an official report. but want· ed to talk. He returned to her placl' after he was off dut} and took her to his home in Laguna Beach. The complaint alleges that he tried to kiss and hug her. but Chavez denies it He drove her home the same night a nd left the can of Mace with her along with his personal telephone number and address. the complaint reads 51 arrested in protest • agaU1St arms urg ar The deputy, while off duty, IS alleged to have given a rape vie-EL SEGUNDO (AP) -Fifty. flees WI• th tim a can of Mace, or tear ga.s, one demonstrators against the for protection even though she arms race have been arrested • J h J was not licensed to use It. for '"intentional acts of civU dis· JeWe 80 The notice also includes a obedience" at Rockwell lnterna- complaint ·-strongly denied by tional's corporate headquarters A burglar, who reportedly Petersen -that Chavez made including a Unitarian minister broke into rooms al the advancestothevictim.Petersen whochainedhlmselftothefront Newporter Inn while hotel guests said the allegation has yet to be door. were out dining escaped with investigated and added that The Rev. Phlllip Zwerling of more than $15.000 worth of Chavez had not done .. anything the First Unitanan Church of jewelry but JUSt try to be a nice human Los Angeles and 14 members of The intruder, police said, being to a rape victim.·· his church chained themselves Plains states stoned broke lnto two rooms Saturday Assistant Sheriff Robert Grif-together as part of a day.Jong ni~ht at the Newport Beach fi n said Chavez' superiors protest Monday involving 150 hotel. uslng a tool to pry open believe the deputy used poor demonstrators . doors. judement. but still can be a good The protest was against .. ns· Sylvia Schenkmen, a New officer as long as he can be in~ militarism and the needless Hail, tornadoes lead broad front of storms Coastal iooather Gentln...O ...,..,Y ttwoutl\ W-• d•Y eo.t•t.I 1ow tonlQl>t >t co .. i.1111911 Wedr>e..s.vn101• lnl•lld •-tonight U 1111....:1 lllOll W-ldey IO to IS w.ier •• EINW ..... , V9'1ele WlnGI W-.,_ d•Y mor"lnv ov•r owter ••t•r1, t.com1...i -11•rly I to U llno11 In ef --Wind WOH J lo• Ifft w.f1 ... ~ ·-11111021 .. 1 U.S. summary Cali,fomia erown1vlle •..tt•lo CM rl1t11SC CMrhtnWV a.., ..... Ollc-Clncln11•tl Cl•v•l•nct Colwmtn o.nver o .. Mo~ O.lr•lt 0 .. 1 .. 111 H•r11ord H•l9ft• .. _111111 ....... toll IMll .. ls Je<llU\\llle K•nt City U•V..-1.lltle RKll Los Ange ... l.Ooiltvll19 NOAA 111 0• .. <-.. , M9mpftll Temperatw'ea AlllMy ........ .,...,11 .. • .....,11 .. Allllflt.9 All9rtKCty ... u,,..,. alrlftl"9flm •llm•l'Cll .... ...... Ml L9 ~ ., 4' IS t.2 " '° ..... f1 .. 64 SI n ,,. t1 SI 60 a ts 0 n a Ml•ml Mll•llY'• ....... ,, ... HHIWllle Hew~i.­H_Y_ Non.Ill Olll•Clty Om9N Ori•IMIO ~·~ .......... .......... "11911d,M9 fltlaN,Ore llt9M ... , ...... Souihem Cal.ifomia 6UT/ report, S.D .... .... , .. Sfftllt It LAul• ..... ,.,.... MS9AMl'le .......... , ...... ,._ -Tllfla York resident vacationing in transferred to the Jail where proliferation of nuclear Newport, told officers a jewelry he'll get closer supervision. weapons," according to Nancy box was taken from her dresser. Mintie, a spokeswoman for the • 1• The box. officers were told. con-"WE THINK he can be very Catholic Worker, one of the ~ !: °' tained $12,050 worth of rings and amenable to this type of re-groups that organized the pro- 12 n bracelets. training." said Griffin test ~! ~ 01 Shirley Hall, a La Habra He noted that the rape victJm The 51 who were arrested u n school teacher, told police the and her boyfriend, who filed the were booked for investigation of ;4; :: thief grabbed a $3,000 coral and complaint, didn't want any sane-trespassing and obstruction and " si turquoise brac~let as well as her lions taken against Chavez. ··or all but eight of them were re- • " mem bershlp card to the lntema-course." he added.·· they really I eased on their own re . ~ : ~ tional Arabian Horse Associa-don't have the choice.·· cog nizance, said police Lt. 10 n lion According to the reassignment Maurice Colyar . ~ ~ 19 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---=-~~~~~~~- '° 72 u •2 " ~ IS t7 .. 71 II M M ~ " " IS U 11 ,, M «I 12 1t .. ... " ., .. 71 SJ .. » ..... 11 n IS ta .. . ., ,, 71 " .o1 ... 41 " JI .Jt 61 II U 40 .M .. '2 .. " SI 4' .ti ., ,. 1' " .. ., J1 41 " ., ,, ,, @ EiEM WISE Without the sllde presenlatlons It loses some of the impact As usual. the following five daya were devoted to the continuing education ot the Society·• members. We attendad gemotoglcat lab ••••Iona, samlnara and leotur" on the lnduatry·a lat.st developmenta. Special cllnlce Mre held by lnstruttora with expertl .. In a particular field of gemology. We had the opportunity to IHrn about the VfllY latett dlacover1.. In the gem world. I found It very .tlmulatlng and exciting. t . --~ ': ~!it#r, mo~ tUlel I'm aure the enthu.lam I have for attending the cOhCUHij ts alao due to the m1rvelP1-9 otla~ to get t9 know •o mafJY wonderful people from all p"1I Of the country who aha,. my tntereati In th9 fHclnaung aclence of gemology. W• cannot halp but learn ffOfft .ch other evtn In t}\e lnfonnet ,CljtcUtalQna we have at the lunc:Mon and dinners on U'it echedute. When wt J•w...,. Qlit t<>q:ether, Wt "tllle atlot)" a lbc • . l"IV becautt WI ffnd our "* ao lnt.rntlng. ' I wt~ 1t\lt opportunity ttc:h y .. , 'o 1tlnfon;• end lncrtne my '"'owledtt ot oemotogy end Of t .. ~ry ~wtry. In ao doing, l *" mo .... to hfV• my CUltO!Mf't better eno to contlnut to dtter•• th• trutt end oontldeoc. """ ,_. f<Mind In ma and my flnn. \ DETROIT CAP) -General ;)f oton Corp. aays futenafve cos~· 'tutUn1 efforts were respe>n11· le fqr lts $190.3 mtllloo probt m • he first three months this year !..-a 22..6 percent increase from "'154,1 million tn the same period last year. •1 The earnings amounted to 63 ,cents a share, compared with 52 -reents a share in the first quarter iiPf 1980. rt was the second con- pecuttve quarter that the na· ~~ion's No. 1 automaker has made money. a· GM lost $763 miilion in 1980, • ats first annual deficit since 1921, 1~espite a S62 million profit in the '(.fourth quarter m }eta /or Korea WASHINGTON (AP> +-The Pentagon has sent Congress a proposal to sell South Korea 36 advanced F -16 jet fighters to replace aging aircraft and help offset the roughly 2·1 numerical advantage in warplanes held by North Korea. n Patty continuing ~conviction fight "' Ii• WASHINGTON CAP > - Despite her second loss in the h U.S. Supreme Court, newspaper f1beiress Patricia Hearst Shaw i'>will continue her fight lo over· uturo a bank robbery convicUon ,!stemming from a holdup two months after her abduction by rlithe Symbipnese Liberation 111Army, her attorney says. b Tbe blah court refuted Moo· day to coo.sider ldopti.Dt a rule that automatically would over· turn her convtcUon -without the tntroducUon of supportin1 evidence -beeau.se of a boot .contract which her former at· torney, famed defense lawyer F. Lee Balley, entered into before the trial began De/e1111e rat.a NEW YORK <AP> -The de· fense completed testimony Mon· day in tbe Abscam trial of Sen . Harrison A. Williams Jr. with the senator denying for the fourth day that be ever tried to peddle political influence for personal gain. Iron aeela talk. WASHINGTON CAP) -Iran has informed the United States· it is ready to open negotiations to decide financial claims by Americans against Iran and it suggested the talks be held in London, the State Department said Monday. Optiom studied WASHINGTON (AP) -The White House said Monday the president retained a ''full range of options," including a trade embargo, in responding to any Russian intervention in Poland. But the chief spokesman refused to say whether that represented a difference with Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Iaraell warplanes •bot down a Syrian helicopter iunahi:P 1D cen· tr al Lebanon today. ldJUn1 four Syrian troops, newsmen oa the scene reported. The Israeli mlllta.ry command in Tel Aviv acknowledaed the helicopter was shot down but did not pro- vide details. It. wu the flnt direct Israeli intervention reported in the cur· reJlt fighting between S)'l'lian forces and Lebanese rl1btist Cbrlatlah militiamen in central and eut.ern Lebanon and the first clash of Israeli and Syrian aircraft this month. ........... A statement by the Israeli military command, issued in response to a question, said the Syrian helicopter bad been "at· tacking and murderin1 Lebanese Christiana.'• REPORTERS IN Lebanon said two helicopter gunships -were flying back to base at east Lebanon's Rayak military airfield from operations against Christian militiamen in the cen· tral Sannine mountain range when they were intercepted by RINGO REMARRIES -Bearded former Befl· bridal attendants, leave the Marylebone re· tie Ringo Starr and bride, American actress gistry office in London, where they were Barbara Bach, flanked by her daughter married in a civil ceremony Monday. It is the Francesca, 13, left, and his daughter, Lee, 10, secondmarriageforboth.Heis40andsheis34. ffiA rebel near death high.flying Israeli jets. The jets ftred rockets and one Guerrilla Bobby Sands in 59th day of prison hunger strike helicopter crashed in flames BELFAST, Northern Ireland Sands is demanding restora- about a mile from Rayak, they <AP > -With IRA hunger striker lion of special privileges enjoyed said. The second helicopter Bobby Sands reported near by guerrilla prisoners in the escaped, according to newsmen death today, guerrillas shot to mid·70s. who telephoned from Cht.oura. death a member of Northern Pope John Paul II sent bis the east Lebanon town that Ireland's Protestant militia and personal envoy to demonstrate houses the command of Syrian the Rev. Ian Paisley said the his concern ' ·with the forces. province appears headed for all· humanitarian aspects of the Rayalc is four miles from the out sectarian war. case," the British Foreign office Syrian border and eight miles Supporters of the jailed Irish in London said. The Rev. John southeast of the Saonine range, Republican Army guerrilJa said Magee. the pope's secretary, where the Syrians wrested a his family bad been told the next was to arrive in London today French-built observation post 72 hours would be crucial and and travel later to Belfast. It from the Christians in four days Sands could die at any time. To· was unclear whether he would of peak-to-peak combat in the day was bis 59th day without try to see Sands. snow. food at Mazo Prison near All police leaves were can- the violent protest they expected would follow Sands' death A member of the locally recruited Ulster Defense Regi- ment was shot and killed today when terrorists ambushed a three-man undercover squad in a van near Casllewellan, south of Belfast, a military spokesman said . Another militiaman wa s wounded in the attack, he said Paisley. leader of the Protes- tant Democratic Unionist Party, said if Sands dies, "war will no doubt be unle ashed with Prime Minister Menacbem Belfast. celed u authorities braced for B e g i n ' s go v e r n m en t • immmliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmlilmmmmmmmllimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!iii~i meanwhile, reiterated that savage fury upon us " t,~Tourists thwarted Israel "cannot acquiesce l.n the attempt of the Syrians lo con- quer Lebanon and liquidate the Christians in that country," the official press office announced. IN BEIRUT, where Syria's foreign minister was to meet to- da y with Christian militia leaders lo try to arrange still another cease-fire, artillery and 11 i~'.in Bermuda strike "' HAMILTON , Bermuda (AP> An estimated l ,800 tourists, _most of them from the United States, were stranded for up lo four hours al this Caribbean island's main airport Monday because of a strike by bus and taxi drivers They finaU y made 1t to their hotels through a car·lift of more than 100 private autos organized by the various hotels. There were exchanges of an- gry shouts between the drivers of the private cars and a small group of union pickets before police intervened and ordered the strikers to stand aside. 20,000 escape ISLAMABAD, Pakistan CAP) -Nearly 20,000 families of an Afghan tribe have crossed the border into Paki5tao because their obsolete weapons cannot II.O'S It n ... cwsL1n c-~~E­~0••••1111111 -Oootw cai..-'" ·· · .. ·-~-541.740 I t Now, You Can LeamTo Coatrol Your Headacbea Help r<>r many persons 1ufferln1 rrom ml1uJne, • cluster or t.enaioa t· beadachee ia now PM•ible, be The Re•dacbe Treatinent Cemerol OranceCounty yr. offers H lndMdually b L&Uond prosram , le proviclin1 -aceurate diapotlt fOl1owed b 1 copcerne4 c•re wblch may locluda biofeedback traJniq, education. and • ~ u. of non-bablt rormin1. -.11bty spec&rlc, alltl·beedaclM mecttution. drive the Soviet army from Afghanistan. the tribe's chief said today. Poland reprieved PARIS CAP> -Represen· latives of Poland's 15 Western creditor nations agreed Monday on terms to reschedule some $2.5 billion in debts falling due this year An agreement expected to be ratified by the 15 govern· ments in the next few months was signed by monetary of· ficials and diplomats. Airport. struck LONDON (AP) -Scottish airports at Prestwick, Glasgow and Edinburgh closed today as Britain's air traffic controllers seeking higher pay moved their hit-and·run strike to a new loca· lion. rocket dues subsided. But hard fighting continued without a letup in eastern Lebanon, and the military com- man1 in Tel Aviv said Israeli gunners fired into southern Lebanon today after heavy Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel's Galilee panhandle. The rocket barrages apparently were in retaliation for Israeli air raids on southern Lebanon Sun- day and Monday in which about 125 Lebanese and Palestinians were reported killed or wounded. Israel said the bombardment by Soviet-made Katyusha rockets fired from southern Lebanon caused no casualties but damaged a clinic, a school and telephone poles. The provincial governor's of· fice in the south Lebanese port of Sidon said the Israeli air raids Monday were the most severe since the 1978 Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon. N-M's new menu in The Zodiac: Just one more reason to come Sunday-shopping with us. NEW e=.'s tataurant Weds. thru Sah. • BUSINESSMEN Cont•ct the DAILY PILOT tor lnform•tlon regarding the county requlrementl tor using a Fictitious BuslneH N•me. Hut-Sutt R811ton 642-4321 EXT.332 /1.olJen C0~~~~ __, ~~ Sfi:;;)ragon -_""' GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DtSHES Specializing In Chinese A lo C:Orte Dishes Lunch. 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' 11 I I Quake sewer I lamage feared WESTMORLAND <AP> - Public utility workers have been assessing newly discovered damage to this agricultural community's sewer system u swarms or minor temblors followed a weekend earthqu8" "We are now discovering that the quake apparently damaged our sewer plant,'' City Clerk Nadine Hale said Monday "Our waste water treatment plant has problems " A quake measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale struck this Im · perial Valley town early Sunday, damaging a number or struc· lures. Dr. Richard Simon$ of the University of California at San Diego's Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics said af· tershocks in the quake area con- tined "light and variable" on Monday. ·'The swarm sequence is tapering off gradually but we are still recording aftershocks between magnitude 2 and 3 on the average of once every half hour," Simons said Mayor Ron Rodnguez said the nature and extent of damage to the sewer system was unknown Rodnguez said toilets were still functioning and that sanitation c rews reported no health threat Oath invalid MAR T INEZ <A P > Caltforma s teachers do not have lo sign oaths pledging loyally lo the U S Constttut1on a nd oppos1t1on to communism, a Judge has ruled Contra Costa Superior Court Judge Martin Rothenberg Mon· day ruled the state law un· const1tutional and issued an in junction prohibiting enforce· m~nt of three Stale Education C<Jde sections requiring school employees to sign loyalty oaths Entry refused PASO ROBLES <AP> The CBS new s program "60 Minutes" has been denied ac- cess to the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant unless Pacific Gas and Electric Co. of- ficials are allowed to present an unedited version or their point of view, a company spokeswoman said Monday. Sue Brown. representative for PG E . which built the yet ln· operative plant in southern San Luis Obispo, County, said "60 Minutes" producers refused to comply with conditions that PG&E set as pre-requisites to al- lowing film crews in the plant 2,000 see crash EL MIRAGE !AP> An aerobatic pilot, Cindy Rucker. died in front of 2,000 air show spectators when her home-built, experimental biplane plunged to the earth Sunday. said a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman The single-engine Aero-Duster spun down from an allltude of a bout 500 feet at this desert airport in San Bernardino Coun ty. Ms. Rucker, 33, trapped an the wreckage, was cut out by emergency crews. but died in a helicopter on the way to an Ap pie Valley hospital. Doctor semenced SANTA MONICA <AP> Dr Ramond La Scola. freed last month from a murder charge in the death of a woman who made him heir to $3 million, has been placed on three years' probation for writing a fake prescription for ;i pain-killing drug. The sentence was imposed Monday by Superior Court Judge Edward Rafeedie after the 65-year-old Malibu physician pleaded no contest to the pre· scription charge. As a condition of his probation, La Scola will have to devote 100 hours to com· munity service. 'f. Ul'1G TF.R\1TO15 'i HS SllOHT TJo:R\1TO5 YRS. ; *LOANS* ~ -~ •. VERY COMPETITIVE RATES ~ -ll' H !-: \I EST \ ff. :.•nd &. Jrd 1 I> S ii: ~ ~ ~. (714) 851 -1840 OA YS ' ~ .. \\ E~:l\~.'l>S 759.9553 \d\,llTS ~ ~ 0 ~ORANGE COAST EQUITY FUNDS iQ -:\111' Stu ooo TO SI .1100.000 SECl'RED BY REAL & ~ Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to sell items under $100. 3 I ines for 2 days on- ly $1.50 a day. Sorry, no commercial ads allowed. Charge your Penny Pincher Ad or use your Visa or Master Ca rd. Orange Coast DAILY PtL.OTITueaday, April 28, 1881 H/F LOSA.NGBL!!SCAP)-lfthe pro<luc:er of "Dallas" baa his way. no oae Will replace the late Jim Davia ln the role of Jock Ewing, the silver-maned and 1ravel·voiced patriarch of the Texas oil dynasty. Davis, '12, wt)o recently un· derwent surgery for a perforal• ed ulcer, died in his sleep at hls home over the weekend. A memorial service wnr be held Friday at Encino Community' Church in Tarzana with a private burial to follow. Born Aug. 26, 1908 in Edgerton, Mo .. Davis is survived by his mother, his wife, Blance, and two sisters. Leonard Katzman, producer of "Dallas," the No. 1 aertes on CBS, said Monday it's too early to say how the change wlll be handled, but added, "No one wants to re-cast the role. "WE'VE DONE some th.ink· 'Ing but it's too early to discuss it fully," Katzman said. "Nevertheless, the business be· ing what it is, we be1an to make alternative plans when Jim became ill " Al'WW...- fAfHEALESS TRIPLETS -Susan Algood is delighted that she gave birth to three healthy sons in Fresno. but sad- dened because her husband is not there to share the joy. Police in San .Jose said a man who offered to buy David Algood's car is charged with shooting him in the head Feb. 19. "We 're all terribly 11or· rowful," said series star Larry Hagman, who plays Davis' son, J .R . Ewing. "Jim was a ereat guy to work with and he wtll be greatly missed. He i& irreplacea· ble as both a friend and a co- worker. Katiman said he hoped to get a waiver for the Writers Guild of America. now on strike, to allow him to rewrite scripts for next season so that filming can begin in a few weeks. "Without a waiver," be said, "we might have to re-cast, something we would want very much not to dQ." The current season, however. already has been filmed and will not be affected as "Dallas" winds up the season Friday with another cliffhanger to keep the audience in suspense all sum mer DAVIS DOES not figure in the new mystery that begins Friday Jock Ewing and "Miss Ethe," played by Barbara Bel Geddes. are on a second honeymoon an Europe and will not appear on the show. Davis played a pivotal role an "Dallas." Much of the mischief created by his son J .R. came in his attempt to .beat out his brother, I Bobby Patrick Duffy), Sea search for four men called off SANTA C R UZ CAP > A search for four men missing after their sailboat capsized has been halted, the Coast Guard says The search was called off Monday, and a Coast Guard of f1 c1al said the men were pre sumed dead if they still were at sea ·'If they made 1t to the beach. they might be OK," he said The names of the men, all an the ear ly 20s. wert> not released. Alexander Boomer of Santa Cruz, the owner of the 21-foot sailboat, was rescued , along with an unidenllfied compan1on. after they were spotted clinging to the capsized boat near Point Soquel by a civilian pleasure boat Monday, Petty Officer Larry Bowers said ( for the attention and affecUoo ol his father. The two brothers an rivals for cootrol of the Elriol OU empire, and up to now Joek bad been the key to control. Neither brother seems wtlline to rnake it a partnenhip. Last year the shooting of J .R. eenerated worldwide interest and became one of the moet celebr,ted whodunit• of all time. Tbe show with the solution brot. all viewing records. More than 41.4 million homes tuned in. FRIDA Y'S VICTIM apparent· ly won't get off as lightly as J .R. It looks like it will be murder, and another member of the cast will be the chief suspect, although the "Dallas" people won't say for sure. Who gets murdered? Wbo'a the suspect? Lori mar Produc- tions 1s employing Its usual tight security to keep it a mystery and insure maximum v1ewersh1p of the episode. Man guilty • • 10 antique gun slaying OROVILLE <AP ) -An Oroville man who admitted kill· ang his ex-girlfriend's new boyfriend with a replica of an antique gun has been convicted of second-degree murder. A Butte County Superior Court Jury returned its verdict Mon· day on Scott Thelander. 23, after three days or deliberation. Sen- tencing was set for May 21. He could get 17 years to life Thelander was charged with s l a yang Uav1d Lewis, 21, 1n Lewis home an June 1979. A fnend to whom Thelander had confided his Jealous rage at hi s g1rlfnend switching her af- fections to Lewis, had offered. Thelander a cap and-ball pistol that the prosecution said was the death weapon. Thelander 's lawyer had sought a manslaughter convic· lion on grounds that it happened in the heat of passion The prosecution sought a first degree murder conviction, saying Thelander ambushed Lewis Thelander had admitted in court. "I shot him " WHEN YOU HAVE SOMEONE SPECIAL IN MIND ... Lavish her with our exclusive ribbon mink vest. Feather- ltght elegance for all her special occasiO{ls . In natural glacial or dyed ranch mink•. p-s-m-1, $895 ",ur Salon Charm her with a Karung snakeskin adjustable belt . D1stinctlvely Joined by a gold tone buckle, $175. Just one from our Judith Leiber belt collection. In red. gray, peach, bone or navy. Fashion Accessories Delight her with this Gucci satchel. Meticulously crafted In the prestigious vlnyl-<:e>ated signature fabric . One .of many Impressive Items In our Gucd Accessory Collection. Satchel, 7Va" x 12", In blue or brown, $155. Designer Handbags ~~ ..... ~~ ..... ~~~;..--~--... ..;;;..,.ii..:. ..... .;. .. ..:..~ ....... .:ii.;....iiii .... .,,..,,.. ........ WwClllOIW'f•.,... ~UllOC~5 »ll~&Urn[ NEWPORT BEACH ~ -:::: ---_.....,.._ - Quake sewer damage fe&r~d WESTMORLAND <AP) - Public utility workers have been assessing newly discovered damage to this agricultural community's sewer system u swarms of minor temblors followed a weekend earthquan. "We are now dfscovering that the quake aJ'parently damaged our sewer plant," City Clerk Nadine Hale said Monday. "Our waste water treatment plant has problems.·· A quake measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale struck this lm· perial Valley town early Sunday, damaging a number of struc- tures. Dr Richard Simons of the University of California at San Diego's Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics said af lershocks in the quake area con- tined "light and variable" on Monday. ·'The swarm sequence is tapering off eradually but we are still recording aftershocks between magnitude 2 and 3 on the average of once every half hour," Simons said. Mayor Ron Rodnguez said the nature and extent of damage to the sewer system was unknown Rodriguez said toilets were still functioning and that sanitation crews reported no health threat Oath im>alid MARTINEZ <A P > Californi a 's teachers do not have lo sign oaths pledging loyalty to the U.S Constitution and opposition to communis m. a Judge has ruled Contra Costa Superior Court Judge Martin Rothenberg Mon- day ruled the state law un- constitutional and issued an in- junction prohibiting enforce ment of three State Education Code sections requmng school employees to sign loyalty oaths Entry refused PASO ROBLES <AP> The CBS new s program "60 Minutes" bas been denied ac- cess to the Dlablo Canyon nuclear power plant unless Pacific Gu and Electric Co. of- ficials are allowed to present an unedited version of their point of view, a company spokeswoman said Monday. Sue Brown, representative for PGE, which built the yet in- operative plant in southern San Luis Obispo County. said "60 Minutes" producers refused to comply with conditions that PG&E set as pre-requisites to al- lowing film crews in the plant 2,000 3ee crtUh EL MIRAGE <AP l -An aerobatic pilot, Cindy Rucker, died in front of 2,000 air show spectators when her home-built. experimental biplane plunged to the earth Sunday, said a Federal Av iation Adminis tration spokesman The single-engine Aero-Duster spun down from an altitude of about 500 feet at this desert airport in San Bernardino Coun ty. Ms. Rucker, 33, trapped in the wreckage, was cul out by emergency crews, but died in a helicopter on the way to an Ap ple VaUey hospital. Doctor sentenced SANTA MONICA <APl -Or Ramond La Scola, Creed last month from a murder charge in the death of a woman who made him heir to $3 million, has been placed on three years' probation for writing a fake prescription for a pain-kilting drug. The sentence was imposed Monday by Superior Court Judge Edward Rafeedie after the 65-year-old Malibu physician pleaded no contest to the pre- scription charge As a condition of his probation, La Scola will have to devote 100 hours to com- mumty service. -.r. LONC; TER'1 TO IS YRS SllORT TER\I TO S YRS ~ *LOANS* § ~ VERY COMPETITIVE RATES 5 Cl' ltt:AL 1-:ST.\TE 2nd & 3rd TU S a: 0.. > / ~. (714) SSl-1840 Dt\YS ' ~ .. \\ 1-:l':KF:'\l>S 759-9553 ;,IGllTI; ~ ~ORANGE CO AST EQUITY FUNDS~ -MI:\ $10.llOO TO $1 ooo.oOO SECl'RED BY REAL & Cal Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to sell items under $100. 3 I ines for 2 days on- ly $1 .50 a day. Sorry, no commercial ads allowed . Charge your Penny Pincher Ad or u~e your Visa or Master Card. Call Classified Ad- vertising at 642-5678 to place your ad. Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, AprU 2.8, 1981 H/F LOS ANGB~ES (AP> -If the producer of .. Datr11" hu hiJ way, no one will replace the late Jim Davis lo the role of Jock Ewing, the silver-maned and 1ravel·voiced patriarch or the Texas oil dynasty. Da\tis, 12, who recently un· derwent surgery tor a perforat· ed ulcer, died ln his sleep at his home ove; the weekend. A memorial service will be held Friday at Encino Community' Cbureh in Tarzana with a private burial lo foUow Born Aug. 26, 1908 in Edgerton, Mo .. · Davia is survived by his mother, his wife, Blance, and two sisters. Leonard Katzman, producer of "Dallas," the No. 1 series on CBS, said Monday It's too early to say how the chance wtll be handled, but added, "No one wants to re-cast the role. "WE'VE DONE some think- ing but it's too early to discuss it fully ," Katzman said. "Nevertheless, the business be- ing what it is, we be&an to make alternative plans when Jim became 111." ·~-......-FATHERLESS TRIPLETS -Susan Algood is delighted that she gave birth to three healthy sons in Fresno, but sad- dened because her husband is not there to share the joy. Police in San Jose said a man who offered to buy David Algood's car is charged with shooting him in the head Feb. 19. "We're all terribly aor· rowful," said series star Larry Hagman. who play1 Davis' son, J.R . Ewing "Jim was a great guy to work with and he will be greatly missed He ia irreplacea- ble as both a friend and a co- worker. Katzman said he hoped to get a waiver for the Writers Guild of America, now on strUce, to allow him \o rewrite scripts for next 1easoo so that filming can begin in a few weeks. "Without a waiver," he said. "we might have to re-cast, something we would want very much notto dQ." The current season, however. already has been Cilmed and will not be affected as "Dallas" winds up the season Friday with another cliffhanger lo keep the audience in suspense all sum- mer DAVIS DOES not figure an the new mystery that begins Friday. Jock Ewing and "Miss Ellie," played by Barbara Bel Geddes. are on a second honeymoon in Europe and will not appear on the show Davis played a pivotal role in ''Dallas." Much of the mischief created by hlS son J R came m his attempt to beat out his brother, <Bobby Patrick Duffy>, Sea search for four men called off SANTA C RUZ (A P l A search for four men miss ing after their sailboat caps tzed has been halted, the Coast Guard says The search was called off Monday, and a Coast Guard of- ficial said the men were pre sumed dead 1( they still were at sea . "If they made it to the beach. they might be OK ," he said The names of the men, all in the ear ly 20s, wen• not released. Alexander Boomer of Santa Cruz. the owner of the 21-foot sailboat. was rescued , along with an unidentified companion, after they were spotted clinging lo the capsized boat near Point Soquel by a civilian pleasure boat Monday, Petty Officer Larry Bowers said ----------------- for the attentJon and affection cl his father. The two broll)en an rivals for control of the Elrinl Oil empire, and up to now Joci had been the key to control. Neither brother seem• wlllln& to make lt a partnership. Last year the shooting of J .R. 1enerated worldwide intere1t and became one of the ma.t celebroted whodunit• of all time. The show with the soJution broke all viewing records. More thu 41.4 mjllion homes tuned In . FRIDA Y'S VJC"l'JM apparent· ly won't get off as lightly as J.R. It looks like it will be murder, and another member of the cut will be the chief suspect, although the "Dallas" people won't say for sure Who gets murdered? Wbo'a the suspect? Lorimar Produc- tions is employlng its usual tight security to keep it a mystery and insure maximum viewersh!.P of the episode. Man guilty • • 1n antique gun slaying OROV ILLE <AP ) An Oroville man who admitted kill- 1 n g his ex-girlfriend's new boyfriend with a replica of an antique gun has been convicted of second-degree murder A Butte County Superior Court jury returned its verdict Mon- day on Scott Thelander, 23. after three days of deliberation. Sen- tencing was set for May 21. He could get 17 years to life Thelander was charged with slay ing Uav1d Lewis, 21. in Lewis' home in June 1979. A fnend to whom Thelander had confided his Jealous rage at his girlfriend switching her af- fections to Lewis, had offered Thelander a cap-and-ball pistol that the prosecution said was the death weapon. Thelander·s lawyer had sought a manslaughter convic- tion on grounds that it happened in the heat of passion The prosecution sought a first -degree murder conviction, saying Thelander ambushed Lewis. Thelander had admitted in court, "I shot him " WHEN YOU HAVE SOMEONE SPECIAL IN MIND ... Lavish her with our exclusive ribbon mink vest. Feather- light elegance for all her special occasions. In natural glacial or dyed ranch mink•, p-s-m·I. $895. Fur Salon Charm her with a Karung snakeskin adjustable belt. Distinctively joined by a gold lone buckle, S 175 Just one from our Judith Leiber belt collection. In red, gray, peach. bone or navy. Fashion Accessories . Delight her with this Gucci satchel. Meticulously cratted In the prestigious vinyl-coated signature fabric. One of many Impressive Items In our Gucd Accesaory Collection. Satchtl, 7VtH x 12", In blue or brown, $155. DesJgner Handbags SUllOCr~ WJMUrn[ NEWPORT BEACH ~tate offieials back ·rail travel incfj __ , • · President Rea1an '1 budaet cutten have proposed removfn1 three fa t240 mllllon, almo1t one-third, . ly w e horn the $835 million budget tlom ~ Ml!ld~neJo~ tought by Amtrak to maintain Laguna Hilla, aloal ..ta otbif oatlonwide pUtenger rail opera-stops in San Diego Count . tiona lri the comln1 year. la recommendln1 fUDd- Amtrak officials aay tbat ing, Ms. Gianturco •~ thJll.it could mean cutting off almost all ridership throughout the 1te.» faasenger rail services in all but creased 21 perc•nt I ·~• be northeastern corridor wbil• intra-state • trave1 between Washington, D.C. and dropped 5.S percent and auto Boston. travel showed only a 2 percent ln- But CalifOftlia.folt eNn' auue GQIDl>ared M1b the usual 5 ing a pessloii.stic view of the to 6 percent rate. future of rail~a<:ling in-the state. Since tbe Los An1eles-San Last w•k the California Diego train run ts amonc Uae Transportatidn Commission 1ave buaiest in the weat, earryina its blessing t4 a recommendatioo about 1.3 million passenaers a from Caltrar)S Director Adriana year. state officials apparently _Giantureo th•t J4.4 miUion be set believe it will survive aay cuts in aside for a ino of raiJ-bus sta-tile Amtrak budget. tlons in Orante County. Also backing adequate Am- The stations would serve the trak funding is a resolution in the busy Los Angeles-San Diego Am· st•te Legislature citin1 the trak run and would be located in dramatic increase in train An ah e i m, Sant a An a and ridership in California and the Oceanside. need for additional train service, A new facility in Anaheim and urgillt Coll~~ t.o mainttin would be built at a cost of about and support a natioeal pwenser $1 million and existing statlom at railroad system. Santa Ana and Oceanside would If the new adminiatraUon and be completely upgraded to ac-Congress are genuinely intere.i: commodate t;rains, long distance ed in promoting public trans.It aa buses and county and local buses, an energy-conserving measure, along with parking for autos and this is no time to pull the t11acki taxis. out from under AiatraJc. Amtrak cites demand Meanwhile Amtrak President Alan S. Boyd has come up with some statistics to aupport the argum ent f o r adequat~ passenger rail funding. For ex- ample : -In the month of March. t ypically a low ridership month, more than 6,000 persons had to stand on Amtrak trains because it was not possible to satisfy the demand for seats. -As of April 1, all coach and /or sleeping accommada· Uons had been completely sold out on 645 trains operating between April and September, most ot them outside the northeast cor· ridor. -On the same date, 13,500 persons had placed their na mes on waiting lists at Amtrak res ervation centers seeking space if available . -Last August, more than 400,000 persons wer~ denied space on Amtrak's Chicago-Lo,, Angeles, Chicago-San Francisco and Los Angeles-Seattle routes because they were aold out. .Last July 340,000 would-be train riders were unable to obtain aceom- modations on the same runs. -Amtrak's five reservatioo centers bandied • record 22 m illion calls in fJ.SCal l9IO and reservation offices must be modernized to handle the volume of calls. Given statistics like ~. it m ay be quite dlffic•lt for Congress to accept the ad- ministration's contention that the de mand for passeaaer rail travel no longer exists. Amtrak jokes tc the contrary, there's apparently no shortage or customers. .. s~lling job overdone? ..,.s year is spent by goveJ:l(m,eJd' ·· agencies on prodlaCinl ~l'ftliia dlld Advertising, publicity and public relations have come to pl ay a major role in tht American economy. They serve a purpose, introducing new prod· ucts and new ideas and enabllns industry and business to keep in touch with the community. But President Reagan's <5f. fice of Management and Budget is on target in concludini that government does not need to spend so much money on selllag itself to the public. Each year the Government J>rinting Office churns out hun· dreds of thousands of free booklets advising consumers on everything from organic garden- ing and making dried flower ar- ran gement11 to preventing automotive rust and canning fruits and vegetables. ' The Defense Department t alone publishes 645 different pamphlets and has a large film library. More than $100 million a audio-visual aids. '' ,. No doubt this is helpful to many citizens. But today libraries, free classes and booklets published by private buaineN are teadlly available to mest consumen. The OMB ri&htly asks tf the federal government hu any busi- ness becomin& ao deeply involved in all this public relations ac- tivity. · President Reagaa now bas ordered a freeze on the produc· tion of all new govemmnt publications and films. Each agency bu uatil Julf 15 to sub- mit plans for ,cutting tlUa self.. promotion. : . It's not a bad idea. Uke all aovemmental activities, tt will only continue to If.OW caqtU someo11e1tes-ia with tllel>fUlllae 1llears. • Opinions expressed in the spece ~ are thOlit of the Delly Plklt. Other views ex- pressed on this paoe are thOSe of thftr auti.ors and artists. Re.cttr c:ommef\t Is Invit- ed. Address Thi 0.lly Piiot, P .O. &ox tS60, COStA Mes., CA 91626. ~ (7U) 642-4321. LM. Boyd /Hutory of a rotul A crew sometime back c\ut a Mte ln a Milwaukee street. On top weN several Inches of asphalt from re- 1urfaclng1 of modem Umea. Next was a thick sheet of concrete from a 1923 road. Beneath that •u a UU packed stretch of bricks from a 1'°9 road. Under that wu an etdlt·bldt layer of cedar blocu from a.a 18115' road. And below that wu a •tneb bed of aravet from an 19 road. That '1 bow tt ii. Even the period at the end ot W1 sentenc wu lnhertt- ed. We walk . la tbt waya '11 our, UC"*°" lWlllb' wtt.hout A!tli&illC bow deep ttielr WOt't. 1 To strike the lal1I a~ *.1P loo1 •IO IMADt to stop aU ~. ~· It's lrom UUi that the labor' MO.Vemect pt the e.,.....IOo to ":atiite ... Jt'a c:Ultomary ln' Jap• for tM telepboD.• c.Uor, not th• ,.ny wbo ~ up the rtteiver, to HY Miio Living standard dips slowly DETROIT -Recently the papers here carried a story saying that Farmer Jack, Michigan·s largest supermarket chain. had asked its union to give back the rights to an upcoming pay raise due uniter a contract which has another year to run. The second and third largest grocery chains in the state had . already petitioned their unions for a similar concession . Business is bad. Naturally Michigan, with its de- pendence on a half-demolished car in- dustry. is in worse shape than most places. Throughout all of the industrial Midwest and Northeast, however, we ve Sffmg unions and their workers be· ing pushed into tbe Epoch of the Give· Back, the voguish euphemism for a pay cut WHEN THE CUTS are taken by the employees of nationally advertised brands like f"lrestone Tire and Braniff Airlines some attention is paid to the event. Every indication. though, is that the same thiq is happening among the lesser-known Farmer Jacks in ever widening economic a nd geographic circles. Everybody is c uttin1 back. They're even closina down oU refineries because capacity is in excess of foreseeable customer demand. This i.s not unadulteratedly bad news. Jn fact, the people who are taking cuts or at least being forced to forego raises may find things a mite better than they now fear. This frantic management ef- fort in so many companies to cut or hold down wages and salaries is owing less to capitalistic greed than a recognition it is getting very tough to pass on rises in the cost of goods to the final purchaser. Consumers have become ex· tr~ely price conscious and are refus· r ing to buy if it means they have to pay more. ln short, the signs are pointlng to a hefty drop in the inflation rate. Stiffen- ing customer resistance to higher prices, the gentle fall m interest rates as well as employer pressure for give-,._\ f Af_f t V-Dl_H_Df-fM-Afl--~z, backs betoken an end to double-digit in· flation in the next few months. Thus the pay cuts may be less horrific than they would be if inflation were lo continue at the present rate NEVERTHELESS, with inflation or without it, the gradual decline in most people's standard of living which began in the early '70s will continue. Call it working harder to stay even or call it the pauperization of the employed, the process has been going on long enough now so that reporters are beginning to interview people on the subje<:t. Iver PeteTS(Jp of the New York Times recent· ly got this quote from the president of a Un ited Rubber Workers local in Indiana: .. There's a move on to lower the standard of living or the working people . . . I can't imagine that the working class of people wiU tolerate it much longer. We're easily excitable , we could tum rebellious overnight." Blue-collar rebellion is not a high probability bet. Even in the Great Depression it took American industrial workers years of wage cuts and un· employment before they got riled up and even then it was moderate riling up, focused at conspicuously mean and nasty corporations. not al the structure of American political economy The lesson of the 1930s wasn't that our blue- collar workers were dangerous when pushed but that they were surprisingly docile and disinterested in the re· volutionary mating calls of the anti· capitalist left. THE OCCASIONAL article about what the nati\'es in the steel miJll will do if they get their wages cut too far i1 more a re(lection of what the wealthy 10 percent rear than what workers intend. Yet the past is an uncertain guide. for our America is different from the one that saw its standard of living drop 10 sharply half a century ago Ours is not a bump but a drift oil from prosperity like the slow awaken- ing from a golden dream. People have been slow to realize the extent of the de- terioration of their position and even yet think of 1t as a temporary reversal, not an histonc change in the nation's life and prospect. Jn the Depression the most docile of the docile were the unemployed white· collar workers -the bookkeepen and the seoretanes who were relativety few in number. Now we have milhOClS ht ' "the new class." as the cadres of col- lege graduates have been called, people who have always expected life to be good as a matter of right conferred on them with their diplomas. As the give-back era stretches on into the '80s and these people rind out they are m the same boat as the che<:koµl clerks and the baggers at Farmer J ack, there's no knowing in what directions our politics will go. 'Home concerns' sometimes far away To the Editor: City of Irvine. One almost has to dab Your April 15 editorial, "Home Con· tbe tears from one's eyes as we read cerns First:• regarding my two trips to about the "unfortunate" incident which Washi ngton, D.C ., was troubling occurred to Mr. Anthony. because it failed to appreciate the full· What about the unfortunate "inci· range of responsibilities placed on a dent" which occurred to Mrs. Anthony? local elected official. She was allegedly brutally bea\en and Yes, home concems do come flrst. shot at twl<?A!. on• buUet "vaz:tna" her and each day l attempt to maximize my .• efforts on behalf of my comtfttltl\ts in . _________ ....., .. , --- Otan1e County. Obviously, the prepon· ,., ) MAl'~BO"~ deranl amount of this ti~ is spent in , L,; ,. . ., ~ Orange County. However. many ot the pollcy and lax allocation decisions af. feeling my constituents are not made in Santa Ana but in Sacramento and Washington. FORTY PE&CEN1' of this year 's county budget wu funded by the federal and st.ate governments . .Mide from the importance of \hete funds to Orange CotWity for social programs, h11hway coattruction and other programs, federal and state resulations have a dlrel!t impact on Orange County. Two examples are the EPA cutoff 1n sanita · Uon and hiahway project funda, and the FAA'a desire to open up John Wayne Airport to as many commercial jet fU&bta as the mlU'ket will bear. There are U~ when Ute lnfluence of an e~ted orllcl•l is of treat lmpact. Your editorial seemed to acknowledae thil in si.ttnc ·•t,..vel to W~atorl · . . . may evep b9 helpful la ~~ where be can lobby for le1i1laUon that would benefit the county." · scalp. It was only because Mr. Anthony was a poor shot that she was not killed by this man who the news media is now depicting as a saint. ONE OF the articles stated that an in· terview with Mrs. Anthony bas not been allowed because it might lnfluence pros- pective jurors In an im~ding trial. Wby then are interviews with Mr. An· thony okay? We have the reeling that Art Anthon~ is (oing_ to come out of thls1 thing smelling Uke a rose. What will the verdict be? His a Ubl will be the streaa or the weighty decillona and demanda up- on the time of a man in public office. It would appear that an indiriduaJ who saw combat u a rifle platoon leader as well as a npter pllot could handle the heavy pressures of public office ib a ci- ty the size or Irvine. We further believe that the new a media b doln1 a treat injustice by de- ptcUnc this man u a 1ood and tent1e person. Good and gentle people do not beat up their wivea and shoot at them wJth a 45 cal. pl1toll MR. & MRS. G.E . DAVIS BecaUM af my pUt uaoeiatlon wltb .Pt .. ldent ae,_aa end tll• ltaff, u well .., •lx yean apenence 1n the •ie Aa· Hmbly. l ~PPM to eDJ01 ~~ ln t.be Whtte HoiM'iDd Sacram • Thi.I In tum p..;.;;..&....,. fRlltl't&ullUa to belp el· pedite ~~t:i. Of cOllcem to OW" Onn1e p;.ea:, unJdnd. County commUnlt1. OTans• c.un\1 bu problemt that cry To tbe Edltol': out for eolu11oft; It b my 4uty to aebe • I leamed of the ncetit lnctctent lnvolv· · every ~l1 to mulmlN ou~ ef-Ina Jrvtne Mayor Anthony wblle oo a ,.. terilvenea ud foeu1 att.enlloil on our cent bullnesa ttlp to San Jllateo. At the coecerna. To 4o leu wou.1d be ne1lec:t· tlme 1 wu. saddened b. ut upoa rwtumtn1 ln1 th ... uraent blome tOOffftll. ti.came abOCked 1t the 1MW1p1per al- 8RUCS NESTANDI: l•••tton ot coni'iaP aad ~y 1D arrett SQPervllor, TblH OUtriet and proMCUtlOD by Cblel .,.art, Art I have known for m.,.Y yean. I have ~ blm b\lt we b.a•• rue11 II been political allies. Leo I recall frorp the evening I felt I gave bim a thorough griJllng as be interviewed for the job u head of p~tive services for lrvlne. He pBMed with flying colon! As I re· call, we did not want a police chief who would let ~ a gooo equad~ we did nt>t want. • J)OU.ce cll!ef lnc.liDed to shoot first~ ask quesUODs later; we did not wa'\1 •l>uJ>llcity tu>uhd wbp would flood the ~~s With relJaseil on the latest "lnlftedirt.~' WHILE YOUNG vultures looking to make names for themselves are asldnt "tou&b" questions about the lack of preu relea1es, lack of swat team style im· mediate arrest, and soon, I can only ask: l. Don't we want a police department com posed of people who can be frienda and neighbors first? 2. Don't we want a police chief who would not stoop lo drag1lng our namei and t'eputations through the mud for the sake of political gain or press appease· ment7 3. Don't we want a police chief who does not overreact and lote good judf · ment in a crisis situation? Ultimately, the real test of Chtef Peart'• actions will be: 1. Did the timlna of hl1 action minimize the danger to Art and othen? 2. Wu the law enforced? 3. Did bl!J action and the action ol others aasist those with problema In 1et· tine help? . To an ment, this seem• to be ·'th• year of the Jackal." Do not be fooled or dt1coura'ed by this 1mall but voeaJ 1roup. I feel that I speak for anany bl my frtendl and nei&hbon u well u for my1etf. ROBERTJ. war Former 9ouqcilmatJ.; City Of lrvl.HI ! I I I . .. :.. ? l I 1 I # 20 flllfR Cl().<11[ TTfS LOW l'AR CAMEL OUALl~Y LOW TAR CAMEL OUALIT'( . . / .. ' . ·-t ,, u LOW l'M CAMEL QUALITY 4. 20 CtGARETTES • {/ "· n ,J, j J ')f '1f ...u. ,,,, , n< ,, ·n H ')( "' ,. l tit I ' 11 U< ')1 lll ro '}f 2 O~t q aJ re 1 I ()( ,,. 111\ l s J ,, .... ,.., •tCTITfCIMIUllMUI itAM8'1TAT8MllMT T~ t-41NI~ IMC'-• are dol11e 111ua1-.a: 1.UGKV ONE, lt7U MecAt111ur 1tv•.. 11111• 210, lrvlne, Calllornle ttltS eruct E Hott. tt7U -Anllur ll•d , Sull• 131. trvlno, CellfOfnle ..,,, 01Mf' W. I.Alie. "712 M«Artllllf llVd., Svll• 221, lrvl.,., Celllor111e t27U Tflla llutlMH I• Cond<Kled by o ·-·· Plf'bW,..,..., lk\DE. lfOtl Thi• ~ WM ltleo wlth , ... County (lerll ol O<~ County on April 10, tt•t "--PublltNcl 0ronoe c..-Dolly Pltot, Apr u ,11.•,MD1 i.1"1 11~1 PUBUC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUS au111•t:SS NAMt: l'UTt:llWMT Tho lollowlng ponons ar • doln9 outineu •• RAPID GRAPHICS, IOll Aawen- <rnl, Senta Ana, Cellfornie 9VOS Sam W Vujno~, 117Sl Woodl .. tn, Tu1lln, C•lllornle t~ Cll•rlot w COOll, lOll RevencrUI, San le A,,.. Calllornle tVOS P'UBUC N011Cllt PUBLIC NOTICE Hl1Ma '9CTITIOUI IWllNaU ...,.itt: STATUHHT The lollowlno per"°"' are 001110 bWllne•as SOUTH CDA.Sl ST t.Tt~E AS COM Pt.NY, 1'tO C.CSllloc 4V<Wlwt, Cotta MeM, c.a111orn1• taa S A C Olllco PrOdut !', Inc , a Callfornle corporatkll\, U'll (.Miiie< Avenue, C-le Mow. C.llfornl• ••• T1111 11u11neu ls condu< led bY • cor ,..,.,_. S ACOfllco Pf11du<U, 1nt Poter O SI_.., Se<r•ler, Tftla tle-t wet lllod wllll tflO C...,_ty Cler• of Orenoe County on PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE MOTICA OP U.UI Holle• It ,,.,..by 91wn purwMI to -•lo"' J011 Mid J072 of,,.. Clvll C* OI th• Sl•I• ol Celllorllla IM Wll· ClortlQMG, HAAIOR TOWING will '°" 11 p.11111< awctklll. •• ..., w. 11t11 St • Cott.o Mow, CA 9»17, •I II • ITI on T""rMl1.., IN 1'h day ol May, "'1, Iha tot._.,. dft(rl...0 ~Y. to "" t tlO Chtvrolot motor no 1x ... S1••1...,1.1cen•No mxz.wCA 1'10 (.hevrot•I motor nq I X .. 7A••MUI I.teen• No "1XZ.W"" S.ld talo It tor uw purpOM of utl•· fylne lltn OI tno ..-ll91*1 for .... peld lqwifVI -'1«• <11¥1111 in ,,.. --• .. •t,oouo ~ w1t11 coth of a4vortltlng-•~•ol••lo Oat.o INt 111110.., e4 t.p<ll, , .. , K....i«eJ Gall PuDll"'9d Orenvr C.00•1 0.lly Pilot. Pt .. w Apr1111, 1w1 PuDll"*' Or.,,.. C.00•1 Delly P1101, Aprll lt, May s.,, "· 1"1 '").II I PUBLIC NOTICE AIWll 11. 1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE MSll41' PICTITtOUS IW$1 .. l!U MAME STATt:Ml!NT l- PICTITIOUS euSINIU .. AMI STATaMIMT Th• lollowlno pe,.on• ert do1n11 bu'ln•H ._. HIGH RISE AIDE Louisiana State Trooper Arnett Heintz is lowered on a stretcher from the top of the 50-story One Shell Square office building in New Orleans during a Tiii• Du•IMH It conducted ov a ....... ,...,..,,....,,.,_ Ct1erle1W c- I AP'WI ......... high-rise rescue rehearsal by the state police tactical un - it. Heintz' ride to safety from 726 feet took one minute and 25 seconds. Thlt tl•t-1 was tllOO wllh ,,.,. co .. ntv Cterk of Oren .. County 011 -April 10, '"' Tll• 1o11ow1ne "°"o'" er• 0olne b11 rwth•' NEWPORT PACIFIC INVESTORS, I.TO NV. 1774'1 Slit Par• Circle. Sull• 1U, Irvine, U. 9111S Newp«I lnvnl«I V. 11144 SKr Parll Cir<I•, S..lla llS, lrvlM, CA 97/IS I NT Sll.K~CRIENEA~. 1Ml t Nov•• Avenu•, 1rvln•. C.•Hto,,.'l\a .,,,. Crelg MalllloW TllOmes. 1101 WU I Stf'wen,, • UI s.nu1 An•, C..ltforf\4• '1701 Jou Anne l llOl'nH, 1101 Wnt Sloven,, • 1•1. !'>enl• Ane, Celotornte '1101 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P'lfft7• PubllsNcl o...,,.. Coe" Dolly Pllol, This bu•lneu '' conduc ••O t>v • 11m1ted perlno"111D This IMl\lfW.S 11 conouctod by an 1n dlvtduel thUSl»nd • w1101 Marines finish 100-mile hike PICTIT10UI eUllMESS NAMt: ITAT•MIN~ 1 "• lollowtno per'°"' are 001110 C>usint"-' •• THE PARTS FINDER, ISMI Ut Lun.a, Wostrn111ster. Colllornla tlt&l Harr\ton 1n11entory Servk.••, Inc • • Celll01nl• corporellon. 1sa.1 l.H 1.una• w .. uninttor Celllornla 9Ull Tiii• bu.inns h <°"""'led by• cot· p0rellon l'ICTIT'IOUI aUSINUS MAM• STATIMIMT ~pr 14, 21, lt, MoY S, l'ltl 17u.ll PUBLIC NOTICE rw!~::Ollowlng partoM e re dO•ne ""'' l'ICTITIOUS aUilNEU~ THE CARGO SHOP, UHA MAMl!STATt:MIMT WlntorQrHn Pl•<•. Co••• Mua, Tllo 1o11-1ng .,..._ Is doing bull- CeHlor,.t24Jl MU •• lee R Thomp&on ISHA YELi.OW P"GES REFERENCE WllllOrQrotn Plo<e Co&le Muo MAP CO, 111 W.17111 Stroot, Suite JS, C.alilorn1am» CotlaMete,Celllom1anu7 Newport lnwston V Clarke Falrl>rol,..r ~11Pert,..r Thi• .,.._, was 11100 w1lll tne (.ounty etork of Orenv-County on CroiQ M Thom•• fhl\ \t•temrtn\ flfih hleQ Wlth 0\• County Clorll or Oren99 Counly on ADrll l . 1 .. 1 FUtM1 Aprll 22 ttll fl...... Pubill,_ 0.-Coa~I O••ly P1101. PUBLIC NOTICE P..Olished Orenvr C.0.•1 0•11• Piiot. "P"' I I• ,, lt .... I ·~·I AO"I ... "'°" 5. 11. It, '"I ,.., ,1 PUBLIC NOTICE CAMP PENDLETON <AP > -A Marine bat· talion of 530 officers and men completed a five-day 100-mile training hike across hills. highways and deserts from the Salton Sea in full battle pack. a spokesman said Led by batWon commander Lt Col. Jay V Sullivan, the blister footed Marines reached the gates at Camp PendletOll where the lsl Marine Division band struck up "The Marines Hymn." H•rr1san lnv..,l.Of') S.rvke•, Int J.,,..., w .... ,,"~ Tllil , .. .......,, ••> 11100 "'llh tr.. co .. nty Clerll of ~ange CounlY on Aprll J, 1911 f'11Q4t T"omat I' Tllompton tUtA G••PY JamH Cetllomen. 1011 Winl•rtrHn Plote, Co&le Mou, Ch•ltllne O<ivo. Wh•ttler. (.etllornl• Celltomlama tOMIS Thi• Ou&lnau " cond\IClod Oy • Thi& ....,.,..u "cono...<led l>y on in oonerel ~fp dlvldu•I TllO<naJ F fhomD-' Gr99 (.esll-or LM ~ ThOm-Thlt ,i.1...-t wos rn.o •1111 rno Thil 11et...,.nt wet 111.0 with 1 ... County Cler~ or Orenoo County on PICTITIOUI aUilMESS .. AMl STATEMENT T ... fOllOWll'll .,..."°" Ii OOll'Q 0Ull rwues. Al.OEN INTERNATIONAi.. J06 ""'9.,.rlll i>wnia. GorON O.I Mer C.llforni• nus SUPllllO. C.OUllTOP CAl.ll'OllHIA COUNTY 01' OllAMG£ Or-C..• s,,..ra-cwn 1 .. CJy1< C...tat Orin, WH1 haw A,.., Cell-• U7tl MARRIAGE Of' PE flTIONER SU MIN LIU P ... TOOMBAL Coun1yClerkolO,..n99Countyo11Aprll p..1110 '"' 11, "" Publl..,..., 0..""9' COOtl Oally Pllol, Apr II I U 11. 2t. "'' IUA.tl P'U- ,, .. >U Publll/WCI 0..""119 C...>I DoilV Piiot, Publl\1-d Or-Coe•t Dolly Pilot. Apr t•, 21 lt. Ma• S '"' ll:i..fl PUBLIC NOTICE PRISC11.1.A ALDEN MO~VRTRY ]Cl' MA•O&arlle Awn"' Corona del ~r. C:..Utorn1• •»U Tlllt Oulln•u I• conducted by • llMlle<I j)M1nt~lp RESPONOENT SITllCH ... I PAT00M8Al SUMMOHS ll'AMll.Y I.AWi CASE NUMal" Oll>ti-46 llOTICll Ma rine spokesman Lance Cpl. Tom Nowakczyk said one soldier dropped out of the gruelling, hot and dusty trek through 80 degree deserltemperatures. Shortly after arnv1ng al their base. the men of the 3rd Battalion. 5th Regiment and Isl Marine Division trooped to the 11-area parade field. the size of four football fields. passing in review before 1st Division commander MaJ Gen JamesC Day. l'ICTITIOU5 eU•INEU NAMI STATt:MfNT Apr 11, 2t, Moy s. 12, 1911 111111 I PUBLIC NOTICE Th• IOllOWl"il person " dofnQ Ou>I· ,..nu PICTITIOViaUSINllU l>r1.cllle M<Murtry 'l'w have --4!. TIM cou~ may This slet-t "'°' Ill.a with tllo ilocl•• ... !fist,.., wftlMott your IMl"I PICTITIOUlaU51NEU Courlly Cf••• ol Orenv-Counly on ...... ....i ... , ... ..-4 wlllllft )0 MAMt:STATt:MINT ADrl11• "" •• , •. 11-1Mlnlor'""ll""'"'°" fll• lollowl"ll Person• or• doing Pl60lft II you w\111\"' -~ uw advice of.,, PUBLIC NOTICE DEAD AT65 John Roosevelt AP'Wlf'..- SHEWARO & SONS • SONS. NAMl!STATAMENT Newporf F•brlc, Hardwore At· Tiie tollowl"9 penon ii 001ng bu>I •O< 1e1u Cublco, 112 2HI Sir••'• non es NOwPorl8ee<h,Caiilorn1••-..1 11) AMER IC"N MtJfFLER hrry" Slwwerd,U3'81yll10<•. SERVICE. ID) GOOD GUYS N•wporl8eecll,Ce1Uorn1on6'J MUFl'LEll SERVICE. "S' Haroor Th1\ Oulln<Kt h condw<teO OY an in· Blvd , c ... 1eww. C:•illornlat1'21 bu•lnou a& Publl•'*t Orel\00 C.O.tt D•lly Piiot, ett.,..,.y In Wt ,...n..-you "'9uld • OUN RIGHT C ... TERtNG, 162S April 2t, May S, U , If. 1"1 ltll II so 11ro .... lf M tnet y~r ~· •• lrvlnt •A. COii• Moa, CalUornl fllUdlftt. II 111y, moy ... llled on time. nm 1 PUBLIC NOTICE ... v1so1 0•~5<oll (roWloro. 101• N• I U&ted lie t•O ilernend•do. 11 lion•I Aw,,... c ... te ~. c.111orn1e trl-•1 ~ H<Wlr coatr• Utl •"' After a review pass before 5th Regiment com - m ande r Col John I Hopkins. the battalion reached its base where it was met by families and com- mended by Sullivan for "a magnificent Job ·• Youngest FDR son I Olv10uel Ctc11 C Sltp/>e!\\ S W1111•wood Terry A Stwwera Way. 1 r¥1r>e Callforn1e 011~ Th" \l•tement .,., filed """ '"" ""' ovs1nes• "<OllOU<ted by on 1n County Cl*rk ol Or.,99 Co..,ntr 011 April d1v1due l 11 '"' C C St•llhen• 1''60>'4 Tnll tl•temenl wet Ille<! wllll ltw Publl\IW<I O..enge Coo•I Doily Pilot. C°"nly Clerk ol Or ..... County on April Gordon Bryari ltlQhlon. uni N~lMIU aotdlencla a _,,.. •'" Uil. ,.._.... Irvin• Bl•d "°'le,.,.. ... C•lllornla SlATl!MENTOPAaANOOMMINT ..... ., .... diH Le• .. , .. .,mACIOfl t?•n 0' USI OP ttot• tltuo. Thi• bUtlMU " condu<l•O Oy • l'ICTITIOUS aUllNt:SS HAM• SI U'lotl ..... Mllklwr ., unwjo .. lomllod perlnt>rSl!fP Tllo lollowlng -~ -·d th• Wll ......... Ut• ·-··· -r1• 0.vld S Crawford UH of ltw ,'Kllllou• bu>lntU nemo 11.cerl• lomeill•l•rn•"t•. d• HI• Tllll not-I WO\ lllod Wllll l"" $H ANOI $ OELI al aeaa 1. "' .... , .... r_, ... •1..-CI .... , Cownty Clerk of OrMQe County onl lrhlol. Colla MON, Calllorlllo lley a19-, .,..... -'"ltlratl~ • The marching Marines burst into cheers after Sullivan announced four-day passes from private through sergeant and three-day passes to officers and staff non-commissioned officers succumbs AD• 11 1t M411' j 12. 1991 , 1111 11 '1 '"' Pl..,_ PUBLIC NOTICE N·7JI .. l'fCTITIOUS IUSINIU Publl.,_, Or-CoO\I Dolly Pilot Apr 21 ?a.MOJS, 12 1"1 t•t.tt PUBLIC NOTICE April 10 1911 tU2• The fl<tillOUI °"""°" ,,_,,,. j Uempo FU'lllll roforte<I lo a-wa• fllOO In C°"nty I 10 THE llESPONDENl Pv1:>11..-0r.,. c. .... , Oe11, PltOI on •11211• Tnt .-1111ono• NS ,,,.., ........ °" Apr u. 21,,. -y s. '"' 17Jl.ti HR I ER SHANDI 1UO Po•I toncorn1no your .,, ... ,..Qt II you, .. , _ _ _ C•r"•Y Pt•<.• N••oort 8••<h \o "'• • r~ •tU\•n lQ 0.'fl ot uw PUBLIC NOT CE C•lifor-N• nwo d•tt that th1\ summotn •S Mrvf'<I on J JOSEPHINE SHANDI ltlO ~rl ,ou your°"'""",...., Ot enlerod and C•rne., Plat •. Newpon 8••<" tf\e tot.irt may Mitt• J"°9,,_.nt con. NAME STATIMl .. T DEATHS ELSEWHERE NEW YORK IAP l John A Roosevelt, 65. investment banker and youngest of four sons of President frankhn D. Roosevelt, has died of heart failure at New York Hospltal Cornell Medical Center I 1 ht loll-1"9 perlOfl I\ d00"9 OU>I· n•'-' ., VENDING PROGRESS CO .• 1"1 Collly Woy, u1111 I Anahelm, Calllornla .... flCTITIOUS IUSINaU NAMEHATIMEMT The foll-Ing perM>ft It 0011\9 11\1\1 neU•' PICCADILLY PARlt CAl'E •1 9.,,,. StrMI, Spec• o· NewpGrl Boach, C<IHIONllO ST AT IMENT OP AaANOOfOUMT Of USIOI' ,.CTIT10US auSt .. EU NAME TM 101._,ng per'°" ...,, _,..a tr.. UM ol lho 11<1111°"' bu~MU name THE SHOE DOCTOR, 4l2A Ee<I 111h StrHI, CO\la ,.,..,. Celllornle C•lltOfN• ~ te11'\1n9 1niUO(\•"'• or Ott\et Ot"der~ CO+" Tf'l1S bu~m•·U ••s conch• t«I by _.. t erning d•w•,•ot\ ol pr~rtJ". ICXk.IMI lndlvtdu.tl 1upport child (11\tod1, CP\lld suppor1 This •\a-I .,.,, l11eo with ,,.,. ellorney •~ tOll>. encl ""h°'""' •• Counly Clerk OI Or_.99 Counly on hel e• may Ot ll•Anlad Oy t~ c°"'I Maren JI, '"1 Tnt II•'"",,,,,..,' ol ,._., realng Of r DETROIT 1AP1 Ellubt'th llughl's C'.onett. 73, the last SUl"\IVIOI( child of the late l ' S Chief Justice Charles t:~ans Hughes and founder of lhe U S Supreme Court H1::. torical Socle'ty. died Sa\ur day '\;\'ACK \ Y 1Af' Wlfl•em E l onQ. 31l1 llell• River Driv• He<•....S. H•l9hh. Ce lllornla •110 Ronald 0 Cre~. U S IOollO La Hoore. C•lllorn•• -31 ')1e\UIOry 1'111"11 l'ff U 00 li'UIW monf'y or or~rly. or olf'•' courl Tiii\ °'411'4U It cOOd<KlaO Oy Ol\ In· dlviduol WOiiam E LOnQ Tflll Slel-1 WH 11100 Wll!I \tw County Clerk ot Oren .. County on Aprll t, 1'11 This blrliMU h conov<led Or •n In divldu•I. lt-ldO Ctal9 Tiii• 1let......,1 w41S ruoo with tho Co.inly Clorllol Or.,,.. County on Apr II nu1 · Tllo Flcllllout BuJIMU Neme ro· lofrod lo lbOvO WM fll.,i In 0<- C°"nty on S ..... PubllllWd Or ..... Co .. 1 Dolly Pilot, April lt. Moy S. 11, It, 1"1 1"711 PUBLIC NOTICE f:d" ard "Eddil'" Sautn. 66 l'Om poser arranger for Ben n~ Goodman and other big hand leaders in the 1930s and 1940s and latt•rfor Rroad\\ a\ sho" S, t11ed TUl'!>da' of a hl':l rt ullack Roosevelt. whose only encounter with politics was when he ran unsuc· '1fft14 Put>ll•NO Orange Coe•I Delly Pllol, 11. "" PllOP'ESSIONAL lSCllOW Scott Edword Holmes, 20SO e .. 1 Ocun l'ronl, B•lboe, Celllornla ., .. , Thi• buMM'l\ wot <-U<led bY en llldlvldual PICTITIOUS eUSIMISS Soll HOlrnet .. .,,.. STATt:MaNT Al>" 14, 21, 21, Moy S, '"' 11-..1 WASHINGTON 1AP 1 f cessfully in the 1957 New St: .. VICH . P'.O. ao• 11"7 ............ Celllof"fll••Z711 This •1•1-1 was tiled willl Ille Tiie loOowlne .,.....,,, It dolnq bull County Clerk of Orengo County on ,.. .. OJ. AJ>rlfl, 1 .. 1 KATHl.EEN A ZACCARIA, PARADISE VALLEY Arti (APl Bernard Sakowltt, 74. chairman or Sakow1l7. Inc . a fashion store cham. died Friday Avis Bohlen. 68. "ido" o ambassador Charles E Y.ork City mayoral race. Bohlen. died or cancer m hN died Monday . PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUI austNt:U NAM• STATa-..EMT .. , .. ,., Publls,_ Or-Coe•I Delly Piiot. Apr 71, 21, Mey s. n. ttet 1110 .. 1 l'IJ7U2 Con"'l'-'l. ~ Or......,..,po, • lta, P .. 011t11ee1 Oranee Coesl Daily Pilot. I.a Pa1,.,..cailf0ml•*ll. '-P<'ll I. 14,11,lt, tttt 1'21-11 KATHLEEN ANN ZACCARIA, He was a Republican in a staunchly Democratic family. PUBLIC NOTICE ______ ,.oo or.....,,., •1•. 1..a ,........, · homt' Wl•dnl•:.da\· DEATH NOTICES The 1o11-1ne -son I• dOlnll Oonl· net.\ •1 ~ACIC A ME ENTeA.PRISES, 71J N71111 Marg ... rli;.~--· corona Ool Mer. PICTITIOUI •UllN•U P'ICTITIOUI •UllMIU Colllll'nle Or M HAMI STATIMt:MT MAMI STATl...aMT 1>1y-M r, 713 arprllo The lollowlno penont or• dolnll Ave,,..., COrono dol Mar, C.lllornla !Mlil""H el ,,.!~11otlowlnt llOflDft Is do"'9 bull· t~UI .,..._ I .... EURO.AMERICAN KITCHEN A GREEN KEE p ER, UH 1 di h. • I c.-tod by ... IATH, lOllD 9rltllDI StrM Morttl, ""''° Martllfflte ........ -. MIMIOn vie•-. wldu~ f1, Newti«t 9ffdl, catlfornle ~. C.t llfor'ftll ~ -• ,.. PUBLIC NOTICE Born in Washington. CONNELL M P e r k 1 n s a n d ORRIN WILSON CON grandchildren. Jason and NELL, passed away on April Prentice Perk ms, brothers 23. 1981 at home m Laguna R P Connell or Oakland. Ca Hills, Ca He allended UCLA and Dr J Robert Connell of and Loyola Law School He Sheridan. Wyoming Private was employed at General services will beheld at sea for Dynamics in PQmona. Ca He the family at Newport Beach, is survived by tus lovin& wife Ca In beu of flowers dona Jane ( Kennicott l Con nell and lions would be appreciated lo daughter Michael Connell the Orange County Founding Perkins. son-In law Robert Chapter National Kidney Match 13, 1916, Roosevelt graduated from Harvard in 1938 and was briefly em ployed by Wilham filene's Sons Co.., a de· partmenl store in Boston, before Joining the Navy in 19'Cl. He at· tained the rank of lieute nant commander and served aboard the aircraft carriers Wasp and Hornet. He was the holder of the Bronze Star. Tl'lh ..= ~~ 111.., wllJI tf.. . EureDeCfl A Tile,• C.lllornl• <«· evo1.,.. J .. ........,,.,. '°' w .. , .... C I _..,,.,,_ 1000 Brit~ Strool Hot1h, ...,,.., .. d, .. ,"°" CAllfonlla 92.Ml. wnly Cl••' o 0•.,,.,. C-Y .., Sllll• n .......,., a..11 C..lltotnlo Tiii• ~-It conclWC,.., by ., 111. IALTl IHGHO.,i SMITH It TUTHILL WHTCLIFf CHAPIL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 rounJat1on oC Southern California. P 0 Box 84.ll. 1 NewportBeach.Ca 92660 I CORONA DORINE CORONA. a resl· dent or Costa Mesa. Ca Paned away on April 25. 1981 at the age or 60. She 1s sur- vived by her husband Louis Corona of Costa Meta. Ca . 1 April IO, ,., '*° . . 4lvlf\lel. P~lf)lad Or .... ~ 0.11:1:::~ -.!".:~-........ It cOftduCIOd bY a <«· lv .. ynJ Hel'nl*lll A 14 21 a. Ma 1 1•t 1nw1 ..... -·-Tiii• 11a1omen1 wa rneo w1111 tt1e II< • y • E,,,_lh ~Tllo County Cler• ot ()< ..... C:O..nly on PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS auSINEH N"""" ITATt:MaNT Tho toll-Int PoNOft It clo"'9 llUM· ....... ROAD'S ENO, tlJO Newport 1ou1 .... ..-e1. C..ta Me'-. Calllorlll•. O . Foley W llSOll, 1•40 Cherl•nM911'. l.on9 &each, Ceil!Of'nl•. TlllJ Mines> I• conouc:i.4 lly.,, In· dlvlOUal 0. Poley Wiison Thi• at•t-t ••• meo with Ille County Clorll 01 Orengo C.Ounty on Aprfll, t•t. P1"4ff Put>lltlwd Or ..... Colin Dally Piiot, April I, 14, ll, ll, 1•1 ttto-11 Tlllt ............ wea tlled wll1' ltw Aprfl J, t•t County Ctar ll of OrM911 County on April), 1•1 PUfl.W PU\111"'94 Or ..... C:0.11 0.lly Pliol, Pl"'tt April I, 14, 11, 21, 1'11 Hu.ti Pubfl-Or.,,.. Coatl Deity "''°'• ----___ ----- April 1, 14, 21. 21. 1•1 lt7t-ll PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICJ: • ·'"' son Jlm Vermilya of South For several years after leaving the Navy he was with Grayson· Robinson Stores in Los An&eles. Arter stints as president and director or the Regency Fund in· vestment company and president of Universal Products Inc., Roosevelt joined Bache Halsey Stuart Shields Inc. in 1957. He reUred as senior vice president and board member at Bache la1t December. PUBLIC NOTICE f'tllCl•OTHHS SMSTMS' MOITUAI' 627 M11n St HunhnQton &iach 536-6539 - M&COblal MOITUAiltn LIQutla Beac;t\ '94-t-41S L.aaun• Hiiia 168-0933 ~ JU*I Qlp11tr1no '"''77' - ~a1una, Ca.. 1 4aughter arolyn Webb of Dal\• Point, a .• 1 brother Alde11 Daven- rt of Ftorid•\1 sister Louise ehrke of Be mont Shores. ~a •• arandchildren. Funeral ervlceawtUbebeldonThurs· day. April 30. 1981 al l :OOPM at the Plerce Brothers Bell BroaCSway Chapel with Rev . L. V, Tornow olriciaUn1. In· ttrment at Harbor Lawn Memorial Park. Friends may call 1t I.he mortuary on Tues-d~d April 28, !Ml and on W~ ndda1. April 29. 1181 rrom 4:00PM to fl:OOPM both ldtytr l'len-e · &rothers Bell Broedway Mortuary dlrec• tora. ROl>GB He la survived by b..ls wife, the former Irene Boyd, whom he married in 1965, two dau1bten by a previous marrta,e, Anne Rooaevelt Luke and Joan Roouvelt Schoonmaker, and thfee brothers, Jatnu of Newport Beach~ Elliott and Y~anklln Deaano Jr. _ _.........,.._ - PV81JC 11Ccn'IC£ gowARD COMODOR ROOOI, wa1 a (\Jberman 10d • 41) )'tfr r•ldent of &a1un• Buch, Ca. pu1ed -•CTt e!llHllM •• a, on April n, 11191. It. TMftl=·~:.... •. Uave• blt '°" Sean Hodt•• _ ••i Auilt LlaP6t ~. eou1l11 ¥Aitur1..a A111t1 •HU, aa Jimmy Nlftb, maey ftitn4i N, N••=. la1tltv•rt1~1t• •· up ,au 4owP th• eo1tt, Nc"J:!.,.. 1, ;:r.,:::t.0 w.IJtlltt; •n4 *la wbo remtmbtr bl.I Wlt•AM.~""'· loJAltJ, lltndn•tt and r111u1t11M•1t~'Y•ill· ..,..... he wat a korun •~ ..... ,,....,,.'- War Vttlrin lild • bod1 •\lr• , ........... _ '" ...... fertau.tlW•.Senica•lU eei-, c.__ .. ar-. <»-tY • MMW"6ar.atMa.&l~• .-.a.twt ,_. Dua POIMRarilotwit.h~ ~o-... C11M1 o-ttt,...; ,...au .... ~UDI _.,,,.,(';'a,,twt • ....., • •r,,...,...., C.Olltortllo*Zl. I ntt _,..., It conouc•tt DY ... ,,.,_ lvldual K•lhloen Ann Z..Ccerl• Tl'tll Itel.,_ ._ .. lllod Wllll lhe unly Clerk ol Or.,ge C.O..nly on prH 14, 1•1. P'l..e1 PVOllllWCI Or .... l:Mfl !)ally Piiot, .... W..y s. 12, "· ... , 1.,..., PUBLIC NOTICE •uU'lor 11fd proc.t.o•nv\ may •tM> tt '"" Oeltd March ll '"1 LttA ar-n Cler,, 81 J .. M1no Gel.s, °"""'' PlllO J PLIEMING, I.SO. 1111 Wlltlll'11 •• , •. ,1111 f'l- 1.H A ........ Cellf'"""a NOit UIJI JIH7SJ Publllllled Oreneo Coe11 Dolly Pllol. Apr U, 21, U, Moy S, 1"1 171'1 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE "'"'" Publlllhod Or ..... Co""I Deity Plltl • Apr 14, 21, 21, Moy S, ltll 17»41 W. Covina dction stops Huntington work _.., DllMy,.. IWI ...... semi-mall, complete with a one-way traffic route, park benches, trees and shrubs. The ·$325,000 project is expected lo be finished by summer. TRANSFORMATION GOING ON -Main Street in downtown Huntington Beach is blocked off to inland traffic as coastal shopping area off Pacific Coast Highway is changed into a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kid porn case delayed More charges pending against Huntington couple The arraignment of a Hunt· ington Harbour couple arrested in connection with a local child pornography probe has been de- layed until May 15. working with officers in the Los Angeles Police Department's child exploitation unit because the probe involves some people who reside in that city. By PAT&ICK KENNEDY Of .... DeltY ...... ._.. Excavation of a three-acre chemical dump in Huntlngton Beach bas been brouebt to a bait by an emersency ordinance paaaed by the West Covina City Council. The emereency ordinance forbids further transfer of haiardous chemical waste from the abandoned Boucher Landfill to the privately owned BKK hazardous wast.e dump in West Covil)a. BKK is the only site in Southern California that accepts hazardous materials The next closest is in Ketllemen Hills, about 230 miles north. An official of the State Depart- ment of Health Services, which certified the excavation, said ~­ day that the State Attorney General's office will seek a tem porary restrairung order to al low the hazardous waste excava· lion to continue. Excavation of the chemieal dump, located 700 feel southeast of Warner A venue and Bolsa Chica Street, began last week but still was scheduled to take IJ more weeks Peter Von Ellen. counsel for Mola Development Co which as financing the excavation. called the West Covina ordinance "totally irresponsible " He satd the developer and BKK also would seek a temporary restraining order. He said work will co ntinu e on non contanunated areas. The developer plans to build Schools eye activity fee Orange County Deputy Dis- trict Attorney Marty Enquist said he requested the delay to consider additional charges against John Steen, 55, and his wife Christi, 30. Huntington Beach police raided their Venture Drive home April 5 and said they seized films and snapshots described as child pornography. Creative campus GWC adds basket weaving challenge Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict will consider charging stu· dents a $25 fee next year to participate in athletics, band or drill teams. The Steens initially were charged with two counts of child molesting and were scheduled for arraignment last Friday. Golden West College has been described as a place that offers cla:;ses in everything short of basket weaving. The Huntington Beach school will correct that oversight this week with a six-part workshop entitled ··creative Basketry Techniques." The school board also ia scheduled tonight to consider re· ducing the full-time athletic trainers at the six com- prehensive high schools to part- time employees to reduce ex- penses. The <;.tWPle are free on Sl00,000 b'ail ee~ The free sessions will be held Thursdays from 9 a m. to noon in the community cent.er. Enrollment is limited, and pre-registration can be placed by calling the community The board meets at 7 p.m. at 10251 Yorktown Ave .. Hunt· ington Beach Mary Yvonne Plunkett, 22, of Long Beach, was taken into custody during the raid on the Steens' house, but Enquist said no charges have been filed against her. services office, 893-6250. . In the course, instructor Ginger Luters will discuss coil- ing, twining, shaping the basket, changing colors, in- corporating handles and lids, and creating patterns and de- signs. Huntington Beach police de- tective Len Damerow said he is Villa, vistas top tour ·Mediterranean elegance perches on Laguna hilltop Bv JOHN NEEDHAM OftbDaity~letSl.aff A featured s top on this Sunday's Laguna Beach Charm House Tour sponsored by Village Laguna will be a walk through a Florentine style villa. perched on a hilltop. The former beach house was remodeled nearly 20 years ago by Beverly Hills art collec- tor Proctor Stafford to resemble a palatial residence he lived in during the 1940s in Italy. VIUA SIENA IS NOW owned by Michael Smith and John Thompson, who are• both employed in the entertainment industry. Thompson is a vocal coach and music teacher at Marina High School in Huntington Beach. Smith is the personal manager of such celebrities as Diahann Carroll, Kaye Ballard, John Davidson and Julie Harris. As the first home in Arch Beach Heights to be included in the annual tour, the 3,500-square- foot house provides a magnificent view of ttie Laguna coastline, as well as Catalina and Palos Verdes on a clear day. THE FRONT DOOR OPJ:NS onto a spacious terra colta-colored courtyard with the tile-bottomed pool painted with a fierce looking Chinese dragon. Around the pool are a life-size sculpture or two Greco-Roman wrestlers and several larie terra cotta planters impo~ from Italy con- taining thick-leafed tropicall{Jlants. An antique copper dragon bead adorns the balcony above the courtyard and .serves aa a fountain apd water source to fill the pool. Blooming daisies and other flowers abound. 224 condominluma on 12.5 acres that includes the abandoned chel'J)ical dump, which was used for oil refinery wastes ia the 1940s. Bob Fast, city manager ol West Covina, said the ordinance approved Monday immediately stops transfer of toxic wastes to BKK from "uncontrolled dumps that weren't monitored by state officials." The unanimous action came after months of citizen protests over BKK containing hazardous substances. West Covina residents had specifically criticized the Hunt ington Beach excavation as an example of one city transferrin~ its dangerous materials to Wesl Covina, Fast said. Miller Chambers, Southern California supervisor for lbt State Health Department, said the excavation and traMfer ot waste was being monitored by state officials and "there wu nc health hazard." Harriett Wieder, Second Dis- trict Supervisor, said today that the West Covina action was based on "justifiable fear bul not enough logic and facts." She noted that the state health o fficials had certified the ex· cavation. Huntington Beach Mayor Ruth Finley said the BKK closure would "have ramifications not just for Orange County, but for all of Southern California " Hollinden unsure of council future Confirming that he will step do"'n soon from t .... o county transportation posts. Fountain Valley City Co uncilman Al Hollinden said he has not de c1ded yet whether he will seek an add1t1onal council term Hollinden said confusion sur faced last week when a letter was made public announc mg his plans not to seek reap porntment after June 30 to the Orange County Transportation Com mission. which he chairs. and the Orange County Transit D1stnct The councilman can hold the county posts only as long as he 1s an t•lected city offi cial He said he could not guarantee he will be a councilman after his current term expir~s next spnng Holtinden also said he desires more tame to do research He as assistant director of UC Irvine's Institute or Transportation Studies He was elected to the Fountam Valley City Council in 1970 and has ser ved as mayor several times Asked when he might de termme whether he will seek a nother council term. Jlolhnden replied "Dec1s1on making time .,., ill bt• .,.,hen filing time comes ·• Police seek • witnesses to truck death Huntington Beach police are looking for witnesses m connec· lion with the death March ?\Of a truck driver who was found pinned between his cab and the truck frame. Police Sgt Ed McErlam said a tractor-trailer rig driven by Robert Edmund Bray, 61. Hunt- ington Beach. was round parked southbound on Springdale Street 100 yards south of Edinge r Avenue on that Monday after· noon McErlain said anyone who re- calls seeing any people or vehicles around the white trac- tor.trailer rig on that day should call police between 8 a m. and 6 p.m Monday through Friday at 536-5951 or 536·5965. The home's interior is filled wilb antiquea and other collectibles gatbeM 'by Smith and Thompson, who_ do a great deal o1 business traveling. Pet dog and crocheted afghan add~ tM ccnineJI of upstc.dn bedroom of MedUemmeon villa decoroted in brown. and n&lt tones. Windows <it'e lowemf cftd walk-bl clout at r•ar ha. 1ky-light. FOR WARMTH ON CB.ILLY evenlnp the upstairs· bedroom haa a cast iron 18th century Frencb fireplace. Jn aumll\er the room ll cooled by • ltJOI style ceilln• fan. On Thompson'• arand piano in t.he llvinl room are several porcelain Llardro fl•urtnea from Spain. La Uque crystal lines the coffee ta- ble. The downst.AJ.rs batbroom, wh.tcb opena onto the pool deck, w f sunken Japanese tub. The waU. ol th• upat.ain bathroom are covered with Italian marble impotted by the bome'a f~r owner. • I ; I . Art /or Ali'I loU on Costa Meto'I SuperioT Avenue thumbing Rt municipal authority with a masterpiece of 30 feet called .. Volcano." While admittedly, Ali Rooshan sometimes ir- ritates the citizenry when be gets too vocal, there are a number of observers who think his alleged art work looks pretty nice out there on Superior Avenue. SOME RAVE COMPARED it favorably to other ste~l sculptures, like "Vestige," that was given the boot from the Main Beach Park at Laguna Beach. Others have suggested it's a lot nicer to look at than rocks or rills or butterfly bills. ~v~ certa}n folks who clajm to have no ap- preciation of f me arts suggest that whatever Ali erects on Superior A venue is bound to be an im- provement over the present landscape, where rust- ing auto bodies and other aging castoffs tend to fill the vision. ONE WAG EVEN quipped that if you figured Superior Avenue was the development standard for Costa Mesa, then the City Seal should carry the side view of a rusting 1939 Chrysler Airflow. Or ll)&Ybe a DeSotO bumper with a tin can stuck on eacn· end. Anyway it looks like neither Ali nor City Hall are willing iO give quarter, so bis waterfall prayer tower, steel wings and volcano are all headed for Superior Court. ln view of this, Roushan did draw this unexpected ally. Are you ready? His surprising support came from the inland city of Brea. · Brea•a newspaper only last week recounted In somewhat of a lament, the troubles that have visited Rousban as be attempted to beautify his home dty. The Brea l>BJ>el'. in ita editorial, also Doted that Brea has suffered tbe reverse problem with art. That is, the paper alleges tbat every time some developer want.I to erect a new buildina in that com- munity. the city authorities lo<* around and uk him where its art is located. PUSmNG TO UPG&ADE tbe Brea ci'ric image, it was alleged that City Hall wants space in front of every structure for a sculpture. And they .seem to smile even more heavily oo developers who fill the apace witb something of an art form. Art has thws become a Brea passion. The Brea editorial suggested, 46Rou.sban pack up hla weldina tll>S and art and move to Brea . . . Brea just might be the place for Rousban to relocate." ~ition, if taken officially by tbe Brea piunicl authonties, should give Costa Mesa civic auth ·es pause. ABE TREY K.ICIUNG the ne"Xt Picasso or Rembrandt in tbe teeth? ~t ii Rousban turns out to be the Ollly artist his -. remembers from our era? Costa Mesa could ' .. ~1t.akin& the artiltlc Pl"•tfall ol tbe catW"J. Juat UUDk Of h1ltory remem· berlna O>sta Mesa Only because the city waa up; 1ta1ea by Brea. Slain son ' u:as model to morn NORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla. <AP> -To bU invalid mOther Gary Doyno was the model son: cooking her breakfast and car- ing for her day and night since she was crippled 21 years ago. • She never knew he bad another life. Gary Doyno's body was found by a family friend early April 3, slumped over a safe in the living room as his mother lay in the , bedroom. Polic~ say be was a drug dealer. "WE BELIEVE BE was ripped off for drugs and money." said de· tective Ray Nazario of the Dade County homicide squad. "He was dealingheavilyinnarcotics." Mrs. Doyno, 58, was struck by a car when Gary was S years old. After spending a year in a hospital, the divorcee came home loberyoungaon. He "cooked my breakfast and u.sed lo carry my wheelchair and pul il in the trunk of the car," she recalled. When beraoo was 7. be inailted she learn to drive a specially equipped car. "He gave me strength," abe said. "We went through so much together." DOYNO, 2', apparently went to sleep about 11 p.m. April 2. About midnight he was beaten, forced down a fight of stairs and abot lo death. police said. Mrs. Doyno told police she heard a loud noise and called a friend who reassured her, saying she mu.st have beard dogs knocking over garbage cans. The friend later came over and foundtheyoungman'sbody. Police did not determine what the klllera took. A $500 bill was left lo ljhe safe and $20,000 was un- touched on a chair in Doyno'a room. lnveatigaton and Mn. Doyno aald Gary muat have known hi.I killers because the bouae bad a doorbell and in- tercom. "Ubeopenedthatdoor, it bad to be • friend oo the other aide," bi8 mothers aid. N AZAaJO SAID the killen •'knew bia mother was there and tbat abe couldn't 1et out of bed wttboutbelp." Mrs. Doyno baa offered a $10,000rewardlntbecaae. "They killed him like animal, "sheaaid. Workaholic ineffective BERKELEY <AP) Workaholics may be more trouble than they are worth, a University of California paycbololitt's study irldkat.ea. Rather than belna the most productive employees, worbbOUCI tend to ruin their health and lose thelr Job ef- fec:tivedeSS, wtth a narrow focus on wort to the excwalon of all else, accordlnt tO 1 atucJy by Cbarle. Gli.rfieJd. I OOod '°' nine piec. of Ju fey, goldtfl 11town l<.enWClty Fried Chlctlen, with lout 101i., a latge COi• alaw, a twge ~ pot1tqta and a IMdlum oravy Ltmll two offfr• pet PVt~M. ~ good OOly tor comblnatton whllel dlltt Otdttl. C41ttOl'Nf pay1 111 appllcllble , .... tall GOURMET MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD FRESH Nortben1 Red Salmon Wbo~e or Half ...................... 3.98 lb. We will gladly filet your salmon for no extra charge DELANEY'S NOW HAS A LIMITED SUPPLY OF FRESH SWORDFISH. SO GOOD WHEN BROILED OR BARBECUED. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and top ch'>ice beef aged at least JO days to the peak of i;erfecuon Fresh Frozen Local Grown Rabbits 1.98 lb. Center Cut Chuck Roasts . . . . . . . . . . 1.49 lb. Boneless Rolled Beef Routs ........ 2.98 lb. Half or Whole Spring Lamb Cut _ ud Wrapped for yoar Frener ...... l.8t lb. All meat item!! purchased at Delaney's are Freezer Wrapped and properly marked for your easy freezer identification. FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE 150.00 man. please1 Your order is under complete refngeration from our store to your door m our refrigerated trucks Call In the morning and your order "all be delivered to your home the same afetmoon Tbls ad effect.lve Wed., 4/21 t.bru Tues., 5/5 DELAllEY 'S MORNING FRESH PRODUCE · LOCAL-GROWN LARGE SIZE SWEET JUICY STRA WHERRIES. 3 Full bskt.s $1.00 For your complete catering sen•ace. from a complete stl ·d0\\<1\ dinner party to party trays delivered to your home For information call Delaney·s CATERING Department. ask for Tom Martm DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanry's Frlva~ Label Champagne 1750 mill 2.15 e1. or 33.00 per use Bolla 'Soave 1750 mal l Bel Arbres Chenla Blanc I 750 mal l Canadian Club 1 One ht er 1 Scoresby Scotch ( 750 mil 1 (QneUter) . . All liquor and wine plu!> tax I 3.9S ea. .. 3.stea. 9.99 U . s.ss ea. 6.85 ea. Delaney's now f eaturtng fresh pasta. Jelly Belly's, the Official White House Jelly Bean ......................... 2.39 lb. Pepsi 12 pk. reg. or diet ...... 3.19 plus tx Store Hours M, <losed Sunday 2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-5520 TWO WEEKS ONLY FREE SPINAL SCREENING EXAMIMA TIOM & X-RAYS APRIL 27th thru ~A Y 8 The Yarwood Chiropractic Office of Costa Mesa is sponsoring a Spinal O'teek-up and Scoliosis Screening program as a public service. This service will include consultation. examination. x-rays (if indicated) and a report of findings. By appointment only. Call 646-0516 Monday through Friday. <X>NSUL T ATION Tiie Cl ...... II ...... ~ .. ..... ,...,...Wltwy _.,., ........ ,, ..... -... , .., ......... ., .... l•l•rlH er etlller '''••I ......... hM4.,.. .... re..-.ef .. cJ I .......... ~ecter .wlll ••kl rec•••T....._. r• ... •1 ........... er referr .. to ............. X-RAYS Mot •II p•tlHh re~•lre 1..,..,.. ............ ...... ..... ..,....... .. -1 ... ... .., .......... ~--... ........,.ff .... ... ., ............. ..... ....., u I ....... .... ...................... ............... .., ........ •lt••r••lltl•• ••4/•r ........ REPORT Of FINDINGS After t••-clecter ••• cerrelet•cl r••r ........ . lteu4 epo• , .. •latery. ............. x .... ,. (ff. ,. .... ,.. ... reah•. rep•rt •f fledl•t• ••d recn 1 htfw Wc°"4 ltJ ,._.....,CIA-- EXAMINATION• SlDoe 1000 A.D .• tMN tiaV. .._ foar eXtremel,y long "waves" of lnllat!Qa 1" ~1l~ and America, ea~b • ..,.. 100 years in leatth. All have 1barecl ••a common rbythm and a COmt.nOll chronoloJy." All have fOUowed ''• c:dmmoo pattern of relative price lncrea•e• and a common sequence of aS-olute movementl." And all ban been alike ln "common cauaet and common consequences.'' Rllbt bOw, early In the decade of the lllOI, we are reacbinl toward t.be climax ol the fOUJ\b wave. lei 16'1 >I f.ll ctreaded con• WhUe the ~ ~ ob' clualon of tb11 • /« fourth wave ''la :..· not yet in •lltrt. nma PllTll ~-,,, the history of · 1 ~ earlier price movementa 1u11esta the end cannot lie far in the future." these are amone the profoundly significant, and in mall)' ways allo profoundly borrifyinc findine• of historian David Hackett Fischer, writinl in a recent issue of "The Journal" of tbe· Inatitute for Socioeconomic Studies headquartered •t White Plains, N.Y. While nch of the waves -occurrtnc during the 13th, the 15th-17th, the 18th and the '20th centuries - bas been extensively studied on its own, never before bas any blalorian attempted, as Fischer bas. to compare and Interrelate the four. (Fischer Is chairman ol lhe history department at Brandeis Univ61ity md is naUooally known as author of "AginJ in Al!Jerlca "> WHAT IS SO PSOFOVNDLY algnificant about Fischer's analysis la the warning, both stated and Implied, that the United' States (and Europe) has been dead-wrong ln its economic po li c ies . particularly under Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter during recent years. lnate'ad of "coolinc" the economy, persistent efforu to control inflation have bad the opposite and uaintended result of drivine prices higher. The explanations? Each cycle, Fischer points out, has been preceded by a huge increase in population, a resu1Un1 ballooning in demand for loods. a •training to the limit of productive capacity -and then, inflationary monetary·borrowina policies. IN TIDS, THE fourth wave, U.S. government policies in recent years have "intenaifled" infla- tionary pressures. Fischer completed has studles betore President Reagan took office. Reagan's top advt.era may not have read hia report, depr-esaiog but potentially of enormous value to all and each of ua. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORltCAM "INll Dow-J-..,._, ~y,,.,.v. SOLD COINS ·-Op1f1 H11f1 i.-Clo• Ole • T"' ~f.l.'l\11:._Sfl =..:..•t" 15 Utt *-61 to1 M 10UI 14»..JI-O. IS 1:.:: .. ~~.~.~.~·.-~ T,.,, .................... , 1,a1.- UUlt ............... ... • 1'1.Jll WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK CA.., ~. 27 Mw_.. TeN.J. OKllMCI ~ ~ , .. = l:.'t: ~ WMAT AMLJIOIO NEW YORK IAPl Apr. t7 ,.,..,,, .. .L ., ,,. ,.,. 127 17 'QQ l bl' :i-..1:1 1od iol '" I A :tq 1 " ,, jMOYIE REVIEW -.. flnai••H'\l ltudtntl who 1Wiaceia JO 1 an later u a liUftllaU In Jolu9on Count1. "l lbo\llht l could b9 ol IOID• lm~rtppt tel'Yl~:· be ••x?ln • vorce-. onr that ~ th• 10,v1u Jwnp, • but my lU. worked out dlflerent •• Ch'nlno Hll ul) tbe mar.ball M the coudeoce ol ttHt story, then 1tvH blm nOthlria to ••Y abOut lt. Beald hil bandiome flee .nit 1well hat, ·Avenll 11 an lntanstble, almott vapo~H>rot11onllt. Bow dld ht •et trom the lawnt of Haward to the wlkta pf Ca1par, Wyo., 11s a trial"lbaU!~ Wby? At one point, hll lover. Ella (llabeUi Huppert) remarkl 0 you never auwer anythin1 peraortal," and neither doee Cirolno, Krl1tofferton ii stranded In a ch'llracter who baa bO life to breathe lntO \,he ICeDet, he'I hooked UJ) to the movie Uke an anonyDM>us patient on a reapirator -and 10 are "'' Clmlno'a muddl d tblnklog served hlm load· vertantly well In •The Deer Hunter" (people are still ttyill8 to n;ure out what h was "aayln1" > but tn ''Heaven•1 Gate" it's indecent exposure. If he were to work on a smaller scale he'd be more popula.-with the lndµstry th•t flnancea hlm and he oitght be forced to \lh>rk a Uttle more substance ln· lo bis scripta before the cameras roll. My ayrn- pathies 10 to Cimino for the 1nlling "He•ven 's Gate" got In New York because the film releaaed last wee" is not a bad one. Somebody ou1ht to put a decent script Into his hands. Mid~ay throuab the movie the plot be8in1 tq. and evacuations are brilliantly choreoarat>hed and c:on1eal: ttM rpo~yed ranchers of the Stoc~ ln "Heaven'• Gate," they're au lovlnely Cl\>lW'ed Growen A.alOdfation hire 50 eunmen to •hoot or ln historic sep1a by Vilmos Silamond. As in ''The bane almOlt every able-bodied ln l~n County, LA director at Hollywood Bowl Deer Hunter." the opposine action of bk>od.lh;ed wf¥> they believe are ateallnt cattle and ruining LOS ANGELES <AP> -Loa Angeles •nd beauty becomes almost tidal at times -we re prollu. Aver1U, whc> bas known about the plot for -Philharmonic muaic dire~tor Carlo ¥aria Giulini swept rrom one hllh lo another. In "The Deer wteb (be wu a member of the usodation before will be back rrom Italy, where his wife ls recover- ffunter " Derek Wubbum's sensitive acnpt set us )hey threw bim out), belatedl.Y 1preada the qews to ing from a stroke, In time ror his four scheduled up for' those scenes. bui Clmino'1 script for lbe poor slay, German and )rtsh people Marked appearances at the Hollywood Bowl thl5 summer. "Heaven's Gate" jcast lsn"'t enoueb to laold hb own for death, and when they finally decide to flebt. he a Philharmonic spokeswoman bu announced. excesses together: he sweats for epic all"Uctur' in oraanbel their filmay defense. Jllted by Ella for a almost every scene but never lets ua clote enouab 1pooky enforcer named Champion (Christopher Giulini cancelled all of hil spring engagements to his characters to give much of a damn about Walken). Averill joins the immi1rants in the with the Philharmonic -lncludin& a tour of Mex- tbem. bloody, tralic battle. ico ana the U.S. that beelna in May -alter his wife of 40 years, Marcella, was stricken by an Kns Kristofferson, who acts best when be aaya Chnino's talent aQd pasalon are for scenes, not aneurism at the base of the brain last December at Spokeswoman Norma Flynn said t"-or· chestra's executive director, Ernest Fleischmann, and board vice chairman Olive Behrendt recently returned from a visit to Giulini In Milan, and they reported that the 66·year-old maestro has been helping Mrs Glulim with her physiotherapy daily. and that she has recovered full use of her limbs. Before returning to the US. in J uly for the Hollywood Bowl's 60th anniversary season. Giulini plans to conduct a concert in Rome in June with the Academy of Santa Cecilla orchestra, Mrs. Flynn said. least, says very llUle as Jim Averill, one of .the uieas,and there are dozens of beautifully realized their home in Milan. ~--~~~~~--~~~~lir.T~2"r.~~T.mnl:=~~~~~ Matinees~' * BARGAIN SPICIAL * ALL llATS s2.oo ALL DAY •• _, Monday & ,.,...,, mWh~,EJ CD!M~:::!J PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE uc1nematlc dynamic•." -Arcller Wln1ten N Y POST WUT COAST ,HMl(Rr (NGAGlMfNT NOW SHOWING • Orange CINIOOMI • Cocto Mela. HAllOR TWIN ~Hn 611-llOl ~UOOl'M IAI llJN I 00 • 00 a tOO l'M .............. ~ ......... , ~PACIFIC'8~0DOME .:::;::,.,;__, ..... ~-,....,_.1\i1...._wo1 Dally 12 30 • ) ~ • 7-00 • 10 I& PM ---to•••tat'lMllt••·----~, 1 tl(.l.tll Ott I'll'"~' (A(• ... raa fMA1 l.U i P"lA•Oll•WU , • .,...,. ,,,.. Cl]l CJCaJrt 9'TW90 1· _,, ..0 foAl91 ACC... IOt W .... ....._ PUBLIC NOTICE MOTi ca TO C••OI TOtll Of' IMILIC T•AMS~•· Clea. tlt1 .. tl1 u.C.C.I HoUu •• IW"90'( ,1 ... IO (fecJllOr• of 1119 wllNn ,..,.,,.. ,,.,., .. ,. 1i..1 • -k ,,_.., .. _,. • be -.. P•"•"•' pro.,or1, "•r •ln•flor ducrl- Tl>O -..ct!Mnli.»•-•n 114 Ille lfttoncled tr_l..,,r err NATHAN QUOlll. 4SS Loi ...,.,..._ ~ 8"<h, C&llfOf'"'-.. 51 P\JBUC NOTICE NOTICA TO COM'T•M:TOttS CAU.I ... l'Oll at OS S<l>OOI Olstrlc1 H""tl~ ....,, City S<,_ Olllrlcl a td OeOdllne 1 o'clock pm. of lhe 1111 00 ot ~,. '"' ,.IOC• ot Bid ftoco"" "'°rc:-lfto Olllu, 7ll Ullt Slroel, HW1tln9'°" a.ec.11,Cal-• '"••l-« 1.-n1111uuon H•-- F"°I Fecillly Tito lee.ti.., In c:.tlfernlo et Ille ~111114 oU<ullYo OlllC• or ll"lnclpel bvll· .... _..... ... .. office of ""' 1-d lr•mlwor ls:ume Ple<o f'lent MO on Ille otstrl<I OC· llc:e, 7U l~tll Slr .. t. H11n1tnoton Bo«ll, Call!Omlo. ..... _,.... __ _... THt! LAST CHAil IPO) ......... ,. ...... <1c1• ~ .... , ..... _ .. _, _ _,_._,,.,, THE HoWLINO (It) ............ ,.~ ....... _ .. _., ..... CAVEMAN (POI ·~ ..... «II. k11 ..... '*'' ---.... -ca.,,, ...... •ltE.AllEA llOltANT (PO) _, ...... ... ~ .. ····~·t.:•·-=-_.,_. CAVHIAH ll"O) . .. , .................... .... _,.._ All ot-llu.U-s ,..,.... and ld- d ro u es 11ud l>Y llt• Intended lrlftll-#llhltl lllree 'l'H" 1 .. 1 PHI so ,., •• llnown 10 llM Intended lreMl1t ...... ·-. NOTICE I!> HE•EaY GIVEN INt lh• ,..,,..__. Sc.-Olstrkt of orenee Couftt't. c.ittom1e, ectlnt l>Y en• 01r0119ll th Govorftlno llOlrd, llerelnaller r ehrr td to •• .. OtSTlllCT", will recolvo MP to, but "lal~~=~~~~~~~=~~:::-:~~~·11111 "" ...... -tlW ............. '""'· ' .......,... a:tl, .... 1111\ ................. .,.. PUBLIC NOTICE ,. MOTIC. O~ SAL• O~ ••AL ... M••TY AT to•IVAT& SAi.A NO.l' ... 112 • In llM S...rlOr COUf1 114 Ult 5111• of ......... Thi -end llusl,...i ecNr•t ef t":.~ ~:lt"e~ ;l'c-1 v1e• ~1 .... ~9-Kll,CMltwN0'21MI MOled bldt for the _.,d of• contract IMPOtlfAIT ltOTICEI CMILDltlW U•OlR 12 fRHI fer U10 allOYO pro)K L 914" iltell be re<el...ct In Ille pleu 16ontll\9cl ·-· ..... .,..11 be •"" end poibll<l'I' reed eloud .i IN aoove- illlod llmt ""'pl.CO. The•• wlll bee lon\lnecll .,.,_It N · q11lrH for eactl •I of l>ld dOC""-'• to t~rlllt• U. Nlllnl Ill OOod Condltloft wlll\111 ComlttlMll deya 114\ef IM bid ... nlft9-. Ee<lt llld m1111 <onlorm •tld lie re_11 .. ti0 IN c:ontrecl do<umena. Ee<h llld lllloll be ecc-nllCI ..., Ille ucuni., rlf.......O • 111 IN c:onlrlcl dcKM-f'IU ..., by IN Ila! 114 _.., tubcontrectors. TIW DISTRICT ,_..... U. rlgllt lo reJ«t lft'I'.,,.. ell 1114s er lo wllv• lft'I' lfA9Ul•tt ... w lnhrTnlllllet Ill ef\Y Ill•• or Ill Ult '6ckll,... TM DtSTIUCT fin ob4a!NCI lreM theOl--U.~eltft- 4tlnll'lll ltol .. loftl IN _.411 ~t- 1"9 ...... -dlom ..... In Ille locellty In wfllCh 11111 ..-It to M perferlftM kw MCfl croft er tJOO ot -ni-..-cNd ......... tM ,_ tract. T-rates •• on Illa ill 1111 DISTAICT offkl leUtod et 7)5 Utfl $1reet. Huntl""'on 9Hcll, CA '26ola. (opt ... -Y Do -Ill-on req1111t. A copy tf Ole• r.te• Mell too ..,._. •\ 1111 JoO •111 Thi lortiQIOlnQ .-1e of llO' dlein ..... ,, ---\ipGfl • -kl119 dey .. •'111111 ctl ,_.., n.. .... '°' ltollday •!'Id IYenlme ..w 111111 fM et leat ll"'4t and --"4111. II t/1111 .. ~ llllOll 1119 CON· T•ACTO" '° whom 1119 cont.-1Kt I• awenlld ... uPOI' MIY ~tflCIDf' wilder 11Tn;, IO pey llOt ..., 111111 ti. 1akl aj!leclflocl rat• to alt -"INfl tml>lov.G 11r \Nm Ill W llllecutMll Of tllecanlrec:t . ... •klder mey wttltOrew Illa 1>14 tot a .-r1oc1 Of llllty C.01 *"" lftar tilt ...... , "" ... OCl!tnlftl of ...... A INJftWlll MM IM • ,."'""*'« Mfld Wiii M l'MUlr.-prior to e-.e. '"" .. -QlrirKt. Tiii ~ ..... IMlt • "' "" '°'"' Mt '-"' "' "-c:entrld •..,...... ~ftl ... ,. ey ~ Vlftdtr Moltft CJ«'f. ~"'" °' .... CO.• Deity ....... ..,., ... Mey s. ,.., ttaut .. ~ ... ) ::oi:!£:=~~~ I •AM CM ....... Wltl'lltnl\191 Ace81WY IWI .. y., Owft AM ~ ------M.1.-MAMAIOUTA CON IL 7VIDAI Sugar Ray Leonard admits he's worried about next fight. C2. !. OWeiis (Who's he?) I Rams' No. I pick I t ,I fl ' I \ With top pick gone, Rams draft .Michigan linebacker First round draft pick8 BylOHNSEVANO Ofllle~ ......... It's always been the Ram.' contention on the NFL draft day thaf the best athlete 1upeneded need. quarterback with the same pb)'llcal stature and mannerilnlluthenewmemberoftbeAJoueUes. But the Packen threw everyone for a loop, ln· cludlnl the Rama, by fore1oin1 tbelr tint need -de- f enae -for another QB to join Len Dickey, David Whltebuntand Bill Troup. On NFL draft day, 1981, the Rams deviated from that pblio.opby. With quarterback Rich Campbell of Cal, their first choice, aurprlalngly picked i>Y Green Bay. the Rams opted for Mlch.tgan linebacker Mel Owens. .. WE DIDN'T GET Campbell but we sot someone with stability," ls bow Math apalyaed the Owens selection. OWENS, THE NINTH PICK overall, was a sleeper in the sense that be didn't receive the same publicity that Pittsburgh's Hugb Green, North Carolina's Lawrence Taylor and Alabama's E . J . Junior had received. The Rama, With Brucbinllci &one and Jack Reynolds' f\lture up ln the air, will move Owena to middle ltnebaclcer, accordinc to Coach Ray Malavasi. Asked lf the Rams drafted for need rather than the best athlete, Math replied: "No, be was the highest individual we had. You can check our board if you want. But at6-2, 233 pounds, Owens was considered the fourth best pick at his position by a number of scout· Ing reports. "We rated Green and Taylor above him, that's all I'm going to say about that," said John Math, the Rama' director of player personnel. "We took a sta· ble individual who has the-intelligence and athletic ability we were looking for.•' ''I told you guys all week Joni that there were no secrets. I told you after the first nine picu that things dropped off considerably -and ltdrops off." Owens was in a rented home off the Michigan campuswbehegotthecaUfromtheRams. THE RAMS' NEED for a linebacker was ap- parent before the draft, but it was even more em- phasized by the Bob Bruchinski-to-Miami trade, which occurred just prior to Tuesday's start. With the trade, the Rams swapped second round picks with the Dolphins -moving from 28lb to 15th -and also acquired Miami's third-round selection, giving the Rams a total or five picks in the first three rounds. "I'm very pleased," exclaimed Owens. "I was surprised, yes, but l 'm graterul alao.'' OWENS SAID HE worked out for all 28 NFL clubs with the Rams, Philadelphia, Denver and Dallas showing the most interest. Owens, who doesn't have an a1ent, also said he doesn't feel there will be any _problems coming to terms with the Rams. With Vince Ferragamo leaving for Montreal, the Rams were hoping lo get Campbell, a 6·5, 226-pound '·I 'm very impressed with the LA organization,'· said Owens, who appeared in three Rose Bowls for Baylor comes alive OAKLAND <AP > -The Angels have stopped the Oakland A's -at least tem- porarily. . "It's an important aeries, and important for WI to ~in. U a team couJd go throucb a season and ION only one ea.ine, they'd be tough to beat," Angels Manaaer Jkn Fre1osi noted Monday ni&bt. Tbe A'• brou&bt a 17·1 record lJlto the game wltlcb opened a 13·came bomestand. They pro- vided IOllle excitement, lnchld· in& a triple play, for an en- tbualutic crowd of 41,780 before faUlnc 3-2 to the Ancel.a. "IT WAS THE same story as the other Jou -no offenae. We bad three bits this Ume and not many more (seven) in the losa to Seattle," said the A's Mike Heath, who was robbed of a home nm lo the eighth inninl when Juan Beniquez made a catch at the left field fence. "Even if we loet a couple or'- same. in a row, J don't see how the fans could get down on us," Heath added. "We 're still play- Ine exdtlng baseball. "When you're 17-2, 'slump' is a f orelp word." Siesta gets Valenzuela up D.odger phenom sparkles again LOS ANGELES CAP> -It was a World Series almospbere that SriPl*i Dodcer Stadium. Fans were arrivln1 as early u three hours before the game and more than 100 members of the media were on band to witness the latest performance of the re· markable Fernando Valenzuela. So where was Valenzuela, the rookie Los An&eles left-bander, while all t.bia was goin& on Mon· day night? .. HE'S GETl'ING UP for the game, all nght." said Dodger shortstop Bill Russell. "He's in there on the trainer's table, sound asleep." The 2<>·year-old Valenzuela was wide awake a little la as he continu e d bis incredibl e performance on the mound and at the plate. Valenzuela shut out the San Francisco Giants S-0, al- lowing seven bits. Valenzuela h.,as started five games in his brief major league career and won them all, rour via shutout, and in 45 innings thL9 year, be has allowed only one earned run. said, "He throws a pitch you don't see too often, and when you do see it, you don't know what to do with it." San Francisco outfielder Jerry Martin, who had two of the Giants' seven hits, said, "He bas more poise than any 2<>-year-old I've ever seen -that is, if he re· ally is 20.'' AFTERWARD, Valensuela, through an interpreter, said, "l feel great, no 1 wun't tired, I went to my screwball more toward the end of the game." On his hittlngbe's batting .438 for the season with seven hits in 16 at-bats, Valenzuela laughed and said, "No, I've never been a • good hitter. But J like to bit, and I try to bit well." He singled in the third inning but eventually was thrown out at the plate after Ken Landreaux had singled to center. lo the fourth. the Dodgers finally iol to loser Tom Grilftn. 1·2, after the San Francisco right-hander had retired the first two batters in the inning. the Wolverines and spearheaded the defenae wh1cn didn't allow a touchdown durins ill laat22quarters or Ul81. "They have a lot of great playen.out there. "I don't see any problem Lo ailllini with the Rams. I'm more interested in playin,." Math, when asked about the poulblllty of Owens starting right away, commented, "be will not be given the position. The way things are done here it wlll take time. No individual will be elven a position here -period. That's not the policy of the Los Angeles Rams." Owner Georgia Frontiere indicated that the Rams were drafting toward flllln& positions, not athletic ability. ''There are a couple or positions we would like to have more strength in. One of them is at running back. Westillhaveafewmoresecrets." Math countered by saying this year's draft hasn't been the strongest. "I won't say this was the most predictable draft I've beeo involved with "We want to get the best people on the board, we don't want to deviate from that philosophy. We wanl to get some stability." M alb said. Obviously feeling Owens wasn't ~nough, the Rams surprisingly picked another linebacker - Jim Collins of Syracuse. Collins. at 6·1. 227 pounds, played middle linebacker at Syracuse. He runs the 40 in 4.7 Collins was the Rams' second round pick. 15th on the round and 43rd overall. 1. New Ort.en•-~ Roge.e, rb,._... C.rolrre. 2. NewYOfttG&ante-LeWNn" Teylor, lb, NOfUI C1rollne. a. NewYOftt.Jet9-F'"m•n M~, rb, UCLA. 4.aeetae-Kennyl!e.,.y,db,U~. 5.St.LOIAs-E.J.Junk>r,lb,Al•INNM. I . Green Bay -Rich C1mobefl. Qb. C.llfomJI. 1. T1mpalay-HughOrHn,lb.~. I . San Ft11ndlco-Ronnl• Lott, di», UIC . t .LoeAnte4H-MelOwena,lb,Mk:Nglln. 10. Clndnnatl-OevldVerser, wr, Kansaa. 11. Chic.ego-Keith Van Home, ot, USC. 12. Baltlmoff-Randy McMiiian, fb, PfttatMtrgf\. 13. Ml•ml_. Dalltd Overatrfft. hb, Oldehoma. 14. KanuaClty-Wllll• Scott, ta, SoutttCarolna. 15.0•n~-OennlsSmlth,ufety,UIC. 11. Detrolt-M1rtitNlchol1, wr, lanJoN St. 17. Ptttaburgh-Kelth Gery, di, Oklahoma. 11. ·eett1more-Donn•ll Tho"'P9CM\. "dt, NOfdt CaroUna. 1 t . New England-Brian Hollowly, ot, Stanford. 20. Waahlngton-MartlMay, ot, Pttnbu19h. 21. Oakland-Ted Wans, db, Tau• Tech. 22. Cleveland-Hanford Dixon, db, ~HMtrn Ml11l11lppt. 23. • •011dand-Curt Mar1h, ot, W11hlngton. 24. San Diego-Jame• Brooke, rb, Auburn 25. A ttanta-Bobby Butler, db, Flortd• St. 21. 011111-Howard Richard•, ot, Mlasoun. 27. Phlladllphla-Laonard Mltchett, dl,tfou1ton. 21. Bunalo-BookerMoore,rb,PennSt. • Mlnn1sota traded It• first round pldt to Baltlmore for boltl Of the Colt.I' 11conckound chokes, ptua Baltlmore"1flfth·round11l1ctlon. • 'O•ld•nd and Buffalo swapped first round draft plcka with Buffalo alao getting the A11dar9' third round pick. • .. ,. ........... Rogers top draft choice NEW YORK CAP) -George Rogers, the first choice in today's National Football League draft, dismissed sugges. lions that he would be the im· mediate savior for the 1·15 New Orleans Saints. "I don't think I'm an Earl Campbell," he said. Rogers, the Heisman-Tropby winning running bact from the University of South Carolina. said he would like to build tbt Saints into a winner, just like Campbell, once a Helsman Trophy winner at the University or Texas, has done for the HoustoD1.0llers. ''But I can't turn it around by myself," Rogers said. "I'm not a one·man team; I play with a team "As an individual, I can't do it. It has to be the team that wiU do it " SIGNS WITH MONTREAL -Ex-Ram Vince Ferragamo signs his first autograph as a member of the Montreal Alouettes as his wife Jody looks on. The 6-2, 220·pound power run· ner led the nation in rushing in 1980 with 1,781 yards. He averaged six yards per carry and scored 14 t ouchdowns . finishing his collegiate career with 22 consecutive 100-yard games. Rogers said his biggest adjustment in the pros would be a need "to be more physical." Don Baylor, hltlln& .058 before th• came, drove in his fint nm of the seuon with a sacrifice Oy ln the seeond lnnin1, homered in the fourth to break a 2-2 Ue, and lined lnto the~ triple play ln the sixth: Monday night's performance lowered his earned run average to 0 ,3). With his third strai&bt shutout, he bas a string or 28'h scor eless Innings. Ferragamo couldn't turn it Bum Phillips, new bead coach or the Saints, is a firm believer in a bruising running attack When Phillips coach e d at Houston. he had Campbell rus hing some 20-25 times a game. 'l ihnen •t hU t.be ball well all •Prial, but toa.ipt I bad four loOd at.;ball," said Baylor, who wa1 the American Lea1ue's Most Valuable Player in 1979 and bid 1.iiJury problems last ...... , "Webster bas no words to de· fine him," said Los Angeles second baseman Dave Lopes, who h e lped to preserve Valenzuela's latest shutout with a running, over·tbe-1boulder catch of a ny ball in the second inning when the Giants had nm· ners at first and third and nobody out. TRE CROWD OF 49,478 ac- corded Valeniuela numerous standing ovatiooa, on the mound as be struni out one shutout in· Dini after another, and at the plate, where be Collected three of the Doc11ers' 11 hitl and a1Jo lcn~ked tn the same'• ftnt nm. "He.'s entitled to all that ac- claim," said Lopes. "H•'• done tbinC• no one el11 hu done. He'• a atar. He owns the city riabt no•. He'• a super tld and a 1reat pltcber." San FranciSco Manaaer Frank Rob1n1011, referrln1 to . V aleftJUela 11 datUDI ac.nwbrall, Rams say they're ~till deep at QB with Haden, two others MONTREAL (AP> -The Montreal Alouettes made strong ·armed, free -agent quarterback Vince Ferragamo and fieet-rooted receiver James Scott offers they couldn't refuse ... and tbey didn't. It was a difficult decision for Ferr'aeamo to make, bu\, the gifted signal-caller said be was offered a contract with tbe Canadian Football Leaiue club that simply was too generous to turn down. "It was a very emotional de· claioo and one that wu b&N to d~al with," aald Ferragamo, wbo allned a four-year contract worth an estimated $400,000 per HUOD. "Then wu a lot of atreu and a train Involved," 1ald tbtt . '7· year-old Ferra1amo, wbo played out h1I option lut aeuon · with the Los Angeles Rams or the National Football League. "I was making very little pro- gress in contract t.allts with the Rams and I met with a man - Nelson Skalbania -who made things possible and cave me an offer I couldn't pass up." Skaibania, the '2-year-old self· made millioniare from Van· couver, completed bis purchase of the Alouettes from Sam Berger earlier Monday. Slcalbania had announced April 1 that be bad signed Fer- ragamo to a four-year personal services contract, but since then the official allnins bu been an on-again, off-again happenln1. ''It's been a long ordeal and I know lt'a lclnd of antl-cllmactic now, but rm clad to be here," aaJd Ferra1amo. "I'm lootm1 forward to dolng tbe best l can bere. "Los Angeles is a very good organization, and I'm really go- ing to miss the guys on the team, but I am excited to be here. ''I know it's a team effort, and I'm ready to do the best I can to bring a championship back to Montreal." Ferragamo said be doesn't think he will have any trouble adjusttn& to the Canadian game, bavln1 watched it since be was a younsster. ·'The games used to be televised back home and I'm kind or aware of what's going on," he said. "I think with the wider.field we'll be able to open up the of(enae and have a good, sound ~lnl aUack. , Ferracetno, a key ftrure in the Rams' advance to the Super Bowl foliowina the 19'19 aeuoo, played out hi• option. Rogers said he might be a lit· tie more versatile than Campbell. "I want to receive the ball, rather than run it all the time," he said at a news coo· fetence immediately after his selection. Asked about playing under Phillips, Rogers said: "I'm im- pressed with the way he coached Earl Campbell. Earl's one of my idols." New Orleans owner John Mecom said be expected Rogera to be the most expensive rootie ever signed by the Saint.I. Two years aso, linebacker Tom Cousineau, the leaaue's No. 1 pick, siped with the Canadian Football League rather than the Buffalo Bills. "He won't be ln Canadai he'll be ln New Orleans," Mecom 1'1d. Roaen aald one of the thlnD he'll do 'irith the money from Ml contract II bu1 a bouie for Ida mother. lie a1ao tald bla Dew· found wealth acarH btm because "I have a JOb now and II I don't pnM!uc., l can 1et ll.reCl" Runnlns baell Fre•man McNeil of UCLA wa1 ~e tb1ril pla)'er Picked lb the draft, ~ to the New York Jeta. t\ad te•· matt Keuy Ea1le1, u M). A112ertean Ufet,, waa ••lecW No. 4 todQ by Seattle. ...-~ Alto dntled wa. ulK.' ~ feOliye back RoiDlt LIOU Fnnct1co!z bffeia!Yt \•Oii.ia lttllb Van 1W (~) .... laft~ J>tia11 SIDM (DfiiYtr),. OU*' ~ ttek9d.Jllf tbe---.~mew.s~ q\laritrback &lell Campt>fll <Greeb BU>. Sa Jot• aate •tcle r.clf vet Mark .NlebOll (Dttrik) Ud ltaDfOtd ..... tackle Brian Ho\\o• a,i <New DalNll>. Fro•APcllPak .... HOUSTON -Reignlnc World m Boxln1 Council w ltflrw~t cham-pion SUlar Ray Leon wantl to add the World Boldn1 atloa junior mlddlewei&bt crown to b1s trophy case, but he said Monday 1ettin1 put WBA champ Ayub Kalule will be a difficult chore. Leonard, st.eppln1 up one wdpt claulftca· lion, will meet Kalule June 25 aa part of • double-barreled main event that will include World Bo:s· ing Association welterweilht champion Thomaa Hearns, alao a possible future oppo- nent for Leonard. ''When J see blm CKalule) ftght.. il makes me wonder why I ever picked boxing as a profession, the man ls awesom~ ... Leonard Leonard said. "I'm in excellent shape and I'm going to stay that way because this will be a tough fight." State Assembly sticks to decision SACRAMENTO -The state A!.· [i] sembly, for the second time in less f • than a week, voted Monday to pro- bi bit teams like the Los Angeles Rams from using a city's name after they've moved rrom the city. The vote was 42·33 to send the measure, AB502 by Assemblyman Mike Roos, D-Los Angleles, to the state Senate. The Assembly had vot4!d 41·216 for the· bill last Thursday. but an opponent had asked for a second vote. The biU would rorbid professional sports teams from using the name of a city or county if they don't play home games there. It wouJd re· quire such a team to get permission and would let a city or county charge a fee for t~~t permission. . ll is aimed at the Rams, which moved 1ta National Football League franchise to Orange County last year. "They've stolen our team and they've stolen our fans." Roos said "Why shouJd they be al- lowed to use our name'" Quote of the day Blackie Sherrod, columnist for the Dallas Times H<'rald. on a complaint by Atlanta Brav~i. owner Ted Turner that salaries m baseball are loo high· "That's like Al Capone speaking out ror gun cdn- trol " Pirates to New Orleans: butt out PITTSBURGH A federal suit •. seeking to stop the city or New Orleans and the Louisiana Superdome from luring the Pirate baseball team from Pittsburgh was filed Mon- day by Mayor Richard Caliguiri. . . . ''To put it very bluntly. this swt 1s being filed to serve notice on the city of New Orleans and the management of its Superdome to butt out or this city's present contractual dispute with the Pirate management," said Caliguiri. The Pirates, claiming they've lost $7 million since moving into Three Rivers Stadium in 1970, are suing the stadium authority to nulliry their lease, which has 30 years to run. Baseball today On tb.IB date in basebaU in 1971: Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves belted his 600t.h career home run off Gaylord Perry of the San Francisco Giants. On tllis date ln 1961 : At the age of 40, Warren Spahn of the Milw,tiukee Braves fired a 1--0 no-hitter against the Giants. Minor leaguer hurls no-hitter ' • Mille JooeA, a 21-year-old left· han~ tossed a no-hitter to lead om.a to a l!lO American Association victory over Iowa Monday Diehl. The closest Iowa got to a hit was a foul ball in the sixth inning . . YaJlJl.lck Noall, France's beat player and ranked l.3th lo the world, withdrew from the quarterrmals of the World Cham- pionship of Tennis fmals an hour before bis match in Dallu because of bicep tendlniUa . . . A young man who spent 47 days in a coma after be rought an unllceoaed amateur boxing match, has died wit.bout regaining con- sciousness. Vic Ayvazlaa, 21, of Duarte, col- lapsed March 10 after the fight in a saloon . The Hamilton Tiger-Cata of the Canadian Football League have bought the neaotiating rights to Tom Clemente, a third-string quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs The Chicago Bulls sl,ned veteran forward Dwlgbt Jones to a mult.iyear contract . . . A federal judge approved settlement of two claas- a cllon suits involving more than 9,000 Americans seeking refund.a after they canceled plans to attend the 1980 Olympics in Moscow . . . Arad McC11&.cbu, whose teams at the University of Evansville woo1lve NCAA amall- college championships in 31 years, was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame . . . The Mobil Corp.. which earUer announced that it was going to back the national track-and-field championships, said that it was also going t.o fund an outdoor track Grand Priit. Television, radio TV: Vic Braden's Tennis for the Future, 10.30 p.m .. Channel 28 RADJO: San Francisco at Dodgers. 7 :30 p m .. KABC (790>; Angels at Oakland. 7:30 p.m .. KM PC (710). WEDNESDAY RADJO Baseball -Angels at Oakland. l.30 p.m., KM PC <7101. Boxer was given injections Challenger Shields says he used legal pain-killer PHOENIX <AP> -Challenger Randy Shields may have violated World Boxlng Association rules Saturday by taking palnkillinl dru1s before his welterweight title fight against champion Thomas Hearns. Shields' penonal physician, Dr. Richard Sis· aon, disclosed Sunday that the No. S challenger re· celved eight injections of Novocain ln his left shoulder prior t-0 the bout. . But Shield's father-trainer, Sonny Sbellds, said it waa Xylocaine and cortisone. not Novocain, and that tbt drutts used weren't against the rules. Bo~ 11ld the injections were an effort to relieve a strained muscle and tendonitis. Melvin Zie1ler, the WBA's supervisor for the fl1h\, hid lf a palnltiller were used, Shields vlolat· eel WBA rules and would have been disqualified. ZlU11r said that If Shleldl did take painkillers btfort ~fight, "he's putting himself lo jeopardy. He's admlttln& be did somelhin.c Uletal." Sbleldl, 25, lost to the ii.1ear-old Hearns in aht 1Mh round wben ring physician Cbarlea D. Lab n&)tcl that three cutl over Shields' eyes were \oo HVW. to allow blm to continue. stuon, • friend of tbe ShJ•ldl family. aald be adminlaterld the numbina drut Saturday morn· In,. Ht 11ld Shields' •boulder condition wu com- tnon ln "°'1rlnl and ta cauaed by beavy tralnina. SlalOl\ I.ad Sb,leld.I bad ''three or tour .,.. .. that weft "l'1 ftl'1 t.nder" and the lboU "J\&lt took the.-:IP• the p&lo. 8\11l1i llad aatd Sunday that "m)' ann tM>Ul....t •· I 've bad a pJ'ObJtm •!th It for o•er a moftlt\:V Oil ~day b• had •aid be bid tnJured a abollldlr \,.O week• befor• the fl&bt when u fell wbll• l'UMlftl· Lake s aid Monday he had aeen no sign• of Shields' having received any injection prior to Saturday moming's physical and welah-ln. "He paHed his physical, and I did the anatomical part of it," Lake aaid. "I took hold of his shouJder and squeezed It. He didn't respond to any tenderness or soreness. And he didn't show any problems to the arms." Shields' father said he asked his ion not to 10 into tbe ring Saturday but that. the boxer responded, "No war. ll only burta a little bit." "The kid's got too much auta to quit," the elder Shields said. "To know Randy, Randy wouJd not pull out." It's Nugie Too crawling to win • ~~!!~aLSON LONG BEACH -American water polo -lt'a a ltuatrat· ln1 1ame to be1ln with, the American aystem of rompet· lnl a1alnat otben with a dlf. 'ferent Mt of rulft make• it even more dltltcult and Stanford Unlvenlty IO.Phomore Jamie lhraeaon la lo a typical dilemma. 1 The eilht-natioo II Fina CUp competition bore at Lona Beach State eaten its fourth day of competition wUh the United States tackUng a dan1erous Spanlab outllt at 8:30 followina Monday's conquest of A\&ltr~ For Bergeson, it's the same old tui.of-war that haa plaaued the United States slnce someone decided it waa a aood idea to 10 for the eold medal at an Olym- pics with a group of all·atan against the team-oriented com· munistl of eutem Europe. IN A NVTSHELL, Bereeson's life and future consiata of more than playing water polo -the luxury or competins has Its limlta. The 20-year-old product of Newport Harbor High is working on an engineering degree and the class load isn't easy. Neither ls the responsibility toward blending into. the American water polo team an easy load. "The coach (Monte Nitzkowski) may think I'm not as serious about this because I've missed ao many practices," says Bergeson. "Weekend practices are tough to make during finals. I un· derstand the problem , we haven't worked out that much.'· While the American teams get a few solid practices in on weekends when the athletes can hop a flight and spend the weekend alternately in the north (Bay Area) and the south (Long Beach State>. the Russians, Yugos lavians , Hungarians. ltalians . East Germans , Bulgarians and the hke, are practicing on an 8·5 basis. with nothing standing m their way "Trying t-0 get an .::ducation and play water polo at the same time is difficult." understates Berge~. "THE NEXT two years l've Just got to work it out and hopefully the coach will be pa- tient with me. Waler polo, you know, is a year-long sport and by now, you can really feel burned out But 1 enjoy the game . especially tor the physical contact. I like the man to-man confrontation." The ~ Angeles Olympics in August or 1984 come some 15 months after Bergeson 's scheduled graduation from Stan· ford and he says the timing could not be better for him "It's a year to dedicate myself," he says. Bergeson was a member o( the 1981 NCAA championship Stanford team, which revolved around the spectacular play or ex· Foothill High goalie John Ganael, and success seems to have followed Jamie, since the day he decided to follow his brother's <Garth> foouteps. "I began swimming when I was six," aa)!S· Jamie, but because of Garth's success (the latter was a CIF 4-A Player of the Year for Corona del Mar High in 1970), I thought maybe it · would run ln the family. "Btu Barnett got a hold of me when I was about 11 or 12." SPORTS BREAK I WATER POLO I BOATING { I Jamie Bergeton Barnett, the Newport Harbor Hi&h and Junior National team coach, molded Bergeson into a two-time CIF 4·A Player or the Year, and is still considered the bil influence. "He taught me a lot, more than anyone," says Bt!rgeson "And he's a good friend " BERGESON'S ROLE m the United States attack 1s as a driver, constantly moving and driving on offense, putting the pressure on the opponent and counter-attacking, almost an ex· elusive 0Hens1ve role. which suits him (me. One of his major problems 1s one that bugs a lot of water polo players playing with emotion. yet having the discipline to react to low blows without damaging the team or himself It's also one of N1tzkowsk1's concerns about this young American team as 1t conhnues preparation for '84. "You have lo play with finesse." says Nitzkowski "Playing with emo lion and finesse can b<' tough The key is stabihty. consistency and tactical dlaclptm.." ·'THE BEf'EaEE wlll always 1 e e the re1ponae." ••Y• Ber1esoo. "You have to wilt for the ricbt tlme to p1y someone back. I beUeve in 1rouneu if it ls to your advantafe, but nothing blatant. "You have to adjust to the referee. Sometimes you have to 10 very conservatively, other Umes you can 1et away wtth things. You have to flnd out. then pace yourself." B ergeaon 'a de votloo to aquatics lies only with water polo -swimmin1 takea a backseat But he doesn't feel raw speed is a problem, at all. "For 10 yards J can swim u rast as anyone, and that's pretty much what a drive consist! of," lays Bergeson. THE FRUSTRATIONS of water polo in general, for most players, lies with the officiating. which makes basketball or foot· ball appear pale in comparison when considering the effect the officials have on the game. And on the international scene. well. ask an American d1ver what he thinks of com- munist scorers Sometimes at 's JUSt fl at ridiculous. Nevertheless. they're a fact of life and Bergeson expands on this phase of the game: "The referees' influence can change the game so, and I think the Euro- pean referees like to play to the crowd's interest. to keep the potential runaways close. "It's probably one or the reasons why the game bas more support in Europe." As for this tournament, the first of three ma1or events prior to the '84 Olympics lthe others being the World Championships in Ecuador in 1982 and the Ill Fina Cup in 1983), Bergeson says his goal 1s simply to play the best he can And as ev idenced by the Americans· record through the first three rounds. that hasn't bt'en t"o shabby Hamann sparkles Motions enough for U.S . in 9-5 win LONG BEACH -Emotion· less. but still with enough raw talent to win by JUSt going through the motions, the Uruted States put Australia away, 9-5, Monday night m II FINA Cup water polo action at Long Beach State, setting up tonight's duel with Spain (8'30) as the fourth night of the eight-nation tourna ment unfolds. The highlight of tonight's four game salvQ comes at 7 when un beaten Yugoslavia, the Moscow Olympics silver medahst, tangle with the unbeaten Soviet Union . the gold medalist in the '80 Games. "It was about what l expect· ed," said United States Coach Monte Nitzkowski, following the American's routine victory over the Australians "We were very tired physically and emotionally from last night (Sunday's 6·5 loss to the Russians). and it showed." The U.S. got off to a quick start, as it did with Bulgaria Saturday, but this time 1t wasn't a one·man scoring show <Kevin Robertson ), as Joe Vargas, Jon Svendsen and Drew Mc Donald each scored to pace a 3·0 lead, an American advantage that would never dwindle to less than three goals after it was ex· panded to 4· I, still in the first quarter Va'rgal> and McDonald each finished with three goals and Mc Donald also accounted for a couple of first half steals. Goalie Steve Hamann's play was perhaps the highlight ol an otherwtse dull game. as he was responsible for nine blocks at the net. including a spectacular save on Australia's only penalty shot ''We weren't crisp mentally and our ofrense was young - and tired tonight," said Nitzkowski But we were in com- mand from the start and tbal was important. "And, we won." Tonight's opponent, a winless ( 0-2· l ), but dangerously quiet Spanish crew, is led by Manuel Esliarte, who along with Georci Mshvenieradze of the Soviet Union, is a co-leader in goals scored through three eames (10) Baseball standings AMERJCAN LEAGUE Wee& DIYllloll W L Pd. GB Oakland 17 2 .895 Chicago 10 ' .714 4\AJ Anaell 9 9 .soo 71h Texas 7 7 .500 71,A:i SeattJ~ s 12 .294 11 Kansas City 3 9 .250 10~ Minnesota 4 12 .250 11~ East Dlvl•loa Cleveland 7 4 .638 'Milwaukee 8 S .615 New York 9 6 .600 Boston 1 6 .538 1 Detroit 1 9 .431 2~ Baltimore 5 7 .417 21h Toronto 5 11 .313 41h ....,. ...... ~J.~I ................................ , Mii..-.. •, T""""° I Ctl IMllllll> .... ,,... .. ~, H .. Vtr'll I.°""" I ., .... .-. ..... . °"'' .... ~ .._.(fr~~·::......('°"""*" l4)r.= (ClerN> "4 ....... Ul ... 11~•0 ..... ( ...... M19'MI ...... (~ ·~ ..... m., t"=::~~"I.:. .~: 2 .. ),11 .... "'" ~ ..,, Ill DllbWt (t t 1 It ,,...,,, ~ . .... ~._O«Tt-C.Wa..M>,• NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Dodgera Atlanta Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Houston 14 3 .824 9 7 563 •t,; 8 7 533 5 7 12 .368 8 6 11 .353 8 4 12 .2!i0 91~ East Dlvlslon St. Louis 9 2 Montreal 11 3 Philadelphia 11 s Pittsburgh 4 6 New York 4 7 Chicago 1 13 _....,..~ .,........ J, 5911 ,rllfl<.llCO 0 ""11....,.,.oJ,Montr,.11 ()ftly--~ .818 ~ .786 .688 1 .400 s .364 S1h .071 10 T•r•0-1 .. 1 f''8ftC1t<e ( flllpley 0·1) OI DM .... (5'itclll,. HI " ' I\, I.Ne Ciil1ttOl\1 .. I ot Clllc"° (Krull ... 0.1) Moftlrool CLoo 0·11 ol """''•IPlllo CCJlrltMMlll 1-1), 11 , M-1-1 ($ul-N) al AtlOftlO ,........._. M),11 tan Oie9' CWtM 04) ol Clr>c:ll\Nll C~O-JI, " "'~ (I,,..._ l_.) ol tt-Vn tkllt t.J),11 I 1 I I .. lb STEVE llAULF. ... Delly ...... ~ .... Tbe ab-bedroom, waterfront boUISe on BQahore Drtve bean sinall resemblance .to the place where John Wayne ueto bana bb bat. The Duke's mansion, perMJ>I the most f amoua piece of real estate oo the Newport Harbor, la • cluttered with board.a, nails and workmen these day•. The kidney-shaped pool hu been drained and the peaked roof a bave been knocked down. THE RAMBLING ainele-story house with Us million dollar view of the bay is getting an overhaul. Workmen on the project say a second floor is being added. A 880-square-!oot maid's quarter also is being built. But the renovation work trig- gered rumors in Harbor Area real estate circles this month that the house at 2686 Bayshore Drive was being tom down. ''There's bardJy anything left.•' commented one Newport agent this week after taldne a bay tour. Dmty"91 .... ~ John Wavne waa a r*rtectionilt about his nng~-itory maMion with it1 milJU:m..dollar thew of Newport Bay. . bou1bt the famed borne with the intention of extensive remodel- ing. •'The place has been remodeled three times already.'· remarked Buie. "When Wayne was there, be added nearly 9,000 square feet. The c urrent owner is jus t modernWng it a bit.'• was not included in the sale of the house. BUIE SAYS it's his understand· ing that Mrs. Dettingen, who cur· renlly resides in Beverly Hills, in· tends to occupy the waterfront house when remodeling is com- plete. Mrs. William John Bettingen u "modemUing" fOf"f'MT Wayne home. WMn 1econd ~ory i$ f muhed by mid-1Ummer. pool wiU be reflll«I and roof will ~ re- buiU. New garage u in fOTegrmmd. But according to Marion Buie, president of MacNab·lrvine - the realty fir m that handled the sale of the Wayne home lut year, the rumors are only rumors. Buie said the present owner. Mrs . William J ohn Bettingen, Mrs. Bettingen bo ught the estate for $3.47 million. The ask- ing price had been $4.7 million. And that was just for the house, the land being on a lease option. Wayne's boat, the Wild Goose , ·'The house was m good shape already," Bwe said. "Wayne was a pe rfectionist of sorts. He kept the place in perfect shape. He liked everything tn working or- der " Airline offers . OC access plan , . Not happy with a proposed five. year time span for 1ainin1 equal acce@J9J~ , o ralif'~ 'C!oun.:.:.~~.:Re~n• Paci.flc Swthwd\ Airline1'1'ave submitted theiroW11 au..t,_ Jn the propoaal offered to mem- ber1 or the County Board of • Supervl$ora, PSA could .lain fuU . status at the airport ln three · years. · An aide to Stb Dis trict · Supervisor Thomas Riley said to- . d•Y .that the PSA plan may have . some merit and will be examined carefully. Al the heart of the issue la the , fact that PSA is the only airline in ·the UnitedStates-andoneoftwo in the world -that already la fiy. ing the quieter jet aircraft called for in the airport master plan. Because of that, PSA leaders want the county to open up all available flights to competitive bid after three years. The airline with the quietest operation would get preference. Two county proposals, one from Riley and another similar one from Airport Manager Murry Ca· ble. don't open all flighta to bid· dinar until five years. Tbe aupervisors are acbeduled -~tion ~~~f!llJ~~_.. a etr ay 5 m Ana. -llrllllll~~~ P~A pUbllc relatlu Margery Craig said today company has been trybtc10enter the Orange County martft (Of years. She said PSA's plan let.I current airlinea servin1 tbe airport remain, but forces them to be competiU ve at an earlier date. ·'The plan lets other airlines competefairly," she said. "Right now. AirCal has a monopoly on that airport." Sbe said AirCal is the only airline that links Orange County with the San Francisco Bay Area. She noted that the Southern California·to-Bay Area com- mercial air corridor is the busiest in the world. PSA now rues four DC-9 Super 80s , willbaveafiftbbynextmonth and26bytheendofl982,shesa1d. The county master plan for ex· panding the airport includes pro- visions that daily commercial flights can increase from 41 to SS if quieter jets are used that reduce the total amount of jet noise. . Flight "!~Y give ! pair balloon record . By PlllL SNEJDERMAN °' ... .., ......... excapedlnjury,sbeaaid. The~ returned to earth &H· lou• for a good meal, bavlna ett- dured 3S hours without fooct Poo4 <See BALLOON. Pase Al) ...., ............... GUILTY OF MURDER Ronald Spring Marines Reed a: good boy? 7 too young / NORFOLK, Va. <AP> -The Marine Corps may know bow to spot a iood man early, but it was just a little too early ~ying to recruJtJuat.in Ferauson. ~ letter from Marine Corps headquarters in Washiniton in- vited the 7-year-old athlete to join up at a •t.artlni aaJary of $400 a month. "Little boya like to play Anny,\' Dlane Ferguson said ol the letter her aon r~lvea. "Jlut be wu u - tounded they'd pay him $40t> a month.He'dbeoneforfree." Tb• Martne ~J'Pl. couldn't ex-plain the sllpup. Spring ruled guilty de8th of priest • ID ...tm•lill:ilprlng w• • ~U..I&. County Superior Court iMliJqllll'.,.·~ . 1w.1t' MCODd-del"" murder in tbe February. UllO, death of Seal Beach priest Felix Doherty. "We only took one vote," juror Leslie Spiode lman of Fullerton said Monday after the trial. Spring, a 33-year-old Air Force and Vietnam veteran who worked at odd jobs, faces a sen· tence or from 15 years to Ufe in prison for the felony. The seven· man, five-woman jury also con- victed him or a misdemeanor vandalism charge. DRESSED IN a blue velour pullover shirt., Spring sat almost motioniess during tbe proceed· ings. His glance moved from Utt: front o( the room onlf.~ce Wilen a rear doo~ opened and laughler from a hallway filtered into the courtroom. Parked in Ute room between the defendant and Judie James Turner was the ,reen and black motorcycle Spring was riding on Feb. 9, 1980, when be was ac· cused of slugging Father Doher· ty at the rear door of St. Anne's Catholic Church. The prtest was treated for a small lieM wound at the time. He died several weeks later of brain injuries. Spring teatl!led last ~eek tbat be had punched Fatbe'r Ooberty . "in' a rush of the moment" when be bell~ed be wu belni re· buf(~. ~ telephco•conversatlona in which Spring had threate.e4 Cb oa10 church officials bad been slen.ificant in the delibera· Uona. Spring had promised to <See PRIEST, Page AZ> . Homes for 40,000 planned in Irvine By lllCHARD GREEN I °' .. ~ ........... The Irvine Company bas un· veiled conceptual plans for the construction of 15,900 dwelling units -enough housing for 40,000 people -in the City of Irvine. Sites for a hospital, a civic center, parks, schools, offices and commercial facilities are also included in the proposal made public Monday by Irvine Company Vice President Tom Nielsen. The development is planned on 2,101 acres of natland now in orange groves and row crops north ~ the San Diego Freeway in central Irvine. , DellyNll ... PROPOSED VILLAGES Flank erilting Woodbrldg~ The Irvine Company wtll spend about S20 million to build a storm channel for San Dtco Creek and to reali1n tbe Southern California Edh10• power Unea tbat now bisect tbeolt area and travel north alone Jef. frey Road for the Village U pro- ject. Nielsen said the compan)' wants to place the tines arou, Sand Canyon Avenue and the • Santa Fe Railroad tracts. A touth4'.r problem face1 <See ROUSING. Pa1e 42> ~ I ATLANTA <AP) -Just a. ilce were decld1D1 not to add ~mm1 Ray PQne'• Aame to a lilt of !5 Ila.lo .ad mlMID1 y0una 1 blackl, the bodC;the21-yeu.ota 'walfoundfloa inariver-tbe fifth body to be dumped 1D an area river In less than a month, police ~ 18)'. • A fewb0W1lattr. Public Safety 1 Commluloner Lee Brown said Deity ............. COPTER LIFTOFF -A CH 53 Sea Stallion from helicopter base in Tustin lifts dismantled copter from sand at Capistrano Beach for trip back to·the Marine facility. The disabled copter crash landed in the surf in the private beach community Friday. Four crewmen aboard the craft were not injured. From Page A1 HOUSING • • the Irvine Company plans for Village 14, Nielsen said . He said that roadway development plans for that village call for Jam- boree Road to extend through the Tustin Marin e Corps Helicopter Station and connect to the Santa Ana Freeway So far. Marine representatives have opposed the plan. Nielsen said negotiations con- tinue with the Marines and he said that pending the resolution. he is hopeful the city will ap- prove at least a portion of the proposed development in Village 14. He also said there 1s a possibility that company plan- ners can get plans accepted without the roadway through the helicopter station A MORE 41eneral problem fac· ing both village proposals re- volves around their financial viability City planners say that residen· tial developments cost more in city services than they pay in post-Proposition 13 taxes. Sales tax revenue is the biggest source of funding for the City of Irvine. Nielsen admitted that much of the company's residential de· velopment plans hinge on whether enough sales tax - generating commercial facilities can be developed. He c laimed that by the mid-19805 the company will be developing Irvine Center. a 480-acre commerciaJ center bounded by the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna freeways. TO DATE, however,.no major department stores have com- mitted to bwld in the "Super Shopping Mall" envisioned as part of the center. Nielsen said From Page A1 PRIEST • • • "stomp" a church official if the long-lost dream girl were not found In a convent. Turner set a wentencing date for Friday, May 29 at 9 a.m. Spring's attorney, Publlc· Defender Ronald Butler, told Turner be would make a motion at that time for a new trial. Butler objected to Turner's de· cision to let the jury consider the second-degree charge. Deputy District Atlon)ef Dave Carter ortelnally aoulbt a fint- d e g ree murder charge, but Turner said evidence WH inauf- ficlent to 1ubstantlate It. -BY GLENN IC<Yf1' Santa Ana winds whip coastal area Temperatures along the Orange Coast were expected to be near 90 today because of the wind conditions in the Los Angeles basin. That represents nearly a 20- degree increase over Monday's high of 73. However, a National Weathe r Service spokesman said the wind conditions are ex· peeled to die down later~- An unseasonal dose of Santa Ana Winds ·drove tree branches onto electrical lines and caused power outagP.s in foothill areas today as warm springtime tem· peratures heated up the Southern California area. More summer-like weather with temperatures in the mid 80s to low 90s was forecast through Wednesday except for mountains and deserts, which are expected to have variable clouds with a chance of thundershowers. And forecasters predicted con· tinued high winds in the foothills. More than 19,000 Southern California Edison and Los Angeles city Department of Water and Power c,u.stomers in the San Fernando Valley, La Canada-Flintridge, Alladena, Tu- junga, Sylmar, Monrovia and Montebello areas were without power during mornine boura to- day, some for less than a minute and others for five hours. Typically , said Edison spokesman Russ Hawke~. "Wind gets the lines swinging back and forth and they clash togethe.r. That creates a short circuit. When that happens you have an inter· ruption for less than 30 seconds." But in other cases. be said, tree branches swaying in the wind knock lines down and electrical poweriscutforlongerperiods. Today's power outages luted Jess tban a minute for6,000 Edison customers. Power was out 2~ boursfor3,000other Edison uaera, Hawkes said, and for five boun for 10,000 homes served by the Department of Water and Power, according to DWP spokesman Jerry Pfefferman. Talks r~suming LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aa neeotiations between atrikinl mm and television writen and major producers were to resume today, the Writers Guild of America announced it planned to retach a separate agreement with independent motion picture and teletti.sion producera. I that the death of the 5-foot-7, 130- pound man will be investieated by the tuk force probtaa the • deaths and disappearances, I which began 21 months ato. The cause of Payne's death was I not determined immediately and medical officials' said bia body, j found Monday, bore no obviousin- 1 juries. An autopay began um mornin1 at the Fulton County I medical examiner's office. Meanwhile, another young black man of slight build was re- ported missing today by bis mother, but police said his case was being investigated by the missing persons unit rather than thetaskforee. Herman Pittman, 21 , was last seen Monday evening when he left home to get a beer, officials said. He stands S feet 6 and weighs 140' pounds. Police are worried about a change in pattern, Brown said, because "we now have four adult victims of homicides. Previous to that, all the victims were under 16, the youngest being 7. · · All the adult cases have similarities, including the fact that the bodies were found in rivers, he said. ··our people are trying to de· termine what this means," he said. Payne was last seen April 22 as be beaded for the Omni sporting and entertainment complex in hopes of selling some old coins. ac coraing to his sister , Evelyn. Payne's body, tangled face· down in a fallen tree, was spotted by two fishermen, about the lime police were deciding not to put bis name on the list of cases being in· vestigated by the special task force. Brown said police had been given information that Payne had been seen alive He lived about a block from the home of Patrick Baltazar, 11, who was last seen alive at the Omni. Baltazar's body was found Feb. 13 in a DeKalb County office park. Like 13 of the other victims, Baltazar had been asphyxiated. Six of the last seven victims were asphyxiated or probably asphyxiated, authorities said. The cause of one victim's death was unknown From Page A1 BALLOON • • bad beenoneoflhe "luxuries" the pair jettisoned to prevent a col- lision during the flight. "We almost bought the farm near Salt Lake City," Abruuo said. "We got caught in a severe downdraft that almost sent us into the aide of a mountain. We bad to ballastnearlyeverything.'' 'J'HE WINNING aeronauts W4lfe reported on their way to Alfruzzo's hometown, Albuquer· que, N.M., today, and are ex- pected to return to Southern California Friday for the Gordon Bennett Survivors Banquet. Both men have survived their share of death-defying adven- tures. Aoki, the 42-year-old owner of the Benihana of Tokyo restaurant chain, took up balloon racing after be was a lmost killed in a 1979 power boat accident. A Japanese citizen, Aoki also bas been a champion wresUer and backgammon player. '- .,.... ................ ON TRANSIT BOARD Jame1 Roo8eveU Roosevelt appointed to OCTC James Roosevelt of Nt'wport Beach has been appointed" to succeed Zi.ka DJokovich of Santa Ana on the Orange County Transportation Commlssion. Roosevelt, 73, is a former con- gressman from San Marino and Arcadia. He will assume the four-year post as a public representative in two weeks. He is the eldest son of former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. DESPITE IDS legacy as an elected official, he will be the only one ol the five com- miss ioners cul'"renUy not holding elected office. By joining with Irvine City Councilman Bill Vardoulis and County Supervisor Thomas Riley, Roosevelt will give Riley's 5th District a majority on the panel. Riley nominated him, but the selection was no easy task. Roosevelt had been the leading contender among four nominees since late last year. but never received more than two of the four votes during balloting by the incumbent commissioners. He needed at least three. To break the stalemate, com- missioners agreed on April 13 to use a scoring system ln which nominees received three votes for first place, two for second and one for third. DURING balloting on Mon - day, Roosevelt received nine points -two firsts, a second and a third. Runner-up Charles Maloney received six, Ada Mae Hardeman got five and Djokovicb got four. The transportation com- mission is responsi ble for coordinating countywide issues. Two of its members, Riley and Ralph Clark, are county supervisors . Two others, Vardoulis and Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley, are represen- tatives of the Orange County League of Cities. Hollinden said last week be won't seek reap- •pointment when his term ex- pires on June 30. A lawsldt to recover .. 79.612 ln leeal feee deducted trom \be Oranee County Boar'd ol Eduea- tlon 'a county accouttt.a"'by the Board of Supervtaors is scheduled to be filed Friday in Superior Court. The suit, prepared by Dave Larsen of the Rutan and Tucker law firm, wUJ seek to void a 1978 contract between the board ol education and County Supervisor• for county le1a1 services. It al.lo will 1eek ll\e return ot money deducted for tb91e 1ervices subsequently, sajd ~ Koch, assistant county scbooJa superintendent. Tbe flCreement for legal services, lA.rsen said today, was approved in May 1978 and called for a transfer of part of the coun- ty's tax rate to the school board to pay for the service. When Proposition 13, the prop· erty-tax-cutting initiative, was approved by voters the following month, each government entity was more or less frozen to its established tax rate. The transfer was never made, Larsen said. Koch said today that the school board consistently has re- fused to pay for legal services because it contends the contract is not valid because not transfer· ing the tax rate resulted in loss of income to pay for the work. When the Board or Supervisors ordered County Auditor-Controller Vic Heim to take $479,612 from county educa- tion funds for Orange County Counsel's services. the school board voted 5-0 to sue the supervisors. Before Proposition 13, Koch said. it made little difference which a1ency controUtd tax fund• for 1ervlces. However , 1ub1equent tranafen or lack of tranafen ol money results In an Income aaJn or loSI for entities involved because of the tax freeze. While the county auperlnten· dent's office contends the failure to transfer tax base to the achools prorram voids the 1978 coptract, Oranre County Counael Adrian Kuyper'• oalce diaasrees. ' John Anc1enon, deputy county coun.sel, contend.I the tax abift is not a m~or part ol the contract. FoUowina Proposition 13, be aaid, the schools office carried le1islation to Sacramento lo aeeure fund5 for audit.in,g, legal and other services because of in· come cuts. Thal legislation was approved, Anderson said. "As a result," be said, "the County Superintendent got $287 ,000 for county legal services the first year." That ailocation continues, he added. •'They I education office of- fi cials) are great ones for going lo the legislature for funds of one sort or another. And they have some of the highest paid administrators in the county," Anderson said. A court judgment in favor of the school board. he said, would just give the County Superinlen- dent 's office more money to s pend on something else. ··And I guess it wouldn't really break the county," he added. The county Department of Education budget is about S30 million this year. The annual Orange County government budget is about $600 million. Reagan vs. Congress televised tonight WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi-public apperarance since he was dent Reagan. capitalizing on ris· shot March 30 ing popularity since last month's It comes on the eve of his lOOth a ssassination attempt, re· day in office. and the selection of assumes public command ol his the well of the House is intended budget battle tonight with an ap-to focus the drama of Reagan's peal to Congress.Jo stop talking re-emergence on the forefront of and start actmg. <Channels 2, 4 the fight for his economic pro- and 7: KMPC, KFWB. KNX) gram. which already appears to Aides said Reagan will tell a be picking up speed as Congress joint session in the nationally nears key votes this week. televised, 6 p.m. PDT speech One Wtute House official, who that Congress must shed the asked not to be identified, said "old and comfortable way" the president's attitude is: because "a day of decision is "'Look. we 've talked about the near" 0for bis tax and spending economy We've analyzed it. cut proposals. Now 1s the Lime to do something. "High taxes and excess spend· Now it's time to take the ing growth created our courageous measures to get the economic mess.·· one source economy back on the path." said Reagan will say. "To fail to The president, who is not yet act will delay -even longer and working full time in the Oval Of- more painfully -the cure that fice again, was putting the final must come." touches on the speech today. He worked on the message at The speech, expected to last h" c D "d Md tr t about 15 ma·nutes, comes as the IS amp avi • .. re ea over the weekend and met with administratlon program is pick· his speechwriter, his con- 101 up speed with Congress gressional lobbyist a nd the depu- nearing key votes this week. ty chief of staff when he re- Conservative Republicans on the turned to the White House on Senate Budget Commilte neared Monday Gas tax hike due? agreement on a revised budget The s peechwriter. Ken blueprint, and House Speaker Khacbigian, took the notes SACRAMENTO <AP> -The Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said Reagan bad made on a draft and Senate Finance-Committee bas enough Democrats may cross was preparing a clean copy for approved a bill to add two centa over to give the president a vie-the president's final approval to- to the gasoline tax and boost tory in the House. day. according to deputy White driver's license and vehicle reg-The address is Reagan's third House press secretary Larry ,...-i_str~a_u_·on~t_ees~·~~~~~~~~~o_n~t_h_e~e_co_n_9_m~y~b_u_t~hi~~~I_ir_s_t_spea~k~e~s . ...._~~~~~~~~- ' LIBUll lllCl/llUTI ClllT TUESDAY, AP.RIL 28, 1981 MOVtES T El:.EVI SION FEATURES . .,, Solar · use_ urged in new homes A Laeuna Beach·based, non· profit educaUonal or1anbatlon wants s>eQple · who are planning to build their own home to ''build smart.'' This means deslgning the house so it will be energy effi· cieot and constructing it to meet the needs of those who are to live in it. To accomplish thls, Going Solar sponsors several classes that teach woutd,be home builders bow to be their own con- tractor. Partner John Stebbins said the more personal involvement peo- ple are willing to invest in the planning, contracting and con- struction of their houses, the more they will save In building costs. 1n addition, satisfaction with the finished product will be greater. "OUR OBJ ECTI VE is to in· still confidence so the person can be in charae of b1a buUd.inl project,'' Stebbins aald. Stebbins said bis is one of about 2X> owner-builder schools that have been formed acroa the country in responae to the high C<>&ts of buyine a home. "Most of us are being priced out or the housing market," be said. "But if you wort on your own project, many or the costa can be reduced or eliminated." Stebbins said carpentry sk.il.la are not part of the curricuJwn, but that those enrolled in the courses become familiar with tbe building process so they can be their own contractor. STUDENTS STUDY types of building materials as well as the design process. "U you don't have to pay a contractor you can eliminate about 20 percent of building costs right off the top," Stebbins said. The classes emphasize taking optimum advantage or the sun .. an enera tource. Student.a are taken on tours ot Goins Solar's passive solar dem- onstration bouae on Canyon Acres Drive In Laauna Beach. Paaalve soJar healin1 relies on the natural movement or warm air and oo manual control such as dampens, rather than pumps or fans, to clrcuJate heat. Solar homes have large, soutb- facine windows that allow tun· light to enter and warm the house, whlle the colder north aide of the dwelling has a minimum amount of glass so beat will not be loet. "OUR SOLAR class teaches people how to use the sun, wind and shading to maximum ad· vantage," Stebbins said. "How you install the glass in the house is the key to the collection, storage, distribution and retain- ing of solar heat.'' Stebbins said insulation of the house "has to be the first step." Passive solar home designs use 1lazed1 covered concrete walls that absorb beat, slab floors that absorb solar heat throuab windows and skyli1hta and a variety of other architec· tural modiflcaUom. Stebblm said the performance of these systems depends not on- ly on bow much solar heat they can collect, but also on how much of that heat is lost. HEAT LOSS can be prevented by installing movable insulating curtains that let the sunshine in during the day and they close at night to reduce heat loss. Going Solar's free introduc- tory lecture classes will be given May 5 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in Anaheim at the Cultural Arts Center, 931 North Harbor Blvd. The presentation will be on solar desien, including how to solarize an existing home. In ad- dition, sola r g r eenhouses, weather-stripping, insulation and other energy conservation techniques will be discussed Continental employees take takeover attempt by Texas Int'l personally ... B3 Solar demonl'tration ~ in Laguna Beach we1 1outh-facing eenhoule windows to allow ~h1 to enter and heal hmu_e_. __ French unit boosts fund Pain of budget pinch grows Pair plead • • innocent 1n The French-speaking Alliance Francaise organization will meet Thursday in Laguna Beach to hear singer Serge Kerval Already at austerity level, Laguna Beach to lose state revenue The concert will benefit the Al· liance's scholarship fund. Ad· mission is $3 The concert begins at 8 p.m. in the Bridge Hall of the Congregational Church al 341 St. Ann's Drive. By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. o.uy ...... u.tt It hasn't exactly been Easy Street for the City of Laguna Beach the past three years But beginning next fiscal year. the Proposition 13 squeeze is realJy on. When added to a carryover from this year of $525,000, the ci· ty will realize a balance or just over $1 million. A 9 percent cost of living in- c r ease for city employees however, would leave the city with about $690,000 -which just about matches the 10 percent the city requires lo remain in re· serve. The loss of state bailout funds will mean a reduction in some city positions, Frank said, in eluding one police investigator , three firemen, a planning assis· tanl and a streets maintenance worker. No one will be laid off as a re- sult of budget cuts, he said, ad- ding that the positions listed are vacant and will not be filled. AND WIULE the potential end lo stale bailout funds puts a Lagunan named to West Point Deborah A. Haller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Haller of Temple Hills Drive in Laguna Beach, has been appointed to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where s he will begin classes this s ummer That's the finding of a budget message from City Manager Ken Frank, who says Laguna Beach stands to lose $471,000 in state bailout funds next year - or about 7 percent of the city's current general fund revenue. Accordingly, Frank says, oo department heads asked for any extras next year and, in fact, Frank said he was forced to re- duce budgets "even below the austere level requested by in- dividual departments." Creative campus GWC adds basket weaving challenge Golden West College has been described as a place that offers classes in everything short of basket weaving. Miss Haller, 18, has been at· tending the U S Military Academy Prep School in New Jersey. The 1980 graduate of Laguna Beach Hi&h School was nominated by Rep. Robert E Badham < R Newport Beach l R EVENUES ABE projected to be $7.12 million for fiscal year 1981·82, up about $467,000 over this year's $6.65 million budget. Expenditures next year are expected to be $6.59 mUlion, leaving a difference of $526,000, Frank said. The Huntington Bead) school will correct that oversight this week with a six-part works hop entiUed "Creative Basketry Techniques." The free sessions will be held Thursdays from 9 a .m. to noon in the community center. Enrollment is limited, and pre-registration can be placed by calling the community services office. 893-6250. Villa, vistas top tour Mediterranean elegance perches on Laguna hilltop Bv JOHN NEEDHAM OttlM D•lly Pl114 S\aff A featured stop on this Sunday's Laguna Beach Charm House Tour sponsored by Village Laguna will be a wa lk through a F lorentine- style villa. perched on a hilltop The former beach house was remodeled nearly 20 years ago by Beverly Hills art collec- tor Proctor Stafford to resemble a palatial residence he lived in during the 1940s in Italy VILLA SI ENA IS NOW owned by Michael Smith and John Thompson, who are both employed in the entertainment industry. Thompson is a vocal coach and music teacher at Marina High School in Huntington Beach. Smith is the personal manager of such celebrities as Diahann Carroll, Kaye Ballard. John Davidson and Julie Harris. As the first hbme in Arch Beach Heights to be included in the annual tour, the 3,500-square- foot house provides a magnificent view of the Laguna coastline. as well as Catalina and Palos Verdes on a clear day THE FRONT DOOR OPENS onto a spacious terra cotta-colored courtyard with the tile-bottomed pool painted with a fierce looking Chinese dragon. Around the pool a re a life-size sculpture of two Greco-Roman wrestlers and several large terra cotta planters imported from Italy con- taining thick-leafed tropical planta. An antique copper dragon head adorns the balcony above the courtyard and serves as a fountain and water source to fill the pool. Blooming daisies and other flowers abound. cramp in Laguna's spending, Frank said not all the news 1s bleak for next year. For one thing, rent from the Festival of Arts is expected to increase by about $43,000 as a result or increased ticket prices Motor vehicle in-lieu fees should go up about $50,000 next year, and municipal fines will increase approximately StK>,000 because of a new computerized parking ticket program. Frank sees property tax rev· enues going up by 10 percent as real estate changes hands; sales ·tax should increase by 6 percent a nd bed lax should go up 3 per- cent. AS FAR AS major projects proposed in next year's spending document, Frank lists $410,000 for construction of a city park at Moulton Meadows in Arch Beach Heights. Another $18, 750 is proposed to be set aside for improvements to the community center, and $35,000 for a tot lot and basket ball court at Riddle Field .. bookmaking Two men accused of felony bookmaking in Orange County pleaded not guilty Monday at lhe1r arraignment m Central M un1c1pal Court in Santa Ana Alyn Brannon. 50. of Santa Ana and Salvatore Consalvo. 56, of Mission V1eJo requested instead a preliminary hearing on bookmak- ing and conspiracy charges. Judge John H Smith Jr. set the hearing for May 27. The Orange County Grand Jury issued a 20 count indictment agarnst the pair in late February. Orange County Sheriff's and Dis· trict Attorney's m vestigators believe that Brannon was the head man in the alleged opera- tions and Consalvo his assistant, accordmg to court documents Body found The body of 24-year-old Amy Lynn Rothell of Santa Ana was found about 100 yards off El Toro Road in Laguna Beach Monday. police reported. She was an apparent suicide victim The home's interior is fi lled with antiques and other collectibles gathered by Smith and Thompson, who do a great deal of business traveling. Pet dog and crocheted afghan odd to the codne11 of upltairt bedroom of MedUerr~n villa decorated in brown and rwt tOM1. Windowt are louwred and walk-in clout at rear ho.I •kJJ-light. FOil WARMTH ON CIDLL Y eveoings the upstairs bedroom baa a cast Iron 18th century French fireplace. In summer the room is cooled by a 1930s style ceilin« fan. On 1bompson '1 1rand piano in the livin& room are several porcelaln Llardro ficurinea from Spain. La Lique crystal linea the coffee ta· ble. Tbe dowmtalra bathroom, which opens onto the e>ool dec.k, bu a sunken Japanese tub. The wallt of the upstalra bathroom are covered with Italian marble lmported by the home's former owner. VWap Lasuoa li a non-profit, uvli'ODuien· tally oriented aroup whlcb 1howcaae1 ex- •mplary hOmet e.acb year to ral.ae moae7 for lta '1ariOU9 ~jectl in th• clt,y • . Orange Co.at OAU.:v Pll.OT!Tuetday. April 28, 1981 OVERTURES FBOll ELSE WR Ea£: All Rouahan, who welcla up 1teel sculptures and thus overheat.a offlcJala at Costa Mesa City Hall, ls draw· ing some unexpected 1upport tbese d•l•· You remember All Rowahan. don t vou? Not too long ago, be wu just a plain steelyard operator down on Superior Avenue in Mesa town. But then one day, be erecteG a tau. thin steelwork at the front Of hll borne . MunlclJ)al operatives cried foul, alleging that All haa jusC put up an illegal --------r-'\ , structure. TOM MURPHINI ~r,: it w!Jus~c~a:::: tower. complete with a waterfall running down its sides. Hailed before authorities for his asserted zoa.tni transgression1 All babbled a lot at the city lawmakers ana probably didn't improve his situa-lton. Later, however. the woing and building question became more interesting when Roushan abruptly claimed his ~ork was actuallr art. The city's official position said art or not it looked like a structure, felt like a structure ud therefore, must be a structure. · Al.AS, THE WHOLE ar"1ment is now beaded in· to the courts. Rousban is bemg bailed before the bar of justice on charges of contempt of ear.lier court prohibitions, on failure to comply. and other weary legal arguments. Meanwhile, the prayer tower grew a set of steel wings behind it. Then Ali added his latest bit of nose· Art for Alt's ~on Colta Me1a'11 Superior Avenue thumbing at municipal authority with a masterpiece of 30 feet called "Volcano." While admittedly. Ali Roushan sometimes ir· ritates the citizenry when he gets too vocal, there are a number of observers who think bis alleged artwork looks pretty nice out there on Superior Avenue. SOME HA VE COMPARED it favorably to other steel sculptures, like "Vestige," that was given the boot from the Main Beach Park at Laguna Beach. Others have suggested it's a lot nicer t.o look at than rocks or rills or butterfly bills. Even certain folks who claim to have no ap- preciation of fine arts suggest that whatever Ali erects on Superior A venue is bound to be an im· provement over the present landscape, where rust· mg auto bodies and other aging castoffs tend to fill the vision. ONE WAG EVEN quipped that if you figured Superior A venue was the development standard for Costa Mesa, then the City Seal should carry the side view of a rusting 1939 Chrysler Airflow. Or maybe a DeSoto bumper with a tin can stuck on each end. An~ay. it looks like neither All nor City Hall are willing to give quarter, so his waterfall prayer tower, steel wings and volcano are all beaded for Superior Court. In view of this, Roushan did draw this unexpected ally. Are you ready? His surprising support came from the inland city of Brea. Brea's newspaper only last week recounted in somewhat of a lament, the troubles that have visited Roushan as he attempted to beautify bis home city. The Brea paoer. in its editorial, also noted that Brea has suffered the reverse problem with art. That is, the paper alleges that every time some developer wants to erect a new building in that com· munity, the city authorities look around and ask him where its art is located. PUSHING TO UPGRADE the Brea civic image, it was alleged that City Hall wants space in front of every structure for a sculpture. And they seem to smile even more heavily on developers who fill the space with something of an art form. Art bas thlUI become a Brea passion. The Brea editorial suggested, "Rouaban pack up bis weld.in« Uos and art and move to Brea . . . Brea just might be the place for Rousban to relocate." This position, ii taken officially by the Brea municipal autbonUes, should give Costa Mesa civic authorities pause. ARE THEY KICKING the next Picasso or Rembrandt in the teeth? What if Rouahan tu.ms out to be the only artist history remembers from our era? C.0.ta Mesa could end up taJdnt the artiltlc pratfall of the century. Just thlnk ol blltory remem· bering Costa Mesa only because ,the city waa up- •taaed by Brea. DISSENTS -Gen. William Westmoreland , former Army chief of staff, says women shouldn't be drafted for the armed services because if a man and & woman are in a foxhole together "they're going to be making love, not war." He said "any man of gump- tion'' does not want women to fight their wars. Slain son uxis model to mom NORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla CAP) -To his invalid mother, Gary Doyno was the model son, cooking her breakfast and car· ing for her day and night al.nee she was crippled 21 years ago. She never kne w he had another life. Gary Doyno's body was found by a family friend early April 3, slumped over a safe in the living room as his mother lay in the bedroom. Police say he was a drug dealer. "WE BEU EVE HE was ripped off for drugs and money." said de· tec\ive Ray Nazario or the Dade Co unty homicide squad. "He was dealing heavily in narcotics." Mrs. Ooyno, 58, was struck by a car when Gary was 5 years old. Arte r spending a year in a hospital, the divorcee came home toheryotmgson. He "cooked my breakfast and used to carry my wheelchair and put it in the trunk of the car." she recalled. When her son was 7. he insisted she learn to drive a apttially equ1ppedcar. "He gave me strength," she said "We went through so much together." DOYNO, ZI, apparently went to sleep about 11 p.m. April 2. About midnight he was beaten, forced down a flight of stairs and shot to death, police aaid. Mrs. Doyno told police s he heard a loud noise and called a friend who reassured her, saying she must have beard dogs knocking over garbage cans. The friend later came over and foundlheyoungman'a body. Police did not determine what the killers took. A $500 blll was left in the safe and $20,000 was un· touched on a chair in Doyno's room. Investigators and Mn. Doyno said Gary must bave known bis killen because the house bad a doorbell and ln· lercom. "If be opened that door, It bad to be a friend on tlie other side," his motbersaid. NAZARIO SAID the killers "knew bis mother was there and that she couldn 'l get out of bed without help." Mri. Doyno has offered a $10,000reward in the caae. "They killed him like anlm al,•' she said. Workalwlic ineffective BERKELEY <AP > Workaholics may be more trouble than they are worth, a Univeralty of California psycbologtst's study indicates. Rather than beln1 the moat productive employees , workabollca tend to ruln thelr health and lose t.belr Job ef· fectlverseu, wlt.b a narrow focua on work to the excJualon ot aU else, acoordJn1 to a 1tudy by Cbarlea Glffleld. •• • NeWS FEATURES .. ,. . --------------AIOUY 1 s1A10UJ99 GREAT ! 9 DINNER 5 •9,suPERI e7 DINNERI 0 c: GOOd IOf lntH p1ec•• ol 1u1cy. gotden brown Kentuclly GOOd !Of nine piecea of 1u1cy. gpt!Mn l)l'own Kentuelly Fried Cnlcken, wlltl lour roll1. a large cote alew, e larci- mashed po1a1oe1 end a ~dium gravy Limit two offert per purcl'llM. Coupon good only IOf comblnellon wtllla/ den< Ofdefl Cuatomer p1y1 all 1pphcable talff tu i:> F11ed Cn1cllen. plus single servings ol cole slaw. 0 mashed POl1toea Incl g11vy and 1 1011 limit two olle1s Z per putcnase Coupon good ooty IOf comt>ll'ahon wn11e1 I Clatk Ofdets Customer pays 111 applicable 111n I•• Oller expores May 10 1981 Oller expores CIC CIC I May 10 1981 I P11ces may vary el par· llc1pa11no 1oca11ons OOOd only 1n SOUtne•n I C111torn11 wne1e you see Ame11ca s F1avOC1l4' W1noow Bannet I ~ MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD FRESH Northern Red Salmon Whole or HaU ...................... 3.98 lb. We will gladly filel your 5almon for no extra charge DELANEY'S NOW HAS A LIMITED Sl'PPLY OF FRESH SWORDFISH. SO GOOD WHEN BROILED OR BARBECUED. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and top chQice beef aged at least 30 days to the peak of i;erfect1on Fresh Frozen Local Grown Rabbits 1.98 lb. Center Cut Chuck Roasts . . . . . . . . . . l.49 lb. Boneless Rolled Beef Roasts ........ 2.98 lb. HaU or Whole Spring Lamb Cut and Wrapped for ~oar Freezer ...... 1.81 lb. All meat tlem!> purchased at Delaney s are Freezer Wrapped and properly marked for )Our eas) freezer 1dentificalion. FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE t 50.00 man. please 1 Your order is under complete refrigeration from our store to your door In our refrigerated trucks Call tn the mornin1 and your order "Ill be delivered to your home the same a(etmoon. Thia ad effective Wed .• 4/29 lhnl Tues .• 5/5 DELANEY'S MORNING FRESH PRODUCE· LOCAL·GROWN LARGE SIZE SWEET JUICY STRAWBERRIES. 3 Full bskts $1.00 For }Our complete ealenng wn 1ct> from a complt>te sit·do\\n dinner part) w part} Ira) s delivered to vour home For mformatiun c;ill Delan<') ,., CATERING l>epartnwnt a.,k for Tom Martin DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanry's Prhoate Label Champagne 1750 mill 2. 75 u . or 33.00 per case Bolla Soave 1750 m1l 1 Bel Arbres Chenln Blanc 1750 ma ll Canadian Club t One lat l'r • Scoresby Scotch : 750 mil 1 1 One Li' er 1 All liquor and \\me rilus tax 1 3.95 ('ll. 3.51 ea. 9.99 ea. 5.55 ea. 6.115 u . Delaney's now featuring fresh pasta. Jelly Belly's, the Official White Houe Jellv Bean ......................... 2.39 lb. Pep1I 12 pk. reg. or diet ...... 3. 79 plus 1x St.ore Hours 9·6, Oosed Sunday 2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-5520 TWO WEEKS OML Y FREE SPINAL SCREEMIMG EXAMIMA TIOM & X-RAYS APRIL 27th thru MAY 8 The Yarwood Chiropractic Office of Costa Mesa 1s sponsoring a Spinal Oieck-up and Scoliosis Screening program as a public service. This service will include consultation. examination. x-rays (if indicated) and a report of findings. By apPOintment only. Call 646-0516 Monday through Friday " CONSULTATION n. c .... h ..... cl .. ........ ,... ,..t .. ...., _,./or ,....... ,,.,to• • tlley .. , ,..,... t• ..... . .. ,.,, ... , ..... , .,, .. . co•dlH-. IOM4 ... tM ,......ef .. CI ..... .... d•ctor wlll ••II• ,..c.......... ,...,.di .. .......... or referrel to .........doctw. X-RAYS M•t ell ,etlHh r•1t•lre X-nya. ........... .._ WtW .,.... .......... ..... ..., ............... .... .. .CI 19rJ. H a..cefe4. .,. .. 1 flt.1 ....... .... •t.NM .. I ... •f ... .................... ........ ~.,.,ef ...... •lt••r••lltle1 ••d/ er ...... . .. ' REPORT OF FINDINGS A.fhr tlie doctor II•• correlet•cl roor fladl•t• bo .. cl •poa th lll1tory. •H•llMff• •cl X·r•r• Uf. r1....,...a JOll wfl recefY• • re,ort of fl•cll•t• ••411 NCH 91 ...... lllclc: ..... bf row.,.....ccnditlea. EXAMINATION* oilr office ... u... ..y ..... ty,.1 ef ...... •• I eHe. ,reced•re1. So•• •f Ille ....... 4 ..... ~ ¥"-' IM,.clloete .... tlC ...... or ,.,...... pr1lll1..: A,.. ... Let ..... ....... ... Mnde Tfth: _, .... ef ........ Sllllles. •IALLOW 60 TO tO MINUTll llOI •U NOCIDUUI TO 11 COMPU'r'9t COMMON WARNING SIGNS OF SPINE RElA TED CONDITIONS z 0 ci. :::> 0 u I II · I " Sugar Ray Leonard admits he's worried about next fight. C2. Owens (who's he?·) Rftms'~No. l pick With top pick gone, Rams draft .Michigan linebacker · Fir1t round draft picks ByJOBN8EVA.NO ................... 1~·1 alwaya been th~ Rama' contentJon on ~e NFL draft day thlt the best atbJete 1uperseded quanerback with tbe same JRiyslcal 1tature and maonerilmauthenewmemberoftheAlouette1. But the Paekera threw everyone for a loop, in- cludlnt the Rama, by foreaoln1 their ftnt need -de· fenH -for another QB to join Leo Dickey, David Wb!tebuntaod Bill Troup. need. • On NFL draft day, 1981, the Raimdevlated from that pbilolophy. Wlth quarterback Rieb Campbell of Cal, their flrat choice, aurprtatnaJy picked by Green Bay, the Rama opted for Mlcbigan linebacker Mel Owens. 0 WE DIDN'T GET Campbell but we 1ot 1omeooe with 1tabillty," ii bow Math analyzed the Owens selection. OWENS, THE NINTH PICK overall, wu a aleeper In the sense that be didn't receive the same publicity that Pittsburgh's Hugh Green. North Carolina's Lawrence Taylor and Alabama's E. J. Tbe Rama, with Brudzinat.i ion• and Jack Reynolds' future up in the air, will move Owens to middle linebacker, accordlnt to Coach Ray MalavaaJ. Asked 11 the Rama drafted for need rather than the best athlete, Math replied: "No, be was the highest individual we had. You can check our board if you want. Junior bad received. ' But at6-2, 233 pounds, Owens was considered the fourth best pick al his position by a number of 11cout- inl reports. "We rated Green and Taylor above him. that's all I'm going to say about that," said John Math, the Ra ms' director of player personnel. '·We took a sta- ble Individual who has the lnt~lllgel\ce and athletic ability we were looking for.'' •'I told you guys all week loog that there were no secrets. I told you after the ftnlnine pleb that thin1s dropped off considerably-andltdropaoff." Owens was in a rented home off the Michigan campus wbehe got the call from the Rams. THE llAMS' NEED for a linebacker was ap- parent before the draft, but it was even more em- phasized by the Bob Bruchlnsld-to·Miami trade, which occurred just prior to Tuesday's start. With the trade, the Rams swapped second round picks with the Dolphins -movina from 28th to 15th -and also acquired Miami's third-round selection, giving the Rama a total of five picks in the lint three rounds. "I'm very pleased," exclaimed Owens. "I was s urprised, yes, butl'm grateful also." OWENS SAID BE worked out for all 28 NFL clubs with the Rams, Philadelphia, Denver and Dalla! showing the most Interest. Owens, who doesn't have an agent, also said be doesn't feel there will be any problems coming to terms with the Rams. With Vince Ferragamo leaving for Montreal, the Rams were hoping to get Campbell, a 6-5, 226-pouod '·I'm very impressed with the LA oraaruzatlon, · • said Owens, who appeared In three Rose Bowls for Baylor comes alive OAKLAND (AP> -The Angels have stopped the Oakland A's -at least tem· porarily. "It's an Important series, and Important for us to win. If a team could go through a seuon and lose only one game, they'd be tough to beat," Angels Manager Jim Fregosi noted Monday night. Tbe A's brought a 17·1 record Into the game which opened a 13-game homestand. They pro- vided some excitement, includ- ing a triple play, for an en- thusiastic crowd of 41, 760 before falling 3-2 to the Angels. "IT WAS THE same story as the other loss -no offense. We had three hits this time and not many more (seven) an the loss to Seattle," said the A's Mike Heath, who was robbed of a home run in the eighth inning when Juan Beniquez made a catch at the left field fence. ·'Even if we lost a couple of games in a row, i don't see how the fans could get down on us," Heath added. "We're still play- ing exciting baseball. Siesta gets Valenzuela up Dodger phenom sparkles again LOS ANGELES <AP> -It was a World Series atmosphere .that gripped Dodger Stadium. Fans were arriving as early as three hours before the game and more than 100 members of the media were on hand to witness the latest performance of the re- markable Fernando Valenzuela. So where was Valenzuela, the rookie Los Angeles left-hander, while all this was going on Mon- day night? "HE'S GE'ITING UP for the game, all right," said Dodger s hortstop Bill Russell. "He's in the re on the trainer's table, sound asleep." The 20-ye ar-old Valenzuela was wide awake a litUe la as he c o ntinue d his inc redible performance on the mound and at the plate. Valenzuela shut out the San Francisco Giants ~o. al- lowing seven hits. Valenzuela has started five games in bis brief major league career and won them all, four via shutout, and in 45 innings this year, he has allowed only one earned run. said, "He throws a pitch you don't see too often, and when you do see it, you don't know what to do with it.'' San Francisco outfielder Jerry Mutin, who bad two of the Giant.a' seven bit.a, said, "He bas more poise than any 20-year-old I've ever seen -that is, if be re- ally is 20." AFTERWARD, Valenzuela, through an interpreter, said, "I feel great, no I wasn't tired, I went to my screwball more toward the end of the game." On his hittingbe's batting .438 for the season with seven bit.a in 16 at-bats, Valenzuela laughed and said, "No, I've never been a good bitter. But I like to bit, and I try to hit well." He singled in the third inning but eventually was thrown out al the plate after Ken Landreanx had singled to center. In the fourth, the Dodgers finally got to loser Tom Griffin, 1-2, after the San Francisco right-hander had retired the first two batters in the inning. the Wolverines and spearheaded the dafenN wbU:b dldn'tallowatouchdowndurinlilllast22quartenof 1981. ·'They bave a lot of 1reat playen out there. "I don't see any problem in 1ipln1 wkb the Rams. l'mmorelotereated inplaytna." Math, when asked about the poulbWty of Owem starting rl1ht away, commented, ··~ will QDt be elven the position. The way thino are done here it wlU take time. No individual wlllbe etv~ a pe>aition here -period. That's not the policy of the Loa Anae.JJ!s Rama.'' .. OWNER GEORGIA F&ONTIE&E indicated tba~ the Rams were drafting toward fllllnl posi- tions, not athletic ability. "There are a couple of positions we would like to have more strength in. One of them is al running buk. We still have a few more secrets " Math countered by saying this year's draft hasn't been the strongest. · "I won't say this was the most predictable draft I've been involved with. "We want to get the best people on the board, we don't want to deviate from that philosophy We wanl to get some stability.•' M alh said. Obviously feeling Owens wasn't enough, the Rams surprisingly picked another linebacker - Jim Collins of Syracuse. Collins~ at 6·1, 227 pounds, played middle linebacker at Syracuse. He runs the 40 in 4.7. Collins was the Rams' second round pick. 15th on the round and 49rd overall. ,1.N•w~-Oeotge"099,..,rb,'°4ltt!Carolena. l .N•wYortlOlanta-Lawr•nc•Tartor,lb,NCNth CaroUna. I . N•w YortlJeb-f',..m.n McNel, rb, UCLA. 4. IHttle-MeMrh•r.db,ua.A. ' I . It. LOu19-l.J. Junior, lb, Alabeaw. I . Orffft Bay-fUch C•mpball, qb, Calfomle. 1. Tarnpahr-HuahOt'ffn,lb,~. I. Ian Francfeco-Jtonnla Lott, 6, UIC. t . LoaAngatea-M•IOwena, lb,tllCNpn. 10.Clndnnatt-DavtdYerMr,wr,Kaneaa. 11 . Chlc:ago-K.ethVanHome,ot.UIC. 12.aatamora-"•ncfrlilcMWan,fb,~. 13. Mlarnl-Davtd Ov9f'8trfft. hb, Otdahotna. 1 •. K anNa ett,-Wlth Scott. t•, louttt Carolina. 11.Denver-O.nnlalmltl\,aafetJ,UIC. 11. Detroit-Marte Nlchola, wr, 8anJoM It. 17.P~tgfl-KelU'tOary,dl,Oldahoma. 11. •eaJttmoN-DonneU Thompeon, •cft, North Carolina. 11. New England-Brian Holloway,ot, ltanfof'd. 20. Waahlngton-MartcMay,ot,Plttaburgh. 21 . Oakland-TedWiitta,db, THHTach. 22. Ctev.iand-Hanford Dixon, db, Southern MIHIHlppl. 23. • •oaldand-Cur1 Ma rah, ot, WHhlngton. 2•. San Diego-Jame• Brooke, rb, Auburn 25. Atlanta-Bobby Butter, db, Ronda St 2S. DaHH-HowardAlcharda, ot, Mlaaouri. 27. Phlladetphla-L90nard Mltm.tl, di, Hou1ton. 211. Buffalo-Booker Moore, rb, Penn St. • Mlnneao .. traded lt1 flrat round plcll to Bahl more for both 9f the CoHa' uconckound ~•. pfua 8 a ltlmore'a flfttHoundJeleetlon. • •oaldand and Buffalo awapped tint round drd pick• with Buffalo alao getting the Aaldera' third round pick. ........... Rogers top draft choice NEW YORK CAP) Georee Rogers, the first choice in t o day's N ational Football League draft, dismissed sugges- tions that he would be the im- mediate savior for the 1·15 New Orle ans Saints. "I don't think I'm an Earl Campbell," he said. Rogers, the Heisman-Tropby winning running back from the University of South Carolina, said be would lUce to build the Saints into a winner, just like Campbell. once a Helsmao Trophy winner at the University , of Texas. has done for the Houston Oilers. "But I can't tum it around by myself,'' Rogers said. ''I'm not a one-man team; I play with a team. .. As an individual, I can't do it. It has to be the team U.at wiU do it." , SIGNS WITH MONTREAL -Ex-Ram Vince Ferragamo signs his first autograph as a member of the Montreal Alouettes as his wife Jody looks on. The 6·2, 220-pound power run- ner led the nation in rushing in 1980 with 1,781 y ards . He a veraged six yards per carry a nd score d 14 tou c hdown~ finishing his collegiate car~ with 22 consecutive 100-yard games. Rogers said his biggest adjustment in the pros would be a need "to be more physical." "When you're 17-2, 'slump' is a foreign word." Don Baylor. hitting .058 before the game, drove in his first run of the sea.son with a sacrifice fly in the second inning, homered in the fourth to break a 2·2 tie. and tined into the triple play in the sixth. Monday nigt\t's performance lowered bis earned run average to 0.20 With his third straight shutout, he bas a string of 28~ scoreless innings. Ferragamo couldn't refuse Bum Phillips, new head coach of the Saints, is a firm believer in a bruising running attack. When Phillips coached at Hous t-Qp , he had Campbell rushing "Some 20-25 times a game. ·•1 haven't hit the ball well all spring, but tonight I bad four good al-bat.a," said Baylor, who was tbe American League's Most Valuable Player ln 1979 and bad lnjury problems last season. KEN roasca, ONE of the many addltiom to the Angels· pttcbln& ataff th.ls aeuon, im· proved bis record to 3--0 with the three-bltter in bestinl the A's St.eve McCalty, 3-1. .. I knew I'd have to hold them down to • few run1, because their pttcbina staff la just ao.fan- taatlc," aald the rlaht·bander wbo evened bil career major leasue record, now 11-11. The A'• other loaa, •lain.st the S.attJ• Marloen el1ht days earll.r, a1lo wu by a 3-2 tcore. "Webster has no words to de· fine him," said Los Angeles second baseman Dave Lopes, wh o helped to preserve Valenzuela's latest shutout with a running, over-the-shoulder catch of a fly ball in the second inning when the Giants had run- ne rs at first and third and nobody out. THE CROWD OF 49,478 IC· corded Valenzuela numerous standing ovations, on the mound as he strung out one shutout ln· nlng after another, and at the plate, where be collected three of the Dodgers' 11 hit.! and alJo knocked to the game's flrlt nm. "He's entitled to all that ac· claim," said Lopes. "He's done thlnl• no one else baa done. He's a star. He owns the city 11Cht now. He's a 1uper kid and a 1reatpttcber." ~ San Francisco Manaaer·Frank Robinson , referrlne to Valenzuela's darti111 1crewball, Rams say they're still deep at QB with Haden, two others MONTREAL (AP) -The Montreal Alouettes made strong-armed, rre e -a1enl quarterback Vince Ferraaamo and fleet-footed receiver James Scott offers they couldn 'l refuse ... and they didn't. It was a d.Wicult declaioa for Ferragamo to make, but the gifted signal-caller said he was offered a contract with the Canadian Football Leaaue. club that •imply was too 1enerous to turn down. "It wu a very emotional de- cision and ooe that was hard to deal with," said Ferraaamo, who •laned a four-year contract worth an estimated '400,000 per season. ''There wu a lot of 1treu and llraln involved," aald the %7- year-old Ferraaamo, who played out bla option lut aeuon with the Los Angeles Rams of the Natiooal Football League. "I was makln.I very little pro- gress in contract talks with the Rams and I met with a man - Nelson Skalbania -who made things posidble and gave me an offer I couldn't pus up." Skalbania, the 42-year-old self- m ade millioniare from Van- couver, completed his purchase or the Alouettes from Sam Berger earlier Monday. Skalbania bad announced April 1 that be bad siped Fer· raaamo to a four-year penonal services contract, but since then the official slp.lng bas been an on-aaain, off-acaln happenlq. "It's been a long oideal aDd I know it'• ~d of aotl-cllmactlc now, btrt I'm 1lad to be hen," aald Fettaiamo. "I'm toatlna forward to doing the beat I catl here. · "Los Angeles is a very good organization, and I'm really go- ing to miss the guys on the team, but I am excited to be here. "Naturally, we're sorry to see that Vince bas made this de- cision because we wanted very much for him to be a Ram and we tried very hard to alp him ln the last year." said· Jerry Wilcox, the director of public re· lationa for the club. ",We have three pretty good one1, we feel," said. Wilcox. "We've got Pat Haden. who helped us to three division cbamptonahips as a starter. We've eot a proven veteran quarterback with a lot of years of experience in Bob Lee, who'll be back, and we ha•e a )'ounpter with a lot of potential lo Jeff Rutledge." f!-eoubled Be.II unsure of fooiball fi:iture at Kaiuas Rogers said he might be a lit· li e more versatile than Campbell. "I want to receive the ball, ra~ thaa run it all the thpe," he said al a news con- ference immediately after his selection. Asked about playing under Phillips, Rogers said: "I'm lin- pressed with the way be coached . Earl Campbell. Earl's one of lby idols." New Orleans owner Jobo· Mecom said be expected Roten to be the most expeflllve rookie ever slped by the Saints. '--Two ·-¥eart •IQ, linebacker l·om Cousineau, the leaeue'1 No. 1 pick, •lined with the Canadian Football Lea1Ue rather than the Buffalo Billa. "He won't be in Can ad a; he'll be ln New Orleana," Mecom said. lloaera aald one of the ~ he'll do with the molie1 from conttact la buJ a bouae for • mother. He alto tald b1a oew- f o u nd wealt)i 1carH btm becauae "I bav• a Job now and if I don't produce, I can •et tfnd." Runnln1 back Preemaa McNeil ol UCLA wu tile tblnl pla1er ]licked in the draft, ,... to U.. Nn Yott Jeta. Md~ mate Kenny J!:aaley, H AU-Amencan aatei,. wu Mledli No.'~ by SeatUe. Aleo drafted wen USC fetlllTt bMll ._ .. LOU~ Praacl1co~t• Itel" r~ ·Jill ••> ·~~~-:! u.. ~ ,._. aad.:W ca••rtulNlet IUclt Came...,~ (Or .. Ba)), IU JOH 1 .... w••• ,.....lluk!'l=e <l>etl'Glt> ... f•d "11111--..-~-­latkle Jhiltl llollOWQ ( ..... ). , .. From AP dllpa&e91a HOUSTON -Rel1nlo1 World m Boxiha Council welt.erwei&ht cbam· pion SUtar Ray Leonard wanta to add the World Box1n1 .USOClatioa junior mlddleweitbt crown to his trophy cue, but be said Monday 1ettln8 past WBA cbamp Ayub Kalule will be a difficult chore. LeonUd, atepplD1 up one welpt cluslflca· lion, will meet Kalule June 2S u part of a double-barreled main event that will include World Box· int AsaoclaUon welterweight champion Thomas Hearns, . also a possible future oppo- nent for Leonard. "When I see him ( Kalule) fight, it makes me wonder why I ever picked boxing as a profession, the man is awesomt!," Leonard Leonard said. "I'm ln excellent shape Dent, Gu drY prolong Tigers' mlsery . ..., .... btt. iwo. ......... II and --~~ scatter.d 4" blta lD eltbt lllaln11 •• tb• New Nork YUkeel Mfeated o.t:rolt, 1-1 to P• teod the ,,,.,... lol1.nl .~ to ~t 1am• JI011iaynl0t • • • Ill otMI' A.mertcan I.Ml,_ action. r.cf.bot &a...,...... raPPed four fdtl and dron In tM winn1D1 ruo u aaJttmore 1napp.d the Chlcato Wblte Sox's 1lx·1ame wln· nln1 ttreu wttb a 5-2 Vk· tory. 8ea4t NcGn.or. 1·1, a 20-1ame wt.noer lut HUOD, 1cattered 11 bit.a, atrlkln\:: ab ln the proceu . • . 47 8eU 1mackecl a two.nm homer ln tbe nr.t lnnlnt and Te:1as added rour more rum In a 1lxth·lnnln1 outburst hi1hll1hted by a three-run Boston throwln1 error u the Dent Ran1era downed tbe Red Sox , 10.0 . . . LarrJ Hiiie'• slnlle scored CecU ~r from second bale wttb two out in the 12tb lnn1n1. Uftint Milwaukee to a 4-3 vie· tory over Toronto . . . LeMy audle tipped a five·nm 10th iDnlDI with a crand alam homer to llft SeaWe to an 8-3 victory over MJ.nne.ota. aoapping the Mariners' four-aame 101101 streak. . . . . ln the National Leaiue, Pete &oat tripled home one run and scored another in tbe ftnt lnninl and the Phlladelphia Phillies went on to beat Montreal, 3-1, and map tbe Ex· pos' atx·game winning streak. Rlahl·bander Dick aadlva pitched • four-bitter for bis third victory against one defeat Baseball today and I'm going to stay that way because this wi!l., be a toueh fight.·· '""' On this date in baseball in 1971 : Hank Aaron of the Atlant~ Braves belted his 600th career home run of( Gaylord Perry of the San Francisco Giants. State Assembly sticks to decision SACRAMENTO The state Al.· [i] sembly, for the second time in less 4 • than a week, voted Monday to pro· hibit teams like the Los Aneeles Rams from using a city's name after they've moved from the city. The vote was 42·33 to send the measure, A8502 by Assemblyman Mike Roos, D-Los Angleles, to the stale Senate. The Assembly had voted 41·26 for the bill last Thursday, but an opponent bad asked for a second vole. The bill would forbid profeaaionaJ sport.a teams from using the name or a city or county if they don't play home games there. It would re- quire such a team to get perminioo and would lel a city or county charge a fee for that permission. It is aimed at the Rams, which moved its National Football League rranchiae to Orange County last year. "They've stolen our team and they've stolen our fans," Roos said. "Why should they be al· lowed to use our namt>7 " Quote of the day Blackie Sherrod, columnist for the Dallas Times Herald, on a complaint by Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner that salaries 1n baseball are too high : "That's like Al Capone speaking out for gun con- trol." Pirates to New Orleans: butt out PITTSBURGH A federal suit •. seeking to stop the city of New Orleans and the Louisiana Superdome rrom luring the Pirate baseball team from Pittsburgh wu filed Mon· day by Mayor Richard Caliguin. "To put 1t very bluntly, this suit is being filed to serve notice on the city of New Orleans and the management of its Superdome to butt out of this city's present contractual dispute with the Pirate management," said Caliguiri. The Pirates. claiming they've lost $7 million since moving into Three Rivers St~dium in 1970, are suing the stadium authority to nullify their lease, which has 30 years to run. On this date in l961 : Al the age of 40, WarTen Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves fired a l ·O no-hitter against the Giants. Minor leaguer hurls no-hitter Mlke Jooea, a 21-year-0ld left· Ill hander, tossed a no-hitter to lead Omaha to a 2-0 American Association victory over Iowa Monday rugbt. The closest Iowa got to a bit was a foul ball in the sixth inning . . Yaaaick Noa.Ill, France's beat player and ranked 13th in the world, withdrew from the quarterfinals of the WoTid Cham· pionship of Tennis rmals an hour before bb match in DaJlu because of bicep tendlnit.b . . . ~ young man who spent 47 days in a coma after he fought an unlicensed amateur boxing match, has died without regalning con· sciousness. Vic Ay•aalan, 21, of Duarte, col· lapsed March 10 after tbe fight in a saloop . . The Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League ha'Ve bought the negotiating rights to. Tom ClemeaU, a third-string quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs The Chicago Bulls signed veteran forward Dwlgllt Jones to a multiyear contract . . . A federal judge approved settlement or two CIUS· action suits involving more than 9,000 Americans sei!king refunds an.er they canceled plans to attend the 1980 Olympics In Moscow . . . ""41 MeCtlkllaa, wt.o.e teams at the University ol EvansvUle won fi9e NCAA amaU- college championships in 31 yean. was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame . . . The Mobil Corp.,. which earlier announced that it was going to back the national track-and-field cbampionsh.ips, said that it was also going to fund an outdoor track Grand Prix. Television, radio TV: Vic Braden's Tennis for the Future, 10 :30 p m .. Channel 28 RADIO: San Francisco at Dodgers. 7 · 30 p.m .. KABC (790 >; Angels at Oakland. 7:30 p.m .. KM PC (710 > WEDNESDAY RADIO Baseball Angels at Oakland. l : 30 p. m ., KMPC 1710). 8YloGE&CA&lBON OAlltO-.Nll ... LONG BEACH -Amerttan water polo -lt'a -. l · ldl aame to b•fln • h, the Arrattcaa a)'a.ib' Of. tbftlpet· ln• a1&1Ut other. whb • dlf· 'ferent 1et of rules rnatet It even more difficult and Stanford Unlvenlty aophonaote Jamie Berseaon la In \' typical dilemma. ' The eidlt·nation ll Flna Cup compettt.loa bere at ~nl Beach State enters its fout'Pt day of competition wltb tbe Untted State• tacklinf a d•n1er«>ua Spanish outfit at ':Sd following Monday's conqueatot Auatrana. For Bereesoo, ft'• the same old tua-or-war that ba1 plaaued the United Sta tea since ~_lrleone decided it WU a SoOci td4ffi ~ IO ror the aold medal ~ •o Olym· pies with a group 6f IU·stars against the team-0riet!ted 'eOm· munist.s of eastern EuropeJ IN A NUTSHELL, 8ergeson'• Ute and future coo1lsta or more than playing water p0lo -the luxury or competing has Its limits. The 20-year-old l\roduct of Newport Harbor Hieb ls w.1UDC on an engineering 'detr• 81\d the class load Isn't euy. N"ii~r is the responslbillty toward blending Into the American water polo team an euy load. · · T h e c o a c h < M °'" t e Nitzkowski) may think I'm not as serious about tlris because 1 've missed so many practices." says·Bergeson. "Weekend pracUC98 art touah to make during fUtals. J tan· derstand the pr6"1em , ~e haven't worked out t.f\lt much." While the Ametlcan teams get a few solid pracUce1 ln on weekends when the athletes can hop a flight and spend the weekend alternately iri tbe north (Bay Area> and the s~th (Long Beach State>. the flossiarB. Yugoslavi ans, Hancari1ns , Italians, East G ermafts. Bulgarians and tt)e like, are practiclne on an 9·' lule, with nothing standing Jn ttNtr "'ay "Trying to get an education and play water polo at the same lime is difficult," undentates Bergeson "THE NEXT two years I've just got to wo rt lt out and hopefully the coach will be pa· tient with me. Wata polo, you know. ts a year-lon1 Sport and by now, you can reallf reel burned out. But I enj6y tht game , especia lly fl)r the physical contact. I like the man· to-man confrontaUon " The Los Angeles Olympics in August of 1984 come some 1~ m onth s alter Bergeson's scheduled graduation from Stan ford and he says the timing could not be better for hiln "It's a year to dedicate mysetf," he says SRORTS BReAK I WATER POLO/ BOATINQ Barnett, the Newport Harbor High and Junior National team coach, molded Bergeson into a two-time CIF 4-A Player of the Year, and is still considered the big influence . "He taught me a lot, rnore than anyone," says Bergeson "And he's a good friend." BERGESON'S ROLE in the United Slates attack is as a dr\ver, constantly moving and driving on offense, putting the pressure on the opponent and counter-attacking. almost an ex elusive offensive role. which s uits him fine. One of his major problems 1s one that bugs a lot of water polo players -playing with emotion. yet having the disciplint> to react to low blows without damaging the team or himself It's also one of N1tzkowski's concerns about t h is young American team as it continues preparation for '84 "You have to play with finesse ,·' says Nitzkowski "Playing with emo t1on and finesse can be tough The key is stabiUty. consistency aod ~~cal cllldpl.lnt." 0'THE a rEREE Will alwa)'I aee the reaponu, •• ••1• Ber1eson. ''You have to walt tor the ri1ht time to pay aosneone back. J beUeve In 1roe.,._. If lt la to your aclvanta•e, but nothina blatant. "You bave to e.dJutt to Liie referee. Somelimea you have to go very conservatively, other limes you can eet away with things. You have to find out, then pace younelf." B e rgeson 's devotion to aquatics lies only with water polo swimming takes 1 backseat. But he doesn't feel raw speed ls a problem. at all. "For 10 yards I can swim a > fast as anyone, and that's pretty much what a drive consist. of." >ays Bergeson. THE FRUSTRATIONS of water polo in general, for most p\ayers, lies with the officiating, which makes basketball or foot· ball appear pale in comparison when cons1dertn& the effect the oHicials h.ave on the game. And on the inte rnational scene, well. ask an American diver what he thinks or com· munist scorers. Sometimes it's just flat ridiculous. Nevertheless. they're a fact or life and Bergeson ex pands on this phase of the game: "The referees' mOuence can change the game so. and I think the Euro- pean rererees like to play to the c r owd 's mterest, to keep the potential runaways close "It's probably one of the reasons why the game has more support. tn Europe " As for this tournament, the r1rsl of thrt.>e major events prior to the '84 Olympics <the others bemg the World Champ1onsh1ps tn Ecuador in 1982 and t he Ill Fina Cup 1n 19831. Bergeson says his goal 1s simply to play the best ht• can And as evidenced by the Americans' record through the ftrsl three rounds. that hasn 't been too shabby ~I Hamann sparkles Motions enough for U .S. in 9-5 win LONG BEACH -Emotion· less. but sW1 with enough raw talent lo win by j ust going through the motions, the United Slates put Australia away, 9·5. Monday night in JI FINA Cup water polo action at Long Beach State. setting up tonight's duel with Spain <8 .30> as the fourth night of the eight-nation touma menl unfolds The highlight of tonight's four game salvo comes at 7 when un beaten Yugoslavia. the Moscow Olympics silver medalist, tangle with the unbeaten Soviet Union, the gold medalist in the '80 Games. Mc Donald each scored to pace a 3 o lead, a n American advantage that would never dwindle to less than three goals after it was ex· panded to 4 1. still m the first quarter Vargas and McDonald each f1n1shed with three goals and McDonald also accounted for a couple or first half stea ls Goalie Steve Hamann 's play was perhaps the highlight of an otherwise dull game, as he was responsible for nine blocks at the net, including a spectacular save on Australia's only penalty shot Boxer was given injections Bergeson was a ttlember of the 1981 NCAA championship Stanford team, whkh revolved around the spectacular play or ex-Foothill Hilb' lo.,.fe John Gansel, and su~Ct'll teems to ha.ve followed Jarni6' slnce the day he decided co follow his brother's <Garth) rootateps. ·•1 began swimmiriC ft'hen r was six," aaya Jamt•. but because of Garth's totces• (the latter was a CIF 4·A Player of the Year for Corona del Mar High in l.970), I thoucht maybe it would run in the famtty. · · Jt was about what I expect· ed ." said United States Coach Monte Nitzkowski, following the American's routine victory over the Australians. "We were very tired physically and emotionally from last night <Sunday's 6·5 toss to the Russians >, and it showed." "We weren't crisp mentally and our offense was young - a nd tired tonight," said Nitzkowski. But we were in com· m and from the start and that was important "And, we won." Tonight's opponent, a winless ( 0·2· l>, but dangerously quick Spanish crew, Is led by Manuel Esliarte, who along with Georei Ms hvenieradze of the Soviet Union, is a co-leader in goals scored through three games (10) Challenger Shields says he used legal pain-killer The U S. got off to a qukk start, as it did with Bulgaria Saturday, but this time 1t wasn't a one-man scoring show (Kevin Robertson ), as Joe Vargas, Jon Svendsen and Drew PHOENIX <AP) -Challenger Randy Shields may have violated World Boxing Association rules Saturday by taking painkilling drugs before bis welterweight title flgh\ again.st champion <Thomas Hearns Shields' personal physician, Dr. Richard Sis· son, disclosed Sunday that the No 5 challenger re· ceived eight injections or Novocain in hiJ!I left shouldeT prior to the bout. But Shield's father-trainer, Sonny Sheilds. said it was Xylocaine and cortisone, not Novocain, and that the dru&s used weren't against the rules. Both said the Injections weTe an effort to relieve a strained muscle and tendonitis. Melvin Ziegler, the WBA's supervisor for the fight, said lf a palnklller were used, Shields violat- ed WBA rules and would have been disqualified. Ziegler saJd that if Shields did take painkillers before the fight, "he's putt1n1 himself in jeopardy. He's admittlna he did somethlni illegal." Shields, 25, lost to the 22-year-old Hearns in the Uth round when rln& physician Charles D. Lake ruled that three cuts over Shields' eyes were ~ severe to allow blm to continue. Sisson, a friend of the Shields family. said be administered the numbln1 drug Saturday morn· ln1. He sald Sblelds' shoulder cond.tUoo was com· mon in boldnl and ia cau.sed by heavy trainln1. Sisson said Sbleld.a bad •'three or four areu that were very, very leader" and the shots "just took the edle ofl" the pal.a. Shlelds bad said Sunday that "my arm bothered me. I've bad a problem wtth It for over • month.'' On Friday be bad said he had tnSured a 1houlder two weeb before the fiabt when be fell wblle~. Lake said Monday he had seen no signs of Shields' bavine received any injection prior to Saturday moming'a physical and weigh-in. "Bill Bameu eot a ltoll ol mt when I was about 11er12. '' "He passed his physical, and I did the anatomical part of it," Lake said. "I took bold of his shoulder and squeezed it. He didn't respond to any tenderness or soreness. And he didn't show any problems to the arms.'' BasebQll standings Shields' father said he asked his son not to go into the ring Saturday but that the boxer responded, "No way. It only hurts a little bit." "The kid's got too much guts to quit," the elder Shields said. "To know Randy. Randy would not pull out." It's Nugie Too crawling to win AMElllCAN tEAGUE West Dl•lllon W L ftt. GB Oakland l'1 Z .895 Cblca10 10 4 .714 4'h An1e1J1 9 9 .500 7'h 'Texas 7 7 .:iQO 1'h Seattle S J} .~ 11 Kanau City 3 9 .250 lO'h Minnf:IOta 4 1' •1.11> 11~ EHtDl'rilWllll Cleveland 1 6 .i11 - Milwaukee I • .115 New York t • .eeo Boston 1 8 .131 l B ALMON " ns-v aaEY Detroit 7 t ... ~ ol.,Nllfl • .,.,,:::.;;,~ BalUmore :. T .fi1 l\Ar ENSENADA -Jlm Nugent of Balboa Yacht Toronto 5 '11-r> .IU C~ Club skippered bis Ericson-35 aloop Nufie Too to Alltf*i.o.a.!!.l "'':::., an overall Tictory in the Performance Handicap =:;1'.,~;.-::.!~'M......, Racing F1eet d1v1Jlon ot the Ne""""rl to Enaenada .. 1"-·~1 -.... -.. .,_:-' I yacht race Monday. .......-•.., 1 .. Tbe win 1ave him the Praident of the United ~::---~ • States t,ropby rorthe beat Ume in the bl11est neet Mel* (T,...;..'""';'f>~ k-. ln the race. Nuate Too was a Cla11 D entry. t .. >.11 ·. ._..,. WinDer of the Pretldent of Me.tco ttopby for =:::~,~;~ t>Ul comteted tlme in the lntemational Offabore •·~cOJti~~'L;t.......,., ... ~: Rule OM.1\on was Chnaun~. an M-foot sloop sailed KIM!M60tf ( "1• • ~ by Fred Pr.I••· Paclflc Marlnert Yacht Club. '1:.:r ...-.. '"""" •o II\~ c•a , NATIONAL LEAGUE West Dlvlsloo W L Ptt. GB .. Dodcen Atlanta Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Houston 14 3 .824 9 7 563 41-'l 8 7 533 5 7 1'2 .368 8 6 11 .353 8 4 12 .250 91/11 Eaat Divlsioo St. Louis 9 2 .818 \.'l Montreal 11 3 . 786 Philadelphia 11 5 .688 1 Pittsburgh 4 6 .400 5 New York 4 7 .364 S~ Chicaeo 1 13 .071 10 ....... k-. .,....,.. ), 5911 ,rMCllco 8 ~·~·1.-.-11 °"''--~ , ... ,. . ._ se11 ''•1te••<e < .-1111er •·ll •• Def .. ,. CtukllffeM),11 St.. L-* c.-i-t~l •I CJll<a90 (K"'*ew•U M•fllfeel (\.el t ·ll el Pllll••elplll• ((Nit!-1.0." "-'-' ,...._ ..,, el ........ (~ t II, 11 Seti 0 .... (Wltil04) el CIMl!lftMI CUC..•t>, 11 ,.lti.......,_ ,._......, 2~) et,._ Yet11 Ck• Hl,11 PrieaalloplckeduptbeNewport.Oteaos.wntAI· '"'·" • .,. • 1oclatioo tropbY for th~ first m.ciriohUU ye.cbt to ..;;_..;...._ _____ ,~ ___ M>_•~T•..,,~ ....... •r-.__-._,..,, .... ·n4..,.11...._...-._..:..._ ...... ________ -:--"".....-..---.. flnllb. • Wlnnor of the NOSA trophy for tbe flnt 1acbt tA> rtnlah wu Macbtt.e, a 40-foot catamaru ealktd by Jack Swart and Warren Seaman ot Offlbofe Crulllnt Club (thla yacht WU tint •miDIMlllJ ldonWltd u t>einl HUtd bf an Onqe Cout eon~•• crew). • 'r:be •&ow.It race l1l Ull Wltor7 of &bl M'~ old ..-.di"aued tO a dole at ill a.Ill. 11-.r wltb~abcMI& I ~--)'&d.U Mill ••H=.1111 M. TIM nee eommltttll ..W .::ti::!' .U: J>rob•bilr .amoq the a lit r~ ............ ,...'Ill) ,, ......... ... .. • d"Md _, It J P·•· " .,-=.mm .......... Udl Y811 llllllll llllY PIPll - ·tl ANtt•".JN IY IC. II ""'· •N I'-> By STJVE llARBLF. ofllleDIMY ......... The sbt-bedroom, waterfront house oo Baysbore Drive bean small resemblance to the place where John w ayne use to bang his hat. The Duke's mansion. per~ the most famous piece of real estate oo the Newport Harbor, ls cluttered with boards, nails and work.men these days. The kidney-shaped pool has been drained and the peaked roofs bave beenk.nockeddown. THE RAMBLING sinele-story house with its million dollar view of the bay is getting an overhaul. Workmen on the project say a second floor is being added. A 680·square-foot maid's quarter also is being built. But the renovation work trig- gered rumors in Harbor Area real estate circles this month that the house at 2686 Bayshore Drive was being torn down. •'There's hardly anything left," commented one Newport agent this week after taking a bay tour. .,..,,~ ........... John Wayne wcu a pttfectionist about his !ingle:story maMion with its million-dollar view of Newport Bay. bought the famed home with the intention of extensive remodel· Ing. •'The place has been remodeled three times already," remarked Buie "When Wayne was there, he added nearly 9,000 square feel. The current owner is just modernizing it a bit.·' was not included in the sale of the house. BUIE SAYS it's his understand- ing that Mrs. Bettingen. who cur- rently resides m Beverly Hills, in- tends to occupy the waterfront house when remodeling 1s com- plete Mrs. Wilham John Bettmgen is "modernizing" former Wayne home. When second 8tory is finished by nud-summer, pool wiU be refiUed and roof will be re- built New garage is m foreground. But according to Marion Buie, president of MacNab-Irvine the realty firm that handled the sale of the Wayne home last year, the rumors are only rumors. Buie said the present owner, Mrs. William John Bettmgen. Mrs. Betting en bought the estate for $3.47 million. The ask- ing price had been $4.7 million. Atld that was just for the house. the land being on a lease option. Wayne's boat, the Wild Goose. ·'The house was m good shape already," Buie said "Wayne was a perfectionist of sorts He kept the place in perfect shape. He liked everything m working or- der ·· Clnrk 's airport plnns rejected Orange County Superviaor RaJpb Clark's proposal to study an increase in daUy commercial airline fflghtB at John Wayne Airport to 62 was rejected today on a J..2 vote or the board or supervisors. Clark had asked his colleaiuea to fund an environmental study to examine increasing the 55 ff}gbts adopted ln February by the supervisors as part or their new master plan for improve- ments to the airport. (Currently, 41 flights are permitted daily.) Clark. noted that approval or the master plan had included a stipulation that the 62-Clight pro· posal could be studied later. But Thomas Riley. whose Sth District includes the airport, said today that the option was In· eluded only as a courtesy. Riley said the supervlt:ors alreaay have told county resi- dents that the SS daily flights will be the maximum. He noted that the study would cost up to $40,000 more than the current S330,000 cost or the complicated environmental studies already completed. Supervisors Harriett Wieder and Bruce Nestande joined Riley lo voting dowft Clark's proposal. Nestande formed the motion, which denied the pro- posal without prejudice, which means Clark could raise the iJ. sue again. But considering the political climate, it is unlikely be will for some time. Supervisor Roger Stanton sided with Clark to call for the study. But Stanton was careful not lo support the flight in- creases. He said, instead. that unhappy airport constituents should feel more secure if the 62-per-day proposal were re- fused after environmental documentation were available. Clark has advocated the 62 daily flights because he claims the seven extra trips won't add much more noise while better satisfying the county's overall transportation needs. "This is not a commitment; this is nothing but a study com- ing back to us," he argued. Riley, however. claimed the <See AIRPORT, Page A%) :Flight may give '.p8ir balloon record By P HIL SNEIDERMAN • OftlleDlllfy ..... I .... ex caped injury, sbe said. The pair returned to earth anx- ious for a good meal, bavln8 en- dured 36 hours without food. Food <See BALLOON, Pase A2> .,..,., "9e ......... GUILTY OF MURDER Ronald Spring PSA submits own airport access plan Not happy with a proposed five- year time span for gaining equal access to John Wayne Airport in Orange County, officials for Pacific Southwest Airlines have submitted their own access plan. In the proposal offered to mem- bers of the County Board of Supervisors, PSA could gain full status at the airport in three years An aide to Sth District Supervisor Thomas Riley said to- day that the PSA plan may have some merit and will be examined carefully. At the heart of the issue ls the fact that PSA ls the only airline in the UnitedStates-aodoneoftwo tn the world -that already iJ fly. ing the quieter jet aircraft called for In the airport master plan. (See PSA, PaJe AZ) Spring ruled guilty death of priest • ID ~ Ronald Spring was on tnal an He said he had visited the Or@le County Superior Court .cburch u p'ft or his ei1b~·year for nine day1, but it took his jury search for a woman he bad dal- less than five hours to find ru~·m ed nly once years before. He guilty of second-degree murd ouebt the woman might be a in the February, 1980, death of nun. Seal Beach priest Felix Doherty. Spindelman, the juror, said taped telephone conversations in which Spring had threJtened Chicago church oHicillts had been significant 1n the delibera- tions. Sprin& had promised to <See PRIEST, Pate A%) "We only took one vote." juror Leslie Spindelman of Fullerton said Monday after the trial. Spring, a 33-year-old Air Force and Vietnam veteran who worked al odd jobs, faces a sen- tence of from 15 years to life in prison for the felony The seven- man, five-woman jury also con- victed him of a misdemeanor vandalism charge. Homes f QJ; 40,000 planned in Irvine DR ESSED IN a blue velour pullover shirt, Spring sat almost motionless during the proceed· ings. His glance moved from lht: front or the room only once when a rear door opened and laughter from a hallway filtered into the courtroom. Parked in the room between the defendant and Judge James Turner was the green and black motorcycle Spring was riding on Feb. 9, 1980, when he was ac- cused or slugging Father Doher- ty at the rear door or St. AMe's Catholic Church. The priest was treated for a small head wound at the time. He died several weeks later of brain ir\juries. ·Spring testified last week that he had punched Father Doherty "in a rush of the moment" when be believed he W)lS being re- buffed. By RICHARD GREEN Of Ille Deity l't ... Staff The Irvine Company has un· veiled conceptual plans for the construction or 15,900 dwelling units -enough housing for 40,000 people -in the City of Irvine. Sites for a hospital. a civic center. parks. schools, offices and commercial rac1lit1es are also included in the proposal made public Monday by Irvine Company Vice President Tom ~telsen. The development is planned on 2,101 acres or flatland now in orange groves and row crops north of the San Diego Freeway in central Irvine. TWO DISTINCT planning areas -Village 12 and 14 -are encompassed by the plans of the Irvine Company, primary land- owner in the city. VllJage 12 is bounded by the San Diego Freeway, Jeffrey Road, Irvine Center Drive and Sand Canyon. Village 14 is bounded by the freeway, Irvine Center Drive, Culver Drive and Irvine Industrial Complex-West. Company representatives tried to file the conceptual plans for both villages with the city Friday bOt the proposals are ao lar8e that the city's Community Development Department would only aaree to begin work on plans relative to Village 12, said department spokesman John urpby. He Hid plans for VUlage 14 m uat be held in abeyance because the city doesn't have enough planners to procesa both proposa.la at the same time. Nf elMl aald the filins of con- ceptual pla na for tbe new vWaces ii only tbe flnt •ta•• ol ·a leDJthy review by the city atalf, dty commla1lon1 and UM City Councll. IAVINE CENTER OR. VILLAGE ~ cw 14 ~ ;a Detty ...... .,... PROPOSED VILLAGES Flank eristmg Woodbridge The Irvine Company will spend about $20 million to build a storm channel for San Diego Creek and to realign the Southern California Edison power lines that now bisect the area and travel north along Jef- frey Road for the Vlllage 12 pro- ject. Nielsen said the complny wants to place the lines aloog Sand Canyon Avenue and the Santa Fe Railroad tracks. A tougher problem faces (See HOUSING, Pa1e AZ) lllJHil C8AIT WllTBll Sunny Wednesday. Lowa tonight 56 at the beaches, 82 inland. Hi1ba Wednes- day 12 to 16 alon1 the coaat, 80 to 85 lnland. 111101 TIDAi Geort11 ao,rrt, °' •zp«t· Id, ,_ U.. top Nf'L draft jMcJI. TM R.ca1m, tn a tu,,,,U., go /01 -o Mf.cld(IOrt HubocM"t. ' SH POQt CJ. 11111 I . i I I \ ATLANTA <AP) -Just u poUee were decld.lnt not to Md Jimmy Ray Payne'• name tO a lilt of 25 llaln aad m1Atn1 YCM&nl I blacks, the bodyoftbe21-year~ld w11 found noatinjt.n a rlver-tbe fifth body to be dumped ln u area rtver in less than a month, police aay. A few hours later. Public Safety I Commilsloner Lee Brown said I that the death of the 5-foot-7, 130- pound man will be investitated by the tuk force probint the 218 deaths and disappearances, 1 which betan 21 mont.bs aco. The cause of Payne's death was I not determined immediately and medical officials said bis body, I found Monday, bore no obvious in- ' Juries. An autopsy began this mornin2 at the Fulton County I medlcaf examiner'sofflce. Meanwhile, another young black man of slight build was re- l ported missing today by bis mother, but police said his case •&;=;~~ was being investigated by the .... ..,,... ..... "-- COPTER LIFTOFF A CH 53 Sea Stallion from helicopter base in Tustin lifts dismantled copter from sand at Capistrano Beach for trip back to the Marine facility. The disabled copter crash landed in the surf in the private beach community Friday Four crewmen aboard the craft were not injured. From Page A1 HOUSING • • the Irvine Company plans for Village 14, Nielsen said He said that roadway development plans for that village call for Jam boree Road to extend through the Tustin Marine Corps Helicopter Station and connect lo the Santa Ana Freeway So far, Marine representatives have opposed the plan Nielsen said negotiations ~on· tinue with the Marines and he said that pending the resolution. he is hopeful the city will ap- prove at least a portion of the proposed development m Village 14. He also sa id there 1s a possibility that company plan ners can get plans accepted without the roadway through the helicopter station A MORE general problem far ing both village proposals re- volves around their financial viability City planners say that residen- tial developments cost more in city services than they PflY in post-Proposition 13 taxes. Sales tax revenue is the biggest source of funding for the City of Irvine. Nielsen admitted that much of the company's residential de- velopment plans hinge on whether enough sales t ax- generating commercial facilities can be developed. He claimed t h at by the mid-19805 the company will be developing Irvine Center . a 480-acre commercial center bounded by the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna freeways TO DATE, howeveT, no major department stores have com- mitted to build tn the "Super Shopping Mall" envisioned as part of the center. Nielsen said From Page A1 PRIEST • • • "stomp" a church official if the long-lost dream girl were not found in a convent. Turner set a sentencing date for Friday, May 29 at 9 a.m. Spring' s attorney, Publtc· Defender Ronald Butler, told Turner he would m alee a motion at that time for a new triaJ. Butler objected to Turner's de- cision to let the Jury constder the second-defree charg~ Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter oriainally soueht a first- de aree inurder char1e. but Turner said evidence wu lnsuf· flclent to substantiate it. -BY GLEN tr SCOTT ORANQI COAST Dilly Piiat Santa Ana winds whip coastal area High readings along the Orange Coast today were expected to reach into the 80s. Some coastal areas reported westerly winds up to 18 knots as of 11 a. m. San Clemente Pier had re- ported southwesterly breezes of 7 knots. It was blowing 5 knots out of the west al Huntington Beach. No small craft warnings were in effect. Coastal vi~ibility was four miles. The pre-healed breezes are pre- dicted to decreue tonight with coastal temperatures ranfing lll the 70s Thursday through Satur· day Average ocean temperature was 60today with generally one to two-footsurf. An unseasonal dose of Santa Ana winds drove tree branches onto electrical lines and caused power outages in foothill areas today as warm springtime tem- p er a t u res heated up the Southern California area. From Page A1 PSA ••. Because of that, PSA leaders want the C0'10ty to open up all available flights to competitive bid after three years. The airline with the quietest operation would get preference. Two county proposals, one from Riley and another similar one from Airport Manager Murry Ca- ble. don't open au flights to bid· ding until flveyeara. The supervisors are scheduled to take action on an access plan at their May 5 meetin1 in Santa Ana PSA public relations Manager Margery Craig said today her company has been trying to enter the Orange Couaty market for years. She said ~A's plan lets current airlines serving the airport remain, but forces them to be competitiveat ah earlier date. "The plan 'leta other airlines compete fairly," SM Hid. "Right now, AirCal bas a monopoly on that airport." She said .AirCal is the only airline that llnll Orange County with tbeSan J'rancilco Bay Area. She noted tba1 the Southern Califomia-to-B'ay Area com- mercial air corridor ls the buliest in the world. PSA now rues four DC-9 Super 805, will have a flftb by next month and 26byt.beendof 1982, eh ea a.Id. missing persons unit rather than the taskforce. Herman Pittman, 21, was last seen Monday evening when he left home to get a beer, officials said. He stands 5 feet 6 and weighs 140' pounds. Police are worried about a change in pattern, Brown said, because "we now have four adult victims of homicides. Previous to that. all the victims were under 16, the youngest being 7 '' All the adult cases have similarities, including the fact that the bodies were found in rivers. he said "Our people are trying to de- termine what this means." he said Payne was last seen April 22 as he headed for the Omni sporting and entertainment complex in hopes of selhng some old coins, according to his sister, Evelyn. Payne's body, tangled !ace- down in a fallen tree, was spotted by two fishermen. about the time police were deciding not to put his name on the list of cases being in- vestigated by the special task force Brown said police had been given information that Payne had been seen alive He lived about a block from the home of Patrick Baltazar, 11, who was last seen alive at the Omni. Baltazar's body was found Feb.13 in a DeKalb County office park. Like 13 of the other victims, Baltazar had been asphyxiated. Six of the last seven victims were asphyxiated or probably asphyxiated, authorities said. The cause of one victim's death was unknown From Page A1 BALLOON • • had been one o!the "luxuries" the pair jettisoned to prevent a col- lision during the flight. "We almost bought the farm near Salt Lake City," Abruzzo said. "We got caught in a severe downdraft that almost sent us into the side of a mountain. We had to ballast nearly everything.'' THE WINNING aeronauts were reported on their way to Abruzzo's hometown. Albuquer- que, N.M., today, and are ex- pected to return to Southern California Friday for the Gordon Bennett Survivors Banquet. Both men have survived their share of death·defyine adven- tures. Aoki, the 42-year-old owner of th e Benihana of Tokyo restaurant chain, took up balloon racing after he was almost killed in a 1979 power boat accident. A Japanese citizen, Aoki also bas been a champion wrestler and backgammon player. ABRUZZO, 50; made history in 1978 as a member of the team that made the first trans- Atlantic balloon flight. He was aboard the winnine balloon in the 1979 Gordon Bennett race and set a new Gordon Bennett endurance record in tbe 1980 race. The pair were the last to lift off at Mile Square Saturday afternoon, hopln1 to avoid the mld-dlty beat that would cause their helium balloon to expand. Eleven gas balloons from the Unltqd States and other nationa competed in ~ year's Gordon Benqett raee. The unofficial aecond-place winner fa the Rosie O'Grady, piloted by Bob Snow and Joe Klttlqer, botb of Orlando, Fla. Tbla ~ooo touched down Mon· day ,motnin1 near M1ton Utah, ·~~t 12' milea from launch p0l,. TRJa.D PLACE la expected to 10 t.O GhiOllt Rldu, piloted. by PauJ Woeuner and Bob Penny 11~1 both of NHhvllle. Tblt bauoon l.nded near Delta, u~ abOut ~ inllea away. In the Fountain Valley Clanlc, an accuracy conteat launched Su.nday, Ken Frant abo•rd tb• Remaa bH •P· •oa.nntb wen ftnt place Ill UM &ot dr·C...ol'J .. laDdl~ at m, ertal Golf OoUrH lD Bi'•, .. Otfttlal tarpl. Dell, ............. ON TRANSIT BOARD Jamea~lt Roosevelt appointed to OCTC James Roosevelt of Newport Beach has been appointed to succeed Zika Djokovich of Santa Ana on the Orange County Transportation Commission. Roosevelt, 73, is a former con- gressman from San Marino and Arcadia. He will assume the four -year post as a public representative in two weeks. He is the eldest son of former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt DESPITE HIS legacy as an elected o!!ictal. he will be the on I y one of the !i ve com - missioners currently not holding elected office By JOtning wilb Irvine Caty Councilman Bill Vardoulis and County Supervisor Thomas Riley, Roosevelt will give Riley's 5th Distncl a majority on the panel. Riley nominated him, but the selection was no easy task. Roosevelt had been the leading contender among four nominees since late last year. but never received more than two of the four votes during balloting by the incumbent commissioners He needed at least three. To break the stalemate, com- missioners agreed on April 13 to use a scoring system in which nominees received three votes for first place, two for second and one for third. DURING balloting on Mon - day. Roosevelt received nine points two firsts. a second and a third. Runner-up Charles Maloney received six. Ada Mae Hardeman got five and Djokovich got four The transportation com mission is res ponsible for coordinating countywide Issues. Two of its members, Riley and Ralph Clark. are county s upervisor s . Two others. Vardoulis and Al Hollinden of Fountain VaUey. are represen- tatives of the Orange County League of Cities. Hollinden sajd last week he won 't seek reap- • poinlment when his term ex- pires on June 30. Gas tax hike due? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate Finance Committee has approved a bill to add two cents to the gasoline tax and boost driver's license and vehicle reg- istration fees. • A Jawauit to recover '478,fU t letal f eee deducted from Oran1e County Board of F.duca- tlon 'a county account.I by the Board of Supervisors ls scheduled to be filed Friday ln Superior Court. The suit, prepared by Dave Larsen of the Rutan and Tucker law firm, will seek to void a 1978 contract between the board of education and County Supervisors for county le1al aervlces. It also will seek the return ol money deducted for those services au~equently. said Fred Koch, assistant county schools superintendent. The agreement for le1al services, Larsen said today, was approved in May 1978 and called for a transfer of part of the coun- ty's tax rate to the school board to pay for the service. When Proposition 13, the prop- erty-tax-cutting_ initiative, was approved by voters the following month, each government entity was more or less frozen to its established tax rate. The transfer was never made. Larsen said. Koch said today that the school board consistently has re- fused to pay for legal services because it contends the contract is not valid because not transfer- ing the tax rate resulted in loss of income to pay for the work. When tt,ie Board or Supervisors ordered County Auditor-Controller Vic Heim to take $479,612 from county educa- tion funds for Orange County Counsel's services. the school board voted 5-0 lo sue the supervisors. Before Proposition 13, K~h said, 1t made httle difference . \ wlllcb •tency controUed i.. f un1l1 lot Ml'Vice1. , H owe v er , 1 u b • • q u*t tranafen or lack of t.ranalen money reaulta ln an lncomt or loas for entitles lavol 1 because or the tax freeae. " While the county 1upel'blt•· dent's office contend.I tbe faUufe to transfer tax baae to i schools proeram volcb tbe contract, Oran•• foun )' Counsel Adrian KuXJ)U 1 offtf8 diaarrees. ·1 John Anderson, deputy ~ counsel, contends the tax ltdll p not a major part of U.e contrac1. Followin1 PropoelUoo lll, t aaid, the schools olftee cant leglalation to Sacra111ento t. secure funds for auditin1, leOJ and other services became of• come cuts. ' That leeislation wu aPPrO\' .. •· Anderson said. ~ "As a result." he aal•. "lle County Superintendent ftl $287 ,000 for county legal sen1cfa the first year." · That allocation continues, Jie added ~ . "They (education office .,_ !icialsJ are great onea for g~<J· to the legislature for funds one sort or another. And have some of the highest p administrators in the count)IJ" Anderson said. A court judgment in favor bf the school board, he said, w~ JUSt give the County Superint~ dent's office more money lo spend on something else. ' "And I guess it wouldn't rea11y break the county." he added. i The county Department t( Education budget is about ~ m II hon lhts year The annu,.i Orange County governme~l budget 1s about $600 million Reagan vs. Congres; • televised tonighl .! WASfllNGTON <APJ -Presi dent Reagan. capitalizing on ris- ing popularity since last mouth's assassination attempt, re. assumes public command of his budget battle tonight with an ap- peal to Congress to stop lalkine an<J start acting (Channels 2. 4 and 7; KMPC. KFWB. KNX> Aides said Reagan will tell a jomt session in the nationally televised, 6 p.m. PDT speech that Congress must shed the "old and comfortable way" because "a day of decision is near" for his tax and spending cul proposals. "High taxes and excess spend· ing growth created our economic mess," one source said Reagan will say. "To fail lo act will delay -even longer and more painfully -the cure that must come." The speech, expected to last about 15 minutes. comes as the administration program is pick- ing up speed with Congress nearing key votes this week. Conservative Republicans on the Senate Budget Committe neared agreement on a revised budget blueprint, and House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill Jr. said enough Democrats may cross over lo give the president a vie· tory in the House. The address is Reagan's third on the econ1Jmy but h1_s T1rst public appe~1rance since he wu shot Maroh 30 ~ It comes on the eve of his lootjl day an office. and the selectien ~f the well of the House is inlendal to focus the drama of Reaganf. re-emergence on the forefront Of the fight for his e<:onomic ~ gram. which already appean '9 be picking up speed as Cong~ nears key votes this week. One Wtute House official, whio asked not to be identified, N6jl the president ·s attitude i~: "Look, we 've talked about UR economy We've analyzed it. Now is the lime to do something. Now it 's lime to take th~ courageous measures to get U., economy back on the pat.h." ! The president, who is not Y4k working full lime in the Oval Of. !ice again, was putting the fin•• touches on the speech today. ' From Page A1 AIRPORT. ,. . extra fli"hts would further ae. gravate traffic and noise Jan>b- 1 ems . He said the board't vacillation also could harm t» county's credibility in searcrua,; for a regional 81rport site. Clark disagreed -GLENN SC<Yl'T I' NB talk turns to • cnme Neighborhood Watch sessions bump aside bridge games Behind the courtyards and in side the fancy homes. the talk has turned to burglary. purse snatching and general mis behavior That's what Newport Beach police say They claim Neighborhood Walch sessions havt' bumped aside bndgt-games in Corona del Mar and C'ocktail parties in Spyglass Hill The millionaires .ind the less than-mi lhona1res have become the city's lat.-st <'rime fighters Officer Rich Long, who put together Newport's Watch program officially known as "the Community Congress ," says the town has typically suf fered from an "tl·can't happen" here" attitude But Newport burgla r y stat1st1cs have increased and violent episodes have been re ported m areas generally re garded as safe and secure. Long says Newporte r s are now becoming involved in fighting back Long says the Watch program. inaugurated last December. utilizes existing homeowner as soc1ations. merchant groups and rea I estate agents who frequent· l y are 1n and out of neighborhoods "It's like having 1,000 eyes out there.·· Long suggests . The Community Congress 1s composed of a single represent- ative from each homeowner or business group The represent ative 1s responsible for orgamz mg Watch groups and attends regular police sessions to pick up on latest crime trends. Newport has 73 homeowner g roups that all ha ve bee n molded into Watch outfits. Long says police pass on information to the residents who in turn pass on tips tD the officers -STEVE MARBLE ------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ HONORED Sixteen Newport Harbor High School seniors were honored recently by Commodores Club of Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce for achievements as scholars. Recipients are (back row, from left) Victoria Collison, Gordon Durkee, Laura Ann Forbes, Miche lle Foxx, J ohn Gifford, Douglas Jones, William Kemble, Joseph Mader and (front row, from left) Vincent Mc Donell, Kimbe rly Nelson, Lisa Payne, Jeffrey Reck. John Schmiesing, Laura SuJlivan (Agnes Blomquist Award recipient) and Geoffrey Williams. Not pictured is Mark . McLaren. Continental empliijjees take takeover attempt .. by Tezas lnt~l personally ... B3 Patient attacks few? F.airview officials criticize labor leaders' remarks By .IEUY UIAUtlt;N °' .. °"" ......... Patient attack.I on staff mem· bera are not 10 frequent at Fairview State Hospital lo eo.ta Mesa u in moat state ln.stitu· tiona for the mentally ill, a Fairview official noted this week. And Francis Crinella, Fairview's executive director. opined this week that labor leaders' remarks about the at· tacks may renect the current b ids by. various unions to represent stale hospital workers. ONE LABOR representative charged in Sacramento last week that there were 2,600 pa· tient attacks last year in state mental hospitals against other patients and some staff mem· be rs. Crinella said that during the first three months of this year none of the 29 on·the-job injuries recorded amon1 Fairview mem· bers was the result of patient al· tacks. Nor, he said, were an{ of the 310 workdays lost to injuries during that period the resuJt or patient abuse. "I'd say we have a couple or incidents each month that might be noteworthy when a patient in· j ures anothe r patient." he added. Those IQ.Juries, tbou1b, be claimed are not necessarily the result ol an attack. "PBlllA&ILY, they are neuorolo1ically handicapped and uncoordinated people who might stumble into one another or become dangerous by their inabllity to control and manage their bodies in space," he said. Charles Stron1, a Psychiatric Technicians Union leader, said last week in Sacramento that pa· Uent attacks at the state's 11 mental hospitals -including Fairview -resulted in the loss of 32,000 work days by staff members last year . Strong's organization is part of the Communications workers of American and AFL·CIO or· ganizations and is ()Ile of three bidding to represent psychological technicians at the state hospitals in a May l mail· balloting election. The other two unions are the California State Employee As- sociation and the California As· sociation or Human services Technologists. STRONG WAS one or several labor leaders protesting inade- quate staffmg al California men- tal hospitals and speaking in support of Assembly bills in· troduced to give technicians a 5 percent "hazard bonua" pay in· crease and to bike ataffinl re· quirements. Crinella said, "They (union of· ficials) try to encourage people to follow them by generatin1 notoriety and making claims that the workers are en· dangered. "That's a fairly typical tactic that we will be seeing from all the unions over the next couple of months" Crinella said that at least 12 unions are bidding to represent workers of all kinds at the 11 state hospitals, including Fairview. FAIRVIEW c urre ntly is auth orized 987 "nursing services" positions About 800 or those, Crinella s aid , co uld be filled by ' psychiatric technicians earning about $1,161 to $1,451 a month. "I think our psych techs do a hell of a fine job and are certain· ly the backbone of our work force operating under some ex- tremely difficult conditions," he said. "But we have few patient at- tacks compared to the hospitals for t he mentally ill. It's er· roneous to lump us together with the so-called mental hospitals when we serve people who are developmentally disabled " Unit seeks suit funds Group asks council for cash to further cause Surprise and amazement swept the Newport Beach City Council when a non-profit group that's suing the city put in a re quest for $20,000 to help further its cause. T he group seeking the money. the Fair Hous ing Council of Orange County, is one of severai organizations that launched a s uit against the city last year. The lawsuit alleges the city has discriminatory housing practices. "But you're suing us," blurted Mayor Jackie Heather after Eugene Scorio, director of the housing group, made his request for the money Monday night. City Attorney Hugh Coffin ex· Irvine to consider connnercial center The lrvine City Council will consider a zoning request for a SOO·rooom hotel and commercial cente r proposed f or the southeast corner or Main Street al\d Jamboree Boulevard in Irvine at its meeting tonight. The Irvine Company proposal comes one month after the City Council approved a zone change for a 500-room hotel the Koll Company plans to build on the corner of Michelson and Von Karman avenues -about one· quarter mile west of the Irvine Company project. In addition to the hotel, the Irvine Company is proposing to build restaurants, banks, retail stores, servlce·oriente d busi nesses and offices on the 48-acre site. Other items on tonight's City Council agenda include: -An appeal of the city sub- division committee's approval of phase three or Irvine Industrial Complex·East. Residents in the area of the complex say the new phase would create traffic problems. -A staff recommendation ttnlt the City Council authorize an expenditure or $20,000 to in· crease security on the Yale Avenue footbridge, which has been the site or three assault ca ses, one indecent exposure case, an attempted rape and a rape since the structure was built. -A request by Councilman Bill Vardoulis that the City Council write a letter in support or legislation aimed at discon· tinuing fede ral grants that finance Legal Aid Society lawsuits against governmental bodies . The City of Irvine is a defendant in one such lawsuit. The Irvine City Council wi!l meet at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall, 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine. Bal Isle residems protest bait boat pressed surpnse at the request. "I have trouble." he r e· marked, "that a plaintiff is ask· ing for funds that may be used to continue and speed up the suit." Scorio, who said his group pro· vides free service for Newport res idents. suggested the council members were being too sensillve. "It (the suit> wasn't done when I was director," he said. "ll 's an impact suit. It really has nothing to do with us. We still provide services. "Are you so sensitive that you can't be sued?" Rather than respond, several council members turned their backs to the speaker. One coun· cilman left the room. Mayor Heather pointed out that the city has hired a private cons ultant to revamp the city's housing policies to comply with state law Scon o said Newport 1s one of the few Orange County cities not giving money to his group. Bay bridge work closes traffic lane Motorists in Newport Beach were slowed to a crawl today when a northbound lane oe Pacific Coast Highway near the bay bridge project was closed. Workmen on the project said the lane will be reopened We4· nesday morning. • Lane closures, which have been frequent during the bridge construction , are coordinated between Caltrans and the Kaster Corp., the bridge contractor. , Newport police said theJ originally had a policy of notlf1· ing residents of upcoming l&M closures but gave it up because "Caltrans would tell us one trunr and do another." , Work on the bridge is expecteC) to be complete by Nove~ber. Paid busing review due by board b OVEaTv&E8 r OM E~BEWBB•E: AU Rousban, wbo welds up steel acUIPtures ad thm overheat.I officials at Costa Mesa City Hall, la draw· 1ng some unexpect~ suJ)J>Ol"t these d~s. You remem~r A.11 ltouthan. dnft t vou? Not too long ago, he was Just a plain steelyard operator down on Superior Avenue in Mesatown. But. then one day, be erectecl a taJl. thin 1te.lwork at the front of bia ·~ home. Municipal operatives cried rou1 .. alleging that All haa Just put up an illegal structure. Roushan claimed it was just his prayer tower, complete with a waterfall running down it.I sides. Hailed before authorities ror bis -.saerted zoniq transgression, Ali babbled a lot at tbt: city lawm.icers and probably didn't improve b.i5 situa- tion. •·~TD:.....M_M_:..;UR:.:....PH.;._IN-1 fi\ir, Later, however, the wning and building question became more interesting when Rouaban abruptly claimed his work was actually art. The city's official position said art or not it looked like a structure, felt like a structure and therefore, must be a structure. ALAS, THE WHOLE ar~ment is now headed in- to the courts. Roushan is bemg bailed before the bar of justice on charges of contempt of earlier court prohibitions, on failure to comply, and other weary legal arguments. Meanwhile, the prayer tower grew a set of steel wings behind it. Then Ali added his latest bit of nose- Art for Ali 's sake on Colta Mesa'• Supnior A~ thumbing at municipal authority with a masterpiece of 30 feet called "Volcano." While admittedly, Ali Roushan sometimes ir- ritates the citizenry wben be gets too vocal, there are a number of observers who think his alleged artwork looks pretty nice out there on Superior Avenue. SOME HA VE COMPARED it favorably to other steel sculptures, lik~ "Vestige," that was liven the boot from the Main Beach Park at Laguna Beach. Others have suggested it's a Jot nicer to look at than rocks or rills or butterfly hills. Even certain folks who claim to have no ap- preciation of fine arts suggest that whatever Ali erects on Superior A venue is bound to be an im- provement over the present landscape, where rust- mg auto bodies and other aging castoffs tend to fill the vision. ONE WAG EVEN quipped that if you figured Superior Avenue was the development standard for , Costa Mesa, then the City Seal should carry the side view of a rusting 1939 Chrysler Airflow. Or maybe a DeSoto bumper with a tin can stuck on each end. An~ay. it looks like neither Ali nor City Hall are willing to give quarter, so his waterfall prayer tower, steel winf s and volcano are all beaded for Superior Court. n view of this, Roushan did -draw this unexpected ally. Are you ready? His surprising support came from the inland city of Brea. Brea's newspaper only last week recounted in somewhat of a lament, the troubles that bave visited Rousban as be attempted to beautify his home city. The Brea paper. in its editorial, also noted that Brea bas suffered the reverse problem with art. That is, the paper alleges that every time some developer wants to erect a new builWng in that com- munity, the cM.y authorities look around and ask him where its art JS located. PUSWNG TO UPGRADE the Brea civic image it was alleged that City Hall wants space in front of every structure for a sculpture. And they seem to smile eYen more heavily on developers who fill the space with something of an art form. Art has thus become a Brea passion. The Brea editorial suggested, "Rousban pack up his weldine tios and art and move to Brea . . . Brea just might be the place for Rouaban to relocate." This position if taken officially by the Brea municipal authorlties, should give Costa Mesa civic authorities pause. ARE THE~ IUCIUNG the next Picasso or Rembrandt in the teeth? ~at if Rousban turna out to be the only artist hiat«Y Hmembers from our era? Costa Mesa could end up taktnl the aru.tic praUall of the centuey. Just think of history remetn· bering Costa Mesa only because the clty •u uP- stagea by Brea. DISSENTS -Gen. William Westmoreland, former Army chief of staff1 says women shouldn't be arafted for the armed services because if a man and a woman are in a foxhole together "they're going to be ma.king love, not war." He said "any man or gump- tion" does not want women to fight their wars. Slain son u:as model to mom NORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP> -To his invalid mother, Gary Doyno was the model son, cooking her breakfast and car· ing for her day and night since she was crippled 21 years ago. She never knew he had another life. Gary Doyno's body was found by a family friend early April 3, slumped over a safe in the living room as his mother lay in the bedroom. Police say he was a drug dealer. "WE BEUEVE HE was ripped off for drugs and money,'' said de· tective Ray Nazario of the Dade County homicide squad. "He was dealing heavily in narcotics." Mrs. Doyno, 58, was struck by a car when Gary was 5 years old. After spending a year in a hospital, the divorcee came home to her young son. He "cooked my breakfast and used to carry my wheelchair and put it ln the trunk of the car," she recalled. When her son was '1 . he insisted she learn to drive a specially equipped car. "He gave me strength." she said. ··we went through so much together " DOYNO, 21, apparently went to sleep about 11 p.m. April 2. About midnight be was beaten, forced down a flight of stairs and shot to death. police said. Mrs. Doyno told police she heal"d a loud noise and called a friend who reassured her, saying she must ha9e beard dogs knocking over garbage cans. The friend later came over and found the young man's body. Police did not determine what the killers took. A $500 bill was left in the safe and $20,000 was un- touched on a chair in Doyno's room. Investigators and Mrs. Doyno said Gary must have known ttis killers because the house bad a doorbell and in· lercom. ••If he opened that door, it had to be a friend on tbe other side," hls mother said. NAZARIO SAID the killers "knew bis mother was there and that she couldn't get out of bed without help ... M'tl . Ooyno bas offered a $10,000 reward ln the case. "They killed him like animal. "1hesaid Workalwlic ineffective BERKELEY (A P ) Workaholi cs may be more trouble than they are worth, a University of California paycholotist's study indicates. Rather than being the most productive employees , workaholica tend to ruin their health and loee thelr job ef-fectivettess, with a narrow focus on work to the exclusion of all ei.e, accordlns to a study by Charles Garfield. \ NEWS FEATURES -------AIOUI 1$1· "GREAT ! 9 DINNER 0 c Good for 111ree p•ecn of juicy. golden brQWn Keniu y "1> Fried Ch1cllen plus 11ngl• Hmng1 of colt 11 , 0 maaMd POt•loes end gravy and a rotl Limit two of "' Z per purch11e Coupon oooa only IOI comblnetlon whlle/ I darll Older• Cullom•r P•Y• all appllcable ule1 tu Good IOI' nine plec11 of Juicy, golden btown llM\tuctty Fried Ch1ck9f\, wllll lour rolls. a large co4e 1law, a l1tg41 mashed po1a1oes and a medium gravy. Limit two ofter• pet piurch111 Coupon good only for combination while/ deli! ordefl Cullomtf PllYI all apc>hcable "'" , .. Otlef ••Pires 01111 expirn May tO, 11181 CtC I May to, 111&1 CIC Puett may vary al Preen mAly vary al p•r parllc1pa11ng loc:• 1 uc1pa11ng locauons Gooa lions Gooo only en only 1n Southflrn Soulhefn C.lllorn1a 1 C.hl0<nia wnere yov see wtlefe you see Amer1ca·s Fl•v<>r•l<t America s Fl•vor•I• Window Senner ;.;;".·'11111111111. GOURMET MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD · FRESH Northern Red Salmon Whole or Half ...................... 3.98 lb. We will gladly f1let your salmon for no extra charge DELANEY'S NOW HAS A LIMITED St:PPLY OF FltESH SWORDFISH. SO GOOD WHEN BROILED OR BARBECUED. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and top choice beer aged al least 30 d8,¥s to the peak of r-erfect1on Fresh Frozen Local Grown Rabbits 1.98 lb. Center Cut Chuck Roasts . . . . . . . . . . 1.49 lb. Boneless Rolled Beef Roasts ........ 2.98 lb. Half or Whole Spring Lamb Cat and Wrapped for your Frffler ...... l .8t lb. All meal items purchased al Delaney'!> are Freezer Wrap~ and properly m arked for your eas~ freezer identification FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE (50 00 min please1 Your order is under complete refrigeration from our store to your door in our refrieerated trucks. Call in the morning and your order "111 be delivered to your home the same aletmoon Thia ad effective Wed., (/29 lhnl Tues .• 5/5 DELAllEY'S MORNING FRESH PRODUCE . LOCAL-GROWN LARGE SIZE SWEET JUICY STRAWBERRIES. 3 Full bskts $1.00 For }Our compll'll' rall'nng M:n1ce from a complete .,,t d01~n dinner part~ to part~ lra~!> dell\ ered lo \Our homl' For mformallon c••ll Oelane) ~ CATERING Dl"partmenl a!>k for Tom Marlin DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanl'y's Private Label Champagne 1750m1l1 2.75 ea. or 33.00 per case Bolla "Soave 1750 m1l 1 ~I Arbres Cbenln Blanc 1750 mil> Canadt.n Club 10nr> literi Scoresby Scotch !750mil1. !One Liter I All hquor and wint' plU!> I a' 1 3.95 ea. 3.51 ea. 9.99 ra. S.55 ea. 6.85 fl. Delaney,s now featuring fresh pasta. Jelly Belly's, the Official WbJ&e House Jelly Beu ......................... Z.3t lb. Pepsi 12 pk. reg. or diet ...... 3. 79 plus tx Store Hours 9-6, Oosed Sunday 29!8 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach TWO WEEKS ONLY FREE SPINAL SCAEENING EXAMINATION & X·RA YS APRIL 27th thru MAY 8 The Yarwood Chiropractic Office of Costa Mesa is sponsoring a Spinal Olec?k-up . ar:td Scoliosis Screening program as a public service. This service will include consultation. examination, x-rays (if indicated) and a report of findings. By appointment only. CaJI 646-0516 Monday through Friday. ,... OONSULTATION n. c-..... la ...... .. ......... ,...,... .. twy ., .......... , .. ,_. ttaey .., reteff t• ,, .... l•f.rlu er •"•r •pt.•I cH4J...._ 1-".,.. tM ,......, .. c_ • ._.._ dector will •••• rec•-• ....... ,.. ... ..._, ... ..,...... or r•fwnli to ............. , X-RAYS Mel ell patl••I• r•••lrt lof'9P-................... ....................... .., ............... .... .. MC•t.,.. ff .... .... : .............. ..,.. . ............ ... ..................... ....... .....,.,, ........ ••••r••lltl .. •••/er .... k . REPORT OF FINDINGS After tile-deetor II•• cerrel•t•d Jtt•r fl•dl•t• lined ., •• tile Ill.torr. ..................... ,. llf ~ '°" _.. recef•• • report of fl•dl•t• ••d NU 1 I f I llCIM -.lc.ted ltJ , ......... c11dltlo& EXAMINATION* oiir •ffice ... ,... • ....... .,,. ... .,.... .... 1 • ..-. pr•c•tl...... 5••• of tile ............. lildr. ...... ...,.. ................ .,. ,....... .-r••••..: .... ... L.t a..m: ........ .... Made T..tc _. .... ef ........ SlllllM. •lAUOW .. TO tO MONTH llOI ALL NOC8UUS TO 11 COW'LITIDt COMMON WARNING SIGNS Of SPINE RELATED CONDITIONS I I I Since 1000 A.D., there have been four extremely long "waves" of inflation in Europe and America. each about 100 years in length. All have shared ·•a common rhythm and a common cbronoloey." All have followed "a common pattern of relative price increases and a common sequence of absolute movements." And all have been alike in "common causes~ common consequences." Right now, early in the decade of the 1980s, we are reaching toward the climax of the fourth wave. While the ~ dreaded con- clusion of this --------i:=~.;, fourth wave "is : not yet in sight, IY'llll PllJ'I the history of L I earlier price movements suggests the end cannot lie future." far in the These are among the profoundly significant. and in many ways also profoundly horrifying findings of historian David Hackett Fischer, writing in a recent issue of "The Journal" of the' Institute for Socioeconomic Studies headquartered at White Plains, N.Y. While each of the waves -occurring during the 13th, the 15th-17th, the 18th and the <mh centuries - has been extensively studied on its own, never before has any historian attempted, as Fischer has, to compare and interrelate the four. (Fischer is chairman of the history department at Brandeis Unjversity and is nationally known as author of "Aging in America.") WHAT IS SO PROFOUNDLY significant about Fischer's analysis is the warning, both stated anCI implied, that the United States (and Europe) has been dead-wrong in its economic policies. particularly under Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter during recent years. Instead of ·•cooling" the economy, persistent efforts to control inflation have had the opposite and unintended result of driving prices higher. The explanations? Each cycle, Fischer points out, has been preceded by a huge increase in population, a resulting ballooning in demand for goods, a straining to the limit of productive capacity -and then, inflationary monetary-borrowing policies. STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS ~.~ t>( 0 1104 JiO~ H!I. ~~~ ,;: 61~ ortf ti9~ bn~ ~i~ rfW g~' =i ,.. 'tOM lllr) -...... -...... -.... !f*'ll Oii ... ,.,_, ---Yarll .... ~-........ ...._.... .. __ ..W'l'OMWI -...... ____ , I ~-.. --ect ... ---· lr8dlr>g .. ~.., .. -.... UPS AND DOWNS .... •1•,100 ·~ -14 ~ 170,JOO I~ -19 lntl "*"°' 211.IOO l~ + ·~ HowOllTr 17'..JOO 23y, -~ ~· 117,100 11~ -'.\ WerilrC.om wt '0,600 20 -I~ OUttl Air M,700 10\4 -14 lllltroUw 47,600 2014 -~ Gulfc.n I U..200 20h -y, --. • ff,JCIO »'.\ -1'6. METALS '-"'" 17-...0 c.Mll a ..,_,,.,, U.S._._ .... L.-. • c:eMa. l*l"d-~ 0\6 caflta a...-. dellw'9d Tiit "'674' Mttala WMtl compost• lb. Aj I s 14 cenb a pound, H 'f. ~$420.00perflaSll . .......... '415.00troyOI., N.V. SILVER IL".!.,t"UA.,UE• ' "HHvto'I Gal•" ll en ttem&Md epic that follows three cbaracten trom tbelr traduaUoe ceremonies at Harvard In 11'70 to the bloocb Johnaon County r n1e war roupt aome 20 yean later in W. yomlnt. ft'• an e•p&n1lv .. apectacw r movle (the tblrd most expenalve yet made) aqd a 1tran1ely unmovln1 oj\e too: It leavet you with tbe f .. lln1 that wrlter·dlrector Michael Clmlno bad notblna to uy and a mllUon waya to do It. Cimino is a 1pectacle·dnmk movie maker. ffll dances and partlet are magnificent. bis 1bootout1 MOVIE REVIEW and evacuations are brllllantly choreographed and in "Heaven's Gate." they're all lovtn1ly captured to historic sepia by Vllmos Sz11mond. Aa in "The Dffr Hunter," the opposing action of bloodsh.ed and beauty becomes almost tidal at times -we re swept from one high to another. In "The Deer Hunter" Derek Washburn's sensitive script aet ua up for' those scenes, but Cimlno's acri~t for "Heaven's Gate" just isn't enough to bold bu own excesses together· he sweats for epic structure in almost every scene but never lets us close enou1h to bis characters to give much of a damn about them. Kns Knstorrerson, who acts best when he says least, says very little as Jim Averill, one of the rraduatinj 1tudeot1 wbo •Wfac 30 yean later u a manbaD la JMn.loa County .... ~ht I coWd be ol t0me Important 1ervlce. •· M H)'t lo a voice· over that llnlui the 20·Ytar Jump, "but my llf• worked out different." Ctmtno Htl up the manball u the confflence or the atoey, then itves hlm n0t.h101 to 11y about It. Bnldot his band.some face and 1well hat, Averill la an lntan1lble, almost vaporous protaaonlst. How did he cet from tbe lawn1 ol Harvard to the wlldl of Catpar, Wyo., 11 a manhall? Why? At one point, bll lover, Ella (Isabelle Huppert> remarkl "you never an.ewer anythln1 personal," and neither d~• Cimino. Kri1toffenon la stranded ln a character who hu no life to breathe lnto the scenes, be'• hooked up to the movie like an anonymous patient on a, respirator -and so are we. Midway through the movie the plot be•ina to congeal: the moneyed ranchen of the Stock Growers A8sociatlon hire SO gunmen to shoot or bane all'nOlt every able· bodied ln Jobnlon County, who they believe are 1teallnl cattle and ruining profits. Averill, who bu known about the plot for weeks <be wu a member of the association before they threw him out >. belatedly spreads the news to the poor alav, German and hilh people marked for death, and when they finally decide to fiaht. he organizes their flimsy defense. Jilted by Ella for a spooky enforcer named Champion (Christopher Walken), Averill joins the immigrants in the bloody, tragic battle. Cimino's talent and passion are for scenes, not ideas.and there are dozens of beautifully realized mo11>eots In "Heaven'• Gate." Tb• S3I mllllod •pent on the movie weren't wuted u rar u lb look of lt cou -Clmlno't re·creatiOD of t\1rn-of· the-century Johilton Counur ll In ltMll an Im· preulve accompll1bment. Two 1cene1 In particular, tho openln& perty et H1rvard and the closlns alauchter ln the Wyomlns tillll, aN dais· Un1 paaeants on mm. Clmlno brint• a 1tran1e sense of order to 1uch naturally chaotic events: the dancers sweep with the arace and preclalon of a staged musical (borrowln& from DeP11lma, Cimlno's dancers move rtiht . to left across the screen while the camera the oppoelte dlrectlon - the effect ls deva1tatlngly hypnotic). Even In the battle sequence. there'• a sense of clarity and rhythm in what's happenlna! Cimino brin1a us in· side the acUon but never obecurea It -we' re alwava aware that lhe lmml•ranta are .etttu knodctd off at a rate of 10 to 1. and 11 the bet· tle pro1 , ao do • our nM of ympathy and dread. ' Clmlno's muddl d thinJdnt served him lnad· vertantly well In "The Deer Hwit.er" (people are still trytna to fi1ure out what ho w11 "aayln1'» but 1n "Heaven's Gale" it'a lndecept expoaure. IC he were to work on a 1maller scale he'd more popular with the Industry that finances him and he might be foreed to work a little more substance in· lo his scripts before the cameras roll. My aym· pathies 10 to Cimino tor the grl1Un1 "Heaven'• Gate" cot in New York because the film releued last week ls not a bad one. Somebody ought to put a decent script Into his hands. LA director at Hollywood Bowl 'LOS ANGELES (APJ -Loa Anaetu Fhilhannonic music director Carlo Maria Giulini will be back from Italy, where his wife is recover- ing from a stroke, in tlme for his tour scheduled appearances at the Hollywood Bowl this summer, a Philharmonic spokeswoman has announced. Giulini cancelled all of his spring engagements with the Philharmonic -including a tour of Mex· ico an<t the U.S. that beglrul in May -after his wife of 40 years, Marcella, was stricken by an aneurism at the ba.se of the brain last December at their home in Milan. Spokeswoman Norma Flynn said the or- chestra's executive director, Ernest Fleischmann, and board vice chairman Olive Behrendt recently returned from a v1s1t to Giullni 1n Milan, and they reported that the 66 year old maestro has been helping Mrs G1uhn1 with her physiotherapy daily. and that she has recovered full use of her limbs. Before return mg to the \J S in July for the Hollywood Bo" l's 60th anniversary season, Giulini plans to conduct a co ncert in Rome in June with the Academy or Santa Cec1ha orchestra. Mrs Flynn said ~Ann~Malrnees--~Oaily•.~,.-~~~~~~~--.r.r.r.im.~iTi!T.'in!TT.mi-=~- "C•n•m•t•c * IAIGAIN SPECIAL * dynamlca." ALL SIATI $2.00 ALL DAY Ivery Monday & TUMclayl mSout~~~,E m.~~ WlSI COASI PRlMllU (NCAClMlNT NOW SHOWING • Orange CINIDOMI • COtlo Meta. HARIOR TWIN 6M·211J 6Jl·H01 OA4YIOO,.. \Al JUN I ()() • & .)() • t 00 flM PUBU C NOTICE NOTICll TO CONTllACTOU CM.u ... l'Otl a1os $(,_. 0.1trlcl H..,UftOIOn he<" City S<r.ot O.ltrlcl Bid Oeedtlfw. J o'cloO pm of - 1111 do• u..v. "" Pie<• af 9lcl Aacefpt P\lrc,,..1119 Office, IJS Utrt St..-1, """""vton he<ll, CelllotN• Project l....,llflut10t1 Hema IN• 1' ... 1Fec111ty Pie<• P1en1 ••• on Ill• Otstnu Of. II<• IU 14111 StrHI, Huntlneton 11 •• , ... Celllornl• NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN tllet tlle •t>ov•,.,.,,_ S<1-I Ol1tr1<1 ol Orenea County, Cellforrll•. e<tlno by end tllrouell 111 Govern1n9 Boerd, n e r e tn•fter refer r ed to •• .............. •....::tlT..,_11'1• CAVEMAN (PGI tJM •I a•••• t tt •I '' • t•tl n..ta.t.T ""' .... ... , "" ....... ,SJHQI ~*~· 1--~w.~;:;~,~ --IUA61Jll NliCI Ii. iiOii -.............. ---- Fe<ully elC-eWOOd JU/Sll"'* , .. ___ Ill .. &_UPT _ t# _,_ BREAKER MO"ANT CPO) .,...,.., .. , ,. ... , ..... ,,. ........ .... ....., ...... CAVEMAN IPG) &AT ~J"9•4•• .. •1••1 ... ....... , ....... •01s TRICT", will rtuh•• up to, DUI '1Ddr':~~~~~~~~~:~=~:i:::r..11:1mq1 noc leter t1-u. _ _.1e1ae1 time, Ii ~ 1:1• .... lwl, ...... 1:00 ...._ ... IM "•ltd bldl for tr. •wtrd °' • <Otltrect IM,ORTANT NOTICl! CHllOfllN UNOlfl 1Z ffllE! for Ule-proje<I. lldt 111e11 eoa received In the piece ldenlll lecl ebow, end 111e11 Coa -ned •nd publlclr rNd •loud et the atlO•• 1tal.O lime end pt au. There wlll be• <omitted) ~It••· Quired for eecll Ml of Did c1o<ument1 to 9ueren1 .. IN ratwn In (IOOd c-ltlOl'I wllllln Comln.d) de'f' ell.er Ille bid _..1noe1e1e Eacll bid mutt conform •llCI "° re-•lw to Ille C<>nlrect do<u.....,ts h <PI tlicl W ll 119 ecc ....... lad bY Ille M<wrlty refllffed to In Ille "111lre<I dO<u......U -bY Ir. llYI of ~_..i 1111><on trecton. Tiie OISTlllCT r~ tr. rteltl lo r• IK t eny -... blch "' to ••Ive llflY ln'tfl'll.,iu.. tW ll!formelftlft 111 MY bldl or In tr. -"I Tiie OtSTlllCT lleS OO!e<nad from tr. Director of Ir. Oepe<-of In· d111lrlel AeletloM Ille 911,..,el prevell· 1119 rete af JI« diem ..... , In Ille loc:elllr In wMcll 11111 W0'1I I• to be pa rtw,,_ for NCI\ creft or I nie of wertlmen -to exacwt.e Ille cen-lrecl Ti-rel .. ...-. on Ille et Ille OISTlllCT office loc:Aled el IJ5 Utll s1r .. 1. Hwttl"9l0fl .. «fl. CA .,.... CoCllH mey be -.1Md on r-1 A CottT of I-r-.... ell be --et Ille Jo11111e Tiit for-'flll -It af -di..., ••It" la .,._ -• -klno deV of t lthl Ill '-L Thi rllle tor hol!My end ovtnlm1 worll allell be et le•t time Ind --NII. It "'•II ._ menN!Ory -IM CON· TllACTOll to 1lllllom Ille COfltre<t la •••rded, Ind \lllOfl en'( llltKontrector undtr lllm, Id' pey not llM then Ille Mid apecllltcl rat" to •II -men tmPIO'fH bl' U..m In Ille eucwtlan of 1111 contrect. Ne _..., me' withdrew Ills bid for .... 1oc1 "' lbit'f (M) ... '" .,.., "" Nie Ml twh~ of_.., A pe\IMent llOnd end I ,..rloml_t MN Wiii .. ,.qultM ,rt« tt lllKll- tloft If h Clllflll"1. TM..,..._. '*'° INll be In ttw ,_m Mt lll'WI lft tlll ,e111rect--a. o-tn1111 ... , .. a., Hll'TN v~ Mtlefl 011'11 Puttlllllld Or-. CMst Oelly PllM. ""'" a Md,,,,.., 1. ,.., •tlMt PUBLIC NOTICE ..... .,......., __ _ THl~NO(") THI CHILD"IN (")