HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-29 - Orange Coast PilotNOT SO STEADY EMPLOYMENT -The ex·
pression of mime Michael Holly summed up
his concentration as he walked a tight rope
and juggled fiery batons to entertain part of
the crowd durin8 the Wayzgoose festival at
Celebrate UCI, the university's annual open
house. Holly resides lb Irvine Meadows on
camous.
GOP sees hudg~t victory
Reagan Rx: Move swiftly on spending , tax cuts
.·seiZed
Machine guns, $300,000 in cash , jewels
also discovered in raid on 2 homes
By S'EEVEMITCBBLL
tWU.Ollltr .........
LafUDa Beach police, atone
with federal and state officials,
descended 911 two Laeuna homes
late Tuesday, selzin1 tT.5 million
, in cocaine and arrestine aix peo-
ple.
Also seized in the pre-midnight
raids were two machine gum, an
estimated $300,000 in eash, along
with jewelry and eold, authorities
said.
Five of those were arrested in·
side a house at 1422 Terrace Way.
Arrested and charged with
possession of narcotics for sale
were John Charles Gale. 33;
Edward Francia Bereman, 30;
Lisa Renee Bereman. 23 ; Samuel
T . Fisher, 34 ; Gerald Lee Sima,
31 , officials said.
Arrested at about tbe same
time at a house at 730 Griffith Way
was Georce A. Vandenbrink, 28,
who was cbar1ed with possession
of a machine eun after police said
they found two of the aulop'laUc
weapons at that address.
The six were booked early th.la
morning and transferred to
Orange County Jail where bail
was setat$250,000each.
Seized as evidence was 20
pounds of high quality cocaine.
Actin~ Laguna Beach Police
'Ripper'
• •
Chief NeiJ Purcell 1ald police
were 1Ull tryinJ to determineboW
much cub wu aebed in the 11:17
p.m. raid, but •aid the naun will
surpass '300,000.
In addition, an undetenni.aed
amount of /ewelry and cold wu
seized, a ong with the hro
machine guns and a variety ol
handguns.
Laguna Beach police were 11·
sisted in the raid by aeenta from
.U.S. Customs and the 1tate'1
Bureau of Narcotics. ••
Addresses of the six auapectl
we re not av ail able early today.
g 13 worn.en
LONDON (AP) Truck
driver Peter Sutcliffe admitted
today be was the Yorkshire Rip·
per who killed 13 women in the
north of England between 1975
and 198>, but pleaded innocent to
charges of murder.
Instead, the 34-year-old
Yorkshireman pleaded guilty lo
manslauebter on grounds of
''diminished responsibility," or
lack of full mental competence,
at Ilia trial ln ~don'• historic Old BaUey CrimlnJI Court.
in monotone as each charge was
read to him : "Not guilty to
murder , but gui l ty to
manslaughter on grounds of
diminished responsibility.''
His Czech·bom wife, Sonia,
sat on abencb 20 feet away.
The intense feeling aroused in
northern England by the kUJlngs
over a five-year period caused
the transfer of the trial from
Yorkshire, where most of the
slayinp occurred. Police security WU U&bt. but
there was no repetition of the \li-
ly scene at Sutcliffe's first court
appearance Jan. 5, when a mob
shouted obscenities and lynch
threats outside the court at
Dewsbury, Yorkshire.
Sutcliffe, who lives in Brad·
ford, was brouaht to London on
Tuesday from a hi1b-1ecurity
prison in the Yorkshire city of
Leeds, the bue for lbe police
bunt for the ma11 murderer
riamecl after the Victorian Nte'a
(See RIPPE&. Pase AZ) Sutcliffe al80 pleaded 1ullty to
the attempted murder of seven
other women in Britain's most
notorious mass murder case
with female victims since Jack
tbe Ripper haunted London'•
Ea1t End ln the 1880s.
The prosecution requested
that the euJJty pleu be accept-
ed. But the judee. Sir Leslie
Boreham, ruled a Jury must con·
aider all the cbaraes -including
murder -aeain.st Sutcliffe. He
ordered attorneys to proceed
with the ll'tal, starting Tuesday.
Mesa police slwot
struggling suspect
The maximum penalty for
each of the three charges is life
imprisonment, the death penalty
having been abolished ln 1965. ln
the case of a murder conviction,
a life sentence is man<lalory and
the judge can recommend a
minimum number of years lo be
served . The sente nce for
manslaughter and attempted-
murder is left to the discretion
of the Judge, and defendants
seldom receive the maximum
penalty. .
In ar,Wng tbat guilty pleas be
accepted, the chief prosecutor,
A\torney General Sir Michael
Havers, referred lo the findings
of three psychiatrists who ex·
amined SutcWfe. But Boreham
told Haven be had "grave anx·
ieties" about the pleas.
The judge ordered the more
than 80 British and foreign
journalists ln the courtroom not
lo report details of the pros·
eculor's areument.s, saying this
could influence potential jurors.
The bearded Sutcliffe, wear·
lng a light gray suit, responded
A 38-year-old theft aua~ct
was shot in the chest Tuesday by
one of two Costa Mesa detec-
tives attempting to arrest him at
his Orange home on a Harbor
Municipal Court warrant, police
said.
Reported in stable condition at
the UCI Medical Center ln·
tensive care unit today ls Tom·
my Ray Keeten of 863 Parkvine
St., 0r8Jl8e, who was shot as he
struggled wjtb investigator
Steve Shulman, Costa Mesa of·
ricials said.
Shulman, 28, and investigator
Mike Millington, 36, confronted
Keeten in the garage at hls
home at about 3: 10 p.m. said U .
Jack Calnon, head of Costa
Mesa ·s investigations division.
A struggle ensued, Calnon
sai(t, with Keeten working
Shulman into a choke hold.
Calnon said Keeten reportedly
grabbed Shulman's .38·caliber
service revolver during the
strug1le.
Millington, standing a few
yards away, twice ordered
Keeten lo drop the weapon,
Calnon said.
Millington told investieators
be finally fired one shot as
Tennis star King
sued for 'palimony'
Keeten raised Shulman's re-
volver. Keeten, who police say also
goes by the name of Coola Koon·
Kay was sought for suspicion of
theit and r eceiving stolen
·property.
The warrant was issued,
Calnon said, after Keeten re-
portedly tried lo return a
vacuum cleane r believed to
have been stolen lo the May eo:
store at South Coast Plaza. '
Calnon said Orange Police
Department is Investigating the
incident, which he said will ret
sult in additional charees
against Keeten.
Costa Mesa police, he said,
will conduct an internal ad-
ministrative investigation into
the shooting incident.
Keeten was treated by Oranee
paramedics in bis garage and
rushed by ambulance to UCI
Medical Center. .
He is held there on the orieinlll
warrant plus suspicion of 8F
sault on a police officer with a
deadly weapon, Calnon said. ·
Sierra shaken
BISHOP (AP) -A medium
intensity earthquake struck tb4J
Eastern Sierra Tuesday after.
noon but no tnjuries or damap
was reported, aut.borltlet aald.
The q~e meuured about '·' on the Richter 1cale.
I
DROii CUii IUllll
Eitenalv41 cloudlne11
tonllbt and early Tllun-
day mornin&. cleartaa to
sunny later Tburacra1 •.
Cooler with lowa toalpf'of
56 aloq the cout, a ill·
land. !Dabs Tbunday M to
88 at the beaches. 12 to Tl
inland.
1111111111
• AP...,..._.. I NOT GM'S BAG Charlotte Chamberlain, a Departme~t
, of Traru;partation economist, demonstrates an cur bag m
l Cambridge, Mass., in 1977 General Motors announced to-
day that. after spending a decade trying to develop them,
the company is discontinuing the effort.
Abortion ~eporting
backed by panel
SACRAMENTO (A P ) -A
plan to force women who have
abortions to reveal extensive
personal and medical inforrna-
l1on to the state was approved
by the Senate Judiciary Com
mntee today despite heated op
position
The measure. $8946 by slate
Sen. Ed Davis. R Chatsworth,
calls for the information to be
reported withtn 15 days after the·
month an which the operation is
p(•rformed The information in·
e lude~ patient background,
nu m bcr of prev 1ous abortions
and live births. and time of day
the operation was performed
The ball passed on a 5-3 vole
.shortly after 1 a.m .. supported
tentatively by the state Depart·
ment of Health Services, the
agency which would be responsi·
From Page A1
RIPPER. • •
Jack the Ripper.
The accused man was broueht
to the Old Bailey in a green
armored policed van, escorted
by two police cars with sirens
blaring and lights flashing.
Police held up other traffic in
the vicinity and kept members
of the press and public away
The Yorkshire Ripper killings
started in July 1975 and con·
tinued until last November.
Detectives said the killer struck
by night, smashing his victims'
heads with a hammer and usual·
ly mutilating the bodies. The
women ranged in age from 16 to
47 and nine were prostitutes.
Because Jack the Ripper's
victims were prostitutes and he
mutilated their bodies, the press
named the Yorkshire killer after
him But the 1888 Ripper was ! never caught
Sutcliffe's wife was reported
•to have lost her teachinc job at a
school in Yorks~ because of
her husband's an-est and the ac·
companyine publicity.
Voting awaited
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (AP) -Prime Minister
P.W. Botba'a personal prest.tae
faced its biiacett test today in
parliamentary election.a that his
National Party was cerutn to
win.
ble for supervising the report·
ing
Tbe program would cost
between $300.000 and $400,000 an·
nually, a health service&
spokeswoman told the panel.
The measure goes to a fiscal
committee for study.
Karen Douglas of the Nurses
Coalition for Educated Women,
backers of the bill, said the pro-
posa I "would give the state
more information in more depth
than 1s currently available "
The bill was also backed by
the California Medical Associa-
tion, the California Nurses As·
sociation and the National
Organization for Women.
Currently, about 230 ,000
women have abortions annually
in California, Ms. Douglas said.
But Jose Granda of the Pro-
Life Minorities of California said
tbe measure would unfairly
target minorities, encouragine
unneeded abortions among lbe
poor.
Belh Meador of the American
Civil Uberties Union, which also
opposed Davis' bill, said the pro-
posal calls for "much more than
merely demographic informa-
tion."
Bul Davis disacreed. The
measure, he said, "just does
what Jack Webb says: 'The
facts. ma'm, notttiog but lhe
facts "'
Trial opens
in baby sale
BOISE, Idaho CAP>-Tbe at·
torney for a couple accused of
selling lbelr 7-montb-old baby
says be will argue that no crime
was involved because human be·
lngs do not !\ave transferable
''title.''
The couple, Air Force Tech.
Sgt. John Raaen and bis wife,
J antee, are accused in federal
court of aelllnl their daughter
for $2,000 last November. The
case la beb>I tried in federal
court becabse the alle1ed of·
tense occurred on federal prop-
erty, but alnce there ue no ap-
p 11 cable federal laws, the
charfes aff baaed on a state
law.
Tbe cbar1ea carry a max·
lrnum penalty of 1' yean ln
pri.aon and $5,000 ln fines.
to leave 1ometbln1 for
posterity.''
l!be blll, s~ bf Sen. Jim El·
lla, R-San Dleeo. would wipe out
the Callfon.Ua Coutal Act, ap.
proved In 1916 to ~rotect the
state'• 1,100-mile coutlille from
over-development.
The act waa an out1rowth ot
H o t days ,
p cick oc
beaches
Unusually laree crowds turned
up at the beaches Tuesday to
escape the hot weather caused by
Santa Ana winds.
Temperatures alone lbe coast
were in the hi&b 80s, with a high of
90 degrees recorded in Santa Ana
al midday, accordine to the Na·
tional WealberService.
A weather service spokesman
said the wind.st which came late in the season, olew at about 20
mph. He said they are expected
to continue throuib today and
diminish by Thursday.
The spokesman said low cloudi·
ness would be increasing ton.ieht
with temperatures expected to be
a cooler 68 to 74 degrees Thurs-
day .
Newport Beach lifeguards said
more than 30,000 people showed
up Tuesday. a large crowd forth.LI
time of year. No rescues or loci·
dents were reported.
Laguna Beach reported crowds
of about 15,000 with no incidents.
Huntington Beach lifeguards said
10,000 people were at the city
beach.
Lifeguards at Huntington State
Beach said from 6,000 to 7 ,000 peo-
ple showed up with no major incl·
dents.
Water temperatures alone the
coast were in the 60 to 65·degree
range, lifeguards said. Surf was
reportedly running at from one to
three feet.
From Page A1
TENNIS. • •
M s Barnett, n ow a
paraplegic, says she gave up her
job as hairdresser to become
secretary, confidante, compa·
nion, cook, cleaning person and
''all other things necessary so
that Mrs. King's energy could be
totally directed toward playing
tennis."
Mrs King issued a statement
today through her publicist de·
nying the allegation and saying
she was "shocked '· The state·
ment added that Mrs. King and
her husband Larry had been
"sympalbetic" to Ms. Barnett's
"plight" in recent years
The Barnett suit is based on
Cali f o rnia 's so -ca lled
"palimony" precedent under
which former singer Michelle
triola was allowed to sue actor
Lee Marvin for half of his earn-
ings during the period they lived
togelber as an unmarried COU·
pie. Ms. MJJ"Vin was awarded
$104 ,000. although s he' bad
sought SU million.
Ma. Barnett's suit says Mrs.
Kine and her husband have de-
cided to sell a Malibu house that
Ms. Bamett says ia in her name
jointly with Mrs. K.lng's.
She said in the suit that In 1974
Mrs. King had told her, "Go INy ,
yourself a house," and abe bu
asked the Los Aneeles Supertor
Court to rule that lbe house can·
not be sold without ber
laya IA procaatnt bulldinc ap. pllcattona . and of arrp1ant
treatment by commiuTo era
and ataff membert. •·we have a monster that must
-be cut back," eald Brian Bllbr~, the ma)'(>r of l1DP9rial Beacb. 11We've Jot a claHlc U ·
ample of a aoveroment a1ency
AP ........
tbat'• out of Control and a~plaf
on peopl .. and doinl It wlte> cold· bloOchCl mllllee ...
He claimed the act wu "belnl
U1ed by ~ rich to protect tbelr
lltUt )MalliWick wllllt the poor ar• belq kept clown." Ropr 0Jenbaqb, a lormef
coaatal. commlaloner and land-
use canaultant, said there are
tale• of arrogance, deal• and
personal profit •urTOUDcllni tbe
comm.laslons.
He also complained that com·
missions found ••so many
reasons to deny project.." 4 Another witneu, Carlyn
Highland, I Humboldt County
landowner, said her f &mlly ... d
spent $12,000 and 2~ yean lD 1
futile attempt to build a coutal
home.
''Tbey have in fact stolen our
property for public use," she
cop tended.
But Rod Holmgren, co·
chairman of lbe Sierra Club'•
California Coastal Ta$k Force,
said the act was under heavy
criticism "for one reason -it is
effective: it has produced re·
sults."
To overturn the act, he said,
would return the state to the
days when local goverommta
pushed for more and more de·
velopment.
Before the coastal act and in·
itiallve, he said, "it was becom-
ln& a concrete coast. More and
more Californians were ftnd.ing
it difficult to get to the
coastline."
Another bill opponent, Stephen Hopcrafl, spokesman for a
.tenants' group, criticized
Bilbray's statement, saying
Coastal Commission guidelines'
had helped protect low-income
reota.l housing on the coast.
ROYAL RODENT -Nipper, the female ferret wbt> will help
TV coverage of the royal wedding in July, goes through
her paces in London. She will pull nylon cord (attached to
her tail) through a narrow pipe from Buckingham Palace
to a commentary pasition outside the palace. The cord will
then be used to pull a TV cable through.
Holmgren and Michael Fisch·
er. state Coastal Commission
executive director, said a
statewide poll taken last sum-
mer found that more than 80
percent of those questioned
wanted coastal protection
measures
The more frequent criticism
voiced in the poll was that
coastal commissions were not
tough enough on developers, the
two men said. Fischer said that
most permit applicants respond·
ing to letters he sent out had
praise for the way they were
treated by commissioners and
staff.
LastAbscam
figure w ~
resign seat
PHILADELPHIA CAP) -U.S.
Rep. Raymond F . Lederer, [).
Pa., said today lbat be ii resign·
Ing from Congress effectlveMay
5 because of bis convtction in the
Abscam bribery scandal, ac·
cordiq to a statement read by
his lawyer.
Lederer was not present when
his attorney. James Binns. read
the statement to reporters in
Binns' office.
Binns, who defended Lederer
on charges he took a $50,000
bribe from an FBI agent posing
as a representative of a fie·
titious Arab sheik, said he didn't
know where his cltent was.
Lederer wa s elected to
Congress in 1976 and was the on·
ly one among six U.S. represen·
latives involved in lbe Abscam
case who was re-elected last
November.
The announcement by the
Philadelphia Democrat came a
day alter the House ethics com-
mittee recommended by a 10-2
vote lbat the full House expel the
42-year-old lawmaker.
lD b1a statement, Lederer said
be bad been proud to serve the
3rd Congressional District lot
the put 4~ yean and t.bat bi,
only goal baa been to "help Im-prove the Jives of my consU·
tuenb.''
From Page A1
REAGAN. • •
:no telephone calls in his favor
while 27 callers voiced negative
comments.
Reaean told the House and
Senate that they risk public
wrath unless they act quickly on
his economic program.
''The Amencan people DO•
want us to act and not in half
measures," he said. "They de·
mand -and they've earned a
full and comprehensive effort to
clean up our economic mess "
The president, greeted in the
packed chamber by thunderous,
sustained applause from
Republicans and Democrats
alike, compared his recovery
from a builet in the lung with
health or the U.S. economy.
''Thanks to some very fine
people, my health Is much im·
proved," he said, showing no
signs of the gunshot wound in·
flicted by would-be assassin 29
days ago. "I'd like to be able to
say that with reeard to the
economy.
"Because of the extent of our
economy's sickness, we know
that the cure will not come
quickly," he said. ''That cure
be&ins with the federal budget."
Reagan's speech was inter·
rupted 13 times by applause,
altJ\ougb when got down to
specifics or his proiram, much
of it was restricted to the
AepubUcan side of the chamber.
Chase hikes
• prune rate
to 18 percent
NEW YORK (AP> -The
stock market continued its
retreat today as Chase Manhat·
tan Bank raised its prime lend·
ingrate.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials, which toppled from
an eight-year high Tuesday,
plunged another 5.85 points to
l ,Oll.08 in lbe early goin1 with
losers leading gainers among
New York Stock Exchange.
listed issues.
Investors continued to be con·
cerned about risin1 short-term
interest rates. After the start ol
trading this morninc, Chase
Manhattan, the nation•s third·
largest commercial bank, in·
creased its prime len~ rate to
18 percent from the in·
dustrywtde level or 17.5 percent.
As lradinl began, the Com-
merce Department announced
that the index of leadln1 in·
dica~. a barometer of future
econ<>Jnic trends, rose 1.4 per-
cent ln March followln1 three
straight months of declines.
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' '
........
Toria C03ta, B, Qf Freemont, state poater child fur
Muacular Dystrophy, ahowa off her guardian angel
tioll to Gov. Broum during a visit to his office in
Sacrammto.
Puhl.Uher
Murphyquib
Reg Murphy resigned as
publisher and editor of The
San Francisco Examiner to
become publisher of the Sun
newspapers in Baltimore.
Md.
Murphy, 47, has been al
The Examiner nearly six
years.
"The time has come for me
lo move on," Murphy told the
newspaper's staff at a meet
ing.
Murphy came lo San Fran·
cisco from the Atlanta
Constitution, where he was
editor.
In Baltimore he will be
publisher of the Baltimore
Sun, a morning newspaper,
and the sister paper, the
Evening Sun.
Actress Elisabeth Taylor
Warner makes her
Broadway stage debut
tonight when ·'The Little
Foxes" begins previews, and
she's already made her pre·
diction about the New York
critics' verdict.
"They're going to kill me,"
she said while moving her
fingers like a pair of scissors
al a dinner party given in her
honor at a Manhattan
restaurant.
Miss Taylor opened to
mixed reviews in
Washineton, D.C., in the
latest restaging of Lillian
Hellman's "The Little Fox·
es," but tickets were hard to
come by. The play officially
opens in New York oo May 7.
Rock musician Ille Tanter
pleaded innocent lo a charge
of assault with a deadly
weapon for allegedly shoot·
ing an Inglewood newspaper
carrier who had accidentally
hit his dog with a paper four
months ago.
The 49-year·old musician is
half of the nbw·defunct Ike
and Tina Turner Review.
aoben C. Ode, a former
bostaie In Iran, visited 40
fifth eraders in Landlsville,
N.J ., to thank them (or cards
that brightened ht. first
Christmas in captivity.
Ode, 65, visited Our Lady
of Victories School to thank
Karea Maclmey'1 class for
their hand-written notes. The
Sun City, Ariz., resident said
be bad been a captive nearly
two months on Christmas
Day 1979 -without
newspapers. television or
contact with fellow hostages
-when the ~ards arrived.
The notes and prayers lift·
ed his spirit and reminded
him Americans had not
forgotten the hostages, be
said.
.,__...
She was also a big draw at
the dinner party. A sizable
crowd stood outside the
restaurant to watch her en·
. trance, she wore a sUk tumc.
slacks and diamonds. and
some 60 people. including
Roell Hudson, Hermione
Gingold, Miss Heuman, and
Alexis Smith, were among
guests.
Comedian Red Buttons hugs entertainer Bob ff.ope
from behind during a Hollywood award.! dinner in
Los Angeles.
Storms lash Midwest
Santa Ana winds batter Southland, power knocked out
Coastal iooather
8•1ow coa1tol c91yon1 bet-
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tlllt elle,._, W9M to toutllwest
swell I lo J l•l. CINf tlllo&.
U.S. summary
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Tuttn •"PPea.rt destined to be
the el~al pie lllat wU1 be
1llced up tbb •Prine IO all five ol
Oranee Count1'• 1upervlao1'1
have ~ua1 helPlnP al comti· tueotl.
Th• county i• required by
1tate law to modify the
1upervllloria1 boundaries evel")'
10 years after censua counts are
teleaeed.
The redistrlctJ.na ii intended to
eive ~eeldents lo each dlttrlct
equal '\nfluence. The law d.lreeU
local offtclala to honor city boun·
daries if possible when altering
the lines.
The county Board of
Supervisors ac~nowledted the
law Tuesday when It formed a
five-person committee to pro-
pose new jurisdictions.
But it doesn't always work.
And tb.1s appears to be one of
those times for Tustin, popula-
tion 39,781, which bas the dis·
tinctioo of being a meeUne point
for four of the five supervisorial
distriets.
For Tustin to remain under
one supervisor, it would require
some full -scale shifting of
supervisorial boundaries. But
three of the five supervisors -
Harriett Wieder in the 2nd dis·
trict. Ralph Clark in the 4th and
Thomas Riley in the 5th -are
up for re-election next year, and
none seem eager to forsake their
constituents.
Since the five-person commit·
tee is comprised of aides to each
supervisor, there is Uttle chance
for drastic change.
Thus, the stage is set for
Tustin lo be split. As one aide re·
marked, however, it's not
Inmate
stabbed at
county jail
The second Orange County
Jail inmate in a week has
been injured while waiting in the
basement holding cell at the
county Courthouse in Santa Ana.
Reginald Holland, 34, of San
Clemente, was stabbed in the
left arm Monday while waitin&
to stand trial on rape charges,
said Orange County Sheriffs Lt.
Wyatt Hart.
Holland was treated and re·
leased at the UC Irvine Medical
Center for the puncture wound
caused by a homemade knife, he
said.
The stabbine came juat four
days after murder suspect
Miebael Charles Bottoms, 22, ol
Long Beach, died from bead in-
juries apparently suffered ln the
holding cell on April 20.
Hart said investigators have
suspects in each Incident but
won't release any identities unW
they are prepared to issue
criminal complaints .
The holding cell can house up
to about 30 inmates involved in
legal proeeedings, Hart said.
Deputies watch the inmates
tbroueh windows, but he noted it
only takes an instant for fighting
or assaults to occur.
"It's a violent atmosphere,"
Hart said.
The inmates, who are loosely
bound in chains, are moved to
their appropriate courtrooms
through a special elevator.
Hart said Sheriff's offlciaJs
have requested funds in the past
to remodel the cell with more
windows, bat have not received
them.
Gem
Talk
THEWORLO OF GOLD
""'wer Um ,,_.,,
If yqu OWll ~methlnl Made ol
1o1d, ~der younelf \ •mart
lntemlltioaal Investor. U JOU'ft
nev•r really tboqbt of )"ounelf
tbat WSJ, coaatci.r t.Jt11: Hatlont
and IGtematlonal cartell an
Puttmi mon and more of tbelr
effort and cub into ky1nc aold and maldAa IDCJMY trom IO)d.
·Tbe OPEC countttea ~
1tepjeit up their told bU7tq to
tll• POlat where tM 8.U OI Enslaad .. umat .. tll•t 10
Pflfttll of total OPl:C ..... are DOW .la ~. SwadlaDd. -.
of tbe .. •M•r•l••" Af rlua uiw., bu bttma mintlal IU own . aold cola, called lb• "Swut, .. fGf: Inv.ton iid bM
belUD woii4widi dlitrt~ ::0 8:\n~ .~ r: ~r.=:·u:=...rou:=
m>p.'·1'MI ~ .... ~ •
bolater Uatlr econ~-.1." Ao
trcMabled ~· M.cl .......... cop_tronra1 onr w••t•u ltok&Nl or A-brat ~ ...S \e ..... ..-.1 ........ flit
lftelr7, ha eaUMd • po!Mleal
neceasarily bed for ttMt c;tty-.
"SdiDetlm,. lt'• to a dtJ'• lid·
vanta1e to bave two 1upe~vilor1, eapec1aUy It it's
1maU," be said.
Riley curre1'tlY repreaenta
1'u1UD. H1s diltrict, however,
baa -.welled In population
because it al.so includes porUom
of the fut lf'OWinl south COWlf.1,
He 11 tar1eted to yield •bold
21,200 realdeota, aqd some of
them Ukely will come from
Tustin. Stan Oftelle, a Clark aJde
who is chairman of the commi~
tee, sald the Sant~a Freeway
tbrou1h Tustlq i1 belnc con-
sidered as a possible boundary.
The rest of Riley's loases lU'e
expected to be from a small Up
of Huntlneton Beach be
represents but whlcb would go
instead to Mrs. Wieder, who
already represents the rest of
the city.
About 10,000 people live in that
section south of AU an ta A venue
and east of Magnolia Street, said
Oftelie.
Bruce Nestande's 3rd district
bordera TUstln, but Nestande
also representa the south county
and needs to give up about 21,000
constituents.
Thus, Roger Stanton's lst dis·
trict, which currently extends as
far east as Santa Ana, is likely
to absorb parts of Tustin. Stan·
ton needs to pick up about 6,900
people.
Clark's 4th district also could
get in the action because be
needs to add about 9,600.
Even if Tustin is split,
however, it won't be the only
Orange County city to share the
Musse/,s
• qua~ine
set kJ begin
SACRAMENTO <AP> -
California's annual quar~
'on coastal mussel• beti.nl FrV
day. the state Department ol
Health Services has announced.•
The quarantine on sport
harvest4n1 of mutsels, oyst~
and scallops will remain in ett
feet tbrc>ugh Oct. 31, the depart·
ment said. :
The quarantine, which appli~
to coast.al waters and all~ b inlets and harbors, Js im
annually because or ~e rillt
higher concentrations of tox1
materials in mussels durin•
warm spring, summer and earl]t
rail months. "' The department says froril
1927 through 1980 there have
been 508 known cases o(
paralytic shellfish poisoninl
( PSP), including 32 death~
caused by eating toxic musself
from the California coast.
Dtllly "91,........, "91ftd10'~
GIRL WATCHER? -Joni Larned of Costa Mesa may not
have noticed while window shopping at skating store, but
the cowboy "leaning" against the wall of the Newport
shop was "eyeing" her closely.
..
I
• WASHINGTON' <AP) -:
Secretary ot State Ale•ander M.
HaJ1 Jr., defelldlnc the aale ot
advanced milltary equipment to
Saudi Arabia, urced opJ>C)olGla
to waJt fM detalll before label·
lllt tbe plan • 4an1er to l1rael.
He ran into a wall of
tdpartisan atepUeilD).
r HaJ1 bl.oted to a House panel
Tue1day that the Saudi• will
•ake concessions to U.S. ln·
\-ere1ta in the Mideast ln U ·
han1e for the sale and said be
8oe1 not belieye the Saudi
klD1dom wlll (all and allow
teeret equipqient on sophistical·
id radar planes to fall into Sov· .,. bands.
A · Hale's appearance before the
,/louse foreign operaUons sub·
committee launched a summer·
long campaign seeking
Congresa' •upport for the con·
Jroveraial sale.
"
RE SAID THE Reagan ad·
1nlniatratlon is still "fleshing
'but" details of the sale and
urged the congressmen several
times to wait for those details.
But Rep. Clarence ~. D-
Md., told Haig it ta already el.ear
that the sale is "one of t1"t m0tt
dangerous threats'• facln1
Israel.
"I think that it would be pru·
dent for all to wall until they see
the precise character, nature
and modality of this proposed
sale before they describe it as
the most dangerous threat fac-
ing the state of Israel," Hale
replied.
He assured the committee that
Reagan's "firm commitment to
maintain Israel's qualitative ad·
vantage over Arab military
forces will be met.'·
THE WHITE HOUSE an·
nounced last week that the presi·
dent has decided to sell the
Saudis five AWACS radar com·
mand posts plus missiles and
long-range fuel tanks to enhance
62 F -15 Saudi fighters already on
order.
Coneress can veto the sale if
both the House and Senate vote
agalnst it within 30 days of
li'iremen probe cause
Of Nev~ blaze
DAYTON, Nev. (AP> -The
tale fire marshal's office ls In·
estigattng a fire that destroyed
e old Dayton Station, a build·
g that has been a downtown ·
andmark in this community
ast of Carson City since the
ginning of the century.
Firemen from six surrounding
epartments battled the blaze
arly Tuesday, which leR only
o walls of the brick, two·story
uilding standing. No injuries
ere reported.
Deputy state Fire Marshal
ene Williams, asked to in·
estigate the blaze by county
ire Chief Bill Southard, said no
ause bad been determined.
With the building reduced to
is state, It's difficult to de-
rmine the cause," he said. "It
ould very well be an· innocent
e and it could very well not ..
THE BUILDING was being re-
ov a ted and co-owner Carol
ickey said some $250,000 had
one into the restoration aimed
t attracting tourists to the quiet
wn.
A bar and a dinner house were
pen, but work was continuing
n the 11 hotel rooms. She said
o more remained to be re-
rbisbed. .
She planned lo tum the adjoin·
g American Bar into a casino,
e said. It was damaeed ex.
naively by water Uled to keep
from going up ln names.
She said she plans lo rebuild.
Lyon County sheriff's deputy
arry QuUlci discovered the
e, which he said had already
ngulfed the entire first floor
hen be spotted it.
BE IMMEDIATELY began
nockin& on doors of surround·
g buildings to alert people in·
de lo t.M fire. As be ban1ed on
e door of the Union Hotel
cross the street from the burn·
I building, an explosion hom
e fi8Jlllng Dayton Statlon shat.
red t•o huge wllldows in front
the Union Hotel and sent
ards of metal into QUWci'a
othln1.
Edna McDiarmid, who owns
the Union Hotel, said, "My dogs
woke me up and I got out."
The building was virtually
destroyed by-the lime firemen
arrived, and while some
firefighters battled to bring the
blaze under control, others
worked lo keep the fire from
spreading to nearby structures.
Power'-lines along Dayton's
main street were snapped by the
heat or explosions.
The structure was built about
1910 and was known as the
Quilici Building when it houst:d
a mercantile business m the
town about 12 miles east of
Carson City on u:s. 50.
Sterilization
commonest
birth control
BALTIMORE (AP) -Volun·
tary sterilization has become the
world's m05t common method of
birth control with at least 100
million men and women ustng
the technique -five times as
many as a decade ago, the Johns
Hopkins Medical Institutions
have reported.
Voluntary sterilization is most
common in China. where it is
used by an estimated 40 million
peqple, and in India, where it is
used by at least 25 million, the
report said. The eovemmeots of
both nations have actively en·
courased -and in 1ome cases
exerted considerable presaure -
in favor of birth control to curb
their burgeoning populations.
In the United States, the u.ae of
voluntary steriliuUon has In·
creased in 10 years from 3
million people to at least 13
million. according to the Johns
Hopkins report. In Latin
America, the report said, the
use of voluntary ster1Jiiation has
erown from 1 million people to
4.5 million.
The report appears in the cur·
rent wue of Population Report.I.
formal aubJD.ialloa to Coosreu.
Senate Republican Leader
Howard Bak4tr baa aald tbe
Senate will not vote unUl next
f all1 llvlna the adminlltratioo
more time ~o wln ovtJr con-
sresalooal support.
Several memben of the aub-
com mlttee told Hail they will
not vote for the sale unless Saudi
concessions on oU and support
for a Middle Eut peace are woa
in return.
HAIG SAID RE could not spell
out in public "what we can ex·
peel from" the Saudis because
that "would put in jeopardy the
very pro1resa we have been
seeking -and have been
achieving " rn private dis·
cussiooa.
But two Republicans on the
committee, Jack F . Kemp of
New York and Jerry Lewis cl
Calilomia, told Hait be must
give Congresa more information
than that i,o win ita approval for
the sale.
Long said a similar AW ACS
sale planned for Iran when it fell
could have put the plane "into
the hands of t.M enemy,"
But Haig aaid the Rea1an ad·
ministration would not have aJ.
lowed Iran to fall. "Nor would I
anticipate such an outcome in
Saudi Arabia," he added.
Benefit plan
budgetary
effects seen
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Reagan administration's pro·
posals for dealine with Social
Security's short·term fi9Cal
problems will have an impact on
its long-term ~ealth as.well, the
head of the SOcial Security Ad·
ministration said.
John Svahn, talking with re·
porters, did not reveal what op.
tions the administration is con-
s Ider i ng to bolster Social
Security.
But he said, "We're talking
about substantive changes, not
d'Ftificial changes . . . If you
make short·term changes that
are subst:intive. and start doing
them now, they have long-term
impacts."
SVAHN SAID examples of
artificial solutions to the short-
term crunch would be to limit
retirees' coet-of·living raises to
80 percent of the Consumer
Price Index instead of 100 per·
cent. or to hold them back for
three months.
Svabn called "highly
speculative" a New York Times
report Monday that adminiatra·
lion experts were urging Preal·
dent Reagan to defer attempts
at a Iona-range solution and to
concentrate on the short-term
criala.
Social Security's main trust
fund for Old Age and Survivors
Insurance ls certain to run out of
cash late next year or ln lil83
and to remain In the red for
several years. The system ia ex-
pected lo rebound In the lllOI,
but then lo start bulldin1 even
bigger deficits 40 lo 50 yean
from now.
EA&LIEa, A •PC>keawoman
for the Department ol Health
and Human Services, the pro.
tram's parent aceocy, relterat.
ed that the Rea&a admlntltra-
tion remains eomtnitted lo aeek-
ln& a legialattve aolutlon to both
problems at t.tie same time. :
.............
HfTCllmc&i -A muter al outer space, 1buWe Columbia needed helping band getting from
Califomla to Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Powerleq craft ia shown here Tuesday as it
completed twtce-;ctelayed return in J>ilaback ride aboard NASA 747. •
Man awarded $2 million
Quadriplegic's settlement ends 11-year battle
MARGATE, Fla. (AP) -For
11 years, quadriplelic Bill Coo·
nolly fouiht deapair. Later, be
fougbt llaryland Casualty in·
surance company and finally
won a settlement of up to $2.23
million. .
The Sf-year-old decorated
Vietnam veteran escaped the
war uninjured, but broke hia
neck when he fell from a roof 12
years aco.
Hia wife divorced him. He
couldn't pick up a book or take
care of himself without help.
"I woke up one day and said,
'This is it. You're going to see
whatyou'remadeof.'"
HIS PERSEVERANCE paid
off and lut week be won an
award for medical care and liv·
ing expenses in an a1reement
that calla for workman's com·
pensation payments of as much
as S2.2'3 million over 30 years for
him and his new wife and three
children.
After his accident. Connolly
said Maryland Casualty, wbo
had insured him in hia roofing
business, promised him it wouid
provide for bis lifetime medical needs.
But Connolly did not want to
spend the rest of bis life in a
nursing home.
IN 1913, with the help of tm
family, he left the hospital,
enrolled in Miami-Dade Com-
m unity College, and asked
Maryland Casualty for a van
with a wheelchair lift.
He didn't get the van, so he
hired Miami lawyer Harold
Solomon lo talce his case.
IN A DEAL worked out in
1975, Maryland Casualty agreed
lo provide equipment Connolly
had requested along with $2,500
a month to allow Connolly to live
independently in his apartment,
he said.
But two years later, he said he
still didn't have the van and a
claim was filed with the state's
Industrial Claims Commission.
Last year, Connolly said, the
company cut off the monthly
payments and the couple had no
in com e Discouraged , tbey
talked of g1vmg up the fight and
moving mto a trailer.
But the Indus trial Claims
Commission agreed with Connol·
ly Maryland Casualty was or-
dered to make the payments.
and the pape rwork for the
workman's compensation settle·
ment was completed last week.
Daffy Pilot D.Onry ,, c;.,...tffd
Monday-Friday II you do not have
'IQUr paper by 5 30 p m call before 7
pm and your copy Wiii be delivered
Saturday and Sunday II you do not
receive your copy by 7 a m call
before 10 a m and your copy Wiii be
detlV91'ed
Clralaffol. T•pliHet
Most Orange Co•inty Areas 44l-4.Ut No<1hwest Huntington Beach
and Westminster 5*11JO Laguna Niguel 4''"'80t
Lido Marina Village and Orange G~ast ~ly Pilot
present a unique cycling event you won't art to miss
The ride combines the excitement of a bicycle race with the pl asure of a 25. 50
and 100 mile tour. And it's your choice. You can compete for times or sJmply
enjoy a ride through the rural areas along the Pacific Coast Hwy. So come on out
to Lido Marina Village, located on Newport Harbor, 11.t block off Newport
Boulevard, just South of P~cilic Coast Highway on Via Lido. From the San Diego
Freeway, take the Newport Freeway <Hwy . 55) south til it turns into Newport
Boulevard. Follow to Via Udo and turn left. The ride starts at 7 ,a .m., Sunday. May 31st.
ENTRY DETAILS I Team entries will be accept~ tmlnlmum or IS participants per team 1 bul lnd1\1duali. ar~ Jb11 encouraged to compete.
Please fill In all Information on the attached ofricial entr~ form. and enclose a check for th<' rull amount i11cludln1 the purchase of any T·Shirts or \'isor:. ·
Note. Please make the check payable to Lido Manna Village and moil to Lido Marina Villa~• ~1 Via Oporto. Sulle 4. Nev. port Beach. CA 92663
T-SHIRTS
Orficlal Udo Marina Vllla1e Fun Bicycle Ride T·Shirts are a\'ailable for purchase b~ mail. at the <'II"'
of 16.00 each ft.l lncluded1 T-Shlrts '' 111 be anUable for pick· up the f$ay or the ride ut either th1 startln1 line or the finish line ·
AWARDS •
Aw1rds will be prftented at LldO Muina Village at 4 :30 p.m. the same da~ of the race
Entry Diani<
Please ftll In all lnrormatlon. Print or t)•pe cltar'ly. Detach
and mall with t'heclc or money order lo· Udo ·Maril'• ¥111are. ~ Via Oporto. Suite 4. Ne\\ port. Bea eh CA 9*3.
Deacrtptloft
Entry Fee
Visors
@$4.00ea.
T·Shlrt.a
®S6.00ea
Sitt tclttle one11
S M L XL
Quanhty
s
I
s
IACRAMENTo (AP) -JerTJ ward, ebaneellor ol the
QllfGl'nla Oftnmumty Collet•.
be bopea lot a 12 percent
in state aJd, bu~ eoaceded
will be bard to ••t from a
J-lboD Le,S.Jature. ayward appeared Tueaday
!1 • Capitol new• conf•rence
or to tbe flnt le,felaUve bear·
1 on community ooUece tund·
lq. bJllt by Sen. Allr~ Alquilt,
UanJ01e. 8.lt SB&Cl and 142 would aJ.
locate a billion dollan from the
state seneral fund to support the
101 community collqea, which
..,... have about 1.3 million stu-
dents.
It would amount to a total of
$158 million more than
last year. includins a 9 percent
cost-of-llvins boott, luodl for an
lDcrease of 3 percent in atten-
4auce and S7 million for equaJlz.
ln1 differences in district re-
venues.
lloctor •enlenced
SANTA MONICA CAP) -Dr.
Raymond La Scola, freed laat
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-killing drug. ·
of b11 probatioo. La Scola wlll
bave to devote 100 bOun to com·
munlty service.
Oath invalid
MARTINEZ (AP>
California's teachers do not
ba ve to 1i1n oath• pledcln&
loyalty to the U.S. ConaUtutlon
and oppoelUoo to communlam, a
jadte · bu ruled. Contra Costa
Superior Court .Judie Iii~ Rothenberg Monday ruled
state law uncoastltuUonal.
Entry refuaed
PASO ROBLES (AP) -The
C BS news 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 presen\ an
unedited version of their poirit of
view. a company spokeswoman
had said.
2,000 see crash
EL MIRAGE <Al» -An
aerobatic pilot, Cindy Rucker,
died in front of 2,000 air show
spectators when her borne-built,
experimental biplane plunged to
the earth, said a Federal A via·
lion Administration spokesman.
The single-engine Aero-Duster
spun down from an altitude or
about 500 feet at this desert
,.,......,....
JOY UNSHARED -The birth of triplets Ceach boys) delighted
Susan Algood of Fresno but she was saddened the event
couldn't be shared with their father, David. The dad was shot
in the head Feb. 19 in San Jose by a man who offered to buy
Algood's car, according to San Jose police. . .
LOS ANGELES (AP> -•If tbe
producer of "Dallas'' has b11
way, no one will replace the late
Jim Davis in the role of J~t Ewlna, the silver-maned and
1ravel-votced patriarch of the
Texas oil dynasty.
Davia, 72, who recenUy UD·
derwalt sure~ry for a perforat.
ed ulcer, died in hll 1,leep at hi.
home over the weekend. A
memorial service will be held
Friday at Encino Communlt)'
Church in Tarzana with a
private burial t.o follow. Born
Aug. 216, 1908 ln Edgerton, Mo.,
Davis is survived by ht. mother,
hie wife, Blanche, and two sis-
ters. Leonard Kallman, producer
of "Dallas," the No. 1 series on
CBS, said it's too early to say
how the change will be band.led,
but added, "No one want.at.ore-
cast the role.
"WE'VE DONE some thlnJc-
lng but it's too early to discuss it
fully ," Katzman said .
"Nevertheless, the business be-
ing what it is, we began to make
alternative plans when Jim
became ill.··
"We'r e a ll terribly sor-
rowful." said series star Larry
Hagman, who plays Davis' son,
J .R. Ewing. "Jim was a great
guy to work with and he will be
greatly missed. He is 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 strike, to allow
him to rewrite scripts for next
season so that filming can begin
in a few weeks.
"Without a walv•r," be said,
"we mt1bt h ave to re·cHt,
aom1th1na we would want veq
much not to do."
Tbe CutNDJ •••.an. bowtve-.
already hM been filmed and will
not be affected as "Dallas"
winds up the aeuon Friday with
another cl1fthan1er to Jreep the
audience ln suapenae all •WU!
mer. I
" DA VIS DOES not ncure i.D tht
new mystery that betlns .Frid•»
Jock Ewinl and "Mil• EW•.'t
played by arbara Bel Geddes,
are on a second -honeymooo •
Europe and wW ool appear on
the show. I'
Davis played a pivotal role w
"Dallas.'" Much of the miachitl
created by his son J R. came '-
his attempt to beat out hit
brother, Bobby <Patrick Duffy~
for the attention and affection ol
his father. The two brothers arg
rivals for control of the Ewii\I
Oil empire, and up to now Jock
had been the key to control.
Neither brother seems willing th
make it a partnership. l
Last year the s hooting of J.~
generated worldwide inleresJ.
a nd became one of the most
celebrated whodunits of all time.
The show with the solution brokf
all viewing records. More tha&'
41 .4 million homes tuned in. .,
FRIDAY'S VICTIM apparent-
ly won't get off as lightly as J .lj.
lt looks ltke 1t will be mur~~ and another member of the
will be the c hief s uspec ,
although the ··Dallas.. people
won 't say for sure
The sentence was imposed
Monday by Superior Court
Judge Edward Rafeedie after
the 65-year-old Malibu physician
pleaded no contest to the pre·
scrlption charge As a condition airport Sunday.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Rival's killing
brings verdict
OROVILLE CAP> -An Oroville man wbo ad-
mitted killing his ex-girlfriend's new boyfriend
with a replica of an antique gun has been convict-
ed of second-degree murder. Sale17.99 Your
choice A Butte County Superior Court jury bas re-
turned its verdict on Scott Tbelander, 23, after
three days of deliberation. Sentencing was set for
May 21. He could get 17 years to life.
F
A s
H
I
0
N
Sundresslng for summer days and nights.
Tbelander was charged with slaying David
L•wi•, 21, in Lewis' home in June 1979.
A friend to whom Thelander bad confided bi&
jealous rage at his girlfriend 1witchio& her affec-
tions to Lewis, had offered Tbelander a cap.and-
ball pistol that the prosectuion said wa.s the death
weapon.
Tbelander 's lawyer bad sought a
meula"lbter conviction on &rounds that it hap-
pened in the heat or passion.
The prosecution souabt a ftnt-degree murder
conviction, sayina Tbelander ambushed Lewis.
Thelander bad admitted lo court, "I shot
him." The verdict was returned Monday.
Lost sailors
search halted
SANTA CRUZ CAP) -A search for four men
missing after their :uilboat capsized had been
halted, the Coast Guard says.
The search was called off, and a Coast Guard
official said the men were presumed dead if they
stiU were at sea.
"If they made it to the beach, they mi&bt be
OK," he said Monday. The names of the men, all
in the early 20s, were not released.
Alexander Boomer of Santa Cruz, the owner of
the 21-foot sailboat, was rescued, aJong with an un-
identified companion, after they were spotted
clinging to the capsized boat near Point Soquel by
a civilian pleasure boat, Petty Orflcer Larry
Bowers said.
Painling bought
· LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two Southern
California museums have purchased "The Holy
Family," a 17th century palntin& by Nicolas
Poussin for $4 million, it has been announced.
The joint purchase was made over the
weekend by the J . Paul Getty Museum in Malibu
~d the Norton Simon Mwaeum in Pasadena, with
ch ahowinc it for a three-month period initially
en exchanling lt once a year.
, The artwoTk ls contidered among the finest
t e pre1entatton1 of the late claasical 1tyle of
ousain.
'MIWPOIT
-1wa11BOR CRUISE
' ........ , ... "
ATTNICAll•Y
714 '7 ... 71U
announces a new program
c
A
R
N
I v
A
L
Reg. $22-$24. Cool cotton pnnts with feminine
flounshes These 1ng~rwe sundresses are trimmed with
flirtatious lace Choose lace tnm bodice print dress.
sweetheart dress with bodice pnnt, mock button-front
sundress. or coat-style sundress Junior sizes
SACRAMENTo CAP) -JvrJ
~-~.ward, chancellor of tbe ~omla CommUDJv ~~~1 iilN he bopel ror a 12 ~
t in state aid, bUt CODeeded ., ..w be bard to .. t from a
••ey·abor:t Lee1tlat.ure. Hayward appeared Tuesday •t a CapUol news conference
prtor to t.be ftnt lea{alative bear· ~ on community 00De1e f\and. "'8 billa by Sen. Alfred Alqulat,
D."!Jan Joee.
Hts .SBMl and 8'2 would al·
locate a bi.llioo dollars from th•
state 1enera1 fund to aupport the
107 community c0Ue1ea, which
now have about 1.3 mllllon atu-
dentl.
It would amount to a total of
$158 million more than
laat year, including a 9 percent
cost-of-livint boost, IUnda for an
ll)creue of 3 percent in atten·
dqce and $1 million for equalh-
in1 differences in district re-
l'enues.
Doctor sentenced
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Dr.
Raymond La Scola, freed last
month from a murder charge in
the death of a woman who made
him heir to S3 million, has been
placed on three years' probation
for writing a fake prescription
for a pain-killing drug. ·
of bla probatloo, La Scola will
have to devote lOO boun to com·
munlt.y aervtce.
MARTINEZ (AP>
California's teacbera do not
have to sl1n oath• pledgina
loyalty to the U.S. CosuUtution
and oppoeitioq to communism, a
Jodie baa ruled. Co11tra Coeta
Superior Court ludae Martin
Rothenberg Monday ruled the
atate law unconstitutional.
Enlry refuaed
PASO ROBLES <AP) -The
CBS n ews 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 of their point of
view, a company spokeswoman
had said,
2,000 see crash
EL MIRAGE (AP> -An
aerobatic pilot, Cindy Rucker,
died in front or 2,000 air show
spectators when her home-built,
experimental biplane plunged to
the earth, said a Federal Avia-
tion Administration spokesman.
The single-engine Aero-Duster
spun down from an altitude of
about 500 feet al this desert
airport Sunday.
...............
JOY UNSHARED -The birth of triplets (each boys) delighted
Susan Algood of Fresno but she was saddened the event
couldn't be shared with their father, David. The dad was shot
in the head Feb. 19 in San Jose by a man who offered to buy
Algood's car, according to San Jose police.
-The sentence was imposed
Monday by Superior Court
Judge Edward Rafeedie after
the 65-year-old Malibu physician
pleaded no c:ontest to the pre·
scription charge. As a condition .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rival's killing
brings verdict
LOS ANGELES CAP) -lit.be
producer of "Dallas" baa bia
way, no one will replace the late
Jim Davi& in the role of Jock
Ewln1. the sUver-maned and
1ravel-v0Jced patriarch of the
Texas oil dynasty.
Davis, i2, who recently un-
derwent surgery for a perforat-
ed ulcer. dted In hia ~Jeep at his
home over the weekend. A
memorial service will be held
Friday at Encino Communit)"
Church in Tarzana with a
private burial to follow. Born
Aug. 26, 1908 in Edgerton, Mo.,
Davis is survived by bl!t mother,
his wife, Blanche, and two sUl-
ters. Leonard Katzman, producer
of "Dallas," the No. 1 series on
CBS, said it's too early to say
bow the change will 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 began to make
alternative plans when Jim
became ill."
"We're all terribly s or-
rowful," said series star Larry
Hagman, who plays Davis' son,
J .R. Ewing. "Jim was a great
guy to work with and he will be
greatly missed He is 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 strike, to allow
him to rewrite scripts for next
season so that filming can begin
in a few weeks
"Without a waiver," be aalcf,
"we mi1bt have to re-cast,
aomelhin1 we would want veey
much not to do."
The current aeaaon, boweve~
alr~ady bM been filmed •nd will not be affected aa "Dallas"
winds up the season Friday with
another cliffhaneer to ,keep the
audience ln suspense all IUJJ'P.
mer. 1
8 DAVIS DOES not figure in th.t
new mystery that beginJ Frida)'l
Jock Ewing and "Mi.a• Ellie,'l
played by Barbara Bel Geddes,
are on a second -honeymoon ~
Europe and will not appear on
the show. ;·
Davis played a pivotal role ill
"Dallas." Much of the mischief
created by his son J .R. came io
his attempt to beat out ha
brother, Bobby (Pa trick Duffy~
for the attention and affection o(
his father The two brothers ar,
rivals for control of the Ewil\I
Oil empire, and up lo now Jock
had been the key to control.
Neither brother seems wilUng tb
make it a partnership ,
Last year the shooting of J .ft}
generated worldwide intereSf,
and became one of the mos\
celebrated whodunits of all time.
The show with the solution brok.f
all viewing records. More thae
41.4 million bomes tuned in. .1
FRIDA Y'S VICTIM apparent-
ly won 't get off as lightly as J .R.
It looks like it will be murdeJ.
and another member of the cat)
will be the c hief s us pect.
a lthough the "Dallas" people
won't say for sure.
OROVILLE CAP> -An Oroville man who ad-
mitted killing his ex-girlfriend's new boyfriend
with a replica of an antique gun has been convict-
ed of second-degree mlft'der.·
A Butte County Superior Court jury has re-
turned its verdict on Scott Thelander, 23, after
three days of deliberation, Sentencing was set for
May 21. He could get 17 years to life.
F
A s
H
I
0
N.
Sale17.99 Your
choice
Tbelander was chareed with slayin1 David
Lewis, 21, in Lewia' home in June 1979.
A friend to whom Thelander had confided his
jealoua rage at his &irlfriend switchin& her affec-
tions to Lewis, had offered Thelander a cap-and-
ball pistol that the prosectuion said waa the death
weapon.
Tbelander's l awyer had soueht a
maa1laugbter conviction on grounds lbat it hap-
pened in the heat of passion.
The prosecution sought a first-degree murder
conviction, saying Tbelander ambuabed Lewis.
Thelander had admitted ln court, "I shot
him " The verdict was returned Monday.
Lost sailors
search halted
SANTA CRUZ CAP> -A search for four men
missing after their sailboat capsized had been
baited, the Coast Guard says.
The search was called off. and a Coast Guard
official said the men were presumed dead if they
still were at sea.
"IC they made it to the beach, they might be
OK ," he said Monday. The names of the men, all
in the early 20s, were not released.
Alexander Boomer of Santa Cruz, the owner of
the 21-foot sailboat, was rescued, along with an un-
identified companion, after they were spotted
clinging to the capsized boat near Point Soquel by
a civilian pleasure boat, Petty Officer Larry
Bowers said.
Painting bought
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Two . Southern
California museums have purchased "The Holy
Family," a 17th century painting by Nicolas
Poussin for $4 million, it bas been announced.
The joint purchase was made over the
weekend by the J . Paul Getty Museum in Malibu
and the Norton Simon M\lSellm in Pasadena, with
each 1bowin& it for a three-month period Initially
(ben exchani.ioi it once a year.
The artwork is considered among the finest
tepreaentatlons or the late cla11ical 1tyle of
OUHin.
lflWllOllT
RBOR CRUISE • MIMDAT•IMCH
AfntlCAll•Y
714 '71-7122
ahnouncn a ~ program
-~~00
FASt-ION ISlANO
STORE ONLY
Sundresslng for summer days and nights.
Reg. $22-$24. Cool cotton prints with feminine
flourishes. These 1ng~l")ue sundresses are trimmed with
flirtatious lace. Choose lace trim bodice print dress.
sweetheart dress with bodice print, mock button-front
sundress. or ~at-style sundress Junror sizes
Under the ~r,n;LI Of Proposi·
13, tbe aueded valuation of
home fOr property tu pu.rpoees
ereuee to conform with ~ut· ent market value u 900ll u the
rope~ le sold. under the law lt'1 the
e1a1 obll1auon of the bUYer to
noUfy the county A11eaor•1 Of.
flee ~ the transfer 10 taxes can be acUusted. Penalty for failure f lo clo tbil ia either 10 percent of lbe tax due or $100 whichever is
1reater.
Unfortunately, the number of
;property buyers who apparently
SWere unaware of this obligation, lor-who •Imply assumed it would ~ taken care of along with all
IJle other escrow papers numbers
~to tbousandl.
And ri&ht now about 13,000
-Who failed to make the report of
:transfer are awaiting response to
.their petitions for exceptions
from the penalty.
Tbe Assessor's Office, rec-
;ognizing the confusion, recom-
!:mended that blanket exceptions
!J:>e granted. But the County
•Counsel believes each application
for eJtceptlon 1hould be reviewed
to determme "reQOOable cause"
for f allure to report, as permitted
under ~t.e law.
Property buyer• 1hould be
aware tbat, while moet eecrow of·
fleea are wil1in& to help with thll
bit of paperwork, they are not
leaally rapomlble for failure to
report the transfer. And the As·
aessor's Office doesn't become
aware of the transl er unW the
sale documents are recorded.
At that time, the buyer is
likely to be surpriaed by news
that he's subject to tbe penalty
for not reporting the purchase.
The Assessor'• Office now
has reques ted the County
Recorder to include the
necessary transfer report form
with the deed and title documents
sent to a buyer after a sale.
This would serve as a re-
minder. But until that procedure
becomes routine, the wiae buyer
should make sure the transfer re-
port is filed with the Assessor.
Failure to do so might be an ex-
pensive oversight.
~ medical milestone
~ Dedication last week of the
new UC Irvine Medical Center
Tower was the first major step in
j)rojected redevelopment of the
former county facility. And it
~ves Orange County one of the
inest public he'!lth installationa
the state. The six-level, $14.3 million
f.
uJlding, constructed with funds
rom a 1972 state bond issue for
niversity health science
acilities, houses ultra-mocfern
'quipment for emergency and
trauma care, gynecologic and ob-
Jtetric services, intensive care
{or newborns and pediatric pa -
ients and diagnostic radiology.
The fifth floor ophthalmology
department houses the Llon.s-UCI ~ye Bank, funded in part by such
events as the Lions' annual Costa
Mesa Fish Fry.
The center already is na-
tionally known for its outstanding
bum treatment facilities and also
maintains a Regional Poison
Center.
Opening of the Tower pro-
vides up-to.date f acilitiee for both
patient care and education of
medical students at the UCJ
College of Medicine.
Renoyation will proceed with
remodelf'llg of the adjoinine
Medical Center East, which is
linked to the Tower by a system
of corridors on the lower levels.
Thus the once rather forlorn
county Medical Center is becom-
ing the most modern teaching
facility for UCI medical students
and part of a network of affiliat-
ed hospitals and community
clinics in which 600 resident
physicians receive their ad-
vanced training
For Orange County residents
in need of emergency or highly
specialized treatment, it is in-
deed a welcome gift.
A.ff airs of state u:eighly
I
The state highway system is
crumbling, the schools are in
deep fmanciaJ trouble and crime \s terrifying the citizens.
But our full -time, pro-
fessional legislators in
Sacramento have still other is-
aues to worry about.
Like whether the Rama
ahould continue to call
themselves the Loa Angeles
Ra ma when they move to
Anaheim.
No doubt Losa of the football
team was a blow to at least some
Angelenos. The loss of up to $2
million in jobs, sales lax and
other economic benefits has been
suggested.
Assembly Majority Leader
Mike Roos, 0 -Los Angeles, was
so distressed about it be went so
far as to introduce a bill requir-
l n g teams such a1 the Los
Angeles Rama to get pennilsion
to continue using a clty'a name
alter moving away, and authoriz·
lni the city to charge a lee for
that permission.
Rom said the fee would be
like "alimony" alter a divorce.
The lawmaker& pondered this
weighty matter for a Ume and
voled 41 -26 to approve the bill.
But Assemblyman Richard
Robinson, 0 -Santa Ana, who was
one of the five Orange County
members opposing the measure,
insisted on calling it back for re-
consideration. So five days later
the Assembly voted aeain. tbh
time approving it 42-33. Ap-
parently the subject was
fascinating enough to lure even
more of the lawmakers to tbe AB-
se m bly floor the secolld time
around.
Now the Senate will have to
weigh the issue of the Rama'
name. And if that body approves,
the governor will have to sign or
veto the bill. The whole operation
shouldn't cost state taxpayers
more than $20,000 or so.
If .the 1.-0s Angelea folk were
really so upset, it would seem
they could just as well have sued
the Rama with their own tax
money instead of dragging the
entire state Legislature into the
fray.
•
However. the debate was
described as jocular and
lighthearted, so perhaps it was
all a welcome relief from the
heavy stress of government.
Opinions eJCprHsed In the JPK• above • .._ thole of the Delly Pilot. Other views ex·
pre1Hd on this P•fle are thole of their authors •nd artists. RHder comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Bollt 1560, Costa Me111, CA.:9U26. Phone (714)
M2·'321.
---------------------------------------------------------'
LM. Boyd I Howehol,d, orden
Can you expJain why snott men 1'ho
Uke mualc want to play It more loudly
than women who like music? Analyst.I
tb.ori.Je that lt h•• eomet.hlna to do wlth the fact tbat mtn ,.,. l••
1en1JUve than women to the hip
notea. l'be nplanatJoa ta 1....-, Md
prt>babl1 not u siplfteut u tM CTJ
from UM ldtcben, "Tum &b9I Udna,
down I" lDcldenttib, .. Turn tll.t tblnt.
dOwn" la Hld t0 be 008 ct tllit ftH
m~t eommon bouffhold lmpendJ••·
Tbe otbef four are: "Anlwer the •
P.hone." "Take ·b1Jt th• 1arba1e."
Lock UM door." And ''Come to bed." .
C1a1m ti no bait workl bettp tn • mouaetrap t.ban Otitmeal iiilic~ into
~a.out butter.
Five U10u.ll.Dd cltl1en• wttb 25,000
llav• -that'• what th• IN•t GNek
Plato thoueht would make the lde1J city.
I
Thomes P. Haley /
Publllhtr
ThomasK .. vH
Editor
Mr-a K,..INCh
Edltatl_. Not Editor
Saudi arms aid fires debate
W ASHJNGTON -W aahiniton hu lls
own version of Mount St. Helens, which
periodicaJly belches bot steam into the
atmosphere. Thia ls the recun1n1 ques-
tlon of arms aid to Saudi Arabia,
America's great oll ally.
President Rea1an now want.I to sell
the Saud.ls some s uper-radar planet,
plus midair refuelin& capability and
born b racka for their F-15 Jet fi&hten.
Oppooenta of the arm• sale ear that the
equipment will be uaed offenaively
against Israel.
To prevent a major eruption, officials
have tried to keep some detail.II out of
the public debate. These include: Cl )
the hair-raisin& possibility that some
Paleatlnlan pilot.I in the SaudJ air force
could make unauthoriied strikes
against Israel in their souped.up F·lSs;
(2) proposa!.. to approve the 1tele of
even more military equipment to the
Saudis, including 10 long range
helicopter gunships, American anti-
tank .nissiles and several ground radar
stations; and CJJ the State Depart·
ment's push to sell five Boeing
transport planes to nelehboring Iraq.
THE SAUDIS INSIST they have no in·
tention of using American arms to at·
tack Israel. But as part of the weapons
deal, the United States would provide
Saud~ Arabia with bomb racks and re-
fuelln& equipment for the F -lSa that
Jimmy Carter sold to the Saud.ls in 1978.
Thia would extend the range and in·
crease the firepower of the F-15s.
Coupled with the fact that several pilots
G.
-J1-c1-11-1-11-1a-1 -~
in the Saudi air force are Palestinians,
the F·l58 could pose a serious threat to
Israel
There ia al.so some misunderstanding
about AWACS. The radar command
planes will not give the Saudis much
ground surveillance capability beyond
what they already have. But the system
would greatly reduce Israel's critical
advantage in air warfare.
Pentagon 1<>urces told my associate
Ron McRae that the Saud11 have a gen·
unme need for an early wamin& system
like AWACS. But the Pentagon would
prefer not to sell the system to the
Saudis and. instead wanta to maintain
the present arrangement of Amer1tan·
owned and operated aircraft.
THE SALE OF Boeing 747 and 127
transports to lraq is bein& promoted u
atricly a commercial deal to help ao.-
i n g compete with foreign aircraft
manufacturers The contract would be
worth abour $200 million to Boeln& -ti ll can get congressional approval for
the necessary export license.
The sticky point is that Iraq is olie of
four nations on the State Departmeftt'I
list or terrorist·supporting regimes in
toe Arab world. The others are Ubya,
Syria and South Yemen Sale of
military equipment to any of lh~u
countries would be hard to jUJttfy. especl~ for an administration that
has mane terrorism its chief foreign·
pohcy target
Meanwhile, the Saudi oil mmilter,
Sheik Ahmed Yamani, has made ll
quite clear that the Saudis expect
American arms as a quid pro quo Jor
holding down the world price of oil. And
fuel prices are obviously an important
consideration for the Reaean •d·
ministration in i\$ fight to curb UltJa .
ti on
Tax-exempt bond financing risky
Earl Waters ts on vocalwn Tht1 column
i• by ltate Tre06Urer Je11t M Unruh.
When you and l buy somethm1 on
credit, we know that eventually we will
have to pay for it with Interest and the
payment wlU hurt. As a result, we tend
to be careful about a111uming debU, and
we budget our resources accordin1ly.
Unfortunately, there is a growing trend
in government today to abandon thia
common sense approach. Increasingly,
our elected offlciala are turning to tax-
exempt revenue bonds to finance what
they conalder to be worthwhile social
objectlvea, with little thought elven lo
the consequences of their actlooa. I'm
concerned that the consequences may
be painful, and I believe you should be
concerned as well.
IN THE PAST our state and local
communities often financed major pro·
jecu such aa parka, schools. sewers and
public building• throueh the sale of
1eneraJ obllcatlon bonds. Because such
bonda are paid fpr wlth property taxes
or other 1eneral revenue., they have to
be approved by the voten. Recently,
voters, fearful or u1uming ereater and
greater long-term debt which would be
passed on to their children and
grandchildren. have been showing un-
usually good judgment and voling down
'I 'm al.so concerned that these
bonds UBUally are purchased by
wealthy individuals who escape
paying tazea on the !Ubstantial
profits they reap.'
general obligation bond la1ue1.
The Issuance of tax·exempt revenue
bonds. however, does not require voter
approval. That la becauu the principle
and Interest on such bonda is not paid
from tax funds, but tnatead from the
hoped-for revenues generated by the
projects financed with the bonds.
Sometimes that hoped-for revenue
doean 't materialiie, u some California
redevelopment agencies are discover·
ing to their sorrow.
IN RE<'ENT YEARS, the Stale
Legislature has created many revenue
bond authorities empowered lo sell hun-
dreds of rnUUona of dollars of bonds to
provide low interest loans for a variety
of highly doubtful purposes For In·
stance, should we be floodina lhe
market with bonds to provide low In-
terest loans to build K-Marta" Or to Pro·
moters of altemative energy sourck?
Or private hospitals? Or privatf;t·
lve rslties? Or for fain and exposlU ?
Perhaps some. but certainly not II.
These bonds will soon glut the market
and force up the price we have to ~lly
for truly deserving programs such u
the Cal Vet housing bond program.
l'M ALSO concerned tba~e bonds usually are purchued by we
lndlvlduala and large lnstltuUom ho
eacape payin1 taxes on the au
profit. they rear became ol the .
exempt nature o the bonda. That t!dU!d
have. serious rtacat impact oa the date
in future yean
Perhaps the best solution in the ihn1
run is to flnd a way to require a voti of
the people on revenue bonda, just !we
do with general obli&atlon bon . I
personally have considerably re
faith in the Jud1ment of the peop bon bond financing than I do in some of ur
elected officials
A TV Illini-series that can't be topped
"Root.I," "Holocauat," "Shogun" and
"Maaada" were so exciting that my
wlf e, Glynda, and 1 can hardly wall for
the new, new, new tee·vee minl·aertes
now in production . It'• called
"Maborolun." And lt'1 got everythln1.
Maboroiun, which will run slx houn
nl1htly for two weeks, i1 the aaaa of
ln11, bebeadin11, befoottnia and other
lgnomlnlet, Gln.en1 fall~ 1n love wtth
Kl11le Flarius1 a btautlf\&1 black teilba.
She patlenUy teacbet hhn Japanese,
onaaml and lntermed.late Ylddllh l ·A.
BE BECOMES naent la ortaami and lead• a band of orlaaml•t• In a
de1perat. attack on t.be powerfW Nat.ti
ramlb' lbocunat., •hlcb bu cornered
the market 1n GinHDJ root.I.
Mortally wounded ln the bloody bat.-
tie, G1.nten1 barely reacbet j.be houH ot
t'ltu1 Suahlmi, the one 1ood Roman ln
tbt seriet, who ls hidln1 Olnaent'•
d1uabttr, QUcken Maaacla, from the
Nata1-.
CbJeUil lliHda, 1 real ltaUan clltb,
l• 1 az.1ear:o&d vlr~. "l 'low to 10 to my 1rave u s"cb, 1he aara, "IO that my 1tcry wUl 10 down In Mltol'Y u 'Tb•
Glorloua Hol4out Of Masada.' "
. "Bu& rou muat have cbll*eri ao that
1om• 3l)tb ceatUI)' autbof cu make a
fortune Harc"l:fJ~' G~ root.I, .. .. ,.-~ .
TD• "8Y1Qkken llullda mar· rlet .,_.,. '1ill Yule, a -·lllUooPtllan
11.aot. DM11r Midi a IUle 'bUd al
otll•r 1ealota c B1ptl1u, Coa1re1•· Uo11~9&c.) up &o tbl}!P al lloUial Pd. .. .,. Clldltm• trM rn.
Iii tM ... .W • *" tMOI
atone. The Nat1i1 demand th~t he
zealot. stop 1rowtn1 Chriatmu
and convert to the practice ot boNI
"Never!" cries Eleuar. "We itit
before we cut ofr our rootaln
'l'h• Nat.ail lay 1ie1e· to tbt au.._..,_.
tree farm for seven )'tafl. At I ,
zealota are betrayed bJ the ont
Jewl•h Japanese Black Cauc in Roman ln the aertea.
Tb• happy endln1 com• wtMal all fall oo their prunln1 •Mari ~
than surrender. Tb1t I.I a ~PP1
becauae after that Gl)'Jlda 1fti11'1 able to about eomethln& at .eaeb .,.
btaldel: "U'1ont "
1~ Parbr I'm not loafinc-lt bappem to be • time for out Wlndowl .••
DEAR PAT DUNN: I recall that
•ometime last year you told your readers
bow to determine the ash content in pet food.
I have a new kitty, so I'm interested in this
now. Can you repeat the information for me?
M.S., Dana Point
Yoa can't compare a dry food wltll
eanned on the baals of information provided
pn tbe guaranteed anaJy1ls sbowa on the
label. Some dry cat food bas less aab la it
than canned food, but you bave to know how l.o fl 1u.re t.bl.I.
The first 1t.ep ls to ddermbte the dry
tpatter coat.eat of tbe food. In eoavertlllg &o
tiry wet1bt baals for compart.1 any la·
llvidual nutrient, subtract the moisture con·
lent. For esample, II a eanaed food 1bow1 a
f ilture coat.eat of 71 perttat, HbtrHt 71
m ltt and you have tbe dry matter cont.eat
tbe food -31 percent. Now you can de·
term lne the actual dry welpt content of any
patrleat.
If you are compari.Dg uh cent.eat, dJvtde ~e percentage Usted for ... oe the label by
e dry matter cont.eat. Tbu, If the ash mu·
mum was listed •• ' percent and yoa de· rmlned that t.lae dry maUer coat.eat waa 3'
rcent, yoa woald divide ' by 31 &o 1e& ~
1 wel1bt basis maslm•m aall coat.eat,
wlllcb eqaab 13.3 perceat. Tills auprtsea an any coasumers, and yoa will find that some
dry cat foods are actually lower la aall, eve•
U.oa1b a quick look at the label doeu't la·
llut.e tbla.
Rug kit overdue
DEAR PAT DUNN: I ordered and paid
tor a $268.11 rug kit from Woolcraft Inc. of
Medfield, Mass., last Nov. S. I received a
card from them 10 days later saying my or-
der had been received, but they were backed
Up on orders for four weeks. I tried to phone
Uie company in January, but didn't get an
answer. When I called last week the operator
taid the phone had been disconnected I hope
you'll be able to help me.
J.W., Costa Mesa
The Boston Better Bu.slneu Bureau re-
ttrred A YS to the Ma11achusettl attomey
•eneral due to the volume of complaint• re·
telved about this firm. The attorney
•eneral's office reports tbe firm waa having
irganlutloaal difficulties, but that It ls proc· e .... , aJI back orders slowly bat auely.
You are aaked to send Ute details of your ~er and a copy of yeur canceled check to:
flee of tbe Attorney General, Public
otectioa Bureau, Complaint Divlatoa, At·
lloa: Barbara Mintz, 1 Aabbur10n Place,
stoa, Mus. 02108. Ms. Mlatz says yoar
tomplalat will be brought to Woolcraft'• at·
leatloa, and that you can expect to receive ~our ove~ue rug kit within a realOllable It.me.
Phi Beta Kappa data sought
DEAR PAT DUNN: My daughter is a ~cent magna cum laude graduate. What are
e requiremenu ror being elected to Phi
eta Kappa, or how can 1 find out about it for
er?
L. R., Newport Beach
It'• ns&G•U')' for a famlty llOIDJaallal
;
mmtuee te bllorm tboee aomlaa&M for ••benlalp ID Pili Beta &appa. Me•ben
•ally are eMlea on a bam of u.e breadill
tMlr edweadoaaJ eQerleeee u well u
adlieH•nl. Y ............. •&J
Natad &lie academic affairs oft'lee at
eoQese for add.ltloul I.al-•"-·
Next classes begin May 4
Call for your personal Interview.
lmne lllCAI El nNo Loe Alalnltoe
167-G28! 55""3711 (213) 431-3$49
UIQuna ..... L MCAS 1\tdn
831~ 551-2263
~1-..y·~~~~olSchoollllnclC-...• A8et-e~ColtQ.
Llm~Y
~--
Sears Quantities and assortments a re limited, so hurry in!
H1111tinJ.!to•1 u._.ael1
PLUS STORE
EACH Of THESE l"EM9 RF.ADIL V AVAILABLE FOR SAA.E AS ADVERTISED
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandise from Scars RctaiJ and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoll'd arl' tht• rl'gulur pril'l's at whil'h tht•
items were formt•rly offl'n·d by Catalog or in mi~
Sears Retail stores uround lht• <'<>utltry ----== ==== DUAL MOTION
SANDER
SAVE50%
#1166
WAS
S5850
NOW
28.99
(36only)
2-SPEED BREEZEBOX
FAN
#8120
WAS
2499
LO
PRICES EFFECTIVE
SATURDAY, MAY 2
.. 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
APPLIANCES
Description Was
Electronic Control Washer ............... 469115
Gold Heavy Duty Washer .................. 30889
Almond Heavy Duty Washer ............... 308'9
Gold Gas Orver ........................... 258"
=======-....1 WOMEN'S
BREAKFAST SHIFTS
~ WAS
S699
NOW
s1 ss
WOMEN'S SHORT AND
LONG SLEEVE COWL
NECK T-SHIRTS
30'~ Almond Gas Range ................... 61995
N 0 W 40' White Electric Range ................. 72995
40" White Electric Range ................. 83995
Combo Built-in-oven ................... 11()995
WAS
$999
SAVE 404Ye $1 4 99 2.8 Cubic Ft. Refrigerat'Or ................. 28995
Electric Water Heater ..................... 189" (31 only) Compact Dishwasher ..................... 23995
~------------.....,Almond Portable Dishwasher ............. 31495
5-SPEED FAN #8068 White Portable Dishwasher ............... 25495
20 Cubic Ft. Upright Freezer . . ....... 51995 WOMEN'S
SAVE 35°·0
WAS s54e5
NOW
s3499
(37 only)
ASSORTED
~awbuck Brackets ......................... 4119
Two-Arm Adjustable Sprinkler .............. 899
Electric Power Blower ..................... 6999
Craftsman Work Center ................... 1691111
Storage Building ........................ 164"
Power Spray Carpet Cleaner ............. 13995
Sea Eagle Canoe ........................ 19900
Combination Water Sk11s ................. 491111
Wedge Water Skiis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7911i
Catamoran Water Skits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109"
·49•
3H 12
39H 10
69" 3
89" 1 69•• 3
89" 1 24H 2
39H 1
49H 2
POL VESTER PANTS
WAS
S899
NOW
s2ss
---------------11981 Calendars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 399-795 88• 11--~~~-~~~~~---..
18" GAS CHAINSAW
WITH CASE
WAS
535699
NOW
s17999
Assorted Shutters and Doors ............ 184"
TV & STEREO EQUIPMENT
LXI Cassette Player . . . . . . . . . . . ............ 169•5
LXI Receiver ................................ 14999
LXI Receiver ................................ 299115
Fisher Receiver ........... ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19695
13" ColorTV ............................... 289'5
19" Color TV ................................ 4491&
5" Black & White TV ........................ 134"
INSTRUMENTS
24 .. now 70% off
124"
109"
199" 144 ..
238'9
388"
109'9
2
2
1
2
6
GIRLS' ASSORTED
SKIRTS
WAS
s1 Q99 to s1299
NOW
s2ss
Snare Orum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4995 SAVE 50% (12 only) Electric Guitar ............................. 14995
-------------.... Banjo ..... ~· ............................... 49115
32H
89"
29"
39"
24"
221•
:1
el
9
WOMEN'S BLUE Acoustic Guitar .............................. 5995 AND BLACK SRA's 200 G Amplifier .............................. 4495
2..,_ ____________ __
4 JR. BAZAAR STRETCH
WERE
550 to 650
NOW
s1ss
SAVE 65% to 70%
100 G Ampllfier .............................. 39es 5, TERRY TANK TOPS 2
LA 25 Ampfifier ............................ 129H
WOMENS DEPARTMENT
2 WAS 500
89"
Description Was Now
Women-On-The-Run
Tank Tops ......................................... 8 .00 1.88
Skirts .............................................. 17. 76 3,81
Exer-Suit' .......................................... 14.97 2.11
Exer-Suit-Shorts & Tops ..................... : ...... 10.97 2.81
f)cer-Suit ............................................ 9.97 2.18
Dance Skirts ........................................ 16.97 2.81 ---------------10ance Pants ........................................ 15.49 2.18 ....., ___________ ...... ,.
ASSORTED
DECORATIVE .....
tlGHTS
ti
Slips ." .......................•......•.•.............. 5.50 II• BOYS' DISCO
GIRLS DEPARTMENT
hort Sleeve Raider Tees ............................ 4.99
Disco Blue Siik Blouse .............................. 9.99
Dance Skirts ........................................ 8.99
Plald & Flowered Pants ........................•..... 3.99
Ditto Pants ..............................••........ 19.99
Diaco Jackets ............ I. ..............•....•.••.... 8.99
JR. BAZAAR DEPARTMENT
lower Print Sweat Shirt ................ 1 •••.•.•••.• 1.-.00
COWboy Button BIOUM ..................••...•..••.. 16.50'
Red Blou .. t ..........................•............. 18.00
Wool Skirt .•....•....••..........•.•.....•.•.•...... 9.97.
Assorted Pante •..•.....•....................•....... 13.00
.18 .aa PANTS
·88 SHIRTS ...
1.11 VESTS
2.18
• Waa
14"
7H to SJ79
!
t ~
\ i
I
f
f l
l
t i .
f •
~·~ .. 12.49
SAVE•2.oo
PROCTOR "2 SLICE" .
TOASTER
•"llUCT....:-
C..-CMrM . car-.,,..,,,,,,,,
_ 11.99
SAVE•4.00
SPECIAL!
,,..,....,,
• Ih ... , •• ii ,,..,c..,,_
SAVE 53.00
"TAKE A LOOK"
U8KTED TRAVEL MIRROR ,,........., . .. " ...... .,.....,..,,. ..,,...
The GOOD-AIR
ECOLOGIZER ••PILt••a,.., •IJf I
"9movtt odor•. tol>aceo amok•.
poti.n, duet from Indoor •If
Continuously .. _,
. -------....... SAVE•4.00
WAIM7 SPEED
BLENDOR ..
IC:., lt1ar #lw/ .,,.... ,.,,...
Almond or Harv11t
I 19.95~ ..
MOTHER'S DAY IS SUI. MAY 10th WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
Wed. Apr . 29th · Sat . May 2nd -~
•
4 TO 12 CUP \\~ ~
. .. . MR. COFFEE ~
Ut•MNa 26.95
~~ 2.00
=~ 24.9~
W•YNa 41.95
~,\mn 3.00
~=-.. 38.95
'le --&I Ill &AUi -"911,. -11161' mil,_ U
~ --AL•L~~
•
SPRAY, STEAM,ORY,
IRON -a.,....,.. ..... c,..
f -··-28.49
I ~~ 5.00
'llllr·. 23.49
G•N•RAL
•L•CTRIC
CURLER BRUSH
.,,. CM·TOUC# ursn.a
Keeps heated cone 11 69 away lrom f\ngers
• and scalp ~ ..... "'.,,,.... .
~~ 2.00
-CftlAllU 9 69 II llllft e
,.caiano
...... llUl1'
·1•-111tt&ate-mm1•-1111n•n,..u
u ....... 16.88
~~ 2.00
=== 14.88
·, ... .,au»••• ams,.. Dn ..,,.. _
-------~
10.98-=
24.98_
SAVE•3.00
10.49cm'
SAVE S4.00 .
CLAIROL 20
llSTMT HAIRSmER
.. Q .. IL . ............ , •. ......
• 4 WI I I -°"""" ~ ....
SPECIA~!
&lie . COVER GIRL
MAKE-UP
·•c...IU..W
....... (l-.)
... c..r..i ..... ,
~"""-,...., ..... )
..... ft ..... .....
1.69 .. ·
SAVE30e
''PETITE'' LOTION
SOAP
wllllMl'IGll,..,
AND SUNDRY
SPECIALS
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
• ._______,
f'ot.OtNG REDWOOD -PATIO TABLE . .
I
leaves skm soil clean
a11d fresh AO PRICES PREVAIL:
WEDNESDAY APRIL 29th THRU SATURDAY. MAY ?n d
IOoLlaE 99c
SAVE4&e
---~---. llCM(UI
HAIR REPAIR
ltJ COS*YCO
The 011om.a1 Oan1sn
cond1\lonec for damaoed
11111
A(GUaU Olt bllA ...
;~1.l9u.
SAVE20~
UPIOHN CORTAID CRUM.,
°'""'°"
SAVE aoe
7-UP ~:_otet &·PAK 1.59
SPECIAL!
SUl •£
HONEY
1.99 SAVE •1.so
CORNING WAR•
====I/J oi=. =~u. ovALCASSER.ETIE
MASSENGILL
c:o.uTt-llAM·TIMISt
DISPOSABLE DOUCHE
AU I SclJ'fJ
.<LR:59c
SPIECIAL!
rt':: CONTACT Ali~ UJIS CUE
MTllCIWU
"MOTHERS"·
COOKt•e J ..
KAHLUA COFF•a
LIQUl!UR ... .....,
23eL 7.99
PUPTO VAllARTA
TEQU.ILA
_4.99 ,
ASSOITlD
READING GLASSES
~~Duk419
750 Ill. u. ~==========::::::::
PRESIDENTE
BRANDY
:so": 6.99
MARGARITA
MIX
lUltl 1.19
c:.ma~ ......
24'11 Lead Crystal
COUUTION
• oomt CMM IOI
•IWPSMlltl
•llll
ELECTllC LICHT COLLECTION
DlCOUTOI BUDWEISER LAMPS BEER
12 ti. CANS
SAVE 3oe
"Twice As Fresh"
2·WAY AIR FRESHENER
;) ---·-........
. ..., .... ...... ........ .....
AH'\
Scents
lllnetess sfyhng with 1"'
use o! sohd oak antique
brass tin1sh and lrosted
etefled glass
·1r~hl'l-.
•21" .. l-.
=.. 15.95 ..
17!i M1I
l3 GAUON
IOI CW 10
1.99
SAVE&Oc
TRIAMINICIN
~~
SAVE 24e
BARBASOL CONCUfTRAT£D
LATHER SHAVE
CREAM
• lltGUUll
• ll(JfYMOI. ·l.DIOMml
SAVE •1 .OO
DEXATRIM
An'£TITt COfllTltOl
&DIETNN
ASCRIPTIN
ASPltlN wftli llAAlOl
fhe ontv aspirin w11ri
Mulo• added for
stomach p1otect1on
• .::..1.69
SAVE•3.9&
GERITOL ...l'OTDC,
vna.a
111011 FOlllUU
::a.9.99
/ '8AVE&0°
.. MMM" WHAT
A TAN! . .... , ..... ~ . ..
Charisma tiuide
charts neivsmen
By PETER J. BOYER
LOS ANGELES <AP I A nearty welcome to
a new voice in the great, national d~bate over Dan
Rather's succession to Walter Cronkite's throne
He is communications researcher Dr Gerald M
Goldnaber. a fellow whose view strikes from the
essence of the matter, and that is: Network TV
news is theater. first and foremost
Oh, sure, we all knew that, right? Why else
•would CBS worry so about Rather's (fierce> image,
backing the cameras away from his intense mug
and changing the Evening News backdrop to a soft
blue, etc.? But most of us, upon reaching that con·
clusion. utter a 1tsk, tsk> and leave it alone
Goldhaber, practical fellow, has gone past the s1m·
pie conclusion tha~etwork news is a cult of personality; he's dr n some guidelines that may
eventually help d ide who brings America 1ls
news
Goldhaber. partner of the late commumca
tions philosopher Mars hall <Medium is the
Message> McLuhan, has devised something called
the Network Newsmen Charisma Chart. which is
printed in this week's TV Guide
He explained his study in a telephone tn·
terv1ew
GOLDHABER STARTS FROM TKE stark, if
unpleasant, truth that television -be it news or
Loye Boat 1s ·a right-hemisphere. emotion
oriented experience.' TV makes you feel. in other
words, not think. He moves directly on to the mat·
ter or tapping into the ''right" emotional
responses.
Charismatic personalities fall into three dis-
tinct types, Goldhaber concludes:
Hero, who is an idealized person. talking
and looking the way we wished we could.
-Anti-hero, who is a "real" person, talking
and looking and thinking the way we do.
-Mystic, a person we can't quite neure out.
Goldhaber's s tudy, based on survey data ob·
tained from 1,000 respondent.a over a period of two
years, found that America wants its evening news
from an Anti-hero type. Walter Cronkite accordlne
to hrs study, was the consummate common man
and, therefore, the ultimate evening news anchor.
BEING A GOOD-LOOKING HERO type or a
' bard-to-figure Mystic type hurts an evening or
morning news anchor on the network level. Dan
Rather, the study found, scored zero on the Anti·
hero 1c~le and big on the Hero and Mystic scales,
which is oot eood for Rather.
Besides Cronkite, who Is out of the anchoring
business, the only personality who scored "hiih''
as an Anti-hero was David Hartman, the actor who
hosts ABC's "Good Morning America." Now,
Goldhaber concedes that "Hartman is not a
journalist," but that's not the Network News man
Charisma Study's fault.
According to the study, a late-night network
news show should be anchored by a Mystic type,
which ABC News must hAve already known. Their,
Ted l(oppel, host of "NighWne," is far and away
the Mystic champ. with his "large head and point·
ed ears" and "hJs willlnenesa to do the unconven-
tional. .. "
Another good late-night anchor would be Max
Robinson, wbo is ·co-anchoring ABC's evenlne
"World News Tonight." Robinson. as Rather,
scored zero in the valuable Anti-hero category. He
ls too handaome, bold and &IJJ'Ulive to be an
a1reeable evenin1 newa ancihor. He'• a helluva
journalist, you aay? So what? This la t•ft
bemlaphere-ortented stuff we're talklq about.
14K
GOLD CHAINS
luy How
SAVI
25%
50%
• OFF Rl!G. PRICI
14K
GOLD CHARMS
YOUR CHOICE
IUY NOW
SAVI
25%
Tl
50%
OFF REG. PRICE
LOVEHIGHT
DIAMOND WRINGS,
PENDANTS, NACKLACES
AND PRECIOOS STONES
YOUR CHOICE
IUYMOW
SAVI
1n1th• on.
"The teet can be performed ... uy
and should be 100 percent ac te. and Jt la much safer tor the fetllf and
the lDOtbU than the test Uaed , ''
Or. Loll Wiiton said In a telephone
interview.
The btochemiat, who developed the
teat with her husband, Or. J• T. Wilson, nld any well!equlpped
hospital laboratory 1bould be atil to
do the tNt ance tt i• ,perfected.
Slctle eell anemia t1 an tnhertiect.
incurable disorder that causes the
body to produce abnoqnal
hemoglobin, the protein in red blood
cells responsible for transporting OX·
LADIES 14K
WHlnGOLD
BRACELET
ya en t.hroopout the bod)'.
The condition prlmarUy affectt
blacu but also ll , .. n k)_ whites ol
"1editerranean eri,m. ~
About 10 percent of the blatk
populaUon has a reneUc tendenc..y
toward the di1ease, called a traJt,
which does not affect their health. But up to 1 percent of blacu ah belteved to have varying forms of the
actual dJseue.
With the dl.eate, the blood cell•
be~ocne more ri1ld thap normal an(!
take oo a "c" or alclde 1hapo. whidl
preventa them h'om ietUng tbrouah
s mall blood vessels.
blockages cause painful
~-····-1.·-~-.... -~ ... ~ ur.n:w
''crlae1" ln bone Jolnt• and coo·
tribute to dilabWty and, tn many
ca1es. euty deattt.
The· preaent method of preO&tal
dlaenotil, called fetoacep)', reqatre1
drawlnl a stnaJI ,.mple ol blood
from the umbilical cord and looklne
for 1lckle celb. Whtie accurat•, the
method can caUJe spontaneous abor·
tl<m or the fetus in 10 percent to 20
percent or the cases.
!l'he new t.e.t, which takes about a
week to run, uae1 die relaUvely aafe
and d)Ore common procedure ol am-
niocebteais, ln which fluid 10 the sac
around the fetus ls drawn ofr with a
larae needle.
FREE
MYSTERY GIFT GIVEN
WITHEVBY
. $25 PURCHASE
Co11tei.. l2-.25 ct. Dl•a •
1.0 ct. T.t. Wt.
A,pralMd V.._ SI USO-
LARGE CEMTH DIAMOND
. W.wts.tld. ~_, v• s12.o...• '4 pc.•-HMd c.-. =; s 11,980°0 S13,590°0 .. ...,.
2 2 8600 Stereo
Home Ent.
Centers
Food 3 2 Processors
2 Touter/ 4 Ovens
Cassfte 5 2 Reootder11
7 Speed 6 2 Blender
2 Multi Band
Radios
$900.00
$598.00
$180.00
$100.00
$ i2.00
$ 66.00
$ 58.00 s 54.00
:;; sg,25000
........ 40-
MOW
s91200
•-• Heed • P'e11dmt • .,_.. . INc.wt. c_.._, r.10
ct. Dla•e11d t.w. 1 '4K G.W
W"Ptf.71 oi.
...,.., Valle Sl&,1200°
::, $], 798°0
• II .-,1
s..-st.022"'
NEWPORT STORE OHL Y w ...... ..r/. r,...cw..
GRANDFATHER
CLOCK
Si"CWW.CHe.i
LOYEIRIGHT
MIW STYLE
14 kT. GOLD
WEDDING IANDS y..,Ca.oke
.· Teachers' Uni~n Finds
Unbudgeted Income of $745,000
and Proposes CUts of $3, 902,000
~a11dc.h ,902.000
u • 11 .. d
l11ea•
$745,000
Proposed Cuts:
School Closure .............. '300.000
District Administration .... 1,820.000
Maintenance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388,000
Operations ............... ~ 88G.OOO
School-Site Administration .. 455,000
Instructional Services ........ 98,000
Total Cuts $3,902.000
Unbudgeted Income
State Deferred
Maintenance Funds .... $250,000
Interest Income ............ 250.000
Over-Budgeted Interest
Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83.000
Additional Anticipated
Interest for 81-82 .......... 50,000
Savings From
Sabbatical Program ...... 112.000
Total Unbudgeted Income
$745.000
$800,000
·Teachers' Union CA>sts-Out
Proposal for 1981-82 At
Addition~ C:Ost of $3,711,000
1. Average Salary ('8(}.81)
Number of Teachers
Total Salary Schedule
(Based on "80-81)
2. Total Salary Schedule
Role & Recompense
Improve · nts
Step and Column Increments
Flexibility Units
Total Salary
('80-81 + Improvements)
3. Total Salary ( '80-81 +
$22,705
x 902
$20.479,910
$20,479,910
441 ,544
13,201
257,838
32,948
$21 ,225.441
Improvements) $21 ,225.441
Retirement STRS (8.415%) 1,786,121
Unemployment Insurance (.11 %) 23,348
Worker Compensation
Insurance (1%)
Total Salary and
State Benefits
('80-81 + Improvements)
212.254
$23.247.164
4. Cost of 1% Salary Increase $232.472
5. Cost of Union·s Proposal
for Salary Increase $3, 138.372
(13 5 x S232.•72)
Cost of Premium Increase for
Existing H&W Benefits $433.742
c 30 x 899 x s1eoe 2•> (30% Inflation)
Cost of H&W Improvements 138,551
Cost of H&W ('81-82) $572,293
total Cost of
Union's Proposal $3, 710,665
.: ...
Sl,7».000
Cott of,. opoMd H&w...,. .......
SI Jt,000
Total =
$5,447,000 Note: 1. All data in the above calculations are from official State/
County /District documents.
Total=
$3,711,000
2. When necessary to make projections for 1981-82, the Union's
Negotiating Team chose low estimates for income and high figures
for costs.
Statement of Union Philosophy
The Teachers' Union recognizes that. because of many factors,
reductions/eliminations wUI have to be made in the 1981-82 budget for the
Newport-Mesa Unified Schoof District.
The Union believes that cuts shall not be made in areas of direct service to the
students.
Therefore:
All current services proposed to be reduced/eliminated by the District shall be
reinstated.
All current teaching staff shall be retained.
All reductions/eliminations of service/staff proposed are based upon a single
criterion -comparative value to and/or needs of the students of Newport-Mesa.
PERCENTAGE OF
TOTAL BUDGET
22.5 NEWPORT-MESA
(1980·81)
22.4 Br .. ·Ollnde
1S.4 Legune e .. ch
19.2 Caplatrano
18.3 lrvln•
17 .3 Tuatln
17 .1 PlecenUa
16.8 Garden Grove
16.1 Santa An•
15.8 Saddleback Valley
15.5 Orange
Comparison of Percentage of Total Budget
Spent on District Administration, Maintenance
Operation• & Community Service
Untfled School District• In Orange County
11.)
1' 1
Assumntions
In preparing a coat-out of the Unlof .-Initial proPoaals for negotiations for
1981-82, and the sources of money to fund those proposals, the Teachers' Union's
negotiating team made the following assumptions:
1. An Increase of 2% in the block grant revenue.
2. A retention of all present direct servlceta to children.
3. A 3% attrition rate In the teachtng staff (reduction to 902).
4. A 30% increase in the cost of the current level of health benefits.
5. A coat of 1% of the unit member's aaJary for Wor1<er Compensation Insurance.
6. The accuracy of the Superintendent's estimate of savings for the closure of
schools for 1981-82.
+20%
+10%
0
-10%
-20%
-30%
-40%
Comparison of District-Level Administration vs.
'75-78
Classroom Teachers & Students
N-MUSD
-----ACTUAL
·•··--·•••••••• EanMA"J'ED
.. ..... .... ....
...... ....... ..... ..... .....
'I0-11 '11-12
+20%
+10%
0
-10%
-20,...
·30%
-40%
. ..
. .
• WHY
ALDEN'S
We show more than thirty manufacturer's carpet I ines with approx-
imately 3000 samples. We carry about 100 rolls of carpet at special
prices. In our remnant room are hundreds of remnants from tiny to
• room size.
Every " American manufacturer of vinyl is represented in our vinyl
display: Armstrong, Congoleum, Gaf, Mannington . and Biscayne.
, Rolls and remnants in stock at special prices.
Our drapery department inc .udes custom draperies.· ''Levelors,"
Woven Wood Blinds, Custom Bedspreads and special treatments
forunusualwindows.Wenotonlyhavea specialist in this department,
but our own excellent installeraswell.
Wood floors are represented by se·veral manufacturers such as
·Bruce, Harris and Sykes. Patterns include Plank and Parquet de-
signs.
Dozens of ceramic tiles of various sizes·
and shapes for every type off loor use.
1·
NEW JOB -Robert
E. White, the former
AQleri can Am-
bassador to El
Salvador who
claimed President
Reagan fired him for
bis views, is expected
to join the Carnegie
Endowment on Fri-
day.
'Doe' • • to Join
family
PEMBROKE PINES,
Fla. (AP) -Amnesia
victim Jane Doe bas told
doctors she has decided
to live for awhile with
the suburban Chicago
family who have
claimed her as their
own , a hospital
spokeswoman said
The woman returned
to the hospital after
spending six days with
Andrew and Irene
Tomiczek, the Illinois
couple who say she is
their eldest daughter,
Cheryl Ann.
The leave of absence
is part of the normal
process of getting pa-
tients ready fer dis-
charge, South Florida
State Hospital officials
have said.
JANE SAID s6e would
leave for a home in
Roselle, Ill., that she
still can't remember, to
live with parents she
doesn't know as anyone
other than "nice veo-
p le," according to
hospital spokeswoman
Jackie Dale.
The 34 -yea r -old
woman, discovered nude
and near death by
starvation in a nearby
state park last Sep-
tember, cannot recall
any of her life before she
was admitted to the
state hospital in Nov-
ember. Her search for
an identity has drawn
national attention.
"She came back from
her leave of absence
with her mother, father
and attorney." said
Dale, "and very
hesitantly and softly she
said, 'I still do not feel
they are my family,
but they seem like nice
people and I might like
living with them for
awhile."'
AFTER AN emo-
tional, televised reunion
with the Tomiczeks last
month, Jane decided
they were not her family
and she didn't want to
see them again. She said
s he still wanted to be
known as Jane Doe.
Mn. Tomiczek stayed
in the Fort Lauderdale
area and visited Jane
daily until she acreed to
lut week's leave with
the Tomlcseu.
''Even thouCh she still
doe1n't recognize her
mother . . . there seems
to be a feeHnc of
warmth between them,"
aaid Mn. Tomiciek's at-
t or a e y, H . Gordon
Brown. "But we've 1ot a
loGS way to 10."
Even if 1he hadn't de-
cided to 10 to Illiaol11 Jane probably would
ba .. been releued from
the ,bolpital aoon; 1lnce
1be l• on no medication
~ t<M1.ld recei•e treat-
ment on an out·patient
ba1t1, Ml. Dale bu aald.
llG. 59.99 EA.
44~
BRASS· PLEA TED & GLASS
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atOtCI
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Premium quollty win" team up aenaotlon·
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''THE JAR" STORAGE JARS
BY INDIANA GLASS
•lt"JAl .......... 4.49 3''
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For candy, collectiblea, collon bolla, m~e l
Attrocllvely glh-bo•ed. Gr-I gift ideal
YOU'D IXPla TO
''' $$$ MOlll
~ Moe. RoM paft9fn on lr0Mluc8nt
, ) porcelaln with genuine gold
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'Ne b0ugh1 them all' Designer flatware
1n choice of 3 beauttful patterns Not all
patterns 1n all stores While stocks last!
AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCI/
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In rich woodt~ co" While •tock• loetl
llT IKUlll1
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~
I
PAJl> ADV!lTISEM£N I •
..
i l •
Last week, in an ad like this, condition of approval of your Newport tax dollars out of town, and keep the
we talked about our plan for com-Center plan? city's road system from being up-
pleting Newport Center. A. Pelican Hill Road is outside graded the way it should be .. Now I Among the things we men-the city's jurisdiction. So we would maybe that's what some people want, '
tioned is what the plan means to object to having it as a requirement but we don't.
the community, such as millions of for the Newport Center plan. In any Q. Admit it, aren't Irvine
dollars in surplus city revenues and case, we're optimistic that the Coastal Company developments largely
' . th~ construction -at no public cost -Commission, which does have juris-responsible for all the demands on
t of major road improvements that go diction, will approve the Irvine Ccrast the airport?
well beyond the requirements of plan ar\d allow the road to be built. A. Partially, yes. Largely, no. '} Newport Center itself. The county has· already approved it, The airport serves a county of some
I We also mentioned that in and we've agreed to build the road at 2,000,000 people. Five percent of ' ll recent weeks we've been hearing a cost of more than $12 million. We these people live in communities
some good questions from our neigh-expect to have it constructed within a planned and built on the Irvine
I bors about the plan. We promised we few years. It should be ready at about Ranch. We've also provided many
f would publish the questions, and our the time our first new projects at employment opportunities at indus-
l answers, in an ad this week. So here Newport Center are completed. trial and commercial centers located .
. they are . Q. The city is fighting jet noise .. on the ranch. And many of the em-. Q. Will any of the new boil~ at the airport. Won't your Newport ployees use the airport. They would ' ' ,, cut off views of the water from Harbor Center plan add significantly to the do this, and they would be in Orange
View? problem by intensifying passenger County, even if we didn't plan and
A. No. The garden offices we demand? deve~op the way we do .
plan for vacant parcels overlooked by A. We don't believe so. . Q. H preventing completion of
Harbor View will be only one and two According to our consultants, whose Newport Center won't solve the airport
stories in height. This is below the findings were based on several inde-problem, what will?
city's sight plane ordinance for the pendent surveys of airport users, the A. The solution lies in recog-
area, which protects nearby residential additional development at Newport nizing the limited capacity of John
views.
Q. The city's environ.mental
Center will· be the ·origin of about 41 Wayne Airport, putting an absolute
' . departing passengers a day, on the lid on any more flights ~ithout noise
' consultant says one way to handle average. That's passengers, not flights. reduction, and finding a permanent
traffic from Newport Center is to have It amounts to just l.2 percent of the new regional airport site. We have
a peak-hour parking ban along Coast current daily total of 3,250 departing supported a Camp Pendleton location
I Highway in Corona del Mar. Many passengers. We don't think that's a for so~e time now, and we will l residents and merchants in Corona del significant percentage. It certainly continue to do so.
I Mar don't like that idea at all. What do won't result in any change in the Q. There's another ~ue. The • l you think of it? current number of daily flights. golf course at Newport Center. Your
A. We don't like it, either. We Q. Your Newport Center plan plan doesn't say anything about it.
l think it's unnecessary and inappro-will still have some effect on airport use. Does that mean it will stay?
;\
priate. It isn't needed because of the So how can the city support the plan A. Yes. The golf course area,
traffic mitigation measures we'll be and at the same time be opposed to the some 130 acres, is now zoned as open
f providing with our plan .. These include county's airport expansion program? space by the city, and we have no
$8.2 million in road system improve-A. There are two reasons. intention of ever asking that it be
ments and a transportation manage-First, the community benefits that changed.
ment program for employees at the come from the Newport Center plan -Q. WUl the new buUdinp start
center, which will reduce peak-hour the improved roads, the increased going up all at once, before the road
,j commuter traffic. In addition to these revenues -far outweigh any impact sy&tem is improved? ~ measures -which, incidentally, exceed the plan might have on the airport. A. No. Newport Center won't
the environmental consultant's rec-Second, the new hotel and additional be completed overnight. It will take
1 ommendations -we're going to build, office space proposed in the plan are five or more years to carry out the
as part of our Irvine Coast plan, a going to be built at Newport Center plan in phases, with major road con-
~ I road that bypasses the city. It's called or some other place nearby because struction projects completed before
Pelican Hill Road and it will divert there is an ·indisputable need for them any new buildings are occupied.
a lot of traffic off the highway in in this region. This demand is un-· There you are -not all of the
' Corona del Mar. So the highway affected by city boundaries. So it will questions we've been asked, but all ·
I parking ban not only isn't wanted, but be met, and wherever it's met, the that we coutl answer in this space.
it clearly isn't needed. We can~t see impact on the airport will be the same. If you've got a question, let us know.
it happening. Saying no to our Newport Center plan, Just send it to Dick Cannon at The
Q. Would you agree to pri~r in other words, won't solve anything Irvine Company. We'll get the answer
completion of Pelican Hill Road as a as far as the airport Is concerned. All· right back to you. ,...
" it would do is send a lot of needed
.....-
'
CALLEJON REFUGEE
CAMP, Honduras (AP) -
Thousands of destitute ·
Salvadorans, fieeing civil war In
tbeir homeland, are slipping
across the border into the pi.Dey
mountains of Honduras.
Many arrive lll and hungry,
finally crosslne the mostly un-
marked border after weeks or
months of a cat-and-mouse con·
test with Salvadoran troops.
Refugees Interviewed denied
bavina any connection with the
leftist iuerrlllu fighting to over·
throw El Salvador's civilian-
milltary junta. But Hondurans
in the area claim they are
friends or relatives or the leftists
and fled because of that.
SOME HONDURAN orricials
say there ma y be 40,000
Salvadorans in Honduras. The
United Nations High Com·
mission for Refugees says 1t is
feedJng 25,000, including more
than 8,000 in Callejon and other
tent cities.
Celso Antonio Orquilla, 44. the
elected leader of the 800 in this
Sl·tent camp, said he fled to the
mountains more than a year ago
after the natJonal guard killed
nine neighbors in Vi!Ja del
Rosario, in Morazan Province.
which borders Honduras
"The order was given for all
men in the village to report to
the military." said Orquilla
"Five men did and the next day
they were found in the road with
their faces shot off."
He said four people who went
to look al the bodies also were
killed, and many other villagers
scattered.
HIS CLAIMS could not be in·
dependently ver ified, but
similar accounts were given by
scores of refugees interviewed
in four camps.
Orquilla said he, h1l> \.\ 1fe and
their three children. ranging 10
age from 5 years to 16 months,
Jived off the land, traveling by
night and hiding by day They
often saw Salvadoran helicop-
ters strafing near them. he said.
Neighbors and people from
other vllJages joined them. Two
infants died and were buried
along the way.
* * * *
Pregnant woman and three children among 25,000 being aamted in
United Nati.am tent city
"When we f10ally crossed the
!>order, there were 318 of us. We
had no idea where the border
was. We didn't know we had
crossed 1t until an old man met
us and told us we were here.
··We ate anything we could
find, even flowers. Some of the
chi ldren ale dirt to have
something 10 their stomachs."
* * * *
Stomach troubles pers ist,
but most of the refu1ees
are improving on the rations of
corn, rice and beans provided by
the United Nations and other re·
lief groups. A doctor visits the
camp da11y.
Callejon ia about five miles
from the border. From nearby
hills the refugees can see smoke
* * * *
Mortgage payers nave
difficfult time belieVing
·in comwters. . .BlO
.:
""--··· Salvadoran children play liltleuly at refugee camp acro31 Honduran border from El Salvador. Stvollen
~lliea are caused by paraait~•. malnutrition.
rising from forest fires in El
Salvador, evidently started by
government bombs.
"We 'd like to go back, but we
sit up here and listen to the
bombs and wonder if we ever
will ao home," Orqullla Hid.
Edlardo Amador, superviaor
of six camps in the Colomoo·
cagua area, said three leftist
* * * *
guerrillas were found recently 10
the camps and one was killed
trying to escape from Honduran
troops.
"We don't want guerrillas
here," be said. "They jeopardize
the whole program."
CARLOS BAZOCHE, who
beads the U.N. refugee program
in Honduras, said he has a six·
* * * *
month budget of $1.3 million an4
65 full-time workers and iA dis.
tributing 40 tons of food a week.
He said other organizations and
government.a are providin& help
throu&h the United Nations, and
his organization Is tryin1 to
make the camps more self--
sufficient through gardens and
the saJe or craft work. .
* * * * ' their strife-torn homeland Meanwhile, • in • • • I
,......,.......,.._.--~---..,,...,.....~----~--.._.._...--~~~--~~~~ ...... ...-~ ....... ---
I "
I
I
0
I 1 I I • !
I I I j
•I .
I I .
11
I .
I
TU&N THE oresa -a -
Appearlne b1for6 tbe 1u1u1t
Newport Beach Clty Council . just
the other ni&ht, the county'• .-alr
Houalna Council ected just like a
guy wbo wanted a baaeball bat but
couldn't afford lt.
What the f alr houaen want'ed
from Newport wu mODe)' -about
$20,000 -ao they could «111tinue
their campatan for what they
believe is f airnesa lD aew.ni dwell·
lnts for people of limited means.
Trouble with th.ia little scene was,
you see, that very same Fair Hous-
i.ol Council i suing the city of
Newport Beach ob allegatloos that
ita housing practices haven't been
fair.
So this was, to some meuure, in-
deed like the cbap wbo wants the
baseball bat imd can't afford it.
' "PLEASE GIVE ME the money
so I can go purchase the Louisville
slugger," the chap urges you.
"You 41on't look much like a
baseball player to me," you sqgest
in reply.
"You aren't chewing anything
and you haven't even spit once yet
"
"But I really need the big stick,"
the chap urges. "It won't really cost
you much. Just a few dollars. And I
really know how to put that
baseball bat to good use. Lots of
people are going to benefit.
"You 'll be proud that your dollars
were included in the pj.1.rchase that
will be put to such a worthy and
good cause."
"Okay, okay," you reply, feeling
that you're really being pressed by
super-salesmanship. "But do tell
me this before I fork over my Long
Green.
"JUST WHAT IS the good cause
that you're planning to which you'll
apply that baseball bat?''
And thus he repHes, "Why, that's
1imple. I'm aotna to clobber you over the bead with il"
"You're &olDi to what?"
"I'm soina to give you a swift rap
.... ""
You mltht fl,ure that all ol tbe
above wu Just pure flctJoo. Nobody
would have the unmtU1ated 1all to ask somebody to provide the
. ...,.._...
"Wht1 dld Mc~ me1 I bought him llw bat."
on your noggin."
"And you want ME to donate MY
MONEY so you can go buy the bat
to beat out my brains with?
''Listen, nqw that I know what
your intentiobs are for me, don't
you think it would be abysmal
stupidity on my part to give you
~ /::oa'\
MM MURPHlll ~~
money so you can buy the tools that
administer me lumps?
•'Why don't you take your pitch
and try it on the hayseeds up on
Yorba Linda or Placentia?"
"NOW, NOW," the pitchman
soothes. ''Are you so sensitive that
you can't take a !ew lumps !or a
good cause?"
wherewithal for their own undoing.
But that's precisely what the Fair
Housing chap did the other ni1ht
while coming with bat in hand
before the Newport Beach City
Council.
"But you're suing us," Mayor
Jackie Heather sputtered in dis-
belief.
And the housing guy replied,
"Are you so sensitive that you can't
be sued?"
It turned out that yes, Newport
was that sensitive.
Believe it or not, the housing guy
seemed surprised.
View of media
unchanged Famous Simon & Schuster author-lecturer-in vestment counselor Robert G. Allen says-
PRINCETON, NJ CAP> -The revelation
that a Pulitzer Prize-winning story was fabricated
doesn't appear to have changed many Americans'
opinions of the media: only a third believe most of
what they read in newspapers and see on
television. according to a Newsweek poll.
Of 760 adults questioned by the Gallup or·
ganization for Newsweek, 52 percent said they
could believe only some of the information they
gel from the news media
Only 5 percent said everything from the news
media can be believed, 33 pe~cent said most can
be believed and 9 percent said very little is
believable, Gallup President Andy Kohut said.
KOHUT SAID 71 PERCENT OF the adults
questioned knew that Washington Post reporter
Jan et Cooke had returned a Pulitzer Prize this
month after revealinl that her priie-wlnnlng story
on an 8-,year-old heroln addict wu fabricated. Ms.
Cooke, 218, reaiped from the newspa~r.
My-eight percent of thOff polled believed
Ms. Cooke's admhalon that the story was fabricat-
ed was an isolated affair, 33 percent felt reporters
often make up stories and 9 percent bad no opi-
nion, Kohut said.
"Our conclusion wu that tbe opinion of the
press doesn't appear to be much different than lt
has been," Kohut said. "Signlflcant numbers of
Americans are skeptical of the press. Tbat'a pretty
consistent with previous surveys. The Cooke affair
has probably reinforced the opinions of press
cr itics."
RE SAID THE BIGGF.ST SURPRISE of the
poll was the finding that 83 percent of those sur-
veyed believed reporters should sometimes keep
the identities of their soured confidential. Thir·
teen percent said reporters should always reveal
their sources to readers and 4 percent had no opi-
nion.
"The most amazing result was the overwhelm-
ing public support for the protection of sources,"
Kohut said. "Our conclusion is that people have a
healthy skepticism of the news media, but at the
same time, people are committed to the confiden-
Uality of sources."
Asked whicb news or1anization provides the
most accurate and unbiased reportln1. network
TV received the h11heat ranldn1, Kohut said.
Local televt.lon wu ranked second, followed by
news ma1azlnea and dally newspapers .
Supermarket tabloid.a were ranked lut, Kohut
said.
Tbe poll, conducted AprU 22·23, bad a marlin
of error of plUI or minUJ 4 percent. .
Nevada 'an.hexes'
Vegas, environs
~• to., city in the United States. Take
away my wallet. Give me '100°0 for livi~
expenses. And in 72 hours I'll buy 1 •
an excellent piece of .,.al estate \ -~
using n• of my own n11ney." I -~
"In other words, you don't have to be
rich to buy a sin&Je family home or an
apartment buildina-evcn in these times
of inflation, ti&ht money, and hiah
interest rates. You can strip mcofevery-
thina most conventional thinken fed is
absolutdy essential to buyina real estate
-cash, credit, a steady job, and a
strong financial statement -and 1 'll still
be able to buy as much property as I
want. (It's actually easitr In so<allcd
recessionary times, and I won't end up
with bia neptive cash nows, either!)
"Ho'w? Because I understand creative
financing! That's how I bought most of
the real estate I now own -the real
estate investments that have made me
wealthy. And YOU, too, using the
PROVEN, SAFE, HONEST principles
that will be outlined in an introductory
'NOTHING DOWN' seminar (abso·
lutely NO COST OR OBLIGATION),
can buy real estate with little or no
money down. I HA TE REAL EST A TEI
I rea11y do ... but I know of no other
way where you can start with nothing,
learn some basic facts in a short time,
and then with a little time and effort
make lots of money in just a few years.
Yes, EVEN IN TODA Y'S TOUGH
MARKET, you can create reaJ wealth
for yourself, and-in five yan. if you
follow my plan-M.ire with 1 cu-free
80ME OF WHAT YOU'LL LEARN
AT THE FREE SEMINAR •••
income of up to SlS,<XX> a year. (You
could have made a million dollars in
&old in the put couple of years, and
you would have only needed a half·
million dollars to start with. I didn't
have the half-million, and my auess is ...
neither do you!).
''My introductory seminar (no cost or
obtiplion) dacribcs a complete prosram
that ANYONE can learn to use-a pro-aram that includes over SO specific crea·
tive flJWlCiha Lechniquc:sl (My successful
~le, who Jives the introductory
seminar, will clearly explain TWO of
these techniques in detail.) Even if
you're a limited-dollar investor, you can
start your own proaram toward financial
independence by followina the .HONEST,
SIMPLE methods I have personally de·
veloped-the techniques that have
enabled me to acquire several millions
of dollars worth of real est.ate in just a
few years and made me a real MIL-
LIONAIRE at the aae of thitty-one. It's
the same approach I have taught thou-
sands of sw::cessful real estate investors
all over America, and these methods
work BEST in recessionary times.
"I want you to know that BVERY man
or woman in this c:ountry-plumberl,
docton, sec:retariel, teachers, salesmen,
students, retirees, etc., of any qc, no
matter bow cub-poor they 1D1Y be, c:an
PROSPER dulina a recasioo usina my
'NOTHJNO DOWN' prosram. (I've
received soccess Jeaen from peope
anina It the qe of nincceen, ll M'Ydlly· five, and everywhere In bltwccn.)' It's
the MODERN 1PP1°06dl of the dahdes,
and YOU CAN DO IT TOOi
"By the way, l don't havo ca1lUMI on my
hands bS&Ule J doo't advocate buyfna
nm-down alum-typo bulldinD and flJd.na
them up and tl'Ylna to rent them. You
can m.tb manly t.hla way, but k'• the
hird wayt My •NOmCNO DOWN'
methoda ue BASY and SIMPU!. and
afteo ~ baw lim1*t dm ~
step. tl'.liCy CIR tum 10'& from I~
aa.b tmo a CONFIDENT..,_,,
Cometothe~---~
l1*ly NO COii or otilftM'-on~ 1
OMIPect OUdine ol 111J.1imchodl
.._ .;.dftc 'NOTHINO '
..:tltm
"m the 'NOTHING OOWN' introductory
seminar you 11 di$COver how to find the
BEST buys (often in your own back
yard); how to locate the 'Don't Wanter'
who'll do ALMOST ANYTHING to act
rid of a property (many more show up
in a recession); how to borrow at 6'1t to 9.,• interest when the prime rate is over
13'le; two specific NEW creative fl1W1Ce
techniques; how to buy even if your
credit ratina is terrible; how to A VOID
PA VINO TAXES-LEGALLY. You 'ti
learn about 110'7• financing (buyina
with 'NOTHING DOWN' and aettina
cash b&.;:k); how to overcome your fear
of investina (I think fear is the ugliest
four·letter word); how to establish an
investment plan; how to we leverage to
magnify your return on investments;
how to act rid of problem real estate
without losina money; how to pyramid
your buried assets into MILLIONS.
"At this point you may be sayina; 'It
sounds great, but ... ' If that's your
reaction, I want you to know that
coming to my introductory seminar is
totally without risk (there's NO cost or
obligation to buy an)'thina). You'll hear
about how you can euily learn my entire
investment proaram, and you'll learn
MANY SPECIFIC NEW nuNOS you
'ilii""~
never knew before. My brother, Or.
Richard Allen, is a specialist in adult
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already lcamcd my TESl"ED, PROVEN
METHODS ... and it CAN WORK for
you!
"Please take the time to come to my
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8 P.M., but COME EARLY ... we oft.en
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my successful associate, and, again,
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your plans for the future. lbe introduc-
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and on the dates noted below. 0on•t
wait to buy real ~ •.. buy real estate
and waitt Thanul"
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8 PM -WEDNESDAY, APRIL ltTB-----------
SHERATON·ANAllEJM HOTEL
1015 Wett Ball Road
(Santa Ana Frw1·8aU Rd Exlao
Anaheim
8 PM -TBtJBSDAY, APIUL lrl'll
..
,,.,., . .,,., ...,. .,.
u""9 allout ... tf a. MIM'•
"llOfHlllO OOWN" method:
"Your approodt to proptTty inwstmmt
1aw "" mar. mswl1t, morw tools, arrd a
path that ii more srras,ltt, ckar, arrd /OJI
tlktn all tJu otlin sonurars and~
'9n1lzitttd." -&a" Barron, S.Ottlit
"/fJlllJ'lJ4tif# and mariw ... I 11to1Wly ,._.
iWMuforan~mtmstMur~roodw
/i1r41fei4/ 1~tJnta. •I
· ..:.St#Mt M. CGIJ-!t, Silvtr Sfl!VJI
"lt't fonwht •.. /,. /Gs UW. W. "'°"t.b, &Clf,,.., "'°" ciaJA ~fit '""" WI NM rWI /rtil!ti»t cntin )'IQ' p~ pr• .ta1a.,,." -Mr. Mil Mn; MiltlisM'
a ll1JG8 A. MULLIGAN ... '*. 0 2 2
VER DALLAS -If the oame
Oii lbe suttar beJon1iD1 to tbi
ef\ap beside you in the airplane
reads Sleveland J udkln1
Herdaway, you may wonder
•ho OQ earth that could be.
~nd no wonder. Tb1t'1 Stevie
W~d~ ,
;,You're sitting next to a real
cfilebrity Uke Lesley Homby,
Ftedrlck Austerlitz or Nat.ban
8 r"baum, better known of
~rae as TwiUY. Fred Aalaire add Georee Burns. 1 wu once at the same party,
a Catholic Actors Guild benefit,
wttb William Joseph Shields and
WlUiam Claude Duklnfield, but
people kept calling them Barry
Fitsgerald and W. C. Fields.
wot10•• TWlffY
Lots of people chance their
names for various reasons. Jack
Cohen probably finds be gets
m.ore respect as Rodney
Dangerfield. The mole lurking
behind spy master John LeCarre
is bis real self, David Cornwell.
Thomas Rocco Barbella no
doubt punched out a number of
citizens before he turned pro as
Rocky Graziano.
Stanley Jefferson. who already
had changed his to Stan Laurel.
Phoebe Mozee gave it her best
shot as Annie Oakley.
But Peter Lorre's real name
was Peter Lorre, and Alan
Ladd, Erroll Flynn, Tyrone
Power, Clark Gable, Ronald
Colman, Wallace Beery and
Dick Powell all round fame un-
der their natal names
Theodosia Goodman vamped
her way to success as Theda
Bara, while a Portuguese singer
with a fondness for fruity bats
shortened her name from Maria
Oa Carmo Miranda da Cunha to
Carmen Miranda.
The world little noted nor long
remembered Edward Israel
lskowitz. Douglas Elton Ullman
Oliver Hardy stuck to his real
name in teeming up with Arthur
Porn films draw
campus cops' eyes
BERKELEY <AP) Security officers ~t the Lawrence
Berkeley Laboratory are investigating reports that the lab's
computer center has been used to dupHcate pornographic
films.
Officials said that rumors have been circulating that
pornographic films have been shown in the computer center
during working ho.urs.
Security officers said they were concerned mostly wi.th
whether a commercial film duplicating operation was being
run in the lab_
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 0~ TRUSTIEl"I SAL.IE
L-Ne l?B1..,._.
T S.. He S..H J
NEWPORT EOUITY FUNDS, INC .•
u dwly al)l)Oinlltd Tru>IH u1>der Ille
10110 .. ong cle>Cribod dHd of tru•I WILL
SIELL AT PUBLIC AUCTIOH TO THE
H IGHEST B IDDER FOR C AS H
tpayatll• al llmt of •-'• In lewlul
mOMy of the Unllltd Slel"I ell roghl,
1111• encl lnter••I con••Yltd 10 Mid now
ht ld bY 11 undtr w ld Dffd of Trv•I In
IM pr-r1y 1Wre1nefttr d•>Crl-
T RUSTOR GARV L POEL.STRA
and DIONNE R POELSlRA0 huMNn<I
and wife
BEN E F ICIAR Y MARVIN A
KR EI N and I RMA L KRE I N.
n11•~ncl -wife a> fOlnl 1-b
or Munl Weiseatr und unw they
cheated their names, reapec.
ttvelf, to: ~ddle C•otor,
Dou•lu Fairbub Sr. and Paul
Munl.
Cb•rles Frederick Gebbart1 out of VinceMes, Ind.. aaddlea
up for a score or more of
Hollywood oaten tmder lbe han,
dle of Buck Jones, whUe Tbomu
Hellklah Mix, from Milt Run,
Pa., became tbe moet popular ol
the sUeot screen cowpokes un,
der his baptismal brand, as did
William S. Hart who bailed Crom
way. out west in Newburgh,
N.Y.
Leading ladles Helean
Carpenter and Edythe Merrener
graced the movie posters u
Jean Harlow and Susan
Hayward, while Betty Grable
and Llnda Darnall stuck with
their original monikers.
Lionel, John and Ethel Blythe
would have been wonderful un-
der any name but they preferred
Barrymore.
Alfred Cocozza sounded and
looked like a fullback, but made
a name for himself in the enter-
tainment world as Mario Lanza. ,, ........
For years in one of radio's
longest running feuds Benjamin
Kubelsky and John Florence
Sullivan, in real life close
personal friends, made sport of
each other under the vaudeville
names of Jack Benny and Fred
Allen.
REINS OF POWER -Jean Jones al the Ftnt Baptist Cburcb day-care center in Denton, Tex,
as, bolds a tight rein on her c1ua as 14 to 24-moath--Old tota strut in sun.
Tom Wolfe, the elegant es-
sayist and social critic of the
radical chic set, is sometimes
confused with the novelist
Thomas Wolfe of "Look
Homeward, Angel" fame, which
could have been avoided if Tom
had stuck with the Thomas Ken -
nerly Jr. on his birth certificate.
Attacker gets 45 years
Bittaker pal in torture-murders evades death row
We once had a copy boy at The
Associated Press headquarters
in New York named Tony
Benedetto, who wanted to
become a sports cartoonist in
the worst way. Actually. he
drew very weJI but was forever
singing around the place and, as
I understand it, drifted into the
mus ic world where he has
become a millionaire under the
name of Tony Bennett.
TORRANCE CAP > -Roy
Lewis Norns, who testified that
he helped Burbank machinist
Lawrence Sigmond Bittaker
commit a string of gnsly torture
murders, has been sentenced to
45 years in prison.
The portly 33·year-old Redon·
do Beach electrician. dressed in
jail coveralls, showed no emQs
lion Tuesday as Judge Thomas
Fredricks announced the sen-
tence.
Norris pleaded guilty to killing
the five teen-age girls in 1979
and testified against Bittaker
under an agreement by which he
was spared the death penalty.
Bittaker, convicted 10
February after a publicized trial
marked by the playing of a
17-minute tape recording of one
dying victim's s creams, was
sentenced to the gas chamber
last month.
Prosecutor Stephen Kaye said
Norris would be eli gible for
parole in 30 years, but said he
would try to block any parole.
'·one thing I am going to do is
send the tape recording of the
tortute of Shirley Lynette Led-
ford to the Parole Board so they
Let's face it, the cost of energy is climbing and there's no end in sight.
But there are ways to conserve electricity in your home. Easy ways.
Ways that will conserve energy and, in the long run, save you some
money on your electric bill.
would never even think of parol·
ing him,·' Kaye said afterward.
The tape, which caused some
jurors to weep and observers to
rush from the courtroom in hor
ror, recorded the voice of Miss
Ledford screaming ror mercy as
she was mutilated with a pair of
locking pliers, hit with a
sledgehammer and jabbed in the
ear with an icepick
The parents of Miss Ledford,
16, identified their daughter's
voice on the tape Authorities
identified two male voices as
those of Norris and Bittaker.
1. For instance, unplug second refrigerators when not in use. Check that
refrigerator in the garage. Are you spending money cooling a can of cola?
2. Weather strip doors and windows.
3.
4.
5.
Insulate your attic.
Tum off unneces.5ary lights.
In nice weather, dry your clothes outside.
6. When you do use your washer and dryer, make sure you use full loads.
The same holds true when using your dishwash~r.
7.
J
Harry Cauley'• lifelea1 script. Dlteetor Randy
Keene bu mounted a production that takes advan-
ta1e ol wba\ eoterta1nin1 upeetl exilt, and he
1bowcuea tome ftne talent lD tbe 1upportln1 rann.
TD P&OBl.£M is <and ah,ays will be> that
Cauley'• would-be aex ~omedy ls rooted deep in
• tbe late Ftfties 1enre which lmpired the semi·
1 t nau1bty Rock Hudlon·Dorla Day epics. Tbe pre: ! mise ol whether or not one or both ot a newlywed
couple "fooll(l around" before they met almplJ la
too thin on w6:tch to construct a stare play -un-
' less you're playin1 It aa a period piece, which Hun·
tinston Beach lan't .
Further dilficulties crop \.Q> in the interpreta·
1 Uon ot the main characters, who have ~1fialnt· ed u unattractive and, by e~tenslon, abJe.
Sympathies havlne to go somewhere, tbeto fall to
the other three performers, who reflect more
human qualities.
Vickie Soffa and Roy Moosa attack the roles of
the belea uered hone moooers with windmill-
----NOW PlAYING----
MAllll CISTl llSA _.,. llMa
Anlht1m OrtYt tn [dwarO C1ntm1 Woodbt1dCt Cu1edomt
111•1879 98~ Ctnttr e114197H IU e714>S51 065S <H•> 634·2S53
llli n • uau wmimru UA Movon Slddltblc~ South Coast H1 Way 39 Orivt·tn
1714> 990 4012 (11•> 511 !>880 c11•l494 ISU (11')891 3693
llSTmltl UA r,.,n 1114 1193 1305
AINOOSTARR
"CAVEMAN" ~
.. l"NIGHTHAWK" (A) •
"THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS
RINGS TW1CE" (A)
"STIR CRAZY"
''UAD CARI" 1t11
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPll: 111e.._. ... o1,,,.,..,...,.. _ _ .,_.,,. _....,ol ,,., .. _,.,,........,..,, __
® NO OO;E UHOEA 17 ADMITTED
IAoo """' _, ..,., ... __
AU am N«J 11,.k.MS 'IECEIVE
THE HAL ~ n<E MOTlOH PICTURE
COO£~ lfU' AEOUUITIOfl
Sally
tlltln1 determination, tbouO Moot•'• aUent1oc
tendl to wander when he's not at tbe cot'• Of tblnt•
and Mlu Solt• 1ucce11ruUy blweta any ol tbe sex
appeal which diverted her buaband from the
ebarma of a more fetc~ ftancee. She could
scarcely choose leas natterin1 clotbet or balr
styles in an unfortqnately overcbaracteriaed
portra,)'al.
8CO'n' ALAN Zucknian, who lUJ"DS up u Mila
Soffa'• onetime suitor, also comes off a bit
beavybanded, but in b1a cue tt'a qu.lte welcome -
bla uny. stad·h~dlnl health nut ii a fresh breath
of comic 'llief. Karen Jackman ii excellent in tbe
low r-key role of Mtu Soffa'• mother, while Valerie Anne MarosUca perfectly characterizes
Mooaa's old name, a "rich bitch" wbo'a also 1.m-
menaely sympathetic.
"'lbe PallJey Convertible" (that's a couch, not
a car) wW be at the HunUnatm Beach Playbowie,
in the Seacllff Vllla1e center at Main and
Yorktown, for four more weekends, playin1
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 throu1h May 23. •
ONE OF THE more enjoyable taak.a tbi1 cor-
ner bu been called upon to perform was sltttna on
the judiing panel for the second annual Greek
NOW PLAYING
lllllA ..... '1UO .....
lh ntl 8'M ..,.,, (O•llOS Y"'° 1 ... C-~29 ~lt &,)() 6990 '~ 1~»
F ... J .. 'AUil ..,_l llAQI ..._
Pwl< faun"'" Yl ltY (OWllO& lltw00'1 S1111 ... 111 0.ovt to °'"'" ,. 962 1•8• , .. 0760 6J9 1770
"Clne111atlc
dynamics.''
... .._,, ..
(OWllOS C.....,. WtSI
191 393~ .,Allll
ACaPT9 ,. 1"1111 rm··--1
W[ST COMT ,.lMIH( lNGAGlM(NT NOW SHO\\llNG
• Oronoe CINIDOMI • Col1o Melo. HARIOI TWIN .,._HU 61HIOI
OAll.UOO l'M ~-THv.-s-e:ISPM FRl-7:00At:!ll iAt-1 00 •~•1-00l'N IAIJUH 100• 400•1QO• MO l'M
___. ....... 'john8i]ver~
Fish&·
Chicken
Dinner
$2.49
Our crispy Ash fillet from the Icy
North Atlantic and 1Wo boneless
whltemeat Chrcken Plankse ...
with fresh cote s~ and golden '1Y.es, that's a wtnnlng combination .
...... ~~·
SOntftilt·at UC Jmne Sw:ulay ll1Sbt.
Then wu DO entrlY 1bortaj1 here u five UCI
fratemlUet and ftve aorortu.. aquared olf ln
mu1lcia1 compeUUon, pretentln.I 1ta1e4 numben
from a qubitel of Broadway mualcall. The omtaae
aparu wett fanned by the ~es· respective aup-
porten ln a packed Crawford Hall audience. Scortns a moundln1 victory w.re the et Bet.a
Phi 1orortty aod Beta Ttteta·PI · tra&ernlty with a
rendltioo of "Grease" th1l 1voked memorlet of tbe
O\llltandlnt production at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse last •ummer. It'• dou~ tbat the
Broadway veraton ever elicited 1ucb entbualutic
response.
"Grease,. was a winner, but ao were the Bil
Brotben of Orange County, wbicb 1bared la tbe
proceeds from the eve.nt. The 100-plwi performera,
chairman SU.an Topercer and emcee Mike Web-
ber all deserve a b* round of applause for a auper
evening.
'Heaven's Gate' gets a
loud public slamming
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The new n1mmed
version ol Michael Cimino's "Heaven's Gate" ap·
pears to have Cared no better with the public than
it did with critics over the weekend.
A United Artists official said Monday that
weekend receipts for the $36-million mm in 850
theaters nationwide were "terrible." Exact
.. figures were not immediately available .
-·--T-&MAUm THE HOWLING IR) , ........ , ..... ,~ ........
UAG&•"'ICI a.•-.,_ ... , "Tll.1;9t ..
FK"41V .. ,.,~-.........-
a1 c.ndl•-THE HANO IR) 211/Sll .. YO . ••. 1.11• IM.,..,, __ ,_ ... , ........
-nM•• CAVEMAN IPO) ..... -............... ,_ _,_._
POSTER GIRL-Zizi Jeanmaire, star in the
New York revival of "Can~Can," kicks up her
heels in front of Toulouse-Lautrec's first
poster, titled "Le Moulin Rouge." The poster
is one of hundreds to be auctioned Saturday
at the Phillips International Fine Art Auc-
tioneers in New York, and is expected to
fetch between $50,000 and $70,000.
GObD TIMES -Mickey Rooney (right)
&bows Danny Lance some circus fun in
"Leave 'Em Laughing," the story of a
clown who helped handicapped and
deprived cbildren tonight at 8 on Chan-
nel 2.
BarbltinO ~ In with
Gabe 1nd Wuhln91on
m».11 ltte rnl-•bla lor
lhe other S-thogl tParl
21
Cl) lllEHHY HIU
Banny pleya live 109 TV
dllectlvft
fJD KCET NEWl8eAT GD ITUOtO IEE
Sa.lb•. Too (R)
(ti MANEY M!Ua
A rcxillne dly begin• at Iha
12th precinct with Bar
ney'1 wife compla1n1ng
at>out lhe danger• of N-
York C•IV WlnQ
1:00 8 CM .-WS D NBCHEWS D HAPPYDAYIA~
Richie. Potala and R1lph
auction olt lhetf personal
belong1ng1 10 rllM money
lor 1n Euler v1eallon
U ABCH£W8 0 IUU.BEYE
CHANNEL LISTINGS
..........
H....,..aye end 8 J dlac:oVW
Chattn living t"' life of
R11ay d,,.. to Iha attention•
ol hie rnenillly paid Koraen
MrVlnl a> ITNETa Of' SAN
l'MNCt900
FOiiowing a ., ... of lltll
knif• lttaeka on proall·
lutes. one girl auN1Vft lo
natp IMd Siona 111\d Kalle<
to the killer
fE) OVER!ASY
"Helllh C1111 Whit's A
Body To Oo?" G..et Or
JOhn F11q1>1>111 (A)
4ti) MACffEIL I l.EHA£R
REPORT
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH
®) MEAV GRIFflN
Gueat1 l'loaamery Cloo·
ney. Rick Mo ... Jonnny
y vnf' Olney T er roo
7;301) 20HTH£TOWN
Hosts St••• Edw1rds
Melody R<>91r1 A behind·
IMt-ac.nes IOok It ~
Magulne 1pring11ma
amvea 1n lne C1llfornla
deaerl U FAMILY FEUD 0 CAUF<>MIA REICH
The Ideology end aome ol
tJ 11.Nl(T C8$1 lO"> Any<'•~''>
D l\NBC 'llBLI LO., Anqe't'" D t<TLA clnd I l ll, l\nqo• ....
U "-ABC TV 1ABC1 LO'> Anqelt"'
([' -.rMB 1CB!:>I 5Jn u.eqo 9 KHJ TV tlnd I LU'> A1,,w1,..,
(1J' KCST 1ABC1 San D11•9l•
G) KTTV 1lnel 1 LU'> Anqt>lt'..,
Cl) II.COP TV 1ln i 1 L "'> An4,..1,. ...
ED t<CET TV PB'i1 LO'> Anq ... IP'> ~ KOCE TV 1 PB~1 Hunl·nuton 8t•.1lh
the cuatom1, 11tuala and
l'*nbenl of Iha N1llonll
Sodllilt Whl\I P9opll'1
Pwty (Amerlcln NuO ere
documented
• HOLLYWOOD
80UAN!8 Iii FACE THE MUSIC
GI AU IN THI 'A.Mil. Y
Th• uau•lly punctual
Arcnll la hOura OV9rdua 11
• IO<lge convenllOn in Bui·
lalo, and no one know.
wtiat's happened 10 him
(Parl 1)
fl) MACHEL / LEHRER
AEPORT
Q1'i) TH£ DAY MT£A
TRIHrTY
"J Rober! Oppanhal,,,.,
And The Alomle Bomb"
Ptly11Clsl J Robeft Oppen-,,..mer '1 rOll In IM t>iflh of
the 1tom1C 1119 II/Id hll fate
al lhe hlllld• of the u s
government era dOCU·
men I Id
([) P.M. MAGAZINE
A wom1n who won • com·
plell 1>11uty make-over,
Mexico 1 new-lcxind oH
..-Ith
1.-oo 8 ([) L.EAVE 'EM
lAUQHIHG
MICkey Rooney 111111 in lhe
true atory or Ch1c1go
clown J1c:k Thum. wile>
cared tor do1ens of nome-
'-chlldren Wtille atruo·
gllng 10 m•lla a living end
light terminal Cane« U fllEAl PEOPLE
FNl .. ad I gr""9 lesbvll
on Sonoma. Cal., the "Mr
Tullh" COftlMI: • vlalt lo
Borlflg, Oregon. • ach<>OI
for bu.«>~ umplrN (R)
e9~GMATIST
MllBCANHPO
Rllph lewnl that ~IX·
....... • bell ll'lll'ld la plln-
rllnQ • ma)Ot t-el t..mt.
• Aflt.ATHE
HOl.OCAU8T
"Ti,. Hunt For Dr Men-
~" The -ch lor Nul
war Cllmlnal JoMf Man-
ge+a, wtio conducted orue-
aoma "*icll •xper1m«111
11 Au1chwltz and 11
raaporu111>1a for lhl ou
chamber deaths ol
100,000 J-. II dOCU·
men tad 8 0 ALOHA
PAMDISE
A 111111 men nalps .,, ax·
loolb .. pliyer r .. lae hla
""->.Ind a f1thlr .utter1
growltlg pains whirl hi•
Llllle Laeguer 1urn1 Into •
prllty young women at MERV GNf'flN
0.-11 Rolernlly Cloo-
ney. RlCk MOBM, Johnny
Yuna. Oeney Twrlo. Jerry
Salnleld, C~ Hllldy,
Thrasher Brother•
Ill) BATTLE 80AH: MX IH
NEVADA
The impact of men'• 1110-
11t publlc worlla projacl -
lhe glint MX mlulla Syt-
tem -on Nev~• 1 11le-
1tyl1 •nd economy 11
axlmlneo
.. .ao e FUTIVAl CW HANOe:
THE IRJ<EN TVfT
Jaon Robatda Jr Ind
m«n.berl of the Nlllor\ll
T~tre of 11'141 Dell pet·
lorm 1 dr1tnll1C _.sion ol
1· Rob9r1 Froe1 ~
Series' scores tallied
BY PETER J. BOYER A~T--W.-
LQS ANGELES -In the last 29 months,
heaven belp us, the three commercial networks
have put 217 different senes on their prime time
schedules, enough TV series for each network t.O
h.ave completely replaced its entire schedule every
eight months.
That's a lot of TV. A lot of bad TV, the
turnover rate would suggest. How bad" Glad you
asked.
Allow m e to present The Jaundiced Eye
Review's analysis of prime time network TV. Sep·
tember 1978-present.
A note: September l, 1978 was chosen as the
starting date because that date marked Fred
Silverman's beginning as president of NBC, and
Silverman is widely thought to personify the
"Here Today. Axed Tomorrow" theory of pro-
gramming.
Surprisinety. NBC has not had the most series
sjnce September '78 CBS has. with 76. NBC had 74
aild ABC 67. This survey does not include series
tllat may come or go in the time it takes to read
this column
In scanning the bulky List of aeries from the
past three TV seasons, the Jaundiced Eye found
that the 217 programs fell into four distinct
categories. They are.
Category 1, Superb TV -television that's too
good to be true.
Category 2, Pretty Good TV -television that
is consistently good, if you allow that it's series
television.
Category 3. Crummy But Harmless TV -tbe
video wallpaper stuff.
Category 4. Programming Felonies
television capable of lowering your l.Q.
• Of the 217, six series can be llated in category
l In alphabetical order, tbey are, "Barney
Miller," "Hill Street Blues," '•Lou Grant," "M-A·
S-H," "Paper Chase" and "United States." It will
be noted that NBC has two shows in Ull.s lonely
realm, one of them cancelled and the other
threatened. CBS has three. "Barney Miller"
stands apart at ABC.
In category 2, NBC has three shows. ABC five
and CBS bu 10. Only one of NBC's category 2
series is still on the air, "Little House on the
Prairie." ABC jtill has "Tui," "Mork" and
"Greatest American Hero." CBS has eight pretty
good series still on its schedule.
Category 3, not surprisingly, is the fattest.
This holds the mainstream stuff, 120 shows. and is
too boring to pursue further
The compilation of category 4,. really awful
series. brought back some ugly memories.
Remember "Pink Lady and Jeff?" "Supertrain?"
"California Fever?"
SHOWTIMES-
Weekd•Y• 7:00 6 1:30 P.M.
Sunday 2:00-4:10-l:40-t:OO
Miiitary M[ght
KOCE •. T:30 and KCE'I' 9 8:00 -
"The Dar 'A.ft« Trlhlty: J. Robert o~
penhehner and the 'Atomic Bomb."
Documentary on tbe f amoua pbyeicist
and the blrtb of the atomic age.
KTLA • 0 : 00 -''After the
Holocaust: The Huni for Dr. Men1ele." SecteUy filmed investi1ation on the
whereabouts of AU&Cbwitz concentration
camp's "Doctor of Death."
..., • (() JDttNNV CA8H
AHO ntl COUNT9'V
GllllL.8
Johnny c..... P9lll tnbut•
10 women In country
mualc; oi-t1 lnciuda .i.-
Cetter Cean. RoMenne
CMh, Emmytou Hltfll end
Mlnnle ~J D QUINCY
Quincy at1ampt1 10 prove
111et • IOdallll convlc1ad
of murwlflQ her ""8band
It ""-11 (RI
•Ge NEWI
THE YOUNClUT vtCT ..
• KITTY: AETUM TO AlMCHWITZ
Kitty Hlrl 1 IUIVlvor ol
Al.IM:hwttz now 11\llllQ In
England. return• 10 the
concentrelK>n c1mp with
her son 10 !Ilk ebOut the
horron an. experienced
there lor nearly two vear•
Ill) FUTIVAl Of' HAHOe:
T'HE~TEHT
Juon Rob11d1 Jr and
,,,_.beta of the N1tional
The11ra or IM OMI per.
rorm • dram111c verllon ol I
1 Robert Froel poem
OvmA.a
Din " hired to protect
Wayne "'-ton lrom 1
m191eroou1 1n1-oon111 wt>O
ballaYeS hlmMlf IO 0. the
enllrtllnar 1nd wanla
Newlon killed
10-.JO 8t HEW1
• INOEPENDEHT
HETWOAK NEWS
ID IONG~THI
l'UM: THI ITOflY Of'
MMllANOOZ
Thi lff9. ambltton end 111-
11'11 of Nebfl:lila IUlhOr
M1111 Sandoz 11• rem.n-
berld by her lamlly, inanes. Ind colleeguae 1':0011: ~ HIW8
The EnterpriM v1a11a 1
panel cOlony 10 dellvet
~. and Clpt Kirk
linen tl'llt 11111 not wa11
I HIEWl VWED GAME .........
Outside c;lrcum111ncH
CluM Rader to i..va the
40771h. (Pert 11
• 8EHHY HILL
One of Benny 1 ooglnal
IOrlga ta fMlurad end also
• gag about I MCuflly off1-
ear fJD Dect< CAVETT
G.-1 JOhn Miiia
11:30 9 (l)i NBA
M8kETMU.
Pla'fotto.,... D TONtGHT
Holl Johnny Caraon
G.-ts· Nlcola111 ~raon,
F1rrah F1wce11 8 9 A8CNEW8
NIOHTUHE
9 LETS MAKI A DEAL =~HAGIN
Lt BrublkH 1ul)i.c1S
bribe-laking In his vice
squ~ •nd lore" Tony 10
1nv .. 11ga1e h11 leltow olfl •
Clrl
JOHN DARLING
Fred Silverman, preri<k'nt of NBC.
an. retu ... 10 bellllve ''
1:00 9 PSYCHIC
PHENOMENA, THE
WORLD ISEYOHO
"Egyptlaro Trip' HOlll
Demien S1mpaon. S•ICY
HUf'll G.-1 C110ie Ann
Oryet GI MOVIE * * * Anllomy Or A
Murder" ( 19511) James
S1ew1111, Bin Gau1ra A
sm1ll-lown attorney
dalendl 1n Army •-ten-
ant ""'o •• accu..O ol k•ll·
1ng a man wspecled ol
a111ek1ng h11 wile
CD INOEPEHDENT
NETWORK NEWS
1"10 0 MOVIE * * • And Soon The
01rf.ness I 197I1 Pamela ll
Fr1nklln MIChlll Ootr>Ce
One of two English girls on
w bocychng no11oay d•l&P·
pears
1·30 0 HEWS CD MOVIE • * Tne W11cn f 1965)
Richard Jonnson Rosanna
Sdlll!Moiji A -_. ...... ~~·
"'°"*" --""' OtOOIN the .. 111r .. 1 ol 4arti ..,..
,.,~ . MO DrONM. .....
tilOYll
····u~PMlh
The ,_. .. Of leM)"'
( 1tH) Doe11.,enl8'll
Dffected by LAftl .....,,..
lllN. tm'" ...... of
..,.,,, .. the ..,. ..,tifl
8llfl'll'l!ll' o.n-.,,....
1114J llNt.lty Ind ~Ml of
•tlllilltiO--lllon ... "'°"" ••Ju0o9ment Dey'' ,,.,.,
De1ild HllftlNft. ~
Murphy A ll'f\all town II
thrown lnlO c:hllOf wt*1 1
11..o.nl'1 dl.,y I>°'"
~II....,.. of• ......
2;40 ..... a:oo•--..... = * * "The G0tgon" I 1H5)
Chr111ophef L... Peter
Culh1ng A y~ng man Ind
hll _11.,,t lnvMllgate
mUf!Mrl In wt\IC;l1 the ,.;c..
llms 1111 turned to tlone
4'009 MOYIE * * ·~ "In Lo... And Wer"
( 19581 Robert Wegnet • .Hlf-
frey Hunter1
Thur•da11'•
Dayf l111e ,,.ovle•
-MORNNG-
11:00 Cl) * * '"Red River
R1ng1" (111381 John
Wayne, R1y Corrlg1n Tne
ThrM Meequll-1 Ml out
10 n1b a gang OI CAllll
th+IYlt opet111ng ·~ 1ne
Red Rwer
11·30 0 * * ·~ · Here Corne The
Gtrla" (1953) Bob Hope.
Arlefle O•hl F0Uow1119 •
1hre11 on lhe 1111 ol •
1now 1 star perlormer •
M>ng-and·d•IK:I min hHs
1n as 1 decoy lo lllP 11\8
~Iller
-AFTERNOON-
1200CI) • ** Baille Cry
I 19SS) ll1n Hollin Aldo
R1y U S Maronfl m•• love
• .,,,, c;omb11 durong World
War II
1'00 ID * * • Tne 81ehelor
And Tne Bobby So•er
( 1947) Cary Grant Myrna
lOy
3'.30 0 ••• B•DI ( 197!'>)
Susan Clark Alea KlrrH
by Annstrong & Batiuk
'Dallas' star
told of death
INVERNESS, Scotland <AP > -Larry
Hagman, the actor who plays J .R. Ewing on the
television series "Dallas," was "deeply shocked"
when he learned of the death of his screen father.
Jim Davis, an Inverness newspaper reported lo·
day
Hagman, on vacation in the Scottish highlands
with his wife. heard the news Monday morning
from the manager of a hotel where they were stay-
ing at Fort William, on the west coast of Scotland.
55 miles south of Inverness.
Later Hagman and his wife left the hotel to
continue a tour of the Highlands by auto
During a stopover at the east coast village or
Nairn, 15 miles north or Inverness. Hagman told a
reporter from the Inverness Daily Record he
planned to return home to attend the funeral l"n·
day Davis played Ewing family patriarch Jock
Ewing on the series
USITHE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RISULT ..
SU VICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Ser vice Call
BILL MEDLEY
FORMERLY OF THE
RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS
642-5671
bt.lZJ
PRESENTS
CONCERTS IN MAY
AT MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT
·The moat Intimate ahowroom In th• country
''THE ORIGINAL"
"COASTER'S"
Singing their hits from the 50's
"The Day After
Trinity"
TWO NIGHTS ONLY
SUNDAY, MAY 3rd IPM & 11Pll
MONDAY, MAY 4th 1PM & 11Pll
Oppenheimer anef the birth of the
atomic bomb
Tonight 7~SO PM
f'ICTm'*l llUM•ui ::C".,........ ~ ......... Tlltt fell .. "9 ~*'6 •re ..... .....~._..
_.,_.. .... .-...... PICYITtOUI auai•aU Tlfl "'"KT IAl.ANCa, ms ._..._ • ._........ ...,... If&...........,
C lfll•rl• W•'t• NeWffrt aHcll, ......... CL-T ............. --er• ...... c..~~ .... c.11.t. .... ms c NOTICI OP ~.LIC: HUltlNG PUBUC NOTICE WM":-t'c u N 0 I It 0 "0 u N 0
..... , •• Wey ...... ,.,., auo, ... Al'l'LICATI~ l'Oa WASTE -•MOINlllltlNO CONTllACTO..$, ••
Cllll'9nlle '*3 OllCHAltOl ""O ltEOUlft&Ml!Nn fltennout ..,_..... ~ ........ Drlw, M• ,._ Or._., Tereow Merl• •--. Mt" IN•llH•I "•11111•111 Olacllert• """"81l'AT8MllllT c .. ...,........_
Merl ... I Scree\, c;e,.,.. •t M•r, lll111l11etl•11 Sy•t-l'trl!llll) fH Tiie fell-1"9 --· 8N ...... C. "'-""41l•Llllt, lt1 ....... Aftl .. ~lfllnllet!llU:S Howm c. .. .., 111 ... ~ ~-•: D•I•• ...._ • OrMtlt C..lfwN• Tl'lla ......_. I• ClfMlucl .. ~ • H•..-r ~w& ........, C. ........ HAlt901t AND MAC AltTHUlt tawia.' ' ' ---··~~ _ ... ,_ 111, .. "--1...,.~-ASSOCIAT•s. 1tsft H.ie ........ G & G IENOINll!ltlNO CON· --~-... '""" m ... ,....., .. ·---~ .,_, lrvllw.~'271• TltACTOltt, INC,..~ CW· Ttllt ............ -ft ... wltll .. _.,.. fW ~ tw tf1e ..... ......, "· Went'ltl ....... """ "-18 PH•ll•, 1"2 Tiii«• Ori.,., Colt. Ceu11ly atn el 0.--c-ty Oii cur,..,_... J'MMIUfle fr-• A.._,lrvill8,~fl71~ MHe,c:.tlfenM...._
A,,1111, ""· ~ ..... fft ....,.._ tt tM ...... of lt ... r D. DlrMll, IUfl Helt Tl\11 Mln.e I• c01191KtM tty • .......... Or .... CMll Delly ~-tllit s ..... Oii tM __.. el ,,.,lnllnert A-, lrvlM, Cefffetllle 927M ..-11 ~ ....... ~112',M9y6, 11. JD, Itel 2127 .. 1. t141ff ,....;.._ 8llf ,_.IC«WI Of....... "tier I. 111-11, IUtt Hele G& Gl!NOINl!lltlNG
tlefl•erlll e11c rtt11letlt1,., lltt A_, l,.,,.,.,c.llfwl!NtVlf C.QNTllACT()ltS, INC.
C•lller11I• ltetlMel W.tff ~Illy WllU-J . l'IU-, 1"'2 Helt J-a.~. COlllNI ....... S.... Ml It .......... A,,_,,,.,,.,., Cellfw'llM 9271f ............
i.tl,,_.'I' ,,..... le ._ ..... .._ Oliver N. Crery, 1Ut1 Hele Tllll .....,,_ wa flt.f WIUI lfle
llSPMll cller ....... lilreme1111 lt1Cllltlltl1 ••· Aw-.i,,,.,..~m c ... nty cten et 0r-.. OlllMY •
PUBLIC NOTICS
P118UC NOTta
(
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTtt'MMnaUIUl•U 11_,I Mfl'llle4Mna elld IMClll c.,.._ $ ...... ,__selil, i"'1 H•l8 Ajwll 2' 1'91. -
(
NMUt ITATUllallfT 11 ..... ...,...,.. .......... to c-1 •-. lrWle, c:.tlfwnle m1• ' .,,...,
1 TM ......._ ...,_ II ~ Mill· u_, Of' -..ct .. tt1e ..,_.. .... o. .. C. A~me11, 1"'2 Hele Pltblltlwd Or ..... CMst Delly Piiot,
I -n : Cll.,te ,....,_.. ere lllvllee to A--. lrvtne, C..INnlle 92714 A1"112t, M8y 6, IJ, JO, ttl1 1t7WI OltAHOa & CAaltlLLO, LTD .• 114 MIOn\11 ...,. ... Wf'IUflt lo u. .....,. W•l'8r H, ~ 111, ,.,.. H•lt
IEHI 17111 Street, Sulle 111, Ctsle 8dclreu,,. 1MiM-._. M.rcll •• lltl. A-, lrvlftit, Cell,_..... tf114
MeN. C811fWN•nu1. All c-. Of' Oll)ecUolla recel_. L. ~ It.._., ,.,.. "-" PVBUC NOTICE CHAALIH SPILLEll, Jll., 1>4 prior lo 11w ..... ..W "'"Mc-A .. _,l,,,IM,Cellfenllet!IH
EHi 11111 Str .. t, $VIie 111, COtte slderecl In Ille formufe(left et ftn.I... lley J . M<ltHll, IUU Hele
Me ... Celltorn*t tm1. termlMl'-. n. 9Mrd ....... to... ... ..... ue. INIM, Cellfoml• tl114
Thia lluslNU It co..duct ... by • l•ln l11f~ to eultt 11 111 de· TllomH J Aeftltf, IUti H•le "CTIT10UI 9UllNIUS
I I I te dlM:M A .. nue, INIM, CellfWftle tf114 NAMI ITATaMUIT llmll .. _...,......, •rm 11 "' proper •u r.. lloti.rl H. Odle, 1Ut1 Hele Tiie 1o11-1ne __.It clOlllQ llldl· Cl\et'" ""'""·Jr requlrenwnts Md, fot lhel --· 119111 ft:
Tl\11 ste..,,_. wM lllecl wllll Ille Wiii Mid e Plllltk 11Mrl11t a followt: ... _,,,..IM, Cell ..... et11t4 COUHTAY CA81H WEST, JOO Countw Cl8r .. of OrMge C-ty on DATE: J.-12, 1911; TIME: t:JO Tlllt lluslNU It COftlluc.I .. tty I
' " p E Cl 1 ,. .. _ _,., ~-Promontory Drive 6est, Newport Aprll 21, ltll ...... ; LAC ; " c-I ... -m-Wllll•m J ... 111111•11, ••ecll, Cellfoml•t2WO.
1'1 ..... .,.,,, Jt00 M8l11 StrHt, Aln rtlM , Gellerel p.,,,_ AATHUR CHAltLU 91504, 100
P\111111/wd Ore1191 CoMl o.t11 PllOt, C•llorlOrnle. 1in.nstect --•re Tiiis .....,_ -n ... wltlt h Promonlety Drive EHi, Newport Apr II n,-.,., 1a. :io. 1te1 2022 .. 1 ln•ll .. to......, to • .,..._,,.,, ·-CIMillty Cler1l of Or ..... C-y .,, a .. c11, Celltornl• nwo.
Oft there ...._ ,_lfle .. tM elloft A 11 27 Hill Tiii• -lneu la~ .. by .,. In· --•nte dl-.. ,..,_,. ,_..,. -pr ' ..,...., 4Mdllel PVBUC NOTICE MillllloM _..., , ...... ,...., ..... p 1111 Or CaNl 0.11 .. ,... Al1llur Cherie• BIKll
me11u to h ...,.. ttai..i IJwn. Orel A ~1 29 ":.., 6 Tio 1.., Ytcl»41 Tlllt tUt8fNftt w• Ill.., •1111 Ille
tllt-will lie llMrcl. -· for the fK • ' c -ty Cl•rtt er 0•"'118 tountr on NOTICI 01' AVAILAalUTY ecc11recy of Ille rec-... , 1,,..,..,.... Apr II JO, 1"1.
OP AJOtUAL ,..,o•T ••u....,.y ..,_... • .......,1~"' ••It· PVBUC NOTICE f'1MaJ
Pura-.. Sect ... 61~1•1 of Ille Int 0.el ......,_._. tllollld lie bt1ef IO 1 f'Uttll.._ Or .... CNtt Oeil'I' Piiot,
l11ttr11el lteve11ue Code, Mike Is •II-9#1 I....,.._..,_ ti-lo lie ------------A!M'll 12, 2t, M8y6, IJ, 1te1 1"7-tl ,,.,....,. .. ,,... tll8t.,,. -1 r_,i lw ,...,d.
11111 c•....._ .,_ 1919 of DOltOTHY The r-1 of -cll.U-.. , re .. t· GltAHNIS SULl.IVAH, • 1WIW1" I-... Coe-. Itel .-a. llW 9oent'1
.... , .... 11 ..... 1 ...... , ... ._.,t.ft' .......... ,..,....,.,,_.., -all c-
,,1eci..i office for 1-tloft dllrlnt ,.,..,.u -pe11"-recei"9CI ,,...., M
r .... ,.,.....,__,.. Item 1 p.m. .. , ln-t.d Md~ •I .. lt..-1
p.111. tty -clll'*'a wllo ~ It 8Nr4 office, 61119 11141'-•-. wlllllfl 1111 cleyt .n.r Ille Mte of Diii 5411 .. 2'1, Al_,,de, CA'"°' (PlloM
publl,Mlon. ,. • ..........,, ...._Ille"°"" of 1:•
Tiie '-tlon't twln<IMI office Is 8 .m etlll 4·00 p.m., -.cNr ltWOllllfl
loc•lecl •I 245 Slerh, C0tt• Mite, l'rkl•r
C•llfor11I• flll,V f'I-11t"'9 l1'e ~ lo tM 81·
Tl\e l"IMll* ........, of IM I-1 ... 11on of ..,, --.._ to VOii
N llon llMAAY DIXON. who •00tldlle In..,...._ l11 tM1 me~ PvlllllNd Of-C:O.tt Delly PlltC. Pu&llllwd Or .... Coesl o.lly Piiot,
,..,..11 n , ,.., 20JW1 AIM'll n. '"' 1004-ll.
f'ICTIT10UI au .....
MAMll ITATUIMINT
The lol-lfltl --· •re _,,,, ~--= MODOC MINI! 8-AST II LTD .•
f921 •lt'cll Mfwt. Sul" ••• ..._, ...... ~ ..
MOOOC MINE EAST, INC. -
Nevl4• ~•1'-'. I IHI l'lrst
Slrwt, "-·---' Thia ......... '-~ ... lt'I' a CW• -··-MDdlc Mme EMC. lllC. -w. O'C-11, ~I--· T1111 11-•• n-wllft .. ____________ ..._ ___________ -j CIMinly Clerk ot OrMel c:.uftly tll
UC tuition veto
' OK'tl by panel
SACRAMENTO <AP> -With rare personal
appearances from the leaders or both pa~es, ao
Assembly committee has voted for a bill that
would Jive lbe Legislature ef!ecUve veto power
over tuition at the University of California.
The bill, AB1969 by Assemblyman Charles Im ·
brecbt, R· Ventura, cleared the Assembly Educa-
tion Committee on a 9-2 vote and was seftt to an un-
certain fate in the Assembly Ways and Means
Committee.
Aprll 27, Itel. ,., ....
Put>ll-or.,. C..st O.Hr .. llot, APf'll 2t, M8y 6, IJ. 20. 1'11 JO:llM1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTtTIOUI llU .. NaU
NMU ITAJaMSNT
Tiie lol1-lf11 --ere dolnt 1>vsi .......
l'IVE POINTS PET SHOP, 19*
Mein Stre..t. Hu11U111to11 l••ch, C•lltornl8
£. H. o.usle, Jlltl5 TrejM W•y, s .... -.ee1 ............ Lwllle "'-0.Ll:Me, 111QS Trei-
Woy, SI ..... , CMlfoml8 ...
This ....,_ It ~led by Ill·
••v-1 ........... ,,.,
E.H.O.U ...
LllCllle A. 0.LI ...
Tlllt N--WM 111911 Wltll ...
County Cler-of Or-c:.unty °" APt'll 27, 1911 ,., .....
PUBUC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUI MlllNalJ
ltAMa STATIMaNT
PUBUC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS aUSINllU
NAMI STATIMINT
Tf1e followl119 per-., •r• CIOlng
butl"•H •I
ROSS l'AODUCTS, 1UU
MKAf'ltlur .. ...._, ...... -· lrvlM, C•llle ....... ft71S
ltOUO CORPORATION, M•• of l,,corp.,•llon. C•lllor11l 1, 1102 ¥•<• ...... 91Vd., 5'Hle *· lt'YIM. Celllon.re tt71S
lllOS$OCORPOAATION
It. E ttostlyt,
"-ldallt
Tlllt .. ........,. WM filed wltll 11'9
County Clerk of Oreft98 C-ty Of! Aprll 20, H11
PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICT1TIOUHUSINISS
"' P\#bH.tlWCI Drenoe C:O.st Delly PllOI Tbe measure would not ban tuition at the un·
iversity, as that decision 1s up to the UC ~egenls.
But it would deduct the amount of any tu1Uon on
California residents from the university's state
aid unless the stale budget provided otherwise.
Pultlltlwd Or .... CM$t Dell, Piiot,
... .,.. 1'. _., •• IJ, 10, "" JOU .. , ""'" 21, 2t .......... 1l, Itel luo.t
l'l...U 1----------
'T he issue will probably be resolved in the
budget, when legislators balan.ce the s~ate's
dwindling revenues against vanous politically
popular programs, Including the tuition-free UD·
iversily.
DEATH NOTICES
P~I....., 0r9"11t C:O.Sl 0.11'1' Piiot,
Apr. U,2t,M8'1'6, ll,t .. I 1 ..... 1
PVBUC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUS autt••u PUBLIC NOTICE
NAMa ITATaM8 .. T STAThlolNTOfaAUllOOltM8NJ
Tl'll ltflowlnt ........ fl........... Ol ... 01' ,
-.. : . "lctl'nCMellUllllHS M~a T ltl•COUNTY l'OltTAeLE' )(. lite ........ ,.,._.._ •1 llMll
ltAY, 5" S. ll•Y-. l'lolll•ltefl, 111euwefD1eflctltltla.....,,__: Celllom18 ftN1 .-• ., .. iuc ..... lll!eleotftl Cedd"'9. "* INSTA TUHI au,.._ • "419'
M•rYeotd, 81 ...... lnetOll, C:•lll..,.le ;r;-• ~ 9ucll, c:.,llfonlle
92.Jtt TtW flktltl•ll ~ "-,._ Tiii• ._.,_ Q ~IN .... M w ''"° .. 11111We -,.._. 111 Or .....
lltwldutiucllMI M.tkelfll c C-ly • J-r 2'. 1m.
PUBLIC NOTICE 1-------------
f'ICTIT10US •ull••u NAMI ITATIMaNT Tiie 1011-1119 .,.,_ ere dol119 .... ,. ..... :
COA$T HEAltlHG AID CEHTllll,
l40'9 Eest C.O.st HltllWtY, Gw-•1
T1* .....,_ -11..:.-:.11 ._ L•WIS M. ME~ S3DS '--""' CONNELL D ynamics In P omona, Ca. He c-ty Clerk ot 0r-.. ~y • "~t "=' ~-=·.,., M "'*"
ORRlN WILSON CON· 1s survived by his loving wife ~121,11t1. ,.1 .... lftdlv....._ ,..::.i'f~~_:~~:. .,..1",:.':i
NELL, passed a way on (\pril Jane 1Keonicotl) Connell and l"ubl..,....Or.,.. c..t o.tly ~-. LMIMM.M8ta.8 -------------. 23. 1981 at home in Laguna dauahter Mic hael Connell ,...,.Jt,-.,•.1a.a.1W1 mM1 c "'~ ~ ::..:-C:r ':
Hills , Ca He attended UCLA Perkins. son -in -law Robert ,.::; ~. ""· PUIJLIC NOTICE and Loyola Law School He M P e r k I n s a n d PVBUC NOTICE
was em lo ed at Gen eral grandchildren, Jason and ,.,_.. ·--,.,..1CT..,,....1n,,_....,ous-.,,.~•"."'.u~11-"-:•u PUl>ll.._ Ore1191 Coetll Delly Plltlt, NAM.a ITATSM9NT
. Neatane Soc.let)' Prenli~ 1P erkJns, brothers fllCTITIOUS eui.•au
RP ConneU of Oakland, Ca. ~ITATIMaN"T APtll 22, 2',M8f6, 13, 1911 1~1 T ... lollewlfle ,..,_ .,. •I
CQIUTQI ___ ~AT end Dr J Robert CooneU o ,,.. ten_.,. --· .,. 1101,.. PUBUC NOTICE
S h eridan. _Wyoming. Private ~ .. ·i.1.ST aui1.ot:1ts AND
,. .. r ·-_ _, .... _,.. 1erv1ceaW1llbebeldatseafor DIVELOl'lttl, .. ,., ••u11
•••I•• ... -.. _ ••• , • the famlly at Newport Beach, ao111 ... ., •• H11,.111111e11 •••<II,
646-7431 l'ICTITIOUI IMlllNISS
NAM8 STATSMl!MT
----Ca In lieu or nowen dona-c..illorftlet1M7 eoes.-...-l. •··ouJd be • led l J.J.K.T., INC., e c:allfenM4I CW·
TIM lellowlftt --~ clOlftt llusf. nettH.
14 -~ ions .. appree1a . o llW•Uoll. 16162 ._.. lhliMv•r•. """° '!=========~the Orange County Founding t.,._ --.... c:.tff1Dr1118 .,..,,
NEa f.HGINEERIHG &
OIEVELOl'MENT. 1117 Glene•tlH
Twr.ct, c:-te Mell, ~lfeml• tal7. -Chapter-National Kidney , .... ...._ 1u•-.C'9Cltty ecw.
F o undatio n of Southern l*'•tlellj.JHT '"'
NEALi f.DWAltD ae1tGST"°""· 1111 G ......... Twra., C.U ...... C•lllornl• t'21i7.
IAl TI IHGHO"
SMITH & TUTHIU
WISTCUff CHArll
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
Haca•o'"•s IMlHS' MO•TUMY
617 M11n St
.._,nt1nQton Beach
536-6539
Cahlornla, P .O . Box 8411, ~~.
NewPort Beach, Ca. 92660. ,.........
CORONA Tl\!• .....,_ •• '11 .. """ ._
DORINE CORONA, a resi· =1[1.~., 0r._ ee-ty "'
dent of Cost a M esa, Ca. ,.,...,.
P ed A '125 1981 PUlll..,_ Or ... C... Delly l'lloC, ass away on pn , ""'" tt M9¥'-11 • ,_. .-..1 at the age of 60. She is sur-• • •
vlved b y her husbmd Lo111s i,•·· Corona of Costa Meu_. Ca ., 1
son Jim Vermilya m South PVBUC NOTICE
Tiii• ..... ,_ It conctuc1"1 by M In·
dlvlduel N..iea . ..._.rorn
Thll ste""'*'I w .. 111911 wltfl Ille
COllll\Y Cler'k ~ OrMoe tountr Oft
AprllJ.0, 1tl1.
1 .. ,...,,
P11bll-Orenet Goelt 0.lly Piiot,
APtll U, 2t, ~r 6, 1), 1 .. 1 1'6Mt
PVBUC NOTICE
Laguna, C a ., 1 daughter f'1CTIT10U1au .. 11Ha PICTITIOUlauNNHa
Carolyn Webb of Dana Point, NAMa IT&TS••T ...,,.. ITATaMlltn
Ca., l brother Alden Daven· TM ,........ ,.,_ It llellle ......_ ""' 1e11ow1ne ,.,_ 1t ~!Ml·
port of Florida, 1 sister Louise -~tto l'ltOc;IU•NG ICNOOL. -v ... ~A O£L ...,.,. ""AATMINTS,
Gehrke °"Belmoot Shores, u. s..a. artme. Slllte ms. SMt:e ""-· t...a Seti arctt. -lllltlltll a..c ...
Ca .. 6grandchlldren. Funeral CellfonlMUJ'W, CA."""'·
1er vlceswillbeheJdonThurt· ., MAltlL'VN sua SALAI, "' Mefll L. ~ • Mht'I' Acr"
d A riJ .,,. 1981 l 1 00pu ltl•ertlle Orin , CHI• MtlH, ..... ltatllneHlllS ........ Ce.*7._ ay, P -· • . ""c:etlf9nlle..a. TIMI....,.. .. ~.,.,.,,.. at the Pierce Bro&bers Bell n11-..-1e ~.., • 111-•v-.. Broadway Chapel with Rev. _......_ ..._ M... L. ..._..
L. V. Tornow officlaUn1. In· Tillt =.. _ ..... 9"tt v. Tith ...._.. -, .... ._ ':
termenl al Harbor Lawn c:-M? CwtL., 0r._ C:.-Y • =~ .. ~., 0r.,. c:-tty Memortal Park. Frtendl may .,.... .,, ""· ,,.... ..,.,..
ctll at U..mortuary on Tua.· ,.........°'__. c.. ~ ...... ......._.:,_
day1 ~I 28. 1111 an(I 00 ..,..,,.,,,Ji..,* ~ :.---.'*llr ..... Wean...,ay, April 29, ll91 .... ,.
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Broad"''>' Monuary dtAC· • ....---------·-----
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PUBUC NOTICE
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Tustl11. c.llfonll• t1llO. ltOMf\ber1 ltHI l!t .. I• Eciully
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NOTIC•OP
TAUSTIE'S SALE LOAN NO. YA•ttATO/JCHtES
T..S..-161D.J
PlJBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICTl'10USaUllMIU •
MAMaSTATaMllllT
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April 7, ltll. l'I
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PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTIT10US 9UllMllSS
N..._ STATllMllMT T11e lellowl119 _..,,,, ere CIOl"I bu .........
WARMINGTON COMMElt(E
CENTER AUOCIATl!S. lu.J Hele
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CO • c.111-• corpo,.,..,,,, 1$2 Hele A--... lrwlne. Celllornl• tt714.
Tllll llutl,,.11 II condwcteo by • llrnllecl f'«1rwr'lhlp
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Wllllem J Plllm..,,
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PllOl1"'9cl Or-C:0.11 D•llY Pllet,
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PVBUC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS 9USlltllH
NAMll ITATEMllNT
Tiie lollowlne -•01u •re doing bullneu at
GA8AIEI. WILLIAM$ COM·
PANY. nm Arllell• AMII, UIWl\e
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S.C1"9tery
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s1111e ..
~·u AN, CMHwtll• ,_,
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH~F ELSIE FRANCES HO b.
FMANN HOUGAN A
OF PETITION TO A ·
MINISTER ESTATE N .
A10lst2.
To •II h e ir•. beneflc;larles, credltor.s
and contingent creditors.,,
Elsie Frances Hoffm~
Hougan and persons w may be otherwise lntere •
ed In the will and/Or
estate: ~ A petition his been f ,.,
by Rumont W. Houga ln
the Superior Court I~ Or an~ County request •-v
that ~umont w. H~ be appointed as pe I
representatl ve to i · m In I st er the estate f
.)
,
MJPPO&TE'as OF THE P&OPOSED reactive:
Uon tit& New Jersey and the U .S.S. Iowa aay lt is
the!cltest way to bolster a U.S. neet that the Navy teat lostltuli1bted1e over the Russians.
ppanenta arpe that the money -estimated
at b\llllon for the New Jersey alone -could
be spent on sleek, new vessels than on actn1
Uta.flt that they say would lake too many sallon to
maD\ 1 l Juat can't understand why we have to put
all Out e1p in two old bukets," says Seo. Ted
Ste• b!t R·Alaska, chairman of the Senate sub-
comlnee on defense apptoprialions. . John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the
Ar1'-Services Committee, supports the bat·
tlet"Sp plan. In fact, he has a blown-up color photo-
grapai of the New Jersey, guns blazing, Gn his of-
ficf illl.
fower steered an initial S89 million authoriza-
tion -to be spent on the New Jersey in the
balfte of this fiscal year -through the Senate
desp tea move by Sen. Dale Bumpers. D-Ark., lo
free money for new ship construction.
'"fRE NEW JERSEY IS A MAJESTIC ship,"
Butll.,_n said. "It ls a beautiful thing lo see out on
the ocean. But . . . we are not voting on beauty or
majht1.
"We are voting on how we can spend our de-
fenat dollars to provide the U.S. Navy with the
moat cost-effective and most serviceable ships to
keep the sea lanes open."
The Senate rejected Bumpers' move on a 69-23
votj! after Tower argued, "We need more ships
and we need them now, not later ...
1'he money still needs to be appropriated,
ho*her. Appropriations panels are expected to
acl in the House this week and in lhe Senate next
monlh.
Adm. Thomas 8 . Hayward, chief of naval
operations, has told the Senate subcommittee that
the Navy envisions all four Iowa-class battleships
built In World War II as part of its proposed 600-
ship~eel. The Navy has 4:;6 surface ships aod sub-
mar ee. but no battleships.
he Iowa-class vessels -including the Mis-
sour and the Wisconsin as well as the New Jersey
anti ·the Iowa -are mothballed at naval
shiprards. The Navy is asking funds for next year
to Wbrk on both the New Jersey and Iowa.
t'aE NEW JERSEY, LAUNCHED in 19'3, was reti~ed al the end of World War II but was brought bae tor service in both the Korean and Vietnam war . Navy plans calling for arming her with
en! e missiles as well as the existing 16-inch auns.
be Iowa-class vessels are the most heavily
ar[~U .S. warships ever built and the largest ba Nhips in history, except for two that the
Ja used \n World War II. The ships have
12-cb hulls and connin1 tower sides that are
mdre than 17 inches thick.
ltatlleship supporters argue that this would
giv~ them greater ability to withstand punishment
th•rt any current Navy ships.
•'The reason we do not put a 12-lnch hull lo
them any more is that we cannot afford to.·' Tower
told the SenaU!.
The authoritative reference book Jane's Fight-
inlf Ships says manpower requirements for the
shl(JJ might be so heavy as to make it "imprac-
tical'' lo press them into service again.
They each carried 2.270 men and 70 officers in
World War II.
''WE HAD THE MEN, BUT we do not have th~lb now," says Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I.. a for=;r secretary of the Navy who opposes reac-
tiva h& the battleships.
be Navy has a shonage of approximately
2,ooO petty officers, and batUeship opponents say it
male1 more sense lo use the available personnel
on dew guided-missile nuclear cruisers that can be
run ~about SOO men e Navy, however, says the New Jersey
woU d require only 1,567 personnel.
Sex education .
c lled 'fraud'
WAsHINGTON (AP) -School sex education pro~r•tna border on fraud and should be scrapped, ac~ rdlnt to Scott Thomson, executive director of
the IUonaJ Association of Secondary School Prin-
cip •. 'I think educators should be candid and say
we llinply cannot shovel sand a1ainst the 'tide,''
Tbotn.oii said. "Schools cannot be as effective in
selt blioo as parenta would like us to be simp-
ly auae all ol the media and all or the films are
put ~ ~the other diredioa."
n an edltorlal ln a newsletter sent to hls 'i 35,000 members, be said educators should
tuftlctent coura1e to call a hall to the
ch Ide we have been playing with the public on
thi• •
• BRA.MP.TON, 0Jttario <AP> -A Caaad.liD
Juda•. rul1q that the ''MY.-ity ot tb• coue-.
quence1" mraiu ••outwetsb tbe nature ot tb• Of· • ;
tense," bu dltmtaMd drut ctiari• .. alialt actor· 't'
novelist Sterlln1 Hayden. • • •
Tbe &S-year.:old Wtltoa, Conn., JWJdent, wbo II ·"
workin1 on a novel, was not bi court wben Ule
cbarees ol poeµulon ot hUbllb were dilmtued
by Juflle Kenneth Lancdon. · T1\e cbar1eit w•r' fUed April lf when U .s. ..
Cu_stoms olftclal• discovered 30 1nm1 of th• drUJ in a suitcue at Toronto International Al~ ••
where Hayden WU awaltlnl a ru1bt to New Yoril.
Defense lawyer Edward Greempan to14 the
judge that Jiayden uses bubllb wltb bJ.a doctor'• .:.
approval as a tranqulUaer aimed at battllial ,
alcoholl.sm. He arped a conviction would kNJf ."1
Hayden from crossin1 borders to make moylea. ""
Crown Attorney Mar1aret Wolcott pressed for "
SOCIAL SECURITY STAND -Rep. Greg
Carman. R·N.Y., bolds a large Social Securi-
ty card iJl Washington to kick off his plan to
introduce a bill in Congress that will bring
,.~ ........
the president, vice president and all mem-
bers of COOgress into the program for the
first time. CWTent congressional salaries are
exempt frolb Social Security taxes.
a conviction and fine, but Langdon 1ald Hayden1 ·•
whose 30 fllml Include "Dr. Stran&elove'' ana ' ·•Asphalt Jungle," had bad onl~e previous ar·
rest, for a protest in Califol'Wa lo lbe 19SOI. ••
"He hu not drawn a1aJ.mt 85 yea.rs of credtt.
The court feels be is allowed a first withdrawal," .,.
said Lancdon.
The Professionals ... .
Date Evans wun·t born in the saddl-..de1p1te the fact that she was a native Texan She
aspired to a career in mut1cal comedies. but Roy Rogers remembers "she accepted her
dusty, horseback-riding roles with pure profess1onahsm "And. she learned to
hang on and keep smiling, no matter how tough the going got The folks,
at Far West Savings are true professionals loo T-hey have nearly
Annual Yield t
92 years of experience. help·
Ing folks hang on m tough times
And, their friendly service will
keep you smiling tool
I Rate Effective 4/28 /81
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I .
I I
I·
"Con you sing me o lovobye?"
by Brad Anderson
''Whatever you want to do at 4 a.m.,
you're doing alonel"
Jl'DGt: P .\RKER
THE!IE ARE lHE lAf>L.El!>JA..GiON OAVE
ME TO PICK ME UP IN lHE MORNIN6! -.:i__,cr-
1 HOPE THEY WORK'
°™ERE.'e NOTHIH<$ LIKE A 6TEAMIN(i, COP OF COfFE~
ANC> A ~PER 10 <ir£T
THE PA'I 5TARTEC>
JIOON ~l'LLINH
49 Joined
53 F ort11Jet
57 ltnMll'IOt
.. Quit btllytchlng. You get It all day tomorrow."
DENNIS 1'11t:MEN,\CE Hank Ketchum
.... WW
~~'f'-'l8
"SURPRISE, Mr. Wiison!" "Awwwww ... You're not
even trying' to look
s'pnsedl"
by Harold Le Doux
DID I TAKE THREE OR FOUR
CAPSULE5 l~ Ml6Hi :>
-ft-cl/.Z> lf1~r
l 'P ENJOY IT Evett
MORE IF J COOU' f'EAP
THE WORLD 15 IN A
MESS---1 WISH WE
LIVED IN THE GOOD
OLD DAYS
STOP
UVING IN
THE PAST---
THINK
OF THE
FUTURE
by Ernie Bushm1ller
... _o . __ , __ -
_,,~
c,.,._,_, • ._ ....
GORDO
J,l.~K l ' "l~KERB•:it'
I'VE. GOT TO FIND OUT
WHO 1HAT NEW 61Rl 15 !
BRABBLE
iHERE IYIUSf 8£ ~E
WN-J Of !..EARNING HER
NAME!
.. .. , (II\ eoet~O-. o.1,w.N AM I A~ICINI,~~ Ht
lllAi 'f"E 1lA£M£R 1~1~Er ~II OO•l'1" Kl(O\I.) !
1\l&f 1'# 11Uf'i MAO A
MU.A'f\~£ irf,,'f 094 ....
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
(JJH{) CAN'T GrR~ WEAR
iHEJR NAME~ ON IHEIR
BAa<6 L..IKE THE<.> DO IN
iHE NFL~
by Kevin Fagan
-----~
Fluor executive says private sector doesn't need handouts
By KEITH TUBER ot•o.ltr ........
:·Government baa to learn to '1•JP us, not blnder ua." · ·· 1'boee words could have come
from almost anyone in the
private busJneaa sector in tbe ·
last few yean, but ln tbia cue
they beloo1 to David S. Tappan
Jr., vice chairman of Fluor
Corp., headquartered in Irvine.
''Business Government;
Toward a More Balanced Rela-
tionship," was the topic of a
speech by Tappan at a Town
Hall meeting Tuesday in Los
Angeles. ID other words, stay
out of our hair and let us run our
own business, he seemed to be
saying.
"PRIVATE enterprise doesn't
need the kind of government
isupport which Is characterized
by handouts and the in -
terference and control that in-
evitably accompanies han-
douts," Tappan said.
'·If the government controls
the financing, the government
will control everything else. And
when that happens, the private
sector can't exercise it's own in-
genuity and risks ·taking
ability.''
Tappan, like G. William Miller
at last week's economic forum
at Chapman College in Orange,
believes more can be ac-
complished with fewer federal
controls and regulations.
THE REAGAN administra-
tion , in its first 100 days, is
making strides in that direction
with talk about need for less
government, revamping the tax
structure and giving business a
freer hand in the conduct of its
own affairs. This, Tappan said,
can also be seen in the ad-
HINDRANCES CRITICIZED
Fluor's David S. Tappan Jr.
ministration's view of synfuel
development.
"Now we have a new ap-
proach, a private enterprise ap·
proach -and I hasten to add
this issue goes far beyond
partisan politics,·· he said.
·'The new administration
st>e ms to be saying, 'Why
doesn't the private sector take
the initiative? Why doesn't busi-
ness take the leadership role for
a change? Why does govern-
ment have to spend $88 billion to
gel synfuels going? Why doesn't
the private sector grab the ball
and run with it?"·
The $88 billion to which Tap·
pan referred was the amount
·Treasury securities
highest in 8 weeks
WASHJNGTON <AP> Yields
on short-term Trea s ury
securities have risen sharply to
their highest levels in eight
weeks, the Treasury has re-
J>Orted.
percent, up from 13.621 percent
of April 20. The new yield is the
highest since the 14.133 percent
of March 2
The average rate on 13-week
bills rose to 14.190 percent from
the 13.553 percent the previous
week .
ear1Qarked by Concrea• under
the EnerlY Security Act of 1980,
which set up the Synthetic Fuel
Corp. to stimulate the produc-
tion of 2 mllllon barrels of crude
oil equivalent per day, mosUy
coal and shale, by 1992.
Tappan, who bu been with
Fluor aince 1952 and a board
member since 1965, knows syn-
thetic ruel is not the answer to
makinc the United States self.
sufficient in regards to energy.
"Synfuels alone will not make
us energy independent, nor will
drillin& for more or building
more nuclear plants," Tappan
asserted.
"WE ARE at a place in our
history when all of our energy
resources and relevant
technologies must be brought
together to achieve urgent na-
tional goals that require years of
lead time.
•'To succeed, government and
business must come together in
a cooperative partnership where
there is mutual respect of each
other's role as dictated by our
democracy,"
Everyone agrees government
and business should -make
that must work together. The
problem is balance: Just how
much government is needed in
business? In the synfuels area,
very little, according to Tappan.
"GOVERNMENT'S ideal
roles in selective synfuels pro-
Jects should be to provide the
minimal amount of stimulation
necessary to get things moving.
But no more than that," he said.
Fluor was contractor on South
Africa's two operating coal li·
quefaction plants, and a third to
be completed in 1983. These
plants, Tappan said, are en·
a bling the country to become
energy independent.
"We have been given an op·
portunity by the new ad -
ministration and, frankly, we
can't afford to blow it," Tappan
said.
"In the final analysis we need
to synchronize the roles of
private industry and govern-
ment. Each sector bas its own
purpose and particular skills but
for too long these qualities have
boen out or balance.
"Now we have an exciting op-
portunity in Washington and
throuehout this nation to restore that balance."
LOTSA GUACAMOLE -Diego Gonzalez uses
his own advertising technique to sell
avocados in Los Angeles. He and his brothers
.,..a.....,..
join many LA youngsters in selling avoc~dos
on street corners. It ·s profitable.
Trend bucked by Texaco
Oil company reports record operating profits
NEW YORK <AP) Texaco Inc, the nation's
third-largest oil company, has bucked an industry
trend and reported record operating profits for the
first quarter and boosted the dividend it pays
stockholders. But Philhps Petroleum and Sun Co.
reported declines in earnings.
Texaco said Monday its profits rose 9 6 per-
cent to $658 million, or $2.45 a share, from $600.6
million, or $2.21 a share. in the 1980 first quarter
The company raised its quarterly dividend lo
stockholders from 65 cents a share to 70 cents
On Monday, Atlantic Richfield Co and Shell
Oil Co reported lower profits, but Union Oil Co of
California registered a small gain.
TEXACO CHAIRMAN John K McKinley said
his company's increase was largely due to reduced
inventories, which provided a one-time s;rofit un-
der the accounting system used by the company.
He said the company's production operations
benefited from the increase in crude oil prices. but
its marketing operations were unable to raise
prices enough to fully recover the costs
In last year's first quarter, Texaco reported an
extraordinary gain of $402.3 million on the sale of
its interest in Belrldge Oil Co. to Shell Oil Co. That
gain brought total profits above $1 billion for the
quarter.
Texaco said its revenues rose lo $15.45 billion
from $13.25 billion.
Phillips, the nation'!! lOth·largest oil
I company, said tls profits dropped 4 8 percent to
$270 8 million. or $1 78 a sharl', from $284 4 million,
or $1.85 a share. a year ago Hevenues rose to $4.23
billion from $3 38 b1lhon m the 1980 period. The
company said lower product sales and higher costs
of crude oil contnbuted to the decline
Sun, ranked 12th among l S oil companies,
said 1ts profits were S120 million. or 27 cents a
share, down 52 2 percent from S251 m1lhon. or $2.09
a share, a year earlier Revenues rose m the lates t
quarter to $4 .0 bi I hon from $3 I billion
THE EARNIN(,S OECU NE was largely due
to reduced demand for rl'firwcl 111 oducls and an in·
ability lo fully recovt·r h1ghc•r raw material costs,
Chairman Theodor c• /\ nurtis said
Arco. the scvl.'nlh larl{<'Sl U S. oil company.
said 1t earn£'d $:146 5 m1lhon. or St 39 a share, down
18.9 percent from $<127 0 million, or Sl 72 a share, a
year earlier Revenues climbed to $7 13 billion in
the latest quarter from $5 46 b1lhon
Daily P~llii Twenty-six·week bills sold at
tbe weekly auction Monday at
ao average discount of i•.042 . ~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~-
layllcle Phanftacy
.. Purveyors of
Oldt1me Ne1ghborhness
1016 ley.H»Dr.
H•wporlhecll
760.0111
TAX SHELTERS
Od & Gx • Real Es1ate • M
S romp< • Eq..pment L"°""9
DIOUCT10HS UP 11"9 TNS YIAA
fHAALD L IO'Ulll FIMAMCl.AL SIRYtclS
7 I 4 /'44-ll07
.Jack Anders.on Dll.IJ Pl.IOI~ reveals in the
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investment purpose
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker.
Lower Your Overhead,
Earn More Prolitl
•All loans secured by a comtJ1ndtion of
real and personal pronPrty
... 25 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BE.A H llLH OIH JI/I 'l;i( bO 171 4) 752·792'.l
Stw..nce ""'4 $1911 •t voo, OOOt
ICll<I S..,..o -nl .,..,., A•H I
Co.TA MUA641·1289 IUl""-1-
MI-~9s.Q401 -~~ .... II•• DlllF ""'Y •I "'"" "lrrt I
COLLECTORS CORNER
R•r• Coln• & St•mpa
GOLD & SILVER
4-21-11 O.W C.._....,. 111¥W Cl. f11.17 .., ... .
l(tvaotf-a ....s.• .... . Mapli 1-Nfs .-.u ..... u
100 CllrOftH ...,,. M16.•
50 Pe-$HS.JI Ml6.11 _,,. su-84191 mK ms' '·-"---"' c.e ... ~ ......
(~4)55Ml50
&outh CoHt Plaza VIiiage _ .......
CAc.---C:...-1
A~to l Homeown4trs OUot• ey Phone
I f-.SlaAIC( .,
14 .. HM w IJS.J4J7 ............ c .... M9te
Answer Network can help Increase your
profits by lowering overhead With Answer
Network·s shared-overhead concept, you
wlll have available every office service you
need. lncludlng your own phone num~r
and answering service all at a fraction of
the cost of expensive facilities and atalt
COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS
SERVICES AYllllBLE:
0 Answering H"'lce 0 Conference roome
0 Quote prlcet 0 Payroll
0 Make appointment• 0 Mall ll1ta
0 Lettere and typing 0 Telex
0 Word procesalng 0 Facalmlle
0 24 hour dictation 0 Paging .
SpeclallzJng In:
Certified H"'lce call dispatching, order taking
end credit checking
Anewer Network hes a Solutton, Cell:
R'9JJER rtETWCJAK
714-953-1234
UT. 7U
HAROLD KENT GARY RANDY
MILLIONS TO LOAN
MEW RATIS!
$10,000 to $1,000,000
2MD • 31tD TRUST DEED LOANS
Prompt Funding
90 Days IO 15 Years ·~~~ .. ~~ • SWIN~ LOANS ![!I. Ii
• 2ND-3RD T.D. LOANS
• Resldentlol Speclollsts
• Apartments
• ComlTlefclol
• WE BUY DISCOUNTED T.D.11
• We help structure notes
for maximum soleobtllty
A
1('~1~fM' .!L'arfl~· jl111<!t~1y ·1/1<·.
LICENSED MOQIGAGf lOAN lllOllEJI
CALL 714/955·1055
•OOO MocARlHUll 90UUVAAO
ICOU RHANCW IOWIRS • SUITt •70
Nl¥ll'OllT IEAC14 CAllf()llNIA 92660·
fhasatV'OJnc;ement 1:1,...tt·•.., 1nott~ toe•ch.angftn.if tm-v.•c bttl{W'lot ""c.•t."' t P•cMnoet~
MCunt~.,, lf'IY Stat~ .n ¥fflch IUC.h OHM Of K>ktta•fOtt ..-.outt1 t>" .,, .. "", ~ "''°' to reQ•ltlflf)f'I (If
auaMarl(Jt't u~ 11-sec.ur.t'4K la_,, ot 1n., .ct1 St.Jh thO ,,. .. 11 ,, rll..,.. ontv t • ,,,.,. Pr"'"-Ot'C.fU\
~
II
INTEGRATED ENERGY INC.
offer to exchange
10,000,000
Shares of common stock
Exchange value of 510.~ per share
for partnership and working interests in oil and gas
properties which meet its standards as follows
' I '
I . .
(a) interests 1n U.S limited par1nersh1PS or lotnt ventures wt11ch
oonduct 011 and gas aCQurs111on exploration development or
production actrvlties.
(b) wort<ing interests in proved 011 and gas reserves In the US .
(C) Interests in undeveloped 011 and gas leaseholds In the U S
The Company intends to ubhze cash How lrom
the interests rt acQu1res 1n lhe exchange otter for od and gas explorattOn and development l11s a
oond1tJOn ol the exchange ttiat interests having aooreoa• Exchange values 01 sso.ooo ooo sh8A
hevt been 18nder9d and no1 Withdrawn There JS no maiumum hmlt on the amount of interests the
Company w1ll aooep1 The exchange. values will
be detefmined based upon estimates of l9S8rV9S
preper9d by independent petroleum engineers
An lnlemal Revenue SeMCe ruling haS been
r9Celved that holders who acceQC the exchange Will generally not be l1able tor tax88'0n exchanges 01 lnttr1111 kJ( sh81"9S ot common •toct\ and that .,..Wlloenera~ beno recapeureof~tlon or fnlanolble drlHfno a1'ld development Costs
You may~ a copy of the prospectus by ma1Uf'IO the atlactoed coupon Tl'le prospeclLrs
con1<11ns 1mpartan1 1nforma110n which is
1r'leorPorated her91n by relerence and which should be read before any dectSIOn IS made wiltl
respect to lhe exchanoe offer The prospectus
tnciudes a valuahon request form IOf' submlssloli
10 the Compimy
The Exchange Ottor w1M exOlre May 20, 10a11 unle&s extended. one 0< more tunes by notice t~
the Excl'lange Agent Tendered 1nlet9stS can be
wrthdrawn at any time and holderswho8CC9Q.lttl!i
offer " USt '9COnhrm ltietr lenders after !908ipi. f
of a prospectus supplement To be ettecwe.11 · wnnen te1egraph1e, lekt11 or lacstmile noa of
withdrawal must be l'QOOll/9d by the Exchange 1 Agtnl, soecr1ytog the Interests to be withdrawn arid the name ontie holder ol &UCh lntereS11.
The undersigned Is achng as dealer Im 1n regard to lhls transaction
-
,
.,
I L
• •
J CUNNIFJP .. Flfty<OMper:c;entafAmeric betweenthe•Cesof
...... ...,.. 21 aod az believe that t.btJ WIU be older flv• yean
NEW YORK -Thol wbo ireet electromc from now.'• Or, "Americans by 1 2·1 muetn
omputer development• wltb 1u1pldoo and believe th011hould be ea~ more."
ynlcbm .. Yeah, wb1t'll lt do for me." or "811 With the tlectronlc computer you allecedly
al, l'U bet lt won't help me" bavt moN can be told ln advance who you will elect as pretl·
ldmc. to back their vieww. dent, what you will be eatJn.a five years from now,
Re,Wators last week told federal thrift tnstttu-and what, liven your income, your livtna -condi·
~ons. wblcb hid complalned It wu danceroua to tions 1hould be.
ake fixed-rate, Jona-term mortaaces in a volatile If you receive mall ~ and the Post Office
conomlc cllmate, that hereafter they could rai1e warns that could be QUeftlonable unle11 you let
r lower rat.el and 1ht1nk or lencthen terms to tbelr computers use a nlne-c:Ulit code, you know
eflect new economic conditiona. . bow easily the computer can barau you.
: Possible result: a monthly mortcage bill to ... wttb "personalised" letters, wlth
tustomers that m.lgbt rlae or fall from the previous sweepstakes tickets 4ln which you mifht already
•ne, or whose terms might be have woo, with offers of health insurance pollciea
txtended or decreased by ., actuarie& couldn't have fifured out in pre-
9everal days o r weeks or ' computer days, wtth m eatlaees from mail order
piooths, or by fraction s tbereor. rirms who bouebt your n am e and address-from a i This d evelopment, which company that m aintains mailing lists . . . and
pkely will be halted as an ad· from bW collectors. f ance by lenders and damned Ir you are a stock trader you may aJri!ady have
•s a r egression lo usury by bor· been overwhelmed with letters from your broker
towers. is one or the latest con· containing statistical convulsions from the com-
tri butions to society by ad· puter . "(mportant research ," you are t.old. Yeah?
hnces in electronic computer Try usln& it.
\echnology. cu"'""'' Even if you could, would it put you one up on
Twenty rear s ago it could not have been done, the n ext guy? HardJy . His broker alao has a com· Qr certainly not without rooms full of clerks in puler 't'(hiCh sprays statistical confetU. He loves lo
'reen eyestmdes feverishly pushing their pencils throw n al customers who no longer trust hl.5
...... er asing, checking, r echecking, never sure they reasoning. They are intimated by numbers. Good-
...-ere right. ness. they're right out or the computer.
Because it could not be done back then -and And so also will the computer spew out those
because there w as little incentive to change rates variable mortgage bills.
and terms by the m onth, ther e beiQg Lillie or the Variable mortgage r ates might indeed be
~olati lity now seen i n the marke tplace -necessary, but those who will have to wrestle with
liomebuyers enj oyed mortgages whose monthly l them h ave a right to wonder if the computer isn't
rates were all worked out 30 years in advance. p art or a plot r ather than an inert instrument of
• Now. thanks to inflation and unpredictable iR·tt .change.
teresl rates, and through the good offices of the
electronic computer, it i s almost over. What V h l J Jd
couldn't be done then can now be done in the blink egas 0 e 80
df a computer light.
Should Am ericans thank electronics? Well, the
argument being made 1s that without flexible rates
nobody but the loan officer's r elatives w ould be
itble to get any mortgages at all. For that, a
LAS VEGAS (AP) The800-room Maxim Hotel
has been sold to California businessman J ohn An·
derson for$55 million, a hotel executive said.
mumbled thanks
Beyond that, m any Americans will find this
.. advance" just one more nuisance, one m ore
Arthur Wood, secretary-treasurer or the cor ·
poration that controls the hotel, said the purchase of ·
fer or Anderson was accepted Monday by the
hotel's board of directors
v ariable, one m ore day nearer an ulcer
Ther e are many preceden ts. Have you noticed
U1tely that you ar e being told what you think?
Anderson, owner of Andco-Anderson Farms in
Davis, Calif , must w in a st ate gaming License before
completing the p urchase.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
--------NOTICE INVITING PltOPOSAl.S "ICTITIOUS BUSINESS .Nohe• i> nereby given Intl Int NAME STATEMENT "ICTITIOUS IUSINIEH NAME STATEMENT e~erd ol Tru1IH> of ll>e Huntington rne followinQ penon I• doonQ l>us• Steen Union High S<'-1 D••lrt(I •Ill n .. s IS •-:C••v1 propowh tor R1>Mrch, THI TOP TUNE NO 1• ... 61 EGlr>Qer
•"Qi •nd Ev•h>•hot1 S.rv•ce1o me•t•no Av•n~, H""liflO'lon &...en, C.Hforf'\1• .,,. •Pf'<•f•Cll•O<l• on tilt In the O!llC• 01 91•'7
Thi follO#lng penon It dol"9 l>usJ
"*"•' MAA·WEST SALES. 111 Orenve Slrttt, Newport 8••cll, Cellfornt• 916..i I '"'d 0 .. 1 .. < I Lewi• M Meta, SJOS Sur><: rHI Propowl\ •n111 be CIHrly rn.,k.cl Ro•d ANhelm C1ll!ol'tl11 Merk H Wiibur. 711 0,.ngo Slrut, Newport Buch, C111fornoa
,, .. 3 "flluorch. TesllnQ •n<I Ev11u111on Tnt~ ""''"''; ,, cCH>Gucted by 1n tn· Servl<H RFB :rol" .odrH-.cl lo Al dtvtdu•I tyn E Rowley Purcn•"no M•n-•. Lew" M ~tu Hwnlln<!lOfl ~'"" Union Hlgl'I S<noot Tnos sUl•rnenl was 111.ci •llh lhe
Ofstnct, 102~1 VOf'KIO~n A\ff'nut Hun County ''''' of Or.,,Qit c.o,moi on ttrkllon 8Hcn Callforn11 91• ... •n<I Aprol 10 1'111
Thi\ t>us.inns I\ tonoucred by *" 1n dlVtCluel MerkH Wttt><>r
r•u1v1d at 0< ~for~ 1 00 Pm M•y 11. · "1-1
n111 •tt1emtr>t *•• 111.ci •ttn tM County Clt•ll ot Or.,ge County on
Ml'th 11. 1'111 "llillU
PuDltS/Wd OrM>QO Cot>I Dolly Ptlol, 1981 •I w'11cn tom• ""d pl.Ce pro Publl\""' Or"'91 (.out Delly Pilot, P0\11> woll be PVbhCIY o~n.O Ind AP•tl 11 'l'I, M,ay •. 1l, 1991 llll .. 1 rr•d Ap•tl I. IS, U 2' 1'111 IW e1
E•ch prapowt 'NH r•m•1n v•hd for • perooG OI 0 d•y• •fttr the G•ll
sP•c1t1ed tor rtK••PI Ttw ao.ro ot T rutlftS '1\ell l>e lhe W>ie IU09t ot lhl qu1111y ol a<cte>tel>tttly of P<-" of
ltred •no rt\itrW\ ow riont to '•Je<t
•t1r .,.., a.t• pr~•I or to •••vt •nv
1rr.,vl•r11y I""'''" Allyn E Rowley
Purcn~tnQ Meneger
O•l•O April 11 1'111 PubttstwO Or-Cotsl 01tly Polol Aprol 71 l"I !'lit 1«11 II
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE INVITING BIOS
Nol•<t '' ntroDy gtY•n lh•t the Bo.trd of TrustM• of trw H""llngton
B••<Pl Union H1Qtl Sc_hDOI Otitrt<l ., .. rec•iu >tel.cl blG\ for \UpplytnQ
ln\ul•t•d Sw1mm•nv Poot Co"•'' muling O< ~u•I toti.e \P'Klhcallon•
on ltll In llW Oll•ct ol Hid OistrK I
PUBLIC NOTICE I PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS IUSINESS I ll'ICTITI~· IUSINllS NAME STATEMENT MAMa STATIMIMT Tn• follow•r>Q O.•>On• er• do•nQ Tiit IOl-"9 __, h dolnQ l>U•I
bUS•n.tSS ft ,,., •• , BRANCHING OUT, I,. C•P•l•I CORONA LE ASING, 620.,, s1r111. Cmt• Mist, C.lllornta 9»27 MerlVofCI A,,....ue, Corona clel Mer, ROBERT J & MARGARET J CellfomfefJUS HAMMOND l9t C.ptlel SlrNt, Costa VEOTTA I( LINDBERG. t10.,, Mo• C.1110""• ti.v Merigold Aw.., .... Co-one clet Mer,
Tnl\ ttu,1ne~' 1• cond"tt..O by • C•lltorn•a mlS gonerel perlrwr\hlp Thi• ~I• c-.CIJIHI l>y ., In ROl>el'1 J Hemmono Cllwl-1 T "" stet-I we\ !oled wllll llW Veotte K Ll-tg Count y Ct•rll of Or-County O<I Thi• IU*'-t ••• Iii ... wllll ,,.. AC>rll 10. .... County Clerk Of or .. 99 County on
"'~ Aprll 17, 1,.1 Publf\t>ecl Or1n91 Cot•I 0.tly Pllol. 1111....a Aprtl 12 'l'I Mey•, 13, 1991 t17Hll Pu1>11.-Or-Cou t Delly Piiot, -----Aprll 2', Mey t, U, JO, 1,.1 l02W1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
IUPEltlOltCOUltTOll' THE ITATll Of' CAl.lll'CMINIA l'OB THI COUICTY Of' OltAMOE In lh• Meti.r of trw Applketlon of FRIEDA FRIEDENBERG lor tte.,,. to Cheng• her neme to SHE A I FRIEDENBERG
CASE l'tO. A·l ...
O~OElt TO SHOW CAUSE FRIEDA FIJIEOENBERG hevl"9 fll.O ner AA>1lcellon In lhe •l>ovo en· ltll•CI metle<. -selCI Apc>llcenl ll•v· Ing there!" reQVHl.0 ~rmlulon to <fl•noo hor nem1 from FRIEDA FRIEDE NB ERG lo SHERI FRIEDENBERG IT IS HEREBY ORDE RED t!Wtt ell
pe:rions lnterntecl 1n u.ct m.-Uer •P-peer before lh11 court tn ~rt....,.t 3 of ll>e County Coun-loceltcl et 100 Civic c.,.,.,. Drlwt We~. Senl• A,.., C11tfornle, on J...,. ), '"'· •1 t.,. hour
of tO JO a.m., --end '""'• to lllOW <-. II eny U.re mey l>e, _., IM Applkellon "'-<l<I not be gr.,1ed 11 •• furtner oro.....i llwtt • copy 01 thl\ Oreler l>e Pul>llsMCI tn Ille Oronge Co .. t Delly Pilot, on<e e *""-lor lour '"<<•'""• weell:s. And lh•I '•'O C>UOllcellon Ill compleltcl prior to the lltarlng 01 tno• Oroo. OAT ED April U, 1'111 8RUCEW SUMNER JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOff COURT T•EOWAY, BltANOMl.YE•, TOltltlBIO& •1tAZEl.TON 11141 ..... -._,,.,d, o-.. ,, c..t•-· "24t Tel: (tUI fD.MU Pul>11"'9d Or-Cots! 0.11, P1101. Apr IS, 22, 2', Mey 6, 19e1 111H1
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
MARTHA P HILP AND
OF PETITION TO AD-
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A 108529.
Consolld.lted Report of Condition of Citliens Bank
of Cost• Mesa, County of Or•nge, and Domestic
Subsldl•riff •lltthecloseof business on Marchll, 1981.
Bid• shell be ct tarly marlltd"ln1ulelll<I Swimming Poot Covor> B•CI "'~~ ... 1Clllro1WG lo Allyn E Rowley. PurchMlnQ Mene99r, Hun· 11n9ton Bta<n Union HtQtl k-1 DI• 1roc1, IO'UI Yorktown Aw , Huntlnglon
such, Cetllomi• •-. •net ""•Iv ... el or D4lor1 , 00 pm , Frld•Y Mey I, 19't at whfCll lime •nCJ ploKt blell will
D4 publtc ly _..oo and re<MI
T o a I I n e i r s , St•t• Bank No. 1060
Och l>ICI ,,..11 remllln vellCI lor • per1oG of 60 d•Y' •lier Ill• Cltll te>«tll.0 for the recolpl of l>ldt The -d of TrusleH •""II l>e lhe
so4• 1ue191 of tht quelltv of eq11IPmenl Ofltr.0---""t ... rl9flt torelKt 111y O< all -encl to waive t ny Ir r•out•r1h ,,.,.,n AllynE A-ley Purcno.1119 M•M90r
Oettd Aptll 11 '"' P"Dll~-Oraft91 Cat>I 0.lly Pllol, Ap•ll 21, ~ 1,.1 1'901 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
beneficiaries, credit ors ASSETS
and contingent creditors of . Doll•r Amounts in Thousands
M artha Philp and persons cash and due from banks ........................ 3, 125
who may be otherwise in· U .S. Treasury securities ......................... 200
terested in tne Will and/or Obligations of other U .S.
Estate. Govemmentagenc1es and corporations _ ...... 1,47S
A petition has been f iled Obligations of States and
by Jeanne Philp Briggen political subdivisions ............................ 6, 117
1n the Superior CO\lrl of a . Loans, Total (excluding
Orange County requesting unearned income)... . . ............. 36,673
that Jeanne Philp Brio· b. Less: Reserve for possible
gen be appointed as :oanlosses ........................... 262
personal representative to c. Loans, net ................................. 36,'11
administer the estate of Bank p remises. F.F.&E. etc .................... 2.775
Tl.. Martha Philp (under the Other assets ................................... 1,lSl
NOT1caoH1tUITl.l.'SSA1.1 Independent Admin istra-TOTALASSETS .............................. 51,256 .
TS.MO.IDS t ion of Estates Act>. The LIABILITIES
0n "'-Y n. 1,.1• •1 10 00 • m •1"" petition is set for hearing Demand deposits of individuals, 11«1/> front entrtnet lo tht D••ntlO coun•v Court-· 100 cM< C•nt•r in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civ1<. partnerships, and corporations .......•........ 16,532
orlY• west, In cttyof Sent• A11•, R•lll Center Drive, West, in the Time and savings deposits of
tv Tiii• '-"' Lid., •• due., .,, c It y o f Sant a An a , individuals, partnerships, and corporations .... 26.~8 POtni.o T""1" ""°'r •nd --n• 1° Cal1'forn1·a on May 20, 1981 D ·t f U lted St t Go t 035 C>Ho o1 Tru~ rK«><cled Atlrll :n. ••. epos1 so n a es vernmen ........... .
••inst."°· 11•10. 1n -1:a.m, i>eoe at 9: 30 a.m . · Deposits of States and 1mo10tflcl••RKords 1n 111t ottk1of IF YO'=J·OBJECT to the pollti'"al s bdl lslon 1123 11>e CounlVRKorclenofOfaft9'Coun· t• f th tT " U V s ............................ ' ty, siet• of c.utorn•• uocutec1 11, gr an mg o . e pe 1 ion, Certified and offiers' checks ................•..... 740
Reymond L. Sherltc, .. lngl• m•n. you should either appear TOT Al OE POSITS IN
WILL SELL AT Pu1L1c Aucr10.. at the hearing and state DOMESTIC OFFICES .............. 45,428
To HIGHEST1 11D~EA .. F01R 1CASfH1 your objections or file (1) Totaldemanddeposlt s ............ 17,530 tpayeDle ti t me '" H n ew II , . mOft•Y of u. un1Mc1 stttttl et t,.. written obJections with the (2) Total lime and
north ,_,, .,.1ronu to ,,.. Of41n99 court before the hearing. savings deposits ............. _ ........ 27 ,898
CC1¥"tY..-1-,lnt11ec1tyo1s...1.a Your appearance may be TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC AMI, C91tfof'nle, ell rf911t, tltle -In· , • .,...,.,,,..,.0 1e _,,_,,.1e111y 11 in person or by your at-ANO FOREIGN OFFICES .................... 45,428
...,.,., NICI Oeeclot Trutt 1111,. .,,..._,. torney. Other llabllitles for bOrrowed money,
•Y 1tt...-ci in Mid c-tv -'St.el• 1 F yo u A R E A including note balances of U.S. Treasury .......... 326
-:C.:!:.":1.11 1Moft11e Wfft1tu1 CREDITOR or a con· Otherllabllltles ........................ : ......... 400
'"' o1i..ot1•"' Tr.ct No u1, 1n u. tingent creditor of the de· TOT AL LIABILITIES <excluding subOrdmated
u t, oi c.te MeM. -tv of 0r-., ceased, you must tile your notes and debentures> ..•.••..•..•....••........ 46,154 ::~1~.,:::'1~ ~, ":" M~· claim with the court or C St s .. HAREHOLDERS EQUITY
c•ll-~. -. ... o1 0r...-present It to the personal Ort'rTlCI oc: ..
,.,..., Cllll9nll&. representative appointed a . No. shares authorlted.... .1,S00,000 : ~---;r :;':':."':;by the court within four b . No. shares outstendlng •••••• 836,438 3,351 P~.,_,..,.;..._-1..,,H,.;_ months from the date of TOTALCONTRIBUTEO CAPITAL. .... -· ....... 3,351
10.. w : mo we1t w 11-St c .. t. f irst Issuance of letters as Retained NmlAg.S and
,,,.. .. ,c.111WNa. provl ded i n Section 700 of other capital reserves ••.•••.•••••.•.•••••••••.• 1,7S1 .~'71.:.:;-::-.::::::: the Pro bate Code of TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ............ S,102
uw .................. ~callfornla. The time for TOTALLIABILITIE"SANO
:u.n,11..iy,.._i-elfl filing claims wlU not ex· SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY -•...•.•.•.•.•••.• , .S1,.256 ~::,":it~~.,:.·.~ plre prlot' to tour mon1hs Ml!MORANDA: amount• outstandlne •• of ,.........
.-.;.-;-:-,....,.... 1111e, ......-. w from the date of the hear· date
illfl'IWWl<-. w--.,_,<,_... Ing notic«l abovie. , s•·-b l ...... t ...... ~It t-·-1 816 •~.._., ... T,_....,....,.... YOU MAY EXAMINE -·"' y •• 9f'1"' c.roru ou ,.,_.., ng · · · · · · · · · · · · · · u.-..., Mid o-t., TNI\. te th fll IC t bV the court a. Time certificates of deposit In
tt1e _1111,. ~ -ot 1,• • ep t.a..1 1 t ... ..:. denoml,,.tlontof $100,000or mort .••••••••••• ,. 14,186
,.... MCW"M 11¥ NH o..."' Trwt you ar• lnteres "" n ,,,. Marktt valut Of lnvt1tment ~urltles ......•... 6,'90 "~=:',:',W:=:n: = estat•, you may file • re-Tht tnteralgnecl Kenne~ l QonahUe, 'ltc. Pres~
.,,_"' ~ ... 111 u111 ... quest with 0,. court to~-dent end Jolm w. Walsh, Sr. Vice President and "'<elf>.-eny ~., ... i... cel vt specl1I riotlct of t,,_ CHhler °' the ebov..nam.S btn~ each declares, fol' '"':!--.nc..,., _r .... o... of Inv ntory of •Stitt ~nstts Mmself alone end not for tht other: I ~ve personal
.. ,.,......... nectit .. ~ ... and of the petitions. ac-knowledae °' the matters c:.ont.lntd In this r•Port (In·
1 .... "'*,.,,""••wr.1twcountsand ~eporu cludlngJht ,..ve,... 1ldt htl'90f), end 1 btllevt "''' ~:."::.::.::.c:;:_: dHcrlbed Jn Sictkm 1100.S Heh st.tement In Mid rtPOt't Is true. each of the un· •MiO• .. 11n "" .... ,.,.,. of the Cltlltomta Problte dtnlantd, tor hlmstlf afOfli and not for ~ othtr,
IN ..w *«K• • o.ii..,. _. COde. certlfles widtr penalty Of perJUfY that tr.. f«noofno I' • • ... • .. ,_.... • .. Jot\n C. Penney; Pinney true and correct:· · "''Miff•,,_ ,.,.1 ..,_,., " & Pennev, 301 .Via Udo, Eututed 0n April 2l 1911 ll Co1h Mu.a, r·.,.a.• Suitt 203, NIWpOrt S.ICh, c.tllfornla , ' ~&ALnnTI.A001t1W,...,,e.;,.. camomi..'21663." kenr.-th L. Oonal\Ue, Viet Pratlct.nt
, ~-•....,. Publ~ Of'ange Ccwtlf :Jot\n w. Wal~ Sr. V1c.e Prestdlent ,...... ~ o.J1ir ~ Dill AofllJlai :-2l' and Cathi., f rr..... . ..... 2', f "'°"'' ,.....0r .. c.-e--.'"""'N11W•"" . ~
Karcher names VP
Loren Pannl"I or N ewport Beach has
been named senior vice p r esident of finance
for Carl Karcher Enterprises in Anaheim.
Joan Cornell Grosvenor of Huntington
Beach is superv i sor or advertising and sales
promotion for Gar den Grove-h eadquartered
W aybemCorp
Raul Drouea 1s comptroller for lnterna-
tion al Telephone and Telegraph Datanetics
Corp in Fountain Valley He has been with
ITT since 1974, and hves in Costa Mesa.
Nancy Mains of Irvine has been n amed
dir ector of corporate com·
munications for POINT 4
Data Corp. m Irvine
Jess W. Greenlief has
been appointed national
director of sales for Evolu-
tion Com puter System s
Corp. in Orange .
WUllam Greenelah h as
joined Knoth & Meads Co .•
Irvine, as account executive. ,,.., .. ,
Tbomas J . Cahill, president of BEST Life
Assurance Co and operations officer of
BEST Plan Companies Inc. of Newport
Beach. has been elected to the boar d or direc·
tors of the Assoc1al1on of California Life
I nsurance Companies
Roseanne M . Berekl 1s manager of the
Huntington Beach o ffice or Santa Barbara
Savings and Loan Association
Richard Harris hal> been promoted to
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTING S
Nt:W YORK (APJ~CIUSoGa NASDAQ QUIJYI..... IUVIA tl>OWl"9 NQMtl !Heh s;J.IJ\lle end IOWftl Git.,., by Cl•rkJL
mer~•I ,,_." Hof ClowCp T ... t Prk.H do not ColrTlt lnthHle ...tell merllyp ColG•hol merlldown or comm 1ulon lor T.....,.,y ComCIH Stoel!. 8ld ~ CmlShr AEL ln<I I~ IS Cm•Tel AFAProt l'n ''h ConPap ' AVM Cp •V. S Cordi• Accurey u"" 12~1Cro• Tr• ' Addl"'W ll 13\o't CMllrFd I AdvRou '" •'llo Cytltron AlflB\h ~ ,,,.., OenlyM AleaAl11 ~ l.SV• OleOH 1 Allco1nc "'" CJV)IOaytM•I Allyne 1"' 1'-18:"' ::!.•:,.. J"' J:!'o.~t~' A""'" S~ t O.woEt AGreel IJ~, 14 OleCry• AIMGp ..._ tJ Oia"Cru AMlc:ros 20\oo -0e<1111 t ANelln• ,..._ ""' OollrG" AO...lr • U''ll ~ OoylOI 1 ARelMQ " '''" OunlllnO AWtlclftV 10 12 0..rlrn \ AmllhBnt EtOrtef t~ 1•\oo !:elnv..._. AMdll• I~ II At19SA ""-1•"1,ECOflLtD ~Gd ~ tl'll EIP .. EI ~~111fl.1 ~ ... ~~ ~::::~ ArOenGp ).. , ... EIMoclut AtdCole ~ JI EnrOtv AllG1LI 14\o't t°"" EnrMelhO AllenRt 10 10VI EnR•v BelrdCP Wl'J u;w. Enlwhll BellyPP 12 .. 11 .. EqutSL fl•1>11H E JOY, IP"' EqtOll .... lcRt g 1-. 1\o't FSC BeulFr 22 l2V. Ft l>rlh 8eyl•Mll 11\o't 12 F ermGp IHllne "' , ... Fldlcor 81fttP11 1 1 t It FIBkSVI
v ice president en gi neering for Genisco
Computers Corp . Newport Beach
Mark 8 . Mettloger of Mission Viejo has
been appointed vice pres1
dent and manager of the
Laguna Hills branch of
Bank of Amenc.·a
Frederick D egley or
Huntington Beach has
been named vice pres1
dent, marketing opera·
tions. of Basic Four In
formation Systems
Division or Management METIIMOIU
Assistance In(' . tn Santa Ana
Robert B. M cLain, president of McLatn
Development Co . Newport Beach, and Frank
C. Harrington , prt•stdent of H arrington
Development Co . Newport Beach, have been
elected to the board of d1ret'lors of the First
American Financial Corp
WUUam l,, Bennett has been appoi nted
assistant vi ce president, commercial loan of·
ficer, al Eldorado Hank':-T ustin office He is
a Cal 5tate 1-'ullcrton graduate
I.. Lurraim• /\tti~ ha:. bt·en na mt•tl \'Ice
prt's1dcnt ad m1m:-.I 1at11111 for I kn ta~<.· Rank
1n <>r.ingc Cuu111~
('ar•1I ,\ndt'rlt• h,1:-111•1•11 appotnlt•d bi.Ink
">t't' 1c·t•.., ort11·1·1 fo1 El 1>111 Jdo B<Jnk tn
Tu-. tin
Robt•1 l II. Hald"' in Jr. ha-. been named
a .... -.1..,t.int 'll'l' 1111..,1dt·nt uf Cro1·kt•r Rank':-
nt'\.\ \1t·trnp11l1t.111 Jl.1nk10~ 1frpartment 1n
In int•
8.,.llyL 41 '1\o't "tlostn ==~~ n~ ~:"' ~:~~1~n UPS ANO DOWNS N-OelCICP TuEn tlWt TtMOd RomAm TuEn un Mier Z owl
DOWNS
ll•f J 1'1• Hlo
ll<o 11Wo lV.
414 ,._
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~L • e iH Bll>bCo 11\o't IJV. Fl•\Bkt ::~,~ t:~ ttv. ~~tfnt BlyYOO< UV. 1~ FltNFle lonenie sv. ~ Flur0<1> • 8rwTom • 1'V. Jtll'J ForHtO 8w<llbet 1~ '°"" Forml9ll 11111•1• 42.-i, 4l FrenkCp l urnuoS 1"-,. ... FreftkEI CNL f!I" J"-JV. frffSG ~:;~fl,, ~~ H~ ~~.7~ ' Ca"r<MIH ,._ 4 GeltayO ~--~ ~I·~~&~~~~. c:fnAlr JI'> Jll'J GnlUEtl C•~ ISll'J lt ll'JIGovU" (Av 2 ... J Gr""M CnVt s UY> I~ GrtyAClv C-~ 17,,_, 17'1! Glfll'tttl C,..nHe 154 » IGyroclyn Cl\mLH U.,, .,,_, HtmlP1 CllftVll 17 ll Yt HerchlJlr.e ~hlNwTr IS I S\l'J Hr1111t---41Yt HtrPGp lrfko • "'-HerllNt
MUTUAL FUND
g:;:P1,:' :.
011.1.0' Mier l pl Ra,_..,, MutAEI r .. eno ~!';3:: SIOH•"" Micro Z TOl-R1nd-Clltl<O Juely·\ UnvFutlt r .... Slw • 8rAS0 Con II nm MKr l"" Proc:flQY
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Off 11.1 OH IU Off ISA OH IU Off , ... Off u OH IJ..S Oft 1U
OH W OH U.O Off lU 011 12..S OH U.O
Off It ' Off 11.4 Off II t Ott 10.7
Oft 10 j
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Off 10.• Ofl 10.l Ott 10.J
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\ a ·
Hospitals
big business
Tbe Wall Stnet Journal aald lt well ... HH• l Jot
an appendectom7 for )'OU." u· wu refen'i.DI to .\he
aaareutve promodcmal tactlca now ti.tna embraced
by privately owned bolpltela. Many are pu.ablnl tlwdr
aervfces the way eompanta push their 2rodudl. And
that's not •W'Jlrllilll beca many bolpttalJ belona
Lo cbai.oa, the way Safeway and MP atora do.
TBEaE ilE NOW more lban 30 b11 corpora·
lions in tbe hoepit.al bu.al.Dea. The two itantt of the
field are Hospital ,Corp. of America <HCA> and
Humana lnc. Eacb bu reven4es of more than $1
billion a year. Other bll boe:fital mana1ement com·
panies are American Medic lnternatlonal, lloepltal
Alftliat.es (owned by the bil ln.aurance firm, INA >.
National Medical Ent.erprlla and Lifemark.
<Humana lnc. bu otnces in Newport Beach, as
does National Medical Enterprlaes, lnc. American
Medical International baa offices ln Ana.helm.)
When bankers and Wall Street people look at lhe
industry, they liken it to the hotel buslneaa. Tbe prob·
lem is the same: rentin1 bed.a. Companies in busi·
ness Lo make a
buck now con-
trol 12 percent
of the hospital
beds in the na-
tion. The two
biggie s
Humana and
H C A -each
«~ _____________________ } /~ f
llllll llllDWITZ 4'9
has close Lo 20,000 beda to flll every day.
JC you have been Lo a hospital recently, you know
that ooe of the first tbin11 you're asked for is your
health insurance number. Once that's recorded,
everyone relaxes. No one worries about cost. Someone
else -a third party -la paying. 1''or the provuser or
hospital services, it's tantamount to havin1 a 1uaran-
teed marllet
THE GROWTH OF THE commercial heallb-care
business, wb..icb includes naUonaJ chains of diaenostic
laboratories (Damon and Metpalh> and emer1ency-
room services supplied by outside companies, does
bother a lot of people. The concern wu voiced last
year in a widely circu.lated report by Dr. Arnold S.
Reiman, editor of tbe New England Jb"rnal of
Medicine, wb..icb is generally accepted u our most
prestigious medical journal.
Reiman estimated the size of the business at $35
billion to $40 billion a year -and he warned that it
has now taken on all the trappings or a "new
BELMAN URGED THE medical profession to
deal with the matter by insisting practicln1 physi-
cians "sbou.ld derive no financial benefit from the
health-care market except from their own pro-
fessional services."
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
•
N~ YOIUttA~J fflMI 0..-J-•'9-~y, '411. K.
• Ind °"911 H19'1 '--C-Oii
•Tm
WHAT STOCKS DID
NlrW YOllK IA~J "'-'· Ill
SILVER
Het'lfV A Harman, $11 210 per tror outla •
I
\
,.
I
I
I -
,I I
I
I
• ·1
CORNELL"300'' wuss W1111WMl
DOUBLE BELTED
I 3199 $ ·:it~3
SI 69 f ( I
288 12 VOlT
SYSJIM .... -., EASY TO INSTA
13;51) .,~OIOICE or°'Usfl#;
STEREO rar. PLAYER .
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PAii OP 51.4 INCH COAXIAL FREE' All SUSPINSION TYPI WI BUILT•IN TWlnll e
STEREO SPEAKERS
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SAVE '13!!
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SP4RKOM4TIC. AUTO
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WITH EXTRA MOUNTING BRACKET
FOR HOME
OR fITRA
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turtle
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HIGH GLOSS
CAR WAX
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Auro & VAN .
CARPET CLEANER
Mexican-AmeriGan holiday May 5
Cinco de Mayo translated means slmpJy the
Sth of May.
For Mexicans, it'a a special date, a national
holiday commemorating an 1862 military vic-
tory that was as important psychologically as
tactically.
It's a date when Mexicans, fighting to re-
tain their independence, learned that the Euro-
pean superpowers weren't invincible.
For nearly four years prior to the Cinco de
Mayo victory, Mexico had been devastated by
civil wan. The national treaaury had been
emptied; there was no way Mexico could pay
debts owed to Great Britain, Spain and France.
In hopes of coll~tin1 their money. tht
European PQwen sent a combined expedi·
tionary force to Mexico.
Spain and Great Britain withdrew when
they realized they might be risking war.
France, ruled by an ambitious Napoleon
Ill, decided lo stay in Mexico and use military
force to take over the government.
Under the leadership of Gen. Laurencez, the
French army of 6,000 well-trained and well-
equipped men set out from the port of Veracru1
for Mexico City.
Along Laurencez' rout~ lay Puebla, a town
strategically placed on the h1gb plateau between
the coast and the capital city. There, the Mex-
ican army awaited the French invaders.
There were 4,000 Mexican soldiers who had
tittle training and whose equipment consisted of
50· year-old French rifles purchased from
Great Britain.
Led by Ignacio Zara~oza. an expert in what
now is known as guerrilla warfare, the ra11ed
Mexican army not only stood its ground at
Puebla but succeeded in pu1bin1 the
chastened Frenchmen back to the coast.
That's why every Mexican town l)OW boasts
a Cinco de Mayo street and why the date is
celebrated with a fiesta.
In the United States, Cinco de Mayo is
celebrated as Mexican-American Day, a time
for all Americans to appreciate the contribu·
tions Mexico and its people have made to our
culture
Eggs perfect for fiesta
For ease, speed and convenience. it's hard
to beat a skillet supper.
There are countless versions of these single-·
pan entrees, but the easiest and more versatile·
is still the originaJ skillet supper, scrambled
eggs.
Since eggs are not a slJ'ong·tasting food by
themselves, they are compatible with many
other flavors. When scrambled. they can be
combined with just about any food you can Im-
agine: cooked beef, pork, veal. lamb. poultry
fish, vegetables <fresh, frozen or canned >~
cheese, herbs, spices and other seasonings. The
flavor combinations are limited only by the .im-
agination.
Scrambled Eggs Verde, a perfect selection
for Cinco de Mayo, will help broaden your·
egg repertoire.
Green onion, avocado salad dressing.
parsley Oakes, taco sauce and sliced avocado
gives these eggs not only their name ("verde"
means green> but also scrumptious flavor.
One tip on preparing them o r any
scrambled eggs: cook them just until thickened
but still moist. The heat retained in them will
finish the cookinJ.
SCRAMBLED EGGS VERDE
4 serving.a
Beggs
1/4 chopped green onion
'•cup milk
11. cup avocado salad dressing
1 teaspoon parsley flakes
1h teaspoon taco sauce
11. teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons butter
l avocado, peeled, _,ttted and sliced
lf.i cup grated Jack or Cheddar cheese
In medium mixing bowl beat to1etber eep.
green onion, milk, salad dressini, parsley, i.co
sauce and salt. Heat butter in 10-inch fry pan
over medium heat until just hot enoueh to sizzle
a drop of water. Pour ln e11 mixture.
As mixture begins lo set, turn a pancake
turner over and gently draw completely across
the bottom of pan, formin& lar&e soft curds until
eggs are thickened, but still moist•. Do not stir
constantly. Serve immediately garnished with
avocado slices and grated cheese.
•It ia better to remove scrambled eggs from
pan when they are slightly underdone. Heat re-
tained In eggs will complete the coekin&.
~
Scrambled Eggs Verde will help ~oaden your egg repeTtoire.
Tortilla strips versatile
At Cinco de Mayo, Fourth of July or any
festive occasion, party-goers are likely lo find
tortilla strips on an hors d'oeuvre tray.
A product of one of old Mexico's taste de-
lights, tortilla strips, made from fresh com
tortillas, have caught on quickly in the United
States as a snack and dip treat.
For the uninitiated, tortilla strips had a
humble origin in the U.S. as a fried food that
was peddled up and down Southern California's
beaches back In the 1950s. Kids liked them, with
many proclaiming they were better than potato
chips. That started the ball rolling.
An example of how rapidly the product is
gaining in acceptance is illustrated by the story
of Bob and Tony Gallegos and their Grande
Tortilla Strips, produced in Orange.
Back in 19'74, the Gallegos decided to ex-
pand their small Mexican food business lo in·
elude production of tortilla strips. It was their
first commercial effort to market the product.
and was successful almost from the beginning.
Grande strips now are se lling in
supermarkets throughout Southern California
and Arizona and soon will be marketed in stores
in other parts of the nation, accord.ins lo a
spokesman for the firm.
While the Gallegos don.'t expect tortilla
strips to become the dominant snack food item
in the nation, they do see a steady growth
potentiaJ for the product.
To accommodate demand for the Strips,
Grande recently moved into a 30,000-iquare-
foot, $2 mlllion facility in Orange.
A question often uked of them, say the
Gallegos brothers la, what's the difference
between tortilla strips and tortilla "Chips?
The pair believe there are many dir-
ferences.
"No tortilla connoisseur would reach for a
chip when strips are available," said Tony.
"Chips are for emergency use only."
Among their reasons. he says, Is that the
strips are longer and stronger than the conven-
tional chip and, thus, less likely to snap in half
when placed in a dip.
Also, he says, the strips come in various
shapes with no two ever exactly alike, adding to
their aesthetic quality when used as part of an
hors d'oeuvre tray.
~cause the strips begin with natural com,
made into tortillas, Tony says, they have a
more authentic flavor than the chip. The tortilla
strip, he explains, is a natural com product
cooked in vegetable oil, high in nutritional value
with a low salt content.
The versatility and large size of tort.ilia
strips lend to a wide range of recipes and •P·
pealing garnish. The following recipes for Vlva
la Chicken, Grande Strip Soup and Nachos are
examples.
VIVA LA CHICKEN
4 whole chicken breHts (boiledl
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 can cream or mushroom soup
1 cup evaporated milk
1 cup chicken broth
(use broth of cooked chicken breasts l
1 large onion chopped
_ 1 can green chlli salsa
1 can diced green chill pepper
l smaJJ can sliced black olives
1 9-ounce packate tortilla strips
1 pound grated Jack cheese
Cut cooked chicken into larce pieces. Mb
together ln a lar1e bowl aoupa, mllk, broth,
onion, saJaa, diced cblles, and olives. Butter a t
x 3-incb baldna dllb. Put a lawyer of strips on the
<SeeTO&TILLA, Pa•eCZ) •. .
I
t .. i
By ltlAaTIN SLO.\NB
Smart shoppinc i1 cont.,Sous. Just tell a
lew of .your friend& •bout your double-and
triple·play discounts at the aupermarket.
Belore you know lt, they will be telling you
abouttbeirowntriump • •
Jud,Y. Hu1hes of L•-•-.voc>d 11)~ • triple play on•ArmourGolden star Turkey.
Fll'tt, she found tbe turu1 On aate for fl.47
a pound The usual prJce at tier •QPermarket ls
$1.99.
Then, she used a 75·cent-off coupon that the
store doubled.
When she got home, she aeQt in the label
from the turkey for a $2 Armour refund.
·'That $6.96 boneless turkey cost me only
$1.65," she says. "And J want to lell :ou that
since I started taking advantafe of cou.pons
and refund.a, sboppint bu become mucb more
interesting.'"
.Barbara Stalker of Parker, Pa., saw a
supermarkel advertisement offerinl seven
bars or Jereens soap for $1. She bought th• soap
and senlin six otthe wrappers for a $1 refund.
"I got the full purchase price back," she
says. "What more could f asklor?"
Linda Sarro of Woodside, N. Y .. tells of the
recent lriple·play discount that she made with
her mother.
"Our local supermarket bad a liter or 7·Up
on sale at • centa a tiiottl•." ....-recall•. ·•My
mom banded the c:aabl~ tJirM 50-centl-off
coup(llll.l,aoweonlypaldtl:•1rorUiNebottla.
''When wt 1othome, I foWid a 1·Up$l.HoU·
day Refund Offer. which brou,bt their cost
down to47 eeotl. With 13 In our family, coupon· lna and refunding really help.'·
Bob and Vern Hurley of Harwood, Md.,llke
to shop and aave to1et.ber. Th Ir favorite
supermarket recently had the lCk>uoce Jar of
Ne.care, usually $5. 79, on aalefor$5.09.
MUSic.
EDIJC&JION .-c T8R
• ~UIT AR REGISTRATION /OPEN HOUSE
SAT. MAY 2, 10:00 AM CJftreRiNO •.•
(/)
Q)
:::i
Yamaha
15455 JEFFREY ROAD
IAVINE CALIF 9271 4
Primary Course ...
Keyboard Fundamentals
Electone organ, Guitar
Compost11on . . . . . . ..
• . .. ... age 4' to 6
........ age 7 to 11
..... All ages
. •..... Under age 15
JaA fvRTlleR iHfCRMATiON 'PL88$& cau.. . . . T' • I
I (714) 559-5440
Tbe at.ore doubled their *1 Nescafe coupoo,
wtttcb brouaht the coat down to $3.09. And &.be
Jar contained an extra 2 ouncet okoffM worth
another St.ts
REFUNDOFTREDAY
Write to the roUowinl add.res• to obtain tbt
lorm required by this refund offer: Signal $l
Refund Form, P.O. Box 3325, Maple Plain,
Minn. 55848. Enclose a stamped, self·
addressed enveloS)e with your request. This
off er explrea Sept. 30, 1981.
$avory
-------AIOUT
-bottom of tbl aa. Arra:i; bait Of ta. cblc:Mil
pieces an ~ of •tripe Pl>UI" ball of·11uce
mixture over the top. Repeat Uotber later,
atrtps, chicken and tauee. PUt a liyer of •tdPI
on top and 1prtrude Jack cheeM over the top.
Put ln the refriferator over nllbt to blend
flavors. Ba~e for Yt ho~ at 800 cfearees.
GRANDE STRIP SOUP
1 white onion sllced/ch.,qpped (laree
~ieces)
1 to 2 teaspoon veeetable oil
3 ripe tomatoes diced (medium alz•> or
1 16-ounce can tomato Huee
2 to 3 stalks celery
tf'O 8-ounce cans tomato sauce
three 10~-ounce cans chicken broth
Dash of garlic powder or l clove fresh
garlic minced
~small fresh Jalapeno chill diced
Salt to taste
One 9-ounce package tortilla 1trips a cups shredded cheddar cheese eraled
Heat oil in large saucepan, add onion and
saute until clear. Add chicken broth, tomato
sauce. tomatoes. celery. chili, garlic powder
and salt. Simmer 20 to 30 minutes. To serve. put
tortilla strips (slightly broken) into soup bowls.
Spoon hot soup over strips and sprinkle with
cheese. To form bubbly crust. put under broiler
for a few seconds Serve with remaining tortilla
strips.
e ngs.
-------AIOUT
1$199GREAT I 9 DINNER ()
$5 ftft SUPERI e77DINNERI z
0 Cl. ::>
0 u
g GOO<l lor three piece~ ol 1u11.v qolOl'n Drown Kenrucky
"O Frieo Chicken p1u5 5ir101e servings ol coie s1aw
O mashed 001atoes dllO gravy .ir>o .i roll L1m11 lwo oflers
Z per purcha~e Coupon good only lor LOmb1n,111on whrlel I oark oroers Cus1om1•r o.iys "" .1ppl1• dble Sdles la•
GOOd lor nine pieces of fUICY. golden blown Kentucky
Frred Ct11cken, wrth four rolls, 1 luge cole slaw, • large
mashed poratoes and • medium gravy l rm11 two otters
per purchase Coup0n gOOd only tor c:omb1n111on whlle/
oark orders Customer pays 111 1ppllc1bte sates tait
Oller e•prres
Mav 10. 1981 CIC
I C IC Ollr•r •»PHll5 Mily 10 1981 I
PrrLl'S may vary al Pnces may vary al par p~r11c1patinq Iota I llC•Pdlrng 1oc:at1ons Good
11ons Gooo only 1n only rn Soulhern
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~ Wrnoow 8ann1e1r •'•• ....:.---=---=---•
and save 15¢
with the coupon belOYL
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10 GRAND ..,.IZ•S: '!bu can win a C.lebnty Sport Camp-ek for y6or child 1n
Coloete'a lwiay to C.mp S-pstakea lneludtn(I roundtnp coach ,_ end
S100 for expenses. All Superata,.t ChOose from one of th9se camps· Jot
NamattvJohn Dockery fnstructionel Football Cemp -Hamden Conn.. P91i
Socoer C.mp-PurchaH, New 'l\)fk; Ted Williams Buebetl C.mp-Lakevlll9.
M .... ; Ven der Mffr Tennla ~-SwHI Brlat VA.; Kat"Mm Abclul-Jab-
bat Orange County, Ca I Magic-Johneoo. Loa Al'lg9tes. Ce./Jamaaf Wilk ..
Buic.tbell C.mpa. Sant• Baibara. Ce .• Biie• Knotf Spor1S C.mp for Girts -
Ph9fpa. W18C
100 aacoND ..,.izaa; Spelding 8pof11 Set conll1t1ng of Offic111 Pl'o l.Atague Buebal~ Nf:L Playe,. Aaoclallon Football. Dribbler Ba.•111>111. Pw16 Smasher SoocerBal
alO THl"D ,,..IZaa, SheliNp9.,. ~hl"V A6d !Ind AMI Spinning Mt
1IOO l'OUMM ~"IZn Colgat...CU,.d F¥t\g Saucers.
To obtain an official entry form,
look for the c.ofgate ·"AWtJ:oJ to
Camp"' display at your local
grocery store, or send a sett·
addressed envetope to: ._WllY :c_c.~-:r..:::.=
~~May 10, 1981. NO
PU ---da NllCWAlft
Alt entrieil must be ~ b'f
May 29. 1981 to be etigible.
,
produce
•
Irvine Raoeh Grown
Asparagus
Jumbo .98LB.'
Large .89LB.
Medium• 79LB.
Small .69LB.
Crisp Red Delieious Apples
Medium Size 3LB. f JOO
Granny Smith Apples
' Tart All Purpose .29LB.
Irvi11e Ra11eh Grow11
Valeneia Ora1ages
4LBs.•}OO
Russet Baking Po1:atoes
.29LB.
New Crop Texas Onions
Mild Flavor 3 LB.• I OO
Ieeberg Lettuee
\ • Large , Firm Heads .29EA.
\ , Loeally Growta Mushrooms ..
Large Size •} 3 9 LB.
Button • 98LB.
.Join lls For
Our Opening
.
11 This Weekend!
•' ~ ~ We Are Featuring Ir~ine
Ranch Grown Strawberries
Fresh From The Field Daily
• 8 v1lam1ns
•Irvine Raneli Fannen Mark t™
Brands *Vitamin Harvest
meal health foods
Stuffed Pork Chops f J 4 9 LB. Near East™Riee Pilaf9 oz. pkg .• 89 (Reg. $1.19)
C.Ountry Style Ribs f J 4 9 LB.
BAR·M™ Baeon 'J 49LB.
Bo11eless Pork Roast
'249LB.
Peggy Jane's™Ho11ey fJ59
Mustard Dressing< Reg. $2.09> s oz.
Topaz™ Wild Honey 3 LBS. '299
(Reg. $3 .99 )
Health Valley™ ' 15
Sprouted ~real ( R eg. $1.70) 12 oz. I
WITH RAISINS OR BANANA CHIPS
Sausage ITALIAN •J79 HainTMCinnamo11 Raisin Chips
GERMAN LB. SALT FREE
POLISH <Reg .. 95 > 4 oz .• 59 Made On Premises
No Nitrates or
Preservatives
•500
•1000
OFF ANY 50 LB.
FREEZER PACK
OFF ANY 100 LB.
FREEZER PACK
fish
Raw A.lmo11ds '229
(Reg. $3.49 Lb.> <BULK ONLY l LB.
Thompson Seedless Raisins
<Reg. $1.98) 'l 29 ~~~ ,
deli
king Crab Legs •3•aLB. Hillshire™Beef Stiek •3•• <Reg. $4.49 Lb.> LB.
Medium Shrimp
Halibut Steak
Fresh Paeifie Red fJ 79
S11apper LB .
Fresh Canadian C.Odf249LB.
Fresh Rainbow
Trout
Doe's Bread House™
Sheepherder Bread .89 LB.
1 LB.
Martine Iii™ Sparkling • J 59
Apple Cider 2s oz.
For Ci11eo De Mayo
La Coeina Jaek Cheese
. '249 -(Reg. 2.98 Lb.) LB.
English Cheese Sale
Farm Cheddar I Caraphilly • Cheshire •
Stilton y Ch . '379 LB our 01ce .
Gallo™Cotto Salami< R eg. $2.79 >'2
19
Irvine Raneh TM
Farmers' Market
Macaroni Salad
MADE FRESH DAILY IN
OUR KITCHEN
. Produce
fresh from
the fields
daily
,
.98
2651 Irvine Ave., Costa Mesa 631·4404
14002 Myford Rd., Irvine 838-2851
13152 Newport Ave .• Tustin 838-9570.
aalad·1andwicb aye d
wltb a vari y ot fltritalf .
NAC808 (Nab•
~hose>: These are a dreued· up Mexican
ventoa of melted cbeese
on ern era. rfortllla
cbJi;>t a.re la1.eied with a vanety of &opplnPI' . .
beans, chee1t, tbtliea,
chopped meat or
chick.en, The eHIHt
way to 1erve authentic
Mexican party foo4 is to
off er (Uatl a variety of
nach01.
TACOS (tab·cohs>:
Mexican tortilla
sandwich fblded-in hall
with meat, ch e, let·
tuce, tomato and on
topped with aalla.
FLA1JTA (flou-tab):
Toi'tlU• ftlled like tatot
b&at tolhd Uito a tabular
or "flute" •t\a" and fried.
8Ull&ITOS (bun·ee·
toes> : Flour tortillas
tradlUooally filled with
beans, cheese, beef.
pork, chicken <or a com·
blnatlon), folded to com·
pletely envelop the fill·
ln1. Can be eaten with
finfen or aifork.
ENCHILADA (en -
cbee-lab-dah): A tortilla
pped m HUCe, ftlJed
Ith 'cbeeae, beans or
meat, ud rollod, folded
or at•cked. Jn Meilco,
encblladu are served u
IOOD .. tbey are ...
aembled: here. addl·
Uonal aauce la poured
over and enchiladas are
baked until best•d
tbro\l&hi" ··
QVF.8ADIUA8 (kay-
aa-dllabs): TortUlae fl Ile with cbeeae,
chilies and meat heated
until the cheese meltl.
Usually folded or cut in·
to quarters or trian1les
and served h.ot.
Save up to 20¢
Here's good news-
Cinco de Mayo celebration
... ., savmgs from MJB! Now
you can save up to 20C when you
add MJB Long Gram Whlte Rice to your fiesta
celebration. MJB-the nutritious white rice you
can count on to cook up deliciously light and
fork-fluffy; every time. iArnba!
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R1c.e Any othet u•• con101u1es h1ud GROCER Please •edeem 1tu1 I c.ouPQ" at'"-t1c.e ••tu1 on one bO• 01 MJ8 Long Grain w nit• Rice save ~to~ You will be re1mours.e<1 at lhe f•C• v11ue Oh.11 7c I '°' hand•1ng P'O"•oecl 'tou a~ con,umer hlv•
comptiltd *'"' tne le,ms 01 this olfe1 Coupon• I mar nol tie H1tg"8<.1 01 11~1l .. 1ed br you We w 1I no1 honor 1edrmpt1ona trHougf't outa•d• I
agencle1. bf~•,. etc YOUf cw1tom11 mu11 Pll'f I 20~ I
I
I
on 28 OZ '>IZo! bllX
of MJ B l...o"it Cr"'"
Wh1tcR1n·
any ule• ••• <.;o11pon •old Wflere ia .. o p1on1b
~~:.~·.·~r~~~\1: .. ·~,~::t ~~0c~::, ~~",;P~~·. I
Pte .. nle<I 10< oeoemphon m1111 be al>Own on•• I quul Cun ••lue 1120 of one cenl Fo• prompt "" -42 '"' ""' h"x ,,f M.m t .mtt (""'"
I 40500 101304 I
redempllon in••• coupon lo MJ8 Co PO Bo• I 1417 CMnlon IOw• 52732
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Whir, UoH·
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40500 101312
OFFER LIMITED TO STORE COUPON
USE OF ONE COUPON ONLY
More li-aclitional American Lamb Recipes
LOG CABIN
Lamb Chops
Eating hearty in pioneer days started with
meaty lamb chops, a sturdy old iron skillet
or cooking pot. and herbs grown and dried
atsummer'sendfO(winteruse.Puttogether,
they produced a meal that titted the senses
'
and warmed the long evening hours. Today
you can serve this dish for a meal that will
be the highlight of any week's menu.
4 servings
4' lamb loin or 8 rib
chops, cut ~ to
1-1nch thick
" cup chopped onron
l' cup chopped green
pepper
1 clove garlic. minced
1 tableaPOOn butter
~ teaspoon ult
~ teaspoon ground
pepper
)-t teaspoon dried
rosemary
1 ~ cups canned
chopped tort'lat<>ft
In heavy skillet. brown chopa quickly on both tldn.
Reduce heat end cook to de1lred degree of~
oe• R~ovecl'loPt and kMP warm. In un\t
Mullet C<><* onion. grHn pepper and gal'llc in
butter until onion ls limp Add remaining Ingredient.
and cook for 10 mlnutea. Serve tomato uuqt 011~r
lambchopa.
CllALUPAS (ch1·loc);
p1b1): Tortilla. IP·
petlJen ahapH Uke lit·
tie bOat.I iad1ftu.ct with
almOlt u1 Obmbtnauon of shredded meat,
chicken and cbeeae
nond lD a HUC. and
aerved hOt:
TO!'OPO Ooe-toe-
poe): Tortillas· cut lnto
trlanflea and crUlply
coolceCl. U1uaJly served
with 1uacamole or
beana.
CBILMtUILES (cbee·
lab-kee-le11>: Broken
tortillu tossed or baked
in a tomato-based sauce
aad top'P;ed with
lhNdded cheese.
IOCADILL08 (boca·
dl·yo1): Me>uthfuls of
tortlllu, covered wlth
beans, cbUles, etc.
CHJU CON QVESO
<Chee-lee cone kay·ao>:
A hot Cheete·wltb·chllles
dlp served with crispy
round tortilla chips.
ANTOllTOS (ahn-toe·
bee-toes): Tbe word
u.ed ID Mexico for .. lit-
tle whlms," fancies or
desires, and commonly
refers to snacks or ap-
pett zera uten out or
hand throuahout the
d ay . Many of the
sortlll&·baaed recipes
thoufbt of u matn dl•h·
es ln the United States
are conslderejt antojltoa
south of the border.
FRIJOJ.ES
BEFRITOS (free-bole·
lays ree-free-toes >:
Refried beans. The most
popular at)d basic or all
Mexican food4, refried
beana are used in count-
less tortilla dishes as
well as In a warm ,
intriguingly spicy dip
served with tortilla
chips. The basis is
cooked pinto beans thlll
are mathed and lbea
frled, and they af'li
bound to tum uf. at
Mexican mea . Com,
blned with com or rite,
they make a comp ....
protein dip.
GUACAMOLE (w~·
ah-mob-lay): A dl,o
made or seal-OQtd
mashed avocado, sery~
with tortilla chlJ>•
Ingredients moat often
included in auacamole
are: peeled, seeded ....
chopped onion, chopped
lresh or caMed chlliea. and chopped cilantr•
(fresh coriander >.
&ETRl£HIB
.., I
I I
I
I
\
To celebrate ctnco ae 2 table1poon1 red Add beef cubet. onion with warmed corn i '4 cup Jalapeoo tender-crtap. Drain well ~Heupc>Qnaalt conatantl)', until ielatln
••10. bere an reelpea wJne~1.Dffar • and 1arllc: cook, tontUu or bot cooked 1tripa and pour lnto l ·QUlrt t ouncet 1bredd d dltaolv•. Comblne IOUf for a llexlcin·ltYl• l Jar (I ouncH > 1tlrrln1, over medium rice. ~ teupoon 1round nameproof aervtn1 dltb. 1barp Cheddar cbeffe cream, mayonnalH aail
,f•Ht appropriate for All-Purpoae Mnlcan hl1h beat untll meat II IV CCV IN I WI TH corlanoo Top with cheese 1tnpa. i tablespoons finely Worc;H~nblre 11uc91
Y o u r ow D 1 out h . Sauce browned on aU 1lde1. CIDL i,t teupoon lalt Place under broiler juat chopped 1reen pepper 1radulJ.bi tUr ln •elatld,
of· t be . b or def 1 can <• ouncea> Stir In vlne1ar , AHDCllESS f'rethly 1ro1.4nd untll cbeen be1ln11 to 2 hble1poon1 bleodlnt well. Stir lb
ta. tomatoaauce All -Pur~H Mexican <•-t&erY .... ) black1»ppertotute melt: 1erve im· drained chopped remalnln1 tn1redl1nt1.
The menu lncbadea • lcupr.dwtne Sauce. tomato aauce, 1 lb. auccblnl (8-4 \4 pound sharp .,.edlatecy. pimiento Chill mbture untfl
t*tfat.wfeaturin1the tbeyleaf red wlne, bay l•af. medium>, unpeeled, cheddarcheen,cutinto MEXICALlllOLO 2 table1poon1 •lllhtly thlc-eotd. Stir
New World flavors of 1 teupom oresano ore1ano and aalt apd dJeed lbl.ri 1tripe • (AbOa:t 4 C.()9) minced oolon .well and 1poon Into oiled
tomatoH and cblle ~teaapoonaalt pepper. Brin1 tQ boll. l medium onion, Comb l n e a 11' l envelope·UD· l can <' ounces> l ·quart mold. Chitl
pepi>'n: it'• a mildly ~ teupoon freahly Cover cauerol, and chopped inc redlenta except flavored 14'latln diced 1r•en chllea, •ever al hours of'
... aoneddlab. 1roundblackpepper place In p,rehiat•d l clove 1arllc, cheese in saucepan. lc®cOlctwater drained overni&ht to devtlol»
'"" 1~t.y cuterole of 2 tablespoon• 82~·deanMt oven. Bake 2 chopped Cook over Jow ~eat, tcupaouroream Add water to amall flavor. Serve 11 a a\acetlint accented by mlncf4freabpanley to 2V. houri or until 2 medium tomatoe.t, atlrrtn.a occasionally, 10 ~cupmayonnalae saucepa(l; sprinkle spread with auorted
..-.uaot jalapeno chttea Heat oil in lar1e meat II tender. Gamiah peeled, seeded and minutes, or until 1 ,teaspoon Wor-1ela,ln over it. Place crackers or preaent ob
complement. the stew, flameproof casserole. wllb panley and serve chopped i u c c b i n l 1 r e cestenhlre 1auce over low beat, stirring crisp 1reens•s a Hlad. and a 1prt1bUy 1elatin ·~---"'"--------~-----------.,.-----------------'--------------------------~--__:___:. ______ .;,.__....:......:....::..::...:..:. ________ __;_ ______ __;_ ____ -=----.:......::........ ________ ~~•
ereatlon comblnin1
cheese and chiles comes
to the table as an
appetizer apread, to be
served with auorted
cr•ckera, or aa a
refreahln1 salad.
oil
MEXICAN BEEF
STEW
(4-f8entn11> 3 tableapoons olive
2 It.. stewing beef,
cut into l~·lnch cubes
1 large onion,
chopped
2 garlic cloves,
crushed
A tasty
Mexican
chili soup
Stir up a little south·
of-the-border flavor with
this tasty Chili Beef and
Macaroni Soup. A com·
mercial mix for chili
tomato provides lots of
macaroni as well as the
delicious seasonings for
the soup stock. Add
cumi n , canned
vegetables, ground beef
and onion. In 30 lo 35
m in utes, send out the
call that "soup 's on."
CH ILI BEEF AND
MACARONI SOUP
1 pound ground beer
1h cup chopped
onion
1 package mix for
chili tomato
S cups water
Vs teaspoon ground
cumin
'• teaspoon sail
i.il teaspoon pepper
1 can (16 ounces>
whole tomatoes
1 can (16 ounces l
succotash or 1 package
(10 ounces) frozen suc·
cotash
Cook and stir ground
beef and onion in Dutch
oven until beef is brown;
drain. Stir in sauce mix,
water, cumin, salt. pep·
per and tomlltoes (with
liquid ); break up
tom a toes with fork
Heat to boiling. stirring
constantly. l\educe
heal ; cover and sim·
me r, stirring occasional·
ly, 10 minutes. Stir in
macaroni and succotash
(With liquid>: cover and
cook until macaroni is
tender, 10 to 15 minutes
longe r. About 10 cups
soup
Feast on
Mexical
chowder
VOlll IYllYDAY .LOW
I
PllCB8~;1m11r11~ll)
OMATOES
f1RM. RED. Rf>E LB. A
Ll/'\TT e L.85.~se ~ Um1t-teg.Pfk'e .89 LB.>W 1.75-UIBR I.MT 2 (Purchate O\lef llmllftll. pitce 7.59)
l.N!OE. SWE£T FlAllORl'Ul
GROCERIES
1tOLJMCRf.J>lif'IC-AJI American Peanut Butter }99
l&Ol.wt~ Welch• rape Spread .99
f6(),l~~C1.lllE.5 Blue onnet M.rg•rtne .67
~;-~pefr.Drlhk .89
~~":in'g ]59
~~e"M.te Cromer 229
lj()Z rc:N:: P'\M[ MJB Co 201
~'Se'C:.C-}39
UKn~ Cle.ner 114
~m"dowt Cluner ]34
~'t.enn. S•u•-a• .91
-.cD1'1T-~ hmpera pert 789
U:,~pt. Sauce .35
CINCO DE MAYO
FROZEN FOODS
12-0CM'UCAM Snow Crop FM AJlve
~~i:Yt.mu
~lt°occon Cuta
.97
]05
.99
DELICATESSEN
~~~llOl IM.29
tOl fM a.~ 139 Sargento shred. Chedd•r
160l. '9\G.0-!'CAT Ball P•rk Beef Fnnk• 169
~-l'lf~~ Uff-.VPllOI 224 Vons~ ChedCS.r i.a
»« CT'll ,..___ a60l cm 85 Cottag~ Cheue •
PRODUCE
.55
}1!5
u. .25
la .49
MEATS
~~Tteak
~it>'~ka
TA&L~~U!M Beer Cube 5teaka
T..a.t ~ CUl 90rEILSS Family 5te•k•
TMUlll.o~ Beef Chuck Roast
TAM.I.~ Stewing Beef
UI 258
LA 248
UI 248
UI 209
lA }98
UI 209
TMU~CIT~ ]79 Fruh Beef Brtaketa i.a
,.;~oW8p~. LA }49
UICllY'~'*"""Wl8"ST Wl'O 99 Beat 0 Fryer U1 •
~.:;:~,,;i::ti~ka i.a .99
r::~~=OlllWJ' ~ }79
LIQUOR
~~
r.t~s=
I:;. umbruac:o
•
VONS BAKERY
SAVE WITH
EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES
AT VONS
.19
.36
· Just mail the three net weight
statements, your Vons register
receipt and form (1111111lable 11t 1111
Vons stores) to Duncan Hines.
They'll meal you 11 che-ck fOf' $2.401
HOT BAKERY
Ill~ King • H...,.Dan Bread ]19
8PAC:~,,__CNll: POWDERt'.O ~T[O 88 Appleaplce Donuts • 349
ELEGANT STAINLESS FLA1WARE ~,. AT BIG SAVINGSl
ff// ~~~TH~~~ON49 RE0 •• 89 • LA JOLI.A OR PRJNCESS.
Com leter Pieces Also Available At Vons Low Prices ---·-~ 4/~1' '114·,/20 6/IM/24 .49EA.
SALAD F()fU( 4/16-4/22 5/21 '127 6/a 1101 A9 EA.
Dl'ff'fER KNFE ~/~/'29 ~/2U/Ol 7 /f» 7 /C'tll A9 fA.
SOOP SPOOt'I 6/CM~ I 0 7/'19-7/1 ' ;49 EA.
_ ... --
I I
I'''
! i
I
Por the maln Cllab at SChlJetanChot for·~ bi>un. Divide mllllotH and meat. 4 cblle• p11llla• 1plce1 ln th• water. 06110NESCON a tableapd I
your fleata, Ntalote1 10 elo·n1 1arllc, the meat aad place on Garnl1h with freably llahtly to11ted and Seaton to taste . ClllU, Worcettenhl,..Huc.'!h
Coa Came Barbee.,.. or toaated 1quare ol parchment made tortWU and 1erve poached ln .. it.ct water Marinate the meat for 2 CEBOLIA, OIAHT&O t drop1 bot pe.,..r
Blatee..., Chile A.Debo 1 teupooa ore1ano, paper or foll. Gather up with frUolet. SUV• bot. e cloves 1arllc, to a hours. Heat a larte <Oyater C.ektall wltll aauce
y Cbll• PuUJa (ateall toa1t.ct. the 1ldeli to form a 1m1U Serves 12. touted try 1n1 pan Io r 3 o Clllld, Salt to tut.
LD chlle ucbo ua chlle 3 ~le.vet, tout4td bundJe. ne leCUJ'ely. In 81STE~ EN CBJLE 1¥1 larp oolons, cut mlnutea. Add 2 table· oai. aat1a1o& ... > In a 18'1• bowl, ~·
pa1ll1a marinade) art "1a tea1poon cumin a 1teamer, cover wlth ANCRO lD chunkl apoona oU for each steak '8 blue potnt oy1ten blne the ooiom, ~U. fOOd dllOlees. aHd bot water ln lar1e pan. Y CHILE PASILLA 3 cloves •arllc, and heat. Add the 1tew (8 per penon) fr uh cilantro, ~l,
For an appetiUr, you 14 black pepper Cook wiUl meat \1 soft, (8&eak la Qlle ~ello toaa\ed and cook for 1 to 2 1¥1 onlon1, finely oyaten, Juice~ l t
mlltit enjoy 01tloottf con'll approximately 2 to 3 a1141 ~ clnn1mon 1tlck, mlnutea on each aide. chopped juice, the aauceJ dd
Coe Chile, Ce boll a , 2 teupoonl Hit hours. Clllle PUW. Ma.Uade> toasted Set ,aalde. Seaaon with. 2 to 3 .errano cbllet, salt. ,, ~
Cl la n t ro ( 0 )' • te r Put all 1Qped1enta lo (Note: Add addltlonal 12 to H &boulder or 6 pepper corn•. salt. Place on a laree finely chopped Place 1lx oy1~ tO
oclltaU wlth Cbllea, food processor and fine· Wfller, beer or pulque chuck lteakl about \4· toasted warm .er\l'loi diab. ~ cup fretb cllan· lndtvldual eoct 11
ton .:net Cilantro). ly a hop. Add: 3 cup• carefully if needed 10 lncb We~ (aboUt' lbl.) 1 cup water Gamlah with onion rin&• tro, finely chopped glnaea. Cover wttb. e
IUDOTBSCON beef" or pulque (from cooklnc will be even.) Mari.natewttll: 12 to 14 tablespoons and avocado allcea . ~cupollveoll aauce and let 1tand ~
CAllNEBA&BECUE maauey plant). Cover On a large warm terv· 6 cbile1 anchos. oil Serve with potato salad. l ~cupsoyster Juice one hour. Serve la
1 pounda meat, with ·'"'"t_h_e_m_e_a_t _an_d_re_fri_1_e_ra_t_e_in_g_p_la_u_e_r _, _P_la_c_e_t_h_e_U..:;1_h_tly;:.._touted _______ B_le_nd_.!J.b_e _c_hi_l_es_a_nd_Se_rv_e1_1.2.. ________ 111_, _cu_p_li_m_e_Jw_c_e ___ w_it_h_c_ra_c_ke_ra_. Se_rv..;..._.
e (beef rtbl, chicken, •
•rk or lamb), cut ln 3·
~aquuea
24 aquarea (8-lncb >
ixiotea leaves. <from
e masuey plant). Soak
r about 10 minutes un·
1 soft. Or use foll or
archment paper
12 chlles guajillo.
liehtly toasted (slit
.ehiles and remove veins
rst>
4 chiles pasillaa
Nachos
firre hors
d'oeu:vres . '
,: For tasty hor s
-4'oeuvres, here's a half
dozen different nacho
recipes, all easy to pre·
pare.
NAalOS DELVXE
l lar1e bag tortilla
chips .
l pound gro und
meat
l package taco
seasoning mix
Tomato, chopped
Lettuce, shredded
Green onions, sliced
1 pound Cheddar
cheese, grated.
Fry meat until
browned, breaking up
with a fork into small
pieces; drain. Mound
each chlp with meat,
tomato, o ni on a nd
cheese in that order
AVOCADO BEAN
NACHOS
1 large bag tortilla
chips
1 15-ounce can chi li
beans or r anch s tyle
beans , drai ne d and
slightly mashed
1 tablespoon lemon
or lime juice
Hot pepper s auce to
t aste
Salt and pepper to
taste ~ cup grated Ched·
dar cheese
1 avocado, mashed
~ J alapeno slices
1 lh pint sour cream
; Mix beans. juice, bot ~epper sauce, salt and
• epper. Spread on chips
and sprinkle with
~beeae . Broll until
beese bubbles. Top
ilh avocado, s our
ream. onions and
alapeno slice. Ser ve
arm.
ITAUAN NACHOS
1 large bag tortilla
fChips
~ cup prepared
spaghetti aauce
1 poond llalian
sausage or ground beef.
browned and drained
4 ounces Mouarella
cheese
Grate d Parmesan
cheese
Sliced ripe olives -
1optional
Heat sauce, add meat
J and simmer 10 minutes.
Top chipa with thin slice
!Mozzarella cheese.
I Spoon oo meat mixture,
l broil until cheese bub·
Lbles . Sprinkle with
rParmesan cheese and
1 t.op with sltced ripe
1allves. · .
: LACK BEAN NACHOS
1 tablapoon vtneear
I 1i4 lealpoon olive oil I 4 ounces Monterey
I Jack cbeae.1rated , l small onion ,
minced
I
I l lar1e baJ tortilla
chips I 1 l.S-ounce can black
t beans, drained and
I aabed .Uabtly
· Ml• bean• wltb 1
1 vlne1ar and oil. Spread
OD cblpe and top wttb I cheese. Broll until
tib••H bubblea. Cool 1 Uabtlj, , top wltb onion I nd1erft.
! ca~i!.Z:t:::::r.
\ bl~ I 8 OW1Ce1 crabmeat,
I freab, tl"Glliit or c.....S
I • OUDCH cream
1 ctseese.~
1 ,re!~ mt.nc..S
I t tfflllpoam 1ratect
,~ ....
I I ~ bot pepper
1-aUH °' Ills alJ ~A•
' cept ..... ..,. .. 'fnlit· • liaN • dll,.. Bl'Dll ..W ·~--.
Lower' Prices Overal
& 0
-Feliz Cinco De Mayo ..
Save With Dollar Days
& Triple-The-Difference
ALMADEN
MOUNTAIN
WINE
llECTAll llOU. WHITE CHAIUI. IUIMIUllDY OA llHlll(
$
3-LTR. BTL
s
Trlple-The-Difference,------.
Guarantee!
IUY n DlffDDn m•a wotTII 12' 0. •oat AT •MK(T Wltfl. CO•PUE ,_ICU
TMll WUll Gel THE JAltE llEIU AT MY OTMEll COtlYEllflllltAl IUP£HAAltET
IOll&.Y Gift Of EACH ITt• l'UllCHUED •AY II UIH Ill Tiii CO.,AlllSO.) If TIIBa
TOTAl IS LOWH. Hllll YOUll ITfMIZlO MAllllfT Wl((T IHISTEI TUE MD THE OTHU
STOM'I ,.IC:H TO MAllUT IASUT MO Wf Will PAY YOU Tlllf'lf lME DlffPIEllCl ..c .....
LB.
ASSORTED 011 WHITE
NORTHERN
BATHROOM
TISSUE
4$
__ ,.,,__llfl_lf\J_
5 .. 51 EL PATO 4·::51 .89 F"E$H HOT GOLDEN 15 511 CRISP TD•ATO Ull FIJED
CUCUMBERS SAUCE TOWELS ..... CHICIEI NCI -n.1a1 f&ml.YPACI •r ... .... ...... """,_Or--.., ...... .... ......
" Pinto Beans • . 39 B! Cookies 2:..:•1 ~ BBQ Sauce ,..., •1 ~ Chuck Roast ,, 1. 98 1111
c....... ~ -·----,_"'• ..... °'(I-C-1 m1111 flt Tomato Sauce 5::'1 Yogurt 2::·'1 ~ Potatoes n .. , •1 ijt Lamb Heads 2 ... •1 ,,,
~ ............. ~ ........... °' ._: ...... -. 8 z-.i •1 ~ ~sS2 ~ ........ , ........ CttltlifCet ......
Kool·Aid Tyrolia Wine Vegetables 1'4z •1 ~Ham Slices .. 1.99 ,, .. ""' ~. I 1 4-0r T de. """" Or Mllll Mt.#~'t ~ U-01Ct11~·1
Crest Toothpaste ·ti Mustard Ht Tomato Juice
& .....-Clllrl !l! 12.()f II •"'81 IMUI 4 1 ... , "' llllH ....
Cricket Lighters Bleach
.. B+ Jergan's Soap ~ " .
2 tor s1. 3 for s 1 4 tors 1
II-Ct .... , . Clflll I Mr."•· CWtl
Filters Corn Muffin Mix
17-ti.c. ..... .-. Lower Prlce.Over•ll
I I
l
11 have a new career performer. " time; obvlOualy he hu He aaye that almost
• days ln ttachlD1 Escandon 11 tounn1 to always betn • buay any lnc-reclleot • French
rtca.na how to •riJ•>' teach people about peraon. chef would lncorpor.te 1ttoe• (UUle whim• authentic Mexican food Tod1y, Eaeandon 11 Into a canape can be
o Jtlbb&el) u an lnex· ind hll demon1tr1t1on1 known for hi• many uaed. "Yet the round p i11ve, tasty cockt•il ahow the old ways of autbentJc MeXlcan dub· com chip ta.stet lar bet·
a-tetiier. 1rindin1 corn on a •• and he often volun· ter than any cocktail
Thia le the way metate (rectan1ul1r teeratocookforrrteDdl, cracker."
I": tnando 'Escandon atone 1rinder like an whether it be at a He remlnda audiences
a en begin• hh In· over1rown mortar and nei1hborhood fiesta or that the Aztecs and Jn· l ewsuanexperton'I pestle), IOd then con· for an impromptu diana of Mexico in·
hen tic Me x,lc an tr11Un1 thl• with the 1atbertn1. troduced aquash; beans,
. modem eaae of u1ln1 "I remember the dil· corn, chilies, sweet
cUdoo bu been a tortilla chipt, right from ficult labor that my potatoes, chocofate. 1' V a n d r a d i o the packa1e, ln makln1 mother would put into v a n i II a , a v o c a dos .
n ••caster and an· nac .. oa. Nachos are a making her own lortlllaa tomatoes. pineapple,
~lancer. a 1in1 er, derivative of the anto· and I shudder," he says. peanuta and papaya to
I ltarlst, representative jitos <llllle whims>. "Grinding the com on the culinary world.
o the Mexican. •ovem· which ia one name for the metate, paltln1 out C o r n . c h i 1 i e 11 ,
tht internatlonaHy. the '· bp cad i 11 o a'' tortlllaa one at a ttme, 'l<>matoes and beans are
1.S a restaurateur. (mouthfuls> that serve were backbrealcint the staples of today·s lt\ is the latter role as popular one·di1h chorea done veryday. I Mexican kitchen, as
I you probably have m eals and snacks in am loo luy for that. My they have been tor cen·
114tn him on prime time Mexican culture. ways are quick and aim· turiea.
-between shows, that .. We didn't have ap· pie to do. I like lo teach Many people who
i .. -in a tortilla com petizen as such -who people Mexican cookint voluntarily r est rict
clllp commercial. The had time or money for today because it ls meat or need to c ut
rdle is genuine. such luxury?" Escandon healthy, economical and down on meat in their
"I had a restaurant in reminisces. very easy. One can pre. diets rind that Mexican
t t San Fernando One of seven children pare nacho appetizers foods offer variety, at·
valley, not too far from from a farm family, he for 30 people in about tractiveness, good nutri·
njy home, and I cook the turned early to radio one half hour -and tional content and -
bill Mexican n achos and TV as a way out or they will be ouutanding, best of all good taste.
you've ever tasted," poverty Food became a I promise." ... think economy in
••rs Escandon, who lifelong hobby and he Escandon uses lar1e the kitchen is important,
hlbks the s uccessful found himself in the quantities o f fresh too, and Mexican foods
rdle, dressed in a long restaurant business soon avocados, tomatoes, do give a lot or return
sieeved shirt and vest a rt e r com i n g to onion and ripe olives to for low cost."
that is buttoned with California. tum out huge quantities Escandon illustrates
jl!Jt the right touch of in· "We could always eat of nachos "I have also this in the traditional
fdrma l style that lets well this way," he ex· developed new recipes. n acho recipe that is
o* know he has a cer· plains His newscasting some of them quite found all t houghout
t_. flair. He i~. after and TV roles were ac· sop h is l i cat e d , r or Mexico.
al , an ex pe raenced complished at the same cocktail appetizers." <See NACHOS, Pase C8) Chic.ken curry nacho• wUh chili ~r cheeu mackl. b ;::============:=.::================================:::;r-=:.=....:...;.;..:.:..:....:...:..:...--=:...:.__:_---=-~.;__~--".;__~~~~-=--=-=.~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~-y
Denmark-Warmer Cuisine
INTRODUCES
A Las Vegas Night Party Cooking Class
ENTITLED
''LADY LUCK!'
Presented By French Chef Nancy Denmark
CLASS WILL QE OFFERED TWICE
Friday, May 15 -11 a .m . -Sat., May 16 -6 p.m.
For Information Brochure Call 494-9860
RAMSAY :
"EXALL DRUGS :
s1oo . OFF
ANY COSMETIC
WITH PURCHASE
; OF 500 OR MORE
•Max Factor •Revlon
• Arden • Almay
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
[R'Aa11 ]
!t
RAMSAY
DRUGS
: EVERY DAY LOW • : LOW FILM
: DEVELOPING
! PRICES!! • : C.1UH2 up. ......• .sztt•
: C·l~12 Exp. •••••••• sztt•
: C·l~20 Up. ...•..•. 1411•
• C·ll0.24 Exp. •••••••• '4"*
: C.135-24 Exp. ......•. '4" • • • • • •
Kodacolor II
...... Tu
' COSMETICUE
• FINE FRAGRANCES
•GIFTS
2246 NEWPORT BLVD.
(1 BLOCK NORTH OF 22nd ST.)
• PHOTO FINSHING
• HEALTH I BEAUTY
AIDS COSTA MESA
64'97744
q
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flTtll()Ollrt.....,li (MitOt °'1'11"""""''" ,._ tffff ~ '"""' -ttt.....,-i C""""" •111f,iil ~·"'t .,._. , ....... t..·~•IU t'f'"'I ... ._,, , .. , 1 • .., 4-~· (°}'"';'"'•\ t:: I It "rlr"'t',.. ,..,, 01
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I
·Early Spanl1b ••· trted the tortillas crilp p&oNra to Medco found and bad ~daa.
covertd tbem wttb
refried bean• or
auacainol (made from freab avocado•> and served them a~ any time
ol the day at their many
fieatu.
chaa,ea. They have
becom workl famous u
welcom nlbbla.
BA A&FAST _,., cup tour cream, four parts and spoon
.. pound (l cup> 1uacamole or taco over the cbips. Cover l tarce baa tortJJla
chips bulk pork 11uu1e sauce. with ~ cup shredded
t a ma 11 on I on , Fry lhe pork aausa1e cheese.
chopped ' over medium beat in • Cook the e111 11 you t c-ounce can a~en small fl')'inl pan, •Ur· wl1b: Poach, fry or
chlUes, diced rina at intervals. Add scramble. Spoon the
1 pound irou11~ meat
1 packate ta~o
aeaaonln1 mix
lb• Ast.a had a "Itta· On tM tottadaa, tbe
blt new to tMm. tt wu Spanith uHd cbeeH
calle4 corn or mal••· products, their 1plce1
The natlves made th• and meat and Mexican
core into •mall round cblll••· tomatoea or
dlak• oalled tortlllaa, bean•. Tbe Spanl1b
wblcb were eaten 11 called tbeae new
tbelr ''dally bread." tortlllu antUitail, ''Uttle
TortlUa1 • contlnue to wblrm or ha.ri.kerlnt1."
be the daily bread in a They ate tbem at 1n·
Mexican diet four. bun· terxall durtn1 the day. dred yean later. Now Tfle Mexican •Uves
they provldt tM baste liked tbe to1tad11,
tnaredient for ap· added\hem to their dal-
petlien, breakfaat or ly fare u "bocadlllos,"
brun~h me1JU1, and din· I
Throi.llJI tbe lut one bu.ndred yean, tortilla derivauves with dlf.
ferent forms have bad
m oy names :
q utudlll••, totopoa.
1pop11, cbal~pes, nacho., toctJtoa. Their
•eraatillty hu been
useful for menu-
Astec tradition con·
1ldt[td com to bt a sift
of tbe aod or crop1.
Notbm1 wu ever to be
wuted if one would
keep the favor of the
1od1 and lnlure-~rope.
Hence, any on, Of the
tortilla dorlvatives can
t.o be tef ried, touted or
bakect and provide &ood
eatln1 and 1ood, nutri·
lion.
NACHOS FOR
4 cupe tortilla chips, cbof'ped onion and saute cooked eus on top of
each broken into 2 or 3 unt f onion ls Uahtly the tortilla chip mixture.
pieces browned. Drain o1f fat., Cover wlth addltlonal
2 CUJll mlld cheddar Add lhe drained, dJced shredded cbee1e. Place
o r J a c Ire c h e e 1 e , chWes, thl'oUlh and set the baktnt dlshes under
shredded a1lde. Put l cup of a preheated broiler until
4 to 1 e111 (1 or 2 tortilla chip pieces into cheese melll. Serve at
per servln1> each of four 1.,., to 2-cup once with chosen top·
'h cup sliced ripe baklnt dishes. Divide pings. Makes 4 se.rvln1s.
olives the aamaee mixture into COCKTAIL CHAL\JPAS
Tomato, cho~ Leu~. 1bftd~ r
Green onions alittd
. l pound Cheddar
cbeeae, irated
Prepan; meat accord-
in1 to pacta1e dlrec·
tlons . Mound eactr
tortllla chip with meat,
tomato, onion aod
cheese ln that order.
ner cauerole ln homes L around the world.
Aatee corn waa
deac:ribed a1 a tall
slender plant known for
thousands of yean, at
flrit wild and later
cultivated. When the
Spaniards arrived, there
were corn kernels of
red , blue, white or •
mixed colors. White
corn kernels were the !
choice of the natives for 1
tortil1as. I
The com kernels were · soaked in hot water and I
limestone for a day to ·
soften the hard shells.
Women used a mano or ·
mellapil (hand atone) to
grind the com kernels •
on a rectangular three-
lened slab, (known as a .
metate), to make the
masa, a son , pasty
dough.
The Spanish who set·
tied in Mexico brought
with them from the Old
World oil, wine, rice,
wheat, spices, peaches,
apricots and cattle (for
beef a nd dairy prod-.
ucta). They learned to
make com tortillas and
then made tort.illu from BONELESS wheat flour. With the
Spanish oil. they ROUND STEAK
greased the coma ls and '"'cut 90flOecl ... ,
• · ·Nachos BLADE CUT
<From Paie C'I) CHUCK ROAST "It can begin any par· eonoea Bftf ty with a good number
.98
of appetizers for little
cost and with flavors "ROUND that will please almost u
everyone. Then, if one BEEF
wishes to get fancier, HD 11t1g Of' MOr•
there are variations of OOft Not Exceeo '°"Fat
119
lD
this nacho that will be --------------
very popular. You can LA IM""E END 198 present a whole nacho KU
party with different top· RIB ROAST ping combinations. And eonoea 9ftf
be sure to have on hand
a generous supply of
cerveza (Mexica n
beer)."
TRADITIONAL
NACHOS
l large bag tortilla
chips
BEEF
BACK RIBS
1 can refried beans I BONELESS
8 ounces Cheddar RUMP ROAST cheese, grated
1 am a it jar s Ii ced Slr106ft cut 10nOeO ..., 1tOunO
jalapeno peppers
Spread each tortllla CROSS RIB ROAST
chip with beans, mound -..n--•-
U>
.98
U>
179
LD
.. 2.08 with cheese and top with
slice of pepper. Bake 350
de1rees for 5 minutes or !!.~~~,t!~ULDE~ ROA.~T .. 1.08
untll cheese is melted. T·BONE STEAK
Serve hot. .. 2.58 --~-ONION NACHOS
1 large Bermuda
onion, finely chopped
~!!~OUSE STE~K .. 2. 68
3 tablespoo n s
mayonnaise
Salt
RIB EYE STEAK _ ......... .
PORK LOIN ROAST -°" ll8 ave~ .
.. 3.48
... 1.48 freshly ground black
pepper
1 bag tortilla chips
Chop onions, add
~~~::~ s_~vL~ SPAR.E.RI~~ .48
mayonnaise, salt and e.9.,~K LOIN CHOPS
pqper to tute. Spread
mixture on tortilla chips PORK LOIN CHOPS
and broil until bubbly. , ~CUT .... , • • • ... • •• .. •
NACHOS DELUXE FRYING CHICKEN
1 large bag tortilla ae-& _, --•
.. 1.88
... 2.08
..... 55
chips ounpen ... Crab•. 1 pound ground WHO ECOOKIO.,AOZEN L.8
Frnh Rainbow Trout. AVAll.AllL.E meat THUAI . ,,,.,,. IAT. ONL.Y ... ,o oz. 1.a
1 58
. 138
2 18
2.48
1 package taco Stewing Bfff, IONEL.Ha 1.1
seasonlna mix !·Z Cut Cube Steak. IONOID HE, I.I
tomato, chopped Italian Sauaaae. ,.,.HH. lettuce, shredded HOT 01'1 MILO. Cl • . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . 1 91
areen onions, sliced Turkey 8rHSt, L.OUll AICH, 'AllH. I.I 1.18
1 pound Cheddar Turkey Drumetlcka or Winge. cbeeae, grated 1.ou11 "•CH. '"'''"· ~a. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . II
Fr 1 me a t u n ti I Pork Link tau .. '", flllHH. 1.1 ......... 1.39
brown1!d, brealdn& up Lad~ L" Slloed a.con, 1 LI. ll'IC.G. •••••• 1.21
with a fork into 1mall
pieces, drain. Add taco
aeaaonlnc mix, Mound
l/011,,·fto/1/ c.\ ,,,.,
each tortllla chip with ZFA(tAL TISSUE 51
meat, tomato, lettuce, IC&'l'O .................. •CT-•
onion and cheete ln tbat A.TOILIT TISSUE 85 order. ..-IC&'I'&_. cmc&EN cvaaY . . ......................... .
v. ~~~ 1barp ~ l==~~~~~ ........ ••~.59
Cheddar c.beele, 1Tated 1 lPAPll PLATES 4 1reen onion•, : ,... 1 65 mlncedftne .................... 1uu• •
powl:r "upoona curry 1~~~~.:-8:. .............. 1.•
1 I~ ounce can lLtcwld DeetNen.,t. l.Ml't,t-11 M
boned cblcten, dralned, :'*°"~ r:.,•~;i;~;;q:···· ·
and 1hredded z .. ~ ............................... 1.t1
4-5 drops Tabaaco lL.edy Lee ae..oh. Leouto. GAL. en.. .. . .M Sauc~ cupma7onaiiff '~~!.~~ ............. ·•1
1 .,., tortilla dllpt
CbutaeJ, opt.lOQal
Comblla• cbeeae,
on ioDt and cu rr1
powder. Sdr ta bOMd
cblchli, \M4 Ta-= ad .., I I ll'lie &o =.ts•J:er· str•acl on .......... ............... ........ ..,.
!TORTILLA
CHIPS
l8dY I.ft ltegul¥ TllCO
fl'NKhO
!LADY LEE 117
CRAPE JUICE
.007 ltt
pSTRAWBERRY 159
6PRESERVES
llldY .... J2 oz JM
f'LADYLEE 19 6BEVERACES •
It~ Of' Diet t Nvon 12 07 ~
f'SALTINE 55
6CRACKERS •
L.aely lff 16 01 80•
l~:!.!-..~~c~~ .. -.. 01o• .. 39
!!,~~ET_ PEAS .,01 "'"•39
A~~~~~,£~,ES . no1 ca...59
l~~~f!!~R!J~&l JUICE .. oi CM• 79
l!!!~R~~~-~~~~S so or ca... 69
.(COCOA MIX IAID't.. . ....
l~~1.~ .8.~.~~ .c~.~~~Lo1 '°.1. 3 7
.t~~T-~~~TAIL ...... IOOHAlh 75
A~~ICO! HALV~_S .. noi<Alt.59
l~~~~.J.~ICE ............ t•oun .. 89
l~~~~=~T~.. moc.99
l~~~S~~-~-~ .. ,.01eo •• 69
.(~Y L~E _c~_FF~E ... sl8c.5.99
1~iSU1!.~~~··· .... •oa eow 1.19
l!j!~~!.~~~~~~C?.Ol\0Me69 lL•~Y l" Meyonna1 ... UOZ..JAfll .... 1.14 l L•dy LH Corn 011, 4t oz an. . . . . . . 1.15
l f~~'i: ~/11/l'o'' ~~~~. ~~-~· ....... ~ .... 88
1 g~ngf~~z~~:: ....................... .. 1 lnchlleda 8auoe, ~ ~14.MAI. H OZ CAN .. . .. .. .. .. . . . . . 71
l ~~~.~:c:,,~t~: .................... 15
l ~r.:.'1.·~oT!/.U~.1~~:................... ·"
lf:~~1l':'r~" ., .................. 1.H l L.ady L" 8ptneoh, 11 OZ. CAH . . • • • . • • • .H
)
f'WHIPPED
/>TOPPING
LMIY I.ft Non Oatry n oz Ctn
pCOMBINATION '79
6~~~!!.~~~ES • ,,o, ·~
O< Orienta! StV!e
}'COTT ACE
6CHEESE
Lady LM
149
J2 Oz Ctn
LLADY LEE PEAS >001 ""'•65
L~~_E,UET CHICKEN I007 I0•4. 79
A STOUFFER'~ LASAG~.e .. G 2. 29
r Mar-kes Taqu1tos
6 BEEF 11 "'>OZ BOX
r Cnlcken Encli1lada,
6 CAES T "· 9 7~ O Z BOX
r Ch1m1changa Bum to. 6 CRESTA. 6 26'"0 Z BOX
r Minute Maid Lemonade
" AEOUL.AA QA PINK 12 oz CAN
, 19
1 79
1 79
57
pCHEDDAR
oCHEESE 129
L.aOV I.ft ""° toz PWg
p MONTEREY 129
bJACK CHEESE udv .... '07 Pkg
pLADY LEE
bBISCUITS .19
llln«ll"lllll Of IWaetmlMr 1~or can
A~!?.~. l~~ F~~N-~S ,,oa-1.09
l~M!~~~ ~~~~.5~.~.21.89
'~J.S~~!.~SE . IOI -1.19
l Mouarella Ch .. H , 1.AOY 1.H IHAIOOIO, I OZ '"KO . . . .. . . .. . . .. .. Uilt l Cheddar ChHH , 1.AOY L.H
IHllllDOIO .• oz ,.l(Q . . • . . . . 1.29
l~~i t:~o~n~ '-"~".~·~. SL.ICI~·... • 1.48
l ~~:'er;~~ o~~~~\~~: .~~'.~~~-~-~ ~·. . . . 1 .49
l tt8l ~~ ~~~·~.1: -~~~~~~-~~~~~.~ .... 1.41
'l<nockwurat, l.AOV I.II. ll°OZ ,.KO 1 •9
l ~·ci0~t&u~~~~·. ~~~ ~-~~: .......... · .. 1.41
l ~t~I~ .. ,~~~.~~~" ~~~.~ ~.~~: . . . . . . . . . . . . , .ae 1 Hot Link lauHQ•. I.ADY Lii, 11 oz. ~Q • . • .. .. • .. .. • • • • • • • • • • .. • .. • • • 1.111
•
r:
J>rolluce
FRESH .18 CORN
Sweet ano reno.r 880 Un u cn
•Trimmed ,, eacn1
HASS LARCE .25 AVOCADOS
CatlfOrnla'S Flne\t ucn
DELICIOUS 39
APPLES •
GotOef'I w.snington htra Fancy U>
SWEET 49 CANTALOUPES •
lb
RADISHES OR 19
CREEN ONIONS.
PINTO
BEANS us. No,
auncn
.39
U>
LIQll« .., • ._ ontv 11t nor"*"" tlQl.or ~ ·l~!!.9UIS xx BE~~Ol l f\S 2.69 I
AS~ANAOA WINE ,, .... n 1.89
l~~IDE~~ ~R~~.~~n 14.89
.(~._!AZ TE~UILA '"''••n 7.99
l L• Pu Mergerlta, MIX .... oz 8TL. . 1.89
NICE 'N EASY l&CM2.99
101 3.29
l~·v·~· c.~~SULES 1n 2.99
A~~~.1.'!'.~~-! ~~~~.'..~ ...... •an 5. 6 9
A~TEET~-~OHESIVE ioa 1.39
l~~ ............. 011.89
1 ~~~--~~~ ~.~~~.. .. . . ..... 1"• 99
l ~~!!4J ............. MOl 1.89
1 !Se~~.~~~~~ .1.1 ............ 1.19
'~~~~.!~.~ ....... ft 1.39
' -
ripe oat~ · ENCRllADAI I a com toi'tlllu I t:frtnla lnto rema1Dln1 1 TACK I• JO.quart H\IHran, 1 paclafe eacbllada Combine enchtlalla hot •ncbUada •auce.' ~ to ~ po up d
browa rice ID bot ol m:l·1 11ueemlx 1 sauce m111, ~mato put.e Plato aboUt ~ euo beef cooked, boned and tU 1olden: •tlr often. 1 tan (I ouncea H Hd water In .. u::ct.aia,j mixture in center of shredded chJcte.n a move from Wat. stir tomato PNte ' Brint to a boll, ce each tortilla. Fold 1ld 1 p1cll:a1e chlckeo
ln w•ter and Mexican~. 3 cups water heal u d eJmmer, un·' of tortilla over ftlli1'11 taco aeUOftina mix
rice aeaaonlns mix : 1 ~ sroUDCS beef covered, u minutes. and plac. In dlah, seam 1 C\.IP water
blen4 tboJ'OUlhly. Brln1 l teupoon '9d0fted Brown 1rcn01d beef wttb aide down. POur remain· 1 can (8 ounces)
to a boll. reduce beat, salt j 1ea1oned aalt uotlJ In 1 •au c e over tomatoaauce cover and elmmer 20 1 pacuie (10 to 12 crumbly. Dralo fat; encblladH. Sprinkle 4 com tortUlu
minute.. Gently tUr in ouncet> Cheddar or cool. Combine all but 1 with remalnln' 1 cup 1 can W4 ounces) remaininl illsredienta; Monterey Jack cheese, cup cheese with beef. If cheese. Bake Jn 350-chopped ripe olives
co v er an d he a t 1ratect <about 2~ to J desired. add ripe olives,' deiree oven JO minutes 1 can (• ounces>
tboroucbly for 3 to 5 cups) drained. Pour~ cup of 'or unW tborou&bJY bot. whole creen c bllu.
minutes. Makes about 1 un (2V• ounces> prepared enchilada Makes ' sel'Vin11 of 2 rinsed anti seeds re·
3\4 cuos. . sliced ripe olives, op· sauce into shallow bak· enchlladu eatb. moved
BEJ,:f AND.CHEE81: tlonal lo1 diab . Dip each CBIC&EN TOaTILLA 1<SeeBVFFET, Pa1eClt> -. I'm Trying To ·Make Sure •••
<>,Mn Dolly I o.m. to lO p.111. limit riQhts '-*·
Nobody's Grocery Prices are
Lower Than Ours!P~~~ No So'-' Iv D.o!.t1 Thk od only .tfecfi..,. ot Hughet El lto11<llo
ond Hvohef Lido
WI WILCOMlfOOD ITAMltl .... l'-18
U S 0 A Choice lleef Ch11c~
O·BONE ROAST
0ofl Not Eaceed 22% Fat
LEAN GROUND BEEF
LS 1.69
LS 2.19
U S 0 A Choi<e Bonelttu Beef Cnuck Rolled
SHOULDER CLOD ROAST. LI 2 .•9
ELRAtlCHO
SLICED BACON
RANCH
STYLE '8.1.09
Louro Scudder 7-ot . /1.111
TORTILLA CHIPS. .85
16·01 Kroh Znty ttolion or
CUCUMBER DRESSING 1.35
OROWEAT MUFRNS
6-0Z
6 PACK
WHEAT BURY 9c
MtsH <MADI A CHIC1t1N
IRYER
·BREAST
U ~.D A Oiot<• .... Chl#d.
7-BONE ROAST
US 0 A ChoKe Grode A' Hond Cul
18 1.29
FRYER WINGS La.59
~I Ooes Not b.CMd 15% F01
CHOPPED BEEF STEAK l8 2.•9
s 29
LB.
US 0 A Grode 'A' F1ei h Fry1n~
CHICKEN LIVERS LS 1.29
El Rancho Doe\ Nol Eaceed JO% f01 for Ch.lo
COARSE GROUND BEEF LS 1.59
11 Rmocho O•r11 R,.odv
HAM LOAF 18 1.89
El Roncno SwHt or Hot I •9 El RonchO'Por~ & S..0$0n1n9
ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE ts •• BRATWURST
LB.
ta 1.•9 rF~R;E~SH::N;EW::;~~N~G:lA:N:o;-------~~illl!illlll?:iii~C---------1~~-2~-9~--
CHERRY ST ONE CLAMS ..... .ts. •
11 2.19
f•o1 0.lro•Ood Cool'od & r..i..i
COCllTAIL ...... l•'·" F101 O.tto\Md c .n .. , Cv'
SWOltDflSll ITIAU
l l 2.99
~·-··
99
UMIT
2
l '2-01. Snwdt"" 11-01. Dote •Appl. • Rosp , Molhef't
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ......... 99 BAKERY WAGON COOKIES ..... 99
48-oz Chilled Vito Polit 12 Pit I 2-01 Cont
ORANGE JUICE ........ : ...... 1.29 COCA COLA • SPRITE ...... 3 .C5
NIBLETS CORN ....... ~·!~~~~~~~ ..... 37c
1().01 '2'2-01 Teouie Trt99••
SUNSHINE CHEEZ·ITS . ... . ....• 7 5 SPRAY & WASH .......... 1.65
3'2-01 Ch1ll.d Howo11'• Own
GUAVA NECTAR ....................... 79
[1'1!amt1!)
750MI
1taUIDlllTI
BaAllDY . .6.89
750 Ml Reody To Serve Club
MARGAllll A .. . . 2. 98
750·MI Reody To s.,_ Club
ftQUILA ................... 2.98
1 I•"'' II~ e o,.1e L19h1e Atpen
PEPSI COLA... . . .. . . ...... .. 1.39
Q!li !iii?ri/dii I~
AQUA FlllSH ... ~,, 6 '·or 1.19
Normol e Tint e X·Body e 0.ly. REVLON
FLIX SHAM•OO . . 16-oz 1.59
Oily• R99. • l).y• X·Body. lte"'9n
FUX co•mo•••. 1t>-oz 1.59
12·01. Firm• Notvrol• UnKented RIVLONFUXUaAY ...... 1.7•
~---r111co DI MAYA---...
IO-o1. CouM Lawry's Green Quit 7 Or
3 Doren Pod!
Moll. f,.d Plom or 8rl'oded Son"'""
CU BED VEAL CUTLETS
Milk fed
GROUND VEAL ROUND
Mol~ f,.d for w.,.n .. r\chml1f'I
BONELESS SLICED VEAL
lS •• 99
l8 2.99
l8 5 .99
BONELESS
SLICED VEAL
IOIN & ROUND CUT
MllKFEO 5 99 FOR
SCAllOPINI &
PARMESAN 1.8. •
'22-01 T "99.,
FANTASTIK 1.09
'22-or Window Cleoner
GLASS PLUS wflrt9g•r 1.25
CLOROX BUACH
GAllON 79c
TACO 59c ORTIGA 49c IHILLI. .. SALSA .... l'fJ,:1c145 c CORN 75c TORTILLAS .. 12-01. SvprM>O e ltonchwo
LA VICTORIA SALSA ................ 89
'2-oL MJ.11. , 5 9 01. ' 69 •o•ro11 HONIY BUMI........ .. . .. ........
4 Eon GrHn Giant 1 09 coa11011co•........ .............. ............ •
'2 lb. 6og lt~ular or Cnnkt. Cut 1 09
OllUDA FlllllCH Falls . ........... •
'2-lb. 9og 1 09 HUDAC ... KUCUTI ............... •
280z. Toh<Nt 3 09 IWAlllOll CHICKlll................... . •
LOllG GRAlll RICI ................... I • 5
8 Yi -01. Ch1111ky
LAWRY'S TACO SAUCI ...... ~ ..• 69
KIRll'S APRICOT lllCT AR ... 89
--RODN °'-..... • 10.0& 12 ......... 0....•"'--
caDTA VAllDIU•
INCIF *DM 1.59 D•••n ......... 93
FANCY FRESH RIPE
8 Ot Sar~to Chffte
SHalDDID ClllDDAa .
Hughet lt99. Cut Rondon! Wei9hn • Monw ey
IACllC .....
........... 1.29
L82.28
16-01. 1000 Island 1 . 09 •OB'I DRUSlllG ............ ..... .......... . •
13-01.Chub 3 .a GAU.O IALAMI ............... ................... • • ...,
T-ot. 1 69 D.-eDOMOGW*M.................. •
' ORIGON
PIPPllll
WHITI
CABBaGI
CillllllY
TOMATOll
• ~ pou"d 1rated
f. Monterey Jack or Ched·
; dar t'beeae ..
In a larte aklllet com·
" blne cbtcken, chicken 1 taco aeasonln• mix,
· water and tomato sauce.
Brln1 mlxtu~ to • boll,
• reduce heat and ~tm·•
• , mer, uncovered, 10
, minutes. Coat a 2-quart
cauerole dish with ~ veaetablc spray. Dip
one tortilla ln chicken
mixture. Place torttlla
in bottom of casserole,
top with ~ of chlckeq
mixture. Sprinkle with
-\4 of cheese and top with
a tortllla.
Layer the whole chilea
on •top of tortilla.
Sprinkle with olives, re·
servine 2 tablespoons
for aamish. Sprinkle '·•
of 1rated cbeese over
oli vea. Top with tortilla,
remaining chicken mix·
lure, 1/4 oC grated cheese
and the last tortilla.
Garnish with .:emaining
chetse and chopped
olives. Bake, uncovered,
in 350-degtee ·oven 15 to
20 minutes. Cut each
slack in haU to serve.
Makes 4 aervlngs.
BEEF TACOS Mezican bu/fett featuring burritos, nachos , tacos, JU?sta nee. chicken tortilw
l poWld ground beef and beef enchiladas.
1 package ( ~ 11. • r
ou.nces) taco seasoning ounces) teco seasonihg ,,,....-------------==-====;:-... mix mix
l cup water t cup water
1 package 00 count> 1 package tostada
taco shells shells
1.Ai head iceberg let· I can (1 pound >
tuce. shredded refried beans heated ·~ to ~ cup grated 2 quarts' shredded
Cheddar or Monterey iceberg lettuce
Jack cheese ~ pound Cheddar
2 tomatoes, chopped cheese, grated
. C~opped ~r shced I onion, chopped or
npe olives, opti,onal thmly sliced
. Avocado slices, op 2 tomatoes, chopped
t1onal 1 can (2~.a ounces)
Chunky taco sauce sliced rip olives. drained B.rown ground beef 13 pint dairy sour
until crumbly; dram Cat cream optional
Add taco seaso~ing mix Bro~ ground beef un· an~ water. Bnne to a til crumbly; drain fat.
b.oll, reduce heat and Add taco seasoning mix
simmer, uncovere~ .. 15 and water; bring to a
to 20 minutu or until hq· boil reduce heat and
uid is absorbed. Heat s1m,;,er uncovered 15
taco shells in 350·degree to 20 ,;,inutes. Heat
oven 5 minutes Fill toslada shells in 350·
shells with beef fllllng ; degree oven J to 5
top with lettuce. cheese· mmutes to cnsp Spread
a nd tomatoes Add a scant '"' cup refried
olives and avocado slices beans on each tostada
if desired Top with shell. Top with a scant
c hunky taco sau ce. '" c up taco meat.
Makes IO tacos Garnish with lettuce,
cheese, onion. tomato
TOSTADA and olives. Top with sour
I pound ground beef c r e a m . 1 r des 1 r e d
1 pa c k age CI 1• Makes 10 tostadas
IRVDm MEAT CO.
Specializing In
FRESH ·PASTA
• Fettuccine • Ravioli
• Linguine • Lasagna
• Cannelloni • Sauces
• Antipasto Trays
Italian Delicatessen
Sandwiches • Catering • Deli
THE PASTA MACHINE
427 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach
0 494-3150
crunchy New snack!
Now Available in
\Our Favorite Store
New Country Crackers are
now back on the shelves of
your favorite supermarket.
So for a snack cracker taste
that's country style, get the
great new taste: Country
Crackers. There's stone
~ ground corn, cracked wheat,
: and rolled oats for a country
~ good taste that will make
! you smile.
r--~---------------~ I '~--" SAVE 15¢ "' "''" 15' I
I ~ IOIH£AflAILIA ·P "• 10 .. •1••"''" I 1 , ' 01v1 ' •01 "'""'1'"0 .. ri,,,.., \j CQ"'O'r
A'+ln ,j,., ltl•F\\ ,, y 1•1"1•' IDDj•loi1 CM ro , •• I 'u1,.'i 11•ull t • '' 0' '""~ 1ult11 " • pur I ~•v 11~ \ o· Olili, 1 li.o~t •uCI "\
I
I
I
""'\r 'P!J 'tlu\' b1 ·~· jt1ll" 11• hfl' I .,
tl',ji" r i) C ~ "11 •
COUl'O~ U"AIS Al'All JO IH1 I I 44000 103000 . 15( I
~------------------~
....-
HOW •.• ~ Hu'4-ti"'qtot\, B&o.dtl ~ FOut\to:"~ Vo.\\~ ...
67.-ltUi/L 'PRODUCE!
..
8y MITZIE ULL&• a cbeenfull 41 morry tb•C'OilPW&omtll••vUof w•4ldln1··1Uppen to preeloul a-. Mt f\IU
U you're plannlnt a Bn!U;'! an a.ahor '*id dt.conf.!! a11un thelnHlve1 that w Ith T wt I 1 of
ad•ance; one of frnb her~. the dt.Y before. But prepare MV nl tlaru ta
advanceforpraetlc..<Or
order oao from a fior1.Jt: or Maloel)'·Herb1, 21t
Cumberland, We1tboolt,
Malne.)
lune weddllli. wby llO lDU25:eobrideah:werted Ro~ waf!bown eacb would aJway1 Rosetnar)',t'acuat11td.
in v He tudltloD al 1pd11 of baall l11to aa tb• Lo_yaltJ Herb. remalDfalt.hfUI. Other brldet wore tluu bleasinp fot tJapplnet• bouqUllta. Fidelity Herb and Attendantt urryln1 too.
wbtch tpme herb• BayleafwutbeM4lD'I Remembraaee Bub. 1prl11 of roHm&ry Combine fU1J 1pri11 of rep1,1teclly~1nbrtri1. Herb: to lfO'.C)ml wore Al Sbaalpeare Hld lD flanked the coupJ,, at the each weddtu herb when Start 1~in1 tboH apris• in their lapel for ff am let, .. Tbere'1 alttrtol.bit• Roxbul'lb maldn1 a tiara. Twitt
herbs toda to you'll marltalb.U.1. Roaemary; that'• for ballad, "Yount man and metal twines around •
have fresh, ult spri11 of CbervU. "the Herbe of remembrance." Peo~le mtld do reJdy •land, bunch, tbeP aeeure tbem
Kint, a !avorit.e herb or
the aoda of Mount
Olympus, wu alao an
herb ol Venus, the Love
1oddess.
theoneayou'Uneed, Joye, ii cheerlni t.o the believed any mao who with Sweet Rolemary ln unto a covered boop
You'll want 1prt11 to 1plrlt1," Job.n Wesley coo1tantly remembered tbelrbandl." • wblcb flta your bead.
tuck into your bouquet, (1703· ,.1 > reminde.d a lady would forever be Aon e of Cle v • • Includefte1bflowen.
some for attendanta to brides, who Jlncluded loyaltohet! (15U·a7 ), when >he Use eltber dried or
wearj leav~s lo ..-11>rl•11nbouqueta. Brld,1 and •roomt married Kln1 Henry fresh 1prt11. Prepare • C•ll 142-1111. ~nslde your weddtn1 Since dill "hindered slipped leave• of VIII,woreonherhead''a tiara of dTled herbs Putat•wword•
slippers, some to 1trew ,..~W'..!.it~c!!b!:es~t~ro~m~th~e~ir~w=:i~ll~.'_' ..!.:~.=~:._~:.:..:~:..:_~~~~~~~~~~r~o~1!e~m~a~r!y~in~t~o~t h~e~l~r~c~l ~r c::l~e~t_o~f~1~o~l~d~a~n~d_:•_:•.:_v~e~r'._.'.a:_:l~w~e:_:e _:k_:•_.ll ,:n___.:::::::::::'::0 ::wo::r::k::f::or:=o::u.::::_ over the dance noor.
And wby not wear a
Uara or weddin1 herbs,
with or without a veil!
a asil, bay leaf, chervil,
dill, marjoram, mint,
pars ley and rosemary
were listed as wedding
herbs.
• · Basill doth procureth
South of
border .
elegance
91 ve an elegant dinner
south of the border on
your own patio or lawn.
Rum Carrot Soup;
s h owy; chilled and
enh a nced with rum ;
m akes a co l o rful
starter Follow it with
Seviche, a classic Latin
recipe in which risb is
marinated in lime juice
until it is "cooked," then
served with a vocado
slices and additional
li me . For a zest y
partner, try Rum
Glazed Steak. Topping It
off, a rich, rummed
coffee. accompanied by
fru 1 t 1n season and
delicate cookies.
RUM CARROT SOUP
l pound carr ots,
pee led and sliced
5 cups chicken broth
1 cup light rum (80
proofJ
• 4 teaspoon salt
1 8 teaspoon pepper
1 cup thinly sliced
onion , separated into
ringe
1 teaspoon curry
powder
1 small clove garlic,
minced
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine
1 1':1 c u p s p I a i n
yogurt
112 c up s hre dded
carrot
Cucumber slices
In large saucepan ,
combine ca rrot s,
chicken broth, rum, salt
and pepper. Bring to
boil, reduce heat and
simmer 10 minutes or
until carrots are tender.
Process carrots until
smooth . Return to
saucepan Add onion
mixture . Blend i n
yogurt Add shredd ed
carrot. S imm e r 5
minutes; do not boil.
Garnish with cucumber
s lices. Makes 8 to 10
lphs --Double Coupon
Pt-I IM t°"pOn •IOft9 "'"' .,., -,,..,,.,,_,,..,.,.
c..,,. o!I tOUpOn and 941 "°""'-,,.. ..... not .. ~.n ~OU
Du<tn•M ,,,. •tem Not 10 WICluM ·-''" "' pt-~
purcn•M couPont Of••~ Ille•""• Ol ll>e ~•m E.cCl"O..
hQllOf IOl>MCO 1"41 nUld m•lll PIOCIUCI•
Limit One n.nt '-~.,.. Coupott
llftd Limit a Double c~ hr CllMomtf
~ l!ftectM ••• Ith ..., .. 1111
Pr-in.. COUPOll .io,,. *"" .,.,, -...,,ulec:W<.,, t~ oil C°"l>Ofl M4 g4I CIOll!N ... eewitt -,OU pu•t.~ .. 1"9 ,,..,. NOi IO "'Cl-··-··"''" or· grocery
Pll!t."-M cou_."' •~IN.,..,.. Of llM wm IM:luoe1
"Clll"' 1ooecco •"<I n11oe1 m•I• proel~
Limit OM lteM ,_ Mwlfl1Dt•er .. C«MlpOft .-'""""a o.-.. c....-,., c........, c~ 1!"9ctlM •· ao tllfU .. ., •· 1111
• .ICes
,.,, ... '" o''' couPon 11ono .,..1n •f\'1 Of\4 Man1r1tac'"'..-'
~ta ott c.OuPG" ano gt:t CIOu~ tt'le M••nQt ·~n you
p""tCf'l&M tr'\ot! ~tem ~Otto t~Oe refa..., ,, .. Of' gtOCet)
ou,ef'I... covoon1 0t ••end'"-_..1~ ~ tne item l •c•ua.s
Q1i,10t 100.CCO And lf\l>O ft"l•I' 0'~\I
Umff One Hem hr M~· CoupcNt Ind UINt a .,.... CCMIPOM ,., CIMComer
Coupoft UMtlM •· IO tfwu Mar I, 1111
PLllNWRAP..
Approx. 5 Lb. Chub
USDA Choice
Beef Chuck
.. USDA Choice
.Beef Chuck-81._de Cut
USDA Choice
Beef Chuck
Ground
Beef
7-Bone
Chuck Steak
• USDA
CHOICE • 39
Ralphs-Mild Cheddar Cheese or
Monterey
Jack
It 8oz.
pkg.
·09
Corn-Pkg. of 12-Mlaaion or Relph•
~·Es'-ecial'' 1 Tortillas
11'oz.
pkg ••
Chuck
Steak
Boneless
Chuck Roast
per
lb .•
•
per
lb.
Flret of the Seaaon 4 4 9
Fresh Chinook Salmon r::~
PUINWBIP
Refried Beans
Ralpha-"Buena Comida"-Cheddar
Longhorn Cheese
15oz. 45
can •
per
lb.
Ralpha-Golden Premium-Aaaorted Flavors
1/2 gal.198 Ice Cream ctn.
Ralphs-Berry or
Peach Pie • '"~h 159
Vine Ripened
Salad Tomatoes :~.39
Ralpha-2-We,
~ir Freshener each• 79
80 Proof
Seagram's Gin 1.1s11r.1059
btl.
1 JtJN& aore POAOIED SALMON of a fl1b poacher or rowroot apoon eome ol the hot rosemary aeblevect. Makn ' Hrv·
Food HDtltlvitlH 4 small 1almoa larce 1killet. Cover 11Ath 2 tablet~• cold 1ravy into tJt1a and then! ~ teupoon 1lftpr lftt•·
ne been blamed tor ateab 11 bo1ltn1 water. Add water • return all to the akUlet. Arruse lamb tbop9 Jww Roeh ,. llw cudhor
any emotional and B6tlln1water altced lemon , dill, CHICUNPAPIUUSH Weah and pat dry the Cook and atlr unlil1 on a broUlnt rack. Com· •I ooer '""'' pop¥1ar
b11lcal upHtl. On• 1 )enton, thinly par1le')', vln~aar, ult t. chlcken, ~ut to chicken parta. Sprinkle eravy ii lhtckenod andl bin• aprteot n.etar, cootbookt h•cla.dhtg thf r in Bedtoi'd, Tex-1Uced and PfPper. Cover and parta with aalt and paprika. transparent. Serve at rosemary, and atn1er ; uw "Mr'obfc Nwritioft"
, ls tncldft.S down iu t sprlf frah dill simmer for about 10 \.'I teupoon 1alt Heat oil In a aklllet; once. M.U.' servtna1. spoon halt ot the mix· (co-Gtdltond toltll Or. Doti
nk to rheumatoid llprisfreshpanl,oy rnlnutu, or until fish lteupoonpaprtl(a uute Onion u.oUl Ump. AP&IOOl'·GIAISD I ture over tbe cbop1. ManM1WrpJ.f/JIOf'Ptoota
rthritiluweU. flakes easily but still 2 tableapoona Brown chicken parts on~ IAM&CHOPS • , Broll for 4 mtnu\H. fPedoltMefQWdioft,wtttt
At a recent conference 1 tablespoon vlneaJr bokta lta shape. Remove veaetJbleoll --.11 aides. Add boulllon, • lar1e ahoulder Turn cbope and spoon lo J-. Rlllh, clo ~ ctr the International ~ teupoon saJt fish with a slotted pan· 1 onion, tblnly allced cover, and cook over low lamb chops I remalnin1 mtxtun o\ter ~lot, P.O. Bos 1$IO, C61ta ~cademy of Preventive \ii teaspoon peppel' cake turner. Serve hot, 1 cup c'h I c ken heat pr l. hour. Combine ~ cup apricot nee· the m . Bro t l for • Jlfta .... EfteloN o nlf·
Medicine, Its pl'elident, Pla.ce salmon steaks or chilled. Makes 4 serv-bouillon a nowToot and cold tar minut• loo1er, or untJl oddr1111d 1tomp.d •n·
l)r. Stevan Cordas, told on a rack ln the bottom ln 1. z teaspoons. itr· water loto a thin paste;I ~ tea 1 po o D dealred doneneu 11 Nlope/oro,.,.,,aolreplw.
tjow be hu been able to r-------~--~~~"':":""-"---:------.,..,..,.,.-~-------------------_;;,..-------------..:.-=--_;_---.:......:.:...
~elp rheumatoid
•rthritlc patlenta who
liave proven to be react· iPt to ooe or more foods
ln their dlet.
Cordas said there
•ere 150 varieties of
•rthrltla, but there
~ems to be a 1enetic
gredllpoaltion to
theumatold arthritis.
The fooda that he finds
to be the big offenders
fpr these patient.a are
pork, beef, sugar, malt,
oranges and tomatoes.
Under lestin1 condi-
tlons, he can trigger off C hot lnlJamed joint
ftom one-half hour to six
ttours after the ingestion
qf whatever food ag.
11ravat.es tbe reaction.
One method of treat-
ment is to bring the pa-
\)en t into a specially
oontrolled ·•eoviroomen-
t)l uni\" that is free of
rcll pollutants. A critical
~reenin& is made to
iJientify all possible
stressor factors, includ-lhg those that are struc·
t:ural , genetic,
Uehavioral, and nutri·
Uonal.
· After four days on a
<tiet that eliminates all
possible foods that
might be the triggering
offender, the patient is
placed on a diet that
rotates ingredients in
such a way that no food
is eaten twice during
four days.
Two meals a day are
composed of compatible
food and one meal has
new food. In this way,
foods a re added back in·
to the diet under close
supervision so that any ..
reaction will pinpoint
th e trouble to a
particular meal
Here are several rec-
ipes that eliminate the most common food of·
fenders on Dr. Cordas'
list. They may provide a
clue to others who suffer
from this painful afflic·
tlOn
Product io n ·
of r ice
groWing
Rice is the main
source of energy for baJf
of the world's popula·
tion. Accordin& to a re-
cent Issue of Environ·
mental Nutrition, the
Chinese people consume
approximate ly one
pound of rice daily and
the Japanese about half
that amount.
In the United States,
rice Cijltivation was
started accidentally in
1694 when Captain
Smith, arriving from
Madagascar , Africa ,
presented a bag of un·
milled rice to a
merchant of Charleston,
South Carolina. The rice
Industry has flourished
here ever since.
Today. rice production
has spread to Aqkansas,
California. Georgia .
Louisiana and Texas.
The United States is DOW
one of the world's
larnat rtce·producing
aqd exporting countries
aC)d , in fact , the
Sacramento Valley of
California ii the lareeat
rlce·producin1 area in
tt\e world out1lde of
m•lnland Chloa.
Rice is a member of ~ breads and cereals
aroup of the tour bulc
f 09d 1roua-from which
we obtain the nutrient.a
n,ce1sary for good
b-.alth. The other three.
food fP'OUPI are mllk,
meat and ve1etablea
11pd fn.dtl. Each of the a~up1 11 c1te1oriled by t e prtmary nutrintl
t y contribute le> our
d t.
)llce fWn11he1 abOut
flte pettftt of th• ctallj
recomaneaded am ount
of lnJ0 1D the American
diet , a nd It a •oq_d
1ource of B •lt--miU.
A'lthoutta;ibln· ,AN OVU
1~ .......... ol t1U. =5v.·-== • .... llftrft ......... a1.raet; 1" Hee and lnata111
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•
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""'*&ii "'°" ,4'Clf'IC •A •n••a••n
SHOP STATER IROS. FOR
CllCO' DE UVO SPICIMSI
l.•2• IMI Ill,._ MY 1111 ~ l····· LIYDuna .. .... l.•2a• Ol,D Vl1191'11A IUCID ti-OZ ••• 49cl8 aMOkaDTUNA a•••• ..... tA
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LIVI• 'llffll 'llOllN ICU.ANOtC Ll•1•• "°'"' 11M>Z 11.ao , u' Is• 98c .. •••c• •ACON
HO CllUCll ROUT •1 ~· IHI' IV.DE CVT ... 'I" •OUNDHm LI CRUCk aTIAll
PRICES EFFEC IHl'~UCtt ., .. ND'LAllOllND ... •1" 1-•ou•oaaT ll ••••nAK --7-FUU DA1S llll' Cllual eo.uu • 1 •• ta.I CllUCX -Kua ' .... ---........ _AST L1 ... _..snaa ... APRIL 30----ftf.n•(C(Of "lAt IU,. 'llDMLUNMOTTOOCOJI~ FAT • 1" MEI'
... 0 f 0 ... L l f MAY 6, ............ LI c••••nAK '4 •••flrtlH O ro ~t•I'
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• REG. OR NATURAL STYLE MOTTS
-. APPLE JUICE
• PURE VEGETABLE • PURITAN OIL
6-tOZ.• 14 •
320Z. • 172
• SKIPPY DOG I "CATFOOD . .. 260Z. 37c • PILSIURY COUNTRY OR BUTTERMILK STYLE l.c -BISCUITS 7.5 oz.
.. PKRAAFT LRIOHTK SPAREAYD BOWL $
I;' .320Z. 129
.. KLEENEX ASSORTED DINNER 0 .,: NAPKINS eocT.7 c
I · iiiiliYHTOWELS 1RL 79c I HALFHILL$ 011.. OR WATER CHUNK LIGHT TUllA . . .
I POPCOiiLLOW
ROSlll!IT" REFRIED BEANS
I ~oz 79c
I
OllElN DICEO
OR WHOlf. AO~Rtl A CHILES
I 40z 39c
STAfER IROTHERS
REFRIED BEANS
~~67•
BEER & WINE
. SPECIAi.$
.e.soz 79c
640Z .• I 6 5
CHEFS OEUOHT
lOAF Cllf#S.! SPREAD
I 320Z •2~·
REGJSTfVIWIERRY LA PltZ MARGAR ITA MIX
1lT•1•
' DOI EQUll 'U 3a~~ ................ tmoz 11.99
l•DlmDE lt1::~.· ................. 1rn 12.11
LA PINA FLOUR I
HERSHEY'S INSTANT
EASY WASH ::~YER •
! 3201 $2.69
120Z $1.09
GLASS CLEANER :r·:-~x t l20Z ggc
TWICE AS FRESH ~~r:olt~~· :~,t 89'
I ASPEii, MTI. DEW, $1 39
t.__;_;___:.P..=...;EPS=-=I C=OLA:...=;.:.:~~.;,,=:..:::~Pll~HT • .
HEITT BAGS ~:, ·-$2.49
SCOTT COllFIDETS ! . 2•Cr $2.05
BALLARD BISCUITS ! 7 ~oz 19'
BISCUITS PlllS8URY lllO ' ~T~i~ ~°lre'TTER Mil I<
FRUIT ROLL GAOCtRS CHOICI I
y All DE KAMPS llYEIAEAD ! •60Z 7gc
YAN DE KAMPS ~~~~~ I t<OZ $1.&9
COCA COLA CANI son DRINKS J~~~yt·o~~~E~':G omR POPS
TOMATO SAUCE COfflA~NA
ORTEGA PEPPERS HOT Wt<OU I .>&~UC
YIEIJIA SAUSAGE uMv~ •oz 91c
S . SON CHICKEN =ir ! ~oz nc
I · ::;m,~.u . WA~U t~ARTll s2.69
CHUN KllG :>~1 100l. JSC
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AVAA.AM.i IH ITOM.S WITH IEIWICl Clf.LI OHl Y iAU. .. l,39•
ALU CllCl .. 1111. -••• ...... ..u
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HAPl!NINGS
1lve a aample of what tbe festival hopes to
accompllab when establlabed 11ln1en bold
master clu1es for i)'Oun1 vocalists.
Nadine Conner, Mona Pau(ee and
Martial Slnper, aH of Metropolitan Opera
fame, were among the llJ~en and honored
on1ta1e by Mrs. Ber Brenner for their
teaching contributions to the festival.
Att.erward guests at the $25-a-persoo
gala enjoyed "Un petit souper" of quiche,
fried succlnl, fresh vegetables, and fresh
fruits with a chocolate fondue.
Among the music lovers were Dennis
Mangers and James Bentley, both of whom
are festival vice presidents, who >gave a
short "commercial" during the program for
community support.
Others attending were Tom and Emma
Jane Riley, John Schade. Mrs. Harold
Segerstrom, John Rau, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Hoggatt, Lorraine Lippold, Angela Ficker
White, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hes ter, Elaine
Redfield, Carmen Weber and Susan Fries.
Patrone3Se8 ~/corned
The Adoption Guild of Southern
Orange County welcomed patronesses lo a
tea and a celebration of their 20th year in the
Holy Family Services. Adoption and
Counseling, of Southern Orange County.
The new, Spanish-style home of Robert
Lintz in Back Bay was the setting for the
festivities, and Bobbie Stabler. president of
the group, welcomed guests beside a swim-
ming pool with a natural rock waterfall.
Talk at the gathering centered on the
guild's tennis tournament scheduled for May
23, 24 and 25.
Mary Macy (left) and Mona Paulee of the Metropolitan Opera toast the success of the
Festival of Learning and Perfonmng.
Barbie H1rschler. serving as chairman
for the third year, says they're expecting as
many as 600 teams, or 1,200 players, to com-
pete.
Preliminaries will be played at the
Newport Beach Tennis Clt;b, Balboa Bay
Club, .fohn Wayne Tennis Club, Palisades
Tennis Club, Racquet Club of Irvine. Mesa
Verde Tennis Club and Town and Country
Tennis Club
Finals will be at the Newport Beach Ten-
nis Club, and the guild 1s expectmg an even
bigger turnout than in previous years
. ~mong the members and patronesses \\ • sipping champagne and enjoying the refresh-
ments was Lu c} Luhan. whose "What's
Cooking .. restaurant an Newport Beach did
the catermg
Other~ were Paula Earl. Betty Lorenz,
Marj Cooling, Gretchen Meteer. Nora Hester,
Dorothy Yardley. Marilyn G1anulias, Cathy
Bond, Jean Lucas and Mary Maq{a ret
Finster
Members soughl
The Newport Harbor Republican
Women held a membership lea last week. an
event seemingly unnecessary for a group
that's gone from a membership of 200 to
almost 600 in 1usl a year or two .
.. We used the precinct lists and actively
sought out membt:rs." says Ellie Faber,
presidentorthe club.
She introduced the honored guest. Pat
Hitt. who was the first woman to be a na-
tional campaign manager She later served
as assistant secretary or Health, Education
and Welfare for President Nixon.
Now a resident of Corona del Mar, Mrs.
Hitt urged support of President Reagan's tax
cut plan, saying. "Changes have lo come fast
with a new president. otherwise things get
bogged down "
Encouraging the women to support a ·
candidate through the primaries and into the
fall elections. she S Ul'~ested they enlist
everyone in the family lo help
"I was dragged mto politics by my
father, who was active in the 1948 election."
she said
Amonc the party f iltblu.I re Nancy
Fulton, Mary Shackleton, Joume Stone, Joan
Wjlllams, ADD Spencer, Rut.b Steen, Anita
Ferauson, Belly pobbt, Beryl Mellnkoft,
Fran Sloper and BeGe Yahn.
Tea dance aet
'f.ie Irvine Terrace PbllharmQnlc
Group will hold a "Spring FUna" tea dance
from 5 to 8 p.m . on May 31 at the Park
Newport Spa in Newport Beach.
Ticket.a are $25 a couple and Include a
light buffet and music by Jean Tandowsky
l>lus Three.
Proceeds from tbe party will go toward
the Orange County Philharmonic Society's
youth concerts, Music Mobile and other
music activities
Reservations are available until May 21
by calling Mn. Lloyd Gregory at 673-1S22.
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Levine of
Corona del Mar were guests at the wedding
of Mauret:n Reagan, dauehter of President
and Mrs. Ronald Reagan, to Dennis Revell in
Beverly Hills
The Levines attended both the private
ceremony, with about 70 suests, and the
following recepllon al the Beverly Wilshire
Hotel.
The couple recited both personalized and
traditional wedding vows at the ceremony.
Levine, former director of Fairview
State Hospital, has worked with Revell in.
legal issues concermng the developmentally
disabled
Ellie Faber (left) and Anita Ferf1U$<m (right) welcome Pat Hitt, former HEW assistant
iecretary, to the Republican Women's tea.
Women munched pastries and fresh
strawberries while listening to her pep talk
and writing out postcards to send in support
of the tax cut proposal.
They plan a May dinner meeting with
hbsbands invited, too.
Sheila Sonenshine f left J. Susan Lmtz and Barbie
Hirschler at the Adoption Guild's Patroness Tea
PUBUC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS ltUSINIU
NAMI STATIMINT
T,.. •-"'9 penon I• do;ng _,
MU •.S
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNIH
NAMl ITAT.MINT Tiie toltowl"O ,_,,..,,. are doln9
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS •USINISS..
NAMI STATIMINT
Tl\• tollowlr19 "'-'' •r• doing
PUBLIC NOTICE
llvll-M: -----------PAC.,l C MAINTENANCE
SEllVICE, UIS A¥el0ft Street, Coll.I
Meu,c.tl"'*"'•n.a. CAllOLYN A. WEAVl!ll, UIJ
AvtlOft St,_I, C.1.1 MeN, C.lllonlla
... JUJI
NOTICS OP SALi
OP lllAL PllO,eatY
PUBLIC NOTICE
Savel5¢
on the New Lightweight
Champion!
1/3 FEWER CALORIES
New Sego~Ute has l/ 3 fewer
calories than any other diet meal.
1/ 3 tewer than any llqutd, bar or
powder. Yet it gtves you the
complete-nutrition ot a balanced
meal. so train your figure with
the new lightweight chdmp1or ·
New Sego*Utel •·
.r
11
J '·' . 1
•1
.. I
I I I. I
' ..
•
Yau told btm about tbe peolle lmplant
operaUoo \bat bu helped tboulandl of mm re
•a.in tbfd.r MSUal abWtlea. I WU ""' plealed to
tee tbll meotloGed ln your column. So many
people aVold delicate topte1 becauae tbey are
emba1Tueed by them.
I bad the operat.lQn a few years 110 and ean
t.ruthtWly 11.y my tex life ls better 11ow thall
ever, mMI I was oo piker before.
I hope you will encoura•e ey man wbo bu
Iott the abtllty to bave an eNdioa because ol a
m.cllcal piooblctm to ••k a doctor aboUt tbe
pftlle tmPlant. A.ltd taklnc a 1lmple and. pain-:./
le11 test, h1S dOetot will tell him wbetbir or not
th• oPei'atioo will belp. Tdo maoy men are'°
cau1ht tip wit.b the macho lln•ae these days tbat tbey are ubamed to admit they can•t perform.
What a pity, e1peclally now tbat there ll help
aoUabl . -A NEW LIF! FOR ME IN
ALBANY, N.Y. f • oeu New Lite: DUkt ,_.._._.. ..... . y..,......, .... ., ... ,1u .. ,... ... ,... • ... ( ....... ) .. ,, .... ., ...... ......
ffd•~ ............................ elm•
M l& a ••h.._-•teferaWi w u 1 1nMI w1U1 .... ~ l!Hdkal cetra....
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a mlddl ..
aied woman who met a~.~ man at
''Pareott Without Partners." The Pf'Ob!em : J
love to dance, and Herman leAJll around.Uk• a kanaaroo. He tb.lnU be'• a lood dancer. and I
don't have tbe nerve to tell hlJn be wean me
irgo: Listen, don't talk Children's groups to meet
I
tBUR8DAY, AP&IL 31, 1181
BJ SYDNEY OMA&&
4 aJES (Mar. 21-Apr. U>: You locate wbat bad
been lolt or stolen. Emphasis on discovery, revela-
Uon and ellminaUon of fears, doubts. Project will
be successfully completed. Much occurs behind
acenes -you could be subject of secret con-
ference. TAU&US (Apr. 20-May 20): Focus on
romance, aspirations, fulfillment of desires. New
HOROSCOPE
contact prov~s fruitful. Opportunity exists for
"fresh start. • Aries, Leo. Saaittarius natives
fieure prominently. You're due to r~oup financial
loss. .•
GEllJNI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis on
special dialogue with one in posiUon of authority.
Hunch pays dlvidenda. Learn by teaching. Cancer,
Capricorn, Aquarius natives play important roles.
pne who aided in past is due for reappearance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Favorable Moon
aspect coincides with journey, special ability to
communicate and fruitful correspondence.
Popularity increases. You have greater chance to
express views in meaningful manner. Gemini.
Libra, Sagittarius persons figure prominently.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Needed material wiU
be obtained. Financial matters dominate scenario.
Study details of any partnership proposal. Con·
tracts can be renegotiated. Aquarius, Scorpio,
Taurus persons figure prominently. Stick with
number4.
vtaGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Take time to be
analytical. Do more Ust.enlne than talJdna; others
will reveal their "secrets," Emphasis on publicity,
le1al maneuvers and special a~eenients. Geminl,
Saatttarius and another Virgo figure in scenario.
LIBltA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Buie domestic ad-
justment could dominate scenario. Acce.nt on
employment, dependents, relatives in transit -
and pets. Taurus, Scorpio and another Libra play
key rotes. You'll receive "sound advice" regard-
ing diet, nutrition ahd health.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on af-
fairs of heart, creative endeavors, children and
possible change of scenery. Deline terms, avoid
confusina illusion with reality. See places, people
In practical light. Clandestine meeting lends spice
to life.
8AGl1TAJlfVS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Focus on
"survival principle." Scenario hi&hlights
foodstuffs, safety devices and basic security.
Added responsibility accompanies promotion, pro·
ductioo and greater chance for financial reward.
Relationship intensifies.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Obtain hint
from Sagittarius message. Take nothing for grant-
ed, doubl~h~k sources, be positive of directions.
instructions. Short journey could be on agenda.
Long distance communication dominates scenario
Plans cbanae.
AQVARJV8 (Jan. 20-Feb. 1$): New approach
could result in financial windfall. Focus on money,
personal possessions, ability to locate key people. Leo, Aries and another Aquarian figure prom·
inently. You meet a "very exciting" individual.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Judgment, intui·
lion are on target. Take initiative. Follow through
on hunch. Emphasis on personality, special ap-
pearances and "successful appeals." Cancer,
Capricorn, Aquarius natives play important roles.
LAS BIUZAS ,del Mar and Loi Ninos Felice•
auxlllarles of Children's Home Society meet Sun·
day at the Lot\& Beach PJaybou.se. For more in·
!ormatioo call 892-6220 or 962-3018.
NEWPORT HARBOR TOASTMISTaESS Club
meets Monday at 11:30 a.m. at the Balboa Bay
Club. For more information call •N·3651 or
760-6078.
SADDLEBAC& COMMtJNITH!S Christian
Women's Clubs meets Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the El
Adobe Restaurant in San Juan Caplatrano. For
more information call 581·8579 or 493-6767.
NEWCOMERS' CLVB of Newport Beach
meets Wednesday at 10 •.m. in the home of Gall
Rigaud. For more Information call 840-9335.
JEWISH FEDERATION of Oranee County
meets Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at 12181 Buaro,
Garden Grove, to observe Yom Haahoah ,
Holocaust Heros and Mart)'l'S Day. For more in-
formation call 530-6636.
SAN CLEMENTE SENIORS meets at 7 p.m.
Saturday in the Community Clubhouse of San
Clemente. For more information call 498-3322.
Ll'ITLE MERMAID GUILD of Children's
Hospital of Oranee County meets at 8:30 a .m.
Monday for tennis at the Llndbor• .Racquet Club.
For more information call 8'&-G936 or aeo....91".
DESK AND DEaRI CK Club of Oranae Count1
meets at 5:30 p.m . Wednesday in the Revere
CLUB CALENDAR
House of Tustin. For more information call Karen
McDonald at 752-9000.
SOUTH COAST AUDUBON Society meets at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday in St. Clement's Episcopal
Church, San Clemente. For more information call
492-0873.
PATIENCE WRIGHT CHAPTE& of
Daughters or the American Revolution meets
Tuesday at noon in the Capri Room of the Hotel
Laguna. For more Information call 581·2691.
EBELL CLUB of Newport Beach meets at
11 :30 a.m. Monday in the home of Mrs. William
Colver. For more information call 548-6888.
Costa Mesa water excelknt
QUESTION: I live in Costa Mesa. Is there any
reason to get bottled water?
ANSWER: Our local water is excellent as rar .
as purification is concerned. It is free or disease-
causing bacteria.
It is, however, quite "hard," that is, loaded
with minerals. This hardness makes it difficult to
wash with, so many install water aqftening de·
vices. With or without the softeners .. to some the
Person-to-person social set Da na Andrmm slated
The National Council on Alcoholism, Orange
County chapter, will host an annual dinner with
the theme, "Alcoholism, a family affair," Satur-
day, May 16, at the Anaheim Marriott Hotel.
DltTOR IN THE HOUSE
•
SINGLE SET INTERNATIONAL will have a
"person-to-person" social at 8 p.m. Friday in
Anaheim. For information, call 738·5806.
MAN·WOMAN INSTITUTE will sponsor a People
Sampler social at 8 p.m . Saturday in Anaheim.
SINGLES CALENDAR
Also, Emily Coleman and Keith Tombrink will
lead a four-session workshop on "Updating Your
Dating Skills" be,-inning Tuesday in Santa Ana
For information, call (213> 828-8949.
BALBOA SIU CLUB will have a general meeting
The University of CdkM11ia Irvine sn••• FREEMAN DYSON
w .. 11dmy, Aprl 2•
4:30 p.m . Mr. Dyson >Mii autograph his
book Dk .. "talaig .. u.hwM in
the U niverslty Bookstore
8:00 p.m. Lecture: "Science for Science's
Sake: Public Support of
Astronomy."
Science Lecture Hall
Lecture Udleta available at AS\JCI Box Office: S1
UCI 1tudent1; t2 faculty. staff. UCI Alumn I ~atlon rMmbera, and other students; S3 general adml11lon. Cosponsored by the
Department of Phy1lca and Student Affalre
l.ec:tUf9S.
MmlCAL TIAM N.S
VOLUNTEERS \ITH ·
DEPRESSION
A Mldlcal ReMarch Team 11 ltidyfng the
we of 1n anti-depr ... ant m\dlcatton.
Tuesday in Newport Beach. For information, call
752-0128.
CORINTIUANS "will sponsor a potluck dinner and
discussion on family and divorce law at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, in Irvine. For information, call Betty at
551-4897.
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS will have a
T G I.F party at 5:30 p m Friday in Huntington
Beach. For information, call Gerri at 964-5296.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES will sponsor a games
and cards night at 8 p.m Saturday in Costa Mesa ·
For information, call Ann at 751-0291
WE CARE will have a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Friday
in Costa Mesa. For information, call 837-1506.
Actor Dana Andrews will be the keynote
speaker at the dinner, which be&ins at 7:30 p.m.,
Bazaar set S aturday
The Fairview State Hospital Bazaar and
Country Fair will be held SatUrday from 9 a.m . to
4 p.m . in the hospital auditorium.
Booths will be set up offering food, plant.a,
homemade articles, antiques, boob and funtlture.
Funds raised will benefit the Client/ Patlent
Benefit Fund at Fairview Hospital.
The public is invited to attend. For more in-
rorm ation call 957·Sl88.
* NOWOPIH * Everything handmade Of handcrafted
lewllM h ' dt4 ,.._.
CONSl ... DISIGN
2049 ~fl Dr. llullll 102. ......... 8ledl
HWJll
taste is unpleasant and bottled water is used for
drinking, and making coffee or tea.
From the health standpoint, the local wa
bas a very high salt content.
To those with a blood pressure problem where
salt is restricted, bottled water is highly r~om
mended.
I have patients with mild elevations m blood
pressure where merely switching to bottled water
has solved the problem.
Since much of our produce is irrigated with
this salty water, I advise rinsing it with bottled
water before use by these patieot.s.
Dr. John D. R.oun, a proctahOnfT m NelDpOt1 Beoc:h,
tHlcomn JIOUf' fll"•ltona. ~ Jl(Jur r~lt• to ASK
THE DOCTOR., P.O. Boz 1560, Costa Meso, Co., nnl.
Breaking Free II the lm8lh hft
that blends theater wtth
motivation.
You'll hear women speakers
whoyou will be able to identify
with. You'll discover how to
shed your frustrations and ex·
pand your horizons.
It's the kind of show you
won't want to end ... and the
best part Is that it doesn't; it
goes home with you.
Housewives and career
women equally slng the
show's praises. Whether you
want to learn the management
skills of a high achiever or If
you want to put harmony into
your life ... there's something
life changtng for' everyone.
I•
I
I
81 JORN SEVANO °' ................. Pat Haden'& roller coaster
ride came to a merciful end
Monday with the Montreal slp-
ing of Vince Ferraaamo.
Ever since the 1980 1euoo wu
completed, Haden was like a
man in limbo with no certainty
as to bis future. Would Fer-
raeamo stay? Would be to?
Would the Rams draft a
quarterback? Whal role wouJd
Haden play.in each caaeT
Over and over the Rhodes
Scholar mulled these questions
in his mind, and over and over
be came up with no answers.
FINALLY, some were pro-
vided on Tuesday.
Haden will not only stay with
the Rams but he will ~ the
team's No. 1 signal-caller once
aeain. Plus, there will not be
any foreseen opposition as the
Rams opted to draft for other
positions then quarterback.
Haden appeared relaxed and
confident as he met members of
the media at Rams Park Tues-
day . It had been a long
tumultuous year and a hall and
Haden was just glad to be back
at the top.
"All I can do is get myself re·
ady and try to keep my fingers
in the right place," Haden said
with a smile.
Pat Haden
It app~ars like the Rams
a r e n · t g o i n g t-o d r a ft a
quarterback?
"Yes, it looks that way But I
heard there are a couple of good
high school quarterbacks down
the road that they're interested
in."
WILL THE RAMS have to
change their offense with you at
the controls?
"Yes. we'll run on first and
s econd downs, throw only when
it's third-and-12, and no pass
will be longer than three yards ·
"You have to remember tbla ii 1
the fourth tlme I 've beela
throuib this. Fin& it wu (Ron) '
Jaworski, then it wu (Jama)
Harris and now Vince. I tboutbt
for a while I mt&ht have to 1'6
rid of Rich Campbell, too.
"Rt!ally. I'm excited aboUt
another opportunity. It'• n
often you let second chances."
THE RAMS MIGHT bav,
given Haden a second ch~
but that doesn't mean the f .....
have. Haden has been ~
faithfully by team followers
with his lat.est scorning comint
at a Laker game.
"I'm just going io have to be a
big enough man and touch
enough ment'Dlly to handle lt,ai
said Haden of the fans. "Nobody
forced me to do this (to be the
No. 1 quarterback). I chose to do
it." I
Haden, after winning the No. I,
job from Ferragamo last aum-
m er, broke a finger on hie.
throwing hand during the l'a.rst
game or the season. ·
FERRAGAMO. LIKE he did
10 1979 when he led the Rams to
the Super Bowl. substituted for
the inJured Haden and in the
processs, set numerous Rams\
records
Haden, destined to be a back-
up as long as Ferragamo was
around, said he was happy for
his former summer roommate
1f that's what he really
wanted.
. , DMty Pl ... ...._ llY ltk ...... K-
G&antS Enos Cabell slides under the tag of Dodgers' Bill Russell as umpire John McSheTTY gives verdtct.
ACTUALLY, HADEN was
tongue-in-cheek to many or the
reporters' questions For 10-
stance, when asked what he was
doing durin~ Ferragamo's sitn·
ing Monday, he replied, "I was
on the phone lo Montreal to
make sure it was taking place."
Naturally, Haden was joking
But there was a serious tone in
his voice when asked about the
new life be was receiving.
"I'm pleased for Vince," said
Haden " If he made the right
decision for himself, then that's
terrific.
Dodgers
get beat
• • In ranty
LOS ANCELES <AP> The
long-standing rivalry between
the San Francisco Giants and
the Los Angeles Dodgers has
cooled considerably, la rgely
because the Giants have not
been a factor in recent National
League West pennant races
Even when they were, they
s till didn't beat the Dodgers too
often.
Entering Tuesday night's
gatne at Dodger Stadium. Los
Angeles had won 56 of its last 76
games against the Giants.
"I think the Dodgers in
timidated the team we had
before," said one-time Dodger
Bill North, who doubled home
San Francisco's first run Tues·
day 1Hght in a 6-1 victory by the
Giants, their first of the year
over Los Angeles. ·
"ENOS CABELL, Joe Morgan
and Doyle Alexander have
meant quite a bit to this team."
North said of r ecent San Fran-
cisco acquis1t1ons "They mean
a lot because one, lhey can play,
and two, they don•t have that
Dodger rear
.. And I don't either We got nd
of guys who did feel that way
a nd now we've got guys who can
play."
Another of those players re-
cently acquired by the Giants is
pitcher Alan Ripley, a 28-year
old right-hander who was ob·
tained last year from Boston.
Ripley hurled a three-hitter
and missed by only two outs his
Cirst major league shutout. He
also missed pitching a no-hitter
by Just 2% lnnlois. • If J'd pitched a no-bitter
agatnat L.A., I couJdn'l have fit
my bead in the door,'· Ripley
saJd, referring to the Dodgers'
four-same lead in the NL West.
"I bad eood command of my
pitche.9, I felt very comfortable
out there."
· RIPLEY, l·Z, lost his shutout
when Ken Landreaux homered
with one out In the bottom of the
ninth i.Dnina.
"No one mentioned tho no·
bitter unW alter the bl!.'' said
Ripley.· "No, I'm not that disap-
pointed. lt gjvu me something
to •hoot for nlxt time."
lUplej< retired the firat 13 ~
Dodprt 1n order, issued back-
to-bac• walks with one Otat an the
flft.h, aClped wtlti a double play
ball aDd tMn &ot the nHt four Dod1era beCort Du,t1 Baker
slapM • clean shlsl• to left
•itJa one out In ltit seventh.
Some of the others:
"I wouldn't call it a new start
I'd call it a re-start." he said.
Angels correct earlier mistakes
Stopping Armas is key to success against A's in posting second win
OAKLAND <AP> -The Angels learned
two weeks ago to beat the Oakland A's
they'd probably have to stop Tony Armu.
"We made some mistakes again.al him
down at our place, and we're tryinc not to
do that again," said pitcher Steve Renko,
unharmed by Armas' bat in Tuesday
night's 3-1 victory over the A's
fielder Dwayne Murphy, who homered in
the ninth off relie~r Don Aase for Tues-
day night's only Oakland run.
"This next game with the Angels will be
a big one. It would be a great one for us to
win, with the Yankees coming in for the
weekend," Murphy added.
THE A'S A~ bad their last chance to·
ARMAS WT TWO home runs and drove day to tie the big league record for most
10 eight runs as the A's swept a four-game, victories in April.
mid-April series in Anaheim en route to Renko, in bis first start of the season, al-
lheir 11-0 season start, the best in modern lowed only a pair of infield hits In the first
major league history. inning. He left after six with a 2-0 lead,
The A's are 17-3 now, after two straight thanks to Fred Lynn's RBI single in the
losses to the Angels, going into today's third and Bobby Grich's homer in the
final game of a three-game series. Armas' fourth off A's starter Brian Kingman, 2·1
bat, along with most of the others coming "If you don't walk a lot of people, you've
out of the Oakland dugout, has cooled off got a chance to beat them," Angels
considerably. Manager Jim 'Fregosi said, repealing
"We've got to get our offense going another lesson learned from the four
again, no doubt about it." said center games in Anaheim. ~~~~~~~-=--~~~~~~
.
The A's Rickey Henderson was his
us ual. dangerous self on the bases, steal-
ing his 15th and 16th bases of the season, b~t ~ot no. f~er th_an second. Armas got ~ts firs~ hit m two rugbts, a one-out single
in the runth off Don Aase. but reliever Luis
Sanchez saved the victory for Renko, 1-0
by retiring the last two batters of th~
game
KINGMAN WENT into the game with an
0.81 ~arned run average, best in the
Amencan League, but was nowhere near
that form, allowing seven hits and three
walks in 5'73 innings.
"I didn't pitch too well, but if I'd had a
few runs to work with, I might have set·
tied down and won the game," he said.
·:But I kn<;>w there are going to be games
· hke that, Just not as many as last year. I
hope''
"I've always been competitive
and I've always wanted to com-
pete. I just didn't want to just
roll over and die. I'm confident I
can play. I think it's easy to play
well on this team."
Coach Ray Malavasi, as b~ /
has done all along, defended '.
Haden's abilities.
··You know. what nobody re:
ahzes. and I've never seen thie
10 print, is that Haden never had
the offensive line in front of him
that Vince had. It's unfair to Pat
to be treated like he bas. It's not
bis fault some lineman let
somebody get throufh to almost
kill him. He had no time to
throw."
The Rams are 30-13·1 with
Haden at the controls, but it's
been almost two years since he's
had any regular action.
•'This will be m y first op,
portunity to play on thia team
which is different than the one I
played with 2'1'i years ago,'' said
Haden.
"It 's going to be interest.inf
for m e . My sk ills hav,
diminished a little by not pl,
ing but I think I can easily g
them back in practice."
Fronliere breaks long silence
Rams owner Georgia tells what's been on her mind
After more than 18 months in seclusion from
the media, Rams owner Georgia Frontiere broke
her cooe of silence Tuesday much in uie same way
Dave Kingman did upon bis return to New York.
Kingman. notorious for being tight-lipped, pre-
sented the New York press contingent with foun·
lain pens as a way of saying, "Let's let bygones be
bygones.''
FRONTIERE, WHO hadn't talked to
members of the media since January of 1980 (just
prior to Super Bowl XIV), walked tnto the press
room at Rama Park Tuesday armed with gifts.
"I brought each of you a present," ls how she
opened the conference as everyone was given a set
of Super Bowl XIV coasters.
The move was not only surprising, it was un-
expected. At the same lime, the generosity
slanified a peace offerin1, too, aa FrontJere and
the Rams organization appeared to be embuk.liig
on a new, "Fresh start" proaram.
The Rams owner didn't finish. but she didn't
have to.
NATURALLY, MOST of the questions asked of
Georgia dealt with the team's upheavaJ of last
year and in particular, contract negotiations with
Vince Ferragamo and Bob Brudzinski.
Here were her answers: . I
On Ferragamo -"If he's happy, then I'llt
happy for him. He was a Ram and we'll miss biai
as a person
"I met with Vince and talked with him on •
number of occasions. And, if you'll remember, Wf
came to an agreement with him at one potm
(that's when PauJ Caruso was his agent).
RaD18 pick linemen
for openers in draf~
DratUna tor need and ln order or· EE
der to stren1then some weakened~ • • •
positions, the Rama picked two
linebackers, two defensive encb, a defenttve
tackle and an offensive cent.er ln Tuesday's ln·
ltial round of the NFL draft.
With Bob Brudz.inaki traded to Miami Tues·
day and Jack Reynolds' future uncertain, the
Rams selected S.2, 233·pound outside linebacker
Mel Owens in the first round -the ninth pick
overall.
The team then followed by lakinl middle
linebacker Jim Q)Uina of Syracuse.
The Rams bad three picks ln the third
round and used the first two to nab 6-3 Greg
Meisnar of Pittsburgh and 8-4 Bob Cobb of
Arizona. Both are defensive ends.
With their third pick of the rour)d, General
Manager Don Klosterman engineered a trade
with Washington ln which the Redskins would
receive the Rams' Wrd choice of the third
round -the 10th player overall, both the Rama'
fifth round picks in '81 plus the team's No. 2
choice· in the '82 draft for Washington's No. l
selection in 1982.
The move left the Rams with two No. l's,
two No. 2's, two No. 3's, one No. 4 and two No.
S's in next Yl!ar's draft.
In the fourth and sixth rounds the Rams
picked 6-4, 260-pound center George Lilja of
Michigan and 6-3, 250-pound defensive tackle
William Daniels of Alabama State, respec-
tively.
Quote of the day
"It feels a lot better to win my first after ~hose first three losses, although I thought
1t. would come earlier," said Houston
pitcher Doo Sutton after a 2-1 victory over
Atlanta ~esday night. "Leaving the game
was my idea. I wasn't going out to lbe
mound in the ninth no matter what. I bad had it."
Margerum drafted by Bears
Just as he predicted, former EE Fountain Valley High star Ken
Margerum was selected in the third
round of the National Football League draft
Tuesday. He djdn't expect the Chicago Bears to
draft him. however
Margerum, who became the Pac-lO's third
best all-time receiver during his four years as a
Stanford Cardinal, had said earlier that he
would like to pla) for the Oakland Raiders
At Stanford. Margerum caught 146 passes.
32 for touchdowns and totaled 1,517 yards for the
Cardinals.
ROGER CARLSON
Cruz helps SuttOn, Altros win '18 .... --• ~of !Uta, ~~-=~ ...... ~~
1 ~-a ,.1 ~ over ~Uuu p~tc "C:_.andPllift ... udjlve
Tu • CNI. JU-1nl oalr.;m •Wini UM C•nl•, ....., did •cored ~·1 other nm
OD AIM Ml*f"I .. eaod·~ llnfle olf Jolet I••• lloa..,ueot.; 1-2 ... la otbtr NaUoHI IAaiut 1ame1 ... (;JDdn.DaU leONd •leht Umea
lo the fifth lnoln1 to 1upport tb• ela.bt·htt pitch~ ot Tua leHer and trounce Sa.n bteao.
11·2. Seaver, 2·1, wu tbe only CinclnaaU player
, wbo did not ICON in tbe flfth when lb• R«la 1.m
U batten to the plate a1alnat th...-San Dleto
pltcbel"I. . .Clu11 Speier•• ftnt ot tbe three blta
drove home 1 1lxtb·lQJlln1 nm, trlqertq Mon·
treaJ to a 6-3 victory over Pblladelpbla. Tbe Ex· ~trailed 3-2 when Aaclre O.WIM opened the
sixth on an error. He moved to MCODd wben lol·
ins pitcher Larey C~teaaeta, 1·2, t.brew wild
for an error on a plckotf attempt. Outtlelder
Ema Valeat1De tben •~&led to drive home
Dawson and tie the eame. Speier later 1ln1led
to sud home Valentine ... atek &•ode•
scattered nine hita and Dave Parker
collected four hita, 'leadine Pitt1bur1b to
an 8--0 d~iaion over New Yort. Rhoden, the
former Dodger, extended his record of never
losing in April during his major leaeue career
to 13 games.
Foote, Randolph help John win
Barry Foote and Willie Ran-
dolph slammed home runs and Tom-
my JobD pitched a six-bitter as the
New York Yankees defeated Detroit, 4-1 Tues-
day nieht. extending the Tigers' losing streak to
nine games. Jobn Wockenlua hit a homer off
John leading off the Detroit SttODd, but the New
York left·bander was in command the rest of
the way as be imp*>ved bis record to 3-1. In
other American League games . . . Pete Red·
rem, who bad retired only three of 11 batters in
his previous two appearances, pitched • ftve·
hitter as Minnesota beat Seattle, . . . Doubles
by BW Almon and Toay Bernau.rd keyed a six·
run, secoud-inning explosion that carried
Chicago to an 8-8 win over Baltimore . . . Pat
Putnam walloped a three-nm homer to dead
center field and three Texas pitchers shut down
Boston on five hits as the Rangers thumped the
Red Sox. 9-0 ... Ken Maella'• two-run double
keyed a four-run sixth inning, and Lloyd
Moaeby and Otto Veles both added solo homers,
powering Toronto to a 6-2 win over Milwaukee
in a game that was twice delayed by rain. Merk
Bombaek, 2-1, allowed two runs and ei1ht hits in
seven innings and Joey McLaaPJ.ln stopped the
Brewers on three hits the rest of the way.
Yaz, Evans unhurt in crash
DALLAS -Boston Red Sox playera Carl
Y astn:emski and Dwight Evaoa emerged un-
hurt -but shaken up -after being involved in
a Cierv three-car collision Tuesday night that
left three persons dead and four critically in-
jured.
It occurred around 11 p.m. wben one car
traveling westbound in the eastbound lane of Interstate 30, colllded w1tn an eastbound vehl-
cle Three occupants of the eastbound vehicle
were killed instantly. police said.
tstanders'ln top form. beat Aangera
TJM New York l•landtn, dtaplay-ln• tbe tonn that eanted tbem to the
StanleJ CUp lut Muoi., rode lffOOd
period IOlb by o. ... S.U.r, lllb •es
aod ~ T..tl to a 5-1 playoff victory •
tbeir local rtnJ, the New Yon R&n.1er1. la a
furlou.aly paced National Hoeh1 L••IM
Hmtnnat =•· Tb• two teams put on mHterful tor th• U,008 rant at N11Hu
Colileum but the blanden' superior 1cortn1
deptb made tbe dilre.renc• ln the nrat ••m• of
tb&·beft-d..evea Ml"IM. Game 2 ot tbt "BatU. ot N .. York" wiU be played at the same place Thur~y m•ht . • . In tbe otb t Hmltinal
••me, lbort·hand~ .. 10• b)' GoNle aoberu
and Al MacMa• brOile open a U,ht came and
carried Mtaneaota to a 4·1 victory over Callery,
the North Start' •lxtb •trailht road win in tht Stanl~ CUp pl17oft1. Ctati llannu1 scored a
power·pll.)' 1oal for tb• North Stan and Tim v..., contributed a 1oal and two ualata ln the
open.lni came. Tbe second came will be played
1n Cal'8J"Y Tb~rtday before the aeries sb.J.lta to
Mlnn4*1ta for aames Sunday and Tuesday.
Baseball today
On Ul1a date ln baseball in 1918:
Cleveland centerfielder Tris Speaker
pulled off the fourth unuaisted double
play of his career, but the Indiana lost to
the Chicago White Sox, 8·4.
Today's Birthdays:
Angels short.stop Rick Burleson is 30.
Milwaukee pitcher Bob McClure is 28.
Wiiis suspended for "doctoring"
Seattle Mariners Manager •
MHf)' WW., claiming be was just
ustne one ot the tricks of the trade,
bas been suapended for two 1ame1 by the
American League for "doctorin1 the batter's
box" tor la.at Saturday's game against the
Oakland A's in the Seattle Kingdome ... PlaU
Stepa.e-bit safely in his 46tb conucutive
game ln the opener or a double-header Tuesday
paasina a collegiate baseball record that had
stood for 10 years u bla Wichita State team de-
feated Oklahoma City twice . . . The Alabama
Le1lalature passed a bill Tuesday allowin1
University of Alabama football coach Bear
Bryam to coach beyond the state's mandatory re-
tirement age of 70. Bryant, 67, needs only nine
victories to surpau the all-time colleie career
record ol 314 held by AJOAIO S&a11 . . . Former
UCLA football star BUJ1 Dou Jaekaoa bas
pleaded innocent to charges of murdering a
man last year in what police said was an argu.
ment over a small amount of marijuana . . .
The Denver Broncos acquired fullback Tony
Reed from the Kansas City Chiefs for a third·
round pick in tbia year's NFL draft and a
fourth-round selection next year NFL
Hall of Farner Cllfford BatUea died in a hoapital
where he was being treated for a heart condi-
tion. He was 70.
Television, radio
TV: Basketball NBA playoffs
(Philadelphia al Boston). 11 ·30 pm .
Channel 2 (taped>
RADIO: Baseball San Francisco al
Dodgers, 7:30 p.m., KABC (790 )
ByCUHSEBD N CMtl*~_,. 'l'ue a bUnch of new players, tbrow them
toaether wtth 10m• of laat year'• vets and bope
thln11 click. Jt doesn't happen very quJckJy.
But mlx the new and old Uld stQ wltb tbe
aame liMup tor 1 couple of 11mea and Just like
that, you've cot a winner.
Th•t'1 the cue of the California Surf whlcb
hH overcome a Jittery be11nning to the 1981 Nort.b
American Soccer Lea1ue season with two straidt Impressive victories.
"WE .KNEW EARLY that the ri1bt chemlatry
would eventual make the team," notes Surf Coach
Peter Wall, whose team will try to make it three
strai1ht tonight when the Vancouver Whitecaps in·
vade Anaheim Stadium for a 7:30 contest.
Back-to-back wins over SeatUe (2·1) tand San
Jose (1-0) have evened the Surf's record at 3-3,
good for 24 points and second place in the Western
Division, four points behind San Diego.
They come into toni1ht's 1ame witlt just about
everything going for them : their defense ts more dis-
ciplined; goalkeeper Alan Mayer is as sharp as
ever (his goals-against average is a mere 0.75)
and newcomers like defender John Craven and
midfielder Kai Steffen are stablizing the team.
IN ADDITION. Vancouver goalkeepr David
Harvey, whose goals-against average is a
microsopic 0.477, will miss tonight's game after
suslalning injuries in an automobile accident last
weekend.
The Whitecaps used a 19-year-old rookie, Ran-
dy Keen, against Minnesota Saturday, and be
promptly shut out the Kicks in al ·O victory.
The Surf defense will face its toughest
challenge tonight. with the Whitecaps' explosive
attack. Vancouver has netted eight goals in five
games In comparison, the Surf has scored six
times in six outings.
"They're one of the best teams around nght
now." notes Wall. "They attack in numbers. I real-
ly think it will be a good test to see just how much
we have improved."
Wall's system calls for njne players to be back
at all times, with JUSt one striker, usually Steve
Moyers. The Surf coach says the system is work·
ing defensively: the key now is to break out quick·
ly and counter attack
"We're not giving the ball away like we used
to. Our attack is butldang up. We've just got to be
patient." he says
Poloists pay
for nristake
By ROGER CARLSON
OI UM o.lty f"IMt S&att
· LONG BEACH Another lesson. another
price tag. another bill paid
For the second time m this 11 FINA Cup water
polo tournament al Long Beach State the United
States was guilty of a schoolboy error :n the
'critical stages of a game and paid for it. coughing
away a successful venture.
Spain pulled out a 4.4 tie with three se~onds re·
maining after getting a monumental break and
cashmg ID on at Tuesday evening before 1,850
Nitzkowski t11niing it around
The U.S appeared lo have a lock on a hard·
fought 4-3 victory when 1t gamed possession with
43 seconds left, but Joe Vargas saw an opemng and
fired away with still 28 ticks left
The shot missed and the Spaniards took advan-
tage, gaining a six on-five situation with 13
seconds left and then connecting for the tying goal
as Rafael Aguilar rifled home a goal from the
pen meter with three seconds remaining Anyone associated with water polo, especially
the United States national team, is well aware of
the frustrations dealing within the scope of in-
ternational sports, against other countries with
their own set of rules and definitions of an
amateur
On a team basis, the problems of putting
to1ether a functionint unit border on the
ridiculous. It would seem nothing could make
thin1s worse -that is, until 1975, when the un-
thinkable became reality -American water polo
failed to qualify for a berth in the Montreal Olym-
pic•.
Dissension, jealousies, maybe even paranoia,
aeemed to be involved among athletes and
coaches.
Clearly, help was needed, and to the rescue
came one Monte
Nitzkowski, a Hunt·
ington Beach resident
and coach of Long
Buch City College
wattr polo the,,se past 26
Ytlrl. It was Nitzkowski
who coached the
Americans to the
btOl\H medal at the Munlah Games in 1972,
1n11tplq a 40-year dry
.-pell for the U.S. in al·
tempts to medal In the
Gamn. And lt bas been
NH1kow1kl who has
brou1bl tbe United . $tatea back to respec-Mont~ Nilzkowlld
\ability. In lrrt bt ,Wded the U.S. to a second place ~llb 1\ th 1979 world championabips, which
aUIMd "" Alfterlcans for the Moscow Olympics. uall~-Utt eventual 1980 Olympic champion, jf ~ j~ in the first cup, but the United
~ ~ there to challenge because of the ~ycott ta\~ed by the Amertcp govemment in ;...~ to U.e lnvulon ol Atpanlatan by tbe
Jov ,.ie the U.S. ii ln Ute rebulld.inl atqea tor the Los AnleJes Games ln UIM
'9 on 1ebedule, with tht excepUoa ot
lions within the coaching system together.
Something like Camp David apparently bas
been put together. Like the Jews and Arabs,
something less than war is takini place .. mong
California coaches
When you consider that every American
Olympian since 1960 has been a Californian. well.
that takes in quite a lot of territory.
When the United States B team won a recent
tournament in Canada it wasn't the victory that
was so notable, it was the coaches sent In charge
-UC Irvine's Ed Newland and Cal's Pele Cutino.
That's right -Nitzkowski bas this combina-
tion together. and in addJtion, be bas all of tbe
others -UCLA's Bob Hom, Stanford's Dante
Detamonte, UC Santa Barbara's Pete Snyder -
and others, working together.
Nitzkowski and Lindgren are presently band-
lina the national team, while Newport Harbor High
Coach Bill Barnett and Steve Heaston from the
Northern section of California take care of the
juniors.
"This will be a unit intact for eight years when
the Olympics arrive at Los Angeles in 1984," says
Nitzkowski.
When the U.S. failed to qualify for the Mon-
treal Olympics on that grim trip to Mexico, the
final opportunity, Nitzkowski was called upon to
turn things around and one of the fint things he
said was, "This won 't happen again."
He's kept bis promise and then some. When be
steps down as the national coach followin1 the 'M
Games, the groundwork for the future will be
cemented. • • • A new basketball tournament on the prep level
will be in force in December -The flrst Fountain
Valley Invitational, which will include Ocean
View, Huntington Beach, Servile, Santa Ana
Valley, Los Alamitos, Alhambra, Mira Costa and
the host Barons.
Dye lands coaching job
BAKERSFIELD <AP) -An UIOdate athletic
director and former coach at cautornla State
University at Fullerton wu named buketball
coach Tuesday at the at.ter coUec• here.
Bobby Dye, 42, wu cbolen from amon1 129
•pplicantl to succeed Pat Weinaban wbo wu ftred tbia ypar after 11.lt HUODI at Cal ~tate
BakeJ'lfteld.
Dye led the Tit.am to tbe w•tern rtfloaal cha1n~ in the Nat.loaal COlleslate AtbJeUc
A.ae>claUon ln 1971·'11. He amaated a 115-'lt
coachlDC record 1D aeven aeucma befGl"9 tUID1 the admlolltratl~• poet lut year.
In maldnt the annoucemmt, Prellldeltt Jacob
Frankel aald D)'e WUJ be paid "5,000 to tllO.OOQ.
The RoadnmneraJ>lay.S to a i.at ree0td lut
season.
It's scheduled for Dec 8-11. • • *
Basketball prospects interested ID competing
in the U.S.A. Basketball Development summer
league should contact Laguna Hills High Coach
John Moore at 770.5447.
"Well. that killed us ... said an angry U.S
Coach Monte Nitzkowski ··All we had to do was
spread out and control the ball. You JUSt don't take
a shot like that. we didn •t need it.
"We dominated the game from whistle to
whistle and the defense did everythjng it had to do
to win it. The tie was our fault, just gross inex-
perience. In college water polo scoring is so im·
mortalized. All anyone can thjnJc: of is ·another
Moore's Orange County entry will practice at
Bolsa Grande High for a league which runs from
June 20-Aug. 2 (weekend dates only)
Registration is May 14 (6 p.m l at Bolsa
Grande ffi&h. Tryout cost is Sl.2. _goal' " · • • *
PREP NOTES -Fountain Valley High
hurdler Mike Pandaoa appears to be lost for the
balance or the track season with a hamstring in-
jury. It shouldn't deter the Barons from laughing
their way to the Sunset League championship -
there are too many other 1UJ15 to pick up the
slack .
It was a stunning setback for the Americans'
'dreams of remaining in contention for first place
and now puts the U.S. m a precarious position to
even place in the top three in ttiis tough, eight·
nation tournament.
The U.S. bad dominated with an incredible 14
steals four by Kevin Robertson and two each by
Jody Campbell. Jon Svendsen and Vargas
Baseball standings
UIERICAN LEAGUE ""* DfylaJoa W L Pd. GB
Oakland 17 3 .850
Cbicaeo 11 4 . 733 3""
Texas 8 7 .533 61,'j
Ansell 10 9 .526 61,'j
Minnesota 5 lZ .294 10""
Seattle 5 13 .278 11
Kansas City 3 9 .250 10
Eut Dtvlaloll
Cleveland 7 4 .636
New York 10 6 .625
Milwaukee 8 8 .571
Boston 7 7 .500
Detroit 7 10 .412
Baltimore 5 8 .385
Toronto 6 11 .353 ~·--...... ,,Olll*Wt
Mm 114,IMmet l'etMIU,Mli-•1 I CM< ..... ..._...
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
Weal Division
W L Pct. GB
Dod1en 14 4 778
Cincinnati 9 7 .563
Atlanta 9 8 .529
San Francisco 8 12 .400
San Diego 6 12 .333
Houston 5 12 .294
EHtDh1aloa
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7
8
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St. Louis 9 2 .818 1
Montreal 12 3 .800
Philadelphia 11 6 .647 2
Plttsburgb S 6 .455 5
New York 4 8 .333 6Y.i
Chicago 1 13 .071 lO!h T...-... k.-
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BASEBALL I FOR THE RECORD
Orap1• Coaat, Golden W•tt
and Saddleback all took impor-
tant conference victories ln com -
munity college baaeball acUon
Tuesdl\Y.
The Pirates won 6-2 over Ml.
San Anton io , Golde n West
thumped LA Southwest and Sad
dleback came back to defeat
Southwatern.
At Mt. Sa n Anto nio, OCC
pitcher Mike Hogan S('attered 11
bits and the Mounties stranded
B4SEB4LL
10 base runners in an import.ant
victory for the Pirates.
Coach Mike Mayne's OCC
squad improved its South Coast
Conference record lo 11 ·4 with
the win And since second-place
Cerritos dropped a 10·5 decision
to Santa Ana, the Pirates have a
two-game lead with just three
rem aining.
With the score notched at one.
Rich Ama ral opened the third
inning with a single. Larry Lee
fo llowed with a double to put
runners at second and third.
Mike Vanderburg's ground out
brought Amara l home and Reg
gie Montgom ery followed wilh a
sacr ifice rty to scor e Lee
Montgomery also scored a run
for the Pirates after s1nghng an
the second inning
A mar a l gave OCC som e
breathing room in the ninth with
a two-run single The Pirates
can virtually wrap up the con·
ference crown Thursday with a
wan over vis1(ing Grossmont
12.30>
Al LA Southwest, Golden West
exploded for 22 hats. including
six home runs to eas1I) defeat
LA S<iuthwest and ">lay a game
berund conference·leadtni RJo
Hondo, 18-2.
St eve Sprto1er, Jack se.tJe.
Wes Colli~. Cbtia Schull, Tl
Kingstove r and Keith HeU
s m acked homers to lead the a •
t ack.
Ro b Meyers pitc hed six in·
nings of shutout ball before 1iv·
in& way t.o Rieb Gomez and then
Beje Mahoe.
E very Rustler st arter had at
least one hit and an RBI in the
game.
Hall was S-for-6 for Golden
West with four RBI.
Golden West, 4·2 in the second
half or conference play and 15·13
overall, will host Rio Hondo
T hurs d ay at 2 .30 p.m Lert-
hander Mark Stone (4-4> will
start for GWC.
AT S ADDLEBA C K , t h e
Gauchos clouted four home runs
lo 1 mp rove their Souther n
Division-leading record to 12-7 in
M1ss1on Conference action
Saddleback rallied from a 2·0
deficit as Rusty Evans homered
in the fourth inning, Bob Gray
smashed a round-tripper in the
fifth, and Ben Amaya and Steve
Schaeper each connected for
homers in the sixth
As a te<lm, the Gauchos have
now belted 31 homers this
St.>ason Until this year, the most
homers hit by a Saddleback
team in a season was 15
Starter Rach Rooney got the
victory, his first of the year, but
he needed rehef help from Brad
Kinney
Kinney came into the game
with the score. 4·2 and runners
on second and third He
managed lo stnke out the next
two batters In the ninth. he
loaded the bases. but turned
a round to strike out two
I
1 Barons, Seahawks,
I Oilers post victories
Fountain Va lley and Ocean
View High baseball teams had
something in common Tuesday
each maintained Cl hold on
third place an their league races
as they continue an quests for
Cl F playoff berths
Here's how il went
E_quntaln Valley 5 , NewPOrt 2
Fountain Valley struck with a
four·run fourth anmng lo put
Newport Harbor deeper into the
Sunset League cellar. sparked
by Mike Wagner's RBI double
and a sacrifice fl) by Steve
J ongeward
Brian Ayers. a right handed
JUnaor, scattered ft\C hats in lak
ing the victory for Fountain
Valley, now 6·6, one victory bel
tl'r than fourth-place Huntington
Beach.
Newport Harbor's two singl<'
tallies came 1n the second and
third as the Sailors assumed a
2-0 lead An error plated the
second t ally after a second
in ning uprising which featured
Clarke Smith's double and an
RBJ smgle by Bob Ncllll.'s
J im Choate of Fountain Valley
Tars, Barons
remain tied
Newport Harbor and Fountain
Valley highs stayed tied for first
place in the Sunset League with
one match remaining as each
took easy wins to highlight prep
volleyball action Tuesday
F c'>u nta in Valley went four
games in defeating Edison as
the front row team of Todd
Story, J im Speth. Kirk Harty
and sette r Re.y Gubernick all
played well. ,
Friday, the Ba rons clos4! out
leagu e play a t Huntington
JIOLl.EYR4LL m
Beach. If they win and Newport.
Harbor defeats Westminster as
expected, then both teams would
finish with 8-1 records and would
be co-champions of the league.
Newport Harbor bad an euy
time with Huntto1ton Beach.
alao winning ln four 1ames.
Hitter Mark Barrett led the
way and got help from setters
Mal Durkee and brother Kevin
Barrett. Lane Peterson, a mid-
dle blocker alao played well for
the Sailors.
In other m atches, La1una
Beach remained undefeated a•. the CIF No, l ranked Artlata
slru11led before overcomlna
i crapp1 Dane ff Ula ln rlvt gamu1 For Oana HllJ1, middle
blocken Jctf Baym'1!i and Stott
Swartzbau1h led the cbu••·
Dana HUii it now J.f ln leap.
ElMWheN, !!atabda deteatid
lmne to f«Lr sam81, ~lDI
COat• lf11a upped 'ltf ffeOnt to
io,2 With • atralahl same win over Corona cftfl llar aad Ualv~ clelea La QUlDta m
*"----·
and Mark Chiarenza of Nt>wport
Harbor each went 2-for 3.
Huntington Beach 7, Marina 3
Huntington Beach moved into
content.Jon for a third place an
league play, keyed by a four run
seventh rnning when Bobby
Thompson unloaded a three run
homer to left field.
Earher it was Ricky Cam Uo
who keyed the Oilers' success,
scoring m the first innmg after
rapping a base hit and again in
the third frame, movmg Brian
Beard up with a base hit, then
commg home. along with Beard.
on Tony Ph1lltps' two run single
Jam Lane got Manna on the
boards in the first with an RBI
single and Ken Bodle's run
scoring triple in th<' third kept 1t
dose In the seventh Manna
came up with its final marker as
Bob Grandstaff s ingled and
scored on a run-scoring single
by Lane
Ocean View 5, Cyprets 4
Wavne Carlander and Bill
Small combined to stifle Cypress
on three hits as the Seahawks
pulled out an Empire League de-
c1s1on
The winners got three runs m
the opening frame as Doug
Irvine a n d Kevin Stan ley
s ingled, followed by a triple by
Eric Reinholtz
Irvine and Fred Tuttle were
each 2·Cor·4, Reinholtz finished
with a 2-for-3 day at the plate
with his second triple in the six-
th and subsequent score on Bob
Hernandez's sing!e. the winning
margin
VCI rallies
for 7-6 uin
UC Irvine used three eighth
inning doubles and some sharp
relief pitcrung by Larr~ Hicks lo
pull out a 7~ Southern l.alitomia
Baseball Associa tion victory
Tuesday over visiting Loyola.
The Anteaters, down, 6-4, com-
ing into the ejghth, got a lead-Off
double from Troy Ybarra . Mark
Stowe ll followed s uit wilb
another double to score Ybarra.
S t eve Haworth s a c rificed
Stowell to third and Lee Gra.nier
promptly singled him home t.o
notch the score atslx.
Dave Gillies tben flew out,
brln"11& Mark Morrison t.o the
plate. Monison ran the count to
3·2 and then ripped a double to
ritht to bring home Granier.
MeanTiblle, Lam Hicks, ptclt·
Inc up tor starter .Josb Randall,
coUected hil tint victory 1lnce
March ai. Hldta (6-1) dtd not al·
low a hit In two iMIDS• of relief
work.
UCl had ratlled from 1 3-0
dtlidt In the tlllb lnnlo& t.bal\Q
malnly co Canon C1rroll'1 Uiree-
nan cSOuble. Dave Glick alio bad a
hot bit for the Anwaten, ~
2-lor-5Wilh lb RBI.
The Aqgaten ~tum to •CUaft
Jrrlday WbeD they tranl to ep-o i>Udma ror • a:ao p.m • .nu-
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4tl, ~ IMINdlst. G<oy Fra.ler. 1-.
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MINN.IOTA YllUNGS
MarOye McOole, wr, MIUIUlpj)I State
Rol»ln Sendl•ln, ID, TeaH. J•••I• 11.0WIN ,
rD, N•bl'•UC.. Tim lrw1n, ol, T--.
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·Molly Volley
Linus
Peppermint
~ Patty
RENTALS
""-' t'ur"'•Md ~ Unfurn.ahed .._.,. f'llrn0< Unr Oeinck>m1Num1 furn Cot.dom1ouama \ 'nf ,._........Fllrn
Towfthou•H Unf Dui>k•tt f'Vrn Ouple.1e1 Unt
ApU f\irn
ApU Unr..,n
AllU f\irn "' Lnl Rooms A-.• Boord Hcula.M.W. c--· S..m-r Rmlol1
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BUSINESS, INYESJ.
MEJfT, ANANCE
::i=~= :::::::::~>
M-ri.&.oon .,_,..,..,,ed.
Mw1aocn.Tn •
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
PERSONALS &
LOST & FOUND
Al\l'llOliit.M'tnwn.u Cu pooj
!Acal Noh<"Ya Loot• f'ovnd P~raon.&a•
Soc-101 C'l•ta• y,...,,,.
SERVICES
Srr-~10 Omecior)
EMPLOYMENT &
PREPARATION
'W'hoo'a l"JlrUf'l.c>n Juh WAnl.4-d • ltt"lp V. ont.., M 6 t
MERCHANDISE
Anh•ltH~ Applj~
"''"""' t:t:.~:: .. a\.,, •• ,
C•mirru 4 f.q"tpm«"nl C.u Dot•
Frw to'°" f\trmtvrt' c.,. .......
Hotwo
Ho..Mhold (,-· J ...... >
L-•nlO<-
MM'hlMt')'
M lAttlt aM<tiu.' Mtt<'tll•MOU• ~ antf'd M".WC'al INlrumf'nh om.-. r .. ,. • t.Q"' p Peu t!':: ... ~~f~r: <:oorl• na Cood1 store,Rt"'i,•uranl Bar
tv'Tac1.o..H1r1 ~·'"
BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT
, ... ..,. Motlca:
TVm•OCI HIGHLANDS
A 1tunnln1
achievement by Pollock
lnterlora. E xq ui11te
decoratlna thruout thil
4 JJdrm, 1 1ty home
with aeparate dlnlna
room and lar1e ma•ter
1ulte. A new and
exctttna offerln r
"12.000.
11%DOWM a bedroom l bath,
separate In -law quutera. Larae comer
lot. RV putinf, •1.1100.
151·1111
C:::. ',t I I 1 I
~l'f~lll't Hlll·,
Y•C•S..
\\I ~.1 I ' ' '!,AYLOR CO.
Ill .\l.ICll(S ·.11111· l!l·ll i
•
AJI real eatate ad·
vertlaed In tbla
new1paper la subject to
the Fedenl Fair HOWi·
lnl Act f1l 1181 wblrb
mates lt We1ai to ad·
vertiae "&IU' preference, .,.,..,,....,,.,_,./
limitation, or dl1·
crimination baaed on
race, color, rell&lon,
sex, or nation.al orisin,
or an lntenticn to make
TM-Pedflc From tbh Cameo
Hl1bland1 beauty.
Priced to aell, S'138.000.
Only 10'1! down wltb
ownera Ullatance. One
level 3 Bdrm plus bu&e
yard. Call now, '7US50
IA YCltlST CUSTOM HOMI
Designed for entertaining and family
living. 4 Bedrooms, huge living room,
large formal dining and family rooms.
Gourmet kitchen. Mas ter suite
separate from other extra ,large
bedrooms . Pleasing privacy in
pool-sized back yard. Great terms.
$395,000.
any 1uch preference, _ ___:~--l!!~-
THE R E AL ESTATERS
WESLEY M. TA YLOtt CO.. llAl TORS
. 2 I 11 S• J~ ... load
HEWrO•T CIHTll, M.1.. 64 ... 49 I 0
11 mi la lion, or dis
crimlnaticn."
This newapaper wllJ not
lrnowinfly accept any
advert ~ins for real
estate which is in viola·
lion of the Law.
~ii-................. llllllj
SlOO :MOO
~ 3SOO -~ = ---tOl50 ....
ILlO uoo 4ZIO uoo ::~-... -... ---~ -!: Ho•nforS. :: .••.•...•..............
GeMr<ll 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••
-STaOLLTO
:: NEWPORT llACH ~ Cbarmiog 4 Bdrm. Cozy
: living r.oom features ;
-wood bumi.n& fireplace
s .... A.Hats.
3 Bdrm 2 Ba lamily
room. 2400sq ft, vu, pool
•upa. 303dwn, AITDof owe 2nd. '220,ooo
3 Bdrm 2~ Ba, vu, pool,
uaume Lil. owe carry
2nd. $189,000
3 Bdrm 2~ Ba, vu, as·
s ume lll, owe 2nd.
$18',000.
OCIAM'ttOMT
2 Bdrm1, 2 ba, unlum.
New. $850yrly .
IAYAIOMT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unlurn.
Mint cond. $850 yrly.
CHAMMB. RONT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unlurn.
S750yrly.
associated
lemnber
M1tllll''s Day Mor•• Send a messa1e to Mom
via t he Dally Pilot 'a
Mother's Day Page.
Your messaae wilJ ap·
pear in a pretty nower
box For information
d and lo place yo ur 3 B rm l Ba, vu, assume message call 642·5678
B II,_._ f P <, II I 11 l T (J 11 S
J ,•I \!\ f3 1lt • t>' l "'b I
lit, owe 2Dd. $179,000 TODA y '
3 Bdrm 2 Ba, zoned for~--· ... -------1 MES• v-... 1 horses, remodeled. --~ "' -.., owe. Sle3,900. 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. S 141.900
Firepace, built-Ins. Ex· Hundreds of rlowers
ceUent rental area. Near everywhere and sun
beach 4' bay. S285,000. filled rooma make this 3
&u-2253 eves. BR home a must to see
associated
BRO~E115 llfAlTORS
J11} lh 9u't·· 'l f.' 1 lb• I
Call now for deuals
CD
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-63 '·6990
11.AUTIAILLY
IERllllSHED
4 bdrm home in good
location with a com·
plele l y remodeled
kitchen, new paint, new
cpts and drapes. Owner
flnancina available.
$132,500. Call now
979.5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
LE'rSTAUC
Con I aw Spits
J.ck H Lesdl., M4Jr.
67'91771
OCEANFRONT
Duplex, 3 Bdrm 2 Ba up-
*ALL ADULT*
• lo/oDOWM.•
• 5°/o COMMISSION *
TO I .E. UCB4SEIS
*SB I ER PAYS MOM-«ICUIRIMG *
CLOSIM'i COSTS
Large spacious 1 bdrm. units with
brick woodburning fireplaces and
private balconies or patios. Luxuriant
tree shaded grounds. Tennis, pool,
spa, sauna, clubhouse enclosed and
underground parking. Located in a
prestige area of Tustin. Three
shopping centers, bus and freeway
less than two blocks away. Relatives
and friends can help you qualify.
Below market interest rate at 131,2 '7<. 1
left al $73,500.
(i)UAIL MEADOWS
17554 Vandenberg Lane, one block
south of 17th Street, between Yorba
and Prospect Take 17th Street exit
east from Fwy 55 . Right on Yorba left
on Vandenber~
832-2300 ask for Sandy
Open 10 :00·5:00 p.m.
CASA DEL RIO
l...tlM M.w COftdo1
Xlnt terms 13<7, interest
for 3 years 12132 Ed
Inger close Lo Harbor
Blvd
OPEN WEEKENDS 10.5
641·1991. 631-4361. agl
Find what you want an
Dally Pa lot Class1f1eds
GREATOWHY
FIH.AHCIMG
Beautifully maintained
three bedroom home on
large lot an Newport
Beach French doors.
custom cabmetry, spa.
gazebo. shaded patios
$285,000 Fee.
D.M. Mcn'-1 Rltr
64 ... 9990
)IOO
St)O
!.ll)Q
S300 ,.,,..
Owner will help finance
Only $209,900. Hurry,
call 67J..8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
11FAST
RESULT ..
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
per, with sundeck plus 2 i== Bdrm 2 Ba lower with •liiiiiiiiii;;;;;~--... ~ separate raised patio
~
.w.io ~-~-~~~~---l
llJllll 5: PlanN~ty
IOI$ -Cl$ -~
a!O !!OM ...
0$ -107) -8Dlll D I
llOll -IOI? .,.,
llllQ ---...
9010 -!lfX!O -·-90IO
I010
90IO ...
tltO tl20 tl.30 tl40 ...
''"' tl10 tllll -... -----1171 --
$3
CCI"~ you
$100
all it t*ft is a
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
3 lint'' fr>r 't dd\'
nnh SI 511 J dJ'
\d' l'rll'l' ont• or
morl' lll'm' 'ahwd
II ll I t1 S lllO fo; J <' h
Jdd1I IOnJI lint• I'
onl~ fi6t rur lht· t"o
d u'' Sorr' n o
roinmer<'t ui ad ...
.. 11o"t•d Charl(e
~our Pc•nn~ Pm<'hl'r
Ad or u't> 'our
RunkAmt•rrc•urd V1,a
or ~1 ui.lc·r C'hur.:e
Cati tod9y .-'" you ad in print
totnon-ow!
c ..... ...., ...,. llridey
l :OOAM ... S:JCWM ....
!Mat ....,., ~ .,. ul .. , __ ~·-
S-.y'•~·
642-5671
ht. UZ
Trade your old stuff for
new goodies with a
Classified ad. 642·5678
For • Ad ht W Cll9tl'I Wortd
Cal S..e 642-5671, bt. 330
Prettiest Doll! Easy-2 Main Parts
:· ·t ,'
; • l t I~ I ,. ) t
• 1 • I · . ' I'· ·
lllAL UfAfl U CfllfHCf SIHCf ,,.,
IAYCREST
2039 SMpway LGM
Ol'EH THURS 1-5
St1mulat1ng thr ee
bed r oom h o m e
Cathedral ceahngs an hv
tng and duung rooms
Oak plank nooring Cozy
fireplace. Huge covered
patio Pool size yard
Owner mouvated Pnce
reduced Lo $299,500 See
Gail Amato or Allan
Manor
Ul-7300 H.I .
WESTCLIFF
$129,500
H you thought you could
not afford Newport
Bea c h , look at th is
Sharp 2 bdrm condo
with 2 full bath s,
fireplace, pool and bar.
Terrific location
A D!v1s1on or
Harbor In vestment Co
detk. Both units a re
completely furnished
with a decorator's touch.
4 + car garage and fan·
tastic financing. Take
over $426,000 loan in-
c lud ang 12,,,.'* ror 30
years. Asking $659.000
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
llGFAMILY
llGHOUSE
5 Rdrm 3 Ba. Mesa del
Mar $45,000 dwn buys
1t! Agl, Rich. S4G-3666
Whelan
Real Estate
EAST SIDE FIXER
Whal a mess! Bring
patnl brushes, shovels
and rakes and make SSS
on this bargain Only
$139,000 Won't last. Call I
now
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714·631-6990
The fastest draw in the
West a Daily Pilot
Claaslfied Ad. Call To·
day 642·5678.
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATI! SERVICES
TROUSDALE SOUTH
All the beauty is here in this Cameo
Shores 5 8 R. + den. Soaring
ceilings , spacious rooms &
exquisite decor. Private courtyard
with pool & wat~rfall. Gorgeous
Panor a m ic 0 CEA N VIEW .
$875,000 Fee.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
LAGUNA OCEANFRONT
Spectacular ocean view from this
bHutiful 2 bdrm, 2ba co-op riqht on the
ocean. Greenery, privacy, HC1trity,
beach and 1wimmlrHJ pool $299,000.
NEWPORT CHARMER~OL
s.ip.r fomlly a..-a on a quiet lfrHt. l..ar'99 pool and ct.ck arM in a MCWecf
back yard surrounded by CJl'fff'BY·
Opp llvlrHJ room with M.ty ,.,,.,..ed
ldtchett. Two b.drooms +deft that could
be 3rd bedroom. $185,000 fH.
WATlRf RONT HOMES.''<
HI Al I .,I '\II
• • ' I "' \\
2436 W Coasl Hwy 6 31 .1400 Newport Beach
CE
110111 ILllRS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
LUXURY COHDO
Convenie nt Lo ca tion Two
Bedrooms. Two Baths. Plus h
Carpets, Plantation Shutters,
Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up &
Leave When You Wish. Large
Assumable 10 1~(',; First Trust Deed.
Only $255,000
HEWl'ORT HORSE COUNTRY
Glamorous 2+ Acre Estate In
Beautiful Settirtg With Your Own
Privacy. Formerly Home Of Movie
Star. Jus t Li sted. Large Five
Bedroom Home With Double
Master Suite, Large Family Room
& Gourmet .Kitchen, Surroundjng
Sparkling Swimming Pool. Your
Own Stables. Priced At $2,500,000.
® --......... , ..
. THEIWEI I
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NEW WAYS IJcr~
10 REACH ~~" ·YOUR GOALS ~
A serious professional organization Is based
on keeping pace with the constant changes
in the economy and the marketplace. At
RfiMAX. this is exactly what we do ... quietly.
RfiMAX has attracted hundreds of hard work·
Ing men and women committed to dedication
In Real Eatate service. Together. we have built
an International network. structured a solid
reputation, and have developed a wide variety
of proven and effective support systems. The
RfiMAX teem is as individual as it is vast.
Many are seasoned In every respect of our
bu,lness. Others bring with them a variety of
unfque talents. The ble nd Is superb.
However. all who have joined RfiMAX have
one thing In common. They all have "high
goals." With all that RfiMAX offers. Including
a proven 1003 commission program. goals
have a way of rapidly becoming delightful
down-to-earth realities. The reason Is simple
... we work at it.
We are proud to announce that we now have a
limited number of openings. Give us a call.
Let's discuss your goals!
IOI LICATA
Of HIWPORT llACH. IMC.
,
• ~
15 COIPOttATI Pl.Ali. H" I CH. CA.
759-1221
"An international network of indiV\dualty owned and opuated real estate oftkes"
of newporl
REALTORS
675-55 I I
LOVELY "E" PL.AM. Most popular inocMt
eYer built la the lhrffs. Sltueted on
tpectacYlar grttnMlt ..ftt. ...taift Ylew.
l ldr, F.I . IHt buy In the ar.a at
$252.tOO.
COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy., Corona .. Mer
675-5511
SEE AND BELIEVE
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One half block to major
shopping centers. Ceme nt
drives, air conditioning,
microwave oven, ti ash
compartor, large walk·in
closets. Garage with opener.
Pool and 2 jacutzis.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
JIOW.W..._ c .... M .... CA
714/631·1055
"'-SI 36,000
LIDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home, newly decorated. Priced to
sell quickly at $475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420,000.
PENINSULA POINT llACHFRONT
Panoramic view at wedge, from prime
large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home.
3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room,
en~r)'., living room, dining room,
bwlt-ms. etc. $1 ,385,000.
IAYFROHY
We have several fine homes with pier
& slip, starting at $1,500,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
1..11 f\uy·.·d• Dr•v· rJ A o/'l olol
HIW-f41VB LIVID IH
JASMINE CIUIC-PLAN I
For the buyer who wants a
lovely new 2 Bdrm and den
home in a guarded community
on a beautiful, quiet street,
close to pool and tennis. 'Ibe
amenities are a plenty. Call
now for an appoip.t ment.
TlllllllC llVI ..
J IDIM WITH 'AA'TY SPA
Tfle sophisticated couples
pr-lvate "Cata" ln 1'n1~ty
Pvk. Shaded col'l)er ' lot.near
pool and tenni1. Plantation
shutters. floor to celling home
library and neutral decor.
Deslrable lat TD that· can be
assumed at 10\4~. SUPer buy
a t $190.000 with a ·so: da y
poesess!on ii needed.
lailJPilat
Any classification . No cancellation Rebate.
llACHDWLIX
Xlnt shape, prlucy "
parkio1. Owner will
flnaoce, $90,000 dwn.
Good rate of return
Broker Chria 957 · U68
o, •• .,....
! Bdrm + loft w /frplc.
wet bar ln ea. unit
Out1taodin1 floorplao
w /1real tenants
jOLDf.lt TOUCH
'tONDMllUMS
Lar1e private deck• &
patiot. Only 3 left. Xlnt
Lerma. lM. int.e .... t for 3 yean.
2000MEYER PLACE
OPENDAlLY 12·S
641-1991 ; 631-4361, aet.
FOUtt-ftlX
BY OWNER
Xlnt Fhulnclng !
$310,000
675·0073, (714)3'5-4123
llDUCED '395,ooo EASTSIDE
SI00.0001 Yow"-+l..tal 3 br, t ba, lae lot.
OCLUROMT Lovely3Bdnnfrontuo-$933 /mo. $9500 do
.~1!Y!tLREAl.JY
LOVELY LJMCOLNI
Are you looking for a long escrow?
Are you looking for a lease option?
This lovely Lincoln in Woodbridg.e
Estates w /its attractive antebellum
exterior ts in a super location. Pools,
parks, t e nnis, lake. schools &
shopping are all in close proximity.
An ideal family community. 3BRS, 212
baths come w /a family rm, inside
laundry & 2 car detached garage
Toni Morris. 551 ·8700. (F87). Choice corner duplea. 3 It, w/frplc" beam cell· Sl25,000 Trade" Owner,
Bdrm, 3 bath up. 2 inas. 2 Bdrm unat S3t-5475 lrriDll
Bdrm, 2 bath down. Cao w/year lae, So. of Hwy. --------•I Campus V&lley Cent.er Woodbrtdge Village Center
convert to a larger $485,000. Call Barbara $40 000 ON 7821414 661·8'700 home. SELLER WILL GlaH, C-21, Sandpiper
HELP FINANCE al Rily 646-4950
13%. $795,000! --------Owner tin finance. 3 H•tiacJton leoch I 040
lalboa lar ftrop. IEST IUY IN AIEA houses on a lot Eastside ••• •• •••••••••••••••••• l~TOltS Charmioa duplex, by Co1 la Mesa Only,_ _______ -i
•67ir. 7060• owner. S239,500. Asaume $179,000 Call 645-9161
ir $10..000 at 11~3. So o(
OWHB
1 DESPHAn
I Corona del Mar Duplex.
Huge owners unit. 4 car
garage Submit all of.
(era now. Must sell!
WHATS UMtquE
AIOUT UH19UE
COZY CAPE COD-3
Bdrm, 2Ya ba, earth
tones, pool, tenol1, a
value In Woodbridge,
$167,500
LIGHT AND AIRY-4
Bdrm, 2Y.t ba pool home,
hwy 2 Bdrm + bach.
213/430-91.56
•••••••••••••••••••••••
MESAVEllDE
Co.try CW. V-Lovely 3 Bdrm 3 bath
end UQlt, enclosed
cou r tyard, double
1ara1e .-1th load• or
s toraae ca binets
Beautifully maiotaane<i
C::. '">fl HT ~PHnl-'fl~T ll <, OCEANNONT
2 br, 2 ba condo. Distress
lll, 21/•ACOMDO sale Sl79,000. R&H ln vmmenta, 752·2197
Almo1t New! Frplc, ~~~~~~~~~ Balcony, Patio Yard, l-
$130,000 Owner will LANDMARK 2 s lry,
finance PP ONLY (213) 4bdr, 2~ ba. 3 car gar
373-570. New 1n out $156.SOO
adult community, with 3br, 2ba, ''Halecrest " pool and spa and securl· Home 1129,500 ty aates thruout. Walle lo
built in finan 963-8377
*ASSUME YA t'hO/o
• Bdrm + 1~ ba. $79,000
VA l•t. atS773PITI. LIP
$120,000. Possible lO'lt
down. Prine. only Bkr,
751-6836
exclusive Mesa Verde ____ ss_7_·388_1 __ _
Country Club and 1011
course. Aakinl Sl.85,000.
For infonnation and ap·
polntment lo see, call
StG-ll.!H
·: -,, HERITAGE
IMDOOltSPA
Beaut. 2 sty 3 BR, family
room and spa room on
cul de sac near all
schools Agt 646·4380 ,
64.2-4"7
LEA.SE OPTION
STOP HERE
. • REALTORS
peeriv.ate beach. m..500~~~~~~~~~I Luxurious custom con· f4 I do. 1700 sq. ft 2 frplcs, 3
This super nice 2 Bdrm 2
Ba condo iJI just right for
a young couple starting
oul All the amenilles
are here Large low in·
terest loan available and
seller will carry a 2nd
Priced right at $109,900
MILLION DOLLAR owe STRGHT ~o~sias~~.~~~
LOTS-Prime bayfroot Nd'TE
lalboe lsbtd Rlty
67).1700 I
lot1 on little Balboa Auume lsl TD w /2 CLOSE TO PLAZA
Island. Unobstructed S20,000 dwn for this dart Sprawling 3 bed~oom
view of main channel. iog E .slde 2 Bd condo 1 condo loots jusl Like a
Actual price Sl,300.000 w/lrg brick frplc. Cozy model. Two story floor
each. step-down living rm, plan 2"'1 baths Formal •--------1
BIG CA NYON -
Broadmoor, 4 Bdrm, 2v.
ba, with pool and spa,
newly redecorated.
$645,oeo
nice patio. Joyce Wallie dining room Atrium
831·1266 Government low tn·
R&'M~
H ~\l l llH~ ~---~-----
terest loan available
$~3•,750, TARBELL,
BKR. 546-1720
STEAL IT!
$85,500
P R I D E 0 F•-------•I •$87,tOOAT
So. Coast Plaza•
Believe it or not. we
ha ve a spacious 2
bedroom, 2 bath home
with excellent lerms.
759-1501or752-7373
2 B d r m , 1 ·~ b a t h .
fireplace Close to beach
and s hopping. Hurry'
645·9161 OWNERSHlP -
Palcrmo model, 4 Bdrm,
country kitchen. super
master suite, lovely
yard. $325,000fee
SKYLIGHTS & USED
BRICK-Ony and well
done 3 Bdrm. pool, fplc,
lovely nower filled yard.
Sl65,000.
THAT'S WHATS
UHlqul AIOUT
u ..-1001: tl()~r:s
Realtors, 675-6000
1006 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
MAMI YOUI TBMS
Prime Balboa b land
d u p lex. Immaculate
front a partment with
fireplace and mini view
plua, la r1e modern 3
Bdnn• 2~ batba. See
thlaone beforelt'a 1one.
642-5200
j PETE BARR E TI
HEALTY
OWHB
W /AHAMCE
MISAVBDE
rOOLHOME
Jldt lo time for sum·
.~ OPEN HOUSE
REALTY /' \ mer! Thill charming 4 ~,,,. 111...IL-I laB ~~~~~~~~ Bdrsn home features -nalftlll
huee ramily room wath 104 bar, skylights and REALESTATE lniM ---------· slamed glass windows VIEW CONDO
overlooking beautiful Newer 2 Br. 2 Ba Many solar heated pool and spa. And, for the avid upgrades. Large as -
photorrapher. a com· sum able loan. Seller will
plete dark room with carry large 2nd. TD with
custom cablneta, aiok, 20% down.
separate water beater. D Bourlte Realtor
U&bt sealed and ventilal· 546-9950
ed. Beautiful wallpapers ---------
and levelors lhruout. A COLUGIPAlllC
untq ue lr.itcheo with 4 IDllM
cedar sl1:7U&bt and re· New U1tin1t Lovely
celled ll1htlng. This street, walk to acbools
customized home Is a and 1hoppln1. Bdr m
m U1t to see. Offered at could be used as
SUt,900. For an appolJ\t· ae par ate 1 u eat or
menttoaee,cal1540-ll.51 mother-in-law area
• HERITAGE
. REALTO RS
· Hf:RlfAGE
"' ;'\l I I Ill'-,
w/privateentrance. Call
agt. ~for appt.
••••••••••••••••••••••
VA TERMS
Oo lha spacious 2 Bdrm
Greentree home. Needs
TLC but haa great poten-
uat. Priced to sell at
ft.19,500. cau for info e-HANl.H
HEAL TY
1 >~> I /000
*•TREES Exceptional 2 Bdrm 2 Ba
townhome fronting on
quiet treehned green
belt. End urul, lrg patio
w /br1ck BBQ Asssume
low interest loan. Hurry.
won't last'
Wm'41 brldgc
RealUJ
551 3000
1120 lhrran<'• l'lo.•". lntnr·
VIEW HOME
Xlnt locauon 3 Bdrm. den. family rm, 2 wet
bars , close to ten
ms I pool. S330.000. Call
Barbara Glass. Cent. 21,
Sandpiper Rtly 640-4950
UNDER MARIEl
College Park Syra~use
Plan features 3 Bdrm +
den, 2 Ba, large fam•I>
kitchen Asking 1000 s
under market Call for
details.
e HANCH
HFAL I Y
~G 1 2000
MO 9UAUFYIMGJ1 UMIVBSITY PAU
Only $29,500 down. Love
ly Cardiff model Ill Ter·
race Calh ceilings and
wet bar provide an
elegant setting for enter
taanmg Coty loft/den 2
Bdrms, and overs:i: 2 car
gar $138.000
T OWft & Country
Realtors 552-1800
~
Beautiful Woodbrige
Place, Biscay Model.
lo w interes t loan
$269 .900 Agl
Thompson, 551 8700
WOODBRIDGE
M usl sell brand new
Petera #2 Plan. 4N 4Br
JBa, closetolake
Open Sat/Sun 12-S
113 
Warmmgspring
$245,500
645 9850 dys, 675-9857
eves
LOOK WHAT
WE FOUND .
Incredible find, good
location, temfic VIEW.
extra large pool sized
lot Immaculate Plan 4
in Turtle Rock Hills 4
bdrm, 2\.'a ba +ram. rm
$289,500.
1b1s 5000 Sq. Ft; Home 1iU oo Linda
Isle. A private guarded Community in •
the heart ot NeWJ>Ort Beach. ·Boat
slips tor (3) 55' -70' Yachts. For Sale or ,
Trade.
We are developers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner J*1
'lbo~pson.
1714) 121·1210 l21JI 591-IUJ caoo• JSZ.J710 ...... v.. 1067 ....................... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AFFORD AILE
3 Bdrm Mlasion Viejo
stnale family home with
country kitchen and lov· eb' mounl&l.n vlew Only *29.~ down to exb.lallnl
loan• Jnd no qualifying. fl24,500.
Toww & Comtry
.... htah 551-1100
Newport leach I OH
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HEIGHTS CONDO
CUSTOM HOME ..wroaT
Immaculate custom home, 2 private
brick patios, spacious living rm, 3 Br, 3
Ba, gburmet kitchen and all the
goodies. Pfush carpets, walking dis·
lance to the beach & water. Don't miss
this one for $265,000.
aaraae. Great asauma
ble flnancLn&. No quail·
QUAIL PLACE
PROPERTIES
Quiet Npt Hgta/Cllf· J fhaven condo w/pool &
~~~11 ..
111111
..
11111
.. 111s1z1•11t1z1o111111~
REDUCED TO .~~REAi.TY
SB.I.
Owner will carry
$195,000 oo tbll 1pac1ou.a
1:,';.!~·~v~~ aH~te~ IA YSHO•ES CLASSIC CftAIMEA!
aq ft deaiened for family Custom built 4 BR, 3112 bath Cape Cod
llvln1. l380.ooo Joyce style home completely remodeled.
altu. 631-1286. Formal dining plus family rm/kitchen
-a gourmet's dream. 24 hr gated
community w /2 pvt beaches. $850.000
incl land. Appl only. Dona Chichester.
642-8235. (F88>.
lfewpan BMch
001 Dover Drive Harbor View Cent.er
642-8235 644-6200
CONDO W /VIEW . J ..
l Bdrm, S20,oo0 dwn will Capi1......_ I 071
PALM SPRINGS AREA.
2Br 2ba. 4 )Tl dl8~mpl
furn. On 9 bole exec 1olf
courae lo adlt park.
View San Jacinto .
SS.9300 ult for Vlrfinia.
New Mobile Home,
oceanvlew-El Morro
Beach Park, ap 70. 2Br,
apace rent $175 mo. 20 yr
lie. '59,900. 4119-3816
10 X '5, lo be moved. Xlnt
cond. New cpta, SIBOOO,
873·S826
TRIPLE MOBILE HME
lie fam rm, w/wel bar,
2br. 2b•. e fnail tree•.
uUI shed, much more. I
s.31-9491 I
Mew llclllllvel
IALIOA ISLAMD
Marine Ave · hi&h via·
lblllty locaUon on prime
~omer. Hu existing re·
tail buaina1 plus two
rental unit.I. $550,000.
WATERFRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
IUSIMISS
OPPOUUMm
in Newport Beach loca-
Uoo on PCH. 50' fron·
ta1e. Great lease.
1180,000.
wat .. fl..eHws
hie.
'31-1400
•EXCITING• .,... ... 1 01llh Wt 1100 19711"':1=o~~3Br, •••••••••••••••••••••••
281, U1ht int, lrl liv & MEAi THI SAMD
dlnin1 area, 21 yra + to lalboo,... .,.....
qualify. Small pet Second• to the waler
welcome. Excellent 3 BR owner'•
Ifft lw a. ToWll "home-like" unit ~ 2
1974 Royal Lancer 24x80. BR, 2 ba, rental urut.
2Br, 2Ba w/family rm, Ideal for home & in·
lo La1 Hills nicest 5 atar come. Ckiee to Newport
pk. 21 yrs + to qualify. pier and shops. 1289,950.
139,000. Also 20x80 2Br, W..a.y M. T.p.r Co.
2Ba w /fam rm +encl. Realton 644-4910 porch. $29,500.
CLASSIC
MOllUHOME
SALIS
2'106 Harbor. Ste 20ll-A
540.5937
lacw ,,...., 2000
•••••••••••••••••••••••
WA TEI AMO SAMD
Luxurious Peninsula
home, close to beach &
bay. Large 3 Bdrm. 3 ba.
2 frplcs and much more
Only 4 yrs new Assume
large 1st al 10~ 1nl
Owner will carry 2nd
$350,000. Call 979-5370 lo day
ALLSTATE
move you in Assume ••• •••••••••••••••••••
loans. $137 . .iOO Rae • 4br. 2ba. assume ap l~~~~~~~~~I
Rodgers 631 -1266. Agt. prox $81K at 11 ~.3 Vlata S• adult, 2Br. lBa,
APnJVAUEY
Near new 4-Plex. 2
bdrm, 2 bath each unit
with fireplace, enclosed
p•tio, double gara1e
1115,000. Bill Grundy.
Rllr,67~1.
REALTORS
*LIDO ISLE*
Lovely 2Br. 3Ba home
Beautifully remodeled
2yrs ago $484,000 with
xlnt hnancang Open
House Sat. Sun 1·5 119
Via Vella
Owner I Agent 673-0697
IACICIAY
3 Bdrm, 2 bath home
plua ideal mother-In-law
quarters Compl.
w/balh. $220,000
Roy Mee.de, Ur.
541-7729
LIDO ISLE
Cuual eleaance la lhe
capUon f9f'lhU beautiful
Spanlab style home on
preatialoua Lido lale
Includes 4 bdrms, all
with pvt balha, in-
door/outdoor awtmmmg
pool and apa Excel
fln~nc 1ng Ofrered at
$649,000.
*Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
BLUFFS BARGAIN
3 bdrm twnhme. Walk lo
everythlna: pool, lennia,
achoola. park, ahopplna. Alt. 875-58.10, 640-8146
HARIOR VIEW
HOMES
Portoftno mdl w/4Br 2~ Ba lo the main boute,
bonut rm w /loft Ir full Ba adjoin the pra1e.
Perfect arranaement for
ln·lawa, IDdl. olflce or
1tucllo. Lr~acceoted by an lo •J>a. A.lk·
Int tMZ,JOO. ,000 a1-
1umabJ• loaa. Owner
trill eonalder ZOd. Call
Tom Baran~.
RflMttt)(
,, ~ \' l ' ----
•SIOOOODOWM• Frplc , Sprinklers , 20'xS2',mstrbdrmdeck
Beaut 3 br, 3 ba, lrg fam Xlras! $139,900 Broker over wooded stream. Nr rm Lrg bckyrd Open 493-702il Hosp bus, shop S26,2SO. DUl'LEX • M.I. (1)941-1056 pp Near beach, two 3Br un· houae Sun. i:.JO Heather Sell things rast w1th Daily ill. 2 car gar. nr park
Ln 631-01.517. Pilot Want Ads Want Ads CaJI 1142-5678 TSL lNVSTMT 642·1603
UMHiMIE
PENTHOUSE
CONDO
with boat dock, pool,
. s e curity + 180 deg
ocean, C1ttalina & bay
view Fee liand. S450,000.
Smith-Meyer, Bkr.
640.5357 541-7113
Waler front Condo I
$633,000, 1400,000 rln·
aaaume. Bkr cooper&·
tion 673-0248
Watetfl:Glllhplex
Wttla .... Dock
Could be Newport 'a
loweat pri<!ed waterfront
home with lncome urul
too ! Call for Info.
Broker, 988-1182
WATERFRONT
EXCLUSIVE
4 Br 4 Ba + l'Q.8ld'1 qlrs,
huae mstr suite, room
for 2 lra boatt. Terms,
terma. Low down. $1.1
million. Bob & Dovie
Koop. 631-12166
POO&.HOMI
JUST LISTED. loveif 4
BR 3~ ba + den with
wetbar +fam rm, and
deUthtful kitchen over·
looldn1 pOOl and JaC\tJ.Zi.
Muter Is 1uut or
mother·ln-law bdrm•
with own batha. a car
1ar. A1t. Ul•4380 ;
M2-4-M7.
DUPLIX•WATll
DodlfwWloM
3 " 2 Bdnm, 2 Oi>k•. deco and patio.
C/Zl ....... Cwtr
64o.f U7
To Mother With Love ...
Lovr haa • w•y of retum1n1 lo llJ &ourct On th1S ~pt·r1al dn
the lovt you have 1lven la returned with a •pec11I me'h~Kt'
of warmlh Take• look ~haw much you.,., lo~f'd
. . ! I ! I ><-'-,. ' l ,,, , ··' v\;.·l·.1"1 r\
I I , j ,t tj I
II units, near new
houae w 17 renlala
R&'Mftl<
IC ~\IT••I<'-
Jaamlne Crtlek. 3 BR, 2a,..
ba, executive home_
llSOOmo.
IUMl'ALS IBr.l".,._
IBR.lbl. -IBr.l~be. tlOO
l•r. Iba. '1JIOFURN
1...tfM 's-D:r. Nr nu twnbse 3 BR 3 Ba La,,_a H• 3250 Pvt yard. 2 carelec gar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9.1 x Scheel. G • 1895/mo. bt, last, Sec Attractive 3 Br 2 Ba. in
48 Units. 3 br, 2 bl 4 yra ltQ_ ,...,. Laguna Village No pets youna $1,200.000 aasum 7.-..-l ....... , agt 759-1.234 '5~5 mo. 497-4072
9~.3 1nl 1""33-1723 Bkr. 3 br, 2~ ba, con<:'<>. 2 car La.-• MicJ-1 3252
New MobtJe Home 3Br, 1ar .. dedl, patio. pool, •••••••••••••••••••••••
2Ba. frplc, redwood l700. 5"4<MOB3 New 2br, 2ba CONDO.
deck, cedar shake aid· Secl\lded 2Br, lBa paUo frplc, ocn view, lennUI
ang. nr lake • skllna home, pool, adU.a. no courts $725 /mo &M·S9Sl
141,900 Term.a or trade pela, $525 mo 2453 days,645-9399eves
499-3816 Orange Ave. see Mgr 4bd 2b f 1 rm. a, rp c, gar, an
Sell idle Items &42 5678 Apt B. ldvely neighborhood
2 Br. 1 ba, small child
welcome. $550.
673-3614
1735 lease mcl gardener,
n o pel 499-47 21 o r
838-4921
2br, l~ba, dbl gar, lge ~·:~.!~ ..... ?~.~~
yard, children/pets OK. HOME FOR RENT
S875. 642·1M38 I 4 Bdrm. $600. Fenced
BeauUtul 3 br, 2 be, fam. yard & garaae. Kids &
rm, atrium. 1ar. w. elec. pell welcome 9114·2:166
dr, across from park. or 973-2971. Agt .. no fee.
xlnl loc. Yrly leue. t800. Newport 1eocJt 326'
751·7328 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3bdrm. 2ba, tam rm, den,
frplc, "50/mo. Avail
DOW. Call 831-4045.
3 br, 1 ba boute, new
paint ln.a1de le out, ocean
view yard, pref .
newlyweds. S650 + uui..
tcS-3000
Npt Cretl condo, 4 Br 2~
Ba, aplH level, dbl
1ara1e. Leaae '800/mo.
bt, luUrdep. 957.9303
H..._.V.w
Gracious family home 2
atory 4 bdrm
FurnltbiN aYaJI at no
extra. 11200/mo lse. No
pets. 2015 Port Bnstol
Cr. Call Elaine 644-5997
or&t0-5357
THI....,
• bclrm.. a baU., • clean. Y eart1 leaM. mo. Aft, ..,.UN.
Small Blultl Coodo,
281, avaUable now.
mo.~-
Lease or ~ase /Opllon .
Harbor Ridge Condo,
3bdrm, 3ba. den, pool,
spa. tennis, sec 759·8903
S-J ...
Copl.tr-Jbl • ••••••••••••••••••••••
3 BR. den. 2 ba. refril. 2
car gar , $650 Agt. Glona .~. 496-1122
s-te4-3210 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Beaut 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, all
new decor Dnve by
2317 S Lowell S&OO/mo
1st, last + ILSO. 644-5089
2 Blks from So. Cit Plaza,
6 or 12 mo. lte. $ll500 mo
Xlntcond.551-4540
~-~~ ..... ~,~~
OCEANFRONT HO~ O'loalt• pvt beach, 2 r . 2~ ba.l den, din. rm, e
deck, t1200/mo. 499--•
499-5021
•Small cozy cotu;e,
1.bdrm, lbl, atone frplc,
clOH lo ocean. 1700/tho.
495-4488.•
Co.doml' r u ... h•rd 3425 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Bachelor CONDO vacant,
UOO /mo Newport
Beach~
2bdrm, 2car1ar. coyer.cf
patio, '.4 mile to Mith.
Acceaa to pool Ir CO\tttl.
'575. H.B. (213)92J.CT98,
(714)675-812.
.l.11FIMEST
.,.nltb Eltate Li•tn1 ! ~.M:~:.~'!'ci
Sunken cu bbq,
' I ll Un1 fountain•. S~acloua room1 Se irate dlnln1 area
W lll ·ln cJ01ets . bo,lpelille llllchen & ca~ta. Wal.II; to Hunt-IJsitOD Center I IJtclroom-f um, S640
t Bedroom-furn, f.SlO
AdWta, no pet..
Utilities Free!
LA QUINTA HERMOSA Mli.U Parkside Ln. 1 blk
.!t:1 ot Beach, 3 bUta S. of
E<Wl1er.
847-$441
Lori•._. 3741 ••••••••••••••••••••••
walerfront. private
betcb, a«urlty. pool 2 att f\llly furn. Luxury .,W>llt Home. 542-1802 ottfS-OMS
~~~~ ... ??.~!
L.at~ry Oceanfront We,11:))' 2or 3 Br. Comp
fSAtn . iocld linens 6'M714
FaDlaalically furnished
to•nhouse, with ocean
vl•. Tennla court. pool
/mo 78G-tll7
NO
LEASE
REQUIRED I
UR·AOUNO FUN.
Social Ac1t1111t~ D•
lecl"r •Free Sunday
Brunch • BBQ s •Par
tits •Plus much more
tlAfAT RECREATION
Tennis• F1ee Lesson~
lr:>ro & pro shop)• 2
11ealth Clubs• Sauna.
Hyd1oma ssage •Swim
fn1ng • 011v1ng R.inge
~UTIFUl APART·
MENTS Singles 1 &
t Bedroom~ • Fur
ll·Shed &. Unturnoslled
• "<lull L•v•ng •No Pel~
• Models Ooen da.1y
t to 6
Oakwood
Gerden Apartment•
Newport S.ac:h/So.
1100 16111 St
Do•e• .i 161" (7141 642-5113
$395 2 BR. gar, upstairs. Condo, l~, lba, patio, 132 E. Bay. bit-Ina, t.ennia, pool, 1pa,
Ml·sa!lor548-ZS<f sauna, 1ec. &•le. nr
beach. $450/mo. Dee·
2 bdrm 1 ba, C/p , dis-962-2912orM2"4474.
Nooamoker to abr 3 br ,,_ __________ -t bouae In Woodbrld1e. ---~-..,...----
IZ80. 857-2807 af\. epm.
.... ,
M11Mr'stay Mllr ,.
Send a m ... J• to ltlom
via the Dalty Pilot's
Mother'• Day Pe1e.
Your mesQ&e will •P·
pear in a pretty Oower
box. For anlormation
and to place your
me11a1e call 542-5e78
TODAY•
Male/Female-enjoy llv·
Ina ro my pJLllh, million
dollar w•terfl'Qllt hoUle
in Hunt. Harbour. Rent
netoUabJe, M-4.125e
2 !ktnn apt in Balboa 1225
until June 15th. UUl not
lncl. 875-7914
Costa
Found: Hutky, male,
wht/bJeck. Flea collar .
NB, near ltth St.
S75450I
Cl£ATIV£ l Lo • t : Lt G o I d e n a Day Funding it needed Retriever, w/bm collar,
No pymnt Ins speciali.sL no ta1. 4/25 8.1. 760-9584
Homeowner loans a cinch / Le 1oa.o amount Found Parakeet. Vicinity
1peclall"t Land, apt a, of Talbott and Bushard
3 MONTHS rentall, c.'omm. lst, 2nd ____ -._5821 __ ._
6 3rd TD's C~ll Dlck, Lost Diamond watch,
Female Rmmt wanted to Bkr 55f-73U CdM Bank ot America
hw•br, nu cpU/drapes,
tare1e. "60. 821-1890.
shr Condo with 2 FREE RENJ Mo~ Trwt area, or Bullocks, So Brothers. Before 2PM Dffdi 5035 Cout Plaza }..lberal THI WHfffLI TaH Private room and ba•'-in S36-2033. R w L Adul uni f "' ---------1 3175 St,!Ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• E ARD 7~ btwn uxury t ls at • · lovely mobile home an • 5" 6pm 1 Bdrm w/loft. 2 Ba, fordable Hvtn1. 1.2 6 3 Huntancton Beach, nr Female to share 3 Br 2 llllldto SaffterMhJ.Co. --------
le.nller
Motmrs Day
M.r '°"' Send a meua1e to Mom
via the Daily Pilot's
Mother's Day Pa1e ....
Your meuaie will ap. .
pear lo a pnitty flower
box. For information
and to place your
meuaae call 542-~8 ,
TODAY ' refri&. stove, pool $420 Br. Well decorated ocean £mployedpersoo Ba. apt, ocean view, ArchedWIRclowa · All typea ol real estate Found: M. moatly wht
283 Avocado 821·1890. Olympic size pool, U&ht only $230 per mo. Mmt Peninsula. $217 /mo. Sl25 lnvestmeotasince 19'9. Terrier w/Green ribbon. Mature female comps·
---ed tennis court, Jacuzzi, h k d security. Avail May 1st. Direct G_.. &try S~*-In Marsh lls .... B h Bl d mon to 52, like fia ....... a, 2Br. 18a, 5425/mo. park like landscaping ave wor an prev. 613-2961 atl6PM. PriMe .,.___. r---2~=:' a .,.. c v . • ... ..
Ciilwkdys Most beautiful bldg in rental refs. 960-5844 aft. H rtMw~ -·-HB768·7306 lra1ler1ng, extend•d
tS&-4173 H.B. 8pm. Prof. F nds hse /apt • 642-2171 545-0611 F'OU trips an Mexico. Write (714,675 8662 NO : Black snake Ad!l89•,DallyPUot,Box 2ll / Froml:e.ll46·08l9 Hohtlt,Motets 4100 w /same. NB area . • Widow has money for about 4' long. Please 1560,Cost.aMesa9282'1: Cath~!r'a} =il~~p~c. I"• · 3144 ••••••••••••••-••••••• :i~llwk, (2l3)8Z2·84l5 Off•r • 15 2N 0 · T . 0 . ·s any size identify 640-&23 Lou. ·
dshwshr, balcony. Pool •••••••••••••••••••••••Balboa Inn oceanfront. ............... 4450 above Sl0.000. No credit P~ah --5-3-50 G~~e:o~~ ~t~~~ .~
& spa. SS35 mo. Adults 0 range tree p I an 4. Low winter rat~. Daily ••••• •••••••••• •••••••• ./ • no pnlty. For action •••••• or weekly Kitchenette M F hr 11 AG T 6 7 3 7 311 • • ••••••••••••••• minded woman 25-40 for only, no pets 2650 Harle lbdrm + loft Adults, no · I 25-40 to s btfi pvt For store & office space c 11 • ~9-:U.7 pet.s. Poola, tenniB. 1475. SOO&up.61:>-8740_._ -3Br !am rm compl furn atreaaonablerates. anytime FIRST LADY mutual Cun ValentlJle
... EWLY DECOR. 730-1250, 542-7609 Yearly. Hotel Apt Room, home or So. Cst. Plaza, 500 to 2700 Sea Ft. -M---L---_.-a-~-...._--E rt M d I 831·04.SCl N.B
" k't h t~&b th U ·1s pool /jac, pride o1 RDEb G11>11.-nnnan .... ..,. SCO • 0 e 5 EMDlo~& 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar Logmta lleedt 3848 a c ene a ta . ownership, may have MESA VE E R SINCE 1981 PoriyDaneen. ,,..in-atlola -
d/washer pool Atlults ••••••••••••••••••••••• paid. S280 mo + secun-use of 2Br. $375 mo. + •~ PLAZA lsl&2nd TDs, SSOK·SlM + r-542.5073 ' lbdrm aptwilbgorgeous ly deposit 2306 W ~ lSZSMesaVerdeE,CM Owner /Non Owner * 972-1345 * ••••••••••••••••••••-•
2 Bdrm condo. Lakeshore
adlt complex Compl.
rec facal. Nr So. Cst
Plza 1495 mo 556-8232
oceanvftwfromlivrm Oceanfront, Newport utl.S40-B225.675·4917 545-4123 SFRs&C-Ondos MC&VlSAAccepted JobsW-.cl. 7015
&. bdrm. Efficiency Beach 613.-41.Sf I ,_._,_ ........ ~ CommerciaJ &lndustnal •••••••••••••••••••-••
k1tch. North Laguna. 2 1 ............ ---. PETER DOBBS COVER GIRL Exp'd cle811lng lady k!Oll·
blocks to beach. Must be SEA I IDlr w AMTEi> 1270 Sq rt on busy Beach 640-6016 613-9043 ang ror a few good steady
or 540-0770
non smoker with quiet UUUl .Female to shr w /2 girls Boulevard·Huntangton * OUTCAU. * Jobs Rea s , ref's
llfe style. $375/mo ancl MQJ(L NB Apt. s166 Call art Beach Ideal for real Want investor ror Npt 953-0778 MC/VISA 498·9480
----uti I Call 497 4342, 6PM 548.8097 eatate office, store or bay front home Give ------
2Br. 1''2Ba Townhouse 973-0307 •Weekly rentals now other suitable business well secured lst or 2nd Need temp office help!
Pvt patio, gar, adults no 1 Bd N h End W lk avail •S98andup 2 Private baths, ava1la· TD Agt,615-6161 *0 UfOTCXYALLLA.DONYLY* Avoid high agency fees. pets 1465 548-7510 rm. ort. · a •Color TV •Phones an G~1 ble 1mmed1ately 10 Ind. Agt 960-0210eves.
to beacb. lnclds utils No rooms for•..t 4350 Year lease Attractively Wut 21-22% Yield? VISA MC Bookkeeper Full char&e.
3br.2ba,crpts,drapes, pets.klS.~1526 2274Newport81vd C.M •••••••••••••••••••••••priced On your TD.'s Notes •972-1131• 20/hrs wkly, $7/br.
patio, carport. no pets. Ch . ..A. -r 11 646-7445 Storage only 1mgle safe 642-4l2 I, Ht 216 SSRa1sers-lnvestorsSS --------• Fl i 1 S485 645.9966 arming st...uo w u & •. ..-7,,. J · W kd Call DeM.lSOn Assoc ** nanc a statement,
. -kitchen, avail. May 1, LIVE IN NEWPORT C ~c~:.;;;n -ames, ee ays 613-7314 SPIRITUAL payroll taxes, CPA exp.
Spacious 2 Br $365 Pool & S325 49'·0.123eves BEACH FOR SlOO PER . . . CowrcW READINGS Pat. 964-4370
laundry fac ---WEEK. 64.5-0440 Single Gar. lockable, for RMfoh 4475 Purchase of 2ND TD: ·s lOam lOpm Fully Llc'd
548-9.S56 N.wport hocJt 3169 -slora&e not parking i ••••••••••••h••••••••• arranged. For details 492 7296 or 492-9034 1815 -----•••••••••••••••••••••••• S-•rlt...tah 4200 $75/mo.6.s-2389 . Shops. stores, hobby. 312 call S Camino Real , San
2 HUGE Bedrooms in PARI NEWPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq.ft., 12' hi w/lge dr & 960-l957Broker Clem super location Fully Newport Beach House. LACiUMA IEACH 21 o sq. ft . w I s ink ....,_ 000 2nd TO 20"' t
carpeted, built-ins, COUMT'IYCLUI Summer Weekly Rental SSO/mo. Tri.sh or Bonnie 548.7249 -"• · '"an .1---------
ground noor Adults, no LIVING l9lhSt. ~blkfromsand. days 833·8847 eves All due 18/mo. Seeured. THE
pets WOmo.646-4477 Singles, l"2 bedroom compl. furn. off 1treet 497-2278 ' 1..-stn•Rewtal 4500 20 un its. 673-6720,
apts, •townhouses. parkine. taJtin& reserve· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 544-0333. (Private lender GirHriends Newport Heights 2br.
lba. enclsd gar . S42.S
548-•262
From S.SlO 6"-l900 llons540-8632eve.only Office l..tal 4400 $575. Approx 2000' In· preferred.) •ESCORTS• ------••••••••••••••••••••••• du1 'I /Office 18101 -'---------
Oceanfront for Winter Balboa Peninsula. Furn 2 FULL SERVICE SUITE · Redondo Cr "Q" Hunt ~/ H011M/Offlce/Hotel
-. -Rentals. Furnished & Br, quiet 1oc 50 yrda to 0 RANGE C 0 AST Bch 842-2834 Persoeak/ * 759.1z16 *
Newu 2 Br patio & unfum. Broke 615-4912 beech S450wk 675·3148 FINANCIAL CENTER ---* 529• I Ill * garage AduJt.s, no pets r 2M5 Mesa Verde Dr. E COSTA MESA Lost Ir FoiiRd
1435 mo 645-5577 NO FEE! Apt. • Condo Vec:offott........ 4250 fl6. Costa Mesa tr75 per ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24Hrs. Now Hmng
tals Villa Re aJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. + M!CW'ity deposit ~O~~ ts~ 1 f: I Ne; i ~ne Lost & P'omd 5300 MC VISA
2 br, l ~ bastudio. adults. ren 67~ 8r!l s •NWPT OCEANFRONT locludea all utll., use of sprinklered 18• clear. ••••••••••••••••••h•··~~~~~~~~~
no pets. 1475 54>3627 er & Lido Isle bayfront, llbrar y/conferfllce & truck door. hea vy r----------~1;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
art 5pm ---OCEAHEROMT W /sml boats Wkly telephone ao1werin& power, a le o(fice Good
2Br , l '•Bl\. frplc
Townhou s e unit
$500 mo 5 48 ·1927.
Furn. 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba 2 673-SURF Secretarial area avail comm'I potential ror
car garaae wrth office. letttala to Shar-. 4300 at Sl7S. per mo. James E auto-related business
washer & dryer meld ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ouoger Attorney Call George Campos,
642-1355 · I ~7-1414. 752·8011 A v a 1 N o w Movana? Avoid deposits __ _
----Wkly/Molhly. & cut Uvl.Oi eapen.aes' 1617 Westcllff. N.B. Want
EASTSIDE3Br Cottage. TSLMGMT 64.2·1603 Profess1onally since financial inst. 70008.f
built ms. washer dryer . 1971 lsl. floor. Agent~l·5032 hook up. garage No curr Haven, 1.804 Clay. 2 HOUSEMAnS
pets $525/mo. 2625 "A" BR l Ba. fplc , no pets 832-4134
Elden 631 17~ S500 mo. 615-0349 KOLlCEHTH
.MESA
INDUSTRIAL
PARK
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Cal~
642-5671
EXOTIC ESCOttTS
•551-1946• Serving au of 0 C
I have a tecluuque that
cou Id help you re·
member dreams. Send
S2 to Dreams. P 0 Box
5062 Glendale, Ca . 91201
IMTRODUCIM&:
J .H WALKER AGENCY
(Now expanded toO.C.)
17952· B Skypark Circle
lrvuie
An exclusive Uve·in P L A C E M E N T
SERVICE
Now your loved ooea can
remain in their own
home, whether the needs
are for companlooabip,
home maintenance or
nursing c1&re. We can
provide people who ere
thorou1bly and pro·
fesalonally screened.
For more info call Susan
Walker. 986-0llllll.
H.., W tllhd 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ACCCMtnMG
CLIM
N•wport Beech/No
880 Irvine
••1'161"• D.a fl'oW ll26 WESTCLJFF 2 Br. 11"1 ba
••••••••••••••••••••••• townhouse. Adutt& only,
HEWPORT
Elegant e~ecutive suites
in prestige location
With complete support
services.
7 I I W. 17th St.
Lost. Cat, Himalayan
Seal Point, Sat in Top of
World area. Lag Bch.
REWARD494·2536 aft 4
SHE
Exp in bank rec's .
General posting" 10-key
by touch req . Xlnt
benefits. Salary com-
mensurate w/ability. Nr
O.C Airport. Call
549-9322 The Rusty ,
Pelican, 2862 McGaw. (7141 6~1104
l or 2 br, balcony, 0 .W • no pets. S550/mo 1728
Bedford Lane 548-7533
Costa Meta. CalH.
642....4463
E S
Lost: 11 ~ mo old Brindle
C 0 RT S
MODEIJNG & Irvine.
clean, coin laundry &
S.Cle-..te 3776 wshr, gar. nr ocean. •OCIAHFttOHT•
••••••••••••••••••••••• 661-0252
•ShandU•iRg•
Counselors to penonally
select your compatible
rmmte to suit your
lifestyle Shared-Living
833 Doyer Or Suite 31 NB
831-1801
714/851-0681 US-9199 1 .1 Pat Bull, F, bet. Superior •DELUXE-..CES• 1980 sq fl Un t avaa & Nwpt Blvd nr Hoag ·---------1 ACCOUNTS
IECEIVAILI lbr~lba, clean, new fum -------1 Frplc. panelled. palao,
2 Br. 1 Ba. nu paint " lbr. SS75/mo. 642-00451---------i 6 apes, util pd Wik lo t' all •-eves be /ahppg 101 w carpe .Av .now.-5. ---------1
Mar1uita 41r.l-8120 Call Darlyne 661-1162 or
••••••••••••••••••••••• Gtiitr• 3102 ••••••••••••••••••••••• APTMn FOil IEMT H.lJ .. N.B. Colla Mesa
Sb8le0ung for Everyone Ba~ to 4 Br Unfurn A . Certain locations
o er : Pool , spa ,
fireplace, laun room,
b•amed ceiling s , ot••es. all bullt·lns. ~~tden & Townhouse iit~GMT. 642·1603
~, ••• ll07 ~;: ............. .
sdt tau pd. lBR Duplex. dt . Ba)' Ave. Balboa
MO .sa-iw
494-3672
1410 & S430 -Spacious
2Br . apts Nr Dana
Harbor One w/ocean
vu 25081 La Cresta Or
Owner 494-6848
E. Blurts Condo, 4Br,
3Ba. sundk, pool $850
mo . 845 3474
(213)541-4460
Bach. unit on water
$300 /mo Own /Agl
833-2650 or 613-8849
No Dana Point off Cst 2br, Iba. Harbor View
Hwy, ocn view all rms. w/pool MOO/mo.
2Br. tBa. hardwood Ors ~
•frplc. S.OOOmo. Tommy ------
41M-2469 Steps to lhe bch, I&• 4br,
Hwllagt• .._. 3140 Z~ba clsed LD patio, ,yr
••••••••••••••••••••••• ly. $9SO/n10. 613-2507
,~'l AOUl T ;:·re. LIVING
• , & 11111 1'1!10 ApO
• OoSh•HP!f•\ & 880 S
• Poo1 & Rte lloom
2 BR, oew epts, 1 blk to
beach. $900 mo. yrly.
631~
S..toAM 311 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Extra le 2Br 2ba condo.
Oldest & largest agency
an So Calar since 1971
Credits ABC.NBC.CBS.
Cosmo. Phil Donah~
*''>off•
to all who need a place
Newport Beach, 641· 1899
Garden Grove, 196-3482
Rmmte wanted to shr lge
condo nr S.C. Plaza.
Sauna, pool, jacuzzi.
Private bath. Available
Ma y lit. $250 + U ·
penses. Call 557.3527 or
759·0060
• G11oen l1~ose101no
• JOQ 10 8c1<h & Sfloos
S CI
SEA fNVIRONMENT
'II, 1/HAM •l IU"4 H fj
'"•1 ~~on
P a ti oci g a r • Po o I • M or F, Newport Crest 3
wuhr/ pyr, prof paJnl· br Townhowle Tennis,
ed. new drapee. Adults Jae. Utll Incl. $3SO mo.
Close te> Ml Sq Prk 6U-3850or54&-1869.
77$-0529, Dl-10ll8
Mr. So. Cead .......
2 Bdrm lba, 1ar,
cbUdren OK. '435/mo
Aft
M /F to shr 2 bdrm apl
acrou from Fashion
l1land. $330 /mo Incl
utl.la CaU Paul, 84G-8937.
M•letrem 5 br. 2 ba hse
nr S.Cst Plau/f'Twy
Spa, 1225 + 1hare uUl.
641-4913.
vm M a y 1st Ca r pets , 1-1 room, from $235/mo. drapes wet bar. •336·34• Hosp. 631·~74 SWEETHEARTS
•ESCORTS•
24HOURS
No lease required. 2172 sq. fl. •Leasing off ace FOUND : Wa-1-let-in-rro-nt._. D u Pont 0 r . A d j hrs. Mon lhru Fri 8·4. A I r po rte r Hot e I Sat 10-2 of CdM Post Office. Call
833-3223. g.12 & identify. 673-9432 eves ---------tR...tah W..t.d 460 759-6629 days.
CdM Deluxe Suites, AC, •••••••••••••••••••••• ampl pke. uUl pd. 28S5 American family of 4 Lost: Male Irish Setter,
E.CstHwy.61S-QM>O from Brussels looking whale chest CdM
f b L 0 Reward. 640-1499. FULL SERVICE SUITE or ouse an a.una, CdM or Newport nr bch 0 RANGE C 0 AST lo reol or trade for 3.4 Found · stray dog in
FINANCIAL CENTER weeks In Aueust Newportarea.
Visa/MC 529-1927
STACEY Formerly With
.. FANTASY" is Now
With "THE
GIRLFRIENDS'' N B
759-1216
2845 Mes.a Verde Dr E Aa.rmaal-Hukan, Avenue 548-3238.
#6, Cotta Men. Share Hamoir 17 'A' 11801--------.-. AFTER ... OOlli.I
350 •q fl office with Brussels Belgulm Found yellow Lab max. " "
another Realtor or comp 32·2·374-1223 m a I e Aust r a II a n *DELIGHTS* other small buslneu. ---l Shepherd, tri-color,
If you are a sharp penon
with 2 or more yn. of
solid accte. exper. with
gd. back&J'C)Wld in ac-
counts receivable, call
us EDP exper. belpful.
not nee Busy Account·
mg Dept. in electronics
co offers a variety of
dutlea, competitive pay
& excell. benefits. in-
cl u d 1 n g our 4 DAY
WORK WEEK. Co. ls
located ln beaut. Laguna
Canyon, nr. beach A: re-
sort areas. Call for appt.
Telonic Berkeley,
71HN-9401. E.0 .E. ta50 per mo.+ security, Needed·& place to live 21 rem ale. Old English HHM/Offla/Hotef
includes utils. & phone adult.a, 2 dogs. S30().t350 She e Pd o g ._ ma I e . * 529-4631 *
answering . Other IWB-12.S2 Schnauzer max, mile. 2'Hn. Nowfflring ---------services avail. 957.0701. L SB house / d Newport Beach Animal MC VISA Accounlina ~-5 daily. ~ tor Dana ~.Y~~u _:s~h~e~lt~e~r ,~64t~-~3656~-==·=~~~~~~~~~~
760-8015evesart.6PM. ~ 1.25 Sq. Fl on
NEWPORT
HAllBOI .,~
•
465 ..••..•..•........ , ....
6 Atrea, 10 ml from Palm Sprlof•• store your boat,
trlr o what have you for
S50 mo. Also self cont'd
campra welcome to
vacation. View of tram
Call Anawer Ad U80.
842-4300, 34 boun.
.c
tlPHOLlrDRAP~
Cleantn1 lb your home.
Tl p. TOP CARJ>ET Ir
Accoml~Floo l~~r~C~an~-:.__~~~~ .... -----------t••····················· ....... ~ ............... C....t/CGRCJ .. , __________ ,H........... Mlnl·bllnda 4t woods, win
LEIGH ROBERTS •••••••••~•.......... -----'-----1 DUMP JOBS ••••••••••••••••••••••• dow tintina. vertlclea. Speclallied Acc:ountm1 Foundatlooa Retainin1 CJ••-.. Small u ....nu Joba H O U S ES I TT I N G . Phone eat Sd-~ . Senlce 548-l484 Walla, Hlllakse Restora-••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., • ..._ Weeklv, monlblv or'
1 b P . CaUMIKEMB-131H " " Mo &.... ........ t on, Sia a, alloa, CLEAN-l1P6/LAWN Wlll consider pet.. Rera •-.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Block• Brick. Llc'd. Maintenance.Lndacp Haalinl •Dump J obe. Vicki 556-9Z50 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Drtvewaya, parkinl lot 642-8317eves/96G-0539 Freeeat. "2·9907 AaktorRandy. Movtn1' The Starvln1
re · I ti "-die~ Colle1e Studenta Movln1 pairs, Ha coa n1 Pool decks, patios, TRHS Ml-MZJ -.-. S4t8 Aaphalt 6-46·4871 ----------1••••••••••••••••••••••• Co. has IJ'OWll, lntured Uc'd. maaoory, sport court, Topped/removed; clean Tree/1brub bir-. 1araae WE DOIT ALL! same aood service
tennis courts. Lie . ups,lawnrenov 75l·S476 "yard clean-ups. Free We do It best! We do it l!Tl24-436 License
Colleee Student, exp'd,
int/ex, any job for less'
Alex 851-9371, 552·0231
•••••••••••••••••••••••
C--..Mald.g 374067 851·1966,847·7078 ~••-11..U!. est.S57·8Z7l cheapest! Ruuell &4l·M27
••••••••••••••••••••••• .,"'_.....~ Landacanina.644·7062 Wat•rrront Pa1·nt1na CABINET-CARPENTRY THOMPSON'S WAMTID HAULING-student has ------·-----tABC MOVING, Exper Spe~ial Spring -Tl~~
Newport Real Estate
agent w1U consider trad·
ing services What have
you 1ot to trade? Bruce
Blom1ren, RE/MAX
Realtors. 759 1221,
760-0297 Smal1Jobs&Repa1rs CONCRETECONSTR. Mowin1,edain1.rallln1. I lar1e truck. Lowest LANDSCAPING prof, low rates. qwclt rates-qua!. work .
Free esl. 645-2003 Lie. 393:113 642·8482 s w. e e pin I . Free rate, prompt. 759-1976 Rototillinl, clean-ups & careful service 552-0UO lnt/Ext. Mark64S·4290
-Child CGN eisttmates. 646·0944 or Thank you, John. ideaa. Lie. ~l c .. ,....... 645 5737 ••••••• •••••••••,••••• . H--·c..._.._ U--11--•~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• V'W ... ~ ......................
DOORS & WINDOWS $31.90/WI( . Sprinklers, hauling, trim· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
"MOVlN·MAN ''
is careful, courteous &:
cheap. Pls call 642-L329
RepalredorReplaced Hot lunch. C.M. Chns-min&. clean-ups, mow· Wanta REALLYCLEAN ·~1CadStretcbLimo
Free eat. 635 3720 ttan Preschool. 646-5423 Ing. 645-7287, 546-882.8 HOUSE? Call Gingham Orient rugs-tv-stereo· PalntlncJ/' ... ..., ----c~c...__ Girl Freeeat 645-51.23 bar·pbone. SJO/hr + ••••••••••••••••••••••• All Types Remodeling & unnv ._.-Comm'l/Resld. Fertili:t· . . 20%. '96-8364,831-3046 QUALITY PAJNTERS
Repairs, top quality, 17 ••••••••••~·••••••••••• ing, trimmin1. planting, ROBIN'S CLEANING BAROAJN RATES
yn in area Llc'd Mr Construction-All types clean-up. ~5409 Service-a thoroughly MOIOftt'J Free eat 848-5684
Palombo; 962 8314 w:O/::=.· Fre::~973 Gardening, landscaping, clean house. 54().0857 ~-~~~·~·;~~·~~··~::=~~ •STEVENS PAJNTlNG
All Around Carpenter Corona del Mar Const Co. tree trim':1'1ng & re Eitpertiff Housekeeping Jobs. NewJ?Ort , Costa Int /ext. FrH 1tem1zed
Finish & Rough Free design consultation by moval, ma,Jor clean-up, Supplieefumished Mesa, Irvine, Refs eat. Neat.quality work
Est. John 979.4529 or deaian director, color free est. 752·1349 Personalized 641-4970 675-3175 S32·320J, ~l
Will paint your home loofhMJ
• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ext. &/or int. Free est QUALITY ROOFING
Ramon, 646-0333 aft. 6 All types, free est
DAVE'SPAJNTING Viaa,MC 5"1·5930
Serving sat is r i e d HARBOR ROOFING
customers 9 yrs Qual. Leak Repair-resicomm
inte1rity. Reas, ins. lie 1st qua I mat'I & labor
760-7301 Beat any bid 631 9193
H-WWAUPAPER
25 yrs exp. Free est
Fast, neat. reliable
S8/roll "up 645-6490
ROOAMG
All t ypes, repairs.
decks Free estimates
Call Bob 548-0769 775-34182 sketcbs, & ald in obtain· ~ NEED YOUR HOME Small jobs wanted. Bnck Jnter/Exter/Reftn11h1ng
Sellin& anything with a an& fin. 644-4289 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEANED' I and Block. Low hourly ce1Unaa/walJpaper Lie. Selling anything with a
Daily Pilot Class1f1ed Ad Carpentry, Additions & HOME IMPROVEMENT Evelyn, 642-0728 art. 5 I rate. 499-1226 aft 6pm Cain&: Sons 1198-5105 Daily Pilot Classified Ad
BALBOA ROO_Fl_N_G-CO
Take advantage of SlOO
gas or food give away
Realtors welcome ls a simple matter SmalJ jobs-25 yrs exp. Remodelln1--0dd jobs is a simple matter
just call 642-5678 Uc 309152 5411-2719 28 yra exper. 979-2265 Sell idle items 642-5678 Want Ads Call 642-5678 Sell idle items 642·5678 just call 642-5678. 673-6743 6'13-0403
Custom U\e lNltallahon,
firs, kit, baths & relat.e<I
remodelin1. free est
Roger Irving ~l60
Tf"ffSff'Tlce ••••••••••••••••••••••• NOW IS TIIE TIME to
prune your trees. Call
"The Experts". 20yrs
local. George548-3239
W•ldl1t9 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Indus /Comm./R~sid .
Atlas Mobile Metal
548-9507
Window a.•lag •••••••••••••••••••••••
''Let The Sunshine In"
Call Sunshine Window
Cleaning. Ltd. 548-8853
Placing your <:laSliified
ad is so simple . just
give WI I\ call on the
phone and we'll help you
word your ad for fast re·
suits 642·5678
H.fp W_.H 7100 H.tp W_.H 7100 H•lp W-.cl 7100 H.1p W..ted 7100 p WCllftd 7100 Hflp WCllftd 7100 H.ap W..e.d 7100 H.ap W..ted 7100 H•lp W..ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ANSWER~O Serv No
exp. nee. Part & full
Ume. Min typing req'd
631·0140 EOE
ANTIQUE Shop, Laguna
Beach requires resp. &
honest yne person, leav
ing school or older to as
sist with running quality
antq. shop. <:all 494 2272
Assemblers/Ele<.'lron1cs
lmmed opening for
final assembly pos1taon
Eitp with air
screwdriver desirable
Small friendly Co nr
ocean 645 3632 ask for
Wes
ASSEMILSt
FIT, some electncal as
sembly Exp preferred
Some overtime may be nee 898-2658 ·
ASSEMILERS
Loe Mission V1e10 co
needs Assemblers w 12
yrs exp. Candidates
must have id manual
.dexterity, gd eyesight,
neat In appearance & de·
pendable Work is in life
support medical elec
tronlcs. Gd. benefits.
On ly reapoQ.sible
persons seeking perma·
nent emt>lymt need ap
ply. Call: Mrs. Parelll,
581-3830
Assembly
ILUE JEAN JOIS
./WAllHOUSE
./FACTC>aY
I ASS!Ml&.StS
Lon& & short term as
s11nments
AVAILABLE NOW• Call
or come by
2102 Business Center
Dr , 11208, Irvine,
833-1441 or 27957 Cabot
Rd .. Laauna Nl&uel,
831·0542 or l6LS2 Beach
Blvd., #230E, Hunt
lngton Beach.
NEVER A FEE
IAIYSITTER
LovtDI. responsible BANKING
person needed Mon.·Fri.
Call art. 6, 644-1027 TfilER
Bankin&
TB.LEI
Full Time
No experience ne<'. Will
train. Position avail in
our South Coast Plaza
office Call
Kathy Amburgey
54().4066
CALIFORNIA
FmERAL
Sa•i..,.&Loan
695 Town Center Dr
Costa Mesa. Ca 92626
Equal Opportunity
Employer
Banking
TBllR
Newport Beach office
seeks exper'd. full time
Teller. Typing & lO·key
add For further in·
formation & interview
call:
Brian Taggart
644-7255
WESTSlH
F£DElAL SAVIMGS
14 Corporate Plan
Newport Beach, Ca.
E .O.E .M/F
Banking
MEW ACCOUNTS
Newport Beach S&L has
openm.i for New Ac·
counts Counselor New
Accta . IRA/Keogh, col·
A11 o•htandllHJ op-
portwtlty ....... for -
indl•ld.al with sis '"°""" pn•lom T •r exp•rl•11ce. A1 a
lead.r in .... flncmlclal
com1Hnfty, 1111,.rlal
lank can offer ••·
ullHt salariH and
IMMflts. ,.._. foM •
today .. ow tM..ttM
Coate Mfto offlu.
Co•tact SHIRLEY
~ILIERT to •rmNJe
Clft lntent.w app r>W
!Mftt.
IMPERIAL
BANK
695ToWRC...terDr.
Casto~
CAtl626
7 I 4-641 ·2200
bt.262 Equal Opp Employer
USITHE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
lllSULT"
SEllVICI
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5671
ht. J22 lecllons. & NOW Acct.s. ________ ,.
ex per. req'd . Salary
commensurate with ex
BANKING
TELLERS
CAREERS YOU
1CAMCOUHT
OH!
GREAT WESTERN
SAVINGS has 1m·
mediate openings for
TELLERS on a FULL
Tl ME basts 1n our
NEWPORT BEACH
Branch
We are 1eeking mature
dependable people w1tb
previous financial In·
stltuhon experlen~e or
c ash hanl!llng ex·
perience but we will
train quallr1ed in ·
d1viduals. Pubhc con·
tac t bac~gro und 1s
helpful Knowledge of
10 key and light typing is
required
We offer competitive
salaries, excellent
benefits and work in a
beautiful office.
Please apply in person:
GW
wl~TWESTHM
-$AVtMGS
450Mtwporl c ..... o... M•.,......_.
AA /EOE/M/F
Sell thinp rast wtth Dally
Pilot Want Ads
per Full insurance
benefits .Ir paid career
apparel. Pleue call:
Ma. Denny Parisia
71~
mr:i BANKING ~ START
MIWPOIT IALIOA
SAVIM$5 & LOAN
E.O.E.
·~t!~··1~1 i--.--1
1 CHECKING
CREDIT INSTEAD
OF THE WANT ADS.
We're looking for a Credit
Checker who wants to put their
time to better us e. By working for
the bank that gives you the credit
you deserve. In an atmosphere
that's a far cry from the stodgi-
ness you find in most banks.
E.O.E. M/F/H BANKING
ASS8141LY
IO OPENINGS Start work tomorrow!
Eolry level po1ltlon1/no
exper. req'd. Lon1 term
a11l1nmeot1 with
alee/clean co. In Inlne.
Gd. payl.pald wkly., no I•. Appay btwn ""4.
.Norrell '
TUll'OfWl'f tllmeu . ...,
2Cltl BuatoeaCtr. Dr.
f20lt 1"1.D• (off lhcArthur blwn.
Cua Ilaria Is Moon· ruv re.taurantl> S0.1411/F
Our Newport Center of·
fke haa an immediate
opening for a
T ......
<3C> Hrs. per week)
Eaperlenced not re·
q\l.lred-Tratnins wm be
provided.
I W elll hrio Bank otfen
outalandl.na benefita and
con1enlal wonin1 at·
mospbere. For IJ)Ore in·
formaUoo pleMe call: .,.... ...
JMla
714-6iA980
lllN¥>11JJ
'
Y<m11 process and verify credit
checks on consumer and com-
mercial loans. Respond to other
companies requests for credit
infonnation on UCB customers.
And write up requests for credit
· infonnatioo from consumer credit
application ;
Allittakes fi baiictyping and
communication skills.
So' can u• If you've got these
qualificadons.
You might never have to do your
checJc:ina ln the want ada again.
CASHIH
Bankinc CLEIUCA.L Coc ktail Wai ter /
Waitress, tugh volume
house Orange Cnty
Airport area, only de
pendable & exper nd ap-
CONSTRUCTION Ap·
prent1ce, &en
knowledge needed. Pis
apply . 711 W. 17th, AS,
C M or phone 631·2004
TB.LEA
Experien~ required
IARCLA YS IAHIC
Contact Cathy Antunez
631-1511
F I T po11t1on avail
Salary commensurate
with exp Apply in I
person, Metro Car
Wash, 29(1()Harbor Blvd
C.M
Authorization operators
pltime. Graveyard pos1·
lions open. Work 25·35
hrs per wk. Hrs avail.
Tues thru Sun. lOPM·
SAM . $4.01 to start.
TymshareTransaction
ply Call betw 2 & 5pm ---------
E.O.E. M/F/V/H 1---------
HAT IMR.A TIOM
Start now~am extra
income m your spare
time. For appt, 848-6995
Beauticians &
Manicuriat.s with chen
tele, be sell.employed,
pick your own hours
First c lass salon
557-2234.
CASHIERS Services. Inc.
2462 Dupont Dr , Irv
E .O.E. Mil-' u TD TE M ~C~LE~lll~TYP~IST~I
Work in beautiful s ur
MARKETS roundings at the harbor
For2nd&3rdSh1fts 32-40 hrs/week Pay
We promote to manage· commensurate with exp
ment & supervision from Requires good typing
w1thtn skills, bookkeeping &
Mon-Fri Ask for Carole
Smith 549-8728.
Companion to live m with
e lder ly woman .
housework Must have
car 548 3366
• Cornr::-/ Afct. Mature,~ eiderly lady
Light housekeeping.
some cooking Live in
weekends Permanent
S48 3688
WANTACAREER" general office exp
Cost.a Mesa Please apply Tues thru Construction IOOKKE:EP£R/FC 111 Del Mar Sat Dana Pt Marina $300-$600 WK Small manufacturer or 631-9421 Co , 24701 Dana Dr
S ··' .. __ k o Pt MO EXP. MfC. pa eqwp . ..,.,, ey open ana · Get out or the hot sun &
ing with outstanding LagunaBeach mtooura1rcondofftces g r ow th potent 1 a I 494 9'llJ Famil1ar1ty with CLEUTYPIST Will locate an office
safeguard pegboard HuntlnitonBeach Plessey Semiconductors closesttoyou s y s t e ms he I pr u I 962-9116 m I rv1ne 15· seek mg a South Orange County
Responsible for all ac clerk typist Applicant 10022 lmpenal Way
counting functions thru ----must type 40-45 wpm & Unit E, Call aft IOam
trial balance Workw1th CLSUCA.L have 10-key exper 534932.'i
outside CPA for state-Person Friday, 10 key & Previous office ex per a I North Orange County
menta " tues. Should fllin1. 2601 So Mam St . plus Pleaire apply in 8201 E Oranðorpe
be mature. dependable, SA. (714) ~5506 person· Swte E
with a senae of humor. A i---------PLESSEY 636-0664
real opportunity to erow Clerical SEMICONDUCTORS You r friend s a n cl
a Ion g with us. Ca II PIX ~st 16-41 Kaiser Ave .. Irv neighbors use Classified
(714)646-9664 btwn lOam· 1~~~~~~~~~~1 w he n t hey h a v e noon.AskforLloyd. La1una Beac mfg co I something to sel l
need1 1harp person for Th 'II II Bookkeeper Auist our rront ok to operate Have something to sell" ey te you how well
Cl "f"ed _ ... _ d ·t II it worked for them ' Perm PIT Mon-Fri. switchboard, open " us1 1 ~ 01 we
Exp req. Lite typing, route mall fr usiat wtth
10-key. Pleasant work Person n e I Dept
1ng cond 1n N.B ad workload. Type 50wpm
agency. Non·smoker min Previous clerical
pref. 833-843.'S exper. desired 4 day work wk We otrer gd
pay &: benefits Call for
appt. Telonic Berkeley.
714·49'·1M01. E.0.E
Clerical
WHIM YOU THIMIC
TIMPC>aAAY
THU«UU.Y
COOi<
Full lime pos avatl
Ideal schedule Excell.
co benefits which 1n
e lude discount
privileges, medical/den
tal. Life ins, profit shar
ing & pension plan App·
ly in person
J .C.PEHHEY
24 Fashion Island, NB
E 0 E M/F
COSMETIC.AM
Needed for position as
make up artist at a
Newport Beach salon
Mus t be lic'd 12 131
65-4 6155
COUNSELOR
Day camp June 29-Aug
28 10am·3 30pm wkl~
Previous expenence de
sired S4 25-S4 75 hr
Nig uel Shores Com
munaty Assoc1at1on,
493-0122. -----Counter Help, F IT
Kuster's Cleaners
548-4.UJ
COUNTER Person to
write contracts m tool
rental ctr. Must work
wltnds. Beoefits. Will
tram. Apply: 22600 Lam·
bert-1203, El Toro.
Counter Help & catering.
Busy Dell, some cook·
ing F /time, exp, pref.
Feasts 494-4772
CUSTODIAN-lmmed
openm1 ror exper detail
oriented cuatodJan m
quality Fashion hland
retail clothln1 store
Full-time po<ion w/al·
tracti ve salary &
bener1t1. Call Ray ,
644·5070
DENTAL Assistant,
chairside Laruna Hilla
ore Mon ·Tburs .
Pleasant wonina f;.'Onds .
714-770-4275
Dental Assistant
IDA
Dental Asslatant-
Prosthetlca. X·r•)' llc.-
exper. nee. Excer. orc-
hra.-benerlu. Submit
resume upon Interview.
8'0-SUO
D•hUtnl1 .. st needed In preventaUve
oriented o!!'C!: l <t•Y wk to start. roaibJ.t. .more
in near future.~
Deuta.I By.-mt roe buay
offlee near So. CoHt
Plaaa. KS'4SSI
DESK CLERK-NIGHT
AUDITOR for hotel ln
La1una Bch. Exper
NCR '200 mach. Call
t7W4N.QB7
Donut abop. Early AM
shirt, no exper oec ApJ>-
ly: Dlpptty Donuts, 1854
Newport Blvd. C M
o,....,, Wortiroo.
Needa taoler, hemmer
Experienced Mo n
Thurs ., 7·5 30 C M
6'.2·18'3.
Driver
CiD'\. OfACI
Good typing aldlls, work
varied, electronics firm.
Advanced Kinetics. 1231
Victoria. CM E.0 .E
Call 646-7165
Meyerhof's, primary
supplier ol good rooct to
Irvine corporate com
munity , need s a
responsible delivery
person to drive our van.
Good driving record
necessary Mon-Fri. ap
proximately 8 .30·2pm S~rts minulmum Call
SU1ie 557 -6232.
GRANDMOTHER
NEEDED l ive -in
housekeeper desired for
2 boys ages 6 & 11.
833·2221
DRUG & COSMETIC
CLERK. 40 hours
Moulton Plaza
Pharma cy , Mr
Dreyfus. 768-3784
JEW UY SALES
WtU train sales person
for fine retail store in
Fashion Island Mall
Phone for appt 759 1722
Fantastic opportunity for
enthus1ast1c girl
lmmed FIT opening for
Recept !Typist 10 Beaut
Newport Center office +
xlnt in<'entive program
644·2507
File clerk. P 'T for busy
travel aeency in Irvine
Approit. ~ hrs pr wk.
flexible hrs, lite typing
req'd. Great for bored
housewife or student
$4 00 pr hr Tomm1t'
833-2977
FILE CLERIC
Large insurance •gency
has immediate t>pening
for last, energetic file
c lerk Paid <'Ompany
benefits Call Linda at
5'&-8161
FOODSERVICE
Restaurant worker. over
l8, will tram ror meat
slicer Ii portion control
Approx 1 hrs Flex
starling hme, \OAM
lPM. Mon-Thur . 6AM
lPM Sun Lori 's
Kitchen. :Y.'171 S Harbor
81., S .A. 979-0747
Front Desk C~•
F /lime & P /time
See11rity, p /tinw
Hotef In Laguna Call
494.9436
Front Office Mature.
person for eye doctors
office Dictaphone. lyp
ing, receptionist Salary
neg. RB area 551 2933
Fulltime employee for
electrical assembly &
cleao up Will t r ain
$3.35/hr ~9552
Full time Bro1lerman.
day or nite Apply in
person. Mon Fn. 3-Spm
2607 W Pec1f1r Coast
Hwy. N B 846 0201 -----
~w_.... •••••••••••••••••••••••
SECRETARY
STOCKIROKER
TR.AIMEE
College grads Oppty in
Newport Beach area for
hard working en-
lhu.,1a!lt1c 1nd1v ~nd re·
sumt' to P 0 Box 430.
\1 arlton. New Jersey.
1Jt105J
STRAIGHTENER
for aluminum forgings
Jo;xpl'rll'Ol'e required
\ble to read blueprints
& measuring 1nstru·
ml:.'nls bl & 2nd shlfls
\pply <\luminum Forgl"
l"1l • 502 i-: Allon St .
Santa Ana 549-4075
f: 0 E
Sut't'<'ssful Person. Ex·
pand1ng business re
quires success oriented
pl'rson wanting to
d1vl•rs1fy inC'ome. must
want self employment.
Cal l for a ppt .
714 '964 1862
ADMIHISTR.A TIVE
ExpandmR rl!'it?arch
firm needi. versalll<'
ca reer minded 111
d1v1dual t o pr1n 1de
se<'retanal i.upport for
Admin1 s tr al1\l'
Secretary l';xcel typ
mg, sh & ab1ht} to or
ganize & mtuntain Cile5 a
must Call for appt Newport Pharma
ceuu cals, 897 W 16th St j
N B 642 7511, t>'.'<t 47
Tl-:A<.:H ER's Aide want·
ed Exp 5 mornings.
9 12. a fternoons 4·6
Susan. ~8820
TEAL'HERS
ASSISTANT
Spec11l dasses for han·
d1capped adults 2 yrs
college exper req'd. Ex·
cell varation & in·
surance benefit s
Wkdvs 8 JO to 4PM
l..n1ted Cerebral Palsy
A .. soc . Santa Ana .
!>46 5760
TECHNICIAN
W unted for service & in-
sta llauon of photo pro-
r es so r So me
merhanical & electrical exp required. (714)
898 0290
Telephone
PHOt-IE PEllSOH
P T phone person
needel.l lo call & st't
app'ls for busy Solar
Jo:nt>rflY Co S4 50 'ht +
honu!> /\sk for Al
LIQUIDYHE
EMERGY SYSTEMS
545 679J. 754.0,535
Telrphone
LAY OH 11.fE BEACH
AU DAY
\0 1mmcdlale oper\lhgs
Short apphcatton. Work
5 9pm Mon Fn. talking
on our lelephone Deep
\Otr<'!i preferred
SJ JS hr guaranteed.
more money easily
possible Come by 3 L
Ent 1180 N Coast Hwy,
N Lal! Bch Wk dys al
3pm First come, first
hired
Lose something valua
ble? Place an ad 1n 01Jr
Lost and Found, col·
umns Thal's where peo
pie look when thlt've
found an item of value.
llCllTAIY
PatUhn•, appro · JO a.rtl•••k. Jea1., -.-i.
1090
OMIOflAoet
11' •Pru , lap atrUt
••Uboat w/ttlr. ~Im· mac. Ma Jo Norway.1--....-.;..-.--.;,_.._t _5_5-'0
Salla slot. SZ500. SSI 4085
1prln1 •10, Bserolaer
17541
~Sipe/ '74 Blater, NbJt eni. alr,
WllUY
iCLUMCARS
AHDnUCK5
CONp.tUL
CHEVllOLEl
~tl1 1••1 t• .
·•r,l\\H
546-1200
HIGHIUYIR ........... '125.~ 1 Doell.a 9070 new tltu. UOOO , _____ ......, ___ .......,1•••••••••••••H•••••••• ..... •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• (18tPPll. T80·8120, JfARBORAJlltA 8lldln1 eloaet doou HaA.Shno 1_. ._4"_-_11_1_a. ____ _ •s• •TOOMUCH• ( p • l e t m 0 ) • • v...• BOAT SUPS FOR RENT·-APPLIANCc. &:oBVICB Ovttttocked condition ( 8 ) t 3 ' ' H x 4 a ' ' W • ••••••••••••••••••••••• NPT BCH. 25' -35'. rwllt t560 ~.4:.,~11~~= MUST SELL '°'out tn· (2)9S"Ra36''W, •ood BeautltUl Color TV, a yr NZ..-.. ...................... .
Top dollart for Sport•
Cara, Bup, Campen,
914's, AudJ'a A.all ror U/C MGR
\ •ppllaac.t. SG-I071 ventorf.AtCO.t·OrBeat condH,on, $10 ••· wrnty. Free delivery Special t 1--';...;....---.,-~----i Otter! No reuooable of· 144·8079 Sl'8. 848-1788. WANTED: Shon moor· p~---L--ff
__,a;......;.._.;.;____;,__::._;__ 1 IUY ·-a•~u ftr refuted? TERMS RC"' YL 100 •--TV lnl or muina apace ror ....___.. ~ AVAlLABLE. ""' • COUO" •et, lOxlT' catamaran eva. LowMINoe! Et~=r:~~:!'!lub, Les IOT.au> ............ 1.-.r xlnt .... ..::;;,, 4r7-19H "' ........ ext 1910 4 ....... 15 tpel ~!':TO::'. ·:.:zr :·::·: Porta~. , ...... ,, M1tllir's Day ,. .. eo,.,,. v . .,. "' •o•t surs D.;:.:::*~' ~rlfo~~llb:e, ~'d: Antq. Deak. Muat aell. Mar I °"9 646-J405 For rent 646-4419 Saviftas!!l
vOJce ~ Guar Electric dryer, used Imo. Sacrifice. 761U777 Violet ~=d t~:u:.~f: ti1~0~~ 'o:!!i~ Newport Beach slip M• dOMt
••\ ()()mm Wk'"· $100. dye ~5'747; aft 5 McNauabtoo. Mother'• Dav Pa0 e -.-,....--I _ __. II _.,. ~ .. , St8-9924 , • ••••••••••••••••••••••• mu""' ava -llMISC:f ~fttl ~~ ~=~~-9-~, ~~~~ Whlrlpool aupreme elec Likbe new Raff tun Cl ouch, 2 -:::: 1:~:~t;h~!tr G,..,.. 90 I 0 ~all Tom~ MS-1t57or54S-113'1 · c rs. co H lb S600. box For information •••••••••.•••••••••••••• Wanted . 17' slip for
---------trlc dryer ror sale or Call631·1.338 and to place your Non-pror1t org. needs Johnson Hull Cla~s1c
To_. -·SH-s trade for aas. 980-6265 bo ft1 "' vu-v ~ eve Sofa.bed, 7'i'li', custom mesuge call 642-5678 your at, .,..ane, car. IM6·4130btwn5-9pm
CaUtomla bued drillina TODA y • etc Liberal tax deduc. -
cap.tractor leeU ~row· lie 1H 1020 built. blk/&ray pattern. -----l I 0 n ad Va D tag e S !~ .... man for unt ye &d cond, '75. 644-6579 Weddlna dreu. sleeve· 2l31654·23tl Tr9sw tClltlott ·~ ·······················1~---'------. r--· In Beach rl&a Xlnt leas, eyelet, s11e 9 over •••• •••• ••••••••••••••• s ry It benefits Send MX BActNG BIKE QUEENlllD&A·BED worn 1560 548.4364 AVON Redcraet Many C ... P!f"· Salt/
r-ume: PO BOX "'"""' for 12 yr old 6 up. Webco •LIKE NEW. S1l6 D'"'Ann extras, 40+ Seacull eng, let.t . 9120
... """"' frame. Redline 'forks, 962 """"l " d d .... ~ Bakersfield CA 93303 or ·•"" ---ll con . •.l"""· S44-0079 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cood cond, $75 OBO. F .. H c•ll (905)327·5736 875·3631 Kng sz wate_.__ ... Oa" ran.. am1lton orig •-~ MAI ~ 76 VW CAMPER n-.o "' W te I 18'. 24'' ._...., -Cl •Ce • frameSSO. a r co or, x Sen~ 020 Dynamite Westfall a
Travel Schwinn Cruiser. 1 yr old, ph 832·9339 alt 6PM Early work from 1965 A ••••••••••••••••••••••• pop-top 4 speed Only : EXCLUSIVE cuatoinhed It lic'd, bbe~lult. winter scene. a MarineElectnclan 49,000mlles (441WXA> N~pt Deb travel agency $180/orf~r. MC>-5100 ext. KingSizeBed rt iant art invest. Design/install/repair $5995
Minimum 2yn exp. 53; afl.6, 78().21646. a.!l~ $3500 <714>796·2080. Qual. work. 549-2520eve. JIM MARINO
w(travel agency Saber ..._...,... VOLICSW ,,_ ,.... asta ONLY Contact Roadmaster 40's Cruiser ---New Bing Grondahl loots Power 9040 A .. E" Gaylene645-7777 w /spring fork s200KlngSi1ebed.$50orbesl Mother'sdayplates '11. •••••;••••••••••••••••• 187118eachBlvd.
644-2'199 offer. After 2.30 pm call '72. Xmas '70, '73 SlS. 1971 SIUPJACIC 142·2000
Travel Agency 646-5510 675-0043 . • O range Cly sabre WldllMJMal«lahl02 24' w /tra1ler Xlnt Motorcr:/
equipped travel agency •••••••••••••••••••••• H u g e coffee t b I . sc11u •ns financing. Call Gary or Scoo 9 I SO
po11t1on for exper RIDWOOD2X6'• matching ends, office """ Don631·1400. •••••••••••••••••••••••
agent Call mana1er Xlnt declung. 8-20' long. desk It chr. 2 eaay chrs, ANSWERS Tob OverPcrt,,....flh Yama , Kawa, Bultaco 7~· lSSS New load Just 111 from c b r o m e • I I a s s No down Dirt $300 ea ofr 2430 Hol
mill. 55</ft 646 ·9885 artifacts. Rain lamp, Button Poter .80 23• IM p Cuddy ly Lne NB MS 1496
TRAVELACiENT anytime ends, 1 set mida JOllll, Cycle Quauit Cabin Only 30hrs on SUZUKI T250, 2 cyl
BARWICK DATSUN
~a,. Juon C op,.tres><>
831-3311
• c ....... u ·10
LUV 1/Jwtoe Stake
with dual rears' Ideal
for landscapers etc
<Ser 6056).
OMLY $5991
HOW ARD Che.,..oW
Dove & Quail Sts
NEW PORT BEACH
131-0555
1979GMC
LOHGIED P1CKUP
Automatic trans .• pwr
steering. stereo tape.
fiberglass shell & ONLY
20.000miles! 111987>.
ONLY $5995
MIRACLE MAZDA
215-0 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
645-5700 Exp'd comm'l agent swags. SS2-39l6 COUNTRY engine. Mercrw.ser 260 Street Blke xlnt cond needed ror rast growing 15 gal antique white I Just saw a beauty con· I out drtve. Fully fitted $500 960-6481 '79 Chevy Luv step-side,
'71Triumph6SOTR6C. gd AM FM Lape, pinstripe
rond Call Fred after sh~~~ 67_3-8015 •
0 c Travel Agency semi.gloss ~tex enamel. Chrome/Glass 42" Coffee test ant She had the 1 out. pp se73M
Apollo exp pref Cher> I S75. 645-&490 Tbl $300 paid t600 Vlksng shape 1 wuh the COUN· ~-04_9_2 _ _ _ _ Cats IOJ Furniture PP 846-8964 TRY were m 18' Bay CruiMr wired &
---wbt canope top
TYrESETTH
CO M PUG RA PH IC
EQUIP, xlnt work1na
conds, pay, benefits The
Composing Rm. 979 3541
TypeMf/P•~ Mln. 3 yean experience
in both areas
Quadratek Capable of
full-charge Art Dept
Darkroom experience a
plus For interview. ca II
855-113i
Typing, PIT Tues. Wed
& Thurs South Santa
Ana M0.5850
TYPIST
•••••••••••••••••••••• BDRM Set. dresser. m1r
Tortoise 1hell Siamese ror, nste stand cabrnet
kitten~. Huntington Bch butch w/drawers 2 yrs
area $50. 960-1.204 old looks brand new
M&-3405 D091 104
•••••••••••••••••••••• 12) BDRM Corner
KEESHOND Pupe. A.KC. groups, cstm coven.
Mother's Day? Uruque 111· Character Boat Parade
expensive gifts for winner! Slip avail
mothers 714 8216-5919 aft $2800 /0BO 673 7873.
5pm 673-7677 -~----~----W h sr Ip o o I washing 21' LYMAN Lapstrake
machine. Classic Bay Boat. Needs
557 8393 _ work. $800. 673-2968
Champ sire. M/F . Pet & built-ins. 13001 Ea
s h o w Pvt pt y . 63l-l13S eves Glass top table on bam-Owens 24' new eng, clean.
213/697·13'5aft6pm. -boo pedestal w/4 de· $4500 FIRM pp
. Lg Thoma.svilJe tbl, 1n corator chairs $350 646-1221
Golden Retnever pup· laid wood w/2 lvs 6 lad 646 2876
pies, 6 wits, A.KC, Sl75. derbk ch.rs, ~CL\i\fbsl ofr 31' Ch · VHF CB I S56 7572 ..,.,.., Musical ns. . • enc · eves. 673·8902eves,S48-0724 lnitrumefttt 8083 head, s lip avail. fun
AAA Home Dog Training Colonial type hutch •• • • • • •••••••••••• ••• •• boa~. ~r.~~apeft 6 S8900
Does your dog have good $3lO CONN Director trombone .!!..r !.' r . ......-"""""a P~
manners" We specialize 631·3796 with ('ase f:xcellent 18' lertrallt SF. lethr
m happy owners & well -d t SlOO 675 SOS2 mannered dogs 638-9265 Cioroge S-. 8055 ~~~e/61~~ th• MW. ScrYe o .. r
••••••••••••••••••••••• $40,000. Ownr.
Lhasa Apso, ma~e. AKC All 1n gd cond 8tt couch. FLUTE Silver Selmer 675-6670, 67).4515
w papers Friendly. floral Twin beds. misc Metro •5865 Gd for stu
SlSO. 675· 7141. 9 to 5 548· 7891 dent SJSO. 963-3039 33ft Owens Brig S F.
radar. pilot. Ha Ion
6pm 631 4645 •74 Toyota PU. 20,000 m1.
MotorHOMH. 5*/ rblt eng nice cond .. nu tl..t/Ston.p 9160 tires Camper shell
••••••••••••••••••••••• $2500 536-4)4.56198301!)
WE CAN SELL
YOUR R.V .
559 1304
RENT 22 ' lux mtr
home Sips 6. self cont
$275 /wk + 8' m1
640 8S8S
72' DISCOVERl'~R 25'.
fiberglas, streamline,
beaut Sips 5 Just re
furbished Last chance.
moving n>-1412
'76 Toyota PU. tool box.
good tires. 59M. S3250
673·5990 aft 4
'79 Toyota SR·5 Sports
Truck. 5spd. am /fm
stereo cass. steelbelted
radials. bucket seats.
50.000 mi warranty
Blue. xlnt rond 36.000
m1 Call Dan 556 1613 or
558·4822
'69 International p1t•k up
w hydr hft gate nu urei.
Auto Se"ice· Parts nu paint 646-2707
& Acc"soriH 9400 . , ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76 Ford f 250, great
For sale
Datsun Z
shape. tool box. $3800
OBO Brad 588 2880.
990 1149
JIMMAllMO
VOLKSWA81N
18711 Beach Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142.2000
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAH
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda
2150 H.-bor ltvd.
C09ht MftG 64 5-5 700
WANTED!
Late model Toyota!> and
Volvos Call us
TODAY '''
Earle Ike
TOYOTA.VOLVO
.......... 11•4.
Cati• Mn•
""444.tJOl or HO '4'1
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow u:. the opportuntl)
lo consider the pur<•hai.e
or tradt> in of vour cll'an
Porsche <.het·k ~ ll h Ls
Toda)'
I tt.11 11atf,.i>• tll-.1t ,.,,, ... <~"'•"' • 1» nu
Top Dollar
Paid
f'ur Your Car'
JOHMSOH & SOM
Linc~Met-cury
2626 fl arbor Hlvd
Co!tta Ml.'sa 540 !'>630
We Pay
OVER
Blue look
For Your Good
\ W P on.thl' or I\ ud 1
f ,W.W8~
\'W PORSCJH: \l DJ
145 E C'oa~t H1~a \
G I ST 6 llOAOWAY
u~nA Ate•
835'3171 .
THI ~TlllM flt. ollMHO lllACHIMI
•USIDIMWt*
'115.IOIA (6421) '793201 (7580)
'19 320\A S/R C7<9)
'80 : auntf. (0013) '81 A (OllS) c .... ~ .......
'7tl30IA
Allo)' wbeels, atereo caa~tte, power win
dow1. 13,600 ortainal
m Iles, exceptiooa lly
nice! PRICED TO
SELL'! (891>VPYl
Crevier Moton
1st & Broadway
Santa Ana 835-3171
7tlMW
Dynamite 2 door
aulomatic. Air. stereo,
58k Very clean.
1411SYH)
S74t5
JIMMAIJHO
VOU<SWACiBC
18711 Beach Blvd
842-2000
The Most bcltlnc)
PoriOfYow
IMW PwchaM Or
base CCMllld le
Mc La"" BMW!!
luyOrleole
By Our Phone "-!
1714) 522-5333
751MW
Dynamite 2002 2 door
Automatic. air. stereo
Low m1les H's squeaky
clean 1419NKQ1
$4995
JIMMARIHO
VOLKSWAGBf
11!7\1 Beach Blvd
842-2000
ORAMCiE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
Sales Service Leasing
Roy Carver.Inc.
Holl~ lloyce BMW
1540 Jamboree
Nt>wport Beach 640-6444
761MW
2002 4 speed Very clean
lot·11l l'ar 1123RKLI
S5695
JIMMARJHO
VOLKSWAGBf
18711 Beach Blvd
842-2000 General office work. no
experience required
H11h School graduate
Costa Mesa area Will be
moving to Irvine soon
Good benefits Farmers
lasuran<.'e Group.
540-4100
Mov1ogtocoodo Beaut.I Neighborhood Garage klltos&Orps 8090 system. gen . new
yr old I rush Setter, AKC. Sale May 2nd It 3rd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crusaders In Nwpt shp
shots, lovt>S kids, S25. 8.30am Brus k1ngs11e WURLITZER. spsnette S37.SOO. (714)640-7246
motor 71 Datsull PL . Xlnl c~nd + oht' ports mags. tool box . S3250
at Bayside Un\l'
"1t·~ port Beath 673 ll'IOO
78 BMW 633 xlnt cond. 4
~pd anthracite gray·
beige. 34.000 m1. S21.000
PP. 642 343.1
7i BMW 3201 . -;lvr . snrf
EOE 642·0862 bed, h1de·a bed sofas, model 4410. two 44 note - -----.-lamps. garden hose . keyboards 13 pedal IS' Bost.on Whaler, 70hp
rurn . & misc items notes. auto tone control. I Evinrude Less than 20
968·6736 8611 Lorraine earphone Jack. solid ma hrs. Cover. trailer $5800
Dr H . B 1 Magnolia & pie w / matchrng bench 673·8910 after 5pm
Spnnger Spaniel AKC. 17
wks. female. all shots
957 0742or646-9076
7 6a.sa31 I 494 7148
'i3 Datsun P u Runs gd
Right front fender for '67 Must sell $1300 vw $25 S59 4095
M6-l.879
Premium pru·e.,
roa1d Cur <tn' u-.NI 1·ar
• fon•1j'!n or doml'sll< 1
in ~uod l·und1t11m
St>e l '!t l-'1r-.t •
\ (. ...tl.'rt'O 0~5
l &46 JIO!I, l.'H'l> 646 6010
Capri 9715
·73 Good Cond. 73K m1
Typists
IOMEB>ED
Long & short term
pay No fee
Top Purebred black labs
Have shots. 10 weeks.
Y '-to ) $400 cash or $450 de or .. wn livered M7·184.5 '77 171;· Tn-Hull lJOhp, 8 whee~ and tires
All 14''s1ze
768-5837
'76 El Camino 'liew I paint. wheels & t1re1>
PS PB AC SlOOO slt'reo
systm Xlnt cond. S3500 I
I ·······················
IW9!!11!111111!!~' s2000 oso 545 96!17 e \es
..
Everything Goes' , .. . Volvo4cyl 280outdnve
Fri./Sat. g..5 297 Lilac 5 6 A B Chase Louis Walk thru bow Seats 10
Male Poodle for sale Lane ?<V Ampiro reproduc· people New upholstry
Reasonable to right par· Much Misc. 1 n g grand P 1 an o Single axle American
,,.,,
0
......, Completely restored & trlr $4400 ~3410
Females. 631·5349
536·4142
Vatt1 9570 ty ....... -........ Jewelry 1070 rebll. Plano originally ·
Ni>t. Bch. 556-8520 Frff to Y Oii 1045 • ••• • •• ••••••••• • •• •• •• bit in 1921. Like new '6 2 Ch r is Cr a Ct 1 8 •
Equal Opp Emplyr M /F ••• •• •• •••••••••••••••• SILVEl DOU.A.IS good investment. Collec-Runabout w /trlr. ~
Parting out '67 Chevelle.
396, 4spd. 12 volt rear
end. '66 VW trans axle.
Challenger duel ex
haust. 496-7323
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1979 CHEVROLET
IEAUVIUE
WAITRESS/WAITER
VI /car for wicker basket
lunch' service
9!30·1:30PM. Mon-Fri
E•rn Sl25-S150 wkly
Mut be neat, peM10na·
ble & energetic 979-0747
~I\ JOAM for appt.
WAREHOUSE/
IAMIOO 19 in good to xlnt cond, tors item Ask i n g 645·2338
You cut&dJg.642-5075 various dates. ~100 yrs $20 .ooo Hammond loats ___ S_aM ____ 9_0-60 Four Tru spoke wire
old, $18·S26 ea. Call COdrgMa°...~ . .!'~no Center •••••;••••••••••••••••• wheels 15x7"' superb
WIHOOWVAH
Automatic trans .. 2 rear
seats, pwr steering,
AM /FM stereo tape.
gauges. lg. gas tank. 2
Freckle•. 99% Dalma· Answer Ad If 4 6 6, """'"°""" $350 Uon Spayed. shots. Gd 64.2_.300, 24 hours. . I 4' AMF SUHASH cond · 964-686
2
w I kids & dogs . Keyboard elec piano. $400 646-4647 (714)64~7048. Unl_que 1-tKG Golden Rhodes 88 key Xlnt A..to1 for Salt D 1 am on d R 1 n g sound s450 10 rrer 16'HobieCat.Goodcond ••••• • ••••••••••••••. •• tone paint. cruise con-I M PORTANT trot It radial tires
To gd home. Fem neut. (WGT .34, VVSl) 14KG 6'13 2641 Trailer. cal box. S17SOor
Bracelet • Ruby rlna bsl ofr. Shella. cail German Shepherd. lyr
Charlene642·182.8 548·73Stl Antique Uprieht Beaut SS9·9133, Benss.2-9794
dark wood $275
FREE PUPPIES 8wka Investment quality facet
old. Good mothers day ed SAPPlnR~ over lcl
gift 646-1252 ea. Your choice, only
~~ Pl.o• & ()rps IOtO ________ , ...................... .
NCYTICETO (28SWRR).
READERSAND ONLY $5995
ADVERTISERS MlllACU MAZDA
The price or items 2lSOHarbor Blvd
advert11ed by vehicle COSTA MESA
dealers m the vehicle 645-5700
cla111fied advertising --------
'llX8 IJ.11 IH•I lll\d
' .... 1.. \J; ..... 1 ltl 11:1.10
Autos, Imported •••••••••••••••••••••••
Gn~ral 9701
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Remember
Mother's Day
~ May 10th
'76 Capri Ghia. V6. auto.
a l' x Int. fast sale.
$2500 548·3876
Dat1un 9720 .......................
78 OATSUM 280%
Oynamile4 speed coupe
Gold beauty Very clean
1839UODI
$6995
JIMMARJMO
VOLKSW ACiEM
18711 Beach Blvd
842-2000
DELIVEltY PBS~J
Party rental store FT
&./or PT Apply 2025
Newport Blvd. C M Sprtnaer Spaniel A.KC. 17 $1.SO per stone! 640-&688
wka, Cem&le, all abots. Stunning 1.04 ca rat
957·07'2 orMS-9076. diamond certificate ap-
PUBLIC MOl'ICE
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
FINAL SALE
columns does not In·
elude any applicable
taxea. license. tranarer
feea. finance cbaraea.
fees for a1r poUU\JOO COD·
trot device certifications
or dealer documentary
preparation charges un·
less otherwise specified
by the advertiser
'71 Dodge Van auto, p s.
p /b. reg gas. Sl495
646-1678.~17
Send a message to Mom
via the Dall> Pilot 0!>
Mother's Da) Page
Your message will ap
pear in a pretl)' nower box For information li._ .... .., .. ~..,...,.11111
Wllldow Washer Ex
~rienced. P IT, own
tra.os 846-srTllO F'wwit•. 1050 :aised Sl1.6l3. S..900/
••• ••• ••••••••••••••••• st 552-3339 M4wc•• .. ..... ·················· * * I BUY * * Misc .. ••-1080 ........ 1005 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• Good used Furniture-4 REDWOOD ZX•'•· Appliances-OR l will sel Pvt Sale: F\ne jewelry· or SELL for You Xlnt dedtinc. s..20· long.
lfct.Opal, Lucien Picard MASTl:ISAUCTIOM New load ju.st In from
Oold watch. Original 646 .. 686 13~9621 mill. 55• Ill. 646 9885
P•lntings. olla. wtr. clra. • r _an~yt_l_m_e_. _____ -t
9'el\io11. Picasso, Dall, I IUY FUIMTUU Lon l•aw
Paul Blaine Henrie. Lea 957-8133 Hellum Bouquets de·
Cbde Zulch. Miauel livered. Perfect Cor
1)omto1uez, Linda Solid oak bedr aet w/11:· everyoccuion.673-4419 l\oa•n Is others. Pr. in as Ii e wat er bed . ----------1
~eotal lc. broaue Um.a. '900/080 . Ma-7GS.
Brome, poruleln, bit· RATTAN FURNITURE qUe n1urtoe1. Old Loo·
G ENUlNE RUBIES
Ooly taperatone!
don Pub clock on Mpny K.nl n headboard. $125;
ptdeatal. Blfl Cbloa S drawer chest. 41\ lOin Oriental Rup, muat aell.
Cabinet w/blt-tn ladies 11 • Zit em bi. 12116. Two 20 band woven rup, tree
ak. French llarbte 2drawer cbesta, 2fl4in bl sliver dollar ror each
ortee tbl. Pr. ellk •2ftlOl.Dl&SUOea.IJr purcbHe.MMl22
Pr b-·· Sprln1 twin bed w /fit~ ~ nap. -~ ·-bed.lprud 6 dust ruffle. CAR PHONE, xlnt cond. ,. + ~u.-·n•. -...... 1 1 -s ro Uke new. siao. M5-Mt2 ...,.,., va ue, on Y -· · ~ eompl. 7f0.l702
•• aom etb'o• you ut to ..U1 Cl.,.lfltd Trade your old 1tufC for Power mower 6 ed1er
do ll wt -C•ll Dew aoodiu wltb a ~oo. wa1beT • dryer
W, MWt1'1; CJulifled ad. M2·5e'78 bZ each. a.5141
'· I> . •
~ ...
. :~ . . . .
Most lt.tm At Or lelow Coit
MEW ORGANS
Thomas-Vox chord organs from $379
Thomas -Vox 2 keyboard with
auto/rhythm from $597
Thomas· Vox 3 keyboard deluxe from
$1323
Kawai Performer $667
Kawai Deluxe church console $3363
Kawai 1981 digital console with
everything $3289
Kawai Deluxe spinet with tape $2734
USED ORGANS
Hammond M-3 with separate Leslie
$836 Baldwin 2 keyboard Fun-Machine $544
Kimball Swinger $462
Gulbransen full console with rhythm
$969 * * • Many more new and used to
choose from !
Pl.AMOS
New Kawai 9' /Ebony Concert Grand
$9864 New Kaw al Walnut Baby Grand $3790
Fender-Rhodes Home Electric pianos
with built-in tape $792
American ma.de spinet pianos from
$795 American made console pianos from ..
Must sell '72 ~ton Dodge
Van.Gd brakes, \ires &
Crager Rims. nds eng
work. $900/firm. Call
673·1371.
and to plare your
message rail 642 5678
TODAY' ~~~~~~~
----1A..tos Wanted 9590
CieMrol 95 I 0 •••. •• ••• •••••• •• •• ••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPDOLLAR
Hydr/llftgatewfext,lnt. for t op used cars-
truck incl $1900 080. foreign, domestics or
IM6·Z'107 or64&-1472 classics U your car Is
~I/ utra clean. see us
Clftala t520 F IRST!
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
Atfa Romeo • I
•••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
BEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEW PORT BEACH
752-0900
'73 GTV FM radio, new
tires, just tuned Dy
49'7·2406, ev. 497 ·4331 "' "'·~c-..y 2925Harbor Blvd. Aatfw 9709
COSTA MESA •••••••••••••••••••••••
'O Ford W9odle .
ratored, tu.500. ALSO
'ZI Model A Town Sedan,
4 dr, rest.Qnd. Ideal (or
atudent '10,SOO .
'75-8111.
979-2500 '59 Bug Eyed Sprite ----------1 w/hardtop Xlnt S2600 W AMftDl! 873-9211 K~ _
C'""::c:" IMW
T4ft6At
Cell J• tt.,.. or
M .. L. en .........
lll-3171
ForTbe Best
Bu}' Or Lease Deal
ln Oranae ~ly ...
Com• See Us Today!.
Mid-Week
·:· S PE C I AL:.·
599*
OVER
INVOICE
SALE
OM ALL
2101 & 310s
IH STOCK! .......... -.-. ...... ..,
Sale end• Thul'ldtY. ~
April 30. 1981 at ctoee •
of bu1ine1•. Copy of ad
mu1t be presented at
lime of purcha ...
•••••••••••••••••••••••
~ C'M~fl L
Ht Vil( 'l tl
,'4b I J J(•
1977 Clmaouf
MOMTICAILO
'78 850 Spider, lo O'li, '7' vw Westfall• Cmpm· coov. or bd top Steno, ClO\IDWN~n ble. Stove, retr. am/Im
REASON
BUICK
«I 'f "' c,, '•"'' Auto111atlc t.raQa., Ult
1u11, l\lto nu, lal50. S4ICll» 9160 caaa, aleepm 5, 2lmpt, lo
_M_T_·'r._28'_7 _____ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mla. $8500/080.
'> ,1nlo A no '• 4 I C., I t •,
c wbMl, crulu conUol,
pwr. 1turin\ • wla· dowa. 1pllt... A¥/nt stereo l•Pt rally•
whMll. (151TWT). '75 Xl9, Jtlnt cond. am/Im LEASE 8'7M580.
t•pe, new~. JO mp1. 1970 VW C•mper V•o OVER 'H Skylark, partl1
restor.d, X1nt cond. lo •
out. •.ooo ml. Nu t.rau, OMLY91ttl
MllACUMAID.A
2150Rarbor Blvd.
$3300/obo. 8'75-4378 DIRECT.1 ' new en1., l22l00. "100" · br•k•• • minor en,. overbavl. $5t5/0 BO
Ml-Nll HOllde 9727 l4&-040, Jhn ····v··,·s··IT··v··ou····.······ 1911 Sill ·11 vw 411 Sqrbdl. Beaut.
DOWN D&IYIRI AMT
YIHICLI IM STOClf TURIOt mo\or, It cln body '7'1 Riviera Cpe.
COSTAllESA
64W700
ORAMCH COAST 673--14112; ~2372
H ~D & IUCH IMPORTS '75 convert .. yellow, ori1.
USED CARS
IN STOCK!!
Autom•tk trlDI., 1tereo
tape, power 1teerin1.
power brakel, electric
windows 6: &eata, 1lr,
cruhe, vinyl top
(SflWCP)
. MmtWI
CLl:AN 'TS MONTE
CARLO. Sliver w I
bur1undy lotcrior. AJr
~d., All/FM cuaette,
power brakes, steutn1.
lf\UI TAX A~ uc .. sa
OMAPP.Camn'
•Lnn.101
MOC:&mm '-'" A 848 Dove Street ~u Ir 0
HE •D'-'-1.&8 TEl5 NEWPORT BEACH owner . .-.y en.. aw· ... w ...
~RMIA1 5A ~"'ft less SS300. Donna dys TODAY!!! 751-0900 M9-8233eves1S2·6360 FORtlGN ... WOM
UNIYERSITT
SALF.S Ir SERVICE
OLDSMOllLI
HOteA
GMCTRUCKS
28M Harbor Blvd.
'78 Rabbit, clean,
$2800/080
64S-3173
'73 Sub, 4 cyl, 96GL, less
than 50,000 act. mi, rn
top cood. orie. owner,
S2300 /0BO . Call
McGowan 646·H31 '61 Bug , Xlrrt, mags,
days; 642-6197 eves. stereo, nu wht paint,
DOMESTIC
From tr1nsport1llon
Yettlcln to Lu1<uriou1
e1·11 Only at . '
$47'5 Sl.500 7U.SU'I
·ea Chevy C1price Eni. in
Jd. cond. Nda body wit
$100/0BO &42-8875
YOUI JOl1
•SMOltTOM
DOWN PA YMIMT7
•SI.OW
$LS95.536-'6456 SUN SIT
CllDrT HISTOITI
•MLITAITI
COSTA MF.SA
540.9640
oyota '765 -------
••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 BUS/cust campr, nu ~
'74 Ve11 Waioo. En1. nda
worlt. '400orblltotr.
846-56<M WE CAN HELP!
71HONO.A
Dynamite CVCC 5 speed
hatchback. Clean, low
miles. (l:WWRN>
$3995
JIMMAllMO
VOUCSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd
14%-2000
.OTOYOT ... b r Its , c Itch I e ng ~ w/customint.$2960Alan TERCB.
2 door 4 speed It's 673"5018
clean' It's dynamite '78 Scirocco. air, 4-spd,
(340ZEE> AM /FM cass., clean,
$]995 $5000 Firm. 951·6250
JIMMAIJMO VOLKSWAGEN •REDUCED•
18711 Beach Blvd '79 convert, yellow w
142•2000 blk top, S9200. 673-8735
Frj RD
636-40 I 0 w..,olnos.t>D,..c> •0-0.0¥0 ,..,. _
~w .. trn.n•w
••••••••••••••••••••••
•76MOHZA
2+2, 4 cyl. aood
•77 ..... fwood mlle11e, a /c, radio,
Leather interior, wire trablferrable warranty.
wheel covers, 8 track· _55_7_·_3S_27_or_7_59-0060 __ . _ __.
stereo, power . door Coat ..... al ttJO
locks. new tares .••••••••••••••••••••••• (058TNE) 76UMCOLN
MEW 1910
FIESTA
2 DOOi SEDAM
5 11~
PINTO
J DOOR RUMAIOUT
5 126~
'79 Prelude, am tfm
radio. 5sp. moon roor.
Xlnt cond. 531H2.S7
'62 VW Hatchback. Wtll
To y o t a · 7 7 Coro 11 a sell for $500 or gd ror
L1ftback SRS. 5spd. new parts. 548-1029
tires/brakes. S3200
857 2302, 64-4·0685
$6795 Remember
M1tMr's Day
MAIJCIV
Dyn1mite coupe .
Loaded! All the toy1
Sharp. (1AJH617)
Sl4H
JIMMAl.IMO
VOUCSW.ACHH
18711 Beach Blvd
(Stk 24'51) (356740)
'1• ,. .. tu a - -111too"""" ""to --c:-__ .....,..,... .... -,dac
._ ~ ~· pn .. -srnea -,~
IStk 2716) (1748971
"" ll4oa '""' • -.... -11• • _, ""eo -c;..,,pnce 1515100 ...... _,_ ...
~ __ ,.,,_ ~°' l#fll 112'l"'o
1980 4 door Accord
Green. Mint cond $8300 Toyota Land Crwser '75, 551~~4pm lom1 S3200
646-8382
Late '79 VW Convertible.
white on whale 7 .000
males Mant cond
613-9174
May IOtlt I
Send a meuaee lo Mom
via the Dally Pilot's
Mother's Day Paae 142.-2000
HEW 1911 HEW 1911
ESCORT "L" COURIER
Honda Prelude '81 fully
equip, silver sport model
$7500 67~3Z3.1
-'73 Super Bug, new Your message wlll ap-1 VolrswOC)ltl 9770 M 1. c h e 11 ns. am / rm pear 10 a pretty flower • ...... -. box For tnformation ~ &31.all)
JDOOR HATCHIACK s l 4ii4 .lrn ~[~~~ 5 lli~ , .... roo""-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo, clean. S2895
97 .. -.... and lo p I 1 c e you r
J~r 9730 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'67 J agu1r 3.8 MK llS all
orag. very well main·
tained Mus t Sacrifice
846·8570 ---------Merudnlem 9740 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SELLING YOUR
MERCEDF.S?
WEP.AY
TOP DOI.LAI SS
Call Jack Bacon
JIMSUMOMS
IMPOttTS
11170 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
631-1276 833-9300
'73 280C. Xlnt cond Must
sell $7500/080 752.2'(M
dys; 552·~71 eve11
'72, 220D, 4 dr Sed1n, sun
roof, manual trans One
Owner, 11lnt oond S'7 ,SOO
(213)696-4188 dy1, (714)
552·0146 eves/wknd.s.
'62 190 Bluapunke, cln, nu
valves. etc. $1800.
morns.~7051
MGI 9744 •••••••••••••••••••••••
77MGI
Dynamite British racing
green "B'' roadster. Its
s queaky clean (696TRH)
SJltS
JIMMARIMO
VOUCSWAGE:H
18711 ~ach Blvd
142 .. 2000 ---'77 MGBmint~
'7UZtl
'78 MG B. beautiful
pnced lo sell, $4850 PP.
713-WIO, 675·9325
r..geot t748 •••••••••••••••••••••••
L~SE
DIRECT!
1911 PEUGEOT
TURIOs
IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752At00
74PIUGIOT
DllSB.
5-04 1unroof 1ed1n 4
1peed 6: .iereo. P1pera
on fre1h englne
(059LFF>
Slttl
JIMMAllMO
YOLBW.ACHM
ll'Tll Beacb Blvd.
142-2000
,........ t710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GIANT INDOOR
P ORSCHE
SW APllSl:l'. llay znd,
i4 hr info~ _.in
·~tu XJot COnd. ltbr lat.
alloya, mUIU•ll ......
I .. .,,... 960-6377 meuage call 642-5678 CO~Til'Mi
fACTOtlY CAMrER .78 CONVERTlBLE _!ODAY ! CADILLAC?
4 speed trans , AM /FM We spedaliu in leues stereotape&extranice' White w/black, xlnl, AMC tt05 for the busineu ex·
(877MGB) besloffer 536-8597 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ecutive Ir proleulooal.
OHLY $4995 '10 VW New Batt, Brks. ·~n~a~u~le~\!g~( L_,.W.ctle.
MIRACLE MAZDA Looks & runs great work $250/080. 960-1069 Of Mew ltll
2150 Harbor Blvd. $1950. days 642·6553 C ••re•
COSTA MESA -'76 Gremlin, nu en1. stao· .., 11U-.-a. 645-5700 VolYO 9772 dard. Xlnt cond. Must " .... _.
------'••••••••••••••••••••••• s e I I t h i s we e It . ·N~ 7 4VWSUPl!AIUG #I VOLYODEALH Sl695 /0BO 760-9204 ;
Automatic trens . air ~~ ~~ .~00•t:10•1.!1_....,,,.,, __ ..,, .,, •1" '""° 191 6 .._... -1142.41 -'"'ea ...... _ .. .._, ~---~ -......,.,.. Qeol\ -157S7.2J ,,... ,._ -· cond, AM /FM stereo OOC.'-o.teneo~...--.-w 10 N'fl ~17 • .. ~t•Oel••""....-•---ao
tape, Vette map as tilt •'-7 7_,,. ______ ..,.. ___ ---4,_--"...--------------
wheel. (305WXD>.
ONLY SI 1,595
MllACU MAZDA
21.50 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
641-5700
1910 GRANADA
2 DOOi SEDAM
5 147~
HEW 1911
FAIRMONT
2 DOOR SEO.AM
5 14~ AM·FM cassette stereo JNORANGECOUNTV! _1_ss.._112_1 ______ 1 SHOWIOOMCOMD. $2200or best offer. 2600Hatbor Blvd '75T·TOP (Stk. 2207)(131232) ""'"1717 '68 Javelin SST 343 cu ln, Power brakes, power "• .... • ' --•147u...,,.., tor 90 (Stk 0520> (l&n&l) """' Sa.us. SBYICE Cosu Mesa. 540-9100 --c.i. ot1Ce -aMM.oD....,. --a •1•,.... -a --autoo -""to -. air, aut.o, Id cond. '850 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~J wt.ndow1,power1teerln1 ._ ... °""'*'~.,,...-*«>to lll'fll _c-.,,,..-ll00422,.._.__,_ 77 YW SCllOCCO .AMD UASIHG Beat offer~91183 ...! with ti 1t/tele1copin1 .-'~--.---..... ~-........ ~---~1---Doollw-,......,""'..;'---"..,1 "'-... _-___ ,,_. ___ ,_, __ _
Dynamite Pearl OVE.RSEASDEl.JVERY Well ttlO '71BLACKCAD steerin1 wheel. 1tr. MEW 1911 MEW 1911
metallic 4 speed Xtra EXPERTS Loaded. uia, l50C) AM !FM stereo. rear
clean. shows loving ••••••••••-••••••••••• ~9018 window defo11er, MUSTANG GRANADA
cue. (0791181> EAaUIKI 7 9 .....,.C,.. ---------1 automaUe trana. Soow $4695 YOL YO Auto mat\ c , 1 t ere o 1171 SdV. xlnl cond. $YOO. wb.ti. wttb &urcuodY ln· 2 DOOi SIDAM % DOC>a 119AM
JIMMAllMO lt66Hart>MBlvd. cauette, power 1teer· Like new leaiber, tutor. 27,000 mila. IJD· s 15~ s 155t~ COSTA MESA ln1, power brake•. ek!c:· Mlchelina.&&2~ maculatethruoutl •100. VOLKSW A'98C tric windows • aeata, ------.,-. --i '1~ or Answer Ad 18111 Beech Blvd. 646-tlOJ 540-t4'7 air, cntlae, wire wheel "14 Cpe DeVUle. pl, pb, f208, l42400 2' hn.
142-2000 75 VOi.YO coven, leather interior. air, ei.«:. wudwa Ir seat, ~ ttll (Stk o.481)(113314') (Stk. 0334)(110377) tilt (11S4Zl) am /fm, padded top, ,.__,,... tt•,.... ... • --111211 -•to 11•,... •a ---.,.._. -..,, eo MARK HOWARD Dynamite 242 4 speed. Sitts u 000 mi very CIHD ••••••••••••••••••••••• -c---•144•t1M--•c11ae -C...pttoo -..,.. .. rc .. --.dDC. Air con d It i o De d mso. pp ~. ' '71 Dodae 340 motor, ~--~ __ 119_,~.;.~_,._.,,..._-_*7_2z._1_4 ___ 1•---+•-a..---""'-·''!''*~"1~P'~..,.--~''!!'0~·-~S7---'-'-'""~I
VOUCSWAGEN Original sharp cer. • treo1 runa. needs re· ... EW 1911 NEW 1911 Large selection or <003023> C-.ro 9917 building, ofCer. trade "
Volkswagens wt\h com· $Jffl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 961)..'11114 PICKUP VA.._. petttive prices JIM MAI.IMO ·1acamaro ~-------,-,-4-0 "
u.a,.. .. L 11--··--J VOUCSW•~-. Air, automatic, power ~ FIOO STYUSIDE EI OO CAIC.O 'v~:'~ 18111 aeacb'8i:l (~~i~f) 27,961 miles. ;;·~~;;·;.,·;;::~·;~;~ 5158'~ $165~
534-4100 1 ___ 1_4_2-_2_00_0 ___ ,t;~~~~~~~I $49ll AM /FM stereo, PS, PB, ..........,.,..
13731 Harbor OIAMGICOUMTY .!!! Barwick Import.a air. $925. 547-4749
Garden Grove VOLVO '77 dRi ~~a150• s000unroo1f·.!:~ lll·UI I '60 G1luy. Xlnt running ....... _ 1aa(~tW2'42!l.~~1:>_,.,, 90 .... ,. .. w(~t~~~2!!l,<~~~)-""80 ra a... • m · _..,.,. cond. Needs fender • ~C-price IMOll t4111 .. tu.. -• c11ae •· 78 VW SCIROCCO Largest Volvo Dealer 673·5990 aft 4 !71 Camaro with T·lop. radiator SlOOO or best •i-•-°"'"'-'..,_..119 ... ,,,,_ .. _;;.-.,,...._-_•_10_:n_•_•_-__ 11_2"1>~1-=---°'""-c::"_...: ... ,':_ ... _,,_:-_, .. ___ es,_fa_'~-,'r'-oo_~ __ ,:_~_.
D B ·i 8 inOrangeCounty! ------M " t ond 1 ynamate razt ronze BUYorLEASE 'IO S~c,.. tn c .. ~ .. ~· offer.49'1·*'7 ... EW 1982 1911 beauty 4 speed. ractory .,-_._,. " air, stereo Very clean DIRECT V 6. automatic 'elFalconSptCpe EXP T-BIRD (69SUPT> transm111ion,radlo. '67 Covert. new top, new Xlntcond.see>o. VJOIML:MS5_W~~~ '!f !!(!fe~ F:~~· '.5~9~9~5ft~. ~;~ ~~~~:;~ =. :~~ -.7_9_0_r_an_1_:-:57-;-n-u-.-Xln ..... t l DOOR SPOIT COUPE TOWM UMDAU
.. AWA"" ~----- ----.. trans. 66M mi, Xlnt ml1. 2Dr. llluat Sac at s 11A89 s274w
18111 Beach Blvd 10120 GarcJen Grove Bl cood. $3500. d7·2111 S!IOO. 937-17'7 at\5 .., MOMTH MONTH
142-2000 Garden Grove 530-9190 ClileY.... ttZO U.Cola 9945\ (Slk 0~2)(1058061 (Stk 0115)(116087)
79 VW SCIROCCO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., • .,... • • --~••,........,., =.:-c.': :,...~.=_::.::-'tow':.~ _c.i..,,,..-sni11• --•we -. ._ ~ ~ ...-anJUtl.""" Silver beauty with lac-75 VOLVO 1976 CHIVWOLIT 77 UMCOLN .... °"""""..,_...,._ 1.1•a.-1..-,._.1,.o-0 -
1
tory air & stereo. Super Dynamite 245 4 door CHIYllTICOUPI Jet black/black tao I
clean <445UBll waeon. 4 Speed with air Autom1Uc trans., air sedan. Lolded and ooJy
S64t5 64,000 miles. Xtra clean. cood., AM/Fii ndlo • 42,000 mil•. Showa lov· JIM MAAIMO (012201 >. ma1 wheels. (050RIX). iDI ca~ imlde as out.
VOLICSW.AGEH $4'95 Placing your Clau~ ONLY S2595 (4URSK)
18711 Beach Blvd. JIM MARIMO ad is so simple .. just MllACU MADA $4tfl
142-2000 VOUCSWAGIM give us a call on the ZUOHatborBlvd. JIM MARIMO
18111 eeach Blvd phone and we'll help you COSTA'llESA VOLISWAfHM
Classified Ads, your one-14 .. •ooo word your ad for fut re· 645-1700 11711 Beach Blvd.
stop shoppin& center -• suit.a. 642·56'78. 14WOOO
... ......._. u d Wot. Used Wot, U1ed Mtos, Used ' 1 ded
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NOT SO ST!AOY EMPLOYMENT -The ex·
pression of mime Michael Holly summed up
bis concentration as be walked a tight rope
and juggled fiery batons to entertain part of
the crowd during the Wayzgoose festival at
Celebrate UCI, the university's annual open
house. Holly resides in Irvine Meadows on
campus.
GOP sees h~dget victory
Reagan Rx: Move swiftly o~~ending, tax cuts
W ASJD.NGTON (AP) -Pres!·
dent Reqan, returninl to acUoa
witb a pronouncement that be is
"much improved" but tbe
economy is as sick aa ever, ls oo
the verse of &ettinl Conareu to
fill bis preecription for the na-
tion's economic Illa, Republican
leadel'l HY.
In his ftnt public appearance
since lut aaontb'~ uauainaUoo
attem]'t, Rea.fan told a Jolnt
aeuioo of Cooll'eu on Tuesday
nl&bt that tt should move quicklJ
OD his pJ"Oll(lled tpedlnt and
OTHER ITORl18-A4
Machine guns, $300,000 in cash, jewels·
also discovered in raid on 2 homes
lb STEVElllTCllELL O(U.DellyNll ....
Lacuna Beach police, along
with federal and state aeents,
raided two Lacuna homes late
Tuesday, eel.zing $7.5 mllllon in
cocaine and arresting six peo-
ple.
Also seized ln the late evening
raids were two machine guns,
an estimated $200,000 in cash, a
handgun, silencer, 30 pounds of
hi&h grade seedless marijuana,
four pounds of hashish, a case
fuU of gold and gems, and a
paper money counting machine.
Five of those arrested were
captured inside a bouse at 1422
Terrace Way. Arrested and
charged with possession or
narcotics for sale were John
Charles Gale, 27971 Heartwood
Circle, El Toro; Edward Fran-
cis Bergman, 30 and Lisa Renee
Bergman, 23, of the Terrace
Way address; Samuel T. Fisher,
34, of Idaho; and Gerald Lee
Sims, 31, Bellflower.
Arrested at about the same
time at a house at 730 Griffith
Way was George A. Vanden-
brink, 26, whose address was
listed as 800 E. 15th St .. Newport
Beach.
Vanderbrink also was charged
with possession of narcotics for
sale. Gale and Edward Bergman
face additional charges of
possession or a machine IUD·
Two of the automaUc weapoDI
were found inside the Griffttb
Way home.
The six were booked late Tuee·
day at Orange County Jail. Ball
was set at $250,000 each.
Seized as evidence at the two
homes were 24 pounds or cocaine
with a street value of S7.5
million, hashish valued at
$30,000, about 30 pounds of marl·
juana valued at $60,000; cub
and ··a case full of 1old, aems,
and jewelry that would start
around $250,000," said Police U .
Terry Temple.
(See COCAINE, Pa1e A!) •
Coast act repeal nixed
· State panel votes 8-1 to block move for current session
SACRAMENTO (AP )
Despite tales of delays and
abuse, a Senate committee has
blocked an attempt by de·
velopers and disgruntled Ian·
downers to wipe out California's
historic coastal protection act.
The Natural Resources and
Wildlife Committee voted 8·1
Tuesday to refer a bill to repeal
the act to interim study. killing
it for this legislative session.
"It would be a dangerous mis-
take to repeal the act,'' said ooe
committee member, Sen. Diane w ataon. D-Itos Ana.iea. ··I th1nk it'• the only suarantee we have
in California that we are loinl'
to leave somet bin& for posterity."
The bill, SB260 by Sen. Jim El-
lis. R-San Diego, would wipe out
the California Coastal Act, ap-
prond in 1176 to protect the
state'• 1,100-blile coutllne lrom
over-development.
The act wu an outsrowtb of
Propolitioo 20, a coastal protec-
tlofl initiative approved by
voters in 1972.
About a half dozen witnesses
testified Tuesday that the act
bad been •bused by coastal com·
miuioners and aides who en-
force the law.
They complained of long de-
lays in processing build.in& ap-
plications and of arrogant
treatment by commissioners
and staff members.
"We have a monster that must
be cut back ," said Brian
Bilbray, the mayor of Imperial
Beach. "We've got a classic ex·
ample of a government agency
that's out or control and stepping
on people, and doing it with cold·
blooded malice."
He claimed the act was "being
U1'Eid by the rich to protect their
little bailiwick while the poor
are being kept down."
Roeer Osenbaugh, a former
coastal commissioner and land-
use consultant, said there are
tales of arrogance, deals and
personal profit surrounding the
commissions.
He also complained that com·
miuions found ''so many
reasons to deny projects."
Another witness, Carlyn
Highland, a Humboldt County
landowner, .aid her family bad
spent $12,000 and 2~ yean in a
futlle attempt to buUd a coutal
home.
"They have in fact stolen our ing a concrete coast. More and
property for public use," she more Californians were fmding
contended. it difficult lo get to the
But Rod Holmgren . co-coastline."
chairman of the Sierra Club's Another bill opponent, Stephen
California Coastal Task Force. Hopcraft, spokesman for a
said the act was under heavy tenants' group, criticized
criticism "for one reason -it is Bilbray's statement, saying
effective; it has produced re-Coastal Commission guidelines
suJts." had helped protect low-income
To overturn the act, 'be said, rental housing on the coast.
would return .tbe state to the. Holmgren and Michael Fisch-
days •b~n local governments er, state Coastal Commission
puabed for more and more de-executive director, said a
velopment. . statewide poll taken lut aum· Bffore the coastal act UMl ln· met found that more than 80
ltiatlve, be said, "lt was beeom· . <See COAST, Pase AJ>
Tennis star King
sued fior 'p.alimon'l{;~
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A hairdresser who says she lived
with Billie'Jean Kine In the ear-
ly 1970s bas sued the lennia star
for an interest in a Malibu house
and half tbe property she ac-
quired during the alleged les-
bian relaUoruship.
Mrs. King said today the aJ.
legations were "untrue and un-
founded."
Marilyn Barnett, 32, said she
began living with Mrs. King in
1972 and that . she promised to
take care of her financial needs
in return for her services as a
companion and business as-
sociate.
The Superior Court suit fiJed
Tuesday by attorney Joel F.
Ladin contends: "On or about
May, 1972, in Los Angeles, Ms.
Barnett and Mrs. King met and
began dating on a regular basis.
Sexual intimacy between Ms.
Barnett and Mrs. King com-
menced approximately six
months after their first date."
Ms . Barnett. now a
paraplegic, says she gave up her
job as hairdresser to become
secretary, confidante, compa·
nlon, cook, cleaning person and
"all other things necessary so
tbat Mrs. King's enern could be
totally directed toward playtn1
tennis."
Mrs. King issued a statement
today through her publicist de-
nying the allecation and sayin1
DENIES ALLEGATIONS
Billie Jean Kmg
.
.. .. ·:
she was "shocked." The state.
ment added that Mrs. King and
her husband Larry bad been
"sympathetic" to Ms. Barnett'•
"pU1bt'! in recent yean. .
The Barnett suit is hued oo
California's so -called
"palimony" precedent under
which former sin1er Micbelle
<See TENNIS, Pate A2)
·'Ripper' admits
killing '13 women
llllCE. ClllT 1111111
Extensive cloudinea•
toni1bt and early Tbun-
day mornlna. clearlns to •
sunny later Tburada7.
Cooler with 10'W9 ton.llbt ol
58 aloni tbe cout, 12 in·
land. lil&bl Tburaday M to a at the beacbea, 12 to 71
inland.
Abortion repOrting
~baCked by panel
' SACRAMENTO CAP) -A
1plan to force women who have
abortions lo reveal extensive
r personal and medical lnforma-
tion lo the state was approved
by the Senate Judiciary Com-
.miltee today despite heated op-
"posilion.
~-The measure, SB946 by state
)?Sen . Ed Davis, R-Chatsworth,
calls for the information to be
''reported within 15 days after the ~onth in which the operation is ~per formed. The information in·
e ludes patient background,
'number of previous abortions ~and live births, and lime of day
the op£"rahon was performed.
' The bill pussed on a 5-3 vote
.shortly after 1 a.m . supported
'tentatively by the state Depart·
ment of Health Servi ces, the
agency which would be responsi-
ble for supervising the report-
ing
oi The program would cost
:ioetween $300,000 and $400,000 an-~ u a 11 y , a health services
l\pokeswoman told the panel
"The measure goes to a fiscal
committee for study
From Page A1
Karen Dou&Jas of the Nunes
Coalition for Educated Women
backers of the bill, said the ~
posal "would give the state
more information in more depth
than is currently available."
The bill was also backed by
the California Medical Associa-
tion, the California Nurses A3-
s oc i a tion and the National
Organization for Women.
Currently, about 230,000
women have abortions annually
in California, Ms. Douglas said.
But Jose Granda of the Pro-
Life Minorities of California said
the mea~ur~ would unfairly
target nunor1tles, encouraging
unneeded abortions among the
poor.
Beth Meador of the American
Civil Liberties Union, which also
opposed Davis' bill, said the pro-
posal caUs for "much more than
merely demographic informa-tion."
But Davis disagreed. The
measure, be said, "just does
what Jack Webb says: 'The
facts, ma'm, nothing but the facts "'
RIPPER CONFESS.ES. • •
told Havers he had ''grave anx-
ieties" about the pleas.
Thf' judge ordered the more
t.han 89 British and foreign
JOurnahsts in the courtroom not
lo report details of the pros-
ecutor_'s arguments, saying this
could influence potential jurors.
The bearded Sutcliffe wear-
ing a light gray suit, re~ponded
in monotone as each charee was
read to him "Not guilty to
murder . but guilty to
manslaughter on grounds of
diminished responsibility "
His Czech born wife. Sonia,
sat on a bench 20 feet away
The intense feeling aroused in
northern England by the killings
over a five-year period caused
the transfer of the trial from
Yorkshire, where most of the
slayin&S occurred.
Police security was tight, but
there was no repetition of the ug-
ly scene al Sutcllffe's first court
appearance Jan. 5, when a mob
shouted obscenities and lynch
threats outside the court at
Dews bury, Yorkshire.
Sutcliffe, who lives ln Brad-
ford, was brought to London oh
Tuesday from a high-security
prison in the Yorkshire city of
Leeds, the base for the police
bunt for the mass murderer
''hamed after the Victorian AJle's
Jack the Ripper.
The accused man was brought
to the Old Bailey in a ereen
armored policed van, escorted
by two police cars with sirens
blaring and lights flashipe.
Diver hurt. J
at Catalina
LONG BEACH CAP> -A 22-
y ear-old member or the
California Conservation Corp•
broke his neck while diving for
an underwater obiect at
Emerald Bay at Santa Catalina
1s1ana, autnonues said.
Rafael .Alvarado was taken to
Torrancd Memorial ffospital
following Tuesday'• accident,
Ule Coast Guard Nported. Re b
Usted in critical condition.
ADMITS 13 SLAYJNGS
Peter Sutcliffe
Police held up other traffic in
the vicinity and kept members
of the press and public away.
The Yorkshire Ripper killings
started in July 1975 and coo-
tin ued until last November.
Detectives said the killt:r strucit
by night. smashina bis vicUms'
heads with a hammer and usual-
ly mutilating the bodies. Tbe
women ranged in age from 16 to
47 and nine were prost.itut~.
Because Jack the Kipper's
victims were prosUlutes and be
mutilated their bodies, the press
named the Yorkshire killer after
him. But the 1888 Ripper was
never caught.
Sutcliffe's wife was reported
to have lost her teaching job at a
school in Yorkshire because of
ber husband's arrest and the ac-
companying publicity.
Fire probe pu8hed
The attorney, Sb•rman ~eade, 1ald Maraball wu told
tho letter1 came from the killer
who teared Marshall know
somew.n, about the atrtna of
alayino. Meade Jaid~anhall
does not have the letteli.
Marshall, Jailed here on an
armed robbery charge, bu re-
fused to talk to a special task
force investigatin1 the sla.ytncs
until he la promised immunlty
from prosecution on the robbery
charee. Fulton County District
Attorney Lewis Slaton has re·
fused to meet the demands.
AuthoHtiea have repeatedly
said Marshall la not a suspect in
thesla~s.
Meanwhile, authorities said
Tuesday that two other young
blacks who had been reported
missing were found unharmed.
Herman Pittman, 21, was re-
ported missing by his mother.
But police said be called home
from work Tuesday after hear-
ing reports of his disappearance.
The other missing person re-
port was filed on 33-year..old
Richard Character, whose
mother said she bad not seen
him since April 14. A police
sergeant found Character,
described by police as mentally
retarded. in a downtown park
Tuesday night and retutned him
home.
A special task force in-
vestigating the child deaths is
looking into one disappearance,
that or 10-year-old Darron Glass,
who vanished last year.
Meanwhile, Public Safety
Commissioner Lee Brown told a
news conference Tuesday that
police are concerned about the
change in pattern in the killings.
He noted the last four victims
were small adults rather than
children, as had been the case in
the earlier slayings.
From Page A1
REAGAN. • •
. . to the spe~cb, to the ap-
pear ance" and 42 negative
phone calls.
There were 383 telegrams and
mailgrams that were favorable
and 23 opposed, Speakes said.
Reagan told the House and
Senate that they risk public
wrath unleas they act quickly on
his economic program.
·'The American people now
want us to act and not in half
measures," he said. "They de-
mand and they've earned a
full and comprehensive efrort to
clean up our economic mess."
The president, greeted in the
packed chamber by thunderous,
sustained applause from
Republicans and Democrats
alike, compared his recovery
from a bullet in the lung with
health of the U.S. economy.
''Thanks to some very fine
people, my health is much im-
proved," he · said, showing no
signs of the gunshot wound in-
flicted by would-be assassin 29
days ago. "I'd like to be able to
say that with regard to the
economy.
From Page A1
COCAINE. • •
Twenty heavily-armed agents
from seven local, state and
federal agencies raided the two
homes.
Acting Police Chief Neil
Purcell said the arrests toot
place wit.bout incident.
Assisting in the raid were
aaents from the California
Department of Justice Bureau of
Narcotics Enforcement; U.S.
Customs agents, the Orange
County Sheriff's Departmept;
San Diego County Integrated
Narcotics Task Force, Internal
Revenue Service, Fountain
Valley Police Department and
the federal Drue Enforcement
Administration.
Lt. Tell)ple said the arrests
were the result of a mutual in-
vestltaUon dating back to Sep-
tem ber.
Alvarado was swimmtn1 with
other menibers of the CCC when
he dived from a pier for the un-
derwater object. Loa Antelea
Count)' tifecuarda saw the acci-
dent, rescued Alvarado and then
radioed for a Coast Guard ~elicopter.
SAN BERNARDINO CAP) -
Fire officials have no suspec:ta in
the latest -and worst -in a
series of suspected arsooa at
California State University. Five
students were injured, none
seriously wben they jumped
from a second-floor dormitory
window to escape the Tuesday
mornin& blue, which cauaed
moderate damqe, said city fire
spokesman Jim Jewa. Home hunlen
~ out in /orce
MAIN OfllllCI ............ c.19 ..... (A .._ .. .._: ... , .... c ... -...CA.._.
..........
Triola WU allowed t.o •u• actor
1Ae llarvtD tor bait Of b1I Nl'll-
Uaf• dWiDI tbit perSOd t.IMJ Jlftd
to1ether aa an wunamed cou..
pie. lb. Marrin WU aWardad sio•.ooo, aJUaou1b 1b• bad/..-'°"** ~• milMoa. ( Mi;11 Bati:at.tt'I •ult • .,. Jira.
KlOI aiMt bet bt.11baDd haft c». cldtd to MU a Ma.W>u bou1e that
Ma. Baiftett tai• fi In b• name
JolDU1 wltb Mn. KlD1'1.
She iald ln tht sull that ln m•
Mn. Khll had told ~r, "Go buy
younett 1 house_" •"4 the bu
aaktd the Loe An•eles Superior
Court to rule that tbe bou.Ulcan-
not be told •ltbout ber l>ermlasioo. I
"Marilyn Barnett la a woman
who worked u my secretary ID
the early to mld 'TOI,'' 1aJd Mn.
K.ln1'1 1tatement, wbJcb wu re-
leued by publicist Pat ~
aod the Women'• Tennis A.j.
aociatlon.
"When I decided to cut down
on some of my busineaa ae·
tivltles and concentrate more on
playtna t.ennia, MariJyn'a wort
was phased out and she returned
to her former profession u •
halrstyllat in Beverly Hilh," the
statement said.
NOT GM'S BAO -Charlotte Chamberlain, a .Department
of Transportation eCQDomist, demonstrates an all' bag in
Cambridge, Mass., in 1977. General Motors announced
Tuesde,y that, after spending a decade trying to develop
them, the company ia discontfuuing the effort.
Ms. Kin&sley said the suit bu
been explained to Mrs. King by
her lawyer Denn11 Wasser.
•'The allegations contained in
this lawsuit are untrue and un-
founded," Mrs. Kin1's state-
ment said. "I am completely
shocked and disappointed by the
action Miss Bjtmett baa taken.
My husband Larry and I have
been very sympathetic to• ber
plight in the last few years."
Four banks boost
prime rate to 1.8% Ms. Barnett said injuries suf.
fered in a fall left her a
parapleeic.
NEWfORK CAP)-Fourolt.be
nation's largest banks ralaed
their prime rau from 17 .5 percent to 18 percent today.
For the second Ume this moath,
New York's Cbue Manhattan
Bank, the nation's third lareeat.
toot the lead in pushine up the
closely watched intel'est char&e
and waa followed within an hour
by No. 3 Manufacturers Hanover
Trust Co. of New York, No. 7Con-
tinenta1 IllinoU National Bank &
Trust Co. of Chi~go and No. 9
First National Ba of Chicago.
Chase raised th rate char1ed
its most creditworthy cuatomets
from 17 percent to 17.S percent
April 10 and was followed within a
few days by the rest of tbe coun-
try's majorbanta.
At the time, analysts said the
higher rate was llPerely a
technical response to money sup-
From Page A1
COAST. • •
percent of those questioned
wanted coastal protection
measures.
The more frequent criticism
voiced in the polJ was that
coastal commissions were not
tough enough on developers, the
two men said. Fischer said that
most permit applicants respond-
ing to letters he sent out had
praise for the way they were
treated by commissioners and
staff.
Quake shake8
Reno area
RENO (AP) -Some residents
of the Reno-Carson City area
were jolted awake today by a
sharp earthquake centered near
Washoe City, about 20 miles
south of Reno.
Alan Ryall or the University ol
Nevada-Reno aeismolocy lab
said the temblor hit at 4:55 a .m.
with an intensity of S.9 on the
RJcbtu scale.
ply condltroo.s aJMf not a harblnler
of sharply hl&her interest rates. A
number of leading banken were
prediclini a continuing decline in
the prime at least inUI this awn-
mer.
But In recent week.a, lntenst
rates have been rilblf in re·
sponae to fean that the Federal
Re1erve Board would act to
lighten credit and concern over a
surge in the money supply.
The prime reached arec:ord21.5
percent last December, but then
began a gradual decline that bot-
tomed out at a 1981lowof17 per-
cent April 1.
Ms. Kinpley said today that
she had met Ms. Barnett "back
when she was ti-er C Mn. Kini'•)
secretary. She (Mn. Kint) uaal
her to screen phone calla, make
travel arraneemeota -not u a
typist.
·'They were friends," she said,
adding that the suit "ts a teni-
ble.t.tllnl to happen to somebody
who has done so much for so
many people."
WTA spokeswoman Ana
Leaird said in Orlando, Fla.,
that the Kings have a sound
marriage.
"They are still together," Ms.
Leaird said.
Abscam convict
to quit Congress
PHILADELP~A (AP> -U.S.
Rep. Raymood F. Lederer, 0 -
Pa .. aid today that be is resign-
ine from Congress effective May
S because of his conviction in the
Abscam bribery scandal, ac-
cording to ·a statement read by
his lawyer.
Lederer was not present when
bis attorney, James Binns, read
the statement to reporters in
Binns' office.
Binns, wbo defended Lederer
on charges he took a $50,000
bribe from an FBI agent posing
as a representative of a fic-
titious Arab sheik, said he didn't
know where his client was.
Lederer was elected to
Cobgress in 1976 and was the on-
ly one among six U.S. represen-
tatives involved in the Abscam
case who was re-elected last
November.
The announcement by the
Philadelphia Democrat came a
day after the Rouse ethics com-
mittee recommended by • 10-2
vote that the full House expel the
'2-year-old lawmaker.
In his statement, Lederer said
he bad been proud to serve the
3rd Congressional District for
the past 41,A, years and that tu.
only goal bas been to "help im-
prove the lives of my consti-
tuents "
Curb condemn8
coa8t commis8ion
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Con-
demning t,be Callfomia Coastal
Commission as "social
engineers," Lt. Gov. Mike Curb
says it has exceeded its authori-
ty and is blocking the construc-
tion of needed housing.
Curb, a contender for the
Republican nomination for iov-
e r nor next year, told a
legislative conference of build-
ing contractors Tuesday that the
commission, which reeulates
construction alon' California's 1,100-mile coast, 1s putting too
many restrictions on new proj-
ects and bas imposed conditioaa
on others which approach
"socialism."
WHY NOT MAKE THIS
A SHORT SPRING?
These fashion walk shorts
bf Happy Legs are Just one from
our wonderful selection of
spring & summer Shorts.
See these as well as many
other short styleS
from
Condor, L.A. Seet
I
.......
Tona CMta, 8, of Fremont, atate poater child for
Mtucular Qystrophy, shawl off her guardian angel doll to Gov. Broum during a V!sit to nis of/ice. .
Boben c. Ode, a former
hosta1e lo Iran, visited ..0
fifth sraden ln LandlsvtUe,
N .J .;to thank them for cards
th~t brl1htened hla first Christmas in captivity.
Ode, 65, visited Our Lady
of Victories School to thank
Karen Maclme7'1 class for
their band:written notes. The
Sun City, Ariz., resident said
he had been a captive nearly
two months on Christmas
Day 1979 -without
newspapers, television or
contact with fellow hostages
-when the cards arrived.
Publuher
Murphy quitA
Re1 Mmptay resigned as
publisher and editor of The
San Francisco Examiner to
become publisher of the Sun
news papers in Baltimore,
Md .
Murphy, 47, has been al
The Examiner nearly six
years.
"The time has come for me
to move on," Murphy told the
newspaper's staff at a meet-
ing
Murphy came to San Fran-
cis co from the Atlanta
Constitution, where he was
editor
In Baltimore . he will be
publisher of the Baltimore
Sun, a morning newspaper,
and the sister paper, the
Evening Sun.
Actress Elizabeth Taylor
Warner make s her
Broadway stage debut
tonight when "The Little
Foxes" begins previews, and
she's already made her pre-
diction about the New York
critics' verdict.
"Thetre going to kill me,"
she said while moving her
ringers Uke a pair of scissors
at a dinner party given in her
honor at a Manhattan
restaurant:
Miss Tay lor opened to
mixed reviews in
Washington, D.C., in the
latest restaging of Lllllan
Hellman's "The Little Fox·
es," but tickets were hard to
come by. The play officially
opens in New York on May 7.
She was also a big draw at
the dinner party. A sizable
crowd stood outaide the
restaurant to watch her en·
. trance, she wore a silk tunic,
slacks and diamonds, and
some 60 people, including
Rock Hudson, Hermione
Glngold, Miss Hellman, and
Alexis Smith, were among
guests.
Rock musician Ike Turner
pleaded innocent to a charge
or assault with a deadly
weapon for allegedly shoot·
ing an Inglewood newspaper
carrier who had accidentally
bit his dog with a paper four
months ago.
The 49-year-old musician 1s
half of the now-defunct Ike
and Tina Turner Review
The notes and prayers lift-
ed his spirit and reminded
him Americans had not
forgotten the hostages, he
said.
u---Comedian Red ButtOM hugs entertainer Bob Hope
during a Hollywood award! dinner in Los Angeles.
Storms hatter Midwest
Twisters rake 3 states; thunderstorms roll east
f.oastal, iooal.her
l!venl,. ~ 11..-..e "'°"
••l•n1I" lnle ""-•tde"f mornl119. c1e.,1,.111........, by ml4-<Ny n...n-
M"f. Cooler Thur_., con1e1 -leflilM 56.....,, r-..
.. ., ... 0 ...
lnl•nd low IDflltllt •2, 1>1911 r-.
d•'I' n to 7'. W•lef w. a1......,.., v•r• winos Tilw9'
d•"f mornln11 becoming wot to
aouUI-Tllund9"f on.n-t at 10
to I• kftOtl witl'l wlM -ef J to• , .. t. • ....,, ...... 2 10 J '-l LMw
UllWI-ll«Omlng IUNIY Thwade"f Jft••-
U.S. summary
••·T~v ..... y UJ.ifomia
Mon......,_, II In llellt ter
Thundo"f, boll '-'°'"'" •'9 D ·
peeled lo cool • 1111 l"og and -,,__. ......... _ ........
1M IOUttl c-l lonlghl -T..........., mornlno.
Hi gh tem.,.ro111re1 Thuradoy
tllOuld lie -71 In Loi AnQelM, 16 to '4 In c-1.ol and 1n1erm..i ...
volleya, .. ID 7• Ill the -iolM, •
, ... In ........... *-1• oftd" .. , .. In _ _,, '"9t1L
Temperatures
BY GL&NN 8COIT ... ..., ........
ll'utln appears d81t1Decl to be tbe electOral ple t.bat will be
1Uced UJ> thlt aprlq 10 aU f,Jve ol
Oranfe County'• 1upervl1ora
bav• equal helplop of conitl· tueot. ..
The county 11 required by
ltate law to modify tbe
•UPervtaorlal bouodarle1 every
10 .yean after censUJ counta are
releuect
The fed!ltrlctlnl la intended to
1ive rea1dcta in each d.lltrtct
equal influence. The lay directa
local offtclala to honor city bcM.m-
darles II possible when altertn1
the lines.
The county Boa.rd of
Supervisort acknowled1ed the
law Tueld.I)' when lt formed a
five-penon committee to pro-
pose new jurlldlctlons.
But it doesn't always work.
And thls appears to be one of
those times for Tustin, popula-
tion 39, 761, wbicb bas the di.a-
tinction of being a meetina point
for four of the five supervisorial dlstri~.
For Tustin to remain under
one supervisor, it would require
some full-scale shifting of
supervisorial boundaries. But
three of the five supervisors -
Harriett Wieder 1n tbe 2nd dis·
trict, Ralph Clark'·tn the 4th ud
Thomas Riley in the 5th -are
up for re-eledion next year, and
none seem eager to forsake their
constituents.
Since the five-person commit·
tee is comprised of aides to each
supervisor, there is little chance
for drastic change.
Thus, the stage is set for
Tustin to be split. As one aide re-
marked, however, it's not
2nd inmate
stabbed at
county jail
The second Orange County
Jail inmate in a week bas been injured while waiting in the
basement holding cell at the
county Courthouse in Santa Ana.
Reginald Holland, 34, of San
Clemente, was stabbed in the
left arm Monday wbile waiting
to stand trial on rape charges,
said Orange Gounty Sherifrs U .
Wyatt Hart.
Holland was treated and re·
leased at the UC Irvine Medical
Center tor the puncture wound
caused by a homemade knife, he
said.
Tbe stabbing came just four
days after murder 1uspect
Michael Charles Bottoms, 22, of
Long Beach, died from head in-
juries apparently suffered in the
holding cell on April 20.
Hart said investigators have
suspects in each incident but
won't release any identities until
they are prepared to issue
criminal complaints .
The holding cell can house up
to about 30 inmates involved in
legal proceedings, Hart said.
Deputies watch the inmates
through windows, but he noted it
only takes an instant for righting
or assaults to occur.
"It's a violent atmosphere,"
Hart said.
The inmates, who are loosely
bound in chains, are moved to
their appropriate courtrooms
through a special elevator.
Hart said Sheriff's officials
have requested funds in the past
to remodel the' cell with more
windows, but have not received
them.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
C"tlfittd G~mo/o6i1t, A
.
nfeeNllri11 blld for th• city.
' "Soi:IMUIDM It'• to 1 cltY'• ad·
vaota'e to have two 1upenbor1, eapec:Jally if It'•
tr.nail," he 1aJd.
Riiey currently r~eaent•
Tu1tm. Illa di•trtc:i: tiowever,
aa •••lied ht population
ca~ It la1Jo laeluct.1 :POrUons
Qt the fut srOwJnl IOUt.b c0Waty.
He ta taraeted to yleld about
21,200 l'eljde•. and some of
them likely will come from
Tustin. St.Jn Oftelle, • Clark aide
who ll c.balrman of the commit-
tee, aaid the Santa Ana Freeway
throu1h TustJn Is bein1 con·
sldered u a poulbl~ boundary.
The reat of RUey • loe•ea are
expected to be from a small tip
of Huntin1ton Beach be
representa but which woulcl 10
instead to Mrs. Wieder, who
already represents the rest of
the city.
About 10,000 people live in that
section south of Athlnta A venue
and east of Magnolia. Street, said
Oftelie.
Bruce Nestande's 3rd di.strict
borders Tustin, but Nestande
also represents the south county
and needs to give up about 21,000
con1tituents.
Thus, Roger Stanton's lst dis-
trict, which currently extends as
far east as Santa Ana , is likely
to absorb parts of Tustin. Stan-
ton needs to pick up about 6,900
people.
Clark's 4th district also could
get in the action because he
needs to add about 9,600.
Even if TustiD is split,
however, it won't be the only
Orange County city to share the
alleflancea of more tban ODe
l\lPHYltor. Oran1• (Clar -
Neatand•l and Gardea Grove
<Mn. Wleder·Staoton> anildY 1hare repreaentaticm and Runt. ln1ton BHC-b atld lrtcludet
RUey'1 Hdlon. • •
The committee members ~
to have a propotal to the board
by June. Oft~e •aid the IJ"OUP baa met tentatively.
State 11W8sel -• quanintine
set to begin
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Calltomla's umual quarantine
on coastal mussela beaim Fri-
day, the atate Department of
Health Services bas announced.
The quarantine on sport
harvesting of mu.sell, oyaters
and scallops will remain lo ef-
fect through Oct-. 31, the depart-
ment said.
The quarantine, which appllea
lo coastal waters and all bays,
inlets and harbors, is imposed
annually because or the ruk of
higher concentrations of toxic
materials in mussels during
warm spring, summer and early
fall months.
The department says from
1927 through 1980 there have
been 508 known cases of
paralytic shellfish poisoning
(PS P l, including 32 deaths,
caused by eating toxic mussel,s
from the California coast.
Dmtty Pttll ..... " ....... O' ....
GIRL WATCHER? -Joni Lamed of Costa Mesa may not
have noticed while window shopping at skating store, but
the cowboy "leaning" against the wall of the Newport
shop was "eyeing" her closely.
-
;-lllllllim• 0 ••• ~-· , ...
••• t .. -
MONSTER WORLD -:-Eight-year-old Marcel
LaGrange, intent on roller skating, seems ob-
AP.._..
livious to gigantic zebras painted on wall of
Portland, Me .. housing complex.
.S. auto ind:1utry .
$600 million
DETROIT CAP) -Despite an
dustrywide loss of more than
million in the ftrSt three
onths of 1981 , U.S . auto
akers are predicting "substan·
al" and "dramatic" improve-
ent soon.
Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler
orp. announced first-quarter
sses Tuesday amounting to
38 million, a $"39.5 million loss
r Ford and a $298.4 million loss
r Chrysler.
The industrywide loss of $600.6
illlon for tbe quarter -tem·
ered by the $190 million profit
eneral Motors Corp. reponed
onday -was substanUally
orse than the $4.56.8 million
ss in the first quarter of 1980.
ext •pace alwule
li2Ht111111f!d/or fall
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
AP) -Its ftrSt journey com·
lete, America's reusable rocket
lane was back at its Florida
unch site today, being readied
r a four-day miuion with a
ayload next fall.
The space shuttle Columbia,
blcb left here on its maiden
ght 17 days ago in a tbuo·
erous roar of flame and smoke,
eturned to Kennedy Space
enter u a hitchhiker, bolted
top a Boeing 747, shortly before
oon Tuesday.
a.eaGr1111 indicator
1111(1.eX takea hilM
WASlllNGTON (AP> -A !My
arometer of the nation'• future
conomic health rose steeply in
arch, tbe fifth major indlca·
on of economic strength lo less
n two weeks, the Commerce
epartment reported today.
The 1.4 percent rise 1n the gov·
ernment's index of leading in·
dicators came in the race of
President Reagan's renewed
contention Tuesday night that
the economy is severely ailinc.
OPP, Ala. <AP> -Cornella
Wallace. the
ex -wife of
former
Alabama
Gov. George
Wallace, was
bandcuffed
but not
charged after
police found
her driving a
pickup truck •M.UC•
that had been reported stolen,
authorities said.
Police Chief Jerry Brannon
said Tuesday night. his officers
f6und a "highly nervous" Mrs.
Wallace driving "what wu ac·
tually a boltowed truck" on a
rural road about 1 p.m . Satur-
dav.
Military aperuling
bill advance.
WASHINGTON (AP> -A
military spending blll totaling
$136.4 blllioo -$12 million tielow
the Reagan administration re-
quest and $20 billion above cur-
. rent levels -has been approved
by the Senate Armed Services
Committee.
The action Tuesday, com.inc
earlier than normal in a con·
gress\onal session, lndicated the
com mlttee's "support for the
priority given to national securi-
ty progr8D14 by the Reagan ad·
ministration," said tbe
chairman, Sen. John Tower, R-
Texaa.
.
hatcher rehUffs
RA htinger ~triker
•
Pope lfDllld fight
Israeli
jets hit
guerrillas
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
Israeli warplanes blasted
Palestinian guerrilla
strongholds in southern Lebanon
today, a day alter sbootinc down
two Syrian hellcl>pter eunships
near the Christian city of Zable,
30 miles east of Beirut.
There were no immediate re-
ports of casualties.
The eovemor's office in the
port ol Sidon, provincial capital
of southern Lebanon, said the
Baufort Castle, Jarmalt Moun·
lain and the town of Aiableb
were the main targeta of the
midday air raid in the Green
Valley area.
A MIUTARY spokesman in
Tel Aviv confirmed the planes
attacked bases near the
Beaufort Castle, about four
miles north of the Israeli border.
Pilots reported accurate hlta
and all Israeli planes retW"'Md
safely to base, be said.
The jet.a drew barraae• ol an-
ti-aircraft fire from Palestinian
guerrillas in Beirut and the
southern port cities of Sidon and
Tyre as they made several
mornm, reconnaiasance fll&hta
before the strikes.
Israel shot down two Syrian
helicopter eunablpe Tuesday ..
a w aming to Syria to 1top tta
campaicn to wrest control ~
central Lebanoo'a mountaintope
from the Pbalangiata.
ISRAEU DEPvt'Y Defeme
Minister Mordecbai Zlpport •aid
bia government wu "malrinl tt
clear that in Lebanese stlea
there wlll be no Syrian air ac·
tlvlty."
The Israeli lntervention -lta
first since the S)'riam attacked
the Chrl1tian1 on April 1 -
brought SJl'ia and larael clOler
to the brink ol war tbu at any
time since the 19'13 Arab-hraell
war.
Syria vowed to meet "thi•
,rave eacalatloo" witb "~
irmne~•· ·' llraell Prime
Mini•tef Menacbem Bealn, pro-
mialna more •*1ltea to laelp tbe
Lebanese Cb.JiatliM, said, "We wlll not autnce OW'lelvea with
tblj acUon.~1
TSE LEMNBSB aonnunent of Cbrl1tf an PreaJ.dent Elias Sarkl• and Moslem Prime Mlnlater Sbaflll Wauan de·
DOUDced tbe Jll'Mll lntenentsan
.. ID attempt to "Hbotqe CW'·
l'Ht eftorta to brlu abOuf. DI·
Uonal recoaclllaUoo In
Lebanmi.0
. ,
BJ WALTO a. .-&AU
W ASHINOTON <AP) -ID a
••Ula& an 1ltuatlon
._0111,wood eo•l4n't hue
matclled,. Prealdeat a..a1ao
crowDed bll ftnt 100 day• -and
hl• comeback frOlll a bullet
wound -by~~ it
U Ume to jidopt bit apetld.hii i.Dd
tas ~Ptlon u the one and
only cure for 1 alck eeooom1. • R••.J•D 11 convinced the
voten an on bla aide, and made
sure nObocty faraot It.
ft• wofdl were familiar, but
the 1ttuatlon made them 1pecial
u tbe prealdent renewed bi•
per1onaJ campalf(Jl for the
economic prosram he ln.lllts ii
"tbe oo1y answer we have left."
The performance w11 a
iuaranteed bit, witb tbe leadint
man makfne till nrat address
since the attempt on b1a life
llarcb 30. Tbe scene wu •tan·
dard: tbe House chamber,
before a joint 1e11ion of
Coo1re11, in the Clare of
television U&bta for the cameras
tbat beamea tbe nation it.I flrst
real loot at Rea1an st.nee the
sbootiDC. There wu no outward
si10 ol tbe cheat wound be suf·.
fered four weeks a10 . He
graaped hands, clapped backs
aloq tbe aiale u be came and
went from the 27-minute ap·
pearance.
They Uld ~ abMDe• ol the
convaleid111 pr•l4eal w11 a
MriOUI MtbaclE in tbe effort to tell b1a l)l"Opqlal& •
l'l'hey don't tblnk 10 now.
ROUH Speaker TbomH p .
O'Neill Jr. hll vlrtuaUJ coo-
ceded that lb• Democ...U cu· aot It.op ae.,u·a bud•et cUta
nen ln tbe Houle U..y COrrtrOI.
Reaaan'• penonial -popWartty h"• iOaled'ln the public oplnloD polil alnce the uaualnatton at-
tempt that wounded bim.
PoUtlcal.ly, he ii u atroq ri&bt
now u a_presldent can be.
P'or all of that, for all the
drama, and despite tbe IUm ol
an admlnlatraUoo victory ln the
first major votes on the bud1et,
there la a lonl legislative road
ahead for Rea1an and hi.a lob-
by i 1 ts. The measures be Is
puablng are resolutions that aet
the coocresalonal bud1et. Still to
come are the separate ap·
propriations bills that actually
fix spencliq leveb for lndividual
proerams. That is where the op-
position will try to rally.
It will be a long and difficult
process. There is a lot of lobby·
ing, aod probably some ~etolng,
yet to come.
Actually, Reagan already has
won on the concept of budget
cutting. Even in the unlikely
~ept that the HOUM'adopteCJ ~
OemocraUc ~utioo, lt would
call for D'lott ol tb• cutl ..fie
want.a, Althou1b WUb a ~~ auateri~ Wletl tM I I 'i
lncreMi l.D defeat•~ m I
R-enan •aid tbat would • ~ nearty;~·enol.llb. He •• I' 411 cU:ts, all of them. and ldl
Qir ... year lax bW, not ~ -.~
)'ear plan the Democraw have
preafJ,tted. Re said it ii tbe ~
way to 10, "there are no more
alternatives left."
The tax cut ii tbe iuue on
which Democrats moat llkeb'
will make their stand, later lo
the con1re11tonal aeaaon. So
Rea1an paid special attention to
that phase of bla proeram.
"It should be looked at as ..,
integral part of the entire budaet
package , not sometbtn1
separate and apart from the
budeet reductions, the res·
ulatory relief and the monetary
restraints," be said.
Reagan said the Democratic
version would leave taxes toe
~igh , and would not produce the
Jobs and economic growth bis
plan would.
lo circumstances like those
Tuesday nl1bt, an amateur
would have been a star. And
Rea1an is a pro.
While be is likely to lain con-
g reHloaal baekio1 for bla
bud1et cuta, tbe House and
Senate votl» just ahead do not
neceaarUy foretell the final out·
come.
Reagan 'pen pal'
awakens celebrity
He probably will have to com·
promfse later on bis three-year,
30 percent tax reduction plan,
althoup ~e la no aien ol that
now. Compromise ia not the mood at the White House,
not with a recovered Reagan
rldin1 hicb lo the polb, and with
leadlna Democrats conceding
that' tbe voters want hil budtet
biddine done.
Rea1an underscored that
mood, diamlsain1 Democratic
alternatives u ju.al about use·
leas.
''The American people now
want us to act, and not In baU
measures," Rea1an aald. "They
demand -and tbey have earned
-a full and camprehemive ef.
fort to clean up our economic
mesa."
Nt>t many days aeo, Reagan
lieutenant.I were worried that
the drive for hil economic pro-
era'm wu alowinc if not sW.ling.
ROCKVILLE CENTRE, N.Y.
(AP> -Eight-year-old Peter
Sweeney was excited te> learn
that his get-well letter wu quot·
ed by President Rea1an in his
speech to Congress and the na·
Uon but said today be hoped
''this celebrity stuff cets over.··
The child was fut asleep at
9:10 p.m. <EDT> Tuesday when
Reagan read the letter. and bis
father, also named Peter.
wouldn't wake him up.
When the boy rose this morn-
ing, be said, "My dad told me l
was famous, a celebrity. .I
dido 'l even bear it!·'
BE ADDED THAT he wanted
things to get back to normal ''so
I won't have to take so many
telephone calls.·'
The eet-well letter was written
as a project for bis second-grade
clus at Riverside school to wish
Reagan a quick recovery from
the wound be suffered in the
March 30 attempt on his life.
The tine Reagan quoted said,
"I hope you gel well quick, or
you might have to make a
speech in your pajamas." A
post.script added . "If you have
to make a speech in your pa-
jamas, l warned you."
Reagan wore a blue suit as he
addressed a joint session of
Congress and read the note.
Where did Sweeney gel the
· idea about the pajamas'>
"Well , I thought that if he
didn't gel better he might get
embarrassed. so if be got em·
barrassed be might want to get
better soon so he won 't have to
make a speech in his pajamas,"
he said
THE BOY'S FATHER, a New
York City police sergeant, said
his son had been upset when
Reagan was shot
"I didn't know how anyone
could get so close to the presi·
dent," young Sweeney said to-
day.
Lido Marina Village and Orange CNSt Daily Pilot
present a unique cycling event you n11't nit to miss
The ride combines the excitement of a bicycle race with the pleasure of a 25, 50
and 100 mile tour. And it's your cboice. You can compete for times or simply
enjoy a ride through the rural areas along the Pacific Coast Hwy . So come on out to Lido Marina Village, located on Newport Harbor, V.. block off Newport
Boulevard, just South of Pacific Coast Highway on Via Lido. From the San Diego
Freeway, take the Newport Freeway (Hwy. 55) south til it turns into Newport
Boulevard. Follow to ,Via Lido and turn left. The ride starts at 7 a. m .. Sunday, "
May St.st.
ENTRY DETAILS
Team entries will be accepted I minimum of 15 participants per team 1 but indh'lduals 11re ul .. o encouraged to compete
Pleaae fill In all information on the auached ofricial entry fonn . and enclose 1 check for the fu ll amouftt Including the purchase ol any T·Shlrts or \'lsors. Note: P1ease make the check payable to Lido Marina Village and mail to Lido Marina Village. ~211
Via Oporto. Suite 4. Newport Beach. CA 92663.
T-SHIRTS
Official Udo Marina VIUaae Fun Bicycle Ride T·Shlrta are anllable ror purcl\ase by mall. •t the t'O"'
of $8.00 each <tu included<. T·Shlrt.s "111 be anllable for pick-up the day of the ride at tither thr
atartJna line or tM fmlah Une.
AWARDS Awardl will be presented at Udo Martita Vlll•lt at 4:30 p.m lhe uroe day of the race.
--~-~~--~--~~-----~~~-~-~---~-~-~~---~~--
I
I I
·1s~CRAMENTO (AP> -O•llfomlana now have to take a ~inl clus to use tear 1u but
nqt to &et I hand*"'1, and ID Al·
itfin bl)' committee thinks lt •fl~u14 be the other way around. 'In lenath.Y be..-tni1 Tuesday
to' beat -a lestaJaUve deadline,
tbt crime committees of tbe two
Hbaaes also approved a variety
of lentenclna meHurea, from
crlmea uslna a knife to sale of a .. u. equipment, but turned
dOwn wiretappln1 propoaalt.
Hid the requirement •ould prob-
ably decrease the number of
new bandgun.i in circulation.
A more ambitloua 1un-control
b1ll, ABllM, WU shetved by ill
author, Assemblyman Elihu
Harris, 0-Berkeley, who aaw
that it would not pus.
It would have required a 1afe-
ty test and a state permit for
everyone poeaessine a handrun.
It was the last scheduled
meeting ol the commJttees to
pass money-related bill.II to take
effect ln 1882 on tbe year'a bot-
tea t topic, crhqe. And gun-
tontrol supporters scored a
rare, modest victory.
rt'be Assembly Criminal
.hmtice Committee, by a bare-
llJ&Jority 8-0 vote, approved
AB1169 by Assemblyman Mat-
tfle w Martinez, 0 -Monterey
P•rk, sen<Ung it to the Assembly
Wiays and Means Committee.
THE caotlNAL Justice Com-
mittee voted 9-1 for AB1771 by
Assemblyman Terry Goaatn. D-
San Bernardino, which would let
Californians use tear I••
weapons in sell-defense without
ha vlng to late tbe currently re-
quired training class.
The bill would requlre only
that a buyer of tear eaa read and
fill out a state-prepared form
containing information about the
weapon and legal requirements.
TRIAL PROTESTED -Demonstrators outside
the federal building in San Diego protest trial
of three men accused of conspiring to bomb
power transformers at the National Steel and
Shipbuilding Company in San DieJ1?0. Defense
,.,..,......
attorney Leonard Weinglass told a federal!
court jury that Rodney Lewis Johnson, Clyde
1 "Mark" Loo, and David Phillip Boyd, all
fired employees, never intended to carry out
the plot.
I
STAllTJNG JULY 1, 1982, it
would prohibit the sale, transfer
or delivery of a handauo to
anyone wbo had not either com-
pleted a safety course or taltep a
safety test. ft would not apply to
police, the military or private
investigators.
Goggin said there aren't
enou1h classes to meet the de-
mand now, and questioned why BUT CONSERVATIVES
"it's much easier these days to scored several victories in the
obtain a gun than to obtain tear Senate committee, and at one
gas." point threatened to make in-SACRAMENTO (AP> -The steering wheels Calling off.
'Lemon' refunds eyed
"I think it'll cut down on the
amount of accidents in the
home," said Martinez, who also
The bill was opposed by the roads in the uns state law re-Assembly consumer protection Representatives of the car
schools that give the current ducing penalties for marijuana committee has approved a bill to manufacturers, who oppose the
training courses. Michael possession. give automobile buyers refunds bill, countered with descriptions
Sullivan of Personal Protection The committee also voted to or new cars iJ tl)ey're stuck with of new arbitration committees
Systems said people find the ban plea-bargaining -the com-·'lemons." they say they are setting up "to
courses worthwhile, and predlct-mon practice of trading a guilty Car buyers told the committee hopefully end up with a satisfied ed the bill would bring tear gaa plea for a reduced chargt: or about cars stopping on the customer
products into the state that weN! sentence -for most senous freeway over and over, of
ineffective or dan:.:g:::e:.:.r.::.ou=s::..:-____ _:c:.:.r~i m::...:e:.:s·~------------=b.:...r::.ak:.:.e:.:s:.....:.:f ail:::':::i=n~g_l:..:;O--'-'t1 ..... m_e,_s_,_. _an_d_of ___ T_h_e_v_o_t,_e_T_u_e_s_d_a_y b Y the
4 kids placed
• in state care
Consumer Protection and Toxi~
Materials Committee was i-3 to
send the measure to the A8t
semblv floor
The bill is designed to define~ term in the current consum
protection la~. It requires su
a refund or replacement afte
•·a reasonable number of a~
tempts" at repair 1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four young members
of a sprawling family that haa amused some 400
fl}"rests have been placed under the jurisdiction of
Jl)e state in a case that could break new legal
ground on what constitutes an unfit parent. Sale17.99 Your
choice Superior Court Judge Elwood Lui issued a t~mporary order Monday malting the four
"Wilson" children, aeed 10, 9, 8 and 20 monlh8,
wards of JuvenHe Court so they can be placed in
foster homes.
F
A s
H
I
0
N
Sundressi~g for summer days and nights.
One chOd has since been placed with a ~andparent, and the other three were in official
custody and were to be placed in foster homes or
shelter. It was not known which child was placed
with a grandparent.
Painting bought
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 17th cP.ntury paint-
ing priced at $4 million was purchased by >two
Southern California museums.
The joint purchase of "The Holy Family" by
Nicolas Poussin was made over the weekend by
the J . Paul Getty Museum in Malibu and the
Norton Simon Museum ln Pasadena, with each to
show it for a three-month period initially, then ex-
change it once a year.
Autopsy perform«l
LA VERNE CAP> -Police said they would re-
view results of an autopsy on a 21-year-old bar
patron before deciding to file any charges in con-
nection with hi& death following an unlicensed,
amateur boxing match at the Last Chance Saloon.
Unofficial autopsy results indicate Vic
Ayvaziana of Duarte died from head trauma after
the March 10 bout, said John Finken of the Los
Angeles County coroner's department. Finken said
the coroner was awaiting a police report before
filling out a death certificate.
Tuition vek> eyed
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The Assembly Educa-
tion Committee bas advanced a bill to give the
Legislature effective veto power over tuition at the
University of California.
Pay~backed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The governor's salary
would jump 58 percent and the other constitutional
officers would also get hefty raises under a bill ap-
proved by a Senate committee.
The measure, SB238 by Sen. Alfred Alquist, D-
San Jose, would raise the governor's salary from
$49,100 a year to $77 ,409, the salary of the state
chief justice. A 6-1 vote Tuesday of the Senate Gov-
ernmental OreanizaUon Committee sent it to the
Senate Ftnance Committee.
NIWPOlrr
-1MA•BOR CRUISE a
suteAY•tMCM
•T tteCA.ll•Y
714 671-71ll
c
A
R
N
I v
A
L
Reg. $22-$24. Cool cotton prints with femini~e
flourishes. These in®r)ue sundresses are _tnmmed with
flirtatious lace. Choose lace trim bodice print dress,
sweetheart dress with bodice pnnt. mock button-front
sundress. or coat-style sundress. Junior srzes
S"CRAMENTO <AP) -
C-.lltornlan.a now bave to take a
Hlnln1 class to use tear au but
nqt to 1et a hand&Wl, and an Al·
•l!m bl)' committee tbink1 It
•bouJd be the other way around. 1n lenlthy beartn11 Tuesday
to• beat a lecillative dea4llne,
tht crime committees of the two
bOtues also approved a variety
of aentencine meaaurea, from
crimes using a knife to aale of
aru1 equipment, but turned
ddwn wiretapping proposall.
aaJd the requlremen& would prob-
ably decrease the nutnber of
new handcunJ in olrculatlon.
A more ambitious run-control
bill, ABllM, was 1belved by it.I
author, Assemblyman 1Ellhu
Harris, D-Berkeley, wbo saw
that it would not pus.
It would have required a safe-
ly teat and a state permit for
everyone po9.Se1Sint a baocteun.
•I
Two wJretapptn1-relat•d
mea1ures were lbelvtd for the
year when their authoit 1 w
tbey would be deteated.
AB3'14 by AIHmblYJDan Dave
SUrlin1, R·Haelen49 Hetabta. tn
the en~ Juatict Commit*'ie, ~., AttorMy Geoeral Geor1e
DeµluneJlan'a lllftllual attempt to
le1all_u Police wiretappld& U a
court approves lt.
A,. ........
It was the last scheduled
meeting of the committee. to
pass money-related bills to take
effect In 1982 on tbe year'• bot-
tes t topic, crime. And gun-
tontrol supporters scored a
r~re, modest victory.
ITbe Assembly Criminal
J•tice Committee, by a bare-
a>ajorlty 8-0 vote, approved
AB1169 by Assemblyman Mat-
thew Martinez, D-Monterey
Park, send,ing it to the Assembly
Wiays and Means Committee.
THE CRIMINAL Justice Com·
mlttee voted 9·1 for AB1771 by
Assemblyman Terry Goeetn. D-
San Bernardino, which would let
Californians use tear gas
weapons ln self-defense without
ha vtng to take the currenUy re-
quired training class.
The bill would require only
that a buyer of tear 1as re and
fill out a slate-prepar orm
containinl informat the
SBe'11 twSeaa. Ollie Speraw, 1l-
Lon1 Beaeb, alao sponsored by
Deukmejian, would have al-
lowed police with a search war-
rant to aet records of all nwn-
bera dialed from a particular
telephone.
ln putUni the bill off until next
year, Sen. Omer Rains. D·
Ventura, chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, suggested
that Speraw address the issue,
''To what extent do we want our
privacy invaded?"
TRIAL PROTESTED -Demonstrators outside attorney Leonard Weinglass told a federat1
the federal building in San Diego protest trial court jury that Rodney Lewis Johnson, Clyde
of three men accused of conspiring to bomb "Mark'' Loo, and David Phillip Boyd, all'
power transformers at the National Steel and fired employees, never intended to carry out
Shipbuilding Company in San Diej?o. Defense the plot.
STARTING JULY 1, 1982, it
would prohibit the sale, transfer
or delivery of a handgWl to
anyone who had not either com-
pleted a safety course or ta.ten a
safety test. It would not apply to
police, the military or private
investigators.
weapon and I ls.
Goggin aren't
enough clas eet the de·
mand no uestioned why BUT CONSERVATIVES
"It's muc ier these days to scored several victories in the
obtain a an to obtain tear Senate committee, and at one
'Lemon' refunds eyed
"l think it'll cut down on the
amount or accidents in the
home," said Martine~ who also
gas." point threatened lo, make in-SACRAMENTO (AP> -The steering wheels falling off.
T i was opposed by the roads in the 1975 state law re-Assembly consumer protection Representatives of the car
s ools that give the current duclng penalties for marijuana committee has approved a bill to manufacturers. who oppose the
training courses. Michael possession. give automobile buyers refunds bill, countered with descriptions
Sul)ivan o( Personal Protection The committee also voted to or new cars if they're stuck with of new arbitration committees
Systems said people find the ban plea-bargaining -the com· "lemons." they say they are setting up "to
courses worthwhile, and predict-moo practice of trading a guilty Car buyers told the committee hopefully end up with a satisfied
ed the bill would bring tear gas plea for a reduced charg«: or about cars stopping on the customer.
p'foducts into the slate that were sentence -for most senous freeway over and over, of The vole Tuesday by the ineffectiveordan~g~e~ro~u~s-·~~~~~c~ri~·m~es~·~~~~~~~~~~_..::b~r~ak~e~s:......:..rw~·~li_n~g_l_O~ti_m_e_s~,_a_n_d~o_f~~~
4 kids placed
in state care
Consumer Protection and Toxi~
Materials Committee was i-3 to
send the measure to the A~
semblv floor.
The bill is designed to define~ term in the current consum
protection law. It requires su
a refund or replacement alle
.. a reasonable number of a1,t
tempts" al repair._ _ _ _J
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four young members
of a sprawling family that has amassed some 400
arrests have been placed under the jurisdiction of tJle state in a case that could break new legal
ground on what constitutes an unfit parent. Sale17.99 Your
choice
Superior Court Judge Elwood Lui issued a
temporary order Monday making the four 1'Wilson" children, aged 10, 9, 8 and 20 months,
wards of Juvenile Court so they can be placed in
toster homes.
F
A s
H
I
0
N
Sundressi~g for summer days and nights.
One chnd has since been placed with a grandparent, and the other three were in official
custody and were to be placed in foster homes or
'sheher It was not known which child was placed
with a grandparent.
Painting bought
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 17th cP.ntury paint-
ing priced at $4 million was purchued by two
Southern California museums. The joint purchase of "The Holy Family" by
Nicolas Poussin was made over the weekend by
the J Paul Getty Museum in Malibu and the
Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, with each to
show it for a three-month period initially, then ex-
change it once a year.
AutoJMY perf ormM.
LA VERNE lAP> -Police said they would re-
view results of an autopsy on a 21-year-old bar
patron before deciding to file any charge~ in con-
nection with his death following an unhcensed,
amateur boxing match at the Last Chance Saloon.
Unofficial autopsy results indicate Vic
Ayvazlana of Duarte died from head trauma after
the March 10 bout, said John Finken of the Los
Angeles County coroner's department. Finken said
the coroner was awaiting a police report before
filling out a death certificate.
Tuition veto eyed
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Assembly Educa·
tibn Committee has advanced a bill to give the
Legislature eUective veto power over tuition at the
University of California.
Pay raise3 backed
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The governor's salary
would jump 58 percent and the other constitutional
officers would also get hefty raises under a bill ap-
proved by a Senate committee.
The measure SB238 by Sen. Alfred Alquiat, D-
San Jose, would ~aise tbe governor's salary from $49,100 a year to $77,409, the salary of the atate
chief justice. A 6·1 vote Tuesday of the Senate Gov-
ernmental OreanizaUon Committee sent lt to the
Senate Flnaoce Committee.
MIWPOlrr
HARBOR CRUISE a
SUteAY•IMCM
AT THI c:Aal•Y
714 671-712.Z
c
A
R
N
I v
A
L
Reg. $22-$24. Cool cotton prints with feminine
flourishes. These ing§11ue sundresses are tnmmed with
flirtatious lace. Choose lace trim bodice print dress.
sweetheart dress with bodice pnnt, mock button-front
sundress. or coat-style sundress Junior sizes
.I
I
l1Qder tbe ~nu ol Propoei,
OD 13. the uaeaud v&luatJoa of
home IOI' property tax p&rpOMI
ere ... to conform Wltb ~~
nt market value at soon u we
pro~ ta told. , Wider the law, it'• tbe
le1al ~atioa of tbe bQYer to bouty tbe county Alaeuor11 Of.
fl• OI the tranafer ao tax• can adjusted. Pen<y for failure'
do t.bia la either 10 percent of
e w due or $100 wbJcbever hi
-treater.
Unfortunately, the number of
Eoperty buyen who apparently
ere unaware of tbia obll1ation,
r wbo simply uaumed it would
taken care of along with all the other escrow papers numbers
loto thousands.
And ri&bt now about 13,000
\ivbo failed to mate the report of
\ransf er are awaiting response to
J.heir petition• for exceptions
Jrom the penalty.
The Assessor's Office, rec-
pgnizing the confusion, recom·
snended that blanket exceptions
t>e &ranted. But the County
i:;ou.nseJ believes each application
for ea~on &bo\ild tie reviewed to~ "reillOGable cauae••
for f ailu:re to tepo.r:t, u i>efniltted
under itilt8 law. ...
J>rOP:erty t:NYera 1hould be
aware that, while ru~t e:acroW of·
flees are WW1nl to help ~ th.la bit of paperwork. tbey aN not
le1allY responsible for f allure to
report the traurer. And the >a.-
1e11or' • Office doesn't become
aware ol the tranaf er W1tll the
sale documentl are recorded.
At that Ume, the buyer ii
likely to be surpriaed by news
that he's subject to the penalty
for not reporting the purchase.
The Assessor's Off{ce now
bas requested the County
Recorder to include the
necessary tran5f er report form
with the deed and title documents
sent to a buyer alter a sale.
This would serve as a re-
minder. But unW that procedure
becomes routine, the wise buyer
should make sure the tramter re-
port is filed with the Assessor.
Failure to do so might be an ex-
pensive oversight.
L4 medical milestone
• Dedication fast week of the., maintains a Regional Poison
flew UC Irvine MedicaJ Center Center.
ower was the first major step in Opening of the Tower pro-
rojected redevelopment of the vides up-to-date facilities for both
ormer county facility. And it patient care and education of
ives Orange County one of the medical students at the UCI
inest public bea_lth installations College of Medicine.
the stat~. . . Renovation will proceed with . 'J'.be s1x-tevel, $14.~ mdlion remodeling of the adjoining
udding, constructed ~th funds Medical Center East, which is
om a 1~2 state bond w .ue for linked to the Tower by a system nh:~rs1ty health science of corridors on the lower levels. f acibttes, houses ultra-modern equipment for emergency and Thus th~ once rath~r forlorn ~rauma care, gynecologic and ob-~ounty Medical Center lS bec~m·
f
tetric services, intensive care mg .. the most mod~rn teaching
or newborns and pediatric pa · fac1bty for UCI medical stud~nts
ients and diagnostic radiology. and part .of a network of affili_at·
. The filth fioor ophthalmology ed. ~os~1tals .and comm~mty
department houses the Lions-UCI ch01~s. m which. 600 resident f:ye Bank, funded in part by such phys1c1an~ . rece1 ve their ad·
events as the Lions' annual Costa vanced trauung.
Mesa Fish Fry. For Orange County residents
The center already is na-in need of emergency or highly
ttonally known for its outstanding specialized treatment, it is in-
bum treatment facilities and also deed a welcome gift.
A// airs of state u:e~ghty
The state highway ~yatem is
crumbling, the schools are in
deep financial trouble and crime
la terrifying the citizens.
But our full -time, pro-
fessional legislators in
Sacramento have still other is-
sues to worry about.
Like whether the Rams
should continue to call
themselves the Los Angeles
Rams when they move to
Anaheim.
No doubt loss of the football
team was a blow to at least some
Angelenos. The loss of up to $2
million in jobs, sales tax and
other economic benefits bas been
suggested.
Assembly Majority Leader
Mike Roos, D-Los Angeles, was
so distressed about it be went so
far u to introduce a bill requir-
ing teams such as the Los
An1elea Rams to set permi51ion
to conUnue uaing a city's name
alter moving away, and authoru-
inl the city to charge a fee for
that penniasion.
Roos said the fee would be
like "alimony" after a divorce.
The lawmakers pondered thls
weighty matter for a time and
voted 41-26 to approve the bill.
But Assemblyman Richard
Robinson, D-Santa Ana, who was
one of the five Orange County
members opposing the measure,
insisted on calling it back for re-
consideration. So five days later
the Assembly voted again, this
time approving it 42-33. Ap-
parently the subject was
fascinating enough to lure even
more of the lawmakers to the M -
sem bly floor the second time
around.
Now the Senate will have to
weigh the issue of the Rams'
name. And if that body approves,
the governor will have to sign or
veto the bill. The whole operation
shouldn't cost state taxpayers
more than $20,000 or so.
•
If the Los Angeles folk were
really so upaet, it would seem
they could just as well have sued
the Rams with their own tax
money instead of draggln1 the
entire state Legislature into the
fray.
However, the debate was
de-scribed as jocular aad
lighthearted, so perhaps it was
all a welcome relief from the
bea vy stress of government.
Opinions e>epressed Jn the space above are. thOse of the O.lly Piiot. Other views ex-
preased on this page are those of tf\elr authors ancs artists. Reader comment Is Invit-
ed. Address The Dally PllOt, P.O. Bo>e 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71,)
'42·,321.
LM. Boyd I Homelwld orders
• CIUl you explain whv 1no.tmen who
Uk• 1nullc want to play lt more loud1J than ~who Uke rnualct Analptl
tbeorb• that It bu 10m.cJUna to do
with the tact tbat men -~· Ina HnllUv. tban wom• to UM 'bllb noc.s. The expla.naUOD I•~~, and
probabl1 not .. 1IP111eaat • till f!r'1
from the ldtcb111, ''1'unl that UdDI
do,m I'' IDddentall)', •'Turn taM. thbtc doh" II aald to be one of -. ftn
moat common bouaehold lm~v ...
.Th• other'"'fou.r are: "Anawer the
pboiie." "Talce out the 1arba1e ...
"Locktbedoor."Atld "Coinetobed."
Clahn' ti no btit workl beUeJ' ln •
mOUMu-ap than oumeaJ mJxid loto
peanut butter.
Flve thouaand ctUtens With 25,000
1lavet -that• I what the sreat Greek
Plato tbouabt would make tbe •deal dty.
,-
----~ _:-_-_-
Saudi anns aid fires debate
WASHINGTON -Washington bu ill
own version of Mount St. Helen.a, which
periodically belches hot steam into Ute
atmosphere. Tbh la the recurrine qun-
llon of arms aid lo Saudl Arab••·
America's great oil ally.
President Reagan now want.a to sell
the Saudb some super-radar planes.
plus midair refuellna capability and
bomb racks for their F-lS jet fighters.
Opponents of the arms sale fear that the
equipment will be used offensively
again.at Israel.
To prevent a major erupUon, official.a
have tried to keep some details out of
the publlc debate. These include: (1)
the hair-raising possibility that some
Palestinian pllota in the Saudi air force
coulc:\, make unauthorized strlkea
against Israel in their souped-up F ·lSa;
(2) proposals to approve the sale of
even more military equipment to the
Saudis, including 10 long-range
helicopter gunships, American anti·
tank .nissiles and several ground radar
stations; and (3) the State Depart·
ment 's push to sell five Boeine
transport planes to neighborine Iraq.
THE SAUDIS INSIST they have no in·
tenlion of using American arms to al·
lack Israel. But as part of the weapon.a
deal, the United States would provide
Saudi Arabia with bomb racb and re·
fueling equipment for the F·lSs that
Jimmy Carter sold to the Saudis in 1978.
This would extend the range and in-
cre aae the firepower of the F ·Us.
Coupled with the ract that several pilot.I
G.
-JA-Cl-Al-1-111_1_1 -~-4'
In the Saudi air force are Palestini~.
the F · 158 could pose a serious threat to
Israel.
There is alao some misunderstanding
about AWACS. The radar command
planes will not give the Saudis much
ground surveillance capability beyond
what they already have. But the system
would greatly reduce Israel's critical
advantage in air warfare.
Pentqon sources told my associate
Ron McRae that'tbe Saud.la bave a gen·
unine need for an early warning system
like A WACS. But the Pentagon would
prefer not to sell the system to the
Saudis and, in.st.ead wanu to ma.UUlih
the present arran1ement of Amerlcid-
owned and operated aircraft..
THE SALE OF Boeing 747 and tfl
transports to Iraq i.s belni promo~ stricly a commercial deal to help .
Ing compete with forel&n aircra t
manufacturers. The contract would be
worth about $200 million to Boeing -U it can get cooereaalonal approvill foe
the necessary export license.
The sticky polnt is that Iraq is oot or
four nations on the State Departmedl's
list or terrorist·supporting regim• lh
tne Arab world. The others are Llb)'a.
Syria and South Yemen. Sale of
military equipment to any or tb•se
countries would be hard to juaWy .
especially ror an administration that
has made terrorism its chief ro~lrh·
policy target
Meanwhile, the Saudi oil minilter,
Sheik Ahmed Yamani, has made it
quite clear that the Saudis exp•ct
American arms as a qu.id pro QUO Jor
holding down the world price or oil Ana
fuel prices are obvioualy an impoft*nt
consideration for lbe Reagan id·
ministration ln its fight to curb Lnlia-
lion
Tax-exempt bond financing risky
Earl Waler• u on vacation. Thu cofumn
11 by nate Trecuurer Jeue M. Unruh.
When you and I buy something on
credit, we know that eventually we will
have to pay for it with Interest and the
payment will hurt. Aa a result, we lend
to be careful about assuming debts, and
we budget our resources accordingly.
Unfortunately, there is a growing trend
in govemment today to abandon this
common sense approach. Increasingly,
our elected officials are turning to tax·
exempt revenue bond• to finance what
they consider to be worthwhile social
objectives, with lltUe thou1ht elven to
the consequences of their actions. I'm
concerned that the consequences may
be painful, and I believe you should be
concemed aa well.
IN TIIE PAST our state and local
communities often financed major pro-
jects aucb as parks, schools, sewers and
public buildings through the sale of
1eneral oblieation bonds. Because such
bonds are paid for with property taxes
or other general revenues, they have to
be approved by the voten. Recently.
voten, fearful of aaaumlng greater and
greater long-term debt which would be
passed on to their children and
grandchildren. have been showing un·
usually good judgment and voting down
'I'm also concerned that these
bonds usually are purchased by
wealthy individuals who escape
paying taxes on the substantial
profits they reap.'
general obllgat1on bond issues.
The issuance of tax-exempt revenue
bonds, however, does not require voter
approval. That is because the principle
and interest on such bonds ii not paid
from tax funds, but instead from the
hoped-for revenues generated by the
projects financed witb the bonds.
Sometimes that hoped-for revenue
doesn't materialize. as some Callfomia
redevelopment agencies are discover-
ing to their aorrow.
IN RE<'ENT YEARS, the State
Leglalature has created many revenue
bond authorities empowered to sell hun-
dreds of millions of dollars of bonds to
provide low interest loans for a variety
of highly dou~ful purposes. For ln·
stance, should we be rtoodina ihe
market with bonds to provide Low in·
terest loans to build K -Marts? Or to Oro-
moters of alternative energy aoutf,1?
Or private hospitals? Or privati Un·
iversitles? Or for fairs and expositJ~? Perhaps some, but certainly not U.
These bonds WllJ soon glut the m• et
and force up (he price we have tO 'r
for truly deserving programs IUC h
the Cal Vet housing bond program.
l'M ALSO concerned that th .. e
bonda usually are purchaaed by w~J indl vlduals and lar1e tnstitutiooa Jio
escape paytne tuea on the subs ~
profits they reap becauae of the -
exempt nature of the bonds. That d
have a serious fiscal impact on the te
in future yea.rs.
Perhaps the best solution in the lbng
run ia to find a way to require a vote of
the people on revenue bonds, just ai we
do with general obli&ation bontY. I
personally have considerably mbre
faith ln the judgment of the people on
bond financing than I do in some of our
elected officials.
A TV mini-series that can't he topped
"Roota," "Holocaust," "Sboeun" and
"Masada" were so excltinl that my
wlle, Glynda, and I can hardly walt for
the new, new, new tee-vee mlnl-aertes
now in production . It's called
"Mahoro1UD." And it'• 1ot everyt.biq.
Maboroeun. which will run ais houn
oi1btly for two weeks, ta the ,.,a ol
-111-11-PPl---j'.
t
Kunta Glnaen1 •. who sail• to Japan
101UeUme between 100 a.ad 2,000 yean
afO 1n aearcb ol hi• ance1t11.
tn11, beheadln11. befootinp and other
lpominies, Gtnsena falla in love with Kl11le P1avtus, a beautlfuJ black geilha.
Sbe patiently teaches him Japanese,
ort1aml and lntermedlate Ylddltb 1-A.
BS NOO.U nuent lD orl.laml and
lead• a band of orl1aml1t1 lo a d~atAI au.ck oo J.be powerful Natal
famtl1 lbotunate, whleb baa COl1lVed
the market ln GlnaenJ roo&a .
Mortally wounded In the bloody b•t·
tie, G= barely rucbes tbe bouM of Tltut __ wm, the one &ood Roman in
tb• ••rt•. who l• blcflbc Glllleo1'•
dauabtef, Ctdcken Yuada, from tbe
Natsll.
! I
Tb• Huntln1ton Beach Chy ff e reco~mendt • traffte ad-
CouncU ls conalderin1 creatlnl a · · vlaory comml11lon cou{d .. ..._ ~w commission of public of· lieve tbe attsma of arbitrary
ficlalt to deal with inereulns bureaucraUc action'' by provid·
tnffic complaint.a from real· ing a speelftc forum to air trafftc
denta. concerns prior to tbe complalDta
Paul Cook1 city public workJ reaching the City Co\lncll.
director, notes the "rapid
erowtb ol Huntiniton Beach has Decisions of the proposed
created Its lair share o/ traffic commission could be appealed
problems.'' to the City Council, be said.
In the put m<>nth, four ctUzen
eroup1 have barraced City
Coudcil members with requests,
petitions and telephone calla
conc1rnin1 reroatin1 traffic
away from variou residential
areH to impr.ove pedestrian
safety.
• 'l\'1 d ifficult for the City
Council to solve some of these
problems because the cl~y tral·
flc aystem hUD't kept pace with
the city' a en>wtb," aa1d Mayor
Ruth Flnley.
Sbe noted several lnteraec·
tiont need traffic U1hta but are
delayed becauae they are on
Caltrans' "five-year" plan.
"I feel the (proposed>
board is necesaary to bear and
study some of these traffic prob-
IMMY~ ................. ~
Cadets of Golden West College's Police Academy on their way to lunch at the Huntington Beach campus
. Pair seized
after holdup
of HB girl
Two young men who allegedly
robbed a 12-year·old Huntington
Beach girl of her knapsack. mis·
taking it for a purse. have been
jailed on suspicion of strongarm
robbery, police reported.
Arrested were Dana Wayne
Johnson, 18, of Victorville and a
16·year·old Huntington Beach
youth, whose name was withheld
Police said the younger suspect
allegedly jumped out of a car
driven by Johnson and struggled
with the girl for her knapsack as
, she was bicycling on Atlanta
A venue near Bushard Street.
After the incident was reported.
Huntington Beach police detec·.
live Ray Hattabaugh spotted the
suspects' car near Brookhurst
Street and Atlanta and made the
arrests with other officers.
Valley's last
budget meet
set tonight
The citizens committee study-me Fountain Valley's budget
problems will conduct its final
public meeting t.oni&hl in the Lit·
Ue Theater at Los Amigos High
School, 16566 Newhope St.
The committee is seeking resi·
dents' suagestions on how the city
should cope with an anticipated
budget shortage of almost $1
million. Possible solutions are ad·
d1Uonal user fees or service cut·
backs.
Tbe previous meetings held by
the committee have been poorly
attended. but the croup bas col·
lected 700 quesUonnaires in which
restdenu have expretsed their"
vtews on the budaet problem•.
After tonicht's session, the
committee will prepare a report
and recommendaUOnJ, wb1cb are
expected t6 be presented to the
Citr Cowieil ln mid-May. .
Cemm OOok
now available
Hot days pack beaches
Unusually large crowds turned
up at the beaches Tuesday to
escape the hot weather caused by
Santa Ana winds.
Temperatures along the coast
were in the high 80s. with a high of
90 degrees recorded in Santa Ana
at midday, according to the Na·
tional Weather Service.
A weather service spokesman
said the winds, which came late in
the season. blew at about 20
mph. He said they are expected
to continue through today and
diminish by Thursday.
The spokesman said low cloudi·
ness would be increasing tonight
with temperatures expected to be
a cooler 68 to 74 degrees Thun·
day.
Newport Beach lifeauarda said
more than 30,000 people showed
up Tuesday. a large crowd for thif
lime of year. No rescues or inci·
dents were reported.
Ocean View poll,s
views of parems
Ocean View School District
has launched its seventh annual
comm unity survey. soliciting
parents' views on school subject
matter. discipline, communica·
lion with teachers, lunch pro·
grams and other topics.
"ll's about our most useful
tool m seeing how the communi·
ty feels about us," observed
Dale Coogan, superintendent of
the 23·school elementary district
in Huntington Beach.
The one-page questionnaires
have been malled to 2,120 of the
.district's 10,000 families. with
Computer
k>,track
HB violators
each school area given proper
representation.
Coogan said the anonymoUB
surveys have helped the district
locate weak areas in curriculum
a nd teacher·parent rela·
tionships.
To assure anonymity, district
officials do not see the complet·
ed surveys Th~ questionnaires
are compiled by the School
Research and Service Corpora·
lion in Anaheim.
More than half the surveys are
r eturned by mall. Phone in·
terviews are used to collect
opinions from those who do not re-
turn their surveys, resultina in a
·response of more than 90 percent,
the superintendent aald.
Results from the question·
naires will be presented to diJ.
trtct trustees ln mid·June.
Arson probe
started in
Huntington
Laguna Beach reported crowda
of about 15,000 with no incidents.
Huntington Beach lifeguards said
10,000 people were at the city
beach.
Lifeguards at Huntlneton State
Beach said from 6,000 to 7 ,000 ~
ple showed up with no major incl·
dents.
Water temperatures along the
coast were in the 60 to M-degree
range, lifeguards said. Surf was
reportedly running al from one to
three feet.
Mortgage JXIYITB have
dtf~lt time believing
in computers . . .810
lema before they reach City
Council, but I'm aiso concerned
that we could create a borreo·
doua level of bureaucracy," ahe
aaid.
Cook recommend• a traffic
commission could provide a •
"non-biaaed third party forull),"
and adequate time' for
"thorouib staff investigation." .
He added, however, a dlsad·
vanta1e would be "time deJa19
in completinf 1Dvesti1aUoo, re-
ports and respon5e1." ·
Currently, clUzen complainta
are studied by cUy traffic
enaineen wbo rue reports \hat
go to City Council.
The City Council will coostder
creatlna the new commiHlon
next month.
Action delayed
HB. athletic trainer cuts eyed
By PATRICK KENNEDY
of .. DeltJ .... "'" Trustees of the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dls·
trict postponed a decision on
whether to reduce athletic
trainers to part·time employees
after nearly three hours of dis·
cussion and testimony Tuesday
night.
The evenly split school board
had to agree with the swing vote
opinion of trustee Brian Lake
who asked to postpone action un·
til the State Legislature released
next year's exact funding
formula for public education.
probably in September.
Last month, the school board
cut nearly $300,000 from the
athletic budget. but Superinten·
dent Dr. Frank Abbott said
Tuesday that the $132,000 annual
salary of the six full·time
trainers is "beyond what we can
afford."
Supporting retention of the
trainers on a full·time basis
were district coaches, team doc·
tors. parents and the trainers
themselves.
They argued that the trainers
prevent numerous injuries,
especially in football. The $300,000 which was cut
from the district sports program
last month followed recommen-
d a lions by a committee of
athletic directors. coaches,
citizens and administrators.
The apparent thrust of the rec·
ommendatioos was to save the
trainer positions by giving an
alternative budiet cut proposal.
District administrators initial·
ly bad recommended cutting the
trainers completely to save
$132,000 annually.
Abbott's· latest recommenda·
lion would reduce the fulJ ·time
ll·month position to a 20·hour
weekly job for 10 months a year.
This would cut distr ict costs
between $84,000 and $99,000 an-
nually, Abbott said.
Education requirements to be
a district trainer would be re·
duced to an associate in arts
(two.year} college degree. Cur-
rently. all the district trainers
are certified and have four year
university degrees, according to
district orficials.
Abbott said part-time trainers
still would •·provide some type
of service to protect students"
from injury.
But trustees Doris Allen and
Stephen Smith disagreed "With
the recommendation.
"It's possible we'll be cutting
the entire program (by reducing
it to part·time) because we
won't be able to find quaJified
people,'' said Mrs. Allen.
Smith said he Celt the proposal
was unfair to district coaches.
"We told the athletic directors
in good faith to come up with
better (budget) cuts and we'll
listen to you. Now we're saying,
·sorry, we're changing the
rules' ..
Trustees Zita Wessa and
Helen Dille supported the reduc-
tions
"I can't justify cutting other
sports to keep six people," Mrs.
Wessa said of the sports reduc·
lions. "We're the onJy district in
the state w ith full ·lime
trainers."
(Gymnastics, golf, surfing and
junior varsity field for girls
were eliminated in the previous
budget cuts.)
Board president Ditte noted
that the ,Ustrict had cut nearly
$4 milJion from next year's
budget. including layina off
teachers. counselors, and
librarians and reducing the
school day for junjor and senior
pupils.
* * *
Parent claims
HB activity
fee 'unfair'
Although Huntington Beach
Union High School District
trustees postponed a decision on
whether to charge an activities
fee to student athletes, drill
team and band members, one
parent told the board she's given
all she can and the fee is unfair.
Peggy Glenn, whose daughter,•
Jane, is in the Huntington Beach
High School Band, told the board
s he's "given all the money I
have to give to keep her ln the
band."
Mrs. Glenn said she spent
about $1,500, including $400 in in·
strument repairs , (flute ,
clarinet. saxophone), $400 in
band travel expenaes, $70 for
band dress and shoes, $35 for
·dress cleaning and $400 for
private mUBic lessons.
She also cntaclud the pro-
posal for not apecifylog that the
activity fee will 10 directly back
into that procram'a budset.
''I don't mind paytna a fee lf I
think I'm iettlnl somethlna for
lt, but Lt's very unfair t.o cbarce
a youqster to be in band lf th~
money lsn'tJolnc into the band
fund.'' atae a d.
'1 II you charge every
youn1ster who goes to 1cbool
$25, "then I'll be happy," 1be
aa1d. "But I've liven all I've cot
to 1ive." '
The board la conalderlnt a atu·
dent fee ol $25 t.o participate ln a
sport, band or clritt team.
A maximum 1tudent fee for:·
·participation lD more thu ooe:1
actl vlty ~d be $50 and • sr•.,
fee ceUlne for each faJDJJ.y woU&d
be lnatituted. •econtbal t.o ti
trlct off\dall.
AltflouP the f" toW WOUid' 10 lnto t.6e 1eqeral ftan4, dlittld.
otftclala bave 'lodJca~ ~
could be diHd.11 allOCated 1lillels
to t.be acthttlea troiD wblda ~ came.
•
t
! TURN THE MHE• CllEU -
Appeartn1 before the augu1t
, Newport Beach City Council Just
• the other night, the county's Fair
• Housing Council acted just like a
; IUY who wanted a baseball bat bUt
: couldn't ~ford lt.
' What the f alr ho users wanted f·trom Newport waa money -about
$20,00b -so tbey could lcontinue ;·their campaign for what they
~'believe ls fairness in getting dwell·
. ~
1"4\
TOM MURPHINI -~f(
ings for people of limited means.
Trouble with this little scene was,
you see, that very same Fair Hous·
ing Council is suing the city of
Newport Beach on allegations that
its housing practices haven't been
fair.
So this was, to some measure, in-
deed Wee the chap who wants the
baseball bat and can't afford it.
"PLEASE GIVE ME the money
so I can go purchase the Louisville
slugger," the chap urges you.
, ''You don't look much like a
baseball player to me," you suggest
in reply.
"You aren't chewing anything
and you haven't even spit once yet ..
.. But I really need the big stick,"
the chap urges. ··It won't reaUy cost
you much. Just a few dollars. And l
reaJly know how to put that
baseball bat to good use. Lots of
people are going to benefit.
.. You'U be proud that your dollars
were included in the purchase that
wiJJ be put to such a worthy and
good cause."
"Okay, okay," you reply, feeling
that you're reaJly being pressed by
supe~salesmanahlp. 0 But do tell
me UilS before I f orlt over my Long Green.
''J.J.18T WHAT JS t.he 1ooct cause that you•n ptanniq to wbJch you'll
apply that baSeball bat?"
And thus he replies, "Why, that's
simple. I'm going to clobber you
over the head with it.''
"You're goin1 to what?"
"I'm going to give you a swift rap
•
''NOW. NOW/' the pltehmao
Rootbea. "Are you 10 ~Wve tbat you can't take a few J pa for a
food cause?''
You mJpt naure tbat all of Ule
above WU just pure fiction. Nobody
would have the uttmltlgated 1aJJ to
ask somebody to provide tbe
wherewithal for their own undoing.
But that's precisely what the Fair
Housin& chap did the other night
while coming with hat in band
"Why did Ju! clobMr me? I bought him tlu! bat."
on your noggin."
"And you want ME to donate MY
MONEY so you can go buy the bat
to beat out my brains with?
"Listen, now that l know what
your intentions are for me, don't
you think it would be abysmal
stupidity on my part to give you
money so you can buy the tools that
administer me lumps?
•·Why don't you take your pitch
and try it on the hayseeds up on
Yorba Linda or Placentia?"
before the Newport Beach City
Council .
"But you're suing us," Mayor
Jackie Heather sputtered in dis-
belief.
And the housing guy . replied,
"Are you so sensitive that you can't
be sued?"
It turned out that yes, Newport
was that sensitive.
Believe it or not, the housing guy
seemed surprised.
View of media
unchanged Famous Simon & Schuster author-lecturer-investment counselor Robert G. Allen says-
PRINCETON. N.J . (AP> -The revelation
tha t a Pulitzer Prize-winning story was fabricated
doesn't appear to have changed many Americans'
opinions of the media: only a third believe most of
what they r e ad in newspapers and see on
television. according to a Newsweek poll.
Of 760 adults questioned by the Gallup or-
g anization for Newsweek, 52 percent said they
could believe only some of the information they
get from the news media.
OnJy 5 percent said eve rything from the news
m edia can be believed. 33 percent said most can
be believed and 9 percent said very little is
believable. Gallup President Andy Kohut said.
KOHUT SAID 70 PERCENT OF the adulta
questioned knew that Washington Post reporter
Janet Cooke had returned a Pulitzer Prize this
month after revealing that her prize-winning story
on an 8-year-old heroin addict was fabricated. Ms.
Cooke. 26, resigned from the newspa~r.
Fifty-eight percent of those polled believed
Ms. Cooke's admission that the story was fabricat-
ed was an Isolated affair, 33 percent felt reporters
often make up stories and 9 percent had no opi-
nion, Kohut said.
"Our conclusion was that the opinion of the
press doesn't appear to be much different than it
has been," Kohut said. "Significant numbers of
Americans are s keptical of the press. That's pretty
consistent with previous surveys. The Cooke affair
has probably reinforced the opinions of presa
•rilics."'
· RE SAID THE BIGGEST SURPRISE of the
poll was the finding that 83 percent of those eur~
veyed believed aieporters should sometimes keep
the identities of their sources confidential. Thir·
teen percent said reporten abould always reveal
their sources to readers and 4 percent bad no opi-
nion.
•'The most amazing result waa the overwhelm·
ing public support for the protection of sources,"
Kohut s aid. •'Our conclusion ls that people have a
healthy skepticism of the news media, but at the
same time, people are committed to the confiden--
Uality of sources."
Asked which news or1anlution provides the
moat accurate and u11blued reportin&, network
TV received the bl1best rankln1, Kohut said.
Local television was ranked second, foUowed by
news magazines and daily newspapers.
Supennart.et tabloids were ranked last. Kohut
said.
The poll, conducted April 22-23, bad a mar1in
of error of plua or minus 4 percent.
·Nevada 'annexes'
Vegas, environs
"Seftd .. to any city in the UnHed·States. Take
away my wallet. Give me '100°0 for living _
expenses. And in 72 hours I'll buy ~
an excellent piece 1ol real estate \ --
using no• of my·own money." I ;~
"In other words, you don't have to be
rich to buy a single family ho~ or an
apanmcnt building-even in these times
of inflation, tight money, and high
interest rates. You can strip me of every·
thing most conventional thinkers feel is
absolutely essential to buying real estate
-cash, credit, a steady job. and a
strong financial scatcmcnt-and l'U still
be able to buy as much property as I
want. (It's actually easier in so-<:al.led
recessionary times, and l won't end up
with big negative cash nows, either!)
"How? Because I understand creative
finandna! That's how I boua;ht most of
the reaJ escate I now own-the real
estate investments tltat have made me
wealthy. And YOU, too, using the
PROVEN, SA.FE, HONEST principles
that will be outlined in an introducrory
'NOTHING DOWN' seminar (abso-
lutely NO COST OR OBLIGATION).
can buy real estate with little or no
money down. I HATE REAL EST ATE!
I really do ... but I know of no other
way where you can sWt with nothina,
learn some basic facts in a short time,
and then with a little time and effort
make lots of money in.just a few yean.
Yes, EVEN IN TODAY'S TOUGH
MARKET, )'Ou can create real wealth
for younelf, and-in five years, if you
'follow my plan-retire with a tu-free
SOME OF WHAT Y~'LL I.EARN
AT THE FREE SEMINAR •••
I
income of up to 125,<XX> a year. (You
could have made a million dollars in
gold in the past couple of years, and
you would have only needed a haJf-
million dollars to start with. I didn't
have the half-million, and my guess is ...
neither do you!).
•'My introductory seminar (no cost or
obligation) describes a complete program
that ANYONE can learn to use-a pro-
gram that includes ova-SO specifi~ crea·
tive financing techniques! (My successful
associate, who gives the introductory
set;nioar, will clearly explain lWO of
these techniques in detail.) Even if
you 're a limited-<Sollar investor, you can
start your own prOiflDl toward financial
indcpcndenoe by followina the HONEST,
SIMPLE methods I have pcnonally de·
veloped-thc techniques that have
cna6led me to acquire several millions
of dollars worth of real estate in just a
few years and made me a real MIL-
LIONAIRE at the age of thirty-one. It's
the same approach I have taua;ht thou-
sands-of suocessful real estate investors
all over America, and these methods
work BBST in nassionary limes.
"I want )'Ou to know that EVERY man
or woman in this country-plumbers,
doctors, secretaries, teachers, salesmen,
students, retirees, CIC., or any qe, no
nwter bow cash-poor they may be, can
PROSPER durina a recasiao uslna my
'NOTHINO DOWN' prosram. (I've
recdved succas letters from people
ltUdna It lhe aae of ninetecnt• IM:llty-nve. and evaywhere in between.) lt'a
the MODERN approech of the dahties,
aild YOU CAN DO TT TOOi
"In the 'NOTHING DOWN' introductory
seminar you'U discover how to find che
BEST buys (often in your own back
yard); how to locare the 'Don't Wanter'
who'll do ALMOST ANYTHING to get
rid of a property (many more show up
in a rta:SSion); how to borrow at 6'lo Lo
9tft intercsl when the prime rate is over
13'lo; two specific NEW creative finance
techniques; how to buy even if your
credit rating is terrible; how to A VOID
PAYING TAXES-LEGALLY. You'll
learn about 1 IO'le financing (buying
with 'NOTHING OOWN' and getting
cash back); how to overcome your fear
of investing (I think fear is the ugliest
four-letter word); how to establish an
investment plan; how to use leverage to
magnify your return on investments; ·
how to get rid of problem real estate
without losing money; how to pyramid
your buried assets into MILLIONS.
"At this point you may be saying; 'lt
sounds great, but .. .' If that's your
react.Ion, I want you to know that
coming to my introductory seminar is
totally without risk (there's NO cost or
obliption to buy anyt.hina). You'll hear
about how you can easily learn my entire
investment program, and you'U learn
MANY SPECIFIC NEW THINGS you
{~'-~
never knew before. My brother. Dr.
Richard AJlen, is a specialist in aduJt
education. After nine years on the facul·
ty of Johns Hopkins University, he has
joined me to develop the most COM·
PLETE, EASY-TO-UNDERSTAND.
WORKABLE teaching methods avail·
able, so that you can quickly learn and
actually begin to take the steps that will
bring you to financial independence. It 's
working now for thousands who ha~
already learned my TESTED, PROVEN
METHODS ... and it CAN WORK for
you!
"Please rake the lime to come to my
introductory seminar (lllcy nlJ stan at
8 P .M .• but COME EARLY ... we often
run out of chairs!) h's a terrific muJli-
media learning cxpcricncc conducted by
my successful associate, and, agajn,
there's ABSOLUTELY NO COST OR
OBLIGATION. The ninety-minute
seminar wilJ introduce you to some life--
changing facts that should revolutionize
your plans for the future. The introduc•
tory seminars arc ONLY at the locations
and on the dates noted below. Don't
wait to buy real estate ... buy real e
and wait! Thanks!"
8 PM -; WEDNESDAY, APRIL ltTB-----------
SHERA'roN·ANABEIM HOTEL
1015 West Ball Road
<Santa Ana Frwy·BaU Rd. Ext.It>
Anaheim
8 PM -Tllt'.JuDAY, APBIL JtTH
DEL WEBB'S NEWPOBTE& INN
1107 Jamboree Road u Block North or J>CH >
Newport Beadl
FINAL2
NIGHTS
,..,., . .,.,.,..,..,.
-~ llMuf,...,., G. MIM'• "llfOT'HlffG DOW' mefltod1
''t&ur a"''""°"' IJJ ~ 1trW1Nnnrt
f<J'--m1 mmv rmigltt, """"'100/J, and 11
pat It tlraJ ii ~ 1tra1glit. c~r, and /D.11
titan all IM o"'4r """"°" and boolu QH1fbtnql." -Brian 8am:J11t ~ttll
"lnMWriw tJttd (Nl/JW ••. J s,.,,,,,,ly ,._...
mmd ii/"" an~ U.kmUd in i.M rrioJ to jintu&Oal~··
-SllllOI M. Ca/mf, Silwr SJriv
"It i f01tt<11ttc ... lrc lu1 IMrt tJnw MOnllu;
u tnadt _,,. '4ilt profit tlian wt ltaJ .-~.,. enrm )INr of worlwct for"
told.,,." -Mr. a.M Mrs: Deon MCAIJ#4r
HospitBls ·
big business
n.. Wall su-e.t Journal 1ald It well. "ff•Y• I aot I
an appebdectomy for you." 1t wa• refen1.D& to tM •
a11reatYe promotloaal iacUca now be1nt embraced
b)' privately owned boapltab. Many .,. putbtq tbN
servle9 the way coabpanlee pu.ab their eroctucta. And
that'• not 1urpri1lDs beeaUH many bOlpltall beloo1
to cbaina, the way Saf•way and McP atort1 do.
THESE ASE NOW more than 30 bl1 corpora·
lions in the botpltal bu.s1.nels. The two iiant. of the
field are Hospital Corp. of Amertu <HCA) and
Humana Inc. Each bu reveou.-of more than fl
billion a year. Other bis ttospital mana1ement com·
panlea are American Medical International, 1loapilal
Affiliates (owned by the bil lnlurance firm, INA>.
N atlonal Medical Entetprtees and Lifemarlt.
(Humana Inc. hu offices in Newport Beach, aa
does National Medical Enterprises. lnc. American
Medical lntematiooal baa offices in Anaheim.>
When bankers and Wall Street people look at the
industry, they liken it to the hotel business. The pf'Ob.
lem is the same: renting beds. Companies in bu.al·
oess to make a
buck now con· ~ trol 12 percent l'
of the hospital i ~
beds in the na· 1 l'J/ ~i1~· g~hees twol --ll-Tl_l_l_ll_l ___ l_TZ-.-•
Humana and -..lmlllt
HCA -each
has close to 20,000 beds to fill every day,
If you have been to a hospital recently, you know
that one or the first things you're asked for is your
health insurance number. Once that's recorde<\.
everyone relaxes. No one worries about cost. Someone
else -a third party -1s paymg. t,.or the provider 01
hospital services, it's tantamount to having a guaran·
teed market.
THE GROWTH OF THE commercial hea1"1-care
business, which Includes national chains oC diagnostic
laboratories (Damon and Metpath> and emergency·
room services supplied by outside companies, does
bother a lot of people. The concern was voiced last
year in a widely circulated report by Dr. Arnold S.
Relman, editor of the New England Journal of
Medicine. which is generally accepted as our most
prestigious medical journal.
Relman esllmated the size of the business at $35
billion to $40 billion a year -and he warned that it
has now taken on all the trappings of a "new
RELMAN URGED THE medical profession to
deal with the matter by insisting practicing physi-
cians "should derive no financial benefit from the
health-care market except from their own pro·
fessional services.'' As an example of bow things
should not wort, Reiman cited the example of
Brookwood Health Services, a Birmingham, Ala .•
hospital chain operator.
Brookwood wu started by doctors who remain
active as buslnesa partners. Brookwood also recruits
young docton and sut»idhes their start in practice.
Reiman commented that this "sounds precisely the
wrong DOle for a private market in which the hospital
is the seller, the physician is the purch11sing agent for
the patient, and the public pays the major share of
the bill.'' .
Jt wasn't long after Reiman penned these words
that Brookwood became the pawn ln a takeover bat-
tle. Althou.gh Brookwood bad a book value of about
$36 million, Louisville-based Humana offered to buy
it out for $77 million. . ' ·.: "-~--------------------------~------.....
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HEWYOltKtAPI FIMI 0---..... • ~YHIMy, AP" •
• Ind °"9n Hip Low C-0,.
IOlS .... Iott.~ 1009.17 1016.~.tt ' .;,,u ..o.u Oil.ff~.-~ IOi.4 10. ... 10$,)4 10$.67-~A7 '9S.7' •1 • 190.n-, . '. ·. : .. .' :.: .. ·:.::.. ::§
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YOltl( CA'"I ~ a "'91t. ,,,.,__,, T-.z; ~ = "" PU JU -Atll-lfl7 1ftll
..... lllglls ,, 1• ..... _
24 • WHAT AMEX C.0
NEW YOlll( CA'"I AfK ll .......
=~ T°"r/o ' at m ~. 214 m =~ 'ft ..
10 I
METALS
878-13
C78-U
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
G78-15
H78-14
H78-1 5
L78-1.5
. -.. "'.""------:-:·..,.,,,. ..
FOR MOST IMPORT
OR DOMESTIC CARS
25~~0FF·!:
011
BRAKE ~~SHOES
&
PADS
REMAMJFACTURED PARTS
WITH ORIGINAL EGU•MENT QUAUTYI
WITH REIUILOA&LE PART IN TRADE •
turtle
®\NBX®
HIGH GLOSS
CAR WAX
• ll~L 111
AUTO & VAN
CARPET QEANER
CONTAINS SPICIAL SILICONI
SMllLD POR ,.OTICTION
u~~:1'9
.. , ......
~WOMAN
• 11/llfl • boy llnowlfl9 lhlll n la telli!W Wondet Wom-
M , '~ cont'-her
blltU. ~ • tn)'lterlow
i WWUiofl (Pllff 2)
TIC TAO DOUGH u•A•l•H
When Hewlteye le deni.d
en R end R peM lie leela
he ,,.., •• 1'41 ~. Wlkl
cu. hletOfY IOf en Almy
payctlWrlsl to lludy
• GOOOTIMU
The p<ot>ebilily ol J J nol
being pn>rnoted 10 • lllgll
IChool Miiiot W()frlett lhe
wtlOl9 lemlly
GOOD TIMES -Mickey Rooney (tight)
shows Danny Lance some circus fun in
"Leave 'Em Laughing," the story of a
clown who helped handicapped and
deprived children tonight at 8 on Chan-
nel 2.
l:tO. Al.NI AND WEU. ..
THIU .. .A.
An lnVfttlgel.... report of
the ~ NalOtiet Of four ••·Huie llnd eollat>ofet0t1 ••emlned In detllll ·c:Mc:>l~ ANDAmNDI
•• EUCTAIC
COMPAHV ("> Q ABCNlwt
uo I JOl(Elrl WllJ)
WIEL(X)ME MCK.
!(OTTER
9arbetln0 moves In ..nth
G.ebe and Wutllnglon
mllkM lite ""-•ble IOf
the other S-•lhoO• (Ptt1
2) •
eeewtHIU penoy pla~ live top TV
dtMc!Me' fJ9 ~NlWnEAT Q9 8T\DOSU
··Scube "Too (R)
[I BAAM£Y MIUEA
A roultne d•y 1>eg1n1 at lhe
12th precinct wtlh 9.,.
ney·s •lie compl•lning
•bout Ille danget• of N-
Y0tk Citv lhm>o
7:00 fJ C88 HEWS CJ N8CNEW8
Q HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Rtehle. Potaie and Ralpn
auction oft lhetr pe.110nal
belongings 10 raise money '°'..., Eastet vacation fJ A8CMEWS 0 BUU..81EYE
CHANNEL LISTINGS
C8 M'A"S'H
Hawkeye and 8 J d1ecovet
Charle9 IMng Ille Ill• ol
RI~ dlHI lo Iha •llentlon•
of ht. menl•lty peid 1(()( .....
a.vant
Cl> STRUTS OF IAH
FMHCtaOO
Folle>wlng e -las Of l•tal
knife •lllM:i<I on ptOlll·
lutes. one girl lltHVI,... lo
help lee<! Stone end Keller
Io the lullef
@D OWAJASY
H .. 11n Care w11a1 1 A
Bod)' To Dor Ounl Dr
John Farqun., (R)
'1,9 MACN£Jl I L.&IAEA
REPOA'T
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
(!§! MERV ORIF'FIH
Gueeta Rosemary C1oo·
ney. RICk MOSM, Johnny
Yune. Oeney Temo
1:30 fJ 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosts Sieve Edw•rds.
Melody Rogers A behind-
lhe--=--look ., Ou1
Magaz1n• sprtngttme
amvee in the C•lll0<n1a
d-1 Q FAMILY FEUD Q CAUFOAHIA AaCH
T~ IOeology and aome•ol
fJ KNXT CBS! LO'> Ar11.1••1,.,
CJ l\NBC NB LO An W'""' 0 l\lLA ln1l 1 l ,.., A111w , • ..,
fJ MBC rv 1ABC1 L ..... Anl)t'll' ...
f -.FMB 1CBS1 S.1n (),1'c1n 0 l<HJ TV 11110 •Lo<, An wll'.>
,flJI l\CS T l A8C1 5an D>t'<I• CD I\ nv (ln11 I Lo .. J\r1ql'lt• ...
Cl) !\COP fV(lntJ 1 L••' An1l"''·'
fl>KC..fl Tl.rP851l """l"'' '19 l\QCf rv PA::.1 H11r I' I' ,,, ..... " h
tl'le custOtn&. rlluell 8r>d
mem1>e<1 OI ttw H•Uonal
Sor;lall9t Wlllle People't
Party (Am«lcen Hui) ere
doellrnented 8 HOU..YWOOO
IQOAMB IJ ,~THE MUSIC GJ AU. IN THIS l'AMIL Y
Tiie ueu•llY punctu•I
Atehle .. hOurl oYerd"8 ti
• lodge convention In Bui·
telo. and no one knowa
•h•t'• heppen41d to """ 1P11t1 11 fD~lliHRE"
REPORT QB TI4E DAY AFT'EA
TNHITY
· J Robert Opoenhelrne<
And Th9 Atomle Bomb ..
Pllyslcl1I J Robert Oppen· heo,.,,.,., role In Iha birth of
the •lomk: ega end tus l•I•
•I the h•ndtl ot lhe U S
government •r• doCu·
menl9d
()) P M MAGAZINE
A woman MW> won • com·
plele beeuty mal<e-over,
Mulco • n-·•ound o.I
WH/th
1:00 8 (I) LEAVE ·a1
LAUGHINO
Mickey Rooney 1l•r1 1n the
true ttOty ol Cll1c•go
clOWn Jeclt Thum. wtlO
cared for dozen• ol hOme
lea children wlllle tlrug
gllno 10 meh • llvit'IQ and
l~hl lettnlnal c;anc.,
D REAL PEOPU
Fe•tured • grape festllfal
ln Sonoma, C•I . the .. Mr
Tuan .. con1 .. t, • vi.It to
Bortng OrllQO'l. • SChOOI
umpr .. (R)
OAEATUT
HEAO
Ralp!I leetne that Me•·
well'• l>Mt ln.nd .. plan
nioq • meior 19we1 ,.,...,
Sllltt "Mf'I ~Al
Lunch, .. ''Boy~ Gift "
t:00 G Dff'NNT 8T10<U
Alndd end Wiiiie lace Ille
poeeiblllty of ~ 9Ga1n
1>ecom1no 0tpNn9 wt1er1
Mr. Dn.tmmof>d ta -loully
Injured In en eocldent (R)
• AFT'E1' THE
1-t01 OC:AueT
.. The Hunt For Or Men-
llM" "The -ch lor Nazi
..... ctimlnal JoNf Men-
QM. who ~ed "'--aomo medical ••perjmentt
•t Autch•llz •nd 11
reapontlbla ror the gas
Ch•mber de•lhl ol
100.000 Jews. It doeu·
"*''ed 8 0 AL.OHA
PAAADeE
A ltttle man halpl en ••
roo1ball player rNllz.e ni.
dream. end a l•thet aufle<•
growing peoln1 when his
U ttle LiMQUet lurnt Into •
pretty young ...oman
Q) MERV OfWF1H
G"8&11 ~ry Cloo-
""'I Rk:lt M-. Johnny
Yune, ~ Tetrlo. ~ry
Se<nleld, Cheryl Hendy.
Th<Uher &olll«a
~ BATT\.l 90RH: MX ...
NEVADA
Thi Impact ot man • 1arg-
.. , l)Ublk: Worka project ••
Vie goant MlC miAile ¥-
lllm -on Neved• • kta-
11y1e and economy 11
a•lml"41d .-.ao. H8TIVA.L cw H.AHDe:
THl atu<EH TENT
Jaeon Aobetd• Jr and
member• Of Ille N•llOnal
Thtletre Of Iha Oeef 119'·
form • dt81natlC ,,.."°" ot
• ROf)erl Frost poem
Series' scores tallied
By PETER J . BOYER A~T .......... ""'9r
LOS ANGELES --In the last 29 months,
heaven help us. the three commer cial networks
have put 217 different series on their prime time
schedules, enough TV series for each network to
have completely replaced its entire schedule every
eight months.
That's a lot of TV A lot or bad TV, the
turnover rate would suggest How bad7 Glad you
asked.
Allow me lo present The Jaundiced Eye
Review's analysis of prime time network TV, Sep·
rember 1978-present.
A note: September 1, 1978 was chosen as the
s tarling date because that date marked Fred
Silverman's beginning as president of NBC, and
Silverman is widely thought to personify the
·'Here Today. Axed Tomorrow" theory of pro-
gamming.
Surprisingly, NBC has not had the most series
since September '78. CBS has, with 76. NBC had 74
and ABC 6'7. This survey does not jnclude series
that may come or go in the time it takes to read
lbis column.
In ~anning the bulky list of series from the
pasMhree TV seasons, the Jaundiced Eye found
that the 217 programs fell into £our distinct
categories. They are.
Category J. Superb TV -television that's too
good to be true
Category 2, Pretty Good TV -television that
ii con.sistenUy good. if you allow that it's series
· teJevision.
Category 3, Crummy But Harmless TV -the
video wallpaper stuff.
Category 4, Programming Felonies
television capable of lowering your 1.Q
~ Of the 217, six series can be listed in category
l In alphabetical order, they are, "Barney
Miller,'' "Hill Street Blues," "Lou Grant," "M·A·
S·H," "Paper Chase" and "United States." It will
be noted that NBC baa two shows in UUs lonely
realm, one of them cancelled and the other
threatened. CBS has three, "Barney Miller"
stands apart at ABC.
In category 2, NBC has three shows. ABC five
and CBS has 10. Only one of NBC's category 2
series is still on the air, "Little House on the
Prairie." ABC sUll bas "Taxi," "Mork" and
"Greatest American Hero." CBS has eight pretty
good series still on its schedule.
Category 3, not surprisingly, is the fattest.
This holds the mainstream stuff, 120 shows, and is
too boring to pursue further.
The compilation of category 4, reaJly awful
series, brought back some ugly memories.
Remember "Pink Lady and Jeff?" "Supertrain?"
"California Fever?"
SHOWTIMES-
WHkd•y• 7:00 • t:IO P.M.
tsund•Y 2:0CM:2CM:40-t:OO
Military Might
e~MC ....;..oii~""'ii~·~------~~~~~-1 1'Mt .. ~~.,..,_I The F-11Vif Of The ,._,,
IOU 8 t:OO -.. Wltneu for ttie ,,.. .. 11aa, ~g,y.
l ~'YLenl~ PrOseeauoa.'' ~e Power. Mar eoe
1
11ta111 The Net pett ~.,...
Dtetrlcb aDd Charin LaUlhtcJb ttal." in .adlllmed lllm ,_d ~ thls mOvie abOut a youn1 mao'a trtal for 1 tn. 1e:tt 1et11n ~
the murder of• weattbY woman'• frleDd. I : :c:-1.,.:.:. !:
• _. !fie el•bot•t.e lne&>-
KOCE 8 7:30 and KCET 9 8:00 -gutaflon e.tamOl\ln pr•
"Ttie Day After Trtllity: J . Robert Op· ~ -~ Adqlpll ""·
penbelmer and the Atomic Bomb." e o LoveeoAt
Documentary on the !arnous physicist "Ote«n Ship" HllN COft-
and tJle birth Of the atom.le a1e. reld: "S..t Of Frlendt" Ben Murphy Donn•
Peacow "Atterrntlh" KTLA • 8 : 00 -••After the Rlcflard Andelaon. 0tena
Holocaust: The Hunt for Dr. Men1ele." Mvldeur 1R1
Secretly filmed investigation on the !o ~II-rjel(
whereabouts of Auschwitz concentration 11\eif ..,,.. to , .... money camp's "Doctor of Death." toranwldlk\MonUN
• ...-.oH:
...oee&.E 10:90. (I) Jtt1t'MW( ~
ANO TI4I COUNTRY ....
.1oMn1 CMtl payt tribute
lo women In c;ountry
mullc. ~t• ~June
Caner Cul\. FloNan™i I
CW\, Emmylou Hetrla end
MinnleP-1
• QUINC'(
Quincy •llemptt to Pf0\18
111a1 • IOCiaMte convlc:led
ol rnut'dwing lier huabend
Is ""-' (R)
••• NeWS
• THI YOUMOUT
VICTIM
• KITTY: AETUNt TO
AUICHWJTZ
Kitty Harl. • 1urvlvor OI
Au8ChWltz now Uvong In
England, return• to the
conoentr a11on Cetnt> ..nth
1\91 ton to l•lk •bouf Ille
notror• the .. ,,.,~
there IOf ,,..,.iy hwO yura
• IOHGCWTHI
ftlAIH8: THa ITOfWY CW
MNWIANOOZ
The llfe. llnlbltloft end lal-
.,, of "9braell• author
Metj 8ando.l .,e remem-
bered by her family.
tri.nda end OOl!Mg4-
11:00 ••• (I)@) NEW1 ITARTMJ<
The EntetprlM vtllt• •
penel oolony to 08!1-
tuppllea. and Caci• I(.,.
hnd• 11191 .. , .. l'Ot ...
I NEW\.YWIO~
M0 A0 l 0 H
Outside clrcum•l•ncaa
cauM Rader 10 lea.;e the
4077111. (Pttl 1)
G) aENHY HILL
One ol Benny' I 0tlglnel eono• 1a tNturao and "'°
• geg about • MCUrll)I ott1.
cer Ill Deel< CAWTI
GU.I John Mlttt
H:aG 8 ()) ~
The IMF Mii out tO
~oy a t\'\Ufde<·fOf·h+r•
~~
t2:30 G TOMOMOW CfueSI• Siiier Sledg.,
le..i• l.llll1tnan, ~11rn•n
of lhe Executive Commtl·
1 .. ol Rlt•Ald al Ot4e l1V MYONO
·Rendezvous" Kele Max·
well had been notllied b~
Ille H•Yy thal her hu1band
had died jn Ille Pactlle. bul
Iha refueM lo belle,,. 11
t:OOD PIYCtfte
PH~THE
WOAlJ> BEYOND
.. Egyptlen Tflp Hofls
O.m,.,, Simpson Stacy
Hum Guest Carole Ann
Oryet m uow
''"" et• turned lo atone 4:008 UCME
• • 1t "In love And War ..
( 19581 Aoberl Wagner. Jel·
Irey Hunl«
Tlaur•da11••
Day• 1111.-.ffori.-•
-~-
11:00 ti) • • Red River
R•ng• I 1938) Jolln
W•yne Ray Corrigan The
Three Mesqun-• .. , OUI
to nab a g•ng ol cattle
1n .. ve1 operating •!Ong the
Red Rive<
QB FUTIVAL CW HAHOI:
~Sit.KEN TfHT
Jason Rot>etd• Jr and
membe<I of Ille Nlllonal
Tr-tre o1 the O..t per.
torm • dram1111e Ye<llOn of
I BAIKET9ALL
Pt•yottgame D TONIGHT
* • • An•tomy 01 A
Murder · ( 1959) JemH
St-•11 Ben G11Z1•r• A
1m•ll to wn aflorney
defends an Army lieuten-
ant wno •• accused ot ktll
jng • m8n suspeclad 01
•1taci11ng '"'wile
t 1:30 D • • • Here Come Thll
Goris ( 1953) Bob Hope
Arlene Oehl Following •
111re•I on the Ille ot a
~ow 1 1111 pe<lormer •
wng end-dance "1•n htts
in u • decoy to trap tne
1<1lle1
• Robert F rMI l>08f'1
111 VEGAS
OM 11 hired l o protect
WayM Newlon lrom •
m~lerlous antagonlll """°
bel-1 hlmtell lo be Ille
ent•rta1ner and w•nll
llMwtonkll«I
10'.ae>CD HEWS
• INOPENDENT
HETWON< NEWS
Holl Johnny Carson
~la NICOiette l•rson
F•rr•n Fawcett
D (I}) A11C HEWS
HIOHTUNE 0 LETS MME A DEAL
Q) KENNETH HAGIN
Cl) 8AAETT"
lt Brub•kH s11spec1S
1><11>a-tall1ng in n1s voce
squad •nd lorcea Tony lo
1nves11gate his leflow 0111
c:ers
.., IHOEP£HOEH"T
HETWOR.I< NEWS
t:tO Q MOVIE
• • .-And Soon The
Oarknen t 19711 P•mela
Franl<hn Mien.le Ootroce
One of lwo Enghsf\ girls on
ii b1cycltng hoh<lay <l•~P·
i>ea••
1:301) HEWS
II) MOVIE
• • ... The Woten 11965)
Rlch•rd Johnson Rounne
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 Cl) • • • Balfla Cry
j 1955) Van H•lltn Aldo
Ray U S Mar•n•• mo.( lo\19
"''"' combal during World
War II
1:00 Q) • • • The B•cnelor
And rne Boooy So•er
f 19471 Cary Gr11n1 Myrn•
loy
3:30 0 * • 't B•be ( 1!1751
Suaen Clar~ Ale• Karrsr.
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk
'Dallas' star
told of death
INVERNESS, Scotland <AP > Larry
Hagman, the actor who plays J R. Ewing on the
television series "Dallas," was "deeply shock~d"
when he learned of the death of his screen father.
Jim Davis, an Inverness newspaper reported lo·
day. ·
Hagman. on vacation 1n the Scottish highlands
with his wife. heard the news Monday morning
from the manager of a hotel where they were st&)'
ing at Fort William, on the west coast of Scotland.
55 miles south of Inverness
Later Hagman and his wife left the hotel to
continue a tour of the Highlands by auto
Fred SiWennan, president of NBC
During a stopover at the east coast village of
Nairn, )5 miles north of Inverness, Hagman told a
reporter from the Inverness Daily Record he
planned to return home to attend the funeral l"ri·
day. Davis played Ewing family patriarch Jock
Ewing on lhe series.
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT"
SHVICI
DlllCTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5671
ht. JU
BILL MEDLEY
FORMERLY OF THE
RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS
PRESENTS
CONCERTS IN MAY
AT MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT
·The moet Intimate ehowroom In the country
"THE ORIGINAL"
"COASTER 'S"
Singing their hits from the SO's
"Tbe Day After
Trinity~·~
TWO NIGHTS ONLY .
SUNDAY, MAY 3rd IPM &'11PM
MONOAV, MAY 4tft ~ 611PM
Oppenheimer and the birth of the
atomic bomb
Tonight 7:50 PM Bl~L MED~EV~
I~ CONCERT
DEATH NOTICES
PICTlTIOUS au ...... ...... ITATU .. NT
Tiie lol'-1 ... --ore del119 IMnl-•· MODOC MINI: llA$T 11 LTD ..
4'21 81rdl $ltwl, SulW ••• ...._,
8Mdl, Cellfeml4t -MOOOC MINE llAST, INC. -
NOWOdO COf"pOtal ..... I EHi Flfll Stroot. "-• Newe.so 1t•1 Tlllt ....,._ la~ .... by o CM·
-•llCNt.
ModeC MIM Eor.t, 1"'-
dent Jotln w. O'C:-11, .........
Tllla ~ w• llled wllll Ille CO<lftty Cterk _, Oraft09 Couftty M A,.-1127, t"1.
.. t .... P11llllllled Or .... c:.at o.llJ ll'llCl'I, A1><ll H , May •• II, 20, 1 .. 1 2Cl»tl
PUBlJC NOTICE , BELL a t 2 OOPM al the Harbor
JOHN EDWARD BELL. a Lawn Memorial Chapel with ,tcTITIOU1au1tHU
resident of Burbank. Ca P astor GUI Moreno-of the .....,..ITATllMlllfT
Passed away o n April is Apos tolic Assembly in Jesus The •ot•-lftt lltf'Mn• ••• cio1111
1981 He 1s survived by a Name or Placentia officiat· ""''~:Ea~HTS ll'l!T SHOP ,.,.,
dauRhter Jacqu elyn_ A mg Interment will be at Main StrHt. H11nU11t11on iuo.
R o -b e r l :. a n d 4 Harbo r Lawn M emorial C.011,.,.....,
grandchildren :-,erv1ces are Park Servicee u d th e:. H o.u.i., 111m Trolen Way, scheduled for Thursday, d ol n er e ~.c.Alfof'llN.,.
April 30 1981 at 11 OOAM at irection . Harbor Lawn-L11d1te A. o.uu.. mos TreJen
• . M o unt Olive Mortuary of W•'l'.llMllll\Cellfwnlato•• The Church of J esu!! Chrts l Costa Mesa S40·SSS4 Tiii• -...... la _.._, 11y tn
o f L a ller·day Saints. 801 GILLERMAN dlv!Uebt....,......_.,.1
Dover Dr • Newport Beach. e. H OeUMt Ca wit.h Bis hop Keith Duke T H A D f A D · 1..uitll1tA. o.uw
presiding Interme nt will 'be G ILLERMAN. a resident of c:!:., ~ o,-:,:-ea:.ttt, ':
at H a rbor Lawn Memonal Cypress Passed away. on APf'll 21, ""·
Park Services under the April '27. 1981 She had Just P1Mtl4
t1irection or Harbor Lawn received ber. RN Degree P"4HLIMtlOronge Coa•t Delly Piiot.
Mount Ohve Mortuar y or S he is s urvived b y her Apr.it,Mey•,1»•.it1t JGJNI
Costa MPSa 540-SM4 husband Lionel G11ler!"an of
BISHOP Cypress. Ca • 4 c hildren,
Karen. John and Richard PUBlJC NOTICE
DA VlD LEE BIS HOP. r~s G lllerman a ll of Cypress
1dent of Santa Ana •. Ca Ca . and Kathryn Schnee of • PICTITIOUSM.I., .... ,
Passed a.way o n April 26. Lakewood, C a .• a grandson Tiit ,.:::::. '!!!,!~':!.,.. ._,_
1981 . He 1s survived by his Jason Schnee. Services are -••:
mother an~ fath~r Mr & sch eduJded ror Wednesday, T•1·COVNTY PORTAaL• x.
Mrs. Orville Bi s hop of April 29, 1981 in Lhe Harbor ~!~;,.,:'~"•.,rnonc1, l'1111ort'"'•
Ga rd en Grov e · Ca • 8 Lawn·Mount Olive Memorial "k-MMolm ~ "*
daught.er Shonoha By rd or C h apel with Rabbi Henri E MtrHOld, •'-lneton. Collf9"11o
Anaheim. Ca •. 3 brothers Front of Temple Beth David ~~I•......_ 11 coMuc:9tl by an i...
Steven D .• Orville G a nd orticiating. Interment will be dl1tl4llel.
Randle Bishop all of Santa al Mount Olive Cemetery. •klwdMalc...,.c-..,.
Ana. C a • 3 s is ters Elle n Services under the dlrectlon Tilla ..........,. -"'" wilt\ ..
Jea1er of Garden Grove. or Harbor Lawn·Mount Olive ~:::':15:-""' er.,... c:ou..ty an
C a .. J erry Meeks of Santa Mo rtuary of Costa M esa PU ... A n a • Ca and Pat r I c l a s..0.5554 ..._..,.. 0r....,. c.oata o.11y ,...._
Bishop, also of Santa Ana. KERBEA . ~.it, Moy•. 11, a . 1.. tttw1
Ca Services are scheduled VI VIAN ANG ELIN E
for Thursday. April 30. 1981 KER BER, a resident of
Huntington Beach, Ca. for 10
years Passed away on April
28. 1981. She was a member
o f the F i rst U nited
Methodist Church of San !:::..::'--.=:..:•_-;-,.• Gabriel aad also a member
PUBlJC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI 9UllN .. ....... ITAl'UIUINT
Tllo lollowlftv --ere •itt ~-:
PIMUJ Pllllll&Ncl Or .. Coelt Dollr Piiot. Apr II n. 1', ,,..y I, IJ, ltll llt1'41 •
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUI 8UllN .. S MAMalTAT•MaNT
Tiie tol'"'fne --· ere 1>1111-•:
COMP\.IMENTARY COLO• Vl1to Boye, Newport ee c.111o>n10 nwo
Honey C.olyn R-. a 8eya, N.._t llMcll, C~ltornl IMO
J11dy Ann l"ooto, >OJ• rlh PUBlJC NOTICE
Plnow-. Or.,., C.lltornlo t .. J
Tiiis b<dfneu h condll<19CI by a N71117
llOMrol pef1NnNp. PICTITIOUI 8UllNaU
NtncvROft'ljln NA.Ma ITATllMllNT Tiii• Nlonwll WM llltld with tho Tiie , .. ,_Ing --I• dolnt bull· Co11nty Cler• ol Orengo Co11nty on neu ... ·
Aprfl 6, 1"1 H I H E 0 0 T S Q U A R E
PltM11 ENTE"P"ISES e ll.o NINE OOT P11bll-Or-to..e 0.lly Piiot, SOUAlllE OEVEl..OP"'ENTS. c/o April I, U, %2, 1', 1 .. 1 IMl-41 Golden-ti Rullon, IUJI Irvine
PUBlJC NOTICE
•l•d ., TWC!n, Ca. ft ...
GUY HILTOH OILLOW, 1 .. l_o Strool, C.i. MeM, CA '2tlL
Tiii& ~It ~led by .. II\ • dlvldYal.
f'ICTITIOUS8USINllll Olly HlllM 0111-.
MAM II ST A TllMUIT ,..,_.._
Tiie t•fl-1119 penona oro dotn9 T1111 ,._.......,, •• IUod wlln me !Kdl,..., • eo.."tY c1on. DI 0r.-.. eo..Mr on TltlNITY CUSTOM OltAPERIES. A1><ll J. 1"1
JISJ·8 81rch, Newport •••<II .,._,
........ P11bll-OrOftOI CO.II Dolly Pllol, Apr111, u. n , 2', n•1 u ... ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
N711M
PICTITIOUI 8UlllfHS NAM91TAT .... NT
TM 1011-•no pertofta ere dolnt llvalno1aa.
TUSTIN HEIGHTS SHOll'PING
CENTER, llU Irvine Bowloverd, Twsllft,CMHomlotalO R0Mfl1>ero ,. .. , Eltote Eq11llt
Fund IV, o ~ Tn.ac. ISO C.lllomla Sl<ett, San Fraftclaco, Ctlllornlo
UIOI
Tllla --11 ~-lly a IMltl MU ln.ol.
Jlllwl R Cenety
"-• ,. .. , Ealo1•
E ... tyF-IV Tiiis Sla'-1 wa rn ... wllll Ille
CO<JnlJ Cl-ot er.,... CoVl'lly °"'
""'" J. ltltl.
•ICttnout •ute ..... UMI ITATIMll._T
Tlte ftl'-li,e ,.,._, we '°lftf llU"-·~ INDUITalAI. COATING CO.,
,..., ...._ C:.i.tto, "'-te111 v11e.,, C.Ulet1Nt1111
"· ~ ......... ,. Ce., ..... lont• C.rlttt•, l"o11n101n v.i11.,,
Col lfonV• fZ1t8
Tlll1 ...._. I• QftdlOCtod .., #I -·~---lolloft -r lfllft • ,., """"'"' Jo-J ,..,.,...1
Tlllt • ._ •• tu• •I .. Ille C-ly Cletti Of 0.."'99 Co<Hlty 9fl ~111,1•1. .. ..... P\11>11,,_ Or .... CoA11 o.lly ll'IW,
""'" '· IJ, n. 2', "" 1611.ft
PV1IUC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI eUlllHU
MAMa ITATaMatn
Tiie foll-lne per...,. ••• Nll\f Dust-. •.
0 a A H G I! C 0 U H TJ. AOVElllTISER, U.1 Vlo '"""'c.I , MIHICNt VlejO, c.llfemle tMI.
M l!aCHAN TS ll'U 8LI SH U'.f~J INC .• o CMll-• c-r.tloft, Ult'I
Vl o l"obrlconte, Mlulon Vle jt,
Collloml•'*'· Tiii• bwl-11 conduc'94 by 0 CM• porellOOI.
Mofcllenl't P\lblllhi119, Inc. Fr-P. M9rwll .... Prelldent
Tlll1 •lo-I wet lllecl wllll:l Co11n1y c1er11 et er .... CollntY Aprll 7, 1"1. l"f
"llbll ..... Or .... C:0.11 o.111 ~i.e. •~111. u, n. :i.. ,,.1 ",...'
PUSlJC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI eUSINEU
NAMa ITAT•MRNT Tiie 1~1-1119 _...,, ore c101n1 bllllnot.••·
WAltMIHCHON COMMERC• CE NTER ASSOCIATES, I.St? Halt • ........ lrvlrw. cAtllwnle '171'.
THE lt08EaT "·WARMINGTON
CO • CAiif-• cerporetlon, 1utt
Hole•-. lrvll\e, C•HI-• •V1'. T1111 IMttlneu 11 cCNtdllctect lly a llmllH ~,..,,._ ColllomMI Putlll-Or-(AHi o.llY Pllol, PICTITIOUI M.lllNeU Jlllla It. C.tle, ll~A .._ Orin , Aprll I, IS. %2, 2', 1•1 '102-41
NAM• ST A TaM•NT Sanle AN, ~llorlllo tt10t "'""' Pllbt1-Or-.. to.11 Dally "llOt, Tiie II~ P Worml"llton Ct. WIUIOmJ l';tt......,
Tiie lollowlfto ,..._. la 40tno bo.ltl· Coftftle Sue Marllnea, ,,. Well nou oa Sllollmor Drive •I, Cotl• Muo,
•n •. u. n. :i.. 1•1 110.w1 5ecrei.ry
T1>l1 ltOhmenl was lllect wllll Ille (0111\IY Cltrk DI or ... go Coune, Oii
Aprll •. 1 .. 1 l"IS..M
P11lllllll9d Or-Coo1t Dally Pllol,
ANTIOUA"'4US , .. w ltlll Calllorl\lomV Sir"'· Cosio MnJ. CAiilfomla ... Tllll blltlnot.1 It COndllCled by • ____________ ,
PVBlJC NOTICE PUBlJC NOTICE
Gernlc Corr Avetoom, tUl -r•l-=~PC•lle l"ICTITIOUlaUStNalS l'ICTITIOU18Ul1Nall Hllllloncl Orlve, N•wPorl BHCll, NI.Ma ITATaMUft' NAM• ITAT•M•NT ..., .. •. u. n, 2', "" ,.,,,.,
Calllernle '2tiO Tlllt st-..,I •• llltld wllll lllo T11e 1011-1119 --Of"O dol Tiit lollowl119 per_,, ore ctolne Tiiis bwlneu 1, c-..:t9CI by.,. In· CO<Jllly Clerll et Orengo County on bll&lnHtH 119 llUtlnou•; PUBLIC NOTICE lllvldtlel. Apr II•. ltll. "''*" J A y A Eu It 4 s I AN Au T 0 AltTISTS INTE ltNATIOHAI.., '111
This :::~;,!;~~= wltll 111o Pullll"*" Or--eo c:o.11 Dolly Piiot, ~n~V~SC..~om1 w.:;,~"' 5trHI, ~~,:;,.1~~· Newport 8eec11,
Co11nty Clerk ol Or.,. .. Collnty on Apr ti•. U . 22• 2', 1"1 tMt-tt :ORIAAN M. L~NH, llffS 0.-rtl Oona Ill Geor~, tto Ool Mer
April 16, 1981 Avenw. Fo..ntaln VOlloy, CAllllwnla Sllorta Terroce. Solon• lee ell,
l"ICTITIOUS aus1111•u
HA.Ma STATIMlNT Tiit tolloWll\9 PO•-· .,. doln1 ll11•lnouoa ,., .. JIJ PUBlJC NOTICE n1oe. ca111orn1. non Publlthecl 0.--Coest Dally Piiot. SOEHOEO RAWIROATMOOJO. Jeni• GrtllCIOlll, tto Oel Mor
Apr U, 2', May•. U, 1,.1 IMl-41 • llSU Ouel'U "-· Fowoleln Vtlley, Sllort 1 Terrace, So1 ono 8eoch,
l'ICTITIOU• eUSINllU Calllornla t210I. Calltornlo'207S
GA9R1El WILLIAMS CO""· PANY, nm Artlell• Roed, l..oOuNI N111.,.1. CAlllfomt• tan
111-ll STATllM•lfT Tllh -·-11 coedlKled by a Tiiis llvt lneu la condll<l9cl by o Tiie 1011owlno ,..,_,, ••• dolne llm1"4 -"'8r'llllp. _-ol~r..Wp
1>111inou ... ....,._, M. um OanoldGeorgo
PVBUC NOTICE
• A.W CRAFT, 11162 Well•rn Tiii• ............. 1119CI "'"'' lht Tiil• "°-' • ., llltld Wllh the f'ICTITIOUI 8UllNIHS ......... Unit M, si .... C.lllornla c-ty Clorll Of OrM .. Covftfy on CCH111tr Cl••• DI Orange Collnly on Ill-• STATUHNT toMO. 4'><112, l .. I .,._1 ... 1"1
,.ocllk eo.11 l!Uchlnory Cof'por•
llot1, • Gallfomia corporation, :io. W.
011 Street. s.nu An•. CAilllonW• tvot Tiii• llU>lnou ,, Condllcled llV • COt· l>Ot•llOn
Tllo lollowlno --· •r• doll\ll 8RUCE • WEEKS. 19060 Tillnl ,,lftn "''""
..WneH• Strut, FOW1ltln Vtllo. C.111-4 Publl.,.., 0r-.. CeMt O.lly Pllel, P-1-OrOft91 Coou oa11, "llOI,
PocHk CooM M«Nney ~ OIJon
Horroe«a S.lngor
,S.CrwlMy AO'S PltOOUCTS, 111•1 '770I A$>rll l,IS..U.1t,I .. , ,,.... Aprlle.u.n.2',1 .. 1 ·~I MtcAl'Ulw IM¥d., s..llo 200. lntlM, OE80RAH 0 WEEKS, •• Colllor•tvu T1>1r11 s1ru1, Fovnltl" Ve lltJ, llOSSIO COA"ORATIOH, t10W et c.lllornlotVOI
Tll!i &lat-I ... Ill.a Willi lho
J
PV•• •c NOTIC11> c .... nar c1era ot °'°"V-County e11 PUBLIC NM'ICE l"corperollon, Celltornlo, tt•41 Tiii• CMalnnl ll condw<IMI b'I' an Ill Ma c An.-81¥d , Sllllo 200, lrvlfte, dlv1cl1141I ,...,_,.. & wllol
..._ c. Aprll 10, 1•1
Ml:LSll'•ING••
Celllornle tVU 0-0ll o Woella
ROSSO COA"ORATION Tllll rteean-1 wM llltld wllll t
AAM-m •--T•Uw NOTIC• OP NOTIU Of' TIUtlTlll'S 1.t.1..e ,_ W•lf .._... S-
R E. tfotllytl,. County Clor1l of Or.,.ge County ~ Aprll 10, lttl
TaUSTal'S SAL• OTO .... IN1 hlte ... LOAN NO. YAaU1'0/.IC*llS ao: ltT n.1 1°"''° AN. c;.r....,, tl7tl
Tllla ..,._. w• Alect wlttl "'9 l'I
C°""I' Cler11 of 0raft09 Collnty °" Pllllll-0r..,.. eo.11 O.lly ~llCl'I
T.$.Ne.~ SU NWEST eANK, e Colllornla "1 ..... NEWPOftT HOME LOAN, INC .. Corpor•llon, formerly SANT IAGO PllblllNd Orango CMSI Dolly PllOtf
Aorll 11, 1 .. 1. l'llMQ Apr II t2, 2', May•. 13, ,,., I •111y ·-1 .. -1'r111IM .. -,,,. 8ANK H lllllY-"tlecl Tnatoo 11,,,.r .,,,. u. 2', May •• u. 1•1 1"1-t
fo11 ... 1ne-.u....,-...ottront'W1L1..1111e tollowlfl9 ,..er•-deed Of tru~t SELL AT ll'UaL1c AucnOH To THE w1L1.. SELL AT PU8L1c AucnOH pu•• .,,. NOTICE PUC>llMled Of-.. C.0. .. Oitlly PlklC,
Apr H, 19, ...... U, ltll 1 ..... 1
PUBlJC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUI MIStN•U N..,_..ITATaMtlNT
PVBlJC NOTICE HIGHEST 8100Elt 1"0" CASH TO THE HIGHEST •100ER FOR ~ (payable •I time of .... In IOWflll CASH ... Y•lll• •• II-.. ..,. In
--money ot Ute United~· •II,..,.,, lowM .._., ot Ille United StotHI •II NOTICE OF DEATH atr
l'1CTmou1eu111111111 llt1•ond l_"_..,to--<IOftt, uu..,.. llllorest '°"""ad to ELSIE FRANCES HOlli
NAMll ITAT•MINT hold by 11 _.,Mid Deed f1f Trvtl In •nd now ,..cl lly 11 -Miii o..ct et l'MANN HOUGAN AND
The 1011-1,.1 --•ire ctolno tllepr_.-tvllet91nattordHcrlbed: Tru1t In "" property lltrt lMfter OF PETITION TO "'D· IMttlnena· TRUSTvR . GROltOE LEO delcrl-: ,..
COAST.HEAltlNGAIO CENTf" VA"RATO, JR. and SANORA T"USTOlt: GENE I!. POWEL.I.., on MINISTER ESTATE NO.
MOt Ealt Coest HlthW•Y cor-~ VAllltATO, llllSllMd and wlfo •• jolrtl ""man-l111mon A10ISt2. Mer C.lltomlota.2S • 1onan11 • 8 EH E Fl CIAR y SA HT 1 AOO
EVELYN o. wHITE, 1wa e1,,. au1a111c1ARY : DOROTHY M. •"NK,•Colllorl'lacorpora11on T o a I I h e i r s)
Clrcle "-t•I" Volloy Calllornlo JONES ROCOf"ded Oc-r II, lt7t .. lnslr. beneficiaries, Creditor$ t270I.. • RocotWcl ~r D 1110 •In· No."'°'· In._ 1297·,... , ... Of d ti t d "t .. f
DONALD H WHITE ,._ Elrn •tr Ho ''*In ..... 111"' P-ee w"' O(llcl•I Recor• "' '"' off lee of '"' an con ngen ere I o. s 0 c1 1 F · • Of 11 ·" • 11ocorc1ero10r.,.. c-tr, Mlclci.ct Els le Frances Hoffman re •. °""'~" volley, C•lltof'ftla 'c •• ecordl "' !tie offk• et Ille o1 1r11at dlKrlbet u. tou.,.,.,.. pro-Houg•n and persons who t210I, ltocor-of Ortiftoe c:-tr; •eld ~ oerty· ..
Tllh i...11 ...... 11 canctwct.d lly • DI 1rv11 dmkr1t1n u. 1o1-1ne prop. .,11 ·IMC conei11 ....., t111Mi.t in 1.,. may be otherwise interest-llOM::!l:"~i': '':lorcOll 1..ol14o1Troc1No.7»1 In Stet.flfCotlfornla,c-tyolOr ..... ed In the will and/of'
• ,.,...,. 111e city oi 1rw.., c_, of o....;.. ~11::..!. *-' e.oc11, cteocrtoeo •• estate:
ll'vblllllad 0r.,. c:o.11 0.11., ~iot. Sitt• of c.tlfornle, n pw m.., ,.. A cwdomin1..., <--Of A petition t\As been flled
""'"tt.zt.Moiy•,u,1t11 1.,..1 c~in -..11,~i.20lld 1of PARCELi by Rumont W Houg.an I~ ------------4 Mlsceh-~ In .., office Of Unll Ho. ,j • ._ -*"'~ th S I · C t tNc_.,.,__of,.Wcoun1,. lnll\e~n111m1>1e11r--on e uper or our o PVBlJC NOTICE bceoune u.mrom o11 o11. t•, Oc:t-,. t'7• In -11,,, _ Orange County request109
mlnero11...., ~ ~.. • • • ,....... that Rumont W H g•n PfCTITIOUS8UMNIU l"oncr..-uldleftCl.llUtw"'*'ttho )l~:A°!E~ll«Mclloll-.c-ly · OU u l '.
llAM9 STATW.MSlfT r'"'' ot -1ec. _,., 1o • ..__ o1 '°° A" undl-_ ...,,.y-t111rd 1111131 be appofnted as personal
Tiit ,.......,... ~.,,..-We .. 1,. fHI, muallf't• lr•rn ,,.. awrtK• inttnat aa i-t"' ,_ 1n .,. representative to ad·
...._.;. .,_.., .. ~•ndMdt'k.,....,.,. 1 .. ,,.._..,_101,.c_., .. minister the est•tt Of
LA PALMA T•••Ac 1Me1111141 .... i7v ,9flki.t-..ot o11at1D1tt11eu .... .,,.,......,,Hec11n Elsie Frances Hoffmen APA"TllHNTS, LTD., ••tu Mld0<8fllltc.wnty lloOll J14 ~,. 1o o 1nc11111wo et H ( d I •e111oort1, "'"" .. '"' lucll Paro• t ; • n.n..01cit1t1•• •P· mite••..;_. ,,_., ,~di ot ;.14 ougan un er the ft·
-----or the Eastern Star lodge. _.._ --.... ~~ She ia survived by h er
MAit Wl:IT 8UILOllaS A .. D
oave1..o ll'•1ts. 1•1u ••ac11 ••t1lewort1, H11nUn1t•n •••ell,
Cat 1'°""41 ftW7.
J.J.H. T ~ INC., a c.ilfenlla ctr•
Tiit lellowtftv ~ la CIOlftl bl.Ill· ........ c.ot11ono1tCM1. , ....n.Mnt -• • "'-,..,...... dependent Administration Woe• Morncll, 1•~t .. oc aa Ml 1..-tll In Md ..,., h loM <-Y ... sucf\ ~m 11 dOflr~ "' u. f E la t' ~ eov1nort1, Hort1lllllltn aucll, *'<rU..lftA1Uc1tV,Sku.nao1t'* rllc11 en1111ec1 dlt11n11i...s ot 111e o S tes Act). The pe ...-
Cofllonli•nM7 corttlndlcler'.OC.tf---1•••1ton of ~-.. u. condtt'-tlon Is set for hearing In ~========~husband Roland A. Kerber.
a son David A . Kerber of
Santa Monica . Ca., a
daug hter Virginia A. Walter
of L os Angeles. C a .• 3
1randchlldren; 2 brothers
Gerald Scheltens of Florida
and Ronald Scheltens of
Minnesota, 2 slater-Irma
Lauster of Maryl1nd and
Bernice Johraon of f'.(Ortb
IALTI IHGUOH
SMITH I TUTHfU.
WISTCLlff CHAPIL
427 E 171h St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
.... CIN01"JIS
SMITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Mein St ~nlinQton e-iach S3H539
, .•. Dakota and several nlttes
and nephews. Services are
scheduled for Friday. May
1. 1981 at ll:OOAM at Lhe
Harbor Lawn Memorial
Chapel with Rev. Ford B.
MIUer of the Fint United
Methodist Church of San
Gabriel offlciatlna. Intn·
ment at H1rbor Lawn
Memorial Pm. In U~ of
lowen contributions may
PACIAC YllW
...,.IM.PAIK ~19'\f Monu~
Ch1pel·Cr•matotv
3l500 Pac1ftc View Ori1te
NewDort Beach
144·2700 a m~tbe American -:-~ Se~fl:..e;
Wft·Mount Vt ICOrtuaij COit.a ..... S.0.$554. .
llll'l'Bft•AN
........ 16161 ..... ----·· .._ ,....,.. llilad\, c:allfonlla tiM1
Tlll1 ....._ la contluc9tl by a C.• ,.,.I.Ion.
J.J.H. T., Inc. ~Monad!. ~
Tll1-......,..,. -fll• wltll ... Cownty C-MB 9' ~.,... c-ty en
Apf'll 27, ...... ........ PllOlltfted Orafttll CObe Delly Piiot ""'"It,,.., ....... "'' JllMI
PUBUC NOTICE
D1AN2 BETTY SMITHERMAN, resident of ,
Co•t• ...... Ca. PH led
••a1 on APriJ 25, tM. Sb4I la aurvlvecf b7 her huaband Ro1 &cQttMrmao ol Coi.ta
lileH; Ca.,.motber Ro .. D•~•~ i...-. 2 daidrw ................. ., ......
Nevada 'and Brtnt
Smitherman rA Calta II••· Ca. Me"'°"al Ml'Vieea are
•chtd-.led for Thur1d11,
A1rU =~-at n :oo.ur *' th• H Lllwa ...........
CbaPll db~ ~
Co1tend1ll ot 19''• l•MI
&euoyal Oltueta •f
" Beed& GMditiaj • .... ~ ...... u.. cUftltdcia
ol Hatbof IAWD·tlcNDt Olive M1>rtaarr or Coit• 111 MIMll
NE& CHOI NEERIHG & OEVl!lOPMEHT, 11'1 Glonoa9loa Terreco, c.t.o Mtu, c.i...,.... ... J7.
NEALJ EOWA"D 8Elt05T"0M.
I 117 Gte ...... 1 Torr8'0, Cotto Mt .. , C•lllornla"'27. Tllla~11~9tl0y.,1n. dlvldwel.
,... ....... trom Tllll Rl'"-1 WM lllod wllll Ole
Co11t1tr c1er11 .. o.-.,... eo..nty on
A.prll 20. 1•1.
"'~ P111MI.,_ Or-. Qlell Oolfy .......
April ti, 2', Mit'I' •. lJ, ltll t~
PUBlJC NOTICE
· -·--•••tr'ICtJoini •ecordM °" 0c:-.. "-t N 3 00 Cl It ..WMwudl . ""'°"".,,,. reA'l<a.M ~Moy ,. tt7• In -nm -406 of Of· ..,..p . o. at 7 I/ Tiii• ........... ,..., •It'll .... 10, 1'71 In ..... ""°· ....... ~ ...... ~ ••• ROCOfdt Of ~Id county (tlle Center Drive, West, In t~
c-•• C1.n. of o.-.,.. c:i-.ty ~. • 1,.,,......, 11Y ~ ., UI\•· "Ooc1ar .. loft''I .,.. any 0-.....1111 C I t y of Sa n t a A n •
•
11
""
1
'· "'' :;w'.,,::·~~~rt 0•;::C":1..";"i11ern California on May 20, 198{ • ,,..,.. ..... 0r..., C..M Oe11y Plltlt, ,.,. M, oftlclat roco,.. ot Seid Et-111 .. _11 _, hi at 9: JO a .m . ~
"P<111• u. 22, 2', tt111 1.,..., Oro1199 ceuncy, IF YOU OBJ E')..T t t .. t
PUBLIC NQTJCE
4212 Rlfa.f '"""" c:At'PI( lt/oro -1klllorly Mt '°'111 In Ille artl· '-o ,, "Cir•..,..:.......;.._.,_,,_-.. Cl• e n1111ec1 "H•tmenu" 01 tilt gr anting of the petition,
•ftnetlOfl IS,,_ otlow M WtrrOl'ltyldtclerellOfl ...... U. IOCllCln lloecltftl YOU Should either apPe~r
11 ,1,,.,. .... •b ~OITllllti..•M or co<-!.'1 In ·~ ~lcle ant1uec1 •• '°'1-: at the -•ring and sta : rte4ntHI .. 11111111.a , MttlofNftl --~ nv T11t-.1ei.~..,.,Hklo-lof ,,..,..,..,, .. _.,.. .. ....,...1, .. your objections or flt ""'•l.tf•-Of•~••••111t #MY aE ALSO KNOWN •a: 12 So• written objections with l"J
1n ,.,. -.1eot"'1f MCtlfff tlltl'eby, •ti•l>d °'1"· tourt before . the heerl~. :;·=~~,:_ ~~att! ~=~=---Your •PPMr4'nc:e m•y tit Of Otfelllt Oftd '*'-Ii fW 1eie _, tltnotloll It ---.W.LM Wlll'f'aM f rt P9f'IOft Or by your at-
"'"'"' N4kA • ..._" anc1 of o..:CU. ~!:,:'a1"!.•1ta-•4•4n., cw· tt>rney.
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Pat Haden'a roller coa\ter
ride ~ame to a merciful end
. Mondu wtth ~ Montreal 1ip-
tn1 of 'VIACe Terraiamo.
Ever 1tnce the 1880 aeuoo wu
completed, Baden was like a
man ln limbo with no certainty
H to b1a future. Would Fer-
ra1amo atay? Woutd he ao?
Would the Rama draft a
quarterback? What role would
Haden play ln each case?
Over and over the Rbodea
Scholar mulled these questions
in h1a mlnd, and over and over
be came up with no aiuwers.
• FINALLY, some were pro-
vided on Tues<fay.
Haden will not only stay with
the Rams but be will be the
team's No. 1 siinaJ-caller once
again. Plus, there will not be
any forseeable opposition u the
Rams opted to draft for other
positions then quarterback.
Haden appeared relaxed and
confident as he met members of
the media at Rams Park Tues·
day. It had been a long
tumultuous year and a half and
Haden waa just glad to be back
at the top.
••All I can do is get myself re-
ady and try to keep my fingers
in the right place,'' Haden said
with a smile.
Pat Haden
It appears like the Rams
aren 't going t-o draft a
quarterback?
"Yes, it looks that way. But l
heard there are a couple of good
high school quarterbacks down
the road that they're interested
1n."
WILL THE RAMS have to
change their offense with you at
the controls?
"Yes. we' II run on first and
second downs, throw only when
it's third-and-12, and no pass
will be longer than three yards."
Naturally, Haden was joking.
"Yo~ have to remember t.b1I ls
the fourth time I 've been
throuth thia. First it wu <Boo>
Jaworski, then it was (James)
Harris and DOW Vince. r tbouaht
for a while I might have to set
rid of Rich Campbell, too.
'•Really, I'm excited about
another opportunity. It's net
often you get second chancea. •·
THE RAMS MIGHT have
given Haden a second chance,
but that doesn't mean the f~
have. Haden bas been booed.
faithfully by team follower,,
with bis latest scorninc comi.ne
at a Laker game.
"I'm just going to have to be a.
big enough man and tough
enough mentally .to handle it,"
said Haden of the fans. "Nobody
forced me to do this (to be the
No. 1 quarterback >. I chose to do
it..'
Haden, after winning the No. 1
job from Ferragamo last sum-
mer, broke a finger on his
throwing band during the lint
game of the season. ·
FERRAGAMO, LIKE he did
in 1979 when be led the Rams to
the Super Bowl, substituted for
the injured Haden and in the
processs. set numerous Rams
records.
Haden, destined to be a back·
up as long as Ferragamo was
around. said he was happy for
his former summer roommate
-if that 's what he really
wanted.
Oli61y PM11t """"'1' ltlCMN IC.-..,
Giants' Enos Cabell slides under the tag of Dodgers' Bill Ruaaell aa umpire John McSherTJI gives verdict.
ACTUALLY, HADEN was
tongue·l.n·cheek to many of the
re porters' questions. For in·
stance, when asked what he was
doing durini Ferragamo's si~·
ing Monday, he replied, "l was
on the phone to Montreal to
make sure it was taking place."
But there was a serious tone in
his voice when asked about the
new lile he was receiving
"l wouldn't call it a new start.
"I'm pleased for Vince," said
Haden. "lf he made the right
decision for himself, then that's
terrific.
"I've always been compelitive
and I've always wanted to com-
pete. 1 just didn't want to just
roll over and die. l' m confident I
can play. l think it's easy to play
well on this team."
Giants not
intiinidated
by Dodgers
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
long-standine rivalry between
the San Francisco Giants and
the Los Angeles Dodgers has
cooled considerably, largely
because the Giants have not
been a factor in recent NationaJ
League West pennant races.
Even when they were, they
still didn't beat the Dodgers too
often.
Entering Tuesday night's
game at Dodger Stadium. Los
Angeles had won S6 of its last 76
games against the Giants.
··I think the Dodge r s in-
timidated the team we had
before," said one-time Dodger
Bill North, who doubled home
San Francisco's first run Tues·
day night in a 6·1 victory by the
Giants, their first of the year
over Los Angeles.
"ENOS CABELL, J oe Morgan
and Doyle Alexande r have
meant quite a bit to this team,"
North said of recent San Fran-
cisco acquisitions. ·'They mean
a lot because one, they can play,
and two, they don't have that
Dodeer fear.
"And l don't either. We got rid
or guys who did feel that way
and now we've got guys who can
play."
Another of those players re·
centty acquired by the Giants is
pitcher Alan Ripley, a 28-year
old right-bander who was ob·
tained last year from Boston.
Ripley hurled a three-hitter
and missed by only two outs his
first major leaeue shutout. He
,1ao ~ pitching a no-hitter
tJy }llA 2% lnninp.
• If I'd pitched a no-hitter
a1al.olt L.A., J couldn't have m
my bead ln the door," Rlpley
aald, referrint to the Dodlen'
four.came lead in the NL West.
"I had &ood command of my
pitches, 1 felt very comfortable
out the,..."
Some of the others: I'd call it a re-start." he said.
Angels correct earlier mistakes Coach Ray Malavasi, -as be
has done all along, defended
Haden's abilities. Stopping Armas is key to success against A's in posting second win '·You know. what nobody re·
alizes, and I've never seen this
in print, is that Haden never had
ttu! offensive line in front of him
that Vince had. It's unfair to Pat
to be treated like he bas. It's not
his fault some lineman let
somebody get throueh to almost
kill him. He had no time to
throw."
OAKLAND CA P > -The Angels learned
two weeks ago to beat the Oakland A's
they'd probably have to atop Tony Armas.
"We made some mistakes against him
down al our place. and we're trying not to
do that again," said pitcher Steve Renko,
unharmed by Armas' bat in Tuesday
night's 3-1 victory over the A's.
ARMAS IDT TWO home runs and drove
in eight runs as the A's swept a four-game,
m id-April series In Anaheim en route to
their 11-0 season start, the best in modern
major league history. •
The A's are 17·3 now , after two straight
losses to the Angels, going into today's
final game of a three-game seriea. Armas'
bat, aJong with most of the others coming
out of the Oakland dugout, has cooled off
considerably.
"We've got to get our offense going
again, no doubt about it." said center
fielder Dwayne Murphy, who homered in
the ninth off reliever Don Aue for Tues·
day night's only Oakland run.
·'This next game with the Ansels will be
a big one. It would be a great one for us to
win, with the Yankees comlnc in for the
wee1'end." Murphy added.
THE A'S ALSO had their lut chance to·
day to tie the big league record for most
victories in April.
Renko, in his first start of the season, al·
lowed only a pair of infield bits in the fint
lnnine. He left after six with a 2-0 lead,
thanu to Fred Lynn's RBI single in the
third and Bobby Grich's homer in the
fourth off A's start.er Brian Kingman, 2·1.
"If you don't walk a lot of people, you've
got a , chance to beat them," Angels
Manager Jim Fregosl said, repeating
another les11on learned from the four
games in Anaheim.
The A's Rickey Henderson was his
usual, dangerous self on the bases, ateaJ-
ing his 1Sth and 16th bases of the season,
but got no further than aecond. Armas got
his first bit in two nights, a one-out single
in the ninth off Don Aase, but reliever Luis
Sanchez saved the victory ror Renko, 1-0,
by retirin& the laat two batten of the
game.
KINGMAN WENT into the game with an
0.81 earned run average, best in the
American League, but was nowhere near
that form, allowing seven hits and three
walks in 5~ innings.
"I didn't pitch too well, but if I'd had a
few runs to work with, I might have set·
Ued down and won the game," he said.
"But I know there are going to be games
like that, just not as many as last year, J
hope."
The Rams are 30-13-1 with
Haden at the controlt, but it's
been almost two years slnce he's
had any regular action.
''This will be my first op-portunity to play on thu team
which is different than the one I
played with 21h years ago," said
Haden.
"It's going to be interesting
f o r me. My ski ll s have
diminished a little by not play-
ing but I think ( can easily gain
them back in practice."
Fronliere breaks 1,ong silence
Rams owner tells what's been on her mind
After more than 18 months in seclusion from The Rams owner didn't finish, but she didn't
the media, Rams owner Georgia Frontiere broke have to.
her cone of silence Tuesday much ln the same way
Dave Kingman did upon bis return to New York.
Kingman, notorious for beins tlibt-Upped, pre-
sented the New York presa contincent with foun-
tain pens a.a a way of sayine, "Let's let bygones be
bygones."
FBON1'1EBE, WHO hadn't talked to
memben of the media alnce January of 1980 (just prior to Super Bowl XIV), waited tnto tbe pre.a
room at Rama Park Tuesday armed with eift.t. .
"I brouaht each of you a present," b bow 1be
opened the conference aa everyone was given a set
of Super Bowl XIV coutera.
The move was not only aurprillnt, It wu un·
expected. At the same time, the teneroaity
alanllled a peace offering, too, u Frontier• and
the Rama ortaniaatioa appeared to be embarkln1
on a new ''Fresh Start" procram.
I ~
.
Rams pick linemen
for openers in draft
Draftln1 for need and in order ot· Eil ' der to atrenathen aome weakened 4 -,
poaitloos, the Rama pick~d two
linebackers, two defenalve ends, a deten1lve
tackle and an oftenalve center in Tuetday'1 in·
iUal round of the NFL draft.
With Bob Brudlinski traded to Miami Tues·
day and Jack Reynolds' Mure uncertain, the
Rams selected 6-2, 238-pound out.side linebacker
Mel Owens in the first round -the ninth pick
overaU.
The team then followed by takin& middle
linebacker Jim Collins of Syracuse.
The Rams had three picks in the third
round and used the first two to nab 6-3 Gree
Meisnar of Pittsburgh and 6--4 Bob Cobb of
Arizon:i. Both are defensive ends.
With their third pick of the round General
Manager Don Klosterman engineered a trade
with Washington in which the Redskins would
receive the Rams' third choice of the third
' round the 70tb player overall, both the Rama'
fifth round picks In '81 plus the team's No. 2
choice in the '82 draft for Wubinitoo'• No. 1
selection m 1982.
The move left the Rams with two No. l '1,
two No. 2's, two No 3's, one No. 4 and two No.
S's in next year 's draft.
In the fourth and sixth round.a the Rams
picked 6·4, 260-poimd center George Lilja of
Michigan and 6-3, 250·pound defensive tackle
William Daniels of Alabama State, respec·
t1vely
Quote of the day
"It feels a lot better to win my first a.fter
those first three losses. although I thought
lt would come earJier," said Houston
pitcher Don Sutton after a 2-1 victory over
Atlanta Tuesday night. "Leaving the game
was my idea. I wasn't going out to the
mound in the ninth no matter what. l bad had it."
Margerum drafted by Bears
Just as he predicted, former m Fountain Valley High star Ken
, Margerum was selected in the third
round of the National Football League draft
Tuesday. He didn't expect the Chicago Bears to
draft him, however.
Margerum. who became the Pac·lO's third
best aJJ.l1me receiver during tus four years as a
Stanford Cardinal, had said earlier that he
would like lo play for the Oakland Raiders.
~d. Margerum caught 146 passes.
32 for to~hdowns and totaled 1,517 yards for the
Cardinals
ROGER CARLSON
Cruz helps Sutton. ~tros win _
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aame, d0uba4id and :aeohd ...,..._., oUMr run
oo AJM ~·· •~·~ .... otf IOMr l•fla• ••ter..e,. 1·2. . ,Jn otber NaUooAJ Lea~ pmoe ... Ci.nclnoaU leored etpt timet
ln the Mb lnntna to 1upport the et1bt-hlt plte~ of Tom a.aver and trounce Su DJe•o, u.a. Seaver, 2·1. wu lb• oDJy ClncbmaU pla1er
who did oot ICClft Lia the IUth when tbe J\e41 Milt
ti bat.Mn to U. plate a~alolt lh.rM a&n Dle'° pltcher1 ... Clam &pe&er • .nnt ot tM ~ lllta
drove bome • 1ist.b-tn.n.m, nm, tri•certo• MOD·
treat to a 8-3 victory over Pblladetpbla. The Ex·
poa trailed 3-2 when Aache Da .... opened the
slxth oo an error. He moved tq aeeoad 1rhen lo.·
ine pitcher Lal'I')' Clrta&eJIMll, 1·2, threw wild
for an error on a pickoff attempt. Out.tlelder
t:IU1 Valeatlae lben alntled to drive home
Dawsoo 8Qd tie the game. Speier later •ineled
to aend home Valentine • . . ate• &•odn
scattered nine hlt• and Daye Parker
collected four bits, leading Pltt1bur1b to
an 8-0 ded1lon over New York. Rhoden, the
former Dodger, extended his record of never
losing in April durin1 bis major leaeue career
to 13 games.
Foote, Randolph help John win
Barry Foote and Willie Ran-Iii
dolph slammed home runa and Tom·
my Joba pitched a she -bitter u the _
New York Yankees defeated Detroit, 4·1 Tues·
day night, extending the Tigers' losing streak to
nine games. lohn Wockellfua bit a homer off
John leading off the Detroit second, but the New
York le.ft-bander was in command the real of
the way u be improved bis record to 3·1. In
other American Leaaue games . . . Pele Red-
fern, who had retired only three of 11 batters in
bis previous two appearances, pitched a five-
hitter as Minnesota beat SeatUe, . . . Doubles
by Bill AJmoa and Toay Bemaaard keyed a six·
run, secoud·inning explosion that carried
Chicago to an 8-6 win over Baltimore . . . Pat
Putnam walloped a three-run homer to dead
center field and three Texas pitchers shut down
Boston on five hits as the Rangers thumped the
Red Sox, 9-0 . . Ken Madaa'1 two-run double
keyed a four-run sixth inning, and Lloyd
Moseby and Otto Velea both added solo homers,
powering Toronto to a 6·2 win over Milwaukee
in a game that was twice delayed by rain. Mark
Bomback, 2·1, allowed two runs and eight hits in
seven innings and loey MeLanlhllo stopped the
Brewers on three hits the rest of the way.
Yaz, Evans unhurt rn crash
DALLAS Boston Red Sox
players Carl Yastrzemski and
Dwight Evans emerged unhurt but
shaken up after being involved in a fiery
three car collision Tuesday night lhal left three
persons dead and fou.r critically injured
It occurred around 11 p.m. when one car
tra'lr~ling westbound in the eastbound lane of Interstate JO, coJIJded w1tn an eastbound vehl·
cle Three occupants of the eastbound vehicle were killed instantly, police said.
Baseball tod~ ,.
On thJ.a date ln.baaebaJI in 1918 :
Cleveland centerfielder Tris Speaker
pulled off the fourth unassisted double
play of hit career, but the Indians lost to
the CbJcago White Sox, 8-4.
Today's Birthdays:
An1els shortstop Rick Burleson is 30.
Milwaukee pitcher Bob McClure is 28.
Wills suspended for ''doctoring"
Seattle Mariners Manager •
Ma•ry Willa, claiminc be was juat
usinc one of the tricks of the trade,
bas been suspended for two games by the
American League for "doctoring the batter's
box" for tut Saturday's 1ame aiatmt the
Oakland A's in the Seattle Kin1dome ... Pllll
S&ept.euc. hit safely in hi8 46lh consecutive
game In the opener of a double-header Tuesday
passing a collegiate basebaJJ record that bad
stood for 10 yea.rs as bis Wichita State team de·
reated Oklahoma City twice . . . The Alabama
Legislature passed a bill Tueaday allowing
University of Alabama football coach Bear
Bryaat to coach beyond the state's mandatory re·
tirement age of 70. Bryant, 87, needs only nine
victories to surpass the all-time college career
record ol 314 held by AJouo Stall . . . Former
UCLA football star Biily Doa lackloa bas
pleaded innocent to cbaraes or murdering a
man lut year in what police said was an argu.
ment over a smalJ amount of marijuana . .
The Denver Broncos acquired full back Tony
Reed from the Kansas City Chiefs for a third·
round pick in this year's NFL draft and a fourth-round selection next year _ . . NFL
Hall or Famer CUlford BatUes died in a hospital
where he was being treated for a heart condi·
lion. He was 70.
Television, radio
TV; Basketball -NBA playoffs
<Philadelphia at Boston), 11 .30 p.m .
Channel 2 (taped).
RADIO: Baseball -San Francisco at
Dodgers. 7·30 p.m , KABC (790)
a•..,aT8B£D
Of ............
Take a bunch of new playen, throw them tocelher with some of tut year'• vets and hope
lhinp click. It doesn't happen very quJckly
• Bu\ nm the new and old and stay wUb th• ••m, lineup for a couple or aames and Jua\ like tha.tf you've aot. winner. .
Tha.t'1 t.be cue of 1the California Surf wbJeb
baa overcome a Jltt~ry be&inninl to the 1981 North /..mvlcan Soccer League season with two 1tral1ht
lmpreulve victories. ·
"~ KNEW EAaL Y that the rlabt chem .. try
would eventual make the team," notes Surf Coach
Pet.er Wall, whose team will try to make it three
slraicht torucht when lbe Vancouver WhJtecapt lo·
vade Anaheim Stadium for a 7:30 conteat.
Back-to-back wins over Seattle (2-1) and San
Jose <1-0) have evened the Surf's record at 3-3,
gooct for 24 points and second place In the Western
Division, four points behind San Diego.
They come into tonight's game with just about
everything going for lbem: their defense ia more dla·
clplined: goalkeeper Alan Mayer is as sharp as
ever Chis goals-against average is a mere 0.75)
and newcomers like defender John Craven and
midfielder Kai Steffen are stablizing the team.
IN ADDITION, Vancouver goalk eepr David
Harvey, whose goals -against average is a
mjcrosopic 0.477, will miss tonight's game after
sustaining injuries in an automobile accident last
weekend.
The Whitecaps used a 19-year-old rookie, Ran-
dy Keen, against Minnesota Saturday, and be
prompUyshuloutthe Kicks in a 1-0 victory
The Surf defense will face its toughest
challenge tonight, with the Whitecaps' explosive
attack. Vancouver has netted eight goals in five
games. In comparison, the Surf has scored six
times in six outings.
"They're one or the best teams around right
now." notes Wall "They attack in numbers I real·
ly think it will be a good test to see just how mucb
we have improved."
Wall's system calls for nine players to be back
at all times, with just one striker, usually Steve
Moyers. The Surf coach says the system is work-
ing defensively ; the key now is to break out quick-
ly and counter attack
"We're not giving the ball away hke we used
to Our attack is building up We've 1ust got lo be
patient." he says
Poloists pay
for mistake
By ROGER CARLSON
Of llM DIMIJ -S'-ft
. LONG BEACH -Another lesson. another
price tag, another bill paid
For the second time in ttus fl FINA Cup water
polo tournament al Long Beach State the United
States was guilty of a schoolboy error !n the
critical stages of a game and paid for it. coughing
away a successful venMITe
Spain pulled out a 4 4 tie with three seconds re-
maining after getting a monumental break and
cashing m on it Tuesday evening before 1.850
Nitzkowski turning it around
The U S. appeared to have a lock on a hard·
fought 4 3 victory when it gained possession with
43 seconds left. but Joe Vargas saw an opening and
fired away with still 28 licks left
The :;hot missed and the Spaniards look ad van·
tage, gaining a six·on fi ve situation with 13
seconds left and then connecting for the tying goal
as Rafael Aguilar riCled home a goal from the
perimeter with three seconds remaining. Anyone associated with water polo. especially
the United States national team, is well a w:ne of
the frustrations dealing within the scope of in-
lern at\onal sports. against other countries with
their own set of rules and definitions of an
amateur .
On a team basis. the problems of putting
to1ether a functioning unit border on the
ridiculous It would seem nothing could make
things worse that is, until 1975. when the un-
thinkable became reality -American \l(ater polo
failed to qualify for a berth in the Montreal Olym.
plc1.
D1ssens1on, Jealousies. maybe even paranoia,
Itemed to be invol ved among athletes and
coaches
Clearly. help was needed, and to the rescue
came one Mo nte
Nitzkowski . a Hunl-
in1ton Beach resident
and coach or Long
Beach City College
water polo these past 2fi
years.
It was Nilikowski
who coached the
Arntrlcans to the
bronH medal at the Munl~h Games ln 1972,
snapplna a .W.yeX dry
spell for the U.S. in at
temptl to medal in the
ChmM. And lt baa been
Nit11cow1il who bas
brou1bt the United st~ttl baok to respec-Monte Nitalc:owald tJblllt~. ln 1fPt a.. guided the U.S. to a second place
tfnl4b I\ th 1171 world championahipa, which
qu1lltied &b• A01ericans tor the Moecow Olympic•.
R.unla, th• eventual 1980 Olymptc champion, ~ · -~ ln the firlt cup, but the United ~ ~ •• -... ~ there to cb8llen1• because or the
boycott -~ by the American eovemment ln
NtaJ U. w the lnvulon of Af1banistan by the
Sovie
lions within the coaching system together
Something like Ca mp David apparently has
been put together. Like the Jews and Arabs,
something less than war is taJcing place among
California coaches
When you consider that every American
Olympian since 1960 has been a Californian, well.
that lakes in qu\te a lot or territory.
When the United States B team won a recent
tournament in Canada 1t wasn't the victory that
was so notable, it was the coaches sent in charge
-UC Irvine's Ed Newland and Cal's Pete Cutino.
That's right -Nitzkowski has this combina·
lion together. and in addition, he bas all of the
others -UCLA 's Bob Hom, Stanford's Dante
Detamonte. UC Santa Barbara's Pete Snyder -
and others, working together.
Nitzkowski and Lindgren are presently band·
lin~ the national team, while Newport Harbor Hilb
Coach Bill Barnett and Steve Heaston from the
Northern section of California take care of the
juniors.
"This will be a unit intact for elibt years when
the Olympics arrive at Los An1elea in UMM." says
Nitikowsld.
When the U.S. failed to qualify for the Mon·
treal Olympics on that grim trip to Mexico, the
final opportunity. Nitzkowski was called upon to
turn thinp around and one or the flrst things he
said was, "This won't happen a1aln."
He's kept his promise and then some. When he
steps down as the national coach followin1 the '84
Games, the groundwork for the future wlU be
cemented. • • • A new basketball tournament on the prep level
will be ln force in December -The first Fountain
Valley lnvitatlonal, which will include Ocean
View, ffunUofton Beach, Servile, Santa Ana
VaUey, Loi Alamitoe, Alhambra, Mira Costa and
the boat Barona.
It's scheduled for Dec. 8-11. • • • Basketball prospects interested m competing
in the U.S.A. Basketball Development summer
league should contact Laguna Hills High Coach
John Moore al 770.5447.
"Well, that killed us." said an angry U.S.
Coach Monte Nitzkowski "All we had to do was
spread out and control the ball. You Just don't take
a shot like that. we didn't need it
">Ve domjnated the game from whistl e to
whistle and the defense did everything it had to do
to win it. The lie was our fault. just gross inex-
perience In college water polo scoring is so 1m·
mortalized All anyone can think of is ·another
goal'."
Moore's Orange County entry will practice at
Boise Grande High for a league which runs from
June m.Aug. 2 (weekend dates only) ,
Registration is May 14 (6 p m. > at Bolsa
Grande High. Tryout cost is $12. . . ..
PREP NOTES -Fountain Valley High
hurdler Mite Dnlcboa appears to be lost for the
balance ol the tract season with a hamatrina in·
Jury. It sbouldn't deter tbe Barona from lau1hing
their way to the Sunset Leacue championship -
there are too many oUH!r tuns to pick up the
alack. ·
It was a stu.nning setback for the Americans'
dreams of remaaniog in contention for first place
and now puts the U.S. in a precarious position to
even place in the top three in this tough, eight·
nation tournament.
The U.S. had dominated with an incredible 14
steals four by Kevan Robertson and two each by
Jody Campbell. Jon Svendsen and Vargas.
Baseball standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Dtvialon
W L Pct.
Dodcen 14 4 . 778
Cincinnati 9 7 .563
Atlanta 9 8 .529
San Francisco 8 12 .400
San Diego 6 12 .333
Houston 5 12 .294
East Dlvtalon
St. Louis 9 2 .818
M ont.reaJ 12 3 .800
Philadelphia 11 6 .&47
Pittaburgb 5 6 .455
New York 4 8 .333
Chicago l 13 .071 ~.-.._...
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' MOVIES
TELEVISION
COMICS
..
M 85
88
Mortgage payers have
djffiCUlt time beHemng
~n computers. . .BlO
Laguna stuek with sewer tab ...
llOusing
edict
nixed
The Legal Aid Society has
failed to convince an Oran1e
County Superior Court judre
tbat San Clemente needs lo pro-
vi de greater housing op-
portunities for persons with low
and moderate incomes.
Judge Edward Wallin refused
Tuesday to issue an injunction
that would have forced the city
to require developers to Increase
the number of low-cost housing
units planned for construction aa
part of a 1,060-unit development
on the Reeves Ranch in the
city's backcountry east of the
San Die10 Freeway.
The Legal Aid Society, which
provides legal representation to
the needy, sued the city in
January 1980, contending that
housing policies erfedively pre-
clude people from low and
moderate incomes from
purchasing houses in San
Clemente.
The city specifically was ac·
cused of zoning the backcountry
lands for high-priced, large-lot,
detached dwelling develop-'
ments.
Legal Aid attorneys contended
that about 35 percent of the unita
to be built on the Reeves Ranch
should be available to people
with low and moderate incomes.
Developers plan to provide
a bout IS percent.
Wallin's refusal to issue an in-
junction again.st the city does
not terminate the lawsuit. The
case will now be scheduled for a
trial.
The Legal Aid Society bas
sued several Oran&e County
cities over housing-related i.-
sues.
The society's actions have
been criticized by the Oran1e
County chapter of the Building
Industry Association of Southern
California and several members
of the County Board of
Supervisors.
Officials have specifically ob-
jected to the fact that Legal Aid,
which receives more than 80
percent of its income from the
federal government, is using
taxpayers' money to sue other
government agencies.
Suspect held
in triangle
knifing death
A former Irvine employee is
scheduled for arraignment May
13 on first -degree murder
charges in the stabbing death of
his estranged wife's boyfriend.
The arraignment date was set
at a preliminary hearing at
South Orange County Municipal
Court Tuesday.
Patrick J . Fogarty, 32, of
Newport Beach, is accused of
slabbing Donald Frank Cook, 2S,
of Laguna Niguel on Feb. 1.
Fogarty was an engineering
tecbrucian for the city ol Irvine
at the time of his arrest Feb. 19.
His alleged v(ctim was an
enelneer for the Bechtel Corp. at
•the San Onofre Nuclear Generat-
in& Station.
'Front Page' due
free for seniol'8
Tbe movie "Front Pa1e" star-
rinl Walter Matthau, Jack Lem·
mon and Carol Burnett will be
shown free of charge tor senior
citizens May 15 at South Coast
Theater in Laguna Beach.
ScreenJn1 of the film ls
apon.aored by Laguna Federal
Savlnp. It will be ahowo at2 p. m.
Tick eta are available at the Hl\lor
ccoter, 515 Forest Ave., Laa\lna
Beach.
TACTICAL ALERT? -Although this group of cadets seem
to be rushing for a tactical police alert, do not be
alarmed. It's just Golden West College's Police Academy
members on their way to lunch.
3 firemen
injured in
chemical spill
Laguna patrols •busy'
102.arrested in checks of beaches, parks
A small tank trailer being
towed by a Saddlebaclt Unified
School District truck spilled an
unknown amount of weed killer,
diesel fuel and water Tuesday in
El Toro.
Orange County Fire Depart-
ment spokesman Chuck Murphy
said the trailer bitch came 1006e,
causing the tank to roll into a
curb on Muirlands Boulevard
bet ween Heath Street and Turf
Avenue at about 1 pm
The contents of the tank spilled
into a street storm drain that
empties into Aliso Creek. Murphy
s a id the California Highway
Patrol blocked off Muirlands
Boulevard while a fire depart-
ment bulldozer constructed a
dam to keep the chemicals from
traveling downstream.
Three firemen were taken to
Saddleback Community HospitaJ
in Laguna Hills after suffering
res piratory irritation from
breathing fumes from the spilled
chemicals. All were released
shortly after being examined by
doctors, Murphy said.
Murphy said a Wilmington firm
tbat specializes in handling
hazardous materials bas been
called to clean up the spill.
CUSD sponsol'8
music festivals
A stepped-up proeram or
patrollin& Laauna Beacb'a
beacba and pub bu resulted
in 102 arrests this month and a
subsequent reduction in of-
fenses, city officials say.
City Manaaer Ken Frank said
the program. which la entering
its fourth week. is the result of
complaints from beach1oen and
park visitors about drinkin&, un-
leashed dogs and drug sales.
Since the first of April, two
plainclothes officers and a uni-
£ or med reserve officer have
Block Parent
Program to
protect young
An assault on a youngster in
the south part of La1una Beach
last year has prompted creation
of a community program to pro-
tect children oo their way to md
from school.
Called the Block Parent Pro-
gram, members of the Parent·
Teacher Associations and
Neighborhood W.atcb are or-
1anlzing the progum.
The Block Parent, similar to a
Neighborhood Watch member,
becomes an extra palr of eyes
The Capistrano Unified School and ears for Laguna's law en-
District will sponsor a series of forcement.
three spring music festivals in-A child who is lost, injured or
volving elementary. 'junior high threatened by a stranger can
and high school studenta. ti d f 1 t 1 ti Band Night wiJJ be held May 8 n re uge n part c pa DI homes where a colorful block at Dana Hills Hl&b School at parent poster ts diaplayed tn a
7 :30 p.m. Featured will be an window.
honor band made up of student musicians from all school di.a-The poster ia a atgnal to
trict high schools. Junior high children that the peraon inalde
and elementary school honOt' can be trusted in caae of an
bands will also perform. emercency.
On May 11 Choral Nieht will Volunteers neecl not have
be held at Caplatrano Valley children enrolled in a acbool to
High School at 7:30 p.m. wltb ~ partJclpat.e ln the pro1ram. For
three honor choirs performlna. . information about the proeram.
Orchestra Nleht wtU be beJd call t.be LacuDa Beac.b Polle.
on May 14 at, Sao Clemente ~h Department at ~-3311, en. 28',
School at 7:30 p.m . or Karen S8uen at '""4691.
patrolled north end beaches,
Heisler Park, Main Beacb and
the Sleepy Hollow area.
And the stepped-up patrols are
apparently payine off, Frank
says, adding that officers have
noticed a reduction In the
number of offenses.
Frank said the program will
continue "for a whUe longer,
then at some point we will prob-
ably only hit tt when problems
occur."
During the first 23 days of
April, the special police enlorce-
m en t program reported 14
felony offenses; 27 citations,
ranging from dogs on the beach
to litter violations; and 73 warn-
ings for drinking, fires on the
beach and tidepool violations.
Brank said he had no arrest
fteores from previous periods.
Cemus book
now availabk
For ~. you can learn every-
thing you've $!Ver wanted to
know about the 1980 Orange Coun-
ty census.
A 48-page report detailing the
results of the censi.la Is available
from the county Public Informa-
tion Office, Hall of Administra-·
lion Room 103, 10 Civic Center
Plaza, Santa Ana 92701.
Property
owners to
\ . pay cost?:.
In what the city manaeer bu
termed "a real financial dJI:
aster area," Laguna Beach of.
ficials are scramblini to come
up with $3.4 million to cover cost
overruns of a multi-mlllion-
doUar sewer system.
And, city officials say,
Laguna's property owners might
be the ones who pick up the tab
in the form of increased sewer
rates -perhaps twice what they
are paying now.
Laguna Beach is one of seveu
public agencies involved in the
Aliso Water Management ~n
cy. a regional sewer system that
ultimately will serve $4S,OOO
acres in south Orange County.
But the AWMA partners say
they have suffered cost overruns
and design deficiencies in the
system of treatment plants, dis-
posal facilities. pipelines and
outfall.
THE MOST serious problem,
both city and . A WMA official1
agree. is a series of design prob-
lems in the coastal treatment
plant under construction in Aliso
Creek.
The plant. located in the nar-
rows of the canyon about a hall
mile cast of the Aliso Creek Golf
Course, will be capable of proc-
essing 16 million gallons or
sewage a day when completed.
But AWMA officials aay de-
sign problems have caused de-
lays and major changes in the
plant. The San Francisco-baaed
contractor. C. Norman Peterson
Co., says it can't do the work
for the $13.8 million bid price.
THEY SAY the treatment
plant will more likely cost $19.3
million to complete.
''There were design deficien·
cies and this project bad an ab-
normal amount,•' said one
AW MA official who did not want
to be identified.
Laguna Beach figures to pick
up $3 million of that cost, and
another $386,600 for repair of a
pipeline leading to the plant
from Laguna Beach that wa~
heavily damaged in last year's
storms.
City officials are preparing a
report for the City Council that
will ouWne possible means ol
financing the cost overruna and
storm damage repairs.
The city already has sold two
bond issues totaling $6 million
for the original A WMA project.
ALTERNATIVES that prob-
ably will be listed in the report
to the council include:
-Increase sewer fees for prop.
erty owners. Lagunana now
pay $6.50 per month for sewer
service, and it appears on their
property tax statements. Some
in city hall fear that rate might
nearly double to pay for the
A WMA problems.
-Use cash on band from other
AWMA projects.
-Use the existing sewer fund
balance. •
-Employ short-term boi"f01f.
Ing, or try for a third bond laaue.
As a result of the problems
and delays, the A WMA system la
expected to cost more than $100
mUUon when completed ln July
1982 -three times the orialnAl
estimate. .
Aeencles that will eventuaUy
benefit from the system, besidlis
Laiuna Beach, are the El Toro
Water Olatrict, Emerald a_,
Service Diltrict, Irvine Ran&
Water District, Lot Allaoa Wafi*r
Dlatrict. Moulton Nituel Wat#
Olstrlct and the South Cout
County Water Olatrlct.
-STEVE lllTCHEU.
~ ----------..... ---~ TDM MURPHINf ,wrf~
ings for people of limited mea.DS.
Trouble with this little scene was,
you see, that very same Fair Hous·
ing Council is suing the city of
Newport Beach on aUegations that
its housing practices haven't been
fair.
So this was, to some measure, in·
deed like the chap who wants the
baseball bat and can't afford it.
"PLEASE GIVE ME the money
so f can go purchase the Louisville
slugger," the chap urges you.
"You don't look much like a
basebaJJ player to me," you suggest
in reply.
"You aren't chewing anything
and you haven't even spit once yet
"
'·But I really need the big stick,''
the chap urges. "It won't reaJJy cost
you much. Just a few doUars. And I
really know how to put that
basebaJJ bat to good use. Lots of
people are going to benefit.
"You 'll be proud that your dollars
were included in the purchase that
will be put to such a worthy and
good cause.'·
"Okay. okay," you reply. feeling
that you're really being pressed by
.
auper-saleamanahip ... But do tell
me th1a belore I fork over my Loni
Green.
.. 1\18'1' \WHAT IS the 1ood cause
t.tiat YoU'"' planntn1 to which you'll apply that bueball bat?"
And thus he replies, "Wby, that'•
simple. I'm going to clobber you
over the head with it."
"You're going to what?"
"I'm goinl to 1lve you a swift rap
' . ••NOW. NOW.'' tbe pitchman AOOtbes ... Are you so sensitive that
you can't take a few lumps for a lood cadae!"
You might ftpre that all of the
above wu JuS1 pure flctloo. Nobody
would have the unmltlaated tall to
ask somebody to provide tbe
wherewithal for their own undoiq.
But that's precisely what the Fair
Housing chap did the other nl1bt
while coming with bat in band
''Why c&d M clo~ me? I ~ht him tM bat.''
on your noggin.''
"And you want ME to donate MY
MONEY so you can go b\.IY the bat
to beat out my brains with?
"Listen, now that I know what
your intentions are for me, don't
you think it would be abysmal
stupidity on my part to give you
money so you can buy the tools that
administer me lumps?
"Why don't you take your pitch
and try it on the hayseeds up on
Yorba Linda or Placentia?"
before the Newport Beach City
Council.
"But you're suing us," Mayor
Jackie Heather sputtered in dis-
belief.
And the housing guy replied,
"Are you so sensitive that you can't
be sued?"
It turned out that yes, Newport
was that sensitive.
Believe ·it or not, the housing guy
seemed surprised.
View of media
unchanged Famous Simon & Schuster author-lecturer-investment counselor Robert G. Allen says-
PRINCETON, N.J . CAP> -The revelation
that a Pulitzer Prize.winning story was fabricated
doesn't appear to have changed many Americana'
opinions of the media : only a third believe most of
what they read in newspapers and see on
television, according to a Newsweek poll.
Of 760 adults questioned by the Gallup or·
ganization for Newsweek. 52 percent said they
could believe only some of the information they
get from the news media.
Only 5 percent said everything from the news
media can be believed, 33 percent said most can
be believed and 9 percent said very little is
believable, Gallup President Andy Kohut said.
KOHUT SAID 10 PERCENT OF the adult.a
questioned knew that Washington Post repOrter
Janet Cooke had returned a Pulitzer Prize thi.s
month after reveaUng that her prize.winning story
on an 8-year·old heroin addict was fabricated. Ms.
Cooke, 26, restgned from the newspa~r.
Fifty·eight percent of those polled believed
Ms. Cooke's admission that the story was fabricat·
ed was an isolated affair, 33 percent felt reporters
often make up stories and 9 pe.rcent had no opi·
nion, Kohut said.
"Our conclusion was that the opinion of the
press doesn't appear to be much different than it
has been," Kohut said. "Significant numbers of
Americans are skeptical of the press. That's pretty
consistent with previous surveys. The Cooke affair
has probably reinforced the opinions of press
•ritics ··
. HE SAID THE BIGGESJ' suaPaJSE of the
poll was the finding that 83 percent of those sur-
veyed believed reporters should sometimes keep
the identities of their sources confidential. Thir-
teen percent said reporters should always reveal
their sources to readers and 4 percent had no opi·
nion.
"The most amazlne result was the overwhelm-
ing public support for the protection of sources,"
Kohut said. "Our conclusion is that people bav~ a
healthy skepticism of the news media, but at the
same time, people are committed to the c!bnfiden-
llality of sources."
Asked which news or1anit8Uon provides the
most accurate and unbiased reportinJ, netwoyk
TV ncelved the h11heat rankin1, Kohut said.
Local televiaioa wu ranked second, followed by
news maeazinea and daily new1papers .
Supermarket tabloldl were ranked last, Kohut
said.
The poll, conducted April 22-23, bad a martin
of error of plus or mlnut 4 percent.
Nevada 'annexes'
VegaS~ environs
~ me to any city in the United States.Take
away my wallet. Give me '100°0 for livi~
expenses. And in 72 hours I'll buy \ 11f
an excellent piece ol real estate \ •']ii£
using none ol my own money." I ~
"ln other words, you don't have to be
rich to buy a sin&le family home or an
apartment buildina-evcn in these times
of inflation, ti&ht money, and hi&h
interest rates. You can itrip me of r:very-
thing most conventional thinkers feel is
absolutely essential to buying reaJ estate
-cash, credit, a steady job, and a
strona financial swcrncnt -and 1 'U still
be able to buy as much property as I
want. (It's actually '*Sier in SO<alled
recessionary times, and I won't end up
with bjg negative cash flows, either!)
ow? Because I understand creative
financing! That's how I bouaht most of
the real tState I now own -the real
estate investments that have made me
wealthy. And YOU, too, wing the
PROVEN, SAFE, HONEST principles
that will be outlined in an introductory
'NOTHING DOWN' seminar (abso-
lutely NO COST OR OBLIGATION),
can buy real csta~ with little or no • money down. I HA TE REAL esr A TEI
I really do ... but I know of no other
way where you can SW1 with nothina,
learn 90l1lC basic facu in a short time,
and then with a lit .. time and effon
make lots of mone)' in just a few )UJ'I.
Yes, EVBN IN TODAY'S TOUGH
MARKET, you can aeatc real wealth
for )'OllrJdf, and -i.rt five years, if you
follow my plan-rctite with a W ·frce
ea• OF WHAT ,YOU'LL LEARN
AT THE FREE 8£MINAR •••
income of up to $25,000 a year. (You
could have made a million dollan in
gold in the past couple of years, and
you would have only needed a half-
million dollars to start with. I didn't
have the half-million, and my guess is ...
neither do you!).
"My introductory ICftlinar (no oost or
obligation) delcribcs a oomplae program
that ANYONE can learn to ux-a pro-
gram that includes over SO specific crea-
tive fmancin& techniques I (My successful
iwoclate, who gives the introductory
seminar, will clearly captain TWO of
these techniques in detail.) Even if
you 're a limited-dollar investor, you can
start your own program toward financial
independence by following the HONESf,
SIMPLE methods I have personally de-
veloped-the techniques that have
enabled me to acquire several millions
of dollars worth of real estate in just a
few years and made me a real MIL·
LIONAIRE at the qe of thirty-one. It's
the same approach I have tauaht thou·
sands of successful real estate investon
all over .America, and these methods
work BEST in recessionary times.
"I want you to know that EVERY man
or woman in tbia country-plumbers,
doctors, secretaries, taichcn. aalesmen,
students, retirees, etc., of any aae. no
matter bow cash-poor they may be, can
PROSPER dwina a recession usina my
'NOTHINO DOWN' prosram. (I've
recdwd Rac:cas Jettcn from ~
IWdns. the. of nineecal,. ~·
.. ~ anCt everywhere In between.~lt'•
tbc MODBRN ~of lhe dahdc:t,
and YOU CAN DO IT root
"ln the 'NOTHING OOWN' introductory
seminar you'll discover how to find the
BEST buys (often in your own back
yard); how to locate the 'Don't Wanter'
who'll do ALMOST ANYTHING to act
rid of a property (many more show up
in a recession); how to borrow at 6'7t to
9'11 interest when the prime rate is over
13'11; two specific NEW creative finance
lflChniq~; how to buy e\'Cf\ if your
credit rating is terrible; how to A VOID
PAYING TAXES-LEGALLY. You'll
learn about 110'11 ftnancing (buying
with 'NOTHING OOWN' and getting
cash back); how to overcome your fear
of investing (I think fear is the ugliest
four-letter word); how to establish an
investment plan; how to use leverage to
magnify your return on investments;
how to get rid of problem real estate
without losing money; how to pyramid
your buried assets into MILLIONS.
''At this point you may be saying; 'It
sounds areat, but ... • If that's your
reaction, J want you to know that
comina to my introductory ~ is
totally without risk Jthcre's NO cost or
obligation to buy anythina). You'll hear
about how you can e:Uly lc::am my entire
ln~t program, and you'll learn
MANY SPECIFlC NEW~ you
' iii""JP"'
never knew before. My brother, Dr.
Richard Allen, 1s a specialist in adult
education. After nine years on the facul-
ty of Johns Hopkins Uruversity. he has
joined me to develop the most COM-
PLETE, EASY-TO-UNDERSTAND.
WORKABLE teaching methods avail-
able, so that you can quickly learn and
actually begin to take the steps that will
bring you to financial independence. ll 's
working now for thousands who have
already learned my TESTED, PROVEN
METHODS ... and it CAN WORK for
you!
"Please take the time to come to my
introductory seminar ("They all start at
8 P.M .• but COME EARLY ... we often
run out of chairs!) It 's a terrific multi·
media learning experience conducted by
my successful associate, and. again,
there's ABSOLUTELY NO COST OR
OBLIGATION. The ninety-minute
seminar will introduce you to some life-
changing fa.cu that should revolutionize
your plans for the future. The introduc·
t.ory seminars arc ONLY at the locations
and on the dates noted below. Don't
wait to buy real estate ... buy real estate
and wait! Thanks!"
8 PM-WEDNESDAY, ~PRIL lrJ'B ------------
SREBATON-ANAllEIM BOl'EL
1015 West Ball Road (Su\a ~na Ftwy·Ball Rd. Eldstl
.Anaheim
a PM -TBUBSDAY, APBIL wre
.DEL WEBB'S,NEWPO&TE& INN · lltn Jamboree Road
< t 81ock North onoo
Newport Beae•
.,,,,,., . .,.., ...,. .,..
~....,,,...,, G. Allen'•
'WOn.IO OOWll" melltoll1
"Ye111r a~ to pro~ 11W11tmatt
gaw "" wwrt innglrt, ""'1't tools. a'ld a
patlr tlrat u """'stratght, ckor, and /OJI
t/ta,, o// IM OIJkr .,,.INln and bQOks
f"WfliM/." Biian BO"""• 'S.ittl.
1'/nrtlJ\llJhW and aw>trw,.: I ttfOlllly l'llCOlfl~
mmd if/"' G11.)'0fll &11,.,.tid in tlN road to ~·~··· -St""" M. Qi~ Silwt SJn:ing
"lt°$/Cllftos~ •.. /If b ,_,. ,._ "'°"~
..,_.._,,.OW.Mfit1*wW ~""""' ... "''",,.., t;:""v /W.. ~., -Mr. Olttl ~n; MiA..,,,,.
I
Mlno•TEU OF THE PaOPOSED reatt.tva:
Uon ~the New Jersey and the U.S.S. Iowa aay It 1t
the 4Ulckelt way to bot.tu a U.S. fleet that the Navy fe~•ll&hted&eoverthe Russians.
ar1u• that the money -atimat.'4
at miWoo for the New Jersey alone -could
be Nttu apent on sleek, new vessels than on •linl
tltatil that they HY would take too many sailon to
m~1t just can't undentand why we bave to put
all aUr egs ln two old basket.a,'' sayt Sen. Ted
SteOnt, R-Aluta, chairman of the Senate aub-
com,*1tttee Od def enae appropriations. J!eft. John Tower, R·Texu, chairman of the Ardl~ Services CommJttee, supports the bat·
Uea plan. In fact, be has a blown-up cofor photo· srai» of the New Jersey, iUn5 bluing, en bis of·
flee }'all. Tower steered an lnltial $89 mUUon authorita·
tiod -~ be spent on the New Jersey in the bal•~ce of thll fiscal year -tbroueh the Senate
despite a move by Sen. Dale Bumpers, 0 -Ark .. to
free lbe money for new ship conatruction.
'fTRE NEW JERSEY IS A MAIESTIC ship,"
Bud1~rs said. "It is a beautiful thing to see out on
the ocean. But . . . we are not voting on beauty or
majffty. "We are voting on how we can spend our de·
fen•• dollars to provide the U.S. Navy with the
molt ~t-effeclive and moet serviceable ships lo
keep the sea lanes open." the Senate r ejected Bumpers' move on a 69-23
vote after Tower argued. •·we need more ships
and ,r~ need them now, not later.''
The money still needs to be appropriated,
bowtver. Appropriations panels are expected to
act lb the House thls week and in the Senate next
month. Adm. Thomas B. Hayward, chief or naval
operations, has told the Senate subcommittee that
the Navy envisions all four Iowa-class battleships buil~n World War II as part of its proposed 600-sbi~ eel. The N'avy has 456 surface ships and sub-
mar es, but no battleships. he Iowa-class vessels -including the Mis·
sou and the Wisconsin as well u the New Jersey
an the Iowa -are mothballed at naval
shitJtard.s. Tbe Navy la askinC fun~ for next year
to •t>rk on both the New Jersey and Iowa.
tflE NEW JERSEY, LAUNCHED in 1943, was
retlted at the end of World War II but was brought
bacl for service in both the Korean and Vietnam
wart. Navy plans callin1 for armin1 her with
end•• miuiles as well u the eililin& 16-tncb IUJLS.
The lowa-clua veuels are tbe moat heavily
araleU .S. warships ever built and the Lar1est bat eships in history, except for two that the
Japu used ln World War II. The ships have
12-U\Cb hulls and conning tower sides that are
more than 17 inches lhlck
llattlesbip supporters argue that thh would
gi~~ them greater ability to withstand punishment
than any current Navy ships
1'Tlie reason we do not put a 12-incb hull to
the~ any more is that we cannot afford to." Tower
told UH! Senate. The authoritative reference book Jane's Fight-
ing !;hips says manpower requirements for the
shioi might be ,so heavy as to make it "imprac·
ticll!' to press tnem into service again.
1 they each carried 2,270 men and 70 officers in
Wotld War 11.
~·WE HAD THE MEN, BUT we do not have
the now," says Sen. John Chafee, R-R.J., a
fortder secretary of the Navy who opposes reac-
tivating the battleships. -'l'be Navy has a shoriage of approximately
2,000 petty officers, and battleship opponents say it
makes more sense to use the available personnel
on lt!w guided-missile nuclear cruisers that can be
run by about 500 men.
'.l'be Navy, however. says the New Jersey
would require only 1,567 personnel.
. ... ......
IOCIAL· SICUIUTY STAND -Rep. Greg
Carman, R·N.Y., bolds a large Social Securi·
ty card in Wubinltoo to Id«* off bts plan to
introduce a bill in Congren that will bring
the president, vice president and all mem-
bers of Congress into the program for the
first time. CUrrent congressional salaries are
exempt from Social Security taxes.
Dale Evans wasn't born In the aaddle, despite the fact that she was a nativ1t Texan She
aspired to a career lo musical comedies. but Roy R09ers remembers. "she accepted her
dusty, horseback-riding roles with pure professionalism:· And, she learned to
hang on and keep smiling, no matter how tough the going got The folks
at Far WHt Savings are true professionals too "Rley have nearly
92 years of experience. help·
ing folks hang on tn tough times
And, their friendly service will
keep you \ffi•ling tool
,.
•tt Pf'•"<•Olf ano •"tt.,"J ..,. 10 ~n °" ~· t"' one Y~•t •• tn.' ,.,#
l"'tf'1ftl dOe1 rQ COf'ilOOuft4 Oft f"'t tyoc' Of i1CC.c..NM1t
~FAR W·~AVINGS ~
Your Saving• At Ga1leld
lnaured To ,...ORTIEACH
4001 MocArthut BNd $100,000 Near Jamboree Rood
t Disc:ount Ever ,Greates .
BEEF STICK .. .., ......
6FF
per lb.
any cat piece
reg. 4.39 ..
Serving
Callfornlant
Since 1889
For Ev~ Room
Open Daily 1o-6 p.m.
Quality
you can
see, touch
and ·
Friday 'til 9 p.m. rely on.
Country China
Hutch
Mother's
Day Special
$998.95
For Country
China Hutch and
Solid Oak Table
~~with 4 Chairs~·----
\ "~-h it '-...: r (as shown)
SOLID OAK
42" ROUND
TABLE
With 21" leaf
Princess Leg with four
County Winsor side chairs
No substitutions
Complete line of Fine Oak
F.urn1shings -.
' ....
I
""
'.
\ ..
.. ... .,
".
.. '
"
-~ • •:•! t
t f
' I • t
I . • .>
"Con you sin9 me o lorobye?"
by Brad Anderson
"Whatever you want to do at 4 a.m.,
you're doing alone!"
Jl'DGE P .\RKER
lHe~E ARE THE 1A~LE1!> JA.<;QN (;JAVE
ME TO PICI\ ME UP IN THE MORNIN61 ....,.. __ ~
I HOPE THEY WORK I
°™ERE'e NOTH\HG-L\KE. A 61'EAIWNG COP OF COFFE~
ANQ A ~PER 10 GET'
TME rJAV STARTEt'
49 Joined
53 Fonfflel
57 T tnnit lhot
"Quit belly1chfng. You get It 111 d1y tomorrow."
DENNIS THE MEN..\CE Hank Ketchum
-..w~
"SURPRISE. Mr. Wilson!" "Awwwww ... You're not
even trying' to look
s'pnsedl"
by Harold Le Dowe
DID I TA"E THREE OR FOUR
CAPSULE!> LMT Nl0HT ?
4~ir
THE WORLD IS IN A
MESS---1 WISH WE
l..IV eD IN THE GOOb
OLD DAYS
GORDO
•'l'!\'K \' "INKERBEi\ 1\
I 'VE. GOT ro FIND our
WHO 1HAi NEW 61Rl 15 !
BRABBLE
MAV I S~\t>U
-mY A "1SAR A1'
CHARM scHOOC.
/STO P
L IVING IN
THE PAST---
THINK
OF THE
FUTURE
"THE.RE MOSf 8£ 50ME
WP/.) OF L,EARNIN6 HER
NAME !
"°"*"'• ("1 COAA»£CL °'4,~ AM I A'tlN&'t>I>~ M &
IJ4S ~£ 1tAC~ IMPl'f\.U, 'fOI) OON'f ~011) ~
1\4Af 1't!i 'fUM'f llAO A
ME6AfrJ& £~"c'f Otl-
byTomK Ryan
0.t(~"'1' JOS'f~Ht:
vo-lfWANr
1t>60.
by Ernie Bushm1ller
0; HAMBURG-ER c.J"~" pOP • 4 !.9 Movie
, \ o G(J,.., sro
5001' .l ___ _
t \ ~ POORHOUSE
FOR
KIDS
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
by Kevin Fagan
~'I 8RYCUt18BN fl'ht ~ atOCC, aboUttli.lt •o..,....._ .. oftbe76loUec1Tuesda11 bavere-
A trUaocy sweep lo Coat• Meta eultecJ in a barras• ol! parental
Monday Ud Tuelday re1ulted lo outra1e reacbini both tbe police
tb1 an'elto028juvenllH, moat1J department ana the NeWpott·
CoetaMeuHJCbScboolltudenta, Me .. Unified Scbool Dlatrlct'a
PQliceaaldtoday. beadqu.aNn.
A number of the arreau were at Sit. Bill Bechtel, In charie ol a
Ol'anae Cout COUece Tuesday. 10-mernber truncy ealoreement
Mesa Hieb 1t:Ud Dll traditlooally &TOUJ>CalledtbeSCATTeam,Hid
bave croued the 1treet to the col· the sweep had been planned for
le1e snack bv durina the lunch montba and is partly the retult ot
hour. iocreutns daytime bw'ilari• by
Juvenll•ln Colta llaa.
Many ol tbe arnata, 52 ()0 Moo·
day aDd 'fl on 'l'Ueld'Y, wtre
mad• u clu1-cuttln& 1tudenta
played pnball and other elec·
tronle aames in 1mall conve·
nie11c markets t.hrou&bout lbe ct·
ty and, at a 1ame arcade in the
Seara' South Cout Plau store.
Becht.el said.
He 1aid bJa department bu
found that much of the cash stolen
from Coeta Mesa bomea in recent
·1 .Court. ruling opens club
I Live rock to return at Mesa's Cuckoo's Nest
The Cuckoo's Neat punk-rock
nightclub will reopen hj Costa
r.feaa Friday nieht to the ethoes
of TSOL (True Sounds of Uber·
ty) following a state Supreme
Court decision Tuesday.
Suspect
shot by
Mesa cop
A 3B-year-old theft suspect
was shot in the chest Tuesday by
one of two Costa Mesa detec·
lives attempting to arrest him at
bis Orange home on a Harbor
Municipal Court warrant, police
said.
Reported in stable condition at
the UCI Medical Center in·
tensive care unit today is Tom-
my Ray Keeten of 863 Parkvine
St., Orange, who was shot as he
struggled with Investigator
Steve Shulman, Costa Mesa of·
ficiala said.
Shulman, 28, and investigator
Mike Millington, 36, confronted
Keeten In t.be 1ara1e at his
home at about 3:10 p.m . said U .
Jack Calnon, head of Costa
Mesa's investigations division.
A struggle ensued, Calnpn
said , with Keeten working
Shulman into a choke bold.
Calnon said Keeten reportedly
grabbed Shulman's 38-caliber
service revolver during the
struggle.
"1 c.bo8e that band," said club
co-owner Jerry Roach of Laguna
Beach, "because of its name and
because it's rock ... "
The Supreme Court ruled that
the club at 1714 Placentia Ave.
may offer live entertainment un-
til the Fourth District Court of Ap-
peal in San Bernardino bears the
constitutional merits of
clubowners' complaints aeainat
the City of Costa Mesa.
Roach said word of the
Supreme Court decision ln San
Francisco came at about 3:30
p.m., just a few hours before be
and co-owner Pete Williams were
to sign over their club's lease to in·
vestors planning a cowboy bar on
the premises.
··It was like right out of a movie
-an eleventh-hour reprieve, you
might say,•' Roach said today.
The Cuckoo's Nest all but abut
its doors two months ago after the
City Council revoked the club's
Ii ve entertainment permit.
The action followed neighbors'
complaints of problems caused
by club patrons and report.a by
police regarding Ulegal UH of
drugs and alcohol and aruwide
vandalism.
Roach, who countered durln&
public bearings that bla
custo.mers were no more rowdy
than crowds at athletic events,
said at one public bearing that be
waa facing a city "kangaroo
court."
Roach and Williams took the ci·
ly to Orange County Superior
Court shortly after its decision to
llft the entertainment permit,
ar1utni that revocation vjoJated
thelr First Amendment rights.
Judie Robert Fitzgerald de·
nied the claim. Tbe rock·club
owners appealed that ruling to the
Fourth District Court of Appeal,
whicbla yet to set a hearing date.
Roach said that sale of the
controversial "new-wave" club,
whlcb stages punk and rock
ensembles, would result in large
financial losses.
"We bad fmally decided tojuat
walk away from it when the
Supreme Court ruling came
down."
Jle took special aim with a
verbal barrage at City Attorney
Tom Wood over bis reported
~atements that the issue is not
constitutional but one of poor
management by irresponsible
owners.
Costa Mesa police pressed a
special enforcement detail into
service in and around the club
following complaints of van-
dalism and harassment by punk
rockers early thi.8 year.
Several arrests for various al-
leged activities followed.
Roa~ said be was arrested one
niiht for jaywalking near the
club. The cue could have been
diami.lsed, be allqed, because
the arr•ting officer didn't show
up ln Harbor Municipal Court.
But Roach said be wants a trial
on the matter u an example of
what be said la discriminatory
law enforcement aimed at closing
down the rockestabliabment.
Mortgage pgyers have
dlffµ:ult time beltevmg
in computers. . .810
moat.bl la used-aJon1 wttb lu.ncb
mooey -by electronic machine
pla)t.n. ,
Tbe 1weep, orde«d in conJUPC-
tJon with meetinll with ICbool of-
ftclab, is etpecWd to continue in·
definitely, Bechtel said today.
Student. netted in the effort,
conducted by the 1peciaJ Schools
and Community Atainal Truancy
<SCAT> team uid by replar CD·
duty otftcen who can spare the
tim~, are held on juvenile "atatUI
·off e111e'' complain ta and released
to parenta called to the police It.a·
tion.
Norman Loatl, deputy 1cbool
district superlntendent, said to-
day that be takes issue with thear-
reata al Orange Coast Collete
across F.airview Road from Costa
MeaaHlgh.
•'The kids have been 1oin1 to
OCC for lunch for some time," be
1aid. "l Ir.new of the sweep, but 1
bad no idea the arrests were golni ·
BODYSURFEA HOME -Ian Baird, 1.$, who was flipped head
over heels into the air by a whale while bodysurf ing last
Friday, is home now, says dad Bruce Baird, Lasuna's
marine safety director. The youngater goea in for a checkup
todayt and will return to South Coast Medical Center next
week tor liver and spleen tests as a result of his South
Laguna mishap. Doctors say the Laguna Beach High School
junior won't be bodysurfing for a while.
years.
Mrs. Trudy Ohlig, a promineot
Girl Scout leader, registered
similar objections regardinggirla
arrested Tuesday." at Orange
Coast College.
She said her own daughter nar·
rowly missed arreat in travelinl
to the popular eatery there.
Sgt. Bechtel said this morning
he ordered the college campus
sweep in conjunction wlth the
total truancy effort because of
problems reported there by col·
lel(estaffmembers.
He said bis office bas received
numerous complaints of marl·
Juana use amone students.
Millington, standing a few
yards away, twice ordered
Keeten to drop the weap()f1 ,
Calnon said.
Millington told investigators
be finally (ired one shot as
Keeten raised Shulman's re·
volver.
Irvine complex must await road work
Keeten, who police say also
goes by the name of Coola Koon•
KayJ was sought for suspicion of thetl and receivi ng stolen
·property.
The warrant was issued,
Calnon said, after Keeten re-
portedly tried to return a
vacuum cleaner believed to
have been stolen to the May Co.
store at Soupt Coast Plaza.
Calnon said Orange Police
Department is investigating the
incident, which he said will re-
sult in additional charges
against Keeten.
Costa Mesa police, he said,
will conduct an internal ad-
ministrative investigation into
the shooting incident.
Keeten was treated by Orange
paramedics in bis garage and
rushed by ambulance to UCI
Medical Center.
He is held there on the 9rlgi.ual
warrant plus suspicion of as·
sault on a police officer with a
• deadly weapon, Calnon said.
Irvine school
sets seminar
The n0n-profit Cros1roads or·
canisatioo has scheduled a peer·
counseling semlJlar for Thurs·
day. Friday. Saturday and Sun·
day at SELF Altematln Hiah
Scboolinlrvlne. The boun of the aemlnar AN e
p.m. to 10 p.m. OD Tbunday and
F\1day1ta.1D. tolp.m. onsatur-
day ananoootolp.m. on Sunday.
More IJlfonnatlon about the
free 1emh\ar at t.be school at 31l
W. Yale Loop, lrvtne, cu~ ob-
tained by calllnt Gordori Yeat.oo
at552.esol. 1
~ewport (Qcken
to meet Mexicana
lmprovements must be made to
the road system serving the
1,200-acre Irvine Industrial
Complex-East before the Irvine
Company can start building anew
phase of the development.
That decision was made Tues·
day night by the Irvine City Coun·
cil after residents of the unin·
corporaled county area surround-
ing the complex complained that
their streets are already choked
with traffic and the new phase
would make matters worse.
The industrial complex east of
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station
is served by the Lake Forest
Drive interchange of the San
Diego Freeway-an offramp that
is also used by residents of the
fast-growing county area to the
east.
The Irvine Company had pro·
mised that the Alton Avenue in·
USMC
AIR STATION El TORO
I
I
! I
DeMyNIJ ..
TRAFFIC CONTROVERSY
lndtatrlal Area (Shaded)
terchange, the construction or
which is being funded by the com-
pany. will be completed in late
1984 before the 110-acre pbue three of the complex la built.
The City Council approved
phase three by a 3·0 vote Tuesday
but stipulated that construction
can't take place on it until the
Alton Interchan1e is built or some
other way is found to alleviate the
traffic on the Lake Forest In·
terobange. Council members
Mary Ann Galdo and Art Ant.bony
were absent.
"We feel the council action is a
step in the right direction," said
Nance Lee McKendrick ,
spokeswoman for a group of
homeowners surrounding the in·
dustrial complex. "We dld all
right considering we were 1oing
against a mega-buck operation 1D
the Irvine Company.•·
She was ooe of the persons who
brought the issue to the City Coun·
cil by appealing a city subdivision
committee approval of Phase 3 of
the Irvine Industrial Complex-
Eaat.
Mrs. McKendrick said her goal
now is to convince the Orange
County Board of Supervisors that
residential development in the
area to the east of the industrial
complex shouldn't outpace
freeway and street improve·
men ts in the area.
She said that it's also important
that the county place truck weight
restrictions on streets in the
vicinity of the complex and near
residential homes.
••And who are these anonymous
people being threatened by
anonymous traffic?" Mrs.
McKendrick asked the City Coun·
cil. "They are senior citizens re-
Newport eyes condo proposal
Sweeping changes urged in housing.policies under study
Sweeping changes proposed in
Newport Beach's boustn1 ·
policies are under study tbi1
week including a scheme to
facilitate convertlnc more lb.an
7 ,000 rental units into con-
dominiums.
Current law in Newport maJtee
conveniooa to condominium1·
nearly lmpoealble.
Accord.in1 to proposals drawn
up tbi• month, convertln1
duplex. triplex and fourplex UD·
lta into condomliilUJD• would be
encouraged.
B'ut, the su1eesUon la, con-
version laws on laraer apart·
ment complexes would remain
strict.
The propoeed chan1e1 are. de·
tailed in a just-released housing
policy draft, a document re·
quired by 1tate law.
Ward ConnerlY, a Sacramento
conaultant hired bt the city to
prepare new boualnc poUclet,
a110 baa 1uaested Newport ln-creaae tbe aen.slty oa new i-es-
idenllal developD}ent1 by 25
percent.
Addltlonally, Connerly pro·
poses, the city abould renew ita
pracUce of acceptln1 federal
Commun1t.y Development funds
and use the money to uallt ln
bouaiq rebabllltatlon and other
boualn& projects.
The city bqan turn.I.DI down
the federal fund• la the
mid·19'70s clalmlDI red' tape
made the prosram unattractive
and bani to manaae.
Connerly a..laO 11 uklDa etty of·
...
siding in Forest Gardens Mobile
Home Park in structures ~at
aren •t sound attenuated wben
18-wheelers roar by at 3 in tbe
morning."
Irvine City Councilman Bill
Vardoulis said that when phases
one and two of the complex were
approved several years ago,
nobody expected that funds for
roadway improve111ents would~
sohardtocomeby.
An lrvine Company spokesman
said that completion of the fi•e
phases of the complex should OC·
cur over the next lOto lS years. •
To the west or the industrial
complex is the 480-acre "Super
Regional Commercial Center"
the Irvine Company wants to
build on the •'Golden TrianeW'
formed by the Santa Ana, Sam
Diego and Laguna freeways.
t:'
lroine slates -t
clean-up days fl
The City o f Irvine h'•
scheduled· "Clean-up Days" .._.
the annual days on which;! city's traab collector will pick'
larae items 1ucb aa fumi
and appliances -for Fri #
Saturday, SUnday and Moad•!, ..
Bins for the larae items ~
be placed at the followin1 ct;-
ner1 on tbOlse d.,a:
-Tunte..-11Mt~*""-
-Mic.-•Y ... ......_ • -AtWI ,.,._,_, ........ .,_.A~ -••v•..__...,_ • ......_. _y ...... ~.,,...... _ ................ ....... . -"1*11 ........ ._,_ ..,,
-._ ..... CllleY ., •••• _,...... ........ .--.,
For tatonnauoo call
Keane at '15'-aell.
~ ---------------~ mM MURPHlll ~~
ings for people of limited means.
Trouble with this little scene was,
you see, that very same Fair Hou.s-
ing Council is suing the city of
Newport Beach on allegations that
its housing practices haven't been
fair.
So this was, to some measure, in-
deed like the chap who wants the
baseball bat and can't afford it.
"PLEASE GIVE ME the money
so I can go purchase the Louisville
slugger," the chap urges you.
"You don't look much like a
baseball player to me," you suggest
in reply.
"You aren't chewing anything
and you haven't even spit once yet
"
"But l really need the big stick,"
the chap urges. "It won't really cost
you much. Just a few dollars. And I
really know how to put that
baseball bat to good use. Lots of
people are going to benefit.
"You'll be proud that your dollars
were included in the purchase that
will be put to such a worthy and
good cause."
"Okay, okay," you reply, feeling
that you're really being pressed by
"Jll8T WHAT IS the good cause
that you're plann.ln1 to whtcl) you•u
apply that baseball bat?"
And thus be replies, .. Why, that's
simple. I'm goina to clobber you
over the bead with it.''
"You're going to wh.alt?"
;'I'm going to give you a 1wift rap
0 NOW. NOW," the pltcbman
ltiel. "Are You so tenaltive th•t you can't take a few lump1 for a 1o0ct cause'? ..
You inlPt ftJ'Ure that all ot tbe
abOve was Juat pure fiction. NobodY
would have the unmtUaated call to
a1k somebody to provide tbe
wbetewtthal for their own unctolna.
But that's preclaely what the Falt
Housing chap did the other mabt
while coming with bat tn band
"Wh~ did M clob~r me? I bought him t/w bat "
on your noggin."
"And you want ME to donate MY
MONEY so you can go buy the bat
to beat out my brains with?
··Listen, now that I know what
your intentions are for me, don't
you think it would be abysmal
stupidity on my part to give you
money so you can buy the tools that
administer me lumps?
"Why don't you take your pitch
and try it on the hayseeds up on
Yorba Linda or Placentia?"
before the Newport Beach City
Council.
"But you're suing us," Mayor
Jackie Heather sputtered in di5·
belief.
And the housing guy replied,
"Are you so sensitive that you can't
be sued?"
It turned out that yes, Newport
was that sensitive.
Believe it or not. the housing guy
seemed surprised.
View of media
unchanged Famous Simon & Schuster author-lecturer-Investment counselor Robert G. Allen says-
I
PRINCETON, N.J. CAP) -Tbe revelation
that a Pulitzer Prize-winning story wu fabricated
doesn't appear to have changed many Americans'
opinions of the media· only a third believe most of
what they read ln newspapers and see on
television, according to a Newsweek poll.
Of 760 adults questioned by the Gallup or-
ganization for Newsweek, 52 percent said they
could believe only some of the information they
get from the news media
Only 5 percent said everything from the news
media can be believed, 33 percent s&id most can
be believed and 9 percent said very little is
believable, Gallup President Andy Kohut said.
KOHUT S~ID 70 PERCENT OF the adult.s
questioned knew that Washington Post reporter
Janel Cooke bad returned a Pulitzer Prize this
month after reveallng that her prize-wlnning story
on an B·year-old heroin addict was fabricated. Ms.
Cooke, 26, resigned from the newspa~r.
Fifty-eight percent of those polled believed
Ms. Cooke's admission that the story was fabricat-
ed was an isolated affair. 33 percent felt reporters
often make up stories and 9 percent had no opi-
nion, Kohut said.
"Our conclusion was Uult the oplnion of the
press doesn't appear to be much different than it
has been," Kohut said. "Significant numben of
Americans are skeptical of the press. That's pretty
consistent with previous surveys. The Cooke affair
has probably reinforced the opinions of press
•ritics."
· HE SAID THE BIGGEST SURPRISE of the
poll was the flnding that 83 percent of those sur-
veyed believed reporters should sometimes keep
the identities of their sources confidential. Thir·
teen percent said reporters should always reveal
their sources to readers and 4 percent had no opi·
nion.
''The most amazing result was the overwhelm-
ing public support for the•protection of sources,"
Kohut said. "Our conclusion ls that people have a
healthy skepticism of the news media, but at the
same time. people are committed to the confiden-
tiality of sources."
Asked which news organization provides the
most accurate and unbiased reportin1, network
TV received the hl1hest ranking, Kohut said.
Local television waa ranked second, followed by
news ma1azines and dally newspapers.
Supermarket tabloids were ranked la.st, Kohut
said.
The poll, conducted AprU 22-23, bad a marpn
of error of plus or minus 4 percent.
Nevada 'annexes'
Vegas, enviro'18
"Send me to., city in the United States. Take
away my wallet. Give me '100°0 for livi~
expenses. And in 72 hours I'll buy \ d
an excellent piece of real estate \ ·'!fJ!
using none of my own money." I ;~
"In other words, you don't have to be
rich to buy a single family home or an
apartment building-even in these times
of inflation, tight money, and hi&h
interest rates. You can strip me of every-
thing most conventional thinkers fed is
absolutely essential to buying real estate
-cash, credit, a steady job, and a
strong financial statement -and I'll still
be able to buy as much property as I
want. (It's actually easier in ~ed
recessionary times, and I won't end up
with bi1 negative cash nows, either!)
"How? Because I understand creative
financing! That's how 1 bought most of
the real estate l now own -the real
estate investments that have made me
wealthy. And YOU, too, using the
PROVEN, SAFE, HONEST prindpl~
that wiU be outlined in an Introductory
'NOTHING DOWN' seminar (abso-
lutely NO COST OR OBLIOATION),
can buy real estate with little or no
money down. I HA TE REAL EST A TEI
I really do ... but I know of no other
way where you can start with nothina,
learn some basic facts in a short time,
and then with a little time and effort
make lots of money in just a few yean.
Yes, EVEN IN TODAY'S TOUGH
MARKET, you can aeate reaJ wealth
for younelf, and -in five yeats, if you
follow my plan-retire with a tax-free
income of up to $2.S,<XX> a year. (You
could have made a million dollars in
gold io the past couple of years, and
you would have only needed a half.
million dollars to start with. I didn't
have t.hc half-million, and my guess is ...
neither do you!).
"My introductory seminar (no cost or
obliption) descnbcs a complete prqvam
that ANYONE can learn to use-a pro-
gram that includes over SO specific crea-
tive rmancing techniques! (My successful
associate, who Jives the introductory
seminar, will clearly explain TWO of
these techniques in detail.) Even if
you're a limited-dollar investor, you can
start your own program toward financial
independence by followlna the HONEST,
SIMPLE methods I have persoaaJly de-
veloped-the technlqucs that have
enabled me to acquire several millions
of dollars worth of real estate in just a
few years and made me a real MJL-
LJONAIRE at the age of thirty~. It's
the same approach I have tauaht thou-
sands ·of successful real estate in\'eston
all over America, and these methods
work BEST in recessionary times.
"In the 'NOTHING OOWN' introductory
seminar you'll discover how to find the
BEST buys (often in your own back
yard); how to locate t.hc 'Don't Wanter'
who'U do ALMOST ANYTHING 10 get
rid of a property (many more show up
in a recession); how to borrow at 6'10 to
9'1t interest when t.hc prime rate is over
131/o; two specific NEW creative finance
techniques; how to buy even if your
credit rating is terrible; how to A VOID
PAYING TAXES-LEGALLY. You'll
learn about J 10'1• financing (buying
with 'NOTHING OOWN' and getting
cash back); how to overcome your fear
of investing (I think fear is the ugliest
four-letter word); how to establish an
investment plan; how to use leverage to
magnif y~ur return on investments;
how to g rid of problem real csta~
without ing money; how to pyramid
your buried assets into MILLIONS.
"Al ,.tUs point you may be sayina; 'lt
sounds IJ'C81, but ... ' If that's your
reaction, I want you to know I.hat
comina to my introductory seminar is
totally without risk (there's NO cost or
obliption to buy anythina). You'll hear
about how you can CGily laun my entire
i.nvesunent program, and YoU'U learn
MANY SPECIFIC NEW THINGS you
\ fiii''-~
never knew before. My brother, Dr.
Richard Allen, 1s a specialist in adult
education. After nine years on the facul-
ty of Johns Hopkins University, he has
joined me to develop the most COM-
PLETE, EASY-TO-UNDERSTAND,
WORKABLE teaching methods avail-
able, so that you can quickly learn and
actually begin to Lake the st~ that wiU
bring you to financial independence. It's
working now for thousands who have
already learned my TESTED. PROVEN
METHODS ... and it CAN WORK for
yo~!
"Pl~ take the time to come to my
introductory seminar (They all start at
8 P.M., but COME EARLY ... weoften
run out of chairs!) It's a terrific multi-
media learning experience conducted by
my successful associate, and. again,
there's ABSOLUTELY NO COST OR
OBLIGATION. The ninety-minute
seminar will introd~ you to some life-
changina facts that should revolutionize
your plans for the future. The introduc·
tory seminars are ONLY at the locations
and on the dates noted below. Don't
wait to buy real estatc ... buy real estate
and wait I 'Thanks I" "I want you to know t.ha1 EVERY roan
or woman in this country-plumbers,
doctors. sec:retaria, teachen, salesmen.
srudents, retirees, etc •• of any aae. no
matter how e&m-poor the)' may be. can 8 PM -WEDNESDAY, APRIL ttTB ------------
PllOSPER durina a recession usina my
'NOTHING DOWN' procram. (J've
RCdved IUOCCSS letten from people swtina at the • of nineteen, a& .wnty-.
ftve, and MIYWbero in between.t lt't
the MODERN approecb of the dlhdet.
and YOU CAN DO IT TOOi
SBEllAn>N·ANABEIM HOTEL
1015 West Ball Road <Santa AJ\a Frwy·Ball Rd. Exist 1
Anaheim
8 PM -TBUBSDAYt APIUL 3'T11
DEL WEBJJ'S NEWPOBTER INN
1101 Jamboree Road
Ct 8k>clc Nciltb of PCH>
New,pon 8eada
,,.,. .. .,... ...,. .,..
..,..., ...,.,, llD••:rf G. ~·· "#OJNINJ OOWW'' melltodt
"~rlr approaeli to~ t1'WJfMmt
gatJt N lllOW 11tn,1t1, ~ tooU, alfd a
pa tit ti.at IS "90N strai,Jit, CWt, Clrld fast
tlta1t all tlt4 otlttr tl'HUtan and /JooAJ
comb!ntd. '' -Brta1r &m,,,, &alt#
"'""""°'""and cnattw .•. I strongly,._ .. ~it/or ca~ inttMttd in tht rood w /lnana4I indq;mdm«. »
-Sttw11 M. C4Mr1, Silwr SJl'iltl
"lt'I /tllftas~ •• In Im ""11t t1wtt "'°"t.V,
CUI "'°"1f MOl9 d l'f'o/it ,,,_ 1111 litltJ
fftlJJf ~ fltUfltwl )INF Of ~for.• ' ~ 0 -Mr. linll Mrs. Da!nt MOtlliiW
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'
Hospitals
big business
The Wall Street Journal said it well. ''Have l aot
an appendectomy tbr you." It was referring to the ·•
a~~ressive promotional tactics now being embraced
by privately owned hospitals. Many are pushing their
services the way companies push their products. And
lh1.1t 'i; not surprising because many hospitals belong
to c hains. the way Safeway and A&P stores do.
THERE ARE NOW more than 30 big corpora-
tions an the hospital business The two giants of the
field are Hospllal Corp. of America (HCA> and
Humana lnl' Each has revenues or more than $1
blllaon a year. Other big hospital management com-
1Jar11es are Am~ncan Medical International, liospital
l\ffllaatcs <owned by the big insurance firm, INA),
N atlonal Medical Enterprises and L1femark
c Humana Inc has offices an Newport Beach, as
il<1es National Medical Enterprises. Inc American
~frd1cal Jnternat1onal haq offices in Anaheim. I
When bankers and Wall Street people look at the
1nllustry they hken it' to the hotel bu .. aness The prob-
lt.•m 1s the same renting beds. Companies in busi·
nl•ss to make a
Inn k nov. con
I rol 12 µcrcenl
ol l he hospital
111 d•. in the na
lion "Jhe two
h I g J.! I l' S
Jluma11a and
111 \ t-at·h
MILTON MOSKOWITZ~·
h:i-. l'loM' lo 20.000 beds to fill t'very d::iy
If \OU have been to a hospital recently, you knov.
lh,11 Cllll' or lhl' first thmgs YOU rt> asked for IS )OUr
h1•.ilth 111surance number Once that's recorded.
«'\'l'r~orw relaxes No one wornes about cost Someone
1•b1· a I hard µart) 1s payrng I-or the prov1aer 01
hu-.p1tal s(·rvices, it's tantamount to having a guaran
11·1'<1 market
THE GROWTH OF THE comm(•rc1al health-(· are
llus mei.s, which includes national C'harns of diagnostic
laboratories <Damon and Metpathl and emergenc}
room services supplied by outside comi:ian1es. dots
bother a lot of people. Tl)e concern was voiced last
Yl'ar in a widely circulated report by Dr Arnold S
Helman, editor of the New England Journal of
M l1dicine. which is generally accepted as our most
prestag1ou.s medicaJ journaJ.
Reiman estimated the size or the business :tt $35
h1ll1on to $40 billion a year and he warned that 1t
has nov. taken on all the trappmgs of a "n~w
RELMAN URGED THE medical profession to
dt'al with the matter by insisting practicing physi-
<.'lans ·should derive no financial !:>enefil from the
ht'allh care market except from their own pro-
ft•ss1onal services ..
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
HEl'V YOAIC 111P1 -S•'" .._, .,.,.._ -..., ~ ol "'* ..,.. "'°'' a<.t,... .. ,,..,<Ml 9laO> ~ ,....,.., H8dlnQ ne~~•M'r at f'l'O'e then
IBM
Teaal(o In" LTV Corp Z.,,~I& (p 5't•r\Hoeb
No<t.,nS1m /k.Oor>n Ov
Mid5oUUI l>Mwmonl
c.u1f 011
C.0.sl•KP
1 l(m••I Softy (Orp P!1111p,P•t X•ro• (p
61J,4(IO
S71, 100 SlO,IOO souoo •1l 100 OJ.300 0~.300
361,:ZOO 3'1,SOO >Sl, 100
346,000 l.oJ,000
ll'l.IOO lll,700
l'l•.000
UPS AND DOWNS
Natne 1 PUC>ll<k Ind 2 Oltl•GE pf J CoaUICp pl B
f Po1EI 7.~
S S<JnEIK
6 NevP 7 JOpf
1 O.n Riv•• I OOECO s
• Tedi Ind 10 Ot>Ed • 40P1 11 Ouel<StOll 12.e-tfld 13 coa"afCp u Amtfieu pf u Mes" Ma<ll 16 StdMotA
17 MEI Coro
Pct Up 10.,
Up IOC Up l.t Up I.( Up l.l
Up IC Up 7,! Up 7.J Up 6.l Up S.I Up 5.6
Up U Up U Up s.o Up U U9 s.o Up o
l'ltt. OH U OH ti g:; r,
OH t.1 Off LO Off 1.1 °" 7.2 ~ t.1 o;i 6.1 OH t.J Off 6.J ~ u °" tt OH '-1
Intl Bnkrool 1~.300 3\. I• HouOllTt 11! 100 ll'•
G1Bu Pel 161,700 17~. • .. A~r01I 100 .clO 17.. • ~ ~"I' p,.,._ 177 700 q1... •I
Mld1IE ' IOS,400 :14~ \o Wat19 8 ... 100 JI... 11<.
ln\trum S1s "·000 P • • '" Br•d H•ll a. 100 14 .11.\ '
G<llfC•n 9 7J.'°° ~ ._
METALS
C•-• '7~90 <.enll • PoUnd. U S cksll-ltons
L•H l8 cen1S a_,..,
lhK o • cents• POUl'd. o.11verec1
Till '6 s110 Meta Ii w .. k <ompoioll• lb
Mere 11ry M70 00 per llH&
l'l•lln""' ~ 00 troy o,., N v
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
L-: morning ll•lnv M71.)(), off M.U.
L.....,_ alter-ll•lno M1' u. efl " M ....... el-fl•lllO "10.60, Ml .....
l"r•Mhlft; fl•lng MI0.21, Off $f,ll. l11rk1t: l•t• .,...._" 1111"'9, .,.,, oo, flt
M oo. i•1' 00 •511..t ~
Ma••Y & Mar-a only d•lly Qll-•
$'11 2S, off " 50 • • ........,.. only dally QllOte M71.U, Cllf.:
H.JO. ' '
IE ......... : ..,., IMlly -· 1-k .... ..,. M, ott u . n
SYMBOLS ' . .~
178-13
C78-1.f
E78-l .f
F78-U
G78-1.f
G78-15
H78-l.f
H71·1-'
MIAf•OI ~ • IOAl'tNe.
l'fCNICkl ..... 288 12 VOlT SYSTlM .... ~ USYTOllST
SAvt '13~
49~~
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