HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-07 - Orange Coast Pilot..
• •••••
IUlll ClllT Ylll 11111111 llllY PINI
THURSDAY . MAY 7 198, OR ANGE COUNTY CALIFOHNIA 25 CENTS
..
Beac·hed wha/,e
Laguna artist fights clock, funds
to complete 170-foot-long mural
BFsTEVE MITCHELL 0ta.o.it, ...........
When Pope Julius II commissioned him to paint the
ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in 1408, Michelangelo didn't
have to worry about cleaning up his mess and moving out
at 10 a .m . every day because the chapel was full.
Things were easier then.
Not so for Laguna Beach artist Robert Wyland, who
mU$t put up with 20th Century problems as he paints his a-1o1i-~t-..w,ft.alift9 Walkdj&C'eftt'.tO'the'~ .
THE 24-YEAR-OLD artist can work on his 170-foot· ·
long sea mural only four hours a day -from 6 to 10 a .m .
That's when the operator of the hotel parking lot says
he needs the spaces taken up by Wyland's scaffolding for
parking.
What s~a~ed . out to be a three-week project !1'1ight
end up takmg twice that lone. the good-natured painter
says with a shrug.
There are other problems with which Wyland's 16th
Century predecessor did not have to contend.
Like what it's costing him to rent the scaffolding
($200 per month>. generator ($170 a week ), air com-
pressor ($100 per week}, and airless sprayer ($40 a day.)
AND THAT DOESN'T count the money he put into
buying 35 gallons of custom-mixed latex paint for t he
massive mural. <See WHALING WALL, Page AZ> Robe.rt Wyland applies mid-morning 'facial' to Laguna Beach 'Whaling Wall' mural CN!ty ................
Federal home loan cost soars
Panic related
OC woman testifies in kidnap case
A Garden Grove woman has
told an Orange County Superior
Court jury In a kidnapping case
that she became panic-stricken
when a sherifrs deputy who bad
just arrested her suggested she
could be raped.
The testimony of prosecution
witness Rebecca Jones came
Wednesday in the trial of deputy
George Louder.milk of Costa
Mesa, who is charaed with four
counts of kidnapping and three
counts offalse imprisonment.
Miss Jones, 31 , said
.Loudermilk suggested "it might
have been better if I had been
raped" after he handcuffed her
and put h~r in his patrol car in
the early morning hours of July
28, 1980. She was arrested on
suspicion of drunken drivina.
M lss Jones is one of four
Rosener says
·panel ouster
'very shabby'
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Deltr .........
· The removal of Newport
;Beach resident Judy Rotener
from the State Coastal Com-
mission is drawipg praise from
.her opponents and registering
•stiock with local environmental
· aroups today.
: Mrs. Rosener, a resident of
. :
! . .
Lido Isle and an eiaht-year com·
missioner, said she bas
still not r e-
c el v ed of-
ficial word
t hat As -
sem bly
Speaker
Willie Brown
has dismissed "°'•"•• her. .t "Considering bow much time
and dedication I've put in," she
commented from her office al
(See aOSENER, Pa1e A!)
women that Loudermilk is ac·
cused of abducting and threaten·
ing between July and October of
1980.
In earlier testimony, a Mission
Viejo woman claimed that the
37-year-old defendant threatened
to rape 8hd kill her after drivin1
her in his patrol car to a
secluded hilltop overlooking
Irvine.
That incident occurred in Oc·
lober, three months after Miss
Jones said she was taken into
custody by Loudermilk on a
Garden Grove Freeway onramp
in Garden Grove.
Questioned by prosecutor
Mike Jacobs, the witness said
she had been to a bar with a
friend earlier in the evening
before eventually heading for
home.
,., ........ She admitted s he went
through a red light on Huter
Street near the freeway and was
quickly pulled over by a deputy
. she identified as Loudermilk.
Miss Jones told the eiaht·
woman, four-man jury she was
arrested even though
Loudermilk never gave her any
sobr iety tests.
Seven1Je(Jr-Old GeTard Sandi tDOLks behind the coffin carrying the body of hU father. hunger striker
Bobby Sandi, in Bel/a.at funeral proc1Hton .
His first words lo her as she
sat in the back of the car were
about rape, she said, adding that
she made no response lo the
statement and did not feel
Coffin carried in ,street
"" Bobby Sands' hearse followed by Belfast mourners ·
frightened at first. BELFAST, Northern Ireland
But when she noticed the car CAP> -Under gray leaden
going in a direction away from skies, a hearse bearin1 the cof·
the Orange County Jail, Miu fin of Bobby Sanda made a slow
Jones said, she asked the fun e ral procesalon today
lawman where they were through the riot-tom streets of
headed. • Belfast_, packed with t,ns of
••He said he wanted to gjve ._. tbousands ol mourners for tbe
time lo think about what he bad IRA bun~r striker. Hundreds of
said to me earllu," she women carrying yellQw and
testified. . white ft,atha followed the cot-
Wlth that, Mlss Jones 1ald, ahe fin at the head of tbe march.
panicked and began acreamlnc Sandi' pariah priest lasued a
and fighting to free hereell from call for rea•raint "In theae
the handcuffs. critical days" durin1 tile Re·
''I kept that up for quite ctuiem Mus, one of the bi11est
awhile," she told the jury 1D funerals in Northern Ireland
Superior Court Judie James K. slnce-.ectariu violence erupted
Turner's courtroom In Santa 11 IA yean a10 and lo which Ana. nearly 2,lod have 4'ed, <See DEPUTY, Pa1e AJ> More than 1.080 people. many
wearinl{ black arm bands,
crammed into St. Luke's Church
in lbe West Belfast Catholic dis-
trict for the Mass.
After the service, the liabt oak
coffin, closed and with a single
candle on top, was carried out·
side where some 20,000
mourners waited,fn the streets
of the Catholic Twinbrook
municipal housing estate and
the surrounding bill.side.
Six hooded Irish Republican
Army men, wearlna combat
jackets and black bere ts 1 formed a ,uard of honor ana
draped the coffin in the green,
while and orange fiag of the
lrilb Republlc.
A BrlUah army helicopter -
symbol of the Uiht security
clamped on the city -hovered
overhead al' Sands' coffin. car-
ried inittally by four pallbearers
and then placed in a hearse,
began the slow, 3\.'l-mile pro-
cession to Milltown Cemetery on
the edge of another Catholic
housing estate, Andersonstown.
DurinR the church service.
bundreda of mourners took Holy
Communion. '
The vessels for the sacrament
were handed to the priest by
Sanda' son, Gerard, 7. The small
boy, who was dry-eyed, wu as-
sisted by Sands' sister, Marcella
Kelly, and brother, Sean. Sanda'
wife Geraldine, from whom he
separated five year1 aao,
did not ateend the funeral.
Faith holstered -vi'etim's f~mily
8u1ineuea ln the c:lt')''s
CatboUe diltrieta were reported
respondin& "100 pwc:ent1' to OI'·
ders they close aa a mark of
respect for Sands.
Protestants were t•therinc for
a memorial service for Jrtab
R epublican A.-my vlctllns,
scheduled to be held at BeJfut's
dty ball llve miles away from
t.be cemetery where Sandi WM
to be burled.
Parents of slain Bible translator feel son's death wa8 'God's will' ..
somebody or eometbiq wtUa 1111
flat.
''But M J •trualed wltb UM
qu .. dan ol wbat to .clo, • mble
v ..... Upt forcilll ..... , .. • , u.T= ·1a an uu.. .... tbQb, tbl9 II the wW ti Qciid ... .. Aft. .... 111 .... ---~UM._. .... .-elled for •U*t ;llii ............ o1 ........ ~
a llat ol.-tldao for .. •~ .... CCMlld be tbaaktUI. ··ne ftnt Wnc tllat came f¥
me WM that God promiMs fO
J
c:a~ lor b1I own," be aaya. "I
knew Chet wu lp Ood'• handa,
do&n1 God'• WGl'k.
"Aad Oo4 II tile eaoa1b to k..,1111 .......... "
Durln1 tbe 70••1 Bibi•
ttan1latGr'1 • ~ ol c_,....o-, bh pareau· fallll aettr . .........
T1M6r Well .,.... not 1Mbi
enn wbea the new1 arrtvtld
MU'da T Ulat Cliet aau.nD• lll'allaiaW,WM,.... ...
abaadcined baa.
"ff• hi" come to '"' dlat Chet waa born for thia," bl•
father HYI, "that God Wal
1roomln1 btm for His own
purPOlll. "We didn't tJdak It WU to
have blm mart,red, .._ tt w11 • * we've Md tq ·~ Uaat." The BlUennlDI talked about
thett -IDd tbelr faltla ta ..... tervlew at tJle HuatlUtaa a.eta
beadquarten ol W1d1na llble Tranala'°«'t and tba Summer
JntUluta Of LlqWitlcs, tbe or·
IHIH.._ for wbAdl tWr aoa
worked.
Tbe Bltterman1 will
(lee !19LI, Pap Al)
"'}
TIM IOO BrlU.b troope airlifted
ln ov.Dilht to st.rea,u.en the
1hield between Northern
lrelaiid'• Protntaat majority
and Catbollc mtnorltJ were °"' standby u fun l'OH ot etealat.
lDI .tol•c• follewta1 Sudl'
burial wit.Ii hall IRA mllltary
bonot1 ta a ~ ol tM Milltown
Cemetery neerved for lllA men aad....._.
PoJlee armed With nn. nre.
OD .. trol, but Hedrtt)' ron.. ap-
peared to be li:erilni tO a low
pron.., before u.e· -..-.... • ~
15.5.%•
rate a
record
W ASHJNGTON <AP> -The
government is raising the in·
terest ceiling on federally in·
sured single-family home loans
to a record 15.5 ~rcent, the
Department of Hot11inc and
Urban Development announced
today.
The change, which takes ef·
feet Friday, covers fixed-rate
home loans .insured by the
Federat Housing Administration
and the Veterans Admlniatra·
tion .
The old ceiling of 14.5 percent
was also a record when HUD
raised the limit to that level less
than a month ago.
HUD Secretary Samuel R.
Pierce Jr. said the increase waa
necessary to keep FHA· and VA-
backed home loans within com-
petitive range of conventional
mortgages. The latest Federal
Home Loan Bank Board flCJ.lres
showed conventional private
mortgages averaging 1S.S3 per-
cent in early April
Pierce said interest rates ib
private credit markets have
risen sharply since the April 13
increase in the FHA-VA c:ell-
lng,and "as a result lenden are
reluctant to make mortpfe
loans based on the current al-
lowable FHA rates."
Assistant HUD Secretary
PhUip Winn said people sellin&
houses in deals involvinl FHA
or VA backing are being foteed
to pay substantial premiums to
lenders in the form of lnterelt
"points." And ttiat cliscourqes
sellers fro m dealing wltb
prospective buyers who want to
use FHA or VA .
"The high number of points <See FHA, Pa1e A!)
DRlllH cun IUTlll
Partly cloudy ~iglat and
morniqa, other~e aunny
throu1b Friday. Low1
tonl1bt 50 alODI the cout,
55 inland. Hi1h1 Frlday
mid eos at the beaches, 74
to 78 inland.
lllllTIUY
T1't ...... ~ tMI
aumfft•r f1t1•t "trM 11'01.
J.R.'/" bMt ndlwr "1'1'o _,
J.R. do fft?" 'l'lw ~ H•m mdleu. S.. ,..,. 81.
11111
A2 • • • • • • Otange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thuraday, May 7. 1981
-Reagan elated by .bro.ad budget support
WASHINGTON <AP) -Presl·
dent Rea1an. looking forward to
House approval of his budget-
slashing blueprlnt, crossed bU
fingers for good luck today and
said of the antlclpated vote:
"wonderful, ju.st wonderful."
With a vote expected later to-
day House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr. conceded the number
of defectors from the
Democratic party is "extremely ·
high."
He said it is concetvable
Reagan could w1n by 90 vot4il 1n
a chamber where tbe O.mocrate
hold a majority of 51.
Reps. Delbert L. Lauai. R·
Oblo, and Pbll Gumm, D·
Texas, sponsors of tbe measure,
conferred with the president
before the Houae convened to-
day and predicted a victory of
landslide proportions when the
House votea.
Rea,an, poslng with Latta and
Gramm in the Oval Office for
photos, was at first cautious,
crossln1 bu fingers and. when
asked U the administration
would win the vote, saying, "I'll
just settle .... "
But Latta said "it's golnc to
be big.••
Added Gramm: "The presi-
dent's efforts turned our hard-
won victory into a landslide."
"No doubt about it," Latta
said. "We're going to have a un-
animous vote on our side. I can't
recall a vote of this magnitude
on oOr side."
Gramm predicted that con·
servattve Democrats would
make a strong showing, and
added: ''J think you're ioina to
see a philo1ophlcal coalition
here willing to put the interests
or the cou nt ry ahead of
partisanship. The American pee>·
ple are for the president's
budget and we are going to show
them an election works and that
the Democratic process still
works.
Earlier, O'Neill concedt:d that
"only the Lord himself could
aa ve this one'' for opposition
Democrats
The stage for today 's
showdown was set Wednesday
when the House swept aside two
attempts to boost spending on
social programs.
That left a choice of the
Democratic leadership's plan or
a modtried Rea1 a n pro1rapi
that would ouUine deep cuts la
social programs, accelerated de-
fense spending and a three-year,
30 percent tax reduction.
By nightfall, the Democrats'
alternative was likely to be
gone, loo, putting Reagan wiUtin
reach of getting the first phase
of hi s economic program
through Congress
The Senate was beginning de-
bate today on a spending plan
drafted by its Budget Committee
and endorsed by Reagan, and
that version was expected to
have litUe trouble winni11R ap-
proval .
'Revolution' seen on lwme saks
Supervisors say they will fight commission on cost controls
Af'..._.
BERLIN VISIT -Maureen Reagan, daughter of the presi-
dent, arrives in West Berlin with her hus bantl, Dennis
Revell, for a reception. She will talk with Berlin trade fair
officials on the Possibility of U.S. products being exhibited
in the West German city.
Panel nixes
~none' vote
SACRAMENTO <AP >
Californians won't be able lo
vole for "none of the above"
because the state Senate Elec-
tions and Reapportionment
Committee has given the bill its
third defeat
·'This has got to be the most
asinine bill that 1 have ever
seen," Sen. William <:raven, R·
Oceanside, told a joke-filled
hearing Wednescfay before th~
losi ng 5-2 vote.
The bill, 58675 by Senate
Republican leader William
Campbell, would require that
"None of the Above" be printed
on the ballot below candidates
for president. and all state and
local offices except appellate-
level justices.
From Page A1
FHA ...
causes a genuine hardship for
sellers of homes, many of whom
did not anticipate having to pay
this additional amount of money
' when they arranged to sell their
homes with FHA or VA financ-
ing," Winn said .
Today's HUD action also
raised ceilings on other
categories of FHA loans, in-
creas,ina the limits from 15 per-
cent.. to 16 percent on graduated
payment loans, from 14.5 per·
cent to 15.S percent on loans for
multi-family Wllts such as apart-
ments and from 17 percent to 19
percent on the separate rate for
multi-family Interim construe·
tlon loans and on certain other ·
land·development Joana.
From Page A1
RO SENER • •
UC Irvine. ''it seems like a pret·
ty shabby way to treat me."
The outspoken environmen·
talist says there has bet:n
pressure for her removal for
several months.
According to offi cial word,
Long Beach attorney Marvin
Nutter will replace Mrs .
Rosener. Nutter. also an en-
vironmentalist, was remoyed
from the South Coast Regional
Coastal Commjssion in a power
struggle earlier this year.
Lorraine Faber, a
spokeswoman for the conserva-
tion group Amigos de Bolsa
Chica, said she was "dis turbed"
by the ouster move.
"Our group has always been
supportive of her and her work,"
commented Mrs. Faber. "We're
disturbed that Orange County
once again will take a back seat
to Los Angeles."
Mrs. Rosener was the only
Orange County resident on the
state board, havina been ap-
pointed to the commission by
former Assembly Speaker Bob
Moretti.
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather. a member or the Sou.th
<.;oast Regional Coastal Com-
.. mission and a frequent critic of
Mrs. Rosener, said she was not
surprised by the action.
"I've heard rumors for aome
time now and, 1 suppose, she bas
loo." Mrs. Heather said. "She's
certalnly made some powerful
enemies."
Mrs . Rosener, though; was
quick to suggest that her oppo-
nents shouldn't do too much
celebrating.
"If anything," she noted,
"Nutter ls a 1tron1er envlron·
mentalist than J am. ThO!le that
are looldn& at this with glee are
probably not goin1 to be any
more 11U1fied with him."
iiilfPiat MAIN 01'P'tC1
The Orange County aoard oI
Supervisors has agreed t(>
challenge the state Coastal Com-
mission if necessary to fight re-
sale controls for new affordable
homes built along the coast.
ThNut>ervisors reached the de·
tftftftfWeafiesCfay 'dmtn -m ·
ing infused with unusual amounts
of philosophical discourse both by
board members and proponents
of resale controls.
At one polnt, Supervisor Roger
Stanton warned resale controls
could lead to a "social revolu-
tion" when homeowners of al·
fordable units realize they can't
sell their houses at market rates.
The tqpic surfaced during a
board review of coastal policies
mandated by the coastal com·
mission. The commissioner has
From Page A1
BIBLE. • •
participate in a program Salur·
day in Anaheim lo honor
Wycliffe founder W. Cameron
Townsend.
The couple remember their
son as a man always eager for
new challenges.
He had taken his wife and two
youn g daughters to Colombia
and was preparing to work with
the Carijona people when he was
taken captive by guerrillas who
claimed the Bible translating or·
ganization is a front for the CIA,
a c harge Wycliffe oHicials
strongly deny.
The Carijona people had been
young Chet's second choice.
His father recalls that Chet in·
itially wanted to work with an
obscure Colombia tribe that
may have killed two of the first
three people to make contact
with them.
"Tbls was a real danger, but
Chet was ready to walk into it,"
his father says.
The Colombian government
would not allow it, however.
The young Bible translator
was not the man originally
sought by the guerrilla.s who ln·
vaded the organization's Bogota
living quarters in January.
The Bible translating group's
local director was not present.
Because Chet Bitterman spoke
Spanish fluently and appeared to
be in <!barge, he was given a
chance to kiss his wife and
children and was taken away by
the armed lntruders.
"When Chet was captured, his
father and I came to the con-
clusion independently that if the
guerrillas had to have a witneas
for Jesus. Chet was the one to flt
the bill," Mary Bitterman re-
calls.
"We think God bad a job for
him to do in his captivity," his
father adds. "We feel sure he
was sharing the gospel with bis
captors."
The guerri!Jas said young Bil·
terman would be freed if the Bi-
ble translating organization re-
moved its workers from Colom-
bia.
The organization refused.
"Chet wouldn't have wanted
them to puJI out, and we dldn't
either," his father says.
During their son's captivity.
the Bittef'mans received
messages of support from
around the work!.
''We 're convinced that their
prayers were not ln vain," the
elder Bitterman says. "On a
human level, Chet may have lost
his life. But we belleve that
God's not' finished ln this. We
haven't read the last .. cbapter
yet."
The Bitterman• have aeveo
other ehlWHn. Crail, 21, has ap-
plied to Wycll'rtt, hopin1 to
become a Btt11e ~anslator Uke
his slain brother.
Ria parents say they wlU not
try to stop him.
r
Thomu P. Haley ~
no wn1..., k., C.I• -... c•.
Men...._, ... , .... c. .. -..,cA-. Crossina fatal
~· ""°' ..... c..tt .......... ~.... " Roe.tf1N.WMd ......... r.., Thomn KffVll
""" ....... 111v .. ,.--, .. , ... , l'lltttff • ... f M .
wtrllH-lt ......i11 IMY M , .. ,Mu< .. •lt!IWI or ex1can 111811 ~ .. , ,.,,..,.tlell ol COll'r•lellt .... , •
advocated resale controls for low-
cost housing and the supervisors
were on the spot to decide whether
to break Crom their past opposi·
lion to call for such restrictions.
They didn 't. First·year
s4perv· tanlon nd. B~
es an e c a1me resa e controls
deny owners traditional chances
to parlay housing equity toward a
higher standard of II ving.
Favoring government controls
were Maya Dunne of The Housing
Coalition of Orange County and
Mary MilleroftheOrangeCounty
chapter of the League of Women
Voters.
Ms. Dunne said controls are
virtually the only way to preserve
low-cost housing. She claimed 60
percent of affordable units built
from 1977 in Irvine's Woodbridge
Sands g iven
Bay 'rites'
SAN FRANCISCO <AP >
Five thousand miles from the
prison where he starved himself
to death, Irish Republican Army
hunger-striker Bobby Sands was
given a mock funeral, complete
with military honors and
speeches denouncing the British
government.
A green and brass casket sat
outside the shuttered residence
of the British consul general
Wednesday night as more than
1,000 demonstrators gathered
quietly to mark the death or
Sands.
Leaflets distributed by the
group said lta aim was "to focus
the attention of the American
public more efrectively on the
stale of Irish prisoners of war
held In British prisons.·'
Transplant p air
showing progress
' STANFORD <AP) -Almost
two months after receiving a new
heart and lungs, Mary Gohlke
was transferred out of the in·
tensive care unit at Stanford
University Medical Center on
Wednesday and may be released
from the hospital in three weeks.
Meanwhile, Charles Walker,
who received a new heart and
.lungs at Stanford last Friday, re-
mained in critical condition.
However. his recovery haa been
smoo th so far, said a
spokeswoman for the hospital.
KKK cancels ral~y
MERCED <AP) -The Ku
Klux Klan will not hold a march
and rally here this weekend. Bob
Wyer, grand dragon of a klan
unit from Fresno, said the
planned Saturday rally was
called off because of threats.
neighborhood are no longer OC·
cu pied by the original owners.
Ms . Miller said supervisors
were being shortsighted to de·
mand affordable housing only to
lose the benefits upon the.first re· me. . Stanton and Nestande admitted
speculation controls are needed.
Added Stanton: "Our differences
aren't in the objective but in the
meanstotheend."
The county does have resale
controls for low-cost units
finan~ed by the county's revenue
bond sales In that case, buyers
are screened to make sure they
fail within acceptable income
levels.
Housing prices rise according
to annual increases in the coun-
ty's median income level. which
From Page A1
currently 1s $25,000 for a family of
four. That level went up 12 per-
cent last year. county officials
say.
In a related coastal issue,
supervisors voted 4 to I to oppose
...a.olhM eoas~rmnmiett.t-'-""~
ommendation to seek an ease-
ment for public pedestrian access
through the Emerald Bay private
com mun1ty to the beach.
Emerald Bay is in Laguna.
Supervisor Ralph Clark s ided
with the commission's planning
staff, claiming the policy is con·
sistent with the county's intent to
provide beach access.
But other supervisors said
Emerald Bay should be excluded
because of its protected layout,
prox1m1ly to other public beaches
and Jack of visitor facilities.
WHALING WALL • ••
Wyland says he's trying to work out the parking lot
problem with the owners, adding that the longer it takes
him to complete the wall. the deeper he'll go in debt.
So far. contributions to the Whaling Wall have
amounted to only $500 -and all that came from one
generous couple.
"Sure. I'm still accepting donations," the youthful
artist grins. "I'm really going in the hole with this thing."
But even if he doesn't break even with the mural. he
thinks it's worth the effort.
HIS MAIN CONCERNS are the preservation of
whales and sealife and the presentation or art in public
places, especially Laguna Beach.
When the predominantly turquoise. blue and gray
mural is completed, it will show a 60-foot gray whale and
her calf, a couple of dolphins, some sea lions on a rock.
and detail work "authentic down to the barnacles,"
Wy land says.
H you're interested in seeing the artist at work, and
maybe tossing a couple of bucks his way. you can find
him 20 feet orr the ground, leaning against the wall of the
Fahrenheit 451 bookstore, air compressor in hand.
But you'd better get there early. He's cleaned up an<;t
gone by mid-morning.
From Page A1
DE P UTY. • •
Eventual l y, s he s aid .
Loudermilk drove her to UC
Irvine Medical Center in Orange
for treatment oI a hand cut she
suffered when she freed her left
hand from the handcuffs.
While that wound was being
stitched and bandaged. Mis11
Jones said she asked the doctor
"six or seven times" to not let
Loudermilk take her to jail.
A female officer on the prem·
ises. however. pushed her into Loudermilk's patrol car and she
was taken to county jail.
She said she ca ll ed the
sheriff's department the follow-
ing day to complain or her treat-
ment.
Right face
for buffalo
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
fact that the buffalo on the Jn.
terlor Department s tationery
faces right now instead of left has
nothing to do with the political
orientation. of secretary James
Watt. a department s pokesman
o;ays.
Douglas Baldwin said Wednes·
day that the old left-facing buffalo
was turned around for artistic
reasons.
Baldwin said he and Walt de·
cided to change the stationery de·
sign by adding the department's
sunset seal and putting the buffalo
above it.
give her
something she's
always wanted.
Pearls
·-·.
. ;:. .
Actor Pat O'Brien, an old Hollywood colleague of President Reagan, was co-host
with Nancy Reagan at a White House gathering to honor 185 /oster grandparents.
O'Brien, 81, starred with the president in the film "Knute Rockne."
It's a good life, Herman
Talmadge says, lending
garden, jogging and fishing.
But the former powerful U.S.
senator says the addiction lo
politics is a hard one to over·
come.
Talmadge served 24 years
in the Senate before being de-
feated in November after a
battle with alcoholism and an
investigation of his finances.
"If l 'd ke pt a diary. I could
have written a best-seller,"
he~~ud-in afl interview, ad·
ding he had no plans to write
a book.
The 67-year old poltiCian
says he's enjoying the quiet
life at his home in Lovejoy,
Ga., al least for now.
.. Politics 1s like heroin ad-
diction · it's hard to shake,"
he said
John Young and Robert
Crippen, who flew the space
shuttle Columbia on its suc·
cessful maiden flight, will
meet with President Reagan
at the White House on May
19.
The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration
announced that they also will
spend several days next
month at the Paris Air Show.
Entertainer Lena Horne (left) gets hug from actress
Debbie Reynolds backstage at New York's
Nederlander Theater after f'eTformance of Miss
Horne's show,·· Lena Horne: The Lady and Her
Music.''
Gregory R. Anrig, who pre·
sided over Massachusetts'
schools during the turmoil of
Boston school desegregation,
will become president of the
Educational Testing Service.,
in September.
Anrig, 40, announced that
he wlll succeed Joh n W.
Turnbull, who is resigning
after 11 years as the head of
the Princeton, N.J ., service.
Late snow hits Rockies
Mobile, Ala., flooded, East fog leads to collisions
C.Oastal. iooather
Sm•ll craft ed,.lsory outer COHt.I
w•I•,. Point Conception to Sen
Hlco1 .. 1~ lor nor1h-•I wlnot IS
to U knob wit~ ' to 10 loot comblM<I
ffH, decruslng lonlQM. EIMwhere,
119111 verl•Dlt wind• D.comln9
wHtert, 10 lo 1' knoU In •lier,_.
Petchy row cloudlneu •outhern
••t•r,, olherwls• fair through
1onron1
V.S. swnmary
A llorm DrouQhl snow •nd Icy
rO.Os lo PMts ol Mont.n., ColOr-
•nd Wyomlnv on WtdMsd•Y. ~11.
ru lcltnll of Mol>lle. Al•., moc>l)ed up
•lier flff\IY lklOdlng. Ofl the e .. 1
Cont, -en~llt, denH f09 con-
lr1DulecJ to I-tl'llp tollltlOM, -ol
which lnJurecJ ea peoj)le.
Eltt-., lhe Wffther wes l•lr In
IN GrtM ~-...0 Hor1,..m Pleln•.
aunn' In Ille Soul-I -Southern Callfornla. and r~ny In perts of the
EHi,
T~t Rocky -...1eln "°"" DrOUQlll
• wernl119 to Uoc:kmen lo PHIKt
n•w·l>Om 11.,..1tock. Al\ advisory •Ito
..... lu-by '"" N•tion.r WNlher Service wtrnlno trevele" of
hU•rdous ClrlvlnQ conditions thr°"911
Thursbty In mount.In er••·
The storm ayst..., wu "'°"lno "''
prec:ecJlne • c.o1e1 rront enc1 ~"' r•ln or snow from NIOnt•M to the
HebrHIUI llrw. Up to J '"' ol snow WH UP«l.0 In the MoftttM ,..._.
l•ln" with lesser emounta In Wyom·
Int tn4 Coloredo.
In Mobllt, K hOOh were closed Wtdrwadey and lluftdreclt of resldeftts
cle-d...., as lloodwwtten receded alter I ln<het ot rtln fell In st. hOurs
Tuesd•Y nl9'1t. Polk• clOMd • lhr ... mile strelcll of tnle"late '5 for
ttver•I "°"" --llflOges end rotda ..,.,. wu.lled out. No Injuries
were reported
At tDoul the ••m• time,
me•nwhl .. , two lrelQMors collided
off IM COMI ol \/lrolnl•. Ho l"l""'"
were r-1ed. llUI crew....., from
one ol tM 1111~ Md lo huddle In
llfeboeU for more ,,,.., I-'-"'•
l)efore lltlflo rtte'*'· Temper.tures around ll• Miion .t
mldoy w.dneldty rtnlled from" I"
Bulle. -.. to '1 In Of-. Flt •
uuifomia
Southern CtllfMftlt will lie fair
thro.19h Frltley, ncept for ~l<"Y
·-C 1°"'8 tl0f'l9 tM COHl lt le fllght tlld morning houn. TM mountalnt
end deaeru wllt htve wul to
northwut wl11ds Wermer dey1
•heed.
Highs In Ortn{llt Couttty wlll r-h
Ille ""'"' Mia .t the -het. mid 70. 1111-. L-JO to !J.
l11falld va11..,_ CM\ ...-ct llllM t•
NY •lld l'"rldrt In tlW 7Cll, IOWS 111 , ... sos.
Mount.Ins will hew wlllda 91f6tlne
". ' .... o ... \ ,.,,,
1S le JO mpll. High~ In IN .0.. L-1 ISIOO.
Hort,.,.,. deterU un e•Slkt wllldl r•Kfllno ~ ... _ 20 enc1 u
m1>11 al tlmn llWOUOh Frloy. HIQM
75 to u. io-s In the SO.. Southern -.
serts wlll tlto tit"" wlnda tit-1S
alld 1' """"· HIQM IS to ts, lows Ill the Mis.
Northern encl Central Ctlll«11I•
ltlr thrOUgh Friday with wermer
Hys -.cl. CO.ttal I-CIO\ICIS In·
cretalllO tonllflt-Ff'1ea\t MClrnlno.
Temperatures
8rownsvlll• • 70
8uff•IO Sl 41
Cheri tin SC 11 ..
Cherllln WV n '1
Cheyenrw S7 41 Chl<tQO so l7
Clevel•nd S2 42 Columbtn ~ 0
0•1 Flwth 16 SI Oe"ver .. S1 Oe1Molrw1 u .. Detroit SS 41 Duluth SI 1' Felrt:..nllt " 40 Htrllord " SJ
Helen• so ,.
Honolulu n .. Hou at on 111 ..
lndn•1>ll$ 60 0 Jacunvlle u 60
JUM•u 75 )1
Keno City ., S1
Lea lleQtl IS SS Llllle Rock •7 SI
CALlflOlllOA
A1>t>I• lltlley M o e ... ersf'91d 11 ~
lltrll-U SI
llffum-74 so
lllthop 15 l7
aty!M t4 •1
c.talln. 70 M
Culver City 71 S4
El Centro • S7 Eurek• S7 42
Fr""° 1' S1
L•k• Ar,,,...,.ed 66 ,.
Ltncestw 12 n L.ont 8-1\ 72 SS Lot Angelet 71 S7
Mt rysvll.. 77 4'
Monrovia IO 41
Monterey U 4S
Allleny
Albuqw
NHdltt .. U
10 4.1 NtwPof'l 9Mcll .. 60 A _.. Oekt-61 4' ,,. .... , ....
An<Mf' ...
Alhevll ..
AUtftW
Alltntk City ... u .......
a1nn1nQM> 11-•rck ..... a.atofl
76 JO Oftt.r.. 76 s.
s• 11 "••m s.w119 " 4t " " ..... "*" 7f ,. 72 61 llUvenl• 74 SS u li1 lled •luff ,. ..
.. St lledwOOd City n 41 7J " .. _ •t ,.
6J Jt Secr•mento 74 4.1 f1 13 $allttH 61 ,.
SI _.. Sett aarnercllno 11 J1 There •• no etCUf'ete nllrntte ol
P'oPer1Y ~. olflclala Mid, Dul
publk P\Allk ~kl C-IMIMtf
L•mMrt Mims Nici, "lrs _, vou
call. 111 lftY ~. • tttaslrotlfW. •• Soulliem Calif omia wrf report
SMO!eto 70 H
Sllft l'rarK!Ke 6J JO
S..J-11 ...
Salll• •artier• .. 41 tn H-Yon llMtlw, IN sttten
tataftCI fwry, cerrylftt 2,JGO r\19'Mlour
cOMmvttn, we -Oit s..1 .. of
Llller1Y Wiien II c.tllded with the
tlttltlht.,. Heotlt Orcllltl et allOUt 7:20
t .m. t:DT, 111Jwlne ea ,_..,., of· llclelt ,.Id. l'eur ef tMm were
""9ft•llr.d Ill Mtltlec1ory cOlldlllott.
._. ........ S...t.Cnn 1S 4.1
A"' ... DW S.11lt Mwlt " •
I I SW Q. • .,. .!J~-~ : :: ur.u., moon, tUM!ll
t a SW
TOOAY
l'l"t 1-•:su.m. .1,1
---------------------------------• P'lmll.., 1:17111.m. a7
We're Listening.~.~
What do you like about ta.. Dally Pilot? What don't you Uke?
Call the num ber below lltd your mesaa1e will be rec:Orded, tranac.rl~ and deUvered to the appropriate editor.
'The same 2.t-bour auwerln1 tervice may be used to reeord
letters to tbe editor on aa,~ Mailbox ~trlbuton m~t ln·
elude t.belr um• and t.elepllOM aumber for ftriftcadoo. No
clrculatl<JQ. calla, please. '
~ell UI what's on your In.ind. Aa•fJ088.
I
\
'"" .... 7:• 111.m., 11-. Tll..,....y J:ff •.m.
Moon ..u 10: .. p.m.,'•'-~
.. , t :ll•.m.
Orange Coast DAILY PJ.LOTfThursday, May 7, 1981 s A.3 , I
Rapist
claillls
disorder
A convicted rapist who
represented himself in Orange
County Superior Court now says
he was mentally. incompetent at
the ti me and "incapable of
properly defending himself."
In a hand·written letter to
Judge Francisco Briseno. who
presided over his lengthy trial.
Ty Glen Clayton said he believed
he was "and still is Incompetent
to stand trial" or face sentenc-
ing later this month.
"Tbe defendant was incapable
of properly defending himself
because of that incompetence
and I would ask that the court
stop all criminal proceedings at
this time and grant a hearing
. .. to find if the defendant was
and is in fact incompetent," the
letter states.
Clayton , 30, a resident of
Westminster. was convicted of
rape in April by a jury even .~~..;...::.:, __ ..... ~;,;,..~:...;;~-------------------:-:---------""';'----1 houjh-~the~~~ost"'-
important witness the victim
her&,1lf committed suicide
befo?'e proceedings began.
Clayton, a previously convict-
ed rapist, was accused of sexual·
ly assaulting Kimberly Prentice
of Huntington Beach at his
apartment in June 1980, 10
weeks after his parole from
state prison.
In the letter to-Briseno, the de·
fendant said that even though he
still believes he is innocent, he
a lso feels he is "incompetent
and has greatly deteriorated
overthryears and because of
this hi s ability to JUdge what is
best for hi s defense has been .... .,..,,.....
greatly impaired."
Clayton also asked the judge
to appoint lw6 psychiatrists to
examine him to determine if he
should be sentenced as a mental·
ly disordered sex offender.
MYTH NO MORE -Lancelot, an attraction at Marine World
near San Francisco, is being heralded as the first
"medieval unicorn" in 500 years. The year.old animal, with
er single 10-inch horn in the middle of its forehead, was pro-
duced from Angora poat stock.
Of! icial hit for Bergeson blast
By 0. C. HUSTINGS
Of U.. Di141J ...... S\tff
The vice president of the
Corona del Mar Republican As·
·' sem bJy is being criticized by his
own members as being "out of
line" in attacking Newport
Beach Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson's voting record.
David Dykstra, a Newport ac·
countanl, used the Republican group's stationery for his
critical letter last month to Mrs.
,Be rgeson.
He also sent copies of lbe let·
ler to three local politicians, the
California Republican Assembly
and the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce.
But colleagues in the Corona
del Mar Republican group claim
Dykstra failed to gel~ board
permission before issuing his at
tack.
·'The letter makes it look like
he·s speaking for the whole
group," says Al Cook. a past
president of the assembly "We
told him he was out of line and
definitely s houldn't use our sla·
tionery.'·
Cook claims the Corona del
Mar group is "devoted" to Mrs
Bergeson and has no qualms
with .her voting record.
"Mr. Dykstra is an eager and
smart man but his politics are
m ore on the Genghis Khan
side," Cook suggested. "He's ul·
tra conservative."
Dykstra· says his pohllcs are
in tune with the group's
"I don't believe 1t was a mis·
take to use lhe stationery and l
never indicated I was express-
ing the group 's opinion."
Dykstra commented.
In the letter, Dykstra noted he
w as ··shocked and disappointed"
at Mrs Bergeson 's voting pal·
te rn on issues relating to spend·
ing.
With extraordinary savin9s of 25°/o
Impeccable comfort and beauty. Unsurpassed quality.
Incomparable values All of this can only descrtbe
our popular H eritage• best-seller upholstery sale
a rare opportunity to save on the finest in
custom upholstery.
Our selection is wide and varied -each piece
meticulously tailored by hand to create the ultimate
in quality. 800 fabrics and a delightful range of
modular. sofa. love seat and chair styles ensures
handsome compatibility with your decor. And the
reductions will blend beautifully with your budget.
Make your selections today . . this is an investment
in quality furniture you will enjoy for years!
"~·· ' '-Reg. Sl,53811
SALE '1,149°0
Reg. '64211
SALE s47goo
Reg. S6Q5Dt
SALE s449oo
Your Favorite O.srgnar Wtll Be Happy To Asslll You
+-
Reg. s713oo
SALE s529oo
Reg. si ,34411
SALE sgggoo
M.J.GAl\RETf fU~NITU~E
PROFESSIONAL HOUAI : Mon. thru Thura. 10 •·"'· '°I p.m. 221 S HAHOI ILVD.
lflllTERIOR DESIGNERS Frt. 10 e.m. to I p.m. let. 10 e.m. to l:SO p.m. COST A MESA 60-027S
s Otange Coast OAILV PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 NATION I WORLD
French ponder
Socialist bid
Vendor,.91,
back after
fleeing
,. ............
PARIS <AP) -The eJecUoo of
Socialist Party leader Francois
Mitterrand in Sunday's prea·
ldential election would mean
major social and economic
changes in France. But it would
not bring Marxist.style collec·
tivlsm or sign.lflcant alterations
in lts lndependent·llne foreign
policy. many political analysts
here say.
Mitterrand's own campaign
team tries to present him as not
much diflernt from social dem-
ocrats in power in other West
European countries.
There has been no handover of
power from the right to the left
since the Firth Republic was
established by Charles de Gaulle
in 1958 and much or what hap-
pened would depend on currents
within Mitterrand's own party
as well as on what French Com·
munists decide to do.
Mitterrand, 64, making his
third try for the presidency in
the campaign that winds up Fri·
day, has tried to reassure those
centrist voters he needs to win
that there would be no fun·
damental change in the
privilege and prosperity many
middle-class French now enjoy.
He has also separated himseU
from his former allies, the Com·
munists.
BURNED UP Irish demonstrators hold burning British
Union Jack aloft otUside British Consulate in New York
City. They were among hundreds from various Irish na-
tionalist organizations protesting starvation death of IRA
guerrilla Bobby Sands.
President Valery Giscard
d'Es taing, 55, trying for a
second seven-year term in the
race of some polls which show
him trailing, has become in·
creasingly strident in predicting
that a Mitterrand victory would
'Volks-rocket' planned
E x-Nav y ~aptain aims to launch j unkyard part s
MIAMI <AP) A retired Navy captain says
he plans to launch a collt!,ction of junkyard parts
he calls his "Yolks-rocket" 63 miles into space
with a man aboard.
Robert Truax. a 63 ·year-old aeronautical
engineer, is determined to launch the world's first
privately funded and produced manned rocket,
and has picked Miami as the site.
"We've been offered launch sites all over the
world, but we want to keep it an All·American
project," said John Feeny, a vice president in
charge of promotion Cor Truax's lhree·man firm in
~aratoga, Calif.
"This is the perfect area . . . It seemed a
natural because Miami has had such bad publicity
and this could help turn it around," he said.
Feeny, a University of Miami graduate. will
m eet with Dade County officials later this week to
discuss making a launch from here.
Truax said one reason why he chose Miami is
that he thinks he can raise the additional $1 million
he needs to get the project off the ground by selling
tickets to tourists at the launching. He said he has
already raised $250,000 and chipped in $250,000 of
his own money.
"One way to do it is to take advantage of the
public interest that seems to be there and sell
ti ckets to the launch site. And the county
auth.orities seemed to .reel it will attract enough
tourist trade to make at good for business in the
area," he said.
Truax said four of six tests of his rocket so far
have been s uccessful.
•'I've been collecting parts over the years, just
rescuing them from the junk heap, because I
couldn't bear to see such beautiful machines
melted down for scrap," he said. "I fit them
together until I came up with something that had
enough capacity to lirt a man high enough so it
could be counted as a space flight." High enough,
he sajd, is 63 miles. The rocket would land in the
sea and be picked up by boats.
National Aeronautics and Space Administra-
tion officials say they don't feel threatened by
Truax's venture. NASA spokesman Dick Young said he wasn't
familiar with the technical aspects of Truax's
project. "but they said the Wright brothers were
crazy, too. so who.is to say this won't work?"
Truax, meanwhile, is sifting through 4,000 ap-
plications from would·be astronauts. He himself is
"too chicken" to man the first launch, which he
feels could come as soon as a year from now.
MX runs into Mormons
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -The Mor mon
Church's plea that the MX missile system not be
based in Utah and Nevada, could have "enormous
ramifications" on proposals to base the missile in
the area, two governors say.
But an Air Force spokesman says "there's
very little we can do about it."
Church President Spencer W. Kimball, 86, re-
vered as a prophet by 4.7 million Mormons, urged
Tuesday that President Reagan not base the giant
mobile missile system in Utah and Nevada, as the
Air Force proposes.
An Air Force general said the effect of the
statement by the mostly conservative and
staunchly anti·communlst church hierarchy would
be "not inconsiderable." Results of polls and
special ballot questions in Utah and Nevada con-
'
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan auociation
OPEN MON . FHI. H A .M . 6 P .M .
SATURDAY JO A .M . 4 P .M .
Executive Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave.. FSfic
Huntington Beach, CA 928-47
Southtrn Ctllfornl• l#gloll•I OlflcH: --·-.. .._.._ ___ _
Mn E. La Palma Aw., Anaheim, CA 92807
8065 Valley View St., Buena Park, CA 90820
1654 Arnelll Rd . Cemartllo, CA 93010 20715 S. '••Ion Blvd .. Clr,oo CA 9074& 23021 Like Center Or , (Lalla ~or111), El TOfo, CA 92930
1001 E. lmpe1lal H,.I LI Habt8, CA 90631 Gl 41~ Long Beach BML, Long Beech, CA 90807 • 22IKl8 HlwthotM Bl¥d., Tooance, CA 90606
IOI& ltvlne Blvd., Tuatln, CA 92880 U)llM
230 N Cltrw A~ .. Wnt Covin-. CA 11793 ~~~RC
ufll~rt Aoom" ,.,.ll•bl• on• mllWd bflafl
2nd TRUST DEEDS
OWMH/MON0"1• OCCUP\ID
Call Wllllam B. MltCMll
Call tOdtr'f for quoi. • Ho oOltoalion llOr'4 na1lonOI Udng
(7141 975-1121 ===
sistentJy have shown a majority oppose the MX.
"We've known that lt was coming, but there's very
little we can do about It," said Maj. Robert Mc-
Mains. chief Air Force MX spokesman ln Utah.
Missile backers and critics alike said Kimball's
position could have substantial impact on the is·
sue. since over two.thirds of Utah residents are
church members and Mormons make up 7 percent
of Nevada's population.
Moreover, lt is a tenet of Mormon faith that
Kimball speaks for God in spiritual matters. And
while offic1aJly shunnini partisan politic•, church
leaders also take stands on what they believe to be
moral issues. Kimball's opposition to the Equal
Rights Amendment Is an example.
Both Gov. Scott Matheson of Utah and Gov.
Bob List or Nevada oppose the system.
FREE FOR MOM!
WHEN DAD OR THE
KIDS GET A 1 YR.
MEMBERSHIP.
n .... Fri., w. & s-d9y _., Ex"'" i-Io.I I
• Nautilus Equip.
• Large Spa
• OrySauna
• Steam Room
• Life Cycles
• Olympic Weights
• Karate Classes
• Aerobic Classes
CALL NOW
675-1171
. ... ·-~-.... ·~~-.. ·-.... _. ....... .....-. ... ~ .... ··-...... .......... ..-. "'
mean Communist order or
Sociallat disorder.
In contrast to the semi·
monetarism ol Gis~ard d'Esta·
ing who hu tried to create a
rree market economy, Mitter-
rand believes in state control
and would seek a return to the
old system of economic planning
that Glscard d 'Estaln1 has
dropped.
In the campaign, Mitterrand
has soft·pedaled some of bis pro·
grams to pick up moderates but
there ls expectation that Wlder
his presidency some industries
would be nationalized, amona
them arms makers and the re-
maining private banks.
The analysts said they foresee
an attempt to tax the rich in an
effort to redistribute the coun-
try's wealth as well as tax ex·
emptions for people at the lower
end of the salary scale.
But economis t Jacques
Plassard, who supports Giscard
e'Estaing, excludes any
possibility of Mitterrand adopt·
mg Marxist collectivism.
"It won't be the apocalypse
with a gulag at the end of the
road ," he s ays. ·
Foreign policy has played
more of a role in this election
campajgn than previous ones,
with Mitterrand, among others,
accusing Glscard d' Es laing of
being weak toward the Soviet
Union.
But experts at the privately
run French Institute for lnterna·
tional Affairs said they expected
Mitterrand to continue the same
independent line that de Gaulle
laid down.
ln their view he would con-
tinue to maintain France's role
as a potential mediator between
the superpowers but maintains
the Soviet Union should not be
allowed to have its own way in
Afghanistan and Poland.
SEAL ADDED The
Presidential Seal is attached
above the door to the
entrance of the West Wing of
the White House, which
houses the senior staff ·as
well as the Oval Office
while a U.S. Marine guard
stands duty.
Rabies battle d
MILAN, Italy (AP> -Some
400,000 dogs in the Lombardy
region will be given anti·rabies
shots to prevent an epidemic or
the disease being s pread by
foxes , regional health
authorities sajd.
MIAMI (AP ) -William
"Pop" Miller, a 91 ·year·old
newspaper vendor who disap-
peared for six days arter belnl
accused of a $1.38 theft, ls back
on his street corner with bis
mind at ease.
He no longer has to fear pros-
ecution on a shoplifting char1e.
The charge bas been dropped
and Hillsborough State Attorney
E.J . Salcines said the case will
be dismissed formaHy.
"Mr. Miller has absolutely
nothing to worry about,"
Salcines promised following
Miller's return. "He wiJl not be
prosecuted."
The fear of prosecution
prompted Miller's sudden
odyssey last week, on the eve ol
a court appearance. He was
charged with stealing an 80-cent
package of candy and a 58-ceot
bag of smoked ham from a
downtown supermarket on April
11.
Friends, ministers, politicians
and attorneys worried aloud
about Miller's disappearance
from the downtown street comer
where he has hawked the Tampa
Tribune for the past 22 years.
The oldtimer, howev'er, knew
nothing of their concern. He was
too preoccupied with a mission
to defend his honor.
He said he traveled by bus and
plane to J acksonviUe, Boston,
Louisville, Ky .. Charlotte, N.C.,
Savannah, Ga ., and St.
Petersburg to see brothers, sis·
ters, cousins and friends and ex-
plain personally he was inno-
cent.
Miller calls it "character."
"Character Is something I've
always had and I didn't want to
lose in Croat of ·em," be said.
"I'd do it again in a minute. A
man's character is a big thing.
They were trying to take my
charActer away from me."
M~tl)er's Day
ASSORTED
MUSIC
BOXES
reg. 19.99
15aa
2 .49 144 ••.
24% LEAD
CRYSTAL
HEART
BOX
4a9
SPECIAL PURCHASE
SILK & DRIED CUSTOM'
ARRANGEMENTS
A. BudVase
Arrangement
B. Basket/Swan
Arrangement
Limited
Ql,llntlty
lliUt'I
TOIDOW
WHKLY
MANA OEM
8'!CIAl,I
6''··
8''··
LOIMmL.18 Cl'1., .. ,_, .. , HUNTlltOTOll llACM (11., ........
WllTCCMNA .. ,,, ..... ,,
•-i.·--·
O~OAOVI
'" •• t»4tlO I
l.AIMADA
(1'1, ......... ,
.. .. -.. ...
MOSKATEL'S EXCLUSIVE
''MOM''
CANVAS BAG
by "Its me again"
A great tote for beach,
picnics. knitting, etc.
SPECIAL
PURCHASE 5aa
METALLIC
SILK FLOWERS
(in Sliver & Gold)
30% OFF
SWEETH~AT
BUD VASES
Single stem 1.09
Double stem 1.19
POTPOURRI
20% OFF
We carry all the necessary
ingredients -aromatic plants,
herbs, spices and oils.
FREE POTPOURRI CRAFTING BOOKLET
See our collection of Deherware metalware
boxes with the look of fine porcelain .
perfect for Potpourri.
BRASS 4 '' POT OR
WATERING CAN
reg. 6 .99
4~ •.
HEY KIDS •••
Make a Gift For Mom
SAT., MAY 9th
Call 1tore nearest you
fOf' more details
TUZANA
(111• .. ,., ...
Sale ends
Sun .. May 10
TOMANCI
(211,UM741
IAN DelQO l.A MlaA UCONOIOO m•H..e1u (lt•,117..Ult (1 Mt41MM7
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 s
' Sailor's death probed as ship docks
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The skip-
per of the USS Ranger says he
bad a "fine conversation" by
telephone with the father of a
young crewman whose con-
troversial death aboard ship last
month ls being Investigated.
"I asked him to have faith in
us," said Capt, Dart Pedersen,
chief officer on the 96,000-ton
flattop, "th~l we were honest
and that a thorough investiga-
tion was being made."
P edersen. speaking after the
ship's arrival Tuesday following
eight months at sea, said the
phone conversation with William
Trerice of Algonac, &iich., oc-
curred in Hawaii. He told re-
porters afterwards, "Thal was
not an easy phone call to make."
The parents or dead crewman
Paul Trerice, 21, filed ' a $3.1
million lawsuit last week in
Detroit alleging he died as a re·
suit of assault by men in charge
or the disciplinary unit.
Asked to r espond to the
parents' suit, Pedersen said :
"Wh at can I say?"
The 4,700 men of the Ranger
were given u loud and joyous
welcome by 3,600 relatives and
friends, but it was dampened by
the growing dispute over the
death of Trerice.
''Il made the last days very,
very difficult for all of us," said
Pedersen. But he declined com·
ment on the death.
The Navy said an autopsy
showed Trerice died April 14 of
heat stroke while taking part in
group exercises for brig inmates
on the flight deck at Sub1c Bay
in the Philippines. He was being
confined for being absent
without leave during a stopover
in Hong Kong.
Trerice had been on a bread·
and.water diet for at least two
days before he died
The Wayne County, Mich ..
medical examiner was hired by
the Trerice family to conduct an
autopsy Although he still seeks
tissues from the organs removed
for the Navy's investigation, Dr.
Werner Spitz i.aid Trence had
become violent in reaction to
heat stri>k e.
He said the 6-foot-5 230-pound
sailor was restrained so violent-
ly that several fingers and a
thumb were •dislocated and hls
chest and arms bruised badly.
Another suit against the Navy
was Ciled after Trerice's death
by a Philadelphia attorney on
behalf of four other Ranger
sailors who claimed they were
beaten by guards.
The death was the first of his
five overseas tours, Pederson
said
' 'WHAT CAN 1 SAY''
Capt. Dan Pedersen July coast permit change backed Girls bought
in India
Litt/,e danger
seen to Jews
NEW YORK <AP)-Despite
a wave of anti-Semitic incidents
reported last year in the United
States, it would be "a mi~take''
to view the trouble as a
dangerous sign for Jews, a study
says.
•'The current outbreak or
anti-Semitic vandalism should
be viewed against the alarming
increases in all kinds of
crimes," the American Jewish
Committee said in a report.
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The
Assembly resources commiltee
has approved a bill to let coastal
cities and counties that are
halfway finished with coastal
protection plans begin issuing
building permits July l.
At the same time the Energy
and Natural Resources Commit-
tee rejected two measures to re·
peal the entire 1976 Coastal Act.
One , AB1425 by As -
sembly woman Marian
Bergeson. R-Newport Beach,
would have repealed the law Ju.
ly 1, 1983, unless the Legislature'
decided to retain it. It was de-
feated by a 4-3 vote.
The vote for the permit bill,
AB385 by committee Chairman
Thomas Hannigan, 0 -Fairfield,
was 7-l. It goes to the Ways and
Means Committee
AB385 addresses the problem
of who will iss ue butldtnf( permits on the state's 1,100-mile
coastal zone after July 1
The Coastal Act, passed to
protect the coast from over·
development, set up a 12·
member state Coast a f Com-
mission and six regional com-
m issions. All 67 cities and
counties a long the coast must
write local coastal plans and get
them approved by the s tate com-
mission by July 1 After final .!E_·
prov al, they can begin issuing !>lrcamlined procedure for small NEW DELHI, India <AP) -A
their own building permits. The building projects. girl can be purchased for half
regional commissions, which Two rival bills, backed by the price of a water buffalo in a
have ~een issuing building local governments and de· flesh market in central India
permits. cease existing July 1. velopers, would have let the that supplies brothels, the ln-
1 r locals lake Ov"r the permit pro· dian Express reports. However. Peter Doug as o the " R rt Ash · · s · · Coastal Commission said only 33 ccss, even if they hadn't finished epo er wmi . ann, lD .a
Of 106 Plans · .. -d • t~ewph~s-front page story. ,said be paid some c1t1eS' an . , . H $288 for....a...-~wig..womaa . .dw:iAll---·· counties sphl thei~ r-turve Te--Hanntg1'Ht'9 ft>mpr~m~-bt -h' r th . r r f ceived stale approval for the would let the local issue permits this fol urh.mtrond ~nvelhs igMa ion o · d after they get government ap· e es a e in e oreoa-f1r s t part of the process. the Ian 1 f th 1 d 1 _ Dholpur region 155 miles south use plan. Even fewer have prova 0 .e . an ~s~ Pan of New Delhi. finished the zoning ordinances to ~e~ore the final ordinances are . . . I k'd· . finished He said teen age g1r s 1
gel fmal approval. llis bill also attempted to win napped from villages throughout
H annigan's bill originally local government support by India and neighboring Nepal are
would have had the state com· ma king approval of land use brought to. the market ·for sale to
mission issue building permits plans easier. but that was reject-brothels tn Bombay. Calcutta
after Ju I y 1 . adding a ed by committee memb rs. and other Indian cities.
----~ 1< -------------
r.=======& IWMTIMCTOM cone • EXIT IUCH llYD. ======;i
ROSENTHAL
OPEN STOCK DINNERWARE
SALE 20o/o off On Saturday, May 9,
14 KT. GOLD CHARMS
• f HOI< E
Since 1927
iii 0 ~
Q ... u
0 J
It ,, • .JI during month of May
The Uf)Pef Crust. a
new adcl111on to the famous Ptlllhps· Chicken
Pot Pie St'q)S, 16 opeoing in Seacliff Village
And the ktlle UpptW Crustaceens who ruo lfle
place really knOW hOW to how a party And
how a Fnsbf!e
They'll be holding a Frisbee ConteS1 at
1ttet1 Village Gr.nl Openng on May 9 com
at 11:30 am,
Hundreds of Fl ing
Discs will Invade
Seacliff Village.
piste Wllt1 tree Fnsbees !of everyone ano
pnzes lo< the contest wimefs.
In addltiOrl to the Fnst>ee Cor1l8sl lhere'I
be tree pony ndes. t>erOs and a "chdcen
pie wall<"
So oome out to the Uf)Pef Crust In Seedill
Wlage and celebrale their Gr.nl Oper*1g on
Saturday, May 9 lrom I 1 30 to 3 30 ~( YOUR S 2 200
,. I rlc r ....... ,,, Se•so~y P•<ed
~£U1ffit~ Choose from any or our 22 patterns. the besl china services rrom
the Baroque, Rococo and Ar1 Nouveau eras designs that have
endured the age~ around the IA<Orld
The Upper Crust Grand Opening
and Frisbee Contest
HUMTINGTOM CIEHTIR
HUMTINGTOM IEACH
892-5501
VISA'. Ask about our Bridal Registry
HARIOR CanlR
2300 HARIOR. COSTA MESA
545-9485
the
[]LITTON
what's cooking for 1550
.#0111/~ MICROWAVE l~~.--:-f ~ vvith ~·. (J;~ EVEN WAVE™
{ 11 / ' -1 r c-11
Co me In and see how from
defrosting to cooking to reheating,
Litton helps families eat better. Take
home a Llttom Microwave tod9yl
Whlle They Last
999''
No 1other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, ·planni ng commission,
school and college districts and county
government than the Dlily Plllt
Seacliff Village
Thct C.nter of Attention. For Fun and Games.
2205 Main St., Ht.nt1ngton Beach, CA 92648 714-536-8711 Located 81 Goldenwesl and Yorldown
( 11t·:n;±+
We invite you t;o visit the new LeSportsac Shop in South Coast Plaza.
You'll love the va.st selection of LeSportsao ~sand accessories
including the New"Genera.tion II''tra.nsatla.nt1c sail aloth Bags.
Lelponaao loulb Com Plaaa
3333 Brist.ol Street
Cost& Mesa, CA 92626
7146671263
Lelponaao Wutwood
914 Westwood Blvd.
Westwood, CA 90024
213 208-8822
Lelponaao lanta llonloa
Santa Montoa Place
Beoond Level
2133947027
-------------------...----------~ll!l!l!ll!ll!!llJ!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!l!!! ....... ~
s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thuraday, May 7, 1981
New I rvine village
· p lans /ace obstacles
Ever-expanding Irvi ne saw
still two more-villages being put
on the construction map last
week.
Called Villages 12and14, the two
new communities are to house
40,000 people and include sites for a
hospital, a civic center, parks.
.. schools, offices and commercial
facilities.
Village 12 is bounded by the
San Diego Freeway, Jeffrey
Road. Irvine Center Drive and
Sand Canyon Avenue. Village l!I
Is bowtded by the freeway, San
Diego Cl-eek, Irvine Center Drive
and Culver Drive.
While the Irvine Compa ny
plans (which must be approved
by the City Council> have appeal
in a housing-short county. there
are some reservations.
One of the main difficulties
with the Village 12 area is that it
is impacted by jet noise from El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
In fact, state officials say
that the noise and potential for
crash in the area argue against
the construction of schools there.
The Irvine Company is trying to
take this problem in stride, say-
ing Village 12 will be geared
toward adults and few children
would live there.
Still, the problems of Jet
noise will remain no matter who
Ii ves there and any resident who
moves into the new village should
be aware of this disturbance.
Village 14 faces its toughest
problems in the area of traffic
circulation. Plans call for Jam-
boree Road to be extended through
the Tustin Marine Corps
Helicopter Station. The road would
connect with the Santa Ana
Freeway and is seen as a key
roadway for the village.
However, Marine Corps
representatives say they don't
want Jamboree Road to go
through their compound. Until
this issue is resolved or the com-
pany finds an adequate
alternative, development of
Village 14 could create tremeo-
dous traffic jams in the western
part of Irvine.
Company officials say that
·even before this issue is settled.
they should be allowed to build
some sections of Village 14. The
burden should be placed on them
to prove s uch development won't
lead to traffic-clogged streets.
A more general problem fac
ing both village proposals re
volves around the question of
their financial viability.
Ci ty planners say that res-
idential developments cost more
in city services than they pay in
post-Proposition 13 taxes. Sales
tax revenue is the biggest source
of funding for the City of Irvine.
Long-awaited development of
the "Super Regional Shopping
Center" in the "Golden Triangle"
bounded by the Santa Ana, San
Diego and Laguna freeways
would certainly go a long way in
providing the sales tax revenue
that could support future residen-
tial development in Irvine.
At firs t blush, plans for
Villages 12 and 14 seem im-
pressive. Now the Irvine Com-
pany must prove that these plans
are practical and financially via-
ble for city residents.
Athle-tic program hit
The Huntington Beach Union
High School District may have
the best program of professional
trainers for high school athletes
in the state.
According to district of·
ficials. the system is the only one
in California that hires full-time
trainers.
But according to a hudget
proposal. the trainers may be re-
duced lo part-time employees
next year to save up to $99,000 an-
nually.
By limiting the trainers to 20
hours of work a week, district of-
ficials say that at least two things
will occur.
Trainer service will be cut in
half, -with less trainer attention
given to athletic practice
sessions. And education require-
ments for trainers will be re-
duced from a four-year college
degree and trainer certificate, to
a two-year college degree.
While a saving of $99,000 isn't
a big chunk out of the district's
$42 million operating fund, dis-
trict officials point out the $3.8
million already cut from next
year's budget has affected many
programs. These cuts include re-
ducing s ports programs, laying
o ff teachers, counselors and
librarians, and shortening the
school day for juniors a nd seniors.
District officials say the de-
cision of whether to keep the
trainers full time will depend on
the level of funding for public
education fr om the state
Legislature next year.
It would be unfortunate to re-
duce the high-quality trainer pro-
gram that helps to protect young
athletes, especially football
players, from injury. But it must
be recognized that expenditures
may have to be reduced
somewhere and that other dis-
tricts do well with part-time
.trainers.
~Bay kudos eanwd
As hard as some may find it
. to believe, it appears that prog-
• ress has been made in the effort
· to clean up the silt-clogged Upper
: Newport Bay.
· Officials in Newi>ort Beach.
: with help from county and state
: leaders, have put together a $4
• million cleanup package.
• Unless Gov. Edmund Brown
• Jr. takes a sudden detour on his
announced thinking, much of the
' money that is to come from the
state budget should be available t this year.
While the cleanup project,
which calls for a pa,tiaJ dredging
t of the bay and a deepening of the
main waterway to the bay, will
•
certainly not restore the area. it
is a ~ood start .
Several persons deserve tips
of the hat for their efforts and
stubbornness in pulling the S4
million package together.
County Supe rvisor Thomas
Riley and Newport As ·
semblywoman Marian Bergeson
worked hard on the plan.
But the best arm-twister was
probably Newport Mayor Jackie
Heather with her "Mud Sale" in
the Upper Bay and her frequent
lobbying missions to Sacramento.
Now if only Gov. Brown
doesn't pull one of his last-minute
flip.flops, help will be on the way.
Opinions expressed In the space abOve art. those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex· J pressed oo this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit-
ed . Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone C71~)
M2·~321.
~L.M. Boyd/Name choices
~ • In New York City, more 32-year-
~ old women bear the name of Llnda ~ tban any other moniker. Next there
,. lD that age bracket, in order, come
~Mary . Barbara, Patricia, $uun,
• Kathleen, Carol, Nancy, Marsaret
I' .. aod Diane. Compare these to the
: moat popular names amonc I-year·
•
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
old girls there. Jennifer, Michelle,
Lisa, Elizabeth, Christine, Mana,
Nicole, Kimberly, Oenise and Amy.
It's remarkable, I lhiok, that in Just
24 years -about one ieneraUon -
none of the top·lO preferred names tn
the finst group overlap wttb the top-10
ln tho second group.
Thomas P. H•ley
Publlsher
ThomasKMVU
Editor
B•rbara krelblcb
Editorial Page Editor
--~-==t
Mafia regains dope control
W ASHJNGTON -A House commit·
tee has been seeking Information -and
headlines -by investigating drug use
by Hollywood celebrities. The con-
gressmen might better spend their ef-
forts looking into the huge influx of
heroin that the Mafia is pouring into the
East Coast.
Until recently, the Mob had kept a
low profile, after the disruption caused
by the notorious "French Connection"
and the non-Mafia competition from
Asia. But now the situation has changed
back to the old Sicilian route for im-
portation of hard drugs into the United
States. The dope is funneled from
Southwest Asia into this country by way
of Sicily.
"In the early 1970s, we didn't see the
broad-based involvement of all the
< M a!ia) families," the FBl's organized-
cri me boss, Sean Mcweeney, told my
associate Tony Capaccio. "Now they're
into it up to their ears," he said.
According to a secret Drug Enforce-
ment Administration report, all five
Mafia crime families in the New York
area are involved in the heroin traffic
that used to be the almost exclusive
province of the Vito Genovese and
Thomas Lucchese families.
"U.S. BUYERS of heroin are pre-
dominantly ltallan-Amertcans in the
New York City area who in tum supply
various distribution networks along the
East Coast," states the DEA report.
Two of four Sicilian groups idenlilied by
DEA and Justice Departme nt in-
telligence operations -the Badalamen-
ti and Scaduto factions -are connected
G. -JA-Cl-Al_D_IRS_D_I -d
by marriage to several New York crime
families.
The biggest bust involving organized
crime was the seizure of 40.6 kilograms
or heroin in Milan, Italy, on March 31,
1980. The shipment, which had a street
value of $10 million, was on its way to
the United States. Among those arrest·
ed on this side of the ocean were two
cousins of the late crime boss Carlo
Gambino and reputed Mob figure
Emanuele Adamita.
The Sicilians provide the processing
expertise for the Southwest Asian
opium; their crime brothers In this
country take care of distribution. As the
secret DEA report notes, "Several or-
ganized crime members trafficking in
heroin between Sicily and the U.S. are
some of the same individuals who were
involved in the heroin traffic of the
1960s and early 1970s."
More than 50 kilograms of heroin
have been seized at Kennedy In·
ternational Airport in New York since
December 1977. "This heroin was under
the control of United States and Italian
organized crime figures," the DEA re-port states.
One of those arrested last year in con -
nection with three heroin-conversion
laboratories in Milan and San Remo,
Italy, was Jean J ehan. He is familiar to
American movie and television au-diences as the "Silver Fox" who
escaped when the French Connection
was broken
The resurgence of Maha control over
the drug trade is a result quite simply
of the enormous profit involved The
Mob has been able to recoup after the
imprisonment of many Mafiosi for dope
trafficking in the m1d-1970s The family
ties between Sicily and the United
States were crucial in re-establishing
the drug trade and regaining control
from freelancers.
SATURDAY NIGHT DEAD: Jn the af·
termath of the assassination attempt on
President Reagan, at leaiot 10 bills have
been introduced in Congress lo plug the
loophole in the 1968 Handgun Control
Act that allows unfettered importation
of pistol parts for assembly in this coun-
try as Saturday Night Specials.
Incredibly, the government en·
couraged the production of cheap
handguns a few years ago when it quiet·
ly lowered the tariff on imported gun
parts .
Mesa art c ontroversy s par k s d e bate
To the Editor:
If Ali Roushan goes to jail for his
artistic beliefs and faith in the Constitu-
tion, Costa Mesans better be prepared
for a wave of public reaction across this
slate and country.
The cultural commissars on thi City
MAILBOX
Council will have stood up and hollered
to the world that here in Oranee County,
in 1981, an artist who creates and dis-
plays works without prior government
approval will be harassed, intimidated,
coerced and eventually jailed.
In the Soviet Union an art.iat who db·
plays his work without government ap-
proval is jailed; in Costa Mesa an artllt
who displays his work without govem·
ment approval is jailed! Liberty ls
mocked, justice abused and Costa
Mes ans grow sleek in real estate
speculation. Shame on us all. A com-
m unity day of mourning should be
declared.
J.P. PALMER
Who be~/ its most?
To the Editor:
I notice that on the April 21 Dally Pilot
there's an article titled ''Freeze Put On
Federal Booklet," calling attention to
booklets such as organic iardening,
mulch, etc., u being wasteful govern-
ment expenses. I quote from the article,
''during these difficult economic times
we cannot afford to waste time and
money on activities that bave limited
benefits to tbe people of this country."
OF COURSE In whote opinlon tbal
benefit ls limited, J don't know. But la
"Study Undertaken'' it says the Reatan
administration has commlaaloned a
study oft.he World Bank todetermi.Mtflta
lendine 9racUce1 have encoura1ed
socialist aovernmenta at the apenae ol
prlvateenterpriae.
It aeema lrooic that one 1tud1 II lauda-
ble and acceptable to the Reqan ad·
ministration and not waa~ but these
others a.re. Apparently whoever ftlakea
these determlnat.lona ls . blued. preJ·
udiced and la iotnc to determlDe for UM
real ol us ln the tnae Lradidon ol Bll
Brother what h11 benefit for tbe peop.a. ol
the country and wbatdoeaa 'L
MIKE POSTO
26 letter from Tom Williams concerning
Murry Cable's article titled "Master
Plan Will Quiet lhe Skies Over John
Wayne Airport.''
I
MUll&AY ACCORDING to Williams:
"the people in Newport Beach who
are opposed to the county's insane ex·
pansion of John Wayne Airport are simp-
ly a social group."
''People who are able to afford a life in
the Newport Beach area should be the
people who should have to suffer the emo-
tion al disturbance caused by the
airport."
No such statements were made by
Murry.
The problem becomes that when you
mis take facts or misquote people. you put
into jeopardy the whole case. It makes no
difference where the discussion is, clos·
Ing of schools, airport expansion or find-
ing an alternative airport.
JIM de BOOM
Blame miAplaced
To lhe Editor:
This revision of the Mike Peters car-
toon you published April 19 iB a more
appropriate misdirection of attention.
The car ls quite frequently uaed as a weapon, to run down victims. But It ls
the driver that ls blamed, not the car.
Even If the cause la a defective
automobile, the blame will be placed oo
the people who bullt lt. Now, because of
recent reluin1 of government stand·
ard1, tbey can produce even less aafe
111d more polluting vehicles. However.
death by automobile ta accepted as
though death by nature.
I AM NOT acaiDlt cars. Tbla ls Just
an UitJDpJe to ahow the unbalanced
preju .. e toward t'1na. Ftve people murdered by a car, used u a weapon,
brtnc nowhere near the public outrase
u on• penon lbot by a ,un.
Wilen someone la •bot. wblH la the
blam"e placed? On Ute operNc>r cl the aun ... with tbe operator ol the car?
No. tbe ,_ la blamed I
Al f« tbe crt mlnal behind Ute fljll),
our law ayatem wlll protect him. ~eya lbow taat 1 ... tbu I pen:. ol
Ylolent crimelD tbl U.S. wiU r.Yltln Pf'O. tee..uan. ea.vtcUoD ucl,.......ment. _
N"tl' m1ad the crlmlnals. Jmt pl
rid ol the run ud evetJlblal '"11 M all
right, right? No. focus on the proper
subject, the criminal, not the gun. It is
the person behind the gun who is at
fault, just as it is the person behind the
wheel.
RODGER RHINEHART
Remarks dUtuming
To the Editor:
While reading the Pilot article con-
cerning the Mesa truancy sweep (April
29). I became very disturbed to find
that some parents were actually "out-
raged" because their child had been
caught away from the school camp11S. I
commend the Police Department and
those school officials who had the
courage to engage in such an undertak-
ing after all the kids were breaking
the law.
I would like to see the "closed cam-
pus" rules more strictly enforced to
keep students on campus during school
hours (unless they have a legitimate ex-
cuse from their parents). I realize not
all kids are using or dealing in drugs
and supporting their habits by breaking
into homes during midday hours, but by
enforcing these laws it may help curtail
the activities of those who are.
JACK BOVAIRD
A irork of art
To the Editor:
I am writing in behalf of this beautiful
sculpture that we have seen for the first time on 16th and Superior in Costa Mesa.
We were astounded at the "eye appeal"
this sculpture has. It is a work of art. It
should be a thing to be seen and admired
by people far and wide.
So more power to Mr. Roush an for
bringing such a thing of beauty to Cost.a-
Mesa.
Aren't we lucky?
CAMILLE WAL.KER
lllllY Ill
That towerinC pile of scrap Iron on
Superlor Avenue ln Costa Mesa hu an
artl•llc value equal only to Bandlnl
Mountain ln L.A.
D.M.J. . ._., .. ,_.. .............. .., ,....,.. ... _ Ilk_...,.,.. ............. _,,, ........ . ....... .._. ... °'"., ...... .
' r
I
t
\
'
MORE OPINIQN Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Mav 7. 1981
Washington: A city of timeless fascination .
WASHING TON -I like tb1I city best
alter mldnlpt. Rldlng a Diamond cab
throu1h a warm drizzle, \VUbln1ton
seems teea the nation'• capital than
some sort of rare enchanted forest. The
roads curve throuab woodland.I and
densely-shrubbed parks; the 1Ustenin1
white marble monumeota are for the
daytime, but here, lh tbe blaclmeas of
night, you might be ln another country.
Because I dislike polltlca, for years I
tried to convince myself I disliked
Washington. But I keep being drawn
back i there is something so enticing 6
and so beautiful about the city that even
Ir you are not a part of its only real in·
student council types wbo were a little
too 1tilf and conatricted back ln high
school in the towru1 where they arew up,
it doesn't matter now: tbe covemment
needs them to fUncUon, and they need
the govemment to validate their ex·
lstence, and they and the town are
perfect for each other.
SO W ASHINGTON is a city of attractive
young men and women who eat in m.any
comfortable restaurants, and 10 to
many packed movie theaten, and drink
in many well-recommended bars. In ap-
pearance . they differ little from ad·
ministration to administration. They
are here because of the almost palpable
buzz this city gives off; it is not a bun
that is compelllog to everyone, but to
these men and women , coming to
Washington has probably been inevtta·
ble since they were 13 years old
AND JUST AS inevitably. many of
them never leave. There is a syndrome
among congressmen who were elected
from some districts out in the heart of
the country years ago; every two years
the congressmen run for re-election,
and they grow further and further re·
moved from the towns where they grew
up. The separation occurs in small
ways; one day they wake up to realize
that their hometown newspaper is no
longer t.he Omaha World-Herald or the
Tulsa Herald, but the Washington Post.
And when, finally, they are defeated in
some even.numbered election year,
they cannot bring themselves to go back
to the towns from which they sprang.
Washington is all they know, and they
bang o n , securing work from
W asbington contacts made over the
years, clinging to the game board.
So as you walk down the street, you
notice that the fellow next to you looks
familiar. He nods, and it strikes you ; he
is Zbigniew Brzezinski , Jimmy Carter's
national securit y chief, just a few
months ago one of the most powerful
men in the country. Now, on a warm
spring day, he is strolling to wherever it
is he is learning to belong.
THAT IS GOSSIP, of course, but
gossip is what fuels this town. In the
rest of the country you bear vague
praise about George "Bush doing a good
job as vice president during Ronald
Reagan's period of recuperation. Here,
though, that talk is too bland. You want
to know about George Bush? You are
told that George Bus h changes bit
watchband every day to match the color
of his suits; quintessential prep. On
such information does Washington run.
So even if you don't belong here, you
find yourself returning, to stand on the
outside of Washington life and watch.
The agenda for the nation's business -
at least the business that Is considered
official -is set here, and these are the
people who set it. And though you wiU
never be part of it, it is a good show the
people are putting on. After midnight,
in the enchanted forest that is
Was hington, the show pauses for just a
moment. But In the morning it will re·
sume.
108 liRfHH
dustry -the industry of aovemment -
there is a lure to it that is undeniable.
National service prog.ram would benefit youth
In the rest of the country there may
be an antipathy toward the very word
"Washington"; It has come to stand for
all the bureaucracy and muddle·
mindedness that critics of big govern·
ment love to harp on. But once you
spend time here, a ll of that becomes
slightly irrelevant, and you begin to
take Washington for what it is: a game
board upon which lives and careers are
played out. a Disneyland for the
pathologically ambitious. And if you ac·
cept that, you can step back and watch
it all with a certain fascination.
Earl Watns is on oocatwn. Thia column ia
by 8 . T. Collin&, Director, California
Conaervation Corpa.
We are mired in an age of use and
abuse. The takers far outnumber the
givers. T he notion that every citizen
owes a debt to this country has passed
into antiquity. The bottom line is that
we need to regain the importance of
service to country before our plight
becomes much worse.
Immediate attention must be given to
our faltering all volunteer Army. Those
who have benefited from a good educa·
tion have apparently chosen not to de·
fend this land in today's Army. Fifty.
two percent of the recruits cannot read
and write above the sixth grade level.
Forty percent of all recruits are found
unsuitable for service. Our sophisticat-
ed weaponry is rendered useless by this
corps of functional illiterates.
classes to upgrade their reading and
writing skills. They donate blood and
hold food drive s , for the un -
derprivileged. 1
TH E SUCCESS OF the CCC proves
that young people want to work, to con·
tribute, to "put back" so future genera·
lions may enjoy what too many or us
IARl WATIRS
take for "'granted. It is a tragedy when
youth ls not challenged. Those first few
years out of high school are crucial to
the proper development of work habits,
let alone self-esteem. This development
is severely curtailed by youth un
employment and underemployment
I believe the best way to serve. youth
and this country is to implement a na·
tional service program. (( every young
man and woman knew he or she faced
one year of mandatory· service after
school we might well be on our way to
regaining some of that barn-raising
spirit that made this country great in
past years.
I believe in national service as op·
posed to a straight military draft
because 1 don't think the military is for
everyone. If you don't want to carry a
rifle then clear a stream or fight forest
fires CCC style. Other work alternatives
could be round in the areas of assisting
in hospitals. day care centers, senior
citizen homes, veterans' homes ... but
do something!
I BELIEVE NATIONAL service
should be for everyone. the disabled as
well as the fit. No exemptions!
Howe ver, everyone s hould be given
three choices: military, public service
and no service. That's right, an in·
dividual would still be given the chance
to decline to service only this time it
would become a matter of official rec·
ord. Hopefully, employers would place
a great deal of importance on whether a
youth volunteered to serve his country.
As I sai, if tht' spirit to serve cannot be
manufactured, the best that can be done
is to force the issue .
JN DI VI DUALS entering public service
programs would only be paid a sub·
sistence wage. They would not receive
any education'hl benefitf after suc-
cessful completion of their service.
Those entering the military would
qualify for at least minimum wage pay
and educational benefits upon satisfac·
tory completion of ser vice.
Each state s hould design its own
public service program. Let the states
prove how well they can run a program
before any significant federal aid is ex·
tended.
l believe national service for our
youth could favorably alter the course
of our nation
THE TOWN IS small; the actual
working part of it is tiny. And yet Its im·
ages have been transmitted to the rest
of America with such frequency that it
has the feel of a national hometown.
The landmarks are not all the ones that
the guidebooks prefer to show; new
stopping-places are bom with every ad·
ministration. You take a walk down
Virginia Avenue. and there is the
Watergate complex, now less a symbol
than an interesting-looking office build·
ing and apartment house and hotel. You
walk a few blocks to your left, and you
see a driveway that looks naggingly
familiar; when you get closer, you re·
allze it is the e mergency entrance to
George Wa s hington University
Hospital , where President Reagan
walked from bis limousine just a few
short weeks ago.
THE SOLVTIONISTS say extend GI
benefits, raise pay, etc., to attract "bet·
ter people." The solutionists do not re·
alize that money is a short-term
motivator, that the spirit to serve can·
not be manufactured. As a combat
veteran I can say with a great deal of
certainty that when you are getting shot
at, you don't think about the GI bill. In
combat your best friend is the guy next
to you, and hopefully he knows what he
is doing.
Try your skill on. this timely te st
lmplonng for another Quiz, are you?
The political columnists would have
you believe that the look of the inhabi·
tan ts changes with every president:
dour, black-suited palace guards for
Nixon. sloppy, drawling Georgia boys
for Carter, cool. efficient management·
types for Reagan. But that is mainly in·
side the White House and the Executive
Office Building.
On one hand l bemoan the decline of
national spirit, on the other I can say
the spirit to serve is close to the s ur-
f ace. A recent Gallup Poll indicated
that 75 percent of our youth favor some
national service. Look at the success of
the new draft registration. The com·
pliance rate is a heartening 92 percent.
As director of the Ca lifornia
Conservation Corps, I can attest to the
"toughness". of California youth who
sweat for minimum wages in the CCC.
These 2,000 young men and women fight
forest fires and floods, build parks,
plant trees and clear streama. They
work in snow, rain, mud and intense
heat. They attend evening literacy
Here's one with a new twist to excite
your languid spleen. It's t~mporal.
dealing with famous (if not familiar )
time-spans in history and fiction .
1. How long was Robinson Crusoe
marooned on his island?
2. How long has the "Star.Spangled
Banner" been our official national an·
them ?
3. How long was Rip Van Winkle
asleep?
IN THE REST OF Washington, the
feel is a young one. It is now, and it has
been for years. The ground troops of
any administration are men and women
just a few yean out of college. They are
trying to court success, and if they are
4. How long was the reign of King
Louis XIV of France?
5. How long did Michelangelo work
painting the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel?
6 . How long does the New Testament
inform us that Jesus was on earth
~~~~~~~~~~~
TELL YOUR MOM!
This Mother's Day, tell that certain someone how special she really Is with an outstan-
ding gift from Roger's. There is a.great variety of hanging baskets and color pots. Their
lasting beauty wlll be a constant delight and a reminder of your love. If she enjoys her
plants and her garden, you wlll find everything at Roger's to make It all easier and more
beautiful. Rogltr's Gallery ls also full of special and unusual gifts for the occasion. Say "I
love you" In a beautiful way from Roger's.
MOTHERS UTILE HELPERS
The Giimour alr-<>matlc sprayers are the easy way to
spray fertlllzers and Insecticides. They are self-mixing
which means no luss and no waste
reg. •12.98 NOW '1 0.98
Help keep mold, mildew and fungus out of your roses and
the rest ol your garden with Ortho Funglnex.
16 oz. reg. •9.98 NOW '8.98
•
FROM TIIE NURSERY
WITHIN THE GARDEN
Marguerite Daisies are the llght·hearted favorites
everywhe+'e. At this special price, you cen surround mom
with year around color
5gal.reg.•12.00 NOW7.99
Agapanthus (dwarf blue lilllea of the nlle) Is a good pere~
nlal land8cape plant that IOY89 surprtMS; from time to
time It shoots up clusters of blue nrewottcs. One of our
faVOf1tes, you'll find II planted at Roget's. 1 2 gal. reg. '6.50 NOW 8.99
Hydrange1 produoea bonuHlled clusters of flowers. The
fono-lastlng bloeeoms are available In 94MW&I putel
OOIOtL
5gal. reg. •13.00 NOW'8.99
Az.alee9 offer hand9oma fOUllQe and ~lat flowel9
In a dlOtcl of COien
1 gal Ng. Q2&
il'l'loee9'MelhltltwvM~ 1""· 10t!
11"4 t<AJjecl 10 «11*!1111.e Oft~
DEAR TO HER HEART
A Roget's EngllSh garden basket Is a special treat A~
plete miniature Indoor garden with a rich blend of colors
and foliage. This living centerpiece keeps on detlvenng
pleasure day after day. ,29 9S NOW •
PIANT PROFE.5SOR
You can hear GORDON BAKER LLOYD, noted garden ex·
pert, on KMPC and KABC radio. You can also find him In
person at Aooef'• Gardens fNfllY Friday from 12:00 tll 230,
to &n$W9f all ot your gardening questions. He will also be
presenting thele special eeml~
Apt1123, 11 A.M., *Pest Control"
May 11, 11 A.M., "All About Tomatoes•
May 25, 11 A.M., "Planting f0< Summef"
Give a 10'
Roger's Color Pot,
the unique gift that
keepsgMng.
NOW '9.95
r.-\" . '
HBR CHAISE IN THB SUN
At home or al the beach, a mlni.eun chalH by/
Teleaoope will provide'* convenient and comfor·
table relaxation. Adjuetable, lightweight, durable
and beautiful, It'• • laatlng pleasure.
reg, •39.~ SPECIAL '2A.86
leouo uBT FOR MOM
-~ ~· r'" -\··· • ,.,J. .. T -' Ir<'•· ~'--.J. -.> --• 640-5800 ..... -). "'" -.! t.t ' ~ 9 to•dolr •Son~ Illa ltQQd GI MOCAIWllll ll'll'd • AOo.ii flOf!I fCllfllOll lllOnOl lrl ~ hoGll
J NURSERY • INDOOR Pl.ANTS • FLORIST • lANOSC~PING • PATIO FU~ITURE • ANTIQUES
'
between the Res urrection and the
Ascension'! .
7. How long wa,, William Henry Har·
rison president of the United Stales?
SYDfHY HARRIS
8. How long was Thoreau in jail for
refusing to pay his road-tax?
9. How lone did the Trojan War last?
IO. How long did it take Ulysses to gel
home after that war?
ANSWERS:
I . For 28 years.
2. Only since 1931. JUSt over 50 years,
when Congress formally authorized it.
3 . In Washmgton Irving's celeb1·ated
story, just 20 years.
4. For 72 years -so long that hi s
great-grandson inherited the French
throne from him.
5. He began the project in 1508, and
d id not complete it until 1512
6. Jesus lived among the disciples for
40 days.
7. lie became ill and died one month
after taking office.
8 . Overnight (his friends paid the fine
and had him released)
9. On and off, for some 10 years
10. It took another IO years before
Ulysses returned to his home.
.... 4 ..... ...... ,,26.
°'c;!~:·
'·~=:-.. 842-5596
\
J.
Aa Orange Coast DAILYl>tLOT/Thuraday. May 7, 1981 NATION
Voters nix
sidewalk
• project ..... inee , ..,.. •• .,,. ., ., °""' ()of,,t
tCMI SIOr• -... YOUt Nt•I
eoeTA •u641·129"9
, .. lt-1~
CO RONADO (AP> •••=~~!1
Vole rs have dee ided 1"='='"=· oi...~=,_,== .. =·_.,~"= ... ::' ::' ~ against using a com· 1-
bination of federal anti·
poverty funds and city
reserves to replace
downtown sidewalks.
The ballot proposition
Tuesday was rejected
2·1 by 60 percent of the
9,000 eligible voters.
About $364,500 was
available in poverty
funds awarded before
several poor families
moved from the area.
Sidewalks for five
blocks are cracked and
uneven. City officials ex-
pressed fear that
Truckload
Plant Sale
Huntington Center
12 lush varieties
_L O 'M8 v poh .... 1.-...
Al"W~
Maya Ying Lm, 21 , hold3 her winning entry for design of memorial to
Vietnam veterans m Washington.
another city would get 1----------~
the federal money un·
less it were used. You can Charge
DAILY PILOT
Classified Ads War memorial
design OK'<J,
WASHINGTON (AP) -Maya Ying Lin, a
21 -year-old Yale University architecture student,
bas won first place in a competition to design the
nation's memorial to the 57,692 Americans killed
in Vietnam.
Miss Lin, whose parents were born in
mainland China, was among 1,420 competitors -
including some of the nation's best-known
architects, sculptors and landscape architects -
in the biggest competition of its type in U.S. his·
tory. She will receive $20,000.
The memorial she designed as a class project
at Yale is to be built beside the Reflecting Pool
near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington and will
be engraved with the names of each American
killed in the war, chiseled out in letters three-
quarters of an inch high
Miss Un's design was described Wednesday
this way: ··Two elongated reposing walls that
meet to shape an Open V. The backside of the
black granite memorial will be level with the
ground while the front side will gradually slope
down to a depth of 10 feet where the walls meet.
'I'he names of the 57,692 men and women who died
in the war will be inscribed in the memorial in
chronological order, beginning with the first fatali·
ty of the war and ending with the last."
The memorial was authorized by Congress but
is to be paid for by donations from the public. So
far, about $1.2 million has been raised, and the
,total cost could approach $7 million.
Miss Lin said at a news conference that she
was only 10 when the war started.
"I wanted to describe a journey -a journey
which would make you experience death," she
said.
The memorial was the idea -and for some
time the lonely crusade -of Jan. C. Scruggs, who
was a teen-age infantryman in Vietnam and who
buttonholed congressmen lo realize his project.
.
Re-enlist01ents
reflect gains
WASHI NGTON CAP ) -Higher pay. re·
enlistment bonuses and broadened educational
benefits have been credited by the Pentagon with
helping the armed services improve the record on
attracting and retaining uniformed personnel.
A manpower report said that between October
and March 62.S percent ot those eli gible re·
enlisted, an increase of 7 .1 percent from the com·
parable period a year earlier.
Enlistments in the same period reached 101
percent of objective, up 2 percent over the cor·
responding period in 1979-1980, the report said.
~ 's name deplored
HARTFORD, Conn. <AP> -Corpus Christi .,_
Latin for "body of Christ" is not an appropriate
name for a fast-attack Navy nuclear submarine, the
Archbishop of Hartford s ays
Archbishop John Wheaton said the sub's war·
'lnaking capabilities make the name "inap·
jl>ropriate" andoffensivelo Roman Catholics.
The "Nell Greene Mother's Day
Memorial " is being honored May 9,
1981 in Fountain Valley, CA. in "Mile
Square Park " -corner of
Brookhurst,IWarner at 11 :00 A.M. All
are invited in Nell's memory as wife.
Mother and educator. The Brent
Greene Scholarship Fund-Irvine
High School on Walnut St.
Morris Lewis Greene
PEOPLE Al~ ORANGE coAS! ALOttE~ ON the la\\1 fl\I\
~pie Pie with
Mom's Fresh Rowers!
and they'll be delivered by a Tuxedo-clad driver!
H.ihlm lalloon ._ ... Iv•• $I 5.00 ,.,. ....
• 125 00 or more -local delivery
Ltm1t one per custome<
Whtie supply lasts -O<der early.
-962~66i1 ~·
21 SU II a JM wstSt.
H....tllllllhaleodl.Co. OPIHDAIL Yt-6
642-5678
Smart savers want more than growth for their
money. They also want safety.
Put your money in an account at
Perpetual Savings and you'll be satisfied
on both counts.
Your money will be insured to $100,000 by
an agency of the U.S. government. That's
protection.
As for growth, you'll get the
highest rates allowed by law at
Perpetual. No bank pays
higher interest. And
we've got a number
,
.Four dailytdirect flights.
Most flights to Denver.
$123 -Selected flights only.
Two flights daily.
Just ca ll your travel agent and say you want to fly
Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060.
of attract ive savings plans, so you're certain
to find one just right for your situation.
Our package of free services* appeals
to savers because each offers a specific
benefit of convenience, time saving, or safety.
And Perpetual's staff has a reputation
for courtesy and efficiency.
For solid protection for your money,
interest rates that will make
your money grow quickly,
and friendly people,
Perpetual is the place
for you.
PERPETUAL SAVINGS
CALL MlliZI WELLS
FORA
FULL YASSUMABLE LOAN -
Home ol Green Caf'P8f Treatment 9 ~ @. ___ _
INTEREST ONLY I
'Newport Equity Tunds ·Inc
LlcenMd Brok~ Sil\o. 1971 • 714) 7e<MS080
.._·Ofllloe: 0120 Wllahlre Blvd., Beverly Hiiia, CA 00212 274-608e or 272-56Se • WMtwood Office: 10866 Wllahlre Blvd., Loa Angeln, CA 90024 474-3503
• UrohMont Offtoe: 260 No. Larchmont Blvd., Loa Angel•. CA 0000. 482-8483 • Northrtcloe Office: 18540 Oevon1hlre St., Northrldge, CA 91324 380-2329
• C...,. ~ Otlloe: MOO Platt Ave., Cenoga Park, CA 81304 3"M141 • Ful .. rton Otnc.: 3334 Yo~a Linda Blvd., Fullerton, CA 92931 (71 4) "3-i200
• t~ leecft Offtoe: 1934 Sen Miguel Drive, Newport BMch, CA 02ee0 (714) &40-1634 All lfflcte.,.. Setnert frM 11 •·•· tt 211•· ..... ...._,..,. ...-.. ......_
•
• I
. . ' ' . . ..
~ST
CLIFF
PLAZA
quality in fashion and services
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thursday. May 7, 1981
with that personal touch
GIVE HER ELEGANCE
FOR MOTHER'S
DAY ...
... with a
s heer nylon
tricot go\\C,[I
from Luci~
Ann combined
with soft saUn
collar aod
cu ff s . In
beautiful
wisteria
P·S·m. $S8.00
CUISINART
SALE
thru
Saturday
only!
THREE
MODELS
DLG10E
DLCSE
DLC7E
Cuisinart Cookware
and
Accessories
20% off
~
ROW• HARDWAR
W estcllff PICllCI
Corona del Mer• Hew bor View
Be Mom's
Favorite Pet
With a Gift
From Westcliff Corners
Wesrcl~ Corners ·
1100 IRVUifE AVE., NEWPORT
. BEACH
645-8777
dick tJ
~ ve=r=n=o=n::;::::'s
... pc ""'"l'ar
Westcliff Plaza, Newport Beach S4&-<tl21
GIVE MOTHER
A LASTING FLOWER
THIS YEAR
French enamel on 14K yellow gold.
each with a bright diamond center.
760.00
Single flowers from 215.00
CHARLES H. BARR
Newport
Beach
J\9
.. ~~----~_....----~--...--·.-----~----· ............. ""."'9 ............. ~ .......................... ~ ............. ~.""':""~-.......... ~ .... ~ .......... ~ ..... ~ ...... ~ .... a ... s11¥1 ........................ llll!!~E~~ --. -----------
Ale Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT!Thuraday. M ay 7, 1981
Airport scan
'OK for film'
WASHINGTON <AP> -The Federal Aviation ,
Administration has again s aid that airport X-ray
mac hines do not har m ordinary photo film and bas
c hallenged a nyone to s upply it with rum d a maged
by the me ta l-scr eeni ng devices
The FAA m a de the s tatem e nts in response to a
pe tition filed las t month by Irwin Diamond, a
Chicago cam e r a a ccessory manufacturer , a nd
som e professiona l photographers a s king the a gen·
cy to post wa rning signs in airports.
··Any film s u bmitted • . • will be passed on tor
examination by experts at the E astman Kodak Co.
o r the Nation a l Association of Photographic
Ma nufacture rs," the FAA said.
Women hail settlement,
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Women's -rights ad 1 vocates are h ailing a $1.5 m ilHon settlement lha t
' a i ms to g ive wo m en a better chan ce to advan ce in
the U.S. Forest Ser vice.
"This doesn 't fo llow t he us ual pattern of
• decrees, which gives each wom an a couple of hun·
dred dollars but le a ves the proble m s untouched ," ! said Nancy Davis. who ha ndled the laws uit for
' Equal Rights Advocates.
Federal J udge Samuel Conti approved the con-
• sent decr ee, designe d lo open up all fields of
1 service and set up tra ining aod prom otion pro·
gram s for wo m e n It is lo be enforced over the
next fi ve years.
· Poison booze fatal
NEW DELHI, India CAP ) -P oisonous liquor
' bought in gove rnment-licensed s tores has killed 33
and blinded sever al others in Ke rala st ate in
southern India, Ker a la Excise Minis t e r M K
Krishnan said
P UBLIC NOTICE
"CTI nout euau1e11
MAMa IY&T•MIWT
Tiit lel-l11t --• e•t ...... ... 1 ...... SIEIU•A PAC.,IC SILltSCllll&N, ISJel P~ LeN •• ,,., .. ...,., ...... ••.ell, Cell ..... le ....
J-I(. Pre<IW, l'll'01 H•l'Yfl1, uuw-, C.lltvnlle t01U I rtM Crewlord, 1ffl Oerllet• ,,.VtnlM. Huntll\Oton a.Kh, C.lllornl• '1Mf MAr< L Ll-..... n. 7ltt Ce,..11ti.
Clrc te. OrM199, C:.lll0tnl• •-J-t I( Procter Tiii\ , .. ,_, wM 111.0 wllll ti.
C-ty Cit<\ ol OtM99 C"-'Y.., Mey
'· ""
P UB LIC' NOTICE
PICT1t10Ua eUllN•U NA#I tTATllMI WT
Tnt 1•11 ... ll>Q 11••-• ••• t"lllt l'u•)ft•U •t A "'"'C Uott PtttY Ot Ive W.•1 ... lntltt ~"'"°' .... •a.u o .. .o l~ ~ ......... uoo "•" Newpo•I llt ~e•t1••I I t.ill, ca11101nle ,,...,
~l(Olt All• U•.., .. llo llOll Pe•ty Otl••, We•tml11ll••. (•11.oml• •M l
T ht• • .,,., .... I• r .,,d.,dtG b\I • Otn•••l -11 .. , "Ill) Nlc ... A 11""4111• lnl• \Wit/Noll ••• ltl-o ••Ill ltw
C411i111Y Cit o k 111 0••'09 Cou111y 1111 Aptll It Itel ...... ,,
PUBLIC NOTICE P UB LIC NOTICE
P'ICTtnaua au.,..... P'IC'TITlc.ll l UM NIU ..... &TATllMelllT NAll!MI ITATllM•NT
I '-lel.._tne --'' ...,,.. ..,.., Tiit fel._,.. _.... It Mine IMitl· M •t ., M U •t -
H u H r I H 0 l 0 H II • L Le y ""(OVNUIY IOV . tU• N_,.n OllOOMINO, D..c WWMr ,,....,.,.., lout .. art , C..le Meu, Cellfornle ,._t.tn Valley, Celt'°'nl• t tltl mu
Hen"' "'"" Ltwh , t2t1 Win· JO ANw S.tllOe, lt73t £-PltU, let•-· kMI011, CelllOrnl• _. Covll\9, C.lllOfnlattTU Tlllt tlullneu I• concluOt• by ., In· Thi• ~""t It conclucteO lty •n ln-e1v1•ua1 dlVlllwel Heney A"" lAwlt JOMlwl .. ,.,be
Tllh ··-· w• llltd Wlll'I ti. nu. ···-· Wat lilecl wllh Ille t-•• Cler• of Ora119t C:.0-ty on May County c .. rkof Or.,.. Countr011All'll
,. lftl 2', l"I
l'ttlS11 P'ltltJt l'wltll-Or-Gou t O•llY PllOI, l"w1>11111ec1 Or-Coen Delly Piiot,
l'ltlMt PwDll\Md Of~ U..•1 l>•llY ,.llol, Mey7 14,tl, .. 1''1 21.041 AoptlllO,Mey l,14,21,1''1 ,..,.,
Pul»lllhtel Or<lllQll Coe•I Delly l"llot, Apr U 10, Miry f 14, 1'tl ""II P lJBLIC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE Mey 1, 14, 71, •• 1•1 JUNI
P UBlJC NOTICE
P'ICTIT10UI I USINIU KAMI 11'AT•M•NT TIM IOl'-1"9 _ _,I•~ llu\I· -a· 0 w. AOOflNG. )102 ltoanolt i.. .... c .. i. ,,_,., c.11to<n1a ,.,. OA VIO ALLA.N WHITE, JIOJ Roano~t ~. Goalt -... Ctlltornlt f2U6
'"" -neu '' <ondvt ltG by an In dlvldual Otvkl A11a11 Whllo Tl'll• •i.t-t we\ llttCI wtlll ,,,. Cwnty Cler~ ol Or-GO\lnty on Mar
'· "" fUU•1 Pwl»llW.O Or<1t191 Coe•I O•llY Pilot, Mo I, U 11, 1'. 1te1 104.,11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINllS N-IJTAT•MaNT Tht IOllowtne --I• OOlnQ l>utl
M U •a OLY MPI C PAI NTING, /I) N Mo<lnl•ln v-. S.-.1• An•. (tlllo11\le n 1ol HAE ~T LYU, 11J N.-leln View, s.ni. ,,.,,., C.lll01nle 91703 Tnt1 C>uMnM• I• <ondu<•ll lty en 1n dlvldu•I H• :wtiQ Lyu Thi' •tet-t wH 11ltc1 wlln ,,.,. County Ctert< o1 Or-Countv on Mn .. ,..,
f!t1MJ P\IDll"*I Onnaie Coe•• O•llY Pllol. Mey 1. t4. n, '"' 11»-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTl('F.
NOTICI. CW APPLIC:ATION 1'01 CHANOI. IN OWMUMll" Of ALCOHOLIC a lYl•AOI LIC:eNH To WllOrTI II Me1 Cencatn. Me1t1 Mett<lllll llAl.CNl I h lllllCll1lfl1 to 1i. Oepertmen1 ol A.le-lie S.vt rtoe
COllltol lor ··41· OH .,.Le •Et!ll & ININf IPU8 I AT l"L I lo ••II
•l<Ol>Oll• 11e .. r ... t al JOU NewPof1 81Yd . • U, Cool• MeH, C•lllornle .,.,,
P\il»llthed Orenoe Coen Delly Piiot .. ,,, ,... , ..... ,
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINl.U NAME STATIM•NT T,.. IOll-ltlQ .,.,..,,, Is CIOlftll IKl\l ....... Ll!T tT BE SEWN . IH, Mec Arthur, • t>. Co•h M .. t . C•lllonrla fMltt Slllrtey Mfl Wlnche•t••. UOI Wtll
W tlth lr• Av•nue, Sa nta A na , Calllornle '12/tw Thi• 11u.11 .... s I\ concN<leO by an In
dl•IOu•I
snirtey A w1nci.t1er Tl'I" >Ulttmenl w'" lllecl with ti. Coullly Cltrll of Or-C-ty onM•y
S, l"I
P'ICTITIOUS aU$1NHS fl(TITtC>O• aUllHl.U """"a STATIMllNT N-1 STATIMINT Tiit IOllOlllO --art 001119 O..•I Tl'I• IOllOwlnQ per""" I\ dolftll .,.. .. ~'' ., "•'-'•' MONACO JEWELRY , 2'H BE.r.CH GRAPHICS IOJ 11th Ntwporl lowlevt re, Co•I• Mete, Slr••I • 10 Hun11n111o'1 l ttCl'I, C•ll:;'~"::.:!'ft1w1k, 5'D I.a Mirao• C•lllornle'2IMI • 11 Loo A"911•t Calllornl• Sharldtn A..,. 0 Bri.n. 202 11111 ·~· • · Street • 10. Hwnt l1191on Bett11, --Cettlornla n .... t(rl-0<' ICeClllClllen, 54'0 Slerrt Thi\ ~liltU h r onaucttKI Dy en 111· I/hi•, •201, LOI AllVtlH, Calllornte Ol•ldu•I
tOO» !>/leo ldcln Aonnt 0 " Brien Thi• MltlH\ I• C-UCtecl D1 .. un Tl'll\ \Ult.,,.,..., W•• llltKI wltn Ille lllCOIPO<Mecl tHOClatlon ~t ... r "'"" # county Ci••k ol Orana-County on pertnerWD Aprll 14 1'91 Ohanne11111u ,.., .... Tiii• •Ult-I WU llltO with Ille County Cle .. of Or-County 011 Mn Pultil•lled Oret19t CO.•I O•llY PllOI.
,, lttl 'Apr '•· U JD, M4y I. 19111 1111 .. 1 l'UISU
Pu11111"'4 Or-Coe•• 0•111 Piiot, P UB LIC NOTICE M•y 1. 14. "· ,., '"' , ..... ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOOS auSINEU NA.Ml STATl.MENT Tiit lollowln9 ,..,....., I• dotn9 lkl\I· neu •s
FICTITIOUS aUSINESS I HE CA.RVEO HORSE, )19U NAME 5T,,.TEMENT Cam ino C•P••H•no. San Jwt ll I ht lollow•n11 P••s<>n• ••e ao1n9 Cep1\lr....,, C•lllornla t'lt75 llU\lneu •• J 0 A N L E I B 0 w I 1 z . I t PRESIDENT PROPERTIES. 120 Monlptlloet. N•wpon Be•cll, VI • W•rltn. Ntwpon Beach. C•hlornl•9'lWO
Cetllornt•92WO lnt• --·" <onclUc"d Dy.,, 111. W llll•m 8 1•'' Arm\lrOnQ. 1t dlYtdu•I Nlorb unne Ne wport Bt •<n JoenLelDowlU l'ltlSU ce111orn1a~ Tno> SL•l•ment we1 llttd wllh tflt Pu1tll""'2 Or-Goe tt Dalt; Pilot, 1 home$ M Linden llO S•PP""• . Couniy Cler' 01 Orenoe Cownty on M•y '· ••. n. 79. ,... 2111-t• B•lbO. ,,, __ C•lllorn1'• '2661 • Ao .. 121, '"'
P U Bl.IC NOTICE
NOTICI
Edwin A Meur••. 120 V•• "161t'7J W•rle,.. NtWPOll Beech. Celltorn1• PuDll•llecl Oret1oe Coot Delly Pllol,
"1MO Ap"I JO. ""°YI, I<. 71, t•t lt1MI Tiii• ou>1neu 11 cona11c1tu Dy • ·
II m It t<1 pertnerllltp EdWl11A Mtwr•e Tiii• >attmenl .... 111eo w11~ 111e County Cler~ ol 01.,,ge Co.,nty on Aopr ll l . 1•1
P UBLIC' NOTICE
FICTITIOOS ausrNIESS NAME STAfEMENT
PlJBlJC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUS aUttHl.U NWISTAH M&NT
T lie IOllowtltQ __, I• llOlllQ l>u•I ""--'•• ST"l.ll TOY$ ,,.UTO aoov
"'HO ltAINT. 660 Wtll 1'111 Sit-•U, C0tl• ..... , Cell'°""•~ Jttftry Allen Ttllbet•, 491 COiie Mew $1,...1. C°'la ...... Cetllo.nl• tU21 This l>lnl ....... COtlCluecled .,, .,, In Ol•IOU•I Jolfety Aolle11 Tio«oell Tiiis ..... ..._t ..... llltcl wltll 1i. C ... nty Clet-OI OrM .. C.O..n1y Oii
,,.~ .... 1•1 ,., ....
p.,l»llohecl Ora1199 C•tl Otlly Piiot, A.tr "· U, lO, Mey 1, ltll 11,, ti
P UBLIC NOTICE
flCTITIOOS IUllNISS N"""'a ST,,.T•MENT The to11-1no Ptnotl It llOlllO ""'' I\•••., PACIFIC GULF ENTEAPAIHS. iOI 0( .. n Hiii Ortve, Huntington 8Hch. Ctllle11n1e •llMI
0 .. 10 JeMlllQJ llDI Oua11 Hiii Utt••. HuntlnQIOll B .. cn. C.lllornl• f2Mll Tnt> l>uMM\\ .. Condw<.led by ... In dlvodual D•vla JtnnlnQS Tho• •t.toment wu llltd with ,,,. Cownty Citro ol Or anoe Covnty on
"'"" '. 11111 "' .... p.,.,.,,_ °'-Coelt Oelly Pllol, Aor It, JJ, lO. Mey 1, t•t tttl-t l
P UBLIC NOTIC E
JiKk ICtltr. SlndOrt Tho. •l•lernen• wes llltct •Ill\ 11'1e County Clerk ol O••"llt County on Aprll 1•. 1'91
1'1.-U
Jaci.-, •-& s.c..i1., ... *-'C-l«Or.
Slolte 1'U
"-' IN<ll. ca. n ... PuOll"*I Or-Coe•I Dally Piiot, Apt II JO, Mey 1, u. 21, ltlt ,..,_.,_
OBITUARIES
P UBUC NOT ICE
.. OTIC:I <W .... aUPOll•lelUfY Notice .. ........, QI...,, t"9t the 1111 llOrtl .... wtll nol .... r_ ..... lot
•"Y dM!s W 11*111 ... Cetllre< ... ty .,,,_ ....... ,,_ myMll, 4'11 O' entf
lllh dtte. Dt lffltllt ll\ClayGI Mey 1•1 ,..,.II " lllwtllerford 1140 l . SyC.MOtt titre .. 0r-..cAn .. 1 PuDll.,,.., Or-Co.ti Oally Piiot. May•. 7, IS, 1•1 21)2 .. 1
P UBLIC NOTIC E
FICTITIOUS I USI NEIS N-& ITA.T•MIHT Tl'I• 1011owlnt1 per...,., ere dotno 11 ... i ....... TH E MONl!V MACHINE, ?OOS W BelDo• lloult •erll, Newpon 8.-<11, C.atllornte 92* AOO fAYLOR. 1111 EIOen,. CClltt
Me t.t, C•lllomle f'M11 JAMES ROBERTSON. 20h 2 Wooe ten, Munt1n11ton Beach, Celllornla n.. Tiiis I>.,_.,,,. .. h •Ondwcttd Dy t
a•ner•I pertn.nlltp
A h rtot Tiii> St•t-1 w•> llltcl With 1M Counly Cl•tk ol Or.,,oe Co.,nty °" Apt II ft, l'tt.
l'lt1'71 PuDtttlled Orenoe Co.ll Oelly Piiot. April JO, Mey 1, U, 11 l'lt1 1'74~1
P UBLIC NOTICE
"''°"l PuDll\NCI °'-(04\I O•llY Piiot .r.pr 7l,>G,Mlty10 U Ifft ttl)-11
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOOS euSINlSS N-E ST,,.TUllENT P UBLIC NOTICE City loses out "~T~~!:~!·:::s
Tiie 1o1•-•no ~r!IOfl I• 00tn11 .,..., BAKERSFIE LD CAP) neuas.
Tiie Annutl R_, lor the YNr ltlO ol OONA.LOA.M PELLETIER fOVN· OA.TION, INC .. evellatlle le><,,,~ llon at 901 Oow r Orlw, S..tlt JC»,
Newpor1 INA<n. C..lllONll•, ""''"" •• out•• Du>l""s "°'"' by any clUrt11 "'"o '° •-ll within llO dtY> lrom d•t• ol IK'bllcetlon ol '"" nollce
MALCOM & O"'L Y 41H Mk~atvd., .... .,.'1 IH<.ll, c;a 97..0
In• toll-1119 pen.o11 h cloll\Q l»u>• nt u e\ CHIC. AUTO BODY A.NO CUSTOM PAIN 1. 18081 ~I RtdOnclO Cit< It, Hun I 1n91on Bt«ll, C•lllo•n•• •l!M1
P UBLIC NOTICE
Tll• 1011owln11 perM>n• •r• aotn11
, C>\iltfn"-'••·
·.
,,
"ICTITIOUI I UltN•SS
H-E STAT•M•HT h l "l THE MUSIC MAN, 1719A Hunt· T he city as ost I s lnglon Strut. Hwnt1no1on Buch, WILLIAM A, SCHMIOT Prlncipel Mlt"9Qer
"UM07 Pwblhllecl Ortn91 Coesl O•llY PilOI,
"'P' 1', Jl, >G. May 7, t'ltl llH et
OCEANA IRE AP"RT MENf S
ltll Tt ll»ert Avenue Hunttn 91on 8Hcl'l,C•lllornl•t,.... The loll-ltlQ per!IOn I• OOlnQ t>usl·
M IS •t ICARL E. BUTCHER CONTRA.C· fOR , llU PoM Mero•I•, Newpaf1 lleecn. Cellfor,,;a fl!MO
eligibility stand ing for a ce11101n1em..
$7 .5 m il lion fe d eral JOHN PATRICK YEISER, IJttA HwnllnqtOll SltWI. Hunllt191on S.e<ll. g r a n t t o b u i I d a c.1110,,,;• m.
PuDtl>Nd OrM>Qe CO.st D•oly P1101. Mey 1. 19111 Jltl<tl P UBLIC NOTICE
"'•' M Fallahl•n. 1880• N•I flCTITIOOS IUSINISS ll•wooo C•rtlt Hwnllnglon Btt<ll. N-IE STATEMENT
(4llfotn~ ,,.,,,.. l h• lo11owln9 Q4f"\Ot" •re
r "'' bV'»iM>n " conouu•o by ~n '" t>u\tneu .• ,
o .. ld K i..m1>. 1asn -cAn11 ...
8tvo , S\ltte 440, lrvln•. CaUforrh• dotn11 .,115
""'RL E aurcHER. 1154 Pon Mer11•••. H-• S.Kh, C.lllOlnl• n..o Thlt l>uMMU I• <ondu<•d Dy en In· dl•ldu•I. IC•rl E. B11tci.r fhls •lei-I WH llltcl wltl'I lhe Covnty Clert< of Oranoe County on Mer s. , .. ,
1'1tl-Pu1»11'11ed 0r--oe C:0.1t Oall1 Piiot, Mo I. 1', 11, :it, Itel 2112 .. 1
P UBLIC NOTIC E
d o w n t o w n p a r k 1 n g Tl'lh .,..,,,,. .. '' conauc•.o 0 1 ., m
rr. . I dlvldu•I garage, an o tcta says .>o11n P Yt•M•
The facili t y was in · 1 Thi\ "•lement .... llltd w11n tllt
t d d to be a rt Or Coun1y Cltrk of Or.-.ve Counly on "4y e n e p a s, 1"'
m a jor downtown shop· f'UU1' . II I PuOll"'8<1 ()y-co .. 1 Oelly Piiot, ping ma M•Y 1 •••• 21. 29, '"' JllMI
P UBLIC NOTICE
P U BLIC NOTIC E
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU
NAME ST"'TIMEN T FICTITIOUS I Ull NIESS Tne lollowlftll peri.on1 ••• dolnQ f lCTlrtOUS aUSINISS H-1 STATIMENT l>utl,,.u ..
lf"""'IE STATEMENT The IOlt-•no --,, OOlnQ IMIM· THE P~STER F,,.CTORV. 2J710 The 1011-1no PtrMln h "'""II l>U•I· M H a• Et Toro Roell, E.1 Toro. C•llfornl• nen u . SOUTH SHORE OESIGN, llOO 97UO J W. INTER PRISES. ltl COll<ota, Tell, Coll• Mttt, Ctlll0tnl• 91'2' Uncle Joet1 Gilford, t411 Gul'1tMIO NtwPOM 8tech.C•lllornl•'2..a LESLIE MARILYN FREGOSI. Clrclt, Huntington Beech. C.lllot le JOHN w WRIGHT. )I) Con<ord, l lOO Tait Wev. ,.,.,. -~. C.lllOllll• 97M6
Ntwl>0'1 8-11, C•lll.,.,,1• •-n.o 97Ut I A Jon G111or11, t412 Gl.llftr-Cir Tn1s 1>41\intU '' <_ .. d by.,. 1n Tl•h ~ln.u I• <ondw<teO lty .,, 111 Cit, Hwnlln9ton 8ucl'I C•lllotnte lllVldu•I dlvoclual t1M4
P UBLIC NOTICE
STATEMENT Of A.IA.NDONMIENT
01' USI 0 1' P:ICTITIOU' IUSI NEU NAME
T ht tottowlno per...,, ""' •l»nclonael the .... ol ,,_. llchllou1 l>u•lnru neme· DOLPHIN TACICLE CO., ,,. WtllO•t• 011.. Anai.1m. Calllornla '12tl04 Tl'le FlctillOU\ 81.1\lrlffS N•me ,.
ttrrod to •be>¥• w .. llltcl In Oren91 Counly on JM f, 1911 RA.LPH 8ERT AINA, SU WHIQtlt on .. "".,,_1m. Celllornla .-. T hll ll<Alneu w•• uirldwctecl 1»1 Ml
1nd1wld~t Ralph E 8tf1•11M1 Tnls ~t.ltm4tnl w•> lllecl w1111 lllt County ClerN ol OranQe County on Aptll Zi, 19111
flllfG PuDll.,,.., ()y-Co.•• O•llY Piiot, Aprol >o •... 1 1, 14. 21, 19'1 1°'1 .. 1
P U BLIC NOTICE
Tiii• 1i.tt.....,1 wH flleO with tht Tllll llM-1 wu hied with 1i. ~,,., •• pertnennlp l"ICTITIOOS IUSINEU JONI w. wr1on1 l..ttl•t Fr_., Thi• l>u•lneu " conductt<I lty •
1
Counly Cttr" 01 Or..,~ Cownty Oii Countr Cltr._ of Or.-.ve C°""1r on M•y Lllld• Joen G•llwa N-1 STATEMENT
Apt II zt. l'ltl ,~. 1'11 Tllh >lal-t we• llltd wltll Ille Tne IOll-1119 Pt•IOn II OOl<IQ 1>u•I fltll1t f1t1 Me Coun1r Clerk ol Or-County on M•y neu u Pu1»ll•r.ct Or•no-Co." Delly Piiot, Pul>lllolltd Or-Cot•I Otllr Piiot, S, '"' H"'MILTON ANO AS$0CJATIS, April JO. f'NIV 1, 14, 21, ltet "'"' M•y '· 14. 21. 29. '"' • ., ... , l'UIM4 ""° Celalll\9 Street. UtQUn.9 Bu ell, PuDllstlaO Or-Coe\1 D•lly Piiot, C•ltlorn1e '12Ut lo\91'1,14,21,zt.1•1 11l04t R1cn•tll 0 H•mlllol\, lhO
P BLIC NOTICE
C•Ullnt S1rut. L•Qun• Be•cll , Ca111orn1t nut Tll1\ o...in~• "conauued l>Y ell Jn
01v1aue1 O"'KlNE WOODWORKS, Jllt LEGAL MOTICI Au1 M Fatt•nian Otehld Holl Pl.u. Sent• ...... H•IQl'lll, •OTIC~ Of l'UI LIC HEAlllNG fll•• •t.le,,,..,1 """' liltd w1lh the Calllorno•'1707 l'lt ECtll l'LAH Of Coun1 y Cltr~ ol Ot.,,QI County on ROllert Wey9""4, 2U. O<ehlO Hiii
STlllET "'LIGHMI HT •H M•r< n , •. ·~· Pleet. Selle• .... HtlQhh, Ctlllornl• NOTICE. IS HEREBY GIVE N that e f<1Sf111 '1707 public i.•rlnQ wlll be i.ld Dy tr. Cll1 PuOll\llecl 0.""Qe Coetl D•llY Pilot, Weyo~ IMmoto, 14t E 16"1 S1r"t. PtannlnQ eomm1 ... 1on ol the (II~ ol Apr 23. lO. May I, u. l'ltl 1'12 .. 1 Colla ~M. C.lll«nl• "'" Hu111tng1on BN<h. C.IHornl•. 1111 ti. T hll D<lsl,..u I• conoucttd by • ou•POM of cCW1$1doHl119 PrtclM Pt.,, o~I gen••t1 ~nner.,,,p. StrHl AllGM*ll No II 1 a rtawHt tJ P UBLIC NOTl CE R-rlWeyQoOnd
•llQn • Pf'IV•I• str .. 1 IO<., .. -3 Thtt •Ultt ...... t .... llltcl wit~ IN
of 11f'OVktl119 ecetH lo -12 ecte til county Clerk ol OrMIQie Counly Oft lou ted on Ille -.tl'I •lelt 01 T•llM'1 FICTI TIOUS IUSIHESS °'P<•I u, Itel N-E STAT~MENT ,,. •• ,..,., -oxlmaltly 00 '"' w~ T lie lollOwlnQ i>e•M>nt ere doln9 of B••<l'I Boulevard. Ao plan depict ""~',,." ..
wld .11_,11, on Ill• In .... 0.Dtrl J ... a M SE. R II I c Es. 9Sl2 men1010. .. t~S.r•lct\ottlce H•m11ton H11n11n9lon Beach Seid r.earlno wlll be i.111 al ll'lt hour Celllornl• n.,.. · ol 1·00 P,M., on "4y 19, l'lllt, 1" tllt RI chard K•rn M<IC•uon 22'3 Cowncll Chemo.,, SulldlnQ ol tll• LeLlnda Coun Ntwporl a"••<h. Cl.,lt Cenlt<, 2000 lo\eln Sttffl, Hunl <alllorn le 9?WO
ln9ton8aa<h,Celllorn1• Jolln IC urlll MclC•uon. 21U All lnttrHtecl Ptrwn• ere lnvlltcl I Lt Linda Cowtt Newport Beech.
•11•114 -d .,..,,"II -upreu ,,,.Ir Celllorn1• 92..o ' 001111Dnt tor or _,,.,, t,,. pr-rn,. .,...,,,... " conduct•a Oy • Pteclw Plt11 Of Slr"I All911men1 No. llmotea PV11-•l/llp
tM RIC MclC•Mon Furi11er tnlormellon m .. l>4t OD· fnl\ , .. 1 • .,_1 ••• 111.tt .. 11n I,,. ~~':::" fr""' the City P1M1nlftll Oec>trt· County Cler~ ol Or.,99 Cownt1 on
ltltf)ftane No. 1714) ~SUI Aoptll 2', I'll P1"'1f
DA rEo 111111111 aey of Miry, 1"' I PuDll\hed O.enaie CoeSI Delly Piiot, MISSIONCITY PL A.NN ING CO M· Aprll30.Mty 1 14,11,1 .. 1 1*"41
J-•W Pell110 s.<.-.i.,.., PuOll.,_, Ortl\Qe Co .. t Ot1ly Piiot. May 7. Itel '1t1 .. I
P UBLIC NOTICE
,,,_
Pw1»11""'4 0ra11Qe Coe>I Deity Pt101, Apr 1•,U.:IO,Mltyl0 l'ltl 17U .. 1
P UBLIC NOTICE
H$-1M• l'ICTITIOUS IUSINlSS NAMIE ST,,.TIMENT rnt lollowonQ P•rtons •tt 1101no
OU\lna\\t\ BREWTtME SYSTEMS IS.OS RtKI Hiii A•tnue. Tustjn. C•lllOm•• f2't0 McG11 & Son• Vending, • C•lllOtnt• corporation, IOO N Cwm m1n11• Roect. Co•ln•. Ctlllornl• '1724 Thll 1>u.1lneu Is conduc1e11 .,, • COi· POr•llon
M<Gft & Sons ven111n11 MIClleel A McGff,
Pres.c)tnt
1'hl\ s&Ai~t w•?t Oleo •Ith lf\f' Cou11tr Clerk 01 Ot.,.,'111' County on Aprol II lftl
John Minar. IUU M•cAr111.,r
8hd .. Suite -4.tQ, Irvine, Ceutorn1a
'11U Mthrd•d R•H ••n. UH2 MecA.r..,,..r Bl••, S..110 440, lr•lnt. Celllornla '1271S O.vlGIC. uml> JOfWI MINt -dadRt'.liUll Tiii• •Utlt.....,I w.,, tiled with lhe Cou111y Clerk of Orange County on Aoprtl 1'. ltll flWln
PuDh\ohed Ora1191 Coe\! 0 •11• Pilot.
Aor "· U . lO. "4y 7 "" lill-11
P UBLIC NOTIC E
FICTITIOUS auStlflSS NAME STATEMENT The lollowlng petton> ••e aotng
t>u1lnets •1 FOURTH ST REET PAATNEASHIP. 100 Wul Com
monwe•lth Avenue Futtertof\ Catllornl• mu FULLEATOH SAVINGS I. LOAN A.SSOCIA.TION. 100 w .. 1 Com
monw••llh Avenue. FuHenon Ctlllorr.lt 'l2U2 GOLDBERG WHEELER COM PANY, ,140 C.mpu> Ori••. Ntwpart a .. , ... C.llfornl• f21MO fhh l>uslnel\ h condu<lo<I Dy • Q•nerel PM'tller,Np
Ow 1\1.,.,nctr A INl\teltr n .... ,.,......,,, .... lllecl with ,,,. Cownty Cletk ol 0rft1Qe Cowtllf Oii .r.pnt n . l'lt1 DEATH NOTICES dtv tdual FICTITIOUS IUSINEU N"""'E STAT•MIENT l'• .. J1t Ft•totl FICTITIOUS I UllNEIS NAME ST"'TIMINT
T nt lollowln9 pe,.on II dolnlfo D<islneu ••· BOTKIN ter 10 Yugo,.,1av1a . 5 AJ ENTER PRtSES.JU7Blrch,
.JEAN BOTKIN. a resident .l{randchtldren. 10 great ~~ 452. Newl)Ol'l a."""· c.111ornl•
or Custa Mesa. Ca since 1947 granckh1ldrcn and 2 1itreat Amy Jllll• Polllt mU\ 21121
when :.he moved here from great grandchildren Visita w1nach1111 Lane, Hunllt191011° &eec11. Oregon. pas:.ed away on tton wall be held on Wednes C.t11ar111e.,_...
May 4, 1981 She 1s :.urv1ved da~ May 6. 1981 from 12 00 .,!,';:.:.~lne ... IHoncN<teo l»Y., •n
by her husband Robert 0 noon to 5 OOPM und T hur:. Jiii•• Pl:>lllem.n Botkin or Costa Mesa, Ca. day, May 7, 1981 all day Thi• ... _. We} llltd wllh , ..
Catholic Funeral Services Rec1tat1on of lhe Rosary will ~~',' ~ °' OrtnQt Coull!• on M••
are scheduled for Friday, be held on Thursday. May 7. · · F"1MI
Maye. 1981 at 1 OOPM at the 1981 at 7·00PM at the Ba lt1. Pw1>t1.,., 0renoe cou t Dally Piiot.
H arbor La wn Mem orial Bergeron Smith & Tuthill •Y1. 14,21.21•1 .. 1 ~ltMt. Chapel with Rev F11ther Chapel Mass of the Resur·
Denis Lyons of St John the rection wall be held on Fri P UBlJC NOTICE Baptist Catholic Church of. day. May 8, 1981 at 10.00AM __ _
r1c1ating. Interment will be at St J ohn the Baplts t A.OHiaMl!NTTO,,.CCWlllll
al Harbor Lawn Memorial Catholic Church with Father l'AU NlllSMtl' tNTmltHT ~.~~~tio~e~~ic~~r~~de~a.!.~~ ~~~~n~Y~f1 ori:~!tt~' t~n~ "~!.!.~
Mount Olive MMtuary or Good Shepherd Cemetery. MkloMIH.r.tteclil,
Costa Mesa 540·5554 Huntington Beach , Ca w1111am11.w11-. l ........ M.Welr.U-, Cl NOEL Services under lhe direction •-.r1J. DH•, Jr.
KATllERINE T CINDEL or Balt1 Bergeron-Smith & -..,..MIMM•.t"''~-Acc-t
passed away on May 4. 1981 Tuthill Wes tcliff Chapel 1..,';;1:"=.":~:::!~.,.Hce1,.:::~:
In Santa Ana, Ca She was a Mortuary or Costa Mesa Wllll•m " Wiison, Slephtn M.
resident or Costa Mesa She 646-9371 Nelrtlll •nd Aoben J 0.11."· Jr
was born an Hungary on . FYE ;::!!.,~_'"" ,.,..., P•""-" "'" ••
November 25. 1885 She ts BEATRICE J FYE. resa UTICLI 1.1tECITAU
s urv1v_ed by 3 ch ildren. dent of South Laguna, Ca p~,o~o':.,~~~:_.~ c~~C:,...'i!
Katherme Piccolo or ~osta Passed awny on Monday. nm haw.,..,, •nd now er• c1o1119 Mesa. Ca . Rose llcminger M 4 1981 at the age or 60 Dw•lnu s under th• firm n•m• of of Laguna Beach, Ca. and Sha y I h d" t r Alrpl-A<counL · 1 r 0 · e was t e 1rec or o O.W.t•M...,.,.. John Ctnde o regon, a SIS· services for Coast lnterna 1 Ol Ti. Acoulrlno PanMr now.,...
ULTZIHGH OH
SMfTH & TUTHILL
WU TCLIFf' CHArEL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
"HCf •OTHllS SMfTHS' MOf1'UAaT
627 Main SI
Hun11nQton &ach
536·6539
tional Inc and a member or slrts to KCl<llrt • Pet1Mrllllp 1n1ere1t • , Tiie Acqull1nQ Penner shell reu lvt St Catherine's Catholic en lnttres;t 1n u.. P•rt11trwp -••·
Church. Laguna Beach. Ca sum• •II of ,.,. 11011111 .. 01 '"•
She as s ur vived by ~er P•n":~~u.,,.couistTION
parents Mr and Mrs Wallis J.01 rhe ,,.cqutr1119 Per111ar h ..
Fye, 3 sisters and 3 hrothers Kqulrtil his tnterttt oft.ell.,. on May
Mass of Christian Buriul 1, 1"1.
I NMkt el M ... tltlM was ht>ld at St Phi ip & 2.02 .,.,,. pen ... 111e11 ceute • rio•k •
James Catholic Church an Of ecciwl1H1on 1o be put>t•ING •I 1 .. 11 Canal Fulton, Ohio In lieu on<• In w Delly Pttot, • --llef'OI
Or flowers donations may be o•neral ctrcutetlon tn , ... place •• wlllcll ,,,. Pe'1,,.,tlllll 1>41tl-11 .. m a de to St. Catherine 's 11Hnrf9Ul.,.,,c.wrledon Catholic Church. Laguna c-a • .._.,....._.
Beach, Ca. or lhe City of J.03 "'1ter the•tit 01 1111t Att-,,.. At4U1....... Per1nt< Wiii folll tllt Hope. Directed by Swt1ard pertnen 111 c-.tlltlQ 1>ut1nen •• •
F u n e r ft I Home , C a n a I P•rl,,.r""o 1u1own •• Alrp1an. Ac·
Fulton. Ohio. co..r1t. ACc-...
LANGZETTEL 2.1M t"""9Cllet••Y 1oi1ow1ne 1i. ec·
ROSALIE J . LANGZET. , .. 11111on of "" Pe.-nt\lp lnltrMt,
Ille per11ei tlwlll Ce!IM .. etC0\11111119 TEL , r esident or Cost a 10 •,....o1e11 trweswts...tt oft11t
Mesa. Ca. Passed away on re&119<11 ... 11.0111u...
d OiedlMN May 4, 1981. She is survive 2 os b~ .. .,,._" on ,,,. ec
PUBLIC NOTICE Th• lollow1n9 per\Ollt ere dOl~Q RKllerd O Hemllton Tn1• >ltltlT*'t .... lllt!CI wl1• I,,. PuOll'1Wd OrlnQO Co.~• D•lly P1101, Publ1'1Wd Orf'IQO' Coe\I D•lty Piiot,
Cou11ly C•••" 01 Oranaie County Oii Aopr11 14, l'ltl
__ --bustnt\i ., Apr 1l. l0. May 7 U l'ltl 1'11 II "Prll 30 May 7 U . 11. ltltl 1'7MI
GOL DBERG WHEELER COM NOTICE OF DE ATH O F PANY, Sit() c-· Orlvt, NtWPOrt ETHYL M. FERGUSON B .. ch,ca111orn1en...i
A E T H E L M CHRISTOPHER A WHEE LER, K A • 2U Ot• G1or1110 Ro•a, An•h•lm, F E R GUS 0 N A N 0 0 F ce111orn1t t7t07
1'1 .... Pultll>ht!CI Or..,aie Co.lt Dally PllOJ.
"Pr "· Zl, >o, Mey/,'"' 1120.fl
P UBlJC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE P E T IT I 0 N T 0 A 0 -GOLDBERG A.SSOCIATES. INC, Tl'le IOllow1n9 PttSO'I\ •re do1n9
MIN 'STE R ESTATE NO • C•ll•orrw• corporation, $140 Ce"'""' Du"'••U••
FICITITIOO~ aUSINIEU MAMIE STA.TIEMIENT
• Ortve Newpart lucl'I Calllornle THREE. 0 BEO & BA TH. Yon>t NOT ICE OF DE ATH OF A101696. o..o.. ~p1n11 c-.. r. sseo Sent• An• Ce·
WALTE R L E 0 FR IT Z T o a I I h e i r s , fnjs 1tu•inou ts condwcted t>y • nyon ROtcl. Ao..-rm, C.lito•nl• •ao1 F PETITION To d i I pert n11tp flltte 0 D•o•rtmenu. Inc .• ANO 0 S T b e ne fic iarie s, e r e to rs oenere Chrl-·Aow.,..1., 0t••w•••corporatt011,totSll••rL•ne.
ADMINISTER ETA E and contingent cred itor s of Tlllt \tet•"*'' w•s 111.tt wtth 111e E·~·.~t.~~~~~:t~~~~·.cor· NO. A10l695. Ethyl M . Ferguson, aka Counly Clerk OI OrMQe County on por•llon.
T o a I I h e I r s. E t he l M. F erguson a nd Aprll 11,ttei. ,.,.,.. T11r"o °"""'r1men11.1nc
b e ne ficiaries, c r e ditors p er sons w ho m a y be Put>lls11te1 0ranoe c.oeS1D•lly P1tot, Ro0er1Shwtsh. and contingent c reditors of othe rwise Inte rested In the Apr11 30,Mty1, u . ,,_ "'' ttn•1 rren•1-.r WALTER L EO FRITZ Ill d t t This 1i. .. ..-1 was llltO wHh lht W an /or eS a e. Count1 Cltrk ol OrMQe County on and persons who may be A petition has been filed P UBlJC NOTICE Ap11121. 1"1 othe rwise Inte rested in the by Bank of Amer ica Na ------
w ill and/or estate : tlonal Trust a nd Savings NS11MJ
A petition has been filed Association in the Superio "~~~~!~!·::Tu
by Beverly G. Oellea and Court of Ora nge County Th• 1011ow1n11 P•,.on. a•• dotn11 M ildred R. Strausbaugh in requesting that Ba nk of lklslnttsas th S I C t Of A I N ti I T t OEUTSCH OL MSC HEID e upe r or our m e r ca a ona rus PROPERT•Es 1, 1100 west cou1 Orange County reques ting and Savings Associa t ion HIQ11w•1• s..11e 210. N••PIH1 a-ch, tha t Beverly G. Dellea and be appointed as personal ca111orn1enw.i
M ildred R. Straus baugh r e presenta t ive to a d -Jo DEVELOPMENT, •Nc .. •
be appointed as personal m In ls te r the estate of Ce111or111e corporation, 2100 wut (OU\ MIQhway, S..11• 170, N_Po,, re presen tative t o ad-Ethyl M. Ferguson, aka aeech.t.e11torn1••*>
mi n iste r the estate o f Ethel M. Ferguson (unde r ~,,.Y P OL MSCM E t o
Walte r Leo F ritz (under t h e Indepe nde nt Ad-CORPOR,,.TION,•Celltornlecorpo•• Uon, 11141 M\lrpfly ... .,.,,.,., Suitt C, th e I nde p e nde nt Ad· m inis tration of E s tates ,,...,n •• eei1t.,.,,1e•v ".
m in istra tion of Estates Ac t). The petition Is set for Thi• l>li•lntu ,, conducttcl tty .
Act ). The petition Is set for hear ing in Dept. No. 3 a t oeneral ~~';~OPMENT INC.
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Cente r Drive, JOMC>ll P. o.utw:h,
700 Civic Center Drive, West, in the City of Santa Pr.idtn1
West, in the City of Santa Ana. California on June 3, c::~:, ·~1~: ~!,,:;!tct~'!'Y •::
Ana. California on June 3, 1981 at 9:30 A.M . Aor11 211, ""
1981 at 9: 30 A.M. IF YOU OBJECT to the ,.,._.
IF YOU OBJECT to the g r anting of the pet ition , Pwbllolltd Orenoe '°"" oeuy Pttot,
granting of the petition, you should eithe r a ppear •11rttl0,Mt•7.u.21·'"' 1"1•1
you should eithe r a ppear at the hear ing and s tate
at the hearing and state your objec tions or f il e P UBLIC NOTICE
y o u r objections or file w ritten objections with the ----
written objections with the cou rt before the hearing. l'tCTtT:eJuTrusiNau
court before the hearing. Your appearance may be .. _a nu•MI NT
Your appearance m ay be In person or by your a t· ... ~:~,1o11ow1,,. --'' c1o1,.. .,...,.
lh person or by your at-torney. ' NEWPORT """'NAGEM ENT
torney. I F Y 0 U AR E A SYST EM S. uo1 Mac"'''""' IF Y 0 U ARE A CREDITOR or a c ont-aou1everd,Su11e >111,N-t S.K11,
CREDITOR or a cont-lngent creditor of the de-cau~:·~~rana Luia1ter, 10221 ingent creditor of the de-ceased, you must file your Ever11-i..,.., Munt1net011 a .. c11,
ceased, you m ust file your claim with the court or ca111orn1e.,.,..
Claim with the cou rt or pr esent It to the personal T111111u111neu t1eor11Mttct 11y en ,,,..
I 111v1ctue1. prese nt It to the personal represen tative appo nted o..rittFr-Lwucttr
r epresentative appointed by the court w ithin fou r T11b •u ttnwn1 •n 111t11 w1111 t,,.
by the court with in four months from the date of COll•tr Ct•nt ot o..,ee Covt1ty on
m onths from the date of firs t Issuance of letters as "°'11 24• '"' Ft.OC>
l'HO»I Pu1111'1Wd OrMIOI C:0.11 O•lly Pllo\. Apt U , >G.MlrY1. t•, 1'111 1910411
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOOS IUSINIESS
H-E STATIMENT The loltowlnQ per\Oll1 art clolno t>ullntuH M"' C. PROPERTIES tlOO Ed
tnQer ••OJ, Hunt1n91on B••ch, C•lllornle fZ..1 ., Jemtt C. H•nton. •100 EdlnQer • •O>, Hunllnvton Bt•cll, C•lllornoa 92t41 Donald M. Henton .ioo Edinger 1t60l. Hunllneton Buen, Calllornle 92U7 PtQQY A ICtlso, 6100 EdlnQtr • tOl. H11nll119ton Beac'I. Cttllor111a 91M1
T "" o""""" II conowcted l»Y t Qtntt•I Nl'ln•nlllp
f>eolly J 11.tlM> Tlllt st•l-1 we~ llltcl with ,,,. County Clerk 01 ·oran~ CO\lnly on April 21, 1'91
l'ltoJU PuDllthed OrMoe Coall Delly Piiot,
"'J>r, U, :IO, May 7, 14, l'ltl 117HI
P lJBlJC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS I USIN•U NAME ST"'TllMI NT The lollowln11 pertons •rt dOln9
.,..~,,... ....
WATllR ANO SEWI!" UTILITY COMP.a.NV, 160S2 lletcl'I Blvd .. Suite 215, H11nllftllton 8Hch, Celllornle '2•41 P•rll Ser•lcn , In< •• • Oelewart cOtPOrt tW!n. I.OU 8M<ll llvd., l<lltt 215, Hwnllftllton 8Hch. C•llfornle ., .. , fhl• ........... ,, (_ ... by ......
ln<IH'pof'atacl H toclellOll Olller ~ P•rtnerafllp.
P UBLIC NOTICE
N-72365
NOTICE OF DEATH O F
JOSE ROSAN, aka J OSE
ROSAN . SR . AN D OF
P E T I T I ON TO AD ·
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A-108630.
T o a ll h e i r s ,
be neficiar ies, c reditors
and contingent creditors of
J ose Rosan, a ka Jose
Rosan, Sr. a nd persons
who may be otherwise in-
terested in the will a nd/or
estate:
A petition has been filed
by Charlotte Mae Rosan in
the Supe r ior Court of
Orange County requesting
t hat Cha rlotte Mae Rosan
be appointed as per sona l
r epresentative to ad-
m inister the estate of Jose
Rosan, San Juan
C a pistrano, Cali forn ia
(under the Indepe n dent
Administration of E sta tes
Ac t ). The petition Is set for
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
700 C ivic Cente r Drive
W est. San t a A n a ,
Califo rnia 92701 on May
27, 1981 at 9.30a.m .
IF YOU OBJECT to the
grant ing of the petition,
you should e ithe r a ppear
at the hearing and state
y o ur objections or file
written objections with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be lri
pe rson or by your a ttorney.
i
r.AC9'fe YllW
MIMOaJALrAaK
Cem:itery Mortuary
Chapel·Crematorv
3500 Pac1l1c View Drove
Newoort Beach
6"4·2700 by 2 d a ughters, Darlene cwntlnt o1 u.. .. ..,,..,.,.., ... •"'" of
Deu n a nd Rene J o Eddy ,,,. -''" ~ U1M,.. Ni•"°'
both Of "'~ta Mesa. Ca., 2 llaretotore ~-••ct-4 •11Y lllllltl ty """' whlcll can or "'•Y cllero• Ill• brothers Sam Lazzar a of P•rtnert111t1ort1ieott.r,erty,,_11 ..
first issuance of letters as rrovlded In Section 700 of ....,..,..__ .. ,
provided In Section 700 of h e P robate C ode of •1e;.~a"_,_
t he Prob a t e Cod e of California. The tim e for ••,::::;,..~~:•
California . The time for filing clofms wilt not e><· ••: • 111. MMM•
Pal'll Servk et. In<.
, ...... J.~
Director fllll 119..,.,_t .... Ill"' JllJIA Cownly Cttrll of Of'M .. County ,,.prll 14, l'ltl.
I F Y OU ARE A
C R E DITO R or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
c laim w ith the court or
p resent it to the persona l
r epresentative a ppointe d
by the court within four
months from the date of
firs t Issuance of letters as
provided In Section 700 of
th e Probate Cod e o f
California. The time for
filing claims will not •x-
plr e prior to four months
from the d a te of the hea r-
ing noticed abOve.
..
McCOltMK:ll MOHUAatH
Laoune Beech
494·9415
LaQuna Hills 788-()933
Sen Juen C.o•atrano
49S-1778
~ LAWM-MT. Ot.1¥1 Monua~ • C.me terv
Cr•miitorv
Hl25 GisJer "'" eo.1a Meta
540-5554
.-ca llOTMml
l&lllO.-WA'f MOITVAIY
1108ro.d~y
Costa Meta tM2-9150 I
Calabasas. Ca. and Eugene 11e (te•'"" or "'<herftd My ., .,. L.nura of Nevada 2 sisters cre11111, -It•, or tflac1t of the . "•" ,.,..,., Mrs . Miid red C. Ladom• H T".,. a. u acuT1o.t •110 ....
and Ms. J . Lnu.ra both or l'OlleaMINT
W h I t t I e r . C a • and 3 ui TlllJ ~..,. .nc .. t.
arandchlld.ttn. RoHry will .. 141 ·~ ,_.., f/f WUllMili*ffi ... b4' re.cited on Wednes day • .c111«1t~•"•......,
May 8, Ull at 7:30PM and •;::::;:,~· ....
MH• of ChrteUon Burlat wlll u t.,.... •+;w:-.•• ... _._
bt celebrat4'!d on Thursday, .t-.. ...,.." ...... • ,_
May 7, 1981 at lO:OOAM, bolh C.::.::' ~1119 • ...... tlf
at St J ohn the 8apt11t "1111 31 ,_.,....._
CatboUc Chu.rch lnwment 1 a ,,.. ..,_.... -..1 !Mn 1t wUI ~ at Good Shephe.rd ..,"., _. llilM.,. _,__,
Cemete ry Hun tin1too "1111~:.;.•.=;r::-• •1141 ••·
Beach, Ca. Frttncb may ~all luotH ., u11111e 111111•1,
a t Pierce Brothtta 9tll ..,,.Mn••~1.1t11.
Br oad•ny Mortuary on Wedne1day, May 8, \tel
from t :OOPM lo s:ooPM.
PhHe Bro th er s Bell
Broad_.., Mortuary dlrtc·
ton.
flllng ctalms will not ex· plre prior to four m onths ' Pu1111&11er.1 0r.,.. eoest 0.11~ Pllof,
p l re prior to four months from the da te of the hear-"'llf'11 •.MIV 7• ,._ 21• "" ro.Mt.
from the date of the hear-Ing noticed at>ove.
Ing noticed a bove. YOU MAY EXAM INE P UBUC NOTICE YOU MAY EXAMI NE the file kept by the court.L _________ _
.. , ...
Pullll...., °" ..... Coetl o.i1., Pl!M Apr. 1', n, JO, Mey 7. 1•1 111M
PUBUC NOTICE
the file kept by the court. If you are Interes ted In the ,1CT•Tiounu1tHu •·m" If you Ire Interested In the estate, you may flit a re-NaMH TATaMaWT 111rnT1ounu•1 .. •11
estate, you may flJe a r• qOest wlttt t ht caurt to re-n. 1o1_.,. ,.,._ 11 _.... """ Tiit .:i=-m:T~".',.. .. 111t
quest With U'f court to ,.. Ct lVt special notice Of the n.u,-:: VIOIOLA, Ill lllATUN 1> .. 11 ....... :
Ctlvt specltr notice of the Inventory of esta te ••sets win. UI lllATTAN PACTOlllY ILITa TYPIHO llltVICll, ,., .. ltWt ntory of ntete nsttl I nd of tht petitions, t C• 1.41.U, 141 VIC>llO TltONICS, HI lwene Vl1te Ortve, l.tt1111e Hiiia,
and of the JMtltlons, I C• c 0 u n t ' • n d r. p 0 r t s VI0.-0 MAM, I•> lflH O ~1.0, ~71 C•":.0:,4:,~ K-..1. 1'1• ·-
c o u n ti • n d re Ports dncrlbld In SKtlon 1200. ~:..,~g.,c,~," :f JA..1 'JoJ~ 1~ vwe or1w, i....-Hiii&, c.11~
dtKl"fbtd In SKUon 1200.S of the Clllfomla ProtMtte "'· '"" s'""'· •·•· C•••~ Mn•, m» Of the Cllifamla Probate Code (.afffWIM*". ICll'll Oii It~• •'1 ,,..._.
Codt . Jti.a C. f'HHY, At oavto LOYD ltOtllltTI. lttM: Coll~~~.::~ I r• Wllllam I . CHc:t., Al· W'MY M L.Mit, P•NN8Y ::;.:.w.. . ...._AM. Clol""""4 1~ •••1.ev--.c.e11._.et11• tornty~Law, #1 & 11'1'.NNIY Ult VI• t1111 Ml-• I•~--,• '"'•....,_It t..-e11t• _,
CJty 8 1Yd. Wfft, 1900 8tnk LtW, Wtt ia, NIW'9t1 lllftltte==·~ ..,.er••=iu
Amerlc• Tower, Ora l"Qt, •••c!'L C.llfer•la; tel. "'" .......,.. _ 11..-..... .,. flll• .....,.. -,. ... ••• Clllfornl• 92661. C114) w1-na c-1, 0tr11 _. 0r .... c.witr ... c-1, ci.rtt .. ~9'\ .. '-"'
Published Ora nQe Coa1t Published Or•nve coast A1t11 n ,1t11. "'"'" "-'" •. 1•1· '""' Dally Pilot, May 7,1, l4r Dally Pilot, ~y 7,1, 1•, ~~c..tDelty,._ .._,.,..0r._.c.. .. o.11r~
l9t1 21SH1 1911 215'-11 ..,., .. ..,,,,~re,"" .-i ~.1t.n.a,_,1,,., '"'•
YOU MAY EXAMINE
t he flle kept by the court.
If you are lnte~ted In the
estate, you ma y flit • re-
quest with the court to r•
celve special notice of the
Inventory of tsta1e a1sets
a nd of the petitions, t C·
coun ts a nd r e port s
described In Section 1200
of tht Ollfornla Probate
Code.
M•Mt'V9, MumpW IN
Hu11tu, by: 8ra~J. kb•1, Jr., Att_.... at Law, J1IO C.mpua , P .o. lox 7t.10, Ne-..rt
IHC.h, Ctllf ... nl• "'60.
(714) 752""'5.
Published Orenge Coest
Dally Pilot, ~y 6, 1, 13,
"" 20ts.a 1
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. May 7, 1981 All
t~blllly 01 the lndl·
viO\lal towaro eo1:1My
• AU lf4T1*,AMILY
Glorle ,.... Ilk• • "dUMb
bto11de" whe11 Miiie
~ her fM an "Intel•
lectuel" friend
TUBE TOPPERS «*I bOy wflo -Matt u a
man wflo GM r Id "'' vtllege
Of 611 bandit•
~ • det.ct!Ve Into •
r.ilglOUa Ofdet t:_..,I NEWS !~~--~~~~~~~~--~---• toMllOtt
IMPOelllM.l
t:~ MOYIS
1111 ~Sl>A Y
-~---....-. 4:30. 00dae1'9 vt. Phllllet
etl'"ll•dltliitll• e:oo1 D. NlWI I WONOER WOMAN
Wond« Women lotle e
ruth .... mooet«'e plen to
tutn the town of Sant•
Corona Into g.mbllng clll·
noL G TIC TAC DOU0+4
• GOOOTIMU
Flof1de'• pl-for J J .'•
birthday are aom.w1111
aubdued when JamH
IMtna 1"-1 I computet llU
glYet'I htm e bad cr~lt rat-
lrig (Pen 1)
ON TRIAL -Ellen Burstyn and Martin
Balsam star as accused murdere·r Jean
Harris and her attorney in "The People
vs. Jean Harris'' tonight and Friday
night at 9 on Channel 4.
SI IN8IOE STORY
Hoddlng Cart«, form«
~ apok.,..an lor the
State o..>•rtment, looka •I
hOw well th41 -con-
MHMf .. letVl<*I by preu
COveteg9.
Ii) El.£CTNC COMPANY
~ C88NEW8 9 A8CNEW8
t :IO G JC>t<ER'S WILD
• IEHNYHILL
a.My playa the oandmu-
ter ot a perk band
• KCET NEW98EAT
Ii) ITUOIO 8H
"Un~ ..... Th41 St H.i-
en'a Sc:nool Unlcycle Oriti
Tum In N-bury, Ohio
pertorma ~tk:a on
unk:yclea. (RI 9 BAAHEY MILLE.A
A de1perat1 citizen
thrMleM 10 blow hlmllell
and the pr9Clnc:t alty high.
.... EOfTOAIAl 1:00 CU NEWS 0 N8CNEW8
• HAl>f'V DAYS AGAIN
Marlon'• lrequ4N'lt myaterl-
CHANNEL LISTINGS
oue &bMnCet from ho~
crMte -..picion In lhe
hOUMhold D A8CNEW8
1J IULL&EYE «D STAUT8 Of' SAN
FAANa8CO
A~ 111Mman and 1111
wife each 1uapec1 the
other Is rnponllble for the
deelha of a 11-atd-
•nd e nurM
fi:) OVER EASY
G...at: Odetta. (RIO
Ii) MACHEIL I LEHAEA
AEPOAT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 MIRV OAlf"FIH
G...ata. Kil Rudman, The
Marahall Tucker Bind.
Don McLean, Sylvia
7:30 tJ 2 ON THE TOWN
Hos11· Steve Edw•rda and
Melody Rogera A IOok at
the X·r•t~ movie SC41ne In
Loa ~ Melody ratta
down tn. rough Kern Riv-• .,
0 FAMll V FEUD
U SHANI.NA
G...a1 Conway TWltty
I) KNXT 1CBS) LU'> Anqt-tt-. 0 KNBC 1NBCl Los An<Je t-
U KTLA 1lno 1 Lo., An9t-""' 0 KABC· TV (ABC! L o., Anq1•1,,.,
l£ '\FMB 1CBS1 San Q,ego 0 KHJ· TV (Ina J Los An4ele<.
~ KCST (ABC1 San D ·t'QO m KTTV \Ind I LO!. Anqple<,
Cl) KCOP· fV 1 Ind I Los Angell'S
fl) KCET-1'11PBSI Los Anqt:'lt>~
'1D KOCE TV.1 PBSI H untongton Beacn
D EYEONLOS
ANGE1.E8
Ho41ta lnei ~roa.. Paul
Moyer A IOOk 11 lignt·-
lng and the nlghtUf• In lar •·
el, -• IMl\08 conducted
at a "dMth hOuM", vlllt •
Oenlah dude ranch In Sol-
vang IJ FACE THE MUSIC m M'A'S'H
Hawkeye fella IOt' • bMutl-
lul Swecliltl dOC1or ..no
arrl,,.. 11 the 4077th to
~combat IUIQetY flD MACNEIL I LEHAEA
REPOflT
'1!) NEWS
(I)· P.M. MAGAZIHE
A a-up IOOll •I putting
out a dally~ with
Marlh• Mcau.tn, city edl·
IOt' at Iha San Diego Union
1:00 tJ (I) THE WAL TONS
Ike. Cor•beth. E.llzabeth
and Or.,. ere all l0tmet1I·
od by problem• of love. D N8C MAGAZIHE
WTTH DAVIO BRINKLEY
U MOVIE
• e ,..., "The Or-oon Llvn"
( 111711) Bruce LI · The
eesence or Bruce LM , one
ot the muter• ot the art ol
Kun~u. Is r.craeled D ®J MON<AHD
MIHOV
Mork' t reaction to Mindy'•
gotng 10 work wtllltl h4I
doea lloYaehOld cnore1
senda her 1n ... ,ch ot P•Y·
cnlatrlc help. IJ MOVIE
e * * • "Judgmern Al
Nurambarg" (Perl I)
(11161) Mulmlllan ScMl11 SPln<* Tracy. The pro-
cMdlnga of the Nazi wlf
Cfl~ trials explore the
.OONOOe ....
8aMd °" the novel by Jann D Mec:Oonald An
Impending hurricane
thrMtlll'I• the Nvee of th4I
rtllldenta ot an n~
oondomlnlum bullt by I I
gta.dy and lrreeponllble
COfl>Ot•tlon Stat ring Bar·
baH Eden. Oen HllOQ«IY
and St-Forr•t (Pwt I)
• TVAUCTIOH
A blO-by•phone extrava-
0-wt!«• enylhlng end
everything wHI be IUC· I
tloMd to Iha l'llgheat bid·
der ID MAGIC Ml'TlfOO ~
0tL PAINTIHO
"Road, Fence And Moun-
tain"
a:ao •a ~ IUOOll!.8
Sonny lhrHI-to lea\19
town If an. doean't ~ •
dancing jot>. (RI m P.M. MAGAZINE
A vlalt with Glen Campbell
and Tanya Tuclc•; !Ind out
hOw Stew Lewtt dMla
with dMth; Or. JuUen Wiii·
taker t1k• a look at how
tat• cut ott our oxygen
aupply. Capt Carrol
1harea advice about
IJlerciM •nd ,,..,., dla--· ID INU>E STORY
Hoel Hoddlng Carter
t:OO II Cl) MAONUM, P.I.
A terlea of atlange eventa
1>4tgln occurring at • hellth
club alter an elderly
H•w•Man p1ac. • curM on
11.(R)
0 MOVIE
'The People Va. Jean
Harrl1" (Part t) (Premiere)
Elletl Bumyn. Manin Bal-
aam. TM trial ol Jun
Harri. for the murder ol
lamed diet doctor HerrMn
Tarno-11 dramatl.tld 8 9 MANEY MIUBI
The equ~• lnltlal glM at
receMng tK.illetprool -II
tlll• an unexpected turn
toward the hllarlou•. Q m ME.AV QRIFFIH a ....... Kai R&.dman. The
• • M1r1h1U Tucker Bind,
Don Mclean. Sylvta. T.G
SMpj)ard, B.ilamy Broth· .,.,
fi:) TVAUCTION
(CONTD)
I!) SNEAK PAEV1EW8
Roger Eber1 and Gene
Sllkaf review "Cavetnan."
"TM Howling," "Hardly
Wonclng" aod ~Br11ker
Morant " e:ao D 9 TAXI
The SunShl"41 Cab Co
goes out ol ou~. lert·
Ing all ot th41 taxi gang
wlthOUI joba. (Part I)
Ii) TOMOAAOW I
TOOAY
A tapon on wtiat'1 ,_ In
talklng mllChlnea; e IOOk •t
the poaalblllU.. ol autl•ll·
tutlng llooflol for guollne
KHJ 0 8 :00 -"Judgement at
Nuremberg." Part one of the movie
based on German war criminal trials
and starring Maximilian Schell, Spencer
Tracy and Burt Lancaster.
KCOP ti) 8:00 -"Condominium."
Part one of a drama starring Barbara
Eden, Dan Haggerty and Steve Forrest
about an exclusive condo development
with faulty construction.
KCET 9 8:30 -''Inside Story."
Hod ding Carter, former assistant
secretary of state for public affairs,
anchors a new series assessing bow the
press handles developments in the news.
<See story, photo below)
U I IOUtCI OI lull, I loOit
at the lat•t ,_. from
Juplt« and Salurn. 10:'00. CJ) ~
One of MatY'I bell frtendl
la IKlmltt~ to the hoe91t•l
... would·O. eulcicM eueliii> NEWs D lGl 'l0/20
10:ao m News
• INDEPENDENT
NETWON< N£W8
l1Ii) MY8TERV
"SerQMnt Cribb: Horl1on-
t al Wllneu" An
underworld hoodlum I•
found unconeclou1 end
badly OHien •lier telling
Scotland Vard ti. wll·
neaeec:I the murder ol hla
ganga.ter bou !Pert 3)
11:00 IJ 0 8 ([) 9 NEWS 9 ITARTREK
Klrlt, Spock and McCoy
land on e plenet to tnvntl-
g•te the dleappearanu ol
• atarlhlp toat 100 years
P<lor. u MEWL vwm GAME m M'A'8'H
H•wloeye and B. J oecome
loat In enemy terrllC>rf
ti) BENNY HILL
Benny hll tun with Iii. uM
of pvOdy on• well-known
aong In 1 lovely old Engll&h
Q!fden &I TVAUCTION
tCOHrDI
11:ao e Cll N8A 8A81<Ef8ALL
Hou1lonet Sos ton
D TONtQHT
Ho9t· Johnny Cvton
8 9 A8CNEW9
HIOHTUHE D LET8 MAKE A DEAL
.. HOGAN'S HEAOES
Hogen gate help from the
Germen GMtepo wn.n he
tn.. 10 detain • German
~al at Stelag 13 m IAAETTA
T ony'a llancae and '-
0.by .,. l&rgele In • dead-
ly power atruggltl In tn.
und-ortd •
Ii) CAPTIONED A8C
NEW8
-Ml>tlGKT----
12:00 U MOVIE
e e e "The Ugly Amert·
can" ( 11163) Merion Btan-
do. Eljl Okada. An~
tic ambauedor to a
Southeut Allan republic
i. confront~ with hOatlllty
In hla hoel nation D 9 CHAAl.IE'S
ANQ£L8
Kelly goea undercover aa •
dancer w~ • dance
marlthOn contntent la
murder~ (Rl 0 GUHSMOKE
In Mexico, Mall 11
belrltlnd~ by a 13·)"'8'·
JOHN DARLING
The IMF muet thwlft the
appolntmet1t ol 1 r~t to
the throne of • em111
monarehy.
• CAPTIONED A8C
NeWS
12-.*I I TOMOfW>W OHi STfP IEYOHD
"~"A mine cave In
1repe ......, Archer and her
aonSteven.
1:00 IJ PSYCHIC
PHEHOMEHA, THE
WON..D IEYOHO.
Hoe11 Damien Simpton
Stacy Hunt
• MOVIE
eee "BNI The Devil'
( 11154) Humphrey Boglfl
Jennlter Jonea lntern•-
tlonal awlndlera. n.ck-
d999 In pl•na lo oulwll
MCtl Olhet, are diverted
lrom Iii.Ir alnlater deAJ1ng1
wflen an IKpiOelOn wreck9
the Jlhlp tli.y ara ebO&rd
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWOAK HEWS
1:10 D MOVIE e e "The like" (1974) Bil-
ly 0., WUUam1, Eddie
Albert A ~ew Mexico
p04ic:.m.n with e ,~··· llon '°' honeaty 11oopa to
~ting bribe• from the
ayndleate. 9 CAROl 8URHElT
AHOFRIEH08
Guett Roddy McDowell
1:30fJ NEWS
• MOVIE
• • ,..., 'Thi Myeterlana
( 18511) Kenjl Sahetl. Vuml
Sh1<ak1wa A group ol
hlghty evolved allen1 ot
wperlor lntettlgence try 10
take over Earth 10 perpe1u-
11e their cMtlutlon
1:560 NEWS
2:00 IJ EOfTOAIAL
D NEWS U MOVIE
• • "Showdown Al Boot
Hiii" ( 1858) Chatlea Bron-'°"· John Carradine A
boUnty hunter expecting •
huge r-atd tor klHong 1n
outlaw nu a great deal of
troubltl coll«tlng the mon·
ey
2:061) MOVIE
e e ,..., 'The Blldge Or The
Cron" (11171) George
Kennedy. Rlcatdo Montel-
ban The murder 01 1111 wife
e * "Th41 Lui Bllt.z:krleg"
( 18S8) Ven Johni«I, Diclt
V ofll During World War
II'• Battle of the Bulge. •
gung-N> N&Zl and"'-band
ot Hboteurt 1nf11trete
Allied troop1
3:00. WOVIE
• "Ftenkenateln 1 Bloody
Terror" (11171) Paul N-
elly, Diana Zura Fr1nktn·
ateln relurne tor • bloody
maaMCre when 8 lllvet
c•oas la removed ttom 1111 .,...,, 3:211 N!WS 3:30 MOVIE
• e "Boy On A Dolphin"
(lllS7) Sopnl1 Loren. Alen
L1dd When • GrHk
aponge diver nnaa • 9Uftk •
en work of art. aM ptll'• to
Mii '-MCrll lo Iha high•
.. , bidder •:26 ., MOVIE
• e ~s.crel Ventute"
(111S7) Kent Taylor A eel·
ent11t'1 HCret formula le
etOlerl, 1K> Scoll•nd Y91d
comet In 10 1nvn11911e
4:IO Cl) NEWS
f 'riday•11
Dayfimr ff ut•ie11
-MORNING-
11:00 II) e • "The Man From
Utah" I 11134) John Wayne,
Gabby Hayea A tough
lawman nab• • gang ot
ou11a,.. who •re ualng •
rOdeo 81 llWMr baM OI oe>er••lon•.
11:30 0 e • • "Harlow" (P1rt
2) ( 1865) CerrOll Biker,
l'.l•rtin Balaam A HOiiy-
wood starlet t>ec;om• dla-
illvalon4Mj and turna 10 •
Ille ot 8lcollol
-AFTERNOON~
12:00 II) e •'It "Comanche"
( 11156) Oan• Andrews. Lin·
de Crletal
1:00 m e e 'h "The Burning
Hiii•" (1957) Tab Hunter,
Natalie Wood
3:30 U e e 'It "Rogue Maltl'
(1879) Peter O'Toole, Joton
Standing
& Batiuk
Hodding Carter hosts new look at press
NEW YORK CAP) -Hodding
Carter 111 has seen the news
business from the inside and out,
as a reporter , editor and
publisher in his home state of
Mississippi .. later as the highly
visjble spokesman for Jimmy
Carter's State Department.
That should be fitting back-
ground for his current assign-
ment, as anchorman and chief
correspondent for "Inside
Story," a new public TV series
described as "the first national-
ly televised examination of
press performance."
"There is an awful lot of activity
not centered on ~he three
networks and the three major
newspapers, though we don't
often hear and read much about
it.
"It's a far more complex and
interesting picture than we
usually get," ~arter says of the
press. "We want to cover the In·
stilution the way it covers
others."
story, and then move into the
''Cover Story" segment. an ex-
amination of coverage of a
prominent issue.
Carter will anchor the "Cover
Story" on location, and the seg-
ment will include television
news clips as well as newspaper
and magazine graphics as il-
lustration.
The magazine also will in-
clude "Winners and Sinners,"
examples of good and bad press
perforinance; ''First Amend-
ment Alert," on developments in
the area of free press; "Bob and
Ray," humorous pieces on Ure--tntentional.
press by the comedy team, and "If we go mto this thing sound-
"Commentary," a short wrapup ing overly serious about
essay by Carter. o urselves and pompous, we
Robert Schulman, for seven ought to sink Like a rock," he
years media critic and colum· says. "We're taking our produc·
nist Cor the Louisville Times and tion team out, to the mid-South
Courier.Journal, 1s managing and the Midwest. other places,
editor of "Inside Story," and the and we're not going to have peo·
senior producer is Howard Wein-pie in the press sitting around,
berg, most recently a producer talking to each other. We're go·
for CBS' •'Sunday' Morning" ing to talk with the people affect-
news programs. ed by press coverage.
Carter says the makeup of "We're trying to do something
"Inside Story," with light as serious, but that doesn't mean
well as more serious features, is we have to be dull."
Tne nail-hour program pre-
mieres on Channel 50 tonight at
8:30..
"I learned a great deal in my
old job at the State Department,
and in the 17-years before that,"
Carter says, "especially that
you 've got to be very careful
about making s weeping
generalization about the press.
In that context, "Inside -
Story ,·· produced by Ned
Schnurman, a veteran journalist
who spent seven years .,s as-
sociate director of the watchdog
National News Council, has been
laid out in magazine format,
with a half-do~en regular seg-
ments. Murder trial dramatized
HODDJNG CARTER
"It's happily a more diverse
business lhan you sometimes
may be led to believe," he says.
Each program will begin with
a brief wraparound1 "ln the
News," that will include
Carter's comments on press
coverage of a recent major
By BOB THOMAS
A•-la .... flrell Writer
Executive def ends programs
HOLLYWOOD -Was it
murder or a "tragic accident"?
Television viewers will have a
better chance to decide for
themselves tonight and Friday
night wh en NBC re-creates a
portion of the murder trial.
··People vs. Jean Harris ''
<Channel 4, at 9 p.m.) LOS ANGELES (AP) · Most
Americans want to make their
own viewing choices and not
have them made ror them by
special interest groups like
Moral Majority, ABC television
executives said.
James E. Duffy, president of
the ABC television network,
warned ABC affiliates against
yielding to pressure groups,
which he described as "a band
of moral zealots busy inventing"
a national problem.
"This str ange misplaced
crusade by the evangelical right
would have the public believe
that we in television, Cor some
unaccountable reason. are bent
on deslroyipg the moral fiber of
America," he said.
An ABC r esear ch study
showed that even mem hers or
the fundamentalist Christian
militant group Moral Majority
tend to watch the same pro-
grams as tbe general public,
said ABC vice president Mel
Goldberg.
Only 2 percent of the total
population said that religious or-
ganizations, advertisets, or
s pecial interest groups should
hav~ primary responsibility for
determining program accep-
tability, according to a study by
the National Survey Researob
Group in March.
Duffy opened the annual af·
Ciliates meeting in the Century
Plaza Hotel with welcoming re-
marks to th.e more than 800
broadcast executives from
ABC 's 'lJY1 affiliate stations.
Space shuttle astronauts
Robert Crippen and John Young
received a standing ovation as
they arrived to describe lbe re-
cent flight of the shuttle Colum-
bia.
Young, who described the
sbutUe as "this good ol' truck,"
said "Everything in that shuttle
worked, including me and
Crlp."
~OPHl~TICAT£0 PRXRAMMINO ...
The basics or the case are well
known to news readers and
watchers: the headmistress or a
sedate Virginia school accused
of killing Dr. Herman Tarnower,
cardiologist and author of "The
Complete Scarsdale Medical
Diet.''
With extraordinary enterprise
that suggests a video version of
tt}ose quickie paperbacks that
onen follow major news events.
NBC began taping a dramatiza·
lion of the trial's major eventa
only foUT weeks after the sen-
tencing of Miss Harris. The
show's three hours plus an hour
for commercials wlll begin
broadcast only 12 days after the
8e;;ufilul ~lereo Mu~ia-New~MarinB WealhBr-
Con~umer Reporl~~loak Mal'kel Reporlo
end of taping.
Whal could ameli orate cries of
exploitation are the producer-
d i rector and star. George
Schaefer has won eight Emmys
for his distinguished productions.
Ellen Burstyn. who appears as
Jean llarris, has received both
the Oscar and the Tony.
Miss Burstyn, exhausted and
nursing a back ailment, ap-
peared for an interview a few
days after the end or laping.
Why did she agree to "People
vs. Jean Harris"?
"First of all, she's a fascinat-
ing woman," the actress replied.
"Also, I thought it was a very in·
teresting television show, and I
hadn't done any television in 13
years. That's an important au-
dience.
"Yes, I did h ave a few
qualms. I wasn't so sure l should
be doing it because it seemed
very exploitive. I went through
the same thought process about
'The Exorcist.' I wasn't so sure I
should have done lhat,either .
But I reasoned that if 1 turned it
down, that didn't mean the pic-
ture wouldn't get made. If it was
a question of me or sbmebody
else. I'd rather do it.
"I made the same decision
about this project. l hope it is
fair and human and com·
passionate "
Miss Burstyn recalled that she
was first approacbed about
"People vs. Jean Harris" a
week before the Academy
awards (She was nominated as
best actress for " Resurrection").
Miss Burstyn studied a taped
interview with .Jean Harris, but
she made no attempt to do an
imitation. As to whether the
spurned Miss Harris intended to
kill her longtime lover, the ac-tress commented·
"It's impossible to know what
was intended. She claimed it
was an accident. Obviously the
jury didn't think so. The
television show is not Intended to
conjecturize or to speculate. We
merely present the events of the
trial. The viewer has to decide
what the truth is."
'
-
~ ' i
EADACHE -John
hompson, 39, can
~derstand what is
d to him and even
ile four days.. after
seven-foot crowbar
ashed through his
rain in a Boston
uto accident.
·1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask for Roy,
LEASE SrtCIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
C:O...of~-0....Sts
Nev.MAT BEACH
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 NATION
'Quitters' gain ground
More Americans give up smoking successfully
WASHINGTON (AP> -lnl980. s mokers has stayed in that
Women find it harder to qu.lt Less than 29 percent of women ranee ever since.
smoklna than men~ but tor the over 16 smoke ci1arettes com-Pinney said women eenerally
first lime Ln 15 yean, fewer than pared With 30.4 percent in 1978, smoke lower tar and nicotine
30 percent or the nation's adult said John Pinney, director of the cigarettes than men, but quea-
w o m en are reach in I tor Ortlce of Smoking and Health. lloned whether they look on low-
c i I are t tea . Io v e r nm e n l Smokers make up 88. 7 percent tar cigarettes as ··a step toward
alalisUcs show. of the adult male population quittinl or possibly a substitute
Of the 8 million men and B compared with 34 .7 percent ln for quitUn1."
million women who tried to live 1978. The surgeon general's office
up cigarettes lut year, 24 per-There were 100,00<t more has warned that since women
cent of the men succeeded com-smokers in 1980 than the 52.3 have begun to smoke like men,
pared to 18 percent of the milllon in 1978, but -the adult they can expect to begin suf-
women, accord1n1 to data com-population increased by S.6 fering lung cancer and other
plied ln the 1980 National Health rpillion people, to 160.8 mlUioo, health problems at rates com-
lnlerview Survey. Offlclat. at during the period. 1>arable to those of men.
the Department of Health and Dr. Joanne Luoto, the Office of Human Services eould offer no Smoking and Health's medical Luna cancer is projected to
reason for the disparity. staff direct.or, said the fifures outstrip breast cancer as the
The Interview survey eatimat-show for the Clrst time since 1966 leading cause of cancer deaths
ed that 3.5 milllon "persons suc-that the number of women who among women during the
ceeded In qultlln, smokina In smoke fell below 30 percent of decade, according to the sur-
1980. A total of 16.3 million tried the female population. geoo general's 1980 smoking re-
lo give up the hublt. Nearly 53 percent of all men port.
The N11llonal Cent er for smoked and 24.S percent of the Federal officials also have
APPEALS -The
bride of New York
Gov. Hugh Carey, the
former Evangeline
Gouletas, has asked
the Roman Catholic
Church, to which her
husband belongs, to
sanction their recent
marriage. Health Stal111Uc1. which conduct-women smoked in 1955, she said. said women who smoke while
ed the survey. said the number By 1966, the proportion of men they are pregnant stand a
of udult Americans who smoke had dropped to SO percent while greater chance of miscarriage 1 call 642-5678.
dropp<.>d from 33. 7 percent of the that for women rose to 32.3 per· and having pre-term babies or Put a tew words
population In 19'78 to 32.8::..pe.::r:..::ce.::n:.:..::t_c_e_nt_._Th_e_:p:.._r_:opo:__rt_io_n_of_w_o_m_en __ 10_w_-_b_irth_w_e_ig:..h_t_b_ab_i_es_. ___ _::===='o=w=o=rk=t=o=r =o=u=. :::::_
MONDAY, MAY 11 at 7:00 p.m.
·-COstA MIU UCUATIOM CanlR. 1145 PAii AVL
Day-Long Nutrition of Orange County la 1P<>nsortng world reknowned Or. H. E. ..
Howard. MO •• Sc.O., D.B.M .. Pt\D .. Lie. Cl.Pa .. LL.B .• In a special one evening
educatlos~Of). th. $!May 11 . at 7:00 p.m. Or. Howard ia a atan physician tt Plaza in ~a.ico, a membeJ of the World Health
Organlzati 0'1'1 latlon II be cowring topi~k!ch !'the lollowf\'lg: . ...,,
• allergtes A ' high blood pressure
• arthritis .... I • • .. intest~I problems ..
• asthm~ <l' stress .~ • cance ntlo'"n and treatment• weight prbblems • " ... -(
• digesti terns and , ~. ,
• head • · • how to put a toung sexy l\rtur
• hea~~ :i1 in an old ttrea Hfel!! iL-
FREE A
,...., ·•·
. •). • i
~. ~.ADYAHCE':!UTIOMS OA St.GO AT DO
C411, ~·.0110 • u.lteJ' '
... . _,.
Shel our income in
1981, 1982, & 1983 from taxes.
Accumulate a fortune with dollars
y ou are currently spending on
taxes and insurance premiums.
[ .. Rise 'n shine to FM stereo music,
your favorite AM station or a 47a 8 bu1.,Jer. Snooze button gives you a
few minutes of extra rest,
followed by the alarm. Auto-Reg.
shutoff lets you relax with music 69.95
-radio turns off automatlcally.
uw-d:e your
~etereo .vat.ml 8" woofer, ~v. " tw•ter and
tuned port Genuine
walnut veneer (not
plastic Of vinyl). 18 •
high. 14()-1988
r ............. , Enjoy Safer
~DillWlrita with CB
\TllN!t2A tJr AeallJtlc
4 -91sR99. v 119.95
•~ .. :M~1urlty (If a.W.y r.ito to a aale pricer 'Features
9 and 19 eelectlon for
or travel Info. #21·1503
• Bullt·ln CondenMr Mlk
• Aut~L•vel •nd Auto St:.,
~~~r~~·~rrfect tor taping
Jacks tor mfk ngs, "talking" letters
external powe~'. =~~~J'o~ne/ speaker and
8~~c~~rtz Travel Ala
Cut 38°/o 1795 Reo.
Features 24-hour 27.1t5 alarm, snooze
buttonhbackllght for nlg t viewing
fold-out stand. '83-701
lncluctea Vlny1 ~h
Lono-Ufe lat19ty '
It you are tired of losing to taxes and Inflation, and would like
to learn the solutions to these problems, please call and attend
a complimentary 90 minute seminar. Champagne and hors d' oeuvres served.
ranch·S~le Pushbutto
hone Sa ay Aedlo "'-ve • 1 e>
64ao .....
74.IO
Addi a bright
ICOent to any =':-:t,r,~o
trtm. 143311
TWURSO-'Y, ~AY 7, 191t
.. A
JUST-COAST I NG
COMICS
82
86 •
.. \ ,.
IHI.
H ...., __________________________________________________________ ..... , .
Two-earner households are de-
manding that business make it
easier to manage jobs, families
~ee Page B4
D ~
D
Tax rebels spreading their Dlessage
By tlae Associated Presa
His gray hair was neat, his
smile warm, his three-piece suit
authoritative. When be delivered
his homily with sincerity and
flaabes of humor, his an1ry
gospel rang clear to the smaU
group of disciples gathered in a
Times Square church for a Sun·
day meeting.
"You don't owe income tax!"
said the guest speaker, Ed El·
li son , who represents a
Maryland· based tax protest
group called the Free State
Constitutionalists.
"Right on!" shouted back a
man in the audience, wearing a
Revolutionary War style tri·
corner hat.
IT'S A SCENE being repeated
across the country -at a Holl·
day Inn in Baltimore on Monday
nights, a temple in Queens,
N. Y., a smorgasbord restaurant
in Garden Gfove, before crowds
of 150 or more rive nights a
week:
Ellison, who wouldn't say
whether he pays federal income
taxes, la a frequent speaker on
the tax rebel lecture circuJt.
There are others, like Irwin
Schiff, who have taken his no-
tax message to at least SO cities
-and currently lectures via
telephone from a federal prison.
The Internal Revenue Service
calls these advocates of tax re·
sistance charlatans, de alers in
snake oil who mislead the public
and themselves. They and their
followers are a grolVln1 problem
that the government has had to
work ever harder to stamp out.
TllF.SE ARE AMERICA'S lax
rebels -most of them white,
politically conservative, middle·
class -who are so enraged by
inflation and a poor economy, so
convinced that the federal gov·
ernment Is st.ripping away prec·
ious freedoms, that they risk
fines and even prison by refus·
ing to pay part or all or their
federal income tax.
In four years, 2,781 Americans
have gone to jail for tax fraud -
and the IRS describes 539 or
them u tax l>l"Otelten. The IRS
says it has no ldea how macb
tax the government loae1
because of protesters.
Ahd the problem is growing,
says the IRS. Spokesman Tony
Bombadere says in 1980 the gov·
ernment recieved 13,390 protest
returns, up from 8,784 the year
before and S,694 in 1978.
·'They are a stubborn bunch,"
says Vincent Walker of the
Manhattan district office or the
IRS.
THEY ARE NOT garden·
variety tax cheats trying to
sneak a dollar here and there
from Uncle Sam. These lax reb·
els, \tho cloak their cause in
patriotism, resist taxes on prin·
ciple .
For their part, many tax pro-
testers insist the IRS has no right
to exist. much less to tax. They
say the dollar is not backed by gold or silver any more and
therefore is worthless, so they
have no income. They claim the
oath they must sign on tax' re-
turns unconstitutionally forces
them to incriminate themaslves.
And they try many schemes,
from ordination in a tax-exempt
"minil\ry" to simply not filing a
tax return.
"The American people," says
James Wickstrom of Tigerton,
Wis., a member o( a croup
called Sherifrs Posse Comltatua
which claims chapters in 40
states, "finally ve findJng out
that the graduated income tax is
d.,troylng them. They've had
enough of this communist IRS."
In Maryland, there's the
·Free State Constitutionalists
and the Committee of Cor·
res pondence. There's the
Thomas Jefferson Equal Tax
Society in Virginia, the Golden
Mean Society in Montana, the
Tax Patriota in Sumter. S.C., th&
Committee for the Restoration
of the Constitution in New York
and Americans (or
Con stitutional Taxation In
Frederica. Del., amone others.
On March 28, some 300 pro-
testers led by tbe Americans for
· Constitutional Rights recalled a
1773 anti-tax demonstration -
the Boston Tea Party -and
dumped tax forms in the Boston
harbor.
Walker, of the Manhattan IRS
offi ce, says "all indications are
that the numbers are continuing
up."
In February, a Michigan anti·
tax group, We The People ACT,
encouraged 3,SOO auto workers
in Flint to declare dozens of ex·
emptions to hall tax withholding
by their employers in the largt>.st
tax protest in mem.ory. Most
backed down under IRS pres·
sure, and the agency recently
announced a crackdown on that
form or protest.
ANTI-TAX MOVEMENT ac·
tivists, including Tom Junker of
the New York-based Committee
for the Rest oration of the
Constitution, estimate there are
30 or ~ active tax protest groups
scattered around the country,
with total active membership
anywhere from 50,000 to 250,000.
Many groups have banded
together in a loose confederation
which a ctivis t s ca ll the
"Constitutional Movement," or.
on the East Coast . the "Patriotic
Network." Members receive
newsletters on activities in their
own cities and cities elsewhere.
Jule Herl!iert of the National
Taxpayers Union says right·
wing organizations Hke,J tbe
Liberty Lobby and the Jolln
Birch Society also have given
the anti-tax cause a boost with
sympathetic attention to the tax
rebels in their publications.
MOST GROUPS HA VE a few
bunclred members, but at leut
two -Your Heritaie Protection
Association in Loi Angeles, and
the Alaska Patriots in Action -
claim close to 20.000 each.
Some in the movement claim
as many as 30 million
Aqiericans either don't file in·
come ta.x forms on principle, or
file various kind• of protest re·
turns. The IRS says those
figures are wildly inflated, u do
most tax law authorities.
"l don't believe it at aJl," says
University of Michigan tax law
Professor L. Hart Wright.
Nevertheless, Carr Ferguson,
until Jan. 20 the assistant U.S.
attorney general ln charge of the
Justice Department's tax
division, caUs the tax piotest
qJovement ··a major, probably
the m~or. challenge to the In·
tern al llevenue Service today. ·
0 1 THINK IT'S manageable -
because U;ie number of pro·
testers is not yet big -by using
the tradltlonal civil and criminal
ianctions. But you have to re·
alize that the tax system ii one
of self-assessment. If the tax
movement e rodes taxpayer
morale, this could have a ripple
effect."
Donald Alexander, IRS com·
missioner from 1973 to 1977, isn't
cer.taln the IRS can stay ahead
of the lax protesters, particular·
ly in view of President Reagan's
plans to cut the IRS budget.
"The system works surpris·
ingly w.e.11." "he Raid in a
a> telephone interview, "but I ~
the system is endangered by
ing asked to do too much wi
too few resources. The IRS la ben
ing stretched to the limit. I
would be difficult for it to cope
without making public examples
of some of the protesters."
Still, Alexander and others
say, Americans remain t}jghly
compliant with tax rules . a
Polluter
checks
stiffen
il
>
I
t
r
r
I(
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Surprise inspections at mi
night, more electronic monitor-
ing and tougher fines and sen.
tences is the $600,000 recipe the
South Coast Air Quality Manag~
ment District bas come up witif
to crack down oo the biggest I.Dr
dustriaJ polluters. :~
The AQMD board received ap
outline of the more stringent
program that will be aimeA.
primarily at preventing the 2.ocf
major industrial plants rroaa ~Wt& · llty standaids . .. ~~f-will double ~ nutn ber of annual ins"pectiona
and make many of them SUJ'·
prise visits during holldayt,'
weekends and at night.
Sneak inspections were di~'
continued five years ago. AQMiS
deputy executive officer James
Birakos explained, "We were e,-
sentiaUy unconcerned with any
surreptitious dumping at th~
time. We're not so sure lt's nol
going on now."
The program will also tripl'e
the number or permanent
monitoring devices inside dia-
charge stacks.
And the AQMD will push for
state legislation to increue the
$500 misdemeanor penalty
levied for violation of air quality
sta ndards, and will seek
stronger court penalties.
"Our purpose is not to put
everybody in jail," said Birak~.
"It's to control air pollution."
He said the AQMD has r ..,..,. ... ,.....,...,..O'._. ceived an increasing number
FLORAL ABUNDANCE -New landscaping at
Casa Pacifica was shown off wbea two
Orange County Music Center au.x.iliariet host-
ed a fund-raiser at the f onner Western White
. . _ ~mplaints from people wb House. G~a S1>.90Q~ Nannette Pittman. ·believe indu.air1a1 polluters
Susan Str•r and· E\1tlyn Daniel welcom~ discharging ijJegally into the ·
rJOO pefts 1'bQ contributed $15,000 f9r build· •l nighi. .tng tbe cultfaril complex in Costa lt•a. ~•we're a bit coacerped a
• 1 , t.le air quality in the l41t coupl 9f ,_years,·• b• aald. '
· CurrenU)' the AQJID mat
1pectlons at 200 an. annu
ly. That will be dOUbted, ud
keeping with the surprise
spectlon technique, some plaq
will be inspected more than
a year, be said.
In cases where repeated viol
tions occur, the AQMD wiU
to get the permits revoked,
said.
The AQMD will also beco
involved, for the first time,
monitoring airborne pollu
Jrom toxic spills and dum ,
Blrakos said. Agency staff me
bers in a special unit will 10
the site of hazardous leaks
spills to tes t for airbor
emissions lo identify air
pollutants, and warn ab
health hazards.
LOS ANGELES <AP) -lo.
effort to keep· its search for • new school superintendent ._
secret as possible, the sc~
board temporarily moved
high-rise building to carry
week of in~iews. The
moved Tuesday to the law
fices of O'Melveny & M.y
which handles some dis
business.
Every day, slaughter of dogs an~ cftts continu..-a
WASHINGTON <AP) -Every American Veterinary lledleal
2.4 seeondl in the United States, AaaoclaUanaaJd.
about u often u an averaae LooH animall are a major
person takes a breath, a lost or beadllebe for city offtelala, ae·
abandoned pet ii put to death. • cord.IDI to Jay Mbfebenko altbe
And the occurrence of "Be Interu&loaal Ctty Ilana=
Klnd to Animals Week," -'Nb A~Ckln.He1aldtbate ;
be1an Sunday and ..a Satar· tbeat.reeUottbeaalmallllmt•·
day. la unlikely to have aD>' ef. ly a coeUy cbore but allo uumo-
rect 00 a phenomenon that oae tlonal ialue that often tvu
expert tsmed u bldlctment ol nellbbarqalnlt..,..bor. ·
bumu belnp. T~~ ol .._. almall .,.
"The problem ll bolt..,_, not mvQI but pita alloW9d to
We're 1ttll kllltn1 from 12 run looM, wblcb tben eM •la
naWkm to lJ llUIU.. bolMI• anlmal lbelten and an ....,.
do11 ud call every 1ur," Hid reclaimed by tbelr ownen •DI
Pbyllli Wrtsbt~ dlreetor of Alan Beck, director ol the
ulmal ~ a( tlM Rmnue Center for the lntenctim ol
Society ol the United Stat.. Animal• and SoeletJ at tll•
.. It'• IOllMW'bat .. ..,.....,.. Unt veralty of PHDlf lH•l• l!nd cWnamanlu., to eoeMtJ II Sobool ol VttertaUJ lledlclnt bi . -...... uc1~·-~-people wboN Job It ta dal!J to "WUt I'm 1artn1 ta a bontble
kill-tar1e lallll1-'I of dop Uld lDdletmmt .,alnat laulan '9-
catl" Mlcb.HI WaJten "rtbe lnp," ~ Hl4i ,.,,_ m,U. ol
the stray dot protect. us from Alto\ be aaJd of the ownen al
f acln1 up to the faet that thll atraylDI peta, "a lot of ~
country . . . ii very ambivalent leave them loose out of .._
aboat anlmala and does some atupldU,y." ·
very inhumane tblna•." A dot pref en to be with tbe
He aald studies ~· :~ew York, leader ol itl pack, and in the
Baltimore and St. Loa.la lndicate case ol a pet, that leader ii the
that tbe actual number ot ca11 human, Melt esplalned. The
Lt so low tba( lt would Wtel1 be f ani:z..: freedom to roam ii w .. xtltent U tt wen not for tom bumw tblnk about.
pets tbat are abandoud or be1.ad,butdopdan'tneedroam• •cape. m1.
Oftm, wtMD people DO -..r lb. Wrl'11t said the tolutton la
want a Pit. be AW, tbey let lt nm 1Jmple; pet ownen mut cmtrol
looee ratber tbm mue a poelt.tve tbelr ulmall and -aw• them declaian to take It to a IMJter or a • 1payed or IMU&en4.
•eterlnarta. WMD tlM petdllaf' CommuDiU. ..... to •tablllb pears. tbe owner llmp&J..,. lt 1troa1 lawt to c:oatrol ~: •caped: partlc.alarlJ UeeMtDc
Bett compared UM,,,_... to m•tl md bldueewta to bave tM ~ ~., ..,.. pets .,.,. ., .... ,.... ,.,.
tldct• lD ..... tM 11'11, laid. Allll-:~
WbeD ....... t.ooll DO offrt --le lbauld C tbe • ••:...,. • ....... t ... ~tJ•~iv~~C1CI~., '" •• ...,..... ovtl"fi ••· "h.:"f .,._, ad•~--..
'
I
I
ALONG THE SMUT RUT -Civic leaders of
Fountain ,Valley, noted as one of the more quiet
wonderspots along our coastline, may soon take the lead
among our cities in battling sin and purging for purity.
Just look at the record.
The valley City Council bas already outlawed
massage parlors and sexy movie theaters. Currently
they are attacking flesh magazines. '
.If the.y keep all this up, Fountain Valley's forces for
purity wtll make the Costa Mesa vicecops look like slackers.
Earlier on, Fountain Valley councilwoman Barbara
Brown went on a crusade against stores that sold girlie
magazines .
THEN ONLY THIS ~ week, one of the city's
anti·porno crusaders pre· · • ~
sented Mayor Ben Nielsen--------~"""'
with a whole stack of TOM MURPHINI · I periodicals he said were ,~ /
offensive, along with a list ________ ....,.._.......,_
of 19 liquor stores he alleged were carrying the a wful·
ness.
So shocked was the mayor with the gift that he
wouldn't even gaze upon the allegedly offensive
mat erials. ,
You'd think the least the mayor could have done was
to have called a study session on the material.
.... , .. ;;;::. :J·!&!i!ll"WCUili..s:a1111...t~::.-::~---' •·
Al111·smut crusaders keeping kiddie• ftom gin 1hop
"You 'd think the least the mayor could have done
was to have called a study session on the materJal.
Anyway, the Fountain Valley civic lights seemed
most concerned about keeping the kiddies away from any
adult.type literature. It might be okay for the liquor
stores to carry fles hy periodicals, so long as they'are
secreted out of the eyesight otchildren.
That question, of course, lead to yet anotherluzzle:
What are all those children doing hanging aroun liquor
stores in the first place?
THAT_PROBLEM ISN'T quite so simple. If the booze
places were just selling pure alcohol, you might be able
to suggest the kiddies simply be banned frobl the
premises. But s uch isn't the case these days.
Beverage stores have become almost general stores
now. Your corres pondent knows of one Corona del Mar
dealer, for example, who was forced to start stocking
fresh eggs because of customer demand.
Depending on the place. you can purchase candy and
cakes, flashlight batteries, milk a nd butter, comic books,
or motor oil. Then there are also some liquor places that
have installed those coin-operated video games that are
s uch an addictive attraction to the younger set.
One liquor dealer once told me, "l s.e.11 so mucb candy
and licorice sticks that I've forgotten what it, was I
planned to sell when I opened this place ... "
WlTH THE COMING of video games, you now have a
lot of youngsters who hang around at liquor stores,
pumping quarters into the machines all night long.
Grog shops have come lo replace pool halls as spots
where youth flirt with sin and degradation. Time was
when youngsters were warned by their fathers that
nothing good ever lurked behind the swinging doors of the
pool hall. \
Thus you promptly tried to sneak into the place and
spend hours learning how to bank an eigbt·baU into the
side pocket. Parents, however , kept insisting that tUWard
halls were hangouts of the idle.
"AND IDLE HANDS do the devil's work," you were
admonished.
Considering the fashion in which the Fountain Valley
civic savants are pushing for ~urity, it's clear that il
sa.tan ever does come to town, be U be on unemployment.
SADDENED -Actor ·director
Laurence Olivier says be I.I
"very much ·saddened" by
the demise of London's
163·Year ·old Old Vic
Theater, which will close
May 16 due to lack of funds.
Olivier starred in many Old
Vic productions.
Wurt OKs
boys-only
bequest
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -
A bachelor who died at age 96
was within his legal rights even
if he discriminated against
females when he willed money
for scholarships for male hi&h
school students only. a judge has
ruled.
However, since it would be un·
constitutional for the Croton·
Harmon Union Free School Dis-
trict, a public entity, to ad·
minister the scholarship fund
under male-onl y terms, the
judge has appointed a trustee
and ordered the money turned
over to a newly formed private
trust.
The ruli ng by Westchester
County Surrogate Evans
Brewster apparently signals an
end lo a three.year legal dispute
over the will left by Edwin Irv·
ing Johnson.
The probate judge declared
the bequest was not illegal
because the law does not pro-
hibit private discrimination.
Johnson, a life.long bachelor,
died three years ago. His will
e xplicitly es ta blis hed a
scholarship fund for "bright and deaervia1 young, men·' in the
Croton-Harmon Union Free
School District.
After other bequest$ were
taken from Johnson 's $238,000
estate, $196,300 was turned over
lo the school
The bequest said school of·
ficials were to determine the re-
c ipients, provided that they
were bright and deserving, with
parents who could not afford to
send them to college.
And they were to be male.
A female Croton·Rarmon atu·J
dent raised an objection to the
all-male provision and applied
fOf the scholarship.
School officials realized they
had a dilemma. If they followed the-~ provislons ot the will, the dlstri~ could lose federal s~·
sidles: If they failed to comply
with the male-only terms, the
di s trict could lo s e the
scholarship bequest.
So ttie scholarship program
was Indefinitely curtailed.
At the same time,. the woman named to administer Johnson's
estate petitioned Brewster to in·
terpret ·•men'' to mean
"persons" or declare the pro-
visions illegal and revise the
will.
Under New York law, the Sur· rotate Court, th·e court for pro·
bate and guardianship matters,
can interpret a vague or am·
bt1uous provision in a will.
~Smokes tax hike eYe.d
:Democrat leaders propose increase from 10 to 20 cents
• S ACRAMENTO <AP ) -
' Democratic leaden ln tbe at.ate
: Assembly are plannlni to pro-
pose doubting the state cigareUe
tax from 10 cent.I to 20 cents a
pack, the Sacramento Union
said.
The boost ta part of an
alternaUve bud1et plan being
developed by the Democrat.I to
bridge an expected tl.7 billion
shortfall ln tM bucl1et for the
year 1tartln1 July 1, the
newspaper said, Wednesday.
The Democrata' plan included
an unprecedented 1hlft of mon
than Q>O mJlllon ln unemplo)'·
ment lnaurance taxes Jato the
ttate's general rundl, the Union
aald.
and Mean s Co mmitte e
Chairman John Vasconcelloe, D·
Sao Jose, presented the plan lo a
closed-door meeting of As·
sembly Democrats Monday, the
Union said.
The present ci1arette ta.x la
expected to raise $203.6 milllon
for the state's general fund next
year plus $85.4 million for local
governments. Doublln& might
r educe sales.
The Unemployment Insurance
. Fund has about '3 bllllon 1D re·
serve. The fund Is flnanced by a
payroll tax on empfoyera and la
used to pay beneflta lo worten
who are laid off Of otherwise
lose thelr jobs.
The Democrat.II' plan includes Autmbly Sptaker Willie ahHtlng several hundred million·
Brown, 0-San Francluo waa to dollan In tideland• oU revernaet
have unveUed the plan tbl1 froqt captt.al outlay, aa propoeed
•eek, but aJdea Hid ltt releaH by the Brown admlns.trau.t, ln·
la beiqdelayed v.nUI next~. to operational ~I~; the
Brown aaJd at a recent new dOlure of Mveral IDiJiw tu
eoalenace that IM waa eonalder· loe>ftiOlll, a.ch a1 UM uemlllkm
la1 ,..,...., illin•• la die ' of motloe plctllH ...... frum "1la tau1° oa ..a---•• la...;uor the ,.... w ..-.. .............. lo· .~iAd :::.; ;a,, · :m: :.=~~1
>
from paychecks.
The Union said the plan could
reduce the budget deficit by at
least $600 million.
State control
of dumps
proposed
-..--..-~----· ~· -------~-~~---.__.._. • .._ __ ~ _ _.. ......... ~ ......... .._. ..... ~.11'91U'1 .....
le...ttM Sef•ctto. of: .......
•C~•-• A ...... , . ...... ..
• Me4llw'1 o.., .....
OPEN MOTHER'S DAY
~THAU SAT IOOlol lOO 8UH t OOIQUO
Lloyd's Nursery & Landscape Co.,
2021 M•wport ltYcl lat lay Shef)
COSTA MESA, CA 92'27 • '46·7441
Houra Mon -Sat 7 &(" to 6 pm
Sun 9 am to 5 30 om ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;V~t&Aelpt~~S~ -_../
1980 Hallin.Jt~ C.i•O> 1,,c """"'
K.C:/-tt,~Lt~~ /HOP
979-1112
U OO HAllO. k YD. 1M HAllOI CINTB
Open 1•19 om Monday thru Friday Sat 10 111 8
Sun 12 1115
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
F R ESH SWORDFISH .............. 5.98 lb.
OrH I w-....i or broiW wka bui.r •1111 .._ lluU.n
F RESH FILLET OF
NORTHERN SEABASS ............ 2.98 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top chl)ICC beef aged at least 30 day~ to the
peak of i;erlect1on
Stuffed Pork Chops ................ J.98 lb.
Just think! A por.k chop cut 2" thick
stuffed with Delaney's famous
homemade apple dressing
Bonele&s Rolled Pork Roast ........ 2.49 lb.
A veraiie weiiiht 3 pounds.
Center Cut Pork Chops . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.49 lb.
Farmer Style Spareribs ............ 1.69 lb.
Lean Ground Chuck ................ 1.49 lb.
Ground hourly, not over 227' fat.
F REE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE
150.00 min. please)
Your order 1s under complete refrigeration from
our store lo your door in our refrigerated trucks
Call m the morning and your order "111 be delivered lo your home the same afternoon.
• This ad effecuvc Wed • 516 through Tues . 5112
DELANEY'S
MORNING FRESH PRODL'CE
Sweet Large Navel Or anges ........ ~ lb.
Lg. Size Iceberg Lettuce. . . ...... 3 for 1.00
Local Romaine Lettuce .......... 3 for 1.00
Lg. Bunch Spinach ................ 29( ea.
So. American Bananas . . . . . 3 lbs . for 1.00
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
DelanPy's P rivate Label Cha mpaitne 1750 mt1 1
2.75 ea. or 33.00 per case
Wen le Bros. Le Blanc de Blanc 3.541 ea.
Seagrams VO 9.H ea. <one liter>
Forlm & ~·Korbrand . . . . . . . . .. 3 50 ea. ( 19711 )
Scoresby Scotch <750 mill . . . 5.55 ea.
<One Uler) . .6.85 ea
All liquor and wane plus tax
Complete calenng service. from a sit-down dinner
party lo party trays deli vered to your home. Call
Delaney's Catering Department. ask for Tom
Martin
StorJ Hours 9·6, Oosed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
673-5520
t\esa \7e rde \Jine and riqoor •• ,., •• ,., •• ,.,
SMIRNOFF
VODKA EXCEPTIONAL WINES
PRICED 5$00 AND UNDER
JIM HAM
IOUllOM
:it.. Sf97
l .11Lft«
Good sa vings on
America's favorite
Ctaan:oal flltered
We're having t~s sale to entice you to
visit our small. family-owned store to see our
excellent selection of exceptionaJ wines
priced $5 and under. Jerry Mead. the Santa
Ana Register wine writer. publishes a list of
exceptional wine priced $5 and under. We
found 73 wines in our regular stock that
were on Jerry Mead's list.
:.~. ~677
I Ltt.r
A great price on our
most popular Kentucky
bourbon Sour mash! For old-fashioned, friendly, knowledgable
Sfrvice. come in and see us!
CHATEAU DE
FOMTPIHOT
COG MAC
.... Cl1.IO
710 ML
LOME STAR ...
LOMCi MECI I01'lUS
.... St..20 C..of24
A"grand• champagne" cognac-the Imported from Texas. Sold bV case
best kind. "Supetb" eald-New west only, plus~ bottle deposit. magazJne. . t I
FITZll PRl.MIUM
WHITI WIMI
.... u,
I.IL
"One or the Best of California Jug
'Mnes" aavs New West magwlne
STOHi Clute
CAUF. COLOMIARD
7HML s244
If this were und8f the label of the
famous winery who prOduced It. the
eelling orlce would be '3.99. Good
sipping wine.
SOUVHAIM 1 tlO
COLOMIAID ILAHC
... P.tt
711 Ml s333
On .Jerry Meld'• "lntkftr'I Ult of
bctpttonal WlnH Priced 16 end Undtt.h
CODOIMIU
II.AMC DIE ILAMC
a...11.IO
716Ml
A Spanish "champagne" that we
900fed eQual to Mumm's in a blind
tasting. Fresh. clean. lively.
PAIDUCCI lt7'
c.-.IMILAMC
Year after year a favorite. Sliver
medal-Orange County Fair. Glear,
fresh, fruity, lutclous.
ALMADIH MTH.
CH.UUS, ROSI. IHIMI
.... 14.7t
1.1 1.Jtw
One or Callfom11'1 moat popular Jug
wU,•
CHARLES KRUCi
CHEHIM ILAMC
a...suo
710 ML
Callforn1a·s llrat Chenln Blanc. Gold
Medal -Orange County Fair. Flowery. sweet edged.
RANCHO TEMICULA
CHAILIS
l.IUtw
From a small Temecula wln8fY. Half ~auvlgnon Blanc and hall Chenin
Blanc. Excellent.
' SUTTll HOMI ltlO
WHllW llMFAMDIL
....... 71
716Ml
An early sellout at th• ..-.~ hllO
years In a ro'f'. A luvety plc:nk: Of
poot..party wine.
711 ML
A whit• wine from rid grap91. Fr9llh
lnCt fruity. with a SWHI IC!Yd\
I •
--.... --· ... _ -·--·-~---~~--...----..... ..---..... ~ ........................ ,.2 .. 2 ...... ml]!lll(lll!!Jl!!ll!ll!l~!ll!ll!~~~@l!!i!S£11!!!!!!!!!!!~!!6!4~!·!3!!!1.,
NATION
REVENGE?
Sue Ellen
A THREAT?
Pam Ewing
TURNCOAT
Leslie Stewart
BLACKMAILER
Kristen Shepard
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
M2•5e78
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 ••
Whose body was ii? Bing's pipe
hard to keep Another cliffhanger for fans of TV's top show • LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
newest cliffbanae r on CBS'
"Dallas" is more of a "Wbo·IS·
It?'• than last year's whodunit in·
volvingtheshootingof J .R.
Who is the dead woman Cliff
Barnes found in the swimming
pool at Southfork Ranch as J .R.
looked down from the balcony?
There are a t least six
possibilities. J .R. Ewing s preads
threats around Like most people
say hello.
The outrageous, larger-than·
life prime -lime serial,
television's h.ighest·rated series
from Lorimar Productions.
ended its third full season Friday
with the new cliffhanger . Last
year 's mystery over who shot
J .R. generated such world-wide
interest that the solution broke
viewing records.
Nol only is the identity of the
victim unknown , but also is the
means of her death. Did she mere·
ly drown? Or was she murdered
1 before being thrown in lo the pool?
Was it suicide?
the death. Alter diving Into the
pool, Barnes looked up at J .R. on
the balcony and said, "She's
dead, you bastard!''
Here are the prime candidates
for the lady in the pool:
-Sue Ellen Ewln1, J.R.'s wife,
played by Linda Gray. J . R. swore
he would gel her if she took their
son from the ranch -and young
John Ross is gone.
-Pamela Ewto1. J .R. 's sister-
ln-law, played by Victoria Prin-
cipal. J .R. also threatened her ii
she took John Ross. At the end of
the episode a guard said she had
taken the child.
-Leslie S tewart, J .R .'s
mis t ress. played by Susan
Flannery. She tried to nail J .R.
at a State Senate hearing, but
J . R. slipped out of the trap. J . R.
was accused of spending $10
milJion to start a revolution in a
Southeast Asian nation to regain
control of his oil interests there.
money for their son, supposedly
born of their illic;it affair, but J .R.
was resisting.
-Afton Cooper, Lucy's sister-
in-law, played by Audrey Lan-
ders. She helped J . R. drug Clill
Barnes and steal the evidence he
bad for the Senate hearing. The
evidence helped him build a
phony defense that led to h.is ex-
oneration
-Lo u e lla Lee , J .R .'s
sec r etar y. played by Meg
Gallaghe r. J .R . was angry
enough to fire her when she dido 't
carry out his order to get Claude
Brownout of town before the hear-
ing. Brown was the man who de·
livered the money for the revolu-
tion.
The affair will be settled next
September, the writers and direc·
tors cooperating. The writers are
already on strike and the direc-
tors have been threa.ng to
walk out when their contract ex·
pires June 30. A strike by the
directors would delay the pre·
m iere of the fall television
schedule.
BUT DID HE?
J. R. Ewing
Value up
BAKERSFIELD <AP>
-Kern County's crops
were worth more
than $1.27 billion in 1980,
a 14 percent increase
from the preceding
year, Agricultural Com -
missione r Robert A.
Edwards said.
SPOKANE. Wash. <A P l -Keeplne a pipe in the
mouth of a larger-than-Ure statue of the late Biat
Crosby has proved difficult, and Gonzaaa Ulli-
versity officials are smoking mad about it.
The statue was unveiled Sunday with tbe
singer's widow, Kathryn Crosby, in attendance. But
Tuesday, for the second time ln two days, the pipe
resting in the statue's mouth was stolen.
The Rev Arthur L. Oussalt, Gonzaaa vice pre·
sident and longtime friend of the Crosby family,
said the original bronze pipe was removed by
"someone who knew what he was doing ... They
would have had to strip some threads and weldtna
lo get It."
"'We had a backup pipe and replaced it until tbe
original was found,·· he said.
The second pipe was taken Tuesday but both
missing pipes were located later.
The names of the suspected thieves were
forwarded to a student affairs organization.
Dussault said the thieves will be disciplined
''through proper channels .··
The pipe thefts are not the first incidents involv·
ing Crosby memorabilia at Gonzaga, which lists the
crooner as its most illustrious alumnus.
Crosby's Oscar for his role in the 19« movie
"Going My Way" was stolen in 1972 from Crosby
Li brary and replaced with a Mickey Mouse statue.
The Oscar was recovered a week later. We do knowthat J .R., played by
Larry Hagman, is implicated in
-Kristen Shepard, the woman
who shot J . R. last year, played by
Mary Crosby. Kristen was trying
to shake J .R. down for more ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiliiiii ...... iliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii _____________ _
Quality hurts
art show spoof
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The swing of politics
since last November 's elections appears to be affect-
ing t he arts in the Calilornia capital.
Well, al least the special anti-establishment art
world of Jack "Slippers" Murphy, a painter and col-
lector who is a private legislative consultant in his
spare time .
Years ago, after quarrels with a m ajor
California museum and the organizers of a big state-
sponsored competition, Murphy set out to get even.
His weapon: spoof.
So it was Tuesday when Murphy and co-
organizer Dick Kelly, a painter and lobbyist. pre-
sided over "Slippers Murphy's 10th <or 11th > Annual
Invitational Art Show."
The site itself is part of the spoof: the Torch Club,
across the street from the bus station. Innkeeper Ron
Texiera boosted the price of beer to Sl.25to cover the
buffet.
But otherwise, the spoof seemed to run thin com-
pared to previous shows. Never before Had there
been so many serious pieces of gallery quality.
·'It might give us a bad name,·· said Kelly. who
had added two sleek female portraHs to his unsold
"Kellyman" of the last two shows. Superman with
Ke ll y'sface.
Murphy's firecracker landscapes, done by but·
tering firecrackers with pigments and exploding
them on black Velour, paled beside Vincent Bode's
serious ··Greetings" a nd "Love Lock," both marked
$250.
And so it went among the record 40 entries.
Quality was clearly overwhelming the spoof.
"Things are getting out of hand," Kelly added.
Murphy said he hadn't anticipated the serious
approach of the newexhibitors. Nor had he screened
the entries screening is an establishment plot.
Interviewed behind a plaster skull with PRESS
printed on the forehead, Murphy quietly studied the
waves of Capitol personalities who pressed into the
door or joined the overflow crowd on the sidewalk.
Thenitcametohim.
"Last year we had more Democrats. This year
we've got more Republicans,'' he stated.
Major crimes rise
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The rate of major
crimes rose 10. t percent in California last year.
Attorney General George Deuk mejian said.
The actual number of major offenses was up
12.4 percent over 1979 to 1,192,489. But bec.ause
population also increased. the number of cnmes
per 100,000 population rose only 10. l percent.
Deukmejian said he was using population
estimates from the state Finance Department and
would revise the figures when the final U.S.
Census Bureau count is available.
Paid Political Advertisement
I •
·Can you · help
Huntington Beach
spend 1.5 mllllon?
•
Huntington Beach residents who would like to participate in Qty
Government are invited to apply for volunteer .positions on the
15-member Housing and Community Development Citizens Advisory
Board ( HCD -CAB).
The Council-appointed Advisory Board is charged with the tas~ of
recommending the allocation of the City's approximately $1 .5 million
Community Development Program to meet neighborhood needs, identify
community development and housing needs, and formulate
recommendations to the City Council regarding these needs. ,.,, ,. Tl•• ,,, , ••• ,, .. •
The HCD Citizens Advisory Board represents public input and meets at
7:30 p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. The
Advisory Board will meet approximately eight times between July and
October with other interested residents to review project proposals to
meet these criteria. It's recommendations are then presented to the
Planning Commission and the City Council for approval and to the FederaJ
Government for funding . ae A&E
RV AWNINGS
Calf u1 and you'll ... what we mean.
FrH IMtallatlon at vour he>n"e. All
lint and prices available.
• w.·,...-..1 . ,. .......... ,.. ........ ..
""Ice
S.. u1 tor woven WOOdl. ~
1tcnoe POCl• anc11ev,11no ~·
~ Cti1 AM Y•'NC.+w_,-
15998 Mariner Drive
Huntington Beach,
Grant funds are received through the Housing and Community
Development Program administered by the U.S. Department of Housing ..
and Urban Development and are earmarked for community improvements
such as recreation centers, day care centers or street improvements. A
large share of funds are reserved for improving housing conditions or
providing new housing for low and moderate income households.
'
Current improvements are targeted primarily to the Downtown and
Oakview neighborhoods, and residents of these area~ are encouraged to
apply for CAB Participation. Applicants wt II be appointed by the City
Council.
Applications are available at the Housing and Community Development
Office, second floor, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Beach, Qllifomia.
92648; or by calling 536-5542. Completed applications must be returned
to this office no later than June 6, 1981 . For further information on the
HCD Program or the Board, contact Stephen V. Kohler at the nurrt>er
below ..
...
•
. --~-,---~--'~---~---~---·~----~----·~---~·~~~~·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, i981
Working families suffer
Pollster says businesses under pressure to adapt
NEW YORK (AP> -A majority of men and
women believe the family get! hurt when both
parents work outside the home, according to a
study.
At the same time, ··the potential impact ol
family life on work seems to be as great or greater
than the impact of work on the family." because
businesses will have to adapt to family demands,
said the report Wednesday by Louis Harris and
Associates Inc.
The polHng firm said companies "will come
under increasing pressure to adopt more flexible
benefits and work policies" to make it easier for
employees to manage job and family successfully.
The findjngs come at a time when more and
more women are in the labor force -regardless of
whether they are married or have children.
The Department of Labor says. for example.
that more than half of all married women hving
with their husbands have paying jobs. As of March
1980, almost 57 percent of women with children un-
der 18 were in the labor force ; 53 percent of the
children under 18 had mothers who worked outside
lt\.e home.
The survey on family attitudes toward work
was conducted by Harris for General Mills Inc. ll
consisted of Interviews in November and
December with six groups: 1,503 adult family
members, 235 teen-agers, 104 personnel executives
from major corporations. 56 labor leaders. 49
traditionalists or leaders in the "pro-family"
movement and 52 feminists. active in women's
rights organizations.
The pollsters found expected disagreements
among the groups on some issues. including the ef·
feet of the growing Lrend toward dual wage-earner
families.
Fifty.two percent or adult family members.
for example, said there had been a negative im·
pact on the family as a result of both parents
working. Twenty-eight percent said there had been
a positive impact; 14 percent said -there had been
no impact at all. and 6 percent were not sure.
Sixty-five percent of the labor leaders. 60 per-
cent of the personnel executives and 100 percent of
the traditionalists agreed that the impact had been
negative. But 67 percent of the feminists said the
effect was positive
Women who work outside the home were split.
Forty-four percent said the impact was negative;
37 percent said it was positive: 14 percent said
there was no impact, and 5 percent were unsure.
Majorities of most of the groups interviewed
said children are more likely to get into troubt:e ·
both parents have paying jobs. Only 19 perce of
the feminists took this view, however .
Given a list of programs and proposals and
Tangleivood drops
• • pop music senes
LENOX. Mass. CAP) -The Tanglewood
s ummer music festival has dropped its pop music
series from the schedule. due to declining profits.
Entertainers in the series last summer
included John Denver. Harry Chapin. Judy
Collins, Barry Manilow and James Taylor.
Tanglewood, in the Berkshire Mountains. is
the s ummer home of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra.
Orchestra offi cials Caroline Hessberg said
that the popular...artist series may be held in lhe two
weeks before Labor Day. following the orchestra
season that lasts from June 23 to Aug 23.
College h ead named
MODESTO <AP l A Washington state
educator has been appointed president or Modesto
Junior Colle_Be effective July 1.
Dr. Louis E. Zellers was appoir1ted by Yosemite
Community College District trustees to succeed
Kenneth Grirr!n, president of the college for the past
decade. Griffin is leaving the $51,500 post al his re -
quest and will rC'turn tn leaching business classes.
Antique Show
Hun11noion ~«If
M•lf 1oo.y lhfu
May 10
e Daily Pilot
• classifieds
• workfor
• you. Call
642-5678 e forquick e cash sales.
Antique
Show fiale
Today thru Sunday
M•y lOat !he
Hu ntlngton C.enter
Mall Outstanding
collections from 50
dealers Aleo free
evaluation clinic.
405 Fwy and Beach
Blvd .. HB.
•••••••••• •••••••••• •••••••••• -
Maybe she's the type who II~ to·
t inker around on the typewriter -the
woulct.be writer, the part-time student,,
the unfulf llled housewife. Buy her a
typewriter' today.
Wt carri1 Stl«ct rlc. f..rrcw1~
cand Stondcard SCM CClmpod brolldl
Call \.II Today!
964-5282
•1 We're the TBM Specialists"
Action Office Machines
1t1 ~· lulle 11 IMctt
asked whet.her each one would be a eood or bad
thing for families, the famlly members gave
positive vol.ea to just about everythlni mentioned.
Eighty.five percent. for example, said it would
be good If employers made It easier for working
parents lo arrange jobs and careers around
children; 81 percent said It would be good if
children were expected to take more responsiblU·
ty: 65 percent approved of government tax deduc-
tions to help people pay to have someone care for
their children, and 65 percent said it would help if
day-care centers and other chlld-care services out-
side the home became more common.
The personnel executives, labor leaders and
feminists generally endorsed the same programs.
A majority of the lraditlonaUsts also supported the
idea of employers making things easier for work·
ing parents, of government tax deductions and or
increased responsibility on the part ot children.
But 81 percent of the tradltionaJjsts said that
tnore day-care centers would have a bad effect on
families.
The family membe rs also were given a list of
employer-provided potential benefits and asked
which ones would be helpful The most popular
proposal approved by 74 percent or the family
members was the freedom to choose the
benefits that best suited their needs. Sixty-two per-
cent also said it would help if they could work part
lime with ruJl -tlme employee benefits.
3/s"
PARTICLE BOARD
I
\
\
3!~
.. Wonder who
invented this stuff.
Hard as rock, saws
like wood, drills,
paints up nice. A
way to keep the
price in line.
!l/9" 5 97
b.8
4 97
1/2.. 4:a8 ~" 6!?
l/4 II CD PLYWOOD
SHEATHING
The contracton still t ell me this la good.
Th~ show up in their pickups in droves.
( Sounc:la good anyhow).
FILON
FIBERGLASS PANELS
COUUGATED
In Green or Whit.
26"xl2'
2.88
3.88
4.88
COOL Ill
ln Whit., Lime or c.m.1
01 SOLAR
GIO CLEAi
26"xl2'
6.88
8.88
9.88
ASPD STllPD
01 llDWOOD
IUDIEAI
8.88
28"d0' 11.88
2e ... 12··13M
.. -... --------·-· -· -·--· '
NATION
"" ....... JOB'S A PANE -Glass company workers in Dover, Ohio, must be living a clean and proper life. ~t would app~ar they're competing in a st~ange mime competition. But they're actually carry.
mg a large wrndow across the street, evadmg potential motorized catastrophes.
DOUGLAS FIR
What fir? What fir! Smooth four sides. To
build things you need good fir and you'll go
a fur piece to beat our deal. (So I'll drive to
Barstow, I love a barc;iain. )
,, ..
; '
' '
5/8" TEXTURE
Tl -11 SIDING
13~?
I wonder if Tl • 11 mean.
"Tenure one. eleventh try" 2.
GrC>CW9d 4 inch .. on centM"S,
very d .. igny looking.
SIR MIX
CONCRETE MIX
I ~!es.
Ju.st add water. stir. put in the ov.n for
thirty minutu, frost, and MrM aiz. (Ju.st
kidding. LaMar. )
We an mald.n9 this kind of price bec.u.ee
9"J\ if brick la hioh,.. got our nputation
to think of (,.ah, th. nuts who .. u too
cheap.)
rDClll
1
6FOOTld 97c ROUGH
REDWOOD
··~
2x4
c:
LIN. rr.
2x6
c:
LIN. rr.
per square, square
meaning 100 square feet,
appro:a. No. 1 Cedar la 4
bundlu per squan.
~ 13?o~
APPROX 20 SO FT
~k IS?o~
APPROX 2S SO. FT
ll D.E. DOOR
15 PANE
FRENCH DOOR
7788
This i• primed and ready for final paint or
stain coat . In 30 or 36 inch, 1 ~ "z 6'8".
SCREEN DOORS
BELLFLOWER
~ :i'!'lah 12•7 OJ' 36"
Gold
Fini.8h In 36"
PEACOCI 3577
TIE TYLEI
S..tin Flnlah. Th. .crMn
door with in'3:·~00J'. 53•7
only.
?
I
CONSUMER
QUEENIE
~a-'[~
SE"CRlTARIES(
BAR ~~Ja
....... -·-... _...,..._ 5"·1
Insure
collectibles
DEAR PAT DUNN: I just inherited valua-
ble coin and sta mp collections. What type of in-
s urance coverage should I get?
R.T., Costa Mesa
Vou should ins ure valaable Ite ms
separately by a procedure called "scbedal·
lng." BaslcaUy, thls involves UaUai collec-
tibles with their appraised value on a
separate -schedule. This policy ltseU is at·
tacbed u a "floater" <addition) w your ten·
ant's or homeowner's property insurance
poUcy.
There are standard condition.a of policies
cove ring stamps and coins. Rare boob and
paintings fall unde r fine arts policies.
Re m e mber that all these objects, euept
perhaps colos, can deteriorate physically, so
you'll want w provide a suitable environment
for them because their condition obvlouly In·
r&uences their resale value and hence their ln·
sured worth.
Be sure t-0 keep your valuaUOIU up to
current market value. -
"Insured for and valued at" means that
If your books are destroyed lo a fire you iet
back precisely the amount you losared them
for. Reme mber, however, that amout was
first determined by your Insurance company
a nd an appralser.
ObUln written autheadcatloa of an ob·
Ject by an authorized expert ii yoa ue baylni
for investment purposes. Forgeries of coloa,
stamps and books ed s&. Don't trust your own
knowledge to make the jadiment. Abo give
detailed descriptions of rare boob and coins
te> your Insurance agent and keep coplea of
these descriptions la a 1ale place. lleport
new acquisition• promptly ud have them
valued, as well as any sales you make so
your premium can be reduced.
Oyster m-yths debiaila!d
DEAR PAT DUNN : Is it true that it's
sa fe to eat oysters only from Septem ber
through December ?
W.G., Costa Mesa
Oysters tend to be watery during tbe
s ummer, but that poses no danger te> health.
There's another myth that claims oy1ter1 aid
virility or potency. Actually, they are a pret·
ty poor source of eneriy In aay 1e11se; a half·
dozen raw oysters of tbe kind commonly
grown along the Atlantic Coast add up t4 only
some 60 calories.
Fuller's eart.hfact,s
DEAR PAT DUNN: Why is Fuller's
earth called "Fuller's"? ls it named after the
person who discovered it, or what ?
N.W., Irvine
"Fuller's earth" ls not a proper name
and It shouldn't be capitalized, altbou&b It
often ls. To "full" cloth Is to treat it so as to
give It more body, auc b as make It "fuller."
John Olson discovered fuller 's earth at
Benson, Ark., In 1891; It's a kind of clay.
Slnce it turned oat t-0 be most u.seflll wlten
employed by a "fuller" of cloth, fur, etc., the
name "fuller's earth" came to be applied to
It.
lntem data list,ed
DEAR PAT DUNN: Is there any source
for locating intern positions? My college
education is generalized, and I would like to
try out several types of work before making a
·career choice.
G.E., Fountain Valley
Invest S7 .15 In a copy of "1181 I•·
tern ships," pubUslled by Writer's Dt1eat
Books. Tbla 308·paie boolt 11.fla more Ulan
15,tOt altort·term job opportaaltle1
throu,..._ t.be UnJted States, laeh1dJD1 potl·
tloa1 ID &eclmltal, profeulolla.I ud service
occapaUou.
Ea~b U.U.1 11 ap·&o-d1te ud la11 la·
form au."-' wlU ltelp la ta.e adeclloa of ti.e
rt11tt lnterublp, laeladla1: d1ldes oldie potl·
tlo•; tral•l•I offered; qaallfleatl•H;
n a1J1blllt1 el eolle1e e.re4U; IHftla of
1eaaoa ot a. laterulllp; __ p11 aad tttace
bcAeftll; ....,.,., a..Ua'81t7. ud •JPlk•·
tlOD COlltaeta, proeedaret ud del4UMe.
Tiie ....,.,, tell wlald p 11IU1• e .. lead te
permue11& emplo1mea& wlda ....... eom•
PHY. blen.IW,. ue lfo.ped bf pnlealo9,
and u.tre la 1 ~al llldex f..-Jeh 18
apeelfte locattallt.
• "Got a pro«>Um? Tlum writ• Co Pai
•
!>MM. Pat aoW cvt Nd Cope, ,,.tfifto
CM onawt" and action p Med to
aolot fMqtdl'ft in QOotntmn.t otld n ,,..,.,.,,., blaU wour q1111ttOu to Pol
!>MM, At Your~. Or.,. Coaet Ooilw Piiot, P.O. 80% l!fO, Cotea Met0, CA .... A1 manr ,_.,.. °' po1tfbk eotu bf onrtomd. ~ pltorutd
i8Q1drin or idUTI Mt incl~ tJw NOdtr'• f"'l
llGWlf, CiddNU ond bwitNH #totitt' "'°"" ...... bftr
CCllUtoC N ~ftd. T#Ut c°"'9M ....,, ... U •
Ctpf,....,"
NO
DEALER
SALES
RID-A-BUG
QT. 277
GAL.
677
Ready m ized prof ... ional strength
formula that wipu o ut roach .. , anta,
•piden, fliea, ailverfiah , and 20Q other
pest.a. (And you've got 201, right.)
' WATER BEATER
BLANKET
497
Thia Uta up t o a 40 gallon heater. S.v ..
energy and k .. pa you.r wa ter heater warm
in wint er. (That's a h ot one .)
VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL 7,c
30 WT. OT.
lOW/40 WT. 79:.
Sl .. p well t onight, t he Brooklyn Kid u
out ecouting more oil.
IRACO AM/FM STEREO
RADIO WITH 8-TRACI OR
CASSETTE TAPE PLAYER
s•~-551 •KJD -581
... ·~-. ~' ~~
If your kid la bugging you a.bout a st.NO
9)'Stem, buy 'em thJ.a one. It'• a ~t d .. 1.
SER CON
REFRIGERANT 12
741~07.
AIR CONDITIONER J66
RECHARGE KIT
Thoee of you lucky enough to ha,,.
an auto air conditioner can recharge
it with thla.
ARMOR ALL
I~!.
Rene'W9 rubber. vinyl, plaatic,
leather producta. (Yeah. but
what a.bout m y armor?)
MURRAY BICYLES
LADIES 26" MONTEREY
CRUISER
A good looking bike
with 26":d.75"
Balloon
Whitewall..
Chrome
touring
handlebar,
coaster brake
15033 and flam blac k, cherry finlah.
OR MEI'S 26"
•so22st2 MOITEIEY
CRUISD
Bike with 26"a2W'
A":;:;:;::~ black with
whitewall
ttre., BMX
t~ fo.rk,
full foam
~d.lebar
with• oto.
bl&c:k finial\. Go14 ft.niah
rim.e and
eprocbt.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May7, 1981 ••
4'' CONTAINER
AFRICAN
VIOLETS
c
Give Morn a plant at least. Okay, take her to dinner, too,
hut let the plant he the desse~t (oh no, don't eat it).
~' DURALITE OUTDOOR FURNITURE
... I Th ... are stackin g
padded chain.
(Whooo, comfyl)
LeG• and a rm.a are
furnituN grade
CHAIR
S POSmON
CHAISE
74 ~" LONG
39!83~
79!84~ 1 ~" aluminum
tubing.
TORO ROME DUTY
TRIMMER/WEEDER
Hu a 2.5 AMP motor t hat
cu ta a 9" path. AJ..o ha.a an
a u t om atic line feed. (I
think 110mebody la feeding
me a line, too. )
19~!
SUNBEAM
SlllGLE BUINER
GAS CRILL
89!!
Giv .. you 250 eq. inch .. to cook on. Com ..
with a 20 lb. tank and lava rock. 18,000
BTU'•·
BOMELITE 16" GAS CRAIN SAW
MICROWAVE
UTILITY CART
29!!
Wh .. 1 your microwaft
a.round you.r kitchen.
Eaay .... mhly, Oak finiah. (Get a long
cord and take it to the moviN.)
BRASS
PLATED BEAD BO AIDS
VICTORY
TWIN 8JZE 23.77
FULL S1ZE 29 .77
nESTA
TWIN SIZE •• • 77
FULL S1ZE 59 • 77
NOUVEAU
FULL SIZE 79.77
WITH FREE CARRYING CASE Th ... heaclboard. starred in many ~t
feature.: "Gidget gON Br--. Headboard," 12 9!!. ~ ~ ~...,_"oo_(~-and-~_th_e_B_r .. _Head.board ___ ._ •. _ .. __ ..,.
BENTWOOD COAT
Large fuel an d oil AND BAT IACI ta.nka, rubber coated handlebar,
a utomatic chain oilin g and throttle ~
interlock. I' 11•• MONARCH
MIXER
157~1~
~ HPG.E.
MOTOR 44••
Good for little mizing joh.. Handl .. 3
cubic f .. t of dry .materi&l and 2 cubic feet
of ...t. Hu wh .. i., puU.y, JnOt9r
mounting bracket and fold. away ha.ndl..
McCl.OSIEY MAIO' WAI
VI.TIA SPAR
MARINE V AINISB
13 07. 8PRA y 2.37
PT.
QT.
2.97
•• 97
t•.97
Gnat for exterior wood finiah ... Gloa and
aatin finlah .. protect.a against 8\lft a.nd
water. (I'll bet they made that up.)
DISIDIASTEI llTCBEI FAUCET
·5777 IM-78
r
i I
Auemble th ... yo~lf.
and gift them to Mom
for Mom'• clay. l.IOOu
antlquey walnut.
NOREJ.CO COOL WHITE
FLUORESCEIT TUBES
4FT 73c SHOWN
~-,.7 ..
U you neecl fluoN90U\t tubee. come in and
buy ~ of th... <Brilliant, a.maaino
what they tea.ch them to aay in oolJeve. )
HOMTEI TIGHT
WATT
Thi.a chan999 jowi ordlr\&J7 lamp
into U\ eNU'9Y efficient nu.onecent
lamp. No hwtallatlon.
It
tl a
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7. 1981
0
THE
J~,\MILl'
Cl&Ct.:8
by 811 Keane
"lhere must be a ballgame over there."
BIG GEORGE by Virg il Partch (VIP)
"Everything Is garden fresh."
by Brad Anderson DEl\l\IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
"I wish you hadn't told Marmaduke the
price of dog food went up again!"
Jl"DGE PARKER
HERE'£) A RIDIN6 HA~T YOU CAN WEAR. MAG61 ' I'll
MEET YOU 00WN6TAIR~ IN r:::===::'.:" 20 MINUTE!>' __ ........,._...,,
~ s-7
··1 bet you're surprised to
see ME. Mr. Wiison." "No. Denms. Not really."
HCMI DO YOU FEE.I..
AeouT 6l.EEPING
TI-410 MORNINQ
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
Woops ! IT MUST BE: TIME F~
ME m FIX LUNCH .
49 lmmedlately UNITED Future Syndicate
50 Iron oxide Wedllftdmy"s Punle Solved
54 lnsurrectton
57 Poem part
58 Misfortunes
59 Being: Pref.
llO Ablolule
81 Cftard
62 Mldllne pan liiiililiti~
83 F!Owtf
DOWN
41VtMratt
4t"--· ~··
5 t "Aerlder -
~·-"
PEJ\Nl:TS
;
by Charles M. Schult ---------------. -------..., -----...-, .... _, .... · ~ATS! I TAKE MV OM, WELL. I'll 60 MAl/6€ ONE Of THE
STUPID 8ROTMER SPIKE OVE~ TO TME CANTEEN REP CROSS 61RLS WILL
OUT ON ™E TOWN, AND AHP EAT SOME OOO~NVT5 TALK WITM ME ..
HE RUNS OFF WITH TME
Fl~ 61RL ME MEET'S ...
TUMBLFM EEDS
I CAN'T GO
OUT, SLUGGO--
I'M BEING
PUNISHED
I WAS EATING
OUT OF THE JAM
JAR AND A FLY
CAME IN THE
WINDOW---
MI CJNT LIFTIT.
·,
by Tom K. Ryani
by Jeff MacNelly!
--E~u,£ Ot_,_,_, .......... >c 0U$HMIU..1Jl ..
I
JU5T lU4Af ! WAS
LOOKING FOR !
I C:.OBS I ~A\/£ "ftlO
CW>!CE.-5 •.. I CAN UM Off
t 'fv 'fOtltE>M1 A~()
~'fvV'I, oii I CAW J\JST
rA1L 1~E E:~AM ANO
RUIN M'l ~Nl1R.E CQ..l.E<,l
CA~E.ER . .--..--.
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORll!
WHAiSA rvflliER, ~ '? -YOO t-EVER SE.EN A
S0GM SANDWICH°?
by Gus Amola
by Tom Bat1uk :
1. Ol~'T EVEN KNOW ~E4 MAOE AN~
51ZED TUB OF Cl.EARA51l !
by Kevin Fagan
I l(NOW. 'f~ERE1>!. A
~-SC8ALL Gib\! Ot410H14.Mrl
,
b
-SI
G
St
·sc vi
.DI
y
-pi
·ai
:J'I
. ta
~l
J
De
D•
m l
I
ob rit
Dia ror
Wi'
' .aa:
·.a~
rel
J
el1
H4
tr ti
out
J
co• b,
hi• co,
th~ I .
•ii
:.1 •
A d &4 . ·-• • •• u ~
18601
MAIN
STREET
Corner Of Beach
In The ·
'FIVE POINTS'
SHOPPING CENTER
IVHnHIM& GOH! Molt.lug R~-4 ••• Motttlllt Held lttell. Ow &ff,. Stock
d Hal hea Price sa.Md To TM IOM! At Cost ••• MHr Cost ••• lelow Cost •••
Miiies Mo Dlffenttcel If Y• Jn e. 1'e Mn.t For Mere._... Of 11tl1 KIMI -
MOW IS THI TIME -THIS IS THI Pl.AC!! C•dl Tiie s• Prices U1ted lflow.
n..r. Are H_.eds ~nat S,.. Wiii Mot p.,,..ff Us To List. Come Attd luy
W1tlt Enry Dohr YCMI C.. Spcre. 1'11 11 llte Greot.1t Sal• In Our lu1lllae11
.... tory!
EVERYTHING
GOES AT
DRASTIC
REDUCTIONS
TORE HOUR
'DAILY
10 to 6
SUH: 10 to 5
,,_.. Wll le Mo L...U, To 1WI Scrifke ._.To Tiie Price 5&et111itt •••
Ulll ilowt TIN••._..... Of NI St.di It S.W .... T-4 .... Co .. ! IMAIDLISS OF AMY LOSS THAT MAY II IMYOlY• w, Are
Del11 ••~ To Sel Off Th ~ .__, Of StM• ••• Liii l .. HT
J HOWi PricH HoH a-~ .. ,To Tiie &..w"t Lrteh le Oor Hl1tory . .. To .._,. We AcW.•e Ow .._.! We lHlu Ttlot UTllMI LOW
NICI 11 Tiie Ot11J Tiii ... Tfll.t Wll 1ri11t Y• .. To loy Ttlll More.._..• .. ... n. Slloti ri-n.11 s• Wll lMtl
Store Closed Til Friday
To Slash All Prices!·
LADIES BLOUSES & TOPS MENS SPORT SHIRTS
"YOU IAllS" "CALIJ TllHDS" "lotr• "O'" 'SWllT IAIY JAMI" "IOllY HOOKS .. "WIT ....... OP" "Am-The very latest in one and 'UVIS" "SPIRE" "LH" "OPF SHOH" "UGHTMIHG IOLT" "O'"The newest
"OllGAHICALLY GROWM" Cotton/poly blends in a big variety of two piece and bikini styles. Sizes 3/4 to 13/14. styles and colors in polyesters. cottons. blends. long and
new styles, prints. solids, plaids. sizes S-M-L-4 special groups short sleeve in sizes S-M-L-XL includes western shirts.
:=;;~.'~·~.0 .•••. 5111 ::;;?.".~-~-~ ..... 5311 .~~:lf.~~1t!=s 1/2 PRICE :!";!~!·'.5
.•......
5811 ::";!!~··~ ..... 5 1088
------------------------------------------11 :~~.s~·~.1 ..... 52". :~~.s'.~"o·~ ...... s4• MM·~~c;;rEs ::;:1~!·'~ ........ s911 =:;.:.!!·'~····· s 11•
SPJCt.a. ~IQUP MENS SWIMWEAR
LADIES PANTS "Of"' "HAHGTEH" "LIGNTHIHG IOLT" "CATCHIT"All brand new. very
"LOVI H STUPF" "PADIO CilOltY" "TOM IOr' ... OSI HIPS" Variety of llG GROUP GOES AT: latest styles '" sizes 28 to 38.
materials and styles rn an array of colors. Sizes 3 to 13. OUR EHTlRE STOCK $ ...
REG.$14.00toS2495 s511 =~~:·'~ ...................................... .
.-price •....•. .' .............................. .
"CHIMIM DI Fil" "JORDAC .. " "SAllOM" "IOMJOUl" 'lllnM'tA"
.._.. Denims. corduroys, cotton blends, big variety of
styles. sizes 3/4 to 13/14. 4 groups.
UG.$21.95 Sft88 REG.$31.00 $ 1511 .. pric• ...... ....,. ..,--.. price . .. . .
~:~!:·~~ s 1 2" =-~!:·~~ .. s 1111
SOCKS
Dress-casual-sport sf>'IM, lntlUdes heevy duty ski and hiking ·
wools. all sizes.
=:!a~·:'!~.~~:~~ .. 99C REG $5 50 $275 ' ,... .-P,..c'• ......... '
~~hJ'J\11\/~ ~~ \)"\ MIMS & LADIES
\ RUNNING SHOES
"HIKE" '"TIGER" A few are listed: mens & ladies WAFFL
TRAINER
MONTREAL II $ 1950 u~2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~<REG.$2U5 s14• ~.s31~5
SUMMJR'S aLADWR Bells, corduroys. shrink to fit, ·t.. S~02' ri
9
'.•
9
'15' • .. • • $ 14.. ..R~MT. S. it3li9'_9.L5' iia"519" ..
brushed denims. Sizes 4to14. l!;V ''HAHG TIH" "Off SHOH" "IOlr "WUMGLB''Coordinated blouses. sale ;
tank tops. jackets, shorts, sweater tops, jumpsuits and halter s 1 o• mu. s. R2. '4c.9A5. NV.AS.$ 1250 ROCEGEA. s .... 2. iii.,,' 5 ••• s' 1·0· .. } tops. Sizes S-M-L. 3 special groups. ~
:;.~.s~.~~ .....• c :~~·$'.~·~.' .... s 111 BOYS T SHIRTS ·tt,REG· y. s·u2' ·,·.c,· Qs. 'urn's 1350 ~.5.t.1~.~. R •. :. ~.S.S. ·_s 11•· Crew necks, long and short sleeve. _ $.U variety of colors in sizes S-M-L. Hie ~ =~~.s'.~·~.~.................................. A -~ , ..... .... s311 ao.g.... s4• ~~~~~i~;.:u;.i<s 13• d:. ~~~:~~-. _s 1 Y-
LAD1Es 11DITT011 PANTS .-pric;~ · · · · · · · • sa1epric;• • · · · · · · · • ~ ~~:All. OTHERS 1/2 Oil MolE oFF. '
Jeans and brushed denims in a big selection of colors and MD4s.LADIES-IOYS-GIRLS GIRLS PANTS
styles. Sizes 3 to 15. JACKETS "IOH JOUR" "CHIMIH DI Fil" "VAHDllllLT" "SASSOH" "SIRGIO =~!!·'~ ...................................... 5988 ~~o~r.r~~~x!~~T~iz'!:~~~{~C, ~iRa~~Tf~~u:i6~c:ets. :~'r'"All new beautiful styles, colors and materials. Sizes 4
1
LEE OVERALLS
Unisex overalls in corduroys. denims and cottons. assorted
:.r:.l::::s ~~. ~~ ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••• St-.ow
REG. $21.95 ........................ ,. ... s 1450
ROW
RIG. $27.95 to $59.95 s 11 • I 1/1 or 1non off ::;:i!!·'~.................................. 1
MENS T SHIRTS =~'~. · · · · · · · · · · · ·· ·· · · ·· · · · · · · · · ....... 51488 I
''HUMTl.-TOM HACH" "JAarsJAll new. big variety of colors, sizes P.LE.ASE NOTE J
S-M-L-XL. Items listed are but a sampling <from our tremendous J
stock. Nothing reserved, notri1ng held baok . . . •
EVERYTHING OOEStll ...,,,,. ad~lsed are subjeFt to t
quantity on hand when s8Je starts Friday and to prior
sale after that. FIRST COME .... FIRST SERVED I
I •
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, May 7, 1981 GENERAL NEWS
·Be1_1.tl,e~ knee still . making .Washington waves . ~· WASIUNGTON (AP> -IAilion An· neeeu1tyolbendln1theirkneeslnrec-was caught in the act of arlalnl alter "Mrs. Annenber1'1 reaction waa a
nuber1 beat a knee and 1"1•d opltlon ol BriU.h sovereipty, and retrlevtns a ~love. ot perbap1 a 1e1bare0Ccourteay,nomore,noleu,"
eyebrow11.UoverWt1blftltoft. Ilia• MQfers believes that acbleve-handkerchief.' 1 Pasnse said. ''It was a seature
Mrs. ADMnberl, the Slate Depart-meat sbould not be mocked.'' she In an interview, James Symlneton. wlthoutpoUUc~limpllcatlona. ltwaaa
ment 11 dllel ol protocol, •reet-4 the wrote under the headline, ''A Ml11 one or Mrs. Annenber1'1 predecessors 1eature without political si1nificance.
vlsltiJ\a PriDQe Cltar~es of Britain with MannenRuJ1n1." in the protocol job, wu cbivalrous. He ltw~Hapel'IODaJone ...
a deep~ bend wtien be arrived oa Writers of letters to the editor of the recalled that Mrs. Aonenber1. u wife At the White House, deputy press
AmerlcauolllutTbursday. Posttookupthecry. or the rormer U.S: ambqaador t.o Bri-secretary Larry Speakes noted that
Tonguestbeduponwa11ecl. "How dare she?" asked reader lain, probably got In 1the habit of Mrs. Annenbershadkissedt,heprtnce
Mrs. Annenber& w41 taken t.o t.uk. Mary Ruth Holroyd. curtsying, and properly •o. on British upon biadepartur.e.
Amerlc,ans, she waa told, do not Joe Anne Sherman said a photo-soil to BrlUsh royalty. lfe called her curtsy. • • 1raph of the curtsy "made me 1a1 on curtsy "a throwback ... a learned in-''She covered both ends of the spec·
The Washtn1ton Post's etiquette myorangejuice." stJnct." trum.isotospeak,"Speakessaid.
writer, Judith Martin, wbo uses the Wrote Catherine M. Collins: "Wedo Govemmentspokesmenspoke,too. At the Library or Con1ress,
pseudonym "Miu Manners," printed notbendthekneelnthiscountrybefore At the State Department. spokeswoman Jean Taylor satd re-
a special "k-tak. any except God." spokesman David Passage sous ht search I ailed to dlscloae whether Mrs.
"A ~at deal of effort wu c!bce put Richard M. Sawyer said be could to ~ake ,light ot Mrs. Annepberg's Anneaberg's gesture violated
into freeing Amer\cans from the only assume "that Mrs. Annenber1 gesture. Americantraditlons.
; ,~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
esert haven
• • • or tortoise
CALIFORNIA CITY (AP) -The sip standa oa a desolate stretch of Highway 58 in the Motave
ert: "~ert Tortoise Natural Area, 15 miles."
The land surroundin1 the two-lane blacktop
t cuts north off the highway looks like
ething out of a training film on desert sur-
al. You can't sh the rattlesnakes coiled under
pale, stunted tbornbusbes, but you know
y're there.
Ten miles north or the highw.ay, the proapects
ghten a bit as the road paHea throu1h
lfornia City, a developer's ouia or tract homes
h a golf cou:rse and a smattering ol trees, but
blacktop then eives way t.o a narrow dirt road.
The road wlndsr beside a f.enced·ln area of
ert that doesn't look different from the fenced·
desert all around it.
The fence rings the 38-square-mlle Desert
ise Natural Area, which boasts the hi1hest
wn concentration of desert tortoises.
You've never heard of the desert tortoise! It's
official California State Reptile, for one thins.
It's also a protected animal, and it even has lts
I' organization. the Desert Tortoise Preserve
mittee, Inc .. a group of people from 1overn-
t agencies. academic institutions, and "turtle
tortoise organizations," accordin1 to one
hure.
The desert tortoise, gopherus agassizl, is one
ol approximately 50 species of birds, reptiles and
mmals that eke out a living in the hot, blustery
jave.
The naturaJ area was established to protect
se animals, which are quickly disappearin1 as
anization pushes relentlessly into lbe desert.
The problem is that desert animals and plants
't keep up with the pace or urbanization.
wth is slow in the desert.
The creosote bush. one of the principal shrubs
in the area, takes as long as 200 years t.o reach a
bel1ht of four feet, and clusters of creosote bushes
can be thousands of years old.
The desert tortoise, which makes iU home in
burrows underneath the creosotes, also 1row1
slowly, taking up to 20 years to mature and llvinl
as long as 100 years, but it never gets more than
about 15 inches long.
During the spring and f aJ11 ,irtdeb are· Ute t>.at
Uqtes to ·visit the area, tortoises feed on
wildflowers and grasses, accumulating water and .Qf. Visit.ors to the area are warned aot to ap-
Jlol!Oach the animals too closely. because when they
.,., frightened they can "lose water Crom thelr
bladders," ln the polite lan1uage of the visitors'
plde.
The natural area is virtually undeveloped,
h. the exception of several short trails that in·
duce visit.ors lo the planta and animalj of the
a.
Trail l{Uides urge vtalt.ors to use all their
tea to spot the well-~emoulla1ed desert
ellera, lncludin& lizards, jackrabblta. coyotes,
cats, owls, vultures and. the desert to'1DtH.
e weary visitor used all the HOHi be eould
sler and spotted nothin1 but a few Uny Uiards.
That's because he wu busy tbinkln1 about the
rning printed on top of all the trail 1uJctea: "BE
ARE OF RATTLESNAKES."
The Deaert Tortoi8e Natural Arto u 4'out a two-
r drive north of Loa Angelu and JV. hoUrt eon o/
enfield.
lien worken help ·
FRESNO (AP> -Illegal alien farm workers
tribute more than they take from American
iety, a Fresno State Uoivenlty professor con·
ds. \
Dr. Andrew Alvarado discussed preliminary
ings of a study be and graduate assistants
de by Wking to 257 aliens awailini deportation
e Border Patrol's detention facility here.
The aliens generally spend most of their earn-
• here, believe in a strict work ethic and rarely
plain, -.said Alvarado, a professor. of social ·
rk.
yelWldohlYI ........
Multl-polltlon adjuetat>I•
banna loungH . Vlnyl
wapptne OV9' at.., frame.
Aeg. 14.16.
A beautlful hanging
redwood planter lot all your
grO'l!Mg tnend1. A grMt
~tor all kinda ot flower•
.,..d ptanta. Reg. 2.18
lllcll b-* In comfort
Super comtortebfe d\llM
l°'-tnge tor around the pooh.__.;. · --•
or on the p•tlo. Ad)uet9ble'·1 I 1 II poaltlon. #510. Limited
quantlU... Reg. 142.95.
feast your eyes on
this barbeque
Propane gas barbecue features heavy duty
construction and high-domed lld. Tank In-
cluded. #9230. Reg. 393.70.
26995
a .&rlll for the
outdoor gourmet
Propane burning barbecue with tank. Easy to
clean ltalntess steel cooking grates. Durable
construction., #9240. Reg. 457.75.
29995 ·
-------
' . I
:
"
dining comfort gltl ....,nd boolll CMVU belCll chair F.
Quality 42" dlemetw gt ...
tcfp table with 1turdy
aluminum frame. Outdocw
dining made elegant. #142.\
Reg. 110.95.
Ifs high 111111 t• tu II•
R1vere' Ware elumlnum
Whletllng ... kettle. 2-13
capeclty. Reg. 15.95. 1. II
More comlort then ev« on
th• beech or poo1 ·ct.ck.
Blue canvas on • folding
elumlnum treme. Quick·
drying ltyte. Reg. 14.95.
double lllblchl .
Cast Iron double hlb•chl
with adJu1tlng twin grlll1.
10"x17". #135'. Reg. 8.99.
DOlrT ~ MOTHSI DAY1
KERMRIMA
GIFT
CERTIFICATES
FREE
GIFT WRAPPING TOOi
,•
•
Daily PDat
THURSDA~, MAY 7, 1981
BUSINESS
,
Peter Wall says
he left Surf with STOCKS
ENTERTAINMENT
cs
C7
C11 SURF. head held high . . . C4.
,·
A leap above the rest
UCl's Kelley hates to practice, but loves to compete
By JOHN SEVANO
Oftlleo.ltr .........
For the time being, Michelle Kelley is oniy as good as
she has to be -and that's not too bad lo itself.
Kelley is one of these marvelowaly gifted athletes wbo
has the abillly to turn it on and off al at will.
She has participated in track for five years now: her
beginnings almost accidental. When uked why 1be choae
track over other sports her response was, "becauae it was
there." Her forte -the long jump -was equally unex·
peeled as she picked it for its simpUclly and "because It
was the easiest thlng I could find where I
dido 't have to run much."
KEUEY, A GRADUATE of Irvine
Hieb. is intelliaent. statuesque and a Musical Theater major -her looks de·
finitely more suited for the Broadway
stage than the long jump pit.
But it's the long jump, for now, that's
giving the UC Irvine athlete her notoriety.
Her best leap of 20·2 ranks 12th in the na-
tion and has qualified her for the nationals
this month in Austin, Tex.
Only a sophomore, Kelley's potential
is unlimited. It's simply a matter now of
how badly she wants it.
"I'm maybe using 60 or 70 percent of ·
my ability," admits Kelley. "My coach
will probably tell you I'm using less than
that."
THE REASONS for Kelley's low
percentage are two-fold : a) the long jump
is her specialty, not her only event as
she's also been asked to participate In the
• 100, 200, 400-meter relay team, the mile re-Michelle Kelley
lay team and the high jump at various
limes this season: and b) she's a lousy pr•ctice person.
''I hate to practice but I love to compete,'' says Kelley
with a smile. "If it's what I want to practice, like music,
I 'll practice. In track, I have to want it and I have to have
the competition.''
get It. I wanted to qualily ... so l did .
"I'm the kind of person who is very quiet, though,
because if you brag, and can't do It, then you're lying.''
KElJ..EY ISN'T conceited. M a matter of fact she
likes to downplay her accomplishments. She knows she could
be better ii only she put forth the proper effort.
"College is not like high school," Kelley explains. "In
high school I didn't need to practice and I could gel away
with it. I can't do that here.
"I'd Uke to think I could win the long jump (at the na-
tionals). But I can do it only ii I work really, really hard."
And by working hard that means prac·
tice, which Kelley seems resigned to do·
ing.
"I'll PROBABLY DO 10 or 12 jumps a day from now on because practicing
does help," she concedes sheepishly.
''Realistically, I'd like to be in the top four
or five and jump 21 or 22 feet (the top
mark in the nation this year is 21·7~).
"Actually, everybody <on the team> is
trying to do their best so we can get a
name for ourselves. That's what I'm fight·
ing and running for."
Kelley readily admits the lack of re-
cognition her sport receives. The combina-
tion of no '80 Olympics, no money on a pro-
fessional level and the fact track isn't
easily identifiable to the mass media all
contribute to the public's apathy toward
the sport.
·'Nobody ever hears about anybody in
track until it's time for the Olympics,"
says Kelley. "Plus, people would rather
see football or basketball, something they
can relate to.
"I just want to be able to help build
this team so people will want to come here in the future.''
WHICH MEANS Kelley will not only have to improve
in the years to come, she may even have to practice ~om•
in the proce11.
Deity ....... .., ·~ IJ(elllltff
Michelle KeUy has qualified for the nat~ in the long jump
The hardest part for Kelley is that it almost comes too
easy for her. When she goes after something, she usually
gets it -like qualifying for the nationals.
"It's the drive inside me that makes me do better,"
says the 20·year-old. "So when I want something I usually
"You have to want it all the time, not just some~
time I" says Kelley or her devotion.
"I guess I can be as good as I want to be. A person can
<See KELLEY, Page C%)
The advantage was obvious
:It was pit~hing as Angela fall to Guidry, Bird and the Goose, 5-2
ByEDZINTEL --~ ........ When the night had ended and
he had finished his work to
satisfaction, Yankee pitcher Ron
Guidry had a point tomalte.
lt was a weU understood ob-
servation and it made Guidry
·sound like a master of the ob-
vious, but the comparison was,
.nonetheless, food for thouaht.
· In comparing the Angels and
Yankees, Guidry said, "Our
pitchers are better than theirs
·and I think they'll admit that.
They might have a slight advan-
tage in hitting and I'm sure they'll
,iJtart rutting soon.''
IF THE ANGELS do in fact
nave more stick than the Bronx
:Bombers. they haven't dem-
i>nstrated it through three
.ea mes, especially not Wednesday
.night as New York shut them
down on seven hits to gain a 5-2
win before 37,410 at Anaheim
Stadiup>.
Guidry (3-2) was credited with
the win, receiving help from Doug
Bird and Rich "Goose" Gossage
who picked up his seventh save.
Thal gave the Yankees a 2-1 ad-
vantage in this series and added
additional pressure to the slump-
ing Angels' cause and their
Manager, Jim Fregosi.
Not that nine of his. 15 players
hitting under .250 is entirely or
even partially bis fault, but the
fact that his team trails the
division-leading Oakland A's by
nine games is enough to make
Fregosi just a little nervous about
his job.
THE EVER-PRESENT rumor
factory in the press box is begin-
ning to wonder what changes
might be made if the Angels don't
Hootoin's hard work
starting to pay off
PHJLADELPHIA <AP) -Burt
Hooton watched the ball slice
toward the right field rout pole
and held his breath.
Hooton of the Los Angeles
Dodgers bad tossed pinch-hitter
Del Unaer a futball through the
m lddle of the plate on a 3-0 pltch.
"I didn't think he'd swing, but
obviously be did," the
ricbt-hander said Wednesday
nl1bt alter beating the Pbilliet2·1
for his fourth victory of the season
without a loss.
sometimes with a homer and lose
sometimes that way."
Dodgers manager Tom
Lasorda agreed with Green. He
said Hooton worked the beat same
he'd seen him pitch.
"He maintained his stuff
throu;tlout the game,'' said
Laaorda. "He pitched a very
tougb seventh, eighth and ninth
Innings."
The Dodgers took a 1-0 lead in
the second on the first of three
singles by Steve Garvey, a walk to
start putting some consistency
together.
Be that as it may, the Yankees
got out of the gates early W ednea-
day off starter Mike Witt and by
the second inning, the Angels
found themselves behind, 3-0.
Wilt, the rookie from Servile
High in Anaheim, was bis worst
enemy in the first as be threw
away a pick-off attempt of Willie
Randolph at first. The speedy
RandoJpbJlad wheele.d around to
third by the time the Angels were
able to retrieve the ball.
Dave Winfield then followed
with a sacrifice fly to center and
the Yankees then opened up on
Will in the second.
Shortstop Bucky Dent, who pro-
vided most or the y ankee offense
with a double and home run to ac-
count for four RBI , hit a two-run
double to give New York a 3-0
lead. The rest was left to Guidry
<five innings, two runs, five hits),
Bird (211 innings, no runs, two
hits) and the Goose (123 innings,
no runs, no hits).
DENT, WHO leads the Yanlc:ees
in R Bl with 15 (one more than
Winfield), bas picked up the slack
left by a struggling Reggie
Jackson, who by going 1-for-5
Wednesday night rafted his
average to .179. Suddenly, Dent
has abtrusely become New
York's new leader.
''I remember leading the White
Sox once during May, but those
were old days," the 5-11 veteran
said. "I've been bitting the ball
well the last five or six games, but
they've been right at people. It's
just a matter of concentration and
I'm finally doing the ri1bt things
at bat."
in the sixth, about the ume Ume
bis neck began to stiffen. Dan
Ford led off with a single and Fred
Lynn doubled.
BVT THAT'S when Yankee
Manager Gene Michael called up-
on his relievers, a bunch who are
developing into a feared bullpen.
Bird allowed Don Baylor a
sacrifice fly t-0 score Ford and an
infield single to Downing. But the
right-hander then got John Harris
and Grich on fly balls to end the
threat.
Gossage came in with one out
and two men on in the eighth to
strikeout the side.
"In the first few innings, there
isn't much going on down there
(the bullpen>," Gossage, who
lowered hi s ERA to 0.82 said. "In
the sixth or seventh inninfs,
there's usually some stirring
around. But in the eighth or ninth
and we have the lead, I know
that's my territory. It's my
responsibility to save the game.
"THE SA VE ls actually the
only stat that I can base my
performance on. I can say if I
have 30-35 saves I've had a good
season, but I go out there first of
all to malc:e sure we win the
game."
Left-hander Tommy John (4·1)
wbo wu 22·9 last year and com-
pleted 18 games, will take the
mound for New York tonight
against Ken Forsch (3-1), a right·
bander.
Yankee center fielder Jerry
Mumpbrey, riding a is.same hit·
Ung streak, went hitleas Wednes-
day butbe, as well u lllcbael, felt
bewaarobbedofhlsluta\bat.
M ........ "I thought it would 10 foul,"
uld Hooton. Then he smiled •
·.smile that indicated be wasn't
really sure.
Hooton didn't let tbe drl vein the
elabth lnninl with a runner at
second interfere with bil concen-
tration. He came back to strike
outUnaer.
On TV tonight
channel 11 at 4:30
Ron Cey and Pedro G'Jerrero's
run·scorlng bit. Cey'1 third
homer of the season made it 2-0
withoneoutinthefourth.
Guidry, who lasted only ~ in-
nln1s in bis previous start at
Oakland, bad a no-hitter unW
Brian Downing 1in1led with one
out in the fifth. Followin1 a two-
out walk to Bobby Grieb, Downin&
scored on a single by Butch
Hobson.
The Aqels finally tot to Guidry
Home plate umpire Ken Kalser
called interference on Mumpbrey
on a throw down from Downln1 at
catther to second base ln an at--
tempt to get thl° 1teallnt Ran·
dolph.
Randolph wu sale, bow,ver
Kal1er sent him back to ft.nt 9nd
(See ANGELS, Pafe CZ)
LET'S DANCE -Montreal Ex~ catcher Gary Carter tap
out San m.ao's Luis Saluar who tried to score on an lnalct.
the-park home run in the fint innine Wednesday Dipt at
Montreal. I\ didn't matter, though, as the Padres bombed
the Expoe, 13--S.
Hootoe, who pitched bis flnt
com plu same of the season, said
ho worked all wintet' to 1trenltbea
his arm and was pleued that be
cowd muster auch •ood stun
throu•h mne lnnln1s.
"We were 1lx lncbes from a
WlD{" Hid PhUUH mana•er
Dal u Green, meuurln1 Uuer'•
drive put the foul pole.
Green, however# waa quldl to
sJveHooeoocredlt ora1oodJob. "Hootoa pile heel a tr Ht
1ame,"aaJdGreen. "Hehadto10
tbroulh the but we had lD UM
Dlntb, Plte Role, Klkl Schmldl
udGa17M ..... 8MMdW •tt.••
Orem mo uld be tlll IGiler
Nino &1.-..plubW well.
"It •• •• ol u.o.. ftlJ.
_.~td 1ame1 tbat JOU "ln
u
The Phillies ruined Hooton'•
bid for a shutout In tbe seventh
wben llat&bew1 tripled to center
and scored on a sacrifice fly by
llannyTrtUo.
Cey, who average120 bomen a
year, Hid be t.boulbt Eaplnola
tttber took somethlnt off his
fMtbal.l or w .. It a eUqeup.
'' l -... looklnt for a pitch to
drive and I tot It. Tbere WU DO
qupUoQ U wa1 1 bome run."
There eertainly wua't u the ball
1cre1med into tbe ..au ill left.
center despite a 1wlrlla1 wtMaad raln.
C91 Hid M'I bMe Mtalll Ille
l»UlloldaUMUOD.
"f .a•t WU "" 1et an. cbeap WIS. Mid UM lDftelder wbo
w11 blttlna.• btfon lb• 11me. ~ I
After months ·of 1quabblln1 and
ha11lln1. &be Rams announced Wedneldu
tber wlll not ai1n Uaebaeker lack
R11nol4' for the lMl 1eaaon for tbe pu~ ol livlne llim hll UDCGDdltloMI No . .....
ReYllOldl and tbi Rama haft been lr1·
ln1 to lllllOtlate a new eootnet t&DN lMt . seaaon. Or1taally, tb• 11., .. r "'8'911
lln1Ncker had been uttna for ' n ... ,.ar contract ca.llln1for ... 00011116ulb\. Ila
• ... •tittle man ~an SUS,000 bi i•. Reyaoldl, under bil latelt otter, wu
U1tia1 tDr a dine-,_, pad at UM .... ,., wlddl ............. , .... ,... ne Mlla ;llelUll.·llMflHf, on.t.nl la-
1tead. &\~ .....
Reynolds, II, 1111de hit HCODd Pro 8oWt
• I
' .
'
I t . . • . ' • • ' '
. • • ,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. May 7, 1981
Wills gets picked off
as Seattle's manager
From AP dispatches
SEATTLE -Maury Wills, the •
base-robbing king of the 1960s wbo
couldn't beg, borrow or steal enough
victories as a manager in the 80s,
was fired Wednesday as skipper of the Seattle
Mariners .
At an afternoon news conference, the
American League team's majority owner,
George Argyros, of Newport Beach, announced
that minor league Manager
Rene Lachemann would
become interim manager.
Lachemann , wh o
managed the Mariners' AAA
Spokane farm c lub , will
become t .h e young~st
manager in the ma1or
leagues. He turned 36 on
Monday.
Lachemann becomes the
W1:Ls t h i r d m a n a g e r i n t h e
Mariners' five years as an American League
club DarreU Johnson ran the club from its first
season in 1977 until he was fired last August.
Wills. former base-stealing whiz of the Los
Ange les Dodgers, was named Mariners
manager Aug. 4. Ironically, Lachemann began
his association with professional baseball as a
Dodger batboy in 1959, the year Wills came up
to the majors
Wills said he didn't want to talk.
·'I just want to relax today and shoot some
baskets." Wills said from the gym in his apart·
ment. "Why don't we wait until tomorrow?" .
The Mariners had a 6-18 record under Wills
this season,.their worst start ever.
Quote of the day
Asked about the areas of disappointment
thu s far in the season, new Seattle
Mariners owner George Argyros, said :
"The standings.''
Blyleven loses no-hitter in ninth
Cleveland right-hander Bert •
Blyleven J?ilc~ed eigh.t innings o.f no·
hit ball, wmding up with a two-hitter,
and the Indians defeated the Toronto
Blue Jays, 4·1 in American League action Wed·
nesday night. Blyleven allowed just three
baserunners through eight innings on two walks
and an error. But Lloyd Mo1eby stroked
Bl yleven's first pitch of the ninth inning to left
field for a double . . . In
other games, Mike Parrott
snapped an 18-game losing
streak, and Rene Lache mann
made a successful debut as
the Seattle Mariners' new
manager with a 12-1 romp
over Milwaukee. Former
Golden West College s tar
Terry BuJllng knocked in one
run and scored twice for the
Blyleven M a r i n e r s To m
Brookem drove in the tie-breaking run with a
sacrifice fly in the eighth inning, sending Al
Cowens home with an unearned run that eave
Detroit a 3-2 victory over Oakland. The loss was
only the sixth for the A's again.st 21 victories
. . . Bamp WUh had two hits and scored two
runs as Texas scrambled for a 4·2 victory over
the Chicago White Sox. Texas starter alck
HoneycuU had his string of consecutive lhutout
innings snapped at 15 after blanking Kansas Ci-
ty last week . . . Dwight Even• drilled a
towering two-run homer in the eighth inning to
spark Boston to a 3·1 victory over the skidding
Kansas City Royals . . . Al Bumbry scored
the winning run for Baltimore as Minnesota
botched a potential inning-ending rundown in
the ninth inning, giving the Orioles a 5-4 victory
over the Twins.
Bench delivers winning base hit
Dave Cw~-·· th1ld hit of • the same tled the 1core. in the ninth
lMlrif, aJld then Jelluy Betlela de·
livered a bases-loaded ain1.le, knock·
log in the winning run 11 the Cincinnati Red1
raUied for a 9·8 victory over tbe Pittaburgb
Pirates Wednesday nJabt in National League
baseball action. The Pirates entered the bottom
of the ninth wtlh an 8·7 advantage . . . Jn
other rames, Chris
Cllambilss drove in rive runs,
three of them on a ninth in·
nlog home run, leading
Atlanta and Gaylord Perry to
a 10·2 romp over St. Louis.
Perry, lhe mll,jor leagues'
oldest player, checked the
Cardinals on six hits . . .
Ken Reitz hit a two-out RBI
single In lhe 11th inning to lift
Bench the Chicago Cubs to a 2·1 vie·
tory over Houston. The CUbs began the 11th
against Frank Lacorte with a walk by Steve
Dillard. Tim Blackwell sacrificed Dillard to
second, and Reitz delivered tbe game-winning
hit. It was the Cubs' fourth victory in 21 outings
. . . Broderick Perkins drove in five runs with
a three-run homer, a double and a triple, and
Ruppert Jones knocked in three other runs as
San Otego unleashed a 19-bit attack to rout Mon·
treat, 13·5 . . . San Francisco's Jack Clark
tripled and scored in the third inning and then
singled home another in a thrPe-run sixth.
leading the Giants to a 6·4 victory over the New
York Mets. Greg Minton pitched 2~ innings of
two-hit relief to pick up bis first win of the
season. He has five saves, sharing the National
League lead with Brace Sutter of St. Louis.
It's official: Puffball banished
ST. LOUIS -A memo to Na·
tional League umpires outlawipg the
"puffball" did not mention Atlanta
Braves right-hander Gaylord Perry, but the
Atlanta pitcher apparently was the target.
"I got a call from the umpires. saying 'no
more puffballs'," said Braves Manager Bobby
Cox, who started Perry In Wednesday night's
game against the St. Louis Cardinals.
National League President Chub Feeney In·
formed the league's umpires in the memo that
Perry's pitch, thrown amidst a cloud of dust
from the resin bag, is not to be allowed. The
umpires were instructed to warn Perry after
the first puffball and eject him if he throws
another. ·
Memphis pushing for NFL franchise
Gov. Lamar Alexander led a •
group of Tennesseans w~o met ~ed-
nesd ay in Washington with Nauonal .
Football League Commissioner .Pe~ Ro&elle ~n
hopes of getting an NFL fl'anch1se m Memphis
. . . Talk that Illinois may withdraw from the
Big 10 continued to circulate and Chancellor
John Cribbett s aid the university is :·quit~
serious in considering the option "The univer.s1·
ty community is s till re~ling from ~he seventy
of sanctions imposed on 1t by the Big 10 for us·
ing Fullerton College transfer Dave Wilson who
has been ruled ineligible to pl ay for the school
. . . Fifth-seeded Wojtek Fibak of Poland
dropped the openin.g s~t. then ~~k the next two
to oust Vijay AmntraJ of India m the Tourna·
ment of Champions tennis tourney in New York.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: ./ ./ ./ ./ excel lent; ./ ./ /
worth watching; ././fair; ./ forget It. n 4:30 p.m., Channel 11 I I { {
DODGE RS BASE BALL : Dodgers at
Philadelphia.
Announcers: Vin Scully, Ross Porter and
Jerry Doggett.
The Oodoers, after holding off the Phillies for
a 2·1 victory Wednesday night, send Jerry Reuss
(2·1) against young Marty By~rom (2~) toolghL
Bystrclm hasn't lost a game for the Phillies since being called up from Oklahoma City late last season. He was ~with a 1.SO ERA in 36 Innings
last season and is off to a perfect start this year.
OTHER TELEVISION
Basketball -NBA championship game
(Houston at Boston), 11 :30 p.m., Channel 2.
Taped .
RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Philadelphia, •: 30 p.m., KABC (790); New York Yankees at Angels,
7:30 p.m., KMPC (710).
sL-----------------------------------------------
~Baseball standings
t AMERICAN LEAGUE 'NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division West Dlvl1loa w L Pel. GB w L Pct.GB
Oakland 21 6 .778 Dodgen 17 8 .680
Texas 13 9 .591 5\l'J CinciMati 12 10 .545 31h
Chicago 12 10 .545 6\l'J Atlanta 13 12 .520 4
San Francisco 12 15 .4-44 6 t Angels 12 15 .4'44 9 11 14 ·'"° 6 } Minnesota 9 15 .375 lQ\l'J Houston I Kansas City 6 13 .316 11 San Diego 9 17 .346 8\l'l • Eaat Dlvlaloe Seattle 7 18 .280 13
St. Louis 13 5 .722 East Division Montreal 15 7 .682 Cleveland 11 5 .688 Philadelphia 16 8 .667 New York 15 9 .625 Pittsburgh 8 9 .471 4\l'J Milwaukee 13 9 .591 1 New York 6 14 .300 8 Baltimore 12 9 .571 1\l'J Chicago 4 17 .190 10\l'J Detroit ll 13 .458 4
Boston 9 13 .409 5 ••• l h r'•tc..
Toronto 8 15 .348 6\l'J ~·· '9tlladtl!llll• 1 c111ea1u • ........., 1 c11 '""""'' l ........ , .. ~ SM Dlelit II, ,....,.,.... J N-Ytnl S, Alllela 2 CfMIMltl t, fll'l~I Cin.1Md•,T.,.Cll'lla1 ~ ,,,_._., fffW Ytnl • •••tt,_.. s, Ml-o«a • All#ta 10, fa. L.owlt J • T ..... 4, Cllkelle 2 • TeMf'•._ .. eMIOft I, K-City I ~ 1-.e 2'11 al ................ Ce"""' • Oatralt t, Oalll-t , .... 11 ! 141•111• 12. Ml-.. 1 Allallta (I'. Nllkra Ml et M. LMlll (Ma411Mll TM1y'10-M....tS'I (~ t..Ol al Cfll( ... (Mer111 .. l New Yorll IJ-.. 11 alAfleMI1r:or1<11,.11,11
"" ....... (~ .. -'"'"' , .. , .. 0--Oalrolt 1,,_.ry .. ll at~lelld ClleWl!ftMI clMatl I .. M .... ~ t.ll, 11 Cle,,.lalld (Weltt Ml et arOl'l• Cit._ 1.U, 11 a.n .,.... (Wiie , ... , ., ............. (~ Cfll~ ... CTl'M Ml at Te-(MM!dl t..J), 11
Mllw ..... (HNI 241 at Sffttle ( ...... W ·~ ,rMCltCO CA~ .. II at .... .,.,. t •Jl," II. yftdl Ml, 11 °"'' ...... *"-''"
•
SPORTS BREAK I TRACK I BASEBALL
Owners stay mum
Sad day for free speech -Miller
NEW YORK (AP> -The
baseball owners' rule forbidding
any public comment from
management on contra ~t
negotiations with the players is
so ti1ht that the owners were re-
1 uctant even to talk about it.
Wednesday.
Brewers, the owners held their
tongues.
"I have nothing to say about it
(the gag rule )," said John
McMullen, owner of the Houston
Astros, who bought into the club
after the owners voted to keep
themselves quiet "What do you
want m e to s a y a bo ut the
Cons titution of the United
States?"
Apparently fearing a .pen~ty
similar to the $50,000 fine 1m·
posed on General Manager
Harry Dalton of the Milwaukee
From Page C1
KELLEY. • •
But Marvin Miller, executive
director of the players associa
tion, is unencumbered by any
., s uch o wne r r estrictions or
reprisals. He called it "a sad
day for free speech "
only be' as good as they want ..
And there's no doubt Kelley
wants to be the very best at
what she does.
* * * A good opportunity to catch
Kelley in action will come
Saturday when UCI hosts the
Southern California women's
track a nd field invitatinal
beginning at 10 a .m.
More than 25 intercollegiate
and club teams will participate
with many former and future
Olympians like UCLA 's Sherri
Howard (200 and 400 meters),
Debbie Bottom ly <400 -meter
hurdles> and 32-year-old Martha
Watson 0001 expected in the
field.
Tickets for the meet are
priced at $3.50 for adults and
$2.SO for students .
MONRO-
MATIC ®
•Amerlca'S
Best Selllng
Shock Absorber.•
Dalton was quoted by sports
writer Thomas Boswell in the
M a r c h 6 e ditions o f the
Was hington Post as saying: "I
hope management is really look·
ing for a compromise and not. a
victory, but I'fti not certam
that's the case ... The players
association is genuinely looking
for a compromise, if we 'll just
give them something they can
accept without losing too much
face."
Dalton and Frank Cashen,
general manager of the New
York Mets, were the owners'
representatives on the four .
member study group charged
with investigating the stumbl·
ing -block issue of free-agent
compensation. The two players
on the panel were Bob Boone of
Philadelphia and Sal Bando of
Milwaukee.
~MON~Y
RADIAL-MATIC ®
•A Great Ride
at a Great Price~
~MON~~
tnese ~ec1a1 pnces are w IOW
triev are not v3ld ri coniuncnon
wttn anv other coue>on or
~ount Offer
MONRO-
MACNUM60®
• bigger bore
• bigger oll capacity
• bigger Piston
~MON~Y
MONIOI llftLACIMINT WAHANTY
From Page Cl
ANGELS. • •
called Mumphrey out for ob·
structing Downing.
Michael rushed onto the field
and began a heated ar1ument
with Kaiser Kaiser , however.
had the final word, tossing the
Yankee manager out of the game.
"He (Kaiser > threatened my
player," Michael said later . He
told me one more word and your
bleep is gone. But I dido 't swear at
him. I didn't think there was in·
terference on the play Downing
got the throw off fine, in fact
Mumphrey ducked out of the
way '' *
ANGIL NOTll-alll Trawn, whocamuut• r ... .oav'•9IWNtt1lltfl•Wl"9••••-1owtM1e-..
... ,.. ...... hit left "'°"'lclef' sUtte-. -· ••· •mined Dy Dr. LAwlt v ..... Wedft .. d•Y moml"9 and lhe di.or-ls••• INI Tr ave",,.., de~
<•ICIYm~IUlnhlstlirOwlfto•-lder.
OCC, GWC open
play,9 ffs today
It could be an early exit for
Oranli(e Coast and Golden West
colleges in the Southern
California women's community
college basketball cham·
pionships as round two started
today at Golden West.
Orange Coast plays Fullerton
while Golden West faces Santa
Monica in a strange pairing of
conference rivals OCC is 1-2
against Fullerton and G.w c is 0:2
against Santa Monica this
season
The Ora nge Coa s t-Fullerton
game is at 6 and the Golden
West-Santa Monica a ffair at 8
pre('ed ed by t wo afternoon
games
If, tn eo csavs you dent aar• mat four Monro·Mattc,MOnroe Raclaf·Mltlc or MaQnum 60 snocec absorbers ~ vou the t:>eSt ride you ever hid, Monroe Wiii rtf)laCe them wttti any comparat>fY prleed st10dcs at no chlrge.
_,OIT MITI AVAILULI llf MOST ITOlll.
OOOd It .=:ttllO WQUIST AUto PlrtS ltOrts. ··~
~SEBALL I TENNIS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thursday, May 7, 1981
Vaqueros near playoff berth
Estancia, CdM, Laguna Beach also victorious
lrvme Htgh pulled into a second-place lie with
Costa Mesa in the Sea View League baseball race
Wednesday, whJle Fountain VaJley missed out on a
chance to move ahead or Huntington Beach in
Sunset League play with.a loss to Edison.
In other games, Estancia downed University.
Corona del Mar topped Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach
blanked Dana Hills and Westminster disposed of
Marina.
Here's how it went
lrvlne 5, El Toro O
Senior left hande r Steve Westbrook struck out
eight Chargers over 5% innings and Bob Perry
mopped up with three more strikeouts over lhe
PREP IUSEB4U
final l 'ta innings as the Vaquer~s appear to be on
their way lo the CIF playoffs.
Perry walked into a major Jam m the sixth, en·
tering the game with the bases loaded and two
outs. He need a 3·2 changeup for a strikeout that
got Irvine out of trouble.
Meanwhile, J im Gasho knocked m two runs for a
pHir of RBI, and Robbie Akers and Jay Scott de·
livered RBI singles as the Vaqueros collected their
s ixth straight victory
Westminster 13, Marina 5
The Lions ( t2·2l scored in ever y innmg but the
fourth. including six runs in a fifth· inning outburst.
to hand the Vikings their eighth loss against six
wins
Matt Coddington and Dan Twiss ripped triples
for the Lions, while Dave Cox. Rick Castle and
Dave Harris added doubles.
Marina got two hits from Bob Grandstaff and an
RBI single from Jim Lane
CdM 12. Costa Mesa 7
In a seesaw battle that saw the two teams com -
bine for 19 runs and 17 hits. the Sea Kings pulled it
out, despite seeing an 8-2 lead evaporate into a
slim 8-7 margin.
Corona del Mar, which has already clinched the
Sea View League championship. exploded for eight
runs in the Set'ond inning as Jeff Pries and
Gordon Moss each collected two RBI with singles.
Bob Shollin hammered a two-run homer and Brent
Melbon and Mario Ybarra delivered key hits to
keep the inning alive
Ybarn~ was 3-for 4 on the day, including a solo
home run in the fifth inning, while Melbon knocked
in three runs with a 2·for-2 performance.
Costa Mrsa fought back. as they picked up one
run in the fourth lo cut the Sea Kings· advantage
to 8·3 With the bases loaded, Chris Wh ite entered
the game in place of starter Ken Santoro His first
pitch to Joe Cruz was promptly smashed over the
left-ccntC'r field fence to slice the lead to 8-7
Fu lure s tars
come to Viejo
By EOZINTEL
OftlteOallyPO .. Statt
Are women tennis players r eally worth
watching·'
That's a question that's been looked al recent·
ly and most people will tell you that yes. women's
tennis has its own m erits
If that's the case. then next week's Tourna-
ment of Champions 11'\ Mission Viejo might be
worth seeing
Top top-ranked players in three USTA age
divisions wi ll be among 156 girls from every state
1ENNIS
• m the nation to compete in this annual event at the
M argueritc Recreation Center
This 1s where Tracy Austin. among others, first
raised eyebrows before going on to conquer the ten-
nis world
The tournament. which begins Tuesday and
runs through Saturday. May 16, will have three
representative:. from each state in age divisions 14
and under, 16 and 18.
It's a great opportunity for tennis fans and
young players to see how the future stars of tomor-
row are doing il. And the players love the chance
to visit Southern California.
"It's the only tournament where you can be
com petitive on the court, and the next day find
yourself relaxing on the beach with your oppo-
nents," says Andrea Jaeger, who captured first
place in the 14 year-old division of this tournament
only months before turning pro two years ago.
••• Veteran pro tennis star Marty Riessen has
been named coach of the Ca lifornia Oranges of the
new Team Tennis League. Riessen. who will pair
with Sherwood Stewart to form one of two doubles
combinations for the Oranges, will coach the team
in its six-match season which be&ins with a home
matchagainstthe LA Strings, July6.
With Barbara Potter and Sharon Walsh form·
Ing the other doubles team for the Oranges,
Riessen is excited about his team's chances of win·
ning the four-team league. _,
''l'm sorexcited about our chances to wan that
I'm going to try and get the team together while
we're in England for the Wimbledon toutna ment."
Riessen says. "Since we open the season against
Los Angeles. I want to make sure we get off to a
Cast start. We'll need to be ready for (Strings'
stars) Martina Navratilova and Vijay Amritraj."
The Oranges will play all home matches at the
Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club In Foun-
tain Valley.
Tickets for Team Tennis matches, whlcb
range in price Cro m $10 to $20 ar~ available by call·
lng 532·6825.
Tennis pros to compete here
Tbe second annual pro.Invitational tennis
tournament sponsored by Bob Clauaon'1 pro s hop
at Park Newport will be befd thi1 weekend with six
tourlnt pros and ciaht area stan competin1.
Touring pro.1 lnclude Pbll Dent, Tom Leonard,
SJshl Mtnoo. Jerry VtaUnp. lloa&C....-4 Jeff ~orowiak, winner of the atate open last weektnd.
Friday's lint match will 1tart at 11 with Sun-
day's tiUe matdl at l o'clock preceded by an ex-
blbltJon by th Court Jeaura at 12:JO.
All matches will be pi..yed at Park Ne1t'J>C)rt
•Ith prize moocy totalln• approximately 13,000,
Estancia 5, Unlveralty 1
John Robe rtson went 4-for-4 with a triple. two
doubles and an RSI lo lead the Eagles to vie·
to ry.Teammate Jeff Gardner was 2-for-4 with two
RBI as Estancia evened its Sea View League mark
at 7-7.
Starter Don M itroff, a sen tor right-hander,
pitched six strong innings before giving way lo
Greg Forge in the seve nth inning. The win evened
M 1troff's record at 3·3.
Laguna Beach 2, Dana Hlll1 O
The Artists collected just three hits, but lwo of
them came in a two-run fourth iMing
Scott Magers opened the inning with a single and
Dan Arndt followed with a run-scoring triple. Dave
Padgham then knocked in the second run with a
sacrifice fly as the Artists collected their rifth
South Coast League victory against nine defeats.
Laguna Beach pitcher Kevin Clark work'ed his
way out of several jams, scattering seven hits
while striking out four Dolphins
The Artists' only other hit was provided by
Arndt in the second inning
Edison 4, Fountain Valley 1
Senior Tom Duggan set a school record with his
seventh homer of the year. and teammate John
Be lles added a two-run homer as the Chargers
kept a solid hold on second place m Sunset League
play.
Belles also stole hom e in the first innmg to ac·
count for three of the Chargers' runs.
Pitcher Rich Sorenson improved his record to
8-2, with a four hit. six-strikeout performa nce .
MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO
SPECIALISTS
Frn 011 Filter w /$ 14. 95 Oil Chanqe
CHECK OUR COMPETrtiYE PRICES
ARST & GRANO ARCO 835-4049
1222 E. ht loff 5 Fwy I 8-5 bee pt Sllft.
for the little bit
of mom'' in o il
your ladie s
remember Mother's Day
Moa.·Sat. I 0-5:30
3406 Via Lido, Newport IHch 6 73· 771 0
FOURTH ANNUAL 20-LAP
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
KRW HALF-MILE
SATURDAY, MAY 9, 8 P.M.
SP'RING CLASSIC-New "kttlt tf the ~rell4s" •.. T-ha
etMI HtlMlti 1W• challtnt• the M1ri•y·Dnithens.
NATIONAL PRELIMINARY
STANDARD HALF-MILE
(lx,.rt1, Jun6-rs, hvlces)
FRIDAY, MAY 8, 8 P.M.
Mother's Day
Sale
Ey•ltwl controls to -.1ec1 Time or
T tllllltl'ICllrt Cfolll111 •II '°'"r lwtfi
11111t111111t t li111fllt tetti1ttl With tllt
S1111ct1111bf MlcrOWM
Ow11 11141 y .. r ""' rtllfl, y .. l11wt I Um .. ttt
CHlfltf Ctllltr1
JVM46
RADIAL 1 /2 PRICE
~~s
tt.\\t ;~ '"'" oll oO' S\t\S '\ .
• 4 Rib Thread
r•restone Steel-Belted
RADIAL i·~NJ1M ;;;~: £Uill
l
•• " FUEPI
FIGHTER
Size
·Pt65t80R13
P175170R13
P175180R13
P185180R 13
When You Buy One at our Regular Price ... 4 & 15-inch sizes
SAVE s4250 s5e Wb11 Y11 . II llY I Pairl
WHITEWALL F.E.T.
Size Also fits 1st tire 2nd tire per tire
P175/75R14 BR78-14 $ 85 $42.50 $1.88
P186/75R14 CR78-14 86 43.00 2.04
P195 /75R14 DR,ER78 -14 93 49.50 2.26
P205/75R14 FR78-14 96 48.00 2.37
P215/75R14 GR78-14 98 48.00 2.52
P225/75R14 HR78-14 104 52:00 2.74
P205/75R15 FR78 -15 97 48.50 2.50
P215/75R15 GR78-15 102 51.00 2.64
P225/75R1 5 HR,JR78-15 105 52.50 2.85
P235/75R15 LR78-15 112 5e.oo 3.06
It 's one
WHITEWALL F.E T touglt lire to top! Also lits Isl Ure 2nd ttr• per tire • 7 <Jlll'r :! p/u,, I 1ot1•1•l t'11rd'
AR78· 13 $71 14e.20 $1 74 Ten ~lrands or .. lt"t-1 \HltlllH'd 1nlu
165R13 78 •e.80 171 earh ~let-I c«1rd for f{rt'1.1l hlr1•ni:th
BR78· 13 80 4 8.00 1 79 1.1nd durability
CR78-13 80 48.00 I 91 • 2·1 m1//111n ••n th, r11ad'
1'• restone SS RADIAL
Designed for Performance and
High Style with Raised White OUtllne letters
70 ••R••• eo ••R•••
ize aces Met
P215/60R -13 BR60 -13 $71 $2.26
P235/60R-14 ER60· 14 82 2.70
P245/60R-14 GR60 -14 88 2.87 ~'.?35/60R-15 FR60 · 15 90 2.86
P245/60R-15 GA60-15 92 2.95
P255/60A-15 HR60-15 95 3.14
P275/60R-15 LR60-15 105 3.44
FINAL CLOSE-OUT • LIMITED STOCKS! rt re stone Size 878-14 Fits Datsuns
Toyotas, Mazdas, etc. SIZE
BLACKWALL$
PRIC• F.E.T.
$37 $2.34 DOUBLE BELTED $ F78-14
G78-14 38
G78-15 38
H78-15 41
WHITEWALLS
SIZE PRIC•
2.53
2.59
2.82
F.E.T. Deluxe Champion
Get there Early to Blackwall E78-14
J78-14
H78-15
$40
42
45
$2.21
3.02
2.82 A voitl Disappointment/ Plus $1.94 Fed. Ex. Tax
4 TIRE & 4 WHEEL PACKAGE OFFERS!
Mllll· TRUCIS tuv:-.~~'~u. COMPACTS-IMPORTS
,.,...._ s., .,.. ,... ... s., .,..
--.r ••~Tl um1 ...,.,. n1t1 Lm11
·~·~, ~?. «~ = ) ··l~ I , ,.,., ,,..p ... 14d , ~ ·~.{/ ':',.9' ~ .r' H17
Set of PCHW P.J. lato Wh••••
YOU GIT • TlllS '-• WIEILS Cl-. .. 119·'4 .....,,.. .... ~ 'W' .. __ _. ,.,_ ..... .... ..... w...."'"" .... ..,, ,.,.,.. ........... ~ ~Yllll fM 4 ..,_ llM ..._.._ ... ·-or MMClfl '""' Pwtoit In• .......... NM1et .... --.e... ...............
4 ms' wtmlS
fOI
Plus S2.40
to 12.11
F.E.T.
per Tire
Flreetone St .. l·Belted Radlal Tiree
:@;·~1 ,@) ,(fj/
Plnllll J .... U.I. DH•ll Wirt laatlt n.11
You get 4 Firestone Steel Belted Radlal
White Stripe Tires Size BR70-13 & 4 PJ
U.S. Double Wire Basket Wheels Size
13x5. Price Includes mounting & Rubber
VaJve Stems.
4+s329 ~~
rl •• .
r()l-~------o_r_•_nge_eo_as~t.,.DAIL Y PILOT 1Thura~d,..•y_._M_•_v_1._1_98_1 _________________________ ....:_FO:R THE RECORD I SOCCER
~ • I • •
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Yentce.1 5, An~le 2
NaW YOtllC CAl.lf'CNINIA .... ,_. ...... _.
R"dlpll, 2tl S 1 2 0 Cerew, 111 S 0 I 0
MuMplWV d4 0 0 0 ' 811rle-. M S O O 0 Wlr1tf ..... (1 J 0 I I fot'd, rf I I I 0
Jecllaon.rl s 0 I 0 l,YM,<I 4 0 2 0 G•mble,Clll 4 0 I 0 Baylor, ell\ JOO I
N1Ult1, 311 4 1 I 0 Oow"lllQ. c J I 2 O =~'t~ : : g : Cler•, II 20 0 0
Foott., J o o o Harris, II 2 o O O
0. .. 1. II 2 I 2 • Grlcll. 2D l 0 0 0
MllDotft, 11 I 0 0 0 HOl>M>n, Jb l 0 1 I
CmP"''· pr 0 0 0 O Tot•l1 JJ 2 1 2
TOCell J.J S I S
SCMotlyl-.....
New York 120 200 000 -S Celllorftla 000 011 000 -l
E Mllt>o<wne. wm OP -Hew Yortl I
LOB --Yor-•• c.lltorftl• •. 28 -JecllDll, Helli .. , l'l'N'. HR -Deni (4). SB
-Winfield. S Foote. SF -Wlntl<ttd.
Baylor
NewY-Guldry (W, HI Bird
IP" • s s 2
21'> l 0
th 0 0
• ••• '° 2 2 •
0 I
Gossage CS,11 0 2
Cellloro6a
Wiii Cl., J.ll ~ S 4 4 2
D'Acqul1to 21, o o o O
HHllW ) I 0 0 0 2
Guidry pitched to 2 l>ellers '" 1l•lh H BP -by 0' A<:Qulsto (Dent l T 2' ff A
J7,410.
Angel averages
BATIIHO
H•rtow
811r1 ......
Lynrt
Harris
Ford
011
Cartw
Dow"'"' Grlcll
HOl>IOn
Cempe,.rls
llenlQUltl
Cler•
B•ylor
P•ltk
Tot•I•
.... lte,,ko
S.l>Clltl z.,.,,
HeHl•r
Jellerson
Wiii
Forsch
Travers
O'Acqulsto
AB R H Hit lt81 ~
31100 .lX)
109 10 J2 2 I .,..
.. 11 21 s " ·* 21 3 • 1 1 -'4 ,. 2• • ll 211
S021J 0 s 1tO
104 It 26 0 10 1SO
M I IS 2 1 .2)4
,. 11 11 l 12 .230
M S I) I S .2Qt
21 4 J 0 l ISO
JS 4 S 0 I .141
II 0 , 0 I 111
19 • 9 l I .114 11 I I 0 0 .091
111 IOt 20J 2• tl 230
PITCHING IP' H ae SO W·L EltA
1n., 14 • • 1-0 o.so
22 17 1 12 I I 1.M
11' > It • • 0.2 2.M
41 SO ll It. l-l l.14
I~ 13 10 I l•I l.11 '
l2\'> l3 • ' ·~ l.12 l2 2t 12 ti M U2
J4 l4 11 l I f .U
9"i 14 S 0·1 1M
I) 15 • 0-0 •.••
219 U7 11 IOS IMS l .11
1...a.M4,ll•Jey1 I
Clt•eltrld OOJ 000 010. • s 1
Toronco 000 000 001 I 2 S
Blylew.n -H-Y. Tocld, lA•I Cl) -Whlll W Blyleven ll 11 L-TOdCI ll·l l
" 11 .....
Or-s. Twlftt4 Ml,,Msol.e 011 002 000~ 11 l a.11•mor• 001 100 002-s • 1 Arroyo, O'ConftOr 111. CorDetl ct) .,..,
8ulere; Palmer, Sttwer1 ISi •NI Otmptey W St•werl (I II t. O'Co,,nor (0-1).
• •.oes
11~4,WlltteS.a2
Clllt-000 000 100-2 • 0
Tues :t00 000 10• 9 0
8ur,,1, Ho'(I C11 -FIU.. HOMycull, ..... cock 111. Jomson 111 •NI SunCll>erg. w-
Joh1>1on IJ·ll. L Bur"' U.JI. A-12,104.
It., Seal, ltey .. 1 1
Boston 000 000 021 > II o IC•n•as City 100 000 000-1 4 o
Eck•,.l•y '"° All.,,son; Leonard, Qui..,..
berry Cl ), Breit ct> •"d Groote W
EcletlltY IJ-21. L Leonard 12-.,
HR llOllOtl, Ev-ISi A 21,400
TlfenJ,A'l2
Detroit 001 000 11-J S o
OeklerMI 002 000 000-2 1 J
Wll<om -Perrlsll, Ungfof'd •NI Heatll.
W Wllcu (4·21 . L Le ,,gtord (4·21.
A U,1U _....., ..... _..,
Mll•eu.._ 100 000 000-1 S I
St•tll• 010 402 soa-12 1J a
Lerch, Cl<tw!Mld 141, KeetCll'I 111 -SI~
moM. VOi\, P'11<f10tt, Rawley Cl) -Bult. 1 .. ,. W-P•r•Oll 11·21 . L-L•rCll 11·2).
A ,12t.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dodgers 2, PhllllH 1
t.O,AMOat.111 .. HILAO..Lf'MIA ...... _. .. , .. _.
L~l,2" LaMru.cf
....... 11
Ga rwy,11>
Cey,all
Guer,..r.r1
S<IO!lcle, c
1tu1w11.n Hoot...,, p
4 0 I 0 OroH,•1 4 0 0 0
) 0 I 0 Row, lb 4 0 2 0
4 0 0 0 Sc"">dt,Jb • 0 0 0
4 I l 0 MattrlWl,lf 4 I 2 0 J I I 1 Trlllo,211 2 0 0 I
3 0 2 I ~a.Cf l 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 llowe,u l 0 I 0
) 0 I 0 9-e,c 2 0 0 0
l 0 0 0 Eapnw,p 2 0 0 0
UMer,pll I 0 0 0
Proly,p o o o o
Tot••· JI 2 ' I Tot••• JI 2 9 2 I<_...,, ........
Los A11gt1H 010 100 ooo-2
Phllecltltlflla 000 000 IOC.-1
DP -Pt\11-pNe J LOB -LOI A,_..
S, Pllll-lpNe 1. l8 MettMws. Hit -
Cay UI. SB -Uftdre..,• S -119-. S~
-Trillo. ............. IP H ll Ee eatO
HMfDll ('W, 4-0) t S I 1 0 4
Piii .........
••plnou a 1 2 J J Proly I 0 0 0 0
T -t:Ot A U,l!O.
c:.-a. ..... 1 Hwtloll 000 001 000 00-1 1 •
Cflkeoo 000 100 000 01-2 10 I •u•. Sembllo (II, LeCOtlt (111 MMI
Atlllly; Ceudlll, c.111• t.i, Tldrow 111.
Strlltll llO) Mid Bleck-II. W-$1!11111 11·2).
L-Lee4w1t (Ml. A~2,m.
........ ta. ......
Sen 0.... -1)4 026-11" 0 Mefttr .. 1 010 000 004-s • >
aklltl ........ , ._,. (ti end K.-.,;
aurrls, .._.._ m ..... (4), • ..._ (t) -
Certw, a-. W~klltl•~ ().I). L-
8unl1 (WI. Hlt-.$.M 01900, P9AIM 111;
Montreel. Panlth Cl). A-IJ,00.. ·-............ Pit™"""" 004 210 1-.-. 11 2
C:lrt(f-l '°' 000 112-t ,. t C:•ftlolerl•, Romo C71. Jed1&0" Cll,
Tekul¥t (ti #Id Hl<oMe; P'asaoro, ,.,.Ice (4),
.. ,, (1), HUffte (ti ... ()'Berry, NolM. W-
Humt 12•11. L-.J•dNft (1·21. Hfl-"'t~ PerttM CJ), Euler m ; Clflcln-•11, ,....,. CS). A-14,UI . .,_,.. Cer'aMll I
Atlaftte 010 • .._,. M 2 SL~ 20000000t-J•O
Petry ............. iloMdlct; ,Onell, .,.., m. ~•loft m. °''°" m -,,..,.,., Sel>cl\<I&. W-Porrt ll>tl. L-fl8't<ll 12·21.
Hll ,._,.., OWM!lta m. SL L-11, ~ m.A .... ,...
.._ ........
lllft ,.,_"'11 IOI OIJ ..._.. t t
MowY"11 001 -~12 a
Wlllt-""'-m. art1111111 m . Mlfllllll m .., Mey; 1edlt\t, eoa1c-<•>. ,._... •
17), Alltll <ti -MMntl, n.¥1M. W-..U.. CNI. ~ INJ. A-j.119
To., 10 , ............ ,
AMll9!KMI \.&MW& ....
n " It
'""' Q ,. ct ' II • II n n 11 ,. . ' n ,. w " ... ,. .. . ....
" M. .... .... ,. .., ·-It .... " ... u -....... . .... . -
.._ ...
Armu, ~I; SI,..._., a-'ti-,
1; llall, IMttM, T; "'*-.Mil ..... 6;
............. ; ...... lft'. ,,,._ .... , .. ·---·· Arme\, OMIMMI, l4, I..,.., ~ tt1 Sln•ll•'t, Ml-•.W, It, O<lilltl, THH, 11;
C)ellvl•. Ml~. 11, ~ .... OekleM.
11. ~CJ~I
H0trlt. Oellltnd, M, IC90U91\. Oelilend.
S.O; WaltJ, Cle ... lend, M; HOyt, Cflkaeit,
M ; Jolwl, New Ywtl, 4-1, AUy, Hew YWll,
•·I, e1y1e-. c1e ... 1eMt, ).I; eom---.
T WtftlO, ).1 fllw9dl, U.,.lt, > 1; OOt9ll\
Chl<-.).1; "-eclfwn,MlnM .... >-1.
NATIONAL LaAOUa
0 AB • " ~
... rllM, SM DI.... II .. f It .4ft
Y-l>ld, 1Mw YWll U 4' S It .•
·-· ...., ... lpN. l4 " " JI .17• c.111,.1,c1nc.,,,...1 22 • n n .m
........ -""' 12 17 11 :a ... H•r-.S..frf""IKe U ~ 12 ,. .aw
Plyftft, H-Ycwll 21 I'll 10 2S .M7
He_r_., OW'-22 II ~'J' 2t .:ii. MetllMwl. P!Wladelpftle 21 7l t U .M _., .... CN<eeci u ., 2 " •• ..._._
Schmidt, Pflll-lphle, I; 0.wMlll, ~
treal, S; KlnQtnM, New Yer11, S. ~-SI Louis.. s. Fot•r. CIMlnNll, s; erw.
"~''°"· .s ._ ...... , ..
CoftcepclCll'I, Clnclftftall, U ; ScllmlOl,
PlllleCMlpl\le, 20; CNmbllll, AtlMIA, II;
Garvey, ~ 11f u--., o...,.n.
11. l'ltclllltt IJ O.CW-1 Va1te111ele, Oe41et1, 6·t ; Cerlloft,
PlllleO.lpflle, S.O, 1.000; Scwenteft, St. 1.oult.,
4-0, 1,000; ....._, ~ ... ; Rhoden,
Pllllburgll, J.O, Shlrle,, St. Louis, J.O;
Ruth,,.,,, Ptlll-lpl\le, 4-1: Al•••nder, 5-1
Fren<IKo. 4-1
Coll99e 1core1
Pepperdlne •. A1uwo Pe<lflc 4
UC ltl...,llde 17, ltec:lleMl 4
High school
~-111.0-Hlllll 0.M Hiiis 000 000 0-0 1 I
LetUM 8ee<ll 000 200 •-2 J l
Cook -H•rv•y. Cler• •NI Hou.iCll'I t8 Kear"' I DtO l8-C-U»O, AITlllt
CL81
C-*4 AUr U, Caste Meta 1
Co.ta !MM 101 500 ~ 1 I I
CorON •• -OIO Oil •-12 10 2 Smllh, Williamsen 121. Field •"" f l-.
Se"'oro, Wllit• 14) -Murllf. W-SeMorO (Ml Smith ?8 -Crui . JOMI (CNll, Melbo"
ICdMI HA-<:rui ICNll, Shollln, Vt.en.
I Cd Ml
lrvlM S, El Twe t
lrvlM 100 Ill 1-S t I
El Toro 000 000 0-0 l 2
WHlbrOGlt , P,.rrv (6) -Feflrenoedl,
lomell -T~rskl w -WHlbrooll C._11
t.-t.omttllS P,.rry.3B Brow"l"(I).
E•-le S, U"lvenllT I
Eslen<I• 001 020 l -S 10 I
Vnh•erlltv 100 000 ~1 l 4
Mllrott. forge 111 .,.., Ol<tley; Yobln Md
Miiier. W-Mllroll (]..]), L-Yobl" ,._
ltoDerbml 2 • Al>l•ll (El. yOf)j,, (VI ,._
AoDerUOfl,Grellem CEI Hlt-Mlllt r IVI.
1• ... •. ,._._._ v.11.., 1
Founl•ln Valley 100 000 O t 4 I
EdllO" 102 100 • S I
JeftMft, ~ (J), Shew 161 -Bas,
Sorenson -Ll1>99nl. W-Soren•OI> ( .. 2).
L-Jenwn. 28 Hiii CEI HA-a.lln . Out-
~n !El. Clerk (fVI
_.,.,.,.,_ U, AUriN S
Wetlmll>Sler UI 061 1-ll 11 4
Merl"• 100 022 0 S 10 4
Castle, OeU••ll-1•1 -Coddl"910ft,
Nunt>eumer. Wlllt• <SI, t.usllg 171 -floret W-<••11•. L Nuut>a....,er. 18-
Co•, c .. 11t,Heme1 IWI, Venture (Ml. ia-
COddl"910ft, Twlu (W), Hunt (M)
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
See View league
lfVIM
El Toro
E1le,,cle u .. 1vers11., ........ .,..k_
I rVIM s, EI Toro 0
E1len<la s. Unl,,.nlly 1
W L GB
12 2 • • I •
1 1
1 1 s o 14 n
CorON del llUt 12, Coile -Ml 1
f'riU'f'•0-1 CorON dlel llUr et Vnl,..nlly
Cost• Mew ti lrvlM
El Toro •I Eti.ncle •l TtWl,,kl<t Perk 111
South Coaet League
Ceplllr-va11..,
Mlulon vi.io
SanCl-\e UjjuMlluch
DeM Hiiis
ugu,,eHllll ..__.,.,le_
'W L GB
ll 2
II J 1
1 1 s s • 1
4 10 •
J II t
Laguna llN<h 1, Dane Hiiis 0
C-s>lllr-Y .. leY I, Sen Cletnefltt 0
MllslCll'I Vl<tjO I. l...-Hiiis 4 ,,. ... .,..o-.
O•"• Hll" et Seti Cl<l....me
Mluloll Yl<tlo et U..,.. .. ecll
U19~ Hlllt et c..c>lllr-Valley
SunHtleague
Wutmlftster
EdllDll
F01.,,l•lll Vallty Hu,,111\0tOft llMch _,,,..
NewtlDft ...,_ .... . ...,..k_
EOllDll 4, "-Letft Valley I
WHlmiftlttf' U, MerlM S
T-'f'tO-..
'W L ••
12 2
II I • • 4 I
s ' 1 2 U IO
Newpwt Herllor et W.SlmlMter
Hunll,.... a..c11 at FOUfttalft Vallo
setwler'I 0-
Founlelfl v .. 1.., •I Huntl"91on .. e<h 9t
Mii• s.i-e Pertt en
Angelus League
1111"°1> Amat
AUier Del
S.rvll•
St. Paul
91"'°4> -.tgomery ......... .,,.k_
81 llloet Amat J, Servile I
W L 08
• J
' s l\lt • s 2 • s 2
I 10 1
St. Paul 4. 81tllop MoMoomert 0
Co'*'t'•O.-S.r vita at 811Nlp Amat
~,·.o.••IMI>-..,....,., el St. p..,1 I Ill
Empire Leegue w
Katelle 12
L.oer• II
OcMnVltw ,
LotA~tot •
L •• 2
J 1
I ' • • I(._.,
• ' I Cypreu ,....,.,le_
Keltlle I, Los Attmlloa 1
Oceeft Vltw 7, ~· S K tftntdy 10. C'tP"Hi t ,.....,.,.._.
I \J 11
LN•• 14 KeMH't et 8r004l.11Unl Perk "'
Cypr-.. IC•ltlle (1) ........,.,._
1.otAlel'lll ... et~VleW (l1:•l
Oall't,..... ~~ •klleN IC ..... r
IN ACTION FRIDAY_.. Newport Harbor High's Mark
Barrett (8), who shares Sunset League MVP honors
with Fountain Valley's Rey Gubernick, leads the
Sailors at Bosco Tech in first round CIF volleyball
action. Fountain Valley is in action, too, hosting Sea
View League representative Irvine.
Pernod Trophy Tournement
(et Cllklll-........ )
l'lntlt-11 ...... Chris ,,__ ..... Jotwl FMver, M , 1-4,
1-4, Ker1 Melller def. Andrew Janett. ._,,
H , 1 .. ; ltlclWlrd Lewis Ott. Ecldl<t Edw910S,
M , ._,: Stew Krul<tvln def. Mil• H.......,.,
._2, .. ,; Oeftle V1119' Otf SlitYe Oefllotl. M.
,_. Warr.,. MeNr del Jeremy Bain • ..i,
I ...
Nation'• Cup
let ow.ui.1 I,.,... 0..-yl
~
Herokl ~ (U.S.) def. Rolf Geflrl"t cw .. 1 G«",.,...y>, .. 1. 1-s •.. a: v11 Pl_,
IW"I ~y) def SIMI Smltll (U.S.I, M,
•·•. Paolo .. rtoluccl C ll•lyl CIOt. Kim
Wa rwick CAullr•ll•I. 4·•. •->. Peter
Mc Hamara CAustr•ll•I del. Corr•CIO
llerenutll (lla!YI, ._,, 6.0.
0..-
Smltl>-s.ftdy AU.,., CU.S.J cltf ~
Kl•u• E-I-Oenneflyl, ._,, M,
7-J; Wanllcll-MtHt,,,_e (AUltrellal NI. 8eru:rutt~BerlDluUI lltely), .. ,, w.
I U.S. defeats We•I Ger me,,.,, t•I
A11Jlr•lle .... 11ltely,2·1 .)
Toumement of Chemplons
letNewY-1 ................
WoJt• F._ def. Vljey A-llr•I ....... 2.
._2, YIC10r fliKcl dtf. Brl.., Teec"9r, M,
1·5; Belai T~ dtf. Lerry St•f-1, ._,,
M ; HelN Oolntl!Mcft "'"· SWnmy G...,..
<Mlve ... , ... 2; 11Ur1o _,,,,...def. •le.er• ea-. w , .... ,,_ l(n.41 ..... 0oma..i.-
lleclel, .. 1,7·S.
Men'• tournement
l"tlO UfVITATIC»l.AL
Cat Pen~
~ ..... O.llty"'9
Ackerman def. TI>omes, •·•· .. 2 ... ,,
Pewu t dot. O.ru ... 1. H ; •-def.
Heyward, 7-4, •4
Perugl• Open (M~,IUlyl f'lnt•-....... ltetlly ~def Ketfty R-kll, ._2.
t•, M ; HIN lldln'I dotf. KetlletlM SIAlmplll,
._2, 4-4, '-1; 1'9trlzlt Moirgo dtf. Kate G'-
C't, •·2, .. 1. ................
Chrl1 E_, Uoyd def. Y-V........_
...o. M ; t.ucl<t R--· Vlrglftle w... ,,
M . W, ._I; Muf90 def. 01-''°"""°'ta. M , •~; ROMlyn Felrllenk . del. Kim S-, .. 2. 4-6, .. 2; "°41y VeMI• def. JIOllllll H«·
rl"tlen, .. ,, ~1. M ; T..W. Harton! def.
Oucl·Hte Lee, I•, ).4, M ; Honltlll cltf.
llottm ... , ... 2; 51; .. ,, Matcarln cltf. Piiar
Vasquez, w ... 2; Sandy Colllfls def. Cort,.
Venier. ._I,._.. .. 2 •
Women cou.ao• UC,,... I, CM fliltT (,.._I 4 ....... Me. M.,.,.. Ill cltf. Mot\Oft, 4-6, M, M ;
Wlllt IPI def. K-.llllg, M, M ; Cl-CPI
*'·Me. M.,en. M ... 2; Mellwy m Off.
Scott, .. 2. '-': ~ <P> def. au.-. H ... 2. M : Serr-m "4. e..c11, ._1, ..._
~
Morton-Wiiis CPI dltf, M.,.rs-M.,...s, ~ ,.._ M ; ~lftlt-EllMel Ill def. C*--
0.W.,, w ... 1; Me11try-Stf1'-m ... T,_,._.NMMll. ..._ ..._
LOI Al•mlto•
WaONllDAY'S RlllULTI u .. ~ .. .,...._.___...._.._,
first ••ce -Sorrels Go,,,,agetem
(CAlrOOu >, 7AO, 4 • .0. 2.ID, My Sell" Deck.
IWerdl, 4,10, l.40; Top Me Hot IMltchelll. UO. U tucte I 1-21 paid MUO
Seco"d race -J ell Ouullo" Ber CC.rooul, 4.40, J 10. 2.40; 11 ... un o.w>ety
J.-CMylM), '·'°· J.40, Ml. Hulk (Hert), uo.
Third race -Talk to ~ ICMOGUll,
t .2'0, J.JO. JM. PIMI of Alt«k (Hartl, t..IO,
4.2'0; Joe C. Oukk (Adair), J.40.
f'ovrtll rec. -By 9tclulft0 !Ao.Ir), 26.JO,
t .2'0, 4.00; Rldl UIU CHert), J.00, 4.00; E-
•Rell IC!erluel. 1.10. n eucla ll·JI fMlld .... 20.
"''"" piece -J .. I t.1•• ..... CMllchelll, IUD, I.JO, J.40; A Live B...a ICMOOUI, f.a ,
2.IO; EHy HuttW (Hen), 2.a .
Sl•tft race -Ml ~· O.Ck l<:erdDl•I. J.40, 2.60, 1.11; Stkky Fl,.._n CClerl-1,
1.2'0, UO; ~ .. .l«ll IBr-•I. 1.60.
SJ eucte l+.I paid sso.20.
Seventll race -A"otller E•cuu
IC.rdoul. J.AO, J.60. 2M ; Mr Tc,,., .....
.,...,,,, SM. a.oo. E••Y Awwdt ( Ootlom-
INI. J.40. Sh..nt C._21,..ecs UA.•.
l!lghttl race -MIN Trlple DleC Ccenloul.
17.60, 6,JO, 2.IO; Cletlllerlllte Oo ITrNsurel,
4.40, 2.40; l(lpt-f1 ~ Ket fMCtcMlll, 2.JO. U H«la (W I peld 9'IL60, tt Pick SI• , .. ,......,..., paid u .m•
wllll 12 c:':!t tickets lllw horlftl. P '"l<k SI• !on paid PO.ID with JOO w~
nl"ll tlclleb Oour.__I.
Hl"111 reco -O.C'°'""" Domlflo C~ INI, 1.00. J.C. 4.00; Too Int-Iona (8r-&I,
11.2'0, J.C ; fllowdy HettVll•ll !TrMsurel •
•.OO. » •ucla 1241 "* $71.ID. At~-J,171.
HoflYWOOd Pertc waDN•io.l v·1 aasu "n c,.. .. ~ ..... ,, .. _....,
First rece -Or.~ ILi.-.."'I· 20.IO,
t 40, •.ID; Soll AUrle! (PIMaYI. LIO, '-41, lrllll Fr-(~I. IM . S.C-raa -Geraldo (Hawley), 10.40,
S . .O, 3.40; ""-1110 Sllm (llU ... rlftll, IS. .. 1.40; ,.,......,.. w • ., 1ee. ...... 1. ue. u
Dally Oeullfe ( .... I ..-Id tlUO.
Tlllrd f'1Kt -Mi*llghl AcllOft (Wlftl...,,,
tt.IO, 4.IO. J.40; Glor lo11t CerHr
IMcH91"'9), UO, :LOO; Le Prine-(Pl~
ceyl,S.IO. Ue:ucta IMI ... kl llJl.00 .
,_.,,.rec.a -Molllcel Wey IM<CMrcr1I,
•.to, S.00, J .20; Aegean Ceftye11 ISlloemekerl, t.40, 4.M>; A Giii Aoal" CMcHe..-1, UO.
f'lfltl race -Porrt Cabl11 IM<CMrGn), •M, J.ll, J,00; Hotlll<t KntoM CPlnceyl,
SAO, J.00; Hatlw Wit tsi-m.kwl. uo. ts nee le <•111 pekl SID.JO.
Sixth race -Carol LM IH-l<ty), IOL4Q,
14.00. LOO; Oft Cue CVeleniwlel, UO, UI;
F-k IT•l-1. J . .O.
kvetttll ... -... Ho (0.1--yel,
12.60, 6.40, 4..40; Ufe't .._ IMcCMrGnl,
10,00. •.•; Ml. PrlftM Minister (Plftc.eyl,
UO. U •Mcie 11 l·n 1191d It>' .•. U Plcll SI• (...,_J.+~11) pei. SD,.UUO
wllll flft WIM!ftg ticket• (flwo tior•s>. p
P l<l Sia caMd.ltlon paid SIU.40 wlttl Sft
Wlftlllll9 tkllett (lour ~I.
Eltf\U\ rec• -Teroe CHewleyl, 21M,
1.211, 4M; Ack't Secret (SM91Mkerl, 1M.
1.IO; Treck • ........., IV••-ue111, J.00,
Hlntll ,_ -04tcoflla IDtl~I. 11.60, IAG, UO; ....., SI-CMt...,,.I, uo. t .60; f'..cy Ml• (~et'), a. .. u
uecte 0-91 ,.... sin.so.
At1Hdaftc:e-U.llll.
NAIL wan••• OIVlllOM
W L 0' GA BP,. S t 14 I II 11
J 1 1 1 JI
J • " • ...
J s ' ,, 1 " LUTaaN DIVISION c;.,,.os • 1 " • 11 Q W Hiil rogton Mo,,,, .. , s J 14 I 12 42
J2IO l lO•
T-lo • IS•U tlS
IOUTMallN OIVlllON P'ort Leuderca.tle S 2 II
JecliM111vllle J s I
........ 2 4 10
hmlN .. y J • II caNTltAI. DIVISION
2 10
2 ' , 4
I t M
11 1 n
12 10 22
21 10 D
Tulu
Cllluoo
Ml ,,,,.IOta
Dall•• 2 4 • II
10 SJ • 14
) IS s u
..otlTHWHT OIVlllON s .. 111• 4 , u ,, 14 ,.
PorlleM 4 l IJ t IJ :Ill
VMCOU-4 l 10 1 ' SJ
Edmonton 2 2 I t 1 It Cel~ry I S S t S 11
SI• potnh ¥• ewero.ct fw • reguletlof'I cw
overtlm. vl<t«y. Four POl"ll for • .-..,.,,
victory. ON boftu1 p0l"t for tvery geel
ICOrec:I wllfl • "'"'m""' of u.r .. per -No t>onut polf14 Is ewerOtd '°' overtime or tl!Dotout -ls:
--.U'(•k-Calgery 2, MINWIGU 0
Portl-J, SM .... t
T-'f'•G-
No O•mM ICheduled ,,.....,..0. .....
ClllC-.i Dallas,,,
Ven<ou..., at E...,_ton,"
O.~ He fishing
NE'W .. OltT (Oney'1 l.ei\erl -U
•f>Oleo. 3 berrecude. U botlllo, te telleo 1>e11. SOS mec:lierel. (Art'• Le_. .. , -is
antler•. l -.ito. l t>errecucs., .. ban, 210
me<lertl.
DANA WHARF -102 •f>Ole": Jl4 t>au, 10 t>arrecude, 1 llallbul, S yellowta ll, 49 rock
""'· m mec:kwel. MORRO BAY (Vlr1'1 UMl ... 1 -12
•"91••· l llng Goel, '° reel rock CDd, 4l rock
cOd, 10 olive t>M•.
SAN SIMSON -1$4 e1>9ltr1 llO 11"9 cOd, so rock <.Od. SIO rlt(I rock COCI, .. 011 ... l>eH, I
COW COCI.
SANTA 8AltMltA (SH Le ..... I -:Ill
e1>9let1: IJ2 cell<o t>eu, 11 "'"" -.. 3t rock fish, 1S mec:11.trel.
VENTUIUI -22 -lets 113 rock cod, I)
COW COCI, l lil>O COCI
OXNA•o ,, ellgletl. •1 rock COCI, 9
COW(Od. .. OltT HUENEME IA,,.erlcu l -IS
•r>Olers: t1S rock COCI, I COW COd PARADISE COVE 11 _ .. ,. 114 rocll
cod . I.ONG BEACH (Qw.,.'1 'W.,.rfl -S3
•f>Ol•o 11 t>erre<ude, 100 l>Cll'llto, 241 ce11<0
ball, 1S uNI t>M1, 40 rock 11•11
SEAL BEACH -S2 •"ll•n 40 mec .. rtl,
JO roc• 11111, 120ullco t>eu, 10 ,.,,., ball
Women'• gymnae1lc1
HIGHltHOOL s....t ~ lfMNYl ... h
C"O..llflen
V•ull -1 P .. ml«I (Mer I. t IS, 2 Hof
l<M1t (FYI, t I, l MIO\Mls IH8), t .05, 4.
Gaits (Mer,), t.O; S. Tam IFVI, 1.15; ••
Kohler CWm l, IU, 1 ~(Wm.I, LS,
I. ,rotl (NH), 1.4$; 9 1(-(Hiii, 1.4, 10,
ltum•l•lcl (NHI. 1.1.
UMWll llM'I -1 Weber (FV), '·'· J l(,,.,..lfti !Mer.I, 9.)$, J P•lmlerl IMI, t.J,
• Tam (FV), t.J; S l<ohler (WI, 9.0; •· McGrew CHiil, l .t , 1 Ka-IHlll. l .l$; I
Hoflm.,. (FV), I.•. t Ml<chHlt IH8l, 1.U •
10. Grhft (fVI, I .SS
ll•l•M•-m -I MlcllaelS (HSI, 9.4.S, 2
Hollm•" IFVl, 9.U , l . 1<now1 .. (Ml, t.t. 4
Gel" IMJ, I 7S; S. Pelmlerl (Ml, I.IS, •
McGrew 191, 1.4.S; 1 Konl<tr (WI, 1.65, I. Tam (fV), t S, t . CMr IWI, 1.J, 10 Med..,.
IWl,l.IS.
f'IOOt uertlte -I Tam (FVI. t.l , 2
Mlellatls CHBI, t. IS, J Hoffman CfVI. t IS,
4. Gelff CMl, t .OS; S M<Gr-IHlll. t 0, 4
Ke-(H81, t.4, 1 Pelmltrl (Ml, I.ts, I
Fell• IWI, l.tS; '· Terry !FVI. l.1S, 10. MedMft(Wl.1.1.
All•""'"" -I. Ml<llMll IHB). 36.4, 2 HoffmM IFV), Jl.2; J Pelmlerl (Ml, :Ill.IS,
•. Tam (f'VI. JS.tS; s. oat .. (M), lS.O; •
KOl\ltr (W), lS.IS; I. M<Gr-IHBI, SU; I
Kartodt IHBI, U.1; t. MadMfl IW). U.S, 10
Knowl .. IHBl.11.1.
Htah achool volleyb•ll ~IU .. MT LIIAO"Ua "1,..T_
l\My Kluumenn lllUrlMI; Milt Bunllo
I Hunllllt(Dll BH<lll; kirk Harty, Todd
Story CF-.!" Vell..,), Mel OU,....., ltkll
Hol,.,... (.._1H«11ofl. --T-9 111 ~rta. Cllrl• Fl.i>er lllUrlftel; Robert Ptlersoft, Cliff lttlch (Hewp0r1
He'110rl; Jim Scletfl, Keft Hertw I f'-ttitt Valley); Jeff,. ... ....,. IHunll"91D11 llNclll
Co·MY,.: Merk ll•rr•ll (Newport Hartlorl, ,..., °'*91'1!10 lfOUtll•I" Valley!.
Co·c10ecllu: IUcl Eveftl I feu,,teln
Valley), S..... 811Cben (H-rt Herllorl.
Misc.
..
Wall had
to make
decision
By CURT SEEDEN Of, ... Deity ,..... ,...,
In the end, Peter Wall said he
was faced with two decisions:
"Yes. I'll be a yes man, and no,
I won't."
Wall chose the latter.
So. after nearly two years as
the head coach of the California
Surf, Wall stepped down Tues·
day. citing the difference In
philosophy between himself and
newly named director or team
operations Tom Lllledal.
ACTUALLY, WALL had con·
sidered resigning two weeks
earlier, but he didn't make bis
decision until last week when
Lilledal placed rune Surf players
on waivers.
Lilledal, a virtual newcomer
to the North American Soccer
League . had promised a garage
sale when he came to the Surf.
Team management a nd the
SOCCER
club's new owners had promised
a contender this season, and
after seven games. the Surf
sported a 4·3 record including
three straight wins.
It was just before the Surf
beat Vancouver, 1·0, last Wed·
nesday that Wall realized things
weren't going to work out.
He had gotten a pretty good
idea the day LHledal was hired.
"l wasn't even told he was go-
mg to be coming in," Wall ex·
plained. "At first, I s aid, yeah,
sure. we can work things out
But finally, it just got to the
point that I knew 1 wasn't going
to be making any decis ions that
I thought I should be making as
head coach "
IN HIS STAY with the Surf,
Wall establis hed himself as
somewhat of an iron man on the
field. He came to the Surf in 1977
from Crystal Palace. In 1978, be
established a club record for
minutes played with 2,664. Eight
games into the 1979 season, WaU
who had been an assistant coach
while playing defender, was
named head coach when John
Sewell was fired.
He guided the Surf to second-
place finishes in its di vision both
in '79 and ·~.
But when Lilledal came to the
S urf, he unveiled a n e w
"Am ericanjzalion" process in
which the Surf would build for
the future using top notch
American talent. Lilledal also
got the OK and the funds to go
a fter a couple of so·called
"world class" players.
Wall wasn't given that luxury.
Instead. he was allowed to go
after several free agents .
Although, the team started off
sluggishly with a 1·3 record, the
new players started to get a feel
for one another.
WALL THEN instituted a new
tiefensive alignment in which
only one striker played up front.
While the s t yle produced a
rather slow soccer game, it also
produced victories
"Sometimes, you have to
ma!<e a big decision in your life .
Well, I made it." Wall ex·
plained. "I walked out of there
with my head held high. It was
just one of those things you have
to do.
"I might get some criUcism
for doing it, but I don't think it
was a stupid thing to do. I don't
think my credibility as a coach
will be hurt, either. "
Wall says he'll take the next
couple of weeks to think things
out and spend time with his
family. He said he'd like to stay
in the NASL and the thought of
some day coming back to the
Surf is always possible.
"I WANT TO get back Onto
coaching) as quick as possible.
I'm very confident about my
abilities. I do know I have two
jobs waiting for m e back in
England, but I'd like to remain
here." Wall ~ontinued.
"The team has somethin1 10-
ing right now. The only thing I
regret is that we didn't will a
divisional championship.
As for Wall's replacement.
LilledaJ says no decision wlll be
made until next week.
Laguna, Pioneer
vie in volleyball
La1una Beach Hi1h'1 u.n·
beaten and top-ranked Artlata
open the 1981 CIF volleyball
playorra toni1ht as Pioneer Hi1h
lnvadet for a 7 o'clock game. .
Coach Bill Asben'a Arilata,
South Coaat Lea1ue cbamplona
and winners of the Pallaadel1 Orange County and ln•lewooa toumamenta1 are a top.heavy
favorite a1alnat tbe W•tmont
Leafue'• No. ·a team.
The winner of tonJ1bt'a &am•
meeta UM winner of Friday'• first round teat between
Rubidou1 and vl1lttn1 Costa Mesa.
AU other ftrat roucl l&mel are Friday •
•~EPC p a
MOTOR SPORTS I BOATING I BUSINESS
It's Mongoose vs. Snake
McEwen, Prudhomme vie in funny car championships
By HOWARDL. HANDY Of ... Gelfy,. ........
One of the oldest rivalries ln funny car drag
racing competition will be renewed at Orange
County lnt.ernational Raceway Friday and Satur·
day du.ring the Western Regional championships.
Tom "Mongoose" McEwen of Fountain Valley
wlll pit his skills against the all-Ume leading win·
ner on the funny car circuit, Don "Snake"
Prudhomme.
ACTION GETS UNDER WAY Friday with
lime trials from 2 to 10 p.m. with gates openine at
noon. Saturday will find gates opening at 9 a.m.
It's opening day
for yacht clubs
By ALMON LOCKABEY oeur,_...,....,,.
Yacht clubs in Southern California are never
closed during the year -unlike midwest and east
coast clubs which are usually shut down during the
winter months and observe traditional Opening Day Ceremonies in the spring.
But the opening day ceremonies in the spring
are just as much a tradition in local clubs as they
are in the wintry east. It gives club officers an ex·
cuse for dressing up in uniform and club members
an opportunity to "dress" their yachts and show
them off to members and guests at their "Bristol'"
best.
That is why Newport Harbor will be colorful
and somewhat noisy Saturday as six yacht clubs
observe opening day. The blast of small deck can·
nons, the martial airs or bands and the array of
"dressed ships" will herald a party day that
begins about 9 a .m. and continues throughout the
day, climaxing with clubhouse parties in the eve-
ning.
Local clubs observing opening day -··season
opening·· would be a better term will be Balboa
BOATING
Yacht Club, Bahia Corinthia Yacht Club. Shark
Island Yacht Club, South Shore Yacht Club, Lido
Isle Yacht Club and Voyagers Yacht Club.
Balboa Yacht Club, the second oldest in the
area, will be celebrating its 57th opening at the
clubhouse al 1801 Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar.
Voyagers Yacht Club is the third oldest and
will be starting its 4lst season with rtag-ra1sang
ceremonies at the club quarters at 2616 New-
port Blvd.
liah1a conntn1an Yacnt Club, 1601 Hays1<1e
Drive, will be celebrating its 23rd opening day ;
Shark Island Yacht Club, the area's only all·
powerboat club will begin its 21st year at the
clubhouse, 1099 Bayside Drive, Lido Isle Yacht
Club officers will greet members and guests at the
club headquarters on Lido Isle. and South Shore
Yacht Club will observe ceremonies at the
clubhouse al 2527 W. Coast Highway. '
The only competili ve event along the Orange
Coast this weekend will be at Dana Point where
the Capistrano Bay Yacht Club has scheduled its
May Regatta for Performance Handicap Racing
F~eet yachts Sunday.
* In ot . ..., ~ Cllllornl• Ya<lll
lfl9 ltec"'9-i.t1or1 ..... ,
~-cahy
*
Klno Hal'tlor YKlll Chill Mall
Wallll Win No. 2. S.h#'dO.
C.lllornla YKllt Club -AM<aCM I slend race 110111. Ma1l1>11 a nd
lteturn IMORCl, Saturday.
South co.st Corlnlfllan Yecllt Cl111>
-L.Hln race (Pt4RF) Saturday.
S..Dleee
Ml11lor1 lay Yacht Club -Famllv
S.Mt Ser....,.., Setllf'dav. S..nday.
Oc•MMdo Yeclll Clut> -v .. r1y Sertn, tPt4AFl, Sundey.
Sen Olevo y ac.111 Chit! JeHOP
*'
Trophy lnvllellonal 111endlc•Pl
Saturday, Clpenlno O.v. ~•Y
Soutllwulern Yaclll Club
G"adah1~ llle nd race IPHRFI
starts S..turdey. --·--Ventura Yeclll Cllll> Gold Ci;p
It-Ila, S.turdlly, Sunday.
Ana<-Yeclll Clul> -Sltl-reti.
an<I Slnol•....._ rec•. Sal11rday,
Sunday.
Point Dume Yectit Clul> Sabot
recu, S..W.
Pomorw Velley S.111"9 Auocletlon
-Sam Cool! Ellml,..tlons. Saturday,
Sunday.
with sportsman time trials lasting until 1 p.m.,
followed by pro qualifytnc to 5. Final eliminallons
start at 6 Saturday night.
This 1s an NHRA points race, one or only two
on the West Coast this year. In addition to funny
MaTOR SPOKIS II
cars, top fuel and pro stock competition will also
be held along with sportsman races.
The Mc Ewen· Prudhomme series started m the
1960s and has been one of the longest and hottest·
on the drag racing circuit.
"'I have a brand new car and hopefully it will
be ready to run this weekend," McEwen says. "It
is a lighter car with the body made of titanium and
the engine is all-aluminum.
"THE MINIMUM WEIGHT, including driver.
is 1,950 pounds and we have weights bolted on at
strategic places, most of it up front to keep the car
down
'"It is a new Corvette We are going to run
more on the We~t Coast this year and forget about
the points standings I'm not chasing the points
like I used LO do. In fact. I'll be back for the Nitro
championships in June at OCIR •·
Drag racing has become an expensive sport or
profession. according to McEwen.
"I'm trying not to let my ego run away with
me." he says ··And I like running at local drag
strips and feel I want to support Orange County.
"FUEL COSTS have gone up and will go op
even more in June Right now it costs $1,200 a
drum for fuel and there is going to be a 14 percent
increase the first of June.
'"It costs over $300 for fuel alone lo make one
run if nothing breaks on the car I have to figure
out fundamentally what I can do and go about it. I
don't want to spend money foolishly.··
McEwen will take off next week for races m
Kansas City, Milwaukee, Denver. Houston and
Columbus. Ohio before returning home for the
Nitro championships al OCIR in late June.
llE ALSO PRAISED the new oper ator of
OCIR, Charlie Allen. himself a former driver "He
understands the problems from our side as well as
the other side and he has done a great deal to im·
prove conditions at OCIR and make it a family·
oriented racing strip once again," McEwen says.
McEwen also adds that the drivers and NHRA
may come lo a parting of the ways in the very
near future if problems aren"t worked out
It's basically a matter of money and increas·
ing the purses that has brought about the rift A
meelmg of drivers on the board and NHRA of·
fi cials wa s held today
The outcome will not affect this week"s race at
OCIR
Prep track f inals
schedule d Friday
Track and field finals for Orange Coast area
prep athletes are on tap Friday and Saturday with
league titles and berths in the CIF preliminaries at
stake
The Sunset League finals are al Huntington
Beach Hi~h. where Fountain Valley is the heavv
favorite for team honors The field events are slat·
ed to begin al 7 p.m. followed by the first running
event at 7: 30.
The Sea View League finals are at Irvine High
as Corona del Mar attempts lo make it two
straight league titles The first running event is at
6, following a 3 o'clock start for the fi eld events.
And at Laguna Beach High, the South Coast
League finals will be staged with the first field
event scheduled for 2 o'clock. followed by a 5 p.m.
start for the running events.
Saturday's agenda lists the Angelus League
finals at Santa Ana College, beginning"at 3.
I
ml!
PRE-INVENTORY
SALE
COAST GENERAL TIRE
2155 Hnor ll•d.
SINa 1957 Costa Mna 540·57 I 0
BR78x 13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 .00
DR78x 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 .oo
ER78x14 ................ 49.95
FR78x14 ................ 51.95
GR78x14 ................ 53.95
HR78x14 ................ 55.95
FR78x15 ................ 52.95
GR78x15 ................ 56.95
HR78x15 ................ 51.95
LR78x15 ................ 63.9~
nm UllAlS -WllltWaLS
Pl85'813 . . . . . . . ...... (~78x13) 3U5
P205fl5Rl5 ................ (fR78xl5) 4U5
P'Zl5175Rl5 .............. (GR78xl5) 5&.95
Mi MllLEfll
UNIRnva1 STEEL-BELTED ut~ RADIAL WHIT EWALL
BUILT TOUGH AT A PRICE
P185/80Rl
Pl95n5Rl
P205/70Rl
P205/75Rl
P205n5Rl5
P215n5R15
P225n5Rl5
P235n5R15
THAT'S TOUGH TO BEft
H~ERIC I 5 °/o
El'l.ACEMEH NICI OFF
"71113 63.97 THIS ,RICE
El71x14 61.95
117~14 73.91
f171xl4 75.65
fUlx15 72.59
Ql7l115 0.79
Nl7hl5 5.52
ll71x15 IU5
11sn o11 J .............. S39.5o
185flOR13 .............. $45.80
.... -4-HO-S-HO-Cl-,7-000---4185flOR14 .............. $47.50
won u.s. CAU 205n o114 .............. $57.7&
Antique
Show ;Sale
Today thru Sunday
May 1081 the
Huntington Center
Mall. Outstanding
collections from 50
deale,.._ Alto free evaluation clinic.
'405 Fwy and Beech
Blvd., HB
Find
the whole
Peanuts
9an9
evervdav
in the
Illy Pilat
142-4321
a • 0 4 ... .
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 ca
EMPLOYEES MARCH -Employees of Con·
tinental Airlines march from rally near the
Colorado Statehouse to a Denver hotel where
Continental stoc kholders met . The
,. ...........
employees. many dressed Wednesday in
black uniforms of flight crews, were protest-
ing Texas International 's bid to take over
Continental.
New a:!rline planned
Founders hope to compete with PSA , AirCal
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Plans have been
laid to create a new airline that its founders say
will serve 26 cities in seven western states and
challenge established carriers s uch as Pacific
Southwest Airlines and Air Cal
The new airline, Pacific Express Airlines. will
boast 21 airplanes and carry more than 3 million
passengers a year. according to Fred Davis. who
said he would be vice president for marketing
Davis said the Burlingame-based West Air
Holding Corp., has asked the Civil Aeronautics
Board for permission to create the new carrier.
which would serve cities from Seattle to Phoenix
and frorn San Francisco to Salt Lake City
Within three years, said Davis, the new
airline would be ""approximately the size of Air
Cal today ... <Air Cal is headquartered in Newport
Beach >
West Air currently operates the West Air com
muter airline. which flies from San Francisco to
six California cities. That line would remain in
operation under the Pacific Express proposal
•
Davis said the company, financed by its four
founders and venture capital from Citicorp. and
others. hopes to raise $10 m!llion to launch its
operations.
Davis said West Air already has ordered seven
twin engine Jets. about the size or DC·9s, and plans
to order 14 of an efficient. "new model" airplane
on May 12.
Jf the CA B approves, Davis said Pacific Ex·
press would start serving "major hub airports
such as San Francisco. Los Angeles. Phoenix and
Las Vegas'" by mid-September and would expand
lo the outlying µoints by fall 1983
He said Pacific Expr ess has filed for
permission to operate at John Wayne Airport in
Ora nge County; Seattle and Pasco. Wash.:
Portland. Eugene and Medford. Ore.: Boise.
Idaho; Salt Lake City . Las Vegas and Reno;
Phoenix and Tucson; and San Diego, Ontario, Los
Angeles. Long Beach, Burbank. Fresno. South
Lake Tahoe. Sacramento. San Jose, Oakland, San
Francisco. Chico. Redding and EurPka.
Galbraith issues alert
Warns Reagan to be wary of 'pop economics'
CA MBRIDGE, Mass. !AP>
John Kenneth Galbraith, who
has advised three presidents and
millions of readers on economic
theory. has some advice for
Ronald Reagan: Beware ""pop
economics.··
"There has always been a
danger of cliches becoming
economic policy.·· sai d
Galbraith as he stretched his
long frame around a chair in hls
Harvard University office. "Tm
certainly not a s upporter of
Reagan supply.side economics.
His advisers seem engaged in a
kind of pop economics. sub·
slituting what 1s popular tor
what is real.··
Galbraith. 72. who has been a
professor, government ex·
eculive. political adviser and
author. has mixed his economic
philosophies with a wide range
of reminiscences in his new
autobiography. "A Life in Our
Times."'
T he book . released last week.
recouots Galbraith"s life. from
his childhood on an Ontario farm
to his work as the "price czar··
during World War II and his af-
filiation with John and Robert
Kennedy.
In the boOk, Galbraith said his
upbringine left him with "the in-
herent insecurity of the farm·
reared boy in combination with
an aggressive feeling that t
owed it to all I encountered to
make them better informed."
Galbraith said the description
holds true today.
"There is still the insecurity
and still the desire to instruct."
he said in a recent interview.
On the s urface. insecurity
would not seem to be part of the
Galbraith personality. At age 32,
he held one of the most powerful
civilian posts in a wartime gov·
ernment as head of the Office of
Price Administration. which
placed price controls on a over·
heated war economy. In the two
decades that followed he was ad
viser to presidents and wouJd ·be
presidents .
.. My most intense job was run·
nlng price control in World War
II,'' he said. "I certainly ac·
cumulated more enemies than I
did later in life. And it had the
worst effect on my personality. I
developed the feelin1 that when
someone left my office smiling 1
hadn't done an etrective Job."
He rattles off the names and
descriptions or presidents with
disarming off-handedness
There was Roosevelt : ··. .very
much disliked economics By the
war years he was very much
bored by it:·· Kennedy· "By the
time he was president he had a
fir s t rate instinct in
econo mi cs;"' Johnson ;
very good instincts. He
absorbed economics through his
pore~ during h is y ears on
Capitol Hill."
'"I didn 't know President
Carter. but his tragedy was he
relied too much on economists
who managed to time bad infla·
tion and unemployment to coin·
ci d e with hi s election.··
Galbraith said. adding with a
s mile "Economists can do
some things with precision.'"
As a liberal Democrat,
Galbraith has few contac ts
amo ng t h e con ser vative
economists advising Reagan.
But he thinks the Reagan plan to
save the economy through tax
cuts and fewer controls is
doomed to failure
··What Reagan economics
does is to take the most pleasant
tack a tax cut and hope for
a pleasant result in the future.
The basic contradiction is that a
cut in taxes lo stimulate activity
and quench Inflation will in·
cr ease the deficit which pushes
up inflation, .. he said.
Galbraith has spent a lifetime
ex plaining economic theory. He
wrote for Fortune magazine in
the post-war years and authored
21 books, including '"The Af·
fluent Society." -------------------
GETS UC I HONOR -Daniel Aldrich, left, chancellor of UC
Irvine, presents Patrick Cadigan with plaque recogn.Wn.1
him for service to the university. Cadigan, president of
EECO Inc .. Santa Ana, is vice president of the Cbancellor'1
Club and board member of UCI foundatlon and UCI In·
dustrial associates.
lelWPOIT
RBOR CRUISE EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT • SUMOAY llUMCH
4 T THI CAMlmY
714 '7 .. ntt
J4C.K ANOEA.WN
REVEALS ln the Diiiy Pilat
881 Dover Or., SUite 14
NEWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
-~--~~~--------~---.. ..... ~_... ...................................... a ... •c ...... a ..... 011110 ... •a ........ s .. 1111 .... 11 .... 11 .. 111111111111111111
•
" Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT(fhursday, May 7, 1981
Pioneer aviation firni celebrates
Orange County air pioneer Ed·
die Marlin wasn't talking.
"I don't want to say anything,"
. he said. "TaJktoMr. Volkoroneof
those other guys. I haven't got
anything to do with it anymore."
What be doesn't have anything
day, where he was gueat of honor
along with former astronaut Pete
Conrad.
The celebration kicked offtbree
m onths of planned festivities
scheduled to culminate In July
with a "Concours Aeronatique"
exhibition for antique aircraft at
Martin's seven-acre base at John
Wayne Airport.
earlier in an Irvine Company
field.
''Hejustdidn'tstartpaylngrent
for the space until 1923," the
spokesman said.
Martin sold his business in 1971
to Ric hard Fontaine and Ned
Goodhue after three financially
depressed years. • to do with anymore is Martin
Aviation, the Orange County
sales, charter and training com·
pany he founded 60 years ago. The first entty, apparently, is
the 1931 Stinson now parked in
front of company headquarters on
Airport Way.
Robert Volk, a former Union
Bank official. bought lhe firm
about eight months aao from Fon-
taine.
. • i
' ..
Ma rtin wouldn't discuss lhe
spruce-ribbed aircraft or the
smell of casein glue and canvas
that permeated the aircraft in·
dustry when he took off Crom
Orange County pastures lQ teach
would·bepilots .
He wouldn't even talk about the
days when he walked biplane wings over Newport Beach.
T hat aircraft. flown in the 19305
by Martin. was ferried from
Lancaster for the party by its
renovatOf'·owner Phil 9chultze.
It rested be hind an icing-
covered, 8-by-12 fool birthday
cake. Martin is credited with starting
his flying service in 1923, though a
public rel ations spokesman
claims he really began two years
Volktookadvantageoftbebirtb·
day party to promote his company
and its long service to county a via·
lion. He said he plans to expw
operations.
Martin A viatioo is home for 80
aircraft of varying sizes, shapes
and power. The company leases
about 60 or those privately owned
planes at its base to renters and to
its own charter service. Martin
boasts 114employees, including16
Martin was speaking -or,
rather, wasn't s peaking -at the
Martin Aviation's 60th an·
ni versary celebration on Tues·
CALL WALT SELLERS
'FOR A
FULLYASSUMABLELOAN-
INTEREST ONLY!
Newport Equity'Funds ·Inc
Licensed BroKer Since 19 71
(714) 760-6060
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lntereat only s-~nt
• loc-• •Co••-d•I
• }leeldentlal
• w .. klv co--'tm••••
• llltonllilv f•ndlo1•
• 6 aontll• to S v••rt1
• So•d1ern CaHfora&.
( • )nla<f / '"'
loan lnfonoatloo ae rvlce
t ., 1 •\H hncu\c 1n!::J ,,,.,.d,
(714) 759-1515
AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE 230 NewPQr1 Center Onve
Design Ptaza
Nl'wpor1 Beach Calllorn1a
92660
WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewels by Joseph purchases dlamonda,
gemstones. gold and silver from pnvate indM-
duals and estates CaretUI elll8mtnation and
evaluatlOO by our experts. Highest pnces paid,
10-9 dally, Sal 10-6 Closed Sunday Phone
today A$I{ tor Betty Grace or Eric Zalaskua.
A rMDITIOH OI TkUST J~ OVI" tlJ YCAAS
J [W [LS by JOSEPH
South Cont Plaza, Costa Me9a • 54G-90H
MAY FLOWERS COLLECTORS
B EGIN ALLERGY CORNER
PROBLEMS A•r• CcNn• • St•mp• g GOLD & SILVER S-6--11 By Terry
Grant,
R. Ph.
• ..., letl
Kr~end9 Mte.• "91.11 ~pie L•m MM.• $4ff.•
1• • o.wc_..,.._. Mtwret.11e.•
100 eor-...... w1•
T II 50P.-JMe.• Wll.• he a ergy seasons '°"' suv ... 8-·~ ~ begin now. Pollen. smog BANK FINANCING and other 1rntants can NOW AVAILABLE cause ~neez1ng, weeping (714) 558-6850
e) es. itching, running South Coaat Plau VIiiage no!>l' and hoarseness rr -......... you have these
11
• __ ,_._., ________ c-.. __ -._._._
sy mptoms constantly, you would be wise to
consult u phys1c1an For
allergic problems ran
develop into far more serious ailments
Many allergy med1r111es ha\'e a tendency to lessen
awak efulnes~ and 1t may be dangerous for you to drive Ask your physician
ahout this. or we will be
glad to tell you about the
aftereffects or any re
medy you are taking
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. Pick up
yo ur prescr iption 1f
shopping nearby, or we
will deli ver promptly
without extra charge. A
great ma n y p eople
entrus t us with their
prescriptions. May we
compound yours?
PAH UDO PHARMACY ,,....,........,
H l....,WI-' ... ._.,.... leecll
64 IMO
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for you.
THE LIGHT TOUCH
Remember ·when instant rerall was a sign of good
intelligence. not bad manufacturing., ••• He who stnkes the first
blow confesses that he
has run out of ideas. ••• Data Proce ssor to
sweetheart: "How do l
l ove thee ? Let me
compute the ways." ••• You can always tell when
a marriage is shaky. The
partners don 't even talk
during the commercials. ••• Yesterday's nest egg will
hardly buy today's bird
house.
1-----Qaa~G 8U)lncl» .:;;;ifln ... a.,...-.iaca~-----
l n Business To Make Business Happen
••• Everyone's chirping
about Tire City , 1950
Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa where you'll rind
the best values 1n ti re and
wheel service. At Creative we have the money you need.
Loans from $25,000.00" for any business or
investment purpose
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker.
·All loans secured by a comb1nat1on of
real and personal property
H 25 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 (714) 752·7923
Check out CHEK/IN:
M.ore ways to earn on your checking.
55orover?
Free checking
with average balance of just $100. Write all
the checks you wlsh.
MOO average minimum balance.
Free checklna. Onllrn~ check wrtUng.
Free ftnandal services
with $2,000 In a savlngs account Free
cl)ecklng, wtth no mlnlmum bolance Meded. Free safe deposit box. travelers
checks and money orders.
••••••
Check Guarantee Card.
Check-Reserve Credit
Protection
on your approved good credit.
Earn 51/4-X. annual Interest
compounded dally on your CHEK/IN•
balance.
CHEK/JN~
Your dollar's best
friend today. )
~· ,.
full time pilots.
Volk, a corporations com-
missioner in Ronald Reagan's
firs t state administration,
grabbed an old biplane propeller
to "cut" the big cake.
Martin, the pioneer. lent a
hand.
They couldn't slice too deeply.
The confection was layered
styrofoam.
-JERRY CLAUSEN
CM Mazda
deale r s hip
sets move
Miracle Mazda is planning to
move its Costa Mesa dealership
to a new location in September.
..., ...........
The franchise, reportedly one
~f the lar~est Mazda dealerships
10 the United States, will open a
20,000-square-foot facility at 1425
Baker St. There will be 20
service staJls at the faciUty. a
spokesman said.
The present retail outlet is at
2150 Harbor Blvd.
County aviatwn pioneer Eddie Marti~. te/t , discusses 6()th
anniversary of Martin Aviation with current owner Robert Votk.
Regan sees oontinued high inte rest rates
WA S HIN GTON (AP > -
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Regan bas said interest rates
will likely remain high for lhe
ne xt few months, threatening
the administration· s budget
plans as well as continuing a na·
tional business slowdown.
rowing. are pushing the project·
ed federal deficit closer to $10
billion than to the $54.9 billion
the Reagan administration has
t argeted for this fiscal year .
Regan said.
Regan said His comments came
one day before Congress was ex·
pected to vote on the admimstra·
lion's original budget-cut plans.
High interest rates jn general,
including those on federal bor·
"We are trying to cut spending
r ight now" in an effort to hold
the deficit to about $55 billion.
A While House economic aide
said it was reasonable to assume
the administration would pro·
pose new cuts for ·the fi scal year
which is already seven month~
gone.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW YOlllK (AP) CltrSoCO. N .... HelmRS< ~ S"-NwlNG' 1~ I~ SflM1d 32\lo ;nv,
NA$0AO QUOCatlot'e CIUUIA 2214 22\/'> H1nrdF , 244 2.SIJo N•otPS 12v. 13..., SflwMI 2~ 25""' NASDAQ SUMMARY ~l"I llitllW1 bldll CIUUll 21 111'4 Holo«>m 214 2 NOH ll ll"' ,. ... ~IWlr 1014 11 -loWMt ..._,.. by Hoover UV. 1~ Nucorp 1°"' ~ SwEISv Ullllo 1511'> man.et mMlln a1 a# Cl ... llJL l l JI HorllR• ' •14 OollvyM 211'> Jlllllo SwnEnr 35"' ~
Wad Prices do not ClowCp 7"' 7 Hya ttlnt 24\'t 21 OfiloCe• lt~ 40\IO Slandyn Q Qllllo Incl .. ....-11 mattiup X:olrTle ,,"' t MS I ~ JO¥I <»-Ferro 13 llll'> SldMl<ro 1014 10111 ,,..,._do_ or~ ICOI~ '-1 111 rv, ..... OtterTP 1W 17 StdRtllS
lulon tor Wool.. ComCIH -J7\io :~:~~·~ ..... -PCA l"I IS~ 1• StenHP ~r· ~"' ,t!:!: ~AKJ::.1 . :!" ~ol~~tlll
$tock 81d Alll CmlSflr 1~ 17"1 lntrcEnr '"" '"' PalKll ,...., 1..-i. SterlSI •7>'-.! ,•-ks -warranu 11w1 .,.,,. -141 AEL Ind U Ullo CmwTel ~ !,!~ 1ntMIG1 10 1~ PcGalll •.• lt'tl.,lOV. SlrawCI , 111 ~ th;" MM1 --!fie "'°'' ...-tad °" AFAPro4 '"" tv. ConPap 1 ij tt ln8kWlll 17"" 12 ... )>..,1eyP nl' •• Subaru 1'V. 1'V. P*•unt of <Ninoe r99'1rdlH\ of viii....,. AVM Cp ~ 4"i C«dlt .,,. .,.~ lwaSoUI t~ 10'.ll Payl1C1 171111o 11 SuperEI •11. !~ tor Wed .. Accure y 1~ I~ CrosTr• I "':;;': -::~ Jam1by 2.Sli. UV. P"rMJ 17 17 .... TIME 0C 4 • ..., No wc11rlU .. lradlnp beloW U ere Intl· AddltnW 12.,., IJ CutlrFd 1 ·~ ,_ Jerico 1 14 ..... H"-PeMEnt 11"°' llV. Tampax """ lll ud9d Nel -per<lll'-<han9K are ..
Adv lltou ~ 4V. C'i'<Uron 1614 " Jiff Fd S-1' "' Pentair ltlll ,.,. Tandem •V. •Yi dl:r.r·•-• tie-IN P,."'°"' ctotl-Alll8111 ... ,, Oe nlyM D """ Jo.l~nM 3' Pe T p .. ..,., 70 ·-·~ Al••"'°" M Ml4 DUl>ff 1 11~
10
11 Kais$t pf 16~ f~ Pew:..:. m: ~-\lo :rt.~~d-2'Yt 32111 bl price --., las! bid orlc.e.
Allcolnc C2 4211'> Oa ytMal •n ~ I 2-2•~ PltlleNal Jt•• 21-royGld ft ,.,. S All'fn8 rv, 7'11 Oa-7 IS.I• I "e Yer ~ ,... p ., -Fd • 1""· 1•~ Allu ~ 7 OeklbA' ~ M Kam en JlV. D .,., leruss 9-\lo 1~ ''°" .~ ~ · · Amar.. 2IY> 2' o.1c... 11 11"' KmpAm 1~ 1S-\lo Pln•rtn 54 ss nM<Gll 1' "\/'> 1 """'" ~ • O.wi yEI J I lta'l'MM ~ S14 PlonHIB J7~ l7-\lo US Enr 1114 ,,.,., 2 AGrMI ,,,.. 11"1 OlaCr'I'• t1 22\'o l(efl.,$v I av. ... PIHllne Ill I us Sur • l7YJ 22~ l •1ntOp -_,, DlanCn• 2'\'t 40 K•uftel 2111'> 22 POSMI 7'4 ..... us TrO 1314 1lYo • AMlcrK *-;M; Docutl 1 *' ~ K1tmball ll V. I~ Pr•tGM JR4 • UVa8111 Ml'> M"' S ANallns 14.,.. 14\lo DollrOn 17 17\lo ~.~Gnt 2... JV. Prdl•Yn """ ~ UpPenP 10\'t 11111 • A~•· t • ....._ ••-Doyl08 1 I~ l•llo """" 32"'° 32~ Pr09rp 1-\lo 2 1VaelR .,I'> .. 7 -..,.,. ......, K,._v 15\lo 1~ POSvNC ~ lot. Vel8kAr • ..... A esMil 1.-. 1714 DvnlllnD 21Y• ,,,_. Kratos 17\lo ,,.., Pur18tfl 2514 JS-\lo VanDu• 1t 1'1'> •, AWe1dn9 61 70 Durlrn 1 17 17\io I( 110 1'\lo 19"' PwtOGac> 14\4 IS v ... co 2' 1'V. Am11h8nc 2311114 EtD~leJ .• IZJ;..17"' w e 23 U V. Oua-reh 1'"6o 15\/'> Velcro o 10'* 11 10
Anadlte 1CW. 10.V. ~•tnVnc• t!~~n •v. • .,., RaoianPr 1~ 10.V. VlctreSI 7-\lo I 1121 ""'SA " .... ,.-., m'I 1111o nee" • •1Co Rayc1ttn ~ " v~ ,. ,~ AneAGd 17 .. EconLAb 21-21"' LA 0 22\'t 22"' Re ymnd 21 ... 21 V•NBlh ,~ "~ I) ::~f/:1 = ~;~ ~:::.'if: ~ ;.,.. t~~ 1414 u"' RemCm 44111 o WlllEnr 12~ 12~ :; ,.,...__,.. -... -Ele u·-I ,~ , ••• Llnlcst 22Yr D RoadE• ~ O \lo Weldtrn 4~ S 1• _,...., ..,. '"" "-"" ~ Logetrn 1-I...._ RobbMy 41 tt W1llGa tOYt 41 AMICO!• -J1 El~I v 2' ICU 16\i: ,~ Rowton 2\(o J Wendy ~ 17 17V. ,, AUOILI 14 14 .... EnrOe\I i. ,.\lo :o~ 0 • '~ ,.. RO<iM 14\/'> Ullo WstDr•I 77 771111o :,• AUanRs IA lt\4 EnrllWtltd 4l'a 5 ¥ac11GE IW. 12,_. Rw.Stov 1~ ,. WO.Op 4414 0 8alrdCI> 1M 1~ l!nRtlf 1Mll t~ ~IPI ,,...., ,,...., SMiier ~ 4 WHold •7111 .,"° 2021 8ell'fPI> 12 IJ\4o Entwl'tl I M MafMP •n• 4514 Safeco 31 ..... \Co WtnMto ~H~. _ !9. , 101/t EqutSL 11 1114 MaJrRI .... ~ $tHetGd lSV. ~ l IS.1• '"-22 liulcR• II 1°" IOY> EqtOll l4 ...... 4 Sol• 4 7-16 St Paul 44 44 .... Wmo.-C 21 2114 2l
8eu tFr 23 23\lo FSC N 2"' Mall-rt S1\lo 511'> ScanO J S-1• 211'> WOOdLOC 25 lll<t ~ 8ey11Mk 11 11\'o FabflTll ll4 1" Malkr1 wt ~ MY> ScrlppH toY, M WrllglttW 51'1 S" 2 e .. 11... N • F1nnGp az nv. Marlon I "" '"' SenSO< ~ M iio ZlonUle ~ ltllo •
8eft1Ptl 2 S-1• ~ Fl•ICer tlY> 1~ MaulLP 22 M SwcMer 1J"°' ""° n.e .. Not ..iic..-. =~ = : ~r=~· = ~"' ==Y~'M ~~ ~:~ Svcm•u' PS,.....AN"O DOWNS - . .. ,,Met 1Mli 1ff't "tEmpS 14\'o U Mc~M IW. 1,_ I etl*(;o 11 11'-"IWlll<ln 49' SV. Mct''arl UY, Ifft 2 etr"5on 1~ u11o ~:::\au = =: M<Ouay u ,,.,,. !
81r1<11r .... 6\lo l'INt~ 41,_. C2 :u:t •l'I '1 5 ~00:. 1m 1t-,., ... ,,.I• ,..,., , ... :..& \~~ l~ HEW YOlllK CAP) --· K11ve --• ltwTom I It .,~ l'lwroco • Ullo 1W. M141111" 1\4 1'-"""-_... ~led by NASO. 1 ~--flit *"" l'WMIO ~ .... M.lcll-• 22 JZl'I Name V-8ld Alltad Cllg. I 8"'1111 ,,_ • "°""~' "' .,,, .. rv. -. c111.,nlllJC •.200 J J.1• Jlio .. .. • t awr .... IDIS 1M IS .... Frank TO 11 '"'llllpr ,,_ 12 tONM .. :IM,100, 1s-1• 2 + 1·1• 10
CNl. fl'ln M J\4 Fr-I,_ 11\lo M 11VIG ,._ 15\Q IHl<RI g 224,600 10'lll 10 .... -"' 11
CPT Gp '°"' .... Fr-•$0 Glo'I U --~ot' q ~ MCIC ... : JIW,200 1•11o 1~ ..... J32 ~WtSY U\'I ~ Frem11t t It 1'\lo ~... S.. ,... Enllsv .. . lO'J,JOO IJ*ll U~ .... . radH Meo M9 l'wllrH8 22* 22V. MonuCo 1•11o 1"" S<otln1t . 191,JOO •llo W> -IV. 14
E"I ~2 7·t• Y.i.no UM,~ Moore-Moore-Pd lllViJ ~CO.met.Tr 16l..40011)..ll 17·1• •I-» u C.ke _., 29\'I OnAllfm U 1~ ro"• ..... lllO<iM ... 152,000 2~ 2A'-•2 1• C.lnAlr 2 t\lo GnOeYCI 5\Co SI'> "'°""In ,,~ 1114 Wendy s.. 1•.100 ,, ,, .... -.... ,, C.t~ 15 t• GnlltlEJt 12. 1114. MolCh1b 2.vo J WlltnlEIC . 10 ,100 1.-,.... + " 11 c:.v 211o 2-~IE"" •Ii'> 7.,. Muellff ll 31'-" Cl\VI 1N IJ ,_M 11\lo ll'MI NeNACP S 25\1') t7 AdYan<ad • . . . .. .. • .. . wt 10 crwm5fl 1614 1 • .,,. .-.1 yAdv lG •J"" =o:o!i D 2214 o.c11nec1 •• • .. .. .. • . . .. .. .. • s54 21 Cl\er1Ho Jn\ II" llntst ,. 1 Vt J ~· 1~ 1514 Uncha"llld . ... .. .. .. ... .. 1,117 22 CMILH ,.. IS Gyrod.rr .... ~ =~-... I ~ m: Totel 1..-................... s.o.a ~l
CllnUll 17 1tllJ HaMI 20\o't 20il6 NI r A U U\'t N1w ltlllhS .. · · .... · • · • .. • •• · · · .. ~ CltlNwTr 71 71Vt HerdWkl •Iii 1 NlelM I 42~ '3V. New lowt .. .. .. . . .. . . . ...... .. 2 CltuDCI 4Stlt ..... Hrplltow 10\'I 1M'i NC::~ G 1214 1,_ Tot•I MIH .. . . .. .. ••. . .. . • • • J0,921,400 26
clrllco 6 ,,_ =:~J: n :~ Nof..".J,o'. 21 2t"i
MUTUAL FUND
~:::: Eq Inc JO.It 11:8<11 )4.75 M ... I 1t.9' Mllfl 8d L12 ,,,de. lt.1•
Ovt Sec e.7' Hllt>Ga 7..SS HI Yid 10.10 I.I Mun 7SI Purltti 11.4' S.tem ... TIYlft .... Tr-JO.a
M1111 •.a 10.01
Pro0 •·'° 5.n Tu Ex :1.02 J.1• St.ock J0.7' 2:Ut
Select •.M •• 12 Ver Py 10.07 10.H Orwtll SM •.:M 1nv lltnfl uo •.tt Netad 1.2.S 1 t2
lltel a.a NL Mut ... 1 "' Orftel\e: ~",1 t::.-:~:~ U~.~ ~~h lf! S~7~
JP 1nco •·" 7.40 tncom 7.'2 1.•1 J-s 10.0I NL T• F.-. t.J:J 10. U
It~ 1J.l3 N-tT ...... NL JEenc«'-: Mui 511r 0-l' NL
nrtlt 1U5 12." Nat Avie 10... NL
'
alan 1.27 .... Net llMI 1S.11 NL
I• Ex l.M '-" Nat s.wr!tllt: K•llfmn 2.12 NL •••an IQ.17 10 ... Ktm.-r Fllllllt: 9ond a.21 J.46 ln<M> 1_.. 7.S1 OMd S.15 S.77 ore-11.7' n.1t o,._ a.oa ..,, :•..:i: t:ri ,.,: r"7::. t: t~
()ptti 14.0t ISA $too t.1' 10.M
Su""" ""' 11.• 7..U 7,tt TKll
;...,.,,e
CllnlTh Cllnl un C-wt CnRsvLI l!nnRIC H-8oncllncl PrymeEn KetKop EnlAadlo
Wo.-dTNI NeoBlon Oollcom Circle FA Flc!Md un
CIC Fn ,_..,
DlgltSw un Comdl wt n
1Emhr1 '"' i:~~~"' FldlMd RancMdo PICGdUr Reye.om
Name
CmBltSF " RfffWI lltedlnl'd
Scot I"" lcotc:.i Scllwtll SenlcOev Sl'lmh SuprCr• AOOll
o.tr."" Leal~n un Mllll un
ACalln un UFlrCM R$R Cp CmPM<r Clnd'tl NuEnvY Vllall
8HICR' 11 g=.
Yorll.Rlll Termo.1 Velmnl
.'Ii\
t "" . " ... . " • J • J • 1\lo
• 1 .... • Ill • 14
t "' ..... . .... . "" • 211'> • 1\1'> . , ....
\lo ,
14
"' 14 -"" II.
OOW!ff .....
l.ell °"' 11 -J
2 -" 1" -'Ml •14 -, ....
4 -llJ
2 -14 2 -14 J -\lo , IS.1• -7·1• 214 -...
214 "' JUO -150
214 -14
J\I') -0 -41'>
7\lo -"" ,, .... -, .... ,... ...
~ -"' ~ --,°"' -... , -...
12 -I a 11. 1214 -, J7 -2
~i ..
Up •2 Up lS.l Up 1U
Up II.I Up 17.t Up 16.7 Up ,.0 Up 15.• Up 14.0 Up IU Up la.J UP IU Up 12.f
UP 121 Up 12.0 Up 11.6 Up 11.J Up 11.S Up 11.1 Up 11.1
Up 11.1 Up 11.1 Up 1e.s
Up 10.l Up 10,0 Up IO.O
.. P.:i.' ..
Off 21.• Off 1U
Off 11 .. g:: l1~
Off 1 ·'
Off "·' Off 11.1
Off IU Off 100 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off t .7 Off t .7
Off t .4 Oft u Off 1.0 Off a.a
Off "' Off 7.1 Off 1.1 Off 7.7 Off 1.1
Oft 1.S Off 7.1
----~---. -0 0
BUSINESS I STOCKS
a a a a
Orange Coast DAILY P1LOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 s
Johnson & Johnson (J&J> !Jells a lot of products to
women· contraceptives of all kinds, a raft or baby·care
items (in case the contraceptives didn't work>. lam·
pons and sanitary napkins.
But it never saw fit to place a woman on its board of
directors until now. Ann Dibble Cook , director of the
social service department al the University of
Chicago's Lying-In HospltaJ, has just been named a
J&J director.
The president or the Unjversity of Chicago, Hanna
H Gray, already has a seal on one of the most influen·
ti al corporate boards ln the nauon: J P Morgan & Co.,
operator of Morgan Guaranty Trust.
No one holds and votes more stock And that's not
her only corporate directorship. She's also a member of
the board of Cummins Engine, the diesel engine
manufacturer.
Polaroid, the instant camera maker. put a woman
on its board for the first time a couple or weeks ago. She
is Yen-Tsai Feng, chief librarian at Harvard
University. ~ Another •
company that l·, c:.
decided recent· ; ~·,
ly to admit a .~~
woman to the ~
ranks o ( 1 t s -------1-----1-
directors is Dow lllTDI I llRIJ
C h e mical .
Barbara Hackman Franklin now sits on Dow's board.
She was formerly a commissioneroflhe U.S. Consumer
Products Safety Commission.
WHAT' GOING ON here is a continuation ol a
trend that began in the early 1970s Prior to that time .•
Lhe board of directors was an all-male preserve. The
board, at should be pointed out, is a policy-making body .
it doesn't so much run the company as sit in judgment.
approving or disapproving what the paid managers do.
So what was in place previously was men judging
men. That's still pretty much the case, except that now
there's an occasional female voice to temper the male
chorus
How far has this women's movement gotten in the
business world? According to a recent count done by
Catalyst. a New York women's organization, this was
the picture among the nation's 1,300 largest companies :
324 women held 464 directorships on the boards of 387
com panics. In short. il 's getting to the point where near·
ly one out of every three companies has at least one
woman director. •
TJUS PENETRATION was corroborated by a new
study, •·Women Directors on Corporate Boards," done
at the business school of the University of Texas at
Dallas. The Texas researchers looked at 491 big cor-
porations and round that 168 of them had at least one
woman director
ONE FEATURE THAT'S clear from the Texas
study is that the larger the company the more likely it is
to have a woman director. Thus, among the 100 largest
corporations, about half have women directors; this
percentage decreases as you go down in size.
At any rate, men certainly don't have to worry
about being outvoted. The 491 companies examined by
tbe University of Texas researchers had a total of 6,224
board seats, of which 3 percent were filled by women.
Thal may be small but it is up SO percent since 1977 .
. ..-_.,.. ..... . ~ . , .... -.... + ~ _.,.. ..... -" +I '
WHAT STOCKS DID
! ~· !H!lllt YOl'llC CAPI M.oy • "'"·
.GOLD COINS
H•W YOIUt CA"I -~left,_. T~y 9f ... II <OIM, <omoortll wltll _.,,..
P"kll·
!(,......,.....I,,.., Ill., ...... eff SI ...
.... ..... t ,,..., •• ""·"· ...... . ~ •••• l.J ,..., .... ..., ... 19 •••• ........ 100 C~ .-lftY K ., '411.U, ...... ,..
s..irco1 Ottll·,.._,•
Todey ~1. Ad;,encld ltJ
Declined .., 1106
Unchef\99CI 43 :IS4 rote••-1'24 ,.,.
N•w lllglll " s
N•• IOW'l • ..
W11AI AMU OIO
NEW YOl'llC CAPI M.oy •
"'"·
~Veft<ed TodeJ. ~;.
Oe<tiMd UI QI
Urw:lle"t'N 207 Jll5 folel ,_ 1111 m ,.. •• lllgM 14 • Nt• IOws • 11
METALS wec1MtOev C-~ ctnlJ 1 PG\Hld, U.S. -11-
liOM.
L.eM • tentJ t PG<lnG.
Zlioc q 14 tentt a pound. Otll,..,..
Tl• ... 4XJ Metelt w .. k ~i.. lb,
Alttlfti-7'c11t1t•1~,N Y
M -wy \G0.00 s-r 11 .. k
.. lltl_,. .. S7 00 troy Ot , N Y
SILVER
COLD QUOTATIONS w--Y U...1 MDnllllO tlal119 ..,,H, llO S..iO,
.......,,, elltf-11'1"9 '41,00, 1111 t.US, ,..,..., -11.11111 ... ,.u,..., ... tl.
,.,.....,.~ 11i11no ...,,.,, ..., s.s.n.
Zttf1cll1 le4t •11-llJlno ..-1.00, wP
.-..oo;~oo-..s.
Neall• & tterlftea' Ollly dlll1 411..0te tc.OO, -. -.us
• ..,....., only delly quote ..a.oo, ,. s.s.n . ......... : ........ .,, QUOte fHricelM
Ull.JI ...... ..
SYMBOLS
Hel lefet ....
C."9 I" I l>d< CIO"I C"O
I
..
-~~--;~~-·~~-:----~_.. ........ ...,"'!':' .... ~ .... =l'\9'~·~· ... ~ ............................. , ............. , ........ a•a .... ~a .. a .... a .............. 1111111111~
OI Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 FEATURES
Thoroughbred lady's dream coming true
Bf EILEN BRANDT ._ ..................
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thlt lt the firat tit o 1me1 o/
1tom1 the Dail11 P.ilot wall pubUlh about fnl4tf'etUng
Coli/<mlio women
In America, nearly all little atrla love bones.
They cry over "Black Beauty." thriU at marchlna
horses in parades, and triumph with Elizabeth
Taylor in "National Velvet."
But one little girl did more than dream. She
rode and cared for horses as a child, studied them
in pre-vet colleae classes, and finally went to work
at a major American racetrack.
Today, Kathleen Nelson ia the leadin1 woman
triJiner al Santa Anita Racetrack in Arcadia and
also races horses al Hollywood Park in Inglewood.
Her Nelson Racing Stable, colors blue and while,
is still a small one, but growing rapidly, as
thoroughbred owners hear about Kathy's way with
horses and increasing record of sucteu.
Ms. Nelson, 31 , a lean, athletic-looking
woman, with long black hair and a soft, throaty
voice, does not come from a racing family. But
many residents own horses in her home town, the
Los Angeles s uburb of San Dimas. Ms. Nelson
learned to ride when she was six or seven, and her
parents gave her a donkey to raise one Christmas.
A neighbor, who owned several quarterhorses, let
young Kathy groom and exercise them and also
encouraged her to attend horse sbows.
Ms. Nelson thought of becoming a veterinarian
and attended California State Polytechnic
University in Pomona as a pre-vet major.
But one afternoon, she chanced to watch a
television program from Santa Anita and heard
morning workouts at the track were open to the
public. Ms. Nelson attended a workout ; saw girls
galloping horses; became intrigued; made in·
quiries. At 20, she was hired for her first racetrack
job.
Kathy Nelson describes a racetrack as a strict
hierarchy. A potential trainer must endure a long
and hard apprenticeship.
"You have to start at the bottom," she says.
"In racing, there's no substitute for experience
Calif omia iroman
amd hard work."
Ms. Nelson's first job wu at a "bot walker "
helping cool horses off alter workouta. In a re'91
months, she 1raduated t4 eJterclse 1lrl, actuall)
galloping horses during workout periods.
After about a year, ln 1972, trainer Joe Dunn
impressed with Ms. Nelson's ability, hired her as
his asalstant and helped her prepare for her
trainer's license.
The Calllomia licensinl exam is a rt1orous
oral grilling with more than three hundred quea·
tions. Potential trainen must demonstrate an ex·
cellenl knowledge of such subjects as equine
anatomy, diseases and medication. and racing re-
gulations. Ms. Nelson passed with flying colors, received
her license, and worked as Dunn's assistant
trainer for almost four years. ln late 1976, she
started to train on her own.
Her first client was a Wa.shln1ton state shop-
ping-center owner with four horses, two of which
started winning races almost immediately.
"I started off with a big bang," she laughs.
Present clients include two real estate brokers, a
plastic surgeon, and a podiatrist. Ms. Nelson
herself owns shares in three of the horses sbe
trains. She also recently purchased a brood mare. ·
Ms. Nelson describes training thoroughbreds
as a tremendously demanding job. "You couldn't
do it if you weren't dedicated!" ·
Her typical day begins at 4 a.m. with the drive
in from her Monrovia apartment. Between S and
11 in the morning, she must see that her horses are
red, groomed, inspected and exercised.
After about a year, in 1972, trainer Joe Dunn,
nap, Ms. Nelson returns to her stable for afternoon
feeding and stall cleaning. She leaves the track at
4 or 5 in the afternoon.
About 7 p.m., clients start calling her home.
Horse owners, particularly new ones, are anxious
Kathleen Nelson with 3-year-old filly Court Disaster
about their horses· progress. Ms. Nelson typically
must spend two hours every evening on the
telephone reassuring clients about their "babies."
Alt.bough some horses can be trained in as Ill·
lie as 90 days, it takes five or six months to brtni
the average ~orse up to racing form. The tralnin1
regln:'en begins with simple gallopin1 to develop
stamina. Later, a horse can be "breeHd " or
worked_ out at racing speeds, gradually buildl~I up
to the distance at which It will be raced.
Kathy Nelson believes one or the main thin1s
that separates a good trainer from a mediocre one
is.~ compreben~ive knowledge of the physical con·
d1t1ons of hors.es. In this regard her pre·
veterinary studies evidently have served her well.
"It's very important to recognize leg problems
before they're too far advanced," she cautions. "If
you don't stay on top of a minor ailment, it can de·
velop into a major problem rapidiy."
Ms. Nelson also feels it's important to treat
horses kindly, to make sure the atmosphere In
which they train is a pleasant one. Because even
more than people, horses are prone to
psychosomatic itlness. Her favorite quote: "A hap-
py horse runs better than an unhappy one."
"Actually," she says, "I've gotten some teas·
ing about this' belief. There are some fellows at the
track who gleefully shout whenever I ride by
'There goes the Happy Horse Trainer!··· '
Ms Nelson thinks many women have a special
ability to transmit kindness and calm to the horses
in . th~ir care. And s~e·s a strong supporter of
bringing more women mto racing.
In fact, Ms. Nelson's groom and her exercise
pers?n are fe~ale, making Nelson Racing Stable
possibly the first all-female stable in American
racing.
But Nelson feels being a woman may hinder h~r ~omewh~t in attracting clients. "Some people
still JUSt won t entrust their horses to a woman."
But Kathy Nelson is optimistic about her
future. A solidly skilled, well-prepared trainer can
take advantage or attendant publicity when a spec·
tacular horse comes under his care. One or two
well-known horses can "make" a trainer's career.
"In another five to ten years," says this
tho:oughbred lady, "I'm going to be a maJ'or
tramer."
Neatness not trademark of lost generation
You may not sleep tonight after I tell you lhis
but it's something you have to know. '
For 16 years, I have conducted an informal
sorvey among parents that requires a simple
answer lo a simple question: "Does your son or
daughter pick up anything besides a fork?"
Some parents became quite violent. Two had
to be sedated. A dozen or so reminded me they had
served in the war. And here's the scary part. Of
those queried, net o~ parent had a child who found
tidiness a way of life.
Somewhere between boiling the pacifier and
buying black towels, we lost 'em. l don't knnw.
where we failed, but we have unleashed upon
ERMA IDMllCI ,·;·
society a generation of kids who think self-cleaning
bathrooms have already been invented.
Wllat most parents fear is that they will be
considered incompetent for not teaching cleanli·
ness. This simply is not true. My own children
come from a good family. I use soap when I do the
dishes. l don't wear a shirt the fourth day by turn·
ing it wrong-side out. I do not store Slusbee cups
Mother's Day
Sale
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTllY
s. •• ...--. ......
1922 HAllOI ll 'ID.
COSTA MHA-541·1 IH
l1d1et Priced
Microwave Oven
want to tr4Mie ·in on 8newer ~I?
Use a Daily filot
Penny Pincher Ad
to sell items under
$100.
MICRO·THERMOMETEiP4rEMPERATUAE
CO NTROL-TAKES THE GUESSWORK OUT
OF COOKING!
Cook by
time or by
templflturt
with Micro·
Thtrmomttlf
temp. probe
•M IOmin·
ut• timer
e 3 Plhftr ltwels
e Includes Micrownt
Guide ind Cookbook
Jet 89
'~1W
under the gas pedal. I do not sleep on pillows that
have no cases on them, nor do I drink milk out of
the carton. When I saw my son's locker, didn't I
pass out?
Some naive little fools think low-quality air is
the fault of too many automobiles and industries
Think about it. We started to note pollution the
year this generation found out they had locks on
their bedroom doors.
l resent people thinking that slovenliness
comes from a mother who was too busy to teach or-
ganization. When my Cirst-.born was just a toddler.
before I would let her al the table, I'~ say. "Did you
SENIOR CITIZENS
SPECIAL
25°/o OFF ALL SYVIC
M-.. TMs., Wecl. <>Ny
HAIR
HANDLERS ---........ .
wash your hands and face?" I never got an answer.
Just a 24-inch tongue that came out of the mouth and
like a street cleaner made a path, bordered on the
north by a nose, east and west by cheeks and on the
south by a chin.
I lost ground every day alter that.
. I hate ~o go whining to the government every
lime there 1s a problem, but perhaps a Child Neat·
ness Agency could be established to set up some
health standards.
Yes, the real problem today is not the threat or
UFOs bringing alien people from another planet to
earth. It 's how are we going to find t~em in all this
mess after they've landed.
CONSIGN DESIGN
tveryfMltt) ....... d. w ..... ,...fte4
le.ttM' ' wfMI,.._
~043 W-.lcllN 0. S..... 102. ....._, 8Mc11
64MJll
3 lines for 2 days
only $1.50 a day.
Sorry, no com-
mercial ads
allowed. Charge
your Penny
Pincher
' ~,/INOUR AS SEEN IN
Ad or use your
Visa or Master
Card.
Call Classified
Advertising at
642·S678 to
place your ad.
lllllyPlll
YOU~~
10 attend an uccpdonal two.day
flne~lry ~mount ehow. Our
C\.StOM OESlCNER will ,,_.It doeely
whh voo In IMY«lopinc your own unique dalsn wMn yOl.I
•hooK • mounrlna from uur colltttlon ol hundttda.
You will be able c• watch -MASTER CRAPT'SMAN eel your dlamondt, p"1ou• aconee or colna from a dalsn thtr It
crut~ np«lally fCK you. 1Mtt will i,. no urn clwrwr for tlw dalcn CM" lat. wlwn '°" wlccc • mount Ina durint dw day <!(
!hit tpttlal eVl!f'IC,
You won'r wine 10 mite 1h11 f0ldcn c>pC)Ot'C\lnlry to ttt c~ n._. quallcy and II'<"' uuclwly~ mountlnc collfttlon In
tti.a.v'• m11rkeq>l11tt.
sftt l'OW' ~now!
Friday, May 8th
and Saevnla)i, Mcoi 9th
@ I A ... IOll of ma '°' -~ ,,_.
J(Wl:LS by JOSl!Pll
Locu~d at South Co11t Pl1.u In Cotti Me11. Most major
md1t card1 md layawsy hanond; Tdrphone (714) ~~.
... -.
MAY ISSUE
See how white sizzles
in a sexy show-stopping pump.
Embroidered bag. 5.99. We're so affordable.
23.99
QUAL!ICRA.n• •Ho• •TOR••
45 FASHON ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH
·'
l
0 a a &±WY as
Music gi:Oup installs officers
By MARY JANE SCARCEllO
Of .. DllMY ..........
The Sound of Music Chapter of the Oranae
County Music Center held a noetalaic meetina for
loatallation of new officers this week.
Maxine Gibson, who led the group throuah its
successful lint two years, turned her president's
gavel over to Marilyn Bean with an emotion-filled
farewell to the SS-member chapter.
As their thanks, the club presented Mrs.
Gibson with a gold treble clef pendant designed
especially for her.
"She brings style to whatever she touches,"
Mrs. Bean said of the outgoing president, "and her
love for what we're doing has shown."
Dorothy Stillwell. a member of the Camelot
Chapter, helped found the Sound of Music Chapter
and was there to install the new officers at the
home of Carolyn De Wald.
Cit was at her Big Canyon home the group first
met, which added to the nostalgia of the occasion.)
Elected officers who will assist Mrs. Bean dur-
ing her year as president are Mrs. DeWald, Ellie
Faber, Ann Pange, Marlene Frisbie, Rosalind
Chang, Maomi Payne. Shirlee Yeary, Pan Emery,
Doris UehUnger and Mrs. Gibson.
Mn. Faber is chairman of the club's big fund-
raising party scheduled for Sept. ~. so she and
her committee will be working all summer to
ensure its success.
Guests at the. Spyglass Hill PhiJharmonk
Committee's "May Fest" party enjoyed the sunset
across Newport Harbor and strolled from houae to
house tulinl wine• and cheeses.
Sebaatlaoi wine accompallled Norwe1iao
jarlsber1, New York State muenster and bot crab
dip at the home of Dr. and Mn. Richard Krau.
Danish fontlna, Gourmandise and Klracb
cheese alon1 with many flavors of qulcbe were
aerved with Mlruou wine at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Sytnyk.
And Mr. and Mrs. James Friable opened their
home for a sweet endln1 of fresh fr;ults, Swediabt
Ambrosia and French Brie served with Charles
Krua wines.
Musicians entertained at each home, and
flowers were provided by Clark Kennedy, Oowers
by Morri and Randy Harmer of Allen Beck Florist.
Mrs. Malcom Green was chairman for the par-
ty, and she wu assisted by Mmes. John Torell,
George Lane, Lloyd Lokka, John Schmitz, Jueraen
Schar, Robert Beal, James Privitera, John
Johnson, Carl Ensley, Donald Hilliard, Richard
Ad\er, Edward Robinson, Kent Steinbrenner and
Ms. Marilyn Kershner.
Among the euests were Carroll and Jane
Daulton, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gering, Mr. and Mrs.
Rudy Baron, Gerry and Christa Long, Sharon
Wentworth, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McLean and Mr.
apd Mrs. Steve Piper.
l:e Musical Theatre Guild of Newport
Beach will present its aala Crystal Black and
White Ball Saturday evenina at the Newporter Inn
in Newport Beach.
6 0 as 3 ........ ""' . , ' . ....... ,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday, May 7, 1981
Cocktails and dinner will be followed by a one·
man show done Las Vegas style by Lou Cutell, and
music for dining and dancing will be provided by
Jean Tandowsky and the Internationals.
Tickets are $25, and profits will go. to support
HAPPENINGS
Ma.rine Gib.!on (left J.
outgoing prelident of
tM Sound of Muaic
Chapter, with Marilyn
Bean, new prelident,
and Dorothy StillweU.
the group's scholars hips and donations to all.
forms of musical theater and arts.
More information and tickets are available by
calling Mrs. Gerald Samos at 963-3490 or Mrs
Jeffrey Pero at 496-4333.
trotters Now thru Mothers Day
The Walking lady
En1oy tounng and shopping
1n true comfort.
Bone, Camel or Navy·Calf.
/\II with crepe sole
4A lA 2A A I
' It 10 i tt 1 S-11 SY> It 9'h 4-11
~ ~L"j~ SHOES
99 Fashion Island . . . Newport Beach
MOTHER'S
OAYIS SUNDAY
MAYIO
CARIBBEAN BLUE
8JNC£ 1949
. 759-9551
M>WM
s.M-1.•1.-PEACH BLOSSOM CARIBBEAN BLUE
all womens fashions
STORE HOURS Mon-ffl 10.9:30.
Set 10.7. Sun 10.6
We love Mom, tOO!
•
.... -· ..... -.......
Cle Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday. May 7. 1981
Childbirth 'sheer agony'
I '
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've bad seven woo bravado>. '"tr having a baby was as rough as
derrut children. My husband always accompanied women let on. they would pass out, have the baby
me to the hospital and was usually close enough lo und wben they came to lt would be all over." Will
hear what went on lo the delivery room. you comment on his re asoning, please? And don't
The births we re all normal, but my doctor did spare the fl orse11 . WONDERING IN LOS
not believe in any kind of help lo relieve the pain. ANGELES
His motto was "natural is always best." The last Dear Wondering: Pass out and come to aod ll
30 minutes were sheer agony and I made quite a will be all over. eh? Doe1a't t.be l1aoramu. kDOw
&hat,, &he mother has to remain couclou1 aad help
pui;h the baby down tbrougb Ute blrtb canal -and
the pain can be excnaclatloC? I have Ion• held &be
be lief that, If Mother Nature reversed the charges
A DI.I 1nd It wu the man who bad to carry the baby for ANN l N nine months and lhen 10 throo•h the delivery, the
birth rate would be cut by 95 percent wlthJD 10
years. By the year 2000 Che human race would be
extinct. lo t of noise. T his seemed to embarrass m y
husband. Ile kept telling m e to ''pipe down"
because I was upsetting the relatives in the wait-
ing room and disturbing the patients on other
fl oors.
After our last child was born he said he didn't
know why I yelled so much. It seems he sprained
his ankle the previous week and it hurt so bad he
passed out He decla red <with a good bit of
Can drugs be a friend In time oJ 1treis? If you keep
your head together can they be of help? Ann Lander•'
new booklet, .. Straight Dope on Drugi" separate1 the
fact from the fiction. Get it today. F or each booklet or-
dered, send a dol lar , plus a long, selj.addreutd.
stamped envelope f 28 cents post(J{}eJ to Ann Landers,
P 0 Bor 11995 Ch1caao. Ill 60611
Aquarius: Think with logic
Friday, May 8, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES <March 21-April 191 Emphasis on ac
tivities which center on home base. Domestic
situation is accented . You could purchase item
long requested by family membe r. Evaluate
budget. Surprise is due -one you thought indif·
ferent proves othe rwise.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20> Defer important
decisions. Ltsten, wait, obser ve. Nume rous op-
portunities present themselves; take time to be
HOROSCOPE
..
selective. Steer clear of tendency towards wishful
thinking, se lf-deception. Streamline techniques.
define terms, get rid of superfluous material.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20): This can be a
power-play day. Invest in your own tale nts, ac-
cept added responsibility and find out where you
st and in special relationship. Clear decks of pre-
tense. See places. s ituations, people as they are.
not merely as you wish they mjght be.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Keach beyond
current expectations. Element of luck rides with
you. Judgment is on target. You'll be at right
place at crucial moment. You receive a "very m
teresting" offer Don't se ll yourself s hort Strive
for ma ximum benefits.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: What starts as an "op·
pressive" situa tion will act ually be transformed
into a chance for success in new endeavor. You
could be t aken on t.our of facility or you might be
asked to represent s pecial cause or group before
the media.
PUBLIC NOTICE I
NOTICll INYITING llDS • Nollu Is !Mret>y Olvan tllet tM
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITtOU5 BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
T ne 1011-1no per\OI\ " CIOln9 DUSI ne\i •s
\'IRGO 1Aug. 23-Sept. 22> Accent on friends,
hopes. wishes and intuition You perceive when
som ething of importance is lo occur. Know it, act
on hunch. Learn by teaching. Family member
proves loyally C<rncer. Capricorn . Aquarius
pers ons figure prominently
LIBRA <Sept 23 Oc t 221. One m authonty suf
fer!> bout of indecision Make inquiries Jn various
direcltuns Submit ide as, formats. manuscripts
T e lephone call re su lts in c han ge of plans
Popularity increase~. you'll receive invitation to
prestigious event
SCORPIO <Oct 23-Nov. 21 l Bring long-range
view into focu!> Be read y for revision of plans.
You'll be asked to tear down for ultimate purpose
of rebuilding on a more solid structure . Aquarius ,
Leo and another Scorpio figure prominently.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22-Dec . 21>: Actions
could be spurred by emotions give logic equal
time Key is to piece together clues. to synthesize.
Focus will be on changes connected with banking,
credit, partne rs hi p a nd legal arra ngements.
Count'
CAPRICORN <Dec 22-J an. 19 >: Dispute could
arise over who owns what and what should be
done about it T aurus. Libra, Scorpio persons
figure prominently Collect data. organize factual
information Family member has good "money
news'"
AQUARIUS <J a n 20-Fe b 18 >: Low· key ap·
proach is necessary Know it, act accordingly. One
who relies on your Judgment wi ll ad mit it and do
something to compens ate you. Define terms. avoid
wishful thinking. lie loose ends, compile data.
PISCES <Fe b 19· Ma rch 20» Responsibility,
challenge, money and love dominate powerful
scenario Capricorn . Taur us. Cancer natives
figure prominently Older individual lends sup·
por t. Accent on adventure. children. speculation
and romance
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'tCITITIOUS BUSINESS
H.t.ME S"TATEMEHT
T hf' fo11ow1nQ Oft"\On\ ar• OOtt'IQ
bu\1n,u10
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th• IOll-1119 penon It dOlftO llUSI "'" ., • Bo.rd of Tr-of Ille Hunllnoton
SH<n Union Hfoll S<r-1 Distric t wlll receive SHl•CI lllCls for supplylno 11 011.L.IGAS 21 L.OVACATOR. 1S. I AQUA SOL J/01 w Moort I PL.ANT PRODUCTIO"iS. 1 .. 01 Cerpet Cle.nine Service meeting ,,,. SH cll Strfft, Ulgun.t 0..o<ll, Celllor••• A••nu•, SM11a An4 c a111orn1e 9270• Overleu. El Toro, Celtlornl1 tt.lo
Com~unity theater gets local boost
By TOM TITUS
Of .. DMly ...... S .....
It's been a while since the Orange County Com·
munity Theater Association has made IU presence
felt. butthings are abouttochange .
Ever since the highly successful one-act play
festival la.stsummer, which led to the birthofOCCTA.
members of the theatrical amaJgamalion have been
busy backstage prepa ring to return to the spotlight.
Under the guidance ortounde r and president Pat·
ty-Gene Sampson, who also heads the Friends of the
Newport Theater Arts Cente r, OCCTA has frown
from the nine me mber theaters which participated in
the 1980festival to an even dozen. The group has been
m eeting on the last Wednesday of every month at the
Newport theater
U PTO NOW, the chief order of business has been
establis hing OCCTA as an organization. drawin2 uo
b y laws and getting some input from guest
speakers on various theatrical topics.
Now, however. OCCTA is gearing up lo go pubhc
again a nd local theater groups should ma rk these
datesontheircalendars:
Saturd ay and Sunday, May 16·17, Community
The ater Day al Fashion Island in Newport Beach.
The ater groups will pass out information about their
respectiveprograms
Saturday, J une 27. Community Theater Day at
Sout hCoast PlazainCos ta Mesa. Ditto.
Thursday through Sunday. July 30-Aug. 2. the
second annual community theater festival at the
Newport Theater Arts Center. OCCTA's 12 member
theatl.'rswill showt he1rwa resoverthelongweekend.
TllE LATTER event is the .. bi g one" on the OC·
CTA calendar . with board members hoping for as
good a turnout as the y e xperienced at the firs t such
festival m 1980
Returning to participa te in the non-competitive
event will be last year 's ent rants, the Costa Mesa
"STUNNING"
-F1ed Y11<,1er, A P
WlST COAST PRlMIERl l NGAG[M(flll NOW SHOWING
• Oronoe CINI DOME • eo.10 MMo. HARIOR TWIN
6U-2HJ 611·>&01 Oollv 800PM
SOl·Sun 1 00 • ~ 30 t 8 00 PM ............... -........ ~, ... ~ PACIFIC's~·ooME ~ ~u"utnn1V1n., Holly•ood• 211/46 ... J.401
Oo11v 1230 • l .&5 • 100 & IOI~~
-I O&Of'f ICf 0'11it5 1 I 01 Alll hLU U 01111 S•lt IHIOUfiMOUT OCM on '0111 rMal ... \ 'fU OU•o cn
--• ... ;;;-;t • 001 oo..sv STmEO r -
C1v1c Playhouse, Cypress Community Oriented
Theater, Huntington Beach Playhouse, Irvine Com-
munity Theate r , La guna Moulton Playhouse .
Newport Harbor Actors Theater and San Clemente
Com munityTheater .
J oining them for 1981 will be the Ana-Modjeska
Players of Ana heim, the Gem Theater of Garden
Grove and theS!lddleback CompanyTheater, operat
ing a summer stock operation out of Saddle back
College. ,
All of this is targeted at a common goal -raising
local c1t1zens' awa reness of community theater in
general m an era when escalatin& fuel costs and
outrageous ticket prices for "uptown" theater
make the hometown alterna tive increasingly at
tractive •
IT'S BILLED AS the largest and most elaborate
production ever mounted at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse theOran~e County premiereoftheCivil
War musical "Shenandoah ...
Opening Mtty 15 and running Tuesdays through
Saturdays until June 6, ''Shenandoah" boasts one of
the biggest casts yet assembled on the Laguna stage
Playhouse managing director Douglas Rowe is put
ting the epic together , with David Anthony serving as
musical directo r, Marla Pendleton handling the
choreography and Wa lly H untoondesigning the set.
Creque Wolverton heads the cast as a V1rgin1a
farmer torn between the Confederacy and his cons-
cience. with Greg Howitt, Kevin Burke, Paul Wein·
berg. Nick Matich, Steve Dunham and Jim Ziegler
playing his sons Other principals a re Gretchen
Almond. Laura Pryzgoda, J im Bentley, J oseph An·
der s on, F red Lenway , Bob Kokol . Norma n
Weingarte n and Pete Williamson.
.. Shenandoah" wilJ pla y at 8 p m evenings and
2.30 on two Sunday matinees, May 17 and 31 at the
playhouse, 606 Lagun a Canyon Road, Laguna Beach.
Advance reservations ar e available at494-0743after l
p m TuesdaysthroughSatl}rdays.
lllWPOllT IUCll
Eow~ros N~woo<t 6-44 0760
WllT•IHTlll fow~•os
ConerN Weit
891 393~ IOrUIU UCIPTlD fDtl Tllll lllU8lME•T
NOWPUYING
ttn•UH
,,. ,,,, , ..... , ........ tOU9f&11t t1U t•
va. co•r•n 1uu
ll'W&HI c ..... CUlll
im:mJ ~.'u' ....... ,. ... "'
• KUtl '"'"'• lllrtCOUI Ol1tt "' ,., ........ .,
ATLANTIC CITY (A l
1 0 J so '00 I 10 10·1 S
Sy1 .. ,ter Stallone NtGKT HAWKS (Al
2:00 4 00 i oOO I 00 10 00
HEAVEN'S Q ATll (A )
1:00 • 00 7·00 9 SS
THEJAZZ I SINGIE• CPO)
' 00 3 1 s s 30 1 •S 10·00
• equel lo Ille -lllu tlons on Ille In Ille UUI i "'"~ So<rtntono 1'113 s R•ne Mery J -T1ylo<, 14601 Ovu l•k• office ol wlCI Olslrl<t AllrtCI Stn1•m1n F .. t>er 1))1 D"•• 5.tnl• Ana C•l•lorn•• 9111M Et Toro, C•lllom•• tlUO ....--------
Bids sll•ll lie clu rly m•rkecS G•v1ot• Or1vo L.•oun• S••<11 Tllis ~"~" "tondutltCI by en on This 1>u11neu Is conduc ted llY j KING OF THE
MOUNTAIN (PC)
V1nN uys8hd.(A)
"<•<pet CINntno Servi<• Biel •... 1 •• Celllorn141 nu1 O•V•du•I Q•n•r•I ~r1n~P
eCIClreued lo All yn E. Ao wley. This l>US1n.u h <onducteCI by •n in I Fran• $orrent1no I M.eryT1ylor
Purc llulng Menager. Hunllnoton Cll•1Cluel Th1\ "•1tmef11 ... , Ille<! with lh• Tiii\ ll•t•f'Mfll wn 11100 with Ina
. Buell Union HIQll Sc-I Olstrlct Alf.ell 8 FHt>er County C1'rk ol Orang(' Couhly on County Cler1' OI Or.nee County O"i
10u 1 v .... -A•..,.,., H""1lnoton' rn,. st•lemttnt ... , 11100 with 1h<t Ap,,1 n 1991 April u "'1
BH <ll, c.itlomle ._, -r..:elveo County Cler~ ot Or""QI' County on l'l .. SH 1'1.-S
•el or t>el0<e 2.00P.m ., Frl<My, Mey U. Ap,,121 19'1 Publl\IW'CJ O•M\91' Co.ul Oe1ly Pilot. Publlsne<l Or-COH I O•llY Pilot,'
•1tet,el wNclllltne-pl.aulllds w l11 1'1'0"1 Apr JJ • .lO.M•y l,I• , .. , 1UJ8t Apr.1•.U.l0,Meyl,1te1 111>.tt
be publlcly-'*' end reed. Publ1)n.d °'""Of Co.ut 0 1lly Pilot,
Eecl\ bill -II rem.In ••lid for • Apr. 23, lO, Mey 7. 1', '"'' 1'99-11
pe rloCI of 0 cSeys alter lll• date PUBLIC NOTICE
19Hlti.ct fw IN <9'MPI of l>lcb.
Tl\e '-"11 of Trvfl-.,,.II ... Ille
. SOit IUOQe of Ille q.lellly Of _._t PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI! INVITING alDS
Notice Is lleret>y olven thel IM
Soard Of Trus!Ms ol Ill• Coast Com· • oller•d •l'td ,...,,...1,.. r1911110 rej..:t
1ny or 111 bids -lo wel•t eny Ir· l'ICTITIOUS BUSINau munlly Coll-ol Or•no• County,
NAME STATl!MENT Cellfornle, wlll rte.ive Meltcl bids up • reou1erlly therein
Allyn E. A-leY.
Purcllftlno M<t-r
Oeteel: Aprll 2', 1 .. t
Put>llshed Oranoo Gout Oelty PllOt,
"pr. >0, M.ey1, 1"'1 2015-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiie 1011ow1no per.ons are CIOlno t.o 11:00 •.m •• Fr\dly, #Yy u. 1 .. t et
l>USlneu es tlM Pu•dl•slno Oe~rltnent of HllCI
SUNSET PACIFIC, I.TO .• 11701 COl119* district lo<.etecl •I tl70 AC11ms
Ml I< nell Avenue No rlll, 1r11 lne, Avenue, Coste Mew, C1lllornle, et
Celllorn•• •V1• wlllch lime said llld.s wUI lie put>llcly
SunHI P1ci!I< Hom et>wllders, openeCI -rMd for. PAINT AND
for mer ly Oougleu PKlll< COIPO,. .. SINO OAANGE COAST COL.I.EGE
lion. g_,el PM1Mr 17101 Mll<,..1 CL.ASS SCHEDULE, 1 .. 1-«I.
Avenue N...U., lntln•. C•lllornl• '7714 All llldt •••lo ... In IKCOrclenc• Wllll
TlllS bu\lnus is <onCIU<leCI l>Y • llM Biii Form lnstrucllont end Condi·
l'ICTIT10U5 BUSIN•IS ilmlttd partnHWllP llont end Sile<lllcellons Wlll<ll •r• now
NAM• STATU4aNT !Mlr\MI P..:111<. LtCI on 111• -l'lllY ... Ml<Wred In Ille olll<•
Tll• 1011ow1no o•rsons ere dolnQ By s-.t P•<•l•c ol 11\e PurclWislno A-1 Of .. Id colleoe
buslntts .,. H-lleltrt cSlttrlcl
1 2 ,. o L. y N If s t "' N a-e1 Pe rtn., Eecll llidOtf """-'' sut>mll wltll "'' PAA TNEASHIP, u SllerlcMn, Irvine. Sy.c w. Melllberge• blcS. <•~·<MCI(, "rtllled Che(k.
Celllornle 92114 Cllief FIN n<••• Ollk er or lllClcler's l:IOnd m-pay•bte 10 Ille
M•rtc O. Or....,,.r, HOii WHI Monte Thlt tltU,,,.nt we.a llled wltll 11111 orcter ol lhe eo.11 Community Colleoit
Cerio, S...te Ml, t.ilfon\le tvo. County Cle rk of Or""ge County on District 8 oerCI of TrwSIHS In 1n
Terry~-er-, 1tO:I west April 1', ""· •mount not -•hen ""' oercent U'l.l ~ Monie Ctrlo, ~·· An.t, C.lllOntl• LAYMAN, HANSON, JON~S & YOU of Ille sum biCI H ....... ntM 11\el t?IOI! Lew Oflkff llM t>lcSde< will t fller Into Ille p~
Pelrlcle GelleQMr. UIO Welton 1 c ... ,.,,-Pl1u Conlrect 11 Ille ,.,... It 1weroeo 10
, SlrH1. Rlwrslcle, Celllornle tllOJ New,ort .. 1K11, Cellloml• t *O l\lm. In tile •~ent ol l•llure to ent.,. In·
Rot>ert Welson, IS Slle rlden, l'tMleS to W<I\ contract, the proc-ot 11\e
trvlne, c:.tlloml• t:r714 Put>ll~lllCI o..-. Coast O•lly Piiot. <lloe<k wlll De lot'felted. or In ,,,. CIM
K•tlllMn WllM>n, 1S SllerlC11n, Apr 23, JO, Mey 7, 14, 19'1 1'1111 of • -· Ille lull sum 1i.r90t win t>e
trvlne, c.it1orn11 t:r714 lorlelled lo .. ld cot~ Cllslrl<t.
Tiiis t>uslnen i. c-ted by 1 -----No Iii-rney wlllldrew Ills lllCI for
11ener11 P11rtner1111p. PUBLIC NOTICE • per100 of torty·ll•• 10> 001 •II•• Merk o. Orenner Ille date Mt'°" the Ol>tftlno tllereot
Tiiis stet-I wet lllecl with Ille -------Tiit 8-11 of Trusteet ruer¥ft Ille
: COulll y Clull ol Or.r191 Coun1y on NS7MV prlvlltQI of rei.ctlfto ..,y eftCf ell biCls
Aprll h , , .. 1 l'ICTITIOUS BUSIN•SS or lo Wei ... eny lrregulw lllH or ln-
Fl.-i NAME STATEMENT lorme~~~~~~:~~·: llldcllno
",..-• & Voaa Tiie lollowlnQ per~otl Is clOlng C>U\I· Secretwy, \ 1 l'elrtllll411 Dr. 549 1M neu " c lrvtM,c.mu SU N IN VES TM E NT A'IO ~=~~~ Col1999 DIS
!
Pullll-Orenot OMSI 0.lly PllOI, CON Sul. TIN(;, O Roc-y Knoll, ,,.,,,ne, tr let
APfll JO, Mey 7, 14• 11• 1 .. 1 ....... l. C.llfoml1tVU P11t>l1Slltd Oranoo Coast 01lly Piiot
P UBLIC NOTICE
SUll'llUOll couaTOI'
CALll'Oa!UA,COUNTYOI'
oaaNol
oaoll• TO SHOW CAUSE l'O•
CHANOI 01' NAMI
CASI tWMa•a AlmM
t II tlle Mllt!Of Of UM AppllU I Ion of
O ENNIS KENT MC COM9S, tor
CMn9ulN.,....
Vlcl0< 811·S~lng Sun. 0 Rooy April ao, Miay 1, 1 .. t 2<Ms-ti
Klloll, tr vine, Cellloml• '2'11)
Thlt 11\dlneu Is c.ollCNCled Cly en In·
Olvldu.t
Victor B Sun
Tiii• st.tl91Mnl wit llled wltll IN
c o11n1y Clerll ot Orenoe Counly on
AorH 11, 1tt1.
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS BUSINISS
NAME STaTaflllllNT
Tll• 1011owln9 perso nl ere doing
slneu1s:
41 P OL.Y NE S IAH
AATNEASHIP. U SllerlOen, l"'lne,
elllornl• t27U
Jerry I. SwCldulll, 172S South
H COm Av ...... (Mnpt>ell, O lltornl• sooe Slllrley J . SudCluth, llU South
u c:om A-. CMnpt>ell, C.llfor.,11 •sooe Ao llerl Welson, tl Sllerlden.
lrvlne C.lllornla tZ71'
Kell'llMn Watson, IS s11erloen,
rvlne, c;..111orn11 tvu
Thi\ business la <OllCkKled by •
r a 1 -1/>erslllp
J.,.ry L.~
"Tiii• Slal_,,I wea llled wllll tllt
ounly Clerll ol Orange County on
April 74, 19'1.
"...._av ...
IMM l'alrOl1411 Dr. llllte 1M
,,,,...,ca.mu
17141 K$-11U
Pullllshed Or•noe CoHC 0.lly Piiot,
r ll )0, -y 7, 14. 21, 1 .. 1 1..s-e1.
P UBUC NOTICE -------
Sometimes a woman has to leave
the man she loves ... to find herself.
'~~~~~~:~~:?i.~~n~.~' ~~-"HARO COUNTRY"
-.,.JAN-MICHAEL VINCENT KIM BASINGER
MICHAEL PARKS ..• ,.TANYA TUCKER. • •• , ••
-,..1 -f"I MAAHHSTARG(A ,. •\•'"'11· ('\Ai,\ll(lt,hlfN(._..MAlf< tt.IM;
t'-"••UttOAl/ID~tNI f • "' •• ,tlMINHAHIM•M-t
'"" .. MICHAEL '(JllHf. -· Mll..HAll Jr.tA.Hl.N ~IAPH(V
~ • ..._._ MllCHAEl ~flf4 ..... llVW'P .. _..,,,,, ~~ ..... ,
-...-11qp9a.>t1Nftf ~'-j\j:J' PG .... .,.,,.......,,.. ·-----L·f'\.../ --------.--
THE OCTAGON , ___ _
A FORCE OF ONE ,_,_
SHOWTIMES-
Weekd11ys 7:00 & 9:30 P.M
Sunday 2:00-4;2CMl:40-9:00
l:XCAU•U• (R) Fort Ap1che
Tllo Bronx (R )
Krl• Krhtolferson
HEAV.WSQATE (R)
Tl\e L.on9 Aid~• (A)
MICHAEL CAINE
~H~JP I I I .
ORDINARY PEOf'lE
(RI
TRIBUTE {PC)
STIR CRAZY
(Al
USED CARS I A)
DRIV E INS OPEN
7:30 NIGHTLV
Undlr 12 "'-Unlea Not.d
AVI'~!~~~
"~ __ -h.~[~ -I .
IRI ·~ NOW PLAYlHO .. __
MANN SOUTH COAST SYUFY CINEDOME
C:Mta Mesa 54q 13'ii> 01a11ge 634 7S~3
NO PHUI ACClPTlD FOR TMll UtG&GlMENT
Wlfmlfh
141 Wit 3, Oton I~
rll418'l )69)
l{mmttt
11A To•
1rt••l9l l)OS
••• 4 t 0 a 0 a 0 ~. . --. . . .. . ' • -.. -. .. . . . .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 Cl I
wars: The battle for (advertising) space =1· Star
1
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -A couple of years ago,
the nation's newspapers carried ads for "Yanlts"
with a photo depicting the movie's two young lov-
ers, an American GI and an English girl in World
War II.
Discerning readers could have looked closely
at the figures and not detected "Yanks" sta"',
Richard Gere and Lisa Eichhorn. Why were their
identities clouded? Because if Universal had used
their likenesses, the ads would also need to contain
photos of Vanessa Redgrave, William Devane and
other stars whose contracts required that.
Such restrictions cause permanent headaches
for studio executives charged with creating ads for
newspapers, magazines, television, radio and
billboards. They are hampered not only by actors'
contracts but by requirements of the guilds,
especialJy the writers and directors.
"It has become increasingly difficult to create
ads that are both aesthetically attractive and ef·
fective as a sales tool," says Irving Ivers, ad·
vertising-publicity vice president or 20th Century-
Fox. · "Agents and lawyers argue that credits can
mean hundreds or thousands, even millions of
dollars in the selling of movies," says Steve
Elman, Universal executive. "We don't think so.
We believe a handful of superstars may help sell a
picture, nobody else."'
"We're stuck with a terrible problem," said
Larry Marks, publicity-advertising chief at Para·
mount, "and the situation can only get worse."
J 1
, J
,
J
Rather Uum deal with the intricacies M billing
sizes, Marks said Paramount resorts to "running
billing" -all the necessary credits in the same
size type for print ads. This can produce a
congJomeration of thirty inches of half-inch type
with this message·
''ICC-International Cinema Corporation pre-
sents a John Kemeny-Denis Heroux Production -
a Lou1s Malle Film -Burt Lancaster -Susan
Sarandon Michel Piccoli -Hollis McLaren -
"Atlantic City" -Robert Joy -Special •P·
pearance by Al Waxman as Alfie -Robert Goulet
Kale Reid as Grace -Composed and Conduct-
ed by Michel LeGrand -Written by John Guare -
Produced by Denis Heroux -Directed by Louis
Malle A Paramount Picture."
Phew! Does this sell Uckets? The ad men don't
think so. One or them explained the reason for
.. running billing." "For each 'presentation' title
above the title such as 'Robert Evans Presents'
the writer's type size must increase five per
cent under Writer's Guild rules. Since the Direc·
tors Guild rules won't aUow writers bigger credit,
the director's credit must incr~ase, too." ·
Abuses can be costly. Universal had to pay a
stiff fine to the Directors Guild because "teaser"
ads for "Jaws 2" did not include the director's
name. The arbitrator ruled that an ad is not a
teaser if the title of the movie is included.
A studio executive estimated that credit
restrictions cost each major company $200,000 in
extra advertising space each year in the New York
r
Old fashioned, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style.
anti 1hc (,r,intl PortJgl· nm' otkr., ~ou
.111l"\'C:mn~10 Lomiwtc: "ith vour fJ\11rlll' mc:nu1r.
-.oft 1mlJmg Lhnner mu"l
deg.ml l:antlldil tahlt· .,c:llin).{" tht: jV"Jntkur of 11.tmmJ.t tahk.,itlc: u1okcn
Tut: ultimatd) t.lanc.c:ahh: Did .. Puwdl Trio 1:-. 1l·:11urc.·tl
'Thursday through Saturday 7 10 Ir. JOd )Oft piano lllhl·r L"\'C:Olll~"
SEAFOOD CONNOISSEURS
IKHOO \1AcAnhur Houk'\•Jn.J ( -11) -.:;.z 1-1---
11ii. Mtw_,.tn II 141 t "l~ I '" II,_.,..
·FOR MOTHER'S DAY·
unique
gift, you
want
an unusual
gift, you appreciate
unique
waterfront
specialty
shopping center.
II II II II II II II II II
lff40() raclfic C.Out Hwy., Huntington B(ac:h, (714)
City area al~e. The problem can be solved by us·
ing more sp.ce in print ads. It's tougher in other
media.
"Imagine a OO·second radio spot with au the
necessary credits," suggests Univel"Sal's Etman.
"Impossible."
For that reason -as well as questions about
radio's effectiveness the major companies have
been using fewer radio spots than before. Also
billboards.
"With outdoor advertising you've got an
average or four to six seconds to get your message
across," reasons Fox's Ivers. "If you've got a
billboard cluttered with credits, the message gets
lost. Except for special areas like the Sunset Strip
or Westwood, Fox has elimlnated billboards as a
media consideration."
None of the studios wants to repeat the
"Young Frankenstein" fiasco. Fox commissioned
a 50·bY·70 feel mural to be painted on the side or
the Playboy building on the Sunset Stnp The art
work took two weeks: four painters worked two
weeks to copy il on the building wall.
The Writers Guild complained that the mural
contained Mel Brooks' name but not his fellow
workers. Fox paid a $13,000 fine and had to paint
over the mural. The addition of more credlts
would have been a violation of zonmg laws.
Heston named to arts panel
WASHINGTON CAP) Actor Charlton Heston
has been named by President Reagan as co-
cha1rman of a task force designed to find ways
private donors could help offset budget cuts for the
Na tiona l Endowments for the Arts and
Humanities ·
"While J believe firmly that the federal gov-
ernment mus t reduce its spending," Reagan said
in a written statement, "I am nevertheless sym-
pathetic to the very real needs of our cultural or-
ganizations and hope the task force will deliver to
my desk by Labor Day a plan to make better use
----FIUOAY THE 13th Pert 2 (R) 1a:9•Lll·~·tt:ll · ... , ••
.....,., .... ""
CAVEMAN (PQ)
1&9 • l;tl .......... .,.
-~ ... --ATLANTIC CITY (R)
-·-.... -_.....,. __
t<IHO CW THI MOUNTAIN (N) __ ,,, ...... MT--a.il·-·-·-
.. .-.---... ffltOAT THI 11111 flllft I (9') -MY tt.OOOV VALCNT1NI
of existing federal resources and to increase the
support for the arti. and humanities by the private
sector."
Reached m Los Angeles, Heston agreed in-
creased funding for the arts at this timt> was not
realistic
As for using his star image for a little political
arm-twisting in Washington, Heston said that his
committee's recommendations would have to
stand on their own merits, "not on the reputations
of the people who offer them."
'
•
~ .....
j
IZ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981
I I I ~
l I I ,
I • I
I
\. .
·r
•
•
. .,,.
-·
Now the Merit idea has been
, introduced at only 4 mg tar-New
Merit ULTRA LIGHTS. A riiilder
Merit jJr those who prefer an ultra
low tar cigarette. L
New Merit ULTRA LIGHTS.
ItS go(ng to set a whole new taste .
standardjJrultra low tar smoking.
RIT
· Ultra Lights
4 mg "tar:' 0.4 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method
Warning: The SurReon General Has Determined
That Cigarette S~o~ing Is Dangerous to Your Health.
' .
l
I
CLASSIFIED .
INDEX
Tt Pbct Ywr U. CaN
642-5678
11115($ F81 SALE
C.Mnl .. '"""''"'•Ad Ill"°' ttt'euu.wt ..
(.'.,...i ..... ll<>•<h l'-•*•»•• l'C>il• » ... . o.a. .... ...
FJT•" ...... in\ .11.,., ttuno""'"' Kfi•• h lnilW
1-IW...-h ......... 11111>
r
t£Al ESTATE
:~ =~~·.r.: ~~~:· I• llHlt:loloCt•--lfr111 ·-, .. ·-IM
IUll
tHIJALS
l,_..h[N ...... '""""'l11fw1•h-,.._t'\mo1;1lor
( Oftdom1ni_um11o t~Urft
l'Qftdonuftu•A•" "' T.,.._._t•wn1
T°"""°"""'' l rtf llW Oupka.,, t\irn 1:aiw l"'Pw• .. lar 1:1111 All• .....
141» "jllUllllwrn
111111 ""'' rwr• ot l nl )flUU 11 ....... .
11\N 11-. ....... ..
llO~J lkll•b.Mo4•b
HI.Al (i.,...t ll"mf')I
JQl,ir ,...mftWr M"'4!111Jio
l HM \ ....... Kf'ftt••" r,,., Mf"ftll•I .. lU Mu..-
t U• (;., .. ..._ ,.,. M•"' ,...., orr ..... MoM&I
dO• MM.MM'<!ll~ ......
ll>'M llld11Mrt1l ll•nl•I ....... _
1M --llr•lll••.-tt4 Mo,... MMl•I•
llSIMEU, IMYESJ·
IDT. AMAMCE
.... COIENJS,
PHSONllS I
llSl & FOUND
AftftCIUIK'f'rtVft,,,
C•t Pool Lr1al ~.001.-................
P«'flilOfUtl.ti. lioc'10111wla
Tr•\fl
:: SHYIClS
-01Plinmn a
nfPAIAltlM
11110 ~ ......... ., ..........
Jiii) ~ ....... .
-ll•llo••ot..iw .. t -Sil)J
Wb MllCHANllSl
14% of people buying real
estate have read classified
ads in the past week.
AlllMOlllE
""°"'"' MlMrlt_,.. t:t•nH • ~ reMtMiH\ \'d•u k._
W I" ~~'::.~ .. ~ttd .. ..... rrv.~. ~ v .. ,..
miMI AMi& .. LAo.,,•ttl *IC* .\wh• W.,.h,•I
Oillll
W1'1 -._, AUTOS. IMPOITED
u ........ ,
Vlht Alt.i Mum. v
VM
•Tw .,, ., ~., ft4 t ...
.11 .. .. ,. ••M ""'
AITOS, ltlW
AUTOS, USCD
\•••luwnt"I
\.•••''''' \~Ill, IJrutlr• Vi 1• t Vt•I
"'"' lrn..-•ri•I ,,~, ....,,.,"""
~,_w lil•\r ru'
v1..-M •'HUH "1!11 M w11l•b&.
»1'-' tKif\.""'1h•I• »1W l'111l11
!111,,,) l'htn1111lh "j"' ...... , ....
'111W l h1JO•l\·1hu I ~. ,, \\ ....
. r
••
-
~.~~•••••••••••• ~.~~ .. , .... 1~·~•~••••••• ~,...W. .._..,...W. HMsnFwW. .._..,_W. HMlnForW. Ho.snForW. ..
'
2 • •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• · · • Ge•r ~ ._, .. ,.. 1002 ........ I 002 . til O ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••~! •• ~ G.e•r• I 002 C91Mr.t I 002 GeMr.e I 002 c.wr.e I 00 ----------------....... ................ ........ ... ............ ....... ... .. ........... . ..................... .
EQUAL HOUSING
• QPPORTUNITY
,.. ...... Notice:
All real estate ad·
vertised in this
newspaper la subject to
the Fedenl Fair Hous· ms Act ol 19811 wblcb
makea it We1al to ad-vertiae "any preference,
llmltatlon, or dis ·
crimination baaed on race, color, rell1ion,
sex, or naUooaJ ori1ln.
or an int.mt.loo to make
any s uch preference,
limitation. or dll-
crimlnatioo."
Thia newspaper will not
knowlnJ)y accept any
advert11in1 for real
estate which Is In viola·
Uon of tbe law.
••• ,.., 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
YOUl llST V AWi
IMC....OSHOUS Lowest priced fee aim·
ple opportunity. Great
auumable lat TD. En·
joy l\ftemoon 1un and
views from wood dedt. 3
beautiful private beaches. Only SM&,000. Call today. 67U550
THE REAL ESTATERS
SO.OFHWY
COM dplx, lowat price
ln town. Pedect mon·in coodltlon. Call today·lt
will be 1one tomorrow.
Tim llboae. sat·i-.
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment! Two
2 Bdrm tmitl, one with
flreplacel Current in·
come-Jr40 mo. Financ· inl ! One rear home pro-
t e ct lo n plan lncld.
HWT)', thil won't lut!
Ml-7171
THE REAL ESTATE RS
OWCltt
Thia 3 Bdrm coodo bu
1Uper flAAJtcinl, pool, apa and 1bowl like a mOdel with all uptradea. Woe 't lut. call now. Tim
Rboodll·lm
RVM~
' ~ " , , •I!'
IRVIHE TERRACE, $] 15,000, FH
4 bedroom pool home, now vacant
and easy to see. Features include
added den <with separate entrance),
covered patio, 3 baths and parquet
flooring. Pool is heated and filtered
with nifty diving board. Presented at
$315,000 (fee).
REALTORS. 675·6000
2«3 EHt CoHI Hl9hwa11. Corona del Mar
WE H.NE ¢7 OF lliE BEST AGENTS IN 10.\IN
BUILDER'S OMEYEAIOLD
BARGAIN
Two (86'lll00') kit.I, aide
by 1kle near Newport's
Back Bay. One w /
charmini W:modeled .3 Bdrm nome. Only
1238 ,950 ! Me-7171
UMDH $100,000
Perfect starter home with great U1umable
loan. Call now THEREAL ESTATERS
-.-I
WATERFRONT 30' DD
........ pod •• ...., ,,. .................
1 'w /•-• • apo. Ll"C) alt 61.. ..t ...,., tpt
-dKlla. Price $525,000. lite.IL ..,_,
lob • Do•le Koop.
I
WMtl< 631-1266
REALTORS
Rf StOfNTlltl REAi f S TAI[ SERVICES
A SOLID GOLD IMVESTM84'T
IH GRACIOUS UVIMa
I
I
I
Emerald Bay -A home crafted
to perfection for that lucky f am Uy
looking for a tour bedroom home
within walking distance to a private
beach, tennis courts and pools.
There's a library/den, a courtyard
entry, a rose garden, a gourmet
kitchen, a breakfast room. brass
hardware, imported tiles, marble
counters, beamed ceilings, pegged
hardwood floors and, ol course, an
.ocean view. The whole effect is ene
of casual elegance with a touch of
European charm.
We offer some assumable financ-
ing and an owner that will carry
paper for a credit approved buyer.
Extraordinary, stylish, rare
$875,000
IN NEWPORTC•NTER
644-9060
\ o/ newporl
REALTORS
'75-5511
LOVILY ''I" Pt.AH. Molt.......,_ ....
••• , lt•llt •• .... .. .... .-~ ...... d ..
spectec.lar '"...... ...... •• • ....... . 3 14r, F.I. IHt bt1f la tM WM at
$252,900.
COLE OF NEWPORT ltW.TOIS
25151. Coed Hwy., eor-del Mw
675-5511
COIMlo S,.cl•lh Placing a Clusi!led ad is
Call the experts at the as easy as dlalin1 your
condo Information phone. Give ua 8 call.
center. W • 11 d t b Touc .. ~t.ooen·-lt Inc e o e rest. ..... n.ca Y • · 642-~s 9G-Ol8'1
IOOM FOi 2 l.AICE YACHTS ........................ ...... ' ...................... .....
Mite, ._.... .... Price SI.I ......
T.,...loltwDo-riel_,
~MMC 6:11-12''
REALl't>RS
OCEANFRONT EXQUISITE
, .. .,.,.. ..cMIKtw.I 1 hs ,..ca•
CClf'Mf', H.w wood • ...... ..._ _.
c .. laeh • ..tic._ ...., & 4ecor la
.... ktory ..................... &
••••••• _ .......... 1 ..... vu .. ...
•.-ftr..tllh2M...,_..._
..... 2 bee&.,..... ... , .. c..w ..
tWt • ...... f..etr ..._ StH.000.
'31-1400.
UDO ISLE CORtll-VU
OffwllMJ .... HC......, & c .......
•Ht of Lido llfHtyl• -teHlt,
' ct 611HM, blcydllMJ & frhn., ,..,..,
..... ...., ........... Wery. 3
......... : ha-r&, ...... clL ,.
................ 1.-.d .. '"'·000.
SPYGLASS-IASTill. W
0 ............. ....,, ...... ..... ........ ~ .......... ...... .... ,.., ...... ..... ..... .. . ., ..
...... tkyfltllh & _,.., $491,000.
ill-1400.
NEWPORT CHARtll-IOtl .,....., .............. .
Lep,... .... ._ ........... 1 ..
It.ell y-4 .. ra•d•d by pe••rr· °"" ..... ,_ wftlt ....., 11 I dlltd ...... , ......... + ..... .....
It• 3rd bedroo•. S 111,000 fH.
631-1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, sNC.
REAL ESTATE
SMH, R..nt..i.. l'foclert!I ~
2436 W. Cout Hwy. ~S.ach ., .....
~~~~1111111111~--------~ \\ I '--I I· 't '.\
TAYLOR CO.
HI-,\ I ; ll h~ ·,11111· l~H1;
8.MAMT "°YBSAJU.IS"-OCWSIVI
OH llG CAMYOM GOLi COUISI
Spectacular Deane Homes
"Versailles" located on largest lot of
all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf
course view ! Professionally
landscaped yard with mature trees in
a private park-like setting including a
lovely lge pool & huge spa + an
attractive gazebo Gated front
courtyard entry w /fountain. Marble
floor in foyer with glittering
chandelier. 4 Bedrms, den, formal
D.R. & 41h baths. Priced right at
$825,000. Call for appointment
WISLEY H. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS
2111 s-J-... ... ltoed
HIWPOIT CINTll. H.&. 644-49 IO •
NICI IBMICTIOM OWHR Dl5Pll.A Tl
Owner anxious. Great Low down, take over ex·
a11umable loan. 3 latin1 VA loan. NoqualJ-Bdrm, in Huntlnston fyin1. Just reduced
Beach. Only Sll0,500. '5000. Beautiful pool. 3 Hurry! Bdrm . RV stora1e .
&Ym rn·.p·g·:1,.,..;l-JE· -.... l ""'lj-m-rq-. ~:. & ca • .,,
962-44!1(~:) ~ 512-1100
~~~!!!~~~~ WantAd1 Call64.2-5678
llE
111111 ILlllS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE .
SUPH IAS.,.....,.. COteO
Former Model With View Of Big
Canyon. Three Bedrooms Plus Con-
vertible Den, 2th Baths. Wet BM.
Intercom. Lovely Appointments
Throughout. Community Pool. Best
Value In Area . Listed Under
$200,000. A "Joy Of Newport" List-
ing.
MIWPOIT HAUOI VllW HOMI
Desirable Corner Location In
Phase 11 Harbor View Home.
Popular Montego On Fee Land.
Secluded Yard With Spa. View Of
Fashion Island And Big Canyon.
One Block From Community Pool,
Park & Bike Trails. Owner Very
Motivated. $295,000.
® --.............
759-9100 t 2c.,. ........
He.,..Cttlhr
SEE. AND 8_,EYE
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One half block to major
shopping centj'r&. Cement
dr.ives, air cbnd ltloning,
microwave oven, tras h
compactor, large walk-in
closets. Gara1e with opener.
Pool and 2 Jacuzzis.
. WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
JIOW.W....
C.•Me-.CA
714/611·ffll ..... .. ».ooo
UHDAISU
Wide channel view from spectacular
architectural designed 4 bdrm pool
home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1 ,495,000.
By appointment.
LIDO ISLE HOMlS
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. Best price for the money.
PEHIMSULA POINT 11.ACHFRONT
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, ~tc. $1 ,385,000.
WOULD YOU
BELIEVE.
$75,000 a Bdrm fliter upper,
located on bqe lot. in
TuaUn. Call '152-1700
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
JAIMIHICUR
Comfortable 3 Bdrm
bome with plantation 1butter1, parquet
noon, luah carpeting,
tasteful decoratlna. Within the security 1ata of Jumine Creek.
9V•% assumable loan.
$335,000.
WESTCUFf
I m m a c u I a t e t h re~
bedroom home .
Spacious open floor plan. Double f\Rplace. Built·in breakfront In
dininl room. Outdoor
Uvin1 -dininl area. Free form pool and 1pa.
~000.
631-7300 M.I.
HOT·LOCATIOM ·
Commercial pro e •
ty-3 untta oa 2 Fee
Almoet CoMt Hwy a • dre11 w /euy acc11 .
Good tralfic. t:m.500
JACOBS IEAl.TY
'7'"'670
WALITOWA
from this ~· wide dp owe lit. can forte nm Rbone.111·18
HEW USTIM&
I UMDA ISLE'S IEST LOCATION
is 5 Bdr. home is for only the most
• discriminating Buyer. Main Channel
Frontage with Room for 4 boats.
Owner may assist with financin1.
Asking $2.6 million.
OCIAH VllW
MIMI ISTATI IM C6t
E l egant, very private
customized 4 Bdrm home with
pool. The private dininc room
and a4K82' living room mall• thll property one of a kind. AJ)-
pointment only $795,000.
. .. . ~ . .. .. "
0 '~ ""•lfJ'd 'tii.11,11" S,n1J•<•1• ln1.
Snoopy
~ t~ UifMfO f f411,1tf ), 1 ..... I,;
Woodstock
Lucy
Mally Voll•y
Linus
(;
P•ppermint
· Patty
Sally
Find
the whole
Peanuts
!;9ang .
~ ~fVerv,day
~in the • llllJPlil
142~1
0 o a o co e • 4 •••• ·= 0 0 a s a
OranpeCout DAILY PILOTffhursday, May 7. 1981. ~!:!.~.~ ...... ~ ~!.~.~ ..... ~. ~.~~ ....... ~~~~:::.~~ ........ HwffFef-W. ~ C .. .....__ 10• ~__._ ......___ IOZ .._......_ .t•••••••••••••••••••••• Ho.M.Fors.le HoMflForS. ....... ,.,.......... ...... -.z --. ....,._ 104 ............. .... ................. ..,, .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ..................... r""'· -.... . ··················iooz c;;;:.:.;··········;c,·;2 ··;.:;;;,;··········;;;,·; '-' S,Y4tl.ASS SHAIPCO.O .............................................. .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• launac. 5bdnn bonJe s bdrm, J bath, pool, UNIV. P• ·
HIATASAPIM
Deter I bet t.bis l Bdrm 2
bath condo in Woodside
Villa&e. overlooklne
pool and park .
Beautifully up1raded
caarpetl and floorin&.
TAKE OVE R
EXISTING FINAN·
CING AND OWNER
WILL CONSIDER CAR·
RYING A 2ND TD. Ask·
Intl $95,500. For an ap-pointment to see, call
~().1151
• -$ -HERITAGE
' • REALTORS
AGENTS
YOU GET MORE
FROM nlESTORE
Jack H. Lesch, Mer.
'75-1771
IAYCUST
Quiet tree lined street.
Th'e perfect home for an
active family. 4 bdrms ..
game rm .. family rm ..
formal dining rm .. omce
and pool. Lots of panel-
ing. Custom built. Im·
macu late condition.
$449,500.
(7141 673-4400
121 >• ua.2121
HARBOR
A l>i v1c;1on or
11.irbor Investment Co
••••• •••• • •••••••••••• • City •ocean lew near So. COaat Plui. Lrt 4 Bdnn 2~ Ba home
EASTSIDIYA IASTSl>IFOCa IM0,000, only 1514 dwn. $115,000. wm consider In preat11lou1 Univ .• MACNAB-AYN: REALTY
Charmin& 3 Bdrm l'-'t What a meu! .Brina Auume at TD. OWC leaaeopt.iontopW'Cba1e. Park, 1te119 from pool• •....._Cl" .. _..~
Ba bome that need• paint bn.11ba, abovela balance at is. Prine. Broker, "4-01.M. 1reenbelt. A.Hum.able
some TLC Load1 of and rakes and make SSS Only. MM758 Ytiltr IOJ4 Onancln1. Call for d•
pot en t i a I w I t h 2 on thi1 bar4aln. Only ••••••••••••••••••••••• talll.
flreplaca, and lar1e ad· $139,000. Wont last. Call CD._. ---15 3 ML •o •---II d-0n ramU1 room. Price now. _ _..-A ,, _.....
is riaht at we.ooo. ~OOD AMA.MCIHG 3 Br. 2v. Ba coodo +
TR/\DI T IONAI.
REJ\l.TY
HOMES~ 11\NES TMCNTS
631-7370
PllMI LOCATIOH
5 IDIMllATH
Spacious two-1tory on
quiet street shaded br
huge treea. Many quah·
ty features. An excellent
buy at $192~.
751-lltl
C::. ',{ l ( ( T -t"""' P~~< >Pl H 11{ •,
POOL HOME
Large 3 Bdrm 3 Ba 2-sty
with family room .
Located near OCC and
walking dl1tance to
parks and shopping.
Owner will help fmance.
Full price $179,000.
SUPER STEAL
@ 2 Bdrm1 + kJft w/frplc, bonu1room1n Fountain
wetbarlneachunlt.wlth Valley New carpeti
ereat tenanta. ceramic Ule and loada o
1talned 1tau. SU2,000. ~-,,,\j\j, ti
Ji I 1\ t r l''
I•': I .'I)()()
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
, 714·631·6990
HOME+ RENTAL Ano• M c Ca 1 I and;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
lovely 3 Bdrm, front unit 831-lJlll WOODBRIDGE with frplc and beamed lU 1 2 bd It Mu1t aell brand new ~/y::rP. l:aae. rm un Petera #2 Plan.• 4Br.
Call Barbara Gla11 3Ba, cl<>&etolake.
Century 21/Sandpiper Open S.t/Sun 12·1
640.4950 851·964.t H_...,.._.._.. 1040 u••8Wamuprtn1
M."-r's Day ........................ rus~
W9 845·9850 dy1. 875·9857 M-r IOte. Jaamlne Creek decorator SIAWIHD wjPOOL eves.
Send a meua1e to Mom bome, plan 1, &reenbelt Deal1nera 4Br, 2V.8a, 1~~~~~~~~~ via the Dally Pilot'• loc. $305,500. ~8145. po o I home N r 1-
Mother'a Day Paae. Good Duplex on beat !~ukchedu~t .. ~ ... ~la. ota. WAT'mRONT Your meu.a1e will an. ncv ..., ...... ....., Woodbrld&e prlmei
• r street , pool, hl1h In· 2700 SJ?ICHSIDI lakefront location f:ar 1n a ~retty flower come. Owner. '320.000. Br 3B 1 Vlew1 forever, 3 Bdrm,
1 nxd r:r p11n:~~m;~i~~ Prine. only.~4999. ~u:~~4 4bit to ~h~/~ 2"' ba, pvt~· Yl .. lbl•
me11a1e call 842-~78 Coste M... 1024 SlW1,500. flnancln1. Speda rular!
TODAY ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUTCH HAVIH Offered at 1354,000. Call
MISAYEADI
$141 ,900
Hundred1 or flowers
everywhere and 1un
filled rooma make this 3 BR home a must to see.
Call no~ for details.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
lrittmwy Woods
---------1 Sharp 3Br, 2Ba nr Beach 552 1800 flfld uk for MISA VII.DI ftWamer.1112,900 Lynn Noah owe ..... ll.5% ASSUMIVA ToWlt&C...try
Sharp 3 bdrm on coroer Like new 4Br. 281 lnlton 112·1100
lot . Featurl n1 2 w /te2,000 VA loan al
rireplacea, new roof1 9"°"~· 1117,900
copper plumblna ana I .E. P'rof111l11•
much more. Owaer will tU..al77
carry the fmanclog and ~~~~~~~~!.-I
will also sell VA and * ASSUMI f '!2% -~!t'S.~~~ at $13&,000. 4 Bdl~ ba f79,000 VA
, •~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
Ul, Sl20,000 W/10% dn. ~lnc only. Bier 751·6836
BY OWNER
3 br, 1'¥• ba. $1(17,000
1168·2644 or 967-2677
W AMT A HOME?
C.-cloS,.C ......
Call lhto upert.a at lh•
condo lnformhllon
center
Touch1tonc: RHJty, Inc
~0987
LOCATION-
LOCATIOM
31r.2k
lnc.CoMo.
LIDO ISU
Perfect 4 BR, slngle story home on l 'h
lots w /center courtyard. French
doors, hardwood floors. beam ceilin gs
& 3·car gurall"· $495,000 incl. land.
Nancy lmbcrnino/Jan Young 642-8235
(G83)
••Wf01'\ JlaNh
001 UOver nrw" llM·tJor Vl.ew t.Ain'l.i!r
~~ &23e M4 0200
'f'h11 ~~ ~I Yt. Hotnr 11ll.a$ on Linda
lilts A vr1v1itl.-guurded Cornntunity in
th~ twurt ''' NetwJ>Ort. Hf>ech. Boat :tUr>tt for ca) ~!S' 70' Yateta11. Jo'or Sale or rrra.<fo
W~ n•• tft'l/f"ltJ!lt:f b b'J t.>Ubmil land Or
other lt••:.J f'.:sl ~t .. to owner Jim
ThtimJ"'°"
17141 IZa.1210 121JJ lta.IUJ
llOtl JIZ-.J710
14 units, best E .side
location. Xlnt cond Prin. only. CaU today.
Tim Rhone 631-1266
GOLDEN TOUCH
COllDIMNIUMS
IH1b in exclualve
Turtlc:rock. 3 paUo v1c:w
of mountain • city
Ughtl. Entry foyer operui
to upper level dlnin&
room I livin& room I --
2 Bdrm 2 Ba, near new.
green belts. he a led pools, tennis courts,
1acuui, gas BBQ's.-
Super location. Large
Assumable loan availa·
ble + owner will carry a I
3 IR CHARMU 2nd. Askin1 s~,950 I
$91,000 ··-z::.~ llty
R&'Mtte
Large private decks &
patios. Only 1 left. Xlnt
terms. 13% interest for 3 years.
2000 MEYER PLACE
OPEN WKNDS lG-5
~1·1991; 631"'361, agt
But don't think you can
afford It. Golden Weat
Realtors has deslpied a
program that has al
lowed many people to
enjoy home ownership
that never t.houabt they
could. CaU now for more
details.
fireplace, larce kitchen/ Itta.. Yr.te 1067 By tn. beach 3 Hr. 2 Ba
nook, faauly room / bar, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xtr1 wide lot, comm
separate bedroom wrng AFfOltDAILI ll001' • t.mni. S23S,OOO
2 car garage + bonua 3 Bdrm Mt1alon V~JCJ Tl'rma Owner/Agent
room. CO!JUDtm.ity pool/ 11111le fanuly ~ w1th 642 3850
R f.Al.T<>RS
Sharp 3 Br. 2-sty home, ----------1•---------1
huge ramtly rm, rormal --------• OWNER dining rm, util rm . OCEANRlONT DIESPBATE
Loads of storage! Love-2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unlum. Corona del Mar Duplex
ly neighborhood. Giant N S8SO 1 Huae owners unit. 4 car
lot! Call Teri Marquez ew. I "'Y~~ 1arage. Submit all of.
759 1221 • "'~' fers now. Must sell• 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum
FO•.ft.EX BY OWNER
Xlnt Financing!
$310,000
875·0073, (714)345-4123
Goldea Wett Ur (714) 8'8-8588
spa I tenrus. country IUt.chen and lov i---------THIE GOOO LIN ely mounwn view Only
Near beach/ .sbop1/ S29.850downtontusunc BIG CANYON
schools. Under market loan1 and oo quallfylna ni11 highly upgraded 3
at $294,000. Low down & $124,500. bedroom 3 bath home 100/oLOAM terms. Paul Hi ckey Towa&eo-try has it au. 3450 sq ft in·
Assume tDS,000 loan al Agent 832-3910 leol hhlh 552-1 tOO clud1111 custom pool, spa
10% on lge. 4 br. bome and sawia. View of the
RVMtte
Rf.Al.TORS
Mint cond. BIO yrly.
CHAMH& FltOHT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unlurn
$750 yrly.
with fam. rm. & fprlc. BIG IS Owner built new house, golf course and all new
$40. ON No qualifying. Only BEAUTIFUL vacating 5br, pool, carpet compliment the
ti $154 ,900. Call now ! Large _ spacious 4 $320,000 this week many refinements. A 979-5370 or 64.>3447, ask T 1 t' k d h kl h 1 ·1 Owner ·11 finance. 3 bdrm, 2~ ba. Plan 4 in erms· e s ma e a e· uge le en, am1 y @
SELLER HAS
ANOTHER
Home and must sell this
beautiful home located
associated
BROKERS -RE Al TORS
JO]', W 1'olbc...., t; 1 1 ,,.b •
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
houses on a lot. Eutaide _f_o_r _J_im_. o_wnr __ l_A_et ___ , Northwood Place. Im· al! 8J0.1As3 room and formal dining
Costa Mesa. O nly HI Fou11•LEX maculate throughout. room complete the Sl79,000.CaU645-9181 • • ~ Ceramic tile entry, ewportleac:h I06t amenities. Couple the
A8lal ~nglt0s0darere2nBdtsrm, no2 beige carpeting, nice •••••••••••••••••••••• above with excellent as·
wallpapers. Extensive VIEW CONDO sumable financing and
·1 OPEN HOUSE
in excellent area of ---------1 Tustin. Step down living
ASSUME ~IGIE
LOAM
REALTY
/
vacancy factor. Price brick and c~menl patios $20,000 dwn lllld assume you can move in before
Sl85.ooo. Loan is as· front and rear. Prof. loans . $1 37,500. Rae the summer starts. Ex·
sum able . Anne landscaped. Tri ple Rod&ers63f·l266 clmiveat.-,S,000. Mccasland. 631·1266 -. .. 900 ' DUPLEX on this excel value. 4 ·~~~~!!~~~~ Bdrms. large pool. gas 1~
firepit, new carpet.s. On·
ly $96,500. CaU 979-5370 MIESAD&MAA
This home trW,. de·
garage......... · m· i ~ ~· 11 *Cote Realty , r & lnv~stment I + , 640-sn1
room . family room,
apace age kitchen. 3 big
bdrms, just recently re·
modeled. One year free
home protection plan.
Call today. 7SZ.1700
3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace. built-ins. Ex·
cellent rental area. Near beach 4r bay. S28S,OOO.
~2-2253 eves. today. serves "The Most _______ ...;;__1 Beautiful Home On The
THE REAL
ESTATERS
IEHINDIN
PAYMENTS
Owner arutious, this 3 Bd
pool home also has a
family room & lanai.
Call now, it won't last!
Tim Rhone631·1266.
associated
BROKERS -REALTORS
l 01C.. W Balboa b 1 I llib I
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
R.IE. IMYIESTOR CASA DEL Rio Always wanted to invest
in Real Estate-but don't
leautfMMewCo.do1 thank you can? Let
Xlnt terms. 133 interest Golden West Realtors
for 3 years. 12132 Ed· show you how to invest
·Block" award. A func·
tional balance of beauty.
com fort and con Ye·
nience. Complete
w /remodeled kitchen·
an inspiration lo any
cook. $131.900-VA terms.
556-2660.
C::. C>fl EC T -t"""' PH()µf-1 .. n I( '-,
inger-close to Harbor with little cash & no "Te· 1---------
Blvd. nant Problems". Call f•--------OPEN WEEKENDS 12-5 now for more details. l7 ASSUM LOAH
641-1991; 631-4361, agt. GoW.. Wnt lltr. No qualifying, small
(714)848-8588 down payment.a. Jow ln· llEAUT1FUU. Y terest rates, no loan llEFUallSHID .POints ! 2, 3 & 4BDRM
---------• 4 bdrm home ln good ---------llouses & Townhomea.
location with a com· MIEW,o.TH~HTS All in good areas or
p I et e I y remodeled De I u x e townhouse Orange County. NORTHWOODS
This lu xurious
Candleberry baa 3 Bdrm
and shows like a model.
Call today. You won't
believe the price. Tim
Rhone 631· 1266
kitchen. new paint, new duplex, 3 bdrm amily, GoldeaWestlltr
cpt.s and drapes. Owner 2~ bath each unit. (714)~
financing available. Frplcat all built-ins, 1~~~~~~~~~ $132 ,500. Call now decks "' patios. Park· r:
979.5370 I i k e 1 a n d s c a pin g . IUSIMESS OPPTY
A SELLER WILL HELP Established well located
LLS"""TE FJNANCE.$295,000! beauty aaloo In \lrime ll"t lol»ooa.,'rop. location. Submit on
....... terms. REALTORS *67S.7060• Touchstone Rulty, Joe.
--------=-1 GREATINVF.STMENT l~~~~~~~~I 968-09S7
3 BR 1 Ba, '72,900. A.a· bec.ee.. 1..._ Two 2 Bdrm houses on NEWPORT
IEACH
Huie home w/RV or
boat a ccess. Under
$200,000. Call today-see
tomorrow. Tim Rhone.
631-1266
RVM~
llfo:AI TCIH '.'--
THE REAL
ESTATEl~S
sum able financina & •L lit 1 1 one lot. W. Coeta Mesa. seller w /also carry l>"J year new, IP eve ' Aa1wnable loan. OWC 3 Bdrm. 2~ ba end unit. paper. CaU for terms. Entertainers deliabt 1_lr.=g_2n_d._6tt). __ 7464 ___ _
752-6499 with formal c1lnlng rm. l1t•••t 11111 Loceffoll
Plan N 8'aJt't and gourmet ktlchen. Sharp 2 Bdnn condo ln
Recreation inc ludes, Meaa Verde. Priced to
tennl1 & racquet ball. sell at tea.5oo. Anne 'i:>~~ione Really Inc. McCaaland. 631·12166
96).(817
1044 • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • ••••••• 833-8600 ATIJ~ ..
• lHEGROVES
Spacious 2 Br mobile
home. Owner will help *523 C Mftla. n... jn· finan ce. Best in the · A..,rv;i"": "VINE
park Seller anxious.
Sl87 ,SOO. Rae Rodgers
631-1266. Ag\.
HIGH ASSUMAILI
4Br home w/1pa, xlnt.
cond. $169,000. s.52-6940.
PARTY
IM
HARBOR VIEW
Smashing family room
with wet bar. Unbelieva·
ble beautiful enter·
talner's patio. 5 Bdrm
Sommerset on fee land.
Absolutely immaculate
move-in condition Creative finan cing
available.
OC~OHT
$450,000
This first time offering
is an estate sale. One or
Newport Beach 's fmest
views. 3 bdrms home
with guest apt or 2 units.
Realonomics 675-6700
Sharp 3 Br, fam, beams,
1kylt, aeclud spa/decks
$190,000 Ownr. 645-1498
OWN ER DESPERATE
1 Br & 2 Br condos, low
down + terms. John.
54().4648
BY OWNER
Lease !Dntiln
Harbor Rid{e-;oodo
$550,000 with $50.000
caah.759-8903
On the water, 4 bdrm, 3
ba. One bit to beach.
Bonus rm. $279,000
642-2067
VERSAILLES 2BR. wilt
to bcb, low dwn, no
qualifying. Sl40K.
730-2270 dya. 6-42·2682
eve1.
• -
)
•
,e • e
• e a 3 3 4 a . 2 6 a .24
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday, May 7, 1981 03
Cash in on 7 ·or 11 ..... _H•r•'•. eure "'Ing lot Orange County ildHrtlMra-
There are.two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad
Run r days for $7. 77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes Da1·1r P1·1at
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'
HcMIHt For S4* otMr IN 1state IHI lslate Ho.ea UafwWalwd ......_, U1tfw111alwd Apa,..,...t1 FwwilMd ApOi t'"ah u..fwR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..ted 2900 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s-t. ..._ I OIO Mottle Hws t..c ... Prop11+, 2000 w Property 2000 ....................... Co1ta M... 1224 wport leocJt lZH Costa Meta 1724 Coroao def Mar 3122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fors• 110 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Investor's looking for ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·~··••••••••••••••••• APPUVAUIY home in Laauna/So 3 Bdrm ll!s Ba r le dbl Hartaot-Va.w SUSCASnAS Bachelor apt, w/rdrig, ---------NEWPORT 8E'1Pff Near new 4 Plex 2 Laguna for sale by Ir ' rp . . Gracious family home 2 place ror micro, So. or llADFOltDCOMDO LOWDOWN "'"" down and ~me bdrm 2 bath ~ach iiolt owner. Stephen Flan· car gar, grecrm,nace st or Y 4 bdrm . Furn. 1 br. apt. S32S & PCH, $275 incl. utils. Beautllully located on Repoued single wide &.I-,., -I h r" I lo d nlgan 494-84111. area $750. Marguerite. Fumlahlng avail at no up. Encl. gar. Adults, no 760-1813 all. 6pm.
part lite greenbelt just Fleetwood, central loans Three adjoinlng ~a\io.'r~~:~~ egnarrasg~. 54~3666 extra. Sl.D>/mo lse .. No pell. 2110 Newport 81.
a short walk to the pool. T'oan..,gen <:o:mtfe' ~emltibsle. !c~~~i~~!rp~~dM on $165,000. Bill Grundy. 3 Br, neat & clean home, 3 B d rm• 2 l!s bath pets. 2015 ~ort Bnstol 548-4968 btwn 8 & SPM Cotto Mesa 3124
$55,000 assumable loan • Rltr, 675·6161. in CM Hi School Dist .. by Cr. ~al! .. 7Elaine 544.5997 H~'el• •~1. 3740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or lll!s% interest. Private (GM4772..a9). f'LUS 6/1. Needed desperate· lOwnhouse, pvt yard, 2 or 64.r5.w _......_. __.. 2 B 1 B M I St
DISCOUNT MOBILE "ar auto aarage 3 deck0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r. •: ape · patio and 2 car aarage. two duplexes and 1 ly ! Mother, son & well ~ • · ,. Adult, rerna. no pets. Only'911.SOO HOMIS triplexinarowonl9lh " 20 units . Pride or behaved dog. Under orrbdrms,frplcinlivrm THEILUFFS $:!75/up 1·2 bdrm. ~l. Quiet $375. Sierr a
'44-7211 Q>.(118() St, Balboa Peninsula. ownership. E.side Costa $700. ~9-7272 & mstr bdrm, sep. din· 4 bdrms. 2 baths, super JaC, adll, Ul992 Flonda. Mgmt. Co. 641·1324
,_..__.,. Onlf 1 lot from sand and Mesa. 1.3 million. 30% Ing rm & mod kitchen. 2 clean. Yearly &ease. l9SO H.B. 842·2834or842·3172
/.Jn Nl[1[L
DAILEY &
ASSOCIATES
A~::• lM sur . Absolutely prime dwn. OWC. Overall in· lewtoh y r s o I d . C o m m mo Aat, 673-S354. Spacious 3 Br Duplex
I properties. terest 10% Agt. 760-9333 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• pool fspa /tract. Close to 8 FFS H.I. 1
1 FU-tEST $42S. Pool & laundry fac ••••••••••••••••••••••• bus & So. Cst Plaz.a. $775 LU . 3Br, 3Ba. ram Spanish F.state Living! 548-9556
Rent covers paymnt, DUPLEX with Dock Owner says sell/exch 24 Ho.Mt Fwllll:t'-d m 0 , pa u I H ickey rm . pvt spa, $1,050 Beautiful park-like sur·
avoid high int. I unita rorJO'boat. indus. income units for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 751·8485. 644-2300 r oundings. Terraced MEWL Y DECOR.
CM $310,000. 10% down 1 r g er ind us I c 0 mm . Coroeo def Mar l 122 1>001 Sunken gas bbq, So.till.... 1016 owe 14%. Owo er $895,000. Agt, Biii, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cute coodo 2 Bdrm, no WATERFRONT spa rkling fountains .
••••••••••••••••••••••• (213)431--4432. FOURPLEXlf"'Valey 831.1257 TWOGllAT pets. $540/mo. Donna. w/boatslipincluded Spacious rooms .
1 Br. au pd, encl aar
d /washer, pool. Adults
642-5073.
Spectacular ocean view .
4 Br. Private area, ten·
nis . Priced be low market. $549,000
499-1526. BU.
00 SUMMM RIHTAL.S Richardson Realtors. 3 Bdr 2 Ba, dbl gar. nn Separate dining area. ....... Proper+, 14 MANY MANY MORE! ...._~~ Each with three 768-5600,837·5916. for power boat up to W a 1 k . i n c I os els. Spacious 2 Br$36S. Pool &
••••••••••••••••••••••• C /21MewportCatr Pro 2100 bedrooms,twobatbs.On D---PoL...& 1226 about35'.$ll50/mo homelike kitr hen & laundryfac.
MIEWPOltT 64~5357 -""" J •COIS Rl!!•LTY cabinets. Walk to Hunt· 548-9556 9 Office building. ••••••••••••••••••••••• thesand.SlOOOweekfor ••••••••••••••••••••••• A 110A inatonCenter. ___ __;_ ____ _
$425,000. Hurry . won 't DUPLEX·M.I. LAGUHAIEACH one. the other SlSOO to •Closetomarina3bdrm, 675-6670 lBedroom-fum,$440 2 HUGE Bedrooms in last! Bill Grundy , N be h 3B Canyon industrial bldg u 3oo per month . l ~ba frplc yard 2Bedroom-furn,$510 s uper location. Fully
OttwrlM Estate 675·6161 it:.·~ c:rc ga~~nr :a~· near town & art festival ~1·7~· ask for Roger, $600/mo. To~nhouse: THE BLUFFS. A lovely I Adults.no pets carpeted, built· ins.
••••••••••••••••••••.••• TSL INVSTMT 642·l603 grounds. Fully leased. 14 gen · 495·44116 • level 3 Br. 2 Ba. on green Utilities Free! ground floor. Adults, no Mobile.._. tenants. 9600 59. tt. Solid Newport 1eoc19 l 169 · bell near pool. Sl 125 pets. $35() mo. Apply Apt
ForS• 1100 WATIJtRtOHT FIX &SAVE! moneymakermhlghde-••••••••••••••••••••••• H..tillC)loft~ 1240 lease.Agent758-1092 LAQUJNTAHERMOSA B 568 w W i lson .
••••••••••••••••••••••• OfftCEIUILDIHG 3 & 4 units pnced to mand a~ea. Manage· LIDO ISLE charming 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 16211 ParksideLn, lblk 646·4477.
New Mobile Home, Pride of ownership, one movenow!Sellerswant mentav'!!}.;.,000 bdrm,2 bath,playroom. •21rToi4Who:Me$550 3 Br. 2._, Ba Condo. W orBeach,3blluS.of
oceanview-EI Morro or a kind, prestigious quick escrow R 1 -."'· 67 .. 6700 Just remodeled. $1650 Gar,pool,park.}16?-5191 ?~kea,n Rview7.52sa5oo111tmo Edinger. Lg 2Br, carport, lndry,
Beach Park, sp 70. 2Br. location in Newport ea onorrucs ..,. mo to mo. Bill Grundy, ~ "" or on. · · 847-5441 $385 mo. 642-8843or (213)
space rent $175 mo. 20 yr Beach. All this plus a 60 ,Jx: Loh for Selle 2200 675-6161. 3 Br:~1:,~~ ram rm. NEWPORT CREST Newport leach 3769 _596_· _·_37_o_3 _____ _
lse. $59,900. 499-3816 root boat slip. Owner will NEJC~l: o ••••••••••••••••••••••• d" . $795 gsa.5191 Agent has 3 three units. •••••• • •••••••••••••• •• 2 Br No pets Joann St. 1
ARTISTS RETREAT ~':fu~~~f;.c~~1c&ri~e~: qJtlll\~ Lot in Hills above Nwpt. IHowetUwfwwlshed tmngrm. ' Possible lease option OCEANFRONT child. $375; Canyon St. 2
2Br, 2Ba, den, sunny wt ~ 111 area or nulbon dollar!••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br, 21,Aiba, frplc, Cam rm. $775 to $850. 64.5-0295 Furn. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. 2 children . $390; PacHlc
porch. wlk to Bch & rell, 714.641·0763 homes. Ready to go. Capistrmoleadl 1211 gardener,$700/mo H•llOIVWIC .... OLL car garage with office Ave. 2 children, garage,
&tor ..... Agt .• n .. ,,. .. " 2787 Bristol St $3 l 0, 0 00. G i I Ag t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962-3375 eves ~ " ' .... 00 S' M t C ...., ""~ ,. M ,.A oc7 0211 3br, v1·e~ "CONDO'", washer & dryer incld. " . aerra gm . o Redhill ~~Realty
Ii-;-:~ -;-; {1111
vOSla esa ,'"' °" · · 4Br. 3Ba, bltns. frplc, all -· 641 1324 redecorated. S8SO mo. Springhurst 3 Br 2 bacon· 1900' of super upgraded A v a 1 I · N o w --·-------•MOVE IH TODAY
1978 Obie wide in ramily 1 -1 Whlhwat.rV• 34544 Calle Portola. do w/patio, gar. lmmac. elegance & corner Wkly/Mnlhly. 642.1603 2 br. l ~ ba, no duldren, UNITS-C.M. Great tenns,subord. Owner (714)549-2042 Nr. Newland & Talbert priucy. Pool & tennis TSL MGMT. small dog OK, S4.2S. 610 park. 2 bdrm. 2 ba. Ulil· ~~~~~~~~~! ty rm. Din rm .. shed,
Picnic tble. All appl.
$46,SOO. Ownr. 964-5309
-rdal
14 units. E·side, pool . 7141492-8320 Co--o ...1.....1 Mar 3222 S72S. 891-6:116. w.~~~~dges. $900/mo. Fantastically rumlshed Joann St. 642·7344
10~% rinanc111g Mobile H '.... _, townhouse. with ocean _. • • • • • • • • •••••••••• • •••• S blks to ocean Elegant 2 L a k es . s t re a m s & Pro,.rty 160~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 units, near new
house w n rentals
Pork 2300 SPYG• •ss HILL bdrm. fam nn & den. PEKTHOUSI view. Tennis court, pool. waterfalls in the back
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ($750 ) Pl h ls New 2 story condo. S92S/mo. 760-9117 and 3 Bdr, fonnal din .. ram mo us crp . yard or a br new 1 or COSTAMESACUTIE pprox. SSOOsq ft+ opt.
$1,500 Saota Aoa, $315,000. &
Slnale wide dollhouse other comm. prop. Agl, TSL Investments
325' on Lagoon, older rm 2 fireplaces lrg 2Y.r ba, cedar & glass. Ocean & mountain SHORTTERMRentaU; 2 bdrm condo. Frplc,
t raile r park $250K. yard $1600/mo. eOb & Obi. car pvt gar, fully views. 2 + den. Secutity Weekly & monlh.ly bl tins, gar, pool, jac
w /I & added rm, pvt ._B_il .... t,:...:8_3_1·_1257 __ . ----____ 642 __ 1_603 ___ _ n;«!:.s~1~K equ.ity for Dovie Koop. 631·1266. ma1nt. y~. Adult.5. no gate guarded communl· Agent,675-8170 S540&up.979-33'76 Agt. pets. lnqwre at 527 18lh. ty . $1000. 675 -9132 or ----='------------=-------
St. 714/960-6331 675-9113. * SPACIOUS * Eastside smaller I Br
I ... 3244 MOIUHOME Prof. decor, 2br, 2ba, Natural wood ceiling &
" • Super dbl ~i·de , 2Br, sciral stairs, frplc, cabinets. Adults only
patio, walk lO shopping oado•hll-1fTow• I 7 ...... ITS ............. of c_..... &bus. (DU926-SS) ... _ --6.-1:.. 1700 "" vww -·r DISCOUNT MOBILE ........ ..._.._ 9 ocean view apts. 8 Property 2550 Shoreclirfs 2br, 2ba. fam
HOMIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• comm 'I. underground ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, lge yard. kids/pets
636-0880 THE LA.ICES parking elevator. fron New Mobile Home 3Br OK monlh·monlh. teOO.
IRVINE ta~e on Coast H~y . 2Ba, frplc, redwood 644·0164
••••••••••••••••••••••• -u•a patio gar •us. "'"'1·1660 2Ba, $SSO mo. includes s Y ...,s, ·spa. · _e.ro.:..;___:...,...:...:.....;..:_ ____ _
RENTALS ut"al' •·t + ~ secun"ty 1 block lO bch. Ulil incl.
HIGH (i)UAUTY lBDRM Townhome, ten· Pnme Laguna location. deck cedar shake sid· 1---------LOW NICE nl.s, pool & spa. $107,000. 54~3666 · Ing, 'nr lake & skilng 4 blks to beach. 3 Br. 2 ~a. B b ft:c.J\ '-" _.,... $1 n.r.n t ,,.., ·u~ ft • 2br 2ba condo, nr 2 r 1 ~ a. _..,., moves you in. 6'2-6991 or •"""yr Y ................ a er 2 BR. 2 ba. t900 675.7104. 6pm. S.C.Plaza.S.A. $500. no
3 Br. 2i,.;, ba. tBOOmo to ---------pets. 549-3232. mFUoR3NBr.2ba. $1250 Harbor Ridge Condo. 3 Avail. now. 2914 W. ~_;;_-.... -~----T---
Br, 3 ba. sec, pool, spa & Oceanfront 2 Br. 1 Ba. ,..s ..... ..--• Dbl wide Crusader, cen· Assum loan OWC 2nd Whelan $41,900. Tenns or trade New crpl, fresh paUll.
tral air, dshwshr. lg 1_T_.D_. c .... a .... u .... s.w-__ 1158_1___ 499-3816 $895. 642-5290.
~~·. ffl'il~~-to ap-THI SPIUNGS Real Estate o.t of Shih
OISOUNT MOBILE IRVINE . Property 2600 HOMIS 1 Bdrm CONDO on Just moved into town? •••••••••••••••••••••••
636-0880 water. Pool, lenni.I & Then get acquainted EXUMA, IAHAMAS ~ta~·. o'~~':t· T~D.scall with the Classified Ads. Rattan furn, bch hme. 10x45', Costa Mesa, 559.9581 They're the easiest way Illness forces sale.
adults. 96500 for quick .__:...:..:..;.__ _____ torindjustlheltemsand $14 0K /SllOK Cash
sale. 673-38216 Want Ad Results 642·5678 services you need! _645 __ ·7_64_9 _____ _ ----'----~
To Mother With Love ...
Love ha~ a way of rt>tum1ng lo tls source On this ~p..ct:il tlJ\
the lo•• you have 111ven 11 return.cl with a special mc-"J'~ of warmth Takl' a look Stt how much ) Oil art' IO\l'<l
JASMIHE CREH
Bea utirully upgraded
Plan 5, 3 bdrm, 2V. bath.
family. air cond .. plan-
tation shutters. some ocean view. very
private. Vacant & re·
ady. Only $1300. mo.
ten n is . u 1 so . Ph : Fireplace, garage APAlrTMEHTS 759.3903 $300 /week . Open. 2·1Bdr. avail. $270. mo.
7 1 4 I 7 5 l · 6 1 4 1 o r Plus ulils. No children.
NEWPORT CREST 213/331-5417. no pets, no waterbeds.
4 br, 2000 sq ft condo, 2450Newport Blvd.
split levl, immed. occ Costa Mesa
1 '990/mo. 631-7270 THE SEVIl..LE 2 Br. Ji,<,
C{/ouH'Wfj'~ -.523 CAMPU5Dl·IRV'"E
• 6~9_8.,,9,, W~LLOWS 3Br, l i,<,Ba.
'I'-' .,, v air, new crpts , rrplc.
2435 E. COHI Hwy., CdM re need yrd. $600/mo
644 · 1480 ; 830-S<llO ext 81
4 Bdr + maid's qtrs.
beaut. decor. Super vu.
Top o r Spy&lass .
$2000 /mo . Koop .
631-1266. Agt.
TUITUaOCIC
3 Bdrm 2 bath, atrium,
modem decor, across
from park. Small pet OK. $850 mo. 675-8170,
SAHTIAGODI.
Beautiful house avail
now in elegant area. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Dining Rm,
Living Rm. & Family
Rm . New wallpaper,
cozy kitchen & many
many xtras. Children &
pets OK . 759-8974.
Newport Shores 2 Br. 2
Ba. home. Tennis & pool
pr1vl. Walk £o beach.
$750 lse. 640-5272, if no
ans. 1-723-0601. agent.
Costa Meta 3224 S..ta AM 3210 ••••• •••••••••••••• •••• La.-a leocll J241 •• ••••••••••••••••••••• Secluded 2Br, lBa patio ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, all
home. pool, adlts, no Oceanfront rental $650 new decor. Drive by.
pets, $500 mo. 2453 mo .. rurnis hed I un-2317 s. Lowell lllOO/mo.
Orange Ave, see Mgr furnished. Adlls only. tsl last + SlSo'. 644.5069 Apl 8 . 751·2'787 499-3816 _ _.:•;_____;____ ___ _
3 br 2~ ba c:oodo 2 car Two ramily home, 4 BR. 3 Bradford Place 3 Br 2 ba ' • ' u · condo w/patio, aar. Nr gar., deck, patio. pool. ba, 2 kitchens, 2 vmg Bradford & Carriage. ssso. S40-4<B3 rooms. 2 fplc 's, vaulted ceilings. Great ocean IMS, 891-6:116 Aat. ·
DOLL HOUSE view. Much charm. Like 5o.tt. LopMI 3216
l Br. patio, attached new. $1400 mo. agt. •••••••••••••••••••••••
garage. stove & Rerrig. Hillie,494-7SS1 OCEANFRONTHOME
Orange St. near Del O'lookl pvt beach, 2 br,
YEAA·ROUNO FUN:
Social Ac1tv1Ues 01·
rector • Free Sunoay
Brunch • BBO's •
Patti•• • Ptus more
OAEAT RECREATION:
Tenols • Free L8$80M
(pro & pro 1hop) • 2
Health Clubs• Sauna
• Hydromessaoe •
Swimming • Goll
Ottving Range
BEAUTIFUL APTS:
Singles. 1 & 2 Bad·
rooma • Furn11hed
& Unlur111Shed • Miii
L1v1ng • No Pell •
Model• Open Deily
9 to 6
Oekwood
Garden Apartment•
Newport Beach N.
880 l"'1ne cat t61n1
(7 14) 645·1104
N•wport BMCh S.
1700 16th SI (Dover et 16th)
(714) 642·5113 Mar. ~-Adults, no Hlglltl 1252 2~ ba, den, din. rm, lge pet.a. 67lHS372. ••••••••••••••••••••••• d,ct, $1.200/mo. 499-2253, .. _______ •
4bdrm, 2ba, f~lc, gar. in 499-5021
Beautiful new condos. lovely neig borhood.C ---.--.... -1-----S. Cleac1Ac 3776 l&SO. Dbl gar w/opener. S73S lease incl gardener, o• OM& &s• ..................... ..
400sq.ft. astroturfdeck. no pet. 499-4721 or U•fwr hlled 3425 lbr, lba. clean, new furn
cloee to ocean. 641-1991 ; 838-4921 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & drapea, ulil pd. Wik to
631-4361, agt. • 8 R + 1 2 Blks from So. Cst Plua. b ch /ah p p ,, 1o1 W . • den, Nlgue 12 •--MN\ • 2 BR. Fncd yrd, gar. Cou· Shores. guard gale. ~f:t cond~55i'.-'s40"' mo. Margulta492-8120
ple,cbildOK,smallovt· Some ocean view.---------
aide pet. Drive by SSS A Comm. pool, tennis, Nwpt. Bcb. lBr, wlk to ,.._._ ... _.h
Victoria St. C.M. June wait to beach. $875, Bch. pool, Jae, laundry
Ba. Adulu only. crpts,
drapes. patio. gar.,
water pd. $4.25. 2619 San·
la Ana Ave. 636-4120
Btwn 1 &S
1 BR. cpts, drpa, stove,
adlts, no pets. S300 mo.
646-4382
2 Br. Aduha only, DO pets.
$42S/rno. 755 W. lBth. St.
Call for appt. M&-9507
Charming, 2Br . 2Ba.
adults. no pets. Carport.
latflr.~5
3Br, 2Ba Triplex. Crpts
drps, patio, car port
Children OK, no pets.
2515 Oranae Apt B.
Owner on premiaes Sun.
May 10. $485. 64.5-9966
IHSTAHTIM!
Beaut. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apt.
Frplc, eoclsd gar., lndry
rm, patio. Small pet OK.
$440Mo.
TSL Mamt. 642·1603
AVAL HOW!
Roomy 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apt.
4-Plex . lndry rm.,
balcony. Adults only.
$465mo. TSLMamt. 642-1803
Duplex. 2 Br l~ ba.
$41S /mo. No pets. Dave.
Agt. 644·7211
3bdrm apt, gar. patio.
rrplc. $365/mo.
549-2'7 4.2. lst . $425. 1163-3379 498-2S01or492·2958 rac. $52S /mo. 642-4957 .... 1102 ~~~~~~~
lBr, 2Br "J\81.lor. 2Ten· Coiy Townhome. 2 Br. 2 FOR LEASE, Back Bay •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• New Condo 3br, 2ba ,
nia crta, pool, jac, u una, Ba. Fireplace, beamed executive CU>do. 3 BR 3 APTMTS poa alMT frplc. micro, balconlea.
sand volleyball, pool celUnaa. 2 car garage, Ba. extensive upgrades H.B., N.B., Costa Mesa dbl gar yard '750/mo.
tble. Adult sorry, no comm . pool 4' spa . tbr u out. Include• SometblngforEveryone -~--------
pets. 685 Baker. CM $600/mo. 495 ·4947 , wa1ber/dryer and Bach. to 4 Br. Unfurn.
557·0075. 64&-5171. refrig. '8tlO mo. Call Apt.a. Certain locaUon1 1 Br. Adult.a, 00 pets. Rb 631.ellN ff4 Lndry room, pool,
W •U(TOPOOI. i11•~y1a&... l2'7 o. o fer : Pool. ~pa, carport&. S38S/Mo. S285 ~ --.... fireplace laun. room. or sun on the deck. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Delue 2br, 2ba, McLain be a me ci c et l l n I• ' Dep. 931 W. 19th. St. bdrm1,2bat.tw,1padou.1 HOMEFORRENT Wllt at Bl& Can)'OO incl garaJe&, all bullt-in1. _541J... __ CM9_2_. _____ _
condo with sunny decor . a Bdrm. '800. Fenced wu her/dr>'er, frtae. un· Garden • Townhouse
•mo. Call Barbara al yard • fcara1e. Kid.I & de rs round pkr, sec. d•llP .. NO FEE. i::~::~rvle~.n:=:
BarretlReally,M2·5200. pet.a we come. *-,2566 pool,A:tennll.644-91514 TSLMGMT. 6'2-1603 545-'-" or 97S.297L Aft., no ee. _ _.;_-~·------MESA VERDE 4 Bdrm 2 1 Br condo,_,,, mo. No Pullru d 3107
bath, double 1arage. Mew...t 11ec1t J2't qualtfylnt·leue option. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 1~ Ba. To~,
lmmed. occpy. 1750 mo. ••••1·•-•••••••••••••••• So Coast Pl.au. John. $tOO Ullla pd. 2Br Duplex '~'ia'4iii":Uo. dult.I e
Aft. M2·53l0 llG CYH l.IASI 54CMMI. no Hardtni. Balboa. No :~dren • =;... ~
1 Br a Ba. ronnal cllD .• Apastus•Pu tllllr~ pet.a. 547·W6 mo. 541-Sm. ·
4 Br. New ptJnt, caa-p« •
drapt1. Gardenlnt
aervlce. S750 /mo.
Mf.t850.
a Br 1"11 Ba. dabwahr,
frple. dbl ear pr. eacl.
backrard, nice area.
tUO. Ila rtutrltt.
~-wa. you call Cla11llled aopa.. u ad, 1ou·~ a1·
aured of a frleadly
welcome and help ln ...... ,.,. .. fOC' ....
r•poHt . Call Nowt .....
1.rt maater 1.nt., ••l'Y ....................... Cer•1dislW. 3122
1b•rp pool, ritW, bot ..... ...... J706 •••••••••••••••••••••••
tub. izOiitmo. Bob • ....................... 2 Br, 2 8• du.Plex w /1un-, ~--·-Dovie Koop. Ill-la UtU. 111.aad. 1 bdrm, 1 deck . 411 Polnaetta.
•
U!l. cvwc~O be. New tum • appl. $'700 /mo. tyr he .
,., I" ~ -IDO Incl udl. 1 adlt. 875--0124 Jadie. Lovtl.12 as 2 ... anll i71-0'118 lmmed. tll Sept. l.•---------lmmac. 1 Br. ocean vu, 1 UIO /mo. Ill· UH. MeM l724 bUr from bell. Shared
Pautck,._..,AI\. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• 'ar•1•, l•uad facll.
CASA DI OIO '8'15/mo. Alt1'71-1111 Exc=~~7. ALL UTILITID PAID l:DJo1 wlU!'~.! .. ~ .. ~~~
beautlfuJ J Br. I Ba. Com para btfort you 7tar. ,..,_.. .,..atl
Prlvtt.e Jard. w'lt bar• reat. Cutom du l~ •r::r rrple, -decll. ecU ttreplact, mU1 otlltr fHl•rtt: Pool, BB • lold· •,.,51mto1511•••
emtnltlea lacldl•I .~ wttJa Dl• mmt · · or
Ila.Ida S'OOID. '1MO "'°' ludeea,... Mull l•· Ml·'IM4 Call Aatb•f :::,r: luaU&almt.ito..U. ..;:...;.;;_,;..;.~----11-1, ......,.., ... • . ~,...........,. Ha•• to .. •·m . • W • ......., ta.11'71 c1 ... lft.11 • ll ..U.
APd'neft'S
BHutlful ludeca.-4
1ardeo apb. Patloe °" dtcU . Poiol 6 IDt, COV•
tred parktnc. Aftb, DO rt::1~BA. ·..,. •w.wu..,m ....
lBR. tu0
dR.tBA. b
WI V==' War ,
-. --------.... ----. _..,... ---------------------.·------.......... --.. --... ·---... 1·
IM
~ .. ~.1~!1y
I.or• 30dayad
lo the
DAJLY
P'll.OT s•wca
DIUCTOIY
DOlTNOW!
Asia Fw 5-dr'O
Vo1u Dally Pl.lot
Service Directory
Representative
642·5671. •at l 11
Accomtlwg •••••••••••••••••••••••
The Feminine Approach
LEIGH ROBERTS
Full services. 543-1'84
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thurad•Y. May 7, 1981
c ....... , e_.,.ectw H•ilr•• Hwc .. s.r.1ce ......,.... Mo•llHJ ft.WlllCJIP••...,. ····\················· ..............••.••.•...................•....................•.......................•...... ·······•·················••············••·····
All Around carpenter. CONST.R, •REMOD. HOME IMPROVEMENT Elderly• Handicap Care Reputable college 1lu Movlna! Tbe Starving
1-"'lnlah It~"· Free Plana. Uc'd . Qeora• !Wmodellna--Odd.toti. Servlee, Cbrlatlan denta will bolaMlltt any CollegeStudmta Movina
Eat Jobn77~ PilmerltSoftl,557.a:D. ayraexper. '79-22165 owned 6 operated, pro-or all s ummer, May Co haa grown, lnaured ----------•c t bln ,_ ~• vldioa in-lb•· home »Sept. I, refa.m.1•14 same eood sHvlce c..,...s.r..ice ryw•I arpen ry,ea e .. , I VUI peraonal ca.re: balhlna. llT12•J'36 License
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• repaln, plumbing. Free cookina. lite bouackeep-UCI Pre-med student 6'1·8'27
DOC'S PAIN;l'l NG hH
r~turned! Dbcka. boat
s llps . 1nl /ext bae
Prompt , r elia ble
M rvlce Dave 645-0389,
839·5851 Shampoo• steam clean. OrywallSPf'.C'.lalial est Call Anaw•r Ad ioa. Call Richard or work i ng al Ho a a ---------1
Color brtgbtenera, wht Qual. " prod. New" re-U61. 641.-4300, 24 bra. Donna at 4118-5883. Jt!SWI Hospital tltls summer ABC MOVING, Ex per DAV E'S PAINTING
crpts 10 mln. bleach. mod. t388M4. 532-M-49 ls Lord! want.s to babysit house prof. low rates, quick Serv. sauaried cusl 9 Hall. Uv. din. rm• $15; REPAIRS or boal. Doesn't smoke careful service. 552-0410 Q 1 1 l . l 0 Ho ..... -----------1 yrs ua .-n egr1 y. av0 rmJ7.50:.,,...uch$10; DRYWALL-ur ex · Callan'*1me,67S-30H •K or drink. 714-953·2100 ., -. '" "MOVIN-MAN" Reaa, lns, lic. 760-7301 chr ~. Guar. elim. pet pertlse. We can handle •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• eves.
odor. Crpt repalr. lS yrs your problemB. 63l·l00' Carpentry -Masom-y Want a REAu..YCLEAN ---------ls careruJ, courteous & Plo•terjRepolr
exp. Do work myself. a.-.-&-1 al Roofing-Plwnblng HOUSE? Call Glngbam L.ctscaplalg cheap.PLscaU642·1329 ••••••••••••••••••••••
Refs. 531·0101 ~me Drywall. Stucco . Tile Girl. Free est. MS-51.23 •••••W•E••DO••••JT••AL•••L•!uu• ftollltlnn Ja_.-.. Ne1&l patches & textures ----------!••••••••••••••••••••••• •more. J .B. 846--9990 wl ' -r--•..., WeCareCarpetCleaners ELECTRICIAN-priced . ROBIN'SCLEANING We do it belt! We do It ••••••••••••••••••••••• free Ht. 191-1419
Steam clean & upbols. right, free estimate on llPAll~OO& Servit;e--alhorougbly c h eapest ! Russell QUALITYPAINTERS ED 'S P~'TERING
Work guar. Truck largeorsmalljobe. All types. Carpentry , cleaobouse.S40-~7 Landacaping.6'4-7062 F_!'!_RstG. AlNRA.:1.:~aA AU Types lnt /E.xt mountunit.64$-3716 Uc. t396621 673-0359 plumbing, concrete, •"'"'"' ....,.......,... ceramic, masonry, elec. Expertise Housekeeping LANDSCAPING 645·11258 FREE EST
No Steam /No Shampoo REMODELING One call.-.._ it all. Wor·k Supplies fumiabed Rotolilling clean '"' a. •ST EV ENS PAINTING d •. ....-p ,. __ _. · ·u,.... Int/ext. "'-"--1"tem1'z:ed Stain spec1ali1l, rasl Electrical work. resi . .. guar . Free est. 631 4323. ersona~. &n-•970 ideas. Lie. ~l .. '""' dry. Free est. 839-1582 comm 'I. 631-2004 631· 1137 est Neal, quality work NEED YOUR HOME MolCMlry 832·J:nJ. 546 4561
·uPHOL&DRAPES forMlcafTl'e Roofing, plumbing, CLEANED? ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleanlng in yourhome. ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpentry, pain ting , Evelyn,6'2-<J128aft. 5
TIP·TOP CARPET& FormlcaCountertops floors, repair/remodel. Floor Care · 960-6266 Custom built & in11lalled, Ff'ee est. 968-2056 aft. 5 General Housecleaning latest cok>ni & designs Reliable-Rererences
BRICKWORK : Small
Jobs. Newport, Costa
Mesa, Irvine, Refs
675·3175
WALLPAPERIHG
rrof. installed, ul roll
hung rre e Don ,
1-639-1429 for ( ree est
Plaster PatchlJlg, int-ext,
JO yrs exp Neat work
S4S 2977 I Paul) -----·
PLASTER1NG-Houses.
uddit1ons, re-color, over
blqck walls. Free est.
LO\< rates 586-4892
\.
looflltt ........................
Leak Repair·ra/eomm
ut qual. mat'l ~labor
Beat any bid.131-9193
IOOAHG
All t ypes, repairs,
decks. Free estimates.
Call BobMS-0769.
Swl>latt.cJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOCAL SANDBLASTER
Lie. lna, reas. No Job too
big/small. 840.79'» --------S.wlilcJ/ AJl ... atta-c •••••••••••••••••••••••
Alterations & Dressmak·
1ng . exp 'd, reas .
54().3593. 646-3393
StemRC~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Portable Steam Cleaning
Engines, machinery-
No crpts 963-9925
Spriltklen •••••••••••••••••••••••
CONSERVE WATER F/C BKKPGSERVICES
AU Taxes-Costa Mesa
Ca 11 646-1.596 /645-9580 C•l•CJ• ACCMllffc Freeesl. 646-'871 HordwoodAoon Own trans. 962·0610 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Acoustic Ceilings+ Roon HARDWOOD FLOORS
FRPLCS built & reraced, Housecleaning done brick /stone veneers 30
thoroughly. Call after 5 yrs exp. 893-3743
••PAINTING-Don't
Call Unless You Cart!'
536·9801 (24 hrs>
Automate Yo u r ,.._.,lftg Sprinkler System
Aspltolt custom band texturing ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleaned & Waxed
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lic.389944 532-5549 Yard cleanu.ps , lree Anytime 832·48111S.A Driveways, parking lot work, 1rngation & re· '
repairs. sealcoating. C....t/eo.cr.t. pair. green belt lndscp'g HaMllHJ
S&S Asphalt. 646·4871 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 851·0129. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lic'd Foundations, Retaining G ,...'-' Haul. cleanup. roncrete
._._ &Ma..-Walls, Hillside Restora-0 ~ removal. Dump truck. -ya ... ...., lion Slabs. Patios . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Q · k 1u2 7638 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Block & Brick. Lic'd. CLEAN-UPS/LAWN wc serv.""' .
Nr So. Cst Plaza. ~ull. pt 642·8387 eves/960-0639 Malntenance-Lndscp DUMP JOBS
time & swing shills 0-4 Free est. 642·9907 Small Moving Jobs
yrs 557·2140 Child CClft Call MIKE646-1391
••••••••••••••••••••••• Gardening, landscaping,
$31.90/WK
pm. 962-8675or962-6786.
SUNSHINE
HOUSEKEEPING
Give your home that s pr·
ing cleanine look all
year-round, with quality
& dependable work .
F r ee estimate, re·
re rence f u r ni s hed,
li censed & bonded .
952-3034 Lic'd day care now thru
June 11. Costa Mesa
area. 646-8428 Hot lunch. C.M. Chris·
Lian Preschool 646-M23 hslH115eniu ••••••••,•••••••••••••• <:oetractor
tree trimming & re·
moval, major clean·up.
rree est 752·1349
Pror. Japanese Gardener
Lawn cutting, tree trim·
ming, weeding 543-8375
Hauling & Dump Jobs
Ask for Randy.
00·84Z7 Mature remale desires
hou se ke epi n g w
Tree/shrub trim. garage respoosibilites for pror
& yard clean-ups. Free p e rs o n . Li v t! o u l Kiss Mm ute Service Stop. • • •• • •• • •••••••• •• •• • ••
Engra ving, Printing ConstructlOn·Alllypes
1 . D a y S e r v i c e 20 yrs exp Free est. GARDEN MAJ NT. Westminster Ma 11 Lac. #334589. 645-S973 Yd Clean-up Tree trim-
Corona del Mar Const Co. ming. 548-8709. 4-8pm. 891·1161 ------
Carpet1ttr des~gn c~ultalion by GeMral 5-rYkff •••••••••••••••••••••••
esl. 557-8271 586-5919
----~----HAULING -& ud en t has H OUSECLEAN JN G
large truc k. Lowest LOW RATES, Own
rate, prompt. 759-1976 I t rans port at ion c a 11
Thank you, John. I M a r i a after 5 P M
646-7698
BRICK ARTISTRY
Pool & spa copings,
bnck pavings, block &.
brick walls. 960-7421
NEW PORT PAINTING
Comm. /tndus. tres1d
Free est Low rates
673-11737
IRICIC & STOHE First Class 1nt /ext paint
Tile, Marble & Frplcs ing, wallpaper. refinish
673-6650 (213)634-0140 cabinets. etc. 979.5294
Custom Masonry & Con
crete lOO's Local Rer·s.
Lie/Ins /Bond 645-8512
Jim, 840.1706 Rod .
MASONRY &TILE
Our speclalty. We solve
your problems. 631-2004
NATURAL
MA RILE & OHYX
Fireplaces, bathrooms.
counter tops & floors m
stalled. 641-1222
Mllll llhtdl
RALPH'S PAINTING
Lie Int text. Low rates
Free est 964-5566
Ft.ne pamung by Richard
Sinor Ltc, ins. 13 yn. of
happy N B customers
Thank you 631-4410
College Student, exp'd.
10t1ex, any job for lrss'
Alex 851·9371, 5.52-0231
PAPER HAHGIHG
DOORS & WINDOWS
Repaired or Replaced
Free est 635-3720
AJI Types Remodeling &
Repairs, top quality. 17
yrs m area. Llc 'd . Mr.
Palombo, 962-8314
design dtrect<;>r, col.or ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAULING AND QUICK ~ketchs, & ald m obtain· For housework. windows, C LE AN · UP Free
ing fin 644--42.89 gardening, paantmg, re-Estimates. 631-0953
Residential & Comm re· pairs, elderly care, rate Wh ed t $3.50. Call 548-9674. en you oe ex per modeling. ttm addit. service or repairs, tum
Reliable, areas or H B .. •••••••••••••••••••••••
C.M., lrvine&N.B. Has Mini-blinds&woods ,wm-
refer. Call546-5195 Rosa dow tinting, vertacles P hone est. 549-0636
25 yrs t!Xp. Free est.
f'ust , neat, reliable
SS/roll&. up. 64.5-6490
Wall Paper Hanging
All work guaranteed
Tem.~6268 Patios. C.OOcrete wrkm The faslesl draw in the to the Service Directory
U c 142Z1773 G.R. Ryan. West. .a Daily Pilot 1n Classified to solve
Gen Contrctr675·8133 Classified Ad. 642-5678. your problem
Do you want your home
cleaned weekly" Call
Jeri, 534·27~ aft. 5.
H ave something you ------
want to sell? Class1r1ed Have somethmg to sell"'
ads do it well. 642-5678. Classified ads do it well
•• •• ••••••••••••••••••• 714 /586·1S91
PLUM BING new con·
s l rue lion. remodeling, Tiie
re pairs. restaurant, •••••••••••••••••••••••
electronic leak detec-Custom l1le U\Stallalioo,
lion Top Hat Plumbing flrs, ktt, baths & related
636 2030 remodeling, free est .
Rnl &tat. Senlcn •••••••••••••••••••••••
Roger Irving 979-6160
TILE INSTALLED
All kinds, guaranteed.
rers John,893-1667 - -Tre• Service
Ne wport Real Estate
agent will consider trad·
mg services What have
you got Lo trade? Bruce
Blomgren, RE 1M AX r.iow·iS-niE: .. TiM·E·t~
Rea l tors, 759 1221 , prune your trees. Call
760 0297 "The Experts" 20yrs
RefllllshiR9 local. George5'8 3239.
• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • TypilHJ S..-.ke J D. llom Refinishing
Antiques, kn cabinets
to'ane paanlmg. 64.5-0664
RooflllCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY ROOFING
All types, free est .
Visa, MC. 541-5930
HARBOR ROOFING
BALBOA ROOFING CO.
Take advantage of SIOO
gas or food give-away
Realtors welcome.
673-6743 673-0403
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Expert typmg. my home,
12112 yrs exp. IBM Sel.
111 960·4977
WeldillCJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Indus /Comm /Restd
Atlas Mobile Metal
548-9507
Wiladow CltaniRCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let TheSunstune In"
Call Sunshme Window
Clean mg. Ltd 5'8-8853
ApartM ... ts u..fww. ts u..funa. Apca l1M11h Uawfw'ft. Vocatioft R.... 4250 l..tah to~ 4300 Office Rental 4400 Co11uMrdal Industrial R...W 4500 MoMy to LOClll 5025
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• R...tals 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Costa MtM 1124 Newport hoch 3169 WHhllilashr 1191 • NWPT OCEANFRONT 3 Male /Female needed to ••••••• •••••••••••••••• LOAM FtHDERS
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •-L1'do Isle bayfront. sm s hare .. Br ... pt. In Cannery Village 450' or 5,000 sq ft or sp~ce avail PRIME NewedS.A. ~N Highest fees na1·d ; .. the
2 Br. 2 Br. w/garage. ••••••••••••••••••• • °' • n lice or shop space 1n on Harbor BfVd . near Own mott,vat 10,920 or Y ..... NO FEE! Apt. & Condo Brunfum.Westmlnster boats & dock Wkly. Newport Beach area . quaint character bldg Warner. This space ad· 5070/SSSO Opt/Sale $53 busi n ess . Call Mr. Avail. now. $535/mo.
2650 Harla, 549-2447. renl~~s-~u;:B~~~rls. & Springdale. $275 . 673-SURF 979·0345. $475/mo. avail May Sth joins a well established 631 .1191 Leonard 7 days at
898-6063. Oahu, Hawaii beaut. F nnmate wntd to shr 673-65229-5 retail store. lt 1s ex 661·9343 -------
Quiet Adults over 35. l or
2 Bdrm From $325.
Beaut landscaping. No
pets. LEEWARD AP'I'S.
2020 Fullerton, C.M
631-0397
WESTCLIFF 2 Br. 1"7 ba ewhFwaahlMd alud10 condo, o'looklng blfl 2 stry c .M. hme. cellent space for add1 INDUSTRIAL MOMy WC!llfwd 5030
townhouse Adults only, orU•fw f tad 3900 golf,ocean.~2667 w/d, r;p, jac, mny xlrs OFFICES FOR RENT t1onal retail, light as SPACE ..................... ..
no pets S550/mo. 1728 min to bcb $280 + . Juda Ground floor omce, 2"'1 sembly, spectally shop. FOR 1 E £SE Will pay 30"'.-+ 00 19-2SK
BedfordLane.M&-7533 E A W I lllo...I D TRADE HOME I N 645 .• 2362 aft 6pm. blocks from beach 315 or inventory storage. ~ for 1 yr on well-sec. DP
*OCEAN FflONT *
Fr pie. panelled, patio,
lbr, S575/mo. 642-0045
" GRASS VALLEY for 3rd St. HB. Asking S22S Could be excellent dis COSTA MESA prop 831-1257 VILLAGE n i c e b o m e 1 n Fem. rmmte wanted, 2 per mo. 536-7533 tr1but1on center Call 642-4463 --------
YEARLY 2 Br. 1 ba, dbl
Laguna/Newport area. Br 2 Ba apt. B.I., age SCOTTREALTY 54G-3700or847-2223 •One 278 0 s q ft Mo01'tcJc!CJ"d ,Trust 5015 New 1&2 bdrm lu.xury ClasaicSpanisbhomein 25·35. Avail.5/15 . warehouse avail forim· ff s adult apt.s m. 14 plans h'll r N Avail now 111· O.C. Airport OFFICE-STORE d T ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. Avail. 6/1. $350. 1_e_v_es __ _ foot 1 commty o o. $300/mo + util. Dys me . occupancy. • wo rrom otAAO 2 bdrm from J~. 4 offices + recept. 525 Sq rt Or 1050 SQ (t 6()() ( · rr· & Sattt.r Mf9. Co. Agl 67~_9000 ____ _ Qulet 2br. lba. gar, pool, _. · CA. adjacent t.o forest & 6'0-3934, eves 673·2957. "" l sq t units. o ice S505 + pools. tennis, Golf Coune. 1.2 weeks Debbie. area. SlSO/ea or make Carpet. paneling. park warehouse space avail. All types or real estate
investments since 1949. D•a Polllt 1126 adults, no pet s. $450
• •• • • •• •••••••••••••• •• 1601D !Sth St. 642-7340 waterfalls, ponds! Gas from June-Sept. Call deal on aUorpart. Clean in g Newport & Bay June 1 •J2r·3Jt per sq
for cooking & heatlng Thom. (916)273-6U8 Male/F e m 5 br. 2 ba hse & readytooccupy (7141 I Sho p Center. 2052 ft •Leasing office hrs.
3 BLKS FROM PCH
1 br , l ba, au utils pd,
$360. 831-1B73
paid. From San Diego nr S.C.Plaza/Frwy. Spa 760-0169. Newport Blvd. C M Mon thru Fri 8-4, Sat 1 Br. $390. 2 Br. $62S. Frwy drive North on p k c ·t u•~h 2 B b . I 556 418l or644·2228 l0-2
SpecMlllilMJ "9
2"dTDs
642-2171 54S.06 I I Adult.sonly,nopet.s.1409 Beach to McFadden ar a y, ... · ron S2 25+s are ult 3187 A Airway. Costa
Superior. 6'S-8684 then West on Mc Fadden golf course. ~15tmo. 641-4913. Mesa. 92S sq. ft. AdJa llldtafrial R...tal 4500 flttals WCIRhd 4600
HwllilcJlmleedl 1140 lo Sea wind Village. thruNov. 499-1.5216 Offlu R..... 4400 cent to Airport Good .............................................. Widow has money for
••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCLIPF 2 BR. 2 BA. (71')893--5198 Oceanfront Condo. Poipu ••••••••••••••••••••••• parklng. drapes, carpel, S575 Approx 2000' In· Ho me w /pool or Jac. 2N 0 T D 's any siz:e
D.R .. fr-plc ,pool,patios.IOOWI• 4000 B:eacb.KaUAJ.lBr.SCSa l617Westclifr.N.B.Wanl allutilspajd 7S<perft dus 'l t OHice. 18101 Wanted approx 611. above Sl0.000.Nocredit
1_A_d_u_l_t.s_._S595 __ . 67_S-_6999 ___ 1••••••••••••••••••••••• rught. 2 Br. $65. 4W·152l6. financial inst. 1000s.r. Will partition to suit =~0~2°2834Cr. "Q" Hunt Xlnt rer 673-1933 ~. no pnGllyT. For action
1 0 · lst.noor.Agent541·5032. 979-3541ArtorSue. · · call A 673-731 cean view, spacious. Laguna Beach Motor Inn, PUERTA VALLARTA Retired Udo Is le busi· anytime
,«a ADULT ..dlri.. LIVING
I u x • 2 b r . 2 b a 985 No. Pacific Coast Avail. May 2.8toJ1me 10_ IOUCIMTH pr..,,.TACULAR MESA ness man going into _...;...._ _____ _
"Versailles" Condo all Hwy. Laguna Beach. End unit 00 the water. H-.-OltT ~ Peace Corps . Sept. Want Investor for Npt
amen J75e.M7·1997 Daily, Weekly, Kitchen Sleeps 2.,, maid service, '""'" HARBOR INDUSTRIAL Desires house or boat lo ba yfront home. Give
• I & 1 8A P11to Apt5
• 01lhWUhft> & 880 \
available. Low winter Elegant executive suites · r f 11 ured lst or 2nd Ve rsailles, 1 br pen· rates. 494-5294. private beach, kitchen. in prestige location. PARK sat or summer or um. we sec
• Poot & Rec Room
• Ci••Otn l1no\C'1o•no
thouse, all amenities, New hotel with d.lning With complete support VIEWS bach apt. References. TD Agl.1175-6161.
$525/mo.968-5133 Room with kitc hen room. swimming pool, services. 440to4000Sq.Ft. 711 W. IJthSt. Enjoys pets & peace. WClftt21·22°1'oYl.td7
• Jo9 10 Buch & Snop\
S Ci I
SEA ENVIRONMENT
% Ii HAMll TON Ii 8
~.I 4SOU
Two houses to beach. 2 Bd
apt. $475 /mo year round.
673-2'32.
privleges. Adults only. etc. $5 5 . 00 a d a Y. 71418:51--0681 ftrestigt r.-w1a 640-96{)8. On your T D. 's Notes
962-7520. 5'8~: 642-5200 • --.-1.1-Costa Mesa. Calif. Newport Family nds 4 S$RatSers-lnvestorsS$ --------1--------1 •DELUXEOfftCES• ..__ 642A46l I .. 1..tola to~ 4100 1 Room cit 2 Room. No Plmg. G_,.,. Bdrm. 21'> ba, 3--4 yr lse. Call Denrusoo Assoc. llllllrf ••••••••••••••••••••••• lease ...,,.ui.red. 2172 Du· v ~T S800 to uooo Dys 673--7314 SEASPRAY. 2Br, 2ba, PAii NEWPORT . '> A 'd d I ·-... ery f'WXW' .,.... 1980 sq. ft Unit avail 975-0888, eves 675-0475 r ..... lc. Rec.•-s""un'ty. M1.....,•'s Day Moving. voa epoels Pont Dr. Adj. Air-porter ly "'pp Lt• t~ May l s l. Carpe t s . 26"k yield , balance ·.. • """ ~ & cut Uvlng expenses! Hotel. 833-3223. 9-12 '"'* as: w _.....,, d ask for Bob Nr beach. ~. 891-6396 COUHTIYCLUI 11 1 ,7141675 8662 rapes wet bar. •336·34• ---------1 $44 ,000. You buy ror agt W., IOttl • Profeulona Y s nee _C_d_M_D_e_IWt-e-Sw-·-te-s-.-A-C-. ------·---sq. rt. •Leasing office $39,000. Due 6 /l /82. · UVIHG Send a measage to Mom 1971 ~ hrs. Mon thru Fri 8·4 luktte11jlR•nt/ 1-793-82'7 2 Br,...., Ba, gas pd, S350 Singles, 1&2 bedroom via the Dally Pllot'it HOUSIMATIS ampl pkg, utll pd. 28SS hsM11bwlal 445 Sat.10.2. finmtc• ---------
+ $350 depoglt. Crpls, apts & townhouses. Mothe r 's Day Paae. 832-(134 E. Cat Hwy. 675-6900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------... -•
drapes, bit-Ins. McFad· From ~10 644-1.900 Your mesaaee wtll ap-Prime Newport Center For store & office space SIOOSQFT l•ktt•ss ISTTIUSTDEIDS
d e n n r Beach Bl. LrgBlurr1coodo.2bdrm, pear in a pretty Oowcr •Sh.-.dU.ilNJ* Office spa ce w /spec-atreasonablerates. Warehouse/Mrg Bldg. Oppol"twlity 5005 2ZO/olNTBHT
AD ULTS l box. For Information Counaelorwlo pel"IOOally tacular ocnviewforsub-500to2700Saft. Cotta Mesa..1. 4 offices, 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ISOO/o COUATlllAL ·nope 1 · 2ba,2car garw/opener, and lo pla ce {.our select your compatible MESAVERDEbR restrooms.11our.light'g, APPLIANCESERVICE
893-4894or646-9243 greenbelt, bay view. meuage call 64 ·H78 rmmte to suit your lease.1078aqlt.760-9204 PLAZA 2 overhead truck drs. & SA LES ... Best & I or2Y ... T..-
THIWHIFR.ITllE secluded patio. $750. TODAY! Ufestyle.Sb~·Uvtn1. HIWPOITllACH lS2SMesaVerdeE,C.M. 120/208 3 phase pwr. busiest service agency This IS .~ • .1~ndli"whic.h I
r 8»0645. 1---------133DoverDrSwte3lNB 54ir. _.121 Close to the ocea n. 10. the Harbor area. Esl. own, & wvwu a.etotm· Luxury Adult 1D1it.s at a · •----------Private ·nt-·-Prefer 631 1I01 Convenient Peninsula -Tri Co n --lt ln M ve Leave message fordable living. 1.2 & 3 ... ......... · location acrou from Ci· 1----------1 · l"\C4I Y c. r. 8 yrs & still growing. pro ·
Br. Well decorated. IA YFRONT Male over 40 No amok· Rmmte wanted t.o abr lge ty Hall. Executive style Space ror Rent in active Turne r&&>062l Nets steady $7-8K per ~-~\elephone sec'y·
Olympic size pool. ligb~-Super posh 2 br. 2 ba Ing, no drink.Ina. rus. condo nr S.C. Plaza. oUicea w/full services beaullful beauty sa.k>n. Get GREEN cash month. Owner relocat·
ed tennls court, Jacuut, r_;nthouse. 2000 sq ft. Share utlla. 556--0UJ Sauna. pool. Jacuzzi. avall. From 215 aq.lt. Any related specialty for WHITE elephants Ing out or state. Very re-
park Uke landscaping. ec ·1 ~Ida. boNat slip Peninsula Point h40/mo Private bath. Available and up. No lease re -ok. Faabioa Island. N.8 . with a Classified Ad asonable price. 731·5375. Owner-Broker wants
$20,000 to 15(),000 secured
by 2nd TD on own N.B.
residence. Principals
only 64,..1817 aft 5pm,
Tom
Most beautiful bld0 • In avai · .usotmo. 0 pets. · quired. Call67S.3002. Pal: (71') 64G«l23. " 675-0105 Priv. ent.ra.oce. no cook· now. $250 + expenses. Call642.s678 EXTRA INCOME H.B. . ing/smokin&.673-4'19 CaUJ)S7-3SZ7or759-0060 AllPOIT 6 hrs /wk. 10 rruit juice From $395.1M6-06l9 Cannery Village lbdrm, machines w. 10 xint loca·
$400/ UM 21st X.lnt Pvt Ent" Ba Nr Rmmte needed n ice DICUTIVISUm lbdrm , quiet, secure. ~~.~~is · Hoae, No smkr-drinker, home in Laguna Niguel Several offices avall In ' lions. 751·0174
w /D , patio . pool. a Male$265.64tl-1036. M /F non-smkr. pro-full service exec. suite A e . ,JL
Mature adulta. No pets. 3Br. 3Ba c.oodo w /fr-pie, , Mohk 4100 fesaional. Call for appt Io cat e d nea r 0 . C . l_ ~ .Jj~ .!.'.~5' 1330/mo. 6'2-8768, pool. aauna. '675/mo. •95 0909 Airport. 7S2·09l!9 . 1tV irv~ 646-2838. Aak for Brent 631""238 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -=:.::...:· :.:.:.:_ ______ , _ _.:. _______ _
Balboa Inn oceanfront. Fem. Buainesa student Office to share Costa bµfVJ;rd ~
Spacious 3br, 2ban ro~r-St.pa to lcll Low winter rates. Daily od.s rmmt.e t.o abr 2 Br 2 Meaa. tl50mo. ,..,J./11ui../1 11,,,,,,.
plex, rrplc, dlshws r , lBr. S30CJ/IDO. l3l-5803 or weekly. Kitchenette. ba apt. Ne&otlable btwn 1 ____ 631 __ ·3:8 ____ 1 j:;(/\Vtf'TI'!:V ~1W'I
"'50/mo 847·7846 1---'----'--------1 890 It up. 87U740. H,JJDUngton Harbour • h i.-, . ..1.
Avail. now 2 Br. 2 Ba. Beaut. 2 Bdrm, frplc, Seal Beach. 2081125--9952 E=~: °1:.ea~ ::cz: ov.~, v'O~ I
Apta. Garages. 1 child balcony,quletatreet. 315 SEA LAii or209/2Sl-lOIU Port. $350mo . In c l .JIJ~~.._,.... .... _...._..,_ c,u{ ,&f>.?
0 K • n 0 p e t s . £.Bay. 91585,"2-8MO • Mom Shar e beaut. Newport Janitor, A/C, crpt " 0
Water /trash paid. S'75· 117' Hel1hu home. Overlook-Panellne. S:O.lAlA.
164·25416or97&.297L Al(t.. •••••••••••••••-.••••• •Weekly rentals now l b b • ~ no fee. e.ar new 1 bl'. a.,. .• buUt-avail. ••and up. n 1 t e ay open P~titlOUI Office Space. ~
r ocean. Your own tarae I wladow oltice1 availa-1 2bdrm apta. fr plc'a, Ina, c•l~~.rapea, ear •Colior TV. •Pbonel in Bdnn. " full bath. Non ble ln tau aervice '-al
mlcrowa"e ov•••, un· port, racWty\ rooma. amoklnl ta50 l45.ao5S ..... • ....... in public \tolUt cowta. ano 227' Newport Bhd. C.M. . ' . Suite ln NewportCeoter.
derttound eec. pn: 1· 1otf COW'M rifbt behind 146.7446 Fem abr apt. C.M. ~rent Avail. Mly 15. M0-5140
/mo. ID-MM>. prope rty, aClulta, oo $115 utll. Rel Aft
1-..1........ P.~ta . nall ::Ii 1 IYE IN NEWPORT + . req. Bayfrontottlcetpacefor .,....._ 917~/mo. o.ra--U1 BEACH POll SlOO PER t :JOPM 1454740 leaae, l imo tree rut. •••••••••••••••••••••••·i-----------i WUK.M54MO • -'apt to ahare wfM •• _ ... __ ..,_u_. ______ 1 Orn1t TrH, Adlt l br, l~ ba. IDCI nr apt, ...... ,.
bdrm, poa1. avaU 5/lt. cloMtoaboPPID1.beach., Yearly.~ Apt. room, Stralabt. Dana Pt., pvt Executive 1pace N.8 .
ii •y 1 u .l· u u 0 r no pt ta or •au t I tltc~ • beth. • ba, $250, l•t • lHt. 1175 sq. ft. r\111 Mf'Viee.,
u•tH2nea. chlldre.n.llaO.m.GU + •MCUrit.Ydep»tt. 7....,_:....., 1roiand floor, amplt -.. -... llha-,.-_.._--1-b-r _+_lo_fl_.• ---._-------0-• 2108 W. <KHnfroat, NB atrt prof reUeman patkl.nf, Sl-35 pe-r ft.
_. """'""' N • w p or t 8 • a c b . WW dr bnut JBr ZBa Term• QitlOtlable. Cab
poo.t.,temdl.etc. a &a Z8r 2b• CCJDdo, 17J..4J.M. bome •t;:glo. M/F, =s..otmc.owttlyto
• T»dlO,JO.TtOI Patlo, 1ar. pool, .... 4JM over ao. ut.U lnel1---------
wuhr/a~, prof pelnl· •••••-•-"•*""••• 'JtO...z ed, ...,, . Adda.. ewport BMdl llOUH. ar--.. --c..--N-8.-..,-
1 IN'. onm ""'L _f!J*, CloH to 1 Sq Prt. Su.mme-r W..tlJ Reetal +~ ' -0 ~-'='~1:ama· TTMIUl,a&·*' =St..~':r= ruu ·a.~Hll :rt ..!!!~!::!!!!!J.!!~:!-.~lillHti lltl pa~~er IWl"'a• t :•PM ... __...... .,, •••••••••••••••••••••• UoM • ... -----------
Oeua dew md double ome .. lo run MrVtc.
tulte DOW nallable at ,.,,_ &xtCWJ" OMN''.
K&WPORTCDn'ltR
~ .... ,.................. llrilJ a.tU1 lbdni • MD Neb prol. M,. .tao
CkeaJlfnat for Wiater ad.rm. uW pd, 9daha; Balboa • ......_. hn 2 Ma. II-. to*'· Nortla j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!il a .. tall. J'v...U.bH • ao P•U. Prom "71. 'Br. qalilt k>t. •7* to ~\ii Cclll or N .B. Ra" *>mtthla& to "11' _,.,....,...l?MIU. ... 'btach.M10et.m.n41 lew./..._... Clua.ifltd .. cJok..U.
Use AMwfr At/ service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
. we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you ca ll
In at your c9nvenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service is only $7.50
week. For more informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642-5678 .
"'•••""'"' I Opp111wdty 5015 AMo•ct•wls
••••••••••••••••••••••• ftLo•nolMllll&F1~ d lnveal $200,000.Secured at
by lsl T.D. Hlgb returns. •••••••••••••••••••••••
s hr p rofits Owner ._.ca I b 5100 760-1318 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HIGHUTUIH
Invest S200,000, sbr pro-
fits with developer. ln·
ve1tment secured with a
lit T. D. 76CH368
ytol.om 502
······················! ZIMITDa.o-
h00,000 t.o S250,000 18% + points. Call: Bkr ..
"3-$788
SCUMUTS
ANSWERS
Stigma -Gleam-
Shaky-Define-
KNE~
There a r e 10 many
forel1n can, It '1 been
three moalhe sinc:e ~
meone baa been hlt
above the KNEES.
Mori~9"o Trwt Mo~1 .... Trwl Dffcli 1035 Deidi IOU . ............................................ .
ofow % f<at.
2nd Trust Deeds Low cost equity loans avail. $20,000 to
$1SO,OOO. 18 yr. loan. AHumable.
Owner occupied.
BANKERS un alWE co .
(714) 731·51M4
An 11lablllhed O.C. Mortaale..,.._I ComPllD1
-
..
-
Lod&.._. I JOO--. U IOHelpW-.d 7 100HelpW_... 1100HelpW_..., 1 100 OrangeCoestDAILYPILOT/Thursday,May7, 1981 •• Adve:~E!man. lhc~a~~;-'u':mbly B~:n~ :!!b a;.:Tpe~~ Clerical ~.,.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~\'.~~ ..... ?!~ ..... ~~ ..... ?!!4? ~.~~ ..... ?~.~ ........................ ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... . ~
Fo. US Toaharettu.11tn1Ufe. elee. eq. WUl ll"aln. Nr Ceal.A!r P\ab-186$1 Sulto ftlX lec"1f1• t DILIV•Y •IHMALOl'flel Interior de.Ian firm. Medical Froatoffiee. Ex·
Off1horeendaln1veaae1. Ocean lA C.M. Gd G,Ootbant&.H.B. t.aauna S.cb mlt. co. Person that knows P IT afternoon• non· teekln1 aultUnt to per ner. Salary to
llE FIE£ Be conipet1blil!!, 2S-40. btnent.t. AM for Wea. nffch sharp peraon for Orange County. muat smkr, mature Uilnklng, VP /receptlonlat. Vane· Sl.200/mo. Capo Valley
Write Jamey ReU 2005 665-M.a. IA TH Ami our front <'Ac. to operate have own car . .,,._5294 w /pleaslna penoiallty ty of dl&Uel, m\llll type area. 49Ml8l
l'...aL . W. BalboaBhid. t:ua ASSEMBLERS We will PIT, MJam. Mon·Prt. switchboard, open 6 6 aood trilhit·muat en· 80wpm. Od bell. rel~1t-.,m; Newport Beach, CA t 1 A j 7 AM NewportVIUa,MZ-5881. routemaU•ualStwttb DeUverymenoverllfor joyamalfeo.eUaround loalrv.aru.879-8680.
64u 671 921163 ran. P.f Y · rertonnel Dept. l .. A.Timettohometln sales work EN · llacGtelO" acbtt. 1831 Beauty Aultt needed for wori&load. Typo 50wpm N.B. 6 C.M. St001$&SO + VIROSCOPECORP CM Wr. ,._.c_..
PSYCHIC PJacenUa,ec.talle:sa bu•y Bch hair salon mln. Pre~ clerfcal bonus.646-0637,646-5844. 6'5-4400forappt. Growlnscompanyneeda
Retriever. Name Sk>Un. -----------ASS ... S Bea•"'uSalon work wk. We offer ad. e very • are ouae wlMIEl.AL ~1 .., '"'
MGR. 1ltt1tore Lido VlU. Req_. powerful, telf·
motivated ln; aelllnJ, a
aelf·atarter, lake chJ.,
fut wortuna. Sal. open.
67H6SS Lott Male Golden Readio11 J ack556-U78 B73-40llJ exper. dalred. 4 day 0 11 •. w h ... _ ':Nllnab~I• .~.m.wSobomiae
vi lnlt Hlptand N PROILEMSm L«. lllsaion Viejo co. Needed ,;al.tered Elec ply • beaelltl. Call lor penon for Part1 rental M1111t type, tam·4pm, know ed&e ol borticure V~ew >'Tract, Lai:':: 0 needt ANemblen .,,12 lrO!o.1.tt with with t appt. TelOlllc Berkeley, atore. Flor Ptr. Apply Moo· Fri. Call Chuck helf!ul, butooc.nec. Call MMGMTPOSmOM
Nl1uel. Day or nlte ta~'k·-r:::1:&.~'~:Y yra. up. Candidates followlna. We~ave ~~e 714-41M·IM01. E.O.E. 2025 Newport Blvd. C.M. (714)673-8110. for terview. $4()-8790 Fabric cha lo, C.M.,
'95-ar7tor49'7·1708 raolve your problem on roust have ad. manual bualaeas. Call963-0099 DIMTAL OfffCE <iEHHAL OFACI JAMITCMlW Anaheim. Xlnt opp
---------1 •service fee or• ''no-dexterity. 1d. eye1IJht, Ct.al( Receptionist N.B Exr. helpful, ad. typina C(ouple needed for a flt Gert,&4MCMO.
Foundfemalebulldoevlc cure-no pay" basis . oeatlnappe.araoce~de-BlllinaclerkForexpaod· EHCi ..... IHG pleauntgrouppractice ab Illy, prortclency employment. Must MOTEL
Trask It Maa. Owner Phone714/897-7LSS10AM peodable.WortrltlnUfe Ina CM import Co. Gd Hydraulic hon rom· 640-1122 w/flgurea, lO·key by •reak English Call , DE5'CCLllJC
Iden. 842·219'2 to noon on I y . No support mrlc1l elec· typing stills ~. Some pany needs person who touch. Xlnl Co. beneflta. 6 4·0$10 or apply In Neat appearance. Com· ---------• w~endcaU.. tronic1. G . benefits. phone exp. a +. Xlnt has knowled&e or basic Dental Hygienistforbwiy Informal ofc. c M. Call person at Newport munlcate well with
Found Schnauzer. m . Only re~{>ona l ble salary ben & erowth math &c blueprint -ad· omce near So Coast Millieart9AM .~5800. Duneall31Backbay0r public. Shepherd mixed, Brin· For a Therapeutic penoo1 teek1ftl perm•· •a ti I"'""""""'"' '"' Pl "'"""u" NB 84 30PM M b 'd 0a 0 t em~ml _..._.a po .... o • ·~ Ing. Irvine. Kendavis aza . .............., · · · : AMBASSADOR JNN die male. Shepherd, usage Y a lie "' ._, P-d c <iEHEl.ALOfffCI wb!te fem. St. Bernard lheraplat. Call Earle ~Y· Ca : Mn. Parelll, IOOIOCEIPERS In · o.50-76.19.E.O.E. Dental AMi.stant. Ftror Looking for a 'lery in· Jewelryat.orelnSo.~oaat C.M.MS-4840
tri·colored m. Shepherd M&-2.ll7 1NPM l·3830 .Newport Beach real Clerk . mature. Ory P I T PI ea s ant terestlng part lime job Plaza needs brt ~ht NANA needed tor 2 am.
mixed, bk • bm fem . ....._, estate development cleaners.3dysprwk. established Costa Mesa in pleaaant .office? person for office duties children. $3.50 hr, 4 day
Allo, Siamese c al. ,,.1,.Y-:f! AUDIO company with projects 646-7621 omce. X·I!Y Uc. & exp. Clerical, for mature ~0.9066 wk. Refs.962-1915. Nhew1lpo~,,~~ Animal ...... :::;:......... Recordlna Engineer & in So. California and --req. 63J.1._, ~rson. Location P.C.H .• L A N D S C A p E
a e er.~-._....W_._.. 1015 T1pe DupUcator, up Florida needsexprd. fuU CL_.,'IP'V-.ST Dent41 Receptionist pt. Bcb. Ex per. a CONSTRUCTION HURSBY . --necessarf;, •§fly in charge bookkeeper to ~ • ,,.. must Accurate typing. 1 M posi· YAIDMAH Found: Olde~ ... Sheep••••••••••••••••••••••• &rson. 1885 y~ark handleau..a..-·-otr,ro-Ener0 etic person with Exp.nec.4dywk.S1200 no shorthand. 20 hr l on . uat have all· ...... ............ • c M "'""'7580 d T •-To do deliveries • help dog, Fem, pup. Vic Bch European lady offers rcleSWte'B2'lrv e. ject accounting. Sa ary good typ,ing needed for · ........ weekincludesSat&Sun rou.o exper op pay"' w /stocking. F /time. blvd 6 Main HB S36-ll38 services to elderly M or open. Call S46-9316 for in· busy managing general Call: 646-7431 benefits. Please call Wkdys Apply in penon
' F, companion help, live Automotive terviewappl. agency . No exp DISKit4 (714 ) 768·47 51 from Tues thru Fri .• uk for
Loet German Shep pup, F out. Call a.ft. 5. 546-0848. SHVICI Wll'TH necessary, but ability to 9AM·3PM. Jerry. Lloyds Nunery, ~~·E~e3wani. 646-6791 or Nun. students avail. for Growlna N.B. Co. neecb F•~;s.c,.., d lealm a m&u.stl.l Attractive Mf ~M. llRI Vi . GENERAL omcE Corpo---"-,_I....... 2038 Newport Bl. CM. _.,..,... individual w/mlnlmum or new sea 00 90 arf a company g.co.IJ\ lSSOD e,o ,.._ ~ 646-?4.4l ' · pvt. duty nurs. Xlnt 5 yrs. exp. in dlagnoelng restaurant on PCH lD benefits. Call Linda at area needs ex per. 10 Growing e lectronics or s.cr.t.ry ---------
Lost: Gold eniagement ref's. S7 /hr. 7»1862. auto mechanic condi· Sunset Beach. Good of· 549·8161 . electr ical connectors, firms needs outgoing witb heavy corp. back· NURSES AIDE
rina. vie Placentia ltFullUmestudentneeds Uonatomanaae200car fi ce s kill s . F I T . hermeti c seals , person to assume groundtomanaeecorp For retirement hotel,
19th. C.M. 646-2171. nlobt time work. Call neet. Good written & _<_2_13_)_5_92_·5534 __ .____ transducer design, com· secretarial duties 3 days dept. Small law omce, Fri & Sat . midnllbl. • oral communication C LOTHESTIME ponents materials & pr wk, Mon·Wed. 8·5. No airport area. 'NB Call PIT". PIT position for LOST : Fem Cocker Mikeaft4PM8S7·1755 skills r"""uired. Salary IOOIOC&lll Now hiring assistant methods -shorthand nee. but ap. Carolyn833-9983 'd 5 11 Spaniel t I --.. Real Estate Inv6elment manager trainees. Duties include design, pt1tude w /ri~ures a an ai e. pm-pm. .. an· v c · 1.1-1... w~ 7100 commenaurate with ex· "'" Newport Villa """ """''l 19th/Acacua960-6023 ~?' ••• :=........... crience. Xlnt benefits. c 0 . with mu It i p I e minim um 6/mo exp. drafting, materials test· must. Congenia omce in LEGAL SECY -'.,.,...__, .
A in Cl _._ f io nd J'ob '"'-tory •-P.O. partnership entities Call642-12.31. ing & R&D lro/·ects. Huntington Beach. SE .... IOR--..R ...auas1~ Lost: !Albino Cockatiel It cc~unt I. e... or · '"" "" d full ha book M b · 1 Pl t t J · " .-•" " nw
P _._ Vi Lin tenor d ... 1.,.. fi1.rm . Ex· Box 1560 r /o Dally Pilot nee s c rge · ec an1ca ng neer ease con ac oante RN 7 3 30 LVN gm ar ... eet c '""'"... keeper to work in all CODER-PTTIME ing degree pref'd . for appt al 894·7257. Challenging position for ' : pm. '
bergh Sch. REWARD ~"'ewrf;ere.q . ~nu.sRtel~apt~ ~:~ruperCMCA 92626 aspects of accounting & Flex hours Good read Qualified candidates Salary negotiable. top secy w/Xlnt skills. llpm·7am,3 days week.
646 5229 ..., Gd~ ~ quarterly financial re· ing comprehension & at send resume to: Mrs Deluxe oles OC airport Pv t . 41 bed Conval. · · Ing ·area. 8'79-8680 _B_a_b_y_s_lt_l_e_r_n_e_e_d_e_d porting. Please send re· tention to details. Will J ans . 2 3 8 9 1 Vi a area. Gd ben. Sal Com· Hoafi. lmmac. with gd
F 0 UN D : German 1---------~ mature woman for7 mo. sume to PO BOX 3050 train. 557-7314 Fabricante. Suite 603, GENERAL OFACE mensurate w/exp. Con-staling. Santa Ana Hta.
Sb rth .___, p . t M .a.cc---bo M w F c N .B CA.....,.,,.. --Mi.salon Vie"', Ca. 92691 8 to 4 PM. Must be good tact Cindy, 752·7551 S.A. ~9·3061. o atn•u OUl er, . ~ _..,_.... y. . . . M area. ~~ COMPANION r Id •-Solid brown. Harbor & 548·3326 i---------ore erly ~~~~~~~~~I accurate typist, 10 key Geisler. CM. 957.0381 CLBICS ---------Businessman seeks p/l lady. June 5 to June 21 -by touch, conscientious LEGAL SEC'Y
Found: small black &
while dog, cropped tail.
H. 8 . area. 856-4832.
Found· Men's bike. So.
Lag. Call to identify
499-5754
USO •••••••••••••••••••••••
Plessey Semiconductors Babysitter . wanted. P /t associate in wholesale Xlnt. cond. SaJary neg DINING Rm. personnel, and mature worker. SANTA ANA
in lrvlne is looking for eves. NB home. Dr 's re-supply. 754-1742 Possible full -part time for luxuri<>U.1 apt. hotel. Salary $833 per mo. Ask Small firm (6 lawyers)
two Acct~. Clerks. Must sidence. IWf>.7078 -offered 64G-6337 Perm . full/part time for Dawn. 645-8830 10 to requires good skills. have typmg ol 40-4Swpm •CAI DIUVERS• ------ -openings. Gd. working 4pro. Type 80 wpm, Mag II ex
& 10.key adding mach. BABYSITTER. Lite Checker Cab COOi conds. Unifonns fum'd --"---------_perience.Jean,641-4901 b~ touch. The ideaJ ap. bskpg, 5 yr old girl. 38 77().0222 For retirement hotel. 1 Willing to train In-GENERAL ~CE
P 'cant should have ac· hrs week, Refs req. Npt 1---C-A_R_W_A_SH ___ I day, Mon. 2nd shill terview ~Y appt. Call Association mgmt. div LIFEGUARDS ~~nge.fi'tesx. P1~~~e aEpxpclyelD_I. Bch. 644-8071 eve alt 6 & 1 Newport Villa. 642 5861 _!!ope at s&l-6115 needs gd typist with ex· W AH'TB> "" p ...._., wknds. C as b i er s wanted . -cell. spelling & gram· Must be certified. 18/yrs
penon: Anaheim & Orange. Call Cooll-Short O,..r DISHWASHEtt I' fT mar & gen ofc. for 5 hrs. or older. Fir-temporary
rLISSEY Babysi tte r Tues. & 644·4460askforNancyor Nights Apply Mesa Neededforconval~cent per day flexible position only. Apply in
SEMICOHDUCTOllS Thun. my home, NB. Ann Lanes. 1703 Superior. hosp. Perfect for stu-Pleasant working condi· person , Del Webb's
*FOXY LADY * 1641 Kaiser Ave .. Irv. Ref. Req.644·7777 CASHIER -Costa Mesa. see Sam or dent. Gd working cond. tions Call: S4S.4834. ext. Newporter Inn, 1107
OUTC"'' 'ONLY ~~~~~~~~~~ Belly. Apply Beverly Manor. 205 Jamboree Rd, N.B. ~ 1.:;; Babysitter. lite hskeep. P tr 1 Th E I' ---------
OFFICE SBYICU
ASSISTAHT
Health care co. ill Irvine has an lmmed. opening
for an individual lo join
our Office Services
Starr. Duties include
sorlin g & deli verlog
mail & xeroxing. Must
be able to lift 8S Iba. &
have a Calif. Driver'•
lie. For more informa·
t1on & interview, COD·
tact : Ter r y Jones ,
714·641-1616, EOE M /F VISA MC Acctg Clerk, computer · Wk d Plum' ba1·~pnp.yl526 eNewapor rts COOK·sm. retirement re ~o Victoria, C ~--General 1-P_e_rs_o_n_n_el_o_ffi_ic_e_. __ _
• '7~· 11 ll * Ulg. ays 7: JO am to • input, typing, use 6 pm. Newport home. Ave, C. . (714)641·1289 sidence in Lag. Bch. hab Donut shop. Early AM LIQUOR Clerk, mature.
calculator. Gd ben. NB Mr. Hood. 644-6141 opening for mature all shift.,no exper nee App· I VICKI HESTON I eves. full or p/time. Also Optometric office. P tr.
area. CaUKathy67S-7071 CASHIER around cook. 40hrstnex. ly· 01pplty Donuts, 1854 -• s tock clerk, p/time. must be neat. outgoina,
A.TlAMTIS BABYSITTER needed. HOUSEWARE SALES hrs workwk Mrs NewportBlvdCM &Auoclates Call:Tom,97S.9744days willingtoleam.647·5927.
AIDE for paralized vk of TeWinkJe School. Apply in person. Crown Collins 494-9458 SpeciaUzlngin MASSA.GE SPA Be pampered by 16
Beaut. Girls. Open
10AM·4AM 7 days
young woman. Mon-Fri. C.M. 2 girls. 2:30-5:30 Hardware, 31117 E . Coast ----Doubleday look Temporarycrerical Ll9UOICLStK ORDERFKJ..ER
7:J0.5PM, must drive. w/transp. 556-0636 alt _H_w_y_.C_d_M _____ ,_ ~ PersoMel Exp d F /T & P /T Mustbeaccurate.Noex-
Balboa Isl. 67S.S652 6pm. Cooks in Newport Beach seeks 540.0400 Hillgren Liquor 2.50 E perience necessary. Ap-
TM lalboa a.... Cllib part time help weekday -17th St. CM ply in person: 511 E. ~~~~~~~~~! AIDH CASHIERS _, mornings. Ask for Dean. GUARDS l'miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml Goetz, Sant.a Ana. ::: lf you care for the needs BANKING 1• ftOW lllritMJ: 640.5313 Full & part time. All --------1 of others, caU the Elder· yr1 I CD areas. Uruforms furn'd. MACHINE l'AllNTERS
Phone 64.S-3433
THE ly & Handicap Care ULU u TDTE M S1tack._C~ Driver, Class 1. Nat'J Ages 21 or over. retired SHOP Onl,qualifiedneed •P&; Service. Muat have car. PA.IT TIME Fastroodexper. Client Co. seeks licensed wekome. Noexper. nee. ly. inimwn5yrsexp Girlfriends 4R91.c9h·aSrd69or3.L_A_s_k. ro r LAGUNA HILLS Summeronly Uldiv. w/xlnt dnvUlg re-APP 1 y . Univ e rs a 1 Imm e d . o pen I ng . ~~ir~h.8;:~~~~s~e1:
....,....... cord for long tenn 81· Protection Service. 1226 machine operator lion. Call alter 8PM H!!~~ AI DE-Work w/han-M~~ay For~~1~~hllts ~~~~;~s~~llMtg~.i~f~. sign.imlr;:EDY ~te~e~hrs~~&~t g-:,in~T~n~.UEg~~~l~eg~: 957·1690
6 dicapped adults. Must 7 1 .... ..t_ .. 050 Wepromot.etomanage-9:J0.5PM TemporaryServices Mon·FrL benefits. Deltronic, p ART . T 1 ME * 7 59-121 * be strong, willlng to as-,... _ _.. ment & supervision from !~~~~~~~~ 637 Bl d H 545·0413 * 529-111] * sist in tasks such as Co.t.d: within. 1= l l B~~v · B HAIRSTYLIST/ Cutter. ~~~~~~~~~! housewives, mak.e thole
24Hn. NowHiring toiletina. feeding. geo. Mr.IUdlHllger WANTACAREER? COSMETICIAN 17802Skypark#lOO Needed immed. Full ~tla hrs =•bJe· MC VIS cleanup. Excell. vaca· Costa Mesa Needed for position as ~ time & part Ume. Fun, MAIDS EXP'D a es reps · or ~~~~~~~~~~A~l tion & inauranre Will accept sharp lltDelMar make.up artist at a EOEEmployerMF&.H easy going atmosphere. Apply to Angie at San Nwpt Snack Co. Call to-:: benefits . United trainee with previous 631·9421 NewPort Beach salon. Work w/ldds &c adults. C lemente Inn. 125 day673-7320
Cerebral Palsy Aaaoc.. customer contact ex-Must be llc'd 1213) Drug Store Clerk. exp Will train if nee. H.B. Eaplandian. PA.a'TTIME
SWEETHEARTS
•ESCORTS• 24 HOURS
Sinta AJ., 546-5760 perlence. Type 20-30 Laguna Beach 654-6155. preferred. Xlnt pay. 40 .,,., .. 8860 494-9233 ......,.. -------~-'summer dollan It fun. •---------• wpm. Counter Help.mature, for hrs . Moulton Plaza ---------MACHINE Pacific Casting is in·
Visa/MC S2!H927
ANIMAL We oHer career op-Huntinetoo Beach dry clearung plant. Top Pharmacy. l..ag. Hills. Hospital terviewlng now for Hiah HOSPITAL portunities, competitive 962-9116 w a g e 1 . East b 1 u r f Mr Dreyfus, 768-3784 WARD CLERK SHOP Schoolish lookinJ people
salaries and wide range ~~~~~~~~~ Cleaners 2547 Eastblu!f lltl--. :&-.._1,.-1..,..4 r / R 1 h Hills H .t 1 . 1 d . f for major mot.Jon pie· Ftr ""'rm nn.ltioo lDcl f ....... fi -: D N Bch .,,,. 0932 s;~ --··-a e1g os~1 a ID mme . opent0g or ex· t al o c lean cut .. -..-0 company -ne lts. r. pt ....... Wt-P~-Newport Beach as a n per 'd . Cent e rl ess ure. 5 • wknds. bather, brusher. LINCOLN ,.,. ,...._,,.. male/female 21·30 with SHE cleanging & een'I as· CA.SHH COUMTBt HELP Needed by Laguna Hills iromed. opening for a Grinder. CM plant. Ex· good smile for com•
c 0 RT s & sistance.Minage18yn. s•v1NGS withmajorstockbroker For dry cleaners. H.B. industrial control Ward Cleric. Full lime eel . co. benefits . merci1l audition .
MODELING N.B. 6«·5463 A near O.C. Airport. Ex· area. 846-4221. m a n u fa cl u re r pos .. 3·U evening shift. Deltronic. 545-0413 Depend ab 111 l y &
.l Rflft ANSWERING Se N & LO•.._. per.pref'd.Houra,8to4. Fulltlme. Will train . Aculecarehospl.exper. ~~!!!!!~~~~~~I transportation a must!
E S
,,.. rv. o A" TypeSOwpm.CaJl:Judy CounterperaonforParty S.~5·1353. req'd . For interview, SS8·8608forappt.10.6 ---------exp. nee. Part• full EQual()pportunity Eckert,S40-8121 Rental store. Ptr Must contact : Phyllis Maint. persons ~eeded
tlme. Min. typing req'd. ~~~£m!plo~yer~M!!/F~~ ~~~~!!!!!~!!!!!~~! work SaL Apply 2025 FASTFOOO Warner, 714·645·5707 . for Steam cleanlllg Co. AFTERNOON 631·0140 EOE 1= = c· --.a.L Newport Blvd. C.M. Must be lB. Pizza parlor EOE M /F Gd pay, easy to learn . ..--~ on the beach No exp Foreman pos. avaR Call •DELIGHTS* Apartment Manager, P /T , Wed thru Sun. DATA&n'RY nec.673-1811 Chris641-1079 tto../Offlc:ajHotel Couple,6Sunrtadultapt. Bankioa Private club, CdM . Ptr days. nex. hn. Will Hostess/Host. Ptr. exp.
* 529 46] I * Hu~t. Bcb. Ok.1ff111~e & NHEWrtA~COUh .,!4;TSb 644-9S30. train. 557.7314 FILE CLERK npeersce0sns, aLery.B1'Aarpnpl~Y. 411n4
MAHAGEMIMT
• mat0tenance s .... re· ewpo """1c ~ as General office wor.k . .. 24 Hn. Now Hiring quired. 213/582-1573. opening for New Ac· ________ ,. Data Entry, lnt'I Client som~ typing req. fo~ pro-N. Newport Blvd, N. B. TRAIMH
MC VISA -'---A-SS_EM_B_L_E_R__ counts Counselor. New USE THE Co. seeks CRT oper. for mo!lonal owc>rtun1tles. 645·6700.
Acct.I .. IRA/Keogh, col· DAIL y PILOT immed. long term 88· No exr~erienc.e req. High
for telephone answering
bureau & communica· lions services. We are looking for intelligent,
depend1ble future
mgml. personnel. Ex-
per. pr~f'd. but not ner.
Will train. Pay sea le
based on ability & ex per.
Many co. benefits & re-
gular merit increases. ll interested, call Mike
Smith L 5'3·4230 bt wn
9 :30AM & 11 :30AM.
Moo·Fri. EOE
1·2 yn exp., Ute electro-lections, & NOW Accts. signm 't. schoo graduate. Costa Hotel Rem.-a..r mechanical aaaembly. exptr. req'd. Salary "FAST Call now. Remedy Mesa area. will be mov· HIGHT AUDITOR
lllllillllUI Must know soldering, commensurate with ex· RESULT" TemporaryServkes ing to f rvine soon . lmmed. opening for
Ml.._.,$ Day speak & read Eng. $t·5 per. Full insurance l6371BeactiBlvd HB Farme r Insurance nightaudltoratlheSurf uml pr br. So. Santa Ana. benefits & paid career SERVICE ~3339 Group. 540-4100. & Sand Hotel, Lag. Bch ..
May IOMt S49·0623 apparel. Please call: DIRECTORY 17802Skypark #lOO E.O.E. to work Thurs. tbr u , Send a message to Mom Ms. Denny Pariaia 50-4'59 ·---------Mon nltes. UPM·7AM.
via the Dally Pilot's Assemblen/Electronica 71~ For Result Excell. salary. Apply to:
Mother'• Day Page. lmmed. opening ror MEWPOlrTIALIOA ServiceCall EOEEmployerMF&.H FILECLERK Charla4111·189f:J.
Your message will ap. final assembly poeltlon. SA.VIHGS&LOAH 642•5678 1 Make your s hopping Large insurance agency
pear ln a pretty Oower E x P w I t h a I r EOE easier by using the Daily bas immediate opening
box. For Information screwdriver desirable. ~!!!!!~~!· !.!!!!!. ~~~ ht. l22 Pilot Classified Ada. for fast'-energetic file HOUSECLEANERS
To ~/hr, car. EWS-5123 and to place your Small friendly Co. nrl:; clerk Yaid company
meuage call 642·5678 ocean. EWS-3832 uk for People wboneed people D •1 ,., A. benefits. Call: Linda at MATBIAL
TODAY l _w_e_s_. ------~~~::=~~ ::: •••••• ~ II y I II 549-8161 ~~~ ..... ?!~~ Want Ad Results 642-5678 DAILY PIL~ • • FOODSERVICE
HOUSEKEEPER CHTLD
CARE-part-time. 3-4 dys
wk. Good pay641·9323
-HAHDUMG
lmmed. opening for
parta clerk, rubber hose
products. must pass co.
physical including back
X-ray. Takioi appUca·
lions btwn 8 Is lOAM on-
ly. Stratoflex, 17671
Armstrong Ave .. Irv.
EOE. A Kendavls Ind.,
Co.
-~ • Classm·ed Adv~• • Restaurant worker, over
~ e s uperv1sor for Classified De\>artment. • 1Ucer ~portion control. L --a-......._ ........... ~-~ INRl5 .18, will lraio for meat HOUSEKEEPER. exper,
live·in 3 dys week. For
older woman. 499-5562
.,
\
BANKING .Experience necessar y. Excellent company • Approx. 7 hrs. Flex.
•benefits . Salary commensurate with . starting time, lOAM · Housekeeper, live.in.
experience. For appointment for interview.. lPM. Moo·Thur .. 6AM· Lovely home. Bch area.
e call tl42_.321. ext 277 . 1 P M Sun . Lor I 's Pvt bdrm, some cook· • · e Kitchen, :Mm S. Harbor Ing, salary neg. Call ---------
6 I~ A · t • Bl .. S.A. 97'9-07·'7 Kathy 5*t8ll; 759-0177 MICHA.MC •• enera SStg1111811 • Front Office/Publilbers Housekeeper/Companion Full~~nme Are you a well-groomed, career oriented
individual and have had banking or
related experience? If so, we a.re looking
for youl
We offer an excellent salary, medical
insurances Including Dental, one week
vacation this year If hired before June 1,
plus working In the beaeh area. Our
Immediate openings are:
\.,
• File CleAs • Tellers
• NCR Proof Operator • Credit Check
-.
• Cultomer Setvice ~ .,
.
............
11141 ~~ ......
l
I
I
' r
"'
Secretary t. A.11 't wanted for local Live ln or out. NewpOrt Beach e Ull e pub. Co. Typing a must. 833-2009. 714M2-88'70
• Executive Office • 957.8522. • IMSTAU.8t5 MEDICAL
•1mmecllale openln1 for vereaWe i.ndlvldual. il FULL 'l'lme, p/tlme. Ans Need extra money? lmmed. openlAt for ex· e a&uat be capable of handllnl fast-pace4.,.9' aerv. No exp. nee. Call: Partllme employment. p"d, penonable Recep.
• varied and lnterettln1 dull• for M"#IP&~. '48-8000 EOE N ° e " Pe r 1 0 n c e Uotd•ll lo b•f N.8. or· execuUve &c personnel admlnlttnt.or. Call:. GIMBA&.OIACI neceasa~ Car• musL thopedic practice.
• eo-m1, Ext. 2T7 foT appt. lmmedJat.eopenln1/full· ~feP!iv:•tof'W'~~h ~: =:~u:~ ·,..:eur•;z • Cl ss•t•1ed o·•:.&. ~ .. -• tlme. SouUaLqun1 area _N_e,_..;wpo;...._rt_Be_a_ch_. --1 tlent•. xln frlnte ~ a I .•~ ~ . . e property ownen ... bene11t1. 14t·Ht5 ror
•Salesperson to handle Real Estate e • o c I a t I o n . IHSURUICI appl.
Development ,ccounts and utomotive Shorthand/1,eedwrlt· SALIS -----------
e accounl'I. Must have at least 2 years. lna, •ood lY1Ma helpful. PBSOHS Medical, f\&D time front •~perie.nce. S1lary plus comrnbslon. Must e Muat bt.oulaotng , Outatandln/ op· ottlct pc19JtJoo. Mluloo
have car mJJea1e paid. Excel.Jent company runonable It enjoy a portunlUM etp' or in· V le Jo . Re q u I rt 1
e btnent.t. 'For appolntme.nt for lnl«vtew. cau e uay :!fke1cd~ -lb ex.p'd. Salary +com· medical, aecn.tartal ex·
• Ni<Sf71, ext. rn. • mer\ n bPJ ~·1 •· ml11lons. Pbone Bob per. tncludiq lmu:ranc. e 11-6 e J:,o~:,tN~eShot,:; Smt~IU-a&A b1\Un1.-.1oeo • ...-., r •• Eweninn .• Commanlt1.Auoct1Uoo. INTERIOR DESION MmMCAI.
• c, .,., " .... c...t.r. • <714>..,.mz. ::;.g:.::i·wu~~r..rn~ ,,_,~o...
Adullt witb oubtan~ln attr active . • .. llALOllRCI df.1411 1'11bloa lalaacl , Type e penonalJllea W'bo ~1 wllh 10-15 Pl'f pe....W ..n.tut weU. R.tlUll, elftdelll. e yur old youth• 1vcnln11 t•9Pm. II 942-mt • wttb leoenl ett,..Urtal latertor ct.Ip ft.rm Nek· exp. PNf. MO-al e ea w betw"n 2Pm to ~pm, Nit ror Lori. e tor bf~-=:,.:.~~ ~k P:~.·~11:f°~: M..Unl .W't. H.a. J"root e . e ca 1 1 II 1 re I• at be I d •/de&alll It follow • back' omc.. Esper.
• Oi'8 C.... • t1H)l'7Mm. up. PIT. JWomN 1". belpfuLM.-
' D "9t • a..o.. aomtlbla1 "•alue m.mo Me4lcal e 330 W. ay ~ • blel Place &D ad In ot1r Loc*iol r0r a riom• ot Fubloo lslaad MD. e Costa Mesa, CA Lott and Fa.and col· J'Olll' ownt Vou'U RDd beek etnct. Ptr6 Taff• e Equal OpportunUy Employer •· u,..., That'• wbe,. peo-IDlllY home• aclvert.lttd tlo• cover•••· &a' • • pte led wbn tM7•n t ... Hit ta Cl111Ull'd ,, DQ, drntlll lllilDd
••••••••••••••• banc(aa"••~•alue. .,,.,.day, 1 t liajed......-i. -; r ~ .-.
_., -
PartTne
ComM'-gYOlllllt c..n.n
Adults with outstandini attractive personalities
to spend 15 hn per week
counseling youth aees •
10· 15 . Eveniqga 6
Weekends Availaf>le. S75 per wk . Cal l
2:30·5:30pm. Mon tbru
Fri 642·4321 ext. 343.
Ask for Lori. Oe:eo.t D Not 330 w. ay Street
Costa Mesa.Ca. Equal Opport .
Empk>yer
PART Time Days. An.I.
serv. No exp. nee. Call:
S46-3333 EOE
PAIT TIME
CiEMllAL Ofll'ICI
Growln1 e lectronlu
ti rm need a out1o la1
person to ••ta m e
secretarial d~ea 3 d11
pr wk, Moo-Wed..._ 8-5. No
aborlhand nee. out a~
pltude w tfiauns a mml.
Congenial olfice In Hunt• tn1ton Beach. Ple1ae
contact Jooie for appt.
at894·7257
PA.YIOU:CLal
2·1 da)'I per nek. Hn.
9·S. Apply: 1980 Plaetn·
llaAve.,C.M.
1 person ortlce, td on
phones • w /people. 2
day1/wk • cover for
vaeatlona. Dependab&t1
It flu. Hra 9·Spl0.
Ml-7417 bet.._, lMP!·
P£8TlCIDE Sl>JlAY
OPE RATOR·Eapu
, w /p .. t contro l •f -
Dllcator tic. "nip pe,J ••
belleflt• .. PIHH c.Sl
<114> 1'1M751 IAM·IP'll.
PUNTS •
Wort lDtha ..... ,...
worldotlaliaior,._,
Ltara to t.are ror:g ~t . loter~l'\f ha.=... '
compHJ ln:: ff\ vtded. Non ... M/llr111·1'ftl: .
i. ,,,,;::;;,
Hnt aoaett.l11!,... ..... tomlU .-l li rr~
.... ll.... .
I
I
I
ltti~ ... ~-""9~ .............. ~.-· ........... ~ .......... ~.!""'4•"'"*"~' .... ~-......... ~ ...... ~ ............ .._.--•• ~·~·--··--··----....-.._. ............. .._~_..,~.._.~._.~_... ........ ~~__..~-----,) ·-----+ • .. • -·-•• -_____ ..,.._ ·-
• •t
b 1161 IOIO Ma.eel 11• IOIO Office r. •• e • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 ....,w.-. 7 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I '1"'• szt IOIJ
W.W..W 7100 W..... 11 W-.4 7 100HetpW_.... 7 100 SD'THI ~4•1 IOOI ** IBUY ** Orl•nulRup,mU1t1eU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··················· ·············-········ ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• la.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20 band woven n&11. lree PIOOUCTIOH llSTAUIAMT SICllTilY Careers tn 1alel, aaJet WANTIDTOIUY ood ~ed Furniture as 1Uver dollar for each c .. h Re1iater. Sweda
TIU• Saadwlcb Mahr hC• Sales p rr Chrilt Cbureh By coaoacemlll&. Salary + I bu y 0 l d Cun 1 • Appllanc--OR I wtll Hll pur~haH. Mf.tlZ2 lllooroe. Newl,y tupeci.
Rubber boee producu, 7Alll·SPM .lllloo .·l'rl. 19CTAL Tb• Sea. Mon ·Frl. Call Tom Jl'iDo-..sat dlamooda l\'Of7 Jade" or SELL for You ed • aervked. sno.
aSuat p ... co. pbytlcal Nl-ml,callaQ1UIM COMSULTAMTS t ·lPM. Gener~I office ST•9Ml!!!!:l•IY collecllbl~ call (?l4) MAl 1Wt$AUC110H GAME SHOW PRIZE 87MZ41 lnchadln1 back X-ray. 8 re u n • r '1 Re n t 1 duUa 171-3ll05 -• ~--97" ....... ,,_ __ .. • 646-16M •JJ..t6ll S I L V It R G I F T ---------Tait In/ application a llSTAUIAMT Furniture Showroom ln Store lo CdM need• .. _ .... ,or Dane. ' CERTIFICATE worth Typewriter, Olympia.
btwo ti lOAM ooly. Need 8111 Person• Wutminater ue1t1l•--------•I 1aleapersoe P /tlme, 5 For 1ale Antique llUYPUIMTUlll SlOOO. Will MU at rt50. full 11olcelect. Alm01t
St r a tori u . 17871 Coolt. A~ persoo. caner orieoted person Secretary daya. X1nt workina con Partner• Deak Vory' Lea 957-8133 544·t21.5orl'l'J.OS.O ne w. Xlnt Cond . IMO
Arm1trona Ave., Irv Mon·Prl. at Stem ror eotry &evel pc19. ln TCW IXIC. da. 2-oed&UY fine cllen· aood cond. 7l•n31·2"5 891·8t4-0 EOE. A Keodav11 Ind , Wheeler. eubea E. home furol1hln1a. S ICllTilY tele. JJhc>cW M"7'82 lor evet. Collectable, lpc atlldent llOWOOD U•'S ---------
Co. Lee, 151 E. Pactnc Coaat Breuner'1 ls California '1 MJr. elec:t.rooJca co. 11 appt. dealt, Ou Alkini 15(). Xlot deckln1. t.20' lonj. Peh IOl7
p /time, 1 daya, 2 hn dal· Hwy • Newport Beach. ~~t:~=~~1:· t 1eeklnl a career person STOC•OtCB Antique Enilillh IM7·00l5ev•. lOX' on band. 55• l tt. •••••••••••••••••••••••
ly, AM delivery, L.A. RESTAURANT Ftr, Pff mimt. ,._,.•or eapand· wbo Ukea a bmy dealt, RAAB leacaddytaOO. 64t-t885 anytime Amazon Red Parrot. t .... I' hll .. llla r l . Coll da Op I • .,.__ 5 piece Spaniah Dinette vear old 2 .. t Times. $100 per week. undwlcbman6counter In& milt. Ret.aUexp. pre· 1 •• 0 ypin1 e1e gra · pty. n .,._..,._, set, lllte new $125. cau POOL TABLE, eaquiaite 'bso 846-• ca.ea, e c.
4truna Beach, .iM·8496.
0
help., ~fl de Care. f'd. Will tra.ln. $6. hr.L..de· ~wp:i'.° w: .. !~lnr tnheedd ~eawrpod rtwBeo ralr.cb1. na~aelnor DepreHlon Gia.ta Show " after epm. 979-1,73 old f uhlooed model . 1.889, 6'2·~. ary 1 ..,_, 752-MOl peodln1 on exper. rull .... " • I i I 1 Pkmo & no--1-0 PIT Liquor Clerk, Apply 0 p/tlme Mons t or an organized, aelr· thualastlclndiv. Send re· Sale, Sat. M1y 9th. , w art at c Pano leg1. • _..,_.. v-. Broadway LJquor. 278 llSTAUIAMT e.:';:30 Ir ~. ~nN!,~: 1tarter who enjoys detail sume to: P.O. Box f30, 10am-4pm. Huntlnaton I bl11e IOla, ~-Curio Slate. Leather pocketa •••••••••••••••••••••••
Broadway, l.aauna Waltrease1, waiter&. , 5PM. Contact: Cindy Ir dklvers~~Uon. Non· Marlton, New Jersey, Beach Women'• Club. cabinet, $75. 10 stereo Sl500 value, aacriflce WURLITZER, apinetle Beach . buapenom.APOl.Ybtwo. Mllla,s91-2:all8.EOE smo
1
e
1
r. """'aUon close 08053 '2010th8'.H.8. COfllOle w. am/fm, SSC>. U95. Deliver Free. model 4410, two 44-note 9AM • Noon," tfaarlte'a to a your peraona11--------------'-----1 549·0206 838·8102 keyboards, 13 peda1
l ... llHhS.. Chill. 3001 Redblll, Blda. needs-Minion Viejo STOCK Clerk ~rt time ~-••IJ:: notes, auto tone control,
Esub. oCllce teelti pro-'2,Ste.#za&,C.M. SALIS aErea . II b f for marine hardware Today thnaSW\ 11 10. AlrSprlng twin bed w. Lonl•u• earphoneJack,aolldma,
feuiooal auoclates . ._-'----'------1 Seadol Computer Corp. xce . ene its s tore . Call: Balboa Free admlaslon. Hunt· bedaprd &c dust ruffle. Sendaomeoneyoulovea pie w /matchlna bench. Uberal commiulon. No RESTAURANT ls expanding. We have packaae. Salary comm. Marine, 549-9671, E.0 .E ln1ton Center Mall. Like new fl.60.64.5·9"2 bouquet of 30 multi col· $400 cash or $450 de·
desk coata. Call MS-7221 Food service worker, vacancies (or qualined with exper. Only lhoae M/F/H •Fwy ~ Beach Blvd, ored balloons.very lov· Uvered.547·1.84S in confidence. Alk tor over 18. will train for outside sales & sales seeking permanent H. B. Natural Knotty Pine Ta· Ing ror Mother'• Day & ---------
Dan WallenUne. meat slicer &c portion mgmt. candidates. Call employment need apply. STUDENTS ble 51" roW>d w/2 22" your own peraonal Conn Caprice ~lux or· Wntclff...._,. control. Approx 7 bn. 714-642~ Sendreawneor letterof 18yrsorolder.Workln Appl..cft 1010 leaves Ir 6 cbrs $325 menace. Perfect for gan.Lknew,benchlncl.
Flex. atartlnl time. :!plication t o : Mrs . movie theatre 8 ·12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '31·5009 every occuion. We de Sl395 644-2506eves.
Reception.lat, Pff AM. 5 lOAM·lPM. Mon-Thur., SEAMSftlSS YI~• 2 38 9 ~ VI a hrs/wk . 67S-4580al\ 6 HARBOR AREA , liver 673-4419 .r_ a..-dy•. Airport area. No 6AM·1PM Sun Lori's Sailmakln&, exp helpful Fabr1cante. Suite 603, APPLIANCESERVICE 7 Hlde·a·bed couch & . -w .... Mocbii 11 1092 typlni. Pbonipenonall· Kitchen, 3l1T1 s. Harbor but willing to train MlsaionVlejo,92691 Teoc~c.. WebuyusedappUance1 matchlne arm chair , Rerria. chair . sofa & •••••••••••••••••••••••
ty Ir neat awearance a Bl., S.A. 979-0747 Imm ed. open Ing ~~!!~!!!~!!~~ Before & after school ··We aell recond. guar. $2 50 b I ue· d ea k & stamp collection Call Singer Touch & Sew
must. Laurie. 752,Slll 1---'---------1 6'S-7950. SICUT""•Y hours. FuJltime durlna appliances. 549-3077 bookc .. e combo $250 962·9858 machlne & cabinet $200.
Rece ptioolst-N ewporl
Center law firm needs
someone w /lite typing.
Call Sheila 840-1560
. aECrt~ST Newport Beach
Bayfront Law Ortice.
Legal el(J)r. not req.
548-2283
•ECEPTIOHIST Growing S.A. company
hu opening for recep.
tion ist /typlst w /pleasant phone
per sonality. Typing
s kills o f 55wpm
Responsibilities Include
typ1n1 or orders, In·
voaces, quotaUons. cor·
respondence etc. Ex· cellent st.artin& salary
w /periodic reviews For personal interview con
tact Cy Simpson at
SSl-2603
IECWTIONIST Ni1hta. Between 25 & 35
years of age. ~ hour.
Call bet. llpm &c 9pm.
Wed .. Sat. 67~ (Bon-
nie)
IECEPTIONIST Full-l ime, Newport
Beach a•a. Must have
good phone voice & must
work well with people
Rel.all Mature person ex· 1---------schoo l Vacations & 640.6252 951-3889 per in.Gourmet s. ... 1frw.u/T0Uor ADMIMISftATIVE holidays. Children llUYAPPLIAHCIS WANTED : Air condi· ---------
c 0 0 kw are o y s To run alleraliona shop Expanding research Center Permit requJre· Les 957-8133 Complete Furn. apt. Bed, lloner for a sash win Sportt.4)GocMk 1094
(2l3)S92-22l2. in San Clemente. Flex•· firm needs versatile, ments. 548-8849, caU bet. sofa , dsk, chrs. love dow. Load leveler or ••••••••••••••••••••••• blehours.'9&-6961 caree r -minded in · 1&6pm. Sma ll f'reeter SIOO seat, lmp & end tbl. All trailer hitch. IBM Elec-WANTED ~uba gear in SAIL CUTTERS-div id ua I to provide _ _..:_______ Washer" dryer,•~ ea. for $200. 673-6720 tric corrective Selectric good condit.Jon only .
ASSEMBLERS Sl.AMSTRESS secretarial support for Te .. _..~ All A·l cond. 646-5848 typewrtier. 751.8967 751-8967
Experience prererred, Boat covers Ad m In I s tr at i v e Sell to dealen, racwry Sora bed ruU siu. Earthy but will train. 631·1842 50129th St, N B. Secretary. Excel. typ. direct via phone, ereat 4' long LeGourmet solid wnes $100/obo. 673-3262 T 'l IBM E TV• lodlo, 675-1823 Ing, sh. & ability lO or· product, repeat buai· maple cooking stand , eve. ypewri er. xec, HI~. Steno 1098 Sales ganlze & maintain files a ne1s, $18,000 w $30,000 w /spice & pan rack, ---------elec, proportional spac· •••••••••••••••••••••••
•lllDAL SHOP• •SEAMSTIESS• must. Call for appt. lat year. Call for in USO. 673-3122eves. ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD Ing, $300. 673-6472 _ Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr
SECUTAIY
For small office Typing
Part tame-Costa Mesa. Bridal shop-part tame.
Prer. exper. in retail 546-1821 SS6-9333
clothing sales.
546·1821 SS6-9333
SALES 70 wpm, telephone.
Career opportunity in general office skills.
sports promotion &sales S900-$1100/mo. 851·9150 ~f.~1\1 Call Mr. Green, --S-E'-C-RET'---A.:..:.-R....;.Y~-
Part lime, 8-12 hrs per
Sales week. 673-6372
&ioyr116g n.P~er? SECIETAIY
The Reader Ad. Dept. of Outstanding opport. for
the Pennysaver is ac· career minded super
ceptini applications for secretary. Excel skills
a part·time sales pos. and organizational
Clear prinung, gd. spell· abilities will guarantee
mg & a friendly smile a successful future with
are the basic require· this dynamic, growing
ments. We will train. Ap. pension firm. Smokers ply : 1600 Placentia Ave , need not apply Call
CM Barbara 857·1204
Newport Pharma -lerview966-<1166 orfurnitu.relorsale:LR, Meo'sw\ngllpshoes, wrnty. Free delivery
ceullcals, 897 W. 16ih St., Refrioerator, frost free, bd R · ~148 646 1786
N.B."•2-75ll,ext.•7 Telephone • rm , D & patio. .azl0.101,-;,xlnt • · · · .,.. .. excellent. like new '250. E hi LAY OM THE IEACH veryt ng near-new. cond $25 pr. 646-8400 Zenith 25" color con~ole 548-8513, 548-4485 Must sell immed. OfCers. " Secretary AU.DAY 0e1· ... n9010 WANTED·Baby slroller TV, SlOO. 645-5795 eves; • 1·m~edia·-· Washer •· gas dryer , ivery....... 8338830v"'"da Ex <--'-'" .,. ""' operungs. .. and playpen, both in · ~ ys. •c. ---··-r Short application. Work clean. works good $75. & Double bed, complete, ood d 1 Electronics co in S·9pm. Mon·Fri, talkin& $85.548.8513,548-4485 goodcondi''-.$75. g con .ony.751·8967 15" Color T.V. remote
Laguna Beach has an tel ....._ D ....,.. t I 6 Id S300 . ed on our e.,...,..es. eep 631·5179, ,,.,. """" Cruiser Red Straiahtba r con ro . m06 o . . 1mm · opening availa· voices preferred Tappan dlx micro wave ~ "" 966-1363 ble rrcu are an exp'd. 53.35 /hr guaranteed t h trol Xt I Mathews rides well S70.
E . ouc con · ra ge rwin oak bdrm set (2 R d ' t I xec cretaryw1thex· Mo re money easily Ont ed 3 .... u. a 10 con ro equip
I I k I 11 Y u.a mos ~. beds), rollaway bed, 1 yr CllTWI port 111 D 1 c e t Y p n g s s possible. Come by 3 L 64().2746 s , ua re· 170+ wpm) & able to de· Ent ll80 N Coast H old I.WO. ~9608 ceiver system 4 servo,
13" Color 1V, remote con·
lrol. d1g1lal tuning, Smo
old $300. 966-1363
al with people, handlel N. Lag Bch. Wkdayswit Kelvmator refrio, $75 N1cadcharger 76G-l86l
d I & S' decorator couch. lo & correspon ence, stat 3pm First come. fir.it Gibson elec dryer, $35 oh MarW typlne. phones & a hired. Wards dtShwasher. $75 almost new, custom T1Han y Club m em ~,......,
variety or admin. duties, ---------1 G quality. stnped velvet. bership, gold card, no •••••••••••••••••••••••
II ' So uar. S46-8672 Off h' Id ca us . me account· TEL.PHONE ·W 1te, green, go . dues required. ~1028 GeMrol 90 I 0
mg or bookkeeping ex. SOUCIT-S R f Fits casual or formal per desired. "" e rig. $150. Stove, dbl room. Sac. less than ,,., Phone-Mate Telephone •••••••••••••••••••••••
We orrer excel pay & lmmed. openinJs now & oven, SlOO O\Shwasher. price. S79S, best offer Answering Machine Non profll org. needs
benefits including our ~~n~~~~~ 5eU:g~ {a~j SlOO. 766-1~ lakes. MS-9447. with warranty S79 With your ~at. plane, car.
4 DAY W OllK WEB 966-0151 after lpm. Micro oven, Lk new remote S149. 7~3791. etc. 'Liberal tax deduc·
Please call for appl : -------'-----• $175 t1on advantage s Te Ion 1 c Berke I e y , TOOL.rUSHEllS 848-<>640 2 high.quality matching Large wood cortee table _2_13_1_654_-234 __ 1 ___ _
Secretary Per sonnel Dept . Califomiabaseddrilling designer couches, xlnt with storage space ISO. New Avon inflatable
LEGAL SEC'Y 714·494-9401 contractor seeks grow Elect Stove, Coming top, cond, super buy at $475 Call 842·5643. dingy c 12'4" >, $850. Sales glrl needed .
Newport Surf &Sport
675-7823 1·2 yrs litigation exp. & ~~!!~!!~~~~I ing foreman for Hwil· hood $75. Bit-in elect both. La·Z.Boy recliner, 1 ., ... 1227 ,,.,. good typing skills req. -ington Beach rigs. Xlnt S good cond, '""00. Call art. Kirby Vacuum. Like new . ...,... J . ...,...7M2
Sales O.C. Airport area, smaU ---------1 stove $35. "t. Andrews •i with ALL u ch l
lECEP'T/TYPIST HELPWAMTEO! firm.Call (714)9S.S·2511. SECUTAIY ~:.~~e~ ~cre~gx~ Church, I.5th St. & St. •5~·~6~31~·5~350~·~~~~~ Will sac._fo:~.~:~~ 1ors."·M1c~kJSmc•/020
Newport Beach law Telephone sales. No ell· Excell oppty. for sharp B k f. Id CA 9 • ..,.... Andrews Rd. NB Thurs = 960 584 ..-f( firm.office.Salarycom S F /T 1 k ' d aers1e ......... or &F i930-2 appreciate . 4•••••••••••••••••••••••
752-0869.
mensurat.e with ability per. nee. Excell. co. e c re t a r Y • ga to wor tn rast-pace _c_a_U_(.;_805_>_:rn_._57_36 ____ 1 ~ ~ ----C9icarocJe S. 1055 eves. Marine Electnciao benerits. Co mmission restaurant. Light typ. Newport Beach comm'I. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·6400 program & profit shar· lng,applyinpersonM·F real estate ore. Excell T....-..S CASH FOR 1928 Antq . Marine Design/wt.all/repair
RECEPTIONlST ing. Apply in person: 3-5pm. 'The Magic Pan. typ1nf & dicta phone Full time employee ReCrigerawrs, washers, FLEA MARKET Gasoline Engine. l cyl, 8 Qual. work. S49-2520eve.
GENERALOFFlCE Pennysaver , 1660 So.CoastPlaza. sk1I s required . needed for wholesale dryers, ranges.Working Nwpt Crest Home hp,fly whlinCront,xlnt loah M--.
Good on phones; some Placentia Ave .. Costa•---------Challenging position ror pictureframemfg.App. ornot 842-lBl.5 Owners cond Craig $1 ,500. ~---9030
typing & light bookkeep. Meaa * * SECIETAlllS• * ~h~al Call: Laila, ly 8:30 w 5 at Fine Arch May 9tb 9-S 213-591·5665 •• ::!"':'r.:::: •••••••••••
ing. Fulltime. Moo.·Fn Sales p tUJ Framing 1.5632 Product Norge r~Crig/Cree1er , Superior&Ticooderoga -2. I . r Id ' Salaryopen.833-9505 Acct ay"n g$14,400 Ln. Huntington Beach. good cond, muslard Newport Beach John Wayne TenntS Club 1 A ummum ~ ing INSULATION AcctAsat/AAdegSl.5,600 .,_ 896-509'7 yellow, 185 837.212J6eve F b h boat, $2$0. Eleclrlc Car. IECIPTIONIST •English & Spanish Sbt80/RE/Fun$14,000 ~cretary Rummage sale, St An· am mem ers •P 1250 642-1.3.53al'l 3pm
F rr . Saks of Irvine. 5406 speakln1. WordProcessing$15,600 PART TIME Tree trimmer, exper. tn llcyca.1 8020 drews Church. 15th St. & $1,000. (1)496-~2 . . .
•S.WOtoSl,OOOperwk. Expd.ConsuJtantOurs Weekend sec'y needed allphasesoflreework •••••••••••••••••••••••St. Andrews Rd , NB Loe lk. he II loah,Power 9040 Walnut Ave, Irv •Pay d:ljevery week. Liz Reinders Agy, lnc. immediate~for busy re· T •. be fi Pis S h "'A b a stc n store w1 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 559-6353 •""" B . ...A. .,._t '"•EOE op pay .. ne its. 2 c wmn .;x;ram lers, Thurs. May T. 9:30-5. ana to sell k.ltchen cab & · · •No er 't turndowns ..., ... v tr.,u ~ .,... al estate fice Typing ca II 7 l • /768·4751 bet boys 16" •· 20" •• ,. ""'" F · M 8 9 ""2 · 31 ' le_.__ Sf, ..... r
D
. Newport/1133-3190/Free .. · "" ~....,. ri. ay • :...,. . van1lles. 30% below dlr ~
RECEPTIONIST :w1ireU tcrt!,~l.esexper. & iood w/pbones essen-9-JPM 549-8553; S.S7·1S66 price. 631·7032 "'-MW. SGT• o•er Required for growing, ..... t1al. Contact Chris ------------------Chevy GMC 15" rims. s 4 0 0 0 0
international company. 531--4501, Bob 644·7020 TYPIST Men's Schwinn l~spd & sewing machine, lamps. King-O·Lawn Croat throw 1 ' O ' W ft r ·
Minimum 3 years ex· SALES-«ITCHEM S£CR£TAIY SEl>IJllrTY General office work, no 1$a100dieesa. ~elu-3889geot lO·spd 821 Presidio. C.M. Sat mower, Sl25 Mclane 6 5-6670, 671-4515 per., word processing, ~ experience required ,... Sam Sp onJ ~281 ed S7S ... 7 """"" ty~ing & good telephone Good comm . Ron , GUAllDS High School graduate. . m Y. . aer • . .,. ·~ '77 171,".a. Tri-HuJI. 130hp.
skills. Neat & organized 63).7032. Land Planning Wanted for the Newport Costa Mesa area. Will be Schwinn Cruiser 5 s pd Scout Rummage & bake Men's ~fl.handed Golf Volvo 4 cyl. 280outdrive
and not afraid of hard Beach area. Full & part moving to lrvine soon. Spitrlre, blue, good cond . sale. Sat '¥... 9-3, behind Cl b Walk thru bow. Seats 10
work . Good erowth aStoJa.o.hn&WUarJl'ynelkkAi"°~rt Deparhnent time, all shirts avail. Good benefits. !"armers $1.50.67~9638 CYC,5th&lris,Cdm Su s :T
2h 3
· &
4
woods· people. New upholstry potential, benefits, Must be over 21, have Insu r ance Group, S:~~l ompson s4o. Single axle American
salary. Contact Mr. for 1 penon ofc. eed I M car & phone. No exp. 54().4100. WWillc)tW.,..102 5 Toro mower, washer· trlrS«00.840-3410
Green &U-9800 take-charge person Exp. " nee. Uniforms & lrain· E 0 E ••••••••••••••••••••••• dryer, garden tools & de· ' . nec.549·2203 Ing au lied tt.o15 h -----·-·-·---alDWOOD~v6'5 Beat quality STAR 21' LYMAN Lapstrak" 1----------1 Ponderosa Homes, a PP · ~· r. -. corator items. May 9, RUBIES r lndl On "' RECEf'TIONIST ma)or California home startin1. Call for appt: TYPIST Xlnt decltln1. S..20' long. 8 : 30, 215 Amethyst, I S20 rom '64:a· Bayboat I/BM Nd.a wrk.
Telephone,lighttyping, Tt~Ll~nnc:!~~c· builder, has an im· 558-1135 GeneralOfftce,P(f.Ac-lOK ' on hand. 55•/ft. Balboalsland Y peratooe. t800.673-2!168orAnsAd
general orrice duties, cepting applications for mediate openin1 lor an SEC'Y l!!VEC. cMuraMcy ~must. 780-8111 648·9885anylime ---------1 Moving sale. Campina #472atfJ42..4300
Newport Beach Law a Sales Rep. to call on experienced Ad · --...A s. anna. -----'------1 •ESTATESALE• gear, toys, books. Lan· Firm. Salary 9800. Call Reader Ad business miniatralive Secretary Career opportwiity with NEW 10' wide 4 panel Fri. only, g..3. Fine anti· cewood Irvine u. Park 20' SIOPJACll M~ltl 955-2411. acct•. for advertising. in our Foward Planning very good growth poten· Typists bronze aluminum slid· ques. ivory, cloisonne, orr Michelson. May 9 and W /Trlr. & 50 channel
RECPTJCrTaY Hrs.areMon·Fri.,9AM· Department. tial for dedicated. prof. ing gla11 door. Still in Hummels, Doulton, radlo.8hrs.onlyonrblt
1 -SPM. Base plus com-secretary who is not Ty•ists 51WPll box value S350 will sell lithographs + much -1-0-· --------188 H.P. Mere cruiser ~r)~~h~v::e'~~r~t miaaion. Cull co. The Ideal candidate afraid or hard work & r forl85 8'wideX2'hlgh, more! 1754 W. Beacon, Elec. dryer $40, Rabbit eng $7500 644-9617 aJ\
pleaaantpersonalltyand benefits . Will train. must pogsess 2-4 ~ears willperfonnresponslbly oa...... ~-'rs used aluminum aUdlng Anaheim.CASH ONLY. case SlO, Desk $100, 6PM
h I So C prof e •a ion a I a P -Secretarial expenence & eHiclently Contact ft.WI ~ window $10. Contrac· Small spa S800. L•" ,...,.3 P1 one vo ce" · al. with excellent clerical Mr Green,&U-9800. G ,,_.....,... '78 Tri·Hull, xlnt cond Builder seeks sharp re· pearance & gd. spelling skills. Shorthand not ----~----r .. IC ~-'rs tor's wheelbarrel S25. arage Sale Sat. May Lo h liable receptionist. euential. Call : Miss necessary. Exposure to SELLAVONFULLTIME U ~ Transit l evel ns. 9th. 25•5 Elden JB , Mltc••••CMa w rs. Many xtras.
4
Variedofflcedut.lesain· Jones,64Ul8ll reale1tateenvironment Eaml&-SlOprhr. Cll•gll11c.o..r? 548-4039 Costa Mesa. Moped W..t.cl 1 011 cyl,SS600f1rm.
49
3-
5375
. elude accurate tyfin&, SALISPIOPll dealred. CaU966-~2Z Loat• ifw• ---------1 $175/obo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _6_-9_p_m_e_ves_. ____ _
filinJ and aerier• ad· Clnli ... 1 D04Js 104 Wanted: Gold & silver ZODIAC
min11trative taaka. Jn PAJITTIMI For Immediate con· SEIVICESTATIOM Opp a l .. f? ....................... ,... THIHUCilST dollara,slotmactune.9. Ir MK·2 G.R. 20hp Mere
exchange for abilities to Eves. le wtnda. in our sideratlon. please sub-A TTB«)AM'T KEESHOND Pups AKC. fi.All.AGIA jukeboaes. P.P. Gary. 3200 F' ..... ""'•" ft function well in a busy wtnelrspiritsdept.Must 1 1 · E 'd I h f' f/ Champ sire. M/F. Pet& Bl I f $35 714 /981·8873.981·6148 · um_....,_ a · office, company offers be over 21. Apply in m t resu.me or app y an xp w t re a t, Use temporary Jobs aa c y c es rom , ---------4. rriend~ atmosphered pe r1on : Peraonnel person. $258/wlt to start+ com· your shopping tool. We a h ow . pvt pt Y . Un le ye le, golf irons, llG u •c G""ul ---------ti
1
D l The B d miaalon. N.8. 844-7151 have long le abort term 213/697·13'5 aft 6 pm. beer signs, gillions or --·12 24 • Reine II cab. cs::rben~a~:fi ~f:i. c!~ri' of F::.:_c:,a~pr. jobs available In the womens and mens Letacomparefn9-4{187 cruiser. 225 OMC out
F t tTbe P I B h POIJEIOSA SERVICE On shop). Ex· 0 .C. A1.......,. area. Week· AAA Home Dog Training clothes plastic buckets u-• ol dr1·ve. Sino 6. VHF rad1'0. a os er a res ey c . eel. oppty "beneCils for -.,..,... Ooet your dog have good ' ' ,.._c ,... Companlewa ror In· ---------ffnllfS mech-incllned lndiv. ly paychecks, quarterly manners? We specialize Jewelry, both quality IMITum wla 101] Stove, sink, head. Runs
t e r v l e "' a P P t . SALIS p /f . UWI with bas1'c electr1· ca I bonus trips. Neve,r a fee. in b b •-11 and costume, C02 BB ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt. Trim tabs. 40 knots. 71'/540.0liOO Weneed3 harp I Calllorappt.~y: •q~_twnen.we 1uns, kltchel\ware. -----· ----with fashio: backJ:>!~ k.nowledce. 540-6300 SSJ MJll: mannerittdop. 638-9265 ch and e 11 er s, cas h CONN Director trombone 100 gal Cuel tank. ll90Q. alCB'1'10HIST to work In our men'a & ~ drawers restaurant with case. Excellent _846-__ «_7_1_846-44 __ 7_3 __ _
W•IHDS women's dept. Salary + Skate & Bicycle rentals St Bem11rda, l M. 1 Fem., quality ~r stools, and condllioq, $100. 67~8052
commlulon, call for and sales. F/time incld rn. L'n-11 mos. $200 ea. AKC much m b m Y'Ail after6PM i0~~-=~1! ~·::~rl cRee:'. appt. ~~~~·.:e:.us~.~~ L~ U \• 11 ':. re1. 7141827-7872 Come! tFrid~· only Roland ~nalog Echo FOR SALE Newport Beach omce. THI LOO« An Equal OpportWJJty per hr depending OD ex· fOMOIAllY P'fRSONNfL SEIMOIS 10--o-'l'-d-e_n _R_et_rt_e_v_e_r_P_u_p-I· 9am-5pm. 325 Esther Sl. DC·20 Sl.50. . gaiifh1~ ~ri~n.ce 1----~------hi~!!E!m!plo!!ye!!r!!!!ll!!!/F!!~ per. Oceanfront Whttl 3721 llrdl.~~ pies, 7 wlta, AKC, S1'5. ~~ta Ana Streets. 873-5128 c~f,uclalre Johna~~: s.......... 1: Work1.Balboa,675-6Sl0 ........ _ 556-7572evea . SOPRANOSAX i h BAYLINER 844-toeO ltda t s Hl&h faatilon women'a Have something to sell? 't;O.E. Ho•eltoldGoodt 1065 · atra g t
wee ya to . apparel store lo Fuhion C~a~a;sl~l~led~ads~~do~it;w~e~ll~.:!2W~a:n:t:A~d~R~es:ul~t.s:::~64~2;·~~78i~========= SAMOYED PUPPIES, ••••••••••••••••••••••• mc)\teJ. Xlnt cond. Only UC.,. ITY9IST J 1 nd .,_,_ .A • AKC 4 wksoJd. Avail ate Waterless ,._..._are. Ur• "50. 8'15-812JO 1973 27 Ft.
1 • •_ • • • • • -ry. comm.. -:< wk P t t H II '-'Na" ~ P (f,t-lpm,Jrvlne. aood beoeflt.a. Exper. Tnlltsl..,,.I 1• v Py. o >'• time Guarantee. Brand OfftuFw•we& Aylrtdlt 133-UM Bobble req. 844-7100 ' & llfM c, I I Hn 780-6008. Ive mae. new. Sac. 979-9388 11"'•• _. IOll M ce1il
llMTALA61NT s..,...._ Looc ,. abort term. Top DOO. 011D••c1 Jewelry 1070 ....................... 7 Giiiy, Heed
for Laiun•'• lead Ina Blctre • t 'c.. • P1y. Ho Fee. New cluaatarttn1. .. ..................... S m I l h . C o r o n a D ... C ., ..
R.E oll\ce. FWJ Ume. •ft• ... _ li•i•+ JAlsob ~~~1~;. lnveatmentquaUtyfacet· t0ypedwrltttd, M1odel 300 T.e.130 Lie. ~ • ...,.5411 ult ror -•' -• .,. 0 n M1u~. _......... ed SAPPHIRES over let 00 con it on. SlSO. Ruth .,..9fwer1t111., FREEi Goodbomumall ea. Your cbOlce. only Call Dalebout Bay • Vot.o• t' u 1-~/f...&.a ••I•• ,.rs••· So. wbt part poodle, 6 mot $150 perat.ooe! 640-8688. ::,~::.·~\,J~r Janet "IEAJ D~Ublf'
-~...... C•llf. Ar••· C•ll Id • rNllln'I FantHU opportunltr. 11 1 41141• 0 4 71 ° · M2·lOl• Orie. deal10. lavender Olllce furn. Muit 11 • MITI i:m~~~~iJ!Hllc llfor ....._ ... 7:l0 -te Jade 1old rln&, w/12. lull quldai. lmmed. Prac· DUii •
Rffept. IDS..ut 4:Jo,. lllll" Poodlea, A.KC, mlnl wy. cut dla. $2SOO/OBO tically new. ideal for "IEAT ocr1M
Newport tarotnce + ~ whlU/1U¥U. Midi'. Ca1h &U-2'7t0 computer co. • oak 2 • llln
U\l lncentive pro&nm. SAL819SOM WAITRESS/WAITER oal,y. t"1942ll Mite.I••-IOIO la1er abelvtnc for com· AMD DIV 9n1yt
'44-2507. Want.eel for aUnletlve ~ w /car f« wkter ti.allet •••4'•••••••• .. ••••••••• puterw, 2 White tonnlca ft Ml UR • ~~~~~~::t Sf.:!~~D= ~.:S i~.:1c::OP;.~ r.;o:_~~1: l•mH ::::;;a::.:i•r. d;a:~ CIEAJ II W!
menu. lll;bconun. New l*taa• .... mo. " ~::' tJ!i::60pe;;!!~: llll~S .._, ~:!1:~ ~-.t'.~ec~ CIEAT PllCE!
• p /T o,. Newport AL IC l!I p & a 8 0 N • ble a -..64 .... -J b l 1 k k Pact.neR.t . .._.... a.-... Work after school and on ...... _.e. 9'J't.G'74' '--------1 ~a• c • u , 01 wor $12.000 mat-.re. p,_ •tom• aft lOAM fouppt. Send a ;::..f:\o ilom c.ntcr w/wti.11.e fonnlca '7J.l••a.. a.tnrut wbdl • .,.._ Sat u r day g e' t Ing new l P11 ub. uTOA 1.op.1 waJnut --------
r-med. Ptr -ln1• IA • OM "Uttom•rt for the area's am.d: Boyt. Girl.I to via tb• Da '1 ol'• ~ W/aeaeitart•I ,... ... 'd n--··-c ... ........ Lii I .., " atll flo--v .... 't ... olbtr'1 Day Pase. aap ovauul ouple Hall for coob • bartta-• • ~ a.ding nltwapaper. Big S Ph• ..... ..o"°er • turH •I .., /aUached wbbel l)Ur'Cb.aae bJ.
den. lll•O•Jl •older ::r:w•tr-rtr prlzM. trtp1 and bonu.a ~;t..:k~nf.:lhr i-----------1 -;.o:; ::-.:.,'1fo::; c~eua. 1 ttQCtneerto1 .. ,. :: UARAY ~\11'1• 6 ablit to "°"It •••· · -• Cil • Cll••• · · "41 box. For tllformatlon _ta_ble_;_. 4D' __ ._~---· __ 1 d.ucer or C!Omp&nb1•
........ '"' ...._ ................ _... ~ ·---·-.. l ·······-·-········· ~••Yo _ ..... __ ~ --64MIZl,•lll Oh ear~)' •.ammer ead lo Jiau 1oar boat la water or dry
I t b o u l I • l o a ..U .-....: llliillrMta Ill .:.-.. ... , ~un"1 ~ ••ea. Is -.... P tr. .::! ~~~~..:! aeu•I• call ld-5'71 bet.her you're buyin1 or aton1e Newport or • ...,~ ,,.,.... OD. WUI tnla. __ .__... WtlcoineMW,........, W/YJ• ..... irN'ilo 1 TODAYI aellln1. Clu1llled ad· DuaPolil&.(l)IJl.UU
t ..-·A*""'" ad PQL i!M' le ..,. HoapltaUlt RoattH 1-.;.:;..~~;..;,;;;.;..:;.:;;;;;.~-I~-------~ vertla1A1 will lel your 8111. ... s.4'1 Call Cana UaUal&.d ._ _____________ _.. ._.afewl'Od,...._ Wl~&ASKI me11a1e lo the rllbl lt' llANOU -C.l.
Pt.ut tttla •~la, Maa.t .... ce lenlet. Car 6 t7pewrl\er Jt'uaamg ptople Call Todayl Pal&MI' Jet..,.. akle. ~-. Ml•lll'I ......_IC.... C'luelWA.iklU-$f'JI "2·MTI. tlO,IGOftna.lll-4111 _;_ __ ;..._~----
. . .......... ,. -' ... -·--. . .. --...
~Poww 9040 ......_forS. ....._.W_.... 9H ........ a.11 W Aaltea,I• 1rt.J Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 , ...................................................................•................................. ! ......... . Q7
~-· Sllver10a FB OF IMPORTANT W"'~ll IMW t712 W.U..... 97·:,· ........ 1 f W ........ UM4 ,UMd ...._ UHCI
VH n' ' ' """"""C.ETO ~·-•• ~ ••••••••••••••••••14••• ••••••••-•...,••••u• • r . CB. ADF. atereo. '"'U.ll., c .... ::r:-..................... ....................... .~ T ........................................... _ ... '°w bn diqhy w/mtr READERSA.ND v....... 77 Md 9tt et...NW t92 PWo 9957 xtraa. xlnt cond. bt,soo'. ADVERTISERS T•uei •••••••••••••••••••••• ;;;;1•••••-••••••••• ••••••••••••••••-••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Terma. ~ The price of item• ,..., • 'I0-'95 VW left • ri1bt '80 Retal Limited, 2 dr, 1977 CHIYROl.IT _______ __.:::re'::·~~ ~:t~ Cd , .. ~· w door, ·11 Wt door. '50 atc, 1t.ereotape, .,., pw, MAJ..llUWA80H l97'FOU
'H 11' Cent\lry, Xlnt claHlfW advr••·tol Mlle Wiit •l &• '' • ~y e~cb. W.wra sty .. wbl pike, tilt, .Utro roof, Auto. trua .. a.Ir rood.. '9MTOWA60M coo d . UHO /080. cohamu don ~;i lD· C,..._........., SANtA ANA nm• tor Su.I*' Beetle level air ride, etc. U,000 pwr. at., tilt whl • Auto. tra.01., AM/FM
,.MZ-__ 011_1._8)'..;._A.:.;ppt=--. _ _.elude ·aay applicable IJS.Jl71 835·3171 • S20ea.5d-t'1'6 m1.20m111 . ..-more! (400llO). ~~~~·:'C:.1~1i'oe~
'79 Glaatran HPV1'5, Uke taut , Ucenae. tranJfer VtlW~flOlllVINOM.Ac-t "11 VW coovt, S7IOO 15K C..-.C •.. ttl $2119 $ZOl5
new,extru a .ooonrm. fee1, flnece cbar1ea, WllUY •USIDIMWs• AUTHORrZED mi, a /e, am/fm ltrk, ....................... n..1•1•....._ n.a•an..._ ~Call19'M'780. feeaforairpollutloncoo-CL•• ... c••s '7UOOU1pd (OI03) MERCEOES-BFJllZ xlntcond Gl-eool~)'I COMT-.....TIMG ,.,... ---------1 troldevicecertificaUona ~ AA '71DOlS/R(NN) DEALER . 20&0Harbor81. C.M. Ford letlh. If/fl/ or dealer documentary ..... D TIUCKS ,7f52illSIR (l07t) 831.1740 495-1700 '72 VW . Run1, needs CMMLLAC7 6 .... _10• 2080 Harbor Bl., C.M.
Cwt.r 9050 preparation cbar1es un-"'" work. $700ora.t We 1pecldae lt\ leasa ~-64Z..OOIO
••••••••••••••••••••••• le11 otherwile apecilled 'll a20iA <9115> 97"'"8 for the bu11De11 ex-'79Cbevett.e.1.7K ml.• dr, ---------
,. •IMMAC28'·M' BOATS bylbeadvertiter. Cloled '19 300D, black/black, '80 Rabbit "L" mdl, ~.dr. ecutivelsproteulonal. 4 spd, am/fm cua. air, ltlOPOllD
• f/umo. plans pre1Htl~ .._...__ I n. M..t laclfllMJ 1unroof, Sl.8,800. Work • ...... s.a.ct1. xlat, $3850913-6583
. from $119/mo. lt\cludll\I c1.'fffc. 9520 P.tOf Yos 98().•M2; bomelM7-2731. ;.f.~~tr.:.~· musUell. O(H.w ltll tlip, 1eaona 714196'-SIMM , c--· '78 Chevy DSI Pickup, lo
-..-....;.-----'----•••••• .. ••••••••••••••• · IMW~Or 76 Mercedes UOSLC, -· mileaae. air cond, ...... ,.. t060 PIETT11ST a..-eo.th metallic blue, alloys, '79 Convert.lble, 9000 ml. HowlllSlockl am /fm casselle, two ,,~·-••••••••••••••••• '57T-ltRD H15HIUYB full aerv rec ord•, am/tmatereocua,met. ~~ tone red with red In· I P o o t S A B O T T d llan i 8 McL.,. IMWI! 121,000/b&t otr. 6'5-2'15, paint. ailllOO. l·M&-0201, · · terior, muat see to ap-
:SAtLBOAT $225. Daya IMTOWH! c:~. OBup, Cam~~ l.yOra.... 8'7S.8638evea. l-164-4960 LL . preciate,takeoverleue ·~~ir,1:,a2 . evenin1s IESTOFFIR! 9i.'1,Audi'1 If Ow,.._ Pim! 300 SD MBZ 1990. Black '73 Bua, CUltm cmpr, nu Z600Hart>or81vc1 or best offer. Call
<e>mUKZ) AakforU/C MGR 17141522-5333 w. tan int., aunrf, en1. brkl •clut ch Costc1~.S40-9100 M&-lSOlafter5:30pm.
PIMTO IUMAIOUT
Auto. trans .. pwr. at. "
brakes, custom lnt~ " Uke NEW! (ll.9033).
$3"9
T11eocb'ea.MM
Ford
2060 Harbor Bl .. C.M.
64J..0010
UTATISALI
CataliDa 27 um. Good cpnd . Wkdays please _ caU 759-4175.
THEODORE
ROBINS
JIMMAIJHO AM /FM CUI, chrome AM /Flil '21150. Alan I !~~~~~~~J Cb 11 I I ln
Vo• •sw.e..a-.. oaAM~ICOUMTY"S .... .,.11 1_ 70 4:ve e or sa e. x t ~ 9960 ..,. ,....,.,.... wbls. $31,000; Ask Joe ,.,..,..,., · ru.nnlDI condition Ask • ,,__.
11711 Beach Blvd. OLDIST Bob tM-5155 or MS-573 77 CADIUAC 1n Sl50 oo MS-785. . •••••••••••••••••··~ •••
KUNTINGTONBE.\CH $ aft2pm. '7•VW SunBut.SW\1'00f, COUPEOEVIW I . . 1 '65 Barac uda. needs FORD 14J..2000 Alum wbla, new radials, Leather int., Ult, ~ruise, Co"ette HJZ work, U OO.
•O CIUISIMG MOW!
La P'itt.e 44 cutter
All trim • Big sav !
N.B. (71•)MS-0222
10b!> HARBOR IH'vO
CO'>TA Ml ')A b42 0010
Mercedet, 1J79 300D, 25K new en&. oew gold met AM /FM stereo, wire ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962-6136 H.B.
TOP DOLLAR mi, sunrool, nu Mlcbelin paint, cherry cond. wheel covers+ lo mild! SHOWROOM COHD. Fury Spt Sub. wa' n. "Tl.
, "'ID E.-a Sales-Servtce-Leuinl tires, all extraa. Xlnt '3800/ofr. 673-3803 aft UBIF831) ,75 T-TOP
"' rvR Role--.__ cond $19 ooo ~963'7 5pm wkdys, aft Sam 55995 P . 383 eng, ps, pb, a le.
:V«ce 5 boat trlr, north
• aail, teOO/OBO must sell,
. aft 1PM (114)1M0-6244,
'O Studebaker Land
Cruiser. Xlnt cood. Sell
or trade. 493-•761 GOOD & CLE & ... -.. ....,, •""" • • • wknda. ower brakes, power radio, trlr lutch, good for
IU'" Rolls oyce BMW Mei 9742 windows, power steering h Un
USED C "'RS! lS.OJamboree with Ult/t•lescoplng au · g. llOO. 546-221S "' N Be h ••••••••••••••••••••••• •74 VW Thinl. Classic, ... ewport ac 640.~ MKGTI xlatcond,aewt.oplsslde steering wheel, air, '69 Satellite, runs great .
'7 curtain•, en1 . eompl. AM /FM 1tereo. rear nds body work, good buy
'67 Imperial LeBaron.
Blk w /blue llher int. 5 BMW l.2K mi, alloys, Yes, a rare MG "CEE" ! reblt, RltH, new seats. w Ind ow defogger, at ssoo /OBO. •97·1845.
Beaut. 18' fiberglass '55 Packard Clipper a /c, fm , 62 cy21.hbitgbbbpe~.?rmance 7 0 0 0 0 act m ,· automatic trans. Snow 494.9707
(213 )$92-5863 Best offer760-0l.50
miracle
mazda
(213)355--0765 aft 5PM + a c a..... coupe. • · • while with Buroundy in· ---~-----
• •ailboat, alps 2. all xtras. Restored F .. t, economical• good $3000/080. 540-6223 lJoWll ~ t · 27 ooo •u I · F s Air " 1 \rfr, OB. Utet, compass, 646-312A C.. 9717 1001o1n1 classic . Only ~ 831.Qm enor. ' m es. m-75 ury port. 'v~ · ... c ...... r ... et .... 75 "" '72 Bug Xlnt -d -s maculate thruout ! •noo. rf, xlnt car *"650 n.....•t. . .... '"' • .,.c. c. ~ · 2150 H•,..a..DOI" • ._~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3900! Cali (714) 857-0001 · ,.,_, · _ .... · ... ·~ 871.e$46 S~rh, Rae•, ...-.. ..,..... 5•5 i.&1 • 3210 Dakota 754-6790 or Answer Ad 832-3220. ext 310 loda 9540 CottaMno645-S700 '77COLT or(714)a&.0507. Av~.C.M. '71 Black Cad. Loaded. #209 ,64.2·UJ0-24hrs.
Nacra 18 s q mtr
Catamaran. Best offer.
759-1354 or 540-4190, ext
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 speed. 497-2653 MGI 9744 $700. Call 759·1301 days. C 9933 Powtloc 9165
'81 "GAZELLt:'' '29 W •.._.TEDI D..._ 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vohto 9772 A.tk for George. OllCJClr ••••••••••••••••••••••• replica Mercedes, Prim "" • 19 MGB 18 000 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 Turbo Trans Am. Late model Toyot.as and ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • mi, over ·71 White Cad. Seville. '71 MERCURY Glass tops, all options. rose yellow w/blk fen-Volvos . Ca ll u s drive. AM /FM cass., #IVOLVODIA&.a Beige leather Interior. co•--•IXl7 Xlnt cond. Best offer.
dera, VW drive train, TODAY!!! lu11rack,Pageantblue. INORANGECOUNTY ! wire wheels. loaded -"' l4'CycloneGreen&whl, $7500 call aft 6PM · Immac cond. $5850 or xtras, 68.000 mi. Lie. AutomaUc, stereo tape, _64_2·_97_5_9 _____ _
w/cover & trlr $1300. 640-0967 bat ofr. 675-5548 SALES,SBVICIE ''Pos h ee··. S7500. power steering, power '78 F' b'rd Es 't lnt (1a)~2eves. '--da brakes, electric win-ire 1 pn · ll
30.
---------4 WMel Drins 9550 fOYOfA·YOLVO evs/waJJ AMD l.IASIHG 754·0822 days. dows & seats, air condi· cond, loaded w. extras
10' Fiberglass Drake. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,_......, ............ --..~..-...__. PHIJ"l '741 OVERSEAS DELIVERY 9917 tioning, vinyl top, tilt incl. am/(m stereo ca.ss.
New. Must sell. 'i'J pnce '80b4 sport truck. Lk nu, ''""-'-1h& ...,""".,...,.,....,. .... 1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERTS CC1Maro wheel. sport wheels. must sell this week,
l200. 536-7134. u n d e r war r a n t y . " .... ~~;; :•;:0.,40 LEA.SE ••••··~;;~-;:i:;;,••• •••• (614377 ) U500. Dy 549·9'44: ev
'73 21 ' Schock, sleeps 4, SU95 /0BO 831 -7634 ; EAILlllE Air, automatic, power $4995 _55_2·_70_1_3 ____ ~-
Berth Avail. Ace~ 759.2465 Tip DIU..r DIRECT! 1966 ~~Blvd. steering. 27,961 miles, ThmCS.rWrd "70 Call 5"-3278 Trwcb 9560 ... COSTA MESA l882V El) •••••••••••••••••••••••
---------••••••••••••••••••••••• n.M.I . 7 4 B 2 l 0. Ht ch b It . 1981 IMEll'-!.EOT $4911 I '71 FOO UI' Sunfish Sail Boat S ial ,.._, Radials, 4 spd, nu paint, ,.~ 646·9303 540-9467 Barwick Imports a.r. TURIOs THUMOEUIRD
Xlnt for summer. Good r--ForYourCar! lownr. $1750,673-8836 OR"'.._.,_.,cou.....v 131-3311 A · d cond. $650. 642·2164l Purchase!! JOH.._.r-... & 5-... ,.."..,... "• • uto. trans .. air con .. "~ "'" ·u Datawi pickup. Xlnt VOLVO pwr stArt. disc brakes
14'SAILBOAT LowMllloge! U11c•U1r~ cond. Rad .. AM /FM. IEACHIMPORTS LargestVolvoOealer ·7:~am~S.7~uto, P/S, & windows, radio, wire c:.1t:~.·~~ 4~o2oo "~'!.::",.:-:,:.:pd. Cos~~bor B~o-5&3o ~~7v~~: J:.1~~:::::.11. N :J: ~'ft".r ~r;1CH in a<tr~~·L~~t . ra 8M..a65. Cl~~ia~ters & more!
T
..1.. 75J..0900 DI ECT '69 c•....,••o Ford 9940 $3999 rlMlftuOUI W• Pay • '72 240Z, new paint & up----------R ,..,.._ ••• •• ••••••••••••••• ••• T._ __ ...__ 1-1..L..
IMh.Slpa/
Docb 9070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Sa•inCls!!! OVER 'hol. anlh. gray, 74,000 Porsct.. 9750 1 owner, clean, aut4t, • 1977 FORD ,...__,.... _.,,
la.look kit'.ciatomst.e'reo.~. '699l2allnew,just drive ---·~·------ca rburator, digital L AGOH 2060 Harbor81.,C.M
Side Ties ror rent.
18·$10/ft. Hurry !
646-4419
M•d'Own mi susp. kit steering ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·,·~~.m]a't'~-·~ -m-ag_s_._3(11--en_g_._2-ba_r_re_I_, Ainu~~·Tt~~wnaWr:· ~~tr: s~ei~r~ Ford mdMocsltltf po'f'MRfl For Your Good pp Chriatopher Ben-It It watch it appreciate. clock. am/fm. Sl700 642-0010
VW, PorscheorAudl oett 557.2792. Askiog $8550 /0BO fir m.995-8989 brakes, AM/FM stereo, ' 639·6263 '73 Xlnt cond. Wht lther. ---------10 120 Garden Grove 81 Sharp '79 Camaro. xlnt r o o f r a c k & Lux, all pwr, nu tires . BARWICK DATSUN
<i.on Juan Cop"t«ino . •• ' ·~ I \ '788210GX,lo mi, GardenGrove530-9190 cond. pw, pb, ps, $4650. more!(201887J. Sl.800.675-4174.
Xlnt Cond. '7 5 Porsche 9 14 855-4865. eves. S29 15 WANTED: Shore moor-
1.ng or marina space for
10x17 ' catamaran
Nacra Uleq mtr ror sale,
VW-PORSCHE·AUDI Eves 67-3865 546-Q'l.48 445E.CoastRiway '70 lHS. Good cond. '69CAMARO TModonloblnt ~i.UHd * C'-•· MU 'IO at Bayside Drive flat 9725 '67 912 wbt, rblt eng. nu Needs paint. Sl.500. Call 1 owner. clean, auto, Ford •••••••••••••••••••••••
831 -3311
• Best Ofr. 759-135• or -'· :WO..UIO, ext 30.
Slips a vailable for quality
boata to SO feet. Riddle
LUV l/J-toll Std&e Newport Beach 673-0900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sea ts. am trm Cass 557•6964 mags, 3(11 eng. 2 barrel 2060 Harbor Bl .. C.M.
'78 1318 4 dr Sdn. Xlnt Clean in & out. runs carburalo r , d igital 642-0010 N~J?l1~
with dual rears! Ideal Premiwn prices d c ll bef 1 con . .. ore pm. great. $6(!15.67S-34i. ......._ u-.......1 clock, am /fm $1500.1---------l c for landscapers, etc paldforanyused car Ph 968-22S38ob -•· -9958989 '78RancheroGTw/every D LLA (Ser. 6056). (foreignordomest1c1 Iola loyce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --·--------• xna Incl cnme control ~
• Y acbta 67~9137. ... .,... .. ,
T-714 645-0222
OMLY $5991 ln good condition '10 Flat Spyder convert.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._.... 990 I Ct..•rolet 99 20 / f a t k c B • # D E A
am m , r . .
HOWAIDca..,.... SeeU• Fint! tape, s tereo, S2195. 1 EAL R IN U.S. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe cm per shell
DovelcQuaHSts. 637·0510 Im ROY llRl•rntr 1971 CHEVROLET wtblt ins, all cpt'd inter, .
NEWPORTBEACH ..... 9727 CARVER -MCWA motorcycle carrier etc
.,,...,.rt .... IJJ.0555 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROLLS-ROYCE MltMf'S Day Auto. trans .. pwr. st & _ss_.200_._c_a_ll_S48-_l_4M_._---' I HO CADILLAC
197'FOllD YISfTYOUR 1MtJamMrff brakes . air cond . & '73Rancbero ,..._. ... ," Mar 1°"9 more! (161916). COUPE DE VILLI
F 150 PICKUP ORANGE COAST \'----..J.,...... Send a meaaage to Mom ~-99 Sl600Qr best orter <604ZBJ > A t · · h D ii Pll · _.,. CaUS48-3008aft5PM
uo.trans ,pwr.st .. a1r l888llarbor Rlvd H~DA. ClOSEDSUNOAYS via t e a y ots Theoc1Drtltobilt1
•••••••••••••••••••••••
s 12,595 9120 , •••••..•...•..........
Cabover Camper, long bed mini truck. '825 or
bst ofr. Extras. 645-6384
FOR SALE: '73 Chevy
~T Camper Special
$2000. •94-8120 .
'70 OMC 1i,., T factory bit
Camper. Xlnt cond.
44,000 ml. 8 Nu tires.
I )3,300/0BQ646-S433
Coleman Tent Trailer.
· Slps 6. Good condition
l&00,897·~
Motorised .... 9140 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MOPED REPAIR
Your moped can run like
new. Fut service. Call
cond .. AM /FM cass. le Mother 's Day Page. --.... '65 Ford Galaxie. Fixer
more!(EJ21644). Cn;;ta :\lt>saS.W0330 HEADfi)UARTERS Saab '760 Your message will ap-~
$6299
••••••••••••••••••••••• pearlnap ..... tynower 2060Harbor81.,C.M. upper $300 /obo. Call ....._., .. ported TODA. Y!!! · bo~t. For !~form ation 64J..OOIO afler5:30pm.551-8l.2S. The~lobllta ;;;;;;••••••••••;;•0i UMIVRSITY LEA.SE and to place your ---.7-1-C-H_EV_Y ___ ,U.coln '945
H bo Bl C M ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALESli:SERVICE DIRECT.I message call 642-5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 206-0 ar r ., . . TODAY! MOMTICARLO '79Linc.towncar,loaded,
642-0010 ...... f oa.::u 1981 Sill AMC ~~uc~\les, loaded. xtnt cond .. xlnt main·
'79 Ford pickup. 1 Lon, M tmf' Da r-MCTRUCIS TUUOs ••••••••••••••••••!!.~~ tained, best offer.
l be k •-tool bo I $ y • 831-80318-5 wkdys only.
um r rac "' x-· 28SOHart.orBlvd. 1972 AMC Hontet $3995 es. new tires & rims. w_, I Olll COSTA MF.SA Spot flll a.t WCICJOll '70 CONTINENTAL
_IS000 __ ._754_-7_995 ____ 1 Send a message to Mom 540-9640 IEACH IMPORTS Economic a I 6 c y I. • Loaded, asking $1000.
· 7 7 DAT s u N p . u via the Daily Pilot's 848 Dove Street engin e. autom atic Jim Sutherland 642-1.2168
am/fm . radials, S9K mi. Mother's Day Pase. '77 Blue Accord, Eng. NEWPORT BEACH trans., power steering, 9950
K 200 /0B067 ... -18 Your message will ap-rec . overhauled. Nu 75J..0900 factory air conditioning, M•rcwy ~ ~ pear in a pret.l)' flower tire•• brks. Am /Fm 8 AM /FM stereo w/8 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'86FordEcooolineP/l.Jlo box. For information trlt. (714)4U-UU; '80Saab99GLI, track tape, radial tires. ORANGECOUNTY'S
ml, Id cond, auto Sl400. and t o place your 4"·3'22 A-1 cond. FM-cassette new brakea. recent LINCOLNFtN-MISETRCURY
Call 5U-1800. mesaa1e call 842-5678 $7800. ~ tuneup, LOW miles & ---------• TODAY! 'T9 CVCC. S 1pd, red run1 well. (833FZF). l-"-lllC4lll DEALERSHIP
'71 Toyota Hilux. P .U. w/suoroof, AM /FM 8 '75 99LE, auto, am/fm, 11500/best offer. Call · ~ 83i.Qm
Com pl rblt. En1 .. l•--------i trk, re1 or lmlead gaa. cass. Micbelln1, '5M, (1H) 77•1076 weekday ~ "?'411/J••
clutch, trana, etc. Orie. Sb~'! ... rE wUIN o,,!.,! .... ~ uc~ or 17.000 mt. lmmac cond, SoeOOO. Call Answer Ad evenln&s afte.r 6 p.m. & 79 et.Ty LINC. ot..N· -MERCUR-Y
FOXI MOPED l200 paint. ~. ~ """'"' iu .. "'"' We l I ma Int U 9 2 S', #467, 642-4!MS. 24 hn. weekeoda. MALllU LAMDAU Good condition. you want at Low Blue MS 2IZl A t ti _._ t 16·11 Auto Center Dr.
V-9570 Boo'" or lower. Dave, • s.b.N 97 '2 hick 9910 u oma c, .. ~reo ape, SD F Lk F · 8(2..7235 -· .. p ower steer ing & WY· orestex1t
Larry, 645-3529.
---------••••••••••••••••••••••• 631-4621 ._ 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVINE "~-"'--....,_. • 2D · brakes, air conditioning, 1.....-Cvdn/ '76 GMC Loaded. Custom!~~~~~~~~~·•••••••••••••••••••••• 76 r , auto, air, tape 1979 IUICI( tilt wheel, en.me con· 130.7000
Scoofen 9150 p_ain1 &intr. PS/PB, AC. AlfaR....-970 '67 Jaguar3.8 MK US all deck. $2,000. RIVI~ t r o I , door l ock s .1---------1 ri~··••••••••••••••••••• Ster. Cfaeaer whls, lo •••••••••••••••••••••• orig. very well main· 673-4424 Loaded Inc. auto. trans.. (999WRJ> '73 Capri Auto, A/C, snrf. 91 Yamaha 650 Special. ml. Reg gas, sharp, best tained Must Sacrifice Toyota 9765 air cond., pwr. s,., seals $3695 Gd cond. SUIOO 557-t!Hl
2d00 miles, Uke new, ofr. 754-1533or •93-6300 LEA.SE 846-8570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & dr. locks. Ult,• much dys ; 5'5-9697 eves.
Sl800,9!"2286 '72FORDWindowVan. DIRECT! 114 )(KE epe, xlnt, must '79CorollaSRSUftbk,AC, morel (ll.8U5). Mmtmg 9952
'tOSuzuld G~ l Tm Mil, best o(fer . .e9-2883, AM /FM ~reo, radials, $1199
• aM . xlDt cond, fairing, 646-7076 1911 •• 11!.a. _w_k_M-__ 1192__._ ____ , =nd. $'950/bstofr. T'Mo~...,...
eafe aalrron. $1500. AW""' rvirv
..... , .....•.••..•.•..•
'66 Ford Muatana, fair cond. Needs body work.
ll,000/080. 8'2-7083. M$.51'77,6'7M7l2 "111 FORD l:iO Van cstm SPIDaS ~ , t731 '79 Cellca GT , 'ftba .. 2060 HarborBl .. C.M. ~ int/palot many extras •• .. •••••'-• .. ••••••••• .... ca. 64MOIO
M_._ 't U 3 11 -coo '""~"'"" --'11 Mad A"' 5 pd Blk. loaded , Cln ~,...,_,.auto alr ta ...... rcyc.e ra. er. ra • _.., ............. 1e.•CHl~OITS a a vr-• • ' S6'95 /0BO 831-7634 ; •---------"' -· ' ,nu r ns, mtd qu t.anka, custom, ....... W__._..
9590
511' ...-brown, macs. 1unroof, 77 IUICK ~~~~~~~~ crpt, amlfm cuset Xlnt
9500.•41·9375 :••••••=••••••••• N-::~R~~CH ~';lf.~~'::,k~ TS9·246S llVllRACOUPI 1975 CHIVIOLET cond. $3200.ssz.mo ....._.._,S./ WEPAYTOPDOLLAR 752-09"'°' '75 Toyota CeUca GT Automatic, stereo tape, IMPALA •75 Must.an& Ghia. SR,
.... "'h:c-f 160 for top used cars-MffceM-9740 51pd, beaut. con d . power 1teerln1 Ai A t t · od Loaded .. __ .. .,. -..A t• • $3400 /0BO. US-8926. b k lectric ta • u 0· rans., all' co ·• _...,. •. -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• forei1a. domestics or "11 Sspd, coavert. Mech ••••••••••••••••••••••• u" .,..... ~c1o"' e _,_ •eclalll pwr. st. & brakes, Ult 67~~. m.X14 WI CAM SILL clas1lcs. If )'OW' car is A·l. Nu paiDl, flad lnjec. •HIW 'II Mn• ....,........,. wUJ "'· ... coo on· wbl. •morel 0•7723) --~------r
YAA• LV. enxRtr5~1 clean. aee u• $1SOO/OB0t4MIM 24 ... ,.. +SD • ~-------;::: =ril, vinyl Set" 'H Mutt. lookl, NDI
..... --• ... t7 SAft$Ul:lll 77CBJCA•T $4791 TIMla•n..... :::~M:-~d>'~~3•0473
· ·~ •••••••••••••••,...... Eute ..... Llftbeek. a ,oao ml, tood '9rd RENT: 22' hut. mtr -"72 Audl 100. 41pd, SlOOO TJlAMSPORTAnON cood, .... 7llMIN7 2060Hart.or 81.,C.M. 'It Moat. 302 hardtop,
t.ome. aa.. e, M&l·coot. 1 or bett otter. CON8l1LTANTS 642..GO to 1ood condition. $1400.
UH /trk. + I • m l. 417J.1TS2. 64Mnl TU/IM7..tll5
•-· . #te.o.-,t~ IMW t7'2tm ... .._ ___ ..,.iilllll SEIUSFIRST! '•Muatint.poclcondt-
T ......... ,,..... t7'-21o0 s•LUNOYOUR MAUHOWAl.D WebaveagoodaelecUon UOn.moG.AakforMltcb
·-•••••••••·•-••••••• _____ .:....;.......-..;....._...;;..._1 rorn..a.t 1u:acmaT YOLDWAeee ~rof.:1 • US ED •U05or111-n11>
T1' .. 1I Camper Trallilr Bu=••Deal WIPAY L 1 I ti r Ollll•••• 9915 (1W&),for1mlcu..... In ODmtf... t-1e1w·.-It _ ... ~.L • H 1!_~8 0
..,.,..,_.., ComelelU1'1'oUJJ, , c:ii1.-.::.. __ .,._ ..,_ eom-'17mcl ••••••••••-••••••••••• ,.utt.e,nc.. U ••-ll1D•11 forcee aale. 'T7
.... IGMI ""*·~· __,.. Red Cutia. Cpe. m VI • NPR11 fJ 2Cloor,a.ulamltk,ndto. -i ~--~--&.•ii ' power 1.teeriDI • ... ' v•• ...,.,_, _,_., 1T<lr.\':lr· ~l "°'i:~..,..1.INC W.nU.. ~ ooatn>I. -======= ml. 91110.mt1•
tn·lftl m 1111 Uk....._ (-.n> 76 ~ '10 Cutlau Broqham 13731 H..,. IMfl 2 + 2 , • c yl , 1004 Sid. l7JOO or take OYtr ~rden Grew• mll•••·· a /c, radio, ..... sawrmo. ,LMded, trauftrrabla warren~. Vt ... .-..-~.
Sff ·1517 or 73MOeO.
1910 CADILLAC:
FLEETWOOD
IROUGHAM
<325ZBW>
S13,995
1979 CADILLAC
SEDAM DE VILLI
(453WWZJ
s9595
1979 CADILLAC
ELDORADO cou"
(80340())
s12,995
1978 CADILLAC
SEVILU
(358VOV) . .
s9395
1977 CADILLAC
SEVILLE
C8S5SPKI
, .. .,,,
' 1971 CADILLAC -
COUPE DI v1w:·
(793VAZ)
s7995
1979 CADILLAC
SIVJUI
(711YBO >
s 11,995
I t79 CADILLAC:
court DI YIU."~
(761WKT> '
s1495 .,..,
..
l
'
Orange Cout BAILY PILOT/Thurtd1y, M1y 7, 1981 ·
~--------------....... -..-~iiiiiiii;;;;=::;;;::::::::-----=---~-.-~--...::~-----------------=-------...;..il~
............. with
e 1.6 Liter' cylinder
•' Speed Transmission
• Rack & Plnlo Steering
•Front disc pe>wer drum brakes
•Mini console
· • Reclining passenQer seat
• Fold down rear seat
e AM radio
• Radial tires
• Rally wheels
•Side body molding
AS LOW AS
* SUGGllTID mAIL
DISCOUNT
IOI LONGPIE
SAUPllCE
1980 TRANS AM
T·TOP
Automatic. power 1teerlng, 4 ~ disc brake•.
tilt, crulM, custom Interior & ~ (863ZUA).
51995
1978 PONTIAC
TUMS AM 4 ,,_
Pe>w« llHrlng & brak ... NNFM ~ tape. rally
whMI•. tilt. custom lnt«lor. (111145).
5 12,284
s I 0,684
10.00 .
...
ECONOMY RATING
u.. ...... ~ .. ....... _,._ ......... _,.....,
••• I R•tne -4JWl1'f ~. trtp ........... _.._ ,...,,.
..._Ac'-' ......... wfft,... .wy ... leu.
IUMPLI COUPE #200117
AND
Plus Tax, Lie. & Documentary FM
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
S.lt price SltS 1>1111 IH, he & doc ftt 99S dOwn 1>lu~ 311 90 •••· S20 00 ooc ltt .ino 10• ••t '" ·• •o•
IOl•I OOwn N Vmfftl of IO I 90 Cull or tr•<Se SI 12 01 Pf" nno for 60 month\ F onAnc t' <"•'"''''
U S20 lO APA 20 xr. dl'f~red oav~nt l>flCt 81 S2 20 on <tOP•oved cred•'
1 RAN D PRIX DIESEL ECONOMY
RATING
DIESIL-AUTOMAT1C TRANS.
U.. tMM 11....-n fer ,..,..,1 ..... Yovr mil ....
_, _., .......,,,.. ... ''"""' ~. ,,,, l•ft9fh
eft4 -"'-_....itt.ftt. Act-I hlth-y mil ....
wflt ,.,.i.a.ty ........
EXAMPLE 573122
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
1979 PONTIAC 1975 CHEV. 1977 PLYMOUTH
VOLAllV-6 LeMAMS S.AN V-6
Automatic. air cond., power= & brakes, AM
r.:tlo, whit• tide wall tlr•, ). . ~
1974 AMC
MATADOI 6-CYL ~
~tic. air cond., power ltMflng, vinyl top, tilt.
onty 11,000 mll•. (eoeKYR).
MALllUWMOM
Automatic, power ate.ring, air oond., AM radio.
(338NKK). · ..
~2495
1977 POWTIAC . G~PiDu Automatic. air con , power .inctowt. A¥/FM
...,., i.pe, r .. ly wh ' tilt. CfulM & much more.
(534SET).
Automatic, power 1tHrlng & brak8a, air cond ..
vinyl top, AM radio & more. (145314).
1972 PONTIAC
FllllllD ISNf
~utomatJc, air cond., power 11Hrlng, power wlndo~ AM/FM tfeteo, rally wheels. custom
Interior. \935EYE). '
~95
. ..
l ;
i
(
IUJCI CUil
THURSDAY. MAY 7 1981
Beached whale
Laguna artist fights clock, funds
to complete 170-foot-long mural
By STEVE MITCHELL Of•Delt¥........... .
When Pope Julius II commissioned him to paipt the.
ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in 1508, Michelangelo didn't
have to worry about cleaning up his mess and moving out
at 10 a.m . every day because the chapel was fuU.
Things were easier then.
Not so for Laguna Beach artist Robert Wyland, who
must put up with 20th Century problems as he paints his
Whaling Wall adjacent to the Hotel Laguna.
THE 24· YEAR·OLD artist can work on his 170-foot·
long sea mural only four hours a day -from 6 to 10 a .m .
That's when the operator of the hotel parking lot says
he needs the spaces taken up by Wyland's scaffolding for
parking. .
What started out to be a three-week project might
end up taking twice that long, the good-natured painter
s ays with a shrug.
There are other problems with which Wyland's 16th
Century predecessor did not have to contend.
Like what it"s costing him to rent the scaffolding
($200 per month), generator ($170 a week>, air com-
pressor ($100 per week), and airless sprayer ($40 a day.)
•ND THAT DOESN'T count the money he put into
buying 35 gaUons of custom-mixed latex paint for the
massive mural.
• * • • •
-11111111 llllY PINI
UH ANGE COU NTY L AL II <i HNIA 25 CENTS
(See WHALING WALL, Page AZ) Robert WyLandappliesmid-morning 'facial' to Laguna Beach 'Whaling Wall' mural
Go . Jo c _ourt in county; go to jail
Parents kept the faith
Slaying of missionary· son believed 'will of God'
By PHIL SNEIDERM~N
Ol .. o.t., ...........
It was noon on Jan. 19 in Lan·
caster, Pa., when Chet and
Mary Bitterman learned their
f Ideal son, Chester A. Bitterman
II , a 28-year -old Bible
translator, had been kidnapped
by leftist guerrillas in Colombia.
Chet immediately w'8nled to
get some guns and a boat and
. head for South AJnerica to free
his son.
"I felt I had to do somethin1."
he recalls. "I felt like smashing
somebody or something with my
fist.
"But as I struuled with the
question of what to do, a Bible
verse kept forcin1 its way into
my thoughts: 'In all things live
thanks, for this ls the will of God
After struggling with bis emo·
lions for awhile, the elder Bit-
terman reached for a pen and
·ff oDle loan inte r e st
ceiling hits record
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
government is raising the in-
terest ceiling on federally In-
sured single-family home loans
to a record· 15.5 percent, the
Departme nt of Housln1 and
Urban Development announced
today.
The change, which takes ef·
feet Friday, covers fixed-rate
hom e loa ns insured by the
:Federal Housing Administration
and the Veterans Administra-
tion.
The old celling of 14.5 percent
was also a record when HUD
:raised the limit to that level less
·than a month ago. ·
· HUD Secretary Samuel R.
Pierce Jr. said the increase was
nece11ary to keep FHA· and VA·
backed home loans within com-
petitive range of c·onveatlonal
mortcaces. The latest Federal
Home Loan Bw Board figures
showed conve1atio11al private
mortiqes averagiag 15.53 per·
cent in early April.
Pierce said interest rates in
private credit markets have
risen sharply since the April 13
increase in the FHA-VA cell·
lng,and "as a result lenders are
reluctant to make mortgage
loans based on the current al·
lowable FHA rates."
Assistant HUD Secretary
Philip Winn said people selling
houses in deals involving FHA
or VA backing are being forced
to pay substantial premlum.s to
lenders in the form of interest
"points." And that discourages
sellers from dealing with
prospective buyers who want to
use FHA or VA.
"The high number of points
causes a genuine hardship for
sellers of homes, many of whom
did not antiqpate havlaa to pay
this additioaal amount. of money,
when they arranged to sell tbelr
homes with FHA or VA finapc· inc." Winn said.
· Oits~er of Rosener
stirs coastal· shock
By STEVE MAABLE ................
Shock, aurprlae and un·
restrained enthusiasm spread ID
Oran1e County today followtac
word that Newport Beacb •·
vlronmentalist Judy Rosener
baa been removed trom t.be state
CoM&al Comm•ulon . • Jin. ...... , • Udo ........ .
.......... ,.... ...... of
ta• coaaaf11loa, ••sc-Mcl
15,..... ...... Nici ....................... AIMIDMJ lptaUr Wiiie
-·· I 11dw. •'9111 e1EJll1r1811 ... ~ ............... r .. ,.-. ..
... , .. 111 .. ....,,.. ....
UC lnlM Glllee, :1t ..... lire ·~ ........., . ., .. .....
The
paper instead of a gun. He made
a Ust of things for which be
could be thankful.
· 'Tbe first thing that came to
me was that God prornlMs to
care for his own," be U)'I. "I
knew Cbei was in God's hands,
doing God's work.
•·And God is big enough to
keep His promises ."
During the young Bible
translator's 48 days of captivity,
his parents' faith never
wavered.
Tbelr beliefs were not shaken
even when the news arrived
March 7 that Chet Bitterman
Ill's slain body was found in an
abandoned bus.
"We have come to feel that
Chet was born for this ." his
father says, "that God was
grooming him for His own
purposes.
"We didn't think it was to
have rum martyred, but It was.
So we've had lo accept that."
The Biltermans talked about
their loss and their faith in an in-
terview at the Huntinaton Beach
headquarters of Wycllfte Bible
Translators and the Summer
Institute of Linguistics, the or·
ganbation for which their son
worked.
The Blttermans will
participate in a pro1ram Satur-
day in Anaheim to honor
Wycliffe founder W. Cameron
Townsend.
The couple remember their
son as a man always eager for
new challenges.
He bad taken bis' wlf e and two
young daug.bten to Colombia
and wu preparina to work with
the Cari,Jona people when he was
taken captive by cuerrillu who
claimed the Blble uualitina bf.
(See BIBLB, Pase A!)
Deity NII ..... !If Lee....,..
Mary and Chet Bitterman, parents of slain linguilt for Huntington
Beach translating organization, never wavered.
Mail ballot gets
.split c Ounty vote
Stats say
criminal
rate 95%
Orange County Superior Court
statistics released today show
that 95 percent of all criminal
defendants were convicted in
1980, with nearly all cotnc either
to Orange County Jail or state
prison.
''These Orange County
criminal justice figures send a
clear message to criminals that
they should know the courts do
not go easy on them,'' Superior
Court Judge Philip E. Schwab
said in a prepared statement.
Both Judge Schwab and
Presiding Superior Court Judie
Robert E . Rickles were to
participate in a press conference
discussion today on the meaning
of data complied for inclusion in
the California Judicial Council's
upcoming re~rt to the governor
and state legislature.
In his statement, Schwab said
the figures indicate that "when
a criminal defendant comes into
the Orange County Superior
Court, it is highly probable be
will be convicted and go to jail."
The statistics show that in
1980, 1.3 percent of all criminal
defendants were acquitted and
3.8 percent bad their cases cl1a~
missed at the request of the
Orange County District Al·
torney's office.
About 95 percent of all thole
convicted were sent to Orange
County Jail or state prison while
5 percent were gjveo probation.
Those figures closely match
stati$UCS compiled for 1979.
Schwab said that the numbers
indicate that "sentences are not
reduced and very few <defeo·
dants) are placed on probation
without dolnl more Ume beblnd
bars. These figures show that
the court.a mean busineas.''
1111-1 CWT WUTlll
Partly cloudy ni1bt and
mornm., otherwise sonar
throush Friday. Lowa
tonlcbt 50 along the cout,
55 inland. Higbl Friday
mid 809 at the beaches, 14
to 78 lnland. .
lllllTIUY
1'1N ,,..,.. 411•'-tMI • ""'""., ..... , .......... , . J.IU'' .,., ftltMr "'"'9 at J.1t.. c1o ... 1 .. nw ,,,.,.,.,,.,.,
lfftn ....... ,..,.. ...
.. . . ... , .... .. -......... ' .
• • ••• Ortnge Cont OAJL v PILOT/Ttunday, May 7, 1981 .•
Brenda Bitterman and daughters Anna Ruth, 4, and Esther
Elizabeth. 112, were left without their husband and father.
From Page A1
BIBLE TRANSLATOR • • •
ganization is a front for the CIA.
a charge Wyc liffe officials
strongly deny
The Cari1ona people had been
young Chet's second choice.
His father recalls that Chet in·
itially wanted to work with an
obscure Colo mbia tribe that
may have killed two of the first
three people to make contact
with them.
"This was a real danger. but
Che t was ready to walk into it,"
his father says.
The Colombian government
would not allow it, however,
The young Bible translator
was not t he man originaHy
sought by the guerrillas who in·
vaded the organization's Bogota
living quarters in January.
The Bible translating group's
local director was not present.
Because Chet Bitterm an s poke
Spanish fluently and appeared lo
be in charge, he was given a
chance ts> kiss his wife and
children and was taken away by
the armed intruders
"When Chet was captured. his
fa ther and I came to the con·
clusion independently that if the
g uerrillas had to have a witness
for J esus . Chet was the one to fit
the bill," Mary Bitterman re-
calls.
"We think God had a job for
him to do in his captivity," his
father adds. "We feel sure he
was sharing the gospel with his
cap\ors."
The guerrillas said young Bil·
terman would be freed if the Bi·
ble translating organization re·
moved its workers from Colom·
bia.
The organization refused.
"Chet wouldn't have wanted
them to pull out. and we didn't
either." his fathe r says .
SLAIN TRANSLATOR
Chester Bitterman 111-
During their son 's captivity.
th e Bittermans recei ved
m essages of s upport from
around the world.
"We're convinced that their
prayers were not in vain." the
~Ider Bitterman says. "On a
human level, Chet may have lost
his life. But we believe that
God's not finished in this. We
haven't read the last .. chapter
yet." I
The Bittermans have seven
other children. Craig, 21, has ap-
plied to Wycliffe, hoping to
become a Bible translator like
his slain brother.
His parents say they wiU not
try to st.op him.
Reagan awaits vote
on budget slashing
WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi-
dent Reagan. looking forward to
House approval or his budget-
slashing blue print, crossed bis
fingers for good luck today and
said of lhe anticipated vote:
"wonderful, just wonderful."
With a vote expected later to-
day House Speaker Thomas .P.
O'NeUl Jr. conceded the number
o( defectors from the
Dem()(ratic party Is "extremely
high:"
He said it Is conceivable
Reagan could win by 90 votes in
a chamber where the Democrats
hold a ma]ority or 51.
S.J>S. Delbert L. Latta, R·
Ohio, and Phil Gramm, D-
Tex.as. sponaors of the measure,
conferred with the president
before the House convened to-
day and predicted a victory of
ORANOI CO.IT
landslide proportions when the
House votes.
Reagan, posing with Latta and
Gramm in the Oval Office for
photos, was at first cautious,
crossing his fingers and, when
asked if the administration
would win the vote, saying, "I'll
just settle .... •·
But Latta said "it's goina to
be big."
Added Gramm : "The preel·
dent's efrorts turned our hard-
won victory into a hlind1Ude."
"No doubt about it," Latta
said. ''We're eoing to have a
unanimous vole on our side. I
can't recall a vote Qf tbl1
ma1nitude on our side."
Earlier, O'Nelll conceded lbat
•'only the Lord himself could
save this one" for oppotlUon
Democrats.
D1HyPHat MAIN Off1CI.
>JO Wttt...,. M., C• .. Mew, (A.
ThomM P. Hal•y f'lollMw
Aobett N. Wffd ...........
M, Thomat KMVll ...,
~urphlne
Clw ... H.LOO. ,,...........,..,_
l::d 8chulrntn
~~
INll .._: ... IM,C:eetll ,_..,CA.**'
IllOUrll Sands
IRA liuriger striker's body carried through riot-torn streets
BELFAb"T, Northern Ireland
CAP> -Under rray leaden
aklea, a hearse bearing the cof-
fin of Bobby Sands made a slow
fun e ral procession today
through the riot-torn streets of
Belfast, packed with tens of
thousands or mourners for the
IRA hunger striker. Hundreds of
women carrying yellow and
white wreaths followed the cof-
tin at t.he bead of the march.
Sandt' pariah priest issued a
call for reatralnt "ln these
critical days" during the Re-
quiem Mass, one or the blHest
funerals in Northern Ireland
since sectarian violeftce erupted
11 ~ years ago and in which
nearly 2,100 have died.
More than 1.000 people. many
wearing blark arm bands,
crammed into St. Luke's Church
In the West BeUast CathoUc di•·
trlct for the Mass.
Arter the service, the light oak
coffin, closed and with a single
candle on top, was carried out-
si de where so me 20,000
mourners wa!ted in the streets
of the Catholic Twinbrook
municipal housing estate and
the surrounding hillside
Six hooded Irish Republican
Army men, wearing combat
jackets and black berets
formed a guard of honor and
draped the coffin in the green
white and orange flag of th~ Irish Republic
A Britis h army helicopter
symbol of the light securitv
clamped on the city -hovered
overhead.
Amtrak tells subsidy cut fears
Caltrans Director Adriana
Gianturco wound up a two-day
train ride today to get Califor-
nians all aboard her campaign
to boost proposed federal sub-
sidies for Amtrak service.
Unless Congress increases
present Reagan administration
propos als, s he claimed all
passenger trains will be stopped
in the state. Local fares and
state s upport couldn't muster
the cash to keep them going, she
said.
Among the endangered runs is
the San Diego to Los Angeles
route, which has seven trips
each way per day. The trains
s t op in Orange County in
Fullerton, Santa Ana and San
Juan Capistrano.
The rout& is one of the busiest
on the West Coast.
·' lt's important that the people
make their voices heard as votes
are being taken," Ms. Gianturco
said Wednesday in an overnight
stop in Bakers field. She urged
c itizens to writ e their
Congr essmen to pus h for
From Page A1
ROSE N ER • •
taltst, was re moved from the
South Coast Regional Coastal
Com mission in a power struggle
earlier this ¥ear.
Reaction to Mrs . Rosener's
removal is varied.
"She created her own political
following with counter-culture
environmental extremists and
anti-growth people," said Gil
Ferguson, director of CEEED
Californians for an Environ-
ment o f Exce llence. Full
Employmen t and a Strong
E cono m y Through Planned
Development).
"She was an embarrasment
to the Democrat leade r ship
and held property owners in dis·
dain." Fe rguson said .
L o rraine Faber .
spokeswoman for the conserva-
tio n group Amigos de Bolsa
Chica, said she was "disturbed"
by the move.
"Our group has always been
supoortive or her and her work,"
commented Mrs. Faber. "We're
dis turbed that Orange County
once again will take a back seat
to Los Angeles."
Mrs. Rosener was the only
Or ange County resident on the
state commission. having been
appointed by former Assembly
Speaker Bob Moretti.
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather, a member of the South
Coast Regional Coastal Com-
mission and a frequent critic of
Mrs . Rosener, said she was not
surprised by the action.
"I've heard rumors for some
time now and, I suppose, she has
too," Mrs. Heather said. "She's
certall\ly made some powerful
e nemies."
Jerry Collins, spokesman for
the Irvine Comoany, sa!d news
of Mrs. Roaener's dismissal
took his firm by surprise.
··We believe s h e was a
hardworking and fair-minded
com missioner,'· said Collins.
"And it seems to us that since
she's being replaced by Mr. Nut·
ter, this indicates the change
has 11 ttle to do with her
philosophy.''
Mrs. Rosener sunested t.hat
her opponents shouldn't be too
quick to celebrate.
"If anyUtlne." she explained,
•"Nutter ls a stroDser ~nviron·
mentalist than I am. Those that
are lookine at this wttb glee are
probably not 1oing to be any
more satis[ied with him."
She added, "I feel lood about
the impact of the commission on
Oran1e Couaty. I think it'• been
positive. It'• been a privilege to
1erve."
Iran asked
for tuition
LOS ANGELES CAP> -USC
and UCLA ·~· flllna claims total· Ina abou\fnS,000 ac•lll•t the 1ov-
1rnment0Uran for unpaid tuition
of lranlu •ludeoll alld for otber
1trivlcea pco\'lcled for Iran p.rtor to
tbe revolution there I.ft 1979.
The clahna wUl bt preHnt.cl to a n l n t ·member trl bunal
eate bll•b•d under Januer1'• •tr._. bttwetn tht Untt.d IUtelllldJran.
The •ma to tie flied br USC total .... '800,000. 0( wtUdl aoo.oeo tator\he unpaid tultionot
about 10 lran6am who..,.. ltlldJ.
ta1 at their l l0"'1llD•t'1 •· penH. TM ~Wml to M flied bf
UCLA tOaaJ aboutl t'N.OIO.
T, _,,
enlarged subsidies
Amtra k spok esman Arthur
Lloy d said to da y that the
Reagan Adm1nistratton proposal
is for $613 million for the 1981·82
fiscal year The Carter Ad
ministration e1:1rlie r had pro
posed $995 million. he said
Amtrak originally asked for
$970 m1Jlion and scaled down the
request to S853 million. Lloyd
s1ad
The curre nt Reagan ad.
m rn1stralion proposal would al·
low passenger trains to run only
a long the Boston-New York·
Washington . [JC .• corridor,
which accounts for about SO per·
cent or the passenger traffic.
Lloyd added
The one.way cost to ride an
Amtrak tram from Santa Ana to
Los Angeles 1s S5 20 The tn p
fr°'71 Santa Ana to San Diego
cos ts Sl0.35 and the one-way San
Diego to Los Angeles fare is
$14 75
Santa Ana officer dies
Cause of death of William F . Sir ks , 32, unknown
Santa Ana Police Lt. William
F. Sirks. 32, a Huntington Beach
resident who receiv4'd numerous
commendations for his work .
died Wednesday at Westminster
Community Hospital. Cause of
death is unknown
Mr. Sirks. who joined the San-
ta Ana police force as a patrol
officer in 1974. had been promot-
ed to lieutenant in October 1980
after serving as a narcotics in·
vesligator a nd a patrol sergeant
Funeral a rrangements for Mr
Sirks . w~o received the Purple
Heart for his military service in
From Page A1
Vietnam, were reported to be in-
complete. Peek's Mortuary in
Westminster was in charge of
details.
Before joining the Santa Ana
Police Department, Mr. Sirks
was in charge of security for
Costa Mesa High School and was
a r eserve d e puty with the
Orange County Sheriff's Depart·
m ent.
He was an Army infantry
sergeant and he reeeived the
National Defense Service Medal
and the Vietnam Service and
Campai.9n medals.
WHALING WALL • • •
Wyl a nd says he 's trying to work out the parking lot
problem with the owners, adding that the longe r it takes
him to comple te the wall, the deeper he'll go in debt.
So far, contributions lo the Whaling Wa ll have
amounted to only $500 and all that came from one
generous couple.
"Sure. I'm still accepting donations," the youthful
artist grins. ''I'm really going in the hole with this thing."
But even if he does n't break even with the mural, he
thinks it's worth the effort.
HIS MAIN CONCERNS are the preservation of
whales and sealif e and the presentation of art in public
places, especially Laguna Beach.
When the predominantly turquoise, blue and gray
mural is completed, it will show a 60-foot gray whale a nd
her calf. a couple of dolphins, some sea lions on a rock,
and detail work "authentic down to the barnacles."
Wyland says.
If you're interested in seeing the artist at work, a nd
maybe tossing a couple of bucks his way, you can find
him 20 feet off the gr ound, leaning against the wall of the
Fahrenheit 451 bookstore. air compressor in hand.
But you'd better get there early. He's cleaned up and
gone by mid-morning. ·
Riglll f ace for buffalo
Mr Sirk!> earned a bachelor's
degree 1n criminology and a
master'.s degree from Cal State
Long Beach
lie is survived by his wife,
Sha r on. and 2 year old son .
Eric. both of the home address.
ha s mother and fat~r. Gerry
and Charlotte S1rks . two
brothers. Trey of Orange and
Paul of R1vers1de. and a sister.
Laura Porter of Concord
From Page A1
MA I L ...
As an example. she said there
could be· numerous legal prob-
lems posed if the Postal Ser vice
were to s udde nly discover a
number of ballots lost in the mail
months after an election had been
decided ·
The GOP leader said there
also would be no way of knowing
1f the person who was sent a
ballot was actually the one who
returned it
I San· 01(~go offi cials said elec-
t 1 on wo r kers compared
::.1gnatures on returned ballots
with those already on file to pre-
vent fraud l
Mrs Lundberg said that
because of her concerns. she
would "rebel" against any use of
m all balloting in Orange County
atthis t1me
Pope. however. said that even if
it was shown that postal ballot·
ing was not as cosl ·effective as
touted. 1t was still a good con·
cept if it generated higher elec· ti''" totals.
· T d like to see it tried in Orange
County,·· he said, s uggesting that
experimentation would show
whether it was a usable concept
here
0 Ison said balloting by mail has
been used on occasion in smaller
elections in Orange County. WASHINGTON (AP I The day thattheoldlefUacingbuffalo
fact that the buffalo on the In was turned around for art1shc However. he s aid most cities in
terior Department stationery reasons. the county were so-called general
faces right now instead of left has law communities. meaning they
nothing to do with the poltltcal Baldwin said he and Wall de followed state regulations and
o rientation of secretary James c1ded to change the stationery de-guidelines. He said there was no
Watt. a department spokesm an sign by adding the department's provision in the state elections
15ays. sunset seal and putting the buffalo code to allow postal balloting in
Douglas Bald~m said ~ednes_· __ a_bo_v_e_rt_. _______ __._ ___ t_h_e_se_c_i_ti_e_s ________ _
C'fir
give her
something sh_e' s
always wanted.
.Pearls
~·
, ..
;; ;
•": i~ •'
.......... -----------~---... ...... -... -·
Actor Pat O'Brien, an old Hollywood colleague of President Reagan, was co-host
with Nancy Reagan at a White House gathering to honor 185 foster grandparents
O'Brien, 81 , starred with the president in the film "Knute Rockne."
Entertainer Lena Horne (left) gets hug from actress
Debbie Reynolds backstage at New York's
Nederlander Theater after performance of Miss
Horne's show, "Lena Horne: The Lady and Her
Music."
Politics 'like
heroin habit'
ll 's a good life, Herman
Ta l madge s ays , tending
garden, jogging and fishing.
But the former powerful U.S.
senator says the addiction to
politics is a hard one to over·
come.
Talmadge served 24 years
in the Senate before being de-
feated in November after a
battle with alcoholism and an
investigation or his finances.
"If I'd kept a diary, I could
have written a best-seller,"
he said in an interview. ad-
ding he had no plans lo write
a book ·
The 67-year-old poltician
says he"s enjoying the quiet
life al his home io Lovejoy,
Ga., at least fo r now
'"Politics is like heroin ad-
diction it's hard to shake,"
he said.
J ohn Young and Robert
Crippen, who rt ew the s pace
shuttle Columbia on its suc-
cessful maiden flight, will
meet with President Reagan
at the White House on May
19 (Related photo. A4 l
The National Aeronautics
a.nd Space Adminis tr ation
announced that they also will
s pe nd s everal days next
month at the Paris Air Show.
Gregory R. Aorig, who pre-
sided over Massa chusetts'
schools during the turmoil of
Boston school desegregation,
will become president of the
Educational Testing Service
in September.
Anrig, 40, announced that
he will s ucceed John W.
T urnbull, who is resigning
after 11 years as the head of
the Princeton, N .J ., service.
Heavy snows hit Rockies
Rain pelts belt from Plains to Texas Panhandle
wastal iooather
Some cloudlness evening end
mornlno '-"·Mostly sunny FrlO•y Co.Ual I-lon!Oflt !IO, 111vn F<IO•Y
mid t.Os.
lnl4NIO I-tonlO"l H, 1110" Frld•y
14-11 WetH 62.
Elsewhere, ••rleble northwest
winos tonloht be<omlno -st•rly I to IS knob Frldoay arterrmon wltll I to l
tool westerly swell. Mostly t lHr Fri·
dey
U.S. summary
Sc•lt•red r•lnsllO-.ri tell ovor the
.... r111em llell of IM AoO IH H rly to-
day. •1111 .,_ In 1119fter elev•ll0111.
Some p...U of Moni.n. oot .. mucll
as •lollt lncllH of snow.
TrevelffS ecrvl-ltt -re In efle<t lor lod•Y, fOf 11'111. lllaller elev•tlons ol
central -IOllit..central Monie,.. •nd tlle northern and c•nlr•I
Color-..-e1n1. Stocllm•n's advlsOf'IH were up
•cron w-,om1no, nor111 ... 1t•rn encl
-•1-<•nlr•I Color-...0 ldello. Showers end thundffstorms sc•t-
tered from Ille c...,tr.i Plelns lo II•
Tues PMlhendle Ti.ere wH l\ell In
nortll•HI Hew Mulco, SOUlllWHI
K•nsu encl ,,,. nortllern Texas
Panllencll•. Tornedoe• were r eported
norlllwnt of Tucumcari, H.M .. In Ille
northern r .... Penllendl• n•.,
Gruver, -In toul-11 Kenws II reined from Florl«N to Vl'91nl•
~ ecrou -1• of,.._ Enel-.
Showers -tllunclersllo'#ers -r• expected to scetlef' o,,... ttle soulll Allenllc Coesl end Olll•llOm• to Ille
-r Ml-I Val'-V. Rain Wiii to fall O¥er Ille ftllf!Nrn
Rockies wtlll snow In l\ltflff •leva·
ll0<\1 -tlleA wltt a cllenc• ot r.cal-
t•rtd •llo-n over Ille northern
Pa<llk Coett.
~ -~ ---
The H•tlOnal WHlller Service Is
f0fe<Htl'19 lllol\ l_,.8Mtl l"rl-
O.y In Ille -r 70s In L.os Angeles,
1S to n In COHt.I -lnt.....-iole v•ll•vs. ts to n In Ille mounlelns. IO
to 90 In UCIPtf CIH«ts •ncl 90 to 100 In
loWerMMrts.
Temperatures
HI La ~ Albany 10 • •• Al!Mlque IO 47 Am•rlllo 16 St
•-vllle ,. ,. .n All•nle n .. • 06
All•ntc Ctv .. • B•ltlmorw .. 41
Blrmlnellm 73 '° Blsmtrck u 42 ..... J1 11
BoslOll " .. Brow,,nlle • ..
8ull•lo SS M .02 CllerlstnSC f7 u .21 CllertstnWV 7J • ...
....
Cheyenne
0 11<.-00
Clnclnnetl
Ctevettnd Columbul
Dol·l"I wtll Denver
Oe1Mol11tt Oetrojt
Ouhlth
H•rtford
Helet18
.._.ulu
HOUllOfl
lndn8Plll
Ja<llM!Ylle
K•nsClly
LAIV ....
Liiiie Aocll
Lo.Anet ...
Loultvllle Me"'"'" Ml•ml
Mllw ... -Mplt-Sl.P
Nelllvllle
Hew Orie-
Hew Vorll
Norfolk •1 Oki• City •1
Om•ll• M
Orl•ndo " Pllll•dpl>i• ..
Pl'IOenl• ,,
PlttsburOh SI
Pll•nd, Me .,
Pll•nd. O<'e S4
Reno ..
5"111.•U SI
S.n 01990 10
$an Fr4NI •S
Suttle S6
St LOUii •1
St P-T.,n~ 11
St Ste M.9rl• 51
SPok•ne 51
Tul .. 12
wu11ln01n 70 ... ....... -' .. CALl~RNIA
B•Ul"Mleld Blytlle
Euro• S7 3S 1 °' Fresno 50 :n ~Htet ,, ,. .10 Mar(tvllle S2 40 Moflt•rev ,, J1 .24 ... ..., ... ,. " 0 8kl.nd .. .. .06 Ptso Robin 6.S » Aed Btu" SS sa Aectwooel City SI :a Socremento 11 40 SollnH
50 41 .OS Santa llMW• 12 .. .2S SlocJitOft t2 .. Tllerm•I .. 40 Ulll•ll 15 u .OS B•rstow
41 ,. 81"'°1> IS " C•letlnt u '7 El Contro 11 5' Lil ArrOWflffd M .. • OS 1.ono BHCll 71 ,. •nrovlo 11 n HewPon 8Hdl ., sa Oftt•rlo " » Polm s.t!llll .. .. .os Son Berl*'cllno ,. .. SonJOM 14 44 S.nto Cruz T8110e Vt l'-V
!iO J6
50
41 n
Q ..
J6 u
)6 05
" )()
S2
M 01 .,
4t
44 .03
40
72 ll
)()
J3 02 n
41 01
11 " ·~ ..
S7 • 79 ..
12 ..
11
62 • " ..
1t )S
11 S4
73 ..
14 4l .. 41 .. " IO
" u
73 42
IS ,.
7S 11
10 S4 • S1 .. M
72 u IO .. .. .. ,. ff
" " 11 J7
11 • rs .,
n t1 Tempereturtt eround tlle ,..II..,.
early ,....., reflllld from • In l!ly,
Nev .. -llo\er'quftte -Tr•v•n• City, Mlcll,. to 1' Ill Key West, Fl•. Southern Calif omia mrf report Sun, moon, tides
1-1 ............. .... ._. A"I ,.., ..,.. 11"1 Mu Dir TODAY
l~ t • fO I I SW Second lew •:20p.m. U Santo~ t t It I I IW
Califomia
More felr weetlltf la In 1tore
lllf'OU9fl Friday, wllll •lltfllly warmer .. ,11nc_.._._
HtW'*1 J S 11 1 I SW s.n Di.tD C*Mly J S 12 t J IW l"lrslllltf\
()vi .......... rid9'/! Slowlt'•l'Mlllll .... Flrtt '"' SKOflCI lllth
....... y
111IJe.m.
1:02•.m •
J .... I'll.
s.s
0.7 u
We're Listening ••• ~ -~ ·
HkA\\; ---Whit do you llke about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number below and your mna•1• will be ~rcled,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriat.e edit.or.
The same 24·hour auw...U., 1ervict may be used tor~
letten to tM edilor on any topic. llailboa tontributort mutl ln·
elude tbllr a ... ilHI • ....,,.... number for veriflc.tion. No
clrcul.doa cali., pleue. Tell• what'• on your mind.
Sun Mia 7:41 "'·"'·· rlws ~ri.ey J:Slo.m. •
Moon Mb 1t:JO p.m .. rlwt l"rldey
10: 11 •.m.
-----------
·orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 H/F A3
Rapist
claiDls
disorder
A con victed rapis t wh o
represented himself m Orange
County Superior Court now says
he was mentally, incompetent at
the time and "incapable of
properly defending himself."
In a hand-written letter to
Judge Francisco Briseno, who
presided over his lengthy trial,
Ty Glen Clayton said he be lieved
he was "and still Is incompetent
to stand trial" or face sentenc-
ing later this month.
"The defendant was incapable
of properly defending himself
because of that incompetence
and I would ask ltlat the court
stop all criminal proceedings at
this time and grant a hearing
. . . to find if the defendant was
and is in fact incompetent," the
letter states.
Clayton, 30 , a resident or
Westminster. was convicted of
rape in April by a jury even
though the prosecution's most
important witness -the victim
herself committed suicide
before proceedings began.
Clayton. a previously convict-
ed rapist, was accused of sexual-
ly assaulting Kimberly Prentice
of Huntington Beac h at his
a partment in June 1980, 10
weeks after his parole from
state prison.
In the letter to Briseno, the de-
fendant said that even though he
still believes he is innocent, he
also feels he is "incompetent
and has greatly deteriorated
over the years and because of
this his ability to judge what is
best for his defense has been
greatly impaired."
Clayton also as ked the judge
to appoint two psychiatrists to
examine him to determine if he
should be sentenced as a mental-
ly disordered sex offender .
~-------------------
Af'WI .......
MYTH NO MORE -Lancelot, a n attraction at Marine World
near San Francisco, is being he ralded as the first
"medieval unicorn" in 500 years . The year-old a nimal. with
a s ingle 10-inch horn in the middle of it~ forehead. was pro-
duced from Angora poat stock.
Off it:ial hit for Bergeson blast .
By 0 . C. HUSTINGS
Of tM Delly f'IMC S!Mf
The vice pr esident of the
Corona del Mar Republican As-
sembly is being criticized by his
own members as being "out of
line " in attacking Newpor t
Beach Assem blywoman Marilin
Bergeson's voting record.
David Dykstra, a Newport ac-
countant, used the Republican
group's station e r y f o r his
critical letter last month to Mrs
Bergeson.
He also sent copies or the let·
ter to three local politicians, the
California Republican Assembly
and the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce
But colleagues in the Corona
del Mar Republican gr oup claim
Dykst ra failed to get board
permission before issuing his al·
tack.
·'The letter makes it look like
he 's speaking for the whole
group," says Al Cook, a past
president of the assembly "We
told him he was out of line and
definitely shouldn't use our sta-
tionery"
Cook claims the Corona del
Mar group is "devoted" to Mrs
Bergeson and has no qualms
with her voting record.
.. Mr Dykstra 1s an eager and
smart man but his pohtics are
more on the Ge nghis Khan
side," Cook suggested. "lle's ul-
tra-conservative "
Dyki.tra says hti. poht.Jcs are
tn tune with the group's
'"I don't believe 1t was a mis-
take to use the stationery and I
never indicated I was express·
ing the g r oup's o p1n1on,"
Dykstra commented.
In the letter. Dykstra noted he
was "shocked and dis appointed"
at Mrs Bergeson's voting pat-
tern on issues relating to s pend-
ing.
With extraordinary savings of 25°/o
Impeccable comfort and beauty Unsurpassed quality
Incomparable values. All of this can o nly describe
our popular H eritage" best-seller upholstery sale
a rare opportunity to save on the fi nest in
custom upholstery.
Our selectio n 1s wide and varied -each piece
meticulously tailored by hand to crea te the ultimate
in quality. 800 fabrics and a delightful range of
modular. sofa. love seat and chair styles ensures
handsome compatibility with your decor And the
reductions will blend beautifully with your budget.
Make your selections today ... this is an investment
in quality furniture you will en1oy for years'
~· Reg. $1,53811
SALE 51,149°0
Reg~ $64211
SALE 5479°0
Reg. $605 11
SALE s449oo
Your F1V011t• Designer W1fl Be Happy To AMiii You
Reg. $71311
SALE s529oo
Reg. $1,34411
SALE s999oo
H.J.GARRET,f. fU~NlllJ~E
PROFESSIONAL. HOURI: Mon. thnl Thut•. 10 •·"'-to. p.m. .. u 15 H•••oa ILYD.
INTEAIOA DESIGNERS Ff'I. 10 a.m. to I p.m. '-'· 10 a.m. to UO p.M. COST A MISA '46·0Z75 ...
'· 1 I
A4 H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfThursday, May 7, 1981
Victims hunted
in AF jet crash
WALKERSVILLE. Md . <AP>
-Air Force crews were
searching a remote barley field
today (or the last or 21 people
who died when a missile·
tracking jet on a training flight
blew up and crashed, scattering
documents and debris.
All those aboard the $50
million advanced range in-
strumentation aircraft were
killed in the Wednesday mom·
ing crash, which occurred about
a mile from this western
Maryland comnaunity of 8,000,
said Air Force Maj. William
Campbella
wps seek missing
blnck Atlanla boy
ATLANTA (AP > Police
were searching today for a 14·
year-old black boy who disap·
peared after classes at a special
school attended by one or the 26
young Atlanta blacks whose
slayings have frustrated police
for nearly two years.
Eric Thompson was reported
missing Wednesday by Brandon
Southern , di rector or the
Challenge School for Boys, a
facility for youths with juvenile
records, said police spokesman
Benjamin Sims.
C.Ontim!mal fights
impending~
DENVER (AP> Continental
Airlines, laboring under more
than $52 million m losses since
the beginning of 1980, will
"fight for ages" if that is what it
takes to prevent a takeover by
Texas International Airlines,
says Continental President A.L.
Feldman. "If we're in court for years
over this, it's because we believe
we are doing the right thing for
the tompany." Feldman sajd
Anny nixes medal.
for Iran lwst,age
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Army has refused to discuss a
report that a special awards
panel has recommended that
Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic Jr. not
be given the medal it wants pre-
sented to other soldiers held
hostage in Iran.
A Pentagon source who asked
not to be identified said Wednes·
day that the panel has decided
that five other officers and
enlisted men, but not Subic,
should receive the Army Com·
mendation Medal.
Bess Tnunan falls
KANSAS CITY. Mo. <AP)
Former first lady Bess Truman
was in fair condition early today
at a hospital awaiting surgery
for a fractured right hip, a
hos pital spokeswoman said.
Mrs. Truman, 96, apparently fell
from her bed at her home
Reagan lauds Haig
WASIIlNGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan welcomed
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. home from Europe
Wednesday, calling it "a trium-
phal return" from a meeting
with America's North Atlantic
allies in Rome.
.., . .,.,.....
CHICAGO WELCOME -Space shuttle astronauts John
Young, left, and Robert Crippen wave to well-wishers
during ticker-tape parade in Chicago's financial district
Wednesday. Some 25,000 cheered along the route of the
parade, the seventh that Chicago has held for American
astronauts after a mission and the first in 12 years.
Mayor Jane Byrne, right, presented them with crystal
statuettes symbolizing the shuttle 's takeoff from Kennedy
Space Center.
0. Surgeon sues;
Syrian move
bodes 'war'
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -
Syria moved some 4,000 troops
In two armored brigades past
Israel's "red-line" In Lebanon
today, Lebanese government
sources c,eported.
They said the Syrian troops
and tan.ks were taking up posl·
lions in Sehmor and Yehmor in
the western flank of Lebanon's
Bekaa Valley and in Kfar Tibnit,
just eight miles north of Israel's
northernmost town of Metulla.
There was no independent con-
firmation of the report, which. if
accurate, would put Syria's
m ost favored positions in
southern and eastern Lebanon 12
miles beyond the "red line"
Israel drew for Syria's military
activity and presence in
Lebanon five years ago.
The reports of troop move·
ments came as American and
Soviet envoys began trying to
defuse the latest Middle East
crisis.
THE SOURCES SAID the
Syrian troops in tanks and
armored cars were deploying in
the three towns south of the
25· mile-long Zaharani River
"red line." •
The sources said this was the
first time the Syrians h ad
punched so deep into southern
Lebanon since they intervened
in 1976 to snuff out Lebanon's
Moslem-Christian civil war.
Israel has frequently warned
Syria would risk war with the
Jewish state if Syria's troops
crossed the red line. Syria staged war games on its
own territory Wednesday to
show that its forces are "con-
tinuously ready to confront
Israel at any time," the official
SANA news agency said in
Damascus, the Syrian capital.
Israeli warplanes, meanwhile,
s treaked over Syrian surface-to-
a i r missile batteries in the
Bekaa Valley o r eastern
Lebanon for the first time 1ince
Syria deployed the Soviet-made
missiles there last week. An As-
sociated Presa reporter ln the
valley said no missiles were
tired at the planes overhead.
Syria moved the SAM -6 and
SAM-2 missiles into Lebanon
after Israeli jets shot down two
Syrian helicopter gunships at-
tack Ing pro-Israeli Christian
militiamen around the embat-
tled Christian city of Zable.
ISRAEL DEMANDED Syria
remove the missiles. claiming
they restrict Israeli air strikes
on Palestinian guerrilla posi-
tions in southem Lebanon.
Is rael contends the missile
deployment violated a secret
1979 agreement with Syria that
allowed Israeli pilots freedom of
the skies over Lebanon in ex·
change for non-interference in
Syrian policing of the armistice
that ended Lebanon's 1975-76
civil war .
Uncontrolled
auto kills 2
CHICAGO (AP> -A man who
was picking up his son from
elementary school was being
he ld on r eckless homicide
charges today after his car al-
legedly sped in reverse through
a crowded schoolyard. killin&
two and sending "kids flying all
over the place," officials said.
Nineteen children were in-
jured, two critically, in the
Wednesday incident. authorities
said.
Police charged Cruz Rivera,
50, with reckless homicide, driv-
ing on a sidewalk and dnving
without a license.
WOOUJ[OO
Terrorist bombing
kills 3 in Spain
claims chimp
bit off finger M~tl)er's Day
MADRID, Spain CAP ) Two
Basque terrorists on a motorbike
put a bomb on the roof of a
military car stopped at a red light
in Madrid today. killing three
army men and wounding King
Juan Carlos' military adviser.
police said.
The blast beheaded soldier·
driver Carlos Taboada, and killed
bodyguard Lt. Jose Ledesma and
Lt. Col. Guillermo Tebar, aide to
Geo. Joaquin de Valenzuela, head
or Juan Carlos' household guard.
Mi.ssing priest
OK in El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
CAP> -An American priest, mis-
sing in El Salvador for lOdays and
feared dead, has turned up safe at
the U.S. Embassy here and issued
a statement criticizing U.S. sup-
port for the embattled junta.
'Ripper' labe/,ed
shy uith ioomen
LONDON (AP> -A witness in
the Yorkshlre Ripper trial told the
jury today that defendant Peter
Sutcliffe was generally shy
around women and never gave
the impression he disliked pros-
titutes.
SutcliCfe, a 34-year-old truck
driver, is on trial for the murder of
13 women over a five-year period.
Eight of the victims were pros·
titules and Sutcliffe has told
psychlatrists he had a ''divine
mission" tO kill prostitutes.
Leatlers assail.ed
TEL AVIV <AP> -Prime
Minister Menachem Begin
labeled West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt a Hitler loyalist
to "the last moment" and ca)led
French President Valery Giscard
d 'Est.aing immoral. It was his
second outburst t.hls week:.
OKLAHOMA CITY <AP)
The chimpanzee Washoe, who
won national fame for ber abili·
ty to learn s ign language, is at
the center or a $2. 75 million
lawsuit filed by a brain surgeon
who contends the "wild and
vicious" animal bit off one of his
fingers.
Dr. Karl H. Pribram. a San
Jose, Calif., neurosurgeon, al ·
leged in the fe deral court
lawsuit that he was "permanent-
ly disabled" in April 1980 when
the crump pulled hls right hand
and arm through the bars of her
cage.
He said he was visiting tbe
Univer sity of Oklahoma's
Institute of Primate Studies at
the time.
In the suit, filed against
Washoe's trainer, the university,
and the company that built her
cage, the surgeon said the chimp
bit off hjs middle finger and
severed and "severely damaged
the nerves, musc1es and ten-
dons" of hls right hand.
Pribram's attorney, Fielding
D Haas of Norman, said that
Washoe had bitten university
personnel about 20 times before
she allegedly bit Pribram.
Fouts said Wednesday in El-
lensburg that Pribram 's finger
was cul and his hand damaged
on a sharp metal edge of
Washoe's cage.
Embassy spokesman Howard
Lane said the Rev . Roy
Bourgeois, 42, entered the em-
bassy alone Wednesday after-
noon and appeared in ~ood health. ~~~~~~~~~~~ •. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-...;
MERCURY SAVINGS
attd loan anociation
OPEN MON. FHI. H l\.M () f' M
SAT lJ HD A Y I 0 : \ . M . l I'. '\1 .
g
Huntington Beach, CA 92847
Southtm C•llfoml• 1*glon•I Ofllc•a:
Mn E. La P1lma A ... , Anaheim. CA 92807
8965 v.i1ey Vl•w 84~ 11191\a Paiil. CA toe20
UM Ameltt Rd., camarlllo, CA 93010
t!>UC _.._ . ._._. .. _..._ ___ _
20715 8. ~••Ion Bl'td., Careon CA 907~
23021 ~ Cen1er Or., (LMI• Forni>. El Toro. CA ta30
1001 E.. \mPl(lal Hwy.j La Habra, C.4 90831 ~
•140 l.ong BHctl llva., Long a..c:ft, CA 9C*>7 1.!!!J
22939 Hewtl'IOfne Blvd., Torrance, CA 80e05
108& lf'flnl 81¥<1., TU1lln, CA 82880 ..W:~ G 235 N. Qlll'UI Ave., w .. 1 Co-llN. CA 91793 lC11ot".
··~~ff •wllabl9 on• ,.l«Yed O.ll•
WTR•T DEEDS
OWMH /MOMO'W• OCCUPllD
Call William B. Mitchell
Call today tOt q"°'9 • No obll0'1IOl'I 1IOr'll notiOnal Udng
121 "°'"' notlOnOI ~ (114) 97~1 ===
FREE FOR MOM!
WHEN DAD OR THE
KIDS GET A 1 YR.
MEMBERSHIP.
n.r .. Fri., s.t. &: ~ ..,
hplretl-tMt
• Nautilus Equip.
• Large Spa
• Ory Sauna
•Steam Room
• Life Cycles
• Olymplc Weights
• Karate Classes
• Aerobic Classes
CALL NOW
675-1171
ASSORTED
MUSIC
BOXES
reg. 19 99
15aa
2.49 144 •• _
24% LEAD
CRYSTAL
HEART
BOX
419
SPECIAL PURCHASE
SILK & DRIED CUSTOM
ARRANGEMENTS
A Bud Vase
Arrangement
B. Basket/Swan •
Arrangement
Umlted
QUenlily
lllUAI
TOlllOIM
ftaLT
MANAQE .. 8
SHCIALI
6'' ...
8'9 ...
MOSKATEL'S EXCLUSIVE
''MOM''
CANVAS BAG
by ''Its me again "
A great tote for beach.
picnics. knitting, etc.
SPECIAL
PURCHASE 5aa
METALLIC
SILK FLOWERS
(in Silver & Gold)
30% OFF
SWEETHEART
BUD VASES
Single stem 1.09
Double stem 1.19
POTPOURRI
20% OFF
We carry aN the necessary
ingredients -aromatic plants,
herbs, spices and oils.
FREE POTPOURRI CRAFTING BOOKLET
See our colleotlon of Oaherware metalware
boxes with the look of fine porcelain .
perfect for Potpooo'i.
BRASS 4'' POT OR
WATERING CAN
reg. 6 .99
4" ...
HEY KIDS ••.
Make a Gift For Mom
SAT., MAY 9th
Cell atore neerest you
for more detalfs
Sale ends
Sun .• May 10
L.O.AMOIW
(IU)U1·1N\
HUNTINCITO•HIA04 Cl"MITOI TMlUNA TORMHCI
(ltl)l1M1•1
ftlTCOY!ltA
C2Ul ..... 171
I .
11'._MMottl (ltJ)HA-OUa (118)MNIM
QAAOIM CMOVI L.A •.oA IAN MOO LA •IA C1'•)e»nao (211) ....... 1 {1'•)H7412t C71.,....e1
'
IKOHDIDO
C1U)HMlt1
•'.
-~UffiU~
. .
~---~----• --------------------------· ... -___ .....,. ___ _ ••
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 H/F A$
Brown endorses Second
• • JUSt1ce • •
Deaths suspicious?·
anti-crime tax
LOS ANGELES <AP > Saying Californians
live in "a climate of apprehens ion" because of
violent crime, Gov. Edmund Brown J r has en-
dorsed a c1uarler cent sales tax for more prisons
and police.
eyed
SACRAMENT O (AP1
Coronor's office mum on patients
RIVERSIDE (APl -The spouses
of some of the 27 elderly patients
whose deaths are being investigated
by the Riverside County coroner's of-
fice say they are beginning to worry
that their relatives' deaths were sus·
picious.
But county officials continued Wed·
nes day to issue "no comment"
answers to most questions about the
high number or deaths 25 -in the
intensive care ward at Community
Hospital of the Valleys in Perris dur·
ing March and April.
Two more deaths were being in·
vestigated at San Gorgonlo Pass
Hospital in Banning. A third San
Gorgonio death has been eliminated
as unrelated.
SACRAMENTO <AP > There
would once again be a 6 percent sales
tax on candy and chewing gum, un·
der a bill approved by the Assembly
Revenue and Taxation Committee.
It voted 9·6 Wednesday to send
A~l30 b y Assemblyman Bill
Lockyer. D-San Leandro, to the Ways
and Means Committee. The bill
would raise $66 million a year for the
state and $17.4 m illion for local gov-
ernments.
Eviction law stands
SACRAMENTO <AP> In a de
feat for elderly groups and mobile
home owners, a Senate committee
has refused to change a law letting
mobile home parks evict old homes
when they are sold.
unter pwh eyed
SAN DIEGO <AP 1 Cla1m1ng
voter rejection of a downtown con·
vention center was a "temporary set·
back," San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
promised future attempts lo pass a
similar measure.
"Now we have the opportunity to
come back at it from another direc
lion. I'm not at this point clear what
direction that will be, .. Wilson said
Wednesday following the resounding
56.6 percent defeat of the proposal he
supported for s ix years
CHARGED Salinas
Ma yor James R .
Woods, charged with
arson and insurance
fraud in connection
with $811,000 fire at
hi s Idaho
agricultural
ware hous e, d e nies
his guilt and says he
will continue cam-
paigning for second
term.
Building saved
LOS ANGELES <AP l
The Ga r den Court
Apa rtments we r e de -
signated as a cultural
hi sto ri cal monum ent.
sparing the 62-year-old
structure from destruc-
tion.
In a speech to a statewide television audience
Wednesday, the Democratic governor a bandoned
6 12 years of oppos ition to all general tax increases
lo endorse the anti-crime levy, which would raise
taxes an average of $500 million annually before
expiring in 10 years.
Brown also said he would call a special e·tec·
tion Nov 3 on the proposed anti-crime tax. a move
which would a utomatically put a referendum on
the Peripheral Canal on the Novembe r ballot.
However . in the 15-minute televised s peech.
Brown didn't mention the effect his action would
have on the Peripheral Canal refe rendum, or how
changing the da te or the canal vote might help him
out of a political bmd
"That 's u separ ate issue," Brown 's press
secretary, Cari Beauchamp. s aid of the canal re-
ferendum "Others will accuse him or using the
crime tax election to get tne canal vote behind
him . but that was not a cons1derat1on behind the
idea of calling this election
"Ile has said he may not lake a leadership
position m the campaign for the canal. but he has
said he will support the measure," she added
Brown's speech was praised by Democratic
leaders of both the Senate and Assembly, and they
endorsed the tax hike
But Republicans quickly labeled him a "Jerry-
Come·Lately'" to the crime issue and opposed his
tax proposal. Without s upport of at le as t a few
lawmakers from lhe GOP minority, the tax pro-
posal, which requires two-thirds support, cannot
pass either the Senate or Assembly.
Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., who nominated Ap
peals Court Justice Otto
Kau s t o th e s t a t e
Supreme Court. will an
nounce a second ap
pointment .. very soon,"
says his top aide
But G r ay Davis.
Brown 's chief of staff.
refused to say Wednes
day wh en the new ap
pointment would be.
Kaus. 61, a 20-year
veteran of the bench .
has served on the 2nd
District Court of Appeal
in Los Angeles s ince
1964. lie presides over
one of the court's f1 ve
divisions
Kaus' apporntm e nt
me t w i th n e ar
una nimous support, with
the legal profession and
most politicians describ·
ing him as bright, able
and scholarly. a ha rd·
working moderate with
a s tro n g se n se o f
responsibility
But the second vacan
cy on the court has left
Brown in politi(•aJ dif·
NOMINATED
Otto Kaw
f I (' u It y ari er s 8 m u e I
W11l1 ams. a $275,000-a -
yea r black attorney
fro m Los Angeles,
turned down the gov-
e rnor's offer to s erve,
c 1t1ng family
responsibilities. Ka us. who has re-
ferred to himself as hav-
ing a "Prussian, if you
lik e. or milit aristic
sense of obedience " to
the law. was appointed
to the Los Angeles Coun·
t y Super ior Court and
the appellate court by
former Gov. Edmund G.
··P at" Brown.
r.======= & HlllHIMCTDM COITEI • UIT ICACll ILVI. ======;'I
14 KT. GOLD CHARMS
<"H OIC E ~(. YOU R s2200
·~ irk r.:t~:.I S.00~1 P<..0 ~£U'ff1tb
HUMTIMGTOH CEMTIR
HUMTIMGTOH IEACH
892-5501
HARIOR CEHTER
2300 HARIOR. COSTA MESA
545-9485
.
iii 0 ~
!
0
:£ 0
% ~ "' i ~ •
5' ... ~ u 0 ~
Q ~ Ge 0 ~
ROSENTHAL
OPEN STOCK DINNERWARE
SALE 20 o/o off
' . . during month of May
·'""" ...
. Choo'<' from .my of our 22 pallerm. lhe best 1.'hm a servtl.'es from
lhe 811roqu<' Rococo and An Nouveau eras de signs that have
endurl'<l the .. ge~ around the world 1-•••~1 VIS4' Ask about our Bridal Re zstry .........
> < i Ii
The Upper Crust. a
new adcl11oo to ltle tcrnous ~· Chicker1
Pol Pie Shop&. IS opening in Seaclifl V'1age
And the little Upper Crustaceans wro Ml lhe
place really knOw hOw IO how a PIWtY And
ttvow a Fnst>ee
They'H be holcllrlQ a Fnsbee Conies! al
lhetf Vllage Grand Opening Or\ May 9. com-
On Saturday, May 9,
at 11:30 am,
Hundreds of Fl ing
Discs will Invade
Seacliff Village.
P'e'e wiln tree F rlstlees IOI everyone and
pnzes IOI lhe oonies1 wtnnera
In OOdltlon to the Fnsbee Coneesl lhere'M
be tree pony noes. bands and a "c:tle:tl8n
poe walk"
So come OUI 10 the Upper Crust '1 Seaddl
Village and oeletlrale tnew Grand ~ on
Salu'day. May 9 ~ 11 30 IO 3 30
The Upper Cn1st Grand Opening
and Frisbee Contest
Seacliff VIiiage
The c.nter of Attention. For Fun and Games.
2205 Main St . HlXllinglon Beech, CA 92648 714-536.a711 Located 81 Goldenwesl and YOOt1own
While They Lost
Come In and see how from
defrosting to cooking to reheating,
Utton helps famrn .. Ht t>etw. Take
home 1 Llttom Microwave toct.yl ""''
We invite you to visit the new LeSportsac Shop 1n South Coast Plaza.
You'll love the va.st selection of LeSportsac bags and aooessories
including the New"Generat1on II'~transatlant1c sa.11 cloth Be.gs.
IAlportaac louUl Oout Pl.au
3333 Bristol Street
X.lponaao Wu&wood
914 Westwood Blvd.
Westwood, CA 90024
213 208-8822
X.lponaac Ian.ta Jloalea
88.nt& Mon1oa Place
Seoond Level
2133947027 No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school and college districts and county
government than the Diiiy Pllllt
Cost.a. Mesa, CA 92626
7146671263
~ I
Write or pborMI b JOlll' free 11111-.
• I • •
s
• r.
Orange Coast DAILY Pll.OTfThursday. May 7. 1981
Traffic complaints
• require some response
Hunting t o n Beach Mayor
Rut h Finley says s he's concerned
tha t a proposed t r affic com -
mission could cr E!ate a "horren-
nous" level of bureaucr acy.
Bul despite her reser vations.
s he a lso says s he favors suc h a
commission to deal with increas-
ing traffic compla ints by resi-
dentl).
City officia ls note that Hu·nt·
ington Beach has undergone a
g reat increase 111 population in
recent years. It is the third
la r gest c ity in Orange County
and the 10th largest in the state.
But. they say. str eet upg rad-
ing hasn't kept pace ~ith the
population growt h. Key. mt~rsec
tions are wi thout tra ffic s igna ls
a nd. incr eas in gly. c itizens a r e
asking tha t residential streets be
blocked because of cr owded and
high speed tr a ffic conditions.
T he City Counc il has been
barraged with s uch citizen con -
cerns in recent months and it ap-
pears a t raffic co mmission could
be t he forum lo a ir and study
such compla ints.
S malle r c ities tha n Hunt·
ington Beach h ave tr a ffic com-
missions a n d, if pro per ly or -
gan ized , they a ppa r e ntly function
well without creating unneeded
bureaucr acy.
The City Council would re tain
u ltimate a uthority over tra ffic
problems, but the commission
could shoulder the m ajor burden
of h andling them.
Properly organized a nd
g uided, it may even rever se
Mayor Finley's fears a nd actua l-
ly reduce bureauc racy.
Fees must be flexib l e
As its enroll m ent continues to
decltne , the Fountain Valley
School Distr ict fi nds itself with
m a ny unoccupied class.rooms .
T he district leases some of
these classrooms lo private or-
ganizations and to othe r school
age n c i es . At t h e mo m e n t ,
however. the lease fees vary
wide ly.
F or exam ple. the Hunting ton
Beach Adult School pays nothin g
for the use of two classroom s . The
O r ange County Department of
Education. however, pays $2,000
a nnually for each room it r ents for
inst ruction of autistic children.
District ad m inist rators have
proposed t hat standard fees be
ad opted, based on what it costs the
d is trict to m ai n tai n each
c lassroom. This h as been comput-
ed at $2, 160 per room per year
T he administ rators suggest
that this amount be ch arged to
agencies suc h as the Orange Coun-
ty De partment o f E d ucation,
which already receives funds to
o pe r ate its progr ams.
Other community groups that
be ne fit district families as defined
by t he s tale Civic Center Act-day
car e centers and youth groups, for
example would pay half tha t
fee : $1,080 per classr oom .
When this plan ca m e before
the school boa rd recently, two
grou ps contended that the second
fee was stiJI too high.
T he Fountain Valley Girls'
Club, for example, wan ts to lease
four room s n ext year. But a .
s pokeswom an said it wiU be dif-
fi c u lt to m a intain a ffor d a ble
r ecr eation progra m s if t he group
m ust pay more tha n $4,000 for the
four classrooms .
The trustee s agreed that stan -
d a rd lease fees are need ed. But
they r equest e d tha t the ad -
m inis trator s give them enou gh
flexibility to pe rmit s pecial a r -
rangements with groups such as
th e Girls' Club. 1
For example. the club might
be g iven fina n cial conside ration if
it sh a r es equipme nt with the dis-
trict.
This seem s a sound a pproach.
When the lease fee po licy comes
back to the trustees. they should be
cer tain there is enough leeway to
a dj ust the r ental c ha r ge in special
cases
Trainer culback valid
The Huntington Beach Union
High School Distr ict may h ave
the best progra m of professiona l
tr ainers for high school athletes
in the state.
According to dist r ict of -
ficials, the system is the only on e
in California t ha t hires full-tim e
traine rs.
But according to a budget
proposal. the traine rs m ay be re-
duce d to part-time e mployees
next year to s a ve up to $99,000 an-
nu a ll y.
By limiting the trainers to 20
hou rs of work a week . district of-
ficia ls say thCit at le a st two things
will occur.
Trainer service will be cut in
ha lf, with less t r a ine r attention
g iven t o a t hl e tic p r a c tice
sessions. And education require-
m e nts for train e r s will be re-
duced from a four-year college
degr ee and trainer certificate. to
a two-year college degr ee.
While a saving of $99.000 isn 't
a big chunk out or the district's
$42 million oper ating fund, dis-
trict officials point out the $3.8
•
million already c ut from next
year 's budget has a ffected many
pr ogr a m s . These cuts include re-
d ucing sports program s. laying
off teach e r s, counselors a n d
librarians, a nd shortening the
school day for j uniors an d seniors .
Dis trict offi cials s ay the de-
c ision of whet he r to keep t he
t r ainers full lime will depend on
t he level of funding for public
e du cation fr o m the stat e
Legislatur e next year.
lt would be unfortunate to re-
duce the high -qua lity trainer pro -
g ra m tha t he lps to protect young
a thletes, esp ecially football
players, from injury. But it must
be recognized that expenditures
m ay ha v e to be r e duc ed
som ewhere and that other dis-
tric t s do well with par t-ti m e
trainers.
It also might be noted that
m ost bud get r e du ction s h a ve
been unfortunate, but n~essary
to balance expenditures with in-
com e.
Opinions expressed in the space above ar& those ot the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit-
ed. Address The Daily Piiot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Name clwices •
In New York City, more 32·year-
old women bear the name of Linda
than any other moniker. Next there
in that age bracket, in order, come
Mary, Bar bara, Patricia, Susao,
Kathleen, Carol, Nancy, Margart t
and Diane. Compare these to the
mos t popular names among 8-year-
old girls there: Jennifer, Michelle,
Lis a , Elizabeth, Christine, Marla.
Nicole. Kimberly, Denlse and Amy.
lt'R remarkable, I think, that in Just
24 years -about one ...aeneration -
none of the top-10 preferred names in
the tint group overlap with the top·lO
In the second group.
Claim Is that mott of the slplfi·
OR~COAST
Daily Pilat
'
cant inventions of man are imitaUona
or n ature. Ma y be something to that.
Wasps chew up wood to make eheet-
ed nesta. The French scientlal An-
toine de Reaumur tn ~e early 1700s
watched those waap9 at worlt, and
came up with the first way to
manufacture paper out of wood pulp.
How many of these bright ideas, In·
spired by natural phenomena, can
you r emember? A dozen will do.
Q. How can I keep the neighbor's
dogs out or my yard?
A. Put a few· unbalte<I mousetraps
iuound your shrubs.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
ThonY1 Keevll
Editor
81rbara krelbich
Edltorl•I Page Editor
Mafia regains dope c ontrol
W ASIUNGTON -A House commit-
tee has been seeking information -and
headlines -by investigating drug use
by Hollywood ce le brities. The con-
gr essmen might better spend their ef-
forts looking into the huge influx of
heroin that the Mafia is pouring into the
East Coast.
Until recently, the Mob had kept a
low profile, after the disruption caused
by the notorious "French Connection"
and the non-Mafia competition from
Asia. But now the situation has changed
back lo the old Sicilian route for im-
portation of hard drugs into the United
St ates. The dope is funneled from
Southwest Asia into this country by way
of Sicily.
·' ln the early 1970s, we didn't see the
br oad-based involvement or all the
(Mafia) families," th e FBI's organized-
crim e boss, Sean Mcweeney, told my
associate Tony Capaccio. "Now they're
into it up to their ears," he said.
According to a secret Drug Enforce-
ment Administration report, all rive
Mafia crime families in the New York
area are involved in the heroin traffic
that used to be the almost exclusive
province of the Vito Genovese and
Thomas Lucchese families.
"U.S. BUYERS of heroin are pre-
domina ntly Italian-Americans in the
New York City area who in tum supply
various distribution networks along the
East Coast," states the DEA report.
Two of four Sicilian groups identified by
DEA and Justice Department in-
telligence operations -the Badalamen-
ti and Scaduto factions -are conn ected
G.
-JA-Cl-1-ND-IR-SD-N -~
\
terl'lat1onaJ Airport 1n New York since
December 1977. "This heroi n was under
the control of United Slates and Italian
organized crime figures," the DEA re-
port slates
One of those arrested last year in con·
nect1on with three heroin-conversion
labor atories in Milan and San Remo,
Italy. was Jean J ehan He is famlhar to
American movie and television au diences as the "Silver Fox " who
escaped when the French Connection
was broken by marriage to several New York crime The resurgence of M afla control over
families. • the drug trade is a result quite simply The biggest bust involving organized or thj! enormous profit involved. The
crim e was the seizure of 40.6 kil ograms Mob has been able to recoup after the
of heroin in Milan, Italy, on March 31, imprisonment of m any Mafiosi for dope
1980 . The shipment, which had a street trafficki ng in the mid -l970s. The family
value of $10 million, was on its way to ties bet ween Sicily and the United
the United States. Among those arrest-St ates were crucial in re-establishing
ed on this side of the ocean were two the drug trade and regaining control
cousins or the late crime boss Carlo from freelancers. Gambino and re put ed Mob figure
Emanuele Adamita
The Sicilians provide the processing
expe rtis e for the Southwest Asian
opium; their crime brothers in this
country take care of distribution. As the
secret DEA report notes, ·'Several or-
ganized crime mem bers trafficking in
heroin between Sicily and the U.S. a re
some of the same individuals who were
involved in the heroin traffic of the
1960s and early 1970s.''
More than SO kilograms of heroin
h ave been seized a t Kennedy In
SATU RDAY NIGHT DE AD: In the af-
termath or the assassination attempt on
President Reagan. at least 10 bills have
been introduced in Congress to plug the
loophole in the 1968 Handgun Control
Act that allows un fettered importation
of pistol parts for assem bly in this coun·
t ry as Saturday Night Specials.
Incredibly, the govern me nt en
cou raged the produc t ion of cheap
handguns a few yea r~ ago when it quiet
ly lowered the tariff on imported gun
parts.
Mesa art c o n t r o versy s p arks debat e
To the Editor :
If Ali Rousha n goes to jail for his
a rtistic beliefs and faith in the Constitu-
tion, Costa Mesans better be prepared
for a wave of public reaction across this
s tate and country.
T he cultural commissars on the City
MAILBOX
Council will have stood up and hollered
to the world that here in Orange County.
in 1981. an artist who creates and dis-
plays works without prior government
approval will be harassed, intimid~ted,
coer ced and eventually jailed.
In the Soviet Union an artist who dis-
plays his work without government ap-
proval is jailed; in Costa Mesa an artist
who displays his work without govern-
ment approval is jailed! Liberty is
mocked, j us tice abused and Costa
Mesans grow s leek i n r eal estate
s peculation. Sha me on us all. A com-
m unity day of mourning should be
declared.
J .P. PALME R
Wlw be1ref iu mo8t?
To the Editor :
I notice that on the April 21 Daily Pilot
there's an article titled "Freeze Put On
Federal Booklet," calling attaltion to.
booklets such as organic gardening,
mulch. ete ., as being wasteful govern·
ment expenses. I quote froln the article,
"du.ring these difficult ecooomlc limes
we cannot afford to waste lime and
money on activities that have limited
benefi ts to the people oftbis country.''
OF COURSE in whose opinion that
benefit is ltml~. I don't_knctw-8ut tn
"Study Undertaken" lt 1ay1 the Reaaan
ad ministration baa commlaaloued a
studyoflheWorldBanktodNr-mineutt.a
lending pra clices have encoura1ed
socialist governments at the expense of
prlvateenterpme.
ll seems ironic that one study lJ lauda-
ble and acceptable to tbe Reagan ad·
mlntstraUon and not wasteful but these
others are .. Apparently whoever makes
tl\ese determination• ta biased, p~
udlced and is 1olng to determine for tbe
rest ot ut ln the true tradition ot Blt
Brother what baa benefit for the people of
the country and what doean 't.
MLKEJ'OSTER
'Quotea' m.UleOOiJw
To the Edltor :
I'm concerned that UMt 1poke1mu fOJ'I
an anU·e.l.rport f roup la mU:IDC bll UH
unbe-UeV1ble. While be ll .uu.d IO bla
opinion, be doea more harm for tbe HUM
whlC!h he upoundl upoa ...._ be all·
q\lotaothen. I amNfvrtqtoUteAprll
~
26 letter from Tom Williams concerning
Murry Cable's article titled "Master
Plan Wul Quiet the Skies Over John
Wayne Airport."
MURRAY ACCORDING to Williams:
"the people in Newpor t Beach who
are opposed to the county's insane ex-
pansion of John Wayne Airport are simp-
ly a social group."
··People who are able to afford a life in
the Newport Beach area should be the
people who should have to suffer the emo-
tion a I disturbance caused by the
airport."
No such state ments were made by
Murry.
T he problem becomes that when you
mistake facts or misquote people. you put
into jeopardy t he whole case. It makes no
difference where the discussion is. clos-
ing of schools, airport expansion or find-
ing a n alternative airport.
J IM de BOOM
8lmne mispltwed
To thP. Editor:
This revision of the Mike Peters car·
toon you published April 19 Ls a more
appropriate misdirection of attention.
The car ia quite frequenUy used as a weapon, to run down victims. But It is
the driver that is blamed, not the car.
E ve n if the c ause is a de fective
automobile, the blame will be placed on
the people who built it. Now, because or
.recent relaxing or government stand-
u ds. \bey ~ produce even less 1afe
and more polluUns vehicles. Howenr,
death by aatomobUe ls accepted as
thou&h death by nature. '
I AM NOT aeainat ca n . Tb1a ~ Just
an example to show the unbalnced
prejudlce toward euna. Five P"Pl• murdel'ed by a car, used u a weapon,
brine nowhere near the public outr11e
11 o.ne person shot by a 1un.
When someone 11 shot. where ls the
bl•m e placed? On the operator ol the fun, p wllb the operator of the car?
No, the fWl la blamed!
M for the criminal behind the sun.
our law system will protect him.
Su"eys lbOW u.at tua tba a percent of
violent criaM ln the U.S. wUI result ln pro·
aecuUcm, eon~c:tlon and punlahmenl.
Ne'fer mind the crlftilnalt. JL&St r•t
rid of the run and everything will be all
• ·-
right, right'! No, foc us on the proper
subject, the criminal, not the gun. It is
the person behind the gun who is at
fault. just as it is the person behind the
wheel.
RODGER RHINEHART
RenUJTks dist11rbing
To the Editor : While reading the Pilot article con·
cerning the Mesa truancy sweep (April
29). I became very disturbed to find
that some parents were actually •·out·
raged" because their child had been
caught away from the school camp.as. I
com mend the Police Department and
those school offi cials who had the
courage to engage m .such an undert~king after a ll the kids were breakm~
the law.
I would like to see the "closed cam-
pus·· rules more strictly enforced to
keep students on campus during school
hours (unless they have a legitimate ex-
cuse from their pa rents). I realize not
all kids are using or dealing in drugs
and supporting their habits by breaking
into homes during midday hours. but by
enforcing these laws it may help curtail
the activities of those who are.
JACK BOVAIRD
A irork of art
To the Editor:
I am writ.i.ng in behalf of thJs beautiful
sculpture t.bat we have seen for the first
time on 16th and Superior in Costa Mesa.
We were astounded atthe "eye appeal"
this sculpture has . It is a work of art. It
should be a thing to be seen and admired
by people r ar and wide.
So more power to Mr . Roushan for
bringing such a thing of beauty to Colt..-
Mesa .
Aren't we lucky?
CAMILLE WAL.KER
111111111
That towerlna pile of acn» lroo on
Su~rtor Avenue •n Cotta Meta bu an
artlaUc value ~ual only to Bal>Clln.I
Mou_ntain in L.A.
D.M.J .
...... ST
CLIFF
PLAZA
------------~------------·-------.-. --
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981
quality in fashion and services
\
GIVE HER ELEGANCE
FOR MOTHER'S
DAY ...
... with a
sheer n y lon
lracol gown
Cr om Luc ie
Ann combined
wilb sort satin
co llar a n d
C U((s . I n
beautiful
w is teria
P·S·m , $58.00
with that personal touch
CUISIN-ART
SALE
thru
Saturday
only!
THREE
MODELS
DLC10E
DLCSE
DLC7E
Cuisinart Cookware
and
Accessories
20% off
fltD
ROW• HARDWAR 'I
Westclff Plaza
Corona del Mer• Hew bor View
Be Mom's
Favorite Pet
With a Gift
From Westcliff Corners
dick tJ
~ \Ti=er=n=o=n=:r='s
... purh\\l'<lr
Westcliff Plaza, Newport Beach S4-4121
GIVE MOTHER
A LASTING FLOWER
THIS YEAR
French e~amel on 14K yellow gold,
each with a bright diamond center.
760.00
Single flowers from 215.00
CHARLES H. BARR
Newport
Beach
Ale HI fC
••1 ,...,.._u~
•• 4 •• • 0 o s a 0
.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday, May 7, 1981 OBITUARIES
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICllTlOU$8UtlMUt MAM8 l'YAT8Ml•l
Tll• lol....,I"' .. , -• en •lne _, .......
$lllU"' l'ACl l'IC $11,KK•llN. 1,,_I l'~ar UtM, •A, Hlllllifttl6n 8Hcll, CalltonrtattMt
JaM• I( l'nKIOf, IO'OI Hafv .. 1, uu..-. c.i1 ....... tOJ ll
lrlen C••••wo. 11tJ Oarlloll Ave ...... Hllftllnaton .. !Kii, C..llllHlllt
'7Mt MJ>rc L Ll.0.111'\tfl, 1)11 C..1111)< It
Clr<lt , o.. ...... Ctllfotlllt •a... J-·· ~OtlOI flll• •ltl-1 ••• 111.0 wllll tllll C-1 y Cltft. Of O< .,Gt C.-IY t11 lillay
P \JBU(' NOTI ti:
l'ICl ITICM#I I UllMIU MAMI •YAlltiHNf
I II• 1eutw1n11 11t•Mn• •• • dulnu
Ou••n"'" MI l'ft41.. lllltl t'er1 f Orl•t .
W9'1Mln""' C •lllij•llle fa.IJ
t1 .. 1c1 LUllQ ••-00.11, llW l'et~ NtwPOt l 41f Now11w1 I lltOLll
C a11t111 nit ta..11
Hl<\lle All• llt ~lie IMlll l'ett y U11vo Wt•hllln•I•• r •II or nit.,.,,
I Illa l;tutlM" I• t unlludtd by • gtlllll al'"" ..... ,,, ... Nl1 .... A ....... ,,.
I"" •lalt1,_1 we• 111.0 """ 1"9 luunly tie•• "' O• .,.II' tounly IHI Ao11111 1 .. 1
"'""" ,, Itel fllllMl l'ubl'"ht\I 0. .. 1~ t ... ll Ually '""ti
PulHI.-0.-CM\I OtllY l'llot. A111 IJ JO May I " 1•1 l•lt 11
Mey '· u. 21, •• ''" )1, ... 1
PUBUt.' NOTI<:•;
PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE
l'lc:TITJOlll IUllllllU l'lc:TITIOUI 8U.iNIU MA.MllTATIMS•T NMMJITATaMl•T '"°' 1e1-i,.. ..,_ It ~ htl-Tiie ...... 1111 ,__, ll dol"ll 111111
M~ff MM" HUH TI H 0 T 0 H VALL a Y "COUNUY llOY", tit• H-11911
OROOMINO, 11MK W«,.,., A.,.n.,., loult•trd1 C."l• Mete, Celllor11la 1'911111e111 va11.,, c.111ar111a tnoe nu•
..... 0 """ l awh, IJJI Win· Jt M"9 .. l'\lbe, ,.,~. (fnt l'ltU, i.1-, ...... ton. c.tlfOflllt ..._ Covlne, Ctllforlllatlttt
Tllll -llft• It c~-. OY an II\ Tlllt _,_,It (tf'ClllCIH Dy ti\ II\ •lvld;/tl Cll•I0\111 Hano Ar111 1..twl• Jo e.nne a.,,..,.
Tllll tltltlnelll WH 111• with Ille Tiii• •ltil...,..nt •ti Ill.cl wlll\ IM c; ... nly , .. ,, ol Ottl\09 ~ly on May c ... nty C._,11Of0.-C-IY Of\ "-'11
,, ... I 21, "" l'ltlllt \,\. P11197t Pullll....O or.,. C:O.ll o.i1y Piiot, P~Oll\llt<I OtM\Qll to.ti O•llY Piiot,
M•y 7, 14,JI, :at, 1'1t 11.0•t AprllJO,Meyl, 14.lt, "" lta .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI 8UllNI U MAMllTATaMaNT
' ... tollowlng --.. 4»1110 l)lnl Mt••• n11ee1 TOYS AUTO aooY ANO l'AINT,..0 w .. t 17111 \lt .. t • J4, C.Hle Me6e, C.UIMftle t)lf]
Jetttrr Alie<\ Ti-•, m CMl.t Mt .. l!Ael C-1.t ,,,,.. ... C,.lllornle
t)ttJ
f Ill• ll</tl""t I• <OOOU<leO Oy en In Olvlclutl Jttftty Allon T ..,._,,
TlllJ f!A-1 wti llled wll" , .... Counly Clerk ot Ote<IOt C..unly °"
AOfll 14, 1911 " .... Puollthed °'-COHI O•llr l'llol, AP< tt, U, lO Mey I 1•1 17'2 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTIC£
lfOTICI tw ..o..aa&l'OMlllllLITY
Htllu It ....... ...., IMt IM ""
......... will ........ ,._ .......
any •1111 "" 11..im .. 1 Cllftltt<I .. oy tllr-ot-11-myMll, lift Of at .. 1
INJdale.
Oai.4 11\11 IU d.ty Of Mey "" 11.,.oe111tlt\li~
11.0 f \yt-• 11 .... O<f1199.CAttt.7 PuDll•"9d 0.-c;ont Delly Piiot, Mty •. I, 1), 1•1 21,, .. 1
P UBl.IC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI 8U$1NIU
N-anAT•Ml •T Tho lollowll\O p.,....,, ••• 0.11\0 '""''"•" .. THE MONEY MACHIN I!, 200S W. l'ICTITIOUI IU,IHllS l'IC'TITIOUI 8USIH•U 8•1ooa 8oulevuo, N•wllOrt e .. 0 1, PUBUC NOTICE MA.Ml ITATIMINT HUH ITATIMINT l'ICTITIOUS llUllNeSS (alllOlnlt ttMO
ttiOTIC• 0, Al'l't.ICATIO. ,,,. IOllol119 --· .,. 00l"11 O\lll ' ... IOllowlno ... ,_, I• 00'"9 """' .. _. n AT9MaNT ROO TAYLOR, 111/ EIOeft,. CO\IAI
l'O• CHANOI ... ow ......... , NIH.. 'n•o.. '"' lollOWll\O .,.,...., " doing Dull Me ... Ctllfornl• tl621 l'ICTIT10U$I USIHIU OP ALCOHOLIC llV•••o• MOHa.co J &WELR Y. Hh BEAC.H GRAPHICS. 107 11111 n...... J AMl!S ROBERTSON, JOU)
Ne.Ml ITe.TIMIHf 1.ICIHll Nawpart 80ulo .. rO, Cotll M .. e. SlrUI • 10. Hullllnolot Beech. Pe.CIFIC GULF ENTERPRISES, Woodltft, Hunt1noto11 8aacll Tl\e toll0Wl"41 l'fttOn It Going Olitl fo WhOM II Mt~ (Olltorll HUtl CallfOtllla~l7 Calllornla.,.,.. IOI Ocun •WI Orivo, Hunlll\OIOn Calllornl1.,.,.. MU ll. ,,_.rodllll VALl:NTI It al>jllylll(j lo llW 01\eMft ltllak, i.tD LI Mlttot SMr-Anre 0 Brl ... 20t 11111 Bt1<ll, C1llf0fnl1 t21M1 Tiii• Dutlneu IS conoucleCI Oy t
0 w •OOFINO, lleli lloinou OtD•"-"' ,, e.•c-11( •••tr•oe Avt-•••. LM Anoeltl. Ctlllo<nla Slrttl • 10, Hunlll\glo~ Beecn. 01•10 JeMll'~. IOI Ocean Hiii V•M•fl per1Mr.it1p Ltne, c .. ,.,.,..w C•lllotnl• t>t1' Control fOf 41 a.. SALi 1111!11 ~ 900» Ctlllornl1'2MI Ori••. Hunll"Glon 8e"l:Ch, C1lllotnl a II T1ylOI OAVIO e.LLAH WH ITE JIOJ WINE (PUii I AT Pl I 10 •all KrlKOf lttClllthlen, $460 Sltrrt Thl>l>uJlneUlltondu<ltODy tn ln ~h41 flll• \let-I WI'\ Hlad with 1M :,:~:~u LIM, Cool• Mete, Cl ll!Otnle elcollollc lla•tr•• et >OU ""'port Vitia, rtol, l.,o• A19ltt, Ctllfornlt OlvlOual Thi\ liuwne\• t> <Ol\Clu<teO Dy •n 1n Councy 'Itri. ol Orange C.ounly on
Tlllt llu•IM\~ I• <OllOuc..0 Dy _,In· ~l:J~ • • U CMtt Mete Callfornla ~It llutlllllii I• C-u<ttd OJ., 1111· Tiii> ;:.;::;:,A~':. 0,,~::':.11n llW dlv1GualO•v1d Jentl•I\~ APril 11, ltll l'ltlt7t
Tnl• \ltl-I ..,., Hlad wllh t"9 -r . " 1u-..tt OtrlMtWll• Ohlnnas ISl>lk e.prll ••. 1911 ,, ..... County Cltrl! ol Orange Counly oft e.pr11 JO, Mlty 7, 1•. 11, "" 1974-t1 _. Apt ll 14, 1'11
r
"First I would like to make a.statement about the
shocking condition of our Inland waterways."
dlvlClutlO.•kl .,11.,. Wiiii• I ~.Pu71>111111tc11 0r.,.._ C6n l 0.11~ Pllol lnCOtP«tltCI HMKltUOn ct.., U-.n • County Cl••" ot Oran119 County on TM• >ttlt-nl WM 111.0 •1111 u.. PuDll>llt<I Or.onoo Ccw>I Otll' Piiot,
Counly Cltn."' Or-County Oft MIY PUB C O Tiii• •1•1.,.,.,.1 ••• Hied wllll Ill• Puou,,.,.., 0..anlll Coe•t O•lly Piiot ,.1_ s, '"1 ""'-'' 1,1 N TICE ~.°:'~'.~ Ctan. ol Ortl\9" c-ty 0" MO Ao• 1', ll, JO, May I."" 1uai PuDll•l'ted Orat\90 C->I o a11y Piiot, PUBLIC' NOTICE
l'l•uu\ a.pr 1•. n. JO, Mlty 1, 1"1 1121 .. 1
I PuOll\htO C>.noa C.0.'1 O•llY Piiot, i l'ICTITIOUS 8USIHaSS l'ICTITtOUS IUSINEU May 1 14 JI, H. ••• 70.Hl HAM• STAT•M•HT PuDll•/'ed or..-oo Cotll 0•11• Pllol, PUBLIC NOTICE NAME STATEM£NT
Airport scan
'OK f o r film'
fhe toll-lno .,.,_, h e1o1no t>v•I Miy 7. 14· 21• 21• 1"1 tll4'41. PUBLIC NOTICE Tne 1o11ow1no IHt\OM .,. 001ng
PUBLIC NOTICE "-"~·E T IT BE SEWN, !SH PUBLIC NOTICE F~c:;,.~~!::!'::f bu"~~'s8'1 NTERNe.l 10NA I., •
l M1 t e.r111ur. • tl . co"• M"•· Tiit 1oriow1110 penon I• Going ou.i "~c:;,.~~!:~:_.1:,:f O••i•lon of Oa111ron•• '>y>lt1•n int
FICTITIOUS8USIH£SS Ct tlfonrle '1t2' ,.,..... The IOllOWl"G .,.,_, ll 001no ...... UH CrodOy W•y S•nlt An•. He.Mli.STATIEMENT ShtrleyAnnWlnt .... lttr, l~I WHt l'ICTITIOUSIU51HIU THE CARVEO HORSE. 319U neue> C•lllorn••'ll04
fnt tollowl~ ,,.,..,,, I• doing O..•I Wllshlre A•tnua. Santa An•, N-(STATEM£HT C•m lno Capl\lrano, Sen J u•n J·V 1..ITTLE TOKYO 1111 Otntron1 ~ !,ysttms, lrH •
..... •• Ce11101nl• '2104 Tiit lollowlng P•• ~· ••e doing CtPl>ltltlO, C••llornl• m is M 11< nell .... nu• • .. Tu s 1111 C•lllornl• «••llO'l llOft 1•3) CroOOy OLYMPIC PAINTING, /U H Tllls-1\ttlll tonclu<lltdDy.n lll· Du>lntH•> JOAN LEl 80W ITZ, I • Cilllornlt"2MO ' 'WIY S•nl•Ana,C•lllorn1a91104
MounltlnVltw,s.tl\!1"111,Ctlllornll Olvlelu•I. PRESIDENT PROPERTIES. 120Monlptllltr, Newporl B••<h, JtckKtllftSlndort,lr·ull .. of SI,,_ lftl\Du>lna\S•><OnOu<leODy.t<or '12103 Sllirley e. Wln<helltr \flt Wltltrs. Ntwporl Boach, Calllorl\11'12660, Oort Chlklron Trust Cllte<I 4•1 .. ltll porallOn HAE SANT LYU, 11) N MOun•••n r11 .. itlltmenl wes 111.0 Wllh , .. C•lllornl•'2f>60 This llu>ln•H ,, CotWJ<Kled by.,, In· IH I MllCl\;llt A .. n;.., •ff, rusun: OenlronlA Sy•l•m• Inc WASHINGTON I AP> The Federal Aviation Vl.w, !Mini•"""· C.tlll0<nl• 91/0il County Clerll ol Ortn9t CounlyonM•Y Wllllt m Bl11r e.rmstrono. 21 di.ldual Calllorn<•9'1tl0 Pala• 1(...,.1
Tlll>llu'.llt>H>h Cond<K ledDyenon S,ltll N1rDonnt , N1w11or1 8ea t n, Jo.nLelbOwllt Tn"bu•l,...,hc...-C:ltdDy..,,ln Ptt\ldenl Administration has again said that airport X -ray
machines do not harm ordinary photo film and has
challenged anyone to supply it with film damaged
b y the metal·screening d evices.
The FAA made the s tatements in res ponse to a
p etition filed las t m onth by Irwin Diamond. a
Chicago camera accessory manuf~cturer. and
some professio nal photographers askmg the agen·
cy lo post warning signs in airports
o .. 1ou11 l'lt lSU c1111or111•'1660 fnlt >tlla,,_t "'"' rlltd •1111 lhe oi.iou•• '"" •••••nwnl ... , 111l'O with '"" H., StnQ LYll PuDllS/Wd Or-Ccw>I O•llY Pllo1, ThOmts M Lindon 110 S•PPlllrt Counly Cltrk ol Oran91 County on , Jto 1(111nSlndort County Clerk ot Or.tn~ CounlY on
Tiii> stlltmenl w•s flltd with 11111 May 7• 14' 21• lt, t9ll 2117"1 BalbO• hlano. C1111om1'a 92661 ' APrll 11, 1"1 rhl> sl.tlement wis llleo wlln Ill• Apr II 11, Itel
I Counly Cltrk o4 Or_,Qie C-IY 011 M•y EOwln A Mt>trve, 120 \flt l'ltleJJ O C I F1MU2
PuOlll""" Or-COl\I Daily P1101 4, 1~11 P UBLIC NOTICE W11111S N.wporl Be.en, C1lllorn11 Puol1sneci Or-CCN~I Dally Piiot, Coul\ly (ltrk 01 ••not oun Y on FtllMJ '2'60 Aprll lO, May I, 14, ZI, 19tl lt7MI AO•ll H . ltll l'IMQl
P11D11"-d Ore<>Qt CCN>I Ot llY Pllol,l -Thi\ l>u•ln•U " COl\OuCltO Dy • . J•O-. K._ & 5'•011 ... M1y 7, 14. 11 1'111 ,,SJ.ti NOTICI llrnlltO P1r1ners1>1p P UBLIC NOTICE ... __,c.ttl« Or. T ne Annuol 11_.-t for "" , .. , '"° Eowln A. Mii•'"" ,..,\e u14 lol OONALOA M PELL.ETIER FOVN· This slAl....,_I wa~ tll<CI wllh lhe H-1 llM<ll, Ct."* P UBLIC NOTICE OA TION, INC "•••II-tor 1nsc••<-County Cttr11. ot Or..,,ve Co111'I• on FICTITIOUS •USINISS PuDll'1ttd Or-Cot>I O•lly Piiot, FIC'TITIOUS IUSINEU
Apr JS, JO, May 1 14 1'111 111111
PUBLIC NOTICE
"Any film s ubmitte d . will be pass ed on for
examination by experts at the Eastman Kodak Co.
o r the National Association of Photographic
Manufacture r s," the FAA said.
1 uon al "II °"""' Orl•t. S..111 200, AP<tl l, 1'111 NAME STATEMllHT Apr il.)(), Mey I. u . 21, ltll 1"311 He.M .. ITATEMENT P'ICTITIOUS IUSINHS IHt•llOrl -h, c.e111.,-n11, ClurlnO rt· MALCOM& OALY fht lollowl"G P'"'°" h doing Dull The tollowlng per>Oftl •re oolng HAM( STATIEMI HT 0111•• D<o>IMU no.,,. by •ny ClllHn 4100 M~Al1M llvd., ntu •• Oullntu ti.
1 DEATHS ·.ELSEWHERE
BEAU~'ORT, ~ ( I \P1
Gen Melvin Zai.,, 1.i
command111g genen.il nf tht·
Third Army who rnm
manded 'thl:' IOls t A1rhorrw
Division 1n Vietnam. dn•d
Tuesda)
MOl:NTAIN Vl fo.:W I i\P I
Profe!>sor eml'r1tu'
Theodore J. Krep1t, 8-1 "ho
helµed s hape the Stanford
Busi n t:S!> School 1n a
h'aehang career n f morl.'
than thret• decadl''. lltt.'ll
Wednesda' following " Ion~
illness
WASill NGT0:--1 I A I' I
J ohn Osborne. 74. who
wrote a widely reud Whit<'
H ouse column for the Ne"
Republic magat1nl' died
Saturday of emphysema
LOS ANGELES 1 AP1
J ohn F. Kessel, a LiCLA pro
fessor whose research led Lo
the control of a crippling dis
ease in Tahiti. has d1erl at lhe
dj(eof87
. DEATH NOTICES
BOTKJN
JEAN BOTKIN, a resident
of Costa Mesa. Ca s ince 1947
when she moved here from
Oregon She passt?d away on
Min 4, 1981 She •~ .,un·1vetJ
by ·her hui.band Robert 0
Botkin of C:osta '.\1c~a. Ca ,
Catholic Funeral Services
are scheduled for Frida>.
May 8. 1981 al I llOP M at the
llarbor Lawn M l.'morial
Chape l With Re\ rather
Denis Lyons of SI John lhl'
Baptist Catholic Church of I
fic1atlng Inte rment will ht•
ut Harbor Lawn Memorial
Park Sen ices under lhe
direction of Ha r bor LJwn
Mount 011 ,.e Mortuary Cil
Costa Melia !>40·5~
1.un1HGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTCLlff' CHAPIL
421E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
rtHCI llOTHllS
SMITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Main SI
HunllnQton Bt.ach
536-6539
rACtffC YllW
MIMOllALPAaK
CerTeterv Mofluarv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1hc View Drive
Newport Beach
644·2700
McCOIMtal MOITUAlllS
L1<1un11 Beach
494-941!1
LllQuna Hills
76&-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1176
HA.llOl L.AWJi6-Wf. OLIY~
~onuarv • CerT9t•rv
Creiratorv
t625 G111er Ave
COsta Mesa $40-~55-I
Teamster
president
rites set
Tne 1011ow1~ person I• dolno busl~ wllo '° requo•ts wl111ln tto <llY• ll'Om New,.rt a..dl, CA HMO CHIC AUTO BOOY ANO CUSTOM PUBLIC NOTICE OCEANA IRE APAR TMENf~. MU.. Git• of publlullon ol lllh nooce P'UMt7 Pe.INT !GI 91 R.-Circte, Hunt 711 I TalOt rl Avenue Hul\lll\lllOn
THE MU$tC MAN . ., .... Hunl WILl..IAM A !>CHMIOT PuDilsi-1 Ore<>Qt , ..... Oaily P1101, 1no1on Btl<h. Ctlllorn•• 9"41 1 B••<ll. Callloml••,... inglon Slrttl, Huntington Buen, I Prlnclc>11 Mln.gtr I Apt ... U , lO, Mltv I, 1911 ltJS.al A111 M F•llan1an, 1110• Ntt FICTITIOUS aUSIHISS Oa•IO K. Limo. 1tSS2 Ma<Artnur
Calllornta 'l?MI Publl>""" Or-Ccwll O•lly Piiot, -llowooo Cir<I•, Hunllnglon Buch, NAMl STA,TIMI HT Blvd , Suite u o, lr•lne. Ct lllorn1a JOHN PATRICll. YEISER, 121'A 1Mo 1 1911 _ 1161 a1 PUBLIC NOTICE C•lllorn1• .,... Tno lollowlng perM>n• •'" Going "271~
HunllnolOI\ SI'"' Hunllnoton B•a<ll, -TnoS t>u•"~" "<ondu<ttd DY 1n '" DullnH••• John M1n1r 1ess1 Mt<Artnur Call/orlll•~ PUBLIC NOTICE 01v1du11 OAl(INE WOODWORKS. llh BlvO , Sullt u o. l•v•M, C111torn1a Tnh DU\t,.U •• C....OUCIPCI oy .., '" U!GAL NOTICE Alll M Faltahl•n Orcnld HUI Pia<•, S.ntl An• Htlgllh, t?llS
dlv1dual HOT1C• OF PUllLIC HEARING" Tnl\ ltltemenl wes ltltd wllh 1nt Ctlllornla 97701 Mt n ro a a R • u t >: n, I US 2 Jonn p Yt1••• I STATEMaHT OF A8AHOOHMEHl l'••cese !'LAH 01' county Cl••• o( Or1n91 County on Ro.,_,, Weygono, )Ul Orc1110 Hiii MtcArlllv• Blvd S..ttt 440, Irvine,
f hi• \llltme111 ••• lll@d will\ tlut 01' USE 0" ST•EET ALIONMEHT 11·1 Mtt<ll 2• t911 P11u, !.ant• "'1\t Halohh, C.lllorftl• Ct lllorn1a 9211S County Cl•rtl o4 0r .. ve (OIH\IY on M•Y FICTITIOUS •USIN($S HAMI NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN...... FUIJll '1101 Otvocl K Lamo
S. Itel The lollow1no Pf''°"' Ila• IDlndoMCI puDll< "9trlng wlll b9 IWkl Oy I"' (.lly PuOll\0..0 Or.nge Ccwll Dally Piiot, WeyM lntmato. 10 E 1•11\ Str .. I, JOlln MIMr 1'11Ul41 tn. UH ol t"911<1111o.a OliSlneu nt mt Plannlno Commlt.alol'I ol lhe Cll1 ol Apr 13, JO, May I 14, 1911 1912 .. 1 Cos&a Mow, Ctlll0tn1t '11411 Mellrdt<I Rll>tl<h
Publl>llaO Oranoe C.O.st Oailr Piiot, 001..PHIN TACKLE CO .• Ht HuntlnQtOfl lleecn, Ctlllornla, I<>< tlW Tiii> Ou•lna•• I\ conou"eo Dy • fhl• st•temtl\I wa• tlltd wllh I~
M .. 7, 14, 21, 2t, 1'111 ,,. ... 1 ~~oate Drive, Anthalm. C..lllornl• ou•POH o1 conslclt•lno Prt<IM Pion ol o•ner11 PMtnarVllP Counlr Cieri< of Oran"" County on .,.... StrHt e.11onmtn1 NO 11·1. • raqutt1 to PUBLIC NOTICE ltOOtrlWtVQll\d a.pt II 14. 1911 l'l .. ltJ SAN DJ EGO (A p I Tnt F1<Ullou• B.nineu Ntm. re •l1gn • 11tlv1te streal tor '"'purpose! Thi\ •l.tte,,_I •tt hlto w1lh tM Puo11.-O<-Ccwst Dally P1101,
Frank E . Fitzs immons, I PUBLIC NOTICE I''".., to ·-""' mec1 In Oran119 tf provlOlno a<<tu to tne 12 ecre ill FICTITIOUS austNISS County Clerk ol Or1n119 C.ounh °" Apr.••. JJ . .)(), """Y '· '"'' 1111 t1 COU'!,'Y onPJHenBR9R, ,"~NA Ut w I I ltx•l•O °" tilt ....,,h side ol Tt lr.. He.Ml STAT£MIHT April ... 1'111 ,._ a trade union SUCCeSS nAL "' ~ ' HO• t Avtnue, ...... o .. jmtltly 450 1 .. 1 WHI Tnt lollowlng 11er"°"' art Going
l h l f Om a l'ICTITIOUS IUSINlSS Ori••. Antll91m. C.1U1orl\lt tltOt of 8eKll lloult•••d A pl.,, tltpjcllno buSiftt H as Publllhtd Or•-CCN•t O•llv Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE sor y w o wen r NAMIESTATEMENT Tn••-nen wll <ondu<tedbyan ,..10111..,._1 1,onma 1,.1,..o.peri J ano M SERVICES 9UJ AP• 1•.Ul0,Mty 7,1w1 11sw1
22-cent-an-h our truck Tho lollowlno permns "" ooino .no .. 1oue1 men1of0t11t1_._1Serv1<Hottl<• Htm llton Hun11no1on ee1c11 l ~S •USIHIH -I 0 a .ding J 0 b t 0 th e Du••~·~ ~LASTER FACTORY, 2l710 Thi$ .~:.':"..!tB~-:·~tO wlll\ ma Stiel ntarlf\11 Wiil lie hlkl allllt llour Callforn1•"-• PUBLIC NOTICE .. _. STATEM£HT
000 d El T 11-·• El T C Ill I C Cl , I 0 (.o I ol 7·00 PM., on May 1', 1911, In,,... R1<hard K•rn M<KIUon J71l The IOllowl~ ~nons art dol11n $160. ·&·year pres • en tltlO oro ~. oro, • orn. •OP~~'l •. 1.:~· 0 ....... un y on Councll Cll1mbe•• BullOlno ol th Lt LlnO• Court, Nowporl 8tt(ll, ..• ~-•
CY Of the Teamsters, the U llOI Joan G11toro, "'11 wl>lr•no ....,.., Civic Center, 1000 Mltln Sl-t, Hunl C1111orftla 92MO FICTIT~OUS-IS~USIHEU DU\lne~• ~· V II T H S T R E E T
b. d c I 8e<K c p lnolOfl BNcn,CtlltonM• Johl\ KutllS MCl(I UOn, ,,., N·-csT•TK ~KHT PARTNERSHIP, 700 Wot Com-n a ti On • S I g gest a n Ire le Hunt "91on II t llfO< 11 PuOll""° Or-Coeil Oelly 1101, All lnl-sttd .,.,....,, aro lnvll.O I l •LlnO• Courl Newport BtlC" ....,.. -•m"' , h . . d d ,,.,.. •prll JO, Mey 7, u, 21. 19'1 lOtl .. I Ille~ •••• -··lno .~ ••~•· 1-ir • • rne followlno parton• ••• dolnn monwe•llll A .. nue, Fullerton, r!C e~lUfllOn,IS ea RJonGlll0<d,'MllC.1,,.lr•noClr 1 --·----·-·-~··••~ Calllornla'12MO bu\inoui> • •celilornle'2632
Fit ZS i mm 0 n s. w h 0 I ~:~. Hunllnoton Buch, Calllornll P UBLIC NOTICE ~~~= ~~ '::; ;.~~::'...:~Ho. II~~~~ ~=.~·P'' conouctt<I Oy • BREWTIME SYSTEMS, ·~s Rt<I FULLERTON !>AVINGS & LOe.N
d d r I l 73 .,_ .. I Hiii Avenue. Tu"•n.C1Hlom11 •:i.eo ASSOC.tATION , 200 Wt>I Com-te 0 ung CDnCer a Tiii\ tl\IW\t" ll col\CluCltO Oy • ~urthtr lnlorm•llon mt y lie OD• RI( MCKt'""i' M<C.e• & Sons Vtn01no. • monwtlltll Avtnu~ Fullerlon,
Wed n CS d 8 v al th e 0tMral po1r1netV1lp f'ICTITIOUS •U5INEU ltlllllcl lrom 1 .... Cllv Pltnnlno Oe~rt· Tll" stll.,,_I w•s I I.cl wllll lhl Ca11tornl1 co~r•llon, 900 N Cum Ct lllorllla'2'32 . . . -' I L1~· JCN1n Gitt-a Ne.ME STATIMEHT 1 ~ Coul\IY Cltrk ol Orenge CounlY OI\ ·~ GOLOBERG WHEELEn COM S Cl look Over ·--men ming• RCWO. Cov1n1, Ct hlornla ~17'4 · " Cripps 1.n1.c. Thi' l11ltmenl .... ltltd wllh ,,.. Th• lollOWlnQ .,.,'°" I• doing bU>I T••"'-... 0 11141 S»-5211 Aprtl 24, 1911 ' Tiiis _,,,. .. "C-u<ltd oy. (Of PANY. SIC) C..mpu• Ori ... , N-l)On
the tWO ffiliLiOn·member CountyCltrllOIOr.,91Counlyon"""y nouH OATEOlllisltlldtyOIMty 1tl1 ,,...,. llO•tl•Oll Bo1Cll,C..lllor"4a91660 . h h s 1 .. t HAMii. fON ANO ASSOC IA TES, T P G CO PuDlt\l'\ecl Or-Coe•I Deity PllOI, M<O.. & Son• V•noino Tlllt Dv>lnen 1, conouct..i oy • unio n 1n 1967 wen l e FIOIM4 1•.o c ••• ,,, .. !.tr"t· .... _ Bt.Cll, MISSION,, y Le.NN IN M· e.prllJO,Mayl,1•.ll,1 .. 1 ...... , M1c11te1·A Mee.... gtn1ralPtrtnanlll11
late James R. H offa , tn P11D1t"-d Ore<>Qt Ccw't 0111y Pilot. Calllorn••ntSI I Jame•W Palln PrHooent cnri•IOPfltf A W"-tltr . j May I 14 lt 21 '"' 1130.al I R 1cn1ro 0 H1mllton, 1940 . • PUBLIC NOTICE T I t I s 111-1111 1~ federal prison for JUry · · · :._ _ · c•••••n• st•ttt, Lagun• Buell. P *"0r1a"' c 0 P Tn" '"'t•men• ... \ 111l'<I •11" ,,,. hit '• -... -"' ·-tampe ring and mail Cl lifornii'1UI 1101111\tO ~ O.~I ally 1101, __ (.ounly C.ltrk ol OrMIQO' Counly on Counly Cler• OI Oran~ County on PUBLIC NOTICE Tnli D.nifte>> "con<1uc•11 Dy.,,'" ""'°Y 7. 1•1 nu.a• I April 17 1"' Apr1111. l'llt . fraud. decided n ot t o dlvidu•• FICTITIOUS llU$1NISS P'lttJ101 • FttlOll
I Ne.ME STe.TEMl.NT Publtlned O<anoe CCW•I 0111v PtlOI, PuOlls,.,.., Oranoe C.o.J>t 0111y PllOI, s eek r e -e echon a s pres1 l'ICTITIOUS •USIHIE$S lllChlrd 0 H1mlllon PUBLIC NOTICE Tll• lollowlng IH'"<>n• ... Going Apr 13, lO, May '· ... 1'181 ,,,. 11 Aplll lO, May I .. 11, 1'181 mw1 d t Ne.Ml. STATEMENT I T nis \llltnwnl ..... 111.0 •llh ,,... ---bu Jinan... -e n ' The lollowlno perso" h doln" Coul\IY C1t •k 0( Orenil" CouftlV Oft GOLO BERG WHEELER C.OM
Ri s ing through the 1111.1,,.uas v APril u. 1t11 NOTICE OF DEATH OF PANY, sic> c:emou' Ori••. N1wll0'1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Teamster heirarchy o n A ' ENTERPRISES, •s1 e1rc11. Puo1b~Or-Co.S1 o111~1=. ETHYL M . FERGUSON Be1c11.C•llfornlat2M0. Sull• 02 ... ewpc>rl lkxll C.tlltornla ·~ • .. K A e T H E L M CHRISTOPHER Jo WHEEL.ER, N-7236S H 0 f (a ' s c 0 at la i I s • 92..0 • • Apr ••. n .)(), M•Y I, 1911 11:zo.a1 ~ • lU 011 Glotglo Ro1d. •n•Mlm. l'ICITITIOUS BUSINEU
f'jtzsimmons inherited a Amy Jull• Polnemus, 21122 Fe RGUSON AN p 0 F Cali!Orl\119*/ Ne.MESTe.TEMENT NOTICE OF DEATH OF
Un.ton with a r eputatio n w,.',"101oc,11.:.'.o -~~ ... Huntington BHtll P UBLIC NOTICE p e TIT I 0 N T 0 AD . GOLOBERG·a.ssoc1ATES, INC., fllt lollow1ng Ptr\Oft\ ... doing JOSE ROSAN. akOI JOSE
•w ··-MINISTER ESTATE NO. e ca1tlorNt <or'P0"••1on.s1.oc:empu• Du•1nn .. , ROSAN , SR . AND OF
for corruption and s can· Tiii> -lrwu I• COl\O<Klecl by.,, II\ A108696. !.>2~~·· Ntwl)Orl Beacll, (.elllornl• THREE 0 BEO & BATH. Yorl>I p ET IT I 0 N T 0 AD .
dal. The Crim'tnal mis· dl•telual Jui••Poi~-u· NOTICE OF DEATH OF , .... s11opp1no Cent••. sseo s.nr• An• C•· -·~·" ~ WALTER LEO FRITZ T 0 a I I he Ir s, Thll Dusln•U •• conOucttO Dy. nyonR060,An-11T1,Cl lllO•n1e tlt07 MINISTER ESTATE NO.
d eed s of nave Bec k . Tiiis S1tl-I '""'Hlad wllll '"' AND OF PETITION TO beneficiaries creditors oener1lpt11ne""11>. Th•tt 0 Oepulmeftl•. II\( .• A -tOl630. Hofra ·~ pre d ecessor , c50ou1 .. n11rc1H11o10<.,geCOU111yonM•Y STER ESTATE . ' edl Chrlstopfl«A.Wheeler o.1aw•rtcorpor111on,to1si1vorune. T 1 1 h 1 s " ADMINI and contingen t er tors of Tiii• •ttte..-1 •a• w.o wllh t,,. En1H•111oro,connac11tuto.111 o a e r •
h e I p e d g e t the P'1'1S.U NO. A10l69S. Ethyl M . Ferguson, aka County C.ltrk of 0rAl)9t County Ofl !h:• DUMneu IHon<IUcltd by .cor· beneficiar ies. c.redltors
Teamst ers kicked out o r PubllslltCIOr-CottlOtll Piiot T 0 a 1 1 he j r s. Ethel M . Fer9uson and Aprll21,191t. ,.,.,_ P0•10\nr .. Ol>tpattmenl>.lllC and contingent c reditors of
theAFL-ClOin1967 M•Y1•14.u.tt,itei ;11»1• beneficiaries, c reditors perso!'s _who may be 011011.,..,0renoecoe••O•llyPl1ol. R-rtsnu•~ky, Jose Rosan, aka Jose w h e n h e d i e d • and contingent c.reditors of otherwise interested in the ""'"'°·Mey 1, 14, 11, 1w1 i.11 .. 1 Tre•wm Rosan, Sr. and per sons P UBLIC NOTICE WALTER LEO FRITZ will and/or e state. Tnis stt1ement ... , 111•0 with 1"" who may be otherwise in·
Fitzs immons was fight and per sons who may be A petition has been filed PUBLIC NOTICE ~:~~1;1 ~:;• 01 0'""oe coun1Y on1 teres ted in the w ill a nd/or
ing a f ederal g o vern· •01tHM1ENTT0 Acou1u o therwise Interested In the by Bank of America Na-F1.0»0 estate:
ment s uit seeking to re· l'AllTNeasH•I' 1HT11tHT w ill and/or estate. tlonal Trust and Savings H~ Pu1>1is11te1 Or-ccw>1 O•••• P1101. A petition has been filed
c over millio ns of do llars HTWHH A petition has been filed Association in the Superior F•CT•Tlous eusi1tiss APr. 72. JO. ,...,,Y '· 14' 1 .. 1 19,o•t by Charlotte Mae Rosan in r Fr•llk -· He.Ml STATIEMIHT -----he a nd other ormer .,... by Beverly G. Dellea and Court of Orange County Th• tollowlno per..,n• ••• doino PUBLIC NOTICE the S uperior Court of
trustees of the union's Ml<-•"· ,...1oc11, Mildred R. Strausbaugh in requesting that Bank o f 1>us1nHsas Orange County requesting
b ·11· c 1 wuii.m•.w11-· th s · Court of A • N r 1 T t DEUTSC H OLMSCHEID that Charlotte Mae Rosan $1 4 I io n entra S.-M Welrtlll, e uperior merica. a iona . r~s PROPERTIES I, 7100 Wnl Co111 "ICTITIOUS•USIHESS
S tates Pe ns ion Fund al •GMf1J.o.11es,Jr. Orange County requesting and Savings Association H11111 •• ,. s..<tt 270. "'"'"°,., hec11, Ne.M•STATEMENT be appointed as personal le~e dl y lost through ... ,,.--.1a1Al,.,._Acu""' that Beverly G. Dellea and be appointed as personal c.111ornl•'l2"'1 Th• 1011ow1ng Pt•\On> ••• do1n11 representative t o ad-
ques ll·onable manage Frtl\k Meury,lle••1,...11•rcai1t<1A<· Mildred R . Strausbaugh representat i ve to ad-Jo OEVE1..0PMEN'f, IHC • • 1>u•lnauas minister the estate of Jose ~ulrlno Par1nar, Ml<lwtl H Polloc•. I f Celllornl1 <O•llOrt tlon, 1100 Wnt M a. C PROPER fl ES. 4100 EO R S J m ent ,,..1111am 11 w1uon. s1ep11en M be appointed as persona minister the estate o Coe•t HIQllw•Y. sune 210. H-llO" 1nger uo1. Hun1r"g1on Buch. o s an, an u an
Na1r111\ .no Robert J oots. Jr representative to ad-Ethyl M. Ferguson, aka &Hch,C•lllornl1•*3. C••llorn1at21M1 Capistrano, California
vre•n•lttr ca11t<1 Par1Mrs•g• .. •• minister the estate of EthelM.Ferguson (under RAY P OLMSCHEID J•mH C.H•nson,t100Edlngf( (under the Independent
•011ow•. Wa I ter Leo Frit z (under th e Ind e pendent Ad -CORPORATION, a c:e111or111acorpor•· .. oJ, HunllnQton Bt1cn, C•lilorn1a Adm lnistratlon o f Estates AltTICLe I. •ECITAU , tlOI\, 17141 M.urplty Avtn1.1t, S..llt C.. 91•0 101 P1rtn."'"'d•11G •t 11eo1L1 the Independent Ad· ministration of Estates1rv1ne,c:e111om1att1u oone•o M H•n>01.,••00Ed1,..., Act).Thepetlt ionissetfor "~~~C::!:~:_.·:::s p., 11cwc1. L-. N1gu11, Clllforn•• m i nistration of Estates Ac.t). The petition is set for Thi• 1>u11n1u •• conclu(ltd or • -.ol, HunllnglOI\ B~•cn. C•111orn1• hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
T11e 1o11ow1~ .,.,_, •• dolno Du•• ~::n::, ... u::=; :;:: ;:c:-:, •;:m°:'~ Act>. The petition Is set for hearing In Dept. No. 3 at oane••1 ~=~0PMENT INC. m4~eggy A l<tl\o 6100 e oinger 700 Civic Center Drive
"'" .. , Airplane Account hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, JQMPll P. o.utsc11, ••OJ, Hun11ngton B .. cn, c1111or"11 We S l . Sant a An a •
KARLE euTCHER COP<TRA<.· Dntret•A< ... ,. 700 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa Pr~1c1tn• .,.., California 92701 on May
fOR. its. Por1 Marg11e, N•w110rt 'O? The A<11Ulrl"ll P•rtner "° .. * . th C't f Sa ta A C l'f rn' a on June 3 Tnl• ~i.1-1 wti tlltd w1111 '"' Th11 Du••neu '' conoue1..s by • 27 1981 at 9 30 a m Beech, CtlllOfnlatliMO \lru lo KQUirt 1 Ptrtnertlllp ll\lttffl. West, 1n e I y 0 n na, a I O I ' Counly Cltrl< of OrenQt County on Qtn•r•l pertnersllip ' : ' •
KARL E BUTC.HER, m• Pon TM Acqu1r1~ Par1 .... ,,...11 rt<•••• Ana, California on June 3, 1981 at 9:30 A .M . Aprl110. "" Pto11v J. tt11>0 IF YOU OBJECT to the
Mergel•, .. ....,,.,,. 8tKll, C.tlllornl• en Interest In .... Per1Mtslllp -a•· 1981 at 9: 30 A .M . IF YOU OBJECT to the ,.,.... This •l•1emtnl ..... 111.0 with Ille granting of the petition, '2~1-s tllnit>H•" con0uc1ad oy.., In· ~~';.~:~.:.' Ille 11ao11111u o1 111• IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of tlhe petition, A:,~~~~:ir.-:r2~.:\ oeuy,:::i ~:~~·; •. ~!:;k o1 O•Mloe County on you shouheld !?ither dappet atr
dlv1c1u11 uT1cu L Acou••m-granting of the petition, you should ether appear FtMIS» at the aring an s a e
K••1 E Butcner z.01 Tn• Acquiring Pa1111er 11.. you should eithe r appear at the hearing and state PuDl1>Md o.. .. go co .. 1 0111 v Pl101, your object ions or f ile
Tnls 11•1-1 "'"111.., w11" 1111 ecqulre<1111s1n1tr .. 1trttec1lveonMay a• the he•ring and state your objec t ions or file PUBLIC NOTICE Apr n .:10.May1.14,1M1 111.s-e1 written objections w ith the Counly Cl•r'!l o< Or.,.91 Covnty on Mey 1 1,.1 ~ <> I
s, 1t11. • Natk•t1~......... your objections or file written objections with the ---court before the hear ng.
l'lmtt 2 oJ Tiit ,..,,~ .,,. .. ,_ • no11e1 written objections with the court before the hearing. l'ICT1T~~T:'usi1tiss P UBLIC NOTICE Your appearance may be in
Put1llJ/\t00t-c..u o.iiy PllOI, of e<qu1.111on 10 tie ll'll>lltlllel •I 1Hll court before the hearing. Your appearance may be HAMaSTATIMaHT personorbyyouratto rney. Mey 7, 14. 21. tt, 1•1 2112.al Ol\Ct 111 IN 0.lly Piiot, a MW-pet ol b t T I I clol Du I l'ICTITIOUS •USIHISS -----g•ner•I c1rcu1a11on 111 cne Ille<• •• Your appearance may be in p erson or Y your a • ,..s=:11o11ow no Pff""' s no ' "-• STAHMIHT I F Y 0 U A R E A PUBLIC NOTICE w111c11 tllt Par1,..,1111p ""''""' ,,., In person or by your a t-torney. NEWPORT MANAGEMENT T11e 1o11ow1"0 "''°"'.,.doing CREDI TOR or a cont·
_____ r...,..,1ycert1tcton. torney. IF Y 0 U ARE A SYSTEMS, ltOI Macl\r111ur bUtlnHses ingent c.reditor of t he de·
l'ICTtriousauseNISS z.OJ A=~ =:-t I F Y 0 U A R E A C RE DI TedO Rlt or fa hcodnt· ~~::;::·~· 10'· --' ....... coMW,.e.,.~E,,~ ,";5~ :!':::1.~~1';!.~t: ceased , you mus t file your
NAMISTATEMINT Ille AC_..., ... it.rt .. , wlll loln IN CREDITOR or a cont· lngen t c.r or 0 t e e-C.11••••• Fr•nll Lultdtr. tOUl 21S, jiunllnglon BHcll, C•lllornl• c lalm with the c.ourt or
Tn• 1o11ow1no 11tl'Wl'I is c1o1ng bUsl-pannen 111 cone1uC1l11t 1>u•J,,.u •• • lngent creditor of the de -ceased, you must file your EveroltdH L.ane. Hunllnot°" a.ac11. ttMI present It to the personal
Mu•s Parlna•llllP ll/leWll •• AlrP•-A<· ceesed you must file your claim with the court or ce111ort11a.,... Peril w•k•l. In<.• o.11w•re representative appointed
.... Ji!, :!te:~:~~;.J:~oncon1, '°""'· .-.cc.,..lftt claim 1wlth the court or present It to the personal d1!1~!.':':'1'1ne" 1' '*""'<ltd°" t11 In· ~fs:'~a~~n~~ =~. 8~~~iio5:'~:: by the court w ithin tour
JOH N w. WAIGHT , JU concord. J.IM 1nwnedl11••r 1011owt11t 111e "'· present It to the personal representative appointed C11tr1" F•an11 Lut1>11tr •1•01 months from the date of
N•wpor1 BNc11. ca111orn1• •t..o qu11111on o1 tllt Par1ner•h•D '""'"'· representative appointed by the court w ithin four This 1u.1tmen1 was 111• with 111e T111> llUtlneu •• c-..c..a by.,, Ill\ first lssuanc.e 01 letter s as 01!1~1~a':"'1nau •sc-1eoy'" In· :::'t!':.'::"9::1 ~':,:.,':c.0.:1:':.: by the court w ithin four months from the date of ~~~1;.5~~~ of Onlloe county .., ~':;:'!°~::" •nocl.ttton _, U\tfl • provided In Section 700 of
J<>Mw wrloM ,....,.,11 ... 11.c>iun" months from the date of first Issuance of letters as F1.oa1 ParH•nkn,1n< the Probate Code of
Tiii• , ... _, wa~ llllld wllll lllt DIK........ f irst Issuance of letters as provided In Section 700 of ~M11Ul11, SleveftJ.$1\tf-California. Th e time for ~:~~·: •• ~~~-01 O•tntt Couniy °" co!.~:1,.:~":,,.a',.:::. !:11~ provided In Section 700 of the Probate Code of ... ~~..::.:-= .. ,. Tiiis ;:!=, wK 111 ... 1111 111e filing clalms w ill not ex·
P1•1m 11\tpartlffrltlf'H•ftblhtl ........... lh t Probate Cod e of California. The time for •-18Mdl.ci . .-.. Coullly , ..... ol OranQt Cou"'y Oft plre prior to four months
Puot1111tc1 Or-coast o.uy 1'1101, "•••to•o-• cantr•<t• •11y ll•IMllly California. The time for filing· cla im s w lll not ex· AM: .1ea1t . ...-.. Ap•ll ••. 1te1. from Jhe date of the hear-
Apr11 '°· ""'' 1, 14, 11, 1w1 it1M1 w111,11 u" •• mu c11ar11t 1111 tiling clalms wlll not ex· plre prior to four months Pu1111llled Or.,.. Goat1 o.uy PllOI, "' ... , Ing no1iced above.
PUBLIC NOTICE ::':::::::'::i:.:::::.-yn:i::: p lr• prior to four months from the elate of the hear-Aprlll0,At\rf7.U.2l,t .. I 20f0.tl ....;~~~.·;ri,t;:,~~~P•llrt:1~i YOU MAY EXAMIN E
trtd!O ........... or '''"" at lhe from the date of the hear· Ing noticed above. the file ker,t by the c;ourt.
f'1mnoutau-.N•M :~~~t ax1cu"°" ANo .... lngYnoOUtlcMedAaYbovEeX. AMINE theYOflule kMer,AtVbyEtXhAeMco'uNrEt. PUBLIC NOTICE P\JBUC NOTICE If you are nterested In the
NAMSITATI Mt•T '°"".,.."' estate , you may file • re-Tl'tt '°'._.... --11Clo-11ut1· ,..,.......,, the flle kept bV the c ourt. If you are nte rested In the P•CTtTtouuusi1tua ... mw quest with the c.ourt to re· ,. .. ~L,." sHou oH•GN, 1100 a,01 T1111 ..,...,,_. _ • .,. •-..<111• If you are lnterestMt In the estate, you may fllt a re· NAMa1TATllM81tT "'"'1ouuu111tau celve special notice ot the
T4tft.c.tA....._c.t"9nll .,.,._ ""'•llY}llllrnlllttr•H-~~ estatt, you may file er• questwlththecourttore-T11e1111Mw1111,.,._1,...,..-'_ NAMalTATUdNT 1 t of t t *'"""'ls
1.HLll M.U11.vH ~111iGos1. :::c:.:,:'~~-·---quest w ith "" court to rt· ctl\lt sPeCl•I notice of tn. _ .. , ou~":.:!71"° __ , ••• dot,,. nven ory es a e •-
>100 Taft Wey, Cietta Mite, CAUfWfllt ._.... .. ._............ CllV• lpetlal notice of the lnvtntory of tstate H5ets wt~~I' r~,o~~~~·A~21,:~:~:~ lil..ITI TYPING HRVICI, HtO. and b f the petitions, 4tC· ~ ........... IH~IDY tft l,.. =~~~==:-:-.. ~ .... e:: lnvtntorv of .......... ts Ind of~ petitions, IC· IAl.U. 141 VJOllO Tltotues. UI ~~;:.:,!·~~~··· L•o11n• "111" ~:~~~ ~:t.:tT!0~2~ ••v!Mll. ti-•eND~ ..... 1111111tat •nd of the petitions, IC-counts end reports ~11°01f0~9:t~~·:~~~~'i'l>'~i e ... waA.~1.2'1ou-of the ca11tomla Probate
Tll•• ~-::. , .... wit" "" MY Ketllmlllle. count 1 and r •Ports described In Stet Ion 1200. sa11vica. ,., ••n•" HOUsa. 111 v1.1a or1 .... U9llM Hnti. ca11ten111 Cod ~tyO••utOrt111t ~Y ... ~ a.a.,':'!:~~.,,.,,.. .. described In Sktlon \toO.S of tttt Clllfornla Probatf w. 11111 t1r .. t. •·'· Cttta M .. •. nm e . ,,,..,, teMttttf41MMMtlw~ al the Clllfornle p~tt Code. cen...w.tttu1. Kt1110tt1t-• .. •1t A1DMU_.. MtMnt•~ Mum,..-and
.,,.,.. 11111, ,.,,.,me.tan a~.-. COde. J e"• c , Pt•H,, At· s.. c:,::,;o:.._"c::,ll~= c.o.:.-,:'7~i'.t"".::S:.~ ., ... HuthH, by: Ernest J . ,_.,...,er~c..tOtll'f'li.t. ....,....,............ WllU•m I. cfHc8', At· tontty at Law, P•N .. RY fl1k • ,.,.,.,.,LAtvan-,c.o,_.at11• Seh•lt Jr., AUorneys at
Maf), 101,.. ''""' ... cvtt41 et l.•lllH "1101, .... , at uw, #1 a· ... I .. N. !t. J•7t y la Tiii• .......... II clllftctH Illy • Thlt NI-• It <9M11Clff IDY • Law, ,,90 C.mpus °"'"
.""1lla•n111 Mty1.1..,, dty a•wa.;w.t, 1' • ._ _., Mt"'""1 """''"=•:.....,,_ ..-••=., P.O. 9ox 71lt, N._,.rt ,.,...~ Amtrtce Towtr, Or9nve, •••c~"-C.lltornl•; •••• Tiii• ....._ -...... ..... .. "''-.......... -Ill .. wtlll u. •••cit, C111fornl1 ...... = :: =• C•llfarnl• 92661. (714) w•11•. c-1, cltf1! _. 0r..., c..ty "' c:.-.tv cten .. or.. c-tr • (714) 712...,,,, .....,_ • ...,.... Pul>lllihed Or•nge CoHt Pubtllhed <>nnge Colst A~t1•t.1t11 ._,,.11•,1•. 11 Published Or•nve Coa•t
"'-'J o. .. ,Jr 01Uy Piiot, Mly 7, 8, 1•, Oalty Piiot, Mly 7~ I, t•, P'lllUlllMor .... c-Oolllt:~= PIMllltfletOrMlll CM• Oltl~= Delly Pll°', May 6, 7, 13,
L--_.;...._ ____ ...__-J'_"'* .• 1,1r"°' ... c.Nlp.llfl::t 1M1 J15S41 ~ t911 2156-11 ....... , ... l,t\Jtttat 1-.1 "-•1Ui,lt,ll\ef1,IW1 .. .,_. ,1911 2"1-fl
PUBLIC NOTICE
'
__,, _____ .... , ____ , __ ---------~----------------
•
I 111 'KSI>:\ '\'
-EVEHl«i-' 4:30 e Oodaera va. PtlllllH
•• PllllMtlllN•
t.-00 ID. NlW9 WONDER WOMAN
w~ Wom•n tolls •
rulh .... mobelet'• pl811 10
turn the town ot S8111•
Coton. Into gambling call·
~ G TIC TAC DOUGH
• OOOOTIMES Florid•'• plane tor J,J •
blnhd•y •r• aom-hat
aubdued when J•m••
INm• that • computer has
glYen him • b8d credit rat·
~ (Pat11)
ON TRIAL Ellen Burstyn and Martin
Balsam star as accused murderer Jean
Harris and her attorney in "The People
vs. J ean Harris" tonight and Friday
night at 9 on Channel 4.
fl) IHllOE STORY
Hoddlng Certw. lormer
preu spokesman lor lhe
St•t• Department. IOol<a •1
hOW weH the ,_. con·
Mlrnet It Sllt"icecl by press -· 4it!) ELECTAIC COMPANY
~ C88H£W8
®) A9CNEWS
8:30 0 J()t(£A'8 WILD
II) BENNY HILL
Benny plays the bendm••·
let of • Ptl'k bal>O. SI KCET NEWUEAT
4it!) STUOIOIEE
"UnicyclM" The SI Hel-
en't School Unicycle Odil
T .. m In N-bury, Ohio
pert«ma gymnutlel on
unlcyclee (R) ltl BAAHEY MIU£R
A desperate citizen
thrMlena to btow himself
!Ind the P•8'1nct sky high
tU 8 EDITORIAL
1:00 II C88 N@W8 D NeCNEWS 9 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Marion'• frequent myateri-
CHANNEL LISTINGS
oua absences from home
cre•te au9'>1c1on on the
l'IOUMhOld. 0 ABCNEWS 0 BULLSEYE
(!) STREETS OF 8AH
FRANCISCO
A jflwelry .. !Mman and hos
wile e•Ch 1uapee1 the
other ta responsible tor the
deaths of • stewardess
end a nurae
Ell) OVEREASY
Guest Odetta lRI 0
4it!) MACNEIL llEHREA
AEPOAT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
(!:I MERV OAtFFIN
Gue.16 Kat Rudman, The
Marahall Tucker Bend.
Don Mclean, Syt1111
7:30 I) 2 OH THE TOWN
Hosts Sii,,. Edwards ano
Melody Aoget• A look al
the X·reted movie ac-tn
Los Angeles, M•IOdy '8111
down the rough Kern Riv· •r IJ FAMILY FEUD 0 SHANANA
Guest Conw1y Twitty
1J KNXT CBSo lo. An<J•',,.., 1J KNBC NBl.i lo· Ar1 w ,.
0 KTLA tlnO t LO~ Ar Q•· ,..,
fl KABC TV 1ABC1 Lo An1w ""'
1); "f MB tCB"I S,1n D•l'lJO 0 KHJ· TV (lf'O ) lo~ Arl·W I<''
®' KCST 1ABC1 Sa n D•·•yo
CD KTnl pn<1 t L .., A11ql'll''
II) l<COP TV 1 In 1 1 t •<; Anoe'"'"
SI KCET· TV PBS1 Lo-. An•l" .. .,
Ci) KOCE·TV1 P85 Hunt ro91on Bf',1ct1
fl EYEONLOS
ANOE LES
Hosts Inez Pedrou, Paul
Moyer A IOQI( •I alghl·SM•
Ing and the nlghtllte tn lsr•·
84, ,._ a aMnee conducted
11 a '•dealh llOUM' visit a
Oani.h dude ranch In SQI.
"11119 0 FACE THE MUSIC «D t.t•A•&•H
H-keye lelt1 for a t>eautl-
tul Swed11h doctor who
arnves 11 the 4077th lO
ob_.,• combat ''"QlltY. 8:) MACNEIL I LEHRER
ii.EPORT m NEWS
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
A c:Jote..up IOQI( at pulling
oot a dally~ with
M115h1 McOue<n, city edl·
tor •t th8 San Diego Union
l:OO IJCI) THEWALTONS
Ike, Corabeth, Elizabeth
•nd Otew ate all tor,,,...,t-
8d by problema ot 10,,..
1J NBC MAOAZIHE
WITH DAVID 8AINKLEY 0 MOVIE
• • ·~ "The Dragon lives
c 11178) Bruce Lo The
essence of Bruee L ... one
of the masteta of the art of
Kung Fu, oa recreated 0 @) MOAK ANO
MINDY
Mork s reaction to Mindy's
going to work whole he
does houteho4d chores
aenos her on search of psy-
chiatric: help 0 MOVIE • • * • "Judgment At
Nuremberg.. CPart 1)
(1 961) MaxlmlHan Schell,
Spencer Tracy The p<o-
ceedlngt of the Nazi -
crm-trtalt ••PIO<• IM
~~the Indi-
vidual towetd ~lety tD AUIHntEFAlllLY
Olotle leeia like a "dumb
blond•.. wh•n Mlk•
lgtlot• Ml' tor .,. ··1o11•
teetu.1" fflend
• CDNOOMINIUM
8BMO on the nowt by
JoM 0 MacDonald An
Imp ending hurrlo•n•
lhfNI-tl\e llvM Of lhe
rMl<lentl ot en ••ck.lalve
conoomlt'tlum buMt by a
greedy and ltr99900albll
corporation Statrtng 8ar·
b.,e Eden, Dan Haggett\'
end St-Forr•t (PB11 1)
fJa TV AUCTION
A bld·by·phone IXtrava· oanz• ~• lflythlng and
eyerythlng wMt be eue-
t toned to thl hlgheet bld-
dw.
4it!) MAGIC METHOD OF
OCL PAINTING
"Roe<:I, Fenc• And Moun-
tain"
l :IO fl tIIJ B0e0M 8UOOIE8
Sonny threaten• to ,..,,.
1own II she d~·1 gel •
dancing l<>b (A) tD P.M. MAOAZJNE
A viall with Glen Campbell
and Tanya Tuck.,, find oot
how Steve L-11 O..la
won death, 0. Julian Whl·
taker Ilk" • lootc •I hOw
lats cut ott our oxygen
'supply Capt C•rrot
ahatea •dvlce about
eJ1etciM end he.,1 dl5-
eese.
"1i) INSIDE STORY
Hoel Hoddong Certet'
t .00 I)()) MAONUM. P.I.
A M<18S of strange •vents
begin occurring al a health
club alter en elde1ly
H•wallan plac1a • curse on
11.(AI IJ MOVIE
"The People Vs Jean
Harris .. (Pan 1) (Premlet•)
Ellen Buratyn, M•ttln Bal·
..m Thi trlal ol .i-..
H81ria tor the murdet ol
tamed diet doctor Hetmen
Tarnower I• dramatlz.eO fl QJl 8AAHEY MILLEA
The ~·e lnlli.I glee at
receiving bulletp<~ vetla
lak• en uneJ1pec1ed turn
toward the hilanou• o CD MERV GAlfPIN
Guesta: Kai Rudman, The
M•rahall Tucker Band,
Oon McL1an, SyM8, T G
Sheppard Bellamy Broth·
era
fII TVAUCTION
(CONT'D)
"1i) SNEAK PAIVIEW8
Roger Ebert and Gene
Soak el review "Cllletn811,"
"The Howling ' "Hatdly
Worlciog 8nd "BrNker
Morant •
t-.30 8 (11) TAXI
The Sunahln• Cab Co
goes OU1 Of l>llalrlft8, leeV•
ing an of th• taxi gang
without joba (Part 1)
4it!) TOMOAAOW/
TODAY
A rlC)(lf1 oo what's ,_ In
talking machtnff. a IOOlt ••
the poqlbllllles of Mlball·
tutlng alcotlol tor gUOllne
·~----~--
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday. May 7, 1981 HI F All
TUBE TOPPERS
I
KHJ 0 8 :00 -"Judgement at
Nuremberg." Pa rt one of movi e
based on German war criminal trials
and starring Maximilian Schell, Spencer
Tracy and Burl Lancaster.
KCOP Q) 8:00 -''Condominium."
Part one or a drama starring Barbara
Eden, Dan Kaggerty and Steve Forrest
about an exclusive condo development
with faulty cons~ruction.
KCET 9 8:30 -"lnside Story."
Hodding Carter, former assistant
secretary of state for public affairs.
anchors a new series assessing how the
press handles developments in the news.
(See story. photo below)
u a source of fuel, • took
al the latMI newt frOftl
Jupll• and S•turn
10:00 IJ (JJ NURSE
One ot Mary'• tint Irland•
la admitted to ttll hOepHal
u • would-be aulCide eomm NEWs 0 9 20120
10:80 CD NEWS
Cl) INOEPENDEHT
NETWORK NEWS
4it!) MYSTERY
"Sergeant Cribb· Horizon·
lel Witness" An
unde,...orld hoodlum 11
loond unconlCJoua and
badly beat.,, altw telling
Scotland Verd he wit·
n-..d the murdet of hla
gangtter bOll f Part 3)
11:00 I IJ fl Cl) ®J NEWS
STAATIW<
Klt11. Spock and McCoy
land on • pl-t to ln...sto·
gate the d11BPP111ance ot
a starship Iott 100 ~·
ptlOf
0 NEWLYWED QA ... E CD w·A·S"H
Hawkeye and B J become
lost tn enemy 1err11ory
(!) BEHNYHILL
Benny has fun with the uae
ol patody on 1 well-known
song In a lovely old English
Q!rden W TVAUCTIOH
ICONT'OI
11:30 IJ Cl) NeA
8A8tCET9AU
HovUon•I 80.t ..
D TONIOHT
Hoel Johnny Carson 8 9 AllCNEWS
NIGHTUNE D LET"8 MAl<.E A DEAL tD HOOAH'8 HEAOES
Hogen gets help from the
German Gestapo whan he
trlea to detain a GetmMi
Q!f*•I at StalBO 13
gJ BAAETTA
Tony'a flencee end her
b•by .,. l81gel& In. dead·
ly pow« tlruggle In the
undenworld
4it!) CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS
-Ml>NIGKT---::'
\2:00 9 MOVIE
• • • "The UO'Y Ametl·
can" C 1"3) Marton Bran-
do, Eljl Ohda. An ldeali5-
tlc ambuaador to a
Sootheut Asian tepobllc
11 confronted with Mallltty
In Illa host natlOn.
fl (!}) CHARLIE'S
ANGELS
Kelty goes undwCCMll u a
dancw when • danc•
marathon cont•tant Is
murdered (Al
(iJ OUNSMOKE
In Mexico. Mell is
befriended by • 1l-yUt·
JOHN DARLING
AND NOW, WITH HIS
COMMENTARY FOO TODAY,
HERE'5 C.HAaLIE L~D.'
old bO)' """° -M.it ...
men """° can n<t hi• viii~
011111 bandllL m Mt88ION;
IMPOeaMILI!
The IMF mu91 lhwll1 the
eppo1n1,,,...,1 of • regent to
I he Uvone OI I llnall
monetc:hy
fll CAPTlONED ABC
NEWS
1t:30 D TOMOMOW
• ONE 8TEP HYOND
"EpllOgl>I" A mine cave rn
lfll>I Helen Arcn.t end hi<
IOf!St-
1:00 0 PSYCHIC
PtiEHOMEHA, niE
WORU> BEYOND
Hoet1. Oemlltl Slmpaon.
Stacy Hunt.
«D MOVIE • • * ··ee.1 The Devol
Ct8M) Humptlfey Bogert
Jennltet Jones tnletna.
uonal awlndlers. nee~
deep In plant to outwit
each other, are d1v11r1e0
from ttllor stntatilr d•allngs
when en exptoaion wrec~•
lh4t ship they are aboard
(!) IHDE.PENOEHT
NETWOAK NEWS
1:10 fJ MOVIE * * ··The Take' ( 19741 Bii·
ly Dee Wiiiiama, Eddie
Albert A New Mulco
pollelman with a repota·
tlon for rioneaty atoopa to
ace.piing brlbee lforn the
a_t"dicale
(1§) CAAOt. BURNETT
ANO FJUEND8
Guest Roddy McOowall
1:301) NEWS
(!)MOVIE
• • •11 The Myate<oana
C t858J Ken~ Sanata. Yum•
Shlrakew9 A group ol
highly evotved e11en1 ol
superior 1nteu1g1nc1 try to
take over Earth to perpetu
•••their cMUzetlon
1:66 8 NEWS
2:00 1J B>ITORIAL D NEWS 0 MOVIE
• • "Showdown At Bool
Hiii" ( 111~8) Ch8rtes Bron·
aon. John Ca,,edtne A
bounty huntet 1Xpec11ng 8
nuoe rewatd lor killing an
oollaw has • great deal of
trooble colleetong the mon
ey
2:06 fJ MOVIE
• • ·~ "The Badge Or Tne
Cross" (1971) George
Kennedy, Ricardo Montal
ban The murder ol hta wile
d1111H e o.wcti..-. Into a
rlllglou• order
~40 1 NIEW8 2;"6 MOVta
• • "The Lut Bllt:ikrteg"
( 195111 Van Jotinaon, Oicti
York During World Wat
11'1 Battle of ttMt 9ul0e. a
guno·hO Nazi and hi& bend
or tabot•urt 1n1111ra1e
Allied tr oopt
a.-OO Cl) MOVIE
• "Ftenk8nllain'a Bloody
Terror" (11171) Paul N ...
ctly Olene Zura Franken-
ltein lllU<n• IOI • bloody
muaecre ""*' • allllllt
CfOU IS retnOVed from hi• ,...,.
"60 NEWS
3:30 0 MOVIE • * "Boy On A Dolphin"
f 111~7) Sophi• Loren. Al8n
Ladd Whan • Oreek
Spongl dlllet floda • 8Unk·
en work of art. al\e plen• to
sell her Merel to the nogh-
Ht blddet
4:26 CD MOVIE
• • Secret V1n1ure"
( 19571 Kent Taylor A aci-
enttst's aecret formula la
stolen so Scotland Ye.Id
come• on to onvestio•••
4:30 II) NEWS
f 'nday·•
Dayf imP ffot·i_.•
-MORNING-
11:00 (!) * * "Tne Man From
Utah" ( 1934) John Wayne.
Gabby H•yes A l~h
lawman n•bs • gltflO ol
outlaws wflO are uelng a
rodeo 11 thetr base ot
opera Ilona
11;30 0 • • • "Harlow" (P•rl
2) ( 1965) CarrOll Bak1r,
Martin Balaam A HOiiy·
wood ltllflel becom.e die
1llu9ioned end turn• to •
Itta of etcot\ol
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 (!) • •·~ .. Comanche"
( 11156) Oana ~ndrewt, lln·
de Cr111e1
1:00 CD • • •11 'The Burning
Hilla'· (11157) Tab Hunter.
Natalll WOOd
3:30 0 • •'II "Rogue Mala"
(1879) Pele< O'TOOle. JoM
Standing
by Armstrong & Batiuk
Hodding Carter hosts new look at press
NEW YORK !AP> -Hodding
Carter Ill has s een the news
business from the inside and out,
as a reporter. editor and
publisher in his home s tate or
Mississippi, later as the highly
visible spokes man for Jimmy
Carter's State Department.
That should be fitting back·
ground for his current assign·
ment. as anchorman and c hief
correspondent for ''Inside
Story." a new pubHc TV series
described as "the first national-
ly televised examination of
press performance."
"There is an awful lot of activity
not centered on the three
networks and the three major
news papers, though we don't
often hear and read much about
i l.
"It's a far more complex and
interesting picture than we
usually get." Carter says of the
press "We want to cover the in-
stitution the way it covers
others."
story. and then move into the
"Cover Story" segment, an ex·
amination of coverage or a
prominent issue.
Carter will anchor the "Cover
Stor y" on location, and the seg· •
ment will include television
news clips as well as newspaper
and magazine graphics as ii·
I ustration.
The magazine also will in·
elude "Winners and Sinners,"
examples of g~ and bad press
performance: "First A mend -
ment Alert," on developments in
the area of free press: ··Bob and
Ray." humorous pieces on the
press by the comedy team, and
"Commentary," a short wrapup
essay by Carter.
Robert Schulman. for seven
years media critic and colum·
nist far the Louis ville Times and
Cour ter-Journal, 1s managing
editor of "Inside Story," and the
senior producer is Howard Wein·
berg, most recently a producer
for CBS' "Sunday Morning"
news programs.
Carter says the makeup of
"Ins ide Story," with light as
well as more serious features. is
inte ntional
"If we go into this thing sound
ing ove rl y seri o us abou t
ourselves and pompous, we
ought to sink like a roc k," he
s ays ... We're taking our produc-
tion team out. to the mid·South
and lhe Midwest. other places.
and we're not going to have peo-
ple in the press sitting around.
talking to each other. We're go·
mg to talk with the people affect-
ed by press coverage.
"We're trying to do something
serious. but that doesn't mean
we have to b<' dull ··
'1 he hall-hour program pre·
mieres on Channel 50 tonight at
8:30.
"I learned a great deal in my
old job at the State Department.
and in the 17 years before that. ..
Carter says, "especially that
you 've got to be very careful
about making sweep i n g
generalization about the press
l n that context , "Inside
Story .·· produced by Ned
Scbnurman, a veteran journalist
who spent seven years as as-
sociate director of the watchdog
National News Council. has been
laid out In m agazine formal,
with a half-dozen regular seg.
ments. Murder trial drallla tized
HODD/NC CARTER
"It 's happily a more diverse
bus iness than you sometimes
may be led lo believe." he says
Each program wiJI begin with
a brief wraparound, "In the
News ." that will i11clude
C~rter's comments on press
covera~e of a recent major
' By BOB THOMAS
Atteel<lleoll ""-• WrilM
Executive def ends programs
HOLLYWOOD -Was 1t
murder or a "tragic accident"?
Television viewers will have a
better chance to decide for
themselves tonight and Friday
night when NBC re·creates a por-
port1on of the murder trial,
"People vs. J ean Harris"
(Channel 4, at 9 p.m. ).
LOS ANGELES (AP> · Most
Americans want to make their
owo viewing choices and not
have them made for them by
special interest groups like
Moral Majority, ABC television
executives said.,
James E. Duffy, president of
the ABC television network.
warned ABC affiliates against
yielding to pressure groups.
which he described as "a band
of moral zealots busy inventing"
a national problem.
"This strange misplaced
crusade by the evangelical right
would have the public believe
that we in television, for some
unaccountable reason. are bent
on destroying the moral fiber or
America," he said.
An ABC resear c h s tudy
s howed tbat even members or
the fundamentalist Christian
militant group Moral Majority
tend to watch the same pro-
grams as tbe general public,
said ABC vice president Mel
Goldberg.
Only 2 percent of the total
population said that religious or·
gantzations. a dvertisers, or
s pecial interesl groups should
have primary responsibility for
determining program accep-
tablllty, according to a study by
the National Survey Research
' Group in March.
Duffy opened the annual af.
Ciliates meeting in the Century
Plaza Hotel with welcoming re·
marks to the more than 800
broadca,st executives from
A SC's 20T affiliate stations.
Space shuttle astronauts
Robert Crippen and John Young
received a standJng ovalioo as
they arrl~ to descri~ the re-
cent flight of the s huttle Colum-
bia.
Young, "ho described the
shuttle as "this good ol' truck,''
said "Everything in that shuttle
worked, including me and
Crip."
goPH/gT/CAT£0 PR()(JRAMMINO ...
T he basics of the case are well
known to news r eader s and
watchers : the headmistress or a
sedate Virginia school accused
of killing Or. Herman Tarnower.
cardiologist and author or "The
Complete Scar sdale Medical
Diet."
With extraordinary enterprise
that suggests a video version or
• those quickie paperbacks that
often follow major news events.
NBC began taping a dramatize·
tlon of the trial's major events
only four weeks after the sen-
tencing of Miss Harris. The
show's three hours plus an hour
for commercials will begin
broadcast only 12 days after the
Beaulilul ~lerBO Mu~i(}-New~Marine Wealher-
Con~umer Reporf~gloak Markel Reporl~
end or taping. down. that didn't ml'an the pie·
What could ameliorate cries or lure wouldn't get made If it was
exploitation are the producer· a question of me or somebody
director and star . George else, I'd rather do it.
Schaefer has won eight Emmys "I made the same decision
for his distinguished productions I' about this project. I hope il is
Ellen Burstyn, who appears as fatr and hum a n and com
Jean Harris, has received both passionate "
the Oscar and the Tony. Miss Burstyn rec ailed that she
Miss Burstyn. exhausted and wa s firs t approached about
nurs ing a back ailment. ap· "People vs. J ean Harris" a
peared for ao interview a few W('Ck before t he Ac ademy
days after the end of taping. awards <she wa~ nominated as
Why did she agree to "People best actress for '· Res urrection" l
vs. Jean Harris"? Miss Burstyn studied a taped
"First of all, she's a fascinat· interview with J ean Harris, but
ing woman," the actress repUed. she made no attempt to do an
"Also. I thought it was a vecy jo· Imitation. As to whether the
terestiog television show, and I spurned Miss Harris intended to
• hadn't done any television in 13 kill her long-time love r. t,,he ac·
years. That's an important au-tress commented .
dience. "It's impossible to know what
"Yes, I did hav e a few was intended. She claimed it
qualms. I wasn't so s ure I should was an accident. Obviously the
be doing it because il seemed jury didn't think so. The
very exploitive. I went through television show is not intended to
the same thought process about conjecturize or to speculate. We
'The Exorcist.' I wasn't so s ure I m erely present the events of the
s hould have done that.either. lrial. The viewer has to decide
But I reasoned that If I turned it what the truth is.··
~ I
,.
I'
HEADACHE -John
T hompson, 39, can
understand wh.at is
said to him and even
smile four days after
a seven-foot crowbar
smashed through his
brain in a Boston
auto accident.
.. 1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask For Roy,
WS£ SrfCIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet eor-o1 Dow ano o..... si.-
NEWPORT BEACH
_____ <I# ___ ··~......-;---,..-..........--.-._.. .......... ,.__,. _____ ,_ • ._.,_ .. __ ..... _ ... ,._ ........ ..-..... -.. ............ --...... ,.._. .. _ ... __ • __ ,........ ______ ............. --.... -....... ~~~~~:-:-----------;-;-:; .. ~,...
. .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 NATION
I
,
ONE IVENING B>UCATION
,.., I
'Quitters' gain ground
M or e Americans give up smoking successfully
WASHINGTON (AP > -ln1980. smokers has stayed in that
Women tlnd lt twlrder to quit Less than 29 percent of women range ever since.
smokin& than men, but for the' over 16 smoke clearettea com-Pinney said women generally
first time ln 15 years, fewer than pared with 30.4 percent in 1978, smoke lower tar and nicotine
30 percent of the nation's adult said John Pinney, director ol the cigarettes than men, but quea-
w om en are reach in I for Office of Smoking and Health. tioned whether they look on low-
c i gar et t es • go v e r n men t Smokers make up 36. 7 percent tar cieareU.es as ··a step toward
•tatiatica show. of the adult male population quitting o possibly a substitute
Of the 8 million inen and 8 compared with 34.7 percent ln for quitting."
million women who ttted to glve 1978. The surgeon general's office
up cigarettes last year, 2' per-There were 100,000 more has warned that since women
cent of the men succeeded com-smokers ln 1980 \than the 52.3 have begun to smoke like men,
pared to 18 percent of the million in llrf8, but the adult they can expect to begin suf-
women, according to data com· population increased by S.8 fering lung cancer and other
plied in the 1980 National Health million people, lo 160.8 million, health problems at rates com-
lnterview Survey. Officials at during the period. parable to those of men.
the Department of Health and Dr. Joanne Luoto, the Office of Human Services could offer no Smoking and Health's medical Lung cancer is projected to
reason for the disparity. staff director, said the figures outstrip breast cancer as the
The interview survey estimat-show for the first lime since 1966 leading cause of cancer deaths
ed that 3.S million persons sue-that the number of women who among women during the
ceeded in quitting smokl.ni ln smoke fell below 30 percent of decade, according to the sur-
1980. A total of 16.3 million tried the female population. geon general's 1980 smoking re·
to give up the habit. Nearly 53 percent of all men port.
The National Center for smoked and 24.5 percent of the Federal officials also have
APPEAL S -The
bride of New York
Gov. Hugh Carey, the
former Evangeline·
Gouletas, has asked
the Roman Catholic
Church, to which her
hus band belongs, to
sanction their recent
marriage. Health Statistics, which conduct-women smoked in 1955, s he said. said women who smoke while
ed the survey, said the number By 1966, the proportion of men they are pregnant stand a
of adult Americans who smoke had dropped to SO percent while greater chance of miscarriage 1 call 642-H78.
dropped from 33.7 percent of the that for women rose to 32.3 per-and having pre-term babies or Pul a few word•
population ln 1978 to 32.6:..pe..:.r:..:c:...:.e.:..:..nt:____ce_n_t _. _Th_e_:_p_ro..:.po_rt_io_n_or_w_om_en __ 1_ow_-b_irlh __ w_ei_:g_ht_b_a_b_ie_s_. ----======'o=w=o=r=k ='o=r:::o=u=. ::::_
.
MO~DAY, MAY ,JJ at. 7:00 p.m .
·-· COSTA MISA llCUATIOM CEMTll.' 1145 PAltlC A.VI.
[~ Rise 'n shine to FM stereo music, 8 8 your favorite AM station or a 4 7 buzzer. Snooze button gives you a
few minutes of extra rest,
followed by the alarm. Auto-Reg.
shutoff lets you relax with music 89.95
-radio turns off automatically.
FOR AN
And L u~your =t •'lereo timl &" woof er,
4 y. • tw'Hter and
tuned port Genuine
• BuUt-l n Condenser Mlk
• • Auto-Level and Auto St~
Save •28 011 p t
Accumulate a fortune with dollars
you are currently spending on
t axes and insurance premiums.
walnut veneer (not
plastic or vinyl). 18"
high. #4()-1988
lectures ·me.tr' ect for taping
Jacks fo~ mrk ngs, "talking" letters
external powe~'. :~~~~2ne/ speaker and
CD Quartz Tra I Al By Mlcronta• . V8 8
Cut 38°/o 1705 Reg.
Features 24-hour I -27.15
alarm, snooze
buttonhbackllght for nlg t viewing
fold-out stand. #fb_701
fncfUcfea Vinyl Pouch
Lono·Llf• Battery '
rench-Style Pushbutto
hone S.
By Rlldlo lflact Ve * 't 0 6450 Reg.
74.50
Adc:ta I bright
acc.nt to any
room. Remy to
Plug Inf Whfte
QOlden trim. ~
.. . .. .. . -----------------------------------.. --
..., ....
THURSDAY,
MAY 7, 1981
'
JUST COASTING 82
COMICS 86
Two-earner households are de -
manding that business make it
easier to manage jobs, families
See Page B4
D
0
Jury·hits county 01ental health progra~
~
t I
: I
BJ FaEDE&ICK SCHOEMEHL ... ...,,.. .....
Mental health programs
should be removed Crom under
the umbrella of Orange County
government's vast Human
Services Agency, the Orange
County Grand Jury said today.
In a 27-page report, the jury
conc luded that mental health
services have deteriorated, not
improved, and that the mental
health progr..ui Is not meetinc
its stated object.Ive.
Referring to those objectives,
the jury said:
-Recent reorganiaaUon of the
mental health department "bas
decreased and disrupted service
to cllents." ·
-"Overemphasis on regimen·
talion and documented accoun·
UCI to hike
student fees
$86 neXt fall
UC Irvine Vice Chancellor
Wi lliam H . Parker says
that yearly student fees will in·
crease next fall from $714 to
about $800 at the Irvine campus.
T~s increase ls necessary to
ke41 p pace with inflation and will
have no effect on the uni·
verslty's enrollment, which ls
expected to remain around the
10 ,000-student level, Parker
said Wednesday.
He pointed out that inflation
forces the university to pay
HB seeks
additional
$5 nllllion
Huntington Beach officlalf
plan to spend $5 million more in
the next fiscal year lo provide
the same level of service, ac·
cording to a preliminary budget
releaaed this week.
The city's proje~ied o~ratinJ bud~et of '47 millloe for tbe
perlOd of July 1, 1981 to July l ,
1982, Is 13 percent greater than
expenditures in the current fl•· cal year.
Most of the increases -about
8.2 percent -are attributed to
higher employee salaries that
have yet to be negotiated. lnfia·
lion ls blamed for most of the re-
m ainder.
An addit.lonal $34 mlllloa of
state a nd federal fund s
s pecifically earmarked for pro-
ject. such as boUsing, redevelop-
ment and park acquisitions,
brings the total estimated expen·
dilures by the city to $81 million in
1981-82.
An overview of t he pre-
liminary budget will be present·
ed by City Administrator
Charles Thompson at the May 18
City Council meeting.
Public study sessions OD the
bud1et. will be scheduled later
this month with a public bearin&
tentatively scheduled for June 1,
according to ci\y officials .
The budget must be adopted
by June 30, 1981, according to
city officials.
13 to join
Valley school
closing panel
Fo\antain Valley School Ota·
trict trustees will select 13 peo-
ple lonipt to form a new school
cloture advisory committee.
The tnaatees meet a~ 7 _p.m. l.D
the district headquarters, 1
Li1bt.boule Lane.
more and more each year on
teacher salaries, utility coeta
and supply expenses.
The University of California
campuses don't cbar1e tuition.
Instead, student. pay reglstra·
Uon and educational fees.
These fees differ slightly from
cam pus to campus, but on
average they will increase about
$100 throughout the system next
fall, according to a recent an-
nouncement by UC President
David Saxon.
In addition to inflation, Ua'bt
federal and state budgets plaee
pressure on the University of
California to increase student
fees, Saxon said.
UCI Chancellor Parker said,
however, that reduction in state
and rederal frnanclal aid to stu.
dents will have a creater effect
on private universities than on
public institutiolU like UCI.
He added that many of these
reductions are still iD the pro-
posal at.age and if the cutbacks
are adopted, tbelr effect prob-
ably won't be fell immediately.
The Universit y of California
Regents set the educational fee
and atabllsb a cellinl on re1·
istraUoo fees. Local cam~
can then set t.belr re11Jtrallon
fees under this celling.
UCl's new registration fee will
be "a couple of dollars under the
ceiling," Parker said, noting
that these fees go in part to ex·
penses created by the new Stu·
dent Union on campus.
tabllity bas impaired client
service and staff morale, in·
creased unnecessary paperwork
and decreued staff efficiency."
-Community participation in
mental health program bas de·
terlorated.
-Communication wilbin tbe
mental health department bu
been stymied "under a rigid
chain-of-command now of in-
formation."
-"In-service training baa
virtually disappeared.··
-Efficiency in the pro1ram
bas deter iorated "because of•
continued duplica tion of
paperwork and r e port-
making ... "
Mental health programs have
operated wider the aegis of tbe
Human Services Agency since
the agency was created several
years agQC'
There has been continuing
criticism of the effectiveness of
the programs, primarily from
mental health activists who
claimed non.professionals were
overseeing mental beaJth pro-
grams.
That criticism was strongest
.... ........... .., Plelrka O'._..
FLORAL ABUNDANCE -New landscapiac at
Casa Pacifica was shown off when two
Orange County Music Center auxiliaries ~t
ed a fund-raiser at the former Western Ylbite
House. Gol>tll• sPooa*, Nannette Pittman,
Susa!) Striader and Evelyn Daniel welcomed
300 auestt.-wllo contributed $15,000 '°' build· ii\& iW eUlt~al complex (n Costa ¥esa.
Earlier this year the trustees
dlaaolved the closure committee
apPolnted three yean aao anCI
-= 10.1ht new appUcantl tor the
ll'ftP. TIM trustees themselves wtll
appoint five people from dif·
f ertnt acbool attendance areu
to the committee.
Lions run far b~eakf ast Brothers
arrested in
RB assault
Tben names wW be.. dra,m by
lot miW et1ht otben are found,
aa1urtq that the committee la
balaaeed by &eOIJ"apbl~al areu
and iDcludea repreaentatlve1 from the bull.nett commiu..
and from the dlltrlct'• ad·
minlltraUon or teacher teacb1nt
at.aft.
A committee member .ttb a ·
pert.lie la le1aJ contracia. •· vl....,... impaet or land ...
pl__..,, allo m• be iDehlded.
fllEFS
breatfalt are sz.so eaclt Cbllclnn
T andundlran edndttedfree.
A mobile terHDlnC unit wW be
at tbe D9lt from l:IO a .m . to 1 p.m. f'ree rilloa, ll••rlna and
blood 1Q&ar tlN will be offwed.
Peoplewboleteltnealtl ADdlcate
a po.,lble Cltl•• auclla H
11au001Da or ol IMu'bll' will
be reterna to a _,..clan. ,......, froai &.tie raee ... the
pueaa ~Mt will .....nt Or .... ~,. ........... .
palnd ....._Ott a..n .. .
conduct its semi-annual inst.alla·
lion of officers at 7 :30 p.m.
Saturday. May 9 at the Hat-
lnston Beacb Muonic Temple,
IOI Palm Ave.
Ediaon High youda
.. AnnapolU nod
Jon F . .a.nokla ~ a MDiOr M &dltGD Hlp Sc lD H•t· ~ Budl, lw been appo&nt-
td to the U.S. Mani Academy at
l11aapoU1 , Md ., for tbe
eoademle ,.., bfflDalnl lD Ju· Jr. a. WM ..-&D ..... i., U.S. lep. Robert Baclbam, R· ... ,.. .... ;'"", ........ _..,....,.......,_~~
Two Huntlnfton Beach
brothen have been arrested in
connection with an aHault on a
third man who received serious
btte wounds on his noae and
back.
Held on 1uaplcion of auault
and mayhem were Anaatuio
Prieto, as, and Perfew> Prieto,
11, both ot Sl~ter A venue.
last year when the county Board
of Supe rvisors appolnted-
Margaret Grier, then KSA dlrec1,
tor. as director or the mental\!
health program. Mental health1
a ctivists claimed Miss Grier ..
was not qualified to hold the
mental health position. In part1
that criticism led to the grand
jury's investigation of the men·
tal health program.
OCmusi~.
revenues \
• ot increase ·~
•r Revenues for the Orange Couo·
ty M uslc Center topped $1 mllliQa
last year, according to an annual
report.
The $650,000 increase over 1979
is due chiefly to increases in con·
tributions, memberships and
guild activities, Edward C.
Sebek, vice president of finance
for lheOCMC, saidtn the report.
Increased operating expensl and funding of three feasibili
studies for the future $40 mllli
performing arts center push
expenditures up to $429,000, co •
pared to $146,598 in 1979, accord'-
ing to the report.
In the financial report ma£
public last week at the aMual
membership meeting, Sebek said'1
the Music Center was enterin&
1981 "wilh a strong financial posJ-,
lion."
Highlights of the ,report in!
elude :
-The 40 guild chapters raisecl
$121,000in 1980.
-$443,068 will go to tile general
fund to finance operations of the
organization.
-$358,014 will go to the
Founder Building Fund for the de·
velopmentofthe arts complex.
-$255 ,034 will go to the
Trustees Building Fund for the
construction oltbe Music Center.
Sebek predicted that this year ii
new execuUve director will bei
added to the Music Center staff as the Music Center steps up ltS
fund·raisin& act!vitles.
Not included in the 1980 figures
are about $12 mlWon ln donations
received since JanuJU'Y for the
construction of the $40 million
tbtater al~8ristol Street and
t&eSan Diego fl'reeway. . 1 . About $6 million has corpe fro•
the Segerstrom family, S2 mllliOll
from Jim Bentley, owner Qf
Bentley Laboratories and $1
million from the Harry G. Steele
Foundation of Newport Beach.
The remaining $3 million comes
from pledges by James Baldwin.
Walter Gerken, Mr. and Mnt
Charles Hester, Carl Karcbet>
James Knapp, William Lund, Ml'.
and Mrs. John Rau, Ro~e Warmington and Mr. and M
James Nagamatsu, said H
Segerstrom in the report.
Named to the board of directosi
were Costa Mesa City Couw-
cllwoman Norma Hertzog, Diane
Dailacis, Bernice Hird, Jou
Murphine and Pete Siracusa.
R eturn i n g me m be r s a re
Karcher, Rau, Hugh Saddln.tOll~
Florence Sehumacher and David
Tbresh.ie.
New officers include JI~
Bentley, chairman; Elalnes field, vie~ chairman ; Rau,
dent and chief executive o j
William Lund, executive vice
s ldent; Sebek, vice preal..,_
treasurer, and Timothy Stradlr,
secretary.
1 Other officers are Dol'OUd
Stillwell, assistant secreta~
Raymond Watson, vice presl
facilities; Vincent Jorsenae
membership vice presiden
Georgia Spooner, support
vice president, and Mr
Schumacher, special events
president.
Cyclist dies
after crash
A 22-year-old motorcy
who wu injured Sunday Ua
1 ceident on Puific Co
Hi1bway ln Huntinston
dJed Wednesda1 of tilt 1nJ
police reported.
The acddent vlcUm wa1
titled u Kenneth c. Suma
Levlttown .. N. Y.
Police aaid Suffln wu
bound on Paclflc Cout Hl
betwten Warner Avenw Gol~en WHt StrHt
·evenln1 when ~ -...-
a&ruck a center cllYl
era.lled. '" Rt died at lJ:M p.m .• ......,
d•J at the bolpttal. ~
~, .
' • •,
ALONG THE SMUT RUT -Civic leaders of
Fountain Valley, noted as one of the more quiet
wonderspo'f along our coastline, may soon take the lead
among our cities in battling sin and purging for purity.
Just look at the record.
The valley City Council has already outlawed
massage parlors and sexy movie theaters. Currently
they are attacking flesh magazines. '
_If the_y keep all this up, Fountain Valley's forces for
purity will make the Costa Mesa vicecops look like
slackers.
Earlier on, Fountain Valley councilwoman Barbara
Brown. went on a crusade against stores that sold girlie
magazines.
~
-TDM_M_U_RP-HIN-l .~1'
. THEN ONL V THIS
week, one of the city's
anti-porno crusaders pre-
sented Mayor Ben Nielsen
with a whole stack of
periodicals he said were
offensive, along with a list
of 19 liquor stores he alleged were carrying the awful-
ness.
So shocked was the mayor with the gift that he
wouldn't even gaze upon the allegedly offensive
materials.
You'd think the least the mayor could have done was
to have called a study session on the material.
I
Anlr·!mul crusaders keeping lnddies from gin 1hop
.. You'd think the least the mayor could have done
was to have called a stud y session on the material.
Anyway, the Fountain Valley civic lights seemed
most concerned about keeping tbe kiddies away from any
adult-type literature . It might be okay for the liquor
stores to carr y fleshy periodicals, so long as they are
secreted out of the eyesight of children.
That question, of course, lead to yet anothercfuzzle:
What are all those children doing hanging aroun liquor
stores in the first place?
THAT PROBLEM ISN'T quite so simple. If the booze
places were just selling pure alcohol, you might be able
to suggest the kiddies simply be . banned from the
premises. But such isn't the case these days.
Beverage stores have become almost general stores
now. Your correspondent knows of one Corona del Mar
dealer, for example, who was forced to start stocking
fresh eggs because of customer demand.
Depending on the place. you can purchase candy and
cakes. flashlight batteries. milk and butter, comic books,
or motor oil. Then there are also some liquor places that
have installed those coin-operated video games that are
such an addictive attraction to the younger s~.
One liquor dealer once told me, "I sell so much candy
and licorice sticks that I've forgotten what it was I
planned to sell when I opened t)lis place ... "
WITH THE <'OMING of video games, you now have a
lot of youngsters who hang around at liquor stores,
pumping quarters into the machines all night long.
Grog shops have come to replace pool halls as spots
where youth flirt with sin and degradation. Time was
when youngsters were warned by their fathers that
nothing good ever lurked behind the swinging doon of the
pool ball. .
Thus you promptly tried to sneak into the place and
spend hours learning how to bank an eight-ball into the
side pocket. Parents, however, kept insisting that billiard
halls were hangouts of the idle.
"AND IDLE HANDS do the devil's work " you were
admonished. '
.. Considering the fas~ion in which the Fountain Valley
c1v1c savants are pushmg for purity, it's clear that if
sa.tan ever does come to town, he'll be on unemployment.
SADDENED -Actor-director
Laurence Olivier says be is
"very much saddened" by
the demise of London's
163-year -old Old Vic
Theater, which will close
May 16 due to lack of funds.
Olivier starred in many Old
Vic productions.
Court OKs
boys-only
bequest
WHITE PLAINS, N .Y. (AP) -
A bachelor who died at age 96
was within his legal rights even
if he discriminated against
females when he willed money
for scholarships for male high
school students only. a judge has
ruled.
However, since it would be \lll·
constitutional (or the Croton·
Harmon Union Free School Dis-
trict. a public entity, to ad-
minister the scholarship fund
under male-only terms. the
judge has aJSpointed a trustee
and ordered the money turned
over to a newly formed private
trust.
The ruling by Westchester
County Surrogate Evans
Brewster apparently signals an
end to a three.year legal dispute
over the will left by Edwin Irv-
ing Johnson.
The probate judge declared
the bequest was ~ol illegal
because the law does not pro-
hibit private discrimination.
Johnson, .a life.tong bachelor,
died three years ago. His will
ex plicitly established a
scholarship fund for "bright and
deserving young men•' in the
Croton-Ha{mon Union Free
School District.
After other bequest& were
taken from Johnson's $238,000
estate, $196,300 was turned over
to the school.
T he bequest said school of·
ficials were to determine the re-
cipients, provided that they
were bright and deserving, with
parents who could not afford to
send them to college.
And th~ were to be male.
• A female Croton-Harmon stu·
dent rAised . ~ objection to -the
all-Coale provi)ion and applied
!or the scholarship.
School officials fealized they
had a dilemma. If they followed
the provisions o{ the wm, the
district could lose federal sub-
sidies. If they failed to comply,
with the male-only terms, the
district cou l d Jose .the
scholarship bequest.
So the scholarship program
was indefinitely curtailed.
At the same time, the woman
named to administer Johnson's
estate petitioned Brewster to in·
terpret "men " to mean
"persons" or declare the pro-
visions illeg-1 and revise the
will.
Under New York law. the Sur-
rogate CQurt, the court for pro·
bate an~ guardianship matters,
ican interpret a va1ue or am·
biguous provision in a will.
tSmokes tax: hike eyed
Democrat leaders propose increase from 10 to 20 cents
SACRAMENTO <AP> -~omocratic leaden in the state
Assembly are planning to pro-
pose doubling the state cigarette
"8x from 10 cents to 20 cents a
pack, the Sacramento Union
, said. • The boost is part of an
alternative budget plan being
~eveloped by the Democrats to
bridge an expected Sl.7 billion
shortfall in the budget for the
year 1tartln1 July l, the
newspaper said, Wednesday.
The Democrats' plan Included
an unprecedented s hlft of more
than S200 million ln unemploy-
ment losurance taxes into the
11late'1 general funds, the Unlon
Hid.
Auembly Speaker Willie
Brown, D-San Francisco was to
have unveiled the plan tbl1
week, but aides 1atd lll reltase
I• belna delayed until next week.
Brown said at a recent new
tollf.-..ce thJt he was consider-lu Pi\¥ .. lDCteaNI In tbe "Ila &aa•'' on cltaHUes, Uq.aoc
and cvact1. 8'°"9' a.ad M:temblJ W..,,
ft
and Mean s Committee
Chairman John Vasconcellos, D·
San Jose. presented the plan to a
closed-door meeting of As ·
sembly Democrats Monday, the
Union said.
The present cigarette tax is
expected to raise $203.6 million
for the state's general fund next
year plus $85.4 lJlllllon for local
governments. Doublln1 might
reduce sales.
The Unemployment Insur ..
Fund has about $3 blWon ln re-
serve. The fund la financed by a
payroll tax on employers and is
used lo pay beneflta to workers
who are laid off or otherwise
lose their Jobe.
The Democrats' plan includes
1bifllni aeveral bW\d.red mUllon-
dollart ln Udelandl oll revenues
from capital outlar. aa ~
by t.M Brown aclm••..,.a&Ma, ln·
to operaUoDal 1peiMlilt; th•
closure of aevtral minor t&Jt
loopholea, such u lbe eumpt!oo
of mot.ion picture lea•" from
lb• 1alt1 tax, and weekly, ln·
stead ot monthly, co~• of 1tate tncome tHH wttbbeld
Crom paychecks.
The Union said the plan could
reduce the budget deficit by at
least $600 million.
State control
of dumps
proposed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Senate committee has approved
a proposal to transfer controJ of
six. baurdous-waate dumping
sites throughout California h'om
local sovernmonts to state
health otnctat.s.
The Senate Health and
Welfare Committee endorsed
58501 by Sen . Daniel
Bo1twn1ht, O·Voacrod.
The bill would •lve the 1tate Department of Health Servtces
autb0r1ty over ClaH I dumpe,
which handl• dan1erous in·
dustrial chemical waltel, liquid
and IObd, and hasart>ut tub-
atances audl •• PCB•.
-.. ·~ ~-·-· ----·----·-------,
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
cil has amended the city's
1980·81 federal revenue sharlng
budget to accommodate an unex-
pected $65,000 in additional re··
venues.
revenue-sharing program and
tbe clty would be receiving
$378,221 instead of lhe $313,221
oriJ(inally planned
Slx UCI students have re-
ceived scholarships Crom the
Southern California chupter of
Phi Beta Kappa Alumni.
Alan Bcwcll of Canada re·
celvec:t '600, fl'rancolte Sullivan
and Violett. Vornlcel, both of
Fr11nce, SIOO each: Michel
Carpentier Of Yrancc, '400, Shu
Hung IA·un" of Hong Kona and
TakakuLu Namera of Japan,
$200 each
At a council meellne. Cit,Y
Manage r Ken Frank said
Congress recently extended the
Child criminal8
topic of seminar " .
Under lhe revised budget. the
city will spend $104, 700 for new·
vehicles, $39,!M>O for communlea-
tlons eq uipment, $2.400 for
senior cillten assistance and
$231 ,221 toward construction of
an emergency access road link
ing the Top of the World and
Arch Beach Heights com·
munities Image lectur e set
Criminal activities committed
by children will be the focus ol a
free all-day seminar scheduled
Saturday, at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach.
The program will take place
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 pm. in
Forum 1.
The $15,000 set aside in the
original budget for uerial hand
photographs was deleted. Frank
said completion of the fire road
took priority over th~ pholos
The pictures were to be used in
planning future development in
the city
Im proving image projection
for per11onal or business reasons
will be discussed at the Orange
County Mensas General Meeting
May 21. 8 p.m .. in the communi·
ly room of the Orange Public
Library.
2 ON IRV1NE TOWN -Steve Edwards and
Melody Rodgers tape ·a segment of their "2
on the Town" program for CBS, Channel 2, at
I'~ LLO\'o·s Y3 M gard~n sl11111
;~ ~
-MOTHER'S DAY
Give a LivinCJ Gift
leautfful S~ectiOft of:
-~ ·~ • Afric.Yw.h ..... , ..
•..._,1Deyletet
<>Pa. MOT ~ER'S DAY . . . . . MON. THfW SAT. 1'00 11 l'OIJ ..,.._ t-oo IO I IO 1
Lloyd's Nursery & Landscape Co.,
2021 Newport ltYd. lat lay Sfrwf J
COST .4 MISA, CA '2627 • '*·744 t
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 7 am to 6 pm
Sun. 9 am to 6:30 pm '~------;;;;;;;~ISA &M C ACCEJ'Tm EXPIRES &-1:M1 ;;----=;;;.,;;-;{ii
Delly ~ 5Wf"""'
the Woodbridge Village shopping center. The
Irvine taping wiU be seen May 25.
.....
1----------tt-~~~.J., ______ __
A Special Mom
Deserves the Best
And with Hallmark Mother's Day card, that's
what she gets. Tell her how much you care
on Su~nday, May 10.
c 1980 Ha11m11k Car05 Inc •
K.C:J -ttill~JL /HOP
979-1112
2300 HAlaa. a¥D. IH HAUOI CIMT9t
Open 'Ill 9 pm Monday thru Fnday. Sat 10 tit 6,
Sun 12 1115
~OURMET
MARKET
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
FRESH SWORDFISH .............. 5.98 lb.
Ort1I Mr ........ '16' llroll..s wllft but« . wtu.i.-i.....
FRESH FILLET OF "
NOR111ERN SEADASS ............ 2.98 lb~
MEAT DE P ARTMENT
Prime and top chl)ice beef aged at least 30 days to the
peak or i;erfection
Stuffed Pork Cbope ..•............. 1.98 lb.
Ju1t Wnk! A por.k chop cut 2" thick
stuffed with Delaney's famous ·
homemade apple drea1in4..
Bonelela BoUed Pork Roast ........ !.4t lb.
Averaae wel1hl a pe>unds.
Center Cat Pork Cbop1 . . . . . . . . . . . . !.4t lb.
Farmer Style Spareribs ............ l.tt lb.
Lean Groand Chuck ................ 1.41 lb.
Ground hourly, not over 22~ rat.
f'REE ROME DELIVERY SERVICE
150 00 min please I
Your order ls under ~mpltte refrigeraUon from
our store to your door Ill our relrigtr-ttd truck•
Call In the mornlnic and your ordtr 1'111 be
detlvered to )'OW'~· ll~•m• al\tmooft.
Thia ad eltectlvc Wed., $/8 lhr~h 1\lill., 1112 •
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Large Navel Oranges ........ 39e lb .
Lg. Size lc~berg Lettuce .......... 3 for 1.M
Local Romaine Lettuce .......... 3 for l.M
• Lg. lkmcb Spiaacb . .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. zte ea.
So. Amerjcan Bananas ...... 3 lbe. for L"
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanf'y's Private Label Champape 1750 mill
2.75 ea. or :13.00 per ca1e
Wnte Brol. IA Blanc de BIHC . . . . . . . . . 2.M ea.
Seaframs VO . . . • . ... I .It ea. COM lKer>
Fer&m a Doc·Korbrud . . . ............ :t.so ea. f 1974)
coretby!kotcb <7M mm . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 5.55 ea.
(One ll&Atr> ...••••••••• , , ................... I.SS ea.
AU liquor and wine plus tu.
Complete cater1n1 aervlce, from a ell-down di.Mer
party to paJ11 trays delivered to YoUr home. C.U
Delaoey'1 Caterina Department, aak tor Tom
Martin
r
--------------------------------------------··----------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 FOR THE RECORD I SOCCER
r---------------------........ ,.---------------------------------------------------...:.:
H/f
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Venke .. 5, Angela 2
.... YOaK CAl.ll'OIUOA
•rllM •rllM RMI._, 2b S I 2 0 Cerew, lb S 0 I 0 :r:=.1t; : ~ ~ lurl-, H S 0 0 0
JecllMf\. rf J O I O l'enl, rl l I I 0 ~m••··· 4 0 ' 0 ~:;~~~ : : : ~
Nett..... 4 I ' • 00.nl-c J I 2 0 Spencer, lb I 2 o o .... WallOfl, lb I O O O Cl•rll, II J 0 0 0
Foote,< I o o o H•rrl1, II 2 0 0 0 O.nt. u 2 1 2 4 Ortell,~ l O O o
Mllllorn, U 1 0 0 0 H-, Jb l 0 I I
Cmpttrl. pr 0 0 0 0
Tol.•11 J3 2 1 2
Totel1 J3 S I S
lunllfl• ....
Ne•Y-no 200 OOD -S
Calllornle 000 011 000 -2
E -Mllbour,.., Win. DP -He• Y-I. LOI -,.._ Yori< I, Cellfornl• t. H -Jec:Uon, Hetti•, Lym. HR -Deni (4). SB
-Wl ftflelcl. S -Foote. SF Wlftflel4, 8eylor .... v-Guldry (W. )-21
II' H. s s 2
2Y> 2 0
•••• so
2 2 I
l lrd 0 I I
GOluoit (S,71 ·~ 0 0 0 I 2
Celltlenlle
Wiii CL, 2·2) ~ J 4 1
D' Acqulllo 21'> 0 0 0
HH1ler l 1 0 0 0 2
Guidry pl1Cllecl to 2 belleo In alatll H8P by O'Acqulsto C Deni.). T -J:.ff. A
-ll,410
Angel averaget
IUTTING
Har tow
8urleton
Lynn
H•rrl1 Ford
Ott
Carew
Dow nine Grich
HOOIOfl
Ctmpenerl•
8enlque1
Ci••k
l•ylor
Pt tell
Tolel1
A•M llenko Stncllei
l•lln H•nler
J•ll••IOfl Witt
Foncll
Travert
O'Acqul•lo
Tot•ls
Al • H HR •&1 ""' 3 I I 0 0 .m
1119 10 l2 , I .Jt4
ti II 2t S If .•
21 J • I I .• ,. ,. 26 • I) .111
50113 0 s ,..
10. " ,. 0 10 ""°
64 I IS 2 1 ZM
14 12 11 J 12 .:tJD
... S IJ I S .D
,, • l 0 3 .uo
)S • S 0 I .143
11 0 2 0 I .111
1' 6 t l I .114
II I I 0 0 .091
111 109 102 2' u .llO
PITCHING II' H II SO W·L l•A
17\o> 14 • I 1-4 0.50
22 17 1 12 1-1 I ...
II•> 1' 6 6 0.2 2. t4
4J 50 IJ 16 >-> 3..U
I~ IJ 10 I 1-1 J.7'
)2\o> » • ' I~ a.a
J2 21 12 11 J.2 U2 s. s. 4 i1 ,., 4 n
f\o> U 4 S O·I 1A ll IS t 6 0-0 9 • .,
2Jt m 11 10s 12. u 3.n
llMleM 4, 81,.. Jeya I
Cl•••I-OOl 000 010-4 S I
Toronlo OOD OOD 001-1 2 S
Blyleven -HffMY; Todd, ...... Ill -
WlllU W Blyleven 1>-11 L Todd !Ml
•-n,4't
~l,T .. At4
MlnM.otAI 01 I 001 OOD-4 11 l
B•lllmore 001 200 002-S I I
Arroyo, O'C-11), Corbett Ctl •nd Sulere, Pal,.,..,, Sf-•11 UI tnd Oem-y.
W-Stewtrt 11·1). L-O'Connor CO·ll
A-,,OIS
·~4.-S.•I Clllc990 OOD OOD 200-2 I 0
Tues 200 000 IOll-4 t o
lurns, Hoyt (11 Mid FIM, H-ycull, a.~
cock (1), Johnson 171 aftCI Sunclbere. -JolVlllOfl (I.I). L-8 UrM 12·21 A 12,llM.
... Sea I, ReJeh I
loslOft OOD OOD 021-l II 0
K•n1 .. c.1r, 100 ooo 000-1 • o
Et llet'lley -Al--.; L-rd, Oul_.. berry (I ). arett ") •nd Oroolt . W -
Eclleuley U ·2 l. L-l eontrd 11·•1
HR-lotton. ElfeM CJ). A-21,400.
T...,..1,A•11
O.trOll 001 OOD 110-J S 0
Oellaftd 002 000 000-t 1 3
Wlkoa -Perrisn, u,.roro •nd He-.
w -Wllcoa (4·1). L-lengfor CI U ·21.
A-15,7"1
-.....1z.9f-.nl
Mll•tullee 100 000 000-1 I I
SN111t 010 ..,, so.-n u 1
L.trcll, CtevetWICI 141, K<MiOfl (1) anCI Sifl>.
mons, Y•I; Parrott, R-l•f (I) -lklll·
Ing. W-P•rroll 11·2> L-Lercll 12·11.
A-1,n&.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Oodgera 2, Phllll .. 1
LOI AMOaL&t l'HILADaLl'HIA
arlllll •r11111
L0991, 2b 4 o 1 o Orou,r1 4 o o o
LAlldr ... ct J O I o Rose, lb 4 O 2 0
leller, 11 4 0 0 0 Scllmdl,111 • 0 0 0
Gervev. lb 4 I J o l!Uttfltn,N • t 1 O
Cey, • J I I I Trlllo,Jb 2 0 0 I
Gwrrer,n > o 2 t Meddo•,d > o o o.
Scloacl•, c 4 I o o llOwe,u 3 o 1 o
Rutull, II J 0 I 0 •-.< 2 0 0 0
HOOIOft, p J 0 0 0 ESCHtU,p 2 0 0 0
Vnter,pll I 0 0 0
l'rolJ.P O O O O
Totela JI > t I Totals 31 2' 2 Sc_.,, .....
Lot A"'91tt 010 100 000.-2
l"tlll•dtlp!IM; 000 OOD IC»--1
DP -f'tllle*lplllt J. l08 -Loi AAoelM
J, Pllll .... lelftlt 3.. 18 -Malllw#s. HR -C•t (I). Sii -........,,....,,.. S -ea-z. SP
-Trllle.
............. II' M • a1tlll0
Heetoll lW,4-41 t J I 0 4 ...........
,..,_. • ' ' J •
!'rel; ' ' 0 0 0 0 T -11 ... A -2S.,ISO.
c..a.,....,
..__ OIO 001 000 00-1 1 4
Olk... .. 100 IOO 01-2 IO 1
aye ... Semellte 111. 1.aeort• tm -AtMy; GIWlll, c.ille !ti, Tl*-(7),
Slftllll lltt ... llecllw.11. W-Slftltll CHI.
L-i...c.te (Ml. A-Un.
...... , ....... 1
S... D.... * OM 020-11 It t MoMl'fff Oto OOD 0..-I t I lk~ • ._ (t ) Mid ic-.,;
'""'"' ,_..., m."'" m • ......, "'• C-t, "--w-aldle~ (f.1). 1.-
811n"lt c•v. H•-IMI DMte. ,.,..1111 m :
............ "-"lall (l).A-~ ....... ..., ..... Pit~ .. ttt ,._.,I
Clll<lflNtl Ila -122-t 14 2 c ........... "•"'• (71, JtcltlOfl (8), Tea.t.IVO It) 9M Nie.la; .......... fl'rl<.e (4),
hlr m • ...,_ ltl Mf O'llen'y, .... en. w-
"•"'• U ·t), L-..IOOHn (l•tl. Hlt-P'ltllillWll\ '9twr !~I .L f _.., I II ; Clftc;l!l-
Alltl, f'.-r CJ>. A-'~ I . ......... CerelMI.
A._.. ttt .. IM-1' I~ I
St.I.WI• --__ ,. 0 ~ .. ,,..,...,., ~; .... II.
.... "" ...... "'' 6'• (7) .. ,.,,..., S.OZ.. ~ CMI. L-"-ICtl IN).
Ha-A ..... C:-.i. Ill; M. LMll, k*t m.,._, .... ...........
IMf'r-llKit ltt Ill.._. t I
NN v..-111 -.._. II I ~ .... ..,. m. ".,.... "•· MlflMll m _. -.1 Zlidrt~-=-1•1. ,...,.. In. A*" (tt .,. , Tlftttle. W-
MIMlll CM>. L-bCIW'y (Nt. A-J.llt,
Top10 .............
.... tCMUM41• ....
tt " .. .. "' ,, 14 •• . . .. II n H .... 4 . " . " .. . " .. . .. . .
. ... . ... . -" .. .... ., ... n !!
11 ... ·-...
.._._
Alme-. OlllcleM, I; II~ leltl"*" J, 11111, teew., 1; "*-• Mii--a; l'erf, ...,.._,,Smelley, Ml_..., .. ._...._.,.
Armat, 0-1-. 14; 1.,_, ...... tt; $mel .. y, MiNWMM, It, .,..,_, T .. el. ltl
GelMe, Ml.._.., II. ~y, Oell ...... 11
,_.....(10.CW..I
Norris, ~. M ; K90Ull\, O...i.M,.
H ; W•IQ. Clewf-, M ; Movt. C11ke9e,
M ; JolWI, New Ytrll. •1; Mey, Ne• Y ..... ,
M ; llyl-. Clewlaftd, J-1; lomM<lt,
,.,.,,,., )-1 ...,.., ....... J-1; 0..-.
Cfll<a..,, )-1; .......,,Ml-..UJ.1.
NATIONAL 1.9 .. U.
• A• • .. ~ It .... ,. ..
p .J14 n .an n ...
... )M
Par!llM, Sen 0Meo II 64 t v-1114. New York u ft s It-,~......... 1• " IS COlllns,Clri<lnMll n M n
•••ne1, MMtrMI n 11 " Her-.s.nl'r...CIKO u " 12
"'~""· NewYor11 21 n 10 H•-•IOfl, Oll<eOO 22 II 1 lllYt~ ""11-1p111e 21 n .,
~ ..... Cllkeeo u ., 2 .._._ u ·*'' . . ... u .Mt " ....
Sc:llmldl. f'tlll~•. I; o.._, ~
lrHI, S; Kinan-, ,.._ Y-. S; -·· St. Louis, S, Foti.., Cincinnati, S; OYI.
Houlton, s. ._..._1.
ConctP<IOfl, Clnclnn•tl, JS; Scllmldt,
PlllltO.lpflle, JO; c:Mmllllu . AUente. 11; o.,.. •. ~. 11; ~ ~
11.
P'lk .... II DecW-1 Vtle•111elt, DMter1, 6·1; C.,llon,
Pllll-lpllle, H , I OOD; Sor-. SI. L.oula,
4.0, 1,000; ....... ~' ... ; Rhodell,
Pllltburgll, 3.0; Shltley, SI. loul1, W ;
Ruth•en, Ptlll-lpftle, 4-1; AIHM!der, Sen Frenc:IKO, 4-1.
Coll99e ICOrel
Pe_,... 6, .tJvw Pec:lll< 4
VC RlwnlGe 12. Redl•nch •
High ac:Mol
......... INc:llJ,DeuHIH1I
D•n• Hllll 000 OOD o-4 1 I Laguna BMcll 000 JOO •-2 > J
COOll -H•nt•Y. Cl••• •nd Houlton 21 -Kur,,. IDHI >&-CO. CDHI, Arndl
ll81.
c.r-....... 12. c:.u ....... 1
CMI• Mew 101 500 -1 1 I corone det ,,,., OIO 011 •-12 10 2
Smith, Wlll'-on m. Fleld and F lelel;
S.nloro, Wlllle (4) -Murtr. W-s.ntioro
11·21 . Smith. ll -Cru1. J-CCMI. Mtlllon
ICdMl. HR-<:ru1 ICM), Sllollln, Yberrt
ICdM)
,,,,._ J, II T-t
lrvlne 100 Ill 1-S • I
El Toro 000 000 o-4 J 2
WHlbr-, Purv (61 -Fellr.,.becll;
Lornell end TOl<ar~I. w -westbrOOll C•ll. 1..-1..omell. S-,..rrv J8-8r-nl• (I).
lllWl<N S, Viol""'ty I
EtleMI• 001 020 2-S 10 I
Vnlverllty 100 000 -1 > 4
Mllroff, Fof99 111 -D .. ley, YOClln -Miiier. W-Mltroll ()-)). l -Yo«Hn 21-
ROO.rtton 2 , Alllell CEI, YOClln (VI. Jl-
Robertton, Gr-m CE). HR-Miiier (VI. ••-4, ~ v.11..,' Founttln Veil-. 100 00D 0-1 • I
Edlton 102 100 a-I S I Jenltft. ~ !JI, SN• 16) aftCI IMS,
S..tnlOfl -Ll_,d W-Soreft'°"' (J-2) L Jensen. JI-Hiii I El HR-8911 ... 0..0-~n (E). Cletll (FV)
W"11NMI« 12. Ml""" S
Wutm•nsi.r '" 061 1-u II 4
Mttlna 100 022 -S 10 6
CH iie, O.uvell-161 -C-lnt'Oll, HuUb•u,.,..r. Wllllt (S), Lu•tlg 171 -
FlorH W-C...lle L-Nuu-•r 21-Coa. Ctil ... Kemel IW), Ventwt !Ml ,._
COOOl"91on, Twlu (WI. Hunt (M)
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
S.a View League
CorON ... 1-
C~laA!Ww
Irvine
El Toro
E•lencla
Vnlvtt1l1Y
W ........ y'1Sc:-
I rvlM '· El Toro 0
E lltn<le '· Vnlwnlty I
• .. 01
ll 2 I 6
I •
' 1 1 1 ' 0 14 12
cor-0.1 -12. Coate Mew 1 .. ,..., ... 0.-S
Corona det -tt Unl,..nlty CMl•llMMet lrvlne
El Toro el Es\anele ., TeWlnltle P••ll (1)
SouthCoeatLeague
CtPlllrano V•llt'f Mlulon Viejo
SenCl-........... BMcll
DtM HlllS
L..-Hllls • ......,..k_
W L 01
12 2
11 J I
' 1 s
' ' 1 4 10 I
> " '
LA...-&M<ll 2, 04H\t Hiiis 0
teplalr-Valley I, Sen Clemen1t 0
Mlolon Viejo I, LeeuM Hiiis • .. ,...,.,..~
D•n• Hiits al Sen C .. ment•
MIMlon Viejo et 1..t9UM leech
LACll>N Hiiis ti Ceptllr-Valley,
SunaetLeague
Westminster
l!Oltofl
Founleln V•ll-.
Hunll"910ft llM<ll
Merine
Hewtl«1--
•WIWl .. -a ...... lft',.,I k-
l•llOfl •. "-teln Valley 1
WHlfnlfwttr IJ, MtrlM J
T.-y'a~.
W L 01
12 2
II I • • 6 I
s ' 1 2 12 IO
N-..ort Herbor •I Wfflmlnsler
Huntl,,.ion 8N<ll .. ,_taln V•ll•Y .......... 0-,._,..., VeUey el HUfttlflOIOfl leech ti
Mlle Square Pen 171
Angelua League
""'°" Anwt Meter Del
Servile
SI. Peul
.... ~ry ....... .,..k_
11.iiop Mwt S, SeNlte I
W L 01
I I
1 s 1111 a I 2 • s ,
I 10 1
St. Peul •. 81111ap .. __ , __ ,,,,.,..,,,, 0
f'ftmy'IO-
S.rv 11• et ll""P Alnet ....... .,..o.-
llahopMOfl__.,., ti St. Ptul (II)
Empire L .. gue • K•lellt n
.... r. " cx....v ... 1
U.AlemftOI •
L
I ,
1 • K.--. J '
oa
' J • 1 c;ypnu I II II
0.ly " ......... .., ·~ IC .... r IN ACTION FRIDAY -Newport Harbor High's Mark
Barrett (8), who shares Sunset League MVP honors
with Fountain Valley's Rey Gubernick, leads the
Sailors at Bosco Tech in first round CIF volleyball
action. Fountain Valley is in action, too, hosting Sea
View League representative Irvine.
Pernod Trophy Tournement
ltfOlk:M-.1 ..... ,
l'lnt ..... 11 ......
Cllrl1 JOllftltOM dtf. JoM Feever, M , 14,
1-6, Kerl W iiier def. Alldrew Jtrrelt, •I.
14, 1·6; Rkl\arCI L.ewt. 0.1 l!dclloo Ec!W•rdt..
M , .. ,. Slew Krulevlb def. MIU H-.
•2. •·•. Deni• Yiu.er Clef Steve o.n1on. 1.s. 74 , w.,,.,. MtNr 0.1. Jer-y latn, w . , ..
Netlon'a Cup <tt on-1• f, w ... o.nw.-11 Sl ... tes
Haro10 $61-1v .s.1 clel. Roll Gel\rlno
(WHI GermMy), .. 7. 1 S, •l. VII Pinner
cw .. 1 o.,.,._.,, 0.1. Stan ~1111 cv.s .1 ......
•·•. Ptolo 8ertoluc<I l lltly) Clef. Kim
Wtrwl<l IAu1l••ll•I. •·4. 6·>. Peter
Mc Ntm•r• (Au•l••ll•l def Corr•dO
Bertut.1111 (llelvl. w. M .
~
Smll,,.Stndy Ma19r cv.s.1 Clef. Oellrl,,.
Kltu1 Ebef'llerd CWHI Germany), '"'· M ,
7-S, W•nt;lck.McNemere (AUIV•ll•I def.
Beru111tll-.. rtoluc:c1 Cllely), '"'· a-i.
IU .S dete•ll Wot Germ•nr. 2·1 Aullr•ll• ClefNll ltely, t·I ,
Tournament of Champion• (tfN_Y_)
S«.-a ...... Sh191M
WOjlell Flbell clef. Vll•Y Amr"r•l .... •2.
t·2. Vluor Pwccl Clef. lrltn Teectwr, M ,
1.s; 8eleu Ten>ciy Clef. u rry Stefenlll, •l.
M , Heinl 0-!Nrdl def. Semmy G141m-
mtlvt, •> .... 2. Merlo l!Ur1IM1 def. Rkerdr>
Ceno, '"'· ... 1. J-Kriek clef. Dornlnlqw 8edel, .... ,.,
Men'1 tournament
l'ltO INVITATIONAL (etl"erttN...,.n)
~It_. Qolellfr._
Ackerman def. TllomH, 4 ..... 2, '"'·
Pe•1•t Clef. Oen.a, ... I, 64; R-Clef.
H•yw•rd. 1 .. , W .
Perugla Open , .. ~ .... ,,
l'lnt• .... .,.....
KtlllY Horvlllll de!. Ktlhy Rtntldl, •l.
11, M ; Nine 8oNn def. Ketlltrlne Stampfll,
... ,, 4-4, ... ,; P9trl%1• Mureo clef. K•t• 01--
cy, •·2, •• . .................... Cllrl1 Evert Lloyd def. YV'Clnnt VtrrnMll,
H, H , Lucie R-clef. Vlr91nle W-,
M , •J. •1; -., clef. DI-l'romhol'2,
M . t-4, "°9Myn F•ll·-. Clef. Kim SMda.
•2, H , •1; Holly VNll" def. J\ICllll1 HM· rlnglon, .. ,, S.1, M ; Tenl• Herll>nl .-..
Du<k·HM ...... 1.a. ,.., M ; Horvetll de!.
80llm, •1, .. I; Sutan Mel<erln .-.. l"ller
VHCIWI, W, .. 2; Sandy COlllnt Clltf. Corlnt
Venler.•l.4-4,._2.
Women
ClOU.•M UC,,., ... I, QI.....,(,.._) 4 ....... Me. Mye .. (I) ... Morton ..... M , H ;
Wiiia (P) def. Keellfla, 6-G, M ; Cle.,_(~)
def. Mt. Myen, M , ... 2; Mallory (I) d91.
Scott, .. a. .. 1; 'Tllon.-n (I') ..... llltclllt.
S.7, ._,, M : S..r-(I) def. le«h, •1, 6-4. ......
~Wiiia (Pl ... Myera.Myen, W.
1-6, M ; ICM!lfte-EI ...... m Clef. C'-
00.My, W, W ; Mallory-Sarr-tll Cllf • TllOf'llCl~,M,M.
Loa Alamlto1
WIDtfHDAY'S •ISULTS ,_ .. ,,...._...,__..._ ... ,
Finl race Sorrel• Gonn•g•t•m
(~rClotel, 7.tO, 4.tO, 2.•; My Sttln Deck
(Wtrd), 4.lO, l .<IO, Top -Nol IMllclalll.
l.60. »•Mele (I.JI peld 146.60.
Second ••<e Jets Ouullon I••
C~•Cloi.tl, •.a. 3.10, 1 <IO; lenllen Dendy
Jet IMylel, 5 60, a.40; Mr. Hulk 1Her11,
HO
TlllrCI rece -Teli. to "-9 !Cat-I.
t .10, S.20, 3.tO, Plan of Atte<ll (Hert), UO,
4.10; Jot C. Ouk• !Meir), >.40.
Fourtll rece -ly Sedulno (Adalrl, 2'.20,
'JO, •.OO; Rlcll uu IHtrt), S.00, 4.00; EM
Reb (Cieri-), 1.20. U tllt<te 17·» paid
, ... JO.
Fiith pjei;e .Ml LIU -(Mlk-1,
ti .JO, 1.10. 1.4t; Jo Ll¥t Bug ICerdot•I, 4.111, t.•; Eur Hu&tter (Hartl, 2.tO.
Shrtll rece -Mr ~ Deck ICordorel.
J.40. 2.60, 2.IO; SU<ky Flngera cc .. r1-1,
7.20, 4.60; ~tndme• 8oJecll ClrOOlltl. UO. '2 ... ct• (4-6) paid U0.20.
Se venth r•c• -Anolller EacuH
ICerdoul, S.<IO, J.60, 2.60; Mr Tiny ltl ..
(AO.Ir), S.00. l 00, E•sy Aw•r~ (()Mom.
be),> ..... u ..... , ... u pelcl '24.20.
Elgfllh rece -Miu Trip .. Dl•l ICor•tl.
11 ao. •.20, 1.IO; 0 -etta Ge (T,......re),
• .O. 2.40; Klpt'ft Copy Kai (Mllchelll. 2.20 '2 necte c .. 11paid16oL60.
$2 PIO Sia (4-1 ......... , P•ld u.ni.•
;:::: s~! =~':ft!':.-:; ~1.; ::;::: ;,,!
nl"IJ lklt.U !tour 11or-1.
Nlntll rec.e o.tloplne Domino (0.-
bel, 1.00, S.40, 4.00; Top Intentions llr-1),
11.20. S.AO, "-Y N•V\Mlell (Tr-..rel,
6.00. '2 eucte 114) F•ld $71.IO
All•-• -S,111.
Hollywood Park
wao..aklAY'S ••tULTS ......... ,..,1 ..... __ ,
Flrll rec. -Or. Stor1I lllpl\em), •a.
t.40, ••.Soll Mer~ (Pl11uy), 6.tO, 4.40;
lrilll Fr-IHtwteyl, 7.IO. *-rece -Gef'•ldo <Hawley), I0.40. S.60, J.40; ~I .. $11m CMel9erlnll, ISA,
7.40; AfTO(IWll Wty !Celtenedel, J .60. U
Dell, Doullle CM ) pakl llS.60.
Tlllrd rece -Mldnltllll Action (Wini-),
U .10, 6 .10, 1.40; Olor lou1 CtrHr
IM<H•r-), J.20, J.00; LA Prl11eeue (Pl.,. <•vi. J.IO. Ueucte !~I pelclSIJl.00 .
Fourt/I rece -Muak•I -y IMcCarrGlll, •.10. s .oo, J .20; Aegeen Ct nyon
(Slloemtbrl1 6.40, 4.60; A Giii A119l11 (McHMV119), ._llO,
l'lllfl rec• -Peny te111n CMCCMtM),
6.tO, J.20, J.00; Holll .. Knltllll (l'lllC8y), s.•. ug; N•U.•• Wit CSNem•llttl. uo. ts
nee ta t•111 palcl •tH.50.
Sixth rec» -Cerol ue (Hew .. y), IOl.40,
24.00, 1.00; On Cue cve1eNw1e1, 1.60, 1.00:
F04'-ll IT•I->, J.60.
Sewntll ,... -... No (0.1---ye),
12.60, "40, t.40; Llle't H0119 (Mctorre11).
10.eo, 4.tO; Mr. Prime Mlnlatar ll'lncey1, a.JO. U eucte (11-71 polcl SZ'9.•.
P Pl<ll SI• (~>s.4<J.lll palcl ~.»o•
•1111 n .. wl"'""9 t1c11 .. 1 '""' "°''"" u Pkl SI• contoleC'-' Pllld SISJ,.40 •1111 _.,
•lnnl119 tl<lltts (low "°''"'. Elalltll rec• -Tar .. (Hewleyl, tuo. 1.20, 4.•; Aclt'I Secret (Sfleemell.,), a.tt •
J.IO; Tredl R.-.,Y (Ve'-4e), J.•.
Nlntll r--DIKtflll (Oeletlo__.,.I,
IUO, 7AQ, YO; ..., M•er c•H•f9U1),
J .... 2.60; l'ency Ml11 CMleemeller), J.•· u
necte Cl .. l pelclt1n.•
Att~-•un.
NAIL WalT•aN OIVlllOW
W LOP OA II'""' 5en Diego S I 14 I II 11
s.rt I I 1 1 II
LOI Aneel• 3 6 II • 2A Sen J-2 s 1 IJ 1 It aASTIRN OIVlllOW
ColMH 6 I II 6 11 A w .. 111....,. s 2 u • 12 o
IMlltrNI J 2 10 I 10 • forOftlo • 1 ) t II t IS
IOUTHa•N DIVISION
Fort La-d111e S 2 11 1 I M
Je<lilOflvll.. l S I IS 1 2J
Allente I 4 10 12 IO 22
Tempe .. y 1 6 II 21 10 22
caNT•AI. DIVISION
Tulw 4 1 \0 S 10 J3
c111uoo J J 1 1 • t4
Mlnnetot• 2 J 6 ' J IS
D•ll•• 2 I t II J IS
NOaTHWHT DIYlllOW
S.•111• ' J u " 14 » Portl•nd 4 > II • 12 »
V encouvw • > 10 7 t »
Edmoftton 2 2 I t 1 It
Cal .. ry I S J ' S 11
Six POlnb.,. _.,"" tor • r9911l•tlon or
oYertlme vklJOrt. Four points tor • "'°"""'
•lctory. 0... bonus polnl fer ewry goel
acored wllll • mulmum ~ '"'" per game. Ho bonv• point 11 ewercled '°' overtime or lllootout -11.
....... , •• k_
C•l .. ry 2, MIMtSOte 0
Porll-3. Sen Jou 0
TMey'IO-.
No games IC-leCI .. .... .,..o-s
c 111cavo •t Della, n
V en<ou,..,. el E-!Ofl, n
Deep ... flahlna
NIWl'O•T (08YO'I Lec"l1trl -U
•ne••n 3 berrecudt, u bonito, " u ll<o beH, ~ mackerel. (An'a U ....... , -l5
11191er1 l bonito. 3 berrtcvelli, .. MU. 210
mackereL
DANA WHA•I' -102 •neten: ll6 bell, 70
tNrr•cudl, I hellbut, s yellowt•ll • ., roek
11111, 2'2 mec•erel MO••o IAY (Vlrt 't ........ , -12
•11111er1. 2 11,. <od, 60 reel rock cocl. ~rock
<00. 20 011 .. -i. SAN SIMaON -IS. •"91ert llO lint cOd,
.SO rock coo, SIO reel roe• coo, 4' ollve -... I
CO• Cod.
SANTA M•tu•A (IH UMI ... ) -at
~nglers 1:12 <•ilco beu. 11 wllCI t>eu, ,.
roo 11111, 7S rn11<kertl VINTUllA -2l •"91ert 213 rock cod, 11
<O• <00, l 11119 Cod.
DllNA•D 21 llft9let'l •1 tock coo, t
<-Cod
l'O•T HUINllME C4merlc ... ) -U
•ne••r1. ns rock cod. 1 c-cod
l'A•ADISll COVE JI 1W111lers: 216 rock
cod.
LONG aaACH 10... ... ·1 Wlltrt) -»
•nel•n · II berrecuo.. 100 bonito, l • <t llco
btH, U wncl bell, .0 rotll lhll
SIAL II.ACM -SJ -'•" .0 m ecllerel,
30 rock 11111, 120 c•llco beu, 10 wnd t>tu.
•
Women'a aymneallc1
HIOHJCHOOL
'-"'U..-IMlvMIMl1
Cll'OMflflen
V•ull I Pelmlerl (Mer.), •.U ; 2. Hof·
lmtn IFVI. '·'· 1 Mk llMls IHll, t.OS; •· Gttu I-1. •.o; s. Tem (FVI. a.ts ...
Kofller tWm 1. LU; 7. MectMn cwm.1. a.s.
I Froll (NH I, L4S;' K-CH Bl,. 4; 10.
Rum1leld (NHI, I l .
Uneven berl -1. W-r CFV), t.S; 2.
ICn-ln (Mer.I, t.U; 3. Pelmlerl IM), t .J; 4. Ttm (FV), t.J; S. KOlller IW), t.O; •·
M<Gr•w IHI), 1.•; 1. K•node CHll, I.as; I.
Hofftntn CFVI, t .6; t. Ml~la IHI), LU;
10. Gr•ves tFVI. I.SJ.
8tlenu --I. MlcllMh (H81, t.6.S, 2 Hollman IFVI, t.35. J. K,....I• CM), t .t. •
Oetu CM), L7J; S. P•lmlerl IMI, 1.7S; •
McOr•• Il l, 1.6.S; 1. ICofller (W), 1.6.S; I.
Ttm (FV), l .S, t. C:Wr (W), l.J; 10. MedMn
!WI, I.IS. .
Floor ._rclM -t. hm (l'V). t .J; 2.
MkN•ls (HI), t .IS. J. Hoffman (FVI, '·"·
4. Gt lea IMl, t.15; S. M<Gr-IH8), t.O; 6.
Kt-(HI), •.o; 1. Pelmlerl (M), '·"· L l'ell~ (W), I.ti; t . Terry IFVI, l.7J; IO
~(Wl,1.7.
All .. rOUllll -I. Ml<Nel1 (H8), 3'.4; 2 •
Holl ...... (l'Vl,a..2; l . Ptlmlen (Mj, ··"· •. hlll (l'VI, JS.fl; s. Giil•• IMI, u.o; .. Kollltr (WI, JS.IS; 7. McGrew (H81, ).I.I; I
Ktnode (Hll, 34.1; '· _..., (W), 83.S: 10 Kno.1 .. (Hl),11.1.
Hiatt ac:hool volleyball
{U...SUNSllT LaAoua
l'lntT.-,
Andy Klu..,.,,..,. (Mtrlnel; Mike lurdlcl
CHuntlntlOfl 1 .. cllJ. Kirk H•rly, Toekl
Story tl'-.ln v.11..,1; Mel Dun•. Rid\
Holme1 (Newport HM'llorl.
S.C..T-1111 .......,..,.IJ, Ctwh FllNr (Merine),
Robert Petenotl, Cllll Rtl<ll ( N••Pffl
Har1M>rl; Jim Spetti, Ken Harter Cl'-
V•l .. yl;.,... AICll,,.., (Hunllnoton IN<ll).
Co·MVP: Maril B•rrell (Ne .. porl
Htr1Mlr), Rey 0'*9fnl<k Cl'-taln v a11..,1.
Co-coe<lles: ltl<k Elf•n• IF011nt•ln
V•ll•rl. s..... ~ (NewPor1 Htrtlor).
Misc .
Wall had
to make
decision
By CURT SEED EN • 0(11ao.My ...........
In the end, Peter Wall said be
was raced with two decisions:
"Yes, I'll be a yes man, and no,
I won't."
Wall chose the latter.
So, after nearly two yea.rs as
the bead coach of the California
Surf, Wall stepped down Tues·
day, citing the difference in
philosophy between himself and
newly named director of team
operations Tom Lilledal.
ACTUALLY, WALL had con·
s idered resigning two weeks
earlier, but he didn't make his
decision until last week when
Lilledal placed nine Surf players
on waivers.
Lilledal, a vi rtual newcomer
to the North American Soccer
League , had promised a garage
sale when he came to the Surf.
Team management and the
SOCCER
club's new owners had promised
a contender this season, and
after seven games, the Surf
s ported a 4·3 record including
three straight wins.
It was just before the Surf
beat Vancouver, 1-0. last Wed·
nesday that Wall re alized things
weren't going to work out.
He had gotten a pretty good
idea the day Lilledal was hired.
"I wasn't even told he was go-
ing to be coming in," Wall ex-
plained ... At first, I said, yeah,
sure. we can work things out.
But finally. it just got to the
point that 1 knew I wasn't going
to be making any decisions that
I thought I should be making as
head coach."
IN IDS STAY with the Surf,
Wall established himself as
som ewhat of an iron man on the
field. He came to the Surf in 1977
from Crystal Palace. In 1978, he
established a club record for
minutes played with 2,664. Eight
games into the 1979 season, Wall
who had been an assistant coach
while playing defender . was
named head coach when John
Sewell was fired. ,
He guided the Surf to second-
place finishes in its division both
in '79 and '80 .
But when Lilledal came to the
Surf . he unveiled a new
.. Americanization" process in
which the Surf would build for
the future using top notch
American talent. Lilledal also
got the OK and the funds to go
after a couple or so-called
.. world class" players.
Wall wasn't given that luxury.
Instead, he was allowed to go
after several free agents.
Although, the team s tarted off
s luggishly with a 1·3 record, the.
new players started to get a feel
for one another.
WALL THEN instituted a new
de fensive alignment in which
only one striker played up front.
While the style produced a
rather slow soccer game. it also
produced victories.
"Sometimes, you have to
make a big decision in yoqr life.
Well , I made it," Wall ex-
plained ... I walked out of lhere
with my head held high. It• was
just one of those things you have
to do.
"I might get some criticism
for doing ll, but I don't. t~ it
was a stupid thing to do. I docl't
think my credibility as a coach
.will be hurt, either."
Wall says he'll take the next
couple of weeks to think lhi.nfs
out and spend time with his
family. He said he'd like to stay
in the NASL and the thought of
some day coming back to t.be
Surf is always possible.
"I WANT TO get back (Into
coactung> as quick as possible.
I'm very confident about my
abilities. I do know I have two
jobs walling for me back in
England, but I'd like to remain
here," Wall continued.
"The team bas somelbtn• go-
ing right now. The only thinl I
regret is that we didn't win a
divisional championship.•'
As for Wall's replacement,
Lllledal says no decislon will be
made until next week.
Laguna, Pioneer
vie in volleyball
Laauna Beach Hl&b~a un-
beaten and top.ranked Artllta
open the 1981 CIF voUeybaU
playoffs ton.1.aht aa Plonffr' Hllh
invades for a 7 o'clock same,
Coach Blll Ashen'• Arti.U,
Sou.lb Cout Leaaue cbampkel ud wlnnerl ot the Pau..-,
Orance Count.y and IJll)ewood tournaments, are a top.betwY favorite .,...,,, the W•tmont
Leaiue'• No. J team •
Th• winner ot tonJpt'• pme
meetl the wtaner of FridaJ'•
flnt rouad tut b•t•e•n
Rubldou and •l•lU.-, Cotta
Mna.
All other· ftrit n>Ultd llJll•
are Friday.
~SEBALL I TENNIS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7. 1981
Vaquero s near play off b e rth
Estancia, CdM, Laguna Beach also victorious
Irvine High pulled Into a seeond-place tie with
Costa Mesa in the Sea View League baseball race
Wednesday, whJle Fountain Valley missed out on a
chance to move ahead or Huntington Beach in
Sunset League play with.a loss to Edison.
rn other games. Estancia downed University,
Corona del Mar topped Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach
blanked Dana Hills and Westminster disposed of
Marina.
Here's how it went.
Irvine 5, El Toro 0
Senior left-ha nde r Steve Westbrook s truck out
eight Chargers over 5% Innings and Bob Perry
mopped up with three more strikeouts over the
PREP B4SEB.4U
final t'-:i innings as the Vaqueros appear to be on
their way to the CIF playoffs.
Perry walked into a ma1or Jam an the sixth, en·
terang the gam e with the bases loaded and two
outs He need a 3-2 changeup for a strikeout that
got Irvine out of trouble
Meanwhile. J am Gasho knocked in two runs for a
pair of RBI, and Robbie Akers and Jay Scott de-
livered RBI singles as the Vaqueros collected their
sixth straight victory
Weatmlnater 13, Marina 5
The Lions I 12 2) scored in every inning but the
fourth, including s ix runs in a fifth-inning outburst,
to hand the Vikings their eighth loss against six
wins
Mau Coddington and Dan Twiss ripped triples
for the Lions, while Dave Cox. Ri ck Castle and
Dave Harris added doubles.
Marina got two hits from Bob Grandstaff a nd an
RBI single from Jim Lane
CdM 12. Coste Mesa 7
In a seesaw battle that saw the two teams com -
bine for 19 runs a nd 17 hats, the Sea Kings pulled it
out. despite seeing an 8-2 lead evaporate into a
s lim 8-7 margin
Corona dcl Mar. which has already clinched the
Sea View League championship, exploded for eight
runs in the second inning as Jeer Pries and
Gordon Moss each collected two RBI with singles.
Bob Shollin ham mered a two-run homer and Brent
Melbon and M<irao Ybarra delivered key hats to
keep the inning alive
Ybarra was 3 for 4 on the day. including a solo
home run 1n the fifth inning, while Melbon knocked
in three runs with a 2 for-2 performance.
Costa Mesa fought back. as they picked up one
run in the fourth to cut the Sea Kings· advantage
to 8-3. With the bases loaded. Chris White entered
the game in place of starter Ken Santoro. His first
pi tch to Joe Cruz was p romptly smashed over the
left-center fit'ld fenct• to slice the lead to 8-7.
Fu lure stars
c o me to Vie jo
By EDZINTEL
OltlleDAllf~ ... S~lf
Are women tennis players r eally worth
watc hinJc?'!
That's a question that ·s been looked al recent-
ly and most people will tell you that yes, women's
tennis has iL'> own merits
If that's the case. then next week's Tourna-
ment of Champions in Mission Viejo might be
worth seeing.
..:rop top-ranked players in three UST A age
divisions will be among 156 girls from every st8:te
1ENNIS
in the nation to compete in this annual event at the
Ma rgueritc Recreation Center.
This is where Tracy Austin. among others, first
raised eyebrows before going on to conquer the ten-
nis world.
The tournament. which begins Tuesday a nd
runs through Saturday. May 16, will have three
representative::. from each state in age divisions 14
and under. 16 and 18.
It's a great opportunity for tennis fans and
young players to see how the future stars of tomor-
row are doing it. And the players love the chance
to visit Southern California.
"It's the only tournament where you can be
competitive on the court, a nd the next day find
yourself relaxing on the beach with your oppo·
nents," says Andrea Jaeger. who captured first
place in the 14-year-old division of this tournament
only months before turning pro two years ago.
••• Veteran pro tennis star Marty Riessen has
been named coach of the California Oranges or the
new Team Tennis League. Riessen. who will pair
with Sherwood Stewart to form one of two doubles
combinations for the Oranges, wlll coach the team
in its six-match season which begins with a home match againstthe LA Strings, July6.
With Barbara Polter and Sharon Walsh form-
ing the other doubles team for the Oranges,
Riessen ls excited about his team's chances of win-
ning the four-team league.
"I'm so excited about our chances to wan that
I'm going to try and get the team together whlJe
we're ln England for the Wimbledon tournament,"
Riessen says. "Since we open the season against
Los Angeles, I want to make sure we gel off to a
fast start. We'll need to be ready for (Strings'
stars ) Martina Navratilova and Vijay Amritraj."
The Oranees wlll play aJI home matches al the
Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club in Foun-
tain Valley.
Tickets for Team Tennis matches. wblcb
range ln price from $10 to $20 are available by call-
ing 532~.
T ennis p ros to com pete h er e
The aecond annual ero.lnvltatlonal tennis
tournament sponsored by Bob Clauson 'a/ro shop
al Park Newport wlU be held lhit weeken wt\h alx
touring pro.' and elghl area stars competln1.
Tourln& pros Include Phil Dent, Tom Leonard,
Saehl Menon, Jerry Van Lln&e. Ron CaJe and Jell
Borowiak, winner or the state open Jut wffktnd.
Friday'• first matcb wW at.a.rt at 11 wt~ Sun-
day's Utl• match at 1 o'clock preceded by an ••·
hJbltloo by the Court Jeaten •t 12:30.
All matches will be played at Part New~
with prize monty tot1lln1 approxJmalely $1,000.
Ealancla 5, Unlveralty 1
John Robert.'lon went 4-for-4 with a triple, two
doubles and an RBI to lead the Eagles to vic-
tory .Teammattl J eff Gardner was 2-for-4 with two
RBI as Estancia evened its Sea View League mark
at 7-7.
Starter Don MitroH. a senior right-hande r ,
pitched six strong innings before giving way to
Greg Forge in the seventh inning. The win evened
Mitroff's record a t 3·3.
Laguna Beech 2, Dane Hiiie O
The Artists collected just thrett hits. but two of
them came in a lwo-run fo urth inning.
Scott Magers opened the inning with a single and
Dan Arndt followed with a run-scoring triple. Dave
Padgham then knocked in the second run with a
sacrifice fly as the Artists collected their fifth
South Coast League victory against nine defctats.
Laguna Beach patcher Kevin Clark worked his
way out of several jams, scattering seven hits
while s triking out four Dolphins
T he Artists' only other hit was provided by
Arndt in the second inning
Edlaon 4, Fountain Valley 1
Senior Tom Duggan set a school record with his
seventh homer of the year. and teammate John
Belles added a two run homer as the Chargers
kept a solid hold on second place in Sunset League
play.
Belles also stole home an the first inning to ac-
count for three of the Chargers· runs.
Pitc her Rich Sorenson improved his record lo
8-2, with a four-hit. six-st rikeout performance.
MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOL VO
SPECIALISTS
Free Oil FIHer w/$14.95 Oil Chancje
C HECK OUR COMPETITIVE PRICES
ARST & GRA NO ARCO 835-4049
1222 E. I st I off 5 Fwy I 8·5 Except S-.
for the little bit
o r 'mom " tn all
your ladies
re member Mother's Day
Mon.·Sot. I 0-5:30
3 406 Vlo Lido, Newport leach 673·77 I 0
FOURTH ANNUAL 20-LAP
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
KRW HALF-MILE
SATURDAY, MAY 9, 8 P.M.
S,RING CUSSIC-Ntw '~tttlt tf the ~re11,1" ••. Y-hil
tn4 N..,. 750' s chell•111• the N•rf•y-Devl4nns.
NATIONAL PRELIMINARY
STANDARD HALF-MIU
(b pert1, Juniors, l owkts)
FRIDAY, MAY 8, 8 P.M.
Mother's Day
Sale
Ev• L1¥tl co11tt0lt 10 lt!KI Time or JVM48
Tt111,er1111rt cooklnt "'' ttOWlf 111¥tli •tt1 lust • slmttle wttlntl Wltll tllt
• S'1111em1lltr Mlcrow.;1
~::",.:: ::::n:::.,.,.· s4009s
CtMlllt center! , 7 7 "
..,, ... ... ..... 0.-0......,.. °'91'1 ... ~,...~
~ ....... 14J..Ht6
RADIAL 1 /2 PRICE
r•restone Steel-Belted
RADIAL ,t\\ ')'~lM
When You Buy One at our Regular Price ... 4 & 15 -lnch sizes
SAVE s4250 s5e ·~·· ,,. II l l Y I P1irl
•• " FUE~
FIGHTER
Size
P175/75R14
P185/75R14
P195/75R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R14
P225/75R14
P205/75R15
P215/75R15
P225/75R15
P235/75R15
Also fits
BR78 -14
CR78 -14
DR,ER78-14
FR78 -14
GR78-14
HR78 -14
FR78 -15
GR78-15
HR,JR78 -15
LR78-15
WHITEWALL F.E.T
1st tire 2nd tire per tire
$ 85 $42.SO $1.88
86 43.00 2.04
93 48.50 2.26
96 48.00 2.37
98 49.00 2.52
104 52.00 2.74
97 48.50 2.50
102 5 1 .00 2.64
105 52.50 2.85
112 5 8 .00 3.06
It 's one
Sile Also lits tough tire to top! WH ITEWALL FE T
1st 11re 2"4 tire per tire • 7 111 l'r 't pltJ> I \It'• I 1 ord'
• P 165/ 80R 13
P175/70R13
P175/80R13
P185/80R13
AR78-13
165R13
BR78-13
CR78-13
$71 $49.20 $1 74 78 49.90 171
80 4 8.00 179
T en '4treod" of ~ll't-1 wruppt>tl intu
ea1·h stet-I \nrd for !(rt-al 'lrtongth
and dur11b1hl\•
80 48.00 191 • 2·1 m1//111n 11n th" ruod1
'f'trestone SS RADIAL
Designed for Pertormanc8 and
High Style with Raised White Outline Letters
70 ••R••• eo ••R•••
ize eplaces Prtoe 'ze places ,rfCI
P195/70R-13 BR70-13 P215/60R-13 BR60 -13 $71 $2.26 P225/70R-14 FR70-14 P235/60R-14 ER60 -14 82 2.70 P235/70R-14 GR70-14 P245/60R-14 GR60-14 88 2.87 P225/70R-15 GR70-15 !>235/60R-15 FR60· 15 90 2.86 P235/70R-15 HR70-15 P245/60R -15 GA60-15 92 2.95 P255/70R -15 LR70-15 P255/60R~ 15 HR60-15 95 3.14 P275/60R-15 LRS0-15 105 3.44
FINAL CLOSE-OUT • "!!'Irestone Size 878-14 Fits oatsuns BLACKWALLS
,. Toyotas, Mazdas, etc.
DOUBLE $
BELTED
Delu xe Champi on
Get there Early to
Avoid Disappointment/
Blackwall
Plus $1.94 Fed. Ex. Tax
SIZE PIUC•
F78-14 $37
G78 -14 3 8
G78-15 39
H78-15 41
WHITEWALLS
SIZE
E78 -14
J78-14
H78 -15
PRIC•
$40
42
45
F.E.T.
$2.34
2.53
2.59
2.82
F.E.T.
$2.21
3.02
2.82
4 TIRE & 4 WHEEL PACKAGE OFFERS!
MINl -.JRUCIS lUV:.~~~v~~:"· COMPACTS-IMPORTS
ArwtMe s...""" ....... s...""" ....... WllYI LITill '7r WllTI LITIH
l~j i~.llJ; If;'~ u.;;/ ~ ..;.-{I ~ .;'.:,-~ : ~ 14al
l et of Pow P.J. l•I• wtt .. 11
YOU GIT ' TlllS ~ 4 WlllLS ~ti l10•14 ................... "10'' w MO· M ,.,._....., '-""tr MM~.,_ & _,, ...,,_ .......... W.. ... wi..-vou "' 4 .,.. _. ...._ .... '"" Of Mllllfl ._. ,,.... "'" ............ NMW .......... C.,.N ... _ .....
4 mlS &
WllllS
fOI
Plua $2.AO to $2.71
F.E.T. '*Tit•
Flreatone SIMI-Belted Aadlal Tire•
~ ~. ~ ~I ~I '~/ '~/·
--------------------
Orange Coasl DAILY P1LOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 ,-~--~~~~--~~~~~~--~--~~~------~--_;:~~----H /F
Johnson & Johnson <J&Jl sells a lot of products to
women. contraceptives of all kinds, a raft of baby-care
items <in case the contraceptives ditin't work ), tam·
pons and sanitary n11pklns.
But It never saw lit to place a woman on its board of
directors until now. Ann Dibble Cook, djrectc>r of the
social service department at the University of
Chicago's Lying In Hospital, has just been named a
J&J director.
The president of the University or Chicago, Hanna
H. Gray, already has a seat on one of the most lnfluen·
lial corp<>rale boards in the nation: J P Morgan & Co.
operator of Morgan Guaranty Trust.
No one holds and votes more stock And that's nQ.l.
her only corporate directorship. She's also a membertW
the board or Cummins Engine, the diesel engine
manufacturer.
Polaroid, the ins tant camera maker. put a woman
on its board for the first time a couple or weeks ago. She
is Yen-Tsui Feng, ch ief librarian al Harvard
University. ~ Another .
company that ~;r o
decided recent ·, ...., ,
ly to admit a ·~ woman lo the ~ ranks of llS .._ ... _.._..._ _____ _
directors is Dow lllJll lllllWIJZ
C hemical.
Barbara Hackman Franklin now sits on Dow's board
She was formerly a commissionerofthe U S Consumer
Products Safety Commission
WHAT'S GOING ON here is a continuation or a
trend that began in the early 1970s. Prior to that time,
the board of directors was an all-male preserve The
board, it should be pointed out, is a Policy-making body.
it doesn't so much run the company as sit in Judgment,
approving or disapproving what the paid managers do.
So what was in place previously was men judging
men That's still pretty much the case. except that now
there's an occasional female voice to temper the male
chorus.
How far has this women's movement gotten in the
business world? According to a recent count done by
Catalyst, a New York women's organization, this was
the picture among the nation's 1,300 largest compames ·
324 women held 464 directorships on the boards of 387
comparues In short, It's getting to the p<>int where near
ly one out of every three companies has at least one
woman director
TJUS PENETRATION was corroborated by a new
study. "Women Directors on Corporate Boards." done
al the business school of the University of Texas at
Dallas. The Texas researchers looked at 491 big cor·
porations and found that 168 of them had at least one
woman director
ONE FEATURE THAT'S clear from the Texas
s tudy is that the larger the company the more likely it is
to have a woman director. Thus, among the 100 largest
corporations. about half have women directors, this
percentage decreases as you go down in size
At any rate, men certajnly don't have to worry
about being outvoted. The 491 companies examined by
the University of Texas researchers had a total o( 6,224
board seats. o( which 3 percent were filled by women.
That may be small but it is up SO percent since 1977.
The problem for women, pointed up in the Texas
study, is the feeling or loneliness when you're the only
woman in the board room. And then there's the tenden
cy of your male col leagues to be patronizing.
Ernesta Ballard. who is a director of Burlington In·
duslries, the nation's largest textile company, put it
this way.
"Men are uncomfortable. They don't know quite
how to treat you. They are extremely Polite. They don't
expect input. On one occasion, one male executive com·
mented that financial s tatements must bore me r
replied that financial statements might bore him too.
After all, financial statements can be boring.·'
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT D9E~ J11~~l~, A~fB!~lt •YGI
AMERICAN LEADERS
·~ -.... ..... . "' . , .... -.... . "" .... ..... -" +I • l'I . . "'
NEW YORI( (AP) -5.elft, wees. prk• end Ml CNnDt Of Ille t.fl motl Kll ...
A""'rl<MI Slocc• E•<...,_ • 11.._,
lfAOlllt nMlonell., at "'°" IMll ''· Compoil)d llUOO t ... Oorch1IGe• 17",100 U\lo + -II.
R•=I 1 ... 100 11.... + "'° Re Int wt 162,JaO 6 + 14
Gull en o IU,100 '°"" + " MldlMIQ IJl,500 tllt + .... CryatelOU 100,JOO J6 + 1~
Ca'°°' U ,400 Ml'! -"' HouOllTr U.100 11"'* + ~ Ntw ldrla IJ, 100 2'4 + V.
lor W.cl , Mey •· JTO<KS Ooei\ High 1.-Clot.t C"8
JO 1no •n.n "'1 " "'·" .,, l4 + o . .i> lO Trn •If CM •It 11 "0.11 0).1) + 1.21 IS Ult 100 CO IC» 01 IOl.43 104.8>• o.-. .s s111 JJS" m .o '" 02 >75.lh o . .i lt>du~ ,,.,..,100 Tran 1,7S1,,. Ullll 9'7,JOO
tS Slk . 1,023,100
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW VORK (AP) "'9Y • P,..,, .
AdvencH T°":l> ':1.
O.clln.cl '" llot u I\( h•llQOCI m 1S4 Toi.1 rs~ ''24 1'34
New highs .. ,
New IOWi Jo 4'
WHAT A .. 0 ()0
NEW VORK IAP) ,,_.y t p,..,,
AdY41'\<9d rooa~ ~{.
O.Cllnecl >• UI UncMll90CI 101 105 Toter rs~ '°' m New hlgM 1;. • HIW to~ 17
METALS c-~ (fl\lt. POUl'd. u.s. detll-
llottl.
LH4I • c.nt• • pound.
ZJIOC ~\k ttl\IJ • llD'N'd, 6ellYtM.
fl• ..... Mlttell w-c.ornpotll• lb.
Al•""-It cents• "'°""°· H v M.er(..., $C0 00 per lletll
~lftl-S.U7.00tro.,ot., N.Y
SILVER
Henclv & --· ltO "PH troy-..
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~' MOMlno 11.11no .,,,,u, Oii Q .75.
L.eMtlll ~ llMlnt M7l .1S, off ... 2S.
... rh: ~ llMlno Mte.U, WI ti.& "'.......,' ll•lno .,.,..,,. 011 p.10
IAtrklll ... •"-11.111111 ... , •••• Oii!
$S.OO; tnt.OO -.0. Mo•dr & Mar"'41•: onry oelly 11-• tu7. 1S, off M.U. ........ , ... , °"'' llwW "'71.11,. "' .. .JS.
1....--1 Ollly delly Cll*t laetlciMll
....... ,OffM.O
SYMBOLS
• ... -u --0 ·-UC O#P4WW4 a a sq
OI Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThurtday, May 7, 1981 FEATURES
Thoroughbred lady's dream coming true
81 EU.EN BRANDT
"'9ctlil .... Dllty """
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thu " ,,.. ffr•t ... 0 HTMi o/ "on•• the Doil11 ~lot IDlll pubUlh about fftltrt1lmg
California worMn.
Jn America, nearly all UlUe Jlrla love horaea.
They cry over "Black Beauty,'' thrill at marchln1
horses in parades, and triumph with Elisabeth
Taylor in "National Velvet."
But one lltUe girl did o\ore than dream. She
rode and cared for horses u a child, atudied them
in pre-vet college classes, and finally went to work
at a major American racetrack.
Today, Kathleen Nelson la the leading woman
trainer at Santa Anita Racetrack in Arcadia and
also races horses at Hollywood Park in In1lewood.
Her Nelson Racing Stable, colors blue and white.
is still a small one, but growln1 rapidly, as
thoroughbred owners hear about Kathy's way with
horses and increasing record of success.
Ms . Nelson, 31, a lean, athletic-looking
woman, with long black hair and a soft, throaty
voice, does not come from a raclnl family. But
m'any residents own horses in her home town, the
Los Angeles s uburb of San Dimas. Ms. Nelson
learned to ride when she was six or seven, and her
parents gave her a donkey to raise one Christmas.
A neighbor, who owned several quarterhorses, let
young Kathy groom and exercise them and also
encouraged her to attend horse shows.
Ms. Nelson thought of becoming a veterinarian
and attended California State Polytechnic
University in Pomona as a pre-vet major.
But one afternoon, she chanced to watch a
television program from Santa Anita and beard
morning workouts at lhe track were open to the
public. Ms. Nelson attended a workout; saw girls
galloping horses; became intrigued, made in·
quiries. At 20, she was hired for her first racetrack
job. K~t.by Nelson describes a racetrack as a strict
hierarchy. A potential trainer must endure a long
and hard apprenticeship.
"You have to start at the bottom," she says.
"In racing. there's no s ubstitute for experience
Ca/,ifomia uvman
and hard work."
Ma. Nelson's flrat Job wu aa a "bot walker "
helpln1 cool bones off after workouta. In a few
months, she 1raduated lo exerciae 1lrl, actuall)
aialloplna horsea durin1 workout perlodt.
After about a year, in 1'72, trainer Joe Dunn
Impressed with Ma. Nelaoo'a .abillly, hired her aa
his aaalatant and helped her prepare for ber
trainer'• llceruse.
The California llcen1in1 exam ia a niorou1
oral grilling with more than three hundred quel·
lions. Potential trainers muat demonstrate an ex·
cellenJ. knowledge of such subjects aa equine
anatomy, diseases and medication, and racing re-
gulations.
Ms. Nelson passed with ny1ng colors, received
her license, and worked aa Dunn's assistant
trainer for almost four years. In late 1976, ahe
started to train on her own.
Her first client was a Washington state shop-
ping-center owner with four horses, two of which
started winning races almost immediately.
"I started off with a big bang," she laughs.
Present clients include two real estate brokers, a
plastic surgeon, and a podiatrist. Ms. Nelson
herself owns shares in three of the horses she
trains. She also recently purchased a brood mare.
Ms . Nelson describes training thoroughbreds
as a tremendously demanding job. "You couldn't
do it if you weren't dedicated!"
Her typical day begins at 4 a.m. with the drive
in from her Monrovia apartment. Between 5 and
11 in the morning, she must see that her horses are
fed, groomed, inspected and exercised.
Arter about a ,Year, in 1972, trainer Joe Dunn,
nap, Ms. Nelson return:; to ht:r stable !or afternoon
feeding and stall cleaning. She leaves the track at
4 or 5 in the afternoon.
About 7 p.m .. clients start calling her home.
Horse owners . particularly new ones, are anxious
Althou1h some horses can be trained in aa Ut-
tle as 90 days, It. takes five or six month.a to brtn1
the average horse up to racin1 form. The trainlnl
re1imen begins with simple 1aJJopln& to devetop
stamina. Later. a borae can be "breezed " or
. worked out al racing speeds_. gradually buildhi1 up
to the distance at which lt wtll be raced.
Kathy Nelson believes one of tbe main lhinl•
that separates a good trainer from a mediocre ooe
is a comprehensive knowledge of the physical coo·
dilions of horses. In this re1ard, her pre-
veterinary studies evidently have served her well.
"It's very important to recol.Jlise lea problems
before they're too far advanced,'' she cauUOM. "If
you don't stay on top of a minor ailment, it can de·
velop into a major problem rapidly.''
Ms. Nelson aJso feels it's important to treat
horses kindly, to make sure the atmosphere In
which they train is a pleasant one. Because even
m ore than people , horses are prone to
psychosomatic illness. Her favorite quote: "A hap·
PY horse runs better than an unhappy one."
"Actually," she says, "I've gotten some teaa·
ing about this belief. There are some fellows at the
track who gleefully shout whenever I ride by,
'There goes the Happy Horse Trainer! ...
Ms . Nelson thinks many women have a special
ability to transmit kindness and calm to the horses
in their care. And she's a strong supporter or
bringing more women into racing.
In ract, Ms. Nelson's groom and her exercise
person are female, making Nelson Racing Stable
pos~ibly the first all-female stable i.n American 1
racing.
But Nelson feels being a woman may hinder
h~r ~omewh~t in attracting clients. "Some people
stall JUSl won l entrust their horses to a woman."
But Kathy Nelson is optimistic about her
future. A solidly skilled, well-prepared trainer can
Kathleen Nelson with 3-year-old filly Court Duaster. take advantage of attendant Pl;lblicity when a spec· lacular horse comes under his care. One or two
about their horses' progress. Ms. Nelson typically
must spend two hours every evening on the
telephone reassuring clients about their "babies."
well-known horses can .. make" a trainer's career.
"In another five to ten years," says this
tho_roughbred lady, '"I'm going to be a major
trainer.''
Neatness not trademark of lost generation
You may not sleep tonight after I tell you this
but it's something you have to know. '
For 16 years, I have conducted an informal
survey among parents that requires a simple
answer to a simple question: "Does your son or
daughter pick up anything besides a fork?"
IRMA lllllCI n
Some parents became quite violent. Two had
to be sedated. A dozen or so reminded me they had
served in the war And here's the scary part. Of
those queried, rn>I one parent hod a child who found
tidine,!a way of life.
society a generation of kids who think self-cleaning
bathrooms have already been invented.
Somewhere between boiling the pacifier and
buying black towels, we lost 'em. I don't lcnnw.
where we failed. but we have unleashed upon
Whal most parents fear is that they will be
considered incompetent for not teaching cleanli·
ness. This simply is not true. My own children
come from a good family. I use soap when I do the
dishes. I don't wear a shirt the fourth day by turn·
ing it WTong-side out. I do not store Slushee cups
Use a Daily Pilot
Penny Pincher Ad
~ to sell items under s $100.
I
• 3 lines for 2 days
only $1 .50 a day.
Sorry, no com-
mercial ads
allowed. Charge
your Penny
Pincher
Ad or use your
Visa or Master
Card.
cat/ Classified
Advertising at
642-5678 to
place your ad.
Diiiy Pilat
Mother's Day
Sale
11~181 Pl'iCld
Microwave Oven
MICRO-THERMOMETEifMTEMrERATURE
CONTROL-TAKES THE GUESSWORK OUT
OF COOKING!
Cook by
time or by
tempenture
witll Micro·
Thfrmomtter
ump, probe
Ind 18 mill·
•tt titn•
• 3 PoWtr LMts
• hldudts Microwtvt
Guide 111d Cookttook
Jet 89
Oallwd
IHlll ..... ,1129"'
~~
ff! ~ onflt
H ...... Ollhecl'I
14Z.55'6
A .._ ____ RENCE
ADAY
MAKES
t ' I ~ T\\0-~ ~,,~ J~~UNf
' 'imN J_YOU~~ to an~ an ncq>tlonal two-day
flnt jnttlry _.thaw. Our
CUSTOM Df.SlONEll wlll work cloeely
wllh vou In lkv~lopin1 your own 11n~ dalpi ~n you
c:iwx-a mounlll\I from our coll«tlon o( hundred..
You will be able to -k h our MASTilR CRAFTSMAN
tel vour dlamondo, prttl-ttona or col111 from a dnlpi th.et It c:rut.ed apeclally for you, Tbttt will ,ti. no ntra c.....,_. fM 1ht
dnicn CM' W-whtn vou eclec:t a mountlnc durlna ttw day of
thlo ac:iulal e .. ~n•.
You won't-RI 10 mltl thlt aollkn opponunlty 1011« lht
fl nett qualliy and moet cnoatlnlyoflYled mount Inc collect Ion In
today' a marketplace.
Located at South CoNt Plua lnCoat1 Me ... Mon m*r
cmllt arc.h tnd lay11Wty honored. Telephone (714) s.tO-~
.... , . .-.-...... ~ ................... _ ...... __
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTHY
s.. • .,_ ... _..,...
lt22 HAHOR l\.VD.
COSTA MISA-141-1 IH
under the gas pedal. I do not sleep on pillows that
have no cases on them , nor do I drink milk out of
the carton. When I saw my son's locker. didn't I
pass out?
Some naive little fools think low-quality air is
the fault of too many automobiles and industries.
Think about it. We started to note pollution the
year this generation found out they bad locks on
their bedroom doors .
I I resent peo'ple thinking that slovenliness
comes from a mother who was too busy lo teach or-
ganization. When my first-born was just a toddler,
before I would let her at the table. I'd say, "Did you
SEHIOR CITIIEHS
SPECIAL
25°/o OFF Al.L SHvtCl
....... Twa., W•d. Ollfy
HAIR
HANDLERS ·--. , .......
wash your hands and face?" I never got an answer.
Just a 24-inch tongue that came out or the mouth and
like a street cleaner made a path, bordered on the
north by a nose, east and west by cheeks and on the
south by a chin.
I lost ground every day after that.
I hale to go whining to the government every
time there is a problem, but perhaps a Child Neal·
ness Agency could be established to set up some
health standards.
Yes, the real problem today is not the threat of
UFOs bringing alien people from another planet to
earth. It's how are we going to find them in all this
mess after they've landed.
CONSIGN DESIGN
b~ ll•••d•"" "-4crefted ......... ~ .....
2043 w .. ld!tt o. s..... 102. ,_..., a.ct>
64M31t
See how white sizzles
in a sexy show-~opping pu~p.
Embroidered bag, 5.99. We're so affordable.
23.99
45 FASHON ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH
......... ' ... -··-·
----. --___ .,...__,_ ______________ ~ _____ __,_,__..,.... __________ ~-
lllilll lllCH /lllTH 1:1111
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY,
MAY 7, 1981
JUST COASTING 82
COMICS 86
Two-earner households are de -
manding that business make it
easier to manage jobs, families
See Page B4
0
a
h
Jury hits county IDental health program,1
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ... .,.., ...... , ....
Mental health programs
should be removed from under
the umbrella of Orange County
government's vast Human
Services Agency, the Orange
County Grand Jury said \oday.
In a 27-page report, the jury
concluded that mental health
.sea:vices have deteriorated. not
Improved, and that the mental
health program is not meeting
Its stated objective.
Referring &(> those objectives,
the jury said:
-Recent reorganization ol the
mental health department "hu
decreased and disrupted service
to clients."
"Overemphasis on regimen-
tation and documented accoun·
Laguna school
ho_ard to hear
closure 'flap'
After more than a dozen meet-
ings and preparation or a 12·
page report to the Laguna Beach
school board, an advisory com-
mittee agrees it can't agree on
which or four schools should be
closed.
The nine-member School
Closure Advisory Committee is
to present its findings to school
trustees tonight at 7 in district
headquarters at 550 Blumont St.
The panel was given the tasJ<
or determining whkh or the dis·
tricl's three elementary and one
intermediate schools could be
put in mothballs, sold or leased
with the least effect on educa·
tion in Laguna Beach.
The financially str a pped
school district is exploring ways
or saving money, and closing
one or the schools is being con·
sidered.
But the report that will be re-
ceived by trustees tonight shows
the committee was split on
selection of a school to be closed.
While determining that .. any
three or the four schools sur-
veyed could adequately serve
the student population for the
next fi ve years," the panel
failed lo select which would be
the most likely candidate.
No single option was accepta·
ble to more than half the panel
and, as a result, the committee
Lifeguards
n~ed $15,000
fo r qua rters
Laguna Beach lifeguard! will
be getting a new building at Main
Beach, but not until they raise the
$15,000 needed to complete the
project.
The City Council granted
permission on Tuesday to the
60-member lifeguard department
to build its own headquarters so
lone as it doesn't cost the city
anything.
Council members were amazed
at the low cost to construct the
1,100-square-fool building, to be
located over the old pump station
at the north end of Main Beach
Park.
Former city lifeguards who are
now working in the building
trades have offered their time
and expertise free. Io addition,
local businesses have offered to
sell construction materials at
cost to the lifeguards.
Mike Dwinell, speaking for the
ltfeauards at the council
meeting, said all the money
needed for construction w\ll be
raised before they begin.
They have set up aluminum can
collection baskets and newspaper
blna in various spots ln the city to
help fwid the project.
Dwinell said the lifeguards
would also be approaching local
businessmen fol' donations.
When the bulldine is completed,
the city will take over main·
tenance of the structure. ·
Fund,. ra iser
• auction set
Tbe South Oran1e County
Chapter of Young Life, a
non-leclarlan youth orsantr.atlon
operatlnl ln local hlch 1cbooll,
wlll 1ponsor a fund-ralslnc
auction May 18 from 6:30 p.m. to
10 p.m.
TH auction will be at Crown
Valley Commu.nlty Park, 2$751
Crown Valley Parkway in
LAIUOI Nlruel. Th:ketl are SU. The ftnt SlO ol tbe ticket price
will be credited toward any
purcb.Me al the auettoa. Item pric .. ruse from $10 to
Sl,000, lncludlq hand-crafted cma and vacation packa1et.
Bultneuel and lbdividuall wbo
wt1h to donate ot _purchaH
tlaltetl may call •1·"3133.
submitted nearly 40 pages of rat· ·
ings and score sheets to il-
lustrate individual perspectives.
And while the report is not
con clusive, its d ata point
toward closure of Aliso Elemen-
tary School in South Laguna.
Specifically. the com mlttee
rated which of the four schools
should be closed. without regard
to feasibility.
Aliso garnered the most points
in that rating chart, followed by
E l Morro , Thur s ton In·
termediate and Top of the World
elementary school.
That rating chart is what has
Aliso parents upset, a nd they
say they'll be out in force tonieht
to argue in favor of no school be-
ing closed ne'1 year.
They say there are other
alternatives that have not been
explored.
About the only firm conclusion
reached in more than three
months of study by the commit-
tee is a recommendation that
the district seU or lease an 11 ·
acre par cel or district land in the
Top or the World community, as
well as a house adjacent to the high school on St. Ann's Drive.
The school board is not expect-
ed to act on the r e port at
tonight's meeting.
Officials say a large turnout
might mean moving the meeting
to the high school cafeteria,
across Park Avenue from thedls·
trict administration building.
-By STEVE MITCHELL
P sychologist
to le cture
a t U C I rvine
Dr . Pbylli1 C h es ler,
p1y,ehologlat, author and
femlnlst, will lecture at 8.p.m.
May 14 on bow men and women
are relatin1 to each other lo the
19'0'•·
The author of "Women and
Madness," "Women, Money and
Power" and "About Men" la an
a11l1tant profe11or or
p1ycbolo1Y at Colle1• of Staten
11land, City UnJvertity ot New
YoJ'k.
Her lecture enUUed, "Me and
Womtn ln the I0'1," will be
&Inn In Room r .110, Medical Sclen~e Lecture Rall at UC
Irvine. TlckeU ar• U for
1eneral admlulon, II for UCI
staff ,and $1 for UCI 1tudent1.
For fJitormaUon calJ au.am. 1
ta bili ty has t mpaired client -chain-of-command now of in-
service and staff morale In· formation." creased unnecessary pape~ork -"In-service training has
and decreased staff efficiency.•· virtually dlsap~ared.''
-Community participation in
mental health program has de·
teriorated.
-Communication within the
mental health department bas
been stymied '·under a rigid
-Efficiency m the program
bas deteriorated "because of
continued duplication o f
paperwork and ,report-
maklng ... "
Mental health programs have
operated under the aegis of the
Human Services Agency since
the agency was created several
years ago.
There has been continuing
criticism or the effectiveness or
the programs, primarily from
me ntal health activists who
claimed non-professionals were
overseeing mental health pro-
grams.
That criticism was strongest
FLORAL ABUNDANCE -New landscapbig at
Casa Pacifica was shown off whep two
Orange County Music Center auxiliaries host-
ed a fWld-raiser at the former Western White
Delly .......... .., ~·O'~
House. Georgia Spooner, Nannette Pittman,
Susan Strader and Evelyn Daniel welcomed
300 ·guests who contributed $15,000 for build-
ing the cultural complex in Costa Mesa.
UCI fee hike planned
'Fall studen ts face $86 yearly increase
UC Irvine Vice Chancellor campus to campus, but on
Wi lliam H . Parter 1ay1 averace they wm increase about
that yearly student f eu will ln· $100 throuthoUt the 1y1tem next
creue next fall from '714 t6 fall, accordlne to a recent an-
about S800 at the Irvine campus. nouncement by UC President
Tbi1 increue la necnaary to David Suon.
keep pace with lnf11Uon and wlU In addlUon to lntlation, U1ht
have no effect on the uni· federal and atate bud1ets place
verslty'1 enroUment, wbleh la pre11ure on the University of
expected to remain uound tbe Callfomla to lncreaae student
10,QOO·•tudent level, Parket fee1. Suon said.
aald Wednesday. UCI Chancellor Parker 1ald,
He Pointed OUl that 1Dftatk>G bow ever, that reduction In 1tate
forces the unheralty to pay and federal ftnanclal ald to 1tu·
more and more Mela yur 08 dent.a will have a sreater effect
teacher 1alarl•, uUUtJ cotte on private unlvenlU11 tun on
and ~r •XII..... public l.DIUtutionl like UCI.
TIM Ual-..-.... Of CaltDmla He added that mao1 ol ta.. ~...., reductiom an ltil1 bl tbi pro. um,... -·t cbars• hlltian. ,.._. "911 ~· "._ .-1eki , .. ~ .......... rL.~·· .......... ~.,,. ......
don edue.U.. · ably won't be felt lmmedlatel)'.
Theee f"' differ 1UtbU1 from Th• Unlvera'ty of Callfomla
• . l-----~---·~·.-..---
Regents set the educational fee
and establish a celling on re1-
istration fees. Local campuses
can then set their re1istraUon
fees under thLa ceillne.
UCI'• ne• registration ree will
be ··a couple of dollars under the
celltn1, '' Parker aal~. notln1
that tbele fees 10 In part to ex.'
penaes created by the new Stu-
dent Union on campus.
Fiesta slate d
Senior clUlent 'are Invited to a
Mexican n .. ta MtY 15 at Irvine
Senior Center, #3 Sandburc
Way.
The dinner menu lncludt1
eaclaUllllli1, rwfried beau. •alad.
. benra.. and detMrt. Amon&
t.b• actf vitJet will be breakina Of
a Kutcan pinata.
4
I
last year when the county Board
o f S upe r viso r s appoint e d
Margaret Grier, then HSA direc.
tor. as director of the mental
health program Mental health
activists claimed Miss Griel'
was not qualified to hold the< mental health position. In part.
that criticism led to the granif
jury's investigation of the men•
tal health program. 1
I
O C board
to fi g h t
contr ols
The Orange County Board of
Super visors has agreed lo
challenge the state Coastal Com·
mission if necessary to fight re-
sale controls for new affordable
homes built along the coast.
The supervisors reached the d•
cision Wednesday during a meet.
Ing infused with unusual amount.a
or philosophical discourse both~
board members and proponentJ
of resale controls. 1.a
At one point, Supervisor Ro~
Stanton warned resale contr~
could lead to a "social revolu·
lion.. when homeowners or .i: .
fordable units realize they c~·i
sell their houses at market rate$r
The topic surfaced during
board review or coastal policies
mandated by the coastal co~· mission. The commission h~
advocated resale controls for loft'-
cost housing and the supervisQ&'l
were on the spot to decide whether
lo break from their past "opposi-
tion to call for such restrictions:,
They didn't. F irs t .year
supervisors Stanton and Bruce
Nestande claimed resale controls
deny own ers traditional chances
to parlay housing equity toward a
higher standard or living.
Favoring government control,a
were Maya Dunne of The Housing
Coalition of Orange County and
Mary Mill er ofthe Orange County
chapter of the League of Women
Voters.
Ms. Dunne said controls are
virtually the only way to preserve
low-cost housing. She claimed 69
percent of affordable units built
from 1977 in Irvine's Woodbridge
neighborhood are no longer oc;
cu pied by the original owners.
Ms. Miller said supervisors
were being shortsighted to de·
mand affordable housing only to
lose the benefits upon the first re.-
sale.
Stanton and Nestande t!dmlt~ speculation controls are needid.
Added Stanton: ··our differences
aren't in the objective but in the
means to the end."
The county does have resale
controls for low cost unit•
financed by the county's revenue
bond sales. In that case, buyera
are screened to make sure thet
fall within acceptable income
levels.
Housing prices rise accordinc
to annual increases in the coun-
ty's median income level. wb~~ currently ls $25,000 for a family
four. Thal level went up 12 per
cent last year. county orrtcillf
say.
In a related coastal lss\Ji,
supervisors voted 4 to 1 to oppoee
another coastal commission ret-
om mendation to seek an eut-
ment for public pedestrian ace~ through the Emerald Bay prtv
comm unity to the beac, ,
Emerald Bay is in Laguna. ·•
Supervisor Ralph Clark s14«f
with the commission's pl~
staff, claimin& the policy ii cdllf
sistent with the county's intent.,
provide beach access. •
But other s upervisor s safd
Emerald Bay should be exclu&M
because of Its protected layOlt,
proximity to other public beacbn
and I ack of visitor facilities.
'Cat' burglari
gets j e we ls 1
from g uesl8
A cat burelar worked bil -.,
through five second-story roo
at the Surf and Sand Hotel
Laeuna Beach this mornlnt,
escaped with an unkno
amount of cash, credit carda
Jewelry.
La.una Beach pollce weN
amlninl the "°""'' and to occupant.I a... tbi1 m
after the ll'OUP ot conv
eoera reported the burll*rl ...
The bur1lar appea
particularly interested In
cards, police aald, and ln
stance left cab ln a vl~,.
wallet. t.attna only t.be carill.
One hotel 1ue.t repOitM a ...
of •'8,900 In caah and Ja
and police •ere tabulatf
stolen items from other 1~
\
I
0 0 44 •
•
OranQe Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, May 7, 1981
•
ALONG THE SMt!I' RUT -Civic leaders of
Fountain Valley, noted as one ol the more quiet
wonderspots along our coastline, may soon take the lead
among our cities in battling sin and purging for purity.
Just look at the record.
• The valley City Council bas alreacfy outlawed
massage parlors and sexy movie the'lters. Currently
they are attacking flesh magazines. ~ '
.If the.y keep all this up, Fountain Valley's forces for
purity will make the Costa Mesa vicecops look like
slackers.
Earlier on, Fountain Valley councilwoman Barbara
Brown went on a crusade against stores that sold girlie
magazines.
~
T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 ~~
THEN ONLY THIS
week, one of the city's
anti-porno crusaders pre·
sented Mayor Ben Nielsen
with a whole stack or
periodicals he said were
offensive, along with a list
of 19 liquor stores he alleged were carrying the awful·
ness.
So shocked was the mayor with the gift that he
wouldn't even gaze upon the allegedly offensive
materials.
You'd think the least the mayor could have done was
to have called a study session on the material.
"You 'd think the least the mayor could have done
was to have called a study session on the material.
Anyway, the Fountain Valley civic lights seemed
most concer:ted about keepi~g the kiddies away from any
adult-type literature . It rrught be okay for the liquor
stores to carry fleshy periodicals, so long as they are
secreted out or the eyesight or children.
That question, or course, lead to yet another puzzle:
What are all those children doing hanging around liquor
stores in the first place?
THAT PROBLEM ISN'T quite so simple. If the booze
places were just selling pure alcohol, you might be able
to suggest the kiddies simply be banned from the
premises. But such isn't the case these days.
Beverage stores have become almost general stores
now. Your correspondent knows of one Corona del Mar
dealer, for example, who was forced to start stocking
fresh eggs because or customer demand.
Depending on the place, you can purchase candy and
cakes, flashlight batteries, milk and butter, comic books,
or motor oil. Then there are also some liquor places that
have installed those coin-operated video games that are
such an addictive attraction to the younger set.
One liquor dealer once told me, "I sell so much candy ·
and licorice sticks that I've forgotten what it was I
planned to sell when I opened this place . . . "
WITH THE COMING of video games, you now have a
lot of youngsters who hang around at liquor stores,
pumping quarters into the machines all night long.
Grog shops have come to replace pool halls as spots
where youth flirt with sin and degradation. Time was
when youngsters were warned by their fathers that
nothing good ever lurked behind the swinging doors of the pool hall.
Thus you promptly tried to snea.lr into the place and
spend hours learning how to bank an eight-ball into the
side pocket. Parents, however, kept insisting that billiard
halls were hangouts or the idle.
44AND IDLE HANDS do the devil's wort<,'' you were admonished.
Considering the fashion in which the Fountain Valley
civic savants are pwshing for purity, it's clear that lf
sa.tan ever does come to town, he'll be on unemployment.
SADDEt(ED -Actor-director
Laurence Olivier says be is
"very much saddened" by
the demise of London's
163 -year -old Old Vic
Theater, which will close
May 16 due to lack of funds
Olivier starred in many Old
Vic productions.
Wurt OKs
boys-only
bequest
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. CAP> -
A bachelor who died al age 96
was within his legal rights even
if he discriminated against
females when he willed money
for scholarships for male high
school students only, a judge has
ruled.
However, since it would be lUl·
constitutional for the Croton-
Harmon Union Free School Dis·
trict, a public entity, to ad·
minister lhe scholarship fund
under male-only terms, the
judge has appointed a trustee
and ordered the money turned
over to a newly formed private
trust.
The ruling by Westchester
County Surrogate Evans
Brewsler apparently signals an
end to a three-year legal dispute
over the will left by Edwin Irv-
ing Johnson. ·
The probate judge declared
the bequest was nol illegal
because the law does not pro-
hibit private discrimination.
John.son, a liCe-long bachelor,
died three years ago. Hls' will
explicitly establi s hed a
scholarship fund for ''bright and
deserving young men" in the
Cr oton-Harmon Union Free
School Di.strict.
After other bequ ests were
taken from Johnson's $238,000
estate, $196,300 was turned over
to the school.
The bequest said school of-
ficials were to determine the re-
cipients, provided that they
were bright and deserving, with
pare nts who could nol afford to
send them to college.
And they were to be male.
A female Croton-Harmon stu·
dent raised an objection to the
all-male provision and applied
for the scholarship.
School officials realized they
had a dilemma. If tbey followed
the provisions of the will, the
district could lose federal sub-
sidies. U they failed to comply
with the male-only terms, the
district could lose the
scholarship bequest.
So the scholarship program
was Indefinitely curtailed.
Al the same time, the woman
named lo administer Johnson's
estate petitioned Brewster to in·
terpret '•men'' to mean
"persons" or declare the pro·
visions Illegal and revise the
wlll.
Under New York law, the Sur·
rogate Court, the court for pro-
bate and euardiansbJp matters,
can interpret a vague or am·
bl1uous provision in a wilt.
~mokes tax hike eyed
P emocrat leaders propose increase from 10 to ~O cents
t SACRAMENTO <AP ) -
mocratic leaden in tbe state
. sembly /Are planning to pro·
e doubUn1 the slate cigarette!
from 10 cents to 20 centa a
ck, the Sacramento Union
~aid.
•: The boost ia part of an
i, lternaUve budaet plan being
evele>ped by the Democrats to
rtd1e an expected Sl.7 billion
bortfall in the budcet for the
ear startlna July l , the
ewapaper aald, Wednelday.
, The Democrat.' plan Included
'.ln un~ented shift of more
· an milllon ln unemplo)'·
ent tnaurance taxea lnto the
late'• ceneral funds, the UnJpn
aid . ,
Auembly Speaker Willie
rown, J>..San Francisco wu to
ave unveiled the plan thla
eek, but aldea aald lta releue
belq dtlll)'ed until nut week.
Brown aald al • recent new
f~ tbat.'be w11 cODllder·
I Pl'GPJeiilal laenaMI lD tile •11n t.u•" oa ctsarettet, liquor
candy. ~
Browi, and Auembly Way•
and Means Committee
Chairman John Vasconcellos,[).
San Jose, pre.sent.ed the plan to a
closed-door meettne or As·
sembly Democrats Monday, the
Union said.
The present cigarette tax is
expected to raise $203.6 mllllon
for the state's general fund next
year plus ~.4 million for local
governments. Doublina ml1ht
reduce sales.
The Unemployment Insurance
Fund bas about *3 billion ln re·
1erve. The f\md la fina"c:ed by a
payroll tax on employera and 1a
YHd to J)aY benefits to worlten
wbo afe laJd off or ot.be(.Wt1e
lose their jobs.
Tt\e Democrat.a' plan lnchldet
shlttlna MveraJ hundred mlll1on-
dollara ln tidelands oil revenue.
from c:apttal outlay, •• propoHd
by lbe Brown admlnilt.radon, ln·
to operational apendlns; the
cloaur• of 1everal mmor tax
loopbo&es, such u tbe uelDDUoD of motion picture le... tram
the 1alet tax, and WeftlJ, ID-1tud ol monthly, collec!tJoa ti
1tate income taxH wltbbfld
from paychecks.
The Union said the plan could
reduce the budget deficit by at
least $800 million.
State control
o( dumps
proposed
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
Senate committee bas approved
a proposal to transfer control of
1lx hHardous-waste dumpln1
sites t.hrouabout Callfornla from
loe!al ~overnmenta to slate
health offic:lal1.
The Senate .He11lb and
Welfare Committee endoraed
SB501 by Sen . Daolel
Boatwrlpt, l>·CoocrOCI.
The bill woul4 aJv• t.b• at.ate Detarttnent ol Reattb S.rvlcet
iaath«tty OTer ClUI I dum1111 wa.lcb handle dancerou1 ln-
dutrial clMmJcal wait.et, Uquid ud IOUd, ud baaardous 1ub-
1ta.nces 1ucb u PCB1. l
l
w p e • • • 0 c c a o o c
Laguna reaps
fund windfall
Six from
UCI win
grants
The Laguna Beach City Coun·.
ell has ame nded the city's
1980·81 federal revenue sharing
budget to accommodate an wiex·
pected $65,000 in additional re··
venues.
revenue-sharing program and
the city would be recelvlrfg
$378,221 instead of the $313,221
originally planned.
Six UC I •tudentt have re·
celved scholarships from the
Southern California chapter or
Phi Beta Kappa Alumni.
Alan Bewell of Canada re·
ccived $600, Francoise SuUlvan
and Violette Vornicel. both of
France, $500 each : Michel
Cu rpentier of France. $400, Shu
Hung Leung of Hong Kong aJ'ld
Taknkuzu Namera or Japan,
$200 t•ach
At a council meeting, Cl(y
M a nager Ken Frank said
Congress recently extended the
Chil~riminals
topic of seminar
Under the revised budget, the
city will spend $104,700 for new
vehicles, $39,900 for communlca·
lions equipment, $2,400 for
senior citizen assistance and
$231,221 toward construction of
an emergency access road link·
ing the Top or the World and
Ar c h Be ach Heigh ts com
munities. lanag~ lecture set Criminal activities committed
by children will be the focus of a
free all-day seminar scheduled
Saturday, at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach
The program will take place
from 9 a.m. to 4 30 p m. in
Forum 1.
The $15,000 set aside in the
original budget for aerial land
photographs was deleted. Frank
said completion of the fire road
took priority over the photos
The pictures were to be used in
planning future development 1n
the city
• Im proving 1 m age projection
for personal or business reasons
will be discussed at the Orange
County Mensas General Meeting
M ay 21. 8 p m , m the communi-
ty room or the Orange Public
Library
2 ON IRVINE TOWN -Steve Edwards and
Melody Rodgers tape a segment of their · '2
on the Town" program for CBS, Channel 2, at
0 (:1 LLOl'o•s ~ ~ oardl~•1 !>111111
MOTHER'S DAY
Give a Living Gift
leGllffM s.l•ctlOft of: .........
·~ • Afric•Yi.h . ~· ... • ....._,1Dey l ""
OPEN MOTHER'S DAV
~ THl"J8AT, 1ooiot'OO IUN. t:00 IO I $()
Lloyd's Nursery & Landscape Co.,
2021 H•wport llYd. fat lay StrHtJ
COST A MESA, CA '2'27 • ~744 1
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 7 am to 6 pm
Son 9 am to 5:30 om
VISA & MC A0CEPTm ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;EX"1AE8 6-1M1;iiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Delly ,..... ,..., .......
the Woodbridge Village shopping center. The
Irvine taping will be seen Ma y 25.
~ -----+~~~-iL-----A Special Mom
Deserves the Best
L..;.:;----n-'·'· J· ·· .. ;. . I d~·~--·--. '-_:JO
And with Hallmark Mother's Day card, that's
what she gets. Tell tier how much you care
on Sunday, May 10
c 1980 Hallm•rk Ca10\ Inc ...
K.C:J ~~t~'"L /HOP
979-1112
2300 HAllOll a YD. 1M HAllOI CINT9
Opel'\ 'ttl 9 pm Monday thru Fndav Sat 10 'ltl 6.
Sun 12 1115
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
FRESH SWORDFISH .............. 5.98 lb. Oreol~•~wi.o.i...tM • w!UI .......
F R ESH FILLET OF
NORTHERN SEADASS ............ Z.98 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top choice beef aged at lea!lt 30 days to the
peak of perfection
Staffed Pork Chops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . L98 lb. ·
Juat think! A porJt chop cut 2" thick
stuffed with Delaney's famous
homemade apple dreHlng.
Bonelea Rolled Porll Roalt ........ Z.4t lb. Average wel«iht 3 pounds.
Center Cat Pork Cbops ...... : . . . . . Z.4t lb.
Farmer St1Je Spareribs ............ 1.a lb.
Lean Ground Claack ................ l.4t lb. Ground ~ly, not over 22% fat.
f'REE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE
ISO 00 min please I Your order Is und11r complete rerrtaenlion from our atore lo your door In our refrigerat~ trucks
Call In the mornlna and your order vtlll be delivered to your home the same aflemooe.
-ThJ1 ad ttrtnln Wed., Ml ltlrouth Tu-.,a112
.DEIAllEY'S
"
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Large Navel Oranges ........ 3k lb.
Lg. Size lc~bers Lettuce .......... 3 for 1.tt
Local Romaine Lettuce .......... 3 for l.tt
Lg. Bunch Spinach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zk ea.
So. American Bananas ...... 3 lbl. for 1.tt
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanry's Private Label Cbampape (750 mill
Z.75 ea. or 33.tO per use
Wente Bros. Le Blanc de Blanc . . . . . . ... J.M ee.
Se11ram1 VO. . . . . . . . . . . .... l .M H . (oee IMcr>
f'ortm • Dot-Korilrand . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 3.SO ea. Ut74) Score.by Scotch (75t mil> .................... 5.SS ea. (One Jlt.er> .................................. t,&S ea.
All liquor and wine plua tax. .
CompleU caterlna service, from a sit-down dlnMr
party t.o party traya delivered to your home. CaU
Delaney's Caterina Department, 11k for Tom
Martin
Store Houn t-1, Ooled SadaJ
2me Newport Blvd., Newport Beaell
673-5520
. . .. . ·---·· .. "' ,. .... ~---
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 H/F AA
~UillU~ Brown endorses Second
• • JUSt1ce • • anti-crime tax
Deaths s~spicious? · LOS ANGELES <AP> Saying Californians
live in "a clim ate of apprehension" because of
violent crime, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has en·
dorsed a quarter-cent sales tax for more prisons
and police.
eyed
SACRAMENTO <AP1
Coronor' s office mum on patients
RIVERSIDE (AP> -The spouses
of some of the 27 e lderly patients
whose deaths are being investigated
by the Riverside County coroner 's of·
rice say they are beginning to worry
that ·their relatives' death11 were sus-
picious.
But county officials continued Wed-
nesday t o issue ··no comment''
answers to most q uestions about the
high number or deaths 25 -in the
intensive care ward at Community
Hospital of the Valleys in Per ris dur-
ing March and April.
Two more deat hs we re being in·
vestigated at San Gorgonio P ass
Hospital in Banning. A thi rd San
Gorgonio death has been eliminated
as unrelated. •
Candy tax backed
a nd Means Com m ittee. The bill
would raise $66 million a year for the
sta te and $17.4 milJion for local aov-
ernments.
Eviction law stands
SACRAMENTO (AP> -ln a de·
feat for elderly groups and mobile
home owners. a Senate committee
has refused to cha nge a law letting
mobile home parks evict old homes
when they are sold.
Center push eyed
SAN DI EGO <AP > Claiming
voter rejection of a downtown con-
vention center was a ·•temporary set
bac k," San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
promised future attempts to pess a
"SA CRAMENTO (AP 1 Ther e simila r measure.
would once again be a 6 percent sales ··Now we have the opportunity to
tax on candy and chewing gum. un-come back at it from another direc·
der a bill approved by the (\ssembly lion. I'm not at this point clear what
Reve nue and Taxation Committee. dir ection that will be," Wilson said
It voted 9·6 Wednesday to send Wednesday following the r esounding
AB130 b y Asse mbl y m a n B i ll 56.6percentdefeat ofthe proposalhe
Lockyer, D-San Leand ro. to the Ways supported for six years.
CHARGED Salinas
Mayor J a m es R .
Woods, charged with
arson and insurance
fra ud in connection
with $811,000 fire a t
h is I da h o
ag ri c ul tu r a l
w a r e house, de nies
h is guilt and says he
will con tinue ca m -
paigning for second
term.
Building saved
LOS ANGELES (AP>
The Garden Court
Apartments wer e de ·
signated as a cultural
historical m o n u m ent,
sparing the 62-year-old
structure from destruc-
tion.
In a speech to a statewide television audience
Wed nesday, the Democratic governor abandoned
61h years or opposition to all general tax increases
to e ndorse the an ti-crime le vy. which wo uld raise
taxes an average of $500 million annually before
expiring in 10 years .
Brown also said he would call a special elec·
lion Nov. 3 on the proposed anti-crime tax. a move
which would a utomatically put a r eferendum on
the Periphe ral Cana l on the November ballot.
However . in the 15-minute televised speech,
Brown didn't mention the effect his action would
have on the Peripheral Canal referendum, or how
cha nging the date of the canal vote might help him
out or a political bind.
"That's a separate issue:· Brown ·s press
secretary. Cari Beauchamp. said of lhe canal re-
ferendum. "Others will accuse him of using the
crime tax election to get the canal vote behmd
him, but that was not a consideration behind the
idea of calling this election
"He has said he may not take a leadership
position in the campaign for the canal. but he has
said he will support the measure." she added.
Brown's speech was praised by Democratic
leaders of both the Senate and Assembly. and they
endorsed the tax hike
But Republicans quickly labeled him a ··Jer ry·
Come-Lately'" to the crime issue and opposed his
tax proposal. Without s upport of at least a few
lawmakers from the GO P m inority, the tax pro-
posal. which requires two-thirds support, cannot
pass eithe r the Sena te or Assembly.
Gov Edmund Brown
Jr., who nom inated Ap
peals Court J ustice Otto
K aus to th e state
Supreme Court, will an
nounce a second a p
poinlment "very soon,"
says his top aide.
But Gray DC1vi s.
Brown's «hief of staff.
refused lo say Wednes-L _
day when the new ap-
point ment wo uld be. NOMINATED
Kaus. 61. a 2b year Otto Kaus
veteran of t he bench .
has served on the 2nd
District Court of Appeal
in Los Angeles since
1964. He presides over
one of the court's five
divisions
Kaus· appoint ment
met with near
unanimous support. with
the legal profession and
most politicians describ
ing him as bright, able
and scholarly. a hard
wor king mod erate with
a st r o n g se nse o f
responsibility.
But the second vaC"an
cy on the cour t has left
Brown in political d if
f1culty after Samue l
Williams. a $275,000-a·
year black a tto rney
f r o m Los A n ge l es ,
turned down the gov-
ernor's offer to serve,
c 1 t1ng fa mi ly
responsibilities.
Ka us, who has re-
fe rred to himself as hav-
ing a "Prussian, if you
lik e. or mi lit a r ist ic
s ense of obedience" to
the law, was appointed
to the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Superior Court and
the appell ate court by
former Gov. Edmund G.
··Pal'" Brown .
----------------'---------------
(}notife!L
{A)t/Jr~
~ ~ rv4
tA r 14 KT. GOLD CHARMS 1r,. ,,1, Since,~~:.~~ •22••
,,~I I I\. rine Jewelry Sensibly Pnced
(U'ffrH
HUHTIHGTOM CENTER
HUHTIHGTOM IEACH
892-5501
HARIOR C&n'IR
2300 HARIOR. COSTA MESA
545-9485
1======& HUMTillCJOM CDITEI • an IUCM llYI. ======:i
ROSENTHAL
OPEN STOCK DINNERWARE
SALE 20o/o off
during month of May .... "' ...
,.
i
Choo~e rrom •'") of our 22 patterns. the Ix-st rhrna services from
the Raroque Rococo and Art Nouveau eras designs that have
endured the ages around the v.orld IAM•••<Mj
VISA' Ask about our Bridal Registry ..... Pi
The Upper Crust, a
new addrtlon to the fMlOIJS f>t111~· Chldcen Poe Pie Shops, is opening in Seadiff v~
And the llttle ~ ~ wt1o run the
plaoe re<Wly know hOw to ttvow a party And
ttvow a F risOee
They'I be holctng a Fnst>ee ConleSI al
thflV VIiiage Graro 0penrog oo May 9, ~
On Saturday, May 9,
at 11:30 am,
Hundreds of Fl ing
Discs will Invade
Seacliff Village. ·
plele wnn ITee F nst>ees tor IY8fY000 and
pnres tor the contest winners
In addition to the Frisbee Contest there'n
be ITee pony ride&. bards nS a ""ctick.en
pie wall<"
So come out to the lJppef Crust in Seadill
V*8ge and oelebral8 their Grand Oper*1g on
Saturday, May 9 lrom 11 30 IO 3 30
The Upper CIUSf Grand Opening
and Frisbee Contest
Seacliff VIiiage
The c.nter of Attention. For Fun end Gema.
2205 Main St . Hl..ntlngton Beacti. CA 92648 714-63&8711 Located at Goldenwest aid Yorl<fown
( ''f~*:Uk41
White They Last
Com e i n an d see h ow from
defrosting to cooking to reheating.
Utton helps lamlhea eat ~·· Take home a Llttom Microwave tldayl ""'''
We 1nv1te you to visit the new LeSportsac Shop in South Coast Plaza.
You'll love the vast selection of LeSportsac bags a.nd aooesaoriee
including the New"Genera.t1on II"tra.nsatla.nt1c sa.1l cloth Ba.gs.
Ldponaao louUI Cout .iua
3333 Bristol Street
l No othe ~ newspaper brl ngs you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school and college districts and county
Coste. Mesa., CA 92626
7146671263
Ldponuc W11"9oo4
914 Westwood Blvd.'
Westwood, CA 90024
213 208-8822
Lelpo~o Santa llOllloa
S&nte. Monica Pl.ace
Seoond Level
2133947027
. ". government than the lllily IYhd
'
~I
... , .48 L Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thursday, May 7, 1981
Laguna /aces boost
in sewer service fee
If you're a property owner in
Laguna Beach, you've been en-
joying a relatively low s'ewer
service fee of $6.50 per month.
No longer. Beginning July 1,
the rate for sewer service will be
increased to $10.50 per month, a
61 percent hike brought about by
contractor says it will cost more
than $19 million to finish the
facility, currently only 35 percent
completed.
· cost overruns within the Aliso
Water Management Agency.
Laguna Beach figures to pick
up $3 million of that cost as its
share. AWMA intends to borrow
money from a bank and later
float a bond issue to pay for the
cost overruns.
..:
Laguna Beach is one of seven
public agencies that make up
AW MA. The agency is in the
midst of completing a $100
million sewer system for south
Orange County.
But cost overruns. caused by
design deficiences on a coastal
treatment plant, have forced
Laguna to look for additional
funding for the multi-million-
dollar project, city officials say.
The treatment plant, located
in Aliso Canyon, was to be built
for about $13 million. Now the
Laguna property owners will
pick up the tab in the form of in-
creased sewer fees, which will go
toward paying off interest and
principal of the A WMA bond .
The only good news coming
out of the whole issue-·is a plan by
the city to seek legal action
against the design engineers.
But even if litigation is suc-
cessful against the designers, it's
doubtful Laguna Beach will roll
back its sewer rates.
Pull in the belt another
notch.
Budget reflects losses
Laguna Beach City Council
members won't find only bad
news in City Manager Ken
Frank's $7 million budget pro-
posal, a spending document that
can truly be defined as austere.
La g un a stands to lose
$471,000 in state bail-out funds
next year -or about 7 percent of
the city's general fund revenue.
It's the first year the city will
not receive bail-out funds, and
the first year that the effects of
Proposition 13 really put the
squeeze on the city.
ning assistant and a street main-
tenance worker.
But Frank sees a balanced
budget next year, even after an-
ticipating a 9 percent salary in-
crease for mupicipal employees.
And there's actually some
good news in his budget message.
Rental of city property to the
Festival of Arts is expected to
rise by $43,000 next year, due to
an increase in ticket prices.
But Frank's budget message
shows Laguna Beach still will be
able to plug along in the black -
, with a few more inconveniences.
An innovative computerized
parking ticket program is being
installed, whic h s hould mean
$80,000 more to the city. And
motor vehicle in -lieu fees should
go up-about $50,000 next year.
A council budget workshop
has been scheduled for May 26 at
6 p.m. in the council chambers,
followed at 8 p.m . by a public
hearing.
While the budget does not in-
clude any employee layoffs, some
positions that are ·currently va-
cant will not be filled.
Those include a police in-
vestigator. three firemen <for the
Top of the World station ), a plan-
Residents who are interested
in hearing those discussions, or participatmg, should show up for
the sessions at 505 Forest Ave.
Shelter helps itself
Directors of the Laguna
Beach Youth Shelter say they
aren't going to wait quietly for
county supervisors to change
their minds about cutting finan-
cial assistance to the institution
by 25 percent.
Instead they are out seeking
private donations and plan to sell
soda and cookies at local social
events in Laguna Beach.
The 15-me mber shelter board
will be approaching service clubs
in the surrounding area to ask for
donations to help keep the six-}?ed
facility open.
The Laguna Beach Youth
Shelter, located at 508 St. Ann's
Drive, gives temporary
sanctuary to troubled youths
aged 11 to 17 who are separated
from their families.
•
Last mont h . co unt y
supervisors cut funding for the
year-old shelter from $1.22,900 to
$92,200, about 75 percent or what
was previously received.
The supervisors, basing their
decision on the recommendation
of an advisory committee, said
there just wasn't enough money
t-0 go around.
The shelter directors should
be commended for their dedica-
tion to keeping the facility open
and working to raise the money
elsewhere. '
The Laguna Beach Youth
Shelter provides an essential
service to the community. Help-
ing it stay in operation would be
a fine pro~ect for a local service
club.
Opinions expressed In the space above ar& those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex:-pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment ls Invit-
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Sox 1560, Cost. Mesa, CA 9'262'. Phone (714>
6-42·4321.
LM. Boyd/ Name clwices
In New York City, more 32-year-
old women bear the name of Linda
, than any other moniker. Next there
In that age bracket, in order, come
Mary, Barbara, Patricia, Susan,
Kathleen, Carol, Nancy, Margaret
and mane. Compare tbeae to the
most popular names among 8-year-
old g:lrlJ there : JennUer, Michelle,
Lisa, Eliiabetb, Christine, Marla,
Nicole, Kimberly, Denise and Amy.
It's remarkable, I think, that in just
24 years -about one aeneratton. -
none or the top-10 preferred names in
the tlrtt lf'OUP overlap with \betop-10
ln lbe H<?OOd feC)Up.
Many a tribe In by tone centuries
endowed one mqmber, the trtbal his-
. torlan, with the sole chore of remem-
berln1 even1.hJng that happened to ! tbe group. This Job ta said to have
• been the one occupation more than
~ any other which required \be beat
memory. Maya,. so. But another can-
didate for belt·memory wort ln re·
cent tJmee was that. of San Fran·
clsco's Chinatow n telephone
operators in the ear ly 1930s. Phone
numbers weren't used there then.
Only names. Those 1irll on the
switchboards bad to be able to reeall
them all.
Claim la that most of the •i,rutl·
cant Inventions ot man are lmitatJorui
of nature. May be aomethln1 to that.
Wasps chew up wood to make sheet-
ed nests. The French scientist An·
toine de Reaumur ln the early 1700.
watched those wasps at work, and
came up wltb tbe fint. way to
manufactureJ>aper out of wood pulp.
How many ol thete brllllt ldeu, ln·
spired by natural phenomena, can
you remember? A dozen will do.
Q . What doa a zoo elephant 1et for
breakfast?
A. About 50 pou.ndt of bay, ftve
loaves of bread and 12 pou.ndl of car-
rot•. Sometlmet a few appl•. Plus
willow cllppln1• to chew on. Or
browae aldm'. Whatever'• bandy.
~1,.-----------------~-----~;.__----~
I ' . ORANGE COAST,
DailJ,ilat
Thomas ~. H•frf
Publlsher
ThomasK•vU
Editor
BarMr•Kr'elW<h
Edltorlal P-oe Editor
~ ' ' ,
-' -.
- _ t =i
Mafia regains dope control
WASHING TON -A House commit·
tee has been seeking information -and
headlines -by investigating drug use
by Hollywood celebrities. The con-
gressmen might better spend their ef·
forts looking into the hu1e influx of
heroin that the Mafia is pouring into the
East Coast.
Until recently, the Mob had kept a
low profile, after the dis ruption caused
by the notorious "French Connection"
and the non-Mafia competition from
A~ia . But now the situation has changed
-back to the old Sicilian route for im-
portation of hard drugs into the United
States. The dope is funneled from
Southwest Asia into this country by way
of Sicily.
"In the early 19708, we didn't see the
broad-based Involvement of all the
(Mafia) families," the FBI's organized·
crime boss, Sean Mcweeney, told my
associate Tony Capaccio. ''f'low they're
into it up to their ears,'' he said.
According to a secret Drug Enforce·
ment Administr6tion report, all five
Mafia crime families in the New York
area are involved in the heroin traffic
that used to be the almost exclusive
province of the Vito Genovese and
Thomas Lucchese families.
"U:S. BUYERS of heroin are pre·
dominantly Italian-Americans in the
New York City area who in turn supply
various distribution network.a along the
East Coast," states the DEA report.
Two of four Sicilian groups identified by
DEA and Justice Department in-
telligence operations -the Ba<lolamen·
ti and Scaduto factions -are connected
G.
-JA-l:l-A-ID-11-11-1 -~
by m arriage to several New York crime
families.
The biggest bust involving organized
crime was the seizure of 40.6 kilograms
of heroin in Milan, ltaJy, on March 31,
1980. The shipment, which had a street
value of $10 million, was on its way to
the United States. Among those arrest·
ed on thls side of the ocean were two
cousins of the late crime boss Carlo
Gambino and r eputed Mob fi-gure
Emanuele Adamita.
The Sicilians provide the processing
expertise for t he Southwest Asian
opium ; their crime t?rotbers In this
country take care of distribution. As the
secret DEA report n~s. "Several or·
ganized crime members trafficking in
·heroin between Sicily and the U.S. are
some of the same individuals who were
involved in the heroin traffic of the
1960s and early 1970s."
More than 50 kilograms of heroin
have been seized al Kennedy In-
ternataonal Airport in New York since
December 1977. "This heroin was under
the control of United States and Jtallan
organized crime figures.·· the DEA re-
port states.
One of those arrested last year ln con-
nection with three heroin·conversion
laboratories in Milan and San Remo,
Italy, was Jean J ehan. He is familiar to
American movie and television au·
diences a s the "Silver Fox" who
escaped when lhe French Connection
was broken.
The resurgence or Mafia control over
the drug trade is a result quite simply
of the enormous profit involved. The
Mob has been able to recoup after the
imprisonment of many Mafiosi for dope
trafficking in the mid-1970s. The family
ties between Sicily and the United
States were crucial in re-establishing
the drug trade and regaining control
from freelancers.
SATURDAY NIGHT DEAD: In the af·
letm ath of the assassination attempt on
. President Reagan. at least 10 bills have
been introduced in Congress to plug the
loophole in the 1968 Handgun Control
Act that allows unfettered importation
of pistol parts for assembly in this coun·
try as Saturday Night Specials.
Incredibly. the governmen t en-
couraged the production of cheap
handguns a few year:. ago when It quiet·
ly lowered the tariff on imported gun
parts.
Mesa art controversy sparks debate
To the Editor:
If All Roushan goes lo jail for his
artistic beliefs and f aitb in the Coruititu-
tion, Costa Mesans better be prepared
for a wave of pubUc: reaction across this
state and country.
The cultural commissars on the City
MAILBOX
Council will have stood up and hollered
to-the world that here ln Orange County,
in 1981, an artist who creates and clla-
plays work.a without prior government
approval will be harassed, intimidated.
coerced and eventually jailed.
In the Soviet Union an artist who ells·
plays his work without government ap-
proval ls jailed; in Costa Mesa an artbt
who displays bis work without 1ovem-
ment approval ls Jailed! Liberty is
mocked, justice abused and Costa
Mesana grow sleek in real estate
speculation. Shame on us all. A com-
m unity day of mournln& shou.ld be
declared.
J.P. PALMER
Who 'belU!fiu mtMt?
To the Editor:
I notice that on the April 21 Dally Pilot
there's an article titled "Freeae P\lt On
Federal Booklet,·· calllnl attention to
booklets such as organJc 1ard.enhlt, mulch, etc., u beln1 waetelul 1overn·
ment expenses. I quote. from \be artlc;le,
''during these difficult economic timea
we cannot afford to wa1te tJme and
mone)' on acUviUea that have Umlted
benefits tot.be people of tb11 country."
OF OOUUE ln whole oplnlon that
benefit la limited, I dOn't know. But ln
"Study Undertaken" it eaya Lbe Reqan
admlnlltratton has commlH10lled a
study of the World Bauk todeterm!Mlf ill
lendto1 practlcH have encoura1ed
socialist 1ovemmenta at the uptDH of
private enterprise.
ll aeems ironic that one •tucb' ii lauda·
ble and acceptable to tbe ae.,-an ad·
ministration and not waatefu.I but Ul••
others are .. Apparently ~ ... mak.,
these dettrmtnatJou ii bAued preJ·
udlced and ii JOl.n• to determlnefor tbe
rest ot ua la tbe true tndttSoG ot Bl&
Brother what bu beoeftt for the people Of
the country and wbatdoeaa't.
lllltZPOSTBR
'Quote.' mU~ .
To the ldkor:
I'm eoanned that the..,.._ ... IDr
a ati-~ poup ll m,,_ Ml ew
uablllwable. Wblle.lle Ill .,.Ill ID 1111 oPt-.111 ... monlt .. twlMe-. wbldlllea,_.....,.. ..... _..
q--~· • •• Nl.rrtlijtollleApft.I
'
26 letter from Tom Williams concerning
Murry Cable's article titled "Master
Plan WW Quiet the Skies Over John
Wayne Airport."
MURRAY ACCO&DING to Williams:
"the people in Newport Beach who
are opposed to the county's insane ex-
pansion of John Wayne Airport are simp·
ly a social group."
"People who are able to afford a life in
the Newwrt Beach area should be the
people who should have lo suffer the emo-
tlona 1 disturbance caused by the
airport."
No such statements were made by
Murry.
The problem becomes that when you
mistake racta or misquote people, you put
into jeopardy the whole case. It makes no
difference where the discussion is, clos-
ing of scboola, airport expansion or find-
ing an alternative airport.
JIM de BOOM
Blmne mUpiattd
To the Editor:
This revision of the Mike Peters car·
loon you publlahed April 19 ls a more
appropriate misdlrection ol aUentioo.
The car ii qult.e frequently uaed u a
weapon. to run down victims. But it ls
the driver that Is blamed, not the car.
~veQ if f tbe cause la a defective
automobl e, the blame will be placed on
the people who built It. Now, because of recei:at reluln1 9f government stand·
ards, they can produce even lesa safe
and more PollUtlnl vehicles. However,
death by automobUt fl acce~ a•
lhou1h death by nature .
I .ul NOT .aaalut cars. Th1I ii juat
an tumple to abow tbe unbalanced
preJ\ldlc:e toward 1un1. l'lvt people
murdered by a car, used u a weal)OD,
brln1 nowhere near the public outra1e
as Ollt penoo 1bot by a fun.
When 10meone it shot, wbert la the
blame placedT On the operator ol th.
l\ID. u wttb the operator of the car7
No, tbt IUD la blamedl
At for tbe c.rlmiDaJ bell1nd the IUD,
our law 111ttm wlll protect blm.
Sun911 .,..tllat ... \baa. pettenlol
vSoleat .... latMU.S. ==lnpro-aeeutlca,eanvkUOllllDll ent..
Never mind tbe cri.mlllala. Just 1tt.
rid ot the IUD *fd n&rJ\ll.bll will be all
l
right, nghl? No, focus on the proper
subject. the criminal, not the gun. It Is
the person behind the gun who is at
fault, just as it is the person behind the
wheel.
RODGER RHINEHART
Remarks distwbing
To the Editor:
While reading the Pilot article con·
cerning the Mesa truancy sweep (April
29), I became very disturbed to find
that some parents were~ actually "out-
raged" because their child had been
caught away from the school campus. I
commend the Polke Department and
those school offi cials who had the
courage to engage in such an undertak-
ing -after all the kids were breaking
the law.
I would like to see the "closed cam-
pus" rules more strictly enforced to
keep students on campus during school
hours (unless they have a legitimate ex·
cuse from their parents). I realize not
all kids are using or deal~ ln dru1s
and supporting their habits by breakihl
into homes during midday hours, but by
enforcing these laws it may help cwta.ll
the activities of those who are.
JACK BOVAJIW
A irork of art
To the Editor:
I am writing in behalf of this beautlf ul
sculpture that we have seen for the ftrat
lime on 16th and Superior in Costa Mesa.
We were astounded at the "eye appeal"
this sculpture baa. It is a work of art. It
should be a thing to be seen and admired
by people far and wide.
So more power to Mr. Roushan for
·bringing such a thing of beauty to Coltai
Mesa.
.Aren't we lucky~
CAMILLE WALKER
lllllYm
That tonnn1 s>lle of scrap troa oa
Superior AVtoH la Cotta ..... bu aa
artlsUc value equal only to 81.Ddlnl
Mount.a.In In L.A.
D.11 .... . ._, .. ,_.. ............... .,~ ... ·-~.i.'.::" .... -. .... -........ ,_,.,. ........ · ... OM!,,.... •
......... ·-~~
IRVlll
--t -----...---------.------·---
..., ....
THURSDAY,
MAY 7, 1981
JUST COASTING 82
COMICS 86
Two-earner households are de -
manding that business make it
easier to manage jobs , families
See Page 84
D
D
l"
.
Jury hits co_unty nientJl]. he.alth prograllJ!:
!f
last year when the county Boar,t 1 of S upervisor s a ppQintett
M argarel Grier, then HSA dlrec'·
tor. as director of the mental
health program. Mental heaJtb
activists claimed Mi ss Grier
was not qualified to hold the. mental health position. In part.'
that criticism led to the grand
jury's investigation of the meo-
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL
Of .. INllJ ...........
Mental health programs
should be removed from under
the umbrella of Orange County
governme nt's vast Human
Services Agency, the Orange
County Grand Jury sald today.
improved, and that the mental
health program is not meeting
Its stated objective.
Referring to those objectives,
the jury said:
-Recent reorganization of the
mental health department "has
decreased and disrupted service
to clients."
ta billty has impaired client
service and staff -morale, in·
creased unnecessary paperwork
a nd decreased staff efficiency."
-Community participaUon in
cnentaJ heaJth program has de·
teriorated.
chain-of-command flow of in·
formation."
-"ln-service trainln1 has
virtually disappeared."
-Efficiency in the program
bas deteriorated "because of
continu ed dupllcatlon or
paperwork a nd r e port·
making ... "
Human Services Aeency since
the aeency was created several
years ago.
There has been continuing
criticism of the effectiveness of
the programs, primarily from
mental health activists who
claimed non-professionals were
overseeing mental health pro·
grams. In a 27-page report, the jury
concluded that mental health
services have deteriorated, not
-"Overemphasis on regimen·
talion and documented accoun-
-Communication within the
mental heaJth department bu
been stymied "under a rigid
Mental health pr'o1ram1 have
operated under the ae1is of the That criticism was strongest ta! health program.
Quick switch
for chief Boyd
Former Irvine police Capt.
Jerry Boyd wtll take office Im-
m ediately as Coronado police
chief, Coronado City Manager
Ray Silver confirms.
Boyd, 35, came to the Irvine
Police Department In May of
1975 after serving seven years
with the Los Angeles County
Sherifrs Department. He was
commander of the uniformed
patrol division of the Irvine
police department.
He lS the second Irvine police
commander to be appointed
police chief of another depart-
ment. Former Irvine police Lt.
Jim Carrington is the Compton
Chief of Police.
Acting Laguna Beach Police
Chief Neil Purcell said be was
seriously considered for the
Coronado post last month, but
backed out of the consideration
after deciding to stay on in the
Art Colony.
Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
says that there were about 85
serious candidates for the
Coronado job.
He said the fact that two
Irvine police commanders-have
won jobs as police chiefs spew
well for the Irvine police depart-
ment. "It's a compliment to our
agency," he said.
The Coronado police. depart·
ment bas 45 sworn officers. The
population of the San Diego
County community is more than
20,000.
There are 75 sworn officers in
the Irvine Police Department,
which is responsible for enforc·
ing the law in the 70,000-person . city.
Irvin~ police chief Leo Peart
had announced Boyd's appoint·
ment earlier this week, but
Silver said at that time he
couldn't taik about it since the
Coronado City Council hadn't ,
yet been advised of the matter.
Irvine firm fights
curbs on project
Claiming it alrtady has made
·'adequate" concessions, the
Irvine Company is challenging
conditions that Newport Beach
planners want to tie to the pro-
posed expansion of Newport
Center.
-y planners this week asked
evelopment firm not to OC·
any of its planned buildings
e center until it completes a
$15 million road project south of
Corona del Mar.
Further. planners say a por-
tion of the proposed office build·
ines at the center should remain
unoccupied until the state com-
pletes a one-mile extension of
the Corona del Mar Freeway.
Irvine Company officiaJs say
they've agreed to finance $8
mlllion worth of road improve-
mentls around the center and to
phase construction with the road
work. They say that should be
enou1h.
They say it wouJd be "illogical
and inappropriate" to condition
their expansion plans with the
eJCtension of the freeway, a state
Psychologist
to lecture
at UC Irvine
Dr . Phyllis C hes ler ,
paychologis t , author and
femlniat. will lecture at 8 p.m.
May Hon bow men and women
are relating to each other in the
188011.
project that remains in limbo.
Companv officials say they have
no control over the freeway
project. ·
The Irvine Company also is
objecting lo the condition that it
should complete a $15 "million
road system -Pelican Hill Road
-before occupying buildings.
FLORAL ABUNDANCE -New landscaping at
Casa Pacifica was shown off when two
Orange County Music Center auxillari• host-
ed a fund-raiser at the former Western White
................. ..,,..,_.O'~
House. Georgia Spooner, Nannette Pittman,
Susan Strader and Evelyn Daniel welcomed
300 guests who contributed $15,000 for build·
in& tb'e cultural complex in Costa Mesa.
Tbe author of "Women and
Madness," ''Wbmen, Money and
Power" and "About Men" Ls an
a1sl1tan t professor of
ptycbology at Colleee of Staten
Island, City Unlveralty of New
County muSic revenue $1 million
York. ·
ffer lecture enUUed, "lden and Contributions, memberships, activities push funds ·$650,000 over 1979
Women in the 80's," wlll be
given in RGom F-110, Medical
Science Lecture Hall at UC
Irvine. Tickets are U for
1eneral admLuioo, S2 for UCI
staff and $1 fqr UCI student.I.
For tnformaUoo call SS3-5.9.
Irvine dentieb
elate seminan
Irvine dentiltl Victor Feld and
Dlw&rd Spector wiU rresent two
e d•eational aem nau for
elll14r• OG tbe subject o1 pr•
veatlve dentlltry. Tiiie Mmlnan will be held May
11 ad • from J CO 1:30 p.m. In
t.be denu.ta' offtce, Saile HO ln
Irvine VU1a1e center, Hll'Dll' of •
Jfffre1 Boed I.ad lrvln• C-.
·Drlve.
J'or lnformaUoD OD tbe free Hinlnarl eaU ssz.lJIO.
'
Revenues for the Oran1e Coun-
ty M uaic Center topped $1 mllllon
last year, accordlnt to an annual
report.
Tbe '850,000 increase over 1'11
ls due dllelly to lncreues lD COil·
trlbuttona, membersblpt and
•ulld activitlH, Edward' C.
Sebek, rice preeldent of finance
for.tbeOCMC, said ln the rePort.
lncreaMd operatlq ea,_..
and tuDd1Di of three fellibWty
1tudles for, the tuturi • m1IUoa
performlnl aru c•w pushed
npendltures up tp ... ooo, com·
r.ared to $14i,• In tm, aeeord· D. to the report.
lD the ftnanclal Npert ....
pabllc lut w .. t at UM ....,..
membel"lhtp meedaj, ~
the Mutlc Center wn lntiltlll
1•1 "wiUr11troa1 ftnuclal....,
lion.''
'
Hilblilhtis of the report in·
c ude!
-Tbe .c> aulld chapten ralMd
$121,000Jn lllO.
-~oeawtU 1oto tbe ........
fund to flnance operaU.. Of the
or1aabaUon. • 1
-ISN,01' wlll 10 to the
Founder B~ l'aadfor&becte-.
velopmentoltbe U1I compla.
-tlS5,0l4 •W 10 to tbe
Trustee. Bui._ l'uDd fir U.
cons~olU.1181lcc.ter.
DaUacls, Bernice Hird, Joan
Murphlne and Pete Siracusa.
Returnlna members are
Karcher, Rau. Hugh SaddJn,ion,
Florence Schumacher and David
Tbreabie.
New officers include Jim
BeaUey, cbalrman; El.tne Red·
fteld, vice chairman; Rau, preei·
dent and duet executive omcer;
William Lund, execuUve vice pre·
aident; Sebek, vice presldent-
tnuurer, ud nmothy Stnder,
NCretar)'.
OtbW' olftcen are Dorothy
StlllwelJ, ualstant 1ec:ret&r1 :
Raymond Wat.IOD, vie• preUdent
faolllU•; Vincent Jor1•DHD,
membership vice prHldent;
0 ...................... ..... . ... '"''···'· ..... ,.. Soll..u.eMr. spitdal ....... vlee ,,... .....
OCboard
to fight
controls iO
I '
{•
I l.;
The Orange County Board if,
Superviso rs has agreed U>
challenge the state Coastal Codi-'
mission if necessary to fight re·
sale controls for new affordab1'
homes built along the coast.
The supervisors reached the <W·
cision Wednesday during a meet·
ing infused with unusual amounti
of philosophical discourse both 119
board members and proponenfa
of resaJe controls.
Al one point, Supervisor Ro2Vr
Stanton warned resale contrdls
could lead to a "social revolb-
tion ·' when homeowners of af.
fordable units realize they caq't
sell their houses at m'ar~et rate!tfl
The .topic surfaced durlngii'
board review of coastal polic1
mandated by the coastal co •
mission The commission h ..
ad vocaled resale controls for loW•
cost housing and the supervisors
were on the spot to decide wheth4!i
to break from their past oppost.
lion to call for such restrictions . •
They didn't. Firs t -year
supervisors Stanton and Bruce
Nestande claimed resale controla
deny owners traditional chances
to parlay housing equity toward a
higher standard of Ii ving.
Favoring government controls
were Maya Dunne of The Housing
Coalition of Orange County and
Mary Miller pf the Orange County
chapter of the League of Women
Voters.
Ms. Dunne said controls are
virtually the only way to preserve
low-cost housing. She claimed &e>
percent of affordable units built
from 1977 in Irvine's Woodbridge
nei~hborhood are no longer OC·
cupted by the original owners.
Ms. Miller said super visors
were bein1 shortsighted to de-
mand affordable homing only to
lose the benefits upon the first re-
sale.
Stanton and Nestande admit~
speculation controls are needed.
Added Stanton: "Our dlfferen~'5
aren't in the objective but in tbe
meanstotheend.''
The county does have resale
controls for low-cost unite
financed by the county's revenue
bond sales. In that case, buyef*
are screened to make sure th~t
fall within acceptable income
levels.
Housing prices rise accordifti
to annual increases in the coUq-
ty 's median income level, whlcfi
currently is $25,000 for a family f
four.
Woman says
she feared
OC deputy
, I
. A Garden Grove womao blls
told an Orange C9unty Supe"-
Court jury in a kidnappln1 cije
that she became panic-strl.cqn
when a sherilrs deputy who Jlld
just arrested her suggested •
could be raped.
The tesUmony of prosecu~
witness Rebecca Jones ca•e
Wednesday in the trial of dePNtJ
George Loudermilk of C 1
Mesa, who is chareed with i
countis of kidnappine and
countis of false imprisonment.
Mi u Jonea , 31 , a
Loudermilk suggested "lt ml
have been better it I had
raped" alter he handcuffed
and put her in his patrol c~ la
the early morning hours ol J
28, lM>. She was arrested
suspicion of drunken drtvm,.
lllsa Jones is one of f
women that Loudermilk la
cused of abducttna a"d lhAa
ln1 between Ju.ly and"'Octobe
1980.
In earlier testimony, a M
Viejo woman claimed llult
37-year-old defendant tbfta
to rape and klU her after *' Iler in 'bls patrol car t
Hcluded llllltop overlOOk
Irvine.
Tbat laeldent oecurnld Iii
tober. u.r.. mOlll.lat aNli
IOMIMldU.WM ....
n1&ody by !Aud•,...~ . Garden Grove l'rMwar
ln!)ardeaGrove.
. .
OranQe Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, May 7, 1a&1
ALONG THE SMUT RUT -Civic leaders of
Fountain Valley, noted as one of the more quiet
wonderspots along our coastline, may soon take th.e lead
among our cities in battling sin and P,urging for purity.
Just look at the record.
The valley City Council bas already outlawed
massage parlors and sexy movie theaters. Currently
they are attacking flesh magazines . '
If they keep all this up, Fountain Valley's forces for
purity will make the Costa Mesa vicecops look like
slackers.
Earlier on, Fountain Valley councilwoman Barbara
Brown went on a crusade against stores that sold girlie
magazines.
TOM
,...,. . ,~~1
MURPHINI .@~
THEN ONLY THIS
week, one of the city's
anti-porno crusaders pre-
sented Mayor Ben Nielsen
with a whole stack of
periodicals he said were
offensive, along with a li st
of 19 liquor stores he alleged were carrying the awful-
ness.
So shocked was the mayor with the gift that he
wouldn't even gaze upon the allegedly offensive
materials. ,
You'd think the leas t the mayor could have done was
to have called a study session on the material.
Antt-smut crusaders keeping kidd~I from (1fn 1hqp
"You'd think the least the mayor could have done
was to have called a study session on the material.
Anyway, the Fountain Valley civic lights seemed
most concer!1ed about keep~g the kiddies away from any
adult-type literature. It might be okay for the liquor
stores to carry fleshy periodicals, so long as they are
secreted out of the eyesight of children.
That question , of course, lead to yet another/uzzle:
What are all those children doing hanging aroun liquor
stores in the first place?
THAT PROBLEM ISN'T quite so simple. If the booze
places were just selling pure alcohol, you might be able
to suggest the kiddies simply be banned from the
premises. But such isn't the case these days.
Beverage stores have become almost general stores
now. Your correspondent knows of one Corona del Mar
dealer, for example, who was forced to start stocking
fresh eggs because of customer demand.
Depending on the place, you can purchase candy and
cakes, flashlight batteries, milk and butter, comic books,
or m~tor oil. Then ther~ are also som~ liquor places that
have mstalled those com-operated video games that are
such an addictive attraction to the younger set.
One liquor dealer once told me, "I sell so much candy
and licorice sticks that I've forgotten what it was I
planned to sell when I opened this plact! . . . "
WITH THE COMING of video games; you now have a
lot of youngsters who hang around at liquor stores,
pumping quarters into the machines all night long.
Grog shops have come to replace pool halls as spots
where youth flirt with sin and degradation. Time was
whe~ youngsters were warned by their fathers that
nothing good ever lurked behind the swinging doors of the
pool hall.
Thus you promptly tried to sneak into the place and
spend hours learning how to bank an eight-ball into the
side pocket. Parents, however, kept insisting that billiard
halls were hangouts of the idle.
"AND IDLE HANDS do the devil's work," you were
a dmonished.
Considering the fashion in which the Fountain Valley
civic savants are pushing for purity,· it's clear that if
sa~an ever does come to town, he'll be oh unemploymt'nt.
SADDENED -Actor-director
Laurence Olivier says be is
"very much saddened" by
the demise of London's
163-year·old Old Vic
Theater, which will close
May 16 due to lack of funds.
Olivier starred in many Old
Vic productions.
Wurt OKs
OOys-only
bequest
WHITE PLAINS. N.Y. (AP> -
A bachelor who died at age 96
was within his legal rights even
if be discriminated against
females when he willed money
for scholarships for male high
school students only. a judge has
ruled.
However, since il would be tm·
constitutional for the Croton·
Harmon Union Free School Dis-
trict, a public entity, to ad-
minister the scholarship fund
under male-only terms, the
jydge has appointed a trustee
ahd ordered the money turned
over to a newly formed private
trust.
The ruling by Westchester
Co unt y Surrogate Evans
Brewster apparently signals an
end to a three-year legal dispute
over the will left by Edwin Irv·
ing Johnsoo.
The probate judge declared
!he bequest was not illegal
because the law does not pro-
hibit private discrimination.
Johnson, a life-long bachelor.
died three years ago. Kia will
ex plicilly esta bli s hed a
scholarship fund for "bright and
deservi.ot young men" in lbe
Croton -Harmon Union Free
School District.
After other bequests were
taken from Johnson's $238,000
estate, $196,300 was turned over
to the school.
The bequest said school of-
ficials were to determine the re-
cipients, provided that they
were bright and deserving, with
parents who could not afford to
send lbem to college.
And they were to be male.
A female Croton-Harmon stu-
dent raised an objection to lbe
all-male,provision and applied
for the scholarship.
School officials realized they
had a dilemma. If they followed
the provisions of the wlll, lbe
district could lose federal sub-
sidies. U they failed to comply
with the male-only terms, the
district could lose the
scholarship bequest.
So the scholarship program
was indefmitely curtailed.
Al the same time, the woman
named to administer Johnson's
estate petitioned Brewster to in-
terpret '•men·' to mean
''persons" or declare the pro-
vialons• lllepl and revise the
will.
Under New York law, the Sur·
rogate Court, the court for pro-
bate and guardianship matters,
can lnterpret a vague or am-
'bi1uous provision ln a will.
1
(Smokes tft~ bike. eyed
pemocrat leaders propose increase from 10 to 20 cents
·: : SAC RAMENTO (AP > -
E
mocratlc leaden ln the state
ssembly are planning to pro-
se doubling the state cigarette
x from 10 cents to 20 cents a
ack, the Sacramento Union
ld.
The boost ls part of an
lternatlve budaet plan belng
eveloped by the Democrau to
rldge an expected $1.7 billion
hortfall in the budtet for lbe
ear 1tartln1 July 1, the
ewspaper said, Wednesday.
Tbe Democrats' plan included
n unprecedented shift of more
an • mllUon ln unemploy-
ul lftlWpce taxa into the
t.ate'1 1eneraJ fundl, the Union
aid.
Auembly Speaker WllU• rown, D·San Francisco was to
ave unveiled the plan this
eek, bul aides aald lts releue beiAI delayed until next week.
Brown tald at a recent new
onf...,. that be was consider·
I pnpolinM i.DcHuea In the
'aln wea" on ct1arette1, liquor
and M ea n s Committee
Chairman John Vasconcellos, D·
San Jose, presented the plan to a
closed-door meetlng of As-
sembly Democrats Monday, the
Union said. The present cigarette tax ls
expected to raise $203.6 mllllon
for the state's general fund ne~
year plus $85.4 mllllon for local
governments. Doubling ml1ht
reduce sales.
The Unemployment Insurance
Fund has about S3 billion ln re·
serve. The fund Is f\nanced by a
payroU tax on employers and is
used t6 pay benefita to worken
wb~ are laid off or olbenriH
lose their jobs.
The Democrat.I' plan lndudea
shifting several hundred mlUk>n·
dollars ln tidelands oll revenues
from capital ouUay, as propoeed
by the Brown administration, ln·
to operatlo11al ·~ndln1 : th•
closure of several mlDor t.ax
loopholes, tueh u UM uemlltioa
of motion picture 1 ..... from
the sales tu, and weekly, in-
stead ot monthly, coU.cUGD ot candy.
Brown and A11embly Ways" state income taxH yltbbeld
from paychecks.
'll\e Union said the plan could
reduce the budget deficit by al
least S600 million.
State control
of dumps
proposed
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A
Senate committee has approved a proposal to transfer control of
eb baurdou.-waete dumplnl
sites throuahottt CaUlomla from
local governments to state
health otndals.
The Senate .H'ealtb and
Welfare Committee endorsed
SB50I by Sen . D•nlel
'BoatwrtlJ\t, 1>-ConcrOd.
The bill would stve tbe state
Department ol Health S.rviCM
autbartt.Y over C._. I dumpt,
wblcb handle daa1erous ln·
dustrtal chemlcal wutet, liquid
and tolld. and basactoua 1ub-
1tance1 such a PCBa . • •
Laguna reaps
fund windfall
Six from
UCI • win
grants
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
ell has amended the city's
1980-81 federal revenue sharing
budget to accommodate an unex·
peeled $65,000 in additional re··
v~nues.
revenue-sharing program and
the city would be receiving
$378,221 instead or the $313,221
Six UC I students have re-
ceived scholarships from tbe
Southern California chapter or
Phi Beta Kappa Alumni. originally planned. Alan Bewell of Canada re·
ceived $600, Francoise Sullivan
and Violette Vornicel , bolb of
France, $500 each ; Michel
Carpentier of France, $400, Sbu
Hung Leung of Hong Kong and
Takakuzu Namera of Japan,
S200 each
At a council meeting, City
Man ager Ken Frank said
Congress recently extended the
Child criminals
topic of seminar
Under the revised budget. the
city will spend $104,700 for new
vehicles, $39,900 for COll)ffiWliCa·
lions equipment. $2,400 for
senior citizen assistance and
$231,221 toward construction or
an emergency access road link-
ing the Top of the World and
Arch Be ach Heights com·
munities. Image lecture set
Criminal activities committed
by children will be the focus of a
free all-day seminar scheduled
Saturday, al Golden West
College In Huntington Beach.
The $15,000 set aside in the
The program will take place
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in
Forum l.
original budget for aerial land Improving image projection
photographs was deleted. Frank for personal or business reasons
said completion or the fire road will be discussed at the Orange
took priority over the photos County Mensas General Meeting
The pictures were to be used in May 21, 8 p.m., in the commWli·
planning ruture development in ty room of the Orange Public
the city. L1 brary
2 ON IRVINE TOWN -Steve Edwards and
Melody Rodgers tape a segment of their ··2
on the Town" program for CBS, Channel 2, at
~~ LLOl'D•!i ~ lM gDrde1-a sl111a1
MOTHER'S DAY
Give a LivinCJ Gift
lffuttM SfiKtiOft of:
·~ ·~ • Afriom Yleleh . .... , ..
• ......,.,Deyll-
OPEN MOTHER'S DAV
YOU ARE INVITED
TO LLOYD'S
A FAEE GIFT lor-MOTHEA T~at VllHt UOyd't 8eL ~21
and &ind9y .. 1CM1 NoPurci-~
•
. Uoyd's Nursery & Landscape Co.,
2021 Hewport llYct. fat lay StreetJ
COST A MESA, CA 92627 • 646-7441
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 7 am to 6 pm
Sun. 9 am to 5:30 pm
VISA & "4 C'. ACCEPTED ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;o;;;;;,';EXPIAES&-1Mt ___ -
----L
o.ily l"IMl SIMI ""°"
the Woodbridge Village shopping center. The
Irvine taping will be seen May 25.
~ 1---------Tfd.C'"4.J.., ______ __
A Special Mom
Deserves the Best
And with Hallmark Mo ther's Day card. that's
what she gets. Tell her how much you care
on Sunday. May 10.
c 1980 Hallmark Cards Int ......
K.C:/-tt""ll~~ /HOP
979-1112
2JOO HAllO. &YD. IH HAllOlt CIMTmt
Open 'ttl 9 pm Monday thru Friday. Sat 10 ·111 6.
Sun 12 ·1115
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
FRESH SWORDFISH .............. 5.98 lb. Oreet~orlnlW_.,..._ ..... ._ __
FRESH FILLET OF
NORTHERN SEADASS ............ Z.98 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime a.nd toP chllice beef aged at least 30 days to the
peak of perfection.
Stuffed Pork Chop• ................ 1.98 lb.
Just Wnk! A porJ< chop cut 2" thick
1tufled with Delaney's famous
homemade apple dreasln1.
Bonelesa Rolled Pork Roan .... " ... Z.49 lb. Average weight 3 pound1.
Center Cat Pon Cllopa ............ ! . .e lb.
FarmeJ' Style Sparerlbe ........•... 1.tt lb.
Lea• Gl'WD4.Chack ............••.. I .ft lb.
Ground hourly, not over Z2'X-fat.
fBEE HOME DE.LIVERY SERVICE
<!50.00 min plt>a e l
Your order ia under coms>lete rerHgeratlon from
our store \o )'<>Ur door ln our reCrlaerated trucks.
Call In the mornlna and your ord~r l(t'lll be dellvend to your home the same att.-noon.
• Thja Id ettectlve Wed , 518 lhrouah T\ael., 5/l2
DELAllR'S
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Large Navel Oranges ........ 39e lb.
Lg. Sbe lc~ber1 Lettuce .......... 3 for 1 ...
Local Romaine Lettuce .......... 3 for 1.te
Lg. Bunch Spinach .. .. . . . . . .. .. . .. zte ea.
So. Amertcan Bananas ...... 3 lbs. for 1.oe
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
D'lanl"y's Private Label ChampaJne 1750 mil)
2. 75 ea. or 33.00 per CHe
Wenle Bro.. Le Blanc de Blanc . . .. J.M ea. suaranw VO ..................... t.ttea. (Me Iller)
Fortm • Doc-Korbraad ................ 3.!50 ea. < 19'74>
Storeaby Scotch (7M m11> . . . . ........... S.ss" ea.
(One llWr> ................................. 6.15 ea.
All liquor and wine plus tax.
Complete caterlns 1ervtce, from a alt wn er p•r\y to party tr.ye deU\lered to your home. Call
Delaney'• Caterin1 Department, ask for Tom
Martin.
tore Roan M, Ooeed Suday ,
2l'20 Ne"'POrt Blvd., Newpf.M"t Bea.ell
673·5520
_.......,... ____ -----------------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 H/F
·~UffiU~ Brown endorses Second
• • Just1ce • •
Deaths suspicious?-
anti-cnme tax
LOS ANGELES <AP> Saying Californians
live in "a climate of apprehension" because of
violent crime, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has en-
dorsed a quarter-cent sales tax for more prisons and Police.
eyed
SAC RAMENTO <API
coronor's office mum on patients
RIVERSIDE <AP> -The spouses
of some of the 27 elderly patients
whose deaths are being investigated
by the Riverside County coroner's of·
flee say they are beginning lo worry
that their relatives' deaths were sus-
picious.
But. county officials continued Wed·
nesday to Issue "no comment"
answers to most questfons about the
high number or deaths -2S -in the
intensive care ward at Community
Hospital of the Valleys in Perris dur-
ing March and April.
Two more deaths were being in·
vestigated at San Gorgonio Pass
HospitaJ in Banning. A third San
Gorgonio death has been eliminated
as unrelated.
SACRAMENTO <AP > -There
would o"ce again be a 6 percent sales
tax on candy and chewing gum, un-
der a bill approved by the Assembly
Revenue and Taxation Committee.
It voted 9·6 Wednesday to send
AB130 by Assemblyman Bill
Lock~er. D-San Leandro, to the Ways
and Means Committee. The bill
would raise $66 million a year for the
slate and $17.4 million for local gov-
ernments .
Eviction law Btands
SACRAMENTO (AP) -In a de·
feat for elderly groups and mobile
home owners, a Senate committee
has refused to change a law letting
mobile home parks evi ct old homes
when they are sold.
umer push eyed
SAN DIEGO !API -Claiming
voter rejection of a downtown con·
vention center was a ··temporary set·
back," San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
promised future attempts to pass a
similar measure.
"Now we have the oppQrtunity to
come back al it from another direc-
tion . I'm not at this point clear what
di rection that will be,'· Wilson said
Wednesday following the resounding
56.6 percent defeat of the proposal he
supported for six years.
CHARGED -Salinas
May or James R .
Woods, charged with
arson and insurance
fraud in connection
with $811,000 fire at
hi s Idaho
agricultural
wareh ouse, denies
his guilt and says he
will continue cam -
paigning for second
term. ·
Building saved
LOS ANGELES <AP>
The Garden Court
Apartments were de -
s igna ted as a cultural
his toric al monument,
s paring the 62-year-old
structure from destruc-
tion.
In a speech to a statewide television audience
Wednesday. the Democratic governor abandoned
61h years of opposition to all general tax increases
to endorse the anti-crime levy, which would raise
taxes an average of $500 million annually before
expiring in 10 years.
Brown also said he would call a special elec·
lion Nov. 3 on the proposed anti-crime tax. a move
which would automatically put a referendum on
the Peripheral Cana l on the November ballot.
However, in the 15-minute televised speech.
Brown didn't mention the effect his action would
have on the Periphera l <;anal referendum, or how
changing the date of the canal vote might help him
out of a political bind.
"That's a separate issue." Brown's press
secretary, Cari Beauchamp, said of the canal re-
ferendum. ··Others will accuse him of using the
crime tax election to get the canal vote behind
him, but that was not a cons1derat1on behind the
idea of calling this election
··tte has said he may not take a leadership
position in the campaign for the canal, but he has
said he Wlll support the measure," she added.
Brown's speech was praised by Democratic
leaders of both the Senate and Assembly, and they
endorsed the tax hike.
But Republicans quickly labeled him a "Jerry-
Come-Lately" to the crime issue and opposed his
tax proposal. Without s upport Qf at least a few
lawmakers from the GOP minority, the tax pro·
posal, which requires two-thirds support, cannot
pass either the Senate or Assembly.
Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., who nominated Ap
pealg Court Justice Otto
K au s t o th e s tate
Supreme Court, will an
nounce a second a p
pointment "very soon,"
says his top aide.
But Gray Dav i s ,
Brown's chief of staff.
refu sed to say Wednes-
d ay when the new ap.
pointmenl would be
Kaus, 61 , a 20 ·year
vete ran or the bench,
has ser ved on the 2nd
District Court of Appeal
in Los Angeles si nce
1964 He presides over
one of the court ·s five
divisions.
Kaus· appoin tment
met with n ea r ·
unanimous support, wtth
the legaJ profe~sion and
most politicians describ
ing him as bright, able
and scholarly, a hard·
working moderate with
a str o n g se n se of
responsibility.
But the second vacan-
cy on t he court has lefl
Brown in politi cal dif-
L
NOMINATED
Otto Kaus
r1cu tty after Samue l
Williams, a $275,000-a -
ye a r black attorney
fr om Los Angeles,
turned down the gov-
ernor's offer to serve ,
citing family
responsibilities. Kaus, who has r e -
ferred to himself as hav·
ing a ··Prussian, if you
like , or milita ris tic
sense of obedience" to
the law,' was appointed
to the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Superior Court and
the appellate court by
former Gov Edmund G.
:. Pat" Brown.
r.=======& HUNTIMCTOM C00£1 •EXIT BUCH llVI.
ROSENTHAL
OPEN STOCK DINNERWARE
SALE 20o/o off On Saturday, May 9,
14 KT. GOLD CHARMS Ir .I (~::.~~ s2200 I~ i r K ~:~~:.7 s. .. .,, '""'
Q
~ • 0 ~
durt.ng month of May ..........
n
I
> i
The Upper Crust. a
rew adclrllOO to lhe tlnlOUS ~· Ctlidlen
Pot Pie Shops. IS openjng WI Seaclifl Vilage
A«J the llltle Upper Crustaoeens who run lhe
place realty know haw IO ltYoN a perty Aro
ltVOW a Fri6t>ee
The·fA be holding a Fnsbee Contest al
lhelr V•lage Grand Opening on May 9. ~
at 11:30 am,
Hundreds of Fl ing
Discs will Invade
Seacliff Village.
plele W11r1 tree Fnst>ees b eYet)'On8 and
pnzes loi the contest wimers
In addltlorl lo lhe FriSbee Contest lhefe'I
be tree pony ridas. bands and e "chc:ken
pie wet«."
So oome out IO lhe Upper Crusl in Seaditl
Village and oelebrale 1t11!!! Gnw1d Opening on
SatlJrday. May 9 !tom 11 30 10 3·30
~£wffri~ Choo~e rrom an~ ur uur 22 patterns. the be)t C'hma :.erv1C'es from
thr Saroqur RorO<'o and Art Nou\'uu eras designs that ha,•e The Upper Crust Grand Opening
and Frisbee Contest. endurt.'d the JRl'' around lhe ~orld
HUHTIMGTOM CEMTIR
HUNTINGTON IEACH
892-5501
VISA' Ask about our Bridal Registry
HAlllOR CanER
2300 HARIOR. COSTA MESA
545-9485
Come In 1nd see how from
defl"09tlng to cooking to ref'INting,
Litton helpe f1mllles HI t>ett«. Tlke
home 1 Llllom Microwave todayl
.
Whlle They Last
999''
' No other: newspa~r brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school and cotl~e distri icts and coun.ty
government than the Daily l!illt
Seaclitf VIiiage
The c.nter of Attention. FOi Fun end Games.
2205 Malr1 St. ~on Beecn. CA 92648 714-536-8711 Localed 81 ~and 'Ybl1\town
c 11maw1•
We 1nv1tie you to visit the new LeSportsac Shop 1n South Coast Plaza.
You'll love the va.s_t selection of LeSportsao bags a.nd aooessor1es
including the New"Genera.tion Il"tra.nsatla.ntic 88.11 aloth Bags.
LelporUao louUl Oout '1ua
3333 Bristol Street
Cost.a Mesa. CA 92626
7146671263
Lelporbao Watwood
914 Westwood Blv~.
Westwood, CA 90024
213 208-8822
Lelportaao lanta lloDlaa
Se.nta Monica Pla.oe
8eoonc1 Level
2133941027
A8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981
New lroi~village
·plans /ace obstacles
. Ever-expanding Irvine saw
etill two more villages being put
on the construction map last
week.
Called Villages 12 and 14, the two
. new communities are to bou.se
40 ,000 people and include sites for a
hospital, a civic center, parks,
schools, offices and commercial
facilities.
Village 12 is bounded by the
San Diego Freeway, Jeffrey
Road, Irvine Center D~ive and
Sand Canyon A venue. Village 14
is bounded by the freeway, San
,. Diego Creek, Irvine Center Drive
and Culver Drive.
While the Irvine Company
plans (which must be approved
by the City Council) have appeal
in a housing-short county-, there
are some reservations.
,. One of the main difficulties
with the Village 12 area is that it
is impacted by jet noise from El
. Toro Marine Corps Air Station4 t . In fact, state officials say
• that the noise and potential for
crash in the area argue against
the construction of schools there.
· The Irvine Company is trying to
take this problem in stride, say·
ing Village 12 will be geared
toward adults and few children
. would live there.
Still, the problems of jet
noise will remain no matter who
.... lives there and any resident who
moves into the new village should
be aware of this disturbance.
Village 14 faces its toughest
problems in the area of traffic
circulation. Plans call for Jam·
boree Road to be extended through
th e -Tustin Marine CO'tps
Helicopter Station. The road would
connect with the Santa Ana
Freeway and is seen as a key
roadway for the village.
However, Marine Corps
representatives say they don't
want Jamboree Road to 10
through their compound. Until
this issue is resolved or the com·
pany finds an adequate
a lternative, development of
Village llt could create tremen·
dous traffic jams in the western
part of Irvine.
Company officials say th·at
even before this issue is settled,
they should be allowed to build
some sections of Village 14. The
burden should be placed on them
to prove such development won't
lead to traffic-clogged streets.
A more general problem fac·
ing both village proposals re·
volves around the question of
their financial viability.
City planners say that res·
idential developments cost more
in city services than they pay in
post-Propositiorr 13 taxes. Sales
tax revenue is the biggest source
of funding for the City of Irvine.
Long-awaited development of
the "Super Regional Shopping
Center" in the "Golden Triangle"
bounded by the Santa Ana, San
Diego and Laguna freeways
would certainly go a long way in
providing the sales tax revenue
that could support future residen-
tial development in Irvine.
At first blush , plans for
Villages 12 and 14 seem im·
pressive. Now the Irvine Com·
pany must prove that these plans
are practical and financially via·
ble for city residents.
SClwol bond bail-out
There are advantages and
disadvantages for a growing city
. •that deals with one primary de-
velopment company.
This is the case in Irvine with
the Irvine Company owning and
developing the overwhelming
share of land in the city.
One of those advantages
became clear last week when the
Irvine Company came to the
rescue of the Irvine Unified
School Di strict, agreeing to
purchase $1 million worth of
school construction bonds that
nobody else wanted to buy.
The bonds were authorized
by Irvine voters in 1972 as pat"ti of
a $60 million school bond issue.
The bonds authorized by voters
bore a 7 percent interest rate.
However. with the pri~e in·
terest rate now between 17 and 18
percent there isn't much interest
in the 7 percent bonds .
The bonds are tax-free. The
party holding them doesn't have
to pay tax on the interest from
the bonds, thereby realizing a
higher return than would be
possible if tax had to be paid.
However, the Irvine Company
could easily have bought 10 per-
cent tax-free bonds instead of
those being offered by the school
district.
The Irvine Company's future
is inexorably linked with the City
of Irvine's well-being. The school
district, of course, is an integral
part of the city.
It's heartening to see that \he
Irvine Company realized these
facts last week when it decided to
buy the $1 million worth of bonds.
Inside track on pests
Irvine City Councilwoman
Mary Ann Gaido was the city's
envoy to the statewide vector
control conference in Redding
last week.
(A vector, if you wondered, is
any of a number of disease
transmitting organisms including
mosquitoes, flies, midges and
other pests,)
Her trip to the conference
was sponsored by the Orange
County Vector Control District,
on which she serves as Irvine's
trustee so it won't cost the city
anything. And in fact, thanks to
•
Mrs. Gaido's frugality, the Vee·
tor Control District's budget will
hardly be dented. In an unusual
gesture for a public official, she
made the trip in her own car,
cam~ out one night en route to
Redding and figures the ex·
cursi6n didn't . cost rnore than
about $200, despite high gasoline
prices.
Although we don't expect the
councilwoman to single-handedly
solve the summer mosquito prob~
lem this year, it will be good
news if she found some tech·
niques for eliminating even a few
olthe pesky critters.
Opinions expressed in the space above artt those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and ertlsts. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60. Cosi. MeM4 CA 92626. Phont (714)
642·4321 .
L.M. B~ya/Name clwices
lo New ·Vork Cjty, more »-year·
old women bear ttie name ot Li.Ilda
than any other moniker. Nest there
lA that age bracket, in order, .. -come
•Mery, Barbara, Patricia, Sunn,
~Kathleen. Carol, Nancy, Mariaret
and Diane. Compare these to the
, most popular names among 8-yeat·
old &lrls there: Jennifer, Michelle,
Llaa, Elizabeth, CbrlsUne, Maria,
Nicole, Kimberly, Denise and Amy .
U'• remarkable, I thlnk, that in Jutt
24 yeara -about one generadon -
none of the top-10 preft!rTed name• to
the first IJ'OUP overlap with the top.-10
ln the econd group. •
Amqn1 those eouls who take sit· • down baths instead of sbowtn, three
out or 20 read In the tub, the sur·
veytakera report. Why do you sup·
pose those surveytakers would uk a
thlng like that?
Q. Row can I keep t.he neil))bor's
dot• out of my yard?
A. Put a few unbatt.ed mouaetrapt
around your shrube.
-_r =+
Mafia regains dope control
WASHING TON -A House commit·
tee has been seeking information -and
headlines -by investiaating drug use
by Hollywood celebrities. The con·
gressmen might better spend their ef·
forts looking into the huge influx of
heroin that the Mafia is pouring into the
East Coast.
Until recently, the Mob had kept a
low profile, after the disruption caused
by the notorious "French Connection"
and the non-Mafia competition from
Asia. But now the situation has changed
-back to the old Sicilian route for im-
portation of hard drugs into the United
States. The dope ls funneled from
Southwest Asia into this country by way
of Slcily.
"In the early 1970s, we didn't see the
broad-based involvement of all the
(Mafia) families," the FBI's organized·
crime bosa, Sean McWeeney, told my
~ associate Tony Capaccio. "Now they're
into it up to their ears," he said.
According to a secret Drug Enforce·
ment Administration report, all five
Mafia crime families in the New York
area are involved in the heroin traffic
that used to be the almost exclusive
province of the Vito Genovese and
Thomas Lucchese families.
"U.S. BUYEll8 of heroin are pre·
dominantly Italian:Americana in the
New York City area who in tum supply
various distribution networks along the
East Coast," states the DEA report.
Two of four Sicilian groups identified by
DEA and Justice Department in·
telligence operations -the Baaalamen-
ti and Scaduto factions -are connected
G. -dl-Cl-A•-11_1_1 -~
by marriage to several New York crime
families.
The biggest bust involving organized
crime was the seizure of 40.6 kilograms
of heroin in Milan. Italy. on March 31,
1980. The shipment, which had a street
value of $10 million, was on its way to
the United States. Among those arrest·
ed on this side of the ocean were two
cousins of the late crime boss Carlo
Gambino and reputed Mob figure
Emanuele Adamita.
The Sicilians provide the processing
expertise for the Southwest Asian
opium; their crime brothers in this
country take care of distribution. As the
secret DEA report notes. "Several or·
ganized crime members trafficking in
heroin between Sicily and the U.S. are
some of the same individuals who were
involved in the heroin traffic of the
1960s and early 1970s."
More than 50 kilograms of heroin
have been seized al Kennedy In·
ternational Airport in New York since
December 1977. "This heroin was under
the control of United States and Italian
organized crime figures, .. the DEA re-
port states.
One of those arrested last year in con-
nection with three heroin·conversion
laboratories in Milan and San Remo,
llaly, was Jean Jehan. He is familiar to
American movie and television au-
diences as the "Silver Fox" who
escaped when the French Connection
was broken.
The resurgence of Mafia control over
the drug trade is a result quite simply
of the enormous profit involved. The
Mob has been able to recoup after the
imprisonment of many Mafiosi for dope
trafficking in the mid·l970s. The family
ties between Sicily and the United
States were crucial in re-establishing
the drug trade and regaining control
from freelancers.
SATURDAY-NIGHT DEAD: In the af·
termath of the assassination attempt on
President Reagan, at least 10 bills have
been introduced in Congress to plug the
loophole in the 1968 Handgun Control
Act that allows unfettered importation
of pistol parts for assembly in this coun-
try as Saturday Night Specials.
Incredibly, the government en-
couraged the production of cheap
handguns a few years ago when it quiet·
ly lowered the tariff on imported gun
parts.
Mesa art controversy sparks debate
To the Editor:
If Ali Rousban goes to jail for bis
artistic beliefs an4 faith In the ConsUtu·
tion, Costa Mesans better be prepared
for a wave of public reaction acrost this
state and country.
The cultural commissars on the City
MAILBOX
Council will have stood up and hollered
to the world that here in Orange County,
in 1981, an artist who creates and dis·
plays works without prior government
approval will be harassed, intimidated,
coerced and eventually jailed.
In the Soviet Union an artist who diJ·
plays his work without government ap-
proval is jailed; in Costa Mesa an artist
who displays bis work without govern·
ment approval is jailed! Liberty is
mocked, justice abused and Costa
Mesans grow s leek in real estate
speculation. Shame on us all. A com·
nuinity day of mourning should be
declared.
J .P. PALMER
Who benefits moat?
To the Editor:
I notice that on the Aprll 21 Daily Pilot
there's an article tilled "Freeze Put On
Federal Booklet,.. callln1 attention t.o
booklets such as organic gardenln1,
mulch. etc., as being wasteful eovem·
ment expenses. I quote frosp the article,
"during these difficult economic times
we cannot afford to watte time and
money on activities that have limited
benefits to the people of thia country."
26 letter from Tom Williams concerning
Murry Cable's article titled "Master
Plan Will Quiet the Skies Over John
Wayne .Airport.'·
MURRAY ACCORDING to Williams:
"the people in Newport Beach who
are opposed to t.he county's· insane ex·
pansion of Jotin Wayne Airport are simp·
ly a social group."
"People who are able to afford a life in
the Newport Beach area should be the
people who should have to suffer the emo·
tional disturbance caused by the
airport."
No such statements were made by
Murry.
The problem becomes that when you
mis take facts or misquote people. you put
into jeopardy the whole case. It makes no
difference where the discussion is, clos·
ing of schools, airport expansion or !ind·
Ing an altemaUve airport.
JlMdeBOOM
.Blame 11Wplattd
To the Editor:
This revision of the Mike Peters car·
toon you published ftpril 19 is a more
appropriate misdirection of attention.
OF OOUltU in whoae ~on that The car is quite fr~uenUy used as a
benefit is llmlted, I don't mow. But' in weapon, to run down victims. But it is
"Study Undertaken'' lt saya the Rea1-.i . the driver that i1 blamed, not the car.
,administration has commlHloned a Even if• the cause is a defective
studyoftheWorldBulc.todetermlneJUta automobile, the blame will be placed on
lending pracUcea have encoura•ed the peaple wbo built it. Now, because of
socialist governments at Ule expeue ot recent ~laxina of aovemment st.and·
privateenterprtse. arda, they can J>rodqce even lesa tale
It seems ironic that one study ta laud.a· and more p0lluttn1 vebJcles. However,
ble and acceptable to the. Rea1an ad· death by automoblle ls accepted aa
mlnist.ratton and not wa1tefuJ but tbete tbouah death by nature.
others are .. Appa.renUy whoever makta I ~· NOT aeaiolt can. Th1I la Just
theae · determlnaUona 11 blutd, prtj· an example to show the unbalanced
udiced and ll toinJ to detennlne for tbt prejudice toward 1uns. Ftvt people Nst ol u.a in the true tr.Utioo of Bi& murdered by a car. used 11 a weapon,
BrotherwhJtbaa MneliUortlaepeopleof brtna nowhere near the public outrage
tbecountryandwhat.d.oun't. aa one penon shot by a 1un.
M1'C.E fOST.BR When someone i• ahot, where I• Ule
blam~ placed? On tbe opeqtor of the ',£-...,,,,,._.-:.., ,,.;.,1~.... aun, 11 with the operator <# thl car? ~ ~'5 No, tbe sun la blamed I
Tothel'.dlt.Or: • A1 for t.be crlmlDal belllnd the cun, , .... ew~ Uaat thee· fCll' our law 111tem will protecL ldm.
U ~_poup ii._ 1118 UM Sun.,. lllGW•that leel thllD I percent Ol
•Mlli¥atile. While be ta to Ida vlolentm.919t.beU.S. wWreeultlnp.ro-
' ~ Mdoel more b._tar&M c.... secut.lcm,eanvicUonaadpailbment.
wblcb M 1QOUIMll ~ wllla lie ... Never mtnd the crlmlDala. Just 1et
qUGtta ~I am~ totlle A'"1 rld ot tbe IUD UJd tverJthini wlU be all
, ' .
right, right? No, focus on the proper
subject, the criminal. not the gun. It is
the person behind the gun who is at
fault, just as it is the person behind the
wheel.
RODGER RHINEHART
Remarks disturbing
To the Editor:
While reading the Pilot article con·
cerning the Mesa truancy sweep (April
29). l became very disturbed to find
that some parents were actually "out-
raged" because their child had been
caught away from the school campLls. I
commend the Police Department and
those school officials who had the
courage to engage in such an undertak·
ing -after all the kids were br-eaking
the law.
I would like to see the "closed cam·
pus" rules more strictly enforced to
keep students on campus during school
hours (unless they have a legitimate ex·
cuse from their parents). I realize not
all kids are using or dealing in drugs
and supporting their habits by breaking
into homes during midday hours, but by
enforcing these laws it may help curtail
the activities of those who are.
JACK BOVAIRD
A trork of art
To the Editor:
I am writing in behalf of this beiuUful
seulpture that we have seen for the tint
time on 16th and Superio'r in Costa Mesa.
We were astounded al the "eye appeal"
this sculpture has. It is a work of art. Jt
should be a thing to be seen and admired
by people far and wide.
So more power to Mr. Roushan for
,bringing such a thing of beauty to Cotl&i
Mesa.
Aren't we lucl<y?
CAMILLE WALKER
Clliltm
That towerinJJ pu, of scrap tron on
Superidr A-Yenue ln Costa llesa b..11 an
artlalic value e(lUl.l only t.o Budllll
Mountal» In L.A.
D.11.J . .._, ... ~ .. , ....................... .. --~·-· ....... -..... ,.,., ........ ... ,...,. .. y OW. o.t!Y ~ •
.........._.,.. .......
,
---·------·~---~--~----·--~--...----
•
..., .....
THUASOAY,
MAY 7, 1911
JUST COASTING
COMICS
82
86
Two-earner households are de-
manding that business make it
easier to manage jobs, families
0
a
111111 CUil See Page B4
By FaEDERICK SCHOEMEHL .... ..., ..........
Mental health programs
1hould be removed from under
the umbrella of Orange County
government's vast Human
Services Agency, the Orange
County Grand Jury said today.
In a 27-page report, the jury
concluded that mental health
services have deteriorated. not
improved, and that the mental
health program is not meeting
lU stated objective.
Referring to those objectives,
the jury said:
-Recent reorganization of the
mental health department •'has
decreased and disrupted service
lo clients."
-"Overemphasis on regimen-
tation and documented accoun-
tablllty has impaired client
service and staff morale, iq-
creased unnecessary paperwork
and decreased staff efficiency.'.'
-Community participation in
mental health program has de·
teriorated.
-Communication within the
mental health department bas
been stymied "under a rigid
chain-of-command flow of in-
formaUoo."
-"In-service traln1n1 has
virtually disappeared.''
-Efftdency in the proeram
bas deteriorated "because of
continued duplication of
~paperwork and report-
maklng ... "
Mental health proeram1 have
operated under the aeais ol the
Human Services Aaency since
the agency was created several
years ago.
There bas been contlnuine
criticlam of the effectiveness of
the programs, primarily from
mental health activists who
claimed non-professionals were
overseeing mental health pro-
grams.
That criticism was strongest
UCI students
face fees hike
UC Irvine Vice Chancellor
William H . Parker says
that yearly student fees wiU in-
crease next fall from $714 to
about~ at the Irvine campus.
Tbls !»crease is necessary to
keep pace with inflation and will
have no effect on the uni·
versity's enrollment, which is
expected to remain around the
10,000-studenl level, Parker
said Wednesday.
He pointed out that inflation
forces the university to pay
more and more each year on
teacher salaries. utility costs
and supply expenses.
The University of California
campuses don't charge tuition.
Instead, students pay registra-
tion and educational fees.
These fees differ slightly from
campus to campus. but on
average they will increase about
SlOO throughout the system next
fall, according to a recent an·
nouncement by UC President
David Saxon.
In addition lo innation, ti&hl
federal and stale budgets place
pressure on the University of
California to increase student
fees , Saxon said.
UCJ Chancellor Parker said,
however, that reduction in state
and federal financial aid to stu-
dents will have a &realer effect
on private universities than on
public institutions like UCI.
He added that many of these
reductions are still in the pro-
posal stage and if the cutbacks
are adopted, their effect prob
ably won't be felt immediately.
The University of California
Regents set the educational fee and establish a ceiling on reg-
istration fees. Local campuses
can then set their registration
fees under this ceiling.
UCl 's new registration fee will
be "a couple of dollars under the
ceiling," Parker said, noting
that these fees go in part to ex-
penses created by the new Stu-
dent Union on campus.
Newport police ask'
command center
.i
Newport Beach police officials
are asking that $18,000 be pen-
ciled into the city's proposed
1981-82 budget for construction
of an emergency command
center.
Police say they've had a
citywide emergency plan sinee
1977 but no emeraency center.
In recent City Council
sessions , officials explained
there is an extra room in the
police headquarters near
Newport Center that could be
converted into a command post.
The center would be used ai
both l.lhelter and a communica-
tiom center durin& earthquakes
or otber disastrous situations.
The room. city officlals ex·
plained. would be equipped with
phones, radio gear and an_ in-
tef>com setup.
The emergency center pro-
p<>11al was one of several new
Pl~ners eye
Center -
rulings tonight
Newport Beach planning com-
missioners are set to make rul-
ings tonight on the propGSed ex-
pansion of Newport Center, a de·
velopmenl package that has
sUrred considerable controvmy.
The Irvine Company i1 seekinl
permlAion to build a 400-room
luxury llotel and nearly 900,000-
square-feet of office space. in-
cludinl two high-rise towers, at
the center.
spending items that may be
added to the city's preUmlDary
budget of $36.9 million.
Council memben also are coa-
slde ring spending more than
$60,000 to hire an airport
coordinator. a secretary to te.tVe
that position and new office
equipment.
FLORAL ABUNDANCE -New landscaping at
Casa Pacifica was shown off when two
Orange County Music Center auxillarilS host-
ed a fund-raiser at the former WesterQ White
D*ly,.. ..... .., PMlk• O'o-tl
House. Georgia Spooner, Nannette Pittman,
Susan Stradet and Evelyn Daniel welcomed
300 guetta who contributed $15,000 for build-
ln& ta. cultilral complex in Costa Mesa.
Tbe firm's request for a general ~;~i~~r*1:.~i:*--:a.: County music revenue $1 million The heart ot the controveny
surroundln1 t~e proposal has :r.:~~-:~o::.:.J:nto~ .Contributions, memberships, activities push funds ·$650,000 over 1979
compound daiJy traffic Jams on Revenues for tbe Oran1e Coun· Hl1hUpts of tlae report In· are abouU12 mWlon ln donations Dallaci1, Bernice Hitd, Joan
streetaaroundtbeCenter. ty MualcCenter topped $1 mllllon elude: ' received since January for the Murphine and Pete Slracuaa.
The meeting 11 scheduled for . last.year,accordinatoananftual construction of tbe MO million Returnlnt members are
7:30 at City Council chambers, report. · -n.. 40 guild ebapten raUed ! theater alona Bristol Street and f'etcber, Rau, Huch Saddliil10n.
UOONewporL Blvd. Tbe ~.ooo increue over 1t'1t $121,000lnll80. theSanDleao~way. Florence Schumacher and David
i• due cblelly to lnena ... ID ~· . About '8 mllllon bu come from Tb.reable. trl~uUon1, membertlalpe MMI -s.a.J088 will IO to UM ,...,al U. Sesentrom family, sz miWoft
1ulld acti•~ti ldward C. fuM toananceoperadwoltbe from 11• Beatley, owner 01 Seba, flee ni ot n.aaee oraaniutlon. • Butley Laboratorl•• and Sl
forlbe()C1IC,1aidlnthereport. -hll,OU wU!Jo to tbe mlW• '"-• Harrr G . .._
F....,...._ BuUA1 ... • • ·-..a... J'ountlaticlaotNeyport 8e9Cb. Increased operatlq HPlllMI ~ ...... ..-~·--· ' Ncl flMlnl of UlNe feMllllUty v~ofU..ut1 ... pa... /l'bemna1n1n1S1mUUoneomet
It.ti• fOf' llM tutar. .. .aoD -tlN,084 w(ll ao to tbe from pieda• bJ Jamet BaldWtn, perfoi'llllaa uu ~~........ Walter awtr-, llr. aDd llrl. expendlt9rel up to .. ,. tom· Tru1tee1 BuUdlq hnd I• tbe Olar'-H~ o.t ltattber,
Pand to ttAt.• tia'Vli, ...,s. coaUWUGDottM MUlleC_.. Jam111CUpp, wWl .. IADd, 11r ..
1Ntollllerepon. S.betpred!NdUulttiblftU'a and llra. Jobe Ila•, aobert
new exec:utlve dlNdOt WUI M Warm.INta md Mr. _. ......
addM to tile ..... CGIM' IUlf,
•• the ll•lc C•w..,. ., lb .......... di .......
Not lftchaded la UM~~ .
last year when lbe county Board
of Supervisors appolnte4
Margaret Grier, then HSA direc-
tor. as director of the ment.41
health program. Mental health
activists claimed Miss Grier
was not qualified to hold lblif
mental health position. In par{,
that criticism led to the gradd
jury's investigation of the me-.
tal health program.
OCboard
to fight
controls ,,
The Orange County Board 161
Supervisors has agreed to
challenge lbe state Coastal Com·
mission if necessary to fight re-
sale controls for new afforda~e
homes built along the coast.
The supervisors reached the cfe.
cision Wednesday during a meet·
ing infused with unusual amo~ or philosophical discourse both
board members and propone
of resale controls.
Al one point, Supervisor Rodtt
Stanton warned resale con~
could lead to a "social revoM-
lion.. when homeowners or af.
fordable units realize they ca1n
sell their houses at market rate&'.~
The topic surfaced during '"a
board review of coastal polici.S
mandated by the coastal cods· mission The commission hat
advocated resale controls for loW.
cost housing and the supervisors
were on the spot to decide whettkr
to break from their past oppo5i·
lion to call for such restrictions.'
They didn't. First -year
supervisors Stanton and Bruce
Nestande claimed resale cont'rols
deny owners traditional chances
to parlay housing equity toward a
higher standard of Ii vlng.
Favoring government controls
were Maya Dunne of The Housing
Coalition of Orange County and
Mary Miller of the Orange County
chapter of the League of Women
Voters.
Ms . Dunne said controls are
virtually the only way to preserve
low-cost housing. She claimed 60
percent of affordable units buil~
from 1977 in Irvine's Woodbridge
neighborhood are no longer oo-
cupied by theo1iginal owners.
Ms . MUler said supervisors
were being shortsighted to de.
mand affordable housing only to
lose the benefits upon the flrst re-
sale.
Stanton and Nestande admitticl
speculation controls are need«l
Added Stanton: •·our differen~
aren 'l in lbe objective but in the
means to the end."
The county does have resale
controls for low-cost unit.a
financed by the county's revenue
bond sales. ln that case~ buyeq
are screened to make sure thej
Call within a~ceptable incor1W
levels.
Housing prices rise accords to annual increases In the co
ty's median income level. whi
currenUy is $25,000 for a family r1
four.
Woman says·
she feared
OC deputy • ..
A Garden Grove woman h8J
told an Orange County Supe=
Court Jury in a kldnappin1 c
that sbe became panlc-atric
when a sberifrs deputy wbo bl8
Just arrested her suuested • could be raped.
The testimony of proaecut.Wa
witness Rebecca Jones ea9
Wednesday ln the tttal of cleJMl.t
George Loudermilk of C_.
Mesa, who ls charged wltlt I
counts of kidnapping and
counts of false impriaonment.
Miss Jones, 31, 1a
Loudermilk suggested ''it ml
have been better if I had
raped'' after he handcuffed
and put her in bis patrol nr
the early morning boun ot J
28, 1980. She was arrested
suspicion of dnmken driviaa.
Mlu Josaes Is one of fi
women Utat Loudermllt la
cuaec1 of abductlnt and lb,.-~
lna between July and Oct.CMNnr, 1980.
ln earlier testimony, a M
Viejo womu claimed that
37-year-oW defendant threa
to rape'aoa kill after clri
her In bl I car to
Hclud•d b OHrloMl
li'Vlfte. .a Tbat incident occurred ta .
tober, thne montha after
Joa" Mid lhe WU lak• llWi
cuttod1 b7 Loudermilk • «•
• Grewe rr..w., ~ 0 ... 0l'Oft. ~(
..
ALONG THE SMUT RUT -Civic leader of
Fountain Valley, noted as one of the more qulet
wonderspots aJong our coastline, may soon take the lead
among our cities in battling sin and purging for purity.
Just look at the record.
Tbe valley City Council baa already outlawed
massage parlors and sexy movie theaters. CurrenUy,
they are attacking flesh maeannes.
If they keep all thls up. Fountain Valley's forces for
purity will make the Costa Mesa vicecops look like
slackers.
Earlier on, Fountain Valley councilwoman Barbara
Brown wenl on a. crusade agawt stores that sold girlie
magazines.
THEN ONLY THIS ~ week, one of the city's
anti-porno crusaders pre-• ._
senled Mayor Ben Nielsen ~b\ r
with 8 whole stack of TOM MURPHINI ~ periodicals he said were -~
offensive. along with a list
of 19 liquor stores he alleged were carry~g the awful-
ness.
So shocked was the mayor with the gift that he
wouldn't even g aze upon the allegedly offensive
materials.
You'd think the least the mayor cou)d have done was
to have called a study session on the material.
Anti-m ud crusaders keeping ~.from gin •hoJJ
"You'd think the least the mayor could have done
was to have called a study session on the material.
Anyway, the Fountain Valley civic lights seemed
most concerned about keeping the kiddies away from any
adult-type literature. It might be okay for the liquor
stores to carry fleshy periodicals, so long as they are
secreled out of the eyesight of children.
That question, of course, lead to yet another puzzle:
What are all those children doin1 hanging around liquor
stores in the first place?
THAT PROBLEM ISN'T quite so simple. If the booae
places were just selling pure alcohol, you might be able
to suggest the kiddies simply be banned from the
premises. But such isn't the case these days.
Beverage stores have become almost general stores
now. Your correspondent knows of one Corona del Mar
dealer, for example, who was forced to start stocking
fresh eggs because of customer demand.
Depending on the place, you can purchase candy and
cakes, flashlight batteries, milk and butter, comic books,
or motor oil. Then there are also some liquor places that
have installed those coin-operated video games .that are
such an addictive attraction to the younger set.
One liquor deale r once told m~. "I sell so much cancty
and licorice s ticks that I've forgqtten what it was I
planned to sell when I opened this pJace . : . "' ..
WITH THE COMING of video games, you now have a
lot of youngsters who -bang around at liquor stores~
pumping quarters into the machines all night long.
Grog shops have come to replace pool halls as spots
where youth flirt with sin and degradation. Time was
when youngsters were warned by their fathers that
nothing good ever lurked behind the swingine doors of the
pool hall. •
Thus you promptly tried to sneak into the place and
spend hours learning how to bank an eight-ball into the
side pocket. Parents, however, kept insisting UJat billi~
halls were hangouts of the idle.
"AND IDLE HANDS do the devil's work," you were ..
admonished.
Considering the fashion in wbJch the Fountain Valley
civic savants are pushing for purity, it's clear that if
sa.tan ever does come to town, he'll be on unemployment.
' I
SADDENED -Actor-director
Laurence Olivier saya be la
"very much saddened" by
the demise of London's
163-year -old Old Vic
Theater, which will close
}l.ay 16 due to lack of funds.
Olivier starred in many Old
Vic productions.
Court OKs
boys-only
bequest
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. CAP)-
A bachelor who died at age 96
was within bis legal rights even
Ir he discriminated against
females when he willed money
for scholarships for male high
school students only, a judge has
ruled.
However, since il would be Wl·
constitutional for the Croton-
Harmon Union Free ·School Dis-
tri~t~ a pubUc entity, to ad-
minister the scbolarablp fund
under male-only terms, the
judge bas appointed a trustee
and ordered the money turned
over to a newly formed private
trust.
The ruling by Wes tchester
County Surrogate Evans
Brewster apparently signals an
end to a three-year legal dispute
over the will left by Edwin Irv-
ing Johnson.
The probate judge declared
the bequest was not ille1al
becaY.Se the law does not pro-
hibit private discrimination.
JobnsoD,, a lile-loog bachelor,
died three '/ears ago. Bia will
explicitly established a
scholarsh.lp fund for "bright and
deaervtni youn1 men" ln the
Croton·Harmon Union Free
School District.
Arter other bequests were
taken from Johnson's $238,000
estate, $196,300 was turned over
lo the school.
The bequest said school of-
ficials were to determine the re-
c ipients, provided that they
were bright and deserving, with
parents who could not arford to
send tbem to college.
And they were to be male.
A feniale C~-Harmon stu•
dent raised an objection to the
all-male provision. .and appijed
for the scbola.nbip.
School otft'clals realized they
had ·a dlJemma. If they followed
t,he provisions or the will t.be
cliatr\et cciUld IOJe tederal· JUb-
sidiea, U they failed to comply
with the male-only terms, the
diatrict could lose "tbe
scholarship bequest.
So the scholarship program
waa indeftn.lteJy curtailed.
At the same time, the woman
named to administer Johnson's
estate petifioned Brewster to in·
terprt!l •·men '' to mean
"persons" or de<:lare the pro-
visfons illegal and revise the
will. ,
Under New Yorlr.'. law, the Sur-'l"Ogate Court. the court for pro-
b,ate and guardianship matters.
can lntetpret a vaeue or am-
bi1uous provision lo a will.
~ S~okes tax ~ilfe· ef ed
;:nemocrat leaders propose increase from 10 to 20 cents .
1 SACRAMENTO (AP> -
: Democratic leaden ln the state
: Aesembly are plannin1 to pro-
• pose doubling the stale cigarette
:· tax from 10 cents to 20 cents a
pack, the Sacramento Union
said.
· The boost ls part of an
alternative bud1et plan belnl i developed by the Democrats to
brldee an expected $1.7 bUUon
. shortfall in the budeet for the
year atartlna July 1, the
• new1paper Hid, Wednead•Y·
'. Tbe Democrat.a' plan lnduded
;, an unpteceden~ shift oM:nore
· • than • million ln unemploy·
4 ment lnluraoce taxes lnto the
111 state'• pneral fWldl, the Onion :1 taid.
r Aaaembly Speaker Willie Brown, D-San Francisco wu to
bau Wlv•Ued the plan thls
wttk, bu.t al4tes aaid tu reJe ...
I• btlnt M18Y*I u.nut next week.
Brown laid •t a recent new coal~ &Mt be wu conaldtr-tu P1'4•IDI IDa'MMI ID tbe ·~lln tuee" on d1arett.1. Uqqor
udnady.
Brown and Aaaembl)'
and Means Committee
Chairman John Vasconcelloe, D-
San JOfe, presented the plan to a
closed-door meeting of As-
sembly Democrats Monday, the
Union said. .
The present cigarette tax ia
expected to raise $203.6 mllUoo
for the state's ceneral fUnd next
year plus $85.4 million for local
governments. Doubllna mltbt
reduce sales .
Tbe Unemployment Insurance
Fund bu about SI bUlloa In re-
serve. 'lbe fund 11 financed by a payroll tu ·on employen &Dd lt
uMd to pay btneflt.a to ~
wbo are laid off or ot.benriM
lOie their jobl.
from paychecks.
The Union said the plan could
reduce the bud1et deftctt by at
leut $800 million.
State control
of dumps
proposed
.. ......... Selectto. of: ...... :·~ ...... . ....... . .......,.0.y .....
OPEN MOTHER'S DAY
MOH. THAU SAT 1 00 10 1tOO ~ l:OOI0630
Lloyd's Nursery & Landscape Co.,
2021 Newport llvcf. Cat '-Y ShetJ
COSTA MESA, CA 92627 • 646.7441
Hours: Mon.·Sat 7 am to 6 pm
Sun. 9 am to 5:30 pm
VISA & M C ACX:EPflO ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;:; EXPl~ES 6-1u1;;.;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=.,,
NEWS FEATURES
And with Hallma rk Mother's Day ca rd. that's
what she gets. Te ll her how much you care
o n Sunday, May 10.
1 1980Hallmar~ Card~ lrtc •
K.C:/-ttkLC""4AL /HOP
979-1112
ZJOO HAlloa a YD.'" HAUOa canm
Ooen hi 9 pm Monday thru Friday. Sal 10 ·t1t 6,
Sun 12 ltl 5
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
FRESH SWORDFISH .............. 5.98 lb.
Great ........... or brollood -bui.r . wHJia.-~
FRESH FILLET OF
NORTHERN SEABASS ............ 2.98 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
P rime and top chf')ice beef ag('(I at least 30 days to the
peak of i;erfect1on
Stuffed Pork Chops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.98 lb.
Just think! A por.k chop cut 2" thick
stuffed with Delaney's fa mous
homemade apple dressing
Boneless Rolled Pork Roast ........ 2.49 lb.
A vera"e welabt 3 pounds.
Center Cut Pork Chops . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.49 lb.
Farmer Style Spareribs ............ l.69 lb.
Lean Ground Chuck ................ l.49 lb.
Ground hourly, not over 22'1 fat.
FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE
150 00 mm please1
Your order 1s under complete refrigeration from
our store to your door in our refrigerated trucks
Call in the morning and your order \\Ill be
delivered to your home the samea nemoon.
-Thia ad effective Wed., S/8 through Tues . S/12
MORNING FRESH PRODVCE
Sweet Large Navel Oranges ........ 39c lb .
Lg. Slze lc~berg Lettuce .......... 3 for 1.00
Local Romaine Lettuce .......... 3 for LOO
Lg. Bunch Spinach ................ 29( ea.
So. American Bananas ...... 3 lbs. for 1.00
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
Delanf'y'i. Privatt> Label Champagne 1750 mill
2.75 ea. or 33.00 per case
Wente Bros. I.A' Blan<' de Blanc . . . . . .. 3.50 ea.
Seagrams VO .. . . . . . ... 9.99 ea. (one Iller)
Fortm &i Doc·Korbrand . . . . • • . . . . 3 50 ea. I 1974>
Scoresby Scotch C750 mill .. S SS ea
<One Uter>. . . ... 6.85 ea.
All hquor and wine plus tax
Complete catering service. from a sil·down dinner
part) to party trays delivered to your home Call
Delaney's Catering Department, ask for Tom
Martin.
Store Hours 9-6, Oosed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach DELANEY'S 673-5520
Aesa \7erde \J ine and ~qoor •• ,., •• ,., •• ,.,
--------------------
SMIRNOFF
VODKA
EXCEPTIONAL WINES
PRICED '500 AND UNDER
JIM IEAM
IOURIOM
. .
· SA97 tt .. , ...... 7 utLIW
Good savi ngs on
America's favorite.
Chate0al filtered.
We're having this sale '° entice you to
visit our small, family-owned store to see our
excellent selection of exceptional wines
priced $5 and under. Jerry Mead, the Santa
Ana Register wine writer. publishes a list of
exceptional wine priced $5 and under. We
found 73 wines in our regular stock that
were on Jerry Mead's list.
~. $677
I Llffr
A great price on our
most PoPular Kentucky
bourbon Sour mash! For old-fashioned. friendly, knowledgable
service, come in and see us!
CHATIAUDE LOHESTAllB
FOMTPIHOT LOHG HICK IOnUS
COGHAC
;;i:·... s24aa . ~~~~ SS!!
~"gr•nde chMl~gM" C!>gna~h• Imported from Texas. Sold by cue
bett kind. "Superb" said New West only, plus 85t bottle deposit. rnegazJne.
Fl1DI PltlMIUM
WHITI WIHI ....... ,,
l.fL s4"
CODORMIU
la.AMC DI ILAHC
CHARLES KRUG
CHIHIH IU.MC
.... $5.10
1141 ML
California's first Chenin Blanc. Gold
Medal -Orange County Fair.
Flowery, sweet edged
IAHCHO TIMICULA
CHAILIS
l.llJtw $299
~0ne of the Best o f California Jug
YAnet" sava New West magazine.
A Spanish "champagne" that we From a small Temecula wlnetY. Half
800red equal to Mumm's In a blind Sauvlgnon Blanc and half Chenln
tasting. Fresh. clean. llvely. Blanc. Excellent.
STOHi cam
CAUF. COLOMIAID
.... * s144
If tl'lla were under the label of. the
temoua winery who prOduced it. the
aelllng price would be 13-89. Good
alpplng wine.
on Jflrrv Meed'• "lntld«'a Ult of
bclepttonaJ Win•• Priced '5 end
Undet."
PAIDUCCI 1979
CHIMIH ILAHC
Vear after year a favorite. Sliver
medal-Orange County Fair. CINI,
fresh, fruity, lueclous.
ALMADIH MTM.
CHAIUS, ROSL llHINI
....... 7,
I.IL.hr
One of Catlfbrnla'a moet popular jug
win ...
suna• HOMI '910
WHITI DMFAHDIL
. ,./ An early eellout at the wiMWY tVllO veers In a row. A. luvely picnic or
pool-party wt ne.
Wiii& ••••
WtlTI DHFAHDIL
HOM&. •
-~------~-----~ -----=--------------------------------------------\
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 H/F
·~uroua Brown endorses Second
• • JUSt1ce
'.
• •
Deaths suspiciolls?-
anti-crime tax
LOS ANGELES <AP > Saying Californians
live in "a climate of apprehension" because of
violent crime, Gov Edmund Brown Jr has en·
dorsed a quarter -cent sales tax for more prisons
and police.
eyed
SACRAMENTO <AP >
-Gov Edmund Brown
Jr., who nominated Ap
peals Court J ustice Otto
Ka u s to t h e s tate
Supreme Court, will an
noun ce a second ap
pointment "very soon,"
says his top aide.
Coronor's office mum on patients
RIVERSIDE <AP> -The spouses
of some of the 27 elderly patients
whose deaths are being investigated
by the Riverside County coroner's of-
fke say they a re beginning to wor ry
that their relatives ' deaths were sus·
picious.
But county officia ls continued Wed-
nesday t o issue "no comment "
answers to most questions about the
hi&h number or deaths 2S -in the
intensive care wa rd at Community
Hospital of the Valleys In Penis dur·
lng March and April.
• Two more deaths were beins in·
vestlgated at San Gor gonio P ass
Hospital in Banning. A third San
Gorgonio death has been eliminated
as unrelated.
Candy tax backed
S ACRAMENTO (AP l There
would once again be a 6 percent sales
tax on candy and chewing gum, un·
der a bill approved by the Assembly
Reve nue and Taxation Committee.
It v9ted 9·6 Wed nesday to send
AB130 by Assem b l y m a n B i ll
Lockyer , D-San Leandro. to the Ways
and Means Committee. The blll
would raise $66 million a year for the
state and $17.4 million for local aov-
ernments.
Eviction law stands
SACRAMENTO <AP> In a de·
feat for elderly groups and mobile
home owners, a Senate committee
has refused to change a law letting
mobile home parks evict old homes
when they are sold.
U!nter p ush eyed
SAN DIEGO <A P > Claiming
voter rejection or a downtown con ·
venlion center was a •·temporary set-
back," San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
promised future attempts lo pass a
similar measure.
"Now we have the opportunity to
come back at it from another direc·
lion. I'm not at this point clear what
direction that will be," Wilson said
Wednesday following the resounding
56.6 percent defeat of the proposal he
supported for six years.
------'----
CHARGED -Salinas
M ayor J ames R .
Woods, charged with
arson and Insurance
fraud in connection
with $811,000 fire at
his I daho
agric u ltura l
warehous e , denies
his guilt a nd says he
wi ll continue cam-
paigning for second
term
Building saved
LOS ANGELES <AP >
The Garden Court
Apartments were de ·
s ignaled as a cultural
his torical monument ,
s paring the 62-year -old
structw·e from destruc·
lion.
In a speech to a statewide television audience
Wednesday, the Democratic governor abandoned
61,, years of opposition lo all general tax increases
to endorse the anti-crime levy, which would raise
taxes an average of $500 million annually before
expiring in 10 years.
Brown also said he wouJ d cull a special elec·
lion Nov. 3 on the proposed anti-crime tax, a move
which would autom atically put a referendum on
the Peripheral CanaJ on the November ballot.
However, in t he 15·minute televised speech,
Brown didn 't mention the effect his action would
have on the Peripheral Canal referendum, or how
changing the date of the canal vote might help him
out of a political bind.
"That's a separate issue," Brown's press
secretary, Cari Beauchamp, said of the canal re·
ferendum "Others will accuse rum of using the
crime tax election lo get tne canal vote behmd
him. but that was not a consideration behind the
idea of calling this ele<"taon
"He has said he may not take a leadership
position in the campaign for the canal, but he has
said he w1 II s upport the measure," she added.
Brown's speech was praised by Democratic
leaders of both the Senate and Assembly. and they
endorsed the lax hike.
But Republicans quickly labeled him a "Jerry-
Come-Lately" to the crime issue and opposed his
tax proposal. Without support of at least a few
lawmakers from the GO P minority, the tax pro-
posal, which requires lwo·thirds support, cannot
pass either the Senate or Assembly.
------
But Gray Davis ,
Brown's chief of staff ,
refused to say Wednes
day when the new ap
pointment would be
Kaus. 61. a 20-year
veteran of the bench.
has served on the 2nd
District Court of Appeal
in Los Angeles s ince
1964 _ lie presides over
one of the court's five
divisions
Kaus' appointment
m e t with n ea r
unanimous support. with
the legal profession and
mos t politicians describ
ing him as bri~ht. able
and scholarly, a hard
working moderate wi th
a s trong sen se o f
responsibility.
NOMI NATED
Otto Kaus
fa c ulty after Samue l
Walhams. a $275,000-a ·
year bl ack a tto rney
from Los Ange l es ,
turned down the gov-
ernor's offer to serve,
c 1t1ng f a m i l y
respons1bililles Kaus, who has re ·
fe rred to himself as hav-
ing a "Prussian. if you
Ii k e , o r mi Ii t ar is t i,c
sense of obedience" to
the law. was appointed
to the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Super ior Court and
the appellate court by
former Gov . Edmund G.
"Pat•· Brown
r.=======& 1KHtTlll'1011 coma· EXIT IUCll llVD.
But the second vacan·
cy on the court has left
Brown in po~tica l dif-
14 KT. GOLD CHARMS
< HOIC E Ii( YOUR $2 200
•• i rl< ~~~~~y7S<o.,~yPnced ~(U'{"~~
HUMTIMGTOH CIHTIR
HUMTIMGTC>t4 J~CH
892-5501
HARIOR Ca«ER
2300 HARIOR. COSTA MESA
545-9485
ROSENTHAL
OPEN STOCK DINNERWAR E
SALE 20 o/o off
during month of May
Choose (rom ,m\ or our 22 pallems. the best rhana sen 1ci•s from
the Rar0<1ul' RfJrtx·n Jnd Art 'lloo\eau eras designs that ha\'e
endured lht• .1gt'' around lhl' world 1-•••CNOJ
VISA' Ask about our Bridal Registry ur .. u
The Upper Crust, a
oow adClltlon 10 the famous ~· Ctlid<en
Pot Pie 5nops, IS openng in Seaclltl Wlage
Ard the little Upper CruslaCeanS wr.o run the
place really knoW how ~ how a ~ ~
ttvow a Fnsbee
They'• be t-olding a F nst>ee Contest at
1he!r VIiiage GrlW!d Opening on May 9. com-
On Saturday, May 9,
at 11:30 am,
Hundreds of Fl ing
Discs will Invade
Seacliff Village.
plate Wlltl flee Frisbees to.< evetyone and
pnzes tor the oon1es1 wwiners
In adcjljon 10 the Fnst>ee Contest lhere'•
be flee pony rides, ba'lds lWld a "chcken
~wall"
So come OlA 10 the Upper Crust n Seadlll
Village and ~ their Grand Operwlg on
Sauday, May 9 lrom 11 30 IO 3.30
The Upper Crust Grand Opening
and Frisbee Contest.
Seacllff VIiiage
The C.nter ol Attention. F0t Fun and Games.
2205 Main St. Hllllinglon Beacn, CA 92648 71'4~711 Localed 81 Goldenwest and YOOdown
While They Last
Com e In and see how ftom defrosting to cooking to reheating,
Litton helpt famllln eat bett•. T.ite
home a Llttom Microwave todayl
,,,,,,.
We 1nv1te you to v1B1t the new LeSportsac Shop 1n South Coast Plaza.
You'll love the vast selection of LeSportsac bags and aoceesor1es
including the New' 'Generation II' 'tra.nsa.tla.ntic sail cloth ~·
Lelporuao louth Co~ '1ua
3333 Bristol Street
Ldponaao Watwood
914 Westwood Blvd.
Westwood, CA 90024
213 208-8822
Lelporbao lanta Jlonloa
Santa Monica P1aoe
Seoond Level
213394 7027 No other newspape brings you more
of your. ~ity council, planning commi ssion,
school and college c;listricts and county
· government!than the Dillj ll.llllt
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714 567 1263
1
c Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thurtday, May 7. 1981
··Committee to study
school closure needs
. Early this year, Newport·
,.Mesa School District ad-
ministrators predicted that up to
eight schools must be closed
down within the next five years.
, Already, th'e school board has
,.
ordered two schools closed this
coming June.
Last week trustees approved
u new SO-member committee to
formulate program and housing
recommendations for school
operations with anticipated tough
financial constraints over the
next five years.
That committee, composed of
educators, students , parents and
~ other residents of Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach, will hold its
first public meeting May 20 at
7: 30 p.m. in Sims Hall, Newport
Harbor High School.
ThejobwilJ bea tough one.
. Trustees already have drawn
·· criticism for considering plans to
house middle-school students on
~. the district's four high school
campuses
And they shook up Costa
Mesa when computer studies in·
dicated the board was consider·
ing closing down Costa Mesa
High School in years ahead.
That study was a rehearsal
for 'What can be done , ad -
ministrators quickly pointed
out. They hastily assured that no
plan is being considered for clos-
ing any high school at this point.
But schools must be closed, of·
ficials explain, as student popllla·
lion continues to decline by about
1,000 annually and state money aJ -
loc a tions are watched more
closely.
The new committee, official-
1 y called the Educational
Resources Advisory Committee,
has some tough and emotional
decisions to reach over the next
s ix to 12 months before making
its report to the school board.
The communities owe it to
themselves and the committee to
off er all the help and ideas they
can muster.
'Rules need attention
I'
Costa Mesa police swept the
., city of truants last week, arrest-
.. ing 208 young people they claim
should have been in school.
The concentrated effort by
officers. aided by a 10-member
special truancy team, proved
that the Newport-Mesa School
Distri ct 's "closed campus"
pohcies aren't too well enforced.
And Police claim, also, that
th<' sweep helped prove that if
kuls are in school, burglaries
decline.
t' As fewer absences were re-
corded. the city's burglary rate
, declined SO percent, according to
police department figures com·
paring Jai,t week with the same
· week a year ago.
Initial comparisons, in·
vesligators said, also showed that
other kinds of t hefts declined
a bout 40 percent.
The truancy effort. planned
1n conjunction with school of·
· fi cia ls and youth organizations
for months, was praised by some ~
parents and criticized by others .
A handful of parents ~ere
irate over arrests made a t
lunchtime on the Orange Coast
College campus where school of -
ficials condone Costa Mesa High
student jaunts across the street
for the purchase of food at the
-snack bar.
Other parents, especially
spokes men for youth groups in·
vol ved in anti-drug crusades.
praised police action as long
overdue. •
The police department should
be applauded for its efforts if
only to demonstrate what many
unsuspecting Mesans learned -
parents aren't a lways sure where
their children are.
It also should be instrumen·
tal in focusing some much-
needed attention on enforcement
of precise school district campus
rules and policies.
Blly kudos earned
As hard as some may find it
to believe. it appears that prog-
ress has been made in the effort
to clean up the silt-clogged Upper
Newport Bay .
Officials in Newport Beach,
with help from county and state
leaders, have put together a $4
million...cleanup package.
Unless Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. takes a sudden detour on his
announced thinking, much of the
money that is to come from the
state budget s hould be available
this year.
While the cleanup project,
which calls for a partial dredfing·
of the bay and a deepening o the
m ain waterway to the bay, will
•
certainly not restore the area, it
is a ~ood start.
Several persons deserve tips
of the hat for their efforts and
stubbornness in pulling the $4
million package together.
County Supervisor Thomas
Riley and Newport As -
semblywoman Marian Bergeson
worked hard on the plan.
But the best arm-twister was
probably Newport Mayor Jackie
Heather with her "Mud Sale" in
the Upper Bay and her frequent
lobbying missions to Sacramento.
Now if o nly Gov. Brown
doesn't pull one of his last-minute
flip-flops, helpwiU be on the way.
Opinions expressed In the space above art: those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71'4)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Name choices
In New York City, more 32-year·
old women bear the name of Linda
than any other moniker. Next there
in that age bracket, in order, come
1\1 ary, Barbara, Patricia, Susan,
Kathleen, Carol, Nancy, Margaret
and Diane. Compare these lo the
most popular names among 8-year·
old girls there: Jennifer, Michelle,
Lisa. Elizabeth, Christine, Maria,
Nicole, Kimberly, Denise and Amy.
lt' remarkable, I think, that tn just
2'4 yeors -about one generation -
none of the top-10 preferred namn ln
the first group o\'erlap wi\h t.he top-10
: ln the secood group.
Many a tribe ln bygone centuries
: endowed one member, the tribal hla-
• tori an, with the sole chore of remem·
• bering everything that happened lo
the group. This Job ls said lo have
• been the one occupatloa more than
any other which required tho best
,nemory. Maybe so. But another can·
didate for best-memory work ln re·
' cent limes wu that ol San Fran-
cisco's Cblnatown telephone
operators in the early 1930s. Phone
numbers weren't used there then.
Only names. Those girls on the
switchboattls bad to be able to recall
them all.
Claim is that most of the signifi·
cant invent.ioM of nfan are imitations
of nature. May be somelhlnJ lo that.
Wasps chew up wood to make sheet·
ed nests. The French scientist An·
toine de Reaumur ln the early 17001
watched those wa.tps at wort, and
came up with the first way to
manufacture papel' out of wood pulp.
How many of tbese brlabt ideal, ln·
spired by natural phenomena, can
you remember? A dozen will do.
Q . Where did Sammy Davia Jr. 10
to school?
A. He aays be didn't.
Among those souls who lake 1lt·
down baths instead of showers, three
out of 20 read in the tub, the IW'·
veytaken report. Why do you l'U>"
pose UlOH 1urveytaktn would ut a
thlnf like that?
f r-~------------------------....... ----~ •
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
• .... ti .... _., *' " ... .,.., ... w • .., I , Co\I• •'-AOck•n t.,.,~."' ... IMO,'"'•_,,. CA t2•21l
TIUNNIS p. Haley
Publisher
Thomas K•vll
E.dllor
Bar ... rAKntltldl
EdltorJet Page Editor
I ------
~ scon can )btt
ha~this~f~ cnnse misailis . son ?
Mafia regains d~pe control
WASHINGTON -A House commit· East Coast," states the DEA report. ternational Ai~t in New York since
tee bas been seeking information-and Two of four Sicili~n groups identified by December 1977. "This heroin was.under
headlines -by investigating drug use DEA and Just.ice Department in· the control of United States and Italian
by Hollywood celebrities. Tbe con-t~lligence operali~ -the Badalamen-organized crime figures," the DEA re·
gressmen might better spend their ef· ti and Scaduto factions -are connected port states.
forts looking into the huge influx of G One of those arrested last year in con·
heroin that the Malia is pouring into the nection with three heroin-conversion
East Coast. laboratories in Milan and San Remo,
Until recently, the Mob had kept a , Italy, was Jean Jehan. He is familiar to
low .profile, alter the disruption caused JACI AllrlSOI ~-~ American movie and television au-by the notorious "French Coonection" 1 diences as the "Silve r Fox" who
and the non-Mafia competition from escaped when the French Connection
Asia. But now the situation bas changed was broken.
-back to the old Sicilian route for im-by n:1~age lo several New York crime The resurgence of Mafia control over
portation of hard drugs into the United families: . . . the drug trade is a result quite simply
States. The dope Is funneled from The biggest bu~t involvlllg orgaruzed of the enormous profit involved. The
-Southwest Asia into this country by way crime ~a~ the ~eizure or 40.6 kilograms \ Mob has bei?n able to recoup after the
of Sicily. of heroin tn .Milan, Italr. on March 31, imprisonment of many Mafiosi for dope
"In the early 19705, we didn't see the 1980· The ship~e.nt, which had a street trafficking in the mid-1970s. The family
broad-based involvement of all the value ~r SIO milhon, was on Its way to ties between Sicily and the United
<Mafia) families," the FBl's organized-the Uru~ S~tes. Among those arrest-States were crucial in re-establishing
crime boss, Sean McWeeney, told my ed 0!1 this side of the ~ean were two the drug trade and regaining control
associate Tony Capaccio. "Now they're cous~ of the late cnme boss .Carlo from freelancers.
into it up to their ears," he said. Gambino and .reputed Mob figure
According lo a secret Drug Enforce-Emanu~le ft.-dam1ta. . .
ment Administration report, aU five The ~1cilians provide the process.mg
Mafia crime families in the New York e xpertise for t~e Southwest . Asian
area are involved in the heroin traffic opium; their crime . br~thers in this
that used lo be the almost exclusive country take care of d1stnbulion. As the
province of the Vito Genovese and sec~et DEA report notes. ''Sever.al o_r·
Thomas Lucchese families. gam~ed cnme m~~bers lraffickmg in herotn between Sicily and the U.S. are
"U.S. BVYUS of heroin are pre-
dominantly Italian-Americans in the
New York City area who ln turn supply
various distribution networks along the
some of the same individuals who were
involved in the heroin traffic of the
1960s and early 1970s."
More than 50 kilograms of heroin
have been seized at Ke nnedy In·
SATURDAY NIGHT DEAD: In the af.
termath of the assassination attempt on
President Reagan, at least 10 bills have
been introduced in Congress to plug the
loophole in the 1968 Handgun Control
Act that allows unfettered importation
of pistol parts for assembly in this coun·
try as Saturday Night Specials.
Incredibly, the government en·
couraged the production or cheap
handguns a few years ago when it quiet·
ly lowered the tariff on imported gun
parts.
Mesa art controversy sparks debate
To the F.ditor:
If Ali Roushan goes lo jail for his
artistic beliefs and faith In the Constltu·
Uon, Costa Mesans better be prepared
for a wave of public reaction across this
state and country.
Tbe cultural commissars on the City
MAILBOX
Council will b.ave stood up and hollered
to the world that here in Orange County,
in 1981, an artist who creates and dis·
plays works without prior government
approval will be harassed, intimidated,
coerced and eventually jailed.
In the Soviet Union an artist who db·
plays his work without government ap-
proval is jailed; in Costa Mesa an artist
who displays bis work without govern-
ment approval is jailed! Liberty ls
mocked, justice abused. and Costa
Mesans grow sleek in real estate
speculation. Shame on us all. A com·
munity day of mournin1 s hould be
declared.
J .P. PALMER
Who benefits mo8t?
To the Editor:
I notice that on the April 21 Daily Pilot
there's an article titled "Freeze Put On
Federal Booklet," callina attention to
booklets such as or1anic aardenina,
mulch, etc., as being waatef\&I 1ovem-
ment expenses. I quote from the artlcle,
''during these difficult economic Umes
we cannot afford to waste time and
money on activities that have limited
benefibtothepeopleoftbiscountry."
OP 00Ult8S in whote oplnion that
benefit La limited, l don't know. But ln
"Study Undertaken" It aay1 the Re•1•
admloiatratloo baa commtnlooed l
1tudy of the World Bank todeterml,ne ltlta
lend1n1 practtcea have encourased
socialist governments at tbe expenM of .
prlvateenterpriae .
IL see1111 lroolc that one atudy ta lauda-
blo and acceptable to the Re11an ad-
mlnl1t1'1Uon and not wa1tetul but theM
othel'I are .. Appare.atly whoeYtr ~aktt
these deteii:nl.Datlont l• bl...CS, pnJ·
udiced and ll solng to dtteJ1lliM tor UM
re1t ol us lll the true trldltloa ol BJ&
BrotherwbatJlu .,.nefltfWtbepeopteof'.
th• country and wbat doean 't..
ll!KBFOSTER
26 letter from Tom Williams concerning
Murry Cable's article tiUed "Master
Plan Will Quiet the Skies Over John
Wayne Airport."
MURRAY ACCORDING lo Williams.
"the people in Newport Beach who
are opposed to the county's insane ex-
pansion of John Wayne Airport are simp·
ly a social group.''
"People who are able to afford a life in
the Newport Beach area should be the
people who should have to suffer the emo-
tion al disturbance caused by the
airport."
No such statements were made by
Murry.
The problem becomes that when you
mistake facts or misquote people, you put
into jeopardy the whole case. It makes no
difference where the discussion is. clos-
ing or schools, airport expansion or find·
ing anallemaUveairport.
JIM de BOOM
Blame mispbum
To the Editor:
This revision of the Mike Peters car-
toon you published April 19 ls a more
appropriate mi~cUon of attention.
~~~ 111UKl~ '4\510 A~CAHi YeAR -MAIMtD lHOU.Wll>.S ~p ~---
The car la quite frequently uaed u a
weapon, lo nm down victim.a. But it is
the driver that ls blamed, not the car.
Even if the cause la a defective
automobile, the blame wlll be placed on
the people who built it. Now, because of
recent relaxlnt of 1ovemment 1tand·
arda, they can produce even len 11f e
and more polluUq vehicles. However,
death by automobile t1 accepW!d aa
tbou1b death by nature.
I A• NOr .,ainat can. Tblt la Just
an ex.ample to lbow lbe unbalanced
prejudice toward •uni. Five people
mw"dered by a car, UJed u a weapon,
brlnt nowhere near the public outraae
aa one person ahot by a 1un.
When someone ta •hot. when la the
blame pJac«l? On the operalor ol the
1un, u with the operator ol the cu?
No tbl .-.. blamt41 ;4, tor tb1 crimtDal beldDd t.bt cun. oar law 111tem wUI protect bl.m. SUn971,._ . ..,.,1 .. \haa I pereet of
ri.OJtllt c§ime lo the U.S. Will reftlt I.a pro-
aecuttaa. convl~ aod..,......meot.
Nev• mJDd lbe crlmlnall. JUlt 1et
rid of tbe IU1l 8" tVtt"Ytblnt trill be all
•
right, right? No, focus on the proper
subj~ct, the criminal, not the gun. It is
the person behind the gun who is at
fault, just as it is the person behind the
wheel.
RODGER RHINEHART
Remarks dUJtwbing
To the Editor:
While reading the Pilot article con·
ceroing the Mesa truancy sweep (April
29), I became very djsturbed lo find
that some parents were actually "out·
raged" because their child had been
cau1ht away from the school camp'1s. I
commend the Police Department and
those school officials who had the
courage to engage in such an undertak-
ing -after all the kids were breaking
the law.
I would lilte to see the "closed cam·
pus'' rules more strictly enforced lo
keep students on campus during school
hours (unless they have a legitimate ex·
cuse from their parents). I realize not
all kids are using or dealing in drugs
and supporting their habits by breaking
into homes during midday hours, but by
enforcing these laws it may help curtail
the activities or those who are.
JACK BOVAI!lD
A uvrk of art
To the Editor:
1 am writing lo behalf of this beautiful
sculpture that we have seen for the first
tlnte on 16th and Superior in Costa Mesa.
We were astounded at the "eye appeal"
this sculpture has. It is a work of art. It
should be a thing to be aeen and admired
by people far and wide.
So more power to 'Mr. Rouaban for
bringing such a thing of beauty to Coetai
Mesa.
Aren't we lucky?
CAMILLE WALKER
•
111111511
Tbat towertaa pile of 1cr1p iroa on
8'.pertor Avenue in Colt.a Mesa bat an
arU1Uc value equal only lo Bandlnt
Mountain ln L.A • D.11.J. ...... , .. _.._...,..."" .............. ..
MC...nty, .............................. ... ,..,, ... ...,_,.., OOl•r PIWlt. , •
• l
! .. •I
'
c
'
....... ......,... -.--........ --.-·--·-... --·-·--. ---~---~------------------~1911!11'"'-!'~.._.""!m.""~~O--ra_n_g_e_C_o_a_s_t_D~A-IL_Y_P_l_L_OT_/Th~-~-,s~d·ay-.-M-a·y·7-.-1·9-8_1._. ________ ...,.H_/_F._. ..... A_a~ .... ~-
~UffiTI~ Brown endorses Second
• • Justice • • anti-cnme tax
Deaths suspicious?· LOS ANGELES l AP l -Saying Californians
live in "a cUmate or apprehension" because or
violent crime. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has en-
dorsed a quarter-cent sales tax for more prisons
and police.
eyed
SACRAMENTO <AP>
Coronor' s office mum on patients
RIVERSIDE <AP> -The spouses
of some ol the 27 elderly patients
whose deaths are bein& lnvesUaated
by the Riverside County coroner's of·
flee say they are beginning to worry
that their relatives' deaths were sus-
picious.
But county officials continued Wed-
nesday to issue "no comment"
answers to most questions about the
high number or deaths -25 -in the
intensiye care ward at Community
Hospital of the Valleys in Perris dur-
ing March and April.
Two more deaths were being in-
vestigated at San Gorgonio Pass
Hospital in Banning. A third San
Gorgonio death has been eliminated
as unrelated.
SACRAMENTO <AP> There
would once again be a 6 percent sales
lax on candy and chewing gum, un-
der a bill approved by the Assembly
Revenue and Taxation Committee.
1l voled 9·6 Wednesday to send
AB130 by Assemblyman Bill
Lockyer. D-San Leandro. to the Ways
and Means Committee. The blll
would raise $66 million a year for the
state and $17.4 million for local gov·
ernments.
Eviction law stands
SACRAMENTO <AP> -In a de·
feat for elderly groups and mobUe
home owners, a Senate committee
has refused to change a law tell.Ing
mobile home .parks evict old homes
when they are sold.
~Iller push eyed
SAN DIEGO (AP> Claiming
voter rejection or a downtown con-
vention center was a "temporary set·
back," San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
promised future attempts to pass a
similar measure.
"Now we have the opportunity to
come back at it from another direc·
tion. I'm not at this point clear what
direction that will be," Wilson said
Wednesday following the resounding
56.6 percent defeat of the proposal he
supported for six years.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---':.....-~~~
~HARGED -Salinas
Mayor James R .
Woods, charged with
arson and insurance
Craud in connection
with $811,000 fire at
hi s Idaho
agricultural
warehouse, denies
his guilt and says he
will continue cam-
paigning for second
term.
Building saved
LOS ANGELES lAP>
The Garden Court
Apartments were de·
signaled as a cultural
historical monument,
sparing the 62-year-old
structure from destruc·
tion.
In a speech lo a statewide television audience
Wednesday, the Democratic governor abandoned
6"'4l years or opposition to all general tax increases
to endorse the anti-crime levy, which would raise
taxes an average of $500 million annually before
expiring in 10 years.
Brown also said he would call a special elec·
tion Nov. 3 on the proposed anti-crime tax, a move
which would automatically put a referendum on
the Peripheral Canal on the November ballot.
However, in the 15-minute televised speech.
Brown didn't mention the effect his action would
have on the Peripheral Canal referendum, or how
changing the date of the canal vote might help him
out of a political bind.
"That's a separate issue," Brown's press
secretary. Cari Beauchamp, said or the canal re-
ferendum. "Others will accuse him of using the
crime tax election to get the canal vote behind
him, but that was not a consideration behind the
idea or calling this election.
"He has said he may not take a leadership
position In the campaign for the canal. but he has
said he wiU support the mea5ure," she added.
Brown's speech was praised by Democratic
leaders of both the Senate and Assembly, and they
endorsed the tax hike.
But Republicans quickly labeled him a "Jerry-
Come-Lately" to the crime issue and opposed his
tax proposal. Without s upport of at least a rew
lawmakers from the GOP minority, the tax pro·
posal, which requires two-thirds support, cannot
pass either the Senate or Assembly.
Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., who nominated Ap
peals Court Justice Otto
Kaus to the s tate
Supreme Court, will an
nounce a second ap
pointment "very soon,"
says his top aide.
But Gray Davis ,
Brown's chief of staff.
refused to say Wednes
day when the new ap·
pointment would be
Kaus. 61, a 20-year
veteran or the bench,
has served on the 2nd
District Court of Appeal
in Los Angeles s ince
1964 He presides over
one or the court's five
divisions.
Kaus ' appointment
m et with n ea r
unanimous support. with
the legal proresswn and
most politicians describ·
ing him as bright. able
and scholarly, a hard
working moderate with
a strong sen s e of
responsibility.
But the second vacan
cy on the court has left
Brown in political dif-
NOMINATED
Otto Kaus
ficulty arter Samuel
Williams, a $275,000-a -
ye a r black attorney
rrom Los Ange l es,
turned down the gov-
ernor's offer to serve,
<'i ting family
responsibilities. Kaus, who has re-
ferred to himself as hav-
ing a .. Prussian, if you
like. or militaristic
sense of obedience" to
th<' law, was appointed
to the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Superior Court and
the appellate court by
former Gov. Edmund G.
"Pat" Brown.
(hzotife!L
{;Ji/it~
r.======= & llllMTIMCTOM CEMTEI • EXIT IUal ILYI. ======\1
i~A r 14 KT. GOLD CHARMS 1r .f ,~g~~ s2 200 , ... i r 1< ~~~~, s.,.., ... ,,;
.:!:!) {U'f frt~
I
HUMTIMGTOH CEHTIR
HUHTIMGTOH IEACH
192-5501
HARIOR CEMTER
2300 HARIOR. COSTA MESA
545-9485
Come In end see how from
defrosting to oooklr\i3 to reheating,
Litton h•lps lemilies .. t better. Tlk•
home • Llttom Mlcrowev• 1oo.y1
p
Q
~ • 0 ~
d
ROSENTHAL
OPEN STOCK DINNERWARE
SALE 20o/o off
..... ... . . during month of May
,f•lil• ...
> i
The UPPl!f Crust. a new acldrtoo to the famous Ptlitlips' Chicken
POC Pie Shops. IS operwig in Seacllfl V~lage
And the little Upper Crustaceans Who n.in the
plaoe reaHy know hoW IO ltYow a patty And
trvow a Fnsbee
They'I be hOkling a Fnst>ee Contest at
lheW Vrllage Graro Opeong on May 9, com
On Saturday, May 9,
at 11:30 am,
Hundreds of Fl ing
Discs will Invade
Seacliff Village.
plete wttr1 tree FnsbeeS tor everyone ano
prv;es lor the oonleSt wwinen;
In addition 10 the F nstlee Conlest there 'H
be tree pony ndeS. bancJS and a "c:fid<en
pie walk"
So come out to lhe UPI* Crust in Seadill
V~lage and celebrllle tf1el( Gra00 Opening on
Satutday. May 9 lra-n 11 30 lo 3:30
Chooi.e rrom ilny or our 22 patterns. lhe bt>s t china serv1cu from The Upper Crost Grand Opening
and Frisbee Contest. the Buroque Rococo and Art Nouveau eras des igns lhal ha\!~
endured lht-ages around lhe world 1-•••CAJtJ VISA' Ask about our Bridal Re ..... .,.
. . &!fcliff VIiiage
The Center of Attention. For Fun and G•mn.
2205 Main St . Ht.nbnglon Beac:tl. CA 92648 714·~711 Localed at Goidenwesl and Y001town
( l!J::ifi~t•
We invite you to visit the new LeSportsac Shop 1n South Coast Plaza.
You'll love the vast selection of LeSportsac bags and aocessories
including the New"Genera.tion II"transa.tlantic sa.1l cloth Ba.gs.
i.lponaao louUl eout nua
3333 BrUJtiol Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714 6671263
Lelportaac Wutwood
914 Westwood Blvd.
Westwood, OA 90024
213 208-8822
Lelponaao Ian&& Jlonloa
Sant& Monica Place
Seoond Level
2133947027
.... or pl!ON fW ,_...tree tllllafm. .
t A• N Ortinge Coul DAILY PILOTfThureday, May 7, 1981
,, Housing official was
~~·asking for trouble
~
JI ,
Newport Beach elected
leaders took a couple of low
blows last week from the director
of a non-profit housing group.
Eugene Scorio, chief of the
Fair Housing Council of Orange
County, took city counciJ mem·
bers off balance by asking that a
$20,000 allocation be made to his
group.
He failed to mention that his
housing group is suing the city
for alleged housing discrimina·
~ ., ti on. When council members
... pointed this out, he said they
were being "too sensitive."
After council members con· ~ tinued a decision on the request· •( ed allocation, Scorio turned
around and blasted Newport for
what he called "an unspoken"
.... racial bias.
t< He said Newport is known as .. ,
11
the "Rhodesia of Oranae
County'' ln falrhou.sinsdrctes.
The languaae and approach
are hardly in place from a person
asking for $20,000.
However, the housing chief
made some valid points. Accord·
ing to new state law, Newport
must update llS hou&ina policies
and provide an independent
service to monitor houainc ques·
lions.
Scorio points out that his
group could do it for $20,000. He
claims it would cost the city up to
$100,000 to set up an operation on
its own.
So why didn't the fair hOWI·
ing director simply say that and
leave his insults at home? Also, it
is understandable that local
leaders would have trouble fund·
ing an organization that is suing
the city .
~:: ScboQl closure study ..
Early this year , Newport·
Me sa S c hool Dis tric t ad · ~1 ministrators predicted that up to
; eight schools mus t be closed
down within the next five years.
Already, the school board has
ordered two sc ools closed this
coming June.
,,
)f •
Last week trustees approved
a new 50-member committee to
formulate program and housing
recomme ndations for school
operations with anticipated tough
financial constraints over the
next five years.
That committee, composed of
educators, students, parents and
other residents of Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach, will hold its
first public meeting May 20 at
7 :30 p.m. in Sims Hall, Newport
Harbor Hi gh School.
The job will be a tough one.
Trustees already have drawn
• . . criticism for considering plans to
house middle-school students on
f\• the district's four high school
campuses.
And they shook up Costa
Mesa when computer studies in·
dicated the board was consider-
ing closing down Costa Meaa
High School in years ahead.
That study waa a rehearsal
for what can be done, ad· ministrators quickly pointed
out. They hasUly assured that no
plan is being considered for clos·
ing any high school at this point.
But schools must be closed, of·
ficials explain, as student popula-
tion continues to decline by about
1,000 annually and state money aJ.
locations are watched more
closely.
The new committee, official·
ly called the Educational •
Resources Advisory Committee,
has some tough a nd emotional
decisions to reach over the next
six to 12 months before making
its report to the school board.
· The communities owe it to
themselves and the committee to
offer all the help and Ideas they
can muster.
..... Bay kudos earned
As hard as some may find it
•• to believe, it appears that prog·
:; ress has been ~de in the effort
~ to clean up the siJt .. clogged Upper
~ Newport Bay. ,
~ Officials in Newport Beach,
... with help from county and state e leaders, have put together a $4
~ million cleanup package.
· Unless Gov. Edmund Brown ~ Jr. takes a sudden detour on his
announced thinking, much of the
money that is to come from the
" state budget should be available
" this year.
While the cleanup project,
which calls for a partial dredging
of the bay and a deepening of the
main waterway to the bay, will
•
certainly not restore the area. it
is a good start.
Several perSOM deserve tipe
of the hat for their efforts and
stubbornness in pulling the $4
million package together.
County Supervisor Thomaa
Ril ey a nd Newport AS ·
semblywoman Marian Bergeson
worked hard on the plan.
But the best arm-twter was
prob•bly Newport Mayor .Jaekie
Heather with her "Mud Sale" in
the Upper Bay and her frequent
lobbying missions to Sacramento.
Now if only Gov. Brown
doesn't pull one of his last-minute
flip-flops, helpwtJJ be on the way.
• Opinions expressed in the space above artt thOse of the Dally PlloC. Other views H ·
pressed on this page are thOse of their authOf's and artists. llte.-r comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mew, CA •2'. PhOne (7W 642-4321.
· LM. Boyd/Name clwice1
In New York City, more 32-year·
~ ~~nw:;,e~tf:::r mt~~kne~~~e0:t ~~:
L. in that age bracket, in order, come
[: Mary, Barbara, Patr\cia, Susan,
rr. Kathleen, Carol, Nancy, Margaret
and Diane. Compare these to the
most popular names among 8-year· 1 old girls there: Jennifer, Michelle,
Lisa, Elizabeth, Christine, Maria,
• Nicole, Kimberly. Denise and Amy.
It's remarkable, I thlnk. that i.n just
24 years -about one gene(aUon -
none of the t.op-10 preferred names in
,. the lint group overlap with the top-10
ln the second group.
Many a tribe in by1one centuries
• endowed one member, the tribal hi•·
tortan, with the sole cbore ol remem·
berlnc ev«)'thiD8 that bappened to
the group. Thls job la said to have
• been the one occupation more than
any other which required the best
memory. Maybe so. But another can·
dldate for beat-memory won in r-e-
cent times wa1 that of San Fran·
clsco'1 Chinatown telephone
operaton in the early 19309. PbGne
numbers weren't uaed there then
Only names. Those alrl• on tbe
ORANGE COAST lailyPitat
switchboards had to be able to recall
them all.
Amoq those aoula who take sit-
down baths instead of st.owen, three
out of 20 rea• in the tub, U.. 1ur·
veyta.ken report. Why do you 1up·
pose lboee surveytat•n would ask a
thln1 like that T
Claim la that ID09t '11 Che aip)fl·
cant inventions ol mu ate (llt.l&Miou
. of nature. May M aometlllinf w t.bat.
Wasps chew up wood to •U. .. eel.
ed nests. The Frenctt aet.tbt AD·
toine de Reaumur in tht tarb 1700t
watched tboee wa.,. at ~. _.
came up wlth lllt first ••Y t•
manufact-.re Jal*' oat fl .... ,..,.
How many ol t.beH lllrttlat ldlM, la·
splred by natural ..._..., cu
you remember? A do1en WW dD.
Q. What doet a 100eJ..,..38t1« tor
breakfast!
A. About 50 .,....-ti ,.,, ftve
loaves of .bread aDd 11 ,._.. fJI car·
rota. Somet\mee a few ....... Pim
wlllow clJppln11 to cbtw ... Or
browse alder. WllateYW'• IMlildJ.
ThotMI P. M•ley
Pub II sher
Thomas K•vlt
EdltM
.. ,.., •• NtMC.
Edltorl .. "-UMW
: .. ;
Mafia regains dope control
W ASlUNGTON -A llDuae coanllll·
tee bas been seeklna informatk>e -and
headlines -by investiaaliq drut uae
by }{ollywood celebrities. Tile coa·
gressmen might better apend their d ·
forts lookin1 into U.e huse l.nfiux of
heroin that the Malla is pouring into the
East Coast.
Until recenUy, u.e Mob had ke,t a
low profile, after the ~ caused
by the notorious "French Cormeet.ioll"
and the non-Mafia competition from
Asia. But now tile sltuatJoa .._chanced
-back to the old Sicilian route for im·
portal.ion of bard dru11 into tbe Unlt~
States. The dope ls funneled from
Southwest Asia into this cOUblJ'y by way
of Sicily.
"In the early 1170s, we dkl.D't see tile
broad·based involvement of all the
(Maria) famlliea," the FBI'• or1anized·
crime bo6s, Sean McWeeoey, told my
associate Tony Capaccio. "Now they're
into it up to their ears," he said.
Accord.in& to a secret Drug Enforce·
ment Administration report, all five
Mafia crime families in the New Yerk
area are involved i.n the heroin traffic
that used to be the almoat exclusive
province of the Vito Genovese and
Thomas Lucchese families.
"U.S. BU'YEas of heroin are pre·
dominantly llaUan·Americana in the
New York City area wbo in tura supply
various distribution networks alont the
East Coast," states the DEA report.
Two of four Sicilian groups identified by
DEA and Justice Department in·
telligence operatiOfts -the Baao1amen-
tl and Sca.tuto factions -are connected
G. -Jar-1-1111_•_• -~
by marria1e to several New York crime
families.
The bi11eat bust involving organized
crime was the seizure of 40.6 kilograms
of herein i.n Milan, Italy. on March 31.
1980. The shipment, which bad a street
value ol $10 million, was on its way to
the United States. Among those arrest·
ed on this side of the ocean were two
cousins of the late crime boss Carlo
Gambino and reputed Mob figure
Emanuele Adamita.
The Sicilians provide the processing
expertise for t he Southwest Asian
opium; their crime brothers in this
country lake care or distribution. As the
secret DEA report n~. "Several or·
ganlzed crime members trafficking in
heroin between Sicily and the U.S. are
some of the same individuals who were
involved i.n the heroin traffic of the
1980s md early 1970s."
More than SO kilograms of heroin
have been seized at Kennedy In·
ternational Airport in New York since
December 1977 . ·'This heroin was under
the control of United States and Italian
organized crime figures." the DEA re-
port states.
One or those arrested last year in con·
nection with three heroln·conversion
laboratories in Milan and San Remo.
Ita ly, was J ean J ehan. He is familiar to
American movie and television au-
diences as the "Silver Fox" who
escaped when the French Connection
was broken.
The re8urgence of Mafia control over
the drug trade is a result quite simply
of the enormous profit involved. The
Mob has been able to recoup after the
imprisonment of many Mafiosi for dope
trafficking in the mid·I970s. Tbe family
ties between Sicily and the United
States were crucial in re-establishing
the drug trade and regaining control
from freelancers.
SATURDAY NIGHT DEAD: ln the af·
termath of the assassination attempt on
rresident Reagan, a1 least 10 bills have
been introduced in Congress to plug the
loophole in the 1968 Handgun Control
Act that allows unfettered importation
or pistol parts for assembly in this coun·
try as Saturday Night Specials.
Incredibly. the government en-
couraged the production of cheap
handguns a few years ago when it quiet·
ly lowered the tariff on imported gun
parts.
Mesa art controversy sparks debate
To the F.ditor:
If All Roushan 1ees to jail for h1a
artistic belief• ud faith la tlle Comutu·
lion, Costa Mesans be~r be prepared
for a wave ol publlt reaetMn atrou Ulis
state and country.
The cultural commisaan on tbe City
MAILIOX
Council will have 1tood GP Md hollered
to the world that here la Ora.qe County,
in 1981, an artist who creates Md db·
plays works without prior ioventment
·approval will be harasaed, intimidated,
coerced and eveitt•ally jalled.
In the Soviet Un.ioa an a!1i9t who dis·
plays his work without iO'ftftllllal ap·
proval is Jailed; in Costa Men an artist
who di.splays his work wltbout •overn·
ment approval 11 jaUed! Liberty la
mocked, justice abuse• and Co1ta
Mesans irow sleek in real estate
speculation. Sllante on us all. A com·
munity day of mournla1 allould be
declared.
l .P. PALMER
JJ1lo be~fiu ,,..,,
To tbe Editor:
1 notice that oa ta• A•ril 21 Dallt Pilot
there'• an article UtlM "Pteue ht Oa
Federal Boeklet," .un.:t ~ t.
Mc>llletl aucb aa •• ue 1a......,, 11nllcb, etc., u ~ .,.....,.. l"WD·
men\ HpeeHS.1 •aote fl'Olll Ule arUele, ·.:d.1.111na thele dlllcah «....ao u ...
we carmot lftord t. wute Unte _.
money on adlvities ta• U¥t tlmlted
benefita totbtpeopte.rth" ~."
OP oovu•"' wboM ...--u.at
Mneftt 11 Uaated, I tlcl't ....... la
"Stuf;y Un~" lt • .,. .. -..n
dmlnbtrati• Ma co••...._. a
•tudJolU.. ........ ., ...... llltl
leadl., Pf"tlee1 bvt ••eovaaM
1oclalltt JOftftlmftta at U.. .,..... ol
prlv ateenterprile.
It eeenw lf'Gllk t.ll*t-. .-.:, fa,..._.
bl• ud ~ba. te tM aw1&• •· mllli1tratlon Md Mil ..,....,.. .._. .._.
otbenan .. ~ ....... ..._
tttete ~-........ , .....,. '"''* .............. 1 .,. ..
Nit ol • la ~ inll tr•••· fJI .. Bi"oUMi'What Ila bfNft.t ,_tllt ,...."'J. t.bec~..Swktl.,_.'t.·
... ftJel' ••
26 letter from Tom WUllams concerning
Murry Cable'• article titled "Master
Plan Will Quiet the Sides Over John
Wayne Airport."
MU&llAY ACCO&DING to Williams:
"the people In Newport Beach who
are opp«»ed to the county's insane ex·
panalon of John Wayne Airport are simp·
ly a social group."
"People who are able to afford a life in
the Newport Beach area should be the
people who should have to suffer the emo·
tional disturbance caused by the
airport."
No such statements were made by
Murry.
The problem becomes that when you
mistake facta or misquote people, you put
into Jeopardy the whole case. It makes no
difference where the discussion Is. clos·
i.na of tcboola, airport expansion or find·
ing an altem.ative airport.
JIM de BOOM
Blante ,,.U,pl,aood
To the Ed.it.or:
This revbloa of th• Mike Peters car·
toea ,_ 1M1bliabed April 19 la a more
app?Ofl'late .u.cllrectfon of attention.
~~ lJU.llOUtP 4\SIO AUl'RIC~. YeAA WT MAl~D nlOUJAllOS NJP il\··-
ne ear ll 4ulte frequeatly uaed u a
weapclll, to tun clown vlctlma. But it ii
U.t mi.er that la blamtd, not the car.
Svta K tile ca"'e lt a defective aa.._otl ... U.. blame wW be placed oo
tile MOiie wtlM> kilt lt. Now, because ol
rec9•t telaatna ol aovemment stand· ara, t.lley e• produce even lea sale
· ancl _.. ........... veMclel. Howe.er, •••_. '1 -.0.ok.le ll accepted 11
tholl .. ._...~utwe.
I A• M9r .,.._t can. 'n.la la j\19l
an •••uh ...... the • ....._..
•r•j.tlte '9WU'd IUDI. Flvt people .,...,.... by a car, UMd M a n1poe,
brta1 •••re ... , the public outr•I• u ... ,.._shot by a l\lft .
W'-... _. ll ahot, wlMre la the
blame plaeed? Ola t.M operator of the
pn, • wttb ta.. operator fJI tM car?
................... 1 Aa ,_ U.. crlmlaal beblad t.be pa, • ., law n•t•• wtll ,roteet blm. .......,. .... a.t a.i a.. I ,.,._.t OI n-. ... la&MU.1 • .W.....atlapro-
wwt•,-•llUlia.W ..........
Nfttr ..-. die citlalDllll. IUll tel i'M _, .. .-..s n~ wlU be a1J
right, right? No, focus on the proper
subject, the criminal, not the gun. It is
the person behind the gun who is al
fault, just as it is the person behind the
wheel.
RODGER RHINEHART
To the Editor:
While reading the Pilot article con·
cern.ing the Mesa truancy s weep (April
29), I became very disturbed to fand
that some parents were actually "out·
raged" because their child had been
caught away from the school camp\11. I
commend the Police Department and
those school o((icials who had the
courage lo engage in such an widerlak·
ing after all the kids were breaking
the law.
I would like lo see the "closed cam·
pus" rules more strictly enforced to
keep students on campus during school
hours (unless they have a legltimat.e ex·
-cuse from their parents). I realize not
all kids are using or dealing in drugs
and supporting their habits by brealtillg
into h9mes during midday hours, but by
enforcing these laws it may help curtail
the activities of those who are.
JACK BOVA I RD
.4 trork of art
To the Ed.it.or:
I am writing lo behalf of this beauWul
sculpture that we have seen for the first
ume on 18th and Superior in Costa Mesa.
We were utounded at the "eye appeal"
this sculpture has. lt is a work of art. It
should be a thing to be seen and admired
by people far and wide.
So more power to Mr. Rouaban for
brin1l.ng such a thing or beauty to Colla
Mesa.
Aren't we lucky?
CAMILLE W ALICER
;fbet lbWerinl ptle of 1enp Iran •
hpertor Avenu. la COila ..... Ila an
arll1tlc value equal _., to Band.int
Kount.atn In L.A. D.K.J.
·---
·,
...
• .
I "
S••n Nol '° [ !>Iii (IOM (l'Q
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Thursday, May 7, 1981 N
Dow Jones Final
UP 5.05 .
CLOSING 978.39
Johnson & Johnson I J &J > sells a lot of products to
women: contraceptives of all kinda. a raft of baby-care
items (in case the contraceptives didn't work>. tam·
pons and sanitary napkins.
But il never saw fit to place a woman on its board of
directors until now. Ann Dibble Cook, director of the
socia l service department at the University of
Chicago's Lyang·ln flospital. bas just been named a
J&J director.
The president of the University of Chicago, Hanna
H. Gray, already has a seat on one of the most influen-
tial corporate boards in the nation· J P Morgan & Co.,
operator of Morgan Guaranty Trust.
No one holds and votes more stock. And that's not
her orfly corporate directorship. She's also a member of
the board of Cummins Engine, the diesel engine
manufacturer.
Polaroid, the instant camera maker, put a woman
on its board for the first time a couple of wet>ks ago. She
1s Yen-Tsai Feog, chief librarian al Harvard
Another , University. ~
company that ~; ~
decided re~ent· '1 ~,
ly to admit a 4'-~ woman to the -=--·~ ....... ._ _____ _
~fr~:i~rs ~! ~ot! lllTll lllllWIJZ
Chemical .
Barbara Hackman Franklin now sits on Dnw·s board.
She was formerly a com missioner of the U.S. Consumer
ProductsSafetyCommission.
WHAT'S GOING ON here is a continuation of a
trend (hat began in the early 1970s. Prior to that time.
the board of direc.-tors was an all-male preserve The
board, it should be pointed out, is a policy-making body,
it doesn't so much run the company as sit an judgment.
approving or disapproving what the paid managers do.
So what was in place previously was men judging
men. That's still pretty much the case. except that now
there's an occasional female voice lo temper the male
chorus.
How far has this women's movement gotten in the
business world? According to a recent count done by
Catalyst, a New York women's organization. this was
the picture among the nation's 1,300 largest companies:
324 women held 464 directorships on the boards of 381
companies. In short, it's getting to the point where near-
ly one out of every three companies has at least one
worn an director.
THJS PENETRATION was corroborated by a new
study, ··women Directors on Corporate Boards," done
at the business school of the University of Texas at
Oall89. The Texas researchers looked at 491 big cor·
porations and round that 168 of them had at least one
woman director.
ONE FEATURE THAT'S clear from the Texas
. ~tudy is that the larger the company the more likely it is
lo have a woman director. Thus, among the 100 largest
corporations. about half have women directors: this
percentage decreases as you go down in size.
At any rate, men certainly don't have to worry
about being outvoted. The 491 companies examined by
the University of Texas researchers had a total of 6,224
board seats, of which 3 percent were filled by women
That may be s mall bulitls up SO percent since 1977.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
AMERICAN LEADERS
METALS
c-u-1 ,..,., • "°"""· u.~. ""1'-uona.
UM•c..fttsepol#ICI
ZllOC 'l\4 cefllS e paund, 0.llY•l'M.
Tl• $6.412 Mel.,I -CMljlellllt I ..
Al-i-1' c .. 11 • -"'• N. Y. IMttwY '4211.00 per fl•lll.
~l•ti-..$olS7.00trova .• N.Y.
SILVER
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, May 7, 1981 FEATURES
Thoroughbred lady's dream coming true
By ELLEN B•ANDT ._. ....... Dellr ......
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thia ii tM /irlt itt o wme o/
1torW1 IM Dalli/ Pi&ot w.U publUh oboul tntneetmg
Col•fomJa ~.
In America, nearly> all little gtrla love horses.
They cry over "Black Beauty," thrill at marching
horses in parades. and triumph with Elizabeth
Taylor in "National Velvet."
But one little girl did more t.han dream. She
rode and cared for horses u a child, studied them
in pre-vet college classes, and finally went to work
at a major American racetrack.
Today, Kathleen Nelson is the leading woman
trainer at Santa Anita Racetrack in Arcadia and
also races horses at Hollywood Park ln Inglewood.
Her Nelson Racing Stable, colon blue and whlte,
is still a small one, but growtn1 rapidly, as
thoroughbred owners hear about Kathy's way with
horses an~ increasing record of success.
Ms. Nelson, 31, a lean, athletic-looking
woman, with long black hair and a soft, throaty
voice, does not come from a racinJ family. But
many residents own horses in her home town, the
Los Angeles suburb of San Dimas. Ms. Nelson
learned to ride when she was six or seven, and her
parents gave her a donkey to raise one Christmas.
A neighbor, who owned several quarterhorses, let
young Kathy groom and exercise them and also
encouraged her to attend horse shows.
Ms. Nelson thought of becoming a veterinarian
and attended California State Polytechnic
University in Pomona as a pre-vet major.
But one afternoon, she chanced to watch a
television program from Santa Anita and heard
morning workouts al the track were open to the
public. Ms . Nelson attended a workout; saw girls
galloping horses; became intrigued; made in·
quiries. At 20 • .she was hired for her first racetrack
job.
Kathy Nelson describes a racetrack as a strict
hierarchy. A potential trainer must endure a long
and hard apprenticeship.
"You have to start al the bottom," she says.
"In racing. there's no substitute for experience
California uvman
and hard work."
Ms. Nelson's first job wu as a "bot walker,"
helping cool horses off after workout.. In a few
months, she graduated to exercise eirl, actuall>
gallopm, horses during workout periods.
After about a year, ln urn, trainer Joe Dunn.
impressed with Ms. Nelson's ability, hired her as
his assistant and helped her prepare for her
trainer's license.
The California licensing exam ia a rt1oroua
oral grilling with more than three hundred ques-
tions. Potential trainers must demonatrate an ex-
cellent knowledge of such subject.a as equine
anatomy, diseases and medication, and racin1 re-
gulations. Ms. Nelson passed with flying colors, received
he r license, and worked as Dunn's aasistant
trainer for almost four years. ln late 1976, ·she
started to train on her own.
Her first client was a Washington state shop·
ping-center owner with four horses, two of which
started winning races almost immediately.
"I started off with a big bang," she laughs.
Present clients include two real estate brokers, a
plastic surgeon, and a podiatrist. Ms. Nelson
herself owns shares in three of the horses she
trains. She also recently purchased a brood mare.
Ms Nelson describes training thoroughbreds
as a tremendously demanding job. "You couldn't
do it if you weren't dedicated!"
Her typical day begins at 4 a.m. with the drive
in from her Monrovia apartment. Between 5 and
11 In the morning, she must see that her horses are
fed, groomed, inspected and exercised.
After about a ,Year, in 1972, trainer Joe Dunn,
nap, Ms. Nelson returns to her stable for afternoon
feeding and stall cleaning. She leaves the track at
4 or 5 in the afternoon.
About 7 p.m., clients start calling her home.
Horse owners, particularly new ones, are anxious
Alt.houlh some horses can be trained in aa lit-
tle as 90 days, it taltea five or six montha to brin1
the average horse up to raclne form. The tratnln1
re1imen begins with simple 1atlopin1 to develop
stamina. Later, a horse can be "breezed " or
worked out at racing speeds. gradually bullcihit up
to the dhtance at which it will be raced.
Kathy Nelson believes one of the main lhlnJ•
that separate5 a good trainer from a mediocre one
is a comprehensive knowledae of the physical con-
ditions of horses. In this reeard, her pre-
veterinary studies evidently have served her well.
"It's very important to recognize lea problems
before they're too far advanced," she cautions. "ll
you don 't stay on top of a minor ailment, lt can de-
velop into a major problem rapidly."
Ms. Nelson also feels it's important to treat
horses kindly, to make sure the atmosptlttre in
which they train is a pleasant one. Because even
more than people, horses are prone to
psychosomatic illness. Her favorite quote: "A hap-
py horse runs better than an wihappy one."
"Actually," she says, "I've gotten some teas-
ing about this' belief. There are some fellows at the
track who gleefully shout whenever l ride by,
'There goes the Happy Horse Trainer!'-"
Ms . Nelson thinks many women have a special
ability to transmit kindness and calm to the horses
In their care. And she's a strong supporter of
bringing more women into racing.
In fact, Ms. Nelson's groom and her exercise
person are female, making Nelson Racing Stable
possibly the first all-female stable in American
racing.
But Nelson feels being a woman may binder
her somewhat in attracting clients. "Some people
still just won 't entrust their horses to a woman."
But Kathy Nelson is optimistic about her
future. A solidly skilled, well-prepared trainer can
. . . take advantage of attendant publicity when a spec-Kathleen Nelson with 3-year-old fiUy Court Disaste~. tacular horse comes under his care. One or two
well·known horses can "make" a trainer's career.
about their horses' progress. Ms. Nelson typically "ln another five to ten years," says this
mus t spend t wo hours every evening on the thoroughbred lady, "I'm going to be a major
telephone reassuring clients about their "babies." trainer ...
Neatness not trademark of lost generation
You may not sleep tonight after I tell you this,
but it's something you have to know.
For 16 years , l have conducted an informal
survey among parents that requires a simple
answer to a simple question: "Does your son or
daughter pick up anything besides a fork?"
ERMA IUlllCI cc•
Some parents bttame quite violent. Two had
to be sedated. A dozen or so reminded me they had
served in the war. And here's the scary part. Of
• those queried, not one parent had a child who found
tidineua way of life.
society a generation of kids who think self-cleaning
bathrooms have already been invented.
Whal most parents fear is that they will be
considered incompetent for not leaching cleanli-
ness. This simply is not true. My own children
come from a good family. I use soap when 1 do the
dishes. I don't wear a shirt the fourth day by turn-
ing it wrong-side out. I do not store Slushee cups
Somewhere between boiling the pacifier and
buying black towels, we lost 'em. I don't knnw.
where we failed, but we have unleashed upon
want to tr.tde .. in on ~ neYllJr ~I?
Use a Daily Pilot
Penny Pincher Ad
to sell items under
$100.
3 Ii r\es for 2 days
only $1.50 a day.
Sorry, no com-
merdal ads
allowed. Charge
your Penny
Pincher
Ad or use your
Visa or Master
Card.
I
Call Classified
Advertising at
642-5678 to
place your ad.
Mother's Day
Sale
Bm1et Pl'ICI~
Microwave Oven MICRO·THERMOMETE~EMPERATURE
CO NTROL-TAKES THE GUESSWORK OUT
OF COOKING!
Cook by
time or by
tempenture
with Micro-
Thermomttlf
temp. probe
11M110 min-
ute tlmw
• J 'ower l1nls
• llldv4es Mierow.vi
Guidi •IHI Cookbook
Jet 89
Ool!wd
&Hiii -....1.-
~~ M.,,..,.. Ol>tt
~-142-5596
TWQ..DAY
TimmlRY
JiW.MOUNI'
EVENT
IN OUR
S10RE
YOU ARE INVITED
10 attend en uaptional two-elev
One ,._Irv remount iloow. O..r
CUSTOM DESlCNBR will work doeely
with you In devel09ina your own unique daltn when you
c.._ • mounllna from our colkcllon ol hundmlt.
You wlll ~able to W9kh -MAfl1!R CRAFTSMAN
Mt v-r d~. pndou• 1tonn Of colm '"-i •~that la
aatird ..peclelly (or you. Then wUI M "° oua chatet for the
.-.. cw labor when vou wkct • -ntlna durint ttw dey ol IM.tpKWcYtnt.
You ..-•1 want to mw 11!11 loldm opponunlry 10 -the
OneM qwillry Ind moet ~1wlv•vi.d MelUnll .. coUecdon In
1oday'1 marke1pla.ce.
Set your .ppoUiunmt ~!
FTidQy, M~ 8th
and Saturday., M~ 9tlt.
@ II. "'*-"'tnllt for -60"""'" dl:Wl:LS by JOSl:Pll
Located et So\uh l-:0.tt Pl1111 In Cotti Me11. Mon major
credit Clfde end ~ honoftid, Tckphone (714) S10-9066.
'
RUFFELL1S
UPHOLSTERY
s.. • .,.... .........
I '22 HAHOI ILYD.
COSTA MISA-14a.l 116
under the gas pedal. I do not sleep on pillows that
have no cases on them, nor do I drink milk out of
the carton. When I saw my son's locker, didn't 1
pass out? ' ,
Some naive little fool~ think low-quality air is
the fault of too many automobiles and industries.
Think about it. We started to note pollution the
year this generation found out they had Jock s on
their bedroom doors
I r esent people thinking that slovenliness
comes from a mother who was too busy to teach or·
ganization. When my first-born was just a toddler.
before I would let her at the table, I'd say. "Did you
SEHIOR CITIZENS
SP'ECIAL
25°/o OFF •LL s1av1c1
MIMI., TMa .• Wed. Otlty
HAIR
HANDLERS ---.. ., .....
wash your hands and face?" I never got an answer.
Just a 24-inch tongue that came out of the mouth and
like a street cleaner made a path, bordered on the
north by a nose, east and west by cheeks and on t.he
south by a chin.
I lost ground every day after that.
I hate to go whining to the government every
lim e there Is a problem, but perhaps a Child Neat·
ness Agency could be established to set up some
health standards.
Yes, the rea~ problem today is not the threat of
UFOs bringing alien people from another planet to
earth. It's how are we going to find them in all thls
mess after they've landed.
COMSIGM DESIGN
EY~ k•M•d• or .._.reftetl
........... t ~,._,
2043-dl" Dr ..... 102..........., ...... .......
See how white sizzles
in a sexy show-stopping pump.
Embroidered bag, 5.99. We're so affordable.
23.99
45 FASHON ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH