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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-11 - Orange Coast Pilot' ' I' IUICl ·C M ON[)AY MAY 11 !'IHI "'""' ..... UP, UP AND AWAY -An F·l4A Tomcat goes into full af· terburner as it climbs out following a maneuver at the ·Naval Air Station in South Weymouth. Mass. The twin· engine supersonic fighter was participating in a recruit· ment drive for naval pilots. .. .. * * * • * * YDIR 11111111 DlllY PAPIR OHANGE COUN TY C ALIFORN IA 25 CENTS Valley hugged by flies Residents say sewage plant. spawns pests: filed lawsuit A group of Fountain Valley re· sidents is claiming It Is bugged -by "many million, perhaps billions" of mes around the Orange County SaJ}itation Dis· tricts sewage treatment plant. In a class action lawsuit filed in Orange County Superior CQurt, the residents claim they have been victims of disease, lowered property values and dis· turbances to their living pat· terns as a result of flies. ·'The flies fly over practically everything in the house in their desperate search for whatever flies search for," Santa Ana at· torney Robert Sasso'ne said in the lawsuit filed Friday. "It is impossible to catch all or the flies. ·•Because of their breeding place, these flies are excep· tionally dirty and germ carry. ing," the attorney said. Sassone estimated that as many as 100 mes could be found in any house al any given time in the one.mile radius s urround· ing the plant at 10844 Ellis Ave. According to the lawsuit, the flies began breeding in July. 1980 when plant operations were altered during a maintenance project. At that time, sludge - "human manure" as Sassone termed it -was neither proper. ly treated nor covered," Sassone alleged. He said the fly infestation con· linued for about six weeks. But Sassone said a court order s hould be issued to prevent future fly infest~lions . In the lawsuit. the residents also complain or odo rs or "human manure" and chlorine and release of obemicals into the air, and noise. One hundred fort y -four persons are named as plaintiffs in the action. Sassone said, however, the more than 10,000 people Live within the one·mile radius of the plant. Also named as defendants in the lengthy action are the cities of Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach and Santa <See FLIES, Page AZ> Navy getting his goat Trapper stopped in bid to take-animals from island SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND (AP> -Trapper Jim Clapp says he's furious because the Navy has stopped him from going into the southern tip of San Clemente Island to get the last 100 or 150 wild goats. ln 10 months Clapp has re· moved 5,000 goats in a court· ordered alternative to killing the goats because they damage the environment. including valuable, endangered species of plants. The Navy had planned to land riflemen to shoot the goats until the U.S. District Court in Los "IT we· re not allowed down Angeles stepped in. there because it ·s too dangerous, Clapp had sent ashore barges of then Navy riflemen can't shoot goats regularly, but the Navy said the m down there because it's loo the south end of the island is lit-dangerous," Clapp said. "If we tered with dangerous unexploded don't get the last eoat, we haven't shells. done a damn thing." "We don't want to see a human The goats are believed to be being lose his lite over a couple of descendants of Anda I usi an goats goats," a Navy spokes man said. left on the island by Spanish Clapp said two of his men have soldiers 200 years ago So rar suffered broken legs but he insist· Clapp has shipped 344 to the Black ed in a telephone interview Sun-Beauty Ranch ope rated by the day: ''We're out here for a total Fund for the Animals at Tyler, 1 removal program.·· ~ Texas. Others have been sold. Israel t~lls Syri~ to 'hack off' Crash victim pushes drunken driving cUrlJs By .JOHN NEEDHAM °' .. ~,,_, ... It has been about four months since a driver ran head·on lnto Linda and Carlos Schmidt's car on Coast HJghway in Corona del Mar as they were returning home at night from a movie. Since the accident, they say the deluge of medical bills near· ly caused them to lose their new- ly purchased house in Laguna Beach. and their insurance will cover only half the cost of buy· ing a new car. Mrs. Sclimidt, a nurse at the mental health unit at South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna, suffered two fractured vertebrae, which required sur· gery, and temporarily Jost the sight in her right eye. Her husband, an emergency room physician at San Clemente General Hospital, was diagnosed as having a brain tumor two months after the. Jan. 18 acci· dent, and underwent 13 hours of surgery. Schmidt is now recuperating from the operation, but says there is no way to prove the tumor was caused by the acci- dent. After the surgery. he says he was left with permanent and total hearing loss in his right ear. (See DRUNKS, Page AZ> hi'l~ .... ..... ~ CAGEY COMPANIONS -Danny Zook. 2. of Saratoga, Calif., and his golden retriever Shandy, also 2, get plenty of second looks from spectators at the Del Monte Kennel Club dog show in Pebble Beach. Danny shares cage when Shandy isn't performing. Belfast a 'powder keg' IRA guerrilla campaign to avenge death of Sands feared BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP> -Gunmen ambushed a cash·laden mall truck in Catholic West Belfast today, wounding two British soldiers escorting it. The attack and a weekend bombing at an oil terminal that Queen Elizabeth was vlsitln& heightened fears that IRA guer· rillas had begun a campaip to avenge the death of -unger striker Bobby Sands. The mall truck was dellvering money to the Wbiterock post of· flee in West Belfast when the aunmen opened fire from a house across the street, a police spokesman said. Soldiers jumped from their armored personnel carrier and two were shot down, he said. Tbelr condJ. tlons were not Immediately known. The ambushers apparently made no attempt to steal the money, police reported. Troope and police fanned out to search for the 1unmen 11 Roman Catholic youn1sters and women blew whistles -the tradlUonal wamlq slanal that security forces are on a sweep. Mall trucks are re1ularly escorted to the Wbiterock faclll· ty, tartet of previous raids by auerrlllas of the lrhh Republican Army 1eeldna tunda for their campal1n to end Brlt.lab rule in Northern Irela-1. The oU wmlD&l explotlon oc· curred as Queen Elizabeth II was opening the Sullum Voe North Sea facility in the Shetland Islands north· of Scotland, police said Sunday. The IRA's "Provisional" wing claimed it had planted a device there shortly before It went off, they said. \ The British monarch, her husband Princ e Philip , Norwegian King Olav V and about 700 guests at the opening ceremony were about a quarter· mile away from the bomb, which exploded at midday Saturday. Police said the blast damaged the terminal's power station but caused no casualties. Officials said the explosion may have been aimed at the queen in reprisal for Sands' death Tuesday. Suef er corwicted in spear incident . VISTA (AP) -A Superior Court jury bas convicted a Carlsbad surfer of assault with a deadly weapon for alleged· ly uaiq bis surfboard against a surf er riding a wave in front ol him in January. Stnen J . Cram is awaiting sentencing next month after his conviction for assault on Larry Richards, also of Carlsbad. Cram wu accused of using his surfboard as a spear and 1trlldD1 Rlcharda in the back of the bead. resultlnir in " gHh requlrina five stitches to close. Deputy Dl.strict Attorney Steve Anear said the victim contended Cram told him he "would spear anyone who 1ot in front ol him." "There la a terrltorlal attitude developlns on the beach,'' Anear Hld. "That wu one premlle of the trial." Richards contended be wu uaaultecf because bo dJd not refUlarly aurf at the •po\ where the incldent occurred. Missiles threaten new war JERUSALEM <AP> Prime Minister · Menachem Begin ap- pealed today to Syrian President Hafez Assad .. to retreat from the brink" and r emove from Lebanon the ground-to·air mis· siles that threaten the Middle East with war Begin disclosed in a policy speech to Partiament that he had ordered his armed forces to knock out the missiles 11 days ago but canceled the operation. first because of bad weather and then because the United States asked for time to solve the crisis peacefully. Begin spoke s hortly before meeting with U.S. special envoy Philip C. Habib who arrived from Damascus in an attempt to negotiate a diplomatic end to the standoff. "Syrian Pres ident Mr. As · sad." Be~in said ... rescind yottf' action. It will in no way dis· honor you. We don't want your dishonor. It will bt! to your honor, for you will be servin'a the peace. . "Retreat from the brink," he urged Assad. "Remove the mis- s iles . . . And humanity wiJl breathe a sigh of relief." Earlier. Begin told a cheering crowd that the air force is ready to act if Syrians do not withdraw their missiles from Lebanon. ··And when our air force goes to work, it gets results," the Israeli prime minister said Sun· day in his first explicit promise to take military steps if diplomacy fails to budge the Syrian anti·aircraft missiles from eastern Lebanon. Habib n ew to Israel today from Damascus, where he saw Syrian leaders Sunday. After the meetings, the official Syrian <See MIDEAST, Page AZ> DRlllil CBIST lllTHIR Low clouds and local fog night and morning houl'I with mostly sunny after- noons through Tuesday. Highs In upper 60s at the beaches to upper 70s In· • land. Lows toni&bl 54 to 60. 111101 TODAY You thought TV hU a low , wfth 10rM of lu lhotot'! An AP columniat ,.,. mor• posaibUftlu oMod. Sec Page Al. 11111 ' 2 I • • • • • • Orange Coast DAIL v PILOT /Monday. May 11 , 1981 ............. FOR ME? Polish leader Lech Walesa flashes a smile as he holds flowe rs present- ed to him by Japanese labor officials at a welcoming ral· ly in Tokyo. Walesa was in J apan at the invitation of the nation's trade unions. -------- From Page A1 DRUNKS • • • "It's going to be tough to use my stethoscope," he said JOk· ingly. The couple said they already have r eceived, $20,000 in medical bills for their hospital s tays alone. They said t he bills for t hei r surge r ies wi ll be astronomical Neither Mrs. Schmidt nor her husband has been able to work since the accident. They said their insurance pays them about half their normal income. In the meantime, the bills continue to come in. Last week . t h e driver o f th e ca r t h a t struc k the Sch midt s' vehic le was found guilty or a misdemeanor reck- 1 es s d r ivi n g c h a r ge . Mrs. Sc h midt clai med t here is evidence that indicated the driver had been drinking But Ora nge County Deputy District Attorney J ack Sullins said a felony d runken drivtng conviction could not be sought because the driver le ft the scene . Sullins said a blood alcohol test is needed as evide nce to prove intoxication . Since the driver left, no test could be con· ducted Angry over what s he sees as an easy out for the driver, Mrs. Schmidt has become a familiar sight at local s hopping plazas, where s he has been distributing a petition calling fo r tougher pena lties for people convicted of drunken driving. lie r s ignatur e gather ing is par t of a national effort started a year ago by a B ay Ar ea mo t her wh ose 13 -yea r o ld da u g h ter was ki lle d b y a d runken driver. C alle d MADD , M oth e r s Ag a ins t Drunk Drivers, the loosely knit group hopes to gain t h e a ttent ion o f n a tio nal l a w ma ke r s and Preside n t Reagan to get legislation passed that would r equir e drunken drivers to lose their licenses. "Just about e very person who signs the petition has a story to tell about a drunken driver," Mrs Schm idt said . "Almost everyone knows someone who has been the victim of a drunken driver at one lime or another " She said she wa nts people to know that the kind of accident t hat disrupted her 's and her husband's lives happens to hun· dreds or people every day. Quoting a 1980 Ca lifornia Department of Motor Vehicles study, Mrs. Schmidt s aid 65 per- cent of those whose licenses are re voked for re peated drunken driving offenses often are al- lowed to renew their licenses within a year's time. In addition, she said statistics show an alarming number of felonv drunke n drivinll arrests being plea bargained down to lesser c harges, with the victim lefl to suffe r In silence ''These people are aware or ho w easy it is to get away with driving drunk, and even injuring other people ,'' s h e said. "Drunken drivers are devastat- ing peoples' Jives and getting away with it." ORANGE COAST Prince shy about bald spot Excerpts of ''bugged'' conversations.revealed DUBLIN, Ire land CAP > - Prince Charles told llancee Lady Diana Spencer be loved he r. did not want his bald s pot ph o t o graph e d and tha t Aus tra lian P r ime Minis te r Malcolm Fraser was humorless, a ccording to excerpts of sup- posedly bu"~ed tele phone con- vers ations published by the Irish Independent. Buckfagha m Palace said the tapes, allegedly made by anti- .. monarchists during Charles' trip to Austrulla lu:it month, wer e bogu5 Courts In Britain and West Germ uny banned m edia use or t h l' material , bu t a Germun mugazine carrying the transcripts got 900,000 copies on the stands ~forehand . The Irish Independent then tra nslated and pu blished ex· cerpts in its Ireland only ed i- tions, C'scapsng lht' ban in Bri taio PrlD~t-<:harlt:S: "l don 't know how to tell you this . . '' Diana: "Oh , please Cha rles " Charres: "0 .K . During the whole trip, thjs guy had nothing better to do than to try to take photographs of the bald patch on my head" Diana (laughing I. "I did not know you had a bald patch " Cha rles: "Vt's. but it 's too stup id. J a m doing all these things a nd the only thing they want are these ridiculous de tails '' Diana: ·•t t hin k il 's very funny " Sandwic·hed l>l'tWl'en t he couple's expressions o f mutual love and desire for a q uick re- union are snippets or con versa- tion about their July 29 wedding and tht' pO!>sibahty or Prince Charil's becoming t he governor general or Australia · Top crowds of ·year jam beaches Lifeguards a long the Orange Coast reported their h eaviest crowds of the ye~r this weekend as soaring temperatures. blue skies and lukewa rm water com bined for August -like conditions. Ocean temperatures crept up An Anaheim man. lluntsngton worst An hour hater. the wife to 67 degrees in Newport and lireguards said . was reported • call ed authoritiC's to tell them Huntington Beach on Sunday. m issing by his wife Sunday she'd found her h usband at Strong ripcurrentsand heavy noon . The wo m a n t ol d home. sleeping rnpthe living surf kept lifeguards from Seal a uthorities that her h usband room Beach to San Clemente busy "drank th ree or four beers Lifeguards said the man ap during the two days. Althou~h a nd who kno ws what else and parently was pulled down the In Newport Beach, more than th1::re were no serious incidents. went in the water .. coast 111 the rip currents and 100,000 people showed up at the city lifeguards 1n Huntington then took a bus home after being beach on Sunda:x 'while-90.000 were worried for several hours By 6 P m · lifeguards said unable to locate eith er his fami tur ned out Sa.turdly. Sunday they 'd begun to expect the ly or h1i-towC'l Diana; "How wilt that go? Do you think tha t at wll work?" Chiarles: "Yes, hut there are some consid erable pr o blems I myself am not s ure I can get a long with th is fe llow Fraser Jle, however , a ppears l<> e njoy the respect of his coµntry, Diana: "Oh, terrific." Charlei.: "He appears to know what he 1s dc.1ng, and l believe t hat I could get on with ham The only difficulty is that he does not have an~ humor llt>'s terribly serious I made a terrific e ffort lo be amu!>ing, but h e JUSl stared a t ml· all the time.·· Thl' lr1!>h Independent 's, ex ceri.1!:-quoted Lady Diana as telling Pr ince Ch arles she missed him \'ery m uc h and saying, ·-rm not complaining. r only wi!-.h I were with you When you t(o there the next ti m e, I will be with you." Jn a tl'lt.>phone <'iJll said to have takl'n place wht.>n the prince broke away from a party in hts honor, then: was this ex Cha§~_T_(l.ises prime rate to ch:inge 19 5 IJl.O • ~ Diana: ··Now \'nu mus t go e _./ ( ·~ !tack to the p::trty. · 1 bet they are NEW YORK <AP> Chase Manhattan Bank today r a ised its p rime le nding rate a hatr percentage point to 19.5 percent. reflecting highe r borro wing costs for banks and soaring loan demand. T he move by the n alion's third-largest comme rcial bank was not imm ediatqiy followed -~Y .the r est ot the indus try, which boosted its prime lending ra te to 19 percent from 18 per- cent a week ago. The prime rate last stood at 19.5 percent in late Februarv. when it was declining from a rec· ord· '21 5 percent peak hit 10 December Hut the prime rate began rising in April after fall· ing as low as 17 percent The prime rate 1s r epresented to be the interest banks charge r.,r loans to their best risk cor· por a te borrowers, but banks have increasingly loaned mone} at interest rates be)ow the prime to valued customers. Small business borrowers pay one percentage point or more above the prime rate for loans Consumer loans a re not based o n the p r ime rat e . a lthough mo\'emenl~ in the prime rate orten s 1gn<JI trends in other financing charges I ntcrest rates have soar ed in recent ""eeks a the Federal ResC'rvt' Roar d t1 ene d credit reins in an attempt slow the growth of the natM>n money s upply in its fight aga st inna lion Although thr money s upply declined sharply rn the latest re porting week. its growth still rt- m ams abo\'e fed target:.. Too rapid growth in the funds readi ly available for s pending ma~ heighten inflatwn • ..all standing around. wondering Fed cred1t-t1ghtening moves have pushed up th<> cost of funds for banks The interes t on federal funds C1\'ern1ght loans of SI million or more among banks averag('d 8 91 percent 1n t h~ bank sl aterW,t, week ended Wednesday. 11'J'J' .. ·sharply from the 16 28 pt>rcenl average the ~rt.·vious weC'k · MeanwhJle. the Fed reported Frida\ that bu:.mess loans on the books of the nation's largest com merc-ial banks rose S2 13 billion in lht· week ended April 29. compared with a gain of Sl.07 tnllion the previous wN•k wht.>re you art.• · Charles: ··well thev ('Un wait a little 'I ht· 'Aholt· iong day I ha,·c· dont• m) duty. ll~1 no"'r I a.ro talking to ffi) f1ar1t•t•e . whom I IO\ c• '1•rv mul'h . . GA . ~ ~ \ ) :.. I ·~wte FLORIDA\ "'\ i Winter I Park\ Q 1l,11 HJ11 • • L~L' ... 11_n_ .. __ _ County· man dies in cycle mishap A Laguna Niguel man d ied late Sunday after he skidded a nd was dragged in opposite direc- . Li o n s a fter falling fro m his motorcycle in Capistr ano Beach. Da mel Hoss Hentsch. 31, was prono unced dead at t he scene a t ;. 11 . 30 p m b) paramedics. sa id Califorma l11ghway Patrolman Bud Rooks. Hentsch was dn,·ing his un· li ghted motorcycie about 80 mph south on the hig hway when he clipped anot her motorcycle d riven by Donald Taylor. 21, sta- tionc•d at the M<Jrinc Corps Air Station in Tustin, Rooks said . T aylor was turning left onto the high" ay from Aliso Bearh. lhc ofri('er said llcntsch fell and s lid 118 reet and then was hit by a car going north and dr<Jgged in the op posite diret·t1on Thl• car's d river. Joan Car · rafield, 31 , of Capist rano Beach. "as ftOt injured. the orftC'er said Tavlor was t reated at the seen~ for minor in1unes His passenger , Alle n Ma rino. 19, a lso from the air station, was not hurt. Probation unit rated No citations were issued in l'onnc•ction with the a<.'c 1dent SINKHOLE Map locates Wi nter Perk, Fla .. where a g i an t s in k hole . al r ead v several hundred feet wide. has swall owed a ho use. swi m m ing p ool a nd s ix P o r sches a nd threat ens some businesses perched on i~ ed_g_c. Turner files suit against TV networks Orange County 's Probation De partment h as r eceived a statewide award for its work with the Orange Poli ce Depart· ment to pre\·ent gang-related de· linquency. The progr am involves close contact b etwee n pro bation workers, police and school of- ficia ls to work with youths on the fringe of gang-related ac· livity Chier Proba tion OH1cer Michael Schumacher. probation officer Darlyne Pettinicchio and police officer Chris Griffith ac· Cookie drug sentence set S AN F RANC ISCO (AP ) pleaded guilty to sale of mari- "Brownie Mary" Rathbun has juana and possession of mari- pleaded guilty to selling drug-juan a.ror sat~. laced confections from her San Poli ce said under cover of· Fra ncisco ho me, and a judge set f 1cers purchased sever al sentencing for June 5. b rownies from Ms Rathb~n. Superior Court J udge T homas who allegedly distributed price Dandurand indicated he intends lists for a variety of mind · to impose a t hree-year prebation altering sweets which she sc;>ld a nd possibly a county jail terrp from her home Her brownies on Mary Jane Rathbun. 57. She reportedly sold for $40 a dozC'n. From Page A1 MIDEAST WAR CLOUD. • • news agency quoted Premie r Abdel-Raouf Kasam as saying, "Thre ats and warnings will only boost Syria's Hr m stand." President Re agan's envoy met four hours with Assad as the Ara b nation's warpla nes circled overhead , b ut th e r e tire d American c areer diplomat had no comment later on how long his mission might last or its likelihood of success. Begin had hinted before that Israel was prepared to act if Syria did not withdraw the Sov· iel·made anti-aircraft missiles it deployed April 28 in e aste rn Lebanon's Be kaa Valle y, the day alter Israeli warplanes shot down two Syrian helicopters. The prime minis ter's speec h to a poUtical rally of his Llkud bloc supporters. however , was his most adamant stand on the issue to date . He did not set a deadli ne. "If they don 'l remove the anti· ai r cr aft m 1ss1les a f ter t he special and extraordi na ry ef- forts made willingly by t he Unjt. ed States .. _ an order will be give n to act," he said Begin said the United States and Israel agreed ther e must be a return to the status quo t hat existed in Lebanon before Syria Introduced its three anti-aircr aft m issile batte ries. I srael con- l e nds tha t th e missiles jeopardize its ability to monitor Pal estinia n g u er r i llas in southern Lebanon. From Page A1 FLIES. • • ceptcd the award 10 Fresno from Pearl West. director or the California Youth Authority. T he department was one of hve agencies to be named to re ce i ve o utsta n di n g service awards during a regiona l deten· lion admanistrators ' confer ence Ms. West lauded the progr am for reducing crime a nd further- ing cooper ation bet ween police and probation departments. Nancv Nelson, deputy chief probat.ion officer, s aid the Or ange program diffe rs from othe rs in the county because of a s tronger commitmen t to work· ing between agencies. She said offi cials a lso t ry to have more interaction with their youthful clients to per suade t hem not to gel involved in gangs The fact tha t t he progr a m doesn't cost taxpayers addi tional money p robably was another reason fo r its winning thf' award. she added. WASHI NGTON <A P ! Ted Turner, the founder of the Cable News Network, a nnounced today h e filed suit against the three major television networks a nd President Reagan to break up what he called the "predatory a nd illegal practies" in volving t he pool ing o r TV n e w s coverage. T urner. the Atlanta s ports man who also owns WTBS-T V in Atlanta, said has suit was fil ed in U.S. Dist rict Court in Atlanta. a lso names White House Chief or ming practices or the three ma· Jo r networks a nd the molton pie· ture industry to determine if their programming was having ·'d etri ment a l e ffect on the m o rals. attitudes a nd habits or t he people of this country." Turner established the Cable News Network on J une 1. 1980 The network 1s the only 24-hour· a-day television news oper ation and 1s available to more than 5.5 m i ll ion cab l e television s ubscri!M'rs. Sta ff James A. Baker and Depu· 5 Stores burn t y Press Secretary La rry Speakes as defendants PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP> ty P ress Secret a r y L a rry A fire t hat broke out in a Speakes as defendants. nightspot spread to a djoining In a separate action. Turner struc tures. d estroyi ng fi ve also called for a congr essional downtown buildings in this Ohio investigation of the progra m River city, officials said. r- 1 ----------------------------- I Dally Pilat MAINOfflCI Ana. It is c laimed the cities have taken no action ta protect resid e nts from the a lleged nuisances. Thomaa P Haley ,,....,,_ ~N.Wffd ,.._.. M, Thom11 KMVll ... ~Murphlne e:':f.. .. ~:. t:.r Schulman C4w1 Canteneen ......... ~ ~°"~odderd Jr DO Wellt a.y St_. Cat• """41, CA llMll .._ .... U•, Celi. Mew, CA n.» • Each resident, a ccording to the suit, Is demandin1 SlOO Cor Increas ed medical expens es, $100 for p estlclde expenses, $8,000 for reduced enjoyment of hl1 residence, $SOO for 1Ue1ed dama1 from odors, $10,000 for reductJon of proptrty value, and S25 (or each time he wu . awakened by nolse. ----------- Superior Court Ju.dee Edward Wallln acheduled a bearlnt oo the plalntifft' appUcaUon for an lnjunctJoa for J\IDe 8 Al's Gara~e and Sea Bags Heavy duty Canvas Bags m shApos and sizes to fit any occasion Seams Aro double stitched 10 provide a ltfot1me OI dufabll1ty All Soo Bags •re w. ter 11 pe!tent and f ature 8 shoulder strap for easy carrymo -----------_, ._ ---., __.,..._, __ _ AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH {714) 644-7030 • '~3 '-' I I t's ~I'< IU tst LIJJ to L'r •• t' •• II t' r .I • Div i,s i n s deep~ooted Ireland reli g1 <a1s chasm always at forefront BELFAST, Northt'rr , , I ind 'AP> -She's a Roma11 1· th111t1· and he's 1 Protestant n .. , ltvt• a half-mile apart. She wants the Br1t1,n 1111 o Northern Ireland, and h,. 11 •• mt•. a hard line aeainl>t t t.1• I nsh Republican Army ·1 h·' l\ '"'' the sectarian div1d1 11 1h 1:- violence-torn, British 1, , ii 11111· v1nce. The woman, who 11!1 1 • 114•d herself as Rita 0 <·, , I\ .1 housewife and the n •tr 1 ,,f four. lives a few door' 1111 Utt' family of IRA hungt 1 ..,l1 ,.1·r Bobby Sands in the 1 'II "' uok public housing pr0Je1·1 • 1fr.i1t. grayish area of l.li50 d , , 1111~-. It 's 100 percent Catholl• A road winds d• 1 .. ground and secunt' Areema. a haridsom 1· some 300 homes lanct .. 1 blossoming trees u111I I 'II , , , 1 .,r rth 111 sharp contrast to tlll' 1. painted walls anti li11•' •t 11 1t cars at Twinbrook 'r r 1 1-; Protestant T h e m a n . \\ h 11 " himself as Colin J1111 18 year-old env1ro1111 1 r ficer in the civil st·•' 11 Arecma with his 1•l d1 1 and 23-year-old t:ollt- brother. When Tw1nbrook , years ago, it was SUJIJ • mixed Catholic and l'r But the eruption 111 violence m 1969 dr<"'" to respective camp.., 1 Protestants living Ill r fled Twinbrool. p<.•1111 through Ar<.·ema und same shopp1n~ l't•P1 I Ill 12 ,,,. I Ill 111 fl',\ ..... \ I' "" 111 It' even work with Protestants at the nearby U.S.-owned Delorean car factory But each side keeps lls dis- tance. "Protestants aren't all bad. Just like anything else, there's good ones and bad ones. But you never talk to them," said Mrs. O'Grady The fair-haired housewife. who declined to give her age but appeared to be about 40, spoke in the narrow hallway of her end-of-terrace house as crowds gat hered Thursday for the runeral of Bobby Sands, who died two days earlier at the Maze Prison on the 66th day of his hunger strike to back de- mands that IRA prisoners re· cei ve poltt1cal status , "He was a real gentle lad. They s hould have given him his <lemands and he would be alive tod ay." Mrs. O'Grady said. "It's all bec.-ause of (hardline Protestant leader the Rev.) ran Pais ley It's him that has the blood on his head and he gets away with .everything. He's sup· posed to be a man of God Q.ut ht•'l> a devil." .. As for c Prime M inisler J Mrs. Thatcher. how would s he like to be in that poor woman's (Mrs. Sands') pta·ce today, and many another mother who has lost a son before today? "There's discrimination in ever ything. You look around at all the young lads and young girls here. You eould count on one hand thwnunltber that have got jobs," said ~ O'Grady, who said her husband has been unemployed for two years. 37 year.· g e ts the <ite, student >o dnews RALEIGH. N C \I in case Robert Wll s•i ing. he has pasS1·ll engineering rour .... ROTC at North < '.11 University The uni vers1t' anti 1 flee tried in vain to n• that h(• had pas~l·d 1111 The letter. mall•· I 1944, was fmall v n •r 1 university hecau:.1· 11 fice said it couldn 1 f 1111 Postal official~ 1, 1 I tl'I ~I f' I IC' '" \ ... >I •Ill !ht• ll'tter April 30 and said they couldn't explain what had hap- pened to 11 for nearly four de· eades. ~ Sgt James O'llerron. who tn· 'l'Stigated the returned letter , said the ce rtific.-ate was mailed to Wilson's father in Los Angeles. O'Herron said the en- velope probably slipped behind a "helf at the post office and was found when the s helf was mo\'ed. The location of Wilson was un- known. "My oldest boy, who's 14, says if he can pass his exams he wants to emigrate to America and save up and send for the other boys." She foresaw no solution to the Catholic -Protestant conflict which has claimed nearly 2, 100 lives since 1969. Looking at her ll·year-old son, John, and his 7-year-old sister. she said : "What are they com- ing up to. Nothing. I tell them the truth -there's no future for them here ." . Across the divide on Saturday, Johnson watched British Army troops on patrol at the end or his street and said: "When Bobby Sands died, li v- ing on this estate we were bound to wonder what would happen. Dared we go out. or if we went into a pub would we be blown up? "But in the end, you can't just sit in the house and stick a sand bag over your head, so you carry on living," he said outside his front door. He said shots were fired al the edge of the estate and a few cars hijacked following Sands' death. but most residents were not dis- turbed. A ftus inessm an friend, who gav e his name as Harry Thompson. JOtned the conversa- tion. "Mind you. 12 years ago when the troubles started. we wouJdn't hav.e stood out here talking to you," he said. Both men attacked Irish- Americans for donating money to I RA coffers to fight the British. "Do they know who is being killed with the weapons they are buying?" said Johnson. He said bitterness between the Protestant majority and Catholic minority is now too deep-rooted for easy solutions. "If the !RA said. ·right. we've had enough and we'll leave you alone,' then people might start coming together. But if's not go- ing to happen overnight. You can't stop fighting Friday night and on Saturday morning go out shaking hands with everybody," Johnson said. Is he a Paisley supporter? "I have no personal like or dis like for him. but a lot of Protestants Like him because he sees what is happening. Unless there's a hard line taken . things can only get worse •· Kent ___,ky town torn Twister toll . U.S. sumnu1ry P•rh of l •NW\-Me, fl:.4'1\h • ttt\oh 1no Miuoutt w,.1, lor"•do ••1Che\, •nio CJn,. , ... IOUCll..i -rn C•lvert u1, • J")ur .. s _.....-• r9P0f'ted, t>ut ri r roof ••t CIA~. • dt1v• 'fl ,.. s.<rMft ... torn and wv"•' were owrturM'd •t • dltattnr ,, llcl•ll wkl. Sorl~ ttorm$ to•fl1l MU(" I Southeast on Sunday In '-1 • Cf\Art•t. La . rf'tWlr er•~ --'~ lrylnig to re\tore ele<tr•Cll'f ,,, who hMi ~n w1tnou1 paw•r .. M<IH of lie<ct I,,_"°'"' day. More ti-H.000 cu\!om • power, Tiie slorm tn4h<ll'<I ~vora injuries, mostly from fly1nQ ~' QleSS, •nd WM \lfOt'IQ Pnou9n h. •O•rt • • IMl'lt br•n< ~ W•O CMrlt\ Pof•<• SOL Tommv D•"''" "l hey'll hew lo rtbutid , 1 - UOl IM v..,11," r>e ""'d Eh•w·ht,... c°'o rein felt ''Cl'' m1d0Mls."U'OCH V•11ey to u, L•k•' Aecor-d tows ~,,, '~' 1 nlghl In II• c.n1ral statn •"' O•raturt'l Wtf"I' tlllf wlthlf1 I I oeor•o OI ''"""9 Suno ... ·~ • ol MlclllQan Bui II was on nw llll •nn ill 1 Florlo.. 90 ,,. AJ,11P1t.c.n1.,.\ , Gull Cott1I -In \OUIM"• I Tht Soul"weil df'MrU h•11 h per~--Aft•rnoc>ft temper•h"'"' 'A from • J.I 1n Al~ Mich 1 .. Palm S!>tl"ll'. c.alifomia Tiie Netlonet wu11>er ..,..,., • calltno 10< fair wulher lhr Tuesday n ceot lor ~ low MU -IOYI loQ In Ille n1on1 ••rly mof'nfnQ Mur-1 •n CO.\t•• "' l..oc:at gulty wetl lo norlhwe\I ,., J •r• •llfMCtild k\ U. mount•1n "'f' t•rlor MC.lion\ Ttmptr•tur•' fl•· Ille ... ,"'°""' bt •llglllly (00100 Hlefls an •-ltd lo bt M•• r l..o• AnOflH, II lo ... In (n I• valltU. n lo II In lnltflnt .1 v•ll•vs. M to 10 In the moun•••n ton 1,. IN o..r.nt Yel .. y, 12 10"' on I 'ITCh roof, drive·in, boats " J,.. ... rh •nd 9? to '4 tn IOW Ott· 11artl0r0 .. .. 12 Htlena S6 •1 .03 1hl • I~ \tlould be 1n the low Ho!>Olulu .. 15 • !oO\ In LO\ Anoei.s. U lo 61 In HOU lion 7l 55 " .... 11.Y'. H IO u In In-IN!nitj)llS u n !I " d1••t .... 11.,, In Illa 40s In Ja<klftYll• .. ¥ , "" •ritei •nd the Owe1u Kans City .. l4 SS la 65 on htgll -1• aNI 1,. l..HVeQM •s 11 . 1n •ow°""'"" 1..llllt Rock ., 41 01 l..osAngel .. '° " loultvlll• , . . , .60 , 1111peratures AMmPlll• 70 so ·°' Miami ... H Mllwauk" 40 :.. I 41 HI .... I"<• Mpl,·SI P S6 M '"• 7) 60 .en NHIWlllt ,, .. .50 ft1u IUfl ,. 4J Nt•Orle-" .. . 01 •rlllO 1l 43 New Yon .. St 03 " .. ., u.-•> ~ '°' Nonol• ,, .. .n tr.ta ., " ,, Otile City 6j )I I Cly M JI .oe Omalla 60 41 0 6.J .u °' ........ ., •t tQhm II 50 .OJ Ph Ila_.. 12 62 °' SI 40 """"'• ,. TO 61 ,, 01 Pit~ 14 S6 JO 5' 50 P11allCl,Ma 60 ... •lillli(l\Yfl@ 12 57 PllallCl,Ore .. " 75 n .21 R-., u '"'"""SC ,. .. " S.llUQ 11 ... .If ..,,f\lt\WV IS SI II S... Di.to II .. ....... ., ., ,... ""'" .. SJ \..,00 ,. Jt I II S.eltle st ... .o (•nnttU ,. 51 SI 1.ouls 6l 42 41 f \tf'l•nd .. SS .2' SIP·T-., 10 I ltntt>UJ II S7 71 SI Sl•Marle SI u l fl FIWlh " ., " $tl0flane SI .. • 02 D•""'' .. ... TulY •1 41 O.\Mottws u ., w •"'lllfl1' .. 67 .n L>tl•olt S1 ., .ff Oulvl~ " ,. Soulhem Calif~ 6UTf report CALl~•lltA HI .... I"<, 80erilletd •• '3 81ylhe 10) .. Eureka S6 ... Fresno ., s• l..an<Hlet .. .. M.lrysvlll• " 65 Monterey ,,. •• Paso llotllti .. '1 Rtd Bluff .. u lledw-Ctly 77 S6 Reno IO lS Sacramenlo ... 61 Sallna• u ~ San Oleec> II .. San Frenclsco •• SJ Sanle Bar-a 7l SS Therm•t " .. Ukiah 13 51 Bartlow 95 u BloBtar II ~ 81"-., 0 El C•n•ro IOI 60 l..Oftll S.ach ... ~ Monrov&• u SS Ml Wiison II S6 Onlarlo u 60 Palm Se>rlfl!ll un .. PaMClena " so San 8er,,.nllno ., S4 SanJOM IO 4' Tahoe Yalltv .. 11 "'AN AMIEltltAlt ACal)UICO .. .. BarbaOol .. 11 ll•rm11da n ., Curacao .. 11 Fr .. 00<1 .. .. GuaclataJitf"• " ... G11ackk>upe .. 12 Havana 14 7t Kln9110n .. ., MOnMgo8ay .. n AMullan .. .. Merkt• HM 73 AM•l<OClly .. 51 Moni.r,.y '° .. Nau.u .. ., S.n J...,. t2 11 St Kiits .. 15 Te9uc l9alPe .. •2 Trlnlctacl '° Ii Frog leaps 202 inches SPRINGFIELD, S.C. <A P) -Sixteen feel, 10 inches may not be an Olympic record in the tri· Ht10ftl 11' IMI ... ,IOd 111 _......_ lwt ..... lwt .... = .............. pie jump, but It may have A119 •• ow saved Herman from the t 2 J J OutlOOI< fW TllMNy> Uttte <"- 4 4 s s t4 '4 It It t J SW terrible (ate &Walling ~ : :: some of the 172 other, less 1 • IW athletic frogs in the 15th Annual Governor's Frog Jump. ----------------------------------Herman• s owner, What do you Jlke, ubout the Daily Pilot? What don't you Uke7 • Call the number below and your mt1111e will be rtt0rftd, transcribed an•I clf'l1verPd lo the appropriate editor. Th" same '>.J hour enswe.rl'ng auvice may be used to r ecord letters to lhr Nhtnt on an,y topic. llallboll contrtbuton mOlt ln· cludt lhelr n.1mr :ind telephone number Tor veriflcaUon. No drculation rail , rlf'asc. Tell whut' 'n vour mind. Laura Bolin, 18, said she ha d never entered the th ree-Jump event before, even lhoUJlh 1he lives ln Sprlolfield. . "It's the firsl lime I ever picked a rro1. '' she conreued The f roc• hailed from ponds, lakes, and rtvers around the atate, •nd a aood number were 101d· 1out of a plckup t ruck for iSS apiece before the con· -------:""------~~-------------------------------------tsl. I. - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 s A3 A baby seal survwed an in}lmous encounter with fish hooks and was recuperatmg at Newport Center Ammal llospital, as Ten Tanner looks on Andrew Hubert and his mother. of San GabnPI. found the animal near the Corona de/ Mar State Beach tidepoo/s lie was headed for 'Warinelond Pup gets helping hand .. Andrew Hubert saylf he's thought of everything for his new friend a wet towel, a cou pie of small but tasty fish JUSl the kind of things a sea lion puv would want during a car tnp to Marineland. Hubert. A San Gabriel res1 dent. says that's where he plans to take the little guy once it's re leased from the Newport Centt>r Animal Hospital. Hubert and his mother d1~ covered the injured pup floallng near the tidepools at Corona dt·l Mar State Beach this week "It crawled out of the water a nd collapsed," he explained "We saw there was a ftshjng hook in one of its fhppers and some fishing line c.-oming out of its moul,il " The t~ of them wrapped tht• .1eak sea hon an a we t towel asked for directions to lh1• nearest vet and e nded up at tht• animal hospital. Veterinarian Gary J ohnson says he agreed to treat the littl1· fellow a fter learnin g that Laguna Dcach's friend. of St>a Lioni. was up to its flippers in in JUred sea lions. · It was in pretty bad shape. the vet explained Ile said s u1 gery was required lo re mo'.., one hook that the sea lion hatl managed to swallow "SC'a Lions arc pretty fragtl•· ('rcatures when they're )oung. he said · But 1t sel'm5 tu be du ing better llC' ate a f1 .... h th1 -. morning .. llubl•rt, who :.atd he':-. :i marine buff and freqUl•nlly \I., its the tidepools in Corona dei Mar. say:. he fecb · fortunat1· to have found thl' inJu1 ed µup Med center loOks ahead South Coast hospital hopes to tap 'inland' market By STEVE MIT<'HELL Of 11111 OMI) l'llol Stall The !oration Sl'ems ideal for a thriving. s uc•cessful hospital Many of the room~ at South Coast Medical Center provide views of the blue Pa('1f1c.-. or the green hills of South Laguna. Visitors arC' more apt to be seen gazing out the windows than walchmg the lube while spending timt• with a1 ltng rd atives or friends at the 268 bed facility. But Paul Mc.-Q u ade, ad - minis trator of the f1ve-slory hospital just inland of Coast Highway, does not view the loca lion entirely as :.in asset For one thing. hC' says. there 1s limited access lo the 217.000 square foot hospital from inland areas .. Besides Laguna Canyon R oad and Crown Valley Parkway, there's no way for in- land patients to reach us." the 42 year-old administrator says "We're off the beaten path." Partially as a result of loca- tion. the hospital is only about half full. McQuade says he wants to see a steady improvl' ment, until the fa('ilitv reachl's federal occupancy guidelines of 80 percent. To do that. the bearded ad- ministrator says the hospital has lo move awa) from its former depe ndenrl' on s low growing Laguna Reach. and expand to other areas "All too frequently we talk about how beautiful 1t is here. but wl' C'an't lull ourselves to <>l(•ep Wl• have to be more ag- grt•ssi\ t• to inland areal. " M dJuadt· has incorporated that aggre.,s1\c• spiral, having m adt.> somt• m<JJOr changes at lhl· ho:.µital in the pa~t year and LI half !-'or om· thing. he no longer needs apµr n,·al o f the 21- rnt•mb .. r board of directors to hire or fir <> top a1das He's gaancct board support for major c.-hanges m the hos pital bylaws, and has lt.1ken over more management chores from I hl' board Some fe;.ired McQuade was making a power play. and there was a mmor shakeup during board clcct1on::. earlier this year that i.aw four of seven incum- bents defeatl'd But McQuade !.ays rumors of a powe r grab "couldn't be rurther from the truth "I 'm an e mployee or the board," he s aid. "They are the polic.-y-making body and my job is management of the hospital." In ex plaining his role . McQuade said. "You have to un - derstand that within the last four to f1 ve years. the hospital had three µe rman e nt ad mrn1 strators and an interim ad· min1 strator on two oc.-c.-as1ons "When you hav(.' a vacuum like that, the board tries to step 1n and assist "Onc·c· ha\'ing dune that. it's difficult to step out " Rut McQuade says he's "very comfortable with the present ar- rangement. I think the board has responded ver y well " And the board apparent!~ likes what McQuade ha::. bt•1 n doing to boost busin<'S!> at the 21 year old hos p1t:.i l Last month it approved hb proposal for construction 11f ,1 new medical oHtce building ad Jarent to the patient tower al the hospital. The 30.000 to 50,000 squar 1 foot struc•ture would bnni• n111ri· doctors to South L<.1guna . ;met . il ... a result. more patients lo fill hospital beds. McQuade figures each Ol'\\ physician to a hospital brings 111 about $300,000 in re' enul particularly doctors whose 11f fi ces are near the hospital The hospital board will lea"'' land to a private developt>r wh·i will become a general partner The developer will then sign up physicians as limited partners, The administrator also 1s de veloping a marketing program. which he s ays "will attempt to idenltfy our consum ers and lh1,ir i nterests re~arding hosp1t:i l service " He'll also be looking at the hospital's internal operation 10 determinl' areas that need to he revised lie lists placement and allO<'a lion of beds as an example "We r urrently have ~ large obstet1;c•s service. but low volume." he said "The question is. s hould we continue to provide this service. be<·ause it's very ex- pens1vt' ·· On the other hand. the mental h ea lth and alcohol prog rams "are verv viable. growin~ services.·' · o;r w,ry own p:>phn suit ... 44 Fashion lslond ·Newport &och • 714/644-5-070 1001 '-"' twood Blott· Wtttwood Vlllo!H' • 213120thJ273 ,, a s Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, May,,' 1981 EX-CON IN RACE Robert Huflert Ex-con runs for mayor 'It's easier ~eing a crook than a politician' ... SUNBURY. Pa. CAP) -A convicted bank robber says bis indicnallon over alleged political corruption led him to run in the Republican primary for mayor of this central Pen· nsylvania town against a former prison counselor. "You're not golne to believe it with my background, but I believe Sunbury ls a cesspool of corruption and I want to do something about it," said Robert Huffert, 31, who served five years in the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary before he came here when he .was released in 1978. He was convicted of rob· bing a bank in 1973 In Deal, N.J. "If people ask, I tell them about the prison record. I don't just pop out of the woodwork and tell them where I've been, but in Sunbury everybody knows.·· said Huffert, a draftaman who sits on the City Planning Com· mission in this town about 70 miles north of Harrisburg. Although Hulfert says be can't prove corruption, it doesn't lessen his campaigning. "I 1ot put on the planning commission and as I got into it, a whole lol of stutr didn't make sense. Nobody liste ned to my hollering, so I de- cided to get into politics and fight the whole system from within." Facing Hulfert in the May 19 primary for the $1 ,500-a·year part-time job is endorsed GOP candidate Daniel FH•r, 59, who wo rked in the U.S . prison system from 1955 to 1975. Filer was a drug abuse counselor a~ Lewis burg while HuUert was an inmate, but the two never met there. "It doesn 't bother m e that ~~~~h·u ~~de r~1~~d d~~e~~o; /! domestic relations office. "He ( Huffert> served his time. ''The voters will have to de cl de whether that bothe r s them," Flier said. They are runnlne in the GOP primary for the mayoral post now held by Donald Morgan, who is retiring a fter three terms. Huffert, who a lso served two· year prison terms In New Jersey and Texas for assault with a knife and car theft. is on parole "I jbst realized that jail crime doesn't get it," said Huffert. "There's mor e to life than just a jail cell." But he added: "lt's easier be ing a crook than a politician ·· ---- NeW bones created from old ,. .. ., .......... TAKE THAT -Cowboy Mark Tovsen f rightl isnt r'i!al ly kick ing in the face or his sister, L ynn. It only looks that way. They'r e teen members or an Explorer Scouts post in Tucson and have learned fundamentals of staf{ing fights from stunt m en at Old Tucson. BOSTON <AP) -Researchers have developed a gooey paste or ground·up human bones that can spark the body to grow new bones, providing relief for vic- tims of deforming accidents or children born with misshapen faces. The paste has been used so far to treat about 60 patients with results that were sometimes.~ "spectacular,"" according to doc· tors who have used it. One of those treated was a boy born with fused bone where the sort spot in his skull should have been. In a series of operations, doctors removed the top of his skull and replaced it with the paste. "By a year, he had a brand· new s kull ," said Dr Judah Folkman, chief of surgery al · Children's Hos pita l Medical Cepter here. "'From a surgeon's point of view, that's pretty spec- tacular.:· "From a clinical standpoint, I'm very excited about this The doctors don't know why 1t material," said Dr. John B. works. Mulliken, who conducted the •. The crushed material does not first operation usin-i..!be P•_te, • actually become new bone by which is made from 'bones t~~ itself But when it is implanted, from cadavers. The bones are each 'spe~k of bone dust is sur· ground into powder, which is rounded by cells that ordinarily mixed with wate'r to make paste. form connective tiss ue cells. ··1·m ·e~-~ciall y ex~tfct f!tl,~t Those cells, called fibroblasts, the concept of being able to somehow change to their func· t ransform the \:x>dy 's cells to tion to produce cartilage. Even- m a ke something that's needed," tually , the cartilage becomes Mulliken said. bone · Man of ACTION WASHINGTON <APl The" Senate has confirmed Thomas Pauken to head the federal agency that oversees the Peace Corps despite concerns that his military intelligen ce back- ground might tarnish the Peace Crops reputation overseas. Pauken. 37. was picked by Presidt.>nl Reagan lo head AC TION , which manages a ll federal 'olunteer agencies, in eluding the Peace Corps Th t-S<'nate approved the nomination by voice last week a nd Ot•moc:ratic criticism of Reagan·s choice was muted. STILL WAITING FOR SH~• T..,.. 51•1• •t '°"' 0oot .c ... ";tor.....,.,, y~ ..., ••• COIU llf1A641-1 289 , ... ..._._ tlllllON ~95-0401 1-c.-~ .... IS.• .,..._ ,_,, et ANOY l'tiwJ I Cou.ECTORS CORNER Rare Coin•&. Stamp• GOLD 6 SIL V£R 70% Bank Fin•ncing Now Av•il•ble On Gold & Silver Bank Fin•nclng Now Av•ll•bte ··-----.. 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Solid shades of white, blue. yellow. $17.50 ISTAIUIHIO 1111 Come to the Spring Garden Parties Celebrating OUr 46tb Refreshments Thursday, May 14, 1 to 3:30 F riday, May 15, 1to5 . HomP Offirr: LAG UN A REAC H. 260 Ocean Av<'nUl' .. Flower Sho~ by Laguna Beach1Garden Club an<l l*una Nurst•r.\' SAN CLEMENTE. 601 North El C'amino H<'al. Flower Show by ~an CIC'ment<' c;arden Cl uh LAGUNA NIGlTEL. 3 Monarch Bay l'laza. So11th Lai.nina ... Art Display and Rt'frc~hnwnts LAG UN A HILLS. 2430 I Paseo dt• Vall'nc-ia. L1..'is11n• World ... Flower Show hy 1.a){una Hilb Florists LAKF. ELSINORE. mJO WC'st Craham AvC'nllC' ... Individual Displays by local flori sts and residc-nts OUVE/ORANGE. 2535 North Tustin 8treet. l~·anl(t'. Displays by Acacia Florists and Fabric Flower A rran}!PmC'nt..; by .Judith Bryant Ilomc Interiors GLEN AVON . 901 1 Mission Boulevarrl. Glen Avon . Rin•r..;id<> .. Silk Flower Arrangements by Glen Avon Village Florists BALBOA. 600 East Balboa Boulevard ... Display of Hand-Crafted Miniature Modf.'ls by the Ship Modelt•rs' Asso<'iation BELMONT SHORE,4601 Second Street. LonR Reach ... "The Pageant of Flowers" by the Long Beach Garden Cl uh. Inc. MURRIETA. 24-7!l6 Washington Avenue ... Display of flowers by Rancho Temecula Florist!' BALBOA ISLAND. 301 Marine Avenue. Balboa Island ... Flowers and Refreshments fo9r//1r~ .7'-~§~dl/19.i ANO LO"N ASSOCIATION . HOME OFFICE . 280 Oceen Avenue, Ugune 8Hch, CA 92851(714)494·7541 Additional offices In San Clemente ... 492-11i5 • Lake El1lnore ... 874-2191 • Belmont Shore .. (213) 4J8,IM2t Laguna Niguel ... 49&-1201 • Ollve/Orenge ... 996-8400 • Murrieta ............... 877-5632 Laguna Hin• •.... 586-5100 • Glen Avon •..... 681 -0111 • Balboa l1l1nd .......... 875-3212 B1lbo1 ..•...... 81'3-3701 PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Savings,. Complete St9fkS, Local News and Sports, and Advertised Values. READING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK In the lailyPillt ' ' -~-·~!!'----~·---- ta. tr· tr. ·er : TI· e r nd lV· in lid er 1'5 ed in rn nt n ed 1e 1e es to •• JO ' 1 ~ • ..... .. .v ' I •I I . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 s Wheels off ortune hit bumps Crippling disasters paint dark revenue picture for Nevada casinos CARSON C I T\' 1 i\P 1 Nev uda <·a ... 111os recorded what may be thei r worst winter quarter t>ver, ac·<·ord1ng to ... tale figun•s rt>lea ... t·d 1''mfay post 111g less llwn a 2 percent in cre;i...t' m er lhl• !'>a111e period a year ugo But ... tall' Gaming Contr ol Board member J ack Stratton said the in~reasl' 1n taxable grnss rl'veuues dunng January. February and Marl'11 1981 to a total of $591 4 m1 1l1on s till marked a perel'ntuge increase dc ... pite t·nppli11g d isas ters that hit three ma1or holt>l casinos. During the quarter, the MGM 1; rand 111 LHs Vl'gas remauwd 'hut .111<1 the I.as \.'ega ... ll illo11 \\ti'> partwlly d osed Both \\NC' hit I>\ dis astrous firl's And ll arve_,·s W<1go11 Wht•el in Stalt'llllt'. tut h} an t'Xtortw11 bomb la ... t yt•ar. also " as partial I\ d11Sf'Cf The l11 llon has rf•opened, Harve.v's 1s about to reopen. and the M G M plans t o reopen this summer Stratton also ...rud Olilll\ t'X paus1on plans are 111 tht• ~or·ks by various hotel cas m o corpora twos. and the d1srnul quartt'rl) r1gurt.•s Call t bl' VICW<'d as a signal that the Nevada gaming industry has fallt•n on hard limes One good !'>tgn, said Stratton. is that pt.·n·<'nt ai:tc rN•s p aid mto slate coffr.rs hy the duos for the <'nlin· fi scal ) N tr t•11d1ng next June have shown a sli(ht in rrease over l'Sllm<1tes h) <iov Bob I .isl 's 1wdgt•I office The JJl'rn•ntage fees for the fis l·al y(•ar. already t•ollccled CH 'll though l hl' year's not up. tote1I $126 million . up R fi pt•rcent _ from th(' µnor f1St'cJI yt.'ar Th<' s tate·.., t•stimate was about 8 per 1·1·n1 . Stratton s:11d . adding that the t•st1matl' wa' exC'eeded even though the winter percentage fees, hke the 1:tross r everiues , were down sharply A l>rcak<lown o r lht• $591 4 millwn Ill g ro-.s gaming rev e nu es c·ol l et•ll•d during J anuar~. Ft•hruary a nd March showed the.it all area ... of the stale outstdl' Las Vegas showed moderate tu -;lrong 1ncrl'ases llowt·ver. dubs in th(• Las Vegas c1rea at·t·uunt for two t hirds or all the gam111g rev t>n uC's and primarily because of tht• M<i M und rtillo11 disasters the gam111 g i11dus t r} t here showed a dl•crease of 2 3 percent compared to the ... amc winter <1uarter 111 1980 . That pulled the entire stall' a\l'rage down to a scant 2 percent increase The Vegas -area C'lubs hauled 111 $408.8 million 111 the 1981 "i11tt.>r <1uarlt•r. about $10 million shy of what thc•y amas!H'd in th<• sam e period a year earlier. Jn the Reno North Tahoe area, c lubs collectt.>d $108 million dur· ing the recent winter quarter, ro r a 10 percent increase over the sam e quarter a year before In Douglas County, encom passing Harvey's a nd other Stat eline clubs on the south end of Lake •Tahoe, the gross rev· e nue take was $51 3 million in the recent qua rter. up a solid 18 2 percent over th<· past winter quarter even with llar vt:y's limited oper ations In Elko Cou11ty, clubs posted the best gain of all, taking 1n $10 2 million from eas t ern Nevada g::srnblt•rs 1n the recent quarter for a 214 percent in t•rease Jn Carson Cit). duh' -garned nearly.$6 9 millwn. for a 7 7 per cent increase O\ t'r tht• winter quart<>r1n 1980 I San Francisco OKs 'workfare ,. .I I 'plan SAi\ l"H1\NCISC'O 1/\1'1 l'ht> n oard of Sup1•1 visors of San F r a 11 t' 1 ., t' o h a :-.. a d o p t " d a \\Ork fan· pl:111 that \\ 111 rN1u1rl.' w t· If a r f' 1 t • 1· 1 p 1 " 11 l s t o st• e k 1• m p Io' m " 11 t 111· Io s 1· th t• 1 r ht·nl'f1ts Thl• -..11p 1•1\1sor ... hud ~l.'l .inahst s;1~-.. th1• pl<in 1:011ld '>il\'l' thl' tll~ ·~, 111il h1111 to ~7 111illlon a Vl'<H' L'ndl't tlw \\orkfarl' plan, tlw -..11cial 'l'I\ lc·1·s d1·partnu•11t 1s rl' qu1r1·d to ll·1111inatt• \\elrarl' hPn c•fits lo 1wople ''ho an· das!'.1fi1•tl as 1·mph1) cihle' hut \\ho foil 111 111ak1· rl'J!Ul ,ar dforts Io look for a Joh tht' coast of ('pntral C'ahfornta l'OUlcl St'FIOlls h thn·atl'll th(• population of the; sea olt1•r l ' S lnlt•rtor \c•<·rt.'lar~ Jame ... Watt has rt•tt•nlh 11111vl'Cl to open t h l' Sa n t a M a r 1 ,1 B :is 1 n off no rt hem Santa Bar hara a ntl San 1.u1 ... Obispo l'OUllllt•s to Oil anc1 g,1s t•\ph1r ,1tio11 The h1olog1st ... aid c'<plorator) dnllinf! would not ha1 in th<· St'il nllt•r (Jjfit'P fo.'\/ /J y 9 .1 t'P lll."i LA JOI.Li\ u\ P 1 .Joshua .. ';lreet I il(lll t'OtttV>rsio11 ()K'<l S'\CHA:\11':NTO 11\P 1 Statt> lo<111'i totaling SR 11111l1on to ena lilt• com t•rs1011 of 12.000 street li~hl ~ l•• 'ioclium vapor lamps \\ h1t h use ll·ss l'fl t•rg,\ than 1n t•a1Hle..,1 ·C'nt or mt•rniry \ apu1 light:-.. lta\l' hrt•n a nnounced Till' loans. awarded b\ lh<· s tale 1-:rwrJ.(y l 'ommission-to 39 citic·s and counties. r anged from $10,200 111 llw City of Albany to more than St million to three light1111.: clistncts 1n l.m; i\ngell.'s l'ount) hel'ome the new ext.•cutive scl'n·tary and manag<•r of the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association , whith has been 'ilag1ng tht• annual Nl'w Year 's Day Ho'it.' Paradt· for soml' 80 ) cars Co1wict io11 t'Oided FHl:o:SNO (/\P l A Ke rn Afl'WI ... ,_.. ()ii spill seP11 thrt>al lo ollt>r llarris was t•l(•C ted student president of tht• nivers1ty of California al San Uiego, then promptly \\a.., stripped of his vir lory. 1 larn ... sp'tmt $50 93 on his campatj!n 93 c·cnts over the S50 Ii nut, the s tudc•nt elertions cum mission ruled County burglar> and rohbery con\'iCllon has het•n overturned on grounds that a previous thert o f :i dock a nd possession of s tolen propert) were allowed in to evidence Thl' state's 5th Dis trir t Court of Appeal ruled that thev were riot rt.>lcvant to the ca•;<' for which W1ll1am Kenneth Manie,· Jr was conv1ctt.•d HOT CROP -With yellow oni ons bringing high prices to growers, some in the I mperial Valley have found it necessary to put night watchmen in their fields to guard their 50-µound b~gs . The onion harvest. which started in late Mar ch, •~due to end in the next fe w weeks. Gov. Brown aide may seek office SAN DIEGO <AP > Lynn Schenk. Gov Ed· mund Brown Jr 's secretary of business and transportation, is cons1der1ng a r ace for Congr ess or the state Senate next year She said she a lso would consider runn ing for secretary of state if the Democratic incumbent, March Fong Eu, seeks another ofCice. A campaign for public offi ce is "not something tha t is in the forefront of my mind" and depends p artly on family consider ations. she said. A Democ rat. s he lives in the sprawling state Senate district or William Craven and the COO· gress1onal district o f Clair Bu rgener. both Repubhrans Hoth districts extend from San Diego suhurhs to th1• i\rnona border Escapee given death penalty MERCED 1/\l'J The death penalty has been ordered for a Canadian prison escapee convirted of murdering a Chico man Jerry Douglas Rigelow, 20, was sentenced a fter Supe rior Court Judge Ceorge Murry denied motions for a new trial and to a ppoint a new public defender to represent Bigelow. The j udge pointed out that he had advised Bigelow that he was foolish for insist ing on representing himself al his trial last m onth on charges of murdering John Cherry. 26 Because it is a death penalty case. the verdict and sentence will be appealed automatically. and Murry told Bigelow "I beg you now not to turn down the stale when they offer you an attorney ." EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr., Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 NATIONAL FOOT HEALTH WEEK May 9th thru 1 5th The podiat rist is the only doctor so lely dedicated to the ca r e of the toot . See your podiat rist during Foot health Week. For the name of e PC>dlatrlst In vovr aree cell ... SA!\1 l"Hl\!'\('JSC(J t \P1 A stat<• fish ancl garnt• dep11rtme11t h1olog1st sa~ s that Jn 01 l s pill off Aptly named, this-a collect1on of truly opulent beauty-malcPrs. Imagine Princ1pesSd Lipstick, Contour Blush, Lumina Radiant finish Moisturizing Makeup with its own unique sponge applicator, Lumina Perfect Moisturizer and a purse-sized flacon of the "fragrance of the night'. Di Borghese Parfum Vibrant Spray Automatique And they're all yours as a bonus with any Borshese purchase of 7.50 or morel l'i\St\OI-:N.A 11\P I The Tou rn:i merit or Roses Associ a lion ha.., announced that John H .11 · J o.1t:k '' Fre n c h will DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642·5678 Come in and meet with our resident Borghese experts. They'll introduce you to a new gathering of treatment and colors for nails: the Lumina Radiant Finish Nail Collection including Foundation, Protection Glaze, and the most brilliant Lacquers. The Borghese Lumina Cosmetic Collection al/ from •s to 'JS. Find them in Cosmetic Collections -where we are all the things you are/ South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bristol Street, Costa Mesa Open Monday through Friday from 10 am to 9 JO pm. Saturd1y '1116 pm; Sunday 12 noun to S pm. . --... r;Jrantri.~ Coa st DAILY PILOl Mund,iy, May 1 I 198 I (~1·i11ie sl.t1tistics 11<>l ))'(Jlltl ,,,,,,,,.,,,,~p1·i1 g I t'-1 \\I•'" -.111111• p101111111•11I 111•11il111•, Ill ffll' 111.1111·1· ('011111\ S qu•11111 ( •• 111 lw111'l1 11-lp;i• ,.;I 11 1111•~ lto\\1,1•lit11 1111h•1•, il11111 \I tl!ll1• \ 1 illlllt,tl 1 iJ,tl JI) l,11 f 'l) Jtl•tll •I 1111 dr•lf'1d11I Ir 11•,1 11t I 111 11111·11• •l 1 •• 11 \\l'' 1· 1 tlll\ Ith d 1-'111I111 I 1 hi 111.t ,. !\,lld ''·· l•H 111 •I lllll t 1l•ll\ltl1·d ti I •Ill•' "' 11 1 llro·r 11H·:1111·1 ;111• I I ( 11 .1111•1 I '11 1111 \ l.11J HJ ,1 I Ill f •1 "'' II ll 1111111 I 11 p.1 \ I' 1 ,, I I 111 I ' I ti I \\ 11 I• I ti h I .I . "' 111 k I I ,I 1 tf I I 11111 I l ,, h· !I 11 4 ; "' I I• " I •' 11 11(1111\ 11u I f I I 11 I II ti .. 1 I I 11 • • • \1 I ( lt 111111' t '111111J \ pld).!t''\ 1 11:111,\ 1h:11 t111q~h' Tlll't••'<.; ;lllt11 li1·1 d1·1111•1tl ,,, l ht• ... ltll \ It ... .11t .. 11 ,11111.! 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IJ.!1.!,•'I ,tl ••d dt111.t11d• lot 11•p•11I· lt.t\I' l11•t lllllt' ,111 111111!1 1.1lil1• 11111 "'''' 1111 li11tli 1111..,111••-.,.1·.s :111tl 111\\1•1 h·' ··I , ... , "' llllll'Jtl .1111•111•11• \11d II ... ,,,ti• In t ... 1 lh;t1 11111o.;t of lh1• 11•qu1r1·d r1•p1111:-., 1:111•1' .i.:11 h1'.\t11td ..;ntr1t'111t<•'-. fl1111g 1·:tl1111PI 'l'ht.• o,;11p1•1 \ i;,01.s IJl'lt1•\I' llr:tl 1·11111111~ hal'I' th1· p.11111 \\t1rk \\1111111 .. ;,,·,. 1111111 1111·r.rll 111 :dth :111tl \\141:1n• 1 O'ils a11d !>.J,dt linll' I h.rt l,.'11\l ld hi· llS t•cl Ill 11101'1' prmhH·t 1 \ ,. p111 s 111I s 'l'h1•\ 1·t· 1111 1 ht• 11ultt I 1 :wk Dllllll!ll\ exprf'S'>t'd '" ltll' '>P<lr I oll)OVI' C\I t: thn<.r. ot the o.11ly Pt lot Oltter Vt!.'W'> PX prf'S<ocCI nn lht'> paQl' ilrt' lho~I' ol lh• ir <iulhors and artists. Reddrr commrnt r<o 111v1t ed Adon ., Th•• (JrlllV Ptll)I, f' 0 Boie 1So0, (OSI<'\ M e<oa, CA 921,}1, Phom (714) Ml 41?\ • I\']. I.' flm\ m111'11 1·:t11111·1l 1 :11 .1111! rio..: 1t111(! 1 1•,1lt•11 t.1 111•11plt· 1\ho !Inn'! ha \ I' I fl (1 II~ h ltl I) n ,. ~ I 11 h II I gr ll l'l ll'S' :\ !>1111 t kno\\ rl1111'1 kntt"' Uo l-r11m llH•lll~h that ~~ 1wn•1•nt 11( :ill llw '"'' ind 1111~ food ts houizht II\ ··ld1•1 l.1 r11tk on l':'(('l'l'll11t 1tly ltght h11t1.:l'I ORANGE.C..OAST ·1 t t'utl11t,_ -y _.., .. tr. t••• 11 A.Ill W .. , it \;: t• WI Ada•n• C '"ftll)ltdf'f\Clfl ta I~ tn\lai. M '-""U • l>o ~1111 han• a danlnj• r uom an your h111JM'' \nil 1f so. do you 11111• 1t ri>11l111l'ly'• Wh<'n JX>lltittt•r!I put that 11ul'n to ~· •11zcubl<-' !rnmptlna of h11rncowm•r!I, ff7 pcrct.•nt snld no. they u s unllv c•at 1n th1.• kitche n , or wh<>rever By "wherever ," I think what's me.mt t~ whn~ the TV set Is, like• tll(' <kn. Thomas P. Haley Publisher Thomas Keevil Cd1tor Barbara Kroibich Editorial Page Editor I l I • .• The FBI IS not above fraud W \SlllNGTON The FBl's crime ..,, a I 1sl11•.., .trt: the official yardstick of just 1111\\ mut'h pv1l lurks in the hearts of m en. 'I lw ;1111 hmC'l11.· does not reflectfavorably °'' t lw 1-'Bl wh1rh St>ems ·powerless to '•1JH' \\1th thc.· n ..,ing crime rates l'ht• c; nwn ne1t~rtheless show no e m· h.11 r a!'. ... m1·nt over the incr ease the more 1·111111• 1 hat,.., committed. the more money t Ill'~ I t·qum· to right at So at•appropria- t 11111s ttnlt' the~ point to the grim st al 1-.11cs not al> evidence of their own in· .11l11qu:H"'.\ but"" Justification for a bigger ltutli.:l'l l -.u<.111\ Congress is duly impressed .11111 '11lt·.., thc.· FBI the fu nds it requests to ~.ift•gu.ircl thl· nation Yet the Jus tice I tl'p,1rt rn1·nt ·.., internal documents show tlt1" 111111w~ "sometimes misspent. Here .11 • pi...I a few of the improprieties tl•11 11111t·nlt'd tn rerords that the public ":i r11·1 "r ..,u pposl·d to see: I h•· 1mµroprset1es " in volve in· "" 1d11;d 1•<ir111•r-eulling as well as serious '1olal 11111.., of contracts involving millions 111 dollar ... lft·rearesomeexamples· "Ernt·rgt'ncy purchases" which tlo 1101 rt•qu1 re rontracts or even purchase 111d1·1"·, huw been used by G-men to ,, '111d 1 f•gulur account ing c hannels. ·1 h1•s1· !<!t1ppo.-..ccl emergencies result in ex· Jll'nd1t11n·~ of millions of doU ars each ''"If Jnc1 have inc luded payments for .t~l·nl.., physical exams. auto repairs. n111f 1•11·nl'l' l"<µenses. laundry. office sup- l'l 11• pJrkmg. lu1tion and utility charges I tw liulk of FBI contracts were found to lt;1' 1• gont• lo "sole source" suppliers noncompetffi've awards that are an open invitation lo s weetheart arrangements. The investigator s found cases in which contractors s ubmitted unsolicited pro· posals and then coached bureau officials on ways to justify contract awards without competitive bidding. -A 19'75 INTERNAL investigation found that FBI officials had been guests of the Remington Arms Co. at a weekend __ G. ~ JACI AIDIRSDI hunting retreat a few years earlier. The company paid for accommodations, hunting licenses, liquor, ammunition and guides. The investigation concluded that it was OK , however, because Remington had no FBI contracts at the time. But documents s how that the bureau was buy- ing thousands of dollars' worth of Rem· ington shotguns under small-purchase procedures. The bureau recently bought new of· fice furniture, though it had $279,000 worth of furniture in storage -in a warehouse that costs $16,909 a year. . When the Marriott Corporation's food ser vice contract for the FBI Acade my at Quantico, Va., came up for r enewal some years ago, an FBI official recommended soliciting competitive bids only to "keep within the sphere of federal ... regulations." The time for submitting bids was so "unduly restric· live," lhe auditors concluded. that only one competitor made the deadline. The result was succinctly summarized by the routing slip of the review committee: "Me mo with our recommendation on way up! Of course 1t 1s Marriott "Jn 1976, M arriott offered SlS.0-00 to the FBI recreation association's snack bar. Mar· riotl says it was not a donation, but was "intended as our own investment to up- grade the existing facility " The FBI's legal counsel shot down the proposal ABOUT 1,000 REVOLVERS we re purchased solely from Smith& Wesson on ~rounds that non-uniformity of handguns would create a safety hazard. FBI officials also said the S&W revolver was the only weapon used in most of its gun battles But government a uditors found that agents are in fact allowed to carry either Smith & Wessons or Colts. according lo personal preference. In lhe ubsence of doc umentation auditors were unable to determin~ whether the FBI had actually received many of the goods and services which invoices showed had been paid for. Footnote · Al least one member of Congress is not willing lo give the FBI a blank check Ile is Sen. Orrin Hatch. R· Utah. whose investigato rs are checking up o n the FBI expe nditures. The senator is planning to take up the mat· ter with FBI Director William Webster. Don't write off Hayakawa's chances I •l'I \\ 1111·•' 1~ m1 i:uc:11twn Thu column'" 11111 ·11 /111 ltt ~ 11~ ~11crnle Phil Jo rd.an t ,, 111111 111,, ·.., µol1t1ros and p undits II ,1 ' 1 • .I( r 1.· '1 d y '~ r i t le n o ff S . I. lf.1' aka\\ a·:-; <"hances in next year 's ,..1·11;it11n al l'IL•cl 1on T hey did the same thing :.ix ~l'ars a go. 'I ht·rt• I'> 0111.· big difference this lime .11 1111111! S" \'f'ar~ ago, tluyakawa was nrth 111·1·s1d~·nt Cm(•r1tus o f San Fr a111•1' 1·0 St ale Now he's the in· 1•11111h1•11t I ruled Slates senator That's "'' ~·11;11 .11111•1• uf re eled1on it didn't h1•lp '"" th11·1• pn•dN·t.•ss1irs but it is a l11tlh p11lp11 fo1 tho~t· who know how to ""'' 11 .11111 1n his ov. n quiet "ay. I l.1' .1k,I\\ a ha" d('mnn ... trated he does. .ll ~T T llE SAME. Democrats and 111 lt1 1 H1·p11hhc.10s arc lining up to vie !111 ltt .., 111h tr1 next year 's races The v.uultl h1• 11•plal'l'ml'nls cite several rea ~1111 ... "'" ll.1~ak<rn:1 c<1n't win again . 1111· 111.11111 111w" lwing his age. his well· I'" hi 11•11ctJ Jll'n<·hant for dozing off when 11011•11 .11111 a not -particularl y - 1111p11· ...... ," 11•cnrcl 111 office I 11 tl•.,tl "1th Lhosl' points in reverse 1111 It.,. H ayakawa himself has noted hl' hasn't. so rar . ma naged to accomplish much. He's also observed that as a doubly junior solon, and a member of the minority party lo boot, he hasn't bee n in a ny position to accomplish much. Afte r four years in office. Hayakawa llRL WITIRS rs no longer a complete newcomer to the world's most exclusive club. MORE, HE AND hi s fellow Republicans now control that club. This increases his legis lative clout. It also means. with a Republican in the White House. Hayakawa now has the ex- ecutive branch clout held for the last four years by California senior Sen. Alan Cranston. As a r esult o f th ese changes. llayakawa has an excelle nt chance to impress the state's voters in the more than a year before the 1982 elections His ca t naps'> Far from be rng evidence of aging, they de monstrate an a bilily many people envy; ask any re· porter who's had to s it through hours of dull legis lativ<.' sessions. committee hearings, or press conferences. HIS AGE? Huyakawa ·will be 76 next year. but that s not nearly as "old " as it once was. either an hfe or in politics. For instance. it's only abollt fi .1e years older than the President of the United States. a man an a much more demand· ing position. It's only three years older. for that matter . than a certain fellow Re publican senator from Arizona, a fact a much younger California con- gressman. who admittedly has his eye on Hayakawa's post . mrght do well to keep in mind. 1.i1ven the respective records of those hoping to replace him, plain-speaking S.J Hayakawa. wherever he stands in the polls today, may be more than capable of pulling off more electoral upsets next year The Schlafly theory can be made to work t·: vl'I since Phyllis Schlany told the S1•n11t1• Labor Committee that women who an• sexually harassed i n the w111 kplacc• have only themselves lo hl.1m1" our office has been a hotbed of C'llnr11s1on I Whut Mrs Schlafly said was: "When 11 woman walks across the room, she 'o(wuks with a universal body language ---i ' ART HOPPI 4S . that most men unders tand. Men hardly ~v,•r osk sexual favors of women from whom the certain answer is 'No.' V~rtuou~ women ore seldom accosted by unwelcome sexual propositions or tamllloritlcs, obscene talk or profane language." THIS REVELATION certainly camed th women in our otflce to sit up and take notice. There were numerous cries of "Gosh, why dJdn't I think or thal?" or "By Georae. 11he's rlahu .. l wish you could have seen the artm line or r males shufntn1 to their dnk1 t he next morning with thelr arm• crossed O\lttr lhe Cront upper port.ion of their bodle.,. l don't know wbat tJl1I aald o the other Cellowa, but to m• It Hld, "Wom n'1 Rehabllitallon Center.'' Poor Miss Dreemley. It took her three minutes to make It to the water cooler as she insisted on skulking from rile cabinet to file cabinet while wearing dark glasses, a snap-brim fedora and cold cigar between her teeth. l 'M NOT SUR E if this enhanced her reputaUon or not. True, she didn't re· ceive a single sexual proposition, but two guys tried to place bets with her on the third at Hialeah and Fred Frisbee got sore when she wouldn't sell rum a lid of somethlng or other. On the brtght side, Jane Starling in accounting wasn't harassed once by a male Invitation to lunch. She credited her newly acquired habit of constantly plcklna her teeth. "I don1t know whether lt's the toothpick,'' she said, working on a lateral inclaor, "or whether they fl1ure l already ate." Attempts to look virtuous were not 10 succeasrul. tf lss Peachart got her white veil caught in the collating machine In the Xerox room and came within an ace or beln& forced to engage in a reproduc· tlve proceas. AND WHILE Betay Barton'1 new wardrobe <deslaner overalls by Can't· Bust·'em and rubber boot.I) spared her beln1 IUCMOUll)' Oiled, It did lead UD· fortunately to prof anity. That wu when she told the bota .. Mr. Pb.IQuer, that 1he didn't care who the bell be lhoucbt she was, by God. but s he didn't do win· dows . The one unqualified s uccess was Lorelei Sartire in personnel. As usual, she came swaying into work wearing nylons, a mini skirt, decolletage, dangl- ing earrings and the longest eyelashes on the market today. And not one solitary male pinched, patted or even made her a welcome sexual proposition. "l dress this way because I enjoy looking pretty," she told a crowd of female admirers. "And I think that any young woman who believes In Mrs. Schlany and yet still wants to wear pretty clothes," 11he added, stroking the tips of her new Zapata moustache, "should 1row one, too." lllllY Ill Personally, I'd rather help a Mexican who la wUllnt to work and find room for hlm ln W1 country than all the other foreianen l'm helpint to 1uPl\C)C"t th.rouah welfare. J.V. ........ _.._ ............ ,....... .... . _ ....................... _,.,, ...... ,.. ... ~ .. .--. ... .,... ........ --------- -. ... . I ~' . ' ' • . . . .. a I ·. ·=. .. -.. ·:..i :~: ., ' QUEENIE I -")._ -7' . e,.., • .,._,_,,.. __ _ "I think I can shO\\' my support for the administration without a jelly bean In my martini, thank you." ,~~\ ~'"" . \\ Disability facts told DEAR READERS: If you're between 35 and 65, your chances of bein« unable to work for 90 days or more because of an injury or Illness are far greater than your chances of dying, according lo the Health Insurance Institute. If you're over 50, there's one chance lo four that you'll be disabled for six months or >1 more before you retire. I Disability insurance is one way to protect yourself financially, and this ls the subject of a pamphlet by the Health Insurance I Institute. Titled, "What You Should Know About Disability," It lists some of t.he flnan· clal resources and benefits you may already have, helps you decide whether you have enough protection, tells you what you should know about individual policies and offers helpful hints if you're shopping around for a policy. The free booklet may be requested by writing to: Health Insurance Institute. Dept. 733, 1850 K St. N. W ., Washington, D.C. 20006. Shop for insurance DEAR PAT DUNN : Can a lend er force a borrower to get credit life and disability insurance to cover the outstanding balance on an installment credit contract? . G.L., Irvine A creditor may require you to b~ tills Insurance, but may not require that you buy it through him or bis Insurance agent. If tbla insurance is required by the creditor, the premium cost must be Included as part of the finance charge. If insurance ls not required, make sure you have surncleot coverage to protect merchandise you are buying In case of death or dlsablllty. If you decide you need credit insurance, it may be wise to shop around. Some creditors receive sales commissioM from the insurance .company and you may be able to get a better deal rrom a local l.n.surance broker. · "'Cot a problem., Then write to Pat Dunn Pat will cul red tape. getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities an government and busantss Mad your question& 10 Pat Dunn. At Your Seroice. Orange COO!lt Dally Pilot. P.O Boz 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As many letters a.t posmble will be answered. but phoned inquiries or Letters not including the reader's full name. address and bwaness hours' phone number cannot be considered. This column appears daily u - cept Sunday$." New telescope a joint effort MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP> -An infrared telescope that scientists hope will spot l million new radiation sources in the heavens is set for shipment to Holland for mating with its dutch-built spacecraft, according to offi cials at Ames Research Center. (J nlike conventional telescopes, the unique instrument will be able to "see" heretofore invisible objects s uc h as "cool" r ed dwarf stars, 12-blllion-year-0ld quasars and, perhaps, the black 1 bole that many astronomers beli~ve lies hidden at the center or the Milky Way. The telescope was built by Ball Aerospace Systems, part of the same company that makes Ball I jars used by millions of Americans who can their own foods, according to Ames spokesman Pete Waller . The scope was shipped on Sunday to Ball's Boulder, Colo., plant. The project was managed by Ames. Conventional telescopes are used to locate objects emitting vlsible light. Radio telescopes can pick up other frequencies of the spectrum where noisy waves now from many ulronomical object.. Infrared radiation la far cooler than visible lllht, though It aclually is emitted a.I' beat. The earth's atmosphere blocks out infrared waves from distant bodies. Jn a joint project llnltin1 the U.S. with Brltaln and the Netherlands, the new scope will be carried to an a1Utudeof563mlles where it wUlorbltfrom pole to pole every llOmlDutes. The ext.remelY sensitive ICO&>e wlll operate at minus .se de1ree1 Fahrenheit, a temperature that wlU be maintained by fUUn1 lta double· walled veuel with lMpoundaofauperfluidbeUum. waller said the cold temperature l1 needed to kffP the heat-.emltive Instrument from "Heln1 ltailf." Ill 34-lncb mJrror eye will point 1t.ral1ht up and wlll eoon scan lbe enUr• 1ky hricedur1n1the1cope'1 Olte·Y..,. tlfe. A Duteh·bum 1peetrom.ter will aaalyae rlCUatloo picked up by a detecton. / Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MOnday, May 11 , 1981 A7 ******************** * NOTICE lt * TO FAMILIES * How Do You Feel Right Now? . Are You A Mature Woman ... · With A Circulation & Figure Problem? " your answer la "YES" then you need Jean Marl• ... The only women's Health Salon designed with you In mind I LOOK BETIER ... FEEL BETIER .. The apedaJ man In your Hfe will love you tor ltl tt you find ArObk: Dancing strenuous Md the "Bargain" exerctse salons offer no equipment ... then please come In tor a Free Treatment . . . on the moat eoc>hlltlcated machines available ! * of _ * * DECEASED VETERA~S * lt In honor o f Veterans who have died. Harbor lawn Memorial lt 'Park 1s dedicating additional flags to its .. Avenue of Flags" on * MIMORIAL DAY, MAY ZS, 19~1 : * Any family who has a Veterans Flag and would like to have it * dedicated and added to the Avenue of Flags, may call or bring lt ...._ the flag to Harbor Lawn Memorial Park office no later than May ""-- .....-15, 1981 . The Veteran need not be buried in Harbor Lawn to !"{' * have his flag displayed at this dedication ceremony. lt "'-(flags wtll be stored at Harbor Lawn for future display at no expense to the ""-. ,....-family) ~ * * Try Jean Maries own Therape~tlc Lounge • to Improve special problems .. such as Clrwlatlon, Dowager Hump, Flabby Thighs, Dropped Buttocks, Lethargy, Tension and Stress. IMTIODUCTORY Off8 * * * * * * --.0.,1 S30. ~· IU•llmlted YltJ+sl llP. l /IV tl ~~~~~~~-------=-* * *---.::::==~ * * Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive : I ! Mortuar)r · Cemetery Crematory ·: * * '"Serving All Fatths" 1625 Gisler Avenue • Costa Mesa • Phone (714) 540-5554 Costa Mesa's Only Complete Funeral Factb tles .. * ******************** II THE BIG DISCOUNT TO THE EAST YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT FOR. It\ ju~t not rx"'iblc to rlan every lnp ahead of ti me or to -.tay for a wee!.. or longer. On Continental. that doe~n·t mean you \.·an·t get a big Ji~rnunt. Our nc"' ASAP Fare let' wu tal..c ot f from Lo~ Angele' lntcrn:.Hinnal. Bui-bani.. nr Ontario for ~even Ea. ... 1crn citie-.. With no waiting Flv to Bn,ton+. Nev. 'lhrk/Nc"arl.., Philadc°lphia:j:. Wa.,hington. D.C.. Miami or Ft. Lauderd;ile IOr onl) $179. Or Chicago for $159. That"' caL·h ~a) when you OU) a rnunJ. tri p tic:l..ct. There arc no t1thcr re-.tnction .... No auvann.· pu rcha,c. No length of <.tay requirement-. or time deaJline,. But -.cat' arc limitcJ and :.ill n1gh1-. are via Denver. AN EXTRA CJTY, NO EXTIA CHARGE. When you fly to any ot the<,e -.even Ea'tem ci1ie'>. you can return from any nne of the other cit1e~ at no cx trn charge. For example. )OU rmght fl y to New 'thrl../Ncwurl.. anJ call.:h a return flight from Wa.,hi ngton. D.C FIRST CLASS FOi THE PRICE OF COACH. Buy a full fare Coach ticket on Continental ur bring us another airline\ full tare Cooch ticl..e1 t IO thc-.c E;.-.rcrn ci11c' anJ \\c·11 th \>Oll F1N Cla". Thar\ right. FiN (la". . . 1111-. i' 011 ;J fiN ClllllC. Iii"! -.enc ha-.i-.. '() n:...crva11orh art· -.uggL'\lcd. \\'Im -..ud )our ~111111x111~ "ouldn"t all1l\\ hr.I Cla-., rrJ\d Jll} more' BIG DEAL ON A RENTAL CAR. Continental\ ASAP Fare dtll.''n·1,tnp tx·111g J l!oo<l Jcal '~hen 'ou land. ~ On \\Ccl..enJ~. with a three Ja) minimum. wu can rent a Dollar Rent -A-Cad for ju-.t ~ 16 a tlu). That\'' ith unlimited DOLLAR milcuge. Or duri ng the \\l'cl... ju't .., •""" 5-14.95 a da\ \\ith IOO ln:c mile,, Ju,1 'how v11ur Cont111e111al tiL·l..el at the Dulla; rental hK·a111111 Go11a· g1.·1 hacl.. L1't 111 a hurr) anJ \\>ant to Bo~innt, 7:00 ,till. ~A5 pm Chit-ago 7: II\ am. 1 I 25 a111. ~.00 p111 5·28 pm. 5.55 pm. 1·1. LauJcnlalc: 11 :25 ~1111. M 1:11111 7: 10 am. 11 · :!5 am Ne\\ Yorl../Nc\\,irl.. 7:10 am, 11 :25 ,1111~ 3:00 pm • Phtlaudphiat. 7:00 am. 2:-15 pm Wa,h1ng1on. D C . 7. to Jm. 11.25 .un 'ave 111nnc\ too? )bu 1.·•m·r do ~ttcr than ASAP. C:ill ;our rnmpJll) trJ'd lkp.1rtmcn1. trJ\cl agent. nr Con11ncnwl CHICAGO *tS9 BOSTON *i79 NEW YORK/NEWARK •t79 PHILADELPHIA *t79 WASHINGTON D.C. •t79 MIAMI *t79 FT. LAUDERDALE •t79 I otJ I "' '"' 111 .. 111111.11 I ,.,f'', "' .0 .. 1•.thlt' JI ~m.iJI .,1,1111,u,,.t 'h.ir,•r , .. 111f1,' ,1,,.,,,uoi" 1r r11 t ..... ·,u,. Hh.l~JOlt•I t . .u t••u~•"' u·1utth:J 1"''"~111,.i 1,·11110~· 11-. .. rn1" , fhtnun.;11Jhlf' .. h .. r.-C' .. rr1•c" M•o,· .:•"•'•hr ... ,h '"" Ii l~t '\II 111 ·h• , u"rtC'.,lt<wt ••flritt\tlwhl("'.,.,~, .... ,,J•h.nJ11 • '-ct\lo "'"'"'''" t\o:~'""''' '' f''"'"J<'lr~ ....... ' "' I.,(' .. 1nJ .. ,tw-Juh .. ~""'' I i.1,h.1•11 Vttl~i\UI rrnw ... ,.. ... L-0$ A nae le~: 772·6000 • Bc:-.c:rly Hill• ind San Fun1nJ(t \!alley. 4186· 1000 • Burban~. OlcnJah: 11nJ Pa~adcn•: 246-7181 • l.on)l Bcu~h: 537-4400 • On111tl11 1nd Pnmona. 4'118·6541 Ora nae: Ct1un1y: .SJ7.Jt 14 • Rivtr~ldc ind Sln Bc:manlinn Tull Fll'c: t800) .SlS-0280 •San Gabriel Vallo)'~.5711-42 10 • on11 Monica and S11u1h 81y; 646-2230 ' I PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports, and Advertised Val~es. .'READING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK· In the Ill Pilat .. ' ~· I I - -------~~--- - - ----~--------7 --------------------..-------• •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May I I, 1981 Ballet an obsession for dir A~ ......... FOUR'S COMPANY -Linda Bootz pushes a stroller made out of two bicycles down a WausalJ, Wis. street. Along for the ride are two Bootz children Abby and Ben. and Sarah and Wendy Buehler. Dog Lucy pulls on weight National parks 'deteriorated' WASlllNGTON <AP I The national park syst em has deteriorated mlo a ··shameful" cond1 t;on because of a government greedy to acquire new land without adequately taking care of what 1t has. lntenor Secretary J ames Watt has said. ··The state of the national park system 1s sickening to me," Watt told a Senate Energy and Natural Resources s ubcommittee "To see the de· teriorallon and degradat10n because we have not been good stewards hurts ... Watt said one estimate shows a backlog of $1 6 bilhon in needed maintenance on buildings, roads. water and sewage systems. He said it was in· formation such as this that prompted him to im· pose a moratorium on land purchases and ask Congress to divert $105 million earmarked for s uch pur chases into a crash maintenance program "I am appalled al the condition of lhe National Park System. What the Reagan administration has inherited 1s shameful. .. Watt said ... As secretary of interior. I owe an apology to the American pc•o pie for th e fact that the National Park syskm has not been maintained " Watt appeared before the subcommiltee to s upport an administration-backed bill that would for the first time allow money from the Land and Water Conservation fund lo be used for park main tenance Under current law. up to $900 million from the fund can be used each year by federal. state and local governments to buy park land. Libyans allowea to stay in U.S. WASHINGTON 1AP1 The State Department has said the esltm atC'd 4.000 Libyan s tudents in the United St ates can stay so long as they pursue their studies and obey U.S. laws Officials said Presidt'nt Reagan's decision last week to shut down the Libyan diplomatic mission here C'ould cause problems for the students, most of whom are in the U.S. on Libyan government scholarships. The officials said a principal function of the Li· byan mission was to provide financial aid to the students. The Libyan government will now have lo find an alternate procedure, the officials said. Under Reagan 's directive, the 27 Libyan diplomats accredited here and their families have until Wednesday lo leave the United States. State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said. Robbery verdict nixed SAC RAMENTO lAP> -Pohce should hav£ obtained a search warrant before opening a rolled up paper bag containing evidence from a robbery. a state appeals court says A dissenting justice said the decision was an example of "the lurches and spasms of the ap· pell ate courts." r P UBLIC NOTICE I P'ACl~C VIEW MIMORIALP'All Cerretery Mortuary Chapel·Crematory ~ Pac1f1c View Drive• Newport Beach NOTICR 0" AVAi L.AalLI TV o" ANNUAL RE~RT I Pur>u.,.,t to ~cllcm •10. (d) ot the I nt•rnel Rev.nu• Code, notice h f\erebv given '"•I Ille •nr>uel repor1 tori Ille uleOO.r vear 1'90 ol 8rl9gs Cun· nlngl'tem Automotiv• Museum h 1v1ll1bt• for public lnsPKllon bv •nv Interest.cl c1U1en WllO requestt It •11 Ille founcMllon's prln<lpel offlu lout• ed 11 250 Biker St,...I, Cosu Meu, Cellfornle 92677, beQlnnlnQ on Mey ti, "" encl tor llO cs.ys tf\efHller durlno regular bu.i,,.n f\oVrs ln>m 1:00 1.m. toS.OOp.m. 644 2700 McCOltMIC« MOUUAallS LaQuna Beach 494 9415 LaQuna Hills 768 0933 San Juan Capistrano 495 1776 HAllOll LAWK-MT. OLIVE Moriuarv • Cerre tel)' Crematol)' 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540·5554 Nac1•ont1u IM.LllOADWAY MOUUAlY 110 Broadway Cost• Mesa M2·91SO r'ALnHii HOM IMfTM ' TUTHIU WISTCLW CHANL 427 E f7th St Colt• Mesa 948-9371 . Tiie neme of Ille Pronclpet Meneoer 01 Ille foundation Is llrlggs Cull· nl119111m. Tiie 11111 of Ille Prl11Cl1M1l Meneoer ot Ille loulldellon Is P•HW.nt Ol•ector M.TMl.-yw,C .. A ....... .-rt~°'1¥1 5'111111'1 New~ a..cll, CA ttMot Tit: 17141...sD PvtMI.,,.. Otano-Coest O.lly Piiot. INY I. 9. 10. II, U, 1't1 11n .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUS aUSINISS NAMa STATEMaHT Tiie IDl-1119 peno!! ll doing l>Vtl MHU SEA HlO CONSULTANTS, '1• ,..,k Ori,,., Co.I• Mell. C1lllornl1 ,,.,,, Tl!Omes J Petiet\, SU PUk Ori••. COii•~. t.lllornll tt.27. Tllll -llltll I• Cond\><ltd llv "' In· dh•ldll•I fl1omuJ. Petiet\ Tllli tMl-l wu lllJld wllll Ill C•unly Gier• tr Orat10tt Gounlt O' Mlr'll i•. ''" PUflM "11bllSllM Oreno-C•tt 0•11' ll'llot, Mlr<h tt, Nlil •, 1 I, It. i.•1 U ... 11 To Place your "Fast Result" Service Otre~tory ad .... C11l Now 64~1671 .... JJJ By SHARON IJALEV p., tll• At-latH rrwu MALIHl'. l'nl1f i\s the Ol'" manua111a d1rC'clur of lhl' L~s Angetts Ballet. Steven Jacobson's f1r<\l Joh wu-; unpacking boxes. pickrntt lip paper!-t and 01 guntztng f1l es .. E1ghtet>n year'\ in the Jarntonal s ervice bust ness," lauithi-J 1.1l·ob.;on "I nevt>r actually cleaned n floor uni! I I JlOt ltm Joh " Jacobi.on n•l11 l'd two and a half )t>:irs ago :11 the age> of 42 :1fter huildmg a small ian1 to1111I service tnto a m1l11011·ctollar operation "I vowed !(> n•lirc youn~ and devolt1 myself lo sculpting, fish in~(. making violins, 01 whatevt.>1 struck my fam·y " Then. a few months ago he received a call from Hob Boyles. Sl'nior vicl' president of Security Bank and Jll l'!>l(ll•rtt or the Los Angeles Ballet ..... I board of d1ret·t<i1 s Bo)'lt•s "aid he had the perfect job to lure Jacoh,.on out of 11·111 eint•nt lmpossihl<'. <'hal lengm~ ancl 1111 p.n "0( l'ou1 ..,,. I Ht'l'l'Plell. .J :ll'Ob<;on 'lay.; · 11 souncfod too i::ootl lo he true The Lo., \ngt•les Ballel 1'i not a new C'ompan). 1l ha'i l'lCl!'ttt•tl Pl'l'<'a1111 us ly 101 sen•n } ears l111t1I rect•nlly. thl' b.11l1•t hl"lpNI to nwet its C'\pe11se-; h'.\ giving performant'l'" for lo<·ttl "t'honl~ and rec·en in~ funds from lot' al gove1 nment ;1gt>nCll''> Rut \\Ith Utt• ""'sage of Caltfornta'i. Propo,1t11ir1 l:J, th1· ba 11<.·t lost both trll'O lllt~ aml 1·x1"'"u1 e When h1• <1tTl't1ll0d thl' Job:.-; ntr111ag111g d11 t•t' tor .. Ja t·oh,1111 had 111 ·1 ('r e1 en S<'Prl a hulh:t, bu t that hatl 1111 l'fft•1·t 1111 Im. de<:1s1011 1' tll that matter • f1tl1'Kf THEB"' fART2 • • IDWUOl ............ u, ~., . ............... 0U~I0411WI Iii .. MJ.W•-.U•tlf 'lf\OU ... lff Ill , .. , ... .._ ..... ., MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ri'l "-Ail.I .. .\(.;•I' I I ~ ,,, .• ,!\~,., .. )'ti w-~ 'tH '' J'l YI f J A._, 1 "lot• t4, ... j. .. •. , USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For R<•su It Scrvit'l' Call 642-56 78 Ext. 322 "' Rtngo St;t•• CAVEMAN (PC.I SHOWS Al 6 15 8 15 10 15 -====-----~ llONOFTHE DESERT (PG) 111 Dolby Ster"o SHOWS AT 8 00 t r ('" -=======~-=:i.1 N"•I D•amoncl JAZZ SINGER IPGI SHOWS AT 6 00 8 20 10 30 -__ , Burt Ld11c;as1er ATLANTIC CITY (R) SHOWS A T G·OO 8· 10 10 15 0.•111t1lut1ou••'f' (..in• r. ~111nd •IO•,.,.. ,,l a.1 .... ~ ... • Aft..1 r...-• ... n .. '11'0""" \,...,.-.., JI rtt fiM ....... .., .. , ..... ,.., •Q•· ..... ,.,, .. ,~ '" l.W•• I ~""'"4 '1•1'* •41\ """'~ ""-•t,.O•f J•11 M1cha~I Vonc"••I HJ\RD COUNrRY IPGI And Huv .. .,·, Gare tRI c ------M1chat1I Cau•e THE HAM> IRI PltJ\ Thct Sphmx (R I :::i I John 8001rr.~···,, EXCALIBUR tnl r o•t.l\p,che l hPRr 1 ~ tRI I tAc~demy ~ W1mo~1 1 ORDINARY PEOf'l £ IRI 1 r1butP ll'GI r -----> GPne W1lc1~• STIR CRAZY In! Plu• U1ed Car~ (RI KING OF THE MOUNTAIN IPG) Plus V1111 Nuvs Blvd (RI EKCLUSIVE MAN~ !H[ATP.C SHOWJ,H(l SPECIAL UMITEO £HGAGEM£Ml Mann's South Coosr Plaza CoU (714') 546-2711 fOJ st1owtlmes . ht' tiH1 t play the v1ohn, but tor mort-thun two 'l'{lr<; he ha' t1tud1ed under the ltahan ma<.te1 ~I <•rto Fr osull learning to make them I\ look nt Jacobson's Malibu ~uch house m d1cutc'> wh) Boyles tons tdered him the right m an lo manugt• H ballet company. It took him nine 11111nths to n1mph1l<• the large mosaic he copied from u tlOO vei.r old Venetian fresco It hangs on h1i. w;1ll Nt•'<l to ltis fireplate lies a soft -eyed. pin) (111 :wa 11011 lte sculpted an wood. The wholC' lwui.t· rcfl t•tts his interest in and mastery of various art forms 'If I hke something, then I have an obsession t<1 rnaslt•r it," he says, offering his guests a sample of Ins own horn(• hrl'wed beer J acohson ap1>roacltes the s ubject of the ballet with sorrH•thing like evangelical fervor He is morl.' th:.in Pnthus ia'i li <', he is adamant 111 the short lime he has been on the j ob. he ha" immersed h1mst•lf 111 the ballet. lie admits he k110"., littlt· of the a1tical or creative end, but ht• Ii.is qu1l·kl:r ll•a rn•·d to love the dance J Ir admit'-he 1s too old and too short 5·foot •I to lc•;1111 to dam·e . but he 1s content if he can be •1 1111<1· 111 111:sk1ng the• ballet a success in Lo-.. \ 11 i::c• lcs \1\ J11h ,..., to help the company run srnoothl) ;111<1 to st•1• that 1t has the fundmg lo succeed,' ltt "") s, and that give•., me a tremendou5 '\t•nsc ol h1·long111g tu the• b<tlll·t · H1·c·c•nt ly . ltc Wl'llt w 1th the compau) to Nt·~ \ 11rk. wht•11• lite Lo~ Angeles Ballet. undc1 the ol1n •t•t11111 of John Clifford. performed at tht• .... ~ ..... '• "' u.,.," r, •• .,.. ,,.,.,.., "'"'" --·--FRIDAY THE 13th,.,, 2 (RI 1a:tl·t•··•·tca•t..a •t•• UM f ., ..... .._ #WlfMtft Of TWO ACA.OilMY AWAAC. '",{ !,Mr!!,RJ..,.,. 1~•·1••IM •t ••1t• OOl.CN_ ........ • CMAltCMM.O ~ LOVERS AND LIARS (RI ., .. ,-.., , ... .. .. , ..... , ................. , .. e""t LAM:A.atla AMO SUIAN &AA400lt AT~N;,:.c, ;.•!:,JR> ,., "'", , ......... .... .,..,.. ... ..,v .. ••u. W.-llCJ PERRO CALLEJECO II CON AL ROJO VIVO LOVERS AND LIARS (RI 11\UI HX MACHINE (R) "HO AM'"' RIKllO Wiii 1on111an A<C MSOl'f lltlng YOU<°"'" AM PorUD' t •at" .,._ •....O lfU• IN .. ~!'f.•:.'=, CAVE~H CPO) (PG) 8 ' t• ,.., fl>t.ANl!T Of THE DINOSAURS 11 N• AM t.M R.cllO Wltll 19nlllan A<<B""f at Ing YO!lf 0.n AM Portal>< --·--·· F'lllDAT THI 1atlt Part t (II) -MY ILOODV VALINTINE ----- Mft·--- LOVlflt ANO L.IAl'8 (Ill , """ atx MACHINI (") _..,. _ _,..,. ... _ UCA~Utl (") UC NOM&MAN (It) Brnokl)n t•acll'm\ .l.H'•>h'lort 's enthus iasm lume<f tu rtf'ur 1•c·,1 <"Y \~ ht•n ht' "Poke of the critical re t.'H'\\-S Ull' 111111p;in\ 11•1 ''l\t•d while 111 New York. Jn .111 11 111111· 11•\ ,.,...,,ti of lttt' u4'ual coastal 1·111t111 ;11 11' 1I1 \ . tlw Los Anl!eles Rall et received i.:111\\ 1ng 111 ;11w~ fr11111 tht" N1·w York l'ritics 'I ht· h:llh t 'i 11111111 town l nllc°'I art! not so ktnd 11111 Pvt·• .l.11 ot .... 1111 11•r11"'' ti) bt· ruffled by tht 1, .. ,, th•111 "l11wir1r. l1111111"lt1\H1 prai11c lie points out tli .11 11n1·c• "}t•11r ra111ous l"tlll1pan1 es like the Stut tv,:11 t u11d Huval Ha 111•1 1 <Hill' lo Los Angeles for a 11•1\ tl.1~·!-t, pl;1v 111 <'.ll•·ll It\ n owd<, and then leave. "'l'lw a111l11•111•1· '" lw11· ... hl' sav.s. "and we just liav1· 111 k1•1•p \\1J1 l;1111:. ht>l·a11s1• w1lhout a resident • 1101 pun\ !111·11· "' 1111 \1 ay to l'XPO"l' lite population tu tht• 1!;11111• 111 t1 .1 111 111•11. d:1nl'<'r-;, '" tu l•ncoura~e lll'W lt1lt•11t ' 'l'h1• l.11-. \111: .. 11 . ll.1ll1•t 11•11111111 arih 1esides at ~ht• l'h1ll1a1111111111 \11d1t1111u111 hul t•1•1•ntually """"''I"'" t11 11·1\ •' .1 1111111• 11f rt 11\\11 ll1i11.t•11·1. findrnj! ''"' f 1111d1r11• ·' 1•1 1111.1111·111 11·.,1dt·nc·r• 11•q111r(• mor t' t Ii 111 l'\llln I :11111· \I ' 1•11al 1, 111 1 ,...,,. $;> 11111111111 a ~ 1·~11 • s.1y <. th• • 1.•111t•11 \f11•1 .tll \111,11 .. $" 111 ilhm1 • Tbat 'i; \\I •I 11 (II t l•I f.;1·111 l\\11 !11111.ntlll\ll hu11dtn~5 f ,, Ill H1 1•1it 11•1\1 l11m • '1•1 .111 hr \\ .1111 s 1s tu r aise 1 111 111•'1 11111111•\ 111 II·'' ofl 1111• 1 ••rrtf1'111) s deht.s ',\hat 111'1•' I''> t· 1111• lll ll'>l IS tl11 clf'dll'Uliun or ,, 1n1• 111 tl11·~·· 111·11pl · " 111\ \\••rl l1a11I. and 11.ork I •I 111" \\(1• 11 \••I' II( \,.II 1111.! \\Ith pl'oplt· fikl' llo. 1111•1111\\111111111 1 I .. ·: •. .· .. · ;.· .. •. =· :· ,. I .. Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 MS eun.,., who fo;,gtit tor .. fi9hl to .... ma11iu- ... Cl) LYNDA CAlll'T'P'I CWlftrATION L)'ftda Cet1ar i. jOltlaCI by .., 0-.. .-ry "'-' and °"" Evart UOyd In a ....-c:.1.vllrie4y ~ i TUBE TOPPERS IO HYe MYa1ely ~ eoldlera • 91NNYHIU. Go •boetd el\lp Wjlh Banny 1ne11Moe eclencie ow.< • l•Ull 9'110- mot>lle~t tll-40. ()) ~ 0 An AllOll\a)r lllt• Hllffy to help him ciNr a Yc>unQ rnan auspactad of c;omm11. 11no • v1<:k>us crime CR) \II '"l \' -EVBING- 6."(IO eue --. 8 WOHDP WOIMN 0.-posea -• ...... aoen• and.,_..,.. an -Y of the united Se.-. who Hiii 00.,...._, MCtetl CP"'1 I) 0 TIC TAC DOUGH e w•A•1°H e UTIUHOUMON TMEPMWI °"" ... ~ • home tor _, orpnana. uneww• ol .,.. cruel trfftment th•t II '"'*11ng them th«• CPa11 2>0 • MOYIE • • •Y. "The Birds" ( IM3) Tlppl Hadt.,, Rod Taylor Ol<ected by Attred Hitcncoctc 8aMd on the 1110tY by Dac>f'"9 du M- rw For -.,nllnown r.u«o, huge fldcl<• ol l*da 81taclc an ISOiated c.w-u .-coast town 8 9 THATS CNCABl9L£ Feeturad • psychic detec· !Ne, a ponal>la pain con· uol daYlca. • group of amput• akydlv«I .• ,_ -~ technique. II MOVIE Franlt thfowa lw bac:k out •nd •PP'lft tOt • Purple Heart while Hawllaye moutl\a Iha ki. ol a '"-'cl and Mn<I• an unc1«-ua aokltar hOma • GOOOTMO Florida'a pl-lof J J s birthday .,. ~t subdued wflan Jamaa laarl\I th•• • comoul9 has goven him a bad credit rat· ong (Part 21 DYNAMIC DUO -Lynda Carter is joined by Ray Charles in ber musical variety special "Lynda Carter's Celebration" tonight at 8 on Channel 2. • * • '" "t Want To Lo .. C 1858) Suun Hayward. Simon Oakland A C.U girt 11 convietad ol murci.< and _,lenced lo doe In tl\e gu CIWlmbef fD PAOOIHGTON BEAR Paddington vc-on a OIC- noe. gaea hlS po..-. ...., •• the .-.CW• and • trleked Into t>uyong phOt>ay shares on .,, °" comp9f>y «!.) E.L.ECTNC COW'ANY ~ CMNBWS Ol A8CNEWS t :30 0 JOt<EWS WILD • W£1.COMIE aACK. KOTTVI Waahongton 11 Iha Of- llUIP"I when Iha c:iaias Uv\ngl tund ~ II) IENNYHLL Benny's Waat Country Chllfactar ,,,_ Iha ~t twt.>c:a a'"'* CM\ WW 10 hos son ti) KCET NIEWSllEAT «!.) STUOeOS& "Stunt Kid " Hollywood stunt kod Reid Aondall ~­ lonns • WOlid rec«G- br t.ak Ing 1umP oll a hogh- rota (RI (J) NEWS CHANNEL LISTINGS 9 IMHEY WIUBt While irate at~.. corn.- plwl ol PO<l"°Gf apty bau>g dl~yed •• • dostJn- guo9hed W1 gallery. 8llfnay and ......... 1-.c:• • ....,,,., cr-H6 8 EDfTONAL N10 8 C88 NEWS a .c:NlWS G HAPP't °"YS AGAIN Forme atlafTICMs 10 lalle the piece ol an ellw.g .cape W1A&1 "" a maglC ~ 10 Mic> an orphan· -ua 8 Mc.NEWS II 1UUJSEY£ • M'A"l~H A )'OUnV surgeon from TOllyo bnogs home 10 the ' -gec>N or the 40n 111 that they ... out ol louefl ... 11\ ,_ medical pracllC· -• STNETI OF IAH FMHC900 When • coliag. 1..0.. is accldantally shot , he r•"-to lee IN pollCi9 ..-the~IOt'- ollosing • "'-"°" II KNXT CBS1 Lo~ Angeh·'> 0 KNBC 1NBC1 LO'> Anqelt''> " KTLA \!no I Los Angt!lt.''> D KA8C TV 1ABC1 Los Anqeie .... CE "rMB 1CBS1 San Diego 0 KkJTV1lnd1LosAnut>I,,..., i!IJ KCST cABCI San D•~·qo • KTlV tlnO I LC>S Anq»1 .. ., .., KCOP TV (lno I L o s Anq .. 1 .... &;I KC(T TV 1PBS1 Los Anqt•lt><; m> KOCE TV1PBS1 Hunt,n41o n Beach ID <WEAEASY ··w-Men ..t.lone Gueala thaatrleal p#O ducar F19IJe<ICk 8t'950r'I, 98fonloiogdl 0. Ja.,,_ Peterson. KM RodOall IRI it MACHel. / LEHA1EA AEPORT TIC TAC DOUGH 0 tilllEl'N OAIFF1N GuMI~ Badttnge<. Angie Oodunson. Lou Ferngno 1:*» 8 2 ON THE TOWN HOsts St..,.. Edw111ds, Melody Ro9a'S A IOOll al ..,__ itnd polillCS. • betwld-the-scenes IOOll at r~---what ~ 10 !tie small Ven twa Community ol Ojlli -11\ousaf>ds tum out , '°' the o,. v...., r ........ T~~I D AOHT 9AO< wmc DAW> HOAOMTt • IHANANA ~-.Mlmle~ 8 HOU.YWOOD SOUAAEB .G FACIE THE MUSIC • AU. .. THEFAllAY As George pr.,.,.. 10 ~ ... -d doaiwwtg store. l"9 Jeftarsons ,,_ 10 an~ East Sode ilC)a(trMnl 8) MACNBL / l.EHAEA AEPORT 61 ONCE UPON A ClA8SIC fl\e H191 Of Hee¥91 A cweles5 -• r-.lts"' a rie11111t -•ogl\t M>d •ong '°' .,,, .. c:IWdf .. (Pwt 2)(RI P..M..WAOAZ»E .... _,_,..~ tool& •• rvs M"A·s·H . .,, • PJIOI. w.GAZJNE "'Thf•'• Comc>any stai ~ Hamson; an MS ..nerar Wl\O lougl>I lor the ngl11 to use m111111.1an• Bll- ly Bnll lntrod<>cel th• etart ,,_ lhe "P M Mag.wne 8"11\d•y Contest ', Or Whllllllar gives us • IOOI< at hOw carbollydrata 8'd In grvtng us -gy; Cl\al Tell prep11181 •tufled P411)991$ 9) MOVIE • • "The tngk>Ooua Bas· tard1" (19781 Bo Svenson . Ffad Williamson Two men bm an unuaual foend51\!p durtng th4111 efforts to sut • I v111e enemy attactc• and ~t death durrng 11\e tumultuous d•ys of World W111 II a;) WNEA'8 CIACl..E tM1:YOUHO MUSICIAH'I FOUHOATION LM Angei.& Tomes music erotic Mer1in Be<nhel,,,., hc>ats lhlS 194!Clal with the """ l1rst-place winners 1n poano. violin and cello pe1 forming 1n • recitet taoe<I a1 KCEre studtOS «!.) CHARLIE CHAPLIN COMEOY THEATM ··One AM 11916) Chante plays a drUl'lcen playbOy wN> returns from a noghl on the town and runs an Ol>S'lacle course wtth h1a Iron! door 11\e ataJrs and l\ls bed ~. CAAOL 8URHETT AHOFRIEH08 S«n "'A SWl9ad Loi• «!.)MOVIE • * ''> "Call Me M•ste<" ( 19S 11 Bally Grat>ie Dan Dattay A IOldlal 00- AWOL 10 try to wtn back hoS entart-Wff• She'll take romance LOS ANGELES <AP> -Ltt Purcell's newest movie offers he r an opportunity lo act in two of her favorite story forms, romance and fantasy. In "The Girl, the Gold Watch and Dynamite " she has a romance with co-star Philip MacHale, and there's the fantasy about an old pocket watch with magical powers . In the movie, she and MacHale keep trying lo get lo lbe altar. but are stopped by one misadventure after a nother. The watch saves the day. The t wo-hour movie is a pilot for a series on the ad hoc network of independent stations belong- ing to Operation Prime Time . The stations will broadcast the fiJm in May and June. It is the sequel lo an earlier film , '"The Girl, the Gold Watch and E•erything." adapted from the novel by John 0 . MacDonald. T he show's gi mmick is the gold watc h MacHaJe inherited from an uncle. lt allows him or Miss Purcell to s top time tben set aright Wedding daze By PETER J . BOYER ..t.,.T~Wrtew LOS ANGELES Ub-ob. Real people are at it again. Next month. NBC will begin a daily balf- hour show called "Wedding Day," featuring in· studio marriages. "It's amuin,," says Deanne Barkley, ex- ecutive producer or the show for Osmond Produc- tions, "people will do anything to gel on televis ion." ApparenUy. wha tever m ischief bas created the problem. ··t think everyone has a fantasy or some sort of myst ical propor t io ns," s aid Miss Purcell. a Southe rn·bom actress with chestnut-colored hair. "We'd all like to have powers and abilities greater than we have I do When I was a little girl my fan- tasy was havmg a time machjne. I saw the movie 'The Time Machine' 15 times." Miss Purcell LS a busy actress who regularly switches between te levision and theatrical movies a ny actress· fantasy. She's the shoplifie r who frames Gene Wilder and sets him on his way to join Richard (>ryor in prison 10 "Stir Crazy ·· Lasl year she co-starred with Kenny Rogers 10 the season's highest-rated TV movie. "The Gambler." Aboul a year and a ball ago she decided she wa nted to do a series and starred with Granville Van Dusen in "My Wire Next Door." "We got beat out by another show. which is now off lhe air .'' she said ··This time with 'The Girl' it's a pilot without compc.>titioo lt"ll eithe r sell on its own merits or not at au. ··r like operatioo Prime Time," Miss Purcell said . "There aren't as many people running the s how. so you get to know the people you're work- ing for "I'd turned down serie11 offers before, but now th at I've done about everything else I'd like to do a series It'd be nice to know where you're going lo be working next month." She was born on a Marine Corps base in North Carolina. bul grew up in Paragould, Ark., where he r father is a doctor . After high school s he struck out for Los Angeles lo berome an actress. "I was so naive," she said. "I had my stage makeup and I kept it in a fishing tackle box. I worked nig hts selling clothes at a disco and KCET @ 8!00 "Winner's Ci rcle 1981 Young Musicians Foundation.'' Mar tin Bernheimer hosts a trio of first place winners in world class competition in piano, violin and cello. ABC fl 9:00 -"The Best Little Girl in the World." Dra m a starr ing Eva Marie Saint and Charles Durning about a teen-age girl who star ves herself to the brink of death. K CET@ 9 .00 "G r eat Per formances: St aying On." T revor Howard and Cecli a J ohnson star in a story filmed in India about a British a rmy couple who stay on after the coun- try becomes independent. t:OOll (J) M•A0l'H Tile •077th troupe an•- • parcel ol lett•rs lrom a tourlh·grade clau on Hawtceya'a hornet°""" CA) 0 MOVIE "Tl\e Siar Makar' (Part 11 (Prarn1arel Rock Hudson . Suzanne Pleshelle Tne story of • HOll\'Wood dorec- tor w11n • knack tor 1ran1lorm111g 1ngenUff into lntarnatoonet at111tets and a pench•nt IOI marryono h•a creations IS told D 9 MOVIE The Best l11tle.G1rt In Tl\e World" (Premiere) Cha•les Durning, Eva Ma11e S•ont .... ~y model,..,_. ago< '' diagna.ad u l\h· 1ng ano<ex•• nervosa Q) MERV GAlfflN Gu .. 11 8adhnoei. Ano•e Dickinson. Lew Ferrigno. Jaye P Morgan. Artl\ur MurreyO-s &!) GREAT PEAFOAMAHCES Staying On Cetoa JOhn· son and Tro11or Howard stat es an agong Engllsto •rmy Couple who elect 10 remam on India alllfl ols 1ndepe<1dence 9'..30 II C1J HOUSE CALLS Night duly wreaks havoc woth Ch•r1ey s social lite fRl 10:00 II Cl) LOU GRANT 811toe •• given on 1n11do v-ot polttlc• and a •OUQh ln<lllllOI\ lrom the preas corps when ane goes on the 1oad to co11er a poh tlClan IRI QOll) NEWS I0:30Q) NEWS Cl) INOEPENOEHT NETWOAK NEWS fD L08TTOTHE AEVOUITIOH The work 01 mast., 1eweler and goldsmlll\ Peter Cart f•berge 11 chronic.led N•Halad by Yut Brynner '1!) MASTERPIECE THEATRE FESTIVAL OF FAVOfVTU The Golden Bowl" BH&d on a novel by Henry James Amerigo ~· • telegram wolh a conoe•lttd w111n1ng 10 CharlOlle whllf'I ne heat• of v.,v., s mer· rosge p<oposat 10 her (Pert 2)(RIC) 11:00 u 0 D Cll ®J NEWS Q STAATAEK Capt Kork 11 captured by lwo strange creatures wl\o eppe•r on •aroous "'llOIC&I - fOfms 0 NEWL YWEO GAME Q) M •A08'H The •0771h races tne clock JOHN DARLING ; i I I Actress Lee Purcell studied acting during the day a nd worked very hard lo lose my Southern accent." After six months s he'd got her first part a starring role op posite Michael Douglas in "Adam at Six A.M." She said , "It was a real nice break. My family was very happy. They thought I'd starve to deatb out here." Now s he has her own production company a nd is developing a miniseries in which she will star with Kare n Black. "Karen's a friend a of mine and we wanted to do som ething together ." fD DICK CAVETT Guaa1 Ha1ry Balalonte (Patt 1ol21 "~II (J) QUINCY, M.L A toHantlel r•lnatorm • ..,_ d1MU9d corpses out or a l\illllda cemetery, crHllng the poten11a1 '°' • .ar:E~ CAMON Guest• Buddy Hackett. Fernando LamH. Brend• ~ar(AI D 9 A.ICHEWS NIOKTUNE 0 LErl MAKE A DEAL • REX HOMBAAD • BAMTTA Tony toes to aave two yew~ act•-lnvO/'olad In • deadly ••tor11on llCheme fJI) «!.) CAPTION£() ABC NEWS -r..>NIGKT- 12:00 Q SPACE: 19" One man s Obsee"°" .. ,m the future lead a 10 a 1 ere and startl•no d•sco...,y " the moon nurtMls onto a bll.l.mg •nlerno fJ ~ FANTASY ISLAND Tattoo cnanges pl•ce• with Mr Roarlte 10 grant two stoowoorls the<• dream ano a doctor '"" 10 1a1se money lor a vast new 1 l\eetlh compM!a (Al 0 GUHSMOKE The lather ol a young gun hQhter Ines to end hos sons ca•Mr by wouud•no his gun nand Q) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE Th• tMr 11 a .. 1gned '10 knock 001 a boxing syndo cate wnocn t•~es lognts l0t a bookmaking operallun (Perl 11 Si) PHILOSOPHY 12:30 0 TOMORROW Guests former l&riUllo Oelense M•mater Ezer We1zmen KOOl and the Gano. Playboy Playmate 01 tne Vear Terro Wetles Billy Graham Q) ONE STEP BEYOND Ann1ver11ry 01 A Mur de< A man and woman are plagued by tneor con. t.CI08 MOW * * 'Rldln On A Rain bow" ( 1841) Ge<>e Autry, Smiley Burnaue 0 PIYCHIC PHINOME.HA, THE WOALO 8EYONO ··eayond B1oleedb1ck Hoel• Oamtan Simpson Stacy Hunt Guest Elma< Grean. M 0 • IHMOVT • IHOEPEHOEHT NETWOfU< NEWS l:tOD MOVIE * * • T l\e lmpo&atble Yee1e" C 18681''0•Vfd Noven. LOia Albrlgl\t 9 AOAM-12 1:30 Q) MOVIE * • * '• "Gu111 Al BatNI' ( 18641 AiChlrd Atlenbor ougl'I, Jack Hawk ons 1:5011 NEWS 2:CI00 NEWS 2:20 II EOfTOAl.AL 2:268 MOVIE * • • 01ploma11c Cou11er" (1952) Tyrone Power Stepl\81\ McNelly 2:300 NEWS 3:00Q) NEWS Tuesday's Daytime Movies -MOR~- 11-00 Q) • • Westward Ho ( 19351 John Wayne. Sneolo Mannors 11:30 0 • • • Ne11ada Smtih (Part 21 ( 19661 Steve McOuaen. Karl Ma.Iden -AFTERNOON- 12-00 Q) • • • Force 01 Arms (19511 Wilham Hol den, Nancy Olson 1 00 Q) • *' > One More T1ain To Rob pg111 George Peppard. John Vernon 3•30 0 • •', Some Kind Of A Nut t 1969) Otck van Dyke. Ang18 Oock11uon by Armstrong & Batiuk Hi ! WE'VE GOT AN E'><"l'RA SPECIAL -n:?EAI ~ 'tOlJ !ODAY .•. ABC unveils Sunday show LOS ANGELES c AP I ABC has unveiled p lans for a new Sunday morning news program that will replare "Issues and Answers" and in· corporate part of its formaL Roone Arledge. president of ABC News, told the annual meeting of t he network's aHiliates that the o ne-hour program would use the formal or "Is sues and Answers" but would also ioclude dis- cussion between a perm anent host and a panel. No date was set for the premiere of the show. which will take over the time period of the children's series, "Animals. Animals. Animals." The~ broadcast executives representing 207 ABC affiliate stations gave enthusiastic receptions at their meeting here to the two space s huttle astronauts. Robert Crippen and ·John Young: to Pierre Salinger, ARC News Paris bureau chief who was instrumental in putting together the pre stigious "America lleld llostage," a detailed ac· count of the release of the hostages an Tehran. and to David Hartman, host of ABC's "Good Morning, America " Arledge told the meetang that Hartm an's con- tr act with ABC has been extended so that the former actor can remain at the helm of t he popular morning show. lie also announced that ABC : Will telecast the Sugar Bowl during primy time for the next five years. beginning next New Year's Day. Will also present the fi rst major network coverage of the New York City marathon, set for Oct. 25. Marriage is a wonderful thing, but a bit drastic just for some TV exposure. Why not simply rob a bank, or pilcb a no-hitter! ~------- And why would we want to watch two strangers get married! Weddings, it seems lo me. are or little entertainment value, unless Daddy ar- rives bearing arms. The June S.12 run is a tryout ror a regular daytime series oe .. t fall. and if that works out. who knows? Possibilities: , "Reception Blowout," a daily, 30-minute s eries leading into prime time. Focus changes from the happy couple lo t.be bride's drunk Uncle Harry. See Uncle Harry pinch. wink and sini ''Danny Boy,'• before rippin& bis pants in a han1e for the garter. · "Hooeymooo Night ,'• a prime-time series that follows the newlyweds from t.be rtteptioo st.ad.io to the honeymoon Wile studio. Tben. our bappy brid e and groom fumble and blab and do eYel'J· thl"' except what tbey're suppoted to do -lb.is Is network TV, after aU. "M atrimonlal Bliss." a rollicking weekly series lbat cbecka lD witb our ·•weddiJac Da1" couples • year after lbdr weddin&. Featared episodes could Lnclude. ··Betty nawa Chicken:· .. Tbe Weed-Eater RUDS Out ol Card" and°'* bit.a of AmeriealUI lb.at mak• real people netl comMllnl atertalMn. The reetUdlaa ol tM ID..,... ceremooJ to TV entertainment waa a•tieipatecl. of ~. bJ Chuck Ba.nil' dmal ol JIUltriJDGmlal ckbuaneM. "The Newlywed Game.•• Mila Barkley. a respected TV maker ud ,., ... ol lb. 'Teatlt7 TV'.~. "eudld Camera." clllCOlll"qa ~ bet .... w new •"°w and Banta' ,_. .-. •• ..,. _,._ lorfOlt«ft proclacU. "No, it'• not Wte ct.Nd Barril at all;' IM 1111, "it'I like tbe Osmoadl. f lbiM that at.ck Barris, underneath tt all had the U>tenUon ol male· tac tun ol people. J even had that feelln1 with •can- did Camera.• But thl1 doan't make fun ... . . NllftC'l 99Ta CMfl -_.,.COAST CHKDCME U8Mi llllcll 49'1 1$14 Cosg ~ ~9·33~2 011nge 63HS!>3 ...... M:CDT9 .. Tiii lllAllMl.IT TLANTIC CITY THE DECLINE of Western Clvtnaatlon 12:~­t :oo-1:-.10:00 • Chic -------AIOU1 I $1" 199 GIEAT I le DINNER (') g Gooo '°' ,,,, .. pltcte of 1u1cy, golden t>rown K4tnlucky .,, Fried Cttlclltn plus single •trvlng a ol colt •l•w 0 muhed l)C>t11oe1 100 gr•vv ltld 1 toll \,1mll IWO ofltr• z per l)UfCheH C01Jpon gOOd onty IOf ContblnltfOll wl'll tll I a11k orders Cuatomtr P•Y• •It appllcablt Hitt 1ax Oller expirlll Mt)' 24. !Ill! Pf1cH m•y very 11 par11Cl~lifl0 IOCI hOl'lt Good only 1n Sotitnern C•IU0tnll ,.,,.,. y04.t ... AIM!let t '11vor1lt Window lanntr. c s. I I I _______ .,.._ AIOUT $5 ftft SUPIRI e 7, '7DINNEll Good IOI' ntne pl~• of juicy, ootoen bfown Ktntuelly Fri.d Chicken, with lovr rOlll , 1 llf99 ~ •<•w. a lef9t mathed polatoaa arid a medium gravy Umlt IWO otttf• per purcllale. Coupon good only for com1>1n111on ..VIII dattt orwt Customer ~Y• an _,,,.le..,.. ..... taa Oller explrtt May 2•. 11111 Prtett may n ry at P•• llClpttlng IOct tlont QooO only 1n Souttwtn CalltOfnta w,,.re you ... Atnaflc.t'I Fll VOttla W11\00W BIM411' z 0 Cl. :::> 0 () I ----~ ..• --~------..,--·-· __ ......,... ____ ..... ________ & ____ ......__ 1 n :· • .. • Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 A,.WI ...... St eve Yeager and Ron Gey tmmp as Gey makes f1rst -mning catch. Angels' timing just right Fregosi breathes sigh of relief after 4-3 victor~' By JOHN SEV A.NO Of .. Delly .......... The An1les leav{ for lbe atart or a 10· game road trip oday and, yea, Jim Fregosl will be accompanin1 the team as its manager. I Fregosi was ablt to maintain hia posi- tion because bis layers rallied behind him for the second straight day in beatln1 the Detroit Tigers. • Sunday, it was an emotional come-from· behind 4·3 win before a Mother's Day crowd of 29,689 al Anaheim Stadium. Brian Downing, playing left field for on· ly the second time this season, provided the chills with his two-out, two-run homer lo dead center in the eighth inning which gave the Angels a 4·3lead. And Don Aase allowed his skipper a sigh of relief when he struck out the final batter In the ninth innlq, strandin1 a Ti1er base nmner at third in tbe prweu. Even Fregoei bimaetl couldn't contain his Rick Leach 1win1 t.hroutb an Aue fastball for at.rlke three. He bounded up the steps of the dueout, slapped b.La hands over a job well done and went out to personally CC>Qlratulate hla relief ace. "Downin& gave me the game ball," said 1''regos1 wilb a smile. "We made some. mistakes bUt they (players) battled back." The mistakes Fregosi referred to almost had owner Gene Autry pullin1 the switch to the electric chair. In the flft.h inning, Dan Ford's misplay of a double,down the right field line by Champ Summers allowed the Tigers to score one more run tban tbey should have. And, two innings later, errors by Rick Burleson and Butch Hobson gave the Tigers another gift and a 3-0 lead in the seventh. The most aaonlzing inning, however, bad to be the Aneela' hair of the sixth when they loaded lhe buea with none out and came up empty despite the presence of Burleson, Dan Ford and Don Baylor. "The tough thing was the sixth at least for the manager," admitted Fregosi. Wit~ three Angels s urrounding him, Detroit start.er Dave Rozema was able to work out of the jam by striking out •Burleson lookin1. getting Ford to hit a short fly to center and Baylor on a routine ny ball up the middle. As Al CoweDS squeezed the ball for the final out of the inning it a ppeared Fregosi's fate wa~aled a~ well. But the Angel players. who have made <Stt ANGELS, Pag~ All) Lea drops fiis ERA just a bit Mont~eal youngster an unlikely candidate for first no-hitter of '81 MONTREAL (AP> -Charlie Lea of the Montreal Expos is an unlikely candidate to pitch a no· hitter. He was born in that great baseball capital or Orleans, France, and when he began Sun· day's game against the San Francisco Giants, his earned run a verage was 7.36. Although Lea once pitched a no-hitter in college al Memphis State, his major league im· sprang to their feet in anticipa· lion of witnessing a piece of baseball history. Lea took ore bis cap, mopped his brow and bounced the baseball on the artificial surface a few times, a nervous habit that several San Francisco players later said annoyed them. Lea went to a 3·0 count on Bill North, but fought back and ~~~~my came as a surprise to , I , m r e a l l y ··Nobody expected .... no-hitter d. · · .· ~r,: ll j from Charlie,'' said Expof 1,Q,e'Sflng a 0 catcher Gary Carter. "But he th 'f I'm really had a good fastball and good I" 1.S. command of his pitc~. aod f,•· t th t j everything fell into plye." . ~Tto e ype 0 LEA RELIED mai~ly on person WhO jUmpS his fastball in pitching the major nd d , league's first no-hitter or 1981, up a oum. victimizing the San Francisco Giants 4·0 in the second game or a Sunday double-header. The Giants won the opener 5·1 on Tom Griffin's four-hitter. Lea. 24, making his third start, knew he had a no-hitter going," he said after squaring his record at 1-1. "J think every pitcher does in that situation." caught him looking at a third strike. He then induced Enos Ca bell to pop a 2-0 pitch to center fielder Andre Dawson. ·• 1 was hoping he'd hit the ball in the afr to me," said Dawson. "Everybody wants to catch the last out of a no-hitter." I.. Welch at home So did his wife, Louise, who was in the s tands. ''She ate most of the rose that was distributed to all the women entering the park on Mother's Day," said an Expos official. UNTIL THE seventh inning the no-hitter was almost ob- scured by the fact Lea was locked in a scoreless duel with Ed Whitson, 0-4 . •. New York • ID There were no dangerous balls hit and Lea only had one inning or real wildness -the eighth when he issued two walks. But he got Milt May to bounce into a double play before yielding his fourth and final walk to Dave Bergman. Bill Smith then flied to center. ending the inning with runners at first and third. But rookie Tim Wallach, out of Cal State Fullerton and Sad- dleback College, led off the in· ning by belting Whitson·s first pitch into the ten. field stands. Rodney Scott added a two-run double' and Dawson contributed an RBI double to complete the four-run inning. NEW YORK <AP 1 Bob Welch loves New York lie ac· t ua I(\. "histh.:!-. the t unc or the same name loud. c le ar and often The young right-hander enjoys wandering around the big city lie even likes t h<' subways, believe it or not Saturday mght on the eve of his scheduled start against the New York Mets, he roamed around the m1dlo"Ul area just enjoymg the sights Among the sites the Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher en- j O y e d Sunda y wa s Shea Stadium. whrre he beat Mets a 5 3 althllugh he failed to finish the game· "I TIUNK New York is the .I( re a test city in th<' world," said Welch ·There is always some action goin~ on You know, I re· fuse lo lake the team bus rrom our hotl'I "hen I'm in New York I always go out to Shea by sub· way so I can enjoy the scenery on the elevated hne " Welch was the centerpiece of an odd game al Shea. He saw his team score four runs in the fou r th inning without a hit. ·'I had ne ver seen that anywhere before,'· he said. "in grade school, high school, col· lege or organized ball " Welch was ~ferring lo an in - ning 10 which the h rst two bat- t e rs made outs . Then third baseman Hubie Brooks was charged with three straight er· rors, tying a modern-day record held by n in e other third basemen for miscues in one in· ning LOSING PITCHER Randy Jones. possibly unnerved by the loose fi elding, contributed some -------- loose pitching, forcing in three runs on walks. Tom Hausman replaced Jones and also walked 1n a run to complete the picture. That made the score 5·2 and the Ml'ts were he4'ten except for a brief flurry in the eighth in ning Welch had to leave during the minor uprising, but Steve Howe took over and finally closed out the Mets' budding rally. "THE ONLY thing I can say about thar inning was that I was tired ... Lea said. "This was the longest stretch I've pitched all year." "The runs allowed me to go out there and just lay the ball across the plate for the last two innings," Lea sa1d . "" ........... Welch admits his d elivery wash't as good by that time. "I woulrl ha ve loved to havE finished. but Howe is a very capable replacement." Arter Lea got pinch-bitter Jim Wohlford to ground out leading off the ninth. the 25,343 fans Lea had a carpet of white towels and a few cans of beer awaiting him when he arrived in the Expos· clubhouse. "I'm still digesting all of this." he said. Charlie Lea celebrates with catcher Gary Carter and Warren Cromartie. ... Welch first came into prom- inence in 1978 when he struck out Reggie Jackson to end the second game of the World Series against the New York Yankees Later in the Series. Jackson got a measure of r evenge by reaching the youngster for a single m tht• fourth game and a home run 10 the sixth and final contest Rockets find right chemistry for succe ss Reid's pre-game drill, Dunleavey's points get Houston even with Boston "• * I WELCH IS ON the road back. lie had a drinking problem for a time hut appears to have <J\ler· come 1t, thanks to a rehabilita· lion program he underwent in the spring of 1980. Meanwhile. Mets Manager J oe Torre refused to blame Brooks for Sunday'!> defeat. "Hubie's too good a player and I'm not blaming him for the loss," orrered Torrt. "He's a winner. Wh y single him out? Randy Jones. the s tarter (who dropped to O·Sl didn't put the baJJ over the plate, either Brooks, who handled a dozen chances overall. explained, "lt was one of these days. Things didn't work out well. I felt bad whe n the runs kept coming across because I knew we should have been out of the inning." HOUSTON CAP) -Houston Coach Del Harris had the winning player comblna· lion, forward Robert Reid had the right pre-game drill and the results erased Bos ton's chances of a qulck kill in the Na· tional Bas ketball Association cham· pionship playoff series. Harris used only six players in the brutal fourth game of the best-of-seven series Sunday and with Mike Dunleavy playing the cataJys t's role with 28 points. the Rockets defeated the Celtics 91·86 to even the series at 2·2. The series resumes in Boston Tuesday and wiU return here Thursday for Game 6. N Elm ER ROCKETS GUARD Calvin Murphy, a super substitute off the bench throughout the playoffs, nor Allen Leavell got into the game. In fact, Bill Wllloughb~ was the Rockets' only substitute. "There was no poison there, no anlmosi· ty that Murphy or Leavell did not play," . Harris explained. "I would have used them ·if the situation called for it. Why mess up the chemistry i! It's working?" Dunleavy responded to the mixture by scoring 28 points, a personal playoff high, and Moses Malone, although battered beneath the backboards, scored 24 points and grabbed 22 rebo~: · Rdd. meanwhije.-witd. Celtic forward Larry Bird to eig1't poi.cits for the second straight game and said an embarrassing 'W ~ "are JIOing to do unto others as they have done unto us.' . '\,: 94.71 loss lo' Boston Saturday did not make him tigbt..t>out Sunday's game. "I got up this morning, ate some Fruit Loops, watched Tarzan.save Boy from an allleator on televis1oa and came down here to take my ..:arm-ups," said Reid, who scored 19 points and grabbed 10 offensive rebounds. "When I saw Bird get the ball the first time, I thought it's time to keep it out of bis bands." TOE ROCKETS CQNT&OLLED the of· fensive rebounds 28-17 and won the overall re~\llMl1ng -...1. leading Boston Coach Blll Fitch to make a promise. ··We are IOiae to do unto others as they have done µnto us,'' Fit.ch said of the violent activity beneath the boards. "I think the rest of the series is going lo be more physical than it has so far." Reid said the Rockets respond better when they are in pressure situations. "So we just told ourselves that this was Game 7 and if we lost there would be no tomorrow." Reid said . "Now we have a tomorrow. If we bad lost today, it would have been tough to win three straight against the Celtics." The Celtics and Rockets battled back and forth in the first hall with neither team leading by more than four points and it ended at 50·50. Although Boston tied the score several times, then never led after the first quart.er. HOUSTON LEAD A 10-point bulge with 5:20 in the third quarter for the biggest lead ol the game. The Celtics struggled back in the closing minutes of the mat.ch, but Filch said the Rockets never bad a chance to break. "We made a lot of mistakes when we were behind and dido 't rally to get back into the game," Filch said. "We didn't. give Houston a chance to see ii they would break ii we ·came back. We didn't even bend them." San/ ord's ultimate goal -worM record in 100, 200 ~ WESTWOOD (AP> -James San· ford's goals are lofty but, considering his performance• so far, oot ot of the realm of the posalble. "J think my ultlotate goa ta 9.8 aeconda for the 100 meters, and world record ln the 200," Sanford 11ald Sunday alter be awep\ both aprintl ln tht UCLA· Pepsi IDfft. The .orld recordl urrent· ly are Jim Himtt' ,.95 In tM flOO and Pietro Mennea'a lt. '72 in the 200J Sanford,' th• wor!d'a to" -rated •printer ln 1'79 and a r at USC thl• 1ea1on, won the 100 a 10.os aecondl. He beat Stanl•y , IMt 1ear'1 No. 1 aprtnt.r, wbo w, cloSed Iii 10. IO. SlrifcJH tlMi tooll • lo 20.20. ••I respect all the sprinters, but especially Stanley Floyd," Sanford said. "He'a aUU the No. 1 sprinter in the world -until after 1981, when I hope James S.n!ord will be." Sanlory:l'a two victories were amon1 the hl~hP,lhta of tbe meet thal allo In· eluded Greg Foster's 13 .lO·Htond clocklns in the 110-meter hi&b b-.rcllt1, the~ futer ever, and a prodllioua IOJll Juaip by Carl Lewla that turned out to be wtacl·alded. Lew~. from the Unlveralt7 of Houston Jumped a.i~. lbe HCODd bl9t tHr, tbl WIDd waa .OI llMt.ert per tffODd .. the allowable 2.00. It •• th• lot) Jump ever at or ....,. '" lner·r ... mon'• wwtd near'4l o1 ·-· • 29·2~ came ln the bi.ch altitude ol llex· jco City in the' 1988 Ofymplca). "I felt real 1ood and everytblnt seemed to 10 just ript.,'' IAwb laid. "I tried lo wait '811 Ute wbMl •ed clown a Utile bit, but 1,_.. I didn't wait qulte *• eaoqll. Still, I'm pleued." Lewis' J•mp eanaot be ..tend lD an1 official ~ books ·became of th wind. ,._...., c .. dd., ta the hllb buntles 1taaftd .II MC a Ide Off Illa Pf•.W. belt. and be •I•• beat rhal lleaaldo Ntlllaw• • ..._ ..W ncont boNel' at u .... N•m•, .... ~ fll'lt start Of UM .....,., fl=isllld · \Wn, and tt • marted the MCOnd YMI' In 1 row Fo.ter b11 be1teD blm tn WI meet. "J wu very surprised at Foster's time," uld Nehemiah, who was clocked in 13.41, a1ao behind Sam Turner's 13.0 . "I cloa't lhlDk I wu ready for that yet. I'm DOt worried, t.bo'l,h. I had a bad 1bowiq here Jut year and went on to ban a very 1ood year." _1'be victory a-ppattnlly save Fa.ter • bdr shot ol confidence. "I ba'ftll't felt W. &ood since l wu ln blab tcbool," aaid t.he former UCLA atar ... I feel now t.bat l can co out and •ln IDC1 nm rn1 own race doina lt. "I wu • Uttle diuppolnled that Reaaldo aid &am wera't up there a ltt· lle bit more," f'oeter added, "but J'm •l•d to set UM Wt.D... I ' I 1 l i f . " • • ~ ., 'ifi , •• ,,.-~ • ·--=-~~~~~~~'!"""!'!~~!lllllll~~~~~~--....... -. .... ,_.2•2 .. 2•z•s~e•2•s•£ .. £•21 .... 1~ Angels take chance, add ex-Dodge r Rau The Angels announced the addi· Iii tlon of ex-Dodger Doug Rau to their roster Sunday. Rau, 32, suffered a tom rotator cuff in 1979 while in bis eighth year or pitching for the Dodgers. During his rehabilitation, Rau pitched four games for San Antonio last season. but the Dodgers released him this spring. The Angels signed Rau April 21 to a Redwood contract or the Calitornaa League. Rau pitched three times for the Piol'leers. allow· ing one run in 11 innings. Dunn~ a five· vear s t retch with the Dodgers, from 1974-78, Rau averaged 15 vie tori es per season His last appearance in a major league game was June 3, 1979atSl. Louis. Rau In order to make room for Rau, the Angels have placed left·hander Bill Tr a verson the 21 ·day dis a bled list. Travers, bothered by tenderness in his left shoulder. worked in four games for the Angels with a0-1 record and8.38 ERA Rau will accompany the Angels when the team opens a 10-game road trip at Milwaukee Tuesday. He is scheduled to make his first start Satur· day against the Tigers in Detroit. Quote of the day "When I see him fight, it makes me wonder why I ever picked boxing as a pro- fession ." World Boxing Council welterweight c hampion S u gar R ay Leonard, speaking of his opponent on June 25, WBA champ Ayub KaluJe. Dibbs ends Kirmayr's Cinderella bid Steady Eddie Dlbbs, playing ~ rla"' less tennis. captured the Tourna ment of Champions Sunday. ending the Cinderella hid by Brazi l's Carlos Kirmayr, 6-3. 6-2 jil the fabled West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills Top-seeded Chris Evert Lloyd won thl' Perug1a Open tournament in lta ly with a \'ICton· over Virgina Ruzlcl Lloyd needed JUSt 112 hours to earn her 17th career victory over the Romanian without a loss From Page A10 ANGELS' 111\'IING • • • Ex-Angels spark Red Sox victory arney La1asford sinJled home a hJs fourth run of the game and Joe Rudi s lummed a three-run homer as lhe rormer Angels s parked Boaton to a 9·5 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays m American League 3Ction Sunday. Rudi·s homer capped a four·run Red Sox 10th lnnina . . . In oth er ga rn c~. Andre Thorn t on capped Cleveland's four run firth inning with a two-run • single as the Indians downed Minnesota, 5·1 behind Wayne Garland's seven-hit pitching. The Jndianl! handed Twins starter Jer ry Koosman his fifth loss against just one vie· tory Outfielder Mark Brouhard h9mered. singled and drove in five runs, lead· ing Milwaukee to a 13 5 vic- t o r y over Oakl;rnd The lansford Brewer:., who pounded out 16 hits. chased Oakland ace Mike Norris in the third inning in handing him his first defeat after six victories. The win snapped the Brewers' four game losing streak. while the loss was just the ~c\'enth against 24 victories for the A's l>anny Darwin posted his th1r<1 con· secutive victory, and Texas scored five runs in a m1 i.lake-fillcd s~co nd i nning to beat Balh}Tlorc 7-3 Third baseman Aurelio Rodriguez, starting his first game of the season, !>lammt'd home runs on his first two 1981 at bats to le:.id the New York Yankees to a 5·2 victory over Seattle. Candelaria's arm. bat spark Pirates Whale spot starter Charlie Lea la was gathering most of the attention by pitching a no hitter Sunday to give the Montreal Expos a sphl with the Giants. PitLsburl(h's John Candelaria wasn't having a bad day, either The Pirate left-hander checked St. Louis on three hits over the first six inning:. and singled home a run to cap a rally in the second to lead Pittsburgh to an 8-2 victory O\ er St Louis. In ot h e r Na tional L eague games, Ozzie Smith's fielders choice grounder in the s ixth inning drove in the go ahead run and J oe IAefeb- vre slammed a three·run homer 1n the seventh to lead San Diego lo an 8·4 victory ' over Ph i l<tdelph1a Steve \1ura allowed nine hits in six Ca11delana inning:. to gain his first triumph of the ~eason after four defeats Jose ('ruz dro\'t.' in three runs and Cr aig Reynolds collt•l·ll'd three hits as Houston defeat- ed Cincinnati. 7 5 Right·hander J oe Niekro p1tcht•d f1\'e innings to earn his third 'ictory aga1n~t the samt> number of defeats . Raso forced postpnm•mcnt of the game between the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta after they had played 14 innrng~ to a 5 5 tie and sat through two rain delay., tot a Ling one hour. JI minutes San F'ran('1i.co's Charles "Chill" ()avis who had led the Giants with a 408 hitting average in spring training. will be sent back to the minors. ClF s oftball pairings set no bones about the fact they want Fregosi to stay, rallied for four runs in the eighth on a two· out. two-run single by Baylor followed by Downing's shot on a 2-1 fastball off Tiger relief ace Aurelio Lopez. go," he said "We JUSt haven't been playing very consistent. But we've won two in a row now and any time you come from behind it's great. M arma. Edison. Ocean Vi ew and Irvine all draw home as· s1gnments l''riday when tbe CIF women's softball playoHs kick off. while Fountain Valley. Estancia and Mater Dei travel for their openers "It's a good s ign, .. said Fregosi of the team's com eback. "It s hows we're coming around a little bit. Coming from behind like we did was a real upper for this club." The players preferred to low- key their part or the victory. contending that it was timing. not the ax over Fregosi's head. that has them winning. "The longer that garbage is written, the longer it's going to be around." said Downing of the rumors. "If the guys aren't hit· ting, what are you going to do?," "I think we should have a ' good road trip." s aid Bobby Grich. "Baylor is swinging the bat better: I'm s winging the bat better: and Downing 1s swinging the bat better. Things are look· ing up for a change. "It's just a coincidence things are happening now for us. that at came at the same time as the talks about Fregosi's firing " Fred Lynn agreed. "Nobody wants to see Fregosi "We we r e trying to win before. 1rs really a matter of timing I guess good liming for Jimmy " So. at least for the moment. Fregosi is stall at the helm But ror how long is another question. "I know 1·11 be able to relax a little bit more now But, then. nobody s aid st was going to be eaS\'." said the manager J~st then Autry walked into Fregosi's office and patted him on the back for a job well done. "llave a nice trip." he said as he left the office * ANGEL NOTES Another Slon ,., .... 1·1 ooom '' al"'°'I 1mmlt•nl tollowl"O If" A19I•' U·• win owr tM Tl91r1 S.turcs.v, many al ltle •••m ' heir•r<"'Y wer•f\•t •• vl~bh t i I led a\ ON' •0..10 tlllnl! a.. ,.,,...,be, of IM media •-a" he t•tn huro au,.lant chairman of Ille boerO ltH Pat'9 ....... t.it 0-. MAllCll, "Wt need -pk lurH of VoU" Tiie Anv-1• flnlP,tO Hon lht flomt\lana Tiiey wtre J., on their tint llomutand Wltr. tlwlr fo..r nomtr' S.tu.,,.y and one Sunday, t.,. A1>9tl\ r.avt now outllOmt<'ed tr.. -•illan by a >t·27 maro1n a.ytw, •t>owlno \igm of "'°lno Ill• M•·••O """"'· '' 111tuno .no In lht pa•I •111'1• oamn wltll '"'" r.omtr1 -12 Riii nw Angel\, wllO are I 2 a;alntl Ille Tiger."''' 5tHOll, 11.tven't llMI •win· nlno yHr •~Inst Detroit 1lnc:t t97S -n tnt• wert .. s Marina. the No. I represen· tat1 ve from the Sunset League. wall no doubt send ace starter Tina Kvler to the mound when the Vakin~s host Warren in the 4 A opener Marina is the No. 1 'ieed in 4-A. The Sunset League's No 2 team. Edison. is also at home. hosting Downey, the No. 2 team from lht! San Gabriel Valley League. Ocean View. which won the Empire Ll'ague· championship. w11J host Garden Grove. the third ·plact> f i n isher in the c; a rd en Grove Le ague in another 4 A contest, while Foun- tain Vallev •Sunset No 3> has a long trip 'to Thousand Oaks to face the Maramonte League's No 2 finisher. In 3·A play, Irvine. the Sea \'1ew League's No t squad. will host the Moore League's third place entry. Lakewood: No. 2 Estancia is on the road for a game with Savanna ~THE SPORTING HOUSE@ y Where H ealth la a Way of Life and Conditioning la a Way of living ... y MOTHER'S DAY The Perteet Gift For The p·ertect Girl In Your Llfel Foras $1 Llttle as a Day Plus lnfnanon Ftt KUll1\ Limited Offer •lmdlll &Mktr Pndlttll for lllft 6 Wotn• •lwlf....,Jaa 1J1 ....... , ....... .. •l._.Y..,..IC.nt •111 .. Jllllll Traok •11"'1••• 11.-,,.. ... •lr•n1lll• (11 ..... 1(. Vo...,_lt) Call 751~561 for addttlonal lnfonutton S601 tlambone Rel .. Newport Bach Orange Coast OAJLV PILOT/Monday, May 11 . 1981 Al I No record for Watson: Lietzke wins Bruce Llecake. jluyinR a course !I h~ deispl.aes, tappe ln a short par putt on the first bole of sudden death playotr Sunday to defeat Tom Watson for the title of the Byron Nelson Claaaic an Dallas Lietzek's victory kept Watson from ou1tchlng the record of Walter Haaea by win ning the same tournament four times in a row. Hagen won the PGA four straight times. and Walson had colleced three s traight Byron Nelson Classic victories. Watson. who had holed a 15·foot putt for a birdie on the 72nd hole to earn the playoff. three· putted from 30 feel on the 428·yard No. I hole. which he loves, while Lietzke two- ' ~ putted from 25 feet for his eili!hth PGA tour triumph 1.rc-rzkl' Amy AJcoU fired in five birdies over a six-hole stretch on the back-side to complete a 6-under·par 66 that gave her a one-shot victory in the LPGA tournament in Ros well, Ga. Alcott, who started the day five s trokes behind second-round leader Hollis Stacy, collected the 15th tour victor y of her career, including her second this season. Sally Little, winner of three tournaments this year , closed with a 70 to finish in second place at 210. Andretti's Indy 500 chance gloomy Marlo Andretti, looking almost • as gloomy as the weather that kept Indianapolis Speedway closed Sun- day. said his request that he be allowed to qualify today for the Indy 500 was turned down by Chief Steward Tom Binford. Andrelli is com· milted to the Belgian Grand Pnx next weekend. which mean s he -II miss the final weekend o r qualify ing. He asked for lhe s p ecial qualifying session after it became apparent that Sunday 's time tnab would be washed away Another driver would have to qualify Andretti's car. but 1t would have to start from the back of the 1 lth row Billie Jean King says this may be her last ~car as a tournament tennis player. King 1s striving to overcome the emotional turmoil surrounding lhe disclosure of her les· bian rclal1onsh1p with her former secretary PaM Forgetting breezed to an easy nine· length triumph in the second running of the Californrn Miss Sirt-l> Stakes at lloll ywood Park Talkl> are ~<·heduled to resume today between negotiators for baseball 's owners and playeri.. ""1th both i.1des doubtful an accord can be reacht•d before a threatened strike Ma y 29 Gerry Cooney lakes what he plans as a million dollar step to a heavyweight title shot when he fights Ken ~orton tonight in a lO·round bout at :\1 ad1son Square Garden Lrneba<'kt•r Gary Spani of the Kansas City Chiefs escaped scriou!> injury in a one·car acci dent that killed a young woman in New Mexico. Television, radio TV : No events scheduled RADIO: No events scheduled GWC nine /aces a crucial ~ek With one week remaining in the regular schedule. Coach Fred Hoover's Golden West College baseball team has three pivitol contests re· maining . The first two. including Tuesday's battle with East LA are games they cannot afford to lose. The Rustlers have defeated East Los Angeles all three times this season. and a win would keep them neck and neck with LA llarbor. Both teams possess 8-3 second round records. Should GWC defeat the Huskies. and then top LA Southwest at home Thursday. only Rio Hondo College would stand in the Rustlers' way of gain- ing at least a lie for the Southern Cal Conference second-round tiUe. GWC should send Ron Hendricks to the mound Tuesday against East LA. and Hoover hopes his star pitcher will improve on his las~ perfc;>rmance. Hendricks earned a 1 02 ERA into his last out- ing with Cypress. and the Chargers ju~ped ?n him for five runs in the first inning, knocking ham out of the game. . Meanwhile. in another important community college game. Santa Ana will host Mt. San An· tonio Tuesday m a plc.yoff to determine the No 4 team in the South .Coast Conference. The Uons downed Fullerton. 4·3, Saturday to earn the right to meet Mt. SAC The winner then travels to Orange Coast to race the South Coast Conference champions in the first round of the Shaughnessy playoffs Thursday --------------~~--------------------- First round toughest? Area nines face early tests By ROGER CARLSON CH Ille Oally ...... Si.ft Nobody was guaranteed a garden of roses with the Cl F baseball playoffs on the docket this week as seven Orange Coast area teams swing Into ac lion. And there doesn't seem lo be any. Costa Mesa's Mustangs and the Ocean View Sea hawks. two third place teams expecting some lime lo prepare for Friday's first round, find themselves locked up in wild card confrontations Wednesday The Mustangs must C'ontend with South Coast League representat1 ve San Clemente on the Costa PREP B4SEB4LL Mesa campus in 2·A action, while Ocean View. in the playoffi. for the first time. must travel to Tustin 1:1nd win in order to gain a 3·A first round game Friday at Freeway League champion Anaheim tr Costa Me:.a 1s s uccessful the Mustangs will travel to M1ss1on League llth~t St Bernard Fri day It doesn't appear any easier for the res t of the urea teams. either Defending CIF 4·A champion Mater De1 has been cast against host Redondo. the 4 A s No 1 seed. while Fountain Valley. No 3 in the Sunset League. ventures to Moore League kingpin Long Beach Pol v Sea Vic~ League runnerup lr\'1ne must travel to Capistrano \'alle}. tht' South Coast Letigue champ The only teams drawing home assignments Fri- d ay from the Orange Coast area are Sunset Le~gwe runner-up Edison and Sea View League t1tlist Corond del Mar Edi~on. 21 4 and on a 10 game winning streak. entertaini. Angelui. League power St Paul. while Corona dl'I Mar, seeded No 2 in 2·A r1rcles. is at home lo the winner of Wednt·sday's wild card game betwt>l•n Hawthorne and Glenn Edison·~ ta~k againi.l St Paul will include solv sng the pitching or G 11 Duran. who has fashioned an 8-1 rerord and an ERA of I 40. whill' trying to muzzle the bats of shortstop Andy Stankiewicz 1 565! and first baseman Jcrr Nowinski < 486 1 Nowinski. a 6·4. 210-pounder. 1~ also a threat as a left ·handed pitcht'r * * Cll'•A PU.YOlll'S l'lmll-l'rld.ay IU-IWacUO Mamo.latR- S•n G.ortel •I St Franc: ls lltll ...... Valley •I LB Poly No T0t<An<e •I CIWlnMI f\ Fonla"" 411 Bl\llOP AmAI Cru c"""' \/•llO .ti W•lnul NewlKlry Para at Hutf\tme * N otrt 0.me IS 0 I at Welt,..lnsltr 1i.-waot11 M iro C:0.141 411 Simi VAllt 'I' E 1>«n-41\ LO\ All~ St. Jolln Bo!ico •• Laktwood SI Paul al ldh ... El~ •I San M•rcos M1lll~ at So TooAnc:c R-1-•I Redla- W•st TMr.nc-.e •t Ar<•d1• Cl~ J.A PU. YOFl'S Wiid CM'd Ga .... WMnaMl•Y Octa" View 11 Tu\tin ""' ..... ,.,., 1u-wack9'l Troy 411 VIII• P•rl< Soult\ Hiiis •I Hoover UPIAnc:l al Norlll I Riv I Gu den Gro""' Al Loar a El Dor_ .ti Cerritos cJiendale •I Lome>o< L • Sierra •I Oon L._ Oct•ll View°' Tustin •I An11M1m l"-tlr•clletl Sonora •I Co•ln• Ri~lll at G1e.-r1 Wuren •I L• Oulnl• El M-al Nortt Vitia S•n Lui• Oohp0 •I Burlwlnk Magnoll• at G""r North•-•I Fullerton Bois. Gr-at lt•tell• Clf'J,A l'LAYOl'l'S w11•~0 ...... w .......... Y Wlllllier .ti RowmHcl S~t.mtfllt at C•ll Mew l!b~IMll• V41llty at Apple V•lltv Glenn .i HawlllOrnt l'lnllt-l'r•y IV-i.rachO Onl•rlo 411 Sant• Ft Irvine al C•Plstr•no llalltr Norco at C•lu lco Who Iller or R05tm<!ad •I Yut11pa ~•wnd411f 11 S-u\ Cena ,.,... °' 5.., Clemt<'te .ti St Bern•rO Arroyo •I Chino Coron• at ArtHla (L.o.,.rlWacktll A lemony al Btftrly Hill• * * * E '<tl>IO• .ti G.nvon l~uou•I 8r•wlo •I P.tlm S1mn0> C•lllornia •t VtttOf' V•ll•• Aoplt V•llev °' (;oat Mll• V•ll•Y •• Mon1c1a1r HArt at ~t•1n ~·•• Pt us JI( •• Minton VteJO U•w,nonw or Glenn I\ C.,Oft• .. , Mar Lil' l·A PU.YOl'l'S l'\ntlt-l'rMl.ty IU-IWaclLtll Aqu1na,bye L• S•lle •• CMrt., O•a V•rbum 0.1 at 8~11 G.trOtns BIO BHr 411 El\lnor<! M•'Y ~ •• ,It Ttrwch•O• L• CanAO• al LA B•Pll\I • HordhOtf 11 Morro Bai; Oe~en •I F1umor~ 11-"-bnclL•ll Notrt Damt C Riv t at 81ldw1" Park Wh1U ltr CN •• tt Palm\. (1rp1nt...-lt •• Cl\Mn1Nat Royal O.a •• Tt mole C•IY Para(._, •• , AH'10f ~OtlO Bell Jeff •I At•.c-ro V•llty Cl\!' 411 SI Anthony RIO Mewb~ Cll' SMALL SCHOOLS W1ICI C..~ c;.,..,.. W..,_MIAy F f tntt1dQt Preo •• L•V~"'' Lui Mr"" (hr ScflOC>j ol Dt>«•I •I Rnrersldo (ht C•Pl\lr....o Valley Chr •• P11or1m Yuhlv• •I Cal Prfi> l'lnl It-llrt.My IU,....ltn<1L410 Villano•• •I Montcl•lr Pr"' Mom moth 411 <>-m VAlle1 F11n1r1ooe Prep or Laverne Lulller.tn •• Provlocnu • N••-' CIW'. al Owen ol Anv-ts Cnr ScllOOI Of Oe-1 or RlvtrslO. cnr 11 RIO Honoo Hf'\Ptt1• CN' •t Meectlf \ MH•CS. At H10fll""° Hall Lo' Pino\ •I Av•lon IL.o-bucl<ttl P•19r1m or C•P•slrano 1141110 Chr al Or•nv-Llllr..ran Boy\ Rep.Citic al Llnfltld Cllr VIII•~ O>r •I Temple (hr 1'e<>I 8uCklty at c ... s1 Union ROHmond al BIO Pint E•OI• M0<1nt411n •I Twin Pint' v Uhl•• o• c...1 Prep .ti Templeton Brentwood al Hel9hts LutlMran Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 24 7 .774 Texas 15 11 .577 61".I Chicago 14 11 .560 7 Angels 15 16 .484 9 Minnesota 10 17 .370 12 Seattle 10 19 .345 13 Kans as City 6 15 286 13 East Division Cleveland 13 7 .650 Baltimore 14 10 .583 1 New York 16 12 .571 1 Milwaukee 14 12 .538 2 Boston 12 13 .480 3"41 Detroit 12 16 .429 5 Toronto 9 18 333 71h s.Mr'•lc-A ..... •,o.mtil) 8til0fl •• Tonnto s ( 10 IM lno•I t<ana.s City at CN<aoe lllPCI., r•lnl Claw land S, Mi-wta I Mllw-.. II, 0.-land $ TUH7,a...11Mf'e) New Y9" ), loNttM 2 TMly'eo-t lffMn tT-tt-1) at f-lt IToOd I.JI, n C:l•""i.N 111'1'.._ J.I) al Chlc900 IT,..,. 1-11, II THH (.._ytutt t-41 •I l(anMI c;lty (i...-f ..• ,," Only .. _. K....,led, - NATIONAL LEAGUE Wesl Dlvlslon W L Pct. GB Dodgers 20 9 .690 Atlanta 15 13 .536 41 2 Cincinnati 14 13 .519 5 San Francisco 15 17 .469 61 2 Houston 13 16 .448 7 San Diego 10 20 .333 101i<i East Division St. Louis 15 7 .682 Philadelphia 18 10 .643 Montreal 17 10 .630 ·~ Pittsburgh 11 11 .500 4 New York 8 16 333 8 Chicago 5 19 .208 · 11 ..... , •• 1c_ ~S,N_Y_I SM l'r-ltce J4, MontrMI 1-4 Sen Dlt90 e, 11'1111 ... lclfll• • Cllk ... s. AtJMCA s I H IM!fte,I., railll "°"'"°" 1, GllKIMetl S l'ltl....,.,, .. St ........ J ,...,. . ._ Pll~ ll'lllodtll '-0) al Atl..,la ( ... rry >i>, II Hwtton 11•~ 1 11 al Gln<lflMll llffl t JI. n Only _....~ .... lad. ' • • • .. ~~~----~~ .......... ------.................... _ .......... ~ ................. " ...... ~ .............. f,..llllll0 ............................. ~$ ...................... 1111111211&111 .. 1~ ~·2 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11, 1981 r-------------------.. ~ • • . . 'f • HATtoHAL L!AGUI Oodgeta $, M•t• 3 LOSAM09&.SI ....... 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MCI.A..,...,. m. J . J_. m. Minetto It) -t+ffttl, --(t ). W -Vu<kovkll 12·2). L -M. Nwrl1 IM ). Hlt1- Mllwa uk ... 8roull•rd Cl). OO l•nd, c . J ollnton (6). A -2t,st1. Y-1,..._.I New Y-004 010 __ , 4 o Sffttle 000 020 000--2 4 I Underw-. Gon•oe Ill end Foote: GIHton. A.DblMI It), Alld9rwn ltl -W l- 1,,.. W -U-rwood 0 -4). L -Gl .. ton 12•SI. HRS -Hew York, ltOdrflluel 2 (2), Wlnflekl U L Seettlt, ,.._"'°" IJI. A - ll,M2. Top10 l .... •UM8Mll AMaltlCAM LiAOU• 0 Al R H flet. Evans, a.tan U ti U M .11• Sl ngletM, lelll,.,,.,. 2A .. II JI .»t Wl"'lel<l. H9w Y-21 IGO IJ U .lSD Zltk, SM1t1e JO 116 1J • .au Ben\ea.nl, CN~ 2S tt 12 M .JO Alktnl, IC-City 21 10 10 24 .IG J-ton. CNcevo 11 " ' 20 .11t l.entfwel IMtan 2S ti 14 J.J .m c-•n•. DottrcN1 u n t 2A .m ArmH , OHiand JI 111 It tt .Ill .._._ Armn, OeklMCI, t ; Tllolnel. Mllw-. I , s1,,.1~ a."lmore. 1; Event. lottan, 7; ZIO, SHttle, 7. ._...._., .. 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Concepelon, Clnclnn•tl, 2'; S<llmld1, Pllll•delpllle, 2S; Murpf\y, A1111118, 20; l'nter, OndllNltl, JO; J. OW, HouRon, ». .._...., ... d .... ) V•l•H .. 18, DM .. ,., 1·t ; Cerlton, Ptlllldelpflle, Ml; ,.,_., PllttWrtll. 4-o; Slllre.y, St. L.oult, 4-0; H-. ~ M ; Sendenon, Monlr••I. •·I; 1tu111ve11. Pttllldelptlle, •1; Sonnlen, SI. Ltult, 4-1. Collep KOfH Cellfomle 12. suMord' Gel SI* ~1 Hiiis I, Cal "'°'' ISLOI 1 HoNywood ~·"' IUMOAY't •llU'-1'1 (1 ... ...., .. _, .. ~ Plrst ,_ -~i._.. T~e CM<C:.. ren), J .... J.oe, 1.60; Twrn111, Wri.tlt IMCH•rtu•>. s.•o .•.••• H• c11., Cl'r .. tttclll, •·•· $e<oM "° -~ (M<C.renl. "·• lS.00, t .OO; Tiie "'°"'« COllvar .. I, at.•, 1t.•; IMh llUwr), ls.JO, P OellY 0..... 111 •t) .. Id t 112.00 • Tlll~d , .. -an_., Vltte IHew1ey1, •·••· a .01, t.••: ttrl••• ''•M• 10. .......... 1 ••••• ut; ~" ....., l*'-" uo. "._ .. 1~11 .-Id ua..• ,.-111 rece -~"I c.tle CM<Met .. I, ta.40, •.OO, 4,40; AW-lmtm9nl (Wlnl...V, •.40, 1.:io; Mell•N'• ~ IM<C.anen1. a.40. ~ .. lltll r--l'ealllon I Plncey), 11.to, •.o , 1 to; •m•n ,.,.,,.c1 IM<Mlt9Wll, ._ .. , JM; C01..-i1t1MI Le P lf ... I 1Veltftxw4eJ, JAO. U11....,,.. ~ JI.CM llllnll t.S e11e<le IHI .... SU.to. ll•fll rece -l!nllMce cva1en111el•I. 11.10, 1,40, s.•; ,.cwt !*Cloud (SllMMallerl ...... J.60; H-MN-IDll.,.._.,., •• JO. leWfl"' reet -leltlewlnd CINefM-1, 7,40, ••ot. tAO; aerr; ·-IC-....... 1. 4.20, 2.60; u ... en C~Jel, I& U Ue<1AI C M I) p.tld WoJ. Jt, p Pick SI• 1..._..1.J.11 PAld ... 141.00 wlttl ~ WIMlf\t Ucb ll lllw '*'-). u Pleil 51• ceMOl•llon pal• sn .• wltll 1,m wlfWl'"8 tlellets CfMw llw-). • 11i.riu. tee• -Pe11 l'oreettlno CMCCM· r111l, 4.40, J .20, J.60; Golden ••II• 1ve1e111uelel. U.00, s.to; Pro or Cen ccu•-1. uo. Hlnth reca -Tllr .. 8lt1 IOe18llOUtuyeJ. UO. UO, i.to; I.elf Go to Edwards IPln- <•YI. S.00, JAG; leek lelle, (S-~I. J.20. U euc:t.a 1441 1181d S1IO.OO. Al,.lldence -Sl,a. Byron Nelaon Cle11lc (et Delle•) •·lr...:e Li.ab, "'41000 ... ,~,._111' T9"' We_,, $ll,._ ... JC>.72>7)-Jll T9"' Pwraw, S11.AOO 12•12-11-m 1--, C.......,. S11,AGO .... 7WM4-m 1.-Cr.,.._, Slt.000 7Ht-n~IM Cff8r Senudo, SIO,OSI 70-7o.7S.7o--iu Rey l'loycl. S10,j00 ...... 11-71-JllS Cunis str...,, St0,050 ... 1 .. 10-n-as 1'1'9d ~. M.• 7o-7Mt-71-W lrvce Onlffl, M.• 12·11-11·11-W LArry Helton, M,800 ,,.n..,.n-2111 Clll Chi lloelrltaQ.M,a 7H7-72-12-X1 Joe I ntn8n, M.11111 11 ·72-72''2-107 Lon Hlllllle, M,toO 7"71·71-14-3117 T°"' J.,.lfl~. M.IOO 6f.11·1HS-107 Dan Polll, U,745 ... , .. , .. 11-• LM Trevino, U,165 IHH .. 72-- Jerry P8te, A,7'5 12-IS.1,___ lrecl 8ryMI, U,74S 11·T0-1HJ-• loti 011-. S2.160 7,..,_7S.12-2M Tim Norrl1, U ,760 ... ,._, .. 74-IM 11"8r'k H•Y". 12,160 7Wf.T).7ol-2M Ptler Oostemult.12.760 1:1-n .. t-1s-1M Gtne Llttler.12, llS 10-7).T .. 11-2'0 GlbCI' Glltlln, U,llJ 7).71·7).l)-2'0 Merll M<Clownller U.175 ... n., .. ,.._290 Frink c ....... r U. llS 12*7l·l6-2'0 J•Y Han, Sl, 1• 1$.11·1>11-2'1 Scot Sim-. SI, 140 7M4-1).12-2tl Lennlt c-11. J l,140 ... 1'·74·Tt-2'1 J eyHeusa,Sl.140 Ts.Jt.7).12-2'1 Tom WeltkGpf, Jl,140 Jt.1 .. J>·IJ-2'1 All8ft Str.,., Sl,140 7).1M2-74-2tl Morri1 H-Nly, Sl,1.. IS.11·11·74-2'1 It Ives Mc .... SI, 1• 70-72-74-IS-2'1 Welly ANfttl,__ S1,t40 11·7J.7J.IS-2t• Mike SulllvM, SI, 1• 6f.7•7>-7S-2'1 lffu • ....._SI, 140 ... 1•12-11-2'1 s,..,. Melnyk.''°' ,...,.,._n-m Miu Morley,"°' 7HN4-,7>-m 1111 8rl...,_ M01 1J.12'1H4-2'2 Fornst Fe-. St07 ... 7 .. JHS-2'2 lud •11111, "°' ,,....,..,.._m Ital Llncbr(, StOO 7...,.7J.71-2tlS 1 111 lto0ert, StOO 10-1 .. 10-11-m Tlr'r' ~. '61S 12·7>-7t.11-2t4 0.¥e E~,$675 Jo-7>.f0.11-2'4 11.ooy W .... IN. $61S TS.rt-n-n -2'N Jeel< Feflftl, $615 1HS.1S.1J-1'4 Crelo Stadler. MIS 1,..._IS.7s-2'N Ed 5-, MIS 1,..._1S.1S-"'4 Cll8rlH c-dy, $67S 1'·1f.12'71-2'N Tim Slf'llPIOll. $61' 11*7S.7t-2'N O•rYICOCl\$667 71.....,.,,_m JOfvt Scllroeder, '6S1 ,._..,..n-ns ltod H""*I~. "51 IH0-7 .. 14-2tS • ...,., o.rdNr. $6S7 ... 11.1•1 S-2'5 •-Oll~dNlllpl•yoft LPQA tournament 1 ............ 0..1 Amy Ak oU, Sll,HO s.11, Llttlt, SU,250 0.lt L.......,.tt, M,1'0 Oot Gtrmeln, SJ-'ts Pet 8r8dley, SJ~ Holllt Sl«y, M,VS JoAnn• Carner, M,000 P•m Hlt1911tt, M.000 Gall Hlr.._, P.SOO K•tlly ~. U,$.64 Jen S..,..,_,, ~ Cellly ~ St.544 8e111 Oanlel, '2.544 M're Van Hoole, $2,5M J-t Cei.t, U.544 Cafll, SM<11, Sl.Jm Sllelley i..w1n, si..- Judy CIM1t. SI.Sit Donn.~ •• , •• Mutfln Scl•nnr·Oevlln. s1..- A .... ll• ltorw, SI.Sit !Cathy Y-., St.• ... , ....... JOit "*10--210 11*11-211 Jo-Jo-12-212 l).IO..t-212 •7·11·7S-21) 11*74-21• IO.IHl-21• 74'7~215 n .11.1>-t" 7Mt-74-tt• n -10.14-m 7H2-71-214 7•12-70-21• 11·7).12414 n..,.1'-411 11·~1~11 11-1 •1 :i-tl1 1 .. 12.11-211 n -1•11-211 1 M0-10-211 74.7).10-211 BYC co-skippers uin trophy 'Tartan Ten, Temper takes Times regatta IBy ALMON LOCKABEY Tlmberwolf finished 11th in the final race and DMfY ..... ....,...,.. wound up the series with 20\.Ca points. The Los Angeles Times Trophy, one of the Overall series winner for the Lewis G. 0Jde1t yachting kudos in Southern California, Whitney Trophy in the 40-boat International Ulf· found a home in the Balboa Yacht Club trophy shore Rule division was Tonka, a Peterson-34, case Saturday when Joe Smith and Kay Booth sailed by Tony Hibbs, Anacapa Yacht Club. Run· climaxed the seven race series with a low score of ner-up was Red Shift, sailed by Alex Goetz, LA YC. 18~ points. Salling the Tartan Ten, Temper. the BYC co· skippers had a close battle throughout the series with Larry Harvey's Timberwolf, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. The final tally was decidell after Tim· berwolf went on the rocks near the L.A. Harbor lJ&bt a week earlier and was not repaired and back In the water until the morninc of the final race. California Gold wins May ~tta Calllomia Gold, s~lppered by Lee Colt, Dana Polnl Yacht Club, waa the overall and Clan A wln· ner Saturday ln Capistrano Bay Yacht Chtb'• May Recaua. The event drew three cluaea of Pel'formance Hand.leap Raclna Fleet ( PKRF> yacbta and two one·deslp cluset and was aaJled ln Ideal aummn conditionl with a tteady 10.lcnot breae. Second ovenll was Arlee, aaJled by Bob Burkhardt, DPYC, and third wu Flmny FNlln', Pete Mude, Capo..BYC. Trophy wtnnen In ctua: CLASS A -1. California Gold; 2. Art•; a. TM Vulfar Boatman, ff~ Cunan, DPYC. CL.Aa 8 -1. Fuaala.!a....ato': a. Bolo KW, Rick Raft, Capo BYC; 3. na-. 1eb 8Uaa, Capo BYC. NO SPIHNAK&R -l. 8ealllrd. Dea ....... apo BYC; I . WUoll, Howard Pa ... C.po IYC: I. Bandl ... But Browum, Capo IYC~ CA'fAUNA-11 -l. TWo ... Al ......... 1po ave· 1. A.-eM 1111 •••'•&· c... YCf.~~91t1te, rraiis Yr11les; C... YC. CAPil:. -1. ,.,.. ....... ~ ~ ,...,, PYC: I. ~J:::· &Jell oretaanl. CQo IYC; a. apridolla, T. wta, Ca" BYC. ' l BOATING and third was Temerity, Ted Kerr, Bahia Corin· thian Yacht Club. Clmest batUe for points was in the Mid&et Ocean Racing Class <MORC> aallln1 for the Little Whitney Trophy. Tied with 13\.ia points were Firecracker, co-skippered by Steve Grillon and Jim Morris, Kint Harbor Yacht Club. and Bad Newa, sailed by Stan Sorenson, Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. The wln would ordinarily 10 to Flrecracker becauae she beat Bad News in more racet In the tertea, but race otrlclalt taid firecracker'• victory la peod.lni a v1Ud1Uon of her raUnc ctrtJficate. · Jn the Small Boat Ocean Racina A11oclatlon <SBORA> for the Todd Paclflc Trophy the winner wH Gln1er Al• II, Andy AyaJe, AlamltOI Bay Yacht Club. Runner-up wu Qulckallver. Bob NewlOme, LA YC. Wlnn.n of the teventh and final race: Wllltae)' 8erte1 lOR·A -l . Brill, Deno.it Choate·Dick Melne. tBYC·LAYC. 101·8 -1. a.cl Shift, Ala Goeta·Ann Kahle, LAYC. • IOJt.C -1. Toa.U, Toa)' Hibbe. Ana YC. .,... ........ PllllF·A -1. ~uy, Frank Dair, CBYC. Pllal'·I -l. Ko& Rum, Al CuW.loa·Cluu le~IDIYO. P.Rar.c -l. Tomara, Dou1 and Tom Jora--.LAYC. ........ , llOIC -l. ftncr.det, atne Ortlklll·~lm lllorrll, KllYC. ,.... .... SBORA -J . Qaicull•er, lob Newsom, LAYC. ~ >· NBA CHAMPIONIHIP 81Altl A~ete 11, Cehka II .............. ) IOITOM -MuweM 1•, 8~ I. ltet'ltfl It, Arclllllelil 11, '°" •, Cerf •. ~Hale •, ltoi.ey •. O. Hendtrw" t , l'er111te11 o. Oowwod I. Tote11 as 1 .. 1• M. HOUtTC* -Peulti 10, Reid It, _._.. 14, OM"'""" .. T, Htftda"°" I, Wll....,., t, T.UIH7 1'-tt ti, le_.,,....,. ... _ ,. l• 11 , ...... "°"''*' ,. 14 u 1 ...... 1 Tll,.......nl ,.., -OunlNvy, l'ew!M euc -H-. TOie! tou11 -IMIOll tl, H_ .... •• Tecllll~I -HolltlOll CNcll Herrl1. A -14,121. , ... .,..o--·""et e.tan ~.,. . ._ ... -.. ._.... ~.Mllr17 Hou•ton .. ._..,Cit necesutyl UCLA lnwltatlonal ... Dr ... ..._, 100 -I. J. ~. !USC Treek Chill), 10.ff. 2. l''°Yf C-lledl, 10.10; l. E. lrown IUCl.A), 10.Jt. 200 -I. SenfO<'d, (USC AC ), 20.20; t. Ev•"• (Ari-SI.I, 20.:M, I. MerMl8!1, IWhlllllflonl. 20.-. ._ -1. _.., IArl-.. SI.I, '4.t2; 1 Or9etl lUSCI, 4J,01; J.. W Smltll, CAlll!etlc AIU< I, •S.ti. 100 -1. 8011 ISoutntrn C•lllornl• Str~tl, 1:.U.'3; 2. 'I*-(1-.CJIY ACI, 1: ... 01; J. En,H r1 llte<lfl< Coet1 Cl'*), 1:46.11. Mlle -I. Scott ls.AM TC), J:U.JO; 2. 'W81ker IH9w ZHlend). J.SJ.tl, I. Co9lllen. llret.lldl, J;U.'4. 2·mlle -I. M<Cllt•ne' lunettac:lltd), l :U .14; 2. Splver. (lndlanel, 1:24.H . a. Mc Doneld IAlll!etlct WtStl, I • U.OS. 110 HH -I. Foti.t 1-tt.c:llecl), 1J.IO .. <Ollds, 2. Turner 1st ... • •"" SlrlPttl. IUJ; l . ~IA~ Attk), IUL 400 l.H -1. Pfllllips, !UCL.Al • .a..u, 2. IClllQ IMecUllll TCI. 4Ut; l. Shetfleld (Mee· <Ml TCI, J0,41. HJ -1. 5Unbl ILOllO heell CC), M ; 2. Or-11 IAll"""-<lc.-i TCI, 1•3; J. J-l'retler C-teclledl. 1-1 LJ -I ~t (Houston!, Zt.l~ lwfn6. •lcMdl; 2. R-IMeccelll TCI, u.t; J Wllllems CUSC TCl, t.J..6....,. T J -I . .-S, (l.INI), s.-4~; 2. Merlow lSl•rl -SlrlPffl. Sl-1; >.Connor (SMUI. SS.I. PY -I Curran (UCLA), IMI, 2. ,...,..., IP •clfl< Coul CIMb). 11·0. l Ill•). 1Ce-or111y lunetl«lle<ll; Zol., IS-nl, Volz 11nc1i....1. •llCI e.11 1 Pacific Coelt '''*'· 11 ... OT -I. Plucknett lSoulllem C•lltoml• Strlclersl, 211-11, 2. Powell !Sell JDM Sl8rtl, 21T·IO; 3. Hjellnes (Norw•,>. JIH. SP -I Oklllekl IChl<etQ TC). 4t-Ol.2, 2 Cerler ISMUI, ...._; 3. I.Aul, IAll'llellcl We11) .... I 14 WOMa .. ll!O -AillfWd (Meoallsl TC). 10.tt; ) lolci..n (UCLA), 11.11; 3. re,1or, IC-), 11.31. 200 -1 Tu •o• IC•n8d•I. u .n , 2 MerlNll (Coffl Allllttk •I, 21.16; a. Pune, Cl.A N•lurlkl, ll.t1. ' too -I. ~II (Slellfwd TCI, J:lll.112; 2. Walton ITtiw.-1, 2:0l.61; 3. G•ll._,.r (""•ttec-), 2:1M.41. 100 HH -I. l'llllll"'•ld (T-1, IJ ti, 2. Y-.e IF•lrtt1911 DlcklftlOll). 1U 2; 1 H .. 11--.r IOlllo ~I. IJ.JO, OT -I. Griffin (Sports WHO, 112·11; 2. Ven Hterdan (UM.I, llCl-J; J. Cady (Sten-fwd ), 1n.I. u -'· MCMiiien-Rey, CTl1res1 TC). 21-Slll, 2. -IWl~-1111. 21-4'A; J. Jo,_ Cua.Al, Jo.Ill">. SP -1. Frtwrl<k CAllllellu W•stl, SI-IV.; 2. Griffin 1Hollcl8y S.. TCI. JT -1. Smllh IC.I l'ol' SLCI, 211.J; t. Scllmld1 IPac:lllc Coest Club). 200-1; 1. Celvert 1""811«1\ed), 1 ... 11. Women IO. CAUl"OtlMIA IMVITATIOllAL l .. UCIMM) Atlr-1•-"Wt 100-1. ~Int (Vlt.mln Plut), 11.62; 200-1. T~ IUNLV), U .lt; 4ll0--1. MclC""'• (N•1urltes), S4.tt; I00-1. Af>. tonewleu (H'tlurlttS), 2. 11.S; OU.rt: S. G ...... lre IUCll, 2:1U , 4 ~-IUCll, 2.20,6; l.JOCl--1. ~ IMEOTCI, •:».4; Otllers: 4. Tralnw (UCll, S:•.7; S. St1*f IUCI). S. II.I; 3,Gl»-1. S_ne, (UCSll), 10:21.l;Otllon: 3. Sell-<& IUCll. to:a.2; s.000-1. CNddock (Vlt. Plutl, 11:01.S; 10,000-1. Albert IUCA). •: .. .6; IOOH- 1.McO.. Cl.A Mef'), IJ.6t; 'llOH-1. H.,_ CHetYrl'ttl, Ml.12; Otllera: •. Hl9'1t- cuc11. 1:0S.t; 400 rtl•y-1. M•nurettet •7.M. HJ-1. SteHord (Vil. Plut), S.f; OtllOrt: 4. Hltlllo-CUCll, ~; u -1. M•r1lMm 1Hor111r lclglf), ~; OU..,: J. Ml<llelle ICellty tUCll, lt-t ; JT-1. Moro CSTC), 1 .. SI; SP-1. Kenntd, IVll. ltlutl •1~. OIMrt: 0... IVl1. PIUtl. 4S.10\ll; S. T- CUCll, 41~; DT-1. VanHMnlen !Unat.1, lllMI; Ottwrl: S. T-IUCll, 1'4-10; ._ OHM (Vlt. Plutl, 144-2. T041rnement of Chemplona , .. ,._, ...... ) ............ 1 ..... °'* ... tet• '"'""''" .. 1 .... C 01-wlnt 1100.000, IClrme" .... 0001. Women'• tourn•ment .. , ........... ,, .._...,,_ Cllrlt ,...,. LIO~ dol Vlrfjnl• 1tu11c1 • ._I, .. 2. 1Llo't4 w1nu20.-. 1t11il<l t10,0001 N•tlon'• Cup ... .,_...,., .... 0-MMJ) ........ lwan I.end! l°'<'-IOv••'-> 0.1. Her .. 4 Stlemon, IU.$,l. •·•, 1·4; Tom'H :\mid CCucllOtlOveklal dltl Sandy Meytr IU 'I ir M .2 .. ,._,. ~ s1 ... Smith ,,...,., cu s 1 *' t...elld•·~. "''· ...... 1. CCze<llotlO••kle wlM -'"· M l. ...... Peul McN-IAMllr•ll•I !Ml, fd.,.do 1-llff CAr .. ntln•I. 1 ,, •-4; G11lllt""° VllH IAr...,lln•I dltl "-!er M<Hamere IAuttrallel, .. , • ._, DeW6ft M<N-•-McN•"'" *' Vll1..011wovo f.~."ero, .. ,, T·J, IAuttr•ll• wlnt Mtln, Men'1 tournamnent 18t s.,-,, AwttrallAI ...... ,!Ml J01111 Htw<omee clef Tony Roe,,., 1 • • ._, Women'• tournament (el TM.,.) ,.IMI~ Ann 1(1,ornur•Sue l erur del. Sne~n Welll\·8erbar• Potter. 1.s •.. , IKlyomure B•rker win U0,000, Wal\11· Potier Wlft Ut,000) Davia.Cup ........ z-. Ml<llHI Morlenun IOenmuk) def Mlguel *""· w , •·•. •~. Peter B1111anaan lOenmerk) def. JOM CWclelro (Portuoall, W , ._,, M . IDenm•rk wl111 Mrlet. W I Lula lorfloa CMonecol def My1t.aopN DltllP! 1-rvc:co>. 2 ... • 4, 1 ... J.J, ._1 !Mo<licowl111wr1H, l·l l Pro lnvltatlonal letPAr1lN~) $141e1tSl'IMI Jtff __ ..., ci.i. "'111 Deni, .._., , .. , f S 18or-18k w1,. Sl,000, Oenl ''°°" '*' o I . " Women'• 1ottball HIGH SCHOOt. MMtu1,a-..t Merln• 000 OOQ. 1-1 J 1 Edi-. 000 000 o-4 > O Kyler-Mercon., Baktr •r>CI ~llano. ,._. Y811ty I, H•l le8Cllt Founleln Valley 010 Ott 0--J > o Hunt111111on a..c11 000 000 o-4 4 , Venltn8n-AU999, llorlon end Olinlr• Cll' .. A PUYOPPS (, ............ ,, ... ,) Warr'" al _....., Torr-.e el Allle,... t>re; M1•81HI• ., u Qulnl•. S.nl• Ane .. c,preu ; North Torrence •I Gellr; Cebrlllo •I NewDury P8rk; KtMtdy •• El S.g...-; Sen Gebrltl 81 Tustin; Downey •I ••-; Garden Grove •I Ouen View; Arroyo Grano• •I S•nta B••ll•••. Cenyen el Arc •die , l'Mt11tal11 Y•ll•' •1 Peclllce . Buen. .. T~ Dells, l.AWllCl•lt •• Roll· 1111 Hlllt; WHtl8ke al Rl(lllelll. CIF).A SI. J-" b.,.; 8ur118nk el Don Lugo, Edo••OOd •• San owoonlo; El Dor-.i W-man; IJJland •1 So<ilt> Hills; G-lt •I W•lnut; ••....U. el S.•anne; Collon .. LB Wiiton, El Toro •I WHlerll. E-·- •I Mllllkan, LA "'*11• ., Cllelfey; .... Del •I ltedlends; M.tgnolle •I 8urrOU9f>s, lltllop Amal el Aowlend; l..•kew-•I ·1,,,)M; I.A Hellra bye. Cll'l·A Sen Clemenle •I Bellflower , Sen Strnerdlno el Arlington, Arn>yo •t O...ru Hiii; ltorel Oelt •I C•llfornl•; lent-el Coron•. ,..,,,_,. or L• Mlrecl• at Cl\llrter Oek; Le S...ne al Mlukin Yltjo; El Monte •I lenlle; LA Slerr• •I Ce ntre!; Horco at A.,.... Valle,, Mllyfelr el A1uu; -<l•lr a1 M- lelope Valley; Whittler e l O•n• Hlll1, Moreno Valle, 8t llldlo, Chino et K-1 • Coechell• Valley •1 Aemone Cll'1·A Onlerlo Clwlstlan bye, AqMIMs al 1-. lntlon; lllOltwaod •I SI. Antllony; Notre D•m• 81 5outll Pawoen.s; C11em111-el Temple Cll,; Alm of Ille World 81 ..... monl, Ho4re O.me I Riv ) el Yue<• Ve11t,, SI llernard •I Alemany, Con,.lly 11 Cul- Clly, Pe., R~ •1 Senta Cler•; LA .. p. 1111 11 lt-y. Bt.,.,ly Hll" el LA AelN, S.'1 M.,lno el Cel•ll8Y1; 8relllr«l el Mar· t' Ste r; SI. Bon8WlllMr• .. SI. Gtnevl•n. S1.Jos~t1ye. CIPSIMllS<!Melt 0.Mr1 Sun or Woodc:retl 01<l1tl.,. •I Atve,.,..,, DoMr1 8t Boron; Eagle Mount.,., •1 Ht-l't; 81"-P 8t 0-. Va lley; Ser- reno •1 Rio Hondo; Holt Fam11, or Wllldw1.rd al Temple Cllrl1tlen; Feltll .. P. llt l el Hew,ort Chrhllen; Arg,11 or WulrklOt 8t Mark -; Trone el Parac:ltle; Vl<lw Valley Cllr. •I l..1'6erfy Oirltllen; HH41H at leker; Cet>fllr-Ve ller Cllrls- llen or Ven Hor" at Or•noe Lullltran, Oakw-81 Cont Uftlon, H19"l8"CI Hell el Vlll•oe Ovl1llen. Fll,.lrldte S.Cred He..., at Cal Pref!; Appl• or Herllege Chrlallen •t Pe.a48M Po4y. Stanley CVp flnal• , ........... , .,...,.t._ Ml-al HY'"-'" TllWMrf'••-Ml-.. NYltl .... 1 .....,,w,11 N 'I' I 11endtrt el MlMHotA ,_y,M8ylt HY I a ....... •t Ml-Mt• T--.r,Mll,11 Ml-.. HY 1~1 llf nec.._..,I .. ,_.,, ... , u ... .....,,, Mey .. NY ltl~al Ml-tot• (If nac:e1M<YI T ..... y,MayK Ml.._e •I NY lslenderJ (It nac:tuery) Women'• 11mna1tlc1 Cll' 4-A Fl T ltOUHO 1~,.1 ...... 1 I •~IOCIA, •oovr•. Canyon, Gerclen Grove, E-•..,t•. Culver Cll' or It-el ,_ UI• V•lleY. S•••nna, Vtlt• P•rtll, Crescent• lley, lrvltl1e, BrN -Ollncta. Soulft Hllll el SOvlll Tatran<.• Simi V•llty. Palol Yerde1, Sono<a, "-· 1-.IM IMc•, WHI Covlne Tu11i11 el Mire <.:ott• Rancho A••m1lO\ Marl"•· lorran<e, Scnutr, Ceata Mete, 8ewerty Hillt •l T 110u1enct O•k>. Cll' ).A FlltST ltOUHO IT-,,7p.m.) Ai9het11, MonlClafr S•uou•. Mllllaen. o .... Hiii•. SI J-•I Lot Al•MllOI LO ewOOCI, lllOIO, All• Lom•, Cenl••I, P••m Springs, Sen Clemente •I A•m-. C•brlllo, OcHn View, lmmuul•I• He•n. C•Plll••no Yell•y, Al••rllck Poly al LI WlllOn C,preu, Marlllorou9h, HArt. Coec ... lla J•"o w.-uau •t C••••"'°"1 NASL WESTIEltN OIVl$10N w L GF GA ... -krl s J • • • 1' Sen Oiego , J IS 10 12 • Se" Jo .. J s • u • 26 L01Aft991M l 4 ' " ' 2S IEASTfiltH DIVl$10N Cosmo• ' I lJ ' 20 61 w .. 1111191on s J IS 11 II 4 MonlrHI , 3 " II " " Toron10 I • 10 " 10 " 50UTHIEltN DIVl510N Fort Le..clerdale • , '' I " 4J T•m~ Bay l • " n IJ 31 Allanle l 4 " u 12 JO J ac:k '°""Ill• l • t IS • 24 CIENTltAL DIVISIO .. c111uoo s , 14 , " .. TUIH l 10 • 10 XI Mlnnesot.a , , ' J 19 Oell .. 2 • ' II s IS NORTHWUT DIVISIO .. Pw11and s l " 10 IS 4.S S.ettle s 3 16 13 ., 4J V•nc..ouver 4 11 10 II ~ Edmonton , 11 12 ' 21 C•loar, I • s 10 ' ,, SI• j!Olnts ••• ••••ded for • regylellon or overllme v1<1or, Four points tw • "-- victor, One llon•JI POlftl lw every _, KO<ed Wl111 • tn .. lmum ol lllr .. per eeme Ho bonu1 j!Olftl I• aw••decl lw overtime or ll>Ooloul -•• SlllNN, •• Sc- Chi< •to J, Dall•s o Cosmos S, Toronto I S.ellll '· C8IOI"( 0 Porllend l. l..ol Atlgeltl I Sen J-I, E~lon o Tenl-tO-H HC>IJ8~K-led Misc. Weekend tran11ctlon1 IAHIAU. ..., .... Le ..... SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS -Sent Cllerlu Davis, oul11elder, 10 Plloenla of .,. Pac:llk C:O.JI LffOll' Recellecl Jot Pettlnl, lnlleldltr. from,._, •. COLLIE GI AUIURH -Hamed Ptl Dy• elhlelk dlreclw ST. LOUIS -Announced UM retlgn8tlon of Harry R-r1, essl1lent t>e1hltl8ll coacll. MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO SPECIALISTS This Weeks Special Fr.e Oil FUtw w/$14.'5 OU c-. CHECK OUlll COtiftTmVE NJCES ARST & GRAND ARCO 835-4049 1222 l. I st loff 5 Fwyl l·S bcept S-. Zillgitt and Wright insur.incr ;igcnrs ;ind brokrrs Retailers: Insurance costs rising·• Contact us for a competitive quote for n Business Owners Package Policy "h1ch includes most coverages needed to protect ~our business We also write Group Medical and Life for small groups us well as l11rl(e Bob Guffin J9JI Mac ,A,rthur Boulc,r~rd Nc~rf lkach. Ca 97()60 ( 7l4) 75.l-905~ AH Cltl11n1 May Enttr Wyoming 011 'Lottf!ry' To Be Held In May ONTARIO, CALIF. Americ.n the opponun· (Special} -Hundred• of ity to compete on an awra• c11iunt will win equal buia wich aianc oil oil i.u. riahtt in u~m· compania for lta1et of iq public drawinp con-public lenda. ducted by the Stetc of Information and entry W)'omlna. Some may cletalla are •vallable from ICMnc ovcmiP• wealth The H. Kirt S•nclers '?'. Mllint their ri1MI to Co.. Public Landi Div· od compenia and ntaln-illOtl, loa 3697, Ontario, Int hftloq royaltitt on ~Jif. 91761 (2032 Carol· uy oil or pa produc-ine). PIMMeaclottSlfor Uota. ,.... ud laaadll .. 1979 CADILLAC COCPE DE VILLE Factory 2 tone paint, Cadillac wire wheel covers & an "Astroroof.'' (768WKT>. 8 8495 LEASE A NEW 1982 EXP! TOllORROW'S CAR 18 HERE AND WE HAYE BIG SELECTIONS FOR lllEDIATE DIUYEAY. WI LEASE All MMll CAIS AND ftUCU. ·wr V( r.ur WHAl mu Rf lOO~ING FOR THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. ,.,...~, MOit will nt., omdal tfttry cud• will .o eon tt.u SU •act a Ill n11htit te> penntt yo., mttriM Mnioe f• 10 to "*' tbe neat Riina zo••....._a c ......... enter the llttie..tnown period 1t1rtl•1 May lltb PfoSnmthatotftnt'VCf)I •t noon. . . . ~ i • • • l l • • ~ • l t • ; ' I I I I : I I .! The San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh in Irvine is surrounded by major roadways, overflown by commercial jets and bordered by an abandoned refuse landfill. But the prevalent Red· Winged Blackbirds don't seem to mind. The males stake out a certain territory in the tules and try to attract females by showing off the brilliant, circular red spot on their wings. And the Ruddy Ducks can be found in great abundance in the ponds of the 202-acre marsh owned by the University of California. Some animals, however, are having harder times reaching the marsh because of creeping urbani zation, says Dr. Gordon Marsh, curator of the marsh. ''It's sort of like flipping a coin when some of these animals try to cross the streets near the marsh," he said. "Either they get lucky ortheydon't.'' The birds are less likely to cross streets, but other aspects of urbanization threaten them. ··Birds have difficulty perceiving some of these buildings with reflective glass and they end up smashing into them." said Marsh. "We get calls all the time." He said there are also natural processes at work that discourage some creatures from visiting or residing in the marsh bounded by Ca mpus Drive, Jamboree Road, University Ori ve and MacArthur Boulevard. "Some of the migratory birds that frequent the marsh need a large landing pad and the problem is that the area is becoming overgrown with vegetation and making it roughforthemtoland,'' Marshsald. He added that several methods are being studied for reducing the overgrowth. A quick tour ot the marsh illustrates the situation. Tules and cattails often obscure the ponds as one walks on the earthen dikes that separate the bodies of water in the L·shaped marsh. Wild artichokes line the dikes. Tour guide Cathy Plelnes notes that these and many other varieties of plants and animals aren't indigenous to the area but were introduced by man -Spaniards in the case of the artichokes. . The Starling bird ls an example of one of • c • 3 I ' Daily Pilat MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 ... STOCKS COMICS CLASSIFIED 83 84 85-11 Red-winged blackbird clings to reed to get bearings on marshland home. Wild artichokes line dikes and other spike~ vegetation in ponds makes landings difficult. Photos by Gary Ambrose, text by Richard Green of Daily Pilot Staff these "European beasts," that sometimes thrive in this region at the expense of the native creatures, she said. Something else introduced by man here has the potential of doing more damage than any plantoranimal. Below the bluffs in the southern section of the marsh area is an abandoned landfill, the contents of which are unknown, Miss Pleines explained. Officials in charge of the marsh worry that erosion might uncover a harmful substance buried there. She said that material was buried there a few decades ago, before federal and state restrictions were adopted to regulate dumping. The Irvine Company, wlllch sold the marshland to the University of California In 1970, strung barbed wire by t.tie marsh to prevent grazing catUe from falling in. Strands of the wire can still be seen in the area, testifying to an ear Her, simpler day on the Irvine Ranch before land development became more Important than livestock and agriculture. Before the land was boqght by the Irvine family in 1864, it was pan of a Spanish ranch. In those days, the 202-acre marsh was only a s mall part of a huge wetlands (called "Swamp of the Frogs" by the Spaniards) extending inland from the Upper Newport Bay area. What is now the San Joaquin Ma rsh was fed in earlier days by the San Diego Creek, which has its beginnings in the watershed of the Santa Ana Mountains. Now, however, the water source for the marsh comes from wells at the nearby Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant, said Miss Pleines. The marsh Is used as a learning resource by students and educators at UC Irvine and public tours also are available. 5 s a 2 a 3 2 2 1 A ghost still walks the halls of the old Hotel Leger ... 82 0 D Belfast youth weaned. on daily fighting BELFAST, Northern Ireland CAP) -"Come out and fight," yelled a young man in a Belfast street at a dozen rifle-armed policemen sitting in their gray, armored Land-Rovers 100 yards away. H e was one of about 150 youngsters from 6 to 16 years old m assing around Divis Flats, a spra wling complex of rundown apartments that dominates the rural end of Belfast's Falls dis- trict, heartland of Roman CathoHc militancy. They are a new gener ation of young street warriors who have known little but violence and tens ion for the last 11 lh years. Wti en the sectarian bloodshed erupted in August 1969, most of them were barely out of kin· dergarten. Some weren't even born yet. 'If I had a gun , I 'd shoot the bloOdy lot of them .' Outside the graffiti-smeared walls of the Divis block, the kids taunted th e cops with ob- scenities. Finally, the policemen raced the Land-Rovers toward the mob, s cattering the youngsters in what has become a daily ritual of violence. The youngsters lobbed bricks. bottles, pieces of metal pipe, a few millt bottle fire bombs, the wheels of baby car riages, anything they could pick up. Three policemen in flak jackets leaped from one Land· Rover and fired a half dozen "baton rounds" from riot guns, 4-inch plastic bullets that can blind or maim. None of the young s treet fighters was hit. A few broke away from the clash to retrieve the cream-colored bullets as bat· tie trophies. As violence in Northern Ireland goes, the lO·minute riot last Wednesday was a minor . skirmish amid an eruption of an:. ti -British hostility over Tuesday's death of Irli ' Republican Army hunger st · · Bobby Sands in the Maze Pri Sands was seeking recogniti of the imprisoned IRA men a political prisoners, which wollld , ,.ii.o~,, \~~m.,.t<! wear. s tree-t' clof'Hes , associate with one another and other privileges. Jimmy Coogan, a street-wi,se 16-year-old wearing patch•4· hand-me-downs from his f~ elder brothers and a stole,i, yellow construction hardhlf1, s aid as he waited for tbe policemen to charge again: "My dad locked me in my bedroom because he knows I want to be out here. But I got out the wiJF dow." ,. He pointed to the policemeJI~ "peelers" in the ghetto argot. and said in the hard Belfaat ~ogue: ta~~~~~~ ~~s~f:1~a~P~~ 1 'd shoot the bloody lot of them. I've had too many lickings from them. They hate us and we b&t.4 them. That's what this is al\ about." The teen-agers of 1969 who battled the troops and police have their guns. ; They joined the outlawed IRA's Provisional wing and ~ splinter groups fighting to end British rule in the Protestant· dominated orovince and unite it with the overwhelmingly Catholic Irish Republic. Twenty-year-old Jake Fallotl . of the Belfast rock band, StffT Little Fingers, called his con· temporaries "the barbed wire generation" because of the en· vlronment of conflict in whicl:t they've grown up. Hundreds of the nearly 2,100 dead in Ulster's agony have been youngsters. One was Pa'J) Whitters, a IS-year-old London· derry Catholic fatally wounded last month by a police-fired plastic bullet. Many of the casualties ha\/e been bystanders. 1 . j Dan Rather fiqds .:i new news spot hard NEW YORK <A P > -Dan Rather bas been the subject of intense scrutiny since be took over from Wal ter Cronkite two months ago as CBS' "Evening News" anchorman, but a ll of the pressure, he says, has been from the outside -the media and the competing networks. "If it has worked so far, and I believe it has," Rather said in an interview as be began his ninth week on the job last week, "it's because we've got an awful lot of good work out of an awful lot or good people. "I knew there would be ups and downs," he said, "but I might have underestimated the depth of commitment here. These people are determined to make it work." Rather said that very little of the co mm e ntary o n b is performance as Cronkite's suc· ceasor has been negative, but added: ''I do worry some because so much attention is given to the superficial aspects of broadcast- ing -who's up and who's down. All that counts, but is far less important than maintatnln1 a standard of good, solid journalism." The "Evening News" attract· eel 26 percent or the audience in Rather's first week, March 9-13, compared with 23 percent for NBC and .22 for ABC. By the ei1hth week -through May 1 - the "Evenina News" share was 24 percent, to ABC'• 23 and NBC'a22. The perceptible ero1loo bas beu heralded by the oppo1it1on u a •ten that CBS' front·runninl status ln the evenlnJ news field 11 lo Jeopardy. But Paul laacaaon, a vice prealdent for sales for CBS, aaid the shift in audience may be more a factor of tra.nattion than of any dlaaffection wlth tb• ancbonnan. "lt appears Rather la Chana· lnl vtewl.nc bablta," 111cucm 1lld "and what J th.lnk ,_.,.. Heln1 la viewers looldn1 around, and moet of them com· l•I back to CBS.'· ln fact. be said, CBS' share of·one segmhit. of the audience, women lS..M, has increased by 17 percent' Rt the last year, while ABC's Pf+ portion has declined by 7 per· · cent. ! The competing networks ha :In the meantime, waged d · ,traordlnary promotional ca 1patgns toutln1 their own eveniftl jnewacaata -ABC's "Wo('lcl News Tonltht" and "NII* INews" on NBC. · "It's really very early to~ about l01ln1 viewen to the networtt " he added. "A lot happe;;;d ln the lut two mon that could affect the ratinp the 1bort nan. I 'think It'• loiN to be a year or a year and a blll before we can really a anythlnl deftnite," Rather Hwt In 1ttempUn1 to eatabltlla himself at Cronkite'• 1ucce1111:; Rather may bave been be1&*i by two unforeseen event.a the •~ tempted uaualnatlon ;/ PNll· dent Reacan on March -30, * the apace •butt.le ni1bt bl mlil-AprU. ..... .... .. , . -• .. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 Guilty c harge d She's queen of ~he Mother Lode LAW & JUSTICE DEPT. -You listen to what our Orange CoWlty judges are expounding in recent Umes and you're left with the notion that every time they pound the gavel, they intone: "Bring in the next guilty defen· dant ... " Well it isn't quite like that. What the jurists are try- ing to g~l across to the voters is the idea that they're not soft on criminals around here. TOM MURPHINf Statistics quoted by the Superior Court judges at a press conference just last week indicated that of all adult c riminal defendants hailed before them on felony charges last year, 94.5 percent were con victed. And of those convicted, the jurists assert that 95 percent of the convicted went to the Big Slammer up the River. YOU LISTEN TO TmS and you get the impression that getting hauled before the bar of justice in Orange County is just like being a big loser in the Monopoly game. "Go to Jail; directly to jail. Do not pass Go and do not collect $200 ... • • Extending the game, you could go to a multiple choice ques tion on the s tatus of law and justice in Orani;?e Former defense attorney learning a paying trade County You might ask the question something like this: If a person goes to trial in Orange County on a felony charge, thb: means : · (A > His chances of getting off the hook aren't very good. ( B > He'd better have a defense lawyer that scores wjthin·the needed 5 percent range. <C > He 's a lready guilty. ( D > He· s going to prison ( E> All of the above. ... IF YOU ANSWERED the question with (E>. the statistics suggest that you're a winner. The s uspect who is going to trial is a lways the loser, with the slight excep- tion of Answer ( B). And s peaking of defense lawyers. the statistics handed out by our county jurists must cause them to c ringe a little bit. Being a defense lawyer a round this county must be a job like the used car dealer on the dirt lot in downtown Santa Ana. He s miles and says wonderful things about the Bazooka V-8 he's trying to unload on you. But when starting time comes. he has to drag out th& battery jumper cables ' IF THE JUDGES' statistics a re anywhere near ac- curate for our courts. you know that our co~nty defense attorneys must have one real area of expertise. They must be very good at writing appellate briefs. You're left to wonder whatever happened to t h e famed defenders ot yesteryear around Orange County whose reputation was so inflated that they whispered he could get you off if you came into court with "GUILTY" stamped on your forehead. ONE OLD DEFENSE attorney had such a reputation that a juror was once heard to remark about him, "You believed him even when you didn't believ~ him ... " Nowadays, you s u spect that your defense attorney in Orange County needs only one real virtue. He'd better be able to come before the judge with re- ally interesting motions for a change of venue. BY ELLEN GRANDT 0( .... Oelty "• -- E 01 TOR'S NOTE : Thfl 11 another In a 1ene1 oJ 1to?U1 tM D<Jll11 Pilot wall publiih about In· tereatmg California womn T his Is a s t ory about a Frenchman's ghost, a tragic fire, and a high school s\feetheart. In the background are the excitint early days of television; a fateful luncheon with a university dean. and the cele brated bandit, JoaquJn Murieta. Sue Clark is a pretty, delicate woman, with sort auburn curls and a disarmingly sweet voice a nd manner. But hers is a difficult job, running a historic Victorian hotel in the Calaveras County community of Mokelumne Hill. As owner and manager of the llotel Leger, Clark supervises a stafr that sometimes exceeds 30 and oversees. in addition to guest rooms, a restaurant, saloon. theater and catering business. THE HOTEL LEGER is a l wo·story s tone building with broad verandahs and graceful balconies. It was built in 1851 by George Leger, who came to California two years earlier from Alsace-Lorraine with his second wife, a very young bride. The hotel was called the "Queen of the Mother Lode" and considered the most elegant hostelry in Gold Rush California. The old hotel survived three fires in the 19th century and has had many owners through the years. But the original foundation and walls still stand. And the ghost of George Leger, says Sue Clark, still walks the halls of his elegant creation "He's definitely here," she says. ··And I feel very comfortable knowing he's around '" Mokelumne Hill, now a sleepy village with a population of 836, was once the largest city in the Mother Lode. with more than 15.000 inhabitants The county seat of Calaveras, if narrowly m 1ssed selection as the state capital. losing to Sacramento by one vote an a legislative contest. Scene of some of the richest gold strikes in the area. "Moke Hill" was thewildestofGoki Rush boomtowns, famous for violente, including two all-out "wars" between rival national groups of miners . The town was also famous as headquarters of the dashing bandit, J oaquin Murieta. SUE CLARK'S OWN history is also fascinating. A Washington state native and Northwestern University graduate, Ms. Clark. 50, participated in the very beginnings of the commercial television industry. as a writer and director at the first s tations in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle's K ING-TVandTacoma's KNTV. Her California career started in 1965. when. the newly divorced mother or four small children. she became a writer for Marin County radio station KTIM. Subsequent Jobs include a five· year stint with Marin's Residential Treatment Center for emotionally disturbed teen -ager s ; a year in the corporate world as manager of technical publications for Bechtel Power Corporation ; and four years as director of university re- lations for the University of California Medical Center in San Francisco. All this would seem to have very little to do with Victorian hotels, you say? Indeed. But Ms. Clark always was interested in real estate. In the late 1960s. she tried to assemble He art attack classes set ·.c ARD I 0 PU L M 0 NARY resu sc itation c CPR J c l asses are being offered throughout May and June by South Coast Medical Center. The pro.gram includes CPR ~HEALTH HELP certification by, the Amencan Heart Association. Participants are taught how to provide ventilation and circulation to a heart attack victim . The classes also provide heart facts so students can recognize heart attacks. For information on class schedules. call 499-1311, ext. 618. STOP SMOKJNG CLINIC will be offered by Pacifica i:ommunity H ospital in Huntlngton Beach in conjunction with the Orange County unit of .,.. , the American Cance( Society l>egmomg Tuesday. Ft>~informa tion on the free health education program, call 752·8600. ... SADDLE.ACK COMMUNITY ho s pital will have a dis· c ussion on prescript.On drugs and their side effects Tut.9day. Participants are encouraged to bring their prescriptions In to discuss specific problems. For information, call 837-4500. ¢' STRESSCENTER at South Coast Medical Center and the city of Irvine will present two seminars on family issues beginning Wednesday. The ~t seminar is titled "Stresa,\~our Body's Worst Enemy." The second se minar . set for Wednesday, May 20, wlll be "Law and Order in the Single Family." The programs begin at 7. 30 p. m. For information, call Mariner ' 8 Library 8et8 exhib ition An exhibit or water color. 1raphlcs and callliraphy by Anita E1an Healy will be on display at Mariner's Library In Newport Beach be1tnnln1 Wednesday and conllnutn1 tbrouah June 30. Tbe Newport Beach City Art. Commllllon wUJ 1ponsor 1 re- eepUon to honot arl11t Norma Jay from nooa LO 2 p.m . on Tues- -day at lbe Newport Beach City Hall Gallery Her work has been exhibited ln galleries In New York and Mlnneapolls, and Mra. Healy rece olly w1 1 Juried for watercolors into the Art·A·FaJr FttUval In La1una 8eacb. Soup wUl be 1er:ved• at the 1atberln1, whkb will mark the opnlq ol lbe apeclaJ exhibit b1 Lhe t.acuu Beach palnter whO •Pee all.Ml ln marine 1abJt'Ctl. 499-1311. ext 560 . ANN B. MARTIN, author of ·· Metabionics: The Mystic Power of the Mind" will lead a di sc u ssion on "Psychic Development for Health and Achievement'' at 6 p .m . Saturday In Newport Beach. For information. call 975-0700. SMOKING AND YOU R health is the t op i c of a seminar sponsored by Riverview Hos pital at 7 p.m. Thursday In Santa Ana. For in- formation on the free seminar, call 531-1653. ALCOHOLISM and the elderly population is the topic of a discussion and woTkahop at a meeting of the Orange County Alcohol and Aging Task Force at 7 :30 a.m. Wednesday In Sant.a Ana. The task force is br1n11n1 together persons In alcoholism and 1erontolo1y for the purpose of learning more about the 1rowin1 problem of alcoholism ln the older population. For Information, call Arnie at 49tM311, ext. 560. G ESTALTWOllllS, a counseling and crowlh center ln Lacun1 Beach, will olfer a lecture on the bul1 of Gt1talt therapy at 7:30 p.m. Friday In La1una Beach. For lnformauon. call 41'7·401& r1MALE ALCOBOLll• l1 t.he topk of a two·bour HmiUr _ eonducltd by the Couo.tellttt At1oclale1 for Human Denlopltlent at '7 :30 p.m . Fttda)' ln Tullln . For lntormatJon. call 83.2·1020. A ghost still walks the halls December 1978 , a c losed corpor1ttion of eight investors, with Ms Cl•rk as president, purchased the Hotel Leger She moved to Mokelumne Hill In July 1979. to manage th e hotel full tl11'\e Enter tht> high school sweetheart A certain boy, who sat behind Sue Clark in high school Spanish class. first encouraged her lo con s ider a ca reer In broadcasting, his chosen field. Although they dated other people in coll ege, the two met again when Ms Clark returned lo Washington and very soon became engaged. Just as suddenly. they broke the cn~agement ·'To this day, .. says Ms. Clark, ··1 don't remember why" So JO year!'> 1J3Ssed But last s ummer. this ex fiance. John Lewi:.. n o w a s uc cessful broadcaster 1n Portland. heard about Ms Clark ··running a hotel, of all thing!>, 10 some strange sounding lo\\n' .. In Sacramento on bu::.ines~. Lewis called to ask 1f he could v1~1t the hotel Three month:-l;iter, they were married. Now Lewi:-. commutes from Portland on Wl'ckends and assists with the hotel whcnl'ver he ran. ~U( Clark with Mokelumne Hill in background With a devoted new hus band, he r c.hildrcn in college or safely launched on careers. and the Victorian hotel or her dreams to man<1ge. Sue Clark would seem to have prov('d the adage ... lire beg1n:-at50 " an investment group to purchase the historic Marshall Hotel in To m a I es Bay , ,a be a u ti f u I Victorian survivor of the 1906 earthquake. The scheme fell through, and a young Marin couple purchased the Mars hall Within two months. the hotel burnedtotheground. Although s h e was n't the Marshall's owner, its loss left Clark "heartbroken ·· And, she says. the incident .. stayed an the back of my mind'" for more than 10 years. In 1977. Ms Clark made a major career ~w1t<'h . becoming a res idential a nd commercial reallor. The following year . an the spring of 1978, s he took a Gold Country vacation trip with three frie nds. They visited several Victorian hotels. induding the Hotel Leger. Once again. M~ Clark found herself .. charmed by the romance'" of" these historic structures. ' A week after the trip. one or Ms Clark's vacation companions had lunch with an acquaintance. a dean at a Bay area un1vers1ty The dean mentioned "the friend o r a colleague .. who was interested in selling a Gold Country hotel as 1t turnl'd out. the Jlotel Leger. From then on. says M:. Clark. ·doors started openint! And an Bctausc "1th a ll the hard work. she says 'I thoroughly enjoy what I'm doing I'm happier than I' \'t' t'ver been · · We w1>lcome your comments. questions, and sugqestwns about thas column Please utnte lo Cah/omia Woman. P 0 Box 156Q. C9sta Mesa. Cal1/orn1a 92626 f.'llen Rrandt. educatea at the l 'nwers1t11 of Pennsylvania. 1s a published author now /wing m Sunnyvale, Cah/om1a Aries: New job is possibility Tuesday, MAy 12, 1981 By SYD~EY OMARR ARJES <March 21-April 191. New job or assignment could be on h o rizon . Emphas is o n break -through s, added r ecognition and improved health. TAURUS < Apnl 20 May 20 1 Family member c onfesses feelings and you feel good as HOROSCOPE result Accent on children. speculation, adventure. variety and possible change or scene ry GEMINI ! May 21-June 201 Restrictions are removed Popularity increas es a s potential comes into focus. Older f a m i I y m e m b. e r p a y s meaningful compliment. CANCER (June 21-July 221 : Obtain hint from Ge m i ni mes~age. Opportunities exist for expression of ideas, formats. LEO (July 23Aug 22 1· Articulate ideas obtain data relating to costs, interest rates. Romantic "involvement" is part of changing. exciting scenario. VIRGO <Aug 23-Sept 22> Puzzle pie ces fall 1nlo recognizable pattern Harmony 1s restored on domestic front Circ ums tances favor your efforts and aspirations LIBRA <Sept 23 Oct 22 > Access is gained to confidential material, backstage maneuvers Accent on glamour. mystery and di a 1 og u e with di rector of ho s pital or charitable organization SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov 211 · Accent on dreams, friends. pers uasion and romance. What you want is available and older 4fld ividual aids in obtaining it SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22·Dec 21 l: More people are d rawn to you career gets boost and goal comes within sight Project can now be completed You could receive wide publicity CAPRICORN <Dec 22-Jan 19> Spiritual value!> come into sharp, clear focus You're due for a ··revelation · Emphas1~ on commun1cat1on . tra vel. edu<·ation and universal appeal AQUARIUS <Jan 20-Feb 18 1 l11 ghlighl 5.e curit~', financial guarantees, accounring and bookkeeping procedures First impressions apt lo be correct know 11. re:-.p<md accordingly PISCES 1 Feb 19·March 20> · Delay actions Accent legal review~. clarification of rights. perm1:-.:-.1oni. Focus on joint effort!.. cooperat1on, possible partnership and marital status. S lapping not necessary DEAR ANN LAN DERS While s t rolling in the c hildren '!. department I heard what sounded like clapping I turned and saw a mother slapping her small child's hands. First one. then the other .The woman then screamed, "'Never unbutton m y purse again." Within minutes I witnessed another mother dragging her young son along by his ear When the toddler tried lo free himself. she slapped him with such force hefelldown. My heart breaks when I see lillle ones mistreated like that. No wonder there is so much \'IOlence in the world. Children learn 1t from their parents . When our first c hild was born, the kindly pediatrician took hold or her tiny finge rs and said. ··Mother. these are delicate instruments Take c are of the m I have seen permanent damage done by indiscriminate hand-slapping ·· He explained how the adult hand com es down with such force <especially when motivated by anger> that damage may occur to the bones. cartilage and tendons. ll was his personal belief that s uch punishment could cause arthnll~ 1n later hfe I ra1~cd four children and never -.lapJH•d a ny o f them M y daughtu:-. d on 't slap their ch1ldn·n c1ther Please tell your All lANDfRS rC'ade rs that mothers can find better ways to teach children not to touch thing::. that don •t belong to th e m MINE WERE TOUCllERS. TOO Dear Mother: Thank you for a thoughtrul letter. I wonder how many parents saw themselves today. I never slapped mine, either. A stem look of disapproval was enough. What kind oj wedding goes wilh today·snew/1/e styles? Does anything go? Ann La11ders' completely neu; ·The Bnde's Guidt'" tells what's nght for today's weddings F'or a copy, send a dollar, plus a long, self-addressed. stamped envelope r M cents postage I to Ann Landers. P 0 . Box I 1!195, Chicago. Ill. 6061 I Philharmonic group to lwst te nrUs evenl 0mzirs CUSTOM FRAMING Open 6 Days A Week Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 1()-4 1803 Newport Blvd., C9$ta Mesa ~11 Announcing a Summer~ ForTeensl The Jane Gray Porter Committee of the~~~===~==;,:~ Orange County Philharmonic Society will host ils SEHIOR CITIZIEHS rirst annual women's doubles tennis tournament SPECIAL from 9:30 a .m. to 12:30 p.m. Friday at the Balboa 25o;0 OFF A.LL SHvte Bay Club Racquet Club. ... ..... T•~ Wt4. 0.ty A luncheon at the club will follow the competi· HAIR lion. HAHDLHS Entry blanks for the tournament are available ........ ._ ........ . at tennis clubs throughout Orange County or in· ~========~ terested women can call 760-8340 for information. Proceeds will benefit the Orange County Philharmonic Society's concert series and youth Turn your unusables Into usable cash. can Da lly Piiot classified 642-5671. • I l I .,._ I • • . .. l Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11 , 1981 s DRUGI CDlBT To keep up with all that's Jtappening in your eommunity you need the Daily Pilot ···every day 11ERE ARE REASONS \Vl1Y. • • • a Rt_•ad «tll tct1l11~·'s U 11e"·s. e,·t_•ry day Local, county, state, national and i nternationa I e vents come to 'tOU r /ifif ol low your tt_••••n ~ The sport s action at 15 Orange Coast high sc hool s, three community co lleges, UC Irvine and Cal State tampuses is ~E11joy yo11r Sund«•y doorstep in the bright, light and lively Daily Pilot . ~Family Weekly, color comics, TV Week, the latest news and features about your ~om munity , your money and you highlight regularly reporteq by the Daily Pi lot sports staff. Keep up with nation- a 11 y ranked college and pro teams, too! --0:-.J' the interesting r eading packaged in your Sunday Daily Pilot. Enough to read - and enjoy. @ Ke£•t• an eye on l£,1.wal ~o,·en11nent No other newspaper brings you more news of your city council , planning commission, · · school and col lege districts and county B Save money and <!) shoppin~ time (ij/Tune in to the {/ latest TV . lo~s government. ~Laugh, ery or ~t_•t ~smart Real values on items from apple- sauce to zippers are advertised every day in the Daily Pilot . The latest, mos t accurate television guide is publi shed each weekday in the Daily Pilot. Because the ads are from On-Sundays, TV Week ... ~. . ~ Advi ce from Ann Landers, humor from Erma Bombeck, interesting features on people, opinion s, comics brighten your world. ~~ charts the tu be .. '"'· · , in convenient, easy -to-find listings. .. We deliver days a week Daily Pilat ~--------------------------· : I 'd like to enjoy the comforts of a home 1 deliver ed Daily Pilot every day. ~ r ----------------------------, loO l'OS r •r.1 "11.ISSAi.V II l;IA'l f O ~-----... • Enclosed is $8.00 for three months. 111111 "'·~· UNlll 0 SIA IS I I I : ~t;.~'~~:.~~~::.~~ .~.~1.L I I Name .................................................. ~ 6(, ..... , ,.,c: •• ,. .e.-. ... I I I I Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Or11t99 Coast D1Uy Piiot 1 I . ' Bolll 15'0 I I City ............... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · Phone ·······.····... Cost• Mesa, CA. 91626 I I I I I I Signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cl RCULATION DEPT I I I I "••O"ic•IM•Oistrict ................... Rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I ·--------------------"·------------------------------------'-Complete the coupon ... glue or tape the prepaid label on an envelope for mafllng, or call 6-424321. Ask for Clrculatlon. ... _. f L .. 642-4321 Ba . f . t • 2 I . • • l , I . ~,, I j ·n I I : .•. I ' I I i tg l ....... I f I a I 1, ,.. ·,·a I I l \ I I ( \ I ' ·-·-~~r-----__.....~-~--·~--·-==-....-. .............................. ~,..-...... s .. ~; ......... 1•s•a•2•2•1 ............ l .. l• / Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. May 11 , 1981 TU ft\MILt' Cl8CIJ8 "Grondmo uses the bottom port for reading, the top port for looking out the window, ond the middle for watching TV." BIGGE08GE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "I hate Mondays." by Brad Anderson -BENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ke•.::hum "Speedlng ... running a red light... failure to r yield right of way ... jay-walking ..... IUDGE PARK ER S LJt'(lENL' AWARE lHA 1 \\A6(,t BEN50N Ii> HAVINl' A ~ONEM WITH Htf Ml>.li:E NIE-I~' f'IDtN(• ~•AM AN(" ("l\N l':ll!•H T(l HP:: J\IP !'U I f1 ~·lCONr T~l(1 l I\ 1£ ' ~ .. __ d' }-<~ t S I r ( i i ' Hes upstairs. Said he wouldn't ·stay in the same room with ltver and onions'!'' PMNIJT8 WE'LL SEND IT HOME TO MOM AAD DAD ... And that's the stol)\ <i how h«> sddltrs and their sister met in Fronce during World War I. by Charles M.4Schulz And I don't care lf anyone believes me ornot. 0 t I '" i ~~, by Tom K. Ryan ._..,.,,__ JI< w, ~ ~ ~ NANCY VCcJ~ JU( I:?> FAMOUS FOR SWIN&tNG 7>JRr)()eH mE PEA~LIP:S OW THE aJ~OSITV CMRIO'r, CAT/ GORDO SLUGG0,00 YOU EVER SWEEP YOUR HOUSE? FlJNKY "INKERBEAN Y0tJ CAN'i B€ 5E.Rl005,HARR~ <.X)() WANT. ~E ~OOt.. BOARD 1D HE.lP t.ou W..> A 741 R'.)R I DOUBT IT .;.o .. ~ C..-W-~ ..., 1•1 OM! ......... t ' "'' "'' 'THE cosr OF f.DMEiHl N(;, UK£ 'THAI 15 OOf OF 'TH£ Q<£5110N ! by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushm1ller by Gus Arriola by Tom Battuk GARFIELD by Jim Davis <.;(){.) iD~ IN? HE.V, GARFIELP, WMAT l70 VOO THINK OF MV NEW WA~LPAPER? ~CROSS 1 Actress Gardnet •Shy 9 Smirks 1• Church,..t 15 Girt of song 16 Hindu princess 17 Op1nton1ted 19 FOOi 20 Submit 21 Cte0 50 Abner's fathef 51 Sumutate 52F - F1tzger1td 5• Ptiee Plk! 58 Ortas 60 Munched 61 Nez - lndl1n1 62 Roclltt stage IM Potential trouble UNITED ~Syndicate s.turday'• P\mte SoMld summer souret 22 Stone 66 Earn 23 Oblique look 87 Dye of I typ.t BF..fii&o 24 legal m1t1er 68 "-- 26 China Se• WOl'd" gull 69 law group 29 Deface 70 GOif'• Sam 3t Gynrs mot!w 32 NimbVS 33 Oinlcully 3t Ttme of )'Mf 3t HN-vy weight 39 AppelltllOn 418tll lleld 12 Aectnt: Prwf. 45 F9lljng 13 Stabillm 48 ~~ 11 BIO cu1no 18EurOOMn m1n DOWN 24 VibttllOnt 63 Up.tigllf 1 Dltlnay 25 Ptrm1N1w 55 CUMC1 pelh 2 Sotdtr 27 -the""' 5e ~·· 3 lnlonned 28 Society: Fr. COUlin 4 Credit term 30 On --57 El Patoan 5 Blblle•I ruler wfth 59 EnttlACI 6 Lenglh un•t 33 P11o1111oot e1 si.y undOM by Ferd & Tom Johnson MAMI ESTl~L 8,ACI( VISITING ~Er< MOTHER>, WILLIE? ~~~ ,3 AQI ,,...,lltld 7 Fittl ~ e.r 12 ~unit· .................... +- ~IMUt •1 Tl'IOUgt11 ,. """"'" txpGf1 • ' • Defun(t 35 Some oui-Abbr. 9 Golf belle 37 T raot*t a3 !af1tl.: Ptlf. 10 Veget*t 40 Trn es ~tel): 11 lnt&lgUf •« 42 Ciotti .... ""· DR.SMOCK YOU PIP CAW... POWN5"fAIRS ANPASK FOR ONI! OF "fHe GAt...S F~OM ,..He NU"'-S!!5' POOi...., Pl PN'"f' YA , POC."fOR ? I flE.~O 1'AA1' A ~ICf SIC,, ~ CAM l>l"E 'iOV AN (M01iOl-lAL. 600'S1' II.MEN 'ioo' RE. OEl'USSEO! SO WHY "fHe PUM& GUE!S"T"ION 1 by Kevin Fagan I Al.~O f{EAQ 1'MA1' ~Ol'L.E A"' E1.•lllM" INCREOl&LE ~1"1tEtHifll lM 1"1M(5 ~ ~ttEME Ai.lbtR. by Lynn Johnston I DIDN'T KNOW You WE.RE 1HRI SMART' • •• 2 •• I I, & l, I 2 fl F I ., Is >I 2 :e \ J lo s t iii n. ly o. '" • - - • PlJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ------------ HOTICa Oft HU1Taa•1 &Ai.a CITY CIOUlllCn. ••IOUlno.t NO. n• l.OllUI llO. WA••MOuaa " •UOLUTION OF THa CITY COUNCii. 01' TH• CITY 01' 1•v1Na T.L NO. 4tlff.J DECLARING ITS INTINTION TO O•Olll TH8 VACATION 0, THa NIWl'OltT NOMI! LOAN. INC., •t EASl!MlNT FO" lllCI T•AIL ~llll'OM:S OYla l'AllCaU I, I AHO• Al llwly •l>POlntM Tt1 .. 1-.,,_.., llM RICO•OIOIN IOOlt 121, l'AOIS 14, ISAHlf ... l'A•CRLMA"-RllCIO•OS lollewlne -.. ........ el ll'llu WILL 01' OltAHOI! CIOUHTY, CALIFORNIA. SILL AT l'UILIC AUCTION TO THa CITY COUNCIL 01' THI CITY 01' lll'l(IN8 Hll,alV OOH THIE HIOHHT 11ooa11 '0" CASH Ra50LV«,O«TERM1Na,01to1RAHOl'INO.Ul'OU.OWS· C ... y.ttle et time of H ie 111 lawhll SICTl()H I, It It Ille ltttefttlon of U.Clty C-11 ot lfte City .. I,,,.,. .. .,._, l'llellooy .. "" UNI .. SCai..tl •II tlQflt, Ille v•utllfl Of -Eawment fot l lu Trell_.,...._ ,..I'( .. , I,·-. a• 1111• •M lnie..tc <_,....to -now tW<orow la .... 1•. Peen 14. 11 -16, ~ ""-'-.-.c-ot ~ ..... !Mid ""' It -Mi9 °"«of T""' In COllfttJ, Cel-.We. Ille.,,_..,,, ,_relnaollet Mt<rC-SECTION 2. T'-Clly of lrvl,.. eteqt to_ ... -r ,,_ -ltleltt .. 1M T RUST 0 II C H I! STIR F $1r .. t VteaUon A<I el 1 .. 1 SALISIUllV, 11, an UNn•rtlM man SICTtOH). T,_ 11,... and P14Ke I°'~ lly N C1t1 C-11 ot •II ,_,_ I IN I! FI CI A II Y ; NI WP 0 II T lntetffled 111., o«tl«tll\t to Ille pr--.._.. .... It tiff.., llud et Ille 119w of MOMI LOANTllUST NO. t07 7.JOp.m ,lat,_ CCM>Cll CNmo.r-, 11100J~ ROlld. trvltte,Call-•911 lle(or""" F-...ry 1. ltlO •• ln&lrl. M•Y 2', 1•1. NO f.OJ ""book I,._, page '°" ol Of-SECTIOH '-A Wtalled m-..oltald "-•• •111119111 lM .,, ... of I ... City ll(lal RKorda 111 OM Olllu of Ille Clerk ol ,,. CllJ of lrvl,,. -,,. allenll9fl of~.,.... lnl•""*" 111 -119-1 lhcorder of Or-C-11, wilcl -pertl(ul•nl1cllr.c1..i101,. City Clerk. of ,,, .. 1 llfferlbH Ille IOll-1119 IH'C> SECTION s. The OIY Cler .. of llM City of lrvl ... 11 dfr.ct•cUtc-.... k•• .. ""'· be posted con51>kuov1ly •IOft9 , .. LIN• 01' TH• •AJ•MaNT 'l'O •• Lot • of TrKt No. 1701, •• P'I• VACATEO AT LEAST TEN 1101 OAVS llllFOAI! THI! OATe SIT l'OA SAIO M•p ,_,,...In a-"· P•oa•. •11<1 HEARING. SAID NOTICES SMALL llE l'OSTIO NO MORI THAN JOO l'llET tO Of Ml-11e,.oua 11Mp1, t11 Ille ofllce Al'ART, 'UT AT LEAST THAI.I! U1 01' SUCH HOTICH SHALL •l ol 11\e COWltr RKotder ol hid County. POSTED ON THE IASIEMEHT. SAID NOTICIS SHALL STATI THI! 1 II M al•ber, Newport Bee< II, PAUAGE OF THIS lllSOLUTION ANO TMI TIMI! ANO PLACI 0' THI C•lllornl• n..o HEARING. "(II. street acldteu or common de· SECTION •. IN ACCOAOANCI WITH Al!SOl.UTl()tf HO. ISi, THE Ollll!C· •IOn•llon I& &hown -···no ••rrMly TOA OF COMMUNITY OIVIELOPMIENT HAS OET•RMIHIO THAT THIS ,, Ol••n .. to ... comp1et-.1 or <or· VACATIOH IS OF MINOll HATUlll ANO THIS MATTl!R SHALL HOT •• •Htneu )." REFEAAEO TO THI PLANNING COMMISSION PVASUANT TO HCTION Tiie benelkl.,y under &Md O.ed of •S402 OF THE GOVERNMENT COOE. Tr.,tt, br , .. ..,,. OI • bte«ll or del•ull PASSED ANO AOOPTEO BY THI CITY COYNCIL 01' THIE CITY OF In Ille Obll .. tlon1 M<"'red 1Mr911y, lllVINE AT A REGULAR MEETING HELO ON THI! NTH OAY OF Al'lllL, lleretolore .,.Kuled ane1 dellver.., i. lttl. llM 11114ettloned a wrlllen O.cler•llon OAVIOG. SILLS of 0.lalllt -Demand for S.te, and MAYOR PROTEMOF TME CITY OF lllVINI •rlll•n notkeol breach-· ••KllOft ATTEST. lo UuM ..... -lloned to Mii &aid NANCY c . ROWLANO P•otierly lo letlsly Hid Obll .. tlOfts, CITY CLERIC OF THE CITY OF IR\ltNE -t,..rMftor Ille unoe,.lonect ceuMCI STATE OF CALIFORNIA I Mid nollu of IWM<ll •ncl Ol ele<tlon lo COUNTY OF OAAHGE I SS 0e 1111 CITY OF IRVINE I A4Kor""" -y S. 19'0, •1 ln11t N•. I, NANCY C. ROWLAND, CITY CLERIC OF THI CITY Ol"llCYINI, Hl!RllY SO.• In booll IJ$91, page~. of Mid Of 00 CEllTIFY THAT THE FOREGOING RESOLUTION WAS l'.USIO ANO lkl•I RKordl ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL 01' THE CITY 0' IA\llNE AT A S.ld Mia wtll be ....... llui wltl\oul REGULAR ME£TIHG HELO ON THE 11TH DAY OF Al'ltlL, t•t I Y THI <o•en•nt or •.,t91\ly, HP<HI or Im · FOLLOWING ROLL CALL VOTE. plled, reeardlng tlUt, ooueulon, or AVES· J COUNCILMEMllERS. AG RAN, VAllOOVLIS, ANO SILLS en<vmbr-es, lo pay Ille remelnlng NOES OCOUNCILMEMBEllS: NONI prln<IP<tl wm of ,,_ notthl W<ured Al SENT. 1COUNCILMIEM8ERS; ANT~'I' ANOGAIOO by wild 0... OI Trull, wltll lnterHI •• NANCY C. ROWLAND In H id noltP<O•I-. ed•M<H . H eny, CITY CLERIC OF TH£ vnder Ille ler"" OI .. Id 0.911 ol fr.,tl, CITY OF IRVINE lee&, <ll•tOH and UP9nHl of the PUBLISHEOORAHGE COAST DAILY PILOT. MAY II, t•I Trvllff -of ll'le lrutl& created by -U02•t M id Oeedof Trusl. PUBLIC NOTICE Sald Nit •Ill be held on Wed,,.Ml9y, Junt J, 1"1, ti I I 00 a.m., ti '""office ol T,O. Servi'• Coml)9ny, B•nk ol AMl·JJI PUBLIC NOTICE Amerl(a To-. Suite 1110, One CllJ NOTICEOl'TRUSTIE'SSALE UllTIO,CALll'ORNIA Bl•d WHI, Oranoe. C•tllornla. GTD Ne.ooso O,FICI Ol'THESTATIARCHITICT Allllellmeofllle lnltltl11Ubllullon RE;Rl14t DEPARTMENT 0, OINlllAL of lhl& notke, '""total emount of Ille SUNWEST BANK. t Corporation, SEAYICl!5 unpaid b•l•nce ol Ille Obllo•llon lorm•tly SANTIAGO BANI( ••• duty ADYERTISl.MINT 1'011 llDS M<ur..:t by ..... -w cMKrlbecl -d ol •Pl>Olnled '""'" Ulld•r the lollowlno PU8LIC NOTICE lrvll •nd Hllmated <Otl&, U"'1M&, dHtrtbecl OHd of lru" WILL SELL SEALED PROPOSllLS will be re· •nd•d•en<•S l•Ul,2-17. '"'T PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE ceoved In Room )016, 101 South To d.tormlne lM opening bid, JOU HIGHEST BIDDER FOR C4SH Broedway,Lo&AftOelU,C•lllornle,vn m•y Ull 11141 '17~ Cpoaolt •I lime of Ulo In tewf111 tol 1 00 o.m • Wtd/IHday, /oMy '°· 19tt, Dal• ,,.Y 4, '"' money of Iha Untied Statut all ro9111, el whocll 11,.,,. they #Ill be llUbll"y NEWPORT HOME 11111. end ........... <on••yed lo •na now OP9MO•nd•Mdln Room lt01a1'•ld•O LOAN, INC. "91d Oy II -w lo Deed OI Tr.,st In dttntor •• .. Id Tr11$\ff, Ille proper1y rwr .. neltet dtK'rtbed R ECONS TRUC. T PARKING LO TS By T 0 S.nrlceCo. TRUSTOR AUOREY J UOllLL,e n REPAIRS ANO IMPROVEMENTS toenl unm.,r,.dw0man DEPARTMENT OF OEVELOPMEN By Cllrl•h lelul. BE N EFICIARY SANTIAGO TAL SERVICES, FAIRVIEW STATE Aul1tan1 Sacret.,y BANI( •• C..lilorntt corporetoon HOSPITAL. cos TA MESA ORANGE One City 111...i Wul, Recorded S.pte..-r 11. 1979 •• tn• COUNTY, CALI FORNIA (W 0 HFA Or9n09,CA'2... str No )7651, on DOOi< ll3J1, -te0 801011 17141 ~ ol Ollkl•t REcords In tha Olllo ol lhe Th" P<OlKI <cwnor1Ms roiu••n•llnq Pvblltllecl Newport H•rbot Ne'"'' Recorci.t of Or-C-tJ; .. ,d deed •'911•11 concrete 11<1•-tno lot •no ,.,.., Pren comol...., wllll tl'le Ot•noe Coast 01 l•u>t ~•OOH Ille toll-•no pr ... •urlt<• con•lrvc:llnoconcrm c .... oena Delly Piiot. ,,,., 11. II, H . '"' 21*-tl party guller, '"''"shlno •na tnll•lllng petk P UBLIC NOTICE Loi •Sol Tr.oci No •n•. In tlWI Coty •no 101 lfOM or>o •vstom, p191111no tewn ot H••POrt Bt:.c.h. County 01 o,.,,9', •nd ''"'"••lending '"'9•UOl'I •t•l.m, Sl•I• ol C..lllornlt, u per mep '" •n:~;:::':!te:~koroer plan• •nd NOTICI TO CONTRACTORS corded In 8ooio IST, P•oe• 1 tnrv 14• specol1ce1tom 111' canlt4Ktlng Contr9't CALUNO FOii llOS Mlt<t ll-..US ,,.PS, In .... 0111'* OI Men•11emen1 S.CllOft, p 0 Bo• IOI•. S<i-t OIJtrk l Hun1tng1on Buell ll\lt County Rec:orci.r ol u td County. Sacramento tSl41$. T•l•PllOM 19141 City Sc,_, Olstrtcl MAY BE llLSO KNOWN AS 1511 )12 2111. llld l>Nclllne 1 00 o'Clock p.m o G•l••v Ori••, Newport Btteh, Pl•ns .,,o spe<tlltallon• mey 11o Ob Ille 12nodtyol"My, 1 .. 1 C•lllorno• 1t1neOwllP'ooutcharoe Piece ol BIO RKelpt Olstrk1 Ad '(II• •lrftl •ddr.s• or c."bmmon °• Prequ•t11oc111on 01 bid<!•" unoer Ille l'l\ln1'1r•llve Cenl•r 1lS.141h Strttt \lgnellon" \hOwn •00••, no w•rr•nty S1a1eContr•C1A<11snolrequ1red Huntln9ton 8Hch, Celllornle 9~ :~cql~:~,a~. lo ols '°'""teteneu or cor. s .. ccesstul bidder \11•11 lurnlsh PO ProjeGI ldefltlllcellon N;ome· Paint Tht benellco•rr """'' \aid Dud 01 mint l>Ond •nel petlorm•ncw l>Ond es re lno Smtih S<'-1 " qultto by 1aw Pleo Plans ere on Ille (Wm• • Trust, Oy reason °1 a oreacn °' c>elaull Pursu•nl to S«llon 1170 ol the L•Oor •b,•eJ ~~,!~:tor0:1':,::~~~!, '!~':11!~~;:br~ Code, T'he OetMrtmtnt ot 1,1ou,1r1e1 NOTICE IS HERE II>' GIVEN Illa the undenioned • wtollon Oect•••llon ~et•llons nas ewerlelned ti>t qener•I the ellove·Nm9CI School Olllrlct O pr .. •lllng ••ltol w•gestn llWocounty In Or•noe County Calllornl• Kllno b o1 Ootaull Mid O.mand for Seit. •r>a wlllcll lhework 1'10be oone lobe" '"I end lhrowgll lu Govetni'no lloard, wrllten notoco 01 breacll •nd of etecllon eo 1n tne Oel»rlment ot Tr•nux:orl•llOn llerelnaltet referred lo e 10 <•u~ Ill@ undtrllgned 10 Hll H id 000-111 enlllloO Generel Pr .. •illno "DISTRICT", wilt rec•••• up to, bu property 10 ullsfy .. Id obllgellon•. Wege Rates, dated Mme" plen• ano not leter 11\an llW •bo••·•laled llm• end lh4!realltt .,,. undersigned ctuMd specilk•looru Copo .. oftllill>oololtlart , .. led bldl lor llW ewerd ol •contra< uld notice of Mt« II and Ol elKtlon lo on 1111 •I 1500 Siii Sir"'· S.cr•rnento. lor Ille tboveptojecl be •t<orded Jenuaty "• '"1 "Instr Ctlllornt•, ano ,,. •••ll•Ote to any on Bid& ,,,.., ... reetl•ed In Ille Pl•< NO 11:161, tn -IJ91S, 090• ... o. of l••tlleCIPtrtyonrtquo)I idenllllecl ellove, -sn•ll be -/If' Mid Ollo<oel Rec:orcts. BARRY WASSERMAN, A I A and llUl>lkly read aloud el Ille •bo• Strd ... , wilt oe maot, bUI woll\out STATE ARCHITECT tl•led time -P•K• coon•nl or ••trtttlV. upreu or tm PuOll•i.o <>reno-Coesl °'"' Piiot Troere Wiii be e U0.00 de-II r Ph•O. r_..ilno lolle, PO>Mssoon. or Mty• II , .. , IMUI quired for .. ,,. wt ol bid oocumenu t encumbtanco. lo pay llW rtmaonong -rent• llle ,.,..,.. In OOOd c-ltl prln<tpal \Um of the note(tl sKured wllhln 10 days •tter IM bkl -• bY U•d Oeecl of Tr..-1, wolll rnte,.sl •• cs.te In \.ala "°'* provrdtid. Mvance~. If Eun bid musl conform •nd •nv. vnt»r 1"" ltrm• of w ld DH<I of NOTICI INVITING a1os PUBLIC NOTICE rupon•lw to the contract doeumenls frust. 1"'· cnarges ano 0 ,... .. , 01 Notice 11 llereov 01 .. 11 111a1 the Eacll bid V..11 be accompanied b int Ttust• encl ol Ille lrusll created Board of T""l"t of Ille Coell Com· Ille MC.,rlly referr..:t lo 1n Ille contra< bY H od OM<lol Tru~I Stod sate ""111 Ot munlly Coll~ Olstrlcl of Or•noe llOCv menu -by IM lltl ot pr_.. ht ld on -Y 11· t9tt, •• 11 00 a.m ••I County, Calllornl•. will receive Malff •ulKoritractoo Int main enlrence to Guororan Trv\I blcl& up to 11 00 • m . Tllv,.,.,.y, M•y TIM DISTRICT r~vn UM rlOlll I De ed Servlus. UOO E Meyl•or JI, 1'tl et Ille Purcl\Mlno Oeclerlment ••Ject t ny or •II bkl• or lo wat•• eny AvenOH. Or-. C•ltlorrn a of ••Id <oli999 dlstrlU loca ted t i 1)70 lrreoul•rlllet or lnformallllH In •"Y Tnt 10111 amounl ot the unparo C blds orlnthtbloo1no oatance ot Ille o1>11g.ohon -ured by Ad•m• Avenue. 01u Mesa, T•-0 STRICT• -IA~ I --u 1d P•OCJer1Y 10 be sold 1-ll•er with Callforrwa. •t •hkh lime H id bldl •Ill •-I n .. o~e ·~ romv-' be publk ly --•na read lor Otre(tor of Ill• Department ol In lllltrnl, ltl• en.roes. and Hlrmeled 2'·MONTH LEASE OF WORD Ovllrl•I Rel•llofts Ille O-r•I prt••ll· <Olis, ,,._,.,., M\d ad•ence•. •• of PAOCESSING EOUIPMENT W/OP· 1no .... OI per diem '"''9'1' In ,,.. .,.. d•lt ........ Is »<2.10 69 T IONA L RENEWALS locellly In Wllkll lhl& wortt 11 to Oe Dele. Aprll 20• 1~ All bid$ ere to be In accorti.nu wllll performed for •Kii <r•ll or lype Of SUN~EtST NK Ill• Bid Form ln&tr .. 0 10111 tlld workman ""ded lo ••Kut• the ton· ~· "~tAr~~~;., TRUST coridltlons-5-lllut1onew1tlcfl.,• tract. TlleM ••IH er• on Ille ... Ille OEko SERVICES CORPOR· now onlll•-m•ybete<ured lntlle DISTRICT Office toc•led •• 725-Utll ATION office ol '"" Purcl\9tln(I Avent ot w ld Slr .. 1, Hvnllnoton Beacll, Calllornlel l.00 E. M9yt•lr, college dlllrkt. ' '7MI. C~ m•y be obltl,..d on••· p 0 . 8ox118 Eecll blOder mu1t tubmll wlln 1111 q11est. A COPY of lhe1• r•IH sllall .,. Ot.n~. CA 911166 bid • , ......... Clleck, <erlllled Cheek, l""l•d •t tlle JOb slle, C71'l llH9IO or bloc1er·1 bond m-P9Y•bl• to lht Tiie forevolnt wllecllll• of oer dl•m1 By W•tdO R. Haug order 011,. coast communltr co11eoe ••OH I& IMIMCI upon• wor-1110 "-Y of, Publl•IWd Orenoe Coasl D••ly P ilot Ohtrl<t Boetd of Tru1teu In •n •eiohl Ill "°"" Th• ••I• for f>Olld•• ll, M9y •. "· 1981 1908 1: emoun1 no11ess IN!I II•• """•nt IS'll.) •nd overtime wor-INll be •I l••sl Apr ____ _· 11 of the ,...,. bid••• guar•ntff INt '"" time •nd one·llall. bidder wlll enler Into Ille P•C>POMd It 111•11 be ,,,_.ory .,p0n IM CON· PUBLIC NOTICE con1rac1 II tht wime It ••••decl to TRACTOR to wllOm Ille contrecl '' him In,,. event of lallure 10 enler In· ••••dell, -upon •ny ... bcontrlM:tor NOTICE 01' TRUSTEE'S SALi! 10 IUCh conttact ,,,. P<O<ffds of Ille under lllm, lo NV not Ins tnan Ille T.S. Ne. s.m.s <llK-will be lorl•lted, or In Ille <Me ltld &Cle<lflt<I rtlff lo all •or-men T 0 SERVICE COMPANY as duly of • bond, trle lvll •um ll'lefeof wlll be •mplorecl by ll'lem In Ille ••Kut Ion Of aPPOlnt.cl TruUM ...-r Ille toll-Ing forfeited lo wild collaoe dl1lrkt. 11\e (onlrect det<rlbe<I -of trust WILL SELL No b'-r may wl1hdrew Ills bid tor No DI-may •ltllclr•w hll bid tor AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE •period of lor'ty·llve (4,, d9y1 •ll•t e period of Sixty ''°' daJJ titer Ille HIGHEST Bl ODER FOR CASH llled91etetlorl .. _lnotMreol dei. Mllortlle-ninoolbld& IP•y•blt •I lime of H I• In ""'"'' TIM lloercl of Tr"""' , .... v .. , ... A P•Yrnent bond and • i>er1orm•n<• m_., o1 -United Statnl •II r19111, prlvlleoe of rejecllno tnY and •II 1t1ctt bond •Ill be •ltCl\llred prior Co UK.,· 1111• •nel Interest conw,... to and "°'"' or lo ••lw arty lrr99ul.,ltles or ,,.. lion of IM contract Tl'le P•J,,,..,I llon<I !Mid by 11 under wld Deed of T""' In formelltlff In any bid or In the bkldtno shall be In Ille lorm Ml for111 In tM Ille proper1y ,_reiNller dewrlbttd; NORMAN E WATSON conlrectdoeumenl& TRUSTOR. RONALD LESLIE Secr .. ary, Gowrnlno &o.rd JOHNSON,.,. unmarrlt<I men lkwttd of Trv1t"s Nom'l•V-Moten llENEFICIARY BANI( OF CofftCommvnlty Clerll AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST ANO ~IYC011999 PuOlllllecl Or-Coa&t Oelly Pltot, SAV INGS ASSOCIATION, a ntllonel P"'bll......, Oranoo Coast Delly Piiot, Mty II, II, 1•1 111'"'1 b•n-ln9 auoci.11on May 11, II,'"' 1111.a1 --AKO•-,,,."" 13, t91f .. ln1lr . PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NO. llU7 In-IJ071, Paoe 11'7 OI 01· llcl•I A.cords In Ille olllce of Ille NOTIC• 01' l'U8LIC N•AltlHO Recorder of Ot•noe Count,; said deacl C·no NOTICE HEllEIY IS GIVEN lltel • 01 tr .... dH<tibes 1"" tollowlno pro NORTH OltAHOI Public Hearlno will be lleld bf Ille City "''~ol . of Traci Ho. 1n1, In Ille CltJ JUDICIAL OISTAtCT Council ol -City of lrvlne ort Ille 161tt of Coste M9w County 01 0 ,91109 State I llS It-••rkeley .-ve!lve d•J of M9J, 1"1• et l:IO p.m., or H ol C•lllornl• • .. per map record.a In l'llllertoa, ~. tuu IOOn lller••ll•r .. C>OHlbl• In '"" --S9 ~" MIK•ll•neous Maps PLAINTIFF: c & w ACTtO~ lrvlnt City Councll CNmbers, 11100 In lhe Office of 0.. county recorder oi RENTALS, INC J ambor" R-. lrvl,,. Interim Clvk 1910 count, O E "ENO AN r . Su N w Es 1 CMler, lnrlnt, C.llfornl•, ro09rdlno 1'11 we'11mtn1ler Pl•c• Coste DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION the •m-ment ol Division 0 of Tiii• M•N Celllom1•9llU7 • JOSEPH FAMMl!i ; OAVIO PAL.ASH' vi of lht Codified Ordl-• •nd Ille "(ti• &treet 9ddl'H$ or common 0.-DOES t lllrovon XX. lll<lullve. ec:tootlon ol the llultc1lno Ree;;t•tloM a:;nillon 1, ,_ •boY•. no ••rronty •UMMON• for .... City of lrvlM CASI ltUMl llt; A·JSMI II 11 ._..., l~t C-nl• •ltll ~~1::.:1~· to 11' ,_ .. ._ or COf'• NOTICll v ...... v. -... -· TIM raoarll to.,. 911ove 11'\11>11< HHrl119 be Th• benelk..,,, Uftdtr teld o... of c .. 11 m•, eac141e ...,all Y .. •lllMtr lorwu4tll '° h Clly C-11 prior le Trvat, bJ rNllGn ol • 11r .. c11 of defe111t ,_ •Illa -• -.. Y• ••- Ille P11lllk .._,no de... 111 tlle Obll09tlorls a«.,,.., thereby, •1111111 • uya. lteM h ,,...,.,,..ti., ,o, lllrtMr "'1kuten •lttt , ... rd IMretotore ••«--dellvored to Mfew • IO this l'l*k "-Illa. PINM ,,all .,. Ille undk""*' •written O.Clar•llOft AVllOt Us'" Ill ,.._ -.m..,..... lrvlM "'*I< Worll• .. ,~, ... ·"-OI Oef....it -Ootmanc:t IOf' S.le, -., lr"-e1 ,.... deci.1r ~ .. Ud lion· ... Stot<Hlelm. wrltte11 flGllJu of bt'e«h -of e1«tlon 1111 ••flH(le • me 11u 411• U• 0.IM: MeyJ, t•t t• <•VN Ille t.lldwllOftad to NII Mid ~ ...... cit. •la&. Let le 111 NaMy C. lt"1Mt41 11,.._,.Y 10 wtltty Mid obl ... tloaa. lerm•CI• 4119 .._, City CIH'lt of Ille end I hereof!« ti. _.sl9ftM <•-II YOll Wltll to -II lllt 411hk e of •r Cltyof trvllle N I• notic.., lw'Mc:ll -Of •tectlfn 11 •nornn 11111111 man-., YOll lltovld O< ~I"*' 0rM911 Cofft o.!11 I'll«, Oe r.c:W9d J-,. 16, 1"1 .. IMtr, !0 'r•mptfy '° lllet yowr •rill•• MaJ 11, 1'91 210Mt No. tetU In .. 1Jt16, N9t IM, ail •,r._ 11.,..,, "'9y .. Ill.cl on time. P UBLIC NOTICE N'41 Oflltlal R-W Utled ..... telkltar el (OllUjo O. S.lf ,.,_ Wiii .. ,...-11111 wltllOUC un • ..._ ti\ ••le •wnto, d.C.tl• CfteNlll or ..,.,,_y • .;_ ... Im-fl •<•••• lnmedl•t•mt11te, d• .... --It.cl --ti ' ..ien m•Mr•, "" '"-1• •tcrlt• 11 "'' l'UaUCM8 A•INO ' ' • ..,..._flt U•, .,._ 'w •llJ""9 -*tarrevfllrNa•tlemPO NOTte• 11HHHY01v1111 "'-' • -:i~-..·: .!!'-~, ,_,nlf>t i. TO THI OlftfNOANr: A c1w11 ,....k ,...._ wltl •Mid.., ti. City pr ...... ._ ..... ,_ " MCur .. ctm'l•lrit Ila a -..,. lll•d bt lht c-11 ., .. City .. lrvlM ti\ T-., .... 0...., Tri*, wltfl lnterHI .. Pl•lrttltf apal11tt yow, II y ..... ,.,. •• 4»· NJ, -.y M. "'1 et 1:•, "'· ... • 1tt ..,.,...._._.,~-... 119fly, letld ll'llt ...._,It, ,.._mutt, wllllln,. -~ • ,_..._.,, 111 tllt r 1119 wme of..._ o.11 91 Truet. Clays •fter lllle '-• 1, ..,_.,. ••• lrvlfte OtJ C...CN Cllel'llMrt, ''* '"' cllartH -••-•tt tf 1 'ou, ,. .. •1111 1111• cour t • wrltle!I Jamttrtt l111l••trd, 1 rYlllt , Trvst• -el ... lrwtt CreatM ty HjlOflN It tf1t ("'"-'•'"' uni•••'°" Galle.rNe, " ~ ... vecetlefl llf .. 14 Oeed ., .,.._, s.tcl .... will .. N ,_ e1tlav11 w•ll lie tllle19cl "' 1"' •Ale.NT flOlt llK• TltAIL IMtll on Tw.My, Ma1 ,._ Hel •I 11 :00 Hllc•tlen flf '"' plalnllll, alld 1111• l'U'U"Ola -,.,.. ,, I~ I• a.m .. •I IM offl<t •I T.O. krvlo ovrt 11'14it tfllllf • luc:tamNlt ao-11111 _... Ill ..... tll, ...... 14, U a!ltf CMl,lll'ly, "-., A,_ka Toww, 1111 for 1119 rellef tltlMlldeO Ill Ult 16, ~., ....... _.,,..."' OrWllt 11111• 1110, OM City 11¥11. W••t. Ome>l•l11t, •lllCll Uuld rtlUll 111 c-tr.~ln ec~e wllll Or!""1 ...:.Gall 111~1•,.· ,_11,_ -... •• ~ a rnl1hmt11t of ••OH, ••-Int II ..... lit ....... It ....... ..i1 •• ,. t.,. lftl"' '" ,.1 ,.._.....,ltft y Of' ptt119rty 1W Ollltf l'tllef N • 1''1, ~ ltll Qty C.SCll flf .. City el fl! 1111• Nlka, ti. totel amo11111 of h .,. .... In 1111 <°'""4tlnt, l"'IN ~ 1111,•ld .. 1a11ce II t/'• ott1f1•Uo11 OATI0·.411tustat lt7' O.IM: ..._, ttt t MC11rod .... IN ... Heul ...... flf R 1t11 ' • • ~T • '"''' Md ...,,,,.... c•ts. ~· tlltrlA t,Cle•-HMcyC. .......,. M.,_ It ... 714 JI. e • Vtl'Olftla OevlJ, C>tllvt'f • City°"" Te ~ .. -~ 11141 •o••• l'tlCULNCI ,..,....._.er..,. c...i °""' "'""· arc.1117141 m....._ ' "" ...,_,.u. Me, It. "'1 tttMt D•lil: ..,,.., M, tttl .......... ....._. u you·,.. ln the lllmet C<W a belt« car, be lure to check the mao1 autos ldvertiltd for Hie In ~ '· O. llMc•C.. ...., ca • ..,,, ...... ,,...... .. , .. ..... .. ............. ,. ..... Or .. CM.IC Oeltr l'llel ~= .... ,17,Mer .. Tt, 1'11 IMNI ~.CA ... .,,.,.._ Rave~ lo aellT ~~ c... o.u,.::; Clua!llH ldld'o It ••11. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ... _...,.. ........... ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11. 1981 •• The marketplace on the Orange Co INDEX . ••........••••........ Houses For StM . ....•....••........... HouH•f or Scik House•ForSClk ....................... ····•••••·•·······•·•·· Tt rlact Yhr Ad, Call .. GeMral 1002 GeMr9' 1002 Gewrol 1002 642-5678 HOUSES f OI SALE 0-.tl llelflcMI ltltnd llelbot Pentn.ula C.pj•ltano Buth Corona dtl M., Coot• ..... Dana Pa.n1 El Toro rownt1n \ollty Hunllltlllon Btt•h '"''"" ._....,,.a.. •• ~ Laaun• Holla l..q1111a N11W•I Mlu_v,.,.. !'hporl llO<h San Ctemt&\t >iA1' Ju1n Cap1.cr.r .. 1 »nu Ana SH I 11 .. <h llowlh t..1un1 '4tttm1n.tlfr Nol>tlo Hornea S•lo RUL ESTATE Atrt.Af• for ~fc­ A.,.t1nwn11 for '\•ft-ll«•<h l'ropony S...oneu l'r-rty ramrt•rr LGI• Cr)llU t=~~~:·::m:') O..pl••tt L 0111 S•I• »-to bo 114u>td 1"'°"'4' Propn11 lndu:t.tflat Pr~ny LoU for s.1. M.0.1• Hmr 1 rlt Pr~. Moun.tn O.-.er1 Hr111on ~~(·~·r."" Out °' SllLC ~rup Ranctwta Farm'l C,ru""'" Real Eilalt: t:arh1n1r K••I Ul.1tlt 'A ente-0 RENTALS HWJ.t-1ri f'urn1~b•d Hou•n l'nfurnl\l•N llou.ses fo'urn vr l nf Condom1n1um• ~·urn Condom1n1um .. l.i'nf Townhouai"'• Pur 11 To•n.hcN••• Unr Oupl•ce' t'l.on U..plutt t:nr ~IJU t'urn Apts l.:nh.irn Apls t·urn or \ nf iloom• Room• 8o11'1 llot.-b.M<K•b Cwhl Honw.a !w.mnwr Rf'nt•I\ \'~t'-ahOfl Rtntal• R•Malt: to '°'ih•• t• C..r i'lh ror k flnt Ollott fltnl<!I 8u>.1n~n Rtn'411l lnd~tn1I Rt"nta• ~~·.~: V.antt'O Mu,. ~Pfthl• BUSINESS, INVEST· MENT. FINANCE ~:;::;~~- In~ nlnwnl Oppof1 ~ '""ttltrwnt "'anlf'd Mont) to l.N•ft: r'4UfM) ~•ntM• MOC11•t,.t. TO• ANNOUNCEMENTS. PERSONALS & LOST & FOUND At40t>WM'ttnirnt1 l"uf>r,gl Lrc11 Not1ct'& IA>•• rouoo Pet.\.ONlh·" SortaJ <1"t•• Tnvf'l• SERVICES 'Yr-\11rt lhrf'('IUr\ EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION Mhool.t lnatr&H't1f;I\ JobWt11ntt'f1• Htlp ... onl.O !It • ~ MERCHANDISE Anti.Quort ApphaM•' .\t.l('bOn ~r;,:; M•tf'f'•h (•nv'U• 4 t..q..upn-1of·n' Catt Due• ,,.,..~ l(> \ ... t\lrn1tu.rf' ....... S.lt IC«..-. l-Mldr.0o..t• J ....... ,,,. Lnnt0t~ \CffhllM"f) \&1\("•U•,...ou~ MunllaMOWo II> •~trtl \tv-;.;cal JMtrum•n14 Ofloo f'UNI .. t qvip ""' :..~~~:~:"~~ Spononc Goocs. Slort RHtaur1nt lt•r ~~T.d.o ......... ~.'"' BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT A.1tcran C•mpt"n.Mlf' H•nt Elenr1c L•n MW.lo Hom .. Motor C)orl•, s.-.,.,. .Motor Hms Salt R•nt Tr•1ltn Tnv•I ru::.~~~~U~U1\ AUTOMOBILE C..e-n~r•I A.nllql,Wa l:l•H •n RH'rf'•U~ \ thu. lc-11 Spon, R•~t-Rn..h .. °wftHt l>n~f't hUC'lt• V•11> Au1ut..~u1ni 1'\flUI W anlf'd AUTOS. IMPORTED t,~r•I i\111 llo.,,.o '"'" Al.hhn fC,.•l~!r BlllW C1pri &tt;- Oau~n P•rr•rt t"'u11 llund• J •••• , Jfnattn K•rrrutno lHu-Lam•1h1111 MUdli 3iltri ,.,, .. , fkn1 :.IG llGll Opel P•.nt••• , .. ~ ..... ror1,he thnaull Rulta lloyu Ro•w s .. ~ .... 11\1.,.,. Toyota Tr1vmpll Vo!-•••l•ft Voho To Place your "Fast R•sult" Service Directory ad .. Cell Now 642·1671 .... au •.•.•.•.•...........••. ...........••.......... ···••••·········•····•• lllllZ l(A)ll 1001 1011 lliZ: lo;N IV...'11 ·= 111'.14 STROU TO MEWrORT IEACH Charmin.: 4 Bdrm Coi) Living room reulures , wood burning fireplace Owner will help finance Only $209,900 Hurry, call 673·8550 F.AMT.ASTIC EQUAL HOUSING OP P O RTUNITY I~ tl.)44 , ' llHI! rubl sher'• Notice: THE REAL ESTATERS ASSUM.AILE LO.AM Assume 11~.ooo Juan 11l IO'il lot Ownt:r will carry 2nd Large 4 bdrm home with fafl'llly room and f1r ep la te N o 11uulifying SIM,000. Cull todtt \I 979-5370 ALLSTATE ll&IO IUl!ol IOl\I All real e sta te advertued 1n this newspaper i.s subject to the F e deral Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes 11 1lleg11l to advertise "any preference, lim1tat1on , or discnirunauun based on race, color, religion. sex. or nahonal origin. or an lntent1on to make any s uch preference. l1m i tal1 o n . o r d1scrimmat1on " IOlll I Ult 101• I® llM IUllO ICM llUO Thls newspaper will not knowln~ly accept any a d vertising for real estate which 1:. 1n v1olat1on of the law ERRORS: .AdnrtiH n 1hoMld check their ada da ily and r epo rt errors Immediately. The DA ILY PILOT auumes l ability for the f irst Incorrect insertion Of'ly. Houses for SaAe ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ········•••••·········· OMEYEAROLD Best locauon, steps lo pool & volleyball UM DER $100,000 Perfec·t Marler home with g real assumable loan. Call now 751-3191 C:. SElfC T -t-" PROPfHl I{:<, $69,950 BARGAIN Security gated 2 Bdrm or 1 Bdrm , den townhome Pool, sauna, s pa , s uper s har1.1 Vacant. Owner anxious Call now. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS MESA VERDE UM REAL H undreds of flo wers everywhere and sun REALTORS OCEANFRONT 2 Rdrms, 2 ba. w1fum New $850 yrly l.AYFROHT 3 Bdrm, I bu . unfum Mml l'Ond $850 yrl) CH.AMMB. FRONT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfurn $750 yrly associated BRO KER S ll[ll l TORS l OH W l otboo 611 IU I NO DOWN! OR $10,000 DOWN Owner will carry $90.000 A ITO or no down. owner will help you huy .. You must qualify for loan .. 3 B drm . 1 12 bath . upg rade d Do ubl e garage. call for mon• details. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS YOUR IEST VALUE IM C.AMEO SHORES Lowest priced f ee s imple opportunity Great assumable lsl TD EnJOY afternoon sun and views from wood deck 3 beautiful private beaches Only ~9.000 Call today. 673-8550 filled rooms make this 3 l•---------BR home a must to see THE REAL ESTATERS DECORATOR CONDO SI 19,900 Winding greenbelts lead lo bright sln~le story condo. Exqu1s1tely decorated with custom wallpaper and cabinetry thruout Formal dining room too' Owner will c oop e rate with financing Won't last at this price, so call now @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 14·631·6990 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment! Two 2 Bdrm units. one with fireplace! Current income $74 0 mo Finanicing~ One year home protection plan lncld Hurry, this won't last ! 646·7171 IRVIHE SI 17,500 Sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath home Prime Irvine location with fantastic assumable financing Owner say~ sell today. so call now @ SE A COVE PROPERTIES 7 14-631 ·6990 A real \alue at $141 ,900 Call now for details @ SEA CO VE PR OPERTIES 714-631 -6990 WOULD YOU BELIEVE $75,000 3 Bdrm fixer upper, located on huge lot in Tustin Call752·1700 THE REAL ESTATERS A GOOS YOU G.i:T MORE FROM IBESTORE Jack H Lesch. Mgr 675--177 I SELLER HAS ANOTHER Home and must sell this beautiful home located in excellent area of Tustin Step down living room . family room. space age kitchen, 3 big bdrms, just recently remodeled One year free home protection plan Call today. 752-1700 THE REAL ESTATERS SpaclCHll Cstm Honw 5 Bdrm , fam rm , basement. wine cellar, s pa, 111 -law quarters, lovely treeshaded street in old Corona del Mar $475,000. R.E. INVESTOR Always wanted to invest m Real Estate but don't think )OU can • Lei Golden We!>t Realtors show you how to invest with little l'ash & no ··Tenant Problem!." l' a II now for murc dct111ls Golden Wett R"r. (714)848 8588 RE.ALrEOPLE will love this beaullful 4 Bdrm home with family rm on l'Omer lot Man} extras Only $133,000 Call now !n9 s:nu ALLSTATE REALTORS l .AYCREST Quiet tree I.med street The perfect home for an active family 4 bdrms . game rm . family rm . formal dm1ng rm . omce a n d pool 1.o t s o( paneling Custom bullt Immaculate t·ond1l1on $449,500 171 4) 673·4400 (21 )1621-2121 \ 1111 1• 1 .. 11 "' ll .111101 111 11·-11111·111 ( '11 3 BR CHARMER $91 ,000 Sharp 3 Br, 2 sty home, huge family rm. formal dining rm. utll rm Lo ad s o f s t orage' Lovel) neighborhood Giant lot ' Call Teri l;liil There's an easy way for you to sell that bicycle you no longer use. Just a d vertise it In the Classified! Call 642-5678. OML Y $94,500 Cha rmin~ starter home, 3 Bdrm, I bath, fenced yard. Seller motivated 759-1616 MOTICE how Daily Pilot Class itled ads display their messages with leg1billly and impact" Our ads. we are proud to say. really gel r e s ults Phone 642·5678 GOLF 1 COURSE f VIEW One s t ory ho e ! Elegant covered en ry, formal Uving and d in& room. brick firepl large country kite Four stately bdrm , 2 baths. 3 car garag . A FANTASTIC VIEW OF GO LF COU R E Privacy! Many, ~ny extras . Only $265,pOO C•llS46-2'J3 28 fl&~· E.ASTSIOEV.A : Charming 3 Bdrm 1"'1 Ba home that nteds some TLC l.oad of potential w i t ~ fire places. and t•rge add on family ruom. Price 1s nght at $1361000. TRADI T IONJ\L REALTY HOMES & INVESTME~ TS 631-7370 NO DOWN AND $9,000 PAYS COST Total cash needed lO c lose escrow Must qualif> ror loans. Mesa Verde's rmest 4 Bdrm. dining. 3 baths, famtl} room, fireplace. patio. huge yard $165,000. Call tor m o r e de ta tis 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS To µlact' your message before the n•.iding public. phone Dally Pilot Classified, 642 5678 $3 CClft ~f you $100 all it tab ' is o PENNY PINCHER AD ( 11111-1111 .! tl.1•• ""I' 'I 111 .1 ti.I\ '" \t I I 9'l ''"' "' 111111 t 111·111' '·"'"''' "I' I 11 'I •Ill t-:.11 h .I ti JI 1I11111,d I lllt• I• """ ·~·(' 1111 111, l\\o ti•'\ "' "-•• t r \ ll•1 l II Ill Ill I I I I .ol .11 I" I 11 .. \\ o•tf ( h ,11 ).! \' • 11ur I 11•111" 1'111dw1 \If "I II"'' \OUt ll.111~ \111n 11.ord \ ''J Ill \J ,l'I t'I ( 'h,11').!I C all today and \H your ad in priitt tomorrow! Coll MONkry "'"' ~idoy l :OOA M to S:lOl'M for l'lt d dey'• papet' Of' cal by 11ooa °" Stotwdey for s .. ndey·s~. 642-5678 Daily Pilat '::~::· SCC \\cil lA-/1' £~s· .... ..... ll{SIOfNllA .. I'll Al I !>!Alf srnw,., SORRISO Dll MARI' Mediterranean villa created with all the charm of yesteryear. This 25 room mansion constructed on a Spyglass hilltop· has wraparound views of oc~an & mountains. 4 to 5 BR , 7 BA , s tudy, l ibrary , entertainment center & authentic canUna. POOL. sauna & 2 spa. A magnificent combination of oJd & new with gated privacy. $2,(()(),000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644.goso -------Uh4 • ., o.AT .. l'OUAN • •mrronoe ...,.,. of the 1..., tcro"'°led -d• ~ low to ·-1-,,,,,.. .. -" 1---- PHUICOO 19-.,.0_R,...Y_,...l_N.....--11 1 , I' I I I . _..._..._...._....._., I 8 A Y [ 8 I & Mii 1111 of crime w11 Mot1• ~.,,~,-r, ...... , ..... T,-1 llV9d H• to«>t>ed • lewfY _____ .._ i •tort bu1 t~y cauoht 1" ---------. when h• want beolt for tlle- ..__.......,..._.._........,......,I ! t!i.:::. ~'-:;' • --~ --""" • ------ -.. -~-----~-------·-----·-----·-••-• ""0--------•""'• ... e••~-"'•---•~•-•• ... u-14s ...... cQSllllU ... llll& ... SllS .... 63'6lll&•SlllllS•&lllll .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 . 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ~!.~~.~ ....... ~:~!.~~.~ ........ ~~!.~~~ ....... ~~~ .......... !!~~ ~~~-~ ............ !!.~~ ~~6!'! ............ !~.~~ ~~~~JO~ ... !!~!~~~~ ... !!~! • ••r.t I 002 GeMr.t I 002 G...,.al I 002 GeMf'el I OOZ ------... -•• ••• • ••• • • •••••••••••• • •• • •• • • • • • • • • •• • •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • ••• ••• •• • • ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• •• • • • w ALIC TO OCIAM UNDAISU Wide channel view from spectacular architectural dt!signed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000. By appointment. LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tollr this lovely traditional s pacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home. newly decorated Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings . Great for entertaining . $420,000. Best price for the money. PENtMSULA POINT IEACHFIOHT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room . entry. living room. dining room. built-m s. etc. $1.385.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.11 Hoy~1d1· Dro11 .. N B 67') 6161 REALTORS 675·5511 LOVELY "E" PLAN. Most populcr model enr built In the Bluffs. Situated on 'f"dacular greettbett -'"' mountain •iew. 3 Bdr, F.R. lest buy in the area at S252.900. COLE OF ME.WPORT REAL TORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona def Mar 675-5511 DW'LEX 3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit l:-'1replace. bu11l-1ns Excellent rental area Near bea c h & bay ms.ooo. 842.2253 eves. associated BHOKER S-REALTORS l •, l~ w 8olboo bl 1 loo l SECLUDED RETREAT Assume $74,000 m loans SIH6 per mo pays all Walk 10 South Coast Plaza 3 Bdrm. gourmet THINKING TOWHHOME7 Ca 11 lhe specialists at lh e condom1 n1um mformat100 center Touchstone Reali) 963-M67 Start.r Sto~r VA J<'HA terms. This 15 the one A sharp home just right for a young ram1ly or couple that needs room to grow Near new carpet & pamt throughoul thts 3 Bdrm house Super location Only $97,500 Balboa lsbtd Rlty 673-8700 k1tch . plus formal ---------hv1ng. Seclude(! patio and comm. pool Twnhse askinl'( $97 ,750 Call 963·7881 THE REAL ESTATE RS GREAT INVESTMENT 3 BR 1 Ba. $72,900 Assumable rmancing & s eller w also carry paper Call for terms. 752-6499 Plan lll R~alty UPPER BAY Light and c heery 4 Bdrm , 3 bath family home Large covered patio $220,000. Roy Mccardle, Rttr. 54a.7729 OWHER DESPERATE Low down, lake over existing VA loan. No quallrymg. Just reduced $.5000. Beautirul pool. 3 Bdrm , RV s t o rage. Sl24,950 Town & Country Realton 552· 1800 CE llDllB ELllRS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE NEWPORT HEIGHTS FOUR·PLEX Located On Quiet Street Near Shopping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income . Minimum Vacancy Factor . Four Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans. Inspect With Offer. Reduced To $350.000. SAN CLEMENTE DUPLEX Super Buy. Upstairs Unit With Three Bed rooms. Peek-A· Boo Ocean View. Wet Bar. Li ving Room With Fireplace. Cathedral Ceilings. Wrap-Around Patio, Spacious Down s tairs Unit With Two Bedrooms & Living Room With Fireplace. Laundry Facilities. Good Income Priced At $195.000 (!) ·--...... ,...., .. 75S.9100 # 2 COtpcM at• Pine ... .,..c ....... STAR GA'ZEKfl, .. a;...::~~'-T---8• CL\ Y R POLl\ N----r--,,.--1 M T-0.1> ....... , C.,Mlo Ji.. V •ccottl1"• •o '"• $101• To devel09 m•oo9• lor T uHdoy teod ...,.dl '""~'"9 to.,.,...... of"°"" Zodoac bot+. •'9" LARGE COLONIAL HOME 1"1 Vt' bedroom. three bath. dormers and paned windows. Llke new earth tone decor, te rrific financing and walking di6tance to Mesa Verde Country Club. A tl'Ue value at $249.000. U~l()UI: ti()MI:~ REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 EHi CoHI Highway. Corona d~I Mar WE HNE 47 OF niE BEST AGENTS IN TONN E8LEY N ~YLOR CO H.EA L TOH.S s1 net.• l H4 BAYCREST CUSTOM HOME Designed for e ntertaining & ral'hily living. 4-Bdrm, huge living room, large formal dining & family rooms . Gourmet kitchen Master s uite separate from other extra-lge bdrms. Pleasing privacy in pool-sized back yard. Great terms . $3'J5,000. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., REA" TORS 2 I I I San Joaquin Hiib Rood NEWPORT CENTER. M.I. 644-49 I 0 : ,, J'l''r, ·.: R1_;1 t"+ .... ]1 ~ r~>t_--.11 i c,11 ikc> R(At csr1.rc tlCfUfNCf S/HCI ,, ' .. WESTCLIFF POOLS, TENNJS. The price hi rl&bt Newport Beat'h 3 Bdnn, sln&le family home f or Sl37,SOO. Movt In condition 642-5200 A PETE BARRE TI ··-REALTY lal>oa P1Miullla I 007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAYAVE. CORNER VACANT LOT READY TO BUILD Includes apprv. plans A buy at $180,000. Hurry' MEL FUCHS PAV ILION REALTOR 675-8120 Captshwlo leach I 011 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ DESIRABLE PALISADES AREA A delightful 3 bedroom. 2 balh residence on a comer lot w1lh a lovely enclosed yard. low maintenance gardens and a lattice covered patio. $123.000 . 493-88L2 .blQ.gO Cor'Ofta def Mar I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jasmine Creek decorator h ome. plan l on greenbelt immac $305.500 640-814.5 SPYGLASS Im mac 5bdnn home City &o<'ean view S640.000. only 15''t dwn Assume lsl TD. OWC balance at 12"~. Pnnc Only. 963-4759. PRISTIGIOUS TURTLE ROCK . Exception a 1 ly lovely 3 BR. single story home decorutoo w/style & up- graded w/quaJity. Lg. trees enhance oversized rear yard + add'l enter- tainers palio. Greal location! Lg. as- sumable loun. Sl89,500 incl. land. Jane Paquin 642-8235 CH89> HERITAGE PARK PLAN I 2 BR, 21-2 bath 2-story townhome w/wood burn· ing fplc , & attached garage. Walk to Aquatic & Arts & Crafts Centers. l · acre fishing lagoon. tennis & racquet- ball courts. Reduced to $115.000 incl land Paula Bailey 642-8235 IH90> Newi>ort B41Ach 001 Dover Drive Harbor VltiW <.:ent.er 642·82;35 644 6200 This 5000 Sq. Fl; Home sits on Lind~ Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips ror (3) 55'-70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. We are developers so submit land or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. 17141121-1210 l21Jt 591-IUJ 11001 JSJ..3710 Costa Mno I 024 Huntington leach I 040 ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• IUSIHESS OPPTY Established well located beauty salon m pr1me location. Submit on terms. TouchslOne Realty, Inc 968-Q:l67 --------- OCEAH & CITY VU I yr new. Large 3 sty, frplc. $30,000down owe lsl at 12'12'/t . Call Bill. agt, 963·8847. SHARP CONDO 10%LOAH Assume 9}5,000 loan at lO<J; on lge. 4 br home with ram rm & fprlc No qualifying. Onl~ $154 ,900 Call n o w • 979-5370 or 645-J.t.i7 u-;k forJ1m Ownr Agl Ownt.'r will help finance Sparkling 4 BDRM $136,900 15<Tl2 Kingston Lane. Broker 842·8418 or 962·6365 3 bdrm. 2 bath. pool. Irvine 1044 near So. Coast ·Plaza ••••••••••••••••••••••• $115,000 Will consider lease option to· purchase --0•E•c·---'"T•Aft-s-• Broke r, 644·0134. ~ """ n MACNAB·IRVNE REALTY y . .-.... -- CHARMER IN OLD llUFFS! Highly upgraded Franciscan model situated in the most desirable section of Old Bluffs on a beautiful expanse green belt. Home features imported porcelain fixtures throughout. Mex- ican tile in entry and kitchen. quality plus l'arpeling, custom shutters, de· signer wall coverings & drapes. mar· ble fl oor in bathrooms. also included washer & dryer and refrigerator. The ultimate condominium style living. $239.500. Young Park 5.51 -8700 IHll I 3Br, 2Ba, Mesa Verde Solid Fin. $139,500. By owner 3213 Dakota 556·7174 DB.IGHT U pgrades thruout Be autiful back yard Irvine with s pa. 2 Bdnn + den, Camp1.15 Valley Cent.er WoodbMclge VLllate Cente1 2 '-'.I baths. double 7621414 5518700 garage. l ''l years new. l•lll!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!lll!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•~-~ Assumable financing 1044 lnlne 1044 CDM DUPLEXES GOOD RHAHCIHG 2 Bdrms + loft. w /frplc. wet bar m each unit with great tenants. Out s tandin g four ·--------•I bedroom, three bath Nice 3br Home by Owner Assume $70K at 912•7, Is l· T . L>. Price Sl<X>,000. Call 646-8082 available This condo is I 1.... orfered at $148.000. Call rvine 54G--1 l51 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• * *WOODBRIDGE LANDING THE GROVES SEE AND home. Slwmmg country k1t<·hen with oa k l'ab1nets Other oa k bu1ll1ns include bookcases and desk All new carpets All new appliances Cu!ilom drapes and wallpaper Pri c e redu ced to $315,000. 631·7300 N.I . The ver y finest buy in the Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft. condos. 5 minutes to beaches. One half bloc k to major s hopping centers. Cement drives. air cond itioning, microw ave oven , trash com p actor , large walk-in closet s. Garage with opener. Pool and 2 jacuzzis. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 380 W . W ilson Costa MHa, CA 714/631-5055 From $136,000 SPYGLASS + PASTORAL VU Offering flexible lease/option Jenna on this Newporter model with 4 bed. fam. rm. din.rm. home with interior ganten, dcytlghts & more. $49 5,000. 631·i40b. VU CORNER CHARISMA-YU! Next to park & beautiful "curt>-Gpptal" home that Invites you to go Inside. Spacious 3 bed, with lcinJe famrm. + billiard rm. & possibility of more bedrooms. Excellettt N•wport locatton. $810,000. fee. 63I·1400. LIDO ISLE CONTEMPORARY Bright and ctMemal 2 story on 45' lot. M.w paint, wallpaper Htruout. 4 Bdrm, dining rm, 2 frplcs, sunny patio. $476.000. 631-1400. WATERFRONT HO MES, 1Nc. REAL ESTATE c,.,. .... , RrntM~ Prf'P"rlv Mrt~mll',,t l4ll> W Coa.1 Hwi.- N4"Wf!<1tl ~ach 631-1400 SUK & ,INlf 31!> Maun.> A" &Ibo.-••Ltind '7Mt00 COMPANY C 0 L L E C T T l S N L G I K D E J A s s\c o M P A N YIM r o H A e o R c s W G R E C I 0 Z U Y W 0 0 W 0 R C S W A E N S N 0 P L L E I U T R R 0 0 D S I P T I 0 C L B D T P R Y 8 N H N G Y H E E M T T M l A N 0 P A V A 0 C K T L H P T T E U G E E 0 0 E E L P L C S T~BRS1EYACRNLLEAAER L E X S Y R 0 M T T T H R 0 N G V N E R 8 A I G S 0 E S t H t W C P L E Y A B R T N R E l A 0 X L E 0 I P 8 T E M 8 E 0 T 0 L T N H L G 0 R H k R E W P A C M M U L T I T U 0 £ X I A H T R 8 N 0 I T P A G E R G N 0 C P N Y I H Y GAROO WOUR)CLLWEGOGL llnd MuldtMI Ctowd ~ a,.. C1tm• .... C.4¥'1•• """ ~. ,~ ....... EASTSIDE C.M Lovely 2 Br home on quiet tree lined st Lg ~,&•HERITAGE ' • REALTORS lot Asking $125.000 ~~~~~~~~~ 646·67101r64.5·1103 Agt. Spacious 2 Br mobile home. Owner will help finance Best in the Fabulous J M Peters park Selle r anxious L a n d 1 n g P I a n 4 $167 ,SOO Rae Rodgers HOME+ RENTAL lovely 3 Bdnn. front unit with ·rrplc and beamed ceiling plus 2 bdrm unit w /yea r's lease. Call Barbara Glass Century 21 /Sandpiper 640-4950 851·9541 J asmine Creek decorator home, plan I, greenbelt loc $305.500 64().8145 Assum.-at 13% Old CdM . Wlk to bea<'h 0 W C w 2 o ', d n Owner-Brkr 675.0704 962·2900 POTEHTIAL PLUS 3Br. 1 :v. Ba home needs "TLC'". South of Highway. Room for 2nd unit $260. 000 Ca II Stephen Meyers rnCHAATER PROPERTIES 760-8520 SOUTH OF HWY Cozy 2 Br. Home. 1 block from Ocean Blvd . $225 .000. Bernita Eilertsen, Broker, 675-23'73 or77G-8598 ------ IELOW MARKET Across from park and bike trail to beac h Eve r ything ror the family 48r, Jba + pool and s pa $171.500. WATERFRONT HOMl~ REAL ESTATE 631-1400 EASTSIDE 10% ASSUMABLE Owner will help finance 3 Bdrm 2 bath, spa. Only $127,900.645-9161 ASSUMIAILE FINANCING Terrific location , minutes to s hopping, schools and recreation. Over 2200 s qmft. Separate master bdrm, lovely pool. Enclosed co urty ard. As king $145 .000. Owners anxious. s ubmit all orrers. 54().1151 •'"•HERITAGE . • REALTORS SPYGLASS VIEW This 6 bedroom home is truly one or the finest on Spyglass Hill. The ~~~~~~~~~I beautirut decor renects Dana Point I 026 the current o~ner 's ••••••••••••••••••••••• concern and pride ol ownership with m11ny OCEAH VIEW LOT custom built-ins in the Abo .. Oma H.t»or b e d r o o m s a n d '• acre. plans. permit 3 outstanding brick work m i n u t es to D a n a in both yards Wit h Harbor. 3000sq ft home. lushly planted gardens Wi ll surbordi nate. and canyon and ocean $135 000. 7141898-7607 views. this home oCfers a --· ------- perfect blend of comfort 2600 sq rt upgraded and elegance. 1699.~ thruout. up to 5 Bdr. 2'141 D.M. Mcrshal RJtr Ba. Fully landscaped 644-9990 w /pool & firepil, sep. side yard w/play area. Exclusive Colony Lrg family home reaturing 4 Bdrm. 21 2 Ba in Irvine's Colony Club. Walk lo comm . pool. tennis courts. schools. shof ping. Priced to sell Ca I for details e RANCH REAL TY 551 2000 LOCATIOM- LOCATIOM 3 Ir. 2 la. Exec. Condo. Hi g h in exclusive Turtlerock, 3 patio view or mountain & city lights Entry foyer opens to upper level dining room hv1ng room I fireplace, large kitchen nook, family room bar, separate bedroom wmg 2 car garage + bonus room. Community pool / spa/ tennis. THE GOOD LIFE Near beach/ shops / schools . Under market at $294,000. Low down & terms. Paul Hickey Agent 832-3910 Turtlerock Vista 15°/oDOWM 3 BR 21 2 Ba twnhme. prestigious area. Remax Realty, F red Gibson 114.559.9400 TURnEROCK Lovely 3Br family home in prime location. Price reduced to $169,900 A bargain 640.5357 Magnificent patio 631·1266 Agt w /private s pa Cozy L---1---h-10.,8 fireplace m master suite ag•a toe: ,. w /la v1sh adjoining bath ••• •••• • •••• •••• ••••••• Huge eountry kilchen THE SHAKES w /every a m enity W ealhered cedar Offered al $315.000 shakes. that is. Custom Owner will help with designed 3 bdrm. fam financing rm . 2 baths Extensive Wmld bridge Really 551·:1000 1mRllrranra Pk,.).lnlnr HIGH ASSUMAIU 4Br home w /spa. xlnt. cond. $169,000. 552-6940. -- UNIV. PARK use of wood glass & ceramic hie Beam ce1lmg. frplc $165,000 Mission Realty . (714 )494-0731 Mailt l c.h/Town Vl.w I Bdrm co nd o, upgraded 15''~ down . owner will carry F /P $215,000 furnis h ed .. 497-1305 LCICJ'll'a NHJ-1 I 052 Lrg 4 Bdrm 2"2 Ba home ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n prestigious Univ. AWARDWINHIMG Park. steps from pool & ASSUME AT 103..'1 greenbelt Assumable Unique foxglove model f1nan c 1ng. Ca ll fo r in Lake Park 2Br. Den. details 2Ba Vaulted ce1hngs. -;. HANCH ~ HfALTY ~ ~>Sl 2000 rrench doors Prof designed. landscape. $154,900 Open house 1·6pm Sat /S un . PP 831-7634 or759·2465 MlssiOft Vlefo I 06 7 ---------..................... . Orange Tree Condo, Plan 5. 2 br I ba $103,500. Call 552-7552 after 7pm AFFORD AILE 3 Bdrm Mission Viejo smgle family home with country kitchen and TAKE lovely mountain view. Only $29,850 down to OVER exhisting loans and no High assumable loan .. 3 qualifying. $124,500. bdrms, 2 ba Plan 2 in Town & Ca.ttry Campus View. Prime RHlhtat.552·1800 toe al ion $169.000 1---- Avall able on home wner built new house, partne rship purchase vacating Sbr , pool, plan $320,000 this week. T .. rtt.rock largaln Terms-let's make a deal! 83<H.953 ewport lleoch I 069 •••••••••••••••••••••• ARIOR VIEW HOME "Monlego" 4br. 2ba. Fee Land. loan assum . 675-2139 S103,000 assumable loan ~~~~!!!!.!!!!!.!!!!!!.!!!!!!.!~ Costa M9ICI 102,. at low Int. Sl.85,000. P.P. Ott Fee Lane 2 story1 4 bdrm, dining rm, a oded den w /wet bar, 11teps t o park. comm. pool & tennis. Assumable loan. Owner will assist in financing. $210 ,000 Fee. Agt, 640..5560. ownhouse condo on bluff In Newport Beach with easy walk lo ocean & beach. Ownership of 3 bdrm, 21~ ba unit .;ncl. lge pool, jacuzzi, saunas & lighted tennis courts. $189 ,000 with $50,000 down. Ask for Susan 640-3796 o r Bruce 760-6060 days, 851-2205 eves " wlmds. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prin only. •93-2047 OWNER FIMANCID H..tlngt. hoch I 04G Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• b o m e . be a u t i f u 1 *ASSUME 9'12o/o wallpapers thruoul. Cul 4 Bdll\.-4 ba $79,000 VA de sac street. Owner will 1st, $120,000 w /10% dn. carry AITD for 7 years Prine only. Bkr751·'836 at 13/51* Interest. For an :fcri~~ment to see. call -·w-A•HT_A_H•OM-1•7- · -:-~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS FO......UX BY OWNER Xlnl Financin1! $310,000 675-0073,(714)~123 But don't lhlnJt you can afford it. Golden West Realtors has designed a program that h aa allowed many people to enjoy home ownership that never thought they could. Call now for mor details. ~ow..w ... 11r ( 714) 8'8-3588 37 ASSUM LOAM DUTCH HAVEN No qu.alllylne, •m•ll Very sharp 3 Bdrm 2 ba down paymenta, low home near Beach and lntereat rat.et" no loan polnl.4! 2, a ec 4BDRM Warner. Only Sl09.900. Houaea le Townbomea. Ca JI Ron Ort at All In 1ood are.a of 1 .1 rro1es.-. ' Oraqe County. t6Ml77 ...... w ....... ·-------(7l4)Mi-1511 CloM to beach. Beau. 5 bdr , den , 2 F /P , C:OD'1•n•Uon pi\., pool, ll covered patio. lrull lrHe. $195,000 SZS.000 down. Owlwr will ca.rry al H per cent.• 18A DEERFIELD COMDO E n joy the peaceful. restrul atmosphere or this charming single story home. Features Include : 2 Bdrm, den1 dining room ana exquisile inlerior design. Our best value at $128,500. Call us now. 556·2660 C:::::. '1f I I l I ~ I 'H! ll 'I I~ l il '> THMIHG T0w..t<>ME7 Call the apeclallsts al lhe co nd o minium information ceqter. Touchstone Really 963-0867 TUITLHOCI( !XICUTIVI HOMI New on market, executive family · home ln Turtlerock. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, close t.o park, good schools, comm. pool & tennis. Assumable loan only $212,000. HURRY! W•1f1 ... °""91 W•IMtDock Cou ld b e Newport 'a lowest priced waterfront home with lncome unit too ! Call for Info. Broker. 963-8182 DUPLU•WATB Doell fw 30' loat 3 Ir 2 Bdnns, 2 frplcs, decka and ptitlo. c /21 ........... c.tr 440.5357 PIMTHOUSI UMlqulCOMOO with bOat dock, pool, securltl. + 180 <lea ocunJ. Catalina, bay vtew, r·ff land. '450.000. Smtlb Meye(. Bkr. 64 ... 1317 141o711 J OCEAN !IAY VIEW 2 Bdrm, I ba condo. M.aaalllcen& ocean and ba1 vl•wm Pool, Jauul, c lubhouu. ~:;:,oo . Own /All. ·: Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 117 e • e Cash in on17 or 11 ...... _ ..... ~o ..... c-. ... ~-- There are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot , High Roller Ad • Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes lll.IJ Pl.lat Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate . ....... Fors. Hot.HI Fors. OttNr .... e.w. otMr Rffl Estate ...... .......... ....... Ullfwll!llMd ....... u ..... ~ .,. ........... Fwwka..d ............ u..tw.. .......•............•.........................•••...•••••.......•• \ •......•..••...•...........•.•...••••••••••••....••..............•...•.......•••..............•.....•..•...••............................... ~~~ ... !~~! C~~tr.o 1071 C=Loh/ 1500 ~~!.~!!! .. ~~.~ :~.~~ ... ??.~! ~'!'! ............ ~~~~ ~~r.!~~ ... !?!! ~~!:~~ ... ??~~ ~~!~~~ ....... ?!!.~ ---------· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20 6 n I l•. p ~id e of SPYCiLASS HILL WILLOWS 3Br, l~Ba, wow••• Fantastically rumiahed MIWLY DICOll. DUPLEXACIOSS A11 ... ablt $524/mo Ha~bor Luwn Mesa. 4 ownership. E.11.de Cotta 3 Bdr, fonnal dln .. fam air, new crpls, frplc , Won 't tut N~~port townhouse, with ocean 1 Br. gaa pd, encl gar FttOM WATEll 2 Br condo, 10~% FHA adJ . lots. 1 Acacia Area. Mesa. 1.3 million. 30% rm. 2 fireplaces, lrg fenced yrd. 1600/mo. Crest Townhouse. 3Br. view. Tennis court. pool. d /waaber, pool. Adults In a areat Newport loan. $92,500. Prin only reas 597·4188 ~wn OWC. Overall yard $1600/mo. Bob a, 644·1480; &»5a50ex\81 2~ba , wetbar, walk to 1925/mo. 7~9117 ..::M2:.=..·:...S07:.:..:.3·:__ ____ _ locationnearUdoshops Ownr/Agt CaU497·2509 interest 10%. Agt Dovie K 6311266 and beach. Two spacious --· . O CCH1MMrc5al 760-9333 A t oop. . . TUln&OCI Bch, tennis, pool. spa. SHORT TERM Rental.a MEWPOllT 3 bdrm units of quality s-ta AM J 01 Property 1600 1 · 3 Bdrm 2 bath, atrium, Mini Ocean view. Avail Weekly & monthly APAlt'TMIHTS 't construction. Street to ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••··~··• MEW. UST14G . ShoreclHCs 2br. 2ba, ram modern decor, acrou 15• May. tBSO/mo lyr lse, A&ent,67~170 I streetlocation. $325,000. Adj a l' e nl to I ~vane Larg~ _ ln·plex on qwet rm, lge yard, kida/peta from park. Small pet Children OK. 640-l644 ~f!d~.ti~~a~~ ~fid~~: llADFOllD CONDO Complex and Airport. st. E side ~lJI ~esa · 3 OK month-month. 9900, OK. S850 mo. 67~170. no pets, nowaterbeds. SIO,OOODOWM Can you afford $10,000 down? Owner will arrange rmanclng for your. Condo 111 security building with all the amenities. '94.500 Beautifully located on Over 59,000 sq ft office bdrm owners wut Two 2 644-0164 agent. SAYSIDE. 3 Br. 3ba, 2A50Newport Blvd. pa rk like ereenbelt just site. 646-6710 or 645-1103 bdrm s 0 WC w Ith tlwo 50• slips. Custom Costa Mesa a short walk to the pool. Agt. $50,000 cash. Aakine 4 Bdr + maid's qtra. Spac. 2 story end unit. SSS.000 assumable loan Colldo"tl•l9MtfTow• $250,000. 646·6710 or beaut. decor. Super vu Lofted bdrm. I ba. $495. home. $3200/mo. IMSTAMTIHI Beaut. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apt. Frplc, encl.ad gar .. lndry rm, patio. Small pet OK $440Mo. of 9"2% interest. Pnvate ho9M1 forr.alit 1700 64S.ll03 Alt Top or SP y g I ass 732·2851, 731-4010 CUSTOM CONDO. Boat gi;.uoand2 cargarage ••••••T•Hu~~S••••••• M.l.TRft.EX $2000 /mo . Koop . Terrace 2 Bd 2 Ba , slip avail. 2 Bdrtn. 2'12 ly '7i:7211 150 ft from sand. 631-1266.Agt. S650/mo.CharleyDarr. ba . Security syslm lRVINE Reduced to $279K · S175K lBdrm, range, refrlg, 559-!MOO. Aet. $2000/mo. llACH DUPUXFIXH Oceanfront duplex that can be remodeled to increase vale. ExceUent rental area. Call for details. S650.000 ~NIGEL OAILEY & ASSIJCIAI ES 1 BDRM Townhom e . on 30 yr assumable loan Crplc, dishwasher. gar,. tennis, pool & s pa at 13 ~3. No costs. '600/mo. Years lse, 612 $107 ,000. Assum loan OWC. 714/898-7607 Jasmine ope.n daily 1·5. ~~~12nd TD Call MAKE A.M OFFER! _64_2_·8_36_7 ____ --'- 2Bdrm,1\.'J bacondowith SPYGLASS home 4 patio. Northwood . Bdrms.3ba,exceptional $585 /mo. Agt 551·5000 ramily hm ll650/mo. YEAfMtOUND F\IN: Soc111 Actlv11ies 01 recto1 •Free Sunday Brunch • BBO's • Parhea • Plus more TSL Mgmt. 642-1603 AVAL MOW! Room)' 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apt. 4 Plex, lndry rm , balcony Adults only WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 OCEAHFltOHT OPEN HOUSE Sat/Sun 1-4 Gd, financing, 3Br, pool, spa. 3221 S. Manitoba. Agt 547-7066, 975-0448 By Owner. OWC at 13"k. 3 Br, H'• Ba., Crpk, dbl $450,000 gar New paint & carpet This first time ofrenng 751·8045 is an estate sale. One or Newport Beach's finest 3'7'7. loan 57. dwn, only views 3 bdrms home 5'7. + l'losing cosls 1s all with guest apt or 2 units. you need to move into Realonomics 675-6700 this 3 Bdrm beauty. Call OWNER DESPERATE now-won't last. 540.3666 1 Br & 2 Br condos, low1 Whelan down + terms John. 54().4646 Real Estate THESPRIHGS IRVINE !Bdrm CONDO on water Pool, tennis & spa $84 ,000 Assum loan. OWC 2nd TD. Call 559-9581 ---- DESPERATE! VERSAILLES Newport Beach 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo + 2 car parking View or ocean & harbor. Pool & Jacuzzi Sl32.000F1rm. Owner /Agent 213/821·7949 D .... XH/ Onita S. 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BY OWNER INVESTORS: Two uttle HEAR THE SAMD Ha~~!~1l~o~do. homes on one lot Zoned lalboo P'tft. o..p.x 5 Income Properties Costa MeM 1224 Eastslde Costa Mesa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20% down. Owner will 3 br 2...., ba condo 2 car carry Priced to sell ga~ .• deck'. patio.' pool, .Jx.· NEI&SER a" 1 U tl!.~1-'~~ 714 641 ·0763 2787 Bristol St (.;osta Mesa, CA $650. 54(M(llJ lBr, 2Br & Junior. 2 Tennis crts, pool, jac, sauna. sand volleyball. pool tble. Adult sorry, no pets . 635 Baker, CM 557·0075. _____ I MEW ZIR W A=VLC lildMltri.a/ I Built-ins. Ailults, no Property 2100 pets 642-~. 1675/Mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br. New paint, carpel & LAGUHAIEACH drapes . Gardening Canyon industrial bldg s er vi I.' e . S7 5 O /mo near town & art festival 543-9950. grounds. 9GOOsq. rt. fully -------- leased. Gross annu al 3 Br l V2 Ba. dshwshr. income $54,000. frplc. dbl car gar. encl. Realonomics 675-6700 bal'kyard, nice area Loh for S. 2200 S7 5 0. M a r g u e r i le ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~0·3666 HMTALS 2br.l"'2 ba ~50 2br.2ba. $775 3br. 2ba. IBOO 3 br. 2 ba Sl.250 furn. 4br. 2ba $725 Lalr.e Forest LOCJWla l.och l248 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Two Camily home, 4 BR, 3 ba, 2 kitchens, 2 llvmg rooms, 2 !pie's, vaulted ceilings. Great ocean view. Much charm. Like new $1400 mo agt Hillie, 494.7551 Oceanfront Mobile Home Rental $650 mo .. furnished/unfurnished. Adlts only. 499-3816 EASTBLUFFS. Super view 3 Bdrms, 2 ba $1400/mo. waterfront Ho.Ms Realton Inc 631-1400 OM liOlf COURSE View 3 Br. 3 Ba.+ Den & Bar SHOO 645·7605 or 646-1713. HARBOR RIDGE Ocean View. Lux 3 Br. 3 B11 Lge Master suite. den, wet bars, f p , tennis. pool, jac., $1900/mo. 675·4078, s.t9-9099. Bluffs 2 bdrm w/v1ew lmmal'ulate S67S mo Bkr, 644-0134. QMAT RECREATION: Tennis• Free Lessons (pro & pro shop) • 2 Heallh Clubs • Sauna • Hydromauage • Swimming • Golf Onv1ng Range BEAUTIFUL APTS: Singles. 1 & 2 Bed rooms • Fu1noshed & Ufllum1shed • .A.dull Ltv1ng • No Pets • Models Open Oa11y 9 to 6 Oekwood Garden Aper1ment1 Newport Beech N. 880 Irvine tat 16th) (71 4)645·11 04 Newport a-ch S. 1700 16th St 10over •I 161hl (71 4) 6'42·5113 2bdrm. 2ba, view, walk to beach, town, schools. S-J.._ r-c•-t 3776 L a u n d r y + g a r . Ca-1..trc.o 1271 _.. u•H • .... . ..................... . Yearly·Si2SOO/mo/summt ••••••••••••••••••••••• $ 9 0 o / 1 1 t Beau. ·almost new 3 bdrm lbr. Iba. clea.n. new rum mo w n e r . . 1 & drapes uul pd Wik to $465mo. TSLMgmt 642·1603 Duplex. 2 Br 11'2 ba $415/mo. No pets. Dave, Agt. 644·7211 I Br. Adults, no pets. Lndry room. pool , carports. $385/Mo. $265 Dep. 931 W 19th. St. 548-0492. 2 Br H'2 Ba. Townhouse. garage, patio Quiet lire style. Mature adults, no children, no pets. 1475 mo. 548-5479. Quiet Adults over 35 1 or 2 Bdrm. From $325. Beaut. landscaping. No pets. LEEWARD APTS 2020 Fullerton. C.M 631-0397 $550,000 with SS0,000 cash. 759-8903 fo r professional use! Seconds to the water. Owner will help finance. Excellent 3 BR owner's All offers heard! $89.900. "home-like" unit & 2 T A R B E L L BR. 2 ba, rental unit R·I WhltewaterV• REALTORS. 540.1120 Ide al for home & Greatterms.subord. 3 Bdrm l'h Ba. frplc. dbl car gar, lrg rec rm. nice area $750. Marguerite 540-3666 furn /unfurn . condo.V1ew.Assnpoo bch /sh'ppg 1'01 W. ( 2 0 6 l 8 5 8 · 6 7 7 3 , & spa, tenrus. $695. No Marguita 492-8120 (714 )548-01(8. pell. 493-6871 AP AlrTMEMTS Beautirul landscaped ga rden apt.s. Patios or del.'ks. Pool & Spa, cove red parking Adults, no pets VERSA ILLES 2BR, wlk 1 n l' o m e CI o s e t o ___ 7_14_1_492-8320 ____ _ to bch. _low dwn , no ........ _ R-....11L&-1.... Newportpierandshops. 3 Bdrm home in North Sor.ta AIMI 3210 A~rt.Hh quallCyi ng . $l40K. ~r _..,....... $289,950. Buena Park, 14 Unit site d ••••••••••••••••••••••• w le M. y...a.. C with plans. permits 3 Bdrm , 2 ""1 bath townhouse, pvt yard, 2 car auto garage, 3 decks ofr bdrms, rrplc In liv rm & m str bdrm , sep . di111ng rm & mod k 1tchen. 2 yr s old Comm. pool/spa/track. Close to bus & So. Csl Plaza. $775 mo. Paul Hickey 75HM85. Laguna with ••••••••••••••••••••••• Un~ magnificent view. 1900 Beaut. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, all •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• new decor. Drive by Ii rat ]102 730·2270 ys. 642·2682 Mobia. HOMH H Y .. ,-r o. e ngineering. $268.000. eves. For Sele l I 00 RHlton 64et.49I O Submit offer. Corner sq.rt .. $1300 mo 2317 S. Lowell 9600/mo eM DON OSEN . I 9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llG CANYON ••••••••••••••••••••••• Indiana and Wh.itaker. 4Bdrms 3ba,large pool. New M ~b1le Home , lncCHWMP',,,,.,ty 2000 John W. Saunders R EAi.TORS lat. ast + nso. 644-506 APTMTS FOR REHT 497-4848 Bradford Place 3 Br 2 ba H.B., N .B., Costa Mesa 2BR. H'-.OA $470 398 W. Wilson. 631·5583 Intimate jacuzzi off oceanv1ew-EI Morro ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realty.848--4002 master suite and lots of Beach Park, sp 70. 2Br. APP'll VALLEY 1 __ ... '--1 3252 condo w /patio, ga~ N r Something !or Everyone _.......""Jr-' Bradford & Carriage Bach. to 4 Br Unrum lBR. $410 2BR. 2BA $510 built Ins Included in thjs space rent $175 mo. 20 yr Near new 4· Pl ex. 2 family home nestled on lse. S59,900. 4.99-3816 bdrm, 2 bath each unit a quiet cul-de-sac. Exl.'el COST" MES" CUTIE with fireplace, enclosed financing. Owner is "" "" patio, double garage. motivated. $799,000. Call $1,500 $165.000. Bill Grundy, 64()..7665or675-2311 Agt Single wide dollhouse Rllr, 675-6161. w /lg added rm, pvl HARIOll RIDGE 3 Br. 3 Ba. Assume lease option. S20K do wn Agent Steve 759-1920. patio, walk to shopping NEWPORT BEACH & bus. \01A921(j..S5) ----- Secluded 3 Br. spa . decks, beams. ram Xlnt co nd . owe 12 r1r. $190,000. 645--1496 ---- ForelCJI "'""'°" ! Ccnlalupn! Wate1 front condo. Multi·Million Vlew: 40' slip avail. $400,000 assumable Call now! 673·0248. BIG CANYON DISCOUNT MOBILE HOMES 636-<m() HIGH9UALITT LOW PRICE Dbl wtde Crusader . central air, dshwshr , lg rms , $26,950. See to apprec. (OH162().64). DISOUNT MOBILE HOMES 636-<BIO LOWDOWN Re possed single wide Fleetwood. central Orange Cowtty, nexible down & term s C111toM I Ith Fairway I GM 4772·69>. Newly Usted 6 bedrooms DISCOUNT MOBILE (4 In main house). 4'<z HOMES baths, family room, ____ 6J6._<8t0 __ _ bililard room. large 10x4S' Costa Mesa breakfast room and a • · very pri vate pool adults l6SOO for quick Completely separate sa.!._e. 673-3826___ _ guest/teen or in law Real Doll House trlr quart e r s with 2 w tcabana. aldt park. ~drooms, fu~I bath and Principals onJy. 645·3070 it's own hvmg room, ----"---'---- <P.lumbed ror 8 full .,... ........... kitchen). Exclusive with for S• I JOO Cole Realty al Sl.7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mimon. Rent covers paymnt. 15% down and assume loans Three adjoining TRIPLEXES in CdM on oceanside or PCH. PLUS two duplexes and 1 triplex in a row on 19th St. Balboa Peninsula. Only 1 lot Crom sand and surf. Absolutely prime properties. DUPLEX with Dock for 30' boat. FOURP'LEX/Ffll V•y MANY MANY MORE! C /21M.~C..tr 640.5357 DUPLEX·M.I. Near beach, two 3Br units, 2 car gar. nr park. TSL INVSTMT 642-1603 UMITS.C.M. l4 units, E·s1de, pQOI, lO"ll'k financing. 8 units. near new house w n rent ala TSL Investments 642-1600 E·Costa Mesa. 2Br house on large RA lot. Condos OK. Agt. 645-7221 OCEAM VIEW LOT A I 0 V E D A M A Cute condo 2 Bdrm, no HA.llOll pets. $540/mo. Donna. •1. acre with plans & Richardson Realtors. permit. 3 minutes to 768-5600,837"5916. harbor 3000 sq ft horne.. · · Will s ubordinate 1 Br Carpels. drapes, SL35.000. 7141898-7607 s tove & r e f rig e .. carport. Water & elec o.t of Comly paid. $300/mo. lit & last Properly 2550 Avail.June 1 640-7464. • •••••••••••••••••••••• New Mobile Home 3Br, Sharp newly decorated 2 2Bak frplc, redwood bedroom plus dining d e c , c e d a r s ha k e room condo. Pool and siding,nrlake&skiing spa . South Coas t $41,900. Terms or trade Terrace area. Walk to 499·3816 South Coast Plaza. ~75 Gorgeous custom 3Br in month yearly lease. Oceans Iden Ca. Some _A..,~::...e_n_t'-, 63_l_·7_300_· --- oc n view, 2 yrs old, Great lower E. Side loc. 2 assume rinancing. 12 mi br. 1 ba, gar .. util. rm, Crom Orange County new crpt, tiJe & drapes. line. Sll2,000. Bkr. $525. No dogs. ·Wayne, 831·1616or493-7766 646·8816 R•al &tat. 3 Brm 2 Ba. large living W.t.d 2900 rm, frplc, dbl gar., ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio. Married Christian Investor's looking for couple, l or 2 children home 1n Laguna /So. OK. No pets. '650/mo. Laguna for sale by 1st & last. l200security. o w n e r . S t e p h e n 847 ·2032. Flannigan 494-MSl . --------- ••••••••••••••••••.• •••• $545, 891-6396 Agt. • Apls. Certain locations i BR + den , Niguel o ff er : Pool , spa, Shores, guard gate. Cozy s parkling clean, fireplace. laun. room, Some ocean view. freshly painted 2bdrm beam e d ceilings. Comm. pool, tennis. b o use, n r Main & garages. all built·ins. walk to beach . $875 , Edsnger. l..rg back yrd. 2 Garden & Townhouse 498-2501 or492·2958 car gar $550 /mo . design. NO FEE. 2250 Vanguard Wa y. 54().9626 Lge 2 br, l .,... ba + family rm . xlnt E Side loc, near new, ~10. 548-M-44 or7S9-5391 637·7918. TSL MGMT. 642·1603 2 br, 2 ba, adult comm. 3 br, 2 ba twnhse, dbl gar, w/pool ai spa, ~mo. So.HI L.,... 3216 l~a '••••• 1107 no pets. S575 673-7294 Call eves, 499-3464 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Monticello. MiaslcNI Ylefo 1267 OCEANFRONT HOME $400 Utils pd. 2Br Duplex -------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• O'looks pvt ~sch, 2 br, 410 Ha rding. Balboa. No 4 Plex 2Br. 2Ba. frplc, HOME FOR RENT 2\-'J ba, den, dm. rm, lge pell 547·1155 smgle encl gar, $425 mo 3 Bd ~ F d deck, $1000/mo 499-2253, Co--o .......... ...,._ 3122 lsl & last. $200 sel' No rm ..,.,.,. 4:nce 499.5021 ·-_.,,.._. pets 549·0472 btwn yard & garage. Kids & ••••••••••••••••••••••• M 7p M pets welcome. 964·2566 C..._W-lmmac. 1 Br, ocean vu, I ....;8_A __ · --·----- or 973-2971. Agt .. no ree. Fwalst.d 3400 blk rrom bcb. Shared 1 BR. $350 per mo .. pool. .... port•---1.. 1269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage, laund facil. adlts, 00 pets. 423 w. "•w ~ Irvine 2 bdrm 21/2 ba $650/mo. Ag\673-1181 B 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• condo, attach iar. View. ay. 543-ll6l llG CYH LEASE goll, tennis, swimming. Enjoy summer living all Bach. w /loft, rerrige, 3 Br 3 Ba, formal din.. Avail. $750. 7~6708 year· Wlk to CdM beach, stove, pool. $380. 283 1 te .1 2br, ~rplc, lge deck, encl Avocado. 645-6404. s~ar~,85~1.s~i:~.v~~ CottdD111l I id parkmg. $750 /mo ava1l 1---------- tub. $.2000/mo. Bob & U.t.mlsl:ed ]425 Im med. 675-8589 or 2 Br I Ba. Frpcl, dshwr, Dovie Koop. 631·1266 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·7544 new crpts & drapes, gar. ____ .;...... _ _.., __ 12 Blks rrom So. Cst Plaza, $460. 645·6404. 6 or 12 mo. lse. 9600 mo Bachelor apt, w /rd rig, 1----------llG CYHCOHDO Xlnt l'OOd. 551-4540 place for micro. So. or 3br. 2ba, or SC Plaza. PCH, $275 incl. utils . 760-1813 aft. 6pm. I Ir 21RAPTS POOL, C & D, AGT 731 ·6829 or 548·057 4 Lovely 2 Bd 2 Ba, avail. immed . til Sept. 1. $850 /mo. 631· 1266 . Patrick Tenore, Agt. Beaut. tri·level, pool, spa, gar. t650, 1st. last + sec. 551·2960eve. Spectacular ocean & city Executive townhome. So. llG CANYON lights view from every Cst Plu.a toe. 3 br. 2i.; Exclusl·ve, rull security, roo m · Large l Br· ba pool & jacuzzi, $775 Deluxe 2br, 2ba, McLain "''""'/mo Call Anthony c II""""""""' beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba. -"" · mo. a ....., . .......,eves. unit at Bi° Canyon incl wkdys 642 5757 eves & Private yard, wet bar & "' · fireplace. many other washer/dryer, Crise. wknds644-8889. 2bdrm. ulll incl. Pool, 3 Br. 1 Ba. House, new underground pkr, sec, quiet. mature couple Rewtah paintinside&out.~ean amenities including pool,&tennls.644-9584 Co r ona Del Mar pref. No pets or ••••••••••••••••••••••. view yard. Adults only. ~::f• A r::ft:'ony$1~k;;'~0~ d charm Ing 2 br, w /rrpl, children. Call 548-7689. Holli.I Fvrm' ..... d l650 + util.s. 645-3000. 1 Br con o, IBOO mo. No no pets, 9600. 644-2311 or • _.. 642-5757 eves & wkn s. 1·r · •-· bd 1n · 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E tsid rt d ' 644 8889 qua 1 ymg . ..,aae option. 640-7085. Large 1 rm tnp ex ~ .... ,... l I 02 as t e '? vale stu 10, · · So Coast Plaza. John near So Coast Plaza. *Cote Realty & Investment 640-5777 avoid high int. 8 units CM $310,000 lO'i'c down OWC 14%. Own e r (213)431·4432. ••••••••••••••••••••••• kno ty pine, $2?5/mo. BLUFFS, 3Br, 3Ba, ram 540-4646. Co1to Mna 1124 Patio. garage, adults Long Beach Peninsula 0 yt..... l Gu & water paid. NO rm , pvt spa, $1 ,050. ---11:-.. -m--ID-E ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• only, no pets. $395 mo. D I St d c ..... w PETS.~-SA 2 Br. 1 Ba. Maple St. 833-9293. up ex. eps to san . ....._ ... l...tfc! 644·2300 lrltt•wwoods Adult, refrig, oo pets. --------- ~~~~~~~I'-"'"• r...,+y 1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWC $225,000 Agt Donna Executlv .. ho m e 2 Br. 1 Ba., large yard ' · l Quiet $375 Sierra ZIRC--O (213)439~11 ; 439-7255 upgraded . ..:....,.. mo. $475 CoslJI Mesa WA TERFROHT 3 Br. 2 Ba. Tn·leve ' . . __. ..,.,.,., w/boatsllp'"cluded frplc, micro-wave, ~I, Mgmt. Co. 641-1324 Designed for shared ________ , SUPERB! - 5 Bdrm, entertainer's deliaht Seller will listen to all creative financing proposals. Sommerset model on lee land . • RED CARPET 754-1202 673·0248 493-5431 641-0763 "' t · No ts 45 l1"v1·11g or fami·ty with IMVESTOIS 3 Bdr 2 Ba, dbl gar, rm enn1S. pe · · Spaclous3BrDuplex WATll.FaONT DBJGHT laltoalllmd 1106 D .. PoW l226 for power boat up to Days 646"4262• Eves $42:5..Pool&laundryfac. ce~'~te~.d~~~alF!~~~~ OfflCllULDIMG 2 units on k>t. Seller will ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• about 35'. Sl1o;n /mo. 1145•9543. .,. ua _..., "<(" _....,._ patio & lalmdry hook-up. Pride of ownership, one rinance at 133, 3 years. Cute cottage, 3 Br 2 Ba, •Clote to marina 3bdrm. JACOIS REAL TY ............ FwwlllMd . Jmmed. occpy. 799 2·8 f~c:li~~di/~!t~g~~~~ ~~e~til~ulo:!::e.11::~ ~n~~m~~~~f~;no. ki~~:mo~r~~~n~oau~~: 675-6670 c;:;~M=······;;·;4 sr.a~~~;~a~~$365. Pool& Hamilton. $455 mo Beach. All this plus a 60 641· 1991 ; 631-4361 C---• .......... .._._ l I"" 495·"86. * MOIU HOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54S-9556 963-81B2. Agt. rootboatslip.Ownerwtll -----------_..__ -H ea... •-II lZ O SUSC••-•s . 2 Bdrm 1 bath duplu, cons ider exchange. ore families are1ettin1 ........ -. .............. 1ai ...,.__, 4 Super dbl wide, 2Br. "",..'"" Newer 2 Br. patio & large patio, private 1ar, Prln. only. Call Bill tbe campl.na "bug" thla TWOGltliT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Ba. $S50 mo. includes Furn. 1 bf. apt. S32S" 1arage. Adult.a, no pets. small pet OK. M50 per Merrell, year. 11 you have a SUMMaltlMTALS 3br,2t,A,ba,frplc,famrm, utll! 11t + 121001ecurity up. Encl.far.Adults, no $435/mo.645-~. mo. Call Pam. Dave or camper that's not det· E a c h w 1, b th re.. gardener, $700/mo moves you in. 642·6891 or pela. 2110 Newport Bl. . LarPV, "'"' ,._,. Ht 'l f I 11 I I 0-~ Ht" lit\' t, ·,:; 1 , ;t 111 "' • ~ 962-8375eva 675-7104. 541-4J81btwn81it~PM 2 HUGE Bedrooms 1n 1_;._·-=..·'.:....,,_ __ _, ___ _ s. J.. Una used, sell It now bedroom•. two baths. On super location. Fully c..aatt-1071 wllhaClaulfiedAd. the sand. SlOOOweek for Sprin&bunl 3 Br .2 ba Harbor Ridge Condo. 3 ................ 3740 carpeted, bullt·ins, 2 Br. 1 Ba .• pool. $475. •••• ;;r.;;••••••••••••••• 1>----------1 one, the other IUOO to condo w /patlo, aar. Br,3ba,aec,pool,apa & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ground noor. Adulta, no JMllftFrM.M ~~~~!!!~~~l .. IH11P,.,,.rty 1400 $1800 per month . lmmac. Nr. Newland le tennis. $1750. Ph : $375/up 1·2 bdrm, pool, pets. S3:1()rno. Apply Apt Cott a Mesa 641-(1763 WITH OC ...... vllW ::: ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3l·7300, a1k for Roaer. Talbert. S'125,811-e.3M. 758·8903 Jae, adlt, 192 Tiorld•. B 518 W . W Ila on . ~-. Aaent. · k.8.8.U-~or1M2.a112 646-4477 MISA,..IS hMlloS...... p t4ew__.11Ndt Jl6' 5blkatoocun.E le&ant2 NEWPORTCREST IMdt ---·-----APTS ...._ NEW ORT r--· bdrm, fa.m rm • den. 4 br, 2000 aq n condo, t4ew,.,. 376' 2 Br. No pets, 571 w. 2 Br, 2 e. wtth Gar. Over 3,000 1q.ft, of •••••••••n•• .. •••••••• (f750 mo.) Pluab crpts, split levl, lmmed. occ. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• J oann St. 1 cbUd. $165. Pool, 1pa, barbeque, ele1ance. Euhalvenew QfflC£ BUILJING t.IDO lSLt charmln& 3 2~ ba, cedar ai 11aaa. lll90/mo.131·7270 OCIANFIOMT 2248 C anyon st. 2 c.lh"ral ccilinp, F /P. bomeal rrom ~ll.000. ~~·r!:=:.r.:.1Ti:o Dbl car pvt pr, fully SAMTIA60DI. Fum. J Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 childr en $390; Sierra ~~~is b0~::n~. ~:!r.~ lA~~ l.nancln1 naU. mo to mo. Blll Grundy, malnt. yd. Adults, no car 1arar with otrlce, Mf mt. Co. 141·1124. now. ~515 /mo. 2150 Cl\arter Rily fr Invest. l7Wlll. pets. Inquire at 527 18th. Beautiful houtfl avail wather dryer tnctd. -..122 831-8811 AIRPORT tDrl st. 714/91CMml now ln ele~ aru. 4 A v a I I . N o w 2 br, 1~ ba, no cbildrea, 1_H:.;.a::..:.r...;.:la;,:.'.;..;..;.._MC_7 __ _ Ml.ft UIOBll.£HOMES Br. 3 0.. Dlnlft1 Rm, ~/llllthl)'. 1maU dot OK, tm. 610 P.W M2• INLIDO PARK SBr2ba,dbl1arap,fam Uvtna Rm. • Famlly TSLMOMT. ec.1803 JoannSt.Mt-71M ••WCH•E OYer JlOOeq ft. 3 Bdrma1 du with wet IMlr, rorma llvlnt room • dlnin1 room. l'irwlace .. bop malr tulle AND In ramlb room. ~all for delal ... 651-- 15,000 SQ n LIASID LM4D WESTERN TERRAIN, INC. I (714) 549-1480 rm w/f....a.. t.Dd t ll"lil ... l Rm. New wallpaper. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrm, 2 bath from ,_. 1 n · cozy kltche It many *SPACIOUS* Latu urea nu • JBLKSFROMPCH • 8 5 0 · N r •at• r · =~:'o.~i.o~ OK. mu)' xtru. 0Cbildten It Prof. decor, 2br. 2ba, waterfalla In the back l br, l ba, all uUll pd, Wat.,lront Homu, pdaOK,,._.,4. :e•ra-ata lra, lrplc . vardofabnndnew.lor S.O.lll·Jl7J Realtors, lne. 811·1400 18 ,._ ..... _... lbbae u .......... 1 k i D r ~ ......... c ' Ba k :-r' Bdrm 2 8 y.t ... -· ·~, 1ar. 2 bdrm coodo. ~rple. a br den 2 ba OC .. Jl u or an ~. sm mo. lit lut c · a., l b~t '° bdi. UUI lneL bltlna, 1ar. pool, Jae. view e~cl 1·ar w • +aoodep. ,..,_ I a m l y r o o m $J,050yrlJ.MS.MOlaf\ar .,..•up.m.lml • ............. ·-.1aio · th•11"""' h'I' w/tlttpWce. CW.d•aac tpm. opeeer, ...... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.... Jl44 tlOO/IOo. IDclU water 6 l Sr lutaide. Small but 1-91i •41 c.r.•illlltW. JIU ....................... 1•rdtw'. IQ.TllO. Avail. now. 291' VI . co11 w /lota of neat ..................... .. •••••••••••••••••-·•-Smolltt.reee a Br 2 aa Oceaafroal 2 Br. l Ba. wood. •/IDD. llll·ia condo, 2 c~, nr Wutcllff I Br 2 Ba. Fireplace 1ara1e. SIASPaAV. lBr, Iba, 4blbtobacb.3 Br.IB&. teonli/poal Avl. h•U1--..,.,.CG1td, fHO fwnk. Open.• lbr Iba coado, or frplc. a...• ~Ji New crpt. , ..... pamL S/2. SIU/mo. (IU) 1al"dltm,DO,... -T l4 (111·t1•1 or S.C.Plau.&.A ....... NrMaclL ~·1 •.ausao -n .. .,..•<21.1>a..-. Avau; ...... -. llSIAl·MI1. ,... •ma al\. v ' ~ .. ..... ( .. , ,,. . . • >-.: i1 ' -.. . . .. .. --.... --~-...---~ -..----·· --~~-------~----....... ------........ ...-.... ~.--.......... ~.,... .................. ~ ....................... ~.,...~ ........ ~ ..... ,$11111£111111 .. z1111s .. •a .. u ... ,;~s .. 2•~11. -OrengeCoaat DAILY PILOTJMonday, May 11 , 1981 ........ ,~ IJIOJotttW...... 7071 .... Wlbllllad 7100 -------0,po: tacltr ' 1001 •••••• ••••• ••••••••••• • •••• ••• •••••••••••• ••• • •••••• • •••••••••••• •••• n-i.i...& Ar lwwwata\llllfw9. .._.. 40001 ...... toSM-t OOCIOfflcel...., 4400 ....................... COVER GIRL · BOOKKEEPER F 1C AUTOMICHAMIC u.111111 .~••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXTRA INCOM£ UTC _... 1 CPA up'd. 2IO llr wfflt. Dome1tlc • Poretp. 6 hrs /wk. 10 fruit Juice • 0 -.. • •!Hour Pat 1164 070 LI . c I e • o , w e 11 tlwf ....... leecttJ140 lA&llna0.acb Motorln.n, Fomebrall(CM \iireot Executlveofc + eecty / machine• w 10 xlnt 958-0771 MC/VISA equ ipped ahop 50% • ••o•••••u•••••••••••• 1115 No. Pacific Coaet Sl~ + utH . Ref req Aft rccepUon area, nr Air locaUona. 7$I Ol'74 H.lp W..e.d 7 I 00 comm. Owrl~la. Lota Hwy, Laaiun• Beach. s·aoPM MS-4740 Port. 1350mo . Incl ••••••••••••••••••••••• of work. HWlt Auto Ctr .. Dally, Weekly, Kitchen -· -J anitor, A/C, upt· &i ............ *FOXY LADY* 18~ La1una Cyn. Rd .. avallab~e:.-L.°w winter M/Froommatetoshrtae Pa.nellna.~1414. Op .. : .. dtr 1011 OUTCALLONLY .t.CCfta.._IHCi 494·IOOOorW-8966 rat.ea. •-·-· 3 Bdrm apt. 2 blk8 from •••••'••••••••••••• •••• VISA M.C "' VVS"'l9 1 --- ,•" All U l T ~ ~ l l\llN(, Bayftont office epace for * 97• I I JI * md 'or Automotive R oom with kitch~n beach.536-20.U leafe, 1/mo free rent. ... IOOKKEErlHCi SIRVtctWltf'l'a privlegea. Adulu on y. Shr e le11ant Twnhae. 646·«19 To asslat ln developing Orowlng N.8 Co. need• • I '7 811 Pflio Apl• • DolllwU Plt •) 6 880 \ 812 7520 · B•aut. view. 38r, 2~Ba •-...... S 'he P&rL. Work under individual w/mlnlmum ... Prestlalous Ofnc" Space. ._,~" ~ Private entrance. Prefer S32.5 + last & sec. NB 3 w I 0 d 0 w 0 u 1 c es MASSAGI Sl'A min imum 1u~rvls1on 5 yrs. exp. in diagnosin11 • Poo1 6 lltt Aoom • G••o,n u nosc",po11q • JOG 10 luc11 I Sl\Oos Male over 40 . No 646·11804 ;631·11.53 availableln fuJlaervice Be pampered by 16 Required lo use auto mechan ic smoklna. no drinking. Leaal Suite In Newport Beaut Girls Open Independent judgment conditlonstomanage200 S G S[A fNVIAONMENT •..1r.1:t•AM11 Ti'N •t •t tt.,. ol~lH' 120 Share utils Offlult...taf 4400 Center. Aviul May 15 10AM ·4AM 7 days 1 May a 1 ss1 1 tn 1 _!~rltXlntol carneet Goodwritten& s:IS-0637. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Phone~U33 ower eve c e •. ..,, ora I communication 1617 WeaLcliff. N.B. Want '40.S640 company benefits C1U skills required. Salary _;;;;.._ _______ Fem wanted hse nr S.C financial lnat 7000s.(. Millie a fter 9AM commensurate with Plaza, avall 5/9. Ter i Lit. floor. Agent 541·5032. lnlft•H R...tal 4450 SHE 645·5800 ex per I enc e X Int 2 Br 1 Yt Ba, gas pd, S350 + S350 deposit. Crpts, drapes , bit -I n s . McFadden nr Beach Bl. AD ULTS, no pets. 893·4894 or&l&-9243 556-9016 eves ••• • • • • •••••• • • • • •• • • • • ~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~ be n e fits. Send j o b -----KOLL CIHTEI For store & <>ffice space E s c O R 1' S & history w P.O. Box 1560 Room w /bath, kitchen HEWPOttT al reasonable rates. MODELING c I o Daily Pi Io t prlv, privuteentrance Elegunt executive suites 500 to 2700 Sq Ft. 835-9199 ACCOUHTING ' Newspaper CM CA 92626 tl42.-1B79 In prestige location. MESA VERDE DR MOMy to locM 5025 CLalCS Ad 1185_5 ____ _ _. I 00 W' h I t rt PLAZA ••• ••••• •••••••••••• ••_. ---------Plessey Semiconductors Hoteh, Motels .. ll comp e e suppo in Irvine is looking for THIE WHtFR..E TREE ••••••••••••••••••••••• services 152S Mesa Verde E, <.; M Znd TD Locmts SWEETHEARTS "" 0 1 5 .. ., .. 123 two Acct&. Clerks. Must Luxury Adult units at Balboa Inn oceanfront 7141851 uuo ....... $100,000 to $250,000 18', •ESC-...S• . T • (.' 11 Rk "''" have typing of 4G-4Swpm affordable living. 1,2 & 3 Low winter rates. Dally 1 S AC + points u r • 24 HOURS • lO-key addi"no mach. W II d t d CdM De uxe u1tes, . Space for Renl in active """0 5788 "' .. Br. e ecora e or weekly Kitchenette k .1 pd .... occ .,,._. Visa/MC 529 1927 by touch The ideal 0 I · · 1 am pl p g, uu · "°"" beautiful beauty salon )' m pie size poo · S90& up.675-8740 applicant should have lighted tennis court. E. Cst Jlwy 675-6900 Any related s pecialty Mo1'i90CJH. Trust acctg. exper. Excel Ja c uzzi, park I 1 k e SEA I l'Dlf R_f_E_C--T--ok Fashion Island. N B DHdt 5035 benefits. Please apply in landscapin1. Most UU\ft PE Pat. (714)64-06023 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AFTERNOON person: • beu;~~·=~~.~~9 MOJll LOCATION -R-E-TAILSTORE Al1St~ot;4'i?af:~tate •DELIGHTS• PLISSEY •Weekly rentals now 405 Fwy./ COAST HWY CDM investments aince 1949 .SEMICONDUCTORS Avail. now 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apts. Garages. 1 child OK. n o pet s . Water /trash paid. S475. 964-2566or97J..2971 Agt . no fee avail. •S98 andup. Hort»orll•d. Front & rear ent ry, SpedallDltgln Home/OfflcejHohl 1641KaiserAve.,lrv. •Color TV •Phones in 2280 ~Ft. private FHEE parking' 2ndTOt * 529-4631 * rooms. D L --I 1050 ' Sl 10 /sq . rt 642 2171 54ir.06l I 24Hrs Now lhring 2274Newport81vd.C.M. •-o ce. 0WNER l7 14)49723.S i • -MC VISA 646-7445 o~•ft• ~· Commercial •Retttah Want investor for Npt bayfront home Give well secured I.st or 2nd ~.:..A~t,675 616!._ ACCOUH'T*'G ASST/SEC'Y ADAti&eCY Knowledge or /\ /R, A /P . 10-key b y touc h . a c cura te typi n g Ex cellent, tactful communication skills. Desirable Newport Beach loc Liberal benefi ts. Call : Jan Wood, 714-955-0000 , L IVE IN NEWPORT 3 2bdrm apts, frplc s . BEACH FOR $100 PER m i crow a v e ovens . w EEK 645·0440 underground se c --------- prk1ng . ssoo 1mo . S-.iMrR_.. 4200 963-6490. • •••••••••••••••••••••• -Balboa Peninsula. Furn 2 l"iH 3144 Br, quiet toe. so yrds to ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. S450 wk. 675-3148 Adults Condo, 1 br + loft, --------. pools. tennis, etc. Sublease 2.3 mos. avail 730· 1250. 542-7609 June lst. Ocean view Cull 3148 spa. Sec guard642·546S LOCJUl'a £Heh --•••••••••••••••••••••••a Bd 2 ba home 1 br, ocean view, frplc. 'Furnis hed. Newport lge deck. open beams, Is land . Weekly ssoo. t600 494 lni6. 751-4293 ~gt. 833·2650 ___ _ M•wport leach 3869 ~!':°.~~~.".~!'!~ •• ~~-~~ ••••••••••••••••••~•••• •NWPT OCEANFRONT Oceanfront for. Wmter & Lido Isle bayfront, sm Rentals . Furnished & boats & dock. Wkly un:urn Broker. 675-4912. 673.sURF NO FEE! _Apt. & Condo TRADE H 0 ME I N rentals. Villa Rentals GRASS VALLEY for 675-4912 Broker n 1 c e h 0 m e i n •OCEAH FROHT• Laguna Newport area Fr pie. panelled, patio, Classic Spanish home in lbr, S575Jmo 642-0045 foothill commty of No eves CA adjacent to forest & Steps to the bch, lge 4br, 2'2ba clsed in patio. yrly S9~0/mo. 673·250'7 _ Ocean v iew, s pacious, lux , 2br , 2ba "Versailles .. Condo all amen $750. 557-1997 WESTCLIFF 2 BR. 2 BA D.R . frplc. pool, patios Adu Its SS95 675-6999 Golf Course. 1·2 weeks from June-Sept. Call Thom (916l27J.6118 PUERTA VALLARTA Avail. May 28 t.o June 10. End unit on the water. Sleeps 2·4. maid service, private beach. kitchen. New hotel with dining room, swimmfog pool, etc SSS 00 a da y 548-6646. 64_2_·_5200 ___ _ R.etttah to Shan 4300 •JC 979.9997 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5.000 sq ft of space avail 1.25 Sq. Fl On on Harbor Blvd near Warne r This s pace ad101n s a well NEWPORT established retail store It Is excellent s~ace for Wont 21-220/o Yield? On your T D 's Notes $$Rais ers-lnveswrsSS Call Dennison A!'lsoc. 673-7314 WANTED Adventurous woman To share cnusmg Life Offshore cruising vessel Be com pal.Ible, 25·40 Write J amey Reil 2005 W Balboa Blvd. #243 Newpor t Beach. C.:/\ 92663 HARBOR additional retail. . lif ht assembly, spec1a ty 7 shop , or inventory 26 ':1, yield , balance ------ $44,000. You buy for PSYCHIC • sto r age Could be 3035 S Ft excellent distribution 3q. • center Call 546·3700 or $39,000 Due 6/1/82 Readings J11ck5561l78 A IDE for par.allied 1-793-8247 PROBLEMS??? young woman Mon-Fn Plusti Offt'cn 847-2223 lay Views OFFICE·STORE ISTTRUSTDHOS Pri•ah PatM>s 525 sq ft or lll.SO sq fl 22% INTEREST Loh of Windows Carpet . paneling. I 1500/o COLUTStAL Partdng GOf"CIC)tt parking Newport & Bay ' I or 2 y._-TerMt Forthebusinessman Sho p Center 2052 This lS on land which I Whowantstomakea Newport Blvd C .M own, & would like to good impression. 556·4181 or644·2221! i m prove . Le a v e Won't Lost. , -message with telephone Calf..A....I Waterfront offices & sec'y.G46-8841 .,_,. dis play pace Coast (714)675-8662 Hwy Newport Beach MEWPOttT llEACH Convenient Peninsula location across from City Hall F.xecut1ve s t yle offices w full serv1cei. avail From 215 sq.fl and up No lease required Call 673-3002_ Office to share Costa Mesa Sl50mo. 631·32al Ocean view and double offices m Cull service suite now available al "The Executive Office'". NEWPORT CENTER 644-4492 Xlnt for boat sales 646·9361 Industrial Retttal 4500 •••.••••.•.•........... S5 75 A ppro-< 2000· Indus '! 10fflce 18101 Redondo Cr "Q'" llunl Bch 842·2834 MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK 11 I W. I 7fft St. Costa MHG, Callf. 642-4463 Owner Broker wants $20,000 to SS0.000 6ecured by 2nd TO on own N B. residen ce Principals only 644-1817 aft Spm. Tom WEPAYTHEMOST For your T.D. 's & Notes at Dennison Assoc· 673-7311 WlDOW has money for 2nd T.D 's. Sl0,000 & up! E·Z CREDIT. No pnlty. For achoo cull 673-7311 unylime 7 30-SPM, must drive 0 u r gr o u P 0 f Balboa lsl.675-~2 "think-tank" speriahsts may resolve your problem on a service fee or a "no-cure-no pay" basis . Phon e 714 1897-7155 lOAM to noon only No weekend calls. For a Therapeuti c Massage by a lic'd therapist. Call Earle 548-2817 1G-8PM Buddy now here from the Spa Hotel 548-2817.548-0407 1~7 Color yourself darker without the sun take tablet s ins te a d I ngredients F'DA a pp r oved 496 fJ264 Becky or Carrie. THE AIDE -W or k w /handicapped adults Musl be strong, w1lbng to assist in tasks such as toileting, feedmg, gen c leanup. Ex ce ll . vacation & insurance benefits United Cerebral Palsy Assoc .. Santa Ana. 546-5760 APT MANAGER. mature couple Beaut 30 unit, Costa Mesa. Adults, no pets. Apt + s m s al Wkdys 642-4907 ASSEM8LER Mechanical assembly e lec eq. Will train Nr Oc ean 1n C.M Gd benefits. Ask for Wes. 645-3632. Assembly ILUE JEAN JOIS PARK NEWPORT C OUMTRY CLUI ·······················!~~~~-~~~~ Moving? Avoid deposits 1980 sq ft Unit avail Ma y 1s t C arpets. drapes wet bar. •336·34' sq. fl. •Leas10g office hrs. Mon lhru Fri 8-4 Sat. 10-2. .••.•.•......•......... G i rffriends •ESCORTS• Hotne /Offlu ~ * 759-1216 * I W il&tOUSE I FACTOttY ./ ASSEMILERS LIVIHG Singles. 1&2 bedroom apts & townhouses. From s.510 644·1900 BAYFROHT Super posh 2 br. 2 ba penthouse 2000 sq fl Sec. bldg. boat slip avail $1450/mo No pets 675·0105 & cul h vmg expenses' Professionally since 1971. HOUSEMATES 832·4134 * Shored LMitcJ • Co unselors to personally select your compatible rmmte to suit ~our lifestyle. Shared-Livmg 833 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB 631 -1801 Cannery Village 450' office or shop space in quaint character bldg $475 /mo avail June 5th 673-6522 9.5 OFFIC ES FOR RENT Ground noor orfice. 212 blocks from beach. 315 3rd St HB Asking $225 per mo. 536-7533 SCOTT REALTY INDUSTRIAL SPA.CE 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE ADYERTISIHG COMSUl.TAHTS l Now you can reap the benefits or high cost advertis ing for your co mpany ! I~et The Advertis1ng Consultants set up your own m house ad vert1s1ng agency Please cidl f o r information 24Hrs. Now llmng Male /Female Escort MC VISA Emoloy:MM& P~paraHon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobi Wanted. 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AHHOUHCIHG!! Long & s hort t e rm assig nm ents . AVAILABLE NOW' Call or come by: 2102 Business Center Dr , #208, I rvin e, 833-1441 or 27957 Cabot Rd .. Laguna Niguel, 831·05-42 or 16152 Beach Blvd ., •230E , Huntington Beach. NEVER A FEE Cannery Village lbdrm . $400 /mo avail May 2lsl ~ Call67J..652'l9·5 FOR LEASE COSTA MESA 642-446] •One 2780 s q fl AvailnowinO C Airport warehouse avail for -------I ff t immed orcup ancy oc 4 o ices + recepk . •Two 1600 sq ft units, 759."0652 VISITING HEALTH SERVICES IELL~·=i~- B a ul. 2 B_drm. Crplc. '•~iORt:"atfC'• balcony,qwetstreet. 315 '-£1 '.v• d •-""• l E.Bay.$595,962·8840 ~ ·rl'lJ ~II'.,. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt, Sundeck '-·· .. ··--- $475. Isl & last. Oldest & largest agency 675-5378 in So CalJf since 1971 tBr, lBa, enclosed Gar. prtly furn. on 43rd St $495 /mo +Sec. 551-1690 Credits · ABC.NBC.CBS, Cosmo. Phil Donahue ••,or!• to a II who need a place area. Sl501ea or ma e office & warehouse sc1•u ·ETS deal on all or part. Clean space avail. June 1 IUft"L & ready w<><:cupy. (714 l •32'-33< per sq. ft ANSWERS 760-0169 •Leasin g office hrs . 3187 A Airway. Costa Mon thru Fri 8·4, Sat Hookup-Irony M esa . 925 sq . f t . 10._2_. --AbbeyBR~~dle Adjacent to Airport. SQQ.PER warehouse His life of crime was Good parking, drapes, space avail NOW CM. short-lived. He robbed a carpel. aU utils paid. 75< 1000+ s /f reasonable. jewelry store but they per ft. WiU partition to 545·0311 caught him when he suat 979·3541ArtorSue. -----went back ro r the 8,700 sq ft. office + BRICK. 2 Br. Townhse. $625 Adults, no pets. View 1409 Supe"rior. 645-8684 •PECTACULAr! warehouse I rvine Newport Beach,641-1899 > " Indus trial near San Lott & Fomd HARBOR Diego Frwy orr ••••••••••••••••••••••• uoo "The Little Company With A BIG HEART" PROVIDING HOME CARE BY PROFESSIONAL & CARING NURSES & HOMEMAKERS E.mployees thoroughly screened. insu red, bonded /'4 hr. 1115'1s ovoil S t:R v •C E S E.O.E . M/F /H ASS&eLBS Loe. Mission Viejo co. needs Assemblers w /2 yrs. exp. Candidat es must have gd manual dexterity. gd. eyesight. neat in appearance & dependable. Work 1s in life support medical e l ectronics Gd Garden Grove.895·3482 Jamboree. Call 646-1044 ho bo VIEWS or inquire Marosi Co. For persorol c t a ut ~~-~~."!:'!: ..... ~~!.~ __ _ 440 to 4000 Sq. Ft. 16753 Noyes. 957-9266. FOUND ADS how we con help you or benefits . Only res ponsible persons see king perm anent emrlyml. need apply. Ca I: Mrs . P arelli, 581·3830 3 br, 1~ ba, 2nd f1r apt, Rmmte wanted to shr lge Preitfcp Peninsula Brkr. Coop Invited __ your Io v e d o 11 es closetoshopplng, beach, condo nr S.c .. Plaz~. Location. Rentals Wmthd 4600 ARE FREE CONTACT· no pets o r s mall Sauna. pool. 1acuzz1. P~Garage ••••••••••••••••••••••• DeniseCoupe children. S5SO. 835-3252 Pnvat:.,!ath. Available Very Re .... TenM. Newport Family nds 4 Cal~ 96b-0985 GARAGE SALE ads m Soft J now. ~ + expenses. I A I:"' t n-... Bdrm, 212 ba, J..4 yr lse. If we coo't help, we'll the Daily Pilot bring hap-capllNlft1.____ 3878 Call 557·3S27or 759·0060 Y ppo4 ••tr -1· $800 to $1000. Dys 642.-5678 ,._ ( 7 I 4) 67 5 8 6 6 2 975-0888, eves 675-0475 refer you to someone PY results. To place your •••••••••••••••••••••••Share beaut. Newport • ask for Bob who con. drawing card, phone 2 Br, .d~n. l Ba, dining H e 1 g h_ ts home Newport Beach, 2 offices LOST : Fem Cocker ~~~~~~!!!~~j 642·S678today! rm, llvmg nn, ~25/mo. Overlooking the bay & . suites Pvt Jbr neat clean home Spaniel, tan. vie = 855-4455 open ocean. Your own 1 n exec needed by mot.her. son & 19th/Acacia 960-~ ]180 large Bdrm. & full bath. entraryce Sec/recept. we l I behaved dog. Santa Ana Non smok1no. S350. a v a I I . I mme d . J l Found: Sm Blk & Gray ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·8055 .. occupancy. $600 /mo. Despe rately une ls . fem dog. Blue choke I 2b d Under $700 549-7272 C.M. Extra g 2Br a con o. · Sara. 851·8141 collar Harbor & Adams p a t lo . g 1H. p o o I , High School district__ 94 wa s h r /dryr, prof Lge apt to share w/M. DR'sofc.inDwntwnHB. ..::96:..:=.2·.::..l :..:.:.1 _____ _ palnl'!d, new drapes . Straight. Dana Pt., pvt 2,000sq.n . $1200lse. Red l•lftHt/ln•nt/ Lost 4.30 while ca Adults. Close to M1 Sq ba · s250. lst & last. Carpet 893-1351 · fill..ce w /orange epots. Male Prk. 775-<ri29, 631-1098 768-4234; 493-0987 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• neutered. 646-6707 3 B r l ~ Ba c 0 n d 0 • NB strt prof gentleman C 0 M MER C E lalH11 T s blk •. ht t Ill h be 38 B Oppot"fmfty 5005 LOS : m ex w ca Wood aide Village wh s r aut1 rM2 Fa PLAZA ••••••••••••••••••••••• vie RanchoSanJoaqu!n tl540 /mo. Wtr &c gaa incl ome w /emp o. I • Irvine. 956-1897 545-7975al\3. over 30. S350 ulil loci M A K E S FOR SALi 760-0802 R.E. OFFICE on Balboa !Jenotteh 5350 r.... JltO M E w p 0 R T Island. Extensive rental ...................... . ••••·~•••••••••••••••••MD seeks pror. M/F who c llente le. Best offer . Security a~l • lbdrm & haa house to shr, North BEACH 714 /67~·3331 2bdrm, util pd, adults, Lag ., CdM o r N .B. AFFORDABLE ...;...:.::..:...::......:.~----~! J!~_s. From $375. 6"4·038l eves/wkend.8. MARK ET · 3 Apta. R.E. ....... s~ Otflce.on lake & ekl lift 3M I /F 1-__ .. ed .. 75 to lJ60 c.. Ft. San Bernardino Mtne. Children It ...... welcome. a e ema ... n.,,,.. to .. ..,. L D ~-h ~ B A · * J--tt .. ~•....__;,a-• • '325,000 o w own Larae 2 Br. 1~ Ba. a are .. r . pt. 1n --..........,,.~ • ~ IS'7 44111 FIRST LADY Escort. Models P•rty D.-cen. • 972 .. 1345 * MC & VtsA Accepted -· Condo. Real aharp.15~. Newport Beach area. Uttltlet1Mbt•i4 (71,) • · 754.0225 Wkdya. S58-J060 _t7_t-~0345 __ . _____ , * A4fec-t to Airport Mort~ps. Trwt Mortt111a. Trwt I ...:.:Ml::.:..:5:...:lt:_W;..:..:::mts=·----1Fern rm ma~ wanted to Ir lt1 .... _, .. ., Dticli IOU Dff41 503 _. ___ , •• ~ ti••• 1hr w /aame 1\raf1bt * Acee.a to J -....ia-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,.---• -f CM' B • --r"" orUwfw Sikel ltOO pre er /N area twp. 5·1·;:w··i·;ro· ~~°"~~~~0011 dy•. 833-8813 VII 1 ~CirE M /F 1hr 2 br apt, F.V., A•'°'"' ARIA ~ SZOO + \\ uti11. ~2801 F u r n t 1 h e d o r New au bdrm hlxury San. or al\. 9:10pm unfurnl•'-d Exec\lllve adult apt.I In 14 plans Fem. a+ lllrbeach dpl.Jt, Sutt. In lnlne, waltinft from 9440. 2 bdrm from .. 62.50 + '4 utu.. JUHL dlaLa.nc:. lo Alf'JIC)Jt. A '500 + poob, i.n.n11. .-: Hnlua avail. 2012 waterfala • ..-1 Ou 1..:..1'2...;._·8803 _______ , lllehelaon, Sult • 212, for cooldnc fl llnt.ID1 r •mah r oo ID mat a i:...:.:'71:;.:f.;....;7...;;D.;;.·..;.cmt_~------pekt. From S. IMeto .. Fr'flJ drift Nortb on wanted to anare 2 t?•StmT,C.M. Bea eh to McFa,Hen bdrm.a, 2 ba Woodbridle 2 r~om office 1ulte. tlMll wm on Jllc:P'edcMe Ila lt.M. GIOlllo Back)'d.. OreaL INlftlntm Oreat ofow % ~al• 2nd Trust Deeds Low cost equity loans avail. $20.000 to $150 ,000. 18 yr. loan._ Assumable. Owner occupied. BANIEIS NAT'l JllTUGE CO. (714 ) 731·5844 An eublltbed O.C Mor1pp 81.nkin• ComPan.J Use .,,,.. 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 call In at your convenience during offtce hours and get the responses to your ad . this service is only $7 .so week. For more Informa- tion and to place your ad • ca II 642-5678. Babys itter needed l 4 eves a week Your home Call 642-2864. Babys itter/Nann y Competent woman lo ca r e for newbo rn Approx 10-tShrs /wk Xlnt salary67J.8423 __ BA 8 YS I TTER. Lite hskpg, 5 yr old girl. 38 hrs week, Refs req. Npt Bch . 644..8071 eve aft 6 & wknds Babysitter Tues & Thurs. my home, NB Ref Req. 644-T177 Bab ys itter , Ille hskeeping. Wk days 7 30 am to 6 pm. Newport home . Mr H ood 64-4-6141 Banking HEW ACCOUNTS Newport Beach S&L has o pening for New Accounts Counselor New Accts., IRA/Keogh, collecllons. & NOW Accls . exper. req 'd Salary commensurate with expe r Full msurance benefits & paid career apparel Please call: Ms. Denny Parisia 714·645-~ HEWPOttT IALI0.4 SAVIHGS & LOAN E.O.E. BANKING REGIONAL TELLER An exciting opportunity is available with a leading savings & loan We 'r e s eeking an experienced Teller to travel to branches in the Orange County area. providing extr a coverage when offices are short-staffed. If selected. you will be bas ed in the office nearesrt you. and you'll receive mileage reimbursement. top salary and outstanding benefits including paid career apparel, profit s haring and paid medical /dental coverage. Please apply at our Newport Beach office on TiruRSDA Y, May 14, from 9:30AM to 3 30PM. • FIOanY FEDERAL Sa vlngs & Loan Assn. 1515 Weslcliff Drive Newport Beach EOE BANKING TELLER Part Time The Lake Forest office or a growing savings and loan Is seeking a Teller to provide extra coverage during peak savings hours. Some Salu~day work will be required. We offer an excellent salary flus paid career appare , free parking and a beautiful work environment. Please apply during savings hours at: FIDELITY FEDERAL SaYi19...t Lo.AMA. 25431 Trabuco Road Lake Forest An Equal Oppty Employer Bar maid, P /T over ~yrt . Apply in person, Center Pub 1B6Sl Suite G, Gothard St. H.B. ..,......,.ts-.-. P /t lme, F'or 'Pina Parlour. M ~>at l y evenings, must t;e over 21. We will train if you have sood rererence1. 1164·1704 al\3pm. IATHAIDE p tr. Mlam. Mon· Fri. Newport Vllla, 642·5881. Beautlc la n 1 & Manlc:url1t1 w llh cllent•l e , be aell employed, pick your own boun. fl1nt claat aalon. 55'7·2ZM. Beaut1 Aailt oeeded for bua1 Bcb ba.lr ealon. ll~l~·~~---­ Trade your old atwf for nu~ 1oodlea with a to Suwlnd Vlllue. pool , u uu, Jae. bid~. (714)-.ua 151>_,M,8'\·l• .... ........._ ITM'nlO L-..=.;.------~------•.J Claullled ad. M2-5878 -. . -. -...----- -~- ... CARRY •FOX AGENCY NEYER A FEE Appraiser Gro wing co nreds t>Jtper 'd. real estate 11ppra1ser for s gl family dwellings, non tracts & office bldgs. Bank. S&L or mortgage bkgrnd . req 'd . Co off.ers company car & s tarling s alary lo $1.600. Call c~ 972.9955 161G E 4th St , S A Proof Qperoton Beaut bf'Ok seeks 2 exper 'd pr oof operators to JOLn their growing staff Work 10 ISAM to 7 l5PM Co offers excel. benes & starting salary to $850 Call Carry 972·9955 1616 E 4th St . S A Installment Loan Officer llap1dly expanding bank seeks Spanish speaking loan ofcr with l11e exper OK. Work with tnslallmenl loans business devolopmt. & hte comm 'I loans Co o ffers gd benes . s tart ing sa lary to St.400 CallG Corry 972-9955 1616 e 4th St .. S.J\ Operatiotts Ofcrs. Have 2 pos 1t1ons open with different banks for exper operations omcers or very heu vy asst ops bkgrnd. l'o offers exrel. ht>nes & starling s alary lo StllK Call Coll 972-9955 1616 E 4th St . S A , Teller P /Time Beuul S&L seek!> exper'd teller for part time work 20·25 hrs per wk Starting salar~ to SS 00 hr Call: Corry 972-9955 1616 £' 4th St . S I\ AccounHng Clerk Trainee Eap1dly expanding s&L seeks md1v "'1th 6 moi. cleri cal e xper & moderate typing to JOIO 11 ·s friendly stuff Co offers excel benes & starting salar} to S855 Call . Corry 972-9955 1616 E 4th St.. S.A Loon Senice TrainHs Growing co seeks -I 1nd1v1duals lo tram in their Loan Sen Dept Lots of 'anety for detail minded ind" with typing & gd phone \'01ce Co offers ext el benes & starting salary to $800 Call · Carry 972·9955 1616 E. 4th St , S A. lranch Manager B eaut S &L with $19,000,000 branch & !I employees. seeks expd Branch Mgr with some business deve'mt to JOIO their growing staff Co. offers excel!. benes & a starling salary to Sl.700 Call Carry 972-9955 1616 E 4th St.. S A Secretary Key pos. for sec·y. w1lh nice appe ar. & gd typina in beaut. new corporatt> ofcs. of s&L Ability to work i n rasl paced , r apidly changing environment with R.E. developers & mjr contractors Co provides excel. benes, advancement potent. & s t arting s alar y lo Sl,250 Call ; Carry 972-9955 1616 E. 4th St .. S./\. Lo. Processor Growing co seek s l ndl v . with loan processing bkgmd. to join Its friendly staff. This co. orrers excel benes & starting salary toSl,219. Call : Ctny 972-HSS 1616 £. 4th St., S.A. Snf:Mp Officen Beaut. S&L seek lndlvlduale wltb prev. bank or S&L bkrrnd. to Join their friendly ataff Thest! companle1 offer exct!I . benes . & adv11ncemt!nt potent. Call : CSTJ 972·9'51 1616 £. 4th St., S A ALL JOBS Jl'I EE Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 .._ ~.!~ ..... ?!.~ ...•. ~~ ..... !!.~.~,---------..... ~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ Qerical Yronl Uffi~/Publilben Hetp W~ 71 H .. , .. ... J. . ., •• •• Booklleepet, ~retarial CASHml F IC, ainele mlry, "rr p tr. appty TIM Ea.rl'1 Permanent po11Uon, Plumbln1. 1aaf Newport exper req. Typwrlter, 10 Ave, C.W. (7H}to-128t. key by toueb. If COOIC Aaa't wanted for loc•I ••••••••.-•-••••••••••• ••• .Immediate openina. pub. Co. Typing a mutt. HAllSTYUST . !~ ..... ?!!! ~'t.~.'!'!.~ ..... ?!.~~ ~'r.!~ ..... !!\~~ 1~!~b:rrth~~t. A ~~c,e:ej: 951-8522. Lt& .. Ion, followinl not penon: Jolly Ro1er, Gaa Altendant.a, exper. nee SM-ZZJ.6. MATaW. HMa.9ef& Jmmed. openlo1 for parta clerk. rubber belie producta, m~t paaa co pby1lcal ltlchadlne ~aclt X ray Tak1n1 appUcaUooa btwn 8 & lOAM only. Stratonex, 17671 Arm.strong Ave .. Irv. EOE. A Kendavia Ind., Co. PAIT,... Summer dollan • fun. Pacific Caatlnii la 1ntervlcwln1 now for Hi&h Scboollsh 1oo111nc people for major motion picture. a1ao clean cut male /female 21·30 wtth aood smile f or commercial audition. Dependabi l ity • trans portation a must I 558·8608 for appt. l~S ·~·· Ad 'f : Typioa 1ki requir~. qualified call 151-1042. CASHIER ROUSEWARESALES 100. ... F/C Apply In penoo: Crown Jl'trm located ln Newport Hardware, JlC11 E. Cout Center lootins for up'd Hwy, CdM 2300 Harbor Blvd, Cotta f /time. Harbor Vltw Mcu. Shell, ~ San Joaquin Ros pi ta I C•ll Robin 752-Gll • F /C bkkpr. Salary neaoUable. Call Marilyn CLIRICAL & for an appointment TILIPHOMIOPB.. "4·7520. Immediate openln1t1 with natlonaJ maU order 1001Ck98.f/C company In Irvine. Day, S1tlary commensurate n i&bt shills Good with abihly Newport salary. benefits fr bonus. • Beach. Call bet. 10.m & Call now. 545-3232. noon, Mon & Tues.,--------- 851-l.602. CLalCAL P /T , Wed \bru Sun. looldll1p.r Private club, CdM. for South Santa Ana 644-9530. Mfg. Co. Must· be fuU --------- chuae Call 547.7425 for 1--------• Interview App. IOOKKHPHS Newport Beach real estate development company with projects In So. California and Florida needs exprd. rull charge bookkeeper lo handle all phases of project accounting Salary open Call 546·11316 for interview appt. IOOKIEEPING -4/0ll' ACCOUHTIHG To assist in developing the P&L. Work under m inimum supervision. Required to use independent judgement. May assign to lpwer level c lerks . Xlnt company benefits Call Millie after 9AM &U-5800. IOOICKHPY Clerical WHIHYOU,....IC T~Y THMICB.1.Y CLIUS ltlCIPTIOHISTS TYPtSTS SICUTilJIS WOllD PROCESSORS DATA&ITRY We are not an employment agency. We pay you to wortc when & where you like. If interested. call or come by. 2102 Business Center Dr .. #208 , Irvine. 833·1«1 or 27957 Cabot Rd., Laguna Niguel, 831-0542 or 16152 Beach Blvd ., #230E, Huntin1ton Beach. Real Estate Investment E.0 .E. M/F/H Co. with multiple ~~~~~~~~~ partnership entities _________ 1 needs fu l l c harge bookkeeper to work in CLEll;ICAL . all aspects of accounting Our expandtnf busmess & quarterly financial has . severa imm.ed reporting. Please send ope!'lings. The lollowmg resume to PO BOX 3050! pos1t1ons are avail. NB CA9-= MA l L CLERK · . . _.,., -CLERICAL, typin 3CHO •CAI DRIVERS• Checker Cab 77().0222 CALL MONDAY MAY 11 ONLY ' Wish lo lrain sha rp homemaker to interview , hire & supervise Toy Dem onst rat ors put-timeJuly·Dec. Xlnl in -home inco m e . Former leaching, business or party plan background helpful. Call Arlene Wilson after lpm Mon . May 11 only ' (714 )557·3000. TOYS&GIF'TS HOUSE OF LLOYD'S CAR WASH WPM. mailing. filing, genera I office duties. CLERK TYPIST, typing 40-45 WPM. aeneral oHice duties. CAS HIER . typing 30-40WPM. 10 key by touch, & detail minded. BILLING CLERK . typing 30·40 WPM. general oHice duties. Office exper helpful. Good company benerits. Hrs. 8AM-4:15PM. Call for an interview appt. 833-8450. COMERClAL BANKERS LIFE 1401 Dove St . Ste 550 Newport Beach, Ca E.O.F. M/F/H Caabiers wanted . Clerk mature. Dry Anaheim & Orange Call clean~rs. 3dys pr wk. 644·«60 ask for Nan~y or 64&7621 Ann CASHIERS UTUTEM MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shifts CLEltK TYPIST Energetic person wtlh good typing needed for busy managing general agency . No exp . necessary, but ability to learn a must. Attractive salary & aJl company benerits. Call Linda al 549.8161. NEVER A FEE T,.... Beaut. FaahJon Island olc IHka brlte, bubbly persoo who would like to learn clerical duties. Ute typlne only. Salary $625 to atart. Call: IJhlJ ..... 972·H H 1616 E. 4th St .• S.A. lec.,.._.t Brite. sharp person for a variety of duties. You won't be bored in lhese prelly surroundings. Some typing. Salary lo $800.Call: .... JohlllCMI • 972-9'55 1616 E. 4th St .. S.A. Secretory, Ho 511 2 yrs. background fine for this variety pos. wilh Npt. Bc h. co. Benefits are excell., gd. advancement polenl. Salary to Sl,200. Call . Rita JoMICMl 972·HS5 1616 E. 4th St .. S.A. Enc. Sec...+ory lntern'I. co. seek s professional secretary with ed. skills. Pos. is in their Npt Bch . corporate ore. 5 star benersts & salary to Sl,300. Call Rita Joliason 972·9955 1616 E 4th St.. SA. Receotlonl1t This beaul waterfront co. is seeking self assured , ni ce appearing ind1v. with gd. lyping. Pleasant personality for this warm. friendl y atmosphere. Co . offers excel. benes. & startin& salary to SI .000. Call: Rita Johft50ft 972-'955 1616 E 4th St .. S.A. MmtOCJ9rT..-... 90 days to mgmt. for ind!v. with secretarial or gen. ofc. bkgrnd. & an eye towards the future Train into top pos. in this rapidly expand 'g co. which oHers gd. benefts. & starling salar y to Sl.100. Call: Rita Johft'°" '72·'955 1616 E. 4th St . S.A. Cook-Slloft 0Ntt- Nl1bt1. Apply: Meu Lane•~. 1703 Superior, Costa meaa, see Sam or Betty. COOK-am. retirement realdenct! in Laa. Bch. bu openinl for mature all-around cook. 40 hn /flex. hrs work wk. Mn. Collins 494-94.58 Cpunter Help-mature, for dry cleaninc plant. Top wases . East.bluff Cleanen 2547 Eastbluff Dr. Npt Bcb. 644-0832 Counter help Sandwich shop P rr dys, Anthony's Dell. 5.56-0670 OOUMl'a HB.r F /t, P /t, days. apply 10 person. 7U E . Balboa Blvd. Counter person for Party Rental store. P tr Must work Sat. Apply 2025 Newport Blvd. C.M. DBJVERY Person that knows Orange County, must have own car. 494-5294 Delivery & Warehouse person for Party rental store. F /or P ff Apply 2025 Newport Blvd. C.M. DEMOHSTRA TOttS PART TIME Fri & Sat. Work in your area. Car nee. $4hr. 541·C1118 DEHTALASST RDA. x ·ray license F /T Nonsmoker preferred. Salary open Good benefits. 847-256 9 DIHTALASST Newport Beach office. I Exper. oec . Cal l i ~5680. Dental C0tn ...... Systet.I cus10MSt sav. REP. Safeguard /Dental Practice Sytems. West Coasts U computer billing sytem. is seeking a qualified person to work in our internal customer service dept Must have Dental Admin . exp .. ~ood verbal skills, & ability to work with people Please call Linda DeVorkin or Denise Smith at (714)957-1121. Safeauard Dental Practice Systems. 2283 Fa irview Rd. C M 9216216. Dental Hygienist for busy omce near So. Coast Plaza. 545-4553 Dental Assistant, F tr or P /T Pleasant" established Costa Mesa office. X-ray lie. & exp req 63 \.142.0 Dental Receptionist Exp. nee. 4dy wk. Sl.200 C.M. 645-7580 odlGH ENGIUER we promote t ol~~~~~~~~~!I management & supervision from within. CL011*STIME Secr.tory, Ho SH Well-known intrn'l corp. needs organiied. pleasant in div Variety of positions. Will handle matters s u ch as k eeping records of company's jet whereabouts. etc. Their benes are excel. & salary will start to Sl.300. Call: RltaJollncMI 972.9955 1616 E. 4th St .. S.A. Mfg. co. in Mission Viejo area needs exper. In elect rical connectors. hermeti c seals. transducer design, components mat~rials & WANT A CAREER? Now hiring assistant CostaMesa manager t r ain ees, UlDelMar minimum 6/mo exp. 631-9421 Call 642-1231. Laguna Beach COMM ERClALS, films, 494-9233 models, extras SCAS needs new fa ces . Huntington Beach 957-0282 ~~~e:~·~Sl~lt~S~~~ COMPANION for elderly :;: lady, June 5 to J une 21. ---------1 XlnL cond. SaJary neg. Possible full-part Ume CASHB offered. 64().'33'7 with major stock broker near O.C. Airport . ____ C_OOIC ____ _ £aper. prerd. Hours. 8 to 4 Tvpe 50wpm. Call: For retirement hotel. l Judy Eckert, 54().8121 day, Mon. 2nd shift. Newport Villa. 642-5861. Sec...+ory Gd. skills nee for consulting area 10 Npt . Bch o f c . lnteresung pos. with this well known co. They offer excel. benes & salary lo Sl,350. Call: .... Joe. .. 972-9955 1618 E. 4th St . S.A. methods. - Duties include design, d r afting, materials testing & R&D projects. Me ch ani cal Enalneering degree pref 'd . QuallC1ed candidates send resume to: Mrs. Jans. 23891 Via FabrlcanteL Suite 603, Ml11lon VieJO, Ca. 92691 Donut shop. Early AM shift, no exper nee ReuptloN1t TroiMe Apply . Dippity Donuta, Irvine based co. seeks 1854 Newport Blvd. C.M. nice friendly person Do.....,., look with Spanish speaking •iat ability. Lite typin& & ~ Daily Pl a little ofc. bkgrnd. in Newport Beach seeks e• • • • • ~ ~~a!af:~Y b!re:SO:. ~~~:. ~& f:~i::::. • • Call. 64~5313 • Classified Advettisilg • R:;t;t;,':" a-c ..... :•••r/ •Supervisor for Classified Del>artment. e Win reno. • Experience necessary. Excellent company . 1616 E. 4th St., S.A. Needed by Laguna Hills •beneflts. Salary commensurate with . Industrial control experience. For appointment for interview,. T,..._ Secretory m an u fact u re r . e call 642·4321. ext 277 No exper. needed at Fulltlme. Will train . • e all. Jusl so long as you 855-1353. have moderate : General Assiplnt : !!t:.~~t~· of~~ cf~~ Muai'~SJ.'= parlor • Secretary tD e growth. Have their 00nec.1~ .. be1811acb. No exp. very own spa. Excel. .. , ... • Executive Offtca • ~!~~·· saaary s160. PUCUU e 1mmedlate opcnln& for verutJle lndMduaJ. • lttta J...... General' office work . • Muat be capable of handlin1 faat-paced, • 971•9915 some typing req. for • varied and lnteresUnt duties for newspapel'. p r o m o t i o n a I uecu~ve &i peraonnel adminiatrator. Call:. 1SlS E. 4th St .. S.A. opportunities . No • 842...ml. Eit. 271 for appt. uperlence req. Ht1h e e Chtric.. 1chool rradu.at.e. ea.ta •.. Classified Outside ~ • Beaut. Fashion Island Mesa area, wtll be Hiils Rd., CdM. 944-5064 •IMllAL OMCI E•P· helpful, 1d. \ypin1 abllliy, protlclency w JlllUl'H, lO·ktY by toucti. Xlnt Co. benefita. lnformal olc. C.M. Call MUUe afUAM, ~5800 •IHHAL OfflCI Must type, 11.am-•pm. Mon-Fri. Call Chuck (714)S7UUO. General ofllce. Accounts receivable, telephone, typing for Newport Beach firm. Please call Lu Daley at 642-6800 for interview. WAIDCL8Jl Ralelah Hllla H<Mpltal ln NewpGrt> Beach ha. an immed. openln1 for a Ward Clerk. P\111 Ume poa., 3-11 evenin1 ahifl. Acute care bolpt exper. req 'd . Por Interview. contact : Ph y lli s Warner, 714·645·5707 EOEM /F' MICHAHIC MOPIO Full or Part· Time Newport. Beach 7146'U870 Part Tne C 0•11"'9 Y..tll C-"-"t Adult.a with out.standlng HOST ,t40STISS attnelive penonalltles Fu 11 & pa rt l l me MnYP Al. to spend 15 hrs per wMk available. Apply in '°""' counseling youth ages person 3·5PM. Jolly Bac k office assistant. 10·15. Evenlncs & Roger, 400 So. Coast fulltlme , for busy WetkendsAvatlable $75 Hwy. Laauna Beach orthopedic practice 1n P e r w k . c 8 1 1 ___ .....;;.. _____ , New port Be a c h . 2:30-5.30pm. Mon thru IECEPTIONISt Crowin& S.A. complny h • s 0 p 0 n i n • c:p r r e ce,.ptlonlat /ty pJ•l w t pleaunt phXe personality Typ ng ski lls o f SSwp ResponslbiUtles inchide typing ot orders . invoice•. quotations. correspondence etc Excellent starting salary w /perl odlc revie ws. For personal interview contact Cy Simpson at558-2&03 _ Hotel D>'namic individual Fri 642.4321 ext 343 ---------1 HKiHTAUDITOI w1lh experience to AskforLorl GENERALOFFICE h g f Immed. openln1 for as1ume c ar e o 03:Cont RECEPTIONIST Nights. Between 25 & 35 years of a•e. ~ hour. CaU bet 8pm & 9pm, Wed .·Sal 67S·G090 (Bonnie) Receptionist/l'yplat for ni~ht auditor at the Surf par am edic al lea m professional olficea. •. d H,.. I L g B h Rewardln& opportunity D Piiot M j ti "' an ..,,.e , a . c .. i h wth •· ....... W St ...... l uat en oy mee ng lo work Thurs. thru w t career gro .,. o>'7Y • ay r,..., HCEPT/CLERK publlc,havegoodtyplng Mon. nltes .. l1PM·7AM . attra ctive benefit CostaMesa,Ca skill & front office Excell.salary.Applyto: pa c kage Salary Equal Opporl appearance. Hrs . Charla4!r7·1.896 commensurate with Employer 8:30·4:30. Call btwn back&round.Plea.secall iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 No o n & 3 . Sa I a r y 646-5995 for appt. commens urate with HOUSECLE.<NERS experience. $700 range. To $5/br, car. ~5123 957-0701. Medical Ass't, H.B. Front It back omce. Exper. helpful. 847-6004 PAIT TIME Jacoby ii Meyers Busy law Tinn is seekmg a p rr receptionlSt /clerk in our Costa Mesa office We are interested in GENERAL OFFICE Looking for a very interesting part time job in pleasant office? Clerical. for mature person. Location P.C.H., Npt. Bch. Exper. a must. Accurate typing. no shorthand. 20 hr. week includes Sat & Sun. Call : 646-7431 Housekeeper. live-in. Lovely home, Bch area. Pvt bdrm , some cooking, salary neg. Call Kathy 54&-8811 ; 759'0177 Medical CilEHYAL OfflCE Gr owing electronics ti rm needs outgoing person to assume secretarial duties 3 dys pr wk, Mon-Wed, 8-5. No shorthand nee but app1tude w/flgures a must. Congenial omce 1n Huntingto n Beach Please contact Joanie for a ppl. al 894· 7257 persons with previous experience who have good or ganizational skills, likes to deal with the public. works efficiently & can work approximately 20/hrs week For app'l please call· (714 )!179 1818 GENERAL omcE Growing electronics firms needs outgoing person to assume secretarial duties 3 days pr wk, Mon·Wed, 8·5. No shorthand nee . but apptilude w /figures a must. Congenial office in Huntington Beach. Please conlacl Joanie for a ppt. al 894· 7257. Salary negotiable GENERALOFFICE Typing. phones •and mailing. Part time, 9 to L2 : 30, 5 days. R. E Office in Newport Beach. Larry Strong. 644-9513 General The lalboo lay cw, Is ROW hl"'-9: Seock lcr Cooks Fast food ex per. Summer only Hod/Hostes1 P (rime. Thur. Fri. Sat. Sun Some hotel host I hostessing exp. pref'd. Cocktall Wait..-fWo/Jtress Exp'd. 4-5 nites per wk .. S-12Prt1 Please call for appt. 645 -7358. Mon Fri , 9:30-5PM General Office HElP!! We are in need of a creative gen. ofc. clerk for a l ong term temporary assignment. Must be comfortable wilh numbers, gd. phone manner. professional attitude impt. Call : lVICKI HESTON I &Auoclates 540-0400 Specializing In Temporary Clerical Personnel GEHEllAL Housekeeper /Companion Live in or out. 83J.2iQ. IHSUR.A.HCE SALES PERSOHS Outstandrog opportumt1es exp'd or inexp 'd . Salary +commissions. Phone Bob Smith 953-3153 INTER IOR DESIGN SALES Flex. hrs . No exp nee. Will train. 499-1461 IMVOICECLEU Wanted for lge Marine Hardware Store good benefits. 1mmed . opening. Call 645· 1711 JANITORIAL Couple needed for a f /l empl oyment Must speak English. Call 644·0510 or apply in person al Newport Dunes 1131 Backbay Dr N.B. 8·4:30PM Jewelry st.ore in So. Coast Plaia needs bright person for office duties. 540·9066 LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION position Must have all-round exper. Top pay & benefits. Please call (714) 768·4751 from 9AM·3PM. CorporateP~I or S.Cretary with heavy corp. background t.o manage corp dept. Small law office. ai'lJ(>rt area. NB Call Carolyn833-9983 M.L~S.C2retary i ·a ln1mum yrs c v1 litigation. Salary open. Good benefits. Xlnt s k il l s r eq 'd . No shorthand. 752-2516 LEGAL SECY · SENIORPTMR Challenging position for top secy w /Xlnt skills. Deluxe ofca OC airport area. Gd ben. Sal. Commens urate w/exp. Contact Cindy, 752-7551 u9uoa cLED Exp d F /T & P /T HilJgren Uquor l!l50 E. 17th St. CM MACHINE SHOP lmmed. opening, machine operator trainee. All girl dept. CM plant. Excel. co. benefits. Deltronic, MS-0413 OFFICE Electro•lc1 fl"" I• Co1ta Meta Helli peno• wtHt geMrol office & ll91tt boollll ..... exper., I~~~~~~~ l•cl•dl•CJ accoHh pG'f9ble & ecco.h recefHWe.,..,.., .. MAIDSIXP'D Apply to Angie at San Clemente Inn. 125 Esplandian. posltlo• req•lru ,.. ..... ,.,...c. 1-------1 Valor BKli uelct 54CM2'4 Guards HOWH•ING Armed & Unarmed Openings In Costa Mesa, Irvine, El Toro. .,..00 Per hr fr up •Unlforma·cleanlng free •Mature persona welcome •Semi-retired OK. MACHINE SHOP lmmed. opening for expe'r 'd Centerless Grinder. CM plant. Excel. co ben efits . Deltronic, 545-CM13 Malnt. penona needed ror Steam cleanina Co . Od pay. euy to learn. Foreman pot. avail. Call Chris 84M0'1'11 Fashion Island MD. back office , P /T & vacation coverage. Exp EKG, drawing blood & inject 644-0381. MESSEHCilER 6 m ornings a week. Mon : 5:30AM to BAM. Tues. thru Sal: 6:30AM to 9AM . Excell. driving rec req 'd Apply Pennysaver. 1660 Placentia Ave . CM MGR gift st.ore Lido Viii Req ; powerful. sell-motivate d in , selling, a self-starter, take chg .. fast working. Sal. open 673-4655 MHCilMT POSmOH Fabric chain. C.M Anaheim . Xlnl opp Geri. 646-4060. ----- MOORS Magazine publsiher seeks fresh faces for fashion layouts & adverttsing. Trim-clear skm. exp not nee Must be 5'6 & up SS8-86QJ for app't NURSING LYN . 11·7pm. 3days per week. P vt 41 bed Conval. Hosp. S.A Hts S.A 549·3001 OFFICE SHVICES ASSISTANT Health care co. in Irvine has an 1mmed. opening for an individual to join our OfCice Services Staff. 'Duties include sorting & delivering mail & xeroxing. Must be able to lift 85 lbs. & have a Calif. Driver's l ie For more informalion & interview. contact : Terry Jones. 714·641-161.6, EOE M /F PAIHTERS Only qualified need apply. Minimum 5 yrs exp in aU phases. Ref's required, perm anent position. Call after 6PM 957-1690 PART -TIME housewives. make those xtra hrs profitable. Sales reps needed. For Nwpt Snack Co Call today 673-7320 PAITTIME Earn full time pay in your s pare time' 1250·$400/wk is yours, guaranteed as a consultant for Import Co. Desire for bigSS' Call Debbie 875-5299 SELL idle items with a Daily Pilot Classified Ad . Use'the Daily Pilot "Fast Result" service directory Your service 1s our specialty Call 642-5678 ext. 322 IEC B"TIOHIST Required for growing. international ('Ompa11y -Minimum 3 years PART Time stock clerk exper .. word processing. for marine hardware typing & good telephone store. Call . Balboa skills. Neat & organized Manne. 549-9671. EOE and not afraid or hard M/F /H work Good growth -potential. benefits. salar) Contact Mr. Green, 644 9800. ,. YROU. CLE:Rk 2·3 days per week llrs 9 S . Appl y : 1660 Placentia Ave., C M PEHSIOH ADMIH. RECSrrlOHIST With or withoul typing needed Top pay Temporary & ru11 time. Call Tod ~erv1ces at 979-8900 Young, dynamic pension co.. looking for ex per retirement pl a n administr ator. with strong trust acctng RECEf'TIOHIST background. Position WEB<ENDS immediately avail . Coldwell Banker f(eal smokers need not apply Est a l e Servi cc s • 857 .1204 , Newport Beach office. . Switchboard experience I person offi ce, gd on helpful. but will train phones & w/people 2 Call Claire Johnson. days wk & cover for 644-9060weekdays 9to5 vacations. Dependable ------- & flex Hrs 9·5pm RCPT /SECRETARY 646·7417 between 10·4pm. Busy offi ce with friendly ---atmosphere needs sharp PERSONNEL reliable recepl1onist. Professional person lhat Varied duties include ha s 1n1 l1al1 ve. answering pho nes. flex1b1l1ty . gd gr ee ting v1 s 1tors. handwriting & figure accurate light typinJC aptitude This 1 ~ a filing and gene ral career pos 1n a one administrative task:. If person of c II v y you have a good front telephones & pubisc office appearance with a contact Personnel exp. pleasant personality and very helpful. Sa lary phone voice, we have a DOE 540.6236 ask for good position· with Janice competitive salary and excel. benehls Call PESTICIDE SPRAV OPERATOR·Exper w /pest c ontrol applicator lie. Top pay & benefits. Please call (714) 768"47519AM 3PM PIOOUCTIOH TIAJHH Rubber hose products. mWlt pass co. physical including back X-ray Taking applications btwn 8 & lOAM only. Stratoflex. 17671 Ar mstrong Ave .. Irv. EOE. A Kendavis Ind., Co. Linda Foste r al 714 1540 0500 for interview appt REHTALAGEHT for Laguna's leading R E office Full time Lie. req. 497.5411 ask for Ruth RESTAUtlAHT Sandwich Maker hfs 7A M-3PM Mon .. Fr1. 646-8883, call anytime Restaurant WAITRESSlS E xp 'd waitres s es Male /Fem. busboys, cooks. & cooks helpers IE AGENT /LJc'd for new Continental to work company Restaurant 10 N .B. generated Listing leads. 673-3233 Eaxnlngs to $4000/mo. ----~- CaU Jack Eill from 8 AM Restwwt to l2P M. 714 /9&t·9093 AnlstCMt Manootr Receptionist-Newport Jmmed opening. liood Center law firm needs pay & benefits Send someone w/lite typing. resume to Mr. John French. P 0 Box 391. Ca11Sheila64().1560 Huntington Beach. Ca ltEC Ef'T /TYPIST Newport Beach law firm . office. Salary commensurate with ability. 644-6400. RECEPTIONIST GENERAL OFFICE Good on phones. some t ypi ng & light bookkeeping. Fulltime, Mon.-Fri. Salary open. 833-9505 r. 92648 RESTAUUHT Need Bus Person & Cook. Apply in person. Mon· Fri. 3-5pm at Stem Wheeler. Reuben E. Lee. l.51 E. Pacific Coast Hwy. Newport Beach. RESTAURANT Fff. Pff sandwich man & counter help. Plata de Cafe. Gary's Deli, 752·5401 CARL'S JR. JIELPS MAKE ENDS MEET!! S I o t b di R 1 E l co. need• a brl1ht movln1 to Irvine aoon. •o!v~~g:~'en~ a~co:n~a !nd e:uto~:~v=.· pe~on for their buay Farmer In1uraoce BEKINS • t in• t t d ri Onl Group, 5'CM!OO • accouin s. Msu1st have at least 2 yeara 11vtea mfen be 1· r dy E.O.E. PROTECTION MAMICUltST Hn 9..f. T\les.-Sat. Newporter Inn Hair De1l1na. N.8. SU-2580. CarfsJr. would like to hdp you make ends meet We have iil\nl('diate I ULI or PAAT TIME employment opportunities avalleble • eitper ence. a ary plus commlaaloo. Mull. e o c · 0 · SERVICES have car, mileage paid. Excellent compan)' at,ty,...,-40 needed. e benefits. For appointment ror interview. call• Ellce . bene1. Salary FILI CLlll( 2801 W. Ball Rd MASTER Plu, Maller . •~. ex:t. 211. • SIOO. Call: Lar1t l~ aaency Anaheim, Ca. a .aa HOW'. M..t b.ave S COUNTER HELP ASSl•TANT MANAGER U. Jab·• 1714J761..qJI ..... g1·-ma.Ur eaorwr., • • baa immediate ooentn1 1.0 I. ,.. -• ..-1'.-t nm.· En~ . • t72·ttll ror fHt eners.Uc me • • ......... Mf' rea b l uep rints • We offer excellent benefits. soper WOf1ung eonditiOM nnd good Pl'Y' • 1&16 E. 4t.h St •• ~A. clerk. Paid company coutruct wooden plu11 Ahh1ft.s are available to you may be able to worid'lour-. thot art' <'OfWt'tllt'tlt C1•11•1 Y.... e bentflta. Can : l.Jnd.a at •UARDS for boata, determine, to your K'hedule. •.Adoltt wHh ouutandta1 aUracH••e 54f.8111 • F'ltll •part Ume. All =~.~':t!*.:. Flndoutf()(you11dwhatCarf'sJr.hastoofftryou! personalltfea who tnJoy WOC'tin& wtth 10.15 . artu. t1mtorau f\am'd.. Pleese apply In pel"IOn to: • year Old youth.a ewnlnt• S.llpm. CaU M2-GZ1 r 0 0 0 p R g P • Ai• !ll or owr, retlrtd plumb rule, level nallt • • at MS between lpm to 5pm. aAtor Lorl. • SERVER, now blrt.\f, ll w~lcome. NoOI*' DK. bolta, plub, Umbers. Carl'• .Jr. A I U I I powe r ••••· p ower • • you 're friend>'· PP y : • •eraa drtlbm Supe.rvlM M -aa. ._._._, 1-a. n--11...a C.-c on 1 c I en t I o a• • Pnit.ctJoo S.~lce, 1211 worker•. Telle ad to --...;,. ;;;"" ,_ ~ ... • D ,.. •. CARRY dependable, •• want :te.~&e=-hra.:~~ ll 1 • r 1 • t s t 1 t e • a30 w. ., Street FOX JOU from IA11l-4PM llon·l'rl l:mplo1m1nt Service 1.,.,1 MMArthur 4779 lrWM aw. Costa M eta, CA .. • AO£ICY wkdy1. Apply ln penon: Ofc. 1n 0..... County. lrulM Im,.. ~A I 0 port•• lt E 1.... • ltooerollf Terr•c• SELL ldle ltema wtlh a DOT Ill. •1·010. Ad -. ua p ... n y mp111yer 4U :IOll -,.. R .. t a u r a n l. 0 u Dally Pilot Ol ... ltled pald foe bi emplofer Fqu"I O,.-.c1lfu1t11y t mpl<Yf ,.,, -:--·~·~·~·._;.:.;_·-·~•_._•~·-·-·--·-·-·~•__,, ___________ -.s.:~RH_M_1_1.c_M_.~--.....-.~A.d~~~~---1::..~~~~~~~~~~~~:::;:=========Tou==tue==G=ot==T .... ::::::='====~==::_ -....... ----.....---· -------------~~--~·-------·--·--··--........................... s .... •2 .. a•a .. ~ ...... ......., Orange Coast DAILY 1PIL(Jf /Monday. May 11. 1981 ' 0 0 Ho.Mc..... L.chc..... Mo•IR9 ftalntilftg/ra,.rincJ ltooflag •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Shampoo• •team dean. D R V WA LL 0 u r Color brit)Wlners wbt ex pe rtise We can crpta 10 min. bi•acb. handle your problem•. Carpentry, ubtnete, roof ExpertlaeKousekffplng WE OOITALL! Moving ? T he Starv1n.i IJO("~ l'Al~Tl''IH: ttu-. QUJ\l,ITY RO<WING repalra. plumblna. Free Suppliesfumilhed We do 1t best! We do It College Student.I Mo' mi: ri•I ur•i··•I ' p,11 k., hout All ty,_. tree est. Hall. Uv.-din. mu 115; '31·2004 '. H t. Call Ani wer Ad PeraonaUu(i. &U·•9?0 c beap\"lt' Ruasell Co haa grown, lrusu1t•d ,1 11" 1111 t''l hi.t· \!1J1u.M<: ~1593() uel&4i..3002'hnl. Landscaplng.644 7062 aarne good nn11•1 l'r"'"l'l , .. 11 ,11111. llAHBORROOt-•tNG ~a.~17A~o~y av1 rm S1.50; c:oucb $10; --------- chr a. Guar. ellm. pet Bectric• ' ' NEEDYOUR llOME 1Tl24 43G l.1rr11H• ~1 "'" I ll\•' Ll'..<l:IH!f, R•AIRS CLEANl':D! LANaiCAPlNG 641 8427 HAL BOA ROOJl'ING CO. T11kt• advantuge of $100 1(1.11 or food give-away n1 .. 11lori. weltomt: fora · 30~~d DALY Pl.OT SBVICI DlllCTOIY DO IT NOW! odor. Crpt repair. 15 yn ••••••••••••••••••••••• u p. Do work myself. ELt:CTRICIAN priced Rera 531·0101 rlabt. free esUnu1lf' on Evelyn, 642·0728 an. 5 Rototllling, clean-ups & ti:w .11C1 I Call a nyt.lme,675-3014 ldeas.Lic.848-&541 AHC MOVING. t:itp..r IN'l I :\I l'\l'\ll'\(, GeneralHousttlearung ----prof, low r..1h•:. f1U•1k l.utttt1, 1•1011111t 11t·,1t A1llFor~ Your Daily Pilot Service Directory Repte9entatlve 642·5'71 .... l 11 WeCareCa-Cleaners la rgeoramaU jobs. •.-• Lie. •3N621 673-~9 Steam clean " uphols. Work auar Truck RE MODELING mount unit. 64.5-3116 Electrical work, reaid. & comm 'I '31·2004 No Steam /No Shampoo Stain s pecialist. rut flon11lca~ dry Free eat. 839-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Formica Countertops CellllMJ, AC09ffc: Custom built & Installed, Carl*ttry MlllOnry Roonna. Plumbin& Drywall· Stucoo Tile & more. J .B. M&-9990 ltr Alls.llMOOB. All t ypes Carpentry, plumbln&. conc r ete. ceramic, muonry, elec One call doetl It ull Work guar Free est 631·4323, 631-1137 ••••• •••••••••••••••••• latest colors & desigrui. ~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~! AcousticCeillngs + Freeest.646-4871 Roofing , plumbing . "'--~ customhandleitturlng ~ _. __ &... ca rpe ntry , palntln", _ .. ,...., Lie 389!M4 S32·5s.49 wa...._......, • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• floors, repair 1remodel The Femlmne Approach C......t /COMreh CLEAN-UPS/LAWN Free est. 968-2056 atl 5 LEIGH ROBERTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Maintenance-Lndscp Hardwood Roon Full services. 548-1484 Foundations. Retaining Free est. 642-9907 Walls . H i l lside ••••••••••••••••••••••• F/C BKKPG SERVJCES R estoration. S ia bi., Gardenin&. landscaping, HARDWOOD FLOORS All Taxes..Costa Mesa Patios, Block & Brick t re e t r im m 1 n g & Cleaned & Wa xed Call 646-1596~9580 Lic'd. rem ova I , major Anytime, 832-4881 S.A. A~alt 642·8387 eves /960-0539 c I ea n · up, r r e e est. HaYlng 752·1349 •• ••• •••••••••••••••• Child c_.. ----•••• •• ••••••••••••••••• [)$eways, parking lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prof. Japanese Gardener Jl•ul, cleanup, concrete rfl>airs. sealcoat1ng. Moms relax! I'll watch Lawn culling, tree removal. Dump truck. S&S Asphalt. 646·4871 your kids dally or trimming , weeding Q~ick serv.642·7638 Lic'd . bHore /after school 548-8375 DUMP JOBS Reliable· References NURSERYMAN l.5 Yr• Catt"ful servkl' ~'>4! CMIO exp. Ul planl 10, dl8'"'"M F'nT t·,t 1011 .l!iK4 li7:1 6743 673-0403 Own trans. 962 0510 ""n & pest rontrol Will Polfttlftg/Jt~ A(, \l'I I IJHt'fo Sandbla1ffnc) Housecleanan ii done thorouahlY Cull after ~ I pm. 962 8675or962 6786. SUNSHINE JlOUSEKEEl'lNG Give your home that spnng clearung look all year·ro und, with quality & dependable wo1·k . Free est1matt', reference f urnished, l1c11n11ed & bonded 952·3034 Mature female d11s1rt-i. h ousekeeping w respons1b11Jtes for pror person Live o ut. 586-5919 Do you want your home t"leaned weekly' Call Jen, 534·Z745 art. 5. ----ROBlN'SCL EANING Ser vice-a thoroughly dean house 540.0857 consult w lyou on ull ••••••••••••••••••••••• I' \l'\'I l'\t l'!l\ll'A"'' yo ur l(»rdt'n needs •ST~VENS PJ\INTIN1: ....•.............•.... IO<'Al. SANDBLASTl!:R I.tr. mi.. l"t'as No JOb too l11i:1small 8407909 Refs Int lritl Fn-e 1h'o11Ntf 'I ("tu r .1t 1w1"1( l'.11111111.,: l'.\l'dlt•llt I K;fl .~~I MaSORry ••••••••••••••••••••••• RR f C K WORK Smull J obs. Newport , Co11ta Mt>sa, Jrv1nt-, rte rs 675·3175 1-'R PLCS built & refaced. brick /stone veneers. 30 yr11 exp.1193 3743 erucK AftTISTRY Pool & spa copings, brick pavings, block & brick walls !JOO. 742 1 IRICK & STONE Tile, Marble& Frplt"~ 673·6650 (2131634 0140 l'lil Neut , quahtv work 832 liQ, ~6 4561 W ALLPAPBllHG l'rof in5lalll'<l. hi roll hung fr~. J\nHWN 1\1J 11468, 642·4300. 211 Im. 111 l 639 1429 N F.W PORT PAINTJNC; Comm indu.'I n•.,1cl frt•e est Low rate., 67J.07J7 t•1ri.t <:las:. 1nl t•\t pc11nt1n~. wall('JJI• 1 rehn1:.tt calunc·li.. d1 !17!1 52!.14 Plast~r /Repair . •............••.••.... Nt'al 11.1ll 111· & h•l((lll ei. F~eHt 893-1439 S• w Ing/ AJteration1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Allera11o n 11 & l>rt-ssmak1n1<. exp'd, r1• 11,, 540 3593, 646 3393 ~11~1·1 ,..,1viw.1 . Sprinklers \II I 'I"' Int t>;,t ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.t .. K.' 1K ~ It 1-. f" ~ ..., f C 0 N S Jo: R V J-; WAT E tt l'l,1,(1 I l'.111 11111 1111 I 'l .10 \I ' 1 \J '\1 ,11 \lo Uf I., .. 1.. , I' • I 1111 l'I \-;I J'Hl !\c; 111111""'· ,11hli111111!> ll.' 1 nlul .. \1•1 hl•11·I. ".tll I 11·1• ,.,. Auto1111.1ll' Your Sprinkler S) i.tern 7111 586 l591 Sl'H INKLt:ltS & SOD Tn•c• rcmo~ul l>IC IT L.in1h1·.i1x>. 64ti 7000 ltAl.Pll'S l'AINTINC I .11\lo I Ill ....... HI'!.' Tile Lit· Int Ext I.ow ral1·' Phambinq J-'ret.· •"'st llt>·t !~:,,a; •••••••••••••••••••••• • I' I I \I I\ I 't; I ti 0 I I 11 rt\'" I I 11 11 It IH t1t1 II f l'Jl,lfl.., .........•..•••••••••.. T ILE INSTALLED All krnds. i:uaranteed, 11·r, J obn. 893 1667 r.-.e Senice •........ ,,~ Univ Pk are_a 552-3951 Small Moving Jobs -,.,..._, GARDEN MAINT ••••••••••••••••••••••• COfttractor yd CI ea n u P Tree Call MIKE 646-139_! Ho111•sittincJ Lic'd day care now thru ••••••••••••••••••••••• trimm ing. 548 870!1 . •tauUng•·DumpJo'·-••••••••••••••••••••••• C us tom Ma sonry & Concrete 100'11 l.tll'J I Ref 's L11· Ins Bonn 645 8512 Jim, 840 170:> Rod . Fi11t• painllni.t b) Hu harrl Sinor l.11 111., IJ ~ n. uf h:.ippy N II t'lL'ltomn' Thank you 631 4'1IO fl' 1 J '" 1111 1•I0'1'H """ l1o;1k do '•ti"" lop ll,11 1•111111111111 ..... .!llJll .............•.....•... '"w IS 1111-. TIM .. : to 111 unt• your trt•e. Call J \lne 11. Costa Mesa Construction·Alllypes 4.8pm "' ""· ~rea. 646·8428 20 yrs exp Free est -----Ask for Randy 641·84Z7 ca,,...ttt-Lie 11334589 645·5973 Yard c lea~ups , tree ---__ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• c l Add't & work . 1rrigat1on & HAULING-student has arpen ry, I tons repair green belt l a r ge truck . Lowest A.!,~ :"round Car pente r. Sm all jobs 2S yrs eitp. lndscp'g,85l·Ol29 rat•, prompt 759_ 1976 r in1sh & Rough Free Lie 309152 '48-Z719 ---· " EsLJohn77~2 ---EXPERTLAWNCARE Thank you.Jo~--CONSTR & REMOD. Ca,,_t Senice Plans L1 c 'd Geor ge Monthly service. Trees HAULING ANO QU ICK ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pilmer &Sons.557-6932 & clea nups M i k e CLEAN UP Free UPHOL& DRAPES 543.2049 ----Estimates. 631 0953 R eputab le coll ege students will housesil any or all summer, May JO.Sept. I, refs 833 1414 -------- MAT U RE Cpl Dependable, non smkrs, no children. Would like to houses1t from 6· 16 to 7 16. Sold home must move, ne w home not ready t117 16 833 1737 MASONRY &TILF. Our specialty We !lolve your problems. 631 2004 Mlftl IHndt .•.••.................. M1n1 blinds & woodi.. window t1nt1n1:. vertit"lcs Phnn(• c~t 549-0536 Mo•in9 Cleaning in your home. Drywal Haady"'• Ho1111eclecNncj T IP-TOP CARPET & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -......••.•••...•....... ~rCare. 960-6266 Dry wal1Spe<"1alljtt HOME IMPROVEMENT Wunt a R EALLY CLEAN I SELL Idle items with a ------Qua I & prod New & Remodeling -Odd jobs HOUSE ? Call Gingham I Daily Pilot Classified Want Ad Help? 642·5678 remod. #389944 532.5549 28 yrs ex per. 979-2265 Girl Free est 645-5123 Ad "MOVIN MAN " 1s careful. courteoui. & 1•heap. Pis t"all 642 1329 l'ulle~l' Stud1•11t 1·x11 d Int t•x, an} .>oli fo1 h·" Alex 8~ I 9J71. 552 0'.!:11 PAPER HANGING 25 yr~ exp 1"11·1· l''' Fast. near 1 t•l1,rl1l1· S8 roll & up (;.I~ 1~1~111 W11ll l'ap('r lla11)!1na.: <\II work ...:u:11 a11tt·l•d Tl'rn,>15 fi:!lill ••..................•.• 1\.1•\\ l'Ut 1 (11 ,d ... ,f,t(l' .11 • 111 "ill ··011~1d1·r l1.1d111 j,! I I\ 111''-\\ hJl h,1 \ ,. '011 J '~' 1c, I• ,ult• ) II I II ' ,. 111" Ill j' I t' I) . I< I. \1 \ 11 .. ill111' I,,. I>• UAVfo:'S l'/\INIT'lo<: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ] Ref1ni,hiitq St•n· ~a t1i.r11•rl •'lht •1 .I 11 11 .. 111 11 .. ru110,,l1111i.: } r!> ('oal 1nll'j.!rtl \ \n11 1.... ~ 11 1htnl'fi.. Rea:.. ins ht· 71;0 7301 ~ 111o· p.1 11111111: t.41 IJb'-1 I h\• Exp1•rt:-, 20yr.., lo11·.il Ceor.:e 548 323!:1 We ldin9 .....•..••......•...••• lnd11:. Comm Re:-.111 i\1l.1s Mob1lt· Melal S<lH !1507 Window Cleanlng ........••••••••.••..... l .t•l Th<· Swt~hine In <'.ill Suru;hLnt' Window t'kantnl(, Ltd 548-8853 St'll lhllll:S (..1.~t ~llh 01111) l'1l11l \\'ant Ad::. Help W~ 71 ;;:Help W~ 7100 Help Want.ct -7-100 Help Wanhd 7100 Help..W.ted 7100 Help Wanted --7100 H~lp W~ 71 ool~elp Wan1C'd 7100 ioogs 8040 •••.•.••••.••..••••.....•.••••..•••..••..•...•.•.•...•..•.••.•.••.....•.•••.•••...•...•......•....••....•..•..............•...•.......•••.....•.....................................................•.......... RETAIL SALES Cle ric for retail Sales STORE CLERKS marine hardware store. Cashiers. stock clerks. Ex per. nee. Call. Balboa fl oor clerks Good Ma rine. 549 9671 EOE future, excell benefits. M F IH 18 or over & avail ror Sales full lime work. Apply in HELft WANTED' person· P1c'N'Save 175 · E 17thSt,CM Telephone sales. No -exper nee Excell. co. Retail Mature person benefits . Comm1ss1on ex per. an Gourm et program & profit coo kw are Dys shari ng. Ap ply in (213)592 2212. person Pennysaver, 1660 Placent1u Ave SAILCU17ERS Costa Mesa ASSEMBLERS ~perience preferred. Sales but will train 631-1842 IMSULATIOH •English & Spanish speaking. SALIS •SSOOto s1.oooperwk ADVAHCEMIEMT •Paydayeveryweek. ftOTEMTIAL •No credit tumdowns Are you a motivated •D1rectsalesexper self·starter . looktnR for *Will t rain. h igh earnings? Secured ~1-4501. Bob l'fnancaal Investment SALES-«ITCHEN Inc., Southern Oregon's Good t"omm Ron , maj o r morlgag e investment firm. needs _ 631-7032 __ _ exp'd . sal~ people. 1''or SA L ES PEOPLE fo r interview. l'aU Robert K phone or direct sales. But"hanan 1 8(1()."52 7977 students acceptable for (i n Orego n ) o r <5031779·2839 <outside more mfocalJS6l 3545 Oregon) SALES R&fTAl. COMSULTAMTS Breuner's Rent s Furniture Showroom m W estmins ter seek s career oriented person for entry level pos in home furnishing s Breuner's is Cahrorn1a 's largest rum. rental co. & needs qualified sales & mgmt s t art for eitpanding mkt Retail exp pref'd Will train. $4 . hr ., depending on exper. f'ull or p /time. Mon·Sat., 9-5:30 & Sun. 12 Noon SPM. Contact Cindy Mills, 891 2388. EOE SALESWOMAN, mature, apparel exp, for friendly C M . h a lf.size shop Steady P tr. 541·6500 SEAMSTRESS Boat cushions 50129lh St, N.B 675-1823 *SEAMSTRESS* BRIDAL SHOP 546-1821 S56 9333 S 1A People needed to help a .... s SECm•ay expand Nutritional "'"' SECRETARY ADMIMISTRA TIVE Expand ing r eseurt·h farm needs versatile. ca r eer minded individual to provide secret a rial s upport ror Adm1nislrat1vl' Secretar y Exl'el typing, sh & abtbly to organize & maintain riles a must Call for appt. Newport Pharma l'eullcals. 897 W 16th St . N B 642·7511, ext 47 Secreta ry Enc.Sec~ry Elet"tron 1cs t"o 1n Laguna Beach has an 1mmed. openi n .: available Ir you are an exp'd Eitec Secretar) with ucel typtng skills 170+ wpm) & able Lo deal with people, handle correspondence. stat typin g , phones & a variety or admin dut1e~. cal l u s' Some accouotlng or bookkeeping exper desired. We offer excel pa) & benefits includsnR our 4 DAY WOtlK WEEK Please call for appt Telon1c Berkele y, Personnel Dept 714·494-9401 $36,000 + Sales Program. Only Outstanding opport for B.E VER LY HI LLS enthusiastic need apply. career minded s uper ~~~~~~~~~~ Health & Nutrition Corp. 546-1791 secretary. Eitcel skills setting up operations In a nd o rganiution al Secretar y O.C.Needkeypeoplefor Sales pe rsons Green abilities will guarantee PARTTIME Supervision & Tnining. World Plants is l~king a successful future with Weekend sec'y needed Pull /Part time . Will for a g gr es s 1 v e · this dynamic, growing immediately for busy train. Xlnl. career or motivated lndivid"als pension finn Smokers real estate o ff ice supp lemen t. Ca ll : foranexciling caree rm need not apply. Call Typing&goodw/phones 9·5PM. Mr Zuckerbrod mterior plant sales. No Barbara 857-1204 essential Contact Chm. at97J.8443 eitperlen ce requir ed ---644-7020 Sales •IRIDAL SHOP• Part lime {:osta Mesa. Pref exper in reta il clothing sales. 546-1821 SAies 556·9333 T:~=r1 The Reader Ad. Dept of the P e nn ys aver 1s accepting applications tor a part.time sales pos. Clear 'printin g , gd . s pelling & a friendly smile are the basic requirements. We will tr ain Apply · 1660 Placentia Ave .. CM Contact Green World Se c r e t a r Y • ~ I T ----- 8980300 re ~tauranl: L i ght SalnperlOlll High fash1on women's apparel store in Fashion bland. Salary, comm .. good benefits. Exper req 644·7100 ___ _ typing. apply 111 person M·F J.5pro The Magic Pan, So Coast Plaza SICRETARY P tr Christ Church By The Sea. Mon Fri 9·1PM. General ortice Sain ftotlffon duties 673-3805 Electra ,..~ol & Secretary Receptionist, Mfg. hn 1-.dlate small CPA ore, Npt Bch. opettlltg for a~ Pay comme nsur a t e 10le1 p•r1on. So. w /exper 83J..8<114 C allf. Area. Call 17 14 t545-0477 betwHtt 7:10 C111J1 to 4:30 SALESPIASOH Wanted for attractive SECRET.UY Secretary ** Legal Secretary lf you are a selr·starter with 2·3 years legal experience. you are the person we are looking for Eitcellent opportunity f o r d e p e ndable indi•idual to work for two attorneys and one legal assista nt and dire ct t"le r icul res ponsibilities ln our legal department. Type 65-70 WPM · supervisory experience helpfuJ SECRETARY Good o ff1C'e skill~ Start im mediatc'ly Salar} commensurate with ability Newport Beach Call bet lO-c1m & noon. Mon & Tues .. 851 1502. SECURITY GUARDS Wanled for the Newport Beach area. Full & pan time. all sh ifts avail Must be over 21 . have car & phone. No exp ner . Uniformi. & training supplied. S4 15 hr starting Call for appt 558· l ll.S SECURITY GUARDS Openin• for qualified 1nd1v1duals G ood sta rt1ng pa) Re fundable uniform depos its . 978 7243 & 638·8191 SEC'Y JllECErT. PF.RM PART TIM Jo: Irvine r eal estate' development office 1s i.eek1n g front offi ce se('rl'tar) lo Jn:o.~er phonrs, do tyµ1n~ & f1 hng 752 'Z737 SEC'Y-EXEC. Career opportunity with ve r y good g r o w th potential for dedicated. prof. secretary who h not afraid of hard work & will perform responsibly 4 efficiently Contact Mr Green, 644-9800 SELL AVON FULLTIM E Earn J;.SlOpr hr Call 966-0522 STATIONERY Store an CdM needs salesperson F /lime. 5 days. Xlnt bork1ng conds Especially fine clienlele. Phone 644·7482 for a pp't ----- STOCKIROt<ER TRAIHH College grads. Oppty in Newport Beach area for hard w orking enthusiastic indiv. Send resume lo: P.O Box 430. Marllon. New Jersey. 08053 STOCK Clerk part lime for marine hordware store Call· Balboa Marine. 549-9671, EOE M/F /H Student Jobs $1000 /MO TO START SUMM F:RORCAIH:l::H U u e t 11 expansion l'Ompan v needs many secretar1af. marketing &r warehouse pos1llons Will be filled 1mmedialel} Must be 111 & have transportat111n & be well groomed. Call 10am·3pm 17I4'847-0011 TEC ... ICIAM Costa Mesa computer firm nds Assembl) Tech. w1lh 2 yrs exper to assemble & integrate m 1111 computer systems Call. Susan 55Hl640 Lo schedule interview TELEftHOHE PROS I Set appls for our ~alt•:. people We're looking for ex p'd M-F l(ood working cond. 1you're place or ours) Hourly wage, bonuses al:.o' 545 494 l ask for Stevt' o r Marshall TelephoM Soffciton Arc you tared or workml( full time for part lime'> MONEY? Why not try working part time for rull time money. Work Z0..24 hrs per week in plush new office an the Santa Ana /Costa Mesa art a for well eslab. company. Earning potential of S22C per week Call 835 8883 for a ppt. TELPHONE SOLICITORS lmmed . openings oow & fo r summer. Work 3 9, Trainees \\ '11 I· 11.,1 :-.. I \1 \ :-... l''ull time 1trn plov1·1· I· 111 11 I '111•1 111< net•dt!d for 11o holt·~a It 1 l•.'(1 d , 11 1~ ,., l1h I 'all picture frarnt· 111fi.: 11.111 .... t,11111• ,1·1•11;;1 Appl) II 30 tit ~ .rt 1"1111 t-11 1 \1 I 11 Arl'h Fram1n1: t51i:I" Product Lo ll1111l111i.:11111 Be111·h \\> 11 I " • • I > 11111 1111' I ''"" \ ;,k111ol I ' I \\ 1•h··" Ito \ ,, 1111 111. 11 ....... ,, """'"' TRAINEE 1i.·t·t1 1 11 ., i:• .. tt , .. •111t. For Dlltrict MmHICJe>r < 11 1 ,\ t ' I" " r • t • r Thii. h1ghJy !olll'rt"''f11i 111·111.·ol 1, JW.; lol'al newspapt r ha' .rn K l':l';~llONI> Pup:. AK(' l'h;imps1n.• M 1f' Pt>t& -.ho 11o Pvt pl~ :?tJ t;!l7 1~5 .ifl ti pm A\/\ I lom1: l>of( Traininj? I lol':o. >our dog ha \'E: good 111.rnners., We :.pec1allzc: 111 h.ilJJ>' ownt>rs & well 111.11in1•1 t'<l do)(!> 638 9265 ._\MOY t:l> l't!PPll-:S . AKC I wk:.uld Availat6 "k'. l'\l pt~ !loll~ 7h(I 6()(11,, I\ I' mi.I( openmg for a tro1111t'l' 1111 "4erchandn~ the C."lr('UfJtlOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• department B,1i..11•:-.klll'l ~ntiquH 8005 A Kl' H e~ Yellow w11lenta1lsup('n1..,ro11 11I •••••••••••·••••••••••• l.ahrador Hl·trievt'r 10 to 1<1 year nlll ho~ ,11111 w ANTED TO BUY l'11pp1t·s tor .. a1e c11 ~ 1 r I ho m 1: ti l' I 1 \ 1· 1 _\ 1 h ,, 1 i: 11 11 , I 111 l'., h u v l' sh o l., carriers Art•11:-. o l t11,11111111o1 .l\l•I,\ J.itlt•A. 5.ll.CY.>06 su pervision w111 '"' '"dli·11 111, ... !'.di 1i1 11 deliver), t'Olil't'l11111., ;ir11I 11 ..! 1~r..'i. ,\ ·' k hi 111111 s a I e ., S l' I t• c 1 • ti apphl'ants will n·1l'l\1 \11111111' I •11 It Ii l'anlui.t1 r German Shepherd puppies AKl' II wk<; Males 963 5592 regularly .. 1'111·dul1·1t ,, , , "'"' $.',tMJ r a 1 s <' s . ll 11 n 11 , 1 1,1 ~~ ,'111\l'd l'upp•l''> male fem opportomllt'!i and m.111' I '" & u11' fringe benef1h 'lK'h ·" 4ppliancM 80 I 01 775 1678 compan\ p<t1d c.Jt•rtL•I ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ., and heailh plan v11up II\ H 11111< \l<l-.1\ ( .01tl1•n Hetre1vt>r I up:-. 3 bfc insurant'l'. \at·a1u111 j \1'1'1.1 \;\1 1· . ..,!':II\ lt'E Al\C', sholl>. wormed. 11 and s 1 (' k I 1• a, l' \.\,. '"" 1 , d ,q11,1i.in1t•., 11.k ... Sl85 556 7572 ('ompan} \1•h1f'I,• 1 '"""llr .. 1nol1'11J1 Fvmitu~ 8050 r urn Is h c II du I I II I: .1p1•l1.1 I•." ..l!f :10'17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w orking huur ' I i\ppltt·nnts m11,l IJ(• u\I r I BUY APPLIANCES * * I BUY * * lll. h3Vl' a ~oocl dn\in~· I 1•, •1•,7 Kl:ll r<'cord an•I hl' 1110,ll appearing llour' ,ire generally Mond:iy thru Friday Some ovcrtimr ava1lalile. If you an· qualtrted and intercl<ll•d in learn1n 1: th1· cir culation bu!l1nt·~-. contact Uon Williams or Ken Goddard, 642 4321 Orange Coast Daitv Piiot 33-0 W. BAY° STR l':F:T "1r1all I• rt 1 11•1 Slltll \V;J~h..r At tln1•1. $1:!.S '"' t\ II I\ I I """ Mli ~>8411 ltdn1: \l.'41 Stu\ 1• dhl oH·n ..,,1•1 J11'h"·"•ht r $JOO j(,U 11'*• CASH FOR lt••ln1.• r 11111 wu~llt'I' tlt\t'I •rt1'•' \~"lkltl)! Ill 11111 )<I'' 11!1 .. COSTA MF.SA. CA l\1•11n11u 1· Ir'"'"'!>" n·fn.: Equal Opportunrl' 1~ 1 ,11 11 J( \lo .11tl Employer Ci11ml used Furniture & 1\pphanees Oil I w1ll !>C'll or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION 646-8686, 83)..9625 I IUY FURNITURE Ll'' 957-8133 ;· l11d1• a~hed l'OUCh & lllJldllnR Jrm charr S250 blue: desk & lmokrase rnmho $25() 640 li252 ' Mon-Fn. No selling Call Tree trimmer. l'\IH'I in 966-0151 after lpm. all phases of tn•t• work ----Top pay & benef1ti-.. Pl" c; "' ENTI HE llOlJSEHOLD nffurn1turefori.ale. LR. bdrm , DR & patio EvcrythtnR near-new Must sell 1mmed. Offe ri. Dehvery.S49 !KHO Telephone LAY OH THE IE.ACH ALLDAY 4 immediate openings. Short appUcalion Work 5 9pm. Mon· Fri. talking on our telephones. Ori!p vo i ces pr e f erred . S3.35 /h r guaranteed. More money easily possible Come by 3 L Ent 1180 N Coast Hwy, N Lag Brh Wkdays at 3pm. First come. f1rsl hired. Have somethmg lo sell'! Classified ads do it well. call 714 17611 475 1 h1·1 9·3PM TYPIST/ GENERAL OFFICE PIT afternoon!\ dunn~ school. F' T duri ni.: sum mer 546-64'1 I TYPIST f>'°'ll" .1~J11 I I '11lst ruhli.•r port •1111\I \'4•tado ~ ~llfld I i1t1)>plfll! ltlk 'Int 1•111111 ~1:10 '>'15 11223 1'f'nnio1l ""hr $140, "'r1~11l;ir t ,.,,.., dn r $1l5, \\ .11 11:.. d • h ~stir $!1!1 j!lllll :i !II"''" & do•l ~.tfi kt,,.! RPl lll! 1111·1 In· .. f11·.1n . \\Olk' )'1Hll( ~l :•O 5411 H5 I I ~111 I ll{a llcyclu 8020 •·•···········•·••••••• fw1n oak bdrm set (2 ht·ns l. rollaway bed. l yr old $..'i()() 640.96al 2 high quality matching d<'s1gner 1•ouches. ltlnt cond, s uper buy at $475 hoth I.a Z·Boy recliner, ROOfl rond. SIOO. Call art ~. 1;:11 5350. NEVER USED SALIS women's shoe dept . tn Catch thls opportunity Fashion Island. Full or S50·S100/day. Young parl·tlme. Eitperlence 8 rob It t ous cr ew ha• _n_e_c_e_1s_a_r_y_. _64_0._7_8_1_0_. __ Position i n volves general office r es p ons ibilit ies int"luding typin g, d ic t a ph o n e, m aintenance or files. mail frocessln11. etc. S tart ng sa la r y to 1930/mo. XLnt company benefits includlng The Dental Plan. Call Lee Harr ie for App 't. Finance America Corp., soo t Birc h , N .B . (714)851"°'°5. FH P offers an attractive -r------------------'f 11 a I a r y b a s e d o n ·!! .. General offll:e "°' k no eicpericnct· rc11utrc•I l11gh St•hool .:raolua11• Costa Me:o1a area Will tw moving lo Irvin<' soon Good benefits l"armc1' I n s u r a n c e c; r o 11 11 540 4100 EO lo; 1\11>11 " "' h\\11111 Ill !!JKl & lad11·-. 11 .. ui:cut IO·spd $100 l':.I •1:o1 :l'Ul!t Herculon sor~ tied Sl70. 7 pc dinette $160, Qn bdrm S5•0. mattresses /bolt springs, twin $75, full S85. Qn Sl25. bunks . more ! ! 770.0901 .tbom ror more. Training s ALE s p ER so N .t. tranapo p rovided : mature. P.lllme & som~ 540.7652 aft HAM wknda. S73-a634 Stlea alrl n eeded . Newport Surf & Sport 875-1823 S~lea GRUTHOUIS t.AM-2PM or 4PM-trM E.O.E. M/P SAUSPaSOH For Plant Store P /I'·F tr 645-33921~6 1--------1 ••SICUTAR•S•• Sales person needed to Act"tPay/MfgS14,400 sell malnt. contracta in AcctA1111t/AAdegll.5,800 1rowlng Co. Wiii tratn, Sbl80/RE/Fun$14,000 &d pay, euy lo learn. WordProcessl.ngll.5,600 C all Cbrle Unlimited Expd. Consulta.ntOura Maintenance Service, Lil RelndenAgy, Inc. 841-1079 4020 81.rch Elt '64 EOE J oin the Los An1elea S"'LIS,_,._.....,& Newport/U3-1190/Fre• Times Circulation Team "' """'""" e xperi ence and excelle n t company benefits . Jf you 11ee k t h is c halle n&lna position. plea1e send your reaume to : Attn : AUce Bollin&er Fl-IP •AMILY HEALTH PAOQAAM 9930 Talbert Ave. Fountain Valley, CA927~ Equal Opply Empt M /F ar adapt your work f o r d y n a m t c '~hedul e t o your contempo rary retail I•--------•·--------• fettye. Work 5/h,./day s t o r e . 0 n I y SICllTAIY SECIEJAll£S Jn 1 Timea Circulation career·mindf'd, mature rr you're 1 comptLent Work after school and on ••les office nur your women need •PJ>ly. At secretary fl 1 sood Reilat.er today for local Saturday g e t t Ing new TYPIST 'ir h" 111n t t1w.n 5 'pd Word processini.i e-cp S1'1\t111· hhrr· ~('1011 cnnd desired, Musi bl• fast l!t Sl~10 1ti!\ ~·;:1>1 DUE TO ILLNESS accurate. Sabin !ISO II Verltext eitp. a t-Nrt·1• HEAC'll t IWISt-:K Must se NEW king & offlce11. cong\'nlal 5 «µd . hl.ick nlmoet queen sr. matt /b ox co.workers S11l1tq n ('11o . 11~krni.: Sl70 sprRS, S225 & Sl85 n egotiable Po!.1t 1on 770 237f.. 894 2729 _ av11il.June l.Pl<'11..,e call I 1, .... ._ M"""'-._._1025 WATERBEU King u Marilyn Celley. !15~2000 ".usn9 .... n-II' ._,,. r pp 't ••••••••••• •• •• •••. ••.. extras. must se _,., or a REDWOOD 2X6"S 559 68314tays __ _ TYPIST Xlnt dc1·k1r1g 8 20' lr1nR MOVING SALE-48" blk Centr11l Offlrc. P T IOK · on hnnd M>' ft marble coffee tbl, lg A ccuracy a 111 u '1 l 646 9885 unytimr walnut chest, 48" tbl. 760-8111 rtb Mur1.na conH•r couch unit. 2 bar Old fi;imwootl Sl 110 per Ai---------foot stools etc. 646-1839 Typhtailt9fWOI 548-8214 Hotnehold~ 1065 & •Mc~" 10 -5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loft1 It abort term Top Cm 3 Waterless Cookware. lHl' Pay. No Fee. •••••••••••-.••••••••••• timl' G uarantee. Brand Cl<'A ll1mal11yan Sul new, Sar m-9(J88 roint'I, 8 wk."· 2 moll's. Sl7S. 751 ~6 ric>me It have more lime le11t 5 yrs. r«all exper. or11nlUT, we need you. t.emporarya.Nllhments. customers for the area's for you.r fam~udlea req 'd . Salary plus If you un ta lite a 557 MjlC leading newspaper. Bigs Plus welry 1070 or Jelturtly . We comm. ~ •t:ly tn personal Interest In -..., •••••••••••••••••••••• pay hourly ~., ..• "rcoo•2°' call: ,.propo. dC'l••n• deadline. • C1'·Lln~_ pr1z ... t'c'P .. S ·."d bonuses. .~: ••••••••••••• !~.~~ rl" desl,n. •avf'ndcr ~ l'l!hlli o-;: pmml11lonl. "4· or ta .. 111on etallor1ented buatne.. _ II Ctt.c• Jail" gold r1.n1. w /U full .llland,Npt. lkb. IOI! 1dvertlata1, 'tr\! have a 642·4311. tJlt Ztl1 ~ 556-IWO St Bt'rnArrls. l M'. l Ff'm , cut dla. $2500/080 }~:!~~~~~[: ...... Studenta ... up, ~t=b':e c:,n &.~ flWOIMORSCHHO lllVIOU Equal OpPortunlty Ernploylf qu•l ()ppl"..mptyr M /F 11 mo' S200 l"8 AKC &U 2790 ... CDCD oHd summer Jobt or le1dtn1 adHrU1lqf UJI~..... r'\"I 7\4 8277812 -PLAT. a diamond P Jtlm• yur round a1enclH. l11terHl•d .............. WAUHOUSl Poodle~. AKC, "1ifll l4)' wedding rlna 1rade Equal()pportunlty work. Call Mr. Jona. '7 .. 7000 •.O.E. Eam SSO/daly. Call an Whit~ 1tlvt'r M&t• Cash vvs2 St2SO appra.lul ':-m..; ____ 1m_._'*_,.,._,, __ ....._M_1_,._u_• ______ ),,__!!! _!!_!! _!! _!!_!!_~!!_!!_!!_!!_!!_!!_!l=========;===~-1• _• _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_,-.... -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_.., _ _._UA_M_J*-_~1w __ -:...-:..-:...-l only 971>-628 Su.rillc• 950'118olM3 ' : - Mac.I-•• IOI ta 0.,... 1090 , P•owtf' 9040 Troll•"· Tl'W\'9' 9170 ¥•1 9570 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 Bil ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OAllE SHOW PRIZE.WVRLITZJ!:R, •plncttc H'lert1,..SF. lethr MF.XICOGETAWAV '79 F01,W lMI Vun cstm Awto1,l1npori9d AMtot,IM,...W Aattot,l•portwd A.eltot,UMCI 1 S I L V E R G I fl' T model •410, two ._. noti= "'-"uw SaYe OYer 'rf' fifth wheel, set up In lnt/p111nt many extras ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CERTIFICATE worth lteyboarda, 13 pedal $4 O Cl o'o O proterted KOA Park. l2 $9.5006314S:ll Audi 9707 Howdo 97%7 Toyota 97'5 C.ctllec tttS SlOOO Will tell at S750. notea, auto tone <'Ontrol ' . • w • r ' ml So of TIJuana at S1tn ,. ......_ w__,,,_~ 9590 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5'f-92l5orS73-0360 earphone jack, aolld 67$.'6 .70, 67).4515 A t 1 8xl6 h It .. "'wnvl --• T • I GT -----nono porr w "•••••••••••••••••••••••1978 Audi ~000 1Hver VISrTYOUR 75 oyota Cel ca '79S.VllleOletelloaded! REDWOOD 1X6'S l!~lhle~/c~ht~:~~ 28V'HSFllvc'!!"ORn, FFB , OF, 1rassy are• and Potted WE PAY TOP DOtLAR rn.-tellic Lo ml. Full OIAH~E COAST 5spd · be11Ul. cond. 20 K m1. auum lae Xlnt decltln1. 8-20' 1001. deUvered.547·1845 • h , D ·stereo. plants S4500 Leavin11 to r to P u s e d luxury, pwr. package, 2 • :r~O !OBO. 84G-8924• $416.00tmo 754MM81 lOK ' on hand. 55•/ft I low h~, dinghy w/mtr, !tatel-674·2'i46. cars-rorelt(n, domestics way elert sun rr H~DA (). 556 -oro tt1'7 646-9885anytime 5'6" A.B. Chase Louia xtras X :ntcond Sl9.500. Trallen,UHlty 9110 orclass1C'b ltyourcar1s AM /FM stero cusette HE•D •RTERS ____ ...:_ ____ -I x v . A m p I r 0 erma. ~"48-8242 ••••••••••••••••••••••• extra clc11n . see us S7900 ~l.81M "' "' •77 CaJCAGT •••••••••••••••••••••• Men~=~().ar;~~~~s, ~~!~:~u~~~pfertae~~ 'S6 18' Century, Xlnt New 5 x 10 1.1t1l trlr All i''IRST' TODAY!!! Liflbark 216,000mJ,good Air, ~~~,!:l~ puwer cond$25pr.646-MOO restored le reblt. J>lano cond $5500 /080 steel con s l Elec ~ IMW 9711 UHIVERSITT cond.$4696.73G-<XW7 steerlnf, 27,961 miles. orl1inally bit In 1921. 6420671 ByAppt. ~~:~~1:t~~~ff';'r·~:~~ ·······•··········•···· SAL~&rSERVJC~ (882VE) WANTED-Baby s troller For The Best OL .., ...... OllLI Yolltw-9770 $4911 and Play"""n. both 1·0 LI k e new & o 0 d 33' OWE:NS BRIG S/F appreciate.642·3047 Can BuyOr Le"•eDeul --,,-·· kl rt -i ..., H--• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Barw1c mpo a Coodcond.only.751_8967 nveatmen~. Collectors w /Ntwport Slip, new see at 24S3 Santa Ana lnOrange County _.,."' Ill lllt ---------1 item. Aslun& $20,000. c rus1ul ers, trani. & Ave. ~M _ ___ "' 111 o,... C..ty Come See Us Today' GMC "BUCKS MARK HOWARD --·---- T I ( ( a n y c I u b Hammond Or gun & props lt adar, pilot, bu1t •ut s lu rar+s 2925 Harbor Blvtl 28SOllarborBlvd VOLKSWAGEN '69 CA.MilO membenhlp, gold card. Plano Center CdM. tank, Hulon fire system, &oAc':;.aori.1 9400 COSTAMt:;SA ~ COSTA MESA Large selection of 1 owner, clean, auto. no dues required . 644·8930 $37,5001140.7246 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 979-2500 ~ 54~9640 Vol ks wagens w ith mags, 307 eng. 2 barrel 640-lO?Jl 1886 Emmerson Sq1,1are 2S'GLEN-LttlrExp Forlale • ---competlliveprlc:es ra rburator, digital Phone·Mate Telephone Baby Grand. rosewood. Vn,, 1 . 1 'Z:.V.C8apnwvra.s D z WANTED!! SAOll£BACK ·~ire~r~o~rkJinuA~n1~m"~ (j~vOllCS~t'G~N 1~,. clock , am /(m Sl500. Ans we r1 n1 Machine hand carved. ivory keys. r ats&a'I Clean Import. MW lrk. EveryUung works .... • m.. 995•8969 --- with warranty S79. With $2,000/bstofr. 642 3122 Now $4 1\50 AV, 646 0000 motor Top Dolor B $4,900 (114 )494-3422. 534-4100 . 80 c IT ATION x 11 , remote $149 750-3791. - ------p 'd i! M ri Pk h hb k upd t • ---------P 1 an o . Mahogany oah, R11ftt/ + other parts at 23402 argue te wy 494.4544 Patty. __ 13731 Harbor alt' c • . ex ras. Kirby Vacuum. Like new upright . Be au t . Chart•tr 9050 768-5837 Call Jim Ho9an or Mission Viejo JOC)UClr 9730 Garden Grove 848-3475 with ALL attachments. open.grain finish Gd ••••••• ·••••••••••••••• Mlk Lalle Avery Pkwy exit --CheYrolet '920 Willsac.forS250.Seeto tone , nu keys $950. •IMMA1;?Jl'·34 'BOATS ManypartsforChevy ~re•ierMotors <orr5Freewlly) 7;7·~:~:·a·r·;~8·;_;~·;;;:~~ '60 '65 vw left & right••••••••••••••••••••••• appred ate. 960-5844 646·4042 6/l2m•:•. plansprepiud V 8 ~&up 131·2040 495-4949 0 rig . 11 er Y we 11 door. '73 left door SSO SEE US FIRST• eves. from $1119 /mo. including 646-8400 835-3 I 71 Closed Sundays d M earh. Western style whl • ----------1Ka wal Console piano, sllp,le1tlOl'lS714/964-~ maintaine u s t rims for Super Beetle We haveagoodaeleruon 1928 A ntq . M Itri ne walnut, 10 mo old, Volkswagen Belly Pan Sacrlfice~70 __ S20ea 548-9'144 0 f NE w & VS£ D GasolineEngme,lcyl,8 perfecl,$1700.846-~l oah,S1aif 9060 $175, Transaxle $125 ; Kal"M-~ 9734 ---Chevrolets! hp fly whl In front xlnt --•••••• • ••••••••••• •••• Disc Brake Front End •••• • •••••••••••••••• •• '78 VW convt $7500 35K co~d . Craig . s1'500.S.wlncJMochlnes 8092 14'Cyclc•neGreen&whl. $75.963-6291 & 70 Ghia , front end mi. a/c. am /fm 8trk, COHHELL CHEVIOLET 213_5111.!)66S • ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /rove1· & trlr. $1300. 1 sr & H OADWAY 1 6008d ----------1Singer Tour h & Sew 1714)3211 ·4<k>2eves SANTA ANA damage Not running x nt cond 631 ays 'X.?C 11,trl••I Ill . ol Local kitrhen s tore machine & rablnet $200 .• -• c· ----Autos for Sale 835·3171 $1200 080 552·3746 '79 VW Rabbit diesel. L willing to sell kitrhen 951-3889 73 21 ·• r hock. sleepi. 4• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"l utT11t1•rc 0A1v1No 111•cHtHE Mcnda 97 31 mdle. SOmpg Sunroof. • t ~I \ \1 ~..., \ 546-1200 b & · O"' Berth A. va1I. Acces IMPORTANT S ca . va~1t1es. 3 "'Sears Zig Zag Sewing C'all544·3Z78 NOTICE TO •USED BMWs• ••••••••••••••••••••••• air. xtra tank, t~reo '76 MOHU belowdlrpnce.631-7032 machw/walnut cabinet __ -----READERSAND '81 Maida 626, 5 s pd, tape.Xlnt.~ 2 +2 . 4 cyl , good King-0 .Lawnrront throw S75.960·8160 . 16'Su11rish Sa1lB<>at ADVERTISERS :~~f:2s•;ri=t> brown, mags, sunroof. 640·6215,9661779 mileage, a /c, radio, --Xlnt fo1· summer. Good Tl\e price or items am/fm rass, lo mi, $8500 ------f bl l mower, $125· Mclane Sporting Goodl 8094 cond $1i50 642·2641 adverlli.ed by vehicle :~~ ~~~~1Uf61 OBO. 495 5025 aft. S '80 Rabbit .. L .. mdl, 4-dr, ~~n~:,r~~7~.=ran Y edger.S75.847-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• --• --dealers in the vehicle ---------snrf.AM IFM ,mustsell Besl quality STAR WANTED Scuba gear m Westsall 32' Flush deck, r lass1fled advertising CloMdStlllda M•rcedeslem 9740 Dave673-3370 --'79Chevette.17Km1,4dr, S S 5 000 II ••••••••••••••••••••••• RUBIES from India. goodronditiononly ac . : 4 • ans co lumns does not TheMostbcttinc) '79 Convertible. 8000 mi. 4 spd, am/fm cass. air. Onl y $20 per s tone ! 751-8967 __ 1714>63· 1•1212 include any <ippli cablc WE BUY f'art Of y-um /fm stereo cass. met. xlnt. $3850963-6583 640~8688 TV, Radio, Venture· 17 trailer $2.000 taxes. license. transfer CLE"'...._. C "'RS ..... paanl, $8500 1 346~0201. ---fees. finance charges. A" A IMW PurchaM Or '78 Chevy OSI Pickup. lo Laguna Niguel pro shop. HIFi,Steno 1091 partial trade innatable fees for air pollution AHO TRUCKS . LltawCouldl• 15&1-4960 -mileage, air cond . T · I h ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lido 14 s ails offers c· o n tr o I de.,. 1 c· e I ·'m rm "as•ette, two en n I s ... 0 t es. TV • . . McLaren BMW" '74 vw Thing, <.: ass1c. a ' ~ accessories 23500 Beauuful Color : 2 yr 962"677·' certir.ruhons or dealer " xlnt cond,newtop&s1de tone red with red Cl bh 0 . L wrnty. Free delivery --d o c u m e n t a r Y luy Orleote . I interior, must see to .u ouse r., aguna $148. 646-1786. 21' Sant ana Balboa !>hp preparation charges ly Our-.--p•-! 1·urta1ns. eng comp . Niguel. -----$3500/hstofr Call u n 1 e:. s 0 t h c r w 18 e ,.. _ _, reblt, R&H, new seals. appref.'iate, take over . 13" Color TV, remote 631-4613. r (714) 522-5333 .\I l'llOHIZEI> 7 o. o o o a c· t m 1. lease or best offer Call Irvine Coast Countr y control digital tuning ---s Pe c 1 1 e d b Y the ---\I 1-:Hl 'El>l-:S llE'Z $30001080 ~06223 646 1501 afters·JOpm Club Membership for 5mo. old P>O. 966 1363 . CAL 34 Sloop. '69, h1ghl> advertiser ORANGE COUNTY'S Ill': \I.EH sale. $1200 + transfer --sough l ra cercru1scr GHeral 95101 HIGH BUYEtt OLDEST IUI 17 IO l!h t111u fee . 646-4525 dys , El Tee spkr sy:.t em SJSK l:lkr,6758711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Top dollar.. fo r Sports ·75 BUS Newl) rblt eng '77 Nova. 4 Doo r Xlnt cond AM FM cass. Blaupunkt radio $4400 644·1444eves (voice of the theater) 2 ---Surplus Jel•ps, cars. & I Car~. BuJ.(i.. t'i.tmpers. ---way, lS in woofer. oak loat1, Slips/ t k t bl th 914·s, Audi's '76 Me reed es 450S l.C, m etallic blue. a lloys. full scrv reco rd s. $21.000 bst ofr 645·2375. 675-8638 eves air. $4200,552 5040 PP 644 1151 or64Q.7293 NE~ PROM DRESSES cabinet. $400 pair or best Doch:s 9070 J~~c~~rr'::~t1 ~g!nci::• i\sk for ll ('MG H S12e9~10 P'lf'each rr 544 .. c.~ ••••••u •••••••••••••••• uo ·..,., I o er · ...,....., Mny have solrl for undl'r JIM MARln '60Sgl Cab P1rkup Contlft...tal 9930 No eng. Needs minor ~·•••••••••••··~··••••• work. Xlnt restor cond 73 Continental 43.000 m1, SSS010BO 642 7582 leath mtr 4 spkr stereo, Lisa673-3495/546·9731 loat1 -& ....,._...:__ S1dt(·T1esforrent S200 Cull 312 742·1143 VOLKSWAGEN C h r I S4s ~ S8 SIO fl Hurr)' ext. 4726 for info on hu"' I Sa les-~rvice·Leasing Roy Carver.Inc. o.1.1 c . or sa e . Eaui-..6 646-4419 ll!i ll lkJdl U \d d h I , ,.....~-to pun·haM• bargains UNTING1'()"' l'L' \''II Rolls 'koyce BMW 300 SD MBZ 1980. Blac·k w tan tnl , !>Unrf. AM t FM cass. chrome whls $31.000 , Ask for Bob 496 5t55 or 645·3!173 aft 2pm full pwr. C C. xlnt cond 1s es , s1 ve rware. ••••••••••••••••••••••• hkethis II 1~ '"•'" lamps, rug. misc:. Call Getteral 90 Io H•t wport slip 842.2000 l540Jamboree NewJK>rt Beach 640.6444 '64 Bug. good body, new thru out, $2200 bst ofr int. good transp, xlnt Bill 714 /646-0691 960-6137 ••••• •••••••••••••••••• To"' 7 14 645-0222 Schwinn bicycle girls Non profit org needs 20''. blue, excellent your boa.l. plane, car. rondition S8S shutters e t c .L 1 be r a I t a x 46 'x32'. br~wn u 5 deduction advantages. 661-8286. 2131654-2341 - NEW S hp avail thru Jul) lSth JS ' Newport 645·8 790, 532 2305 547-74:!5 --. -New A von inflatable Need S hp or s1de'lle for WA .~ TED · A 1 r ding\• (12'4"1 , $850. lovely 26'Sea Ray anNH cond1t1oner for a sash 1.684:12271.684.7~2 or Dana Point Call cve11 window Load leveler for --or wk ·nd tra1Jer hitch 751-8967 AVON Redseal annatable 497 4342 . raft with mot.ormount & -----WANTED· I BM Elerlr!c seats. Good Cond 5450 Satlw tus freeonalieaut corre~t 1 ve Selectric 631 0479 Hans Christian Ketch if typewriter. 751·8967 -y 0 u h a v e a 5 o ' L lallooft loah,MaintftlClftC•/ Live aboard slip for a on . 1 Senic• f020 responsible rouple Call Anti~ues/ Classics 9520 ....................... PRmlEST '57T..SIRD IMTOWH! BESTOFfER! (OOSUKZ I THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MFSA 642·0010 You have not really been ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 r G a r )' 8 re we r loved until you send Man ne Electrician <2131~143-5la3M-FS·S '67 Imperia l LeBaron some~ne you love 30 Design install repair _ _ _ Blk w blue lther mt mul~1 -colored huge Qual work.~9-2S20eve Soah ,S----'& Bestoffer76001SO lle l 1um Balloons Ski' ~ 9080 Perfe ct r or e ,. er y loati. Power 9040 •••••·• ••••••••••••••••• '55 Packard Clipper Occasion We deliver Restored · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sumrn er camp want!> lo 673·4419 ·72 24. Re1nell cab buy 11ewish 165 hp I 0 646 3124 N B. Athleti c C lub rruiser 225 OM C out fantasy or other open ltftttey mbrshp. Fashion Island. drwe Sl_Ps 6 VHF radio bow J Im 492-8954 195 7 1-· l }' 1 n g Spu r Sl50. 6 pm to 9pm. Stove, sink. head Runs --co ntin ental S I 213/433-4~ xlnt. Trim tabl. 4o knots front.1portation Exceptional 2 tone paint 100 gal fuel tank Sl6900 ••••• •·••••••••••••••••• Right hand dnvl'. Xlnl Front throw mower & 846·4471846-4473 _ Camip•n, Sale/ J cond $26.000 Pos:. ~o~~~~e~t cart FOR SALE .. ~.~~~ ............ !!~~ .t.:d;o~::~=~~$t500 Used carpet. LI rm si Coleman Tent Trailer '29 Ford Roadster PU. pieces m avocado, dk Sips 6 Good rond1t1on. SJSOO 675 3175 blu, or gold 161 yds total. seoo. 997 8096 . ~!2_07Pe60r. yd Inc l pad BAYLINER Moto,ritedliku 9140 RARE'55FORD oN •••••'•••••••••••••••••• Fairlane 2 dr. extra FO•X 1 MOPED S200 fartory rhrome. new & Mltce~ WCIRted IOll Good condition restored from front end 842 7235 up. A real beauty al 1973 27 Ft. •••••••••••••••••••••• $4000. 839 4945 Wanted : Gold & silver dollars, slot machines, & jukeboxes. P P. Gary 714 1981-8873, 981-6148 Flylridge hi Cabin Galey,Heod Dual COfttrols Twin 130 M OPED REPAIR Your moped can run hke Recnatlonol new. Fast service Cull Vehicles 9530 Lari· y. 645--8529 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----Two Responsible Adutts M•lcal a..1h & A:ot1 IOI VolYo &.cJifte1 GREAT ASHING BOAT! Motc1rcf::!'I Wis h To Lease Sc ·~ 9150 1 Self contained Travel ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONN Director trombone with case. Excellent condition, SlOO. 675·8052 arter6PM. ····~·················· Moto1-cycle trailer, 3 rail. mtd qas tanks, custom, ~ 6419375 ---- Motu ir HOIMS, Sale I Rent /Storagt f 160 Trailer not longer than 18'. 2 R V not longer than 21 · 3 f or the r1rst 2 weeks July. starting July 6th 645 5913 Ro land Analog Erho DC-20 SlSO. GREAT OCEAN AND BAY BOAT! GREAT ON GAS! .••.•••.•..••.......••. - Trucka 9560 673-51?.ll '¥VE CAN SELL ••••••• •••••••••••••••• SOPRANO SAX , straight model. Xlnl cond. Only MSC>. 675-8120 OfflceF...._.lr GREAT PRICE! $12,000 675-3311 ·Ron YOUR R.V. 558.lJ(W .......... 1015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19' RANGER 360 C.I. S m i t h • C o r o n a Panther jet super nire, REN T · 22' I u x ml r home Sips 6. self cont $2!1 5 /wk + 8' m1 640·8585. typewriter, Model 300. $10,500 rirm. 631·4539 R tmt Dix Motorhome Good condition. $150. • , 22'. sips 6, a /c. S200 wk. Call Dale bout Bay & 77 17 i,, Tri-Hull. l30hp. l<>" inl. 493-4168 Beach. Ask for Janet Volvo 4 cyl. 280outdrive. --------- Smith, 631-7300. Walk lhru bow. Seats 10 · l.EER Cpr Shell for Cash Register. Sweda Monro e . New l y inspected le aervif.'ed. $350, 67 3-6241 Typewriter. Olympia, full sz ofc elect. Almoet new. Xlnt Cond. $350 people. New upholstry. Ch4! vy or GMC truck, Single axle American Ukt! new S50(). 968-8?Jl3 trlr $4400. 840-3410 -;;ilen, TNY9' 9 I 70 %001.AC ·~ •••••••••••••••••••• MK-2 G.R. 20bp Mere. r11vel Camper Trailer 3200. Firm 548-054.2 aft. <T enU. tor sml car. $295. •· ~!1rp54S-~ 898-8940 M•ce•••-1080 Mhc1 .. •CM11 1010 Apple II Plus, Cent. 730 •••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••• • ••••••••••••••••••• print, d isk 3.3, 12" monitor, Vlalcalc, Space Invaders + over 50 more proctam1. 85000 retail. 01d1'3250.131-6476 Bleck m.UI ct.ks. $100, Wood clMb, S200. 1wtvel cb1lr1, •• te1at nle ceblnets, '90 to 1100. Mep ruk, •· Con.I tbl, 1100. chain. 125, pla1~tc cor11er IOI.a, flO. 11902 Sky Put Cf' Ste. 208. In. Mon·Tu· Wed. u1-sem irkpatrick Sales DISCOUNT SWIM & NACHWIAI SAVI 111•i to 114' •mn•1m1M• Special Purchase!! lowMAe•! 1910 4 1pd. and 5 spd. Dahwt Pick Up's Tremendous S avlnCll!!! M•dOww a.d MCMllhty pay'IM"tl BARWICK DATSUN Son Juan C opl\ITmM> 831 ·3 3 11 •CHEV.MU 'll I TOH ST AICE 12 ft. model with liftgate, duals, air cond., H.O springs, pwr. steering, aux. tank & more ' Workhorse complete! (3961) OHL Y SI 2,491 HOW AID Ca..Yrolet Dove/Quail Sta. NEWPORT BEACH IJJ.0515 1978 El Camino, very clean 29,000 rnl, every xll'a $MOO. SCZ.7404 Ron '79 Toyot• P\ck Up. Re1ular bed, (tcandard traM. IUQO • ....,.lUl or M0-1293 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOO&CLEAH USED CARS! miracle mazda 21 50 H..tNw llYcl Cotta MHG 645-5700 WANTED! I.ate model Toyota:. and Volvos Call u s TODAY !!' ,,.. H.,._ l l•d. c ......... . ~ U•·UOl er H O·t4'1 -Top Dollar Paid F'or Your Car' JOHNSON & SOM Lincolrt-~rcury 2626 H:irhor Blv<f ·75 BMW l2K m1, alloys, a te. fm. (213 135.>-11765 aft 5PM '77 320!. beige, snrf. air. '76 450SE, hke brand new xlnt s tereo, all rel'Ords J.o mileage A 11 the Will ronsidn trade xlras $17,500. Wkdays $7,750 968-7507 640·2530. eves1wkendi. '77 32()1 Special, $3000 car ~60·1860 phone incl Pioneer '69 280SL. a c . auto. am rm rass. af4•, snrf, white, Sl6.000 nu tires. dk blue1t1m mt pp 998 6405 xlnt cond. Pnced to sell $9450 846·8559 Capri 9715 '68 MBZ4300 673-66.52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 2400, ivory palamino '76 Capri JI , auto, V6, a Jc. mt 4sp. loaded Mu!>l sell 4SK m1, rm cass. snrf. 893-8547 $3600 640.1128 '79 300 '73 Capri grey /blk runs good, SOOO 6000 m I S D . s il ver Sunrf. hkc nu S26.750 pp 675-9029 673-6283 955 2699 Dat1W1 9720 '65 Mercedes 190Sdn, xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. new paint. runs well. orig ownr, 499 3578, 646·0141 MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mech, all orig $1200. C ff- -9932 631 2568 one • --...................... . Vol•o 9772 ..•.....•..........•... #I VOLVO DEALER JN ORANGECOUNTY ' SALES, SERVICE AMDLEASIHG OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS EARLEIKE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 646-9303 540.9467 ORAMGE COUHTY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer m Orange County' BUY or LEASE DIRECT * I I NEW 1981 CORVETIES THREE 4 SPEEDS TO CHOOSE FROM CORM~DeLIUO CHEVROLET CO. 12 I lt od714t 830.5100 * SHOWROOM COHO. '7S T·TOP Power brakes, power windows. power steering with tilt /telesrop1ng s t eering wheel, air. AM /FM stereo. rear window defogger , I 0 120 Garden Grove 81 automallr trans Snow Garoen Grove 530.9190 white with BurgunctY TntefiOr ~:000 miles • ____ _, Immaculate thruout ! Costa Mesa 5'10.5630 a:.;.=:.;;,;;~~~iiiii;;~;;I 79 MGB. 18.000 m1 over drive. AM /FM cass . lugg rack. Pageant blue lmmac cond. $5850 or b s t 0 r r .-6 7 5 . 5 5 4 8 evs /wknds 1968 Mdle 122.S sta. wag. $8100. 754-6790or Answer AM /FM, needs work1 Adll209,642·4300 24hrs. W•Pay OVER Blwlook For Your (;()0(1 VW, Pcmichc or Aurli VW PORSClll': i\lH>I 445 E Coa::.t l11v.J) at Ba):.1de Drivt• N~wport Bearh 673 0900 Premium prin•s pa 1d for any U)>Cd l'a r I foreign or dumcsl 1c l in good cond1t1on See Us First ' .!&18 11.1111111 l\l\d c-.1 .. t<1 \k-...i ;,111 o:no 4..to1, llftported ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE NOW ! Auto broker will find the car you want al Low Blue Book or lower. Dave. $900. Firm ·74 B210 Ht r hbk fleUC)eOt 9741 Rad 1a Is. 4 spd, nu paint. • •• • • •. • •••••••. ••• •• •• 900-1381 '79 Corvette, loaded , white. 6700 mt , assume lease. $325 mo 759·0481 l ownr $1750. 673-8836 LE .._SE 411tos, UMd A •••••• ••••••••••••••••• Co.-ar 9933 '74 Datsun pickup. Xlnt '"MC 9905 -"' DIRECT.I "' ••• •••••••••••••••••••• cond. Rad., AM /FM •••••••••••••••••••••• $2700 (213)598·6218. '77 Cougar XR7, full pwr. David Wk. nites aft 7 1972 AMC Hornet am t fm tape. 53K mi. 1981 PEUGEOT SportaboutWOCJCMt dean· Sac:nn ce S3.395 • ·72 240Z, new pa ml & uphol, anth gray. 74 ,000 m1 , susp. kit, steenng kit , custom stereo, 54500. PP . C hri stop her Bennett. 557-Z792. ------ TURIOs E r on o m 1 c a I 6 f.'Y I S52 5522 engine. automa.t1 c Liftcoln 9945 Bl! "'CH IMPORTS trans .. ~wer ~t~enng, ••••••••••••••••••••••• IC"' fartory air cond1t1onmg, . 848DoveStreet AM /FM stereo w /8 79Lmr Lowncar.loaded. NEWPORTBEACH track tape. radial tires, xlnt .cond ., xlnl 752-0900 new brakes. recent mamta10ed. best offer. tuneup, LOW miles & ~I 803~8·5 wlldys~nly_ florsche 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 280ZX. super shape, super loaded. w/GL pkg + mags. sunroor & rear shade. 494-4490 '69 912 a ll new, just drlve ------1 it & watch It appreciate ?JlOZ 57K mi, good rond . 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Dali, POatw .. ~. \ ~-~-----· ...... --. 11 - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11, 1981 .. .... ....,_ Inside arch is massive wooden doorway which priests have been ordered to trim. ----------------------- Renewal of trapping hit SAN DIEGO (AP> -After a 10-month wait brought by the death or a wild condor chick, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wants to resume taking California condors from the wild for a cap- tive breeding program. The permits to capture or handle the en- dangered birds were canceled last July after a 13-pound chick in a cliffside nest east of Santa lfarbara died as scientists were examining it. As one or only' two juvenile condors known to exist, it's death brought an outcry from conserva- tiqnists. Today they were described as ready to fight any resumption of trapping. A spokesman for the federal agency said it will ask the state Fish and Game Commission meeting May 26 in Sacramento for permission to res ume the program. A public hearing on the application is planned by the state Fish and Game Department in late Ju- ly in the Los Angeles area. "The bottom line is that we can't wait any more if we are going to h;we a chance to save the bird5'" said Bill Sweeney of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in an interview. In Ve ntura, John Ogden of the National A~dubon Society said "we are more convinced tflan ever that the situation is desperate ... Food stamp • savings seen WA S HINGTON (AP > -The Senate -A:griculture Committee appears certain to meet President Reagan's 1982 spending target for food stamps despite its rejection of an administration proposal to reduce benefits for families whose children receive free school.lunches. "I don't believe we have to rubber stamp any administration ... if there are legitimate budget savings elsewhere," said Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan. Reagan wanted to reduce rood stamps to families in the school lunch program to save at least $500 million a year. Although vigorously backed by the committee chairman, Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., the proposal was defeated by a 14-3 vote. But the committee went along last week with other changes Reagan proposed for the food stamp program, including a "workfare" plan that states can adopt at their option. If "workfare" is used by all states, as many as 2 million or the 23 million recipients of food stamps could be required to work for them, the ad- ministration says. The panel already has endorsed Reagan's pro- posed tighter eligibility requirements, which will eliminate 1 million more with incomes above the poverty line. With cost-saving measures of its own, the com- mittee seems certain to adopt a food stamp bill ~ltich next year will save at least $1.6 billion, a fllure the Congressional Budget Office says is needed to meet likely spending targets. Surrogate mo01 having problems PEKIN, Ill. <AP> -The woman who served ~ a surrogate mother for a childless couple says lbe slll can't dlscuas with some relatives, includ- ing her own mother, bein1 paid to bear the child. "We returned to Wisconsin for a family reunion not long ago and some members of the fa.mily just looked over my head like I wasn't there," Elizabeth Kane said in an interview. "I dldn 'l expect the reaction and tt hurt. "I hope someday we're all bli enou1h to put u.is behind ua and be on a talldn1 bull again." Mrs. Kane, a pseudonyn for • 37-year-old ~kin mother ol three, was artllically in.seminal· eel March 2, 1980 with the sperm of a Louisville, ay., man who paid her to bear hla child. A baby ~Y wu born Nov. 9 and offlclally adopted by the' ·a.ouJaville couple. She believes that her relationship with her ;:. n children and her hU1band bu srown atron1er a result of the experience but H)'I her other atlffl, and net1hbora in Pekln, "don't know wbat to.HY, ao they don't aay anytbln1 and that lnlrt• " she uJd 1tM donn 't dilcuaa It with her own "'other because her mother refuse• to. "Ml our family baa left la tacb other,'' abe Mid. "It'• sWJ a definite atralo and I'm 1oln1 to everythinl I can not to let thla make a dlf · ternce. Ufe ll too abort to be bitter." Priests refusing to ~ . 'mar' mission SAN DIEGO (AP> -The massive, evergreen doors of California's oldest Roman Catholic mis· slon swing inward, not outward as the fire code re- quires -and therein hinges what one priest calls a "disaster." • An outside archway at each of the three exits of Mission San Diego de Alcala prevent.s the 15- foot-high doors from openin1 out. Anguished priests were ordered 19 months ago to cut the top of the doors or remove the old Mex- ican adobe archways, but they're fighting it with fury . In the latest appeal, the San OJego diocese sent representatives again to the city's Building Appeals Advisers Board seeking exemption from the California Administrative Code which says exit doors In houses or worship with 50 or more seats ·'shall 1win1 in the direction of exit travel.•• would destroy the sense of antiquity.'' But this week fire Capt. John JondaJ cam0e There are three of the square-abaped with evidence that tbe doors open outward at si ·" doorways, one more than the state requinta. other Callfornla missions established by Fatbe1r Eaean told the appeals board, and aU atand open Junlpero,Serra after San Oieeo's ln 1769. when the weather is good. ''All ~ey dld at some of the other mission:s The mission is located in San Dlit10'1 botel· was simply reverse the hlnges," fire Capt. Jirlll dotted Mission Valley, about five mUes from It's Hunter said. "I don't know if those missions hav·e original site that overlooked the Pacific Oceea arches blocking the doors, though." from a 11hside bluff. ' Church historians believe the 300-pound door s It was moved Inland five years after tts found· of the San Diego mission came by ship from Spaim Ing because of Indian raids, but the Indiaos at- and through Mexico by wagon. tacked the mission in Its new location u well, According to Msgr. Brent Eaean, pastor of th•! burning down many wooden parts of the mlaalon ln 324-seat mission , altering the doors woul1 l 1775, a year after the move. Amon1 the fixtures "destroy" the architecture, inside aod out. saved from the fire were the doors. Archltect Alfonso Macy said it would cost lea: 1 "They just don't make doors like that any than $10,000 to make the necessary chanee but "l l more." Macy said in an interview. ~~--------.,.;._--------------------------~ ' • --·· ···-·········· ............ : ..... : ~::--.:--:;;-.. ~.~1 i f'c ' if\ 'I ~.1/\ Y I 1 1 I)\ i Syria 'at brink' Israelis urge Assad ta withdraw missiles JERUSALEM <AP V-'\ Prilne Minister Menacbem BegUi urged Syr ia today to "retreat from the ·brink" by withdrawing lts anti· aircraft missiles from Lebanon and disclosed he had ordered the Israeli air force to knock them out lldaysagobutcanceledtheorder. "Syrian President Mr. (Hafez) Assad, rescind your action," Begin pleaded. "It will in no way dishonoryou." But Assad was reported ada- mant in his refusal to remove the Soviet-made SAM ·6 mtsslles from eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. BectP. inaspeechtoParliament shortly before he was to meet ~lh special U.S. envoy PhlllpC. Habib, said Syria had beefed up lts ori- ginal deployment of three missile batteries in Lebanon with two ad- ditional batteries. And he said another two had been moved close to the Lebanese border the past two days to join slx already on the border. Begin also said a battery of SAM-9s supplied and manned by Libya had been rolled into posi- tion, butdidnotspecifywherethey were deployed. He urged Assad to· 'retreatfrom the brink. . . remove the missHes . . . and humanity will brepthe a sigh of relief ... We don't want your dishonor. It will be to yo1.1r honor . for you will be serving the peace." Begin said that on April 30, two days after the Syrian missiles ~re wheeled into Lebanon, he ordered the Israeli military to r e- move them. But the prime minister. who also is defense minister. said the action was stopped first by bad weather and (See MIDEAST, Page AZ> Nader attacks Reagan Warns GWC gathering of 'authoritarian regime' By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. Deity~,..., Consumer activist Ralph Nader came out swinging in Huntington Beach. During a rambling speech Sunday night before about 275 people at Golden West College, Nader leveled caustic criticism at everything from Ronald Reagan, American auto makers a nd utility companies to college testing programs, California freeways and the news media. The activist hurled some of his harshest barbs at U.S. Rep. Dan Lungren , a Long Beach Republican who also represents \. the western portion of Hunt- ington Beach, as well as Seal Beach and Sunset Beach. "In his first term in office, Rep. Lun gren has opposed virtually every crucial piece of consumer legislation," Nader charged. He added, "According to the Public Citizen Voting lnx, which rates all members of Congress on key roll votes in areas such as cons umer protec- tion. energy. and tac reform, Lungren voted in the interests of consumers only 20 percent of the time. "While citizens back In his djs- Soldiers wounded in Belfast ambush BELFAST, Northern Ireland <AP) -Gunmelt-'11Clt• ...... cash -la den mail truck in Catholic West Belfast today, wounding two British soldJers escorting it. The attack and a weekend bombing at an oil terminal that Queen Elizabeth was visiting heightened fears that IRA guer- rillas had begun a campalsn to avenge the death of hunger striker Bobby Sands. The mail truck was delivering money to the Whiteroclt post of- fice in West Belfast when the gunmen opened fire from a , house across the street, a police spokesm a n said. Sold iers jumped from the ir a r mored personnel carrier and two were shot down, he said. Their condi- tions were not immediately known. The ambushers apparently made no attempt to steal the money, police reported. Troops and police fanned out to search for the gunmen as Roman Catholic youngsters and women blew whistles -the traditional warning signal that security forces are on a sweep. Mail trucks are regularly escorted to the Whiterock faclli- ty, target of previous raids by I u err i 11 as of '° l<rls h Republican Army seeking funds for the ir campaign to end Britis h rule in Northern Ireland. .,, The oil terminal explosion oc- curred as Queen Elizabeth II was opening the Sullum Voe <See IRISH, Page AZ> Player behind the eighl balt MINOT, N.D. (AP> -Roben Beyer lost out after a pool game with hls buddies, but it wasn't because he knocked the eight ball in. Beyer. a s tudent at Minot State College. spent nearly 111:! hour s trying to free himself from the comer pocket after his hand got caught as he was try- ing to retrieve some keys from the return chute. Finally. firemen had to be called to Beyer's fraternity house to come to his rescue. And the keys? They fell out through a hole in the chute long before Beyer was freed. trict s uffer beca use of s kyrocketing energy prices. Lungren has been in Washington voting with the interests of Big Oil." Nader criticized the con- gressman for his support of the decontrol of crude oil prices, for voting to weaken the oil com· panies' windfall profit tax, for opposing automobile air bags, and for backing efforts to redllce the power of the Federal Trade Commission. He said Lungren voted for the Reagan budget proposal, which will have "a devastating impact (See NADER, P.age AZ> , Navy halu Isle's wild goat hnnt I ~ SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND <AP > -Trapper Jim Clapp says he's furious because the Navy has stopped him from going into the southern tip of San Clemente Island to get the las t lOOor 150wlld goats. In 10 months Clapp has re- moved 5,000 goats in a court- ordered alternative to killing the goats because they damage the environment. including valuable, endangered species of plants. The Navy had planned lo I and riflemen to shoot the goats until the U.S .. District Co urt in Los Angeles stepped in. Clapp had sent ashore barges of goats regularly. but the Navy said the south end of the island is lit· tered with dangerous unexploded shells. "We don't want to see a human being lose his life over a couple of goats," a Navy spokesman said. "If we're not allowed down there because it's too dangerous, then Navy riflemen can't shoot them down there because it's too dangerous," Clapp said. "If we don't get the last goat, we haven't done a damn thing.'· ................. ... • • • • • . . ·: YIUI 11111111 DlllY PIPll OR ANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ~~ ......... u.~..,. Newport Beach'• DennU ~l flies over Balboa Pier in homemade plane on hb trip to Catalina. Hb whffeabouU are a my8tery today. Mi,ssing pilot sought Newport flier last seen over Catalina in plane By STEVE MARBLE °' u. .,..., ...... , .... Where is Dennis Reigel? The 31-year -old Newport Beach pilot who lifted orf from Balboa Park Sunday morning in his homemade plane bound for Catalina Island has authorities today qu estio ning hi s whereabouts. Skywatchers from Newport to Avalon, who reported seeing the young man in his 175-pound machine at various points, say they're stumped. Reigel planned his 31-mile trek to celebrate the 69th an- Heat wave crowds S. Coast beaches Lifeguards along the Orange Coast reported their heaviest crowds or the year this weekend as soaring temperatures, blue skies and lukewarm water com- bined for August-like conditions. In Newport Beach, more than 100,000 people showed up at the beach on Sunday while 90,000 turned out Saturday. Ocean temperatures crept up to 67 degrees in Newport and Huntington Beach on Sunday. Strong rip currents and heavy surf kept lifeguards from Seal Beach to San Clemente busy during the two days. Although there were no serious incldeoCs, city lifeguards in Huntington were worried for several hours Sunday. An Anaheim man, Huntington lifeguards said, was reported missing by his wife Sunday noon . The woman t o ld authorities that her husband "drank three or four beers and who knows what else and went in the water." By 6 p.m., lifeguards said t h ey'd begun to expect t he worst. An hour later, the wtre called authorities to tell them she'd found her h usband at (See BEACHES, Page A2) Surf er corwicted in spear incident VISTA <AP> -A Superior Court Jury has convicted a Carlsbad surf er of assault with a deadly weapon for alle&ed· ly using his surfboard against a surfer riding a wave in f root ol him ln January. Steven J . Cram is awaiting sentencin1 next month after his conviction for assault on Larry Richards, also of Carlsbad. Cram was accused of using bis surfboard as a spear and strlkina Richards in the back of the bead. resultimr in • 1asb requiring five stitches to close. Deputy District Attorney Steve Anear said the vlcUm contended Cram told bJm he "would spear anyone who aot in troot ol b.lm." ''There la a territorial attitude developing on the beach," Allear aaid. "That wu one premlae of the trial." Richards contended he wu auaulted because h• did not replarly aurl at the spot where the incident occurred. niversary of Glenn Martin's 1912 night rrom Balboa to Catalina. The Newport man took ofr from Balboa Park Sunday at 10: 15 a.m. Lifeguards and photo- graphers saw him clear the park by four feet a nd l he n gain altitude over the ocean. In Avalon, a SPokesman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's office reported seeing Reigel there. "We saw him flying around like he was looking for a place to land," said the S heriff's spokesman. "We didn't know what the hell he was doing." Reigel admitted before takeoff that he wasn't sure where he was going to land. But he'd ad- ded '' Any little field will do." Officials at the Catalina Island airport claim they sa\11 no sign of him there. • "He was flying a what?" asked one airport official. "No way. We didn't see anything like that," he r esponded after a description of the crart was pro- vided . Reigel's plane, which looks more like a bicycle with a wtna attached, Is powered with a 30· horsepower engine and holds five gallons of gas. The Newport man. who sald <See MISSING, Page AZ> •: ·: llAICI CUil 1111111 Low clouds and local fog night and morning hours with mostly sunny after· noons through Tuesday. Highs in upper 80s at the beaches to upper 70s in- land. Lows tonight 5' to 80. 111181 TIDAi You thoug#a1 TV hit a Joto with IOfl'Mt o I it• '"°'°'? A" AP cotumllitt 101 more J>0"fb4Jitiea ahead. See Pooe A9. 11111 ' • . '.. . • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11 , 1981 Chase Bank hikes prime [to 19.5 percent NEW YORK IAP> -Chase Manhattan Bank today raised its prime le ndins rat e a half percentage point to 19.5 percent. reflecting higher borrowing ~osts for banks and soaring loan • demand . The move by the nation's 'third-largest commercial bank was rollowed by Bank or ,A m erica, the nallon·s largest. J.loyds Rank of California, Security Pacific National Bank. and al least two New York banks The prime rate last s tood at 19.5 per<'ent in late Februarv. ,when it was declining from a rec -0rd 21. 5 per<"ent peak hit in December But the prime rate began rising in April after fall- ing a:. low as 17 percent. The prime rate is re presentea to be the interest banks charge f,1r loans to their best-risk cor- porate borrower s. but banks -have increasingly loaned money 1at interest rates below the prime rtO valued customers. Small business borrowers pay one percent11t1t• point or more nbo,·e the prime rate for loans. Consumer louns are not based on the prime rule. a lthough mo\•ements m the priml' rate often s 1gnll l trends in other financing churges Interest r11tcs huve soured in recent weeks us the Federal ResN\'t' Board t1ghtent-d credit reins in an attempt to slow the growth or the nution'1> money supply in its fight uga1nst innu- tion Although the money s upply declined !>harply 1n the latest re- porting week. its growth !>1111 1'· mains above Fed target!>. Too rapid growth in the funds readi- ly available for s pending may heighten tnflatton Fed credit t 1ghtening moves have pushed up the cost of funds for banks The 1ntt•rest on federal funds overnight loans or St m1lhon or mor<' a mong banks averaged 8 91 percent in the bank statement wee k ended Wednesday. up sharply from the 16 28 p<'rcent average the previous W<'ek GROUNDED Newport Beach motorcycle of. ficer Dave Sens orders three men to the ground in Cost a Mesa after halting their car near 15th Street and Newport Boul evard. Pol ice said the three t from front 1 Richard Topete. Miguel Orosco and Francisco Garcia. o.llJ ~1194 ,._ •Y •klY,.. K-lff all of Santa Ana. were pursued in a car s imilar to one from which a man allegedly pointed a gun at other motorists Sunday af- ternoon. Topete and Garcia were released. Orosco was held on an outstanding warrant, offi cers said Royal phones 'bugged'; tapes revealed DL'BLIN. Ireland <AP> Prince Char les t old ri ancee -Lady Diana Spencer he loved her. did not y, ant his bald spot ph oto~raphe d and that Australian P rim e Minis t e r .. Malcolm Frasc>r was humorless, ~according to excerpts Of SUP· 'posedly bugged telephone con- 'versations published by the Irish Independent. Buckingham Palace s aid the tapes, allegedly made by anti monarchists during Charles' tnp Lo Australia last month. were bogus Courts in Britain a nd 'west Germany banned media use o r the material. but a From Page A1 German magazine carrying lhe transcripts got 900,000 copies on the stands beforehand The Irish Independent then translated and publis hed ex cerpts in ils Ireland-only edi lions, escaping the ban in Bri lain. Prince Chailes: · · 1 don't know how to tell you this Diana: .. Oh . please Charles ... Charles: "0 .K During the whole trip. this guy had nothmg better to do than to try to take photographs of the bald patch on m y head ." Diana (laughing 1: "I did nut know you had a bald patch " Ch arles: .. Yes. but it's too s tupid. I am doing all these things and the onl} thing they wJnt an• th(•se ridiculous de tails:· Diana : .. , lhink it 's verv funny · · · SandY.H'hed heLY.een the couple's cx1>ress1ons of mutual love and dei.1re for a quick re union are snippets of conversa lion about their July 29 wedding a nd the possibilit~ of Pnnct' Cha r les becoming the governor general of Australia. Diana: .. llow wi II I hat go'? Do you think thal it will work., .. Charlf's : "Yei.. hut there are some con s 1d er;.1hl~ problems l m}st•lf am not '>Ure I ('an gt'l ;dong with this felloY. f'raser lie, howc•n•r, appears tu l'nJO~ lhl' respeC't of h1!> tountn . Diana: "Oh. terrific " Charle'>: · lie ap1wars to knO\\ y, hat he 1s doing. and I belle\{' that I t'Oul d get on wi th him ThC' onl v diffleult v is th:.it he doe~ not ha~:e anv humor lft>'s terrihlv scriou., ·1 made a tt•rnf1c effort to be dmu.,ing. but h(• JUSt starl•d at me all the timt· · The J n-.h I ndept·ndl•nt ·s l'X ccrµl!> quoted Lady Diana as telling Prinn· Ch arles she mis.,ecl him \t.'r\' much and Sa\ ing, ·Tm not complaining I onb w1:-.h I wen· "1th vou When you go there thl' nc·xt 1·1me. I will be with vou · · In a 'telephonl' call '>a id lo ha\{' taken µla<'e Y.hl'n the pnm·t· brokt• <rn a~ from a part~ an hi!> honor. th(•n• Y.a!'i this t'X· C'hangl' Diana : · ;-.:oY. \OU mu:-.t go back to tht· part~. I het t he~ are ::ill :-.l;md1ng around wondt·ring where you are ·· BEAC HES JAMMED WITH SUN WORS HIPERS. • • C!tarles: ··Well thev c<in Y.all a little The y, hole ionj! da~ I ha\ l' donl' m\ dul\. and noy, I am lt.1lkang tu· m~ fwneee whom I lo\'(' \'l'ry much · · From Page A1 home . steeping in the living room Lifeguards said the man ap- parently was pulled down the coast an the rip currents and then took a bus home after being i.:nablt.• to locale either has fami ly or his towel More than 300 people were pulled from the surf by Hunt- ington city and state lifeguards. Guards in Newport rescued nearly 200 persons during the two days. In Laguna Beach. 20,000 showed up Saturday and 25.000 on Sunday Guards said the:. rescued 12 people both days. The air temperature was 85 degrees S unday An Anah(•1m man. 37 year-old To m Wen ng. \'151 ll ng M a1 n Beach rn Laguna. !>Uffered a minor neck injury Sund:.i y while body s urfing South count v beaches. includ ing Dana Point and Aliso. a~~ From Page A1 t racted rough I:. 40.000 peoµI(.• each day with a rt'ported 74 rescues in all.· Lifeguards reSl'Ut.'d a famil:.-of five floating rn an inner tube in Seal Reach Surf a\·eraged from two to fo ur fed with thl· largest breakers hitting in lluntington Guard!> there said '>l'vera l sets reaching height'> of eight fret wen' re1><>rted MI SSI NG. • • the traft can h<• folded up. had claimed his airplane could make the round tnp on five• gallons Thl' Catalina Island Harbor M a s tt·r·s office also reported spotting Reigel buaing around MIDEAST WAR CLOUD. • • .. But I don ·1 kno" where he "°ent to Even one saw him. That Y.as around 5 pm ·· P u l1 C{', lif{'guards and s h opkt.•e pe rs in Newport say the} didn't see Reigel return There wa s s p ec ulation . though. Som e s u ggested the Newport man likely folded up his airplane and returned to the m ainland in a boat Reigel had s aid he might have a friend follow his path in a boat. in case of trouble. Deity " ............... HIGH STAKES -The Newport Harbor Art Museum was the big winner Saturday night at ''La Grand Casino," a museum benefit. Partygoers Marc Friedberg and Karen Cole try their luck at the blackjack table. Story and color photos will appear in the Daily Pilot Thursday. later because or appeals from Secretary of State Alexander M Haig Jr.and President Reagan for time to solve the missile standoff through diplomacy Reagan dispatched Habib. a vete ran dipl o mat ic troubleshooter, to the M 1ddle East in hopes of defusing the cn s1s. which threatened to plunge the two antagonists into an armed conflict. Habit flew to Is rael today from Damascus. where he saw Syrian leaders Sunday. After the meet- ings, the official Syn an news agency quoted Pre mier Abdel- R a o u f K asam as sayin g. "Threats and warnings will only boost Syria's firm stand ... Habib met for four hours with the Syria n president as the Arab nation's warplanes circled over head . but the retired American career diplomat had no comme nt lateronhowlonghis missionmi~ht last or its likelihood or success. Western and Arab diplomatic sources privy to the details of the Assad· Ha bi btalks said Assad flat· ly refused to withdraw the mis- Reagan to r esign NR A m e mbership? CHICAGO IAP> An alliance of 17 state and local handgun control groups have urged Presi- dent Reagan to resign his life me mbershi p in the National Ri - fle Association and join the move-t----------------------------·, ment for handgun control. ORANG& COAST DaiJy Piiat ThomaP.Ha,.y ,..,. Robert N. Weed ,....,,. M. Thomae KHvll .... Thomas A. Murphlne .........,.,_ Chatlel H. LOOI A ...... ~lllllol Betnard Schulman c...lllt Cert CatstenMn ......... ~ ~:.;.2odderd Jr. MAIN Ol'PlCE »0 WHl 8*y M , C.Ul INM, CA. Mall ........ eo. tMO, C.~ IMM. CA tM» (1 "By doing so you will dem- onstrate v9ur concern for the safety and the lives or American citizens and your wlllingness to consider without bias construc- tive ways to deal with the handgun problem, which brings shame on this nation here and abroad,'' the coalition said in a telegram to Reagan on Sunday. 5 stores burn PORTSMOUTH, Ohio <AP> - A fire that b roke o ut in a nl1ht.spot spread to adjolnin1 structures, deatroyln1 tlvt downtown buildincs In thts Oh.lo River city, orrlcia.la said. sit es and told Habit. "We have nothing more to say ·· Rut asked by Habib whether he could return to Damascus if his visit lo l!.rael made such a tnp nccesliary, Assad is said to have replied, "You are welcome ... Hcgin warned Sunday that the Israeli air force would act if Syn a did not withdraw the missiles. deployed the day after Israeli wa rplanes s hot down two Syrian helicopters The prime minister·s speech to a political rally of his Likudblocsupporterswasthefirst ti m e he h<id specifically warned of Israeli military action. but it did not set a deadline March draws 40 LOS ANGE::LES <AP I P rotesting that the district at t ornc\•'s o ff ice fail s t o .. ''1gorciusly prosecute" fathers who fall behind m child support ~aymen t s. about 40 p eople staged a Mother's Day march at the Criminal Courts building Sunday . Al 's Garage \~nd Sea Bags I Heavy duty Canvas Bags 1n shapes and si1es to lit any occasion Seams are double stitched to P<OVlde a hlet1me of durability All Sea Bags are water repellent and feature a Shoulder strap lor easy carrying • From Page A1 NADER. • • on low and middle 1ncome con- sumers." Contac t ed t oday a t his Was hington office. the con-• gressman, who was elected to a second term last November, responded to Nader's chars es. "I think it's interesting that Mr Nader is citing his own organization's rMting service in evaluating my voting record," Lungren said The congressman said be has received awards from the Na- tional Taxpayers Union and the National Federation of lndepen· dent Businessmen 1 representing small busincssl's 1 for his voting record "I think I'm s peaking for a much larger constituency than Ralph Nader," he said Regarding his s upport of oil pric·~ decontrol, Lungren said. "Control of energy prices result- ed in a control or production, whieh created a scarcity or fuel I think the tons umer was far worse off .. Il l• also daimcd that federal manipulation or oil prices and s upplies caused the gasoline hnt>s seen 1n California several years ago Lungren also said the very campus at which Nader spoke, Golden Wt:'st College, benefits from the sale of tidelands 011 in California. HC'garding hi s s upport of Reagan 's budget pro posa l . Lungren said. · I \Oted for that budget propo'>al lai.t week becau!>e I firmly believe it's the bt•st hope for middle and lower IOl'OITil' eonsurnl'rS .. Thl' congressman contended that past federal policies sup- ported by Nader have produced double-d1g1t 1nflat1on. high mortgage intt•rest r ates and a s lowdown in production If he thinks that's a recipe for success. I'm gl ad hes not the cook in the k1tt'hen a• the pres· enl time. · Lungren said During hi s Sunday address. :"adcr dest'nbed the Reagan ad- m in ist rat 1on as .. a r1 s1 ng authoritarian µohtical regi me .. .. Tht' :-.11xon and f''ord ad- m1n1!>lraticms will be seen as doY. nright bC'n1gn 1n com- parison to Y.hat's coming under Reagan · N :.idcr urged those in the au- d 1 en C' e to hand together in organizations that will protect cons umer interests . · 1 r you \\a nt tu enjoy life more." he addl'd. "you ought to wrik to your congressman once a y, eek "And add a P .S .. 'Don·l send me any malarkey."' From Page A1 IRISH ... North Sea f ac ility 1n the Shetland Isla nds no rth of Scotland. poli ce said Sunday. The IRJ\'s "Provisional" wing claimed it had planted a device there shorth• before 11 went off. they said. · The Britis h monarch. her hu s b and Prince Philip , Norwegian King Olav V and about 700 guests al the opening ceremonv were about a quarter- m i le a~ay from the bomb, whi c h ex plod ed at midday Saturdav. Police s aid the blast damaged the terminal's power s tation but caused no casualties. Officials said the explosion mav ha\•e been aimed at the queen in repris al for Sands ' death Tuesday. The 27-year-old Iris h Republican Army guerrilla was serving a 14-year term in the Maze prison near Belfast for ill egal possession or a handgun when he died on the 66th day or a hunger strike ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (71 4) 644 7030 • ' ,. • ~·---~--------------------------llmllll!ll~~--------.... -..... Rest ordered· for Art Carney Actor An Caney is under doctors' ordl'rs to rest at home after speodin& the weekend ln a Dallas hospital for treatment of an un- specified "recurring lllneu he's bad over the years," a spokesman saJd. Camey won fame u sewer worker Ed Norton on television's "The Honey- mooners" and an Oscar as an aging widower in the mov- ie "Harry and Tonto.'' Bob Hargrove, production manager for a TV version of the John Steinbeck classic, "Of Mice and Men." said the 62-year-old actor was to fly home to Westbrook, Conn. He did not know whether Carney would return for filming on "Of Mi ce and Men ," scheduled to be finished May 27. Actress Jane Fonda, husband Tom Hayden and son Troy, listen to explanations from unidentified officials at Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Museum about devastation of western Japanese city by atomic bomb during World War II. Ms. Fonda is in Japan promoting movie, .. 9 to 5." Boston Mayor Kevin H. White apologized to Cleveland for associating the city w it h the word "bankrupt." In a letter to Cleveland Mayor George Volnovicb, White said a remark he made was not intended to of· fend Cleveland. A,WI,.,.._ ·'Cleveland is a city whose greatness can never be de- nied by idle comment," White wrote. The Bee Gees and their m ana~er Robert Stigwood, are together again. They agreed to drop their respective suits stemming from charges that Stigwood had done a poor JOb of representing the rock group. an official or RSO Records s aid. The Bee Gees signed an out-of-court settlement at Stigwood's Manhattan of- fices, saying they regretted the court action and had been misguided in bringing it, said the SPokeswoman. Ruby Keeler. left . who played m the original movie version of .. 42nd Street." poses with Wanda Richert during backstage visit after .. 42nd Street " performance on Broadway in New York City Miss Richert plays the role Miss Keeler played in the film. M iss Keeler was formerly a longtime Orange Coast reszdent Folk singe r Joan Baez, vis- hing Argentina as president of a dis armament group. says she has no idea . who lobbed tear gas bombs into the entrance of a h ead· quarters or a group protest· ing human rights violations. No injuries were reported as a result of the incident. Storms rip Ohio Valley Seven die in Oklahoma; Southwestern Michinan fl.ooded wastal, weather Low <'--loO nlQhl ano morn ll>Q houri othffwlw WIWIV T....0.Y after,,_ Coa•t•I low S4, 1nl-60 Coa•t•I 111911 u-r '°5, lnlend u-r I~ WalM ., EIHwller•. 119111 varlat>te wlna• nt9ht ancl rnornin9 hollo t>Koml"Q -•t to __ , 10 to 11 llnots wllll J to •-foot wino ••"'" T.,.Mlay alter ,_., Soul-iwell 1 to l Ifft. L- <'®dl night -mornl"Q "°"" with mo111v IUMY after,_• Tuewav U.S. summary Thur>derilorml hit'"" H\arn third ot tlle nation today, 1>rfngln9 tornadoe$, Mil ano rain auou Ille OllloVallev Stormi doJn'P9d hall and nearly 11 • lnclle1 of rain lnOt11-...over • lowr N Y period. IHVl"9 M...., people dHd In ••••-..:cldenh -..... unv mucll ol tlle wheat crop 1n northwnwnwcllon., offktalueld. A PonoCrNll<~le •ncl tnelrlnlant dauoritar dl.O _,, ll'<tl• <•r plunvoa Into the -rnent of • ,. • .,,..,....,, l>rld90 In Olli•-·• IMIOf' County. Other vk llrnl _.e • n -vur-old t>oy wllo WH dr-nod wllOn 1111 t>Oal we~ over • 1C>lllw•y, two me-n •hO died In • car er•"' on • raln-.ito.a ro.a and an oil lletd -rll•r who wH kilted when 111911 wind' IOPPlod • ,,., .. ,_ Rein c..-w.._H<I 1-1"9 In '°"thwntem Michl..., tod•Y. lore Int authorlllff to ctow neerty 10 r-• In Kenl C-.ty •1 Ille N•tl-t Weather s.tvlo I-a llalll 11-watch lor llll IOUlhernpartol tl1e ti ate. "NtnetMn ro.od• are comptetaly 1>100.a ~ -to• IOOI or ..-a of wait•," wk! IClftl Gountv Sheriff's Deputy i..n H-"Sewral crMll1 ere up -owr the IMWlllS Some IK· t1on1 are «!Ult• dMp -~to bury a car." Hlgll •at• may,,.,.. -n 1 f1<tor l11tMderallmentofl-carundthrM a.,.1,.. -lions ol • 112-<.., C-rall freight train early tOCl•Y In Ille llOUtherll part ol !he c-ty, lie uld. The cars may ,,.,,. loft the track ~auw ol • rafn-IOl'to-raflbecl, Hlmp~d. About J.000 pt1on1 of "'°' from the 1"91na1 _.., Into the nearby Buell CrMll II\ Kentucky, ,_ tor,_, were stgllt•d NII ol P-.C•ll on Su""°V mornll>Q, -• twister ~ •• 1>Ultdln9 .. 10--lxw'o, IC y. HUVY-rl re..: heel the Atlanlk conta l 1tates. t.ar1" ""ii llOnel Incl ttr-Wll>Cll ace ompanlod 1torm1 over tndtana Sun<My Madison, 1 no mu..,rlld ou1b to.Omph. Cool w111/'er Mltlld into the u- Grut Lalln revlon. wltll lrMrlnv con· dlllon• uattered around I.all• s-rtor. sno-n rnov.a tllr0U9h ,,,. l\Ortllern Aoolot. Lalor today, rain -• lew tt111n- 0erstor•T1l will cover the mkl-Atlaftll< and northeestern 1tatn -the Ohio Valley ~1 -thundenhoweri wero .. pect.O tor IOOlthern Ftortaa, - rall\ will be o¥9r '"" .-thern Rockies ano l\orthern Ptell\1 Tempereturn •round the natlOft al mtdnll)llt POT reno.a from 27 de9f'MI Ill HIMllllQ. MIM. to .. cl90rt1t In Btvtho, Call! California. TllO Net-I w.Mtlff $trvka II cattlnQ lor lalr wHl/lor throuQI\ T...Way t11<..,C tor -low c!OUOI· ..... •"4 IOC•I toe In .,,. nlOllt and tarty momlng llOWI In c-t•t areu. L.ocat 9uity ""' lo ,_,,,..,,. winch are oa~tlld tn .. mountain Md In· tttlor MC11ona. T-atWH durlne lhe d8y -tit lllQll!ly coallf. HIQM _t_WI .... _.In Los Anvetu, '' to 14 In coastal veltova, 12 IO 17 In 111term.dlatt valleys, .,. 10 70 on the mountAln1. 17 to 12 In tM °'""' Valley, 12 to .a '" 111911 dl-U -92 to ti 1n tow dl- Mrtl TOftl91lt'1 low. "'°"'d bl In the to• 10 mid tOt In Los Anvete•, SS to •l tn coastal vattev1. 52 to 51 In tn- lermedtat• valloy,, In Ille 40• II\ mounta in area• and Ille Ow11\1 valley. SS to .s In 1119'> dlMMI and II\ Ille'°' II\ IGW - Tempemtures Albany 41t>uque Amarlllo Alllavttte Atlanta All1111c CtY Balllm0<e Blrmtnviwn 811maro Bolae Boston BrowMvl .. 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" Ml .. 41 •l 0 0 u 70 51 " SI 44 02 67 41 .. •1 n CALl~•HIA Bellorill.tcl Blythe Evrtk• IFrHllO lane Hier ""'""'vii .. Montero PHO AoCltn Aod Bluff llt<IW-Cll't Rtno Sa<ramento SatlllH San DIOF San FranctKO Sant• 8...,_• TllOrmat Ulllah ....... BIO IHr BltMti Et Centro I.Mt hacll Mo11r011la Ml Wiiton Otll•rlo ,aim $ll'1nli Pl-S....~ftM11no $11'1 J-TaMl Valt8y HI LO f'c• , . ., 103 .. ,. ... 92 St .... " ~s M 4' • u .. , 77 ,. IO JS .. " u ... It .. ... " 73 u 9t .. u ,, tS ., 71 M 17 4S IOI 60 .. ,. "u 71 ,. ,, '° 102 .. " so '2 Sot .. 4' .. 27 CA .. AOA "' u ~-c.1 .. ,.., u JO Southern Calif omia surf report =.:' :~ : .• Ottawa ,. 46 t ... 111 I "-91111 .. 8' Ht lOM -· P.,locl "-.oftOl lllff ._. IWf ..... ..... ...... ,AN AMl•ICAM ltMdl AW9 Mu ,,.. AV9 Mu Dir Acapulco S ···- u 14 .. " t J W w"'IHla t J SW CW.CM J I $W ,......, t I SW OveN11J1ta ~._ Hlvlftf •------------------------------------------_.Kl11tttafl We're Listening ••• ~~ == .. y MfflN llllU~OClty ~~ ... _ .,...,_ M IClltl .... .. 11 n ., • n .. .. ., .. • n .. 11 •• " n .... ,.,. n M II .... .... tt n . ,, What do you ltke about the Dally Piiot? What don't you llke? Call Ulit number below and your menage wUI be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appr'()priate editor. Sun, moon, tUJe. The aame 24·hour anawtrinl service may be us ed to record tetlers to the editor on any topic. MaUboic coatributo.rs mual ln· ch1de t.belr name and telephone number ror verification. No circulation calla. pleaH. 'h1I ua 'lWhal'• on your mind. 842•6086 TOOAY ~Mltfl •ttA...... ... TVUNY 11:11 • .... • .. S:8'1.1t1. 4.1 u.o........ ., "'...... , ......... ..... 11111 .... 7:61 ....... ,.._ T--., S:M1.m. I M1e11 ..-~y lt41 8.111., ti-----~------------------------------t t wtiN1t t:U,_,,., Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11. 1981 H/F Drunks now targets Coast woman leads attack on tipsy drivers By JOHN NEEDHAM .,. .. DMtr,.... ..... It has been about four months since a driver ran bead-on into Linda and Carlos Schmidt's car on Coast Highway in Corona del Mar as they were returning home at night from a movie. Since the accident, they say the deluge of medical bills n~ar­ ly caused them to lose their new- ly purchased house in Laguna Beach, and their insurance will cover only half the cost or buy- ing a new car. Mrs. Schmidt, a nurse at the mental health unit al South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna, suffered two fractured vertebrae, which required sur· gery, and temporarily lost the sight in her right eye. Her husband. an emergency room physician at San Clemente General Hospital, was diagnosed as having a brain tumor two months after the Jan. 18 acci- dent. and underwent 13 hours or surgery. Schmidt is now recuperating from the operation, but says there is no way to prove the tumor was caused by the acci· dent. After the surgery. be says be was left with permanent and total hearing loss in his right ear. "It's going to be tough to use my stethoscope," he said Jok- ingly The couple said they already have received $20,000 in medical bills for their hos pital stays alone They ·said the bills for their surgeries will be astronomical Neither Mrs . Schmidt nor her husband bas been able lo work since the accident. They said their insurance pays them about half their normal income. In the meantime, the bills continue to come in. Last week. the driver o f the car that struck the Schmidts' vehicle was found guilty of a misdemeanor reck- 1 es s driving c harge Mrs. Schmidt claimed there is evidence that indicated the driver had been drinking. But Orange County Deputy District Attorney Jack Sullins said a felony drunken driving conviction could not be sought because the driver left the scene Sullins said a blood alcohol test is needed as evidence to prove intoxication. Since the driver left. no test could be con- ducted Angry over what she sees as an easy out for the driver, Mrs. Schmidt has become a familiar sight at local shopping plazas. where s he has been distributing a petition calling for tougher penalties for people convicted or drunken driving Iler s ignature gathering is part or a national effort started a y ear ago by a Bay Area mothe r whose 13-year-old daughte r was killed b y a drunken driver Called MADD , Mothers Against Drunk Drivers. the loosely knit group hopes to gain the attention of national lawmakers and President Reagan to get legislation passed that would require d'runken · drivers to lose their licenses. "Just about every person who signs the petition has a story to tell about a drunken driver,'' Mrs. Schmidt said ... Almost everyone knows someone whO has been the victim or a drunken driver at one time or another." She said s he wants people to know that the kind of accident that disrupted her's and her husband"s lives happens to hun· dreds of people every day Quoting a 1980 California Dep(lrtmenl of Motor Vehicles study. Mrs. Schmidt said 65 per- cent of those whose li censes are revoked for repeated drunken driving offenses orten are aJ lowed to renew their licenses within a year's time In addition. s he said statistics show an alarming number of felonv drunken d rivin2 arrests being plea bargained down to lesser charges. with the victim left lo suffer in silence. .. These people are aware or how easy it is lo gel away with driving drunk. and even injuring other people." she said . "'Drunken drivers are devastat· mg peoples· lives and getting away with 1t ·· Med center looks ahead South Coast hospital hopes to tap 'inland' market By STEVE MITCHELL Of .... Diiiy 1'119t Shift The location seems ideal for a thriving, successful hospital. Many of the rooms at South Coast Medical Center provide views of the blue Pacific, or the green hills of South Laguna. Visitors are more apt to be seen gazing out the windows than watching the tube white spending time with ailing rel- atives or friends at the 268-bed facility. But Paul M cQuade , ad· minislrator of the five-story hospital just inland of Coast Highway, does not view the loca- tion entirely as an asset. For one thfag, he says, there is limited access to the 217,000- square-foot hospital from inland areas. "Besides Laguna Canyon Road and C rown Valley Parkway, there's no way for in- land patients to reach us, .. the 42·year·old administrator says. "We're off the beaten path." Partially as a result of loca- tion. the hospital is only about half full. McQuade says he wants to see a steady improve- ment, until the facility reaches federal occupancy guide)jnes of 80 percent. To do that, the bearded ad- ministrator says the hospital has to move away from its former dependence on slow -growing Laguna Beach. and expand to other areas. "'All too frequently we talk about bow beautiful it is here, but we can 't lull ourselves to steep We have lo be· more ag- gressive to inland areas.·· M cQuade has in corporated that aggressive spirit. having made some major changes at the hospital in the past year and a half. For one thing, he no longer needs approval of the 21 - member board or directors to hire or fire top aides. He's gained board support for m ajor changes in the hospital bylaws, and has taken over more management chores from the board. Some reared McQuade was making a power play, and there was a minor shakeup d uring board elections earlier this year that saw four of seven incum- bents defeated But McQuade says rumors of a power grab "couldn't be further from the truth. "I 'm an employee of the board,'' he said. "They are the policy-making body and my job is ma nagement of the hospital." l n explainrn g his role , McQuade said, "You have to lD'l· dersland that within the last four to five years, the hospital had t h ree p ermanent ad - ministrators and an interim ad- ministrator on two occasions. "When you have a vacuum Like that, the board tries to step in and assist. "Once havi'!.S done that. it's difficult to step out. .. But McQuade says he's .. very comfortable with the present ar- rangement. I think the board bas responded very well." And the board apparently likes what McQu11de has been doing lo boost business at the 21-year-old hospital. Last month it approved his proposal for construction or a new medical office building ad· jacent lo the patient tower at the hospital. The 30.000 to 50,000-square- fool structure would bring more doctors lo South Laguna, and, as a result, more patients to fill hospital beds. M cQuade figures each new physician to a hospital brings itl about $300,000 in revenue. particularly doctors whose of- fices are near the hospital. The hospital board will tease land to a private developer who will become a general partner The developer will then sign up physicians as limited partners. The administrator also is de- veloping a marketing program, which he says "will attempt to identify our consumers and their in terests regarding hospital service." He 'll also be looking at the hospital's internal operation to determine areas that need to be ~evised. He lists placement and alloea- lion or beds as an example. "We currently have a large obstetrics s ervice, but low volume,·· he s aid. "The question is. should we continue to provide this s er vice, because it's very ex- pensive.·· On the other hand, the mental hea lth and alcohol programs /'are very viabl e . growing services." CA.Jr wry own p:>plin suit ... thz. tnriil.ional dacrm orrlcx:il.on JOPl m suit,medci tloma .epzcial 2-py fObric, lim no othzr yoJ\trz <N<lI" 'JJQf1l. 3 button with f6kh ar)d flap p:x;Ktzt 44 Fa.hlon l•lond • NN'pOrt &och • 714/644·5010 1001 '4btwood Blud.. • We.twood VUfogt> • 2131208-3273 ) 5 ,. • -------------~~-------------------------------· ...... ------..... --------... 1111 H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11 , 1981 --mffiu~rnrn Republicans need 8 years, ·Nixon asserts France elects Sociallst French stock market plummets in tidal wave of selling PARIS (APl -Socialist Fran- cois Mitterrand. who pted1ed economic c bange a nd pulled support Crom Communists and mod erates, defeated Valery Glscard d'Estaing's bid for a second term as president of France and ended a n era of cen- ter-right government. The franc dropped to S.45 to g r a ms. natio na l1 iatlo n or t he dollar, appro aching the several lar ge indus tries and lowest level since 1971 when the higher corporate taxes. He pro- doll ar was worth 5.52 francs. claimed he had ''no other ambi· Go ld soared. The Ba nk or lion t han to j ustify the con· France urge d calm on the fi dence of the French people" foreign exchange market • dur mg hi~ seven-year term. Early today, with almost 98 percent or the votes counted, Stock selling orde rs on the rtoor of the Bourse, whic h Mitterrand had 15,639,673 or opened 30 minutes late because 52.06 percent and Giscard d'Es· laing had 14,396.439 or 47_93 per· of the flurry of unloading, were cent. concentrated from nine major corporations in the front-line o( In a victory state ment Sunday Mitterrand's n ationalization S E A 1' T L E ( A P ) -ror other news organiiat1ons af Re publicans have changed "the terward. The Fre nch s tock market plummeted in a tidal wave of selling today -a reaction to Mitterrand's vow of widespread Industrial nationalization and t he possibility he will give France's pro-Soviet Communists a Cabinet role. A harried broker PLE[)(;ES ECONOMIC CHANGE 'said it was the worst selling n ight al Chateau Chinon, the plans A half-hour later. traders 64 year-old Mitte r rand said could quote prices fo r only five Fre nchmen had endorsed his of the~ plus French issues list- whole direction of the country" Nixon 's presence dre w a New President Mitterrand wave he could remember proposals for public jobs pro-ed on the forward market. but need "at least eight years" group of about 200 protesters to remake the federal govern· outside the hotel, demonstrating m e nt in the ir ima ge, says i t us · 1 t · ~, former President Richard M. aga ns . mvo vemen in. L Salvador, war and the draft Nll<On. Speaking a l a King County In his speech, Nixon said the Republican Party fund-raiser extent of GOP victories last year Sunday, Nixon a lso said good "surprised most or the pollsters c ampa ig n organizin g a nd andthe pundjts." ANTI-SMOKING CAMPAIGN Shields ad drop rapped financing were perhaps even "The way that, in a contest of more important than good can-that sort, that you prove the ex DETROIT (AP> The gov-T he ca mpaig n h a d b een didates in November's elections. perts wrong, there's only one crnment's decision to drop an ou blicized nat ionwide, with health-directed com mitment. •. Th e r ecep ti o n at th e way · The campa ign has to have 11 nti smoking campaign featur· photographs of Miss Shields ap- Washington Plaza Hotel in Seat-good candidates. but in addition · ing l een-age m od e l Brooke pearing in various newspapers. ·'The only interest served by the announced scuttling of the program will be the tobacco in· dustry," Sinsheimer said tie was closed to news organiza-to that. in any kind of a close Shields may be linked to "lhe but not launched. tions that refused to pay the election, it must have better or-persistence of the tobacco lob- $150-a ·head admission charge. ganization and it must be better by.·· the presid ent of the Richard Sinsheimer , president Of the metropolitan area's lhree financed, .. he said American Lung Association has of the association, on Sunday Schweiker had no immedjate comment, nor did any o ( the toba cco co m pani es . Th e Amer ican Lung Association met here over the weekend. network-affiliated television sla· "Looking to the future. let me cha rged. protested the decision to scrub taons, two wire services and half say that having won overwhelm· the ads. His three-page telegram a dozen newspape rs, only the ingly in 1980 . _ it's going to T he l5-year-old cover girl and to Secret a ry of Healt h and Seattle Ti mes and the Tacoma ta ke ... at least eight years to ac tress h a d pose d w ith fl u m a n Se r vi ces Ri ch a rd T h e lung associatio n s aid post ers, newspaper ads and television commercrn ls were to use Miss Shields a5 a "positive, non-smoking role model" for a "large foll owing of yo uthful ad· t'nirers." News Tribune paid for reporters undo what li beral congresses un-cigarettes prolrudmg from her Schweiker, said in part. lo attend der the control of the other party ears in a $68.000 fede ral anti· "Our fear now is that you. Mr. Free cassette tapes of Nixon's have done to t he country over smoking campaign underscoring Secretary. may be yielding to 15 m1(lute speech were provided the past 25 years ... Nixon said . the idea that "smoking spoils the persistence or the tobacco OPPOSED TO SMOKING Actress Brooke Shields ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~y•o•u•r -loo~k~s~·~· ~~~~~~~~~lobbv in refusing to carry out a ""''., .. l ,..... !,, ...... ., '1'11 Oo<.• 1( ., "'"'"'"",_...~ .. \I 'f,~· .. , •• , COSTA llOIU.0,641 ·1289 '"'...__ MllllON vouo495-0401 >ttn c.-c.,... ...... l&Oft 0...,. ,,.., ol A•..., l'lowy I COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Cotna & Stampe GOLD & SILVER 70% Bank Financing Now Available On Gold & Silver Bank Financing Now Available ,,_"'-__ ... c.-.... __ (714) 556-aSO South CoH t Pina VIiiage -........ !Ac ___ C:-l'tuol ~ Auto & Homeowntirs ,~;;--. Quotes By Phone FAIMEIS INSUWCE HOUP 541-S554 or llS-107 t•t4 Hwttor -Co.to M•M want to tr4'tie-in on 11 newer ~I? Use a Daily Pi lot -<--· Penny Pincher Ad to SP.II item s under • $100. 3 lin es for 2 days only $1 .SO a day. Sorry, no com- me rcial ads a llowed. Charge your Penny Pincher Ad o r use your Vi sa or Master "'' Card. Ca ll Classif ied Advertising at 642-5678 to place your ad. llily Pilat SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH CA 92660 • (714) 752-7923 Made in o ur w orkroom s, o f o ur o wn cool "Broqk sclo th" T he famo us Brooks Brotherl> "Own Make" shirt need little introduction to most well- drcssed men. Herc, our own experts make this celebra ted sh irt in Brooks'clo th, a broadcloth in a blend of polyester and cotton th a t washes easily a nd n ee ds little or no pressing. Our button-down Polo collar, short sleeves. Sizes 14112 to 17. Solid sh ades of white, blue, yellow. $17.50 . IPAIUSHID 1111 Come to the Spring Garden Parties Celebrating Om 46th R e freshments Thursday, May 14, 1 to 3:30 Friday, May 15, 1 to 5 //tw1" Offirt·: LAGUNA BEACH. 2()0 Ocean Avt•nm• ... Flower Show by Lap:una Beach (;arclc>n C'luh and Laguna Nur~t·ry SAN CLEMENTE. 601 North F:I ('amino Fh·al Flower Show by San Clcnlt'nlc ( ;arclcn Club LAG UNA Nl(;t.!EL. :~Monarch Bav Plaza. South La~1111a ... Art Display and Refr~·shments LAG UN A H I LLS. 24:l0 I Paseo de Valc.•ncia. Leisu n' World F lowc>r Show by Laguna Hills Florists LAKE ELSINORE. 600 West c;raham Avcnu<· .. Individual Displays by local florist.<> and residt•nt~ OLIVE/ORA NGF:, 25:--J5 North Tustin Street. Orangt• ... Displays by Acacia Flor ist.c; and Fabr ic Flower Arrang-l'rn<'nl:-: by .Judith Bryant Home Interiors GLEN AVON. 90 11 Mission Boulevard. (;len Avon. Rivrr..;idl' ... Silk Flower ArrangemenL<> by Glen Avon Villa~C' Florists BALBOA. 600 Ea.st Balboa Boulevard ... Display of Hand-Crafted Miniature Models by the Ship Mtxlt•l<•n;' Association BELMONT SHORE. 4601 Second Street. Loni( Bcarh ... "The Pageant of Flowers" by the Long Reach Garden C'luh. In<:. MURRI ETA, 24-736 Washington Avenu(' ... Displ ay of flowers by Rancho Temecula Florist." B ALBOA ISLAND. 301 Marine Avenue, Balboa Island ... Flowers and Refreshments fo?t'//IE/ y;.efoUz£godU19.J J\NO l OAN A~.· .. oc1ATION HOME OFFICE 280 OcHn Avenue, Lagun• 8Hch, CA t2851 (714) 494-7541 Additional offices In San Clemente ... 492·1195 • Lake Elalnore, •. 674-2191 • Belmont Stiore .. (213) 438-9421 Lagun• Niguel .. 49tH 201 • Olive/Orange ... 998-8400 • Murrieta.... . .... 677-5632 LagunaHI01 ..... 586-5100 • Glen Avon ...... 681--011 1 • Balboat1l1nd .......... 675-3212 Balboe ..... -... 673--3701 PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports, and Advertised V atues. READING ENJOYMENT 7 DAV&"A WEEK In the Daily Pilat s I • ····· . ·--.-~ .. --..--.. ~ Probe eyed • m deaths RIVERSIDE <AP> -Coroner's investigators were examining results or autopsies conducted on the bodies or 8 dozen or the 27 elderly patients who died under mysterious circumstances in two hospitals in March and April. Meanwhile, a male nurse whose house ~as raided by officials investigating the deaths has threatened to file a $100 million lawsuit. Robert R. Diaz, 43, a male nurse who worked at several hospitals invol,,ed in the investigation. has threatened to file s uit against Riverside Coun- ty and hospital officials, claiming his career has been ruined by publicity linking him to the deaths At an emotion-filled news conference Saturday in nearby San Bernardino, Diaz, accompanied by his attorney, announced his plans for court action and claimed he gave information about the deaths to the county district attorney's office prior to a May 1 raid on his home. Authorities said during the search they re covered several vials or a heart stabilizing drug that repartedly has been found in high doses in some of the 27 patients who died during Marc h and April. Diaz said that when he brought the rash of deaths to the attention of a s upervisor at Com munity Hospital of the Valleys in Perris. "The s upervisor came up with the idea that maybe it was Lidocaine . . He told the doctor in charge." said Diaz. Diaz would not name the supervisor or the doctor The coroner's office has said the cause or the 25 deaths at Community Hos pital 1s not known. But they have determined the cause in some cases was not the same as that shown in hospital records That discovery led to a series of autopsies that culminated in the exhumation of a dozen bodies last week · The other two suspicious deaths occurred at San Gorgonio Pass Memorial Hospital in Banning, and officials s ay they are looking for any other s imilar deaths at four Los Angeles-area hospitals where Diaz reportedly a lso worked. Edison P. McDaniels, Diaz' attorney. s aid he will file the $100 million suit in federal court this month, charging hospital officials and the county coroner's and dist rict attorney's offices with violating Diaz' civil rights 'Chain' letter scheme probed LOS ANGELES (AP> The letter comes in the mail, informing you it's "The One Million Dollar Opportunity of a Lifetime ... and that for a mere $59 you could become a millionaire in six months . Further . the letter says it's all legal. Not so. say postal officials who are investigat- ing the nationwide mailing. Postal authorities in California, New Jersey and Pennsylvania so far have acknowledged they are looking into it. However , no charges have been filed against Economic Data Corp. of New Brunswick. N.J . which 1s allegedly mailing the letters . J ames Neilland, reportedly the company's chief executive, told the Los Angeles Times in an interview in today's editions that the letter is part or " a legitimate cooperative marketing program ... He said it doesn't violate any federal laws, but. accordini? to Los Angeles postal inspector Christine Macho, "We 're saying this is a chain letter and we're saying that not only is il a waste of your money but also it's illegal." ~ She said cease-and-desist letters have been sent to Californians on the chain letter list. The California Penal Code bans endless chain- pyramid schemes such as the ones that broke out in Southern California las t s pring, at which people paid Sl.000 lo participate in parties. There's a s lightly different twist in the new let- ter: The Economic Data firm advertises a one- page report, "How Millions of Americans Can Save $20.000 or More in Mortgage Interest " The "investor" can then send $10 to the person who is No. l on a li st of five names that accom- panies the introductory letter, plus $49 to the com· pany For the $10, the individual obtains the one· page interest report, which can be reproduced for future mailings, while the $49 brings 200 address labels and a batch or introductory letters . According to the Times, Economic Data of- (icials say an individual's name moves to the No. 1 pos1t1on m anywhere from a rew weeks to rour months At that point, the letter indicates that 100,000 people must pay the $10 each to make up the million dollars. Despite the sale or the mortgage report. postal authorities say the scheme is still Illegal. They say courts have ruled that including a product or re- port in such a mailing is no defense against federal laws dealing with pyramid schemes. EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr .• Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 NATIONAL FOOT HEAL TH WEEK May 9th thru 1 5th The POdiatrlst Is the only doctor solely dedicated to the ca re of the foot. See your p0diatrist during Foot health Week. For the name of • POdlatrlst In vour area c:all ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday May 11 . 1981 H/F SUITTHREATENED Robert Diaz Marines, Navy in maneuvers SAN DIEGO 1AP1 A major sea exl•rcisc in volving 9,000 men . 17 ships, 25 planes and 35 helicopters. was under wa y t oday off lht• Southern Ca l1 forn1a coast · The training games which began last Wed nesdav were to end Ma-. 18 Sh.ips and units from Long Beach. San Fran CISCO, San 0 1cgo and Portland art• taking part l nvohed a lso an· Mar ine s storming as h or1: at Cam p Pendleton under air sup port from the carrat.>r Constellation. Navy gun fi re will be prov1dl'd. but at San Clt.>menll' Island ini.tead Placing your Class1f1ed ad 1s so simple JU~l ~1ve us a call on the phone and we'll help )OU word your ad for fasl re suits. 642·5678 r Burbank air crash kills 4 LOS ANGELES IAP> A single engine plane crash al the Burbank-Pasadena-Glendale Airport has claimed the li ves of four people over the weekend . while four occupants or another plane escaped tnJury when their craft went down at San- ta Monica Airport across town The Burbank crash Sunday afternoon occurred just after a Bonanza Beechcraft V tail plane had taken off and gained altitude, but then "apparently had soml' sort of troublt'," atcord1ng to airport spokesman Sam Jones use chief i11stalled LOS ANGELES 1APl He has led two ex ped1t1ons to the antarctic and Cape Zumberge on tht' frozl'n continent is named for him, but there was a warm wcll'ome for geologist James N Zum- berge during his inauguration as the University or Southern California's ninth president Flags und trumpet flourishes accompanied a long procession or gowned students and faculty Sunday during thl' ceremony for Zumberge, 58. who was a member of President Reaga n's pre l'll'l'lion l'ducat1on pol1l'Y task rorce l:nps, youths clash \'ENICE 1AP1 Vt'nit•e police tangled with a ~roup of about 150 ) uuths who pelted them with rol'kS and bottles Sunday evening in an incident that began when a low truck was towing cars from a dart lot near the beach. police said. Six mt•n. one of ttwm possibly the owner or a car bcin)? 1mµounded , came up and began to ·'hassle' the tow truck owner Danny Stt'mberg and his clrnt'r, polal'l' s aid I RA c1 u11s eye<l LOS ANGELES I AP 1 Cardinal Timothy Manning, head of the Roman Catholic a rchdiocese here. says tht• British govt>rnment should relax ~omt.• rt•i.trictions plact•d on Irish Republi can \rmy mt"mhers 1mpnsllncd in Northern Ireland. Escapee cau((ht .I ACKSON I A I» A Mi!>so uri prison escapee wanted in the woundin~ of a California Highway Patrol offiC't'r Y.a'> captured today after a trucker spotted him trv1n.e to hitchhike. the CllP said M 1t'hL1el F:ai.lcv.22. whohadswornhewouldn'l he taken ah\'C, \\US captured unarmed a nd Without incident. i.a1d CllP spokesman Gardner Curtnght lit• was taken to the Amador County jail. Aptly named, this-a collect1on of truly opulent beauty-makers. Imagine: Principessa Lipstick, Contour Blush, Lumina Radiant Finish Moisturizing Makeup with its own unique sponge applicator, Lumina Perfect Moistur1zt?r and a purse-sized f/acon of the "fragrance of the night", Di Borghese Parfum Vibrant Spray Automatique. And they're all yours as a bonus with any Borghese purchase of 7.50 or more' • I 1 , Af'WI ........ ' LOFTY PERCH Flagpole painter Jim Phelan has a bird's eye view of San Francisco on a bright day as he works his way down the pole in front of the San Francisco Federal Building. Come m and meet w ith our resident Borghese experts, They'll introduce you to a new gathering of treatment and colors for nails: the Lumina Radiant Finish Nail Collec.tion including Foundation, Protection C/aze, and the most brilliant Lacquers. The Borghese Lumlna Cosmetic Collection all from •s to '35. Find them in Cosmetic Collections-where we are all the things you are! South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bristol Sueet. Costa Mesa.Open Monday throogh Friday from 10 am to 9·JO pm. Saturday 't1I 6 pm; Sunday 12 noon to 5 pm. --------_ .. ---- Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 Crime statistics not beyond maneuveri ng Last week, some prominent · members oC.he Orange County Superior Cmt'rt bench released figures showing that judges don't coddle criminals, that. in (act. 95 percent o ( the defe nda nts prosecuted in superior court were convicted. Further , the judges said, 95 percent of those convicted of retonies were either incarcerated in the Orange County Jail or a state prison. It was strong stuff from the judges, who are prone to keep a low profile on matters of crime and punishment. The timing or release or the statistics was inte res ting. It came only one day after Gov . Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's address in which he called for more aggressive actio n a g a ins t criminals. The Orange County judges apparently wanted to tell the governor that at leas t in this county aggressive action already is being taken. Are Orange County Judges r e ally that· tough ? The re's a nother element to the story. lt's inte r esting ·how the fi gures compare with statistics recently released by the county Criminal Justice Council. Those data s how that only 5 percent or those arrested on felony charges end up serving lime in state prison. In the vast majority or cases. c harges are r e duc e d to mis demeanors and the case "d'ealt out,'· that is , a negQtiated settle ment is r e a c h e d . They neve r adva nce to prosecution in supe rior court. The judges chose to focus on one limited set of statistics -the set that made their position appear the mos t favorable. But the justice council's figures are equally revealing. ll just goes to show that the old adage about s tatistics holds true. You can make numbe rs say j us t about a nything you want the m to. University is pub lie A measure tiefore the state Senate, SB 252, would place the University of California regents under the state's open-meeting law. The university now is the only state agency exempt from this law. The bill by Sen Barry Keene would all o w continued closed-door m eetings only to discu ss hiring a nd o th e r personne l matte r s, lawsuits, selection of ca mpus s ites and specific investme nts . It would, however, .... require the regents to announce the results of personnel decisions in public and to discuss in public overall investment policies - such as whether the university should hold stock in companies doing business in South Africa . Some of these issues now are discussed in public, but it is not required. At a hearing be fore the Senate Gov e rnmental Organizati o n C omm i tt e e , Keene's bill ran into a snag over a provision that would dquire the regents to give seven days· public notice be fore voting on any military contract, a nd to disclose details of the contract th a t don 'i vi olate n a tional security. This would directly affect the university's federal contracts to run laboratories in Los Alamos, N .M ., and Live rmore. where atomic weapons are developed. The contracts are now up for a five -year renewal. The weapons contracts have been the subject of controversy both inside and o uts ide the university. When members of the committee suggested that the military contract provision might be seized upon to delay approval of the overall open-meeting law, Keene agreed to remove it. But he rightly insisted, "The public has a right to require the same high standards of openness from the Univer sity of California tha t it has from other s tate agencies." It is true that the univers ity receives part of its support from private endowments, as well a s from public funds . It remains, nevertheless. a public agency and the decis ions of the regents should be open to public scrutiny. Wasteful paperwork The County Supervisors Association of California has taken a small step that might help rescue county welfare and s ocial w o rker s from the avalanche of paperwork that now threatens to engul( them . As things stand, counties are required to fil e full-scale annual reports on all state and federal programs for which they receive government funding. Following the s p e cified procedural steps and compiling the reports -designed in theory to enable government to retain control of the programs -has now become an end in itsel(, the supervisors contend. And the reporting, they say, focuses on how much a ctivity has taken place, rather than trying to measure the benefits of the programs. At the behe s t of the association, Sen . Joh·n Garamendi has introduced a bill that would place an 18-montb moratorium on six separate plans California counties now must submit a nnually to the state. After that. plans would simply be updated with annual progress r e ports. Comple te reports would be required only every three years. And emphasis would be on r esults of the programs rather than on levels of activity. • Inc luded in the re porting mor a t o rium w o uld be state-funded county programs on drugs, health services, alcohol, child health and social services. Government's exaggerated d e mands for r e p o rts h a ve become an intolerable burden for both businesses and lower-level government agencies. And it's s afe to bet that most of the required report ~ rarely ge t beyond someone's flling cabinet. The supervisors believe that cutting back the paperwork would save both overaJl health and welfare costs and staf( time that could be used in more productive pursuits. They're on the right track. 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 Is lnvlt· td. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9'2616. Phone (71~) t42-4321 . L.M. Boyd/Oldst,ers buy pet food Q. How much canned cat and do& food la eaten by people who don't have enough money to buy 1rocerles? A. Don't know, don't know. Do know, lhouib, that 2S perc.ot of all the cat and do1 food ls bou&bt by •lderly folk on exceedlnaly tJ1ht budeeta. OR ANGE COAST Daily Pilat Oo you have a dininaroom In your house? And if so, do you use lt routinely? When polht.ers ·PUt that query to a alseable sam pllnt of .. bomeownera, 97 percent .. td no, they uaually eat In the kitchen , or wherevel'. By 11wbere"V~r. •· l Lb1nk what's meant la where the TV Mt l1, Uke the den. Thomas P. Haley Publl~r Thomas Keevll Editor Barbara Krelbich Editorial P•ge Editor ~, • ; 0 2 . - + ., i ~l \ ~. SCHU\FLY ! RF.ALLY~! I The FBI • IS not above fraud WASHINGTON -The FBl's crime statistics are the official yardstick of just how much evil lurks in the hearts of men. The arithmetic does not refl ect favora bly on the FBI. whic h seems powerless to cope with the rising crime rates. The G-men nevertheless show no em· barrassment over the increase. The more crime that is committed, the more money they require to fi ght it. So at appropria- tions time, they point to the grim statistics not as evidence of their own in- adequacy but as justification for a bigger budget. Usually, Congress is duly impressed and votes the FBI lhe funds it requests to safeguard the nation. Yet the Justice De pa rtment's internal documents show this money is sometimes misspent. Here a re just a few of the improprieties documented in records that the public was never supposed to see· T he .. impro prieties " involve in· dividuaJ corner-cutting as well as serious violations of contracts involving millions of dollars. Here are some examples : -"Emergency purchases" -which do not require contrads or even purchase orders -ha ve been used by G-men to a void regular accounting channels These suppQsed emergencies result in ex- penditures of millions of dolJars each year, and have included payments for agents' physical exams, auto repairs. conference expenses, la undry, offi ce sup- plies. parkii\?. tuition and utiLitycharges. -The bulk of FBI contracts were found to have gone to "sole source" suppliers - • noncompetffive awards that are an open invitation to sweetheart ar rangements. The investigators found cases in which contractors submitted unsolicited pro· posals and then coached bureau officials on ways to justify contract awards without competitive bidding. -A 1976 INTERNAL investigation found that FBI offi cials had been guests of the R~mington Arms Co at a weekend __ G. JACI AIDIRSDI ~ hunting retreat a few years earlier. The company paid for accommoda tions, hunting licenses, liquor, ammunition and guides. The in vestigation concluded that it was OK, however, because Remington had no FBI contracts at the time . But documents show tha t the bureau was buy. ing thousands of dollars' worth of Rem· ington shotguns under s maJl-purchase procedures. -The bureau recenUy bought new of- fice furniture, though it had $279,000 worth of furniture in storage -in a warehouse that costs $16,909 a year, When the Marriott Corporation's food service contract for the FBI Academy at Quantico. Va . came up for renewal some years ago, an FBI official recommended soliciting competitive bids only to "keep within lhe sphere of federal .. reguJ ations." The time for submitting bids was so "unduly restric- tive," lhe auditors concluded. that only one competitor made the deadline. The result was succinctly summarized by the routing slip of the review committee: "Memo with our recommendation on way up! Of courseit is Marriott." In 1976, Marriott offer ed $15.000 to the FBI recreation association's snack ba r Mar· riott says it was not a donation. but was "intended as our own investment to Up· grade the existing facility.·· The FBl's legal counsel s hot down the proposal. ABOUT 1,000 REVOLVERS wer e purchased solely from Smith& Wesson on grounds that non-uniformity of handguns would create a safety hazard. FBI oCCicials also said the S&W revolver was the only weapon used in most of its gun battles. But government auditors found that agents are in fact allowed to carry either S m ith & Wessons or Colts. a ccording to personal preference. In the a bsence of documl?nta tion a uditors wer e unable t o determin ~ whether lhe FBI had actually received many of the goods and services which invoices showed had been paid for. Footnote: At least one member or Congress is not willing to give lhe FBI a blank check. He is Sen. Orrin Hatch, R· Uta h. whose investigators are checking up on the FBI e xpenditures The senator is planning to take up the mat ter with FBI Director Willia m Webster. Don't write off Hayakawa's chances Earl Waters 1s on vacation. Thll column 1s written bY his associate Phil Jordan California's poli ticos and pundits h ave a l read y writ ten o ff S .I Hayakawa's chances in next year 's senatorial election. They did the same thing six.years ago. There is one big difference this time a round. Six years ago. Hayakawa was only president e m e r itus of San Fra ncisco State. Now he's the in- c umbent United States senator.• That·s no guarantee of re-e lection It didn't help his three predecessors but it is a bully pulpit for those who know how lo use it and. in his o wn quiet way, Hayakawa has demopstrated he does. JUST THE SAME, Democrats and other Republicans are lining up to vie for his Job in next year's races. The would-be replacements cite several rea · sons why Hayakawa can·t win again, the major ones being his age. his well- publicized penchant for dozing off when bo r e d , a nd a n ot-par t ic ula rl y - impressive record in office. To deal with those points in reverse order ... Hayakawa himself h as noted he hasn "t, so far, managed to accomplish m uc h. He's also observed that as a doubly junior solon, and a mem ber of the minority party to boot. he hasn't been in any position to accomplish much. A(ter four years in offi ce, Hayakawa . f ARl WATf RS is no longer a complete newcomer to the world's most exclusive clu b. ' MORE, HE AND hi s f e llo w Republicans now control that club. This increases his legislative clout. It also means, with a Republican in lhe White House. Hayaka wa now has the ex· ecutive branch clout held for the last four years by California seniorr Sen. Al an Cranston. As a r esult of these c ha nges. Hayakawa has an e xcellent chance to impress the state·s vote rs in the more tha n a year before the 1982 elections His cat naps? Far Crom being evidence of aging , they demons trate an ability many peopl e envy: ask any re· porter who'.s had lo sit through hours of dull legislative sessions. committee hearings, or press conferences. HISAGE? Hayakawa wi ll be i 6 next year, but lhat·s not nearly as .. otd .. as 1t once was. either in life or in poli tics. For ins tance. it's only about fi ve ye·ars older than the President of the United St ates. a man in a much more demand- ing position It's only three years older. for that matter . than a certain fell ow Republican sena tor from Arizona, a fact a much younger California con· gressman, who admittedly has his eye on Hayakawa's post. might do well to keep in mind. u 1ven the respective records of those hoping to repla ce him. plain·speaking S. I Hayakawa. wherever he s tands in the polls today. may be more than capable of pulling off more electoral upsets next year. The Schlafly theory can be lllade to work Ever since Phyllis Schlany told the Senate Labor Committee that women who are sexually harassed In the workplace have only themselves to blame, our office has been a hotbed of confusion . What Mrs. Schlafly said was: .. When a woman wa lks across the room, she s peaks with a universal body language --i ' ART llPPI :S , that most mC)n underst•nd. Men hanUy ever ask sexuel favors of women from whom the certain answer Is ·NO.' Virtuous women are seldom accosted by unwelcome sexual propositions or familiarlUes, obscene talk or profane lancuaae." THIS REVELATION certainly caused the women In our otnce to alt up and take notJce. There were numerous cries or ''Gosh, why dldn't I lblnk of that?·· or "By Geocce. 1he'1 rlthtl" l wish you could have aeeo the trim line ol remales 1hu.fnln1 to \heir dakl the next mornlnf wlU. tbelr arms croeaed-over I.he front upper portloa of their bod.lea. I don't know whal th1a Hld to lhe other reuowa. but to mo ll aaJd, "Women's RehabUltatlon Center." Poor Miss Dreemley. It took her three minut~ to make it to lhe water cooler as she insisted on skulking from rile cabinet to file cabinet while wearing dark glasses. a snap-brim fedora and cold cigar between her teeth. l 'M NOT SURE Ir this enhanced her reputation or not. True, she didn't re- ceive a single sexual proposition, but two guys tried to place bets with her on the third at Hialeah and Fred Frisbee got sore when she wouldn't sell him a lid of something or other. On the bright slde. J•ne Starling In accounUng wasn't harassed once by a male lnvltoUon to lunch. She credited her newly acqulred habit of con.'ltanUy picking her teeth. "I dob't know whether It'• the toothpick," she said, working on a lateral Incisor, "or whether they figure 1 already ate.·· Attempts to look virtuous were not so successrw. Mias Peachart rot her white velJ cautht ln the collatln1 machine In the Xerox room and came wtthln an ace of belnt rorced to enca10 In a reproduc· Uve process. AND WHILE B-etay Barton's new ward robe (designer overalls by Can't· Bust·'em and rubber boot.> •l>ared b r belnl lueMouaty oated, tl did lead un· rortunately to prolanlt.J. That .-u when she told the bo11, Mr. Ph.loger, that ahe didn't care who the hell be lhou&bt she was, by God, but she didn't do win · dows . The one unqualified success waa Lorelei Samre in personnel As usual, she came swaying into work wearing nylons, a mini skirt. decolletage, dan1l- ing earrings and the longest eyelashes on the market today. And not one solitary male pinched, patted or even made her a welcome sexual proposition. ·'I dress this way because I enjoy looking pretty." she told a crowd of f@m ale admirers. "And I think that any young woman who believes In Mrs. Sc:blafiy and yet stUI wants to wear pretty clothes," she added, st.rokins the Ups of her new Zapata moustache. "should 1row one, too." lllllY Ill PeraonallY, I'd rather help a Mexican who S. wUUn1 to work and find room for him In thiJI country lban all the otMr foretanen I'm helpl~ to support Uuoqb well are J.V. -r 'I ·. . • : • •C ~! 1u. ~ : l• ·: 0 • • • j . . : • . ., _I -.a f , .. I ! I .. •. i ' ·' II 1' \ I I I I "f . • •1 .1 , I ' I 11 . ,; rl .J• 1 I .,, . , r1 If il J. I I ., i u I< , ~ ' t QUEENIE I -:r;.,-r~' 5 ·11 ~··· C.,.-5-"" --- "l lhink I can show my support for the adminl.atratlon without a jelly bean In my martini, thank you." ,~~\ ,...,,~ ~ Disability facts told DEAR READERS: U you're between 35 and 65, your chances or being unable &o work for 90 days or more because or an Injury or Illness are rar greater than your chances of d ying. according to the Health Insurance Institute. If you're over 50, there's one chance lo four that you'll be disabled for six months or more before you retire. Disability Insurance Is one way &o protect yourself nnanclally, and this ls the sabject or a pamphle t by the Health Ins urance Institute. Titled, "What You Should Know About Dtsablllty," It lists some of the finan- cial resources and benents you may already have, helps you decide whether you have enough protection, tells you what you should know about Individual policies and ofrers helpful hints If you're' shopping around for a policy. The free booklet may be requested by writing &o : Health Insurance Institute, Dept. 733, 1850 K St . N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006. Slwp for insurance DEAR PAT DUNN . Can a lender force a borrower to get credit lire and disability insurance to cover the outstanding balance on an installment credit contract? . G.L .• Irvine A creditor may require you to buy this insurance, but may not reqalre that yoa bay It through him or bis Insurance agent. U this Insurance Is required by the creditor, the premium cost must be Included as part of the finance charge. U Insurance ls not required, make sure you have sufficient coverage to protect merchandise you are buying In case of death or dlsablUty. If you decide you need credit Insurance, It may be wise to shop around. Some credl&ors receive sales commissions from the Insurance company and you may be able to get a better deal from a local Insurance broker. • "Got a problem? Then write to Pat ""'l Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting • the an1wers and action you need to 1olve inequities m government and ,.... • bwmeu. Mall your questioru to Pat ~ I Dunn. At Your Sermce, Orange COCJ.1t Daily Pilot. PO Bo:r 1560. Co:ita Mesa. CA 92626. A1 many letters a1 possible wall be aruwered. but phoned inquine1 or letters not mcludmg t~ readeT's full name. addreu and bu.fine11 houri' phone number cannot be cOfl.l'ldered Thu column appears daily ez. cept Sundays " New telescope a joint effort • MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP) -An Infrared telescope that scientists hope will s pot I million new radiation sources in the heavens is set for shipment to Holland for mating with its dutch· built spacecraft, according to officials at Ames Research Center. Unlike conventional telescopes, the unique in strument will be able to "see" heretofore invisible objects s uc h as "cool" red d warf stars. 12-blllion-year·old quas ars and, perhaps, the black hole that many astronomers believe lies hidden at the center of the Milky Way. The telescope was built by Ball Aerospace Systems. part of the same company that makes Ball jars used by millions of Americans who can their own foods, according to Ames spokesman Pete Waller. T1'e scope was shipped on Sunday to Ball's Boulder, Colo., plant. The project was managed by Ames . Conventional telescopes are used to loeate object. emitting visible llthl. Radio telescopes can pick up other frequencies or the spectrum where noisy waves now from many astronomical object.. Infrared radiation la fer cooler than visible Ugbt, lhouth lt actually ls emitted as heat. The earth's atmosphere blocks out Infrared waves from distant bod let. . In a joint project linking the U.S. with Britain and the Netherlands, the new scope will be carried to an altitudeof Mamtlea whereltwlllorbltfrom pole to poleevery 110 minutes. • The extremely aensiUve scope wlll operate at mlnue 45fJ de1ree• Fahrenheit, a t•mperature that will be maintained by fllllnl lll double·waUed ve11el with l.Mpounda ofaupernuld hell um . .J Waller Hid the cold t.em.,.,.1tun la needed to k .. p the tt.at-1ensitlve l.nstnunent from "..elns llMll.'' Jg M-lnch mlrror eye wlll point straitht up and will aoon scan the en Ure 11t1 hrite durint theacope'a on•·1•ar life. A Dutcb·bWll ,,.ttrometer will ualyae radiation picked up by a fftecton. . ---. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. May 11 , 1981 . ******************** How Do You Feel Right Now? * * * * NOTICE TO FAMILIES * * * * -Are You A Mature Woman ... With A Ctrculatlon & Figure Problem ? H your all8Wer la "YES" then you need Jean Marie ... The only women's Heahh Salon designed with you In mlndt LOOK BlifTER ... FEEL BETIER ... The apecial man In your life wtll love you tor ttl If you find Arobic Dancing strenuoua and the "Bargain" exerdae salons offer no equipment ... then pMM oome In lor a Free Treatment . . on the most IOPhilticaled machines avallable' of_ DECEASED VETERANS * In honor o f Veterans who have died. Harbor Lawn Memorial * 1 Park is dedicating additional flags to its "Avenue of Flags" on * MEMORIAL DAY, MA y ZS, I ti I * lt Any family who has a Veterans Flag and would like to have it lt Jt dedicated and added to the Avenue of Flags. may call or bring Jt ...._ the flag to Harbor Lawn Memorial Park office no later than May ....._ ....-15, 1981 . The Veteran need not be burled in Harbor Lawn to "'f" * have his fl ag displayed at this dedication ceremony. . * ..t.._ (flags will be stored at Harbor Lawn for future display at no eltpense lo the ....._ .,.... lam1ty) "'f" * * * * Try Jean Marlea own Therap!_utlc l.omge I to Improve spec:lal probieml .. IUCh aa Circulation, Dowager Hump, Flabby Thlg~a. Orcp~t1d Buttocks, Lethargy, Tension ancfStreaa. INTIODUCTORY lfrn * * * * IMow-0.,1 ~I S30. I lhlllt1tit.d V lslh I UP. 11••111 * * * ... ! I larbor Lawn· Mount Oliw ! : Mo11uary · Cemetery Crematory ·: * "Serving All Faiths" * ....._ 1625 Gisler Avenue • Costa Mesa • Phone (714) 540-5554 ....._ .,... Costa Mesa's Only Complete Funeral Facilities ....- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * II THE BIG DISCOUNT TO THE EAST YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT FOR. It\ JU't 1101 po.....,iblc to plan ever) trip aheaJ of time or 111 'tay fo r a '-"CCI.. or longer. On Continental. that tloc!>n't mean you can't get a htg dl!>COUnt Our n~ ASAP Fare lc1' )OU tal..c off from Lo' Angele' I ntcrnational. Burhanl.. llr Ontario for 'even fu,tcrn t'i1ic'. Wi1h no \\.l1ttln1!. Fl y to Bo,IOn~. Nev. Yi1rl../Ncwar~. Phil;iJclphia~. Wa!>hington. D.C.. Millmi or Ft. LautlerJule for only $179. Or Chicago for $159. That\ each way when you buy a rounJ. trip ticket. There arc no other rc!>lri<:lion!>. No aJvanc.:c pun:ha..,c. No length of !>ta} requirement' or time JcuJlinc,. But 'cat' arc limiteJ and all llighl' <Ire via Denver AN EXTRA CITY, NO EXTRA CHARGE. When )OU fly to any of the~e !>even Ea.\tCm t:itic,, you can return from an} one of the other c1t1c., at no extra charge. For example. )OU m~ht fl) to Ne"' Yc.irl../Ncv. ari... anti .:atch a return tl1ght from W1'hing1on. D.C. FIRST CLASS Fe. THE PllCE Of COACH. Buy a full fare Coach tici...et on Continental or bnng u' another airline·., full fare Coach ticl..ct hl 1he'c ~ ... 1crn L·111c' .md ''e'll ll\ \Ou FiN Cl;L" That\ nghl. hl'\t Cl•t'' .. Thi''' llll a lir.I come. lir.t 'enc ha"'· "1 rL~l"\attrnh .ire ... uggL"-leJ Wh1> "1!d ~1>ur comp:.tn~ \\ouldn't Jll1"M Ftr.t Cl.1..._, trmd am mnn: > llG DUL OH A RENTAL CAR. Cont1111.:ntal\ AS1\P Fan: lh>e-.n't 'top bctng a goo<l Jcal \\.hen !OU I.mt!. On \\.Cd.end.,. with a three tla) minimum. yuu can rent a Dollar Rent-A-Car~· for ju!>t $16 a Juy. That\ wi th unli mitcJ DOLLAR mi leage. Or during. 1he wed .. jtM _.. •""" $24.95 a dav with 100 free mib. JlN 1.,h1)\\ your Continental tid,ct at the Do llar rental locati1m. Gotta' gel bad. I-;1,1 111 ;1 hurr) •mu ''ant 111 Bn,fon~:. 7·00 am. ~:45 pm Chtl·a~w. 7.10 um. i I 25 Jm. '()(J rm. 5:28 pm. 5.55 pm Ft Laul.lcnfolc· 11 25 ,1111 M1an11: 7:10am. II 25 .1111 Ne" Yorl./Nc"Jrl.. 7 llJ .1m. 11.25 Jm~ .J:OO pm• Ph1laddph1a;. 7.tKI Jm. 2:45 pm Wa,h111¥1u.n. DC 7 10 .1m. 11 :25 Jm ""'c monc\ 100.' You can·1 dn tx·11a than ASAP Call )our l'ompan~ tra\cl d.~.:partn~cnl. trJ\cl agent. or ContincntJI CHICAGO •iS9 BOSTON ~79 NEW YORK/NEWARK •i79 PHILADELPHIA ~79 WASHINGTON D.C. -.79 MIAMI ~79 FT. LAUDERDALE •i79 horJ t ""'"'1, .. '4!t11•.i•• I "'t<• '"' ·".ftl.iM1, ,., .. 11 .. t.h1u .. ••' •" f c. '' "'''' J1 .. •oURh ...,,.,,. \J.,, ..... 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I( 1 ') I' I ,, .. i .c; c _. _________ _...... ____________ _ HI F Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Monday. May 11. 1981 Ballet an obsess~on for director , J Brooklyn Academy. Jacobson's enthusiasm turn~ to near ecstasy when he spoke or the critlcul re· Vll'WS the company received while in New York AP'Wi,..,_ FOUR'S COMPANY -Linda Bootz pus hes a stroller made out of two bicycles down a Wausau. Wis. street. Along for the ride are two Bootz children Abby and Ben. and Sarah and Wendy Buehler . Dog Lucy pulls on weight DEA TH NOTICES BARllA~1 'h•m1111.ll P.irk \'1:-.rtalron "rll hl' twtil from I 001''1 lo 9 11111''1 ctn l'ul·-.dJ~ \\J~ 12 l!ltl I l'.1nf1c-\"rt·\\ '111rl u.11 ~ drn•dur' POPF. \' I 0 I.A I' l::A It L l'O I' 1-;. n• ... 1dc•nl of l'o>.la :\lt''•'· t ·,1 tor 3:1 'l'<tr·~ Pa.,,t>d ,1\•J' 1111 ;\la\· 9. 1981 She '' :.rrru' t·.t II\ ·uc•J n \\' l'opl' ll:rughll'r ~h1rlt•\ '.\kAlecr 11f l'u'I a '1 p ... a ~I ... I t· r ~ I. I 111 !t n Hrub.iker of l.•llll! lkJth By SHARON DALEY he can't play the violin, but for mor4' than two ,..,. .... _ .. ..., ,...., years he has studied under the ltallun master MALIBU, Calif A:1 the new managing Mario Frosall learning lo make them director of the Los Ange les Ballet, Steven A look at J~obson's MaUbu beach house In Jacobson's first JOb was unpacking boxes, picjcing d1cates why Boyles considered him the ri1hl man up papers and organizing files. to manage a ballet company It look him nine "Eighteen years in the Janitonal service bus1 months to complete the large mosaic he copied ness." laughs Jacobson. "I never actually cleaned from a 900-year old Venetian fresco. It hanas on a fl oor until I got this Job." his wall Next to his rireplace hes a soft·eyed, Jacobson retired two-and-a-half years ago at playful sea lion he sculpted in wood. The whole the age or 42 after building a small janitorial house rerte<•ts his interest in and mastery of service into a million·dollar operation. various art forms .. , vowed to retire young and devote myself to "H I like something, then I have an obsession sculpting, fishing. making violins. or whatever to master it," he says, ofCerlng ru s guests a sample struck my fancy " or his own home-brewed beer. Then, a few months ago he received a call Jacobson approaches the s ubject of the ballet from Bob Boyles. senior vice president or Security with something like evangelical fervor He ls more Bank and president of the Los Angeles Ballet's than enthusiastic, he is adamant. board or directors Boyles said he had the perfect Jn the short time he has been on the job. he has JOb to lure Jacobson out or retirement Impossible. immersed himself in the ballet. lie admits he challenging and no pay knows little of the c ritical or creative end, but he "Of course I accepted." J.acobson says "It has quickly learned to love the dance. sounded too good lo be true " lie admits he 1s too old and loo short 5-foot-4 The Los Angeles Ballet 1s not a new company : to learn to dance. but he is content ir he can be a it has existed precarious ly for seven years Until force an making the ballet a s uccess in Los recently, the ballet helped to meet its expf'nses by Angeles. giving performances for local schools and receiv-.. My job is to help the company run smoothly ing funds from loca I ~overnmenl agencies But and to see that it has the funding to succeed ," hf' with the passage of California's Propos1t1on 13. the says, "and that gives me a tremendous sense of ballet lost both income and exposure. belonging lo the ballet " When he accepted the job as managing d1rec Recently, he went with the company to New tor, Jacobson had never even seen a ball et. but York. where the Los Angeles Ballet, under the that had no effect on his decision For that matter ~irection or John Clifford, perfor:ped_al the •Jrit.Al111ccu•tt• ,.., .. l ....... , lOWHOI Ct .. •1 Clt111H• , E.m:ml ~~l.'' ... OA•-'t OJUH I• I • 6 og e:oo 10.00 Ringo Starr CAVEMAH (PGI SHOWS AT 6 15 8 15 10 15 ESTllER BARii/\ \I rt'" tlcnl of \'1-.la ('a for 5 \t'Jr:- .md rt·.,,cl<'nt ol l.J).!un;1 llllb Ll'ISUl't' World ,1n·a fur :1 'l'ar' Sht• 1., -.un 11 I'd h' ht·r hu,h ,1nd JJm t'-' Barham. son Donald ~I "m•lh uf l'~pre:-' t'a .ind d;iughll'r C:Jrolrm• L \lat· tht>W:. of Bt·tlrlmit•r. (';i .,,-; lers L 1lhl'rrnt• (;n·t·nfwhl uf llunt111g1on Park ('a . Tom ('ll•m('nt and \'('bra Pi 1 uruff hoth of 1.i1gun;i llrlh ("' .mtl :\large K1i.se l of :\l1 ... ,,111n \'1t'JO. l'a . hrollwr (;t•uri.(l' l\onnoff •1f \r1111n;i 7 grnndc·h1ldn•n arul 1 gn·;1t i.: r ;i n 1il' h 1 l d n• n Fu n t' r a I ""n ll"t'' "111 lw hl•lcl \\ ed nesd;i~. ,l,1\ 13. l!JKI at Ill UO.\M at the llarhor I.awn \ll•mon.rl < 'hJpt'I "Ith Ht•\ Bruct• l\urrlt-. ua .... 1 or of t IH' l'rc·sh\ll'rtan C'hu1d1 of the (.' 11 I l' n ;i n I u f f I ,. I a I I n ).! S('n llTS umlt·r th,· <lrrt·<·l 11111 of II a rhor I.a\\ rt \lollnl 011 \C' m11rluJr~ ol ('11.,t,1 \lt•,a ~1 IO &5~11 (.'a . Opal :\loon· of \lrt·hr _ I ~ LION OF THE DESERT (PGI In Dolby Stereo SHOWS AT 8 00 1.t:TI~ 1;i.:'\1-: I. L ~:·rrs. n•.,ttlt•nt 111 1·11.,t a '.\11·''' CJ l'a1'...i·d ''" :t\ on 'I." !I. l'IMI 111· 1' .,un I\ l'<.l ti\ h11' "1fr \ t•rn.1 l,l'll "' or ('0 ... 1 .. '.\lt·'·' I h1ld1t•n .f11t•l,1 l.l'll' or \lrn ltl'S tl!J, (',Jlhll' l.<•11., of llt•n\ c•r l'ctl11ra1l11 and .Joni Fnrr 1°.,t of 'ltnn1•.,ot .1. "'lt'r l'nlt't'll Hl'lhlln •1f ;\l 1nn<"-t1la a n <I 2 g r a n rl c· h I I cl 1 t• 11 "l'rlllt'' \\tll ht• hl'hl un l"ul•,da\. ;\l:n 12 l!tKI at :1 311 11'.\( ,1t th•: llarhor l.i.t\IO 'lemon<il t 'h.1pd "1lh 111·1 Brun· Kun I µ.t-.111r or till' l're..,hl'lt•nan l'hurt·h ol lht• ('II\ I' fl Jn I 11U11 I J t 111 I! f'l'I\ all' lllUI llllll'lll 'l'r\ l1't''- \\Ill follo\\ ~wl\ll'l'~ 11ncl1·r lh1· d1n·1·1111n uf IL11ho1 I.a\\ 11 Mount ()I" l' ;\J11rluan 11r c·o.,la Me ... a !HO 55.').I PA• LSE!'l F H E D 1-; R I C' K 11 l'Al'LSE:-.. SR . l'""'l'd ;1>1·;i1 on ;\l:I\ HI. 1981 Hes1 <ll•nt nf C:o-.ta \ksa (.'a Sur\ 1vt>d b\ 2 -.on;. Fn·dnll·k II Paut ... t•11 • .Ir 111 Fullt•rlun. l'a . .inti Holll'rt II P.rulst'n or l nrnl' C'a "l cJuualttc·r!-.frarll'ltt• .laroll' of (.'o'-l<i \ksa l'a and l>orot h\ SH•,ka of llt•f1\ 1•r t'olor.1cl1t !:I itr<11111(-hrldren ;111<1 I 1!rt'a t I! raml<' h aid \Ir P;rulwn hacl ht•t•n .1 rt·:.1dl'nt 111 Costa l\k:.a ;111<1 thr;. :irca ... inn· 1~5 ancl "a' a h11m1• < onslrurlwn cnntra c tor 111 Oran.Re ancl l.111\ /\ng<'ll·S l' o u n l 1 l' ., <; r a ,. l' ., 1 d <' 'en 1Cl's v.111 tw ltl'lcl on \\ <'d nesdU\'. :\la\· 1:1. 1!1111 al 2 OOP!\1 al l11t• l'.1nfll· \'1e11 , " rAClftC VIEW ME:MOllAL ruk Cemetel) Mortuarv Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1!1c View Ori111> NewPOrl Beach 644·2700 McCOllMICll MOITUAlllS LaQuna Beach 494·941S LaQuna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 HAIUIOll LA WK-MT. OLIVE Mortuarv •Cemetery Cretrelory "" 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa ~SSS.. ,,.Cl UOTHHS 11U UO.ADW .A Y wo.TU.AaY 110 Btoadway Costa Mesa 6"2·91SO 1A&.n•ino .. 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"\1•\\ Jl•r-.1•\ .1n1I 2 lll'1>l11•\\' '.\ll'llllltl•ll 'l'l\11'1'" \\Ill hl held 1111 Tut•o;d ;r\ \I:" 12. 1!1111 ,11 HI m.\'I .1t th1· F11-.1 t nrlt•li \l1•thu•lr'I ( hurt h 11t ( '11., t a '1 t•., u f) I II u '...i• 11 ,f ctn l'., R l' 1 l · h .1 r Ii·~ II ('l..1rk .md Ht•1 l'.IUI \lt•x andt•1 ,qJI ofrit•1all· TIH fam1h r('llU4''" 1111 flO\\t'r:- An\ \\ho \\l~h m<i\ make 1·nri1nhul1011s to lhl· Colll').!t Ben('fll Fund of llloomfH•ld 111).!h Sch•1ttl. flloumrrc·ld N l''' J t•r:-e1 0700:1 l'wn·1• Brot ht•r, lkll Br 11,111" ·" \111rtu:1n drr t•t'lor., DEATHS ELSEWHERE I PllO\'ENUER. f:nglancJ I 11\ P 1 Prlnrt' .\ndrt>". 11-l. nf Hui.~r:.r. oldt>,..l ... 11n·1, 1n).! j relall\l' of ('1Ur N1rholas II drcd Fnda' lk hJd ll\t•cl 111 Pani. anti Engl;rncl "'"n I the• Hu.,...ian lk\'nlution PUBLIC NOTICE I NOTICI! 01' AVAILAalLITY 01' ANNUAL llll"OltT ~ PurM1.nl 10 S.Cllon ••~ (di ol ""' Internal Revenue Code, nollce t hereby ol,,... 11\al lhe ..,,,.,., report IO<~ the catet..iar yHr ttlO of 8rl99' C<An· nlngllam Automotive Museum I ••all•llM !of-pub41c in-lion by any 111tere1t.o cltlten -re-Jh II at Ille 10....oeuon•s 1><lnclpel office local· ed •I 2'0 &.ker $1t'fft. Cost• Mew, C•lltorr>I• mv. IM91nnlno on M41y 11, 1'11 •nd lor 1eo .,..,, """'••119r durrno r99ul•r blnl,.» """" from 1:00 e .m . loS·OOpm. TM -of Ille PrlMIPCll --ol th• foundation Is 8 rloos Cun-n1nol\am. Tiie 11119 o4 IN Principe! Mane~ ot lhe I-Ion ll Pr~ldent OlreCIQf M. TMI 1_.,., C''A ..... ..,.., c-w or1 ... .... ,,.. N-~ a..dt, CA ft ... Tth (7141 ..... u PublllMd OrMIQll Co .. I 0.lly Piiot, May I,•, 10, 11, 12, "II ttTt .. I PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIH NAMI STATIM((NT Tiie IOllowino ""°" ,, doln9 DUM• MUH SEA HJO CON$UL. l AN lS, H4 Par• Orlw , C•I• Mew. C..IUO#n • t1•21 r.....-J. Pelltfl. Sl4 P•n Or1ve. Co,I• 'Me .. , C.lll0<nl4I ,,.,, , n11s blnlMH It <-IN ))y en Ill dlvtdU•I ' T_,J Petl<ll Tiii' \!All_. .,., 111.0 wllll Ill county cren 01 OfM .. Cownty o• M41fdllt, ltll ,, .. , .. P11tlt1.iiec:t OrtnOe co.ht o.11v Piiot, Marc II 11, Aorll 4, ti, II, 1'•1 U .... t To Place your "Fast Result" Servlco Directory ad Ca11 Now 641-1671 ... ua ,,.. ~,_..,<A,,... '•""'O• •I tu .-t.tr'Jt"m p.rfH'•t• 1toour in. t&Ate01t0r1"' ~ ,,. tontHir '"' •tfl*"'9 Dtl trH1>11 c""'11tttt 4ll iCl l'l.iJ "NO[~ Fil'-'' R(Ctovt HiE Sl•L Of Y-t-t[ ~IJflfjfrlf Pu •• fuAf l.l)OI Of ';(l< REG>J AllON USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5678 bi. 322 Burt Lancas1e1 ATLANTIC CITY (R ~ SHOWS AT G·OO 8. 10 10 15 A•-ot"to0Nt • c.,.. J • Sownd .. , 0.1w ,,., B•tvw lfo"" AMo• 1...cJ,l•'' yOWll ~'ft If nu AM or '•d•o "'''"ti"'''"" .C~y ""'' .... " °"''"V 1'1WI' O#Pft AM pott.C.~• Jan Michael V1nce111 HARO COUNTRY (PG l And Heaven's Gate IRI M1chatl Caine THE HANO IRI Plu~ The Sphon>< lRI I John Boor man's EXCALIBUR !RI FortApache.TheBron x (RI I Academy Award Winner ORDtNARV PEO-LE IRI T11bu1e IPGI Gene Wilde• STIR CRAZY IRI Plus Used Cars (R) KING OF THE MOUNTAIN (PGl Plus Van Nuv• Blvd. lRI QIQ.USM MAHN THEATIU: S11QWING SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT Mann's South Coast Plaza CoN (714) 346-2711 for showtlm.s. W(~T COA~f PltlMllRl f N(.ACfM(NT NOW SHCM'ING • OfonQe CINIOOMI •Calta Mela, HAllOI TWIN U4•Hh 61t•HOt Slit M 1°!:J ,I~':'. OO N C"'4 MAllll ICI ll<OWIM• _.._..__ .............. ~MCIPtc'l~'DOMI• ~~ ._ ....... __ ,_. 1'1!i .... ~ Dall\' IUO • '"" • 7 00 a 1-.>_ia_""-----. ~,-~-.,-.. -.-.-.-.,-.... -• .:.,:11M".:: ;or,;:. .. , , ,. ••• "'"'" l ........... 001~.,_r GOU* MAWlli • QIMfCAA\.0 ....... LOVERS AND LIARS (RI ..,..~ , •... ... , ... , ............ , .. ~_, .. 1:11. a.i • ....,, ~1:00 ..... ...., 1!41 IMl'ORTAllT NOTICE• CMltOR(ll UNDER 12 fRlf! -.. -..... ,·--J'-.111.r;'lwi:Q;;~1;;~:Jqr-:~~I ~~1.~:..~:~so~;~~11 CHEER ::~~:;t:::c..: ;:~~ II No AM CM Radio Wllh Ignition ""'"-Y '""' v-OwnAM Portabl 411il ~~~· LMA;:c~;::~:.,CR ,, HO AM CM RMlo With Ignition At<•-·"'"' y...,, OW11 AM Porta ~·-·llO~-· • _ _,,,_,AU_ PEllRO CALLEJECO II CON AL ROJO VIVO .. K" .. ~ --.-MA-..... CAM.a ...... .. ., -LOVERS Alto LIARI (RI ... ,...... ,....." .... o':.!'::'.:':, CAYl~~N (ltO) (N ) ----"-' -"'-'-..1PUNET 0, THa OINOIAURI II NoAMCar "edlo Wllft ''"'""" Ac<•-Y ..... v-ownAM Porta I ......... ----Cl.-· • .. .,Geo_ ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN G•• .. ,,_.,.., "-'"' C "' "'1 EVERY WHICH WAY IUT LOOM 1 No AM c.. "ecllo w11111on1uan Acea_,.,,,,. v-own AM l'of\a •• ..Nil'll .. ... ,o.-.. o, ... ,., ..... , .. , ... 1 ,,,_IOAY T .. 1• ,_.I (Ill -MY lll.OOOY VALIMTINI (RI . -~--. P'RIOAT THI 111111 ~I (II) -MY eL.OOOY VALIHTlNI -·---l.OVIRI Md> UA1'9 Ill) -llX MACHI Na (II) _ ... _ _.._.. .. ,,_ UC/4~(111 1"I IMMtlDMN (WI) In an ironic reversal or the usual coastal cull ural rivalry. the Los Angeles Ballet recelv~d l(l<1wing praises from the New York critics. The ballet '11 hometown criltcs are not so kind llowever. Jacobson refuses to be ruffled by the le11!.·lhan·glow1ng hometown praise. lie points out that once a year famous companies like the Stllj- tgart and floyal Ballet come to Los Angeles for '1 rew days. pl ay to capacit y crowds and then leave ~ "Tt)e audicn..ce 1s here," he says, ·and we JUfl huvt> to keep working, because witho t a resident <.•ompany there is no way to expose th populalton to the dance. ln train new dancers, or t encoura~e nt•w talent " The Los Angeles Ballet temporanly esides lt the Philharmonic Auclitorium, but e entua lly hopes to huve a home or its uwn However findi rtg and rundmg a permanent residence requir moce than exuberanc·c "My goal 1s to raise $2 million a year." ais the ex-Janitor "Arter all, what's $2 million" T !is what it rosls to ileep two downtown buildin4s dt·an .. Hight now, however , all he wants 1s to ra1$e l'nough money tu µay off the company·s dl•btJ; .. What 1mprc'>ses me most 1i:. the ded1 cution pr sorn<.· or thesl' penpl<.>. Many work hard. and work for free When you are working with people Ilk~ this. I figure Wl' cJn·t fall · _.,... "CAYDIA.N" ("t _..., "OOtMO ..... "°"DINA"Y NO~I" .... ·•MYATI HtwAMIN" 1111 "IXCAl. .. Uft'' Oil .... ,...NI,_ ........... "towere ANDLIAJtl"llll ........ n -~-. -----·------__,...--~--------------- .4.Je H /F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 SPORTS Angels' timing just right A~Wl ....... Fregosi breathes sigh of relief after 4-3 victory By JOHN SEVANO CM .. Deity ..... Mallf The Angles leave for the start of a 10· game road trip today and, yes, J1m Fregosi will be accomiyaning the team as its manager. Fregosi was able to maintain his posi- tion because his players rallied behind him for the second straight day in beating the Detroit Tigers. Sunday, it was an emotional come.from· behind 4.3 win before a Mother's Day crowd of 29,689 at Anaheim Stadium. Brian Downing, playing left field for on· ly the second time this season. provided the chiUs with }\,is two-0ut, two-run homer lo dead center in the eighth iMing which gave the Angels a 4-3 lead. And Don Aase allowed his skipper a sigh of relief when he struck out the final batter in the mnth inning, stranding a Tiger base runner at third in the process. Even Fregosi himself couldn't contain his Rick Leach swine through an Aase fastball for strike three. He bounded up the steps of the dugout. s lapped his hands over a job well done and went out to personally congratulate his relief ace. "Downing gave me the game ball." said 1''regos1 with a smile. "We made some. mistakes but they (players) battled back." The mistakes Fregosi referred to almost had owner Gene Autry pulling the s witch to the electric chair. · In the fifth inning, Dan Ford's misplay or a double down the right field line by Champ Summers allowed the Tigers lo score one more run than they should have. And, two innings later, errors by Rick Burleson and Butch Hobson gave the Tigers another gift and a 3-0 lead In the seventh. The moat agonizing inning, however.._ bad to be the Angels' half of the sixth when they loaded the bases with none out and came up empty despite the presence of Burleson, Dan Ford and Don Baylor. "The tough thing was the sixth -at . least for the manager ... admitted fregosi. '• With three Angels surrounding him,. Detroit starter Dave Rozema was able to work out of the jam by striking out Burleson looking, getting Ford to hit a. short fly to center and Baylor on a routine fly ball up the middle. As Al Cowens squeezed the ball for the final out of the inning, it appear ed. Fregosi's fate was sealed as well · But the Angel players, who have made. <See ANGELS, Page All> Lea drops hi,s ERA just a bit Montreal youngster unlikely candidate for first no-hitter of '81 MONTREAL <AP) -Charlie Lea of the Montreal Expos is an unlikely candidate lo pitch a no- hitler. He was born in that great baseball capital of Orleans, France, and when he began Sun- day 's game against the San Francisco Giants, his earned run average was 7.36. Although Lea once pitched a no-hitter in college at Memphis State. his major league im· mortality came as a surprise to some. "Nobody expected a no-hitter from Charlie,·' said Expos catcher Gary Carter ... But he had a good fastball and good com mand of his pitches. and everything fell into place " • LEA R ELIED mainly on his fastball in pitching the major league's first no-hitter of 1981, victimizing the San Francisco Giants 4·0 in the second game of a Sunday double-header. The Giants won the opener S·l on Tom Griffin's four·hitter. s prang to their feet in anticipa- tion of witnessing a piece of baseball history. Lea took off his cap, mopped his brow and bounced the baseball on the artificial s urface a few times. a nervous habit that several San Francisco players later said annoyed them. Lea went to a 3·0 count on Bill North, but fought back and 'I 'm really digesting all of this . I 'm ·really. not the type of person who jumps up and down.' caught him looking at a third strike. He then induced Enos Ca bell lo pop a 2·0 pitch to center fielder Andre Dawson. Steve Yeager and Ron Cey bump a.s Cey makes first-inning catch. Lea , 24. making his third start. knew he had a no-hitter g~ing." he said after squaring his record at 1-1. " ( think every pitcher does in that situation .. "I was hoping he'd hit the ball in the air to me," said Dawson. "Everybody wants to catch the last out of a no-hiller." Welch at home So did his wife. Louise. who was in the stands. "She ate most of the rose that was distributed to all the women entering the park on Mother's Day, .. said an Expos official. UNTIL THE seventh inning the no-hitter was almost ob- scured by the fact Lea was locked in a scoreless duel with Ed Whitson. 0·4. New York • m There were no dangerous balls hit and Lea only had one inning of real wildness the eighth when he issued two walks. But he got Mill May to bounce into a double play before yielding his fourth and final walk to Dave Bergman. Bill Smith then rued to center. ending the inning with runners al first and third. But rookie Tim Wallach. out of Cal State Fullerton and Sad- dleback College, led off the in· ning by belting Whitson's first pitch into the left field stands. NEW YORK (AP 1 Bob Welch loves New York. He ac· tually whistles the tune of the same name loud, clear and often The young right-hander enjoys wandering around the big city. He even likes the s ubways, believe it or not. Saturday night on the eve of his scheduled start against the New York Mets, he roamed around the midtown area just enjoying the sights. Among the sites the Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher en- joyed Sunday was Shea Stadium, where he beat Mets a 5·3 although he failed to finish the game. "I TIUNK New York 1s the greatest city in the world."" s aid Welch. "There is always some action going on. You know. I re· fuse to take the team bus from our hotel when I'm in New York. I always go out lo Shea by s ub- way so I can enjoy the scenery on the elevated line." Welch was the centerpiece of an odd game at Shea. He saw his team score four runs in the fourth inning without a hit. '' l had never seen that anywhere before," he said, "in grade school. high school, col· lege or organized ball." Wel~h was referring lo an in· ning in which the first two bat· ters made outs. Then third base man Hubie Brooks was charged with three straight er- rors, tying a modern-day record held by nine other third basemen for miscues in one in- ning. LOSING PITCHER Randy Jones, possibly unnerved by the loose fielding, contributed some loose pitching, forcing in three runs on walks Tom Hausman replaced Jones and a lso walked \n a run to complete the picture. That made the score 5·2 and the Mets were beaten except for a brief flurry in the eighth in ning. Welch had to leave during the minor uprising, but Steve Howe took over and finally closed out the Mets' budding rally "THE ONLY thing I can say about that inning was that I was tired ... Lea said. "This was the longest stretch I've pitched all year." "The runs allowed me to go out there and just lay the ball across the plate for the last two innings." Lea said. Lea had a carpet of white towels and a few cans of beer awaiting him when he arrived in the Expos' clubhouse. A~WI ......... Welch admits his delivery wasn't as good by that time. "I would have loved to havE finished. but Howe is a very capable replacement." After Lea got pinch-hitter Jim Wohlford to ground out leading off the ninth, the 25,343 fans "I 'm still digesting all or this," he said. "I'm really not the type of person who jumps up and down." Charlie Lea celebrates with catcher Gary Carter and Warren Cromartie Welch first came into prom· inence in 1978 when he struck out Reggie Jackson to end the second game of the World Series against the New York Yankees. Later in the Series. Jackson got a measure of rev e nge b y reaching the youngster for a single in the fourth game and a home run in the sixth and final contest Rocke t s find right chemistry for s uccess Reid's pre-game drill, Dunleavy's points get Houston even with Boston WELCH IS ON the road back. He had a drinking problem for a time but appears to have over· come it, thanks to a rehabilita· lion program he underwent in the spnng of 1980. Meanwhile. Mets Manager Joe Torr e refused to blame Brooks for Sunday's defeat. "Hubie's too good a player and I'm not blaming him for the loss,'' offered Torre. "He's a winner Why single him out? Randy Jones, the s tarter (who dropped to 0·5) didn't put the ball over the plate. either. Brooks. who handled a dozen chances overall. explained, "It was one of those days. Things didn't work out well. I felt bad when the runs kept coming across because I knew we shouJd have been out of the inning." HO USTON <AP> Houston Coach Del Harris had the winning player combina· tion, forward Robert Reid had the right pre-game drill and the results erased Boston's chances of a quick kill in the Na- tion al Bas ketball Association cham - pionship playoff series. Harris used only six players in the brutal fourth game of the best-of-seven series Sunday and with Mike Dunleavy playing the catalyst's role with 28 points, the Rockets defeated the Celtics 91·86 to even the series at 2·2. The series resumes in Boston Tuesday and will return here Thursday for Game 6. NEITHER ROCKETS GUARD Calvin Murphy, a super substitute off the bench throughout the playoffs, nor Allen Leavell got into the game. In fact. BUI Willoughby was the Rockets' only substitute. "There was no poison there. no animosi- ty that Murphy or Leavell did not play.'' Harris explained. "I would have used them if the situation called for it. Why mess up the chemistry if It's working?" Duniea.vy responded to the mixture by scorip,g 2tl points, a personal playoff high, and 'Moses Malone, although battered beneath the backboards, scored 24 points and grabbed 22 rebounds. Reid, meanwhile, held Celtic forward Larry Bird to eight points for the second straight game and said an embarrassing 'We are going to do unto others as they have done unto us .' 94·71 loss to Boston Saturday did not make him tight about Sunday's game. "I got up this morning. ate some Fruit Loops, watched Tarzan save Boy from an alligator on television and came down here to take my warm-ups," said Reid, who scored 19 points and grabbed 10 offensive rebounds. "When I saw Bird get the ball the first time, I thought it's time to keep It ot~t of his hands ." THE ROCKETS CONTROLLED the of- fensive rebounds 28-17 and woo the overall r ebounding 49--'7, leading Boston Coach Sill Fitch to make a promise. "We are going to do unto others as they have done unto us," Fitch saJd of the violent activity beneath the boards "I think the rest of the series is going lo be more physical than it has so far " Reid said the Rockets respond better when they are in pressure situations.· "So we just told ourselves that this was Game 7 and if we lost there would be no tomorrow," Reid said. "Now we have a tomorrow. If we had lost today. it would have been tough to win three straight against the Celtics.·· The Celtics and Rockets battled back and forth in the first half with neither team leading by more than four points and it ended at 50-50. Although Boston tied the score several times. then never led after the first quarter. HOUSTON LEAD A 10-poinl bulge with 5:20 in the third quarter for the biggest lead of the game. · The Celtics struggled back in the closing minutes of the match, but Fitch said tbe Rockets never had a chance to break. "We made a lot of mistakes when we were behind a nd didn't rally lo get back into the game," Fitch said. "We didn't. give Houston a chance to see if they would break ii we came back. We didn't even bend them.'' San/ ord's ultimate goal -worM record in 100, 200 ~ WESTWOOD <AP> -James San· rord's goals are lofty but, conaldertn1 his performances so far, not out of the realm of the posalble. "I think my ultimate aoal la 9..3 aecooda for the JOO met.en, and a world record ln the 200," Sanford said Sunday after he swept both aprlnta lD the UCLA· Pepsi meet. The world nc:ordl Cl\ln'ent· lY are Jim Hlmet' 1.95 In the 100 and Pletn) Mennea'a 19.72 llt the 300. Sanford, the world'• top·rated 1printer ln 1979 and a NdtbJrt at USC this 1111on, won the lot In 10.05 aecond.I. He beat Stanley 11oyd, laat )'tar'• No. l 1pa16t.tr, who wu cloektd a 10.10. Santar4:..lbitll 10& &be aoo tn I0.20. "I respect all the spri nters. bu.l especially Stanley Floyd," Sanford said. "He's still the No. 1 sprinter ln the world -\antil after 1981, when I hope James Sanford will be." Sanford's two victories were amon1 the hlghltats of the meet that 100 in· eluded Greg Foster'• 13.lO·aecond clockint in the no.meter blah burdles, tbe tecood tuter ever, and a prodlaM>ul lon1 Jump by Carl Lewia tbal turned out to be wind·ald.cl. Lewl1, from the Unlveulty of Houttoa, Jumped a.,J'6, the HCODd belt ever, but the wind waa .02 mmn per 1tcood a.er the allowable 2.00. It wu the &.op loftt jwnp ever at or MU ... level (Bob Beamon'• world rfford of -----·-i 29·2'>AI came ln lhe hi1th altitude of Mex· ico City ln the 1988 Olympk1). •·I felt real good .nd everytb.loe seemed to ao just naht," Lewis said. "l tried to wait until the wind died down a Uttle bit, but l guest I dJdn't we.it quite lona enouth. Still, I'm pleased ... Lewil' Jump cannot be entered la any of!lclal record book• becauae of the wind. Foster'• clocklnc lo the hlah hurdles abaved .u seCCIDdt oa bl• pnvtoua best. and be alto beat rival Renaldo Nehemiah, t.be world record bolder at 13.00. Nehemiah, matins h1I tint start of the HUGG, ftnlahed third, and lt marked the Mcond 1eer ln a row hit• ba1 beaten him In thla meet. • 11 was very surprised at Foster· a time," said Nehemiah, who wu cloclled in 13.46, also behind Sam Turner's 13.43. "I don't t.h.lnk I was ready for that y•t. I'm not worried, though. I bad a bld s bowinc here last year and went on o ha\te a very 1ood year.'' The victory apparently 1ave Foste a new shot ol confidence. "I haven't felt this good since t w11 jn hlCb achool," aald the former UCUA 1ttr. "I feel now that l can 10 out and win and run my own race doin1 lt. "I was a little dl11ppolnted tbal Renaldo and Sam weren't up there a lit· tte btt more, .. Folta added, "but I'm glad to set. the wtn." •. '•' . · .. \It 1'\I> \' -EVB1NG- 1t00 8 D 8 NIWI 8 WONDEA WOMAN Diana l>OMt u a doul>l9 agent and ancOIH11.,• 1n enemy of the Unn.i StatH who 1e111 government Merell IP8tt 11 0 TICTACOOUOH • M•A•&•H MS tufNr« wno ~ IOt the ':ill"l 10 uM 1'118fljvane a:eo • ()) LvtO\ cwmwa (lll ... .ATIC* l~ c.ner le jolf"9d by ~ CNt*. •rt R9ed Md Ctv18 E-1 UOyct In a nwieleal-V9fiMy "*'* D um.I HOtm ON ntl~ Cllatlee finds a hOn'>e IOt '"'° Ofphent. ..,_.,. ol the Gl'uel l,..lment IMI It ....ittng them t11ere (Pllf1 ~OMOVW • • • ~ "The Bird•" ( 1"31 TIC>OI Hearen. Rod T aytor Olnlc'led by Alfred Hllchcoek 8AMCI on the 11ory by Oephne du Meu· net F~ 10M1 vnll- reuon. huge flocll• of blrdt atlllCk an leoletac:f CallfOMie MICOUI lown D iii THATS IHCMDl8LE Featured: a peychle detllC· llYB. 8 por11ble pain con· lrOI deviee. • group ot amputae lllydovert; a ,_ ..,,g1ee11echnique U MOW Frank thf~ h11 beck out and applllS for 1 Pvrple He1rt while H1wkeye mourn• the lou ol • fr>eo<I and Mnda 1n unoe.aoe aoldllt home Cl) 0000 TIMES Flood• s plen• for J J s 01rthd1y 111 aomewhll suOdued when J1me1 -n• lhat a comouter hes given him 1 bid cred1I r•I· 1ng (Plft 21 DYNAMIC DUO -Lynda Carter is joined by Ray Charles in her musical variety special "Lynda Carter's Celebration " tonight at 8 on Channel 2. •**"'"I want To Lrve" ( 1958) Su181l H•ywlfd. SimOn Oalltand A call gtrl 11 oonv><:ted ol murder !Ind ..,,,encecs to die"' the gas c/\ember fl) PAOOINOTOH BEAR P1dd1ng1on QOM on a pie n>e, ge11 nis pi.:ture 11~en 11 the Mllhor• and 1s tr>eked into buying pnoney 1h11es 1n 11n oil company '11) El.ECTRIC COMPANY (!!) (I) C88NEW8 ®) A8CN£W8 1:30 0 JOKEll'S WILD • WELCOME BACK, l<OTTtA Wathlngton 11 the prime suspee-t when lhe class 91vtng& lund d111ppear1 ti) 8ENNYHIU Benny·1 WHI Country ch1rectllf hu lhe 0.st &dvlCI I lalher can g1v1 IO his son m l<C£TNEW88EAT '11) STUDIO SEE Stunt Ktd Hollywood stunt kid Reid Rondell per forms 1 world record· ~ .. king 1ump off I high rise (RI CJ) NEWS CHANNEL LISTINGS BAlllHEY MIL.LEA Whtie ttlle ell~ com- plain of pornography t>e.ng displayed al a dtsltn· gu•lhld 8tt gallefy. Barney and his wile f-a mlftlal • Cll$11 l:M 8 EDfTOAIAL 7:00 8 C88 NEWS 0 N8CNEWS D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Fonzie a11empts to take Ille piece of an ailing escape 1r1111 In a magic ~ sl\ow to help an orphan- age 0 A8CNEW8 U 1Uu.8EYE tD M'A'S'H A young surgeon from TOkyo bftno• hOme 10 the surgcK>ns ot the 4077th that they are out of louch Wllh new medlCll p< ICllC• .. ti) 8T..uT8 ~SAN F'R.+.HCl8CO Whirl a college leachef ts ecc1den1e11y shot. he retu-to let the poltCI .. .,..._ the bullet for tear of losing a p<omotiOn 8 KNXT 1CBS1 Lll'> An41•11 .. ., 0 KNBC 1NBC1 Lo~ Anyc>lt•'> fi1 KTLA 1lnl.l 1 Lo~ Anyt•I!!'> U KABC TV 1ABC1 Lo~ Anqf'if"., 1{, "FMB 1CBSl S11n 01ogu 0 KllJ TV (lnO I LO'> Anqf'IP' (ff KCST (ABC1 Sdn D'"9" .., K TT\1 1 Ind I L ()~ AnqPlt•·, Cl) KCOP rv t tml t l 0'> A•HJf'io• fD KC[ r TV 1PBS1 l o.., Anq"'"" m KOCE rv I PBSt Hunlonqton 6PdCtl LOS ANGELES <APJ Lee Purcell's newest "•movie offers her an opportunity to act in two of her ,. favorite story forms, romance and fantasy. 1n "The Girl, the Gold Watch and Dynamite" ~: she has a romance with co·Slar Philip MacHale, •• and there's the fantasy about an old pocket watch •with magical powers. In the movie, she and .·.Mac Hale keep trying to get to the altar, but are ::stopped by one misadventure after another. The ·: ·watch saves the day. The two-hour movie is a pilot for a series on the ad hoc network of independent stations belong- ing to Operation Prime Time. The stations will ~roadcast the film in May and June. • It is the sequel lo an earlier film, "The Girl , : ··the Gold Watch and Everythjng," adapted from the novel by John D. MacDonald. The s how's gimmick is the gold watch MacHale inherited from an uncle. It allows him or # Miss Purcell to stop time then set aright . . ~::Wedding daze . . By PETER J . BOYER A~Te...,...Wr~ LOS ANGELES Uh-oh. Real people are at it again. N$Ct month, NBC will begin a daily half· hour show called "Wedding Day," featuring in· ~tudfo marriages. .. "It's amazing ," says Deanne Barkley, ex· ecutive producer of the show for Osmond Produc· lions , "people will do anything to get on television." Apparently. m OVEREASY Widower Men Alone Guests thea1"Cal pro· duce< Frllder><:k 611uon geron1o1og111 Df James Pelereon, Ken Rld<lell (A) ~ MACNEIL I LEHR!..FI REPORT CJ) TIC TAC OOUOH ®J ME.RV GRIFFIN Guell• Badflnger. f<ng1e Ok:k1neon. Lou Fetrtgno 7:30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN Hosts Steve Edward•. Me4ody Rogers A loot. at ethletes and poht1ca. a t>e111nd-the-scenes look at romance novl!ls, seo whal happens 10 the small Ven· lura Community of 0111 I when thOUSllldl turn out for the Oje1 Valley Temus Tournament G AOHT BACK WITH DAVID HOAOWITT fi1 SHANANA G.-i Jimmie Rodgers U HOUYWOOO 80UAAES . U FACE TME MUSIC • AU IN THE FAMILY As Geof~ p<eperes 10 open htS 1t111d cioamng store Ille Jellenons move to an e•pens.ve East Side ~tmenl W MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT '11) ONCEUPOHA CLASSIC 'The Hiiis Of H8BVl!ft A carl!less eccldent resv1111n 1 11 blllle belw-1 rtghl and wrong for three chlldren (Perl 21CAI (I) P.M. MAGAZINE A behind· tlltt-scenes 1001< at TVs "M ·1<·s·H· an GI P.M. MAGAZINE 'Ttvae'a Company" Slat Jenilae tiaruson: en MS ... Herw wno tough• for tile right to ull mattJUaoa. B~· ty B11U 1n1toducet the stef1 ot the P M Meganne Blrthd•y Con111r·; Or Whllak., glVH us I look at ho'# carbohydrates aid 1n g1v~ ua -gy. Chef Tell p<epatM stuffed pepP41'1 Cl) MOVIE • • "Thi lngk><lou• Bas- tards" ( 1978) Bo Svenson, Frlld Wllllameon Two men form an unusuel frienoah1p during their efforts 10 sur- vive enemy a1teck1 and 11101ent deelh during the tumvlfuoua days ol World War II fD WINNER'S CIRCLE 1Ml:YOUNO MUSIClAN'S FOUNOATION LOI An9eles Times mus.c e<1llC Martin Bernheim« hOlll INS tpectal Wtlh lhe thrM flrsl-plece winners tn p11110 11101"\ a.nd cellO per· forming tn • recital taped at ltCET's studtOS '11) CHARLIE CHAPLIN COMEDY THEATRE One AM (19161 Clllrhe plays a drunken playt>Oy. whO returns trom a night on Ille town arid runs an 01>1leclt1 course with his front door. the stairs and hlS bed 6:30 G) CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS Skit 'A Swiped Ltfe '11) MOVIE • • v, "Call Me Mister" I 1951) Belly Grable, Dan Dailey A soldier goes AWOL 10 try to win back hll entertainer wife whatever mischief has created the problem. ·'I think everyone has a fantasy or some sort of m ystical proportions,·• said Mi ss Purcell, a Southern-born actress with chestnut-colored hair. "We'd aJI like to have powers and abiliti~s greater than we have. I do. When J was a little girl my fan- tasy was having a time machine. I saw the movie 'The Time Machine' 15 times " Miss Purcell is a busy actress who regularly switches between television and theatrical movies any actress· fantasy. She's the shoplifter who frames Gene Wilder and sets him on his way to join Richard Pryor in prison in ".Stir Crazy." Last year she co-starred with Kenny Rogers in the season's hi ghest·r ated TV movie, "The Gambler." About a year and a half ago she decided she wanted to do a series and starred with Granville Van Dusen in "My Wife Next Door." "We got beat out by another show, which is now off the air." she said. "This time with 'The Girl' it's a pilot without com petition. It'll either sell on its own merits or not at all "I like operation Prime Time," Miss Purcell said "There aren't as many people running the show, ~you get to know the people you're work· ing for. "I' turned down series offers before. but now that l'v done about everything else I'd. like t~ do a series. I d be nice to know where you re gomg to be worki g next month." :)he was born on a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, but grew up in Paragould, Ark., where her father is a doctor. After high school she struck out for Los Angeles to become an actress. "I was so naive," she said. "I had my stage makeup and I kept it in a fishing tackle box . I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 A9 TUBE TOPPERS KCET 9 8:00 -"Winner's Circle 1981 -Young Musicians Foundation." Martin Bernheimer hosts a trio ol first place winners in world class competition in piano, violin and cello. ABC fl 9 00 "T he Best Little Girl ln the World." Drama starring Eva Marie Saint and Charles Durning about a teen-age girl who starves herself to the brink of death. KCET@ 9 :00 . "Great Performances : Staying On." Trevor Howard and Cecli a Johnson star in a story filmed in India about a British army couple who stay on after the coun· try becomes inde pendent. HO 8 ()) M'A'8'H Thi 40771h troupe ena-r • patoet of 1111.,1 from • tourth·g••d• cl••• 1n Hewlt.'111orne1own (RI 1J MOVIE ''The Stat Maker (PMI 1) (Premllfe) Rock Hudeon. Suzannt1 Pi.then• Thi 110<)' OI 8 Hollywood dlfBC· lor with a knack lor tllnlfOfmlng l"Ollf'Ull tnlO 1n1ernat10naf 1111 .. 11 8'1<1 1 penchant for ma1ry1ng h11 crealtOfl• 11 told 0 9 MOlllE "Tiie Best Ltllle Gtrl In The World (Prern1ere1 Charle• Durning, Ev• Merle Saini A -..1ngly model teen· ager II diagnosed .. h•V· 1ng enore•ta nervou G) MERV GRIFFIN Guesll Bad1tnger. Angie Olciunson. Lou f e111gno. Jaye P Morgan. Arthur Murr•y Oancera 10:00 8 Cl) LOU GRANT Biiiie 11 given en Inside v-of poltllCI 11\d II rougll 1n1t11t1on from the press corps when she goes on lhe road to cover • poll· 1.c.an (R} DUG> NEWS 10-som NEWS Cl) INOEPEHOEHT HETWON< NEW8 fii) L08TTOTHE REVOLUTION T l\e work of masler 1ewe1« end goldsmith P11er Cati Faberge 11 chronicled Narr•llKI by Yul Brynner '11) MASTERPIECE THEATRE FESTIVAL OF FAVONTES 'The Golden Bowt" Baaed on e novel by Henry James A,,_igo HndS a lelegrem wllh a conG181e<I warning to Charlotte when he heart ot Verve<'s mar· flBg• propoS&I to her (Part 211AI CJ 11:00 8 0 U (]) ®.l NEWS 0 STARTREK I • fD GREAT PEAFORMAHCES "Staying On" Celie John· son end Trevor Howard atar as en aging English army couple who elect to remain 1n India alter 11s independence 8:30 8 (I) HOU.E CALLS N19ht duty wreaks havoc with Charley 1 social hie tRI Cap1 Ktrk II captured by two str•no• creatures who appear in varoovs mag>eel • lorms U NEWL YWEO GAME G) M•A'S'H Tl\e •077tn raon the clock JOHN DARLING JOHN, THE. 51.A.ME:SE TWIN S:IGURE 51-<A'TE~S CAN'T MAKE IT. 50 Cl.JP. SPC>RT5-CASTER, MIKE MA.JO~S. 16 GOING 10 PINCH HIT FOR IHEM ' Actress Lee Purcell ! I i .! • ! studied acting during the day and worked very hard to lose my Southern accent .. After six months she'd got her first part a starring role opposite Michael Douglas in "Adam at Six A.M." She said. "It was a real nice break. My family was very happy. They thought I'd starve to death out here." 10 ..... -a1v wounded IOl<ll9t• ., KNHYHIU. 00 l ll04ltd llhip wlUI 8*My ln c:Nltge • DO<CAWTT GUMt Harry Betefonle (Pllf1 1 o1 ll) '1:30 8 (J) OUIHCY. M.L A 10Hent111 r 11n 11orm wUllll dlalaMd corp ... ou' of a ntlllKM _,.,v crN ttng the po1entlll lor • ~epidemlC 0 THE 8EST Of< CAA80H Gve111 Boddy HICklll, Fernartdo Lamat Brenoe Boozer (R) G OJ) A8C HEWS HIOtn'LINf G LET'S MME A DEAL • AOHUMBARO Cl) BAAITTA Tony 11111 10 uve two young ac1r11M1 involveo In a deedly .. 10111011 ICheme Qi) CD CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -Ml>NIGHT- 12:00 0 SPACE: 18" Ont1 man·s ObM111on with Iha luture leads to a rare and 11art11ng discovery a1 tha moon hurtles into o blazing Inferno 0 ®J FANTASY ISL.ANO T auoo changes pieces with M• Roar~e to grent two showgtrll thetr dream and a ooc1or 1r1es to re1sa money tor a vast new heallh comple• (RI U GUNSMOKE The IBlher OI 8 young gun fighter Hie$ 10 end hll son s cereer by wounding his gun hand G) MISSIOH- IMPOSSIBLE Tl\e IMF 1s assigned lo knock out a oo.1(1ng synd1 cate wh1cn fixes hgr11~ fw .. bookmaking opora11on (Part 11 fD PHILOSOPHY 12:30 0 TOMORROW Guests tormer l$raol1 Defense M1n1ster f1fH Weozman t<ool and the Gang Playooy P1ayma10 01 the Vear Tl!frt Welles Billy Graham Cl) OHE STEP BEYOND Anmver .. a1y 0 1 A Mur de< A man ano woman are plagued by lh9'r con ec»ence -• latll auto- moOtle llClCl<lttll 1t:40 8 Cl) HA1WW 0 All a1t0tr-.y Nr• Harty to help """ cMllf a youno tnatl ~ed of oommll· llrlQ • lllC:IOu• etune IAI t:OO O MOVIE •• "Rld1n On A ~ bow" (111411 a-Autry Smtley Burnell a U PSYCHIC PHEHOMEHA. THE WOALO 1£YOHO 8ayond BIOfHdblCk Hosla Oen11en Simpson 518'y Hunt Guest Elmet Graen. M.O • 8PEAJ<OUT Cl) IHOE~OENT NETWORK NEWS 1:100 MOVIE * • • "The lmpou1b1e Vaera" ( 19U) David Nlvtrl lole .C.lbr19ht @) AOAM-12 1·30 Cl) MOVIE • * * '> "Guns At Batall" ( 196~1 Richard AtlenbOr ough Jack Hawl\1n• 1:110 IJ NEWS 2:000 NEWS 2:20 8 EDITORIAL 2:258 MOVIE • • e 01plomat1( Cou1111 ( 1952) TyrOfle Powe< Stephen McNelly 2'300 NEWS 3:00 Cl) NEWS Tuesday's Daytime Movies -MORNtNG- " 1 l'C)() ll) 8 8 Westward Ho 119351 John Wayne Sheila Mannors 11:30 U • • * Nevada Smtih (Part ~I ( 19661 Steve McOvcon Karl Meloan -AFTERNOON- 12"()() ll) * * I Force 01 Arms t 1951) Wilham Hol oen. Nancy Olson 1 00 Q) • • '• One More Tr111n To Roo (19711 George Peppa1d Jonn VernOfl 3 30 0 • • • Some K1no Or A Nut t 19691 Dick V•n Dyke Ang·• Dic.k1nson by Armstrong & Batiuk 5·11 Hi! WE'VE GOT AN El<i~A 5PECIAL iM'EJ{T FOO 'Y'OtJ 10 DA.'( ... ABC unveils Sunday show LOS ANGELES 11\P 1 ABC has unveiled plan ~ for a nC'w Sunda) morning news program that will repl ace "Issues and Answers" and in· corporate part or its format Roone Arledge, president or ABC News. told the annual meettng or the network's affiliates that the one-hour program wo uld use the format of .. Is- sues and Ans wcrs" but would also include dis cussion between a permanent host and a panel No date was set for the premiere of the show. which will take over the lime period of the children's series, "Animals. Animals, Animals ." The 800 broadcast executives representing 207 A BC affiliate stations ga ve enthusiastic receptions at their meeting here to thC' l wo space shuttle astronauts, Robert Crippen and John Young ; to Pierre Salinger . ARC News Paris bureau chief who was instrumental in putting together the pre- stigious "America lleld llostage." a detailed ac- coun t of the rele<ise of the hostages m Tehran, and to David llartman. host of ABC's "Good Morning. America." Arledge told the meeting that Hartman's con· tract with ABC has been extended so that the former actor can remain at the helm of the popular morning show He also announced that ABC Will telecast the Sugar Bowl durmg pnme time for the next fi ve years. beginning ne!Cl New Year's Day Marriage is a wonderful thing, but a bit drastic just for some TV exposure. Why not simply rob a bank. or pitch a no-hitter? Now she has her own production company and is developing a miniseries in which she will star with Karen Black. "Karen's a friend a of mine and we wanted lo do something together." worked nights selling clothes al a disco and -::::================:::;:;;:--r----------- Will a lso present the first major network coverage or the New York City marathon. set for Oct. 25. And why would we want lo watch two •• strangers gel married? Weddings, It seems to me, ... are of little entertainment value, unless Daddy ar-7 .• rives bearing arms .. !! The June 8·12 run Is a tryout for a regular • daytime series next fall, and if that works out, who • • • knows? Possi bill ties: ; •• ;: "Reception Blowout," a daily, 30-minute !;::·aeries leading into prime time. Focus changes ::· from the happy couple to the bride's drunk Uncle ~ Harry. See Uncle HarTy plnch, wink and sing l'" "Danny Boy," before ripping his pants in a lunge t•. for lhe a art.er. • "Honeymoon Nl&ht," a prime·Ume series that follows the newlyweds from the reception studio lo •. the hooeymoon suite studio. There, our happy ... bride and 1room fumble and blush and do every- _,-tbing except what they're sup~ t.o do -lb.ii l1 network TV. after all. "Matrimonial Bllaa,'' a rolllcking weekly series that checks In with our "Weddin1 Day" couples a year after their wed<Pg. Featured Jt, epllJOdes could lnclude, "Betty Thaws Chicken." •\'The Weed-Eater Runs Out of Cord" and other • bJta ol Amerlcan• that make real people aucb ,. compelling entertalnen., TM: reduction of the marriage ceremony t.o TV entertalnment was anticipated, of coune, by ~ Chuck Barris' clrcua ol matrlmooJal debuement, "-'The Newlywed Game." ~ MlA Barkley, a respected TV maker and veteran ~ the "reality 'tV0 prototype, ''Caftdld Camera,•• dlscouraces comparilona between her new ahow and Barris' 1one-and·DOt·IOOCl-e.DOUCb· f or1otten product.a. • "No, It'• not llk• Chuck Ba.nil at all." 1be aay1, .. 11'1 like the Otmondl. I ah1U that Q~k Barri.I underneath It all, bed the la&entiOll of lliak· ln1 f~ ot people. I e¥t'D b..t t.Ul '-llnc ...ttb 'Can· did Camera.' But this doall't 1ntllr• t.n:• ' TLANTIC CITY THE DECLINE of We•t•m Clvltlz•tlon Chic -------AIOUT s. -------AIOUT 1$1 "GREAT I e · DINNER s5 , nt suP1•' e7 DINNERI 0 g Good for three piaCH of 1u•cy. golden blown Kentucky GOOd IOI nlna pl.Cea of lulc:y. ooto.n blown KM!tucky .,, Frit<I Chicken, plu1 1lng1t ••r .. 1ng1 o f cola slew F1ltd Chicken. with 1ou1 roll1, a llfO-COit tltw, • ltro-0 tnHhtd poltlot1 1n<1 g1avy •iu:t a 1011 L•mlt two oflt1rs mathed po11toe1 •nd • IMC!lum g1evy. Limit two oflw• Z pt1 putchtH Coupon good only 101 comblnttlon wl\oltl Ptr purcl\ase Coupon Oood onty fOf combination whltlt I d11k Older• Customtt P•Y• eu appllo1ble HIOI tax dtrtl ordtf1 Cu11omer P•Y• all eppllc.olt ttltl llJI. Oller H PllH M•y 24, 1981 Ofle1 •~PlfH I May 24, 1981 C2C PttCtl may very el Prlct1 rn1y ¥11ty 11 par pa111c1pa11ng ioee 1 11c:1pe1mg 1oeet1on1. 0000 lions GOOd only In on1ir In SOuthetn SOvlhern Ct lllomu.:<• CallfCHnil where irou '" wt1t1e y0u °'" .t.mer1ca'1 J'le¥()(Ut America 1 'llYOflle Window 8anner WtndowhnMY ------ z 0 ~ :::> 0 u I ' l I r. P? 0 .o • ' \4 A 0 ; ;u as a a St 5 ~ . . ., " NATIONAL L£AQUIE Dodger• 5, Met• 3 LOI AMOILCI NIW YO.I( L-.i.. ~•,<-• a.or.K ....... .. .... ,.._...., ·" Gorwy,11> .,.,,. Guerro,rt va ... t,c TllomH,11 Wekll,p S.Howe.o 1 1 0 0 '#11-,c:I J 0 0 0 4 0 I ' Fek_,, 0 0 0 0 > O 0 0 lollor,pfl t o o o I 0 0 0 Te .. rH,M S J 2 O 4 0 I I Yonttlld,tf 4 I J I ' ' 1 0 JOl'9n111,1t J 0 0 1 S 0 I 0 SIHrnt,c 1 0 I 0 J I 0 0 lr-•,Jb 4 0 I I a 1 0 0 Slo11b,lb Joo o > I 0 1 Trevino,< J o O o 0 0 0 0 k lntmn,K 0 0 0 0 FlyM,lb 4 0 0 0 J-1,p I 0 0 0 Hov.,...n.41 0 0 0 0 Bc•mn,pll 1 o I o Mlller,p O O 0 O Moullll,<1 2 o o O To•••• )a ' 4 4 Tol•ll M J • J k_ .. ,.,. ..... Loi Antel• 010 400 000-S New Yorll IOI 000 010-.) E -·-J DP -N-VOl'a I. lO& -lol ~ 10, New York I. 28 -T•-• J, v.........-. S!' -J0rQ9fttot1. LH A..... If' H a '" ee 10 Welell IW,2·0 7 7 J J J I Howe CS, JI > o O t o N-Y-J-. IL. 0." J'°I l S I Hevtman IV. 0 0 ~ Miiier J 2 0 0 F•tcono 2 I O O 1 J Wetcll pll<lleel lo -1191ter In the 1111. T - ''"·A -12, 102. l'IHT OAMI o._,,,_, Sen !'ranch<o 211 001 000-S IJ O Mont,...I 100 ODO 000--I 4 I Griffin -SedM. '--· ltotnr ltl -Corter. '# -Griffin U·1l I. -1..M IHI. H"• -Son Francltco, C:-11 111. D £•-IO. HCC*ofh.Ma ...... 4,018-• Sen Frencitco 000 000 ~ O I Montreal ODO ODO 40•-4 7 o Whitson, 1..e .. 11. 111 -May; LH -C.rtar, W -l..M 11 t>. I. -WlllUOI\ CM ) HR --reel. Wellocll U I A -1S,J.U .................. 4 sen DI-012 101 J(»--1 IS 1 Pllll-lllt>le 012 010 000--.;t IJ 0 M11ra, Lucas 0 1 end T. Kaftnaoy, Cllrlst-. Prolr (1), R-Ill. LYie '" eno Morel a no '# -Mura 11-0 . l - CllrlSI-11·JI. HR Sen Dl•oo ..... - ••• (4). A -40,441 ... -•• C.OWb J PltbbvrQI\ 020 110 1~ n o 51. Louil 000 000 100-2 • l Cendela rle , Romo I 71 •"0 Po"•· 5orenl0ft. SotllOt 171. EO.len (ti, ICHI ltl ollO Tenoaca '# -C:-lerle 12-21. l -Soranwn l•t> HR Pl-Qfl, Penar 141. A -ll,111 ......... 1 ..... 1 HO\lllon 100 030 110.-7 U 0 ClnclMOtl ooo 200 oo::i-s u 1 J. Nleltro, Smllll C•I. l.oCorto ltl -Pv- jols; Pellore, Prl<e 171, Bair (II OllO NolM. W -J. Nl•ro ().Jl. l -Pellor-. It.II. Hlta -Ho111ton, Pulll (J) Cln<INIOU, Fo1'9r 1•1. A -ll.903. c ............. , 200 Oll2 001 000 -S 10 I 014 ODO ODO 000 CO-S 1 0 11 ............. , Ct110tll, Tldrow 171. £eUwl<ll ltl. M<Glotllen 1111 -Bleck-II. Oowl1 ltl, 80911•. l radlord C.I. Comp 111, Mehle• 1101; Hraboslly 1101. Hanna I 111 •"O ••n•dl<I. HRS -ClllCOQO, Bu<llntr 141, Crui 121. Atlanta, Murplly CSI. A -t ,111 AMERICAN LEAGUE Angele 4, Tiger• 3 OIT•OIT .. ," .. CAl..IFOllNIA Glb-.,11 S 0 I 0 C.rew.1b Kellellr ,11 4 1 J 0 8 ,.,1..,.,u Kemp,lf 4 I I o l'orO, rt H-r,lb J I ' 0 Lynn.pl> P.,rlSll,pti 0 0 0 0 Har low ,11 l..H cll,pti I 0 0 0 Baylor,clll S<lmra,clll > O I 1 Oowftll\O.lf W<llnls,pti t O 0 0 O arlt,ll c-en1,d 4 0 I 0 OU,< Fahey,< 4 0 I 0 Grkll.2b 8r01tn1,JI> 4 0 0 0 lefllqvz, ct WllltOltr,Jb 4 o 0 0 HoOton,Jll Toi.ts ,. J I 2 Tololl k-~1-..... .. , ... 4 0 I 0 4 I J 0 JOOO 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 ' ' 2 J ' ' 2 0000 4 0 0 0 l 0 ' 0 J 0 I 0 JI J 0 JJ 4'. Del roll 000 020 loo.-J C•IHonlle 000 000 CMa-4 E -k.,,., llurleMlll, H-. Don Ford. DP -Detroit 1. L08 -Detroit 10, Cellforllle S. H -ICeflofler, H•-. GI-. HR -Oowftlno W . S -kelleher. o.trete If' H ll • ._ 88 IO "oumo 7-., I 3 J I J L.otoea II., M l II) I 1 0 0 Col ........ Witt • H•nlw IW, 1·11 2~ A-IS,Jl '~ O HBP -bY Witt C5<omnMn) ,., .... 2 1 J s ' 0 0 1 0 0 0 ' T ->.".A- Anoef ever•tH aATTtN• HorlOw LYM evri...,. Cet'ltW Horrl1 ,..,. °"'"'~ Ott Ork ll ~ et.'111 COM..-rlt let1!4WJ .. ., ... ..... k Totot1 A-lt-o loM Sellcllal Jetfer- H•Ml•r Win For Kii Tr overs D'AcqulJto Tote1$ Al • M Ma ••1 ""'- • ' t ... " .. IM It S1 lit 11 ~ " J • 112 .. tt 14 •• " SI J 14 "u. ,. • 11 n ' • 11 • • u •• _, t It 11 1 1 l,004 IJ I IA 1 "'~MIN• 0 I ' " 2 ' 0 10 I 2 • u J 11 0 I J ,, I 6 I • • J 0 1 . ,. 0 0 11 no .ID _,.. .... .:lltt .lltt .:lltt .m .Ml .us .JM .!17 ·"' .1a ••• .ott .MO tf' H le IO W•L IU 19¥> IS 6 tO 1.0 0.0 JI U I IS 1-t l.2S S2 S7 11 II 6-J t.n 11111 22 • • 0.t J.U ~ M • t t.;t S.A lt\11 IS II 10 M l.21t • M 14 U M S." 41"' 42 I 22 6-1 U 7 '" u • s ... • • IJ Ut•M tM tlS 211 " 124 1~1• s.o "-" 1, Or1o1et a BaHlmore 000 021 ooo-a I t hut 010 IOO toa-7 •• t Fle n•o-i. Ford (Jl, Stodder• 111 - Grollem ; Dwwln, Comer ctl -~ '#-Darwin 14-Jl 1..-Flenaean l).JI. s- Comer IJI. A-U,ttO. ._ .. Saa t, llw Joyt I · Boston 101 OJO 000 4-t 11 J Toronto 112 ODO 100 ~5 IJ o Tenono, Roliwy 14), 811""'9ler 171 -All-; Ganin, I.HI Ul, -.I.. Jall- (t), 80tllll«• (IOI onO Wlllltlftff, '#llltt l•I. W -• ...,,......, 12-4) l -R.l.. Jockldll. 1 .. 11. Hits -eo.ton, IEvaN 171. ltllCll (1), Toronto, ....,.ti Ill. J ... II 121. A -17,411. ,...._,,r.-.1 Cl••el-OIO 041 00.-S 10 0 Ml-.ote ODO 000 1<0-1 7 J Gari-OllCI Dlu: ICooaman, Varlloven UI •"4 Butore. W -Gorlond IJ.J). l - koosmen <HI. A -J,60t. ar--.11.A't l Mllwault• 033 OJO 011-U 16 J 0••••"4 002 100 200-s • 0 'lllClto.il<ll. A.,.ml,. 171 -Sim-. M Norri$. 8. MCl..811QllHn IJI, J. J-<SI. Minetto Ill -HMll\ ..,_,,,_ ltl. w - YllCkoYl<ll IJ-1) L -M -rll (M l. Hitt - MllwaukM, 8rou11ero Ill. Oe1t1a .. o, C. Joltnson (ti. A -21.Jlt. Y-...s.~a New Yorlt 004 010 000-S • o SH«lt 000 020 000-1 4 1 UnOerw-. Gouage Ill end Foote, Glealon • ._., ltl. AftOlrsen ltl ono Bvll· 1119. w -uno...-I 1~1 L -G-on 12·SI. HRs -New York, Roor19W1 1 121, '#Infield IJI. SHttle. Hanctitnon (J). A - 11,MJ. Top 10 , ...... " ...... ) AMlltlCAN 1..IAeu• O.U"MP'tl Ew .,.,, I OSI on 2S ti ~· )I .JU Singleton, Baltimore 2A M II JI .1't Wl"'leld, N9W York l'I 100 IJ l5 .S!O ZJ111, Suttle JO 11• 1J 40 .au lorMUnl, Clllceoo 1S " 12 M .10 Alkef\1, IC-City 21 10 10 24 .10 JOfWUOll, ~ ll ff 7 20 ,SJl9 l..ondorel, Boston U " u » .JV c-s. Drtrott 24 n • u .m Arm11, Ooll.1-J 1 111 It u .»• "-"-Armes, Oal<lend, t , T,,.,,,.., Mllw-.e, I , Sino•-. 8oltlmor•. 7, Evans, -on, I; 11111. ~eni •• 1. --·aftMlll Arma1, o.ltlelld, ti; Otllvle, Mii•--· JI; Ewlft" &oston, 20; 1..,.., ...._.., ": Smalley, Ml,,,.,..., It; """"""'" Oolllo<ld. It; 11111, SNCtle, 1t . Wiiis, Tea.K, It. ""*8 140.C ..... ) "'°""'· OU!ancl. S-0, _,,,, 0.lt'-, .. 1. ,......, ......... 6-1; OotlGft, Clllcaeo. 4·1. Martinea, B•lllmore, J-t; Stenley, 80fton, ).I; 81yte...,, Cl .... 1-. ).t; Walts, ClhelOfMI. 3-t NATIONAi.. LaAOUI 0 .... " ""1. Pe<klftt, Sift DIOfO 22 .0 U 2A .400 Row, Pflll-ptila JI 11• 20 "2 .171 Y-ootel. M-Y0rk It U • 24 .:lltt Cottlns, c1n<1 .... 11 J7 105 u • .JU Madtocll. PlnHurQll It 47 I 2A .251 RalMt,-.,...., 21 ,.. ts 11 ..,,. Mat!Nws, Plll-•Plll• JS .. •• JJ .J5t He.-, Son Frencl1<0 2t 110 14 Jt .ISS Ftyrw1, N-Vora 2S 15 U 1t .Ml Broo••. New Vor• J4 11 ' 11 .m Howe, HOloston 2t lllS t JS .m "-·-S<llmlctl, Pflll-lplli•, 10; o.....,.,, ,,.,,,,,.. ,, .. ,, •; Foster. c1nc:1 .... u, •; KlllQl'l\Oft. New York, S; H•ndrlck, SI. lo11ll, s, M11rpfly, Aleem., S, J . Crvz, Houston, S "_ ..... , .. Con<•P<lon, Cincinnati, Jt; Scllmlctt. Pllll•d•llll'I•. 1S. Murplly, All•IH•, 10, Foster. Clftc:lllnoll, 29; J. Crvr. -on. io. .. lk .... (4 0.CllMM) Vol•H•olo, DMtort, 7-1 ; Cerllon, Phlloctelptile, M ; ltllOdll\, PltubllrQll, ... ; Slllrloy, 54. loul•. a.o; M..._, DeOeera. ... I Sonoorson, Mo"l•••I, 4· I , ltutllven, Pllll-lpllfe, 6-1; SorenMfl, St. LOlllt, 4-1, College 8COfH C.1 llomlo tJ. StonforO • C.I Slate Domlngun Hiiis I, COi Poly (SLO) 1 Hollywood ~ark WNOAY'I •HUI.Tl " ...... ,... .,, .......... , l'l"t r--Wlft&M Tllr1loit.llU CM«Cat· rt11I, S .... J.00, J ... ; Tvrntnt WllHI• CMcHert1,.I, S.40, 4.00; He Clley ITreela~lll, &.& Se<-rec;e -Geottero CM<C::.r_.I, 19A. U.00, t .00; TIM l..eftler COllv.re•I, ,._ .. 1•.•; a.it '""-'· ,, ... u o.lly 0..-, 11 .. 1 '"'t111.00. Tlllro race -Envoy"• Vltte IH ..... yl, 4 •••• J .00, 2.40, l'rl••• "'•"'• 10.l~l ..... 1M; l)yMnlk I.MY IMtCerron), UO. U .,,_.,. 1 .. 11 ,..., Ul.JO, FOIH1tl rec. -Mery C..le C M<He,...,.>. 1J.eo, •.OO, UO; Attrendl&en*ll CWlnl-11 4.40, 3.20; MelltM'• DleMOl\d IM<Cerr_.I, , ... "'"" rec;e -~-"-ltlell l"lnceyl, tt.00, 4.40, J .00; ltomen "r••11•<1 llllkH.,._I, UO, UD, COl-1111MI 1..8 "lttole (V~-1. )Al. ( ... llKMO _...., ttlKH ltWclJ. Uu«te (1-S) jNld J7J.JO. Sixt.II race -EllfWIM'e (VolellJ,,.lol, 11.IO, 7.40, S.•; Fort McCloW llfloemollerl . 4..0, SAO; HOMllO.._ CDol---..,.,uo. S....nlll race -••«-Incl CS-m~I. 7.40, 4.00, UO; Borry lvttl IC•IOMdlll, 4.20, UO; 1..1_.,. (0.lol\ovuaye), 2.00. U eucto (Mii P91d "'3.SO. U "'"Sia (,...t·l·ll P91d t4,1'1.00wltll ., wlMlftO Ikuta (fl.._ "-I. U .. kk Six <onlOl•Ucln pel4I VI 40 wllll 1,222 •""'"" tl<Utslfoo.lt....._I £19'1111 rec;e -P .. t For .. nl~ IM<Cor· ronl. 4.40, >.JO, J.60, Golden 1•11• I Velenavelel, U .00. S.to, Pro or COfl IC·HloneNl,UO. Nlnlll race -Thr• Bits 10.1-..ueyel. t . .O, 4,IO; UO; Lots Go 10 Ectwercts (pjn- uyl, s.oo, > . .a; Bock Balley csi-mOllMI, J.10. Ueaocto 14-ll P9kltUl.DO. All•-•-Sl,aL Byron Neleon Claeelc tetDe ... tl •·Jruce littJllo, t.54,000 .. ,._.._,_., Tom We-. $32,400 ... J0.1J··7J-.al Tom Purbor, $17,40I 12*11·71-JD htlOyC~Sl1,400 ... n.67·74-JD .... c.-. su.ooo 7Hl-111t-.. c ... r SMuclo, $10.-JO.J0.7~10-c- "ay Floyel, '10,lOO ....._77.71-ais C11rt11 Sir-. '10,050 ... 1 .. 10-n-• FroCI '°""'"· M,GI 10.7HHl--8ruce Devlin, M,GI 12·71-12·11-• 1..erry Nelton, t4.tDO •f.774 .. 72-•7 Clll Chi RoOr\twJ,t4,IOO 7H1·72-72-J11 Joe In,.,.,., '4.IOO 11·7J.1J.7J-211 I.on HIMle, "4.IOO 11·71-1H+-a1 Tom J-ir1$. t4.IOO .,_71-7H.S-111 Oen Polll, SJ,7U ... 14-16-11-- 1..H Trevino. '3,!U 11·71-1•72-- Jerry Po4a, Jl.7U 72-7~7,__ Breo Bry..,t, U,7U '1·10.1>-1>-• Boo Glider, U,7.0 7>4t-7H2-.. Tim Norrll, U,71.o .._,.,, .. ,.._., Marll Hayn, S2,7.0 7).-6t-7).74--.. Peter Ooslemut1, Jl,IM> 73-72-6 .. 7.S-., Gena llltler, S2, 11S 70.IJ.7 .. 71-2'° GIDOy Giibert, S2,17S 7).71-7).1)-2t0 Mork Mee...-u .11s .. ,,.,._,.._2'° Franll C-.rS2,11S T14t-7).7.._2t0 J a y Ha ... $1, 140 1.S-71-IJ.72-1'1 Scot Sim-. Sl,140 7J.76-7).72-1tt 1..e,.nle C*-'U, ",140 .. 71·14-11-1'1 Jay Ho"""·•• 1.S-71·7).72-2'1 Tom Wei.....,, SI, 140 72·76-1J.7)-2t1 Allon Str.,..., tt,1• 7).7J.1J-7+-2t1 Morrl• Hote!Sky, $1,140 1H1·71-1+-2tt ,_,~., Mc .... tt.140 70.12·76-IS-2'1 w.11., Armstrono. "· 140 7H).7J.1)-2•11 Miiie 5"'llv1111, $1,140 ... 74-1).7.S-2'1 ......... ti, 140 .. , .. 72-11-2'1 51a.,. Me111ya. ''°' ,.,.,., .. ,,_m Mike_..,., "91 7J.7J.76-7).-2't2 8 111 Brfloll, $407 THt.·7).1+-192 FCM"reSI F-. St01 •f.16-74-7.S-2'2 • .,.. Attln, M01 • ...._,.,.._m Pet llnd!ley, $too 1 .... ~n-m 8111 "°"""· Stoo '0-7 .. Jt-77....m Terry Mauney, t67S 11·7J.7t-11-n4 Oova Eklle1..,,..,,$t1S J0.7J.a.71-494 e-.y W ... IM, t67S IH0.71·72-"4 Jecll: Ferena, St7S 11-1s.1~1)-Jtot Cr•lo Stadler, MIS 7Wf.7.S-7S-2'4 Ed SMeCI, St7S 1.s-.t-7~75-2'4 CMrles CAlocty, t61S 74-11-1t·71-2'4 Tim SI,._, S67S 72-1.S-,.._,.. Oorykoell.'657 11-.2·7>-m JoNI Scllnleder, 1651 1....._,..,,_,.s ltoCI N11<l<oll1, "57 7~10-7 .. 1+-2'5 ..... , a.-.~ •f.77·14-75-2'5 •-won......,.._." ploy01t, LPGA tournament , ... ..-...... Amy Alcott, Sll,750 ... , • ..._10t S.lly Llltle, SIUSO 114f.70.-JIO Dele lllftllqllilt, ll,7SO 11-71-211 Doi Germolll, U,6.25 7Q.J0.72-2t2 ... t •• ...,,, u .. u l).7....._J11 Hottls Stoey, '4,J7J t7·11·7.S-21J JoAM• C.ner, '4.000 1>•14-214 Pam HW"" t4,IOO 7 .. 7).11-214 c;.11 Hlru , P)OO 74-7U.-JU kotlty -.w11\. U.S.W 72·71-1S-21e Jon s .. .....,__, $2,544 ,,....14-tl• Cotlly Re'l'flOICIA, '2,544 '1·10-14-21• Betti Doniel, Jl,.S.W 73-71-11-21' Myra v .. -. Jl,"'4 74-72-70.-21• J enat Colet, S2,.S.W lt·7H2-21' Cotlly $1tartl, $1.Jll 1t4f.7.._217 Sltelley Homlln, $1,,. 71o7).71-211 Judy Clerll, si.-71-76-72-217 Dollftl '-'· Sl.Jll 7•72·71-Jl7 "'4iltln Spencor·O.vlln, $1,• '1·7•71-211° Amelie lt-,Sl.Jll 17·70.7~Jl1 katlly~Vouno. SI,• 74·7).7~217 BYC co-skippers win trophy Tartan Ten, Temper takes Times regatta 8y ALMON LOCKABEY .... , ............. ,. .. The Los Angeles Times Trophy, one of the qldest yachting kudos in Southern California, ~und a home in the Balboa Yacht Club trophy 9ase Saturday when Joe Smith and Kay Booth climaxed the seven race series with a low score of 8~ points. Sailing the Tartan Ten, Temper, the BYC co· kippers had a close battle throughout the series lth Larry Harvey's Tlmberwolf, Cabrillo Beach )'acht Club. The final tally was decided after Tim· F.rwolf went on the rocks near the L.A. Harbor 1ht a week earlier and was not repaired and ack in the water until the morning of the final ••ce. California Gold ·ns May r~tta I California Gold, skippered by Lee Coit, Dana 1 folnl Yacht Club. wa1 the overall and Cla11 A win- ' aer Saturday ln Capistrano Bay Yacht Club'• May I fht.atta. The event drew three claHet of Performance ffandlcap Racina Fleet <PK.RF> yacht.a and two tne..clellsn cluaH tod was aaJJed ln ldeal summer ··~dltkm with a steady 10-lmot bree&e. s.c<IDd overall .... Ariel, Hiled b)' Bob urlrbardt, DPYC. and third wu f\uuly Feelin', ete Meade, Capo BYC. • Trophy winners ln ctasa: C~ A -1. California Oold ; 2. Arlet; l. The ulcar Boatman. Hqh Cwran, DPVC. CL.Ams 8 -1. Furul~n'; 2. Kolo K.Ut.1, tuclr Raf!: Capo BYt: I. ,,,..., Bob St.rue. f:apo BY\;. HO SPINNA.h:R -1. Seablrd, Du 8.eeaud, po BY£i.?· WIUoll, Howard Pap, Capo BYC: I. dlto, 1R11 BIOWIM!Oft, C1po;IYC. CATA.LINA·IS -1. TWo Blta, AJ Flemlq, • BVC• I. Apedle Mel W ... Nrl. Capo CJ ~.Y.J•'11e. rr~ Vi'tlalear1c•1vc. \iAJ"KI .. -1. Fr.la 1i111111a, ~ f'roleJ, PVC: 2. Pl..t.u, Rick Ottlwd, Capo BYC; J . apndOua, 1'. -Ooodwln, Capo BYC. Timberwolf finished 11th in the final race and wound up the series with 20th points. Overall series winner for the Lewis G. Whitney Trophy in the 40-boat International" Ulf· shore Rule division was Tonka. a Peterson-34, sailed by Tony Hibbs. Anacapa Yacht Club. Run- ner-up was Red Shift. sailed by Alex Goetz, LA YC. BOATING and third was Temerity, Ted Kerr. Bahia Corin· thlan Yacht Club. Closest battle for points was in the Midget Ocean Racing Class < MORC> sailing for the Little Whitney Trophy. Tied with 13th points were Firecracker, co-skippered by Steve Grillon and Jim Morris, J<Jng Harbor Yacht Club, and Bad News. sailed by Stan Sorenson. Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. The win would ordinarily go to Firecracker because she beat Bad News in more races in the series. but race offlclals said Firecracker's victory is pendJng a vaUdaUon of her r1Un1 certificate. In the Small Boat Ocean Racina A11ociation (SBORA> for the Todd Pacific Trophy t.he winner was Ginger Ale II, Andy Ayale, Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. Runner·UP was Quicksilver, Bob Newt0me, LA YC. Winners of the Hvent.h and tlnal race: WllltHJ Serfet IOR·A -1. Brtu. Dennis Choat•Dick Meine, LBYC-LA YC. I IOR·B -1. Red Shift, Ale-x Goeta.An.n Kahle, LAYC. IOB..C -1. Tonka, Tony Hibbl, A.na VC. n ... s.n- PHRF·A -t . Colloq\ly, Frank Dair. cave. PBRF-B -l. Hot Rum, Al Cut.llloa-Chtll SeUan, KHYC. PHIP·C -1. Tomara, Douc and Tom Jor1-.LAYC. MORC -1. Moma, XHYC. SBORA tAYC. Lttde~ ll1ncr1cbr, Steve OriOon·Jlm hlN Paclfk 1. Qulcktllnr, Bob N1w1om, NBA CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES Rocket• 11, c.ttlce H ( .............. , ... TOlt -.,..._ .. ,., .,,. ..... ,,"' ... Ar<lllNN 10, ForO 4, C::.r •• 4111cH ... 4, "•••Y 4, G. H•-raon I, l'ern•I•" 0, Owt .. 0 T"'81• U 1 .. 14 .. MOUITC* -P.,IU 10, iitMCI 1', Mo ..... U, O_...,,., a, T .._,_ 2, '#11........, L Tttola J7 1 .. D ti lare..,...,_,.. ... ton u t4 11 ,.._. Holl•lOll ,. u " , ..... , Tll ....... 11( ... I -DulllM'ty. l'OUIM out -N-. Toe.I tout• -a.ton It, H-*' to, Toclwl~ -.._..,, CoocJ\ Harrie. A - 1•,tJt{ T-y·so- Housklft • eo.tlft n.rM!tr'•O-... Mftlll ........ .....,, .... ,11 Hout-Ill 9oetlft (H -W)ll UCLA lnvltatlonal , .. ~.-...-1 100 -I. J. Softfonl, IVSC Troclt Ctuel, 10.0S. 2. Floyd t..,..ttoc!IMI, 10.10, 1. I . 8rown I UCL.Al. 10.lt. • 200 -I. s..toro, IUSC AC >. JO.JO; J. Ewens CArllOftO St.), 10.M; a. Morll\ell, <Wolllllltllonl. J0.4t. 400 -t. _,.., (Ari-St ), 44.'2, 1. G'"" tUSCI, 4S.07, J. W. Smllll, IAUt.i.tlC Attic I, 4S-J5. HO -I. loll 1so11t11ern C•lllornl• Strlctert), 1:45.43, 2 . ._Mii_ 11--Cl1Y ACI. 1:4t.OI; ). Enyeart CPoclllc C.,_11 (1118), 1:•.11. Mite -I. 5'ott I~ TCI, J:ll.SO; 2. W•lur , .... Zoo•->. ,. " .. : '· Caolltoll, I lrel•ftctl, 1:l4.'4. 2-mlle -1. Mc:Che1nay tvnottec-1, l :U .t•; t. 5'>1"9y, llnOloMI, l :U .... a. ~Donald IAlll~lu '#"II, 1,U.OJ. 110 HH -1. Fos•r l..,..llM.lloCfl, IJ,10 M<oncb; 2. TY<Mr !Start aftct Strlt>ffl, 11.43; J NeNmloll IAUlle1k Ankl, I~. -1..H -I. PllllllPl, !UCL.Al, 40,tJ; 1. kl119 CMo<coM TCI. ffM, J $1\effteld CMoc:· cell! TC>. S0.41. HJ -I SUnton 11..0ftt ..... CCI, 7·S; J. lrown IAll......,l<M TC), l·l ; J J - Fruler IYN111Khed), 7·l. LJ -I. L9Wis !Houston). H-J~ (Wlftd. eldeOI; J. Robinson !Mo<cebl TCI, 1M; l. Wlttlom• I USC TCI, 1WV. T J I. 8enlt" lvnel, S..4~; 2 Mor- IStan -Slrl-), S..1. 1. Connor ISMUI. Si-I PY -' Curr.n IUCLAI, IM , 2 lt~y !Peclllc Cout Club >. 11·0, J. 111•1, Kenworthy 1-toci.ol, Zolar IS-I. Vole llftctlano), aftct Bell IPoclll< Co .. t CIYbl, 11-6. OT I PlllC~I IS....t"9m Collfomlo StrlO.nl. 211·11; 2. Powoll IS.n Joso Start>. 217·10, ), H)elllWI (Norway), JIH . SP -1. Olcllleld IClll<eQO TCI, 4Mt.f; 1. Certw ISMUI, .... "'-. J UYI, IAllllello WHO • .._, 14. WOMIN 100 -AJhford INWdallll TCI, 10 ft; J ~~~ IUCL.AI. 11 II. J. Taylor, IC-I, JOO -I. Taylor CCe node), >J.ta; 1. Mersllell (Coe$1 .Allllelkll, J>.16; l. P-y II.A .Hetvrll•l, 1l.t7. IOO -I. Campbell ISloftforO TCI, 2:o:l.02; 2. Welton CT-I, J:O>.•t; >. GellOQNr l1111a1i.c:-1, 2: .. .41. 100 HH -1. Fltz .. rolCI I T--1, 11.22; >. Y°""9 CFalrlelofl Dklllnton). IJ..12; J. Hl9lllow«IONoStot.).1l SO DT -1 Grlttift 15'iorls Wet1), 112·11, 1. Von "--(-.), 1-.J, J C...... IMM-IWOI, tn.t lJ -I. M<Mtllo ... Rn, ITltren TC). JMl.I.; 2. ~ ('#ltcOMln), 21.;tllo; J Joyner IUCl.A), »-11~ 51' -I. Frederick (Allllttlu W•&tl, Sl-t\lo; 1. GrKnn IHollclay Spa TC). JT -I. Smllll IC.I Poly SC.Cl. 111-S; J. S<llmlctl ll'oclllc Coell Clulll, J-.1; J. Calv~ 1-.-1. ,.._11 Women IO. C.AU"°"NIA INVITATIONAL totUClrrlMl .AKr-111-• ,_ .. Hof*IM IVllAlmln Pl11•I, 11.'2: 200-1. '--(UNI.VI, 24.lt; 400-1. MCk•nn• INaturllH), 54.tl; I00-1. """' tonawlKI IN•lllf'lt")· ,2:11.S; Otlla"! ' GF090lre CUCll. 1:20.J; •· Ir-IUCll, 2:20.•; l.Jl»-1 . .._-IMEDTCl, 4:Jll.4; 01 ...... 4, Tral11or IUCI), s.oe.7; l. St- IUCll, s 11.1; J,Ot»-1. S-y 1vcsa1. 10:21.t ;oe...1: S. Sdlwwt IUCll, 10:11.2; S,000-1. ClwtOdock !VII. Pl111). 11:01.S; 10,000-1. Albert CUClltl, •:>6.•; tOOt4- l.McOM IL.A -1. tl.69; eooH-1. H.,.... CNet11rle1), M.t2; OtMrt! 4. Hltflt-r CUCll. t :OS.J; 400 reley-1. Mtrcur9t._ 47,J6. HJ-1. 5Utlforct (VII. Pl111>. M ; OIN": 4. Hltlllower IUCll, ~; LJ-1. Merllllam INortllrldQltl, 10.oYt; Otht": J. Ml<Mlle Kelloy IVCll, lt.t ; JT-1. -ro ISTCl, >•SI, SP-1. ICellM<ly (VII. Pl11s) 47~; Otllers: 0... (VU. Plvs), 4.S-1014, s. T- IUCll, 41-; DT-1. Von"-9rcteft (UNI ), ll0-'4; Otllen; S. T-IUCI). 144-11; • DHM (VII. Pl111I, 144-J. Tournament of Ch•mplone tot "'-' NllttJ -.............. l!clclle Dt* dltf. Corio. k lrmeyr, .. ,. H IDlllOt ...... JIOO.IOO. klNMyr t40,000I Women'• tournament {M......,.,IWy) ...... ,. .... C11t lt I...., Uoord •• Vlr91n1e "vtkl, ••. .. J 11.toYd wlM UO,ODO, ltwkt i10,0001 Nadon'e Cup ••a-._.., .... 0. ..... ,1 ....... lwt11 l.tllldl (~to .. kle) .... HerolO Solomon. IV.S.I, 6·4, •·4, TomH Smlo ICn c .... tovelllol Clef. Senay Mere< IU.S.) .... H ,t-3. DeolMet SIM Slftlu..Meyer IU.S l Otl l.Oftctl·Smld, H ....... ,. (CloKl\oslO•••le Wint -'"· J.I) ........ ttavl McN-!A..st••ll•I •• Ed-do .... _lier (Ar .. MIM I, 1·S, •~. G11lllermo VltH IAr•nll"•l ctel. Petor M<Namero (AllJtrtlle), t-3, •2. Oelllllft M<Natn.l<•McNa,,_ 0.1. llllH -Oll>lollO Gu.rroro, ••· 7·5. CAvstrall• win• MrlM. 2·11 Men'• toumemnenl let S~, A14lralla) ...... ,., ... Jolin Newcomllectef. Tony Roc,.., 7_., .. , Women'• tournament lotT•yel l'lul Owlllft Ann Klyom11r•S,.. Berker Clef. Sheron Welllll·I......,• Potter. M, .. 1. IKlyomur•· &artier win tl0.000. Wellll·Potter win Ul,0001 Davia Cup • ...... z... Ml<hUI Morlenun CDanmerkl del. MIO ... , Soar"· w ... ,, M , Pater ... u.Mtn 10.nmaral def Joso Cw0tlro '"°"-''· H , .. ,, "f. !Denmark wlnt wrle•, S-0) I.MIS llot1191 (-01 091. MllllOOjll\a Olllam IMoro<<o), J4, t-4. H . l·S ... , I Moneco wins Mrlea, J.11. Pro lnvltallonal lot f'arti .. _,.,,I s-....1111111 Joff ..,_ clef. Pflll 0.ftl, •~. 1-6, 1 ~. 11or-1o11; w1,. Sl.000. Deftt UOOI ~ • • .. .. Women'• eo"b•ll HICMI SCHOCH. -1 ........ MtrlM 000 000 1-1 J J IEdllOI\ ODO 000 ~ J 0 Kyler -Marcotte, 84'1tor Mid Malletto. ,._.,, v-.,. i, M•t. 9-111 Fovnleln VOiiey 010 011 o-l > o Huntlflillon 119«h ODO ODO o-.o • 4 Vtnl ...... -AU991; Borton -011 .. 1 ••. Cll' 4-A "'-"YOFFJ jFtm•wllOl'rlOay) Werrftn ot -lllo; Torrance al Allla,,,. b<t, Mlralell• at l • o.llnta, S.nta Ano ot Cypreu, NOrtll Torrence •I Gollr. Cobrllto at Nowbwy Para, KanMOy 111 El S.V-. Sen Gabriel • TllSlln; Downey at • ._, Gerden Grove •I Oceen View. Arroyo Grend• et San•• Barbera , Cenyon at ArceOle, ,...,.,1.111 Volley et Pactll<•; 8,..ne 81 T~ Oolls; 1..ewl\Oale al ltoll· Ing Hiiis; '#astlalle ot ltlQltelU. Cll').A SI. JOM9fl bye; Bvrt>enk ol Oon I.-; Edoe•-et San Gorgonlo, El Oot-ot Worllman; Upland •• S....111 Hiii•, G..-i. at W•llWI. ••-<I• •• S.•onne; Collon at LB Wiiton, El Toro at '#"tern. E-ranu et Mlltl__,, Loe Puente 111 Cllelley; -Del el Redlands; ~Ila Al Burr.,...,,, • l l•llOP Amel at RowlanO; l..akew-al tr-.'lM; U Habra bye. CIF1·A Se" Clem•nl• al 8t llllowar, Sa n lerMrOlno Ill Arllt191on, Arroyo at O...rtl Hiii; lloyol Oak et C.lllornle; &erst-et Coront, Polmdale or L.a Mlre<I• et Cllert•r Oall; I.• Serne ot Mission Viejo, El Mont• at Bonito; u Sierra et Central; Norco el A""'9 Velley, Meytelr al Ai,,..; Monlclelr el An· tetope Velley; Wllllllor ., D•M Hiii•: Mo<•na Volley et 11\0io. Chino at k_.; Coec:l>ella Valley et Ramone Cll'1·A On1erle OVlstlan bY•• Aq11tno1 at 1-... 1n91on, lnQI-•• St. Ant'-'· Noire Dame ot Soult. Pol60eNI; Cllaml"-al Temple Clly: Rim ot Ille World al .. _ monl; Notre Dorne IRl•.1 et lf'UCU Valley; SI. 8ernero el Aleme,.y; Coniwlly at C111..., City. Paso Rotlles •I Sent• Clare; LA .. ~ 1111 at 11-y; a. .. rly Hiiis ot u llelN; S.11 Merino et C.1-sat; 8relllran et -· IY Star; SC ...... ...,...,. •l Sl 0-vl..,.; St J.,.,......,. CIF Smotl k ..... , Du•rt 5'M ... W-rHI Cllrl1tlon ., Alwemo: O....rt ot Boron, £09le Mo1111t.ln •• H•....,I•, BlthoP ot Ow9ftl Valley, Ser· r eno et Rio Hondo; Holy Femlly or Wlnoword •t T•mpl• CllrllllM; Fallll .. ~ 1111 et Newport Cllrl1t1an; Ar9yll or WHlrlclQlt et Merk -; Trana ol Pareclei.; Victor Valley Ow. •i l fberty Christion; N..Ole1 at 8Mor; Copltlr-Valley Owls- tlan or Ven Hor" at Orange l11llleron; Oek-o1 Coest Union, HIQlll-HOii o1 VIII ... Owlstlen ,...,,,,. S.Cracl H..,, at Cel Prep, Appe or Heritage CMl1tlan a1 p •socleN Poly Stanley Cup flnale ............ , T ..... Y'I O- Ml...-a et NY 111 ..... rt T'-"'My'IO- Mt ........... NY 111.....,1 ,_.,, """' 17 NV t1~1etMl,_Mla T-y,Maylt NY 11,_.>elMIMelol.e TMnOoy,llUy21 Ml-at NV 111-n Ill ne<.a•-YI ._,......,,Mey Hor._...,, Mor M NY l•l-rt at Mlrwwtota (11 rw<e-y) T...Wy,MolyU Ml~a a1 NV IJI-• 111 rw<et.W•YI Women's gymnaetlce CIF6-A FllST ltOYMD ITIMlrMay, 7 tt.M.) I •t.e11Cle, AQDut •. Con yon. Ga<O.n Gro .. , E-ranu , Cut.., City or R.--•• - Ul<tVeMey. Sevaftna, VIiia Park, Crnonl• lier. tnlM, B•H Ohl\Oa, Slwlll Hllll 81 ~ "Torr•n<.t Simi V•ll•Y. Pal0$ VtrclH, Sonora, M-· l"tlOll 8Mc:ll, Weil Covina. Tuttln et Mir• Cotta. lhn<llo A1emHo" Marine, To,,anu , Schurr, CHI• Mua, Bt•orly Hllll at T llOUUl\O Oau CtF).A FlltST llOUNO CT-y,7,.lft l Altll•HI. Monl<lt lr. S•YOll>. Mllllun. D•n• Hiii•, St JOMPft ., LOS Alamltos Le,•wOOO, tndlo, All• LoM•, Centre !, Palm Spr•no•. Son Clernenl• al R•mone. Cabrlllo, 0<••11 View, 1mmeculete HHrt. Caplslreno Valley, Al .. r>tcle Poly al LI Wiiton Cyprtu. MarlDOrouQll. Hart, Coe<M lle "'•ll•Y. -•U&ll• •I Claremon1 NASL WISTl,_N DIV"ION W l 01' GA I" l'b Stoff s J t I t Jt San Dl1911 S l IS 10 12 • $an JC>W l s I U I 2' lot A1>90let J 4 1 14 7 U l.ASTlltN DIVISION COlll\01 Welllllnijlon Montr .. 1 Toronto 1112120.i s 3 u 11 13 ..., J J 11 11 11 ,. I • 10 11 10 •• IOUTHEltN OIVISIOH Forll..•-Gele • 2 u T•mpo lay J • 14 Allento J 4 1J Je<lllOll'Vlll• > • t CENT-Al DIVISION • 11 .., n u >1 IJ 12 • U I 24 Chl<•oo Tulw Mlnnetolo O•llH s 214 711 40 l 10 • 10 Sl 91 tJ1' 2 ••11S1S NOllTHWEIT OIV1$10N PortlanO S 3 1' 10 IS 0 ~•Ill• s l '' IJ IS "2 v....,_ 4 4 u 10 11 s. Edmonton l J 11 12 t 11 Celg.,y I 6 S 10 S 11 Sta POlnts er• ewer-tor • r99111etlon or ••ertlme •l<tory Four polnl1 for • ~ victory One bonus point •or ••••Y 9091 :Ko•ecl with • moalmum of """ per verne. No bonu• point ll ew•r-tor o .. rtlrne or llllootoul -I• S-y'•k•" c111c eoo ), Delles o CosmOf s. Toronto 1 SH iii• I, Col-y 0 Port I-J, l...0$ Angeles 1 SanJ-1.E-tonO TMtM'a Oolft" Nove"'"tc-led Misc. Weekend lranaactlone LUleAl..l NetleMll..e .. M SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS -Sent CllorlH O.wt•. Olllflel-, to Plloeftl• of Ille Poclll< CoeS1 LMQUe. Recellect Joe PenJnl. lnllelcler, from Plloenla. CO~IOI AUBURN -Named Pal Dr• •llllelk Olre<lor ST LOUIS -A.......nc:ao .,.,. rH IQllOllOft ot H.,ry 11_._ au1stonc bash-II cooc:ri. MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO I SPECIALISTS This Weeks Special FrH 0 11 Filter w /$ 14. ts Oii ChmMje C HECK OUI C OWETITIVE PllCES ARST & GRAND ARCO 835-4049 1222 E. I st loff 5 Fwyl l·S Except S-. Zillgitt and Wright insur.incr :.igrnls ;iftd brolttrs Retailers: Insurance <'Ollt$ risin1r' Contat't us for u competitive quote for a Rusint'SS Owners Pat'kage Polley "hi ch includes most <'overa11es needed to protect vour bus mess We also wnte Group Medical and J,lre for ~mall 11roup~ as "ell a~ lurf(e Bob Guffin J9 l1 Mac Arthur Boul(V.lrd Nol!port Beach Ca 91660 (f14) 7Sl 90S~ All Otlzem May Enter Wyoming 011 'Lottery' To Be Held In May ONTARIO, CALIF. American the opportun· (Sperial) -Huadrcda of ity to compete on an aver•• cititens will win equal bul1 wltb tlant oil oll tease riJht• in upeom· com~nitt (or latca of Ina public drawinp con-public landa. dueted by th• State of Information and entry W=ftl· Some tMY delllls are awllablc from ac ovttnllflt wealth The H. Kirk Sanden ~ •UJaa their rlahu to Co.. Public LandJ Div- oll COfft,..•iet and retain· Ilion. lox 3697. Ontario. 11\1 hfcJot11 royahica on Calif. 91761 (2032 CMol· •"1 oil or pa produc-lne) . ..,.._ndoleSlfor tlo"' ,_... •nd baDdllna. lnc:nd~IJ. ntOlt •m riak otndal "''" c.nt• wm no mon tJlu SIS and a be Mhed to permit you miahaal eervia lee to to meet the nHt tub._1 taler the llttle·kllOW• period atanlq Mey 11th propam tlu>t oflera nery at nooo. 1979 CADILLAC COlJPE DE VILLE Factory 2 tone paint. Cadillac wire wheel covers & an "Astroroof." <768WKT1. sg495 LEASE A NEW 1982 EXP! TOllORROW'S CAR IS HERE AND WE HAVE BIG SELECTIONS FOR TR EDIATE DEi.NERY. WI LIASI ALL MAKI CAIS AND TIUCIS. li11Jl8111ljlijilij131:1111{m I l I I ' I I I f I I I Ange ls take chance, add ex-Dodge r Rau The Angels announced the addi· a lion of ex· Dodger Doug Ruu to their roster Sunday. Rau. 32, suffered a torn rotator cuff in 1979 while in his eighth year or pitching for the Dodgers . During his rehabilitation. Rau pitched four games for San Antonio last season, but the Dodgers released him this spring. The Angels signed Rau April 21 to a Redwood contract of the ('ul1tornu1 League Ruu pitched three t1mei. for the Pioneers. allow· mg one run int 1 mnings Dunn~ a five \'ear stretch with tht• Oudgers. from 1!174 78, Rau averaged 15 vi<' tone' per season • Has last appearance m a major league gume w:ts June 3, 1979at St Louis Rau In order to mak<' room for Rau. the Angels ha\'e placed left-hander 8111 Travers on the 21-day disabled hst Travers. bothered by tende rness in his le ft shoulder. workt•d 1n four games for the Angels with a0· 1 record ancl"8.38 ERA Rau will atcompany thE' Angels when the team opens a 10 game road tnp at Milwaukee Tuesday I le b schcdull•d to make has first start Satur day aga1nsltht•T1g1m:.an Oetroat Quote of the day "When I ~t>e him fi g ht. 1t makes me wonder why I ever picked boxmg as a pro· fess ion.'' Wo rld Boxing Council welte rwe ight c h ampion Sugar R ay Leonard, speaking or his opponent on June 25. WBA <'hamp Ayub KaluJe. Dibbs ends Kirmayr's Cinderella bid Stt•ad~ Eddie Olbbi.. playing ~ rtawlcs:. tennis. t'aptured the Tourna ml.'nl of C:h:.impwn:. Sunda). ending tht• Cinderella bid b) Bralll's Carlos Kirmayr. fi 3. ll 2 al the fabled West Side Tennis Club in Fllr'('st llil b Top·seeded Chris Evert Uoyd won th1• Pt•rugia Open tournament in Ila · ly with a virtorv ov<'r Virgina Ruzici Lloyd needed j ust 11 2 hours to earn her 17th career victory over the Romanian without a loss. From Page A10 ~<\NGELS' TIMING ••• Ex-Angels spark Red Sox victory Carney · t.anlford singled ho me a his fourth run of the game and Joe Rudi slammed a three-run boml'r as lhe former Angels sparked Boston lO 3 9·5 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays In American League aetlon Sunduy Rudl's homer rapped a four run Red Sox 10th Inning . In other game~. Andre Thornton capped Cleveland's tour run r.fth inning with a two-run • ~ingle as the Indians downed Minnesota, S·l behind Wayne Garland's seven -hit pitc hing The Indians handed Twins s t11rt er Jerry Koosman his fifth loss agains t just one vie· tory O utfielder Mark Brouhard homered. s ingled ancl drove in five runs, lead· inlol Milwaukee to a 13·5 vie· t <> r y o v e r 0 a k I a n d . Th e l.un!l/Ortl Brt•wt•r·s. w ho pounded out 16 hits, du1scd Oakland ace Mike Norris in the third inning 111 handing him his first defeat after six 'ictones The win sna pped the Brewers' four 1¢i.11ne los ing streak . while the loss was just tht· st•\ ('nth agalrlsl 24 victories for the A's Danny Uarwln posted his third con· st•cutl\'t' victory , and T ('xas scored five runs m a m 1st ake f1 .ll<•d ~e<'o nd inn'i ng lo beat Baltimore 7 3 Third baseman Aurelio Rodriguez, starting his first game of the St·a-,un. '>lamn)l'd home runs on his first two 1981 ~1t hab to ll•Jd t he New York Yankees to a 52 \ll'lor~ o\t•r Seatllt-. Candelaria's arm. bat spark Pirates \\'hilt· spot :..ta rter Char lie Lea a was guthl·nng most of the attention by p1tc·h ing a no hitter Sunday to give tht• Montreal Expos a split with the Giants. P1tt shuq~h 's John Candelaria wasn't ha ving a lJad day. e1lhcr T he Pirate left-hander rh<'<'hd St. Louis on thrct' hits over lhe first s ix innings and s1ng lc•d homl' a run lo cap a rally in the second to l<'lHI Pitts burgh to an 8-2 victory ovt.•r St Louis. . In o tht.•r Na ti on a l L eag ue gam1.•s. Ozzie Smith 's f1l'ldl'r 's C'ho1ce grounder in the s ixth rnning drove in the go aht•ad run and Joe l.efeb· \'r e s lammt.'d a three-run homer 111 the seventh to lead San Diego lo an 8·4 \'ICtory ' "' 1•r Philadt•lph1a S te ve '1ura allowt•d nane hits in six C:anddano 1r1r11ngs to gain hi s first triumph t1f lht· Sl'ason after four defeats . Jost> Cruz drm t• in thr<•e runs and Craig Re' nold-, l'nllt•c·ll'd three hits as Hous ton defeat- ed· l'tnt·1nn<rt1. i .) Hight hander Joe Niekro pllc:ht·d fl\l' anrnng!> to earn has third \'IClory <1ga111:..l lht· same number of defe<its Ra in forl'ed µostpom·ml'nl of th<· game between the Ch11.·ago Cubs and Atlanta after they had played 14 innings lo a 5 5 tit• and sat through two rain d1:la)s lot uhng on1· hour, 31 mmutes San Franc·1sco's C'harlcs "Chili" Savis who had led t he Giant:, \\ilh a 408 hitting aver age 111 s pring tra1111r1i::. will be st•nl b ack to the minors. no bones :tbout the fact they go," he said "We JUSl h<iven'l want Fregos1 lo stay, rallied for been playing very cons istent CIF sof th all pairings s~t four runs in the e ighth on a two-But we've won two in a ro\\ 110\\ out. two-run single by Baylor and any time you tom(' from followed by Dowmng's -;hot on a behind it's gr eat 2-1 fastball off Til(er relief ace ·we wer(' trying to \\tn Aurelio Lopez before It's real!\. a matter of ''It's a good ~1 gn .·· said timing l guess good liming fregos1 of the team's comebark for .Jlmm) " ··1t s hows we're comang around So. at least for th(• moment. a little bit Coming from behind ·11 h h 1 B like we did was a real upper for ~·regos1 as st1 at t e e m ut this club .. for how long 1s another qu('st1on The players pre(er red to low · 1 know I'll be able lo rC'lax a key their part of the victory, little bit more now But. then. contending that at was timing. nobody said it was g01ng lo ht• not the ax over Fregosi's head. easy ... said (he manager. thal has them winning. Jus t then Autry wa lked intc> "The lon ger that garbage is Fregosi's offi<'e and palled him written. the longer it's going to on the back for a job well done be around." s aid Downing of the ··Have a n ice trip." he said as rumors. "If the guys aren't hit h(' left the office. ting, what arc you going lo do?" * "I think we should have a ANGEL NOTES Ano11Wr so11n "•-1'• good r oad trip ... said Bobby clOOm I• .. ,,...,.11mm1nenl lollOWlnQ IN A119tl\ G · B I · • · lh IS.I won owr IN TIQe•• S.1urdo. m.,,y Of llW rarh ... ay or IS swinging e 1 .. m ,,.1r•rc11yw .. r•n·1 .. v1u1>1yo1•1e<1•"'"" bat better. I'm swinging the bat wouldllll'* 0ne-mberolt,,. ..... o ... _.n,,. better·, and Oownino IS s wingan" even ,, .. ro ..... i.n1 cr..lrm.., of"" -·o ••• " " "•U•rwfl teH o-~ .. o . ··we ..... o """"' Pk· the bat better Thmgs are look 111••• o1 .,,,.,. r,,. Anoe•• 1tn,.,,.o won"" rng up for a cha noc nomu11no Tnoy wero J • on 1"•1• llr•I "' llOmHi.nd Wtlll tr.Ir lour "°"'''' S.turday "It's JUSl 3 COlncidcnce things end on•~Y.l"*M9ff\1Wvonow ou1-..rec1 are happening now for ui.. that it 1ne ~u.,,, "' • J1.11 m1r11•n .. ,._, ·-•"9 ~-of .... 11ng "'' •••·W"k ''"""· I• cam e at the sam e time as the 111m1>9 J10 1 .. 1,,. 111,, .1g111 GAIN• .. 1111 1.., .. talks about fo'regosi's firing .. ,,.,..,.,. -1111111 r"' A"9e"· "'""ere 1, •tel"ll 11" liQer• 11111 Me\cn, lllvtn I 11.0 a wlt1 Fred Ly nn agreed ,.,119 ve•r _i,,.t o.1ro11 '""• ms -n ,,,.. "Nobod_v w~~ee Fregos!__ ... , ... s '1 arana, Edison. Ocean View and Irvine all draw home as '>IKnmcnts Frida) when the Cl F women'!> soflball pla\•offs l-.1<·k off. whll(' Fountain Valley, i-: ... t.tnc1a and Mater Oei travel for lht.'1r openers :\lanna. the No 1 represen· l.1t l\l' from lht· Sunset League, "Ill no doubt send ace sta rter Tana Kvlt.'f' to the mound when lhl' V1k.1ni!s host Warren in the -1 A opener Marina 1s the No 1 :o.N•d in 1·A The Sunset League's No. 2 lc<im. Edison. is also at home, hosting Downey. the No 2 team from the San Gabrie l Valley Lca!{ue. Ocean View. which won the 1-:mpirc League championship, "ill hos t Garden Grove, the 1l11r<I place fin is h e r in the Gardt•n Grove League in another 4-A contest, while Foun· lain \'allev <Sunset No. 3 > has a Ion~ tri p 'to Thousand Oaks to fat•e the M ar amonte League's No 2 finisher ln 3 A play, Irvine. the Sea \'1t''-' League's No 1 s quad. will host the Moore League's third· plac(' entry, La kewood. No 2 E~tancia is on the road for a gam e Wlth Savanna ~THE SPORTING .HOUSE@ y . Where Health I• a Way of life and Conditioning Is a Way of Living y MOTHER'S DAY The Perfect Gift For The Perfect Girl In Your Llfel Foras s 1 Little as a Day Plus lnmatlon Ftt "URR1\ Limited Offer •LUii ... Loaktr PnolllttM for Mtft a WOMtn ·~ ..... , JaOUll ..... , ... ..... •I._. Y11Y'1I Oolrtl .,, .... :=. ... ==-.::. ;::::n-*YMIO C.ll 752-0565 f• •ddldoael lnfor••tlo 3601 Jambor•Rd •• NewportBucb Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 . 1981 .411 No record for Watson; Lietzke wins Bruce LJelske, playlnJ{ a course !I he despises, tapped in a short par putt on the first hole of sudden death playoff S unday to defeat Tom Watson for the title or the Byron Nelson Classic in Dallas Lielzek 's victory kept Wat.son from matching the record of Walter Hagea by win ning the same tourna ment four limes In a row Hagen won the PGA four straight times, and Watson had colleced three :.tra1g ht B y ron Nel son Classic victories. Watson , who had holed u lS·foot putt for a birdie on the 72nd hole to earn the playoff. three- putted from 30 feet on the 428-yard No I hole, which he loves. while Lietzke two- ~ putted from 25 feet for his eii!hlh PGA tour triumph 1.1i:>t.ckr Amy Akott fired in fi ve birdies over a s ix-hole stretch on the back-side to complete a 6-under -par 66 that gave her a one-shot victory in the LPGA tournament in Roswell. Ga Alcott. who started the day fi ve strokes behind second round leader Hollls Stacy, collected the 15th tour vi<'tOry of her car eer, inC'luding her second this season. Sally Little. winner of three tournaments this year, closed with a 70 lo finish in second place al 210 Andretti's Indy 500 chance gloomy Mario Andretti. looking almost • as g loomy as the weather that kept Indianapolis Speedway c losed Sun- day, said his request that he be allowed to qualify today for the Indy 500 was turn~~ down by Chief Steward Tom Binford. Andr elt1 1s com milled to the Belgian Grand Prix next weekend, whi c h mean s h e-11 miss the final w ee kend o f qualifying . He a s ked for the s p ecial qualify ing session after i t beca m e a pp a r e nt that S unda y's tim t.t trials would be washed away. Anothe r driver would hu\'t.' to quulify Andrelti's car , but 11 would have to start from the back of the 1 llh row Hillie Jean King says this may be her last year as a tournament tennis player . King is striving to overcome the emotional turmoil s urrounding the disclosur e of her les· baan relat1onsh1p with her former secretary Past Forg etting breezed lo an easy nine - l('ngth triumph in the sc<'ond running of the California ~llss Sires Stakes at Hollywood Park Talh an· St'hcdulcd to res ume today bet'' l'l'O neJ?otaators for baseball s owners and 1>layers. \\Ith hoth !>tide:. doubtful an accord can bC' rNtl'ht.'d bt•fon• a threatened strike May 29 Gerr~ Cooney takes what he plans as a m II hon dollar :..tt'p tu a hl:'avywe1ght title shot \\hen hl' fights Ken ~Orlon tonight 10 a to-round b o u t :.i t M a d 1 '«> n Sq u a re G a rd e n Linebacker Gary Spani of th(' Kansas Cit~ Chil'fs l'scapcd <,t•nou~ injur y 1n :.i one-car acc1 · denl that k1lll·rl :.i voung \\Oman in ~ew Mexico. Television. radio TV: Not-vents st'hcduled R ADIO: No (.'\'Cnb scheduled GWC nine faces a crucial iooek With one w eek rem ainang an the regular sch edule. Coach fo'red Hoover's Golden West College baseball team has three p1v1tol contest s re maining The first two, 1ncluclmg Tuesday's battle with East LA are games the)' cannot a fford to lose. The Rustlers have defeated Ea st Los Angeles all three t imes this season. and a win would keep them neck and ne<'k ""ith LA II arbor Both teams possess 8·3 second round records Should GWC defeat the Huskies. and then top LA Southwest at home Thursday, only Rio Hondo College would stand in the Rustlers' way of gain· ing at least a tie for the Southern Cal Conferen<'e second-round title G WC s hould send Ron Hendricks to the mound Tuesd ay agains t East LA, and Hoover hopes his s tar pitcher wi ll improve on his last performance. Hendricks carried a 1.02 ERA into his last out- ing with Cypress, and the.Ch!lr gers ju~ped <_>n him for five runs in the first inning, knockmg him out of the game . . Meanwhile•. in a nother important community college game, Santa Ana will host !'dt. San An· tonio Tuesday m a playorr to determine the No. 4 team m the South .Coast Conference. The Uons downed Fullerton, 4 3, Saturday to earn the right to meet Mt SAC The winner then travel!> to Orange Coast to face the South Coast Confere nce champions in the first round of the Shaughnessy playoffs Thursday First round toughest? Area nines face early tests By ROGER ('ARI.SON 0t Ille D.MI, .. , ... •i.tl Nobody was guaranteed a garden of roses with the Cff baseball playorrs on the docket this week as seven OranKe Coast area teams s wing into ac- tion. And the re doesn't seem to be any . Costa Mesa's Mustangs and the Ocean View Seahawks, two third pla<'e teams expecting some liml' to prepare for Friday's first round, rind themselves locked up in wild card confrontations Wednesday. The Mustangs must t·ontcnd with South Coast League rcpre.,t•ntat1' c· Sirn Cll'mente on the Costa PREP B4SEB4LL M 1:sa t'ampus in 2 A act w11, whale Ocean View . in the playoff, for the r1r-,t t1m'" must t ravel lo Tu'>tin and "111 in ordN t1> .llJln J :I A first round game Fnd.1~ Jt Frl'<'\\J~ l.t•Jgue champion Anaheim If C'osla !\11•!-.a 1s "Uf'l'l''>\(ul the !\'tustangs will travel to Ml'>!>IOn L1•JjlUt' t1lh~t St Bernard Fri d a) It df)esn t appt·<.ir a n} t·:J'>lt:r for the rest of lhe area learn~. l'lthcr Defl'nd1ng C IF 1 A t hamp1on :\t att•r De1 has been cast aga1 nst ho.,t Ht'dond1>. I hl' '1 A ·~ :-.lo 1 seed . while Fount;.1111 Vallc:v. Ni> :i in the Sunset L eagu(', vcntun·., to Mourl' l.1•aKut' k1 ngp1n Loni! Beach Poly Sea Vww Lt•aguc runnt•rup Irvine must travel t•1 Capistrano Vetlll')'. the Solllh C"11<1~t League c hamp The on(\ ll'ams dra" ing hum1• ciss1gn men ls fn· day from the Orange· Co:.ist an·a ilrl' Sunst-t League runner up I-:d1son and ·S<•a \'1ew League tillist Corona del :\1:.ir Edison. 21 4 and on J ' to gJme w1nn10~ slrei.tk . enle rlains Angelus League po\\t·r St Pi.tul . "htle Curona del ~1 ar. ~<·cdt•d :"o 2 rn 2 A carC'les. 1s at h omt' to the \\Inner of W{•dm•-,da\ ' \\lld card gaml· oel\\N.·n Hawthorne Jnd Cleon Edi!>on 's ta'>k against St Paul '4111 1ncludE· :,o(\' ang the ptll'h1ng or Gil Duran \\hO hai. rashwned an 8-1 re('ord and an ERA of 1 40 "hilt• trying to muzt((' tht• lldts or shorhtoµ And\ Stdnkie\\ ICZ < 5651 anrl first bawman .ldr '\;o\\10sk1 1 4Rll t No\\ 1n~k1 . a G 1, 210 µoundt•r 1., abo a lhn•<il a:. a left handed p1t<·ht·r * * Clf" .. A ,.UVOf',..S ,..lnl 11.....0 Fri ... , CU-l>rlCUU Meter Del 11 Aeclon<IO San Glbrlel •I SI ~·•n<•• f'ovnulfl V•lloy •1 LB Pol r No Torr•ncf' •I Chann•' is F onlan1 at BIVt0P Amal Cr•~cent• Vall•y •I Walnut Ntwt>ury p.,, 11 Huonemt * Notro D•""' tS O I 11 WHlmChtter la.-brocUll Mira C.osi. •I Som• Voli•Y El>en-r •I LO\ AllOI SI John Qooo<o •I llkt wooel SI Poul 11 Edl1on E I sevunoo •I SM1 Ml, CO\ MlllU,•n •t So Torr•nct A ow lend II A~l•ncl• West Torr•nc• •t Ar<•O•• Clf' ).A "L..AYOf'FS WIN C.nl a.me Woelft .. Clly Oc.••" V..._ •t Tu\t•n Finl It....,.. Fr!Uy IU-... ock.il Troy at Vtll• P•rk South H1lh •t Hoaver Upl•nd el Nor111 fRtv I G1rotenGro .. 11 Lo•r• E t Oorlld01t(errtto~ Glend1lo •11..ompo< L• Storr• 11 Oo<1 t..u90 O<e1n V'9w or Tus.ttn 11 Anaheim 1i.-11r•ch ll Sonora 1t Covin• Righetti II GlonOore W1rten 1t L• Ou1nt• El MoOoN•I Nortt V•il• $1t1 Lut\ Obi•Po •• Qurblnk M•gnolla al Gahr Nortf'tvkw •l Fulltrton BolH Grande at Kol•ll• Clf'2·A "l...'YOf'FS Wiid Card l;aftlff WM....U' Whittler 11 RoMmel<I San c1e,.,...,I• ti c .. i. M• .. Co•ct1e111 V•lltr et Apple Valloy Glonn al HawtnorM f'l,..t A-"rldlV (U-brKhll Onlorlo al Santi F• lrvlno el Caphlr•no V•lloY Norco It C••f••to Wllilller or l'lo>e,.,.1<111 'l'utalpo l •wn<lll• 11 SIUQU\ C.lte Mffl °' Sin Cltrn'1'•• 11 SI B•rn•rd Arroyo at Ch1AO Coron.a •t Arte1H1 IL.a-bra<llfll Al•manv 11 ll•~••y ""'' * * ( •t •l\,10, at l •nton fS..UQY\I 81•..-lrv•t P•lmSprmo' (•1tforn1.t•t V1c40f V•H4"v Appl• \#4'1iP'I or CoacMU.i Vaille'f •t Montcl•u H11rt .. , M(ivn\41n View PHI~ )( 61 M l\'\IOf'I \lielO HAwthorf'Wo or C..lron •t COf"'On• H I Llf-l·A Pt..AYOf'FS Fll">I 110\llld FrkWy (U-l>rlCU ll Aquin41\ by• L • Sallo al (.hortN 011< Vtr'bum 0.1 at 8t--U G•rden\ 819 Br•r •t El\tnor~ Mary Suor •I Tt~cnepo L• C..,IO• al LA Baplt\I Norarw:>tt •• MoHO a •• Ot \f'rt 1t FWrnort' (LA-tw•<h ll Notrf' Dame-« Alv t •t 8•fdwtf"I Park w n1ll••• Crw at 2~ P•lm\ (1rp1ntH•• at Ctu~mtMOf' Ror•I °"' 11 hmpl• C.•ly P•r•<ltlf •I Atm ol WOrld Bell Jtll •I Af .. <10tro vauo (.11r •I SI Anthony q10 Mt'\a Dvr Cll' SMALi.. SCHOOLS Wild C.r<I Ge~ WOCl.....U y J'11ntt1dQ• Pr•p •I L•Vtrne luttwran (hr S<noo• ot O•M'n •t At"•'~'de Cnr (IPl\Htino V1ll•¥ Chr ... P1tor•m Y ""'"• 11 C•I Pr"' FlnlA-P'r .... y • f U-bro<koO V1tl•nov• 1t Montct11r Prep M•mmoln al Owenl v1111r r11ntrtdge Prep or l..I Vtrnt Lutntran •I Provo<lenc:t Nowpot1 Cl>r. al OuHn of Anoe ts C.nr S<r-1 of De~rt or Rl•er.tc!P Cnr 11 Rio HonCIO HUJM'rla Cllr 11 NH<llel Ma\•O• •t HIQhl•nd Hall Lo• Pino• al Avalon IL.owe< brlCU ll P1h;ar1m °' C•e>htr•no V•Ht.y (hr •t Or•~ Lulhl'ran Qoy• Republic •I Llnll•ld cnr v111111t cnr 11 ftmp1t Cn• ~~t Que klfV •• (.o.ul Unoon ROH,,,_ •t 919 P•M E•v•• -.n111n •t r ... 1n p,,,., YHlltYI O< Col Prtpp •• Temp .. Ion Br•n•wooo •l H•MJ"H LUthtr•n Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L P ct. GB Oakland 24 7 .774 T exas 15 11 .577 612 Chicago 14 11 560 7 Angels 15 16 .484 9 Minnesota 10 17 370 12 Seattle 10 19 345 \3 Kansas City 6 15 286 13 East Dlvilllon Cleveland 13 7 650 Baltimore 14 to .S83 1 New York 16 12 .571 1 Miiwaukee 14 12 .538 2 Boston 12 13 .480 31'l Detroit 12 16 429 s Toronto 9 18 333 712 ,......,..ac ..... A,...it 4, Oetroftl lo.ton t. TOt'Otlla SCIO IMll'tOll IC1"Mt City It Clllc ... (Nd . ralt1) Clewl ... S. MIMH4" I Mllw--tJ, ~·-S TUH7,lattl~el Hew Yef'llS.!INtt .. t T ... t '•O- IOllOlllT-11-11 at T«tlftlO ITMO 141." Cl1wt.tn11 lllYleve<I t II II Chic-!T""" 1-11, II Tlau (-ycutl J~I e1 l(e-CllV (~ 1..)1,l't ()nly .. ,,,...t< ..... IM NATIONAL LEAGUE West D ivision W L Pct. GB Dodgers 20 9 .690 Atlanta 15 13 .536 41 ~ Cinc innati 14 13 .519 5 San Francisco 15 17 .469 612 Houston 13 16 .448 7 San Diego 10 20 .333 10' 2 East Division St. Louis 15 7 682 Philadelphia 18 10 .643 Montreal 17 10 .630 11 Pittsburgh 11 11 .500 4 New York 8 16 .333 8 Chicago 5 19 .208 1 l SIMA'ft k-D.-..n). ~ Voris l San f"raftCfKo ~.-•Ml 1.4 S.t1 OlegO I. Pflll-l!lflla 4 Ctlk..-i S, Al*'la SI H IM I-. t1ll'tl HovlWn 7, Cltlc:lllNll S Pitt_..., I, St. '--'Is t T ... t"IO-Pllbburgll (R-...01 al Alflflla ("9rry W I, ,., .,,_ ... Illy.,, 1·11 •t CIMIMatl ISotl I SI." °"'' ..,_, ·-1.0 111i1J Pillt MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 . I I 11111111111111:11 f1111111 valuv STOCKS COMICS CLASSIFlED 83 84 85-11 I L I , I The San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh in Irvine is surrounded by major roadways, overflown by commer cial jets and bordered by an abandoned refuse landfill. But the prevalent Red-Winged Blackbirds don't seem to mind. The males stake out a certain territory In the tules and try to attract females by showing off the brilliant, cir cular red spot on their wings. And the Ruddy Ducks can be found in great abundance ln t he ponds of the 202-acre m a r s h-owned by the University of California . Some animals , however, are having harder times reaching the marsh because of creeping urbanization. says Or. Gordon M arsb, curator of the marsh. ·' ll 's sort of like flipping a coin when some of these animals try to cross the streets near the marsh," he said. "Either they get lucky. or they don't." The birds are less likely to cross streets. but other aspects of urbaruzatlon threaten them. "Birds have difficulty perceiving some of these buildings with reflective glass and they end up smashing into them," said Marsh. "We get calls all the time." He said there are also natural processes at work that discourage some creatures from visiting or residing in the marsh bounded by Campus Drive. Jamboree Road, University Drive and MacArthur Boulevard. "Some of the migratory birds that frequent the marsh need a large landing pad and the problem is that the area is becoming overgrown with vegetation and making it rough for them to land,·' Marsh said. He added that several methods are being studied for reducing the overgrowth. A quick tour or the marsh illustrates the situation. , Tules and cattails often obscure the ponds as one walks on the earthen dikes that separate the bodies or water in the L·shaped marsh. Wild artichokes line the dikes. Tour guide Cathy Plelnes note& that these and many other varieties of plantl and animals aren't indigenous to the area but were introduced by man -Spaniard.a in the case ot the artichokes. The StarUn1 bird ls an example of one of Red-winged blackl:rird clings to reed to get bearings on marshland home . Wild artichokes line dikes and other spiked vegetation in ponds makes landings difficult. Photos by Gary Ambrose, text by Richard Greep of Daily Pilot Staff these "European beasts," that sometimes thrive in this region at the expense of the native creatures. she said. Something else introduced by man here . has the potential of doing more damage than any plant or animal. Below the bluffs in the southern section of the marsh area is an abandoned landflJI, the contents of which ar e unknown, Miss Pleines explained. Offi cia ls In charge of the marsh worry that erosion might uncover a harmful substance buried there. She said that material was buried there a few decades ago, before federal and state restrictions were adopted lo regulate dumping. The Irvine Company. which sold the marshland to the University of California in 1970, strung barbed wire by the marsh to prevent grazing cattle from falling in. Strands of the wire can still be seen in the area, testifying to an earlier, simpler day on the Irvine Ranch before land development became more important than livestock and agriculture. Before the land was bought by the Irvine fa mily in 1864, it was part of a Spanish ranch. In those days, the 202-acre marsh was only a small part of a huge wetlands (called "Swamp of the Frogs" by the Spaniards) extending lniand from the Upper Newport Bay area. What Is now the San Joaquin Marsh was fed in earlier days by the San Die10 Creek, which has Its beginnings in the watershed of the Santa Ana Mountains. Now, however, the water source for the marsh comes from wells at the nearby Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant, said Miss Pleines. The marsh is used as a learning resource by students and educators at UC Irvfoe and public tours also are ~vallable. \ Sue Clark has become queen of the Mother lode ... B2 0 0 'Bugged' Valley residents file suit over flies A group of Fountain Valley re· sidents is claiming it is bugged -by "many million, perhaps billions" of flies around the OranJle County Sanitation Dis· tricl' s sewage treatment plant. In a class action lawsuit filed in Orange County Superior Court, the residents claim they have been victims or disease, lowered property values and dis· turbances to their living pat· terns as a result of flies . ·'The flies fly over practically everything in the house in their desperate search for whatever flies search for," Santa Ana al· torney Robert Sassone said in the lawsuit filed Friday. "It is HB Boys Club seeks items for auction The Boys Club of Huntington Beach is looking for merchan- di s e , art works, serv ice certificates and other items that can be sold at the organization's second annual fund-raising auc· lion. The auction and buffet dinner will be hel'd at 6:30 p.m. Friday, June 5 at the Old World Festival Hall in Huntington Beach. Tickets for the dinner and auc· lion are $10, with admission to the auction alone $5. Dinner re· servations must be placed by May 25. To donate auction Items or to reserve dinner tickets, call the Boys Club, 968-0509, or auc· tion co-chairmen Jean Abel, 963-6675, and Judy Sheldon, 963·3007. The program will include a re· ception and dancing. Among the om cers to be installed are Brent Purdue, master councilor; Rex Budwig, senior councilor, and Jeff Wheeler, junior councilor. Host families eyed The Corona del Mar chapter of American Field Service Is look· Ing for several families to house two foreign students July 2·7. IC interested, call Carole Johnson at 644-0772 or 644·0056. impossible to catch all of the flies . ·'Because of their breedin place, these flies are excep tionally dirty and germ carry-. Ing," the attorney said. Sassone estimated that as m any as 100 m es could be found in any house at any given time in the one-mile radius surround- ing the plant at 1084-4 Ellis Ave. According to the lawsuit, the flies began breeding in July, 1980 when plant operations were altered during a maintenance project. At that time, sludge - "human manure" as Sassone termed it -was neith~r proper· ly treated nor covered," Sassone alleged. He said the fly infestation con- tinued for about six weeks. But Sassone said a court order $hould be issued to prevent future fly infestations. In the lawsuit. the residents a ls o complain of odo rs of "human manure" and chlorine and release of chemicals into the air, and noise. ·one hundred fo rty -four persons are named as plaintiffs in the a ction. Sassone said, however, that more than 10,000 people live within the one-mile radius of the plant. Also named as defendants in the lengthy action are the cities of Fountain Valley. Costa Mesa. ·Huntington Beach and Santa Ana. It is claimed the cities have taken no · action to protect residents from the alleged nuisances. Each resident. according to the suit, is demanding SlOO for increased medical expenses, SlOO for pesticide ex pens es, $8,000 for reduced enjoyment of his residence, $500 for alleged damage from odors, Sl0,000 for reduction of property value. and S25 for each lime he was awakened by noise. _ Superior Court Judge Edward Wallin scheduled a hearing on' the plaintiffs' application for an injunction for June 6. The sanitation district has re- ferred inquiries on the mes suit to its attorney, Thomas Woodruff, who also works as city attorney of Fountain Valley. Woodruff was unavailable for comment on the case today. CD cutback fought Chief defends Huntington program 8)'0 PATRICK KENNEDY Of-o.llf PM91SW. The coordinator of the Hunt- ing ton Beach Ci vil Defense Division or the fire department says he's preparing to fight what he believes will be a disaster that could occur July 1. According to the city's pre· Um I nary budget, that's the day the civil defense division is to be eliminated and consolidated into theflredepartmenl. City officials say about $25,000 will be cut out of the city's $47 million operating budget by ellmlnaling_ the civil defense coordinator and his assistant. Another worker will be hired to do necessary paperwork involving tbedlvlsion. City officials say the fire depart· ment has the expertise and personnel to carry on the dis· aster preparedness program ua- i n g fewer prople and less mQney. George Thyden, coordinator of the civil defense division dill· a1rees. •'The city has a good, viable dlaaater preparedness pro1ram that could save Uves in cue of earthquake or fiood, •' Thyden said. "That would be totally loetby tlU. proposal ... Tbydendeclarea he'a not knock· tn1 the fll'e department, but he aald he doesn't think it baa "the time or expertise" to carry on the procram at lb current level. He said a federal atudy pre- dicta that an earthquake alOftl the lnclewoodtNewport fault mea1urini 7.5 on the Richter acale could cauae an outbr .. k ol 15 fires in Huntlnston Beaeb, keepinc the fire department bu•t· ''For41to72houn,c1l11enamust bt prepared to take ca" of them1elve1," Tbfden aaid, tx· platnhulthat a ma.tor pOrtlonolbla time la 1pent livlDI public lee· ture1 and Mmlnan OD bow to bl pr.....S tn c ... ol •m•ramcy. ff e aatd bt atao 1apenllet HVtral volunteer ll'OUPI ln the com 11u111llJ that could bt of urv•ce in a dlauter emer1ene1. , I ....., .......... ~ 'CITY PROGRAM GOOD' • CD Director Thyden I He said he doubts if fire depaf'tr ment officials will continue hil scbeduleofpubllctalkaorlteeplhe volunteenactiveandunlfled. Rich Barnard, a city ad· mintstraUve assistant, said lhe proposal "Vr"On't have an advent effect on the efficiency of the prq. 1ram and will save the city money." He notes that the fire deparfr ment and ~ce are the•' prlmaq a1enclea' trained to handle dla· eaters. He11idtheflredepartment replarly schedules public talb on flrepreventloa and eaaUy coul4 incorporate emer1ency pre· paredneN lnto t.boH fonama. "We wouldn't be maldnc thl1 proponl unle11 we felt the 1ame level olprotecUon wUI be afforded tbepubOc," 8amard11ld. 1 Tbe Ot1 Council wtU 1cbedule a •erl• ol worUbope and public bearln11 OD lb• prellmlnar1 bud1tt propotala at It. MQ 11 meetlna. accordlq to cit,J ol· ftclal•. • 0 0 0 as c a a e a 2 2 J 3 22 J!lJj Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MOflday, May 11 . 1981 J ------------------ Gtiilty c harged Sh~ 's q·ueen of the Mother Lode ! I l a s LAW & J_,STICE DEPT. -You listen to what our Orange County judges ar~ expounding i~ recent• times and you're left with the notion that every time they pound the gavel, they intone: "Bring in the next guilty defen- dant ... " • Well. it isn't quite like that. What the jurists are try- ing to get across to the voters is the idea that they're not soft on criminals arpund here. Statistics quoted by the Superior Court judges at a b' press conlerence just last week -/ indicated that of all adult ~ · crimina l defendants hailed -----~ ..... ---before them on felony charges TOM MURPHINI ~~~\i~~!r: 94.5 percent were And of those convicted, the jurists assert that 95 percent of the convicted went to the Big Slammer up the River. YOU LISTEN TO THIS and you get the impression that getting hauled before the bar of justice in Orange County is just like being a big loser in the Monopoly game: "Go to Jail ; direclly to jail. Do not pass Go and do not collect $200. . . " Extending the game. you could go to a multiple choice question on the status of law and justice in Oram~e ~,· . ' --...-.--. ~1-1 I -. i: 1''ormer defen$e attorney leammg a paying trade County. You might ask the question something like this: If a person goes to trial in Orange County on a felony charge. thh. means: <A> His chances of getting otr the hook aren't very good. 1 B> He'd better have a defense lawyer thal scores within the needed 5 percent range. 1 C> He's already guilty. <O J He's going to prison ( E > All of the above. IF YOU ANSWERED the question with <E >. the statistics s uggest that you're a winner. The sus pect who is going to trial is a lways the loser. with the s light excep- tion of Answer ( B 1. And s peaking of defense lawyers, the statistics handed out by our county jurists must cause them to cringe a little bit. Being a defense lawyer around this county must be a job like the used car dealer on the dirt lot in downtown Santa Ana. He s miles and s ays wonderful things about the Bazooka V-8 he's trying to unload on you. But when s tarting time comes, he has to drag out the battery jumper cables. IF THE JUDGES' statistics are anywhere near ac- curate for our courts. you know that our county defense attorneys must have one real area of expertise. They must be very good at writing appellate briefs. You're left to wonder whatever happened to the famed defenders of yesteryear around Orange County whose rPputation was so inllated that they whispered he could get you off if you came into court with "GUILTY" stamped on your forehead. ONE OLD DEFENSE attorney had such a reputation that a juror was once heard to remark about him, "You believed him even when you didn't believe him ... " Nowadays, you suspect that your defense attorney in Orange County needs only one real virtue. He 'd better be able to come before the judge with r e· ally interesting motions for a change of venue. By ELLEN GRANDT oe•.,_1y,.i.1i." EDI TOR'S NOTE · Thlt II another in a 1ene1 of atones lhlt Dally Pilot unll publath about in· terestmg Cal1fonua women This is a s tory about a Frenchman's ghost. a t ragic fire. and a high school sweetheart. ln the background are the exciting early days of television . a fateful lunc heon with a university dean, and the celebrated bandit. JoaquinMurieta. Sue Clark is a pretty. delicate woman, with soft auburn curls and a disarmingly sweet voice and manner. But hers is a difficult job, running a historic Victorian hotel in the Calaveras County com munity or Mokelumne Hill. As owner and manager of I.he Hotel Leger, Clark supervises a statr that sometimes exceeds 30 and oversees, 1n addition to guest rooms, a restaurant, saloon. theater and catering business. THE HOTEL LEGER is a l wo-story stone building with broad verandahs and graceful balconies It was built an 1851 by George Leger. who came to California two years earlier fro m Alsace-Lorraine with his second wife, a ver y young bride. The hotel was called the .. Queen orthe Mother Lode" and considered the most elegant hostelry in Gold Rush California The old hotel survived three rares in the 19th century and has had many owners through the years. Buttheoriginal foundation and walls still stand. And the ghost of George Leger, says Sue Clark, still walks the halls of his e legant creation. "tie 's definitely here, .. she says "And I feel very comfortable knowinghe'saround!" Mokelumne Hill. now a sleepy village with a population of 836, was once the laq~esl city in the Mother Lode, with more than 15.000 inhabitants. The county seat or Calaveras. 1f narrowly massed selection as the stale capital. losing to Sacramento by one vote in a legislative contest. Scene of some of the richest gold strikes an the area, .. Moke Bill" was the wildest of Gold Rush boomtowns. ramous for violence, 1ncJuding two all-out "wars" between rival national groups of m 1ners. The town was also famous as headquarters of the dashing bandit, Joaquin M urieta. SUE CLARK'S OWN history is also fascinating. A Was hington slate native and Northwestern University graduate, Ms . Clark. 50. participated in the ver y beginnings of the commercial television industry, as a writer and director al the first stations in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle's KING-TVandTacoma's KNTV. Her California career started in 1965, when. the newly divorced motherorfour s mall children, she bccamea wnterfor Ma rin County radio station KTIM. Subsequent Jobs include a fi ve-year stint with Marin's Residential Treatment Center for emotionally disturbed teen-agers ; a year in the corporate world as manager of technical publications for Bechtel Power Corporation; and four years as director of university re- l a lions for the University or California Medical Center in San Francisco. All this would seem lo have very little lo do with Victorian hotels. you say? Indeed. But Ms Clark always was interested in real estate In the late 19f!Os. she tried to assemble Heart attack classes se t C ARD I OPULMONARY r es u scitation <C PR > c lasses are being offered throughout May and June by South Coast Medical Center. The program includ es CPR • HEALTH HELP certification by the Amen can Heart Association. Participants are taught h ow to provide ventilation and circulation lo a heart attack victim. The classes also provide heart facts so students can recognize heart attacks. For information on class schedules. call 499·1311 , ext. 618. STOP S MOKING CLINIC will be offered by Pacifica s:;ommu n i t y Ho s pital In Huntington Beach in conjunction with the Orange County unit of the American Cancer Society beginning Tuesday For lnforma· lion on the Cree health education program. call 752·8600 SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY h os pital will have a dis- cussion on prescription drugs a nd their side effects Tuesday. Participants are encouraged to bring their prescriptions in to discuss specific problems . For information. call 837-4500. STRESSCENTER al South Coast Medical Center and. the city of lrvine will present two se minars on family issues beginning Wednesday. The first s eminar is titled "Stress, Your Body's Wors t Enemy." The second se minar . set for Wednesday, May 20. will be "Law and Order in the Single Fa mily.;· The programs begin at 7:30 p.m . For Information, call ·Mariner's Library sets exhibition ' I An exhibit or,.water color, graphics and cullgraphy by Anita Egan Healy will be on display at Mariner's Library In Newport Beach beginning Wednesday and contlnuln g through June 30. Her work has been exhibited in galleries in New York and Mlnneapoli1, and Mrs. Healy r ecently was juried tor watercolors Into the Art-A-Fair Festival in Laguna Buch. Special reception to honor anUt ~ The Newport Beach Cll)' Arts Com ml11lon wUI 1ponsor a r .. upUon to honor artist Norma Jay from noon to 2 p.m . on TUCll· day at the Newport Beach Oty Hau Gallery. Soup wlll be Hrved at the 1alhttlnJ(, which will mark Uie opentn.a of the special exblblt by the Lquna Beach palnl41' \\'ho apeclllbeslnmarlnesubJects. ' ' 499·1311. ext. 560. ANN B. MARTIN, author of ··Meta-bioni cs: The Mystic Power of the Mind" will lead a di sc u ssion on "P syc hi c Development for Health a nd Achievement .. at 6 pm . Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call 975-0700. SMOK I NG AND YOUR he a lth i s the topic or a se minar s ponsored by Riverview Hospital at 7 p.m . Thursday .in Santa Ana. For in· formation on the free seminar, call 531-1653. ALCOHOLISM a nd the elderly population is the topic of a discussion and workshop at a meeting of the Orange County Alcohol and Aging Task Force at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday in Santa Ana. The task force u bringing together persons in alcoholism and gerontology for the purpose of learning more about the growing problem or alcoholism in the older population. For i nformation, call Arnie at 499·13ll, ext. 560. GESTALTWORKS , • counscllng and growth center in La1una Beach, wm ofter a lecture on the basis of Gestalt thenpy at 7:30 p.m. Friday In La1una 8each. For lnformation, call 497-4076. FEMALE ALCOHOLISM 11 the topfc ol a Lwo-bour 1emlnn conducted by the Counaelln1 Asaoclates for Human Development at 7:30 p .m . Friday in Tullln . For lnformaUon, call 832-1020. A ghost· still walks the halls Sue Clark with Mokelumne Hill m background a n investment group to purchas,e f s pring of 1978, s he took a Gold the historic Marsha ll Hotel-'ln Country vacation trap with three Tomales Bay, a beautifu l friends They visited several Victorian s urvivor of the 1906 Victorian hotels. including the earthquake. The scheme rell Hotel Leger. Oncl' again. Ms. thr ough, and a young Marin Clark found herself "char med by couple purchased the Marshall the romance" of these historic Within two months. the hotel structures . burned to the ground A week after the trap. one of Ms Al though she was n 't the Clark'svacationc·ompanions had Mars hall's owner, its loss left lunch with an acquaintance. a Clark .. heartbroken." And, she dean at a Bay area university says. tht> incident ··stayed in the The dean mentioned "the friend backormymmd"formorethan o f a colleagut''' who was lOyears inte rested in St'lling a Gold In 1977. Ms. Clark made a major Country hotel as al turned out. cart>er s witch , bt>coming a the llotelLeger residential a nd com merc1al From then on. says Ms Clark , realtor Th(.' following year, in the "door.., started opening And in December 1978, :i cloh!d corporation· of eight investors, with Ms Clark as president, purchased the Hotel Leger. She moved to Mokelumne Hill In July 1979, lo manage the hotel full time. Enter the high sc hool s weetheart. A certain boy, who sat behind Sut.> Clark in high school Spanish clai.s. rirst encouraged her to co n si d e r a ca reer in broadcasting, his chosen rleld. Although they dated other people in collt>ge. thetwo met again when Ms. Clark returned to Washington , and very soon became engaged. Just as suddt'nly, they broke the engagement .. To this day." says M s Clark. "I don't re member why " So 30 years passed. But last summer. this ex fiance, John L ewis. now a successrul • broadcaster 1n Portland, heard about Ms Clark "running a hotel, of all things. in some strange sounding town '" In Sacramento on business. Lewis call ed to ask if he could v1s1t the hotel Three months later. they were marned. I . I I • Now Lewis commutes from ! Portland on wee kends and assists . with the hotel whenever he can With a devoted new husband. he r children in college or safely launched on careers, and the Victorian hotel of her dreams to manage. Sue Clark would seem to ha ve JJrOved the a dage. "lafe beg1ns at50." Because with all the hard work, she says "I thoroughly enJOY what I'm doing I 'm happier than I've ever been." We welcome your comments. queslt0ns, and suggeslwns about thu column Please wnle to Cah/omsa Woman. P 0 Box /56(). Costa Mesa, California 92626 Ellen Brandt. educated al the University o/ Pennsylvania. is a published author now II vmg m Sunnyvale. Cah/omUJ Aries: Ne w job is poss ibility Tuesday, May 12, 1981· By SYDNEY OMA RR ARIES I March 21·Apnl 19> New job or assignment could be on h orizon . Emphasis on breakt hr ough s, add e d recognition a nd i mproved health. TAURUS I April 20-May 201 Family member confesses feelings and you feel good as HOROSCOPE r esult Accent on children. speculation. adventure. variety and possible change of scenery GEMI NI I May 21-June 201. Rest r ictions are rem oved Popularity increases as potential comes into rocus . Older ramil y m e mber pa ys meaningful compliment. CANCF.R CJune 21-July 22>. Obtain hint from Gemini message Opportunities exist for expression or ideas, formats LEO"'July 23-Aug. 221' /\rticuJite ideas obtain data relating to costs, interest rates Romantic "involvement " is part of changing. exciting scenario. VIRGO IAug. 23-Sept. 221 Puzzle pieces fall i nto r ecognizable pattern Harmony 1s restored on domestic front. Ci r cumstances favor your efforts and aspirations. LIBRA cSept. 23·0ct. 22 >. Access is gained to confidential material, backstage maneuvers Accent on glamour. m ystery and dialogue with director or h os pital o r c haritabl e organization. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21J . Accent on dreams., friends , persuasion and romance. Whal you want is available and older individual aids in obtaining it. SAGITTARIUS 1 Nov. 22-Dec. 21 I More people are drawn to you career gets boost and goal comes within sight. Project c an now be completed You could receive wide publicity CAP RICORN 1 Dec 22-Jan 19 1 Spiritual values come into sharp, clear focus You're due for a "revelation .. Emphasis on comm uni cation. travel . education and uni v~rsal appeal AQUARIUS <Jan. 20·Feb 181: Highlight security, financial guarantees. accounting a nd bookkeeping procedures First impressions apt to be correct know it, respond accordingly. Pl CES I Feb l9·Marc·h 201: Dela~ actions Accent legal reviews. clarification of rights, permissions Focus on joint! eff11rts. cooperation, possible! pa1 t nership and marital status ' Slapping not necessary DEAR ANN LANDERS While s trolling 1n th e child ren·s department I heard what sounded like clapping. I turned and saw a mother slapping hl•r small child's hands. First one. then the other The woman then scr eamed. .. Never unbutton my purse again." • Within .minutes I witnessed a nother mother dragging her young son along by his ear. When the toddler tried to free himself. she slapped him with s uch fo rce he fell down. My heart breaks when I see little ones mistreated like that No wonder there is so much violence in the world. Children learn 1t from their parents When our first c hild was born , the kindly pediatrician took hold of her tiny fi ngers and said . "Mother. thesf! are de licate instruments. Take care of them. I have seen permane nt d a m age done by indiscriminate hand-s lapping." He explained how the adult hand comes down with such force (especially when motivated by anger) that damage may occur to the bones. cartilage and tendons. It was his personal belief that such punishment could cause arthritis in later lire. I raised four children and never s lC:1 pped a n ) o f the m My daughters don 't slap their. children eitht'r Please tell your ' ANN lANDIRS readers that mothers can find better ways to teach children not to touch things that don't belong to them MINE WERE TOUCllERS. TOO Dear Mother : Thank you for a thoughtful letter. I wonder how: many parents s aw themselves• today. I neve r slapped mine, either. A stern look or disapproval, was enough. ; What kind of wedding goes wit~ today'snewltfntyles? Doesanythin{l go? Ann Landers' completely ~ .. The Bnde's Guu:te" tells what'i right for today's weddings Por a copy, send a dollar, plus a long1 selfaddressed .. ~tamped envelope f 1~ cents postage 1 to Ann Landers. P 0. Boz 11995.Chic o. 111 60611 Philharnwnic group to lwst te nnis evenl 0mn~ CUSTOM FRAMING Open 6 Davs A Week Mon.-Frl. CH Sat: 1~ 1803 Newpor1 Blvd .. C!>$la Ntesa ~11 Annound~a Summer~ ForTeensl The Jane Gray Porter Oommittee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society will host its first annual women's doubles tennis tournament from 9:30 a.m. to L2 :30 p .m . Friday at the Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club. A luncheon at the club will follow the competi- tion. Entry blanks for the tournament are available at tennis clubs throughout Orange County or in- terested women can call 760·8340 for information. Proceeds will benefit the Orange County Phllhatmonlc Society's concert series and youth programs . Jack Ander~on Ill.II,.,,_,, reveals 1n the UI SENIOR CITIZIHS Sf' EC I AL 25°/o OFF ALL SIRVIC Melft .. T11e1 .. Wt4. ()My HAIR HAMDLIRS ·--·MM41• Turn your unusables into usable cash. can Dallyptlot ctasslfied 642-5671. --~--·~~-~-----·----·-·--...... --........... ~ ........... -.i!!••..-.. ._ ...... s•s•z ....... 2•2 .. 1•2 .... lllllllllllllll NYSE OMPO ITE TRANSACTION QUOTATION' •NC~uoa UAOI' ON THI NI'# YOlllll. MIOWUT. ~ACt"C ~··· 10\TON OlfllOIT AliO (IOl(IOllUfl UOCll lllCHANOU ANO lllPOllTIO I T fMI NASO AOIO IN\TINU H /F •a Th~ way to get ahead in the food buainesa Is to stuff yourself by buying other companies Then you get ratter and fatter The one who eats the most wins. Chicago-based Beatrice Foods be&an its eating binge in the middle or World War II (when no one was looking). Previously a dairy company. Beatrice bought an Oriental foods company, La Choy, In 1943. Does chop suey mix with milk? In the business world, you bet it does. Beatrice went on from there to buy more than 400 other companies, including the ones that make Dannon yogurt, Eckrich meats. Switzer licorice and Tropicana juices Not aJI these acquisitions were in the food field. Beatrice also latched on to Samsonite luggage and Ain1tream motor homes <you got to have something in whi c h t o ~ carry around lr all th~t food> :-.~ e. In any case, • 't , this hearty ap· k ~ petite paid off -=~-~ ............ _.__ ____ _ ~t~tr~~J:s:~ lllTll' llllNIU General Foods to become the America largest food-based corporation in BEATRICE'S CHICAGO area neighbor, Kraft, looked on hungrily as this meal continued ad in- finitum. And then, toward the end of last year, under the aegis of a new leader, John M. Richman, Kraft began to show how widely 1t could spread 1ts cheese. First on its menu was Dart Jndustrles of Los Angeles, which was consumed in one bite to form a new com- pany called Dart & Kraft. The Dart acquisition didn't bring in any new foods but it made Kraft the proud possessor of West Bend pots and pans I to cook Kraft macaroni-and- cheese >. Tupperware (to store the leftovers> and Duracell batteries (to spark other acquisitions). Ear· ly this year Dart & Kraft came to the table again, consuming Hobart Corp., the Troy, Ohio, maker of KilchenA.id dishwashers (it fits · after you eat, you have to get the dishes washed I. This frenzied eating didn't escape the attention of the onetime kingpin of the food business, General Foods (GF > of White Plains, N.Y. <Maxwell House, Jell-0 . Koo l -Aid. BirdsEye. Pos t cereals, Gainesbur6ers. Burger Chef, Shake 'n Bake) So GF went out and put the bite on Oscar Mayer, the Wisconsin meat packer AS A RESULT, the scales are buckling under the weight of these food monsters. Taking into a~count t heir latest meals, here's how they stack up <in an- nual sales> Dart & Kraft. $10.3 bilhon Beatrice Foods: $8. 7 billion Gener al Foods : $8. l billion This formidable display or snacking has now in· s pired two other food companies : Nabisco and Stan- dard Brands. They have agreed to join forces Cin ef· feet , eating each other), creating a company to be called Nabisco Brands, which would have annual sales of SS.5 billion, thereby grabbing fourth place in the food industry . I General Mills. H.J . Heinz. Campbell Soup and Kellegg will have to find others lo eat to keep up with the competition.) NABISCO BRANDS will have in one pot these products: Ritz crackers. Oreo cookies. Fig Newtons. Shredded Wheat, Mister Salty pretzels, Junior Mints, Geritol, Sominex. Rose Milk, Aqua Velva, ace combs <those all come from Nabisco> and Baby Ruth candy bars, Planters nuts, Blue Bonnel and Fleischmann's margarines, Chase & Sanborn coffee, Tenderleaf tea, Fleischmann 's whiskies, gin and vodka, Dry Sack sherry, Inver House Scotch, Egg Beaters, Moosehead ale <those all come from Standard Brands>. Announcement of the Nabisco-Standard Brand~ sandwich touched off in Wall Street and the financial press a wave of speculation on how these two food companies would fit. with analysts wondering which product lines would be dropped and which executives would lose their jobs. But no one was really asking the important questions: -Will this result in a better Oreo" I Do they dare make a "triple stuff?") -Will this mean that we'll see lower prices for Ritz crackers and Planters nuts ? -Will there be more jobs available'! Past experience leads one to believe that the answer to all of these questions is : no. Gold metals quotations wld By The Associated Pres Selected world gold prices today: London: morning fixing SSOl.00, up $15 25. London: afternoon fixing $493.00, up $7 .25. Paris: afternoon fi xing $528.33, up $23.47 . Frankfurt: fix.ing $502.02, up $18.03. Zorich: late afternoon fixing $492.00, up $9.00, $495 00 asked. Handy & Harmn: only daily quote $493.00. off $7.25. Engelhard: only daily quote $493.00, off $7.25. Eng~Lbard: only daily quote fabricated $512. 72, up $7.54. Silver Handy & Harman, $11.34-0 per troy ounce-. Metah NEW YORK (A P) -Spot nonferrous metal prices to- day : ------~ -..:'!-------6 .. ....: ·--•.. ·~--~· ........ ·-·~·...__.,,_,,..._. .... ,,_ .... ._ ............... , •• ~ ............ ~·~• ... •s~a ... , ... ,~, ...... a~2 .. s ................. c•s•s"2•t•tlllllJIJ ... ........ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11 , 1981 THE FAMILl' csacus BIGGIEOBGE by Virg il Partch (VIP) PMNUT8 I KNOW WHAT WE SMOIJlD DO! WE'RE ALL T06ETHER MERE SO WE ~OOLD HAVE QIJR PICTURE TAKEN ... WE'LL SEND rT HOME TO MOM AND DAD ... And that's the story of how ~ solditrs and their sister met in France during World War I. by Charles M. Schu And I don't care tf anyone believes me or not. • • I i I 5-II ~~ -.i======i.......:J w . .. TUMBLEttEED8 ! PONY E!XP'RE:SS FOR PE::WL.AP t71PPL.~ ! by Tom K. Ryan "Grandma uses the bottom port for reading, the top part for looking out the window, and the middle for watching TV." Mt\RMADUKE by Brad Anderson ~S·ll "Speeding ... runnlng a red light...fa ilure to yield right of way ... jay-walklng .. .'' JUDGE PARKER ME..Y, GARflELC', WHAT 00 VOO THINK Of MV NEW WALLPAPER? ACROSS 1 Actress Gardner 4 Shy 9 Sm111t1 14 Church seat 15 Girl of song 16 Hindu prtnoe11 17 Op1nlonate<1 19 FOOi 20 Submil 21Ceen SO Abner's 181her 51 Stimulate S2F - F11Zgeuld 54 Price paid S8 Dress 60 Munched 61 Nez - Indians 62 Rocket 1t1ge 64 Potential troublt UNITED Fealure Syndicate Saturday's Puute SOived summtf source 22 Stone 66 Earn 23 Obflque loolt 67 Oyt ol a type ..,...,_... 24 Legal matter 68 "-- 2CI China S.. word" outt 69 Law group 29 Dtltce 70 Oolrt Sem 31 Gynt's mot,,., 32 Nlmlxla 33 Dllflculty 36 T me Of .,_, 3tHea~wtight 39 Appee.llOI\ t2 Recent· Pr.t, 45 F.ilnQ 13 Stabillzt 4t .. endeomt 71 81g casino 18 European man DOWN 2' Vibf1tlon1 53 Up.tight 1 Dltl'llay 25 Permialvt 55 CUMd path 2 Botd« 27 -1111 wey 5e Ctumpte'• 3 IJllOtm.d 28 Society Fr eOU9ltl • Cr.dll lll'm 30 On - -57 a Petotn 5 Btbllell """' with 5t £ntt*lGI 8 Length unit 33 Plant shoot t t Stey undone t v "I hate Mondays." • • l \I " r.1 DENNIS THE MENt\CE Hank Ket.:hum l-<~ !I :;. I i ~ "He's upstairs. Said he wouldn't 'stay 1n the same room with liver and onions''" 1 2 a by Harold Le Doux by Ferd & Tom Johnson MAMlf.STnL BACK VISITING ~ER MOTHER>, WILLlf? ~~~-,...,i· NANCY VO<Jfl( ILJ( I~ FAMOU.S FOR SWIAJGtNG Tf/ICO(}CJ!i iHE PEA~LIES Q4J THE Cl.J~OSITY CHA~1ar, CA.If GORDO SLUGG0,00 YOU EVER SWEEP YOUR HOUSE? FlJNK l' \tlNKERBEAN YOO CAN'i B€ SE.RI006,HARR'f. ~ WANT iliE 5Ul00l BOARD ID HELP t..tX.> ~ A 74 7 ~ ~1D~IN=? BRABBLE DR.SMOCK YOU PI P CALrL- C'OW N 5 'f Al RS ANPASK FOR ONI!!! OF 'T'HI!!! GALS FP.OM i'HE! N<.>jlllSl!!!S' F='OOL.-1 C'IC'N'"f" YA ,. POC.'T'OA ?' WHATtl1A DOING, MOH? • 1 BtM field A3 Agt '' H1111Md •f ltlUI T Flrlt 3A 8tllef t2 Currtnt unit. ._,.....,....,_.,.._..,_ '7 '"°"°"' '9Jlml!U ·~t 8 Defunct 35 ~~ Abbf f dolt'batlc 31 lractabll 63 '-'ti. Pr .. 10 VtgtCICJlt 40 Traine 15 Comptltt!fY '1 lneuQUrltOf' 42 aoth "'*' l'rtf I DOUBT IT ,.,.. .. ....,,.,~., ....... 111tt """'"""' .. .,c '"' '"' by Ern ie Bushmiller by Gus Arriola {. 1W1 l~MO•••~"• ,,....,.. • .., I MAV 11 by Tom Batiuk -rnE CD6T Of ti>ME1HING uKE. 1wrr 15 our OF 1fi£ +¥)1RE.ALLY !AFEW1RIPS 10 ™E iOURNAMENI OF R05ES ~RADE ANO If mJW QUESTION! I ~U.O 1'AA1' A NICf S1(, U\.l'1 l AN 61'4E °"OV AN EMOf10lllAL. ~'f ~EN iOU'RE OEl'U5SEO! SO WHY 'T'He PUMe> GUE!S'f"ION 'r PAAC.liCAU.4' ~ r-OR ITSELF! by Kevin F agah I Al.t;O l{fAO 1'~A1' 9E<X'L.E. At-! E'f.lt1611" INCR£016L.E S'fftE:t{(;f~ I~ 'f1ME~ ~ E"1'R£.Mt ANblR. by George Lemont by Lynn Johnston I DIDN'f KNOW YOU WEAE 1Hfil SMART I • I 1 j PUBLIC NOTICE ~~~~~....._~~-1- PUBLIC NOTICE PlJILIC NOTICE NOTICS OI' T•UIT8 8'1 IAl.I CtT'r COUllCIL •UOUITIC* llO. ltWt LOAM MO. WA•IMCMlq A •154X.UTIOH OP THI CITY COUNCIL 0' THI CITY 01' lltVIN8 T,I. MO..,_, OICLAIUHG 11$ INTINTtOfC TO OllOllt THI VACATIC* 0,. THI Nl!Wl'OltT NOllllll LOAN, INC , M IAllMIHT l'Olt 111<1! T .. AIL 'VII~ OVllt l"A•CIL.I t, I AMO• AS 411117 •Hel11tee Trv•I" 11n4er tl\t "ICOltC>eO IN 100«. t• l"AGll 1•, IS AHO t6, 'AltCIL-""-•ICO•OI IOli.wlfte dltKtlt.N-.. lronl WILL 0,. 0 .. AHC)I C:OUNT'Y, ~1,0lllNtA, llLL AT PUil.iC AUCTION TO THI CITY COUNCIL 01' THlf CITY 0" llll(INa Na•alY DOii fHI HIOHUT 11001!" ~· CAIH llHOLVl.OETllUillNll,0 .. 01 .. ANO,.INOASl"OLLOWI: CNyelMe et time tf Ule I" 1-1111 SICTIOH 1. llltdltlll-... efltleCllYC-lltfhCllYtf ll'YIM•- -y .. IN Uftll• llMtffl all titflt, ,,_ y.uflOft ti ... E.a-fOt ltlle Ttall --~-· 1. I ..W •et lllle •"" """"-1 .....,..JM It aflCI -'Kar-111 9-121, .. _ IA. 11 aN 16, ~ ~. --.. ~ ..... .., It -.. 1c1 OeeCI al Trv•I In C.i11ty, Callfot,,.._ '"' pr0Mf1y llar.iMllltf .. Ktl-HCTIOH J. The CJty Of INllla tlt<tt .. ,,..,_ _, ,,. ,,_ .. ._,,. ..... T It U $ T 0 II CH I ST E • F SU"I VK•lml Acl tf 1'41. U.LIHUltY, 11,IWIUrwnetrleomM SECTIONS. n.11-...i,iecefOt~.., ... QtyC-ll.tell,.,_ I I! NI, IC I A .. Y NI W 1'0 II T 111 .. rMMd In« oll.ltd""9 lot ... II"_.. YKMMll I•_..., fl-M llw ,_.,Of HOMll! LOAN TllUSTNO. 107 t ·>Op m., lllU.C-11CMMflefa.17-J...-...,.1t•.1n11N, C .. IMl'llle Ofl lllKffdecl l'.wu.tr 1, 1-. •• ln1tr. Mty M, "" No'* lft-1..-. ,.._ llQ Of Of· SECTIOH4.Adiot611edmai>of .. l4ff-t1et1tlltlfltl'llefflCAOf""CllY llcl•I llKOtd• '" llHI ofll(t of .... Cltrk OI ... City .. '"'"'--'"' ................ _I ........... .,, M4ltti-1 llle<tr .. , of 0ranQlt C-ty, tald -part1c111an It llllrtclacl ta tlw City Clark. of tr111t deKri'-' llw lollOWl119 Pf'O-SICTIO.. S. The City Cler'k of ... City Ol lnllne It dlr.a.d .. t-MU<" to pert' ......... <onlPl<-ly •letlt t .. LINE 01' THa l!ASIMa NT TO I I Loi • of TrKI No. 1101, ea par VACATED AT LEAST TEN 1101 DAYS l lFOlll TH• OATI HT "011 SAIO Map re<«dtd Ill 9oMc n. Peto t -HlAIUNG. SAID NOTICES SHALL IE POSTED Ho MOltl THAN -l'laT 10 ol M!K•ll-• -.... '" ... ottlc APA•T. IUT AT LEAST THREll m 0" SUCH NOTICl!S SHALL •• of I"' Cownty ll«o,., of Seld Cou,,1,. POSTED ON THE EASEMl.NT. SAID NOTICll SHALL STATll THI! "' MalOtr. N••Porl 8te<ll, PASSAGE 0, THIS llESOLUTIOH ANO THI! TIME ANO l'LAC8 0,. lHE C.lllornla ""° Hl!AlllHG. "Ill•"'"'-·"°' common .... SIC'tlOH •. IN ACCORDANCE WITH llEIOl.UTIOfl NO. 1St, THI OlllEc;. slgnatlon It •-abOvt, llO werr1111ty TOii 0" COMMUNITY OEVl!LOl"Ml!NT HAS OllTll!lllMINIO THAT THIS It given• lo 111 c-let-.. °'co.-VACATION IS 01" MIHOR NATUllE ANO THIS MATTER SHALL HOT II rt<lllt tl).'' REFERRED TO THE PLANNING COMMISSIO.. l"UllSUANT TO SECTION Tl\t lltMflclery -r 1ald o .. o of U402 OF THE GOVElllNMEHT COOi. Trvtl, b, r-of• brNC:ll °" cMla111t PASSED AHO ADOPTED IY THE CITY COUNCIL 0' THE CITY 01' In "" te>ll,atlons wcurtCI 11\arlMI,, lllVINE AT A llEGULAll MEETING HELO OH THI llTH DAY 01' A,.lllL, ""'•IOI«• .. KUlacl .,,.. d911varacl 1IO '"'· 11M -sltntd • •rlllaft Oecleretloll OAVIO G. SILLS OI 0.lalllt -De-tor Sala, -MAYOA PllOTEMOF THEClr\'OF ••VINE •rltltn nOlkt of l>r-ft encl ohle<Uon ATTEST; lo <allM IN .....,tltntCI to ....... d NANCY c llOWUIND pr-rty lo ta11.i, tekl obll,atlon1, CITY CLElll( OF THE CITY OF lllVINE aftd l"'rMlt.r llM -llQftacl ca11Wd STATE OFCALIFOllNIA ) .. Id 110tlc9 of llrte<ft.,,.. Ol t lectlOll IO COUNTY OF O•ANGE ) SS lie. CITY OF lltVIHE l II.car-_, ~. lttD, •• lnttr. No I, NANCY C. ROW\.ANO, CITY CLl!RI( OF THE CITY 0,-fllVINE, Hll!lllEIY '°''In -r>Me. -"'°·Of MICIOI· DO CERTIFY THAT THE FOREGOING llUOLUTIOH WAS PASSll!O ANO fkltl Rae-ADOPTED IY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF lllVINll! AT A Said Mlt llrill be m-, but wfll-1 REGULAR MEETING HELD OH THE •TH DAY 01' APllfl, "" IY THE <ovenen4 Olf werr.,.ly ... P"eU or Im · FOLLOWING llOLI.. CALL VOTE: 111i.d, rt9M11ing llllt, -uloll, °' AYES. J COVNCll.MEMIEllS. AGllAN, VAllOOULIS, AND SILLS enc11mbr -. to pa, ,,.. remelnlng NOES· OCOUHCILMEMIEllS. NOHE P<ln<lpef wm of ""no .. 11) sacvrtCI A8SENT. l COUNCILMEMIEllS ANTHONY ANOOAIOO by tald OeeCI of Trvtl, with lnterHI as NANCY C. llOWLANO In .. Id -•P"O•ldad, tCl~all<n, 11 an,, CITY Cl.Eltl( OF THE "nder .... l.,maOI wld 0 .. d ot Trust, CITYOF IRVINE '""· cl\argH and ••POftH S of tlHI PUBLl~EOQRANGE COAS'T DAILY PILOT, MAY"· t•I Tr"''" -of the lrvtts created by w ldOffdolTrllll Said Mlt wlll llt "''Cl on WtCIMMlay, J1111a J, 1 .. 1. al 11 .00 a.m • at 1,._ Ollkt PUBLIC NOTICE ol l .O. Sar•I<• Company, Bank of AMa-n1 America To.er, SIMia 1110, Ona City NOTICIE OF TllUSTIEE'S SALi llvd. WHI, Ora119t, Callfornla. GTO N•. OHO Al IM llmt of 11\a lnlllal pubflcallon 1111!: RE 149 PUBLIC NOTICE STATEO,CALI ,OlllNIA Of l'ICE 0' THI ST AT I! AllCHITICT DE l'AllTMIE NT 01' OllN EllAL SEllVICIES AOVl!llTISl!Ml!NT POii •ros of lhls llOllCt , ll'oe total a,,_I of IN SUNWEST BANK, a CorporaUon. 11npald ba lance ol the obll9atlon formerly SANTIAGO 8ANI<, •>duly MC11rtd by I,._ abo•t cltKrll»d dttd OI appo111tt<1 T ruSlff unct11< lhe toliowlllll PU I LIC NOTICE lru•I •nd HllmettCI COilS, .. .,..., .. , dH<rll»d dMCI ol tru•I WILL SELL SEALED PROPOSALS Wiii bt ,. aftdadvanctal1 U l,N.l7. 'AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE cel•td In Room 301'. 107 So11th To dtl.,..,,lnt 11\a openl119 bid, you HIGHEST 8100ER FOR CASH 8fO•dway,LI>lA119tlH.Calllornl•,un me, call 1710 "''°""'· (pa ya bl• ti llmt ot sale In lawful Ill 2 00 Pm• w.-...ey, Mey 20. l'lt1. Dalt May 4, 1"1 mono o1 lhe unueo Sl•l .. l •II rignl, •• whl<n ltmt lhey wlll bt p..bllCI' NEWPORT HOME !1111e t nd Interest convertes 10 •net now OCM"'dan<l•ffdln Room 1101 ar said ad· LOAN, INC held b' It ...,.,_, Wld OMd ol Tru>l In dreulor as Mid Trv>l .. , Iha propart' herttnattar cleKrlbtd RECONSTRUCT PARKING LOTS - .,. T 0 S.rvl<o Com~ny. TRUSTOR AUDREY J UDALL an REPAIRS ANO IMPROVEMENTS tQllftl unmarr1eo_,,.,, • DEPARlMENT OF DE.VELOPMEN· ., C/lrlshl•fu>, BENEFICIARY SANT IAGO TAL SERVICES. FAIRVIEW STATE Aulstelll SKrttary DANK, e Uhfornl•corporahon HOSPITAL. COSTA MESA, ORANGE Ont Ci ty 81•d Wut. Rtcordtd Saptemoer 21, 1919. H 1n· COVN TY, CALIFORNIA IW 0 HFA Orantt, CA '2MI Sir No lJ•SI, in -tll31. p-'90 IO?OI) OU)~ or Ofllclal RE<o.-ds m lhe ottlo or 11\a Thi> proJtct <ompriws ••1u••n•ll~ ,.ubll11\ee Newport Hart>ot N••• Recorder of Or.-.vit Couniv. W•CI ottd t'llh•ll concrtlt par,1119 101 t nd roao Press combined with,,.. Orange Coast 01 lru•I c»Kro!IH the tofl-ino pro-•urfa(t, <onilrvclongconcrttu11<btnd 0.11, Pllol, Ma, 11, II, U, "" 11-1 .,.,., gutter. ,.,,,., .... ,,. -ln•l•lll119 per' ---lol 4) OI Tr«I No U2•. In lhe Cit' ing IOI l~1ng lYSltm, ptanltng ""n PU~UC NOTICE of Nt•l>Ort 8.a(n, County ol Or.,,90, •nd ''"'· UlandlnQ lrr19111on •Y'1t m St•te of C.UfoMa., a\ ~ m.a.p ,.. 1ftd•s.s.oc1•ltdwork cor<Hd tn 8ool< ISi PaQH 1 11\ru u Bidders ma, order """' •nd MIM:t ll-ou• Ma~ 111 rne ollk • oi 'Cltclll<attOM by <onlla<11"9 Contr..:1 1ne County RKorder ;,f said County Mana99mtnl S«tton, P 0 Boa 107' MAY 8E Al~ t<NOWN AS ISll S•<ramonlo UtoS, TeltPllOM 1'161 NOTICI TO CONTltACTOltS CALLING ,Olt llOS Sci-I Olllrlcl Hunll119lon Be« Cit' ScflOol OISlrkt l id Otedflne 1·00 o'cloO pm. 0 G•lt•Y Oro•t. Newporl 8eacll, t"' UndCS.y of May. l"I Calllornia Piao of llld Rtolpt Dlslrl<t Ad '(•I• slrttt •OdrH• or common d• mlnlslrall,... Ctnler llS. 14111 StrHt S1gn11ton IS sf'own above. no wtrrenty Hllnllngton ... <JI. Ctlllor,.,la ,_ I• lli•en "10 II• compleloneu or cor ProJa<t IOentlllcatlon Name Palnl roclno" " lno Smith Sci-i Tne benet1e1u, unctu •••d o .. d or Place Plans are on lltt i .. m. • Trust. by rHM>n or a breach or <Mlaun abo••l In lht o1>t1011fons .. cured l~reb,, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Iha neretofore 1a1cu1ecl anct O.llvertd to lht al>Ov•·ne~ S<i-r Olltrlct 0 th• undtr>IQned • wrlllen Oac1erallon Orange Count,, Callfornta, ecllng b ol Oetaull and Ot....,,d tor Salt. and . and through llt Go .. rnlng Board wrllltn noltGe of t>reach •nd of tlKllon "I r . I n. f •• r , • I., r. d I 0 • to uuw Ille undersigned to Hll H id "OISTlllCT", wlll roul .. up lo, b<I proper!, to \tli>ly .. ,d obligallons. not later 11\tn '"' •bo••·U•tecl llmt •nO fMrtalt'1' lhe undffSlll"td caoaad suled bids ror 1.,. eward ol • COlllrK .. Id notice ol brttch and of eltellon to for tlHI abow P<OIKI IHI recorded Jenvary 16, 1991., ln•tr. Sidi sllaO bt rtctlVtCI "' "'* Pia< No 17368, In -IJ91S, -1910. ol ICltftlllltd -..... -111•11 bt -Hid 0111<1•1 R«ords. aftd put>lkly r .. d ·-at ,,._ abo• Said .. le will be -· but w1ti-1 staled flmt-ptace <O•tnant or warr..,ty, HPrtu or Im Tlltr• wlll be • ~ 00 Cltpoill / plied, r-n:tino 1111e. possusiCHI, 0# qulr•d for each sat of bid CIO<llmtnts 1 encumbr.ancts, lo pe' tne rtmalnlno guarani .. "" ret11rn In 900cl <-II princlpel wm of IM notalsl .-curtd wltllln 10 cs.,s alter 1,,. bid _.,1 by .. Id Deed ol Trvst, with 1nltrt>I as del• 111 ,.10 not• 1>r0<rld.o. ad•ancn. If lll 2171 Pl•n• .,,d spe<lliullons mt r bt 00 1a1ned w1tr.ou1 <naroe Prtquallhullon ol bidder• ..ndt r lht 51111 Contra< I Ac I 11 not required Succeulul btcldtr \/\all lurnl>h .,.,. men I bOnd •nd pertOfm•nte bond•',. qulrtd by iew Pursut nf to S«tton 1170 of lh• l •l>Or Codt, Tht o.p.r1men1 or lndu\lrlal lltla1lons ,.,., oc:enelMd Ille Ge"''•' pro .. 111119 rtlt of w•ll'I• In llHI counly In which llHlwor• lstobtoo,.., lobt .. 1"1 td tn the o.p.rt,,,.11101 Tran•oort•lton bOOklel enlllltd General Prt•t1llng Wiii• Raitt, d4iltd .. me .. Plln• •rici specill<altons Coe>lffol I his-tel •re on Illa et 1100 Siii Slr•t. Sa<ra,,,.nto, Ctlllornla, -art evellabl1 10 any In ltresttCI pert,onreq.,.st 8AllRYWASSERM ... N,A I.A STATE ARCHITECT P11bfllhed OY-Coa•I Dally Piiot, Mly4,11,19'1 11•>11 PUBLIC NOTICE Eacll bid mu•I conform •nd tny, ur>dH 1"'" lerms of .. io Dttcl of NOTICll INYITINO 1105 rt"*111¥t IOIMConlr«t dOcllmtnlt Trust, ..... <llal'9fS •net •• _ ... OI Notice •• Mrtb' given , ... , Iha Each l>lcl Shell be acc°""""'ltd b Ille T ruslee and of u. tn.111• creeled lloard ol Tl'\ISIMS of .,,. Coall C«n· ll\a M<vrlt, rtferf9CI lo 1n '"''°"tree b' ••Id Deed OI Trvst-Said salt wllf IHI munlly Coll-Ol1lrl<I ol Oranve clo<lllftatlb -~IN II I of .... don May II, 19'1, .. 11.00 a.m .. •I t.ukonlraclon • .,. ' ,Pr-tho m •ln entrenc:e lo Guerdoell Trust Cwnty, C.lllofnla, •Ill receive M•MHI T ... OISTalCT re·~--· r'-"11 Oeed Ser•l<t•, 1400 E Ma,1alr bids llP to II 00 am .. Thul"lday. Mey " -· •n u-.,,., 0 C 1 ni 11, 1''1 al I"' Pvr<hMlnO o.partment rtle<t ..,y °' all bld1 or to w•I•• .,.,, Awtnve, r-. alt °' • OI said collt911 district fO<etaCI ti 1170 lrregularllltt °" lnforma lllltt In any Tht lotat amount of 11>• unpatd Adams A••n11e , Cos ta Mes•. bid• or In .... blclcllno b•lance Of IN 01>H,a11on SOC:Vftd by I I I I S H id pr-r1y lo be told 1090.,,.r will\ Cat fornla. al which I me Md b d1 will TIMI DI TRICT l\e•Obl•lnad from.... • .. Pllt>llc:ly_,,.., and reed for Director ol Ille Otpartmtnl Of In· lnltrHI. !alt cn.rgH, •ftd n llm•ttCI U ·MONTH LEASE OF WOR D dw1lrlal llltlallons llHI -rtl P<•••ll· cosh , ••Plf'>ts. -.o .. nus . ., ol PROCESSING EOIJIPMENT W/OP· Ing re la of par dltm wages In '"' lht dale ner~, I~ UO,lO" TIONAL RENEWALS IOUllty In wfllch lhl• WOrlt Is to lie Dale s""' I 20E,S 'lt&IA I( Alf bids art to be In K CO<dan<e wltll ,,.rformacl tor .. ch crell or type Of UNW T N Ill• BIG Form Instr uctions aftd •ort man -to e .. cute llHI con· ~1 ~~t~~~;":;. TRUST condlllOManclSpaclllullontwlllchare lt•cl. TlltM r•I•• .... on Ill• •I ,,,. OEio SERVICE~ CORPOll· ..... on Ill• -ma, bt Mc:urtd In t,.. DISTRICT Offk• located •I 73S-14ll\ ATION olllct of Ille Pvrcllftlng A0tnt ot Wld Str .. 1, Hunll"91on 8t acl\, Callfomla l.00 E. Ma't'ftlr, coll•O• district. '2'41. CoPla• mey 11t o1>tal11ad on ,.. P.O Bo• 211 Eacl\ t>lclder m1111 11.tbmll with Ill• Quest. A CAii''!' o1 llWH raltt 11\ell be Or.-.vit, CA 92666 bid t <Hlller't c~k, certified chac:t, posted at llM Joi> •II•. t11•l l7H'10 or bldder't bond m-payable to '"' Tiie loreootno scl\aclule of par diam! 8 w ldO R H•uv orcler 01 tl\t Coeat Communll' Collt91 w•oo• 11 battd Ul)On • worltlng AV or Pwblls..!o o~e11ga co.11 oa11, Pllol, Ol11tlct Boe ro of Tr11st .. 1 '" •n •'9hl Ill "°"''· The "'' for holldey A 11 Ma 4 11 l'ltl l'IOl .. i amo11nt -rau tlltn five part111t U""I aftd overtime work 111.1111 be at IO•SI pr. • ' • ' ol 1ht sum bid" a -""'" that t"' llm••nd-11. blddtr wlll enter Into llHI Pf090Md It 1hall be l'l\Mdetor, lll>Oft I,.. CON· P UBLIC NOTICE contrt<I 11 '"' .. mt " ewer-to T llACTOft lo whOm 11\a contrKI Is __ ----__ _ him, 1 n '"' .....,, 01 lallurt to enter In· awarcle<I, and ppon any wbcontrKtor NOTICI 0 ,. TltUSTlli'S SALi! lo tw<fl contra< I, I"' P"«Mdl of tilt 11ndtr him. to ,,.Y not ltH 11\an ,.,. T s. N• S4ZU·S Cht<k wlll be l«ft lltd or In Iha caw ••kl 199<HltCI ralff 10 •11 worllmet1 To SERVICE COMPANY •• clulr ol •bond, IN 11111 s11m'1,,.reol •Ill be •mPIO,ed Dy t"'m In Ult '"ec11tlon of eppolnltd TruslM .,,,..., Ille loll-Ing lorlt llad to .. Id <Ollf9t dl1trkl. tilt <onlrKt ctekrll»d Cltot<I of trvtl WILL SELL No bleldsr me' •111\draw lllt llld for No II-ma, wltlldrew hi$ bid lw AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE a period of lorfy..il•e 10 ) clay1 alt., • potrlod .. tlxty 1.01 d•~ .,,., llw HIGHEST BIOOER FOii CA5H '"'d•lowtlcwl ... _11191 ... rool. da .. Ml I«'"'--''"' OI bt<H. tpeyeblt at time of w le In lawf11I The Board of Trvtt .. 1 rttar,,.. ll'le A pe,,..... bond and • parlormenu m-y 04 u.. united Staltsl all right prt.llf99 of rtlacflno .,., -•II lllds bond •Ill lie l"lqlllrtCI P"lor to '"Kv-1111• and inttf'tsl conttyed to -no.: or to ....... .,.Y lr'99Ul•rllles or In· tlon of tilt c-.ract. T"' payment bond !Hiid by 11 .,,..... wld Ottd of Tru•I In to.-melltltt In .,., bid or lft '"' blelellng. lltall be In "" f«m Mt for1h In IN the proo.rty "'rtlnafter deacrll»d. HOllMAl'C E WA TSOH <ontrKI00<-1-. TllUSTOR; llOHALO LESLIE SacMery, ~lfltloard JOHNSON,an11ntntrrltClman loardofTrustaes Nonne Vendor Molen 8 ENE FI c 'AR y . BANK 0 F Coast Commvnu, Cltnl AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST ANO CommvnflY CotltOt PwblltNd Orenta Coast Dally PllOI, SAYING~ ASSOCIATION, • national Publllhed Or-Coa11 o au, Piiot, Ma' 11, 11, 1'11 211 .. 1 lltnklno • ._latloll Ma, 11, 11, 1•1 ,.., .. 1 --llecordtd AMrch ll, ,,,. t s Instr P UBLIC NOTICE Ho. J)ISI In -1:1071, e>eoe tJ97 of Of· II<... ltKOfdl In Ille office Of 11\t P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICI 0,. l"UILIC HIAlllNO Rtcorcltr OI Or-Count,; said clatd C·2'0 NOTICll! Hl!111!8Y 1$ GIVEN tl\et e ~r~~st dHcrlbet ll1t toll-lll9 pro-NO•TH OllANOI 1'111111< H-lnt wlll llt "'td lly llw City L~I 4 OI Tract No 1171 In llM City JUOICIAL DISTRICT Ct11ncll of .... City of ,,,,,,,.on t ... Ht!\ ot Cosl• MeN Count; of O;all9t State UIS .. _ .. rltt lty AVtfllle d•Y of Mey, 1•1• et 7:>0 p.m., or H ol Calllomla, 'as per mep record.cs In l'wltan9n, Ce . tlW IOOll tl\trHfttr H PtU lbtt lft tllt l>OOk st -It Mt1<ell•-•MaPt PLAINTIFF: C & W ACTIO~ lrYI ... City Col.w>cll Chambtra, 17100 In 11\t .;.,.,.of u.. covnty recorder of RENTALS, INC. J t mllO,.. ...... INIM Interim Clvk Hid county OE v ~ ~~PE,:E~~ Nc~)11:~ .. NA ~ .~! l (9flltr, lrvllll, C.llfoml•. , ..... dint 2611 Wellmlnsltr Place, Coate JOSEPH FAMMI!,• OAVIO P.·L·SH. tl\t tm~ of OIYll._. 0 OI Tiiie Me .. C.llfomle t»V "' "' VI Of '"' CoOHIOd Or.itwKe -"" "Cfi • slrttt eclclrHS or iommt11 d9· DOES I lllrOugll )()(, lft(luslve, edoptltft of tf1e l ulldlllt lllat11tatloM 1i;n1tloll l1 •-abcwo, no warranty CASI :~=:I A·U4A7 ftr , ... City of INl11t. h gl•t n M lo Its '°"-'"-leneu cw COf• NOTICll Y .. ~·ve ............ -· T ... II It,_....... t-eemmentt wltft rtCIMHI." --"' , ... ,d .......... l'l*lk .._.,,. ... Tho llell9!k1My -r Hid 0... ol Cawt .... , 41t<Hlt .... ,.,, , .. Wittie• f_a,._" h City C-11 11tlor to Ttvtt, b' ,__of a llrffdl 01 dtfavlt ,_ ..... loMr4I llllltta ''"' '""'" lllt l"ll!Mk HMrlft9-. In t ... tC>llt41tloM l«Wrecl thattlly, •ltlllll a dtyL .... lflt IM-.tltt ,tr hlt1Mt l'll'tk114.,. wlltl N9Anl IHlrttofore ·--enod dtltYtrMI • "'-· to Wt .._le ................... Ct ll ttw 11\t lln<Mr....., t Wflllltll 0.ClerMlon AVllOI U .... lie U.. ...,_...._ .. lt¥1na "'-k -·et ,,._,, .. ,•ti.ft· of O.ft lllt -~ tor I.ale ...i 11 ~1 _.. 41ec141W <-• U41 tltlll ._._.<Nleffft. 1 written notlu of IM'N<l\e,... oh tKlltfl •I• ••4llt11CI• • ,,..,. .. 411t u .. 0.lff: ,,.,,, ''" It call9t IN ...,.sl9fltll to ........ ,. ........... 4lt a elaa. L .. '-Ii. :;:1:;.-: 11'9Pt'1Y to Mlitly tald ot>l ... t._, ~:-:!.":.:91!~i. '"' adVl<a 01 tr City ef lrvlM :.n:. ·.::.r:: ~~~= t li.r..ey Ill Ht l'Nltltr, you "-Id ec .....,..,_. o....,. C-* Delly l"lkot, be rec....., J_., " i•I 96 1,_, to Prtrn~lr to lhet 1011r w rltltt Mey 11, 1tl l J2041 Nt . lllit NI -U1t1.: .,_.. 1-. .f '~.If e41'f. mar lie lii.d 1111 Urna. .... Offklel "«Wdl. SI Uttacl ..... Nfkllat ti c_,. Ck PUBLIC NOTICE &e14 ~ w111 "" ,,..., 1111t wt~ ~,:~111';'.1~::,::.~· .~:: Ct-er ••r...iy, t!IP"eN er f9to ma...,.a, Ml , ......... tt<tlle, ti l\t~ · NIUCNhltl... IM1t41, ,...,..Ill ti~, .,._MIOll, "'•~.~swraoelatraoaetlempo NOTlca II " ..... y OIVIN tflM. --11r-..... , , .. ,_,,..,. .. TO THE 01,INOAN't: A rlYll ,-.1c ,_...,•Ill ....... " -CllY 11tlftc1Ht -"' "" .... II) _.,,..., tomp lt llll II•• l>ttn lllU 111 II\• C-11 " Ille City .. ll'llllM ~ T-ltf .... °'941 ef '""" wltll lllW 'HI" pl•llltlff .... lllt you. If ""Wltll to ... .. ,, M9y., ttl t .. r1a ._Ill. M' • 111 .. 141,...~~--.11 •11r, '""' 11\I~ i-11. '9111111111, wltftll\ at -.,.,...,_ .. _., .... 111 Ult .,,..., ... "'1'llt 9f -0eH ef Trwtt, yt ,._, tlllt -.•it ..,..,. ·~ fNlfte ~ C-11 ~ I,_ IHI CllMtH •1141 •• ...,. ... M t yo11, Ille w4tl\ lfllt COlltt • wt lllall J a ,..U tH lt11ttHt 4I, ltwlu, !::~--:.-;fi~ ~ .... ~'fllll ~ .. ......_., ... ~.i.... Unl.U l'OV C-ltl"""9, .. C....-.. ,,.,.._ ef ..._ ·--M, ,_ *'lllllt .,111 IM --et\ 111t IASINNT P'Olt lllC• T"AIL lltMI'" ~. Mev M, 1111 M 111• k a tlell Of 111t IMt lllllff, elMt IN• f'Ult~ -~ t,. _,.. *' a.m., *' tlle tM<e ef T.D • ..,.,,~ • ..,rt mtl' ..,..,. t 1"'"'9nt tttlntt ,--.-111 ... ta. .... H, U _. C-Hflr, ...... Arnwka T-, rt11 lor 111t relief llem.-CS 111 tr. I&. l'erc.t ~ .._..., 0r91111 lultt 1110, Ont City 1 1¥41, Wut, '"'111•1111, wl'llcll ce11141 r uult 111 e-f\I ~ fft Kl(~•""" Ottf19t, Callfw11141. •rfthl\,..,afll Of ,., ... , ••-tllt of ._ .... -., Nt. II·• .._, ....,., a. At Ille Ume .. Ille 111111*' ,-.1<*'11ft y « ,,-...,.., ., etllff ,.lltf , .. ,.., "' ... Clt'i C.-11 .... City -Ifill Mtla, Ult Mal ._, .. .. --ti\"" -4•1nt. lrvtM, c.1........ llflpel41 Mlt11c.a tf Ille ••lltlt .. n OATID: ....... ti, tnt. O..· ,,.,, '"' llf'Mlty ......... ..,............. "*"A"lll Qlttli • .._, C.......... Int .. N ~ <tlta. e..-..., Vll'Wlllla Devit, DMlltY Of\la.tl a41,..._.i, ... m,n, IOltellYICUU.1 ,._....,er..., c:.... DllllY 1111•, !:c~p':..,. .... *• .,._, ~ .. '-- _.. ''·,.. lltM1 o .... Alf!t,.. ,.. ·~ ........ ....._.. r.o,..,_.c:e. .-.c.. ... n U ,_.,.. hi Uta market lor a tNitt.r car, be 1urt to cMck th INI ft)' HlOI adTertlltd for u le In a..Kled., ·--"~· tll lltll ..... If.,_. .... , ,._..,_ °''"" CNt l Delly PIM ~= .... ,,_., .. 11,1•1 , ..... t ~CA--C,,.__ Have IOm«b1ni to HllT ....._. 0r.,.. c-t Oejjr = a ... 111.ct .. cJo It well. 4,1\;tl,... ., 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 INDEX T• Place Yn r A~. Call 642-5678 HOUS£S FOi SAU o-.i 11e1t.o. IU.n4 Be liOt .......... 1. CtplflrtOO llettll Caron4I CS.I M., c.t ...... 0.11& POll\I £!Toro rwnt•ln Vtll•1 llumlncton lleuh INlllO U..W>• Beath i..aun• Hill• LAc11n• 11111vel MtUKll'I Vic.JO ~r.:'..!:~:h San Jw.aft C'ap&alta.no Stalt Ant Sul Buch Soullt L•a•n• Y.'f"l&mlMtt"r Moll<le Hom"' Salt REAL ESTATE A<rt64lf f°" S.lt Aparl4w nl> lor !>•I• ::~!:'?.;:", ~ll'ltlttY l.oC.t t.r1fll• ~~:.!:'~!') Duc>iftft t. '"'" !>.k ~toboMo••d 1........,.. Pr-r\.l' lndl4lntl Propo111 t.au '"'Sal• MU!lok Km« Trh l'rt • Mowatn Onert.Me-..tOtl O.~eCo Pr<11> CM Coun1~ Pr111> 0\11 ol St•t• rop R1nth4tl Jl.,1rm1 l.tov~• Roi Eatalo Eat h•ftJ• Ktal £..U11\f' 'A'tinttd RENTALS ltw• .. f'urru1hed H()u.)n l nfurn"h~d HCM,,U.H t~urn °' t'n' Condomtn.ium• Yurn Condom1111urru Uni ToVr~futn Tov.-~aut:nf DupftAh • .. urn Ouptu n t:nr All(• t'lorn Apu t:nrurn Apt.\ F'\orn ur l nl Room. Room" 110.,d HOie!> MOl•I> C~11 •fomu Sunltlwr Rrol•I' \°et•lJon. Rtnt•I• Rtnlab tb "-ti1r•• Ca.reef'~ hw H.tnl OHl<'t lltnlal (S.u.)11W:t.\ Rrn\•I lndwtn•I Renl•I ~~t~: v. anted "'"' Rtntal' BUSINESS. INVEST· MENT, FINANCE t:::::~~· ln•nlmen1 Op-1 r ln\of':Mmt'nt "~1>4'11 MOM)'IO l..olr1"1 MOM)' V.At1te<f• Mon1•l f'' Tn' ANNOUNCEMENTS, PERSONALS i LOST & FOUND Af1NNfl4.tm"nb llr p(.oj Lrcat Nut.1t"t!'t '-'"found Pttwn111• Sc. ••I Club" Tr~~,·· SERVICES S.n1t e-D1rtttf;f') EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION S<-lnilrv<IMHI Job 'A' •Olf'd • H•IP "-tnleG M 6 t MERCHANDISE AN~\Wt AppltaMn AwOOtl ::r;,~ M1te1,1I• CHl"W(U 6 !.qu.1p""'n1 C..h ~10'\'ou n.rnth•t• Cart.a• S.I• HorMS ttou..-C-b J• ... try Ln·nlOC'k M .... .,.,, Ml.W't>ll~-' llll><'•ll•-"'•Jtl•d Mu.su·&J 11u:trunwno Offttt f"urn &. •·qu1p Ptu ~~':~~:~~:. Sponl'll Gnncb S.Of't Rnt•ur•nl Bir ~if':dt0,H1f'1 :;..,.., BOATS i MARINE EQUIPMENT c ....... 8o•t.a.M••nt M-tv1r• Botll.llhrln• tQul~ Boelt.Powtr liof1•.R•n1 Chttler Botla,S.11 Bot\l.Sllpo l>oc'h Boa11,~ "S• 1 Boal& ...... TRANSPORTATION '""'teft C•mptn .S.l~ Rtnl EJtttn< Ctn ~=·~~:.~•r•' Mot« Hms Stl• R•nl Tre11«-n.Tr•"•I l'ut~r~~~'lJerh \.rfMfl l A~TOMOBILE AMJqtt•S l:ltut1' t Rttr«-•LM>n \ •turlu ~' A.,f tR~11o I ftffl l>rlYf'YI TrW(O v .... l\vtulAh1n' A-W•nled AUTOS. IMPORTED f..«-Mtal AU• Ru'""" Audi A~lln 11 .. lt) 8MW C1pr1 Ott-. COit 01uu.n .. .,,.,. f'tot Uonda J1&1(M»r Jtnttn KartNtnn lf h1• Ltlllborlblnl . Maid• Me"·ctlw-. Kfon1 MG MCtt Wttl Pan«tr" P1uaoo1 Pou t he ...... 11 Rolla Morr• Rlt'\et su o t':!ru TeyOl.t Triw111p1> llotllf••••• Vohro AUTOS. MEW ~r.1 ~·· AUTOS. llSEI A.llC tr tllU.r C.11ero ~rolt1 Clu') ..... C.IMl C<lnttMftUIJ Cor\-e·u• C....u ~· !:""al "'ft ....... t. =•rot)' ~1. IG IW' 1001 1011 ICl22 111:11 10:. IOU llX>4 1000 1044 1008 1oeo ICJW ton 109 l@l• U171 ''*' l!lk ''*' IOM llllll llOU 1-.0 "'° ltell ''°° Jtw llW llOI> lllOll JOCO mo QUI DOii 2400 1SQ) nlO lllllO flOll ~ 2*'.111 l!Oll D..i lllOO )400 ~ ~ J~ ~ 3SlO 1700 JIM) lllOti 4000 olOIU U(t) u:io .. ., 4"" •1'0 4l141 •too HJli 000 WO 4"-0 - ~ )(110 !JOI) :KW ~ )03(j :.oJ) )1(.o(I $1.lO ~ SJOO ~ lo4llO )4'° ~II 1Utlil 101) 1100 '°'" IOIO IOI) etl3ll llOZ$ 8ilJO 9IW ltl40 ICM) _, ~ ... IOQ IO?O llOU .,, llOllO l!Otl llOIO -,.., i!Oljj) 1111!1 .... -.... - llOIU llO:IO "°"° ~ ~ ao llO'IO IMO llQill VllO t13ll tl:IO tl40 "'° Vito •110 tl*I !MOO '41• ~ '4N ~ ~ _, 91$1u ... "*' "1UI lllllll !17Ul YM 91U tlU '711 11111 11'1.IU 'l)tl •1.0 '711 97'111 lf•:U 1173$ ,.,,. 111:11 9740 V76a '1744 V1 .. V741 '7• t'J)U VlloS rue '7$7 "*' :i11 t16l rm t110 m2 ..,., .. , -••• llll •1t .. -*" ... --... = mu '"' = ... ~lllO ,_ = ·= t411.r0 .., ......... :'"~ ... ;..- ' To Place your .. r ast ltetul\ .. -·= Service l)lrectory ad ••• CaU Now ' 642·1671 Id.JU Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MOnday, May 111 1981 H /F Bl The m.arketplace on the Orange Coast ltealhtat. •••••••....••••••......•.•.................................•......... ····················••\ G.....-ol I 002 G.-,..e I 002 GeMt'al I 002 .........................•••.••.•••••••••..•.................••....•• EQUAL HOUSING : OPPORTUNIT Y P•l1her'1 Noffc•: All real estate adv ertised in this newspaper la subject to the Federal Fair Housln& Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to a dverti se "any prererence. limitation. or dtscrmunauon based on race. color, rell~ion. sex. or nallonal origin, or an intention to make any such pref~ren ce, l1m 1 t a ti o n , or d1scriminetion." Thts newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertis ing for real e s tate whi ch 1s 1n violation of the law ERRORS: Adnr+IMn should ct.ck tMlr ad• dally and report errors IM1Mdlately. The DAILY PILOT auumea labilty for the first Incorrect lftsertiOft Oliy. ...••.................. 1002 ....................... YOUR HST VALUE tN CAMEO SHORES Low est pri ce d fee stm pie o pportunity Great assumable 1st TD Enjoy afternoon sun and views from wood deck. 3 b e autiful private beaches. Only $549,000 Ca II today. 67J.8S50 THE REAL ESTATERS . DECORATOR CONDO SI 19,900 Winding greenbelts lead to bright single story condo Exquisitely decorated with custom wallpaper and cabinetry t.hruout Formal dining room too! Owner will c oop e rate wtth financing Won't last at this price. so call now @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-63 l -6990 2 UNITS $94.900 Super investment! Two 2 Bdrm units. one with fireplace ! C u rrent i n come -$7 4 0 mo . Financing! One year home protection plan incld. Hurry. this won't last ! 646-7171 IRVIHE SI 17,500 Sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath home Prime Irvine location with fantastic assumable financing. STROU TO HEWPORT HACH Charming 4 Bdrm. C:uiy living room leaturh . wood burning fireplace Owner will help finance. Only $209,900. Hurry, call 673·8550 THE REAL ESTATERS ONE YEAR OLD Best location, steps tu pool & voUeyball UNDER $100,000 Perfect starter hum~ with great anumable loan. CalJ now 751 -3191 C:. Sfl E.C l -t""" PHUPE HT ll ', $69,950 BARGAIN Security gated 2 Bdrm· or I Bdrm , den townhome. Pool, sauna, spa, s upe r s ha r p Vacant. Owner anxious . Ca II now. 54& 2313 THE REAL ESTATERS MESAVEADE UNREAi. Hundreds of flowers ever ywhere and s un filled rooms make this 3 BR home a mu.st to see A real value at $141,900 Call now for details @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-63 l -6990 WOULD YOU BELIEVE • $75,000 3 Bdrm fixer upper , located on huge lot in Tustin. Call752·1700 THE REAL ESTATERS AGENTS YOU GET MORE FROM 1lfESTORE Jack H. Lesch. Mgr 675-1771 SELLER HAS ANOTHER Home and must sell t his beautiful home located in excellent area or Tustin. Step down livmg room , fam ily room . space age kitchen, 3 big bdrms. just recently re modeled. One year Cree home protection plan. CalJtoday. 752·1700 THE REAL ES TATERS Owner says sell today,·---------so call now @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-63, -6990 There's an easy wuy for you to sell that bicycle you no longer use. Just advertise it in the Classified! Call 642·5678. Spociom C• HOfM 5 Bdrm . r a m rm . basement, wine cellar, s pa, in·law quarters. lovely treeshaded street in old Corona del Mar. $475,000. RfSIOENTIAI RFAI f!:oTAll Sl:RVl(;E'; SOllRISO DIL MARI' Mediterranean villa created with all the charm of yesteryear. This 25 room mansion constructed on a Spyglass hilltop has wraparound views of ocean & mountains. 4 to 5 BR, 7 BA, s tu dy, libra r y , entertainment center & authentic ·cantina. POOL, sauna & 2 spa. A magnificent combi nation of old & new with gated privacy. ~.400.000. FAMTASTIC ASSUM.AILE LOAH Assume BS 000 loan at 10~ int. Owne r will carry 2nd Large 4 bdrm home with ramlly room and firepla c·e . No qualifying $\M.900 Call ,todav. 979 5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS OCEANFttOMT 2 Bdrms. 2 ba, unfum New $8SO yrly IAYFttOHT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba. unrum M tnt cond S850 yrly CHANHa FttOHT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum $75-0 yrly associated BROKERS REALTORS 101', W 8olbou t.' ~ Jbb I NO DOWN! OR $10,000 DOWN Owner will t arry $90,000 AITD or no down, owner will help you buy "You must qualify for loan" 3 Bdrm , 1 1, bath , u pg r aded Uoublt' garage, call for more details 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS R.E. INVESTOR Always wanted to invest tn Real Eswtc but don't think you l"an ? Let Golden Wei.t Realtors show you how to invest with little ca::.h & no "Tenant Problems" Ca 11 now fo r morP details Golden Wnt R"r. '(714)848·858A REAL PEOPLE will love thts beautiful 4 Bdrm home with family rm on com er lot Many extras Only Sl33.000 Ca II now 979 5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS IAYCREST Quiel tree hned street The perfeet home for an active family 4 bdrms . game rm . family rm . formal dining nn . office and p ool !Jo t s o r paneling Custom built Immaculate cond1t1on $449,500. 17141 673-4400 \ I 11\ h l•111111 JI .11 11111 I 11' 1• .. 11111•111 1 ·11 38RCHARMER $91,000 Sharp 3 Br. 2·sty home, huge family rm, formal dining rm. util r m Loads of s t o rage ! Lo vely netghborhond Giant lot' Call Teri 1·. ""'"'21 ,1]£1 ~-751-1111 OHL Y $94,500 Charming starter home, 3 Bdrm . l bath. fenced yard. Seller motivated. 759-16 llt NOTICE how Daily Pilot Class ified ads display their messages with leglblhly and impact? Our ads. we are proud to say, really get res ults Pho ne 642-5678. GOLF COURSE VIEW Ooe s tory home ! Elegant covered entry, formal living and dining room. brick rireplace, large cowitry kitchen. Four stately bdrms, 2 baths. 3 car garage. A FANTASTIC VIEW OF GOLF C OU R SE Privacy~ Many. many extras . Only $265.500 Call S46·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS EASTSIDEVA Charming 3 Bdrm l \o'z Ba home that needs some TLC Loads ol potential w i th i fireplaces. and large add ·on fam ily room Price 1s tight at ll36.000 TRADITIONAL REALTY HOMES &. INVESTMENTS 631-7370 NO DOWN AND $9,000 PAYS COST Total cash needed to dose escrow Must qualify for loans Mesa Verde's finest 4 Bdrm, dmmg, 3 baths. family room. fireplace, patio, huge yard S16S.OOO. Call fo r more details 546 2313 THE REAL ESTATERS To pl act· )our message before the readmg public, phone, Oatly Pilot Classified, 642·5678 $3 C Ofl ~·you $100 all it tc*H is a PENNY PINCHER AD I 11111•, 1111 .! 1l.1\ ... "11 I\ 'I .·111 ,, 1J .1 I \d11·rl 1" •1111· "' Ill "I t 11\•111.. \ .1 ltll'il 11 p I 11 '11111 1-.. H 11 11lcl1l 11111 ,t1 11111 , ... """ IJ1(' l•lf lht• ''"I tl.1 1, -.111 11 nu I "ni 111 •• ' .. I,, I .1 ti ... ·" '"" 1·11 l'h.11 ).!\' \ fl(lf 1'1·11111 l'1111'h1·1 \d 111 "'' \llUf II.ml. \rn1•r 11 .1111 \ >"'J "' \I ,1,1t•r < 'h.1rl!1' Call today ..,d SH your ad in print tomorrow! C oll ,.. Olldey ffw\o Fridoy 1.004,.. lo !.:)01',.. f« ,.uJ doy·, ~ « coll by 110011 C111 S..twdoy for S11t1doy·1 ~. 642 -5678 Daily Pilat '=~=T sec \\.cil ~ -/J, £~s· .... l&AI --------4 ~ a.• .. "°""'" ------ ·~ ... ::r -:. ::: low ........ ,_ 4'11'!Plt -· , ..... _.__ I PHUKO O I I I' I I I ORYIN l •I 1 I' I I I . l I 8 A Y E 8 I ' HI• Ille of Cflml WH lhon· 1---.1,..~-,-.. ,-... , -livid. HI r~ I Jtwtlry .. __......._ ... _..,_ .. __. ~ tlO.. ~t they C!IUOlll lllm .-------,......--. w11111 lie wenl bllck fOf the-. l U l C Df...D I ..... ~-1--1 -..-1 ..... , ............ ,-1 . ~ :-..:=. ~ .-... J... ....... fw.. I """'' MJMNltO umu ti" mus ssmus r r r r r 1 I ~rw!.4#!' uma I. I I I I J SClA.......,.,AMwtft .. C .. 11"'c ..... l .IH I \ ·~ --------· __ _._. __ ._... ____ ,....,.... __________ "r."'r.""~ ............. , . .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ For SGle HcMet ~r SaM Ho.la.a For Sale Ho.Ins FOi' S-. C.e.rol I 002 1"111• I 044 l"IM I 044 Newporl IMc.lt I OH New'°rt IHclt I OH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'II •••r• I 002 GeMHI I 002 GeMrel I 002 G....,-ol I 002 -------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LINDAISLI Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath. pool home. Slip for 2 large boats $1,495,000. By appointment. LIDO ISLI HOMIS Featured on Homes Tqur this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath h6mc. newly decorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings . Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price t'or the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFltOHT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath c ustom home. 3700 sq . ft. featuring marine room. entry. Ii vin g room, dining r oom. built-ins, e tc. $1,385,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J II Anr•il• Dr•vo l\j tt bl~ biol REALTORS 675-5511 LOVELY "E" PLAN. Molt populcr model ner built In the llufh. Situated on apectacular 9reffbelt with mountain •lew. 3 ldr, F.R. Best buy in the area at $252,900. COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 2 515 E. Coast t1wy .• Corona del Mar 675-5511 DlftD 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. Fire place, built-ins. Excellent rental area Nea r beach & bay $285,000. 642-2253 eves associated BPOI< ERS REAL TOPS 111/1 ~ &olLn<J to,• tbb I THINKING TOWHHOME7 Call lhe spedalisls al the t•o ndominium inform at1on center Touchstone Realty 96J..~ Starter Sto~r VA /FHA terms This lh the one. A sharp home just right for a young family or couple that S C UD D needs room to grow E L E Near new carpet & paint RETREAT throughout this 3 Bdrm house. Super location Ass ume $74,000 in loans. Only $97 .500. S916 per mo pays all. Balboa Island Rlty w alk to South Coast 1~ •7 Plaza 3 Bdrm, gourmet ___ 6 ___ ~0_0 kltch • plus formal ---------living. Secluded patio and comm. pool. Twnhse aeking $97.750. Call UPPER BAY 983-7881 THE REAL ESTATERS Light and c heer y 4 Bdrm. 3 bath family home. Large covered patlO. $220,000. Roy McC..., Rltr. 548-7729 GREAT INVESTMENT 3 BR l Ba. $72,900. Assumable fmancing & seller w ta I so carr y paper. Call for terms. 752-6499 OW MER DESl'ERA TE Low down, take over existing VA loan. No qualifying. Just reduced ~. Beautiful pool. 3 Bdrm , RV stora ge. $124.950 PlanlV~alty Town & Couittry Reatton 552· I 800 CE 810111 BLllRS CD. OVER ~7 YEARS OF SERVICE NEWPORT HEIGHTS FOUR-Pl.EX Located On Quiet Street Near Shopping . Exce ll ent Condition. Good Re nt Income . Minimum Vacancy Factor . Four Two· Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans. Inspect With Offer. Reduced To $350,000. SAN CLEMENTE DUPLEX Super Buy. Ups tairs Unit With Three Bedrooms . P eek-A-Boo Ocean View. Wet Bar. Living Room With Fireplace. Cathedral Ceilings. Wrap·Around Patio, Spacious Down s tairs U nit With Two Bedrooms & Living Room With Fi'replace. Laundry Facilities. Good Income Priced At $195,000. ® ·--........... 759-9100 #2c..,_ ... ,.... 1:·-N=. ,....,. ·-·-·~· ·-. ..._ ...... "°""'" Ut• .. _ ""'"' :r. .,~­.. """' .. ... . .., .,,.._ ..... ·-i~ ·"-... Mewport C.....,. URGE COLONIAL HOME Five bedroom, three bath, dormers and paned windQws. Like new earth tone decor. terrific financi ng and walking distance to Mesa Verde Count ry Club. A true value at $249,000. U~l()Ut: t1()Mt:i REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 Ea11 CoHI Highway, Co1on• del Mei WE HNE 47 OF THE BEST AGENTS lN TOWN WESl.l<Y N ~YLOR CO HEALTOHS !'.i11t ·t · t~Ml IA YCREST CUSTOM HOME Designed for e ntertaining & family living. 4-Bdrm, huge living room, large rormal dining & family rooms. Gourmet kitc he n Mas te r s uite separate from other extra·lge bdrms. Pleasing privacy in pool-sized back yard. Great terms. $395,000. WISLEY H. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 2 I I I San Jo~ Hills Rood NEWPORT CENTER, M.8. 644·49 I 0 SEE AND .. ]1• "'! .. ,• ;... ) , ; .• ,., l .. .., '-•.~ J I ,'. J'L' WES TC LIFF Outstanding four bedroom. three bath home. StWlnlllR country kitchen wit h oak cabinets Other oak built i n~ include bookcases and desk. All new carpels. All new applian ces Custom drapes and wallpaper Price reduced lo $315.000. 631-7300 H.B. The very finest buy in the Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft. condos. 5 minutes lo beaches. One h alf block to major s hopping centers . Cem ent drives , air conditioning. microwave ove n . trash co mpactor. large walk·in closets. Garage with opener. Pool a nd 2 jacuzzis. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 380 W. Wiison Costa MHa, CA 714/631 -5055 From SI 36,000 SPYGLASS + PASTORAL VU OfferlftCJ flexible lease/option t.rm. on this Newporter model with 4 bed. fam.. rm. dln.nn. home with interior garcletl. skyliCJhb & more. $495,000. 631·1400. YU CORNER CHARISMA-VU! ..._ .. to park & beautlM "~at" hotM that Invites you to CJO nslde. Spacious 3 bed, witt. lcrgt fom.nn. + billiard rm. & poulblllty of more bedrooma. Excellent Newport location. S81 o.ooo. fH. 631 -1400. LIDO ISLE CONTEMPORARY BriCJht and cheerful 2 story °" 45' lot. ..._w paint, wallpaper thruout. 4 Bdrm, dlnln9 rm, 2 frplcs, sunny patio. $475,000. 63I·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, tNC REAL ESTATE s.,i.., H<nt•I• Pnl!M'rt~ M•N9"""'"' 2436 W Coat! Hwy 3 1~ M"""' Av,. N~>rl R«Mh &lbo.t lt~nd' 611·1400 '7Mt00 COMPANY C 0 i l E C T T I S H l G I K D E J A S S\C 0 M P A N XlM I D N A I 0 R C S W G E C t 0 Z U Y W 0 D W 0 R C S W A E N S N 0 P L L E I U T R R 0 0 D S ( P T I 0 C L 8 D T P R Y 8 H H N G Y H E E M T T H L A N 0 P A V A 0 C K T L H P T T E U G t E 0 0 E E l P L C S T G B R S T E Y A C R N l L t A A E R L E X S Y R 0 M T T T H R 0 N G V N E R 8 A Z G S 0 E S I H I W C P L E Y A BR TN Rt I A 0 X L E 0 I PIT£ M' IE 0 T 0 LT NHL G 0 RN K·R £WP A C M M U l T I T U 0 E X I A N T ~ I H 0 I T P A G E R G N 0 C P N Y I H Y GARDOWOUR)CLLWEGOGL ....... c: Ce;1pf• c., ••• l---= ...... WAa,.K TO OCEAN POOLS, TENNIS Tht price 11 ria.ht Nc:wport Duc:b 3 Bdrm, sln1le r aml l y h o m e r o r '137 .500 Move In rondltlon. 642-5200 ~ PETE J BARRETT .. REALTY lahaP•••• 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAY AVI. CORN ER VACANT LOT READYTO BUILO ln<'lude1 apprv pliu1,11 A buy at 1180,000. Hurry• MEL FUCHS PAVILION REALTOR 675-8120 -----Capistrano leoclt I 0 II • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ PlllSTIGIOUS TURTLE ROCK . Exceptionally lovely 3 BR. single story home decorated w/style & up- graded w/qualily. Lg. trees enhance oversized rear yard + add'l enter· tainer!) patio. G real location ' Lg . as· sumable loan. $189,500 incl. 1and J ane Paquin 642 ·8235 <H89) HIRIT AGE l'ARIC Pl.AH I 2 BR, 2'12 bath 2-s tory townhome w/wood burn- ing fplc, & allat·hed garage. Walk to Aquatic & Arts & Crafts Ce nters. l · acre fishing lagoon. t.ennis & racquet bull courts. Reduced to $115.000 incl land. Paula Bailey 642-~ (HOO> W.wporta.Kh 001 Dover Drive Harbor V111w Olnt.er J 642-8235 644 8200 Ocean :J.ronl nus 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. • We are developers so submit land or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. C7141121·1210 l21lt Stl-1163 11001 JS2-J7 I 0 .... !. Costa M"° I 024 H1111tlngton leach I 040 ............... . DESIRABLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• n MACNAB·IRVINE REALTY PALlSADES AREA A dehghlful 3 bedroom. 2 bath residence on a com er lot with u lovely enclosed yard, low maintenance ga rdens and a lattice covered patio. $123.000 493 8812 Abinoo L BUSINESS OPPTY Established well localed beauty salon ui prime location Su bmit on terms Touchstone Realty. Inc 968-~ OCIAH&CITTVU 1 yr new Large 3 sty. frplc. $30,000down o we Isl at 12'1'J'/r.. Call Ulll. agl, 963-8847. --- Cof"Ofta def Mar I 022 ' SHARI' COHDO 100/o LOAH Assume 195.000 loan at 10'1-on lge. 4 br. home with fam. rm. & fprlc No qualifying Only $154 ,900 Call now ' 979-5370 or 645 3447. 1u.k for Jim Ownr Agt Owner will help finance Sparkling 4 BDRM $136.900. 15072 Kinl(liton Lane. Broker 842 84111 or 962-6365 u ·-.. --- CHARMER IN OlD BlUffS! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bdrm. 2 bath, pool, lnlne I 044 Jasmine Creek decorator near So. Coast Plaza ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• h o m e , p I a n I o n $115,000 Will consider Highly upgraded Franciscan model situated m the most desirable section of Old Bluffs on a beautiful expanse green bell. Home features imported porcelain fi xtures throughout. Mex· ican tile in entry and kitchen, quality plus carpeting. custom shutters. de· signer wall covering~ & drapes, mar· hie floor an bathroom.5, also included washer & dryer and refrigerator. The ultimate condomini um style living $239,500. Young Park 551 ·8700 <Ht l I g r eenbelt 1 m m at' . lease option to purchase $305,500 Broker, 644·0134 64().8145 SPYGLASS Im mac 5bdrm home -3Br. 2Ba. Mesa Verde Sohd F111 Sl39,SOO Ry owner 3213 Dakota 556·7174 City &ocean view S640.000, only 15'·; dwn. Assume lsl TD, OWC balance al 12'7. Prmc Only 96J.4759. CDM DUPLEXES Nice Jbr Home by Owner. Assume S70K at 9• ,•: lst T D Price Slll'>.000. Call 646·8~2 EASTSIDEC.M Lovely 2 Br home on quiet tree lined st. Lg DECORATORS DalGHT Upgrades thruout Beautiful back yard Irv1n.e with spa, 2 Bdrm + den. c:.a..rnp•lS Vall"}' Cl!nter Woodbmlge Villa.ge Cenll!r 2 12 baths, double 7521414 551 ·8700 garage 112 years new. Assumable financing available ThlS condo 1s I In offered at $148.000. Call " • I 044 lnlRe I 044 540.1151 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '*~ .... HERITAGE • • REALTORS THE GROVES I, ~ .. ... ... GOOD FIMAHCIHG 2 Bdrms + loft wtfrplc. wetbar m each unit. with great tenants. lot Asking $125.000. ~~~~~~~~~ 646·6710 ir64S-1103 Agt * *WOODBRIDGE LANDING Spacious 2 Br mobile home Owner will help finance. Best 1n the f'abulous JM Peters park Seller anxious L a n d i n g P I a n 4 $167 .500. Rae Rodgers HOME + RENTAL lovely 3 Bdrm. front uml with frplc and beamed ce1hng plus 2 bdrm unil w1year's lease. Call Barbara Glass Century 21 /Sandpiper 640-4950 851·9541 Jasmine Creek decorator home, plan 1, greenbelt loc $305,500. 640.8145. A slWIHllble at I 3% Old CdM. WUc to beach. 0 W C w 20 «; d n Owner·Brkr 675 0704 962·2900 .-oTEHTIAL PLUS JBr, P·•Ba home needs "TLC " South or Highway . Room for 2nd unit $260.000 Ca 11 Stephen Meyers ~CHARTEA PROPERTIES 76o.&S20 SOUTH OF HWY Cozy 2 Br. Home I block frorn Ocean Blvd . $225 ,000. Bernita Etlertsen. Broker, 675·2373 or 770-8598. IELOW ._,.AIUCET Across from park and bike trail to beach Everything for the family 48r, 3ba + pool and s pa $171,500 - WATf.RfRONl HOMf-" REAL ESTATE 631-1400 EASTSIDE 10% ASSUMABLE. Owner will help finance. 3 Bdrm 2 bath, spa. Only SlZ7 ,900 645-9161 ASSUMIAILE FINANCING Terrific location . minutes to sho pping, schools and recreation Over 2200 sqmft . Separate master bdrm. lovely pool Enclosed cou r tyard As k in g $145,000 . Owners anxious, s ubmit a ll otrers. 54~ 1151 ..:_,.HERITAGE • • REALTORS SPYGLASS VIEW This 6 bedroom home is truly one or tbe finest on Spyglass Hill . The ~~~~~~~~ beautiful decor renec~s D•a .-ow I 026 the curre n t owners ••••••••••••••••••••••• concern and pride or ownership with many OCEAN VIEW LOT custom buill·lns in the Abon 0..0 Hsbor b e d r o o m s a n d ''• acre. plans, permit. 3 out.standing brickwork minutes to D an a In both yards . With Harbor. 3000 sq ft home. lushly planted gardens Will surbordinate . and canyon and ocean $135,000 714/898-7607 views, this home offera a --------- perlect blend of comfort 2600 sq rt upgraded and elegance. t699.SOO thruout. up to 5 Bdr. 21, D M Marshal 1tJtr Ba. Fully landscaped · 64,._9990 w /pool & firepit. sep. side yard w/play area. Exclusive Colony Lrg famil y home featuring 4 Bdrm. 212 Ba in Irvine's Colony Club Walk to comm. pool. tennis courts , schools. sh of ping Priced to sell. Cal for details e. RANCH REAL T Y f>5 1 2000 LOCATIOM- LOCATIOM 3 Br. 2Ba. EXec. Condo. High in exc l usive Turtlerock. 3 patio view of mountain & city lights Entry foyer opens to upper level dining room / living room / fireplace, large kitchen/ nook, family room I bar. separate ~m wing 2 car garage + bonus room. Community pool / spa/ tennis. THE GOOD LIFE Near beach / shops / schools. Under market at $294,000. Low down & terms. Paul Hickey Agent 832-3910 ---- Turt~rock Vista 15°/o DOWM 3 BR 2i., Ba twnbme. prestigious area. Remax RealU'. Fred Gibson 114.5-..00 TUltn.EltOCK Lovely 3Br ramlly home in prime location. Price reduced to $169.900 A bargain 640.5357 Magn1r1cent pa t io 631 1266 _A_gt_. __ w private ~pa Cor.y L--1 _ _.... 1048 hreplace in master suite CICJWla ,.._... w /lavish adjoining bath. • ••• • • •• •••••••••• •• ••• Huge country kitchen THE SHAKES w t every a m enity. Wea t hered ceda r orrered a t $315.000 shakes. that is. Custom Owner will help with designed 3 bdrm. fam fmancing: rm. 2 baths. Extensive use or wood glass & ceramic tile. Beam ceiling, frplc. $165.000 \\\'odhrtdgc Realty 551-3000 1920 81rranr• f'k•>. In-in~ HIGH ASSUMABLE 4Br home w/spa, xlnt. cond. $169,000 552 6940. UNIV. PARK M lsslon Realty ( 714 )494-0731 Moln lchfTown View 1 Bd rm co ndo . upgraded. 15"~ down, owner will carry F 1P $215,000 furnis hed 497-1305 ----- LCICJWla MNJuet I 052 Lrg 4 Bdnn 211 Ba home • •• • • • • • • •••••• •• • • •••• in prestigious Univ. AWARD WINNING Park. ste~ from pool & ASSUME AT l~•'l- g.reenbt:lt . Assumable Unique foxglove model financing. Ca ll for in Lake Park. 2Br, Den. deta ils. 2Ba Vaulted ce1llngs, -::. f~ANC H ~ HlAL TY ~ !J!1 l 2000 french doors. Pr of designed landscape $154 ,900. Open house 1·6pm Sat/Sun PP 831·7634 or7S9·2465 Mission Vt.lo I 06 7 --------..................... . Orange Tree Condo. Plan AFFORDAILE 5, 2 br 1 ba $103,500 Call 3 Bdrm Mission VieJo -~ 552·7552 after 7pm. single family home with -----country kitchen and TAKE lovely mountain view. Only $29,850 down to OVER exhlstlng loans and no High assumable loap~ 3 qualifying. Sl.24.500 bdrms, 2 ba. Plan 2 in Town & Co.try Campus View. Pr ime RealEstate5S2·1tOO location. $169 ,000 --Available on home wner built new house, partnership purchase vacating 5br, pool, plan. $320,000 this week. ,, Turtterock ........ Te rms -let's make a deal! 8JO. L9S3 ewport leach I 06t •••••••••••••••••••••• AltlOR VIEW HOME "Montego" 4br, 2ba, Fee Land , loan assum 67S-2139 ownhouse condo on bluft l $103,000 assumable loan ~~~~!!!~!!!~~ I 024 al low int. $185,000. P.P. OnFHa.- 2 story, 4 bdrm. dining rm. added den w /wet bar. s teps lO' park. comm. pool & tennis. Assumable loan. Owner will assist in financing. $210,000. Fee . Agt , 640.5560. in Newport Beach with ~ easy walk to ocean & beach. Ownership of 3 • bdrm, 21.Ai ba unit incl. lge pool. jacuu.I. saunas · Costa Mna ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prin only, 493-2047 OWHB RMAHCID ~~~~~.!?.~~ Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath h o m e • beaut If u I *ASSUME 9112% wallpapers thruout. Cul 4 Bdl~ ba $79,000 VA de sac: street. OWner will Ut, 1120,000 w /10% dn. carry AITD for 7 years Princonly. Bkr751·6836 at 13/5~ interest. For an 11ppolntment to see. ca11 1-·w-A•MT-A•H-OM-11•- S40.1151 • J . HERITAGE . . REALTORS FOUUUX BY OWNER Xlnt F\nanclnt ! s:uo,ooo 675-00731 (714)145-4123 l1 ASSUM LOAM No quaJlfylni. smell down payment•. low lnterest tat.es no &oan polntat 2, 3 i 4BDRM UOUMI Ir Townhomet. All lo 1ood artH of Or•nt• County ..... w .... (71A) ...... "'" 2 Bdrm hciultt 00 OM lot. W. ea.ta M .... Mswnat>&. loan OWC lJl'l2Dd. M0-7tM But don't think you can afford it. Golden West Realtors has designed a pro1ram that bas allowed many people to enjoy home ownership that never thou&ht they could. Call now for more det.alls .. GoW.WettUr '714)!MM* DUTCHHAVEH Very aharp 3 Bdrm 2 ba home near Beach and Warner. Only $11»,900. Ca.ll Ron Ort at ...,, ......... . t6MJ77 CloM to beach. Bea.u. 5 bdr, den , 2 F /P , convenauon pU1 pool, lg. covered paUo, fru1t treea. S185,000. t:ZS.000 down. Owner w1U HfTJ fl 14 per cent. -.1.11a DEERFIB.D COHDO Enjoy the peaceful. restrul atmosphere or this charming single story home. Features include: 2 Bdrm, den, dining room ana exq u isite inter ior deslan. Our best value at $128,500. Call ~ now. 556-:!MO C::. ',f I ( ( 1 -t-" I 'H( )~'I H 1 11 ' , THI«._ TOWMHOMI? Call the 1peclalists at the c ondominium informationctntu. Touc:hstooe Realty 963-*7 TUln.HOQC IXICUTIVI HO ... New on market, executive family · home in Turtlerock. 4 bedroom. 2 bath, close to park, good schools, comm. Pool & tennis. Assumable loan only $212,000. HlTRRY! " lighted tennis rourts. $189,000 with $50,000 > down. A1k for Susan ' 640-3796 or Bruce 760-6060 days; 851·2205 ' eves " wknds. w ......... .,... WltttlMtDoc.k Could be Newport•• lowest priced waterfront .,l home with income unit too ! Call for Info Broker. 963-8182 .. DUPLIX•WATM DockfwlO'ao.t 3 Ir 2 Bdmu. 2 frplc:a, deckt and patio. C /21 Mei'irC""" 640. 117 PamtOUSI UMlqul COMOO with boat dock, pool. ' I f .. curlty + 180 de1 ocean.:. Cata Una, bay • view. ne land. "50.000. Smith Meyer, Btr. 64 .. IU7 Ml-71U ' " OCWlllAY VIEW l I Bdrm, 2 ba condo Ma1nm.-ocua and l bay vlewm foo1, lacuaalt c1ubbe»ue 1171,tou. Owo /Alt. 541- 's lo as a) el ll. re E ,... ~ .. M M - MO NDAY MAY 11 1<J8 1 ·Syria 'at brink' I sraelis urge Assad to withdraw missiles JERUSALEM (AP) -Prime Minister Menacbem Begin urged Syria today to "retreat from the brink" by withdrawing its anti- aircraft missiles frQlll Lebanon and disclosed be had ordered the kraell air force to knock them out lldaysagobutcanceledtheorder. "Syrian President Mr. CHalez> Assad, rescind your action," Begin pleaded. "It will in no way dishonoryou." But Assad was reported ada- mant in his refusal to remove the Soviet-madeSAM·6missilesfrom eastemLebanon'sBekaaValley. Begin, in a speech to Parliament shortly before he was to meet with special U.S. envoy PhillpC. Habib. said Syria had beefed up its ori· gin.al deployment of three missile batteries in Lebanon with two ad- ditional batteries. And he said anothertwohad been moved close to the Lebanese border the past two days to join six already on the border. Begin also said a battery of SAM-9s supplied and manned by Libya had been rolled into posi- tion, butdidnotspecify where they we redeployed. He urged Assad to•· retreat from the brink. . . remove the missiles . . . and humanity will breathe a sigh of relief ... We don't want your dishonor. It will be to your honor, for you will be serving the peace." Begin said that on April 30, two days after the Syrian missiles were wheeled into Lebanon. he ordered the Israeli military to re- move them. But the prime minister, who also is defense minister. said the action was stopped first by bad weather and <See MIDEAST, Page AZ) Nader attacks Reagan Warns GWC gathering of 'authoritarian regime' By PIUL SNEIDERMAN Of .. o.lly,.... ..... Consumer activist Ralph Nader came out swinging in Huntington Beach. During a rambling speech Sunday night before about 275 people at Golden West College, Nader leveled caustic criticism at everything from Ronald Reagan, American auto makers and utility companies to college testing programs, California freeways and the news media. The activist hurled some of his harshest barbs at U.S. Rep. Dan Lungren, a Long Beach Republican who also represents the western portion of Hunt· ington Beach, as well as Seal Beach and Sunset Beach. ''In his first term in ofCice, Rep. Lungren has opposed virtually every crucial piece of consumer legislation." Nader charged. He added, "According lO the Public Citizen Voting lnx , which rates all members of Congress on key roll votes in areas such as consumer protec- tion, energy, and tax reform, Lungren voted in the interests of consumers onJy 20 percent of the time. "While citizens back in his dis- Soldie r s wounde d in Belfast a01hus h BELFAST, Northern Ireland CAP> -Gunmen ambushed a cas h -laden mail truek Jn Catholic Weal Belfast today, wounding two British soldiers escorting it. The attack and a weekend bombing al an oil terminal that Queen Elizabeth was visiting heightened fears that IRA guer- rillas had begun a campaign lo avenge the death of hunger striker Bobby Sands. The mail truck was deUvertng money to the Whiterock post of- fice in West Belfast when the gunmen opened fire frQm a house across the street, a police spokesman said. Soldiers jumped from their armored personnel carrier and two were shot down. he said. Their condi· lions were not Immediately known. The ambushers apparently made no attempt to steal the money. police reported. Troo'pS and police fanned out to search for the gunmen as Roman Catholic youngsters and women blew whistles -the traditional warning signal that security forces are on a sweep. Mail trucks are reeularly escorted lo the Wbiterock faclli· ty, target of previous raids by guerrillas of the Iris h 'Republican Army seekine funds for their campaign to e nd British rule in Northern Ireland. The oil terminal explosion OC· curred as Queen Elizabeth II was opening the Sullum Voe CSee IRISH, Page A2) Player behind the eighl bal,l MINOT, N.D. (AP> -Rohen Beyer lost out after a pool game with bis buddies, but it wasn't because he knocked the eight ball in. Beyer, a student at Minot State College, spent nearly l lh hours trying to free himself from the corner pocket after his hand got caught as he was try- ing to retrieve some keys from the return chute. Finally, firemen had to be called to Beyer's frate rnity house lO come to hi s rescue. And the keys? They fell out through a hole in the chute long before Beyer was freed. tri c l s uffer because of skyrocke ting energy prices, Lungren has been in Washington voling with the interests of Big Oil." Nader criticized the con- gressman for his support of the decontrol of crude oil prices, for voting to weaken the oil com- panies' windfall profit tax, for opposing automobile air bags, and for backing efforts to reduce the ~wer of the Federal Trade Commission. He said Lungren voted for the Reagan budget proposal, which will have "a devastating impact (See NADER, Page A2) Navy hal u Isle's wi ld. g o at hum SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND CAP> -Trapper Jim Clapp says he's furious because the Navy bas stopped him from going into the southern lip of San Clemente Island togetthe last lOOor 150wild goats . In 10 months Clapp has re- moved 5,000 goats in a court-ordered alternative lO killing the goats because they damage the environment, including valuable, end angered species of plants. The Navy had planned to land riflemen to' shoot the goats until the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles stepped in. Clapp had sent ashore barges of goats regularly, but the Navy said the south end of the island is lit- tered with dangerous unexploded shells. "We don't want to see a human being lose his life over a couple of goats." a Navy spokesman said. "If we're not allowed down there because it's too dangerous, then Navy riflemen can't shoot them down there because it's too dangerous." Clapp said. "U we don't get the last goat, we haven't done a damn thing." * • • • YDll HDllTDll DAllY PAPll ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS .,..,, ...... ,._. r, Lee,..~ Newport Beoch'a Dennu Reige.l ~'over Balboa Pier in homemade pla~ on hu trip to Catalina. His whereabouts today were ,omething of a mystery. Did pilot make it? Observers claim man returned from Catalina flight By STEVE MARBLE Of .. Deity ...... SWt Where Is Dennis Reigel ? The 31 -year-old Newport Beach pilot who lifted o(f from Balboa Park Sunday morning bound for Catalina Island in his homemade plane has authorities wondering today where he landed or if be landed. Skywatchers Crom Newport to Avalon claim they saw Reigel in his flying machine at various points. . Lifeguards near the Balboa Pier watched him take off at 10: 15 a.m., clearing the park by ·H e at wa ve c rowds c oas t b e a ch es Lifeguards along the Orange Coast reported their heaviest crowds of the year over the four feet and gaining altitude over the ocean. In Avalon, authorities claim they s aw the young man "buzzing" around. They weren't sure if he was coming or going.: They wondered whether be knew w~ether he was coming o~ gomg. At 6 p.m .. a bather near 29th Street in Newport reported a sighting. She said the man in his flying machine with the yellow wing was "putt-putting around like he was about to run out of gas." She said he was circling. She said she wasn't sure whether he was trying to land or trying not lo crash. ~~i:"""""l!'l .. Pli • w e e k e n d a s s o a r i n g temperatures, blue skies and lukewarm water combined for August-like conditions. th~re were no serious incidents, city lifeguards in Huntington were worried for several hours Sunday. An Anaheim man, Huntingt.On lifeguards said, was reported missing by bis wife Sunday hoon . The woman told authorities that her husband •'drank three or four beers and who knows what else and went in the water." Reigel had planned his 31-mile trek to celebrate the 69tb anniversay of Glenn Martin's 1912 flight from Balboa to Catalina. In Newport Beach, more than 100,000 people showed up at the beach on Sunday while 90,000 turned out Saturday. Ocean temperatures crept up to 67 degrees in Newport and Huntington Beach on Sunday. Strong rip currents and heavy surf kept lifeguards from Seal Beach to San Clemente busy during the two days. Although By 6 p.m ., lifeguards said they'd ·begun to expect the worst. An hour later, the wife called authorities to tell them she'd found her husband at (See BEACHES, Page AZ) Surf er corwicted in spear incident . VISI'A (AP) -A Superior Court jury has convicted a Carlsbad surfer of assault with a deadly weapon for alleged· ly using his surfboard against a surfer riding a wave in front d. him in January. Steven J . Cram is awaiting sentencing next month after his conviction for assault on Larry Richards, also of Carlsbad. Cram wu accused of using his surfboard as a spear and striking Richards in the back of the head. resultinsr tn " gash requlring five stitches to close. Deputy District Attorney Steve Anear said the vtctlm contenaed Cram told him he "would spear ayone who got in front of him." ·'There 11 a territorial a\tltude deve•oping on the beach, 11 Anear said. ·'That wu one premlae of the trial." Rlcbarda contended be wu usaulted because be did DO~ replarly 1wi at the apot where the incident occurred. In Its day, Martin's flight was heralded as a major aviational accomplishment. But Reigel said his flight was no big deal. But today, authorities were starting to wonder. Reigel's plane, which looks more like a bicycle with a wing attached, is powered with a JO. horsepower engine and bolds five gallons o( gas. The Newport man. who salCl CSee MISSING, Page AZ) ORAIGI COAST llATIHI LO\\f clouds and local fog night and morning hours • with mostly sunny after- noons through Tuesday. Highs in upper 60s at the beaches to upper 70s In· land. Lows tonight 54 to 60. llSIDI TODAY You thought TV hit a lot.O with 101M of ft• 1how1? An AP columnflt IHI mor• po11ibflit~1 ahead. See Page A9. llDll .. ,.,_..,,,. A1 L.M...,. .. ....... u =--~ Cua •• .. ............ ......... ... .... ....... ... ·' .· A2 • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 :chase Bank ~hikes prime to 19.5 percent NEW YORK <AP> Chase Manhattan Bank today raised its prime lendin g rate a half percentage point to 19.5 percent. r e rlecting higher borrowing costs for banks and soaring loan demand. The move by the nation's third-largest commercial bank was followed by Bank or America. the nation's largest; Lloyds Bank of California, Security Pacir1c National Bank, and at leas t two New York banks. The prime rate last stood at 19.5 percent in late Februarv. when 1l was declining from a rec ord 21 .5 percent peak hit in December. But the prime rate began rising an April after fall· ing as low as 17 percent The prime rate is representeo to be the interest banks charge fi>r loans to their best-risk cor · porale borrowers, but banks have increasingly loaned money at interest rates below the prime to valued customers. Small-business borrowers pay one percentage point or more above the prime rate fbr loans. Consumer loans are not based on the prime rate, although movements m the prime rate often signal trends in other financing charges. Interest rates have soared in recent weeks as the Fedetal Reserve Board tightened credit reins in an attempt to slow the growth of the nation's money supply in its fight against infla· ti on Although the money supply declined s harply in the latest re- porting week. its growth still re- mains above Fed targets. Too rapid growth in the funds readi· ly available for spending may heighten inflation. Fed credit tightening moves have pushed up the cost of funds for banks . The inte r est on federal funds overnight loans of S l million or more among banks averaged 8.91 percent in the bank s tatement week ended Wednesday. up s harply from the 16.28 percent average the previous week GROUNDED Newport Beach motorcyc le of- ficer Dave Sens orders three men to the ground in Costa Mesa after halting their car near 15th Street and Newport Boulevard. Police said the three (from front> Richard Topete, Miguel Orosco and Francisco Garcia. ~If~ .. -"RklWIN KMM« all of Santa Ana. were pursued in a car similar to one from which a man allegedly pointed a gun at other motorists Sunday af- ternoon. Topete and Garcia were releaseg. Orosco was held on an outstanding warrant. officers~aid Royal phones 'bugged'; tapes revealed DUBLIN. Ireland <APJ Prince Charles told fiancee Lady Diana Spencer he loved her, did not want his bald spot photographed an d that Australian Prime Minister ~talcolm Fraser was humorless, according to excerpts of s up· poscdly buJ(ged telephone con· versat1ons published by the lnsh Independent Buckingham Palace said the tapci., allegedly made by anti monarchisb during Charles' trip to Australia last month. were bogus Courts in Rritam and West r.ermany banned media u se of the material . but a From Page A1 Gt'rman magazine carrying the transcripts got 900 ,000 copies on the s tands beforehand T he Irish Independent then translated and published ex cerpts in its Ireland-only edi l ions. escaping the ban in Bri t ain. Prince Charles: "l don't know how to tell you this " Diana: "Oh. please Cha rles." Charles: "0 .K. During the whole trip, this guy had nothing better to do than to try to take photographs or the bald patch on my head." Diana <laughing1: ··1 did nut know you had a bald patch." Ch arles: .. Yes. but it's too stupid I am doing all these things and the only thing they want are these ridiculous de tails." Diana: ··I think it ·s very funny ·· Sandwic hed between the couple's expressions of mutual love and desire for a quick re· union are snippets of conversa tion about their July 29 wedding and the possibility of Prince Charles becoming the governor general of Austr~lia: Dia na: "llow wi II that go., Do you think that it will work''" Ch arles: "Yes. but there are soml' considerable problems I myself am not sure I can get along with this fellow Fraser. He, however. appears to enJOY the respect of his country. Diana: "Oh, terrific " Charles: "lie appear!> to know what he is doing. and I believe that I C'Ould get on with him The on l~ difficulty 1s that he does not have any humor lle·s 'terribly serious I made a terrific effort to be amusing. bul he JUSt stared at me all the time .. The Irish l ndependcnt's ex BEACHES JAMMED WITH SUN.WORSHIPERS. • • home. sleeping in the hvmg r oom. More than 300 people were pull ed from the surf by Hunt· ington city and state lifeguards Guards in Newport rescued nearly 200 persons during the two days. Lifeguards said the man ap parently was pulled down the coast m the rip currents and then took a bus home after being unable to loc<itc either his Cami ly or his towel I n Lag un a Beach .. 20,000 s howed up Saturday and 25.000 o.lly ........... ~ HIGH STAKES -The Newport Harbor Art Museum was the big winner Saturday night at "La Grand Ca sino," a museum benefit. Partygoers Marc Friedberg and Karen Cole try their luck at the blackjack table. Story and color photos will appear in the Daily Pilot Thursday. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Thomas P Haley ,__ Robert N. Weed ........ M. ThomH Keevlt r- CIHlll'led eclwettlaing 1141142·9'71 All o~ deperttMnn 142-4321 MAIN°"1CE »O West ••v SI .. COit• Meta, CA. 11144111 --· 8o• u.o, c .. ia Mesa, CA. m» C.JrltM ••• ar..,.. Coe-' ~•Slllnt c-. '" ,. ... , sion.t, Mhulratl-. NllOrlal metlM or •cl-ver11H~ll ltff•I" mey Ille ••Proelll<ed wl01o.it IP9<lel perml11toro of copyrfollt ow,..r. on Sunday. <~uards said they rescued 12 people both days. The air temperature was 85 degrees Sunday An Anaheim man, 37-year-old Tom Wering. visi tang Main Beach in Laguna. s uffered a minor neck m1ury Sunday while body surfing South county beaches. includ ing Dana Point a nd Ahso. at· From Page A 1 tractcd roughly 40.000 people et.tch day with a reported 74 rescues in all. Lifeguards re!>cued a family of five floating in an inner tube an Seal Beach Surf averaged from two to four feet with the largest breakers hilting in I luntington Guards there said several set!> reaching heights of eight feet were reported MIDEAST WAR CLOUD. • • later because of appeals from Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and President Reagan for time to solve the missile standoff through diplomacy. Reagan dispatched Habib, a ve t e ran diplom at i c troubles hooter. to the Middle East in hopes of defusing the crisis, which threate ned to plunge the two antagonists into an armed conflict. Habit flew to Israel today from Damascus, wher e he saw Syrian leaders Sunday After the meet· ings, the offi cial Syrian news agency quoted Premier Abdel· R aouf Kasam as sayin g. "Threats and warnings will only boost Syria's firm stand." Habib met for four hours with the Syrian president as the Arab nation's warplanes circled over- head. but the retired American career diplomat had no comment I ateron how long his mission m i$i(ht last or its likelihood of success. Western and Arab diplomatic sources privy to the de tails or the Assad-Habibtalkssaid Assad flat· ly refused to withdraw the mis·· Reagan to r esign NRA m e mbership? CHICAGO <AP> -An alliance o( 17 state and local handgun control groups have urged Presi- dent Reagan to resign his life membership in the National Ri - fle Association and join the move- m ent for handgun control. sites and told Habit, "We have nothing more to say." But asked by Habib whether he could return to Damascus if his visit to Israel made such a trip necessary, Assad is said to have replied. "You are welcome." Hegin warned Sunday that the Israeli air force would act if Syria did not withdraw the missiles, deployed the day after Israeli warplanes s hot down two Syrian helicopters The prime m inister's speech to a political rally of his Likud blocsupr>orters was the first time he had specifically warned of Israeli military action. but it did not set a deadline. 1- cerpl!> quott>d Lt.tdy U1<1na a!> telling Prince Charles she m1ss<.'d him \'t•ry much and s aying. "I'm nol complaining I onlv wish I wen• with vou. When you go there th<• next t"1me. I will be with )OU ... In a leleµhont' call said to have• tuken place when the µrinc·t.• hroke aY. ay from a party in his honor. there "as this ex <·hangt• Diana : .. Noy. you m usl go back to the part~. I bet they are all :.landing around wondering , when' yo u are " ('harles: "Wt•ll lhev l'an wait a 11tll<.• The y. hole iong day I have done m) dut~. and noy. I <im talking In rny fiant·<•t:. whom I love• vt>ry mut·h .. From Page A1 MISSING. • • the craft can bt• folded up, had claimed his airplane could make the round trip on fi ve gallons. The Catalina Island Harbor Master s office also reported s potting Rl'1gel buzzing around "Rut l don't know where he went to Evervone saw him That was around 5 p m .. P olice. l1feguar(h and s hopkeepers an Newport say they didn't see Reigel return. There wa s s p ec ulation . though Some s ugges ted the Newport man likely folded up his airplane and retyrned to the mainland in a boat. Reigel had said he might have a friend follow his path in a boat, in case of trouble. March draws 4 0 LOS ANGELES (AP ) Protesting that the district at t or n('y's off i ce rail s t o "vigorously prosecute" fathers who fall behind in child support payments. about 40 people staged a Mother's Day march at the Criminal Courts building Sunday From Page A1 NADER. • • on low and middle income con· sumers" Co nt acted today at his Washington o ffi ce. the con- gressman. who was elected to a second term last November, responded to Nader's char1es. "I think It's interesting that Mr. Nader is citing his own organization's rating service in evaluating my voting record," Lungren said. The congressman s aid he hu received awards from the Na- tional Taxpayers Union and the National Federation of Indepen- dent Businessmen <representing s mall b1.1sinesses I for his voting record. "I tlunk I'm speaking for a much larger constituency than Ralph Nader," he said. Regarding his support of oil price decontrol, Lungren said, "Control of energy prices result· ed in a control of production. which c·reated a scarcity or fuel. I think the consumer was far worse off" He also claimed that federal manipulation of oi l prices and s upplies caused the gasoline lines seen in California several years ago Lungren also said the very campus at which Nader spoke, Golden West College, benefits from the sale of tidelands oil in Cahfom1a Regarding his support of Reagan·s budget proposal , Lungren said. "I voted for that budget propo,sal last week becau:.l' I firmly believe it s the hes t hope for middle and lower income consumers " The t·ongressman conte nded that past federal policies sup· ported by Nader have produced double digit inflation . high morlgu~e interest rates and a !>lowdown m production "If he lhinks that's a recipe for SU('tess. I'm glad he's not the cook m the kitchen at the pres ent time." Lungren said. During h1:. Sunday address. Nader described the Reagan ad· ministration a s "a rising authoritarian political regime " "The Nixon and Ford ad· min1stratwns will be seen as downrigh t benign i n co m µanson to what':. coming under Reagan · N adcr urged those in the au· dience• to band together in organizations that will protect consumer interests "lf you want to enjoy life more." he added ... you ought to write to your congressman once a "eek "And add a P S · 'Don't send me any malarkey ... From Page A1 IRISH ... North Sea facility 1n the Shetland I s lands north of Scotland. police said Sunday The I RA ·s · Provisional" wing claimC'd it had planted a device there shortly before it went off, they said T he Britis h monarch . her hu sband P r ince Ph ilip ,' Norwegian King Olav V and about 700 guests at the opening ceremony were about a quarter· mile awav from the bomb, which exploded at midday Saturday. Police said the blast damaged the terminal's power station but caused no casualties. Officials said the explosion may have been aimed at the queen in reprisal for Sands' death Tuesday The 27-year-0ld Irish Republican Army guerrilla was serving a 14-year term in the Maze prison near Belfast for 11legal possession of a handgun when he died on the 66th day of a hunger strike. Thomu A Murphtne ......,_,_ "By doing so 'you will dem· onstrate vour concern for the safety and the lives o f American citizens and your willingness to consider without bias conslruc- ti v e ways to deal with the handgun problem, which brings shame on thJs nation here and abroad." the coalition said In a tele1ram to Reagan o n Sunday. --------- Ctt•lel H. Loos .................. dllot Bemetd Schulman c...lw c.t earaten .. n --.ow- Kenneth N. Goddard Jr. ~~ t. 5 8lores born PORTSMOUTH, Ohlo <AP> - A fire that broke o u t ln a nt1htspot spread to adjolnln1 s tructures, destroyln& rtve downtown bulldtn1s in this Ohio Rlver~lly, officials aald. Al's Garage and Sea Bags Heavy duty Canvas Baos tn shapes and sizes 10 hi any occaS100 Seams are double stitched 10 PfOVlde a hfeume of durabtllty All Sea Bags are water repellent end feature a shouldor strap lor easy c.lrryu-ig • --_ __,_,..., __ ' ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 l\ ·-. -... R est orde re d ~for A rt Carney Actor Art Cam ey is under doc tors' order s to rest at hom e afte r s pe nding tbe weekend an a Dallas hospital tor treatment of an un- specified "recurring illness he's had over the years," a spokesman said. C{lm ey won fame as sewer worke r E d Norto n on te le vis ion· s "The Honey- mooners" and an Oscar as an aging widower in the mov- ie "Harry and Tonto." Bob Hargrove, production manager fo r a TV version of the John Steinbeck classic, "Of Mace and Men," sa id the 62-year-old actor was to fly home lo Westbrook, Conn He did not know whether Carney would return for filming on "Of Mi ce and M e n ," scheduled to be fi nished May 27 • Actress Jane Fonda. frnsband Tom llayde11 and son Troy. lzsten to explmwtums from unidentified Boston Ma yor Kevin H. While ap o l o gize d to Cle veland ror associating the cit y w i lh th e word "bankrupt " c of fi cmls ut lltroshnna s Peace M emonal Museu m about devastutwn of u•estern Japanese ctly hy atomic bomb durllly World Wur II \.Js r'oricla zs m .Japan pro mot mg nwmf>, .. Y to [> " In a lelter lo Cleveland Mayor George Volnovlcb, Whlll' s aid a rem a rk h e made was not intended to of- fend Cle veland. - "Clt•vcland is a ('lty whose greatnl'ss can never be de n 1ed by id le com m e nt,•· While wrote The Ree Get>s and their manuf,.!P r Robert SUgwood, ar e together again. They agreed lo drop their respl'CllH' s uits stem ming fro m charJ!CS that Stigwood had don t-a poor j ob of representing the rock group, an official c1f RSO Records said The Ree Gees signed an out·of·l·uurt settle ment at St igwood 's Manhattan of· fi ces. saying they regretted tht> court action and had been masguu1ed an brinf'(ang 1t. '>aid the !>pokt•:.woman Al"WI,......_ H11h11 Kel'l1·r. ft'ft. lj " • p1.1•1l'fl ,,, the 11 nqmal movie Folk singcr Joan Baez, vis iling Argentina as president o r a dis a rmament group, s ays she hns no idea whc lobbed tear gas bombs inlo the t>n trance o f a head· qua rters of a group protest 1ng human n ghts violations. 1 er ·1i111 111 L if ,\f '1 1 1w•s c1th i\ < da Rzchert c/11 r,••c1l>ud.:~ru~/I'1 r• 'rr/t1 1 · "'11d Stret'c 111 rt11 n11rn ' '" '"' 111111 111 ,. 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" n " .. ... 1J We''• Listening ••• ~ What do yuu like aboul the Dally l>llot? What don't y~ Uke? Call the number Mlow and your messaee will bt recorded, transcribed o.nd delivered to the appropriate editor. Th• ·amc U.hour on1w1rin1 a rvlce may be uaed to record lclttn to the l'dllor on any topic Mailbox col'llrlbutora mu t ln· elude tMlr n me and tt lcphont number tor verification. No clrculabon calls. please. 'hll wbat'a on your mind. 642•6086 Mu.t~ Mtr lN M .. lco C:lly MeMerray ...... " SMJ'*" 11 llf.ltb .. Jl '° ... .... t1 n • 1' Sm, moon, tide. ~y kMI Mlf\ t :,4'""'" 4,4 T\IUOAY f'lnl lftl 11:11 e.m. '" ,lrsl llltf\ )TI U .m. 4,1 ~---It"""' •.• IKeMllll!fl ?U._m. 4.t --... ~.,, 41 •.M., ,._ I S.... MU 1;"4 llJ'fl., n_ T...._y s:~a.rn. ..-.;;.;..--..;..-.... .._._. ......... __ ,.. ... __ .... .._ ____________________________________ TwM11t U •"'- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 1 t. 1981 L Drunks qow targets Coast woman leads attack on tipsy drivers By JOHN NEEDHA M Ot -o.11, ...... , .... lt hos been about four months since a driver ran head-on into Linda and Carlos Schmidt's car on Coast Highway in Corona del Ma r as they were returning hom e at night from a movie. Since the accident, they say the deluge of medical bills near ly caused them to lose their new ly purchased house in Laguna Beach. and their insurance will cover only half the cost of buy ing a new car Mrs, Schmidt, a nurse at the mental health unit a t South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna. suffered two fractured vertebrae, which required sur gery. and tempora rily lost the sight in her right E'ye. Her husband, an emergency room physician at San Clemente General Hospital, was diagnosed as having a brain tumor two months after the Jan . 18 acci dent, and underwent 13 hours or surgery Schmidt is now recuperating t h e ir s ur~e~' wtll be astr onomical Neither Mrs . Schmidt nor her hus band has been able to work s mce the accide nt. They said their insurance pays them about half their normal income. In the meantime, the bills continue to come in. La s t w e e k , t h e drive r o f l he c a r l hal s truc k the Schmidts' ve hicle was found guilty of a misde meanor reek· less dri ving ch a r se. Mrs Schmidt c laimed there 1s evidence that indicate d the driver had been drinking. But Orange County Deputy District Attorney J ack Sullins s aid a felony drunken driving conviction could not be sought be cause the driver le ft the scene. Sullins said a blood alcohol test is needed as evidence to p rove intoxica tion. Since the driver left. no test could be con ducted. Ca lle d MADD. Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, the loosely knit group hopes to aain t h e a tt e ntion ot na ti o n al l a w make rs and Pre sident Rea gan to get legislation passed tha t would r equir e d runken , dr ivers to lose their licenses. "J ust about every person who s igns lhe petition has a story to tell a bout a drunken driver ," Mrs Schmidt said. "Almost ever yone knows someone who has been the victim of a drunken driver at one time or another." She said she wants people to know that the kind of accident tha t disrupted her 's and her husband's li ves happens to hun· dreds of people ever y day. Qu oting a 1980 Cal ifornia Department of Motor Vehicles s tudy, Mrs. 'Schmidt s aid 65 per- cent of those whose licenses are revoked for repeated drunken driving offenses often are al· lowed to renew their lice nses within a year 's time. from the ope ration. but says Angry over what s~e sees as there is no wav lo prove the an easy out for the driver , Mrs. In addition, she said statistics s how an alarming num ber of felon v drunken drivin2 arrests being plea bargained down to lesser charges. with the victim left to suffer in silence. tumor was caus.ed bv the acca r Schmidt has become a familiar dent. Aller the surgerv. he savs sight at local i.hopping plazas. he was left with per m.a nent and where she hab been distributing total hearing loss in his right a petition ca lling for tougher ear penallles for people convicted or . drunke n driving, "It·~ going lo be tough to use m y stethoscope,·· he said Jok mgl y. The coupl e s aid they already have received $20.000 in medical bills for lhcar hoi.pital st ays alone They said the bills for Her signature gathering is part of a national effort started a ) ear ago by a Bay Area m oth e r whose 13-year·o ld daughte r was ktll ed by a drunkt•n driver "These people a re a ware of how easy it is lo get a way with driving drunk. and even injuring o th e r people ," s h e said . .. Drunken drivers are devastat- ing peoples· lives and getting a way with it." Valley bugg e d by flies Sewage treatm ent pla nt insects sparks suit A group of 1-'o untain Valley re sadents is cl aiming 1t is bugged b) "man) m1lhon. perhaps billions" or flies around the <>rani?e Count v Sanitation Dis tnct's s ewage treatment plant. In a class actjon lawsuit filed an Ora nge County S uperio r Court . the residents claim they have been victims of disease. lowered property values and dis- turbances to their living pat· terns as a resul t of flies. ·'The lies fl y over practically ever ything in the house m their desperate search for whatever flies search for." Sa nta Ana al· torney Robert Sassone said an the lawsuit filed Frida v "It 1s impossible Lo catch ail of the flies . "Becaus(' of lhei r breeding place, these fli e:,, are excep t1onally dirty and germ carry- ing,'' the attorney said. Sassone estimated that as many as JOO m es could be found in any house at any given time in the one-mile radius s ur round· ing the plant at 10844 Ellis Ave According to the lawsuit, the flies began hreeding 1n July, 1980 when plant operations were altered during a maintena nce pro1ect Al that time, sludge "human manure" as Sassone Ler med at was neither proper- ly treated nor covered," Sassone a lleged He said the nv infestation con lmued for abou·t six weeks. But S assone s aid a cou r t or der s hould be issued lo pre vent future fl y infestations. Jn the lawsuit. the residents a ls o compla in o r odor s of "human manure" and chlorine and release of che mica ls into the air. and noise O n l' hundre d for t y four persons are named as plamtiHs an the action. Sai.sone said, however. that more than 10,000 people li ve within the one-mile r adius of the plant. Also named as defendants in the lengthy action are the cities of Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, ·Huntington Beach a nd Santa Ana . It is c laimed the cities have taken no action to protect r esid ents from t h e alleged nuisances. Each resident. according to th<' suit. is demanding $100 for . increased m edic al e xpenses, $1 00 for pestic ide expenses, $8,000 for reduced enjoyment of his residence, $500 for a lleged damage fro m odors. $10,000 ror reduction of property va lue, and $25 ror each tim ~ he was awakened by noise . . Superior Court Judge Edward Wallin scheduled a t\earing on the plaintiffs' applicadon for an inj unction for June 6. \ The sanitation distri~~ has re- ferred inquiries on the flies suit to its attorney, Thol')las Woodruff, who also works as citY. s\tomey of FouiWtin Valley. Woodruff was unav'lilable fo r comment on the ~asetoda~. . • ., f.i j·: T urner files suit against TV networks WASHINGTON (AP> Ted Turner, the rounder of the Cable News Network, announced today he filed suit against the three m ajor televtsion networks and Presidenl Reagan lo break up what he called the ··predatory and illegaJ practies" involving the po o lin g o f TV n e w s coverage. Turner, the Atlanta sportsman who,..also owns WTBS·TV in Atlanta. said his s uit was fil ed in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, also names White House Chief of Staff J ames A Ba ker and Depu· also names While House Chief or Staff James A. Baker and Depu- t y Press Sec ret a r y Larry Speakes as de,(endants. In a separate action, Turner C\lso called for a congr ess ional investigation of the progr am- ming practices of the three ma- jor networks and the motion pie· lure industry to determine if their program ming was having ·'de t r i m ental effec t o n t he morals, attitudes and habits of the people of this country.·· Turner established the Cable News Network on June 1, 1980. o;r wry CNJn p::>plin suit ... tha. tnrlit.ional dacn::n en:io1tcn lD?in suit, mack florna .eprzcial 2-~ fbbric, 11\<tz. no dhzr ycu\/rz. <NZf' -wcrn . 3 button with~ and flap p:x:l<izt . -.. 44 Fmhlon lt lond • ~~ &och • 714/644·5'110 1001 We1twood Bluel •• Wntwood ""''•. 213/aotl-3273 -·------------.....-.----------------J --.44 H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11 , 1981 -mfilu~rnm Republicans need 8 years, Nixon asserts for other news organizations af· terward. PLEDGES ECONOMIC CHANGE New President Mitterrand France elects Socialist French stock market plummets in tidal wave of selling PARJS <AP> SoeiaUat Fran· • cola Mitterrand, wbo pled&ed economic change and pulled s upport from Communists and moderates, defeated Valery Giscard d'Estaing's bid for a second term as pres ident or France and ended an era of cen- ter-right government. T be French stock market plummeted in a tidal wave of selling today a reaction to Mitterrand's vow of widespread industr ial nationalization and the possibility he will give France's pro-Soviet Communists a Cabinet role. A harried broker said it was the worst selling wave he could re member The franc dropped to S.45 to the dollar. approaching the lowest level since 1971 when the dollar was worth 5.52 francs. Gold soared. T he Bank o r · France u rged calm o n the foreign exchange market. Early today, with almost 98 percent of the votes counted. Mitterrand had 15,639,673 or 52.06 percent and Giscard d' Es- taing had 14,396,439 or 47.93 per- cent. In a victory statement Sunday night al Chateau Chinon, the 64-year ·old Mitterrand said Frenchmen had e ndorsed his proposals for public jobs pro- grams, n a t1onaliza tioo of sever a l large industries and higher corporate taxes. He pro· claimed he had "no other ambi· lion than lo Justify the con- fidence of the French people" duranl( his seven-year term. Stock selling orders on the fl oor or th e Bourse, which opened 30 minutes late because of the flurry of unloading, were concentrated from nine major corporations in the front-line of Mitte rrand's na tionalization plans. A half-hour later, traders could quote prices for only fiv e of the a>o-plus French issues Ust· ed on the forward market. SEATTLE (AP > - Republicans have changed "the whole direction or the country" but need "at least eight years" to remake the federal govern- ment in their iO\age, says former President Richard M. Nixon. Nixon's presence drew a group of about 200 protest~rs outside the hotel. demonstratmg against U.S. involvement in .l:I Salvador, war and the draft. ANTI-SMOKING CAMPAIGN Speaking at a King County Republican Party fund -raiser Sunday, Nixon also said good campaign organizing and financing were perhaps even more important than good can- didates in November's elections. In his speech, Nixon said the extent of GOP victories last year "surprised most or the pollsters and the pundits." "The way that, in a contest of that sort, that you prove the ex· perts wrong, there's only one way: The campaign has to have good candidates. but in addition to that. in any kind or a close election, it must have better or- ganization and it must be better financed," he said. Shields ad drop rapped . ., >· The reception at the Washington Plaza Hotel in Seat- tle was closed to news organiza- tions that refused to pay the $150-a ·head admission charge. Of the metropolitan area's three network-affiliated television sta- tions, two wire services and half a dozen newspapers, only the Seattle Times and the Tacoma News Tribune paid for reporters to attend. Free cassette tapes of Nixon's IS-minute soeech were provided "Looking to the future, let me say that having won overwhelm- ingly in 1980 ... it's going to take . . . at least eight years to undo what liberal congresses un- der the control of the other party have done to the country over the past 25 years," Nixon said. DETROIT <AP) The gov- ernment's decision to drop an anti-s moking campaign featur- ing teen-age mode l Brooke Shie lds may be linked to "the persistence of the tobacco lob- by," the president o f the American Lung Association has charRed . The 15-year-old cover girl and ac tr ess had posed with cigarettes protruding from her ears in a $68,000 federal anti- s moking campaign underscoring the idea that "smoking spoils your looks." STILL WAITING FOR S,.,~ f1ffti!Sl•h •I YCIUf Door fCMt Stot'e ..._,"'"°"''At••' COITA .... 641-1289 ,.,..._. __ M•IMOM ~95--CM01 -c:......c:.--(I•• .... FNy, et A""......, I COLLECTORS CORNEA Rare Coln• & Stampe GOLD & SIL VER 70% ~nk Fln.nclng Now Available On Gold & Sliver ~nk Fin<1nclng Now Av<1i1<1ble ··-·---... eae ... .-.-. (714) 556-aSO South Coatt ptua Vlllaga ___ ..._ ···---c:--1 "Our 24th year" g_ Auto&Ho~ :f~· Ouotes By Phone FnJS lllSIUICE ., 541-5554 w U5-J07 ltl4H.i1Gr'·C" .. M ... Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to sel I items under THE BANK .TO APPROVE YOUR LOAN? Call (714) 752-7923 Q3F In Business To Make Business Happen You deal directly with the lender and not a broker Loans from$ 10,000.00 for any business or investment purpose ·.1.11 loans &ecured by a combination of real and per&onal property 4425 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH. CA 92660 • (714) 752-7923 ~··.-> /-"·· •.-.-o.-c~ • D ~ • _ .. _,.,. ... --······-·:::.:... .. -.......... Made in our workrooms, of our own cool "Brookscloth" ' $100. The famous Brooks Brothers "Own Make" 3 lines for 2 days only S1.SO a day. Sorry, no com- mercial ads allowed. Charge your Penny Pincher Ad or use your Visa or Master Card. Call Classified Advertising at M2-S678to place your ad. s hirt need little introduction to most well- dressed men. Here, our own experts make this celebrated shirt in Brooksc loth , a broadcloth in a blend of polyester and cotton that washes easily and needs little or no pressing. Our button-down Polo collar, short s leeves. Sizes 14 1/.i to 17. Solid shades of white, blue, yellow. $17.50 ffTAIUSHIO 1t1t health-directed commitment. • ·'The onl y interest ser ved by the announced scuttling of the program will be the tobacco in· dustry," Sinsheimer said. Schweiker had no immediate comment, nor did any of the t o ba cco companies . T h e American Lung Association met here over the weekend. The Jung association said pos ters. newspaper ads and television commercials were to use Miss Shields as a "positive. non-s moking role model" for a "la r ge following or youthful ad- mirers." OPPOSED TO SMOKI NG Actress Brooke Shields Come to the Spring Garden Parties Celebrating Om 46th Refreshments Thursday, May 14, 1to3:30 Friday, May 15, 1to5 Homr Offirr: LAG lJ NA REAC H . 2'10 Ocean Avl'ntt<' F'lower Show by Laguna Beach Garrlcn \luh and La~una N11nwr.v SAN CLEMENTE. nOI North El Camino R<'al ... Flower Show by San Cl<'mente c;arden Club LAGUNA NJ(;llEL. :3 Monarch Bay Plaza. South La~una ... Art Display anrl Refreshm<'nts LA(; U NA HILLS. 24301 Paseo cit• Valencia. Leisure' World ... Flower Show by La1wna H ills Florists LAKE ELSI NORE. 600 West Craham Avenue ... Individual Displays by local fl orists and residenl" OLIVE/ORANGE. 25:35 North Tustin Street. Orang<' ... Displays by Acacia FlorisL4' and Fabric Flower A rranJ1:<'ments by .Judith Bryant Home Interiors GLEN AVON, 9011 Mission Boulevard. Cl<'n A\'on. Riverside ... Silk Flower Arrange ments by (;Jen Avon VillaJZ"e F'lorists BALBOA.600 East Balboa Boulevard ... Disµ lay of Hand-Crafted M iniatur<' Morlels by the S hip Modelen•' As~ociation BELMONT S HORE. 4601 Second Street. Long Reach ... "The Pageant of Flowers" by the Long Beach Garcien Club. Inc. MU RRIETA. 24-736 Washington Avenue ... Display of nowers by Rancho Temecula Florists BALBOA ISLAND, 301 Marine Avenue. Balboa Island ... Flowers and Refreshments fi/~'//ln , ?t-rk~n/§~uU19J ANll l OAN AL,S()C IATION HOME OFFICE 210 Oc .. n Avtnue, Legune Beech, CA t2t51 (114) 494-7541 Addltlonal offices In San Ci.manta ... 492-1195 • Lek• Elalnore ... 874·2191 • Belmont Shore .• (213) 438·9421 L1guna Niguel ••. 49&-1201 • Ollv.,OranQe ... 998-6400 • Murri.ta ....•...•••.•.. 877·5632 Laguna Hine ..... 586-5100 • Olen Avon ...... IS81-0111 • Balbdl laland .......... 875-.'\212 Balboa ......... 873-3701 PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports, and Advertised Values. READING ENJOYMi!NT 7 DAYS A WEEK In the Dlily ... ' 1 ... \111,11 \, -EVENltG- t.'00 • ., • NIW8 -~WOMAH Diana ~ u • double agent and ancoun1er1 .,., enemy Of Iha Unll.O StatM who 1ella government aec:rata !Part 1) D TIC TAC DOUGH • M•A•S•H MS tuft•• wno fought 10t Iha ~ to UM "'*ljuel\a. I 8:00 8 Cll L~ CMT'IA'I CWl'"IATION l _ynde Cettw .. jOiMd by f\ay ~ Jerry Ae.o and CMI Elr«t Llo)'O In a ""'**-..., ...... apec4el 8 um.I"°'* OH THll'MWI CIWIW ~ a home IOt ""° Of.,._, _.,. Of Iha cruel ,,...tment that la -ailing them tti.e (Pert ~QMCMI • a * '-\ The Bit di" (1"3) Tipp! Hecnn, Aod Taylor. Olracted by Allred Htt~ 8Med on the story by Daoof\M Ou Meu- riar "°' aome un11nown reaaon. !luge lloCllt of blrda alfadl an leolated Cllltlooria -1 town e a THATI IHCMDl9li f' .. turea· a paycNc Cletac· ,,..... a porllt>M pein con- trOI Clevlce. a group ol amput .. lk)'diver1: • ,_ -gocel t9ChniqU41. D MOVW f'rank 111row1 IWI bedl out and app1tes tor a Purple Heart wlltle Hawkaya mourn1 the lo11 or a friend and _,di an undef age aoldW home • GOOOTIMU Florida'• plane 10< J J'a birthday ara aomew11a1 subdued wllan Jam•• ie.<na 11111 a computer llu given him a bad cr.01t rll· 1ng (Part 21 DYNAMIC DUO Lynda Carter is joined by Ray Charles in her musical variety special .. Lynda Carter's Cele bration" tonight al 8 on Channel 2. *••·~"I Want To live" ( 11158) Suaan Hayward. Simon Oakland AC.-girt IS conlliet.O of murder and 9enlanced to die In Iha OU chamber fl) PAOOIHOTON BEAR Padd•rv;iton goea on 1 pie· n1c. gel• h" pocture taken al Iha MASllore Ind IS tr!Ck.O into bu)'ltv;I phoney lhar" 1n an Oil company • '1i) ElECTNC COMPANY (A) Cll C88NEWS III A1tC NEWS 9:30 D ~A'S WILD • WELCOME BACK. KOTT£A Washington 11 tll• prune suapeel when th• CIUI ""'l\QI fund dlHPPAIM'S ti) IENNY Hill Benny's Weal Country character 11u the l>Mt I0\11Cl41 I 1811\er Cln give 10 lltsson 83 KC£T NEW&alAT '1i) 8TUOIO SEE "Stunt Kid' Hollywood stunt lud Re+d Rondell pat· lorma a world record· b<...,k•ng rump olf • high· rise (RI Cll NEWS CHANNEL LISTINGS «I BAAHiY MIU.ER While 11a1e citizens com- plain of pornography t>etno d1aplayed II a d•llin- gUt&ned ar1 galle<y Barney and 1111 wife •-a mar11a1 crisis .,66 11 E.DfTOAIAl 7:00 9 C88 NEWS D N8CNEW8 8 HAPPY DAYS AOAIH f'onzle 1ttampl1 to taka 1 he pleCe ol an alAAg escape wtlst 1n a magic anow to help an orphan- •. MC NEWS ·= A young SU<geot\ lrom TOkyo brings home 10 Iha surgeons ol the 4077111 tllaf they Ma out ol touch With new meOlc:al practic· ... • STAOTa Of' 8AH FM.NCl8CO When a COiiege tMChef 11 acc1dentafly shot. lie refuses 10 let the pol!Qe examine Iha bullet IO< IN• Of IOs#>g I promollon 8 KNXT 1CBS1 Los Angell''> D KNBC1NBC1 Lo& Anqeles 8 l(.lLA 1lnc:11 Los Angele!. D KABC-TV 1ABC1 Los Anqele~ ((' "FMB 1CBSI San Diego Q KHJ TV (Ind I Los An 1e1eo; 9 KCST (ABCI San D1!'QO e KnV 1lnd 1 Los Angelt>'> • KCOP TV 1 Ind I Los Angell'!> &> KCE T TV 1 PBS) Los AngPIP'> m> KOCE TV 1PBS1 Huntington Beach f!l:I OVER lA8Y 'W1do-• Men Alone" Guests theatrical pro· ducer f'rederick Bfllson, gerootoloO••• Dr James Petenon. Ken Riddell (R) ~ MACNEIL / LEHRER AEJIORT Cl) TIC TAC DOUO+i ({§ ME.AV OAIFFlN ,Gue.ts Becllinger Arv;i,. Dickinson, Lou Ferr!Q"O 7:IO I) 2 ON THE TOWN Ho111: Sieve Edwards. Metody Rogers A took at atlltetM and po111ic1 a behind-the-scenes look et re><nanca novels .... wllat llap9ena 10 Ille small Ven- tura Community of 01a1 wflen thousands turn out for tlle OJ•l Valley T ennts Tournament D F10HT BACK WYTH OAVlD HOAOWJTZ 8 SHANANA GUM! Jimmie Rodilar• D ~LYWOOO 80UAAE8 0 FACE THE MUSIC Q) AU IN THE f'AMILY As Georoe prepare. to open h11 tll1rd cleaning store. Ille Jellersons move to an allpet'lswe Eur Side apartment ft) MACNEIL/ LEHRER AEPOAT '1i) ONCE UPON A Ct.A8SIC "The Hill• Ot Huven" A careleal acc;ldent results In a bellla -rtg/'11 and wrong tor three Cll•ldren (Pllll 2)(R) CJ) P.M. MA0AZJHE A beh4nd·lhe·5Get\ff ~ at TV'1 'M •A•S•H , an Q) P.M.MAGAZINE "Thr .. 's Company" Iler JenllM HarrlM>n: an MS aulferer WllO fough1 ror the nghl to uM marl"*'•· Bil- ly BrlH inlr~ the llart or Ill• "P M. Magazine Birthday Con1 .. 1" Dr WMAker o·-UI • IOOk •• hOw C.WbOh)'dr•I• aid In giving UI energy, Chef Tell pr'98f .. 11utt.O ~ Cl) MOYIE * * "The lngtonous Bu- t•rda" ( 11171) Bo SvenM>n. Fr.O WilliamM>n Two men form an unusual lrienda/\IC> dunno tllelr anorts to aur' vive enemy attadl• and VIOler'tl dHfh dWlnO the tumuttuous days of World War II fl.l) WINNER'S CfACl.E 1M1:YOUNO MUSOAH'8 FOUNDATION Loa Anoetes Times music critic Martin Bernheim« hOSIS 11141 spec.el wllll Iha lllr• l1r1l·place w1nner1 1n piano, v1otm and cello t>e<-'°'""ng 1n a reol al taped 11 KCET'a S1UdlOS m> OHAAUE CHAPLIN COMEDY THEATRE ''One A M ' (1Qtll) Cllartle playS a drunken pleyt>oy. wllo returns from a Nglll on Ille town end runs an obatacle cou<te With his front door, tlle ata.rs and hll b9CI 1:30 CD CAAOl BUANETT AHDl'MHOS Skit .. A Swiped Life m> MOVll * * ·~ "Call Me Mlater" (11151) Be1ty Grable. Oen Oatley A told.., goes AWOL to try to wtt1 back 1111 entertainer woe romance LOS ANGELES (AP> -Lee Purcell's ne west movie offers her an opportunity to act in two or her favorite story forms. romance and fantasy. In "The Girl. the Gold Watch and Dynamite" •, she has a romance with co-star Philip MacHale. and there's the fantasy about an old pocket watch • with magical powers . In the movie. she and MacHaJe keep trying to get to the altar, but are • stopped by one misadventure after another. The watch saves the day. The two-hour movie is a pilot for a series on the ad hoc network of independent stations belong- ing to Operation Prime Time. The stations will •:• broadcast the film in May and June. It is the sequel to an earlier film. "The Girl. the Gold Walch and Everything," adapted from "' the novel by J ohn D. MacDonald. • I • ~· • t • • The show's gimmick is the gold watch Ma cHale inherited from an uncle. It allows him or Miss Purcell to stop time then set aright By PETER J. BOYER AP T_..,,.. ........ LOS ANGELES -Uh-oh. Real people are at it a1ain. Next month. NBC will begin a daily half· hour show called "Wedding Day," featuring in- studio marriages. "It's amazing," says Deanne Barkley, ex- ecutive producer of the show for Osmond Produc- tions, "people will do anything to get on television." Apparently. Marriage is a wonderful thing, but a bit dr astic just for some TV exposure. Why not simply rob a bank. or pitch a no-fliller? And why would we want to watch two strangers get married? Weddings, It seems to me. are of little entertainment value. unless Daddy ar- rives bearing arms .. The June 8·12 run is a tryout for a regular daytime seri~ next f all, and Lf that wor ks out, who knows:> Possibilities: ·'Reception Blo wout," a dally. 30· minute series leading into prime time. Focu.s changes from the happy couple to the bride 's drunk Uncle Harry. See Uncle Harry plnch. wink and sing "Danny Boy," before rippiJlC his pants ln a lunge for the garter . "Honeymoon NiSht," a prime-time series that follows the newlyweds from ti. reception studio to the honeymoon s uite atudio. There. our happy bride and groom fumble and blush and do enry· thing except what they're auppoted t.o do -t bia is network TV, alter all. "Matrimonial Blias," a rollicldns weekly aeries that checks in with our "Weddin1 Day" • couples a year after thefr weddJn1. Featured t piaodff could Include, "s.tty TUws Cblcken." ''The WMCl-Eater Runs Out ol Cord" and other blta ol Americana that mah nal people 1ucb compellln1 enterta.lnen. TM reduct.Ion of the m arri-se ceremony t.o TV entertelnment WH antldpat4MI. of courte, by Chuck Bania' c\rcua ot 11tatrlmon1al debueme nt, ''The Newlywed Game.'' Mia Bu kley, a .-MCMd TV maker and vetenn ol the "reality TV" Pf'O«Otype, "Candid camera,'' diacow'al• ~ bet .... bu n•w IMw and . Bani•' ,..anc1.aot·to0n~Sb· ---Df'Odvctl. "No, lt'• DOt like Chuck aan1a at all," 1be ••1•. '*tt.'1 like I.be 0.moadf. I t.hlDk that Chuck Banis, undentemUi lt ab bad the tnt.UOO of mil· IDI fun ol people. 1 even b..t that feelln1 with 'Can· did Camera.• But thll doaa't auike f\ul." whatever mischief has created the problem. "l think everyone has a fantasy of some sort of m yst ical proportions." said Miss Purcell. a Southern-born actress with chestnut-colored hair. "We'd all like to have powers and abilities greater than we have. 1 do. When I was a little girl my fan- tasy was having a time machine. I saw the movie 'The Time Machine' 15 times ... Miss Purcell is a busy actress who regularly switches between television and theatrical movies any actress· fantasy. She's the shoplifter who frames Gene Wilder and sets him on his way to join Richard Pryor in prison in .. Stir Crazy." Last year she co-starred with Kenny Rogers in t he season's highest-rated TV movie, "T he Gambler." About a year and a half ago she decided she wanted to do a series and starred with Granville Van Dusen in "My Wife Next Door.'' "We got beat out by another s how, which is now off the air." s he said. "This time with 'The Girl' It's a pilot without competition. It'll either sell on its own merits or not at all "I like operation Prime Time," Miss Purcell said. "There aren 'l as many people running the show. so you get to know the people you're work· ing ror. "I'd turned down series offers before, but now that I've done about everything else I'd like to do a series. It'd be nice to know whe re you're going to be working next month." ~he was born on a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, but grew up in Paraeould. Ark .. where her father is a doctor. After high school she struck out for Los Ange les lo become an actress. "I was naive ." she said . "I had m y stage makeup and I kept it in a fishing tackle box. I worked nlg ts selling clothes at a disco and A \~~ ~1\1 ~ 4P "'°"' PU\'1MO rlCtflC'I .. Tl CMIT ... IOUTll COAJl c.'DOMI l.19unt lluell 494·1!114 Costa Mesa 549 33~2 Orange 63A 2!iS3 • rauu acarT9,.. "'' ••~ \ TI.ANTIC CITY l:.at-~ THE DECtlNE olWeetem ClvHIUtlon t~lltl-4:00 .~ .. , .... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 TUBE TOPPERS KCET @ 8:00 -"Winner's Circle 1981 -Young Musicians Foundation ... Martin Bemheimer hosts a trio of first place winners in world class competition ln piano, violin and cello. ABC fl 9:00 -"The Best Little Girl in the World." Drama starring Eva Marie Saint and Charles Durning about a teen-age girl who s tarves herself to the brink of death. KCET@ 9 :00 -"G r eat Performances: Staying On." Trevor Howard and Ceclia Johnson star in a story filmed in India about a British army couple who stay on after the coun· try becomes independent. t:oo 8 CJ.l M• A •s •H The 40n111 troupe an•- • parcel of left.,• trom • tourtll·O••d• clan In H•wl(aye's ttometown (R) 0 MOVIE "The St.er Maket" (Part 1) (Premleral Rock Hudson • Suunne Plellhalle r11e atory of a HOiiywood direc- to• wnll • knacll tor 1ranal0<mlng 1ngenuo 1n10 1n1er"ati0nal 11ar1e11 and • penchant lor marrying 1111 creatoon• 11 totd 11 0 MOVIE "The Baal Lillie Girl In Tiie World" (Premleral Charles Ourning. Eva Mar,. Saint A Marnlngty model laerl· aget la dlagnoled u hav- ing enore10• ner-;ou .. MERV OAlfl'IH Guea11. e.or.noer. Ano•• Dickinson. Lou Ferriono. Jaye P M0<01n. Artllor Murray Oancets fD OMAT P£AFOAMANC£8 'Staying On Cel111 JOlln llOn and Trevor Howard 11ar u an 901ng Enouan army couple who elect 10 remam on Ind•• all@< 111 independence 9'.30 1J Cll HOUSE CALL.8 Niglll duty wreaks havoc w1111 Charley a llOClll lite IRI 10:00 II Cll LOU GRANT S.ttle •• o•van an 1nllde ..-01 pol1tica and • rouoh 111111a11on ''°"' tha P• ... corps;when ane goes on Iha road to cover • p011 llClan (R) eocm NEWS 10:30 m NEWS • IND9£HOEHT NETWON< NEWS fD LOITTOTHE AEVOUITlON The work ol m111er ,ewelet and ootc1sm1111 Peter Carl Fao•roe 11 c11ron1cled N8Hlled by Yul Brynnet '1i) MASTERPIECE TiiEATAE FUTIVAL Of FAVORITES "The Golden 8owt" Baaed on a novel by Henry James Amerigo Mnds a telegram w1111 a concealed warn•rv;i to Charlone whefl he hears of Vetver s mar ri8Q41 propoul to lier 1Part 21!RIC) 11:00 e CJ a Cl) ®J NEWS 8 8TAATAEK Cap1 K1<k 11 captured by two strange creatures wllo appear 1n ve11oua magic•! • lorms I 0 HEWL YWED GAME Q) M'A•S•H Tiie •077th racM Ille clock JOHN DARLING tou .... -aty~ llOldlerl • llNNYHIU. Go atioard aN9 With Benny inc:heroe • OO<CAVWTT Queal Hett'( Belalor'lt• (Pan t o4 2) 11-.. Cll QUINCY ...... A torren1111 ra1n11orm ....,_ dl-..cl ~~ out of • NllalCle C4tMt.,y craeting the potenhal lor • typ!IOld epidemic: D THEIUTOf' CAAIOH 0.-ta 8<Jddy Hackett, F.,narl(lo Lam••. Brend• Bool!M' (R) 8 111 A.IC NEWS NtQHT\JNl D l.ET'I MAKI A DEAL • AO HUM8AAO • 9N'llETTA Tony tr• to UYA two y<>ung ac:tr-involved 1n a deadly exlorllon ICherne tD G CAPTIONEO ABC NEWS -~- 12:00 8 SPACE: 19" One man's Ob141$SIOn With the future lead• lo a rare anc:t 11*111"'0 discovery H Ille moon hurtles into a blaz.1ng inferno Q @) FANTASYISl.ANO Tattoo ch•nge1 places wtlll Mr Roarke to granl two Showgirls llletr dr aam and a dOclO< tries to ra1111 money 10< a vest n""' nea1111 comple • IR l 0 GUNSM0t<£ The lather ot a youno gun tio111er 111es to end hta son 1 career by wounding his oun h811d m Mt88tON IUP088a.£ The IMF is assigned 10 knock our a t>O••no synd1 cate wllicll fl•M 1io111s for a bookm1k1no opera1.on (Part I) Eli) PHILOSOPHY 12:30 D TOMOAAOW Guests former l5rae11 Oetenae M1n1s1er Ezer Weuman. Koot and "'" Gano Playboy P1ayma1e ol Ille Year ferri Welles Billy Gre11am Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND Anm....,sary Ot A M ui der A man and woma11 are pl8Qued b)I lh<lir con ~ oor.. • llllal auto. moblle~t 11-.AO 8 Cl) HAMY 0 M •ttOfney ...... Herf)' 10 '*P him ~ a YOUllO m.,, aual)eet9d 01 comm"· ttng • vtolOu• cnme (R) 1:008 MOVIE * • Aldin On A Rain l>OW" (1114 1) Gene Aul"( Sm<iey Sumene 8 PSYCHIC PHlHOM!HA, THE WOfU.D BEYOND ··Beyond B1oraad1>ack Hoata Damien Simpson Stacy Hunt Guesl Elmer Green M O CD SHAKOVT g) IHO€PEHDENT NETWORK NEWS 1:10 U MOVIE • * * Tiie lmpou101e Veen I 1968) David Niven. loll AIOrtglll ®) AO~l2 t·30 Cl) MOVIE * • • '• Gun1 Al Batas! ( 196•1 Richard Allenb0< ouo11 J•ck Haw1c ins 1:601) NEWa 2:00 Q NEWS 2:20 II EDITORIAL 2:26 11 MOVIE • • • 01p lomat1c Cou11er' ( 195:>J Tyrone Power Stephen McNally 2:30 0 NEWS 3:00 m NEWS TlU!Sday's Daytime Movies -MORNNG- I 1 00 m * * West word Ho I 19351 John Wayne S111111e Manners 11 30 0 • • • Nevaoa Sm11n f Pa11 21 t 19661 Steve McOueen Karl Malden -AFTERNOON- 12.00 m * * * Force 01 Arms 1 19~11 Wilham Hol den Nancy Otson f'(IO (I) • • , One M~•e Train To Rob (197 I) George Peppard John Vernon 3 30 0 • * • Some Kind Ot A Nut I 1969) 01c:k V8/I Dyke Angie O•ckmson by Armstrong & Batiuk .JOHN, THE. 51AME5€ "TWIN J:·IGURE S~E.~S CAN'T MAKE IT. 50 ~ SPORT5-CA5TS:t, MIKE MA-.JO~S . 16 GOING ,.0 PINCH HIT OH, SWELL! ANOTHER 00RtNG INTERVIEW WITH A MEM0ER OF 11-lE S'TA'TION STAFF f H i! WE'VE GOT AN E'><i~A SPECIAL ~J(T !=OR "tOlJ IOOA'( ... F'OR 1HEM1 'I ~ 1 I ! f • Actress Lee Purcell s tudied acting during the day and worked very hard to lose my Southern accent." After six months she'd got her first part a starring role opposite Michael Douglas in "Adam at Six A.M." She said. "It was a real nice break. My family was very happy. They thought I'd starve to death out here.·· Now she has her own production company and is developing a miniseries in whic)l she will star with Karen Black. "Karen's a friend a of mine and we wanted to do something together." 5·11 ABC unveils Sunday show LOS ANGELES cAP t ABC has unveiled plans for a new Sunday morning news program that will replace· "Issues and Answers" and in- corporate part of its formal Roone Arledge, president of ABC News. told the annual meeting of the network's affiliates that the one hour program would use the format of "Is s ues and Ans wers" but would also include dis· cussion between a per manent host and a panel. No date was set fo r the premiere or the show. which will take over the time period or the children's series. "Animals. Animals. Animals ." The 800 broadcast executives representing 207 ABC affiliate stations gave enthusiast1'l' receptions at their meeting here to the two space shuttle astronauts. Ro bert Crippen and John Young. to Pierre Salinger . ABC News Paris bureau chief who was instrumental in putting together the pre- stigious .. Ame ri ca lle ld Hostage," a detailed ac rount of the release of the hostages an Tehran. and to David Hartman, host of ABC's "Good Morning, Am erica" Arledge told the mee ting that Har tman's con- tract with ABC has been extended so that the former actor can remain at the helm of the popular morning show. He also announced that ABC: Will telecast the Sugar Bowl durmg prime time for the next five years. beginning next New Year's Day. Will also present the first major network coverage of the N<>w York City marathon. set for Oct. 25 -------------------- -------a.n I $1 ·1"G1Eli I ·19 DINNEI. (') O· c: Good IOt thtff piece• of 1u1cy, goto.n bfOWn KtlllUCky "'O Fri~ Ch1Cli.tn plu1 11nglt 1ervlng1 ol colt attl/W. 0 mttNO potatoes tnd g<tvy. Ind• roll Ltmll two ollt11 Z per purch11t Coupon Qood onlv 101 comt>1nat1on wl)lltl I di11i. order• CuatO/llef PIY• all 11>911cat>lt Hit• 1u Oflet Hptrea Mty 24, Hl81 PrtcH may "•"I ti I per11CIPttillO loce I liOlll Good Gnl'f In Soutl'Mtrn Ct llle>tnlt ~)'O\I ... , s. Good IOt nine pi.cff of lulcy, goldefl bfo.n Ktnlu<:lly Fried Chicken. with '°"' rona, • •eroe cole •In , • iwoe maltltd pota1oe1 and• "*'lum llf•"Y Limit two ollen per ciurcllaat. Coupon OOoO Ottly IOf comblnelfon wlllttl dark oroer1 Cu1tOl'I* l>ltY• •11 IOOI~ ulet iu. 01111 txplrll May i4. 11181 C2C "'"'' mty Vltf'f ., Plf· llCIPthnO toc1t1on1 OOOCI only 1n Soutnem C.momla "'*' ~'" A~ic:a a 'l•YOtllt W1noow 81111*. "~IC• 1 ''•vortlt Wtfldow lltnner • ---~ I .. . ' I ' . I I I I ~·· L Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11, 1981 SPORTS Angels' timing jus~ right Fregosi breathes sigh of relief after 4-3 victorµ By JOHN SEVANO Of .. o.61 ........... The Angles leave for the start of a 10· game road trip today and, yes. Jim Frcgosi will be accompaning the team as Its manager. Fregosi was able to maintain his posi- tion because his players rallied behlnd him for the second straight day In beating the Detroit Tigers. Sunday, it was an emotional come-from- behind 4·3 win before a Mother's Day crowd of 29,689 at Anaheim Stadium. Brian Downing, playing left field for on· ly the second time this season, provided the chills with his two.out, two-run homer to dead center in the eighth inning which gave the Angels a4·3 lead. And IX>n Aase allowed his skipper a sigh of relief when he struck out the final baller in the ninth lnninc. stranding a Tiger base rwmer at third in the process. Even Fregosi himself couldn't contain his enthusiasm upon seeine Detroit's Rick Leach swing through an Aase fastball for strike three. He bounded up the steps or the duaout, slapped his hands over a job well done and went out to personally , congratulate his relief ace. "Downinf gave me the game ball,'' .said l''regos1 w1 h a smile. "We made some. mistakes but they <players) battled back." The mistakes Fregosi referred to almost had owner Gene Autry pulling the switch to the electric chair. Jn the fifth inning, Dan Ford's misplay of a double down the right field line by Champ Summers allowed the Tigers to score one more run than they should have. And, two innings later . errors by Rick Burleson and Butch llobson gave the Tigers another girt and a 3 o lt·ad The most agonizing inning. howl'Vl'r, bad to be the Angels' half or the !>IXlh wh1·n they loaded the bases with none out and came up empty despite the presence 11f Burleson, Dan Ford and Don Baylor "The tough Uung was the !>1xth a t Jeast for the manage r,'· admitted F regos1 With three Angels s urrounding him, Detroit starter Dave Rozema was abh• to work out of the jam by striking uul Burleson looking, gelling l''ord to hit a short fly to center and Baylor on a rout me fly ball up the middle As Al Cowens squeezed th~ ball for the final out or tht• inning, It app1·a1 t•d Fregosi's fute was staled a!> well But the Angel players, who ha"e ni.11le (See ANGELS, Page All> Lea drops hi,s ERA just a bit Montreal youngster unlikely candidate for first no-hitter of '81 MONTREAL <AP> Charlie Lea of the Montreal Expos is an unlikely candidate to pitch a no- hitter. He was born in that great baseball capital of Orl~ns, France. and when he began Sun- day's game against the San Francisco Giants, his earned run average was 7.36. Although Lea once pitched a no·hilter in college at Memphis State . his major league im· mortality came as a surprise to some. "Nobody expected a no-hiller from Charlie,·' s aid Expos catcher Gary Carter. "But he had a good fastball and good <'Om mand of his pitches, and everything fell into place." LEA RELIED mainly on his fastball in pitching the major league's first no-hitter of 1981 , victimizing the San Francisco Giants 4-0 in the second game of a Sunday double-header. The Giants won the opener 5-1 on Tom Griffin's four-hitter. sprang to their feet in anticipa- tion or witnessing a piece of baseball history. Lea took off his cap, mopped hi s brow and bouneed the baseball on the artificial surface a few times. a nervous habit that several San Francisco players later said annoyed them . Lea went to a 3-0 count on Bill North, but fought back and 'I 'm really digesting all of this. I 'm really not the type of person who jumps up and down.' caught him looking at a third strike. He then induced Enos Cabell to pop a 2-0 pitch to center fielder Andre Dawson. APWI~ Steve Yeager arui Ron Cey tJUmp as Cey makes f1rst-mnmg catch. Lea. 24, making his third start, knew he had a no-hitter going," he said after squaring his record at l·l. "l think every pitcher does in that situation." "I was hoping he'd hit the ball in the air lo me," said Dawson. "Everybody wants to catch the last out of a no-hitter." ~ Welch at home So did his wife, Louise, who was in the stands. "She ate most of the rose that was distributed lo all the women entering the park on Mother's Day," said an Expos official. UNTIL THE seventh inning the no·hitler was almost ob· scured by the fact Lea was locked in a scoreless duel with Ed Whjtson, 0·4. New York • m There were no dangerous balls hit and Lea only had one inning or real wildness the eighth when he issued two walks. But he got Milt May to bounce into a double play before yielding his fourth and final w41k to Dave Bergman. Bill Smith then flied lo center, ending the inning with runners at first and third. But rookie Tim Wallach, out of Cal State Fullerton and Sad· dle back College, led off the in- ning by belting Wh1tson·s first pitch into the left field stands NEW )0Rk. t AP Rob Wl•lch IO\CS Nl'\\ York He ac tuallv whistll•s the• tune of the sarn~· name loud. c·lcar and often The younµ riJ!ht hander enJOYS wandering around the big city II <' l'\'en likes the subways, behe\'e it or not Saturday night on the eve of his Sl'hl•dull•rl start against the New York :\kts. he roamed around the midtown urea just e njoyrng the sights Among the sites the Los An~cles DodJ!er..; pitcher en Joyed Sunda} wa!> Shea Stadium. where he heal Mets a 5 3 although he rutled lo finish the game "I TIUNK New York is the greatest city in the world, .. said Wel ch. "Then' 1s always some actrnn going on You know. 1 re ru~c lo lake the team bus from our hot.el '"'hen l'm 1n New York I always go out to Shea by sub way so I ('an l'nJO) the scenery on the elevated line " Welch was the centerpiece of An odd game at Shea Ile saw his team score fou r runs in the fourth inning without a hit ·'I h ad ne'er seen that anywhere before." he said. "in trade school. high school, col lege or organized ball.·' Welch was referring to an in· ning in which the first two bat- ters made outs. Then third baseman Hubie Brooks was charged with three straight er rors, tying a mode rn-day record held by n in e ot her third basemen for miscues in one m· ninl{. LOSING PITCHER Randy Jones, pos!'libly unnerved by the loose Clelding, contributed some loo'>c µ1tch1ng forcing in three rum. on walk'> Tom Hausman n•ph1n.·d Junes ;.ind also walked 1n a run lo roms>lcte the picture. Thal madl• the score 5·2 and the Mets "'en• bc•aten except for a brref flurr) 1n the eighth in nm~ "The runs allowed me to go out there and just lay the ball across the plate for the last two innings," Lea said. Lea had a carpet of white towels and a few cans of beer awaiting him when he arrived in the Expos' clubhouse. W l'kh had to leave durmg the minor uprising, but Steve Howe took ovl·r and finally c losed out the Mets' budding rally Welch admits his de livery wasn 't as good by that time. "I would ha\•e loved to have finished. but llow<> is a very cap<1blc r<'plJcc•ment " "THE ONLY thing I can say about that inning was that I was tired," Lea said. "This was the longest stretch I've pitched all year ." After Lea got pinch-hitter Jim Wohlford to ground out leading off the ninth. the 25,343 fans "I 'm still digesting all of this," he said. "I 'm really not the type of person who jumps up and down." •"""'"""°"o Charlie Lea celebrates with catcher Gary Carter nnd Wnnr11 Cromartie. W <'lch ftr l cam<' into prom· mc•nce in 1978 when he struck out Heggie Jackson to end the second game of the World Series against th<' Nf'w York Yankees. Later in the Series. Jackson got a m e a s u r l' "f r e v e n g e b y reachin$? the youngster for a s ingl<' in the fourth game and a homt-run 1n thl' sixth and rinal contest Rockets find right chemistry for success Reid's pre-game drill, Dunleavy's points get Houston even with Boston WEI.CH IS ON th<' road back. lit• had a drinking problem for a time hut appcarc; to have over- come it. thanks to a rehabilita- tion program h<' underwent in the spring or 1980 Meanwhile. Mets Manager Joe Torre refused to blame Brooks for Sunday's defeat "Hubie's loo good a p!ayer and 1·m not blaming him for the loss,'' oHered Torre "He's a winner. Why single him out" Randy Jones, the starter <who dropped to 0·51 didn't put the ball over the plate, either. Brooks, who handled a dozen chances overall, explained, "It was one of those days. Things dldn 't work out well I felt bad whe n the runs kept coming across because I knew we should have been out of the inning." HOUSTON <AP> Houston Coach Del Harris had the winning player combina· lion. forward Robert Reid had the right pre-game drill and the results erased Boslon's chances of a quick kill in the Na- tional Basketball Association cham - pionship playoff series. Harris used only six players in the brutal fourth game of the best-Of-seven series Sunday and with Mike Dunleavy playing the catalyst's role with 28 points. the Rockets defeated the Celtics 91-86 to even the series at 2-2. The series resumes in Boston Tuesday and will return here Thursday for Game 6. NEITHER ROCKETS GUARD Calvin Murphy, a super substitute off the bench throughout the playoffs. nor Allen Leavell got into the game. In fact. Bill Willoughby was the Rockets' only substitute. ·'There was no poison there, no animosi- ty that Murphy or Leavell did not play." Harris explained. "l would have used them if the situation called for it. Why mess up the chemistry if it's working?" Dunleavy responded to the mixture by scoring 28 points, a personal playoff hith. and Moses Malone, altboueh battered beneath the backboards, scored 24 points and grabbed 22 rebounds Reid, meanwhile, held Celtic forward Larry Bird to eight points for the second straight game and said an embarrassing 'We are going to do unto others as they have done unto us.' 94-71 loss to Boston Saturday did not make him tight about Sunday's game. "I got up this m orning, ale some Fruit Loops, watched Tarzan save Boy from an alligator on television and came down here to take my warm-ups,'' said Reid, who scored 19 points and grabbed 10 offensive rebounds. "When I saw Bird get the ball the rirst Ume, I thought it's time to keep it out of his hands." THE ROCKETS CONTROLLED the of- fensive r ebounds 28-17 and won the overall rebounding 49-<t7. leading Boston Coach BiU Filch to make a promise. "We are going to do unto others as they have done unto us," Fitch said of the violent activ1l~ beneath th<' boards I think the rest of the series 1~ going to h• more physical than it has so far · Reid said the Rockets respond heller when they are in pressure situation~ · "So we just told ourselves that this was Game 7 and if we lost there would be nn tomorrow," Reid said. "Now we have a tomorrow. If we had lost today. 1t would have been tough to win three straight against the Celtics." The Celtics and Rockets battled hack and forth in the first half with nt'.'1lher team leading by more than four points and it ended at 50·50. Although Boston tied the score several times. then never l<'d arter the first quarter HOUSTON LEAD A lO·potnl bulgt• with 5: 20 in the third quarte r for the biggest lead of the game. The Celtics struggled back in the closing minutes of the' match, but Filch said the Rockets never had a chance to break •·we made a lot of mistakes when we were behind and didn't rally to get back into the game," Fitch said. "We didn't. give Houston a chance to see if they wouJd break ii we came back. We didn't even bend them." San/ ord's ultimate goal -world record in 100, 200 • WESTWOOD <AP> -James San- ford's goals are lofty but, ~omidering his performances so far, not out of the realm of the po11lble. · "r thlnk my ultimate oat la 9.8 .. conda for the 100 met.era, and a world record in the 200," Sanford llaid Sunday alter be swept both aprlntl hi Utt UCLA- Pepal meet. Tbe world retofdl. currtat· ty are Jim Hlmet' 9.95 ln lbe 180 and Pietro Mennea'a Jt.12 ln thepDO. Sanford, tbt world'• top·r•l•d 1prlnter in 1979 and • r~rt at UIC thia aea•on. won the lf! ln 10.05 seconds. He beat Stanley Pioyd, lut year's No. l apriater, who u doclod tn 10.10. anlord then toe* tM IOO In 20.20. "l respect all the 1prtnters, but especially Stanley Floyd," Sanford said. "Re's still the No. 1 1printer in the world -until alter 1911, when I hope James Sanford will be.'' Sanford'• two victories were amon1 tbe bllhlJ1hta of the meet that also in· eluded Gre1 Foster'• U .10-aecond clocklna in the 11.0-mew hllb bunU•. the 1ff'CJ8d luter ever. lbd a ~ lont Jamp ~I Lewll that Ulr1Md out tobewbld· . Lewl1, from tb• Onlvorslt1 of Houaton, Jqmpod as.~, tbe Heond bat e\ter, but U.. wbld wa• .02 meten per Heoad .... the allo•able 2.00. It WU tbe '°9 -. Jump enr Ill _......., Ma level ·l Bob ,Beamon'• ,..... ,..-. of 29-2~ came in the hlJCh altitude of Mell• lco City in the 1968 Olympics). "I felt real good and everythln1 teemed to go. jwit right," Lewis said. "I trted to wait untll the wlnd died down a little blt, but f 8Utll I didn't we.it quite lone enou&b. Still, I'm pleated." Lewis' Jump cannot be entered in any official record boob becauae of the •lnd. FOiler'• cloektn• in the ldCb hurdles abned .J1 ~ off bla pnYioua belt, and be also beat r ival Renaldo N•h•mlab, the world record bolder at 11 oo. Nebemlah, maldn1 bit nnt 1tart of the seuoa, ftnl•hod Wrd, and it marlrod tbe 1econd y .. r ha a row Fotter w bea&a blm lD WI 1neet. "I was very surprised at Foster's time," said Nehemiah, who was clocked in 13.46, also behind Sam Turner's 13.43 '') don't think I was ready for tha.t yet. I'm not worried, though, l had a bad showin1 here last year and went on lo have a very 1ood year." The victory Apparently gave Foster a new shot of conOdence. "I haven't felt this good sane~ l wa In hi1b echool," 1ald the former UCLA atar. "l feel now that r can 10 out and win and run m y own race doing It. "I waa a Uttle dlsappolnt.-d that Renaldo and Sam weren't up there a lit· tie bit more," Foster added. "but I 'm clad to eet the win." 1 I I j • I I .. -.•... ....._ ......... ·~-··· .-.. -r ·,,. .. -..... ....,_.,_ .. ,_ ...... ,_ ... , ..... -... -........... _.,.._!"-_______ ...... llllllll!~~---•••••c•t ••s•s•c•••2•••s••••s12•212•1t1i1 Daily Pilat • MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 I 1· Llllil lllCH /SDUTH COAST STOCKS COMICS CLASSIFIED 63 64 85-11 ' f l I l • ( The San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh in Irvine is surrounded by major roadways, overflown by commercial jets and bordered by an abandoned refuse landfill. But the prevalent Red-Winged Blackbirds don't seem to mind. The males stake out a certain territory in the tules and try to attract females by showing off the brilliant, circular red spot on their wings. And the Ruddy Ducks can be found in great abundance in the ponds of the 202-acre marsh owned by the University of California. Some animals, however, are having harder times reaching the marsh because or creeping urbanization, says Dr. Gordon Marsh, curator of the marsh. ''It's sort or like flipping a coin when some or these animals try to cross the streets near the marsh,'' he saJd. ''Either they gel lucky or they don't." The birds are less likely to cross streets, but other aspects of urbanization threaten them. "Birds have difficulty perceiving some of these buildings with reflective glass and they end up smashing into them," said Marsh. "We get calls all the time." He said there are also natural processes at work that discourage some creatures from visiting or residfog in the marsh bounded by Campus Drive, Jamboree Road, University Drive and MacArthur Boulevard. "Some of the migratory birds that frequent the marsh need a large landing pad and the problem is that the area is becoming overgrown with vegetation and malting it rough for them to land,·• Marsh said. He added that several methods are being studied for reducing the overgrowth. A quick tour of the marsh illustrates the situation. Tules and cattafls often obscure the ponds as one walks on the earthen dikes that , separate the bodies of water in the L-shaped marsh. Wild artichokes line the dikes. Tour guide Cathy Plelnes notes that these and many other varieties or plants and anim-18 aren't indigenous to the area but were introduced by man -Spaniards in the case ol the artichokes. Tlie Starling bird is an example of one of Red-winged blackbird clings to reed to get bearings on marshland home. Wild artichokes line dikes and other spiked vegetation in ponds makes landings difficult. Photos by Gary Ambrose. text by Richard Green of Dally Pilot Staff these "European beasts." that sometimes thrive in this region at the expense of the native creatures. she said. Something else introduced by man here has the potential of doing more damage than any plant or animal. Below the bluffs in the southern section of the marsh area is an abandoned landfill, the contents of which are Llnknown . Miss Pleines explained. Officials in charge of the marsh worry that erosion might uncover a harmful substance buried there. She said that material was buried there a few decades ago, before federal and state restrictions were adopted to regulate dumping. The lrvine Company, which sold the mars hland to the University or California in 1970, strung barbed wire by the· marsh to . prevent grazing cattle from falllng in. Strands of the wire can still be seen In the area, testifying to an earlier, simpler day on the Irvine Ranch before land development became more important than livestock and agriculture. Before the land was bought by the Irvine family in 1864, it was part of a Spanish ranch. In those days. the 202-acre marsh was only a small part or a huge wetlands (called "Swamp of the Frogs" by the Spaniards) extending inland from the Upper Newport Bay area. What is now the San Joaquin Marsh was fed in earlier days by the San Diego Creek, which has its beginnings In the watershed of the Santa Ana Mountains. Now, however, the water source for the marsh comes from wells at the nearby Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant, said Miss Pleines. · The marsh is used as a learnina resource by students and educators at UC Irvine and public tours also are available. Sue Clark has become queen of the Mother lode ... B2 D a ~ South Coast hospital eyes 'inlnnd' market By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. _., .... ...,. The location seems ideal for a thriving, successful hospital. Many of the rdoms at South ' Coast Medical Center provide views of the blue Pacific, or the green hills of South Laguna. Visitors are more apt to be seen gazing out the windows than watching the tube while spending time with ailing rel- atives or friends at the 268-bed facility. But Paul McQuade, ad · ministrator of the five-story hos pital just inland of Coast Highway, does not view the loca· tion entirely as an asset. For one thing, he says, there is limited access to the 217,000· square-foot hospital from inland areas. '·Besides Laguna Canyon R oad and Crown Va11ey Parkway, there's no way for in- land patients to reach us,'' the 42-year-old administrator says. "We're off the beaten path." Partially as a result of loca- tion, the hospital is only about half full. McQuade says he wants to see a steady improve- ment, until the facility reaches federal occupancy guidelines of 80 percent. To do that, the bearded ad- ministrator says the hospital has to move awav from its former dependence on s low-growing Laguna Beach, and expand to other areas. "All too frequently we talk about how beautiful it is here, but we can't lull ourselves to sleep. We have to be more ag- gressive to inland areas.'' McQuade bas incorporated that aggressive spirit, having made some major chanees at the hospital in the past year and a half. For one thing, be no longer needs approval of the 21· member board of directors to hire or fire top aides. He 's g8Uled board support for major changes in the hospital bylaws, and has taken over more management chores from the board. Some feared McQuade was making a power play, and there was a minor shakeup during· board elections earlier this year that saw four or seven incum· bents defeated. But McQuade says rumors of a power grab "couldn't be further from the truth. "I'm an employee of the board," he said. "They are th~ policy-making body and my jo~ is nwmagement of the hospital." In explaining his role, McQuade said, "You have to un- derstand that within the last four to five years, the hospital had three pe rmanent ad- ministrators and an interim ad- ministrator on two occasions. "When you have a vacuum like that, the board tries to step in and assist. "Once havil!j done that. it's difficult to step out." But McQuade says he's "very comfortable with the present ar- rangement. I think the board has responded very well." And the board apparently likes what McQuade bas been doing to boost business at the 21-year-old hospital. Last month it approved bis proposal for construction of a new medical office building ad- jacent to the patient tower at the hospital. The 30,000 to 50 ,000-square- foot structure would bring more doctors to South Laguna, and, as a result, more patients to fill hospital beds. M cQuade figures each new physician to a hospital brings in about $300 ,000 in revenue. particularly doctors whose of. fices are near the hospital. The hospital board will lease land to a private developer who will become a general partner. Kiosk erected Laguna cristens 9-foot com munity art project ·'What is that?," the girl with the bikini top and the denim cutoffs asked. "It's a kiosk," answered a city official attending the rlbt>on- cutting ceremony. ·'Oh, it looks like a bii ashtray," she said with a shrug as she picked her way through the crowd and continued up Forest Avenue. But Laguna Beach council members, arts commissioners, city officials and photographers knew they weren't gathered to dedicate a 9-foot tall concrete ashtray. They were at the corner or Forest A venue and G lermeyre Street to christen the kiosk. a community project that was con- structed 100 percent with donated materials and labor. That means the Arts Com- mission, which set aside $2,500 for the kiosk, didn't have to spend a dime on the project. Italian-born artist Marco Sassone said merchants donated the wood forms, concFete paint and other supplies. A couple of local builders did the construc- tion, and a painter applied the fresh coat of gray paint, with blue and red trim. Sassone, who says he's been pushing for a European-style kiosk in Laguna Beach for three or four years. smiled proudly as he and Councilwoman Sally Bellerue held a colorful art poster up against the smooth side of the new pillar. A coat of white glue was slapped on the kiosk and the poster was at- tached, complete with a stamp imprint Indicating city approval of the poster. That stamp of approval must appear on all posters that adorn the kiosk, arts commissioners warn. And approval comes only after arts commissioners have re· viewed art posters proposed for the pillar. Posters must advertise cultural events. That lets out posters for garage sales or free· to· you kittens . There's also a small cbargethat goes with having a poster on th' kiosk. Small art posters, those 18 by 24 inches, cost~ per month to display. Larger ones include a space rental feeof$10 per month. For reservations, or informa· lion, call the city's recreation and social services office at491 -3311. • Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /MondaY,. May 11 , 1981 G1:Jilty c harge d She's queen of the Mother Lode LAW & JUSTICE DEPT. -You listen to what our Orange County ~udges are expounding In recent times and you're left with the notion that every time they pound the gavel, they intone: ''Bring in the next guilty defen· dant ... " WeU it isn't quite like that. What the jurists are try· iog to g~t across to the voters is the idea that they're not sort on criminals around here. Statistics quoted by the Superior Court judges at a r.\ press conference just last week ~ ~ indicated that or all adult ~ • criminal defendants hailed ____ .... _....,___ before them on felony charges TOM MURPHINI ~~~\i~:f: 94.5 percent were And of those convicted, the jurists assert that 95 P.ercent of the convicted went to the Big Slammer up the River. YOU LISTEN TO TIUS and you get the impression that getting hauled before the bar of justice in Orange County is just like being a big loser in the Monopoly game: "Go to Jail ; directly to jail. Do not pass Go and do not collect $200. . . '· Extending the game, you could go to a multiple choice question on the status or law and jus tice in Oran2e d · Former defeme attorney Leaming a paying tr6'U County. You might ask the question something like this : If a person goes to trial in Orange County on a felony charge, thh: means: (A> )-lis chances of getting off the hook aren't very good. ( B> He'd better have a defense la wyer that scores within the needed 5 percent range. (C) He 's already guilty. ( D> He's going to prison. IE> All of the above. IF YOU ANSWERED the question with <E >. the statistics sugges t that you're a winner. The suspect who is going to trial is a lways the loser , with the slight excep· lion of Answer ( B). And speaking or defense lawyers, the statistics handed out by our county jurists must cause them to cringe a little bit. Being a defense lawyer around this county must be a job Uke the used car dealer on the dirt lot in downtown Santa Ana. He smiles and says wonderful things about the Bazooka v.s he 's try ing to unload on you. But when starting time comes, he has to drag out the battery jumper cables. IF THE JUDGES' statistics are anywhere near ac· curate for our courts, you know that our county defense attorneys must have one real area of expertise. They must be very good at writing appellate briefs. You're left to wonder whatever happened to the famed defenders ot yesteryear around Orange County whose reputation was so inflated that they whispered he could get you off if you came into court with "GUILTY" stamped on your forehead. ONE OLD DEFENSE attorney had s uch a reputation t hat a juror was once heard to remark about him, ''You believed him even when you didn't believe him ... " Nowadays, you s uspect that your defense attorney in Orange County needs only one real virtue. He'd better be able to come before the judge with re· aJl y interesting motions for a change of venue. 8y ELLEN GRANDT ot•De11Y .......... EDITOR'S NOTE · T hia ta onothtr m a 1ene. of 1torlt1 the Daily Pilot will pubU1h about tn· ttreating Coll/ornlo womtn. This is a story a boul a Frenchman's ghost. a tragic fire, and a high school s weetheart. ln l he background are the exciting early days or television; a fateful luncheon with a university dean, and the cele brated bandlt, Joaquin Murieta . Sue Clark is a pretty, delicate woman, with soft auburn curls and a disarmingly sweet voice and manner. But he rs is a difficult job, running a historic Victorian hotel in the Calaveras County community. of Mokelumne Hill. As owner and manager of the Hotel Leger. Clack supe rvises a sta(( that sometimes exceeds 30 and oversees, in addition to guest rooms, a restaurant, saloon . theater a nd catering business. THE HOTEL LEGER is a two-stor y stone building with broad verandahs and graceful balconies. It was built in 1851 by George Leger, who came to California two years earlier from Alsace-Lorraine with his second wife, a very young bride. The hotel was called the ''Queen of the Mother Lode" a nd considered the most elegant hostelry in Gold Rush California . The old hotel survived three fires in the 19th century and has had many owners through the years. But the original foundation and walls still stand. And the ghost of George Leger. says Sue Clark, still walks the ha lls of his elegant creation "He's definitely here," she says "And I feel very comfortable knowing he's around!" Mokelumne Hill, now a sleepy village with a population of 836, was once the laq:est city in the Mother Lode. with m o re than 15,000 inhabitants. The county seat of Calaveras. 11 narrowly missed selection as the state capit al. losing to Sacramento by one vote in a legislative contest. Scene of som e of the richest gold strikes in the area. "Moke Hill" wasthewildestofGotd Rush boomtowns. famous for violence. including two a ll-out "wars" between rival national groups of miners . T he town was also famous as headquarters o( the das hing bandit, Joaquin Murieta. SUE CLARK'S OWN history is also fascinating A Washington state native and Northwestern University graduate. Ms . Clark, 50, participated in the very beginnings of the commercial television industry, as a writer and director al the first s tations in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle's KING-TVandTacoma's KNTV. Her California career started in 1965, when, the newly divorced mother of four small rhildren. she became a writer for Marin County radio station KTIM. Subsequent jobs include a live-year stint with Marin's Residential Treatment Center for emotionally disturbed teen -agers : a year in t he corporate world as manager or technical publications for Bechtel Power Corporation ; a nd four yea rs as d1 rector of univers ity re· lalions for the University of California Medical Center in San Francisco. All this would seem to have very little to do with Vic torian hotels. you say? Indeed. But Ms . Cla rk a lways was interested in real estate In the late 1960s. she t ried to assemble Heart attack classes set CARD I OPULMONARY r esu sc it a t ion <C PR > c lasses a r e being o Hered throughout May and June by South Coast Medical Center. The progra m i n c 1 u d e.s C P R HEALTH HELP certification by the American Heart Association. Participants are t au ght how to provide ventilation and circulation to a heart attack victim. The classes also provide heart facts so students can recognize heart attacks. For information on class schedules, call 499-1311, ext. 618. STOP SMOKING CLINIC will be offered by Pacifica ,Community Hospltll In Huntin~ Beach in conjunction wlth the Orange Cou,nly unit of the American Cancer Society t>eganrung Tuesday. For informa· tian on t he Cree health education program, call 752-8600. SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY h os pital will have a dis· cussion on prescr iption drugs and their s ide f!ffects Tuesday. Participants are encouraged to bring their prescriptions in to discuss specific problems . For informatioo, call 837·4500. STRESSCENTER at South Coast Medical Center and the city of Irvine will present two seminars on family iuues beginning Wednesday. The first seminar ls titled "Stress, Your Body's Worst Enemy." The second seminar , set for We dnesday, May 20, will be "Law and Order in the Single Family." The proarams beain al 7:30 p.m. For information, call Marine r 's Library eels exhibitio n Ao exhibit of watu color, craphlcs and calll1raphy by Anita Eean Healy will be oa dbplay at MarlMt"s Library ln Newport Beach be1innln1 Wednesday aod cont1nuln1 lhrOup June 30. TIM Newport Buc.b Clty Art.a QammJstloo riJ ·~ a ,... lilPlt• to boaOr VUat Norma laJ from nooo to 2 p.m. on,.__. UJf at tbe Newport Beacb City Hal G IJJer>:· Her work bas been ellhlblted tn 11Uerlet ln New York and Mtnneapolla, and Mrs. Kealy recently waa Juried for watercolon Into the Art·A·Falr F11Uval In Lasun• Beach. Soup Wtll be aerved at UM 1a\berlnl, wbida wW man tbe 01*\lnl ol tbe apedaJ ftbla..t try tit Lacuna Beaeb palaltt' wtlo 1peel.UZ. ln maria• 1utijeCU. 499·1311. ext. 560. ANN 8 . MARTIN, author of ''Me tablonics : The Mystic Power of the Mind" will lead a discuss ion o n "P sych ic Development for Health a nd Achi e v e m e nt" at 6 p .m . Saturday in Newport Beach. For information. call 975·0700. S MOK I NG AND YOl!R h e alth is t h e to pi c of a se min a r s pon so r e d by Riverview Hospital at 7 p.m . Thursday in Santa Ana. For In· formation on the free seminar . call 531-1653. ALCOHOLISM and the e lderly population is the topic of a discussion and workshop at a meetif\i of t he Orange County Alcohol and Aging Task Force at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday in Santa Ana. The task force ls brin&inl toeelher persona in alcohollsm Md gerontolon for' the purpoae ol learning more about t he growlns problem of alcoholism in the older population. For information, call Arnie at 499·1311, ext. seo. GE TALTWOBKS, a counsellna and 1rowtb center in La1una Beach, will offer a lecture on the basis. of Gestalt therapy at 7:30 p.m. Fr1d•Y in Lacuna Beach. For lnlormatJon, ull ,..,__,6, JrBM~LS ALCOHOLISM ta lhe top6e ol a two-hour aemlau eonduded by the C0Wlaelln1 A1•oclah1 for Hum111 Development at '7 :10 p.m Fdda7 I n Tualln . For lnformaUcn, call 8a2·l020. A ghost still walks the halls ... Sue Clark with Mokelumne Hill in background an investmeqt group lo purchase the historic Marshall Hotel in Tomales Bay . a beautiful Victorian survivor of the 1906 earthquake. The scheme fell through, and a young Marin couple purchased the Marshall. Within two mont hs, the hotel burnedtotheground. Although s he was n 't the Marshall's o wner. its loss left Clark "heartbroken." And, she says, the incident "stayed in the back of my mind" for more than 10 years lJl 1977 . Ms Clark made a major career s witch , becoming a res idential and com mercial real tor. The following year. in the s pring of 1978 . she took a Gold Country vacation trip with three friends . They visited several Victorian hotels, including the Hotel Leger. Once agatn, Ms Clar k round he rsclf "rhar med by the romance" Qf these historic s tructures. A week after the trip, one of Ms. Clark's vacation companions had lunch with an acquaintance. a dean al a Bay area university The dean mentioned "lhe friend o f a colleague · "'h o was interes ted in :-.el11ng a Gold Country hotel as at turned out. the Hotel Leger From then on. says Ms Clark "doors started openan~ And an December 1978, a closed corporation o( eight Investors, with Ms Clark as president. purchased the Hotel Leger. She moved to Mokclumne Hill in July 1979, to manage the hotel full lime E n l e r t h t• h 1 g h s c h o o I swt'ethearl A certain boy. who sat behind Sut-Clark an high school Spanish clai.s. fari.l t!ncouraged her lo con !l idt'r a ca r ee r in broadcas ting, has c hosen ricld Although tht'y dated other people sn college. tht' two met again when Ms Clark returned to Washington and very i.oon became engaged Just as suddenly. they broke the eng<1gement "To this day," s<sys Ms Clark, · I don't remember why " So 30 Yl'ars pa!>1>ed But l<sst sum mt:'r, lht!> ex riance .. John Lewi i.. now a s ucccsi.ful broadcas ter an Portland . heard about Ms Clurk "running a hotel, of all lhrngi., an some strange sounding Lown'" In Sacramento on bul>inc!>.,, l.ew1:-. <'<tiled to ask if he rould \'1:-.1t the hotel Three months letter. tht'y were married Nov. l.ew1 :-. commute~ from Portland on weekends and assists w1lh the hold wht-ne ver he can W1lh a devoted new husband. her ciildr('n m college or safely launched on careers, and the V1elor1<1n hotel of her dreams to manage. Sut• Clark would seem to ha\'e prO\cd thl· adage. "hfe begans at50 " B('rause with all the hard work. she says "I thoroughly enjo) wh:.il 1 ·m doing I'm happier thun I've t•ver been .. We welcome your comments. questions. and suggestwns about this column Please umte to Cah/om1a Woman. P <J Hor 156<1. Custa Mesa. lah/orma 92626 E::llen Brandt. educated at the l 'nrvers1ty of Pennsvtvama 1s a published author now living m Sunnyvale. Cahfonua Aries: New job i s possibility Tuesday, May 12, 198.l By S YDNEY OMARR .- ARIES I March 21 -Apral 191 · New job or assignment could be o n h o ri zon . Emph asis on break -through s. adde d recognition and imp r oved health. TAURUS <April 20-May 201: Family m e mber confesses feelings and you feel good as HOROSCOPE res ult. Accent on c h ildren. speculation. advent ure. variety and possible change of scenery. GEMINI (May 21-June 20J. Res trictions are removed . Popu larit y increases as potential comes into focus. Older f a mil y m e mb e r pay s meaningful compliment. CANCER (June 21-July 221 : Obtain hint fro m Gemini message. Opportunities exist for expression of ideas, formats. LEO (J uly 23-Aug 22 >: Articulate ideas obtain data relating to costs, interest rates. Romantic "involvement" is part of changing. exciting scenario. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: Puzzle pieces fall i nt o recognizable pattern. Harmony is restored on domestic front. Circums t ances fa vor yo ur e fforts and aspirations. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct 221 · Access is gained to confidential material. backstage maneuvers. Accent on glamour, mystery and d ia logue with d irector o f ho s pital o r c h a ri table organization. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l: Accent on dreams, frie nds. persuasion and romance. What you want as available and older individual aids an obta ining at SAGITTARIUS 1 Nov 22-Dec. 21 > · More people are drawn to you career gets boost and goal comes within sight Project can now be completed. You could receive wade publicity CAPRICORN <Dec 22·Jan 19J: Spiritual values come into s harp. clear focus You're due for a "revelation .. Emphasis on commu n1 ration , lrav<:I. edul·ation and univers al ap.J-":al · AOUARIUS 1Jan. 20-Feb 1111 Highlight security. fil'Janc1al guaranle<'s. ac<:o unt1ng and book keep mg procedures First impress ions apt w be correct know it. respond ac<'ordingly PISCES <Feb 19·March ~I Dela) actions Arcent legal reviews: clarification of rights. permission:-. Forus o n JOsnt e ffo rts. cooperation. possible partnt'r~h1p and marital status. S l apping JWt necessary DEAR ANN LANDERS Whale s trolling in the c hildren's d epartment I heard what sounded like clapping I turned a nd saw a mother slapping her :-.mall child's hands First one. then the other T h e wo m a n then srreamed. ''Never unbutton my p urse again." Within minutes I witnessed a nother mother dragging her young son along by his ear . When the toddler tried to free himself. she slapped him with such force he fell down My heart breaks when I see little ones mistreated like that. No wonder there is so much violence in the world Children learn it from their parents . When our first c hild was born. the kindly pediatrician took hold of her tiny fingers and said. "Mother . these are delicate instruments. Take care of them I have seen permanent damage d one by indiscriminate hand-slapping .. He explained ho" the adult hand com es down with s uch force (especially whe n motivated by a nger) that damage may occur to the bones. cartilage and tendons It was his personal belief that s uch punis h ment could cause arthritis in later life I raised four ehaldren and never s lapped any of them M y daught ers don't s lap their chtldn•n eithe r Plt•ase tell your ANN lANDIRS readers that mothers can find better ways to teach children not to touch things th al don't belong to them . MINE WERE TOUCHERS. TOO Oear Mothe r : Thank you for a thoughtful letter. I wonder how many parents saw tbe r..selves today. I never slapped mine, either. A ste rn look of disapproval was enough. What kind of wedding goes With today·snewhfe styles'1 Does anything go" Ann Landers' completely neu. "The Bnde's Guide" tells what's right for today's weddings For o copy . send a dollar. plus a long. self-addreised, stamped envewpe ( 18 cents postage 1 to Ann Landers, P.O. Bor 11995. Chica.Jl2..:..lll. 60611 Phillwrmonic group w host tenni.s event Announcl~ a Summer~ ForTeensl The Jane Gray Porter Committee of the ·~~=~:;:;;;;:;::;::= Oraoge County Philharmonic Society will host its SENIOR CITIZENS first annual women's doubles tennis tournament SftECIAL from 9:30 a .m . to 12:30 p.m . Friday at the Balboa zso;0 OFF ALL SH Bay Club Racquet Club. M TwL WM. o..., . A luncheon at the club will follow the competi-•·· HAtlt t1on. HAMDU ltS Entry blanks for lt\e tournament are available w.--.... ,. ... at tennis clubs throughout Orange County or in-~========~ terest.ed women can call 760-8340 for Information. Proceeds will benellt the Oranae County Philharmonic Society's concert series and youth programa. Turn your unusables Into usable ca sh. can Da lly Piiot classffled 642-5671. .... -. ..... --.......... -.... ...._ .. 111111 The San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh in Irvine ls surrounded by major roadways, overflown by commercial jets and bordered by an abandoned refuse landfill. But the prevalent Red-Winged Blackbirds don't seem to mind. The males stake out a certain territory in the tules and try lo attract females by showing off the brilliant, circular red spot on their wings. And the Ruddy Ducks can be found in great abundance in the ponds of the 202-acre marsh owned by the University of California. Some animals, however. are having harder times reaching the marsh because of creeping urbanization, says Dr. Gordon Marsh, curatororthe marsh. "It's sort of like flipping a coin when some of these animals try to cross the sireet.s near the marsh," be said. "Either they get lucky or they don't." The birds are less likely to cross streets. but other aspects of urbanization threaten them. · •·Birds have difficulty perceiving some of these buildings with reflective glass and they end up smashing into them," said Marsh. "We get calls all the lime." He said there are alsb natural processes at work that discourage some creatures from visiting or residing in the marsh bounded by Campus Drive, Jamboree Road, University Drive and MacArthur Boulevard. "Some or the migratory birds that frequent the marsh need a large landing pad and the problem is that the area is becoming overgrown with vegetation and malring it rough for them to land," Marsh said. He added that several methods are being studied for reducing the overgrowth. , A quick tour of the marsh illustrates the situation. Tules and cattails often obscure the ponds as one walks on the earthen dikes that separate the bodies of water in the L-shaped marsh. Wild artichokes line the dikes. Tour guide Cathy Pleines notes that these and many other varieties of planta and animala aren't indigenous to_ the area but ~ere introduced by man -Spaniard.I in the caae ol the artichokes. I Tlie Starlin1 bird is an example of one of Dally Pilat MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 STOCKS COMICS CLASSI Fl ED 83 84 85-11 Red-winged blackbird clings to reed to get bearings on marshland home. Wild artichokes line dikes and other spiked vegetation in ponds makes landings difficult. Photos by Gary Ambrose. text by Richard Green of Daily Pilot Staff these "European beasts,·' that sometimes thrive in this region al the expense of the native creatures, she said. Something else introduced by man here has the potential of doing more damage than any plant or animal. Below the bluffs in the southern section of the marsh area is an abandoned landfill, the contents of which are unknown, Miss Pleines explained. Officials in charge of the marsh worry that erosion might uncover a harmful substance buried there. She said that material was buried there a few decades ago, before federal and slate restrictions were adopted to regulate dumpiog. The Irvine Company, which sold the marsbland to the University of California in 1970, strung barbed wire by the marsh to prevent grazing cattle from falling In. Strands of the wire can still be seen in the area, testifying to an earlier, simpler day on the Irvine Ranch before land development became more important than livestock and agriculture. Before the land was bought by the Irvine family in 1864, it was part of a Spanish ranch. In those days, the 202-acre marsh was only a s mall part of a huge wetlands (called "Swamp of the Frogs" by the Spaniards) extending inland from the Upper Newport Bay area. _ Whal is now the San Joaquin Marsh was fed in earlier days by the San Diego Creek, which has its beginnings in the watershed of · the Santa Ana Mountains. Now, however, the water source for the marsh comes from wells at the nearby Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant, said Miss Pleines. The marsh is used as a learning resource by students and educators at UC Irvfne and public tours also are available. \ \ Sue Clark has become queen of the Mother lode ... 82 D .. a j Firm 'Scrooge' ,in Irvine aid? I By RICllAJlD GREEN Of .. ....., ......... Irvine Councilman Larry A1ran said today the Irvine Company Is acting like a "Scrooge" in refusing to donate land for a proposed animal pound in the city. "The Irvine Company has been a real Scrooge when it comes to helping out the City of Irvine and its residents," Aaran said. "The effect of compelling the taxpayers to pay perhaps $100,000 or more per acre for that land would be to ultimately diminish the quality of animal service that we hope to pro- vide," he said. Irvine Company Senior Vice President Thomas ff. Nielsen sent a letter to the city last week saying the company wasn't in- terested ln giving the city the gift of land. The Irvine City Council had requested that the land be donat- ed. The council on Tuesday nieht is to consider approving the animal pound project. "We do not feel a gift of land for the proposed use is in the in- terest of the City of Irvine or the Irvine Company." Nielsen said in the letter dated May 7. "We will, however, consider a sale of the land at less than its fair market value ... " The City of Irvine is consider- ing a $2.1 million animal pound near the Intersection of Sand Canyon Avenue and the Santa Ana Freeway to replace the over- crowded aniJna1 facility the city now leases on Laguna Canyon Road. At issue is 10 acres of land on which the city proposes to build the new animal pound. •'The Irvine Company. bavinl benefited so much from what the city and taxpayers have invest- ed in this area, ought to be much more forthcoming and generous than their letter suggests," Agransaid. Jerry Collins, spokesman for the Irvine Company (which owns the overwhelming majori- ty of land in the city), disputes Agran's accusations. "The city's parks, schools and road system have benefited significantly from our <the Irvine Company's) dedications, gifts and contributioruJ through the years," Collins said. "I might mention that ... (on Tuesday) the City Council take up the Born met' Canyon Parlts acquisi- tion, which involves our dedicat-. ing a portion of the 15-acre site. j Again the record s peaks for itself ... " 1 Agran has contended the com-• pany has forced the city to pay I "top dollar" for land In the city. 1 •. If they want to play hardball r on who gives what to whom, I'li · be happy to make up a list of , what the city has done for the company and we'll see if the 1 company has done as much for • the city," Agran said. Irvine loses power; City hall affected Irvine City Hail was without power and the police station was using an emergency generator at 10 a.m. today, 2~ hours after an underground electrical vault exploded, causing about 1,500 firms in the Irvine Industrial Complex-West to Jose power. Southern California Edison Co. spokesman Les Ritter said at 9 a.m. that there were only a ''handful of customers" without power at that lime, and be added their electricity would re- turn momentarily. He blamed the vault explosion at Alton Avenue and Jamboree Road on a "switch failure that knocked out two circuits." The explosion was limited to the un- ,dergrOWtd vault and there was no fire, he said. The area affected by the • power outage was bounded by ' Barranca Road, Von Karman Avenue, Jamboree Road and 1 Mac.Arthur Boulevard. ! Utility spokesman Ritter said there was a power outage last week in the Irvine Industrial • Complex-West that was cauaed I by a piece or construction equip- ment breaking a power line. There have been several other outages in the industrial com-I plex this year and last. Ritter explained that the in- d us trial complex near John I Wayne Airport is the largest power user in the Irvine area , and is subject to occasional out- ages. Planners· approve Koll Co. buildings The Irvine Planning Com· (Dission has approved Koll Co. building designs for a 12-story hotel, restaurant and three 10· story office buildings to be con- structed on the northeast corner of Michelson and Von Karman drives in Irvine. The commission action foliows the April 28 Irvine City Council zoning approval for the project. The Newport Beach-baaed Koll Co. estimates that the hotel, restaurant and one of the office buildlnp and a parking struc- ture will be ready for occupancl in early 1983. The two other o · flee buildings and another' park- HB, lroine youtlu cited Howard K. Aihara of Marina Hlth School In Huntin1ton Beach and Renee H. Rot.hatein of University Hilb in Irvine are amon1 10 newly selected presi- dent'• schol ars at Cal State Fullerton. Studentl in tb11 pro1ram are selected for their oubtaDClln1 academic and extracurricular record•. All 1'lll ent er the Fullertoa aebool next fall. 1 he awardl are 1pouored by tbe Preeld•t'1 A11octat•, a community 1upport or1aD.i~a· Uon. Wbmen received $toO per year to cover unlvenlt)' feea, ~·and related ex,... ... Fie.ta 1lated Senior dtl ... are lnvla.d to a Mule• ftelta l'liday at lntM IHlor CltlHD, II Sandbar& Wa7. T b• dJaner mlD• lacla4H eeeldllldN, rtlriid tllew, ....._ .,. ....... ucl dwert. Amoq U..~wlll ......... ,. aMHlcanpAnata. ing structure should be ready in "' late-1983 to mid-1984. The Koll Co. has promised the, city that a transportation management plan it has de- veloped will alleviate any major traffic problems that could be produced. Irvine doctor heads family unit at UCI Dr. Dennis Mull of Irvine, u - sociate professor of family medlclne, has been appointed chairman of f amlly medicine 1n the UC Irvine College of Medicine. Mull, who bad been aervinl as acting chairman of the depart· ment, earlier was the director o1 realdency trainllll at the UCI colle1e of Medicine. Mull, particularly interested In croacultural medical care, ha• beta workln1 with llexlcan- American and Vietnamese pa- Ueata lD Oraqe County. He bu developed an orientation pro- 1ram tor ph)·ilclan1 eateriq medic .. practice in a Mexlcaa- A m erteaa barrio comm~7 and bal bem eomulted on beaJtb probltml ol tbe Vletn1m1H I*>" pie. Ke WU Mlect.d ~ Faculty Member :bJ tM UC1 mld.lcal clua ol 1111 .... wet a warded the Dl1tllllel1b1d Seniee Award by tM Oi••1il'· l>' cumc o1~ ~"· Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 11 . 1981 \ Guilty charged She's queen of the Mother Lode ~ LAW & J USTICE DEPT. -You listen to what our Orange County judges are expounding in recent Umes and you're left with the noti~ that every time t.hey pound the gavel, they intone: "Bnng ln the next guilty defen· dant ... " Well it isn't quite like that. What the jurists are try· ing to g.;t across to the voters is the idea that they're not soft on crirninaJs around here. Statistics quoted by the Superior Court j udges at a ;:-...'\ press conference just last week -I' indicated that of all adult ~ ' criminal defendants hailed -----"----before them on felony charges TOM MURPHINI ~~~\i~~!r: 94 .5 percent were And of those convicted, the jurisJ,s assert that 95 percent of the convicted went to the Big Slammer up the River. YOU LISTEN TO TIUS and you get the impression that getting hauled before the bar of justice in Orange County is just like being a big loser in the Monopoly game: "Go to Jail ; directly to jail. Do not pass Go and do not collect $200 ... " Extending the game, you could go to a multiple choice question on the status of law and justice in Orao~e Former de/eruf! attomf!y learning a pa11ing tradf! County. You might ask the question something like this: lf a person goes to trial in Orange County on a felony charge, thi~ means: <A> His chances of getting off the hook aren't very good. ( B> He'd better have a defense lawyer that scores within the needed 5 percent range. (C) He·s already guilty. ( D ) He·s going to prison. <E> All of the above. IF VOU ANSWERED the question with <El, the statisti cs suggest that you're a winner. The suspect who is going to trial is always the loser, with the slight excep· lion of Answer (8 ). And speaking of defense lawyers, the statistics handed out by our county jurists must cause them to cringe a little bit. Being a defense lawyer around this county must be a job like the used car dealer on the dirt lot in downtown Santa Ana. He smiles and says wonderful things about the Bazooka V-8 he's trying to unJoad on you. But when starting time comes, he has· to drag out the battery jumper cables. IF THE J UDGES' statistics are anywhere near ac- curate for our courts, you know that our county defense attorneys must have one real area of expertise. They must be very good at writing appellate briefs. You're left to wonder whatever happened to the famed defenders of yesteryear around Orange County whose reputation was so inflated that they whispered he could get you off if you came into court with "GUILTY" stamped on your forehead. ONE OLD DEFENSE attorney had such a reputation that a juror was once heard tO remark about him, "You believed him even when you didn't believe him ... " Nowadays, you suspect that your defense attorney in Orange County needs onJy one real virtue. He'd better be able to come before the judge with re- ally interesting motions for a change of venue. By ELLEN GRANDT Of .. .,..",. ....... EDITOR'S NOTE · Thi• u another in a •erle• of stork• tlw Dally Pilot will publlih about in teresting Caltjornia women This is a story about a Frenchman's ghost, a tragic fire, and a high school sweetheart. ln the background are the exciting early days of television; a fateful luncheon with a university dean, and the celebrated bandit. Joaquin Murieta. Sue Clark is a pretty, delicate woman, with soft auburn curls and a disarmingly sweet voice and manner. But hers is a difficult job, running a historic Victorian hotel in the Calaveras County community or Mokelunine Hill. As owner and manager of the Hotel Leger. Clark supervises a staff that sometimes exceeds 30 and oversees, in addition to guest rooms, a restaurant, saloon, theate r and catering business. THE. HOTEL LEGER is a two-story stone building with broad verandahs and graceful balconies. It was built In 1851 by George Lege r , who came to California two years earlier from Alsace-Lorraine with his second wife, a very young bride. The hotel was called the· 'Queen of the Mother Lode" and considered the most elegant hostelry in Gold Rush California. The old hotel survived three fires in the 19th century and has had many owners through the years . But the original foundation a nd walls still stand. And the ghost of George Leger, says Sue Clark, still walks the halls of his elegant creation. "He's definitely here," she says. ··And l feel very comfortable knowing he's around! .. Mokelumne Hill, now a sleepy village with a population or 836, was once the laqtest city in the Mother Lode. with more than 15,000 inhabitants. The county seat or Calaveras. if narrowly missed selection as the state capital. losing lo Sacramento by one vote in a legislative contest. Scene of some of the richest gold strikes in the area, "Moke Hill" was the wildest of Gold Rush boomtowns. famous for violence, includi'\g two all-out "wars" between rival national groups of miners. The town was also famous as headquarters of the dashing bandit, Joaquin Murieta. SUE CLARK'S OWN history is also fascinating. A Washington state native and Northwestern University graduate, Ms. Clark, so. participated in the very beginnings or the commercial television industry, as a writer and direetor at the first stations in the Pacific Northwest, Seattle's KlNG-TVandTacoma's KNTV. Her California career started in 1965, when. the newly divorced mother of fours mall children. she became a writer for Marin County radio station KTlM. Subsequent jobs include a five· year stint with Marin's Residential Treatment Center for emotionally disturbed teen·ager s ; a year in the corporate world as manager or technical publications for Beebtel Power Corporation; and four years as director or university re· lations for the University or California Medical Center in San Francisco. All this would seem to have very little to do with Victorian hotels, you say? Indeed. But Ms. Clark always was interested in real estate. Jn the late 1960s. she tried to assemble Heart attack classes set . CA RDIOPULMONARY r es u sc itation <C PR > c lasses are being offered throughout May and Jun'e by South Coast Medical Center. The program includes CPR HEALTH HELP certification by the American Heart Association. Participants are taught bow to provide ventilation and circulation to a heart attack victim. The classes also provide heart facts so students can recognize heart attacks. For information on class schedules, call 499·1311. ext. 618. STOP SMOKING CLINIC will be offered by Pacirica ~ommunlty Hospital ln Huntlnatoo Beach in conJunctlon with the Orange County unit of the American Cancer Society beg1nn10g Tuesday. For informa· lion on the free health education program, call 752-8600. SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY hos pital will have a dis· cussion on prescription drugs and their side effects Tuesday. Participants are encouraged to bring their prescriptions in to discuss specific problems. For information, call 837-4500. STRESSCENTER at South Coast Medical Center and the city of Irvine will present two se1ninars on family issues beginning Wednesday. The first seminar is titled "Stress, Your Body's Worst Enemy." T he second seminar, set for Wednesday, May 20, will be "Law and Order ln the Sinale Family." The procrams begin at 1 :30 p.m . For Information, call Mariner's Library sets exhibition An exhlbh of water color. 1raphlcs and ca1H1raphy by Anita Eaan Healy will be °" dlaplay at Mariner'• Library ln Newport Beach be1lnnln• Wednesday and contln uins lbrouib June 30. Tb• Newport a.act. City Artl Comm••lcm wUI 1pouor 1 ,. N,UC. to baaor artltt Norma Jar from DOOD to I p,m. oa ,,_,. dar a& llail Newport a .. eti <.'tty Hall Oilll4ir1. Her work haa been exh.lbited lo 1aUer"iea ln New York and MIJu1eapol11, aod Mrt. Healy recently was juried for watercolon Into the Art·~·Falr FesUval lD La1una Beach. Soup ~Lil be served at tb• 11tberf.na, which will mark the C>ptAlq ol the 1peclal exhibit b)' tbe Lapna Beach paint. wbo 1pectall1e1 ln matbM1abjjdl, 499-1311, ext. 560. ANN B. MARTIN, author of • 'Metabionics: The Mystic Power of the Mind" will lead a discussion on "Psychic Development for Health and Achievement" at 6 p .m . Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call 975-0700. SMOKI NG AND YOUR health is the topic or a seminar sponsore d .by Riverview Hospital at 7 p.m . Thursday in Santa Ana. For in· formation on the free seminar, call 531-1653. ALCOHOLISM a nd the elderly population is the topic of a discussion an4 workshop al a meeting of the Oranae County Alcohol and A1tn1 Task Force at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday ln Santa. Ana. The task force is brinlinc toaether persons in alcoholism and aerontology for the purpose of learntns mor e about the growing pN7blem or alcoholitm in the older population. Por information, call Arnie at 499·1311. ext. 580. GESTALT WO&lt 8, a coullffllna and irowth center ln • La1una Buch, wlll offer a lecture oa the ba1l1 of Gestalt therapy at 7:30 p.m . Friday ID Lafuna Beach. For lnlormadoa. c1U•...o7&. I PEMALB ALCOHOLIS• la \be ~col a two-bour aem.lnar conducted by ttM CounHllllC A116chle1 for Human Oavtlopment at 7:80 p .m . Pr•day In TuaUn . Por ln/ormat.lon. call m-1020. A ghost still walks the halls Sue Clark wilh Mokelumne HiU in background an investment group to purchase the historic Marshall Hotel in Tomales Bay , a beautiful Victorian survivor or the 1906 earthquake. The scheme fell through, and a young Marin couple purchased the Marshall. Within two months. the hotel burned to the ground. Although s he was n 't the Marshall's owner, its toss lert Clark "heartbroken ... And. she says. the incident "stayed in the back or my mind" for more than 10 years. In 1977, Ms. Clark made a major career s witch , becoming a residential and commercial real tor. The following year. in the spring of 1978, she took a Gold Country vacation trip with three friends They v isited several Victorian hotels, including the Hotel Leger. Once again, Ms . Clark found herself "cha rmed by the romance" or these historic structures. A week after lht• trip. one or Ms. Clark's vacation companions had lunch with an acquaintance, a dean at a Bay area university The dean mentioned ·'the fnend of a colleague ·· who wa s ' interested in ~clling a Gold Country hotel as at turned out, the Hotel Leger From then on. savs Ms. Clark. ··doors started opening And in December 1978 .. a closed! C()rp<>raUon of elaht Investors,.., with Ms Clark as president. purchased the Hotel Leger. She moved to Mokelumne Hill in July 1979, to manag e the hotel full lime Enter the hig h school sweetheart. A certain boy. who sat behind Sue Clark in high school Spanish class, first encouraged her to , co n s ider a ca reer il't' broadcasting, his chosen field. ' Although they dated other people in college, the two met again when Ms. Clark returned to Washington and very soon became engaged. Just as suddenl y. they broke lh~ engagement "To this day, .. says Ms. Clark. "I don't remember why." So 30 years passed. But last summt'r, this ex ftance, John L e w 1 s . n o w a s u c c e s s r u~ broadcaster in Portland, heard: about Ms Clark "running a hotel, or all things. in some strange !>oundinl( town!" In Sacramento· on business. Lewis called to ask if: he could visit the hotel. Three months later. they were married. Now Lewis commutes from Portland on weekends and assist$· with the hotel whenever he can. With a devoted new husband, her children in college or safely. launched on careers. and the. Victorian hotel of her dreams to- manage. Sue Clark would seem to- have proved the adage. .. life: beginsatSO ·· Because with all the hard work, she says "I thoroughly enjoy what rm doing. I'm happier than I've ever been " We welcome your comment•. questums. and suggestions about this column Please wnte to Callfomaa Woman, f' 0 BoI 1560. Costa Mesa, Cah/orn1a 92626 F.llen Brandt. educated at the University of Penr1syloonia. rs a published author now living m Sunnyvale, Ca li/ornaa. Aries: New job is possibility Tuesday, May 12, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIF.s (March 21 -April 19l . New job or assignment could be on horizon. Emphasis oo break-through s. adde d recognition and improved health. TAURUS <April 20-May 20). Family m e mbe r confesses feelings -and you feel good as HOROSCOPE result Accent on children. speculation. adventure, variety and possible change of scenery. GEMINI <May 21-June 20> Restrictions are removed. Popularity increa ses as potential comes into focus. Older family member pay s meaningful compliment. CANCER <June 21-July 22>. Obtain hint from Gemini message. Opportunities exist for exprHsion of ideas. fprmats. LEO <J uly 23 -t\ug 22>: Articulate ideas -obtain data relating to costs, interest rates. Romantic "involvement" is part or changing, exciting scenario. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 : Puzzle pie ces fal l into recognizable pattern. Harmony is restored on domestic front Circumstances favor your efforts and a s pirations. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Access is gained to confidential material, backstage maneuvers. Accent on glamour. mystery and dia l ogue with director or hospital or c haritable organization. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Accent on dreams, friends. persuasion and romance. What you want is available and older individual aids 1n 1>btain1ng it. SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec 211 . More people are drawn to you career g ets boo!>t and goal comes within sight. Pro1ect can now be completed. You could receive wide publicity CAPRICOR N t Dec 22-Jan 19). Spiritual values come into s harp. clear focus. You're due for a "revelallon " Emphasis on communicati o n . travel . education and universal appeal AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). If ighlight security. financial guarantees . accounting and bookkeeping procedur es First impressions apt lo be correct -· know it. respond accordingly PISCES 1 Feb. 19·March 20>~ Dela} actions Accent legal reviews. clarification of rights, permissions Focus on joint efforts. cooperation, possible partnership and marital status Slapping rwt necessary DEAR.ANN LANDERS .. WhHe. s trolling in the c hildren 's department I heard what sounded like clapping I turned and saw a mother slapping her s mall child's hands. First one. then the other The woman then screamed. "Never unbutton my purse again." Within minutes l witriessed another mother dragging her young son along by his ear. When the toddler tried to free himself. she slapped him with such force he fell down. My heart breaks when I see little ones mistreated Ii ke that. No wonder there is so much violence in the world. Children learn it from their parents When our first c hild was born, the kindly pediatrician took hold of her tiny fingers and said, "Mother. these are delicate instruments. Take care or them I have seen permanent damage done by indiscriminate hand·slapping " He explained how the adult hand comes down with s uch force (especially when motivated by anger> that damage may occur to the bones, cartilage and tendons. It was his personal belier that s uch punishment could cause . .arthr;iUi;mlater.life ........ . I raised four children and never s lapped any of them My daughters don 't slap their children e ither Please tell your Ul lAIDIRI readers that mothers can fin<t better ways to teach children not to touch things t hat don't belong to them . MINE WERE TOUCHERS. TOO Dear Mother: Thank you for a thoughtful letter. I wonder bow many parents saw themselves today. I never s lapped mine either. A stem look or dlsapprou( was enough. What kmd of weddmg goei witlt today'snewhfestyles? Doe1anyth~ go? Ann Landers' completely Mu; "The Bride's Guide" tellis what 'i r right for today's weddings For p copy. •end a dollar. plus a tong, self ·addressed. stamped envelop« r 18 cents postage 1 to Ann Landers. P.O. Roz Il9!IS.Ch1ca o,lll.60611 · Philharmonic group to host tenni.s event Annound~a : summer~ ForTeensl ~I . The Jane Gray Porter Committee of the!~=!~!=;::~~ Oran1e County Philharmonic Society will host its SENIOR CITIZIHS first annual women's doubles tennis tournament S,ICIA&. from 9:30 a.m. to 12 :30 p.m. Friday at the Balboa 25010 OFF ALL Sllvtel Bay Club Racquet Club. A luncheon at the club will follow the compeli· M .... '110•• We4. °"" HAIR lion.Entry blanks for the tournament are available -~~~~. at tennis clubs throughout Oran1e County or in· '=========~ terested women can call 760-8340 for information. Proeeeds will benefit the Orance County Philharmonic Society's concert tenet and youth programs. Jack Anderson D •ty p·1a1 reveals in the II I Turn your unusables Into usable castt. can Dally Pilot classHlecl 642·5671. --...... ' •• f I The San Joaquin Freshwater Marsh in Irvine is surrounded by major roadways, overflown by commercial jets and bordered by an abandoned refuse landfill. But the prevalent Red-Winged Blackbirds don't seem to mind. The males stake out a certain territory in the tules and try lo 'llllract females by showing off the brilliant, circular red spot on their wings. .......... hn<l .U>e •. Ruddy Ouclcs can be found In great abundance in lbe ponds of the 202-acre marsh own ed by the University of California. Some animals, however , are having harder times reaching the marsh because of creeping urbanization, says Dr. Gordon Marsh, curator of the marsh. "It's sort of like flipping a coin when some of these animals try to c!ross the streets near the marsh," be said. "Either they get lucky or they don't." . The birds are less likely lo cross streets, b4t other aspects of urbanization threaten them. "Birds have difficulty perceiving some of these buildings with reflective glass and they end up smashin& into them," said Marsh. "We get calls all the time." He said there are alsonatural processes at work that discourage some creatures from visiting or residing in the marsh bounded by Campus Drive, Jamboree Road, University Drive and MacArtf\ur Boulevard. ··some of the migratory birds that frequent the marsh need a large landing pad and the problem is that the area ls becoming overgrown with vegetation and making it rough for them to land." Marshsaid. He added that several methods ~re being studied for reducing the overarowtb. A quick tour of the inarsh illustrates Ure. situation. Tules and cattails often obscure the ponds as one walks on the earthen dikes that separate the bodies of water In the L-shaped marsh. Wild art.le hokes line the dikes. Tour euide Cathy Pleines notes that these and many othef varieUes of plants and animals aren't indigenous to the area but were introduced by man -Spaoiardl in the case ol the artichokes. The Starlin1 bird ls an example of one of Daily Pilat MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 STOCKS COMICS CLASSIFIED 83 84 85-11 Red-winged blackbird clings to reed to get bearings on marshland home. Wild artichokes line dikes and other spiked vegetation in po1UU makes landings difficult. Photos by Gary Ambrose, text by Richard Green of Dai1y Pilot Staff these "European beasts," that sometimes thrive in this region at the expense of the native creatures, she said. Something else introduced by man here has the potenti aJ of doing more damage than any plant or animal. Below the bluffs in the southern section of the marsh area is an abandoned landfill, the contents of which are unknown,· Miss Pleines explained. Officials in charge of the m arsh worry that erosion might uncover a harmful substance buried there. She said that material was buried there a few decades ago, before federal and slate restrictions were adopted to regulate dumping. The Irvine Company, which sold the marshland to the University of Califomla in 1970, strung barbed wire by the marsh to1 prevent grazing cattle from falling in. · Strands of the wire can stlll be seen in the area, testifying to an earlier, simpler day on the Irvine Ranch before land development became more important than livestock and agriculture. Before the land was bought by the Irvine family in 1864, it was part of a Spanish ranch. In those days, the 202-acre marsh was only a small part of a huge wetlands (called "Swamp of the Frogs" by the Spaniards) extending inland from the Upper Newport Bay area. What is now the San Joaquin Marsh was fed in earlier days by the San Diego Creek, which has its beginnings in the watershed of the Santa Ana Mountains. Now, however, the water source for the marsh comes from wells at the nearby Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant, said M lss Pleines. · The marsh is used as a learning resource by students and educators at UC Irvine and public tours also are available. D Sue Clark has become queen of the Mother lode ... 82 0 <C \ .J May Company sues to halt Mesa project The May Co. is suing the City of Costa Mesa to hall construction of a 15-story building planned to house a Broadway Deaprtment Store and offices at South Coast Plaza. The suit was filed Friday in Orange County Superior Court by the •1aw firm of Rutan and Tucker. It challenges an environmen- tal impact report found suffi- cient by the City Council and a variance allowing reduction Ip parking requirements at the plaza. The suit claims city approval given C.J . Segerstrom and Sons for construction of the building ignores the impact on adjacent properties and takes issue with parking and traffic circulation proposals. The $60-million project was approved in March despite ob- jections by M ay Co. and Federated Department Stores. owners of Bulloc ks and I. Magnin, which have stores in the plaza. Only Mayor Arlene Schafer voted against granting permits in March that pave the way for tower construction. She said her conscience wouldn't let her vote for a proj· eel that would house about 800 employees without offering them some hope for housing in the community. She also indicated she fears traffic congestion that could be generated by the project when completed in an existing parking area just east of the carousel in the plaza mall. Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom Wood said today that city of- ficials followed proper pro· cedures in approving the Segerstrom project. He said the city will be work- . ing with Segerstrom lawyers in 'answering the suit. Newport council eyes housing lnws A controversial set of prov<>Sed housing policies, including a plan to relax condominium conversion laws, will be reviewed tonight by Newport Beach City Council members. The housing policies, prepared by Sacramento consultant Ward Connerly, are aimed al providinlit affordable housing. State law requires cities lo up- date housing policies by Oct. 1 after review by .the State Depart· menl of Housing and Community Development. Connerly bas suggested that al- lowingowners of apartment build- ings with four units or less lo con· vert structures to condominiums would provide a stock of new. cheaper houses. Under his proposal, there would be 8,687 apartment buildings that would be eligible for conversion. Under the city's current con- dominium conversion laws, it is nearly impossible to make such a switch. There bas been only one conversion permitted since the law was passed two years ago. Critics of the proposal contend that easing conversion laws would prodyce a mass eviction of tenants. A second proposal in the sug- gestedhousing policies that is like- ly lo draw fire is a six-point plan aimed at promoting low and moderate income housing op- portunities. Connerly, noting that house prices in Newport are averaging close lo $300,000, suggests the ci- ty should accept federal Com- munity Development funds. The last time Newport accepteq federal development funds was in 1975. ' The consul tant further suggests that city planners consider establishing rental zones in areas of the city lo preserve the city's supply or apartments. Despite criticisms that some of his s uggestions border on "subsidized housing," Connerly says his plan is tailored lo " let the market respond to very troubled times." I I • I f I I I t I Union still pickets J Mesa ·Narmco plant Machinists union members en- tered their fourth day or picket- ing today at the controversial Narmco Materials, Inc. plant in Costa Mesa, following a NB urges bait boat off Peninsula Newport Beach city officials, trying to locate a spot in Newport Harbor for a bait boat stocked with live anchovies to set up shop, have recommended that the boa( anchor off the Balboa Peninsula. Ori1lnaJly, Art Mello's ball bar1e was to be anchored off Balboa Island but residents there objected. They said It wouldn't look nice. Asked to help Mello find a more suitable location for the 58-foot bait boat, city officiall came up with a aite rourhly 800 feet off E Street on the Peninsula. They allo have recommended that llello1 wbo operate• a a.It boat known u the "Ilona U.a'' in Dana Point Harbor, be cbar1ed '3CIO a month for UH ot 1tate tldlludl. The Qq. Council la expecWd to make a deda1on on the recom- mendation tofttiht. It meeu at 7:JO la tbe council cbember, aaoc> Newport Bl..S. Hoet f amilie1 eyed Tbe Oorooa de1 llar chapter ot America Field Service la look· ln• tor ....... ramw .. to bouM two fonlln ltudeDta .July J-7. U lateNltell, call C•rol• Jobmon •t 144'°'"2 or ... .oose. breakdown in contract negotia- tions Thursday. The International Association .., of Machinists and Aerospace Workers Is seeking a three-year contract to replace one that ex-t pired Thursday night. Wages and cost-of-living in creases are the major issues: Phillips said today. The machinists seek a 20 per-" cent pay hike this year and addi- tional increases connected lo the Cost of Living Index, he said. Narmco produces plastic com: c ponents for the aerospace int .., dustry at its Costa Mesa plant; r 600 Victoria St., and at its new .1 Anaheim facillty. ' 1 Phillips said the 125 Narmco j employees represented by his 1 union are about equally divided. between the two facillties. · Narmco has been the object of comolalnts filed by nelJhbors surrounding the plant. It recent- ly pleaded no contest to Oranit r County allegation.a that it creat· ed ·a nu.lunce through chemical emisslonslastAprll. ' Power sltuhed in Costa Me.sa Tree brancbea rubbing aaalDlt ' California Edison Co. power line• ln Costa MeH interrupted electrical lel"rice to about 1,GO bomn end bUllDelMe today. EdilOO om-. said power failed at U:lf a.m. and tbet J). moat CUit.omen ,,..,. back lit tefYlee ln about IO mlaut... 1 , Blacbd out were cuatomen ii f th• area IOUt.b ot tbe San Dleco ,., .... , and north of Wl1IOt Street between Harbo' l Boulevard OD the wnt and a.., Street to the eut. t I • • • • Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /Monday. May 11. 1981 . . Guilty charged She's queen of the Mother Lode 1 LAW & JUSTICE DEPT. -You Hsten to what our Orange County judges are expounding in recent times and you're left with the notio.n th~.t every time t.hey pound the gavel, they intone: "Bnng in the next guilty defen- dant ... " · Well, it isn't quite like lha~. Wha~ the jurists 8fe try. ing to get across to the voters 1s the tdea that they re not soft on criminals around here. Statistics quoted by the Superior Court judges at a r.'\ press conference just last week -( indicated that of all adult 1 criminal defendants hailed -----·----before them on felony charges TOM MURPHINI ~~~\i~~.. 94.5 percent were And of those convicted, the jurists assert that 95 percent of the convicted went to the Big Slammer up the River. YOU LISTEN TO TWS and you get the impression that getting hauled before the bar of justice in Orange County is just like being a big loser in the Monopoly game: "Go to Jail: directly to jail. Do not pass Go and do not collect $200. . . " Extending the game, you could go to a multiple choice question on the status of law and justice in Oraol(e -ti• Former defrnse attorney learning a poymg trade County. You might ask the question something like this: If a person goes to trial in Orange County on a felony charge, thfr means: <A> His chances of getting off the hook aren't very good. < B> He'd better have a defense lawyer that scores within the .needed 5 percent range. (C) He's already guilty. ( D> He's going to prison. < E > All of the above. IF VOU ANSWER ED the question with <E>," the statistics suggest that you're a winner. The suspect who is going to trial is always the loser, with tbe slight excep- tion of Answer < B > And speaking of defense lawyers, the statistics handed out by our county jurists must cause them to cringe a little bit. Being a defense lawyer around this county must be a job like the used car dealer on the dirt lot in downtown Santa Ana. He smiles and says wonderful things about the Bazooka V-8 he's trying to unload on you. But when starling time comes. he has to drag out the battery jumper cables. I F THE J UDGES' statistics are anywhere near ac· curate for our courts, you know that our county defense attorneys must have one real area of expertise. They must be very good at writing appellate briefs. You ' re left to wonder whatever happened to the famed defenders of yesteryear around Orange County whose reputation was so inflated that they whispered he could get you off if you came into court with "GUILTY" stamped on your forehead. ONE OLD DEFENSE attorney bad such a reputation that a juror was once heard to remark about him, "You believed him even when you didn't believe him ... " Nowadays, you s uspect that your defense attorney in Orange County needs only one real virtue. He'd better be able to come before the judge with re- ally interesting motions for a change of venue. 8 y ELLEN GRANDT OfU.Mty-IWt E:DITOR'S NOTE Thu i• t111other in a ame• of 1torie1 the Dally Pilot Wlll publtth about in· teresUng CaJifomia womtn. 1'hls is a stor y a·bout a Frenchman's ghost, a tragic fire, and a high school sweetheart. 1n the background are the exciting early days of t ele vision; a fateful luncheon with a university dean, and the celebrate d bandit, Joaquin Murieta. Sue Clark ls a pretty. delicate woman, with soft auburn curlJc and a disarmingly sweet voh:e and manner. But hers is a difficult job, runnin1 a historic Victorian hotel in the Calaveras County community or Mokelumne Hill. As owner and manager or the Hotel Leger, Clark supervises a staff that sometimes exceeds 30 and oversees, in addition to guest rooms, a restaurant, saloon, theater and catering business. THE HOTEL LEGER is a two story s tone building with broad verandahs and graceful balconies. It was built in 1851 by George Leger, who came lo California two years earlier from Alsace-Lorraine with his second wife, a very young bride. The hotel was called the ··Queen of the Mother Lode" and considered the most elegant hostelry in Gold Rush California. The old hotel survived three fires in the 19th century and has had many owners through the years. But the original foundation and walls still stand. And the ghost of George Leger, says Sue Clark, still walks the halls of his elegant creation. "lle's definitely here," she says. "And I feel very comfortable knowing he 's around? .. Mokelumne Hill. now a sleepy village wtth a population of 836. was once the lart:est city in the Mother Lode. with more than 15.000 inhabitants. The county seat of Calaveras. if narrowly m 1ssed selection as the state capital. losing to Sacramento by one vote in a legislative contest. Scene of some of the richest gold strikes in the area. "Moke Hill" was the wildest of Gold Rush boomtowns, famous for violence, including two all-out "wars" between rival national groups or m iners. The town was also famous as headquarters of the dashing bandit. Joaquin M u·rieta. SUE CLARK·s OWN history is also fascinating. A Washington state natjve and Northwestern ·u niversity gr aduate. Ms . Clark, 50, participated in the very beginnings of the commercial television industry, as a writer and director at the first stations in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle's KlNG-TVandTacoma's KNTV. Iler California career started in 1965, when. lhe newly divorced mother of four sma ll children. she became a writer for Marin County radio station KTIM. Subsequent jobs include a five-year stint with Marin's Res idential Treatment Center for emotionally disturbed teen -agers ; a year in the corporate world as manager of technical publications for Bechtel Power Corporation ; and four years as director of university re- lations for the University of California Medical Center in San Francisco. A 11 this would seem to have very little to do with Victorian hotels. you say" Indeed. But Ms. Clark always was interested in real estate. ln the late 1960s, she tried to assemble Heart attack classes set CARD I OPULMONA R Y resuscitation <CP R > c lasses are being offered throughout May and June by South Coast Medical Center. The program includes C PR HEALTH HELP certification by the American Heart Association. Participants are taught how lo provide ventilation and circulation to a heart attack victim. The classes a lso provide heart facts so students can recognize heart attacks. For Information on class schedules, call 499-1311, ext. 618. STOP SMOKJNG CLINIC will be ortered by Pacifica ~ommunlty Hospita l in HunUnston Beach In conjunction with the Oranie County unit of the American Cancer Society beginning Tuesday. For informa lion on the free health e<lucation program, call 752-8600. SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY hos pital will have a dis · cussion on prescription drugs and their side effects Tuesday. Participants are e ncouraged lo bring their prescriptions In lo discuss specific problems. For information, call 837-4500. STRESSCENTER at South Coast Medical Center and the city of lrvine will present two seminars on family Issues beginning Wednesday. The first ser!Hnar is tilled "Stress, Your Body's Worst Enemy.'· The second seminar, set for Wednesday, May 20, wlll be "Law and Order ln the Sinale Family." The programs be1ln at 7:30 p.m. For information, call Mariner 's Library set s exhibition An exhibit of water color, graphic• and calll1raphy by Anita E1an Healy wlll be on dllplay at Marlner '• Library tn Newport Beach bttlnnln1 Wednesday and, conUnuln1 throuch June 30. Tbt Ntwport Beach Clty Alta COcnmllllkln Will JPC)ftaor a re· Ceplloa lo bGhOr artist Norma Ja1 frOm-. ~.m. oa ,_. dar • .. Nen ..-at, HallO~. Her work ha.s been exhibited ln 1aUel"'le1 in New York and Mlnneapoll1, and Mn. Healy recently was Juried for wat.reolon into the Att-A-ll'alr Festival In La1una ~ach. Soup wUI be served at lb• 11Uterin1, which trill mark the open1a1 ol lbe as*lal ubJIMt by \.be w,un. Bead patDW WllD apeellllaia ln llW'IM•bleN· 499·1311, ext. 560 ANN 8 . MARTIN, author of "Meta bionics : T he Mystic Power of the Mind" will lead a discuss ion on "Psychic Development for Health and Achievement" at 6 p .m . Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call 975·0700. SMOKI NG AND YO U R health is the topic of a semi nar s ponsored by Rive rview Hospital at 7 p.m. Thursday in Santa 4na. For in· formation on the free seminar, call 531-1653. ALCOHOLISM and the elderly population is the topic of a discussion and workshop at a meetlnl of the Oran1e County Alcohol and Aglng Task Force at 7:30 a.m . Wednesday in Santa Ana. The task (orce ls brln1ing to1ether persons in alcoholism and aerontology for the pUJ'PO'e of learning more about the arowtng problem of alcoholism In the older population. For Information, call Arnie at 499·1311. ext. 560. OEST A LT W O R &S, • counselinc and •rowtb center In Laauna Beach, wlll off er a lecture on lb& basls or Geswt therapy a\ 7:30 p.m. Friday In L11una Beach. For Information, call 497-4076. f'SMAL& ALCOBOLISa II lbe topic of 1 two-how seminar conducted by tbe CounHllGf A11oclate1 f or H11 m 1D Denlopmtnl al 7:H p.m. P'rlch1 In ~_.1t1n . ror l11fonnaUoia. c.U al·lOIO. A ghost still walks the halls December 1978, a clo•ed corporation or eight lnveators, .. with Ms. Clark as president, purchiued the Hotel Leier. She moved to Mokelumne Hill lo July 1979, to m a nage the hotel full ·lime. Enter the high sch ool. sweetheart • A certain boy. who sat behind Sue Clark in high school Spanish' class. first encouraged her to: co n s ider a ca r eer in; broadcasting, his chosen field.! Although they dated other people In collcge, thetwo met again when Ms. Clark returned to Washington and very soon became engaged.; Just as suddenly. they broke t~ engagement. "To this day." say~ Ms . Clark. "I don't remember why " So 30 years passed. But last summe r. th1l> ex-fiance, John L e wi s . now a successful broadcaster m Portland, heard about Ms Clark "running a hotel, of all things, m some strange sounding town' .. In Sacramento on business, Lewis called to ask if he could vi sit the hotel Three months later, they were married Now Lewis commutes from Portland on weekends and assists with the hote l whenever he can. Sue Clark with Mokelumne Hill in background With u devoted new husband, her children in collcge·or safely launched on careers, and the Victorian hotel of her dreams to manage, Sue Clark would seem to have µroved the adage. "life beginsat.50 " an investment group to purchase lhe historic Marshall Hotel in Tomales Bay , a beautiful Victorian survivor of the 1906 e arthquake. The sche m~.J fell through, and a young M-arin couple purchased the Marshall. Within two months. the hotel burned to the ground Although s he was n 't the Marshall's owner, its loss left Clark "heartbroken.·· And, she says, the incident "stayed in the back of my mind" for more than 10years In 1977. Ms Cl ark made a major career s witch, becoming a residential and commercial realtor. The following year. in the spring of 1978, she took a Gold Country vacation trip with three friends. They visited several Victorian hotels. including the Hotel Leger. Once again. Ms . Clark found herself "charmed by the romance" of these historic structures. A week after the trip, one of Ms Clark's vacation companions had lunc h with an acquaintance. a dean at a Bay area university The dean mentioned "the friend of a colleagu e .. wh o was interested in selling a Gold Country hotel as it turned out. the Hotel Leger From then on. says Ms Clark. "doors started opening And m Because with all the hard work, she says "I thoroughly enjor what I'm doing I'm happier than I've ever been " We welcome your comments, queSllOl1$, and suggestions about thaa column Please wnle 10 Calzfornw Woman. P 0 Box 1500, Costa Mesa. California 92626 Ellen Brandt , educated 01 the l.,n1 vers11y oj Penruylvama. is a published authar now I wing in Sunnyoole. Cahfomaa Aries: New job is possibility Tuesday, May 12, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 191: New job or assignment could be on horizon. Emphasis on break -throughs. added recognition and improved health. TAURUS <April 20-May 20>: Family member confesses feelings and you feel good as HOROSCOPE res ult. Accrent on c hildren. speculation, adventure. variety and possible change of scenery GEMINI <May 21 -June 20) Restrictions are remove d . Popularity increa ses as potentiaJ comes into focus. Older fam ily member pa ys meaningful compliment. CANCER <June 21 -July 22): Obtain hint from Gemini message. Opportunities exist for expression of ideas, formats. LEO <July 23 -Aug. 22). Articulate ideas obtain data relating to costs, interest rates. Romantic ''involvement" is part of changing, exciting scenario. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Puzzle piec es fall into recognizable pattern. Harmony is restored on domestic front. Circumstances favor your efforts and aspirations. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Access is gained to confidential material, backstage maneuvers. Accent on glamour. mystery and dialogue with director of ho spital or c haritable organization. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on dreams, friends, persuasion and romance. What you want is a vailable and older individual aids in obtaining it. SAGl'ITARIUS I Nov. 22·Dec. 21): More people are drawn to you career gets boost and goal comes within sight Project can now be completed Yo u could receive wide publicity CAPRICORN <Dec 22 Jan 19 ): Spiritual values come mlo sharp, clear focus . You 're due for a "revelation " Emphasis on com muni cation . travel , education and universal appeal. AQUARIUS 1J an 20-Feb 18 > Highlight ::.ecurity, financial guarantees, accounting and bookkeeping procedures First impressions apt lo be correct ~ know It. respond accordingly . ; PISCF.S <Feb 19-March 20): Delay actions Accent legal reviews. clarificat1on of rights. perm issions fo'ocus on joirit efforts. cooperation. possibk> partnership and m arital s tatus.· Slapping not nece ssary DEAR ANN LANDERS. While s trolling in the c hildren 's department I heard what sounded like clapping. I turned and saw a mother slapping her small child's hands. First one. then the other The woman then scre amed. "Never unbutton my purse again." Within minutes I witnessed another mother dragging her young son along by his ear. When the toddler tried to free himself. s he slapped him with s uch rorce he fell down. My heart breaks when I see little ones mistreated like that. No wonder there is so much violence in the world. Children learn it from their parents. When our first child was born. the kindl y pediatrician took hold of her tiny fingers and said . "Mother. these are delicate instruments. Take care of them. I have seen permanent damage done by indiscriminate hand-slapping." He explained how the adult hand comes down with such force (especially when motivated by anger> that damage may occur to the bones. cartilage and tendons . It was his personal belief that such punishment could cause arthritis in late r life , I raised four children and never s lappe d any of them . My daughters don 't s lap their children either Please tell yow- INN LINDERS readers that mothers can find better ways to leach children not to touch things that don't belong lo th em MINE WERE TOUCHER$, TOO Dear Mother : Thank you for a thoughtful letter. I wonder ho)" many parents saw themselves today. I never slapped mine, either . A stem look of disapproval wasenougb. . What k111d of ~dding goes wfh today'&newhfe atyles' Doesanythitag go' Ann Landers' completel11 n4w "The Bnde's Guide" tells whal's right for loday'1 wedding1. For, a copy. send a dollar. plw a Imig. self-addressed. stamped 1nvelope tUB cenla postage1 to Ann Landers. Pp. Box J 1995. Chica o, Ill. 6061 I. j ---F Philharmonic group to lwst temUs event Annound•a ~ summer~ ForTeensl · Jack Anderson fteilv 111111- reveals in the --•I I!• Turn your unusables Into usable cash. Call Dally Piiot classHled '42·5671. ..._------~-·--..................... __ N BS Orange Coast DAILY PILOTISunday, May 10, 1981 -----------------------------------------------------------..., ITE TRANSACTION OUOTAfl0N51"ClUOI. T•AO•S 0" H41 "IW YOIUl. MIOllft\I "ACl~i( il'tW tQ~TO" 01 t tOIT AlllD Cl"CIN"ATI •tOC• I X'NANOlt ANO •lll'OllTIO "'" TNC ""\0 ANO '"'fiNI I Dow Jones Final OFF -12.90 CLOSING 963.44 'eating' well The way lo get ahead in the food bu11iness is to stuff yourself by buying other companies Then you get fatter and fatter. The one wbo eats the most wins. Chicago-based Beatrice Foods began its eating binge in the middle of World War II (when no one was looking>. Previously a dairy company, Beatrice bought an Oriental food s company, La Choy. in 1943. Does chop suey mix with milk? In the business world, you bet it does. Beatrice went on Crom there t.o buy more th1m 400 other companies, including the ones that make Dannon yogurt, Eckrich meats, Switzer licorice and Tropicana juices. Not all these acquisitions were In the food field. Beatrice also latched on to Samsonite luggage and Airstream motor homes (you got lo have something 1n which to ~ c arry around 1·· a II that food > ,; ~ Jn any cast!. 'r "'• this hearty ap· +~~ petite paid off. -::;;;;;m=m~._.._ ~----------~t~tr~a~:s:~ lllJll IBlllllJZ General Foods to become the America. largest food-based corporation in ~EATRICE'S CHICAGO area neighbor. Kraft, lro1{ed on hungrily a~ this meal continued ad in· fmitum. And then, toward the end of last year, under the aegi~ o! a new leader. John M. Richman, Kraft began to show how widely It could s pread its cheese. First on its menu was Dart Industries of Los Angeles, which was consumed in one bitP to form a new com- pany called Dart & Kraft The Dart acquisition didn't bring in any new foods but 1t made Kraft the proud Possessor of West Bend Pols and pans <to cook Kraft macaroni-and· cheese>, Tupperware (to store the leftovers) and Duracell batteries <to spark other acquisitions ). Ear· ly this year Dart & Kraft came to the table again, consuming Hobart Corp., the Troy, Ohio, maker of KitchenAid dishwashers (Jl fits: after you eat, you have to gel the dishes washed) . This fre01.ied eating didn't escape the attention of the onetime kingpin of ttie food business, General Foods <GF> of White Plains. N:Y. (Maxwell House. Jell ·O. Kool -Aid. 81 rds Eye, Post ce reals, Gainesburgers, Burger Chef. Shake 'n Bake>. So GF went out and put 1 he bile on Oscar Mayer , the Wisconsin meat packer. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS .... ...,. 1 GilRff !)IA l MelSUl/I El J G TFi l.Uc>f 4 Of\Ed • ~ 5 Felrel\ld pl 6 Eva11Po I 40pt I HIMo 7.72pl I Cook UNI ' OuqLI 2IJf 10 Plo,_rEI II H0tlln Corp It GF 8.nEC11 U Ke,,. Miii :; :::'1~ 16 IC.CPL 1.J3pl 11 a ..... ,..,. II Am .. lpl It l TV C» pll JO low1El LIP 21 ATE Corp U Dl•bold wl 2J 0.IE 7.Mpf 2f PolEI 4.lO!lf 75 C•rt•r Wall . H...,. l l--J V1nDorn Co J AmAlrtn"" • C•rllno g s ientmbele 6 OIOn "-nn . I eMfl tp . 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IS .. 2' l\lo U\11 -,_ ·~ -14 1n. --u -114 Pct Up ti Up to Up U Up IJ Up 7.J UP 67 Up 6.1 Up •O Up S.t Up U Up s.l Up S.I Up 5.1 Up S.1 Up S.O Up •• Up U Up 41 Up U Up 4,J Up U Up 42 UP '1 Up 4.1 Up U l'U Off "' Off 11.0 Off ••• Off ••• Off t.2 Otf 1.1 Oft 1 I Otl 7.1 Off 7.1 ()ff .. 7 Off u Off .,, Off ., ()ff •• ' ()ff "° Off S.1 Off u Off S.4 Off u Off u Off .u Off S..4 ~ t1 NfW YORI! \l'PI -l oleo, -O<•O. ...., ,,.. ~ "" .,,. ..... ....,., M;h ... ,,.,'<al' Slot- bctW!oe -· ""°"'9 n11'°".,1y ol """" lhon r ... v.1rcp n1,400 12.... -'-Hud180U o no.soo is-~ GullCen fl J ... 'CIO ,,~ 11'> Tubo~a 110,.00 ~ -.,.. HouOllTr 71.100 :JC»\ -1~ lntlnim s~ 1),100 l\'t • ~ S~nl .. Cotp '1 ,000 Ullo ~==:~' ~;;~ ~>t . '' ... W1119 8 Sl.SOO 40l(O ~ METALS ~ tt...el Cefl41 I~. U S. dffll- llonl LH4 .,lll<enh 1 pound. II"< .. ,,. cenlJ • pOund, Ollllvered. Tho $6.601S 11\ellll WMll compoalt• lb. Al11lfti-16 cenh •pound. H. Y Mere wry "20 00 Pt• f IUk "l•tl_, lo'S6 00 troy oz •• H~ Y SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS LetMlefl: "'°"""" 1111no •'°' oo. 111> 1u.u. Le.._: •11-ll•lno '493.00, up '7.lS f'erla: af1e""'°" 1111no U21.l3, yP W .47. f'r•fllllw1: ll•lno ucn.cn. up ua.°'. &wrkll: 111• an•moon 1111r.o ~.oo. ""' U .00,,.., 00 •tilt<! H•11•y & MArlftall: only deity ouot~ "9l.OO. otf ll 2S E ..... .._. only N llY QUOl• Mn 00, off ., JS E_....,.., only O.lly quote febrl~ttod '512.72. up., ~ SYMBOLS I· ·-----------. ---------. . -.. --·-- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 11 , 1981 THE F4MILl' c1ac111 "Grandma uses the bottom port for reading, the top port for looking out the window, and the midcle for watching TV .11 MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Speedlng ... running a red light...fallure to yield right of way ... jay-walklng ... " IUDGE PARKER · ' • -WATCH SuoDENL' AWARE THAT OUT.' MA(;01 SfN~N 16 HAVlNv A PR06LEf\{ WITH lHE MA~ 6HE I~ f',1(l 1NC• e>.\M AND !"AN J;:l'!"H '1(1 Hfr;: AID BUI A f•ECONC' T0(1 LATE' ~---..v GABIFIELD HE.V, GARF\ELP, WMAi t:'O 'JOO TH\NK OF MV NE.W WAU.PAPER? ACAOSS IActrns Girdner • Slly 9Smlflcs l•Chur"Cf'llNt 15 Gin of eong 18 Hindu p<lnc;eu 17 Opinlon1tld 19 Fool 20SublM 21c11n 50 Abner'a l1tller 51 St1mul111 52F. - Fitzgerald ~Price paid u0r .. 80 Munctied 81Na - lndllnl a2 Rocilet ataoe 84 Potentt.1 trouble UNITED~weSyndlcete S1turday'1 Puule ~ 12 ..... ""'· 41,...,. 13S--. .. ~ 71 llgCMlno 11 ~ men . DOWN 2• Vlbrettont 53 Up-tight ' Dllmey 25 .,.. mlllM 55 C\IMd Ptftl 2 .,,., 27 -!tit .., 51 Ctumpet'• 3 lnfomled 21 8odley Ft. CCMlll • Cid 1«'111 30 Oii - -51 II P..,.., SllebfNler .-i llt~ IL. Unit \ 3' ....... noit ''-undone BIGGEOaGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) s ' "I hate Mondays." DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum }-<~ • S·I/ ' t "He's upstairs. Said he wouldn't 'stay 1n the same , room with liver and onions'!" by Harold Le Doux . by Ferd & Tom Johnson MAMIE STl~L B,ACI( VISITING HE~ MOTHER, WI LLIE? 7 ftnc ~ ..... 12 Cur""4 \#llt'. ................. 6"- • DefUnct as 101N .._,. Miit. t Golf bl* 37 T*'*' a ,_l ftNf. '° ~··*' .0 T,_ .. Oolllfltlll). , 'NuOii'llCW ~ CIDll dllW ...... l ·-----------.----......... --~ ............... ·------ PMNlJTI I KNOW ~T WE SMOOLO 00 ! ~RE ALL T06ETHER MERE SO WE Sf«llO HAVE OllR PICTVRf TAKEN ... NANCY VOt.JI( I LJ(. I~ FAMO(.).S FOR S~IAJ&ING ~H 7'HE ~LIE:S ON TJ1e Cl.JIOOSITY CW.RIO'(, CA7'f GORDO SLUGG0,0 0 YOU EVER SWEEP YOUR HOUSE? • WE'l.l SEND IT HOME TO MOM AND DAD ... I DOUBT IT And that's the story <i how two soklitrs and their sl5ter met in France during World War 1. by Charles M. Schulz • And I don't care lf anyone belf eves me or not. 0 I I 1 ~-*lt-"~;,.., by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushmiller by Gus Arriola FUNKY ttlNKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk BRABBLE DR.SMOCK yt)U Pl C' CA1.-t; c>oWN!5,.AIRS ANP AS'K FOR ONI!! OJI# -rHI!! GALS ,.~OM ,.HI! NUfllllSl!!S' POOL..1 Pl PN'1" YA , c:>OC."fO" ~ WHA1'tttl1 DOING, MOM? , . iHE. C05i Of ~E1HIN6 UK£ lH~ 15 oar OF 'lfit QuE5ilON ! .001REALLY !AFEW 1RIP5 10 iHE iOORNAME~f OF R05E5 ~ADE AND If !AnlW I ~£~0 1'AA1' A ~\Ce: 61(, "°'1 l Al4 l>l"IE 'fOU AN £fl'IO'f10NAL ~1' l&)IO l iOI/~£ OEl'~£SSEO ! SO WHY "fHe c:>uMe GUe!91"10N l' PAAl1iCAU. 4' ~ ffiR 1rSELF ! . by Kevin Fagan I A\..~O ~uo 'fMA'f l'(Ol'LE Atil E~l416rf INC~OI &LE <!.1llEt41.'fll IN f1 ME.~ ~ E'tf'RE~E. ANbt~. by George Lemont by• .ynn Johnston I OIDN'f KNOW You WERE 1Hffi" SMART'