HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-18 - Orange Coast PilotOUNIE COAIT
M O N (l;\r M/\'f IH l'IHl
................
Henrietta Giuboco of Los Altos had a kiss for her frog. "Golden
Girl ," after takmg first place al the annual Calaveras County
Jumping Frog Jubilee at Angels Camp
O C entrants flop
as frog trainers
ANGELS a AM P Ouke. the
John Wayne airport entry in the
1981 Ca l ave r as Cou n ty
Fair Frog Jumping Jubilee.
hardly lived up to his name
sake
The frog jockeyed by airport
manager Murry Cable jumped a
mere 3 rt. 4 inches. barely 116th
the distance of the ultimate win
ner.
"Next year," Cable croaked
after Duke failed to live up tc
anticipations. Cable had other
words directed tc1 the frog
Anothe r Orange Coun t y
entrant. American Dream
jockeyed by the Daily Pilot'~
Frederick Schoemehl. a lsc
failed to perform as expected
American Dream placed 18th in
the media jump with a distance
of 7'7"'. Schoemehl had words
too .
The winner of the competition
was HEtnnetta "Hank" Giuboco,
44 , a Los Altos speach therapist.
Her Golden Girl Jumped 18'6"
and, despite some grumbling
from fellow contestants about
Jumping pract1cei:.. moved into
tho wi nners circle. "( was just lucky,'' said Mrs.
Giuboco. Perh a p s She is ,
however. a member of the team
that i:.et the world record of 20'3"
in 1976. The record setter was a
b1 ~ bull frog named E Davey
Croakett
Members of the team wore
di s tin ctive r ed Jacket s
emblazoned with their names
and patches denot mg their now
world famous win. They ob-
\' 1ous ly t ake frog J umping
Sl'flOUsly
So doe~ Stcv<' Co le. 34. of
NC'wporl Beach, Jockey for the
frog entered hy radio station
KF I of L os Angeles a nd
pN-;nnalil ies A I Loh m an and
Hoger Barkley
Cole. an entrl'preneur in·
'ol' cd m numeroui. enterprises.
uc;es hypnotism.
· R1hb1tt, nbbitlt. ·· Cole in·
loncd to a frog during an in-
lervi<.'w The once feisty frog im·
mediately was calm.
<Sec FROGS, Page ~2>
Ylll 11111111 llllY M l
ORANGE C OUNTY C A LlfORN IA 25 CENTS
Spark~ fly i!J.-chase
Suspects in Mesa shoplift nabbed after 2-cities pursuit
A couple suspecteti ot shop-
lifting rammed a Costa Mesa
police car at South Coast Plata
with their car Sunday, blew a tire
and then led a chase into Newport
Beach with sparks flying from the
wheel rims, police said.
Arrested at Fas hion Island
when their front wheel assembly
collapsed were Robert Williams,
24, and Shirley Brown, 29, both of
Los Angeles.
The two are held in Orange
County Jail in lieu of $25,000 ball
each for suspicion of stealing $387
worth of clothlng from Saks Fifth
A venue at the plaza, police said.
· Williams, the driver, aJso is
held for suspicion of assault with a
deadly weapon and resisting ar·
rest, officers said.
The five ·mile chase was
launched at about 5: 10 p.m.Aen
Saks security agents calleAor
police help to arrest the couple as
they left the plaza store and
headed for the parking lot.
As the security agents moved in
on the. couple's car, the suspecU
sped away, sl~mmed into the side
of officer Wayne Rledmann's
patrol car and headed for the
Corona del Mar Freeway with
sparks flying, police said.
Rledmann was joined in the
pursuit by two other Costa Mesa
patrol cars. As the pursuit led into
Newport Beach along Jamboree
Road at speeds up to 60 miles an
hour, two Newport policemen
joined the chase, officers said.
Costa Mesa U . Tom Lazar said
the fleeing car's wheel rim was
"worn right down to a nub" before
the chase ended.
He said no one was injured.
Siamese· twins 'starved'
Illinois officials probe 'orders' of physician-father
DANVILLE, Ill. !AP > -.
Townspeople were shocked by the
story of two ll·day-old Siamese
twins who were removed from a
hospital here after a stale welfare
worker found them starving -al-
legedly on orders of their physi-
cian-father.
"Everybody's talkil\g about it,
but the hospital won't tell us
anything," said a lab technieian
at the Lakeview Medical Center
in Danville, where the twins were
fou nd, "listless and whimper·
ing , .. last week.
An anonymous telephone tip re·
suited in stale child welfare
workers finding the twins, a
published report says. The
Chicago Sun -Times said the
twins' medical c hart at the
Lakeview Medical Center in
Danville ordered workers not to
feed them.
But state child welfare officials
say they believe the twins, who
'Murray' uins
toad thrby
COALINGA <AP> An ugly
, critter named Murray won the
42nd annual Horned Toad Derby
in this western San Joaquin
Valley comm"'ity.
Murray, imported from the
Mojave Desert near Palmdale,
hopped the course in 49 seconds
Sunday, d e feating s u ch
s talwarts as Mad Daddy, Chili
Powder, Brutus and a former
winner, Repeater.
··I want a blood test on the guy
who won." joked Gord on
Oakley. the derby's chairman
and Repeater's trainer.
A total of 122 toads were im-
ported from the Lancaster ·
Palmdale area. Only eight were
homebred because horned toads,
once plentiful around Coalinga,
are hard to find these days.
are joined at the waist, had a
guardian angel at the facility -
someone who violated those or·
ders and kept the twins alive.
''Where I work they all think it's
sick," said Karen Moody, a
nurse's aide at the Americana
Health Care Center, a nursing
home across the s treet from
Lakeview.
Vermillion County State's Al·
torney Michael Clary said his of·
fice is considering criminal
charges against the rather , who
has not been identified.
The lllinois Department of
Children and Family Services is
a lso investigating, although
director Gregory L. Coler said of·
ficials at the Lakeview Medical
Center in th.is community of 42,000
at first refused to cooperate in the
investigation.
·'They know they must
cooperate," Coler said. "It is ob-
vi o us that some h os pital
employees knew of the situation,
butyettheydidn'treportit."
Coler said the twin boys were in
fair condition and have gained "a
few pounds" since Wednesday,
when the department ordered
them transferred to Children·s
Memorial Hospital in Chicago.
They were being fed in -
travenously.
The hospital refused to release
information about the twins lo·
day.
Coler said the twins, whom he
d escribed as "sever ely de·
formed," weighed 10 pounds at
birth. Their weight had dropped
to less than 7 pounds when tbey
were taken from Lakeview.
Both the attorney for the twins'
family, David Kirk of Danville,
and the president of the Lakeview
Medical Cente r , R ic hard
Livengood, declined comment.
On Friday, Vermillion County
Circuit Judge John Meyer grant·
ed temporary custody of the twins
to the state.
The -same day, the state's at·
torney's office filed a petition
claiming that the twins had not
been properly cared for. The
petition said boepilaJ workers had
failed to give the twins food,
water, oxygen or necessary
medical treatment after their
birth Mays .
Meyer did not permit reporters
to view the petition until the
names of the parents, the hospital
and the doctors involved bad been
blocked out. However, Coler said
the twins were born at Lakeview
to the wife of a Danville·area
physician.
One of the entries on the twins·
medical charts made either May S
or 6, said, "do not feed in ac-
cordance with parents' wishes,··
according to unnamed sources
quoted in the Sun-Times.
$3.59 gas no deterrent
Despite gripes, Boston station busy 24 hours a day
BOSTON I AP l A furor
erupted two years back when
Glenn Heller's Uny Gulf station.
nestled among the affluent
dwellings of Beacon Hill, started
c harging Sl.42 a gallon for
gasoline -then about SS cents
above the goinl rate. ·
Some motorists called him a
"capitalistic pig." Others took
him to court.
But business stlll is booming,
even though Heller's price is up
to $3.59 a gallon for unleaded
gasol~ne at some hours of the
day, appar e ntly among the
hi ghest in the nation.
"You can call me a 'capitalist
pi g' only If there i s n o
alternative," s ays Heller. "I'm
not a monopoly. I don•t force
people to com~ here.
·'There's a guy just 200 feet
away selling gasoline 20 hours a
Pope P aul leaves
• • inte nsive care
KOME (AP>-" Pope J ohn PauJ
U was moved from the intensive
care unit to a 1eneral care
hospital room todaf. hla &lit
birthday. In St. Peter's Square.
where the Pope w11 wounded five
days aao, 31 cardinals led prayer•
in a speciaJ birthday Mass.
Doctors aaJd the pontiff bad 1
restCul nllht and woke up reellQI
well aJtbou1h ruMln1 a 1ll1ht
rever.
"We a.re steadily •r proachln1
tbt U... *MG w• wU be able to
H)' U..'1 .. IOftter In)' dlftltt'
of Infection," ••id the (hief of
medical staff 1t lbe pope's
b0tpllal, tieeorctint to lbe ltaJlan n.wa apnty AOl.1'Thl1 moment
ll Unked to 1 number of f acton. above all, lJat 'l&Hppearan~ Of
1 ... r,11 Or.~QlJ.Uo TrnaJU WU
quotaduaaylnt. • l
The pope will be watched
around the clock, hospital source•
aald,
His new, lltb story room at
Gemelli PolicUnico Hospital has
10 lmaae of the black Madonna
of Czestocbowa, the moat
famous lcon or Poland. The Pope
waa bom as Karol Wojtyl1 on
May 18, 19'l0, at Wadowlce, near
Krakow, Poland.
SI x rooms were aet 111C1e tor ute
pope. hia private 1ecrelarles,
doctors, DW'HI and V1Ucan of.
fttllll and Ylllton. The pope's
room h .. a window witb a view ol
tbe ma1ntrlcent dome of St.
Peter's BaslUca.
V aUcan ontclala Hid the pope's
announcement 8\inday that tM
had "alncereJy pardoned" hls as·
sall1nt would not 1ffect the
( POPE, Pase Al)
day until 3 a .m. at Sl .49 a gallon.
But 1·m always here, and people
are willing to pay for that re-
liability. I'm a capitalist, yes.
But a free market capitalist ."
I# ....
During the gasoline crunch of
1979, Heller attracted national
attention when his Beacon Hill
Gulf started cbar1ing the then·
unheard·of price of $1.42 a
gallon.
A New York City bomb lquad offjuT CGnWI a bomb from tM U.S. Mtmon to the UrtUed Natfona tMa
morning. TM <.tmce um deJf~ed 1DUh oUwr tpedal deliwrJ/ maU to tta. milnon.
The move prompted several
court challenges, but Heller says
his new "variable pricing" is
clearly legal.
·'After President Rea1an de·
controlled 1asoline prices," he
aald in an interview, "I im·
mediately sent blm a telearam
Bomb discovered;
100 flee mission
aayin1, 'Thank you very much, NEW YORK (AP> _About 100 Mr. President. Now l 1can use my profits to pay the aovern· people were evacu1ted from the
ment hllber taxes lnatead of US· fourth noor of the U .s. Mi11ion to
Ins them to pay te11l feea. • " the United Nations today alter a
Thoee letal fees have been pipe bomb was discovered ln
mountln1 since tM day t"o .gectaJ delivery mail, police
years aao when Heller rejected ~id.
a federal cetUna on 1a10Une The device was delivered with
prices and cbaraed what be other special deUVtl')' mail when
thou1ht the market would bear. the bulldinl opened ror bUllMll,
Federal official• said at tbt and w.. cbte0vered when the
time tbe price appeared to be packa .. puHd t.broulh a routine
the hllbeat ln the nation. Gulf 1eeurlty 1crtenln1, tald a
OU Corp. eald it "deplored" member of CM mlNlon Mftl'tty
Heller's prtcea. Motort1t.1 pldtet· force, wbo would not Allow
td hl1 atatlon, aad Hvnal hlm1elttobeldmtJfted.
truck•r• blockaded t h•
entrance. Tbe U .8. Department
of ltneray and th• 801ton
Con1umer Council took Helter to
court, compl1lnlna be w11
chu1l111 more than the 17.7·cent
markup tbln allowed.
A feet.Tat Judi• made him
GA.I, Paae .U>
"
A pdUce omc... wlU. a dot
trallMd to lllllr lor exploelY• COD·
firmed U.. ~cU.• aoatalaed H ·
PI01lve1, ~laid.
Police nld CMJ bad 1oti.n no
telepbOlle calli from aa1oa•
clalmlq N1"81lblUty for the
bomb.
The city poUce bomb 1quad re·
moved the device and took it to a
flrln1 ran1e for dlsmantllnc or.
.detonation, offlcen said.
Over the weekend, three bombl
were _planted at Kennedy lD•
ternaUonaJ Airport, lncludlnt one
which exploded and killed an
airport worker. There was nolm·
media.. lndlcauon wb•tb•r the
bomb fOUDd today wu connected
wlU. lhole at CM airport. 1
111111 c• 1111111
Cloudy tonlabt and
Tuesday. Sll1bt chance of
drlule Tuesda1. Much
cooler inland. Lowe
ton11ht 55 aJon1 lbe cout, eo Inland. Hllhl Tuesday
66to89.
£..t='. ! ........... 1:
~l .......... .
"
ll • * • • • • Orange Cout OAJL Y PILOT ,Monday, May 18, 1981
,
Co111·t cites Miranda rtlle
Psychiatric test ruling will affect death penalty procedures·
WASHINGTON (A P > -trov'enlal "Mlraoda doctnn•," murde rer Erneat Benjamin cedur .. tn Vtrilnla and
II 4 d f danta muat be rf'Quirlnl thet criminal sus· Smllb, who received no auch Oldab~ma, accordtn1 to one of
ur ;,_rprie t: cblalric tat· -pecU be warned of their ri&bts wamlna• before or dut'lnl a 1'74 Smith I lawyers, Joel Ber1er of
wlnan:, the ft :~u would be to remain silent and to have a interview with a paychlatrist. New York City. d
I es r · b l l •s help durina question· Today's rulinl likely will af. Moat states with eath penalty
uaed after • conv~Uon to~ i~:Y:~lies to such situations. feet at least 30 other death row laws to not use psychlatr~c
cbdoee life or dea as P B a unanimous vote the inmates in Texas, and perb~ testlmony about a murderer s
ment. the U.S. Supreme Court couit overturned the death ten· dozens more ln the state. It also "future danaerousness" to de-
ruled today. .d It s con· tence o r convicted Texas could affect death penally pro-termlne whether death or life ln The court Sal · prlsonls theapproprlatepunlsh·
From Page A1
POPE. • •
criminal proceedings a1ainst the
Turkish man charged witb shoot·
lne the pope. The pope's rematks,
in a tape-recorded message
played by loudspeaker to a
crowd in St. Peter's Square.
touched off inqu iri es to
newspapers asking' if that meant
the suspect would be released.
A Vatican spokesman, the Rev.
Romeo Panciroli, said the pope's
doctors were inviting foreign
doctors to R om e for con·
sultalions.
.. In view of the great interest
expressed the world over the the
pontiff's health . . . they are in·
viling as consultants some
foreign colleagues of clear
fame." No names were given.
As the white-a nd -yellow
Vatican flag fluttered outside in
celebration, Cardinal Carlo
Confalonieri, 87-year-old dean or
the College of Cardinals. led a
crowd of 6,000 in a birthday Mass
in the basilica, the largest church
in Christendom.
The pontiff's fellow patients
planned to attend a second Mass
for the same purpose this af-
ternoon in a chapel in Rome's
Gemelli Policlinico Hospital.
In his intensive care room, the
pontiff rose from bis bed and sat in
an armchair Sunday for the first
time since a gunman pumped at
least two buJlets into him Wednes-
day in St. Peter's Square, hospital
officials said. Wearing a while
stole over his hospital gown. he
celebrated Mass.
In a brief. tape-record ed
m essajite broa d cast bv loudspeaker at noon Sunday to
15,000 people in the cobblestoned
square, and by radio to millions
more in Italy and abroad, the
pope said he had pardoned his at-
tacker.
· · 1 pray for that brother 01
ours who shot me. and whom I
have sincerely pardoned," the
pontiff said in a slightly slurred
but steady voice.
Mehmet AJi Agca, the 23-year·
old Turk charged with shooting
the pope, remained under heavy
guard in Rome's police head·
quarters. In New York. the
Turkish ambassador to the Unit·
ed States, Sukru Elegdad.
described Agca as a hired killer
for an international right-wing
group.
Agca has insisted that he acted
alone, but Italian police believe
someone helped him escape from
a ·rurktsn J811 m 1979 and travel
through half a dozen European
countries before the shooting.
From Page A1
FROGS •••
But even hypnotism didn't
help.
"I think maybe I got the frog
too relaxed, .. Cole explained.
Cole re ceived no com-
pensation from KFI for his ef·
forts. Uke so many others, he
just lik~ to jump frogs.
They've been jumping frogs in
this historic minlng camp since
1928. The first competltion was
held to celebrate the paving of
the city streets.
Now, the competition -bued
on Mark Twaln's story. "The
Celebrated Jumping Frog of
Calaveras County.•• attracts
entrants from throughout the
country.
Even President Reagan' was
represented. But like Cable and
SchoemehJ, he turned out to be a
loser. Jellybean placed last in
the competition for politicians.
Next year, Mr. President?
I 0 'run state'
SAN YSIDRO <AP> -Ei1ht
men and two women have com·
pleted a 1,239-mlle, state-Ion& run
sponaored by the California
Podiatry A.l10Cl1tion and to raise
mone1 for a sporta clinic. The trip
took one week.
FISHING ZONE U.S. missile destroyer Weddell,. center ,
dwarfs a J apanese fishing boat in the Sea of Japan, as an
unidentified Russia.n cruiser keeps a close watch in back·
ground. U.S. warships have been charged with causing
damage to fishing gear during joint exercises with the
Japanese.
Six enter pleas
in child porno
Six persons arrested in con-
nection with alle&ed child por-
nography activity in Huntington1
Harbour have pleaded innocent.
and have been ordered to appear·
at a preliminary hearing July 13:
i n West Or a n ge County
Municipal Court.
Arraigned Friday were John
Steen, 55. and his wife Christi, 30,
both of Huntington Harbour;
Mary Yvonne Plunkett, 22. of
Long Beach ; Teena Lucille
Schoobs, 21, of Costa Mesa: Irma
Trio claim
gold bullion
TOKYO (AP> -Three fish··
ermen today ofticially claimed!
ownership of 102 pounds of gold
they round floating off the
Japanese coast in 1978, a booty
worth $780,000.
Akio Hamot.omoto, 51 ; his son.
Tatsuaki, 26 ; and younger
brother Yukltaka, 48, took
possession of the 96 gold bars at
the city office or Shimonoseki in
western Japan.
They found the gold fl oating on.
tire tubes after a morning fish·
ing trip_ just off the co1st ot
Shimonoseki , 560 m iles
southwest of Tokyo, and were
able to take ownership formally
after no one appeared lo claim
it.
Poker finale
under way
LAS VEGAS <AP> -The grand
finale of the annual World Series
of Poker gets under way today
'With what's expected to be a rec-
t0rd number of players and the
mostprhemoneyever.
More than 50 players already
have paid their $10,000 bu.y-in and
the total is expected to reach 100
by the time the big "Hold "em"
game begins at Blnion's
Horseshoe Club In the downtown
Casino Center. The game is ex-
pected to end by Thursday.
Carillo Jimenez, 35, of Anaheim;
and Patricia Marie Lombardo:
20, of Los Alamitos.
All six are free on bond, accord-
ing to the Orange County District
Attorney's Office. The suspects
face charges of engaging in sex
acts with children, along with
narcotics violations, according to
the district attorney's office.
The Steens and Ms. Plunkett
were arrested April 5 when Hunt·
ington Beach police raided the
Steens' Venture Drive home in
Hunlin1t.on Harbour and seized
videotapes a nd photographs
described as child pornography.
The other three sus pects were
arrested a month later as a result
of a police investigation.
Orange County Deputy District
Attorney Marty Engquist said one
a1dltionaJ arrest may be made.
From Page A1
GAS ••.
lower his prices temporarily.
and Heller later was convicted
of overcharging. But a federal
appeals court overturned the
ve rdict and ordered a new trial.
A pre-trial hearing is set thls
month, and federal officials said
they planned to prosecute.
Meanwhile. gasoline prices
were decontrolled, making the
federal gas price ceiling ob·
solete. So Heller. 31, decided in
March it was time for "variable
pricing."
He began· by raising his price
from $1.SS per gallon to $1.79
from midnight to 8 a .m . Busi·
ness did not fall off much, so he
slowly raised it to $2.59. Then
$2.94. Not until he reached $3.94
a gallon did his profit margin
begin to decllne.
His current daytime price.
between 8 a .m. and 7 p.m., is
$1.69 for unleaded -about 25
cent.s hilher than most or hJa
downtown competitors. From 7
p.m . to midnight It's $2.S9; dur-
ing the early morning hours the
price has leveled off to $3.59.
MAIN Ofll!ICa
James Vandenberg, a
spokesman for the Department ol Energy In Waahlnaton, said
an Informal DOE survey this
month showed no other se[V_ice
station was "anywhere cloee" lQ
Heller's early-mornin1 1uoline
prices. He also said be knew of
no other atatlon ualn& v•rtable
pl:'lcln1 for 1uoline.
Deaplte the 1Utf prices. Heller
lays be aella about 2,800 aaJlona
a week -700 1allon1 durlns the
expen1i\'e oveml1ht houri .
n.om.P.HMy ,_...,
..... N.WMCI .....
L~~·
~Murptilne
~-H4L:U.,
........... c-.-...c:A, • ,...,..._:._1 ... c:...-..,cA.,..
• · R••I• '• move allowed me to use• my ltttl• laboratory,
wboae Hl• purpou la to
1enerat. lneome fw me at t.be
hl1heat rate poulble," 11ld
Heller, Wbo boulbt tM •t.tiola lD
ment, as does Texas.
Today's ruling did not over·
turn Smith's murder conviction.
It had to d~ only with his death
sentence, which was overturned
··A criminal defendant, who
neither initiates a psychiatric
evaluation nor attempts to in-
tr od u ce any psy c hiatric
evidence, may not be compelled
lo respond to a psychiatrist If his
statements can be used against
him al a capital sentencing pro-
ceeding," Chief Justice Warren
E. Burger wrote for the court.
Burger said the psychiatrist's
r eport on Smith's "futur e
dangerousness" could not be
admitted as evidence at the sen·
tencing trial because Smith had
not been given a chance to re-
main silent.
Smith was convicted and sen-
tenced for the shooting death or
Dallas grocery s tore c le rk
Willia m Moon during a 1973
armed robbery. but Smith did
not kill Moon.
TriaJ testimony indicated that
Smith tried to shoot Moon when
the clerk appeared to b e
reaching for a gun but that
Smith's gun jammed. Moon was
shot and killed by Smith's ac-
complice.
While he was awaiting trial.
Smith's trial judge ordered that
h e be exami n ed b y a
psychiatrist. Dr. James Grigson
of Oallas .• Smith, who was never
told that Grigson was evaluating
anything but his competence to
stand trial, cooperated fully dur-
ing a 9()-minute examination.
Arter Smith's conviction. a
separate trial was held to de-
termine hi s se nt ence
Prosecutors called Grigson as a
witness to testify about his find·
ings. He s aid Smith was a
·'severe sociopath who would
continue his previous behavior ...
Under Texas law. a convicted
murderer's future dangerous-
ness can be used to justify the
death sentence.
Banks boost
prime rate
to 20 percem
NEW YORK CAP> -Two ma·
jor banks raised their prime lend·
ing rates today to 20 percent.
becoming the fir s t banks to
c harge that rate since early
February.
The boost was initiated by
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co in
New York , the nation's fifth·
largest commercial bank. and
matched by First National Bank
of Chicago, ranked No. 9.
It came just one week after
banks boosted the rate to 19.5 per·
cent. A month ago, the r ate
charged by major banks was 17.5
percent.
The increase came a mid con-
cern that the Federal Reserve
Board will again tighten credit in
an effort to slow monetary growth
and fight inflation. The board's
policy-making Op en Market
Com mitlee was meeting today.
The prime rate is the rate
charged by banks on loans to c•r·
porate customers. although some
companies are able at times to
negotiate better rates and many
companies must pay higher rates
that are often based on the prime
rate.
·~-........ AND FOR OUR NEXT TRICK -Having a difficult time han.
dling the pressure or a job? Pity the poor guy who has to
pedaJ and steer this bicycle while 11 others crowd a round
him including two riding on his shoulders. The show is part
or the acrobats act in the Chinese Peking Circus seen re· .£ently in Paris ___ _
Assembly tackles
lwme lender bill
SACRAMENTO <AP1 The
giant reaJ estate and lender in-
dustn es continue their epic bat·
tie in the Legislature this week
over the American dream of
owning a hom e. while the
dr e amer wat c h es o n the
s idelines.
The fi ght is over two bills,
both s ubject of debate last week .
that wouJd give lenders much
more power lo raise mortgage
interest r ates to reflect changes
in the economy but probably
price even more of those dream-
ing people out of the home-buying
market.
One bill would overturn a
court decision that allows home
buyers to assume the old low-
rate mortgage of the seller. The
other would let slate-chargered
savings and loan firms issue
mortgages on which the interest
and monthly payments would
fluctuate with the market with
no limits.
Anot her bill relating to
mortgages would permit pension
funds to provide .. shared ap-
preciation loans.·· which are
mortgages that have lower in-
terest rates because the lender
shares in the increased value of
tbr home over the years.
The assumable mortgage bill.
A82158 by Assemblyman Jim
Costa. D· Fresno. is before the
Assembly Finance. Ins urance
a nd Commerce subcommittee
on financial inst1tut1ons tonight.
The same subcommittee debat-
ed il for hours la~l week. but
pos tponed a vote for a week The
full committee will then vote on
the bill Tuesday.
The bill would overturn the
1978 We llenkamp decision of
the state Supreme Court. which
held that lenders cannot force
m ortgage holders lo pay ore
loans when they sell the house.
rathe r than s hirtin g the
mortgage to the new buyer . Lend·
e r s wa nt t o issue new
mortgages at the presumably
higher current rates.
The other bill, for no-limit
variable rate mortgages, is
before the Assembly Ways and
Means Committee on Wednes-
day. It also was debated in
that committee by members who
said thev want some ceiling on
the a mount that an interest rate
could be raised during a loan.
The ball . A8650 b :» As-
semblvman Tom Bane, D-Van
Nuys."would require state bank·
ing officials t o le t s tate-
chartered savings and loans and
banks offer a n v. m ort~a~es
permitted the federal l y
chartered ones
The two federal regulatory
agencies issued rules this spring
allowing va riable rate
mortgages with no II mat for sav
ings and l oans
King's mate
says family
a possibility
NEW YORK tAPI -Larry
King says hi s tennis star wife,
Billie Jean King, doesn't con-
sider herself a homosexual, and
.. she'd like to have a child if she
can work at out for a lime."
King. in an interviwew in Peo-
ple magazine. said his biggest
disappointment 1s that the cou-
ple never had children.
Mrs. King recently admitted
having a homosexual affair with
her former secretary. Marilyn
Barnett. who filed a lawsuit
seeking s upport.
King said recently he blamed
himself, in part, for his wife's
h o m osexua l r e lat i onship
because the couple s pent so
much time apart her playing
tenn is and him o rganizing
women's tennis.
.. I'd like to have three or four
children ... King told People. "In
retrospect. when I got out of law
school we should have just set·
tied down and had a family.
Once you opt out of that,
anything could happen -and
anything did happen ··
Mrs . King. 37, a Wimbledon
te nnis winn er w h o o nce
ac knowl e dged ha v ing an
abortion. said her heclic career
forced her "to ma ke choices."
She declined to say whether
s he would try to have a baby
soon , but she said, "If I want to
have a baby. I better get this
s how on the road.··
lt'Tt. ..
Polnth\s acrou tbe C...,... RIHr to Hanaid Uld"'9ilf,
Heller iddild, "l'm J• dolnl what tbt Harvard Bu1lne11 School p1Udln: maxlm11ln1 retum on ln"9tment. • •
The Garage Brings It Together wfth the Active Look.
Hlr9 we ,..,,. from Mlronl. 10°" conon warm-ups,
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644 7030 DiNtict tor .. ~ momtr,g )Dgl °" the btech •
Colof'I . rwd, G'Q, kellv. Cntme and (Wf
--~ ....... -~ .....
Boston mayor battles
Cleveland specter haunts White as city funds dwindle
BOSTON <AP) -Kevin H.
White, s tylish rinamaster of
Boston's poJltlcal circus, Is fac-
ing the sternest teat of his
political Ute as hls hlch-prlced,
high-taxing city teeters toward
bankruptcy.
For nearly a decade the 51·
year-old Democrat has been
seen as trying to position
himselC for national officf' -but
now he is raced with the
possibility his city could go
broke by July, and he is getting
much of the blame.
Even though he has said
Boston fac~s the pros pect of go·
Ing "from Camelot to
Cleveland,'' the city which en-
dured bankruptcy, White insists
the situation isn 't comparable to
money crises in other major
cities.
·'There are no analoelea at all
between Boston and New York,"
he told reporters last week. ··we
m a nage the city very, very well.
l would like to say -and I know
it appears presumptuous under
the gun -we manage It better
than, or equal to, any state gov·
ernor or municipal government
over 150,000 in this country.''
White has a $75 million bor-
rowing plan he claims will keep
the city solvent. But the City
Council has refused to approve It
unless he accepts limits on his
spending powers. Some oppo.
ne nls also demand that White.
Money not enough
for modern worker
By the Associated Press
Money isn't enough for many
or today's workers, says a re·
search group which found chang·
ing standards and a changing
labor force are bringing ne w de·
mands to the job market.
The Public Agenda Founda·
lion , a non-profit research or
ganization in New York Ctty,
s aid more and more employees
are looking for intangible re·
wards and challenl(es from their
jobs.
The report is the first s tep in a
study designed to find how to re
.. solve what the foundation calls
"the growing ·mis match '
between what people want and
: need from their JObs and what the
workplace is structured to pro·
vide.''
The initial phase of the project
included a look at what has hap·
· pened to the workplace since
World War If, along with in-
terviews with a cr oss·section of
workers in the Seattle area.
Carol Greenwald. the project
director, s aid money is still im·
portant. "We a ssume money,"
s he said. "But it's not enough for
most people . . They want
much more personal rewards,
more s ense of involvement.
They want to be appreciated."
Ms. Greenwald said s tudies
have shown that aboul60 percent
of today's workers are motivated
primarily by money: the rest of
the people, however . s ay non-
monetary rewards are more im-
portant.
She also said that JOb sat1sfac·
lion and motivation or commit·
ment do not neces sarily go
hand-in-hand. "You can be very
satisfied and be doing nothing ...
she said.
The foundation report s aid
commitment often is linked to in-
tangible factors. It said people
want to be treated fairly They
want to be able to take pride in
what they do. "They want in-
dependence and responsibility.
They want management support
in the form of the tools they
need to do their jobs and in the
form of a "thank you" when the
JObs are well done
According to the foundation re-
searchers, there are sev'e ral
reasons for the new demands.
The generation that grew up in
the 1960s and 1970s. the study
sa id . was ··sha p ed by n ew
forces: social movements, the
Vietnam War, an ever-higher
national standard of living and
ris ing personal expectations
A job develo ped meaning in
itself ..
There \.\ere changes in the
wo rk force. including an influx of
women and an increase in the
level of education, and changes
in the economy itself.
"When most families were sup·
ported entirely by their male
br e adwinner , th e wee kl y
paycheck was essential to the
family economy," the study said.
··Today the economic safety net
of g overnment trans fer pro·
grams for non-workers lessens
cons iderably the risk of personal
economic catastrophe ...
The foundation also said the
nature of the workplace has shift·
ed . There is less direc t control by
management. ··Quality and pro·
ductivity levels are in the hands
of individual workers . " the
re port said.
who acknowledges hls populari-
ty ratlnl has shriveled to 30 per-
cent, &ive up his statutory shield
against recall.
Late last week, the council
proposed its sixth version of a
plan to bail out the city's oveT·
spent school system. White's
aides said the mayor would re-
ject It as he did the first five
because it includes limits on his
fi scal authority.
On Friday, a city lawyer told
a judge Boston has enough
money to run the schools
through June 19, but will be
broke by July 1 if forced to pay
all its bills, including court-
ordered property tax refunds.
Boston's squeeze is exacerbat-
ed by Proposition 2 "2, a property
tax reduction that
Massachusetts voters imposed
on the ir cities and towns last
fall The meas ure is expected to
cost Boston nearly $90 million -
10 percent or its budget -in the
fiscal year that starts July l.
White insists the city would
have no financial problems if it
we ren't for Prop. 2 112 . But
former Mayor John T. Collins,
the man considered most likPly
to handle city finances in case
or a state takeover' disagrees.
· · Hoston's biggest problem to·
.(lay is not Proposition 21.2. It's
Mayor White a nd his whole ap-
proach to governing the city as
if it were his personal fiefdom."
s ays Collins.
Collins complains that White
has expanded his staff from 17 to
600 -plus, primarily l o run
political e rrands. White s ays his
s ta ff is t ale nted and d oing
necessary work and adds ... IC I
want clowns. I should be able to
have them ..
Although Proposition 212 does
not take effect until July, White
began taking cost·cutting action
last month, inc luding the layoffs
of 400 policemen and firefighters
a nd a threat to close schools two
months e arly
However. a JUdge ordered him
to keep the schools operating
A nd whe n d e monstrators
blocked highways to protes t the
police and fire c uts, White re·
lented and temporarily rehired
the orricers, us ing funds pro·
vided by the Legislature.
White says up to 4,000 layoffs
nearly 40 percent of the city's
workforce are inevitable un·
l ess th e Legi s lature does
"°'som ething to weaken or negate
the impact of the tax reduction.
At the same time, he s ays he
deserves a $25,000 raise -to
$90,000.
White used to shrug orr
c riticism. but lately has gone on
the offensive, arguing that his
ad m inis tralive overhe ad is
peanuts about $7 million in an
$874 m1lhon budget.
.
Arkansas recovering
Tornadoes , thunderstorms lash state; 5 injured
·Coastal ~ather
POINT CONCEPTION fO THE
MEXICAN BOROER OUT .0 MILES
-LIOlll .,,.,ltble winds tllrOUQh lo.
d•Y H C9pl ... , 10 to ,. knol1 t11l1 •I·
ltrnOOfl. Winch t>e<ornlno northwH I
15 lo JS ""°~ In lht outer w•ler1
lonlohl 1 to J foot wetltrly •-II•.
F•lr wltl\ lncreulno cloudlntu
t>ecomlno rnosuv c1--., 1on19111.
U.S. summary
Tornado•• and ••v•r• l"""· derllonm roertd ecroH Arl<•nw>.
IHvlno •I_,,.,.. lnJur.cl •nd inoro
11\tn SO -.urn.Qe<I. Sotnt minor
11ooa1no-~
.. ,~
111 Cow-. • wtlc--•nd storm d.._.t up loll ln<ht1 ol snow 111 llndtr«y mouni.IM .,,,.,. IN
lorul 11 ... Ntord !\<Kl bffn ••ltd
lllQll •ncl •llO dr~ inOA lftMI tll
Inell ol ••Inonu .. Mslern plolM. of. llcl•ll wlcl
Cl•m•o• •I •l>oul i•oo.ooo. H id
G•MO• CoMv. Cllre<IO< or .,,. 1t•I•
OHie• ol E,,.rOtntY Servlcet. Temperatures
Tiie I-of W•ldo -McN•ll In Columt>I• COllnty •Ito _... 1111 l>y •
lornedO. """<" O..lroyeel •n eoo •llCI
lom•lo IMm -wreckt<I • mol>llt llom•.
NATIONAL
In .......... .., City, K•n •• h•nntl cl---1119" wino. s..nci.y !Nit tore off rnosl ol , ... c-dome
., ,,,. Uni°" Sl•I• 8 •nl< •ncl COi·
l•PUCI Ill• r ool •I II\• civic
•udllorlum. a\llhof'lll•1 wlCI.
TN wlndt •I.., c•UMd roof Cl•m•ge
•I Hvtr•I -•own butlntlMI •ncl
some "°"'"• $htllertd some 1Wln·
dowo •ncl kncKll.cl delwn Ir"' In lht sou111-cen1r•• K.,, .. , clly of 1'.000
people 11\ree mllet nortll ol Ill•
Okl•llomt IUI• llnt.
No lnJurlet were reported. bul
pollc• esllm•l•CI dtm•o• In Ille
tllouM,,.. tf ctoltors.
A 1cwN11e wotch wos 10.,.. Sullcltv
IOf' parw of Olli.Mme ...., K•nM•
•ncl httY'f rein In nof'lttwetl KAftMt
wAI cou1ln1 lloodlno •lono Ill•
Smoky Hiil 111,..r.
The Oumt1 u•• In 1011tll•etl
ArhnlM -tllt ... , .. , NI by tllt 11orm1, w1111 prellmlntry pr_n.,
California .
" <ll•nc• ol drlult WH forKHl rcw
l•I• 1on1on1 -T11tt4t; inornlno
wlll\ • <l\tnc• ol 111111 st>ower1 near Ille 1001111111. lhl N•llon•I WHlhlr
Service u4CI.
11 1t1ould be clo11dy over Los
A1>9tlH othlrwlN AllCI m1.1tll cooler
T 11ttd•Y wltll lllQl\I noor "· FOQ ond < IOudS tllOlllCI Inc rt AM Oft
,,,. COHIAI movnltlll llQpll """" drlule Of' IPl'lnllltt lll!1ry T.....S.y
mornlno. Hlpr elev•Uon~ were ••·
pecltd to llAW -!y wl-lflroutlll
T11tl40 wlllle "'-••l"'H .-14
cool Clo-l11to IN SO'I.
WI .... ~ ••so klO up In , ...
non ... rn *-1 ...... wlltr• U to JO mpfl 1"1Q ,.,..., oe-ete dldl ....,
-----------Mnd tier .... Soolthern Otttnt Wff9 1.,.C:IN to .... 11111• CAimer wllll
wllldt tVlllfll et It to U mpf>
All>tny
All>uque
AmArlllo
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All•nt•
All•nlc Cly
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8rown1vllt
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Coh1mlWI
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Southern California. 6UT/ report
Htltflt Ill IMI. Period In MConch. ... ._.
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tMrte Listenilifi ••• ~
What do you II.kt about the Dally J>Uot? What don't you like?
Call the number belcnr and your meua1e will be recorded,
lrammbed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
1'bl Hint M·hcMar ana......,. aemee llllf be uaed to retol'd
letters to the editor on any topjc. Mailbox eootrtbutora mual ln·
elude tWr name and telepbiciM nwnber for "rtftcatJon. No circulation calla. pleas•.
TeU m ""8t'a oa JOUr mind.
Houllon
tndn•pll•
J•ck1nvlle
K•n1 City
LuVe~I
Lllllt RoO
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Loul1vlll•
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Pll•nd.O-.
Reno
S.11 L•lle
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S.n l"r.,, s .. 111e
St LOUI>
SIP·h"-
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SPOll•ne TulH
WHlllnvtn
Apple V•lley
8Aktrslltlcl
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 18, 1981
O•lh~IMtSUl1-
8arbara Murray shows some of the revealing nighties the Pleasure Company has to sell. Ms Murray
says business is booming
For the bedroom bored
Coast's Pleasure Company sells sex wares at pru;ties
By JODI CADENHEAD or 111e O•llY ~t ... S~I
Wh at docs a n cnc·q~et1c high
school counselor do art1;•r she's
been laid off'•
Fueled with cmthus1asm from
a Saddleback College bu::.iness
course. Barbara Murray and her
boyfriend. Tom Moss . dt.>c1ded to
go into the sex \\ares part\ bu:.1
ness
The pt•l1tt• blonde admits she
gets a lot of \.\l'lrtl rct1e•t1ons
from her forml·r tollcagues al
f ountain Valle) 111.l(h School
But at S250 per party and foui
parties each Wl'l'k. hus1nl's!. 1s
hot
Faced with a return lo thl.'
classroom. the mother of two
b ega n looking arou nd fo r
some thing new to do
Unaware of the rcct•nt boom 1n
similar busi n<>sses on thl• East
Coast. Ms Murray tboughl her
Pleasure Com p •iny "'as an
original idea
Wo m e n, she says . \\ho
wouldn't dream of \.\ <Jlkm~ into
a sex·oncntt'd hook ston.> .in·
quite \.\i ll ing to go to a fr1l•nd's
home and bu> all :.orts of re\'eal
ing ll ngerw and sex gadgets
R emem ber th<• Tupper\.\art•
parties to \\ h1ch you 1n ' 1tcd all
your girlfriend:-.. at "h1c h you
m u nched on a C'ouple of C'heest·
topped cr ackers and pickl·d
out matching plast 1c containers
in three sizes''
ll 's thl.' same kind of thing
sort of
A bout a dozen young women
sat on pillow!. in u Costa Mesa
apartment last week examining
the sex toys spn•ad across a ta
ble. sipped whitl' wine and took
turns trying on the• see-through
ni g hties.
Ms Murray opt•nt'd tht• party
with a scnsuul q111z and asked
everyone to nanw a plt•asure
beginning with the first ll'ller or
their fi rst name
Arter this ice breaker, thl•
Pleasure Compa ny s unusual
product lint'" as introduct•d
Where's the IC'C crea m . on<'
wo nders. when the• · T aste of
Love Flavor ed L1ckables" 1n
h o n ey s p ice. ''a nilla
mar shmallow a nd chocol ate
eclair are dished out"
"It's bigger than li fe," ob·
.\11> \lurray displays· Slmdt'' 11/
J.01·e. · nnl' flf the mflre L'I otw 1/Prn!;
llH· P/1•11\lir1• '"'"'1"111!1 \locks
't'rvcd one guest after t•x amin
ing the handy J'!lycer1111• so;.ip
that hangs in the sho\.\ l'r and
comes in decorator fragrances
of s trawberry. lemon, orange and musk.
Next camt• the 16 d1ff<ore11t
models of vibrators. 'porting a
number of exollc atlachml'nb
For the luxur\'·mmdcd then•..,
lhl' S30 :-.:1L1n-hnl'd frcnch rahb1t
mitt w1lh a p11uch for d !.l'H'n
1 n t' h ,. 1 b r a t o r 1\ n d l ho.., l'
sea rchmg for an oulll't for the 1 r
a f f c c t 1 on s m 1 g h t t r) t h t'
'Cosmic Explorl'r" that coml'"
with fi\'e allachmenti-. and ninl'
foot t'Ord
But the real fun starts \.\hen
thl' ratk of sexy ltngene 1s dis
played Previously relegated to
1nspinzd from australia ...
{(A QlJlll(SILVlilR.1..c
our favorit<z. S'W1rntrunk and wa.lkshort
anz. p:>p..&lar with al 1 ~· a Qnzat
ecz,la.ct10n of colore. s12.<ze 2S-36
tx:Yye s17JLSeleo.
mall or<ll·r !'atalogs, the frou-
11 uu l'ligl•cl n1ght1es in see·
1 hrnugh Ian· and a ntron drew
J :-.P' of ooh:-. and aah:.
'This 1s better than a slumber
J>Url' orw gul•st excla imed..
1 >11t ~ 11ung \\Oman told how
'hl' pun·hJ:-.t•d a pair of black
p.inl1t·:-. \\.Ith J strategically mis-
'-lng par11•l ut the last party,
uni) tu h:nc her boyfriend flip
d1.1nm+. on the ll'lev1s1on But
lhl· ;irnar<•llo flavored "Licker
l.uhl'H'imt" wa-. \.\ell received .
.., hl rt>port<.·d
Or dl•r hl;,inks art-passed out to
:.tl l p:irt~gt11.•1-. so no one knows
wh11 hought ''hat All products
a 1 t• dl·l1H·n•d 111 plain brown
paper hag:-.
~ot knm' 111g a bout the other
l'11rnpall1l·s. :\loss and Ms Mur·
ra\ had to 'tart from scratch to
find M1ppltt<rs
·'Th er e we we re in these
porno book s tores scribbling
down names of suppHers from
the books\" said Moss. ''We musfhave ooked strange."
~t 1 .ing .. or not thl' couple
ha' 1 111,·n .J\.\'r<1g1n g fou r
part11:' a ''eek o;mce they bega n
\pnl 211 Thl'll original invest·
nwn1 \l!I" .1h11ut S2.500 a nd they
ol I I t1lll'rll1J.: dl ... t rllJUlOl'ShipS
\l If h ~1011 111 S2110 m•l·ded for sup
pllt•'
Hoth till' popul.ir1t) of t he pro·
1hrc·ts and t lw tact thev a re <;o ld
111 horm:-. '"II make the business
a l11111n1111J.! -.uc·ct's". smd Moss
i\11•11 t ''omen l'mbarrassed
about hu~ inj.( ""'" gudgets and
n1ght11 ... 111 lront of their friends"
"Ill-Ion•. lh1-. stuff was looked
down upon .' -..iid Ms Murray.
··But p1•opll0 ha\"' hcen reading
a bout th1-, and an• looking for a
t•hann• tu rnakt• '>l'X run ..
On" woman was reluctant to
lt•ll lll'r husband sh<> was going
to .1 -.1·x products party and told
him onl\ lingerie• wo uld be sold,
.,,wl \h \lurra.\
But 1 ht• Ill' XI day he told her
J 11 l he· \\omt•n in h 1i. offi ce were
gmng to a '-C'X "ares pa rty and
ht• '' antt·cl ht>r to J.!O too
\Iona Coate-.. a li censed sex
thc·1 ap1-,t \\ho teaches a human
s<•xual1t~ c:our se al Orange
Coast Colll'J.!l'. thinks the parties
,,111 ha,•e a pos1ll\'e effect on re-
lat1onsl11p'>
@)(go~@)~@
44Faahfon11Cand• Newport Beadl•7l41644·5010
JOOJ ._.sb.&lood BCud.•\\ab.Uood VUl.age•2.l3141&-1121
• • •
s ·Orange Cout DAILY PILOT,Monday, May 18, 1981
More 'kiddie porn'
feared after ruling
ALBANY, N .Y . (AP) -
l>eaMn ol pornocrapbic rums
featurlq cblldren "wlll be
baek" ln New York now that a
court bu auuck down a 1tate
law to belp authorities 1tamp out
"kiddie ponl," a 1tate lellalator
wbo aponaored the measure .. , ..
In a recent 5-2 decision, the
atate Court of Appeals atruck
down portions, of a 1977 law
aimed at maklna it euler to
proaecute .people who exploit
clalldrea by ualn& them In aex·
ually erpllcit films, books,
pbototrapbl or other material.
Tbe cOurt aaid material portray·
lnl cbUdreq involved In sexual
acttvity may not. be barred UD·
leu it ftta leiai definitions of ob-
1cenlty.
The law waa •truck down
became It problblted "tb• pto.
motion ot materlala wblcb are
traditionally entitled to conatltu·
Uonal protection from 1ov·
ernmental interference under
tbe Fl rat Amendment," tbe
court ruled.
The court held tbe law could
have applie d to "a llve
performance of a Broadw.ay
play and a rllmed report of New
Guinea fertility rites."
The law made It a crime to
promote a performance that "ln·
eludes sexual conduct by a child
lesa Ulan 18 years of a~."
Paul Ira Ferber, who owns a
bookstore ln Times Square ln
New Yott City, had been con·
victed of a feJooy In selllnl to an
undercover police officer two
12-minute films deplctin1
~----·-
AP lJ S the c hi ldren rompln1 nude or • •an m en1a1ed ln sexual acts. Ferber
challenged the law, saying It
' was a violation of bis constitu· composer. s tionalrigbtoffreeapeecb.
MOTEL MOVING -A tugboat tows a barge
carrying the Eagle Inn, a motel in Ephraim,
Wis .. across Green Bay. The two-story, 12·
unit moiel was ferried 'six miles around a
state park to Fish Creek, WIS., where it will
become part of the Fish Creek Motel.
Assemblyman Howard
ho 'l ' Lasher, a Brooklyn Democrat me OS t. who sponsored the law. said the bill had dried up the kiddie porn
WASHINGTON (AP) -The market in New York. "With thla
1overnment bas loat Francia decision, I'm sure they will be
·Papal attacks not rare
Scott Key's bouae. back," be said.
Not only baa the National Twenty-one other states have VATICAN CITY (AP) -The
Park Service lost track of the provisions similar to the New Vatican ls 1uardlan of Cbriat'a.
bouae, it bu loat the bouae ltaelf York law, and if they follow the legacy of love, but violence IJ no
-both stories and all ita brick.a. decision, " . . . all these statutes stran1er to Its ancient halls. The
"We are aearchlng to try to would be in jeopardy.'' said de· 23 -year-old Turk lllccused of
locate the home or document fense lawyer Herald Price Fahr· shooting Pope John Paul II joina
that some of the materials went in1er. a long llne of schemers, rivals
to another house," Sandra Alley, There already was a stale law and lunatics who have tried to
a Part Service spokeswoman, which made lt a crime lo pro-kill a l>OPCI·
aald last week. "Right now, it's mote or sell legally obscene The danger has subsided over
a definite puzzle." performances by a child. The ihe past century with the decline
Key wu Hvine in the house in penalty for convictions under of the Vatican's influence in
Waahlneton's Georeetown sec· that law was stiffened in 1977 to European politics. But ln the
tlon when he set o ut for make the offense punishable by first millen.ium, the Middle Ages
Baltimore in 1814 to observe the. up to seven years in prison. and the Renaissance, papal
11hel11D1 of Fort McHenry, the But 1 aw enforcement murder was not unheard of u
event which inspired him to authorities said there was a an instrument of diplomacy.
write "The Star-Spangled Ban-need for a broader prohibition to One of the best known cases
uer." allow more effective prosecution was that of Boniface VIII, whose
The Park Service boueht the of those involved in the kiddie attempts to subjugate Philip the
bome in 1931 and Intended to porn business and they added Fair of France to the clerey
restore it, but budget problems the section concerning portrayal became a titanic s trug1le
papal misfortunes notes, "thla
was a period of polsonlnes car·
ried out mostly with mixtures of
herbs,"
A ninth-century pope,
Formosus, managed to Uve out
his days ln peace. But after h1a
death his enemies, the Spolet.oa,
came to power in Rome. Bent on
venaeance, they dug up his
body, displayed it ln public and
threw it into the Tiber River.
Another unfortunate pontiff
was John X, who was smothered
to death in 928 on the orders of
the infamous schemer Marozia
so that her son could succeed
hlm as Pope John XI.
Pope Lucius II was struck by
a stone during an assault on h1a
stronghold in Rome and died a
week later.
Al least three popes are
believed to have been poiaooed
during the Renaissance. But for
the next 200 years there were no
recorded assassination al·
tempts.
The next vlctlm may have
been Plus VIII, who died on
Nov. 30, 1830 of a sudden illness.
The College of Cardinals or-
dered an autopsy. suspectina
poison, but the result never was
made known. Pope Paul VI had stones
thrown at him by a mob ln
Sardinia in 1970. The same year,
an embittered Bolivian painter
stabbed tijm in the chest as he
disembarked from a plane In
Manila. The wouJd·be assassin,
Benjamin Mendoza, said he did
it ''to save the world from
witchcraft.''
Bachelor
book
a boost
DALLAS <AP) -Ever alnce
their names appeared in "Tbe
Greatest lJttJe Bachelor Book lQ
Texas," they've been baie1ed
by phone calla and leUen and
visit.a from would-be dates .
Some of those 200 ell1lble
youns men have married, are
lhlnktna of new careers and or have discovered lon1-loat
relatives because their names
appeared ln the little black book.
A park ran1er from Whitney
even says he's gotten ao many
letters and calls -261, to be ex·
act -that be aasl1ns each
woman a number and keeps
track of them in a ledger.
"They have enjoyed an . eJt·
perience unlike anytbln1 that
they have ever had in their We,"
said Sue Goldstein, the 39-year·
old entrepreneur who created
the book . "The kinds of
responses from women have
been extraordinary."
Ker company, Su.sAnn Publlca·
tlons, gets about 100 letters every
day, some of them "status re·
ports " from the bachelors,
many of them pleas from
women looking for men.
Ms. Goldstein, who be1an her
publishing career by println1
"The Underground Shopper" in
12 cities across the nation, said
she thought of the book alter be·
ing rejected by a computer dal·
ing service "because I was over
30 and highly educated and
probably made more money
than most men."
Each bachelor who volun-
teered to appear in the book or
who was recommended In ques·
tionnaires sent to a v ariely of
women and organizations
described his work, hobbles, his
opinion or the Equal Rlehts
Amendment, bis fantasy on an
island and the qualities he
looked for in women.
Eighteen of the bachelors
have married. kept the project in limbo. To of children in sexual activity. between church and state.
make room for a highway, the Ferber also was charged with In 1303, Philip made Boniface r
acency in 19'7 dismantled the pro moting obscene sexual arr offer: renounce the papacy or
bouae, lakini care to number performances by a child. But a die. Boniface chose death, and
each piece, and moved it. jury acquitted him of the ob-only at the last minute waa
But Ms . Alley said the Park scenity charges, while convict· murder prevented. Boniface's an· 1 Service loat track of the house ing him on the other charge. gry subjects drove Phillip's men
over the yeara. The Court of Appeals, the away, but the experience
After the Washin1ton Post state's highest court, reversed destroyed the proud pontiff's
raised the issue early last week. the judgment of the state spirit and be died a few weeu I
one former Park Service Supreme Court and a unanimous later.
employee recalled that the dis· ruling by the appellate division B on if ace ' s s u c c es so r , 1 mantled home had been stored against Ferber. Benedict XI, refused to pardon
for years near a Washington In a s tron1 dissent t o the late pope's aaaallant..a. He
bridee. A search there turned up last week's rulin1, Judees Mal· died .after one year on tbe
nothing. thew Jasen and Dominick Throne of St. Peter, in what tbe I SUN
1
AY · Another employee baa 1u1-Gabrielli argued that the 1977 history books call "mysterious
seated three other locations law was a constitutionally de·--c-ir_c;....u...;;m_s..;..tan--"c-e.;..;s..;...'.;..;' ..;;..H.;..e~b..;;.a..;;..d~j-ua.;;..;l;...; 1 J where the home mleht have fensible effort to protect eaten some dried figs.
been moved. children from exploitation. As one historical account of ..=:.=.:.;...::::..:::...:..:;=-___,.-----------~
lskaboatom
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SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A
city'• rtsbi to maintain "aome
aemblanee of viaual harmony"
can Mwe!Ch candidates' Finl
Ame-.ctment rt1bta, a Court of Appeal H)'I In upboldln1 an ID·
ti-alp ordinance.
The theft ~ a .. ,.....
priaon aentence ._ ~ aillt
be baa been at,_.. 11111ee--..
in1 Jan. 21, J ... Deql11
W ar1e. lo a ..... ...,. la·
terview, said Ile tltl•h ~
blm and other C' Neta tW
either t.bey sbollld a -e IWr
1i1ns or the my --W tU•
them down.
San Mateo WM ~ _. •
other cities with similar or-
dinances in fiPtilll s..ali'a
lawsuit.
• Boyee told him h• needed
money from a pacta1• to be de-
livered to Um•, Peru, but wu
A friead t.bey both bad n.own ueab1e to 10 himaelt.
at ta.. Lompoc federal priloa ln· Altbclu&h warie aald be was
troduadtbem, War1el&id. told it wa1 "the K'H ·ll ~~~~-...:....~~"'~--:-::-~-----mantiiltrtpt, '' be really tboulbt
be WM dellverlDI. narcotic•, War1e ul~ The KB·U, accord-lnC U. a publllbed report, iJ a
Central latetu1enee A1ency
dealpatkm for t.be "Keyhole"
utelllte, a device capable of
la~Ule_...,....,
Ute eourt • ..,........ "' tattered, derelict 1ip1 from
pat e&eetiam MIUfy to the elf.
fic•lt1 of protectinl publlc prope~!°°' umlptJy 1iP1 even laws forbid public
post.me.''
SuuU arped the or~ ma~l.QI httb-resolutlon observ4l·
violated bis rt&bt of free apeecb. tiorta ln the Soviet Union as if
Be aa1d th8 city WU belq
selective la applyln1 U.e or-
dbauee to only one form of eom-m unicatlon -tbe po1t1n1 of
sips.
tbrou&b a keyhole ..
In a 2·1 vote and in tbe first
declaion of ill ktn4 in tbe state,
the eourt upheld Tbunday San
Mateo'• ordinance that bars
political candidates from polt·
tn1 campaip alps on public
propertf.
War1e flew to Uma on March
12, 1980, with tbe package and
telepboned a man with a thick
accent -"it could have been
Yu101Iavlan or a Ruasian-•OUJldl.oa voice." Accordipg to
the at.amp oo bla passport, be re-
entered the United States on
March 15. Gay savings, loan opens "J told him J bad the KH-11
vision ol a permit 1U1led by t.be manuscrlpt an4 be came over to
state ID llare.b ta. the hotel' and went throu1h all of The court cited the po11lbillty
of "an absolute e'1d to tbe
already eroded aesthetic intesrt·
ty of public places ln a tidal
wave ol publicly sponsored iraf·
fill" wttbout such1aws.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
Atlas Savings expeda to..-iU
doors for busiw 11117 miilllw-
mer, giving the ...W its ftnt
cay-dominated •••iJtp aad
loan.
preaidmt Jfftf ICJana1aa uid.
Savla1a aC'couta totali•I
more tbaa $111,000 alrelQ have
been eommttted. aaMI Jl1auc•,
IJld AUa la apeded to 10 °"" t.be balf.milJiaa dollar mart by
tbe end ol dda month.
"W.e're on our way,'' 1a1d the papers and pictures but Flan~an. a beterolexual -.ho didn't say anyt.bing," Warge re-
came to AUu two montbl aao called. "I asked him lf that was
after belpiq found t.t»comtrJ'• what be wanted and he appeared
first Hispanic S•L ID Loa ea1er to take iL"
In urn, Eu1ene SuaaU, a CID·
didate for the San Mateo City
Council, cballenaed the or-
dinuce. The city bad notified
Atlas has met able npit+a.
lion requiremellls ... allllluld
have little troullle P"9I pMt
the final hurdle of -.-in savings deposits, company
Tbe nec11nq S6L la.al 80ld t•.ooo abares at SU~ a ab.are to 2,000 invest.on, completiq
the $2 mi1tiall capkallaatioa pro.
Aa1ele1. 'l'llat. firm, Camillo Tbe man be thinks waa a Sov·
Real .Savbl.1•. now baa 1lx · let a1ent 1a-..e him $3,500 in $100
branclles and more than $40 billsi War1e said. Outside his
mWlon in uaeta. bote room, be spotted armed
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OFFERED BRIBE?
Christopher Boyce
soldiers watching.
"I was so frightened by thel
soldiers that l couldn't sleep au
night," War1e said.
Next day, he Clew bacJt tot
California and gave the money
to Boyce, who in tum repaid his
expenses for the trip and pve l
him two $100 bills, Last October, t
federal marshals seekinl Boyce
questioned Warge at bis tll>Jlle. 1 Boyce, according to Warse, had~
left tbe house nine hours before.
The famous Brooks Brothers
poplin suits for Summer
Two flights daily. Only direct service
from Orange County to Seattle. Avoid
the crowds at Los Angeles International
Airport. Family Plan available. .
This is the warm weather favorite, o ur own
wash-and-wear 3-button suit made only for
B~b Brottien. It's cool, has a crisp look, and
Buy one full fare, save 50°/o on the
rest of the family! Ask for details.
t• Orange Coast OAJL y PILOT,Monday, May 18, 1981
Santiago ailport site
could spell trouble
It is politically necessary
.these days to find a large, un-
developed piece of land when
searching for an airport site, and
that is why Santiago Canyon
seems at first glance to be an at-
• tractive spot.
1
It is close enough to be ac-
cessible to Orange County
travelers but tucked far enough
back in the foothills to serve up to
20 million passengers per year
without sending jets roaring over
rooftops.
Because of that, planners for
the Southern California Associa-
tion of Governments have de-
cided the s ite merits examina-
Uon. They say it will be con-
sidered in the same way they'll
look at a site on Stuart Flats near
the coast at Camp Pendleton.
Taking a hard look at San-
ti ago Canyon is wise, but 1t
seems unlikely that the site could
be selected over Camp
Pendleton's. About the only
superior feature the canyon bas
is its proximity to Orange Coun-
ty's population center.
11\at's not necessarily good,
though. In fact, it's downright
awful for the people in San Diego
who need a regional airport site
as badly as people in this county.
SCAG planners also should
remember that undeveloped sites
don't remain so aft.er an airport
moves in. Experience with John
Wayne Airport underscores that
point.
Hotels, offices and even some
homes might be tolerable near
Pendleton's Stuart Flats, where
roads can still be widened and
where traffic is much lighter. To
allow development in Santiago
Canyon, however, could forever
mire freeway-dependent Orange
County in congestion and pollu-
tion.
Eventually, the Santiago site
could be more of a problem than
a solution.
Handgun control hope
For the first time there are
indications that a measure to
control the distribution of
hand~wis may have a chance in
Congress.
In the days following the at-
tempted assassination of Presi-
dent Reagan , the ti n y
Washington, D.C. organization
known as Handgun Control, Inc.
which has long been lobbying un-
successfully for some sort of con-
trol, was suddenly flooded with
phone and mail inquiries.
Ma ny television viewers
learned of the organization when
it was featured in a segment of
the ''60 Minutes''. program. A
follow-up advertising campaign,
asking citizens to write to their
congressmen via Ha ndgun Con-
trol, Inc. urging support of the
Kennedy-Rodino handgun control
measures yielded 100,000 letters..
'file ffandgun Crime Control!
bills (S.974 a nd HR 3200) in-
troduced by Sen. Edward Ken-
nedy and Rep. Peter Rodino,
would halt the manufacture, sale
transfer and importation of
·'Saturday Night Specials" and
their parts. The weapon used in
the Reagan attack had been
assembled in Florida of imported
parts.
The bills also require a back-
g r ound c heck of a buyer's
criminal record during a man-
datory three-week waiting period
after purchase and provide for
mandatory sentences for persons
committing a handgun crime.
It now appears that some
members of Congress who pre-
viously have flaUy rejected all
gun control measures are begin-
ning to have second thoughts.
Even as stern an opponent as
Se n . Strom Thurmond, now
chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee. has said be now would favor a ban on the importa-
tion of Satwday Night Special
parts and a waiting period after
the purchase of a handgun. _,
The Kennedy-Rodino bills are
not directed at hunting guns and
would not eliminate the purchase
of handguns by law-abiding
citizens. They simply seek to
eliminate the cheap Saturday
Night Specials and ask that
would-be gun owners establish
their good character.
It will not be easy to win•
votes for the bills. Last year the
political action committees of
three pro-gun organizations spent
more than $1 million in election
contributions . Several of the
recipients are members of the
Judiciary Committee which must
pass on any handgun control
measure.
But with enough public pres-
sure, the tide may turn.
A dangerous proposal
Tear gas most certainly is a
less dangerous self-defense
weapon than a handgun, but it
too has some risk if ineptly
handled.
That's why current law re-
quires purthasers of tear gas to
obtain a permit, issued only upon
completion oC a certified two-
hour training class. The law also
prescribes strict quality control
for tear gas products.
During the past year, about
one million persons have taken
the approved training courses
and paid $3. 70 apiece for the
permits to defray Department of
Justice costs for underwriting the
program.
Now, for some obscure rea-
son, Assemblyman Terry Gog-
gin has introduced a bill (AB
1771) that would eliminate the
training requirement and permit
•
indiscriminate saJe of tear g~
produ~.
Needless to say, tear gas
manufacturers are pushing the
bill. But there's strong opposition
from law enforcement organiza-
tions whose members are only
too well aware of the dangers in-
volved in careless use of tear gas
products.
It's understandable that
many citizens would prefer to use
some form of tear gas for self-
def ense in case of attack, rather
than a gun. Under present law.
thiR can be managed safely -
and that's the way it should re-
main.
But isn't it rather remark-
able to think that while tear gas
purchasers are required to un·
dergo training, no such effort is
required of gun buyers?
Opinions expressed In the space above artt those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit-
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 91626. Phone (714)
M2-4321 .
L.M. Boyd I Days of the Sybarite•
Greek traders founded the ancient
city of Sybaris on the Gulf of Taren·
tum. And they had some pretty def-
inite ootlona about what I01't ol dtJ
they wanted. Nobody was suppoMd
to 10 to work before noon. Eveainp were to be devoted to parties.
ltver)'bodY was expecled to •l"P in
the fint half ol tbe day. It WU -
just bad mannert but a downriC)rt
crime to make noise ln lbe morntn1.
.......,....,.,.., .. ..., ........... .,:I'_ c.-..... ...., ... , • • ... •-.c.---.u ....
Therefore, roosten were outlawed la
tbe cltJ limits.
Q. Did Ronald Reaaaa ews .a.r la
a picture called "A 1'lrhj b ~
deat''T
A. 'l1IM. bM IMMlll ~ .. priat.
but lMre'• DO neot'4 of it Ill luiDd. Do
know lboalb. be appand Ila mm.
ca11;d "GcUc Pi.nt" tD --S "It's a Great FeeUac'' la -.
Technolog! will change life
SAN DIEGO -On May S, voters here
decided whether or not the city should
build a new ~ million conventiorf
center. But no one had to leave home to
vote.
Maybe voting machines will be a
thing of the put. Maybe we will no
longer be .. going to the polls "
A week before that in New York City.
C. Peter McColough, the chairman of
the board ol the Xerox Corp., reported
on the company's activities, but said he
didn't really want to talt about copying
machines. Speaking to financial
analysts, he discussed the company's
plans for "automated offices ...
Maybe Xerox machines, which many
of us still think of as new, will sooo be a
thing of the pa.st. Maybe we won•t be US·
ing filing cabinets full of Xerox copies.
We won't even be "going to the office."
Last week, the New York Tim.is, the
town crier of freedom of the press,
editorially called for government
restrictioo.s on the purveying ol news in
the United Slates. The newspa~. es·
sentiaUy, wants the federal government
to prevent the American Telephone and
Telegraph Co. from broadcasting elec·
tronic retail and classified advertising.
MAYBE NEWSPAPEas will soon be
a thine of the past. Maybe we will be
able to rmd out how much ground beef
is today and which houses are for sale
without "going out for the paper."
Those are just three ot lb.is week's
notes from the revolution. Those little
stories could have more to do with the
way each of us will be living 10 or 20
years from now than all the words of
Ronald Reagan or Tip o·Neill and all
the numbers of Oa,1id Stockman or
OPEC.
The voting in the San Diego referen·
dum was done by mail. The city clerk
llCIAll 11011
figured out that it would cost 1520,000 to
hold an eledion with voting machines,
voting booths and the us ual poll-
w a t c her s and paraphernalia
Watermarked. numbered ballots and
postage-paid return envelopes cost the
city ooJy about $350,000.
BUT WE ALL know about tbe U S
Postal Ser vice So why not use
something r~y efficient -say, elec·
tronic voting. Voters could, almost in·
stan taneously, using telephone or cable
television t.tthnoJogy, pick a town coun-
cil or a Congress We wouldrft have to
leave our homes, 1t would be cheaper,
save a lot of gas and aJso prevent news
organiutions from doing the ellit·booth
polling that makes pdssible voling pro·
jections before elections are over.
Xerox, facing the possibility that
paperwork may be becoming obsolete,
wants to get into the business of word
processors , computers. di s p lay
terminals and electronic filing and
memory offices created by wires and
laser beams. We wouldn·t have to leave
our homes. White-collar workers could
do the ir JObs at t e rminals and
keyboards linked to central corporate
computers.
THE TIMES, and other newspapers.
wants a part of that future, too. The
news organizations at least the smart
ones want to be the colJector and dis·
t ributor of the information, news and
commercial, electronically beamed to
homes through television sets and
personal computers. We wouJdn't have
to leave our homes lo s hop -press a
button or two to comparison-shop, press
a nother one to buy.
It is a revolution, probably the most
important thing happening around us
r ight now certainly more important
than anything Alexander Haig has to
s ay. It could be the equivalent, for in-
s tance, of the invention o r the
a utomobile or the airplane. It could free
us to be more than we ever dreamed we
could be, or it could turn us into
pathetic hermits. the victims of a
technology that can't be stopped, but
s hould be understood.
Narcotics probers travel the globe
W ASHJNGTON The House Select
Committee ffl Narcotics recently laid
an egg when it tried to generate some
publicity in Hollywood. The movie peo-
ple boycotted the hearings and the rom·
mitlee was able to corral only one
employed actor and a retired juvenile
star.
But Chairman Leo Zeferetti, 0 -N.Y .
obviously hasn't given up the idea of a
committee road show. Now he's going
to see how the drug investigation will
play abroad.
This month the committee's on loca·
lion in Mexico. In August, the con·
gressmen will head for West ~rmany
to study the problem of drug use among
the American G Is stationed there.
THE HIGHLIGHT of the committee's
year will come laleT that month with a
whirlwind tour reminiscent of the mov·
ie, "If It's Tuesday, This Must Be
Belgium." A three-week "global study
mission" will take the dope probers to
Japan . Korea . Thailand. Guam ,
Pakistan, ItaJy. Turkey. Switzerland,
Germany, Frant'e. ColoQlbia. Peru.
Brazil and Bolivia.
In September. t.he committee may go
Q
-JK_l_ll_l_lll_l_I -~
to New York for a session at the United
Nations.
Traveling investigations ~ nothing
new for the narcotics rommittee. In the
past, it b as gone to Honolulu,
Switze rland, France, Egypt, Italy,
Japan, Korea, Thailand. Guam and
Macao. as well as to members' home
districts in New Yon, Georgia and Ten-
nessee
The select committee spends about
$600,000 a year -not countine its travel
expenses -and 1s supposed to work out
a comprehensive federal strategy to
com bat the traffic in drugs. Among
other other things, it is charged wft.h in·
vestigating the role of organized crime
In the $64·billion·a·year illicit drug busi-
ness.
But this function receives scant atten·
lion. Indeed. it would appear that the
committee holds domestic hearin"s
primarily as a publicity gimmick.
WATCH ON WASTE: It's party time
at the Peace Corps. While the volun·
teers overseas are existing on their
customary short r ations, officials in
Washington headquarters . have been
working since last October on the
celebration of the corps' 20th an·
niversary. A special three-person staff
bas been detailed to plan and coordinate
anniversary activities around the coun-
try. The year-long bash is setting the
taxpayers back about $180,000.
How the great peace scare plot was foiled
The noted foreipi affairs analyst, Dr.
Mark Hawkins, D.V.M .. bas written a
new chapter for that monumental work.
A" Unpubliahed Hutorv of tlw World. 1911 -
1•. It's entitled, "The Great Peace
Scare Plot." Excerpts foUow:
A relatively inconsequential event
during the second week of April in 19111
d i d not go unnoticed by the
masterminds of lbe Kremlin: Wben ---'i ,
lll•PPI ~.
Presiclmt Brezhnev made a apeeda in
Pr acue temporarily coolinc the Poliab crbb, the price ol gold plummeted SZD
an oance.
Tbia lafon:n.adon wu r~ fed bl~
to lbe o.at compat.en lD tbe bel.-
ol ta.. ltGB, wtM!re lt wu spotted 9" •
alert JOUlll prosrammer! VIJMlhair
Notff.oft. ID DO time, tbMb to elec-
Uoeie wlaardrJ. he bd de-riled a Ilea-
'"-" plot tW became bowa a •"J"be
Noklta« Pia."
WJTll l'llS h~klq ol raW ... ......._. atM POI~ Pi11lil11•
Br+ 0
.. taltill .. tM ftnt .... ., ,... N_...PlmtW...._ ........... ....
latel'e9tl of worl4 ... ee." IM a -.... .-.................. .a a.. .
Mt~&om .... ., ..... ....
Ye•• _. '"-.,.1111 tw y-Jia Wtdcll tllilJ mq k .
Unease spread t.broucb the finan·
c1al capitals of the West. Gold plunged
another $20. The doU~r. bud hit in
heavy trading, fell 2lO pfmninp against
the Albanian let. Aod the stodt market
listlessly meandered down through the
non-psychological banier ol 127-% .
This was. of course, but tile begin·
ning. ln a May Day speech in Red
Square, Brezhnev disdosed the next
step: "We are not oa.ly immediately
witbdrawinl all Soviet com.bat units
from Afgbanist.an. bat, in ordet to ease
the fears of our belo•ed American
friends, we are shipping all Cuban
troops in Africa 5.000 miles back lo
Cuba, where they will be onlJ 90 miles
from Key West."
Panic! 1be dollar fell 11 drachma•
aiat.nst tbe Latviaft doe-Three gnomes
ol Zurich weft crushed to death ln an
awesome ,-old sUde. And tbe stock
marllet voted to remain c.--"tbts lo l.DcreMe ules.
"Then," said Brezhnev, un1easbin1
his ultimate weapon. "we will uni-
laterally disarm."
PRESIDENT REAGAN promptly de·
cided to lake late retirement and be and
Mrs. Reagan rode off into the sunset.
Fortunately , General Haig beat
Secretary Weinberger to the Oval Of-
fice, where he locked all the doors and
picked up the Hot Line.
"Listen, Brezhnev," he shouted,
"either you re·invade Afghanistan, ship
those troops back to Africa and Yemen,
threaten P~land and knock otr all this
peace talk or we'll blow you off the face
of the earth. Remember, we have
nothing left to lose."
And thus was the West saved from the
most fiendish Soviet plot of all.
Clllllm
The ao.ly way to atop war ll to talt• \be
profit out ot manulactu.rlnl and aellin1
the t.ooll ot war. And lbal11 about u
likely u ltoppinc lhe 1un lobby. F.Jt .
•i.:-..t;~;-··--..... ................ . -"""''-......... ...,. . ... ,.. ... ~·· ........... .....
J.
j
QUEENIE
'°' ...... "-.•-· ... _..,.._
"Well, really!"
. DEAR PAT DUNN: We bought a house
with central air conditioning, but we don't
know much about laking care of this equip·
ment. Where can we get some general in·
formation? I particularly want to know how
oftfln the fiJter should be changed.
A.J .. Costa Mesa
The Alr-CoadJtlonlllC aad llefrigeraUotl
lutltute recommends cbaagtag a Riter every
30 &o 60 days. A dirty, clo11ed ftJter caa cat
tbe efficiency of a system f1"0m Zit percnt &o
30 percent.
To help you and other coasamen keep
cool and save moaey tbls summer, U1e
Institute bu pabll1bed "The A&J Coaaamer
Gulde to Efficient Central Alr·Coedltlollhli
Systems." Tb.ls 32-paie maaaaJ baa advice
oa mal.ateaance and service, wllat to loc* for
ln purchasta1. an alr·coadJUoaed Hme aad
bow &o use the SEER (Seaaoaal Ellerey Effl·
cleacy RaUo) ratla11, and mael1 more. It'•
avallable for SI from Coasamer Galde, P.O.
Boll l.ZQ, Arllagtoa, Va. ZZZlt.
Day care data wlJ.
DEAR READERS: "A Pana&'• Gude to
Day Care," a pubUcaUoe of &lie Depart•nt
of Health and Human Serncea (HJl8), ad·
dresses t.be concerns of parents from dlf.
fere at etbalc, geograplalc, social aad
economic 1roup1 aboat Ute 1eJeeUoe of a day
care center for children. It dl.leuaaes wlaat
day care la, tells yoa bow to find aad keep a
good day care arr&a1emeat, ••aesta .....
tloaa to common day care preblem1 ud lllta
people and places that caa be of aaalataace.
Free alagle copies are available from tile
Day Care Dhlaloa, Admlalatratloa for
Cblldrea, Youth, and FamWea, HHS, &oom
5754, 40t Ith St. S.W., Waalthaatoa, D.C. ztnl.
Tax slatlU cluJnses
DEAR PAT Dl!NN: I came to the United
States in February of t his year. If J become a
resident would my tax status change?
G. V., Santa Ana
~ Yes, according &o tile lateraaJ aevettae
vice. A dual-status tu year ll oae dartag
lcb you were cla11lfied u bot.It a 808·
resldeat aJJea and a realdeat alfen. l.'.Ommoa
dual-statwt tu years, as would be eapected,
are those of arrival and departure.
&pemes not deductibl.e
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've been a musician
for about five years, but I've decided to
cbange my profession and am lookin& for a
job as an accountant. Are my job bunting ex-
penses tax deductible?
R.O., Laguna Beach
Sorry, but the latenaJ ltevnae Service
says that ln order to bave declacUble ell·
peaaes for 1eekln1 new employmeat, It mast
be la yoar present trade or bulDeu.
e "Got a problem? TMri write to Pot "' l Dunn. Pat wiU cut rtd tape. ~tting
• the aruwen and action JI°" need to
•
aol~ ineq11Uk1 in government and n busiM11. Moil ~r queatimu to Pot
Dunn, At Your ~e. OrOl'lge Cocat
DailJI Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, Coato Meta, CA 9205. Aa
mont1 ldtn• oa poHible wiU be 0M1«rtd, but phoMd
f11q1drie• or ldten not including the readn'• /1'lJ
name, addrtaa and bwineas houn' plloM number
cannot be coruidertd Thia column OPJlf'Or• doUJI 1%·
ce):>t Sunday•."
First coffee may
cause. sleepy day
CHICAGO <AP) -Dr. Charles !!bret, aa
Arconne National Laboratory aclentltt, HY• be
has round that morning cofree or tea can make a
person feel aleepy durtna daytime and rnUaa at
night.
"Coffee doet have the laudedlat.e effect ol lD·
creaalnc blood auaar, wbleb stv• a feelina ot •
lifl. But within IO mlDu\.11,·tbe 'bodJ'• lDlull.D OTer·
ridea tbat and you crull.'' Dnt aalid In aa ID·
terview.
------~--___ .,.......----..,.....-------------------------·----------~~~=,..-,,.--,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT.Monday, May 18, 1981
WASJilNGTON (AP) -A study of search comes primarily from
the World War II atomic bomb ex· Liv.ermo~. where pbyslcista William
ploalona at Hiroshima and Na1uaki Loewe and E<taar Mendelsohn la.at
indicates that cancer may be caued year used a computer to reconstruct
by much lower levels of radiatloo ex· the two atomic explo3ions that
poaure than is currently believed. rocked the Japanese cities of
Science Ma1azlne reported. Hiroshima and Nagasaki in AulUll
''Some of the most important data 19'5, killln& more lban 200,000 and
on the effect.s of nuclear radiation 00 ending World War II.
bum ans may be wrong," It said. Their findings are being checked
"The new rindin1s are far from and complemented by a group at Oak
welcome" and ''will worry the ad· Ridae led by George Kerr.
vocatesofnuclearpower." "Their statistics show that most or
The magazine reported on re· the cancer caused by these bombs
search being done at the Lawrence came from low LET gamma rays,
Livermore Laboratory in Calllomia suggesliDI this common type of
a nd at the Oak Ridge National radiation ls more hazardous than had
Laboratory in Tennessee. been assumed before," Science re-
Science empba_sbed that the find· ported. _
in1s are tentative, but said if they LET stands for linear energy
are accurate, the risk of dying of transfer. Low LET radiation loses
cancer alter exposure to low level"' relatively little enercy u it travels
1amma radiation could double and along its course and includes elec·
the probability of contraclin& cancer trons, gamma rays and X-rays. More
after gamma radiation exposure dangerous high LET radiation loses
couldl>e quadrupled. energy more rapidly and includes
Gamma radiation is emitted In the beamsofneutronsandprotons.
waste from nuclear reactors. Many scientists have believed that
The data, the magazine said, could m~st of the cancer that s howed up in
lead to a rewriting of many basic Hiroshima after the bomb was
documents on radiation hazards and caused by neutrons. But the new
an overhaul of nuclear industry sale-data, Science said, indicates the ac-
ty rules, drastically reducing radia· cepted figures for neutron radiation I lion exposure limits. in that city "are grossly overstated.
The magazine said some scientists "The cancer mortality data from 'EXODUS UT think the information strengthens the Hiroshima are the most valuable in ' A HENTIC? -Historical documents verify the account of
argument that there is no safe level the world," Science reported. the flight of the Israelites from Egypt, though the event may be about
of exposure to radiation, that every "Unlike the data from Nagasaki, 200 years earlier than previously believed. The tidal wave of 1477 B .C. is
incremental bit of exposure in· they are abundant enough to reveal a reputed to be the "parting of the waters" that allowed Moses and h~
creases the chances of injury. clear relationship between doses of followers to escape while Pharaoh's troops were drowne<J .
Science said the impetus for the re· radiation received and ill effects."
II
THE BIG DISCOUNT TO THE EAST YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT FOR.
It's just not possible to plan every trip
ahead of time or to stay for a week or longer. On
Continental. that doesn't mean you can't get a
big discount.
Our new ASAP Fare let!> you take off from
Lo!> Angeles International. Burbank or Ontario
for !>even Eastern cities. With no waiting.
Fly to Boston+. New York/Newark.
Philadelphia+. Washington, D.C.. Miami or
Ft. Lauderdale for only $179. Or Chicago for
$159. Thal'!> each way when you buy a round·
trip ticket.
There are no other re!>lriction.-.. No adv:ince
purchase. No length of stay requirement!> or
time deadlines. But seats are limited and all flight!>
are via Denver.
AN EXllA CITY. NO EX1'l.A CHAIGI.
When you fly to any of theiie seven Eastern
ci tie.,, you can return from any one of the other
cities at no extra charge. For example. you might
fly to New York/Newark and catch a return
flight from Wclshington. D.C.
FllST CLASS fOI THE PllCI Of COACH.
Buy a full fare Coach ticket on Continental
or bring us another airline's• full fare Coach ticket
to these Eastern cities and we'll fly you First
Class.§ That's right. First Class.
Thi!> i!. on a fin.t come. fir.it !>erve basis. !>o
re!>erv.ition-. are ~uggeste<l. Who ~d your company
wouldn't allow Fir..1 Cl~ trJvel any more'?
llO DEAL ON A IENTAL CAR.
Continental'!> ASAP Fare doe!>n·1 !>top being
a good deal when you land.
On weekend!., wi th a three day minimum,
you can rent a Dollar Rent-A-Car·;· for'
just $16 a day. That's with unlimited OOt.LAR
mileage. Or during the week. just -..:. ....
$24.95 a day with 100 free mile!>. Just
show your Continental 1id..e1 al the
Dollar rental location.
Gotta' get back EID.tin a hurry and want 10
From Lo~ Angelei. lnl'I. 10 :
Bo~tont: 7:00 am. 2:45 pm.
Chicago: 7:10 am. 11.25 am. 3:00 pm.
5:28 pm. 5:55 pm.
Ft. Lauderdale: 11 :25 am.
Miami: 7:10 am. 11 :25 am .
New York/Newark: 7: JO am. 11 :25 am~ 3:00 pm~
Philadelphia;: 7:00 am. 2:45 pm.
Washington. D.C.: 7:10 am. 11:25 am. \
~vc money too? You can't <lo belier.than ASAP.
Call your company travel department. lrdvcl
agent, or Continental.
BOSTON 'i79
NEW VORK/NEWARK 'i79
PHILADELPHIA 'i79
WASHINGTON D.C. 'i79
MIAMI 'i79
FT. LAUDERDALE 'i79
Lot Aitplet: 172-6000 • lcvuly Hills Ml S.n f.tmeltdu Yallcy. 916-1000 • BurtMt11~. Olcndtlc 1ftd Puedene: 246-7181 • t..u.a leec1'; S31·4400 •OM.no end~· 9ft.fd .. I •
01'lnJC County: 337·lft4 •Riverside end San lcmardl~ 1blt Frtc (800) '2S·0190 •Sin 01btlcl V.Ucy: '79-4210 •Santa Monka 1..t Sclul11 l1y: '46-2230 '
•
\
-.. . ... . -
----.
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT ~onday, May 18, 1981
r •
'
· .. Research generates consistent proof that . low tar
·· MERIT matches taste of higher tar brands.
Five years ago, low tar MERIT sparked
• 1 •• a whole new ·era in smoking by deliver-
. ing taste way out of proportion to tar.
Until MERIT, no low tar cigarette had
~ been able to prove it could match the
taste of higher tar brands.
~ -··a··,.·~~·
MERI'f: Taste Success
MERIT continues to win higher tar
smokers with its unique combination of
taste, ease of switch, ~nd long-term
satisfaction .
Millions Endorse
MERITTuste
~-----~ ..... _ =~1,...----~·
A combination that
appeals to millions of
smokers who have
switched to -and stayed
with-the first proven
taste alternative to higher
. ·:-
Switching studies con-
firm it. 90% of smokers
switching to MERIT are
coming directly from
. highei tar cigarettes.
tar smoking. .. .
The momentum builds: ·
Fact: Since its introduc ...
tion ~ MERIT has gained
more smokers than any
other low tar braad!
• 0,,..,Jibrtlls. l"I
Kinp:t mg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine-100' s Reg: 10 mg "ter:' 0.7 mg nicotine-
100' a Men: 11mg "tar:'0.8 mg nicotine av.per_cigarene,FTC Repon Dtc:7e
• J
Warning: The Surgeon Gnaral Ha1 IJ>1ternrin1d
if hat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
;
MERIT is changing the
future of smoking.
• I
i
Daily Pilat Love triumphs with .,
MONDAY, MAY 18, 1981 * humor in 0
FEATURES 82
Shakespeare's "All's a Well That Ends MOVIES BS
COMICS 87 W eLl." See Page B6 . ....
Father Hesburgh
reverses learning
SOUTH BEND, Ind. CAP) -
His years of study in philosophy
and lite rature, in religion and
science, in humanism and gov-
er nment have acquainted
Father Theodore Hes burgh with
the unlikely and the absurd. He
has learn~d to separate fact
from fantasy , reality Crom
shadow.
So it was with a clear mind
that he sat here at the Universi-
ty of Notre Dame graduation
ceremony nodding benignly,
hands folded , while Knute
Rockne, the legendary Fighting
Irish football coach, received an
honorary degree, and the Gip-
pe r . Rockne 's l egendary
halfback, delive red the com-
mencement address.
Well, not really Rockne. Nol
reatly the Gipper.
The commencement address
He presides over a campus
similarly divided between the
bravado of sport and the pa-
tience or study.
O n the outer wall of the
library, for instance, is a huge
mural, depicting the savior.
arms raised in an attitude of
blessing. The students call it
"Touchdown Jesus."
T hey may kid about their
globe-trotting preside nt, who
has logged several million miles
in the air satisfying his seeming-
ly insatiable curiosity about the
world. But he has built Notre
Dame into a first-class educa-
tional institution that over-
shadows its sports prowess. The
emphasis, he says, is broad.
"I think they should spend the
four years enlarging their minds
and enriching their imagina-
tions, their curiosity, growing in
They. may kid about their globe-
trotting president but he has
built Notre Dame into a first class
educational institution that over-
shadows its sports prowess ...
was delivered by erstwhile actor
Rona ld Reagan, now the 40th
president of the United States,
who played the Gipper in the
1940 Warner Bros. movie. And
Pat O'Brien, in his soth year in
show bus iness, received an
honorary degree for his long
friendship with the university.
dating from his role as Rockne
in the same film.
Father Hesburgh, in his next-
to-final year as president of
Notre Dame, a survivor of the
turbulent decades that toppled
other college presidents. a
veteran of public service in con·
trover sial a renas from civil
rights to the Cambodian crisis,
from amnesty to immigration.
characteristically stole the show
by returning to reality.
Across Juniper Roaci from the
double-domed Athletic and Con·
vocation Center which houses
both basketball and commence·
ment ceremonies is the Notre
Da me football stadium. Since
Father Hesburgh became presi·
dent in 1952 at the age of 35, the
s tadium has seen six, soon to be
seven , football coac h es -
Leahy, Bre nnan , Devore,
Kuh a r i k . Parseghian and
Devine. It has seen only one
president of Notre Dame and he
is a man who admires football
but reveres learning.
those powers that make them
human beings ... They should
!earn to ask the big questions,
about life and death, good and
evil, substance and s hadow,
beauty and schlock, courage and
cowardice. Those are transcen-
dental questions and they're go-
ing to be important whether
you· re 72 years old or 27 ."
He is a product of such an
education and it has led him to
49 different jobs, besides uni-
v er :Si ty president. H e has
served such diverse entities as
the Rockefeller Foundation and
the United Negro College Fund,
the Chase Manhattan Bank and
the Argo nn e National
Laboratory, the National War
College a nd the Presidential
Clemency Board, the University
of Jordan and the U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Council, the Cam-
bodia Crisis Committee and the
Select Commission on lmmigra·
_ lion and Refugee Policy, the
U.S. Naval Academy and the ln·
ternaliona l Atomic Ener gy
Agency, the Carnegie Founda·
lion and the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights, the President's
Commission on an All-Volunteer
Armed Force and the American
Bar Association's Commission
on Campus Government and
Student Dissent.
He holds the Grand Cross in
the Equestrian Order of the Holy
Sepulchre of Jerusalem, the
Med a l of Freedom , the An·
tarclic Service Medal and 13
other medals and awards. He
has 75 honorary degrees.
But he would · rather be re-
membered as ll priest than as a
statesman or an entry in the
Gui nness Book o f World
Records . He has consistently
taken the humanist approach to
social problems. As a priest he
could take no other.
The current generation re·
members him with bad feeling
for his statement to Notre Dame
students on Feb. 17, 1969, when
the campus contagion had
s pread to the university and
showed signs of getting out of
hand. He wrote a letter to facul-
ty and students alike that said,
abruptly, that any group that
substituted "force for rational
persuasion" would be given "15
minutes of meditation to cease
and desist" or face suspension.
In the predictable outcry, the
students seemed to miss the
point that demonstration was
not forbidden so long as it was in
line with "national persuaslon."
An yway, Father Hes burgh
s urvived that one, and says now
that if the stand had not been
taken, things would have gotten
worse. He carries in his pocket a
necrology, a list of other college
presidents who did not survive
the student unrest of the Sixties.
He r eadily admits his
vu lnerability. He prays 2112
hours a day, abides by the vows
of his order, and ~ars a copper
bracelet on his right forearm to
combat bursitis in his right
shoulder.
A man with no money, as his
poverty vows insure, he deals
with large sums, raising hun·
dreds of m illions for Notre
Dame, the Overseas Develop-
ment Council and dozens of
other projects.
He is a prolific writer who has
produced 10 books and other
tracts, t he latest, "The
Hes b urgh Papers : Higher
Values in Higher Education."
He is al least semi-fluent, "I
won't starve, anyway " in a
dozen languages.
rn years of wrestling with sun-
dry problems that beset society.
one has held front r ank : Recon·
ciling the demands of equality in
eduHlion with quality.
A leader in seeking equal ac-
cess to education for minorities,
Father Hesburgh worries about
diluting quality in education.
"I've always been fascinated
by the change of one letter in a
The Rev. TModore Hesburgh, center, who is in
his next-to-final year as Notre Dame president.
checked fire damage last year on tM campus.
with Leo Carback. left, dean of administration.
and tM Rev . Robert Austgen. at the South
Bend. Ind .. university. F'atMr Hesburgh was
host to President Ronald Reagan and Pat
O'Brien at Surufuy's graduaticn ceremontJ .
word. It's the whole challenge,
because while we are opening up
education to everybody. as we
open it up, we often dilute it, we
often depress it, we often debase
it. I don't mind if they use non·
English but they will know
English first.
"I always remember that
Groucho Marx line. ·Any club
that would have me isn't worth
joining,"' Hesburgh says with no
smile. "That's where we get to
when equality debases quality.
The kids get equal access to
zilch. That's not much or a bless-
ing for them."
He remembers a recent
speech to hi~h school principals.
in which he discussed the dem·
ocratic antagonism toward the
"elite."
"In other words, if you have
high standards, you're elite, and
elite is a bad word because it is
not democratic.
"That's garbage.
.. If I get on an airplane, I'd
like to have an elite pllot up
there. not a stumblebum who
isn't quite sure how to fl y the
thing. When r have a root canal
JOb. I don 't want a guy with two
left hands
.. H's funny that people who
are not elite when il comes to
education suddenly become very
elite when it comes to picking
quarterbacks and guards. wines
and cigars .··
Navy jet fighter crashes into sea
SAN DI EGO <AP > The-:> southwest of San Diego. lht• pilot
Navy is investigating the crash spent 45 minutes in the water
of a $5 million F ·5E fighter Wednesday before being rescued
plane into the sea during a rout· b.y a heliC'opter crew Cmdr Roy
ing training flight. Cash .Jr .. 41 , w::is taken to Naval
After ejecting 65 miles Hosp1talandrcleased.
·California adjusts to Proposition 13 ... 'barely'
BRISBANE, Calif. <AP> -
When the fire siren sounds in
Brisbane, City Manager Brad
Kerwin drops what he's doing,
rushes to the firehouse and hops
aboard Engine No. 2. His fellow
"volunteers" are police officers
and City Council members.
Brisbane, a blue-collar com-
m unity near. San Francisco's
municipal dump, has no full·
iime firefighters. It had 14 three
yeacs ago -before Californians
passed Proposition 13 and cut
property taxes in half.
The tax cut referendum meant
a reduction in revenue of $7
billion for the 5,500 local govern-
ments, like ertsbane's, which
depend on the property tax.
The stale has been able to
ease the pinch because of a treasury already fat with a $5
billion s urplus, and fed since by
laflatton-boosted income and
1ales tax revenue. And income
from the slashed property tax
was higher than expected
because of soaring property
values.
Indeed, since the advent ot
Propositlon 13, the state bas
pumped S5 billion a year into
local 1ov.emment coffers, allow·
ln1 communltlu to trim
tervicet araduaJly. Bat a new
round of cuta la expected later
th.la year: wf tb Ill surplua finally
exh1uatec1, the state wants to
cut lta '5 bUUoo aid packqe bJ
$258 million. t. Wben ~ on 11 took rl·
feet, the s,• al IOYenuntDta
affected .. meet to come up wltb
5,900 different wap to meet &be
lq ........
ID 8111bene, KarN tllaulM ... .... •!f. to t-..... from ....... mWlall _..
....,. .. to abollab die ftn
~-a.. ...... •
other cit.y employees lo fight
fires.
The council agreed, and now
council meetings ar e subject to
instant adjournment when the
fire alarm rings. Kerwin said he
personally has fought about 40
fires in 2'h years.
"Operationally, it is very
workable. We have double the
professionally trained man-
power available for either a
police call or fire call. But
politically it didn't work, not in·
iUally anyway," Kerwin said.
•'There was an initiative to re-
hire the firefighters. There was
a lawsuit against the city. There
was a recall attempt against all
five council members. Tl)ere
was a plot to firebomb my bome
and the mayor's home. There
was about a y-ear of sheer
political hell,!' he said, before all
challenges to the consolida-
tion were defeated.
Although initially opposed to
Proposition 13, some local of-
ficials around Callfornia say
they are pleased, that Proposi·
tion 13 gave them the chance to
make streamllntna changes tbey
had wanted for yeau.
But Oakland, perhaps the
hardest-hit city ln the 1tate, had
little to atreamllne and hat had
to cut ltl 4,000..worker payroll by
22 percent, far h.laber thui the
statewide reduction In public
•mplO)'ed of e percent.
Other commun ltiH tcbo
Oakland, HY1.nt tbtlr buqtta ....... ,., ~ .. and
that iome ~-ia eua -
1uc-b • deteriW street mlin·
tenanee ...S tbe elimination ot crl•• ·P"ftDUaa )'OUtb pro-sram• -wW CGlt mON tn u. 1oD1 nm.
Ma111 aft««bool rffnaUcm
Pl'Oll'Ulll btft bMli •Uminated.
Fees of $1 to $2 have been im·
posed for once-free swimming
pools, public parks and s ports
programs, effectively c losing
those facilities to thousands of
poor youths.
Summer schools , canceled in
most communities immediately
after Proposition 13 passed,
have resumed in many areas,
but often with fees that dis·
coi,trage the poor. Higb schools
which offered up l o seven
classes per day now limit pupils
to five classes, curtailing elec-
tives.
Some cuts were less visible.
Nearby Dixon gave lta money-
In Santa Maria, city hall opens
to the public an hour later and
closes an hour earlier while con·
tinuing the old work hours for
employees. The public is ad·
milted between 9 a.m . and noon
and between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m.
Those two "quiet hours" are
·'the biggest savings we ever
had," said administrator Robert
Grogan, who estimates an over·
all 25 percent increase in pro·
ductivity.
"One quiet hour is equivalent
to two to three business hours."
Grogan said, adding the itverage
city hall worker is interrupted
, an a verage of eight times per
"There was a plot to firebomb my
home and the mayor's home. There
was about a year of sheer political
hell."
losing garbage collecUon sy1tem
to a private operator who hJred
the workers, ralsed pay and lm·
eroved service without a rate in·
cireue. The opentor makes a
profit becauae he mercecl rout.el
w1tb other cities and cot Id·
mtnhtrattve overhead by
operatlna 1everal cit)' M1tbac•
ayatema from a •in1le omce.
The city of Davit took a IOll
coune that was lotlnt tl01goc> a year and Jeued lt to a 1ou pro
who P•Y• the clt.y •n,ooo a )'tar.
Tbe course aWl bat the area'•
lowe1t 1reen feet, ta to '6 per
pl1yer. The coll pro .. ,,. be la
maki•• a 1m~IJ profit.
hour by telephOne calls and vis·
lt.e from the public. ,
Pre>Wtltlon 13 spurred Garden
Grove to lrade in 2'7 large police
cars for compacts which "han·
dle bettel.' and do everytbine bet·
ter tbui the larger vebklea,"
11id PGllce Lt. Don Anton. Mlleat• increased from 5.2
milea per 1a1Jon to 9.5, Changes
planned ln the comina year
should raise that to 13 mlltt per
1allon, Anton aatd. For a depart·
ment lotainl 22,000 mtle• a
week,· that's a aavln1• or 2,500
• ••Ilona ot 1uollne and 13,000 a
week.
In Falrfteld, a city of 80,000
about 50 miles east of San Fran·
cisco. City Manager Gale Wilson
cut street cleaning from every
two weeks to every three weeks,
"and nobody noticed. Nobody
said a wo rd. l don 't think
they've noticed yet."
Fairfield also is one of the
cities doing what the framers of
Proposition 13 had In mind -
cutting government red tape.
Wilson abolished line·item
budgeting, which he said en-
couraged ''all the wrong
things," and adopted what he
calls a "bottom-line budget,"
patterned after private industry.
Starr time for budget prepara-
tion was cut by 1.000 hours a
year; costs were cul $40,000. The
budget book itself was reduced
from 213 to two pages. "\.
Fairfield's department heads
save some of the money they
don't spend for future year.s.
Before Proposition 13, only 3.9
percent of the budget was car·
ried over from one year to the
next. Now it is 8.1 percent.
"Tbis is a reversal of the old
government concept of spend it
or lose it. Wben department
heads and lower level managers
found they could keep money for
future needs. they were much
harder on themselves than we
ever were." Wlllon said.
Those storlet are the upbeat
side ol Propoialtlon 13, along wllb
the tu c:ut&, which reduced the
averaae homeowner'• annual
property tax bUl frolll about•
to about $400 aMually.
But tb~ \8 alto a ne1aUve
slde.
School dlt tricts, 11 well as cut· tina some mah•tenance . aome
sports and some elecUvea, have
cl osed many 1mall nei1hborhood
schools, parUy because of
decUnina enrollments. but mo~
'
often because of pressures to
curb costs and shift to more effi ·
cient larger schools.
Health and welfare services
paid mainly with federal and
slat e money have had some;
cuts. wilh bigger reductiofl,S iri
service expected this year.
I H ealth services provided by
local governments have been
s las hed drastically or put on a
pay-as-you-go basis. Once-free
venereal disease examinations
in public health clinics. for ex-
ample. now average $16 lo $20.
In Oakland, a city of 327,000
w h ere more than half the
population is black, Hispanic or
Oriental and minorities make up
80 percent of the school popula ·
tion, City Manager David Self
said maintenance has been re·
duced and a ll a ft e r ·school
recreation programs were
eliminated.
Police can't prove a direct
connection between Oakland's
rli;lng crime rate and elimina·
tion of the recreation programs.
but Capt. Howard Dilsaver,
chief of police youth servicet,
saya. the connection is obvlous.
Oakland's crime r ate, 6,937
m ajor crimes annually per
100 000 J)Oi}lllation, is 49 percent
higher than the state averaie,
the atate Justice Department re·
ports. And 35 percent of all
crtmee ln Oakland are com·
mltted by youth.I 17 and under,
Dll!!aver said.
"We're talkinl about cloelng acbool 1rounds because the
schools can'l afford 1upervls1on
there. We're t.alkln1 about no
aupervlslon at the parka. We are
very concerned •bout thl1 1um·
mer,'' Dllsaver 111d .
ID Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ~onday, May 18, 1981
~\ --------------------------------------------------------~~~----------
Marilyn craftsman • in kitche n ).\~ Can't jump -----------------------------------By EL.LEN BRYANT
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thu •• another
in o Hries of 1torlea obout mter~lt·
•ng Calf/orma womn.
California Woman
about the jumpers
JUMPING HERE AND 'l'HERE: By now you suspect
the entire universe knows the result.<iJ of the 53rd annual
leaping of the Jumping Frog Contest of .Calaveras Coun-
ty. But I'm trying to ignore it.
Never mind the fact ~ that several operatives
from our very own John · • ~
Wayne Airport here in b '\ Ora~ge County had an en-OM MURPHIN I ~r try m the contest nam ~ /
aptly, "Duke." Forg t 1 '
that even this sterling
journal, under auspices of
our county bureau chief, Fearless Fred Schoemehl, had a
leaping frog entry identified as "The American Dream."
Despite these parochial factors, I'm trying to forget
about the outcome.
IN EVENT YOU AREN'T steeped in the lore of
Califoraja during the Gold Rush days, it could be pointed
out that the current frog-leaping competition resulted
from a story by the celebrated American humorist Mark
Twain. Twain was lured to our Mother Lode country up at
Angels Camp in Calaveras County amid the Yosemite
range, in the hope that he would get rich quick by hitting
a vein of the yelJow metal. He hit it richer in American
literature.
His stay at Angels Camp, however, did result in a
story. penned in 1865, called, "The Celebrated Jumping
There are two aides to Men·
doclno. On the one band, there's
the quaint, simple town tourlata
see, the most "laJd back'' of
Northern Californla vUlagea.
But there's an intensit)' beneath
the luy surface, the buaUe of
creativity, the strenuous efforts
of dedicated artists and
craftsmen striving toward.a ex·
cellence in their chosen field.a.
Marilyn Douglas reflects both
sides of Mendocino, her home
for the past 10 years.
Ms. Douglas, 39, a tall, ma·
jestlc, red-haired woman, i1
articulate and charming, with a
friendly , relaxed QJanner.
Behind the delightful personali-
ty, however, is a determined,
talented craftsman.
Jn less than six years, Ms.
Douglas has built her Mendocino
Jams and Jellies, localed on a
two-acre farm outside of town,
into a highly successful en-
terprise, with 10 employees and
rapidly-growing sales. Her line
of high quality jams is featured
at gourmet shops throughout the
country.
But Ms . Douglas never con-
sciously set out to build a major
company. The business, she
says, "evolved purely by
chance."
M(lrilyn Douglas
Marilyn Douglas was raised in
Springville, an agricuJtural com-
munity in central Tulare Coun-
ty. Sbe first learned to cook
from her father, a professionaJ
chef.
After attending Sonoma State
University in Rohnert Park, she
began a career in management.
For several years, she was an
executive with Four Generations
Toy Company, a Sebastopol
manufacturer of wooden toys
and adult games.
She worked 12 hours or more
each day. And Ms. Douglas-re·
lisbed the role of young, suc-
cessful executive. She bought a
house and furniture and, she
says, "started to accumulate
p~ssessions -things, things, things."
In Unl, disaster"struck. While
she was at work, her new home
burned to the ground.
"I was wiped out totally, los-
ing everything· but the clothes I
was wearing.".
Ms. Douglas was devastated,
psycbologicalJy as well as finan-
c i a 11 y. But the catastrophe
proved to be a turning point in
her life.
''I suddenly realized that
material success wasn't nearly
as important to me as I had
thought. I became determined to
start a new life, an emotionally
satisfying life."
Her family had vacationed in
Mendocino for a number Of '.
years, and Ms. Douglas had I
always loved the area. •
After the fire, she quit her job I
and set off for Mend&cino, rent· '
Ing the summer home of family ~
friends. She bad less than $100 to \
her name. :
·'I felt like a pioneer.·• Ms. ;
Douglas laughs. ·
For severa l months, she did (
nothing but rest and take stock '.
of her life. Her first foray back i
into the world of work was as a :
hotel chambermaid. :
• · 1 wanted a job completely ;
without pressure." !
Gradually, Ms. Douglas felt ~
able to take on mor e l
responsibility. She became a ~
dishwasher at Cafe Beaujolais!.la !
popular Mendocino restaurant. ~
Soon, the restaurant's owners ;
heard about her cooking ability :
and asked her to become their ;
assistant chef. She agreed and :
remained al Cafe Beaujolais for ~
more than four years. the last ~
two as head chef. ;
In addition, she began to teach ~
cooking classes at Mendocino :
Community Coll ege. Ms.:
Douglas was a popular teacher. ;
and one of her most popular :
classes was a course in food pre-•
paration, including the prepara· :
tion of jams and iellies. '.
Virgo: Accent
. on your home
Another drug
and sex t e st
Angel8 Camp boo1ter JeTT11 Heintz cMcking pro~cu~ ~mper1
Frog of Calaveras County." rn it, two gentlemen wager
on who has the frog who can make the greatest single
leap -one declares, ''I'll resk forty dollars that he can
outjump any frog in Calaveras County" while the skpetic
retorts, "I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any
better'n any other frog . . . "
THUS THE BATTLE was joined and if you don't
know the outcome, better read up on your Mark Twain.
Admittedly. my lack of enthusiasm over frogs goes
far back to the time I had mis-enrolled in a zoology class.
The professor was a skinny, bald, bespectacled, thin-
h p ped character who just loved to torture students with
all kinds of experiments on frog cadavers.
As a matter of fact, sometimes the heartless prof
would send frogs to the Great Lily Pond in the Sky right
before your very eyes.
After executing the hapless amphibian, he would in-
to~e. in what seems to be suppressed joy, "Now you see.
this frog no longer exists as an INDIVIDUAL ... " He
put th~ emphasis on "individ4al" iust in that way.
Cripes, you'd say to yourself, he doesn't look llke he'd
give any more of a hoot if that was your very own lifeless
student form, reposing there in his bands.
Don't we want to at least say a couple of words over
the body of the recently passed?
MAYBE SOMETHING LIKE, "Oh Operator of the
Great Lily Pond in the Sky, he ain't much to look at now
but he was one helluva jumper in his time ... Amen!"
But nothing like that ever happened. The corpse was
simply dispatched to the dissecting table forthwith.
I got a "D" on the first midterm in Frog Executions
100-A. I turned in my dissecting tools soon thereafter to
pursue something more pleasant like chasing fire engines and cop cars.
. EVER SINCE, I've had trouble enjoying the Jump-
ing Frog Contest up there north at Angels Camp in
Calaveras County.
Just remember, out of the hundreds of frogs entered,
only a handful become celebrated winners with the big leaps.
Thus I can fret over what university prof gets all the losers.
Adve ntists schedule fihn
Tuesday, May 19, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
You close gaps -what seemed
out-of-reach is now available.
Emphasis' on law, special rela-
tionship, added responsibility
and greater chance for rewards.
Capricorn, Taurus, Virgo
natives figure prominently.
TAURUS ( pril 20-May 20~· Good mon~y ne s !
Gain valu hint by reading
HOROSCOPE
Aries message. Emphasis on
completion, credit ratings and
revelation concerning financial
status of one close to you, in-
cluding partner or mate. Gain
indicated through unorthodox
procedures.
GEMINI (May 2l·June 20):
Let go of outmoded methods.
Get second wind. New approach
necessary where partnerships,
contracts and public relations
enter picture. Focus on small
print, "important papers" and
marital status. Imprint style.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Focus on security, family, res-
olutions concerning diet, nutri-
tion and health. Intuitive in-
tellect provides answers. You'll
regain sense of direction. A
former "teacher" returns to
scene. Capricorn, Aquarius and another Cancer Clgure prom·
inently.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Obstacles are removed; you'll
·have greater freedom of
thought, action. Social life ac·
celerates, romance replaces
lethargy. You feel more vital,
alive and ambitious. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure
prominently.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ac-
cent on home, property values,
safety measures and basic
security. Delve beneath surface
indications. Family problem
will be resolved. Know it, accent
diplomacy and willingness to
make intelligent concessions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22):
Focus on change, variety, travel
and renewed communication
with relative who had been
estranged. Analyze recent oc-
currences; find reasons, take
nothing for granted. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons play
important roles.
Sl:\lRPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Investment pays dividends.
• Money pict"'-re is brighter than
originally anticipated. ~ccent on
personal possessions, payments
and collections. You locate what
had been lost, missing or stolen.
Family member makes con-
ciliatory gesture.
SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec.
21): Judgment, timing are on
target. You'll be at right place
at crucial moment. Highlight
confidence, take initiative, make
personal appearance. New con-
tacts prove valuable. Define
terms, avoid self-deception.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Much that occurs takes
place behind scenes. Clandestine
meeting could be on agenda.
What ~peared a setback is like-
ly to boomerang in your favor.
Accent on courts, hospitals, or-
ganizations and fraternal or-
ders.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Accolade from one you admire
provides boost in morale. Focus
on dreams, visions, wishes and
basic fulfillment. Aries, Leo,
Sagittarius natives play impor-
tant roles. An aggressive friend
aids in removing roadblock to
progress.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Highlight independence,
initiative and open dialogue with
one ii) position of authority. New
approach elevates standing in
community. Leo , Aquarius
persons figure prominn~ntly.
Emphasis on achievement,
responsibility and dedication.
Dear Readers: Last week I
promised to print the 1981 teen-
age Drug and Sex Test. I'd like to
make it clear that these tests,
which have appeared in this col-
umn from time to time, are not
written by me. In fact, I don 'l care
much for them. The first Drug
and Sex Test appeared in 1967. It
was composed by three teen-
agers. I have published several
up_~ated tests by teens from
Maine to California. This one is
from two New Trier lligh School
students who live in a Chicago
suburb. It is called the Know
Thyself Questionnaire. Score the
number indicated for each 'Yes"
answer.
l . Ever gone out with a
member of the opposite sex? 2
2. Ever been kissed? 3
3. Ever been French-kissed? 4
4. Ever been kissed while in a
reclining position? 5
5. Ever gotten or given a
hickey? 5
6. Ever been kissed against
yourwiU? 2
7. Ever parked for more than
an hour? s
8. Ever taken off most of your
clothes while parking? 7
9. Ever said, "l love you?" 4
10. Ever said "I love you" to
more than one person in the
same week? s
11. Ever gone totally steady? 2
12. Ever cheat on your
steady? 5
13. Ever pick up a girl or go with
ag_uyyoudidn'tknow? 6
14. Ever make a member of the opposite sex cry? 4
15. Do you s moke regular
cigarettes? 3
16. Do you smoke pot? 6
17. Do you drink alcohol or
beer now and then? 7
18. Do you drink alcohol or
beer every day? 9
19. Have you ever passed out
from drinking? 9
20. Have you ever tried Angel
Dust? 11
21. Have you ever slipped Angel
l)ustintosomeone'sdrink? 12 •
22. Have you ever taken pills :
lo get high? 11 :
23 . Have you ever taken pills :
to get off a high or go to sleep? 11 :
24. Have you ever had sex :
without using a contraceptive? 10 :
25. Have you (or your partner) '.
ANl LAIDIRS
ever worried about being pre~·
nant? 10 :
26. After the scare did you go :
back tohavingsex without protec· :
tion? 11 .
27. Have you <your girl J ever .
considered an abortion'! 12 :
28. Have you (your girl) ever ·
hadanabortion? 12 :
29. Even though you are :
straigttt. would you go kinky to •
see what it's like? 13 :
30. Ever stolen money to buv
drugs? 13 -~ \1
SCORE CHART
Under 10 -A nerd.
11 to 15 -Pure as Ivory soap :
and maybe a fruitcake. ·
16 to 20 -Passionate but :
sensiblA :
21 to 39 -Normal and decent.
40 to 75 -Indecent.
76 to 85 -Headed for serious •
trouble.
86 to 104 -Already there.
Anything over 104 -Hopeless
and condemned.
• How much do you know about ;
pot, l.SD, cocaine, speed, meth. Up.:
pers and downers, glue and heroih? :
A re all these drugs dangerous? (let :
Ann Landers· new booklet, "Straight ;
Dope on Drugs." For each booklet •
ordered. send a dollar plus a long. :
self-addr~ssed envelope ( 28 cents :
postage) to Ann Landers. P.O. Boz :
11995, Chicago, l!l. 60611 .
ADVENTIST COMMUNITY
services presents a film series
tilled "Focus on ttie Family" shown
Tuesday evenings at 7, May 19
thr,ough June 30, at the Newport
Harbor Sevenlh·day Adventist
Church. The film series features
therapist James C. Dobson and fami-
ly counseling graduate student. will
lead discussions following each mov-
ie. For information, call 645-2082.
are Sue Clark of Newport Beach and
Herta Lin of Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (213 ) 641-8152.
How Do You Feel Right Now?
ORTHOPEDIC TR EATMENT of
aT~ritis is the subject of a lecture at
HEALTH HELP
7:30 p .m . Tuesday, at Western
Medical Center, formerly Santa Ana-
Tuatin Community Hospital. The free
discuaiston wUI be led by physicians
Larry Danzig and Zan Lewis. For in·
formation, call 633-~l.
NATIO NAL IUD NEY f'OUN·
dation bene~C hO~e show will be
held from MQ 20 to 25 at the Coto de
Cua f.qu.triu Cat.ff la Trabuft
Canyoo. Servtn• OID th• llemortal
Day CIUllc Hone Show Committee
CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE pa-
tients and the community can find
out bow the disease affects the fami·
ly at a lecture aponaored by the
American Lung Asaocation of Orange
County. For informaUon, call W -
LUNG.
HI GH HOP ES Neurological
Recovery Group baa scheduled a
skate-a-thon to raise funds for
various pro1rama at 6 p.m. Thun-
day, in Laguna Hl11s . For lnforma·
tion, call 640·4481.
WORKSBOP on ''The Art of Self·
Preservation" wtll be held at 9:30
a.m . F'rklay, In Tustin. Spot"tortd by
the Oran1e County Mental Health A•·
soclation, the event wiU be led by
Barbara Hall·Holme• of the county
Human Services A1ency. For in·
formation, call 547-7559.
~ONQVE& DEP&8S810N ts lbe ll·
tl• of a leetun at 10:30 a .m. Satur-
day, ln Newport Beach. The pqram
I• •ponle>Nd b7 the New Llte Found•·
tlon. For lnforma,Jon, call (213> .._tne.
Announcing a Summer
Program ForTeeml
John Robert Powers has
designed a special Summer
program to meet the sell·
Improvement needs of
teenagers. for over 50
years. John Robert Po\lters
has served the emerging
woman In personal. busl·
ness or career development
and professional mOdellng.
Now the teenager can
especi,lly leam to reach
her ton pottnt111111t "Pow·
«s" way In the rtla~tc:I
atmosphere of SUIMllr
classes. Rtctlve sut>stan-
tlal tuition discounts by •
res«Vtng claues now catt
fO( lrtt lnfom'latlon.
...mum
· 3 Town & Country, Orange
(714) 547-8228
. Are You A Mature Woman ...
With A Circulation & Figu re
Problem?
If your anewer la "YES" then you need
Jean Marie ... The only women's
Health Salon designed with you In mind!
•LOOK BElTER ..• FEEL eeTTER ...
The tptdal"man In your life wtl kW9 you
tor ltl
If you W Arabic Dancing atrenuoua
and the "8atg&ln" exW.. M1ona oner
no equipment .•• thin pleue come In
tor a F,.. T~ . . . on the molt
IOPlilMk:llled med*lee avellable I
...... _ ...
,,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT.Monday, May 18, 1981 s
.,
·-
Don't iust sit
.
there ·-on your ~·
•
small fortune •••
I'
I
e·
Look around your house and garGCJe and you'll probably discover you have a
mountain of oldies but goodies you could sell. Move that mountain. .
Ccill a friendly ad=vlsor c;wt the Daily Pilot. Use the direct line.
· Ttiousancls of ready-to-buy ad readen are "shoppiftCJ the ad1 in the Dally PllQt •
· ev~ day. Many are eCICJer to buy iust what you have to sell.
••
--~~ -. -.. --------·:--~--~--==--~~--~·--·--· ..... --~~11111!!".,5~05 ........ 2 ....... 6~5~3----............. !!llll
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ,t,ionday, May 18, 1981
STCLIFF
PLAZA
ANTHONY 'S SHOE SERVICE
BANK OF AMERICA
CHARLES BARR JEWELERS
CROWN HARDWARE
DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR
DR . LOU1 ELDER
optometrist
HAIRHANDLERS SALON
HALLIDA Y'S MEN 'S CLOTHING
HICKORY FARMS
speci<Jlty food items r
HUMPTY DUMPTY
children's clothing
JEAN DAHL
designer and better sportswear
LA GALLERIA
elegance in fashion
MARKET BASKET
...
ti!ES AMIES TEENS
NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS
PAPER UNLIMITED
gifts and stationers
SAY -ON DR UGS
STOREKEEPER
traditional sportswear
VETA 'S INTIMATE APPAREL
WESTCLIFF CLEANERS
WESTCLIFF CORNERS
gourmet wore and collectibles
WESTCLIFF SHOES
XAVIER 'S FLORIST
Bl r-
"ill ~··· day,
ylor,
Gey.
lrie
lbert
J an-
~r to JSO.
ner-
star
pre-
pro.
Don rize.
a vid
an 's
'The
ura,
Ii cal
for
F F
Lena Hor-rW: in he r, pri ~ at (')3
NEW YORK <AP) -Lena Home, warm and
wonderfUl, better than ever. bad a dynamltt open·
Ina of a "limited Broadway enga~ement" run of
"Lena Horne: the Lady andberMus1c."
Nobody announced how limited the engage-
ment ls; one would expect audiences to pack the
Nederlander Theater ror a loog time. On openine nlabt. she got standing ovaUons at the beginning
and al lhe end of each act and after two other
songs. It wasn't just the excitement of opening
night; one would expect all her audiences to do
that or more. • Miss Home, who is 63, slngs as well and enun-
ciates a.s carefuJly as ever. She's still beautiful.
presents herseU in gorgeous clothes with taste.
with show business knowhow. Some things have
changed -for the better.
She's still.sexy, still has class. Now she's also
friendly, and t.ery funny. She talks between some
of the songs. She tells some stories of the "it sure
wasn't funny at the time" variety. She remembers
the pain and the reason, finally got over the pain
and tells the story in a way that both she and ber
bearers, witllout triviahzing, can laugh.
Kim Carnes still tops
Billboard record c hart
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The following are Billboard's hot record hits
for the week ending May 23 as they appear in next
week's Issue of Billboard magazine.
HOT SINGLES
1. "Bette Davis Eyes" (Kim Carnes) EMI·
America
2. "Being With You" <Smokey Robinson >
Tam la
3. "Just lhe Two of Us" <Grover Washington
Jr.) Elektra
4. "Angel or the Morning" (Juice Newton)
Capitol
5. "Medley" Stars on 45 Radio Records
6. "Take It on the Run" C REO Speedwagon)
Epic
7. "Living Inside Myself" (Gino Vannelli )
Arista
8. "Sukiyaki" (Taste of Honey> Capjtol
9. "Too Much Time on My Hands" <Styx> A&M
10. "Watching the Wh eels" (John Lennon> Gef-
fen
TOPLP's
1. "Hi Infidelity" (REOSpeedwagon) Epic
2. "Paradise Theatre" <Styx) A&M
3 "Arc of a Diver" <Steve Winwood > Island
4. "Darty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" (AC·DC>
Atlantic
5. "Wm elight" <Grover Washington Jr >
Elektra
6. "Moving Pictures" <Rush ) Mercury
7. "Face Dances" CTheWho> Warner Bros.
8. "Another Ticket" (Eric Clapton) RSO
9. "Double Fantasy" (John Lennon & Yoko
Ono) Geffen
10. "Face Value" (Phil Collins) Atlantic
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
.. FAST
RESULT ..
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5678
ht. 322
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rare Coln• It Stemp•
GOLD & SILVER
70% Bank Financing
Now Available On Gold & Silver
,.,K19oftll ICt'49ffMCle Now Ht c.e .... -..-••
(714) 556-6850
South CoHt Plaza VIiiage _ ........ (Ac ___ C-"'*'•I
WtST COAST PR(MIERl ENGAC.EMLNT NOW SHOWING
• Oronoe CINIDOME • COSIO Mesa. HAHOR TWIN
6J4'2HS 6ll·J501
~1~-·~~eooPM C..Ul"lAlll!IOl1 SMOW11M0
~ PACI Fic:S~·ooME· ~~ ~~ttl nt111 V•"• HOll••OOO • 21J/.a6 .. J.a0t
Oat1>t 1130 • l~ • 100 • IC>I~ 'M
----"''""' °'1ttl ti .... --' tiCOll Git UU htMltilttti.11 1ac11 Olt '0" fMt t oat!_ .,l•fO•Jlll•!f_t
• ,...w••1t• OOf 00..8\' ST£FIEO 1·
C€l€BRat€
Newport's 4th Anniversary Tuesday,
May 19, with 1971 Dinner Prices,
an extended "Cask Hour" with
Two-for-One Cocktails from
11:15 A.M. till c/~ing,
Complimentary Desserts
and other festivities.
After all, MGM got M~ Factor to crt!ate 1
"colored" makeup for her. They called it Ll&ht
Egyptian and put lt on Ava Gardner, Hedy
Lamarr and Jeanne. Cral.o in movie roles Miaa
Horne coveted. Sometimes before, in concert, Mias
Horne could be a very mannered singer. That la all
gone. Now she's an actress. Thal doesn't mean 1he
talks the words. She srnas -low, high, soft, loud.
She slowed the tempo or "l Got a Name" and
sang it quiet and proud, wi ii It were written for
her hfe She made the last lines an anthem of deep af.
Cir mation. She made "Yesterday When I Was
Young" a one-act play by the way she sang it and
got a standing ovation. She said, "l had to grow in·
to this song," then poured emotion and volume in-
to ·•stormy Weather' and Rot another ovation.
There is real musical variety in Miss Horne's
selections, fa r more tha n the change-of-pace in·
volved in following a slow song with a fast one. She
sang "I Want To Be Happy" sometimes rJlrty,
sometimes kidding, with the ogling sideways
moves of a stripper.-She sang "Love Can Be a Joy
Forever,'' in wbat one Lhin.k.s of as Lena Home
style, biting off the words and ending every "er"
with "ah."'
She nas a 15-piece band behind her, playing
tasteful arrangements, but sang '"Deed I Do" with
just Grady Tate on drums. "I'm Glad There Is
You·· with conductor Coleridge T. Perkinson's
electric piano and "Love Me or Leave Me" with
Bob Cranshaw's jazzy bass. She sang all the
verses of ·· Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered."
Format was chronological, from the Cotton
Club dancer days through the movies to today.
Clare Bathe, Tyra Ferrell and Vondie Curtis-Hall
fltll>AY
TllEl'8"
fANT 2
•
•Ut" t•U va c.1•1•u ••t1
UA t iff CMHM& t1W&AO$ CUHMt CU 'lll
~
~=:~~ .. ,.,, EJllJCD ~u' .... '
0AA'9Gl 0.lf f I•
• ,..... • .a.wut llllCetM Gllltl Iii ............. ,
• .,.. "·-ANiAMOu~I ......
R -""'~14 '"' meWl:<l!·Wm!t -
EDWARD'S NEWPORT
Newport Beach 644 0760
PACIFIC SOUTH COAST
l~gund Bearr 494 1514
MANN BflEA PlAZl
Bre.i ~29 '>339
UA CINEMAS
Westminster 893·0~46
EDWUD'S VIEJO MALL
Mission V1e10 495 62?0
EDWARD'S WOODBRIDGE
Irvine 5~: 06~~
CINEOOMl
Orange 634 2553
STADIUM 0.1.
Oranoe 639·8770
i"6'i'N} PARK 0.1.
Buena Park 821 ·4070
• Plllll ACCUTU
fOR TMI OlllllME.NT
JAMIU OA,,f!NEll
THE FAN
IAI
6 :30 ,,20 10·1 ~ ,, cLurn ,0110
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
TO M E t~I
1 :00 1:15 10.20
I= Soyvo\ltr !!tailono
mliHTHAWU
(Ill
6:00 1 :00 10 :00
'c:=='=~=l~=G=r::~:r=T :=:='~:::I 5==a
Dolby Sllfl O
• ... VI.,,_ y ,,.. J • SoWICI .t 0.1•-... ....... Yo ... AM e», .-~io tt yo 111 .,....._., 11 no AM
Ott ,._dlO W•Jh 'tf'lhOtl:
·~~'; PQtohon .,,.,.. "°" own AM pott.-..
THE FAN
1111
r==--...,
HARD COUNTRY
(PO)
.-AV•MS-~ (Ill
I c:
! ====~=E=N R=E=~=~=LO=t=;===i 1~1
UKDCAlllS t A I
KING OF THE MOUNTAIN tl'GI
""-~ THC 81110fllXlllll
O A 1\IE·INS OPEN 7 J O
NIGHTL Y'
Chold •en Undlr 1i FREE
Unle" N oleCI.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MOnday, May 18, 1981 I 81
..............
Lena Horne's Broadway act has changed for the
better. She is o.s sexy as ever and has lots of class
on stage.
came on to be a lively Cotton Club chorus. with
Miss Home keeping up with them brieOy, then
walking off stage. Returning, she said, "I told
those children they could shake their booteys as
long as they wanted to; l've got to sing two
hours."
Producers are James Nederlander, Michael
Frazier and Fred Walker in association with
Sherman Sneed and Jack Lawrence. Arthur Fana
staged. Harold Wheeler is musical director and
Luther He8derson, musical consultant.
Anybody thinking Mi ss Home might be past
her pnme can forget it. She hadn't bit it beforl'
She's in it now.
\3
rie~ACT•.....,.
•uo-~~~~!~~-'~L ..••
Ul.Al "T&l.:ttl"' • ft......,._ •• ,Al.LOlm ..
NIOHTHAWttS (IU , .. , ...... , ....... .
, ...... -..cAaTWIT a .... ~ tet ........ , ••·•..a ·tt•
..... nllll tk•··--· .. .,,_ •M Mt~.-.,
N ,U f 1..-•fl •• t:•• ..,_, ...... R:i9 •1•• 1t•
' -~= .. :::: :~~~:T~A:~.~~~)
I .... AMC¥ A.Olo Wllh l9"11tan ACC"\O"V llro"I) V-Owfl AM Po.Ubl•
Jiii ~["=· J ·wH::~~T~=: c1111
I ,..AM C:.W Aedlo Wltll 19.Wllan At<ft-Y 8r1"1) .,...,t Own AM """-OI
"",.,.,."" . --'"THE FAN"(R) -"'lllOUOH cur· (PO)
"TAKE THIS JOB ANO
SHOV!. IT' (PGI
....._ ____ _ --..--... PLUS ___ ...;.;..;..__.1 ··THE KIDS ARE A.UllGHT"' (POI
I No AM Clot 111.oio Will. lfl'lllan At<•_., ltt .. Y-0.11 AM Pof"U I _.,,,. c.._..,._ __ _
.. "'c;..-"OMOUATtON DAr 1"-1 G...• ,,..... ~
_....__,._, -"''-' -"a.eERLEAOl"I HACM PAR'JY"
---------.L--'°"""'Y llltTMOAY 10 Mt•' I") ..,_...;...,;;.;;_"WfflN A IT"AHOIJll CALLl'1("1
t He AMC:. llelllo Wltll lflllllan Aot-'1' 9'1111 -0-. AM ...,. ....
''TAKI TMtl .K>e ANO
• INOVI ff" (..0) -''WMl"I DOU IT HU«T" l"I
Hope b irthday
part of s how
11 01 1 Y WOO J) I AP l Bob Hope wall
ct•ll'hrato h1~ 7Hth b11 thday wi th an all-star special
to be lt'lt•cast b' '\IH' from West Point on Monday,
M .1y 25.
Amun~ those to appear are Elizabeth Taylor,
M ar~ \l.11 t111 Ct'urgt· C Scott. Mickey Rooney,
Sugar H:I\ Lt•ona1 d, Brooke Shields, Marie
Osmond, <ih·n ('ampb<·ll. Dolores Hope, Robert
l I l<'h und !111111 Hroad\\ ay's "42nd Street," Wan-
d.1 H1dw1 t Lt•1· Ho" lh·ami. and 25 dancers.
Vin· l't 1 -.11ll·nt ·Gt•ur~e Bush will also appear to
prt'se111 !lope· '"1th .m <H' urd on behalf of the USO.
Hope lws lx1·11 H:O:.M>c wtert with the USO m enter-
ta in111~ M.'IVl<"l'llH II S lnl"l' 1941.
BPtlt '11<ll!·r h t n W .ihl and Rip Torn will star
rn .l11Pwd · .1 mov1t• from United Artists pre·
vaoush 11th-cl tlut Stn·ak"
Tbt• 1111 11·• ' 1 orn.mt·e thnller is now in pro-
d111·t11111 .11 l ..• i. .. I ahue under direction of Don
S 1t•g1•I I ho· ,1·1 1· .. i:iptav •~ by Pulitizer Prize·
wirtni11i.: pl:"\\ rnrll t Fr.rnk D Gilroy and David
"It "' m 111
~·11ui o l I lit· 't"-t'n "'ar raors from Japan's
c·l;is. "·" l h1 "''"t'll samurai" wilJ star an "The Equ.cl:-. for <·us 'I hl'at rical Films
Tiit•\ .1r 1· I osl11n Mafune, Takashi Shimura.
St 111 :\11' ;,~·11\ 111 Jnd \ 11sh1e Inaba The classical
111111 "' \l-.11 .1 l\11 r11..,;1wu s«>rved as the base for
"'I ht• \J:ic.:111f 11·1•11I <.;(•\\'II
MOH THVt_. ....... " "--1--'-"====~+-==..:.;.;;:"-=.-... ............
EXCALIBUR •~I -.,._.
1 "·'"'
"THIEF'
•AUL McCAAf MY
IOOOI tlHO• ll'OI
"'"' n.rw..o T><I KIC>e Allr •I.II~
lllOej .• ,_. , ... 11•
"MODERN ROMANCE"
llON·1-I M l
" LEPHANT MAN" ---··· -"THI"
"FRIDAY
THE 13th 11" __ ,_. . ... ~ .. , ...
\
4
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 18, 1981
\ti 1\;I>-\ \
-EVENllG-
....01•• NEWS WOHOERWOMAH
A IMn-tlge pop muliC 1tar
la kidnapped Of' the eve of
a huo• concert and
replaced by hit twin
brOthet.
I TIC TA(4 DOUGH
M•11.•s•H
Wlille an entartainer doe•
a 11\0W from en Hnp<ovlMd
1taga In the compound
the comedy and drerna ot
the dOCIOft' llVH oo on
Cll GOOO T1MIE8
Flottda pt1y1 matchmaker
IOf Wtllone and a male
Irland 01 James
HAPPY ENDING -Angela Down and Jan
Charleson star in Shakespeare's "All's
We ll That Ends We ll ," one of the
playwright's least-known comedies,
tonight at 8 on Channel 28. <Also at 8:30
p.rn . Wednesday on Channel 50 ).
SI PADOIHOTOH BIEAR ~.
Paddington ....,d• away '°' • bOdybuOd1no kit.
bakH 1 birthday cake for
Mr.. Curry and tries h11
lland at topiary ID EUCTAIC COMPANY
CU NEWS
AJICNIEW8 I aaG JOt<IER'S WllO
., WEL.COMIE BACK,
KOTTER
Th9 S-tlloga owe • new
lludant teacher Iha lrHI·
rnent
• IENHYHlll
An Auttralian baelloround
give• Benny the opQOftunl·
ty to inveallgate outlaw
hetO Ned Kally. 9 KCETNEW881EAT 6ti> STUDIOS&
"Gymnasttes' Youno gym·
n11t1 11a1n IOf future Olym·
pie eompetlllOt". two ktd•
l1om Nebraska mike e set·
enoe lle11on lllno (R)
(1) NEWS 9 8ARHEY MlllER
A departrnenl store owner
II ~Id napped 1n<1 hll cap·
tort demand that h<a mer-
I CHANNEL LISTINGS
et1and1se be given away 10
the publtc (Part 1)
9:65 8 EDITORIAL
1:00 8 CBS NEWS D N8CNEW8 9 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fonua au1ter1 a bad case
ol stage luohl when he
mai.es his atng•no debut a1
the big dance D A8CNEW8
0 BULLSEYE
Q) M •A•S•H
Hawkeye and Trapp.-help
ornt loldler to toin hll
pr90nan1 wife and try 10
atop anottle< from marry
•no • business gtrt
Cl) STREETS OF SAN
FRANCISCO
A re<:tuae who has lived 1n
a 1tr1noe manlllon tor 30
yaara comes under 1n~11
oattOn when • netghbO<
hOOd boy d~pears ED OVEREASY
Guests Miich Miiier. D<
Samuel Wycolf iRIO ~ MACNEIL / l.V4AER
REPORT
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
OJ) MERV ORIFflN
Gueits Wayne Rogers
8 KNXf CBS1 Lo-. Anlj .. I•'' D KNBC NBC.t LO'> An9t'1,.,.-.
0 KTLA rlnO I LO!> Ang._. I''>
0 KABC TV 1ABC1 LO'> Anyl'll''>
(I) '{FMB 1CBS1 Sdn Oieqo G KHJ· rv (Ind, Los An H'IP<,
[f KCST 1ABC1 San Q1pqo
Q) KTTV 11no J Los Anqe1,., m KCOP rv (lnr1 I Los Anq ....... ED KCE T ·TV 1 PBS1 Los An41•lt•.,
~ KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunt n'11011 Beacn
Charles Grodin. Cheeeh &
Chong 1~30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Ho1t1 St•~• Edwa1d1.
Melody Rogers A voriety
of plythlCS demonstrate
thetr powers, an examine·
lion of the Ku Klux Klan tn
CaltfOfnta 8<\d theu ttlor11
lo recruit youtl\s D FIGHT BACK WITH
DA\110 HOROWITZ U MOVIE * "Sot Pepper'• Lonely
Hear II Ctub Band" ( tll78)
Pe19f Frampton. Iha Bee
Gees A group of young
P4109le try to save lhetr
town lrom Iha mean Mr
Mustard D HOLLYWOOO
SOUARU Q FACIE THE MUSIC
Q) All IN THE FAMILY
Mike and Archie make a
bat 10 -wh<> can do
without h11 favorite mdul· q_ence for 48 hours
6l) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
~ ONCEUPONA
CLA881C
Clrrl9 I War" Catrte h9f
brolhet Nick and lrten<l
Albert move 10 Iha Welsh
countryllde alter De1no
evacuated lrom London
durtno World War II (Part
t)(R)
P.M. MAGAZINE
An anti-rock mullC revival
meeting, the company that
makes President Reeoan's
lavolile jelly beens
9:00 8 (J) THE WONDERFUL
WOAl.O OF PHILIP
MAllEY
A COiiage Q<olessor 1nven11
on 1nt1-grav1ty devJCe an<l
tests II out at 1 sch004
track meet
·Movie reveals
1
PBB pollution
By J ERRY BUCK "'"T~Wrttar
LOS ANGELES Whe n
Michigan dairy farmer Ned
Devries' cows began to get sick
state officiaJs told him he didn't
know how to feed his cattle.
Only later did he learn that his
ca.ftle -and an estimated eight
m1Uloo people -had been vie·
tints or massive pollution by a
chemical called PBB.
The story of the contamina-
tion, based on a r eal case is told
in '.'Bitter Harvest." NBC will
broadcast the two-hour movie on
Monday night at 9 o'clock on
Channel 4. Kon Howard stars as Devries.
Art Carney is a neighboring
farmer, Tarah Nutter is Mrs.
Devries and Richard Dysart is a
researcher who isolates the
chemical. Tony Ganz produced
the film and Roger Young. twice
winner of the Directors Guild
Award for episodes of "Lou
Grant," was the director.
an a ttempt, which ultimately
was successful, to get PBB
banned.
Richard Friedenberg spent
several months doing additionaJ
research in Mic higan before
writing the screenplay, though
the movie does not specify any
particular state. Howard said he
wanted to wear a Detroit Tigers
cap but was told not to.
''The guys who fought for the
ban are heroes," said Howard.
"The thing that drew me to the
s tory is that it shows that one
person , if he's d e t e rmined
enough, can get som ething done.
I was happy to be part of a
dramatization of what effects
chemicals can have on our lives.
But most importa•nt, I was
pleased to be portraying some·
one who did something about
it. ..
D um.I HOUM OH
ll41~
A vialtlng ltmlnlat atlfl UP
a betlle of the &ell• In
Walnut Oro\141 (R)Q ~· FMllH9d a mptetlOUI
Maylll'I lllull Iha ln.,.,..tOf ,
ol a l)O(tal)le w.tultn pump,
Alla'• Komooo dlegona
k111a1e ••P9f1• demol1ah·
·l~awn U MO'M
• • • • "Spartecus" (Part
1) l 19e0) Klfk Oouglb
Laurence Oltvler A gladla-
tOf escapa !Tom slavery 10
ChaltenOf th9 atrength 01
tmparla1 Rome and
b.comH a 1ymbot of tree-
dom
Q) P.M. MAGAZINE
An lll'lll·rotk mYSlc: revival
mMllng. the company that
makH Prestd9'11 Reagan •
ta110f1te jelly Deana, Siiiy
Btlll Chill with the
"Bea1ar1". eugoesttona for
snacking. how to prepare
chtcken 1n a nes1
Cl) MOVIE • * • ~ The Outel Man
( 1952) JOhn Wayne. Mau
reen 0 Hara A torm9f
pr11et1ohle< returns to his
native Ireland alter kllilno a
man 1n Iha rtng, but falls 10
tond th9 peace h9 sought fD THE SHAKESPEARE
PLAYS
All s Wall That Ends
Well In • ct&Sh ot 6tand
ards bel_, oene1atlon1.
the Countess (Cella John
sonl endeavors to teach
her son Bertrem (Ian
Charteson) that pos1tt0n
and hO<lor are less •a•u
able man the quail11e~ of
tove and l1dehty olfered
htm by her ward Helena
jAnoela Oownl m CHARLIE CHAPLIN
COMEDY THEA TAE
The Coont P916) Cha•·
he 11 persuaded 10 mu
que<ade as a count at a
soc:1ew party
9:30 .., CAROL BURNETT
ANO FFJIENOS
Skill "The Family The
Otgs m MOVIE * • • • Coney Island
( 1943) Belly Grable Cesar
Romero A luscious ta•ern
tnller boeomes tne ob1ee1
of adOfatton for two men
on Coney Island 1n the ear
ly 1000s
8:008
KUnoer saves Major W•n·
Chesler s hie when an
explosJon "P' apart 1ne
operating room of the
4077th (R)
IJ MOVIE
'Biller Harvest' (Prorn-
te<e) Ron Howard Art Car
nay A young farmer tne•
to prevent the spread 01 1
deadly chemical matady
lhel has alllicted htS tem11~
and llvetlOCk
0 ~ MOVIE
'Freedom · jP1em1ere)
Mare W1nn1ngham Jen·
n1tar Warran A 1ebet11ous
teen-ager tt1kes oH on 11
"Ned's a chemical engineer
who inherits the dairy farm
from his father.'' said Howard.
''Art Carney and people like that
cafl me 'Perfesser' because I'm
a lTt'ays looking ror the right
com pound or researching some
new system."
The contamination occurred
when a cbemicaJ company inad-
vertently got PBB, a fire retar·
dant for electrical wiring, mixed
up with a cattle feed supple·
menl. OnJy 20 to 3(J bags were
sent by mistake. but PBB affect-
ed everything it touched. Until
the contamination was dis·
covered, thousands drank t he
m ilk, the "sick" cows were
turned into hamburger affecting
more people and an1mals, and
the cow manure was used as
fertilizer.
Ron Howard in "Bitter Harvest."
Devries is based malnly on
dairy farmer Rick Halbert, who
lived the experience and wrote
the book "Bitter Harvest." But
How ard said the character is a
com posite of several oth er
farm ers who became activists in
The movie was filmed in farm
country around Santa Rosa in
Northern California. The dairy
they used kept right on operat-
ing cows wait for no man -
and they sometimes had to stop
filming to let the farmers do
their work.
Arter the cows begin to get
sick. Carney urees Devries to
call ln the state. Howard saJd,
"They do an autopsy. I gel the
feeling they know about the con·
tamlnalion but nothing will get
done. They accuse me of not
TUBE TOPPERS
ass sacs
duty wu 11t1ually mur
09'9d
SIG~AeC
NEWS
2
iw. mothet'• muroet .,,
··--huntl Oown hie l1that '°' WhOm he 1181
bore mingled IM!lnos ol
love and hate
CBS 8 8:00 -"The Wond erful
World of Philip Malley." Stephen
Matban star.s as a brill_ht. voun~ science
professor Wlth a passion for mventing
offbeat devices.
-~
t2:00 U SPACI.: 1 ...
Maya comes down with a
1trange d'-M WlllCh no
one can ttHI 111\d lhe Clfl
no tonger conllol the c1ea·
1u1es she 1r1n1f0fm1 Into G 9 ,,ANTASY ISlAHO
A couple dller\Chanted
wtth COt'ltemporwy loc:lety
..all a retutn to a qul8t8f
111e and • young man gets
10 play on a maJOf league
baseball team (R)
(JJJ ADAM-12
A netvoua recruit en<lan-
~ the llvaa OI MlllOy 111\d
ANd
1;ac> ., MOVIE * * ''\ "The Vltlt" ( 1"4)
1nor1<1 841foman. Anthony
Quinn A wealthy woman
ott9f1 a ~out endOw·
mant to her home town 11
the 1ftl0ant1 agree to
murdet hat fOfmet love<
NBC It 9 :00 -"Bitter Harvest." A
deadly chemical malady affects the cat-
tle and even the family of a young.
Midwestern dairy farmer in this movie
starring Ron Howard, Art Carney and
Richard Dysart. (See story and photo
below). 0 OUNSMOKIE
1:608 NEWS
t:OO D NEWS
2:20 8 EDfTOAIAL
2:258 MOVll CBS 6 10:00 "Grammy Hall of Crllteally 1n1ur4KI Mall linda
h1msall allied with a boy a
leeble ofd man and •
young woman
• a "Oc>Oga Ctty I 19311)
Errol Flynn OtMa de Havll·
land A call .. ranche< bat-
, ... "'• way ,_.,d IHtOf·
1ng peace Ind dtgnfly to I
town
Fame." Andy Williams hosts a tribute to
the recordings selected for the Hall of
Fame with guests Count Basie, Natalie
Cole, Mary Crosby· and Bob Hope.
Q) Ml88K>H:
IMP08818l£
The IMF olfar1 a "lount11n
of youth" to the dtetator1a1
widow ol a South Amer•·
c;an country
2:308 NEWS
3:oom NEWS
sotnary JOUlney through
UHi back 10lld1 ol Am41<tc:a
(IJ MEAV ORlf'FIN
Guests W1yne Roger1.
Char .. s Grodin, ChlMICh &
Chong. The Brough Twins.
Oall~Plke
9:30 8 CIJ HOUSE CALLS
Th9 nurMt and orderhe1
go on strike .. avtng Char.
tey and the other doctors
scru blllng floors and Cl•
ry1ng bedpans (R)
10:00 8 Cl) OAAM~Y HALL
OFFAMIE
Andy Wiiiiams ts host tor
lhll spec;1al hononng the
recordings aeleelfld for
1nduc1ton into the Na1t0nat
Academy ol Re<:ord•no
Arll & Sciences Hall ol
Fame eom NEWS
10:30 «1) NEWS
Cl) IHOEPIENOEHT
NETWORI< NEWS ED UFE WITH MT. ST
HIElENS
The story ol Ml. St Helens
from t830 through the big
eruption ano beyond into
198 t 11 documented m MASTERPIECE
TH~TRE FE.STIVAL Of
FAVOAITES
The Golden Bowl Based
on .a novel by "'Henry
James Amerigo and Cher·
lo11e 1H1g1n to appreciate
the lreeOom her mamage
10 Vervar gives het (Part
3JtR)(,I
11:008DO(l)(.1]) NEWS 9 STARTRa<
Following I IO•'O m1aS10n.
the Enle1p111e 1nke5 shOre
teave °'' e seem1no1y
Earth-Ilka planet
0 NIEWL YWED GAME
Q) M•Jl.•S•H
COi Po118f and Charles
beeom• strange beelfel·
lows when they come
down with the mumps
Q) BIENNY HILL
Benny 1et11 a medieval sto-
ry 1nv01v1no royal 1n1ttgue
Eli) DICK CAVETT
Guest Gto<ge Melley
!Part 1OI2l
11:30 IJ CIJ QUINCY, M.E.
Quincy 11 sued for mat-
practtce alter declertng on
accident v1c11m legally
dead and 11tow1ng the
man s kidney to be trans·
planted
D THEBESTOF
CARSON
Guests R1c1rdo Mor11al-
Dan Judith Blegen Jackie
Cothns (RI
0 ®l ABC NEWS
NIOHTUNE 0 LET'S MAl<IE A DEAL
(IJ REX HUMBARD
Q) BARETTA
Tony dtseovers a police
man slain 1n the ltne 01
ED PHILOSOPHY
12:30 D TOMORROW
Guests Ted Turner author
Ale•andra Penney, 1•:u
musician Grove< Washing·
ton
Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND
'The Secret Sylvia AC~·
royd rummages through
Old trunk• and l1nds a mys.
ter1~ Im~ to the pas1
12:40 8 Cl) HARRY 0
Altar Harry 1ece1ves a g1fl
of rare French cologne
from his ne1oh1>0r she ••
kidnapped ond Harry
learns 1t hH something 10
do with her gilt IRI _
1:000 MOVIE
• •, ··under Fiesta Skies
( 1945) Gene Autry, Carol
Huohes A 11ng1ng cowboy
mine\ trouble lrom a
coveted gold claim 0 P8Yc.11C
PHENOMENA, THE
WORlO BEYOND
.. The Ey111 Have ti' Hosts
Damien Simpson. S1acy
Hunt Guest Lloyd Sten·
beck 0 C discusses In·
dology the study of eyes
as a d1agnos 11c I OOI
(IJ SPEAK OUT
Q) INDIE.PENOENT
NETWORK NEWS
1:100 MOVIE * • * ·Qo1no Home
( 19711 Robttl Mitchum.
Brenda Vaccaro Following
Tuesday's
Daytime Movie1
·-~-
t1:00 m *I. The Lawleu
N1ne1tes' ( 19361 John
Wayne Gabby Hay.. A
federal agent goes under·
cover 1n a am111 Western
town to nab a gano of out·
18""" who hive been terror·
1zong the terntory
11:300 ••• AFacetnThe
Crowd (Patt 2) j 1957)
Andy G11fl1lh PalrlCtl
Neat A derettCI goea from
a 1a1I cell to na11ona1 recog·
muon on the attenoth 01
his humor and musical tal·
ent
-AFTERNOON-
• 12:00 Q) * * • Town Without
Pity (19611 Ktrk Oouglas
E G Marsholl A German
community becomes
obsessed by • o•no rape
case involving U S Gls
1:00 (IJ * I • Play II As II
Lays ( 1972) Tuesday
Weld Anthor1y Perkins A
lorml!f actress beGomes
Cl11Hlus1oned w•lh mar·
11aga. motherhOOd and Ille
3:30 0 • • '• 'Will Success
Spoil Rock Hunter?
( 1957) Tor1y Randell Jayne
Mansheld
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk
IT SAYS HE~E. IHKT 0ROOl<E
SHIELDS 16 GOING-10 BE
IN "TOWN '"THIS 'NEEK !
YOU '<NOW, '"I'..
!HINK 11'.S ~AL..LY A SHAME !ME WA'< &HE~ 0EING-E)(PLOI~
DO YOU G~SE -n·iE.QE'S
ANY CHANCE WE COULD GET
HEQ ON M Y SHOW~
knowing how to feed my cattle.
·'Then a rash shows up on my
baby. The sam e kind of ras h I
see on my cattle.'·
Although the che mical has
now been identified a nd is
banned, its effects Unser. The
chemical remains in the body
and land fertilized by the cow
manure is permanently J>arred
from cultivation.
0'< E"ER'i'ONE/
Trends viewed
By TOM JORY
AuecMltM !'nu Wrttff
NEW YORK Most analysts
miss the point when they talk
a~out a revolution in television,
says Les Brown, editor-in-chief
of Channels' of Communications.
a new bimonthly he describes as
.. a magazine of serious thought
about television. for people who
read."
"The nature of the revolution
is not t echno logy, as most
believe," says Brown, who cov·
ered the industry for Variety,
the trade paper. and later The
New York Times. "The revolu-
tion is people payi ng fo r
television. Ever ything stems
from that.
"It all began in '75." he says,
"when Home Box Office went on
the satellite and became the
first pay-TV service. Once that
was perceived that people
would pay -the business people
began asking, 'What else will
they pay for?'"
Brown taJks of an emerging
Second Age of Television "the
age of cable. p ay cable. QUBE.
satellites, home video, teletext,
large scre e n rec e i vers,
techno logies that go by the
names MOS, DBS and STV. and
the forms of television that in·
tersecl with com pute r and
te lephone technologies."
''If I were going to give this
magazine a dHferent name" he
-.ays of Channels, "it would be
'The Magazine of Television II.·
··A lot of newspapers s till are
living in the age of Television
I .'' he adds, "CBS, PBS, au the
rest." ·
Brown says the new role gives
him perspective he could not en·
joy in daily journalism "That
was like being in a trench with
bullets flying over my head. One
flashing here. and one there.
Just keeping up was a fulltime
job.
"There are so many develop-
ments, every day. and a ll have
very serious implications on the
industry, and ultim ately on the
fam ily and the nation."
Channe ls of Communications
emerges as a nother magazine
d evoted to television , while
Tri angle Com munications'
P anorama succumbs to the
publishing industry's equivaJent
of low ratings insufficient
circula tion.
In fact, Brown says the two
are not comparable
Panorama, from the people
who publish TV Guide. was
ai m ed a t the selective TV-
watcher. Brown says. one who
might watch television one night
a nd read. or play bridge, the
next. Channels is directed at a
more distinct audience.
"My view of it is that we are
for the same people who used to
read me in the Times, people on
the pe riphery of the industry.
who are intensely interested in
what is going on -government
people. communications
lawyers, educators, financial
a n a lysts, heads of major cor·
p o r ations, public inte r est
g r ou p s, technologists ,
journalists.
"My first requirement is that
the stories have to do with socie·
ty. or some aspect of society ...
he says. "The second is that
they be journalistic. rather than
schola rly.
a
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT,Monday, May 18. 1981 87 ,...------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE
FAMILl'
c1acus
by Bil Keane
BIG GEORGE by Virg il Partch (VIP)
\\Is this when God said 'let there be cars'?" "I hate Mondays."
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Jl'DGE PARKER
W HEN THE DOC'TOR
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MONDAY, MAY 18, 1981 There were no surynses
in Stanleu Cup action
as Islanders win
CLASSI Fl ED C4 again ... C2
_He's had his ups arid / doWns in tennis
But for McNamara -coach, teacher and player -it's been mostly up ..
By EDZINTEL
Of ... o.lly ,.. .. , .. "
Between 1970 and 1977. UC Irvine
men's tennis teams, coached by Myron
McNamara, woo an astonishing six
NCAA Division ll championships.
A few weeks ago, Arizona Slate
Uni versity's men's tennis team ,
coached by Myron McNamara, closed
out the Pac-10 season with a 0-10 record.
"Well," McNamara explains, ~·1
guess I'm just one of those weird guys
who has lo see how the rest of the world
clicks. I'm not one to sit and stare at the
wall. Life is like a 100-yard dash. You
don't quit until you get to the end."
Arizona Stale had not experienced
much success after winning the Pac-10
In 1978 and finishing eighth in the
NCAA, but McNamara saw
possibilities. ''I thought we could clean
up the act."
Yes, it's the same Myron McNamara.
The guy who produced three national
singles champions and four NCAA
doubles champions, has won just two
Pac-10 matches in two years since mak·
ing the transition from Division II to
Division I coaching.
Well, at least his friends back on the
Orange Coast can see that McNamara
hasn't changed bis thinkln1. He still has
a way of turning a one -word answer into
an hour-long dissertation.
So far, it's been a trying experience,
even for a veteran coach like
McNamara. It's not that the Sun Devils
aren't competitive. In his two aeasons
in Tempe, McNamara's overall record
is 37·22. It's just the competition. The
Pac-10 has dominated the college tennis
world since the NCAA began cham·
pionship play in 1946. Pac-10 teams
have won all but six championships in
that time. In 1980, Stanford won the
NCAA crown by defeating California in
the finals. use was third.
The obvious question is why? Why
Myron? Why did you leave a stable
coaching position at a college
powerhouse like UCI. located In
perhaps the finest living environment in
all the world? Why would,you go to the
land of cactus and unforgiving heat. to a
school that even you admit can't com-
pete with most of the schools in its own conference?
''I had a good situaluion at UCI -an
excellent college program, a top sum-
mer juniors program which I ran (and
still does), tenure -everything,"
McNamara says without a trace of sen-
timent.
··But I s uppose every coach wants lo
get into Division I. I was getting on in
age (he's now 60) and was thinking of
getting out of tennis altogether. But the
Arizona State AD , Fred Miller, ap-
proached me a couple of times and,
well, he could talk Willie Shoemaker in-
to riding a crippled horse al the Ken-
tucky Derby."
In this weekend's national tourna·
ment, UCLA was the top seed with Stan-
ford , USC and Cal among the 16-team
field. ·
"I had only two kids this year who
wer e really o f Pac-10 caliber,"
McNamara says. ''Trying to knock off
An Angel blessing
Forsch strong again in 7-1 vic tory
DETROIT (AP ) -Jn less than two months on
the job, Ken Forsch has won half as many games
for the Angels as he won all last year for Houston.
"I [e just been lucky," said Forsch after he
pitchep a five-hitter Sunday in the Angels' 7-1 vic-
tory over the Detroit Tigers. •
"The guys have gone out and gotten a lot of
runs ever y lime I've pitched1" said Forsch, now
6-1 with the Angels compared with 12·13 a year
ago.
BRIAN DOWNING'S RBI double keyed a
three-run Angel first inning and that's all the
Angels really needed against the punchless Tigers.
Rod ,Carew and Rick Burleson singled in the
California first and Detroit starter and loser Milt
Wilcox, 5-3, hit Fred Lynn with a pitch to load the
bases. Carew scored on a sacrifi ce fly by Don
Baylor, Downing doubled Burleson home and Lynn
came across when Wilcox uncorked a wild pitch.
The Angels loaded the bases "in the second on
s uccessive singles by Butch Hobson, Carew and
Burleson. Hobson scored on Dan Ford's fielder's
choice.
IN THE ANGEL THIRD, Downing hit a
leadoff single and Howard Bailey came on for
Detroit but yielded successive singles to Bobby
Grich and Hobson that scored Downing.
Ed Ott singled in the Angel fifth, stole second
and scored on Hobson's third single of the game.
In the ninth, Lynn singled home a run for the
Angels. who finished with 14 hits.
Detroit got its lone run in the third on suc-
cessive singles by Bill Fahey, Tom Brookens and
Lou Whitaker and a double-play grounder by Rick
Leach.
fielder Dickie Thon to the Houston Astros of the
National League. Forsch put together a 78-81 rec·
ord during 10 years in the NL. but told the
pitching-rich Astros he wanted to be traded after
they designated him for bullpen duty.
"The trade was pretty much mutual," Forsch
admitted. "I could see there wasn't much room for
me there. I felt like I could still be a starter -
somewhere else."
Angel Manager J im Fregosi said he hated to give up on Thon, whom he considered a bright pros-
pect, but couldn't argue with the Angels obvious
need for more pitching.
"I've liked Ken Forsch for a long lime,"
Fregosi said . "fie's had a lot of low-hit games
throughout his career. Remember, he played for a
team <Houston) that didn't score a lot of runs.
We're really happy with Ken as a starting pitcher.
He's done an outstanding job."
IT WAS THE THIRD victory on the road this
year for Forsch.
"When you get a three-run lead in the first in·
ning, you can kind of relax and go out there and
just throw strikes and not worry.
"Detroit was taking good swings at them, but
they were just hitting it at people."
Forsch said he found the strike zones similar
In both leagues but said the abund!U\Ce of patural grass infields in the AL ought to work In his favor.
"I'm a ground ball pitcher, all my stuff breaks
down, so the soft infields here help me," Forsch
said. "It's my first time around, too, and the bat-
ters in this league don't know me yet, so that's
helped, too."
The Angels open a two-game set tonight in
Cleveland before winding up the road trip with a
pair in Baltimore.
the UCLA. USC and Stanford is
like trying to broad jump the Grand
Canyon."
That's McNamara for you. Always
ready with some kind of metaphor.
Be that as it may, McNamara isn't
singlne the blues these daya. Sure, it'd
be nice to be on to again, but, as he'll be
the first to tell you, winning is only half
the game. ·
"I'm basically a t.acher anyway, not
a coach," McNamara points out. "·I en-
joy seeine the kids improve and slowly
we're coming around. I have only one
scholarship to offer for next year but
one by one. we'll implant players who
can play and win."
If nothing else, McNamara has plenty
of fond memories to look back on.
From his days as a member of a two-
lime national champion team at use. to
a J unlor Davis Cur player, to the
general manager o Jack Kramer's
World Tennis Incorporated, when he or-
ganized world wide tours for namea
<See McNAMARA·, Page CZ) Myron McNamara
..,. ......... .. A man walks up and hits. If you don't hit. you
don't score runs," a dejected Detroit Manager
Sparky Anderson said. "I think we'll start hilling.
I have lo believe that."
FORSCH, A 6·4, 205-pound right-hander, was
obtained in the April trade that sent utility in··
Friday. the Angels return home to host the
Chicago White Sox for three games and Toronto for
three.
Al home, the Angels are just 8-12 while on the
road, they're 11·6.
DOWN BUT NOT OUT -New York Islanders' Mike Bolay Cleft) found him.Self at a standsWl
Sunday with Minnesota's Craig.Hartaburg. Bossy scored two goals in the Stanley Cup playoff
game. For the story, see C2. ....
Cey, Dodgers continue sizzling Streaks
Speaking of streaks, Valenzuela (8-0) starts tonight against Phillies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In April of 1977,
Los Angeles third ba,eman R,on Cey
batted .425 and drove In a major league rec-
ord 29 runs for the month.
It provided an Indication of the type or
streak hitter the 33-year-old Cey really Is.
Cey has been in hot streaks since that
lime, but not ol that magnitude. Not until
the past couple of weeks, that Is. ,
Sunday, as the Dodgers rolled to their
seventh straight vlctory and ninth In 11
games, beaUna the New York Meta, 6·1,
Cey belted hla eighth home run -all of
them in the lut 15 1ames -and hla flftb
In the last six 1amea.
THE VICfORY enabled Loe An1ele1 to
maintain Its 5lh game lead in the National
Lea1ue West as It betln• a three·1ame
aeries tonight a1alnat the world champion
Philadelphia PbJIUea at Dodcer StadJum.
Sensational Loa An1elea rookie
Fernando ValeDJuela, 8-0, wUI pitch for
th~ Dodgers against Philadelphia's Marty
Bystrom, 2-2.
Valenzuela will be attempting to win his
ninth game in as many starts this seuon.
If the 3>-year-old left-hander ls successful,
be will achieve the fastest atart by a fint·
year pitcher in major lea1ue hlatory.
Though the Dodgers have been winning
-their 26-9 record is the best ln the major
leaeues -it bas been their pitchin1 that
has carried the club, not thelr hJtting.
BUT SATURDAY NIGHT, Los An1elea
scored nJne ru.u, a season· hllh, and in the
fourth"'1nlng Sunday, the Dod1en tallied
six runs on seven hits, bot.b aeuon hi1hl,
to lndJcate the offense ls be1lnning to
come alive. '
"Obviously, I'm swln1lng the bat well,''
Cey said of his part In the Dod1en· nine·
bit attack againlt the hapless Meta. "The
pitches that I'm geutn1 to drive, I'm hit·
Ung out of the park.
"When you get into a streak like thist
you go to the plate with complete con'
fidence, with co mplete' relal'ation
Everything ls very easy, very simple. Th
pitches you get to swing at, you hlt on th
button.
"It's easy to explain, it's just not eas
getting there."
IN ADDITION lo his home runs, Cey ba
driven in 12 runs in his' last six games an
has 26 RBl's on the year, second-best o
the club.
Pat Zachry, 3·5, had not allowed th
Dodgers a hit until Derrel Tbomu doubl
to lead off the foJJrth. Dusty Baker doubled
Thomas home with one out, and after twt
were out, Cey homered. A double by Pedrf
Guerrero, a walk and successive slntlet
by Bill Ruuell, winnin«i pitcher Jerry
Reuss and Thomas followed.
Reuss, 4·1, earned his fourth victory in 1
ro~.
Surprisingly fast field set for Indy 500
INDIANAPOLIS <AP > ..:.
Paced by the 200 mph runa of
pole-winner Bobby Unaer and
Tom Sneva tbe a can that wW
1tart next SUDday'• lndlanapoUa
500 qua11fltd at an 1•er11e 111.3
mph, some &.7 mllt1 "r hour
taster than l .. t y .. r and the
third.qulcll• lln"P la Indy hll'"
lOI')'.
''Nobod)' bad a.o7 ldH w.'d be
runntna UU. fut when we 1ot here or even the ftnt few days
after praetJe. be•a.n, Ruu..rtord
nid Sunday duriDI' the final
fraatk: effottl by some drivers
to ••t Into tbe lineup.
run at 197 .098 mph, filth-fut.est
overall.
and then," Bill 1a1d.
Start.ins next to -Onaer on U..
front row will be veterans lllk•
llla1tey, who qualified at tt'7.1'l
mph, and four-Um• winner A.lo
P'oy.t, wbo avera1ed 1 ... 078 folio
the four lape around the 2~·mlli
track. Former winner Oordod
Johncoct wru •tart on th• lnllm of the second row , wlt
Rutherford in the middle
n -7ear-old roolll• JONI• Oana
••n. speed . proMbl)' WU tbe
ttl11eat '"1.,rlH of 41ua1Ulca· Uou,'' aald ~ cllat11ploa
JolaDDJ RuUMirfoN, ..... IW1ed
fro• the DOie PllWGll • ,.., ato but blld to ....... a HeODCI·
row ~ dlll.wil!· Be caUlliftld .., .. DIPli~flliliir ... '11 DOI•
.... in -but lltlll .... than ff¥• mPb....., ..-uu.r.
All 11 rowa were filled on
• 81tu~1leavin18unda1'1 win-
dup ol ume trlala f• "bump-ll\1," while driv91'1 ol tbe alower
cars in ti•• lineup waited
nenoualy. Tbe •low•t wu 8lU
WblttlD1ton, a HCODd·JHr
driver W'tiO qtaiWhd oa Utur-
d11 at*·•·"· He wu bumped fro• tbe
llDeup Suad81. u be n,.c.d . but be jumped Into a M*up
racer and tunMd ln u dlulnl
"l ~u you," Whlttlnston aaid
after his rapid ride. "Thia place
la bard. It'• not Uke aports car
races, it'a not like NASCAR
stock car rac ... lt'a Juat
unbelle'Vable.
"It 1019 IO lood and tbtn lt Just _.. 10 bad so quick," said
Wblttlnltoa, 11, wboH older
brother, boe, guallfled CID Setur·
day at llT.21'7 mpb. ··n.. ctft 1W bin ~
aU .mGlltb a6w, ..... m day,
and U.., ~lly madl I& ;oulble
for me. I JUlt a~ate all the
team wart theJ pat ~ a.ad all
tJle otber drt ............. UI and
mech&DICI ......, UI a Up DOW
ol Meidco • 1M outside. .,
Blll N_luP.E§atMiDbael -~ •allftedfof th• tbll'd '°"· b .,..... bacb nl ........_ for •rto An·
dNtU WM wtU bave to atart tbe
raee ID the llrd spot wbell ~
C ... INDY, Pa1e Cl)
-.. , . . "
• a ' Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOT~ond•y, M•y 18, 1981
White Sox rip Rangers on four-hitter
aoea 9aam1utH hurled •a rour· II
hiller and Wayae Nordlaa1ea and
Mlke Sqwree supplied the b1ttln1
punch Sunday to lead the Chlc110
White Sox to a 9·0 victory over Texas In
American Leacue action .. In other games,
Ted Slmmo•• lined a two.run triple to spark a
rive.run Miiwaukee sixth lnnina. leading the
Brewen to a 6·2 win over Oakland. The
Barker's perfect day
was missed by mom
From AP dbpatcbes
PHILADELPHIA -Emo1ene II Mccurry lost It ln the ninth, but her
son dldn 't and thus took his place in
baseball hiatory.
"The game came fading in and out," said
Mrs. McCurry, mother of Cleveland Indians
pitcher Len Barker. referring to the radio
broadcast or her son's perfect game against the
Toronto Blue Jays Friday night.
"It came back In the el&hth lnnlna. but then
we lost it in the ninth," she said, r~alling the
excitement In a telephone Interview Saturday
Crom her home in suburban Trevose.
Moments after the rad.lo broadcast faded
out, she said, sbe heard a television report that
her 25-year-old son had pitched the first perfect
aame In the major leagues since 1968.
It wasn't until Saturday morning, tbough,
that she was able to call Barker and con-
gratulate him.
Brewers swept tbt three·
aame series and ran the A's
lonaest losin& streak of the
season to rour -successive
111mes ... Run·scorln1
singles by U. L. Washln&ton
and WUIJe Alkens In the ninth
capped a Kanaaa City come·
back that carried tbe
Royals to a 5-4 win over
Boston . . . Eddie Murray
Boumgare.n collected three hits 1&nd Jhn
Palmer scattered seven hits over 72:1 Innings to
lead Baltimore to 1& 6·3 victory over Minnesota
... Rick W11t1 scattered nine hits in eight in
nings and Ml1uel Dllone drove home the game's
only run with a rifth·inninJ( sinJle as Cleveland
ed1ed Toronto 1·0 lo the rtrat 1ame of a
doubleheader. In the second game !hart
Blylnea pitched 10 innings of seven-hit ball as
t.be Indiana won 2·1 ln eatra lnniDSs ... Starter F'leJd BumWer and two relievers combined for
a seven·hitter as SeatUe blanked the New York
Yankees, 1·0. Left-bander ll09 Galdry of the Yankees wu forced to leave the 1ame ln the
fifth lnnlu becauae of a ali&ht bone bruise oo the ball ofltls rilhl foot.
Quote of the day Clark's single in 12th lifts Giants
Stu Eversole, football coach at Lakota
High School in Cincinnati after one ol his
star players, linebacker Bob ((ob•a•,
almost fell from the upper deck al
Riverfront Stadium chasing a foul ball at a
.Reds game: "He's not afraid of anythin1.
I'll ju.st be glad when he crosses the slate
line ( Kobman has a football scholarship to
Indiana), so he can maim himself and be
Indiana's responsibility.••
Jack Clerk's bases-loaded single II
with one out In the 12th cracked a 4·4
tie and lifted San Francisco to a 5·4
victory over Montreal Sunday to
highlight National league action .. In other
games, Ken Grifrey drove in two runs with an
inside·the-park homer and Ray Kat•lat added a
solo homer. leading Ci ncinnati to a 4·3 win over
Pittsburgh, extending the Reds' winning streak
Zoeller gets first win since Masters
Fuzzy Zoeller played his last two l!I
rou:ids in 68·70 and scored his first
victory since the 1979 Masters. a four
four-stroke triumph in the double-round windup
of the Colonial National Invitational golf touma·
ment Sunday The easy-going Zoeller had sole
control of the top spot for 3S of the 36 holes
played and claimed the third title of his c.areer
with a 274 total. six s hots under par. The victory
was worth $54.000 from the total purse of
SJ00.000 Hile Irwin, a two·time L.S. Open
champion and Tom Kite went to the 18th hole in
a tie for the No. 2 spot. and Irwin claimed that
position and the S26.SOO prize when the usually
steady Kite drove into trouble and bo1eyed the
hole. Irwin hud r los1ng rounds or 71 -70 and a 278
total.
• to six games ... Mike
Schmidt belted a solo home
run and Nino Esplno11 re·
corded his firs t victory in
nearl y a month as
Philadelphia defeated San
Diego. 6·3 ... Houston used
the three-hit pitching of Bob
Knepper and some wildness
by the Chicago Cubs •
pitchers to forge a 6·1 win.
Clark Knepper. 4·0. completed his
From Page C1
McNAMARA.
such as Rod Laver, Ken
Rosewall and Pancho Gonzalez,
it's been a long, fruitful life.
A 1raduate of North
Hollywood Hieh. McNamara
went on~ become a star at USC
where he teamed with Frank
Kovat.z to form an unbeatable
doubles tandem to compliment
the singles play of what would
become two of the better pro
singles players o( the l!MOs,
George Toley and Harold
Godshell.
McNamara went into the rt·
cording business, following a
brief stint in the service, and
kept up his tennis. He met with
Kramer, who asked McNamara
to join him in an international
promotion ventur~ for tennis.
"Our organization was the
frontrunner or what's happening
now in tennis, with all the rich
worldwide tourneys," says
McNamara. "I did it for 10
years and though we were able
to accomplish a lot, it got to be
very tiring -moving Crom ooe
country to another. It was a
good experience, lhouah .
Tournaments became the name
or the game ralher than the one·
night st.anda It once was.··
After leavln1 the promotion
business, McNamara supervised
the building or the famous
Riviera Tennis Club In Los
Angeles and later, with an op·
OCC crew
wins Spr;nts
VALLEJO -Orange Coast
College's crew team turned in
another ouutandlna effort Sun·
day by 1weepln1 all four
divisions of the Western Sprints
hosted by Maritime Colle1e.
The Pirates, competing
acalnat 19 colle1es in the Mare
Island Sblp Channel, had little
trouble in defeaUna teams from
UC Santa Barbara. Loyola and
crOll·town rival UC lrvlne,
amon1o&Mn.
OCC won the varsity four
division with a tlme of 8:38.
Second pl.ace St. Mary•a was
cl~ked la •:44.
fourth straight game. the previous three being
s hutouts ... Ken Oberkfell's two-run single
highlighted a four-run first inning and St. Louis
rode that early cushion to a 4·3 win over Atlan-
ta. Oberkfell 's hit to center was the fifth
straight single for the Cardinals ocr veteran
Gaylord Perry (3·31 who failed in his quest for
lifetime victory No. 293.
• •
portunity to invest, he started
the Balboa Bay Racquet Club in
1964 with a partner.
Two years later, UC Irvine
athletic director Wayne
C rawford summoned
McNamara to start a men's ten·
nis program al nearby UC
Irvine. .
"The thought of getting back
into competition appealed to
me," McNamara reflected. "It
was a blessing in disguise
bee a use a Utlle later. the guy
who owned ~1 percent or the
Balboa Bay Club faciUly bought
me out."
That was a hard lesson for
McNamara to learn. But It
taught him a lot about trust,
faith and respect. "The guy was
a crook. But he had big bucks so
he just squeezed me out. It made
a bitter time in my life because I
could have stayed with the
Riviera Club rather than invest·
ing all I bad into the BBC."
Rather than sulk. McNamara
turned Ilia sights to UCI and to
building the foundation for a
strong program.
What transpired was more
than McNamara ~ould have
ever dreamed of. Picking young,
undeveloped players from the
surrounding community,
McNamara molded his early
teams into hard-working dev·
otees ot the i,ame and of
McNamara's teachings.
By 1970, McNamara and UCl
had their first NCAA>. title and
three All·Americans ~-Earl
O'Neill lo singles and Gre11
Jablonski and Charles Nachand
In doubles.
A year later, a sophC?more
with a wicked volley ard serve,
Bob Chappel, won his first of two
NCAA lnd.lvidual titles and led
the Anteaters to their second
straight crown under
McNamara.
In 1973, Chappell won the
sln«les national championship
and teamed with Glen Cripe fu
win the doubles UUe and band
McNamara an unprecedented
fourth atral1ht NCAA cham·
piooahip.
Bobby Unier
From Page C1
INDY ...
replaces Dallenbach. Andretti
was in Belgium for a Grand Prix
race.
Rutherford said he didn't
think a problem would develop
with the fast first-row starters
trying to grab the lead going into
the rlrst tum at the start of the
race.
"Everybody will make a move
to gel the best spot, but we're all
aware of what can happen when
you gel a crowd of cars In one
spot ,'' he Uld. "Everybody
takes care of everybody else In
those circum stances."
Rutherford said his race
slraten m ight chanse "a little
bit" wilhJl second-row start ln·
stead of the first row. "We're go·
ing to ao for it (the lead), but
we're not going to jeopardize the
equipment dolna it."
Unser. however, a two·tim•
winner who wUI be slarlint from
the pole for lbe second tlme,
said there la "nothing different.
really." from be1Jnntn1 farther
back. "I've been on the pole
many times ln many d1fferent
racH. and there Is nothln1
1petlal 1tart!n1 t.htre."
Baseball today
OD tb1a date lD bueball ln 1918:
Wub.luton 1ha11.er rrank Howard belt· ed b.la aiD1b and lOlh homers in hia lalt llx ~~" 11 the Senators defeated Detrok,
Today'• birthdaye: • N w York Ya.liken outllelder Reute eon 11 u . Texu catcher Jlm
ber• la ao.
Reutemann wins rain-marred race
ZOLDER, Belalum -Arge~-•
Una ·a Carlos Reutemann, In a
Williams, won a Belgian Grand Prix
marred by a scary accident and shortened by
rain Sunday. ·
Jacques Lafitte of France finished second In
a Talbot·Llgier and Nigel Mansell of En1tand
was third ln a Lotus.
Dave Luckett, tile chlef mechanic of the Ar·
rows team, was badly Injured when run down
by another Arrows car In 1 confused start.
The race was stopped, then restarted.
Gilles Villeneuve of Canada wu fourth in a
Ferrari, Ello de Angelis of Italy fifth in the
other Lotus and John Watson of Britain sixth in
a McLaren. Eddie Cheever of the United States,
in a Tyrrell, failed lo complete the last lap with
a lire problem.
'White Shoes' Johnson joins CFL
Billy "White Sboe1" Johnson, Ill
pass receiver and ki ck r eturn
specialist for the Houston Oilers of
the NFL, has signed a two-year con·
tract with the Montereal Alouettes of the Cana·
dian Football League. John son joins
quarterback Vince Ferragamo. formerly of the
Rams, and receiver James Scott, formerly of
the Chicago Bears, In the CFL . . Craig
Virgin, leading 27 ,000 run·
ners wearing everythin g
from busin ess s u its to
nothing at all, sprinted Sun·
day to his second consecutive
victory in lhe 70th Bay Lo
Breakers race . J ody
Ridley was four laps down in
second plare with 21 laps to
go when l e ader Ca te
Varborough's car blew its
John.Ion engine. opening the way for
Ridley to go on to has first Winston Cup G~and
National victory in the 13th a nnual Mason-Dixon
500 stock car race West German athletes
scored three victories 1n an international track
and field meeting at Milan's Arena Stadium in
Ha ly. Thomas Wesslnghage won the 3.1''>0
meters. Karl Tranhardt won the high Jump and
Harald Schmid won the 400-meter hurdles.
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Angels al Cleveland,
4 : 30 p.m .. KMPC <710>; Philadelphia at
Dodgers, 7 :30 p.m .. KABC (790).
'-' . , ..
01' ~war horses
play Chargers
Lakewood meets Edison
An old wu horse and some up-and-coming
Chargers clash Tuesday to highlight CIF 4·A
basebaU action.
It's Lakewood High and its coach. John
Herbold, who has had three 4·A champions and
three runners-up In the past l8 years, against visit·
Ing Ed.Ison High's No. 6-ranked Chargers, who are
22·4 and riding the crest of an ll·game winning
streak.
LAKEWOOD, THE No 2 learn out of the
Moore League. is ranked No. 9 in the final CIF poll
and is 18·5 overall following its 5·4 first-round vie· tory over St. John Bosco
The Chargers got oH to the right start Friday
as Rich Sorenson went sax innings in picking up
the victory and Greg Cloney provided the relief.
allowing Robb Munson to be a well-rested starter
Tuesday s hould Edison
Coach Ron LaRuffa
take the option.
In other games
Tuesday involving
Orange Coast area en-
tries. Corona del Mar's
Sh View League cham-pion~. are at Mission
Viejo in 2·A action.
Hueneme visits Sunset
Leagu e kin gpin
Westminster in 4-A and
the amazing Monarchis
of Mater Dei ente rtain
San Gabriel.
JEFF PRIES
twirl e d a thre e
hitter al Glenn High Ron LaRuffa
Friday and is expected to be on the mound again
Tuesday for Coach Tom Trager 's Sea Kings,
although Ken Santoro 1!> also available for duty.
The Sea Kings. ranked and seeded No. 2 in the
2-A classaficataon. boast an 18·3· I record
Mission Viejo, the South Coast League's No. 2
te am and holder of a 15-9 mark. eased past Pius X,
5·2, in the first round
WESTMINSTER UPPED its overall record to
20·4 after edging Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks,
then won the coin-flip to get the home game advan·
tage Tuesday against 15-9 2 Hueneme. the Channel
League's No l r epresentative
Westminster is the No 4 ranked team m the
final 4·A poll and Rack llayes says he'll send Rich
Castle (6·1. 2.8 ERAJ to lhe mound
And then there are the amazings, Co ach Bobby
Ickes' Mater O.i Monarchs, the defending CIF 4·A
champions. who have made a living defeating
champions. . . . . Starting time for games at M1ss1on V1e1_0.
Westminster and Mater Dei are at 3 o'clock . whale
Edison and Lakewood will duel at 7 p.m at Long
Beach's Blair Field
Islanders have too 01uch talent
New York wins, 7.5 to take 3·0 .lead in NHL finals
BLOOMINGTON, Minn t API -A world of
patience and a universe of talent. Those ingre·
dienls have brought the New York Islanders to the
doorstep of their second consecutive Stanley Cup
championship.
The Islanders overcame a 3·1 first-period def·
lcit Sunday night to outscore the Minnesota North
Stars 7·5 for a 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven National
Hockey League finals. They can skate away with
the sport's most treasured prize by repeating their
winning act on Tuesday night.
"We got a little overpumped before the
game," noted Islanders captain Denis Potvin, who
established a playd(f mark for points by a de·
fenseman with 25 this spring after setting up two
goals. "But we knew there was no reason to panic
after 20 minutes. We calmed down, talked about it
and said we'd wait for things to happen."
Instead, the Islanders made things happen,
scoring three times in the second period and using
a two-goal. two-assist nitzht bv MikP Roi1sv and
Butch Goring's three goals to catapult themselves
lo the brink of eliminating the anxious North
Stars.
"He's not a big fella but he has a big heart,"
said Islanders Coach Al Arbour about Goring, his
team's 5·8, 165-pound sparkplug.
"Toni){ht's game typifies the kind or team
we·ve got We kept scratching away and hung
tough and our effort paid off ..
Mainly because of the efforts by Goring and
Bossy, the Isles beat the North Stars at the wide-
open. free-skating game Minnesota said it must
play to stay in the series
"The kind of team we are, we score as fast as
anyone in the league." said Bossy, who scores
faster than anybody he had 68 regular·season
goals to lead the NHL and, with 33 postseason
points, has s mashed the playoff record set by
linemate Aryan Trottier last .vear
"They were on top of their game here tonight
J think 7.5 is not typical of the Stanley Cup finals
but that's the type of team they are. They felt this
was the way they could win ..
Nol all the North Stars fell that way. Goalie
Gilles Meloche mentioned that the Islanders are
"the wrong team to get into a shooting match
with."
Minnesota defenseman Craig Harts burg
seemed in awe at how the Islanders never panic.
"Every time we make a mistake , they
capitalize on them," said Hartsburg, whose e rror
behind his own net led directly to Bossy's second
goal of the night. which put New York ahead to
stay "ll's amazing that they do It but they do it."
Baseball standings
AMElllCAN LEAGUE
Wnt DlrialOll W L Pct. GB
Oakland 25 12 .876
Texas 18 14 .563 4"11 ChJca_io 17 14 .548 5 Aaleli 19 18 .SH 6
Mliineaota 11 22 .333 12
SeaUle 11 22 .333 12
Kauaa ctU .. ~..!f.. .w 11
Cleveland 18 9 .M?
Baltlmore 19 11 .w ~ New York 19 14 · .576 2
lltlwaukee 1T 15 .531 3"'
Bolton 18 18 .500 •"' Detroit\ 18 17 .415 s
Toronto 11 24 .SH 11 ~·IC-.,., ... _~-·
"~~~~· ::J-~T=•f.nb"..-
> C9'y~N>et"-Yll'tl C.-11
-(~ ..... o.nlt (,...,, 1•21, II
NADONALLEA.GUE
Wes&Dlvlaloe W L Pct. GB
Doc11ers 26 9 .7'3
Clnc1nnati 20 14 .583 5'Al Atlanta 18 16 .529 7~
San Francisco 19 19 .500 8~
Houston 18 18 .500 8'Al San Diego 14 22 .389 12~
Eu& Dlvlsloa
St Loul' 19 9 .179 Pliilade Dhia 21 13 .el8 1
Montreal 18 15 .545 3"'
Pltteburib 12 16 .. 429 7 New York , 8 22 .287 12
Chicato / ~ 25 . H7 15 ~~~-·· ===~\,....,
S.11 ,.,_._\~'.!!.!.!'""'"''' ,. ., •• ,,,.,,. rr,,U;;;;y,, ,, o •• , ...
CV llle~~ +II et 1111 0 .... lw.ttfl
2 11 YIR (lYftdl Mlet lln l'r-1"6 llllf>ley ·"
ID the fro9b four dlvtsiGn, the
Plratea flnllbed 11 MC:Ollda ln front ol runMMQ> Loyola ln a
Umeol•:•.
"l have a lot of food memories
of all the kids," McNam1ra
11)'1. "J try lo kMp tabl OD aU of
them. J..et'1 see • • • Cha~~t1 after ~ two years In Wona
Team Tenn.la, l• no• the Sf!Mral
mana1er ot an indoor tenaJ1
faclUl.>' ln Thou.land Oak•, and
Crlpef Oh Y•. fM•e a doctor ln
Newport Beach. ·Jeff Williama
<NCAA doublM champ&M wlUJ
Curt 9t8dJer la 1'17> ll la aMd
tcbool ln Mexico , Matt
Wooldrllae 1' man•stal a dub Ina...
UnHr qualified at 200.548
mph. The futeet qualifier,
however, wa1 Sneva, who
1vera1~ JOO.etl but wa• not
ell1lble to win th pole po1Won --::-;-~;-i--~:---.-•iliiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiji becauie hla car waa not ln ~
Or•DI• Coast won the f.ature Juntor vnty ..... l race by nine
HConcla over MCOQd·•lac. UC
lrvlH. Tb• Ptrat.. were rt· corcMd ID t :aa. un.1 .. ntt, ot Ian oa..., ftDl1ti1d Ullrd, faUOftd bJ Lo9t ........ . -:. rraalb', •• ..... frotb ... ~
dl•l•l••· OCC e11fl1 out.
....... .. Nil " t.be fttlll wtlll • tllDe of l :G . UalYenllJ el
... D1$ •• Meoad, followW
bJUClntM.
It u.a•t au bea ... , f«
McNwara. He~ bi.a pr•lill· .ta.USthU ... .tAIU_. .............. _ ....
WlbilW.11aillllW'9111M oa. 1.t lleN ..... • ·*"··~"l Mliftela ....... ..
or•11n11 qualiflca&.lola UJM a nek
ear1'er. Duny On.cal• of C0t\a
II•• wu alao un.abJe to quality then ~•uae ot a bad 1&aritr
and wW l\al'l behind Sneva.
rour area drheu have
qualut.d f« tile rac..
• Geoff Brabbam of Saa ca ...... IDd 1teYe Krllllo« ot
Daa NM wW Mart la llM llxth
rowt ou., <>M•la OI Colla Mm Wiil IWt'fli-IM ~row
P• . lllh CbUdler of Dua NMll-rowbau.
... ,. -..
~ . ' • •
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Anaet. 1, Tigers 1 ll\l.lfOflll!A . DETllOIT
•II r h bl ab r II bl ••w IC> S I 2 0 L .. <h, 11) • 0 0 0
"'"'" '' S l 3 0 Tramml.sJ t 0 O O I 'I ) I ' I Kemp,lf 4 0 1 0 1• < • l 1 1 1 Hebner .dh 3 O O O •1IQ• on 4 0 0 I P•l•l'l,Ph I 0 0 0 mhHJ If 4 1 7 l Sl'mmr\, rl l O O 0
1 • 1 I O Cow•11•.c I l O O 0 1•1/>l JOIO Fahty,c )110 •·~"' 111 • I J 1 Brokn•,ll> l o I O Whl\akr,lb l 0 I 0 .o " Jr I 14 6 T Olah )() I S 0
, 'M1 nl6 kart by llllllll,~ I 010 001 I
I• I 001 000 000 I 11ob~on. l rtmmotl OP C•l•lorn•a •ltoll l LDB C•llfornot I, O@lro1t J 1 Uown1n11 SB 011 SF S.ylor
I •fllornl• IP " R ER 88 so un 'W • ll . "t S I I I 3 UoltOll
<M I \ 11 1 I S S
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'M{4u• l.C•d I !Nile~ In ti~ )r~ O
1\t bV W1l(O)(" ~nnl WP WlltOk
I\ A 19 /10
Angel averages
BATTING
AB R H HA Rll Pel
H 6 • 0 0 .400 1)1 I/ 411 l 10 lll
10/ •1 31 s 1U 1'l'I
34 s 10 8 .2t0 143 2! ]9 fl 210
111 20 31 16 . ,1S)
.rir'11tiQ 9• IS 1S 4 13 .UJ .... ~I ~ H 1 13 2S3
I i. l • I 1 llO
18 6 10 0 6 .2 ..
" ,,. " ,. s 18 140 . "" H ' 10 0 I 1'3
jltfMt•\ n 0 J 181 ..
IM .... ,\
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11 0 I 167 112 10 •• s 10 1'1
' 114 lt.J 10\ )ii U7 lS1
PITCHIN(;
IP H ea so W·L ERA
/I • I• • " 61 ., IV 19
lJ• II 11 •J •> 19 9 n
~Cf .. ., >• " H
18 • n ~ • l• ... .Ill I 10
•I le 16 73 . , ' 14 • s
·~ II 10 8
I ' • l
"17 11/ 102 Ill
lndl•n\ 1, llw J~Y• 0
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1-0 0 ., s) l )I
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1 " 110 010 001 • 17 I
t ,, .HU tlut\~t\Ot>'' v t•t •tu~ (,rote,
,, jf ~t•llJITllll'ltr {91, a St•nley ft) •nd
•• "n W l toion,ud t•·•• l
t '"u ,.., t1 J) '> OV•\'°n-.rrv (l) HR\
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Ortot•• ·~ TWfft\ J ,,,,,, 101 102 ooo o n 1
"'• 000 002 010 l I 0 StoddartJ I 81 and Or mp\ty,
.. ,,.n Vf'n.,.vt>n (6, Corbett <•l and
ul W P~lm•r 11 It l ErtO_,
• • tr.JC)d~rd t 1J A 9,)13
NATIONAL LE.AGUE
Oodoers 6, Meta 1 11o:w YOAtr'. LOS ANOEL£S
• .. Jo
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01Ul,t. f ...i.un If , .. ,,(,1
... ""' 1b ""\"' ' JI, t" t,P
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4010 Gervey,lb 4000
l I l O Cey,Jb 3 2 I I
3 0 1 0 Guerrer ,rf 4 I 1 0
1000 Scio.cl•.< 1100 1 0 0 0 Ruuell,U 3 I I I 0 0 0 0 ReuH,P 3 0 I I
1 0 0 0 3; 1 11 I Total\ no~ 6
... ' ''k seen bV IMI~ 000 001 1
' •••Or tr• 000 loOO 00• 6
I U•OOl<S MAHllll OP LOS
.>tit\ 2 I.OB N-York II, Los .t.noelH 111 M•Uiltl, Tt>om.os, Bait.tr, G.,.rrero
~ew'::,~ll ~p H R ER 88 SO •hrytl..l~I S I 6 6 2 1 ''u••''"'fl l 7 0 0 O l let·~··" • 12 '1"~1~4~) ~., ..
Rlld• •, Plr•I••)
'"' 1nn•h OOl 000 100-.. 9 1
•lhl,.11gl> 010 000 020-J 7 0
~~'" •nd Nol.on O'Berry 191. Solomot1, Y
l '" 18) •l\d Pena, Hltosle C7>. W -Solo 11 SJ I Solomon 11·3) HAS -Clnclnt\4111,
·•1110 Ill, l(nlgnl (J) Pltlsb\iroh. EHi••
JJ A 11,11\,
Cerdln•lt 4, are"">
\I I °"" 400 000 OOC>--1 II 0
"·'"'• 001 000 020-J 1 2 I Ol\d1, Merlin 161, Olleft 16). ICH I 16),
'UllPt (I) eflCI T~e; Perry, M.olller <•I.
C•'"P 111, B'11dford m Mid S.11edlct. w -
r1..,u11 t).21. L Perry ().3). Sutler (II. A
14,0<IS
MU.a,c;11911
000 000 OI0-1 S 0
,._." .. ''· ..... ", Pllll.O.IOllll 212 010 __. 9 I
S•n 01"00 11 t 000 000-J 7 1
l!'plnot• ena 8ooM; Etcllellleroer, O
lloe>nt II). urr .. (I) Md l Ke-y. W -
hptnow INI L Elthtlberoer ()-2). HR•
Pllll-IP111•, Scllmldt (II), S.n 01990,
8enlll• 111 " 11.»0.
GlaMa S, l•-4
MonlrHI 000 000 230 00. • • I
Sen f'tln(t.KO 000 cn1 001 001-s I I
( 12 lnnlnts)
Burrt\. Benn .. n II), Frvmen (t). lM
(IOI, Ret(e< (lll •llCI Certer, 0 Alu-r.
L•vtilo tlJ, HOll•nd (10) ~ S-k. W -
.. olland It II L LH I M l. .... -11.ffl
tilgh scho ol pla yoff a
UCONDllOUNDllTU(TUISOAYI Cl, ...
Se nGebrr.1•1-o.I
LB Poly•ICNnnel lst-.
8l 1llop.t.matetWelnut
Huenemo•IW.--
SlmlV•lleyatEI-•
f"IMRelLallo-
Soulh TOfrM><t•I s.rr ""'"°' Rtdl•nck•lf.rcedt•
CIFJ.A
VIII• Parlo ••South Hiiis
Norlll 1 Riv I et LO.OtA
1.ompocetEIOor-
Ana11timetu Sltrf•
Gler-.1a1Covlrtt
LeOutnr..otEIM<>dl>Nt
Bvrl>.ln t ~lie
F uller1 al K•tolle
CIFJ·.A
Sen le FtelC .... •trenoVelley
c a1utcoa1 Yucaipa
s.iwuutS1. 8trnMd
.t.rroyo•tCor.,..
B••ertyHlllUIONlyon Palm Scw"lno .. 1 Victor V•ll•Y
M°"lll.olnV-•t~eValley c--.~•IMlulonVle)e
CIFl·A
Cll•rterO.k•l Aqul,,.•
E lllno<t at Btll G.ordent
Teh•c...,.atLA!Nptlil
MorroB.oyttFlllmoA
8.old"'ln P-1tWh1tti.rCllr1ttlen
Royal Oek atCarplnt.erla
Bell·Jtlf •lPere<lete
RloMHAelV•llOCllrl\tten
CIFS-llSC-
O•entVelleyelMontclalrPr-.>
F llntrldOf Pr«Pal N•wport Cllrlstl..,
RloHondO•IHe•p., .. c11r111ten
l\valOnatHlohl-Hall
I. lnlleldClwlJtlen el Or-LMUMren
v llt•oe c1w1sllen et Buckley r .. 111 Ptrwut Ros.mono
Brent-•IT-leton
Hollywood Park
SUNDAY'S llESULTS
I tltft" u . .s.y 111or....,.11r.,. m..u .. 1
Tnt res.>'• Sia• IPlnc.oy, Jr I. 6.00, l . .0,
1.to, Stltnl Outtoo~ tE•traelll, H<O. 4.IO; Tl
•flan Rt~cv (0.tanoun~v•I 3.60.
Se"'"" race FlylnQ Hol•tv tH•wle'fl,
tS 40, 1 60, s 60, o ·F-10.lahout .. rel.
7 20, • 60, Cr@dll SQUMre (M<Carronl, S.00
$2 dally doyblf t2 II paid S51 40.
lhlrd Rao Amiga L• G. (McC.orronl.
10 . .fO, • 60, 2 40, Track Jesltr (Llpnaml,
9 40, l.20, Frt•Cll Frame C0.111\ouueyel.
2 •0 \S f UCtl IJ-1) palO \IS9 00 .
Fourth •ace -Ae ld Street
I oe1111ous .. yel, 1.60, J.60, 2.IO. Minstrel
Orty (P•noy, Jr.I, J.10, 1 IO; B .. r Pliddlno
ITeJ1d1, Jr '·•.IO.
Flrtn •it<• -IN Good Man tMcCarronl.
H 20, 13 -60, •.40, Perloul (Llpllam), 7 JO,
•.20; Flri;.tl 10.talloutwvel, J.00. U uecte
19·4) plkl W>:IO "°· ~l•tll race Lobo 0. Mar (Pierce), 10.IO,
•.OO, 4 40, Jerome Pra1ri. t011v1ra11, ll.40,
I 20. lnv.O•r tRtvera), •.IO.
Seventh race -Port Muter I Hewi&11,
20 •O, s QO, 2 60. Woodtend Led
IOtl.ollous\av•I. 2 10. 2 10, Vlrlllly
(Valenzuela I. t.40
$7 Pick SI• t7.J+9·7-61 paid S27',m.20
with o~ winning llckel (six"°'"'!. U Pick
SI• consolallon paid SJ,Sll.00 with 26 win·
nlng ll<k•ll tflve llorwt>. fi19Mh race -John Httnrv l"lnc.oy, Jr.I,
J.IO, 2.60, 1 10; Cettrmtn tee,ianed.11, 4.00,
2.10: Oat••Y Libra (M<Cerronl, 2.10. JS H •
acta ($-211>.110 U•.liO,
Ninth reo -Don Rotrerto (M<Herguel, 1.•o. 4 oo. 1 • .0. Truoloacl (CJttteMd411, •.20,
3.20; St>Md But (Plncay, Jr.I, UO. $5 Ue<tl
('-51 paid S59.50.
.Alltndln<• -Jq,9!0.
RC EDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO
SPECIALISTS
Frte Oll'Fllter w/$14.95 OU C"-c)e
CHECK OUR COMPETITIVI PRICES
n~ST & GRAND ARCO 835-4049
~'\l~'.0:1,tlon
~.zwo.,.u.#111 •t....We-v4
H. lrwln,'22,41111 • •-11·10--UI
T. ICltt,tU,.00 •N1·71-10-Vt c. &trenve. tUAOO ... ,,,.1.12-in
$.Simpson, lU,.00 ... J0.70-10-21'
F C-, $10,IOO 70.72>*70-• R "oyd, .... 7S ... ,._,..,._.,
O Jenu.,.,, ''·"s 7~70·71--Jll
A Curl, sa,400 61 7>7+*-Jla
J . HHrd, M.400 744$-12·11-la
J . Aenner, "''° 71-70.70.70-SS v. HHlntt,-., uo n.n ... 11-•
II Murpllv .... ISO 1o-TH1-1,_ ..
J Colbert, $6,UO 10-13-11..._SI
B. Aog•n, ... uo 11-*7~•
ll StrKk, M,tSO 11 .... 11.12-m
M. Raid, .... ilO la..t-71-10-SI
J .C. Slll<ll« .... ,llO 6f.11·11·7,_1M
T, Wel•k• ..... 0$0 70-72 .. f.74-"5
M. Lye, .... ~ •f.72·70.74-.S
F Co.;plH, U ,000 71·70-71-7)-216
T. Jeflklns, '3.000 1).70-7+.t-.216
IC. Ferg.,., J,1,000 .._10-11-11-a
G . .,,...,, ~000 , .. 71>-7kt-•
C.C.Rodrguea, '3,000 71·7Mf.7,_116
B. Clam.-«. SJ.000 72·72•f.ll-*
M.Mc C-, $2,040 12·11>-11·1-111
J . Mlt,11911, U,040 71-71-72·1$-"7 B, J H cket, U,CMO .._, •• ,,.n-•1
M. O' Meare, l 2,040 11·12·72·12-211
M. Pleil, IJ.040 7 ... 72-11-211
0 . Edweros, U,040 7).71·71·7t-•7
J. HH&, U,CMO 12·11·1l·12-2'1 II Eellwood, Sl,StS 1~10-16-.
0 . C.Ote, ll,SU 7).70.1t·7J.-•
R.MettnOlle, $1,SIS 74--44·1 .. 72-•
J P•I•. $1,SU 1w1-1 .. n-• L Hinkle, $1,SlS IHl-10.14--..
0. Gren..m. tt,SU 7747 .... ls-•
H. Twitty, \1,UO ... ,..n .76--119
L. Tre•lno, Sl,1<0 7J.71·71·14-21t
g: :~~.~~:.~.. ~~t~~:~t:
G. Koch, Sl,140 13-10.72-14-219
0 .Helldr_,,Sl, 140 11·12·11-1S-..
J. Mehaffey, $ISO lt-72·7 .. 7S-:rto
B Altln, saso 114t·7 .. 74-:rto
J Schr-r, $ISO 12·12·12·7._:rto
8. Bry•nt, '850 11-7).7).7l-:rto
T .Veleritnt. S7S6 tt·72·1HS-J91
M. Sulllvtn, S7U ... 7$-1S.1....m
Stott Hoen, S11S ,....,.12.11-m
o .ed .. arm, vu 12·11·11·1'-m
E. Snttd, VIS ,,.,,., .. n-m
B. EHi-, S1,S1S 7-·10.76--
G. Cadle, Sl,S1S 73-10.72-7)-211
R.Meu-te,$1,SU 1~-1 .. n-•
J. Pat•, l l,SU 1W1·1 .. n-• I.. Hlnkte, $1,SIS 7).71-70.74--
0 . Greham, 11,Jls 77•7•,.IS-•
H. T•tlly, Sl,1<0 69.74.72,7._ ..
L,Trevlno, $1,140 73-1t ·7H4-2"
0 . Po111, Sl,140 11·1f.11·1s--al
G. Burns, $1, 1<0 .._7S.7J.7<t-•
G. Koen, SI, 14() 13-70·72·76--119
O.Hallclt'in. Sl.140 7Ht-7t-7S-_,
J. Mahetley, 5850 69·12·7 .. 7S-2t0
B. l\llln, $ISO 114 .. 7 ... 7'-:rto
J !.chroedr, $ISO 72·12·12·74-:rto
B. Bryent, $ISO 71·1J.7)-7J-1'0
T Val•nlno, $1S6 69·12·7s.7S-291
M. Sulltvan, '11S .._7S.7S.7t-1'2 s Hoch, PIS 74 .. 9·12·77-m
0 . E dw•rcls, $11~ 12·72-12·76-1'2 e. sn .. o, v is .,.,,., .. ,,_,.,
T M.ouney, ~7 6'·1s.72-18-293
l.. Wedkln•, M'7 7J.11·1$-7•-2'3 0 El<llell>rgr, '67S 6 .. 7S.7Ht-lf.I
B. Thom11Son, "IS H.7().75-7~294
G. Hellberg, M66 '9·7S.7 .. 76-2'6
J . Fought, "SJ 11·12·15-1'-291
M 8.orber, "SI 69·7$-19·1•-297 M Morley,...., . 10.1•·11·11-M
LPGA tourname nt Isl Para,,,..., N.J .)
Kathy Whilworth. Sll,7SO 1,_72-70-211
l\llce Ritzman, Sll.UO 71•7·7>-211
Doi Germain, 18,7!0 70·73-70-113
Beth Oenlel, $4,250 70-lf.72-2"
Pat Brlldley, \S,000 74·11·70-2U
J •M Bl•l<Kk, .... JIS 73*7'-216
Petty Stw.llen, $3,812 '9·12·76-211
J enet ColH, SJ,112 19·12·76-211 Shetley Hemlln, $l,2SO IWs.I0-111
P•t Meyers, '3,tlO 7J.4s.to-111
Judy R•nkkl, $2,7!0 72·7NS-21t
Myre Van HOOW, $2,ISO 7'-70.IS-11'
Penny Pull, $1,941 7S-73·7l-220
Cetlly Reynotde. $1,,.1 7•·72-74-220
B.orber.O MoknHI, $1, .. 1 •t-7 .. 75-220
Silvia Bertote<ctnl,l l, .. I 72·72-16-2211
Amy l\lcott, Sl, .. I 7s.47·71-220
Cathy Mam. ll ... 1 11·70-7t-220
Bonnie Bryenl, $1,41' 73-12·1....i21 Oabbl9 AusUn, $1,•lt 71·72-71-ttt
Women's tournament
letTellye)
Jen Sltpflef\IOll,Au&. Ayeko OUmoto, J-
Lorl Gerl>llU, U.S.A.
.t.tsuko HlkalJll, J-Vollo IC-yatN,J_..
T ek•llO Klyomoto, Jepan
Hollll St.y, U.S.A.
Taul· Yu, Taiwan
Mewko S.S.11<1, Jepan
Noriko K-yaMll, J-
Yuko Morlvuc;hl. Jepen
Anol• Ts.01, Talwen
M Oottl, Speln
uure Rurlbul, U.S.A.
Cerolyn Hiii, U.S.A.
l.•M C111.1day, US A.
12·12-76-%20 7).71·71-222
10·1Wl>-t2.S , .. ,,.~
11.1 .. ,_m , .. ,,.,_Z»
73-7>41-227
11·13-11-221 71-7t-17-227
72-77-71-%27 ,,., ... ,._m
,,., ... , .... u1
11-1a.1t-n1
7$-7"5-DI
1 S.11-tl--ttO ,,.,,,.._,.,
German lntern•tlonal
Isl Ha--., West O«-y)
11,. ..... 1 .. 11
P•t•• McH<tmere def, Jlmmv Connon.
7·S, •·1, 4-6, M (McN.omara wins '32,000,
Connof5 •Ins $1',000).
Men's tournament
(atT .. N)
o.Mnl'INll
Stan Smit/I-Henk Pftste< O.f. Roscoe Ta,..
ntr·Oltk Stockton, I• ..... , S.1, M . (Smith,
Pfister "''n $.3,000 HGll, TeMer, StocklOll
Will $2,000 fKll),
Challenge tourn•ment
(et Me!MWM, A~lreflel A-eltewlM,t-1
Sl"81n Ken R~all (Aontrellel clet. S!Wr-
Sttwert IVS,). 6·J, •-1; Rod Lever
l.t.u1treUal def. Cllarlle PeNrell (U.S.),._,,
•·1, 6·4, .,.......
Jolln _om.,..Tony Roelle l f.u1trall•l
def. Tom Ollllef' (Hotlendl·CIUI Oryldlle
\South Alrlc•). W, ....,.,
.Alltalla tournament lat ,_e, ttely)
Sl11tlM"Mlt JOH Luis Clerc 1111. Reul Remlrez, .. ,, •·1. (Clerc wins $10,000, Remlrtz wlM
u,oooi.
World teTinl• tournament
l•tTelyel ._.. ............. It
Andree Jeeotr def. Tracy A11Jtln, :M, .. .).,
1-6, t·I. (Jeeotr wins $30,000; Austin wlft1
SU,0001. ,,....,. , ....... , ....
Brl•n Tt«lltr clot. 1111 $Cenlot\, 24, .. ,, 7•
•· 1 T,.s;,..r wll'lt po,ooo. k •nlen wins
•ts,000). -·o.......'i.ats Teacller.JOfln Sadri def. Su11klll•VIMe
Ven Petten. 2 ..... t. , ... (T .. c:.-·SeMI Wint
U,000 .. ell; 5cen1 ... ven Petten wlll t.2.900
•eclll.
Z illgitt and Wright
insurancr agtTIIS and brokers
e 222 E. est Coff 5 fwyJ .. s bctpt S.. Insurance premium• up thl• year?
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr., Suite 1•
N ~WPOAT BEACH
714-631-3651
Call u. for a competitive quote
tor Auto, Homoownen, Flr-o. Flne Arts;
Litt, Medical. R.V . Boat or Yacht lnaurance.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Monday, May 18, 1981 ca
Indy 500 lineup
1'11• tentetlv• lll\4lup for Sunclev't In·
dleMpotb Ml().mlle rec• l»Md on, t-·••
cau•llllcellon •••r•ue•, ll•ttno driver.
llOf'rMIOwn, <."nu ·1>1r, clleul1•ngl,,. -
111"0 In mllH Pt ·; Pl. ,T ltOW
1. lobtly UnHr, Alb11querQ11t, Ho. J,
Pent11...C.-1h, 200.~
2. Mike -ley, Fell-, NO ..... £~
Clle•rolel, t91. 1'1. a. A.J. FoY1 Jr .. H.,..lon, Ho 1•, Covol•
co ... ort11. 1 ... 011. H COfllO aow
4. Gordon JOllncoell, Plla.nl•, No. JO,
Wlldut-CC.-111. 1ts.m . S. Johnny Rutherford, For1 Worlll, No 1,
Clleparret<o&wortn, ltS.»7
•· Josete Gen•, INalco, No. >S, ,...,_....
Cosworth, Its. 101.
THlllDaOW
1. Bill .t.ttup, W-slock, Vt,. No. ),
Pal'ltke-COl-111, ltl.t.S..
a. •·Wally oa11enoec11, Bawn. l.OIO., -· .0, Wlldut .Cof_.11\, 1'J,040.
•. Gorclofl Smiley, G ... 1.ne1, Tuet, No. 60.
Wlld<el<oe_."1, 1'2.MI.
,OURTH llOW
10. Al Unnr, l\lbuQMerque. Ho. 1e.
Longllom-COSWOrt:h, 1'2.71t.
11. Pencho C.orter, Br--rv, Ind., No.
s. P•n"'-•C0.-1h. 1t1.cn2.
12. Gary e.nenMu..n, Monrovle, Ind.,
Ho. I , Llotrtnl~wortll. lt0.110.
FtnH llOW
ll. Kevin COllef'I, Redondo 8ee<h, Ho. J2,
Plloenl•-Cotworth, IM ......
14. Bal> L.ai.ler, Veil. Colo .. NO. 35, Pensk•
coswortll, 1'9.414.
IS Tom 810tlOW, Wllltew.oter, Wll., No.
~. Pen.ii•Cht•rotet, 1•.19•. SIXTH llOW 1•. o.-i 8'-m. $M Cle....,..e, Ne. It, ..... 1111.-c.wwtll, 111 .....
17. TClllY e.tten-n, lndlen•Polll, No •
••. McLe,...,.Coswortl't, 111.0U. 11. Stew Krltlleff, DIM P .... I. Ho. Sl, .......... c:._,.., 116.122.
SEVENTHllOW
It. Vern Schuppen, AuSlrall•, No. "1,
McLeren<os_.th, 116.548.
10. terry OICklOll, Merl•tl.I. Ottlo, Ho. JI,
Pt ntke-Cos-111, 116.211.
21. Tom SM••. Spc>Une, Ho. l, "°"'""' Cot .. orth, 200.'91.
llGHTH llOW
IJ. D•MY °"9alt. C.ta Mou, No. U, I•
tersc~-. tt7.4 ...
2l Rl<k MUrl, B•k•r•ll•ld. Ho ••
P•n•u< .. ""°""· 1'4.01e. u . Sllttdon Kl"'•'· 81oomlnoton, Ind., No
ti, Lonotw>rr>-Cosworlll, t'9,4S4
NtNTHROW
lS. P•te Haltm1r, u yeyette. Ind . No. n ,
Pefl•ll•·COlworlh, 117.10S.
U . Miu C ........ DaM Pel.,t, No. 74, ..... a11...c. .. r111. 111.MI. •
11. Don WlllltlnQlon, Fort Laud<lrd<lle,
Fla .. Ho 91, M<lrch-Cosworth, 111.237.
TENTH lltOW
21. Biii Whllllnoton, Forl Uucle•dale.
Fie., Ho. 90, Mlrth-Coswortll, 197 OW.
29. Georoe Snider. Houston, No. '1, VPJ·
Co•worth, 199 U5
)0, Dennis' Flrutone. Ga rdena . No. •. Wlldc•t<oswor"1 111 , ...
ELEVENTH llOW
31. Je rry Sneve, Spok.one, Ho. 1',
lloll1tedt-Oft..-hluser. 117 714.
ll Scon 8reyton. Cotow•ler; Mien., Ho
JI, Pen......C:O.wor111, 187.IH.
Jl. Tom 1<1au1le<, Northville, Ml<ll., No.
SI, Sc"k-awvrotet, 1 ... 732.
· •·D•llenOe<.ll qualified tht car tor Merlo
Andretll, who w.os In lklglum tor • Grend
Prix race. If And,..ltl It ~ut>ttlluted •• tht
driver In IN rec•. I/le car mMll •••rt In Jlrd
po\ltlon with each or ,_ In ninth llW'OUQll
»rd moving "" one spot In the •tartlno
\lntUj).
NASL WISTlllN OIYISION
W L Gf' GA a .. P'-a... s • 10 10 10 40
S.n Dl•oo s 4 11 IJ u Jt
Lot Anoetn • 10 IS 10 ll S.n JOSI , 4 $ 10 14 10 )I
EASTEllN DIVlllON
Cosmo• WHlllnQton
Montreal
Toron1o
I 11711U1t
• , 11 11 ll 41
•131ltJJ1
2 •n1'12M
SOIJTIIElltN DIVISION
Ft. Leuderdele 4 3 14
l\tlent• • • 14
Tam pa 8.oy 4 • 1S
J ec-1a1wllle 3 1 t CENTllAL DIVISION
• 12 ., u u •
11 1J 35
16 I 24
Chlc•va
Tuts• MlnMIOlt
Della•
I 2 II I I• 50
• 4 " • 10 :M 3 10 10 • •
217226 16
HO--THWUT DIVISION
Portlend 6 J 11 10 11 SJ
SHttle S 4 11 I• 1' .. V•n<,,..ver S • U II 14 ..,
Edmonton J • 11 14 10 •
Celgery 1 1 s 12 s 11
Six point• era ewercled for • r"9uletlol'I Ot
O•f'tlme victory. Four points for• ,._"°"'
victory. One l>o<lus Polnl lo• every voel
.cored with a maximum of 11\r .. P9f gemt.
Ho bonus paint Is •w•rcled for overtime or
SllOolout 9')ell: ,......, •• k.,n
Allenta 2, Mofltreel I
Clllceoo l, cosmo. 2
Wetlllnoloft 1, O.olla10 (IOI
Toronto 2, Ed.._ton 1
Los ,,..,..., a, s.n oi.oo 1
T•r'•O-
Mlnnaote el Calu«V
Deep aea flahlng
NeWll'OltT (Art's u.l"'I -92 eng ..... ;
50 llonllo, a 1»rrecuc1e, 120 kelp ban, S4 -
beu, SIO rneclut-.1, .,. rock cod, I .,.11ow
bets, 1 ... tltlut, (0.vey'I L«lwrl -21S
•nultrt: l lloerrac:udl, 22' llOfllto, 1 .. twiss, S
rock cod,• Mllbut, SU rNKk ... et.
DANAWMAal'-Utent ..... : 41711HJ,2S
Mrrecud.t, 301 bOnllo, • M!lbllt, I Y'li-11,
JOlmKll«el.
MOa•o IAY (Yl .. '1 L.alMlll .. 1 -20
•nulenl I ting cod, UO nttk cod, .. rH r«k
Cod, 14 yellow bML
Open To All In June
BOATING
Ana-Iman SerlH ........ o.•-Ct•U A 1. ,...,.wll, 2. &eQ\IOyall, ~e
(tYCI; ), ~tum, T-(SSYCI.
Cleu I I Hugle loo, J, Flying Colon,
$tone (I CYCl, 3. Porpy, Slntltlr IBYCI.
Cteu C -1. lltwberry Muffin; 2 . .t.IOl\e ll,
flHd ISSYCJ,) -a. Marlll (VVCl.
Tourna,,,.nt ot C hampion•
, .. "-"'-"Ha,,_.,, c.._..1111,cieu
I. RHb (HHYC); J. C1,1mmlnq• (l\BYCI
Or•IMI Ml•'-" ClllM
I. Jetl•rMll (M8VC), 2 WOOd, (ABYCI
CleuA
I C.,roll (M8YCI; 1 Ftenk Ftnoer
IMHYCI
Claua
1 luptgn (HHVCI; 1 C.,. .. , tlYCI
One-Dealgn lnvltalJonal
Sabol A -1. Pernkk (aCVCI; t Bonetti
18YC;) ), Smelll•r INHYCI ' 4 Horlno HHYCL
SeDot B -1. Cessel IBCVC).
Lldo-U -I. K1rrloen IBCVC J.
Soolng -t. Or1l1 C BYCJ. e 1(111111·22 -I. Bever lSWYC)' 1
Robln1on, Munroe (NH YCI: ) RtmM>r
(HHYCI
Macho Reg.atta
(•t Lei ..... '" """'°'' J·24 -1. hpool>lclenl,'Grlllllh lLAYCI; J,
Cnurp, W-rn (L8VC.I: 3, Ace 01 '""'· Gollson (ABYCI. •. ~ N•w1, Soren'°"
tABYq.
S.O·S -I. Amclron. tSt. FYC). 2. Breutll
ILAYC) ), Ayre\ (HHVC), •· Miller (Pelo
l\llo YCI.
COHTEHOEll-1.Whlle, lSBYCI
Catallna-38 Aasoclatlon
tatL-hKll)
1 Crill Crelt, Crill (SBVC): 1. EnloMreot.
Wll5on (LBVCI, l CllenltuH, Olton
(LBYCJ.
Boswell M emoria l Trophy
(II Hew'°rt HlrMr)
I HelM)n tSSVCJ; t. Smllev (BVC), a,
Wllllls tSSYCJ
STANLEY CUP FINALS
lalanders 7, North S tars 5
UNMden IHll -In >.OI
Scon by PerlMI
NY 1•1•-• 1 l 3-7 Mlnn .. ote a o 2-) ""t .. erled I. Mlnnetola, Chri1loff 7 IHertsti..rQ, Clc-
cartlll), S:2S. 2. Minnesota. Peyne H
(Young, Mecf.dam), 14 09 3 New Yo.-k,
Bouy 1• (GllllHJ, 14 o . • Mlnn.,,ol•. 8.
Smltn I tHerUburg. Payne), 14.30
Penallltt Ny•trom, NY, 1· 10. Vouno111,..,
Min, l .SS, P•ynt, Min, 6 JI, Hy•lrom, HY,
I OS, Vounof'-n\. Ml11, I.OS; Trotller. NV,
1:1t; Langevin. NY, 11 ,., Ny)hom, NY,
IS 20.
S.C-Perled
S. N...., Yorll, Ny•trom 6 I Tonelli, Me•
rick!. •.10 4. N-Yo'k, Goring• (POIVln,
BouyJ, 1.16 7, Ht• Vorlt., Oorlnv 1
101111 .. ), !!:SI. PenalllH B. Smtih, Min,
S·J9; Giiiies, NV. S S6. G. Smith, Min, S.54.
GllllH, HY. t : 40, Trolller. HY' 1':00;
McE .. en, NV, 18.2S
Tlllrll Perled
• Mlnnetote, Peynt " ( Youno. Cllrl\IOtfl.
I II. 9. N-YOf'k, Bouy 17 (Trotlltrl, 2 OS
10. Hew York. Gorino I !C.orrott. P&tvln),
• :M. 11. Mlnneoote, Ckureltl 14 IB. Smlllll,
U:» 12. New York, Trottier 11 CB06.ty,
Merrick I, 1': 16. Penally -Tonetll, NY,
4. lS,
Shots on GOAi New York 11 .. 10.1' Min·
llHOl.I a.MJ.2'.
Go.olln -N-York, Smtih Mlnne\Ola,
Meloche. A -IS,7 ....
Playoff aehedule
T ...... y,May12
HY l•landtn 6, Minntl<ll.o l
T-..y,MayU
HY 15~ 6, Mlnne•ot.o l
SIMMy'•k-H Y htandtn 7, Mlnntwt.I S
T....._,.,o .....
NY lslandtn at Mlnne1ata
T....-J'10-
Mlnntt0te It NY 1111.-r\ (II ne<etwryl
S.lwd.oy'1 Game
NY '"-n•t Minnesott !If neuu.oryl
T-y,MayU
MlnnflOI• •I HY ltlenOers <II ne<euary1
College c re w
WEiTERN SPlllNTS
(a1 Vall•je, C..I
Vustlylour I Ora~Coest,6:lt,2.St
Mery's, •· .. ; J. UC S.nt• Barb.ore, 6: .... 1, •, Pu~t Souncl, t .4S, S. L.ovote, •: Sl; •. S.nte
Cl.ora. 7:0l.
Frosh lour I Orenoe Coe11. •:11. 2
Loyole, •· .t3; 3. S.nla Clare, 6. SO; 4, Hu,,,..
l>oldl, •:SI
Junior ••l"llty etoht -I. Orange Co.o1t,
S. 33, t. UC Irvine, s. U ; l UC Santa
Berbua. S:4'; 4 U. of Sen 0 1990, S.lO, S
Lono lead\ Stale, S;S7, •· Humboldt, 6: 11
Frotll elollt -I. Oranoe Co.,.t, S:42; t. u .
ol San 01@9G, S· S9, 3. UC lr•lne, •.02; •. Sell·
le Ctere.6:0S. ·
Misc.
Texas'
Rose
wins title
By ALMON LOCKABF,V
O.Uy .. , ... -11"9 Wrlllf'
Andy Rose took the 6-meter
national championship trophy to
Fort Worth Sundc.1 y by edging
his closest rival ln thf' best four
of five serlc>1-1 off Bahia Corin·
thian Yacht Club.
Going into the final race. Rose
was tied on points with Dennis
Durgan of Newport llaror Yacht
Club with the title hinging on
whkh skipper bt!al the other in
the fifth race.
Rost fini s h e d third and
Dur~an f111ished fifth, leaving
them both tied on points after
their throwout races The cham·
pionship was decided on which
skipper beat the other the most
limes in the fi ve race series.
Both ended th<' series with s:s...
points after the throwout race.
Winner of the final race was
John BC'rtra nd of St Francis
Yacht Club which boosted him to
third place in the final s tandings
with 91? points.
n ose started his sailing career
as a youngster sailing Sabots at
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
and wa s nam e d j unior
yachL<;man of lhe year. He later
;oined Balboa Yacht Club and
was twice winner of the Gov·
ernos"s Cup, BYC's junior match
racing series .
lie was tactician on the win·
ning boat in two Congressional
Cup ser1£')S. twice tactician on
the winning yacht in two CaJ
Cup series. and s ailed as tacti·
cian for the Australian yacht in
the 1977 Am<'rica's Cup.
In offs hor e r acing he has
sailed on the crew of Kialoa II In
one Transpac raC'e a nd again in
a Sydney·Hobart race. He also
s ail e d on Ballyhoo , th e
Australian val'hl which was first
to finish in one Sydney-Hobart.
race. and was a member of the
crew on Rlackfin when she won
lhL• Trans-Atlantic race
Final standings.
I Ranger. Andy Rose . Fort
Worth Hoat Club. 8a4.
2. Ah. Si Si. Dennis Durgan,
NHYC. 8"4
3. St Francis Vll , John
Bertrand, St FYC. 912
4 . W a r H orse . Brian
Werthe imer. Seattle' YC, J03•.
5 Perspit•ac1ous. Gayle Post.
BYC. 13.
6. Di scovt.·r~, Hank Thayer.
BCYC. 2;J.
Gale winds
play havoc
on race
MARINA DEL HEY. Gale
winds and mountainous seas
played havoc with the 15 yachts
in the second race of the Yacht
Racing u nion's Pacific Ocean
Racing Conference. dismastirig
on e yacht and sending more
than half the fl eet for cover ..
The 194-mile race started Fri·
day off lhC' Lo ng Beach
breakwater in a fresh westerly
breeze that e ased off as the
yachts worked around Palos
Verdes point and then built to 40
knots as they proceeded toward
the Channel Islands.
Skippers report<•d winds of 50
knots and 10-15 foot seas as they
beat along the s hore of Santa
Cruz Isla nd. One by one, the
yachts began dropping out of the
race with l'rew fatigue and
seas ickness.
Second overall on handicap
was l..oube's Bravura. and third
was John Arens· Tomahawk.
Balboa Yacht Club.
Rustlers, Harbor
to meet at East LA
Go l den West College's
baseball team will play a one·
game playoff Tuesday at 2:30
against LA Harbor at East LA
College for the second-half
championship of the Southern
California Conference.
Ron Hendrick wi ll start for the
Rustler s against Harbdr, which
also won the first half title.
A sudden death playoff game
was forced after GWC and LA
Harbor finished the second-half
season both tied with 10-4 re·
cords in SoCal play.
'John Doe' Hits Jackpot
In Monthly 011 'Lottery'
1'78 CADILLAC SEVILLE
Leatht.r covered 11eaUn1 ore1, Ca.dillac wire whffl
(overs tr Ciro rnhlt palnl. 1358VOV>.
' •8995
20-71, 71, '7' & 'llJ S~J ot lfm.ilo.fr .tavtftg1! ft/ICllll"I.,._.,.-,.,.,,. M..""'f··~
ONTARIO, CALIF.
(Special) -H4ndrad• of
avarq• citisena will wl.n
oil ..... rltht. in upcom· b\I public drewinp con·
duct.eel by the State of
WyominJ. Some m-,v
edde\ie ov•micbt.,,..Jth
by ..wn, their rfehtt t.o oil companiN and maln-
lnc lil•lOal royaJti•• on
ID.)' 011 or p.e prod\lct/.oa.
olrerw every Am1ricu the
opportunity t.o comp.te
on an equal bull with
Oan\ oil compuaie• for
f.taHt of public land1.
Wonn.adcm and anti)'
detaill ar9 available fn>m
in.. H. Kilt Sanden Co.,
Publlc,I•""• Div., 2032 I . 0.-oUnt, Onterio, c.ut. 917tU. Pita .. en·
cloM •1 for poetap and
hand.Unc.
~'1 '.-. '~ Jrl . .
DD THAT -.r Cllil name
Wini .......... PMft.
IncrecHbty, moet .tll rilk
no IDOft than •~o. tu de·
~~le. t.o flit.tr the lit·
dHlnotlm Pf'Olntn that
Offtci.al •nlrY cenl• ril bt Nllltd to m .. t UM' nm: ftlir\a dhdlln..
. ' . .. . ...
°'919 CoMt DAILY fttlOT ,Mo~. May 11. ~-1
• • "191.iC NOTICS ~.,,.~~~~~-------~ -~~~~~~--~
PUBLIC NOTICE
McCOIMtCIC MOITUAllH
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hiiis
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano 4~1776
H•'IOI LAWN-MT. OUYI
MorJuary • C.rretery
Crerre tory
1&25 01a1er Ave
CotlaMeaa
540-5554
PlllClllOTHllS
llLL laOADWAY
MOlTUMY
110 Broadway
CottaM..a
&42-9150
WlllO.,.... ....,,... MOITUMY
U7 Main It. Hun•=r~ech
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
()
T
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
. --·-· -.. --. -_..,., __ _
•
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......,. ,.,. w. .. ......_,.,. s. ..._....,. s. HMM• Fors•
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
• ...,... 1002 ........ 1002 Ge•r• 1002 c. ... r.a 1002 ...•.....................................••• , ....•••.........•..•...........................
EQUAL HOUtNNO
OPPORTUNITY ..... ......-...... :
All rul tatate ad·
vertlaed In this
newaj>aper la aub~t to
the Federal Fair Hout
ln1 Act of 1988 wbJch
mekea It We1al to ad·
vertlae "any pre/erence.
limitation. or di•·
crlmlnatJoo baaed on
race, color, rell1lon,
1ex, or oaUonal ort1m.
or an lntenllon to make
any 1uch prererence.
llm l taUon1 or di•·
crtmlnaUon.'
Tbla new1paper will not
ltnowlnfly accept any
advert 1ln1 ror real
estate whJcb la In viola·
Uon oftbe law.
MIOIS: Ad¥...tfNn
....... clledltWracls .....,. ... .,,. ... ,. ····=· DAILY Pl.OT • ._.,
UHDAISU
Wide channel view from spectacular
11rchitectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath,
pool home. Slip for 2 large boats.
$1 ,495,000. By appointment.
LIDO ISLI HOMU
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional spacious, custom a bdrm 3
bath hqme. newlv decorated. Priced1to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lg~ recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining .
$420,000. Best price for the money.
PENINSULA POIMT llACHFIOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath c ustom home. 3700 sq. ft.
featuring_ ~arine room, entry, li v\llg
room, dining room, built·ins, elc.
$1,385,000_
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
1·11 fle1y•.1do IJ1 ,,, I< fl /1/", /ol/,I
HELP!
Wtllty for .... flnt "
l•corrtct h11ertlo•
'-'Y·
The seller baa to sell thlt
4 bdrm air condltloned
home that needs aome
TLC. FNMA financing
available. 195,000.
Ho.MtfwW. , ................. ...,:. ..
, .... ,.., 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super Investment! Two
2 Bdrm wilts, one with
fireplace! Current In·
come-'740 mo. Financ·
ins! One year home pro
tectlon plan lncld
Hurry, Ulla won't last!
141-7111 ~
THE !<EAL ESTATERS
COHDO St7.t00 a Bdrm1, 2 Ba, located In
C:O.ta Mesa near OCC
Great •tarter home or
rentaluntta. Aatuinethe
loan at leu OW\ current
lntereat rates . Call
before lu IOMI
MESSY
MESSY
Vacant aJantl Huge 4
Bdrm ; 2 ator y ! Cozy
fireplace! ~.ooo down
movea you In. Take over
II~~ loan. Owner will
finance remainder. Save
thouaand• ! Owner
aacrlflce. $145,000. Call
NM717
THE REAL ESTATERS
DICOIATC>a
COMDO SI lt,900
WlDdlnl ireenbelta fead to brt1ht 1ln1le 1tory
condo. E"qulaltely de·
corated with cuatom
wallpaper and cabinetr y
Ulnlout. Formal dinlna
room tool Owner will
cooperate wttb flnaoc·
tna .. Won't lut at thla
prlce,1ocallnow. ·
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
Harbor View HCMM
Highly desirable large
corner lol. Newly de·
corated family home on
fee land Too many
amenities to mention 4
Br Palermo $349,000
Ownr/Agt. 759·1698
Yo• C•'t hat Thcrt
Super duplex located 1n
Old CdM. The property
has a 3 Bdrm cottaae
with new paint and
carpelJI and a modern 2
Bdrm apt w/blt·ins The
owner aays seU and he'll
listen to all offe r s
1325.000
Balboa Island Rlty
'7).1700
GREAT TERMS
C harming Eastside
home with vaulted wood
beam ceilings and large
brick fireplace. 3 B<lrm11
2 Ba, comer lot, covered
patio and much more
Owner wUI finance at a
low lntereat rate with
20% down. Full price
SHll,500.
SpacloH CHto"' .....
5 Bdrm. tam rm, bast!
menl, wine cellar, spa,
ln·law quarters, lovely
tree11haded atreet in old Corona del Mar. 1475,000
714 7<>0·9333
lx.c ... nTWIM l~ year new, apllt level,
3 Bdrm, 2~ ba end unit
Entertalnera delight
with formal dlnJng rm. and gourmet kitchen.
Recreation Includes ,
tennla & r11cquet ball
$160,000.
TOUCHSTONF.
.REALTY
963-'*'7
PAYMENTS $750/mo
Lovely M br E/Side hae.
Sll0,000, w 18"'1% Ut. 291
• Monle Via ta, C M.
646·4289.
•
RED CARPET
754-1202
THINKING
TOWHHOME?
Call the 1pecialiata al
the condominium in·
formation center.
Touchatone Realty
963--IM'7
OWMEI wtl CAlllY
Custom blt-12 yn1 old 5
Br 4ba with large polen·
lial in·law ar· 3200 llQ ft + 925 11/ garage.
$275,000
Owrt/A 541-0350
PACESETTER HOME·
VIEW
$169,500 In Laguna
Niguel' 4 Br., l~ Ba , 2
story family home. Rear
Ii ving room overlooks
bea utlful hill a, uaed
brick floor to celllna
rlreplace, bu1e mailer
aulte with 2 large clotelJI
+ walk in, built In &as
kitchen, ramily room,
ramlly bdnna complete·
ly seperate on 2nd level.
2 car attached garaae.
Jots ofatorafe. A mutt to
see! Drive by 24502 Loa
Serranos at Nlauel Road
& La Hermosa. Open Sat
16th, Sun 17th. from 1·5
or by appt
ORANGE COAST
FINANCIAL
REALTORS
Marilyn Dunger
957.0701
TUITLllOCK
HIGHLAHDS
2 story, 4 Bdrm 3 bath
MacGregor, bullt by
Lusk . S tep down
livlnf r oom. larse dining room , bay
windowed breakfaal
nook with aunny
ait ·down view .
E•qul1lte In every
detail. 1385.000.
714·631·6990
E·ZDUPLEX
COMVaSloN
ROOM ·FOR 2 LARGE YACHTS
Cotta Me11 B ·2 J I
Remodeled 4 Bdrm 2 ba
bome wltb tlreplat~1 copper plwnbln1. CoulO
bt ~velUd to duplex.
Onl IU.J-'0001 Call to
... W-1111
THE REAL
ESTATERS
OCl4MMOMT I 8d~1 a be, unham.
New • .-orl1.
IAYlllOM1'
I ldnn, l bt, \IDIUm.
lllDt cood. 90 yrty.
CHAMM& PIOM1'
I INrm, I be, unl11m.
' ' I
associa ted
Great financing available. 4 Bdrm
+-maid's quarters, seating area in
lrg rnstr s uite, formal dining. Price
$1.1 mlllion. Terms. Bob or Dovie
·Koop
WMti< 6J 1-1266
REALTORS •
I
I
• I
\\'I :--.I I 'r ~
~YLOR CO
l<J-.1\l .°J ()l\S ·-1111 1· l !t•l(
.... AMT ''VMSAIUIS"-UCl.USIYE
OM llG CAHYOH GOLF COURSE
Spectacular Deane H omt ~
"Versailles" located on largest lot ol
all Deane . Homes. Beautiful goll
co urse view! Profess ion ally
landscaped yard w /mature trees in t1
private park·like setting including a
lovely large pool & huge spa + ,rn
attractive gazebo Gated f ro11l
courtyard entry with fountain. Marbh.•
floor in foyer with glittering
chandelier. 4 Bdrms, den form:ll
dining room & 4 1h baths. Pri~ed right
at $895,000. Call for appointment. ·
WISLIY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
2 111 S• J~ Hiit Rood
HIWPOIT Cl:HTH, H.I. 644-491 O
WONDERFUL FAMILY HOME!
Well located in family oril·11t1·d
H.arbor V iew Home!>, clol'lt' l 11
community pool and school. N11·t:h
landscaped , 4 bedroom home w11 ·11
private rear yard . great 1111
entertaining. This home is abo 1111
lowes t priced Montegc> l1stc<l .it
$241,300.
U~l()Uf: t1()Mr:\
REALTORS. 675·6000
2443 EHt CoHt Hl9hwa11. C.orona d .. t MAO
WE HNE470fntE BEST AGt:.l'fn> IN It Mf·"\j
STEPS TO SA.MD
3 Bdrm + loft, 2 Ba
Fantastic buy this close
to the beach. $179,500
JACOBS REALTY
675-4670
WISTCLIFF
Alt.ractlve four bedroom home Stunning countr,
kit c hen with oa a.
cabinets, bookcasei. und
desk. All new apphunces
In kitchen New carpels
throughout C us tom
drapes and wallpaper
Seller's plans create a
great urgency lo sell
Submit offer Reduced
to s.115, 000
Ul-7l00 M.I .
MIWPORT HGHTS
Deluxe townho u se
duplex, 3 bdrm family.
2.,., bath each unit
Frplcs, all built ins ,
decka & patios P11rk
like landscaping
SELLER WILL H El.P
FINANCE. $295,000'
lalbo.layProp.
lealon
•675-7060•
I.All On'ORTUHITY
IM CAMEO SHORES
Loweat r.riced ree aim· pie aval able! Great as·
aumable lit TD. Enjoy
afternoon sun and views
rrom wood dec k 3
beautiful pr iva t e
beaches. Only 1549,000~
Call todayl 673-SMO
THE REAL
ESTATERS
DWLD
3 bd nn, 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace, bulll·ln•. Ex·
cellenl rental area. Near
beach & bay. $285,000.
M2·2253ev•.
associated
I' ~J ' I• I •~ , ~ I f\ • I I ',
, -l'!t I I ' /
Sell with EASE!
lt't a BREEZE
ClaHlfled Ada Mz.11878
OCEANFRONT
$50,000 dn. owni ··~t ' 1
AITD at S4000 ''' 11111 yrs 13'1' $150,IMMI 11111 I
2610 W Ol0 t',11t1 o • 111
631 3199 or675 l.:1111
BIG CANYON
C•fo11t 11th Fairway
Newly listed 6 twd11 ... 111
(4 in mam h11u~1· 1
baths. famil) 11111111
blll1ard room 1:11 1'•
breakfast 1110111 m il •
v e r y p ri v a 1 1• p .. " I
Completely "' p.o 1 .11 •
guest /tet-n 111 111 I'"
q u a rt e 1 s w 1 1 h :·
bedrooms, full 1>111 h •"'" il's o wn living 1 "" 1
<plumbed for • 1.1.l
k1trhen > 1-:x1 lu-.1\ • "•I h
Cote Heolty
*Cote R('••lt r
& In \'<"•l 11w111
640-5777
s•1uOAT
WATCHERS
This Cameo ll11(l1l.1 •
beauty 1s pnc•t'(I '" ... t $339 .000 Ow111•1 111
down with ownr•ro, ,,
siatant·e! One 11•\l·I ·1
Bdrm plus hul(c• \ 11 ii
Hurry ! 673-8550
THEREAJ! ESTATERS
LOWDOWN
Veraallle1lbdrm1..,11111111
penthouse condo "'1t l1
large ,.asumabk 101111,,
$1011,900 Cull l 111Loy
979.5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
GIANT
HACH IARGAIH
Charming 4 Bdrm. I "
lnl room feature" c·uq
wood burning flreplt11·1·
Huae lot. Owner "111
btlp finance' Onl.>
l208 ,900 I 67~8MO
THE REAL ESTATERS
llALTOIS DOMT
MISS TIISI
A Sale You can make even In
Ulese times. The largest ''1650
1q. ft.'' Condo for sale in
area. Cement drives, air
condltlonlng, mlcro·wave
ovens, trash compactors,
poo~1 park1lde &c all ahopplng
• locauon1. Owner wUI consider
local excban1ea.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
llOW.W.... c.•w..._c ..
714/6ll·IOll
-· . '"'""
.._...forW. HMl•tFot-W. . ._...Fors. ~:.~~ ........ ~.~~....... Orange Coast DAILY PILOTJM<>nday, May 18, 1981 $ ••••••••••••••••••••••• #••#••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C t M 1024 Co• .. M 1024 111...a-.. .., ..... _ u-. 11t~ or ...... G .. GeMHil I 002 •••r.. I 002 01 • ... IN Hotttff For S. HMt•t for S• ..-1H for -..-Ml..._.. -... , 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4••···················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •• 069 • •• •• ••• • ••• ••••••••••• Two 2 Bdrm houses on lrtlne I 044 l.odt I 041 M.w rt leoch I 069 HewDOrt a.och l
UPPER BAY c:W~ ~~~~:~~~ ~:t: Mo~c ···.···.···s·1·41··!t!····oo··i··· ~ •••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••··. ,,... n Lltht and cheer y ' Immaculate 3 Bdrm 2 lrt2nd.64()..7'64 • YOUCANAFFORO l I I Bdrm, 3 bath ramlly bath Near new paint 11 th~ low u 1. price thl.a ocean view custom r, O IJWDOr home. Larae covered Sprinklers rront and for thLS lovely Curd1!f in an executive •rea r -patio. '220,000. bac'-CoV.red patio. o .. Polltt 1026 mdl in Woodbrid&e a La r1e v iew decks
• ••••••••••••••••• •••••• P k Id d I t be f I h 3 8 21,. RoyMcC.....,llr. Near 1chools. Asking ar ,• e , eveopmen auu u ome. r 1
REALTORS
'71-HI I
LOVIL Y "I" PLAN. Molt ......... MOdef
•Hr bullt ht the llufft. · Sltuat•d Oft
.-ctoculor .,.-.H .tth ........ •lew.
l ldr, F.R. lt1f buy ht the orH at
$252,tOO.
COLE OF N!WPORT REALTORS
2515 I. Coast Hwy .• eoro.o., Mw
675-5511
WATERFRONT JI' DOCK
Bachelor pad, very private. master
suite w /view & spa. Lrg sit din., wet
bar, g r t s un decks. Price $.525,000.
Excell. terms . Bob & Dovie Koop.
631-1266
Hf ':>ll>fNllA, HlAI l'>fAll '>f HVICIS
WOOD Ir IRICK CHARM
Awaits you in t his 2 BR. Lido Island
c ha rmer. South patio. High beam
ceilings. Earth tones . Plush carpets
& More. Private community area
with pool. ten nis & beac hes.
$385,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
CE
110111 ILllRS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
NEW OM MARKET
Rare Three Bedroom Linda Plan In
T h e Bluffs. Exquisite Setting. All
One Level & In Top Condition . Don't
Wait On This One. $240,000.
141-7129 $1.25,000. Call 5'0-1L51 OCl.AN VIEW LOT Won t last ba, den. OnJy su.oo
= . HERITAGE
. REALTORS
14 acre, plan&. perrn1t 3 Woodbridge 497·1761
~•l locaUon, 1teps to !~~~~~~!!!!!!~~
Abou D..a H..-Or [g LOCJun• V~ U
0 1o...1Eym:•10LD m lnutea to Dana Re.,.lry
" ~ Harbor.~ sq fl home u TEMPLE HILL.S area
Will surbordlnate :>5 1-3000 home on private v1e\\
ll35,000. 714/898-7607 IV%41 tbrnuu• t>k .. ~.l"ln~ lot. Spectacular ocean pool le volleyball
UHDER $100,000
IUSIMISS Of'PTY
Established well located
beauty salon in prime
location. Submit on
Hwttln«Jfoft hocJt I 040 views, gourmet kitrhen
••••••••••••••••••••••• THINKING with skylight + artist'~
Perfect starter home term1. MARINER'S COVE TOWNHOME7 stu1ho w tfrµlc . wet bar
2 Bd l~ Bu, 2 sty condo Cull the lipt;Chtllsts al S36L5,000. Vi._ RE with 1reat assumable Touchstone Realty, lnc. w/attached garage. Mi. the <:o ndominlum 1n a9una -.,. • loan. Call now. 968-<1167 from beach in guarded formation center 497-1761 75I·319 I
c:_•,111('
-f-' pq( 11 1( I< 1 It ' 1
SECLUDIO
EASTSIOI
Reduced ! Huae 4 Bdrm
plus pool. Waterfall and
bonus room here too! 4
king sited bdnrus. huae
country kitchen. Financ-
ing is great. Large BS·
sumable l sl TO and
owner will help with
rest. Don't wail Call
631-6990
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714·631 -6990
PRIME
COMM\. CORNER ~ blk lo Balboa Fer ry.
Sl.4 million.
675-1771
A HOUSE for YOU
and IHCOME TOO!
2 houses on 1 lot in very
desirable area. Owner
will carry 1st. No quah
fying. 2 Bdnns each. On
ly $159,900 Call today
979-5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
Woo~Cr.ell
Condo Choice Irvine
area, near pool!, tennis
and shopping. 2 Bdrm
home or nice investment
property. $107,500.
642-5200
j PETE I BARRETT .. REALTY
1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~~~ ---
ASSUME
comm . Assume 10'7< Touchstonl'Realty
I o a n . 0 w n e r h a s 963-~
purc h,sed another ASSUMAILE ht
$110,500. Wendy Sitler at 7~.·t. 3 br, 2 ba home
759-1221. c n t r y kit , I g e Yd
R6'M~
H Jo: Al.TORS
~reallVt! r1n Only
$143,500 Ay owner
~9-5483
FIHAHCING • Ter r ific location,
minutes to shopping.
schools and recreation.
Over 22001q.ft. Separate
m uter bdrm, lovely
pool. Enclosed
cou r tyard. Ask i ng
$142,~00. Owners anx--0-U-T_C_H_H_•_V_E ......
lous, submit all offers. A " !r~~~~~~t£~~~lur
J t::W ELEOSPl,.ENOOR
W11tch the people walk
through beautiful
Heisler Park and thl
beaullful Pacific beyond
from this gorgeous ;;
bedroom, 2 bath Nortt
Laguna condominium 111
a secured buikhng wilt
ample µarl<ing $120.000
497 3331
5'0-1151 Very sharp 3 Bdrm 2 ba ing 4 Bdrm, 21 t Bo in
Irvine's Colony Club.
Walk to comm pool, ten
nis courts. schools , shop-
(Hng. Priced lo sell Call
for details,
~ .. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
MESAVBDE owe lstot 13.5%
Shar p 3 bdrm + family
on corner lot. Featurmg
2 rireplaces, new roof.
block wall. cop per
plumbing and much
more. Owner will carry
the financing and will
also sell VA and FHA
Priced at 1131,500. Call
540-1151
· -$ ~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
NOW! as the lime to grap this
gem. In foreclosure · we
need an offer. 3 Bdrm +
ad-on. SllB,000
home near Beach and
Warner Only Sl00,900
Call Ron Ort al
R.E Professionals
963-8377
Pierpoint COftdo Bx owner, new 1 bdrm, I
ba'. end unit. Nr. o<:ea n.
garage, frplc., patio,
pool, jac .. tennis, etc e-HANCH
IH A LT Y
!>~> 1 2000 Assumable loan $92,500. ----
.bingo
842-2701. 962-7824 WOODIRIDGE Laguna Hiiis I 05(
Gorgeous 4 Bdrm, near ConAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••·
the water. No qualify Bodega Plan, 2Br, Wa, SPECT ACUUR VIEW
ing. Just Sl41 ,000. Bkr family rm, <'Orner lot, In Private. se<.1UTed com
848-0709 a:. s um a b I e a l I 3 ", m u n i l Y • l. a ~ u n a
------Sl58.900 55t 1183 Meadows Professional
BEACHWALK. Lowest Lrg 2 Br 2 !:Sa, dbl RH, ly decoraLed. 3br, 2ba.
price in compl ex Univ Prk "Bradley" spa , deck , full)
$135,500.Bkr.848-0709 $126 .900 OWC ARl furnished , or un
furn1 s hl.'d . hroke1 SEAWIMD 1no 7870 Res 970.2'w owned, 851-3851
Designer's cusl..om 4 Orange Tree Condo. Plan L u:--a I 05· Bdrm 3 bath pool home b b SI.vi 500 , • 11 oguno ,.......,...., ' H 8 5, 2 r I a ""· '-a ••••. • • • • •••. •• ••. •• •., In s 0 II ear 552 7552 after 7pm "'W "RD Wl ........ lo.JG Brookhurst & Atlanta "" "" ,...,... ,...
$165.900 TURnYOCK ASSUME: AT H>"<'',
R.E Professionals lroodmoor Unique Foxglove model 963-8377 b m Lake Park. 2Br, Dl'n. ___ _ Best priced 3 Br. 2 a. 2Ba Vaulted ceiling:.
'"In• I 044 ram ily rm Priced re· trench doors. Prof de
•
.. duced lo SJ69,900 Open d d REDCARPET ••••••••••••••••••••••• S at 1S un I 5 al 5372 s1gne Ian s c ape
754· 1202 * *GABLES! Sierra Ro1a Sl~.900 Ospen ~ouse iu~ C 21 Newport Cntr l · 6 Pm u n a Y
EASTSIDE
10% ASSUMABLE
Owner wiJI help finance.
3 Bdrm 2 bath, spa. Only
$127,900.645-9161
: OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY
/
INVESTOR
MOTIVATED
NO DOWN
Rare Danbury mdl in
Woodbridge·s exclusive
Gables development. 4
Bdr + gorgeous pool and
spa. Call for details
Woodbridge
Really
551-JIHHI
4HO Barnnr• l'kw1. In In~
LOCATION·
LOCATION
3 Ir. 2 lo.
Exec.Condo.
640 5357 76().6767 831 7634 or 759-2465
H•wport IHch I 06~ ORANGETREE ••••••••••••••••••• •••.
Lowest pnccd 1 Bdrm + HARBOR VIEW HOME
loft ro.ndo Very sharp "Montego" 4br, 2ba. Fet
endun1t Vacantandhas Land. lo an a ssum
a lotk box 675·2139
C /2 1 Newport Cntr.
640-5357 760..6767 -L·l·D·o·.-.-,-Rt-O_MT_
THIS IS IT! Custom country French
llere is a hume with 6 bdrm, 6 bath home
sfiacious comfort and with f'er & slip. Spec tacu ar view rrom p enty of room Lo grow ·d · k The large bonus room of-bays1 e bnc terrace F eatures provid e fers enough space for elegant charm Call to family hobbies and day recreation 4 bdrms. 3
ba. tam rm and triple
garage $179,000 Redhill~Realty
I;;:~ -l :Wll
Oc~an :J.ronl
ThJs 5000 Sq. Ft; Home ~its on I:io<~H
Is le. A private guarded Commw11ty In
the h eart of Newport Beach . Boat
slips for (J) 55 ' 70' Yachts. For Sale or
Trade.
We are deve lope r s so submit land _or
oth er Real ft:state to owner' Jim
Thompson.
1714) 121-1210 l21JJ 591-1363
(1001 352-3710
I Br Vers ailles JH!ll ForelCJlltln•"ton! thouse Imported lll•
Cash luprsl thru out SJ22,000 TSI
Waterfrontcondo ~1ult1 Propt-rtics6421603 Million S View 40 i.hp
avail $400,000 a1111uma 20'i ON OW<.: beaut
ble Call now' b/3 02411 house & "rounds Sp..i
M.ITRIPLEX
150 ft fxom 11u11d
must set• PP 645 14!111
Sl!I0.000
Reduced to $279K Sl7r>K 5 Ju n
on 30 yr. assumublc "!an °Caplstrano I 078
al 131
• No cosl~ OW<. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 714 1898 76(Y7 Assumable finanl·111i•
Rest 4 Br value in hea. Ii
SPYGLASSRIDGE community s1 21 .01111
Superb 4 Rdnn fum1ly Lingo R 1-: U1·11 11 "
home. Pnml' l'ond1l1un 498 4950
and lo1:at1on Purl1al 5 t ...
ocean & city lights view on a """0 108~
Com put ~nted ~ecurit y ••••••••••••••.••··~,-· ••
s ys tem throughout Ry Owner owe al 13 I
Some finunl·1n~ ahvu1IJ Br. 1-4• Ba . frpk, d hl
ble $549.000 gar. New paint & ra1fk 1
C /21 Newport Cntr. 751 8~5
640°5357 760..6767 2 Bd p, Ila l'Ondu 111 ..,.,
YERSAIUES
N E A H II 0 A Ci
HOSPITAL
1 Udrm. t omplclc l)
furnished condo Wnlk to
beac•h Security, pool
Priced below markt'I at
$112.000
C /2 I Newport Cntr
640-5357 760..6767
VILLA IALIOA
CONDO
Hugl' I bdrm. VII:\\ <)f
Catalina Just listed '
Owner will r1nanec·
$153.000.
dl~
t'oJs t Pla.rn . l u\\~ 1
patio, 24 hr sec· bid~·
$86,900 Assum S..53.2!'111
w 1 l 37'. t 'ons1der s11il
2nd T f) 0\\TU K!H 2592
U\jJ'l.EX 1'11d t• •I
0\\ 11 crs h1µ Lt>\\, lo\\
do\\ n with xlnt fma111·
lll)l C ull Ow1wr /\J.:\•111
Hun 752 5111
Pay $705 a Month
For 2 Yl'ars with $11,JIH
ti o w n E x e c 11 l' n l ·1
bed room sl<uter honw
Gardener~ 1nirarl1se 11f ,1
yard May be us<'ll 1n1
l'Ommt•rcaal UM' $81 .~IJO
Tf\BBl·;t.t n EAi.Tons ~111n11
Other Real Estate •.....•..••..•.•..••...
Mobile Homes
For Sale II OC ---------...................... .
OCEANFRONT Oup Real Doll Hou.11e l rl1
Xlnt loc. (m , priee ' w cabana. aldt pa t k
673_7873_ 673 7677 Principals only f>-15 30711
SAN CLEMENTE DUPUX
Super Buy. Upst a irs Unit With
Three Bed rooms . Peek-A -Boo
Ocean View . Wet Bar. Living Room
With Fireplace. C athedral Ceilings .
Wrap-Around Patio. Spacious
Dow n stairs Un it With Two
Bedrooms & Li ving Room With
fire place . Laundry Facilities. Good
Income. Priced c:.t $195.000.
BAYFRONT
Bach. Fial. Total Securi-
t y Condo. Sl08,000 .
978-0423.
Gorgeous Mediterra· E Side lovely 2bdrm
nean 3 Br at the quiet home on very lrg lot.
end of the bland. One Be a u t . c u 1. de. s a c
year new, pier & sbp Sl45,000. Call agt .
Sl.600,000. CaU 673-1633 _ Christina at 557-2783 01
High 1n exclusive
Turtlerock, 3 patJO view
of mountain & c ity tights. Entry foyer opens
to upper level dining
room / Jiving room
fireplace, large kitchen
nook, family room bar.
separate bedroom wml(
2 car garage + bonus
room. Community pool /
spa / tennis.
I-~~~~~--· I•--------• 28' Layton w11h Cal>am1 1n Owner Wll Corry Newport Beach Ac·n·
75l9100
# 2 CCM"pcM ah f'tna
H•wport Cefthr
OWNER OFFERS 123A% ANAH!
As prime soon, JOtl cm ... ..., tt;1
COltHH VU hotM! Next to ,.ti Ir
becMffW "curt. appeal" l90Mt that llt•ltff
y. to 90 lt11lde. Spocao.. l bM. with
~ f .... "". + blllwd ,. .. postlbllty
of lftOn MdrOCNM. ExcelMt Newport
locaffoft. SI I 0,000. fH. 631·1400.
PENINSULA POINT-SUPER
WflA to boy & Oce• fr'CIM tlllt lhlsi gl1d
bewty. Co...,a.tety MW In & .t wfftl
loodt of room for ffte ....,. s,.ca-.
~tory with petJpd & 9oeffd floors.
...... & 1tahted ..... L-. llMl, ....
lg. f ... 11, """' • d"'-""' beef I ...t 6-cllM). $444,500 611·1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
s.i,, R#ntAh Pr()llfrty M.Nf"ment
2436 W C<N11 H"'\I 31!> M•u.w A11tt.
Ncwpcw1 Buch &lbot ltlend
6)f.f400 '""'"°
Cof"Ofta del M• I 022 646 3255. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Jasmine Creek decorator
home. plan 1 on green·
bell immac. $305,500
640.814.5 ---
CDM DUPLEXES
GOOD FIHAMCIHG
2 Bdrms + loft w/frplc , welbar in each unit. wit h
great tenants.
HOME + RENTAL
lovely 3 Bdrm. front unit
with frplc and beamed
ceiling ,Plus 2 bdrm unit
w/year s lease.
Call Barbara Glass
Century 21 /Sandpiper
64()..4950 851·9541
Jumine Creek decorator
home, plan 1, greenbelt
loc. $305,500. 64G-814.5.
Cameo Shores Camden
Dr., 3 BR, den, 3 Ba, 3
ca r gar. 600' entr y
w /retractable roof. Call
Two Longs, 760·1397 ;
673-7761
SPYGLASS
CITY & OCEAN VU
Immac. 5 bdrm home.
1640,000. 15% down. As·
1ume lal TD. OWC
balance at 12%. By
owner, 963-475jJ.
JASMIHICllB
Exec. home. 3 Br 2~ ba,
II plan. Vu terr. $4$0,000.
&44·1395
~r""~~ IUL ESTATE 644-6397
MEWPORT HGTS
Ranch style 3 Bdrm +
family rm on quiet tree
lined st Fabulou ~
financing. Call Bill or
Linda 631-0884 o r
646-5096.
3 B drm 2 ~ Ba
Townhouse. pvt yard. £
car auto garage, 3 deck~
off bdrms. frplc in liv rm
& mstr bdrm, sep. din
mg rm & mod kitchen. i
yrs old. Comm. pool·
spa /track. Close to bm
& S.C Plaza. $170,000
Low down, lenns. Paul
Hickey 751-8485.
HALICREST
By owner . Three
bedroom 1~• ba. Beau
yard, concrete drive.
new Boors. Close tc
everything. Fin. Avail.
w /20 p er cen t d n .
$1296000. pen Sat-Sun 11·4
1261 Conw ay , CM
SS7-3881
VIEWCONod ,
Newer 2 Br. 2 Ba. Many
• up1rades. Lat ae as·
aumable loan. Seller will
carry large 2nd. TD with
20"/e down.
D. Bourke Realtor
546-99$0
· -110 Newport Ctr Dr. NB ':::' S«:~lA-4~~s· :: l.ASTSIDI DUPLEX
Both lr1 3 Bdrm unlta,
never vacant. Great
ltarter lnve.tnwnt with
oaty UoXt down. Ofrered
at •11!.950. Motivated
-----..,_..,GAY L l'Ol&Mi°-----. ..._,.,. ........... ... .......w_. .. ........ ._ ........
I CLIF'OR I I I I I r _
I TJYf, f: . r111_i
I • ;, 0, I ' I ...... wed .., lot I r I I I ~ ne!."ni. eo:;1=.::
---....-~~~--, ... HM MW-tlle -l llllA .J I
I I I I r r!=.:~=
r r-r r -r 1
POTINTW. PLUS
lbr, l~ba home needa
''TLC". So. Of Htcbway .
Room for 2nd unit. '2•5.000. Call Stephen
Meyen.
7
1Nuo
r;.. " .
T I . '
1124 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Whelan Real~
MISADILMAI rr you 'vt waled lor •
dream come true, tbl.t la
I\ I A touda ot maclc has
made thl1 the mo•t
bHut1ful hom• w /no
equal in thla area. Ell•
amine • Bdrm 2 Ba beauty lor lta na .....
l.nnovaU•• deeltn and •neara.net. At GJl.IOO t:~nm ft wan't lut
THE GOOD LIFE
Near beach/ shops1 t+523CAMP05Da·IRVIWE
schools. Under market
at $294,000. Low down & Laguna leoch I 048
term s . Paul Hi c key ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agent 832·3910
* *PARK PLACE
Not M onofoly but a
beautifu 3 Bdrm
Northwood home with
great available fmanc
ing. Call for details.
$177,900
Woodbridge
Realty
551-3000
THE SHAKES
Weuthered Cl·dar
shakes. that is Custom
designed 3 bdrm, fam
rm, 2 baths. Extensive
use of wood glass &
ceramic Lile. Beam ce1I
ing, frplc Sl65,000
M iss1on Realty
(714)494 073t
Lagu n a charmer
Sll0,000 2 blks lo beach
I Br 497 4l26 Al(ent
Waterfront D.,.-x
With loot Dodl
Could be Newport's
lowei.t pnced waterfront
home with lllcome unit
too ' Call for info
Broker, 96J.8182
DUPLEX on WATER
Dock for 30' loot
3 & 2 Bdrms, 2 frpks.
dee· ks and patio
C /2 I Newport Cntr
640.5357
OCEANFRONT
$450,000
This first time offering
is an estate sale. One of
Newport Beach's finest
views. 3 bdrms home
with guest apt or 2 units.
Realonomics 675-6700
U20Barnnra Pk,.y,lnlnl' VERSAILLES 2BR. ocn
l"llt• I 044 view, low dwn, no quah
---------••••••••••••••••••••••• fying Sl40K. 730-2270
RCTaylorCo
640-9900
TURTLEROCK
EXECUTIVE HOME
Lo ve l y family h o m e in
Turtle roc k . 4 bedroom 2 ba th
with a trium c lose to schools.
comm . pool & t e nnis. AS·
SUMABLE LOAN. O NLY
$212,000.
RCTaylorCo
6 40-9900
SPICTACULAI PfMAMC....,
Truly lovely 4BR, family rm
home ln Woodbridge Gables
w /many upgrades. The larr10
yard is charmlngly landscaped,
tncludin& p~Uo cover & do1 run .
Call about s pecial financln1.
$2-(S,000. Jackie WHey 551·8700
<l7U
dys. 642 21682eves.
HARIOR RIDGE
3 Br. 3 Ba Assume lease
option . S20K down
Agent Steve 752-1920.
WHITEWATER VIEW
90' to beach, 10"6 assum
loan. May take note on
your prop. as down. 4 BR 2 Ba, recenlly upgraded,
w /possible in-law qtrs.
Under $290,000 inclds
land. Move rast ! 752-6499
Plan lll Realty
VIRSAIUES
Beaut. 2 BR 2 Ba condo.
Luxuriously appointed.
Call agent for details.
64G-42'77
Decorator home 3 Bdr 2
Ba, den, rrplc, pool, fine
Investment. $182,000.
Onwr. 548-MS
I 0 °/o D 0 W N owe
Custom Hel&hta 3 Br. 8
Ba. + Family rm .
1295,000. Owner /Broker
645-7498 or64M638
THEILUffS
Vlew1 or upper bay and
mountains. Front row.
Sherp 3 Bdrm. Fee land.
Only "47 ,000. c /21 Mewport CMr
640.1117 7'CM767
PIMTHOUSI
UH19UI COM>O
wltb boal dock. "°I,
u curltr + 180 · dea ocea.nt Catalina, ba)'
••••• 11 land. NI0.000. ()pen Sat~ 1-' at 310
Fernando (U40I). Smltll
Meyer, Bkr
tMO-UU
Beautiful 3 bedroom the Ma n na S6.500 aa'ti
Newport Reat·h home 714 653 5046
with large lot . !.f>a . AHTISTS HF-:THI· \I
fren l'h doors. oak 2nr, 2Ha. dl'n, i.unu
cabinetry and lcl\t•I> por<'h. wlk lo llc•h It
I a n d s c a P 1 n I: 1>lures A..:1 ·1!1:1 K<MO Rea list1cally pnct•d al
$269.500 ree.
D.M. MonhaH Rffr
64~9990
BALBOA
COTTAGE
Two bdrm Spanish style
Frplc, gar,!vt pul10 &
yard Goo lo<•at1on
Steps to bea ch Only
$174 ,500. Owner financ
ing OK ' Call now '
645 7221
WESTCLIFF
REALTORS
Put your wife c•h1ldrt'l1 111
i.pacmus 3 Rdm1 moh1h
home nr Uc<tl'h f111 111111 .. r
$59,000 Assumal1lt• lu.1n
Agt. 492·4121
Cemetery Lots/
Crypts l SOC ···•···············•··· 2 cemetery lot s
Westminster Memuri<• I
Park Good s eclio11
worth $760 each. J sk1n1•
$1200 for bolh i l l
642 9136 eves.
N•wport leodi I 06' •••••••••••••••••••••••
~MACNAB ~~-
CAPE COD STYLE FAMILY HOM!.
Brig ht & c heerful home w /over
3200 sq ft a ffording total privacy
.for the active g r owing family.
This beautifu l 4 BR h o m e
features form a l dining, family
rm w /pool t a ble area & full wet
bar. upstairs m str suite w /view
b alcon y, remodeled k it c h e n
w /eatin g nook. plus many o the r
featu res reminiscen t o f th at
+.ronde rful ho m e you grew up in!
$274,000 Paula B ailey 642-8235
(179)
NIWPOIT HllGHTSI Lovely
Camily h ome with 4BRS, family
rm, 3-car garage. Extra off street
parking. Serene gardens accent
love l y yard . Ass umable
fina ncing . $249,500. J oyce Edlund
642-8235 (180)
ILUFFS IAl•AIHt 4BR home
w /outstandin g green belt location.
Many m a ture patio plants
p r ovid e pr lv~te gard e n
atmosphere. LarJe Jiving rm
w /ti r e place . Price includes
washer, dryer and refriaerator.
$199,000. Joyce Edlund 642·8235 (181)
tOl&L wt•toUL IAlmlOl'm. ------ICI ~ 0.. ..,._'t'Wlr c.a..-~ 8-11\. CIA -..... -.n M!f\111 Or ~ CA_,
.· < \
I
..
'
... ---... -...... --.............. ....-i,.......------------......-------· --~ --.. ---... -.... -. . -. ------·· .. . ..,
Orange Coast DAJLY PILOT/Monday, M 18. 1981
.
Cash in on 7 or 11~ ... , .... 1ure lhlng tor Orange County •d••rCIMtl-
There are two ways to win with a Dally Plrot High Roller Ad
Run 7 days for.$7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate .
<>ther Real &tcrh ...... u ........ d ...... U.fwabl11d .,. ................ d Ape 1 ..... u.fwa. Apa, ..... u.fw1L ........ to Stwe 4300
C>therleoll:stat• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ................... •••• ... ••• ................. lolloo P•••• 1207 Hi.t•,._ leoch 1240 H.wport leodt 3269 Mew rt IMdt 3769 Co1ta M... 1124 Newport leodt 1169 • Shal"9d U•iftc)• c ..... rcJol "'*'trial/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••~•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Counselors to personally ,ro,.rty 160CI rro,.rty 2100Steps to bay/ocean. 4br, 5bllultoocean.Elegant2 SrYG• •SSHILL OCEANFRONT dl1 2111tCONOO Oceanfront for Winter select your compatibh:
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• den,2~ba,2declts. bdrm, lam nn & den. ~ . • 2·4BR. And Lido Isle Desl&ned ror ahared liv· Rentals. F'umls hed & rmmte to s uit your
LAGUHAllACH $1250/lse. 675-3268 ($750 mo.) Plush crpta, ~Bt d+ m5ds qtra bayfront bme W/sm In& or family with unrum.Broker.675-4912 1.arestyle Shared Living &0Xlll5.~~!Po~ Blvd., Canyon indl.IStrial bldg Summer or year round ~~l ba. cedar & &}a1~· T:~. orCOSi>/ii~av: boats Ii 60' dock. Wkly. children. Private sink in NO FEE! Apt. & Condo 833DoverOrSuUe31NB
near 17th ... 00,000. neartowo&art resllval famished/ unr~ished . ctar dpvtAgdar1'-u Y $2000 /mo. Koop 673-SURF,873-7677 ea~h bdrm. Fertced rentals.VillaRent"ls. 631-1_80_1 __ _ •• grounds. 9600sq. ft. fully · mam · Y · u ""• no 631.1266 patio I& laamdry hook up " Roy Mee.nit, Rltr. leased. Gl"06! annual in· 18r, 1Ba, on 25th St. pets. Inquire at 527 18th · Agt. lmmed. occpy. 769 2.B 675·4912 Broker
"" 14a-77J9 comeSS4.000. 640-2036,898-l402 St 714/96(M;33} Westcllf( 3 Br. 2 Ba Hamilton. $05 mo.
RealonoD'\Jca 675-6700 Ca,.t"'-leech 3211 3br, 2ba, DR, frplc, dbl Family home, new cond 963-8182, Aet.
Ck>se to Airport. Large Lots for Sale 2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. Walk to beach. 1675. gardener, no pets. $7&5 2 Bdrm 1 bath duplex,
eomm 'I Potential lot. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba, luxurious" lov· 642·3743, 962·7788 Avail. now. 646-2389. large patio, private gar. f46-4i710or~ll03Agt R·I WWhwalwYt1 ely,no~~~· 4 Br. 3 Ba no smokers. THEILWfS small pet OK.~ per
G real terms, subord. C d 1 E h s · mo. Call Pam, Dave or CoRdoiniah•••/Town-714/492·8320 CoroeodelMw 1222 overe spa , c ean. !lee. ome. pac1ouE Larry,$46-5880
ho-•iforaa•::.. 1700 Near Edison H .S . (2000 sq. ft .) 3 bdrm,~ -. .. • •• • • • • •••••••••• •• •• • • $ 000 7 /895 3300 b a l h , r a m I k i l . Y!AR•M>UHO P'UN: ....................... Bu~na Park, 14 Unit s.ite 4 blks lo beach~ Br. 2 Ba. Alvau~?::~eJ~ · · townhome. End unit. Socia! Actlv•llH 01· l Ir Townhot11e
Z Bdrm, 2 ba, 2 car wath plans. permits New crpt, fr'lsh paint. near pool, deluxe in· reclor •FreeSundlly Newly decar. gas pd .•
aarage. Low interest engineering. $268.000. 1895 642.5290 3 Brtownhome terior, avail now at $l00< Brunch • BBO'• • encl gar., pool. dswhr rates. Assumable loan. Submit offer. Comer In· · · •ui A l 640.5560 Parllee •Plus more Adults. 642-5073.
Prtnc only Days (714) diaoa and Whitaker. ,,,._, permo. gen· · OAEATAECAEATION: lmmac. 3br, 2ba, jac, 963-7177 M7 4889 54!3·1391 E ves (714) John W.·Sawiders Real· Crplc, gar, $895/mo • · THEILUFFS Tennos •FreeLessons
760·3675. ty 848·400l 673-5069 or 673-2869 Downtown 2 Br beach cot· 3 Bdrm condo w /view ~~:It~ ~~t!~0£!u•~
holex•1/ Mobile H-lage, xtra lrg yrd , Remodeled, like new • Hydromauage • Onita S'ale 1100 Pork JlOO CoroMdelMar $545/mo. Mr. Smith with gourmet kitchen. Sw1mm"'g • Gou
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• (lrvine Terrace). Mag 536-lt.53 lyear lease SlOOO/mo. Droving Range 180 degree view. Custom 760-93678. Agt. BEAUTIFUL APTS: MEAR 1HE SA.MD M·•t Stl home. Min. I yr lease. 3 4 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Near Spr· s1ng111. 1 & 2 Bed·
lol>oa Pfft. o..piex lnmmac '78 Holiday 32 bdrm. 3 ~ ba, Liv. rm., ingdale & Westminster. BIG CANYON LEASE rooms • Furnished
Seconds to the water. ft. Adil Pk Costa Mesa. DR .. den, maids rm. Bit $560 per mo. P / P • 3 Bdr 3 Ba, formal din· & Unlumtlhed • Adult
Excellent 3 BR owner's SIJ.500 wi shed. S90 rent. around atnum w/ pool. ""'"6""'3. ing pool hot tub u Living • No PelS • ......-..., · • • v · Model• Open Oa11y "home-like" unit & 2 P /P Llc01W9964. (714) By owner $3,500 Mo. very sharp. $2000/mo. g to 6 BR, 2 ba, rental unit. 646·9S46or839-7585 C all Collect (212) Hwdllll....._ Bob•· Do · K Agt 2 2-30 ( 2 0 H ...... ?=-3241 "' vie oop. . ldt'al for home & in· 57 ·4 . or 3 l •~ • 631-1266 come Close to NCWPort Out of c~ 637·4846. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
pier and shops. $289.950. Pro,.rty 255 . Gorgeo11& Z & 3 Br Con· TIIE BLUFFS l level 3
W le M.T...&....C •••••••••••••••••••••••Charming 2 br, 2 ba dos.Some w/boatsl.aps. Br., highly upgraded.
H Y .,_.. 0 • 2 Bdrm, l bath rental. W/frp. No pets. Lease $1100 to $1400 mo. 1st &1 $1100/mo. SEAVlEW 3 Reaffon 6~4-4910 $4200 per year income. $700 mo. 759-1243. last req. (213) 445-1584 I Br., Den, tennis, pool.
Fou•-$15 ,000 down. Apple 't t 5129c1 "'""'EX Valley. Sa le price JASMINE CREEK. Exec 1"1111• 3244 secura Y ga c. ·.,mo.
S4000Down $S2 ,000 Ownr /A gt 3Br, 2ba home. Vu ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agent 759·1002.
Mo•H yo.1111! 641·2003. $1600/mo. Woodbridge. 3 Br. 11,"1 Ba. 3 Br 2 Ba Steps to beach
Oakwood Oerden Apartment•
Newport 8Mc:tl N.
B80 Irvine (•I 1111n1
(714) 645·1104
Newport Beech S.
1700 16th St toove1_&.U.6thl
(714) 642·51 r.r
2 Ir. I la ADt
Newly decor. C:as pd.
encl gar., pool. dshwr.
Adults 6'12·5073.
PINE BLUFFAPTS
2 Br 2 Ba. Adults. no
pets. Patio, view, frplc,
encl gar .. gas stove,
SS25 SPMC 631·6107
Lrg 2 Br l Ba, great
· E .aide location, $475/mo
yrly lse. No pets Call
Lloyd. 675-6670
FAMILIES· Sparkhng,
clean 2 Br. 5450. Fncd.
utlls pd. Refrig. 2 small
children OK. No pets.
1960 WaUace, S4G-9626
OWC Jason847·8935 Condo near pool. tennis, Comm. pool & tennis. -------lltanchn, ~. COZY CAPE COD. 3Br school. $650. 714 /495-1695 $750. Property House, A rflftetlh 2 Br. 1'~ Ba. Townhouse.
lftcotM Proputy 2000 .. ~~:.~~ ........ ~?.~~ ~ba~g·u:r~t:' ~~395 ~: 9 art6PM. 6'12·3850. 'Un~ ~t~e.n~iachii~r dK~'4~o~
·~··~;;~·;~~:;•••• ~ (J/ --;z:;:, WOODIRIDGE W. Newport, yearly, 2 Br. c;;:;,:.j••••••••••3;·02 Sierra Mgmt 641 1324
Nea r new 4·Ple x, 2 ORAMGEGROYE -.a, JT~ ~ 3 Br l 'h Ba condo. frplc, yard & gar S650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E.s1de sharp, 2 Br, gar.
bdrm, 2 bath each unit 95 + acres in valencias REAL ESTATE 644 ·6397 $645 /mo incl. all club 645·1387, M2~3 APTMTS FOR RB4T deck. $450. Adu lts, no with fireplace, enclosed and navels. Pnme loca· membership privileges d lion near freeway and llONewportCntrDr,NB & maint. 545.5438 . ----------1 H.B.,N.B .. Costa Mesa ogs.5-48-7933 patio. double garage. "'vEc ~ousE So thin 1 E $165,000. Bill Grundy, r eg i ~ n a I s h 0 PP in g Large 2 bdrm, family rm 731·2680 lliA ...-~'" Ba~~. to~ '<;fr. ~~l~~ Duplex 2 br 11,; ba $415.
Rltr. 675"6161 ceote . ~.000 assume on large lot. Some ocean W ..i..i...-C--..L... Versailles. huge l Br + Apts Certain locataons No pets
lowlnlerestTD. view. $tlOO mo Agent. oo-....,. -den.2 Ba.adults.secur. o(rer . Pool, spa . _Dave Agt.644 7211
UNITS-C.M.
14 units. E·side, p00I,
101.;'1. financing
2BR, 2ba, 2 car garage. all amenitjes, S800/mo 17141 673-4400 673-5354 Fpc,covpatio.$700mo. lse or mo to mo. Agt. fireplace. laun. room. H..tingtolileoch 3140 12131'21·2121 R od 3b 2.__ d 1 3 64G-lOl0,67s.2558 760-8617.644-0322 beamed ceilings ,•••••••••••••••••••••••
8 units, near new
house w /7 rentals
TSL investments
MZ·l603
em . r, .,.. P x, ~~~~~~~~~~! garages, all built-ins. blks beach, sep. yd, no LCMJIMCI leach 3241 -Garden & Townhouse
pets, $750. 64G-n42 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE ILUFFS design. NO FEE.
Co1taMno 3224 Large wood & glass 3 br 3 Bdrm condo w/view. TSLMGMT. 642·1603 2~ ba, Camily rm., 2"'C8t Remodeled, like new lolboa Panil •• 3107
18 2B •-J · 2 T garage, ocean/canyon with gourmet kitchen. l \ 0" 1,1,m 111 r , r"' uruor. en· . N $l:N>C / · rts I · vaew. o pets. v~ mo. yr. le ase. $1000/mo.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
I I ,11 l1or In' l''' mt•nt l. 'o nis c • poo •Jae, sauna. s · M 1 c $400 Utila pd. 2Br Duplu, d II b II 1 ' e r r a gm . o . 760-9678. M.I . nlP\.U san vo ey a . poo &4l-l32A. Balboa. No pets.
150 ft rrom sa nd . -tble Adult sorry, no ir _ _.... L-3216 M7·11M
Reduced to ..,.,..K . s11cK .... Estate pets. 635 Baker I c M Spac1·ous 3 Bdrm home a·n ~ ~ ..,,., " cc:7 """"' · N th L ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co--o ..L...J Mar 3122 on 30 yr assumable loan hchclncJe 2100 -""'--""'-'"-·------prime or aguna . ·-_.. t 13V•%. No c osts.••••••••••••••••••••••• area, with magnjficent *Village BeachHouse. l •••••••••••••••••••••••
WC. 7141898-7607 Npt Bch decorator home MEW ~II W /RPLC view. Walking distance Br. Ci replace. l~n:ied. Im mac. 1 Br, ocean vu, 1 3 Bdr 2 Ba. den, frplc, Built-ins. Aaults. no lobe h Sl300 avaU. 31642 Faarvaew. blk from bch. Shared
pool. nne investment. pets. 642·0835.1675/Mo. a~ON OS~~· SS95/mo. 4&2986. garage. laund facil.
BEACH Sl82 ·~o ex~hange for Cute condo 2 Bdrm, no REALTORS COIMlotlt...._ $650/mo. Agt673-ll.8l IEWPORT low 1crace Le19ure World pets. $525/mo. Donna. 4!17-4848 U•f...-...d 3425 Enjoy summer living all
Cnm. e P~rties con o. S43-S665 Richardson Realtors. • -H• 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• year. Wik toCdM beach.
768-5600, 83'7·5916. ~· 2bdrm, 2 car gar, covered 2br, frplc, lge deck, encl RIPLEX in CdM . Rentals ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, 14 mile to beach. parking. $750 /mo avail
G cean side or hwy ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba. patio home, HOMEFORRENT Accesstopool&courts. immed . 675·8589 or
three to choose from Honei fwftkhed beaut. decorated, with 3 Bdrm. $600. F~nced SS75. H.B. (213)925·4796. 642.7544 ~ --••••••••••••••••••••••• atrium. Near S.C.Plaza yard & garage. Kids & (714)675-4902. i)UP~EXES on Balboa lot.oa laland 3106 & Irvine Industrial area. pets welcome. 964-2566 Spectacular ocean & city
R e n 1 n s u I a Two lo •••••• ••••••••••••••••• $750 per mo 731-4710 or or 973-2971. Agt.. no ree. Deluxe 2br, 2ba, McLain light! view from every ~oose from y 1 3 B 731 4991 unit at Bi& Canyon incl L 1 B ). . ear Y cute collage. r . . Lo991a Mlptl 3252 washer/dryer. frige. un· room . a r ge r 2 Ba Sept $750 Mo 209 ---------$600/mo. CaU Anthony ~!JPLEX on the water Garn"et t.6&l-0893 · 3 Br l~ Ba, dshwshr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• derground pkr, sec, wkdys 642.5757 eves &
1thboatdock. · · rrnlc,dblcargar,lrgrec Three bedroom, 2 ba. i •-t · o.unc:a• ·.. Feticed yard. Flnr. Kids poo •"' emus . .,.........,.. wknds 644-8889. • --Col'Ofta del Mar l I 22 rm. encl. backyard. nice r
fOURPLEX in Foun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. $700. Marguerite. " pets welcome. S700 Recreational Condo. Lg Bachelor. w/sep bdrm,
,~o A OUL T ...lL. LIVING
• I & l 8R P1110 AOlS
• Oisnwnllt'•• & 880 ~
• Pool & Ate Roon•
• G••Ofn I •OOSUP•~Q
• J09 to 8c..C11 & Snoo\
S G
SEA ENVIRONME NT
% t~ HAMll TON 11 B '*'' ~'>110
2 Br l'-'a Ba, gas pd, $350 + $350 depotiil Crpts,
drapes, blt·ins. Mc Fad·
den nr Be a c h 81 .
ADULTS. DO p e t s
893·4894 or 646-9243
THE WHIFfU TREE
Luxury AduJt units at af·
rordable living. 1,2 & 3
Br Well decora ted. Olympic size pool, light·
ed tennis court. Jacuzzi. park like landscaping.
Most beautiful bldg. in
H.B.
From 1395. 846·0619 ~in Valley. TWOGREAT 540.3666 mo. 495-3147 lBr, w/prestige Nwpt sngl empld adll. No
SUMMB R&n'ALS Mlstloe Va.to 3261 loc. Party rm. pools. dogs. S.'t25/mo. Ulll pd. Avail. now 2 Br 2 Ba. 611 large assumable
(.oaos . All owners
JllOtivated. For detailed
fllfo call
E a c h w it h t h r e e Beaut. almost new 3 Br. •••••••• ••••••••••••••• spas, nr bch,. S550 mo. 760-96S7 Apts. Garages l child
f /21 Hewport c .......
bedrooms,twobaths.On house. 2 ba. liv, din, HOMEFORRENT Todd (213)24G-0077 . 0 K • no Pel s .
h d Slooo k r f r P I c . d b 1 g a r , 3 Bdrm. ..,75. Fenced Cotto M"° 1124 Waler /trash paid. $475. t e san . wee or front /back yard w/lawn .., By So Cat Plaza, lg 3 BR , ••••••••••••••••••••••• 964 2566 973-29'7l Agt one, the other SlSOO to service. Next to park. 2 yard " garage. Kids &t 2 ba. utll pd, kids. pets 2 Br. 1 Ba. 1981 Maple no fee. or . .•
S 1 8 O O Per m 0 nth · year lease. Married cou· pets welcome. 9&4-2S66 ok 645-0193 Ave. Adult, refrig, no 631·7300, ask for Berta I k N or97J.2971. Agt.,no ree. Q i s· D I I ·d
PARK NEWPORT
COUMTRYCLUI
LIVING
Singles , 1&2 bedroom
apts & townhouses.
From $510 644·1900
Beaut. 2 Bdrm. Crpk,
balcony. quiet street. 315
E Bay. S.595. 962·8840 -----
·-·--·---... -
Olde11t & Laraest agency
m So. Calaf. since 1971
Credits: ABC.NBC.CBS,
Cosmo. Ph.ilDonahue
· • l2orf•
to a II who need a place
2 BR, 1 Ba, ~mo. yrly. New Port Beach, 641 -1899
lse. No kids, no pets. ServingalltheS Coast 673-8222
OC EA MFR ONT G,arden Grove. 895-3482
3 Br. 2 Ba. Duplu. 2 car 1~~~~~~~~~ garage with au l o 1::
opener. Yearly. Must M IF shr 2 br apt, F. V ,
see to appreciate! S200 + 'h utils. OOJ.2801
TSL MGMT 642·1603 Sun oraft 9 :30pm
T1t1till 1890 Happy outgoing Prof rem
•• • • • ••• ••• •• ••• •••• •• • J0.40 lo sh my N pt Hts
Security af?tS, lbdrm & 2br 2ba pool hm. No smk
2bdrm. util pd, adults, $350 lnc uU. 645-2663 no pets. From $375.
836·5506. Dana Pt. Large apt. pvt
W .._1-.....a........ 3191 ba, $250 mo. Uttl mcl. Lst H"".......-& last 493-0087 768·4234 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
$275. 1 bdrm . crpt , Quiet.non-smoker for lg.
drapes, stov. Nr shop-2 bdrm plus den Apt. CM
pang, park. church. 1st nr So. Cst Plaza Mod
+ dep Call eves for kitch fipc $216.5 M6-2900
appt. 847-3660 eves.
ApartMetlh FW'ftith.d Elderly independent lady
or URfwonist.ci 3900 seeks simaliar to shr her
••••••••••••••••••••••• modest 2br. N B apt
S E A W I N D 759-9266 _
VILLAGE New 1&2 bdrm luxury
adult apts in 14 plans
rrom $440, 2 bdrm from
$500 + pools. tennas ,
waterfall!, ponds! Gas
for cooking & heating
paid. From San Diego Frwy drive North on
Beach to McFadden
then West on McFadden
to Seawind Village (714 )893-5198.
Rooms 4000 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Laguna Beach Motor Inn,
985 No. Pacific Coast
Hwy , Laguna Beach.
Daily. Weekly, Kitchen
available. Low winter
rates 494.5294
Very priv detached sm
rum bach room, pool.
garage. lite cook. Quiet
ad ult s.150 inc utl 645·2663
Xlnt Pvt Ent & Ba. nr
Hoag, no smkr·dranker,
Male $265. 646 1035.
S hare 3 br c ond o
Bu.shard/Adam $200, •.,
ulilaly. Clos~ bearh
964-6071 , 4· lOpm . __ _
Prof to shr 3Br Park
Newport Townhouse
Appro1. $250 /mo. met
spa, jac, tenms, racket
ba II & Sec Call Ans Ad
11473, 642-4300. 24hrs per
day . --------
M room mate wanted Lo
s hr lg Condo nr S C
Plaza, saWla, pool/jal',
pvt bath. Avail now $250
mo. + exp 556·5847.
751-72.87
MIF to shr 2 br, 2 ba
home . 300 y d from
beach . jac, pool .
$300/mo ancl util H B
536·5184 Compl. furn. rooms. good
neighborhood, west C.M
S48·6892atl.6pm VW Mechan ic seeks
house or apt to share
645·9407, S200or less. Room with kitc hen
privleges. Adults only
962·7520
Hohh,Motek 4100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEA LARK
MOTEL
•Weekly rentals now
avail. • Sll8 and up. •Color TV. •Phones in
rooms.
2274 Newport Blvd C.M.
646-7~ ---
Fem lo shr 125+ I new
condo Irv 2br, w/d ,
$295/mo. + 12 util. non
smkr Jan 759-5505 eves,
559.0457
Shr my plush tn-lvl hse :
micro, rrplc, balcony. i,.,
mi rrom bch <HB > $250
in cl a II. 536-8000
M /F to shr 2br, 2ba N.8 .
CON DO. Patio. frplc
$290 Ca 11646-7332 Farr. Agent. 760-0l.89. p e. Non SQiO ers. o pets. u alt. $375. aerra e uxe PoO sa e xtra pets. $750/mo. 1st. & H.wportleac.h 126~ ~rtlftellh,... ... d Mgmt.Co.641-1324 large 2br, 2ba, bltns, Yearly.Oceanfront Hotel Wanted: Femaletoshare
New patio Condo, recrea· I a st. $200 sec urlty . ••••••••••••••••••••••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• d5whr. 1 ~ miles beach. Room s . $260 Up + luxury furn Condo, close
• 40.5357 760. 767
R! lion area w/pool, jac, 751-7328. SPYGLASS LEASE ~I.a.cl 3706 Spaclous3 Br Duplex Adlts, no pets. $395 mo. seturity depos it S260. to OCC & So. Cst Plaza.
BBQ. Bib to beach. l 4 Bdr + maid's qtn, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425. Pool& laundry rac. 536·8362. 2306 W. Oceanfront pool & jac. Call aft 6pm t Income Properties
f.slside Costa Mesa. ., down. Owner wiU
ry. PricedtoseUI
~ CDmfW1J1 lOC
bdrm pl1.11 guest sleep-3 bdrm. Z ba, reoced yd, 2 beaut. de«>r, super vu. $650/mo. Charming, 548-9556 673-4154. 556-4776.
ing. Fli"eplace , adlta. car gar. Nr Placentia. balcony off matr suite. private2Br.w/sundeck. HIWLYDECOll. •211To....._ $550 ---------
Summer $l,OOO. Winter $500. 754.7425 . S2000/mo. Bob & Dovi( Over ~rage. 306 Coral 1 Br. gas pd, encl oar Gar, pool, park963-5191 S....•rR..... 4200 Two priv. rooms & baths Koop A0t 6311286 ~ d" t b •-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• in large. luxury BACK $700 mo. (7141 494·4672 3 Bdrm . 2 ~ bath · •· · Ave. ~ tsur ..,.. d/wuher, pool. Ad ults 2 Br. 2 Ba. Carpets, Summer In Sa nt a BAY CONDO. Super arts. townhouse, pvt yard, 2 SPYG' "'"'"'L"'"'"'E oants. Shown by appt. 642-5073. dshwr, encl garage. B b La 2 B ~ IC."-'> only 2'" ,_.. --ar ara. rge r. recreational facilities. car auto garage, 3 decks 3 Bd, formal dining, ram · ..,..,..,, . ..._.. ....,,.,, 0 •" ..,...,., A be h J L.a4J-a leoc:h l 141 3724 2 HUGE Bedrooms in ~. ~--pt. near ac . une S275 & $300. 11\cludes ••••••••••••••••••••••• orr bdrms, rrplc in liv rm nn, lrg yard, 2 frplca Coste M"° I 1. F 11 15th thru Sept. 15th. S385 ulil1ties. kitchen priv,
W I & mstr bdrm, sep. dln· Sl600/mo. Bob & Dovi< ••••••••••••••••••••••• super oca ton. u Y .._..gtoli mo. 805-685-1547 washer/dryer. resPonsl· a ktobeach.28drms,l ln " odk"t he 2 car peted, built-ins, Hort.O_. 3142 ------.----ba. l ease $650/mo. g rm m 'c n. Koop. Agt.631·1266 SUSCASITAS ground noor. Adults, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa I•. Wkly. 3br/3ba. b I e . em PI o Y • d Aoent 498-8057 Y r s o Id . Com m . F 1 b pt -•-"' F E M A ••E s I 1 • · pool/spa/track. Close to ~ Br. 21;'J Ba. Condo um. r. a · ~"' pets. S350mo. Apply Apt 2br. lba. w/encl gar & 2br/lba, cute. clean, LT o n Y · ~ Mewportleocll 3169 Ocean view. S800/mo up.Encl.&ar.AdulU,no B 568 W . Wilson. patio,2ndrloor$435/mo rurnls bed. 642·57 13 548·0963eves/wknds., bus I& S.C. Plaza. $775 pets. 2110 Newport Bl. ,,.,, .. 77 '"'" -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• m 0 . pa u I Hi c .It e y Aak for Ron. 752·5111. 548.4968 btwn8•sPM ........... . 893·6103or832·2w.> Cathy. Garacie•
714 641 0763
2925 College Ave
Costa Mesa. CA
---------LIDO ISLE charming 3 751·8485. SPYG• •55 HILL ~..._-~ .. 3740 2 br, 1"' ba, no children, '""'• 3144 So. Lake Tahoe. 2 Br apt, for .. tRt 4350
I bdrm, 2 bath, Playroom a.A • ._. • ..,,._-... u d OK ....,_ 610 M · 1 D . f ••••••••••••••••••••••• w isling. Large 3 Just remodefed. Sl650 2 bdrm w/gar. $500/mo. 3 Bdr, fonnal din., fam ••••••••••••••••••••••• sma OI • ~~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• emoraa ay, urn.. th rm owner's unit I& two mo to mo. Bill Grundy. 2052 Pomona Av. Days rm, 2 nreplaces, lrl $37S/up 1.2 bdrm pool Joann St. 64.2-7344 Woodbridge 3 br. condo, $350 5 dya. Near casinos. $50 per mon • storage bd .l E ' .d H di ·-..,.;,.rid • lower comer unit. S600 642·4088 only. N. C.M. aft.er 6PM rm uni s. 11 e. 675-6161. 544·6450;eves837-5009 ~rd SleoG/mo. Bob ac, a t, ~ ,.~ a. • 2br 2ba condo, nr lease.67$-8369aft 6.-callS46-7214 5.~i~~gt~46·6710 Or 2MOBO.,EHOMF.S Mesa Verde/beau. 2000 ovle Koop. 631·12641 .B.84.2-2834 or842-3172 S.C.Plaaa.S.A. ssoo. no 3 Bdrm 2 ba home. Offlcellt_... 4400
lNLIOOPARK sq.ft .4 br,2 ba,atriwn, Al\. MewporllMclt l7H pets.549'-3232. ... 1Bddr1mt +t lort1 COND10 Furnished. Newport •••••••••••••••••••••••
sta Mesa. 5 units, o.ooo, ti kit, ereat k>c.
ents below Market.
at .. AUan972-1577,.
2 Bdrm, 2 batli rrom new paint, new c pt, SAMTIA.0 Dl. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• IWPoaT a u s , enn s , PoO s. hid. Wkly $500. Agt 1617 WestcUrc. N.B. Want
S 6 5 O. N r water. landscaping Cloae to Beautiful bouae aval SHORT~ ~11 A~A~ 7»12SO, 542•7609 673-8849. 833-2650 nnancial inat. 1000..r.
Waterfront Homes. schls " freeway. '850 now lo e•not area. 4 Wee mon70 Z.lBdr. avail. Sl70. mo. Lat-a lftldt 3141 Yee...._._.. 4210 lat. floor. A&enl541-5032.
Realtors. Inc. 631-1400 mo. Avail. July 1. Br. 3 Ba. Dinln1 Rm A~ent,875-81 Plus uUJa. No children, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ask for Dan 546-0480 Llvln1 Rm . Ii FamU, no pets, nowaterbedt. lbdrm, ocean view, lar~e •NWPT OCEANFRONT KOLL CIMTM Rm. New wallpaper Avall. now. 2914 W. d k bl "' t be leb r: .._.._OIT 12 UMfT'S Park Lido 3 Br. 2~ Ba. MF.SA VERDE 4 BR 2 cosy k(tchen " man1 Oceanrront 2 Br. l Ba. 2450Newport Blvd. ec ' oc... o ac ' "Lido h a root, sm "s"n xcellent Cetta Meaa Condo . Fr pie. pa•lo. b th d bl m• .. v x•--. '"""lld-n eo.t. llesa $550. 494-2246, 751-4293. boa ta Ii doc . Wkly. Ete1ant executive suites " a • ou e 1ara1e. ..., ... _ ..,,. '"" Fireplace, 1ara1e. 1'73-SURF In prestige location. aUon. ll00,000. 9.6X p ool. Non smokers lmmed.occpy.'750mo. peta0K.7se.er74. UOO /weelt. Open . E•tra Spacious Lux-With complete 5upport
rosa . Low Interest Owner to occupy 1 Br. Agt. 642·5200 : 673-4396 714 /751 -6147 or 11e---=-a11a urlous 1 BR, deck, Luxury oceanrront servlcea.
naocinl with 15 ~ $450.673-2181,631-0133. evs H.,....Yn.... W /Sll·N.17. 19~-· 1 1arar1e.oceanvlewand KaanapaUlkh.coodoln 714.lml-0881 wn. 1031 OK. Prine. UparadedJB.Rtwabrne. II II v M ..• I II 7/22 11.A1eat.aMm SB B • -· .... avail now. Pool, Jae. AP~ a app ancea. er~ aw,• P9 5, ava: -------'"------1 ....... U.fw ... d r 1 a ...... p ... ac tennla. CloH to sbo-Bac!belor aulte avail. Beutllul landscaped nor beach In North to8/5.Daya832~.ellt •DILUXIOMCIS•
I'•-••••••••••••••••••••••• " dinette. en:hd '9'75 mo. lae. 270( Juee 15, compl. fum. IU'den aptt. Patiol or J..a1una. Leue June 1, 10. 1 Room ft 2 Room. No _.., ~ ._.,... 3202 1ara1•. wuber I ryer WllalM Dr. t.58MIM3; Balboe Bay Club (muat decb. POol 6 Spa, COY· "50. 4tH• --------lease required. 2112 Du·
COSTA..-SA ••••••••••••••••••••••• hook-up, refrt1,. No l..s4f.20N be member), month·t~ end partina.Aduha,no •.-..-...&. JI 9 ....... ,._,. 4300 Po$Dl'. Acij. Alrporter
oir. carrlH ltaelf. Garden Orove.1111$. ier. pet.a. $480.'7'7~ meuth leaae, SlOOO mo. -6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hotel.833-3223.9'-12
01000.10X ..-. wm 2 ea. Ftnplace, aew 2br, Iba, ti• lam. nn 552·..,aA.5:80. B\t:n4BA. "70 Movln1T Avoid dePotlt1 1--M-D-e-lm:_e_SW_t_ea_._A_C_,
4-plaorTlntnde. paint, alove, refrl1e. w/lrplc reMed Td. pr YIU.AIAl.IOA •W WllloD 131.SSU port Sborea a Br. 2 • cU\ Dvlnl npenaea! rlne. only. Aaent. carpeU. dra:pea, 2 car OU /~o . 541.;252· OutatancUqriaw,~aci Decorator funlahed · • Ba. Frplc:. srz. Adults, Proreulonally since ampl \t'· ~pd. ass
lMflS 1ara1e. DJ/-.OU, N42IO • • bey. Comer top nocn Tow....,._, -JBR. $'10 no peta. Avall lmmed. lltl. 1-E_. c_a_t _wy __ ._..,_s..oo __ _
IQllt W/akyl .... Adil • ____ .. _m_7 ___ • lBJl. JBA. .. 75 Sava•• Wilde Ir Co. Housa.IATIS CI~.!!.'.! 0 MT........... 1206 P.W J.126 Hcurity. tu0 °lae ot IBr. l Ba.e»--tobeach. ZDOVanpudWay, 17MIO$. UMU. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nsoatlt to IDODUl. Aft U0'9... ~ .oraJ • Br. 2 Ba. Chrmla1 IBr. 28a, •CloH to nwtu lbdml 7'Mlllor..._.. SlHpe •· A'751w .. lt. •--,-.-2-.-.. ----1 Bdrm, avail June lat. NB •tit P"Of pntleman
,.u_ln: a Ir. z Ba. frolc. patio. lndry, 1ar, l"'b• lr~c •rd'''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Propel'tJ'Boale,M2mC> --·~ Yrly lu. M 50/mo. will 1br beelll IBJ' 2Ba ta.Jn. ,,,.,..ees. HOPE1'S.lkl0mo.yrly . ..-1 • ' •1: POO~C6D,AGT ltt/l&al Ir tee. Stove, home w /empio. M /F.
..,...., lnndrJ room, 17J.... ---=~· OOH. luper ah.arp Clll&oln l OCIANFltOMT m ... cwMMIS74 retrt.c, esa. drps, encl over IO. SlllO utU Incl Jntloc. Bclrm + den, qldet .,.. f'WlataW 1 ar a a&. aar. 2 bib to ocun. 7'0-0802 lNV8'111T IU-18 11,..·,..-~ ..... kY.., UM McleDUal ..... pro(,,.. .-omea aaa.r, ...... 2bdrm, ut.11 lacL Pool, 2U/m.-0,114/Srs.oa34
• • 11We • la ......... _. .......... dec!wated. 'hrrilk JOO! wltlla a•lo opea•r. 4ul1t, •alare couple Shr el~t Twahae .
,.... .W ..,, for >'"'N ...... a Ill l.ldrm Al pr .,.,..., • .,., A ,,... p&aee t.c WMMr • J)rJilr •dd. Pre I . Ho '•ta or Otun tiew. Lie luury z Beeut. . U.-. 2~Ba.
eodlea "'" • ••WIY ..,_.._ •• wub'/drJ, ~ no ,.u enlertala. SllOO/mo Anll DOW. w-..,. et.tldru. 14H . Cati Br Iba • U. 8hatra. • + llllt • aee. NB
.t11N171 u-1N71. lltlldt+•••: .\tl.lfMW TILllOlllT. la.llOI N-7•. fla0,&.57·Ja'f ...... ,.MJU
PERFECT
LOCATION .. ;..../ H.,._'99&
=~ • o...hiilfllll. A/C
979.9997
\
Office It_... 440G Mo ........ Trwt 1~ T.._t P't rtMOla IJSO Http WClllM4 71 00 Of'ange Coast DAILY PILOT Monday. May 18, 1981 C1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deicli 1031 D.ect1 5031 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 125 '•flll •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FIRST• .a.DY AC~CUU 'H.a,W..t.d 71 0 0 ··-kan• Htai.W..t.d 7 100 Htlp W Cll!f9d 7 100 • ~ '""' Excellent company ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,, ... •••T••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
NrlllllnDJ DISCOUNTED lST T.D.' Escort. Models b_enefh•. ~nsion & pro BA JIYSITTER . Lite IO<*KIB'H CHAUfflUl ~"'""" , ..... o-c.n. t 1 l • h ar an I p I an II. hskp1. 5 yr Old atrl 38 p /T' payroll thru lllul HAHDYM.AH
Hl•QI •· •r medical & den~ cov· hrs week, Re!JI ~. Npt bu lance Salary com Re•ponalblti, •ut<>lboat MD $71,000 discounted 20'7v will yield 20<~. * 972· I 345 * era&t' Prefer 10 ey by Och. 644-8071 t<ve art 6 & men1ur1Atl' ,walh ex malnt, odd hn Call wk
1 $650/Mo. 123 interest. All due in 4 MC&VlSAAccepted ~~htu"~~o:lba,:o~! wknds K~'it1:~~:,~.9Joll l.1ns dy1149Hll2.
• years + 2 months . 3br, 2ba, home in COVER GIRL account.a. 1 yr In uc Babysitter Chlropractk Cllnit• needt 3035 Sq.. ft. Costa Mesa. Sold for $103,()()()J ulyof '80 c:oW1tln11. AIR or A/P Oc c iu Ion al al u er looWl:1tper dependable ~raon !of!
PWOfffcn with $32,000 down.C1tn sell all or part! 953.:7~UTC~,;tlSA ~~nJ•d An, 5408671 needed, pref my home. l"ull char{e l-'ull tlrnt· butty front otrlu.:
l11JYlewt Afternoon, eves or poa1t10n Jnt bcn«f1ta &406002.AlkforJudy •· ,..Lo......._,......._ JOH~ B .&.RRY _ BROKER wkends. Call aft 6pm. SHOO mo Niguel ShOl{'S ""--• " "' * fOXYLADY • Mon Fri. Nr Yorktown, NEYER A FEE Community Assn 1714) l•c•.L•E•'R•l•C•A•l.----.: Loh ofWIMlowa 12131 357-1936 OUTCALLONLY ADMIM. ASST H 8 ~9412 •93 OL22 :: P•ril~GGl"CICJI 121 )J 31:• ... 00 VISA MC ---lnatolhMnt ] For t he bm ineu man __. Plush office for Newport IAICER LoClft Officer I OOICKEEPER F /C INSUDIUC( Who want.s tomake a * 972-1131 * Center investment firm t-:itper'd. Ai.aembly & fl" P id I> e "1>a nd in~ Crowin& So Orii Count~ ftM
&ood lmpresalon. Super opportunity ror baking or breads & l11111k 1>e\>k1> Spa lll!i h Co lll'tk !i bkkpr F.'xp'd ClrDll w.,..... ....._.....,......, umbitlous person. Oood I pastry Call Dic k peaking loun utc-r wtth In Journuls, ledgers. Uft C .. T_._I 4500HoppyA• 512( A.l\.AMTIS secretarial skills Ex Bogard 6732040 bfr hte exper UK Work P&l. statement s. _, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MA.SSA.GE SPA cellent salory & bonw; JPM. Wllh installmt'nl louns. supen•isaon of A IP &
,714)675 8662 INDUSTRIAL Be pam pered by 16 package. Hours: 3 days ----business dti\/Clonmt. & A 1 n per so n n 1• I . ------·---SPACE Beaut. Girls Open 1·9fim, 2 days 1·7·30pm BankingS&L lite comm'I lou~i:. Co Llfe /health ins Profit
MIWPOltTIEACH lOA M ·4AM 7 days . Ca l644-25Cn TB.La offers gd benes. :.turl sharing, ESOP Send re
Convenient Penl'nsula FOR LE.ASE Phone64S-3433 1-'ullerton's S & L has I 1g ·al i·v lo $1 4(10 sume to PO Box 27ll Gerald Kozak 1 5 u ' · Capistrano Beach. <:A location acrou from Ci-COSTA.MESA. ICotali ~fal ~ningforF'trTellerin Call 92624 ly Hall. Executl Ive style 642-4463 SHE s-1--. t )'t'~~rt30wBepamch .. CMauslll C arrv 972-9955 ---
offi ces w/ful services • 0 n e 2 7 8 O sq f l .. ·-7 4,97 -4244 r , 1616 it 4th St., S.A Bookkeeper. Sportswe111 av~il. From r1s sq.ft warehouse avail for im· E S C O R T S & --.-_ _ __ kb E 1 or app l. O JNratlona Ofcrs. mgr has opening in Nwl)l
an up. No ease re· med. occupancy. •Two MODELING · Have 2 positions open Sch Xlnt opp fc)r r111hl
quired. Call 873-3002. 1600 sq ft units, office & 83g.9199 Adv Consultant with different banks ind pt ea 5 {' se n ti
Bayfronl office space for warehouse space avail 5 PEOPLE Banking for exper operations Resume Box 2135 NWJlt
I r J une 1. •32<-33< per sq. LO •>.J s~ .. .,.•RY rr h Bch92663 ease. l /mo ree rent. ft. •Leasing office hrs. llo...IEEDED "'" .......,_,"" o acer!> or very eav) 846·4419. Mon lhru Fri 8.4. Sal SWEETHEARTS f"ll Local Newport Beach asst ops. bkgrnd Co.
•ESCORTS• IMMEDIATELY savangs & loan has im offers excel benes & Prestigious Office Space. I0-2. 24 HOURS med. opening for a Loan s la rt 1 n g s a I a r y lo
3 wi.ndow om~s availa· 8,700 sq. ft. office + Visa/MC 529-1927 Guys or Galli, Full or Secretary. Wall consider Sl8K. Call ·
ble m full service Legat warehouse. Irvine In MAKIE SOMIONIKAl'PY p /T Company will trainee. Salary com· Carry 972-9955
Suite in Newport Center. dustrial near San Diego MAil~ SOMIOHI IMIL5 train Call Mrs Colbns mensurale with ex per. 1616 ~ 4th Sl . S.A
Avail. May 15. 640-5640 Frwy off Jamboree. Call rs YCHIC at 751·8008 after 12 Full mburl\llct: benefits T •ll.r p /Time
Cannery Village 4.50' of· 846-1044 or inquire PlaceaHAPPYAD Readings J ackSSS.1178 AIDE Work-w /hun & paid career apparel. Beaut S&l~ seek!> Marosi Co. 16753 Noyes. in this column a Please call: 'd II f rice or shop space in foronJy S3.25 Relaitlng massage by diC'apped adults Must Ms Denny Parisaa exper te er or part quaint charal'ler bldg. 957·9266· Brkr Coop JO· Call642·5678 Newport· s f i n est 714 ... c."c"" lime work 20·25 hrs viled. be strong, willmg to as-..,..., u.>\A1 k S 1 t $475/mo. avail June Slh. masseur. Call Steve, sist in tasks such as NEWPORT I A.LIOA per w 8 r 1 n ~ 673 '""229 s 543 2817 l0.8PM salary to SS uo hr . .,., · Warehousing space To My · · toileting, feedtng, gen S>.YIHGS&LOA.H Call
DR 's ofc. an Dwntwn HB. av a ii.· SOOO sq · fl . I love you Buddy now here from the cleanup. f:xcell. vaca· E.O.E. Corrv 9 7 2-9955
2 OOOsq.fl $1200 lse. Red C?mplete s~rv1ce. Ship-Ttna • Spa Hotel. ti on & in s urance 1616 i.f 4th St .. SA C pet m l3.5l p1ng /rece1ving /book-5482817 S480oW7 1().7 benefits United
ar · keeping, etc 540.7003, Loat & FCMlftd 5 30< · ' · Cerebral Palsy Assoc.. S•~r•tary
963·5059. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Santa Ana, 546-5760 Banking Key pos for set· 'y. -------with nice appear & R...tals W..t.d 4600 THE TELLER/HEW gd. typing in beuut ••••••••••••••••••••••• G1·r·ffn·ends A.SSEMILER ACCOUNTS new corporate ofcs or House wanted 3 or 4 fOIJNO ADS Plastic products Im-S&L Ability to work
bedroom. 2 baths. wall •ESCORTS• med id ate opening in fast paced. rapidly
rent for four mo"•hs. ARE FREE New por t Be a c h Let us tnclude you as a ·h o " env1ronmnnt .,.. Honte/Offlc.,IHotel 548·9818. part or our friendly staff c an.,m., "
Call 547·3182. * 759-1216 * -----at our beautiful office. with II E de velopers I lft n.. t / CaU Irvine Savangs is looking & mJr c:ontrac·lor~ Co •F.._ eu , ... vH : :>.4Hrs. Now Hiring ASSEMILERS for a mature resident of provides exn.'I benes.
l ook Past.up
P 1T1me Mon , 1 30PM lo
6PM, Tues. 10.JOAM to
6PM No expt•r
necessor) Apply Pen
neySaver 1660 Ph1centia
Ave C.M.
C AR WASH
~ash 1 c rs want t' d .
Anaheim & Orangl'. Cu ll
644 ·4460ask forNanc) or
Ann.
C ASHIER W ANTED
El Toro & Newport Bdl
areas. Call l.etiria
644·4460
CASHIER
Wanted P tr. prefer l!ll
perience. but wall train
A1>ply m pen;on. Mon
Fri . 9am llam Stan
da rd Shoes. 3077 S
Bristol.CM
W e hon • exceleftt
opporhn•lt y fo r Cl
,.rtOI\ with 1tron9
clerica l tldh to asllf'
with tn1p loyH 111,:
1uronce activity. .:
DutlH wll COMht of
typl•tcJ •.W.. fonna.
proceuln9 c lalnu
throUCJh our lnwranc.-.
company and CJtMf'cil
coo rd1natlng In·
1urance related mo+.
t e rs bet ween th e
•mp lo yu a n d I n:
wrance company.
ExJNri•n~ in the ln-
1uranu field wHI .,.
helpful but not ,...
quired.
bull.at talary CM~
l>.neflh. Contact:
Sue C CllTOlt
546-7360
MATIONAL
EDUCATION
CORP.
HOO CCllflPU' Dr.
COMMERCE
PLAZA
MAKES
NEWPORT
BEACH
AFFORDABLE ••U 642-5671 Male/Female Escort I . . . advantt>ment potent. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MC VIS 1 Loe Mission V1e10 co the area who washes to A · · & starling s alary lu
0 lusMH ~~~~~~~~~ needs Assemblers w 12 work as teller new ac· Sl.250 Call
Hewpor+ leach. C~-;
C ASHJ ER Equa l Opportwtlty
475 >o 336 Sq. Ft. Opportwiity 5005 LOST 4128181 Male Wht -yrs. exp. Candidates counts on a permanent * J•ltoriat~lc• & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Samoyed 6 mos old Vic Driving to Tulsa May must have gd munual parttime basis. Please Ca rry 9 72-9955 Ufflltles htdMded p · 22nd Share gas. 493-025-0 dexterity, gd eyesight, call 552 6551 for an appt 1616 f. 4th St . SJ\ I artner, Active/Inactive C · M · R EWA R D ' · neat in apnoarance & de· and interview 1-:xper Loan Proc'"'s sor
llOUSEWARE SALES Emp&o~MF
Apply an person: Crown 1---------
Hardware, 31C17 1-; Co11st 1---------Hwy, CdM 1·
• A.d&..c..ttoAlrport 16500 inv. M/F Plumb· 635·6207 evenings. . d bl ""'w k .. 1·r r d .,. r" · g & A li --------pen a e. or as in 1 e pre erre . Growanu vo seeks·---------&•ea.__... Row in PP anc~ repair. ---PROFESSIONAL u I l d I I " ,. ".,_._... Good steady income LOST : Man's Diamond mae suppor meica eec 1nd1v . wllh loan
CLERICAL
Our expanding business
ha!> s everal im med'
o~n1ngi. The followinit
poi.1tions are avail .
MAIL CLEHK
CLERIC1\L, typing :JG.40
WPM. mailing, fllin&..
general ofrice duties. .
CLERK TYPIST. typing
40·45 WPM, general of
fice dulae:.
• Accnt to 3 mafor (714,952.00529AM-SPM Ring vie. Hoag Hospital. Escort. Dinner & Dane· tronics. Gd. benefits. IRVlNESAVlNGS processing bkl(rnd to fwys.. ing.645-1426eves Only responsible 14376Culver Dr JOtn tls friendly staff
Take over $218 t mo R EWARD' Sl 0 O 0 persons seeking perm a· IRVINE. CA 92714 This t•o offeri. excei 8 3 3·88 13 F lower Shop. Irvine. 557 4281 · nent emplymt need ap-EOE M F' be n es & i. ta rt 1 r g
After SPM caJI SS9 0965 Lost April 17 Saf0 way * FANTASY ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli, salary lo $1,219 Call 17.o.a. STR~. C.M. . . ... . 581 3830 Banking "' uo• CdM White leather ball · Carrv 972-9955 2 room office s uite SaAnddw,.ichandWaneShop containing Jewelry TELLERS 16161{ 4thSt .S A ~ldeakfoark ing Great C . San MJ u ~ n Generous reward. Nt1 *STUDIO* Newport Center Branch. SavlnCJt Officers g. mo apastrano assaon questions ai.ked 2 positions. l full time Heaut S&L see k· Realonomics 675-6700 seats 30. 1300', Jay Hall ,,,. ••. 9523. · lud d ( 7 1 4) 661 ·3101 0 r ~ -----.......... ASSEMBLER spos1t1odn tnCI es sol me 1nd1v1duals with pre\' Approx 450 Sq ft Zoned • atur ays. part 1me hank or S&L ''kr"rntl · · (213)427-3067 will carry Found: Irish seller Vic p ...1 ........... R """' k 11 " c 2 crpts drps $180 mo nYunr ooms Electro-Mech position, ...,.,rs per wee to work nr Ot'l'ansil1t•
1ao'E. 17th St..' Suile o: lgenote. Bushard,.!o8~6khurst Electronics Co in with no Saturday work. or San Daegu The!>e
C.M. 548.1168 lnYHhnfflt ____ ...,.,._.,._,. The Beach area's closest Laguna Bch. needs an L 1 g ht l y p 1 n g . Ex -companies offer xlnt
Ofrice to share near So
Coast Plaza. $235 mo.
641·2003
Oppo~ 501 5 FOUND: Very friendly. & most exotic reading E I M ass em b I er re1r1ienc~~prerftserrced1 1-.;x-benes & advancement ··-·r studio 8125 Bolsa Av . w/sodering & E M as· ce ent ....:ne 1 ose to ""tent Call . ••••••• •••••••••••••••• wh ite, blk bunny Vac M 'd c· bl k "''
S d 1 way 1ty (2 oc s sembly exper. Abbbty to bus. CaU Lynn Jaxon. Carry 972-9955 a n c as t I e . Cd M E of Beach behind li· use basic test equip. 644· 1401
23.75 <",-minimum an 640·4028 quor store). Open 10am such 81 power mete rs 4r IMPERI•• S&L v 1616 E. 4th St., SA .._.EWPORT C.._.TR nualized rel urn on 6 Jam daily except Sun. bridges wouJd be a big ~ ,.. " " mos . T .D.'s. Wel l Found 2 pelunese dogs 543-9243 plus. Equal Opportunity Const Dlsburunwnt
Prestigious full service secured by Saddleback v i c B rook h u r s t & Employer m If lh__ _ Clerk
CASHIERS
UTDTEM
MARKETS
F'or 2nd & 3rd Shift!.
We promote to manage
menl & superv1i.1on from
w1thm
WANT ACARl-:1':R"
Co:.ta Mesa
Ill Del Mar 631-9421
La~una lieal·h 494.9233
Office exper helpful.
Good compan) benefits
Hrs 8AM 4 15PM Call
for an interview appf
833·8450
COMERt:lAL
BANKERS LIFE
1401 Dove St .. Ste SSO
--I'Jewport Beach, Ca.
""E':'O E. M If'
Huntington Beach
962·9116 Have something to sell? --'!'!.-~'!.'!..---• Classified ads do it wen:. ~~e86a99n viftew off80i ce Valley homes. All docu· Hamilton 968-5439 -We offer Xlnl pay & ben Beau11ful S&I. seeks
"""" sq . 644·_7L t 'ded . I d a I ., men s prova me u · 2 Lillie Dogs Male short + BANKING exper 1nd1v Co offer!> p·1 l
OfficeSpaceforsublease Ing appraisa l In hair tan, Female long Enu~lo~& 4dayworilwk. xlnt benefits & ....... II J 11
Tastefullydecorat.edofc d1v1dual notes from ha 1 r t an v 1 c ,,..!IMlraffoft Company is 2mi from TB.I.HS ~tarting salar) to • Ip'
suite containing 4 of-2·5K. Call for current Br ookh urst tSlater .•••••• ';: ••••••••••••••• Coast Hwy & 8m1 from rA.RTTIME $1219. Call. •
fices. conference rm & availability. Soutbcoast 968·34~-----Jobt Wanhd. 7075 405 & 5 Fwy. Newport Beach Branch Carry 9 72.9955 •
kitchen area. 1300 s/f. Financial Group. Ask F d M c ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 pos1t1ons . 30 hrs per 1616 Ii: 4th St . s A • Accounts Rece1·vable Clerk • Location: Comer Mesa for Rob 937·5667 oun : anx w al , Mature lady washes hve-PleasecaUforappt week includes 12 day Sa•ir191 Rep t
Verde Dr. & Adams, Female. black( hate in nurse /companion TelonicBerkeley Sat urdayforindividuals . • Prepares classified advertising data for. CM .7 14979-1~ Partner. Actave /Jnacuve Vic nr ltuntanglon position. Good driver, Personnel Dept interested in learning 6 mo exper & v~ry .computerinput.Handlesmquinesfromboth Harbor 846-4223 eves 714·494-9-401 E.O. E S Ille typing wins th1:. customers and sale!> st.alf Heavy detail work .• O ffi ce /1300 sq . rt. ~00 mv. ~/F. Plumb· -__:__ - . non·smoker/dnnker. &L . Light typing super spot. Starting e tok dd' h
Carpets. drapes, a /c, 2~ mg & Appliance repair Lost : Fem blk spayed Call Ad 11474 Daily Pilot. ASSEMBLERS We will ~:~~1~'fg ~axc~:~~~dt Sa I a r Y ran~ l' • petit~~easa1':r~ ~:~· e1;~l~y~~h~~e'::~gin~u'!::•.
sq. rt. Office rum avail. Good steady income. cat. vie of E. 20th nr 642·4300 ----benefits and working S850·S930 Cull ing dental in~urance Call 642·4321. Ext 277
540..7003, 963-5059. 1714)9S2·00S29AM ·SPM Tustin Ave 648-7134 __ Woman seeking position ~:~Gre:o~~:ch~.~:~i conditions. Call Gloria Ca!":Y 972-9955 e ror appt •
WESTMl>.JSTER MoMy to Loan 5025 Los t M. neutered· M to care for ill or elderly Placentia. Costa Mesa Doty. 673-3130 1616 E. 4th St . S.A • •
" •••• H 1 c Id 549·0373att. 1.30pm --IMPtUt••.L s •L Cl•rlcal Auist. Class1·11·ed AdvertiSl·ng 14306 Beech Blvd. 1200 •••••••••••••••••• • •ma ay3 ?, al, I yr?,,· ----aii.1A • e •
sq.ft.Cholcelocationror WIDOW !tas money fo~ colla r . Hou
1
d1n1 . Plast ics engineer Sr. Assislantneededforbusy EqualOpportunity I yr general offl te • •
store or office ~tween 2nd T.D. s. Sl0.000 & up. 642·6266 Reward. grade seeking So or hair salon Must be EmployerM/F/H (' x Pc r I n R E Supervisor for t:lnss1f1ed Department
2 freeways. g79.8889 or ~~~ ~~t~~~~,f~~l~i1 Found. Female calico cut West Orange Co . project ~ae~~; ~L~. u r a ·I~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~i~~~·nfs •• ;:~~ii~~~e s"ae{ae:~.ar%omi-;~~e~l:~~a~~m:~~h . 645·1260• anytime University and Irvine 494·9693 ---------BARMAID this beaut. posilion In experience. J-'or appointment for interview,.
Large2room,strHtnoor Mort--Trwt Ave.646·2810 HelpWanhd 7100 AUTOMOTIVE Partlime. Need en· c-o bra n d new e call642·4321 ,ext277 • ~f(i ~te to, s~adr ~. o~·. 5035 535 .................... :.. R~:.~~~rrx. ~:i:~stbco~~';.1e~aart s~!~t~~:lesa~~'::e~~ • General Ass1·gnment : urn1 u re nc u e . ••••••••••••••••••••••• P•f'IOftoh 0 A.CCOUMTIMG/Cle... perienced PREFER-646-9935 $913. • .
S1S0.53 l·3208. S~~Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• P•""-P.t.... RED. Will consider --------
Four nice offices + recep-All types of real estate P reventative & Stress Busy office with friendly training the right appli· Beauta· "Ian 1~1':7 4~~~~~~~1 •. Secretary tO •
lion area to sublease in investmentssincel949 Reducing Massage by atmosph ere needs cant. Must be good " Clnfcol Aulst. [ • j
Or. Cly airport location. S,.c&..&.&..... 11t Doris. "Intro" Special ! perm a n ent P /t.i me typist Contact Elsie lcal»oa •:r. CW. • XeCUtlYe Office Ideal for sml business. -"::'TD_,• 548.0407 employee. General ac-Tompkins or Sid Wig· I ~ 2 yr ex per genera I I edl . r
C Lli 2 B -cnta. payable and light gins al snow ·~ office with emphasis • mm ate opening or venaatile individual.
a rpel, pane ng, a. 642-2171 545-06 1 1 JMDATINGSERVICE typing skills. Job re· Hal~st in correspondence & .Must be capable or handling fast·paced,, $150 ea or make deal on . h Preferably w/follou•ang . l · bo t SOW varied and interesting duties for newspa ...... I 9 All ages regislerSlO q uires 20·24 rs P.er " ypmg a u pm .. -a I or part. 76G-Ol6 Want investor for Npt 835.0489estbl .69 week. We offer nexable Xlnt working cond . Starling Salary lo e executive & personnel administrator. Call ··
t.llNu Rewhll 4450 bayfront home. Give sched ule, competitive Please call Tues.Sal. Sl046. Call: • 642•4321· Ext. 271 for appt •
well secured l.sl or 2nd salary & food benefits. TOTOTA·YOLYO 842·0092. Ask for J oyce Carry 972.9955 I ~:·;;;;;;-;,·;;;.;:·s·;::: T.D. Agt, 675-6161. Great eoo., •Y Please cal Linda Foster "'~.::==.~·· 1616 E:, 4th SI.. S.A • Classified Outside ~es
al reasonable rates. w ... 21-2~'o y1.....a..a7 E·~-..L. at 714 /540.0500 for an in· -.. B ut s lo Loon Proc~uor • •
0 0 ~11!.& .. -,. --ur-n terviewappt.orsend re· "''O ·tlOlerU0-94'7 ea Yan Salesperson to handle Real Estate 5 0 to 270 n . On your T.D. 's Notes 24 Hrs. 641·0180 sume Attn: Personnel. Make Up Artist. full Moderate typing & •Development accourals aod automotive •
MES A VERDE R SSRai5ers·lnvest.ors$S Co~Cllecb Presley of Southern Cal. time. Rive Gauche. 2300 Io an Pa cka ging • accounts. Mu st have at least 2 ye ors .
PLAZA Call DeMison Assoc •M AM'"JVL.-po B 2200 N rt Automotive B rl s to I St . N/wpor t background leads to experience Salary pfus commission. Must 1525 Mesa Verde E, C.M. 673-7314 . "' 1~ ._ seach,~~ ' ewpo Beach. M0.8177. lh1s super Costa Mesa • have car. mileage paid. Excellent company .
545-4123 PEP BOYS spot. Starting Salary • benefits For appointment ror inten11ew, call .
WEP>.YTHEMOST M ... y,Moe.ctJock BeautySalon toSIOSO. Call 642·5678. ext. 277.
Space for Rent in active For your T.D.'s & Notes •INSTALLERS • Needed models for hair C orry 9 72-9955 • J •t • I •
beautiful beauty salon. at De nnison Assoc. C cutting classes Free. 1616 €'. 4lh St., S.A • 3nl 0rl3 •
Any r elated specialty 673·7311 It Al omes Newport Beach, Aura , Note Dept • General maintenance & janitorial servaCl!S .•
ok. Fashion laland, N.B. ---------Togett.r 831·1390 Fl nanc lal Contr o l P/time temporary position. Call 642·4321. exl •
Pal: (714) 640-6023. lit T.D.d $10,000, 20%, 2 at ·EP IOYS! ct • ..£. • 277 for interview appt : ---'-------yea r ue. $166 pe r r Beauty ,...
Retail/Office space, 700 month. 84().7346. Full Ttme JOJOIA I ALOE Exp. p r 0 c es s I n g • Pasteup Person
sq ft, Weatcllff area, 8 'Id d lres S200 000 We are looking (or a COSMETICS packaging Io an e :
Nwpt Bch. 7S l550 1u~ .;"r, es 11 • d OOV\'f ~t ~ bright, .self motivated Laguna Beach salon documents. Familiar • With newspaper experience. Part time,
C ~ s · · -we secure pe0ple to install ti res. now lnterviewing beauty w I t h f I n a n c i a I hours lla m ·3pm. Monday thru Frld11. ••••re--hil h retw:n. 76G-1368 =_..11,..1 Lf!rt/ batteries and other ac· & rashlon consultants. atatemenlll & reports e Excellent company benefits. For appt for I lewhlh 4475 2 AaJ.y.a.., V I r le/ ti c es o r I es on o ur No exp. nee. Company lands thJs ground fir • lnterv1ew, call 642·4321. ext 277 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v7 • ....,. 1J1:».J uatom · c W r S i vi""' c ers ars. e 0 · tralnina Call Sandra o PP or t. t u rt n g •
525 ~~FltC!S~R~ fl. On G~:~:~~i of 8 -' J ~~e~~0:.c~::e:h~~~ _4_94_·_8086_· ____ · __ , Sabary to:;s:,~~~ •• Trainee • Carpe~1 paneling, pa rk· T.D. 's. backed up by SlO Cl 00 c l u de a disco unts. BOOKKEEPERS ~ • For Distric t M-I ln1. rce wport & Bay Million cuh&seasoned, • ....... Id t . 1616 E. 4th St., S.A e , -~· -ell s'"',.ured T .D •1. (tJJ\in l~-uvuuaea,pa vaca ions. N t B b t p•-"-Seet•y Thishilhlyauccessrut locul newspaper huan S h o p Cente r . 2052 .. .... "'"'' medical and Ufe Ins.. ewpo r eac rea "'"'"... e o-~• .. I t . I 1"-. I u· d Newp ort Blvd. C.M. Beaidea monthly pay. l esta te develo pment Knowledge or notes, ~mn,. or a raanee n ,,.... c1rcu a on e· ~18lor8"-2228. m e nta you are also • pe'!:P~~:f:'~:~·at: company with projects l oon doc u ment s, e p artm,en t. ,Basic sk ills wi ll e~tall
avaranteed a cuh out In ~J Aj ..-tn So. California a nd boarding, new acct&. • auperv slon o 10 lo 14 year old boy and girl .... tr ......... 4100 e month• tr you desire. Use,....,,,,,. service PEP BOYS Flor lda needaexprd.fuU & teller respon · home delivery c arriers Areu of
••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Denl1on Assoc. 15ZZI leedtllYd. char1e bookkeeper to slbilillea lands th l• e •upcrvlalon Will be delivery, collections and
1575. A~>prox. 2000' In· 873-7111 for exciting de-When placing your ad .. • a handle all phasea of pro. be 8 u t. New pt 8 c h : sales. Selected applicants will recelv'•
dua 't Office . 18101 ta\11. Dally Pilot ad number Will Wnt izllr,C• Jett l(.'co(lnUna. Salary Position with excel r egularly tch eduled raises, bonus Redon e r. "Q". Hunt Equal Opportunity open, Call 546-9Sl8for ln· ....... ~ •-1 1 opportunitlea and many frinie ~it.I such I
-B_c_h_.142_·_aM _____ , Aw•c•-wls/ appear In your classified ad EmployerM/F t«view a _,, -start na 18 ary • comp11n)' pa10 oen~a• and health pla.o, aroug
to Sl8K Call: • li/t ln1urance. vacation and sick feave. Com·
MES .&. r.~ . we take your messages 10oeoc98 Carn '72-9955 pany vehicle 1s fumished durln1 workin• "' ....................... 24 hours a day ... you cal I AUTOM011VE J\•aJ Estate lnvatment 1811 t . 4th St .. S.A • boon. Apptkants must ~ over 18. have ·1 INDUSTRIAL An••• t llOC In at your c onvenience llelofCliflllet'/ Co. w ith mv ltl p lt • •0()(1 drlvln1 record and be neat appearlna.
P RK ••••••••••••••••••••••• i ff" h d t ,..._~s•ev partne rahl_p e ntlllu Houn are aenerally Mond1y t.hru Friday. A dur ng 0 ice OU r s an ge Some au&o. dealerthlp n-4• full charlt book-• Som overt.I me avalleble. Ir you art qualltl-1
the ""'esponses to your sd experience helpful. FuU keeper to work ln au e and tntere1ted In 1eamln1 Ow ci~watiol\
'' u • • • Ume Tua. thnl~t. Con· upena ot accouatlni • 1 bualnfll t'ontact Don Williams or Ken Ood· 71 I W. IJtltst. this servjce IS only $7 .50 tact Elele Tompkins or quarterlY ftnanclal re· • dard Applf ln peraon.8:30t.o10.30AMOC"l:OO
c.-.._Cllf. week. For more informa--StdWt11taaat porttnf. Pieuo tend ~ I t.os:OQNI. ~f.: I 64J.446J 1ame to PO 80X J050 tlpn and to place your ad N.e.cA ...
1tlO f4l; ft. Unk aull. C811 L,1,2 5678 •
ll•J lit. Carpeta, v.. • • 10~/C ' l30 W, Bay Street J drapee "t=n • ....,.. 8elu1 eommeuu.rat• Costa Mesa, CA C.. 'i..! dn "'1°'~ ~~cb~~l1.r.:,; Al.LJOBSFRKE •• F.quaJ Opportunity Empk>yer
ltt.; If.I. app'l. -----19! ••••••••••••••.
--------·~""!""~.-..,.;._~-~--~----------~--------~~~~~--~~;.....-------=-----.;;..__------.... -------:::-------------~~-------.,1._~--~~~"""'"'!r-:~~ ...... ~---~"'""'!];~--------=~~
' ' '
J
,,
I . ,
I •
71 00 ___ o.-~.·-nae-Co-·u-t .~.-",''-Y PILOT ~onday, M•Y 18. 1M1 \J ~~~ ..... !!.~ ~.,.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~'!.~~ ..... ?!~ ~'!'.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~'!'.~~ ..... ?!.~~
?!~ .•..•••... Clute'-1 ..... w..._ 7100~Wlillil4 7100 HOus-·......... Modete-hlat.alit.&aU.oon PESTICIDE SPRAY llC.,,ONllT Sal• ll~T•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ERB I bl t OP•RATOR •
' . •••illllillll_lill __ ,,.. aa OD, ma111 oe. • · ... aper For P /T potltloo In ·~-1 • I
DBJ-y ...... -&• --1 To'5/hr,car.8'5-&lll .... _ -1~ ... ·-&ob / t t ..... -.. ._ ..... --~ DO.al'Pvuv·-. w pu contro IP• Chiropractor'• office T11...... ...-
f'ff Ume fOt ~ de· Lookln& for a very lo· pllcator h . Top 91Y • Muat be cMpudabla tf. -_,... ... ,
• , TRY COi! Jt~~DI 11 e'!'l'••I lta 1J~¥P:A···"' I • iONafe ce.ty. HY" ~ ~••• clerlcel. -r· mHnhwW w ... .... . ' ............ , ... ~
···-...... o ... .. Cit_.y Office. We 1.,. .......... .,... ..
. ~w.yt ·~~~ CDI CORP
-JJOJ "-'or ......
,,,#.th D·Z, ~Meta .. ·~"'b 116-1022 ,.,qEqual Oppty Employer
1tls1 M/F
.1it11b-------1 CLESAI. , ,,
--Realater today for local • temporary ... ianmenta • .,, . 557 ftftj~ ,, h "VU'hll
--•
1CT\·Llf\;_
.of:>_ ~NSOHHU IHMCO ••••• • • "nl J7Z) llrdt Shwt
1 WD! Me~IHcll l9't EOE -~~~~~I
CARRY
FOX
M1BNCY
NEVER A FEl
bee. SecrefwY s
Immediate O'Penfna.
Irvine baaed company
hae need or a
profeaslonal, cheerful
person aa ri&ht hand
lo their manager of In·
rormatlon systems.
Compuny hu excellent
bt!neflta Salury offered
will be to $1300. Call:
llto Johllaon
972.9955
1616 E. 4th St .. S.A
Sec,..tory
Expansion minded
co mpany seeks
com patible type
person for friendly
ol(ice Po11tlon is
1nterest1ng and
varied Two years
11ecret11r1al
background required.
Excellent benefits.
Salary Sl200. Call·
Rita Johftaon
972.9955
1616 E. 4th St.. S A
liveries. Xlnt drivlna re-tenetlna pan ti.mt Job Houukeeper, llve·ln. NATIONAL beneflta. Pleaae call nclenl ft have 100i/ of· The React.r Ad Dept o
cord roq. Phone for tCnl pleuan' office! com ~tnloo for •lderl" C "'SH C "'ID (71') 718-4'75UAM·JPM rice akllla Non·1mo1ter°! c ~m·P,•nan!!u'!!~trl~• a,0c
:lr""· m •ttll Al• for ertcal. for mature ' "' "' preftN'ed.CaU8315490 ..,.,. ....... .,.... r ... , ~ ·•~-pc H coupe. M\.9!1-ak Ena. ,fcTUU-&ul a part t• .... 1 •~ r. Emmooa. Newport person."""•.-. .. ..-~ . ,,._ a._ poa Statioo•ralnc. Npt. Bch. Exper a flhavevaUddrlver'1 Uc. Advertl1ln1 11lea M 1 t 1 .. RC".19_...._ Clearprlntlna.~d apell· • t A t •-Ref1req'd ..... ,..llU rep1re1eo••Uve. Career anu ac urer ooalna ,._......_ • ,,_._..1 -----------ml.II · ccurate yp ... IJ, · _.v,.. le """ for EX PERI ENC ED Lite typlnlJ, tllinc Wt!d, tnl a .,.,.,.. Y ami e
Delivery no ahorthaod. 20 hr KotUelleeper/Companloo •• I opportun!ty with a hard woriten lnvolvea thura. frl Nice So are the bulc require· TV IHST /1)B. V week lnchada Sat" Sun Live in or out. multt dMaJooal naUooal frame aaaembly, mat La1una office 499 228.'t men ta We wUI trairt. Ap
Mon·1''rl 12-?pm. Appro1C _c_a_U_:_8_46-_7_u_1____ company We will train cuttln•. 111,. cuttlna. ply . UMIO Placentia Ave .
30bra/wk. Salary com 8»2009. you to control l·on·l ln· etc. Pay accordlna to llCn f"YPIST C•t
menauratew/exper Ap. OeneralOfflce HOUSEWARESALES tervlew• with butl akUla. C09ta Mesa area. Newport B" 11 ch
l l( In ~non KC' rm HElPl.I. CASKlER n e 1 ' men • V r 0 ~ 48&3 (9-6) Bayfront Law Office
d feaalonala We work by m » • r war e. Apply In penon: Crown ap~. onlyjolferina 1 un Le1al cxpr not rrq
MHEC. 2886 Harbur We are In need of a Hardware. uru lrvlne, IQue • va Wible aervlce PIZZA 548-2283 Blvd. C.M. I CWeatcWf Plaza) NB th.t benenta both bual Delivery drlvera "cooka creat ve gen. ore. clerk • needed. Men ai women Rtc....._.at
DIMO .... S ... ·T-S for a lon11 t .. rm tem lNSPECTOR neue• conawnera. B c ,...... d " •-"" " w• offer complet I 21 yrs of aae. &ood drfv. uaf orona el M11r PART TIME Fri• Sat. porary ualanm enL Exp. in blueprint read "' e n· Inf record, vaUd Calif. Rea E1tate0Cflce Light Work In your area. Car Muat be comfortable ln auranc• packale. ~x t I I •~h ,. .. l '"lB with numbers, "d. phone g, and measuring In perue bonUMI, rapid dr vlng llcenae, Willing YP na, 18 ar y eom· nee· " r . .,. ·v• .. alrumenta. Send reaume advln"ement. We work to work evee & wknds, men 1 u r a le w 1th ex manner, profea11lonal at· ... f 1 I k t titude impt. Call: to: Aluminum For1e Co. 00 1 commiulon baals ul . Me-N-Ed'1 Pizza, per enre M or Loret Dental Assistant, F IT or
P /T . Pleasant
established Costa Me11a
omce. X·ray Ile. & exµ.
req·. 631-1420
DIHT AL ASSIST AMT
Chalr1lde. RDA. X Ray
lie F IT Beach cit y
Salary open + benelils.
Non ·smoker pre f
847-2569.
DEHTAl.fP"..lo Non smoker. back or
rice. Roving assist now.
front ore In 2 wks
644·0611 NB
Dental
Experienced Orthodon
tic, chair·side assi1t
546·5170, eves: 557 7077
S02 E . Alt.on St. (PO Box with the averaie ac· ~~·-l2_14. _ ~ Van1t, 6?_5-_34_11_
IVICKI HESTONI 212.5), Santa Ana. m01. count executive eamlng _ • E.0 .E. M/F. $35,000.'4(),000 annually.
Ir Auoc..... INTERIOR DESIGNS We need 4 people lo train for manaaement ln our
54"0400 Buay Home center·NB. newly opened west coast V Exp. req. Floorlna. office. We offerthemo1t
Specializing ln draperiea. conaulllng. recoanlied complete
l'em porary Clerlcul Pe rs on ab I e, we 11 · tralnln1 proaram in the
PeraoMel groomed. mature. non· lnduatry, with extenaive
1mkr pref. 2·3 dy1 per peraonal attention
week. Floor Ume. 30% aparked by friendly
c o m m . I n et 1 a I ea aroup competition. General
Tiie lalboo lay Club
Is now WrilHJ:
S..ack a. Cook•
F111l food exper
Summer only
+ S35 /hr conaulting Call Chril Campbell for
640-9193 Interview at 648-9906. 9.9
Sunday lhru Wednesday
INTERIOR DESIGN
SALES Flex. hrs No
exp. nee. Wiii train.
499·1461
Pla•tlca
MoclllM Operator/
IEClr'TIOHIST
Good front oflice ap
pea ranee, typing &
1eneral orfice ex
pe rience r eq ulred,
plea sa nt phone
personality Newport
Beach . 549-2988
PortsClltMr
Look in& for exp. or
trainee Ma c hine
Operator on our
graveyard shift. Also
openlna available on au
shifts In our tnm room 1---------dept aortinl & trim· RECrnOHIST
12:30to 5
Recepllon111 ai typing
duties for EJCecut1ve
Suite. nr 0 C Airport
Call 752·0234 for appt
ming plank parts. Must
have manual dexterity.
Xlnt benellls include:
paid maJor medical.
dental +life insurance. Prefer English speak
ing. I~~~~~~~~
CIMCO
265 Brigp, C.M.
Sale&, experienced, part
Ume. Ladles apeclallly
ahop. Faahlon bland.
Flexible hra. Call Mimi
759-9951.
SALIS Catch this opportunity
S50-i1001day. Young am-
bitious crew has room
for more. Training &
lranapo prov id ed :
540· 7652 aft 1 lAM
Sales
HELP WANTED!
Telephone salea. No ex·
per nee Excell. l'O
benefits Commission
proaram & profit shar-ing Apply in person
Pennysa ve r . 1660
Placentia Ave , Costa
Mesa
Sole1 & UCJht lkkpcJ.
al John Wayne Airp<>rt
for I person office. Need
take charge person.
El'p. nee 549-2203.
· tile.ERK. 1·!1even mkt, 1'14 4>/T. 24 hrs mu./wk,
-*araveyard&wknds.1920
1
ff!. Balboa. N.B. 673-6190
!l \j ~rk. Ory cleaners. 3 dys
Jr. Sec ... tary
Major company in
Irvine seeks braglft.
career minded person
to handle variety.
duties ror director or
co mmunications .
Company o rt ers
excellent benefits and
salary starts at $1200.
Call :
Det1tol Hygleftlat
PIT for busy office ne11r
S.C. Plaza. Thursdays &
Fridays. 545-4553.
le1tHostjHo1h11
~XP. REQ. Thur, Fri,
Sat, Sun. 6 10 prn
JAMITottlAL
Stoek & delivery person.
7am-4pm shilt, Sunday
thru Thursday. Xlnl
benefits. App ly in
person, Hl·Time Liquor,
495 E. 17th St. C.M-
Newspaper d e livery
person, 18 or over
Driver's li cense, in
1urance, economy car
Npt Bch·lrv·Colta Mei.
area. 1 dye pr wk. Mon-
Fri, 2·5PM. Sat/Sun
4·7 :30AM. Approx .
~OO lmo. CaU 540-3007
bet. 11AM·5PM. Ask for
Lee or Bob
POOLIOUTE
With own truck. Ex·
perlenced. 964·6n (24
hrs)
IECEl"TIOHIST
With or without typing
needed Top pay Te m
porary • full time Call
Tod 58aces at 979-8900.
SAUSl'YSOH
F'ulltime. Tues.·Sal .
9·30-6. Must have al
least 2 years experience
in a card & git\ shop
Hunt. Bch. 962-8910.
· pr wk .
,--646-7621 ..... ~ . -Clerk typ11t, SO wpm, cor·
· reapoodence and light
fWna. some office ex·
perlence. $4.SO per hour.
~ Office hours 8 lo 5 Mon·
4 :;..ay thru Friday
~ :;~a37
J~ !Jii CLlllC TYPIST A~er1eUc penion with fl Ood typln& needed for I ' · y manalina aeneral ·aen cy. No exp. , t-1 eceuary, but ability to
learn a mi.mt. Attractive
aalary " all company benefits. Call Linda at
I .... ~·8161. 1 ftlll·~~~~~~~1 , ------.-------... . · nll'c"t9.:7,;;s-;-,~·t1*ork on Balboa for
111(Property Management . u: .()o. Variety job ~1•1 Irvine PeraoMel Agy.
488 E. 17U1, Coeta Mesa
!--:J~ulte 224 642-1470 t --
'1/ ,, ......
COCKTAIL
WAIT'IESS
CAMIHO
4it11.• MexJc.lnt. ._.., Applylnpenon
"'.. 20111 Brookhl.ll'lt . !if~ .. _1 ___ a_t A_d_a_ms ___ _
· 1,..j_ C OLLICTott
'b1!901ta Mesa collection
· aaeo cy la seekln1 •• telephone collect.or. Ex·
· ~rience preferred. but
' in.Will train. Salary & com· en ~lulon. Health in·
' aurance " paid vaca·
-tk>n. Contact Mr. Gibbs 'l"'Ail 957-1047. 11~Q/)MM ERCIALS. films,
rpodela, extraa. SCAS
_ oeeda new races
I wuM?-0282
."1!1 .. COMPOUHDElt :!;>.t i x i n I c h e m I c a I
powders. Must know
1 ~.-. baalc math. Available IO ~r overtime & frin&ea.
811 ~ uat a peak Enallsh. JJ' !:!lnwllco Labs, 2832 U •• ~w. Tualln. 832·9'700.
.. .:. COot<-0,"D •i:1 e chef, Suzanne's ;/, e1taurant, Laguna
1 ... _ ach. 494-~2
'-·
_o;r. c ()()I(
bf'lmmedlale opening.
-.1.Nt1ht ahlft. Excellent tie ~eneflt1 . Apply ln peraon : Jolly Roger. .-aaoo Harbor Blvd, Costa
'.m Mua.
~;·I yf Cook = Plua,SbortOrder
lflf'1t Mutt be lB. Apply •;a 311 Palm Balboa I~ I IJ
· 1f teek----4 .. rt ar.r ·t i iab\1. Apply : Meaa
Hfl• anea!. 1703 Superior,
Cotta Meta, aee Sam or ''7 Betty.
lllf' o l"'n t & F H e I p o r
, .... 1 1ftdwlftr Penon. P /T
. ·~ Oft..•F.t. Call for appt.
·:. (;. ,,._1, Gary'• Delle.
~c ..... ....,
'!!ll""!IOllftf,P'Jtday. Super
.. ~n4.,fch 545-4887
t ~OUM111 PllSOH , 1flto "1'1Ut contract• In
/ ~ to9l rtntalcounter. lluat I . work wkenda. Benefita. . lfl•W tra•. APlllY Z2IOO ' ,,.,_.mbtr&,..-18: l!l Toro.
I • ....... -COUMTm...,
A. P Jt, da71, apply In
' n_oq, '11 E. Balboa , • vd.
..,.,,.. DATA
"' f. PIOCll_.. .~,_.u,le pereoo with · Ull tD&ry 111,.rtenc• .. ~ Lapna Beech D.P. op• r all• na . X l n t f...=· Noo-amolrtr.
. -..... llYDll'll
. ~auto .-ru •&or•.
1
1 ...... valid CaJll.
,.. lf,~drlY•
'" lalnioord. nH• ~ A•to• lq_f J. UIO . :rr:a ...........
......... 1 •• , ..
.... , Cit I I'.,,.. ....... ~~
Rita Johnson
972·9955
1616 E. 4th St.. S.A.
Exec. Sec,..tary
Director of corporate
planning 1n
i nternational
corporation seeks
organ11ed lop quality
secretary. Your day
will be Interesting and
challenging
Outstanding benefits.
Starting salary t o
$1300 Call·
llta JoMIOft
972-9955
1616 E 4th St.. S.A,
Mgr. Trainee
Excellent opportunity
for sharp individual lo
become manager
within short period.
Must be ca r eer
oriented and
genuinely interested
in company. Some
typing involved
Starting salary to
$1100. Call.
Rita John10ft
972·9955
1616 E 4th St., S.A.
Receptlonlat
Go·Ahead company
seeks plea san t .
friendly individual lo
run their front desk.
Some typing required.
Beaut1ru1 waterfront
location. Excellent
benefits. Salary to
$1,000. Call .
Rita Jolie'°"
972-9955
1616 E. 4th St.. S.A.
RecepflOftlst
Light background OK
for this variety
position with major
company. Need to be
bright and friendly
and have some typing
skills. Company has
excellent benefits .
Salary lo $800. Call :
Rita Johnson
972-9955
1616 E. 4th St.. S.A
Clerical Conacienlious person
needed for Investment
department or large
company. Need good
communication skills
and typing 40. Salary
G crte Plt"IOft
Fri & Sul 7am·3pm
Walter /Waft,..11
1 yr EXP REQ .
10 30-3 :30or5-1J pm
LANDSCAPE
CONSTRUCTION posl·
lion . Mw;l have all·
DEHT AL ASS 'T
P /T chairside ex
perienced, Fri. & some
Sat. $10 pr hr Npt Ctr I
760·9357 Securitv Gtlard round ex per. Top pay &
I yr E>CP R EQ benefits_ Please cali
DENT AL FRONT ( 714) 768-4751 from
OFFICE
Full lime position Costa
Mesa. 2 years exp . mst
be skilled in strong
telephone commun1ca
lion, peg board & in
sura nee. 631-1420
Ston Clerta 9AM·3PM.
P IT , Cash Reg. EXPj LEGAi.SEC'Y PREF 1 MEWPOtrT IEACH
Gcrte Plt"IOft Full lime 9 to 5:30. Call
Fri. Sat 1am-3pm, rac-Joyce for appt. 640-5650.
quet club LEGAL SEC'Y
Desianer Please call for appt. Probate experience,
HVAC Corif'm t lndus t. 645 7358. Mon Fri.. permanent P I T
ProJ·ecls. Min 3-5 yrs ex· •9•.•30--5P-M~~~~~!'I New po r l Be a c h 613·7120 per Mech Consultants ---------
Nr OC Airport
Da hl, Taylor & Assoc
549-5234
General
iv1c11 HESToNI
DESIGN & Assocla+.s
EMGIMHR SpeciaUzlng in
Mfg. co. in Mission Viejo Temporary Clerical
area needs exper. In PersoMel
electrical conneetors, 540.0400
herm etic sea l s,
transducer design. com· General
ponenls materials & • Help W..ted PIT methods. Mail room, Mon·'Tues
Duties include design, nights. 5pm·2am. Apply
drafting, materials test· 1660 Placentia. C, M.
ing & R&D projects.
Mechanical Engineer· General
ing degree pref'd PreultlnHelper
LEGALSECY-
SEMIORPTNR
Challenging position for
top secy w/Xlnt skills.
Deluxe ofcs OC airport
a rea. Gd ben. Sal. Com·
mensurate w /exp. Con· tact Cindy, 752-?Ml
Lite-Mfg Full & Parl-
time work available.
642·570'l
MACHINIST Ha.PEI
Full time. Must read
verniers/micrometers. 6
min exper. Laakmann
Electro·Optics. Inc .
E .O.E. San Juan Capo
(114) 493-8624
MURSERY SALES
Lookln1 for penonable. neal, energetic person
able lo grow with a well
es la bll1hed company.
Minimum 1 year retail
nursery selling ex·
perience required. FuU
time startlna salary
Sl000-$1400 per mo. Paid
holldaya & vacations
Hosrltalization Ins ava1 Part time pos1-
t1ons also avail In
lerv iews by appl only.
Call646·7441 Mon.Fri
LLOYDS NURSERY
PRESCHOOL
Teac h ers and Aides
needed, part & full lime.
Newport Beach. 640-8820
P /tlm:~e room
helper. Mon 3PM to ap-
prox 8PM, Tue, 2PM to
appro;11 ?PM. No exper
necessary. Apply Pen·
neySaver 1660 Placentia
Ave C.M.
Prodetdlo. Won
Loading cassette tapes .
lst shift. 549-0138
PROOF HADER
NURSES AIDE Part lime position after·
For retirement hotel, noons for secretarial
Fri & Sat. midnight. • service ln Irvine. M usl
PIT position for an aide, have xlnt s~lling &
Spm-llpm Ne wport grammar skills. Some
Villa, 642-5861. reception duties re quired. CaU 714/752-0234
MURSIHG RN or LVN. 11·7pm, 3 RECEl"TIOHIST niles per week. Pvt 41 position avail. with a
bed Conval. Hosp. S.A. well established busi· Ht SA 549-"""l ness rlrm in Lagun11 s. · · ......, · Hills. Must be well·
HURSIHG dressed & groomed. Lite
Need Rn or LVN for pm typing req. Beautiful of-
sh ift In conval. hosp. fices & xlnt benelils.
Xlnl salary & benefits. Hrs : 8 :30·5pm. Call
Di ff ere ntla I pa Id for 1_J_ud_y'--at_586-__ 44_00_. __ _
weellenda. Apply Bever-RECEPTIONIST/ Irvine
ly Manor. 43340 Victoria. Distributor has immed.
_C_M_. opening for energetic &
cheerful recepl1onis t.
RESTAURANT
Hogue Barmlchael's
Door person. cooks &
bus help. C.M. 645·36711 • CJ ules or Harry)
Restaurant
Exper Waitress. all
Salnf-non• High lasti1on women 's
apparel store in Fashion
Island. Salary. comm .
good benefits, Exper
req 644·1100
shifts open. Apply Irv me l•--------P rtme. 2·4. Shirley, Sales
751·5223
RESTAUIWO'HEl, PEP BOYS
Del Taco In Newport MOMy,MoemdJack
Beach Ls now blrtng run IF YOU UK£ SALES
& partllme help, both YOU'U LOVE
day & night shills PEftlOYS!
available Startmg wage Full Time
SJ 35-$4 hr. Apply 2112 Take advantage or this
SE Br11lol <near J ohn opportunity to join
Wayne Airport) Southern Callforpia 's
RES UR leading auto paru re·
TA ANT Ftr, P tr tailers 1serv1~ centers
sandwich man & counter You'll enJOY our rnendly
help. Plaza d e Care atmosphere. top wages
Gary's Dell , 752·5401 and progressive think
RetailSales 1ng Our benefits
High Fashio n store package includes dis
needs help. Salary + counts. bonuses. paid
commission. FIT. El' vacations, medical and life ins .. pension. and perience desired. Male moral.
or female. Responsible Apply in person at·
760.0872· PEP BOYS
REWARDIMG 15221 leach llYd.
POSmOH W11hnln1ter, Ca.
F I T Housekee pt!r E 1 O t t Waitress for small re· qua ppor uni Y Em ploy er M I F
lirement fa cility. Hours!~~~~~~~~~ 7-JPM Weekdays. eon I
tact Mrs Collins
494·9458
Qualified candidates Mon 3:30pm·lam. Tues
send resume to: Mrs 2:30pm-l2:30am. Apply J a n s . 2 3 8 9 1 V 1 a 1660 Placentia C.M
Fabricante, Suite 603.
Mission Viejo, Ca 92891 GIRL F«IDA Y Needed for fast growing
small Co. HUNT BCH
area 536-2593
MALCLIU
Sort & prepare outgoing
mail. Part lime. hours
very flexible. Coldwell
Banker Real Eatate.
Fashion lat.and, ask for
Clarie Johnson. 644-9060.
OIDH.flU.D
Must be accurate. no
exp. necesary. Apply in
penion 511 E Goetz S.A.
Heavy typing It 10 key SALES CLBlK·Rl'tall
by touch req. A/R exp a Office Supply Company
+. Gd Co. ben, sal.ary has full time positions
DOE. Call 154-1931 ask available. Will train
SALES PERSOHHR
for dynamic contem
porary retail store. Only
career-minded, mature
women need apply. At
least 5 yrs. retail exper
re q 'd Salary plus
comm Please apply m
person or call. Apropo.
644·2652 or 1129 Fashion
Island. Npt Bch. EOE
Donut s hop. Early AM
shift. no e;11per nee App-
ly · 01ppity Donuts, 1854
Newport Blvd. C M.
DllVER
needed. must have good
driving record. Room
for advancement. Hunt
Bch. area. 536-2593
•DRIVERS• Full & Part lime. Must
be 18 years or age & have
a good driving record
Starts et S3.~/hr. Call
Mark. 8AM·5PM Mon·
day lhru Friday at
751-2680
EHGIHHR
Structural. 4yrs exper
Nwpt Bchorc. 675·6110
FAST FOODS
Cook & Caahier. Exper
nee. 504 Pacific Coast
Hwy. HB ~Eves
GlriFriday
PACIC.A~S
FEMALE
$3.40/hr lo start. Merit
ra i1es. 1531 Monrovia
Ave,N.B.
Port time. Orange Coun·
ly Airport Area SeH
starter with strong or·
ganizational and a c-
1 co unting skills _1 ________ _
Minimum lite typing MANAGER
Part lime at home. Nd 6
dynamic people, will
tra In. R le hard 6?5·5895 Top dollar and nexible
hours for right person. Tool Ealilp. R...+al p '"ITTIME 752·6905 Orange Co. Company ""
G roundS Keeper
Grounds Keeper needed
by Huntington Beach Ci·
ty School district. S090 to
$1233 per mo. depending
on exper Apply 735 14th
St .. H.B. 536-8851. -----1
Guards
MOWHIRIMG
Armed & Unarmed
Openings in
Costa Mesa. Irvine.
seeking responsible in· To deliver Dally Pilot
dividual w/min 2 yrs. auto route in Newport
college. in management, Beach.
E x p e r i e n c e / HOURS: Mon. lhru Fri.
supervision, working a~rox 3 :30pm lo
w /public to manage one 5: m of ita ra ci l lties . HO RS: Sat & Sun
Mechanical aptitude a 5am·1am.
plus. Benefit package Earnings approx S3SO
provided. Salary based per month.
on experience l)Olentlal Call 842·4321 ror Bryan
ortunlly la xinl. Send re· Holland or Sheldon
sume & aalary hiatory Harte. Equal Oppor
to: 1925 Church St .• _E_m...:p_lo-'y'-e_r ____ _
Costa Mesa.Ca92627. PAITTIME
Management
_f_or_w_a.;..y_ne_. _____ 1 Newport Stationers Inc
557-9212. Mr Emmons
IECEPT /SEC'Y
P /T. "Wed.Sun. Yacht SAUSMB'-IOAT -Club. 1601 Bayside. Schock Boats. Scott at
CdM . 644·9530. I 613-2050. _ Wont A~ Results 64_2-56!8
~-THE BROADWAY-.......
Southern California's exciting Fashion Retailers
has a world of opportunity to offer you!!
Permanent & extra on call positions available.
Immediate discount.
SALES
FULL TIME
&
.....
lo SSOO. Call: --------•
El Toro.
•$4.00 Per hr It up
•Uniforms cleanln1 free
•M ature person s
welcome
Office building manager
req . Mechanical
knowledae euential.
Able to uae tools in an
emergency. &:l).3321.
Earn full time pay In
your spare t i me !
S250·$400/wk i1 yours,
1uaranteed as a consuJ.
tent for Import Co.
Dealre for blgU! Call
after lpm: 675-5299
ASSIST ANT DEPT.
MANAGER POSITION Rita John'°" FILE CLERK
972·9955 Large Insurance agency
1616 E . 4th St., S.A. has Immediate opening F4lllMJ Clerk for raat, eneraetlc file
But not juat filing. clerk. Paid company
Th e re w i 11 be a benefita. Call: Linda at
•Semi· retired OK
variety or duties to 1~54~9~-8~1~6~1~~~~~~ make your day1;
BEKINS MAHICUllST ffn 9'4, T\.tee.·Sat. Part time
PROTECTION Newporter Inn Hair Jutrwsf7
SERVICES De1l1n1, N.B. 644-2580. ~Mt7 Interesting. No
previous experience
neceasary. Call:
llto JohnMMt
972·tt55
1616 E. 4th St., S.A.
Tralue
Br la ht and
reaponalble person ror
pretty orflce near
South Coast Plaza. No
experience needed but
must be wlllin& to
learn. Call: .... , ........
972-ttH·
18H E. 4th St .. S.A. T .....
Beautiful oUtce In
Newport Beach, aeeu
brlabt beclnur to /oln their account na
department. No
typtn1 neceuary .
Company h aa
eacellent benellta and
you can uae their very
own apa. Call: .... , .......
'1~ttH
lf1f E. Cth St., S.A.
Florist, exper, lull lime.
DeMurl Florist. 2438
Newport Bl. C M .
646.4479
2601 W. Ball Rd . We 1tarted our own dis-
Anaheim, Ca. MAllMl N•CM.ASS lrlbutonihip became It
(714) 761-4831 P•SOM offera ta. Income poten-
LO.I.,, ••••••• , M/F lmmed empk>yment for tlal on a part-Ume basl•
G
...... top ru1ht ,, .... penion. workln& at home with ~ RAL OFFICE Mutt have exper. Gd xlnt travel and tax ad·
Good typina 1kllls. work GUARDS pay . Apply In peraon vantaaea. If that ap·
vaned, elect.ronict firm. Full & part time. All 1840 Babcock St. CM. pealt to you. call 1.11 at: A~vanced Klnetlca. 1231 areas. Uniforma rum'd. dayttme,orcall831·2519 651·~2. 7·9wkdaya.
Victoria St. CM 848-71~ A&e• 21 or over retired
E.O.E. 'welcome. No exi>er. nee. MIDICAL COUl•I ,...._
ft.1 .... 1•&• Apply : Unlveraal Muat have own Fulltlmepoeflloo.Full
• " -OPACI Proltclloo Service. 1.2.211 t.ranafortatton " be company beneflta. Ex· tFYOU: W h St. f a1n .. I Like People . 5l . Santa Ana. amll ar with Calif. per or w/tr . nPP y
Know OffllA-Proc~ures Interview hrl: 9·124r 1·4, freeway IY9ltm. Mon· P!NNEYSAVER 1880 .. "' .,... Moo P'rt Frt 9 5pm 78M500 Placentia Ave. C.M Are money motivated · · • · · · ___ .....;.._;.;...:..;.;.... __ 1
Cal714/7Sl·'700 H AIRSTYLIST/ CUT· MIDICAL 'AYIOU.CLIU
Tl!:R Needed lmmed. 2·3 day• par week. Hn.
GIHIR.41. OPPICI Overflow of clJeotela. T•AMSClllH N . Appl)': 1880 Placen·
Experienced offtce Permanent poaltlon. WRork at home, to.P pey. UaAve .. C.M.
person to work in amall Full Ir Prr avall. Work aqul rea minimum
]>leaunl ....... omce ln with kid• Ir adult•. 6/yrt acuteFcl ... nx ........... , South La&Wll on Coast eu-eeeo. perieoce ln aU of Laauna kh mff,r Co .
Hw1. Good t)'Plsl, non· medic al di . Call nda aharp penon or our
tmoller, P/f to 1tart Im· H.08TES8: Part time, ex· '7ta·l500farln .. rvtew. front ofe lo operate
mediately. IUO/br. Call perience nece11ary. Ap. 1wttcbboanl, band&e Co. ~. ply lo pt'llOO. Le Blar-MU•••• mall • do a variety ot riu •la'"' 8 ,. ... ..,00 I mornmtt a WHk, pertODD•l de pt wrk. •IMllM.OflltCI ' ., •. ,_..,, · Mon: S:*M to IAM Bua1dtA,aotaofpeopt.
Leadlna local ptll con· HOITfttOIYlll T\lel, 0,ru S.t: l :JOAM contact. Typtn1 of
trot company nH~• l\lll •part Um• avail•· to tAM. S.C.ll. d rlvlnl SO.toWPM ,...., Clertcal
fulltlme &neral otnce blal. A?Ni lo panon rec:. '*I'd. ADPlr: Ptn· taper. d•lrtd.
paraonn·et. Entry.level •6PM . aoter 400 n}'Hve~L • Placentia poauton. 1'nln1 rt· .,, Ooa•l ..,, Laiuna _A_•_•_ ..... C_•______ Wa offer Xlot pey • be.n.
quired : ornce ... 9t1Ch +• "r1 .. ce Mlpful. Call t-'-.------MM•MTPOllTIOM 4 .,Wlftlwt&. Tlm,.u.aa. RoWl l'abl"lc: etaaln, c.ac., Com~ ..... 2ml rrom .... HT MIMJOll Anaheim. Xlat opp, ,.__ ff..,, • 1 f ••mAL."OflllCI Cap. NCR a., 11 mid· Gerl, Ne tOeO. ~ W'1 Im rom CARRY :::u o111ei.,... llrl 111tat to ta,a. Applr ,,..,,. _( r •li•Pw1·
.'1 POX' mi.C::.n.• tr~ 0.•W MeN911 •lire. ~ • • ..._. o1 ~ ... caDIDr•Plt. MiBNCY 1. . lduar 1911-llut· ,_, .... , Y•'U ft8d hlllllllc ..... 1
.. ,..; -_.,.•....w..,. u. -" ztl ~ r-bmct::" 1A19a, -__, ..._ .........-.. Put o•••I D•PL •Mia .~ ...... ~, 'M~ .. lt ''8~-~1'!.:,~..._ 8", .Lq9a !!!_!ale la ClaNtnM U4 ... t•S.O.&. '" , .. __ ..... a. -..... Ull. "'~...,.
. ' ". '
• Linens •China Dept.
• omen 's Sportswear •Children 's
•Cos etic Demonstrator •H ousewares
SALES
PART TIME
IDapl
•Men ·s Shoes
(commlulon)
SALES
PART TIME
(••1Rh9., 1111ea••I
•Men 's Sportswear
•China •Stationery
•Junior World
SALES
SUPPORT
•Stock ......, .. ,., .... ... ..., In.. ..,. 2-4,.
41, .. , .........
•
'In ·f.
. ........... 644-1212
.
. f. ·t : ....
' •••
I
J
.... .,
~ .
. "
I I~
.~ ··'
I t
I "
,.~ ·~ 1 •• l
... I
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.,,
Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT.Monday, May 11, 1981
• ewe,.., . .... ..... ..._.. "•••• t! ........ ,...._/P•u... E SMB ... .................. ........................ ........• ... ............................................................................ ;;;;;-.i ••• ,........... • ••••••••••• .-t•••• · · A/f. Ty~ R~L'°I fr C.rpent.rJ,AddtUoollt Yard clta1uap1. tree HARDWOOOFLOORS SUNSHINE llovin1? The Starvln& Olympic Palntlna-ONSEJlVE WAT•a S•Nll pa • top yt;" .. y 't.17 Small J*-1:5 yn u p. work, lrri1auon • re-Cleued Is Waxed HOUSEKEEPING Collese Student& Movln1 1 r A 11 t o m a t • Y" r ~ i"ao lc\!~l r. Llc.•lA M-1711 pair, 1,..beltlndacp'1 AAythnt,az.48118.A. GlveyoW'bometh•t•Pr· co. h•• arown. lnaured E:ut,,fafe.x ~ ~u~~ Sprlokler S11t• • ·~ 111 r7 ._Dall • m • CONSTR.•REMOD. 15l·Olll. H I t ln1 clunln& look all \•me _1ood aervlce. work, lowr'.atea.MHto:i 714/511-Utl "· ~ ,, fh •• ,... Pli All Around Carpenter. Plan1 Llc'cl Geor1e UPERTLAWNCARE ••••••• .. •••••••"''"' teaJ"ro4. ~~h quall~y ecT~ ue Llcenae . SPRJNKLEM•~· at'•~:~ Y ~J~,!17=· Free Pllme~•Soc.:m .. sa. Monthly M?Vlte. ~ K•ul,cleanup,concrete Fre!11::,rm:t.:0 :e· · 1~~~~~~.P~,:~t . Tree N11MtVal Die ·ft 30,~ayad . . "--.. It chanup1. Mllre removal.Dwnptruck. ference furnl1hed ABC MOVING, Exper Seaalde Palntlnl Orea Landac•Pt·•70'10a ,.,.., • u:itbe .... ,... 541.2049 Qulcluerv.&U-7631 • prof, low rates, quick · • • > · C....t5-¥1ce •••••••••••• .. •••••"•• llcen1ed • bonded. carefulaervlce.ss.2·0410 538·'806 ~ D.AILY .. ;.~;;................ Oryw.USpec:LtU.t TKELANDSCAPECO. DUMPJOBS ' 961·30.'M .......... rt 0"""•••M•••!•f'"•~ .
SPl..!!J.1 Shampoo 6 1team clean. Qual. as prod. New• re-Nothlnl Flnerln llalnt. SCma1.U1-... lllKovE'!'_.~~l~l HOUSICL.,...,. ... 4 "MOVIN·MAN" , .... .'.~.~......... TILE INSTAIJ;.t:D ',1, • .1. ~
n"' Color briahteoera1 wbt mod. ,...,.,132,5549 54t.2015anytJme m ..... __..,."9 la careful, cowteoua Is 1 te 1 pl t d 1 • All kinda •. 1uaranl"':(.'•1
DOlT Hall, Uv.-din. rma $1.S; DRYWALL·Our ex· Comm'l/8.elld. Fertllls· Haulinc&:DwnpJoba, H•nna_h.U0.0'761. · maintenance for home • ~ ~., DIUCT~ crpt1 10 mln. b1eacb. Ref. Xlnt work. Alt 6. cheap Pia call 842-1329 n r or an ea in ref a. John, lf\1111 . e .f'-. ·
,..A .. ._ ' . av1rmS'7.50;couch$10; ptrtlle. We can handle ln1,trlnunln1,plantln1. AtklorRandy. , .... ,,.... .... ,.., or office. Plant ltl ,........ • · \
"'-.._.. chr $6. Guar . ellm. pet your proble1n1. 631·2004 clean.up. 154$-5408 Ul"'27 Houaecleanin1-Call Jen· ....................... SS1·2894. ••••••o•••"''".M•• .. ._;' s!~~f!~c!o~ ·octor. Crpt repair. U yn a.ctric.. MOW ,... EOO"" ~ .. ,_ HAULING-stt.ldent has nRyet'a,trheallt.at-m. !,.1.t,!t09na! •STEVENSP~l~G Plothr/I.,.... SCummder lt~1ord nw..it ' :
R exp. Do worlr. myself. • ~iv,., ...... larae true ... Loweat uw ... ~· lnt/ext. Free 1tem1zed ••••••••••••••••••••••• re ent a e • ••Pr.· :or epreHntatlve Ref1.ss1..0101 """"""••••••••eve count , ~ price winter • e.t.Neat,qualitywork. lea rnin1 1peclalli\ '42·H71. eat J 11 ELECTRICIAN-priced rate•. tss-1328 rate, prompt. 759·1976 ..._...,... 832-Dll, 54HS61 Neat patches• texture1 teacher Will t~~ ~~~~~~~~~WeCare CarpetCleanen rtaht, free estimate on Thank you, John. ••••••••••n••••••••••• Fore.est. ltJ..14Jt child ln areaol ~ ·~
Accomt.. S\eam clean " uphols. ~rae ~all jot;.3-0359 Tr CA~F. G:RDEN HAULING-CLEANUPS Ro~~l~DSCI, :.:.i:.~ ..... Is W 4LLP.,.... ED'S PLASTERING au ~ m :ar. 9 ~·: t > ••••••••::?•••o••••••• Work 1uar. Truc k c.I eet m,c an-upa,ce· G rds . k .... Prof. lnatallect i.t roll AllT l t/E t 21 ·6 • o t
F /C BKKPG SERVJCES
All Taxe1-Colta Mesa
Call 648-1.51111845-9580
mountunit.~~16 RE ... ODEUNG mentwork.~ araaea. ya •Jun . ideaa.Llc.~l huna free. Answer Ad uLa?r.' FREEn ESTx 714 /SSl·SDtewa. .. dirt; 1hrub1 &: treea 11488, 842-4300, 24 hrs or ...... ......, · UPHOLlllDRAPF.S Electdcal work, reald. 6 Sprlnklen, haulina. trim· trim/remove. 8'.2·5274 RenovaUna·Rototillln1 1.639.1429 W..... ·,, •: , '
Cleaalnainyourhome. comm'l..&!1·2111M mina, cliean·upa, mow· Sprinklien·lawnt·clnupa PLA~TERING-Housea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'
TIP-TOP CARPET• Ina. 645-7287, S4S-8828 HAULING fr DaveMZ-~ Fine palnting by Richard addlllona, re-rolor, over lndua./Comm./R.tiPd. . Afpl•ce..,... FJ c 96().621&6 ........ /Tit GARAGECLEANUP BudM6-M&l Slnor. Lie, ina. 13 yrs of block walla. Free eat. AtlaaMobUelll •
••••••••••••••••••••••• oor are. ''r"'""·:_~::~ ....... GARDENING, cln·up1 , Free eat. 631·™ ...._ happy N.B. customers. Low rates.586-82 541-t&Ot · ·
Guar. Uaedrefria. No Steam/No Shampoo ormlca""""""'rtopa mowin1. edemg, raking, ,......_, Thr .. ou. 6314410 · • 'II Goodcood.Saleafr StainSpeclaU.t.Faat CU1tombullt&:l.natalled, 1weepln1 548·6530 C~Yow4d ....................... ua y . PLASTERPATCHING W ... wCll If ~ ""'" Servi~. 642·7754 dry Free·est 839-LS82 latest colora It deal1na. Chuck We clean out praaes. l BR JCK WORK : Small Colle1e Student, up'd , lnt/ut. 30 yn exp. · •••••••••••• .... , •• • · Al...._.. · · Freeeal . .....,1 tontruck.~.548-4769 Jobi. Newport, Coata int/ex,anyjobforleas! Neatworlt Paul~2977 "LetThe~ ... ,r
r--Ce ..... Acomlk ---. .... Nl~lut Meaa, Jrvlne, Refs. Alex8Sl·9~1.552·0231 -.-.....'-CallSWllbkleWt~~~""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.,._.. /......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-3175 ..--_., Cleanln1. Ltd.~ t·;, Driveways, parklna lot ·AcouallcCeillnga + ....................... SENIORCmZENS ~ P4Pll H..-1N6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --.,.=: ·
repairs , aealcoatlng. CU1tom handtextwin CR.PT-LINO.WOOD We provide transport•· •••••• .. ~•• .. •••••• .. •• BRICK ARTIST~Y ~ yra exp. Free est. PLUMBING-new con, · ~4 ~ f s•s Asphalt. 646-4871 Lie. 319964 S32-sJ9 lnatalledtrepaired. Lie. tlon Is do odd jobs. Call ROB!N SCLEANING Pool • 1pa cop1n11. Fast, neat, reliable . struction, remoctellng , rhea• little adl ,,a • · .~
Llc'd. 113892160 Grea499-2JllS2 KlmorJim 839-2544.. Serv1ce-athoroughly brick pavinp. block&: l8/rolllsup.64.S-6490 repairs, restaurant . work ! Jo i n 'It .: '
~ti._ ....................... Pwallw'e H•ltf•• Wall Paper Hanging lion. Top Hal Plumbing. ple In th»~ ;.,. C....t/c.cnte ' clean house. 540-~7 brick walls. 96().7421 electronic leak d~tec· thouaandl d. otbe~ ·
••••• .. •••••••··~··•••• Foundations, Retaining ... ~••••••••••••••""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want a R.,EALL y CLEAN lllCIC & STOHi All work guaranteed 636-2030 re I u la r \iW er ' 0 · ; ~
Alan'a Luxury Motor Car Walla Hlllalde Restora-Reftnlah, cane, veneer, HOME IMP.ROVEMENT ~?f~E . Call Glnabam Tile, Marble • Frplcs Terri.~62168 Clauified, caJl '] •' Care. Wax.ln1. polill1Uni. lion • Slabs Patios sandblu t. From patio to RemodeUna--Odd jobs r . ree est. 645-5123 673-6650 (213)634·0140 Holleman Plumbing take rat 14U1'78. \ s ,
int. Home/ore. 536-4~1 Block" Brick'. Llc'd. ' piano to cabinets. A 28 yn exper . 979-2265 Expertise Housekeepina DOC 'S PAINTING has Salea·Service-Repaln · . < ,,1. '.' •
.......... ....__ S4.2·8387evea~0539 TouchofMa1k,831·0517 Custom Maaonry Is Con· returned! Doeks. boat Freeestlmat.ea S52·7183 ·. ~ -, .... .., Carpentry · Maaonry Supplies furnished crete lOO's Local Ref's. I h ~ f • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roofina ·Plumbina Penonallzed. 641-4970 s ips , int /ext se . Goind Into-.·· ,·.• CONCRE7E fl.BRICK hr••... Lie /ln11 /Bond 645-8512 pr 0 m pt , re 1 lab I e Reflftl1hlftg ·~
1
ct!!!::. fc/~.r;/t '3:y1l,oe~1:n~ Drl vew ay1. patios, ....................... Drywall-Stucco . Tile NEED YOUR HOME Jim, 840-1705 Rod. ser vice. Dave 645-0389, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bualneae'f f
Inga Call631·78. walkways. 855-0930, CLEAN-UPS/LAWN 6 more. J .B.646-9990 CLEANED? MASONRY aiTILE , 839·5851 J.D. Hom Reflniahlng · •. 1··' .. _. ~·
982·0986 Malntenance-Lndacp Roofing , plumbln", '.. Evelyn,642-U128aft.5 0 ialt W 1 Antiques, kit. cabinets. Widen ,_ __ 1--... Free eat. 642-9907 • ur 1pec Y e so ve DAVE'S PAINTING Fine painting. MS-0664 ' '
-·-"' •-carpentry, painllqg, GeneralHousedeanina yourproblema.631·2004 Serv. satisfied cust. 9 n••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .. •••• .. •••••••••••• Gardenln1. landlcapina. rtoora, repair/remodel. Reliable-References yrs. Qual.-lntegr ity. Roofllt9 ~. & D. 1•d1n tree trimmin1 Is re· Free eat. 96S-2056 aft. S. Own trans. 962-0510 Brick· Block-Stone Reas. in.s, lic. 7~7301 ...................... .
Designers. Custo.m LAMBTTU moval, ~r clean·up, RE AS 0 NAB LE ,I, Veryreaa Lie.bonded QUALITY ROOFING homes. 37 yra exp Fm. Kit h b th f,_., est 7"'"···-Bob 548-27531536-9906 INT/EXT PAINTING All ( t avail. Charles (710 c ena, • rooms, ....... · -~ PROMPT. FREE EST. 1'1'he Doer", H""•••clean· · types, reees · entrlea. Lic'd. 978-0320 v...... M1...l lh• Lo rates. Prompt, neat. Visa. MC. 541·5930 898 .. 3141Al(714>963-8433 Prof. Japanese Gardener ALM 0 ST EVERY lni done. Call evea only • Free est. 848-5684 HARBOR ROOFING
La · · REPAIR NEEDED ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------Ce,,..ter CNtuactor m;;,~=~i~~-CHET.645-4757 . afler5pm.~7599· Minl-bllnda&iwoods,w1n· AGAPEFORCE S.wM9/Alarwffotll
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHIP TO SHORE dow tinting, verticles PAINTING COMPANY •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ma & le r Cr a fls m • n Construction-All types GARDEN MAI.NT. Make your s ho pping Boat 6 House Cleaning Phone est. ~36 3 Generations of Alterations & Dressmak·
spec1alizln1 ln finishing 20 yra exp. Free eat. Yd Clean-up. Tree trim· easier by using the Daily Reliable-Exp.· Bonded Paintlng Excellence. in g • exp · d . re as ' -~j
&: remocteling. 499·3105 Lie. •~. 645-5973 min a. ~09. 4-lpm. Pilot Claasilled Ads. Est. 646-~. 54.5-9789 Sell idle Items 642-5678 85-5851 540.3593, 646-3393 "'-----~~~~' * ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;' .. i-' ~~.!!~oeoee?!~ .•••• !~ ..... ?!.~ ~!.~~ ..... !!.~ ~t!!~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~! ~!~ ..... ?!~ ~~~~•••••••~!.'.~ ~.~!~•••••••~!.~! ~::~eeee It: I ..
S4USP/T SecretaryReceptlonlat ST4T10MBY Telephone TTPIST HARBORAREA Young Fem'I German PLAT. 3 di '
w.e need 3 1harp people For testing Lab, front Store in CdM needs L4 y OH THE IEACH Word procesalna exp. APPLIANCESE~VlCE Shep, nda children. Call dine rina :-.. .
with fashion backg~und * * ofc. Typina ar pleasant salesperson F /time, 5 ALL DA y desired. Must be.fast & We buy used appliances 846-8258. $1250 appralaal sacrin8
to wor~ in our mens & penonallty a must. Gd daya. Xlnt worltlna con-5 Immediate openings. accurate. Sax1n 950 ··w~sellrecond,guar. Freekittena ~759-1643 , ' .
women. s dept. Salary+ SECRET ARY on phone, fillni "acctg da. Especially fine clien· Short application .. Work Verltext exp. a +.Nice appliances. 549-3a77 weaned&:tralned !!I i
comm11sion. call for ·exper deaJrable. Call tele Phone 644·7482 for 5-tpm Mon-Fri talking office., congenial ~o-I IUY ,.._'"'~Es · MecMuMfy · ('~ appt. Le gal Dept 891 0206 P ;t · t )ephon. Dee worket1. Salary negotia· "'l'T~ 846-3107 ••••••••• .... ,.,..... . • 1
THIL()OI( · . a P · ~~f~se prefe:~rel ble. Position avail. June Lea 957-8133 ,_.....,.. IOSO 220 volt air compn· ,'" · '.
644-6500 Jf you are a self·starter SICllT41Y STOClll~ $3.35 /br euaranteed: 2 1r1ea::s_~fMaril~n Chest freezer, Seara, •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• 3HP motor, !O ~
with 2-3 yean leaal ex· Irvine advertialna a1en· tl•ltB More money eullL • ey, orapp · older model works * * I BUY * * •loraee tana. "-· · .... Sales Studenta 16 & up ood = ... ·11.s •· • l Co b • IM7·S583d-S.3 -.;, · • • perlence, you are the cy, g ty e -1 • Colleae lfada. Oppty. iii poNlb e. me Y 3 Typht &ood, $50. 979-00'3 Good u1ed Furniture a, 1 • t • .,
need s ummer Jobi or person we are looJtlng pleasant e voice. Newport Buch area for Ent. 1180 N. Cout Hwy, F. v. firm Deeds report . Appllancea--OR 1 wlll aell MflctlH I-I ,
P /time year round for. Salary commenaurate bard workln1 en· N. Laa Sch. Wkday1 at typllt; will train on WP. Wash~~ Is Dryer , iood orSELLforYou •••••••"••"•"o•••A ..
wortr;--Oatt Mr. Jones. w t ex-p ~ Ca ll Elva thusluUclndiv.Si!ndre-3p:Oed· First come, first Typing 50, dictaphone; rond1llon,l85e.ach. MAST•SAUCTIOM GA ME SHOW PRiZi, '1
541·4118 Excellent opportunity S57·0642 sume to: P.O. Box 430, bl1 · noa/b Call Mary. 631-9119 , .. , .. L., IJ•t•JI s IL VE a G ('f' = '·
Sales for dependable in· Marlton, New Jersey, 1 .. ~E 9D'560 1020 "" -• .,. CERTIFICATE ·~ ~ dlvidual lo work for two SIC"Y-IXIC. 08053 ~ lkycln I IUY .. --.-ir .. 000. WW adI ·at . THE IUCIC attorneys and one leeal Adm in. Allt. Excellent SOUCITOIS ....................... ,._,..,.' -~ _...-.. ·
aulatant and d i rect typinc Is SH akilla re· Student Jobe Immed. openinp now &: TYPIST AKC re1. Lab pupa. good Les 957-1133 546·9215 or.,,.,._,.'\.~ STAITSJ!~E clerical responsibilities quired. Salary com-$1000 /MO TO Cor1ummer.Worlt3-t, Part time, afternoons linea,$200. ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD llDWobo~R··~.
ThCi e Loll . Anl_ •-1oomts Tinyourp eleg6al5 ~7epao rtWmPe~ menaurate with ex· 514.IT Mon-Fri. Noaellln.a. Call for recelltionist Is li&bt 55-9803 or furniture forsa•-·. LR. Xlnt dee..-•. • rcu atioo..,.,pt... •· · .. f:jrience. Contact Erie SUMMERORCAREER 9f6-0U1aflerlpm. typlna. fnteratlna posi· 10 ir ""' lOK ' on-..ba ingforwellgroomed.en· aupervi.sory experience ill C Si -tlon.Call714f152-0234 lalldla9t~rWI 2. bdrm DR fl patio. · ~· thualaaticpeopletoeam helpiful. or Y mpson, Due to expansion· TIAIMll ....................... Everythlnl near-new. 648-lllSSanyprde .41 '~.· 11. t $40.ISO d i SSB-2803 company needs many UPHOl.STBB r .;. up o per a' or · aecretarial, ·marketing Show Hone 1table, live-IEDWOOD 2X6"S Must aell lmmed. Offen. Phone-Mate 'l'elf~,. · 1 • few houn wor H FHPoffenanattracUve Sec'yJlmcatln 111 warehowe positions. in. (714)244-2218. Top qualltd Y IU>holstereb r Xlnt decking. 8-20' Iona. Dellvery.~9010 Aoiwerint Ma"~
part ·tlme sales salary based on ex-to lritain lllrunweU Willbefllledlm edite-wante . Must e lOK' on band 55•/rt ~"\: representatives. Hours -rience and excellent ma m a Tree trimmer, exper. ln familiar with converti· aa ...... c: anytime. · 8 ' couch, aood cond. with warranty ·' ~-'
f d ..-eatabllahed manufac-l,y. Muat be 18 fr have ble tops, •-·tallation •· ....,..,,_,., Warm colon. blk walnut remote $149. '» . f. TP ~ are rom 4pm·9pm, an company benefits. turers rep agency. Exp. tranaportaUon •. be well all phases or tree work. u"" "' . ,
trainlni wlll be pro· . . . dktai>hone•ahorthand. iroomed. • Top pay&: benefits. Pia fittings.558-8207. Cats 1035 back • aides. $300. Kirby Vacuum .. !$:· 'ir· "" :1~T!·e;~ie:~~~==e~~ For tnterv1ew appotnt· Full {lme. Office in your Call lOem-3pm call 7141768-4751 bet W AHHOUSIMIH ~·;~;;;;:~··;:·r:··~·;;; 675-6051 with ALL attac · · ti.
tativewlllbebuedona men t please ca ll :,bome.CdM,NB or CM. 1714»147..0011 9·3PM needed. Dullea r ange Blac•k Persian 9 moa. 7 It. navy blue couch. Wlllaac.forSZ50. \o
guaranteed hourly waae m4>9e2·4431 ~~la~!J.1 J>i!~~ i.f..6 Switchboard Operator. TYPESmEI from pacldn1. lnventory au per cute $150. 644-5168 Ver y comft. Xlnt cond. a PP re elate· 9,0. • ·~ ~~i~s~ac.r.ro:;0;::; r::l-IP %Dally Pilot, PO Box approx. 30/hra week. Compugraphlc equip. s:!'U\,~i:~~w~~~: Do4JI . 1040 $175. 551-S007eves. evea. t _!!4
more information about 1560• Costa Mesa, Ca. Nltea Is wkend1. Wlll Positions open in Dana tlal for advancement.••••••••••••••••• .. •••• Beaut. India Cotton WOODW<JY~ENB~ljf
tbia areal opportunity. 92626 train. 642-3013. Point • Costa Meaa. Salary negot. w /ex per. SHIH TIU . 41C Sofa /Loveseat. $500. Xlnt cond, be"4. · (714)957-2361,ext.1204. ,AMILYHEALTHP"OGMM Good pay,97s.zu. Call forappt.536-4664 Coffee Table set nso. U1edJ1 mo'. Us1t Gro~~1~~·near Tl4C... TYPIST i~~~~~~M~~7m:~: Den Sofa $100. Sacrifice SlOO OBO · ,
9930Talbert Ave. o.c. Airport hu opening ::~ic~pc:~~ '.f.: r8~~~ Word proceaslna exp. W 411HOUSI HB.P old/uppy for aale. Rare pricea. 8'7·9295. day• before I: : ~
SICllT41Y /UCP
Personable, mature,
hichly competent sec'y.
recep't for formal
Newport Center Office;
Extenalve 1 to 1 rela-
Uonahip with principal.
Need for Individual
jud1ement &: declaion
makln1. Shorthand Is
medical front office ta·
pertence helpful but not
e11entlal; 8-SPM. 200
Newport Center Dr.
Suite UCM N.B. Salary commenaurate wltb eit·
perlence. For Interview
call 6'0-5353
SICllT41Y
Good office 1kllla. Start
imme diately. Salary
commenaurate with
ability. Newport Beach.
Call 151·150Zfor app't.
Fountain Valley, for receptlonl1t/typl1t 9A-ll35or96().132'7 de.sired. Must be faat & Wholeaale/import com· 10L and wbite .. all in· Capt.ain's armoire, aoUd 1.979 waaber •'aia i~:. CA927111 with pleaaant phone accurate. Sabin 950 pany n• warehouse ternatlonal champion aaa dryer in while, ~A · Equal Oppty Empt M/F p e r 1 0 n a l 1 t y . Teacher Veritut up. a +. Nice help. No uierlence bloodline.. $300 firm. wood, waln'Ut flni1b. • ~ .
Reaponalbllltiea Incl. pairscHOOL offices. conaenlal co· nece~ury · le~sant Call 760-1973 ~/OBO. 645-8017 Whlrlp~..!.1!!!'· ' .. '
Secretary
We-4
Sec11talw•w
fw,...Offla •Secretary• toSl.200
Stat typilt needed with
2·3 yrsaec:tyexper.
Dictaphone Ill/or SH
•Secmary•
2·3 yn secret.aria l
exper, lltetypln1.
•Exec Secretary•
IDOES t-e yn aecretarial
ex per. typln180 +
SH 85 + d1ctapbooe.
*Exec Secty• $DOE$
Word procetainl or
da'8 proceuin1 a +
Sharp typAne •SH
1kllla. U yn exper.
CallJLldy~
Coaatal Perlomel Aay ., 2190 Ha.rt>or Blvd. eo.t.a 11 .. CAna&
Never a fee EOE II IF
Sttr.tW7 TO#lllC,.
llCllfdY
lljr. alKtronlct co. la
Meltlat a career peNOD
who Uhl a tiUIJ detk,
h11 akll11 of ty plnf
,.wpm • 1hrOd. towpm. We an ID Med
of U o,.._bad, Hlf•
IUU1et fto9*P dttaU
• dlnniftatiao. Moo· ••• ,. Loell:t• ~ ....
to ... r~•r ,.n.nat
.... 1-Mll1toa Viejo . ,....
SIOtll. bt8tt&ll ,..__,.,....,,....,
......... Ouit; ......
•••kl•• ,.,., •••• , _ .. ,.. .. Wd....,. ... ,_ .... °' ~~•UeaU• to: Mn. ltrlt, 11111 V i a
hbrtta~Llel&i -............ -
• .. Sala . work1n1 conditions. l19Sea.~, ... typille ordera, quota· T e a c h e r • • n d woraers. ry ne1oti•· Golden'• Magic Wand, KEESHOND Pu ..... AKC. MIYa USB> . ~ Uona. lnvolcea, " cor· Subatitutel needed atart-ble. Position avall. June 946 w 7th St c M A .... Gta11 top dinette, l300, John Wayne Tennll C1.l. : v reapondence. Xlnt ln& now thro summer. 1. Pleaae call Marilyn .1 • .. PP-Champ aire. M/F. Pet& Herculon aofa /loveaeat family mfmtierftlt& ...
benefits. sood •tartln& Al.lo In fall. 968-8833 Ceiley . 955-2000 for ly 9am-llam. I h 0 w . pvt pt y . t3ll. clun bdrm $540, beat offer. FM )lµo:1eeu
salary. Pleasant air· app't. W411HOUSI 213/697·1345afl6pm. mattre11ea/box1prtn11: Kathleen,MZ-WO .. " .;.
conditioned office. Xlnt T E A C H E R . P R E E•m 950/da)'. Call aft Poodl AKC · · t twin S'75. full 1115, qn $125, ~ !f • •.
oppty for aharp In· SCHOOL. Allo AIDES. UAM 540-7652 whit:J~uver. M~.'c::.; bunk.a , morel! 770.0801 8 piece rane Chlna·~sn. : d1vidual. 979·8912 for Full time, liberal xlnt c~-; code ••"': pt only. 979-5228 El t din _. 6 ff ......11.:....a. "'' ' •P · beneflll, ralaes. Call eaan . rm'""'· o · phone , no RDJuw,
Service Station atten-Mellaaa 847'53M. Hunt. wht uphol. chain, 11e record• calla ~LI~ ,
dent, 1 /lime, exper pre-Bcb. area. walnut table, 2 Iva, like kln1alie bedl:.T .~~
fd. Cbevrori Station. 3000 Telephone new. ss.2..as.30 pl llow abr~ ••.•: ~ ·1
F · · ,.._ M kitchen table-: ..a)f 11 , 1 • a1rv1ew, ..... ta esa. PHOMIPllSOH Beaut. nauiahyde ~ n S20; s'mall drnn lei la·. • p / T h hide a bed aofa. $150, II' ~--. SH E ET MET AL S one rraon dark iold leathette type ble US. Call otn
TRAINEE neede to cal • aet flnlah divan, pert, hard· 541-7140. ..., , '\ , ,,;
M u1 l know math, app'ta tor buay Solar Doa ly used $175,dan brown -'J '' t :.
Permanent poaltlon. boEnern .. ~; "A·50
1 • /hr + pt overstuffed liv rm chr, a t 1-I Salary commenaurat• nuaL. 1';.:.:~. Equal Opp Emplyr M /F W-=ti ll1 ~'"" beauty SJ.00, Bllaell elec
wtUl ex~ce. Pleue .-aaY SYSTIMS White ~ 1· apply · I.Im Placentia. SELL ldle ltema wttb a 1lle s ; never
C. M. 545•6193 754·0535 Dally Pilot Cla111fled SIOO or b..t er.
WantAdHelp? "2·5178 Ad. 541-Mllaft S....MltlllMectL
ClUI B. Ooown Ht-up Is
aome l•'°'*· So. Santa Ana area. $5.10·
•.50 /bour .... Cll5Cl5.
SU sc•eo l:leetroalca Co. In
Laaua• Ida Mtdl an ••per. 8'a knenar to
operate Tllick fll•
ICntD prtll .. r to do a variety of 1ereea la1
Oj>trall••• OD SUBSTaATgS. 1tt·
q.airet allmtJ ~ nad
1lmple blue Jflat1, kaowa.d .. of c.au .... IUuome\tn, etc. 6
bUlcmatlL
We ,,,,_XIII ,_,a ....
+• . .., ...... =_, II lllUll '""" • ., • 1111 ,._ •••r.J.
Work ef ter 1ct'lool end on
Saturday getti ng new
au1tomerl ror the area'• lalld4ng MWSP91*· !Mg I '9UI
prlue, tripe and bOnU991. ' c••CI• •4Mlll ... lll ... °"°""""' l""*"'
1~~~19'
......
(.) w
~ 0 a: a.
Cl) c:
~
C'? N co .... I ~ tO O>
en ca
I./) • u; ~Q o () a.: (.) ... . o ~ LL ...J
.· -,-
Orange Coast OAIL y PILOT /Monday. Ma A.tos W..t.d 9590 Wot, Imported Avto1, lmporled .\utos, lmportf'd A.wtot, UHd ..................................................................... ·•·•····••··•·····•···· •••·•·············•••·•
utlcol
lnltl'UIMfth 8013 •••••••••••••••••••••••
24' Sffray F /I
rw1n 165 Mt•IC.' I O.
t•lt•rlororllr Cull t:OVl'f
USt'O l'Qlllp K.18 U:WO.
730 2027
'ONN Oirectortrombone loah, SoO 9060
'711 tJ5 SllVl'J# (j tU)'
lo11dNt, lo~ n11tu, '6QC)O
818 S3!13
=~--Truck• •••••••••••••••••••••••
WANTED!
9720 Pe...-ot '748 Volvo 9772 Chevn>let ttJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
198 I PEUGEOT
TURBCh
BEACH IMPORTS
H-UI l>u\-1· St'""' "~;W l'Olrt 111-.Al '11
752-0900
Pone~ 9750
#I VOL VO DIALER
I'\ I If{ ''I,( ... l.'0111\wTY I
SALES. SERVICE
AND LEASING
II\ I HS L,\S l> 1-~l.l \ ~,It\
1-.XPl.ttTS
!ARUlkf
VOLVO
J!lt.h llJilte•I Uh ti
l OS'I /\ M Joh~A
646-9303 540-9467
'34 fmpala,48.500mi
Original owner $JOOO.
"2·7100
~1 u1o1 ),('ti i4 Chev Monte
Carlo 78K mi, depends
IJlt• $1700 64 2·2456 ,
'157 1655
'Murden Aunt" '61 Chev
4dr, xlnt malnl . 113K mi.
luoki. & runs great $1000
h73 0231
with ca1ie Exr1•1l('nt •••••••••••••••••••••••
ronditlon. $JOO. 675-8~2 '73 21' Schock, 11lco1)11 4
:irter GPM Berth Avail A<'<'l'l>
Call 544 32711
Special
Purchase!!
low Mileacpl
19 8 0 4 tpd. Gtd 5 1pd.
l.wte mo<M Toyotati und
Volvo&, t'11IJ u:.
T UAY !!!
• '72 240i°:, llt'W pOlllll & Ull
hol. 011th terJy, 71,000
n11 1u11v kit, :if\•1•rrn~
kit, t·u11t1111111k11'f1, s1~.oo
PI'. Ch 1't!llo11hl" 1 U1•11
noll. 557 Z711~
••••...•..•••..•.......
'75 Ponche 9 14
... 1n 11:.• 1>1
7i Vol\•• <.nclll 11111cl
~00 (',111111H lJ'' ltl,1\!'-
'1'!10 171111·\1-
ontlnental 9930 .................•••...
t 'ont 2 dr '80 MKVl , ap
p101< IJM mi, dlx stereo,
am fm cuss, leather
l-ru1se spht seats . loaded
$15,900 964-7284.
Wurllttcr eh.•<' piano.
$450 or best ofrcr.
MH 118711 aft. 5
Office Fumfhn &
Equipment 8085 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Smith t'o ronu
typewriter, Model 300
(iootl t•ond1t1on $150.
Call Oalcbout Bay &
Real·h Ask for Jani:t
Smith 631 7300
Ofl 1t·e Svarklettes com
ho, hot & cold, w side
G 1-: rerrig, perrcrt,
$100 01!2 7~ 6789
SW AN 431 S&S llettl(ln,
mamtamed & cqulµped
to the highest i.hmtl11rd11.
complete B&.G na" 111
slr Deal du cl'l & 11J v~·
Call An11wi.'r Ad # ltiU
642-4000, 2-1 hr..
14' AM FSUNFISll
~
~4647
CH EOVLF.1-; om..horc :11·
Dsl cruise ktt·h $11,VOO
Nwpt moor 11\utl
675 !I047
Cal 2 25, IJkl' nt·~ Dw,el.
Ell:'l IUM model C many xtr;as Mu:;t tll'll
Dat1un Pick Up'•
Tremendous Sa~gs!!!
MobclOwn
and monthly payment.
BARWICK DATSUN
Sa n J11a" C api•lrm>o
831-3311
•CHl!V. HU '81
I TOH STAKE
-
,., .. trtirMr "•"
C••t•MeH
,..., •O ·tlOJ w HO 907
Top Dollar
Paid
1-'or Your Cat '
JOHNSON & SON
Llnco•Mercury
2ti2b 11.irbor lihlf
t o~t.1 Ml'~a ~Ill . .f\:111
Auto•, Imported
'73 W1tn6IO,lowm1.11ulo •70 'l'nii:a !JlJV.
icreut corMJ, 0\.'W point I'll•'. H1·"l llffc•1·
11600 646-11'5.'i 41M-ldl!f~
I 'lo· Jfl
'74 Datsun W 1,.:1111 ~n'.1t '"17 'II IS, wltt • "11 11" 1
rar' Grt>ut M 1•<;' \Hoo w1111Ju-... 1>, 1 11111>t• 11 1 I
M4C}.illl.~:1 Al\1 r\1 1.1.~ $Iii'< ...
11:12 '>'17 I 11111 11,11> IMfl
"I'> Vol\ 11 wr; °"
1·1111cl ,11•11~1. ~t ltMI
~1114
'11111
\ I )J \ II 7 I 11.> WI 11 ,, <'.
1 u I • 1 r .11 i.. 1111 I 111
'I• t f• IJ
I '~ "tlf1
Rolt1 Roy« 9 7 56 .\lltos UM'd ····••·••••··········•• . '73 :MOZ SV700 Ill.Ill\ ....
Rot .........••.•••.•......
1977FiATXl /9
I 11111·pd tr an>. \\I I• \1
"'h'l 1'11 l"I ·~I'll(• (I, Ill I '
11•1l1·11l rn11clrl11111 • 11:ilil 1
11 1 DEALER IN US.A ••••••• ········• ••••••• General 990 I ....••.•••.............
J I Jo I' 1' \ II~
I'll Id I''>
fp,111 "11 \\Ull 1lih• ,11
1 .. 1,tl f,o\ ( \U<llltll'
1111 1111111\11\ 1.dl
9932 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1978 CORVETTE
'I Top polais 1s1lver red
11-'Jlhcr, only 16,000
mrll'~ & has all the op
l1<111•.' (20010)
MUST SEE!
Soddlebodr IMW
M rssron Viejo
831-2040 495-4949 <' lol>l"'<l Sundays
I} pcwnWr $175 M J k e o f f l' I
l:l ll 1111111l-1~1th ltflJ:lllt',
duJb .111 rn11d It I>
'1'1111.,:~ jl~ I "''"'I Ill.I(
,tU\ IJ14I( ~ 11111i1·'
W111kh11h• •·11111ph•tl•'
l!l'lfll I ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIU TR.ADE! ( IOSEO \IJM)~f~ IJI 11111 :, 1),11,1 (', 11l1•1
11 '.illlol IC.I I * 645 5781 (714 )962 lr6J9 OHL Y S 12,498
HOW ARO C~vro~t
llo\I• Qu.111 !'>Is
'Jt-;WPOHl'BF\CJI
Alfa RCHMO 9705 Saddfebock IMW Soob 9 760 I I Pianos & Organs 8090 23· Albut;is ... b~ 0~1w1
••••••••••••••••••••••• $750 S1rfr lll' a'\•Jtl
Wl1Rl.JTZ1':R. sprnette 551 6130l.•n•:.
833-0555 Boats, Slips/
Docks 9070 '71 l>;cl~un 11 1".1111p1•r, 1111
• • • • • • • • •••• ••• • • • • • • • • lll <"-. II. n Uh 111':,.I 11H111
Sidi' Tic!> lot 11•111 ,\ft :i. 7~1;,> :J<llll
•••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
t981ALFA
SPIDERS
'vt ll.~1(111 \ 11· 10
831-2040 495.4949
c 'lmll'cl '\unclJ \ ~
'1k Splll<'r I~ (0(Hl\1°11
Ht'cl 1blk lop ""I' 12,INltl
mt 1\m 1"111 ... 1 .. 11·0 < ;,i..,,
xlnl c·11111I $.'>111111 t)llt 1
M!IJ 1!211i I·:\•''>
• ••••. •• •••••••••••••., Buie le 99 I 0
LEASE 1 ········:~~~:1:1~~········
( ,tll ,cll.l 1 I DIRECT! !11;·•.m .
1981 SAAB
TURBOs
NEW 1981
CORVETTES
THREE
mo1lc.>I 4410, two "4·nOlt'
kt•yl>ourd~. 13 (lcdul
1111lcs, auto lonl• rontnil.
earphone JllC'k. ~ohd ma
pl<• w nrnlchml( bl'nl'h
$100 r.i:.h or $450 tit'
h\'i'fl'd 51tj 1845 $8 $1llil't 11111'1 I'
1>16441!1 G.> ( 0 hl•\ pJ1ll'l l 111c·k 3'.!/ I
i-pd. ,1111 fm .'>tc•tt·ci. 1111
1111•.,, nu rlul1 h .. ill 1;;,11/l
111111• % I :.M7 I \\I I..
BEACH IMPORTS Honda 9727 BEACH IMPORTS
,·· 111111 I; l•'.l1·it1.1 l.ttl
\1111 t otlld \II 111\Lll \
• 1-c 111•t 11111~ "I'" 11,11111
111·-... '11°1'1 h1•l1 Ill•'"
I I 1){)11 1111 I "" r11• 1
14 SPEEDS
TO CHOOSE FtlOM
C ORMIER-DellLLO
CHEVROlET CO.
1714) 847-6087 111\MMONI) OHGAN 11000 Wantl•d 'lip (111 :IO
Senci. Lei.lie An11na 1-:nrk:.nn :,,ailbo.11, lmt•
Lmn S21t!J5. 5X 4912 I) mm.I 5!J2 OOt>t
11 t• t ~ > Ho.,:,, 1 L cs I I' r
,11111t•t 1 Ill! kt•\ s Gd rnnrl Transportation
:!i>IOO b~t ofr fi.12 li2!1!1 ° •• •• • • • ••S• ••• • 0 • • • • • • • Com~n. *I \I u:.I ,Jr11l 1tl' prdno Rent · 9120
1i.1H>HJ1
.. l(l(j
848 Uove St red
'I EW PORT II E.\c 'II
752·0900
Audi 9707 .......................
'72 Audi IOU. 1'1HI ~1111"1
KU IHlt11 : t: 1> .. 11 l'l ' 11r best oHc•r
,11)111 I'... I • ..1. 11•11 I r;;3 l1J:!
H•2:! \\ J h•f't \utola S300 1 ·· • • • • • ••• •• •••• •• • • •• •
!1511111'1! 10•, l'amill.>r I uur ...,1•11 l'litl Audi 51100 ,.11\ t'I
. wllh rd11~l'r .1to1 ,111<1 ;i1 c 'h1•\, ·.I , u~l dh llll'tl lht Lo m1 Full IU1(
~ltJI I' ...;,~>1-lf 4(1 hi l!J
················•······ VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
HONDA
HEADQUARTERS
TODAY!!!
UNIVERSITY
'i \I I :s & 'i I II\ I<' fo
>II~ lht\l'Mll't'I
'\I w l1lll<T IH \C 11 Cadillac 9915
7 52·0900 1· ..................... .
Toyoto 9765 CONTEMPLATING
• • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • • •• • • • C ADILL.A.C?
'77 CELICA GT
I 111 hao I.. _.,, 10 11111
1"111111, ;:>!,(;";) I JO 11.i It
\\I Jll \ IJll/t lfl ""'"'''' 1.. I ho hus111c ~.., t'
I' Ill \I 1\ jll llf<">' 1111,tl
* Ford 9940 .....•....•....•••.•.••
7J HJnt•ht'ro
SlliO<l 11r bt.>st off Pr
C'all 'i4M :.>'JHafl 51'~1
·;~, c; rdn loran1>. P S. SewwuJMctehine1 8092 ~to'e Jntl llUl'lJ 111111~. 10 1· :-. I'll.\ 1•. :.!1 \I un. p~r JldlkJi:• :.!
•••••••••••••-••••••w• all but<1nt'. <1U1'l'll "'"' 1111, 'lr1t n1111I "ilc.10 olr I "ii> . t' I" 1• I :.. Un I I I
l'tll'STSELI. twcJ :;lrl'll:.. 6 It" 111'11 I.II l.l!t .• 1•11 ... ci A\I f.\1 o;teru ra:>st•tt1• I
OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
GMCTRUCKS
~~. l"o Ice •' C'I !i ..,,,.1, ho
1 •111d \I U'I 'l'l' 1~11(
<Hiii )(\l.!i'l2 l -.1111.,,c
l11•r 11 \ \l ,111 11'\I
Lorge S.lection
Of New 198 1
Cadillocs
How In Stock! I' H '>tt:"n·o trlr hatch
~I 1(MI .;;,(, Ml>58
J "l'\\ rni: lllJthtm·s .ind t.1111 out for 'll'<'lllnl-' .11111 $7900 G~S 1801
Ill l'll'l"l'S or ITlllll'rtJI Mid l'lHlklnl! \1~ pr 11 t' ~l-,1>11 li~I I· I I \ \IJ '\0 l m.tn) ullwr tu1l11rrni: .it. 631 7657 \ 1•1) '>hJI 1,, l~·:tt ulh.•r i I Audi 1001..S. auto. :.un
,.l',..,011e .. 55ilU!l3 1.,, 1.,11 roor .11r . nc~ l'llle
• H F llil'r l!b 'h1 II tor $U15-0 ORO 4~ <t8lb 1sport1n9 Goods 8094 Chl'\\ Ill c; \)(' t1111·k 'j'l 1>.11 I' t' \\I F\l a~~w
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Int rond '):iOO 11 .. 1 1 ,,,, '111 I 111.11.1· 11111'1· "" 9712
"1111 h~ "'lt•m l'ru l.1m• 'Iii:' 'lli~oC !lo ,ti ICll 1°'
1
1;1111 1·1ub ... \l1'11·~ ~H28:1
I'.' I I \H111ct~ hko· 111·~ Motorcycles/ Vans 9570
''''"' .! thn1 "•'tl~t Pul Scoof~n 9150 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lt I ~lOO ti4G Ol~tl ... , •. , ••••••••••••••••••••••• n1\Ult l ~.1h1 7:!: Ford
llU "u\ooo.1.,.&l..1 1:•11 I 11> l 0 lhln111 \',1n <'\llit!'l
\111111ut'liu11C".11>1111'1 bOOO mt I ikt• ,11•1,
1
\'.!.-.110 ~l)l'.!J.l;!,1.11;,,2•10 ).>t~1 <Hio I 4•1t1 ~i. J \11;,
1.i1, 117.!.lt•\e.lo Autos Wonted 9590
I Motor HOlnl"S, Sole I , • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • • Swaps 8096 R.nt/Stora<Jt 1160 \\fo;P,\\1"Ul'IJOLl.All
• • • • • •• • • •• • • •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • f ., r t ,, p u' t ti t ... r , •
" .. urt ul ::iur Rub•~~ WE CA..._. SElL forl·rgn donw,tu·s 111 I .. , ln<L.a. ..-.n.i lrad~ I ,... l'!.1L •1·· rr 111111 i II • ~.intqi.c'>40~ YOURR.Y. t"!lr.1 111•.111 . 'C'' us
TV, lodio.. 5$ JJCM f !HST I
H1Fi. Steno 80'8 1 RE~T n · lux mlr B
•' • • • • • • • •• •• •• •• •• • •• • home SIP'> t. sPll 111nl M~
:y 1t'ull1,lurT\ 2}r S2!JS ~k 11 1111 k ,.,. .. rn1, ~rel' delt1 er~ I 640 8511:,
SI I~ 1w; liWi
1> I I" Or~ C_..,
N) JI 11hor Bhd
I OS'[ ' ~li"S \
....................•..
ForTht.> !;Jest
Huv Or Lt•a:.1~ t.1t .. t1
ln Orani:c Count~
Come See t..;~ 'l\1<1.1\ '
&
SADDLEBACK
BMW
28402 Margu<'ritt> Pk11. \
M issioo \'icJo
her) Pk~~ exit
1nrr 5 Freeway>
8 3 1-2040 495-4949
Closed Sunday:;
CREVIER
!1<~.u l la1 bor HI'''
I ( IS1 I\ \llo~'i '\
540-9640
·74 Plt'l11dr Arr sunr r
:11<·r<•11 c• cs~ h1;11l1 o1 \ 1111
t·1111tl ~72CXI, -'!14 1:111u I
f<J7111 ... llJll'! j '1(C01 I ,tr
IKf.i 111 111t I "1d1•ol
<.ll.~11(1111· 1.ok•• •o\ l'I 1..,,, llol
<~IHI ;, I i '" " •t " I
•.II lt1'.l1 l\l
7H l11111dJ 1 '\'l't W.1 1• [Triumph 9767
UJ.000 ftt 1 ~ lut cond an • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
·;1 Fl flfl I \o•I\ r•\lt.1
.t I '.., I ... I I I \1 \ t I
01 n :u
s1clt· 11ul .1111 f111 ,11•ro '7!t l111m ,.11-.1111 11 .. 1111 , '•1..!l<llCI
iO ~t a\l·ntk Xlnt cond
.., .. , .. r;il ne~ parts
!-1500 5 15·!f5~ 1.-V('!)
1 '.I ~ 11rcl 150. 1.,-... m lie~.
.1-.;.urnt• h-J~l' B<ilancl'
:...'1'1Cltl "11; H357
l'I Ftc•\la xlnl 1·ond. nP~
111 ,., &. tirks S'l~J PP
.. 1 ... n11
l'U<;!.t•lt1· N11:1• '~li1•C'I" ,'(, '•'l'l ll•I• 111~ in1lo•., ~l'1~X I I I 1 l I 111 I· orrl .\1u.sl:in" Xlnt
'
1 •l . "• ,. •1 I 1 • H t • ' J I ' unt 1 •1 \\ ,., t II t'::. ) I 1110 I tilt> c II • ·' 'F. I I 'I " ' I I . • I •11111 likl· nC'~ 4 { yt .. • . . I) ,II "I 1 .~ ·11 1.11 I •I 1 I-: I ' 111 I • I I 1 I ot 6.H l.ill.l.1115 I 1, , 11 111•11 1 ,11 1,1.~1 .111111mJt1c. peach c<Jl<Jr
Ja -r 97 30 Vollcswo~ 9770 111!1·11.i1 1 •~1 ·1;, 11110 mrte~ S3950
CJU0 1 · •• • • • • • • ••• • • • • • •• • • • • ·'IM h I Hi or 548-~7-t4 ~6·7·;:~~~;,·;·,;~;~·~;~.:~; MARK HOWARD 1 1:1';1~'1111/11,1 ~.:.~~1~.1;;~,1 ,..., I Lincoln 99°45
or!g '•'r} wt>!I rn;1rn VOLKSWAGEN 1111 ''' 1111 ::1111 11110 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lalnl'd Mu,.,t S.1<•nf1tt•11.1•i:o' ,,.1111100 n t' I" 1 l l.r Jll•~lll•·• pan I 7oMAHK HI
84fl8570 \ilk •d,t'll \\llh I Hll • \ll'STS~LL 11 .. It • !;CJ 11.'!>.fl .\I \" E <ffF~:R I 642·8110 '1>4 XK fo. t'ollpt 'Xlnl, 1.. '"I 1l I I rnc
$.S(JOll l:tk1·:, I( l'l'I :'XH1 ®~ itfa_"'l' I 10U.'(.l\d
Wurl.. l!!lf1 l!~I:! "U\. n V0llCSWA1..(N •N( IA n1•w lo11\..111L' :\"I 534-4100
JJJ.:u.1r l:l 1 vi lu 'll 13731 Harbor
H·llo~ h.mH111• <"11UJ1t I Garden Grove
llllll' ""111•1 11rurnrnR 1
i•• I li•o •~••Ill H1u111!11<1m
111 .. 1 ... 1 ~l:!,.1(1
f'o 11 \ 11'1 l!H'i)
u! 1 ·p .. · <11· \ 1111· 17 \I I'<•
rc•j.! I!·'" J.:11•tel ,-.h.CJ1t J,k
1111! 5.121111 1.t(, 1t1:1:
Mercury 995C .............••........
•>HA:-JG E COUNTY"S
FINEST
LINCOLN MERCURY
OE\LERSHIP 11 1 '11l11r T\' remote ron
11111 d1~1ti1l l untnl! 5mri
olrt ~:l'NI !J6(j l Y.:l
RESP < Ol.:f'LE ~unls
to ri·nl :.i:lf 1·1ml.11nl'tl I
'Jn or JR 20 ft rnntur I
ho mt» Jpµrw< .I ul \I
13 l!J f"Jll 548 Hl~li
979-2500
~.Jsl $11\)111 ••ltr.!11:1 d \\\ ,Ull.•••f \\I l-\l
I St & lllOAOWAY ~I~ ll.!lLl'J> t1,11 ~1i l..
SA'"" At<A Mo1do 9 7 38
'79 Eldo
\I I >. tt a:.. "Int c 111111
Hocosh fin.
644·4986
\m,111•ur rad1•1 1ran~m1t
ll1•;ithk1t 1!15>1 \In
l.1.,: 1• 11 X I 011 C'I e ii II ---------~
1n.111u,tl, :>.125 ">·11 1536
Booh & Morine Equipment .....................•.
General 9010 ................•.•.•..
Non prnfiL 11rg Ut!cds
your boat. plane rar.
(•tr Liberal lax dedur
11un advJntagcs
:!13 Kil 2:w1
1\\nn 9 rt ~ 1rloor,
pump. mtr mount. S.125
1;.15 !11)20
Sl'aJ.(ull 1 hp.
loni.: shaft $200
645 9020
Boots. Maintenance I
Service f020 •.••...................
'1 armc Elcclncran
Ul'srgn install 1repa1r
Qua! work M9-2.520eve.
Boots, MoriM
Equipment 9030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Brand 11ew Brookes &
Gat<•housc llalcyon
rompass w extra re·
pcatcr. Rl'g. pricl:'.S4MO
Our price $2500 Call
Answer Ad 11-170,
642·4300, ~ hrs.
Marinr FM/VHF, new
w /antenna. $225
67!HIOOI eves
Anc h or Windlass
Seahorse SL513, new,
never Wied $"l25. Call
675-1156
loots, Power 9040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
38' lertram SF. 1979.
letter than •w. San
o•tr $40,000. Ownr.
675-6670, 673-4585
33' OWENS BRIG S /F
w /Newport Slip, n ew
crutaders. lrans le pro.
p1. Radar. pilot, ball
tank, Halon fire system,
137 ,500 64G-7246
'77 Wellcraft Scarab 30'
wttrlr. very nice, low
hn . very fasl. many xtraa, twtn mcM? 28011.
~.'000 759 \91_~---
111' B•y ~K'.ktaU crul1Scir.
red & whltti canopy.
Chnrecter boat parade
winner. 873 SURr.
813 7ffT7 •
Trailers, Travel 9170 •••••••••••••••••••••••
W,\NTEU Old 15' 01 ti
travel trailer to ht· ust•d
for parli. /\li.o ul1hty
tr:uler ~35 IJl7ti
'7824' Mct00Tru1ll·1. J 1
awn , rrur h1kl' hatt·h
MO 7003. 9GJ 5ffi'J
l l ' S P I I' II S I' II l l V
Sportsman. slp11 I i.:ood
cond Nu t1rl's Sl50
642·6181
Avto Service, Parts & Accessories 9400 ...............••....••
Fors•
Datsun Z
motor + o.-rparh
768-5837
vw Plex1glass rronl l'IHI
cowhnj!, SIO. Maj.!~ for
'foyota. Datsun ;.rml VW,
SIO ea. VW wht•f'I &
spare lire. $5 VW rC':11
window S8 G46·7!H~)
Avtos for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••
I MPORTANT
NCYrJCETO
READERS AND
ADVERTISl':RS
The price o f rlt-m!>
ad vert1sed• by vehicle
dealers rn the vehiclt.• classiried advt'rhsing
columns does not in
elude any appllcablc
taxas, Ucel\le, transfer
rees. finance C'harge11,
fees ror air polJut ion con
trol device certtfit11l10n!I
or dealer documcnlar~
preparation ch.arl(cs un
less otberwln spet·1r1ed
by the advertiser,
Aft~•/ CI011lu 9520 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Plll'TTllST
•s1T~IRD
IMTOWMI
• IEST OFFH!·
(~Z)
THEODORE
ROB INS
fORO
,' ! r • ~ I " t 11 11 , " I •
(_ f •. 1 I\ "J f , ,\ ~, , +I
WANTED!!
Clean Imports
Top Dollar
Paid!!
Coll Jim Hogon
Mike Lake
Croier Motors
835-317 1
We'll luy
Or Sell
Your Cleon
Import On
ConsiCJllment! ! !
Coll Our
Used Car
Monoqer
TODAY!!!
or .
831-2040 495-4949.
Saddleboc~ BMW
Mission Viejo
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
21i211 ll 111 l•ur HI\ 11
C<~TA Mf:SA
546-1200
HIGH BUYER
Top 11011011 for Sport!i
Cars. Uugit, t'amJ>t'rw,
!ll4's, i\ulll'i;
Allk ror U/C MGH
JIM MARINO
VOUCSW.tGEH
llt'l 11 Rench Blvd
llUNTING1'0N Bt-:Al'H
842·2000
We Pay
OVER
l lWlook
For Your Good \'YI. Po111r~ ot Auch
. . . ~ ' ' . .
f>,1hUf\ !!31 .'!:ill 835·3171 •••••••••••••••••••••••
7'1 HX I .rtl 1111111111:.. j i.o 1 .~ \ w lo n "" 1 ll'hl
l.INC'OLN·MERCURY
111 Ill Auto Center Dr
SD f"wv-Lk Forest exit 0l lW INE
830.7000
T"E ULTllOTC OlllYINC. ... ACHIN(
•USEDBMWs•
'76 2002 4spd I 000:11
793201 S /R !58~ I
'7!!5281S1H 110761
'81 3201A (01151
Clos~ Swtday1
The Most Exciting
Port Of Your
BMW Purdtose Or
Lecne Could Be
McLattn BMW!!
luyOrl.eaH
By OurPhoM Pion!
(7141 522-5333
ORANGE COUNTY'S
" OLDEST
Sale11-Serv1ce·l-eas1ng
Roy Carver.Inc.
Rolls Royce BMW
1540Jamboree
Newport Beach_ ~~4
USEDIMW'a
EXCELLENT
SELECTION!
'7 6·'80 ~ODELS
3201'1, 5301'1,
5281'1, 630cal's.
CALLUS FOR
OUR SB.ECTIOM!
Soddlebadc IMW
M U!11on Viejo
831·2040 495·4?49
Closed Sund~
'76 2002 DMW. AM /f'M
Cassette, 11wm1or. low
mileage Xlnt cond
17000 Call 640.l1J3 osk
for Hal
H 1100 rn1. mu. ... t "'II 1,.., door, ;:1 kit rl•.,1 s:,11 ufh•r i;1:1 lliil I I 1:,1dt \\ t'!-.ll'r 11 'l It• ~ 11 I
77 ~!Jtd..1 1.i.1 "i:'ll
1
1101' f111 Sup"I B1· .. 1l1
II~ rtl I 2:.! IJUIJ 1111 , -.pd $20 1'.I :; 111-!.17 11
'lint 1•oncl l!ll K.'>'11• I ·1·1 \'\\' ltJbtnt cfll'M'I, 'J.
Merced.s Ben2 97 40 rndte :.ump~ ~un1<H1t •••••••••••••••••••••••I air, \lr..1 lurck 'ilo·r c·u __________ , t.q.it' ,'l11t ~:;(Ml
'80 300TD
ST ATIOH W AG OH
lllurk llamhcit• 11'.IOf'll
11 k J.,cJ\\ \1 tll•:. tl.1la11"
FJt'llln \\'0t1 r 1111}
I' nn•d lo "I'll """ '
JIM SLEMOHS
IMPORTS
l'l70 llMUIOH 1:1 \II
COSTA M 1-.'i.\
6:11 1276 K.1.:1 !l'.lOfl
,\l l'llOHIZl· IJ
\I l'.l!l'EIJl·:S lllo, '\Z
f>Et\I I· I<
11:11 1740 l!lo1 lillO
'73 45~1':, loudt•d. lo rn1.
some body as 'HO 300
Turbo D~I SI O,IJOO
400 4L6?
'63 220SE COMV.
1131 ·2244
MB '78. 300 <.:D Muph·
yellow Ori~ ownl'I.
aharp.11un Snrr Loudl·d
117,000. 968-425-t, K~ 1833
uno M er cedcs ~ Slh ~r
full pwr • n1r, ant Im
11tereo itlnt cond suns
4.97 ·21178, 4 11011
I
h40 to;!l '>. :l(jl; 1. "l'I
i~ \ \\' [l.1~h1•1
~ n:s-r s u .1
~t ,\10' llFFJ·.H I I.! ><ll'C
i I \'\\' \\ gn II'? 111.: 'lwl
1 \ll· lh·nl SiJll
lhl 1 ~t2.1>11, ~oo.·
'I/I \ \\ lt11J!
.t Ill f I Cl l.ijlt''
t'li '"1~7, '1 ft••r•)
72 \'\\ 111 SQB
~(Ml
JI o• b II rl I
ol\:!fitlll
'Ii: I \ \\ \ l 11 I I 111111111 ~·
111nd '\t•ub J>o\111\ ~ 1111
h11I ;1211<1 7')!1 Wif.
'7 t ll.1 h1·1 Sl.1 \.\~II
\1Jl11, :.tit t:t\J llCI 111 lj.!
11\\111·1 WI 1r.~11
1:• V\\ ll•w xlnl rorcd
$:1:1% 01111 ho• m1·";11•1·
!Hi1 IH7~
'71 \'W Squ.11 l'l1<H k Sl>IOO
ur hc~t 11ff1 r :\tu-t -.I'll
f.4:! 5122
'7fi fl A II BIT Dt.X
i\ \1 F:\l ral.1> \ 1 , \lta
n1t·e $21!1510fr MO ;l;::~I .>
• • ·7 3 \ \\ xlnl l'llllil 111 &
11111 1 Strl'k. lo 1111 ~!>Oii
I <t!li t:i!t7
·73 "iuper l\e(>tle Lt HI w
Am f'm Nds rn111111 1 ""
m~tlc.'S $2000 G31 2:1tiH
c, l I' 11 11 I I' I I I I 1 I 1•
'\J\\ \\hilt lop rc·cl 111
11 11111 X Int 1·1111ol 111•:,,t
"' "'' f i I :1 :! 1>11
·;11 Cail Ehlu 2 ~I (iold.
.l!I llOOm1 l.1kt· n1•".
l11Jd1-rl. 0•'" Im•:.. $!; 7t)(J
1;44 17i 1
i7 l '11u111 Ill'\ 1111· Jlf'rf
n111<1 I 11.11ll'1I lll.IJ1lllm1
111'1 ol '"'t ... i11• ~.11:,0
J~J2 hh.t
Comoro 991 7 .............•••.......
77 CAMARO
''' 11nu tilt '""'c'r "'md11~., A. duol 1111 I..,.
II 11 I\ ;! j , j i II rn ii t•"
•l'ISSt.01
$4995
iH t'am.11 o
\11 .1ut11111<1ll('. IKlW<'r
..,lt•1•1111g 27,!liil mil1•s,
Ollj~\ t·:l1
$4988
ka 1~11·k Import~
831-lll I
'69 CAMARO
1 "" nl'r. l'il'<tn auto. mi•J?ii, :l(l7 enr 2 harrel
~J 1 llltrJlnr. d11~1tal
l'lu«k. am frn $1500
·~1·, K'llltl
'7t. c·arnaro 4sJXJ . lull)
loacJ1•d. rullv !>port
S4200 000b46 (lfiti7
'i7 Cnuj?<t r X R7 -all xtras
AM FM tape 53000
m 1 S2900 552-5522.
51!1 14 14
Mustonq 9952 .......•......•..•...•.
1965 FORD
MUSTAHGGT
I n good l'ondition •
i\utomatrc trans & d isr
hrakes Make offer Call
bl2 ~J24. rr no answer.
Pl. EASE keep trying!
'tii 1; q I. 3 spd s tick
\ \1 1'~~1 8 lrk stereo
"1600 ofr 493-fr657
Oldsmobit. 9955 .....•.......•.•.•.....
80 Cutlass Brougham
S<>d• S7 .000 or take over
lease $2 14 mo Loaded.
V6 1!32 5~.5S2-l800.
1!177 Olds Omega. 1 ownr.
Ii <•yl 36,000 mi $3200.
li39 11:!6. s.57·8910ext 2215
'7!1 Toronaclo Dsl. SOOOM
mr warr i\ux tank, A/C.
PS PW. dr locks. tilt.
1·r uisr. AM FM s ter
lupc. V Wp, wire whls.
s plit pwr seats. Looks
und runs xlnl. Must sell .
$11995, 951 7199 ------
'71! Cutlass. fully loaded,/
exrept1onally clean,
$4800 552 5211 -----
'77 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Rrougham, loaded, aU
"xtras. a uto cruise s:noo 851 0114. ------Pitt to 9957 •••••••••••••••••••••••
·74 Pinto two door, auto,
air,
'82 190 , nu rnd1t1 Is,
l>r~kCI, etc Xlnl cond
Sl800 640 7051
'57 VW con' 1•11 • li1
t'ho111l11. nu Lnp & mt
Nds some bod) work
S.~lrn1 Art t>, ll:l9 6L28 ChHroi.t 9920 Call9G4·1..2.S3.
'70 Merced ~i-: 4 dr
1edan. very clHn. lo ml,
$6000. G7J 8831
Volvo 9772
•••••••••••••••••••••••
OftAHGI COUNTY
VOLVO
Largest Vol\'o Dculer
In Ounati C<1un~r ! BUY or LEAS~
DIR•;CT
••• ••• • •••••• •••• • • • ••• Plymo..th 9960
SEE US FIRST! •••••••••••••••••••••••
\V(' have 8 good select Ion '77 Volare. 6 cyl, auto,
() ( N E w &. us ti: 0 a Ir. r H. $2000. Call
C'hcvrnlcts ! 000·2346
CONNELL
C HEVROLET
.'IUI ll,11 IN1t 1111 I
I "'I \ \1 ~ ;-, .\
~46-1 200
'76 Ply Volare Premier
Wagon. All pwr. a /c,
xlnt cond Besl ofr.
673·2400 -------•07 Ply. Valiant Signet.
9,K mt . 2 sets of tires, 6
~yl w /smoa device. 5400
Fl RM . 752-2282 Dan or
C'•therlne a· 90-5 :30onl)'.
"" •••••••••••••••••••••• . ,, ...........
XlnlCODda27U
..
-
T • .•
* * ,, • *
111111 allT Ylll llllTIWI DAllY MR .. j-
OHANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
-Bel! helping ,hand stilled
.,,..._..
Henrietta Giuboco of Los Altos had a kifs for her frog, "Golden
Girl." after taking first place at the annual Calaveras County
Jumping Frog Jubilee at Angels Camp.
OC entranls flop
as frog trainers
ANGELS CAMP -Duke. the
..John Wayne airport entry in the
1981 Calaveras Cou nt y
Fair Frog Jumping Jubilee,
hardly lived up lo his name-
sake.
The frog jockeyed by airport
manager Murry Cable jumped a
mere 3 ft. 4 inches, barely l /6th
the distance or the ultimate win·
ner.
"Next year," Cable croaked
after Duke failed to live up to
anticipations. Cable had other
words directed to the frog.
Another Orange County
entrant, American Dream,
jockeyed by the Dally Pilot's
Frederick Schoemehl, also
failed to perform as expected.
. American Dream plated 18th ln
the media jump with a distance
of 7'7". Schoemehl had words.
too.
The winner of the competition ,
was Henrietta ''Hank'' Gtuboeo. «. a Los Altos !'peach therapist.
Her Golden Girl jumped 11'6"
and, despite some 1rumbllng
from fellow contestant.a about jumping practices, moved Into
the winners circle.
"I was just lucky," said Mrs.
Giuboco. Perhaps. She is,
however, a member of the team
that set the world record of 20'3"
in 1976. The record setter wu a
big bull frog named E . Davey
Croakett.
Members of the team wore
distinctive red jackets
emblazoned with their names
and patches denoting their now
<See FROGS, Pa1e ~2)
Starving Siamese
twins shock town.
DANVILLE, lit. (AP> -
Townspeople were shocked by the
story of two ll·day-old Siamese
twins who were removed from a
hospital here after a slate welfare
worker round them starvlnt -aJ.
legedly on orders of their physi·
clan-father.
"Everybody's talking about It,
but the hospital won't tell us
anything," said a lab technician
at the Lakeview Medical Center
In Danville, where the twins were
found, "listless and whimper·
Ing," last week.
An anonymous telephone lip re-
au I ted In atate child welfare
workers flnd1n1 the twins, a
published report aaya. The
111111 CUil 1111111
Cloudy toni1ht and
Tuesday. SU1ht chance of
driule Tuesday. Much
cooler Inland. Lowa
tonltbt 55 alont the eoaat,
80 Inland. H11hl Tuesday
Mto•.
·111111•1
Tit• NaUonal Leogu
champbll come to Chooa
Ro'1fne tonfght. And th•
Dodgetl Ort pffchbtg 0 ~
left Mndlr. Btd tlwre ltW •hould be .,,.. ,.,,,,..,.,_
S11 Pa,. CJ.
I
Chicago Sun-Times said the
twins' medical chart at the
Lakeview Medical Center In
Danville ordered workers not to
feed them.
But state child welfare officials
say they believe the twins. who
are joined at the waist, had a
guardian angel at the facility -
someone who violated those or·
ders andkeptthetwins alive.
"Where I work they all think it's
sick ," said Karen Moody, a
nurse's aide at the Americana
Health Care Center. a nurain1
home across the street from
Lakeview.
Vermillion County State'• At·
torney Michael Clary said his of·
lice la con1lderln1 criminal
char1ea a1ainat the father, who
has not been ldentified.
The Illlnol1 Department of
Cblldren and Family Servlcea la
alao lnveaU1atin1, althouth
director Gre1ory L. Coler aaid of.
flclaJa at the Lakeview Medical
Center in lh1I community of 42,000
at first refu.ed to cooperate ln the
lnve~ation.
''They know they mutt
cooperate," Coler aatd. "It la ob-
v tou1 tbat some hospital
(See TWINS. Pate AJ) . .
Men rob, rape
woman,70
OAK.LA.ND <AP> -Police are
tffklq two or Uu'ee men who ter·
rortaed. raped and robbtd a 10-,._,4111 ...................
btr bOUM • ftn aad lMVinc btf lied to Mr ........ .
Th• ....... "b"o wa1 Dot ldeatlled,_.,..,,.. tM ban>·
la• bouee la Ult ...., lDetd111
and •at·~ at"<HtAl• • Hoepttal for 1~b Woaa41' ._.
bui'DA and ..... laJurtel, ,.,....
laid.
f.
..
Laguna waitress killed acting as samaritan
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... Delty ...........
Her friends say they're not at
all surprhed by Maurine Kools '
actions Saturday morning, when
she stopped at the scene of an
accident to see if anyone was
hurt.
The 30-y_ear-old waitress was
returning home from work at
the time of the 1:30 a.m . crash
at Diamond Street and South
Coast Highway in Laguna
Beach.
n turned out to be a minor ac-
cident, and Maurine Kools left
her name with the two motorists
as a witness .
But before she could return to
her car, she was struck by a
motorist In a white truck. The
impact tossed her into oncoming
traffic on Coast Highway and
she was struck a1aln.
She died Sunday afternoon,
about 12 hours after the accl·
dent.
Laguna Beach police arrested
Michael Christopher Zent, 23, at
his home at 180 McAuley Place.
He was charged with
mamslaughter, felony drunken
driving and felony hit and run.
He remains in Orange County
Jail with bail of $5,000.
Friends said they were
shocked at the death of Ms.
Kools, an environmentalist who
was coordinator for the local
ch a pter of the Allil,lnce for
Survival in Laguna Beach.
But relative s and ac -
quaanlances said they were not
at all surprised that she acted as
she did
"It was so typical of Maurine
to try to help somebody. even to
the point or pulling her own life
in danger, .. said fellow Alliance
member Karen Lilfin. who said
she met the activist about two
years ago
"She had an amazing sense or
justice She couldn't stand lo see
somethin2 not be fair "
CSee HELPING, Page-AZ>
Defendant rights cited
Psychiatric test warning needed if tlsed for life. death . .
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Murder defendants must be
warned prior to psychiatric test·
ing if the test results would be
used alter a conviction to help
choose life or death as punish-
ment, the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled today.
The court sa id its con ·
troversiaJ ''Miranda doctrine,··
requiring that criminal sus-
pf>cts be warned of their rights
to remain silent and to have a
lawyer's help during question·
ing, applies to such situations.
By a unanimous vote, the
court overturned the death sen·
tence of con vict e d Texas
murderer Ernest Benjamin
Smith, who received no s uch
warnings before or during a 1974
interview with a psychiatrist.
Today's ruling likely will af-
fect at least 30 other death row
Inmates in Texas. and perhaps
dozens more in the state . It also
could affect death penally pro·
cedures 1n Virginia a nd
Oklahoma. according to one of
Smith's lawyers. J oe! Beraer of
TOPPLED BRIDGE -Truck carrying a water tank smacked
into foot·bridge that spans Barranca Parkway in Irvine
shortly before 10 a .m. today. Police said truck was too tall
New York City.
Most states with death penally
laws to not us~ psychiatric
testimony about a murderer's
"future dangerousness" to de-
termine whether death or life in
prison is the appropriate punish-
ment, as does Texas.
Today's ruling did not over·
turn Smith's murder conviction.
It had to do only with his death
sentence: which was overturned.
.. A criminal defendant. who
neither initiates a psychiatric
evaluation nor attempts to in·
troduc·e an) ps yc hiatric
evidence. may not be compelled
to respond lo a p~ychialrisl if his
statements can be used against
him at a capital sentenci ng pro·
ceeding. ·· Chief Jusllce Warren
E Burger wrote for lhe courL
Burger said the psych1atnsl's
report on Smith's .. future
dangerousnci.s" could not be
admitted as evidence al lhe sen·
tencing trial because Smith had
nol been given a chance to re-
main silent
DMly Pitel -•r L.H PayM
to fit under bridge. Warning of an oversized load on truck
seemed to be prophetic. Police say Barranca between
Culver Drive and Jeffrey Road will be closed 24 hours.
Pope moved
to general
care room
Author Saroyan
victim of cancer
U.S. mission
ro U.N.
'evacuated
KOME <AP> -Pope John Paul
II wa1 moved from the intensive
care unit to a general -care
hospital room today, hls &1st
birthday. In St. Peter's Square.
where the pope wa1 wounded five
day a a10, 31 cardinal• led prayers
in a apeclal birthday Man.
00(ton aald the pontiff bad a
restful nllht and woke up feeling
well althoutb runnin1 a alight
fever.
"We are steadily approaching
the time when we will be able to
aay tMr•'• no tonier any dan1er
of lnfecUon/' said the cblef of
medical 1tafl 'at the pope'•
boapita1, accordln1 to Lfte Italian
""' aaency AGI. "Thta moment
11 lfnked to a number of taC:tora,
above au, the cuaappearance ot
feffr," Dr. ll:m1Uo TreaaltJ wu
quoted atM1ial. ' Tiie .,.,. will be • atchtd
around UM clock, hotpltal aoureea .. .•. Hl• new, 11th ttor)' room at
GetneUI Pollcllnico Hoepltal hM"
AA Im.,• Of the black tladonna
"ef C1t1tocbowa, the moat
famout koli ot Poland. Th• pop9
( ... POPE, Pace AJ)
FRESNO (AP) -Author
Wllllam Saroyan, whose stories
probed the mysteries of living.
dylna and unlqueneas of in·
dlvlduals, died today of cancer
at the age of 72.
Saroyan had been hoapltaUzed
since collapaina at hla home
here April 20.
Saroyan won tbe UMO Pulitzer
Prize for his most famous play,
"The Time of Your Life,' but
rejected the U.500 award
because he felt wealth or com·
mcrce ahouJd not patronise art.
Saroyan'• wrttlnc•. moat of
them autobloaraphlcal, lnclude
numeroua short atortea and Uae
bookl "My Name 11 Aram" and
• 1Tbe Ruman Comedy." Tbe lat·
ter detailed t~ aJternatJn1 Hd
and happy e:irperlencea of a
youn1 tele1raph me1aea1er frOWlna up ln mythical ltbaea,
Catlt., clurtn1 World War II.
He wu twice married to and
divorced from Carol Marcus, de·
bututa da\llhter of a 84md1x Corp. exec:u6ve. Tbey had two
eblldnn, a 1onl Aram, w9'o
became a wr ter, ancl a
<lee AUTHOa, Pale Al)
AUTHOR DEAD AT 7J WUliom~
NEW YORK <AP> -About 100
people were evacuated from the
fourth floor of the U.S. Mission to
the United Nations today after a
pipe bomb was discovered in
special delivery mall , police.
said.
The device was delivered with
other special delJvery maU when
the bulJding opened for business,
and was discovered when the
package passed through a routine
security screening, said a
member of the ml11lon security
force, who would not allow
himself to be Identified.
A police omcer wlth a doa
trained to snltf for explosives con-
firmed the package contained' tx·
,ploalve1, police $aid.
Police said they had gotten no
te lephone calls from anyone
clalmlnc responsibility for lhe
bomb.
Tho city pollct-bomb 1quad re-
moved the device and took It lO a
nrln1 ren1• ror dJsmanUin' or.
detooaUon, offtcera 1ald.
o~ the ....... ~'" bombl
were planted at :JltaaedY In·
ternaUonaJ Alr'Jti1:1ftchiltn1onc
which exploded and kltltd ~n
aJrport worker.
..
il ••••• Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT ,.Monday, May 18, 1981
Gas $3.59 gallon, but business brisk
BOSTON CAP I -A furor
erupted two yean beck when
Glenn H Uet'I tlny Gulf 1t1Uon.
nulled amon1 the affluent
dweJU. of Beacon. Hlll. •tarted
cbarala1 $1 .0 1 1allon tor
1110Unt -then about SS cents
above the 1oln1 rate.
Some motorist.I ulled him • "capltallJU~ pi&." Other• took
hi rp to CO\lrt.
But business still ls boom1n1. even tbouih Heller's prtce Is up
to $3.59 a 1allon for unleaded
gaaoHne at some hours of the
day, apparently amone the
highest in the nation.
From Page A1
.. You can call me• ·capltaliit
pil ' only if there la no
aJternatJve," uY• Heller "I'm.
not a monopoly. I don't force
people to come here.
.. There's ll auy Just 200 feet
•way 1ellln1 aaaollne 20 houri •
day untU 3 1 m. at Sl.49 • callon.
But l'tn always here, and people
are willlnj to pay for that re·
liability. I'm a capltallst, yes.
But a free market capllallst."
During the gasoline crunch or
1979, Heller attracted national
attention when his Reacon HHI
Gulf started charging the then·
unheard-of price of $1 .42 a
111lon.
The move prompted several
court challen1e1, but Heller H)'I
ht1 now "variable prkln," l•
clearly le11J.
"Arter Presldent Reaean de-
controlled 1asoline prices," he
said in an lntei;,view ... I Im·
mediately trent hlm • tele1ram
1"5ayln1, 'Thank you very much,
'Mr. Presldent. Now I can uae
my profits to pay the govern-
ment higher taxes instead of us-
ing them lo pay legal fees.· ··
Those legal fees have been
mounting since the day two
HELPING ••• I
That sense of fairness, and her
willingness to become Involved,
may have contributed to the
woman's death, she said .
Similar sentiments were ex-
pressed by her friend. P"eter
Dobson.
"Such things were not even a
matter or choice for her ... he
said. "It was an automatic
reflex for her to help other peo·
pie."
Jn addition to coordinating the
Alliance chapter, Ms . Kools
"took up whatever cause came
her way," Dobson said.
"She was an environmentalist.
And she would get behind
whatever environmental issues
came up, whether a matter of
land development or nuclear
war, chemical waste or human
rights.··
Ms Kools. an avid tennis
player. was graduated with
honors from Arizona State
University m Tempe. where she
received a degree· in pttysical
education
She taught physical education
in the Paradise School District
in Phoenix for about two years
before moving to Newport
Beach, and later, Laguna.
She is survived by her mother,
Dorothy Brunker of Scottsdale,
Ariz.; father John Kools. of
Santa Ana ; sister Carolyn
Abram , bf Iowa ; and a
grandmother. Isabel Hartranft.
of Michigan.
Memorial services will be at
7:30 p.m. Wednes day at St.
Mary·s Episcopal Church, with
a reception following at Guild
Hall at the church.
Her mother said donations
could be made lo the Maurine
Kools Memorial Fund.
''The money will go to further
her environmental goals," her
mother said. ··Maurine would
have liked that."
From Page A1
1'WINS •••
employees knew of the situation,
but yet they didn 'treporlit."
Coler said the twin boys were in
fair condition and have gained "a
few pounds" since Wednesday,
when the department ordered
them transferred lo Children's
Memorial Hospital In Chicago.
They were being fed in ·
travenously.
The hospital refused lo release
I information about the twins to·
day.
Coler said the twins, whom he
described as "severely de-
formed," weighed 10 pounds at
birth. Their weight had dropped
to less than 7 pounds when they
were taken from Lakeview.
Both the attorney for the twins'
family, David Kirk of Danville,
and the president of the Lakeview
Medical Center, Richard
Livengood, declined comment.
On Friday. Vermillion County
Circuit Judge John Meyer grant·
ed temporary custody of the twins
to the state.
The same day, the state's at-
torney's omce filed a petition
claiming that the twins had not
been properly cared ror. The
petition said hos pl la I workers had
railed to give the twins food,
water, oxygen or necessary
medical treatment after their
birth Mays.
Meyer did not permit reporters
to view the petition until the
names of the parents, the hospital
and the doctors involved had been
blocked out. However, Coler said
tbe twins were born at Lakeview
to the wife of a Danville·area
physician.
One ol the entries on the twins'
medical cbaru made either Mays .
or 8, aaid, "do not feed In ac-
cordance with parenll' wi1hes,"
accordlna to unnamed sources
quoted ln lheSun·Times.
.~..,........
ANO FOR OUR NEXT TRICK Having a difficult time han-
dlieg the pressure of a job? Pity the poor guy who has to
P~da~ and steer this bicycle while 11 others crowd around
b1m mcluding two riding on his s houlders. The show is part
of the acrobats act in the Chinese Peking Circus seen re-
cently in Paris.
Baby possible,
says Billy Jean
NEW YORK <AP > -Larry
King says hjs tennis star wife,
BiUie Jean King. doesn't con·/
sider herself a homosexual, and
"she'd like to have a child if she
can work it out for a time."
King, in an interviwew in Peo·
pie .magazine. said his biggest
disappointment is that the cou·
pie never had children
Mrs. Ki ng recently admitted
having a homosexual affair with
her former secretary. Marilyn
Barnett, who filed a lawsuit
seeking supPort.
King said recently he blamed
himself, in part, for his wife's
homosex ual relation s hip
because the couple spent so
From Page A1
POPE MOVED
was born as Karol Wojtyla on
May 18. 1920, at Wadowice. near
Krakow, Poland.
Six rooms were set asu:se tor t.ne
pope. his private secretaries,
doctors, nurses and Vatican of-
ficials and visitors. The pope's
room has a window with a view of
the magnificent dome of St.
Peter's Basilica.
Vatican officials said the pope's
announcement Sunday that he
had ··sincerely pardoned'' his as·
sailant would not affect the
criminal proceedings against the
Turkish man charged with shoot·
i.ng the pope. The pope's remat1<s,
in a tape-recorded message
played by loudspeaker lo a
crowd in St. Peter 's Square,
touched off inquiries to
newspapers asking if that meant
the suspect would be released.
A Vatican spokesman. the Rev.
Romeo Panciroli, said the pope's
doctors were inviting foreian
doctors to Rome for con·
sultaUons.
"In view or the great Interest
expressed the world over the the
pontiff's health . . . they are in·
viting as consultants some
foreign colleagues of clear
much time apart -her playine
te nnis and him organizing
women's tennis.
"I'd like to have three or four
children." King told People. "In
retrospect. when I got out of law
school we should have just set·
lied down and had a family.
Once you opt out of that,
anything could happen -and
anything did happen."
Mrs. King, 37, a Wimbledon
tennis winner who once
acknowledged having an
abortion, said her hectic career
forced her ··to make choices."
She declined lo say whether
she would try to have a baby
soon, but she said, "If I want to
have a baby, r better get this
show on the road."
• • •
fame." No names were given.
As the white-and-yellow
Vatican rtag fluttered outside in
celebration, Cardinal Carlo
Confalonieri. 87-year-old dean or
the College of Cardinals. led a
crowd of 6,000 in a birthday Mass
in the basilica. the largest church
in Christendom.
From Page A1
FROGS. • •
world famous win. They ob·
viously take frog jumpine
seriously.
So does Steve Cole, 34, of
Newport Beacb, jockey for the
frog entered by radio station
KFI o r Los Angeles and
personalllies Al Lohman and
Roger Barkley.
Cole, an entrepreneur In-
volved in numerous enterprises,
uses hypnotism. t
..Ribbitt, ribbltt," Cole In-
toned to a froai durlna an in·
tervlew. The once feisty frog lm·
mediately was calm.
But even hypnotism didn't
help
aettlled ....,...._ 11411a.1111
AH otMr dllltlrtMe"'8 Mt-4111
"1 thJnk maybe I aot the fro&
too relaxed,'" Cole explalned.
Co e received no com-
pensa ion from KFJ for hJs ef·
fort.a. Ulce ao many others, he
just Ilka t.o Jump fro11.
~P.Heley
~N.WMd
L ThomM KMVll
llAINGna JrltWntlefa..~-...CA,
Mell.--: ... lMl1C. .. Meta, CA •Jt
They've been Jumpln1 fro1s in
this hJstorlc mlnin1 camp 1lnce
1928. 1be flnt competition wu
btld to celebrate the pavln1 of
the ctty streeta.
Now, UM competJtion -b&ffd.
on Mark Twain'• story, ''The
Celebrated Jumpln1 Fro1 of
Calavera1 County," attrectt
entrantt from throu,bout tht country.
Ev ea Pra&dtnt Rea1an , wu
repr--.ct. W Wtt Cablt and
Scboemehl, he tunled oat to bt •
Joffr l.U,btan pieced lut ln
llle ~ ror polJtlclana.
Next ytiar, llr. Prnldntf
yea,.. .. o when Heuer rejected
a federal ceilln1 on fHOIJoe
prlcea and cbar1ed whet be
tho.,.1ht the mar~et would bear.
Federal officials 11ld at the
time the price appeared to be
the hlahest In the nation. Gulf
OH Corp. 11ald il "deplored"
Heller's prices. Motorists picket-
ed his station, and several
truckers blockaded the
entrance. The U.S. Department
of Ener1y and the Boston
Consumer Council took Heller to
court, complaining he was
chargln~ more than the 17.7-cent
merkuJ> then aJlowed.
A federal Judie made him
lower hl1 prlcea temporarily,
and Heller later was convicted
of overcttaraln1. But a federal appeals court overturned the
verdict and ordered a new trial.
A pre-trial hearing Is set thls
mo"tb, and federal officials said they planned to prosecute.
Meanwhile, gasoline prices
were decontrolled, m aking the
federal gas price ceiling ob·
solete . So Heller, 31, decided in
March It was time for "variable
pricing."
He beean by ralsine bis pnce
from Sl.S5 per aallon to Sl 79
from midnight to 8 a.m. Busl·
neas did not fall off much 90 be
•lowly raised it to $2.59.' Then
$2.94. Not until he reached SJ 94
a g.allon did his profit margin be~1n to decline.
tt1s current daytime price
between 8 a.m. an<L1 Pm Is
Sl.69 for unleaded ~bout' 25 ceots higher than most of his
downtown competitors. From 7
p.m. lo midnight it's S2.59; dur-
ing the early morning hours the
price has leveled off to '3.59.
Home loan forces poised
2 bills before Assembly could shackle buyers
SACRAMENTO <API -The
aiiant real estate and lender in·
dustries continue their epic bat-
tle In the Legislature this week
over the American dream of
owning a home. while the
dreame r watches on the
sidelines.
The light is over two bills,
both subject of debate last week ,
that would give lenders much
!'"Ore power lo raise mortgage
interest rates to reflect changes
in the economy but probably
price even more of those dream-
ing people out of the home·b\lying
market.
One bill would overturn a
court decision that allows home
buyers to assume the old low·
rate mortgage of the seller. The
other would let stale·chareered
savings and loan firms issue
mortgages on which the interest
and monthly payments would
fluctuate with the market with
no limits.
Another bill relating to
mortgages would permit pension
funds to provide "shared ap-
'Rare' Lemwn vinyl
has few takers
NEW YORK <AP > The
newspaper ads were brief and
tantalizing: "John Lennon· Yoko
Ono rare Two Virgins album ...
Asking prices varied from "best
offer" to$5.000.
But several album owners who
decided to try their luck at turning
vinyl lo gold say the formula for
instant wealth turned out in
general to be just another
alctiemist'sdream. '"I put in two ads and only got
two responses, one offering i25.
2 Banks boost
prime rate
to 20 percent
NEW YORK tAP I Two ma-
jor banks raised their prime lend-
ing rates today to 20 percent.
becoming the first banks to
charge that rate since early
February.
The boost was initiated by
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. in
New York, the nation's fifth·
largest commercial bank, and
matched by First National Bank
of Chicago, ranked No. 9.
It came just one week after
banks boosted the rate to 19.Sper-
cenL A month ago, the rate
charged by major banks was 17.5
percent.
The increase came amid con·
cern that the Federal Reserve
Board will again tighten credit in
an effort to slow monetary growth
and fight inllation. The board's
policy-making Open Market
Committee was meeting today,
The prime rate is the rate
charged by banks on loans to cor·
porate customers, although some
companies are able at times lo
negotiate better rates and many
companies must pay higher rates
that are often based on the prime
rate.
the other offering SlOO. ·· said
Elaine Corlett. of Los Angeles
'"This instead of the hundreds of
offers for thousands or dollars
that I was expecting rm d1sap.
pointed "
Only one ad verltser who was
contacted, jazz record coll ector
John Leslie of Sanatoga. Pa ..
actually got rid or his copy. Jle ex·
changed it for three antique
watches valued at SJ.500.
The limited-edition album sold
for about $5 a copy when released
by the Tetragrammalon record
company in the late 1960s and is
acknowled~ed amon~ record
aficionados to be a collectors·
item -not because of the
music. but because the front and
back covers depict the late Len·
non and Ono nude. The record
contains no music, but sounds or
the couple making love under
the influence of LSD
Collectors say the record has
been selling for S30 to S200
Fake heroin
setup alleged
KANSAS CITY. Mo <API
Despjle a possible run-in with the
law. a pair of self-described con
artists recently attempted to
hype a story they hoped lo sell to
Hollywood by staging a heroin
buy for NBC's "Today" show. ac-
cording to a published report.
ln a copyright story in its Sun·
day editions, the Kansas City Star
detailed how Craig Glazer and
Don Woodbeck set up the drug buy
at a restaurant and talked the
net work into fit ming the event.
The Star reported that the inci·
dent sparked a police inquiry into
the activities of Glazer and
Woodbeck, who received advice
from one law enforcement official
on how to keep from getting ar-
rested.
The Garage Brings It Together With the 'Active Look.
Hirt we fllfurt from Mtrona, 1°°" oonon w.rm-upt. •
!**' '°' !hi eertv mom1ng JclGI on lht ~ Colort •. rect g~, i.My.erwmelnd nwf.
prec1ation loans,·· which are
mortgages that have lower in-
terest rates because the lender
s hares in the increased value of
t.br .borne over the years.
The assumable mortgage bill,
AB2158 by Assemblyman Jim
Costa, D-Fresno, is before the
Assembly Finance. Insurance
and Commerce subcommittee
on financial institutions tonight.
The same subcommittee debat·
ed it for hours last week, but
postponed a vote for a week. The
full committee will then vote on
the bill Tuesday.
The bill would overturn the
1978 Wellenkamo decision of
the state Supreme Court. which
held that lenders cannot force
mortgage holders to pay off
loans when they sell the house,
rathe r than s hifting the
mortgage to the new buyer. Lend·
e r s want to issue new
mortgages at the presumably
higher current rates.
Th~ other bill. ror no-limit
variable rate mortgages, is
before the Assembly Ways and
Means Committee on Wednes-day. It also was ·debated in
that committee by members who
said they want some ceiHn~ on
the amount that an interest rate
could be raised during a loan.
From Page A1
AUTHOR • • •
daughter. Lucy.
Five days before his collapse.
Saroyan had called The As-
sociated Press to report that he
was dying of cancer and to make
thi s final s tatement for
publication after his death :
··Everybody has got to die. but
I have always believed an ex·
cept1on would be made in my
case Now what?""
The Armenian author was on·
ly 26 when he became ramous in
1934 by wanning the 0 . Henry
Award for his rirst major short
s tory. "The Daring Young Man
On The Flying Trapeze."
ll was the product of a period
when Saroyan turned out a short •
story daily for a month, refining
his philosophy that '"speed and
brevity is the point out of which
comes wtified work."
His prime example of speed
was "The Time Of Your Life."
which was penned during six
days of almost constant effort.
"The Human Comedy" in·
eluded this sample of philosophy
that w as woven through
Saroyan's writings:
··Every man in the world is
better than someone else. And
not as good as someone else."
Sar oyan 's death at the
Ve t e rans Administration
Hospital was announced by Dr.
Robert Aduan.
AL'S GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
{71~) 644·7030
An anti-smoking campaign will feature actress-model·
Brooke Shields. The Amencan Lung Association's
ten-second TV spot shows the actress with cigarettes
protruding from ears in front of sign reading
··Smoking spoils your looks.··
Mary Striegel has attended 23 grammar school. high
school or college graduation exercises for her 11
children. Sunday at Felicia11 College zn Lodz . N .J .. it
was Mom's turn to pick up bachelor's degree earned
with nine years of study Son Gresham helps with
mortar board.
While under federal grand
jury investlgal1on ror a n al
leged fraud at Wells Fargo
Bank, Ross Fields, a lso known
as boxing promoter Harold
Smith, married his common-
law wife with matching rings
bearing the bank's stagecoach
insignia
Fields' wedding to Alice
Vicki Darrow, who is accused
or being his accomplice in
severa l al leged bun co
schemes, took place at the
horn e of a friend in Brent wood.
Fields is und e r in ·
vestigation for an alleged $21.3
million bank fraud at Wells
F argo a nd the bank has
named him in a $46.3 million
civil suit, but no cr iminal
charges have been riled.
Picnic plea
banner idea
DtbTI , ....... Wal IW'·
prised and tomewhat embar-
raued when she looked into
the sky and saw a plane traU·
Ing a blue banner which read:
"Willyoumarry me, Debra?"
But she mana1ed to say
"yes" to aoc1ae1 Gavrolaa,
who arranged for the banner
and plane tony overhead dur-
lne a picnic at his family's
bomein Fowler, Calif.
"It was a shock," Miss
Jonlgian. 22, said. "I wasn't
expecting a proposal In that
way.''
"I've been a wreck for the
last week in anticipation,"
said Gavroian.
Elisabeth Taylor, suffering
from "severe chest pains," re·
mains hospitalized with
doctors unsure when ahe
might be re l e ased , a
spokesman at Lenox Hill
Hospital in New York says.
Miss Taylor, ailing with a
res piratory Infection, ap·
parently tore rib cartilage
during a coughing seizure.
The actress' absence from
the Broadway play, "The Lit-
tle Foxes" forced an indefinite
s uspension of the s how. Miss
Taylor. nominated for a Tony
Award for performance by an
ac tress , has b een ill
throughout the week-long run
of the play.
She appeared opening night
with a 102·d eg ree tem-
perature.
Actress Lindsay Wagner
tied the knot with stuntman
Henry Klngl during a
ceremony attended by the
couple's immediate families
outside Lake Tahoe. accord·
ing to a spokesman for the
actress.
It was the third marriage for
Miss Wagner, 31, known for
he r s tarring role in the
"Bionic Woman" television
series. Her former husbands
are actor Michael Brandon
and music publisher Allan
Rider.
Kingi, 37, has had one pre·
vious marraige.
The cere mony was held in
the home of Lee Fuller Jones,
a friend of the couple and
former wife of singer Jack
Jones, Grant said. Country
and western singer Hoyt Ax·
ton was the witness.
A judge ordered TV star
Erlk Estrada and his ex-wife
Joyce to stop publicly sniping
at each other and dismissed
conte mpt proceedings involv·
ing theco\.lple.
"This has been an explosive
c ase," said Loa Angeles
Superior Court Judge Harry
Shafer. "I want th.is to be the
end ofil."
E s trada, 33, and Mrs .
E strada. 40, riled contempt
charges against each other
after he claimed she dis·
pa raged him in a TV interview
and she claimed he had made
de rogatory comments about
hertoTheNational Enquirer
Plain's twisters vicious
Hail, rain trail devastation in Kansas , Oklahoma
•lrm I""'"' ., ., wastal iooather -~---.-• llsmorck M l7 9olM 70 S2
Cl-y lonlQM and T .. lday with
chance of -...n T~y. Muc.11
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HHvy rein end torge hell pounded
the Or•ol Ptoln• todoy efter ''°''"' <•rrYl"91~ <Oll..,.ed IN rOOf
of on ouclltorl!M\'I In Ar1Utnw1 City.
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llom .. In Oklollom•. tnJurln9 -women.
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Merywltte •
What do you llke about the Dally Pllot? What don't you llb? Call lbe number below and JOUr .... .,. will bt reeonltd,
traDl«lbed ad deUftf'ed to IM aPDl'OIM"lat. edla«.
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tetten to the editor on any topic. Mallbox coatrtbuton muat LD·
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Sm, moon, """
u
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT,Mpnday, May 18, 1981 Al
.,. .. , ...... Matt ......
Barbara Murray shows some of the revealing nighties tM P~re Company ha8 to sell. Ms Murray
soys bwmess i.s booming.
For the bedroom bored
Coast's Pleasure Company sells sex wares at parties
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of tu Oollf l"llel Steff
What does an energetic high
school counselor do after s he's
been laid off?
Fueled with enthusiasm from
a Saddleback College business
course, Barbara Murray and her
boyfriend. Tom Moss. decided to
go into the sex wares party busi
ness.
The petite blonde admits she
gels a lot of weird reactions
from her former coll eagues at
Fountain Valley High School
But at $250 per party and four
parties each week. business 1~
hot.
Faced with a return to the
classroom, the mother of two
began looking around for
something new to do.
Unawar e of the recent boom in
similar businesses on the East
Coast, Ms. Murray thought her
Plea s ure Compan y was an
original idea.
Wome n , s h e s ays, who
wouldn't dream of walking into
a sex-oriented book store are
quite willing to go to a friend's
home and buy all sorts of reveal·
ing lingerie and sex gadgets.
R eme mber the Tupperware
parties to which you invited all
your girlfriends, at which you
munched on a couple of cheesc-
to pped cr ackers a nd picked
out matching plastic containers
in three sizes.,
It's the same kind of thing
sort of.
About a dozen young women
sat on pillows in a Costa Mesa
apartment last week examining
the sex toys spread across a ta·
ble, sipped white wine and took
turns trying on the see-through
nighties.
Ms. Murray opened the party
with a sensual quiz and asked
ever yone to name a pleasur e
beginning with.the first letter of
their first nam e.
After this ice-breaker, the
Pleasure Company's unusual
product line was introduced.
Where's the ice cream, one
wonders. when the "Taste of
Love Flavored Llckables" in
h oney spice, va n illa
marshmallow and c hocolat e
eclair are dished out?
•'It's bigger than life.·· ob·
Ms Murray displays .. Shades of
Love." one of the more erotic ttemi
the Plea.1JUre Company stock~
ser ved one guest after examin·
ing the handy glycerine soap
that hangs in the shower and
comes in decorator fragrances
of strawberry, lemon, orange
and musk.
Next came the 16 different
models of vibrators. sporting a
number or exotic attachments .
For the luxury-minded there's
t he $30 satin·llned french rabbit
mitt with a pouch for a seven·
inch vibrator . And those
searching for an outlet for their
a ff ections might try the
"Cosmic Explorer" that comes
with five attachments and nine-
foot cord.
But the real run starts when
the rack of sexy lingerie is dis-
played. Previously relegated to
inepinzd from australia ...
fit QUl~SILViR.INC
....
our fa~ ewirntrunk arrl walkshort
are P?~lar with el 1 ~. a ~nzat gq,la:Ctk>n of colora. e1zcz.e 2S-3e
~ ei'Ia8aleo.
• •
mail order catalogs. the frou·
frou edged nighties in see-
throui;ch lace and antron drew
asps of oohs and aahs.
"This is better than a slumber
party." one guest exclaimed.
One young woman told how
she purchased a pair of black
panties with a strategically mis·
s ing panel al the last party,
only to have her boyfriend flip
cha nnels on the te levision. But
the amaretto-fl avored "Licker
Lubricant" was well received,
she reported.
Order blanks are passed out to
all partygoers so no one knows
who bought what All products
are deLivered in plain brown
paper bags.
Not knowing about the other
companies, Moss and Ms. Mur-
ray had to start from scratch to
find suppliers.
"There we we r e in these porno book stores scribbling
down names of suppliers from
the books\" s aid Moss . "We must have ooked strange."
Strange or not, the couple
h ave been ave r agi ng four
parties a week since they be;gan
April 20. Their original invest·
ment was about S2,500 and they
a re offering distributorships
with $100 to $200 needed for sup-
plies.
Both the popularity of the pro·
duels and the fact they are sold
in homes will make the business
a booming success, said Moss.
Aren't women embarrassed
about buying sex gadgets and
nighties in front of their friends?
"Before, this stuff was looked
down upon," said Ms. Murray.
"But people have been reading
about this and are looking for a
chance to make sex fun."
One woman was reluctant to
tell her husband she was going
to a sex products party and told
him only lingerie would be sold,
said Ms . Murray.
But the next day he told her
all the women in hi s office were
going to a sex wares party and
he wanted her to go too.
Mona Coates, a licensed sex
therapist who teaches a human
sex uality course at Orange
Coast College, thinkS'"the parties
will have a positive effect on re-
lationships.
'
H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ,Monday. May 18, 1981
Carter assertive '
on human rights
NEW YORK (AP> -Jimmy
Carter de-fended hi s
admlnl1tratlon'1 emphasis on
human rigbta. Sunday night and
laid the Reagan ad -
mlnlatratlon's policy of •·so-
called hard-headed realism"
meant "accommodations with
tvl11 practiced in countries
wblcb·mllht be our allies."
The former president told the
New York Board of Rabbis that
bla admlnlatration had been
criticized "as bavlne been naive
and excessively idealistic, but it
t. Important to avoid" exageeral·
ed and excessive swings in mat-
ters of human rlghta."
Atlanta youths are being baited,
a spokesman said.
N~xt Saturday wUI be lhe last
search "unless somebody el.lie
comes up missing," said John
Bascom, spokesman for the
United Youth Adult Conference,
which bas s ponsored the
s earches ror 30 weekends.
AIDdUmpted
byfoodusue
WASHINGTON <AP) -Two
officials of the Agency for In·
ternalional Development are
threatening to resign over the
Reagan administration 's de-
cision to vote against setting in·
ternational guidelines on selling
infant formulas. . ..........
U.S. seeks Saudi
hacking in Mide a s t
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> -
U.S. envoy PbJlip c. Habib WU
returnlng to hJs Syria-Lebanoo-
Israel sbutUe today after a side
trip to try to enlist Saudi
Arabia's support for hla mlulon
lo ease the threat ot a new
Mldeut war.
Syrian President Hafei Assad
warned again that any form of
Israeli retaliation aaainst Syrian
mlaslles In Lebanon would not
be tolerated, indicating be had
no Intention of giving In to
Israeli demands that the anti·
aircraft missiles be removed.
The official Syrian news
agency Sana said Assad vowed
Sunday to "resist any Israeli ag-
greasioo against Lebanon or our
p eacekeeping forces in
Lebanoo."
off into sniper fire later fu the
mornln1.
In llrael, Prime Minister
Menacbem Beain aald no dead·
Une bas been set for Hab6b'e
effort to •ol ve the showdown
between Syria and Israel over
Syrian missiles in eastern Lebanon.
"We don't want war, we want
a peaceful solution," Begin told
reporters. adding that his
Cabinet had agreed unanimous-
ly to give Habib more time.
The prime minister's pollticaJ
opponent, Shimo() Peres, said
his Labor Party had decided not
to use Begin's handling of the
Syrian misailes in Lebanon as a
campaJgn issue for the June 30
parliamentary elecUons .
The Labor Party aerees with
Begin's demands that the rnU·
slles must be removed and doel
n o t w a n t t o a,l u tt e r t b e
diplomatic efforts, Peres said.
Adanta to ludt
~~nd searches
ATLANTA <AP> -With the
ranks of volunteers thinned from
thousands to dozens, weekend
searches for clues in the deaths
and disappearances or 28 black
The selling of infant formula
to mothers in developing nations
has been denounced by some
U.S. church and health groups
for almost five years on the
grounds that breastfeeding is far
hea'lthier and cheaper.
VOLCANO COMMEMORATION -Ex-logger Paul Searles, 73,
as king or the Toutle, Wash. "Volcano Daze" waves to
parade spectators at the weekend event. The parade com-
memorated the eruption of nearby Mount St. Helens a year
ago today ..
A police spokesman in Beirut
said today that 13 civilians dJed
and 44 were wounded as Syrian
troops and Christian militia
traded night-long artillery and
rocket fire along th e de-
marcation line that divides the
city into Moslem and Christian
sections.
Black smoke billowed from
high-rise apartment buildings
set on fire on both sides of the
line before the exchange tapered
Habib was expected to make
Damascus hJs first stop today
alter the weekend meetin& with
Saudi leaders in Riyadh. Saudi
state radJo announced that King
Kbaled sent a letter by special
em issary to Syrian President
Hafez Assad, but its contents
were not released.
WOOffi[liJ President basks • in limelight
2nd IRA hunge r
strike r d ying
Notre Dame honors 'The Gipper' in day of nostalgia
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
<AP> -Another IRA hunger
striker was reported nearing
death today in the macabre con-
test of wills between the· British
1ovemment and guerrillas de-
manding prisoner of war status.
Raymond McCreesh. 24, is
blind, lapsing into unconscious·
ness and in "an advanced state of
weakness," in h is 58th day
with out food , the Irish
Republican Army's political
front, Sinn Fein, reported.
v.s. call,ed key
w Khadafy ouster
NEW YORK (AP> -Libyan
atroniman Moammar Khadaly
ls a "cancer that has to be cut
out," but his removal would
have to be achieved by means
other than assassination, the
New York Daily New~ has quot-
ed government sources as say-
ing.
In a story from Washington on
Sunday, the News quoted an un-
identified official as saying this
country would encourage con-
servative Arab states, notably
Egypt, to take action on their
own, either by direct invasion of
Libya or a coup d'etat.
Arbitmtors meet
THE HAGUE, Netherlands
(AP) -Iranian and U.S. of·
fi cials today met face-to-race for
the first time since the hostage
crisis ended to set up an intema.
tional tribunal to resolve billions
of dollars in financial claims
between the two countries.
SOUTH BEND. Ind. <AP> -
Greeted warmly as "the Gip-
per" but protected heavily as
the president, Ronald Reagan was back at Notre Dame rem-
iniscing about the role that
gave him his big break in
pictures and reciting the themes
tbat carried him to the White
House.
Nostalgia marked the day and
extremely tight security sur-
rounded the president Sunday as
Reagan chose the university's
136t h commencement for his
first public appearance outside
Was hington since he was s hot in
an assassination attempt seven
weeks ago today. The trip lasted
slightly more than six hours,
ending back in Washirgton
before dark.
For Reagan. it was a return to
the campus he has said "has a
ve ry secure place in my heart."
It was in South Bend that the
Notre Dame football legend of
Knute Rockne and George Gipp
grew a legend that, back in
about om
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--------------1.
1940, was to be the turning point
of Reagan's movie career.
The president, wearing a pro-
t e ct iv e ves t be neath his
a c ademic robe , shared a
platform at the Notre Dame
Athletic and Convocation Center
Arena with Pat O'Brien, who in
the movie "Knute Rockne -All·
American" played Rockne, the
coach to Reagan's Gipp, the
halfba ck who died o r
pneumonia.
Also on the platform were
U. N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim; former Secretary of
State Edmund S. Muskie, who
instead or an honorary degree
received a special university
medal; Jerusalem Mayor Teddy
Kolek and at least one black-
.JitOWned Secret Service agent.
"If I don't watch out, this may
turn out to be less a commence-
ment than a warm bath in
nostalgic memories." Reagan
said.
"Win one for the Gipper," he
said at one point, weavint into
his speech the most famous line
from his 56 movies.
I I
I I
I I
ISU NDAY, MAY 24 1
I PREVIEW 11:00 A.II. -2:00 P.11. • AUCTION STARTS AT 2:00 P .11. I
I NEWPORT BEACH MARRIOTT HOTEL 1
I 800 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH I I FEATURING I
I * ANTIQUE FIREARMS AND SWORDS I
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CATALC>GUe WIU.. H AYAILAaU AT THE DOO" I NO RESERV E BIDS I
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·~~~---~~~~-
~UillTI~
Viet veteran
found dead
CALABASAS <AP> -James Hopkin• •• Viet·
nam veteran who two montbl a10 crubed a Jeep
into the Jobby of the Veteran• Admlnlatrauo-.
Hospital In West Los Angelea and fired off several
1uu, was found dead In his home at a trailer park
Sunday, a sherifrs spokesman said.
Deputy Clyde French said sheriff's homicide
investigators found an empty liquor botUe and pill
bottle on a table next to the ned where the 32-year-
old veteran was lying.
Hopkins' wlfe, Suzanne, called the Mallbu
1herlfrs substation just before 3 p.m . after di•·
coverine his body In the mobile home at the Blue
Duke Trailer Park on Las Vlrgenes Road, French
aaid. He said it was not known how Iona Hopkin•
bad been dead.
On Ma.rch 14 Hopkins, wearing battle faU1ue1,
drove a jeep through the doors of the VA facility in
West Los Angeles and fired 14 shota from an· M -14
rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun and a .45 caliber
automatic pistol into lobby walls. He was also car-
rying two other handguns and had 100 rounds of
ammunition.
No one was injured in the shooting.
Hopkins, who said be wu•deat, claimed after
the incident that he had been harmed by exposure
to the chemical defoliant Agent Oranse which was
used during the Vietnam War. He charged that the
Veterans Administration was ignoring bil plipt.
I'll F 41U,,_ -----St lC 117#7 ..._--··--cc...-.-·-""••I :. cona..M1·1211 ,_..._._ ---0401 -~~ .............. -.-, ..
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Orange Coast OAfl Y PfLOT,Monday, May 18, 1981 H/F Al
·Shack fire kills alien
Three others hospitalized as heated rocks ignite plastic
DOUBLE WINNER -CindJ Kerby, Miss
California, won both the Mlu Amity and Miss
Photogenic awards at the lliss USA Pageant
in Biloxi, Miss. Mias USA will be chosen
Thursday in a live telecast on Channel 2 at 9 p.m.
OCEANSIDE (AP> -Heated roeb keeplns ll· le1a1 aUem warm at nllbt lpited a piece of
p&utic and destroyed thelr lbaCk, flltally burninl
one mu and holpttallaine thrM o&Mn du.rlna the weekend.
AntollD Gonaalea, 20, died Saturday ln
University Hospital of leecmd and Udrd~eiree
burna over 90 perceftt of bll body after Friday
nltbt'• ftre.
Tbe men were 1leeplat In a di~ dq under
·th• f armlnl aback, whlcb wu made of cardboard,
lumber and ptutic. As lt burned, they crawled out,
•tartlna ftrell aloq the way with tbelr burnlnt
clothe1.
Nuke plant doun asab&
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Tbe Rancho Seco
nuclear power plant ii down •lain becauae of a
"•lllht release" of radioactivity.
Sacramento llunlclpal Utility District
spokesman Jeff lla.n aald Sunday that the leak
waa detected in tbe early~ boun in one of
the two 1team 1eneratora wblle tile plant wu pro-
duclna 190 me1awatta of electricity.
r Fotr proteaten held 't
LOS ANGELES CAP> -When an estimated ~ P~ and anti:Kbomelrii demooatraton showed
up lo the Westwood area to excbaJlCe llosWe and
heated lnaulta, there were half u maft1 police and
sberlft'a oftlcen on band to keep everyt.bin1 under
control.
Tile demonstration Sunday was described by
Exce ent Opportunity
for
POLICE· OFFICERS.
In
Northem California'• ''All American Cty''
Vlllf IO, CAUF I
lnflY &.-• ....... •try Ava .. W.
Salary
~J!!t; ~!\~ :.,'!! .. ~ ~!.'!!,;.!~l first......, ...... a...a •·· ............. NII. OtP ............. ,..
Min. I~: 60 S-.. ""*-' C1l111 Aee 21 .. IS ..... o,p. ..... ,, •.
Mh .............. ·--· ...... ~. Exe911eftt am.t. ... Ample leer.don a .... Family Community ........ '= ................ .,
A ¢ --ZI. IHl-H1lt1p ... llllS. ..... ..... ..._ .................. ... ro w..,..-p ., • ..._ r-.. r ,..,,.._
No .ct,1pol11•111t N •
police as nol1y but without serious incident,
althou1h four people were arrested. No injuries
were reported during the six-hour demonstration
outside the Federal Building as police uslns horsea
and ri<>' 1eat formed lines to keep the two lacUons
apart, said Sgt. J ohn SUlo. •
Solar p/,ane aet.s reoord
SHAFTER (AP) -Powered by the sun's
ener1y, the Solar Challeneer new to an altitude of
13,000 feet over Kem County breaklnt a record it
bad set previously.
The Solar Challenger. the world'• only solar
powered plane, Saturday reached 11,500 feel dur-
in1 a slx and a half hour flight. Sunday'• fll1ht
laated more than eight hours. settln1 another
endurance re<:ord for a solar powered craft.
Designed by Pal.l't Macready, who set records
with manpowered aircraft in the late 1970s, the
Solar Challenger is undergoing lestine for a pro-
posed London to Paris ntght in June.
Budget cul.s 'hanlship'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -State and county re·
ports on the effects of the Reagan administration's
budget cuts for government-paid health care say
that either benefits to the state's Medl.Cal reclp·
ients will be curtailed, or t.ae number of .people
receiving such aid will be reduced, probably both.
The gist of both reports, as outlined in a story
in today's Los Angeles Times. is that federal aid to
the state will be cut back, so more of the financial
burden for providing medical care for the poor will
fall on the county.
The famous Brooks Brothers
poplin suits for Summer
Two flights daily. Only direct service
from Orange County to Seattle . Avoid
the c:rowds at Los Angeles International
Airport. Family Plan available.
Buy one full fare, save 50°/o on the
rest of the familyf Ask for details. This is the warm weather favorite, our own .
wash-and-wear 3-button suit made only for
I Brooks Brothe1;1. It's coot, has a crisp look, and
it's a cla1aic. Blend of polyester-cotton, in the
three wanted colors: tan, olive, navy. Our reiu-
lar aizcs, plus 48 and 50 regular and long, and
48 exua l~'Co&t .and trousers, $140
Us. Y"M" BrooJ»-ll~ cluArr~ accOMnt or AJMrican BKpN11.
Just call your travel agent and say you want to fly
Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060.
Fares subject to change without notice.
". Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ...-onday. M•y 18, 1881
&ntiago airport site
could spell trouble
It ls politically necessary
these days to find a large. un-
developed piece of land when
•earcbing for an airport slte, and
that is why Santiago Canyon
seems at first glance to be an at-
tractive spot.
It is close enough to be ac-
c ess i b I e to Orange County
travelers but tucked far enough
back in the foothills to serve up to
20 million passepgers per year
without sending jets roaring over
rooftops. Because of that, planners for
the Southern California Assocla-
Uon of Governments have de-
cided the site merits examina-
tion. They say it will be con-
sidered in the same way they'll
look at a site on Stuart Flats near
the coast at Camp Pendleton.
Taking a hard look at San-
tiago Canyon is wise, but 1t
seems unlikely that the site could
e s el ecte d over Ca mp
Pendleton's. About the o nl y
lt
superior feature the canyon bu
ls its proximity to Orange Comi-
ty's population center. /
Tbat•s not necessarily good,
though. In fact, lt's downright
awful for the peopJe in San Diego
who need a regional airport site
as badly as people in this county.
SCAG planners also 1hou.ld
remember that undeveloped sites
don't remain so after an airport
moves ln. Experience with John
Wayne Airport underscores that
point.
Hotels, offices and even eome
homes might be tolerable near
Pendleton's Stuart Flats, where
roads can still be widened and
where traffic is much lighter. To
allow development in Santiago
Canyon. however, could forever
mire freeway·dependent Orange
County ln congestion and pollu-
tion.
Eventually. the Santiago site
could be more of a problem than
a solution.
'Handgun control hope
For the first time there are
indications that a measure lo
control the dis tribution of
handJnlllS may have a chance in
Congress.
In the days following the at·
tempted assassination of Presi-
dent R e agan , th e tiny
Washington, D.C. organization
known as Handgun Control, Inc.
which has long been lobbying un-
successfully for some sort of con-
trol, was suddenly flooded with
phone and mail inquiries.
Many t elevision viewers
learned of the organization when
it was featured in a segment of
the "60 Minutes" program. A
foUow·up advertising campaign,
asking citizens to write to their
congressmen via Handgun Con-
trol, Inc. urging support of the
Kennedy-Rodino handgun control
measures yielded 100,000 letters.
flie Kandgun Crime Controll
bills (S.974 and HR 3200) in-
troduced by Sen. Edward Ken-
nedy and Rep. P eter Rodino,
would haJt the manufacture, sale
transfer and importation of
"Saturday Night Specials" and
their parts. The weapon used in
t he Re agan attack had been
assembled in Florida of imported
parts.
The bills aJso require a back-
g round c heck of a buyer's
criminal record during a man-
datory three-week waiting period
after purchase and provide for
mandatory sentences for persons
committing a handgun crime.
It now appears that some
members of Congress who pre-
. viousJy have flatly reject.ed all
gun control measures are begin-
ning to have second thoughts.
Even as stem an opponent as
Sen. Strom Thurmond. now
chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee. bas said be now would favor a ban on the importa-
tion of Saturday Night Special
parts and a waiting period after
the purchase of a h~un.
The Kennedy-Rodino bills are
not directed at hunting guns and
would not eliminate the purchase
of handguns by law-abiding
citizens. They simply seek to
eliminate the cheap Saturday
Night Specials and ask that
would-be gun owners establiab
their good character.
Jt will not be easy to win
votes for the bills. Last year the
political action committees of
three pro-gun organizations spent
more than $1 million in election
contributions. Several of the
recipientB are members of the
Judiciary Committee which mu.st
pass on any handgun control
measure.
But with enough public pres-
sure, the tide may turn.
A danierous proposal
Tear gas most certainly is a
less dangerous self-defense
weapon than a handgun, but it
too has some risk if ineptly
handled.
That's why current law re-
quires purchasers of tear gas to
obtain a permit, issued only Upon
completion of a certified two-
hour training class. The law also
prescribes strict quality control
for tear gas products.
During the past year, about
one million persons have take.n
the approved training courses
and paid $3. 70 apiece for the
permits to defray Department of
Justice costs for underwriting the
program.
Now, for some obscure rea-
son. Assemblyman Terry Gog-
gin bas introduced a bill <AB
1771) that would eliminate the
training requirement and permit
•
indiscriminate sale ol tear gas
produ~.
Needless to say, tear gas
manufacturers are pushing the bill. But there's strong opposition
from law enforcement organiza-
tions whose members are only
too well aware of the dangers in-
volved in careless use of tear gas
products.
It's understandable that
many citizens would prefer to use
some form of tear gas for self-
defense in case of attack, rather
than a gun. Under present law,
thb can be managed safely -
and that's the way it should re·
main.
But isn't it rather remark-
able to think that while tear gas
purchasers are required to un-
dergo training, no such effort is
required of gun buyers?
Opinions expressed In the space above ar• those of the O.lly Plk>t. Other views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artlats. R .. der comment Is lnvl1·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60. Costa Mffa, CA 9'1626. PhOne <71•)
b42·4321 .
L.M. Boyd I Day1 of the Sybarite1
Greek Lrlden founded the ancient
clty of Sybaril on the Gull of Taren·
tum. And they bad tome pretty def-inite notklnl about what tort ol city
they wanted. Nobody waa •\ll>POMCI
to 10 to work before noon. Evenlnp
were to be devoted to partlea.
Ever)body waa a~ to...., ID
tM n,. hall ol the day. It waa not
Jutt blid mannera but a doftrtOt
crime to make nolM In t.be mornlnC·
ORANGE COAST
llllJ"81
Tberefon, romte.n wen outla_.. ta
tbe city limlta.
~~-~···· .;~
Technology will change life
SAN DIEGO -On May 5, voters here
decided whether or not the city should
build a new $224 million conventiort
center. But no one had to leave home to
vote.
Maybe voting machines will be a
thing of the put. Maybe we will no
longer be "going to the polls."
A week before that in New York. City,
C. Peter McColough, the chairman of
the board ol the Xerox Corp., reported
on the company's activities, but said be
didn't really want to talk about copying
machines . Speaking to finaodal
analysts, he diacussed the company's
plans for ''automated omces."
Maybe Xerox machines, wbicb many
of us still think of aa new. will sooo be a
thing of the past. Maybe we woo't be us-
ing fl.Jing cabinets full or Xerox copies.
We won't even be "going to the office:·
Last week., the New York Times, the
town crier of freedom of the press. ·
editorially called for government
restrictiona on the purveying ol news lo
the United States. The newsP8per, H ·
sentially, wants the federal government
to prevent the American Telephone and
Telegraph Co. from broadcasting elec-
tronic retail and classified advertisin~
MAYBE NEWSPAPEU will soon be
a thing of the past . Maybe we will be
able to find out bow much growid beef
is today and which houses are for saJe
without "going out for the paper."
Those are just three of Uiis week"s
notes from the revolution. Those little
stories could have more to do with the
way each of us will be living 10 or 20
years from now than all the words of
Ronald Reagan or Tip O'Neill and all
the numbers of David Stockman or
OPEC.
The voting in the San Diego referen·
dum was done by mail. The city clerk
~, -----------~· 111:1118 RlfVIS 1'i"'
figured out that it would cost $520.000 to
hold an eledion with voting machines.
voting booths and th e usual poll-
w at c be r s and pa r ap her na lia .
Watermarked, numbered ballots and
postage-paid return envelopes cost the
city only about $3.50,000.
BUT WE ALL know about the U.S.
Postal Service. So why not use
something really efficient -say, elec·
tronic voting. Voters could, almost in·
stantane0usly, using telephone or cable
!television technology. pick a town coun·
ii or a Congress. We wouldn"t have to
eave our homes ; it would be cheaper,
save a lot or gas and also prevent news
organizations from doing the exit·boolh
polling that makes possible voti ng pro·
jections before elections are over.
Xerox. facing the possibility that
paperwork may be becoming obsolete,
wants to get into the business of word
pro cessor s. computers, display
terminals and electronic fi ling and
memory offices created by wires and
laser beams. We wouldn't have to leave
our homes. While·collar workers could
do t heir j obs at termina ls and
keyboards linked to central corporate
computers.
THE TIMES, and other newspapers.
wants a part of that future, too. The
news organizations -at least the smart
ones -want to be the collector and dis·
tributor of the information, news and
commercial, electronically beamed to
homes t hrough television sets and
personal computers. We wouldn't have
to leave our homes to shop press a
button or two to comparison·shop, press
another one to buy.
It is a revolution, probably the most
important thing happening around us
right now certainly more important
than anythfog Alexander Haig has to
say. It could be the equivalent, for in·
s tance. of the invention of the
automobile or the airplane. It couJd free
us to be more than we ever dreamed we
could be, or it could turn us into
pathetic hermits, the victims of a
technology that can 't be stopped, but
should be understood.
Narcotics prohers travel the globe
WASHINGTON -The House Select
Committee i>n Narcotics recently laid
an egg when it t ried to generate some
publicity in Hollywood. The movie peo-
ple boycotted the bearings and the com·
mittee was able to corral only one
employed actor and a retired ju~ile
star.
But Chairman Leo Zeferetti, 0-N.Y .•
obviously hasn't given up the ~dea of a
committee road show. Now he's going
to see how the drug investigation will
play abroad.
This month the committee's on loca·
lion in tMexico. Jn August, the con·
gressmeo will bead for West Germany
to s tudy the problem or drug use among
the American GJs stationed there.
THE WGHLIGRT of the committee's
year will come later that month With a
whirlwind tour reminiscent of the mov·
ie, "If It's Tuesday, Thu Must Be
Belgium." A three-week "elc>bal study
mission" will take the dope proben to
Japan. Korea . Thailand , Guam,
Pakistan, Italy, Turkey, Switzerland,
Germany, France. Colo~bia, Peru.
Brazil and Bolivia.
Jn September. the committee may go
G -.-.-•• -.-f.-•• -. -~·
to New ·vork for a session at the United
Nations.
T raveling investigations are nothing
new for the narcotics committee. Jn the
past , it has gon e to Honolulu ,
Switzerla nd, France, Egypt, Italy,
Japan, Korea, Thailand. Guam and
Macao, as well as lo members' home
districts in New York. Georgia and Ten-
nessee.
The select committee spends about
$600,000 a year -not counting its travel
expenses -and is supposed to work out
a comprehensive federal strategy to
com bat the traffic in drugs. Among
other other things, it is charged with in·
vestigating the role of organized crime
in the $64-billion·a-year illicit drug busi·
ness.
But this function receives scant atten·
tion. Indeed , it would appear that the
committee holds domestic hearin~s
primarily as a publicity gimmick.
WATCH ON WASTE: It's party time
at the Peace Corps . While the volun·
leers overseas are existing on their
customary short rations, officials in
Washington headqua rters have been
working since last October on the
celebration of t he corps' 20th an·
niversary. A special three·person staff
has been detailed to plan and coordinate
anniversary activities around the coun-
try. The year-long bash is setting the
taxpayers back about $180,000.
How the great peace scare plot was foiled
The noted foreip affairs analyst, Dr.
Mark Hawkins, D.V.M., baa written a
new chapter for that monumental work..
An UnpcAblilhed HUCorr/ of the World, 1•1 -
lM. It's entiUed, "The Great Peace
Scare Plot." Excerpta follow :
A relatively iocon.equential event
during the seeoad weell: of April in 1•1
d i d not go unnoticed by the
masterminds of the Kremlin: When _(. -'i ,
llTllPPI ~.
Pr .. ident Bralmev made a speech in
Praaue t.emporartly coolint the Poli.sh
crilll, the prtce ol 1old plummeted sao
an ounce.
Thla lnfonnaUoa wu rautiDel.J fed tn~
to tbe pmt computers ID tM bMemmt
ot the &GB. 'lrbere tt wu tpOtted bJ an
alert TOUDI pro1ram:,~ VlacUm.lr Nokltoft'. ID DO time. to elec·
t.romc wbardrJ. M bad dnlaed • fle-
cltth plot that became boWD u • '11M
Nokltotf Pia.••
WITB T•S ba~-i•I of nW'na
............ ID tM PallUillto. Pl 11.C
Br•' r llllllMed U.. nnt llilp of TM Nolddl'lailtwo .............. ._
later..U of world PHH.•• M H · ........... ~ ..........
let troop9 fNilila ..... v-• ,._. v .... frollil ........ :v .....
wlllft.Wmqbe.''
I
1
Unease spread through the flnan·
clal capitals of the West. Gold plunged
a nother S20. The dollar, hard hit in
heavy trading, fell 20 pfennings against
the Albanian lek. And the stock market
lisUessly meandered down through the
non-psychological barrier of 927·~ .
Thu was, of course, but the beitn·
nlng. In a May Day spetth in Red
Square, Brezhnev disclosed the next
atep: "We are not only immediately
withdrawing 8'1 Soviet combat units
from Afghanistan, but, in order to ease
the fears of our beloved American
friends, we are shipping all Cuban
troops in Africa 5,000 mUes back lo
Cuba, where they will be only 90 miles
from Key West."
Panic! The doUar fell 16 drachmas •r•inat the Latvian lloc. 1'bfte snomes o turicb were crushed to death in an
awesome gold slide. And the stocll:
mark« voted to remain open nitbts to
lncreue sales.
.. AND FUaTRB••oaE,·· l&ld •
1millq B.rn.bne• a week later, "we will
•1ree lo any conditlODt our Am•rtcan
frlendl wtab to lmpoee il ~ wtU but
draw ap • Stratestc Arms f.lmltati011
Trea\J for UI to tlin."
Wl1' 1'e stock. marll:tt plun1ta1
throqb tbe peycboloctcal ban1er ol
uro, told beUac adYertiaed 11 a "I.Mt· ~. """•• '" nMlftDa material" ud the dollar llOt won.It a Pluaed Roma· Dlu pla,IQs, ......_ fteapn .....,
nluled tbe offer. pledllnl to coilUiNe tMail4'-l • ltnlal• Amenea to meet tbe ..........
'
"Then," said Brezhnev. unleashing
his ultimate weapon . "we will uni·
laterally disarm.··
PR~IDENT REAGAN promptly de-
cided lo take late retirement and he and
Mrs. Rea1an rode off into the sunset.
Fortunately. General Haig beat
Secretary Weinberger to the Oval Of·
fice, where be locked all the doors and
picked up the Hot Line.
•'Listen, Brezhnev,'• he abouted,
"either you re-invade A11hanistan, ship
those troops back to Africa and Yemen.
threaten Poland and knock off all this
peace talk or we'll blow you off the face
of the earth. R•member, wf have
l'lOtbing left to lOM."
And thus wu the West saved from the
most ftendlsh Soviot plot of all.
lllllY•
TM OAl)' way to •toll war la to lake UM /
p1'0llt out of muuafacturtni and Mlllnl ~ toolt of war. And that'• about ~ llttiJ. ~ lh• IWl lobby: P.IC .
.. '
-----. -·-~ ------~-... • ••
Diiiy Plllt
MONDAY, MAY 18, 1981
FEATURES 82
MOVIES BS
COMICS 87 lllTlllTll lllCl/flllTlll VllllY
Love triumphs with
humor in
Shakespeare's "All's W~ll That Ends
Well ." See Page B6.
D
0
Proposed Huntington theater ·disaster?
A proposed amphitheater in
Huntington Beach CentraJ park
would be a financial disaster
because planners In Costa Mesa
and Irvine have beaten local of·
ficials t.o the punch, according t.o
a financlaJ study.
The repor t on proposed de·
velopment in the Central Park
notes that a 15,000·seat a m ·
pbitheat.er at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa and
a 10,000·seat amphitheater at
Lion Country Safari in Irvine
already a re in advanced plan-
ning stages. The amphitheater
in Irvine is scheduled to open
Aug. 1.
In addition, a performing arts
complex ls planned for Costa
Mesa adjacent to the South
Coast Plaza, the r e port by
Ultrasystems ootes.
The r eport says a Central
Park amphitheater would suffer
because of competition from the
othe~ proposed facilities, which
the report states would have
"excellent access and high vis-
ibility."
"With the construction of a
high quality a mphitheater in
Costa Mesa, a nd the con·
s t r u ction of a 10 ,000-sea t
amphitheater in Irvine, a book·
ing agent would be unlikely to
choose the Central Park location
for a concert." sta tes the report.
The study says that the park
isn 't ''central to tbe growing
Orange County population" and
that providing parking for a ma·
jor facility there would be dif·
flcult.
It also notes that a performing
a r ls center tent a t ively is
planned for neighboring Foun·
lain Valley.
The amphitheater concept was
r ecommended by Councilma n
Jack Kelly last summer. He pro-
posed putting a 16,000-seat facili-
ty below ground level at the site
of t he city's landfill pit at
Goth ard Street a nd Talbert
Avenue.
A motor bike course also is
proposed for the pit. although
the fi nancial study notes that it's
"doubtful" if this activity would
be profita ble either.
To get the best revenue from
development, the report recom·
mends building a ..golf course,
hotel complex and restaurant, a
480-space recreational vehicle
campground, a pizza parlour
and electronic game arcade, a
six-fi eld b~seball and sports
complex. a fishing lake and a
YMCA gymnasium.
T he report by the Jrvine·based
company says that existing
equestrian uses. adventure play.
ground, concession stands and
HB bemoans·
'road to
By PATRJCK KENNEDY OfUle~"9tlteft
Huntington Beach officials say
the city streets are in poor con-
dition and wUl get worse unless
the state increases funding for
re pairs.
P a ul Cook, the city's public
works direct.or. said at the cur-
rent r ate of state fundlnc from
gas taxes, it will take 13 years t.o
cet the necessary S20 million to
m ake adequate repairs on the
highways.
By then, he said, "most of the
streets would be deteriorated
aga in ."
Because of the rough road
a h e ad, t h e City Councir is
unanimously s upporting Senate
Bill 215 that would increue the
ta x on gasoline and diesel fuel
by two cents and raise truck
wele bt, driver license and vehi·
cle registration fees.
"We are In a crisis today,"
fo rmer Mayor Ruth Bailey
wrote to local lawmake rs. "The
city is now experiencing the
need for major reconstruction
s ince most or its streets were
built at the same lime and are
now deteriorating at the same
time."
Cook said the city also needs
ruin'
additional money for capital im-
provement s including traffic
signa ls, street widening and
road extensions to keep pace
with g r owing n u mbers o f
motorists.
According to the city's five·
year capital improvement pro-
gram, an additional $6 million
will be needed for improvements
other t han street m aintenance.
Cook said in recent years the
city has neglected street re·
pairs. es p ec i a l ly in the
downtown area where roads are
cracked ana have chuckholes.
He said in 1980·81. the city had
24 workers maintain i ng 370
miles or road, compared to 35
people maintaining 310 miles or
road in the city in 1971-72.
· He also noted th at street
crews will be reduced further
this year when several workers '
who are on federally funded job
programs will be eliminated.
·'The consequence of not doing
minor maintenance at the prop·
f r time is the need for major
reconstruction that could cost 15
limes the amount of the original
repairs," he said.
Six enter pleas
in child porno
Six persons arrested In con-
nection with alleged child por-
nography activity ln Huntington
Har bour have pleaded innocent
and have been ordered to appear-
at a preliminary hearlna July 13
i.n W e 11 t 0 r a n g e C o u n l y
Municipal Court.
ArraJ111ed Friday were John
Steen, 55, and hU wlfe Christi, 30,
both of Huntin1ton Harbour;
Mary Yvonne Plunkett, 22, of
Lon g Be ach ; T eena L ucllle
Schoobs, 21, of Cost a Mesa; Irma
Carillo J imenez, 35, of Anaheim:
and Patricia Marie Lombardo,
20, of Los Alamitos.
All six are free on bond, accord-
ing to the Orange County District
Attorney's Office. The. suspects
face charges of engaging in sex
acts with children, a long with
narcotics violations, according t.o
the district attorney's office.
shooting range could profitably
rem aln ln t he 297 ·acre site.
It recommends against rac·
que tbaJJ or tennis activities
because of nearby com petition
and says lhat the noise from a
propo&.,ed p0lice heli port would
be a prdblem.
The develo11ment concept is
being considered by City Council
HIGH STEPPING -Huntington Beach High School's 48·
m e mber drill t eam d isplayed some high kick s while
performing at Comm unity Festival '81 he ld Saturd ay at
Go lde n West Co llege. Tea m r ecentl y wo n stat e
cha mpions hip in da nce-drill division at Hibbard 's California
to generate funds to support the
city's 50-park system.
Development In the pa rk,
waich is a lushly plante d natural
setting, Is opposed by an or·
ganized group of local residents.
T he Community Services
Commission is holding a special
meetinc Wednesday at 5:30 p.m .
to go over the report .
State Competition in El Monte. Las t fa ll, the team traveled
to New York Cit y to m ar ch in Macy's Tha nksgiving Parade
with the school band. Golden West 's Community Festival
d rew more tha n 10,000 people , the college reported.
Spending Sun, surf draw crowds • cmnprugn
on in HB
Huntington Beach offi cials are
advertising in local newspapers.
asking the public to he lp decide
how to spend Sl.5 million in
federal funds next year.
The advertising campaign is
part or the "maximum effort to
involve the public" in using
grant money, as required by the
feder al Housing and Comm unity
Development ( HCD ). according
to city officials .
Next month. the City Council
will appoint vol4nteers to the
HCD Citizens Advisory Commit·
tee. The committee will meet on
the second and fourth Tuesdays
of each month between J uly and
October al 7:30 p.m.
Applications for the commit·
tee are available on the second
floor of city hall at 2000 Main St..
or by calling 536·5542.
City officials say the HCD
gra nt money could be used for
building recreation or day care
centers or making street im·
provements . The Oakview and
downtown a rea s of the cit y
t e ntative l y h ave been
ear marked for HCD improve-
ments. •accor ding to City of.
Ciclals.
Oran ge Coast beaches packed with 323,000 bathers
Lifeguard departments report -
ed large crowds al Orange Coast
beaches Sund ay after sparse
turnouts Saturday bee a use of
gusting winds.
Laguna Beach lifeguards said
they treated a city youth for a
fractured right leg, suffered
while the 18·year-old was surfing
north of Main Beach Sunday.
John Stuawicki was treated by
lireguards and param edics and
taken to South Coast Medical
Center in South Laguna, a
lifeguard spokesman said. A
h ospita l s p okesman said
Stuawicki is in good co9dltion.
No details were availa ble on
what caused the injury.
Lifeguards said an estimated
30.000 visited Laguna Beach
over t he weekend where surf
was running from 1·3 feel. The
water tem per ature was 65
degrees.
Huntington Beach lifeguards
said about 75,000 came to the ci·
ty beach on Saturday and Sun·
day. Lifegua rds reported 12
routine rescues and 10 minor
first aids. Surf was about 3 reel.
The water temperature was 66
degrees.
Newport Beach guards said
the turnout was about 100,000
Sunday and 40,000 Sat urday.
Surf was the highest reported
along the coast at 5·6 feet with 66
degree water tem peratures.
State lifeguards at Huntington
State Beach and Bolsa Chica
State Beach said about 90,000
people were counted over the
weekend.
Surr was from 2·3 reel with the
wate r 64 degrees.
Doheny, San 'Clem ente and
San Onofre state beaches report·
ed a total of 18,000 people for
Sat urd ay a nd Su nd ay .
Lifeguards said they completed
seven routine rescues.
Surf was reported from 1·3
feet wilh the water 64 degrees.
Weekend air temp e ratures
along the coast were from 65 t.o
70 degrees, Lifeguards said.
Services equality 11rged
Grand Jury cites needs of county unincorporated areas
By DAVIDK UTZMANN
OfllleO.it., ...... , ....
The Orange County Grand J ury
tod ay urged the Boa rd of
Supervisors lo come up with a tax
for mula to more equitably dis·
tribute the costs of providing local
services to residents of un-
incorporated areas.
those governed by elected or
appointed boards -will have in·
com e "commensurate with the
services they provide .''
Activity fee
to be topic
'in HD meet
7 1 puppies find home
The jury, in a report to the
board, recommended the county
join with t he Or ange County
di vision o f the L e agu e of
California Cities in employing a
consultant who would "develop
m et hodology for pro-ratin1 the
costs of locaJ services provided by
the county to residents of un·
Incorporated areas."
The Grand Jury said Ila latest
report examined the issue of tax
e (luity a s It r e late d to the
ope ration or city and county 1ov·
ernment as well as fundln1 of
special district operations. It also
lo ok e d at the I mpacts ot
Proposition 13, the 1978 voter·
approved tax limltaUon ln·
ltlatlve, and Proposition 4, which
Imposed f\.trther spending limits
two years la ter.
Newspaper photo bri ngs fast responses in M esa
Synthia deMarquette of the
K·t Boutique ln downtown Cotta
Meaa wu 1lowlqg today.
. ''You muat have q u ite a
readenshlp,'' she told a Dally
Pllot reporter. "We placed all
aeven ol them."
Placed In homes tbrouatw>ut
the 1rea were aeven ais·Week·
old pups abaltdoned With their moetly ahtDherd mother, Terra,
la a Cotta Mtta backyard more
tbaa ftve weekl a10.
Area dot lovers responded to Utt downtown boutiq\11 at 8D E.
ITtb St ..... tM1 learned ln
SaturdaJ'• ,.,... tlaet lMJ eou.ld
1a ... a dDI rr.. lf t hey offend • .......
"W• .. lllOlll IO calll.'' •aid ...............
Tllj ..U••• operator ac· ftlnillM .... la a apedal .. i i ·, Wltll toita Mtta animal
control officers.
She and the puppies' mother
became acquainted more than a
year ago when the Ulen-year-old
sbepherd was found tied t.o a
n e wspape r rack at a Mesa
supermarket.
A note attached to the dot'•
collar read, "If nobody wants
me, my owners wtll return at 5
o 'c lock t o take me to th e
pound."
Lleted was the do1•1 name,
Terra, and her breed.
Mt. deMarquette took Terra ln
and be1a n eearc hln1 for
aomeone to care for her, She
aald a 1oun1 m an took htr home
wltb the promise ht'd have her 1payed. .Ju.t over a month aco. •he
Hld, the man called to report
that he and b1I f rllrtend wen
1pllttln1 up an that ht waa
leaving Terra In his backyard.
He said he was moving.
Ma. deMarquette found Tern.
But Terra had multiplied. She
WH surrounded by a Utter of
email pUJ>I.
"There was no food or water."
Ma. ddfarquette said.
She Hld sbe offered 'to care
for the new mother and her Ill·
ter, and Cotta Mesa animal olf·
lcera .,reed.
"We weaned them," ahe saJd,
•·and then were forced to belin
looktnc f« homu."
She aald ahe'll look for a home now for Terra. • ·
"But not before •he'• neutered
thl1 time," 1he added.
' "She'• 1uch a aweet dot. and
now abt'• been abandoned
twice. 1bat'1 not iolnt to hap.
pen acaln If I can help It."
AddltlonaJly, the panel suggest·
ed county government guarantee
tha t Independent special district.
Gunman robs
118 eatery
HunUneton Beach POiice are
lookln1 ror a lone 1unman who
robb ed a local f ut food
reataurant of S107.
PoUcii aaid the man entered
th• Taco 9eU r .. i.urant, 17111
• Beadl 81..S., at t :SO p.m. Fri-
day, dilplQtd a baadsun ln b1I
wal1tband and dt1naaded cub.
Accord tn1 to pollce. the
bandit, befon n..ua1 with ..,.
money, told l h• reataurant
clerk, "thank you very much
and have a nJce nltht."
Of its s tudy of the tax queaUoo,
the jury aald lntor malion "on the
cost of supplylne 'local' services
to unincorporated areu ls not
now available to $.he county" and
recommended that a study t>e Wl·
dertaken "to permit thla de·
termlnatJon."
ILF. Hildebrand .
rites 1eheduted
Memori al aervlcu for
Richard P. RlldebraDd, a aonc
time HunUnston BHeh rttldeat-
ba vt been aeh-.uled for a p.nt
Wednt1day at tbe Calvart
Chapel at 411 Uth St,, Hua(..
lnston Beaeh. 1
Hildebrand died Sunday at
Anaheim holpttal. Ht wu n .
-. . -....
Ill Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT ,Monday. May 18, 1981
IT ~' ._-M_a_r_i-ly_n_c_r_a-,~-ts_m_a_n_i-.n-k-it_c_h_e_n_ j ~•~c ' . ~· ! s an t Jump By ELLEN BRYANT ---Ca-li-·-ro_r_D-i8_Wi_O_Dl8 __ 0 __ _
! i
I
L t .
I
h EDITOR'S NOTE : Thu ii a.nothn about t e J·umpers :~0c==·abouthll~·~·
There aare two sldea to Men·
JUMPING HEBE AND THERE: By now you suspect
the entire universe knows the result.a of the 53rd annual
leaping of the Jumping Frog Contest of Calaveras Coun·
ty. But l'm trying to ignore it.
Never mind the fact
that several operatives (;)
~m~~yo~J~ ·~ Wayne Airport here in rw\
Orange County had an en· fi4i-
try in the contest named, TOM MORPHINE ,~ r aptly. "Duke." Forget-. _______ ...... -.. .....
that even this sterling
journal, under auspices of
our county bureau chief; Fearless Fred Schoemehl, had a
leaping frog entry identified as "Tile American Dream."
Despite these parochial factors, I'm trying to forget
about the outcome.
IN EVENT YOU AREN'T steeped in the lore of
California during the Gold Rush days, it could be pointed
out that the current frog.leaping competition resulted
from a story by the celebrated American humorist Mark
Twain.
Twain was lured to our Mother Lode country up a).
Angels Camp in Calaveras County amid the Yosemite
range, in the hope that he would get rich quick by hitting
a vein of the yellow metal. He hit it richer in American
literature.
His stay at Angels Camp, however, did result in a
story. penned in 1865,. called, "The Celebrated Jumping
docJno. On the one hand. there's
the quaint, simple town tourtsta
see, the most "laid back" of
Northern Calllornla vlllasea.
But there's an Intensity beneath
the luy surface, the bustle of
creativity, the strenuous efforts
of dedicated artists and
craftsmen striving toward.a ex·
cellence in their chosen fields.
Marilyn Douglas reflects both
sides of Mendocino, her home
for the past 10 years.
Ms. Douglas, 39, a tall, ma·
jest.le, red·haired woman. Is
articuiate and charming, wltb a
friendly, relaxed manner.
Behind the dellghtful personall·
ty, however, is a determln~.
talented craftsman.
In less th8J\.&ix years, Ma.
Douglas has built her Mendocino
Jams and Jellies. located on a
two·acre farm outside of town,
into a highly successful en·
terprise, with 10 employees and
rapidly-growing sales. Her Une
or high quality jams is featured
at gourmet shops throughout th.i
country.
But Ms. Douglas never con·
sciously set out to build a major
company. The business, she
says, "evolved purely by
chance."
Marilyn·Dougl.<u
Marilyn Douglas was raised in
Springville, an agricultural com-
munity in central Tulare Coun·
ty. She first learned to cook
from her father, o profeHlonal
chef.
After attending Sonoma State
Unlveralty in Rohnert Park, s he
began a career in management.
For severaJ years, she waa an
executive with Four Generations
Toy Company, a Sebastopol
manufacturer or wooden toys
and aduJt games.
She worked 12 hours or more
each day. And Ms. Douglas re·
llshed the role of young, suc·
cessfuJ executive. She bought a
house and furniture and, she
says, "started to accumul~
poissessions -things. thinf!i
things."
In 1971, disaster struck. While
she was at work, her new home
burned to the ground.
·'I was wiped out totally. los·
Ing everything but the clothes I
was wearing."
Ms. Douglas was devastated,
psychologically as well as Cinan-
ei a 11 y . But the catastr ophe
proved to be a turning point in
her life.
"I suddenly realized that
material success wasn't nearly
as important to me as I had
thought. I became determined to
start a new life, an emotionaJly
satisfying life."
Her family had vacationed in
Mendocj,no tor a number of
years. 'and Mil . Douglas had
always loved the area.
After the fire, she quit her Job
a nd set otr for Mendocino. rent·
ing the summer home of family
friends. She had less than $100 to
her name.
"I felt like a pioneer," Ms.
Douglas laughs.
For several months, she did
nothing but rest and take stock
of her life. Her first foray ba~k
into the world of work was as a
hotel chambermaid.
·'I wanted a job completely
without pressure."
Gradually. Ms . Douglas felt
able to lake on more
responsibility. She became a
dishwasher at Caf~ Beaujolais, a
popular Mendocino restaurant.
Soon. the restaurant-'s owners
heard about her cooking ability
and asked her to become their
assistant chef. She agreed and
remained at Cafe Beaujolais for
more than four years, the lcisl
l wo as head chef.
In addition, she began to teach
cooking classes at Mendocino
Community Col lege . Ms .
Douglas was a popular teacher.
and one of her most popular
classes was a course in food pre-
paration, including the prepara·
lion or jams and iellies.
Virgo: Accent
on your home
Another drug
and sex test
Angell Camp boo1ter Jerrr1 Heintz chtcking proipective 1umper1
Frog of Calaveras County." Jn it, two gentlemen wager
on who has the frog who can make the greatest single
leap --one declares, "I'll resk forty dollars that he can
outjump any frog in Calaveras County" while the skpetic
retorts, "I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any
better'n any other frog ~ . . "
THUS THE BATTLE was joined and if you don't
know the outcome, better read up on your Mark Twain.
Admittedly, my lack of enthusiasm over frogs goes
far back to the time I had mis·enrolled in a zoology class.
The professor was a skinny, bald, bespectacled. thin·
hpped chara<;ter who just loved to torture students with
all kinds of experiments on frog cadavers.
As a matter of fact, sometimes the heartless prof
would send frogs to the Great Lily Pond in the Sky right
before your very eyes.
After executing the hapless amphibian, he would in·
torye, in what seems to be suppressed joy, ''Now you see.
this frog no longer exists as an INDIVIDUAL ... " He
put th~ emphasis on "individual" just in that way.
Cripes, you'd say to yourself, he doesn't look like he'd
give any more of a hoot if that was your very own lifeless
student form, reposing there in his hand~.
Don't we want to at least say a couple of words over the body of the recently passed?
MAYBE SOMETHING LI.KE, "Oh Operator of the
Great Lily Pond in the Sky, he ain't much to look at now
but he was one helluva jumper in his time ... Amen!"
But nothing like that ever happened. The corpse was
simply dispatched to the dissecting table forthwith.
I got a "D'' on t~e first midterm in Frog Executions
lOO·A. I turned in my dissecting tools soon thereafter to
pursue something more pleasant like chasing fire engines
and cop cars.
EVER SINCE, I've had trouble enjoying the Jump·
ing Frog Contest up there north at Angels Camp in
Calaveras County.
Just remember, out of the hundreds of frogs entered,
only a handful become celebrated winners with the big
leaps.
Thus I can fret over what university prof gets all the
losers.
Adventists schedule fihn
Tuesday, May 19, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 2l·April 19):
You close gaps -what seemed
out-of·reach is now available.
Emphasis on law, special rela·
tionshlp, added responsibility
and greater chance for rewards.
Capricorn. Taurus, Virgo
natives figure prominently.
Good money news!
TAURUS <April 20,May 20)·
Gain valuable hint by reading
HOROSCOPE
Aries message. Emphasis on
completion. credit ratings and
revelation concerning financial
status of one close to you, in-
cluding partner or mate. Gain
indicated through unorthodox
pro<!edures.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Let go of outmoded methods.
Get second wind. New approach
necessary where partnerships.
contracts and public relations
enter picture. Focus on small
print. "important papers•· and
marital status. Imprint style.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Focus on security, family, res-
olutions concerning diet. nutri·
tion and health. Intuitive in·
tellect provides answers. You'll
regain sense of direction .. A
former "teacher" returns to
scene. Capricorn, Aquarius and
another Cancer figure prom·
inently.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22):
Obstacles are removed; you'll
have greater freedom of
thought, action. Social life ac·
celerates, romance replaces
lethargy. You feel more vital,
alive and ambitious. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius pnsons figure
prominently.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sep\. 22): Ac·
cent on home, property values,
safety measures and basic
SIHIOR CITIJ:IHS
SPICIAL
security. Delve beneath surface
Indications. Family problem
will be resolved. Know it, accent
diplomacy and willingness to
make intelligent concessions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 ·0ct. 22):
Focus on change, variety, travel
and renewed communication
with relative who had been
estranged. Analyze recent oc·
currences; find reasons, take
nothing for granted. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons play
important roles.
Sl.tlRPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Investment pays dividends.
Money picture is brighter than
originally anticipated. Accent on
personal possessions, payments
and collections. YQU locate what
had been lost, missing or stolen.
Family member makes cori·
ciliatory gesture.
SAGl1TARIVS CNov. 22·Dec.
21 ): Judgment, timing are on
target. You'll be at right place
at crucial moment. Highlight
confidence, take initiative, make
personal appearance. New con·
tacts prove valuable. Define
terms, avoid self-deception.
CAPRICORN C Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Much that occurs takes
place behind scenes. Clandestine
meeting could be on agenda.
What appeared a setback is like·
ly to boomerang in your favor.
Accent on courts, hospitals. or·
ganizations and fraternal or·
de rs.
AQUARIUS CJ an. 20-Feb. 18):
Accolade from one you admire
provides boost in morale. Focus
on dreams, visions. wishes and
basic fulfillment. Aries. Leo,
Sagittarius natives play impor-
tant roles. An aggressive friend
aids in removing roadblock to
progress.
PISCES C Feb. 19·March 20):
Hi~hligbt independence,
initiative and open dialogue with
one in position of authority. New
approach elevates standing in
community. Leo, Aquarius
persons figure prominnently.
Emphasis on achievement,
responsibility and dedication.
Dear Readers: Last week l
promised to prmt the 1981 teen·
age Drug and Sex Test. I'd like to
make it clear that these tests,
which have appeared in this col-
umn from time to time. are not
written by me. In fact, I don'tcare
much for them. The first Drug
and Sex Test appeared in-1967. It
was composed by three teen·
agers. I have published several
up~ated tests by teens from
Maine to California. This one is
from two New Trier High School
students who live kl a Chicago
suburb. It is called the Know
Thyself Questionnaire. Score the
number indicated for each 'Yes"
answer.
1. Ever gone out with a
member or the opposite sex? 2
2. Ever been kissed? 3
3. Ever been French-kissed? 4
4. Ever been kissed while in a
reclining position? 5
5. Ever gotten or given a
hickey? 5
6. Ever been kissed against
yourwiU? 2
7. Ever parked for more than
an hour? 5
8. Ever taken off most of your
clothes while parking? 7
9. Ever said , "I love you?" 4
10. Ever said "I love you" to
more than one person in the
same week? 5
11. Ever gone totally steady? 2
12. Ever cheat on your
steady? 5
13. Ever pick up a girl or go with
a guy youdidn'tknow'! 6
14. Ever make a member or the
opposite sex cry? 4
15. Do you s moke re~ular
cigarettes? 3
16. Do you smoke pot? 6
17. Do you drink alcohol or
beer now and then? 7
18. Do you drink alcohol or
beer every day? 9
19. Have you ever passed out
from drinking? 9
20. Have you ever tried Angel
Dust? 11
21. Have you ever slipped Angel
Dust into someone's drink? 12
22. Have you ever taken pills
to get hi gh? 11
23 . Have you ever taken pills
to get off a hi gh or go to sleep? 11
24 . Have you ever had sex
without using a contraceptive? 10
25. Have you <or your partner)
---~O
-··-· l_AM_Dl_Rs ____ ,,_ a
ever worried about being pres.?·
nant? 10
26. After the scare did you go
back to having sex without protec·
lion? 11
21. Have you I your girJ 1 ever
considered an abortion? 12
28. Have you (your girl> ever
had an abortion? l2
29. Even though you are
straight, would you go kinky to
see what it's like? 13
30. Ever stolen monev to buv
drugs? 13
SCORE CHART
Under 10 A nerd.
11 to 15 Pure as Ivory soap
and maybe a fruitcake.
16 to 20 Passionate but
sensible.
21 to 39
40 to 75
76 to 85
trouble.
Normal and decent
Indecent.
Headed for serious
86 to 104 Already there.
Anything over 104 -Hopeless
and condemned.
/low much do you know about
pol, LSD, cocaine, !peed, meth. up-
pers and downers. glue and heroin?
Are all these druga dangeroiu? Get
Ann Landers' new booklet. "Strmght
Dope on Drugs." F'or each booklet
ordered, aend a dollar pliu a long,
self -addreased envelope (21 cent•
poatage) to Ann Landers. P.O. Bo:r
11995. Chicago, Ill. 60611.
ADVENTIST COMMUNITY
services presents a film series
titled "Focus on the Family" shown
Tuesday evenings at 7, May 19
through June 30, at the Newport
Harbor Sev.enth·day Adventist
Church. The film series features
therapist James C. Dobson and fami·
ly counseling graduate student.a will
load discussions following each mov-
ie. For information, call 646·2082.
are Sue Clark of Newport Beach and
Herta Un of Costa Mesa. For more
information. call C213) 641·8152.
25°/o OFF ALL SllVICI
MOA., T ..... Wfll °""
HAIR
HAMDLIRS How Do You Feel Right Now?
ORTHOPEDIC TREATMENT of
arthrltll ls the subject of a lecture at
HEALTH HELP
1 : 30 p .m. Tuesday. at Western
Medical ~nter, formerly Santa Ana·
Tustin Community Hospital. The free
dl.cu11lon will be led by phyalciana
Larry Dllllif'and Zan Lew11. For ln·
formation, call 638·5001.
CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE pa·
tlents and the community can find
out how the disease affect.I the faml·
ly a t a lecture 1pon1ored by the
American Lune AHocatlon of Orange
County. For information, call 835·
LUNG.
HIGH HOPES Neurolo1ical
Recove.y Group bas scheduled a
skale·a·lhon to raise funds for
various programs at 6 p.m. Thun·
day, tn Laguna Hills. For informs·
lion, call 540·4481. · -
WORKSHOP on '1The Art of Sell·
PreservaUon" wUl be held at 9:30
a .m . Friday, in Tustin. Sponsored by the Orange County Mental ff~allh Al·
soclatloo, the event will ~ led by
Barbara Hall.ffolmt1 ol the tounty
Human Services Aiency. For ln·
formation, dll 541·7~·
CONQUER DEPRESSION la the ti·
Ue of a lecture al 10:30 a.m . Satur·
d ay, ln NewPOrt Beach. The proaram ll 1ponsorecf by the New Ltfe Found•·
tton. For information, calJ <213)
Monar Boe.rd ll a uUOna1 Mn*
bonor IOdety. ll•mbin an cboMn ln u.•:;...._ , .. ,, 111. ... ii I lfTI la of
La1uu ads Ht.,_ k~
~~~::::=~~~~==~~~I. Are You A Mature Woman ...
Announcing a Summer
Program ForTeeMI
John Robert Powers has
designed a special Summer
program to meet the Ull·
improvement needs or
teenagers For over 50
years. John Ro«>ert Powers
has served the emerging
woman In personal. bus•·
ness or career development
and professional modeling.
How tht teenager can
especially learn to reach
her full potential the "Pow·
ers" way In the relaxed
atmosphtrt or ~'
cla&ses. Receive substan·
till tuition dlacoonta by
• rewvlng cinses now. Call
for fr,. Information
OIMIECOUITY
3 Town & Country. Orange
(714) 547 .. 9229
With A Circulation & Figure
Problem?
H your 8"'"' 11 "YES" then you need
Jean Marie . . . The only women'•
Health SaJon detigned with ~oo In mind I
LOOK BETTER ... FEEL BETIER ...
The tpecia1 man In your life wtll love you
fc>r Ill
,.._,. lfffl ............ °"' Ullll I $30 U'nl ltM YWttJ . ... .... ,... •
I· -a 3 0 6 • • I 4 a ; 5 4 0 5 0 0 4 4 ' .
• ••
So staegenog are today's coat.a or arthrttl.a -the
nation's No. l crippling disease -that finally U.S. ln·
dustry is taking the lead in developln1 lnnovatlve
programs to help reduce the coats of diublllty
through better use or medical and rebablUtatlve
services.
Hailed as the fi rst joint ecrort by industry. re·
babilltation services and an academic medical center
to deal wtth a health problem of profound impact on
employers and
employees, the•
pioneering pro·
gram involves
the creation of
staffs of voca·
tlo n al
counselors to
work with in·
-~ SYlVIA PllTll ~ .. Z
dividuaJ industries The goals are.
MEDICAL SCREENING to detect and monitor
arthritis in workers: referral to proper health pro·
fessionals in a company's community; extensive con·
centratJon on education of both employer and
employee that "something can be done about
arthriili if treatment is begun early.''
The average person waits. more than four years
from the beginning of arthritis symptoms before
seeking proper medical assistance, according to the
Arthritis Foundation, and that, stresses Dr. Kenneth
Mitchell, associate director or the University of North
Carolina School of Medicine, "may be too late for
employment rehabilitation of the person concerned."
More than 31 million Americans are kffected by
arthritis, a disease which takes about 100 forms. The
horrendous costs:
-%7 MILLION working days lost in 1980 alone.
representing ne arly $5 billion in wages lost to
employees ..
More than $1 billion in annual dlsab1hty pay·
ments. or al>out 15 percent of all Social Security Dis·
ability Insurance payments to workers.
-$450 million per year in Veterans Adminlstra·
lion payments to veterans whose major disability is
arthritis or rheumatic disease.
$1.• billion in lost homemaker services a. year .
SS billion a year s pent on medical care, .mclud·
ing nearly $1 billion annually for quack remedies and
unproven drugs and devices.
ALL TIUS, PLUS about $1 billion in lost federal,
state and local income taxes, adds up t~ a~ ~nnual
price tag bf $14 billion -and that sum is rising re·
lentlessly day after day. year after year.
Industry always has recognized the ~eeply ad·
verse economic impact of arthritis, particularly In
absenteeism. productivity and disability payments;
it has been impossible to miss. . .
But doing something about at on the sample pre·
mise the cost of arthritis can be controlled and It ls
worth spending money ·'to have .happier: people work-
ing more efficiently and. costing, their companies
less." as Dr. Mitchell puts it -thats new.
FIRST OF T HE Industrial Rheumatolo~y
Rehabilitation centers has been set up an
Greensboro, N.C .. under the sponsorship of Burl·
ington Industries, lnc .. the world's largest textile
manufacturer. .
Since this disease is the leading cause of in·
dustrial absenteeism .and. ~econd only to .~eart dis-
ease as a cause of d1sab1bty payments, our com·
pany would rather focus on rehabil!tation. than on dis·
a bility," notes Burlington's medical director, Dr.
Donald Hayes.
Burlington's fight against arthritis began back in
1974, but now, reports the Arthritis Foundation, other
companies include:
G~NERAL MOTORS, which Is establishing
broad educational programs to reach more than
14 000 of its employees as well as workshops for plant
physicians and nurses; Jobns·Manville Corp.;
Western Electric and Samsonite.
Gold m e tals quotations
Go/,d
By The Assodaled Press
Selected world gold prices today:
London: morning fixing $481.75, off $3.25.
London: afternoon fixing $481.75, off $3.25.
Paris: afternoon fixing $533.74, up $16.85.
Frankfurt: fixing $483.01, off S0.16.
Zurich: late afternoon fixing $480.00, off S3.00; mJ 00
asked.
Handy & Harman: only daily quote $481.75, off $3.2S.
Engelhard: only daily quote $481.75. off S3.2S.
Engelhard: only daily quote fabricated $5'11.02, off $3.38.
Siher
Handy & Harman, $10.80 per troy ounce.
Metab
NEW YORK <A P ) -Spot nonferrous metal prices to-
day:
Copper 85%.87 cents 8 pound, U.S. destination1.
Lead 86-38 cents a pound.
Zinc "6~ cent.a a pound. delivered.
Tia tQ.6660 Metals Week composite lb.
Ahamlaam 76 cents a pound. N.Y
Mercury '42S.OO per rtask.
Plallaum $465.00 troy oz .. N. Y.
(;oltlcoim
NEW' YORK (AP> -Prices late Friday or 1otd coins.
compared with Thursday' a price.
Krqerrud 1 troy 0.1., $:!03.SO, olf SS.ZS.
Map)e leaf, i troy 01., $488.25, orUS.25. •
Mmeu ~peso, 1.2 troy en., SIOl.75, otr M.25.
A..utaa 100 crown •. 8802 troy~·· $474.25, off ss.oo.
Soun!e; Deak-Perna
....
,
Orange Cout OAJL y PILOT ,Monday, May ie. 1181
_ .. ___ ···-...
STCLIFF
PLAZA
ANTHONY 'S SHOE SERVICE
BANK OF AMERICA
CHARLES BARR JEWELERS
CROWN HARDWARE
DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR
DR . LOU ELDER
optometrist
HAIRHANDLERS SALON
HALLI DA Y'S MEN'S CLOTHING
HICKORY FARMS
specialty food items
HUMPTY DUMPTY
children's clothing
JEAN DAHL
designer and better sportswear
LA GALLERIA
elegance in fas hi on
MARK ET BASKET
f~ES AMIES TEENS
NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS
PAPER UNLIMITED
gifts and stationers
SAV .. QN DRUGS
STOREKEEPER
traditional sportswear
VET A'S INTIMATE APPAREL
WESTCLIFF CLEANERS
WESTCLIFF CORNERS
gourmet wore and collectibles
WES'TCLIFF SHOES
XAVIER 'S FLORIST
~ • • • ., .
AlllNCAN L.aAGUI A,..7,,,..n1 CM.IPOIUl'IA ~ D•TllOIT ...... .. ......
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0<1c'11.21t ; ~ : : .. ::t 1 ~ ~ & HoClloll,Jb 4 I J 1 ....... 11.,JD J 0 I 0 W!llte•r,21> 2 0 I 0 Totel• l7 , 14 6 Totel• JO 1 S 0 ._...., .........
c.r1tornl• i11 010 001 7 O.troll 001 ooo ooo 1 E -Hobteln, Tremm.11. OP -Celltorn1a 'ti O.troll t. LOB -Calltornla 7, O.troll J 2 ~~raine. se .~· s~ -.a;.Y•'°'i• so
F=~W, .. I) t S I I I J
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T ~~p0 f! . .'":~~ (Lynn> WP Wllcoa
H••l-
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Lynn
Clark
C••ew Ford Oownln9 HobNn
Harri•
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Angel average•
llATTUtO
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101 U J2 S lO .M
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SS 7 10 0 1 Ill n 4 01112 12 J 0 1 ,.,
111 10 .. ) 20 141
TOie it
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Hauler
Renko Foncll
Sane lier Jeller_,
Witt
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PITCH I NO
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42 ll 16 " ,., :us t\'t .. 4 s 0-1 1.41
16 11 10 I 0-0 I.SO 3 5 • J 0-1 11.00
:112 Jll 102 IJS '"" J.4' 1..--., .... J • .,..
lf'lf'll0-1
TorOftlO • 000 ...000 000-0 ' 0
Cle .. lend 000 010 00•-I 6 I
SUelt llld 8. MerUnez, Wtlln Ill. Welb.
Monve ,,, -H-w -W•lb (4-21 L
Sll.O C).41. S -Mo<'99 (1)
I .... ,_ .... ,.,.,
t~0-1
r oronto 000 000 100 0-1 1 2
Cleveland 000 010 000 1-2 1 0
G•rvln, 11.L. Jecio.-. Ill. w 11111 1101 -
Whitt; Bly ....... -OIH. W -81y .. ...., CJ.II. L -R.L. Jeckton 10·21 A -44,1'1.
-Se•t.11•...-n• Tt .. , 000 000 000-4 4 I
Cllltt90 2JO 100 02•-t IS I
H-r<utt, ScllrniOt Ill. HOUQll 111 -Svndbarg; .... meanen •nd "11•. w -
B ... m..,,... 1~1 L H-rcutt IJ.11. A -
JO,fto
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O•klencl 002 000 000-2 • I
Mllweuk.. 000 OU 00a4 I 0
L•noford -Hfflh, H~. EHi.rly Ill
•nd Simmons w -Haas (l·fl . L -Len9lord CM I A -al, t•l . .. , ... , .... , ...
Kenut City 010 000 m -s 11 o
Botton 110 010 001-' II I
Leon•rd, Qul...,IMrry l'I a..O Grote, Tudor, llur9me .... Ill. II Stanley It> end
G•drn•n w -t.oon•rd (•·•I . L -
llurgmolor l2·21. S -Oul_,.rry CJI HR•
K•ntti CllY. Alk-161, M<RM 12> A -
26,72>
~1,T--1 s .. 111. ooo 001 000-1 • 2
He" Y-000 000 000-41 1 0
F B..W11er. °'-m. Rewtey ,., -
eu111nv; Guidry, R. O.vls 161 -F-w F. 11-IJW< (4-3). L -R 0 .. ls ll·tl S
-Rewi.y CI). A -54,nl.
~•.Twl'"J h lllmor1 102 102 G00-4 1J I
Mlnnuot• 000 002 010--3 1 O Palmer. Stoeldard I~ •nd OernPMY.
Erlekt6n, v1.-ven 161. Corbett (t i -autere. W -P•lnwr 12·11. L -ErlO-.
(1-41 S -Stod!Mrd Ill. A -t,311
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dodlll9n ....... 1
N•w 'iolftr'" ~ LOS AHOU.as ........ .. ...... a..-.... s 0 J I Thorne. tit • I 2 I a.nor • s o o o ~ii.ct • o o o ~1(11,cf S 0 t 0 a.ti;er If 4 I I I 1(=11 4 0 I 0 Jdln.ion 11 O 0 t 0 Y .rt 4 O 2 O Garvey 1'b 4 o o o ~•rns, lb 4 0 I g ~,Jlt ' J 2 11 lrWn!.1' ! A l 0 ,,., ,rf • I 2 0 ~IVY i 0 0 0 loKle,c J 1 o O wit • l O O O •u&Mll,M J 1 I I au~p o o o o 11.vu,p J 0 1 1 wyaon jjii 1 o o o otef1 17 1 12 I Totela 12 • t •
1c-w111nlfttl• New York 000 000 001 I l.ol Allt91e• 000 600 OOa •
• -araoh, Manllll OP -Ln ~ti. l.011 -N9wYor1l 11, 1.0tAno1IH ... D -llUUllll. TI'lllmit•, a.ti;er, Guerrero.
Hl;w ~:,ttl IP H1 II E• ee SO
lallry IL, J.SI S 6 • 2 2 Havtrnen J 2000J
.!:~ ' 12 l T -2:1t. A-'°·'··
11-4,Plr.-.J
ClfKlllMU OOJ 000 100-4 t 1
Pltbltu.... 010 000 OJO-.J 1 0
Soto --· O'll«ry I";~. v. Crur Ill -"9M, Nk tllla (1). W -Soto
IJ.J). L -Sotomon U..JI. 1111• -Cl11<1Met1, Orlffay (11, Kn19M UI. Pltultu..,., E•U..
111." -11,ns. c;.,........,.,_,
SI. LIVY 400 000 .._. 11 I
AUante 001 -m-4 1 I
'-"-IM<1111 (6), °'*' '"· 1(-161. htwf ltl and T-•; Pwry, Mellltr 161,
Cami' II.I, .....,.. C9I -99Mdkt W -,_II 1•21. L -"-"'f IWI. h!W Ill A -u.-u.
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000 .... , ... , ' 0
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l'lllS........ 211 OIO .._. t I
h!IOlteP 111 ,000 ao.-l I I
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~l.••-4
Montreal 000 000 ta:> -I 1 Sa.\ FrM<Jko 000 011 001 001-S I 1
(12 lllnlnQI)
llvrrh, !NftnMn Ill. "''l'-11 (ti. lM 1101. l(atmr 1121 end Catter. o. Ale...,...,
Lavelle 11>. Holland (101 end '-*11. W -
HOll•nGIJ.11 l L .. IM>.A -21,ftS.
NATIONAL LEAGU• 0 Aa II M Pct. "-kins. S•" Olooo 21 112 16 J2 3'° R•IMl1Mon11u r l2 l:ID u 44 ,., Mdrl.,., Pllll-lpnie II 11 10 1' .M :;:::a~:.:= York 1: 1~ 1~ ~: ·~
Het'iiC!On, S..n Fr...cltco M 127 1' 4S lS4 ~~O:kc1~1:':1°" I! 1~t J ~ :~ llroolll, New York 30 109 10 J4 330
&onlll•. Sen~ 21 17 • 21 .m ~lllMt kllmktt, PNlaclltlptlle, II, O.wton, Mont·
reel, I; Cey, DIMlllen. I; FOli.r. Cincinnati,
1, J. Crui, H-.':s ~=r:"• o..een.1
Concopclon,,_ Cincinnati, JO, Schmiot.
Pf>ll-lpl>Ce, 11t; 0-yLo.w.n' ti; Coy, ~ H ; kiter. Clnconnetr: U
~(Jo.d1 .... 1I ""~1~.'i:~1 .... a~:.-:.~~. ';,'.:..~::.":.;;
•11t11ven PNl-lplll•, SI, S•nde rson, MonlrH \.. ~-1, SlllrltY;_ St Lo>11l•t 4·11, Berenyl, <.lntlnnetl, •I; :oe•Vff. Cine nnet , 4-1 ; ........ o.een. •1.
tlgh achool ot•wone
HCOlllD-.OUNDllTUC'fU•SDAYI
Cll'4'A
Sa.\ G-lol•lMMlr Del
Lii PolyatC-1111-
lll"'°"ArnM•tW•I-H_., ............
SlrnlVelWt•IEl-
11,._at~
SoulllTorr~eatS...Merc:ft
Rldl-•IAl'cadl•
Cll'M
VIII• PanietSoutfl Hllh
Nortlll•lw.)•IL-a
LompocatEIOOf-
Anellelmat USlerr•
Gtet*re•tCovlne
LeOulntaetlEl-
Bur-et~le FUlll rtCflllt Katelle
Cl,.l·A
s.nta Fe •tc.a..lstr-Velley
CelHICOat Yvc.elpe
S.-atSLa-.-d
Arroyoatcar-
llewrty Hlli.•t c;.nyon
PelrnS.WW.•IYklWV•lllY _n ..... VlowelA#llValley
c-•Mar.tMIM .... Vtti.
Cl,.1-A
C11&11er Oell el Aqulnee
EltlnoreetBeHG..-.
T•llK"-'atL.A ... l•I
M«ro a.., al Fiiimore
8eldWlnP-atWhllllerCIWlt11flft
Royal 0. atCerplftlerl•
aeCl·JefflltPwac .. .,.
•teM-atVallrfClvlstlan
Cll's-llldM!a
o-MVal11YetMon«i.lrPrep
Fllnlrldgo Prepet ......... C!Wlttl-
R 10 HONID•t .._ .. Cllrlstlan
AvalonatHltl\l .... H•ll LlllllelclOW'ltlC ... elOr-L..U..r..,
vc11..,.0W"1.u ... 1a.-k...,
TwlftPlnftat~
llren.-•IT..,..._
Hollywood Perk
5UNOAY'S •E5ULTI ,, ...... ....,-......... _.,
TMreMl'S Ster ( Plncay, J• I •• 00, :uo. 2.to. sc.-Outlooti CE1lre4e), S.60, 4 to; Tl·
ll•n Ragency 10.l~MIY'll J.60.
Sec-r•c. -Flylftt HoltlV CHewloy),
IUO. 1.60, SM!; O'F-10.lel!OuHaY'll.
7.20, UO; Crldll Sq.,..re CM<CerrOft), S 00
12 dally doUbtl IH I paid UUO
Third Rec• A·~foa u O. CMcCarronl.
10.40, •.60, J..10; TreO J"llr (Lipham>.
t.40, 3.20; Frl.O. Fr•me C0elellou"41Y91,
UO. U euc\a Cl·ll paid 5159.00. '
Fourtll race -Reid Streit I O.l•hovs.uY'll. l.60. J to, 2.IO; MlnJtrec
Grey tPlncey, Jr.). J.20. 2.00, lleer Pudding
!Tejada, Jr.I, 4.to •
Flftll race -""-~ Man I-Garron>. 1120. IJ 40, ....0, Panout lt.l!IMrnl. 7.JO.
•to, Fino.ti (~MYel. J 00 '5 eucl.4'
(t 4) Nici i'lO 50
Slatll r1a -L-0. Mar (Plerc1l. 10.00,
•.OO. 4.40, Je.-Prelrle IOllv•real, lJ,40,
1.10, Inv-IAlwrel, 4.IO
S.V1ntr1 r.ce -Port Maller (H•• .. YI,
20.•o. 5.oo. 2.•0; wooe11and L ao
1oe1e11011ueu>. 2 10, 2.20, Vlr lllly
1vaten1ue1e1, 2.40.
U Pick Sla 11·1-t-t•l4) paid U74,J2'.JO
wltll ona WIM"'9 ll<k•I (&IM llO<Mt). u Pick
SI• contoletlon paid '3,,11.00 with 1' •In·
nlng llcUb (llw llO<Mtl.
El9M11·rece -Jonn H11nry IPlnc.ay, Jr.), 2.eo, 2.60, 2.10; Catermen cc..1...-.1, 4.00,
2.10; Oaleay Lltlf'a IM<Cerronl. 2.10. U 11·
•<"(WI Pllld U..JO.
Nl11tll race -Don Rottrto !M<H•rvue>.
1 • .0. •.oo. :uo; Trvck-1c .. i.necia1, •to.
J.20, 5"eed 8•(Plnc.ay, Jr.I. S 60. U e.-ta
IHI Nk:l '5UO.
Atte-.e -Jt,tJO
~~'-9!\,tlon
I'. Zoeller, ~.ooo ,,...._.,._,,4
H. 1;wl11, W!l.AOO 1 •Ml-7i.7t-m
T. 1(1!1, •IMOO 6MMl·lo-iPf c '"• ..... •1..-.... 11..,.n-m S. SIMC*lft, t U,..00 ... ,._,._~
F c-. ••o• ,..,, ... ,._.. It ,.loyd, .. ..,, ... , .. ".,._., o J~.,,.., . .,,." ,.,..,..n__,
It C'wl. te.400 '1·1J.1.......,.J&I
.) H .. rd, M,Alll l~IWI-·
J. •1-. la,lto 71 ,.,..,._. v Hui-. M. llO 11-11•n-• e Mvrplly, ..,uo 10-JWl.,._m
J. Co1Mf1, 16.Ut 10-n.11.,.__:m
e .11..-n.M.ISO n .... 7..._ ..
II. Str1C11, ... UO 11*71-12-m M. Reid, k"° ,..,...,..,.._..
J.C. St.oiei ..... U> .... 11·71·7l-:94 r. Wet•k•, $41°'° 70.tW ... 7-t-• M lye, .... 050 ... n .10.1._.,
F. CO<lplet, $1.000 11·IO-J>.7~ T J Mt.lllt, &UOO ,.,.._,...,_.. K F••-. u.ooo ... ,.,.11.n--G Arc!Mr, U,000 14-10-1..._,. c.c.111 ....... U.000 IM>*n-• 8. c1 • .......,, .,,.. 12.12 ..... n-a
M fllll<C-. U.M 1'·,.11-1._.,
J Mllc ... 11, ~ 11·1"1J·1>--111
8 . JHCkel, U,MI ... 74-73-11-111
M. O'Me¥ .. U.OtO 11·12•7J.72-a7
M Plell, U,040 1~12·11-111 O. IEowardt, 12,0tO 1•11-11-11--111
J. Heat, U.M 12·72•11·11-111 8. EIUI-. 51,SU ,,_...10-76---
G. Cadle, 11,SIS 7J.10-7HI-•
R.Mu ....... $1,SIS , ..... , .. n-•
J . Pele, •t,SIS 1:M1-16-12-•
L, Hlnlllo, $1,SIS 7J.11·70.14---
0 . Gref\el'l'l, •t,lU 11•1• ... 1S--• H, Twitty, it,140 ... 14-12-14-..
L. Trevino, ll,140 IJ.11-71-74-.,
&: :::;:·,:::>.., !!:~~~::~!::
G Koch, $1,140 1J.1o.n ·14-.,
O.H•lldnot1,t1,1.o 11·11·11·1S--.,
J. MallaHey, M90 .... 12·14-1S-2'0
8 Allin, lalO 11 .... 16-1~ J . Sc11r-. saso ,,.,,.71.,,._,_ e. 8ryat11. $l:IO 11·1J.1J.1>-2'0
f.Valentne,U» .,.12.1•1s-n1
M. SUllCven, UU ... 1S-7S-76--2ft
kott Hoell, 11u ,...._n.n-m
O.Eowardl, U IS n.1J.1J.1~
E. Sl'\Hd. t11S '"'1S-1 .. 11-ft'l
II. Ees-, $1,SIS ,,.,_10.16---
G. Cadle, l l,SIS IJ.70-11•73-*
R.Manengte. ll,SIS 1 ..... 1 .. 12-•
J. Pele, $1,SU TMJ.76-12--
l . Hlnkll, 11,SIS 13-11·1°'14-*
0. Grallem, ll,Sll 1141 ..... 1S-•
H. Twitty, tl,140 .... 14-12-14-.,
L.Trevlno,tl,140 73-11·'1·74--.,
0. POlll, l l,140 11·'2·11·7S-..
G 811rn1. 51,140 •1s-1:i-1._.,
G Koci\, •t,140 7J.I0.12·14-.. O.H•lldfln, ti, 140 11·12·11·1s-M
J . MelleHn, saso '"'12·74-7S-2'0 B Allln, tl50 11 .... 1 .. 14-JtO
J.kllr-. MtSO 7J.1J.7J.74-2'0 B. Bry-, $1:10 '1·1).7J.1>-2'0
T V•lenlno, 5716 .... n.1s-1s-n 1
M. Svlllven, $715 ""IS-7S-16-2ft
Sc Hoell, 1115 1...,_12·11-2'1
O. Edward>, $11S 12·12·12·14-2'2
E. sn..o, vu .... ,S-16-n-m
T Mau,...,., WI ... 7S-12·11-1'J
L. Wedkln$,""7 l).7J.1s-74-1"l
O.E l<Mlbr'Of, MIS •t-IS-71-79-itf
8 . Tllo~. la7S l4·7o.1S-IS-2'4
G. H•lllter9, WoM '"'JS-1 .. 76--2'6
J Fo..oM, '451 11·12-IS-1t-lt7
M 84rber, '457 6t-7S-7t-74-lt7 M Mor .. y, .._ • 10.14-11·11-2'1
LPGA tournement (MP.,-,N.J.)
Katny Wllltworlll, &1Uli0 , ... 12·7-211
Atlee Rltunen, $12..lliO 7147-1)-111 Dot Gann.tin, tl,ISO 10-7J.70--Jll
8elll Ott11of, ... UO 10-7J.72-214
P•t llr-y, $.S,000 l 4·11·10-2U
JeM 81elOO, M,llS 7J..6f.74-216
P•tty 5-, U,111 69'12·76--217
Janet Cotes. P.112 .,.,,.,~11 SMiiey H•mlln, Jl.2SO 7J.4J.*-211
Pel M1yen, '3,150 U•.s-to-211
Judy Rankin, U.7SO 7H2·1S-21t
Myra Ven-. U ,7!0 14·10.IS--11t
P1nny Pull, $1,MI IHJ.12-Dll
Cellly R..-. 51,'Ml T4-7J.74-DO
ll••ber• MO....,, 51,'Ml .... 16-1~220
Siivie -.CclnUl,'Ml IJ.12'76--.220
Arny Alcott,, 11,'41 7WJ·71-220
Cellly -· '1,tfl 11-10-1'-DO llOflnl• Bry .. t, 51,0•---J'J.72'76-221
0.11411e AutUn, $1,41t 11·12·71-221
Women'• tournament tatT_,..I
Jan s1....--.,Au1. Ayako~.J
L«I G•r11M:•, U.S.A.
Atwko HIM99, J-YOlloKt*eyMIM,JeNll
Tek•kO Kt~. J-
Hollla Stec:y, U.S.A.
'T evl·Yu, TelwM Meuko~l.Jepan
Noriko K_y_,,., Jepen
Y111Lo Morl.,clll, Ja_.
AnoleTlal,hl"M
M. 00111, 5P11ln
L.aur• Hurl~ U S.A.
C•rolyn Hiii, U.S A
unn CaaUdtY. U S A..
n -IJ.16--DO 1>-11·'7..._m
10-1~m
,...,~~
IH .. 1'--D6 , .. ,.,._,.
7J.7Ml-227 ,,_,,.,,_227
11-1'-11-121
1Hf.1t-221
11·14-16--221 ,,., ... ,,__m 17.,.,._2)4
1~1~ut ,,..,, ....... 2AO
,...,, ........ ,40
O.rm•n lntem•tlon•I
Ca!H ........ w..eO.-yl 11 ..... ,. .....
Peter Mc-• Clef. Jimmy '°""°"· 1·S •.. 1, 64. M CMcNarnere wlnt ta:l,000, ""'"°" ""'' Sl•,0001 Men'• tournament ( .. T .... I
~,(Mfl
SIM\ Sml~Hanll Pfister Nf. Rotc:OI T-
Mt·Dkk S.OC•ton, 74, M , S-1, M C5"'Cll\,
Pfister wln s.1,000 Md>, Tanner, StocklOll
win u .ooo •etlll.
Ctt•llenge tournement
U1t......,..,A•lre4lal
·-·· ........... J 11 ......
Ken R-11 (Alltl,.lla ) dolt, Shi,_
Stew•rl (U.S.I. •->. 6·1; •od Lever
(Aullr•ll•I Clef. Cllarlle P•Mroll IU.S.I. W , .. , .....
ISoutll Alrlca), .. l • ...._
Allt•ll• tourn•m•nt , .. ,..._.,, .. ..,,
~,. ......
Jtte Wt Clore del R ... c •emlre1, .. ,.
•·2. (Clerc win• '10,000, ltarncrer win•
U,0001.
World tennl• tourn1men1
(etT_.,.I -...•1 IMe&ft , ... ,.
Andr .. Ja.ger def. Tracy Auttln, M;'W,
1~. t·1. tJ-otr wills P0.000. Allttln win•
$15,0001. -................. llrten TIK,.r Clef. a111 Scanlen, t ... '"'· 1· •. l'Te"ller wen, ~.ooo, k ..,,.,. w1,,.
su.0001.
-•0.....l'IMll T1ecller·J..., S.Orl def. $<..,I-Vine•
Ven Pett«\,>• ... 1.1 ... cT..-·s.lrl wlM u.ooo H Cll; Sc-Von Patt.fl •Ill a.-
MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO
SPECIALISTS ,,-P ~~-----------------.!
Ff-'M Oii .... w/$14.fl OU c-.
CHICI OUI COMPIT111YI rltCIS
RIST & SWll ARCO 135-4049
IW I. '" fOH I Fwy) 1-1 bc.,t S-.
Zillgitt and Wright
insur:tncr ~grnts ;1nd broke rs
1 lnaurence premium• up thla yeer?
Call ua fOt • competitive quote
for Au.to, Homf'Ownera, Ftre, P1ne Arta.
Llte, MNl.cal, R.V .. Boat or Vachl l~or•nce.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTiMonday, May 18, 1981 ca
0......"9ele
""aty11 FalrlMtnll·T ... le Herr.t• 4l9f
f'lllll Intl~ -..,_, H , .... ...
, ... 1 ..... ~ "'"' ll,.U a.Kii; .... ~
lleyM441t win .-»....,
Indy 500 lineup
T,,. tenlellv• 11111111' lor 5'1ncl•Y'• I,._ Iliana_.. Jll>.fnlll rec. llMld et1 ._....,.
41u•llllc•t(en •v•r•ee•. 11•11111 .,,1wr.
....... """'-CM ,... -· CN Ml••noiM ~ ,_.,In Ml..,. Pt ·:
"'· ,fltOW I, •ololty UnMf, Al!Wq1Mrq11e, NI . t ,.., ... ..c-1'1 .•. ,....
2. Mlk• Mosl•Y, Felltw'eOll., Ho 41, ........
Cllavr~ 1'7.141 s. A.J F.-,t Jr .. -loll. Ho. 14, C....-
Co6wort/I. "' Ill. HCC*O•OW
4 Git-JOl\nCOO, -Ill, Ne IO. WllO<at~. ltUtt. S. ~ lt..-ford. Fort WWtll, No. I,
Clla ... rTel.C._.,, Cff.'97
• .>..-Gane, Muk o, HO-"· ,...,..... c .. worlll, 195. tol
TMl•DllOW
'· 11111 AIWI'. WoodOock. VI . Ho '·
.. ...... ~-"'· 1'3. 154.
I. a·W•llY Dllllenbacll. lltwll, ~OIO., ,..
40, Wiidcat ·C.--111. ltJ,.040.
•. GorOOn Srlll...,, 0 ... 1.nd. TIH•, Ht. 60,
WCIO<el-Oee-111, ltL .. .
f'OU•TH •OW
10. Al Unter, AIDuq111rqu1 HO ....
LOft9~. ltt.71'.
ti. Paf\CM C.Wr, Br-'9, Ind .. No. s ...... ..u-o.-. ltl 022. n. ~ .. tten....._,, _,,ovla. Ind .
Ho. I , Llglltnl,,..C.-111, Itel '10
,.l"TH •OW
U. Kewln Cooan. R-8"<11. Ho JI,
Pftoeftl•-<o9-111. , .......
14. 8o& UII«, Vall, Galo., No. 35, ~
Cosworlll, 1.,AU.
IS. Tom Blee-. WN1ewator. Wis .. No.
16, P1n111.0.vrotet. la2'4.
SIXTH •OW
"· O.eH ......._, s-Cle-........ . ...... ee:. ...... ., .....
11. Tony .. tt...n......,, lndlef\eiM)ll" No.
16, MCL.......CO.worlll. 117.0IJ.
11. ,...,. ICrltlleff, 0... l'eltlt. Ma. U,
f'MM..C-_,., 1M.7U.
S•YENTH •OW
It. Vet'n klluppen, Austr•ll•. Ho U,
Meler~. IM SAL
JO. L•rrv Olck_,, MerletlA, Olllo, Ho. JI,
Ptt1Ue-<o9'""'1.ll, Ill 211.
21 T°"' S...v•. Sook.-. Ho. 2, March-
CM•ortll, 200 ... 1 EIGHTH •OW
IJ. 0-., °"8elt. CM\a -· Na. U, I• 1er1e~-. m.tM
21. Rl<ll Murs. ll01rtlltld, HO .••
Pentk .. Coe-111, 1'4.011.
U. $1\eldon KlnM•, l,_,,lnoton, Incl., No.
II, Longllorn-Cos-11\, 1 ... 4S4.
MIHTHllOW
U . Pele Haltmer, Uy•Y•ll•, Ind., No. "·
Pentll~-1h, 111 705.
:U. Mille ~Ir, 0.M Pllotl, Ne. 74,
P1t1Ml•C-U.. 11F.M6.
21 Oon Wllllllnoton, Fort Leuderelele,
Fl•., HO ti, -tn<ftwortll, 111 2J7
T•NTH •OW
H . Biii Wllllllft9lon, Fort l.Auderdal•
FI•., Ho 'O. MercJ>.<;os-OI, 1'7 .0'8. tt Geot9t Snider, ""'610tl, Ho. H, VPJ·
Cotworlll, '"-1U JO. Olflnh Flrest-. Garden• No 4,
Wll4c•l-C.-ll 111.714
ELEVENTM •ow
JI. Jerry Snewe , Spoka llt, Ho 11.
Volhte<lt.otflnNvMr, 117 714.
Jt. k ott ll••Y10ft. ColdW•ter, Ml<ll., No.
37, P1ntU·.C..-rtll, 111114.
U. Tom Kleuslet', Hortllwlllo, Mkll., No.
SI, kllll-Cllevrolet, ll6.7J2.
a·D•lllnllecll -llllecl Ille c•r IOf' Merlo
Andrlltl, ""'° wa In 8e10l11rn lor • Gr-
PrlK race. II Andrelll Is wt>stllut.d •• Ille
driver In ltw reco, 1,. ur mint Sl•rl In :Drd
posillOft wltll NCll cat ,_ In nlntn ~
llrd "'°""" 119 -tfOO' In tt>e JlartlnO ........
NASL
WHT••N OIYISIO .. ....
~n 0 1190 L.OlAnoete San JOM
W L OF OA 8P "-
S 4 10 10 10 40
S 4161JUJt
4 10 u 10 ,.
4 s 10 •• 10 ,.
•.ura•N OIYISIC>tl
Cosmn We 111 )fl9\0n Mont•••• TorOftlO
I 2 21 II U II
•)ttllUO
4 •UUIJJ1 2•121tll)'
SOUTHE•N OIYISIO"
Fl Lauderdale • J U I 12 0 Atlante 4 to 14 14 ll rem,. a.v • u n u is
JeOtonvllle J 1 9 16 I U
Clllct90
Tulsa
Mlnnato!AI
0 .11 ..
CENTllAL DIVISION
•211114!0
4 4 II t 10 '4 • , 10 10 • ,. ,,,,, ...
NOttTHWHT OIYISION
Portlencl • 3 II 10 II SJ
Seattle s • 11 16 16 '4 vane .... ...,. s • u 11 14 ..
Edmonton 3 • 12 14 II a
Cel09ry I 1 S 11 S 11 Sia polnu a<• ...,.,._ lor • ,..,..,....,er
ow1rllrne wlelory. Four points tor • .-...,.
victory. One boftvs point for ewry -I
scored .. 1t11 • malllmunl Of lllrH ,... ....,.
H• ...,,.,_ point Is •••rdied for ovlr'llrne or tllootouc _.,:
s-r1~
AUanl• 2, Montreal 1
Clllc•eo J, o.n-1 WHhlngton I, OelletO ltol
Toronto 2, E~lort 1 Los Anotlos l, s... oieoo I
T-.,·.o-
Mlnfteaot.e al Cal9er'/
Deep IH fl1hlng
N•WPOaT 1"'1'• L.Mlllllal -'2 _..._1
Ml bonllo, J lttrrac..oa, tJO kelt> -· S4 -l>eu, Sto rnacktrec, '4 l'll<k <oel. 1 yellow
beta, 1 llaCllMll.. (D9vey't "-CU.I -11S
•nelen: J ...,., • ..oa. m -Ito, It•....._ s
roek (ocl, 6 -ltlul, SU mack....i. DANA WMA•, -Ul .,,.ian: 417 -t, U
berracllde, 1111 ....,..o, 4 lwlllttut. 1 ,..1tew\llt,
MIMac:*-1. Mo11.-o aAY 1vtrw'' u .. 1 .. 1 -JO antlen: I 1"'9 (ocl, 1• _.cod, .. ,.. reo < ..... .,.. __ _
Open To All In June
BOATING
Ana-lm•n Serie• .....,-0..._
Cina A 1. Pwwll, t Secl\IO'fall, .._,
1•YC1.' Mtme11h1n" T.,.. <UYCI
CIHS a 1. Nvote T .. , 2 l'lfll\O C:-.. $'-(ICYCI, J. ,..,.y, Slll<lalr llYCI.
Cleat C -I BtwW<ry Mvfffn, I A-.11,
RIM (SSYC); J -... ~Foll IVYCI
ToUtn•ment of Champion• , ....... , .......... ,,
~.-c .. .. I AMII IHHYCI, 2 Cl#nrnlnv• CAavc1
0r ... ~c1e.1a I Jetler-IMBVCI,, w..ci. (AIY(). c .... ,.
I C•rroll tMaYCI. , Frank Flnoer
IHHYC>.
ciaua
I Luoton (HHYC); 2. Coeler CBVCI
One-0.algn lnvtt111on11
$a41ol A -1 ....... ICIL IBCYC>, 2 64w\et1i
llYC,J J. Smennr (MHYCI. 4 Horlnv HHYC>.
JellOI e -1 CaMI CllCYCI.
Lldo-14 -I. K..,.,_ ("CV<:I
Soling -I. Oriti (8YCI
Eltlle llt·U -I aever CSW'l'{I,
lhblnaon, Munroe (HHYCI. J R•'""'
CHHYCI
Macho Rea•tt•
(at Let A119tlH i. • .-,
J•H -1 EQIOObklent,Grlllllll 11.AYCI, J,
C1111;p, WaiNlum IL8YCI. 3. Ac1 01 (.upa,
Gollton CA8YCI. 4. Bed H-•l So,..nson
CAllYCI. -).O·S 1. Alndron, 151 FYCI; 2. llreuth
ll4YCI ) Aytff (NHYCI; 4 Miiier (Pelo
Allo YCI
COHTl!HOER-l.Wlllte, cSBYCI
Celallna-38 AHoclatlon
lelL-.haclll
I CrlU Cr•ll. CrlU ISBYCI 1 EftlO<lr-,
Wiiton (LBYCI , J Cll•nlev\e, Oltlft
IL8 YCI
8 01well Memorial Trophy l•I H~H~I
I Hel'°" ISSYCI. 2. Smiley 18'1'CI,
WClllh (S$'1'CI
STANLEY CUP FINALS
l alanden 7, North Stare 5
(l~llM-MI
k_..,PwriMs
NY 111-n I 3 3-1
Mlnna>Ote I 0 J-S
"l"t"9rlee
I. MIMHOI•, CllrlllOll ' (Hert1ttur9, Clc-
cerolll 1. 3'25. 7. MlnnHota, P•yn• U
(Youn9, Mec:AOl!rnl, 14.ot. J Hew Yorl<,
Bouy .. IGlllleil, 14.47 4 Mlnne•ote. B Smllll 1 (Herhbur9, P•yne), 1':JO.
Pen•lll .. Hystrom,NY,2 10, V~.
Min, Ju. Pevnt. Min,. JI. ""''°"'·HY,
'OS; y~ Min, 7;0S, Trolller, HY.
I "· L•noevln, HY, 11 2•. HYll•om. NY, ., 70 51c_,......
, New Yorll, NY1trom • I T-Ill, ,..,
rlekl. 4 10 t.. Hew York, Gorl"O • I Potwin,
llouy). I 1• 1 H•• York, Gorl11t 1 CGllllH ), 11·s1. "-ntllles -8 Snlltll, Min.
S Jt, Gllllff, HY, 5'16, G Smllll, Min, S.S.,
GllllH, HY, '·'°• Trolller, NY. 16 00.
McEwen, HY. ll't.5.
Tlllnl"9 ....
•. MCMHOU, P•yne 16 I Yo..no. Cllrliloll), 1 ti 9. H9w York, Bossy 11 (Trottier), 2:0S
10. Hew York, Gorl"O I (Carroll, Potvin>. •.J4 11. MlnnHOte, Clccattlll u CB Smlllll. I) JS It H9w Yorl<, Trott .. r 11 l&ouy,
Merrick!, 1t·16. P.nelly -T-111, NY.
4 u SlloU .... _, -Hew Yon. 11 .. 10.n M~
-ta .. , 1).21.
GotllH -York, !>Meth Minne.OU,
Meloclle A -IS,JM.
Playoff 11ehedule
T...U1,Me11l
HY I \1-..S •. M11V9M>I• J
~y.Meylf
H V 1 t,_,. •. MlnnoM>Ce 3
~'f'•kern NY l11-rs7,Nll~5
T...U'f'•O-NY lil ....... •IMl""9sal•
-r--..r•~ MlnnHO(a et NY Ille,_,, (II ne<euaryl
IMwNY'•O-HY .. ,........, •I Minnesota cu ne<HWry)
T--.y,Meylt
Min-•I HY 111•-· (II nec•uarvl
College crew
WHTEllN SPlllNU
(at V•llefl, Ce.I
Vertlly '°"' -I Orange Coe II, •.•• 2 St
Mary's,• '4, J. UC S.nt• Barber•. 6 64 >. •
Puoel Sound,• o. s Loyol•. • SJ, • S.nte
Cl•••· 7 OJ Fro"' lour -I. Oren99 Cotll, • 79. 2
Lovole, • CJ, 3 S.nt• Clare, • so. • Hum
bokll, • SI
Junior v•rslty el9111 -I Or•noe Coast,
S JJ. 2 UC Irvine. S 0 , J UC Senta
Barbera, S 46; 4 U of s.n Otevo, S· liO, S
Long Blteh SIAlll, S.S7, •. Humboldt,. 11.
Frosll tl9'1f -L Oren90 Coesl, S 41; 1 U
ol Sen 0'900, S:St; l . UC Irvine, 6.02; 4 S.n
le Ctor•, •·OS.
Misc.
'John Doe' Hits Jackpot
In Monthly 011 'Lottery'
Texas'
Rose
wins title
By ALMON LOCKABEY
OallJ l'lllll ....... Wrllltr
Andy Rose took lhe 6-meter
national charnp1ons hip trophy to
f'ort Worth Sunday by edgi.Da
his closest rival In the best foor
of five series ore Bahia Corip·
thlan Yacht Club.
Going into the final race, Rote
was tied oo points with Denis
Ourgao of Newport Haror Yac t
Club with the title hinging n
which skipper beat the other Jn
the (i(th ra~e.
Rose · finished third a11d
Durgan finished rifth, leavir\g
them both tied on points aft.tr
their throwout races. The cba~
pionsbip was decided on which
skipper beat the other the mof;t
times in the five race seri!.
Both ended the series with 8 •
points after the throwout race.
Winner of the final race w s
John Bertrand of St. Fran~s
Yacht Club which boosted him'"°
third place in the final slandinfs
with 911\1 points. ~· Rose started his sailing care r
as a youngster sailing Sabots t
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Cl b
and was nam e d juni r
yachtsman of the year. He lat r
joined Balboa Yacht Club a d
was twice winner of the Go ·
ernor's Cup, BYC's junior mat h
r acing series.
He was tactician on the wi ·
ning boat in two Congression
Cup series. l wice tactician n
the winning yacht in two C I
Cup series, and sailed as tac ·
cian for the Australian yacht
the 1977 America's Cup.
In offshore racing he h
sailed on the crew of Kialoa II
one T ranspac race and again
a Sydney-Hobart race. He al
sailed on B ally h oo, t
Australian yacht which was f
to finish in one Sydney-Hob
race. and was a member oft
crew on Blackfin when she
the Trans-Atlantic race.
Final standings :
1 Ranger. Andy Rose,
Worth Boat Club. 8~•.
2. Ah , Si Si, Dennis Durga
NHYC. 8:t1t.
3. St Francis Vil, Jo
Bertrand. St FYC, 9"4l.
4 . War H o r s e, Bri
Wertheimer, Seattle YC, 10'4.
5. Perspicacious. Gayle Po
BYC, 13.
6. Discovery. Hank Thayer,
BCYC. 23.
Gale winds
play havoc
on race
MARINA DEL REY -Gale
wiods and mounta inous seas
played havoc with the 15 yachts
in the second race of the Yacht
Racing Union's Pacific Ocean
Racing Conference. dismasting
one yacht and sending more
than half the fleet for cover.
The 194-mile race started Fri-
d a y off the Lon g Beach
breakwater in a fresh westerly
breeze that eased off as the
yachts worked around Palos
Verdes point and then built to 4-0
knots as they proceeded toward
the Channel Islands.
Skippers reported winds of 50
knots and 10·15 foot seas as they
beat aJong the shore of Santa
Cruz Island. One by one, the
yachts began dropping out of the
r ace with crew fatigue a nd
seasickness.
Second overall on handicap
was l.oube's Bravura, and third
was John Arens· Tomahawk.
Balboa Yacht Club.
Rustlers, Harbor
to meet at East LA
Golden West Co llege's
baseball team will play a one-
game playoff Tuesday at 2:30
against LA Harbor at East LA
College for t he second-half
championship of the Southern
California Conference.
Ron Hendrick will start for the
Rustlers against Harbor. which
a lso won the first half litle.
A sudden death playoff game
was forced after GWC and LA
Harbor finished the second-half
season both tied with 10-4 re-
cords in SoCal play.
ONTARIO, CA.LIF.
(Special)-Hundred•ot
•v•,.,. cithene will win oU ...._ ripia lnupcom•
inf public drtwins• con· cllict.d by tht Stat. ot
Wyomins. Some m~
achieve ovemitht w1aJth
by ••lUnt t.httr riaht.a to oil companl•• and Ntain·
ins lifelons royaltlea on
111\1oOor11• prodUction.
otfet'I every AIMfic.an the
opportunity to c~te
OD U\ tquaJ belil with
liant oU CC*penjee for r.. ... of public Lt.nda.
Jnlorma1ioa and engy
ct.tai1a.,.. 1\Wlabl• from n.t H. Klrtr Slftdtn C<>.,
Public Landa Dtv., 2082
£. Caroline, Ontario, c.ut. &1?61. Plt .......
doet •• f O/r poetap and
handllna
lt'18 CADILLAC SEVILLE
Leather covered 11utint •~•. Cadillac wtre wheel coven 4c nr. ml t paint. (ISSVOY>.
hwndlbtJ, mo« will Nk
no men than 940, cud•·
ductlble. to ent.r the lit·
~bown procnm that
<>mcia1 entry c:erda ril
t>. Ntbtd co meet t.M
oe.t ftUftc dMdllne.
.S8995
JO.-'T1, 71, '79 ~ 'IO smlW1 at-~ to11iftglf
AIO.. ....... f't l'wlw-...._,._,_. t-
~--·
H/F 0rano-Co-1 DAILY PtLOT .Monday. May 11. 1881
PUaUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
•oTlca OI' TltUIT .... U.L•
LONI NO. WAa•M041H
T.LN0.4'Mf.J
NllWl'OltT HOMll LOAN. INC., es
f illy eptlOtllt .. Tr1,_t .. 01110.r , ... ....... lllf dtllCl1llecl deecl of trvtt WIU
$11LL AT l'UILIC AUCTION TO
THE Hlo+iEn llDOllR FOR CASH ,,..,•bl• et time of •• 111 1ew1111 _., of !ht United StMesl ell rlaM,
Ulle •lld ~,_.,...to --1191411 r, It WM1W Mllf Oeef of Trldt 111 .,.. ..,_ny ,.ro1Mfl9r dotcrl -
T RUST 0 It CHllST elt F
SALISIUltY, 11, .. u ....... rlecl l'l\etl
IENE,.CI AltY· NeWPOltT
HOME L~ TRUST HO. 107
ReconlM l"oWuer' 1, 1tl0, et lflttr.
No. t.ol Ill -1,._, -70J of Of· l~l•I Record• '" .... Offlu OI IM lttc0rdor ol 0r.,,.. C-ty, .. 1c1 o.d
el truat -rlb9t I/Ml lollowl119 pre> ,.,...,:
Lot a of Trec t No. 1101. et per NOTICll OI' TltUSTee•t U.Le
.,._P re«<-111 8"11 n. P•9"' -T.t. Ne. .... tt of Mltcetl-. Mept. 111 tM ottlce T .0 . Sl!RVICE GOMl'AHY .. dllly el Ille Cewnty RKorw of Seid e-ty 111>POlntoct T,... .. UNtw IN lo4-lftt
I ll M•l•ber, lhwporl leech'. dot<rlboct o.d of lrlltt WILL SELL Celllc1rnl•n..G AT PUILIC AUCTION TO THE
"lll•ttreot--orcom,,.....do· HI GHEST llOOER FOR CASH
•'9nellon 11 .,_, Mlove. no w•rrenty (peyellle •I time of Ml• 111 lewful
II 9lven M 10 111,omplel.,~H or ,.,. l'llOMY of IM Ulllled S..Wll ell rllM,
rl>(tftHll." lllle •lld -G_.,.c1 lo --Tiie ......,klery ~ telf OHf of llelf "Y It llftdW Mill Deed el Trult !fl
lrutt, by,_ of • !W_,h or .. ,..,., Ille P•-'Y-Mfl9r doler1-: ID 1 ... Obll .. tMNl1 tecllr .. t!Wr..-,, TRUSTOR: RONALD LESLIE
herelefore e..cui.cs -.. livered • JOHNSON. eft _.. ... ....., tti.-lltrlM e Wfltteft Ot<leretlOfl ll!NEFICIARV; aANK OF
ef 0.l•llff -DM*1C1 tor Sele -~ERICA NATIONAL TRUST ANO
"rllten NClce of ~-h -of ei«t1on VINOS ASSOCIATION, • MtleMI te c.., .. IN 111tc11tn1.,.-to NII NI• lftt-lelloft
pr-•11 IO UICltly ulcf Mll ... tloM Rec.,... M9rdl U, 1'79 •• IMtf, -,_...., --......., ~-•·um In tlDOll UD1'1 • ....-,,., of Of·
Nl4 Mtla" llrtlldl -el •lectltft le lcle l ltec«ft In Ille effl'• 91 I/Ml
•· eurdor of Or.,.. C-'f; Mlf ._.
Recor-Me, S, '"°· .. "''" No. '"''* ~rlllH -,,,._..,. ,,. .. '°"In tlDOll 1*"9 ...... NI. of telf Of· ly lkle l ltKorfl. Lot •of Trect No. 1111. ill tN City
Self WI•""" tie -llUI without ICottetMw,c.o...tyefOr .... ,$1Me
cpv•nelll °' wwr..t'f. ~ • ., 1.,,. t Cellforftlo, .. -mep reowdltf !ft
,i1o4, ~"' 1111e. -"*'· or -st, P999 "· WtcaK-Meita, filc11m~-. 1e 119, llW ,_'"'"' In the oHke of tM ~ty _..._ of
prlncll* """ of tlW M4thl IO<WW u lf <-"f. lrf u lf 0..-of Trwt. with 1111-1 .. 2611 Wntmlfttl•r Ill .. Id NC• proVlded -en<M 11 eny ,..._ .. , Celllo<ftie taJ7
llneler IN._ of u ld Deed of Tr...-' "Ill • """' _._or <-._
fM1, c1>er9 .. -11pen,.. 01 1~ 1t1netlon 11 _...., ell0¥o, "" • .,. .. .,,.,
Tr111I" end of Ille lfVlll cr .. tof lily la 9lven M to IU CM!lpl9-W «<·
Mid Ooedfll Trwl. rKl/IHI)," Seid .... wlll w held on w..,,...,.., T ... ......,k ier'f _, Mid O.W 91
J11ne '· 1t11. et 11:00 e.m .. •t Ille off~ Trwll, llY reelClll of• wffdl of *leuH
of T.O. Sorvlu Con\c)eny, lonll el In 11>• ob41.-11ons ao<ur .. thereey,
Amerk.e r-S..11• 1110 OM City llerelolore •lllK--dltllver• •
1 tlvd. w"'· 0rW.. Calltor,;.a. the l.tfldorlitMd • wrltwn O.CleratlOll
• 1 Al 1119 u-of the Initial publleetlon of O.teull end o.mend for Selo, -
Ill 11•11 Mtke. -IDt.i •-t of -wrlllell ftOClu of ~-h-of •loctJon Opelf belence of 1119 obll9etloft lo ce11M IN _...,,.. to MH 9914
P VBUC NOTICE
"1-..C NOTICS
MC11rH by tho ·-foKr1-dood of pr_..., lo Mtllt'f ..... Ollll_.t*'t,
l'Vlt -fflllMleel ""'' .......... • ... tllarMfter ... _..,....<a-' lllld ed•-11921,JtU?. ' ' .. Id llOtlu of brMdl Md 91 elec:tltft le
T• MCamlfno Ille o.-ine 111f .,.... lie r.c..-J-y "· l"I "INtr. PUBLIC NOTICE
,....., cell (11'1 "''°"' ' N•. 1'°"2 !fl bOell 11•1', ..... 1•, el -------""-----Oete: Mey •. ltll M id Oflklel Rec.ordl. NllW~T HC>Me lel4 -win b9 -· llut wl-. NOTIC• TOco•n•ACTOttl
CA&.U ... Ntl a1ot LO.t.N, INC. <•veneM or wwrenly, • ..,_or 1,.,..
•NW TrwtM, pllff, ,...,.... UUa, .,......_, or ScMel O.rie1: _......,. ... 11
City k'-' CMWk t ay: T,O. S.~ke '-"-'· ...C""'llr-. le pe'f IM '-'"'"' ...... prlftclpel ..,. of IN -(I) IKwef llf O..llw: t:• o'cloell "'"' U.nftd..., .. Mey,ltll 9y: (llrlt Telal,.., tty ulf Olef of Trull, wlUI i-.... ..
AMlttMt S.rtll•' 1 .. Mid,,...~ • ...,--, If.,.,, l'laee of 9W ._..., Ohtrkt
"'1"11tr.u,.. c:a..e.r nJ.t_,. "'"'
Huitt"'-' 9-11, Caltfonlla ..... Ono (.lty al .... Wfft .,,., --of Mlf OMf of Trwt,
Or ... CAftMI • '"' cl\er .. 1..., • ._...,..of ti. 17141 m..-Trul1H .,. ., IN i.-. croetad llT
,.llblllheel Nowpo<I H•rtlor News u lf 0.-of Trwt. Self .... Wiii M
re11 c--... with IN Or .. C..94 N lf Oii T.....,, M9'1' M, t .. 1 et II:•
11, ,.. ... Mey 11 It u 1.., 21~ •.m .. et IM offk• el T.O. Sotrvlce
,.,..l«t ~ ·-= l'olllt
Int -""""~ ~ ,.... -... fllo: , ...... ..... ,
,_., ' ' ' -· C..,,PMY, ..,_ ef Amwlca T-, NOTICE IS HRRRIY OtV•N
IN tMw -"' ~ D+ltfkt OrMet c..My, Callftnlla actlfle
•"41 tlll'Wlfl Ill Ge'lff ..... ,., 11., ..... , •• , ,.,.,, •••••
twit• 11!0. 0... City atvd, \#•1t, ~----------lOr.,..e,talltorNa. Al tM time of IN lftltlal ,....lcaJUelt
McCOIMtCll MOITU.UIH
Laguna Beach
494·9"15 Laguna Hills
'68·0933 San Juan Cap1srrano
49S·1776
'kAuoi LAWN-MT. OUVI
Mor111ary •Cemetery
Crematory
16~ Gttler Ave
Coste Mesa
540.55S.
rtllCI •OTHllS
llU •OADWAY
WOITUAIY
ttO 8roadw1v
CotlaM ...
642·91SO
ua.n• .. °" SMITH a TVTMU.
WISTCUffCHA""
427 E 17th St
Cotta Me..
848--9371
.. "''' Mtlce, ... ..., -., ... 11ftptlf btbnu of tlM "" .. '~ M<-WIM ...... mtc ...... e.M9'
trutt -nCllmetad c..U, • ......_ enf .. v-11 Ul,714.7),
To ~ IN ..-nlllt !Mf, ~ may <•II 17141 t'74M4.
O•le: .,,,H 14, Ult
T. O. Wvk •Ca.
MMldT,.,-., • , .......... let. ,....,.. S.Cr«My
Ono city ........... .
O....,,CAf'aMI 11w..-,..,...._Or .... GMtt Dell'( ,, ....
May •• "· ... "" ., .. 1
DEATH NOTICES
"OllTlllCT''. #Ill r9'tl,.. -... ....................... tl!M, _...~._ ......... of•<ftr
........... ,.,.. .. l. .... ...., .. ..ul-' ...... ~
14MtHIM .......... lllall .. .... "'*""' ,... .... at Ille ..._ .............. ,._.
T!Wo wtll .. e .... ...._..
"''" lwMd!Mtof .... _.. .. .... ,.,,... .. relwfl lft .... c;---wltfllll ID .. efter IM M4I ..-11 .....
IHll M4! llWlt c-orl'll af141 M
rotMMtvo • ""uiMrac:t 41<UfMIQ.
IMll * ellall .. _,_., ~
IN MClll'lt'(,...,.,., .. Ill tll9 eeMNct ............. ~ .. , ..... ,...... M<Mtf•.,..,
Tllo DllT"ICT ,__ .. ,._.lit ,.i.e • .., .,, ...... ., ..... .,.. .,,.,
,,.,....,..,.... .. IMtnNl!tio. 111 ...., ...................
Tiit OllT•ICT ............ ,,_..
OlrKtW tf .. ~ M lft. .._ltl..._ .... ..., .. ,....... '"' , ..... ,., ..._,. ..... "' .. SHEU i.c.1tty 111 wNdl w. _. .... •
ALFRED al (MAL 1 :::::-:..-: :=.:.=-a:
SHEAR. resident of Hunt· nc1. n.. ,.... -• ,... ....
l"'ton Beach, Ca. Pa11ed o11Hlc:T °""' _..., • ,..,.
awa)' on M1 )' u . 1981 . ="C:::: .:::,._~
Sur'llvtd by h h wife,..-. !:!'t.!'._ , .... ...., • Florence E. Slltar, 2 1on1 .....,::=-....,
Dale M, Shear ol Mlaalon .:;. "..., --:=.::-:
VltJo, Ca. and Eu1ene L . .,.... <• ....., "'t: ,. tw .:., Shdr or Riverside, Ca., _, _.._ .._ ..... • • IMll
dau1ht.er Nadlnt <Btal P. -r.'.,..__,,
Dudley of La1una Btacb, HA~· ..... -· ...... ••••••l'Y~~
Ca .. S 1undchlldnn, 7 ~-'!. .... ..., u •••
1rt•t·tr•ndchlldren and l = .-..:: :_ • • ._ • 1l1Jer Grace Pdtchud qt ......,., .., ....,,. ... :. ~
S•n Ditto Ca. Grav11ld1 ... ....._ 11rvl~ YMI be Meld on Mon· .,..11-.r,._,.......,,... ....
day, Nay 18, 1911 at l :OOPM ~,:,:"' <• ::...,,., •
a t t h t W u t m I n 1 t • r ..:r= .::I a"'"' ••
Celbtt1ry with lltv. 0 .8. _,• •,..,,,,."""" •-Gordon of tht thrl1tlan :. .:' .. -:':. '":."'::-1111":
Chureb f/I K...ua,toe 8tach c.-.. •1 1 1
otnetau.ta. TM famll7 1111· ....,......,
... ll .. Btu Of "°'"" COii· =-----tribut.'-.... to )'OV ,...... ..... Cllllll .....
f oorltr.s.r•t1. Pl tree f1t~"~=~-.-i~~fr~ BrocM • ·~ Heft u• n, y ...... ,
dlrfttarl. . a ... 1 ......... ..a.
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.......... •••••••••••••••••••••••
l!QUAL HOUSIHO
•. QPPORT~NITY ,.... ............ :
AH real utate ad·
vertl1ed In th l1
new1paper la 1ubjJct to
tbe Federal FaJr Houa·
lnt Act ol 1881 .-bkb
maltea it Wept to ad·
vertlae "any preference,
llmltatlon, or d is·
crlmlnaUon baaed on
race. t'olor. rell1lon,
Mll, Or oat.ioMl OMlln,
or an lnteoUon to make
any eucb preference,
llmitatlon, or di•·
crimlnaUon."
1'hll new1paper wlU not
lrnowlof ly accept any
advert 1ln1 for real estate which la In viola-
tion ol lbe law.
..... "forS.
lti;:;;;.;··········;c,·02
•••••••••••••••••••••••
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment! Two
2 Bdrm unit.I, one with fireplace! Current In·
eome-S740 mo. f'lnanc-
lne ! One year home pro-te c ti on plan lncld
HWTy, tbll won't Jul!
846-7171 .,_
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
COHDO $97, too
3 Bdrm,!'; 2 Ba, located ln
Colt.a 111esa nur OCC.
Great starter home or
rental untta. Aaaume the
loan at leu than current
interest ratu. Call
before tt.aaoaet
MESSY
MESSY
Vacant (lant! Huge 4
Bdrm; 2 1tory I Coi.y
ftNplacet •.ooo down
move• you ln. Take over
t~ % loan. Owner will
finance remainder. Save
thou1and1 ! Owner
1acriflce. $1.45,000. Call
96M767
THE REAL
ESTATERS
DICOUTOll
COMDO SI It.too
Wlndtn1 IJ'Mftbeltl lead
to brilht 1ln1le story condo. l!xquilltely de·
corated with custom
wallpaper and cabinetry
thruout. Formal dlnlnl room too! Owner wlD
cooperate with floanc· inf. Won't lut at t.hll pnce, ao call now.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631 ·6990
E·ZDUPLEX
CONV•SION
Coua Meaa R ·21
Remodeled 4 8dtm 2 be
bom• with flreplac~1 copper ptumbtn1. CoulO bt COliYfrted to dop .. X.
Oal.Y 1112.l..~I Call to ... f .... 7111
THE REAL
E S TATERS
'": ~sso c i a tcd
The marketplace on the Orange Coast
Hen11forS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ci..-.. I OOJ •••r• I 002 ·e IM:.. I OOJ c.....,..a I 002 •·•·········•·····••··· ··········~··········1· .•.•••••••••••••.••..•. ••·····•·•·············
UMDAISU
Wide channel view from spectacular
urchitectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath,
pool home. Slip for 2 large boats.
$1,495,000. By appointment.
LIDOISLI~
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath hQme. newlv decorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lg~ ~ecreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ce1hngs . Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money.
PEHIHSULA POINT llACtRONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. rt.
featuring marine room, entry, liv"1g
room, dining room, built·ins, etc.
$1,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
l·l l 11 .. .,. .... 1. [J,,.. ~-h f ,/'; f,161
Hart»or V6ew HOIM
Highly desirable large
corner lot. Newly de·
coraled family home on
fee land. Too many
amenities to mention 4
Br Palermo $349,000
Ownr/Agt 75111698
Yo.C•'thatThat
Super duplex localed in
Old CdM. The property
has Iii 3 Bdrm cottage
with new paint and
carpet.s and a modem 2
Bdrm apt w/blt·ms The
owner says sell and he'll
listen t o all orrers
~.000
lalboa l.a..d Rlty
67J..8700
GIEATTERMS
Char ming Eastside
home with vaulted wood
beam ceilings and large brick fireplace. 3 Bdrms
2 Ba, corner lot, covered
patio and much more
Owner will finance at a
low interest rate with
203 down. Full price
Sl49,SOO.
SpacloH CHto"'
Home
5 Bdrm. ram rm . base-
ment. wlne cellar, s pa. in•la)¥ quarters, lovely
treetbaded street m old Corona del Mar. $475,000
714 760 '>l.H
EucCIH•eTwwhM
1"'11 year new, spUt level, 3 Bdrm. 2o/.o ba end unit. Entertainers delight
with formal dining rm,
aod 1ourmet k itchen.
Recreation Inc ludes.
t.enni. &i racquet ball
$180,000. 'tO UCHSTONE
REALTY
963-<*17
PAYMENTS 1750/mo
Lovely 3-4 br E/Slde hse
$1.10,000, w/8VJ% lsl. 291
)lonte Vista, C .M .
6"·4289
HRP!
The seller has to 1ell thiJs
4 bdrm air conditioned
home that need.a some
TLC. FNMA financlna
available. ~.ooo.
••REOCARPET
-75~1202
THMIMG
TOWHHOMl7
Call the apeciallal$ at
the condominium In·
formation center.
Touchstone Realty
963-<*17
OWMUwllCAUY
CUBtom blt·12 yn old 5
Br 4ba with large poten·
tial in·law apt. 3200 sq ft
+ 925 a /f gar age .
$275,000
Own/ 541-0350
PACESE'M'ER HOME ·
VIEW
$169 ,500 in Laguna
Niguel! 4 Br .. lo/.. Ba .. 2
story family home. Rear
living room overlooks
beaullful hills, used
brick floor to ceilina
fireplace, huge muter
suite wltb % taree cloeeta + walk In. bullt ln gu
kitchen, family room.
family bdnns complete·
ly seperate on 2nd level.
2 car attach«l garaee.
lot.s of storage. A must to
see! Drive by 24502 Loa
Serranos at Niguel Road
& La Hermosa. Open Sat
16th. Sun 17th. from 1·5
or by appt.
ORANGE COAST
FINANCIAL
REALTORS
Marilyn Dunger
96'7·0701
TURTURO CIC
HIGHLANDS
2 1tory. 4 Bdrm 3 bath
MacGreeor . built by
Lus k . Step down
living room. large
dining room, bay
windowed breakfast
nook with sunny
s1t ·down view .
Exqui1ite in every
detail. $365.000.
ROOM FOR 2 LARGE YACHTS
Great financing a vaUable. 4 Bdrm + maid's quarters, seating area ln
lrg mstr sulte, formal dining. Price
$1 .1 million. Terms. Bob or Dovie
Koop
R6"Mtile 631·1266
RfALTO!tS
ILMAM'f "VMSAILUS .. -GCLUSIVE
OH llG CAMYOM GOLF COURSE
Spectacular Deane Ho~e ~
"Versallles" located on largest lot of
a ll Deane Homes. Beautiful golf
co urse view ! Professionall y
landscaped yard w /mature trees in a
private park·like setting including <1
lovely large pool & huge spa + an
attractive gazebo. Gated fron t
courtyard entry with foWltain . Marb lt
floor in f oyer with glitterini..
chandelier. 4 Bdrms, den, formal
dining room & 4112 baths. Priced right
at $895,000. Call for appointment.
WISLEY M. TA YLOI CO., REALTORS
2111 S•J~HlllRood
MIWPOIT CEHTll, M.I. 644-491 o
WONDERFUL FAMILY HOME!
Well located in family oriented
Harbor View Homes . close l 11
community pool and school. Nicel v'
landscaped. 4 bedroom home w1t"11
privat e r e ar ya rd , g reat fo r
entertaining. This home is also th"
lowest priced Montego listed al
$241 ,300.
U,._l()U~ li()M~S
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Eut CoH I Highway. Coron• d•I Mar
WE HNE ~OF niE BESf AGENTS IN TOWN
STEPS TO SAND
3 Bdrm + loft. 2 Bu
Fantastic buy this close
to the beach. Sl79,500
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
WISTCU~
Attractive four bedroom
home. StWlning countr. kit chen with oak
cabinets, bookcases und desk. AU new appliances
in kltchen.,New carpels
t hrouahout Custom
drapes and wallpaper
Seller's plans create a
areat urgency to sell
Submit offer Reduced
to $315,000.
631-7300 M.I.
MIWPOtrr HGHTS
Deluxe townhou s e
duplex. 3 bdrm family,
2'r'I bath each unit
Frplca. all buill·ins,
declta & patios. Park·
lik e l and1caping .
SELLER WILL HELP
FJNANCE. $295.000!
laltoa a.y Prop. .....
•'75-7060•
URI OPPoaTUHITY
IH CAMIO SHORES
Low .. t priced ree aim ·
pie available! Great as·
1um1ble lst TD. Enjoy
afternoon swi and views
lrom wood deck 3
beautiful privat e
beaches. OnJy 1549,000!
C.ll today! f7"550
THE :REAL ESTATERS
DWI.IX
3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. Fir~place, buJJt.lns. Ex·
cellent rental ar~a. Near
beach • bay. $285,000.
642·2'.58 eves.
associated
I • 11 I I • ~' I !\ ' ( II ••
' "" I ' ,,
Sell with EASE I
It'• 1 BREEZE
Cla11llled Adi 642·56'78
OCEANFRONT
$.W,000 dn, ownr /:igt will
AlTD at $4000 pr m11 ,
yrs 13~. $450.000toCI • •
2610 W Oceanfro1t1
631 3199or675-8307
BIG CANYON
C111to• 18th Fairway
Newly listed 6 bedrOlJ1lh
(4 in mam housel. 11
baths, fami ly ro11111
b1l11ard roo m , lar1:•·
breakfast room an1I
ve r y private poo l
Completely sep:.1 r;1I•
guest/teen or in la\' quarte r s wit h .
bedrooms. rull bath ·'"" 1t 's own hving room
(plumbed for <t l ull
kitchen) Exrlusivl.' '' 11 Ii
Cote Realt y
'*Cote Re all~
& lnveslmt•11 I
640-5777
SAILIOAT
WATCHERS
This Cameo Highlan•I•
beauty iB pnced to Sl'll '
$339 ,000. Owner Ill'
down with owners ,,,,
11stance • One level ;1
Bdrm plus huge ya1 tl
Hurry! 673-8550
THE READ ESTATERS ..
LOWDOWN
Versailles 1 bdrm /sturJ1.,
penthouse condo w1lh
laree assumab~ Joa ....
$109,900 Call lod;1 • 979·5370. .
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
GIAMT
llACH IAIGAIM
Charming 4 Bdrm. Liv
lng room features cor..v
wood burning llreplnrc·
Huie lot. Owner will
h elp finan ce! Onl y
SZOUOO I e-73-8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
llALTOIS DOMT
..II TNSI
A Sale You can make even in
these times. The largest "1650
1q. ft.'' Condo for sale in
area. Cement drives, air
condltlonin1. m icro-wave
oven1, trash compactors,
pooll .. parkalde & all shopping
Jocat10n1. Owner wtll consider
locaJ exchan1es.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS .........
c:Mt9NMill.CA
714/•••·Hll
1111111111111111111 .......................................................................................................... .-.. ..... "'l"'",-......._,... ........ , ~~~
I•
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, MAY 18, 1981'
FEATURES 82
MOVIES 85
COM•CS 87 llGUll llll:H /IDUTH 1:0111
Love triumphs with
humor in
Shakespeare's 'All's
Well That Ends
Well." See Page B6.
D
0
Services equality urged in collnty
f
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of .. Delly ...... l'9ff
The Orange County Grand Jury
today urged the Board of
Supervisors to come up with a tax
formula to more equitably dis-
tribute the costs of providing local
ser vices to residents of un·
incorporated areas.
The jury. in a report to the
board, recommended the county
join with the Orange County
division of the League of
Califomla Cities in employing a
cons ultant who would "develop
methodology for pro·rating the
costs of local services provided by
the county to residents of un-
incorporated areas."
Additionally, the panel s uggest-
ed county government guarantee
that independent special districts
-those ~overned by elected or
appointed boards -will have in·
come "commensurate with the
Niguel ballots
not counted?
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of -.,...,, ,.... 1'9ft
A former member of the
Laguna Niguel Community As-
sociation's governing board,
who lost her seat in an April
election, is charging that four
ballots cast in her favor were
not counted in the final tally.
Eilene Crouse, who lost to
challenger Bob Hurst by three
votes when the count was taken
April 13, said four ballots that
were mailed lo election head·
quarters didn't get counted. •
She says the oversight costher
her seat on the governing board.
and the four ballots should be
added to the vote total.
Voters in Laguna Niguel could
cast their ballots by either de-
positing them in collection boxes
set up in shopping centers in the
community, dropping them off
at election headquarters at
Crvwn \'alley Community Park.
or mailing the ballots to the
park.
According to Mrs. Crouse,
four ballots were mailed to
Crown Valley Park by the April
13 deadHne for filing, but were
not gathered from the collection
box to be counted.
However, community as-
sociation President Paul
Haseman said the four ballots
were postmarked April 13, and
did not reach the election head·
quarters until the following day.
"If the ballots had arrived on
time they would have been
counted," Haseman said .
"There was no ill will on our
part or an attempt to prevent
Mrs. Crouse from serving on the
board."
Haseman said the collection
box al the park was checked just
after the 5 p.m . deadline on
April 13 and it was empty. He
said a check with post office of··
ficials verified that the ballots
had not been mailed in time tc
meet the deadJine.
Haseman did say there wen
several "bugs" in the communi
ty association election. They had
to do with some homeowners not
receiving a ballot.
Ballots were distributed in a
local throw-away newspaper
Haseman said several areas in
Laguna Niguel reported not re-
ceiving a paper.
"There were several problem~
in the process that will have tc
be worked out before the next
election," he said. "But I can as·
sure Mrs . Crouse that all the
ballots that arrived 'on time
were counted."
Despite the newly seated gov-
erning board's 14·1 vote to ratify
the election results. Mrs. Crouse
s ays she will press her demand
for a recount at the community
association's next meeting June
8.
·'The question is not whether I
won or lost," Mrs. Crouse said.
"The fact is that many people in
the community didn't receive
their ballots on time and there •
were poor counting pro-
cedures."
Mrs. Crouse said, of the 14,000
residents in La~una Niguel. only
790 cast ballots. She said the
low voter turnout was partly due
to poor distribution or ballots
and a failure on the part of the
community association to ad·
vertise the election.
30,000 jam beaches
along Laguna sands
Lifeguard departments report-
ed large crowds at Orange Coast
beaches Sunday after sparse
turnouts Saturday because of
gusting winds.
Honeymoo n
• trtp proves
thriller
A Buena Park couple's first.
journey along the road of
maritaJ bliss has gotten off to a
rocky start.
It seems the bride and groom
were taking off on their
honeymoon on their motorcycle,
still dressed in their weddinl at-
tire, alona Lake Forest Drive In
El Toro Sunday.
AH the sudden the bride's wed-
ding dresa became tangled in
the rear sprocket of the cycle,
throwing her to the pavement,
accordina to a spokesman for
the California Highway Patrol.
Laguna Beach lif~guards said
they treated a city youth for a
fractured right leg, suffered
while the 18·year-old was surfing
north of Main Beach Sunday.
John Stuawicki was treated by
lifeguards and paramedics and
taken to South Coast Medical
Center in South Laguna, a
lifeguard spokesman said. A
hospital spokesman said
Stuawicki is in good condition.
No details were available on
what caused the Injury.
Lifeguards said an estimated
30,000 visited Laguna Beach
over the weekend where surf
was running from 1-3 feet. The
water temperature was 65
degrees.
Huntington Beach lifeguards
said about 75.000 came to the ci·
ty beach on Satu.rday and Sun-
day. Lifeguards reported 12
routine rescues and 10 minor
first aids. Surf was about 3 feet.
The waler temperature was 66
degrees.
Newport Beach guards said
the turnout was about 100,000
Sunday and 40,000 Saturday.
Surf wa1' the highest reported
along the coast at 5-6 feet with 66
degree water temperatures.
services they provide.··
The Grand Jury said its latest
report examined the issue of tax
eq uity as it related to the
operation of city and county gov-
ernment as well as funding of
special district operations. It also
looked at the i mp acts of
Proposition 13, the 1978 voter-
a pp roved tax limitation in·
itiative, and Proposition 4, which
imposed further spending limits
two years later.
or Its JilUdy of the tax question,
the jury said information "On the
cost of supplying 'local' services
to unincorporated areas is not
now available to the county" and
recommended that a study be un-
dertaken "to permit this de-
termination."
Tax equity, the jury's report
said, is simply defined as the pay-
ment of taxes by a landowner for
services provided to his land,
such as police and fire protection.
SPACE AGE STOPPER -Did Shane Shrader, 12, get the idea
for his braking system from the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration? No matter: the parachute caught
water and sewers, street sweep·
ing. street lighting and landscape
maintenance.
This definition is complicated,
the report said, by the addition of
non-property related services,
such as health and welfare and
the criminal justice systems.
City officials in Orange County.
the jury said, complain that tax
payers in the unincorporated
areas do not pay their full share
for local services they receive.
County officials, however. con-
tend residents of unincorporated
areas not only pay for these
services, but al so "subsidize city
residents for a larger proportion
o f countywide services than
justified by city taxes.··
·'The ideal solution.·· the Grand
Jury said, "would be lo revamp
the entire tax structure so that
property tax could truly be used to
su pport prop e rt y -related
services."
the eyes of the judges at Irvine Savings' sixtb annual
Orange Crate Derby for the unique car prize. UC Irvine
basketball star Kevin Magee was ~rand marshal.
Huntington theater crisis feared
A proposed amphitheater in
Huntington Beach Central park
would be a financial disaster
because planners in Costa Mesa
and Irvine have beaten local of-
ficials to the punch. according to
a financial study.
The report on proposed de-
velopment In the Central Park
notes that a 15,000·seat am-
phitheater at the Orange County
Fairgrounds In CoUa Mesa and
a 10,000-seat arqpbltheater at
Lion Country Safari in Irvine
already are in advanced plan-
ning stages. The amphitheater
in lrvipe is scheduled to open
Aug. 1.
In addition, a performing arts
complex is planned for Coata
Mesa adjacent to the Soutb
Coast Plaza, the. report by
Ultrasystems notes.
The report says a Central
Park amphitheater would suffer
because of competition ,from the
other proposed facilities, which
ttte report states would have
"excellent access and high vis-
ibility."
"With the construction of a
high quality amphitheater in
Cos ta Mesa, and the con-
struction of a 10.000-seat
amphitheater in Irvine. a book·
Ing a1ent would be unlikely to
choose the Central l>ark location
for a concert," states the report.
The study says that the l?ark
isn't "central to the groWing
Orange County population" and
that providing parking for a'ma,
jor facUity thete would be dif-
ficult.
It also notes that a performing
arts center tentatively is
planned for neighboring Foun-
tain Valley.
The amphitheater concept was
recommended by Councilman
Jack Kelly last summer. He pro-
posed putting a 16,000-seat facili·
ty below ground level at the site
of the city's landfill pit at
Gothard ,Street and Talbert
Avenue.
A motorbike course also is
proposed for the pit, although
the financial study notes that it's
"doubtful" if this activity would
be profitable either.
To get the best revenue from
development, the report recom-
mends building a golf course,
hotel complex and1 restaurant, a
480-space recreational vehicle
campground, a pizza parlor
and electronic game arcade, a
six-field baseball and sports
~omplex, a fishing lake and a
YMCA gymnasium.
The reQOrl by the Irvine-based
company says that existing
equestrian uses. adventure play.
ground. concessiq__n stands and
s hooting range c6uld profitably
remain in the 297-acre site.
ll recommends against rac-
quet ball or tennis activities
because of nearby competition
and says that the noise from f
proposed police heliport woul
be a problem. ,
The development concept 1,
being considered by City Counci,J
lo generate funds to support tht
city's 50-park system.
Diana DicauJa, 21, married to
John Dicaula, 27, for less than
four boun before the 10 p.m. ac·
cident, rivu taken to Saddleback
Community Hospital where she
was treated for numerous
scrapes and rulses.
Reportedly the couple bad just
left their wedding reception
when tbe accident occurred.
Seven puppies find home
Development in the par~ which is a lushly planted natur
setting, is opposed by an o
ganized group of local residents
The Community Service
Commission is holdin1 a special
meetlng Wednesday at 5:30 p.m.·
to go over the report.
Aluminum, paper
drive planned
The Parent·Faculty Guild ~
Moultosa Elemental')' Sebool lD
La1una Nipe& will· lponlal' a
newpaper and aluminum can
drive Tuesday at lb• 1ebooJ,
11151 HlPlandl AYI.
TbOM ......... ~ dclltate to tlM
drl•• ma1 . brlq S:C ud '"eaaa to tbt ...._ from
T:IO Lm. to ll:IO a.m . 11C111i1J nlHd wW b8 ... to ,..,.._.
edaeadoUI ~awtall.
Newspaper photo brings fast responses in Co sta Mesa
Synthta deM'arquette of the
K -t BouUque ill do'ntown Cotta
.... wu 1lowln1 today. , •'.You must have qulte a
readenbJp," she told a Dally
Pilot reporter. "We placed all 11ven~tbem."
Placed tn homes tbroQlhout
tbe area were seven 1ix-week-
ol4 e·~•dooed with t.beir mot ~rd mother, Terra, iD I .. bffk1a.rd more tbuft".-. • .,.
Area dot kmn nspoGMcl tO
U.. ctowna.wn bout.lqu. at m E.
17th St. when they learned In
Saturday's paper that they could
have a dog free If they offered a
tood home.
"We had about 20 calls," Hid
M1. deM.arquette.
The boittlque operator ac-
quired thf"' puJ)pies In a •pedal
deal with CO.ta Mesa animaJ
control officers.
She and the pupple1' mother
beHme acqualnltd more than a
year •to when the then-year-old
1hepherd wa1 fO\lnd tied to a
newspaper rack at a Mesa
supermarket.
A note attached to the dog's
col11r read, "If nobody wants
me, my owners will return at 5
o 'clock to take me to the
pound." ·
Listed wu the dog's name,
Terra, and her breed.
Ma. deMarquette tooJc Terra in
and be1an searchln1 ror
someone to CAN! for her. She
Hid a youn1 mah took: her home
with the promise he'd have her
spayed.
Just over 'a mootb -.o. she
said, the man called lo report
that he and bis Jltltrlend were
aplltt1n1 up an that be wu
leavlna Terra ln bla backyard.
He said be WU mov'tna.
Ma. deMarquette found Terra.
But Terra had multiplied. She
was surrounded by a litter ot smaU pups.
She aald 1he'll look for a home
now for Terra.1
Burglars tak e
8 5,000 in rll@8
BuriJars used an axe to break•
slorerront window In Laguna
Beach over the weekend, t~
more than $5,000 in rugs from
shop.
Police aaid they tounCI an ax•
near the front of Hart's Rup an4
Carpets, 115$ South Coast
Hl1bway, followlna the break-lft
Saturday.
Taken were oriental ru1a
v~lutd atts.~7, ~lice uld.
.. ---------------..... ~---------....... -----------------.
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT ,Monday, May 18, 1981
,
•
Marilyn craftsman
----------------------------------
• in kitchen
L By ELLEN BRYANT
EDITOR'S NOTE. TM111 onottwr
In o 1e1V1 o/ 1forit1 about lnln11f
•ng CalJ/ormo women.
California Woman
i: r I . ~ ~ l I
f ~ I .
I I
1 • ,
i i
• : .
. , :
,
JUMPING HERE AND THERE: By now you suspect
the entire universe knows the results of the S3rd annual
leaping of the Jumping Frog Contest of Calaveras Coun
ty. But I'm trying to ignore it.
Never mind the fact ~ that several operatives
from our very own J ohn • ,_
Wayne Airport here in re'\
Orange County had an en· ~I'.
try in the contest named, TOM MORPHINE ,~ /
aptly, "Duke." Forget _________ ....,_."'""-
that even this s terling
journal, under auspices of
our county bureau chief, Fearless Fred Schoemehl, had a
leaping frog entry identified as "The American Dream."
Despite these parochial factors, l 'm trying to forget
about the outcome.
IN EVENT YOU AREN'T steeped in the lore of
California during the Gold Rush days, it could be pointed
out that the current frog-leaping competition resulted
from a story by the celebrated American ht morist Mark
Twain.
Twain was lured to our Mother Lode country up at
Angels Camp in Calaveras County amid the Yosemite
range, in the hope that he would get rich quick by bitting
a vein of the yellow metal. He hit it richer in American
literature.
His stay at Angels Camp, however, did result in a
story, penned in 1865, called, "The Celebrated Jumping
There ore two 1ldo1 to Men
doclno. On the one hand, there'•
the quaint, almple town tourl1t.1
aee, the moat "laid back" of
Northern Callfornla vllla1es.
But there's an lnton1lty beneath
the luy surface, the busUo of
c reativity, the strenuous efforts o t d e di cated a rt lsll and
c raftsme n strlvln1 towards ex·
cellence In their chosen fleldt.
Marilyn Douglas reflect.a both
sides of Mendo('lno, her homt
for the paat l~n. Ms . Dougla 39, a tall, ma·
jestic, red· red wo man, 18
arlicuJate an charmln1&1 with a
friendly. r e laxed manner.
Behind the delightful personalJ.
ty, however, Is a determlned,
talented craftsman.
In less than sh: years, Ms.
Douglas has built her Mendocino
Jams and Jellies, localed on a
two-acre farm outside of town,
Into a highly successful en-
terprise, with 10 employees and
rapidly-growing sales. Her line
of hi&h quality jams is featured
at gourmet shops throughout the
• country. ·
But Ms . Douglas never con·
sciously set out to build a major
company. The business , she
says, "evolved purely b y
chance."
Marilyn Douglas
Marilyn Douglas was raised in
Springville, an agricultural com·
munity in central Tulare Coun·
ty. She first learned to cook
from her father, a professional
chef.
After attending Sonoma State
University in Rohnert Park, she
began a career in management.
For several years, she was an
executive with Four Generations
Toy Company, a Sebastopol
manufacturer of wooden toys
and adult games.
She worked 12 hours or more
each day. And Ms . Douglas re·
lished the role of young, s uc·
cessful executive. She bought a
house and furniture and, she
says, "started to accumulate
p~ssessions -things, things,
th1ngs."
ln 1971, disas ter struck. While
she was at work, her ne w home
burned to the ground.
. "I was wiped out totally, los·
mg everything but the clothes I
was wearing."
Ms. Douglas was devastated
psychologicaJly as well as finan:
cially But the catastrophe
proved to be a turning point in
her life
'' l s uddenly r ealized that
material success wasn't nearly
as important to me as I had
thought. I became determined to
start a new life, an emotionally
satisfying life.··
He r family had vacationed in
Mendocino for a number ot
years, and Ms Douglas bad
always loved the area.
After the fire, s he quit her Job
and set off for Mendocino rent·
ing the summer home of iamily
friends. She had less than $100 to
her narne.
·'I felt like a pioneer," Ms.
Douglas laughs.
For several months, she did
nothing but rest and take stock
or her h!e Her first foray back
into the world of work was as a
hotel chambermaid.
· · 1 wanted a job completely
without pressure."
Gradually, Ms Douglas felt
ab l e to take o n more
r esponsibility. She became a
dishwasher at Cafe Beaujolais, a
popular Mendocino restaurant.
Soon, the restaurant's owners
heard about her cooking ability
and asked her to become their
assistant chef. She agreed and
remained at Cafe Beaujolais for
more than four years. the last
l wo as head chef.
In addition, she began to teach
cooking classes at Mendocino
Com munity Coll ege Ms .
Douglas was a popular teacher ,
and one of her most popular
classes was a course in food pre-
paration, including the prepara·
tion of Jams and iellies.
Virgo: Accent
on your home
Another drug
and sex test
I
l
·l
;,
t
'\
I
Angela Camp booder Jerry Heintz cMcking prorpeet1ve 1umpn-1
Frog of Calaveras County." In it, two gentlemen wager
on who has the frog who can make the greatest single
leap -one declares, ''I'll resk forty dollars that he can
outjump any frog in Calaveras County" while the skpetic
retorts, "I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any
better'n any other frog . . ·."
TlftJS THE BA TrLE was joined and if you don't
know the outcome, better read up on your Mark Twain
Admittedly" my lack of. enthusiasm over frogs g~s
far back to the time I had mis-enrolled in a zoology class.
'-rhe professor was a skinny, bald, bespectacled, thin-
hpped character who just loved to torture students with
all kinds of experiments on frog cadavers.
As a matter of fact, sometimes the heartless prof
would send frogs to the Great Lily Pond in the Sky right
before your very eyes.
After executing the hapless amphibian, he would in·
to~e. in what seems to be suppressed joy, "Now you see.
this frog no longer exists as a n INDIVIDUAL ... " He
put th~ emphasis on "individl!al .. iust in that way.
Cnpes, you'd s ay to yourself, he doesn't look like he'd
give any more of a hoot if that was your very own lifeless
student form, reposing there in his hands.
Don't we want to at least say a couple of words over
the body of the recently passed?
MAYBE SOMET mNG LIKE, "Oh Operator of the
Great Lily Pond in the Sky, he ain't much to look at now
but he was one helluva jumper in his time ... Amen!"
. But i:iothing like that t;ver happened. The corpse was
simply dispatched to the dissecting table forthwith.
I got a "D" on the first midterm in Frog Executions
100-A. I turned in my dissecting tools soon thereafter to
pursue something more pleasant like chasing fire engines
and cop cars.
EVE R SINCE, I've had trouble enjoying the Jump·
ing Frog Contest up there north at Angels Camp in
Calaveras County.
Tuesday, May lt, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARI ES <Ma rch 21-April 19):
You close gaps -what seemed
out·of-reach is now available.
Emphasis on law, sp~ial rela·
tionship, added responsibility
and greater chance for rewards.
Capricorn, Taurus, Virgo
natives figure prominently.
Good money news!
TAURUS (April 20-May 20~·
Gain valuable hint by readini
HOROSCOPE
Aries message. Emphasis on
completion, credit ratings and
revelation concerning financial
status of one close to you, in·
eluding partner or mate. Gain
indicated through unorthodox
procedures.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20 ):
Let go of outmoded methods.
Gel second wind. New approach
necessary where partnerships,
contracts and public relations
enter picture. Focus on small
print, "important papers" and
marital status . Imprint style.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Focus on security. family, res·
olutions concerning diet, nutri·
lion and health. Intuitive in·
tellect provides answers. You'll
regain sense of direction. A
former "teacher"' returns to
scene. Capricorn, Aquarius and ~nother Cancer figure prom-
ment,J y.
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22 ):
security. Delve beneath surface
indications. Family problem
will be resolved. Know it, accent
diplomacy and willingness to
make intelligent concessions.
LIBRA CSept. 23·0ct. 22):
Focus on change, variety. travel
and r enewed communication
with re lative who had been
estranged. Analyze recent oc·
currences; find reasons, take
nothing for granted. Gemini.
Virgo, Sagittarius persons play
important roles.
S\-ORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Investment pays di vidends .
Money picture is brighter than
originally anticipated. Accent on
personal possessions, payments
., and collections. You locate what
had been lost, missing or stolen.
Family member makes con-
ciliatory gesture.
SAGITfARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Judgment, timing are on
target. You'll be at right place
at crucial moment. Highlight
confidence, take initiative, make
personal appearance. New con-
tacts prove valuable. Define
terms, avoid self-deception.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Much that occurs takes
place behind scenes. Clandestine
meeting could be on agenda.
What appeared a setback is like·
ly to boomerang in your favor.
Accent on courts, hospitals, or·
gaoizations and fraternal or·
de rs.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-F eb. 18):
Accolade from one you admire
provides boost in morale. Focus
on dreams, visions, wishes and
basic fulfillment. Aries, Leo,
Sagittarius natives play impor-
tant roles. An aggressive friend
aids in removing roadblock to
progress.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20):
Dear Readers: Last week I
promised to prmt tne 1981 teen·
age Drug and Sex Test. I'd file to
make it clear that these tests.
which have appeared in this col·
umn from lime to time, are not
written by me. In fact, I don't care
much for them. The first Drug
and Sex Test appeared in 1967 It
was composed by three teen-
agers. I have publis hed several
up~ated tests by teen s from
Maine to California. This one is
from two New Trier High School
s tudents who live in a Chicago
s uburb. It is called the Know
Thyself Questionnaire. Score the
number indicated for each 'Yes"
answer.
1. Ever gone out with a
member of the opposite sex? 2
2. Ever been kissed? 3
3. Ever been French·kissed? 4
4. Ever been kissed while in a
reclining position? 5
5. Ever gotten or given a
hickey? 5
6. Ever been kissed against
your will ? 2
7. Ever parked for more than
an hour? 5
8. Ever taken off most of your
clothes while parking? 7
9. Ever said, "I love you?" 4
10. Ever said "I love you" to
more than one person in the
same week? 5
11. Ever gone totally steady? 2
12. Ever cheat on your
steady? 5
13. Ever pick up a girl or go with
a guyyoudidn'lknow? 6
14. Ever make a member of the
opposite sex cry? 4
15. Do you s moke re!:!ular
cigarettes? 3
16. Do you s moke pot? 6
17. Do you drink alcohol or
beer now and then? 7
18. Do you drink alcohol or
beer every day? 9
19. Have you ever passed out
from drinking? 9
20. Have you ever tried Angel
Dust into someone's drank ? 12
22 Have you ever taken pills
to get high? 11
23 . Have you ever taken pills
lo get off a high or go to s leep? 11
24. Have you ever had sex
without using a contraceptive? 10
25. Have you (or your partner>
INN lANDERS
ever worried about being pre~·
nant? 10
26 . After the scare did you go
back to having sex without protec·
lion? 11
27 llave you • y()ur girl 1 e\'er
cons idered an abortion" 12
28. Have you (your girl) ever
had an abortion? 12
29. Even tho u g h you a re
straight. would you go kinky to
see what it's like? 13
30. Ever stolen money to buv
drugs? L3
SCORE CHART
Under 10 -A nerd
11 to 15 Pure as Ivory soap
and maybe a fruitcake.
16 to 20 Passionate but
sensible
21 to 39 Nor mal and decent.
40 to 75 -Indecent.
76 to 85 -Headed for serious
trouble.
86 to 104 Already there.
Anything over 104 -Hopeless
and condemned.
Just remember, out of the hundreds of frogs entered
only a handful become celebrated winners with the big
leaps.
Obstacles are removed; you'll
have greater f reedom of
thought, action. Social life ac-
cele r a tes, romance replaces
lethargy. You feel more vital,
alive and a mbitious . Gemini,
Virgo. Sagitta rius persons figure
prominently.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ac·
cent on home, property values.
s afety measures a nd basic
Highl ight ind e pend e n ce,
initiative and open dialogue with
one in position of a uthority. New
approach elevates standing in
community. Leo, Aquarius
persons fi gure prominnently.
Emphasis on ach ievement,
responsibility and dedication.
Dust? 11
How much d.o you know about
pot, L.SD, cocaine. speed, meth. UJ>-
pers and cl.owners, glue and heroin?
A re all lhese drugs dangerous? Get
Ann Landers' new booklet, ··straight
Dope on Drugs · · For each booklet
ordered. send a dollar pliu a long,
self-addressed envelope (28 emfs
postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Bor
11995. Chicago. Ill 60611. Tt)us I can fret over what university prof gets all the
losers. .
.. :·l! Adventists schedule fihn
ADVENT I ST COMMUN I TY
serv ices presents a film series
titled "Focus on the Family" shown
Tuesday evenings at 7, May 19
through June 30, at the Newport
Harbor S~venth -day Adventist
Church. The film series features
therapist James C. Dobson and fami·
•I l'!~ ly counseling graduate students will
lead discussions following each mov-
ie. For information, call 645-2082.
ORTHOPEDIC TREATMENT or
arthritla Is the subject of a lecture at
-HEALTH HELP
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, at Wes tern
Medical Center, formerly Santa Ana·
Tustin Community Hospital. The tree "''.~ ditcusslon will be Jed by physicians
Larry Danll& and Zan Lewis. For In·
formation, call 833·S001.
NATIONAL KIDNEY F OUN·
1 datlon benefi\ hor1e show wlll be.
· held from May 20 to 25 at the Coto de
C11a t:questrt1n Center ln Trabuco
Caayoo. Servtn• on lb• Memorial
Day Ct1111t Horse Sbow Committee
are Sue Clark of Newport Beach a"nd
Herta Lin of Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (213) 641 -8152.
CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE pa·
tlents and the community can rind
out bow the disease affects the fami·
ly at a lecture sponsored by the
American Lung Assocatlon..of Orange
County. For lnformatlon, caJI BJS.
LUNG.
HIG H HO P ES Neurological
Recovery Group has scheduled a
s kate·a ·thon to raise funds for
various programs al 6 p.m . Thur•·
day. in Laguna -ffills. For Informa-
tion, call 540.«81.
WORKSHOP on "The Art of Seti·
Preservatio.n'' will be held at 9:30
a.m. Friday, ln Tustin. Sponaored by
the Orange County Mental Health A•·
soclation, the event wlU be led by
Barbara Hall-Holmes ot the county
Human Services Agency. For In·
formation. call 547·7M9.
-CONQUER DE PRESSION It the lJ·
tle ·ol a lecture at 10:30 a.m. Satur·
day, In Newport Stach. The pro1ram
Is sponsortd by the New Life Found•·
tlon. For lnformatlon, call C213>
936·9176.
Laguna •tudent -receive• honor
Ilaria Sla1dtr, daucbter of Mr. and
Mra. a.-Sl\1det" of L11QDa Beach, w beln Mlected for membenhlp in
Mart.at Board at the Unlvenlly of
IOatlMn C8Jl!ornl•.
llortar Board ll I DaUoftal HDior honor ...,. Memben an cbaMn •n lhelrEyear. 1111. .. • '1.171 .,. ........ of
La1ana Hll!I ka.ocil;
SENIOR CITIZENS
SPECIAL
25°/o OFF ALL SH YICI
21. Have you ever slipped Angel
M::~t~CMy How Do You Feel Right Now?
~~·==~·=~~=~~==~~n . Are You A Mature Woman ...
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Program ForTeeml
John Robert Powers has
designed a special Summer
program to meet the self·
Improvement needs ot
teenagers For over 50
years. JOhn Robert Powers
has served the emerging
woman 1n personal, bus•·
ness 0< career development
and professional modeling
How the teenag« Clfl
especially ltam to reach
her full potential the "Pow-
ert" way In the relaxed
atmosphtfe ot Summtr
classes. Receivt substan-
tial tuition dlscountt by
restrVlng ci.,,es now tall
for lrtt infonnatlon.
OMllECMll
3 Town & Country, Orange
(714) 547-8228
With A Circulation & Fi gure
Problem?
H your answer is "YES" then you need
JHn Marie ... The only women's
Health Sak>n detlgned with you In mind I
LOOt< BETTER ... FEEL BElTEA .•.
Thi spedal man In your llfe wilt love you
tor ltl
H you find Arabic Dancing strenuous
end the "Bargeln" extrdM l8lons oner
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tor 1 Free Treatmtnt . . . on the mo9t
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•
Dally Pilat
MONDAY, MAY 18, 1981
FEATURES
IRVlll MOVIES
COMICS
Derby entrants
get few brakes
HEADED DOWNHILL When race cars are
gravity-powered, you need parents for pushing
uphill and ingenious m ethods of braking. Arnold
Kaufman assisted his son Jeremy,. 6, to the
starting line Sunday for the finals of the sixth
annual Irvine Savings' Orange Crate Derby
where Shane Shrader. 12, perhaps inspired by
the National Space a nd Aeronautics
Love triumphs with
humor in
B2
Shakespeare's "All's
Well That Ends BS
87 Well." See Page B6.
Adminjstr ation, used a parachute to attract
judges' attention for unique car design. Mark
Yeates. 10, pushes his car after winning the
10-13 age group. Brandy Powers gets hug from
mother Barbara as tops among the 6-9-year-
olds. Tony Carlini won the open class of the con-
test down Sand Canyon Road.
••
0
n
Proposed Huntington theater disaster?
A proposed amphitheater In
Huntington Beach Central park
would be a financial disaster
because planners ln Costa Mesa
and Irvine have beaten local of-
ficials to the punch, according to
a CinanclaJ study.
The report on proposed de-
velopment in the Central Park
notes that a 15,000-seat am-
phitheater at the Orange County
Fa1rgrounds in Costa Mesa and
a 10,"000·seal amphitheater at
Lion Country Safari In Irvine
already are in advanced plan·
ning stages. The amphitheater
in Irvine is scheduled to open
Aug . 1.
In addition, a performing arts
complex is planned for Costa
Mesa adjacent to the South
Coast Plaza, the report by
Oltrasy~tems notes.
The report says a Central
Park amphitheater would suffer
because of compeUtlon from the
other proposed facilities, which
7 puppies find home
Newspaper photo brings fast responses in Costa Mesa
Synthia deMarquelle or the
K-9 Boutique in downtown Costa
Mesa was 1lowlnt today.
. "You muat have quite a
readership," ahe told a Dally
Pilot reporter. "W• placed all
1even ol them."
Placed ln homes throu1bout
the area were seven aix·week·
old pupe abandoned with their
m0tUy abepberd mother, Terra,
ln a Colta Mes• backyard more
than five weekJ aao.
Area dol loven rftponded to
tbe downtown boutJQH at Ill I:.
lTUl It. ..... they •••J'Md tD lawrder~• ,.,._, that tbey c.wld
baYe a clll fret lf \My offer.d I
Sood home.
"We had about 20 calla," said
Ma. deMarquette.
The boutique operator ac-
quired the puppies in a special
deal with Costa Mesa animal
control officers. She-and the puppies' mother
became acquainted more than a
year a10 when the then-year-old
ahepherd was found tled to a ne~apaper rlfek at a Men
•urrmar1ret. note attached to the dot'•
collar l'Md, "If nobody wantl me, my b\lmen wlU retum at 5
o'clock to take m• to the1
pound."
Lltted wu the dos'• name,
Terra, and her breed.
Ma. deMarquette took Terra ln
and began searcblna for
someone to care for her. She
said a young man took her home
with Ute promise he'd have her
spayed.
Ju11t over 'a month a10, she
sald, the man called to ~
that he and his /lrlfrtend were
spllttlnt up an that he was
leavlnc Terra in hta backyard.
He aald he was movina.
Ma. deMarquette round Terra.
But Terra had multiplied. She •as aurrounded by a Utter of
amall pups.
She aatd'"she'll look for a home.
now for Terra.
the report states would have
"excellent access and high vis·
ibility."
··With . the construction of a
high quality amphitheater in
Costa Me sa. and the con ·
struction of a 10,000-seat
amphitheater in Irvine, a book· en, aaent would be unlikely to
choose the Central Park location
ror a concert," states the report.
The study says that the park
isn't "central to the growing
Orange County population" and
that provldins parkina for a ma-
jor facility there would be dif-
fici.lt. It also notes that a performin1
arts center tentatively 11
planned for nel1hborin1 Foun·
taln Valley.
The amphitheater concept waa
recommended by Councilman
Jack Kelly last summer. He pro-
poaed putUri1 a 18,()()().aeat facili-
ty below ground level at the alte
or the city's landflll pit at
Gothard Street and Talbert
Avenue. A motorbike course also la
proposed for the pit, althou1h
the financial study notes that It's
"doubtlul" lf thJa activity would
be profltal)le either.
To set the beat revenue from
development, the report recom-
mends bulldlnc a 1olt course,
hotel complex and rataurant, a
480-space recreational vehicle
camp1round, a plua parlor
and electronic game arcade, a
six-field baseball and sports
complex, a fishing lake and a
YMCA gymnasium.
The reQ<>rt by the Irvine-based
company says that existing equestrian uses, adventure play-
ground, concession stands and
shooting range could profitably
remain in the 297-acre site.
ll recommends against rac·
quetball or tennis activities
The Community Services·
Commission is holding a speciaJ
meeting Wednesday at 5:30 p.m .
to go over the re port.
Sa/ ari tracking
Wallaby thieves
At first they thou1ht the
animals merely hopped away,
but now officials of Lion Country
Safari ln Irvine suspect the
worse -they think ther.e it a
wallaby thief on the loose.
"It's Just too colncldental,"
wild animal park 16okeawoman
Vlr1lnla Brauer said this mom·
ln1.
She _.explained that on the
weekend of May I three
wallabies (a amaller coualn of
the kan1aroo> were found to be
ml••lnc rrom the compound. Sh• said there waa no hard evidence to
lndlcate they were atolen and
park om dais wondered where the
mlld·mannered creaturta had
1ottento.
Thtn tut weekend tht other paw rtU, so to 1peak.
Another wallaby disappeared
without a trace and a1aln there
was no evidence of foul play.
"This time we filed a police
report," Ms. Brauer said. "And
the police were out here for
some time last weekend but they
couldn't really find any clues."
She aaJd the animals, part of
the manupial f amlly, live in •
pen on the wild animal com·
pound.
T hey're worth about '300
each, aheaald.
The creaturea areo 't at aU
dan1et'OUI tD human belnp and
whoever •lol• them probabty
Juat carried th• S·foot.tall
wallabl• awa1.
The miMln• wallablet' lncludt
a mother with a baby ln bit
pouch.
. "
.. -----_. ....,_ ----,.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ,Monday, May 18. 1981
Marilyn craftsman • in kitchen
--------------------------------------------------By ELLEN BRYANT
EDITOR'S NOTE· Th as as onoth.tr
In a •nw• of ston~s about sntere8'·
1ng Collformo women
California Woman
JUMPING HERE AND THERE: By now you suspect
the entire universe knows the results ot the 53rd annual
leaping of the Jumping Frog Contest of Calaveras Coun·
ty. But I'm trying to ignore it.
Never mind the fact
that several operatives (;:.)
from our very own John
Wayne Airport here in ~~
Orange County had an en· ~I':
try in the contest named, TOM MURPHINI .,.. /
aptly, "Duke." Forget-. _______ ._. .. ,""'-..... .._
that even this sterling
journal, under auspices of
our county bureau chief, Fearless Fred Schoemehl. had a
leaping frog entry identified as "The American Dream."
Despite these parochial £actors. I'm trying lo forget
about the outcome.
IN EVENT YOU AREN'T steeped in the lore of
California during the Gold Rush days, it could be pointed
out that the current frog-leaping competition resulted
from a story by the celebrated American humorist Mark
Twain.
Twain was lured to our Mother Lode country up at
Angels Camp in Calaveras County amid the Yosemite
range, in the hope that he would get rich quick by hitting
a vein of the yellow metal. He hit it richer in American
literature.
His stay at Angels Camp, however, did result in a
story, penned in 1865, called, "The Celebrated Jumping
There arc two sides to Men
docino. On the one band. there's
the quaint, simple town tourists
see, the most "laid back" of
Northern Calirorniu villages.
But there's an intensity beneath
the luy surface, the bustle ol
creativity, the strenuous efforts
or dedicated artists and
craftsmen striving towards ex·
ceUence in their chosen fields.
Marilyn Douglas reflects both
sides of Mendocino, her home
ror the past 10 years.
Ms. Douglas, 39, ~ tall. ma-
jestic, red-haired woman. is
articulate and charming, with a
friendly , relaxed manner.
Behind the delightfuJ personali-
ty, howeve r, is a de termined,
talented craftsman.
In less than six years. Ms.
Douglas has built her Mendocino
Jams and Jellies, localed on a
two-acre farm outside of town.
into a highly successful en·
terprise. with 10 employees and
rapidly-growing sales. Her line
of high quality jams is featured
at gourmet shops throughout the
country.
But Ms. Douglas never con·
sciously set out to build a major
company . The business. she
says, "evolved purely by
chance."
Marilyn Douglas
Marilyn Douglas was raised in
Springville, an agricultural com-
munity in central Tulare Coun-
l)'. She firs t learned to cook
from he r father, a prOfeHional
rbef.
After attending Sonoma State
University in Rohnert Park. she
began a career in management.
f'or several years. s he was an
executive with Four Generations
Toy Company. a Sebastopol
manufacturer of wooden toys
and adult games.
She worked 12 hours or more
each day. And Ms. Douglas re-
lished the role of young. suc-
cessful executive. She bought a
house and furniture and, she
says, "started to accumulate
possessions -things, things,
things ."
In 1971. disaster struck. While
she was at work, her new home
burned to the ground.
··I was wiped oul totally. los-
ing everything but the clothes 1
was wearing."
Ms. Douglas was devastated.
psychologically as well as finan-
c i a 11 y . But the catastrophe
proved to be a turning point m
her life.
"I suddenly realized that
material success wasn't nearly
as important to me as I had
thought. I became determined to
start a new life. an emotionally
satisfying life ...
Her family had vacationed in
Mendocino for a number of
years, and Ms Douglas had
always loved the area.
After the fire. she quit her job
and set off for Mendocino. rent
ing the summer home of family '
friends. She had less than $100 lo
her name
"I felt like a pioneer." Ms.
Douglas laughs.
For several months, she did
nothing but rest and take stock
of he r life Her first foray back
into the world of work was as a
hokl chambermaid
''I wanted u job completely
without pressure."
Gradually. Ms Douglas felt
able to take on more
responsibility. She became a
dis hwasher at Cafe Beaujolais. a
popular Mendocino restaurant.
Soon, the restaurant's owners
heard about her cooking ability
and asked her to become their
assistant chef. She agreed and
remained at Cafe Beaujolais f('r
mort' lhan four years, the last
two as head chef.
In addition, she began to teach
cooking classes at Mendocino
Co mmunit y Coll ege . Ms .
Douglas was a popular teacher,
and one of her most popular
classes was a course in food pre-
paration. including the prepara·
Lion of jams and iellies
Virgo: Accent
on your home
Another drug
and sex test
Angela Comp boonn JeTT71 Hrinti checking prospectn>e 1umpe111 ---Frog of C~laveras County." In it. two gentlemen wager
on who has the frog who can make the greatest single
leap --one declares, 'TU resk forty dollars that he can
outjump any frog in Calaveras County" while the skpetic
retorts, "I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any
better'n any other frog . . . "
THUS THE BATTLE was joined and if you don't
know the outcome, better read up on your Mark Twain
Admittedly, my lack of enthusiasm over frogs g~s
far back to the time I had mis-enrolled in a zoology class.
The professor was a s kinny, bald, bespectacled. thin-
hpped character who just loved to torture students with
all kinds of experiments on frog cadavers.
As a matter of fact, sometimes the heartless prof
would send frogs to the Great Lily Pond in the Sky right
before your very eyes.
A!ler executing the hapless amphibian, he would in-
to~e. m what seems to be suppressed joy, "Now you see.
this frog no longer exists as an INDIVIDUAL , " He
put th~ emphasis on "individl!al" iust in that way. •
Cnpes, you'd say to yourself, he doesn't look llke he'd
give any more of a hoot if that was your very own lifeless
student form, reposing there in his hands.
Don't we want to at least say a couple of words over
the body of the recently passed?
MAYBE SOMETWNG LIKE, "Oh Operator of the
Great Lily Pond in the Sky, he ain't much to look at now
but be was one helluva jumper in his time ... Amen!"
But nothing like that ever happened. The corpse was
simply dispatched to the dissecting table forthwith.
I got a "D" on the first midterm in Frog Executions
100-A. I turned in my dissecting tools soon thereafter to
pursue something more pleasant like chasing fire engines
and cop cars.
EVER SINCE, I've had trouble enjoying the Jump·
ing Frog Contest up there north at Angels Camp in
Calaveras County. ·
Just remember, out of the hundreds of frogs entered,
only a handful become celebrated winners with the big
leaps.
Thus I can fret over what university prof gets alJ the losers.
Adventists schedule fihn
Tuesday, May·l9, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIF..S <March 21 -April 19):
You close gaps -what seemed
oul-of-reach is now available.
Emphasis on law, special rela-
tionship, added r esponsibility
and greater chance for rewards.
Capricorn, Taurus . Virgo
natives figure prominently.
Good money news !
TAURUS (April 20·May 20~·
Gain valuable hint by readinJi(
HOROSCOPE
Aries message. Emphasis on
completion, credit ratings and
revelation concernjng financial
s tatus of one close to you, in-
cluding partner or mate. Gain
indicated through unorthodox
procedures.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 );
Let go of outmoded methods.
Gel second wind. -New approach
necessary where partnerships,
contracts a nd public relations
enter picture. Focus on small
print, "important papers'' and
marital status. Imprint style.
CANCER <June 2l·July 22>:
Focus on security, family, res-
olutions concerning diet. nutri-
tion and health. Intuitive m-
tellect provides answers. You'll
r egain sense of direction. A
former "teacher" returns to
scene. Capricorn, Aquarius and
!lnother Cancer figure prom· mently.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22):
Obstacles a re removed; you'U
have greater freedom of
thought. action. Social life ac-
celerates . romance replaces
lethargy. You feel more vital.
alive and ambitious. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure
prominently.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ac-
cent on home, property values,
s afety measures and basic
SENIOR CITIZENS
SPECIAL
25°/o OFF ALL SH
security. Delve beneath surface
indications . Family problem
will be resolved. Know it, accent
diplomacy and willingness to
make intelligent concessions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22 >:
Focus on change, variety, travel
and renewed communication
with relative wlio had been
estranged. Analyze recent oc-
c urrences ; find reasons. take
nothing for granted. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons play
important roles.
S\.\>RPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Investment p ays dividends.
Money picture is brighter than
originally anticipated. Accent on
personal possessions, payments
and collections. You locate what
had been lost, missing or s tolen.
Family membe r makes con·
ciliatory gesture.
SAGJ1TARIVS <Nov. 22-Dec.
211 · Judgment. timing are on
target. Yl)u'll be at right place
at crucial moment. Highlight
confidence, take initiative, make
personal appearance. New con-
tacts prove valuable. Define
terms. avoid self-deception.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). Much lhal occurs takes
place behind scenes. Clandestine
meeting could be on agenda.
What appeared a setback is like-
ly to boomerang in your favor.
Accent on courts, hospitals, or-
ganizations and fraternal or-
ders.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18>:
Accolade from one you admire
provides boost in morale. Focus
on dreams, visions. wishes and
bas ic fulfillment. Aries. Leo.
Sagittarius natives play impor-
tant roles. An aggressive friend
aids in removing roadblock to
progress.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20):
Highlight independence .
initiative and open dialogue with
one in position of authority. New
approach elevates standing in
community. Leo, Aquarius
persons figure prominnently.
Emphas is on achievement,
responsibility and dedication.
\r 0mar~ ~
Dear Readers: Last week I
promised to prmt tne 1981 teen-
age Drug and Sex Test. I'd like to
make it clear that these tests.
which have appeared in this col·
umn from time lo time, are not
written by me. In fact, I don'tcare
much for them. The first Drug
and Sex Test appeared in 1967. It
was composed by three teen·
agers. I have published several
up~ated tests by tee ns from
Maine to California. This one is
from two New Trier High School
students who live in a Chicago
suburb. It is called the Know
Thyself Questionnaire. Score the
number indicated for each 'Yes"
answer
1. Ever gone out with a
member of the opposite sex? 2
2. Ever been kissed ? 3
3. Ever been French-kissed? 4
4 Ever been kissed while in a
reclining position? 5
5 . Ever gotten or given a
hickey? 5
6. Ever been kissed against
your will? 2
7. Ever parked for more than
an hour? 5
8. Ever taken off most of your
clothes while parking? 7
9. Ever said, "I love you?" 4
10 . Ever said "I love you" to
more than one person in the
same week? 5
11. Ever gone totally s teady? 2
12. Ever cheat on your
steady? 5
13. Ever pick up a girl or go with
a guy you dido 't know? 6
14. Ever make a member of the
opposite sex cry? 4
15 Do you smoke regular
cigarettes? 3
16. Do you smoke pot? 6
17 . Do you· drink alcohol or
beer now and then? 7
18. Do you drink alcohol or
beer every day? 9
19. Have you ever passed out
from drinking? 9
20. Have you ever tried Angel
Dust? 11
21 . Have you ever slipped Angel
Oust mtosomeone's drink? 12
22. Have you ever taken pills
togettugh? 11
23 . Have you ever taken pills
lo get off a hi gh or go to sleep? 11
24 . Have you ever had sex
without using a contraceptive? 10
25. Have you (or your partner)
ANN lANDIRS
ever worried about being preg·
nant? 10
26. After the scare did you go
back to having sex without protec-
tion? 11
27. ltavc you t \'OUr girl > ever
('On~idercd an abortion" 12
28 Have you lyour girl1 ever
had an abortion? 12
29. Eve n though you are
SI raight, would you go kinky to
see what it's like? 13
30 . Ever stolen monev to buv
drugs? 13
SCORE CHART
Under 10 A nerd.
11 to 15 Pure as Ivory soap
and maybe a fruitcake.
16 to 20 Pass ion ate but
sensible.
21 to 39
40 to 75
76 lo 85
trouble
Normal a nd decent
Indecent.
-Headed for serious
86 to 104 Already there.
Anything over 104 -Hopeless
and condemned
How much de you know about
pot. LSD. cocaine, speed, meth, up-
pers and dcwners, glue and heroin?
A re all these drugs dangerou.s? Get
Ann Landers' new booklet, "Straight
Dope on Drugs .. For each booklet
ordued. send a dcllar pltu a Ieng ,
self-addressed envelope (28 cents
postage) to Ann Landers. P.O. Box
11995. Chicago. Ill 60611.
ADVENTIST COMMUN l1'Y
services presents a rilm series
titled "Focus on the Family" shown
Tuesday evenings at 7, May 19
through June 30, at the Newport
Harbor Seventh-day Adventist
Church. The film series features
therapist James C. Dobson and fami-
ly counseling graduate students will
lead discussions following each mov-
ie. For information. call 645-2082.
are Sue Clark of Newport Beach and
Herta Lin of Costa Mesa. For more
information. call (213 ) 641 -8152.
M ..... T .. t.. We4. o.ty
HAIR
HAHDLUS ~ CUSTOM FRAMING I' Open 6 Days A Week
Mon.·Fri. U Sat. 1~ I 1803 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa 1
How Do You Feel Right Now?
ORTHOPEDIC TREATMENT of
arthritis ia the subject of a lecture at
HEALTH HELP
7:30 p.m . Tuesday, at Western
Medical Cent~r. formerly Santa Ana-
Tustln Communjty Hospital. The free
dlsCU$Sion will be led by physicians
Larry Danzig and Zan Lewis. For in-
formation. call 833·5001.
CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE pa-
tients and the community can find
out how the disease affects the fami-
ly at a lecture sponsored by the
American Lung Assocation of Orange
County. For information, call 835-
LUNG.
HIGH HOP ES Neurological
Recovery Group has scheduled a
skate-a -thon to raise funds for
various programs at 6 p.m. Thurs-
day. in Laguna Hills. For inform a·
t.ion . call 540-4481.
WORKSHOP on "The Art of Self.
w .
h!~i!!!l!~~~~~~~~~~~ll . Are You A Mature Woman ...
Announcing a summer
Program ForTeensl
With A Circulation & Figure
Problem?
If your answar Is "YES" then you need
Jean Marie ... The only women's
Heatth Salon designed with you In mlndl
LOOK BETTER ... FEEL BETIER ...
The apedal man In your life wfll tow you
tor ltl
If you find Aroblc Dancing sfrenuoua
and the "Bargain" exercise .. 1ons offer
no equipment ... then pleue come In
tor a FrM T,...tment . . . on 1hl most
tc>Ohletlcated INICNnee available I
UfTIOMTOIY lfRI ............... u.111
NATIONAL KIDNEY FOUN·
datlon benefit horte show ... iU be.
held from May 20 to 25 al the Coto de
Casa Equestrian Center In Trabuco
Canyon. Servlni on the Memorial
Day CLualc Horse Shcnir Committee
Preservation" will be held at 9:30
a .m . Friday, in Tustin. Sponsored by
the Orange County Mental Health As·
sociation, the event will be led by
Barbara HaU-Holmes of the county
Human Services Agency. For in·
formation, call S47·7SS9.
CONQUER DEPRESSION Is the ti-
tle of a lecture· at 10:30 a .m. Satur-
day. In Newport Beach. The program
ls sponsored by the New Life Found&· lion. For lnformation. call <213)
936·9176.
John Roberl Powers has
oesigneo a special Summer
program to meel the sell-
1mprovement needs of
teenagers For over 50
years John Robert Powers
has served the emerging
woman In personal, busl·
ness or career Oevelopment
and professional modellno
Now the leenager can
aspec1ally learn to reach
her lull potential the "Pow-
ers " way In the relaxed
atmosphere of Summer
classes. Receive substan-
1111 tuition discounts by
rtservino classes now Can
fOf free 1nfom1a1ton $30 14' I llc4 VlchJ •·•P•tt1 •
~ atudent receives honor
Ilaria Sbyder. dau1hter ol llr. and
Jira. x.at Se~ of L••uaa Beatb, Ml Mm Mlected for memberlblp ln
Jlorm Board at the Unlveralty ot
lootlMm CaWorala.
Mortar Board 11 a national senior
honor society. Members are cboMn
In their J'8Uor year.
M 1. Sbrder la a 1178 lfaduale ol
Lacuna Sucb Hl&b Scboc:il.
.. .. , ... yll>~--
011u1E coum
3 Town & Country, Orange
(714) 547-8228
t
I
I
---·~-----~-----------~ .......... _. ............................. 2•2•2111 .... t•t .. •t .. a .... 1111 .. 1111 ••
•
llllJPHat
MONDAY, MAY 18, 1981
FEATURES 82
DRllGI l:lllT MOVIES BS
COMJCS 87
FLIRTA·SHUN? -A mime
doesn't need a line when he
meets an attractive woman. Julie
Howard was the object of the
advances by J eff Wirth, one of
the wandering entertainers Sun-
0.11, l"ltet .......... , Gerl'~
day during the Newport Beach \
Arts Festival at F ashion Island.
His silent treatment progressed
from a bashful nudge to a prof·
f ered kiss before s he das hed off
to see more exhibits.
• Theft suspects nabbed m chase
A couple suspected ot snop-
lifting rammed a Costa Mesa
police car at South Coast Plaza
with their car Sunday. blew a tire
and then led a chase into Newport
Beach with sparks flying from the
wheel rims, police said.
Arrested al Fashion Island
when thei r front wheel assembly
collapsed were Robert Willia!'lls.
24, and Shirley Brown, 29, both of
Los Angeles.
The two are held in Orange
County Jail in lieu of $25,000 bail
each for suspicion of stealing $387
worth of clothing from Saks Fifth
Avenue al the plaza. police said
Williams, the driver, also is
held for suspi cion of assault with a
By MARV JANE SCARCELLO
Of "" o.i1, l"ltet •utt
It was quite a concert. Singers and instrumentalists
performed fo lksongs. popular music and even a little
Mozart.
AND THE best part of the whole thing was that the
performers were all about 12 or 13 years old.
The concert was one of those end-of-the-year pro-
ductions put on by a harried music teacher and bunches
of sweaty-palmed s tudents so parents
can see what the s mall fry have been up
to a ll year in music class.
And we loved it. Oh sure, a few flat
notes clinked out a nd an occasional
squeak was heard from the reed section ,
but all in a ll it was a bravura
performance.
Too bad it won't happen again.
NEXT YEAR a ll music classes at
my daughter's middle school will be can -1eucaLLo
celled, along with other electives such as sewing and
cooking. Other classes, including drafting, woodshop a nd
art will be cut back.
They've run out of money in the Newport-Mesa Dis-
trict.
Hit by the triple-whammy of declining enrollment,
the Serrano-Priest d ecision and the efCects of Proposition
13, the district has cut back each year in an attempt to
stay solvent. .
So far the music program at the high school level is
intact, but how long can that remain when the middle
school can't feed in fresh talent each year?
NO ONE IS suggesting that a future Beverly Sills or
Itzhak Perlman will come out of Lincoln Middle School,
but you never know.
Certainly those hours spent trying to hit the high
notes increase the chances.
If nothing else, the struggle creates an appreciation
of anyone who can perform well and make it look easy.
We're raising millions ol dollars to build a Music
Center in Orange County, and that'Slgreat.
Btrr WHO'S 1otn1 to be around to perform in It and
buy the tickets to support it 20 yean from now?
deadly weapon and resisting ar
rest. officers said.
The five-mi le ch ase was
launched at about 5: 10 p.m. when
Saks security agents called for
police help to arrest the couple as
they left the plaza store and
headed for the parking lot.
As the security agents moved in
on the couple's car. \he suspects
s ped away. slammed into the side
of officer Wayne Riedmann's
patrol car and headed for the
Corona dcl Mar Freeway with
sparks flying. police said.
Riedmann was joined in the
pursuit by two other Costa Mesa
patrol cars. As the purs uit led intp
Newport Beach along J amboree
Road al speeds up to 60 miles an
hour. two Newport policemen
joined the chase, officers said
Costa Mesa Ll Tom Lazar said
the fleeing car 's wheel rim was
.. worn righldown to a nub" before
the chase ended
lie said no one was injured
Abandoned in Mesa,
7 puppies adopted
Synthia deMarquette of the
K-9 Boutique in downtown Costa
Mesa was glowing tqday.
"You mus t ha ve quite a
read ers hip." she told a Daily
Pilot reporter. "We placed all
seven of them."
Placed in homes throughout
the area were seven six-week·
old pups a bandoned with their
mostly shepherd mother. Terra.
in a· Costa Mesa backyard more
than five weeks ago.
Area dog lovers responded to
the downtown boutique at 333 E.
17th St. when they learned in
Saturday's paper that they could
have a dog free if they offered a
good home.
"We had about 20 calls," said
Ms deMarquette.
The boutique oper ator ac-
quired the puppies In a special
c!eal with Costa Mesa animal
control officers.
She and the puppies' mother
became acquainted more than a
year ago when the then-year-old
shepherd was found tied to a
newspaper r ack at a Mesa
supermarket.
A note attached to the dog'a
collar read, "If nobody want.a
me, my owners wlll return at 5
o 'clock to t ake me to t he '
pound."
Listed was the dog's name,
Terra. and her breed.
Ms . deMarquette took Terra jn
and bega n searc hing for
someone to care for her. She
said a young man took her home
wlth the promise he'd have her
spayed. •
Just over a month a10, she
said, the man called to relk>f'l
that he and his girlfriend were
splltting up and that he waa
leaving Terra In hia backyard.
He aaid he was movlnl{.
Ms. deMarqueue round TeM'a.
But Terra had multiplied. Sbe
waa surrounded by a Utter of
small pups.
iccrs agreed.
"We weaned them," she said.
"and then were forced to begin
looking for homes."
.. But not before she's neutered
this lime," she added
"She's such a sweet dog. and
now she's been abandoned
twice. That's not gomg to hap·
pen again if I can help 1t."
L ove triumphs with
humor in J
Shakespeare's ''All's
Well That Ends
Well." See Page B6.
0
a
CdM harduxue
parking lot
sparks furor
A Corona del Mar hardware
s hop owner has touched a nerve
in the south Newport Beach
community with plans lo build a
parking lot in a residential area.
Newport Beach City Council
m embers, overturning a plan-
ning commission recommenda-
tio n . las t week gave Jeff
Schulein permission to pave and
strip the property behind Crown
Hardware.
Residents who objected to the
move · claim Schulein 's plan is
j ust the tip of the iceberg.
They said Corona del Mar
bus iness property owners are
pushing a plan that would en-
courage shopowners on East
Coast Highway lo dip into residen-
tial neighborhoods to find parking
s pace
A specific area plan for the
bus iness district, written by
business landholders, is to come
before planning commissioners
next month .
Schulein said he purchased the
res id enti a l lot on Jas mine
Avenue with parking in mind. A
vacant house is located on the
lot.
Theater
finances
rapped
A proposed amphitheater in
Huntington Beach Central park
would be a financial disaster
because planners in Costa Mesa
and Irvine have beaten local of-
ficials lo the punch, according to
a financial study
The report on proposed de-
velopment in the Central Park
notes that a 15 ,000-seat am-
phitheater al the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa and
a 10,000-seat amphitheater at
Lion Coun try Safari In Irvine
already are in advanced plan-
ning stages. The amptiitheater
in Irvine is scheduled to open
Aug. 1
In addition. a performing arts
complex is planned for Costa
Mesa adjacent lo the South
Coast Plaza. the r e port by
Ultrasystems notes.
The re port says a Central
Park amphitheater would s uffer
because of competition from the
other proposed fa cilities, which
the report states would have
"excellent access and high vis-
ibility ...
"With the construction of a
hi gh quality amfhitheater in
Costa Mesa, and the con-
s truct ion of a 10 ,000-seat
amphitheater in Irvine, a book·
ing agent would be unhkely to
choose the Central Park location
fo r a concert." states the report.
The study says that the park
isn't "central to the growing
Orange County population" and
that providmg parking for a ma-
jor facility there would be dif-
ficult.
It also notes that a performing
a rts cente r tentatjvely is
planned fo r neighboring Foun-
tdin Valley.
The amphitheater concept w.as
recommended by Councilman
Jack Kelly last summer. He pro-
posed putting a 16,000-seat facili-
ty below ground level al the site
of the city's landfill pit a l
Gotha rd Street and Talbert
Avenue
Gunman robs
Costa Mesa
food outlet
A gunman and his dri ver
robbed the Burger King fast
food outlet in Costa Mesa Sun-
day night, escaping with $400 in
cash. police said. ·
The robber walked up to a
counter and unbuttoned his blue
denim jacket so that a revolver
showed in his waistband, police
s aid.
"If I have to pull this weapon
out," he told an employee, "I'll
use it " He asked for the money
in the cash drawers.
After scooping up the bills, he
ran out of the Burger King al
3150 Harbor Bl vd. and hopped
into a wailing Plymouth. wit·
nesses told police
The car sped north on Harbor
Boulevard.
The concert's finale wu impre11tve with everyone
11n1inl and playing "The lmpoulble Dream," an •P·
proprlate Utle.
The performers were itlht on key, but it all ended on asadnca.
"Tbere was no rood or water,"
Ma. deMarqueUe said.
She said she offered to care
for the new mother and her Ill·
ter, and Costa Mesa animal off·
THAT TIME AGAIN -Dr. Clive THlotson glves
rabies vaccination to his dog, Soda while
Costa Mesa animal control officer Irene Hare
...,"" ............ ..._.
assists. A rabies clinic, costing $2.50 per abot,
will be held at Oranee County Falrerounds
from 7..&:30 p.m. Tuesday.
-
~\
,. . . ,. .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ,Monday, May 18, 1981
•
• in kitchen
1 ~\~ Can't jump
Marilyn cr_aftsman
----------------------------------------------------By ELLEN Bil YANT
EDITOR'S NOTE. Thll 1' anotPwr
In o •~• o/ 1ton~1 about lntttttt·
ing CaU/omio wo~.
California Woman
about the jumpers
.J UMPING HE RE AND THERE: By now you auspec~
the entire universe knows the results of the 53rd annual
leaping of the Jumping Frog Contest of Calaveras Coun
ty. But I 'm trying to ignore it.
Never mind the fact
that several operatives ~
from our very own John • *"
Wayne Airport here in r-..\
Orange County had an en---------~I'
try in the contest named, TOM MURPHINf .,' . "
aptly, "Duke." Forget--------~-----
t hat e ve n this st e rling
journal, unde r auspices of
our county bureau chief, Fearless Fred Schoemehl, had a
leaping frog entry identified as •'The American Dream."
Des pite these parochial factors, I'm trying to forget
about the outcome.
fN EVENT YOU AREN'T steeped in the Jore of
California during the Gold Rush d ays, it could be pointed
out that the current frog-leaping competition resulted
from a story by the celebrated American humorist Mark
Twain.
Twain was lured to our Mother Lode country up at
Angels Camp in Calaveras County a mid the Yosemite
range, in the hope that he would get ricp quick by hitting
a vein of the yellow metal. He hit it richer in American
1iterature .
His stay at Angels Camp, however, did result in a
story. penned in 1865, called, "The Celebrated Jumping
There are two sides to Men·
doclno. On thti one ha nd, ther e's
the quaint, s imple town tourists
see, the m ost "laid back" of
Northern California villages.
But there's an intensity beneath
the lazy s urface, the bllSUe or
creativity, the strenuous efforts
or d edicated artis ts and
craftsmen striving towards ex-
cellence in their chosen fields.
Marilyn Douglas reflects both
sides or Mendocino, her home
for the past 10 years.
Ms. Douglas, 39, a tall, ma-
jestic, re d -haired woman, la
articulate and charming, with a
friendl y , relaxed manner .
Behind lhe delightful personaJi.
ty, however . is a determined.
ta lented craftsman.
In less than six years, Ms .
Douglas has built her Mendocino
Jams and Jellies, located on a
two-acre farm outside of town,
into a highly successful en-
terprise. with 10 employees and
rapidly-growing sales. Her line
of high quality jams is featured
at gourmet shops throughout the
country.
But Ms. Douglas never con-
sciously set out to build a major
company. T he business, she
says, "evolved purely by
chance."
...
Marilyn Dougl.a3
Marilyn Douglas was raised in
Springville, an agricultural com -
munity in central Tulare Coun-
ty. She first learned to cook
from her father, a proressionaJ
ch er
After a ttending Sonoma State
University in Rohnert Park, she
began a career ln management
For· several years, she was an
executive with Four Generations
Toy Company. a Sebastopol
manufacturer of wooden toys
and adult games.
She worked 12 hours or more
each day. And Ms Douglas re·
lished the role of young, suc·
cessful executive. She bought a
house and fu rniture and, she
11ays, "started to accumulate
possessions -things, things,
things."
In 1971 , disaster struck. While
she was al work, her new home
burned to the g round.
'·I was wiped out totally, los·
Ing everything but the clothes I
was weaJ:Jni," / Ms. Douglas was devastated,
psychologically as well as finan-
c i a I ly But the catastrophe
proved lo be a turnmg pomt 1n
her life.
"I s uddenly realized that
material success wasn't nearly
as important to me as l had
thought. I became determined to
s tart a new life, an emotionally
satisfying lire."
Her family had vacationed in
Me ndocino ror a number of
years, and Ms . Douglas had
always loved the area.
After the fire, s he quit her JOb
and set off ror Mendoelno, rent·
Ing the s ummer home of ramlly
friends. She had less than $100 to
her name.
··1 felt like a pioneer," Ms .
Douglas laughs
For several months, she did
nothing but rest and take stock
of her life Her first foray back
into the world of work was as a
hotel chambermaid.
• · 1 wanted a JOb completely
without pressure."
Gradua lly. Ms Douglas felt
able to take o n more
r espons1bi11ty She became a
dishwasher at Cafe Beaujolais. a
popular Mendocino restaurant.
Soon , the restaurant's owners
heard about her cooking ability
and asked her lo become their
assistant chef She agreed and
remained al Cafe Beaujolais for
more than four years. the lust
two as head chef
In addition, she began to leach
cooking classes at Mendocino
Community Co ll ege . Ms .
Douglas was a popular teacher,
and one of her most popular
classes was a course in food pre-
paration, including the prepara·
lion of jams and iellies.
Virgo: Accent
on your home
Arwther drug
and sex test
Angels Camp boo1ter Jerry Heintz checking pro~C'flt>f! 1umper1
Frog of Calaveras County.·· In it. two gentlemen wager
on who has the frog who can make the greafest single
leap one declares, ''I'll resk forty dollars that he can
outjump any frog in Calaveras County" while the skpetic
retorts, "I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any
better 'n any other frog . . . "
THUS THE BA'M'LE was joined and if you don't
know the outcome, better read up on your Mark Twain.
Admittedly, my lack of enthusiasm over frogs goes
far back to the time I had mis-enrolled in a zoology class.
~he professor was a skinny, bald, bespectacled, thin-
hpped character who just loved to torture students with
a ll kinds of experiments on frog cadavers
As a matter of fact , sometimes the heartless prof
would send frogs lo the Great Lily Pond in the Sky right
before your very eyes.
After executing the hapless amphibian, he would in-to~e, in what seems to be suppressed ioy, "Now vou see.
this frog no longer exists as an INDIVID UAL " He
Put the emphasis on "individual " 1ust in that wav.
Cripes, you'd say to yourself, he doesn't look ·like he'd
give any more of a hoot if that was your very own lifeless
student form , reposing the re in his hands.
Don't we want to at least say a couple of words over
the body of the recently passed?
MAYBE SOMETHING LIKE, "Oh Operator of the
Great Lily Pond in the Sky, he ain't much to look at now
but he was one helluva jumper in his time ... Amen!"
But nothing like that ever happened. The corpse was
simply dispatched to the disse'cting table forthwith.
I got a ''D" on t he first midterm in Frog Executions
100-A. I turned in m y dissecting tools soon thereafter to
purs ue something more pleasant like chasing fire engines
and cop cars.
E VE R SINCE, I've had trouble enjoying the Jump·
ing Frog Contest up there north at Angels Camp in
Calaveras County.
Just remember , out of the hundreds of frogs entered,
only a handful become celebrated winners with the big
leaps.
Thus I can fret over what unive rsity prof gets aJl the
losers.
Adventists schedule film.
Tuesday, May 19, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <March 21-April 19):
You close gaps -what seemed
out-of·reach is now available .
Emphas is on law, s pecial rela·
tions hip, added res pons ibility
and greater chance for rewards.
Capr icorn , Taurus, Virgo
natives figure prominently.
Good money news!
TAURUS ! April 20-May 20' ·
Gain valuable hint by readioJ!
HOROSCOPE
Aries message. Emphasis on
completion, credit ratings and
revelation concerning financial
status of one close to you, in·
eluding partner or mate. Gain
indicated through unorthodox
procedures.
GEMI NI <May 21-June 20>:
Let ~o of o utmoded m ethods.
Get second wind. New a pproach
necessary where partnerships,
contracts and public relations
enter picture. Focu~ on small
pr int, "importa nt papers" and
marital status. Imprint s tyle.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22).
Focus on security, family, res-
olutions concerning diet, nutri-
tion and health. Intuitive in·
tellect provides a nswers. You'll
regain sense of direction. A
former "teacher" returns to
scene. Capricorn, Aquarius and ~mother Cancer figure prom·
inently.
LEO <July 23-Aug . 22):
Obstacles are removed; you'll
have g r eater fr eedo m of
thought, action. Social life ac-
celerates. r omance replaces
lethargy. You feel more vital.
a live a nd ambitious. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure
prominently.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Ac·
cent on home. property values,
s afety measures and basic
are Sue Clark or Newport Beach and
Herta Lin of Costa Mesa. For more
information, call (213) 641-8152.
security. Delve beneath surface
Indications. Family proble m
will be resolved. Know it. accent
d iplomacy and willingness to
m ake intelligent concessions.
LIBRA <Sept 23-0cl 22 >:
Focus on change, variety, travel
and renewed communication
with relative who had been
estr anged. Analyze recent oc·
cur rences; find reasons, take
nothing for granted. Gemini.
Virgo, Sagittarius persons play
important roles .
~L\)RPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 21):
In vestment pays dividends.
Money picture is brighter than
originally anticipated. Accent on
personal possessions, payments
and collections. You locate what
had been lost, missing or stolen.
Fam ily member makes con-
ciliatory gesture.
SAGl1TARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec
21 >: Judgment. timing are on
target. You'll be at right place
a t crucial moment. Highlight
confidence, take initiative, make
personal appearance. New con·
tacts prove valuable. Define
terms. avoid self-deception.
CAPRICOR N <Dec. 22·J an.
19) · Much that occurs takes
place behind scenes. Clandestine
m eeting could be on agenda.
What appea red a setback is like·
ly to boomerang in your favor
Accent on courts, hospitals, or·
ganizations and fraternal or-
ders .
AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Feb. 18>:
Accolade from one you admire
provides boost in morale. Focus
on dreams. visions, wishes and
bas ic fulfillment. Aries, Leo,
Sagittarius natives play impor·
tant roles. An aggressive friend
a ids in removing roadblock to
progress.
PISCES C Feb. 19-March 20 ):
Highlight i nde p e ndence.
initiative and open dialogue with
one in position of authority. New
approach e levates standing in
community . Leo, Aquari us
persons figure prominnently.
Emphasis on ac hievem e nt.
responsibility and dedication.
Dear Readers: Last week I
promised lo prmt tnc 1981 teen-
age Drug and Sex Test. l 'd like to
make it clear that these tests,
which have appeared in this col
umn from time to time, are not
written by me. In fact, I don't care
much for them. The first Drug
and Sex Test appeared in 1967 It
was composed by three teen-
agers. I have published several
updated tests by teens from
Maine to California. This one is
from two New Trier High School
students who live in a Chicago
suburb. It is called the Know
Thyself Questionnaire Score the
number indicated for each 'Yes"
answer
1. Ever gone ou t with a
m ember of the opposite sex? 2
2. Ever been kissed? 3
3. Ever been French-kissed? 4
4 Ever been kissed while in a
r eclinmg position? 5
5. Ever gotten or given a
hickey? 5
6. Ever been kissed against
your will? 2
7. Ever parked for more than
an hour? 5
8 Ever taken off m ost of your
clothes while parking? 7
9. Ever said, "I love you?" 4
10. Ever said "I love you" to
more than one person i11 the
sam e week? 5
11. Ever gone totally steady? 2
12. Ever cheat on your
steady? 5
13. Ever pick up a girl or go with
aguyyoudidn'tknow? 6
14. Ever make a member or the
opposite sex cry? 4
15. Do you smoke regulur
cigarettes? 3
16. Do you s moke pot? 6
17. Do you drink alcohol or
beer now and then? 7
18. Do you drink alcohol or
beer every day? 9
19. Have you ever passed out
from drinking? 9
20. Have you ever tried Angel
Dust? 11
21 . Have you ever s lipped Angel
A DVENTI ST CO MM UN I TY
ser vices presents a film series
titled "Focus on the Family" shown
Tuesday evenin gs at 7, May 19'
through June 30, at the Newport
Harbor Seventh-day Adventist
Church. The rum series features
therapist James C. DobaonQlnd fa mi·
ly counseling graduate students wlll
lead discussions following each mov·
le. For Information, call 645·2082.
CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE pa·
tlents and the communi,tf can find
out how the disease affect.a the faml·
ly at a lecture sponsored by the
American Lung Assocation of Qrange
County. For informa tion, cafl 835·
LUNG.
Announcing a summer
Program ForTetm If your answer la "YES" then you need
Jean Marie ... The only women's
Health Salon designed with you In mind!
ORT HOP EDIC TRE ATMENT of
arthritis is the subject of a lecture at
HEALTH HELP
7: 30 p . m. Tuesday. at Western
MedlcaJ Center, formerly Santa Ana·
Tustin Community Hospital. The free
discussion wiU be led by physicians
Larry Danzig and Zan Lewis. For In·
formation. call 833-5001.
HIG H HO P ES Neurological
Recovery Group has scheduled a
s kate·a ·tbon to raise funds for
various programs at 6 p.m . Thurs·
day, In Laguna Hills. For informa-
tion, call 540·4481.
LOOK BETTER ... FEEL BElTER ...
The "*'8J man In your llft wtll lov9 you
for hi
" you find ArobiC Dancing StrenUOUI
and the "Bargain" exwdM saJonl off•r
no equipment ... then plMM come In
for I Free TrNtment . . on tht molt
eoohleticated mechlnett avali.ble I
Oustintosomeonc'sdrlnk? 12
22. Have you ever taken pills
to get high? 11
23 Have you ever taken pills
to get off a high or go to s lt:ep? 11
24. Have you ever had sex
without using a contrace ptive? 10
25 Have vou (or your"partner)
ANN LANDIRS
ever worned about being preJt·
nant? 10
26. After the scare did you go
back tohavingsex without protec
tion'1 11
27 llaH• ,\OU 1your g1rl1 ever
1·11n~1rtcrf'rl ;1n ahorlion" 12
28 Have you I your girl 1 ever
had an abortion'' l2
29 Even though you are
straight, would you go kinky to
see what it'!> like'! 13
30 Ever stolen monev lo buv
drugs? 13
SCORECllART
Under JO A nerd
11 to 15 Pure as Ivory soap
and maybe a fruitcake.
16 to 20 Passionate but
sensible
21 to 39
40 to 75
76 to RS
trouble.
Normal and decent
Indecent.
Headed for serious
86 lo UM Already there
Anyttung over 104 Hopeless
and condemned
How much do you know about
pot . L.SD. cocaine, ipeed. meth, up.
pent and downers. glue and heroin'
Are all the:te drugs dangerow' Get
Ann Lander.'</' new booklet. "Straight
Dope on Drug& .. For each booklet
ordered. send a dollar plus a Long,
stlf ·addres&ed envelope f 28 cent1
postageJ to Ann Lander:1. P 0 Box
11995. ChlCCJ{}O. Ill 60611
IMTIOMTOIY lfFfl _ ......... °"""
~·
N AT IONAL KIDNE Y F O UN·
datlon benertt horse show wtll be
held from May 20 to 2$ a\ lM Coto de
Caaa l!quealrlu Center In Trabuco
Canyon. Servint on the Memorial
Day QUlllc Hone Sbow Committee
WOa.KSHOP ~n "The Art or Self·
PreservaUon" wlll be held al 9:30 a.m. Friday, In Tustin. Sponsored by
the Orange County Me ntal Health As·
sociation. the event will be led by
Barbara Hall.ffolmes of the county
Human Services Agency. For in·
formation. coll !547-7559.
CONQUER DE PRESSION Is lhe ti·
tie of a lecture at 10:30 a .m. Satur
day, in Newport Beach. The program
la sponsored by the New Life Founda-
tion. For Information, call <213 )
936·9176.
John Robert Powers has
designed a speclal Summer
program to meet the sell-
1mprovemen1 needs of
teenagers For over SO
years. John Rober! Powers
has served Ille emerglno
woman m personal. busl-
nMs or career development
and professional modeling
Now tile teenager can
espectally learn to reach
her full potential the "Pow-
era" way in the relaxed
atmosphere ot Summer
classes. Receive sut>stan·
llal tuition cltscounis by
reserving classes now Call
lor free 1nlom11t1on. $30 l'h• Mc4 Yhlht ....... ,... •
~ 1tuden1 receives honor
Maria Snydu, d1uJbler ot Mr. and
lln. KeGt So,yder of L••una Beach, UI been Hlected for membertblp ID
Mortar Board at th• Unlvenlty of ~ Callfom.ta.
' ')
Mortar Board 11 a national senior
honor aoclety. Member• are choten
In lhelr Junior year.
Ma. Snyder it a lt'lt sraduate ol
L1iuna Beach HJcb School.
T
ORM&Ecoum
3 Town & Country, Orange
(714) 547.S228
•
.. •
-., , ___________ ....._.. ..... .._ _________ _ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Monday, May 18, 1981 N •ar. ,,...----------------------------------------------------------NYSE <:OMPO ~ITE 'fRAN A<.:TION
ouotiU10H"NClUOI fltAOliON , ....... YO•• MIOWlif l'A(ll'I( .... •o,,o .. OlflOlf ... o (l .. CI NNAfl UOCtf taClotAllGU A1;0 Ul'OltTtO •Y fMI 11Ai0 UID INSftHll Dow Jones Final Ji
OFF : 18
CLOSING 985.77
~~~ ~ .. ~ ~~ " U.S. industry
fights arthritis
So stagl(crlng arc today's costs or arthritis the
nat1on'i. No. 1 crippling disease that finally U.S. in
du11try is taking the lead in developing innovative
programs to help reduce the costs of disability
through bctt('r use of medical and rehabilitative
services
II ailed as the first joint effort by industry, re·
hat)llitut1on services and an academic medical center
to rl eal with a health problem of profound impact on
employer!> and
employees, the
pioneering pro·
grn m involves
thc creation of
stufr!> of vor:.i
t i o n a I
«<>unselt1r:-. to
work with in·
--~ SYLVIA PORTER ,, ,
d1v1du:.il industries The goals are·
MEDICAi. SCREENING to detect and monitor
arthritb in workers, referral to proper health pro·
fessionals in a company's community; extensive con
cenlrat1on on education of both employer and
employee th cit ··something can be done about
a rt h ntb 1f treatment is begun early."
The JVerage person waits more than four years
from the· be.einning of arthritis symptoms before
seekm~ proper medical assistance, according to the
Arthritis l''oundation. and that, stresses Dr Kenneth
Mlt chcll. associate director of the University of North
Carolina School of Medicine. "may be too late for
employment rehabilitation~ the person concerned."
Mon• thetn J J milhon Americans are affected by
arthritis . ci disease wh1rh takes C1bout 100 forms The
horn·ndou:. costs
-27 MIU.ION working days lost in 1980 alone.
rcpre~Nll.tng nearly $5 billion in wages lost to
~mp loye1·s
More than $1 btllion in annual disability pay
mcnt:., or about 15 percent of all Social Security Dis
ability Insurance payments lo workers
$450 million per year in Veterans Administra·
t1on payments lo veterans whose major disability is
arthritis or rheumatic disease.
$1.4 billion in lost homemaker services a year
S.5 billion a year spent on medical care, includ·
Ing nearly $1 billion annually for quack remedies and
unproven dru~s and devices
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
AMERICAN LEADERS
c.,,., u~ ., <•nl\ • oovnel.
Oe•llnallot>\
L.ut a.-Je """ • PO<lncJ 1111< ...... C9f\h e Pound, Mll•eted
Tl" 5' M60 Mel•I• Wfft. comootlte lb Ahllftl_,, 7• cenh a PO<lft<l, N y Meru1ry lotU 00 per llH-
l'lall"-....S 00 00 ltOp 01 • N Y
SILVER
v ~-.
r' ll NEW YORK 1 ... PI l<andp 4 H•r,,,M'
tll .. 1 IOCS.y \10 IOO. Oii '° 1• I :
GOLD COINS
c% • ..
' '• I I .. ,.,
''• .. • I o '. 1\11 1•. I'•
P<1 Up 11 7
8g :~ g
Up t I 8g : :
Up 8 • Vp • l Vp II eg q
~ :,· Up 6 Up P
uo "
l,rc•1. 1 II 11 I ,, • 9
II 11 I 71
II tJ II U
11 ) 4
It j 0 011 )0 g:: :: 011 4 1
Off ••
HIW YOAK 1""1'1 Prlc .. lalo l'rloepOf
9014 <OI"'· <~red with r11vnoev·• prl<•
Kr-r.-1, 1 ltoy OJ., 00>.JO, tff U.U
~ ... IMf, 1 ll'Oy Ol., ~.2S, Oii U U
Mule. to°"°· 1.J lrvy tr , 5'0l 1J. Clfl ... u .
A••lrlefl 100 frown. te02 troy H • M14 JS.
off u 00
En9e111ero tllnr '10 HO. oll \0 1(• feDrluteo lll .. r \11 HI. oll 50 IT I: .. 1: GOLD QUOTATIONS ,.
1.-: mornlnt ll•lnt .... 1 IS, oll U U '!;
"-: efl•r,_, ll•lllO $oltl.IS, oll UH
'•n11 er .. rnoon ll•lnt U3l.14, 110 lt•.11 ,
,,. ... ,lll't: 1111"9 ~ 01. Off'° 1• f
lwrlo: l.te •11•,_ 11•1"1 MIO oo . .,,. u oo . ....., oo med 7
H•nfy a Herme11: ontp dally 0..010 \ .. 1 U,ottUU
u ~~--· Olllp o.nv avote ...-1.n. Cl!•
1,_...~f: ""'Y O.lly ciuot• te1>rtce1.,.
UOI 02, oll U •
•
...
1, . .
J
Ohlftge Coast DAILY PILOT ,Monday, May 18, 1981
STCLIFF
PLAZA
ANTHONY 'S SHOE SERVICE
BANK 'OF AMERICA
CHARLES BARR JEWELERS
CROWN HARDWARE
DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR
DR. LOU ELDER
optometrist
HAIRHANDLERS SALON
HALLIDA Y'S MEN 'S CLOTH ING
HICKORY FARMS
specialty food items
HUM PTY DUMPTY
children's clothing
JEAN DAHL
designer and better sportswear
LA GALLERIA
elegance ih fash ion
MARKET BASKET ·
f-AES AMIES TEENS
NANCY DUNN ANT IQUES
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS
PAPER UNLIMITED
gifts and stationers
SA V .ON DRUGS
STOREKEEPER
traditional sportswear
VETA 'S INTIMATE APPAREL
WESTCLIFF CLEANERS
WESTCLIFF CORNERS
gourmet ·ware and collectibles
WESTCLIFF SHOES ..
XAVIER 'S FLORIST