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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-04 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ' I .. ' / . -11111• llllY Ml Ui1A NGE. COU NTY C AllfOR NIA 25 CENTS Peoria father grieves 4 daughters all 01eet vioJellt deaths PEORJA, Ill. (AP> -His daughters are dead now. all four. Against the longest string of odds, each was slain or killed at different times in different ways. I.as than a decade filled the painful gap between the first funeral and the fourth. Now, staring at an old portrait, Donald Shreeves says he can't believe all his girls are gone. "It's like looking at a blank piece or paper," Shreeves said ln an interview. "What the hell was wrong with us? That's what I'd Uke to know. Did we drink out of the wrong side of the cup or what?" His tut survivini daughter, Candace Lang, was buried last week in a family plot in Iowa. Her husband has been charged in her shooting death. Shreeves found out about her death Feb. 22 when he was listen· Ash Wednesday rites The Rev . Kerry Beaulieu at St. Joachim of Costa Mesa places a cross of ashes on forehead of Winif~ed Smith, 79, of Costa Mesa. Ash Wednesday. the first day of Lent, is the beginning of a 40-day period of penitence and spiritual renewal. Will amended 'Ex-heir sought m· mµ.rder attempt SAN RAFAEL <AP> -Harold K. Williams me~ 22-year-old hitchhiker Timothy Hiemstra two montb.s ago. Six weeks later, Wifliams, 70, amended his wiJI to make Hiemstra the sole heir to his $1 miWonestate. It could have been a rags-to· riches story for the former San Quentin prison guard. But, authorities say. he tried to kill bis would-be benefactor. On Feb . 23 , Wi lli ams miraculously. survived a 40().foot tumble over a cliff in a pickup truck after the young man aJ - legedly aimed the vehicle over the cliff and jumped oat or the cab, in· vestiaaton aay. lnvesUgaton have concluded that the young man tried to kill Williams and make it look like an acctdert. Williams said he bad only "a lot or bruises and bumps" after fall· ing down cliff near Stinson Beach in Marin County. He s aid he crawled out of the truck through the windshield after smashing the glass with a crescent wrench. '· 1 crawled up the hill and got to the top where the road was and hollered for Tim (Hiemstra)." Williams said, "but he wasn't around, so I went to Stinson Beach, three miles away." There hegothelp. • Hiemstra was dismislied as a guard at San Quentin prison following his recent booking for investigation of robbery in ~· nection with a drug Investigation, the Marin County Sheriff's Department said. . According to documents filed with Hiem.stra's arrest warrant, Williams «ave a rlde to Hiemstra, <See WILL, Pa1e AJ> ing to the car rfldlO. He wu drivint from bis new Princeton, Mo. home to Peoria to do some work on t.be family house he had put on the market. A few months ago, Shreeves and his wile, Bea, had given up their house here. It held too many bad memories, be said. The radio newscaster was saying something about a woman being shot to death in Scbaeferville. "I knew that's where my last living daughter, Candy, lived," Shreeves said. "But I quickly dismissed it as Impossible. It couldn't be Candy. A man sjmply does not lose all four or his daughters." Shreeves lost his first daughter. Debbie, "the saint or the fami· ly,' ·in a fiery car wreck in 1972. 130 intervieu:s Beverly died in Chicago, where she had moved in the summer of 1977. A man in an apartment next to hers was killed in what police beHeve was an underground war. Beverly, then 27, opened the door of her apartment to see what the •booting was about. The killers were leaving the opposite apartmeQt, saw Beverly. pushed her back into the room and forced her onto a bed. They put a pillow against her head and fired two shot.a into her skull. Denise was two years younger than Beverly and followed her older sister everywhere.Jibe moved to Chicato and tried to find out who killed Beverly. Soon after she wrote her father that she believed she ba<I found Beverly's kille r , Denise was discovered dead i n an <See 4 DAUGHTERS, Page AZ) • ort noise stu Leftists 'smothered' Putting teeth into politics Victory seen by El Salvador INDIANAPOLIS <AP) -When state Sen. Marlin K. McDaniel reached out to shake the hand of a S· year-old honorary page, ' the youngster returned the greeting by sinking his teeth into the. proffered hand. SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador CAP> -El Salvador's defense minister claims the leftist guer- rillas have been "smothered," but fighting was reported in the northeast part of the country and. there were rut-and-run attacks in the capital. ·'The Salvador an army has suc- ceeded in its objective of bringing peace to the nation with only the help of the people." Defense Minister Jose Guillermo Gatcia said Tuesday, adding that the guerrillas had been "smothered" and "every day the situation tends to improve." Meanwhile, military comman- ders reported "cleanup" opera· lions continuing against the guer- rillas in the northeast towns of Zacatecoluca. San Esteban Caterina and Aracatao. In the San SaJvador area. a carload or gunmen opened up with submachine guns on Ilopango Airport, the air force's principal base 11 miles east or the city, and wounded two soldiers. Witnesses reported four civilians killed in a shootout near the airport, and p0lice said two policemen were killed in a guer· rill a ambush in the northwest part ofthe capital. In Washington, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. began meeting with con - gressional leaders, seeking their support tor the Reagan ad- ministration's proposal to send the junta $25 million 1n additional military aid and 20 more U.S. military advisers. But President Reagan told CBS News in a telev\aed interview, "I certainly don't see any llkellbood of us go- ing in with fi1hUn1 forces." The secretary·~eneral of the Socialist International. Bernt Carlsson of Sweden, met with State Department offi cials in Washington on Tuesday seeking U.S. participation in an attempt • by his organization to mediate between the junta and the guer· • ri llas. State Department spokesman Willia m Dyess said the administration would have nothing to do with it. The Socialist Inte rnational, made up of the world's non· communist socialist parties. is proposing that former Chancellor Willy Brandt of West Germany mediate. Jamal Christmas. whose mother, Joyce, is a Senate receptionist, was serving as a page for Sen. Dan L. Burton, who has had several disagreements with McDaniel over fire s afety legislation. But partisan politics ap· parenUy had nothing to do with Tuesday's incident. The youngster ·explained he bit McDaniel because "he shaked my hand for nothing." Charges pe11di11g County crash kills two; three injured A car carrying four teen-agers that had been pursued by police earlier for speeding smashed into another vehicle at an Orange in· tersection, killing two e lderly women and serious ly injuring three of the youths. Pronounced dead at the scene Tuesday were Buelah Taylor, 66, of Santa Ana, and Marie F. MUler, 81,ofOhio. Seriously injured and taken to area hospitals were Scott Brust, 18; Kathryn WUlett, 18, and an un- identified 17-year-old female. The fourth teen-ager, Lonnie Latham, 19, was treated and released. Brust, the driver of the car be· ing pursued by police, was report· ed in serious condition this mom- i n g in Chapman General Hospital's intensive care unit. Miss WiUett and t.t)f female juvenile were taken to Santa Ana· Tustin Community Hospital. where they were reported in satisfactory condition this mom· Ing. All four teen-agers were from Orange. (See CRASH, Pase AJ) Caltech author queried By STEVE MARBLE 0t \M OMly rli.t S\aff A Caltech anthropologist who authored a 70-page study on social effects of John Wayne Airport jet noise has admitted under questioning that he let an- ti-airport forces hand-pick the people he interviewed. Dr. Thayer Scudder. who took the witness stand during. lhe eighth day of noise hearings in Costa Mesa, said he interviewed only 28 families in the study he did for the Mariners Community Association. The report, which cost the north Newport Homeowners group roughly $5,000, states that 130 families were interviewed. Under questioning from Orange County a ttorney Mic hael Gatzke, Scudder explained that 109 families were interviewed by Josith Jorgensen. a resident of the Mariners community and a UC Irvine professor. The Mariners group is asking that the airport be denied a noise variance. The variance is needed if the airport is to con- tinue current jet noise levels, - which exceed the slate noise standard level. In an attempt to discredit the anthropologist's study. Gatzke asked Scudder if he was aware that several of the homeowners who set up the interviews ~ are plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the county and airport. <See AIRPORT, Pa1e AJ> ORlllil CDAIT lllTIHR Police were searcbinc for Hiemstra, who waa charged Tuesday with attempted murder. ~Williama hu alnce destroyed and disavowed tbe wUl namtna mem1tra as beneficiary, and # woa'llay why he made the a witch Suit favors lost love ;. Prime rate :forced down NEW YORK CAP) -Recent declines ln the demand for butt· neaa Joana have torced baDb acroaa tbe natlOD to trim tbetr prime lending rates to 11.5 per. ~nt, the loweat level ln uar.. An Inch of rain, pro· pelled by winds gusting up to 30 mph~ is forecast for toniaht. Thunderstorms also are possible in south· moving fl'QOl expected to clear partially Thursday, leavins 20 percent chance of showers. Lowa toruabt '8 alona coast, 53 inland. HJ1h• Thursday 58 to a . lllllET•Y to Hiem1tra ln the fint place. "I've done all .the talklnl I'm 1oin1 to do to the police,'' wuuum Mid Tuetday D11bt. Asked wbo wu named ln tu. wlll. be Jald1 "That's privU .. ed infor1D8Uan' and chcllned to •a.J a.ow heluld m•lti• tortane. Injured trorker'B m/e •ue• railroad A Southern Paclftc railroad enpneer wbo Sott a le~ a foot Pa 1IT7 When be fell atb hi• own loeomottve 'would re- c.lve Sl.M mlWoD onr a »1ear period ID ID out-ol·court .... meat neommended bJ l•WJWi l«'*la ... taluta...._ Tbe Dl'ODOled Mttlem•t la faTOr tl!GGra JlcJ>oiinll eild llil WV. PlllJ, ~ M, elfpld more daM a ...-.. of pnlftal .. pd .............. ... prec.-... bJ tMlr AUOl'MJ~ loll• Vu D1lre, wlaO '. 'latd lt marked UM flnt Um• a railroad worll;er'I wife bad IUH IUC· ce11f0lly for tbe l0t1 of ber buablDd'a "cwortium.'' He de- nned eoMOl1i1llD u IOI•"' com· fort, ............ ripta. ............. loMI \bole tblnct. -... Mc!om• lier bU1bmd'1 --· ...... ..utled to d••All'·"' Y• DJU Mid. lo1tller• '•elfle law1er WlW_ ........ ..__. 1ortllam WH • ••ll• IH•• Mel-.. NM WU iMlJed before tM ..._.._ ,.__ could be i-... m c.rt. ev.mumn ha loll«: 6 , montba. provllloa ot marlt111M l•w taiut Citibank, the aecond·lar1fllt not raU.roed law, Van Dykt..W, U.S. ~ii:;t itl prime from nqtln1: "Ir a ... mu can be Mb. tlle pnv lt pere•t 'hea· Ject to it, wt11 cma•t a raUllOM da1, and m•tf..!:"' from work•T" . cout to ooMt ault. In· He 1aid tile U.S. Supre.. tenet na. aleo dNpJ1d ID UMt Co• rt r~ted lo•tlaer• aMrt·.._ er.ut man•. Paellle'a ....... ..__. ..... w ·-.,.· alow to eul ...u-......... '""'... :::il"'l~~:J~ ........ ftrlt•Dil•.... - - - -.,, •Lal~-....... a.t °"" ................... ... ,.... • .... ...... v ...... . lfeDoWU. WU llijv.I .... ----tin• ........ ... , .. n._ ............ .._.. ........... ...._of ~ it......,. PM!lle'• •tl••l•ti•I loaa volane, (._LEG, .... AJ) aalfllj Mid. Ecliloll JIW' Scl9ool ... Ha· '""'°" .... ,. " ~ boWft cu Tr0ftlft1' T1c1'. 1h1d 0 .. 1 "'"W '" Roger Cari.o..•a cohtmft OA ,.... 81. 11111 Hanarneri119 their point home APWI ........ Members of United Auto Workers Local 588 of Chicago's Ford Motor Co. wield sledgehammers and bats on a 1975 Toyota Corolla during a rally in support of buying U.S .-made cars and for Fair Trade Laws amendments. Unruly pupils get 25-mile 'penalty' DEARBORN. Mich. <AP > -A 24-year-old bus driver was SUS· pended after she apparently got fed up with about 30 unruly junior high school students, re· fused to let them off the bus and drove them around for 25 miles. Rochelle Nelson was assigned to other non-driving duties while Atlanta case r>rofile told ATLANTA !AP> The person res ponsible for at least some of the killings of black children in Atlanta is probably about 40 years old with no children and a graduate of high school with some further education, accord- ing to an FBI profile detailed in today's Atlanta Constitution. The slayer is thought to be a good employee, who works with children either at a job or in out· side activities. the newspaper said. The killer is not believed to have known any of the victims, but to have picked them because t hey were available, the newspaper said. The killer may also be a police officer, someone with police training or a rejected applicant for a police job, according to the profile. f'ro• Pa,,~ A I WILL ... who was liitchhiklng, and invited t he young man to stay at Williams' home in Benicia, 25 miles east of San Francisco. T he documents said that Hiemstra asked Williams to go to nearby Tiburon on Feb. 23 to visit Hiemstra's family. By 11 p.m., they were allegedly lost near Stinson Beach. authorities said. Hiemstra got out of the truck twice to relieve himself, the docu· tnents said, and then allegedly sent the truck toward the cliff edge, jumping out of the cab beforethe vehicle went over. The next day Williams contact- eid Hiemstra. Hiemstra said he ''thought'' he had put the truck in reverse, according to the docu- ments. the Southeastern Michigan Transportation Authority tn· vestigates the incident, Joan Kolodziej, a spokeswoman for the authority, said Tuesday One student, 13-year-old Gwen Yeager, said her fellow pupils on the bus Monday were "pretty rowdy ." They threw n e w s p a p e r s , y e I I e d a n d. screamed, she said, but that is not uncommon. The children were driven from Dearborn to Detroit Metropolitan Airport and then back to Dearborn, where they were allowed to get out about five blocks from their normal stop. Several parents and students called the authority to complain about the incident. The assistant principal at Stout Junior High School, Kermit Hill, said the students are not perfed, but to call them rowdy would be a "gross exag. geration." He blamed the problem on spotty bus service and· no reg- ular driver. 3,000 seek Ohio jobs MAUMEE, Ohio <APJ More than 3.000 people many of them unemployed autoworkers turned out to apply for 90 to 100 jobs offered by a new automotive battery plant, and company officials said they ex- pected thousands more to ap· pear today and Thursday. Standing in a line that str etched for blocks , several hundred hopefuls braved cold temperatures Tuesday to get a jump on the job rush. The Ohio Employment Service Bureau said the number or applicants could reach 10,000to 15.000. "We had 3,200 within the first six hours." said Denise Zutz, spokeswoman for Johnson Con· trols Inc., as the firm's Globe Battery division started taking applications at a nearby fair· grounds. "We're going to a lot of trouble to make sure everyone gets a chance." Fre•P.,,,AI 4 DAUGH'IERS DEAD • • • elevator in Chicago. She had been injected with enough drugs to kill a horse, the medical examiner said. But the father 's tragedy did not end there. When Shreeves went to Chicago to try and find out what happened, he learned that bis 1irla were nol secretaries. They were prostitutes, he said. "I raised them since they were babies. I beld down two jobs, washed their diapers and ironed their dresses. I thouaht I knew tbem," he said. So be and his wife moved to Missouri. to put It all behind them. Then they heard a newscaster tallng about a woman shot to death ln Scbaeferville. And Shreeves told himself it Just couldn't be. Even now, a week after burying hit lbt ch ild . the retired Army Corps of Enlineen worker tells blmaeU it just couldn't have happened a1aln. Nol a fow1.b time. "Tbls almply can't happen to people," be said." Are we the on· ly ones out of 225 mlWon who are out ol atep with everybody else?" r::,-P. Matey "°**1 H. Weed ,....... L~K.-v11 ~Murphlne Ctlel1ft Hz'•:L I::" ..,Ulmen Vf:,°'J~ Fro• Pa,,~ A I LEG ... La Mi rada yard started McDowell's locomotive without the engineer 's knowledge, Van Dyke said. "When McDowell tried to find out what was going on, he slipped and fell under the wheels. We think the railroad company was negligent because the other employee violated work rules . He unlawfully operated the train when be s houldn't have," Van Dyke said. Still said company lawyers had recommended the settle- ment and management was ex- pected to act on it within the next couple of days. Van Dyke said no approval is reQuired from the court after Southern Pacific's president siRns the settlement. He said the $1 .34 million is the total of a series of payments to be made over 20 years to McDowell , including $350,000 ··up front," S2,780 a month for 20 years, an additional $25,000 lump sum after the first five years, $50,000 five years after that, $100,000 in the lStb year and a final lump-sum payment of $150,000 in the 20th year. f'ro• Pa,,, Al CRASH ... According to police in · vestigators, Brust's car was traveling northbound at a high rate or speed on Wanda Road in , Orange at about 11 : 30 p.m . Tuesday. A police officer had begun to pursue the 1972 Chevrolet Camaro but gave up after several m inutes becauseoftheexcessivespeeds. Offi cers said Brust's car then ran a red light at the intersection with Katell a Boulevard. striking Miss Taylor's westbouna car broadside. The force of the collision spun the woman's car and knocked it "clear through the intersection," causing undertermined property damage to a building at 2109 E. Katella, officers said. Orange traffic investigator Wes Durst said Brust, wbo ts un· conscious with injuries at Chap- man General Hospital, faces chargesoffelony manslaughter. Eatery fetes Vietnam vetA NEW YORK (AP> Restaurateur Gisela Belter, in· spired by the homecoming festivities for the Americans held hostage in Iran, wanted to do something for the thousanda of "heroes, real heroes" who seldom hear an appreciative word. So s he cloeed her eleeant East Side restaurant to the public, festooned it with red, white and blue ribbons and threw a free party for Vietnam. veterana. F1f. ty veter&n1, friends of friends, came to her lnvitation-only par· . t y at Le Clodinis for coclrtalla, hors d'oeuvrea, dinner, cham· pagne and praise as forgotten heroes. "This ls the flnt time I've heard that atnce I 've been home," said Thomas Aiken, who lost an eye in the war. High court due male draft cue W A8HINGTON (AP > -Tbe Suprtme COart wm bear arsu· meDtl • tM eouUtutJoaalit, ot u ....... ......,. draft ad draft re1t1&r.Uoa later tbla moatll. ,,.. drift c .... ,.,...,. .... mott CIOMIJ ••tcW ol Wa court Wm, .. 1eWd11111l ..... arped Mattia lei a ,.. .. ..,. It lp.m. • gets .director By .JODI CADENHEAD Of ... .,..,, ............ , Leo Bedsow, former manaeer of the California Cl vlc Li8ht Opera Association, baa been named executive director of the future OrJanae Couoty Music Center ln Costa Mesa. One of Bedsow's first duties as director will be to help choose an arcbitecturai firm to desirn the future $40 million performing arts cent.er near Bristol Street and tbe San Diego Freeway. Viejo leaper identified as Argentinian A man who apparently leaped to his death from the Alicia Parkway overpass of the San Diego Freeway in Mission Viejo Feb. 7 has been identified as an Argentine citizen who had resided in Long Beach. Orange Count y Sh eriff 's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said fingerprint comparisons were used to determine the body found on the freeway was that of Jose Brizuela, 28, of 1092 E. 7th St., Long Beach. Brlzuela's body was struck by sever al vehicles a fter he ap- parently leaped from the over· pass in the predawn hours. The death is being treated as a suicide. Lt. Hart said. Results of toxicological examinations are pen in~. Crash kills 3 BARSTOW !AP> A civilian and two military personnel were killed Tuesday in the crash of a modified World War 11 bomber while on a training mission out of Edwards Air Force Base. a military spokesman said. ''I will be concerned with as· surlng the aesthetic qualiUea of the structure are in concert with ita professional and technical re- qulrementa, • • Bedsow said. Selection of an architectural firm to design the cultural center is e xpected b y mid· March, according to music center officials. Those (U'ms interviewed were Albert C. Martin & Associates; Ladd, Kelaey & Woodward in conjunction with Arthur Erickson : The Luckman Partnership; Skidmore, Owings & Merrill; Welton Becket & As· sociates ; William Blurock & Partners/C.R .S. and William Pereira. In addition to his duties as general manager for the Civic Light Opera, Bedsow was ad· viser for the opening of the Los Angeles Music Center , the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and t he Ahmanson Theater and supervised the restoration of the Orpheum Theater in San Fran· cisco. He teaches at the USC College of Continuing Education and lee · lures at UCLA . Mu sic Cen ter offi cials declined to state Bedsow's salary or how many other can- didates were considered for the Orange County position. Co fis~ruction of the two· theater complex adjacent to South Coast Repertory moved clos er to reality when the Segerstrom family pledged $S million cash in January on the condition that another $6 million be raised by the end of March. Las t month Jim Bentley, chairman of Bentl e y Laboratories in Irvine, and hjs wife, Irene. pledged $2 million toward the construction or the ·cultural center in Costa Mesa. In addition to the estimated $40 million in construction costs. another $19 million is being raised for endowment purposes ' ,.,... .. ,. .... AIRPORT. • Scudder Hid that waa news to him. "Well, In your profeaalonal opinion, is this a proper thlna? la it a &ood Idea to let someone select your lnt.ervtewa?" aued Gabke. "fl would have been bad," ex- plained Scudder, "but tying It ln with J or1ensen's interviews made It better." Gatzke asked if the study would hold more validity if Scudder himself had selected the interviews at random. Scud· der aareed that waa true. But then a few minutes later. the an- thropologist corrected himself. •'Our sampling was done by networks, community ties," be said. "In this ca.se maybe it was better than a random sam-pling." Administrative Law Judge Robert Neher, who on several occ as Ions has added a touch of ~evity to the technical hearings, int errupted the exchange between Scudder and attorney Gatzke at this point: "I suppose if I give you a bit more time, Dr. Scudder , you'd probably tell me this was the best possible way to do it (the in- terviews J." Under fu rther questioning, Scudder said he wasn't an "ad- vocate" for the Mariners As - sociation anti·airport expansion cause. '·tr any advocacy crept into my study it's only because after 25 years of studying these things I've come to realize that the im· pacts are far great er than anyone imagines," he explained In h1s defense. Scudder said that his study was actually a re- port on what nois e .weary homeowners "perceive" the problem to be. "Just because the residents tell me how they feel doesn't mean it isn't important," Scud- der said. adding that residents frequently expressed feelings of being "mocked, laughed at and even vilified" by public officials. Airline struck MEXICO CITY <APJ -A wildcat s trike by Mexicana Airlines groundworkers forced cancellation of 3~ daily flights . .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribution of men's and women's clothing. We trade with the most prestigio us scores and the best manufacturers in the country. But we also deal directly with you-the individ ual traditional clothing con- sumer. Because you appreciate the classic sryles and the qualiry that our clothing rep- resents, we would like you to understand cxacdy why we can offer you such substantial savings on the clothes you really want. To begin with, we deal in one very specific inventory: traditional styles. We don't do speculative buying on trendy gannents that go out of sryle and have ro be sold at a loss. Knowing our market enables us to buy more efficiently. Secondly, we buy in quanciry. As brokers we place huge volumes of high quality gar- ments in stores all over the country. Naturally, we face run offs and overages. These we sell at significant reductions directly to the dis- cerning public through our Brokerage. Finally, we feel that an individual whose preference is quality and classic styling can appreciate the savings represented by our streamlined look. Because we don't spend excessively on costly displays and fixtures, we don't have to pass those additional costs along to you. We at SOUSA & l.Efl(QVITS feel we have a meaningful concept to bring to the traditional man and woman: A vast inven- tory of the best quality classic and traditional. fashions, sold in a tasteful streamlined atmos- phere. at the most significant savings avail- able anywhere. Tu•tin 621 South 8 St., Tustin. CA 92680 IJust behind Hadley's Fruit Orchard) Telephone 714/,73}-7151 Hours: Mond•y throuah S.turday 10:00 •.m .. 6:00 p.m. SundtY 12:00 nooo·S:OO pm. Wat Loe An1ele1 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd . West Los Angeles. CA 90064 Telephone 213/477-8095 Ill ~~----------------~-----· Bagla to join n~ low fi,.,. Former U.S. Sen. Birch Bayh or Indiana is joining a new law firm that includes the campaign. managet for the man who defeated Bayh in his effort to win a fourth Senate term. Bayh confirmed he will join the firm of Bayh, Tab· b e rt and Capehart , with offices in Indianapolis and Wa s h · ington. One partner is Daniel f' .• Evans Jr., campaig n chairman for Sen Dan uYH Quayle, tbe Republican who defeated Bayh in November. "I thi nk what we brought together here is a pretty good mixture of Democrats and Republicans. and they're all pretty good lawyers that can serve clients ... said Bayh, a Democrat. Rosemary Ludgate, 23 , gets kiss from David Lee, of Olney Parish Church in England, a/ter winning annual pan- cake race, covering winding , 41 5-yard coursein62 seconds. Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer will marry July 29 in a world-televised cer emony that, in a break with royal tradition, will take p lace in St. Paul's Cathedral instead of Westminster Ab· bey. Buckingham Palace an· nounced the wedding date, s'ix days after it disclosed the 32-year-old crown prince's engagement to Lady Diana, 19, daughter of on e of Britian's premier earls. A Palace spokesman said Charles chose St Paul's in- stead of Westminster Abby, where most royal weddings are performed, because the 273-year·old masterpiece of sir Christopher Wren can hold more guests The last Prince of Wal es to be married in St. Paul's was He nry VOi's elder brother, Arthur Tudor. Thal was in 1501 in the original cathedral that was des troyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666. M i ndlul or PrHldeat &ea1u•1 aff.clioa for Jelly- beans, an alteraft e111lnHr figured that the world's l argest trans port r•ane could carry near 1 H mf IUOQ pieces ol the candy. Lockheed Corp., baaed in Burbank:, said that tbe Jelly- bean count wu made by an e ngineer or its Lockheed· Mariella Co. unit. Last year , duri nc the Carter administration, a nother Lockheed engineer determll\ed that the mam· moth C-SA aircraft, 81 of • whi c h w e re built b y Lockheed , coul d carry 158,631,184 peanuts. , Other cargo estimates were up to 25 ,84~,746 pingpong balls and 3,222,851 tortillas. In military terms, the C·SA is designed to accommodatE two Chrysler XM ·l tanks, s even fulJ-sized transcon· tinentaJ buses or five U.S. Air Force Fighters -and Ti fully equipped soldiers. In a long expected a nnoun cement, French Pres ident Valery Glscard d'Esta.lng said he will seek a second seven.year term as the nation's chief executive. Actor Greg Morris of ABC-TV series .. Vega$." was reported in stable co ndition following sur- ger y for injuries suffered. inatrafficaccident. He suffered lacerations to his face , right arm and shoulder. D B ll h Irvine builder says r. oe c er • • rites set 1n Sacrarnento Pl ans for a l at e -March memorial ser vice a re being made in Sacramento for Dr. Kenneth Boettcher. former ch airman of Orange Coast College's Fine Arts Divis ion , who died of a heart attack Feb. 25. HOusing's 'greatest period' lies ahead The former Costa Mesa resi· dent was visiting in Sun City, Ariz., last Wednesday when he died. He was 65. Dr. Boettcher joined the OCC faculty in 1948 as a music in· structor and became the division chairman a year later. , He wrote the OCC a lma mater. In 1955, he lert the college to become president of American River College in Sacramento, re- taining that post until retire· ment in 1979. He and his wife li ved al Lake Tahoe. He is survived by his wife Cor inne, a daughter. Mrs . Robert Hart of Exeter, and two grandchildren. Books slttletl for slmt-ins · The Friends of the Laguna Beach Library are sponsoriftg a delivery service of library books to people unable to leave their homes. Drivers will deliver up to five books to libra r y patrons and pick them up two wee.ks later. The program is designed to help elderly s hut-ins a nd the physically handicapped. Those interested in participat- ing in the delivery program are asked Lo eithe r write or telephone the library . The matung address is PO Box 36, Laguna Beach 92652. T he number t.o call i• 497-1733. By RICHARD GREEN Of Ille D.MIJ Pll•I SI.all A reduction in mor:tgage in· teresl rates and an attendant surge in new home sales can be expected if President Reagan's fiscal policies are carried out, housing expert Merrill Butler told 500 businessmen in Irvine. Speaking Mond,ay night at a Building lndus\ry Association dinner, Butler, the past presi· dent of the National Association of Home Builders, said 1983 and 1984 promise to be the "greatest period for housing this country has ever seen." But he was quick lo warn builders that the home sales pic- ture may not be so bright until mid-1982 when he expects Presi· dent Reagan's policies to begin to take hold. The key to a lowering of home interest rates, said Butler, rests in federal spending cuts pro· posed by Reagan. whom he called "the best president since George Washington." Butler said Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker won 't act to reduce interest rates until he sees Co ngress car· r ying out the spending cuts. The president of Butler Hous· ing Corp. (with offices in Irvine and Newport Beach ) said that federal spending cuts could ease inflation, stimulate reductions in interest rates and fuel new home sales. He noted, however , that builders attempting to gatber capital for new home construe· lion race competition from other industries. Buller pointed out that some economists in the White House favor the infusion of money into other industries at the expense of the home builders. Thts SO· We're · Listening ••• The Daily Pilot wanls to hear from lls reader•. wha.t you Uke about the paper and what you don't Uke. We also wottld like to lP'*bU•b your views on any subject in our letters to the editor col- 'umn Call the number below and your meua1e will be recorded Mea~a1es wm be transcribed several limn dally and delivered to the desk of the appropriate editor. Mailbox contr1buUon1 wtll be delivered to the edJl9rial paee editor. Mailbox toatrtbueon must lpcl-.de u.Mr name and ,telephone number for vtr1ncat.._. Ml ctrculallon calls, please. TeU • wha\'• on your mlnd. TM nu,mber la In Mf\fl~ JI houri • d~, HVen da1t I Wffk ~ SEES HOUSING SURGE lrvlne'1 Merrill Butler calle d reindustrialiution of America's major industries is needed, ne said, but poses a challenge to the builders. Jn his speech at the Airporter lnn, Butler said the building in· d ustry should support federal spending cuts, "even tbou1h 1,000 voices will be raised" against the cuts. In addition to the lower in· terest rates that may follow the cuts, the builders stand lo gain from an easing of business taxes that can take place with a reduc· lion in lederaJ spending, he said. "America was made great by the private businessmen and we mus t reward private e n · trepreneUTShip," be said. ''For those wbo produce or save In great quantity, tbey de· serve as good a break on taxes as others." Butler received a atandlftl ovation when ~ closed hll speech on an up note. "Be very carefuJ in 1981 . becauae by 1982 we'll really beaJn to bulJd bousina for America,'' he aaid. GeD11, gold taken HILLSBOROU~H <Ai'> -A man e. a mallmu•a iDIMm aDd a partMr llalMleUffelt tM "11• °' • Ian .., ..... , ....... eetace mM ad ma. wttll at leaat '100,000 ta Jewelry and told, poke. Mid. I"". Orange Coast Daily Pllot/WedneJday, Merch •· 1981 s - A date trith death Steven Judy, 24 (right> is scheduled to die Indianapolis woman and her three young in the electric chair at Indiana State children. Judy's lawyer and his fost~r Prison March 9 and has refused to appeal parents have said they will not oppose his the penalty. He was convicted of slaying an ~is hes. County hajls out HSA $688,000 fwukd for welfare program By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 0t 11M o.a11, ~11.i su11 The Orange County Board of Supervisors has moved to erase a projected S3.6 million deficit f acing the county's Human Services Agency. which is responsible for adm inistering a vast array of health and welfare programs. The board agreed Tuesday to draw $688,000 from contingency funds to continue payments the county must make lo people seeking welfare assistance un- der the Aid to Families with Dependent Children and the General Relief programs . OF THAT SUM, $638.000 will go to bolster the aid to families program through the rem ainder of the fiscal year, while $50,000 will be earmarked to provide generaJ relier through the end or the month. The board also called for of· ficials from the Human Services Age ncy a nd the county Ad - ministrative Office to return within a mooth with specific rec- ommendations on how to deaJ with the remainder of the pro· jected deficit. Vicki Yon, a county Ad· ministrative Office analyst for Human Service Agency matters, told s upe r visors the budget crunch res ulted from a n in - creased number of persons seek· ing aid and changes in the way the state is providing subsidies to counties for health a nd welfare programs. COMPOUNDING THE prob· lem for the county, she said. is the current stale of the nation's economy and federal policies that have permitted the resettle· menl of Indochinese refugees in the U.S. particularly Orange County. The deficit could climb to more than SS million in the fi scal year beginning July 1, Ms. Yon said, unless the board takes ac· lion to (ind money to offset it. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Cnt1fied Gemo/cgiat. AGS NEW GOLD RUSH hit1 Aiatralia The gold rusb is on again. This time, the locale is not the streams of northern California, but the wild "outback'' region or Western Australia. The rush was touched o ff by the d iscovery or a huge gold nugget, weighin1 more than 26 pounds a nd valued at about $300,000. The discovery was m"de by a retired Australian couple. They had sunk their life 's savi ngs into a rour-wbeel-drive truck and two metal detectors, and had 1et out acrou ~ rol'blddln1 outback in search ol their rortune. The couple wouldn't say where they found the nugget. But, when three acbool c hildren on a picnic found a five-pound nu11et near the llttJe to'wn ol Wedderburn, the 1oldr-..ben bad a place to ~ceetrat. OD. Auttrala bu had soW n.. la ·tile put, tneludlq a whopplltf 10-pounc1 •uoet found so,..,... qo tn tlae aam• UM of tM O•tbut. But. wltlt to4a1'1 prtc-. M1 lold dt.ccn..,. ta• on an aclct•·d meaaure of excltemeet. Gold fe•e~ bu deftm~ Mt lb• folu 0on Under. To find tbat money. the board was told, it will likely havt! lo re· duce funding for other welfare- type programs over which the county has direct control. SU PERVIS OR BR UCE Nestande reacted angr ily to the 15·page report from the county Administrative Office outlining the budget crunch, claiming the board was being asked to make .. monumenta l decisions " on budget cuts on extremely short notice. The letter was dated Feb 24. However, he Joined fellow members in supporting a plan of action that grew out of recom· mendations advanced by the county Administrative Office. and supervisors Roger Stanton and Harriett Wieder. UN DER THE action, none of the contingency money will be used to provide increased as· saslance for Indochinse ref· ugees. This condition was proposed by Stanton. who said. ''This, ib my j udgment, reaffirms the county policy that this is a federal responsibility.·· Ms Yon warned that the coun ty 's s hare of providing as· sistance to refugees wi ll irt- crease AJ>ril 1 beC'ause of legisla lion that prevents 100 perceot federal assistance to refuget? who have been within the coun· try for more than three years. , That alone will c os t a" estimated Sl ,067.000 during the current fiscal year. of which th~ county's share would be aboU\ $300,000. During the nPxl fisca( year , that cost could in('rease tq, $5. 787 .000. of which the county's sha re Wl'Uld be $1 6 m1lllon. ac cording to the count~· /\d, ministrativt-Office. · ' Airport passenger decline continues ., I I " The number of commercial air carrier passengers using John Way ne Airport declined in January from December and was well below the figure one year ago. Statistics released this week by airport officials show that 184.049 people enplaned or deplaned at the airport during January, compared lo 187,645 in December a nd 193,858 in January of 1980. THE FIGURES show that the num ber of comme r cial jet operations <takeoffs and land· in gs I decreased s lightly in January to 2,454, from Decem- ber's 2,475. Yet lbe number of commercial operations was 287, or 12 per- 1•111.l.Alf QUARTZ r cent, hi gher t han in J anua rt.'. 1980. indicating that the number of passengers per given night was down. Commuter fli ghts a lso · ar~ down by 52 percent when figur~ for January and January 1980 are compared. ·' 1 j OFFICIALS SAJD that privat«t' aircraft operations increase& slightly during January. com· pared to levels of a year ago.~ There were 34,331 general avi~ lion operations in January corrf4! pared to 34,303 in January 1980. :~ General aviation operations' account for more than 90 pe~, cent of the activi4' at Joh'1 Wayne Airport. the third busie~~ airport in the country. , .......... . • I ~··/ ......_~I -~ '\~ /. ....... . ..........::. i -~~ / . ~ ') I \ \ , ........ .'/" ~ ·~-:::;' .t:-:::.'' Which Pulsar Quartz slim dress watch is right for you?· Any Pulsar Ouom watch VOi.J select IS right. Eodl ond every one 1s beoutifvl They' oll 91ve neoroperfect 1tmekeep1ng occuracy ond the botte!)' lasts f0t two yeors Some offer sweep s«ond honds. bil1ngvol do'y dote colendors ond more See the enhre collection to moke your seledion ot brocelet ~ strop models All a t Pfites os slim os the styling. Pulsar. ~rtz. · Always o t>.ot ~yood. In technology. In value. .J. f!:;J.lump/ai.i.6 J.-&rd MEMBER AMERICAN OEM SOCl!TV @ 1a..3 NEWPOAT BLVD COSTA MESA ~V,~ IN THE SAME LOCATION SINCE,,,_. -1,.•rd-Matter Ch1roe PHON! ~ J ) J • . . . solutions • fK9)0L DAIS Dan. -Melwboly .,. .. eoatbl• t to tridde out ol our eoutal pQlic tebool 111tem1 UMM daya about DO mone1 fOI' Nueaaac., teacher layolfl and prtndtall 19Wa1 ct.~. It .,_,t IOUD4 aood. . W.'ft \eerd Wa tlDd ol Mn bot1a upcout at Huot· lnstoe Beach and downcout at Lasuaa. Tbe Upta are to- lq Mat~ .. nerJWbere. ·awn late t.odaT. ffe.,airt.)I .. Unllled Sebool Dil· trid tr-.. were ••tbeftDI to dlleUN bow to cope wt\h no cub and dwlDdllnc 1tudlat ..-ollmeata. So far. tbe oaly loauUOOI in uy ol our public 1cbool 1y1tem1 1eem to be ~ · clo1ln& down exl1Un1 1cboob and lettln1 • • r :~·~~ ':!!: T81 181P1lll~ come up with any in· · novaUve notlom on bow we mlpt keep tbe 1cbooll tome. Tberelore, u a publle service, I ecimulted m7 old friend Dr. Rufus Theodore Fudd, tbe noted 90dololbt, economist, educator and one-Ume. car wuh operator, oa wbat i.nnovationa mlabt be employed to keep tbe 1chool syatema golng. ·Right away, be came up with a whole llandful ol schemes to pump up public education. For example, be su11ested: T&AFnc FINES: Richt now, most of the fines for S5 in a 25 are collected by the cities. City cops do tbe arrest· lng. My genius friend Fudd su11ested taking the fine money away from the cities and giving it to tbe school systems. This, old Rufus su11ested slyly, would be a two·edled sword. Traffic cops would no longer figure they were "Evuy time I'm in tM tub, tM clan beU ring•" gathering their own salaries when they slapped one on a hapless motorist. Therefore, they might be more templed lo temper justice with mercy. And, more importantly, the cops when they did write a whole handful would be helping the educatiooal cause. NON-PARENTAL TAXES: Dr. Fudd cleverly deduced that one of the reasons for sagging student enrollment is that people just aren't producing enough babies. "It's another two-edged sword," Rufus chortled. "We bang a special $100-a-year lax on non-parents. Everybody over 18 pays. You either produce or you pay. U you pro- duce, you boost the school population and we win for education all the way around." BVPRODUCf BINGO: Another fascinating way to save the schools as envisioned by the far-sighted Dr. Fudd. Actually, he admitted getting the notion from the parochial schools. "Every time we close a school, we invent a byproduct," Dr. F explained. "We turn the closed school into a 24-hour bingo operation. Good heavens, how the money'll roll in. -··Bingo cash will keep tbe other schools open. If we have to close two schools, we go with bingo in one and a beer hall in the other. We'll just keep hyping the old school economy.'' CO-ED CONDOS: Doctor F admitted on this one that he was just bitching onto a current housing craze. "Everybody's converting buildings into condominiums," he noted. "Why not the empty schools? Let 'em start col- lecting rent.'' Doc Fudd did admit that in converting some lower grade school buildings to living units, adults migbt flnd the bathroom fixtures are a bit close to the ground. "But after all," he noted, "you have to sacrifice something for education. . . " . NATION I WEATHIA Elle sent tO Robbins causeS flap llllS80ULA. IC•t. (AP> -A Umventty ol lllontUa law pro- feuor bM bNe fcMld IUllU ol CODtempt for ....., CODIJdrtlal court dDl ...... u to belP tbe cWwe ol a Callfornla 1tate tenator accuaed ol f*-'Y sex crtm ... U.S. Dlltriet Jud1• Jolla JleDIOD •lined u order tbla week ftndlar Roulcl Wyae, wbo allo worb Part·Ume for • Mluoula law ftrm, pt.tty ol mlldemtanor eoatempt of court. Heoaoo tined Wyse ... la tbe order, lleGIOll wrote that W11e'1 actJon In MDC11n1 con· ftdeatl.ll Juvealle reeorda to Sen. Alan Robblnl, )).Van Nuy1, "con· .Ututel miabellavior In olftce, willful necleet an4 violaUoo of duty by an attorney." aOIUUN8, ,,, la facln1 nlJle felony •ex cbar1e1 lnvolvtnc two teen-a,. atrll. He bu plttded i.nnoeeat. Court neorda lhow one ol lbe &trla accusln1 Bobbins was the subject ol a cbUd neclec:t case in Mlllou.la ln 1977-11. The law firm tor which Wyse worts part·time repraeuted the mother of tbe girl, and the Mlasoula County attorney's office represented the &irl. . Durtni a Jan. 30 b~ on the contempt of court charge, Wyae tesUfied that when Robbins discovered the girl's connection with Mi.noula, Robbins called Wyse and convinced him he wu an innocedt man. WYSE SAID be a1reed to do some lnveati1ative work for Rob· bins. Wyse aaid both be and Robbins attended law school at UCLA at about the aame time but that neither knew the other while they were iD school. Pacific balloon trip try aborted TOKYO lAP > -The first attempt to cross the Pacific in a manned balloon was aborted minutes before takeoff when a hold- dowo cable broke and the 26-slory high balloon was irreparably damaged. "We were within five or 10 minutes of transferring the helium and completing preparations to let up," Ben Abruno, captain of the four-man Double Eagle V, said Tuesday in a telephone interview from tbe launch site in N agashima, a bot springs resort 180 miles west of Tokyo .. The SO-year-old Abruzzo said it would be impossible to prepare another launch in tbe next two weeks, a period in which wind con- ditions are right for the 6,000.mile crossing to the U.S. West Coast. "It's a tremendous letdown," he said after the abort Tuesday. "Now we will re· organize as soon as possible for the next •0«1 possible flight attempt -we hope next year.'' Abruzzo and a second member of the team, Larry Newman, 33, made history in 1978 when they joined Maxie Anderson in the Double Eagle II to become the first lo cross tbe Atlantic by helium- filled balloon. Abruzzo and Newman were joined in the cross· Pacific attempt by Ronald Clark, 40, and Japanese restaurateur and entrepreneur Rocky Aoki, 42, who has business interests in Orange County. The three Americans are from Albuquerque, N.M. Abruzzo said they were plagued by minor problems throughout the night before the ri11ing failed, causing the hold-down cable to jam and break at about 4: 30 a.m. The team also bad attempted to lift. off Sunday night, but called off the flight because of high winds. The four balloonists had hoped to make the voyage lo San Franclsco"in about three days, and if all went well, continue to the U.S. East Coast. A cbec:k of files at the Mllloula law firm turned up a ftle oa dM chUd-netJect cue. In that file were various materials relaU.., to the &lrl, lncl~I paycholoocal report.a. All thole reports, MA•· toula County Attorney Robert Deschamps Ill ar1ued, were coa· fldential. State law says anyone dl.uemlnaling those reporta without authorhatioo ls ,Wily of a m.lademeanor. NEVEATRELESS, Wyse 1ald, be 1ent tbe fUe to Robbi.DI to at•lst ln preparlq his def~ after checkin1 the file aaalut rues kept ln the clerk of court's olnce and the county attorney'• office . Wyse maintained throu1hout bis Jan. 30 heart.De that the lnlorma· Uon ln the file bu a bearing on the credibility of the accusatiom again.It Robbins. "I believed, then as now, that I bad the rigbt to send the in· formation to his lawyer," he said. Bogbandif A~WI...,.._. A 9-year-old boy. known only as Robert, walks with at· torney Mel Sachs, left. and unidentified man, right, after court hearing in connection with the $118-holdup of a Rockefeller Center bank in New York City last week. Sachs contended the boy. who used a toy pistol, did not in- tend to rob the bank but was only "play acting." The youth is from a broken home spending most of his time .watching television and on the streets. I..indhergh ~dnapper 'verified' TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -A new review of the notorious Lindbergh kidnapping case sup· ports the original conclusion that Bruno Richard Hauptmann was guilty of the 49-year-old kid- nap-murder, according lo a state police report. The review concludes that evidence unequivocally sup- ports Hauptmann's guilt and the identification of an infant's body as that of Charles Lindbergh Jr. division superintendent. "This conclusion is based on facts which should dispel the notion that the body of C harles Lindbergh Jr. was not correctly identified." fl y solo across the Atlantic Ocean. The report also said a flannel shirt on the victim was made from the same cloth as gar· ments in the estate nursery . ... ,.. . "It is sufficient lo report that the review fandings clearly SUP· port the verdict that Bruno Richard Hauptmann was gullty,'' said the report, released Monday by Col. Clinton Pacano • The summary s aid hair samples from the body recently studied by lbe latest scientific techniques match hair trimmed from the son of the first man to ;• .. ~!Severe storms building .. Texa.s to Carolinas in targeted path UC•l•e•Clter ,---.:-----------. ... .-. ... ..,9111 ..... 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He represent& a San l>iego group called the CreaUoo·Sc\eJlce Research Center. , · Deputy Attorney General Robert Tyler replied tJaat the state bas the right to make an "educa- tional decision" about the theories tau1bt in seience classes. lttdge "flpr..,e• •e l tW.nat' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Calling it a "milestone in litigation," a Superior Court judge has approved a $21 million out-of-court setllement in a case involv- ing a bankrupt c hain of retirement homes NEWS BRIEFS sponsored by the United Methodist Church. "There is not ab· solute finality here, since we still have to go through the bankruptcy court," Superior Court Judge James L. Focht said. "But nevertheless, this is a milestone. Achievement or this settlement is 8 most extraordinary aC· com plishmenl." Focht also awarded $4.3 million in fees to at- torneys who, the judge said, faced "unique legal and factual difficulties" in the case against the Pacific and Southwest Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church , of which Pacific Homes was an agency. W'OlllCIR jaU~d fn ~If are fraud SAN FRANClSCO (AP) -A government lawyer says the first sentencing in the country of a health care provider for defrauding the govern· ment's Medicare program is a .. major success in the area or white collar crime." The assessment came from David Geneson, a government attorney who helped convict Flora M. Souza, 62, of two felony counts of defrauding tbe government of some $13,000. The San Jose woman was sentenced Monday to 18 months in jail, fined $10,000, and ordered never lo participate in federal health care pro· grams again. A lrlf,... Merger fight loowt• LOS ANGELES <AP> -Executives al Con· tinentaJ Airlines, who say their proposed merger with Western Airlines is endangered. said they will move on three fronts to J>'"ev ent Texas Interna- tional Airlines from successfully acquiring con· trolling interest in Continental. The Civil Aeronautics Board approved Con· tinentaJ's plan to merge with Western Airlines, but then said it bad no authority to prevent Texas In- ternational from acquiring a controlling interest in Continental shares that could be used to block the merger. The CAB approved establishment or a voting trust for up lo 48.5 percent of Continental stock. tbe a mount Texas International has said it will buy. f'H ... Tl' lndeut rr1 •• rlhr ,.,...,. HOLLYWOOD <AP l -The mm and television industry. which only recently struggled to its feet after last summer's 10-week actors strike, is stockpiling scripts and movi ng up schedules a mid fears of a strike by writers and directors. Beats the ha11 Joe Orr, a produce retailer at Farmer's Market in Dallas, Tex., looks over a box of California lemons. An embargo was im- posed Sunday against all California pro- duce because officials feared in infestation of the Mediterranean fruit fly in California would spread to Texas. Massive utility project shelved SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Plans by two California utilities to build a massive SS billion power plant project in Nevada and Utah have been dismissed by state Public Utilities Commission. However, the P UC will allow Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern California Edison to re· file an application for Allen-Warner Valley energy project at a later date. The utilities on Feb. 13 asked for permission to withdraw the application, saying it no longer ac· curately described the project. The companies s l ated they may file an appli cation for an amended project later. THE PUC SAID it this is done. they may use any exhibits or testimony from hearings on the original application. The project involved strip mining of a coal field near Utah's Bryce Canyon and piping the coal to two power plants, the Warner ValJey plant in southern Utah and the Harry Allen plant in Nevada. It was to be a joint venture or PG&E, Edtson and Nevada Power and Light Co. with SS percent of the electricity produced going to Cal1fomia c ustomers. THE APPLICATION WAS filed in November. 1979, and amended three times in 1980. More than 100 days of hearings were held. In August. 1980 the PUC staff suggested deletion of plans to mine coal near Bryce Canyon and of the 500-megawatt Warner Valley pl~t near St. George, Utah. That left a 920,000 kilowatt plant outside of Las Vegas which would obtain coal from near Price, Utah. No action was taken on this, but the utilities decided that the project as proposed no longer represented the project as they originally designed it. -- Orange Coast Dally PllottNedneaday, March 4, 1981 s Quake jolts· l:lay area. Fremom reports broke1i m 1ulma, rockslides SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A moderate earth· quake estimated at 4.1 on the Richter scale toppled bottles f~m shelves, trtnered a minor rockalide and Jolted people awake throughout the San Fran· cisco Bay area. The Tuesday quake wu centered in the Fre- mont area soutb ot Oakland and was followed by a 2.7-rated aftershock at 2:57 a.m .. said Robert Uhrhammer, research seismologist at the University or California seismology laboratory In Berkeley. There were no reports of injurY. or serious damage.· $2.1 millio11 Corona trial • CO$ls soanng SACRAMENTO <AP) -Nejy $2.1 million has been spent preparing for the upcoming retrial of Juan Corona, wbo was convicted eight years ago of murdering 25 migrant rarm workers. The figure includes nearly $1.1 million for the prosecution, about $721.000 for the defense, and about $275,000 in other court and legal costs. Sutter County officials said. Sutter County District Attorney H. Ted Hampton said the final cost may exceed $3 million. making it one of the most costly court battles for a single defendant in state history. THE FIGURES, including pay to attorneys and costs of locating witnesses and evidence, were in an audit covering a 21h·year period ending Jan. 31. Ronald Fahey. a $50·an-hour special pros· ecutor from Santa Rosa, bas already been paid $264,275. making him the highest-paid lawyer in the case. Assis tant prosecutor Roger Pierucci. who began working on the case last spring, has been paidS84.450. Michael Mendelson, court-appointed counsel for Corona, has received $215,950, while one of hi s associates, Terrence Hallina n, has received $117,137. MENDELSON SAI D, "It 's outrageous to spend this kind or money and not have a trial date set." Sutter County will be reimbursed for about Sl .8 million of the $2.l million under a state law that provides state financing for extraordinary trials. The rest will have to be paid by Sutter County. Because Corona is an indigent, all his defense fees are being paid out of state and county funds . Corona, •1, a farm labor contractor from Yuba City north of Sacramento, was convicted on Jan. 18, 1973, of 25 counts of first-degree murder and sentenced to 2S consecutive life terms IN MAY 1178, a state appeals court overturned the conviction, saying defense attorney Richard Hawk bad provided inadequate representation and had a conflict or interest. The retrial is scheduled for Alameda County. but the state Supreme Court must first decide whether it will hear more pre-trial issues, mostly relating to evidence. Corona is in Santa Rita jail in Alameda County. THE MAIN QUAKE was felt alon1 at. least 1 miles ot the California coast from Monterey Marin Couoty, according to the state Office Emergency Services. · "It just knocked a lot of wine bottles off, s pop, medicine, books, coffee pots ...• " said Lar Foster, a worker at a Fremont 7-11 itore. "It scared the hell out of me." be added. "J' been tbrou.gb mortar explosions, but fl've nev been through anything like this." The California Highway Patrol said the qua triggered a small rocksllde, blocking part of Nil Canyon Road in Fremont, but workers quick cleaned the debris off the roadway. F REMONT POLICE said that "probab about a half doien" shop windows were broken the city. "Jl was hard." said Nancy Day, a waitress a Denny's Restaurant in Fremont. "ll felt li somebody picked up Denny's and dropped it. T business just went real quiet." She said one customer bolted out the door a another quickly put down his coffee cup and le when the quake struck. .. I'm a little sick of the earthquake," said San Francisco dispatcher . "I've about worn arms off answering this line." The Richter scale measures ground m lion and the amount of energy released. A 4 quake is considered capable of moderate dama in a populltted area. The devastating 1906 San Francisco eart quake, before the scale was devised. was estim ed at 8.3 on the sca le and was thousands of tim as powerfw as the one that struck Tuesday. Taxpayers slow. in filing returns FRESNO <APJ Taxpayers are submitti their federal income tax returns slower than usu to the Internal Revenue Service Center here. Part of the reason why the I RS is about 86, returns behind last year's filing level is the i creased use of professional tax preparers. I · formation Officer Rob Marion estimates mo than half of the returns are farmed out by ta payers . The professional preparer also blame inflati for slowing returns . THE CENTER RECEIVED 3,330,000 retur by Friday compared to 3.416,000 at the same ti last year. About 10.9 million r eturns are due here by t e April 15 deadline. "They aren't in the rush that they used to be, · said Larry Cunningham. who has been figuri taxes professionally for 23 years. • Dave Drew. general manager of Drew Jarrel . said. "Partly what is amounts to is that it's not en)oyable thing for the public and they put it off.· MARION REFUTED the thanking that la filers are more immune to audits. saying there "no validity lo that thought. It's one of those thin that sounds logical. but isn't." Audit decisions are made in late August September, he said. The busy season for the IRS center. whi handles returns from California and Hawaii, ru from early April to May. P•ppermint Potty THE END IS HERE! with MOUSE·O·LEUM Sears H 1111ti11~• ct11 Bt-a<•l1 TH a HANDS.OFF METHOD ... you NEVER touch a mouse again! 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SEARS 310 POCKET CAMERA EHKtlveS/4/11 SEARS KS 1000 MANUAL 35mm · ELECTRONIC FLASH BUILT-IN SLR wtth SOmm f1.7 LENS was29.50 NowS1999 32 DRAWER ORGANIZER ONLY S849 WM149" Now s9999 (I only) AND CASE wu 25500 NowS15.9 99 (11 only) 6 .0 cu . ft. #90502 REFRIGERATOR POOH PLAY PEN l , A1molt unnoticed in the recent action by tbe Oran&• County Board ot SupervilOn to approve tbe Jobn Wayne Airport mast.er plan wu a dlrectlve that airport offlclala develop a prolt'am of Hnctionl that would apply to ownen of Jet Aircraft that violate certain noiH stan- dards. 1 So-called nolae fee programs have been implemented in' several f orelgn countries. but never In the United S~tes. The very mention ol the phrue raiaee th• ire of the airline industry. , For good reason. Under such a pro1ram. Jet operators -be they commercial airlines or private cor- porations -would have to be accountable for the noise their Jets produce. If the operators became sloppy about their takeoff procedures or other factors that could make utplr aircraft exceaaively noisy. they would have to pay. Operators should be accountable. But there ii nOW.na in the county's existing noise abatement prosram to achieve accountability. A letter ls all an operator can el1pect to receive if maximum noise standards are ex- ceeded. . Revenue generated from such a noise fee proaram could be used in several ways. For example, the $500,000 annual cost of the county's noise monitoring and abate- ment program could be offset. Nor would it be unreallstic for some of the m()ney to go to ~he ~esidents who suffer daily under the thunder of departing Jets. One airport expert who testifi~ recently during a state airport noise variance hearing sai.d imP;OSitlon of noise fees should not be viewed as punitive. Its hard to see how such a program could be viewed as anything but that. In the case or John Wayne Airport, however, a little punishment might go a long way to lowering the noise. A brake on crime or the 100,000 persons released Crom state prison each year after completing their sentences or being granted parole. as many as 60 percent will be re-arrested and sent back to prison The cost of this so-called recidivism is staggering - an average of S13,500 per year to maintain a man in a state prison. Not to mention, of course, the cost to in- dividuals and businesses victimized by the thefts, fraud and burglaries that bring about the re-arrests. A solution of sorts may have been found in a program undertaken in Texas and Georgia. It's called TARP (Transitional Aid Research Project) and it involves pay· ing ex-prisoners unemployment benefits for up to six months after their release. to give them time to search for work. The amounts paid are modest -$63 a week in Texas and $70 in Georgia -but they provide subsistence and re- move the burden of support from the prisoners' usually- poor families. Most important, they remove the need to return to crime to make a living. Researchers from the University of California who examined the TARP project determined that prisoners in the transition program had fewer re-arrests than those receiving no benefits -and the longer they worked the less likely they were to return to crime. Since it's obviously hard for an ex-prisoner to rind a job, the idea of providing transitional help seems valid. Certainly it could be less expensive than paying for the revolving door of recidivism. Marriage penalty Once again this April, two-income married couples with both husba_nd and wile making approximately the same salaries will be stung by the Internal Revenue Service. And no relief is in sight until at least next year. The idea or permitting husbands and wives to file joint tax returns initially was benevolent. With only one income there'd be a notable tax saving over the amount p~id by a single person making the sam~ sum. And if a working wife made much less then her husb~nd, formerly otten the case, the tax bite could be reduced by averaging tt)eir joint income. But with female pay scales steadily rising, this has backfired by boosting two-income families into higher percentage tax brackets. For example, if both husband and wife make about $22,000 a year, pooling their income (as required by the IRS> puts them in a $44,000 tax bracket and will cost them $11,000 in taxes. That's $2,000 more than they'd pay i~ they were permitted to report their incomes in· dJ. vi dually. There's a bill in Congress to correct this "marriage p~nalty" but it won't even cross the committee ... bold until later Ulla year. So worklnl ":i:\'!es once r& will pay the tax penalty for malnt g their rii.lboods. • !Iona expreued In the spaoe above are those of the Dally Pilot. r views expreaaed on thle page are those of their authors and ta. Reader·OCim"'ent Is ln11lted. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. x 1560. Cos1a Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 842·4321 . Boyd/Weightlifters B1L.M.80YD What young welabtllften don 'l know that old weitbWl- ttera do know is the body· fbulldiq came comes wlth a catch at the end of it. Once )'OU ama11 tboae pretty bui,ea, you've 1ot to keep at ~t IO they'll tlay toned up. ifkop the exerel.1e1 and they iturn Oabby. Many a larfe -· 1Roundtrlp1 to l CallfomJa at tll0,000 . wttb. pl'OPOted 10 trlpe per Y•ar. Let'• 1ee, o•tr four Y••r• i 'bat'1 •.. bu1lneu u ] anan BROK~, fleshy man, tiuued over u thouaht with. soft sponaea, wonders why he didn't leave it be. Or so I'm told. However many M trllllon ls, tbat•s the number of pouJ- ble combinaUom of inherited cbaracterlltlca a child can • get from ita parenu. An Ecyptlan film crltlc ln a Cairo daUy recenUy report· ed: ~ ls a new Arab •tar in the U.S.A. followina ln the foot.ates-ol Omar Sbart(. R• la Tunisian and hla name i• AU M.,·raw." . Q. Wtlo waa the •t1nt lamO\W per90e to HU 1Dto Ulla eounuy put tbe lltat. ol Liberty? A. JleDrJ M. StaDJeJ ol "Dr. LlYlaaatoa•, I PH· tu.mt"f .... ..... ·a...su.. ...... utband ...-. .... an, tmc1 to come from tbt loutb. ThMt no Med a.be 1mallelt batbMd ilil9 ~ h'OID the Mewhl'rt...._. Wedneaday, Match 4, 1981 ThomH P. Haley/Publisher ThomH K.-Vll/edltor S.rbera Kr•lblch/Edltof'l1t Page Editor Human rights policy shelved W ASHJNGTON -PrHJde11t Rea1u Uld hll HCftlU)' of state, Alexander Hal1, bave made clear that concern for bumu rlabtl will take a back aeat ln U.S. foreltn policy to the n1ht .. alnat international ter· rorl1m. But the man who bu been ap· polnted to the human rl1hts chalr at the State Depart- ment, Ernelt W. Lefever, may be mon lntranst1ent than the prea- 1 dent In - tends . By most ac · counts, Lefever is a rtaht-wtna fanatic who aerloualy believes the Unlted States should pay no attention to the human rtahtt record, however deplorable, ot re1lmes tt chooses to support with mllltary and ec9nomlc ald. BE WAS ao eaaer to take com· mand of the Human Rl1hts Bureau that he bas served for a month without formal nomina· tlon and without pay. Lefever baa been an un- Andy Rooney a ba1bed aupporter ol milltuy dlcta\on rUlliq b'Oln U.. late abah ol Iran &o U.. dJctat« ol Nlcarapa, ADu&uio Somou. H• 1•tl worked up over reprealon on11 wbea lt la prae· UcM by pro.commwd1t IOVerD· mentl. But any ruler perctlved u anu.commun.llt, 1n Lefever'• vlew, ll deler.ln.I of American friendlblp. Lefever'• wrlt.lnt• have a1IO appeared lo two South Atrtcan pertodlcala that were revealed to have been heavily financed b1 the white minority 1ovemment •• part of • campatcn lo purcbue favorable mention lo the lntemat.lonal press. To bis credit, Lefever hat made no aecret of his oppolition to human nptl H a criterion for U.S. relatioos with forel&n 1ovemmenta. In 1979, for exam- ple, he told a House subcommlt· tee forthrightly : "IN MY VIEW, the United States should remove from the statute books all clauses that establish a human rights stand- arci or condition that must be met by another sovereign gov· ernment." Somewhat less to his credit, Lefever. as head of an ul- traconaervative Was hln1ton tblnk tank, the Ethlca and Public Polley Center, hat ac- cepted money from the Swi.18· backed NesUe contlomerate ln retum for attacJcJ on those who oppoae Nettle's questionable marketJ.ni of infant formula ln Third World nations. N &m..E 18 trylnt to wean Third World mothers away from brea1t feedlnl, delplte 1cieat11lc evidence that the use ol formula bu bad dilutroua effect.a oo ln- f anta .lD tbele couatrie1. A re- cent Brullian 1overnment aur· vey, for eumple, 11.nlted the suc· ce111ul Ne9tle promotion of the formula to Ill lncnue lo lnfanl malnutrttloD from 9 percent to 30 percent lo rural communities. Lefever vebemenUy denies the ''chocolate connection,'' but N es tie documents show that company officials were "somewhat concerned that the company should not be seen as the dominant subscriber t.o the Ethics and Public Policy Center." ' But the memo went on to say that "there are ways in which this matter can be satisfactorily bandied," and stated that NesUe planned t.o ''give every en· couraaeinent" to Lefever'• pro- NesUe propaaanda. ~ AMONG LEPt:VEa•s favorite tarceta fOI' obloquy baa been the World Council of Cburcbe1, which he baa cbarllcteriud u dominated by "Marxists" marching under the banner of reUgton. lntereeUngly enough, sourcet told my reporters Lucette La1nado and Julie Kosterliti that Lefever himself was an or- aained minister. He served with the World Council's U.S. af· flllate, the National Council ol Churches, in the early 19508. His title was associate executive director for international justice and eoodwtU. Lefever insists that be is a "demonstrated champion" of human rights, and says he bas been maligned by tbe press. He claims his statements have been taken out of context. Lefever also insists that the trouble with Jimmy Carter's perspective on human rights. was that it was too narrow, and ignored major violators like the Soviet Union. He dis missed Carter's human rights policy as "romanticism" that dem· onstrated a "se l ective morality." FRIENDS IN NEED: When the Am e ri c an Embas sy i n Islamabad. Pakistan, was over· run by a howling mob in late 1979, two Pakistanis risked their Ii ves to protect U.S. dependents from harm. Now the two Pakistanis, Siraj Patel and Col. Ismail Khan. want to com e to the United Stales. Their devotion to the American women and children during the e mbassy attack earned them disfavor among their countrymen. After I wrote about their heroism. Rep. Lester Wolff, D· N. Y .. introduced a private bill to give the two men immigrant vis· as. But Wolff was defeated in November, and the bill died in the finaJ confusion of the closing session. However, Patel and Khan have not been forgotten on Capitol Hill. Rep. Steve Solarz. D-N. Y .. has taken up the cause. He is preparing to introduce another private bill that wiJI let the two Pakistanis start life anew in the country they served so well during a time of crisis. We can't go back to 'good old days' • • • People aren't laughing at Ronald Reagan's old movies this week the way they were a year ago. That's because the changes he bas proposed are not your average, everyday changes that any new president proposes when be first takes office. and there is nothing funny about them. Reagan is proposing that we stop governing ourselves the way we have been for the past 48 years and start let· ting the COUD· try run itself the way it did before Franklin Roosevelt gave the na· lion the New Deal. When Roosevelt. took office during the Great Depression in 1933, one out of every two eov- e r n men t workers was a mailman -if that elves you some idea how few bureaucrats we had in Wasblneton then. Now, one out of every six Americana works for some form of government. federaJ, state or local. BACK BEFORE Roosevelt, the aovemment fought our wan, printed our money, delivered our mall and made aure we dldn 't all die ol smallpox. but it dJdn 't 1et into every corner ol our Uve. the way lt cloea now. The whole idea of aovernment waa ditterent. Before tbe New Deal. sovemment didn't pretend It had the power to make ua rlch or poor or happy or mllerable, dependlnf on wbat laws it pa11ed. It juat ll'led to keep a~m• order wbUe we foucbt amoq ounelYN for_._..,, The aplOllon of ;ovemmeat occUl'Nd bet.ween ltlO and 1950. Tbe popu.laUoo of tbe Ualted Stat• lntteued by 21 percent. Tbe number ol l*PI• ~ for ta.. federal 1ov...ament lD.· creaHd by saa percent·. much. At the same time, things started falling apart in the na- tion. Crime was up, moral stan· dards were down. Unemploy- ment was up, company profits were down. The Russians were up, we were down. Assuming there ls a rela· tionship between n ational decline and too much govern· ment. the American people In 1980 voted for someone who promised to lead them back to the pre-Roosevelt way of doing things. Don't look here for any opinion about whether President Reagan is right or not. That's the thing I like best about not be- ing president. I don't have to make hard decisions like that. I JUST HOPE Reatan and this kid economist he's got, DavJd Stockman, know what Art Hoppe they're doing. In his first speech on the nation's econom y. Rea~an quoted one of the great thinkers of our age,• Walter Lippmann. He used the q6ote to s upport his theory that we have to return to the free enterprise system. "WE CAN create the incen- tives which take advantage of the genius of our economic system, a system, as WalleT Lip· pmann observed more than 40 years ago, which for the first time in history gave men 'a way of producinl weaJth in which the good fortune of others multiplied their own.' " Mr. Reagan probably hasn't read as much of Walter Lipp- man as I have. It's not that I'm a heavy reader but I've kept a book of' Lippmann's next to my bed for 25 years, and I often dip into it before going to sleep. In 1929, before we even had the kind of socialism that Reagan now wants to get away from. Lippman anticipated the whole cycle: "WHEN THE TIME comes, they are bound to rind that the adm\nistralion of industry under socialism, no less than under capitalism, depends on lhe character of the administrators. Corrupt, stupid and grasping functionaries will make at least as big a muddle of socialism as stupid, selfish and acquisitive emp loyers can make of capitalism." And so it came lo pus. Under the form of socialism we've bad in this country, functionaries did make a muddle of it -just as those capitalists bad in the first part of the century. There never was any golden age of free en- terprise to which we can return. • • •. but Tiine wants us to try I w u not a bit surprised when the freshly shaven, nattily uniformed driver of the 31 but 1teppeddownfromb11seattohelp a stout, elderly woman ln newly whitened tenniJ aboet aboard. "Tbe moet important point," he said, snappln1 ber a salute, "i• not to re- gard old peo- ple aa aome obscure 'they' or 'them.• 'w n-e taltlnC about our f Q t u r e 1elvea." I ldmtUled blm lm · mediately u a reader ol People, one ol the Hv•n Tlme, Inc., ma•asln•• that are caacurnnt11 bombard· llll tbelr IUbltrtMr• wlth 21 Hparate edltortal -Ml'UlODI (Ml tb• theme of '•Am eriean BeoewaJ." ADCI wbat a world ol •ood tbey .,. dolnl I promot.etbe general welfare." "You're absolutely rl1ht, ma'am," said a colored (nee black) teen-ager ln saddle shoes, leapina up to give her hla seat. "And pleue inform me ll I am playfnl Mantovani too loudly on my llt.tle radio. Aa Henry Grunwald, editor·ln·cblef of Tlme, Inc., says, there lJ mucb evidence that, in reaction to the permiulve ex'ceuet of the Slx- Uea and Seventlea, we YO\Ull.. people have besun to diacover a deaperate need for standards and that the 1ell·WOrtbip ol the 'me decade' la llvtnc way to a new Mme ol mutual •~port." "THAT'S Tavz,.. a1reed a youn1 MCretary. wearillc penny loaf en and cultured pearlt and carryinf a rollM·up copy of Fortune ... But on • more prac· ttcal level, •1a11tarlan1 bave · ne1ledecl the t.rutb that equalltf mu1t live 1n temloa witb oUMr value• Just u cbertahed. Or, to put tt anotJaer w•1. l have de· cldM .. atntt ...t.lnf a career an4 WW iDltead ~e myaelf to atarc._, IOI'~· IUPt." ''Good thlMln1. m111;• NW a 1kl••1 old 1••tl•m•a la a ll111W cap.._.....,,.._ .....,.,.._.1 ......... .. ,,..,.. ............... tm· "lltwllllW ............. .... Into other areu of life and ooti- trtbute very effectively, both for tbemsel ves and society.'' "Yes," said a sailor in the back seat, "the years ahead will offer opportunJtiea as well u risks for the U .s. and a re· vit1ll1ed foreisn and defense policy must take account of both." "But there is always a risk that the reforms propoeed b)' Time wtU lead to unforeseeable new problems," cautioned a yoonc man with necktie and brief cue. "YOU AaE for•ettin1.'' 1 Hid, u l pulled tbe cord for my atop, ''wb•t llr. Grunwald told ua readert of Lite. To believe ln an American renewal one must ulUmately believe ta &.cUYldual .Americana. tho•• co.aatl•t• c1U11n1 wbo IO aboat tbell' Uv. with coura1• and pat_leac_~1 1Jan1r CQID.,.._" .ad CDelft1ll peNllWce. TIMM an bumu vlrtaatl wttb a ftl'1 American accnt. and ~ ...a, malt .lD• apln a .... ol IGYe ... .._ ., Aa I .....,_ ... Mm IM • bus, I ,... rtwa,._. lt7 .!ti fellow,...... ... ...., farewell U.at Melaed • "!"!'t': elem& ~Ul far tM ~ a.....a: .. Ran a alee da1t" ~ ......... f I NAT,ON ,.,..1 .......... • Orange Coast Dally PllotJWedneaday, March•. 1981 s AT . Posse 'rides' against regulations By PETE& A&NE'IT 4-laW P_Cet,1$ f al TIGERTON. Wls . -Meet the Posse, 1980 style. As in the days of tbe Old West, tbey come froro the local community but now they ride pickup trucks, not horses. They wear baseball caps and well-pressed camouflage jackets instead of cow· boy hats and stained leather chaps. · They stack semi-automatic military rirles in gun racks and hide .451 in their pockets in place of saddle·hoistered Winchesters or six-1uns at their hips. INSTEAD OF ASSEMBLING IN saloons, they gather at private mobile home parks. But they share something with the posses of the West -a willingness to ride against the bad guys. The problem is, their definition of bad guy doesn't usually square with the sheriff's. They call themselves the Posse Comltatus - literally, Power of the County. In rural Wisconsin where they are most numerous, they are in con· -aider able conflict with the law. members as "deadly, cold-blooded, serious, but men of integrity. Th,y want to arm the people t-0 buck what t.hey see as a national monetary, tax and court conspiracy." State -officials are less sympathetic. particularly judges who sometimes receive com- plaint letters from the Posse with thjs letterhead: ''The Committee To Save Judges From Hanging Even Though They Deserye lt." Re-p. David Obey, 0 -Wis., has referred to the posse as "an extremist group with stormtrooper fantasies." The Milwaukee Journal has called for "constant vigilance against the threat represented by the Posse's bigotry and disrespect for the laws or duly elected, representative government. .. PEOPLE INTERVIEWED IN TIGERTON Dells expressed concern about Posse acCivities . Some suggested that large supplies of ammunition and guns were buried in the woods and that a system of underground bunkers had been built. The group's leaders, who say they are less concemed about speaking out now that a con- servative administration is in Washington, openly identify with hate groups. "The KKK and the Minutemen know what we are talking about," said James Wickstrom, who describes himself as the "new national director of counterinsurgency of the posses or America." He said the po1se has held Jotot paramilitary tralnlna seulona ln the Sierra Nevada mountains or California with the Klan and the Mln~temen .• a 1roup with a philosophy of racllm and n1ht·w•~L polltlcs. Wickstrom said be bu orfered to se':!l them "Green Beret-style" tralnin1 teams he bas or1anlud. Membership numbers are not known. but leadens claim to bave cells in every state butt') Haw~U. with up to 2,000 members ln 13 Wisconsin./\ counties. Wickstrom received. 16,000 votes last ·b year in a run for a U.S. Senate seat fro~(I Wisconsin ; some 2 million votes were cast. 11 Posse Comitatus claims legitimacy from ' English common law that authorized sheriffs to seek assistance from the citizenry. In the ~' American West. the sheriff summoned the posse to r: chase wrongdoers. But modem Posse memben1ll prerer to decide for themselves what is right or wrong. ~o q IN THE OLD WEST IT WA.S always wrong to I• be a cattle rustler or a card cheat, often wrong to ll be a Mexican or an Indian and sometimes wrong,, 1 to be a visitor from the East searching for law anll order. POSSE CHIEF RECRUITS MEMBERS Jame• Wlcketrom heade armed group Taking root in the past decade in the poor scrubJands or northern Wisconsin, the organization ls trying to spread its philosophy of "power to the people" by tax revolt and other activities against state and federal regulations. It is reaching beyond the farmers to a wider audience in the dis· contented middle class. JACK ANDERSON, AN invesUgative reporter for the West Bend <Wis.) News. describes Posse Wickstrom, a Vietnam veteran, 'Said that while his group was "psychologically blended" with such other groups, there were no plans to con· solid ate. For the Posse Comitatus, it is always wrong to 11 be a Jew or an agent for the Bureau of Alcohol.'1 . Tobacco and Firearms, often wrong to be a rent" collector or a county official enforcing zoning reg· ulations and sometimes wrong to be a reporter cstt"ARMED MEN, Page Al4) IS Con11eni.-nt Locc1t1ons Huntington Beach Pacific Coast Hwy So. of Pier Newport Beach 1400 Pacific Coast Hwy ·-------------------------------------.. i Why Are Doctors Recommending The I ! Pritikin Better Health Pr~_gram? I Morr Jno ""0 P onvs J'l.,, .._t'+- 1euwn"·~ni1•nq 1ne • 100 01 0•"' dOO J•le ~IY'P tn 1nQl'S 'P poone••el) W11n lhe Pr·•. e 8Pller HeJ l'l P1oq1dn MP"•tJersn1p y% cdn ll'Ouft rrs> fdCIO•S of hear! O•S .. d~e nvverrensro• l)IJCM'IP< 111C1e,1~P ~rwrqy •nd •llltl•Ov• 1n~ Qu.tl•l v JI you• hie ln~rp d•r oow 110~~ ro ,' r11111 memoe1 Re .ulls u1 • RllA If <;HAW Pr11+'-1f1 P1PU' f'' ~ A<Ou on' t,P ,,.Pre '' J .. ~, n .p<-•Pr w,.,,,. t• ;fl 4.S" Ii,,, '4 rq.;., "10 f10'~ .1'10 flJ I •f IO\I bl! oounn '10,,. 01~ Cl~'" • MARY BROOKS My blOO<l O•~u•e 11 went oown lrom 1401104 10 132/88 I Be101e Pr111111n our grocery bill ave1<1g~ I SlJtwJ.. now 11 s $34/wk I • • ()AVID '> RUSSON 1 nao a I no no•~ nwa 111ori. r vsl lcl;.9L"'11• beJul1lu ! omnl~re onv~•UI ou,.nq ine s .. tn wee~ I 11 lhr cou1 ~t dnO my OOCIDI 1010 me I I now ndve 111e blooo cnen11stry or a I reenJqe1 .ind yel I ani 40 years 010 I • Come 10 the 61J m1nu1e lret I complimentary ltciure lo learn abOul I ine P1111~1n Belle• Healln Piogram 11 Memoe1sn10 flom a Heallh Rpp1e~enldl•ve Our 1ascin.i1111g auOIO I •• ud 11~ adv<1nceo oeyono dny 000~ I vn ine p1ogr am Come oecioe '°' I you•splt M.i1~ your calendar I I • NEWPORT BEACH I lide Marina Yillue 11 &IOg J100 s ...... or 55 r ""! on N•«Port·S to I v,. l~o e~:·s :r~c~, Btdg I WM.. M•~h 4 •• 7:)0 P."" I llllra., Mwch 5 9f 7:J O p.11L I S-.. M•rch I 9f 6:00 p.llL I IOR •FOR•AHOll CAll Jlltl • ., l!ltl tOll(tl l'llll•• l(llU HlAl fl\ "'®U•' I '""'Q•Pd o, l""f' ". '"'""ii eo. a o~ ---~ \ff•ta ~UfSl'f'I 1 ast-. P.o ... .oe:• -.~ OJ..10' .. t \ Qnl~(t 'W)Uf$ J ----------------------------------- The HUNGRY YEARS ... I Rate Effective 3/5/81 15.118°/o · 14.383°/o •J...,_. ..-. rec111ffn • tubll•nl11I lorltohlft '°' H"" "'11\0rowlll Annual Yield • •11 Dnf'C•otl .,.Cl'"'""'-• tu r•rn••n II" cleoOS1l l0< -~ 11111111 """ lnltf"I doe• no! CO~CI on ,,.,. IVll'f ol ""°""' FAR WEST SAVINGS NUNftN9YON llACH 19114 Mognollo At~ AcfCll ftOrn K-Mat NIWPOlf llACH 4001 MoeAnhur 8Nd. Neor JombOrM Read aemng " Calltomlane Slnc• 1111 To offer a growing popu- lace a better place to live, work and play in o ne of California's most desirable environments was a n ambitious dream e nvisioned. in the City's General Pla n . And by combining a genuine affection for the land with thoughtful planning and devefopment, The Irvine Company, the peopll' and City governmcn.t of Irvine are bringing the dream to life. Irvine's growth contin- ues to be carefully guided by two important factors . The City's farsighted , liv- ing General Plan. And concerned res idents from the community, C ity gov- ernment and The Irvi ne Company w h o work to- gether to make it happen. We may not always see eye-to-eye on every d e ta il, but the result has been, and will continue to be, a city that gets better to li ve in every day. The dream is ·continu- ing to come true. Hous- ing, recreatio n, shopping, education, employment. All the things that arc making Irvine a uniquely balanced and dynamic city tlrC born of careful plan- ning. It's a commitment made to the communit\' before the first ground· brl't1ki ng ceremony. A continuing commitnwnl you can see in progress l'Very day. For information on this growing new city, please visi t or ca II Thl' Irvi ne Company Infom1a- ti on Center. Culver Drive exit off San Diego Fwy. (I-405). To corner of Barranca. (714) 551 -1500. Good P.lanning is making the <lream come true. • • • / . ·~ ,;I I f b I I' •I ., : t ,, •I •I' . II .rt '• I tJ Ii !l •.u . . Oranoe COa1t Dalty Pllot/Wednetday, March 4, 1981 . The Treasury is going out of business, and from now until the da we finally close our doors, you'll find fabu ous bargains at all eight Los Angeles area stores! I Shop early, and don't forget our special hours during all clearance events: . MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. SATURDAY: I 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. SUNDAY: -·CLOSED ' ' .. . l ~j•i -z I e . . - ... twtl: 11Ql 81ed\ M •. 0 I NII: 18000 0.. orth 8'. • li I OM: l770 E. CetlDn a • 0..: 100 Qy o.M So. ·' "4«11••: 3&20 ™"a• .... ANl ~ S. .... 8t. • T.,,.•: 8)15 t.....,..rw lhtd. • '#aa•aMI tmi: 21900 Ylcby IMt. ' . . -... • I. • J1 ~~~~~~ -· A • -~-__ _......__,_--.;.;;_ • • • ~._.__..., ---....-..-.~-......_.. ................ -~ ................. . { Orange Cot.at Oally Pllotmedn~ay, March 4, 1981 A9, , I .. *We 're taking 20°10 off every item! Your cashier will deduct the 20°10 from your total purchase before tax. Sale does not include dry cleaning; the dry cleaner will remain open to serve our customers until the day we close . l No limits! .No exchanges or refunds! No rainchecks! All sales final! Shop early for~- ... . . --.... , .. ~ ' . .. . .. , °' ' ... . ' . . . , ... , .... ,; . (,. ~ .. ··' . ~. ; . ' •the .st sel ion! Paper Towels '·- • Alumlnum Foll ........... Jos.eph M. Henrie, re- moVed as chairman of Nuclear R egulatory Com - mission following. Three Mile Island in- cident, h~ been re- appointed to the post by President Reagan. Broker itssessed dmnages SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Superior Court jury has returned verdicts tot a ling $l . l mi I lioQ agains t Union Home Loans, the s tate's la r gest h o me loan brokerage firm, and six other defendants. T~ jury voted 10-2, o n e more t h an necessary, that some principals behind Union Home Loans and three affiliated companies had engaged in a fraudulent civil conspiracy against borrowers involvin g second trust deed loans. A TOTAL OF more t han Sl mi l lion in punitive damages was assessed : -$360,000 against Irv- ing Tuschner, founder and chief official of Union Home Loans. -$108,000 against Union Home Loans. -$60 ,000 agains t Stockton Home Loans, formerly co-owned by T uschner and former state Sen. Alan Short of Stockton. -$105,600 agains t Secured Jnvest.m en t Co rp. -$108,000 agais nt Western Co mputer Services. -$180,000 agains t Joseph Seedman, presi- den t of Union Home Loans a nd Stockton Hom e Loans. -$88,800 aga inst David Marks, president of Western Computer Services. NO DAMAGES were awarded against S hort or defendants Peggy Tom, E s ther Flink. Elinor Tuschner or Los Angeles Title and Abstract Corp. The jury awarded a total of $10,875 in actual · dam ages and interest, and $9-0,000 for •e mo- tional distress for seven individuals. The verdicts were re- turned in consolidated cases on behatr of five Sac ram e nto -area homeowners who had taken out loans going back to the mid-19605. LAWYERS FOR THE plaintiffs said it was the largest verdict in their c o n t i n u i n g c \.u s a d e against Union Horne Loans, but said they have a bout 25 other cases pending. They charged that the defendants. through mis leading te levision advertising and other deceptions, led sone bor - rowers into a financial qoa1mire wbile setting themselves up wit'1 hid· den rolitt. ' Orange Coast Dally Piiot/Wednesday, March 4, 1981 I I NATION SF church leaders fight an#-homOsexual crusade SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Rellatom leaden, trytnr to defuse a drive by rellpou1 fuadamen- taliata to turn people aaalnat bomoaeiu1ale. have decried the camp!Up u a perversion of the teachtnc of Cbriat. "We deplore any attempt to use our common Mritage to divide our society by race, age, creed, color or lifestyle," said the Rev. Edward Mellort, of the San Fran· claco Con/erence on ReU1ion, Race and Social Concerns. The Hnt.imenl was eeboed by ol· 'flcials of the San Francltco Cou.n· ell of Churches, a coalition ol 80 Christian churcbea. Meltort'1 aroup represents Catholic, Protes- tant and Jewish or1anl1&tiona. The council called a news con- ference in reapome to an anti- I .....,,.., ..... 32 oz. SIZl 110 SPECIAL! •GltAllltCC .. t :: #..,.,; .1 ............. -· BAN llOU-ON AmPHSPlllAMT Eftec11"e yet gentle Asst Formulas ,.__Cl __ , 2.••• 1.39 .. SPECIAL! COMBO Plk bomoeexual drive announced lut month by Richard 1'one, a Mon· lerey County minister. •hi> leada a 1roup called In God Wt Tnaat Inc. Zone 1aid some sa mllllon would be used I.ft a media bllb to rou.se the public a1atmt ••Y•· In dlacu11ln1 the eampaicn. Dean Wycoff, of tbe Saata Clara Moral Majority, bad called San Francisco, "the Sodom and Gomor- rah of the United Statea and the armpit of thla perverCed move- ment.'' Wycoff, at one polnt, called tor homosexuality to be considered a capital offense, punlahable by ex- ecution, but later backed off from the statement. T he R ev. Rol and Grumm, s peaklne for the Council of Churches, said his group's goal Ii "not to make a great deal" of the antl-homotexual plan. Noneth•· le11, he wanted the pubUc to know that '1what I preach . . . la not that kind of measaae." Advocatins violence la ''pervert- ing the Goepel of Jesus Chrut, 1' Grumm said, add.in1 lbe council b pa rticularly dis turbed by the ''judgmental" attitude by fun- damentalists toward homosexuals. SAVEsoe McJ\ter Cord Roll-0-Matic MOP 100 CAPSULES 2.41 SPECIAL! SIGNAL MOUTHWASH & GARGLE f1gnts Suong Moulh Odor 40 oz. SIZE 2.49 SPECIAL! AIM ,/ ·' HEAD AD PRICES PREVAIL: Wrings out mP mop Qu•t~l'f ana easily r.~n<ls s1av llr v & cltan TOOTHPASTE • SMAlll'Oe 11 N.. WEDNESDAY MARCH. 4th THRU SATURDAY MARCH. 7th 8.88 • COMM'T'IOMO 11 u. ......, ...... leaves hatr soll shiny and gently manageable 2.43 SAVE •1.00 .74um£ 2.99 or COVU£D WASTE BASKET 12•"• 14"•22" 4.99 .. llOUGHN(Cl Roll -0-Matic Refill 3.29 EUCTRIC 4-CUP HOT POT wtCfl ( .. , ,_ s.-t Safety lock cover & cord sel M~rte of ;i1um1nurn .,.4.59 SCRUB 2 99· ~;. TEXIZE TUB ,_ CLEANERS 24 QT· • ~ • GLASS PLUS a • flNTASTIK NUT & TIDY w1111 T11oger 11 g ..... ~ 32 oz. • u. BUCKET 1 99 .. ·: .. Spraytr 1l QT. • ·SPRAY & WASH 1 39 "-------------'-----------,...---------------22 oz. • SAVE see CURITY --CURAD "OUCH LESS" SMEEll BANDAGES w.99C SAVE70e t''• 3'' 15"• I" 66C 99c OYAl BRAIDED RUG Reversrble tor long wear Ideal lor ~richen den or enlry way PEPTO- BISMOL For upset stomieh rnd1ges1ton nausea ~ H" & llOUSE ~~~~~'RS • :;~~:;~~ s11aps ~··. lu.~ZE 1.39 Sopetlor In design Ind dUftbiltly lUUCM·~ • 11 UIERS ~ ·a~,·3.1 • . on top & bot1om S[lofl 1.19 SPECIAL I = "I.OM Ufl" ~ BATTERIES "C" ., "D" Clll PAIOf2 ltulfr.· •IACH-A._. ~ 1N1 .... 111111-•11f 't & ~;-. .._ ........ '°'*'• YAU.IY -•111111 I • ...., ' S-PIEC£ CORELLE COMPL£TER SET • U lr" ..Umll •I Ql. SlllWIC IOWl • SUGAI! & CllUll(I "2·ST£P" WOODEN STEP STOOL 5.95 SAVE eoc WD-40 IUOSOl LUlltCMT Fi• Sticky Median Isms LOVE UNO SPONGE MOP for eaw 2 99 sanitary mopping . DANDY BROOM Palmyra cenier for long wear 2.49 PYREX WARE 3-PIECE "BAKE. SERVE & STORE" SET •• ..... •l\lt , ... 7 99 • 1 Q .. rt ...,. . Covered Cassne Asst Colors 3 99 1~ QT. • u. BUY 2 & SAVE 34c RENUZIT ..... nfSNENH 1(1lls odora conhnuously. 6.4 oz. TUBE, 1.09 SAVE •1.0& TE GRIN MEDICATED SHAMPOO ORIGINAL or HERBAL 229 •• 66o•~ZE BUY 3 & SAVE 1.37 PEPSODENT TOOTHBRUSHES AOUll NVlON ANACIN Aal1HKTIS 'AIN FOltMUU 1.19 .. TAIUTS SPECIAt.I ' NATION Orange Coaet Dally Pllot/Wedneeday, March 4, 1981 All - Is military r:etirement pay community property? WASHINGTON (AP) -The other states have ruled that U.S. Supreme Court baa been mllltary retirement pay is not. to be aa~" to deelde whether federal dlvtdedtna dlvorce. marrlea·a military man, the wife becomes a part of lhe snllltary aa lf ahe had doaaed a uniform.'' ment pay with anyone. Eytan attempted to draw a dis· tlncUoa between peoaion beoefita and mtlltary reUrement pay. ment pay was tbe te•at equivalent i..._-------.. of a pension -and tbe major en· • . I law pre-empt.I the application ol Two San Francisco lawyers CaUfomla'a community property. ar1ued here ove'r a st-le ruling law tor military retirement pay. \ that allowed a divorced woman to The blah court bu rarely dealt collect baU t.be benenta o! ber ex· wlth divorce iaaues. However , husband's Army retirement pay. courta in six states bave acreed Walter Winter, who represents with Callfornla that there is no Patricia Ann McCarty, told tbe pre-emption, while courta In four court, ''From the moment she Represeatinc Dr. JohnMcCartY. a cardiololiat wbo is aeekint to re· tain his entire retirement pa:y/ at· tornty Mattaniah Eytan ar1ued that those wbo served in the m llltary, some now perhaps "languiahin1 in a nurain1 home," should not have to share retire· "The Army man who ret.lra re- m aina a commiuioned officer," be aaid. "'This la not deferred pay. menta for put aervices, it'• cur- rent pay -reduced pay for re· duced services.'' ... Winter contended that the retire- Ucement for many military f amillea toatick out a JO.yearhltcb. Becauite tbe court ls faced with an interpretation ot federal law, whatever rullnc lt reaches cou.ld be undone by Conaress. Tbe McCartya were divocced ln San Francisco in 1976. IWITllZE 1r 1200n. 2.11 SAVE&Oc ~ ... -· . ·• ~ ~ Cl.AlltOl LOVING CARE COl.OR-t.OTION Washes away only tne gray Ass t Stiades u. SAVE•t .00 STAYFREE llAll rAOS ....... •IUPll •KOIOIMf IOI Of 41 •. 3.95 SAVEsoe YAIDll1 LIQUID SOAP Leaves Sk111 , Silky-Smooth •LAWIJ90 • C9COi\ IUTTD •118T 17.Su. J.89 SAVE30e CUlltOl HERBAL ESSENCE SHAMPOO Normal Oily or Ory SAVE•t.50 KERI LOTION FOi HY SKIN CAil Relrevts dryness and 11cnl119 An1 Formulas ......... '\.• e.r.. 200 SllEm 110 AD PRICES PREY AIL: WEDNESDAY MARCH . 4th THRU SATURDAY MARCH. 7th I LIQUOR BUYS Kamchatka VODKA 750ML. GRAND MARNIER 15 99 LIQUEUR 80 PltOOf -750 ML • SEAGRAM'S 10 99 7 CROWN WHISKRY 80 PIOOf 1.75 LT. • E & J 10 99 BRANDY 80 PROOF 1.75 LT. • 9J.~~~ ·=--.. 2.99 ·CHO• llMC •IOSl t .5 LT. u. PABST ........... BEER WESTClOX 12 oz. CMS 3 49 12-PK. • "BIG BEN " QUARTZMATIC Full luminous dial and hftnas Metallic dial 'nd sweep second Ilana Sohcl slate accuracy (1.-Y "" lrodNell) __ 19.79 .. DIAMANT•• 7 -PIR CR WM.SON "l.oun" YlUOW ALAD SET mr."' DEXATRIM = .. e: Caps111tt & Dlttl'lan TENNIS BALLS . .. I.II SOFT &ORI ~ltSNMT Ass't Formulas WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT! Mo ~ter Cord SAVE 14.00 WOMEN'~ & MEN'S Jogging Suit ·J WITH STllP£S 100'> acrylic soil absorbent knit tor warmth and comtor\ For actrve or leisure wear l -UIGE • l ·SMAU SIZES 4•z. SIZE SAVE &oc Cl.AlltOl s SMALL MIRACLE n. Leec Laltill1 .... c...u.... Reoular 01 htra Body 7•z. Sill SAVE '2.00 ~~_f!_.J ·~ 119 .. ~ SAVE&O~ LADES' Baby Bib BLOUSE Short sleeve pull-on 1n easy cart polyute1 Choose trom many colors sazts S4l Sr own Package rAn•·llATt "WllTt llOS." PENS Blue or Black ggc rAKOf 10 sav••t •70 OS-CAL CM.GUM Supplemtnl wltll Vitamin D CUllOl FINAL NET ......... HAIRNET For lonoer lastmo body and bounce Ass I Formulas l•z. SIZE SAVE&7c POLIO ENT DllfTUll CllMlll POWER CLEANS MTAam 1.99 BUY 2 & SAVE 27e DOVE ..... SOAP Help the Fountain Valley High School Band! 0 ~ They were the only southern California band Invited to play in President Reagan's inaugural parade. This tremendous honor cost the b~d a lot of money. They need your help to pay off the debt. Bring your con- tribution today to Downey Savings Fountain Valley office, 17150 Magnolia Avenue. Downey Savings will contribute matching t unds to the band up to $5 for each person V'ho comes in with a contribution. And we'll give you a free glftl Downey Savings is proud of the Fountain Valley High School Band. We know you are too. Help us help the band. Make your contribution and plck u':.::~ ""glftll S.Ylnp todlJI l '• '\\' .. !I -,· ( /\'.,'I • ) ' I' .. Orange Coat· Dilly PllotJW9dnnday, March 4, 1981 • ii Poverty whips solons .. Test proves welfare mother's point DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - When a stru11Un1 welflre mother chaUented three low• lecislaton to make e nds meet on her Income letel, they a1reed to a montb·lon1 experiment In pov. erty. They were In trouble by All ' three le,.lalat.ors are married, and none has children llvlng at home. fair. For one thin&, the le1lalators already have accumulated clothin1 and household 1oods that a poor family wouldn't h i ve. PUBLIC NOTICE '1CTITtOUI •~Miii NAMll ITATIMeNT Tile loll-"'9 H•Mf'J ... Ml"I .......... IOUTHWOOD LIOUOll, JUO H•,_.. llVf , c:.te ~. Ctllfer11t• ttb• ~·-ltce '· .... .,, ..... "'°' .. A¥• , Vtrte ~llOl'lli• ta.a. S«OI• c;.r,.. Rt*lelltt. 0 7' Lat PIO<tl Aw., Y-1.••. Ctllfornl• .,... Tflll llv\I-Is C-IM llY Ml It\• Olvldv•I. ,,_._,,Solo Thl5 t\414-1 wM fllld wltll ltw County Ctortl of Onn99 Ctullly Oil l'tDr11er., U, 1 .. 1. OBITUARIES PUBLIC NOTICE IU ... •to.t COV•T OP CM.lf'CNlMIA ,. CMc (...a.r OrM .... ----~tl7tl' I MARltlAGC OP: PITITIONllt· LINDA WILLIAMS ltlSl"ONOENT MICHAEL L \11111.1.IAMI IU-CPAMILY I.AWi CAM NUMe•• O.IN1 ... ffO'Tl(91 . .................. ,,.,..,_, .......... .,.. ...... .,.. ..... ...... .................. . .. , ............. _, .... . .. , ................... .. ......., ........... .,.. ...... .. CANARY -Charles KiUlnger's cat is yellow, ·ao this vehicle tag was a simple aelec· tlon. Day Two. Rep. Charles Ponc'r, admitted that he had already 'blown the bud1et a bit" alter buying Sl.64 worth of pastry and spending Mas. COLE TOLD The Auocialed Presa in an interview that her family of four Uve1 on food stamps and $419 a month In Aid to Depeodeflt C hildren payment.a. Her husband la an unemployed factory worker, she But he still thinks it's a good experiment. ''I think she wants all of us to realize what the mother on ADC h as to cope with. She want.a to prove to u s that they're aot living a luxurious life, and they're not," said Poncy. .. , ...... Publl"'9d Or ... CNtt O•lly Pll.i, Ftll. 2S, "'-'· 4, II, II, 1 .. 1 t}NI __ _... _____ _ PUBLIC NOTICE ............................ ........ It..,,..., ....... ._. AVllOI u .............. a' •• ., .... . ......... -......... ill ·-.. -................ . said. • ..... LM .. ...._.IMt ....... . II uai.t .... Mlkll« tt <-Jo .. lnforM•tlon -tllt "Plett of "'' D•Y" It IUl)C>lltCI Dy MIH F ..... ,. •uthor ti IN 1'7' tdltlOft or 11\t "Who'• WllO el l't•-lltH C•llfornl• Lktfltt Platff " $10.36 for groceries. After payin1 his $250 rent, Poncy said he'll have just $135 tor the rest of the month -an average of less than $5 J day for She predicted failure for the legislators. ''I'm reaUy proud that they'Te trying it," Mrs. Cole said. but the task is not easy. "I had to learn how to do It.·' PtCTtTIOUI aUllN•M 1111 ...... 9fl , ... _., • .....,i. MAM9 ITAT•MSNT 1t-c•r1t 1..,,....._tll, de tile Tiie ~ jltf'MN •rt dotftll l'l'l•Mt•, ... ,._... O •1-..<len, 11 lllleln~~ r~ LU B I N V E $ T 0 R S ~::...-, ...... wr '991.trMe 4 SERVICES, IHC. 191 CLVa REALTY t. TO THI RUPONDl!N"T SERVICES, INC tel CLUB REAL Tflt -~ ._ flloo • pelltlor ESTATE SYPPLY. INC. Id) CLUI c0ftctf'11ift9 .,_ 1Nrri..,. 11 YOll lel INVESTMENT Sl!RVICf!S, INC., tollltt,_wlllllnJOO.y•oftht 14140 It.en •• .,., .. Suitt Ill, d•w 111911111• -I• Hr••O or w .. 1m1 ....... COlllD<nl••Ml YOU. v-...... 11 .... ., lie .......... ,.. DEATH NOTICES DORN GERTR UDE DORN . former resident of Brooklyn, New Y~rk Passed away March 3.' 1981 In Cost a Mesa, Ca . S urvived by her sons Alfred Dom. M D and Mur- ray Dorn, d1ughter·in·law Rhea. J sister, l b'rother. 9 g randchildren and 4 great· grandchildren. Services will be held on Thursday. Ma rch S. 1981 at l2:30PM at Pacific View C hapel. Newp o rt Beach. Ca with Rabbi Kang o rf1c1ating Priv ate inter- ment will be in New York. Pacific View Mortuary (j1rt'C· tors THOMAS M ARIE GREGORY THOM AS. resident of Garden Grove, Ca. Passed away on March 2. 1981 after a long ill· ness Survi ved by her duughter Artie Johnson of Corona del Mar. Ca and 2 grandsons J df and David J ohnson . s i s t e r ., R ose Wakefield. J crQ lloy, ard a nd Pegg) J ohnson. 2 brother s Keo Papp etnd Bob Papp Mem orial sen ices y, Ill be held at the Cn .. tal C:;itht·drul ToY.rrs. Garcirn GroH'. Ca on MarchS.1981 a t:! OOPM In lteu or floy,ers the famd~ re quests contnbu11on.., ht• mdcle l o the Amertr<1n C:Jnl·er Soe1el~ DEATHS ELSEWHERE C1\IRO. E.l(ypl 1AP1 Defe nse M1 n1slt'r Ahme d Balla. SJ. a national "'ar hero who fought in all four Arab l s ruel1 l.\ltrS. "'as killed Monday ulong with 13 ranking m1hlary n fftc•er .... whe n lhe11 ht•l1 e optr r crashed in !':Ji) µt i. "'e'>ll'rn desert STANFORD I \P • Paul fo'rancis K('rr. Ill .1 former prt•s1den l or lht• M1ne ralog1cal Soc1l·t~ of Ame rica. died Frida\ Kerr was a ronsultani.: profr.,sor of geolog~ at Stanford ENCINfTAS cAP1 Or. R obert fo:. Kavanaugh, 56. a forme r R oman CatholtC' priest who w;is known for h is books and let·t un'li on coping with dt>ath. d1r cl Saturda~ MADRIU. Spain 1AP1 Mariano Cuadra Medina, who fought on the side of Generalissimo Francisco Franco during t he Spanis h Civil War and later served a s his air force minjster. died Tuesday following a heart attack M A MMOTH LAKES c AP) Christopher Sean Bixby, 6, son of the star of the "Incredible Hulk" TV series. Bill Bixby. died or severe throat anfectioo NEW YORK cAP> Dr R~becca Cralghlll LanceOeld, 86. who m ade m edical hjstory by identify. him and hh wife. Gettings has been gett1n1 Cypress students . "I SUSPECT I WILL run out of money before the month is half out," he predicted. some coaching in dollar-stretching. One w oman who had r ead about the experiment telephoned to offer some "tips on how to cut back." he said. "YOU HEAR ABOUT the person on welfare using their food stamps to buy T -bone ate'aks. It looks to me if they are buying T ·bone steaks, they're eating darn small the rest of the month." Gettings thinks the experiment will give him "a better idea of how hard it is to live, not only on ADC, but also for the elderly people who live on t his much or less. I 'm sure there are people who live on less." GofcM<it.111« Inc., • Otlllornle Ille court mey enter • 1..ogment tOll '-°'*'· 1040 a..cll Blvd., Swlt• l•lnlnQ lnJYnCtlw or othtr ore!«" '°" 111, WtalMIMter. c;.tllornl• tMJ urning dlvklon o1 P<_rt.,, sll!Nu Tiii• ~ 15 CtncllKttd "' • cor •uPOOrt. child cont...,.,, cf\tld su-t -•lion. •110<,.., •-.co.ts, -wen otrwr •• honored Rep. Don Gettings was antlcipating similar problems in tryin1 to support himself and his OodMnl-Rlct Inc. fief .. ""'Y lie ll'•nttO Cir Int CO<KI J-Gododtrd PtoO The o.,nl.,.,,_t o1 w~. t•~tn9 "' O*rnwn moMy 0< P<-1Y, or other CO<K Tiii• •-I wn filed wltfl ltt. 1 •ul"D<lttCI P<OC.-•n~ m•y •IW> n Ctllflty Cltfll tf Or-County °" suit Seven students from wife on the equivalent of $292 the Orange Coast have aDd $100 in food s tamps. achieved an A or better The two Democrats and grade average to be Republican Sen. Sue Yenger, all named to the president's of Ottumwa, agr eed to try living' honors fist for the fall for one month on what they semester at Cypress woul~ qualify for a s welfare College. recipients after Theresa . Cole Local president · s . c hallen_ged . them to experience honors list members in-hard~h1p firs t-hand at a town e lude Marianne Hinz of meetmg. "SHE IS .ELDERLY and on a fixed income and s h e said we could use powdered milk, have Cream of Wheat or oatme al instead of rolls or doughnuts, and more dishes with macaroni and spaghetti and use casserolea to make a pound of hamburger go farther," Gettings said. And the next lime somebody asks him to try a different lifestyle? "I wish they'd give me what a real rich person has and let m e try lo live on that for a month," he said. 1'.Wu.ry IJ. 1 .. 1 OeteCI· Novwnlltr 11, 1'90 '1Wlll LEE A BRANCH Pu•ll.,.... Orenvot co .. 1 0•11Y Piiot, Clot()( · ~tO-11, U , MM 4, LI, 1 .. 1 t• 11 llMrllynn ~rrln PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS IUSIHUS NAME STATEMENT T,,e fOllOwlnQ P•r~on\ ire do1no 0epu1, LINOA WILLIAMS -OakMellfewOrln Y• .... LI .... , Calllonil• Aller,.., '",.,.. p.,. Tel: 1714) tJ .. _ Pulllisha<I OrM10t Coa•I D•1ly Polot Costa Mesa; r.Jonika 0 . Christenson . Ronnie Sue G WC slates Hammond and Linda Kay Wisdom , all of I Fountain Valley, Lynn is es 'tour' Louise Corcoran and A r o u r • w e e k Diana Lynn Donnelly. "armchair tour" along both of Huntington the wilderness trails o f Beach •. and Kathleen Hawaii will begin Fri- T racy Thomas o f day at Golden W est Wes tminster. College in Huntington A total of 28 Orange Beach. coa s t s tudents who The narrative and made straight Bs or bet· s lide presentations will ter w ere named Lo the be offe red in H e alth dean's ho n orlist. Sciences Room 131 , Seal B e ach had 13 fro m 7 to 9 p.m . honorees, inc luding The lecturer will be S uzanne L. Aitken, Shari Robert Smith, author of L . B aron , James G four hiking guides t o t h e Bu ezis, Mitziann islands and a travel Harpe r , S he ri L . Howe, agent who leads tours Robert J . Hurd. Thomas there several times a J Kessler, Debra C . year. M arti n , David R .1 Mi c hae ls. Teresa E . Ni e l s en, Jan C . Robinson , J essamy Rug- gles and The r esa M . Schneider. Huntington Beach had seven Rick A. Dotson. Luci Heryet. Kim Kiesz, John A. Minugh, Elvira A racelia Ri chmond , Dell Smith and Elbert Williams. Costa Mesan John G . Grieman made the list PUBLIC NOTICE ----"CTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATaMINT The IOll-lnQ 11trsons •r • 001n9 llusineun. ( 1) MICRO 0, 171 MIC RO DIMENSIONS, 1•12 Croooy Wty, S.n· ta An•. <:.iltoml• t1704. Mlc111 OOtrl!Kltor• CC•l11prnl• cor-PO••tl°"I• 2•12 CrOCICly W•y, s.,11a Ana, C•lltarr1i. '2104. This~ Is Conchlcltd by . ((W• PO••tlOft MICRO DISTRIBUTORS l.or•a!M Mecu, Presto.nt Tiii> sui.-t w•> fllecl wllh t ... Counly Clerk of 0•.,,99 C°""IY on Ftb t.1 .. 1 too, along with Hubert PubttsNCI 0r-. eo.st 0•1~;•:::0~ Lam mot Johnson of Fe11 n.11.u ,Mar 4.1 .. 1 , ..... Fountain Valley, and rive from W estmin ster . Mic hael E. Damore. Linda M . Hallett , Phuong Ngoc Nguyen, Terrence L . Stark and Brenda R. Wimbis h. Bride photo classes set A s ix -sessio n workshop on wedding photography will begin Friday at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. Classes will be held from 6:30 to 8 :30 p.m. in Fine Arts Room 217. Registration fee is $25 and e nrollment is limited. PUBLIC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUS IUSINIH NAME STATEMINT The IOllowlno 11tr1Gns •re C1oln9 bUslneu ••· R M 0. DISTRIBUTORS, llOU 8H Ch BlvCI . HuntlnQIOft Bte<h '7M7 Mlc,,_t O•l~trCI, llS7 uur• Cl•· c le, Huntlft9ton Bu ch, Calllo•nla ,,. .. Reymond J Melll ... um, S2U Ap P••n W•y, Lonv Buch, Calllor,.lt 9080J This business I• conducttCI by • llmlleCI 11trlnlt(shlp Mlc,,_I Dtt~•rCI Tllis SW-I WH filed with ll'le County Cle•k of D•Mll!e Countv on FeDruu y t, 1 .. 1 FISMll Publtlhtd Or~ CO<ISI D•lly Piiot, FtO. 11, '' U, Mltr. •. 19'1 ISi.fi r - PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI aUSINUS NAME STATaMSMT Tiit 1011-•no .,.,'°"' .,. ootno bUJlntu•. CINCINNATI KIDS, 17'1 Newport BOllltv.,d, Otlltarn•• n.17 Lino. Rutll Hempltlll. Ull Vlc-ID<le Ori ... i....-&tecll, C.lllcwnlt '76SI Tips or no lips, Poncy doesn't think the experiment is entirely PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE '1CTITIOUS IUSINISS flCTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI STATIMINT HAMI STATEMENT Tll• lo1towin9 per50ns ••• do1n9 Tll• foll-lnQ pe"°" 15 doln9 bUU· t>\liln•'' •• nen ., EAGLE MANAGEMENT COM· p AC L AN T I C CO A S T PANY, 31141 P•wo Alto Pl-. s.n OISTR1 1UTERS, IOt AU>en L•nt, J.,.n Caplstr-. C•tttornt• t~IS. Cosl• M•~. C..hl0<nl• t1'77 Cll.,IU O•en 8ennell, JllO G•ry M. ~1n1, 109 A'!>•n L•nt, P•sto Alto Pl•no. S•n Ju•n cosl•Mew.C•ht0<n1•'7•71 C•P"''-· C•lll0<nl• 92111S Tllll bUIJnns ,, con<lucteo b• •n 1n C••Olyn Ruu. B ...... 11. Jll'I Paseo CltYICluel Ano Pl•no, S.•n Ju•n C•P•strano. c;.,.., M ~nc1n1 C•l1forn1-9"1S T 111s •l•le_,,t .,., lo ltd witn IM T lllS llU"'IMU .. conCluct•CI Cly • Count• Clerk of O•MIQot co .. n1, on 9ener•I ~":;:';;'PBenMll M•rtn 2, 19'1 Fl5Hll CMolyn R. Bennett Publl\ha<I Or-Co .. t D•lly Piiot This •tel-I w .. filed •ii" UM M•rC11 4, 11, 11, H , ltll 10-o.ti County Cl••k of 0••1199 COllnty on M•rc,.2, 1 .. 1 FtU.17 Pulltl\ha<I OrMIQot Cou1 O•••Y Pilot, M•rcll 4, 11, 11, lS, , .. , IOIS-11 PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS aUSINIUS NAME STATEMENT Tne fOll-lftll per"°" ls 001n9 bUSI· neu •s. (•) BROCKMAN INVEST MENT C O I ll ) 41\1 STRE!!T PUBLISHING CO. !)) FRANK SPAGUCHI . P.O. B<lx 23SS, 122 4h t Street, Newport Buch. C•lllornl• .,..., Ro!Mrl L. Brc><ltm•n. 122 4tst Strul, Newporl Buch Cellfornl• .,..., . Tll~ buSlneu I• Conducled Cly ... In· Olvlctu•I. Roe.rt L. 9r0Clt....,, Tiiis ,..._, WM filed wtlfl tllt County Cltn of Oun~ County °" Ft~v•ry 23, ltll Ft"421 Pu~I-Or-C.O.sl Oalty Piiot. Feb. JS, MM. 4, II, 11, 1 .. 1 9'0-tl PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUllNEH NAME STATEMENT Tiit 1o1•-1no per'.IOl't I• doln9 bU•I nen .,: UROANETA'S ORIENTAL FOOO MART , UlS Mew Verde Drive E .. 1. "104, Cosi.t Mew, C•llfornl• •U,., Oe•lco L R..,_l•. soi. S.q..ol• Avtn .... Cypren, C•lllO<'nl• -JO. Thi• .,..,,,." 11 conducltd llY •n In· OlvlCIUt l. Oeflto L. R•INl• Thi• 1w1-1 w .. llltd wlln tne County Cl.,k of Or-C011nty on M•rcl\ l, 1 .. 1. ,.,._ Pullll•ned Or-. Co .. t D•lly Pilot, M•rch 4, 11, 11. 25, 1 .. 1 1010-11 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS aUSlNaSS NAMa ITAT•MaNT T"• to11owtn9 ...,-50n• ••• 001n buunns •s INTERNATIONAL HOT 00 COMPAN Y, 011 8lr<1• Street. NtwPOrt &.Kh, Callloml• tlMO Steven C Tnomp1on, UU !;::"•· Mission V)ejo, C•hlornl• PICTITIOUS IUllNESS--R obln L T llomp•on, 2121 PUBLIC NOTICE bu\lntt\ a\ THE QUEEN'S QUIL L, 600 A West 19th Slrnt, Co•I• M•u. C•lllornl• '76?7 l•n Holmes V•nce, IU El\I bin Ftb 11, H , Mar 4, 11, 1'111 I•& I P UBLIC NOTICE Street, StnlaAna, Cahlornla '1101 FICTITIOUS •USINESS Nano Sue Vence. 17• EHi ••n NAME STATEMENT Sir et I, ~nit Ana, Callfo•n•• 97101 The lollow•no Pf't\00 '' ooon9 bUso Thi\ buslneu IS CondOChHI Oy •n tn ntt\\ ., FICTITIOUS IUSINEU CllvoCIU•I I 1 I u N I T E 0 s T A r E s NAMESTATEMENT N•MtS Vence ENGtNEERING ANO RESEARCH T"o tollowlnQ per'.IOl't Is Cloin9 buSI· Thi• sttltmMI was lllt<J ••In 11'1e 9'1 U S E R, 31l0 !> M•1n Str•tl : l8 nt u ts Counly Clerk of Or..,Q<t Count~ on B Sanl• AM, Ca htornoa 91101 CJ M PROOUCTS, 1567 L1rtnorn Fobruery U , l .. l Fl~U !>rro~~,,~~:. ~~n~n!?~a~,1~~:: ~rive, Hunllnoton Bee<h, Cehlornoa Pullll\ha<I Or-Coo t O••IY P1101 91101 ~h•rlu JOHP" McP"u ISU I l'eb 25 Mar 4, 11, 11 1 .. 1 8&611 Tno\ l>u\1,,_U o\ conoutl•a by an on L•rlhorn Ori¥•. Hunhngton e••<h, 0'"•0ucllCarroh R Pt,-11.in\ '·~~orn•• .,... ·-ab P U BLIC NOTICE rn., "••emenr ... , 111eo ... ,n ,,,e 1\ OU\•nns" <onc:IUC1C 'f •n m tount1 C••''--of Or M'tOt' C.ounty on CloYICIUelC J M<-l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS M•rc" > l'ftl Thll '1•te_,,t wa• ltled w1tll Ille NAME STATEMENT FUO?O PuOti\twci Orttnoe C.cw!iit D•11., P 1101. County C1tr~ of Or•nve Counh "" Tho loll-•"9 per'°"'' OO•nQ bUs• Mutn • 11 18 H '"' 1047 11 M•rth l, 1 .. 1 MH •• FIS6tlt ENERGY BREAK ~H F•,,lu Pt.1Dli\PWO OrM\911 Co.st D•1ty Pilot. 8u1101nq, •14, Cost• Mf'\l•, C•litorn1• P UBUC NOTICE March •. II, II. >S, 1'111 11»'·11 '701 ECl w••d Geor9e Bruer ~H PUBLIC NOTICE "•"'•• B ... olOOnQ :14 Cost• M... STATEMENT OF A•AHOONMENT Calllorn1• '7071 OF USE OF --------Thos b'"""''' "conduClecl Dt .tn on FICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME FICTITIOUS •USIHESS ClovlOull The 1011°"''"9 Pl'fS<>n\ havt ab•n NAME STATEMENT EClw•rCI ~ Bruo doneo 1he ""' ol rne lot It loo"' Dusorwu Tiit lollowlft9 person " dolr19 t>us• Tll•• •l•l•-"I "'"' ••lea .. 11n tl'le r1emt neH o Coumnty , .. , .. Of Or""~ (O\lnly On THE MAIL ROOM, 7600 E (OUI PELICAN ENTERPRtZES, '10 Ftll•u•r-,U, 1'111 HoQhwey, (O<ON Otl M<ir, C•hto1n1• Ath o, Newport Buch, C••llorn1a F 1~1• 97US T"" F1t1o1lo1A Bu\1t>tU N..omt t2 .. l P"llll\hed Of•"9fl Cot\! Oa•lv Po101. reltrr•O ro •llOve .,., r.teo on Or .ln9t W•ll••m R R•ll••. • 10 Aluo,. Fell H , M .. 4, 11, II, 1'111 H9 81 COVrlly on July 1'. 1990 Newport Buell, Celltornl• 97''3. · HnCI• L.orr • • n• Horn•, 1b01 Thi• b<nln~s I• COft<hiCltd by •non PUBLIC NOTICE But Uvt Strtol N•wporl B••' n dlvlC11,1al (alolornoa '11~ Wlltl•m R Ritter FICTITICXI$ IUSINEH ~ Roller! Loht Hornt, 1&01 Bu<lt.tYt Tiii• si.tl•mtnl wa\ ltled "'Ith lne NAME STATEMENT !>lrttl, Ntwpo'1 B .. th (alolornoa County Clult. ol Or""llP County on The 1011owln9 pe,.on• a•• C101nv ?1b&O • Mer(h 2. '"' bu'I"''' ., This OU\tn .. \S ... \ tOrHhK tf'd by d F1$6f)I VA L MOLO COMPAN Y, 010 omlltdl>Mlner\hlp PuDllSIWd o.-. CO<lsl O•oly Pilot, Knoll A,,.,,u., Sull• G, Buent P•r1t., Jen<U L HD<nt Maren•. 11. 11. JS, 1 .. 1 ffl.11 C•lllornl• ~11 T hO\ \la1.-n1 w•• fooeo worn tlw -------M iChMI L V•IPn<te, JO'itPhlrw L County Cltrll, Of Or.tnQf' (oyn1y on V•loncl•, l1:Jl l(lttyb<oolt., Costa Mr-.. Feo 10 "''' PUBLIC NQTICE ~ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME STATEMENT Tn• 1o11-1n9 "'""" Ii -n9 """ neu •, APOLLO CHEM GLASS. HOI S. S 1c•more~ S•nt• An•. C•ttforn•• '7707 D•I• Phdtlp B••n. n o1 s Sycamore. Sent• An•. C•lllornl• '1101 C•lllornl• tli~ ThfS buitMH is ConduCled by •n 1n d•vldu•I C ,,..._., "'olrl Joset>fll,,. L V•ltnct• TM'i statf'"""'I ••S fflto wUPt the Counly Cl•rk of O•Ml9t Counly on Ftll t, 1t•1 FUS41t FUUU Pubh\hed Or•"9i' C-o.a\t D•1ty P11ot. F~ll H. ~rch 4 11 II. 1 .. 1 011 SI I P U BLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS BUSINESS HAME STATEMENT Pullh•ha<I °'"""'* CCN" D•lly Pilot The 1011-,119 .,..,..,,, ,, ooonq b"" Fell 11 , ti, JS. ~rcn • 1'111 .. , 11 non "' NAME STATEMENT h •btll•. Min ion Vlt to, C•lllorni Tiit lollowlnQ persons ue doln9 tUt2 J•cquelyn Ann 8un. 2901 S !Kllineues· Syc•more, S•nta An•, C1111orr11a 1 P U BLIC NOTICE us HEAT rREAf SER VICE '"' S••t., Aonnw. Hunt•ooton B••<h C•1tlorn1a '11>'1 Lor Ronno L 0 Nflll, U90 Tro, ... H y p 0 G L y c E M I A Tn1• l>U\l..u I• cono..cttd by In t2107 MANAGEMENT CONSULTANTS. w CltYIClu•I• CH-..0 & Wiit) I This 11 .. 11neu •• conClutleCI by • Oo•tr Orlw, Suia. 10. Newpor1 BHcn, Sa....., C T,,.,.,,.._. 9ener•I PM'lne"lltp. C•llltrnl• ""1 Tll•s \let-1 •n filed wllll lflt o.re P. Be•n Wllllwn E Whtie ~12 Vie S.n Counly Clerlt of 0••"99 COllrll., on Thh '1•1tmenl ••• 11100 will! the S.!Nllf•n ~Ni~ C•llfomla !Merell 2, 1 .. 1 Counly Cltrk o• Or•n11e County on ' • I ~IS6ttt Merell 2 1 .. 1 JuCllllt N. Mtlltofr. 1'SO-l6th Pullll-Or~ C-o.st Dell Piiot • 1"1S6t2t :;::l~t, NtwPOrt BHclt, C•lllornle M.,.-c,. 4, 11, 11, U, 1 .. 1 y1oa.ti Pulltl•neo 0ren91' Cot>I D•llY Polo!, LlnCI• l>lasllell, 411 E 16111 Street, M.,ch 4, 11. 11, 1S, 1 .. 1 1021.f1 Newport a..cn. C•llfoml• 9U4l. PUBLIC NOTICE ----Wllll•m E. White, Ph,0. Tiiis Sl•t-t •H filed wllll the Cou,.ty Cl.rt.. of Or""'Ole County on FeD.t . 1 .. 1. PIU475 Publl•lle<I 0rMl91' Cot•I Oelty Piiot, FeD 11, 11, u . Mare n 4, 1 .. 1 611·11 FICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI STATIMaNT The lollowlno PtrM>ns •rt oolnv bV\IMll ai CONSIGN DESIGN, IS01 WHtclllf Or 1••. Sultr 102. NtwPOrl Buch, C•hlornlt n..o PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T II• IOli-ln9 perM>n Is doln9 bUSI· n•H •1. J.O. CLIPP1NG SERVICE. 1.-,, LOeslClo L•ne. H"nllngton Buen, C•ll lorni. '7MI ~ICTITIOUS IUSINEIS C"clt. HunltnQlon Betch C1111orn1• NAME STATEMENT ti.41 Th• lollO#lnQ Ptrsons ••• _"9 1 Th i< bU•lfltt• •• conovt ••a Cly •n '" bu•in•s1 •• Otv10u•f (I) XENON 111 XENON LO< R•nna L 0 Nr1ll AMUSEMENT GAMES. 4l0 Rl .. ,.lcl« Thi• stat•mMt w.s fol~ wilh fl'le Annut, Newport Bee<h '7643 County Cl••' ot O•.on11t CounlY on Joe V•llcJo, 430 Riverside Avt,.ut, Ft1> t, 1'111 • Newpart Bee<,., C1lllornl• ,,.., 00119 81e<kbUrn, C•phtr..,o BHCh, C•lltoml• Tiii• bullntu h conelucl•CI bv • 111ner•I pertn..-.nlp. Joe Vtlkjo This sl•l...,_I we• lllto .. 1111 tlw County Cltrk Of Or•nO<t COllnly on F•b•u•ry ll, t .. l 1'1SM11 PuDilshtd Of-CCNst Oelty Piiot, Fob. 11, lS, Mar. 4, 11, 1 .. 1 IM>lt JOSEl'H II. DAVIS JAMES M. PICHETTE Attorneys •t L.tw UtO Ha.-.... l••arCI, Sutl• lll C.sta Motw, C.ollfomj• UU• Pvllll>ntcl °'""llP Coa'1 Oally Piiot, Feb ti, 11,1S,M•rch4, l'll1 1SS81 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTtTtOUS IUSINISS NAME STATEMEN"T M•rJor11 E EClw•rCls, 2U1 C•HIYoew, N __ , BH<h, Ct lll0<nl• '7..0 TtrHe M S<MllOft. 11111) A~tt, B•lllo• hlenCI, N1wpor1 Buell, C•lilcwnl•~ RontlCI J . Deen, ,_.,, LO•Slde • Lant. HunllftlllOft Be.ch, C•lllornl• •2M1 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT r hf •ot1ow.n9 Pf>f\Oft\ cHf' Co•ru tk.t\•f\of\S4\ BEST MA RICETI NG AS SOCI AfES, IJOb L09an Ave"~-Cos!• Mt~. C•lllomo• 92626 The followln9 P"'°"' •re C1oln9 CluJlntu ... PLA!fNEO ENERGY INTERNATIONAL, 02 Prospect Strul, NewPOrt BHcn, C•fllornl• '2..0. Pl•nntCI Ener9y Investments, I ,.c . • C•llforol• co•poraliOl'I. •n Prospt<t StrHI, Ne•port B••t h. C•lll«ni• '71WO. Tllh buslntu Is conoucl1CI by • VtntrelpertlWrsfllp f!MrJcwlt E Eow.,ds Thi• l>u$lnt» •s '-..Cr.Cl by.,, In CllYIClu•t. R-ICIO.MI This •i.-1 w., flied •ot" tllt County Crerlt of Or•"9f C011nt., on M•rc111, 1•1 TlllJ ~-I wM 111.0 with lilt C..unty C1tri.. Of 0r•"9t County .., ~lttfU Pl ... 16 PftlW.. OrMllt ca.st D•Uy PIW, Mer<lll, 1 .. 1. Pullll"*' 0r-. c-t O•lly Piiot, ~II 4, 11, 11, ». ltl1 l.a-tt M41rch 4, II, ti, U, 19'1 loa..tl ----- PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMI STATIMINT The IOllowl119 per'°" h ClolnQ bUSI ~, .. HARllOR EQUIPMENT CO , lln MtH Orlvt, St nt• An• HelOllU, Cellfon1le m21 Jolln Sl•Clner Gre110•.,, llll CrHhlew Drive. Ne•PO•I B••<h. Callf0<nl• '161.J Thi. ~> ll Condu<leCI by.., tn dlvlctu.I. JoMcntory Tiiis 51•1-I WH tllto wllh I ... Annur C P••toc~ Sr i.01 Welcen•m P••ct S1nC..t •n a C•l1lorn1• '7704 w 1u1em w 8•rnc111. 20 G,•nc:t 4v•"ut AQt s Lono IW.cn. C•hfornt• IOOOJ ™""'' G Fu19hum, un1 PPrcn SrrH1, o-Pooni, C•hlorn•• 92629 T PU\ \,\lt~t WI\ ftl.O with UW Counly Cl•rk or Or•noe Coontr on Feb 1 1 .. 1 F1S4 ... mg t ypes or s treptococcal On bact eria chiefly responsible honor roll Vl•9lnl• •••ncn.,o, 112 LOI Mollnos, S.n Cltmenlt, C•ll lornle .,,,, Thll bUsl,_st I• CondVCltd lly • cientr•l --Ip. Llnm R. HM\j>llll1 Pt.ANNEO ENERGY INVESTMENTS, INC. Blltlt Jolson, "'eMOenl Tiiis __ , w• 111.0 with Ille County ,,., .. of Or•fl99 C011nty on M••<ll 1, 1 .. 1. PICTITIOUS IUS1••S1 NAMI ITAT•MSNT Tiie lollo-#lng --I• Clol"9 Ml· "CTITIOUS IUllNEH NAMI STATEMRT The lollowln9 ,,.''°"' art C1oln9 bUslntu•s County Cltflt or Or•no-County or1 Ftb. 23, 1'11 FISt«J P\iblli.Nd OrMOO Cota! D•lty Piiot, Pulllllned Or•nQe Cot\I D••IY Piiot, F OD 4, II II, 2S 1'91 S2M I for diseases tn humans. died Tuesday Scott Wilson of Foun· :;;;:::;=====;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:--, ta in \'alley has been Tiiis •wt-• WM Ill ... will\ '"' County C1tri.. ol Ortn99 C011nty °" F.i1. 20. 1tll HAlllOlt LAWH-MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cen-etery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5-40-5554 ..... Cl .. OTHHS 1&.L•OAOWAY MOllTUAaY , 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 1141.TZ& .... OM IMl'nf & TVTHllU WISTCLW CHANL 4V E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 ~monms u.nn'MOnUAAY 627Meln St. Hunhnqton Beach S36-6539 named to the honor roll at P acific Christian College in FuJlerton for the fall semester. Neat.me Society C'flMAn&.i 9-lAT 646-7431 ., .. , ...... --· --.. ... , ..... _ .......... _, ---------c.1 ....... ...- "~ Pu1111.-Or.,,._ C.O.sl D•lly Piiot, FtO. JS, Mllr<ll 4, 11, ti, 1 .. 1 lti-tl PUBUC N011CE Pl(TITIOUI au I H NAM• STAT•M•NT Tiit 1011 .... 1no person• .,, dol,,. ll\lttneu•: DANA CASTANO, lMOO M411n st: •270, HUfttlnvt°" a..ch, C•lllOl'ftl• Mlt..ey Lone. 1009t siwrr-. Foun· t•ln V•lley, C•lltomta, ED•Clol•h E•lltellerdl, 10JU •I, LosAntetos, <:.ilfornt• llt'"9. OMoAllt. MIU R. Frott, 10j0 ttll SlrMI, l!tc...ol*, c.llltnll•. l t--------------1 Tiiis "'*'-8 11 ~°""""'"Dy.., "'1• Flowers sar everything you can't. lncor,., .... •todotl., otl>tf t1141n • tN•t.n.•llllp. MllltyWl!f Tfllt _,... .... Hied •111\ tllt ct1111tr Ctet• ot °'.,.. Gtolfltr .n FM,t, '"'· .. , ..... PvMl"1ed 0r-. CMtt D•lt' Pllel, F.._ tt, II. U. Mwcl14, 1"1 .,...., PtJBUC NOTICE llHOOES, ic:ENOALL ~ HAR · RI HG TOH A PROFESSIONA L L AW CORPORATION 42" M.cAttflur 8oule.,.rd, Suite IOS Ntwpott BN<ll, C•lltoml• tl!MO Put>llsned 0r..,.. eo.11 D.rty Piiot, Muell 4, 11, 11. u . ttll 10ll-tt PUBLIC NOTICE n•n•.s • I NSTITUTE OP HOLIST IC PSYCHOLOGY, UOO trvlnt 8oultv«d, lffwpor1 hech, C..lllomle t2701. Rlt• M. Unlm•n. 446 Hoity, L•QUl'le 8Mch, C•lltoml• fMSI Thi• tMNneu I•~ Dy en In· CllYidual, Rlt.M.Unlm.n This s~ • ., llleo wltll the County Cltr11 or Orenot Count, on Merch 1, 1 .. 1. PU•ttt PuDllJNd 0r-.. CMst D .. 1., Pilot, M .. cn 4, 11, II, u. 1 .. 1 !Ok-at PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUMM•U NAM• STAT•MSMT KITCHEN SAVER OF ORANGE CO UNTY, 7701 G•rCltn Grove Bo1,1lt .. rC1. Unit C, Gerdefl Grove, CtlllOl't1I• '1641 Ton., Ft ... r. 79 Gr•nl, Irvine, C•llfornl• '2714. Rl<IM!nl J, BrtnMn, U2'1 B•r,.11 w..,, G..-dln ~o .. , Celllcwnl• t2643. Thi• l>vlintn h conelucttd Dy • 9ener•I pertnt"l'llp. TonyF,.., Rlcllltrd J. 8renMn Tlllt Sia-I WU flleCI With tlle County Cle•k of Or•1199 Count., on M41rclt 1. ttll. '1'6f24 PulllilMCI Or ..... Cont Dally Piiot, M4lrc1t 4, 11, 11, u , 1"1 1 I-ti PUBLIC NOTICE Tll• toll-Ing --• •re doln1 M'1m bUslntu•: PICTITIOUSaUMNISS GILES, STEWART AHO NAMllSTAT•MUfT BAltNITT. ATTORNIYS AT LAW, Tiit lol1ewiftt --" •r• doing 11Ut lrvlne aoultv•rd. Tw•lln, bUJlfteu•: C•fllcwni.-. H 6 H INVEST•ENTS, LTD .. TtrfY M. GllH, 1212 l'Hc•O 124'4 Hof .. r ltule11orf, 0 ., .. " Ori 11t, S.. AM, C .. '"""° t17tS. O,...,e, Callfenllo n..., \111111'-W, ...,..,,. _. 0..0.. J•-HelomM, 11""4 Hu'l>or Ori .... C•ltO MOM, Caflforftl• •au. ....,.v ... 0-... o ..... C.lllorni• J-D. IMNn, 1 .. RI""* "'4t. Oflllt, S.UAM, Gotl*'11•'2*. JI"' H ..... 11. IUU H••llor TocN A. ~ •.. 1 &. IMll ........ .,._ 0-W ~. Qtllfeml• P1«•,C-.... ~..a1. t2MO. Tfllt 111111-It ~~--llr • Tfllt INMMH It <tllflkl911 llr • .. MHI ,ettN!.... llmltff ,.,,,., .... lef'fY M. Gllot Jim HeW1tt Tlllt ... ..,,..,. ... lllM wltll W. Tfllt .....,_ -Ill• Wllll 11\t Co;;11ty Clffll ef OtMet c-ty .., Ct1111ly Cletll Of Otlfl99 C:Wftly .n M41r<fl l. '"'· Morell a. IWt, ,,,... . ..... Pu•ll ..... °' ...... CMM o ... , "'"'· ""'II'"" Or•lltt Ct1111tv D•llr Marth~ ti, 11. U. ltll 1-..1 l'tlet, Mttell 4. 11. II. ts, ttll 1 ..... 1 PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI H1t••U-_,. ,TATIM9.., Tflt ......... ,......lt~--· -:~v .. a LAHdff ANO Al· SOC:IATH, PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI •uttM•M NAMSITATIMaffT Tiii ........... '"""'1 11 fOlllt WW. ....... , IUNOANC:I 1.ANOICAl"I Feb. U, llMrch •. 11. II, 1 .. 1 OS-ti PUBLIC NOTICE '1CTITIOUlaUltN•IS -NAMSITATl'M•NT TWt totlowlfll....,.. I• Cloln9 -I· MUH: SEA Vlf!W COHSTRVCTIOH, JISI llrcfl Slrwt. Sllllt '10, NtwpOrl '"ell, c.tlfonite t-..o Rici! •.,w11. JOOS YKltl Vlnde•. Nt..._t 9Ncll, COllfomla t2MO Thi• .....,..., Is <onducltd by an In· 191111du•I. Rklt 1.,.,. Tflll ...__, w• 111.0 wltfl Ille County Cltrk of OrttlQe County on '*"•"' 1i. , .. , . ~IUGI PvbtlMOO Or .... CMsl Ool1y Piiot, ~ell. 11. ts, MM.•• 11, 1 .. 1 UWI PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE N·llUI ~ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME STATIMl!NT Tht loll-1119 person I\ doln9 t>ual M~' II HUNSAKER OEVELOPMENT COMPANY. 117'1 Mttcholl, lrv1111t C•lllornlt '77U Rlctwrd C. Hunwller. lSl1 Oc:Mn Blvd . Coron• 0.1 Mtr, C•tofornl• nus Thia bu\lneu Is conouct.tc Cly an In dlvidutl. RlclWrCI C Huns•ke• Thll ll•ltmenl WllS llltO wjlh Ille C011n t., Cltrk of Orenll@ Coul)tY on re11ru•ry 19, 19'1 '1U1SJ Pullll"*' Or-co .. t Oally Pilot, FtO U, f!Mr •• 11,11, 1 .. 1 tis.II PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSIN•H PICT•nous IUst••H NAMa ITAT•M•MT NAMa ITATUMINT Tflt IOll-'nt """"" Is ~ t..111 Tht loltewlng --• ort dol11 "'" ••: -Dutlftffses: EXCEPTIONAL PATTERNS IN ROAD'S END, INO NtWPO•I FAaRIC, 1611 wtill• O.k. Cosl• MeM, a1vo .. ~Mt ... c.111on1u ,,.,. Cotlrorn!. .,.., DMllll R ltlloefM. uo .... 'Vernt ..... I ....... t•n Wl>lt• O.•. AllO., L ..... II. Cilllfel'lllt ~ Cott• MoMo c.lllflrN• t~ P•lfttt. ,.,......,, 1'9 u VerM Tfllt ....,_ I• ConcN<'ltO Dy en '"' AW't .. 1..,.. ...... (4!1ii.mo toeoa 411w!f11411. • 1'111t ---It t~ llY en lt1 Cllttl ........ Olvldu•I. Tlllt ,.....,,.... ...., .. Ill• wltfl lllf o.w.t "· ,...._, c-ty c:1w11 of o.-.. C:CNnty on Tiiis ......_, •• fllef 11111111 IM ,. .... t. t•t. C:Olit\lr C:l9nl of Otat119t c-1, 9fl ,.,...,. '•Wllef'Y 11, "'1, 1"11 .. ltl!MI 0t-.. CooM Oetfy Plitt. PH'1• , ... lt, 1a, H, IMl'tfl 4, 1'11 1s..t• • P .. 1111.,.. Or11199 t..t Oolly Plltt, ...J.-~•. u , MM. 4. u , 11. '"' •PH1 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE CONSUMER l.-.J- OIWI J.loe_..,._, _,...._ "Mr. Wllaton aaya he admi,.. people who roller...Ute to work, but you're not to wear kneepad& ln the office." DEAR PAT DUNN : I just bought a smootb·top range with a ceramic surface that cootainathe heating elements. How do I keep it looking new? I'm worried that it may become discolored with use. J .E.,LagunaBeach Tbe AHoclat.loa of Rome Appllaace Maaafactarera advised ula1 tlae 1peclflc cleaalag a1et1t ud meu.ed rftOmmnded lty tbe m aaafactver. Clea• after eacJa ase. Do Ht ••e a metalilc cleHlal pad. Wipe cleulq materials off die aarface before ui.1 tlae raa1e mJess lastracUou HY o&llerwlae. Aho, apllla, spatters or waler drepleU from steam should be wiped •P quickly. Baned... aoll may reqalre 1eat1e scrapbl1 ~ a rasor blade. Avoid abrutve cleaaers. Doll't aae strong caaatlc materials aacll as clllorlae bleach, dry-cleaalal Ouida or oven cleaaen. lie tare cook lag uteulla are clean ucl free ot blU'U aed bumps ud avoid as1D1 soft metal ateulla. Keep salt, dirt, saad or otlter forelc• sabstaaces from betweea Ute Atface element aad theateaaib. Don't me food releaae apraya wltlclt snay bara oa, aad doll'& coot directly oa tbe aarface. Commercial folJ eo11tal8ers or ~r tltla foll wrappers may melt If placed directly on tile llot surface aad clolt't let ateulla "coot dry" alace tbls maydamageor crack the ceramic aarface. 't'"etltlt Corp• data ..,.,.,,,. DEAR PAT DUNN : Where can I get information about the Youth Conservation Corps? D.B.,Balboa WrUe to tile Office of Peraoaael Mana,emeat, Federal Job laformau.- Ceater, MS S. Fliveroa, 1.-Aacelea ...... If yoa wu& to apply for a Job wit.It tile Y oat.II Conservation Corps, tile Job blormatlo• Ceater advlses you to plMee (ZlJ) 188·3* every coaple of weeks. No cleftaKe dale co.Id be set for whee -or even lf -appllcatlou will be nallableattbe Loi "-•elesofftce. nm re ••• ., •• DEAR PAT DUNN : There's a white film on my ceramic crackpot liner. How can l remove it without scratcbin1 the surface of the liner? W.H., Fountain Valley 1109& ftlma oa laud nrfafttl eu M re· mMed after Nakia& 18 a mlN add Ml•doa, aaclt u llall Ybletar·ltalf water. fw aenral ltoara, fol&twed by aeouUI wMlt a pluUe meslt pad (die klM ~ fer .... •tick amfaea). Or, , .. eu try ses&&e Hem· lat •Ida a .._.elilohl eh..., pewder alxed wit.It water. Uatag a 1talaleu-Meel cleaaer or powdered nait remover prochlct also cH soln dda problem. Sdtda •a"n narrn DEAR PAT DUNN : How much electricity can I save by using fluorescent lights rather than incandescent bulbs? W.J .,Irvine Fl•rescft& lamps Hneledrtcty becaue &bey provide more ll&llt per wa&& U••• 18calldesftlll btllba. For example, a •·watt naorffCe9&lamp elves .n •.._as <•euve of UP&> per watt ud a •·watt 18eaadeaeem& btalb civet oft 09ly H . 7 l••eM per w~ Tiie ft.watt tt.oreseetat lamp woUI sue abMt t• watts of eleetrldtY over a aevet1·...., perioa. • "Got a problem? Tlwn write to Pat Dlmn. Pat IDSU cvt rid lope, ~tling 1111 a~r• and action ~ Mid to tol.-hwquitNI in goomtmnf and buriM11. Mau JIOUr qiwltioftl to Pat Dlwt, Al Your s.mce. ~ Cocut Doily Pilot, P.O. 8o% JSIO, COlto ~flo, CA '2Gf. Al mon11 ldten aa pouible \Dill be OMOerld, but phoMd tnqMiries or lettn1 not Giel~ rlw r.adn'• full name t oddreu and budncll hoclrl' phone """'"-' ,/ cannot be c~. Thil colamsn oppeor• doa1I ez· cept Stn:la111." 9 • .Important Notice Resarclla1 Mooqomery Ward . Parade ofvaluea Sale. In Montpmery Ward'• Parade ol Valuee Sale nmnini in today1 paper, the CDP.J and price oCthe 7·pc. alummwn tet on pap 6 lt incornct. The copy lhtnlld reed 7-pc. Club Aluminum with SilnrStone. The Ml• price ebouJd reed 59.88 and tJw open M.oclt price. 121.M . . W• ncret a~ lnconvenieDce UU. enw ~ came OW' Cll.ltomm'I. . , . ) I t Orange Coatt Oalty Pllot/Nedn•day, Match 4, 1981 All Ex-Jaycee officials ch:ar.gett in fund frftud AS°'°RO, N.C. (AP) -Three former olfteen ti tbt JayeMa, ln- cludlq a one-time naUoaal preai· dent, bave been iDdicted on cbartn ol uajq moMY illtendecl foe dwtty for tbelr benefit and to eatabU1b phony Jayeee chapters. Part ol the money .... Uled to COY· er co.ta ol two trips by Jaycees t... Laa Veiae. Nev., In 1978 for a Muscular Dystrophy Aaaociatlon telethon, accordln1 to the Indict· menta returned by a Randolph Cowl· ty 1ranct Jury. The-indictments stem from a atate lnveatleatlon that followed alle1a· tlons that more than $190,000 in Jaycee funda had been diverted for other uses, lncludin1 membership duet fGr falle Jaycee cbapten. Tiie or1aniladoa'1 state headquarten a. ln Asheboro. Indicted were Robert Arebte Ru.sbtoo ol Gray, Ga., wbo beaded the U.S. Jaycees in 1m-11 and wu the oraanllatlon 's muscular dyst.ropby fund·raltln8 chairman In 1978; former elate president Maurice H. Wilton, now of Charlotte; and Tbomu Anthony Alsop, preaidlnt of the Charlotte Jaycees ln ll'nMO, Wllam wu Indicted earlier on nine count.a of embenllni and miaap· pl'OpriatJ.na '88,449 while servinl u state Jaycee pl'ftident ln 1978-71. embeuleaeat, mlupplylq fundt and ~ to mlaappty f\mda. Ru.sbton and A1IOp eteb we,.. ldct· ed oa one count ol conaplraey to mil· appty fund.I and two counts of Dllaap· p1ytn1 tunda. Bond was aet at $50,000 each, altboqh Willoo waa the only ooe t.n cu1tody. Authorities 1aid an -.rrett warrant for Ruahtoo would be luued in Georpa and that Alsop wu ••· peel~ to surrender today. Rushton and Wlllon were charced with compiriq to misapply funds aDd mlaappJytni them by puttin1 money from the Jaycee Foundation Inc. intended for the Muscular Dystrophy Association in "a secret bank account." then in Rushton's per,aoaal bank account. AeeordiN \o tbe lndl~, the m'ODey wu UMd to pay travel, ectter· tainment and lodlbal .. ,...... ol about to people from Charlotta GD a trip to Laa Ve1u. Tbe ladletlPelll ·~· 922.500 wu lllvolved. WUaoo was cbar1ed wttb u.aln1 more than ~.ooo lD money latended for charitable 'J>UJ"POIM to. •W>PGrl non·existent Jaycee cba.,..n "for the purpose of recelvln• awardl and rewards and other unlawful purposes." ( Wilson and Alsop also were charged with conspiring to embeu.le and misapply Jaycee charity funds intended for the Boys Home of Lake Waccamaw. the North Carolina If urn In the latest indictment.a, WlJJoo was named on 52 count.a that lncJuded for1ery and passing for1ed checks . . ~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~-------~~- .. e're going y_our Wa)!. Improved Local Routes/ Route22 La Habra·Orange via Lambert/Tustin Route29 Huntington Beach· Brea via Beach Route 37 La Habr•Huntlngton Beach via Euclid . ,,. Route38 Orange-Ce"itos via La Palma Route42 Seal Beach-Orange via Lll'fCO/n 43143A/43B Newport BMclt to f ,,. Hein/Brea via HMbot' Boulevard Route41 FulMITon-sant.a Ana tllaAMhelm Route 50 Oralve·SIMI BIMch -~ 1folJte 54 ,El ...... HUn#ngfOn --t:h-~ ••• ,, • Route 57 Laguna Hills-Santa Ana via Laguna Beach Route 78 Laguna HI/ls-Costa Mesa via Irvine Center Drive Route 80 Huntington Beach- Santa Ana via Victoria In Costa M6S11 Route 85 San Clemente-Santa Ana via Monarch Bay Route tJ3 Fullerton-Orange via East Newt Route 82 New •ervlc• between Westminster.Mall and downtown S.ma Ana via Hazard and Fifth, New/ Route 88 . New Hrvlc• between Larwln Square and W..tmlnl!er ~Ml W. Bolu and First during NJMhoun. ... .. ,,,.. .. ,.,,,,,.., , )' ,,, ride the OCTD bus because I got tired of battling my way down the freeway to work. Riding the bus is very relaxing, and it gives me extra time to read or catch up on my work. Another big plus is the money I save not having to maintain a car for work trips. No one has to convince me that the bus is con- venient. t have extra time, and when I get home, I'm relaxed. That's worth a lot to me,, Phil Chipman Engineer Rockwell International. Anaheim More people are riding the bus to work, school and shopping because we've made it so easy with new buses, new routes and improved service. Don't waste your money at the gas pump. Save money and ride the bus. 5~ is all it costs one way on regular routes. Our friendly phone operators will help you plan your trip on the OCTD bus. If you need sched- ule information, we'll send it to you-FREE! Call 636-RIDE Se habla Espanol. o..,.. Cosny n..if Dlelricf We're going your way. ,.,,._ Lorig Beach via the San Diego Freeway. Stops In Irvine, Santa Ana. Long Beach. • Route 206, commuter express service between San Clemente and Newport Center via the San Diego Freeway. Stops in San Juan Capistrano, Mission Vlefo, Laguna Hills, Irvine. ·' Improved IE•press Routes/ Speedier travel times, more service on Route 203, commuter expreSf service between San Clt111tente and Long BNCh via the San Oleoo Freeway. Stops In San Juen Cap· lstrano, Mission Vle/o, Laguna Hiiis, Irvine, Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Sul Beach. More service on Route 291, commurer expres• service between San Clemente and downtown S.nta Ana via the s..n Olego and Santa An• Freeways. SIOl>I In San Juan C.plst;ano, Mlulon Vle/o . NATION • Baelfte•ftl a !'J'proved ARMED· MEN ••• from the East 1earchin1 for fact.a. , Wickstrom la 1enerally Teluctanl lo Sin In· · tervlews, but a1reed to meet witb The Altoelated PNta tate one eveninl and at breakfut 1t a faat· food restaurant near Osbkotb. From inside there was a clear view of the 1\llTOW'Miini countryaide, from t.be parking lot quick acceta to the freeway - two tactical advantages Wlckatrom aaid he needed. With him was T homas Stockhelmer. the Posse's state chairman , who wore a Un star bear· ln1 the words "Sheriffs Posse Comltatua" on tht ltf\ ',c)cketof hi• blu~ lelsure s uit. B<WH MEN HAVE SPENT MANY hOUl'I ln legal and armed confrontation. wtlh aulhorlly. Stockheimer was convicted of assauJUn1 lntern•I Revenue Service agent Fted Chicken In 19'14 and jailed for 90 days. Wickstrom, who said "we are wllllna to shoot. if necessary." ha& been highly visible al Posse confrontations with local law enforcement of. ficials. These sometimes occur when Posse members resist orders to move their Illegally parked mobile homes from public land or are fa ced with losing their farms because of unpaid taxes. Wickstrom and a scor• or more other mem· bers in paramilitary garb sometimes arrive with . loaded semi-automatic weapons to defy the peace officers. The law so far has backed off. POSSE COMITATUS MEMBERS HAVE also ha rassed local offi cials with blizzards of common law liens. some amounting to millions of doJlars. that tie up personal assets even though courts have ruled the liens have no legal basis. • Despite the rulings, court hearings are still generally required to sort out the lien claims. "We, as public officials, should not have to tolerate this kind of intimidation," state Rep. . . =·· • Q New Posse candidates are introduced by mem- bers and are given voice stress analyzer tests "to make sure they aren't jackals from the FBI, the BATF or the IRS," Wickstrom said. Members have to be male, Christian and property owners. Women serve as auxiliaries. Edward McClain said. "WE HAVE TWO CIRCUIT J UDGES in the The Pos:;e has a special antagonis m to the Posse, and members in the Air and National State De partment of Natural Resources, claiming Guard," Wickstrom claimed . ltis unresponsiveto farme rf needs. Posse member Gary Thomas. 26, was holed up in a mobile home in Tigerton with his newly wed "ONR AGENTS NOT ALLOWED. Surviving wife and half a dozen guns. An American flag flew trespassers will be prosecuted," reads a sign on upside down from a pole "to show how distressed private Posse land at Tigerton. the country is," he said . The Posse has also founded the "Life Science "l took my da ughter from my wife at gunpoint Church " Some donate their land, their personal because l was concerned about her welfare," he property, even their guns to the church. Decla ring said . patting 8·year-old Elisha on her blonde hair. the mselves "ministers" and their mobile homes "Five counties are trying to put me in jail for "ch a pe ls." they write off donat ions as tax· various things, but l will resist arrest. 1 will show deductible religious contributions them and 1 know the Posse will back me." His wife, Some of them, declaring that the church owns Althea, said, "I will shoot along with him." a ll their property, file for welfare. And they say that since the church owns their guns, they can't UP THE ROAD AT TIGERTON Dells was a · ff larger concentration of mobile homes on part of be arrested for illegal possession o irearms. 640 acres of forest land given the Life Science As part of their continuing ·conflic t with a uthority, t he Posse issues a Universal Sportsman Church by Posse member Dona ld Minniecheske. Li cense that gcants pe rmanent permissioi:i lo hunt The area is posted with threatening signs. and fish in Wisconsin. It costs 50 cents and 1s worth· Wickstrom admitted the forest was the main less. Another Posse card tells the bearer it's OK to training camp for the Wisconsin Posse, and a carry uncased loaded weapons in a car. despite a law neighbor, Robert Kosciesza, told the AP he had seen "more than 300 men training there, wearing to the contrary· ga~ masks. s winging from trees and running with BEYOND THESE LOCAL confrontations are guns and other mili tary equipment." Into town last Toy store wins sign tiff CERRITOS CAP> -Toya R At the lime, City Councll felt baciwarr R Ua, a chain of toy atorea that the backward logo would con· month. Ulce1 to be known u a lltUe bit fuse achoolchilclren atrua1Ung to backward, bu won ita battle m11ter the three Rs. wltb the City Cou.ncU here to put That order wu not onJy siUy. a reversed R In Ule •Ian at its but "brought a lot of unfavora- Cerritot ouUet. ble publicity," says Cetritos The bacJcwa.nl R la part of the M a yo r Di an a Ne e dham . Toya R Ua logo, but the city "Everywhere I 'd go, people declined in 19'72 to issue a build-would ask me about it." ine permit unless the toy firm aareed to lnstaJl a sign with a correct R for it.a middle namP. Largely through her efforts, the council voted 3-1 to allow the Still, not everyone was bappy. Councilman Barry {tabblt was against the change, noting that the city has modified other trademarks and symbols. For instance, the Big Yellow House was told to tone down the yeUow on the outside and Bob's Big Bo)' was forbidden to put a statue of the "big boy" In front. ~ tmtr RD money plan! Dl.Y-IN/DAY-01JT DITERESI' lntereat compeunded on your dally balance! ' oa Cbecldag lccoaats No monthly charge if your balance is $750 or more! Nominal fee of $3 per month 1f your balance is lower! or '11ME-PLAN IPll'ERESI' No minimum for those 62 and ove rl oa 30-IDOlltll aad 6-moatll Certificate Accoaats Cell ua tor thla wHk'• high tatNI Penalty for early withdrawal on term accounts. fi/?l//I~/ .Yr ~;W/ §~ut/19.J A"'" lUAN A'-,~ .. oc1ATIOl\i the wider aspirations of the posse as detailed by Minniecheske, who had a camouflaged pickup BALBOA BRANCH Wickstrom, a stocky 38. truck parked outside his house. said he joined the 600 EHt Balboa Boulevard, Balboa, CA 92661 (714) 673-3701 "We are losing three police orficers a day in Posse "because it's every man's duty to protect Additional off ices in the cities. America is at war," he said. his property·" Laguna Beach ... 494-7541 • Laguna Hills .... 586-5100 e In his view the Posse "is the rebirth of the Asked about military training nearby, he said, San Clemente ... 492-1 195 • Lake Elsinore ... 674-2191 e militia prior to the Revolutionary War," and ~e "It's a lot better to be prepared and not have Laguna Niguel ... 49EH201 • Ollve/Orange ... 998-8400 e Belmont Shore Murrieta . Balboa Island (2 13) 438·9421 677-5632 675-3212 enemy includes police SWAT ~ams and ''the 1n-anyth~ghappen ,thanhavesom~ing happenand 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=G=l=en~A=vo=n=·=·=·=··;·~~~1=-0~11=1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ternationa l banking houses ~o:f~J~e~w~r~y~·-"~~~~~~__:n~o~t:.=b~e~p~r~e~p~a~r~ed=-.'-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L KOCM FM STEREO 103.1 Dear KOCM Listeners: Saturday, February 28 1 1981 was your day to think Orange-ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC-on Stereo 103.l. KOCM. If you missed us, t une in and listen to bright, beautiful, contemporary ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC. If you a.re listening to us, thank you. Thin k Orange -ORANGE "COUNTY MUSIC-ever y day. Over the last eighteen months w e have been developing a new and improved contemporar y, easy listening m usic format especially for you. We are extremely excited about the music and hope you are, too. We have also s pent the last year improving the air sound of KOCM with new state-of-the-art audio equipment that was installed to del1ver to you the best fidelity possible. We have been proud to be a part of this exciting and well planned growing community for 17 years and look forward to the years ahead. Our man.y thanks to you and our advertisers for your continuing support. KOCM will appreciate your comments or suggestions . • Sincerely .. 67 FASHION ISlAND, NEWPORT CENTER. NEWPORT BEACH. CA 92660 (714) 644-2727 .... ___ ... ._,,, I I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Pl:BLIC NOTICE N71J11 FICTITIOUS a USINESS N·116Z2 FICTITIOUS 8 USINESS NAME STATEMENT ~ICTITIOUS •U51NESS NAME ST•TEMENT Tnt loll-lnQ person ,, 001n9 NAMe STATeMENT Tiit loll-i"9 perwn .. -n9 ""'' t>vsonHS H Tiie lollowl119 e>ertons are <101119 ntu •• I UL TRAMAT•C SYSTEMS, 1'31 Doltl-SM FORO VIEW INVESTORS Hiil Monrovia CC>lla MHa Cahlornia PROFESSIONAL CONSUL TI NG Ford View StrMI. El Toro, Celllornle tUll ' • GROUP, IJOO N .. Mliln StrHt, Suitt tUJO HerolCI 0.wod Slatton, 21.. D 04, SMiie Ane, C.hlOl'nla t 2701 Frenk •tho, Jr • '10 Soulll Ola Placenlle COiie Mo • Callle><ni• ADMAR CORPORATION, a Vl\IA, S.nCle,,,.,,le, Cahle><nletU12 t JUl ' ' Cellfornla ""-etlon. 1200 N M•ln Tnh buslneu h conducteo by • Tiiis ...,..nau 11 cOftelu<i.cl by •n St,...t. 5'olta Q4, Santa An41, C•lile><nle llmltt d partnerVllP "'Olvlo ... I '1101 Fr.,,k Agllo, Jr Herold Slellon Tiiis l><Nneu ii Concluct.d by • <Of'· ~et P•rtner Tiiis itel""""I ,. .. tiled willl tlW POretlon Tiii\ stelt,...,,1 was llled wllll IM County Cltrk of Or•-County on Adnwr Corpor•llon cou'\IY Cieri< ot Oran~ County on Febru.,y U, , .. , Rk l'larCI H Toral. Feb ], 1911 FUMlt Pr9'1dent F1UU1 I fllls , .. ,.men, WU lolt<I with '"" Published 0.-co .. I D•lly Pilot, PubllSIWd Or-Co.st Delly Pilot. County Clerk ot O~an~ County on Feb. 11, 11, 1S, M•rct>', 1'11 7'111 F b 11 1S Mar , 11 1'91 7's.11 Febru ary 11, '"'· • · • • • • • FU61'7 Publl111ed O<en~ CO.\t Di lly Piiot. Feb. lS, Mer.'· 11, II, 1991 '14.fl PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINUS NAME STATEMENT not follow lnQ person' •r• 001n9 ~lcTinOUS aUSINESS b<lsl~~s~~: & CO HAIR$TYl..IST'S, NAME STATEMENT 11>'1 Baker, C~le MeH , C1llfornle Tiit lollowlng persons •rt dolnt 9U U . bU9tnff~ es: Sht rf Ann Horvat, J009 Roowvell 8ARRO'S PIZZA. 1100 s. Wey,CosteMew,Celllornle'10• Ma9nolla. F-t.lln Velley. Celllornl• Sllarley """ O.vl<lton, 2J1 Liiiian t270I Pleet, Coste Mesa, Cehle><nla •1t?1 Fr-G.wlt>ey, U111 Memmolll Tllh busfneu " conducted bY Clr<le, El Toro, C.lllomle tUJO. e ienarlll pertnerVllp Mery GerltMly, 25UI Mammolll She<l Ann H0rvet Circle. El Tot'o, C.llfornle t1'JO Sl\trley Ann oavod son Tiiis bvslnau Is conducleO by "" In· Tiiis s .. lenwt\I we• liled wltll IM d lvkluel. CO<lnty ci.rk o1 Or-County on Jan Fr-Gar Ibey 16 1911 Tiiis n.at.,_,1 was lllf'll wllll 11111 • l'IS44tt Cou11ly Clerk ot Or.,~ County on Publlv.d Oral\OI Co.st Daily Piiot, Fat>. t, 1 .. 1 F1SS411 Feb 11, II, 11, Mer 4 1'91 70 .. 1 Pubtllhed Orentt cou t Delly Piiot, Fat>. II, 11, U, Mercll 4, 1911 6tl-t1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE IJtCTtnous •USINOS PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The lollowlr19 perwn Is 001"9 ""'' ntU•\ HARBOR CONTRACTORS, t•1l M11• Drtve, Sant• Ana Ht1QhlS, Celllornle mv Jolln Sltdner GrtQory, 2421 Creslvl•• Drive~ N•wport 8 ••c.n Celllornla tMJ This buSinHS" CondU<led by •n In Cllvldual JOMG<e90f'Y This st•t..,.,....t w•\ filed •tU'I ow County Clerk ot Oran~ County o" Feb U . "'' F1S4444 Publlslled Oun91 Co.\t Dally Piiot. Feb JS, Maren '· 11. 11. rtl1 t 2'-11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Nee ..... Harold M. Williams, recently resigned chairman of Securities and Ex· change Commission, will become presi· dent and chief ex- ecutive officer this spring of J . Paul Get· ty Mu se um in Malibu. Old IUD dangers revealed CHICAGO <.64P ) ...:_ Calcium can build up on intrauterine devices and cause pelvic infection, says a Texas pathologist who recommends· the birth control devices be replaced every two year s. A link between long· term IUD use and ac- t in om y cos is -a virulent infection which can leave women sterile -was previously iden- tified by researchers at the University of Texas Medical School, but they we re puzzled why the statistical link occurred. THE RESEAKCR· era, beaded by Dr. Waldemar Schmidt, have attributed the link to buildUPS of calcium OD tJ>e IUD. Their find· ings .. were presented at an annual meeting or the International Academy of Pathology. I UDs in place for three years or longer had the most noticeable calcium depo s its , Schmidt said. He advised women who use the I UD to routinely replace them about every two to three yeats , before t he c al ci um d e po si t s. become significant. '.'IT'S NOT THE woman who's unhappy with the IUD as a form or birth control who is at risk, it's the woman who is happy with her IUD. She 's at risk quietly, because the symptoms (including vague dis- comfort and low-grade fever ) are not easily id e ntified,·· Schmidt said. The calcium deposits apparently are a natur al response as the body places a l ayer of calcium around a foreign substance as a protective shield. But it bad been previously been thought the IUDs were non·reactive with body tissue, Schmidt said. Now it appears that the deposits somehow c reate "an ecological niche" -a favorable environment allowing the actinomyces bac- teria to grow where they normally wouldn't, he said. E.F.A. --.. _ .. ~ ... ......... --............. ~ ............ ::::-~ --~ ::::-..-..... _ __ .. __ Orange Coast Dally Pllot,Wedneeday, March 4, 1981 AND NOW AWUTCOAST THllITT EXCLUSIVE ~~.~ YITAMINIZED HAii CAIE ENRICHED WITH PUIE PROTEIN NOW lllllG ~~~~:rl ; 99 c 2.19 u. . EA. Get your hair on the Health Work1 habit ond be o real head· turner I ChooH Shom· poo, Creme RinH & Conditioner or Mola· turlzlng Treatment. Whal o terrific price' PIECISA leCeD. QUARTZ WATCH 5 function 1port1 watch feature• date, month, hour, mi nute•. MCond1 & 15 minute atop wotch. VISTA PAK JUMBO COOKIES 12·ounce or l~·ou!'(e pock• in your choice of 9 dellclous flovora. Stock up now and reolly save I GILLmE "GOOD NEWS" DISPOSABLE RAZORS light enough to zero In on your ~ « hond WOttt. 0--from jJ'.Ot colors. Hl·low-ott 1wltch. SrECIAl IUl TERRY CLOTH SPORT SHIRTS 1 oo~. spun polyeller rerrv shirts with placket front & •horr sleeves. Fo1h1on colors on S·M·l ·Xl. YIYITAl #130 COMPLnE 110 CAMEU OUTFIT ~·~ :;:;.-::. 2 39 c :~:~·:d~~~.~ 44'' IEG. 69t PACI IEG. 49.99 1/2"015/1" 50 FOOT HOSES 1/T low temp. to:~~ nylon 6'' IEG. l .tt '°"' I t .tt C1101C1 ............................. c.., .............. IUDlO'S DILUXI KWD WIUSllY.29 1Ul9SAUPllCI PricHG"4We4 ......... ""''"'· ....... lttfli. s.-..... ,, • ...,Price •. • I I \ ' ALL MENS PANTS AND SHIRTS MENS SHllMI TO "' loaf CUT .... 111.L .... PILI.A CODS AND JIAMS .. MUYOSllLAll , I \ . . ,,/ ALL LADIES' PANTS AND TOPS ••• LEVIS BEMDOVER, LEVIS FOR GALS, .. CHEMIN DE FER, L.A.P .D., A. SMILE, BOBBIE BROOK, ARLENE TOPS AND MANY MORE PANTS MOVIN' ON JEANS . LEVIS FOR MEM LEE FASHIONS • ACTION SLACKS ANGB.S FLIGHT SHIRTS O.P. KENNINGTON LIGHTNING BOLT CHEMISE GW LEVIS JOEL OFF SHORE SPIRE ALL MENS AND BOYS SWIMMING AND WALKING SHORTS . ALL LEVIS FOR FEET SHOES AND HEAVY & LIGHT JACKETS · LEVIS GOLDEN WAYE, LIGHTNING BOLT , KENNINGTON AND MANY MORE I Lev rs ,. ' Husu · \ \ BOYS CORDS .& JEANS . UP TO SIZE I 4 t I ~ 4, 1981 Edison, Fountain Valley get more trans/ ers. See Roger Carlson's column, 85. 87 Artists hit the eanvas It wasn't an easy night for the Artists of Laguna Beach in the second round of the CI F playoffs Tuesday night as a much taller Sunny Hills squad kept them away from the basket for most of the game. From left, Mike McGrath tries to go through two Lancer defenders, while Kevin Hobin (35 ) looks over Jim Karsatos and Lance Stewart (33 ) tries a reverse from \Dlderneath. For story, see page 84. Area's premier t~~µis s~~cked Ocean View surprised by LaketUJOdfive, 61-57 By CllA.IG RUSSELL OI .. o.lly l'tMC Staff LONG BEACH -It was sup· posed to be a final tuneup -one last game before Ocean View High got down to the serious business of winning a CIF basketball championship. Afterall, the Seahawks were 22·3, ranked third in the CIF 4-A and the top team on the Daily Pilot's Orange County list. AND THEY BAD Wayne Carlander, the CIF's leading in· dividual scorer. So the Lakewood Lancers, un· ranked and unnoticed in the CI F , seemingly appeared lo pose no real threat to Ocean View's title march. at the start of the second quarter before the Seahawks scored eight straight points to take a short-lived lead. BUT LAKEWOOD, as it would do on a number of occasions bounced right back with six straight of its own, out-acored Ocean View 10·1 in a span oftwo minutes, to take a 28-22 lead jnto halftime. Ocean View came out fired-up in the second half and finally took the lead again at 43 -42 when Carlander hit a 30-footer at the buzzer. But the Seahawks couldn't break the Lancers. never lead· ing by more than three points, and when reserve forward Jeff <See UPSET, P•ge 8%) Seo Kings adva11ee JEFFPAIES Acres ( 6-10), free throws eliminate Barons, 68-64 By ROGER CARLSON OI U.. o.lly l'lleC Staff ROLLING HILLS ESTATES -It began with a colnflip, ex- tended by a rebounding battle and finished at the free t.ttrow line -and in each case the Fountain Valley High Barons came up a little short. The result: The end of a 20· game winning streak and elimination from the CIF 4·A basketball playoffs as Palos Verdes High, winners In each of those categories, moves Jnto Friday's ctuarterfinals by virtue of a 68-64 victory before 1,100 at Rolling Hills High . THE COIN FUP Saturday put Fountaln Valley on the road and Barons Coach Dave Brown labeled lt a crucial setback lo his team's chances following the loss. "The difference was the coinflip," said Brown. ''.It's hard to play here and it definitely meant poin~ for Palos Verdes." The rebounding battle Tues- day night was a matter of a 32-19 deficit as 6·10 Mark Acres and the rest or the tall Sea Kings dominated the boards and thoroughly throttled Fountain Valley's chances for a fastbreak attack. And without the break, the Barons were left with little in the way or orrensive schemes Edbon an• lhrflW.. (5 .. P•o•B4) with Acres anchoring the Sea Kings' ione. But not only did the Lancers pose a threat, they knocked the Seahawks right out of the playoff picture T\tesday nig~t with a 61·57 shocker before • standing room only crowd at Long Beach Millikan. The Lancers did it with 16- point performances from juniors Dwayne Corbitt and Todd Murphy. CdM defeats Poly, 70-53 And then there were the free throws -the 20 of 22 from the line that went in~o the Palos Verdes' ledger -lo ZERO for the Barons. THE ONLY ATl'EMPTS from the llne for the Barons during the entire game came with 19 seconds Jett, but 6-8 Funt Luongo, playing with a hand bat- tered in the third quarter, mis· sed both attempts as Palos Verdes cl\lng to its 68-64 lead. They did it with defense, fore· iDI Ocean View outside all nitbt and "holding" Carlander to 23 points, well below bis 33-point per g•me average. And they did it on the boards, outrebound.ing the much-taller Seahawb, 20-19. By AJlMAND RANSON oe .. o.11r ,. ....... ,. RIVERSIDE -The Corona del Mar High Sea Kings ad. vanced to the CIF quarterfinals with a 70·U victory over Rlvenide Poly Tu*•¥ nt1ht •t Riverside North Hilb School. Friday night Corona del Mar · wlll race a 1Wfer test. They meet Douc Stockham 'a San Gorgonlo quintet at a site t9 be determined. San Gorsonlo la tbe No. 2 seeded te•m and Tuelday evening eliminated Hemet, 77-et1 to improve lta record to 24.3 ror the aeuon. Tuesday's 8cores Edison 57, Notre Dame 56 Estancia 51, Lynwood 49 (2 oO "ICorona del Mar 70, Riverside Poly 53 LakeWOOd 61 , Ocean View 57 Palos Verdes 68, Fountain Valley 64 Sunny Hiiis 63 , Laguna. Beach S6 • who was guarding Rodney Gowens, the only Poly senior and their leadint scorer, got into foul trouble. At that point, Er- rion shifted.the defensivt; assign· ment.a and Gowens enjoyed the game until be fouled out in the fourth quarter. WITH THE 1-5 Pries leltding the way for the Sea Kings both offensively and defensively, be wu ably uaisted by 6-6 senior Mark Spinn and ee.llior Steve Moore who each ~ontrlbuted 13 point.a. Chris 1.1ncb. • 1bt-foot Junior, •dded 10 pcau and Adam Acooe and o._ _Heu bit four pomta apiece. Hark Luer completed the •cortal wtth two polnta. The Barons never led, saw the game last Ued at 12, fell behbid by as many u 10 (56-46), pulled to within two pointa•Oll four oc· caslona (the last at 84-62) and finally succumbed to the lethal work ol the Sea Kings' at tbe line. "We played our heuta out," said Brown. "It wu a t.ouah match and anyone'• 1ame lad they (Pa108 Verdes) are a~ team. .. But JOU cu't break ~ boa,. eacl daat reall1 bun ut." . Tb• Baroni' offeme wu llmk· ~ H to two l&eml -the pun band of jllldQI' Jeff llu1bes, wbo pl.ud .. "ol Ii (tom tM ... a:=='&;...== M PGllU, eeramlilline ror ..- 'Mile ...a fMa N frMM -9 iD· teM lo work Ule offtDlln lrvlne playing tired By JORN SEVANO Of .... o.My~lletlWI It's not meant to be an exc! •ltboutb it's goln1 to sound e one, but the UC Irvine lea Coach Bill Mulligan wlU brine into the PCAA Tournament Thursday night will n<>t be at 100 percent. Why? Simply because the Arlt· eaters are worn out, beat up and exhausted. It's been • l<>fll 26-game season and a lot pf players have had to log a lot Of minutes or playing time because Mulligan's bench wasn't as deep as once thought. Kevin Magee leads the parade with 910 minutes out of a posal· ble 1,040. That's followed by Ben McDonald 's 861 , Randy WhieJdon's U2 and Rainer Wulfs 800. That totals out to 3,413 minutes between the four, with 'l,732 left over for the other eight. "We 've probably had to pJay our starters more than any other team in the conference," con- fided Mulligan. ··our bench isn't as deep as we thought, plus we 've been involved in a lot of close games." Arter another narrow decision against Cal State Fullerton last Saturday night, Mulligan con- fided that a couple of his pJayets had complained of weariness and that he tried to rest them. "We have a couple of guys who are tired," MuUigan said after the game. "Magee and Mc Dona ld are a lot more physical so they've been able to withstand it better than others. But Wulf and Whieldon have put in a lot of time." "I've been tired a lot lately,'' admitted Whleldon , who is the big outside threat in UCl's in· side-outside attack. "I've ju'.st been trying lo gut it out. I'm ln great shape, but all those minutes tend to get to you." Added Wulf: "I've been trying to play iron man aa much as I can and I haven't played weU because of it.'' Of course, with the PCAA Tournament and a possible post- s ea son playoff berth to the NCAA or NIT tournaments star. ing them straight in the face, now isn't exacUy the best time 'for the Anteaters to be suffering from fatigue~nd, certaiDJy playing the ~Aggies of Utah Slate the first night won't be of any help. The Aggies' record of 5-9 l.n the PCAA is deceiviJlg ln that four of the losses were dec:id'4 by four points or Jess, includiitl two defeats lo UCI -one in dou· ble overtime, 117-110, and the other a two-point decision at Utah State. tot -99. The Aggies lead the con- ference in scoring (81.9) with UC I second (77.6). Howeve't, Utah State also has the dubi~ honor of being last in defense al 82.4 ( UCI is next to last at 75.3), So. what the fans at the Anaheim Convention Center c• expect is a wide open bask:etb~ game that might resemble ate•· nis match more than anyt.bin1 else. 1 Mulligan expects to use ' And, to complicate ma~tte much more taxing man-def against the Aggies because it 1 proven to have been more effec:· live than a JOOe. "I don't think fatigue will be• factor," says MuJligan. "0'111' players can suck it up for one • more week." So what, t.ben, will be the dif.· ference? "I'm not sure what the key ii <See UCI, Paae BZ> : Lynn looks, awesome I Orange Cout Dally Pllot/W~dn.nday, Maroh 4, 1981 • ..., ..... ________________ .., __ _ SPO .. TI IAIAK I MIKITIALL Fro• AP-afeM9 PROVO, Utah -Behavior ot Univenity of m Wyomiq basketball f ana dwinc a came ataln.lt Britbam Youn& Univeraky lut weel was ''tbe most crude and barbaric ever witneated,'' said Jef· Crey R. Holland, BYlJ president. Holland, referrtn1 to last Tbunday's 1ame at Laramie, Wyo .• told a school assembly Tbunday: "Wyominc coUete basketball reached an all·time low." BYU playen, coaches and rans said they were peltecl with rottoo fruit, rocks, and other debris durinl the 1ame. Tbe game was stopped several Umea to restore order and clean the playing rtoor, and olflcil.s threatened to aaae~ technical fouls and declare the game a rorfeit to BYU. Wyoming Coach Jim Brandenbur1 and Wyomint playen went to the public address system and pleaded with tbe crowd to control itseLr. Wyoming won the game in two overtimes, 86-84. -----Qteete •I tu fl••----...., "We lost to Red Klotz' Washington Generals in Martin, Tenn., in January, 1971. But I don't count it. It wasn't our regular team." -Harlem Globetrotters' vice president Joe Aro, explaining the Golbies' only dereat in the last 20 years. "an•flll •1tnfor• talw eoe11rt 111 •lflllt Kansas Coach Ted Oweas said his six seniors m wanted to go out in style, and they did, with a con- vincing 96-69 romp past Oklahoma State in first round play in the Big Eight's post-season basket- ball tournament ... Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo), 20-7, the CCAA runnerup, plays Bloomsburg State, 23·5, al Monmouth, N.J. Friday night in opening round NCAA Division II action. Monmouth faces Clarion State, Pa. in the other Eastern Regional game Pete Neumann, a former Estancia High and Orange Coast College player, is with Cal Poly <SLO> . M3lifie starts Lakers slunper in Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP> Los Angeles Coach Pa!JI Westhead says Magic Johnson is threatening to ruin his predic· lion. And Westhead couldn't be happier. Against Kansas City Tuesday , night. Johnson made his first start since missing 45 games Ota T\' foRlgJU ,.,.,.""'' 9 at 8130 with a knee injury. and scored 13 points in the Lakers' 99·98 Na - tional Basketball Association victory over the Kings. JAMAAL WILKES made the winning basket with 1 ·01 left. "He was more hims elf tnnight," Wes thead said of Johnson. "I don't know if it was the starting role or not I thought his defense was a lot sharper. I thought it would take Magic at least six games to come back tiut he showed signs of beating ttiat prediction. most since he's returned. "I'm just trying to go out, play hard and do the best I can," Johnson said. "I like to play in situations like this game. Then, the true players come out." AFTER WILKES' bucket gave the Lakers a 99·96 lead, Kansas City's Lloyd Walton sank a bucket with :43 left to pull the Kings to within a point. The Kings got the ball back with 16 seconds left and called timeout to set up a play, but Sam Lacey missed a 20-footer at the buzzer. "Oh, I thought that shot was good, .. said Lacey. "I'm just glad Scott Wedman and Otis Birdsong dido 't get that ball," said Johnson. Wedman led the Kings with 21 points and Birdsong had 18. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar topped a ll scorers with 24 points . Wilkes had only one rebound and seven points in the first half but finished with eight and 23 . Throwing siyle , ............ ,, ......... , ........ ... W Jlltcber Terry rw•r, aU.m»tlu b11 Ill tJalrd coaMbatk lD., muy yean from t1'o elbow operaU.., OODtlnufd to mue Pf'OIHll ln tile Dod .... •Prinl trailWal camp lD Vero leach. "ff• threw trwr th.an a.. did t.be lut time be pttcbed, ud b1I cu.rve bA11 wu esceUent," Coacb o..., Oaan commenWct alter ront.r pitched bit NeODCt day of battln1 practlc• . . . c.ter ftelder C.Ur Ca ••H wu ••PffWd baek lD tbt Aatroe tralDint camp today aft.tr n:rta1 to Hou1toa to have an aWnf ankle checked ... Twelve ~a11n, ncJud~:/ Carl Y11tn1aekl, .... JaeU. ·••• G1rw11, bave •n nomlnattd for tilt Robert Cl1m1ate Award ... D••• &la1aaa. scheduled to put on a New York Meta uniform for the first Ume ln four years, alto ii expect.ct to request tbat hla contract be rene1otlated . . . Half of tbe \ Cinclnnatl' Reda pltchln• ataff th'rew flOUTH batthl1 practice for the flnlt Ume tbla sprint wblle the other pitcbets ran atility drUla : . . Wlllle 8&ar1eU, a biC queaUon mark for PltJaburth tbla aeaaon, missed the team'• first full.squad workout with a knee lnjury sustained wbUe Jottint on tbe beach . . . Jladio and television broadcasters will pay nearly $90 million thla season for the nota to air major leape baseball, an lncreaae of 12 percent ·over last year with nearly all or it comln1 from a beer battle in Canada . . . Catcher Gaey Carter was absent aa Montreal continued spring trainin1 drills. He missed because ol stomach flu . . . Manacer Dallas Greea wamed the world champions about smugness and outfielder Gri1 Laal•wM expressed anything but over-confidence. s ........ ""'("'"' ,.,.....,., .... Atl•RI• ., ... ,.,. ' Drew scored 30 points to lead the m Atlanta Hawks to their fourth consecutive Na- Uonal Basketball Association road victory Tues· day nipt, 100..93 over New York. Attendance at • Madison Square Garden was announced al 8,874, smallest Knicka' home crowd or the season . . . In other tames, Myellal ,,..PHO and Kelvbt &auey combined ror 54 points to lead Portland to a 117-112 triumph over the Indiana Pacers . . . Greg Ballard, Elvin Hayes and Kevin Porter com- bined for 73 points as Washington romped past Utah, 112·93 . . . Forward Marques JobuOa led a balanced Milwaukee scoring attack with 23 points as the Bucks downed Detroit, 115·98 . . . Boston battled back from a 25·9 deficit to down Dallas, 117-105, as the Celtics hit 71 percent of their shots In the second half . . . Chicago's James Wllkea came ort the bench to score 21 points to spark the Bulls lo a 128-102 win over New Jersey . . . Calvta M•rplt)' of Houston, who set an NBA record with 78 consecutive free throws, bas been named the NBA player of the month for February 1..,,.-. 8•tclll "• .... Md l•r Gt1••• l'fatoya, Japan and Seoul, South Korea, • alon1 with Greece's bid to be the permanent site, are the candidates for boeUnt the 1988 Summer Olympic Games while Calcary, Canada, Cortina d'Ampezio Italy and Falun, Sweden, are the bidders for. the Winter Games ... Satar aay Leoeard will defend his World Boxing Council welterweitbt title against sixth·ranked Larry Bolldl ln New York March 28 ... Un· beaten Gerry Cooaey and Kea Nono. have sl1ned contracts for a 10.round heavyweight bout May 11 at Madison Squal'e Garden ... A rederal judge rejected Jamee Scott'• request to leave Rahway State Prison to pursue 'his boxing career . . . Two men died last week from injuries sustained while skiing at the Keystone resort in Frisco, Colo . . . Acting ChancelJor Del Sllankel acknowted1ed that a University of Kansas committee bas been reviewin1 allegations about the school's intercollegiate athletic program. T~....rle [-) 8:20 p.m., Ch•nnet t ./ ./ ./ NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Denver. Announcers : Chick Hearn and Keith Erickson The Lakers take on the struggling Denver Nuggets tonight with Earvin "Magic" Johnson back In the lineup. The Lakers, with a last·mlnute basket by Jamaal Wilkes, defeated Kansas Ci ty Tuesday night to move to within four games of Phoenix in the Pacific Division of the Western Conference. Denver is 1S1h games behind San Antonio in fourth place in the Midwest Division. RADIO Hockey -Kings at Pittsburgh, 4: JS p.m .. KOGO (600). Basketball -Lakers at Denver, 6:20 p.m., KLAC (570). f'roaePa9,BI BARONS ..• points and added six blocked shots, while Luongo blocked three and scored eight points for the Barons. tares tone a COSTA MESA C,Ol'Mt' of H..ttor lhod. Ir WHs°" Across frOM fll.....y's SMppiftc) Ce..t.r Both teams went with zones, although Palos Verdes eventual- ly went to a box-and-one trying to stop Hughes, which worked better than Brown would have liked. "We didn't adjust to that right away and that hurt, too," said Brown. It was the kind or game where neither deserved to see their season ended. Palos Verdes shooters, in addition to their. 20-or-22 at the line, clicked on 24 or 49 from the field ( 49 percent). the Barons made 32 or 61 (52.5 percent). Christensen made 12 of 17 and although be saw his prep career closed out, went out in the style he bad displayed for two years sizzling. So, it ends. The Barons, three-t1me tJnoeaten sunset League champions the past five years. see their 20 -game streak snapped and end the campaign, 21 ·4, while Palos Verdes marches on to meet Serra in the quarters Friday night. PHONE 631-0712 I ALINTHETIR EMAN 19UALITY SERVICE .•• FAST Pf'.'ICES IN THIS AD GOOD THAU SAT., MARCH 7th HOURS: MOH. THlU Fll. 7:10 AM TO S ,..,. SAT. 7:10 AM TO l ,.M "I don't think he's al full quickness and I don't thin~ h.e:s holding back. I can't tell tf tt s his leg or his absence of playing. t'm not astute enough to figure it out.'' Downing changes Johnson was 6-for-10 from the field and bad eight rebounds. the Fro• Pagft 8 I UPSET ... tight scored on a rebound, Lakewood bad a 53-52 lead it would never relingulsh. Ocean View was forced to foul in the final two minutes and Mark Nielsen hit four straight free throws (Lakewood hit 11 of its 12 free throws in the final quarter) to preserve the win. "Coming into this season the team made three goals," said Harris. "We wanted to beat arch-rival Katella twice. win the league and be CIF champions. We did the first two parts and I really thought we had an ex- ceHent chance at the third goal. But Lakewood took care of that tonight." , PALM SPRINGS (AP> - Althougli Brian Downing is com- ing ore a season practically wiped out by a fractured ankle, the Angel catcher's top spring training project concerns bis arm. Downing has suffered chronic shoulder pains for years, since the former third baseman- outfielder was converted into a catcher by his previous team, the Chicago White Sox. Never given proper instruction in throwing rrom behind the plate, Downing adopted bad habits which place undue stress on bis arm. His status as the Angels' No. 1 catcher depends on his ability to restructure his throwing motion. "I know what I have to do," Downing said at the Antels spring training base. "It's all rundamental stuff. I have to re- work my mechanics. I have to lean') to relax. "Basically, I haven't been following through. I'm such an aggressive individual, I usually do everytltlng too fast, herky· jerky ." "If Brian Downing can catch 130 games," Fregosi has said. "we should win our division." "I hope to play even more," was Downing's confident retort. r ..... r~•i UCI ..• to winning this tournament," ad-· mils Mulligan. "I guess because we're the third best shooting team ln the nation at 55.1, it will be important to come down and get a shot off without turning the ball over. , "Reall1tically. I th1nk there are seven teams in the con- ference that can beat each other, with Freeno State belflar a cut above the rest . . . aDd I think that makee it tougher." Especially if some of your players a.re suffering rrom ex· 'bauaUon. 'ltl ll " ... ~.:-:::::--.I ' \ ' II ) ~ ... -...... ..,., flj lll\MINM>11 \11"-uhW•• ,.,....i ............ ....... 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U33 1 S30 S HdlOR llVO PHONE 170.0700 10912 ICATfUA AVf KATtllA & EUCllO PHONE 638-0863 lt O f FIRST ST AT CYP~ESS PHONE ~h 71,71 OPEN MON. THRU FRI I A.M.·9 P.M./IAI• I A:M.·6 P.M./SUN 9 A.M.·S P.M. Orange Cout Dally Piiot/Wednesday, March 4, 1981 BASKETBALL 83-58 deelslon Ariists elihiinatea by Sunny Hills By .JOHN SEV ANO Of-o.lty HM S•lt All season lone the Laeuna Beach High buketbaU team had a weakness opponents failed t,o expose. Failed, that ls, until Sunny Hills revealed it Tuesday nl&ht. The Lancers, using a 2-1·2 fulJ . court press, pressured the Artists into 20 turnovers in their second round CIF 2-A playoff battle, and in the far end it proved to be too many as Sunny HiUs coasted to a 63·56 decision before a sparse, but vocal turnout at Estancia High. "WE HAD FAR TOO many turnovers against their press," bemoaned Laguna Beach Coach Craig Falconer. "Because of Lance <Stewart) a lot of teams haven't pressed us this year. But when the ball is out of his hands we don't handle it very well." Unfortunately. the press. wasn't the only problem the Artists were confronted with as the Lancers (21-5) also brought a starting front line of 6·7, 6-4 aod 6-4 with them. That's really not a problem, however, until you realize the Artists don't have anyone on their roster over 6-2 in height. Using that advantage. Sunny Hills took a 15-13 lead at the end of the first quarter and then, shooting from close range, in- creased that margin lo 37 -28 at the half as the Lancers hit eight or nine shots from the field. AT THE TIME, the situation seemed all but hopeless for the Artists, but that's when Dan Irvine, CdM post vi ctories Irvine High opened the 1981 season with a 3-0 volleyball vic- tory over San Clemente and Corona del Mar defeated Dana Hills in four games. But University's Trojans lost to Mission Viejo in an elongated fi ve-set match. Mike Johnston, Ian Black. Reid Hadley and Greg Bandel played well for CdM in the first m atch of the season. Arndt assumed control a nd Laruna Beach got back into the contest. Trailing 4s.aa with •: 52: remalning in the third quarter, the Artists -behind Arndt's eight points -ran off a 14·2 spree to knot the score at 47 going into the final eight minutes of play. But that's where the momen- tum ended as the Artists, look- ing tentative, got off only one s hot during the first three minutes of the final frame while the Lancers, meanwhile, were rebuilding some steam df their own with five straight potnts to take a 52-47 advantage. That, naturally, force~ the Artists into a catch-up situation and while the Lancers were hil- ling their free throws from the charity stripe, Llfguna Beaclt was still missing its shots from the field. ON THE NIGHT, Sunny Hills hit 56 percent (23 of 41) from the floor, while the Artists, forced to shoot from the outside because of a non-existent Inside attack, finished at 46 percent ( 22 of 48). And, as for the turnover depart- ment, which actually decided the game, the Artists held a 20-14 lead. Charley McClelland who, at 6-7. provided the Lancers' inside attack, led all scorers with 17 points while Mr. Outside - guard BrianScharkey had 16. As for Laguna Beach, Arndt finished with 14 and Stewart had 13. "We've played better games but J think Sunny Hills had something to do with tonight's p e rformance." ad mitte d Falconer, whose team closed the season at 17-7. "That's the first time all year a big team hurt us. They did what they wanted to do. '' l thought we did a pretty good job defensing them. We j ust didn't have the offensive balance we should have. "I'm pleased with how we did, though," he added. "It was a great year. but l guess it had to end sometime." CAMEL Warning. The Sorgeon General Has Determined hat Ctpette Smoking Is Dangerous ro Your Health r - It's Estan£ia's reward -finally • ByCVa TSBED EN Of .... Delly Hiil IWI Estanicla Hl&h's Mlke Markel calmly aank l>ot h ends ol a one-plus-one free throw 1ltuatlon With two seconds left ln the second overtime perlod to glve the Eagles a 51-49 upset of bJ1hJy toui.d Lynwood in the second round of the CIJI' 3·A basketball playoffs Tuesday ni&ht. Yes. that's right -in the second round of the playoffs. You see, this time Is usually reserved for Estancia Coach Larry Sunderman to start collect· ins the team uniforms. filing the plays away and patting his seniors on the back, sayina "nice job, fellas." KEN HALL SUNDE RMAN HADN'T WON a second round CIF playoff game in five previous efforts, and surprisingly enough, it didn't take any Chargers shock Knights, San Marcos (24-0) next Speclal to tbe DaUy Pilot GLENDALE -Edison High's Chargers, on the heels of a shocking upset in the first round of the CIF 4-A basketball playoffs, shocked highly regarded Notre Dame <Sherman Oaks> Tuesday night to qualify for a quarterfinals berth Friday night. The Chargers of Edison Coach Barry Leigh dumped the Knights. 57-56, and enter Friday's quarterfinals as the only Orange County team remaining in the 4-A eliminations. It was a story book victory for the Chargers, unranked and solid underdogs entering the playoffs. a team which lost 6·3 junior Rick Di Bernardo in the final Sunset League game with what was described as a broken hand. J im Barone picked up the gauntlet in the wild victory over Corn.plon in the first CIF game, then DiBernardo came off the bench midway into the first quarter and proceeded to ignite the Chargers to their victory Tuesday with a defensive effort that s urely goes into the books as one of the clutch efforts in the Chargers' history. Richard Chang led all scorers with 17 points, Mark Goudge added 17 and Di Bernardo pumped in nine points. But the real story of Edison's triumph wasn 't an Edison offensive burst. but the ability of DiBernardo, with help Crom Chang, to limit Notre Da me sensation Nigel Miguel to 16 points for the game. and NONE in the final stanza as the Chargers pulled it out. "To hold Nigel Miguel to 16 points is wonderful." said Edison Coach Barry Leigh. "But no points in the fourth quarter is even better.·· Chang, held to five points and on the bench with three personal foul s in the c;p<'~nd QLfar:ter \ cut loose. in the third pe riod and his b1ock of a Miguel shot in a pressure situation was one ofthe catalysts to t.t\~ vic.tory. In the end the Chargers got the win- ning margin"when Chang hit a pair of free throws on a one-and-one situation with 1 :58 remaining in the Hoover High gym. Edison got control of the ball moments later and held it to lhe end as Notre Dame ended up with nothing but frustration try· mg lo regain the ball without rouUng . Edison outrebounded Notre Dame , 25·22, led by Darren Moore's nine boards. Neither team ever had a lead by more than four points in the tightly contested game and in the end, the ball-handing of J eff Stephens and Bill Vogelsang wer e also big contributing factors. Goudge was hot in the first period to keep the Chargers close but in the end Leigh's insertion of DiBemardo into the contest. was the groundwork ror the upset. DiBernardo was cleared to play just before gametime despite what is now described as a hairline fracture in his left hand. The vict ory sends the ups tart Chargers, runner-up to Fountain Valley in Sunset League wars , up against the No. 1 seeded a nd undefeated San Marcos Royals, who have swept to 24 straight vie· tories. Edison, now 17-9. is now playing .500 ball for its last four games mlracte. by the Eaelet, or poor play on the part of Lynwood to send Estucla into that fifth dJmerulon known u the third round. AU It took was Markel'a clutch free throws, tome tenacious defenae and a lot of patience to knock oil the Knights who brought a 21-5 record in- to the contest and were seeded founh In the playoffs. Lynwood, which captured the San Gabriel Valley Lea1ue championship, is guided by Coach 8lll NoUey, a Huntington Beach resident who m ust have felt at home in the noisy Huntington Beach ffl&h gym• Tuesday night. But, after four quarters and two overtime periods, Notley still had a long ride home. "We played with some kind of courage," boasted Sunderman, between pats on the back and hu11 from jubilant Eagle fans. "l'm so damn proud o( lhJs team. This was the most exciting basketball eame I've ever been in." F R.OM THE OUTSET, the Eagles stayed with the talented and much taller Knights. although there were times when Lynwood threatened to break things open. With talented senior forward Al Marquetl.i hit- ting from every angle, the Knights opened an 18-8 lead al one time in the second period. But with Markel and senior guard Ken Hall hitting from the outside, the Eagles scrambled back for a 19-19 halftime lie. . While it was not a pa rticularly impressive fi rst ha lf for the Knights !they committed eight turnovers in the first 16 minutes>. they never did relinquish the lead. And with Marquetti and teamnYc1te John Mc Daniels getting free for baskets, the Knights took a 29-25 lead after three periods and then forged ahead for what looked like an insurmounta· ble 43-33 lead with just over two minutes left. That's when the Eagles put on a tremendous scramble, outscoring the Knights 12·2 in the fmal two minutes. Estancia. in fact, had the ball with three seconds left in regulation with the score notched at 45. But guard J eff Gardner's shot a t the buzzer hit the rim and bounced harmlessly away. T HE EAGL ES NEEDED a goaltending call and two free throws by Hall to offset two baskets by M arquetti in the first overtime to prolong tbe game. Estancia then worked for one shot in tile second overtime but Markel was fouled as he drove through the middle, setting up the winning free throws. "We just pl ayed intelligently that was the difference," explained Sunderman "We were pa- tient with the ball and we tried not to run up and down the floor with them . ··Lynwood 1s one great team. That Marquetti 1s a college corner man," Sunderman added. "The guys Just never gave up," added Sun- derman. "Finally. we broke the Jinx." Just as soon as the Eagles figure out what a third -round CIF game is, they'll be the home team against Moreno Valley Friday nig ht, a 49~48 over- time winner over Glendora. The site 1s yet to be determined ~ ., ,,,. • .. ~. , . ~~TNT~ ~tr/U uv.u~~ FILTERS ( HOCKEY ,. Roger Carlson '.Is it TranSfer Tech?· ""' I T he school is not in dapger of being officially chanted to Transfer Tech, but . . . there seems little doubt that Edlson High has become the all· time attraction for standout football players look· ina for better things. Newest to become a Charger is Greg Eskridge, a two-year starter at Fontana High who caught 14 touchdown passes as a sophomore before earning second team All-Citrus Belt League as a junior. latching on to 3S passes for the run-oriented Steelers. ' Eskridge is 6-2, 195 pounds and reportedly runs the 40 in the 4.6 range and checked in at Edison to· day. While the Chargers are certainly getting plen· ty of ammunition to try to eQhance their 22-game winning streak. the kids up the bl ock have picked up some ammo. too, in the form or 6·3. 235-pound tackle Brian Bannister out of Florida. Fountain Valley's Barons, runner-up to Edison in the Sunset League and the CIF Big Five Con- ference, have Bannister on the campus and it is re· ported that his younger brother. a 6·9 sophomore. is also headed for Fountain Valley. but has not been seen yet at the Fountain Valley campus . Bannister 's addition gives the BarOl'lS more to pave the way for Servile High transfer Jim Woods. a running back-defensive back with 5·9. 175-pounc! credentials. Woods played the last fi ve games for the Baron sophomore team after earlier team comple- tion at Sunny Hills and Servile. • • * Edison High officials say they haven't yet ac· cepled no for an answer from Los Angeles City Section Commissioner Jim Cheffers, who has brus hed off the proposed Edison-Banning game as something everyone can do without. Efforts are still being made, through various channels . to bring Cheffers into the mainstream and realize what a tremendous attraction It would be. Los Angeles schools are cryi ng for financial backing (who isn't> and a crowd in excess of 30.000 for one game surely would add some fu el to the pocketbook. Cheffers· lack or interest in this one has a lot of oeoole amazE>d Mavhe if we riillf'c1 it thf' Jim I Cheffers Bowl he would take another look? * * • Look for the Angelus League to return to the six-school format in 1982 with St. Bernards. Serra or Verbum Oei being added to the league. The present system also figures to see Bishop Monteomery replaced by Pius X, according to Mater Del Athlellc Director J erry Tardie. • • * Fountain Valley Hiah star Emlle Harry and Mater Oei lineman Larry Williams, bound for Stanford and Notre Dame res pectively, are among a group of 12 honored by the Long Beach Press Telegram as "The Best in the West," a list of high school stars which includes Banning's Michael Alo and Ocean Glen quarterback Sean Salisbury I heAded fdr USC >. They were selected from schools ranging from San Diego to Seattle. Williams, incidentally, was a SECOND TEAM All-Angelus League selection by the league's coaches over the objections or Mater Dei Coach Wayne Cochrun. If they keep making selections like that they are going to have a hard time finding a news paper willing to publish their findings. * * * NOTES AND THINGS Costa Mesa has a new cross country coach in Art Vltarelli, who replaces J ohn Carney. Vitarelli was an Olympic kayaker during the 70s . . . the emergence of Rick Moser as a selection by Utah State as a de· fens1ve back is significant in that he becomes the first Seah awk to receive a bid from a major col- lege. Moser's coach. Ken Moats, has added track and field duties to his role at Ocean View .. Orange Coast area baseball's prominence seems to be gettine a full head of steam up. At Arizona State , starters include ex-Westminster High star Mike S<>dders, ex-Fountain VaJley s tandout Kevin Romine, ex-Corona del Mar ace Chris Johnston and ex-Edison star Donnie HUI. At Long Beach State is St eve Slaton. another former Edison player. Slaton set a school record with 14 strikeouts recently against Cal State Dominguez Hills Sininier has surgery in Toronto TORONTO <AP> -All-Star left winger Charlie Simmer of the Los Angeles Kings un· derwent surgery Tuesday on the broken right leg which will keep him out of action the rest of the season. Simmer, who had scored 56 goals and added 49 assists in 65 National Hockey league games this season. was injured Monday night in the King's 1-0 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. The injury to the 26-year-old native of Terrace Bay, Ont., cam e on a harmless-looking play in the third period. Leafs defenseman Borje Sa1ming was being checked by Marcel Dionne a long the boards as he moved in· to the Kings' zone. Simmer skated toward them, a p parently intendin g t o bodycheck Salming, when he lost his balance and fe ll to the ice. his right leg doubled un· de rneath him. There was an allegation from the Kings that $ai ming may have stuck his leg out as Sim mer a pproached, but television replays showed such was not the case. A h os pital s pokes m a n described the break as "a frac· tured right tibia, just above the ankle." Reports immediately after the game said Simmer had broken a thigh bone. Orange Coast Dally PilotWedneaday, March 4,.1981 •• SOUTH COAST PrAZA/C.tF. PLAYER OF THE YEAR SELECTIONS . FOR 1981' 12th Annual South Coast Plaza "Player of the Year" Awards, as selected by the participating 28 area high school football coaches. Award winners for the 1980 football season will receive pins and certificates at the Spring Banquet sponsored by South Coast Plaza at the South Coast Plaza Hotel The night of March 4, 1981 Name School COY GLASS Canyon High School JOE WIGHTMAN Canyon High SchOof CLAY TUCKER Corona Del Mar High School BOB $HOLLIN Corona Del Mar High School GREG TEAEGIS Costa Mesa High School FORREST WERNER Costa Mesa High School JIM GLEED Dana Hills High School PAUL SIZELOVE Dana Hills High School TROY SEURER Edison High School DUAINE JACKSON Edison High School DAMON SWEArf EIToroH1ghSchool GREG PACOS EIToroH1gh$chool KURT BURGER El Modena High School JACK FARIS El Modena High School JIM McCAHILL Estancia High School TERRY THOMPSON Estancia High School TOM FISCHBECK Foothill High School JOHN MARSHALL Foothill High School EMILE HARRY Fountain Valley High SchOol DUVAL LOVE Fountain Valley High School SCOIT SK OM MAAS Garden Grove High Schoof LENNY DYKSTRA Garden Grove High School BOB THOMPSON Huntington Beach Htgh Schoof GREG KNAPP Huntington Beach High School STEVE SCHWICHPENBERG Irvine High School ART MOORE JR Irvine High School ERIC CLARK Laguna Beach High School LANCE STEWART Laguna Beach High School Name JEFF FERGUSON MARK CALENTINO BOB GRANDSTAFF TIM BENSON DAVE URANICH LARRY WILLIAMS DANA JOHNSON JEFF BEAGAN CLARKE SMITH MIKE GIDDINGS RICK MOSER DOUG IRVINE MATI WOOD DANNY CLARK JOHN SCHROEDER BOB OWENS scon FRANKLIN JESS ZAMORA TODD PIERSON J~B KOERBER ROB HOBART DAN GENSE MARVIN JONES EAIC PRICE JOHN CROSS PAT HOLLERAN MIKE LEWELLYN ERIC WILLINGHAM School Laguna Hills High School Laguna Hills High SchOol Manna High School Manna High School Mater Dei High SchOol Mater Oe1 High School Mission Viep High School M1ss10n Viep High School Newport Harbor High School Newport Harbor High SctlOOI Ocean View High SchOol Ocean View High SchOol Saddleback High SchOol Saddleback High SchOol San Clemente High School San Clemente High School · Santa Ana High School Santa Ana High School Tustin High School T ust1n High School UNIVERSITY High SchOol University High School Valley High SctlOOI Valley High SchOol Villa Park High School Villa Park : iigh School Westminster High SctlOOI Westminster High School @~W~4 F ILTE RS . ~~M~.· . FILT ERS 'fl, Orange Coast Deify PltotJWe~ne1day, March 4, 1981 FOR THE RECORD J BASEBALL 7 BASl<ETBAl:L ,..~~------------------.. ~------------------------------------------------------------....;.. ________________ ....., I ' I I I ' I NBA WESTlllN CO..,a lllHC• Pll(lfk DMsieft P-n1, L•ll•" Porll•ncl Golden St•i. San 01e90 SU II It San Antonio t<ouston IC•nHsC•h O.nvtr Ul•h O•llH W L Pel. JO 20 7U <S u .. , ~ ll SU ll l4 .49' lO n •.a 29 .H .,. MIOwHI Dh1isl.,. 0 ,. .,, )) l5 4ti 33 ,. .,. ll )I .,. 1S 0 HI 10 S9 10 EASTEllN CONPEllENCE A ll•llU< Dlvl11on • Ph1l•de•on1a S• 14 1'4 0 1 \ti l 12 IS t 10'. lS a 8o~lon SJ 1 S 11' 1 New York •• 11 Mil IJ WHlu1191on 31 J1 •~ Ntw JUMY 10 SO 1h Cenlrat Olvlt•on • M1lw•u~• •9 18 /JI tnC11•n• JI JI s.. 111 r Cn1t•90 JS JS SOO U» A11•nt• 1• •1 JN 1J Clevel•ncl H O lll Z• 0.lroot 11 SJ 143 JJ• 1 tl1nt heCI p l ayoll otrll\ Ttitetd.11'1 SCOt'e1 l.•h .,'l'I, Kans ... Clly'8 All•nl• 100, Now York 9J Mllw•u~oe 1 IS, Of'trCHI 98 8ouon 111, O•llH IOS (hot •90 IH. Nt • JtfSO 102 w .. nlfl9ton 111. u .. n9J Ponl•nd 111, I nC11•n. II 2 TOllltM'sG•mn ...... ,,.,•I Ottn~er Chiu~ •t Pn11aae1pn1• K•nws C1ly •I San Antonio 8ost0fl at tioi.ston C•eweiand •• PhOtn•~ W•!>h1"91on•I <wn 0•~90 Ul•h •I GOiden St•tt lnol•n• ., ~a\Ut Leker1 99. Kings 98 LOS ANGELES W••••s 1l. CIKIMs •· Al>Clul J•~r 2•. No•on 11 John\On IJ Coo111r •. L•nCISl>er9'1r J, HOll•nCI O. 8r•wer O Jord•n 1 Tol•h •• 111• 99 KAlolSAS CITY W..:tman 21, 1(1119 I , l.•CfY 11. Bordson9 II, Wallon 10, OouQlas 11, L•mber-t 4, Grunt•ld 6i M f'rt•••thfr 9 S•nd~,. 0 Toi•!\ H 19 13 91 S<""• -Y 0.0.r1•n LO\ An901f'\ 1• 11 1J 1J " I( •n••s C1ly 31 18 lb H 91 fhrt't 001nf 90a1s W~oman Tol•I foul\ LO\ A1l9"le\ n. l(,inws (lly 21 Fou••d out N°"" A· 11 108 COLLEGE UC lrvlne scoring Pl•rtr IC.01n M"9ft R•ndy Wh1•IC1on Ben Mt Oot\alCI J•\on Worlls ~•1ner Wulf Kevin Fllli.-r Gr •n l hylOr Robbie 8t•I L.0•,US (trttme>nd Stoll H•rlman Don B•rrwi Q"•nun Brown 9 Ip ••9. ht lb 1n 11 0 •O lo 40'! IS I 11 lo )9~ II I 10 H 111 ~I 18 1• 113 • 1 19 1S ISO • 0 IS 2• 96 • 0 11 19 SI J 0 IJ 11 Jo 1 4 • 6 I/ l• 1 0 I 10 10 " 1 0 1 • 2 NCAA Dlvl1lon II pairings SOUTH CENTllAL (•I N..-111 AlaNm•I North Al•l>MNI (10 II vs Lln<oln t124 > •nCI NOrlM•SI M•SM><iri Sl•lt I 11 101 vs J •t "son .. ue St•lt tzt II NOllTH CENTRAL lat Wl~•si11-G..-8•TI North 0.1<01• (27 7) vs Central M1uouro Sl•te 110 11 •nd Horth Oa•ota S\alt 1 l~-11 ., WtKOniln-GrMn 80 (20-1) SOUTH (•1 C-lr•I l'i..idoa l Cen tr•• Florid• UJ 0 Y\ Morehou\.t t t• 101 •nd Wflt c;.or9t• 112·0 vs F1orlO. So,.ithern I IMI fOUTlf ATl.ANTIC 111\ M\. \l. Maryt l Ml. St, Mtt'y1\ lk 21 o . CtMyMy Sl.ett t I' 11 al\O "anOOIPh·~aton CJI •> "' l!llHIMlth City 1 ... 1 Na WI MOLA•o latNtwH ......... CeM ... I Nt• Hal'll,tlllrt Colltt a u1 • ., "' $prfn9llt lO 12011 al StOflt l\111 Cto..fl .,._ Satr~ HtMt llMI, WI ST (•l l•IAnl ........ 1 Puo•t ~ en 41 n CN<• Stet• n•ti anCI EHIKn Meltt•lle {19•11 Vt, Oomtn-1 HlllJ Clt-41. I AJT <•• .............. ,.) 8loom1Dut9 Stale (1).$) YL CAii POIY·San Lula 0111500 111).11 erld ~th 12•·l l VL Clarton Stale (lt·JI Gltl AT L.AltlS (a t We ....... llllMlll lftdlene Slatt·Eva11nlllt UO·U v\. Wutern llllnolt 120-11 end Wright Stall 12'.)) ... K.•l\tUOy Wu ••v•n ''•·IOI Of Northern Mlcnleen t 1'.al NCAA Dlvlllon 111/•lrlngs NotlTHUS C•t CIMll. MAH.I Clara 122·21 "'· Boston State t 19-tt and s.iem si.te ln ·SI n . Roc:ht\ler t 19 .. 1. I AST Ctl f'IU4eft\ Ste. ... N, Y .I Po1M1am Sl•le 12HI .,. Sl•lon lsl- 1)0 •1 O< Allred l~I and SI \-awrenc:t I '"SI •• AllMtly State (21_.I MIDO\.l ATL.ANTIC lat Fr-lift & Marsltall, Pa .I Fr•n-lln & MarSl\all 12S·2) "'· Ursonus I 19·1l anCI Scr•nton ( 11·•1 •• Wllll•m P•ltr>On 11 .. SI SOUTH ATLANTIC 1•1 u,...io, N.J ,I U0t•I• en SI •• All•glleny , ,. •1 - Roenoke US.II"' Monltl•I• St , .. II) MIDWEST . C t i 81!041, WIL) 8t101l Ul-11 •S Wolhem Penn 11•-•1 and AuQUSIMW. Ill Cll SI •• Norlh P•rll ( .... 01 WIST (•t Wllltlierl Whither t 11 •I vs Sten1u..,1 St•t• 11 .. 101 end Oul>UQut 119 II vs Musaln9um c , .. ,, GlllEAT L.AtC ES l•t w 111 ... w9. 0""1 Wlltenberg Ill 11 ••. tl'le t lWll{'P•on of the Mt<hr~n fnltf(e>'lf'91•t• Athlef\c AS\,OCI• l•Ofl •nd Ot1trCWln 120 I I "' W•IMISll 11• SI SOUTH t at S.••111W11\ s i.11. Ga 1 Sav•nn.all S1~1e lU JI vs ROSI H\llm•n 118 n •no Soi.tnwo1ern, TrM UJ 11 vs St Andre"'s 112 61 College PIUA HUT CL.AS51C lat Ut Y-, Ap<ll 41 E~t h•m Atoerf l(onci CMarvl•ntll. Mok• Mt Gff (Mltl\19an>, Gene Banks IOuktl, Jttl Lamp CVlr9lnl•I. R•r Tolberl t1nCllana1. Kolly Tr.putk• tNolrt Oamel. H•rb Wllllams IOhoo St.tel ..... Wood CNorll\ C•rOllM I CN t h Denny Crum (Lou15wolltl l H ITNm Ctyae Bradshaw I OtPaut). Strvt Jol\nson lOreoon Sl•ltl. Ourtnd Mat klln ILSUI, O•nnr Amoe t 8rl9ham 'l'oi.ngl. ~olanao 8 1at km•n (IC•n••• St•••• LOWI) LIOYd tOr•kel. Oarnoll V•ltnll"" CKanw•I Oan n'( Vr•AH (UlA"J (OICfl Urry 8,ow-n tUCl.AI All-Pecfflc-10 l~ •Y CN<l>ffl SI••• Jol\nson, Ort90n Sl•tt, Sr . Alton l.•sltr. Arlzorsa s .. c •. Sr_. Mitt• Sanden., UCLA. Jr_, Andr• Grltlin, Wesl\ln9ton, Sr .. Ron O••is. Aro1on•. Sr , Sam Wtlliam5. Ar11on• St•I•. Sr . M•ur•ct Wtttl•ms. Sovlnern C.I, Jr . Rev 81ume, Or_,, Stale, Sr • ROd Fosler, UCLA. So • Mark RaolorO, Ore90n S .. tt. Sr , Lafa yette Ltvtr, Ari torso Sl•lt, Jr. HIGH SCHOOL Estanci• 51, Lynwood 49 L YNWOOO Gust•u•• •. We lts 1. T ••t •. Mc O•noeh 13, A M•rquelt• JJ, Ste••nson 2 ESTANCIA Mlrh l ts. S•mp.\On l, Kreiss a, l'i•ll 19, G•rdnttr S, Toll? su ... -.,,. • ..- Lynwood 12 1 10 t• • 0 49 E•l•nt1• I \I • 20 4 Z-1\ Tot•I toul\ Lynwooo 1t. Estancl• 14; FoultCI oi.t G~tauos ILTn-1. Krain c E'1anto•I Sunny Hiiia 83, Leg. Beech H SUNNY HIL,LS Karwtos 12. OeFako Z, Stll•r-ey ••. M tCtelt•nd 11. Elms •, Rocn.r-•. Cottrell? LAGUNA SIEACH McGr•ll\ 4, Rodclell 9. Arndt 1•. Sttw¥t ll. Toi.-•. Parsons I, Hollon 1 Sore llY OU."'" Sunny Hills U 27 to 1• •l L•911n• 8N<h 1J IS 19 • l6 T ot•I 10!>1• Sunny lions 11. L•9una Stal\ 11. Foul• lloth•rdson !Sunny t<1110. Mt<;ratn ILAQUna 8H<hl- CdM, Costa Mesa, Newport, Vni win Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa and Newpor t Har bor opened play in t he annual Newport R a r bo r E lk s baseba ll ~ourna ment wlth vict ories tues day a fternoon wh ile nivel"Sity defeated Paramount in a single game. 3· 1. Coach Tom Trager's Sea Kings captured a narrow 8·7 ·decision over Mater Dei in a tame that was called in the top o f t h e seventh with t h e ~onarcbs at bat after scoring -wo runs. Cos t a M esa bl as t ed Saddleback, 11-4 and Newport Harbor edged Santa Ana , '4-3. .... scored their final run. Vince Cook had a double and home run for the Tars and drove in a run. University's Trojans traveled to Paramount for a practice game and took an early 3·0 lead behind the steady pitching of Greg Eberhart wh o allowed four hits in five innings. He had relief help from Joe Yovin in the ri nal two frames. Oreg Buckler walked and scored two University runs with Yovin's double gelling him home once and a fielder 's choice scoring rum wi th the first run. Carl Watkins drove in the other. Ave11ge defeat Lakewood t1. C>ce•n v ... 17 OC:IAllf YllW -(MIMlltf U , Uw vltcll 14, "'~""' 1. S-CI •· 0.1~ .. r •. Oavlt i.w~). LA.IWOOO Power• I, M11rphy 16, corttllt 1•. Nletwn •, Oall.,. 1, Ll1111 •, .... ,. ..... M-lly0-"91'1 °'Hn View 11 11 i• u -S1 Lekl'#... t• II 14 I I To .. 119\M' O<MI\ View , •• L•kt .... It; l"Ollltf -l Cerltltt {WU...odl. Peto• Y ...... II, '"'· YelMy M POUNTAOI VALLIY -Hwtll .. ff. Cllrlsle"u" U , L110111• I , He rrT h VllC•-v• 2, H~ O. l'ALOS VlllDlt -Amot "· Olneu •. J-• n. ""'•• n. ,,..,., e. ~., ......... Pcw!ll•lllVell.., It It U »-+I PalOt V.,... 11 16 It 17 _.. Tota l ,..,., ,,,_lain V•lllY ••• P•tot v.,.oe1t. l'ei.i..wt N- Echon 51, Notf• Dem• H I OCIOH -Slelllfltnt 4, OO<Hlte U, CNng 11, Moore 1, ll•rone 4, vo9e1un9 I. Dllern.,dOt, llnHlll O, Major O NOTltl DAMI J~-'°" '· Level 11, Ml911el ••.Medler 4, S. Ttmllert 14, Str-s 0, Su,.,..0, ErlcUonO kenh0-r11" Edison It 14 12 t• JI Noire O•me •• U 11 ll-S. TOt•I foll!\. Edi.on 11, Noire D•me IS; l"cwl•dout· G~ IEdhOnl CdM 70, Riv. Poly 53 coa~ OIL MAit -Pr .. , u. ~Pinn •>. MOM• IJ, Lynell 10, Ac-•• HtH •. l.uer l IUVlllSIOI P'OLY -Gowen' 2>, Myers 14, Miiter•. Tac>KOIU, w19111 l Sun lly Ooler1tn Coron• dll AMr 11 u 11 20 10 Rl••nlde POiy 1 4 20 22-Sl rot•I •ovJs Corona a.1 Mar 11. AlversoOt P'Oly 22. Fouled °"' T•p•coll Gowf'ns, MTt" IRlver\lde Poly I HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE CIF pleyona (qu.,terllnela) PlllDAY (1:»1 Ctllftt•w ........ 1-1 •-A Edlso" (1 .. t ) "· S... Maros Cl •.01 •I Hunt 1no1on Be.ch High Newt>ury Park UH» "· Lek•woocs 111·91 P•los VerOH lll-41 vs. Serra 123-0 l.on9 8 .. ch Poly I U.21 "' Murphy l23·SI J·A Tusl!n 121-0 n SI Bern•rd CH JI Esl•n<'•• CIW I vs Moreno Valley l?l·l l Coron• .,.1 Mar I "-SI vs S.n GorQO(l•o llS 3) I.a Quinta 12• 21 •\ Oomlngutt l ll-H J·A Sunny Hiiis 111·SI •\ 811,,0llQh\, R1dge<re11 120-•I Pomona 12111 " Gl•ftO•lt 120-SI Bl•or C:I0-71-. L• Sern• 110 SI Nog• .. , 117.01 •• B•rs1ow ill •• l·A A•••llon I 18 81 vs Santa C••re 110 SI Caroonltro• 111 •1 v> S.n Merino t 19 SI C•l•Wwa '1• II ., R•O Mo• 8•nn1nQ 02 11 vs W h1111 .. , Cnri\11•n 11 J I Srn•ll Scllool• Nellu t IS I> vs 8rentw00d 111 •• MelOdyl•nd 11~ 01 ... M•rocopa 11~ SI Needlf's tlJ II .. Cao1"rano Valley ( C.t\n\h4n ( 10 •I Montct••r Preo 119 1t ~\ N t t¥00tt (IVI\ ll•n 110 •• Men'ltoumement cato111vtf'I ,,,,. .......... ""''" 111• N•st• .. del J1rn Oel•Mr.•·J, 1-S, Tom Gu111uon Clef Tim Gutlll<_,, 2• ..... ._3 Cohn OIDlty def J•lme l'lllol. • I, •·l , Terry Moor <Ml R-rl Van'I tiOI. .. l. 1·J. Andrew P•lloson def Scott O•vis. 4 l, •·l. Jol\n Sad" dtC Steve Krultvltr.•-I, l·4, 1·S First ltou ... DeulM" 8rute 8ani0n·Ftrdl T•V9"n del EdOll EC1ware1s-~ P•t•n. r•. 4-l. Aou C•se·Pl\11 O.nl won by clef..,11 over Tracey Oetal1• f1m G•r<•• WCT lnvltatlonel (•I S.lt._.,, "'41.1 Plr&tlt _ _.._.. ... &r1an Tta<ner cleC Etlot hlbehtr. ._,, ••• Women'• toumernent l•tL.ea,.......1 Plntlt-~ ROl>erta M<C.llum «Mf. Kim J-s. •J, •·l , Lena Set>oin dot. Nina 8ohm, S·1, 1 .. •·2. 8ett1na 8Uft91 dfl. R-Blount • ...0, •I, Anne Smith def. S.th H•rr, •·l, .. , Glyl\!S ~ dot -KlyomU<a, .... •-2. 8•rwra Potier dfl Sandy Colllftt. ••, 1·S. Sri••• HMllU dol JeN'llltr Mu.-11, •t, •·2. 8 1t11e Jean Kl119 dol. Suwn MHur1n. l·s. •· 1 .. Anor .. J MOfr dltl. Sue 8 ••-••. 1.s, •·1. Community coli.ge ~llt,Pa-...rt SI ..... Serl-ISi !Ml Erler, .. 3. •·•. Tunst•ll TOM TRAGER : Corona del Mar scored six big runs ln the bottom of the first inning lo erase a 3-0 deficit, then h me back with a pair in tbe bottom or the sixth to ta.ke the lead after Mater Del had soored four in the top of the fourth. Pirates roll; 11-2 : Rob Murar walked to open the sixth and Gordon Moss singled to send him to third. Chris White then drove the tying run across with a sacrifice fly and Moss stole second to set up a two-out pincJe by Brent Melbon for the ~innl.ni run. ~ When the Monarchs went in trqnt in the top of the seventh. JtarJcneas caused tbe game to be terminated and tbe score ~e~~ back to the sixth Umin' \.o 1tve C4M the vtctory. ' Coata Meta held a &"" lead n1 Into the l1M IMln1 wben Mmtan1s put nve nm.a on board to cllDcb lM vtctory. Steves ADder'IOll opeatd wttb walk and 1tol• Hcood. He red on a sln1le by Eric nton and after Tommy !Uvan. llftllecl,a:• ant four tera drew w to l«ee die r n• atJ'ON. '~left WWJamaon did a tood in a relief rote. t~ f t utoul ball &.be ,,..r ~'" mnlnp. Gfft Teresl' aftd Jell i field each bad a double for UM l•Mustanp. tr Newport held th• lead alJ the , ay tn Lt.I 11m• wttb Santa Ana l t bad to hold on lft the bottom Ute ae~mlh wb.n the Dons - It was a day of revenee for Coach Mike Mayne's Orange Coast College Pirates, especially pltcher Don Smith as lhe Bucs won their sixth straight decision with a convincing 11-2 verdict over Southwestern College's baseball team Tuesday. The Pirates' lone loss ln an S.1 season-record to date was ad- mlniltered by Soutb.-eatem In a Edison rolls, 4-1 in 8occer playoffs Aln Grocdanlc scored a paJr of joals and Orea Shutt and Glenn Strachan one each as &dllOD Hlp'1 Cll•t1tn came from beldDd to defeat Ntra.1-., .. 1. lD .._. l'OUPCI ctr ~ playoff actJon 1'1e1day after-qoon. Sbutt'• score came five mlauta lato tbe aecoad ball after Bdllon bad lralled 1.0 at lnterml11lon. Tben GroMlaale mad• the wlDhinc and lalur.nc. m arkers wttb Strachan capptq the 1corlq. l:dlton pl.,• West Torrance lD the quuterftna.lt \ tourname nt earlier i n the sea son. But Tuesday there was never a doubt as the Pirates scored four times in the first in- ning and never trailed. For Smith, it marked hls Hth c areer win over two years a11inst ooe defeat. That defeat cam e at th e b a nd s o f Southwestern last season. He baa . won 13 ln a row since that tlme over the two-year 1pan. Smith worked the llnt ftve in- nJn1s befcn lirinl way to Jae• Reinholtz. Smltb II comlna off an Injury and loweTed hls sea.son ERA too.at. Rel.Moill hu an O.M ERA in three appearances and the OCC pltchiq ltatr baa now l.nc"ued ltl •lrinl of conatcUtlve ln.nina• wltbout ttvt.n• up an euned nm t. •· Tbe 1etaooa record ls a IDd could fall Tbund., when the Bah pta1 the USC junlor var'lity. Reaie Montcomery lmpiovtd b.11 blt'i.iq ........ to D.lft• ..... as the Plnlt9 P'eked "' 1J .... to lmP"lft the t.am .,._, .... to .Ill. K..ta SUwtmtl WM .. ,._. and drove In a pair ot ru111 to 1tve him 14 RBI for the Muon and the tea m lead. Jt ......... U11 ._._ ~tt, t<2, ,_., ~. 0.W"'Y Ill .... Treu.,, .. ,,. t..2: Olrnllaect CSI ... l llen•tl/•i ... t ... 4. ¥111ttftNf9 (SI Clef Ja<-11 • .,., ''°· tacit 1s1 oec 1111hty, M , .. .. ~ l'etton·Oow"'v ISi .. ,. lrttr·AlllQlll". •·t, .. ,, kr'-411Mteed tSI .. , H..,._ 1("111'11•11, 41, M , TUM~l\.Wlttff\i.rt 1$1 def. TrOlltt •--·· 2, .. t Of'.,.._ CMt4 t, Mt. &AC I ...... l'tcllltrly 101 dt l, l'orf\1119, •·I, •I, klHl r 10) Clef. '•flt, • 2, .. I; l"rtft<PI 101 Oel. M<Ooneld, .. I • ..a. Grtcla COi Clel Gem""41, •J, M ; I.Iv COi def ~r. 1 •· 1-4. ltemMt IMI .. , ~rt, .. I, •·1 oe... l'e tderlf•l ata 1u IOI 011 Pontlttv· Ram ao . • >. •·4; 1.111-Prencll 101 dat McOon•ld·Mottwr, •l, .. ,, Ortcl• Mar11n 101 !Ml. Cemo!Nll·l'Wia . • J, • t Hlalt echool lrv-11......_. •• ....... llOMUtlll Ill Ott. Lt, •·>, del J11llo, •t, def, Kt, ...... , I. .. , .. I; H•r ... r (II wOll, 1 '· •·O, •·I, .. ,, Mllltr 111 won, •·3, •·?. •.O. • o, Cll•••1 t11 •ott, H . s 1. •on.• r. •a ~ .. Krtll·YWI ""• c II IO\C ,. ,.,,,. Tuan. 0 •. ' •• ,,., Kol Kn-•• I .• '· 1("'9"' 'l"Of19 ft) •on,1 •.tOM,J •,)•,•IHI,• J ~ .. ec .. u, VIII• P•rll ' Slft91M LH tll ILi llt( AMrcll, • o. 11411 M•dMl1 • o. lo" II~ 0 Ott to Dlylon, llY 0•1. to CMO Brumlteld CLI lost S 1. t /, dtt111lltll, .,..,, .... Snenl• (\_I -• ) 0.1 . I . •.O • I P IUICl\lnl I LI won t-4, won by d•f •••• I DIWIM LU ii• C•POlllant o CLI O•f li•mmonct WOOdwCH'lll •·•, • 2, del Or<.IYtf Howllet • J, • l, Oav1Cl-'·JUR9Cl•I C LI won I •. • 1. I 1, . ' ........ "· Metl'l11tal•• j Slntlet l.•Cl•rman lM•rl del Davos, • O IMf Hay nu , • 0, Otf Simon. I •. d•f Aus11n, •·Z; Ledltrl>Ur (Marl won •·l , 1·2, 10'1 •·•. ••; tiOUM•I IMarl won I 1, • J, 1·2. 10.i 4 •· Crea"n lMarJ won •·l, • l , lost • •. l ·I ~· S•••on Rltl\l \\Or\ CM•• I Gel. Simon Cr•wlord, .. J. l •l, def ti•go.rty·Lyo.ty .. o. •.O. Hatley.CIWlw IMar) won • l . 1-1 won • .. •·2 N•-t 17\lt, LB Wll1on tti;, Slnvl•• Macr .. lNI lost 10 A<l<erman 04. CNI ' Levey •I, Otl Grocwrf • 1. def Le•~""""' • O. Tl!orp CNI IO\I 0-41, J •. ,.on l>-4. •' J•rn•I ~ren IOil 2• ........ J. •-l. ·-·. John Moyer\ tNt IO" f •. U . won• 0, •-<> D-H Godber Svtna"n IN) IOSI 10 C1ur110 8•Cl9l•y 1•. J •. Clef 0 .oy MlthHll;tn .-l, 6 2. Slan~I Smith I NI spill 4 •. •-J, won• l, 1 0 College women UC INIM s. U. s ... 01tto4 Slntl .. F•rr•ll ISO! 0.1 Ma M•V•"· •·3, • •. c .. 1. !SOI dtl 1Ctt1ln9, • l . 6 7, Mewrnln 150 1 Clol Met Meyers,• J, 6·3. Nixon IUCll Otf lltsllS. 6 3, 1>-2. Mallory l UCll def Orto11•. U 6l 6-1. Sullivan ISO> oe1 Et 1..:19•, 2 •• I J, 6 I Mt ytr\ Meyers fUCll Cl•I Or1tQ• Farrell, t •· 6 •. •·•. M•llory No•On 1u(11 Cl•I R .. 11\ Newm•n, 1·6 •·l , 6 I o<re10119 Elted9e CUC11 oer BOl\n dtA~los • •. • • • 3 Community college wo men Or-CN al 7, Ml SAC 2 s1,..111 RoeCI (01 d•I. Sa•one. J •• 6 J. •·l C.otl IKh 10 1 011 Jones. 6 o. 6 •. Sthoelltf'r 10 1 dot Roor19ue1. 6-1. • O Gerli•ld COi Clef Anderson, ...0 6 1 Knoret 101 oet Slorv • • 1-4, Amay• CMI <Ml Or•snon. 1 •. • o. • 1 00..bltt Scl\oe11i.r Gerhold IO I Clef S•lo"" Slorv, • t. 6·1, Goelstn·Reeo 101 del. Jon•• AnCltr\Of\ 6 t •-•. Roar19...,, "m•v• cM1 def l(hortr 0< _,,,., 4 •. 1 S, I • P•-·· S...ltN<ll J Slnt ... Harris I P t Clel Lamt>orl. • I. 6.0. l>Mrcer 1PI def Ahleta, 6-1. •·l. G•flS•Cl\er\ ISi Clel 8r•dsh•w. I o ._.. •-3. Mull\oll1nd I Pl <Ml Limon, 6 1 .• J, MlllU l Pl Clel fribo .. 1. I s. •-l : Well!* ISi <Ml Jol\nson. • •. •-•. • J o ...... H•rr•\ Mercer (P) def Ahl.-r1 Gen11crwn •·O. •-•. 8r-w-Ble<Ucl\m1e11 tP1 del Llrnon·Lamllert. 6.0, 1·S, Wtllok TrtbOIOI tSI CleL Mull\04lana..M1tter, 6 I. 6·1 Pro bowtlng C•ITeleM,Oltlal 1.-..-La-n 1 0 01 Warren 3,SOI 2. RIC I\ Hartman J. l.01 J. AIVlr\ Loi. l,4t1 Jtm Raoc>no J .... 7 MaroRolh l ..... OICI< Wttltr l 01 Ea r1A1>t1-v l.•7C ~ . . . . I ~ . coriwM11t1ty eoue .. o r-..c -11, ........ ,,., 5o\l(llw"e.rn 0)0 000 000-, 1 I 0••11419 C•Ht .00 OJI Zlr 11 IJ J ZlmmtrmMt, Henotrton t•1. Ka<l\lo•n c11 tnd ltlos, Smllll, R•lnhotU ttl a!>d SmeV09 W -$mlCll L Zlmmerm•n 18 Lu . Sllwintkl, l'arreu, MtlllOn, Baillet IOranot c .. 111 High tohool G4Me,M•lff0et1 M•l•r Oe1 JOO 400 1 IJ 3 Corona 0.1 Mar MIO 002 I S J Sottownu, e r-n tt l anCI O••IO S•nlor• . L•ciano IJI tnd M \lrer w L•o•no L l rown 28 Quinn, Gunderm•n IMaler 0111, W"lle, Snollln I Corona dtl Mar I tiR Gu-rman IMattr Oelt cetla IMWI II. S.Hlelllacll 4 C.0\la M•W JIZ OSO -11 I 0 )•dOlt-k 102 000 4 ) 1 <ioellKll Sl•••n• I II W1ll1•m •on I )I •nCI F 1e10. Joro•n. G•1.,1n t•>, 'ltr•no _., E\lr•d• I)) •nCI E•rty W Sienna L Jord•n 2B Ttr•9" Field CCo•C• Mts•I. Jor!la,. ls.ddltCMCkt New ... r1 •• s. .......... J "lt •POrl H•rl)Or 010 100 I • 1 I l S•nl• ""• 000 001 I l • 4 L•Ci' •n Oeur, NuQet\t t• • •na C.oo-., H•rn•o. ~in• 1•1 •no C•m•tno. C•nlu ,., W L•Gr•ndeur L H•rnto 26 Cook ~~~;:::.~rl ti.,borl HR, COok l NewPOrl UlllversHr l, P•ra....., .. 1 1 Vnoo rs•ly 010 100 o J l 1 Ptrerno..111 000 010 0 I • I Eberrt4rdt Yovan C•1 and M 1lltr Rttmlf•l, Mt,,lhUtt f l l. s.1., t •J a nd Gomt1 W Eoornardl L Rem1re1 ?B Yov1n rUnlYer\lty) NHL llWALES CONC'E ltlENCE Norri\ Di.talon Monhe•I Kl"'' PlltsburQn H•rtfo"J Oetro11 W L T GI' GA Pt• 1t ,, 10 ,,. 18o 11 l5 1 t 9 1.e llS 19 JS JO 9 H S 181 S• II 11 It 13'> 300 SO II J1 13 19'1 JS. •9 Adami Otv•••on Bulltlo JO .. ·~ 1S2 19• IQ M1nnoota l~ 11 IA ?31 108 11 80 .. on JQ 1S 10 1Sl JJ1 61 01.1tO.t 11 }q ll l .. 16~ )I roronfo 1J lt 10 260 19? ~ CAMPIELl.CONFEREHCE P~trlcll 01v1•i0ft NV I sl•nelers 18 11 11 l9b lU 87 Pl\ol•drlPR•• Jo 19 10 1SO 100 87 ~·19.,1 31 11 ,, 1•1 Jll I• NV R•"llt'" 1• JI 10 1S8 161 Si v.un11191on n N •• na 1S• S• SI l.OU•'\ (f'l1C .SQO V•nCOUYlr Eomonton Co1orado SmytM O•••tlon l' 1) I• ,. 11 12 13 1S ti 11 n " 1' H 10 1 •s 11 TWM1i1r'' ScorH C••c;attrv b 'W•V\,nc;aton l EClmontonl, NY lsl•nCI•" 8 St l.oul\ • B~lon 1 Color4d0 ~. H•rHoro • TOft49M'' G•me\ K lft" •1 PllUourgl\ EClmonlon el NY R•-r• W•Sl\•nciton ti 0.-.~< C•lo•ry a1 8ull••o W1nn11»Q al MOntre•1 V•ncouver •t Toronto OetroH •I Chit~ Bo\ton •• Mlnnosol• 1'IO 151 1)0 JS. 7U 100 Loa Alamlto1 TU£SOAY'S lt£SULTS 11• 160 n• 11111 112 lOe t 1111 of to-dett Ila~ ... , mHtln• I 97 (>4 •l >J ... ,. Ftt\I rac:t Sen9.t R1C1<14! IC•m~HI •.40. 2 IO, 1 IO. Mac•ll C TOCIOI 1 40, • 60 Model LOtd t Perry). \' M) $2 •••<.t• ,._., P•1CI H 2 40 Setono ra<t Gallons Mossy 1Lon901, S 80, 3 10, 160, f1nt19al (Hym•nl. S 60, J 60 H•llUpoppin I L•Cl••rt. l 40 Third r•ce D•nte' End••"e ' IOesomtrl. u oo. blO, 4 IO M•H Hunltr I S11•rr1nt 9 40, 4 to. Jerry Oof s Htlen lKuelllerl .• Ml U ••Kta 11-SI •••Cl "' 00 Fourlh ract 8old SlrHk IAu1>1n1. 10 to. Basketball scores. l 00, • 111, w.,.. 0..llle'P CIMtttfll, t ... •.• • t a nuno cs.nn.tvllltl, J • 1'1111\ re<.e -~ll 1•...i.1, I•· UO, UOI Itel' C:119Clt .,, .. e\IJ. 1.00, '40, Epic "··· CVelltflellf\tMml. i.to. it U41Cl.t ... n ,ai. 111..0 SIM th rll(e -119 Rod l l.M\991. t to, 2 to, 110. Taoo H-ver CA<t.a.-m.,,I, t 40, 1 ao; K C s Nllollll t Tr..-nDla'fl. t lO. Stn11111 race Or•llP•tll eelllloy IC-la•otll, 1 to, 4 211, J IO, N-y Ancte1- ( D .. om.-1, 4.40, l .40, 1'1'11 olllrrllllno IStHtlll, ii.to U uacta t4 7) Hid ,,..llO, U PIO Sir CM#NI _.id .. ,t>I .. wltll two wlrvurt0 tt0.•1' ttl• llOfMt). JJ Pk• Sia conlol•llCWI H IO t U1 to with 4S Wlllllint llCUll (Ii•• M,..~, tt PIO, SI• Kral(ll (011SOl•llon paid .101 tO .. Ith J1 wlnnlnt l!Ot ls ti-norw•, ont str•tclll Elfll(I\ race Top Lint '4 l Vall•nd· ongllam). 21.40, t 00, S 00. Get•••Y N I Ptrry I, I"°· .... Mltni•M t4•11 (0rundTI, • •0 Nlnlh •ate llKI\ 8remllle lAtll•rm .... I. S 00, • 40. l IO C .. y H-•tr t8aYlaMl, • 40, J .O. Ate~• P-1•1•• t frem111ay1, I 40 U eocce (M l P•ld U 2 to Tenlh r11u Whla~y J1rn 1P1rryl, 14.10 I .0, S.IO, Cr-Cl\00 Mam• CQuertarCW•I, II •O, I >O, The Comtdy Aw•rCI l'Todd) ... Utwc .. tt Sl oeldSUIOO Alltndan<e l,141 H19h achool voll•ybell C0'1• MH6 Cl•I t.•9una t<llll. IS'· IS 2. 1)-• Irvine Clef San Cttmente, tS 9, •• 14 IS 11 M1U1on VteJO def Un1v•t\1ty. 1• I• 8 ll 11S IS12.1St Coron•dt1Mtre11I O•n•ti•ll• 1\1 tOIS 1s•.1s11 High achool aoecer CIP Pl•ro4h fell_....•. Mlratesi. t EO•\On \C.OrlnQ Snutt, Groto.tn1c J, !>tr.a<h•n Misc. Tue9day'1 trenHc:tlons SASIESALL Amerl< ... LHtU. SE411LE MAR INERS SoQned Jerry N•r ron, Br•d Guldflln •nd Dave-V•ll• c.•t<l\t, ... •nd G•rv Grev •f\CI K.ir"' A.He''· Nt l-t 1LU91Hr ST LOUIS CARDINALS S1Qn~d !>to~ Braun outt1~1oer to • minor lt ..JQut con 1r•tt S10~ J~ Edelen. O•"~ L•Po1nf Jtff LitllP, John M anin •no An<ty Rincon P•tCtlt'r\ Or•al'lOO ~ncnti. <•lthftr JOl't' DtS•. ••nt twwm•n. and T•lo L•"Orvm Davf' P•nn1aU 4nc:I Carloi> LoPf't o ut11f>l0t-r \ BASKETBALL Wom.t'ft'I Preif•u~• 8 •sh1NllLH91M SAN F RANCISCO P•ONE.E RS A< QU•tt'd Jody Rat<uta from 1ne Mrnnf'\Oht F 1th~\ to.-• tu\u.-e dr4fl <.h01te FOOTBALL N•hOftal FOOU..11 L•a9 ... ST LOUIS CARDINALS AcQu•r•O Rot >. MO\~ ~t•n\1"'~ O.<., on ,.,..,.._e,c. h om th~ .A11•nt• Falcon~ C•Mell~ft Foou..11 Lu9u• MONTREAL Al.OUETJES Anno.,nc.a ln•t V1f"l<t Hy1•no o~ten\•vt-bile.\. h.O •ortf'd to ttrm\ COLLEGE BOISE H ATE N•,.._O BOI> Mrnd.OI• sPOr h 1ntormat1on d•rf t tor GEORGIA TECH Announud 11\•t Oww•n• Mon1M)f'l, twJ•d b.t\lu,ttklll C04i<h. t~ \IQn«d NOR THfRN ARIZONA AMOun<.0 CIWI JotCIV G•r-. l\e.O t>a>llellMlll t N t h. ro- ~•oneo SAN OlEGO '>lAlE Eatendtd IN con· tr•t I 01 O•ve Smok•Y ' G•tnet, "••O be>~•lllall cOM.h, thr0U9h , ... _ SOUTHERN ILl.INOIS·CARBONOALE Announced 11\al Joe Gol1Cr1ed, hod t>asU I NII co.en. r~i(lned VA\_f N-Don Man on lo"''" IOOI 1>•11 CO.t<hlng Staff H'9h school golf \I t HYMlft9ltll S.eclilt CCI Hunt_ BN<ll JSI, c .. ta M•w 41 t llU ••1"1 Top f1itt scorer\ Ivy ''· COit• •• Wtllt•m\, )l 8t•ton 1' Stunktr. 14 C ._.__,, ,,.gton 811C"I •••••••• c~.:.~ ti•r•.,d60, Oertrnoulll .tO TOUltHAMaNTS (All f'"',.....,. ....... 1 ~c-• MCN-St. 1'. Teut-Ar111191on 14 SW Loi.ttCana 91, Arilensa• ll Mlll-A,,....k •11 C.,.._rell<t B•tt $t. u. Onio U. 10 N llllhols 19, 8-llno Grt!tn 11 To1too•s. E Mltnoganll COii MC_. Vtlln c-tffeMe Woth•l• SI 11. S 1lllno1s S1 Tul" c.a, N-Muico St. •7 Cre191\ton ~. 1ne11an. SI.•• Oroe 8', 6radlty •• Ml'-lern City Conl•renu 0-lahorna Coty ... B1.1ll•r •• E ••nsvotte 11, Or•I RoCll!rlS 11 Loyol• CCIM<aGOI .. , Oetroot 90 ECAC l!Mtr• l.On9 hl•nd U "· W-1' lone M, Sltn• ... r CAC Solltn , Wllll•m & Mary 11, ROl>ert Morris so Roch-91,51 Fren<ts.Pe II ICACH- Mal"e 11. COigate '3 VermonU S, Boston u . 14 lllatlUll lltftt RhOde llland J3. MHWChUMllS 41 Pll\sl>Uf911 '1, tllulQers U We\1 Vlrglnl• ... St. 8Clft••enlure u O.,Q.,._ 14, c;.oroe wasnlr>01on "(oU Bl9 119111 Mlnourl 9S, Iowa St. 70 Kanua st. IS, Okl•IWlm• u Kanwst6,0ktenornaS1 •• Cotor-10, NIOr•Slt• .. Htgh school Cll' PL.AYO,,P$ ..... St n Mar<O!> ••. lnole.-47 Edison n, Notre O•me st Lalleo;ood "· Oc.lt•n View S7 Newt>uty Park 11, 5-nllte •4 S.rr• H , TIWlllSend O•u .. P•toa Vtt'des ... FcwnCa ln V•ll•'lf ~ Murphy ... CypttU., (otl LB Poly u. Cr•ICll JS l ·A SI. Btrnwd ... EIM--H TIUtltt n, 8~1ncle U MortnoVeC1ty4i, Gte-a 411e11 Poly at Marina Karina Hlab School't tlrl1 baaketball team wlll entertain All· Amer~can 1tar Cher1l lllUe1' and her RJverslde Pob tummatee at 7:30 tonlJbt ln a Hcoad rou.n CJF 4·A J>JAyoff a a me. • llllltr ls ooe ~ tbe kip itll IMl*ltball atan lD (be ~---b!Ch sclaool level aal 11 .. bHD named to le\leral All·~-....... ..._ la at bom• to Simi VaJley, Fountain VaU., boltl CWftr' ctt.J and S1tancla bottl Ouct. Grewe ID olbel' arta ,.._. aU at f :•. 1-,-- I I E"•n<,. ~1.1.yn-4• U oll San Gon1on10 11. Htmtt "6 Corona del M., 10, Rl••rl•d• Poly u • Oom1RQUOI u . S."ta Ana V•ll•y s• L• OVln ta 1', Wn l Covll\e 1o toll l·~ 811rr°"91'S I Rl~cre.t> &2. Votlor \/•lley •1 Sunny l'illl\•l. L•auna 8wacll s• GltnClale SO. San Lu•• Oll1spo JS Pomona 61, Nortnv••• 0 l-• Serna"'· C"oso IO e1aor '4. 1119noll1 •1 6••'1ow Sl, Troy U No9•ltt U , S.n Ctem•nlt •• ..... Santa c1., • .o. 81snoo o AYl•hon "· 81\Jtop oieoo 4l S." M•tino so. Et\tnore o C•rp1nl1t•• 5'4' S.f't• YMl ... R 10 Mt'loa.,. Duarte 60 C• .. l>tU• ti. Mor•IHI• •2 Whltller (hrl\loan !><, TtmPI• CllV so BannlnQ 7•. Royal O•k .. Sft\all k!MeH Brtnl-Q, 0.k-4S NtlCH't, PIC9rlm« M"IC°"" ~.Owens Valley S9 12 Oii M•lodylandl7, Ma\ada U C•ol'1r•no ll•lley Chr111t•n II, 1 nit Ml Cllrl•tlen •Z Ne.011111. Or~ LUlll•r•" 11 Newll0'1 C"'lstlan S1. ROHrnond •• Montctelr Prep IS, H19hl•nd t<•ll 42 NOY# thru SUNDAY SHO I 50 Ill([ . . • SEE DEFENDING CHAMPION NANCY LOPEZ, ANO ALL OF THE LPGA GREATS AT THE $175,000 WOMEN'S KEMP.ER, OPEN • MARCH 25·29 MESA VERDE COUNTRY CLUB COSTA MESA, CA. Season Tickets D a II y A d m i s s I on· Club House Badges ..... $12.00 $ 8 .00 $50.00 TICKET INFORMATION: 540·1708 TB Pt\MILl' c1ac111 by 811 Keane "M ommy put a new hot on my pencil." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "He wants you to hide It and he'll find it ... it's LOTS of fun!" IUDGE PARKER L.eT ME CARRY THAT INTO ,...,.,.~- THE &US TERMINAL. FOR YOU, MIO!>! MISS PEACH •l&&Da&E by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) "Ajax, the w1y It end1 11 you get out of my chair on the double." Hank Ketchum by Mell Lazarius A'2r~v~ ~~P~1~! <;A '2.To(Z.IAL SPLEHbO(l. A "'TH lA JZ' I WM.AT ,~ M~ANi ev "A ?LAVE iO FA~HION 11 ? T'HAT'9 WHEN YOtA WO~K veiry 1-1A"D iz::> L.OOt< 6000, 01.Ai IT OOE5N'i r:'AY ~I! ... -~ ~------.. , MOON MULLINS I 1M CURIOUS ,ABOUT IHE COMPANY'S RfllREMENT PLAN, Mrl H.ARiBORN . 3 t ACROSS 1 Teases 5 Shoo! 9 Wupon , .. Dill herb 15 Rec«d 1f Mlk1 l'llppy 17Conc191 UI Delighted 200rlml 21 luaufOod 58 Miii bird 60 e.se 8 1 P\lrpll lh.cle 83 ltMge 84 Change 85 l•Elita - 68 Doz• 87 Twl1t1 88Georgt• - 89 -c:tub 22 O..i. DOWN 23 Slrloul 1 Foraya 25 Mltc:M -2 callfomla city 270ry 3 "-- " Hudton -Polka" 30 8r111Y 4 Or• coin S4 Opp. of dep. 6 0.. mM • "'*' e LioM ~· • ....,,.. 1 DllMoild: • llloodltone: 2 wordt 2wordt .,,.. a--. •Sur'llCll ~ DllcolOr """° ..... 10 -fN'I .___. ''~ •M-1111 tJ ,_--"........, .. ,, ...... ...... .. ........ ....... MTrw ........ 21~ UNrTED FMture Syndicate r~·· Puzzle Solwd e'''J ' <- . ' . ' ' ~ ... ,,...-) )·'i ~ ,.,, (")'\., c.A,., tW..f". by Ferd & Tom Johnson ··,ALL EMPLOYEES SHOULD RETIRE E,ARLY, ~ET PLENTY OF ~EST,,AND BE F~ESH, .ALc~T, AND />ROl>UCTIVE --r0;) l~E" NEXT DAY ~"fr~ I t I 1 2 I 4 17 • t• •I • Orange Cout Dally Pllot!Nldnllday, March •. 1981 n M•NIJT• SHOE '(().)VE NEVE~ "POOFED" A ~DELION ? NANCY HI. SLUGGO--- ANYTHING INT ERESTING HAPPEN TODAY? L/00 CANT SA'Y 'IOO'VE LIVEO UNTIL V'OU'VE 'POOFED .. A MNDEUON ... --------o----- VOU'l.L. NEVER KNOW HOW MUCH I WOfVlllV A~Ui't(>Ui OH, .JUST SOME STUPID K ID H IT HIS HAND W ITH A HAMME R WHERE DID IT HAPPEN? by Chari• M. Schultz '™AT WAS 6000 .. NOW, 't'OU CAN SAi{ 't'OlYVE LIVED! J ' by Tom K. Ryan by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushmiller by Tom Batiuk FUNKY 1'1NKERBEAN OKA4, OOUJ WE.'RE. <:l>ING 10 671\RT f~E 6AA\E WITf.I A 1WO-OOE -"TW) ZONE ! AND THEN WHEN I GIVE l(OU IHE 51~Al ... WE'LL 5WliC.H 10 &IRL-10 - Gt~l C.OVE~AGE ! BRABBLE DR.SMOCK ANP 1'Hl5, ANN , IS AN e!A~L-Y ~e!M&RANP'"J", PONe WHl!N He WAS ONL-Y FOU~ Y'l!A"S oi..P .' LOCll , 'f~IS IS WORMA N ~A&6L€ A~~ ... 014... ~IS rR1ENO. •IMA'fs ·ER-NAME: I ' f Jl f ~ 0 -~= \VDM, ~OOME. TT Hf\D10Be~ 1HRT~HIS LEQ ? by Kevin Fagan L.ORI. ·nu~ IS -----· llEH~ ORA8&t.£ A~O lhS rR1t .ac>. "w"A'f~·ER· K~~ Orange Cout Dally Piiot/Wednesday, March•. 1981 • • { lo..: • • • Now the MERIT idea IUis been introduced at only 4 mg tar- New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERIT for those who prefer , an ultra low tar cigfl,rette. New MERIT Ultra Lights. lt:S gOing to set a whole new taste standard for ultf(l low tar smoking ANNUAL RI PORT . \ Annual financ.ial reports finally have value in their heftiness .... Cl4. , ••• lor Versat.ile Meals Long grain, wild rice recall Indian heritage The first colonists to arrive in the New World were sadly unprepared for life in an tmfamiliar land. They owed their survival to the Indians who taught them how to plant crops, to fish and catch wild gall!e and to harvest and store the wild growing foods available to them. Indians living in marshy areas gathered wild rice by beathlg the stalks with clubs and catching the rice in their canoes. Today's cook can gather long grain and wild rice from the supermarket shelf. Indian Turkey and Wild Rice Skillet features frozen succotash. a combination of corn and lima beans. The Indians were excellent farmers and grew these two crops together, using the cornstalks as support for the vine-like bean plants . Bacon, turk ey and vegetables are cooked as the rice simmers, then are added and cooked briefly to blend favors. The Indians of the Northwest were fis hermen with an abundant food supply in lakes and streams. Heritage Fish and Wild Rice Dinner takes a minimum of lime and effort using long grain and wild rice and fresh or frozen ftsh fillets. Shredded carrot adds a touch of color and crunch. INDIANTURKEY WILD RICE SKILLET 1 package (6ounces) long grain and wild rice · 3 strips bacon, diced lh cup chopped onion 2 c ups cooke d turkey or chicken, cutin2xlhxlh·incttslrips 1h pound fresh mushrooms, sliced 1 package (10 ounces) frozen succotash. thawed Sourcream (optionaJ) Cook contents of rice and season- ing packets according to package directions. Meanwhile. fry bacon in large skillet until brown. but not · crisp. Add onion and cook unW tender. Stir in turkey, mushrooms and succotash. Cover and cook over medium beat unW mushrooms are tender, 5 to 7 minutes. Add cooked rice to mixture in skillet ; mix well. Cook about 2 minutes. Salt and pep- per to taste. Serve topped with dollops of sour cream , if desired. Makes6servings. HERITAGE FISH AND WILD RICE DINNER l package < 6 ounces> long grain and wild rice 1 cup shredded carrots 1 po\lnd fresh or thawed frozen fish fillets lh cup sliced almonds, toasted 1/4 cup butter or margarine, melted 1/4 cup lemon juice Cook rice according to package directions. Stir in carrots. Spoon in· to llx7-inch baking dish. Arrange fish over rice; sprinkle almonds over fish . Drizzle with butter; sprinkle with lemon juice. Bake, un- covered, in 400-degree oven ap· proximately 15 minutes or until fish flakes easily with fork. Makes 6 ser vings. Brown Rke Cculft'OW, Italtan St11~, can be baked nght awo11 ordorfdmr~. ' ~'I • 1, It's difficult to think of another food as veraaWe as rice. It can be served for breakfast, lunch or dinner - in soup, salad, ap~tlzer, entree, side dish or dessert. Hot or cold, plain ~ flavored, there are many ways to serve rice that you'll find it an important food to keep in the cupboard. Rice, such a good blender of flavors, also makes it easy for the creative cook to use different ingredients in a recipe. With a few changes, a basic recipe can be turned into several different meals. And , don't forget, it's economical. A little goes a long woy. Savor the flavors of our Indian forebears with Indian Turkey and Wild Rice Skillet .. Chicken, Sausage team.for economy With food prices, and especially meat prices, on the rise, inventive coots are fightina back by changin1 their buying habits. One survey showed that many people are avoid· ing tbe more expensive cuts of meat and subslitutlng poultry. cheaper cuts of beef, hamburger and pork. Bud1et-conaciou1 cooks are also extending expensive protein fOOds with vegetables and rice for economical sldllet or oven meals. When brown rice la the choice for these meala, the nulriUonaJ bonus ii eve' areater. Because brown rice retains its natural li1ht 1olden brown bran layer, lt provides 1i1n1flcant amounta- of food fiber, u well u protein, 8- vitamtm and iron. l~so bu an ap- pe•Hn1, 1UibUJ chewy wbol•tralD texture and "1ltY navor. Por tbe eaatest casserole enr, wttb famU1 fawortte navon, b'7 tbe re- markable caannlence of Brown Rice C....,., hallan Style. What'• IO aped .. about It? It ta.tea JU1t -. .menll to prepare, wttb DO~ of lnl"Clienta. and it cu ......... baked at onctt or atored In tlMt Nfril ..... , l'Md, to PoP lntetbeot9 tomorrow. TIM brown rlce plump1 18111 eoab uP IDto ftrm, MPU'&t. IJ'aiDI dull .. bUIDI. Pnpare ll la a ea..r .... e1111nlit to lbow off ltl pna, ..,_. fllkwllrlee. ................ llak1, -.. ... temato, ,....._ Ud 11c=.cr.-.-. .. , Com~ It wttb brown nee • aa ••1·to-fbl, eolorf\al skillet meal with a pleasing curry flavor. Brown Rice Country Captain Skillet is a variation of the popular Southern diab that bas become an American classic. aaoWN &ICE CASSEaOLE, ITAUAN STYLE l cup brown rice l package (12 ounces) smoked pork aausqe links, cut in fourths ' 2 medium on.lona, cut ln 'A·incb wed1e1 . 1 ~.~upoons 1arllc salt 1 teupoon oregano ~ teaspoon basil l can (16 ounces) stewed toma_toea ~cup water 1 cup shredded Monarella C!beeH ~ medium 1reen pepper, chopped Place uncooked rice on bottom ol 1reaNd 2~-quart caa1erole. Top1 wUb ladlal•· Arran1• oalaDI over ....... SprtMJe wtua 1arUc •alt. or.,uo and bull. Pour tomatoet ....., "91' -..: fO'll' ,, ......... ~=:' tomaton. lprtakl• wttb ; top wlll ~ pepper. Coftl' tilhtlr wttb .......... rou.• .... at .... .,_t .......... ..... la abeorbld. u~: ........ I I mlnlltee w .. 1enta1. • ... • ......... t •At tide pllat C!'lllW-IN'9ilt• ~._be ~ .• , ........ ~ .... eo¥endat•delNMtorl .... 11 mlnate1. Uaconr; let 1talMI 10 mm._...,._..,. BROWN alCE COUNTltY CAPTAIN SKILLET 1 broiler-fryer chicken, cut up 2 teaspoons saJt 114 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoon.a ve1etable oil 1 medium onion, chopped 1 garlic clove, minced 1 can (18 ounces) tomatoes l cup brown rice 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 teaspoon thyme leaves ~ medium green pepper, chopped \'4 cup peanut baJvea (optional) Sprtnk.le cblcken wl\h 1 teaspoon ot the saJt and pepper. Brown In oil in lar1e Millet about 1 minutes oa eacb 1lde. Remove and cover. Draiaotf all but aboUt l tablnpoon drtpplqa. Add oaloft and 1arlic to skillet. Cook unW oaloa ii tender but not browa. Coanely dlop and ............ . reumas juiee. Add ....... ,,..... to Julee to make N C!UPI UqaAd. Add to •kW• and bdq to • ltotl. Stlr tn remalalq 1alt, dee, C!UIT7 Qd lbJDM. Cover tllbt11 Md coot a.er low Mat • mla8'ee. 8lltana cblam to Millet. COftr ud M"hMle eookiDI Oftl' low IMlt • 1 I 11 . .. ..... ellld•• ,.._ lldlia; ~ .... tomatoel .... .... .. . t' I Orange CoMt Oaity PllotJWednHday, March 4, 1Q81 By MAaTIN SLOANE What dO coupon cllppert want more than $1 .29-a-pound 1round t>.ef and 4t·cenll·•· pound whole fryer11 You petaed lt -double ~I Lul year I reeeived thouiuda of lttttrl from 1bopper1 who wanted to know how they could persuade thelr supermarkets to double the value of manufacturera' coupons. When the flrat supermarketa tn lhelr re· tlona finally made such offen, \bey traveled aa many 11 100 miJea to cash In their coupons. They called It "coupon heaven." merchandise disappear from the shelves fHter than the clerks could restock them. Now the moat darlna manufacturers have decided that if the supermarkets will not double the value of their coupont, they wlll do It themselves. "I couldn't believe my eyes," one shop· per aald when she saw the Maxwell House double·aavlna• certificate in her newspaper's food 1ecUon. Tbe certlflcate offered to double the value of any other Maxwell House Instant Cofrff coupon to which lt was attached. Shoppen In the areas where the Maxwell House certificate wu tested bad a field day. When their supermarkets bad previously of- fered double coupons, coffee had been one of the items that was restricted. NOW, IF THEY WERE smart enough to set extra certUlcates from friends and rel- atives, they eou.ld save on u many cans of coffee as they had certificates. REFUND OF THE DAY Write to the following address to receive the form required by this Sl refund offer: Sylvania Flash Refund Offer, 70 Empire Drive, West Seneca, N.Y. 14224. Send a self- addreaaed, stamped envelope with your re- quest. Thia offer expires Feb. 28, 1981. FOOD R estrictions ask ed on salt By BETTY ANMS WILLLUl8 WASHINGTON (AP> -The covemmeot la be· int uraed to take its own advice and order limits on tbe uae of 111t In proc· eased fooda because of Its contribution t o hypertension, heart at. tacks and strokes. The Cent.er for Science in the Public Interest baa presented a petition signed by 5, 769 health professionals t.o the Food and Drug Ad.ministration asking for contr ols on the use of aaJt. by loweMI fOdlum in toodl and Ietuni those •bo prefer more salt UH their ult shakers," J acoblon aald. HE NOTED that beaJtb secretary Richard Schweiker bas said be hoped to promote dheue prevenUon through bet- ter nutrition. One reason for limiting salt content in prepared foods is the fact that tbe presence of additional salt ls not aJways ap- parent in such products, Jacobson said. I KEAaD FllOM one COUj)Oft club that arranaed to shop before the supermarket opened ln exchan1e for helpln1 the store mana1erreatock the shelves. ·------------------------------------- EXECUTIVE director Michael Jacobson point· ed out that an advisory committee assembled by the FDA in 19'19 COD· eluded that saJt is not safe and should be restricted. As an example of the "hldden&Odium," he not- ed that a cup of coated fresh corn has one milli· gram of sodium com- pared to 390 milligrams for canned com. Three ounces of lean fresh ham- burger meat contain 60 milligrams of sodium compared to 880 milli- grams in a comparable quantity of beeHranks. CUP 'N' FILE REFUNDS But all tood promotlona mual come lo an end. In many parta of t.he COW\try, double coupons have come an~ 1one. Many ahop- pera' eyes moisten when they remember the days when their double coupon1 saved them as much as S30 or $40 on $100 of 1rocerles. But all the fever and trenay that aur· rounded double coupons were not l°"t on the major couponin1 companlea. lllftd lom1, I,. el'CI llep -1119 Ille Pfllducl - lrom -~ of 14-1111149' ColYl•Nll or 10<a4>wl• ColyleftOI Md • rttt111.,. rKelpl wllll IN p;;rcl\eM price dr<led. l!aol,... ~., 31. '"'· ORISTAN Otf .... lleolw Ille lloolll•I "100 Hay Fever ..__," ,_,,., U.. reQui.ec1 refund form, Ille lrOfll -•from any carton of Orlatan Tablela afld 2S cents fw -1 ... -l\Mldllr19 Exol,., May J1, , .. ,. OUR.&TION. Recel .... " relunct •nd • 2k enl coupon. Send tllf required refufld lorm •"" one '"" 11•1> from any box of Ourellon NH•I Spr•y. Explret Sept. >O, 1'11. MUlllNE PLUS Refund Offer. Reul ..... jO.unl refund Ind • 2J.<...,t co.ipon. Send t,,. ,.quired , .. lund form n t,,. box IOI> lr'om eny carton of Murlne Pls~=i~~N~~; ~T~l 1~1AENGHI Save ., THEIR INTEREST was aroused by re· ports ot stores that became Jam-packed with s hoppers takina advanta1e of double coupona. And \hey were beside themselves with joy when they saw their coupOf\ S1 Oller. Send ttw reQulred refund lorm •tld ,,,. front pentl from -pec-•oe of Super aPlenemln' E11t re I Ma.t.L TH '"ROOUCTS. Stref19lh or ""'9r Plenamlna Orl9lna1 Formula. Thia I CO TYL I NOL Rttund. Receive • reruno of up 10 offer la nol VoOcl on Ille lCH ellltl ''" E•plrel J une I In addition, the sur- geon general , t h e Agriculture Department, the National Academy of Sciences food and nutri- tion board, Lhe American Heart Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics all have suggested that con · sumers reduce their in· take of salt and high sodium foods. ONE-HALF c up of plain cooked rice con- tains one milligram of sodium compared to 700 milligrams in a half cup of prepackaged fried rice. u.n ror • eoty.....,1 P<irchue. Send 111e r9QUlrtd r• JO,'"'· J L---~--------~-----------------~-----··By setting limits, FDA would restore choice to the individual The figures are from an Agriculture Department handbook. Save25'on 2 lbs. of Imperial® r.·············t I 25¢ . Save 25¢ on 25¢ I I 2 lbs. of Imperial Margarine I I ..... ---·•-tact·-· .... -... ,... I I -·-... ···-·-........... ,, I --•n..-olllf.,_lt _.,,..,_, __ ,_ ___ I .,......."'._ , .. __ ..,.,,.... I -""'-8 ....... --... ... -----... -·-•---·---ea. I ......... -........... _ ... ,. ..... _-. .-. .... ... ................................ _ I I ,..,_., ... _""_c ....... vlOllt•~...,.-,_• __ -.r......, "'IJU 0..... .... Ill)< C.. ........ JI ... ___ ,_ I =-... ..-.--. ... -------i--· I .. ______ 25¢ l.l.l.l.S l. 7607! li·······••l!ll•••• Two bottles of Woolite are better than one. Buy two bottles of Woolite. Keep one by the basin for your favorite hand washables, and the other by the washing machine for your gentle cycle things. Woolite helps fine washables stay fresh and new looking. Save now on two bottles of Woolite. 1htst Woolite: _______ .. SAVEiOC when you buy any size W>olite~ \ ........ ~ .. ~~~~ip,iil!lil .. iillll~ .... ll!ll .. ~~1111~~~0191Jloyte-M~w.y,New~k u Savory savings. -------AIOUT -------AIOUT ; II $1-99GREAT w DINNER $5 . ftft SUPERI e77DINNERI (") 0 c "O 0 z I Good f0t thrM pl9Cea of Juicy, 0010.n brown Kentucky Fried Chicken, plu• alngle HNlno1 of cote 1law, muhecl potatoe• •tld gravy. and a roll. Limit two oflera per p~m:tlaM. Coupon good only lat combination white/ dettl Ofdefl. Cuatc>mef paya all aPQllcable ulH tu. Good tor nine p1ecea of juicy, golden blown Kentucky fried Cr11cken, with tour rolla. 1 large cole slaw, a large muned Potatoes ind 1 medium gravy Um•t two otters per purchase Coupan good only lat combination white/ darll ordera Customer pays 111 apollc1ble salH tax. Oller expuea M1rcl'I 15. 1981 Oller expues I March 15. 1981 Pf'ICH may vary II P" 818 I tlct~ling lac.Ilona Good only In Southem I Cal1f0tma where you aee America's Flav<><lle Window S.nner. I More Traditional American Lamb Recipes 'HOMESTEAD CO OKOUT L€gofLamb Life on America's Great Plains was full of ups and downs as early settlers struggled to stake their claim to what has tufned out to be the Breadbasket of America. But you can bet that one of the ups was the aroma of a full leg of seasoned lamb roasting on a Write for more free lamb recipes. ameU llil COlllCil Dept L-480, 200 Clayton Street Denver. CO 80206 Otter good 1n u 8 A only white 1upl)l111 Int PleaH 1tl0w 4 10 t w••kt lo; Otll11•tY spit over an open fire. Today you can serve a bit of history to your family over Your backyard grill by making this the main dish often this summer. 6 to 8 servings leg of lamb 1 teasPOC' ,·salt 1 clove garlic. linely minced " teasp00n ground pepper )( teasp00n groond ginger " 1e1sp00n powdered thvm• IC teaspoon dtted sage U teaspoon dried marjoram 1 tableap00n ohve.oil or bacon drippings Cut amall but deep slashes In lop surface of lamb. Mix together salt. garlic, pepper. ginger. thvme. sage. marlorem and 1 teasp00n on or drippings. Fill sla1hea with mixture. Rub remaining oil or drippings over e1Jr1ace of lamb. Skewer lamb with rotisserie spit Place 1plt 8 lncMa above hot ooels. Cook for 20 to 2& mlnut" per pound, or until meat thermometer r99ltte'1 145°F ror medium-rare. 1eoo F for medium or 1700Ffor well-done. Serve American lamb for farm fresh quality. . Orange Coaa1 Dally Pllotwedneeday, March 4, 1981 s• Wasitli~e watchers: Feast on 'apple pie ••• Really.- Even waillllne· walcben can enjoy •P· ple plea, plus or mlnua . . • plus other healthy, lOW·calorte liiared.lenta, mlnua the calorle·laden double crusts that con· tribute most ol the calories. Here are three o! my favorites~ ·Two or them stretch a small tbaw- and·bake commercial pie aheH lo flt a lar1er dessert that's either top· leas or bottomless. The other uses pbyllo dough (strudel leaves) availa- ble frozen in some areas. FRENCH APPLE CHEESE TA.RT SmaU single frozen pie shell 3 apples, peeled, cored, thinly sliced 5 tablespoons golden raisins 2 tablespoons honey 1 teaspoon c in - namon Half · teaspoon nutmeg Half-cup skim milk HaH-cup uncreamed cottage cheese 1 teaspoon lemon juice Pinch of grated lemon peel 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 2 eggs 4 tablespoons granulated fru ctose ( r r u i t s u g a r ) . 'o r equivalent sugar sub· st1tute Allow pie s hell to defrost at room tem· perature. Re m ove it · from its Coil pan by carefully folding in quarters. Unfold it in a round nonstick 9-inch straight·sided cake pan. Ce nter the pastry. then press it lo flt with your fingertips. starting in the center. Use gentle pressure to stretch the pie shell up the sides of the cake pan. Combine the sliced ap· pies. raisins, honey, cin· namon and nutmeg; mix lightly. Spoon into the pie shell. Combine remainin g ingredients in blender or food processor and blend smooth. Pour over apple rtlling. Bake un· History of Toll House1 cookies The legendary Toll House Cookie got its name from a lovely old toll house on the out· s kirts or Whitman , Mass. Built in 1709 at the halfway point between Boston, and New Bed- ford, it became a haven where weary travelers slopped for food, drink and rest while they wait- ed for a change of horses. The historic old toll house was purchased by Mr. & Mrs. Wakefield in 1930, and turned into the now famous Toll House Inn. Mn. Wakefield ex- perimented with, and improved upon many old dessert recipes. Her incredible baked desserts attracted peo- ple from all over New England. One day, she was ex- perimenting with a favorite Colonial cookie -the Butter Drop Do. She cut a bar of Semi- sweet Chocolate Into tiny bits and added them to the cookie dough, half expecting them lo melt.. lnst.ead the bits of chocolate held their shape. softening just slightly lo a delicately creatny texture. Mrs. Wakefield named her delicious discovery - The Toll House Cookie. The Toll House Cookie soon became a widespread favorite. Everyo'ne wanted the recipe to bake al home. Today, morsels •re u.1ed to make hundreds of deliclou1 chocolate • treats all over America, lo addition to the nearly seven bUlion Toll HOUM Cookie. baked lo bomet ~ery year. covered, on the bottom ... ..:Q credlenta and mix Uebt-in • prebeated 400· crat. Stir &Oletber r rack of a preheated 1 tablespoon com- 4Z5 ·de1re~ oven, 15 ly; 'J:° loto a 9·lncb de1ree oven 3$(olo 40 starch malnlnl lDerecHeats, e · minutes. Lower beat to DODI ck deep dish ple mlnutea. Allow cool 2 teaspoon• apple cept butt.I', and 1 325-decrees, and bake pan or cue pan. Take before cutUni. Makes 10 pie 1plce lnlo the pao. Cover the an adcliUonal 2S to 30 tbe lar1e1t (center) servln11, U5 calories 1 teaspoon vanilla apple mtxture with z minutes, or u.nW cbeese strip of pie tutry and each (10 calories more extract layera of pb)'Uo paatry, toppina ls set. Makes 10 cored.sliced Half ·teaspoon 1enUy atretc lt to fit per ~ervlng with fruc-~ tablespoons honey torn in pieces to fit. servings, 170 calories acrou the middle of the lose). teaspoons melted Brush eaeb ta/er Ug Uy eacb Cl!iO calories each Quarter·cup drted nutmee cake pan or ple pan. APPLE PINEAPPLE butter with m~lte butte . wlth 1u1ar substitute.)~ apricots, cliced Optional; 2 table-Continue to stretch and SftVDELPIE With cooking a pray. Tuck the edees ol t 6-ounce can pln.eap. spoons granulated fruc-arrange 1trip1 -three· 2 sheets phyllo spray the bottom of a pastry into the pa . APPLE PJ~EAPPLE pie or apple juice con· tose (or equivalent quarters of an lncb pastry, thawed nonatick 9-inch round or Bake uncovered, in APRICOT centrate, thawed sweetener)' apart -until the ple ls 3 apples, peeled. square cake pan (or ple preheated 400 -degr LA Tl'ICE TOP PIE 2 tablespt>ns corn-Flatten pie shell on a covered with a criss· cored. thinly sliced pan) until slick. Line it oven 20 to 80 minute , Sma'll single pie starch cutting board and slice croes lattice o! pastry. 8·ounce can juice-with torn pieces of until pastry Is flak shell, thawed 1 teaspoon cln-ll Into hall-Inch strips. Discard leftover paatry. packed crushed pineap-phyllo pastry, reserving Makes 6 ser vings, 4 apples, peeled, namon Combine remaining in-Bake the pie uncovered, pie, undrained two-thirds for the top calories each. :'· vons GREAT SPECIALS PLUS :· IM~P ICE , .. - BACON SAVE WITH EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ATYOftS I • f ' i • • ' i SMOKED-REG SLlcrS I LB PKG _ .. SCJ ORANGES '>Wt.Er ANO.J<JICY LB e Ll"\lf 8 LSS (l>\.i1<:ho1~ ov~r hm111~9 puc~ 39 lb I FAMILYSCOTT 79 !2!1-~J TISSUE e LIMlf 2fP..ottN~-·~-1f11 pt!«I01) GROCERIES .,.,llf"{f "'I Tree Top Apple Cider ~·•1""t fll*' r-Htlllf Sunshine Crackers +"11u""'tl 1'1.f' Kelloggs Corn Flakes •••.1t~lnot u1trh·fwu1~, Oeneral Miiia Cerul \\.'IKi\ilti._. 0 & C Fried Onion i.,.• • 1111""~ t Uft Puritan Salad Oil 81,.11 1"1 f "'Ull>O'llll Taster Choice Coffee 149 .99 112 149 .60 1eo 4e2 '''°'fl<() -~ro ... -ecnvc•oc••c.BB Tuna Helper • ~~~.A'f~Dee Raviolis • 7 0 • '""°'l (flt 'W'OC£Dot t~O Oorton s Clam a ~"'"' 'r'! Ust Point Shrimp , •• ., "'-Ii (ltl)c , .. Nestles Cookie Mix .85 ]84 ]47 ~uv•~cr tr• ]35 Her•hey Chotol.te Syrup P~:'Boni 009 Snack• 139 JftCQ\l'll P~·11o<n1 175 Cling Free Fabric Softener P=:l'69 Liquid o.ner 181 ~&Ton Facial Ttaaue • 5 7 MEATS tl<J!ott~~W'~ Stnotn Tip Steaks IAl-1 •N,.!tf:Cr ~l'·~ Chuck Family steaks r.1•1 '"•i!l lf UN< eor.tU!\5 248 Cube Steaks l& (llll lf.lltll"\~ l~~°" }98 Boneless Rump Roast u1 U rt1t•ll.lf -MUO<UDI J69 Beer Roa•t• or Steak• i.a '""'' ""°ltAI]. 209 Boneless Stewing Beer ui 11\1111.l •"'" Vl\l.Ul!'AOI~~ }84 Oround Beer Patties 1• v•,,,•CU111111 Pork Loin Chop• fllf.i.t--Up!I~ Boneless Leg of Porlc UI 21e UI }89 DELICATES SEN .69 .89 lv-\IT 4 (PIJ«:hate ~ ltmrt r~ pric:t' lb I 291 l~OUNCEPACKAOE-MEAT LIMIT 4 (Purchas.e Ollef llmlt-r~ pnce I 4~1 BONELESS ]88 ~J19.c~~~OAST L8 U>\l'l 2 l~Mw....., hm~ "'G prtt• lb I 98) VONS ... 89 COFFEE .&: I POUND Cf\.N -RECUIAR 01111' tltC f't:Rll, UM/T 2(Pur<~w:~ lim111~ J>OC• 2 1~1 SERVICL SFAFOOD VONS BAKERY HO T BAKERY HEAL TH f, BEAUTY tOt"Q!.-~ BICRHOr 1~-oeo ou Pert Shampoo S:tf~ocfc:;nt ~Cold C.psule.• f-4 .99 119 144 121 FRO ZFN FO ODS .39 .79 .59 VONS O WN BRAND 131 189 .33 H";;allan Sweet Rolls • 7 9 C~~cent Crumb Donuts 109 It 2l8 "'1'°'CYWHt'..AT J~(M 98 Granola Bread-nlO'll:• • PRODUCE <lfCA r l'Oll ""4.A05 cucumbert ~ N'C) C"IJ'<... (<()lot/O oellcloua Apples ~""-R)lll l-000 Sunklst Lemons 'U'1. t<Ol Oii~ Large Mk:hoku b1:fte~bachla P1ant1 Lii .19 fA .25 Ill .39 ,,. • 12 I> .69 ~ )99 l IQ UO R I 7'llfU Seagram's 7 Crown I 1'llrr• SflWCilf1 Ten Hlth Bourbon 269 299 489 1249 999 ---n.M. TlllU .... ,_._. t fOIWl!Clle. 1 .. 1.CAl.lllUlltfol_ ... lOCA,_ fW 9'0llil ,._, '°",... ~ --fl Mt,. !iO'J jlllftCTM '4l -UM W, ml~. IM ........... W, ~ ...... . """'"··~~·.Oftll•l•Nll;,...l,-#11..-.W PAL>\OUVE OISHWASHINQ LIQOIO DYNAl'\O UQOID LAUNDRY DETEROEtfT .68 ~ CARESS ~THBOOYBAR ZEE NAPKINS FN"ilt.V PAC:K Or.nge OoaM Dally PllotfNednMday, March•. 1981 Ground bief-Mediterranean 1tyle Dress up an old favorite For a chance ol pace, take an old favorite and dr .. a lt up with forelp flair. Ground Beel, Mediter· ranean Style la a stlllet entree dealped t.o make life euy oo the coot and to w het family ap· petites. Once the beef is browned, diced red ap· pJe,. chop ped onion, mustard, salt and garlic powder att added. Once the apple and onions are tender, peu and water 10 lo. Then, to give the d.lah substance, packa&ed enriched pre-cooked rice ls added. Tb1a foolproof rice la tailor-made for skillet dinners and a natural companion for ground beef. Served with a crisp green salad and a fruit dessert, dinner is ready in a matter of minutes. G&OUND BEEF, MEDITE&&ANEAN STYLE 1 pound around beef 1 unpeeled red ap- ple, cored and diced 14 cup finely chopped onion 1 tablespoon pre· pared mustard 1 ~ teaspoons saJt \<. teaspoon garlic powder 1 package ( 10 o~. > frozen 5-minute cook sweet green peas 1 ~ cupe water 1 ~ cups packaged Bubbly not so fattening enriched pre-cooked rice 1 cup (~ pt.) sour cream Brown meat in a large skillet. Add app le, onion, mustard, salt and gallc powder; cook until apple and onions are tender. Add peas and water. Stir in rice. Bring to boil; cover and sim· mer for 8 minutes, or until rice and peas are tender and most of li· quid la absorbed. Top with sour cream. Makes 6 c ups or 4 servings. Table wines with less 'kick' ST. HELENA CAP) - Aimed at the weight-conscious, Los Hermanos Vineyards says it plans to start marketing two table wines that will contain less alcohol and 25 per- cent fewer calories than the standard products. percent less alcohol than us ual, wines will be called "Llgbt Chablis" and "Light Rose ," according to Tor Kenward, public relatioos direct.or for the Napa Valley winery. calories. The Los Herm anos "lights" will have about 56 calories. Containing three A six-ounce glass of dry white wine usually c ontains about 75 The wine comes from grapes har vested this year in the California Central Valley. T be chablis, a white wine, comes from French colombard, semilllon and muscat grapes, PARK AV ••a..t eapz ese.d Con tai ns 60'X, Vegetable Oi \ 2 5 " .. LESS F"AT THAN MARGARINE ' •.. but atlff h8e thM ~~KAY flevor ' 111wtllazs (2l.BS.I ..... / ~~-<=;>~· A PARKAY L1ght Spread trom Kratt. PARKA.Y tlavor, and 25% lees tat and calories tba.n regular marga.rtne, all 1n a big, b8fu Jt.11\.tl two-pound bowl you oan use ovar and <Mm ------~------------~~~IM 21000 l.llOSO ~Mo 2C» ..------------------------ ~ACK Al"OUIO") ' l . I while the rose ia made from grepache grapes, Kenward said. Most non-fort~fied wines contain from 12 to 14 percent ol alcohol by volume. Tbe "liaht" cha blls and rose will contain a bout nine percent and about 10 percent respectively. .. ... There's one simple reason why Knudsen's new Apple Juice is the freshest and sweetest around: We keep it simple. We start with apples. And nothing but the best apples. Then we stop right there. We don't add sugar. Or preservatives. Or any other additives. We keep it pure, 1003 apple juic.e from oonc.entrate. You1l find it chilled and ready-to-serve. Knudsen's new Apple Juice. It's simply ~-__ J ___ _ delicious. Because there's nothing to it ~. But apples. :7Ae 1/Mij3ltw ... ------------1 ~OFF KNUDSEN I NEW100%PUREAPPLEJUICE FROM CONCENTRATE. I Grocer: To redeem this coupon, mall to Knudsen Food Products. P.O. Box 1806, Cltnton. Iowa 52734. You Wiii oe paid a maximum of 15C for coupon, Plus 7C handhns charse. Invoices proving I purchase of sufficient stock to rover coupons for Knudsen YQiurt . must be shown on r uest. Cash redemption value of 1/20 of ONE CENT Ofter void :e prohibited, taxed, or restricted by law I. This coupon goad on a11y combtnatlon of Knudsen YoBurt flavors · · Limit one coupon per customer. Ally other use constitutes fraud OFF Off« expires 9/30/81 A.1·380-lA ~ STORE COUPON ____ ..... _____ _ Nailableat RAl.PHS, Al.B(RTSONS. HUGHES. GElSON°S. SMITH'S FOOD KING, PANTRY, MAYFAIR. and other ftne stores •NEW Produce ~f (~''H i!'1io Jo~w!) •NEW L.oeo,I, Field {irowt11 Produce ... • N&w ... L.Ow, L-Ow P~1ces/ FOOD -. . Qiiick-brea'ds can be frozen for quick mea~ Inter Bu•y lives often go 1 teupoon salt 1~ teaspoons salt 8~ x 4~-lnch loaf pans. 1 cup milk ireaaed •~ x ·~·Inch hand ln hand with quick 1 teaspoon grated 2 cupe milk Bake at 325 dearees tor "" cup hooey loaf pan. Bake at 350 meal• made ol refined orange rind 2 egsa S5 to 80 minutes. Makes ~cup cooking oil degrees for 45 to 50 foods with UWe nutritive 1 cup milk l. ~ cup dark mo· 2 loavea. 1 ecc minutes. Makes 1 loaf. value. Yet, it 11 possible ~cup cooking oil ._,,_·~ ..._· ________ _...._____ lasses . &AISIN·llONEY ,,., cupaeedlessrahlru to uae some creative ~cupmolasses ~ ~cupcooldngoil &YEBREAD c.;omblne the two June Roth is the weekend time to bake 1 e11 Combine the two 1 cup medium rye flours, baking powder, author of more than 20 whole grain "quick-Combine •rabam Jiil llJI flours,augar, corn meal. flour baking soda, salt. cookbooks, includ breads" that can be flour, Wlbleached flour, baiting soda, and salt; 1 cup unbleached ginaer, and cinnamon; "Salt-free Cooking w frosen tor use on days carrots, sugar, baking stir together. In a smaJI flour stir together. ln a small Herbs and Spices." when there isn't a powder, salt, and orante bined. FUJ ereued muf-or graham flour bowl, combine the milk, 1,,., teaspoons bak· bowl, combine the milk, you have a special • mlnuteto spar"f!. rind; mix well. In a fin cups or paper liners 1,.2 cup unbleached e1us. molasses , and in1 powder honey, cooking oil, and question, write to J Quick-breads do not small bowl, combine the about '4 full, Bake at 400 flour cooking oil; beat well. 1 teaspoon baking eJg; beat well. Add liq· Roth c /o the Daily Pi need hours ol rising and milk, oil. molasses, and" degrees for 20 minutes, 1 cup sugar Add the liquid ingre· soda u1d ingredients to dry P.O. Box 1560, Co punchina down between egg; beat well. Add the or until lightly browned. l,'l .cup yellow corn dienta to the blended dry 1 teaspoon salt mgredlents and stir until Mesa 9216216. Enclose kneadings, but rather liquid Jngredients to the Makes 1 dozen. meal in1redients, stirring just ~teaspoon ginger just combined. Add self-addressed stam are mixed toeether like blended dry intredlenta, BROWN BREAD 1 ~ teaspoons bak-until combined. Pour \i'l teaspoon cin· raisins and stir through. envelope for a pers0?91 a cake batter, using 1_st_i_rr_l~ng;.....;;J_us_t~un_t_il~c_o_m_·~~-3_c_u~ps~w~ho_l_e_w~he_a_t~i_ng~sod~a~~~~~~~-ba_t_te_r~in_to~t_w_o_.::..g_re_a_s_ed~n_a_m~o_n~~~~~~~-P_o~u_r~b_a_t _te_r~i_n_t_o~a~r_e~p~ly_.~~~~~~­ eggs and baking powder for leavening. Instead of using refined white flour. "'8e 40 percent un· bleached fl our and 60 percent whole wheat or graham flour for a heartier and healthier bread. , Whole wheat flour ls ground from the entire wheat kernel, lncludiQg all the natural nutrients . Graham flour is the same, except it is more coars ely ground than the whole wheat flour. Unbleached flour is an all-purpose flour which has its natural white· ness and no bleaching agent is used. Some health·conscious cooks recommend add· i ng wh eat germ t o these batter breads, to make use of its natural flavor , extra protein. iron, vitamin Bl and vi tamin E. Wheat germ can be substituted for V4 cup of eaeh cup of flour listed in a batter bread recipe, combining with 34 cup of an all-purpose flour to total one cup. Once wheat germ is opened. store the re· mainder in a tig htly closed container in the refrigerator, to retain freshness. Wheat germ is from the heart of the wheat kernel, the part that germinates whe n planted. It is removed in the milling of white flour and refiq_ed cereals. Here are some in· leresting batter breads and muffins that may be mixed easily, baked, and stored in the freezer if desired. GRAHAM CARROT MUFFINS 1 cup graham flour 1 cup all purpose un· bleached flour 3/4 cup coarsely grat· ed carrots 1/4 cup sugar 1 tablespoon baking powder Honey bees really do stay bu~y By MIT'll AYALA You're dipping a spoon into a jar of golden·amber honey. and already you can almost ta ste its aromatic sweetness on your breakfast toast. Wait a minute. There's a story behind that honey. To produce the honey in that one pound jar, bees had to fly a distance equivalent to three times around the world at the equator. If it was made on an average summer day, more than 50,000 bees worked from dawn to duisk to gather the nee· tar and tum it into your honey. ~ND wan!E they were doing that, they were also doing something of incom- parable value to man. One·third of all crops we eat need honey bees for poWnaUon. Without honey bees, we'd bave no almonds, no prunes, no melons, no appjes, no carrots, no obioDJ . . . U.. lilt 1oea> onandon. 1 •• Grada1 anlmah would be la uoubh, top. for wit!MNt bete, there would be no aUalfa or clo,er. ! · WUdllfe al8o depends on t housand• of varletiel of fndta, n• aacl 1eedl wbieb neta honey beet for pollina· Uon. Ralphs ·Double Co~pon Savings Double Coupon Present 1"1s coupon ;i1on9 w1tn any 011e Manufacturers cen1s on coue><>n ano Ql'I douoie the sav•nos wnen you purchase Int 11em No1 to rnclude ''retailer ··trH or 9rocerv purcnne coupoor. or eaceed 1ne vatul' ot lhe •IPm E•Cludes ltquor tooacco •no.llurd ""'~ proaucts Ll!Nt One li.tn per Me~ren' Coupon end Limit S Double Coupone per Cuttomer Coupon !ftec:tlwe Mw. I ttwu ...... 11, 1111 USDA Choice-Blade Cut Chuck Roast Present tnrs coupon a1<>ng '""'" any one Manutacture<s cents.off coupon end gel double the sav11191 when you Purcnase the 11em Nol to 1nctude retailer tree or grocery purchase coupons 01 ••ceea 1ne vetue ot 1ne •lem E •eludes llQUOr I008CCO I nd tlu1d milk products USDA Choice Beef Chuck Llmtt One Item per Menufecturen' Coupon end Limit 3 Double Coupone per Cuttomet' Coupon !tlecttwe Mer. I ttwu Mer. 11, 1111 USDA-Grade A-Frozen Valchrla or Golden Glo 7-Bone Roast Hen Turkel Double Coupon Pr t'St'nl II"~ coupon dlon9 w11n any one Manu11c1urers cents ofl coupo11 ana 9rt OouDle lhe sa"rn9s whell you pu•cn..tse ,,.,e •tttm Not 10 .nc-•ude teta1te, ttee or O'U({.)''t' ovr<..rtJSe tuupons or e•cerd tne valut ot the tPm E •c•uOP5 ••avo' tOOdcco a,,d lluiO m+I._, p1ooucts Limit One Item per Menufecturen• Coupon end Llmtt S Doubfe Coupone per Cuetom« Coupon Etlecttwe Mer. 5 thru M•. 11, 1111 Fillet-Pacific Fresh Red Snapg..._ .1 i• .J ,. . .. ·! 1• 79 ~ 7 1/4 oz .• box Meat or Beef Armour Hot Dogs • 11b. pkg. Kraft-Philadelphia .Cream L..::::::=~=..J· Cheese • &oz. • pkg. ll~DDD~DDD ~OOBJJ~W ~fir! mrfF N~l!~. ·over 350,000 Prizes available to win! .luM come lllto ,...,.. eftd p6cll vp '°"' .,._..,._. 11,000,000 ftound Utt of ,,l,.."TM ......... ·~,.., -...~ ....... ~ ......... 11 ........ "' .. ,,.....,... .......... , .. :E:'°""''" ...WS ... 11_.... ....... . ,_.,. ...... °'ti..... • ...... . ... ..._,-U, .. '"-9" TM .... ..... ................................ ~=;· .................. _,.. ......... ........ 11,-. ... ..__ U, .. ,,._"TM ......,, Ne,..... ftlUlllfJ. Y• ...... M 11 er ..... jM1111I,, .... C• ••• ef ..... ~= .................. ..... ...,...._ ... ,.,..., .......... ......_. ''·--.....,.~ .. ~· ..... ...... =,··· ........... ... c ... , .................... .... ................................. .... ..... ,..... ......... .., ........ -~ ...... ..,,ttl19' ... ......................... _.."'Mir.• .......... 71101 .... ... .......................... = .. .... MU SIJlf .... All ,,..." .... ~-'II ........ ,,...... ..................... .. ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE MAR. 1, 1111 --..., .. _.. -· ,..,...., ,,... -· -~ ....... ··~ ..... K~ .. ····--···· r'' ~ I ' .. I • • t t • . '\ ...:...: .. .. ...... ~ New Crop Jumbo Size Arlichok • Ralphs-Egg 64 oz. btl. Sesame Bread • ,· 11b. loaf Now Av•ll•ble-Funk I Wttgnall1 Encyclopedle Volume9 Regency Edition Only per lb. 2'' Votwne 1 ·ltHI Only tt I .1 . ~ r• ., •i /') 1J Or..,,ge Cout OaUy Pllot!Nednelday, March 4, 1981 FOOD Americans fibdy get taste of real Oriental food l'or y1ara, man1 teupoon IJ'OUDCI linler bu1n11 cut lD ~-1.ncb broUI mlxta&re.' Brin& to Yield: tMl'VLQll. ~ teupooq bot 2 1reen·tlpped add part; 1taNry until A••rlcaDI lllaoucbt 1 clove ,-arllc, pleffe a boll; redUH beat and HOT ANDSPICY POU pepper 1auc. bananu, cut lD ~-lncb meat ll cooked. Remove Chin .. food munt only mlnced Jn small boWl cosnblne • l m mer 1 ml nut e . -BVNAN 8TYLB 3 or 4 tablespoooa pieces porlr; Mt ulde. lD same cb,p •u•J a.nd chow l tea a po on broth, cat.up, vlD.,ar, Dl11olve COl'Dltarcb In 1 ~lean pork, ve1etableoll,dlvlded In medium bowl wok. •Ur$ 0 :arllc and mtJn. But tod!Yt the col'DI~ soy aauce, Htame water; add to wok. cut lnlUv.n 1 clove 1arllc, combine porlJ, 1herry 11.D1er. more ol1 Uit!t del1cbta fA unental 2 tablapoou cold aeedt, carrots and Cook , 1 t l r r l n I 2 tablt1poon1 sherry minced and cornatarch : let If neceuary. Add lfMD c"-"lMI cu be eully water pepper; Mt Hide. In a conatantly, until wine "'teupoancbopped atand 10 minutes. In pepper and onlon ; HJDpled u more· and l'ril cup1 1livend, wok or lar1e 1lrlllet, mixture boila and 1 tea a po on freah 1ln1er ( ~ another bowl comblne stir-fry 1 minute. Stir lD more authentic cookedturkey beat oll until lt 11 tblckena. Add turkey, cornJtattb tea1poonlJ"OUDd1lD1er). broth, 1oy aauce, brolhmixture;cooklto S•fcbuan and Hunan 'rilcupbean1prouta smokln1 bot; add bean 1prout1, water '4cupchiclcenbrotb 1 1reen pepper, aeaame oil and bot 2mlnulel.Addporkand r &~tau rant a .are l can (I~ ou.acee> 1calllon1 , 1ln1er and cbestnuu and bananu: a tableapoolla soy aeeded and cut in ~-inch pepper sauce; aet uide. ba.nanu; mix well. Cook I 1 up in cities water c be 1tnut1 , garlic. Stir-fry quickly mht well. Coolr until sauce squaree In wok or lar1e skillet· untU heated tbrou1b. the country. drained, lllced j uat until aroma la heated ~ucb. Serve 1 teatpoon aeaame ~ cup chopped heat 2 tablespoons oll Serve with steamed merican1 can 2 1reen -tipped noticeable; add the wltb steamed rice. oll onion untll it ls •mokinc bot; rice. Yield: 41ervln11. r t the appeal of tbil 1 y, Innovative type of c~. 9ne out1tandin1 Pr\bclple behind Chinese coold.nc ill stretching. ~mall quanUtles. of leffoven or expensive m~ata are turned into sev.eral aervinp through st~·fry techniques - qujckly sautelng the meat, along with a v arlety of colorful vegetables. ~Mbough not c""tomaril'y tbouaht to bet used ln Chinese diJbea, bananas do m•e an ideal addition to e stir-fry. arllest written re rd.I about bananas ac uatly appeared in a cient C h inese m uscripts. today's menus they mllke an ideal coptribution since th4y're economically priced year-round, and lhfir subtly sweet, mqUow flavor provides a toothing contrast to th m.ore pronounced se orungs. tortunately, because of the growing interest in China and Chinese co king, department stqres are featuring Oriental merchandise, foods , and kitchen equipment. So it should be quite easy to locate whatever ingredients you need to prepare these dishes at home: Sweet and So ur Turkey.Szechuan Style is a fitting end to leftover turkey. A dish that's special enough for guests, it's also so quickly prepared it makes for fine family dining, as well. Szechuan cooking is cbaracteriJed by the u.se of scallions and finler, pl45 a touch of the sour. Our entree relies on delectable bananas to provide a contrasting sweetness -so extra sugar ~ not needed . .The Hunan province ls regarded as producing the hottest food in China. However, we have toned down the seasonings in Hot and Spicy Pork -Hunan Style to produce a superbly flavored dish t hat will appeal to the American palate. Here's a stir-fry that's fun to cook and great to eat -so get out your chopsticks and enjoy a meal that will evoke the exotic tastes of a Chinese banquet. Bananas are one of the most versatile of fruits and can be used at almost every degree of ripeness. But the slig htl y firm , green-Upped bananas c ailed for in these recipes are the most practical for 1Ur-frlea since they contribute just the right amount of mellow flavor to the dishes, while boldtng firm texture for attractive servtn1, SWEET AND sou• TlJUEY- SZECRVANSTYLE ~ cup chicken broth ~cup cataup 3 tablespoons white ne vtnecar · 3 tablespoons soy a uce 1 tablespoon seaame 8 eda ~ cup shredded c rrott ~ teupooa pepper 3 table1poona v 1etable o'1 ~ cup chopped .1 alllom ~ teaspoon chopped, b lialer root or ~ rou Ml/Ml IAVEI FRESH PORK SAi E llDlllMST Mlrlls Iii CHOPS ml'lis '111fUUSAIE .11.sl.39 1151.49 1t.S1.J9 11s1.19 ... .1199° IEEf STATER lllOt C8i11RED llll1 IAll M '"""ANY llJI N CI a9• LIY•e.a ..... LI. lfATCll lllOt IUCIO •VAii IM)l. ' I '9 LUllC•lllAft IA Wll.totf CltlT"llO ttol • 11 • MIATW••H IA •in• •ac.. LI• 11• "°'"' 11-0l. • 11• U.ICD8AC .. IA 11111111 -D Ott MY ICZI NCI 99 KA••ac.. LI • IUP CMUC11 llOAIT • 1 •• .......... LI IDP II.ADI CUT • 11 • muc••na• ua ,. ... llOAIT LI• 1 ff iiiH'Tiaa LI • 1 ff i.i..-OasT ua ' I" ........ aftAll LI• 1 ff .... TUI( UI •2•• ii8a•ioa•T L.•1•• ii.o..:iiiiwn UI • 1" I WILD FRUrT PUNCH,RAR VERY BERRY 7 8 C HAWAII II NllCH4&0z .-liiii~~~ ......................... 12-07-• 1 •2 I ORIGINAL STYLE POTATO CHIPS • 28 PRllllLES ............. 214.M>Z. I I CHOCOLATE SYRUP • 11 • .MILK llAIE ........... »07- 1 iliOll ....................... 2&0Z. • 1 •0 I cA1H111R1aououn 99c IAR SOAP ............. 4.~0Z. I KOTEX DEODORANT • 1 •• 111111 PADS ............. »CT. I "IQ OR PINI ,OREIT CUANEA • i •6 'AJAX L•UID ....... »07-I JOHNIOHI OYIRNIQKT •2 .. DIAPEIS .... : ............. 1•CT. IUACH • CLOROX M-0462· HIUllllOe, MOJ21d' Of! l L. l'fllk " FFEE ~·6" ITATlll ~ MOOUHO CH EE&E SLICES ~~·1·· MOU~ APPLESAUCE •~71• UOUIO Cl~lll SOFT sC"UB I UQIJOR SPEC/AU BORATEEM ~ .. I CALGOI :::~~ . . . .. t STA PUF F.5~~ .. f LI• AWAY ~~~E RDIUZIT ~~~ IC»OZ s2.57 t~Z $1.16 la-OZ $1.52 )2<)1_ s211 PICKLES ~~~IU)SHEJI .2•~Z s1.28 PICKLE SLICES ~~~£~ ..•• 24-0Z Sl.19 PICKLES ~5.ALYE.• I . l2~ Sl.19 1 1:.~ .... .... 1ecl PICKLES m,N .. t 126-0l. s4. 79 R011nr•E ""'' '°" c:Hu.ac s1 .29 """" ~~= .. ~Al!CI I 4-0l CllESE EE I Mil. Sl.47 MOZZARELLA :t=".r~.. . . t ..... e.oz. s1.11 MILK :r"'°""m . . ... I ,..... t>Ol. 47c PIE fllllll :~o:~"~~ ..... t . .-.. »Ol. 75° APPLE JUICE MOTn.. • I . . . . MOL Sl.62 GRAP£ JUICE ITAl111MOe •• I ..... ™l294c 11 :.~.. .. ff4L 5tl LEA & PEllllS =~~1~~···'~ '1.18 DOC FOii !i!'IMW' .. t .. \. ~ u JOP CllJICE IOO&CMllll ..... t ... PM)1. SUB CEl£Al ~~ ...... f .......... aor.Sl.48 lll'soB"ti.: .. _ $1.l l KRUSE ...... HAM BUTT PORTION •1• LB SHANK PORTION FRESH FROZEN llMUMI AYAIUllLE IN STORES WlTH SEllYICl OU.I 0 Nl Y ALIX llACAll<*I ••• •ALA• ~u • ALIX CUCIHHlll I ONION ••• •ALA9 ~oll HUA VAU.IY IUCfD TO OtlOC:ll • 1 •• •wt••cm•u ~.u TIYOU IUCID TO OtllMlll ~ll 'I" ua'I" 801UltllAM '"°" CUT CHIOOAll c-u SEAFOOD SPECIALS ,111114 P"llODN PlLLIT • 1 •• oca&• NllCll LI iU8"iii&P ... Ll•1•• Pllllll 'llOZIN eoottaD 9"0W •21 • ca.A• CLftnH LI 'llDH 'llOZDI '•" ............. LI FllOZBI FOODS FllUH TfNC>ell c•u., 23C 1-LI l'KO EACH I DIS Pill.A ::= .. ~IAUS..0£. • YM • u.s mm ua ::.11" Oii I SAU l& llTTO IRft CMU ~~C>«<AAu f ms ClfftI m I WD.CISU£m f "°" FflU ICHOOl. EOUl'MINT £~G,:.euYa T -.. .. Orange Coast Oally Piiot/Wednesday, March~. 1981 * North Carol.ina champagne finding vintners ROSE HlLL. N.C. (AP) -More than a cen· lury ago in a tiny vineyard in northeastern North Carolina winemaker Sidney Weller smacked his lfpa in apprecJatJon of a «1'55 of America'• first commercially produced chimpacne. . Some 145 years later. the bubbly ls flowing once again from this state known more for its tobacco than for lu grapes. North Carolina Champagne, product of the native mu!cadlne grape, is beginning to find its ~1lY slowly to vintners' shelves and winecellers. 1 THE CHAMPAGNE and other wines are be· Ing squeezed into existence at a small farmer· owned cooperative winery in ,Duplin County, about 175 miles south or where Weller's Medoc Vineyard once stood. Duplin Wine Cellars was established six xears ago to breathe new life into the state's dying grape industry. Perched at the edge of the s mall ~gricult.ural community. the winery seems as out flt place as the satin-bedsheet outlet located next cJoo~"The Lord blessed this stale with Vilis rotun· dlJolia muscadines. a Southern grape that once eave North Carolina the distinction or being the Jf>ading wine-producing state in the country.·· $8id David Fussell, a 37-year-old former school principal who is president of the co-op and bperates the winery with his wife, Ann. "THERE IS 75 million dollars invested in North Carolina grapes, not counting the land ~osts. We bad to do something to protect that in· \Testment," he said. To be considered authentic North Carolina wine. the grapes must be traced to what is believed to be the original muscadine vine - which is still growing at Fort Raleigh on Vegetable crop hurt by freeze Roanoke Island where tt was discovered hun. dreds of yean ago. Captains Phillip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe, exploring ror Sir Walter Raleigh in 1584, wrote that the coast of North Carolina was • •so full of grapes as the very beating and suree or the sea overflowed them . . . in all the world, the like abundance is not to be found.'• Indeed. the state's muscadine grapes were so plentiful that in the 17th century they were often used as a medium or exchange. GEORGE WASIUNGTON'S favorite table wine was made from Scuppernong grapes -one of the most popular offspring of the muscadine - and Scarlett O'Hara used Scuppemong wine to make her syllabub. Before Prohibition, the state was the largest wine maker in America. producing at least 2 million gallons a year. In fact, Weller's Medoc Vineyard was the country's first commercial winery. At one time there were 33 in the state. To- day, thereareonlythree. Operating under the s logan "PUT CAROLINA ON YOUR WlNE LIST," Duplin Cellars is trying to stem the now of Tar Heel grape juice to New York wineries. Until recently. about 95 percent or the grapes grown in North Carolina were shipped to New York. With 2,49' acres or grapes in the aatate, North Carolina produces about 5,600 tons of grape• -ot a national total of a bouU. 6 million tona. THE STATE'S WINES have a way to go before reaching their potential, according lo Dr. Dan E. Carrol! Jr. an oenologisl at North Carolina State University, but he adds, "I thJnk within the next 10 years you'U find North Carolina wines list- ed on fine restaurant wine lists.'' "It's really good," declared Florence and Alvin Pietro Paolo, a Middlesex, N.J ., couple who stopped at the Dulpln winery for a tour and tasting while en route to Florida. "Who would have ever thought North Carolina had anything like this." The seven wines produced at Duplin range from the sweet Scuppernong and Carolina Red to the crisp, dry Carolina Preeminence White. Scup- pernong remains a favorite among North Carolina buyers. but Preeminence White and a spunky. medium-dry rose called Noble are gain· ing popularity elsewhere in the country. "NORTH CAROLINA makes a much more fruity wine that is very volatile as far as its bou- quet is concerned," said Fussell "Traditionally, North CaroUna wines are s weeter than the Euro- ~o~ c,\)S ~~+~ ~(\~,"~ c,~ CONVENIENT. DISPOSABLE COLOP~ST • BRAND C..._.lly- • C ..... -~ .......... .,.,..._ • '"9dl.,_... .~ ............ •C ....... ,._ ........... OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE! We no"' (c!r<y t"E C()ITIC)lete COLOPLAS T 11ne lht.' ld•gP\I r,eu.nR (11\00Sdbte o~lorn1 aool1c1nce\ •n IN:' NOtlO f vt>ryl"•nl( 1()1 col<1<,tomdtP\ 1il"f''>tomate<, and u•1n.i•v OSIOO'ldte'>-dll ••"tl'I corwe•·lf'N COLOPlA!>T OISOO'ldb·l•!y C:OLOPLAS r •ehao•t.!y O'u\ Cclst' pack ec.onornv ~ <,\;IE' 10 cl\~ to• yQu• r Rf E COP\' ol IN~IGH I!>- 'Ile oublic:clttOn tl'lat s 1u~I foi you -atway<. •rtCludes lOUDO'IS to• lref> \clmolt><, 711-379' Food shoppers should find plenty of pork . ch,lcken, turkey. dairy products. apples. winter pears. o range s. g rap efruit, r aisins, p~unes and cabbage in markets during Marchi according to U .S . Department of Agriculture marketing specialists. rn ore tender veg eta bl cs l .. t ....... ""'9ncan K•••'-• ..., ,,.,.. like snap beans. sweet -.,..,.,.,.-.. rt•'-•odav MOUL TON PLAZA PHARMACY 2386S Moulton P•rkw•Y. l •gun• Hills (Neir.t to El R•ncho Merkel} A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER ~ut. beC'ause of the J14nuary freeze in Florida. some of the corn, peppers. squash and eggplant wi ll be in li ght supply that is, not enough for normal needs. Fresh oranges will be plentiful because of the bumper crop of navel oranges in California Grapefruit. too. should 1741WntclffDr., .....,.,_..._" 6!1-7032 be plentiful . ~ul ship-r----c.11 642-5678. ments so far this season Pul a few words (See ~~GETA~LES, C8) l_ to work tor you. ((10c:::lc:::J c:::> c::u:~ c::>Cl c::JCJO. D~ 0 'TI. d·+; o· .1..11Q ,,,ons... .;;;;..-,;.;;.;.--- a· start at your dinner table. 0 I • Bake<! ao hours• • Honey 'n spice Glaze 0 Warm un our • Spiral sliced for easy serving '"I' • Whole or half hams 0 pre·COoked Honey •Nationwide shipping service 0 Baked u-for • Full service Oellcalessen 11411111 •Old Wor1'1 Cheese Shop fHckor)' fGrrM or OHto• 2FOR 1 oheesesale !~:.~~.·.~.~~· .............. 2/2.29 Miid Checldcr 112 OLI Wlac..-.......................... . 2/3.19 ~~::d':+;' ........................ 2/2.19 (]~ dinner on those "f lfliYe:d~:~i;i8:"~s cold evenings. ~~:!°s~~~······················ 2/2.29 Good thru March I , 1 H1 a l700E.COA.STHWY.,CorOft•cMIM•P'HOHU7J.tOOO FASHION WESTCLIFF I a 2001 ltA.YMOHD WAY at ll TOaO H .. IL TOltO. PHOt41 ll7·llU a ... o, .. lA.CH l lYD. at G••RELD. HUHTIHGTOH •ucH. '"°""4 ... 575 0 1 s LAN o PLAZA a f'lso Anaheim, Orange, Rancho Mirage •. La H~bra, San. Diego, D 17tt." '"'-Hewpoti letdl Hewporl lffdi n ~estlake Village, North Holl'ywood. Woodland Hills. Santa Montea. Pasadena Il 640-6030 64z.097z ~c::>c::Jc::JClc:::JCJ~~C)c::JCJCJCJc::>c:::Jt::Jc::::>CJCJt:l~CJ~CJ~t:..1==-!1-~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ ClEAN-UP WITN THESE SAV/NfJS A~ailable et 111 Sttter Bros. M1rkm Prices Effwe Merch s -11, 1981 ·9 OWDOL t CHEER 84-oz. 171-oz. I FASllONS REFRESHMENTS FUN SATURDAY MARCH 7 11 A.M. $60 DOOR PRIZE DRAWING I • - ' ~' .. ~~. ;:.. ~ ' pean wines. But 1eneralty, we've found, ooce folks try ours, they quickly develop a likin1 fof' !) them." •11 The winery also produ~ portl, brandles1,1t J and, of course, champagne. Much of the wlnemak't m ing is done by hand. Except for the addition of 1f .1 few modem, lime·savlng concenloau, Duplin atlllLI' makes wine exactly like it was made 200 yeant•3 ago. in "The quality and natural grape flavor of our'" wines confirm the wisdom of our old-tlmey .. , ways," said Fussell. 1 •;., Ironically. the winery sits in the middle or it If I dry county. Wineries are federally controlled, bu! it took a special stale legislative act for Duplin to "' open tasting rooms and sell its product at lh~'I" winery. "'l According to town legend, it also took a kindly act by a Baptist preacher to halt a local movement"q to close the business. ·"" "Yep, he stood up there one Sunday momin' and reminded the congregation that a lot was in·" 1 vested in the winery and that if it were closed, if in would mean an unfair economic loss to the grape' 1 growers and the only thing to do would be for the J' church to buy the winery and close it. Then nobody'· I· would be hurt but the congregation.·' · :• And that, Fussell said, wastheendofthat. Confused ... n .. ,. I, '· •i I I . " .. . ·' '•I "' ,,, '•Tl • 11 : l I r/ • II • I> •• by all tbe conflktlns food barPJft claims? ' ., a BOLD 9 PLEASE R.S.V.P. 495-2823 \\'lien you want food bargain$ -prices you can count on. the proof is m print .... in the grocery ads in the Daily Pilot. Shop the Daily Pilot . get the facts . compare ..... I lien yo" kno1.;: you· re realty petting the most fo r yOllr money. , ' Orange Cout Dally PllotJWednffday, March 4, 1981 ~ taste of spring ~~ .. !~~ned ~.d!!l~!.~b.~~ .. !~~~ .. ~!!IP Doti 1nbaUn1 breaths fl 1>eeauee at can r,e rroaen 1 amall leavea sorrel 1arllc, parsley, 1ploach, 1oup <please, oo salt>. V• cup ( ~ 1tlcll) but. ol •Prtna alr, 1eetn1 col· Lo lee cube containers 1 tresb leaves mlnt peu, aorrel and mint. Top eacb 1teamln1 ter "'1ul newly bl0110mln1 ~ for future 1ervlne1. Jwit 4 a mall aprll• Remove and discard aervln1 wltb an Icy 4 1 fresh oaJon 1prln1 nowen, tender llJZU llllll •\ brln1 whatever portlooa chervil hard lower atema of let· do 11 op of w bl pp e d flD 1 .. 'if'!s 1 •booU ol fOUlll greens < you want to room tem· .y. teupoon aummer tuce. Shred by band the cream, sprinkled with e~ 1 c fproutJnc on trees and perature, than heat in savory . lettuce lnto bite alsea pecana. Makes 4 cupa. Jutceol ~lemon lawnamalleyouwantto anovenonbold-warm. 2 cups chie!lteo (do notpu.ree).Blendall Freshly made <not ~teupooacaraway Inject IUCb lteahneaa in· cerlloUum) Vitamins A, number remain to mate LE'ITtJCE SOUP broth Wldiluted with the chicken broth. canned> Onion Soup also seed ~yourownbody? B, C; calcium, thlasoupasurprisingly 1 head Boston let· ~stlckbutter Cover, 1lmmer 30 wu classified as a Why Dot do ao by eat· c bl orophy II , iron , satisfying aupper. tuce 1 ta6Jeapoon com: minutes, attrring o~· health 1oup because e!i~~~!~~ltlon, Ina health IOUPI made m a I n e a i u m , You'll probably flnd 2 2 cbivea • atareb cationally. Add chervil, onions are nutritionally butter, lemon juice; add i1~ young bert»? pbo1pboru1 , pot as· cupsful wlth hot but· 2 cloves garlic ~cup llU1k summer, savory; aim· rich. onions and caraway . ., t'urd.ue · UWe 1~. alum andlinc. tered roll, or Pita bread, 6 la r I e sprigs 4 tab 1e1poon1 mer 5 nunutea. ONION SOUP OF l57t Cover, simmer l hour. Jlnl• at a nunery. Start Even tbou1h some and fresh fruit (kiwi) a Parsley, or 12 small wbippedcream In a separate pa~. <MODEaNIZED> Add chervil durinf laat th i wtb of the nutrients are lost fulfilling, refreshing 6 large leaves 2 teaspoons pecan melt the butter; stir . . 15 minutes. Makes 8 er Ito on aunny durhil tbe cooking meal. spinach bits through cornstarch to 8 cups cold water .:~d:=in!:rpe~ few proceas, a aufficient It's bandy too for 1 cup petit pois Puree (in a proc· blend without lumps; 8 heapinl teupoona cups. Then combine freshly grown Boston lettuce, chives, parsley, spinach, •orrel, mint and chervil in my original recipe for delicious Lettuce·Soup. your body will enjoy t heir many natural vitamins a nd trace minerals. Lettuce (lactuca Saliva ) contains Vitamins A, B, C, E , G ; calcium, iron , mag· nealum, phosphorous, potaaaium. <At one time, lettuce wu eaten just before bedtime to pre· ventinaominla.) Chives <Allium schoenoprasum), one of the few foods containing Vitamin D, also have Vitamins A, 8 , C, E, G; allicin, allistatin , calcium, cellulose , chloride, chlorophyll, copper , iron, manganese , phosphorous, protein, silicon, sodium, sulphur and zinc. Parsley ( Petroselinum crispum > offers Vitamins A, B, C, E, G, P ; cholorophyll, calcium, chloride, cop· per . iron , iodine , manganese phosphorous. potassium, protein, silicon and sodium. Spinach (Spinacia oleracea) is rich in Vitamins A. 8 , C ; chlorophyll, iron. Sorrel ( Rumex acetosa) has long been classified as a blood cleanser. Antiseptic Mint ( Mentba piperita> holds Vitamins A, C ; cam· phor , chloride, chlorophyll, cineol, cop· per, isovalerate , • limonene, menthol, pinene, thymol and tan· II nin. Chervil (Aothriscus Vegetables (From Page C7) have been lagging slightly behind the heavy volume or last year , and Texa s' harvest is behind last year's schedule. Citrus juices are ex· peeled to be in adequate supply -enough to meet normal needs. Because or Florida's freeze, juice processors there are having to al· locate substantially re· duced supplies of frozen concentrate. chilled and canned juices over the season. At the same time carryover stocks are higher than they were a year ago and processing plants are operating at an ac · celerated rate. Produce bins will be full of apples and winter pears, since storage holdings have been sub· stanlially larger than early lut year. Major canned non-citrus fruits, including peaches, pears, fruit cocktail and applesauce, are expect· ed to be in adequate sup- ply. Milk production in March will likely set an all·tlme high for the month. So far this year, output is about 4 percent above the early part of last year. Mtlk and dairy products are ex· peeled f.o be plenlilul. Pork production la ex· pected to rt.le aeuonally durtnc the month, with overall 1uppJ1e1 remain· in1 lar1e. Output will averaae I to I perce~t below the record hiab production ratea of 1 year earlier but will be approximately 5 percent' above the 1918·'80 averaie for March. Durln1 March, beef will be ln ~uate 1up· ply, with • el 5 to 7 percent elow the 1f7I. •• .,., ... '°' th• montb. Broller-fr1er1 ud tmtrey will bl pie. tifu1 -I to 10 pneeat aboY• tbe lateat a.year , •• ,.,. for the monU. for broi*'-frJen and• to II percent 1bo•e .. ....,.,. ...... ,, . Lower Prices Overall By Our Triple the Difference Money Back Offer WASHINGTON STATE RED DELICIOUS APPLES .. C:lS '"'""" ... ... 4 IM•Y fVfl MU ti !M t Triple· The· Difference--.... Guarantee! IUY n Olff(ll(NT ITEMS WOllf" • 10 011 111011( AT MAll•O USUT COMrUl l'fllCES THIS WEE!! ON THE SAME llfMS AT ANY OTHEll lllAJOll SUl'flllllAll•ET ' IONl Y ONE OF EACH ITEM rUllCHASED MAY IE USED IN THE COMrAlllSON I If THflll TOTAL IS LOWEii llllNG YOUll ITEMIZED lllAHET US.ET llEGISTlll fAl'f ANO THE OTHER STOlll'S P'tltCES TO MA11•£T IAU£T MO WI Will rAY YOU 11111"1.l THE OtffUlNC( I• CA•H. 'llClU-•l•lfU•• llOAll BOUNTY TOWELS DECORATOR Olt OESl6NElt All .UlllOllll -11 lllllH O .. IAU fl KAUtl 1111 Jllll lllSAll OllCO••O Cl"l Uit LB. '100e llil f •t ITO.S wtOI MOf 10001 Dfll Al.IOU CRISCO PEARS OIL 14-IZ. m. 125 ft.c;EN ,. 599 r.,, Ott -ffi Carrots ens, ffi Cucumbers Ill .19 ... 29 IO f'rMI ffi Jim Beam Bourbon '":$ 9. 99 MAlllET BASKET'S TREMEIDOUS RED· I PLAIT SALEI ."-11•1 111•1 .. , &YlllUllll Ill ll• IAllOA IU1 o~I MIC• •. 1"4All.nM Celen ffiChrysanthemums 4" 1"4 !ff Coleus 6",.. ~Gloxinia II 3 o 99 ... 69 .. 3.99 u. ... 8! Clorox Bleach M·u 59 ••• • :' 2.35 ·~ CHI ... ,_ C9Tfll --°f. Sii'c;dc..P:;ches .71 .59 °f. T~~ai(tsauce .22 .16 ...,...... ~ Best Foods 1.49 ~ ..,...,.... L .. "'· f11-Or c;,..._ ~ Cottage Cheese ~:' .85 lllW! Kt..-Nice • .. Cllelsy ~ Cheese Spread 2.-, .. 2.99 FARY •EAT PACll REDUCED 5c PU LI. OI •REI ~ NMIL Y PACK, ._. ~cube Steak ~FAMILY PACK,""' !Jt'!' Rib End Chops FAMILY PACK 11t1 ._.. .. !*Chuck Steak .2.53 .. 1.54 .1.93 MttUI laiUl l ·U rllt .98 ~Beef Pattie Mix ~ Ill ~ St;bB~~~s; .1.29 ... IUin H! T-Bone Steak .. 2.58 ...... B!croton .. 4.99 °f. A·;; pi'e cj'~ice X a;,.;;9c;;~r~ 1.861.39 1.37 .99 ~ FAMILY PAcK. -.-...... Clll-1 19 Lower Prices Over•ll ~ Drumsticks Or Thighs • • Qu•r•nteedl r•-=.::.~==i ,m~~-~..:::.-,SAVE •4 6 51•--a .. -" r•-----• IOO SUGAR I I 101 u 3MB"CIUICK I • I "' CLmAll•R I I .... 1 ~oo OPP 1 SAO WAPBRS 1 1 &Ava IAUCB 1 WITH RED·X COUPONS 1 uo R•PILL 1 1 SAO ..,.... I .10 ·:.~.85 I I .18 ·=-· 7 5 I I .ao ~1.88• •1.ooDOGP'DDIB I I I I Al'lfllTllO Ill• AVMAllUTY IUMMTU I I I U91-,.., ..... -... ~-IMZ_ .. ____ (l(A"-"-•-1t• .. ,.._. ...... -~-DaPIM-i.T•-m·------'*•au • ...... --1 i----' ~-..,_.. I I ~ ,_, ~ - -• -I UUY-•TllS• ••• "' •• ..,. ..... al .... -~ ... __.. I .. ,,.,, --- -• '*I I .. _, lllSllW -· -• -.,-.:::::~;a:·::-_:~ ,m.::::::-1w.;m-=~::; ;rME=~; ;m==-: I ,.. ...'::"~::.... I I 1• cam~ I I 1• ·NT~O 1 I 111 20• OFPi I * 20• OFF1 I * 1n11•'='-- I PADS I I ,.,.PANDY I I CHIPS I I .~ I I .:r=r 1 I DOUGH ISAd 89 I ISAR ":... 74 I IMW 89 I 1 aan Alllnm I ISAV• .. ..-.... aeaeul IMW 1 .ft I:.!' KY=-,.• ·11 :!~..:.r..---I I-!!' .. ==: :J I ~ CH••• I I ·•t -~H•••• I .IO t:::... ., I ~ !!!!..', A::r.=:er: I I ~ ,_, _,.,. =--. -I I !".!I.•, ~ r.:e:-= I .. ~/'l,&T II ra • I ~ .... , ""'1MT:: Mm I I 1111\"-=: r.r2'111 -'--"'*' -_,.. .. tt.1•1 ----·-_........ .,_ -"" -... ---· .......... ··=::"' ,m:=:, ,,.-:.::::] ·-==;:~;.~ ril-=~::"' , .. .:;:: I "' •=;rr=..1 I 111 IHVU I I "' i!aT · I 111 "m'L'VU'I I 11 • 20• nppl I ~-4p I BRUD 1 I LOTION I I 'l'OM'MMlft I I 1 I .-'l'iilT I I 1~.:.C':1.ae1191:.~1.ae1 lJ·~-1.1e~121r~.ee11~ =•·x· I IT-• E~wr.rrm. • • F'"'~T'r.r,.. • Hf.T·•r.~ •· Ei!l'?fi'r..r~ • • .Htttt.&r..r: • • .JA~'WLlll!.;r.mt.r. ~-..:..aoewa• ---i:.i::.... H•H ---~---~-I II• 11Uf8• ----~i: ... ---~-..... i••.• -.. \I Tbe "" ldaool .... "'""'i-* prom bl1b t -t •H ioelal ~aftelDftueeeetbe MtlqhUitaoltem·a1e llrll wbo .... aDldoul to ro..,.....fut. • 'Teea -a1era wltb wel111t problems com· Cal)' fo llow ••JI· ert.bed diet plaal that elute between at.ates Ol cleprivatioo and, in mo-blenu ol wealrneq, over- lndul1ence, dependent upon their upcoming ••. Bee8 <From Pace CS> 3,000 fulltime beekeepers in the UnUed States. It's an arduous Ule. To maintain a family of four, a beekeeper needs to have tbe in- come from close to 1,000 hives -which means a minimum of so million bees. "Bees require care, Just like any other farm animal," says Gary. "YOU HAVE to pro· lect them from diseases, you worry when it gets too bot or cold, and you have to move the hives to good foraging areas just as s urely as a shepherd bas to move his sheep to good graz- ing lands." The beekeepers' worst worry is pesticides. Sup- posedly lhe County Ex- tension warns nearby beekeepers whenever a farmer is going to use a pesticide, but the proc- ess doesn't always work. If a beekeeper has 1,000 or more hives scat- tered in three counties, he'd have to fly like Superman to rescue alJ of his tiny charges from the danger of sprays. Although each hive will produce about 100 pounds of sale a ble honey in a year, honey is not necessarily what keeps a beekeeper in business. IN RICH agricultural areas, s uch as California's Sacramento ValJey, a beekeeper may make more money from renting his bees to farmers. The going rate this year for pollinating an almond crop is $10·$20 per hive during the blooming season. Wh en that finishes, the beekeeper can rent his hi ves up t o four times more to pollinate such successive crops as prunes, m e lons o r alfalfa. What are some tips on how to store and use honey? Jerry Marston, a bee specialist at UCD notes ihat one thing we don't have to worry about is sheU life. "Honey stored Ln the tombs in ancient Egypt is still edible," he reveals. Howard Foster , a Colusa beekeeper and past president of the American Beekeeping Federation, adds, "It will keep practically .forever, but in lime, mo s t hon eys will crystaUze. "TO MAKE it liquid again, all you do is heat tbe container in hot - not boiling -water until the contents become clear." How do beekeepers llke to-u se their product? U you should ner vi.lit the Bee Biology Laboratory at Davis, and Dr. Gary invites you to come in for a cup of cof- fee, don't expect him to offer you white sugar to 10 alone with your brew~ . Gary and bis col- leaauea would find that a bore. lnatead, they ol· fer a variety ol honeys. "TUE n..AVOJl of honeys," explaim Gary, "are u diftermt from •ch other u different navon ol ice cream. "But• lee cream, dMln'tolfer 1uch a wide choice, maybe 30 or 40 ftuon . ·~~.youbav• ~u18Dda o1 varl•U• • , .aa maa1 dilfereat ......... tlMN ldladl ot no.ers that ......... lo ..., • MMeUoD ol ... ,. ilid aPertm• Wiiia a.-ftaYOn ID ,_..ea«• or tea. · .. Orange Coat Dally PllotJWedneeday, March 4, 1981 unusua weightwatch habits aoclaJ calendar," aay1 tbe pre1ident of the 0r..,. County Dietetic A11oelatlon, Marlene Beno. II they're DOt extreme- ly ovel'ftllbt, Ulll type ol erratic eiUDa may pro- vide the re1ulta they want wblle doln• unseen dam.,. to tbelr nutri- tional bealtb, 1beaay1. "IN TBEI& BFFOaTS to l4*t wetcbt they may delete mtire food IJ'OUPI from their diet while in· \1/uf'_ e~ LIDO AND duliinl ID tbelr favorite "For tutanee," 1be h11Ia-eilorie aaacb lD· aa11, .. .._,.._..,." 1tead." tead to 1ub1Utute IOft Beno, a reJ:!~~ed drtW tor da1rJ prodacta dlet!Ua aped in aJt.boub tbelr bon8I Deed wei1bt ebatrol, uya th• cafdum pr"'ided by theM llrll may mu~•· dairy foodl to de•e&op to look sreat4'for tbe bi& andkeeptbem1trem1. event but "lf they're not "ID theea1eotteea-a1e 1ettln1 dally 1ervln11 Clrll about to eater tbelr from eacbo(tbefowfood prime cbildbeartns 1roupa ot milk, meat, years, 1Rd1ct1n1 a IOOd vegetablea ud fruits. store of calcium ii and breads and cereals; particularty important, they may be setting not only for their own themselves up for health health but for tbe baby's problems later in life. too." AVG. WO T. 12 to 22•H . I , Y O t1 • S you uut. AD ......U.Uc coac~rned about e' perceptka ot edequate eatJa1 babJu of yo aerriaC .._ ma1 be the ..... .,.., 8-oba110 real reaaoa for tbetr po11t1"1uaeetklal tom welptproblem. nueece u.m wit.bout the rtak alaouncHn1Ukealec· "POa ~SAMPLE " turtn1panm. e 1aya, "IOID8 al the "Ftnt." Beno H)'I, "J f coanncJlll)' eaten in tb1nk it'• important to l er lel'Vhll lbel than talk to tbem lD a non· re o mm ended a re Jud1mental manner bre ut cerea.11, meat, about tbe foodl they like ml lhakea, apaabeW belt and eat moet fre· and ratarcbea. quently. • ·s vln1 1lae1 for "They may actually be tbeae ~ are three· eatin1 much better than fourtba ~ a cup of dry cereal, two CM.mees per Hrviq al meat IJ"OUP foods, a.o e11bt-ouace milk lbake and ooe--balf cup per aervln1 of •P•lhetU, rice, 1rlll, noodle• or other 1tarcbell." Teen-aaen need four aervlnp a day trom any of the milk O'OUP foods, two a day from the meat 1roup, and fow aervinp a day from both the ve1etable and fruit group and breads and cereals group to 1et all tbe FRESH ..,...,_ S 29 TROUT ........ ::?.~:1.~................. LB. ' OCEAN PERCH • I .89 EASTER.N OYSTERS 2.49 RE X SOlE • 2.99 WESTERN OYSTERS 1.69 ENGLISH SOLE • 3.89 TRUE°COO • 2 .89 ,.OZIN Dll'•OSTID ALASKA s 3 8 9 KING CRAB LEGS................ , •. II I .69 • 3.99 MONTEREY SQUID .69 COCl<T All SHRIMP U ~l)A C"11rnf1e•nlo1"b SMALL LOIN CHOPS '"""Do"' Not f" end ?7"Q 'tit EL RANCHO GROUND BEEF 11 2.19 lfED SNAPPER . 1.19 HALIBUT STEAKS 3.89 J •,{)A ( hu , .. ''"'', ' ... GROUND\AM8 DUtrieaU lMy need foe •ood healtb and •tront bocllell. , " O NCB YOU 'V 8 persuaded your t.eenac•· to watdl Mrvlna lilea and eat from all fow foo4 1roup1, Beno 1u11eat. uldDC tbem to pm~ the Ume al day that thei eat}Mrpoet. . Tbey aboWd able> take note ol whether or net they are eatlne out of (See TEENS, Pase Cit) ll 3.99 Ill 1.29 , 't r1 A (ho tn llo•utlnu 1.,,.1 C"wl ~ •oll•d CLOD SHLDR. ROAST 11 2 .49 NOR THf lfN HALIBUT CHERRYSTONE ClAMS . 2. I 9 SHELL ON.SHR fMP • 6.99 • 1.29 SILVER SALMON STEAKS • 3.99 t~~8 c"H'o~t , ... ge lo,. ,. 3.19 I q,,, • ""' t;, '' Sl·nd DANCH STYLE BA.CON I 29 U ~ 0 A Clio111 ton•I•" ... , 1011\ ff fl h nchoO••n .. ody ,,.,., foo• l wtt•• I If " 11 • NEW YORK STEAK 11 3. MEAT LOAF • 11 • ..-----------..---------------~ ~~~=,;~2A'9' INTEW ·IPY «!~~~ $ Iii 11 IOHILlll LOIN CUT 1.8, • WHOLI AYO. 10· 14°Lll. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79 LB. KNUDSEN APPLE JUICE ELBERTA PEACHES 1.49 ~INGS ~AN(V 290Z 59c KILLOGG'S 11 • 01 · 99c CORNFLAKIS ..... Prt Prictd 99 lell l rond POTATO CHIPS lO C1 I J Gol Hetty T All KITCHEN BAGS ·'' 2.61 o "" ~ • 0 1 ~rotot·Aprlcot ll1n1opple KERN'S NECTARS I 7 i 01 ~O•t•'<lv• Cocoo l w11tr YARD LEY LIQUID SOAP 7 01 (11omellt1 29 I() OI S•"'" "' ELBOW MACARONI • CHEEZ-I T'S 1.29 1.99 1.09 .69 IMPERIAL MARGARINE \.ll CUIE I 7 ~ l •tP• 81end~d KISSLER WHISKEY 750 Ml Gold wi,,,~ LIDO llLI TIQUJLA 9.98 3.99 6.99 75~ '.Jll IV PQ QT£0 ~QQo,< o,<f.10(0 KAMORA COFFll LIQUIUR J!' l"J:r'/: i I 'ff I 5 0 1 Re9 Ooly·Ory FABERGE I 19 SHAMPOO • I 5 01 Re'L. )( 8od.t, FABl•GI ~ONDITIONIR I . 19 J Ol RIGHT GUARD BRONll • 99 P~i.of 100 TTLINOL CAPI 2.49 8 01 KAOPICTATI 1.39 l AllGE OlllGON GOURMET U \ 0 A ( 11011 n ll0.1•111\\ 3.79 SARATOGA l .. MS CHOPS \I I 1·01 P.,H & 8oo1\ MOIST MEALS CAT FOOD .75 PERRIER WATER 13·01 8o!lle 95c MINEOLA TANGERINES AN.IOU PIARI WHITE MUSHROOMS 39!.39L! 79~ 1 ~ 1'1 \('If~ ( 01 -·'~ SOT AN RICE 1.a1 6 IJI 1 H ().·~"'ft CRAIMEAT I .II 1 • or ••• 1.a1 n t1 ri fA 19• I~· 01 Co .. M """"(;i. •a'" 11,1,h ""-¥.fti AGI PREPARED VEO. • f ••• O •Otlt• '(l.011• ' 01 CARROTS 1;D?a!H~!li¢; 16·0 1 Weick'• '°11•1111 t:.::.~ ......... 1. 25 l ~01. "'"''' l llctd ., ............................. . ~ .... ,, dt ~-a· " Rw.nl~ .................... I.It ··=.=;. ll&ia ... ~ ............... 2. 19 " . ' FRUIT SNACKS i'fttm !ft I vi ,.,f .~ •'I' .:-1!/ :I ' 1 ·01. Ant. Vor. Chipped t\'i~~.~ ... 39c 12·~~..!!.''~1. 91 MvDAn•LA CHllll ..... I. IWi*TacH-............... 1.19 1w.,. ......................... 1.19 lt•114M ~ ..... ~~ ~. Mte,, c.D•AI Clllnl ........ li 1.19 ~ -~ f I I ~\ l·~'\' ·(11 ' I ................... make a smash of a b&Sll YOM don't have to in· wllh damp towel to pre-butter. Repeat, m.lnl rt· t perature Ylte 50 people to a tlt· vent lta dryinc out.) malnlng llllln1 and I/• teup00n cream of down feut for a amaab 8ru1b ~ a\Jip pbyllo dou1b. Do oot crowd rtar ol a bub. llahtly wltb butter. pan. (Can be made 1 tea.spoon vanilla ex· Try• fabulous tlnaer• Place about a teaspoon-ahead to tbia point. tract food buffet, a late·nflht ful or mlln.I at end or Wrap well and freeze.• lf4 te&1poon almond daaert extravaaanu or ,atrlp. Fold corner of Preheat oven to 4 extract an lnformal brunch to strip dlaaonaUy over deerees. Bake s to 1 cup sugar aave Uine and money. filllnl so the abort end minutes or until gol ~ cup semisweet- Planqlna for all three ls meets loo& ed&e of strip, Serve bot. Make chocolate pieces minimal -there's formin1 a rl&ht·•nele doien. •To bake f Cocoa for garnish almost no clean-up and triancle. Continue fold· Bake ln preheat 425 Preheat oven to 225 they don • t cost a inl over at right anales degree oven 10 o 15 d eg re es. Cover two fortune. untll you reach end of minutes. cook le s heets with BE£ f s g EWE a 8 strlp .. Place triangle, M E 8 I N aluminum foil . In large WITHOIPJ'ING SAUCE sea m -side down. on MU~auura bowl wit.h mixer at high 1 pound ground beef ,_J_el_ly_ro_ll_p_an_:_b_r_ua_h_w_it_h __ 4..--:eg::..:g=--w_hi_t_e...J1-____ speed, beat egg whites, ~ cap coarsely chopped parsley llargeonion,chopped 1 teaspoon salt v. teaspoon pepper ~ teaspoon cumin seed \4 teaspoon ground nutmeg • v. teaspoon ground clove v. cupsaladoil 2 6-ounce jars mild taco sauce Combine beef with parsley and remaining ingredients except oil and taco sauce. Use food processor or meat grinder to make a smooth paste. With wet hands, shape about 2 tablespoons of beef mix- t ure around a 1-inch· wooden skewer . Brush with oil and broil skewers 2 to 3 minutes, turning frequently. (To keep warm while broil- ing remainder, arrange in baking pan, cover and place in 250 degree oven.) Heat taco sauce and serve as a dip for skewers . Makes about 40. HAM TRIANGLES ~ pound h am , minced 4 ounces Gruyere or Swiss cheese, shredded 1h c up chut n ey , chopped 1 tablespoon dr y mustard 1h pound phyllo dough (strudel leaves) 1h cup unsalted butter, melted Combine ham with c heese, chutney and mustard; set aside. Cut phyllo dough lengthwise into 2-inch wide strips . <When working out with phyllo, keep it covered ... Teens <From Page C9) hunger or just to be sotia- ble. . ''Teen-agers tend to socialize after school at fast-food restauran't.! and eating is often the focal point of such outings," she says. THE DIETERS MAY need to start counting those after-school "snacks" aa enUre meals , eaten in place of dinner, to be followed by a light evening snack like fresh fruit or a vegetable dip. ''They may realize that they're eating when they 're not hungry and decide to settle for an iced tea after school with"the gan1 or arrange to share ball a hamburger or half an order of fries with a friend," she says. Beno also suggests that teen-agen be involved aa much aa possible in the family grocecy shopping and meal preparation. .. TBE CLOSE& THE\' are to the decl.efoo malt- ing, t be more responsibility they'll have to takefor what they eat. "They'll also be more familiar with the ingre- dients and calories con- tained in these foocll." lf possible, Beno suc- geata that the overweight teen-acer viiii a reg- btered dietitian or public health nutriUoo.iat' for dietary eoumelinc. "At tb1s ace, kicb are sUU developtq lifetime eaUnc bablta. "It's important that they view welpt main- tenance u partol a HD.Ii· ble, tlfelaac eadnl pat- tena, DG&me perned by social n•tl aod un- rea Uatlc, 1llort-term 1oala, "•aplalm. ••A trained wei1bt COUDMlor cu uaualb eom manlcate tbh meau'e moat effee-' Uvel1.' . Singl,. Calndcar rta1tt coc:la W..,..., 4*I COft- ta•u ~ °" cfU. ~ ,,..., parlfl• Md '°"'' .... "' uw Pl6blc ... lh• a_. Coul arto. IHd MflN• to ,..., ... CROSS RIB ROAST Bonel~\ Bonelt'O BPef ChlJCk BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST eonoe<1 Beef LARGE ENO RIB ROAST BOn<l«l Bttl BONELESS ROUND STEAK FuH c UI BonOt'<I Beef TOP ROUND STEAK tit""''"' IONOfO IHf •l>J~ BEEF NECIC BONES SLICED BEEF LIVER LARGE ENO RIB STEAi< • ""*"•tr· T BONE STEAi< M ,.,.N{' Alt' ~~ TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ",...,,, fl~l"Fff' ~ FILET MIGNON 7 BONE CHUCK llOAS T GRADE A HEN TURKEYS ....C.&\ft• fU..ftit\ t1 J01•l1S HP01'1'- 1~s · lb .97 lb 11s lb 1'9 lb • 2.28 .. 68 .•. 98 .~1 .98 • 2.58 . 2.58 .4.88 .1.28 .•. 77 llou\ehold & /'et J:SCOTT TOWELS Big Roll Paoer Anortf'C!Or ~OUtfO .65 BS Sf llOll 11' ...... 93 [, ~~~,o TRASH SACS " , ""' 2.89 [. ~.~~~RINC CLE ANS ER , N ., • 41 r KITTY OUEEN CAT FOOD 31 6 .iv-.•li1ti.S f 01 f a,,.• f' ClADE DEODORIZERS 59 0 MCul(MOIO """ \MWC: Of \UftH" ~fM(W '01 , .... i SCOTT NAPKINS 0 1(0~• P&(t O&Of• .. , .... ,1.49 i SANDWICH BACS -:> lAO• lH Jl\AJ f l( OOCI IO•. 51 r LIQUID DETERGENT h flff"-Ol•d•lllf t:'Ol lfl .89 r SANHLUSH CLEANER 99 0 10W1 i.01C•N. I ic111or A Jt im· BONELESS 1 ss RUMP ROAST S>rlQtn Cut Bon<leO Bfff RO\lr\O SIRLOIN TIP STEAK ~s BonMO BHI l!OUOO lD 22s LO PORK SHOULDER 98 ROAST • Fr~ PIC111( Stvlf lt> PORK 118 SPARERIBS Me011.1m sizt Frozen Offrosreo ID CORNISH GAME HENS to\l"'.f\ ••Of •fttft._, I FRYING CHICKEN ~r ~·JCI• (II, ..... ••OJ• ROASTING CHICKEN ,,, ... ,. , . ,,,. .... r .. 1.48 .•. 59 •. 88 COMBO FRYING CHICKEN .~ 1.19 .e 1.47 .1.57 , •• ,,,~, ... 1.i;f\ t0•1.itrit fl • ',~ ..... (. ,.,., ,.8,._. PORK LOIN ROAST ~·•1.()tiN co1 '\I h r PORK LOIN CHOPS ~MER JOHN SAUSAGE 1 •'•• 1.14 HORMEL SLICED BACON.,,,. 1.88 LADY LEE-SLICED SACO~,, .,., 1. 28 J:LADY LEE CHEDDAR sn~rp 129 90Z Piel] 139 901 Pltg lir'tlft. ... 79 L AMERICAN CHEESE FOOD =~~ap ~HU!t i. 01 h C. 2 .19 • KRAFT SWISS CHEESE 2 99 b Ciu('fD'-aTV-44. ••OI •c; • r LONGHORN CHEESe 5 19 l; 1IUT MilOQ f COll • 1101 ,., • r KAUKAUNA KLUB l Co<fllflO•"°"~ • CHEESE SALL t, POtCOOll\ "!Oll~fll• r PONI PIZZA CRUST e· I' SHRIMP COCKTAIL 6 tA'<O _,. .... •01 .. , 1.59 1107 0.G 2.39 ,t-Cll ._.G.89 1?1 , ... 69 "A•- cream of tartu and ex- tra c ta until foamy. Gradually beat ln sucar, 2 tablespoons at a tlme, beating well alter each addltioo, until sugar ls completely dissolved. Whites 1bould stand in sUff glossy peaks. ln1 a 1~ inch stem. Make 30 stem•. Place on upper rack lo oven. Uae remalnlnc meringue to mike caps: Hold pastry bac vertically and with tip clOCJe to foll ( ~ inch). 1ently squeeze a mound of mertniue about the slze of a silver dollar. If necessary, smoolb tops of caps: Dip finger Ugbt· ly in cold water and pat teently. Make 30 caps. Place caps on lower oven rack. Bake mer· ingues for 1 bour. Turn ovH off and let ineJ'· lnaues dry out. door ajar, 1 hour lon1er. wlth a th tie cocoa. Maha 30 mushrooms. Mlnce pnouah itnaer from l jar preserved •lnaer in syrup to make 4 teaspoons. lo bowl, com blne 6 tabJespoon.s lime Juice, ~ teaspoon salt, minced ainier ud 6 tablespoons syrup from ginger. Pe~l 1nd slice 2 pafayas. Wash a nd hu l 1 pint Spoon merinrue into large pastry bas fitted with 'r'l inch plain tip. Make stems first: Hold bag straight (vertically) with tip close to foil , Gently squeeze out mer- ingue whlle slowly lift- SOLE FlllETS •"Oii~ COOt<ED SHRIMP TURBOT FILLET CATFISH ALLET -If• HALIBUT STEAK SNOW CRAB CLUSTERS .. 1.58 .• 1.38 .. 3.18 ll 1.98 WESTERN OYSTERS 'It \H AVA,AIU T._,,.\ ,.., , .. , °"'' FRESH TROUT ,,, .. , ... ""'\ ' \0 OJ •V•••lll flofUif\ ,.., \I f 0'9tW 10011u 1.78 .• 1.88 ( ·anned & Pack.aged p CHICl<EN OF THE SEA 169 O ~~ ~~! °' ~~~~ 11 01 can I' NESTLE'S bOUIK • RAGU SAUCE b CiP4':"4ff• \\••·"f \ t LADY LEE COOKIES 0 ~ "' ... , ,.,~ r coitf.I MUFFIN Ml)( 0 rJtfl.- r COFFEE·MATE t, r.UillllAttQH '°''" ,., ..... ,. r LADY LEE SYRUP ~ YU\f l\AvoetO ~ KIX CEREAL b , ................ \ .I.• LADY LEE COFFEE ..... """'-"' .33 16 Or Car> 259 31 oz Can WI •• 1.49 '101 "'' .59 I Oll!C•.23 ••OI , .. 1.49 ll01 ... 1.29 •Ol I0•.97 •OOl 1At2.84 r SUNSHINE FIG BARS 1 59 t ?•01 .... , • • UNDERWDOO SARDINES 85 b t VA•lfT•(' 1' 01 Oflil • • PANCAKE MIX ! Al)IWT 'IM"'A •GRAPE JEU Y 6 llO• ill r ANDERSON'S SOUP b UffM Ul\.Jf llC.t •IOI H~ 1.87 \)01 ••• 1.43 b ~~;ON TEA SACS •~t• to• 2.37 r R~RIEO BEANS 0 00\UtU r WALNUT BROWNIE MIX 1 59 6 IJTTt C'•OCl'flt )0 01 90• • To assemble: In small saucepan over low heat, melt c hocolate. With small knife, cut tip or stem s to make nat sur- face, Using a small spatula, spread a thin coat of chocolate on un- derside or cap and place the trimmed end or stem in chocolate In center. Allow to dry on wire rack. Just before serv- ing, sprinkle top of each strawberries. Combine syrup with fruit;· cover and refrigerate until ready to serve. 10 01 can !HARVEST DAY 39 MUFFINS • £ng1is11 Of sour OOugn 6 Ct P~9 pwessoN OOIL l"CUP O' O~~~pLes b ~~1 ~?~TE CORN •• , • .,, h\( r RAGU PIZZA SAUCE t,_ )HA.t()lit [SPAM LOAF D-'"'h ~ HMfOh r TUNA HELPERS ·~11'1• •rir•t• ~ 1A8f'f 219 48 Oz Stt .49 ' Ol Pkg .,.45 ... 86 •~I .. 1.31 ... 86 , .... 79 r ?~?.~~BERRY CROUT ON~" • 69 , SALAD DRESSING } ,.~,~.'~lavf r-....-nf , LADY LEE NOODLES ~ -.(.'lf~f•l••WG I ,.1.09 l~· .59 /)airy & Fro:en 299 14 oz Pwg A PARICAV MARGARINE ,.,,, ,,. .67 r STRAWBERRIES ~ l AO• ur \t.Cro ,,, .. ,,83 b ~~;,~.~ GRAPE JUIC~ / ·~ 1. 2 5 L ~!~~~~s BURR1Tos .. ., ••. 1. 39 r OOWNYFLAKE WAFFLES 99 6 ((()HQM~ , .. } "' ,,.,, .. r OH eov GARLIC BREAD 77 to ,01 •« • Key Buys Mean Extra Savings! kr\ Bw)' •rt •trm• purC'd t\tn ln•tr th•" ,.,.,, rtawla• dl\COUl\I prtC:(\ ••• lf\Uh "' ,.,.,.uranurrt• t<mputer) piom'"oooal •Uo• .. n<h or <'«Pt1011ol rurthl\t• Ytouil hMI h1>~rt<I• <•I It•) llu1 utm• n t•) 1111\t )Ou •hop RED DELICIOUS 39 APPLES • lb NAVEL ORANGES 4~~ll0 69 SAC e RED YAMS us No, LARGE AVOCADOS Catoforr>o~ FuertP EXTRA LARGE ARTICHOKES Fldvorhtl FRESH BROCCOLI . Flavor rut Crtpn .39 Ill .25 Earn .69 UCh .39 lD No games No gimmicks No limits Health & Beaut•· r JHIRMACK CONDITIONER 2 99 0lrlilfl()\_'\J9tf\f• , "I • b EXCEDRIN CAPSULES b ~~D L£ZENGES ,,,1.49 .1.29 .99 .. 87 t JHIRMACIC CONDITIONER 2 99 ...... ~ .. ,, \ 01 • r EDGE SHAVE CREAM o ...... -..r"'"°' i ~r,.,. ,,., • r PERT SHAMPOO ~ ¥'1•~·l Ot•,,. °"" r GEE SHAMPOO 0 "'°"' ....... \Wlf\l\ tt•••I( °"" HOnt-•t Of•°" (Qfott(lfllf• r SOFT & ORI 0 •cu °" Of OOOiH Nf l(lJoll0!19 UNl((NlfO P NIVEA CREAM 6··· r NIVEA LOTION 6 -~~ r SPRING FEELING 6 -ooc_r.,..o r OEXA TRIM CAPSUlES 6 ..,..,lfl co1"-oi u O H1«.r1o r DIAL SOllO 0 OIQ0911~' •t-..a•t .... \(r'lt40 o<iut\60 \CI"' . ,,1.59 ',1.29 ,. 3.29 "'" 1.49 ... , 1.87 •01 .99 1\0l 1.29 .011.79 •f)l1.99 ••01 1.69 •10t .99 J0\2.97 IOt 1.69 )61 1.39 C._..,, DilQw '*' ~.O. IN -CoM 11 .... CA .... ,.... ,.. •1M ' otMI -~ .. "'"'· NCIMa_.llt"'*'*'i ... -..... -... --··--~ -'--•°"'I ·----· .. -...... __ ""''"' -·-......... &tHol• ..... ---·-.. tT~ll °"" °""' y ...... .. • ' _...,. .. ·-·---- J • • 4 ... . .... * Cll .. .Most boys, 1.8-plus, wlll take a~ything offered DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your '9"8n from atria wbo ba¥e 'ad aerioua problems bec:auu they aald "yea" have bad a a~ impact oo our adolete1Dtdaqhi.ers. ' We abo bave an adolescent aon. Wbat about bon. Ann? Ia it true that all boy1 are out to iet everytblnc they can? Or do some bold a different view, either because of their own value 111tem or an unhappy experience? Please teU us, the molhen ot aona, What do you think about thi•? - WICHITA MOTHER , DEA• MOTBEa: I w..W laave .. aay moat boJI, I.I Jeart .W alld Her, wW take aa)111111c ~at la Offere4. ,._ wlaatever &My eu talk a clrl a.to or 08t el. 8"' tedaJ tM boy1 cWa't lta.e to eell 11 ltard u tlley G9ee did beeaue tlae stria ltan HOROSCOPE , Scorpio; Look , t forchange THUUDAY, MARCOS By SYDNEY OMARlt ARIES (Mar . 2l·Apr. 19): Discovery dominates -you gain access to privileged 1 information. L'eo, Aquarius persons fi gure prominently. Maintain independent stance. Fears, do'1bts will be erased. You'll be invited to an "exclusive" club. TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20): Accent on popularity, successful dealings with women, a bility to get finger on pulse of public. Wishes are fulfilled -error in judgment will be rectified. -GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): Diversify, be I flexible, open lines of communication. Focus on career. standing in community, a bility to get point across to one who "pulls strings." Another Gemini and a Sagittarian figure in exciting scenario. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Communication logjam is cleared -message gets across and rebuilding program is underway. Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo persons figure prominently. Be aware of subtle legal nuances; protect ideas, con- cepts. Specify needs. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Piece together bits or information -compJete story is available. Scenario features credit ratings, financial status concerning one close to you, including partner, m ate or business associate. Virgo is in picture. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Domestic adjustment is highlighted -harmony can be restored on homefront. Spotlight on legal affairs. opportunity to publicize pet project and a commitment from one who is a "mover and shaker." Diplomacy wins! LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22 ): Outline of necessary duties becomes clear-you know what should be done, key is to avoid self-deception. Pisces, Virgo individuals play significant roles. One who depends upon you will express appreciation. .. .......... .u, acpeuhe. 1&•1 ldll tl.e Sirl •M 1et.1 prepaat, ltow•••r, ao 1h II u.eoee wbo •••t hold &M Uae If tt'11-. &obea.eld. Till• aaderaeorea oae of '·&Ile m aj.r weebeuel la -.r t0elal avudue. Too au1 ••tlaera wlao are t!oaataatly tellt•• tlaelr .dHllMntokeepu.elrlesae.._...aeldo•'talllto ~elr.., abotrt keeplastltehdppenap. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have driven a 1chool bul in LexiftJtOll, Ky., for nine years. The 1ame questic>M Mked by "Illa Know-It- All" are tbe onea you hear at school board. meetinp. Well, be~ are some au wen: respGMlbie f« cettlnl It open aad abut. What happena II be'• a lrluu? If people think the metal oa a aebool but it an orthndonttat't dream, what would a •winl1nl seat.belt buckle ln the kid'• mouth do to tbe den- Seat belts for school tMIMIT Reall)' I If I bad to wait for 300 kids to set -the bus and futen their seat belts, nobody would aet anyplace . tal biU.1 . Also, bow many seat belta would we need? Sometimes there are four little ooes ln one seat. If each ol the 38 kindercarten children were belted In, what would happen If the bus caucbt on fire? • S(Nne people say, "Put a ferris wheel bar across t.he seat." How safe would this be when it amacu a kid across the bead or ll/ulled op in They now bave hieber, pHded 1eata ln school buaes to st.op the forward motion of the body ln caae of a fast atop. Thia, plua a Sood driver who yelb "SIT DOWN' enry 20 seconds, ls the best bet. If parenta want more safety. they should buy craab suits with matchlna helmets. The aovernment can do only so mucb.-THE BIG YELLER · his face? Alao, the outside chit would be DEAS BIG YELLER: BnM! Let'1 ltear It for tJ.e ... , lteroet wa.. 111.i .... kids day after day. Installation set CA ·PISTRANO VALLEY CBAPrER of the American Associa- tion of Retired Persons, No. 3274, meets 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Hot Springs Dance Hall, 32506 Paseo Adelanto, San Juan Capistrano, for installation of officers. IRVINE TOASTMISTRESS CLUB meeu 11:30 a.m. Monday, in Little Joe's Restaurant of Newport Beach. For more informal.ion call 960-2087. NEWPORT SENIOR CITIZENS Bridge Group meets at 10:30 a.m. Fridays in the Senior Citizens Club, 2101 15th St., Newport Beach. For more information call 548-7534. VIRGINIA CASTLE AUXILIARY of Assistance League of Newport Beach meets at 9 a.m. Thursday, March 5, at the Balboa Bay Club. For more information call 642-0379. LAGVNA BEACH BRANCH or the American Association of University Women meets 9:30 a.m. Thursday, in the Neighborhood Congregational ·Church . Gle nneyre at St. Ann's Drive, Laguna Beach. For more in- formaUon call 837-3797. CAMELOT CHA PTER of the Newport Harbor Guild of the Orange County Music Center meets at noon Thursday at the Balboa Yacht Club. For more information call 542-7201 or 675-8052. CLUB CALENDAR M V PHI EPSILON alumnae meets at 2 p.m. Sunday in the home of Bobette Cameron. For more informa- tion call 546-9111. ORANGE COAST Mothers of Twins Club meets at 7 p.m. Wednes- day at the Big Yellow House on Harbor Blvd., in Costa Mesa. For more information call 536·4114. SADDLEBACK VALLEY Christian Women's Club meets at noon in the El Adobe Restaurant of San Juan Capistrano on Tuesday. For more in- formation call 831·0909. . SOUTH PACIFIC CHAPTER of the Orange County Music Center meets at. 10 :30 a.m. Wednesday in the Registry Hotel. For more informa- tion call 640·0306. GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY of Orange County meets 10 a.m. Satur· day in the Huntington Beach Public Library, 7111 Talbe rt Ave .. Hunt- ington Beach. For more information call 541-2049. DOCENT GU ILD of Bowers Museum meets at 9:30 a.m . in the Irvine Gallery of Bowers Museum. For more information call 552-0647. Big Brothers sough/, "Who Ntttb Yoo" u a weeld11 nim· mary of vohmtter opportunitie1 along tfwi Orange COG&t -Tutors are needed on a one-to-one basis to assist with math. readmg or geography. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 -Nov. 21 ): Accent production, organjze material, stress individual style and creativity. Be ready for change, dealings with children and speculation. Cancer, Capricorn persons play important roles. You'll earn more money! SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22 -Dec. 21 >: People are drawn to you with their problems: you inspire confidence and gain popularity in circles previously regarded as out·of-reach. Aries. Libra individuals play significant roles. lovers of bridge and munc will c""°" together WedMlday in the /int fund raising event of the South Padlic Cbapter of the Orange County M~ Center. Chapter members f /Tom ~ft[ um Bridges, Bet111 Ripley and Ruby Ann Barker ar& among the organizers of the event , which i4 1et to take place in the RegiJtry Hotel Ballroom. Big Brothers is looking for more than lSO men 18 years or older to pro- vide companionship end guidance to boys between 6 and 16 years old. Big and Little Brothers spend about three to five hours together every week for a period of at least one year. For in· formation 'call 992·0791, 544-m3 or 831 -6933. -Bilingual volunteers are sought to work at the information desk screening welfare recipients. -The Nursing Home Advocacy Program trains couples or family groups to visit ttie elderly in con· valescent homes. -Several West Orange County high schools need volunteers as teachers aides. clerical workers, tutors and library aides. Corinthians plan po~luck Services for the Blind Inc. in Santa Ana is a non.profit agency wjth several volunteer opportunities. in- cluding working with children in a day program or in late afternoons and answering the phone. Call 541-3354 for details. -Theater fans can volunteer to U3ber for the South Coast Repertory Theater. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Make new starts in new directions personal scenario features calls. visits, letters from relatives. Leo, Aquarius persons fi gure prominently. Take cold plunge into futun -let go of obligation which bas run its course. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on payments, collections, an in-depth understanding of basic values. Another Aquarian plays important role -you are on verge 61 striking pay dirt. Intuition serves as reliable guide. You discover"moneytree!" PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Personal appearances are major part of scenario -you'll . go places, do things and make valuable contacts. Social,activity accelerates. Assert needs. Expand horizons. THE CO RINTHIANS have scheduled a potluck supper at 7:30 p.m. Fri- day. March 6, in Irvine. Speaker will be Peter Johnson on marketing, management and career development. For in· formation, call Betty at 551·4897. ADVANCED DEGREES LTD. will have a social at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 7, in Newport Beach. For i n for m atio n , call 551-4535. EMILY COLEMAN will lead a "People Sampler" get acquainted social at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 7, in Anaheim. For in- formation, call Keith at (213 ) 828-89C9. . OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a potluck dinner and hol tub party at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 7, in Garde n Grove. A volleyball game will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday, March 8. in Costa Mesa. For information , call -...J.~~~\ilfllOl9p~·----.1 50% OFF~ Wiii ..... Of ,. ..... SCULPTUllD MAILS• KIM CAU • SUNTAN IOOTHS ,,_ MAACH t. IHI ... V0GUE GbAMOt:JB SEVENTEEN COSMOP.O~IT AN MADEMOISELLE . ~~l AGENCY ANO .. ~l .. ~ OPPOf'T\JMTin AVM.AalE. VOU COUlD BE A ~ Ofllll TOOi M.ltO ON TH! COVEM °' ,_.ANY OTHEA &.EAOIHO INTI~ ~ACIAZla Your• YOt'tl • n>ronto • "-'• ..._.."G Comection .. ALI ANO FIJ.IALE ClAl8l9 _p ~ CALL MOW 116-7900 - For information on these op- portunities, call 898·004 Robert al 544-8276. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS will have a house party at 9 p.m. Saturday, March 7, in Fountain Valley. For in· formation. call Barbara at 551 ·0161 . Both Orange County Human Services and the Voluntary Action Center in Newport Beach have a number of volunteer jobs available. At Human Services: Call 642-5678. Put • few words to work for ou. -I Distinctive Craftsmanship Serving You Since 19"6 Matte La111e, Tapestries. Nylons, Hercuions. Velvets. Textures, Vinyls Jftrrlf 0U11r ltplf oisttrg '2809 Newport Blvd .. Newport Beach ...... • .4 ~ Continuous Wear Contact Lenses 24 Hrs/Day for 2 wee~s WIWAM D. HAlllSOK O.D • DOCTO.Ol~Y HJ OCIAM AYL LA9UMA llACM 4t7·17ff ' ' 25% OFF Now Wlfll Oar Sprla1 Cleuw1 Special •1 onua moon . n. ......... -.- Melbourne'• Rlcbard l'rantlla frankb ltat. tbat be owes b1J alle1iaace to the late ~ Hitchcock, and that be bopa to won bl tM Hltcbeoct style. He bu even named tbe Mrolne ot b1a latest ftlm , "Road Games," la bll boDor - "HJtcb" (Jamie Lee Curtis). Al anyone who saw Franklln'• earlier effort, "Patrick," will aeree, he aJlares the late muter'• penchant for a kind of ton1ue-tn-cbeek sore. fie bu the same lute for the bizarre the shock, the implied violence as opposed to tbe bJOOd I bath. . But lacking Hitchcock's urbane and I 1ophilticated sense of humor, which relegated • l l b u t h i s s t a , unulE REVIEW I performers to the status nlUI i of ratJier interesting 1 creatures in a barnyard, j Franklin is not quite ready for the Hitchcock man- '. tie. His humanity keeps showing. ON THE OTHEa RAND, both "Patrick" and : "Road Games" remind us that Franklla is fully : prepared to do what Hitchcock used to refer to u : •'the commercial thing'' -the movie prepared ( with· both eyes on its potential box office return. . It's a bit unusual to find this quality in an : Australian director, but it must be remembered : that his early training was right here at USC, and : that ooe of his mentors was Hitchcock himself. • And that one of his classmates was John : Carpenter. who went on to make "Ha1Joween" and : "The Fog." Hitch must have been plenty : persuasive. : "Road Games," an Avco Embassy release, : finds Stacy Keach driving the 1,800-mile run : between Melbourne and Perth, there to deliver a : truckload of pork to the meat-starved community. : Unaccountably, his load keeps gettine heavier. . Why? Because there's a killer at large, and he keeps storing his cadavers in Keach's freezer. Since the police suspect that Keach is the : modem-age Jack the Ripper to begin with, he's : forced to initiate his own investigation, which in- • dudes most of the people he's passed on the long, long blacktop. ... ...... ,._ . ....,, • ~.._,., .............................. llkw.1 l'"r111111ift ~·····-~ ................................. Wl('tll .. ...... ""......,..,._.,.., .................................... """ ... ...... C.1 -· ~ ,,_.. =· M9r*" ~ ~ ~. emMeay, '11M1111elfnilll. Mllllc....._ .......... _"' ........ ;; •AAr ..... 1flO l"raaklia bu mobilised DOt onlJ bla awareneea of Aaatralla '• more aceatc routes, but bl•. knowled1• of loeal typ.. to lend color and lmmedlacf to bAa 1tory. Tbere'• at.me moment. wben a lady bltebbiker (llarioa Edward), auapeet· ln& Keach ol betnc the Ripper, topples oa the edte of an enormoua precipice. And another when Keach atopa otf at a dJnel', trytns to alert the police to h11 flndln11, only to be fMLltrated by whatever is the Auatrallan equivalent of a bunch of redneck.a. Fran.kiln knows bow to make bis mWeu and b1a people work for him. He's alao aided considerably by b1J cut de· cislona, It would be bard tA> ftnd an actor wbo could better combine the poetry and the pra11J1attam of Pat Quid, the truck driver, tban Stacy Keach. Alone ln bis cab, be recites poetry and lines from plays, and you believe it. .Curtis is marvelous u bis foil, the eirl who listens tA> bis lines, but doesn't buy any of it. She's not a beauty, but she elludes a naturalness that ln· tenalfiel the impact of whatever happens to her. .Also, she screams real well. Grant Pa1e, early an· masked as the villain of the piece, is suitably menacing, aJthou1h no one you wouldn't dare challenae to a bare-1mucks bra~l. THE OTREa CHAaAcrEas, no less well cast, are hardly people that you'd care to invite to your home of a weekend. Franklin keeps bis dice w~Jl loaded. But they do pay off, partly thanks to Vincent Montoo's moody and atmospheric photography. partly due to the incredible atmospherics of Australia itself, the accessibility of Brian May's ravishing score, and the tautness of Edward McQueen-Muon's editing. "Road Games" is a scary and efficient melodrama. Hitchcock it isn't -but so few films are these days. My advice? SetUe'for less.. liiiir:=========:""iii ~ .. _.,,. . ..,_ ,_ . ._ . ..,_ --·....-n. ~·-JIU UAW-r-·-.1-UA--~·-­UA_._4._,, I ''THE JAZZ. • SINGER" (~) . I "FOAT APACHE TH£ BRONX" Clll I · THE COMPETITION" JI • ,.,.~ 'I "FANTASIA" "T'HeDIVIL l MAXDeYUN" ".-0 AT LAIMla" 1Nt I ~-IUU."• ''flORT UACMll" MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ALL am Al«) 1111 F~MS M CUVt llfE SEAL Of llfE MO'"°" PICTUM! C00E Of SELF REGUl.A TION ----NOWPLAYING ---- um& Soulh Colsl (714)494·1514 lltm cam •u Wll• 5llW IUICE Bristol Westbrook S1Jd1um Dnve·ln (714).540-7444 (71 4) 530-4401 (714) 639-8770 Saddleback(7 14) 581 ·5880 Everything you've a~a)'s wanted in a Seafood Platter ••• B011411efs tar Liz Elizabeth Taylor, hoJding curtain call bou· quets, is joined by husband Sen. John Warner ODStage following her stage debut in "The Little Foxes" in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. It also was Miss Taylor's 49th birthday. ~~2~11i1ll•l1· l1·1. .. :JLA~,..t~:lrt=u' J ~icO'~~::O) ~---99+=2100 . • ..... -.... -...... "THI[ GRUT SANTINI"(~) ..,......_ •11 M T ..... «ti. .. "RAGING 9UU" (RI . _,,. .. ,, __ ... ENTERTAINMENT Time selling • movie asse ts NEW YORK <AP> -In a move aimed at reduclnc lta loe~l Time Inc. says ft bu all'fflS in prindple with iUlJl Century.Fox Film Corp. for Fox tA> hold moet ol the uset.s in the television and motloa picture divisions of Time.Life Films Inc. Time officials dJd not release the terms of the a1reement, and the deal remaJna subject. to neiotJaUou and approval by directors of both companies. The move comes after Time·Life Films reported an after·tax loss of about $9 million in 1980. Time aaid if the deal ia completed, the loss should not be as lar1e this year. Time-Life Films most recent theatrical re lease was the 01ovie ''Fort Apache: The Bronx," and it is co-producer with the British Broadcasting Corp. of a cycle of all of Shakespeare's plays that Is being shown in this country on public television. 'Lolita' proteste d NEW YORK CAP) -Protesters say they will picl!et a Broadway theater and hand out leaflets urglng a boycott of "Lolita." on the grounds that the play encourages sexual abuse of children. The opponents, organized by Women Against Pornography, also charged that the play Edward Albee distorts the Vladimir Nabokov novel on which it is based by portraying Lolita as a child seductress rather than a fictim of'sexual abuse. • Orange Cout Dally PllotNlednetday,' March <4, 1981 Cla """-' ~ Of NMllo ..... TUBE TOPPERS .... (1) .. lftOeMdf.n .. -..to ...... to plcik up • -... tNelfld~NMMdlto ....... . ·MAl~ ~ .......... KHJ e I : 20 -Luera Buketball . The Denver Nuaeeta boat the defending NBA clwnp1 tonipt. llMall~-..ct-­.............. ., .... wbo •••n wol'llon'• ---. . ..,. . *** "P.J ." (1HI) Geof98 ~d .. "-Y-mond INT. A ~ l)ri¥Me • It tttdlod Into nwrdor by • womMI he ... llftdto~ •0119H1'• KOOP • 8:00 -"None But the Brave." Frank Sinatra and Clint Walker star in thla ·World War II drama about a temporary truce on a South Pacific· iala.nd. CBS• 9:00 -"No Place to Hide." ... , ...... rrltl*(YAND HUrOt INOUCllH Tommy'• be11 friend• gOfM "°"'° ""' ~. end eflow Nm wNtt .... ll'llMMg, end O.vtd "'°"" Into • 11W1n01f11 1k1Q1tt A myatenoua killer atalka a young woman and threatens her sanity in this new TV movie with Kathleen Beller and Mariette Hartley (photo at left). 81-*Y lfld Hutdl bec«ne tlil'glta of PM1C-9lrtcklfl ....... ~IN~ be•uty tll•y b•frtend ....._ • lllllCMe full of .. fob«lery money In S--y·e~t. • L~ IHAaCalON> A dlecuMlon with key LAlkw pleyef'I 8bOul Ihle e-*'e'• 0-llOllin'I tM o.n.... Muogeta. • M•A•t•H 8 .J. bonowa $200 trom ai.rtee to Mfld to hie wtt., only to ~ CMrtea ta• 9Clvtlnlege of him In vlltl- out W9)'S. .GOOD,.._ In rebellion ~1 J J .. TMlml ~ Into Mr own .pattmenl. •• l1..ICTNC ~AN't(f') Cl) CMNIWI 0 MCNIWI 1:111 e NM 8A8KETaAU Denlltlf Nugget• va. Loa Angelea l.akera 1:111• ~llACK. KOTTIR Mariette Hartley {left) 'COmforta step· daughter Kathleen Beller who la befnc terrorized by an unknown killer in "No PJace to Hide" ton11bt at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. (I) w•A•a•H • OWRIMV An embittered prh1ete au.ta: 0.. OM Downe, relueM to heed F •U. DI'. Aober1 Bl.rt•, Chef l.Autcehy'a counael N..ul OeYld. (A) bec.M1M the pn..t ,_ • MAOHP. I LIM,_,. -e11p«lenced front-MPORT line duty. Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH 0 IMNIY MIU.ER 0 MBW CIM'PIH Del. Janie. Wenlwo<th Guea11: Shelley Winter•, bring• romance Into Peut Wiiliama. Audrey WU- Wojo'• "'• and • 1eaaon 1n Nam•. equality Of the MllM to an 7:IO 8 2 ON THa TOWN ••-11lce cop wt\en lhe Hoata: Ste11e Edward•. 111w1111a an -.lnatlon. Melody Aogera. Viall with 7:00 I CM NIW8 Hollywood'• popular 1111ter- N9C NIW8 lnerlan to the •t•ra: a took e HAPP't DAYS AGAIN la taken at Grammy Aw1td Joenle ~ m0te exc:tt• winner Kenny Rogera' new ~·· • ft.M.WMZ*I How tho F.ingold diet .. UMd to help hyper11C11Ye dllldren; • ---U.8. Anny ~ llltlO CO!ft- IMnda • p19toon of "*': Ch8f T .. !TIM• cNCllen cordon blllu: a.wtty a.. aoon demonatr•t•• 1 home ~ C.INe M8M 8ltl Ille MC of "Trepp« John, M.O." .MCMI * * * "None But The ••119" ( t"5) FrMlt Slne- tra, Clint W••· Americ8fl and J..,.,_ men atrlnel- ed on I South Pldtlc: ltland ~ • ltvce that tau untM radio coni.ct ,. reeumed. • THNe HOSTAAU An Oid~d undergredu8te, I mlllioti81re'1 ~I« and 1 10-)'eat-old boy 111• kldn~ end Mid u hoeteges by a~ crime ayndgte pW\nlng a m•jor ~ In Europe and America. ducor of hie d9U0hter'I tel,. ent. I ..IOK8rl Wll.O ...VGMIPIN Oueilta: SMiiey Wlnt•a, PllUI Wiiiiama, lwdrey WW- llam1. Freddie Aom•n. AlH!Kfl'/~ t:a0 II nta ,ACTI Mun A top flthlon ptlologrl- P'Mlf ~ to ENttan<I In -dlol•-·-1 TIC TAD DOUCIH THelltCNC A lllent ~ ebout an outlllg on • IUmmet day with a Cfutly old generll and Illa lamlty • ..,. Ronnie C<wbett and ROC\nle 8arlt-• · 10:00 D QUINCY Quincy bel...,_ lhet the O..th of a young boy. thought by potic. to be murder, ••• 1ctually ·~=lllkltlon. G1!>9 announcN that lie la leaving hll IMChlng pcMl- tlon f~ • !:¥-.. a comedian. (P-.t 2) ment 1118" the counted on $14 miHton horM. when ""' eneak• out 10 I I FNML y FEUD a~. CMOL IUMETT o.n tollowt the aoenl ol flower• to tr8Ck down repl1U wllo h ave cie.troy.O two people'• 11¥M and are lhrMtenlng Beatrice ""° 'NINDI Stdta: "TV Com,.,.,clala." Red Devil• patty. ~NA NA • MHNVHIU. 8 Ame NlW8 GuM11: Tha C:O..tera. "Friend•," "Lucky Lady.'' "The Old Follta." 8enny'1 Y9f'9lon of "The Oerlt Number Ftuher" g1-him the biggetl Ilg IMfof ... • w·A·a·H II HOU.YWOOO Hntl9)'9 pula the 4077th IQUAN.I G!) NA TIONA.I.. OEOGAAPHIC SPECW. "The Tlgrla EJ<pedltlon" Thor Heyerd8hl'a liNll and ctimac:tle voy-oe Is com- ~ated with nlm plus lddrllonel foouge of 11141 Kon Tiki end Ra expecl._ lion.. on edge wNri lie goea on • AU .. THE FAMll. Y • VIDEO I FILM AEVIEW "The New Amerlcen MO\llemakerc" A autVey o4 film• produced outllde of the tr8ditlonll Hollywood studio ayatern IHturn lnterlliewl With i><Odueeta the -..gon. C-ned about o-111ng • IW>fll.U~ ~ e STMET'I MIAH old, an 81'COU11ler with "' M+MCllCO old buddy con11tncH Guell: Wiiiiam Gould, ch8l<man and c;hlet •Jcec:u- tto.9 offlcef of Southern Callto<nle E~ Tenaklns dewtop u Stone ArcNe tt•at took• aren't and enother \n9pect0t pur-_,,.hlng -different lheewiel on • MACMK. I LEHAER hOw to IOllltl the c;aae Of • ~ 8 STUDIOI& cat 1>urg1111 """° i• .iao a ID PUDOE 11AEAK e:oo 8 Cl) MOVIE JOHN DARLING "S«IN. Too" (A), CHANNEL LISTINGS killer. Regulatly echeduled pro- gremming may be delayed due to pledge brMka "No Pl•c• To Hide" (Pretnl«e) Mar!Mte H1111- ley, Kattllewo 8elMr. A ~· . 8 KNXT 1CBSJ Los Angeles D KNBC 1NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA \Ind) Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV 1ABCI Los Angeles Cl) 1!.FMB (CBS) San Otego 8 Kl-U· rv (Ind) Los Angeles (fJ KCST (ABCI San Diego • KTiV Pnd I Los Angetes ., KCOP TV (Ind t Los Angeles ID KCET· TV 1 PBSI Los Angeles ~ KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun1tng1on Beacti Cl) P .M. MAOAZINE How the Feingold diet .. uMd 10 help hyperectlve children: a female U S Army captllln wtlo com- mat>da a platoon of men. 7:'6 ID NA TIONAl omGAA.....clPECW. "Etoah•: Piece Of Ory Water" Extraordinary ant- ,.,., behavior 11 ObMf'Yed In thla fltm r-dlllg Ille wlldttle o4 Etoena. a pr• -_,oundlng a hUge dty lake In the 90UlhwMI young -·· Nnlty and Hie la thrNtened by e mya.- terloua kNW wtlo la atlllk- lng her I~ unknown rM - Ml<la. D Dff'AINT ITROKU Arnold decldee to UM Illa blrthd->' pat1y to tighten up the Ill• of • -IOU91y Ill girl. i Ill ALOHA, ,AM.DIM Fran'• eoratlty 118ter tries to 1'881 Fran'• jot> end a doting tether lrlM to cOn. -• Holt)IWOOd pro- '60 Minutes' upsets 'Dallas' NEW YORK lAP> -CBS' "60 Minutes" became the first non-sports show to out· poll "Dallas" in the weekly prime-time ratings competition in just over four months, figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. show. "Dallas," until the most recent survey. had finished in the No. 1 position 13 times in the 16 weeks since Nov. 3. The program was pre.empted once In that time, and finished in second place twice, to a key "Monday Night Football" game in December and the Super Bowl in January. IN FACf, "DALLAS" took away the predominant po&ition from "60 Minutes," the lop-rated show in the 1979-80 aeaAnn and the winner ln the ratings compeYYQ!'! for the weelt ending Nov. 2. The rating for "60 Minutes" in the week ending March 1 wls 30.8, to 30.2 for "Dallas" in second place. Nielsen says the score for "80 Minutes" means of all the nation's TV-equipped homes, 30.8 percent saw at least part of the newsmaguine. CBS listed seven of the week's 10 highest·rated shows in winning the netwom' competition for the 15th time in 18 week.a. CBS' rating was 21.6 to 17 .5 for NBC and 17 .3 for ABC. The networks say that means in an average prime-time minute during the week, 21.6 percent of the nation's homes with television were tuned to CBS. NBC'S SECOND PLACE finish ended a three-week nm for the network in the rat- lna• cellar. CBS sWl leadl for the aeuon to date, by a comfortable margin over runner-up ABC. The front-running network got a boost from a couple of movies, "Fallen Angel," which finis hed third for the week, and the box-office hit, "The Amityville Horror,'' which was fifth in its TV premiere. CBS got some help, too, from the Gral!1my music awards show, No. 15, and ABC will air 'local,' drama NEEDHAM , Mass. (AP > "Summer Solstice,'' a drama written by a Brockton, Mus., native, filmed on Cape Cod and produced by a Boston television station, has been purchased by ABC·TV for national broadcast. "To the best of my knowledge," WCVB·TV president Robert M. Bennett said, "this marks the flnt time that a netwo.rk has deemed a local production to be of the quality . . . for national distribution." The bour·long drama stars Henry Fonda and Myrna Loy. It wu written by Bill Phillips, a Brockton native now living in California. Phillips won an original drama contest sponsored by WCVB; under the contest rules, the station produced the winning teleplay. another showing of the film classic "Wizard of Oz,'' in 18th place. NBC SCORED WITH the first installment of a two· part movie, "Evita," on the life of Eva Peron, which was 10th for tbe week. The concluding chapter was No. 35 in the week's ratings. ABC's ."Miracle on Ice," a made-for-TV movie based on the U.S. Olympic hockey team's victory at Lake Placid last year, was No. Z'I. NBC had two shows among the five least·watched, "The Gangster Chronicles" in 58th place, and "Great Disasters of the World'' 62nd -last. CBS' "Flo" was 59lb, followed by two ABC shows -"Charlie's Angels" and "Foul Play." HEBE ARE THE week 's 10 highest-rated programs : "60 Minutes," with a rating of 30.8 representing 24 milli~n homes, "Dallas," 30.2 or 23.5 million, Movie -"Fallen Angel,'' 28.4 or 22.1 million, ''M·A·S-H," Z1 .2 or 21.2 million, and Movie -"The Amityville Horror," 2S.4 or 19_.8 million, all .CBS; "That's Incredible," 24.3 or 18.9 million, ABC; "House Calls," 23.2 or 18 million. CBS; "Love Boat," ABC, and "Lou Grant," CBS, both 23.l or 17.9 million, and Movie -"Evita,'' Part·I, 22.7 or 17.7 million; NBC. Marcello Mastroianni 8 ftC.ADEMY NNARD Na't\INATIONS Including Laura Antonelli . BEST PICTURE WJfoDtisifess IHJ 419 Ire Wohl~ John Harwon • NAnoMAL ~INC&AL "Slr"'OI' Cl..aur. Of The Night" 8at1, owtl, ~ and "Oh"-~ Ing fllh are uamlned through the ..,,. of • ~llcalad nigbt-'lllllon c:amerL 0 LOUMWLS CONCPT 10".30·~ I NITWOM NIWI I 11:00 ID. Cl) 9 HEWS STAATMK The Entwi><IM Is sent to I PfOlect the planet Organla wNch .... In the path of the warrlllg Kllngona. 8 NEWLYWED GAME • w•A•S•H The '°771h recelvet two bolllft of ICOICh IOI' secret aurgery and • tenk to aGare off enlp«s. • IAMTTA "Cen't Win F~ Losing" 9 DICK CAVETT "Orug1· Addlcilon And Recovery" Guests: Or Merk S Gold. John Ptoil- lipa, Meckeruoe Phlll•pa. (P1111 1 ot 2) 11 :30 8 Cl) MOVIE • • "Human Feelings" (1978) Nancy Wiiker. Biiiy Crystal. A INtlraled angel votunt..,a to tave LU Vegu from 81tnlghty wrath Nl )~ 1·1 r., ·N J ........... Tll ....... ~ _ ... PUU Sal\11 AN ~ 140 0¥\ttft GfM ~'401 h ~5'~ ............. _ ............. ..-.... INNS51-o655 £IT.,.,.,.~ ,_!91_1 I by ........... W«thy-* ~-... -~ Ho••: Johnny Ceraon °'*''-~ .,.,.,,. . aww..,...., •OMO._. ~ 1:= .... Ho98r1'1men-.OIM ~_,help""­ MofNo 8Clentlilta _.,. 10 ~ • CAl'flONB> MC NIWI ~MDIGHT- 1a:oo• ~ * • "Plntnhll, Plf811h8" (1972) P..., Brown, WU- • Nam Smith. A ruthleM hunt• IGtlernM to llatlt a trio of l\lngll ... dlll• ptlO- •«rr'oV. 90AT "Tiie Oec:lllon" Debbie Allen; "POOi Ltttle Alc:h Gtrl" M.,•n JenHn, ~ Cole; "LOYe Me • LOYe My Dog" Gene Aay- bum. Fllnnie "'8gg. (A) ·=aNINC IMfl'OM*.E The IMF muet determine If en enemy egent ta telling the truth when ti. c181rn• to t>e detectlllg to the U S e ONI ITIP 91YONO "The Strenge<" ThOmM Hedley _c:,_ for the ldenllly ol • tnMI etedlted with Mlling M\len people fromdeeth 12=*> 8 TOMOMOW Gueata: ex.J-.ilt prlftt and authOr Malaohl Mlt11n, Mnlor Pravda eotrMPOfld- ent Thomaa Ko4ftmlchen· ko. Tom s.tlec:ti 8 OOHLAHE GuHt1: Aoberl Clery. Johnny Farnham, Kiri Adema. ~Geyer Cl) OHE STEP NYONO "Thi F1oe" Stephetl bOlt haa a nlghtly drNm In wl\lch he I• murdered by • atrang« 1:00GI YOUIETYOUA LIFE Buddy HKk•ll meeta a femele muter of 1ongue tr1Clt1. a ralaln q~ 111d a &Jn ~ NElWON< NEWS 1:1080 POUCE8TOAY Joe F0tr•ter r..iozM the ltlller lie'• lo<Mclllg IOt 11 hos ~-......... ~ ·••lMIU*I~ "TOO,.. ....... ,. • YOUmfvoaMLR ll*'Y ............ eortHU• undotwater "'Odll,. "*' ""° .. °" 1111 .... ~ • WOIMn""" ·-·aiwM. . .... * •14 ••Joftnny Cool" ( 1N3) Henly Sliva. u.. b9ltl ~. An 1\11.- IM boV tllMd by • SlcllM , guent18 11 8M1 to Hew Yoril to.,.......,.... .. onltle--ofM ~ ... ,...., t:A11• .... t:tO ~ ··~ "Night And The City'' ( 1950) Rk:Nrd Wld• Mlftl, Gene Tlwn.y. A amelltl!M llOOd dOdOot tti. ~r: • • • "Llllle Mlntater" ( 193') l<•th8f1ne Hepburn • Jonn e.ai. 2:10 I IDfTONAL t:1• MOYIE * * o,t "Sleep My L.olle" (1948) ca-:lett• ColNtt, Don AMec:M. I 2:201 NIWI ND Nl!WI I lc46 NIWI 1:60 MOYIE • •v. "Th• Hostage" (llle7) 08n O'Kell'I. 0-. Stanton 4:00 • MOVllE * * "Blood Of The Vatn- plre" ( 19S8) Donald Wolfit. Barbllla Shelley Tluarsda-11'• I Day• i•e Movies 1-MORrM- 11:00 e • • "P111ad1M Can- yon" (1935) Jonn Wayne. M1rlon Burnt. -AFTERNOON- 12:00 G) * * * "A Oamlel In Olllreu" ( 1937) Fred Aslelra. Joan Fon1e1ne ., ••• "Battling BeUnop" ( 1936) Bette Oav- 11. Edward 0 Aobtnaon. 1:00 0 * * * "Men Of Soys Town" (194 1) S.,.ncer Tracy, Mickey Aooney 3:30 8 * • "Cnato'a Land" (19721 CharlM Bronaon. JllClr Palanoe by Armstrong & Batluk Reaw•lwrfttg Top recording stars of the Fif- ties ,· then and now, appear in a PBS special air· ing March 21. From top to bot- tom, they are Ro se mar y Clooney , Frankie Laine and P.atti Paige. .00~~~~~ .. Hefty annual reports . f~ally of value By JORN CUNNIFF 11~.-....AUl'd and government regulators. NEW YORK -You can sense the mood of the times ln cor· porate annual reports, wttich each yeu at this Ume weight the postman's baa. and in more in· stances than companies admit, fill trash ba1a soon after. This doesn't mean the annual · report really is trash, but many· a ho~ reeelvJn1 a report, as a rt&ht or shareownersblp, cqnalden a chairman's message and a ~nterfold of smokestacks comparatively duU. It ls an other matter for brokers, securities analyst•, mutual •nd penslon f und portfolio managers, ~mployees, soon.to-graduate students at business schools. accountants For them there is alway•· a speclfJc message, a tip buried deep ln the fine type, something to be discerned between the llnea. a reference to a new prod· uct by tbe chalrman. Anc1 there ls a general message too. The general message varies with the time11. When environ· mental concerns first absorbed T-bill • interest relJounds WASHINGTON (AP> -Interest rates for short-term Treasury securities have re- bounded , regaining almost half the ground 'they lost last week, the 1overnment reported. The average rate on 26-week Treasury bills climbed to 14.133 per- cent Monday from 13.61l percent. the Treasury Department r e ported after its weekly auction. The new figure is the highest since the 14.76 percent reported two weeks ago. THE AVERAGE rate on 13-week T·bills rose lo 14.463 percent from 14.103 percent. The new level is the highest since the 15.464 percent of two weeks ago Beginning Thursday. banks and thrift institu- tions may pay as much as 14.383 percent on six- month money' market certificates, which are ,tied t o the 26-week "Treasury rate. The cur- rent cei ling on th e $10 ,000 minimum - deposit certificates is 13.861 percent. SAVERS c hoosing 212-year certifi cates can earn 12 percent at thrift institutions and 11. 75 percent at commercial banks. Those yields are at th e ir f e derally - controlled ceilings The cliscount rate on short·lerm Tre a s urv bills understates the ac- tua I return to an in- vestor because a portion of the price is refunded al the time of purchase COLLECTORS CORNER Rue Coln• A Stamp• GOLD A Sil VEA Prices for 3·3·11 Gola Clo .. M1UO Sil•~ Cl. JILIO Kru9errltnd\ M•Ple L .. 1 tOO Coronu $0 Pnos '°"" !'>llvff 81191 l11y ~II '*·00 Mtt ... '41t.te Mtl ... MM ... 14'7 ... uea,oo Utl ... JttM% IO>t,_, f r•C9eftef .,....,.,.,.,,.. ..... lft c.11 .... --·· (71 4) 556-6150 South Co111 PIHi VIiiage -...... ... 1•·---c .... ~., ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS WAYNE J . ZIMME RMAN, Fountain Valley, is group marketing mana1er ol connect.ors for Wyle Distribution Group, El Segundo. EDWARD J . LOHNES has been named ac- count executive at Clay PubUcom, Inc.. an ad- vertising and public relations agency in Irvine. RICHARD A. VEila Y is vice president or ad- ministration and corporate secretary of Daon Corp .. Newport Beach. Doan is a real estate In· vestment and development firm. DON K. PORTEil, Executive direct.or .or the Newport Harbor area Chamber of Commerce, has been elected to the board or directors of the California Association of Chamber Executives ,and Managers. The Southern California office of KEN- NY /J ENKS ENGINEERS, located in Irvine. has been honored for "excellence in engineering" by the Con sulting Engineers Association of California , C.osta Mesa, was recipient· of · an "honorable recognition citation. Petrochemical Engineering Limited, a Saudi Arabia subsidiary of FLUOR CORP., Irvine, has been contracted to provide the second phase of engineering for $500 million polyethylene plant in Al-Jubail Industrial City. Saucli Arabia. PAUL R. DOERR is bead of group MET sales and JOHN P. HARRIMAN manager or group hie and heaJth sales for Pacific Mutual Life Insur ance Co .. Newport Beach. GEORGE GROTTS, San Juan Capistrano, is director of operations for Builders Consortium for Affordable Housing, Orange County. The unit was founded by the Orange County Chapter or the Building Industry Association of CHZM HILL, INC. Southern California which with Orange Coun- ty is building a demonstration housing project aimed at reducing housing costs. MARK MCNEIL is program director of route a ccounting, J ERRY HUDDLESTON, program director of fi eld service reporting and RON LAN GORD, .general m anager of TELL US for MSI Data Corp., Costa Mesa. EDWAR D C. SHUMAKER is president of the newly incorporated firm of Bayly, Martin & Fay, Newport Beach. E RICK DAHLBERG has been named vice president of finance. HOWARD RICHARDSON, Newport Beach , bas been elected to the 1981 Chevrolet Dealer Council for the Los Angeles zone. Aulo & Homeowners Quotes By Phone Canadian finnsued over pact VANCOUVER, British Columbia <AP > -Times Mirror Co. has filed a $3.S million s uit against the British Columbia government and a paper mill over cancellation of a newsprint contract. The firm filed a writ i·n Britis h Columbia Su p re me Court this w ee k , naming th e .province and Ocean Falls Corp .. owner of the new sp r i nt plan t at Ocean Falls, about 340 m iles northwes t of Vancouver. The suit follows c losure last year of the mill and resulting cancellation in June or a contract to s upply the newspaper with 100,000 tons of newsprint in a five-year contract. Times Mirr o r i s seeking compensation for 25 ,000 ton s o f news print it claims it had to get from other s ources at premium prices. T im e s Mirr o r publishes seven daily newspapers . the Orange Coast Daily Pilot in Costa Mesa, Calif.. The Los Ange les Times , Denver Post, Dallas Times Herald, Newsday on L o n g I s land , Ne w s day on Lon g N .Y ., a nd two newspapers in Connec- ticut. IF YOU have a service to orrer or goods to sell, place an ad 10 the Dally Pilol C1assiried Section Phone 642·5678. -•-FAIMElSIHSUIAHCI GIOU' 54a.5554 or llS-307 If 14 HartMw • Coste MHo • Construction loans $500,000 minimum ~,n/~ ,.;),;,onau/ rt~Nah(M Koll Centre Newport, West Tower Suite 6800 4000 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach COURTEOUS, PROFESSIONAL, TRAINED ••• Deteribes TAB Operators and Service. CONFIDENCE When you're away and someone's trying to reach you. an Answer Page beeper lets you know-instantly! Describes Our Customers' Feelings About TAB.' TAB OPERATORS WILL . • Wot1d's largest oomputertzed paging agent. • Widest selection of pagers: single-tone. ·dual-tone, silent (vibrating)/ audible combination, memory storage and more. • Wlde-area~1s.ooo square miles. • Direct dial access. • A location near you. plus field representa· 'tivft at your beck and call, • 2•-hour eeMc:e. We never sleep. • DallV rental or month-to-month. • Free unMmited beeping, free delivery and free full maintenance. • Quantity discounts. • Call today for literature and a free demonstration I • With Answer Page, you may be out of reach, bu1 you'll never be out of tCKJChl Rni6"1Bl PflBE 661342. 731-7777 •831-2493 ............................ Take Messages • Take Orders • Quote Prices • Relay Calls • Make Appoinlments •Telex and Facslmlle Service • Beepers for all Sou11lern California • Wake-up Service Ratu and &rvlce to Flt Your Needa 547-7777 1h . TEl.DHONE ANSWERING BUREAU the country more lbaa a decade aso. some annual report covers deploted lht chaJrman ln ankle· deep graaa on the company lawn. When la11lng producUvity became an issue. charts and 1rapbs abounded s howln1 the daneer to the country. Aa ex· pected. automaker reports have switched from graphic depk· lions off Jlorsepower to fuel sav- ing charts. Today, the big doubt in the minds of annual e rt r t\ concerns the future. With the economy at a cross· r oa d s , they are eager ror tips about the futur e . backed up by numbers and bard argu- m e n t s . CUNH"" Information rather than im- pression is needed, and that, s ays a student of the annual re- port, is what annual report readers are getting, albeit with .. some grumblings in the ex- ecutive suite." RICHARD LEWIS, author of the statement, maintains that this year's reports are ·'the most informative annual reports in history." Some projection might be softer than the hard data that people seek. he concedes. but he states that chairmen are getting the point. ·'Traditionally, executives have been reluctant lo make predictions in the annual re- port." s a ys Lewis. whos e Corporate Annual Reports Inc. claims to be the leadinJt pro· ducer of blue cblp annual•. ''Now," he say1, "the SecurtUes and Exchange Comml11lon 11 lelliol manacement to use In· rormaUoo to make an educated 1ues1 about what might hap· pen." Their acquiescence, says Lewis, "is a historic first step that will lead to more specific projections in the f\Jture." . HE OBSERVES some other trends also: -More emphatic discussion of economic, political and social issues. "Few companies are keeping quiet about the troubled business environment." he says. "They're making strong, de· tailed statements about govem - m en l r egulation , e n ergy shortages, inflation and high in- terest rates." -Getting right to the point "The pretty cover picture is giv · ing way to hard-hitting sen- tences such as: 'It's tough to beat inflation, but we·ve done it.'" Lewis doesn't name the companies that have. -SPECIAL REPORTS for employees. "Many companies concerned about productivity are issuing special employee re- ports that tell employees where the corporation is headed, and how that will affect his life." In brief -and that too is a trend detected in some reports the annual report this year is a serious publication Like so m any these d ays, its authors and commentators know they must give more than a summary of the past, that they must also look into the murky future It's the mood this year P r ....Cftl Stephen Kalabany is general manage r of the a sset management division of The Koll Company. Newport Beach. He will supervise personnel that manage Koll properties in California, Wa shington . Oregon and Arizona. E xecutive quits SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Transamerica Corp. executive v ice preside nt an d director Dana C Leavitt has announced he will rei.ign those positions March 15. a s we ll as other Tra nsamerica positions. Leavitt b ec am e pre s id e nt o f Tranl>amen ca Title Insurance Co in 1964. a director m 1975, and executive vice president in 1977 OVER THE COUNTER NASO LI STINGS Alll8th Al•Brw:p Al••Alu AHcotnc Allyn& AllU Am.tru . 4F111 s A Furn 4Grfft AlnlGp AM lcros ANelln> AOv•W' • AAoM9 AWelO"O Amterr Anedlle A119SA ~~ACGG AptG~I s ArdenGp At<ICOI• ( AllGsLI AllenR1 :::~~g Ba119HE llHICAI 9 B•nlFr B•VllMk Betllne B•nnlPtl MUTUAL FUND Con£10 Osiny Eq Inc 12.01 NL ~~ : :; 1~·~ tO.JI. "NL r .. 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''"°° Tuclr Fd 10.~ NL Olvld J.,41 S.tJ R•lnbw 111 HL TwnC Gt U.t3 NL Grwlfl 7.11 1.0 Revere l.U NL. TwnC S.I u .21 NL PrelO U l • so S•leco S.Cur· USAA GI 12.0I NL lncom • 01 ··~ Equll ,, " NL SAA llK 9.'2 NL Stoel! 10 ... 11,., Grw111 1'.U. HL nl Acc11 U:t NL f u E• 1.•1 1.41 In<• 10.91 NL nil Mui 10.44 I'll NELlft FWtd: SIPaul ln\'Ht: nlleo ,,_, Equh 1U1 to." Cepll IUI• 17.0t Accm -¥911 Grwtfl 1'0I 11.•t Grwtll U.~ 14.l2 Bona -•ell l11tom ft..t4 HL Con Gr ..,. ... , Com St 1'.14 HL. ~ Inc ~I 01,,.1 41.t:l NL Ouc ..,..,,.ii lncom 10.AO HL r~~~ "'=!i1 HI. M11nl -...ii NL UIS<I -.11 HL Vent -•II NL Id Svu S.11 PU. .1 ... uner:e: """' .... 11..D IMOl'fl .. 7S 6.91 Lev Ol 1'-tS 11.a Spl $11 ti.a II.SS en~• Slndln: IMOf'l1 ..... 10 ... '"'".. 1.• "" t.e I 50.o. NL Coiftnl I.II t,_, o •• ,, f 3104 NL. , I 1 .. ' ,,,...------!"'------~--· ___________ ar .. ang...,._•_eo_ .. _,_o_auy PllotfNedneeday, March•. 1981 s Cll ·~ ~~rida NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS oranges victor MOil or the Caalifornla orange crop la eaten fresh. It's the home of the easy-to-peel navel oranae. Moat of the Florida orange crop is proce5aed U\to orange juice. It'• the home of the ju.icy orange. John McPhee. In his book, "Oranges." put It thU way: "Californians say that if you want to eat a Florida orange, you have to get into a bathtub fint . . . Jn Florida, it is said that you can run over a Califonda orange with a ten-ton truck and not even wet the pavement." McPhee's book was written 2S years ago. Who's winning today in this cross-country rivalry over oranges? The answer would have to be: Florida. More and m o r e of the orange crop, even in Californi a, is being processed into frozen con· centrate. Hard· J y anyone -------------_! ~I MllTDN MDSllWITZ :4\.'ir squeezes fresh orange juice in the home any more. At the same lime. consumption of fresh oranges has nosedived. In 1950. Americans were eating fresh oranges at the rate of 27 oranges per person a year. By 1960 per capita consumption had dropped to 19 oranges a year. Now it's down to 12. ORANGE GROWERS IN FLORIDA have long benefitled from heavy promotional support. The Florida Citrus Commission, a joint effort of the growers and tbe state government. spends more than $30 million a year on advertising. The funds for this advertising come from a levy on the growers. You've probably seen their adverlis· ing on television. They run commercials pointing out that orange juice is "not just for breakfast any more." Some orange growers in California would like to see their state copy the Florida model. They have proposed the formation of a California Navel Orange Commission to promote the eating of fresh oranges. With fresh orange consumption in such a tailspin, you would think that all the California growers might be in favor of this plan. But they're not. At least the leadership of Sunkist Grower . Inc. has said flatly that lt wants no part of it SUNIUST GROWER . lS ONE of the nation's largest farm cooperatives It was orgamted in 1893 to market the oranges or small growers. Today. its ranks include 6,500 citrus growers in California and Arizona. In 1980, Sunk1st sold more than 3 billion pounds of fresh fruit grown by lls members. bringing home sales of $645 million Various attempts have been made to establish brand names for fresh fruits and vegetables but none has been as successful as Sunkist It has been a reg- istered trademark since 1909. fl was first stamped on the skins of oranges 1n 1926 The people who run the Sunkist CO·OP today do not want to forge any partnerships with the state of California or with Citrus growers who are outside the Sunkist fold . They fear that a promotional campaign on behalf of navel oranges m general would undermine their brand name. It would, in other words, be Like Bayer aspirin supporting a campaign for generic aspirin While the Sunkist people are fighting against the idea of an umbrella campaign to promote the eating of fresh oranges, they are pushing ahead on other fronts. Dou.·.f ot1f-• I rf-rog«-• HEW YORIC fAPI Fll\lll Oow Jon.-; IV9S lor TUH<Say, Mar l STOCltS ()oefl Hl9f\ l -Ciov CllQ JO Ind m ss "2 01 •tt u '66 en 11 t7 ;oo Tm :197.'1 .01.01 :m 1l :l'U '7 0 TJ U Utl 107.97 IOI •1 107.38 IOI OI-0 03 19..... •""I u Stk J7J.O. 375.31> :161.01 l70.1 .... 2.70 '211/t Indus '•°"•'°° U~ • v. Tr•n 2,410.100 lo~ Utlls S?l.700 17VJ • '" u so 7 ,031 600 7'~ • 1 ~---------------?th ... 7S1t.. '• .... • \oo ... ,. '• -.... 20"-" ·~ ' .. ,., 36..,, 231/• t I• .. ,, I . "" '• +7 . .,, •I'll. .. ~ .. M hat ~foc·k• Did NEW YORK 11>.(1 Mii< l Tocl•Y ~ .... 3'3 1"6 ,, 10 WHAT AMEii. DID HEW YORK IAPI "1i•r l tlc>fob !T.,._.IYI ""-" dll\' •o •1• ,... 1911 ,. 17 C•PIHI• ll.._15 c•nt\ • oovna. u S dMllna tlOfU LUii )2-34 cen1s • pound t•"< t 1 • ltnt\ a oound, Oehv~rtC:S Tin " .. ., -··IS Wff• l OmpOill .. lb Alumhwm I• cen1$ • POUllO N Y Mercury 5313 oo per ll••k Platlftvm s-&S 00 troy 01 • H Y .SU1· .. r Gold Quot at ion• 1T-.1 Lfff ... : momlnv ll•lno-..... n . up Ml.H . L-: ., .. ,_ ll•lno Mll.00, up U.50 '°trls: •llerMOn 11•1"9 U111', oll SI.at. P',.lll&Nrt: ffxlnG ~.18, Oii $9.0I. l11rl(l1: l•I• •ll•rnoon ll1tln9 MU .00, w 1.00, M70.00 eslttd. Ha1u1, & Harm•ll: only delly ~vort Mll.OO, up U,SQ, I If,.._...,., only d#lly quoce Mtt.do, U11 U.50. 1 ........... : only delly OU04t f•WIUl!..s ~14,vpu.n N-11• NOTICB OF DEATH OF N-11... , NOTte• OP D•ATH OP L L 0 Y 0 H e N R Y NOTICa OP D•ATM OP :t :iL~~t~.4~ ~~:\ ... f-l-~0cr0owti :.::.:~ ~::.ir:. ,,.. __ _..._.....,_ D OP PaTITION TO PETITION TO AO · MOaAN ••• ••M•IT .... ......,.,...,., DMINllT•• •STAT• MINIST89' ESTATE NO. MOaAM ella ••NI• CMi=~A~=::= • A·1..... A\07459. M 0 a A fll A M D 0 I' ._ .. ,_ ......_ ..,.,_ T o • I I h e I r s , T o a I I h e I r S , P • T I T I 0 fll T 0 A D • e.u.1 M<wity _.. ,,...,.... neflclarles, creditors beneficiaries, creditor& MUlllTaR •STAT• NO. --::'.:::'• ..,._ ...,._ nd conttnoent c~ltors of end conUngent crtdltort of A·1t7111 ., .. ,,...._..,.i erl M. LOftlS, •k• C•rl Lloyd Henry Car11tr aka T o a I I h e I r s , co•oA 1NTu111u1ouL llt°" Loftis and perSCH\1 Lloyd H. C.r11tr Of lrvlne, btneflclarlts, creditors ~~:11~c:!;~~c·c.t1r.,::-=::. ho may ~ otherwls. In· Caflfornla and persons and contingent crwdltors of ~.-~110--Wts-IOtUt6. rested In the wlll and/or who mey bl otherwise In· emut J09lllh Mwan and ~ .....,... -.,.. * state: teresi.ct In the Wiil arr<J/er persons •"• may bt .,.. ..-._:_:.=,.::: A J*ltlon us been flied Htate. other-MM lmer..t9d In the ..,.,,:::;;...,.1.._. y Crocker National Bank A petition hes .bMn fllH wllt~orttt.19: , ... ~.,.....,o1.._,.,.._ the Superior Court of by Josephine H. Nelson In A 111on ha• been fllH .. • =t •• tt_,_.f'M .,.t range County requesting th• Superior "Court of by llubtth Mn 8allrMr 1M/.1~.! ': ~'=" hat Crocker Netlonal Or•n~ County requesting In the SUperlor Court ot ,.n..,. 11re _... ~, ...,_, • n k be • ppol n ted u thet JOMPhlne H. NtlSOf\ Orange County rtQ~tlng •-11 .. •m"" , .. .,_,,_, ••• c:rsonal -p-seataU .... to .. _ •-inted es -r·-·I that E 11 z a bt th Ann •• ., .. •••t '"" '" .. '· cl\y ~ •• •• '' •• .,.. _. ---I Ntw...,t IMcll c-ty of Or•~. cSmlnlster the estate of representative to ad· 8•11mer bl "'° nt9d H 1i.w9f011...:~. iarl M. Loftis of l rvlne, m In lster the Ht••• of personal repr91ent•tlve to Tr.. ................. " ... or.,.., allfornlat (under the In· Lloyd Henry carter (un-aEdmlnltsteJr thehesMtatt Of ~_::.-.:: "111""' 1' t .. , c- ependen Administration dtr the lndependtnt Ad· rnes o•ep or•n, a-. .. AINflU. OtwMr -.1" ot Estates Act). The Pttl· ministration of Estates F 0 u n t... ". 11 e y , •ftlce, llHI \.• "9111• Avenll•. .lion Is set for hearing In Act) The petition Is set tot C•llfoml• (Under the In-o.w ... r. c.11,_. toui. -d• n, bept. No. 3 at 700 Civic he•rlng In Dept. No. 3 •t dependent Administration '~~'"'• IMY .. 111e11 .. 1u. DowMr Cen'ter Drive West, Santa 700 Civic Center Drive, of Estns A.ct>. The petl· M11111.n1ct 11r-11. ..... °' Anotrk• ~na, Callfornla 92701 on West, In the City ot Santa ~ tt Mt 3for hea700rlnCg 11n ~~· ~~~· "0111• " ... '"1•· .March 25, 1981at9:30 a.m . Ana, C.llfornla on March ...... .-t. No. at :Iv c TM 1~...,. t« "'"" c&o1m• i. • IF YOU OBJetT to the 18, 1981 at9:30a.m. Center Drive West, Santa 1Nr<h20.l,.1. !.ranting of the petition, IF YOU OBJECT to the Ana, C:.llfornla 92701 on Thi•..,.. ,,_, ... 1s w111«11o Se<· ou should either appear granting of the petition, March25, 1981 •t9:30a.m . 11~.~:.z~1e1coo1e. t the hearing and state you shoUld etther appear IF YOU OBJECT to the J....CN.;._. \tour objec tions or file at the hearing arrd st•te granting of the petition, ~CNontw1 ~rltte';,:t>~ections with the your objections or file you should either appear =..1'-1 -tourt e the hearing. wrltte}l objections with the at the hearing and state HOldl ..... 111<. l)'our appearance may be court before the hearing. your objections or file T•-"'" f. person or by your at· Your appearance may be written objections with the ''' RICNrd eorune, rney. In person or by your at· court before the hearing. Publl~ coast Dolly Pliot, I F YO u A R E A torney. Your appearance may be Morch 4, 1M1 101w 1 REDITOR or a cont· IF Y 0 U ARE A In person or by your at------------ gent creditor of the de· CREDI TOR or a con-torney. PUBLIC NOTICE teased, you must file your tlngent creditor of the de· I F Y 0 U A R E A ----------~lalm with the court or ceased,you mustflleyour CREOITOR or a con· present It to the personal clalm with the court or tlngent creditor of the de· ttepresentatlve appointed present it to the personal ceased, you must flle your' l>Y the court within four representative appointed claim with the court or rrionths from the date of by the court within four present It to the personal first Issuance of letters months from the date of representative appointed ~s P.rovided in Se_,c t lon first Issuance of letters as by the court within four JOO of the Probate Code of provided In Section 8700 of months from the date of California. The time for the Probate Code of first Issuance of letters as filing claims will not ex· California. The time for provided in Section 700 of pire prior to four months filing claims w lll not ex· the Probate Code of tromthedateofthehearino p lre prior to four months California. The time for ttotlcedabove. from the date of the hear-filing claims wlll not ex· YOU MAY EXAMINE Ing noticed above. pi re prior to four m onths the file kept by the court. YOU MAY EXAMINE from the date of the hear· ff you are interested in the the file kept by the court. ing noticed abOve. •state, you may file a re-If you are Interested in the YOU MAY EXAMINE !!luest with the court to re· estate, you may file a re· the file kept by the court. ceive special notice of the quest w ith the court to re-If you are interested In the ltwentory of estate assets celve special notice of the estate, you may file a re- end of the petitions, ac· Inventory of estate assets quest with the court to re· < o u n ts and report s and of the petitions, ac· celve special notice of the d escribed in Section 1200 c ounts and reports inventory of estate assets of the California Probate descr ibed In SecHon 1200 and of the petitions, ac- Code. of the California Probate c o u n ts and rep or t s Co de . ART HU R S . described in Section 1200 Cooksey, Coleman & LEVINE, ESQ. of the California Probate k ow a rd, 8 y : Ca I H . S T E L L , L E V I N E & Code. Coleman, Attorney a t BOOKMAN 1-aw, 17712 E. 17th Street, 727 West Seventh Stnet William W. Soukup, At· tvest Bldg., Tustin , LosAngeles,c .a.90017 torney at Law, 1600 N. talifornia 92610. (714) Published Orange Coast Broadway, Suitt 601, Sal\· 132·2474 Dally Pilot, March 4, s, 11 , ta Ana, C.llfornla 92706. Published Oranoe Coast 1981 t077·81 <71•> 91l-1M4. Oaily Pilot, Mar ch 3, "· 10, Published Orange Coast 1981 1065·81 PUBLIC NOTICE Daily Pilot, March 4, 54 11,. 1981 1016-01 t PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF -PUBLIC NOTICE • -----;;;,,,, N 0 R MA V t R G 1 N I A .. ICTITIOUSIUSINEH STRACHOTA AND OF ---------NAME STATEMENT p E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D • "'c;TITIOUS IUSllllHI ;i,!r,!~o:,~•lno ,.,.sons ere ooing M1 0 N 8 1s 78 TER ESTATE NO. Tll• ,:::!=~~. dolllg CREATIVE l!NCOUNTERS ST A 1 7 · D<n111nus· MOTICa TO CllaOITOlll OP auLIC TltAlllSPa• lieu.""""' u.c.c.1 Nolice It 1'9ret>J glWfl 10 credi10f'1 of 11141 •lll1if'I Nmed 11 ... sreror INll • bulk trensler Is .OOUI to be ,,. .. on personal property herelneller dou.crlbe41. The MINS end bllllneu eOdreu ol Ille lntendeef tre11s1 .. or are: THE PIER, INC.,. C.lltorlM• tor· porellon, 104' Br•• Mell, Bree, C•lllorni. Tiie nemft end buUllHJ eddl'HI of Ille lnl•no.d trenster......,•: VINCE NT F CHUAN G end MARIA S. CHUANG,• -.1.,.y Cir· Cle, cor-ml Mer, CA!llornl• tllUS Thal the orlll*'ty pert!Mnl 1'9reto Is dHCrl-In t11Mrel H c.rteln AS· Mb -0-Wlll of thel r.stevrenl buMMU known H THE PIER -11 IO<el•d el. ~ BrH Mall, Bree, Celltornla The -inns name ..-by UM said trenslerM •I sokl Joc.atlon 11· THE PIER . The I w kl bulk tre111lor II Int-10 b• con1urnmete0 al tM office ot; MARVIN 8. KAPELUS. 1• NewPOrt Center Orin , Sult• UO. Newp0rt 8••<11, C.lltomla, °" or alter March ... ""· Then-end _ _., ol IM perwn with "'"°"' claims may be llleo 11 Marvl11 8. Kepelus, llO Newport Center Drive, Sult• UO. Newp0rl Beach. Colllornl• '*°· end the IMI d•Y for 1111"11 clelm1 by any creditor Shell lie M9rcll u, IMI, Wlllch Is tM ituslnn s Clay -· tlMI c011wmmoUon dOI• specif lee! aitove. So tor H Is kllOWrl to sold I........, Transl••-Mid lnwndtd Tr011fleror used 11'9 lollowint Oddtti-1 llullneu MmH and lllldntUes WIOlif'I the tlvw y .. rs lost pest; N-. Doled ~ch t, 1"1 Vlne:ei'llF.C-. Mono s. Chueng I ........ Tr_..,._ Put>lllMd Or-Cont OoUy Piiot, ~rch •.Itel 107M I PUBLIC NOTICE l~IS Wutmlnller 8oul•t•rd: T O a I I he i r S 1 MARTIN I. SAUNDE RS, 1700 llfutmlnste•, eo111orn1.tM:J b enef iciaries 'reditors Ade"'• A-. s..i .. 101• cost•.-.... 1110T1~ roco..TaACTo•s Ronol«LO Trlldel, 14102 En1i.1<1 . ' Collforllla9»JI CALLllllO tr0a aios brcle, W"ulmanster. C•lllornle and contingent creditors Of Jo"" A. Mortlll a. -lot~. 1"' • School Ohtrlcl: OCEAN VI EW titw . Norma Virginia Strachota • calltoml• <Dr'P«•tlol\ 1eoo wi11111re K HOOL o1srR1CT ~ oouo1~ o.v1d si.111. 10102 Me1octy and persons who may be e1vd .. LOI....,....,°"""""' tOOS7 &Id OMdllM: 2:ao o•c1oe1o p ....... ,_Drive, Ger0tn Grove, C•lllornl• otherwise interested In the wo1i.r o. s--s, 11S1 Boo VI•· ,,,. 1111\de'foU~•<ll, IMI. ~. t• Clr<I•, Costa MHo, C.llloml• tJl2' p 100 ,,. lid Receipt: 8\dlneu 04. This buslrteu Is conducl•d by • wl 11 and/or estate: Tiiis ltuslneu I• Conducted by • flee, ,...., • Str.-t. Huntlngl.Oll IMOCll. nero1:::_r-:,~'~n1ot1 b ARpetltionll Whaledes been fllf'.d .. .,.,.1::::::t,.,,.,.o ea111or111on.. Douglas O.•IO Sltlll Y US5e nman tn Tiiis s!AI-... filed wllll IM Project ldlfttllkotlon N•me: R-ir Thll sta-• .... , llled with .... • the Superi or Court of Cou111, Clerk ol o ...... c-ly on ~:~ev~r.c!:ti1~::1e:~'"'Sc;-l, unly Cltrk 01 Ore11911 COYllly on Oraoge County requesting FebNOryU, IMI P .. ce "'-••OOll fli.: 8uslness04· eb. S, IM1 that Russell Wiedenman J. OltlM IVANS ll<e. OcHn View SchclOI District Publlsl\ed Or°"9t c.oo11 0.11~1~~~ be appointed as personal t!!:.~RD«NMOYS 111~0.~,.::,,:R~~,Gri'j',~~c:~: en.11,11.u,Me«h•,1"1 '"°"representative to ad· m 1w1hlllnatft., or•ntl' eountv. eo111ornl•. oc11ng by PUBL-IC NO-TICE--m lnister the estate of ~t~:.:.:.... CA•ll .,,., lhrougll Its Governing Board, Norma Virginia Strachota · '11t4U i...re1na1i... ,.,.,,..s to., "01.i.1ct", • ---(under the Independent ~~1::::V:i.':i'~i.::_1;:~~~':~ TATl!MINT OP AaANDOftMINT Administration of Estates Publlsr.ed OrllllOI Coosl Delly Piiot, ,,,. .... ,.,,of. contrect lor ltl• •Ito¥• O" UH 0" A t) The t•tl I t f Feb. U, Mer. 4, II, 11, IMI t7U I project. fllCTIT10Ul8USINIUMAMa c pe I on s se or Bids lholl .. recel...O In, .... place T"• r.11ow1ne ,_ .... ,,. ... obon· hearing in Dept. No. 3 at PUBLIC NOTICE 16ent111te1 -.... and _.1 11e opened IN .... of ti.. fktlttou.1tullnn• 700 Civic Center Drive and Pllbllcly ,_,aloud ot ,,,. oltove R H'.J I . PROPERTIES, 1-, West, in. the C. ity of Santa 1117ff'll Stel.O II-and place. -. A C I f A II 1 PICTITIOUI aUllllllH Eoctl bid must conform end 1te """'' on.... N-1 looch, na, a I orn1a on pr , MAMIUTATIMtlMT ••-•lwtot"9 controctd0Cu,,,...t1. ,..!:~:"° lu$IMM 1981 at 9:3() a.m . The lellOWlnt per$0nt are doing Eecll bid shell be •"-nled by M to ,:::: ,. .. meot ~·;;:-.,:;; IF YOU OBJECT to the -1nnus: the wcurlt' ,....,._, 10 1n tllt COii· 1,onMorclll0,1'71. granting of the petition, SUSANHARVAROA.SSOCIATES, trocldOC-...Obl'U.ll•tofpro-z·n Ouf'lllM onw. SUll• 111. 1rv1ne. Pottd sUllContreceon. Tl-, ......... Heldlft9ff, IJU YOU Should either appear Colllorfllaft11S. Tiie DISTRICT l'OWf'VH Ille rfOll\ to ·=~w, H-1 looch, at the hearing and State T~ R. ~rd, m S. Hope .. joctonywellllld,orlowelveonylr· J .......... t• G.ioary Drive, YOU r Objections Or file StrHI, .. th Floor, Lot Angelo, reguJ.rlllH or lnlorrnellllH In any loMcll, eoi11tm1• ._.. wr ltten objections w ith the c.ii~~=~ *"""· 21n OuPOllt 111~~ ~~':':!~.,_, tr om 111e Is ......... wos <-19d tty • cour t before the hearing Drive, Suite Ill, lrvlne, Celtlor11le Director ol the Otport,,,...I of In· •I........ . 927• TitNCt1y P. Holdlf9r Your apearance may be In i.. du.1tr1e1 R.,otloM ttw QeMrol prev•ll· '1'"1 .c-. f b t IPM!lnl _,,,_, C:O•llOl'•llOll, 1"9 rote of -~ weoes 111 Ille . I WOI lled wlUI t ... person Or Y your a -21'2 Ou ..... Orlw, Sulit 111, lrvl11t, locoflty In Which tllll -'11 Is to be ty °"" ,,. 0r..,.. c-, °" torney. -· co111wn1.,21u. ,.,.,.,."*'tor eoch croft or t'pe of I>, "11• ~t1Ht I F y O U A R E A Alld•"" Swevely, Jttt OYPonl workmOI\ IWtded to u ec..W tl'9 con· ,....., ar-. Coo• oe11, Piiot. c RED I TOR or a con-Drive, SUit• 111, lrvlM, Celllor11I• tract. Theso retts •r• Oii Ille at lM '2715. Olllrlct office ioc.t4CI ot lutlness Of· · 11• n. ,,__ 4• "· "" UNI ti gent creditor of the de· This 1tus1nou I• conducted h • lie•, Oc•.,. View S<llool Olllrlct. ---ceased you must file your 11m11eo..i"'"""'· cop1u _, • a11to1MC1 on r....,.st. A PUBLIC NOTICE clalm with the court or TllomilfR.Mwpperd copyo1!'-r .... sl\o111tePOtteot•t1"4 Tiiis su'9mtnt we.t llled with tlMI )obslle. --.......,.------..,......-.-----present It to the personal co..111, c1er11 of 0r ..... courtly .,. 11 lMll be........,,_,,,. eon. 1'1CTITIOUI aUllllllH representative aprninted Fee>. 3, ftll. tractor to wl\om tM co11troct ll NAMa ITATaMtlNT F1'1flt Tiie lollowl119 porfOfH ere dOlllg by the COUrt With n four •W01"41td, 9lld upofl Olly wllcOlltrec.•r f th d t f Publlllltd Oronge Coell Dolly Piiot, Utldtr him, t. ,.., not ,_ 11\oll 11'9 .,.. •: months rom e a e o ~tit. 11, 11. u. Morell•."" ,...., uld •11tCll1te1 ••tit• 10 •11 _.,...,. l'ORUT MA LL, LTO., 4stO first Issuance of letters .as •<11"9,.cl Dr tllefn 111 llW uecutlOll OI cArt ..... Bl...t., Sull• no, N•W90rt lded In Section 700 of PlJBUC NOTICE ,,.. COlllrtct. oc:h, Colllomlot-.o prov Ho l>lddtr IMY wltMr•• ,.,, bid,., Olversllled Fl.-clol Consu1tont1, t h e pr 0 bf t 8 C 0 de 0 f '-o perl.cl of forty llve (di deys elttt ·· • c:a111om1• corporellon, Oto Callfornla. The time for PICTIT10uteu111fl11 lhedott1tt1«t1w.,.,.,,..o1111a. acA.::i::.=~·.=• '20• N.,,,pon filing claims will not ex· MAM9 ITATSMIUfT A,..,,_.....,.._,• perlormOtK• Gr...,-, e. 0111. o• MocArtllw plre to four months f rom ...!:...":""" ,__ Mt ... ,.. ::'of•::,..~~:;:,.~-.::; ri1omi5:~20, Newport lttcll, thel datboe Of the hearing ~ U UMITaO, o IMll .. Ill "" tw... wt tortfl 111 Ille 111s .,.,.1""s 11 cOlldllcted b' • not ce a ve. ~ :::;:• :=..,8..t": <"'troc:t •-"' ,._.,... the file kept by the court. ~,....' ==kow °""°"a.0111 If you .re Interested In the "*"a. °"""' 1• ,....,.. Del c1tr11 fllf ,.....,_. wu fl!W with tlle estate, you may file a rt· °"'·""~·~•"'11 1"1*11._0t .... C..ll Doll' Plltt ly c;-;-.:i Or.,... C-y on QUHt Wtth the COUrt lO re-... C. C--, Dt4 l'wt P ... lS, IMr. 4• t•t t7l".i otMlli .. · celvt special notice ot the =.:· ....... llM<ll. -----------:.."a: ..,... Inventory of tttate assets .....,,... v. oer.. 11, •tttt v.. PllBUC NOTICE. ..,..w..., and thepetltfons,acc:ount' :" nwia ~ CMW1n11a1-------~-- ...-.CA.., and reports descrlbtd In -.. ,, ....._ ''·· 11 1--. "::..":=."::' ..,.o.-.,.<Mt*Oolt~'= Section 1200 of the ~~·===~c..-TM.....,....,...,....,...,... , 11, ,..u,.,.,, 4, "'' u2 .. 1 CaUfCM'nla Probate COdt. u. ..... ,,...._~._ -.-=ISTUL v1UMM "rltAVl\..m It 0 a E 9' T L • '.,.,... 1t, c-w. tt ......,.., L ....,, ..... -. c-. -.., HUMPtU••vs, .., De¥er ,,..,..., ~tm4 CIMlffll9 ... Orin Wtl ~ Newport TNI ...._. 1t ~.,.. .., • ..,._ ,...._ ......_ ,... &----------... ,, C.. ttiO. C714l ....,.,=:t-=:,....-..,, '"""· ~ .... 2116 T1llll ......... ~ ..... ..... .. ,..... ...... _.. .. .., ....... Pubtlltted or.._ coast c.-tY °"' " ~ e....tv • ........ . Dally Pllot,Merch4,S, 11, ~u.'"'· P1-,..... ~-=-.......... 1911 107M1 ,_...... 0r .... c-e Diiiy ,...... c:-e. °""' ., °""" c.-y 111 ............. 4.tt."" .... ,..,_.,"'""· ...... PllBUC NOTICE --·..,.. None• ,,........ 0r-. c... °'"' ......_ .-_v--. ................. ,....,.....,._.,.,.~•----':;_ ,..., "., ..,, 4. 11,"" .... ,ICT1,... 11111.. -r:.r.:==:r PVllUC NOTICS ...... A~ ti.. ......... ~Mt .. ,..,, __ ;..._ _______ .,:_ Tiie ---..,_ -............. . ........ I aM iiNDM.JIA "'I. nrf *'-~·-·-•&NT~CO .... n ......... ..,_., ~ le8dlr C:.llfWllle .... ITA~ ..,, ..... ,.~--~-n. ................ ..... ..., ..... A. hrr.,., .,. •. .... •. ..... .... ---...... , ................. CMl*M• AVM.OM COMITaUC'TtOlll CO -.-.-. • '-~,.... -. m u ce.t ... ,.._, ... v.-...~ c.m:r:-: ... !.ti'' ......... ~u:~..:: ...... "" '=--=--· .......... L. u..••• -s ..... v ... -..... ............... ,......~.~ ~--.......... CllMlfW .... ft9 ............... • fNt ....... II UU&dee .., f LAW ....,.at*:;:_ ........ ~ ,,_ .... ~ ......... ----~---~~-~----~~-~,, ..... ~. ~·~" ...... .., • Cllrtl" ...... ...,,.,.. ' 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • l:lllllf Ill SEIVICES C•nttal eo.u.M••"' Strwtre 8ool• MonM r;q,up lloau..P°"tt Boat~. RH\t Ch»rtf'r Boola.Saol lloat.l,S11.,. Doc:k' Boou.~6 8111 Boau.stora1e • ....................... ··················~···· ·······••••············ ......... 1001 .... ,.. 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ,I• lttl • • 1911 11• IOM .. I-••• IOIM !QUAl. HOUSING OPPORTUNITY • UMO IOM UNI ' :: , .......... Holle•: :: All real estate ad· 1m v e r t I • e d I n t h I t :: newspaper i.I 1ubject to '* the Federal Fair Hous· :: Ing Act ot lt18 which llQO makes it me,., to ad· 7006 7111$ 7100 vertiae "any pref ettnce. limitation, or dis · crlmlnatioo baaed on race, color, religion. 1H, or utioeal ori1in . or an inteatico to make any 1ucb preference, llmltation, or d is· crimination." Tb.ls oewspaper will not knowint\y accept any advertising for real estate which is in viola· Uoootthe)aw. EltlOIS: Adnrtfsen ....... dtedc ...... ....., ... report ef"- ron lsst:Nclahly. Tise DAILY PILOT .. ._.., ,....., for the fint IRcorrect lu:sertlo11 Giiiy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA Charming 4 Bdrm. 3 ba home with family room. Corner lot. VERY private yards . Im · m aculate and ready to move in. $174.500 This 3 Bdrm charmer was once a model home. Located on a huge cul· de-sac lot and filled with extras . FINIS HED garage. Close to schools. Offered at $144,500 IRYINE BEAUTIFUL TO•EHOLD! MISAVllDI A larfe c111tonHaed Btte· cola l>uU' chermlnf • Bdrm home wttb formal dlnlq rm .. famUy rm., 2 bathl. a car 1ara1e, burlder alarm 1y1lem, h~af.ed a , central air, lm tile, loft water u Ir much more. Ask· Ing 12U,900. Call to IH. Clyde Johnlon Rltr 5@-2844. Whelan Real Estatt ls now olfertng ~ com· mluion to licensed agents. •Nodesk fees •Nopbonefees •No advertising fees We belong to five multi· ple boards. Call for an appointment. Ask for John. ~31166 ASSUME l'/10/o LM. Only $113,SOO for this 3 Bdrm charmer with heated pool and fruit trees. Call now 979·5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS CdM con AGE $175,000 2 Bdrm charmer! Wood buming fireplace. lllep· saver k.ltchen. High as· sumable lst TD Owner will help fian an ce . 67~ THE REAL ESTATERS * * * D.Ducoh 5121,<z Polnt.settia Corona del Mar YouaT"elhe winner or 4heffck.t. ($H value ). to Aftahef m loatShow Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call &42·5678, ext 272 to claim your lickets * *. Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba single family home with very PRIVATE yard. Xlnt location, close to schools, shopping a nd freeway. Sl64.SOO and l-~l'a-~i.'l!nft1'4sr' owner will carry 2nd. D e luxe t o wnhouse *Cote Realty & Investment 640-5777 OPB4 Sat/S-l ·4 2044 Ocecm ll•d duplex. 3 bdrm + fami· ly. 21h bath. each unit Frplcs. all buirt-ins, decks & palios Park· l i k e landscaping . SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE! $295,000! Wboo lay Prop. RHlton •675-7060• 2 Bdrm. l bath cottage.1~~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f Beam ceiling, frplc. 3 :-: car parking. Priced at $295,000. associated 81H)•£1>~ llEA1TORS J l' l/'t, ~(JI t,,.-'l I) t I e-b t Oamfs • hpie• Only 3 rn old, complete- ly f\.V'nltbed a Bdrm up· per 6 2 Bdrm lower, wit.b bit 4 car 1ar a1e. ftema like malic CUI it's near restauranta. all beach and bay aetlvitlea etc. Buy now and get in on the 1ummer income. Seller wtll help n.nance. Sliet.000. JACOBS REALTY '75-6670 ILDfY+YllMs MOLOAMNIS! Ownersayslwwill carry f i nancin1 o n this beaWful 3 BR/21h BA ex~v• townbome in BACK BAY AREA wUh O NLY 1 0~ DOWN . Sunken living room creates cozy at · mosphere for family or enlertalning. Must see to appreciate this beauty. $1.55,000 FULL PRICE @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 12°/oDOWN Buys this 2 + den home. 6 months new. double Iron gated e nt ry . cathedral ceilings, brick fir e place. gourmet kitchen. French doors to patio. Owne r will finance $179.000. 673-8MO '**' WWAVol.le! Lowe s t pri ce d townhome in University Park/Deane home 2 Bdrm 2 Ba single story home. Assume existing $59.900 loan and owner will help finance the balance. Great location. Ca 11556-2660 t;::SELECT TPROPERTIES DEJA VU Homes like this are not a thing ol the past. This beautiful model home with its 3 bedrooms . large family & living rooms. is localed on ooe or Westclitrs largest lots for maximum pr ivacy Super ftnancmg availa· ble. Call us for details Proudly offe red at $325.000. Wboo Isl.cl Rtty 67l-a700 sTIPS Yo iEAeH Two 2 Bdrm units. cor· ner lot, ocean view, H · cellent summer/winter rental. $210.000. THMSPOH A TION tllO 1~~~~~~~~~~ leach locla. Pod Live in modem 1 Bdrm loft home and rent out older 2 Bdrm unit. The l Bdrm has a sunken tub. sundeck and s kyliles. Owner will finance at 1 2~'1'. Full pri ce $22(),000. tlllO tlJO ti*> tUO tieo 9110 ,.. -HACH HOUSE $ 175,000 Believe it! 6 Bedroom. newly painted in & out. 2 blocks from ocean in Newport Beach. MOW IS tMI TIMI tor job .-.,.. to cbecll th• Daily Pilot Help WMll&ed dU1lllcatJoD. 11 Ult Job 10U ~ant ta not U... ,ou mitbt eonetder atr.int your 1ervlcff 'lfl&ll • lld la the Jub W.ud cat.efQl'Y. Pboat -- $5,500 puts you lrit<> your own 4 Bdrm, A/C home. 12 7 /8~ fanancing. Call for d etails on our "TICKET" program. • RED CARPET' 754-1202 Want Ads Call 642-5678 714 MESA WOODS Bright, airy 4 Bdrm pool home with spa & a few steps from the master suite . Dual fireplace between family room a nd conversation pit. this home makes enter· tain.ing a delight. Full price $183.000. Call 751-3191 «;:SELECT T'PROPERTIES Looking for a home of your own? You'll find many homes advertised ror sale In Classified everyday. STARTING 'A NEW BUSINESS? Aooorclng to Celkimle 8UllMU •"d , .......... COdt (lee. 178 '° 17HO) •H pereont dotftl '"*"911 under • ftclddoue ,...... ,..... .. • ..... IMftl """ 1M eo..., Clertr llftd hlH It pvMla"•d fol?f ..... lfl e MW91Mi1* """'8 tM ... In,..... the ltUltMM 11 IOGitted. TM ........... le req•ett _, ... 1nd le ...-wry In .......,. »• .. bUllft ... ft9ifte, Mott ............. ,roof of fllftl to open CIOOl81M•••Mltrrdll•I 9009Uflla, TM DM.Y MOT ptedtdll ._. ........... ,.-. ............. .. ............... ...,, .... - MllPMlt• ........... ~ ~Cl a1111.--ra;-... _. .. _a1il1•.-...• .... LIU'&. •Mm •n . .............. , ....... ... .. ... ....... .. ::; ,... ""· '*"' Pl sawww~--................ Cllall..... ,..._.._C...Olll\' ..... .......... 4, U,Nl ..... M. U, -~--.. -..... 11,.--4,h,,.,,.. ~_,,..:....;..... ..... __;.~---~~----...... ., ' . . -..... ~--.-.. ...... ~ •• • ...... _._ ... _...WI .... --- ..... , ..... This 3 Br 2 Ba home tru- ly hu \oada of charm with tt.s laraie brick and pine fireplace. and ex· poeed wood beamed ceil· 1np . Features include sprinklers. detached 2 car garage and golf COUl"le view to boot. The owner will finance the sale or carry a large 2nd. Full price $162.500 TRlDI T 10\AL RLALTY MOME~ ~INVESTMENTS 631-7370 REALTORS '7'-151 I CdM DUft.EX REDUCED SI 0,000 South ol PCH duplex in Corona del Mar. 2 years n e w. 4 Bdrms with master hide-away Cln- clud:ing fireplace, spa> owners unit. PLUS. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath unit. Oversized garage for autos and toys + + + very high assumable loan and creative owner ready to bargain. Call NOW for appointment SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 Make your s hopping easier by using the Daily PIJct Classified Ads. Sell idle Items 642·5678 RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES STORYIOOIC DUPLEX-COM 2 BR. front house completely detached from a spacious two & den rear unit. An investor or user will like this charmer. Great location & only $289,500. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 HAWAII KONA COAST An extraordinary residence, totally private, on 6 fenced acres, leasehold, with electronically controlled entry. 180 degree view or Pacific Ocean, unmarred by any structures. 20 minutes from resort and shopping areas. For particulars contact~ B. Byou.k. Realtor, Mike McCormack, Realtors, a division of McCormack Land, Ltd., 75-5744 Alii Drive, Kailua-Kona, Hawaii 96740 -llG CANYON ONLY $435,000. Dr••Htlc ... trywey .... to ttlh lovely S,. 3 br, 21/2 ba to.._.. Hllge II•,. & ,..... .,.... w• of~slMdtobridl pllllos. '9iced ....,. tt. _... w /exc ...... flltmtcllMJ. -IRIMG YOUR PAIMT·SAVI YOUI SSS. TMt._:rmcl• ,_. ........ ,..... & .. , ..... Loc••d Ill clloke C.rw .. M9' ::==~· .~ J~ ==-t ............. s ........ •c=:J & look et the ou-. Of~ .. Sltl.000. . ./ HAR~R AREA LOCATION .f S1Z~1650 SQ. FT. I MlCRO OVEN I ALL S}l()PPING ~BLOCK I COMP.\CTOR ./ AlR <:ONDITIONING I OISHW'ASHER .f CEMENT DRIVES I DBL GARAGE I WALK IN CLOSETS W /OPENER WAID INVESTMENT IMC. SALIS ~CIC7t4t6Jl ..... I - w. w-... It. '4J.Jt00 C....W....c:.lf. SIO,OOODOWN $7M P.1.T.A per mo. 2 Br 1'"1 ba condo. Great in· vestment. Realty World/ Call Realty World Capistrano Association 661-1010 m: llDlll ILllllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE MESA VERDE-HST IUY No Question -This Is One Of The Finest Buys In The Area. Lovely Four Bedroom Home On Large Corner Lot. Completely Remodeled. Large Assumable Loan. Submit Offers. Only $145,000. Gl ·--fll-••0••¥•••• 759-9100 #2 Cotpoe ... rtaaa Hewpori~ EXCEPTIONAL HILLTOP ESTATE ,._~ H~ lidl)t ~ .tttl 110 VU of lay. Oc.-& Mc# - Motplfic...t qyallty & detail thrcllll'll!.._. ... _. tWs 5700 sq. ft. resl~. SHI .._ to set.ct yow oww chcor for tWs for'lllllA .... ,,. ... 4 bed. + .....,, ........ dl•l1tg r11t., IM••1tH faM. ra a•d ~attorw whr Mffe wftll ftl apt.ce, tmdtcJr. .... & .,.. ....,....,.. -cmto. for .... ..-tiulcr .... o ........ Hie best trodlff°" of tWs LoMls XIV ..._.. e.o... st ,tt5,ooo. 631-1400. DECORATOR'S VILLA-8ALBOA eo...,eetely t."'lslled .ttlt ......... dlMa. llTer, crystal ..t a "wortd of Mil• ors" & ~ decor. Secwity bldq & YU frotn IGnJ• poffo; tpaekMls ' coordl11ahd 2 b•d. R•duced to $391.000. 631-1400. NEWPORT CREST-OCEAN VU CorMr-... witlt good vu. -.......... --2 beet. 2112 ba. w ali to pool & ....._s110.ooo. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REALE TATE ~,4., H .. "'"'' .. Pt11f)l•fl\ M~u'l~u~•mt•'11 PllCI llDUCTION This 2 br home has one of the best locations in Bayshores. It is a lovely cottage, just steps from the private beach. Now only $380,000 leasehold .. ' S H Y H S I S I 0 C A J U 0 L E H T 0 0 L L E C H 0 C E T T E H I 0 T H A L T M L 0 T C H R Y S H 0 L T F K W U L T S E L Y S T 0 R E T L M E R A A 0 E 0 Y K N A A L U S M I P ~ A H H A T C G T T T K L H 0 U A L 1 T S t V L M R T T l E T T M N 0 X S E Y L R L 0 0 t A £ C R T ~ L U A L L A M 0 E E T C [ E M A 0 A E D D E 0 0 E A P A L R R I I M J I l 1 L t 0 R R U C T J N U L E E T T L E A 0 J C U S L Q H l 0 P Z C R M P A S L t T M ~ l L t A I A S l " A J L 0 M t T R I I. D R 0 r I N N A H S E '° 0 0 0 P A•CVUZSADNt LL AWEMTJ Orange Cout Oaitv PUot/l.Jedneedmy. March 4, 1981 UDO ISU Newly r~modeled traditional strle 3 bdrm, 2 bath home featuring \&rge recreation room & 2 patlos. L1ving room has attractive beam ceilings, fireplace & french doors leading onto brick patio. New kitchen bit-in appliances. Close to tennis courts. sandy beaches & clubhouse. $420,000 IAY .. OMT We have several Cine homes with pier & slip, s tarting at $1,500,000 RANCHO MIRAGE Sprinf;!s Condo. 9th fairway. 3000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrf'Tl. 3 bath. furn . Golf clb. mbrshp. Will trade for invest. prop. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J41 koy,•d• [J•·•• N R 67'> 6161 v\'I ~l.l<Y ~ TAYLOR CO. IU. A l.TUH S ·,1111 ·1 • l! l·l 1> HAltlOR VIEW HIUS-$475,000 . A RARE "HILLSIOROUGH" MODEL Impressive front elevation to th is est a te-1 i ke S· bedroom. 2·s tory Lusk-built home . Dramatic entrance hall with vaulted ceiling, large li ving rm, formal dining rm. spacious family rm, & lovely master suite with private dressing rm & bath plus deck for sun bathing off mstr BR. Two fireplaces, a s eparate utility rm & 3-car garage. Surprise: a gorgeous large pool in a woodsy rear yard. A real family home. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 21 I IS• JoocpmHlllRood NEWPORT CENTER, N.I. 644-49 l 0 COUNTRY CHARM-BALBOA IS. WATERFRONT HOMES. INC REAi f.STATF 315 Marine Ave Balboa Island 673·6900 LOOKING FOR A GROWTH POSITION? H JW w..t to do yaw reald1 IW ............... ffrM ........ If Y• w..t to 9d4 to ,_.- ... eocfy lllCCHSftlf retWa.tW -··-= • ,,. ...., .. crHh ... _... lllllW,. ""'""" ............... ~s~ ........... ,. .. .. * ............. " ..... h 'I I ............................... ............ .,.., ........ C.-._ TrowWld11. C.CJ.M.. Vlc•·PrHlde•t ead S•let t1••··~ 644-7020 t"1·0 r11'1 I ~---.... 11 I ..._ __ ...... ,: associated ll• ,. t'"' ...,. " . IJ', ... "" .. . ' WHAT"SUNIQUE AIOUf UNIQUE HARBOR VIEW HILIS-3 Bdrm, like a country Inn with den. CDM DU,LEX With a pool! Super Street. Hi income . $295,000. Ask for Gina Paradise . pool. French doors. C-a..-u~ ----102., beam ceilings . $595.000. 01"' .._.a .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN DEAL-On a --------•I clean home, tasteful. 3 OWNEA MUST SELL Bdrm. 2 ba Monaco in THIS WEBC Harbor View Homes High 12~ assumable S23S.OOO (fee). loan. Immaculate 3 Bdrm plus bonus room. OLD CdM-3 units, 2 Earthtone carpets. Bdrm, ram rm. I bdrm beautiful y~rd. Asking plus a bachelor Huge $159.900. O C 2nd TD Jot. views. best street. Submit aU trers. Call $580,000. S4~1lSl B I G CANYON - Broadmoor 4 Bdrm. 2'h ba, with pool and spa. -~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS newly redecorated .·~~~~~~~~ $645,000. CHOOSE YOUR OWN COLORS Due to be completed in July. 4 Bdrm. 2 ba. loads of charm and just steps to Big Corona b e ach Sl649.000. SO. COAST VILLA 2 Bdrm, l~• ba se cond s tory condo. N e w c arpet. drapes. rull security. Only $85,000. THAT'S WHAT'S UMQUEAIOUT U,._.l()Ut tiC>Ml:S Rea it.ors. 67S.6000 llUl DJATf UCLLUllCI SIHCf lt4f IAYCIEST Ope. Wed Ir Fri 1-5 2b39 SWpway La..- Just listed fascinating three bedroom, three bath home. Soar ing beamed celling in living room. Oak plank floor· ing Atrium t y pe breakfast room Im. mense covered paito. Large secluded back yard. $320.000. 631-7300 ..... l°"o ASSUM AILE Sharp3Bdrm. corner lot in El Toro. New carpets and paint. New central air conditioning. Large shaded yard. Asking S98.8SO. VA and FHA terms available. For an appointment to see. call 540-1151 -$~HERITAGE . . REALTORS Easts Ide C M. 2Br Completely remodeled R-2 lot. Lots of charm. Open daily . 11 ·4 642·2101. 321 Rochester. C.M MESAVdBI Sharp 3 Bdrm on corner lot Featuring 2 fireplaces, new roor. copper plumbing and much more. Owner will assist with the rinancin~ and wiU also consider a lease option. Priced at $130.000. For more de tails, call 540. llSl -~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS : OPEN HOUSE REAL TY / MESAVBDE CHAIMH Beautifully dttorated 4 Bdrm bome with atrium and separate master suite. Private comer lot. lovely carpets and wall coverings thruout. For an appointment to ileP. call S40-1151 -, :~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS l.2f8AIB Comfortable 3 Bdrm home, large stone -1111!!1,._!!l•c••l!llllll!k! .. 11111£--1 fireplace, ~unny patio ' --room and room ror 2 .... , ...... 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Older Balboa home with more units. $140,000. terrific potential. 4 It McC-... lltr Bdrms, 4 baths, ramily or --· . room. sundttk and dou-ua.112t ble garage. Could be a~~~~~~~~ Penlns~la Point OpenSunday,2-Spm.1641 don oser.. \t'.dt•d'- 731·3111 {97 ...... OWNER MOTIVATED: FIVE bedroom home. Famlly room. Fireplace. Tile entry. Tucked on tree adorned lot Ck>ee to schools. S128.000. Owntr will help finance. TARBELL . BKft.. 540-1720 D9'0 PoW I 026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO DOWN Dana Pt. Duplex. 6/mo- 1 /yr lease option wiitb ow n e r f i nan ci nk . Spacious Jbdrm. 2ba ' 2bdrm. 2ba. Lrg view deck s 210 .ooo Owner /a gt. 661 ·~343. ---Fo....-Valey 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FRENCH CHATEAU GUEST con AGE ! 4 hthrws. IHCll OHL Y SI M ,500 2 stry French Chateau townhom.e in->!.\ lush green setting by tne sea. Obi door entry to cathedral cernnged liv. ing rm. Dramatic open staircase to pvt mstr suite Sep children's wing and 3 baths! AU this + pr iv d etatched mom·in-law apt. or rec. rm. Compl. w/wet bar. 4th ba +more' Motivat- ed seller. here is poten- t ia I Take advantage. CENTURY 21 WALK-IN REALTY 964-331 I Sll0,000 Clean 4 Bdrm. · owner will carry balance with $20.000 down. Hurry . won't last. Call Rafferty & Lloyd Bk rs. 963-5568 H•liMJI• hocll I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltOOL & HACH Model perfect Seawinds 4 Bdrm. 21~ bath pool home $172.000 DUTCH HAVEN Sharp 3 Bdrm home near Beach & Warner Aves $114.900 $10,000 at I 0% 4 Bdrm. 211. baths. pool and spa. Only Sl2S.OOO ·I RE l'rofessioftah 963-8377 MYESTORI SPECIAL! Executive Duplex for discriminating taste, Jbr. 3ba. each. central air. woodbuming frplcs, custom drapes/ carpets. heavy shake roof. 11 11• ~ loan is assumable, no qualifying necessary. $I Ok Dowwt Or LHt MOVES YOU IN No qualirying necessary. Your mon· thly payment can be ad· justed to meet your mon· tbly budget. We have many 3 & 4bdrm home In best Or ange County locations w /these terms Call our speciallst for more information. ~ BOLDEIWEST ~. EALTORS, ,.,,..r.J. lASSOC.IATf.S1, 14M511 ' .s~ace . Orchard Dr. Sbdrm. 3ba . ~ 642·5200 freshly painted colonial l~ii~iiiF A PETE BARRE TI beauly. Family room· I' separate dining room, frpk. new root. Priced al $160.000. ror quick sale. Xlot Clnaoclng. THE WIEOEMANS . . REALTY 49'-0la or 751-4293.. c ....... w.. 1022 ------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIXER 3 Br 2 ba, pool Ir CDMCOTYA•I ,.. ...... spa. ONLY SUl,900. Va· cant. Tbe Real Eataten. alk ror ELSA. 7SHS7 Ir S.211S .... IZ72,IOO ,._._ ... __ l!ll!!!l•I OR 3 8dnn 2bll bome •• wltll Isolated maater 6 PLD/IASTS81 bdrm(un be puent. ..... $121 .... ~ or in·law qrtn) •*' Slll.000 Ill ... aDCI a 2 Bdrm eottal•· ANY WAY 10U ,_~rtbe It • It'• elaannla, up to date • beaut fltlly lout.ed . • CA&i. NMt Dir Al.I .... 1111 r . I. ' I NIJ.., .. -.., r . L -.. ~ ND,_,., 1 •i I .. Ot'aoge Coat Dally Pllot/Wednffdar. March 4, 1981 ~~-~ ...... l leew Pr1p1rty 1000 "-Uak 'rh.t Ullfllll d1•1~ ~ ........... ....... U.fu I k .. . ~ .... ~w. ,_ w. ......., ,_ w. Ollllr......... . ...................... c ...... .,w; ... ;iii i .. i .... ··w·;i·;1 .;.:;; ............ ;244 ;;; .. · .. ;;:; .. ·;·;;~ •••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••l•ff•••,• w••••~•;••,•••••••••t•ff•••,• •••-.. •••••....... S.IK DOWN .._ I ujfs. ..., •uz• • • r 1•• • • • 1 11 ......_.....,. 0o '"'-1 bome• •• 11 ·····-··············· ....................... ·······~··············· ····'·················· M~-Wllll---111•• I 042 ............................................... ,.. .. · " " I IM arw RJ• latl14 Sub--ie.N 1 Br z Ba 'tll I Bedloom Condo n•ar Woodbridtt/l tvln• 2 Bdrm. Condo. 1184 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -................ •••••• ' ' . 11/15/11~ 950/mo. Art. Brook bunt /Adami . Jbr, JW.ba. aJJ amen. In· Rutland Rd. te. ~mo. • If w... ....... y 1 New llodu&at \Jiit hcMftt, IO Unlt a. lOCA-down. 17N:l55 PooltreMla, !le. $450 cl. ISIO/mo. l40-78IO Avail 3/t. All. 875-4000. ee....i&..l S6:S E " El llof'o e.atll Pan , IP UI0,000. Rlveralde . mo . .....-n ..... :~_ e . ·~a~'fwet 70 JBr •Pl~ fftt f.lfS 1a1r•. Owaer/Aaent. ZBdrm,ftnplaee, family. --B....__..---... --.. --,-d-,--lllHTALS Yearly rental 3 Bd. 2 Ba. uu .... ._.. ..,,. ' ..,· a.. tst 900 17~ ~ kit then wlk t o Bl& ..,111 new • ..._e or ... S750 incl. stove. $'750 /mo. bar. bit.in bbQ aide ii mo. Yt1 • • · • · Coronati5o. M0-7515 crlmlnatln1 family. 3 ~r~~ ba 1575 Possible Leaae option . ma.ny other amenities ...,.1' Duplu, 2 BR 1 B•. 2 car bib to 1 ocean. ST. Br. 11 s SbrZ~ba ll50 Aat.ITs.3355 ~:!·k: :'c,ut: t:SutW~~ Owner will carry 2nd w/20% down · Sln1le aenlor MobUt 1ar .. separate fncd a Br. z~ Ba. Jacuul, 2 Ba .. am. rm. ota Y 4br2i.;ba llOO Id ', assumable9% FHAloan.3Bdrmcozy . Home for ule. by yard, rreat tond. Nr car1ara1e.-50permo. uparaded&i cuatomlzed. abr2ba llOO No. Newport. 2Bd LBa. &::~/~ta~slr• 0 · home in excellent area near schools owner, 114,000. Cap. c.M. Blufft. 1121,500. Startin• lmmed Call uzoo m o . 8U·014S Anah..im Hiiis Ga1rdener. Quiet. Adults 1"._ 1044 and shopping. Only $85,500. 752-1920 Bcb. C7l4)'9Meel. ~ Jlm7eo..17t3. AM/PM. I :'z~~o1::s= appt . ......... ,............. CUTE! BR. 2 BA Mobile MIWPOIT llACH COlhlMete 3224 3 Br condo. Refrlg, frpl~. **$15M! PIOPllTlll d ... Only atuoo. IODSJPITSO• ---~----1 J Ci>U~I. PLACI Home with alr con-A/4A PIOf'llnls ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, carport SS25/rno. Try $15,000 down and as· . I. a Triplexes in a row, E·S&de, l Bdrm. Garage. SEABRJDGE Watervlew sume tbJ,s brand new 2 Redhill .A.Re'.:111+.r south Cf PCH in Corona S3115. M2·25J0, 14e-4848. • Condo 3br, 3ba. frplc, Bdrm attached home In 712· 1920 '¥" w.t.y del Mar. wet bar. patio, pool. t en· super Woodbridge. Ask-552 -7500 II. Zduplexes + l triplex 2 BR, encl 1ar, adlts. no nls, spa, kids /pets ok. ing only 1117.500 and inarowooBal.Penin.l peta.$450.773 W.Wllson. Avail. 411. Encl gar. availablerightnow. L.,_.Mrig.t IOU.._.,......_.. 1069 Ac,.....torS• 1200 ~~tf~"d~:r:x's:'.water 8ll-4a lndryS97S/mo.631-099S .. 523CAMPICISDl.~IRVllllE \\bodbrldge ••M••;:.:::·.·•C••H••·,·:•y••• ••••L••O••W•••,••O••W•••:;••• ;~·;·;;··~~~·~;;··~; withdockfor ~· boat. ·n~b;!~:::~.~~7t4 LANDMARK aduJt con· 2br 2ba. gar. nice. a .. 11 ~ "'i ""d BEST FOR YOU da..,.. do, brand new 2 BR 2 Ba. • 559-6474 ~a U Sweeping Ocean V ew. Versailles JBr/1lu lo. If have 1164 000 and All these properties ~-atrium model. Prime 644.5106 S51·3000 4Bdrm 3~Ba, Cwstom 8 pentbae condo, wile as-.,,f: 35~ yield 'annual-~::!s '•:ri2~~u.m~~ltt 2 BR 1 ea, 252 Knox St. living. S650 mo. Call agl, ------- 412t81rrann Pltw)'.lrvtnt yrs on large lot. Pri Sec s umable loans , only lY purchaseS200.000two Smith-Meyer, Bkr E /Slde. SS20 utll Incl. 962-4454. No ree to te-LC1911M1S..Ch 3241 Gate. Tennis Courts, S105,SOO. Owner I all. · deed ( t t be Drive by. call MS-7009 nant.s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach. Clubhouse. By 645-3647, 979-5370 ask for r ear....,,, inot ~ a;-s 640-S3S7 or548-7Sl3 COATS & WALLACE Oceanfront tbr. trl r Owner,princonly. Jim rng _.,.. eres on · --~.....t... 2200 2 B 2 full b th condo 2 RE b S650 WALMU'TSQUAIE On1 ...._ .... 000 1714> acre avocado trove ln Loh'nlll"-r a · . . +ca ana /m o * IEST IUY • 540-~~4119-3695 RAii Inactive development ....................... car gar Pool, Jacuzzi. H ... i!tgkwt - -adults ~Y 499-3816 Nice 2 story "C" plan 2 Npt Hgt.sCliUhaven con· •re• near Vlsta. Com· WATBROMT ~:i;,rs·1 ~fo'~o.h0~! H_._, 3242 Ocean front house ~drm condo. Freshly 8"4 down. owne r will do. Spacious 2 Bd 2 Ba. bmed I'll-lsl + thla 'n · LOTS 21319rZ3--. o ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fre n c h Norm and Y painted. central air carry with no payments. great assumable financ· vestment epresents A few CABO DEL ESTE Seagate Wat e rfro nt Chateau in Victor ia Priced "'-10~ compara-Jbdrm. condo. spa · ed ed G less than ~ of the ag· t rf t ho e sites b 2 b f I b I • b B d k ""' .. Ul. g Just r uc ..... 0 ,_...... 1 f 1 wa e ron m 2 r, a , rp c , a c. To~nhom ... 40 oat Beach. 4 Br 4 a. ec s. ble Sal .... ror '1mmed1'ate model unit. J ason . Agt. · · • "'" ~ra&M>U va.ue o an . M' .. ... ..... AsUe c"" ,..,.,, remain on Lake tSaon twnhle. •~75 /mo. Call d....,,k m· front. 3 Br, 3 ba. fanfft•lt'c v1'ew, steps to action. $'!18 soo. 536-9374 · ,,_.'"4AI AI appraisal on adj a-fi 1 " "" ...., · cent ZV& acre parcel at Viejo. This is the ma S31-e&94. New cpt. newly painted the beach. S2500 mo CALL HOW 644-72 I I em * •S25M! That's right.a huge 4 Bdrm, free standin g frvine home that can be purchased with as little as $25,000 down pay ment. Call ror details on this super buy Total price only Sl55.000 P AMP ERED PATIO $150,000 each. Ca ll opportunity to build ------thru-out. Pool. spa, ten· Edgew ater R' E yourdreamhome. From Dix E. Side twnhse. 3 br, is clubhouse GREAT HOME snuggled in hills REALTORS 714n5t-482l6; 49l-ll53 or 1285,000. Call Henry 21h ba. patio. frplc, bit-~JEw. vacant. Asking 494-3536. OrNiguel. EnJ'oy country 756-3058. o t t71~ occ 1081 I uran a ......... . ns, auto gar. opener, $14S0.840-334lor84().6045 For Rent: So Laguna feeling just around the AT THE 11.ACH Ctlllltt .. 'f L~/ ••h/dry hook up $690 s b 1 bd h f h . g 3 vw. I + "c-Loh w...,. . , . I '--3244 upe r rm me comer rom s opp1n · Nice3Br housein super Crypti 1500 ,,_ •• 7S~eves. "-w/view. deck & frplr . Bdrm. 2ba. S142.500. cood. Terrific rlnancing. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWC ZOO/o DWH .---••••••••••••••••••••••• S600 incl util Chuck LCICJIMG VIII• I .E. $235,000. 4 grav~ltes. Vista del 9 7 9 -7 300 9 9 4 . 2 17 1 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, family rm. Woodbridge condo. 3 Br. Ayres 499•2512 497-1761 SUNSET R.E. Mar section In Pacific Owner/Agt frplc, 2 car gar. Nice II/• Ba. $600/mo. (213 ) SO RARE This spacious Foothill townhome includes 4 Bdrm s . 2 11 Ba . 2 fireplaces. air cond .. auto garage door opener. and convenient to comm pool S159.500. 495-1720 54.2·58M 846-8803 View Memorial Park. back yard. 1750/mo. 498-6090 eves & wknds LCHJlllMI HiHs 3250 M~.D....,.., Waterf r o nt Ho m es \ ••••••••••••••••••••••• UR S2000firm. Call677-5779. Resort 2400 Realtors Inc. 673.6900 Woodbridge ~ease. 2 Br. HOMES FOR,,R Ellfr END YO Co.wrclal ••••••••••••••••••••••• -1'"1 Ba. palao. pvt loc.. 3 & 4 Bdrm ·r ~75·SS95. SEARCH ,,..,,......, I 600 Tahoe City. Contractor's 5 Br. 3 Ba. 2 Sly SllOO boating, tennis. pool. F e n ced y a rd s & This home has ever ••••••••••••••••••••••• quality home 4 Br. 2li'.I mo. lse. $600/mo. Agt. 640·9900 gar ages Kids & pets ,,. .. ;~g you could want 4ii----------i Ba. Fam rm. 2 car gar. 494-0066 od d--5 ---welcome. 964 2566 or , .... ,. ••"W()HED Try xchng for Or. Cty Wo bri ge ycamore 913-2971.Agt .nofee bdrms. 2""1 ba A spark I-~ • p rope rt Y . 1215 , 000 Npt Riviera 3 BR. 1 level Plan. 4 Br, 3 ba. No pets ingpool,2fireplaces A A.._&,rofft1. I 916-583-0284. Tahoe w/ownjac. +clubrac1l S750mo.incl.gardener (g)llbodbrldge -. .......... ,. .~~; .... ~ bmgo very private back yard Lot. 62t;;x292"'1 opposite 1 Nort.bshore Realtors. No pets. $700 mo Agent. 752 2881 with citrus trees To Costa Mesa Hospital. view this dehghtrul pro-$275,000 0-.t of e~ _646-4380_ -- perty, please call us ror Roy McC_., Rltr. P'roperty 2550 Eastside sharp 3 Br. 1 Ba an appointment As -541-7729 ••••••••••••••••••••••• house Brick frpl c. sumable loan. Owner R3 acre, fast-growing dshwsr. garage. Quiet will help finance ~~~~~~~~~~ H · c • ..,1 soo IL Large 3 Br Condo 21'2 Ba Din area. family rm. frplc. crpt. 2 story, romm pool. Avail. 3-16. S86S mo. +deposit. Call 752-1282 9 to 4. Leisure World, 2br. 2ba, gate l. beaut. Nr all 6 /mo lse option $600/mo. (213)437 7674 ---Mission Viejo 3267 THE TERRACF. of Uni v Pa rk Jbdrm . 2ba townhome. separnte din mg room. wetbar & up grades Offered by owner at S152.000 with rlex. owner finanr inl( 552-5282. Priced Below Newport leoch I 06' ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE GOOD LIFE Newport Crest. Owner will carry for 5/yrs with 20'7' down Purchase $187,500 3 Bdrm. 21"2 Ba. tennis . pool. sauna. r: espena, n . -• · "' street. S650 mo Wa yne SUPf:I CLEAM down. bal. 10"4 . or trade Agent 646-8816 .. C·l bldgs. suitable for for mobile home. beach --- light industry and of· area. Principals only Lge 3 Br 2 ba, lge fncd 3 Bdrm townhouse in fices Front bldg con· Aft 6pm, 644-08$1. y a rd , en c I g a r Heritage Park. Highly tains 4 carpeted a nd Outof Stah Kids/pets ok. S6SO +S300 upgraded Exrellen t paneled offices + 2 , ......, 2600 sec. dep. location. No pets. $600 baths. Rear block bldg. rop9NY 645-1369 mo. Agt, 833-9293. has 2·12' doors, full ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- fluorescent ligh t ing, 40A~cOregon Coast. 3Br, 2'A!Ba condo. Mi cro. 4bdrm. 2'h ba. Wood· lt523CAMPU•"-·fRVl.,E 110/220 power, large El~crty, fenced. out-wet bar. many extras. bridge home. across .;i.lltl " meu, storage space. Lot standing view. access!-Great location 1695. from swim club & park . is .50x~. Concrete d rive ble, owner 492-~99 644--0885, 857-2302. no pets . S8 2 5 I m o NEWPORT HEIGHTS and lg park ing area, R..cllft. ,___ 551·1983. Large assumable loan s ecurity fence. OWC Gnt-fes 2700 IMMAC. 2br, Iba. frplc, __ H_O_M_E_F_O_R_R_E_N_T_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Beautiful view home 3 Br 2 Ba. Fam . rm frplr S695 64().9646 HOME FOR RENT 3 Bdrm ~so Fenced yard & garage Kids & pets welcome. 964-2566 or 973-2971. Agt .. no fee ---M•wport leach 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Shores Canal front 4bdrm, 3ba. newly decorated. 2 blocks lo ocean. 962-6683. House w/pool, -95 mo. 3Br. 2Ba + 2 util bdrm&. fam rm, patio. 640-1327. S5MUll, or ofc 7 59-6S97 WATERFRONT w /boat slip included 3 8dr 2 Ba. dbl gar. rm for power boat up to about 35'. 11150/mo. JACOIS REAL TY 675-6670 Newport Hgts 3br. 2ba. frplc, w/d, avail immed. pets ok 645-7 498 SPACIOUSN.I. TOWNHOUSE New 2 br. 2'1'J ba. Back Bay loc. Gar. pvt. patio. $975 mo Susan 957 ·6507. 54().7238 3 Bdrm, rrplc. walk to beach. pool & tennis $795. Agt. 760-9278 I LUFFS 3 bdnn. 2'h baths. ram rm. Bi<>. 2 bdrm, 2 bath. S875. 3 Bdrm. ram rm. $1 100. Pools R lt r . 1).4.4-0134. 3 Br. I B110teps to tbe h«;acht $650. Property H !>use. 642 3850 Spacious 2br. lba, dplx patio . gar . lndry . $700/yrly 962 4914 3 Br 2 Ba oceanfront ho m e. nu paint , & dra~. xlnt cond , patio & yrd. furn or unfurn Sl200/mo yrl)' Owner may consider winter rental. No pets please Lloyd at Jacobs Realty 675-6670 NEWPORT CREST 2 Br + den, 21• ba. $850 f,UXURY VIEW CON- DO 2 Br. 2ba. Security bldit. S17.50/mo HVH custom 3 Br. 5ba w /pool Professiona lly d e corated. Com p! . ocean/bay view $2500 LIDO ISLE 2 Br. l3• ba home. Yearly s12001mo. Marie et College Park Purdue plan features 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. Askin onl $136,500 on this cozy 3 Br 2ba $215,000 or be/option at ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps, cpl, rncd. patio 4 Bdrm. $695. Fenced home in most desirable $225,000. Sub mil on ... CH $400.~l yard & garage. Kids & 1------111111!1--111!1-I area. Lge lot, fruit trees. terms. 631-1400. AVOC I.A" 2bdnn. Iba. encl gar, lrg pets welcome. 964-2566 S IDRM MAHSIOM WAH.RFRONT HOMl-~ REAL ESTATE 631 ·1400 I RV access. patio, frplc, 2 U..Offk lldra. FALLllOOll yard. washer hookup. or973-29'11. Agt .. no fff Spectacular home on S lotsolexpansionroom. One .... ye'arnewof•ficce l>ld• 93.6acreawtthavocados 1"25 /mo . 1st. last. -acres with pool & ~~~~~~~~~ REAL ESTATE STORE · · " a nd macadamia nuts. 2 Lakeside condo , pool, separate guest & maid's 3210 in No. Sant.a Ana. 10,000 howses including new 642-7233. . b b F ·11 r Santa Alta 67S-1771 sq I\. Owner will he. Ip tennis, 1ac, 2 r, 11"': a . quarters ac1 t ies or '••••••••••••••••••••••• WOOOIRIDGE GLEN lock On Mark.t ---finance. Call for details. cardaker house. Owner East3ide 3 br, 2 ba. lge $65()/mo. 857-0211 14 horses. Beautiful 3bdnn. 2ba, 2 car gar . no 91/•% AssUlft. Lease option or equity SCM Cle1M11te I 016 will carry financing. su n P o r c h . Ya rd . --- -----stalls with exer cise & s hare the best buy on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~3666 S2,495,000 SGOO /mo. 1·mmed Rancho San J oaquin s how arenas t year pets . pool. Jac . split 2br, 2ba. study. frplc bd level, nr SC Plaza $128 .000 Ry Owner 2 sty Span home on the San Clemente area with -~ • HOMI ~ Ille. w/den. Upgraded com-comm'ty pool jac /lake Bal Pen1n Charming Lge 4 BR 2'h Ba In pri'!'e •. v•,.,.-al,j. WATI Ht HONl 645--0346 View Cond. 2 rm lease. $625. 831.7372. S3l·9l03 5594922 park1 CallJoyceWaltze good ocea~ vie w . AealEstate REAlESTATE New2sty,2brhse.frplc. m 'ty pool/golf S750/mo W estwMtster 3298 631-1266 $165,000. Priced ror ...,,....., OW, was h /dry. yd. 644-5598 ••••••••••••••••••••••• POOL-SPA flREPIT l!O 11Vt1\*.• quick sale. or assume balcony. gar. S525. -------Lake new 3 Br home 1n with this beautiful plan 11 •~m:. ~~~ lease opt. Agt. Ron D..-.es/ Adults. no pets. 642-7725 WOODIRIDGE ~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!'j xlnt cond. Lovely back 300 in The Colony. Over -L_ -· ---Poulton 498-2510 CWtt S. 1100 RMI Estah --$850/mo incl. gardener L yard. $625. 962-7940 2.000 sq ft 4 RR Only REALTORS --------••••••••••••••••••••••• hc:llmlp 2100 W. Sided 3Br, l ~Ba. me 4 Br 3 Ba. A/C. Refs. re-Harbor Ridge autre· $177.900 •-.--------•Live on the waterfront in ......... THE 5 ... .,.0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• y d . wl r /trash pd q'd. No ,_ls. 16 Spoon-moot Model Full ocean Condot,._i_..1 •• S Cl t 5 Star "~ ,,_" ,,... view S2500mo. 760-1977 .. _.__:_ ... _ _. Har"-V Hlh an . emen e . · h l6oa,..-, D-'-l Mobile Homes-Lakeside 529-0118eves. bill.559·6221 ,.,___ 3425 Redhill~ Realty 552 -7500 LaCJUM l eoc:h I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE SHAKES W e athered cedar shakes. that is. Custom designed 3 bdrm. ram rm. 2 baths Extensive use of wood glass & ceramic tile Beam ceil mg, frpk. $165.000 Mission Realty (714)494 0731 OCEANFRONT Cottage & Trlr, knotty pme int . frplc. 3 pvt bchs. pool & pier. $49,900 Terms or trade on lse hold land 499-:ll16 OCEAHROMT R.d. to $299,000 Spectacular ocean view from this beautiful 2 bdrm, 2 ba co-op right on the ocean. Greenery, privacy, security, beach and swimming pool. - WATERFRONT HOMES REAi.ESTATE 631-1400 CUTl&CO%Y Prime North Laguna location. CUte Uttle cot· ta1e on large lot with 111aximum privacy and beautiful yard. $325.000 • • ••••••••••••••••••• 3Wrm. Zbal, 2 car (ar, fir, tiled veranda. vtew if hlll1, bea1,&ti cr~t . df'lll, clubboute pooJ, lac. tenn ... ' I $125,000. Al • mabl• l2'44Jf loan. or•i•. DCM' • mobalehomeparkont e ..,........ Big Bear Laite o r ------- Ocean vu , 3 Bdrm 2'"1 beach. Forcep to leave Seconds to the wate~. Ocnfront Laguna Bch. 4 BR 2 Ba. fam rm. Super 4 br, 3 ba. den. Ba . 3 car ga ra ge area. 2 Br 2 Ba, partly ~xcellent 3. ~R owner s terms or trade. 499-3816 dinette, 1700 sq.rt. S7SO frplc. prestigious Rae· Attractive 3br. hse 2ba rrplc. beamed ceiling, e l se t o bch . l(ar . S795 /mo. 675 :6606 . 496·8339 eves Sava#!c.> Wild&Co. 1325.000. furn. $54 ,900. Ownr. home-like unit & 2 m o. Grdnrlncl. 642-4623 quet Club. S74S/mo. 492-8438 BR. 2 ba. rental unit. IHI Estah --5~ Ideal for home & in-W..t.cl 2900 Huge3br,2ba.submiton S•,..... come. Close to Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••• kids & pets, avail. now, 3bdnn. newly decor con- C-.ktrano 1071 pler&shops.$289,950. WAMTED:LOT SQS.631-6994 do in Irvine Groves. 759-9221 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W..a.yH.TcrytorCo. 16SO /mo. No pets . 3MlnFrMarlRo RHlton 644-4910 WJa1rr11 .. pCa7yl~c)~!';,,,~!.11 Mr. 3 Br. 2 '"' Ba . new 857·2141.549-3918. 3 Br. 2 Ba. large yard. 2 car garage. S745 mo 675-0062 S3.900Down N.B. lbr, 540-4646 or 631·7653 John Leml>Kk I Agent l .. ....,..v_., T own h o m e Frpl c. WITH OCIE.AH VIEW H~tolM Income Property Want· micro.wave, auto gar 3 br. 2th ba, 2 sty, bit-in Rm.ca.o S• J.. Mond I 900 ed: With owners unit door. pvt yard. dlx thru· k it, micro, 2 wooden 2500 sq ft condo. 3br. fam. rm. 2'!1ba. 2 car gar. SHOO. 557-7883 Estates ••••••••••••••••••••••• and able tio creatJvely out. Approx 1600 s/L decks. gar. dr opener. Over 3,000 sq.ft. or H 0 u a e r o r re . fin ance, low down, Be s t E 'Side lo c N o rthwood . $695. VICTORIAN elegance. Exclusive new moval/demolitlon 3br. print. only. 547.3182 $750/mo. lat/last + S300 952·2"7 BEACH HOME homes. from ~15,000. Npt Bch. Phone 645·8532 dep. No dogs . Avail ---------Nwpl. Heights. 3Br /2Ba avail Mar 1. Refri~ Grdnr. $700 mo 645-7400 New 3 BR 3'h Ba. Qua Ii· 14 1/z~ fa.nancing avail. Investor wiJI lake over 3-Ml. 2430 Santa Ana N•wporl hoch 12'9 lY handc ra fted oak CbarterRlty&dnvest. htc_.P',.,.rty 2000 payments on your va· Ave.UnitF-1.&U-7808. .. ................... .. thruout Stained glass. 498-8122 831-8811 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cant home. Call & let 's ---------1 .. •••••••••••• .. spa Twfill 1090 APPLIVALLET talkaboutit.547-3182 D .. P.. 322' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Near ne w 4-P le x , 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm, 2 bath each unit Vacant. t480/mo. lst "'I Pian nTu.--1ty with nreptace. enclosed R.... last, S300 aec. frplc. bit· . Lil nccaa ALL I • • • •••• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • · .:~ ... 9lltb't patio, double 1arage. LI~-"=w'ihed tna, '"°" -·· I 752-6499 · WOltK'S DOME $185.000. Bill ·o rundy. ,._ rw-~• I ----1 In .... ,_ beautiful home RI .... •tel ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut .. spac. • br. 2 ba. NEWPORT HE IGHTS whtcli features : 4 tr,u,.,..., . lalboa'•••• 3107 patio, lenced yd. gar CHAR MER! Bdrms. 3 baths. 3 car FOUIPLIX ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.982-211M 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Fam. Rm. garaae, lovely pool and W •-'d ,,.. __ t M Channin& 5 bdrm, 3 bath F 0 rm a I Di n . R m . " l es .... 1 e vutt • eaa. ba~t ........ 38' boat Exceptionally nice ocn spa. Move-in condit on. Need s some w ork ,. .. .,., .. ....., vi h 2b d Gou rmet kitc h e n . Assumable 12"4~ loan. · float. $1600 mo. Bill ew me r + en. Fenced. 12~ interest ! Askln• Sl9S.OOO. Call 122,000 yr incomeO. Full GruOdy 17U181 frplc, new cpts, gar. .. price 1225.000 .. wner • · m agnificent coastal Best ter ms! John Va· 540-1151 will carry 1~ mterest H ........ a..c .. 3140 views, ut1I pd, adult.a, no nianCo.631-0900. w/tBO.OOOdn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• P et a 1 15 0 / m 0 . CHERRY LAKE ~ f R€HIG€ B r i n I s u tt case -(213)947-3291 3500 .. ., "'b Gd as -HOMe' eve rytblne furnished. sq "· ... ,, r . · ~, Secluded 2 br on beach. UwtL gtoaleoch 124 sum. loan. 1297.SOO firm. . $850. Agt, 538-1484, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 892-3385. 00-0565 R. E. Investments 53MS31 5 bib to ocean. Ele&ao\ 2 C .... YOIJ Ottlll'R..tlst.h S333W.CoutHwy,NB I ......... 1144 bdrm, fam rm• den, llG A" " ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64M646 "-<STSO mo). P lush crpta. Prime view building site Molll9 HoMtt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ be, eedar at i tua. on golf course. Plans in· ,.,.S. I 100 IMCOtiitl,.OftllTIIS 6/mo lae. fully furn. Ex· Dbl car pVt 1ar, fully c I u de d · R1 ehd u c e d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Looking for income un· e c . t w n h a e i n maint. yi). Adulll. no 1100,000 ·wt terms ill?! We have 5 pro· Northwood. 3br , 2~ba. pet.1.lnquJreat52'718th. available.$1,100,000. pertlee m C.M. Priced fam nn,ail'.microwave, St . 714/960-8331 or CallDanBibb EXCITING• rlght at les s th an 2 fr plts, pool/ap a . 980-5112. 8'75-23llor640-7~ev • UXGrosa. No ba n lt 11200/rno. complete. •----------1 P81H. DUPLU ....,_ S. flnmxinl r-equlred. 19· S44-41M. ,.. * * Steps to ocean. Assum. Beau'1fully tuatoml~ed terelted! Then call 111· Mn. W. ~ In. 3 Br. 2 ba. each unit 24'xeo• Vlkln• Hom e • H .. 11 U.fu I h~ ltSUU•l•ncl Dr. + dedt. saeo.ooo. 2Br. 2Bll Ii enclot ed ••••••••••••••••••••-.•• Newport Beach Hollis Wood Realtor pottb. ln La1una Miiia • ...., H02 You are the wtnner of 67"817t ftictlt 5 star part. Zl yr ••••••••••••••••-••••• -4 tr. ....... oldtltolder (JD31Jt) By OWN!R, formal din, ($lhalue>. to Eutblutta kJw~t pric:ed home. Xl'nt nnancln1. Call An»e Quevedo. The Property M ert. t40-tolt ..., .., .. Tcnn1 714/1'1~83 1 br: pool. Now avail Aulu• ADollRouit IO'Jt'2.28l'. 278'1 Brlltol St. Arrowhead Country IMtlllew 18•, wa11t.ln cl0Ht1. Cotta Me,., CA c 1 d b are a , 8 a n .. • ... _... a u -500 .ar. 4UU"u .ar. .. uyatru. -· . Bernardino. M9fM712, A.naMlmCOft-ventJon CLASSIC COSTA MIU t.-.ms c.nter J MOllLIHOMI 1 u~. Bnad ... ut\tt' ..... , ......... 3207 Catt fJQ,M71, al 172 to Taitt advant11e of my IA&.ll Th.et• •bet theH Y8Jta ••••u••••••••••••••••• clalmyourtlc~. a11um1blt t4'1._., loen. 2'0IJW1Mw .. IOIA are referred too. A,. * * * Beaut Jumlne Cteek • pro•. ~ acn, eODH• ce..,,_t c:oodo. lbr, 1---------- co.do, plan t , a.nn1. 141-StJJ ni.t t.o all ........ 1 l l r. !! ~ Pl'ka. Mt* condo ln SH1lde den, l•erd ed 1tt t • 4 lBr. -.ooo. 0_,. _. ·-·--Vlllqe, Bud! 6 AUan· co1r1m. Pool, tennlJ, latat• S eit , u u l•~•· P•lblt trade. .. ..... JIJJ s..lhd,l br,dm,l~M. ow9.,/a1t. U U,ott. J a•l!/110od lloMle home, 11 crt a •b Re t l t 1 , •••••-.... -..... _... .. ... ft , MC. 1ate. ten- HCMW 1reat loc. Od cod . IG·l*...,.t"9. aaac. a 1tr 1 I Br, ala ett, ~I • Jae . Wkcla71 pl•u• u ll OR'IClllM •ta L• • d i I• a •, .,.,.,. fJJJ)lll-t•: 19-011. u.1111 IK ,._lal •• -._. Nr 1"*. XIM t • a , 6 w k a cl a ~ u ller 1t t»cls lllOO, g'wc 911 ,111 •l•o ;:::;..r-.'-· tm•-mt.. Tenm. ow<: or tr• PJlltl. '611.llO. Al l 1--------~ ...... • .. JIM; ............ macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY CARDIFF ,LAH FOR LIASlt Dramatic 2BR, 2 bath condo in the terrace of University Park. Available f urni s h ed a t $725/ mo . or Wlfurnished at $700/ mo. Ready for occupancy. Lila Harper 752-1414. (D-73) ' fJOLF COUISI COHOO! 2BR Big 'Canyon Mc L ain townhome w/ gorgeous view and near tennis and pool. $1000/ mo. Appl. only. Julie Van Wieren 752-1414. <D-74) I "'"''" Woocbldqt C-.. MUHi Vl c..... MAllOl..W Dela• 4 Bdrm, den Somereet model. SparklJnl pan.mlc view. Ready to move in. SJ.ISO/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orangetree Condo 2Br IBa Patio-0n Lake S495 mo Jim 957-1100 Ext. 301days551·3751 eve's. Lux condo. 3bdrm, 111-.z ba . pvt patio. 2 t•ar car/elec. opener. close to S.C. Plaza. S595tmo lse . 549-0259. FREE RENT till 3131181. Hngt Landmark 3 BR condo. brand n e w Adults only over 40 yrs. Sl650 mo. 759-9386 Beautiful Pa r k Bristol Adult Condos . Pool , security. spa. tBr. $450: 2Br, SSOO. 646-0686 JSZS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbridie 2br, Jl/zba, pool/jac/tennis SS70/mo Steve White 973-0945, S5l·SCMS Hunt. Beach. Townhouse. Large 2 Br. 11/z Ba. Adults only. $475 mo. 775-1664. Apal I b .... ltH ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... , ...... 1707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br. Carpet.a, drapa. stove, mrtie. UUls pd. Utensils for 4. 1115. 875-<mS c ....... Mw l122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2APTS. On beach. Pvt. aate. '550 It tU 00 I Ill o . Cl D C I. utUftHe. > No pet.a. New maate r tulle . 71 4 -81S -77t4 o r ZlS.ta-18". c .......... J724 ················-······· SUSCASITAS rum l br. apt. sm •up. I ncl. 1ar. Ad111u . fto pea. 2110 Newport 81. S.....btwnt61Pll • • • ' I ... .,.. ...... u.tw.. Orange Cout Dally PllolJWednnday, Marc::h 4, 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... .... ,. ... ~ .................... .... ...... u.tw.. ....... """'"' w........... Jltl Offlul~ 440010Mc...... 4400 ............ 445 ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ().,, •.... 1 1001 c:e.9w.M A 3714 c .... t11tw.. Jll C .... MIM Jl2 H • &'•.._. Jl40 Nbe~ .. t~ .. bed1rooh m, one ~~ For •tore &b,!mce •P•ce ••••• ....... ••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. '••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• &UI unn w t ••race. al re.son• ""r•te•. S'°91'f11 5'0ITSI Newly decor. l Br Spadoul t Br •l&aract. Easts Ide 2 Br Dia FREE R£rn' tlll 3/31/81. S4~monlh 541-0188. • '17th ST. Cllld IRISTOL SOOto 2700 St1 ff. M1114i Women =ll S«p by itr&IH laundry fadl 1$2$. Aslr bwaaber. tar•plau, New spa<'ioiu lbr, lux A,pe• iu ts,........ M ~AVERDE DR /itr~ you Hek\n& FUN• 35. N~m~:t~dul~:;~r torFaye.M0-9900 lndryrm,garafe,patJo. condos.w>91Z-4914 or"""8•ifleil JtOO l52SMes:~z~~E.CM ~·k'c'N·ltf:.c~l~oT 548-1001. Bachelor Studio. Pvt en· Adults. no pets. $475. 2 Bdrm. 2 ba apt. frplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prime ground floor oHlce from 6S·75c 545-4 f 23 w /uolhnlled Polenti1I. trance " bath. $225. &t2-0735. t nel. garaie. SW. A11t. s E A w I N D pr sq. ft. from 200-3000 sq. rt. North -ENJOYMENT + oppty Bach. Apts. Utlls. paid. Weekly or Monthly. McNuh Realty 642·1334, M2.f578eves. 673'6223aft5pm. 1 ar. Stove le reCrlge. ~J4or848.2'f80 VILL•GE Santa Ana near college. All utilities rrilMLocatfon for succestfclheadvan· tbdrm Iba I\.\ bl~ Small yard. Adult. no LCICJIMGlffch 314' A paid. l270Sq n on busy Beach ?:!.!e _of be,m11it you1r bow~ • • pet,., 1315 543.1377 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 1&2 bdnn luxury 8oulevard-Huntln&t.on .,.,..s tn a 11 or p t l.lSI ocean. 9375. Adults. no · · · adult apt.I In 14 plans Beach. Ideal for real nessofyourown. pet.s.675-4174. Large 1 Bdrm. Near Oceanfront condo . Crom "40. 2 bdrm Crom 540 3666 estate office, store or WEHAVE IT! Stunning larce I Br C toM.t-3124 shops. pool. all util pd. beautiful view of Divers '505 + pools. tennis. • other suitable business. If you qualify you can G1rde7n0AWpt. ~ooh 1 5 & Rec .•• ~!••••••~•••••••••••• l884 Monrovia. $48-0336 cove. 2 br. 2 ba. adults, waterfalls. pondJ! Oas 2 Private baths, ava1la· Join a winnln1 teamoodof area. l 1.,.. . t nopets.KatbieHardesty for eooltln& & beating ~ ble imm ediately 10 over 600 sporting g 5 2 Ir. I lo Apt Nr S.C. Plaza. lge I bdrm. Realtor760-8244. paid. From San Diego I Vear lease Attracllvely & sports fashion retail Hwt._.. hocll l740 Newly decor C:as pd. patio. gar. $400/rno S200 ..... __.... •~-h 3169 'Frwy drive North on R~ to s .. ~ prit·..-d. stores & home operated •••••••••••••••••••••••encl gar . pool . d 0560 "-,..... • ..._. Beach t o McFadden ~ ~ 4300 250-500 sq ft gmd nr. 6 .. 2.43•1,ext216 dealers. Contact Sp-0rt· H.. ' Fl .... EST . h Ad It ep. 631" • ••••••••••••••••••••• • 'ls pd F "' 6 C I .t " d l wa s e r . u s . then West on McFadden •••••••••••••••••••••u ut1 . rom $200. 779 Weekdays About. Jnr. 7691 entra SpanishEstateWving' 642-5073 2bdrn1. lba. renced back PARK NEWPORT to Seawind Village. F/non·smkr to shr 3 bdr W 19th. St. C' M Tom Ave NE. Fridley MN Beautiful park·llke sur-----.-yard. sep gar, S425/mo. 1714)893-5198. C M . h 0 u s e 957-1900. Co ...... rdal 55432or 18001328-2502 roundin gs. Terraced llrTowfthous• Sl?.S sec.754-0986. COUH'TlYCLUI s175 /mo+Cori nne Rettds 4475 - pool. Sunken gas bbq. Newly decor gas pd • UVIMG ROOMS 4000 631-9121af\6pm NEWPORT CENTER • •••••••••••••••••••••• ln•ft ........ s park ling founta 1 ns . enc I g a r . Po o I . 2bdrm. new carpels. 2273 Singles. l&.2 bedroom ••••••••••••••••••••••• Full Service Suites Store Space for lease OpportwNty SO 15 Spacious r ooms d /wa s her Adults Maple,$395. apts,&townhou&es. Laguna Beach Motor Inn. Male to share 2Bdrm SCUTCOSTSS 1500sq. ft. & 1260 sq rt.••••••••••••••••••••••• Separate dining area. 642-5073 545-5004. From S429 644.1900 985 No. Pacific Coast House tn Corona del Mar All you need ror one in Huntin11:ton Beach. LOAN SSOO or more Dbl Walk·in closets. home ----Hwy, Laguna Beach. 64()..64'rn thl r , Flexible term s . your money. Loan 11 like kitchen & cabinets. ~ MEWLY DECOR. Triplex. 3 br. 2 ba, Oceanfront for Winter Daily, Weekly. Kitchen Sh are nice HB home. mon y ie 213/596-7202 secu~ by unprecedent Walk to Huntinl(ton 1 Br. gas pd. encl gar. $550/mo. I br. I ba. Rentals. Furnished & available. Low winter -~0-~7 _ ·---ed lst in film financln~ ·Center. d1washer. pool Adults. S350/mo. Encl. gar. unfum. Broker. 675.4912. rates. 494·S294. :~~~ w~j!~~~r~~·m:" Now avai table· Id ea 1 CORONA Df:L MAR history 714·957-4086 I Bedroom·unfurn 642·5073 frplc, patio. lndry fac. 848-S857 eves location for Allorn~y. Prime retail lot• Hwv 1 9'Mftt from S400 Sparious 3 Br Duplex 2276 Pamela Lane. C.M NO FEE! Apt. & Condo C,orona del Mar sunny __ _ _ Real E s \ate or f,n Cronta1te 645 5429 "Wanted 5020 I Bedroom-furn Open hrl> 4:30·5.JOpm rentals.Villa Rentals room & ba. w/laundry Will s h r m y plush trepreneur in beautiful CromS430 S410.Pool&laundryfac 645-6473 675-4912Broker (acil.S275.AskforFaye. s pac ious Hunl. Bch l y ma1nta1ned f ull 3700 s q ft d e luxt.' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bed r •A90 S48-9556from 12·7PM. ----"'•()..9900 showroom & \\&rehouse ,_.__ ..... _._Off room-um.~ .,.. home. micro. frplc. i, se rvi c e build1n1t ~·-r er Adults. no pets. N 2 B 2 B .,.25 2 Br Gar. Child/Pet OK 2 br, 1'..-ii ba + gar. Hoag ml 10 beach S26S ind !Corner Westcliff Dr •. Seetoapprec 631 4402 7.5 pts rommission on all Utl.lit1·es Free• ewer r a. ~ · $485 Ask for Mike. Hosp area. nu decor. Young male. pvt home. "' d T D · · Sundec k . d s hwshr. &4HY1G3 openhseSat&Sunll-3. MesaVerdearea,kitch. all.536·8090 lrvme.NewportBcar h ) lndustriCllRetltal 450 i1o~<XX»S40.000. I &2 5 yr LAQUINTAHERMOSA 700-1418 F.ves wknds or 4238 Hilaria Way . p ri v . 642-4546 wk '•llc'•4•ft6..:\ls•fc ·· 500 sq. ft Call M elis~:.i ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.0. Limited offer. Call 16211 Parkside Ln. 1 blk S48-8675days 2 HUGE Bedrooms in $500/mo.830-5875 549-9847hm. ---tf1.~~F ••(, ., 645 6101. S.Sf100c·e.up18110641 OR' ~~odnwdso'l 1~r' Liberty Home L-Oan . & W. or Beach. 3 blks S. of super location Fully '' 'irt••crs _t "" '-Investments. 661-9343 Near new 2bdrm. 2ba. carpeted . built in s . 3 Br 2 Ba. 'h block to Room with kitc h en ts Newport Center Lawyer "P" HuntB<'h 8422834 Edinger847_~1 frplc. laundry fac. ne w ground noor Adults. no beach. Yearly. privileges. util Lncluded Oldest&ia';;ie;t ~gency or other professional Mortgogu, Trust crpts. drps & paint Encl pets $350 mo. Apply Apt 548-~ $200 mo N B 642·6811 in So. Calif since 1971 single ofc 10 exec· l>Ullt' MESA I Oft.ck 5035 $375/up 1-2 bdrm. pool. gar. S475 Adults. no F. 568 w . Wil son ---edi Law library rt-('£'PI ••••••••••••••••••••••• jac. adlt, 18992 Florida. pets. 673-2113 494-5758 6464477. 2 Br 2 Ba. Penthouse Female. age 25-35. non-C~os~o.AP~~i~~;~~~;c;· tele phone ans wl•rtnl( INDUSTRIAL H.B 842--"•or842-3172 eves Apt. w /<X vu. S700/mo. smoker. with kitch priv. avail. Leas e avail AV SattterMtcJ. Co. "'°"" bl k b h N B Irvin~ 641 1899 PARK I All types of real esl8t"' Westch(( area cozy Bacn. Mo to Mo. 714/624 1325 1h oe to c · ~. · CO Financial T ov.t•r LCICJmMI leach 3748 Stunning large I Bdrm upper$2SO Ulils incld Eves. 675·1700 Garden Grove, 891-1773 955 2411 in v~lments since 1949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• garden apt Pool & rec 642 6097 ----~ 711 W 17th St I S..,_,lali1in9 in El t I t. Retired Nurse lo shr 2br. · · • ,..--Studio. lux s pa. TV. area 710W 18th.St Spacious 3bdrm condo egan • arge. pa lo. 230 F: 17thSt C M C-'lf 2ndTOs d h I Br Upp"'r En"losed 2 b Q . 1 Fas h I s l Pool No 2ba w /privileges CM C 1 M osta eta, '" . 642_2171 545•0611 ma1 service. p one p "' , •, a uiet oc 631_.,_.12 os a esa s u1tt'' 6 .,.2_.,..,.63 _ SlOO wk. 499-2227 2Br Studio 111 Ba atio garage S2.8S Ca II $695/mo. s moke $390 640·6594 "" 350 900 sq rt Crom 75. \II .. .. .. S47S. B.I · O/W. garage 151·9906 631-1759,631 4744 eves.Joyce540-3822day GoragH amen1t1ei. Call Tl'rn Studio.profisgl,40+.non adults.no pets 645-9857 forlleftt 4'350 C'n>S~man 554.9000 s moker $300, Also room. 548·4291 $425. t-:1Side 2 AR. ~ar. Near new I br, eentrally Room for rent. 52nd Nep ••••••••••••••••••••••• St Fem S200 pool patio. no pets. Jst & last localed. encl 11:arage tune. prefer surfer 494.04.51. Super Bark Bay 3bdrm + SIOO 54 1 5331 cvs , s.soo.673-2113 548-8103 Condo New erpts. drps. 646·2325 N~wport leach 3769 paint. enclosed garage I ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• $695 6426100 ADULTS OVER 3!> Spectacular Oceanfront Lar~e I Ad rm Lo\\ er Avail. now 2-4 Br Con~ 2Br l'1Ba ,w gar Adlts. $300 Avail now Quiel do. 673-SURF , cpts. dr~. bltns. fn cd building with beautiful 2br Iba frplc. NewPort I Retired Female Room lfgts ssJstmo with kitchen pr1v Costa 675-0349 I Mesa $200 548-50&2 I Edith Luxurv Ocea nfron t Weekly-_ 2 or 3 Br Comp furn . incld ltnl'n ~ 640..4784. NO LEASE REQUIRED YEAR·ROUNO FUN Soc; a• Arr v t P\ D· •ect"r • r1ee 5una.i~ Brunch • 880 \ • P.11 r es• Plus much mor,e GREAT RECREATION fprrn.s • FrPe LeS'>f')"' (pro & pro shop1 • '} l"ei!llh Clutl\ • 5.iun.., • Hy(jrornas!>dgr •Swim m ng • D• " n9 Ri!nqr BEAUTIFUL APART· .. EHlS s "QI .. • ~ ,.. •I ' ~"eO & ~'"'""'" '1• •J • ~lJu r l " "O • ~' Pt.\t' • Vt ue1, >r "" \J,1 1) Ci lu o Oakwood Garden Apartments Newpart Beach/So '700 16tn 51 ... , ... ,,. 71 4J 642-SllJ Newport Beach/No. CJ&U U i,, PHI '' 'o" 714 , 645-1104 YEARLY 3 Br 2 Ba . Steps to ocean. $695 per Newport. lbr. den. pnv mo Bkr 645-3683 bath1entranee. sundeck . yd . water pd 636·4120 tandi.eapmg No prts fJO!. V.1.etona St $415 LF.F:WARD APTS. 202<1 2619 J Santa Ana Ave Fullerton Ave. I blk F. S4to Quiet 2 Br I Ba. with ~ar. lndry. acro~s from bch. $350962·4914 of Newport Ave & I Rik garage . patio. pool So of Ray f.3 1·0397 Adults. no pets lflOI H. Room for rent. nice house Mfe811:iB.lllt DClfta Point 3826 I 5th St Ne w Po r l & area. $180 'mo APARTMENTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Heights S450. 642-7340 962 8139 Beautifully landst'ape<.I 2 Br t Ba with refrige 3 B 2 B 1 Hotek, Motflt 4100 garden apls Patios or built-ins carpets & r . a · 1 n e ••••••••••••••••••••••• decks Pool & s pa Heat drapes $4ls 951_0881 or stovetrefng, yrly rental paid. c-ovt•n•d parking 951 76:M> Ask for Louie $675/mo. Agt. 673 3355 A dull'\. no pets 1 or 2 33801 Mariana. S unoy upper w /patio. 2 persons OK Balboa Inn oreanfronl Low winter rates Daily or weekly Kitrhenette . $90& up. 675-8740 1 Bdrm $390-$400 El Toro 3832 Br 2 ba . $585 /mo . 2250 Vanguard Way ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dshwshr. no pets. 789 SEA LARK MOTEL ., .... 9626 or 548.24~ Ir-~ ....... ! 63 A m 1 _ 2029 igos Way. 644-<1685 or W k 1 t 1 ~ 111n1111 "• ee y r en a now $525 • M--.&.L avail. Color TV. phones EASTSIDE .-er vnTn Verasailles \Br/s tudio in rms. 2274 Newport No pet.-; ~ 127 21st _.. penthse condo, adlts.no v • · · 64 3 Br. Jlh Ba Townhous e. I 140 r. F--£ Bl d c M 6-7«5 St. Days f>46 .4262. Eves N~ar Tr co lood pets.~ mo. + tst-last VocatioR R..tah 4250 645-9543 and B Toro rood. Fof-+ sec. dep. 645-3447. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i f ti 979-5370Jim WESTBAY APTS. large 2 "'ore " orffta on -------- Br. 2 Ba. S480-S485. New I eafL. Cute. private IBR apt. on 1tanlen apt.s. patios . spa C7 I 41 586-49 I 0 Penin. Steps to beach Adults.no pets -Partial bay & ocean 398W Wilson 631·5583 Hw11Mgton leoch 3140 view 675-49L2 * * • Kathy Raynsford 3034 Femheath Ln. C'Mta Mesa You are the wmner of 4' mt tiekeh 1$14 value ). to A.nafMim loot Show Mar 4 thru Mar 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642-5678. ext. 272 lo claim your tickets. • * * ....................... --- THE WHIFRE TREE 1 Luxury Adult units at a( fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Br Well decorated Olympic si7.e pool. light ed tennis eourt. Jacuzzi park hke landscaping M06t beautiful bid~. in HB From SJ60 846-0619 I ,co ' . ADULT ..l~. LIVING • , & l BR PahO Apts • 01sn•as11e1~ & BOO \ Vers ailles Studio. all Amenities. S450. 549-Mll. Luxurious 1 Br. Condo SSOO mo. Xlnt fac. Full sec 540-4646 or 631 7653 J ohn Lembeck IAgenll Westc\JU adult condo. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths Din 1ng room. Fireplaee f''reshly decorated. Un furn. S600 mo. 631 -7300 . Bkr 4bdrm, 2ba condo on North Shore of Tahoe. Fully furn. 5/min from North Star MOO/wkly. 9S 7 -3226, 53G-3946 Bert. Big Bear. close to slopes. s ips 8. frplc. $45 /day. $175/wkly 546-0116 af{ 6pm. Large Big Bear Cabin Pool table. color TV. 2 frplcs. sips 14 545 6916 Las Vegas 3 bdrm. 2 ba. fully rum 1450 wkly or monthly rate. 673-4586 Will trade 2 wks in lovely home. Sno Summit. Bil! Bear Lake. for 2 wks in beach hse during sum mer 12131988-4300 12xl2x28. 329 Universit.v. Costa Mesa Avlltl March 2nd . $95 per mo Days &46·4262 Offlc~ Rentaf 4400 •·•······••············ Elegant prof bid~ 1n II R 8.5< per sq rt lse R l'cl Carpet. 893· 1351 2300 SJ( Low c-osl Nl'wl,v decorated Bathroom & wet bar Quiet l'11sl a Mesa area Rlqht Realty 9'19.a533 1617 West<'hff N R Want financial inst 7000s r 1st. noor Agent 541·5032 Rent· 3 mos to 3 yrs lflO lo 835 s/f Flex terms Furn or unrurn Riqht R~atty 9)9-8533 KOLLCEHTER MEW, ORT Elegant executive ~uitP~ in prestige location With complete supl)(lr\ servtces 7141851-0681 KOLL CENTER NEWPORT Elegant eiterulive suite1> in prestrJole lol·alion With complete support ser vices 7141851 -0681 '150 sq ft $450 per mo 4001 Brreh St Newport Reach AJ?ent 541-5032 Luxunous. full serV1('(' or fire spare. 1·6 rms. t•on feren ee r oom. s ee 'I se rv1e es Newport Bearh. Call for info 752 6188 Lido Isle. Ir 3bdrm . 2 patio. steps to pvt bear h. micro-wave. 675 7t5S Sharp clean 2 Br I Ba . built ins Westside 4· plex. Kids OK. no pets. $395. 645-2478 eves & wkndc;. • Poof & Rte Room • Garaen t anascap1nq POSH 2 BR I '~ Ba . patios. nr Hoag. adlts. no pets. S495. 631 -3888 . 645-6822 Rentals to Share 4300 450 sq fl De lightful 2 Br + Den upper dplx. I house from ot·ea n . beautifully rurn . linens meld compl kitchen utensils. wkly or mon- thly rental. 675·8018 OCEANFRONT Winter rentaltoJunet5th IRr. S350/mo. Util int'lud~d No pets 548-1930 or 673-7844. Mesa Verde 2 Br. I Ba. Dining Rm Newly de- corated garage Adults. no pets S400 1st last & secunty 642·0735 NEWLY der 2Br ? ba townhouse. Cr pie. patio. encl gar $525. no dogs . 998·8128. $150 dep • Jo9 to Buch & Snop~ S l G ltt ••••••••••••••••••••••• \\Ork1nJil s pare with SEA ENVIRONMENT %3<> HAMIL TON H B 962 4500 WESTCLIH 2 br. 2 ba. frpl. pool, nr. shops. adlts SSSO + dep 631-5596 Moving, Avoid deposits & cut living expenses' Professionally s ince 1971. HOUSEMATES 3Brcondo.w tboat shp 8324134 WOODLAKE ArTS. Call for dela ils F or F w 'child lo shr bi~ 146-6591 fi!S-8650after 5PM condow lsame. pool.jac. Adult luxury l & 2 & 3 Cannery Village. !bdrm. Lennis $200 645·5165 Bdrm Beautiful lake!! & avail immed. S400/mo. ...~ ... ~_. Li•s..n* s treams Comp le t e ,....,.._ ...,., amenities No pet!I 673-6522_·__ __ CotmSelors to personally From S38.5. Newport Heights Duplex select your compatible ocean view Full bath 3 yr old bldl( $450 mo Turner Ass~s . 494· 1177 M D's racil. in HR. 2.llOO sq ft Reduct.'<! to St200 mo 1-;e Red Carpet 893 1351 • DRUXE OFffC ES• From l room up to 2300 sq. rt. Sl.~ per sq. ft. 3 rooms and up. No lease required 2172 DuPont Dr. Adj. Ai~porter Hotel G rl'al ocean v1e\\ from this 2 story orfiC'£' i.ut\l' in l' M Pvt enlram·c• & bath $.500 No ll'il"l' 631 7770 WESTCLIFF AREA 1-: x e c-u t 1 v e s u 1 l e ' f.! r o u n d ( 1 o o r I o 1· Secrl'l<.1ri al book kel'p rng ~erv avail t'<.111 for more> d c l ;,ill:- 17111631 36.'>l OC AIRPORT AREA 140 ~q (t full serv1C't' e" ec·utive of<' a vail Corner J a mhoree Mar1\rthur Re aut1fully deeornh'd w ba y w1nd o \\ ~ 752 250'7 Ofhre ~pare avail;ihlt• w •3 separate oHH'es 7!)j> l\Q ft ~037-1 F.X ECUTIVF. St.:ITF.S Monlhlv rental int'lcb re r cpt. phone eoveraf,!l' mail serv , t'offee ulll. Jan it 'I Xerox & sel' <>rr v avail Oouglu -; P I a 1 a . I r " i n e I o <' $325 $550 RSI 2 120 848 6805 eves wk ends Su h leao.;t' o ffice & ""'r e house 1n T hl· F.splenade. Redhill nr Bristol I ·4 yr be· 4 of f1ees. recept area warehollS(' w ·Ir~ slidm,:: door. full see .;ystcm 11 II nl'\\ crpL'i & pnt. 2.'iOO ~q(t A\dllafter3 25 Ill • Call a~er JOam for app t I t 0 Set' 644 -6500 1-:XF.C OFF1CF. SP/\O: Nrwport. lll75 s q fl cor morl'>. full scr\'H'e, (!round nr. ample prkg. a \•atl 3 16 SI 30 rt T erms negoliahle Tn ~ee. tall 975·0403 wkch i. Courtesy to broke rs 545 SQ.FT. 17th St. Custa Ml'sa 3 room !;uite $450 mo Realonomies 675 fl700 lusinffs Rental 4450 ······••··············• ·~ sq fl "arehouse a vail for 1m me d ot• rupaney •2780 i.q rt \\'arehousc av;i1I late F'eh. •2-1800 sq ft unJts :ivarl early Mart h •33' :;q ft. •Lt•asmg oHl<'P hri. Mon thru Fri R I Sal Hl-2 COSTA MF.SA lndu-.tnal 5 000 sq ft . new tilt up Ill' 2' clear ce1hn~. 4511 i.q fl o H iel•!> avail 10 :1 0 d a v s I 5 ' r l l1•ase. 33' nt-1 I>" ner 1714 1642 6!f7 I PRIME C \1 1800 !>CJ warehousr m n A' I 54().0625 Im· 1500 to r 1 " r ,. s.t511 plu~ 1 mm t•d R~ntals W Clftted 460C ••··············•··•··· G uage needed (' M area. must havt! 24 hr act'ess 673 7586 Wtdo~ ha'> mont·y for 2ND T () ~ any s1i.e above $10,000 No rr<>dll .,. . no pnlt y F'or a<'t1on ea ll /\OT 673 7311 anyllml' Mock~ref Ftats Mtg. SINCf: 1981 lst&.2ndTOs S50K-SIM + o ~n e r ~on o~ner Sf'Rs & Condos Comm<>n ·tal & Indus trial PETE!! DOBRS 1>40-61116 fl73-904'.l Want 20-22% Yield? On Your T D ·s. Notes SSRaL'len. lnve">Wrs SS Call nenn1son Assoc 673 7314 Want ln\'l'slor for Npl hay(ront homt• Gl\t' weit sec·1irl•d bl or 2nc1 T D ,\gt . 675 6161 2 n d T r u ' t 0 e l' fl porrha't ' arran~ed For deta1b. call 960 t957 bkr lusiMu/ln•est/ Rnance .AMCM1ncementl / ••••••••••••••••••••••• Persoftals/ lusiMu Lost & Fo.lnd Opportunity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • •••• • •• • •• • • • • • • Ann<Mftcemenh 5 I 00 * * * Maxine E. Coutn 20102 B1reh is 13 Santa /\na You are the winnl'r oC 4 mt ticlct'k <$14 value>. In AnCIMlm Boat Show Mar 4thruM;.1r 8 Anaheim Con\C•nl1on Center Call 642-5678. exl 272 to I da1m your l1r kels * *. Small Mf~. Commercral Se<.1 Life Display Units . Bus est '77 '80 Sales approx !80.000 Pnre inc equip & 1nven $38,900 ltlll-878 I COPY SHOP $37 .000 Profit. SIS.000 dwn we I Bal. or F.xchange F.s tablsd 5 1':1 y r s 1131 ~: 642-6157 Broker wanLc; partners Arnie Quevedo The Property Mart. 640 9019 ..•..•.•.•..........•.• WEIGHT LOSE IT & 1-:am Money 82 1 3241 Lost& Found 5300 •....•.•..............• FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 642-5678 Lost Blk wht M Cat . red eollar w /name tag 'Runj1 ' V1 <' Cd M 640..4019 Reward LOST Blk/Wt\,t m cat. red collar w >name ta.I( CdM vi e· RF.WARD 640-4019 Lost Khaki belt to ladies raincoat. At f:ase sale Reward f>4.4 8693 Selling anythln~ with a Lost Sc.hwmn Collegiate Daily Pilot Classified Ad mdl. girls bike. green. is a simple maller . . ~~ _!rea. 548·~998 __ 2bdrm , l'"2 ba . d is . 2 Br 1 Ba. Adults. no rmmte to suit your hwas~r. crp~. dr~.s~~~ 2 Mrm w~u ~-~-Mo Id. lad lif~t~e.Sha~·Llving ~~~~~~~~~~-~-~~~~-~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~j-g ar 995 3311 $470 cpl. paint. dJ'1'S. Kids depogit.517Bolsa Days 833DoverDrSuite31NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• 995·llll OK No pel'i 7921 Holt 631-"c20. Eves Wknds 63l·l80_1 ___ _ G......-d 3102 · S425 847 -4803 bt w n ~ A rPQ•slra1ton s101prrpnt "'"ohng 1-::> these socunhe-~ has bee<"· t11eo ...,,,,.. the Secunr1es and f1c"<lnge Newport Beat'h. SI 25 sci ft . New dlx orriec or retail w pvt bath . sccunty. u l e. 600 2400 sq n 509 31st St, c next to Bank of Newport. Lido Cannery area I 675-3236. (213)641-9700 833-3223. 9-12 just call 642-5678 Sell idle items 642·5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EAST SIDE 3•7pm. S48·5041. M /F to shr hse in c M. romrn1ssion t>vt nos 'X"' yPI become effPCl•ve ft,,.~,. securities rnov not be SOid r•O""'lOV offeu ro bvy be Al'TMTS FOR RENT CCMlfttry Woods Xlnt loc. Pl;r-point con Lido Isle. on waler. ba; Sl9S + v.i54utl867l. N1on-smkr ~~~tn"~~01~~111:;~h:~o:~~~;~;:~~,~~~~g~~":~ s~~:;~r ~;ss~i"~~~~n~~11e~: H B NB C t M a 2 B • St d t · I I view, \bdrm, Ir liv rm & 675-7794. 9· these secur1 t1es 1n onv stole 1n wruch such oner so11c11011on or sole would be llnlowlul proor to1eg1strorion o< ...... 05 a es . r."' u y, ri._eve · dos, 1·2br. S450-S600. -----·-~---Something for Everyone fl replace . s. k y I 1 g ht. p 001 . j a c . t e n n i 5 din. 1675. 675· 7155. M / F to shr new home, 3 Quofihcol1on under the s~urrt1~s tows of onv su,..h ~10IP Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. deck. No childre n or 846 1826 from Br. 21h ba. wnnis crt. Apts. Certain locations pets. $535. 180 E.21st. St. -· · ------Npt. Shrs. across Hunt. Bch. La Cuesta. o fr e r : P oo I, spa. Days 646·4262. Eves Large 3 Br frplc. Enclsd bcb. Pool. Encl gar $300. Call 8am to 6pm. fireplace. laun room. 645-~ gar. S495. S47S/yrly. 64().5078 96(}.98JJ beamed ceilings . LG. 2br. 2ba. enc. gar. -213/S96-6S49. New 2 Br 1 Ba. dis------garages. all built-Ins. M t F 2 b 2 b Garden & Townhouse quiet Mesa Verde st .. no Nice 2 Br. 1"" Ba. Pool. hwasher, encl. garage. 8 ure • r .. a. n~n-S475 645-31164 smoker. $220 tncl. uttls. design. pets. S42:S. 536-0673 laundry. garage, patio. · _ _ F.V. 963-6216 TSLMGMT. 642-1603 t s~7"' Lge lbdrm. pool, adults. n ew ca rp e ... .,. 2bdrm, Iba. frplc. no . B di h 2 llDIOOM, SJS5 no pets 1.125/mo. 646.7319 960-5043. 1-630-0350 pets, adults only. SS40. N1ce2Br. 3 • x twn se. On quiet cul-de-sac. lov-673-0lllM . M--'---Wall • ~ l294Stb St. 675-6969. E . Bluffs, Nwpt Bch. _,,. "',..... --Fum. l360 mo. 7S9-0422 ely, spaciout. clean. Lrg Jmmac. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. Lrg 3 Br. Apt. Fireplace. Newport Rts. 2bdrm. Iba. landscaped encl yrd. Z c:ar garage. S600. washer dryer hook up. frplc. carpets. stove. Resp. F to ahr lge 2 br gar. Anaheim lnr 642-8235.~rit/Agent Patio. dbl car garage. etc. Older adulta, no Nwpt Beh hse w/spa & Katetla & Euclid ). ChlldrenOK.~75.NrH. pets.l400yrly.5'8·$306. BBQ. S2'75. &13-1955 . ~7888· IASTSIDI HarbourM0-5623. 89'1·31575 1...,_tshMd 3106 • ooch -S_..AM 3 .. 0 -------1 r-1~1 rw FREE RENT till 3/31 /81. ....................... Fem wanted to ahr home ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br. w th patio. No Hnlg Landm111rk 3 BR 3 Br. 2 Ba. Condo. Across w /same n r 0 CC . 9825. 2 Br. modem. patio ch\ldren or peu. ~ condo. bra n d new. from SC Plaza Securl-$225/mo. Reh r eQ. ' cause. 22T Cor al. mo. 310 C Monte Vista DAdlt.t only over 40 )lfa. l)I • ;,;lmm\na pool. 540-0l!Oll. 2L3/Sa511 Ave.*-flllO. tBSOmo.1»9• SS50.MS-241Z. •---------,..._ ''*•• J107 2 br 1 to. ba. w aide. $425 --Fem DM·amollln 11-25 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• + 'sec dep No pt!ls 3 Bdrm apt. • bike to 2 Br, 1 ba. near So. Cit allr 3Br, 28• redecor•l· 1 Br. Apt. Cloe• t.o beach ~ • · beac h . New c Pt . Piasa. Security 81te. ed hie nr bch.S200 mo. &r Balboa Ferry Yearly M!S+t:ZSO dep will moye POOt 1 chJki ok. No pet.a. ~.e. W.\140 rental. uu. Ca ll 3Br.2Ba.2288C•nyonDr. youln.C/21Surf536-7542 $425mo.7S2-7414. _,. t.o hrlb 2~b hH 17~ S450mo.-t4'1S mo. en1 I r, • • 641Z-8l5.3 a Br. 2~ Ba. 2 Stor)I, 38r, 28• nr So. Coa1t noa-emkr f!. 8luft1 M.~. c.-.. Mw 3122 frplc. lndty rm. ln •· Plau. pool, Jae< play· Sll50•V'fll15t-OS.n ••••"••••••••••••••••• 2 Sr. 1"' B•. 2 Br 2~ Ba. Plex. Bolst Chica / tl'OUlld. ldds OK, '530 Ola oce•uu J Br. newly Frplc, 41.ahwuhcr. lau.n· Warner aru. • per mo. tm>-...evea. R mmte Wanted for •uorat~d w/1arau. dry f.aHU., c•rporLI. mo.~~ S..-.~ ,.., 1paelou1 hH ln San Adulb. "::'o. Aak for ~aft.•· a Br 2 Ba. 1't • lut ........ ••••••••••••••• ~~; =~ rt!, ,.,... JBr~ 281, n••t o.c.c. monthl. llllOOll)O. ceaalro•t atlldlo apt 4M-m1 •--'--• ....,_--... _ ... ,.. ~/rno. Opper. ' 175-0TII wttb Pldo. ove.rlooklD' ______ ......___ ,. --~--.. ...... • ..., r,vt bndl. lliO/mo uttl Jlyou're ltookb\I for a be\· • • ., • dialilli )IOUI' ___ ... tbr,lbla,trplc,DW,encl. ncl.•21SSwdt•1. ~Job.,oawm'lwurtto ...... °'" • • eaJI. Hne IOllMtblnl to tell? 1ar. Nr "'-'-Harbor. -ml•• tM •emplo7m.n\ Wt'UtliU.~to.Jl'll CT 1 lflld .. cfolt'""· Ju .... u11. 1'•..t~ C.Uto-l'llw allaa ""4. ' PROPOSED NEW ISSUE 700 .000 Shares technology marketing incorporated Irvine. Ca li fornia COMMON STOCK {no par value) A copy or thJS preliminary Prospectus for review only may be obtained by colling or writing to the address below Montano Securities Corporation Member$ Poclfrc Stock Exchpnge & StPC 523 West Shdh.St . Sulto 244 107~2 MoCArtt\Ur BlvO ~OS A~les CA Q0014 IMno. CA 02715 (213) 680·.3620 (714} 752·0165 Nome· AddreS$: S1ote· Solte 120 Orange Cout Oalty Pllol/Wednelday. March 4, 1981 ::r.1 •• ', . .,, . ~ " .;:_<L ..::"" I ( 1° I·' t • 1 f : ' 1' ~.... ' "I ) ~"': :'.._ "" I' ..... ' I t J I • • f i I •,, I ) • ii I • ,. I ·-~ ~ ~ 1~--a. '•~ a ~ '9 r.w r " • ~ 'T ' ............... '-... 1 ....... • .. 1•...i r~ •• ll • • , , .. ~ .. ,, •• '~tr S! --~ I If -I - -C...._ Ac1•tlc .,,,_. •• u ti s.r.tc.. · Ht•••• .. , · . ~ ---'~'•''... • .... -·~ .... ~. ~ ................................... ;;;;~ .....•......... ···············'······· •..••.............••...............•.....•... ~······················ .............................................. . --------OEN.CONSTIUCl'ION Mould<'C«llinll Drytrall~lalilt NutriUooal Consuhant S=Houlff~aolnl IBRICKWOJl.K : Small Palntln1 lnt./Ext ren· QUALJTYROOYINO ~ Da Addklona, Rcmodela +CUlttlmbadtutu~ Qual. It~. New• re-fMI ~by lndMdual 1 u 1 Jobi. N•wport. Co.ta t.la our specialty. A.e· ... ,._ rreeat ~!-IY Uc""-.ll&rtf'79..44ll Uc.-... 5» mod.t99M.SD-SMI balanced vitamin ('Ulrn•u t.a Men. lrvlne, Rera. coUIUcpeinted. Prompt. '".,,,,_. • 1 IJ:L'jou p{y t~p)' •diet, coaaulta· ~lso-44• 57S.at1S Seulde Palntlna. Orea v~:~R ROO~~:to w a New or old or ln between C ..... /<:..a"• DRYWALL our ex· UCWI llO. MS-25312 PenonaUJed ff"'•*• EX p E RT Br 1,. k •. "'--_.. c1 bultdlnt. Llcel\sed & ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• pertile Quality wllh tbe v.-.. .. • ---------H_,,..,.,,.. -In~•>'• ln.s··--'• ...... -Pounda·•---·ldRetalnlni r11-... ...:.:.. ..... ••1.-.u H-*•• cleanlntbyKUMI. M•-PV. Small L."-& -"""6 "" the --.w•, u...... 1an111n ..... ..., 6""" ' c-•1 .,.., ... 1 5172 _, ,..,._ Inter/Exter/Reflnlshlna. 1-~ CO Walla, Hilll e Rettora· ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. r...e .... · repairs. Frplc facinaa. ~..., • n••LY c ...... u •• 1... lion, Slabs, Patios ... dric.. Carpentry rooflns Ir I I I , R , ""'1 a1111 71/U\707• celllnp/wallpaper. Lie. RerootltRepair UN ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 1 bl • iuenera e ean n1-o • e.1. -..........,, "" • Cain "Sona. 898-5105 Ll". 1-..-,. •• -•••••• .. ••••••••••••••• BlockltBriclt.Llc'd. masonry, p um na . flees vacantaptl --" __, .....,._,. PILOT HOME REPAIRS &t2-8387 evet. £L!CfRICIAN-prlced atucco, drywall, etc. itom .. 891 ~ Brkk Ir Blockwork PAINTING Le a k Re Pa I rs , & tn\/tlrt Cuat. cabinets rt1~. free eatlm.ate on 64$-9880 · • Marty y E ... CHAR RENOVATING Driveways, Patloa, 1ar1eor1malljobi. . . !MRS CLEAN MAKES IT IMS-~18 LS ears xpe11ence Complete Roofing Jobs. S£RYIC£ 845-3?49 Walka, Brick •It Block. LI t3119121 57"°359 HOME IMPROVEMENT · 548-4162 "Rain Or Shjne Roof· Llc'd 881 1872 962 0986 c. Remodelln°--0dd Jobs OLEAM 1 Homea, apts, MASONRY and remodel· At.PH'S INT NG lflg" 6'5-4396 llRECTOIY c ..... ., . . ' . I Top ""'all•u, Dependable 28.,..e .. p. " ""'" .....," otnce. Carpet. 646·2240 R PA I ------C ....... C ., __ ".r' R" R 18 ,,.v .. ,.,.,..~ lng. Quality with the Lie. lnt/Ext. Low Rates Balboa Roofin• Co. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• -.. ....nice. eu. ates. Ho~leanln°-rell1ble. best price. 631·2004 F "'~t ..... S"''"' 0 DOITNOWI REMODEL-REPAJRS ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrsexperience.531·5055 Carpentry, plumbing & good worlt :teady Job. ree.,..,. -...,.._......, Mat.er\alcostsdown ~ ..... ,_. 5-dre Also Custom Cabinets LIC. CHILDCARE electrical. Uc. cootrac· R f ' MoYiiMJ Plcnter /Repair Free est. 673-6743 YourDatl1 Pilot 2nd generaUon, 17 yrs In My Corona del Mar Electrician -Sm. Jobs, tor. Gene. M2-8S37. ea. IMS-7228af\. 4• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tli. ---S.~lce Dlrec1wry area. Uc'd. Top qual. home 873·294S malnt. & repairs. Lk. H...twood Aoors Ho.sftllllMj Movlng? The Starving Neat patches & textures ...................... . ""'pneentat ve Mr, Palombo, 982·8314 . CanAr-&..-1233118-ClO. 548-5203 ....................... College students Moving £-...."' 19•1439 642-5671 d 311 ---.--••••••••••••••••••••••• Co. has irown··same ~ • ~ Prolessional Installer '• CUSTOM lNTERJOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELECTRICAL and re-HARDWOOD FLOORS Prof. man now in 25th yr· good service. Ins, lic'd. available for your CARPENTRY COOIU'Uc:Uon-All types modellna. Quality with Cleaned & Waxed w /MacDonald Dougl~s #T~. &U·8427 rklll:itiMg custom jobs. 63t·<m3 BOOKKEEPING Qy Jay 642·8809 20~. Free est. the best price. 631-2004 Anytime. 832·488J S.A. Corp. ~hes to housesit. ....................... ------ 6TAXSERVJCE Uc.JD . 84.5-5973 896-~.e7J.71M6evs. Student will move you at DRAINS CLEARED Tile IJ\Stalled. all kinds, R C.,..t5.nk• Ga••CJ H~ reas ratea 752 1493 s1075 Don' bbed guaranteed, refs John eu.ratee. 496-0813 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RESlDmI'IAL It Com· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••EXECUTIVE will 848-aTnorM7·3309· · · · tgetro · S93-l66'7 ....... We CareCarpetCleaners mercial remodeHn1. •VERYLOWPRICES• Haul,cleanup,concrete bo~it. xlnt refs. ex-Call B&B Plumbing -- ....................... Steam clean & upbols. Quality with the best Landscape malnt-clnups removal. Dump truck. per d. 947-5407. 6'4·1248 P ....... /P .. r'-CJ ~a~ic:.fil.~ Rooter Trff S..-.lce Driveways, parking lot Work g u a r . Truck price. 631-2004 George, S49-201S Quick serv. 642-7638 ltt~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----••••••••••••••••••••••• repairs, sealcoatlng. mountunlt.645-3716 DAVE'SPAlNTJNG Propet"tyManogetnfft ExpertTreeTrimmer ,S&S Asphllt. 646·4871 Room additions. remod. Landscaping-Cleanups H~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ServingArea9years ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tenyearsexperience 'Llc'd. Shampoo & steam clean. plan. Geo. Pllmer & Son. Treetnmming-Hauling ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto Ina. Cancelled Mostlteasonable Prof. service to save you 545· 1865. 751 ·2128 • Color brighteners, wht Llc'd. 557-6932 Maintenance. Free est Want a REALL y CLEAN All Risk SR-22 Lo Rates Insured. lic'd. 760-7301 time & money Newport --laltp1'""9 crpts 10 mln. bleach. Amie. S48-3414 HOUSE? Call Gingham Plrkel Ins. 646~3995 ---Pacific R.E. 645 3683 Tree/shrub tnm. remov. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hall. liv.-din. rms $15: Dr .. 1w1 G1·r1 "'---es·t '""'5123 I _.___ Fine ext/int painting by RoofisMJ-cl.nu...:. ha.ul Concrete. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Total aarden & lawn · rr""" ·.....,. ... ._.,.,.. · h d s· · · ,.., BABYSITTlNG avg rm S7.50: couch $10; care. t"ti·me or contin· ual Hwlst••• Ric ar inor. Lie. ms .................. ••••• du1. et~~1m_63.!_:4530 _ My home 1 Yr •· up nr "hr • Guar elim ,...t S.S. DESIGNS Expertise housekeeping, T_ry me. 631-4410 (24 hrs l ' "' · " .... · · .. -Custom Drapery Win· service493-4603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New & recovers. Repair Window Cleaninc) Victoria, C.M · 642-8482 odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrs dows, tOOO's of fabrics. e qui P & 5 uPp1 i e s For Ins. purposes. we Palnting & Papering s peci a I is t /st a Y bus Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• exp Do work myself furnished. trustworthy & Mature woman to baby Ref~. $3l·OlOl · $3.95-4.95 yd. 10 day del. The fastest. draw in the dep&41-4970_____ videatape prop. & con· Cabinet Refinishing pri~~· Reliable 548·05 12 alt anytime. Free est. 30 yrs ln area. West. . .a Daily Pilot tent. Call 640.0100 Video Prof. work. Free est. Have something to sell ? ____ 548-_2038 ____ Clauified Ads 642-5678 645-6654 Clautned Ad. 642-5678. Want Ads Call 642-5678 Verification Rsnbl. Steve 547-428~ , _Classified ads do it well._ "Let The Sunshine In" Call Sunshine Window Cleaning, Ltd 548-88.'>3 ~~!.~.~ ...... ~?~~ ~~ ......... ~?.~~ ~~ ......... !?.~~ ~.~!.~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~!.~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~.~!.~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~!.~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~!.~~ ..... ~!.~~ Lost: M Lab mix , under l yr, It. g olden. vie Lindberg School, C.M Feb 27 Reward 642-8598 LOST· Blk /Wht Ca t Adams/6rookhurst area REWARD963-IS68 LOST. Male Gold Rabbit vie Tradewinds /San· tiago Please call 646·9844 F OUND · Blk puppy female. Pood le-g ray male. Shepherd·lan male. Shepherd·blk & tan male . Al so cat Siamese mix m a le. Newport Beach Animal Shelter 644·3656 Found· male · Ger man Shepherd mix. 2/24. nr I COVER GIRL •OUTCA.LL • 953-0TTS MC/VISA FIRST LADY Escort. M.odels Party DCMC:ers. INTRO SPECIAL MYSTIC MASSAG F.: MASSAGE SlO W /AD Santa Ana f>SS-4656 *" SPIRITUAL READINGS 10am-10pm Fully L1c'd 492·7296 or 492-9034 1815 ADVBTISIMG Acct. Coordinator Immediate opening for agency exper'd . coordinator with gd. managerial /organiza- tional skills. Industrial or trade accounts back· I ground preferred. Call , Freddi at 714·730-0JSS -----S. Camino Real. San ~~!!~!!!!!!!!~~I FANTASY Clem -ADVERTISING * 972-1345 * MC & VlSA Accepted LOST Reward SlOO Sml ADVERTISING RUDIMG, ETC. blk cat .. rem Requ1rei. S .a.LES 0 C. NEWEST & MOST medication 548 6539 "' LIBERAL STUDIO IS ----$2000+ NOW THE BEAC H ~plo~& PER MONTH AREA'S CLOSEST AC· ,reparotiOtl Must be experienced . TI ON 81 25 Bolsa .••••••••••••••••••••••• CallMr.Crossen. Midway City. Just 2 Schools& 759-0652 blocks eas~ of f:1each l1t1tructioft 7005 Blvd . behind liquor••••••••••••••••••••••• store 543-9243. ~--------------- Alarms Winning team . Plavan School. F V ---------AIRUME CA.REHS lnt't. Air A.codHty will be interviewing pro· spective students in your area. If you are 18 yrs. or older & a high school grad .. you may qualify for airline/travel career trairtlng. Experienced personnel required by Oran ge County Security con · tr act ing f i rm. Low voltage & electrical ex· perience necessary. Ex· perienced only need app. ly. 714-838-6310. 540-1662. Los t · Rew ard Sml blk/bm M. Terrier mix. Vic HB 842·2156 LOST: Reward Mixed Terrier Blk /Wht vie Heil /Springdale ff B Lie 1(17780 840.5998 · LOST Male Shepherd Mix. vie . Npt Blvd. REWARD ' 645 7395 "Kimo" Lost. Small white Terner mix. Brown collar Lie #102498 H 8 nr Garfield /Bea c h REWARD 960-1087 Lost: 2 Cockateels. both white w/gray markings Vic Harbor/Vi ctoria 646-6«>2 eves. Lost : black & white Boston Bull Terr ier, fem a l e . R e ward 963-798.S. l year Calico cat M csa Verde area 545-957 9 Reward. Call aft 5pm Found. Poodle: small female. Blue collar, no tag. S56-4700. Call N . B shelter Found. Small Tan/white dog Part Daschshund. •FOXY LADY• OUTCALL ONLY VISA MC * 972-1138 * &otfchcorls 558-1946 24 Hr Service Serving Or. Cly *** Mn. Roberi S•ford 1111 Valley Circle Costa Mesa You are the winner or Call toll frtt. 1-100.42'-1655 Vancouver. Wash. ASSEMBLERS. We . will train . Apply 7AM . MacCre1or Yachts. 1631 Placentia, Costa Mesa ASSIST MA.MA .. 11 ~uto rental. No exper. necesaary. Call 979·8826 or772~. 4 fr'ff tickeh CS14 valuel. to AIMllMim Reading taught children Christian teacher. re· asonable rates. certified 543-9830 after 6pm ~obs Wastfed, AUTO RENT AL AG T 7075 No exper necessary . Call 979-8826 or TI2·6SSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• loot Show Rack office Nurse L VN A~:hei~hC~n~:~ti!n seeks full lime employ· Center menl. In N.B. & C M Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to 675-l706 _ Babysitter , P IT . exp with infants. mature adult Wood bridge 552-9561. cla1myourtickets Scandinavian woman liiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii•lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * * • looking for houseclean· -in g po si tion i n A. TLAHTIS MASSAGE N B . / c . M a r e a . SP A 673-7911. Be pampered by 16 Beaut Girls . Open !Help Wanted 7100 \OAM ·4PM 7 da ys .••••••••••••••••••••••• Banking TELLERS FULL TIME Position available in our South Coast Plaza office. 1iim--------•I Experience pref'd. Call: ACCOUMTING Kathy Amburgey Phone 645-3433 TOUCH A CLASS ·ESCORTS 752-0817 AM BER formerly with COVER GIRL is now w i th THE GIRLFRIENDS' -.d I _. 540-4066 IOOICKEEPING CALIFORNIA FEDERAL part ? Hunt. Bch a rea 1--------- To assist in developing the P & L. Work under minimum supervis ion Required to use indepen· dent judgement. May assign work lo lower · lever deru. Xlnt. com- pany benefits . Call Millie after 9AM : ScrYistgl&Lo.. 695 Town Center Dr. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 F,qual Opportunity Employer 640.7288. THE Girlfriends •ESCORTS• HOIM/Offic• /Hotel • 759-1216 * Found. Black & white puppy. F e b 2nd Dover/Mariners Dr N. 8 . 631-432\ ,.~ 5150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24Hrs Now Hiring PRE LAW student needs 125.000. Will do anything Legal. Confidential DVM. P.O. Box 3242. N.B.92853. MC Visa Find what you want in Daily Pilot Classifieds. l i , ,,. • i 1 ? J ! Use ,,,,.,,., At/ service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad ... we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience 1' during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this ser~lce ts only $7 .so week. For more Informa- tion and to plac, your. ad call 642-5678. .-,Mil .i.'f:._ --- 645-5800. . I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Accounting A./PCL!RI Excell. career oppty. Exper. nee. for Fashion Island investment firm. Medical/dental benents fully pajd. Computer ex- per. Call: 640-0123 Accounting Banking l.upt /Switchboard Seeking personable ap- plicant with gd. phone etiquette. Exper . helpful. Typing re· quired. Call : Sylvia Waters, 552-6100 IA.t«OFllVIME Equal Oppty Emplyr Banking L.A4MIMA. HILLS OfflCIS CURRENT OPENINGS: •Vault/Merchant Teller •Tellers(Full & P /time> •Payroll /Personnel Clk. FICA.cc~ Posilion w /Npt. Bch. p r op. mgmt. fl rm . Outatandlng career opp- t y. -G /L , A /P , A/R w /emphasis ln financial a naly1l1. lf you're bright w/prior F /C exp., we'U train you "provide for career advance· ment. Call: 940-0123 We offer growth op- l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I port u n It I es • e x c e 11. working conditions , salary Ir benefits. Call: ACCT•CLIU Exp'd, mature person for general office Ir payroll. Accuracy • muat. C.M. area . 549-2238. AllllSTRATIYE ACCOUNTING MANAGER Advertisi~A v. Pcnon wttll 41 Ir ornce adm lltratlon. payroU 6 full char1e boolrltHfln1 ex per. Detl,.b e Newport Beads location. Liberal befteftta, Call~ Jan Wood mm.- Carol Tbuyns m .2111 11.DOUDOIA.MI E.O.E. Bartenders wanted for: le•••'•' .... •••· OpaUn1 soon. 0 . Co.'s newest nl1ht/ apot. I s\otitt\l\Uwaky. Dlnln1 • danclrll to rock• pop. APllb' In penon al 2•1 El 'roro Rd1 <top noor or Home Savan1s • Loen Bids.) El Toro. Thurs. Fri, lat, Mon • TUH between 9-tpm. 951-2100 BEAUTICIANS A MANICURISTS, foUow· ln1 pn(. To •orlt ill •arm. fritodl1 ulon. Hrs. nalbte. The Halr Depot . ..,.... ) • Beautician HAIR CUTTERS MAKE-UP ARTIST MASSAGE E s tabli s hed pro fessionals only for a uni· que new s alon in Newport ·eeach openin1i: March 16. A few posi lions available for lease 675-:B28. The DAZZLERS Salon Beauty Progressive salon 1n CIRCUSVA.RGA.S Costa Mesa. Mar. 17-19. Office & delivery help· f rr, Call 546-1266. CLEANING Need h e lp 1n m y estabhshed residential cleaning service Good pay Call today 751-5198 CLERICAL Invoice ore nds person accurate w /figures. typing & 10 key, exp req. 979-8600 C M. Newport looking for ---------creative, motivat ed, well·trained , exp Hair Designer. Call 833-0304 BOOKKEEPER/ RECEPT. Medical of· fice, Laguna area Small, congenial office. full time. Ins urance forms/typing. Call Bet ty; 499-170'l. BOOKKEEPER /SEC'Y Fulltime. Experienre pref. Newport. 631-2825 IOOICKllPING 911d/Oll' ACCOUNTING To usist in developing the P & L. Work under minimum supervision Required to use indepen- dent judgement. May assifn work to lower· leve clerks. Xlnt. com pany benefits . Call Millie after 9 AM 645-Slm. Clerical VARIOUS CLERICAL &c ...... l...efit1 •TYPIST Experienced S884 to $1040 per Month •STENO Expenenced 1946 to Sl 125 per Month •BILINGUAL CLERKS & TYPISTS also needed An additional 2C)" an hour for bilingual skills. Apply Immediately COUNTY OF ORANGE Personnel Dept 625 N Ross St . RoomG·l80 Santa Ana. CA 92701 (714) 834·2861 Affirmative Action Employer M /F lookkeeper 4Full~~~~~~~!'ll Charcje • Rapidly growing C.M. •c•1•en•.•ca•1------mfg firm is seeking an exp'd. full charge book · keeper Interes ting & pleasant work environ· ment. computer & budget exp a +. Growth pot en ti a I· cont r o 11 er within 2 y rs . Salary Sl3K-S1SK to start. Send resume to: CD&G 5020 Campus Dr. N.B. 92660 Attn: D.A.F. IOOICKHrER F /C SECIETA.IY Costa Mesa location Good w/phones. Full time. Typing, general office procedures 645-2244 Typists 50WPM Dicta Sec'ys Exec. Sec 'ys Chmtglst.g c....,.7 Looll fora Ch•1ng11NJ ~7 Use temporary jobs as your shopping tool. We have long & short term jobs available In the O.C. Airport area. Week· ly paychecks, quarterly bonus tr\pa. Never a fee. ---------i Call for appt. today: looldleeplst9 Clet't Full time. exper. helpful 557-0045 but rt« nee. Many com· pany benefits. Apply al: r-n..L•n- 1660 Placentia Ave .. '-I \ 11 ':. Costa Mesa ••MPOllMV "llSONNfl SEll'lllCfs •CA.I DllVBS• 3723 llrdl 5 ...... Checker Cab Newport hocll 770.0222 E.O.E. CLYK lnsurante co. nr. O.C. airport needs rating & coding clerk with ap. titude for math & detail work Typing 40-45 wpm Exp. helpful but not nee $825 a mo. Gd. benefits Call· Laura. 833·8450, 1401 Dove St.. N.B Clertl Pharmacy & Hallmark Exp. pref640-7373 CLOTHESTIME Now hiring part lime s a l es & Assis tant Ma nage r Trainees M 1nimum 6mo. ex perience Call 642· 1231 COUNTER HELP Ambitious. bright and energet.ic people wanted for full and p /lime help for busy deli & sandwich shop. Good starting posi· tion with xlnt chance for advancement in grow- ing company. To set up appt. for intervi ew call Stan at 67J.9000. DESIGMH DRAFTER Laguna Beach elec tronics manufacturer needs· •an expenenced person to be responsible for drafting & mechanical desilOl fun ctions. Must have thorough knowledge or drarting procedures. PC board layout. digital, analo)? microwave c1rcu1t de sign, & some knowled1i:e of eleclrO·mechaniral packaging EXPERIEt4CED DRAFTER •to do mechanical detail drawings for machined parts a sse mbly & layout. Knowled1H' of mechanical part s as sembly, tolerances. l'I C absolutely net'l'SSa ry Minimum I yr directly a pplicable work exper or 2 yrs. technical srhool exper required Opportunity for advan ce m e nt & caree r growt.h We offer xlnt. pay & benefits + 4 DAY WORk WEEK G&tERA.L OFFICE Im mediate opening for a dependable . ex · perienced person with xlnt. typing skills & a pleasing phone personality Duties wilt a lso include filinl'l & general office work Xlnt benefiLc; & working conditions with a gro" ing company Apply m person at TllE J OLLY ROGER INC 17042 Gillette Ave Irvine 714-546-0331 GENERAL OFftC E Need good typing. to.key skills & phone manner Order Desk & lite bkkpg Part lime now. possible full time 1537 Monrovia Ave. N.8. 548-5125. GENERAL OFFICE Newport Beach Stock Markel Advisory Firm If you can. type. han die telephones. do lite bookkeeping & you want to learn a bout tht> stock market & data en try. call 54-0-9237 Counter help wa nted F I T . M ic.h e l le·s Cleaners. 496-5124 Facility is m beautiful •G&tEIAL OFFfCI• Laguna Canyon near Answer phones. typing. C PT 8000-Secr etary . Beach & Resort areas filing & help organize Newport Beach Law Of Call for appt Personnel our airport ofcs Tem· ri ce. ask for Cindy Ray Dept. Telonic Berkeley porary pos1t1on possible I t714l644"..~\6 _ 7\4 494·9401 Lai;tuna permanent Reliable Beach E 0 E 1 ronfident ind ividual CUSTODIAN ---------must have neat ap F / T . 3 pm · I I p m . --pearance Call Laurie male/female. Harbor Disabled shut tn to take rordetails833·0440 area church Cal Chuck I phone messa~es SI per ----- 8 . 5 pm . Mo n .Fr i call could work into 100 ---------631 ·2880. calls per mo General C-&---R~...ll!-s I 1714)842·1935 ThelolMMloyClub _._....... _,..... is now hbi1t9: Growing financial co in DRAPERY SHOP F.V. needs person with In Nwpt Bc h ne<•ds a.rt& gd. phone manner, offite m echani cal person "°';'A~~ exper., typing. 10.key Good drivl n1i: rel.'ord Will train on computer. Fast advancement for $900+. Call : Bobbe, sharp trainee. 673-0760 ~ D a t a E n t r y Drapery Coordin ator. c I e r k / T e r m i n a I exp. person needed for Operator, must ~ self· drapery department in o ur des1~n s lud1 0 s tarter, accurate. gd 556-t60I with figures, ability to - work independently. DRIVERS WANTED PIXOp..-atcw F.xp'd 2PM·IOPM Spa AttettdCMh Ladie's Spa 7A M-2:30or2:J0.9 Men's Spa Sat/Sun 5·30PM·12PM Please call for appt. 645-7358. Mon·Fri . 8:JG.5PM familiarity with general Part time deli very F.ar· computer concepts ly morning.LA T imes helpful. Salary open & Irvine/Newport Beach commensurate with exp. a rea Must be rehable & ~~~~~~~~~ Gd opportunity to ad· have dependable trans vance with a fast grow· $425 +. Ca II Jess ing Co. in C.M. 549·22~1_:--~--· OBJ. FIT & P /T_. Eslary's, ~ E. Coast Hwy, CdM, 675-1354 o.talA1sht..t Chalrslde. RDA & X-ray Uc. req .• 4'h day wk. benefits. salary open. N .B. area 642·6880. 573-3403 wlmds & eves. Driver to pick up de ceased pets & some yard work. 19542 Beach Blvd . H.B ESCIOW POSITION Immediately avail. In L.B. F.scrow Co. Exp req. Call Coast Cities Escrow 1714)494-9792 Gae.AL OFACI Multi branched casualty insurance agy. has open· 1ng for Branch Coordinator to handle in· ter·branch work now' supplies & communlca· tions for L.A & Org. Co. ofcs. Pd. co. benefiUI & car . Call · Linda at 549-8161 GUARDS·l rvine & S.A. DENTAL ASST 1--------•I locations. S4.00 & up. RDA expa}lded duties Facto. r Wortl.n 978·7243or638-8191 Cashier & To Go posltion~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~I avail. PM shift. Exper. prefe rred. Skinny Haven Restaurant 9901 Yorktown Ave,HB Apply in person. CASHIER Fulltime for large marine hardware store. Xlnt benefsts & working conditlons. ~1711. CASHIER USITHI DAILY PILOT "FAST llSULT" SllVICI DlllCTOIY For Result Service Call 642-5671 bf.JU for pediatrics dentist. Permanent position. Dr . Don a Id KI n g. Coeta Mesa. 631-17100. GUARDS 962-9302. Full & part time. All _.atue Miss Muff et sat on a Tuffet. along came a Pile C!erks -want. a spider and read in the change. Use your skills Daily Pilot Classified for bonuses. 641-3907. areas. Uniforms furn'd. Ages 21 or over, retired welcome. No exper. nee. Apply : Univereal Protect.Ion Service, 1226 mu CLHK w. sth St .. Santa Ana. section about Miss Muf·•-••-•••-•I fet's Tulfet and bought It for ts.9S. You can sell your tuffet and lots of other th\ngs through Dilly Pilot Classified Ads. Call 642·5678 n Interview hrs: 9•,1.2 61·4, Larse lruurance a1ency Mon· Fri. has Immediate opening for fut, ener1etk Ille HAllDllSSHS clerk. Paid comp1ny W /Ctientel, be your own beneftta. CaU: Llnda at boss, ca II Gt ad y s ROUSEWARESALES Apply in penoo: Crown Hardware. lO'U Irvine. (Westcliff Plau) NB · CASHIERS UTVTIM s.Mlll 751-SZZl ••••••. Daily Pilat l!FU!!!!LL!!!!TI!!!M!!!E!!!d!!!a!!!y!!!s1!!!n1!!!!!te!!!!!s.!l'!,~~=rb~8;.ted, lots • e Ans. aerv. No exp. nee. ~. • C.eraman • Call:m.:tmEOE HAllSTYUST e Expertenced .. at least 5 years. e •••:car H..,.,. NEEDNEWIMAOB! • Must be able to use newstaper e Work Includes operalln1 Colleen O'Hara ha• a d l · lles1on mower. Ex-spadoUlsalonln --'ect • camera an p atema 1n1 e ,..... .. MARKETS e .systems. Excellent wages ~nd e ~~t benefit•. ~::;:~,_~: For2ndlcarctShlf\a e benefits . A_pply in person e tn1for . ....,1&G. We promote to mua1e· w/resume to Orange Coast Dally ••WAL OMCI mf!llU~supervlakln from • Pilot. e Typbif 6 ,.. otc. aklll1 Handicapped worhra. within. req'd. Wotlt nrted It ln· Cut baDdll /I004 cnlod. WANr ACAREIRT • • terettlni. Cotta Mela Wewantyou.6tl.aot. CoataM•a • O~ ce.I • ant.546-1172 Ul Del..... PelY,.. !---"-------HAIU>WA1'SSALES J m.tw · • 330 w. Ba1 stT• • •-----~llAC" • Costa Mesa, CA · • •••AL OMCI Rel1lt. Perm full • lA~_!'!8ch e F.qual Opp0rtunity Emplov.r e H.....,._ Beed• a.-a. p~me. • Brofldw&1. -1 -S1n. otnc.. 1••oteta1 • .,,... • • • tJPhl1. heav1 phone .1 · ~ a-:::eacll •••••••••••••· ·-·· ::;\ .... cunomen. ~_t~ -=,-..:= ·-· , Cler"'elM.•·a1L \ ,. • • • j I I MefpW..eN 1100 Orange Coast Oalty Pllot/Wednetday, March 4, 1981 •I ••••••••••••••••••••••• W&1b4 7100 tWpW911H 7IOO H•W....., 7100 RETAIL Clerk, full or H..,W_... 7100 WlllNd 7'00 ~W..ted 1100 MtepWmlM 1tM •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••T••••••••••••••••••• pltlrne. Calta Neaa Sta· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ' ~~!!~ ..... !~.~ flAJlDWAB E SALJ:s hlltJtnf/Pan time. Ap- pl) l.D peraon. Crown Hardware, I~ Jrvtrie CW..tdlff Plau) N ,8 . ••• J1•.....,Joyc1 111 Bi.on Ave. Newport Beach OMCI llC.-nOHIST Phone order hlcer. l'1"0IMlll Food Plant L.B. Requires Ute typln1. 1oodwl01Ura4'7 1741 tioaert. 270 E. nth, kl• S!CRETARYTVPfST -------• WlllTDS artldn .,.d Costa Mesa Apply tn SecurUyayttema Relable, tl*'SeUc. Hlf· ~ photo1raplila abe\&l MAMACill Challenalng poaitlon. Mu•t be selr-atarter, creaUve, witb &ood or· aanhallon 1kllll. Sal•ry nelOlleble. Call for In· tervicw. ao.«S23. Tues orThun. lAM·5PM. Ask pel'ICJO lOAM to 12 only. We need career mind~ starter. Able to handle ••• 1• & Or...,. Count1 btacMI people wttb mana1•· aU pbaMa of Otc. duttn. D-Mll..-~ b' ...,., l*bllu· V oo are the winner of 4tn.tkJI• CS14 value>. to RETAILSALF.S m~ot potential to U · u-....... ,.. __..,,_ •'-.... ~·-H = ~llACH . lUICIU -mral Palay Career o pportunlty -.--: " pand rapldl)' 1rowllt1 Auoc .. Santa ~na. avall. for talftlted 6 ••· Beada Ad~I. Health IVaYIOOY Lt«IS UC9'110HIST Parttlme, Tues . & Thu.rs onlY. T)'pln1 te· quired. Nwpt Bch. Hardware. Penn. lull Ir commercial 6 retlden· 54W"ftO Pat Meldell "er'd. Individual with _2000_.:..• C .... :41;...M~. C;..•_na5 ___ _ p/tlme. 240 Broadw•)'. Ual ~ll•r & flre alarm' 'iiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiii--iii;~ "' 4W1"NR 49'7-4G but1neu. 111 w•U •tabU.hecU11row· Met 1t r .. 1 S20K·980K Secreury Ina Civil En1lneerlnt ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ........... IMtSIMtw Be per\ ot the r11te1t lrowiu company ln the lltalth 1r nutrition field. Unlhnited Income opp. t~. Call Mr. Armstrona 891-0M3 S'J5--8038 for Ferne. Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8 Retail Alent with 2 or An&MlmConvention 1----------more yeara exp la Center OfflCI ecept.looiat/Secrelary needed to help increase Cull 8'2·5878. ext 272 to .............. all ~mall sailboat ac· retail salet In lr1 com· clalmyourtlckets. ~""'., ~easory manufacturer merclal ortlce. Xlnt * • * Over 25 to work with nr John Wayne Airport salary ft benelita. Send youth. Must be sharp, d d bl t .. 1 d o utgoing . attractive req ~ epen a e recep· resume o 1'1Saoc ate Leg1al Sec1 retaryk, exp l.n personality good tlomst /secretary. Lite ~aartrlnd/IPllalaoa, C2e n2trlel. lit gat on. gd s ills. H.B. t 1 h · d bookkee~lnd in a one "' e ep one voice, an " lrvine,"""'15. Attn: Tom· lit ye.r comm. Qualification•: un · bltJous. willing lo wotlc hard &i follow proven s uccess pattem. For In· tervlew cell (714)831·5711 Mr. Neill. IXIC firm nr. O.C. Airport. ....... IOOI • Sec~ Apply In perten wltll re· ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Shrthd. nee. G\i. work· aume to Mr. Fuente. at Ina condltiOfll Ir variety Robert Bein. Wllllam * * • Job. Fash. Island to Froet & ANOCiatea. 1401 0... M...._ SU,400 Quail St .• Newport llJSbutt.ane · E .O. E. & Free Beach CO.ta Meta Irvine Personnel Agy You are I.be wt.nner of •E.17th,Costa Mesa 4frMffdleh Sulte2:24 642·1470 Teacher·pre.school·klnd. CJH vahM). to •4HIYIUDS•• Here's your chence to malle extra s pending money, working only a rew da ys a wee k ? Beeome a subscription saleaperson for the Dal· ly Pilot. Earn as much as ~.00 PER WEEK• PoelUons open in Hunt· inston Beach. Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. Ir you are outgoin g. en· thusiastic and at least 12 yeers old , CALL TODAY !!'' '642 4321 Ext. 211 before 6pm Ask for Vtc Owens. Non·smoker. 848·1400. ability to meel ~pie. person o flee. 751-8774. . '"" h m~ Legal Secretary for sole Be anent uslast c self. Receptionist must be 1--------- practitioner. airport loc. starter with aupervlaory bl to · t PBX RN 11·7 Charge nurse-80 SALES TRAINEES Full or pt/time, excel!. oppt)'. for college stu· denLs & moonlighters. Easily eam St0.S15/hr. Call: Jack at 951·2642. t.4PM ........-~ Part.rullt\me.lrv.sub· ~··•· stltutea exp. 551-'533 Security officer, P /T . ---------1 Aew wkends for lrg apt. con-TIACHll Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8 plex in N.B. $3.50/hr. Pre.school. With cleases AnabelmConventlon For Info contact Jim or experience. 540-4750. Cent.er experience. Rapidly ad· 8 e opera e 8 bed ECF. Full & part Congenial atmosphere. . console t)'plng r eq va n c 1ng Co. with . ' ·· time. ad. selarv. Mesa Lu pill at 644-1900. Call M2·~8. nt. 212 lo TE.ACHll cle1m your ticket.a. flex hrs. Prefer back· benefits. Start at $t80 neet ui appearance, gd • • ~ ground in civil lit./busi-per.week. W.e traln. JIM benefits, call 851·1600. Verde Conv. Hospt .. 661 ness planning. word pro· LONG & ASSOCIATES Mn . Wolf. Center St .. CM S48·SS85 cesslng exp helpful Con· Youth Counseloni. Call I---------Route drivers wanted for tact Jim at 17 14 > 2pm·5:30pm. 642·4321 llECIPTIOHIST deliveries or new snack 975-0363. ext. 343 M•wport hoc" ltohf food products to local L1ve-ui lady mature for Part time help in office 4 Ital ~ ...ct for s upermarkets. Some companionship, lite day week 5PM·7PM rtcept'-'1t ... to exp, gd driving record. hs kpg /cooking. free SJ.35/hr. to start. tr-.• M99 Cwd. Perm.position.848-1900. room tboa rd t s a I a ry Newport Harbor Animal F11UtlMe. Applr la SALES Clerk for retail C a 11 Mrs Dun Io P Hospital. 631·1030 penGllo PenoM•· Of. marine hardware store 0..-.Cocrst Dally Pltot Equal Opport Employer 494-8075 ---------flee, Del Webb'1 P /tlme, exper. nee Li ve-in, young disabled Part Time Hewporht '-· 1107 Call : Balboa Marine . HOMECLEANING SERVICE help needed immed. Call btwn Mon· Thur$-7PM. 64S·0961 female business student c-i"-J YCMlttil J o•bor••, M. I ., 54~9671. E.O.E. M/F /H needs English speaking Csrlen I 0-.4 attendant. Ask for Ann. Adults with outstanding 898-9571 . ____ attractive personalities ;;;;;;_-;_-;.-;.----• Live·in housekeeper com-to spend 15 hrs per week HOST/HOSTlsc. pamon for elderly lady. counseling youth ages ~ 642·0056 1 0 · J5. Evenings & Full time. 2 positions __ __ ____ Weekends Available. $75 available. Day & eve. MACHlt4IST p e r w k . C a I I Must be able to work Part time for short run 2:»5:30pm. Mon lhru wknds. Apply in person: production lathe work Fri. 642-4321 ext. 343. JPM to 5PM The Jolly lite. cleanJ'ob. 646.3215 Ask for Lori. Hwy, Laguna Beach. No 1---------oos RECEPTIONIST Full time. Sun .·Thurs. Lite typing & 10.key ex· perience needed. Pvt. CoWltry Club. 644·5404. RECEPTIOHIST With or without typing needed. Top pay. Tem· porary & full time. Call Tod Services at 979·8900 Roger, 400 So. Coast l;: c t phone calls. Piiot MACHINE D> ayStreet ltECEPTl ....... IST Costa Mesa. Ca """ Ho sts I Hos I es s es SHOP E q u a I 0 P P o r t Exper'd. person needed W · w · E I to handle busy board in •iters/ a1tresses TRAllllo..IEES mp oyer wanted for· " dynamic Npt Bch com- Sales/Eng-electronics. Established M anufac· lurer's Rep. Excellent op port un it y Salary /Benefits /lncen· live. Industrial ,equip· men t /co mponents Orange County area. EZRA MINTZ AS SOCIATE.5 INC. 2 I 3-670.5410 Sales GREAT HOURS 4PM-9'M lc~'s PtttthouH Im med. openings for PARTY HELP m'I brok,erage off.ice I Opening soon, O Co ·s mach. operators. Will Exf:rienced gentleman pr 0 res s 1 0 n a 1 a P · 1 Join the Los Angeles t I. fo c M pl t Ex d pearance & mannerism . . . T newest night s pot 11 ran r . an · · & ady to barten & a must Call Laila., Times C1rculat1on earn storiesinthe sky Dining c.-ell co benefits serve occasionally at 83J.2900 & adapt your work & dancmg to rock & pop :,.Dll!!e~ltroru~~c~·S4.S-~~04~1~3!!~~I our residence. TOP ---------s c h e d u I e to yo ur Up \o $S/hr t8 ok No 1-WAGES. Call752·6505 lifestyle Work Shrs/day exp n~ . will train App 1---------•I R EC E p Tr ON IS T in a Times Circulation ly in person al 23861 El PET ATI'ENDAt4T secretary for sm H B sales office near your Toro Rd . <top floor of MACHINE Busy beac.-h kennel firm Excell on phone. home & have more time SICllTAIY For mfg. co in Costa Mesa. Good typing skills. Sell·starter Sal commensurate w /abili ty & exper. Xlnt work· in g cond. 631-0700 SECRETARY This Interesting fulltime permenent position with a leader in the publlca· tion industry has recent· Jy become available. Duties include : organ ii· ing & maintaining office files. hvy use of telephones to follow up on items & answer a variety of questions . Security SECUIITT OFACH Prestigious hotel has im med. need for exper 'd. Security Officer. Qualified candidate will possess a min. or 6 months exper to in- clude· dispatching, the ability to interact quick· ly , require min s upervision & have min typing requirements . E n joy excell co benefiLs including a free meal per shift. Apply in person 9AM-Noon. Mon Fri.. Personnel MARRIOTI' HOTEL 900Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr composing letters & m e morandum s.~~~~~~~~~ scheduling appts & coordinating arrange· ments for meetings & conferences Requires full ran~e of secretarial skills. mcludmg steno· graphy & typing To find out more about this op portunity or lo make an interview apo1ntment. call 556-9360 CCll'fff' ltneorch Systewts. l"c. Slater Industrial Park 17371 Mt Wynne Circle Fountain Valley 92708 SEC'Y /RECEPT. Sales office for national c.-ompany_ Variety of duties. Excellent com- pany benefits. New of· f1ce m Fountain Valley The Standard Register Co. 962-9361. Equal Oppty Employer ---- Sec'y-Typist PIT hrs. flex. Westchff N B. Advt. Co. 642-4097 9am-12 Home Savings & Loan SHOP St a rt SJ 1 S He I en typmg 60wpm + Outgo· for your family. studies. Bldg.> El Toro Thurs. 494.0142. or leisurely periods We -~~~~~~~-Fri. Sat. Mon & Tues Im med opening . -----ingper.wnahty 96().2441 pay hourly wages & SERVICE STATION Attendant. P /time Eves/wknds. Neat ap pearance & handwrit ing. Apply 2590 Newport Blvd. between 6-9pm 951 2800 machine o perato r Pic.-ture Frame Fitter. R.E.Secretary commissions . trainee All girl dept. Custom quality shop. Real estate firm needs HOUSECLEANERS 6AM 2:30PM Costa exp, ref's . Costa Mesa experienced secretary Ptr or Frr Start 1m Mesa plant. Excell 1714_>642_·_41_54. for its C.M, offic.-e Musl mediately. Top dollar company benefits. App-NESSROOM have ex<'ellent typing 673·1266 or646-487t ly: Deltronic, 545-0413 skills, shorthand not re· SUPHVISOll _.... f w· 1 Housekeeper for elderl." p · · 0 qui."" but help ul. 11 "' 1-.--------•I os. requires min t assist manager with lady L1ve·in Maturl' :• yrs. printing exp. Strong operation of orfice. R.E. woman to drive. c.-ook & MACHIMIST mechanical, technical license desirable. Call keep house Allra<'tive for tooling & prototype bkgmd. in Web offset Suzan 631·1266. a r e a R e f s re q 'd work Some production Org. Cty. co. Send re· &M-2120, 673-2991 work on vertical mill & sume: Box •673, Daily lathe. Read blueprints. Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Housekeeper loving non own tools. E.O. E. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 smoking grandmother J.D INSTRUMENTS to IJve-in Mother ex 15542 Chemic.-al Ln. P /T from home. am· pecting. Well paid Ref!i Huntington Beach bitiOU5 person to set own f>.46.0193. hrs & income level For app't call 557·5675. Housekeepers wanted SeacUH Motel 1661 So Coast Hwy. La ~una Reach. 494.4392 Housekeeper Companion toam Fri lo lpm Sun Newport Beach 646 2810 Housekeeper L.1ve In Companion for elderly mobile couple m us l speak English & have a valid drivers h censr Ref's req. 548·0'794 MAIMT./ JAMITOltlAL suPBVISOI 256 unit condo property tn Santa Ana (213)320-6432 PtT·F tT help needed in mail room Piece work +incentive. 641 -3901 MANICURIST Pwtcll rr.ss O~. Tues. -Sat Nice at· P /T evenings. Over mosphere. 3yrs. exper. necessary The Hair Handlers Costa Mesa. 6Jl·0'700 +>42-8484 Market Demonstrator~ Real ~tale Lie. nee Prr opportunity, start· L~ Officer ing April J & 4th. Exp. tn 2nd & 3rd TO S4 50/hr. close to your Io an p I a c e m en t home (213 )277 S7R4 ; I 7 1 4 > 8 3 2 · 6 3 I I . (213)881·6465 after 6pm, <213>4IJ.4050. Real Estate Lie net' lnveshMnt CounHlor Exp. in 2nd & 3rd TO loan placement (714 )83 2 6311 . (213)413-4050 REALTORS Restaurant FRY COOK. COUNTER & ASSIST MGR. posi· tion.s open in fast food rest.aurant Nr Airport. 639 1392 Restcmrant Hetp Del Taco in Newport Beach is now hiring full & part time help Both day & n ig ht s hifts available Please apply in person 2112 South East Rristol, NewPorl Beach Restaurant Show dancer wanted for· LOSANGELESTIM F.S 137S Sunflower Ave C.M. 540-0301 SALES lmmed. openings. full time & part time. reader ad representatives for inside sales positions. Gd. company benefits. Apply in person: Pen· nysaver. 1660 Placentia Ave .. C.M. Monday· Friday, I to5 SALES Newport Beach leading J ewelers seeking full ti me Employee well versed in sales & office procedures. 5 day week including Saturday. no evenings. Call 673-9334 SA LES t Order Desk . Must be Englis h & Spanish speak'g. Marine or auto. exp. helpful. F /time pos. Excell. co. benefits. Call: Balboa Marine. !>49-9671 E .0 .E. M /F/H SALES PER SON . mature. for s peciality shop. Exp. helpful but not nee. Full & P /time. Call: 646-5388 for appt SECRETARY Fash Island Internal 'I mktg. ore. w/mjr corp. in the engineerinR mfgr & const. bus111ess. Req ·s . xlnt. typing & shorthand skills. 760-1:0 SECRETARY Xlnt opportunity for sharp person for position with large packaging Co. at executive offices in N.8. Good secretarial s kills needed. typing above 60wpm. dictating machine exp a must , shorthand preferred but not req Superb benefits. Sl250/mo +.Call Lois at (714)752 2711 S.C~lluc) For President of small fast growing mfg co. Job Service Station Atten- dant. Full time. Apply in p e r s o n' . L a g u n a Chevron, 604 So. Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach. SOU TH COAST REPERTORY Orange County's resident pro· fessional theater is seek· mg 2 temporary F /T as· s1stants for subscription campaign. 2·3 /m o. starting March 30th Clerical & phones skills desirable. Ability to work under pressure a must. Sl7S/wk . contact Steve Winget at 957·2602. Mon·f'n. 9'-5pm . 1s challenging as 1l is ever changing.looking for a person who works well under pressure. can think for themselves. good al follow thru & de· tails. Much of the work has to do w /sales· good 1 ----- Have something you want to sell'? Classified ads do it well. 642-5678. phone personality im ------~ portant. Oppty for some trav1:l. setting up shows & cocktail parties for product demonstration S/H not required, but typing & other offire s kills should be well above average. Phone (714)642·7840, ask for George Mallett. Salar y determined by ex · perience & slulls. Housekeeper. live-out for N.B. home. 5 half days per wk. English speak· ing. must drive lmmat• houseeleaning. laundry. errands. occasional hte cooking. Send resume & desired sa lary t o Classified Ad #685. Daily Pilot. P 0. Box 151\0. Costa Mesa. 92626 MEDICAL COURIER Mu s t ha ve own transportation & be ramlliar with Calif frwy system. No sales. Pleasant position for in· div. who enjoys driving. Mon Fri .. 9·5PM . 768.&00 Real Estate SUCCESSOR FAILURE IH '8 I 7 Ichabod's f'enth<HIH Op..!ning soon. 0 . Co 's newest night s pot. 8 stories in the sky. Dining & dancing to rock & pop. Up to $7. Apply in person at ~l El Toro Rd. Clop noor of Home Savings & Loan Bldg>. El Toro. Thurs. Fri, Sat. Mon & Tues between 6-9pm. SALESPHSOM Photograph y store Good photo knowledge a must. Apply in person 1---------•I Photography Unlimited. I Have you considered MBUCAL OFftCE the pitfalls of com- N e eds p e rs 0 n ex . mercial & residential re perienced with die· al estate'! For example· taphone. Insurance bill· 17'7. INT rates. long · •· h d 1 · escrows. farmint: for 1 0 g "' an 1 n g listings, competition. telephones. One person office. Fulltime position etc.! Restaurant l6889Beach Bl.. H.B. Day food posi · t1ons/Cocktail positions Salespeople.Cathy Jean. Apply in person: Pashloo Island's finest THE RUSTY PELICAN clothing/shoe store has 2735 w. PCH. Npl Bch immed. openings for -eager , attra c tive Restaurant SECllTARY Sea & Pacific Skipper. a leading monthly boating magnine located in Newport Beach. has an immediate opening for a secretary Preschool. Full time. * * * Needs ECF;, Costa Mesa area. 642-0411 TEACHIAAIDE E C.E. units required. Costa Mesa. Garden Grove area.s 642·041 l . TEACHERS ASSISTANT Special classes for han· dicapped adults. 2 yrs . college exper. req'd. Ex· cell vacation & 1n sura.nce benefits Wkdys 8:30 to 4PM United Cerebral Palsy Assoc . Santa Ana, 546·5760 Telephone Operator. Answering Servic.-e. For \1PM·7AM shirt. 2 nights per week. Perm part time. 362 3rd St. t!C, LagWla Beach. TOPLESS MODELS S15DAY. PAID DAILY No exp nee 826 2583 TYPISTS •Immediate Openings •P 1time. F 1t1me. Temp •Top Pay For more info. call Tod Services at 979 8900 TYPIST Pan. llme. 2·3 days per wk Vacation relief Ap ply at 1660 Plac.-e nl1a. Costa Mesa TYPIST/ FILE CLERIC ror dynamic investment co Collins Assoc . 567 San Nicolas Drive. Newport Beach. VET KEt4t4EL ASST FIT. Hardworking, re· liable person needed. Call 661·1658 Dana Pt. Wai tress / Wa iter . Cocktails . High volume business at prime O.C. Airport toe Exp, depen· dable only Call Carol Smith for interview 2pm 5pm . M f (714)549.8728 WA ITRESS Exp preferred. for coc ktails & r ood 644·9650 Call Karen Have something you want to sell? Classified ads do it well Call NOW. 64.2·5678 Victorian Green Velvet Sof• &Chair w/ottoman. Dining Tbl, 6 chrs ._ china both very ornate must ~ to appreciate. S48-1"2'7 .t.,,a-c" 10 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARBOR AREA A PPUANCE SERVICE We buy used appliances .. we sell recond. guar. appliances. 549-3071 I IUY APPLIANCES Les 957·8133 Washer /Dryer apt. size great cond w /stand war· ranty 'tll ApriJ $300/080 642-6826 Beauty Salon Equip· Hydraulic chr S75, Shampoo Chr 125. Styl ing Bar SlOO, Hair Dryer $7S 151·5221 days . 548·8569 eves. ----- Frigidaire Refrig Frostfree xlnt cond SISO. Brown Washer S75 75 I ·5221 days 548·8569 eves Freezer-16 cu ft Upright. G .E .. green. see it running $50. Balboa. 67S·OS59. Sear's Almond Refrig. 6 mos full warr, 18 cu ft Orig price $149, will sell for $469. 714 /646·4588 AMANA Refrigerator I Freezer Side by Side lS. l cu. ft. Harvest Gold Xlnt condition $200 631-fi618 Kenmore dryer . Whirlpool 18 gal cap washer. Xlnt con d $350/together. 842-0892 , 842·2112 ------ Refrlg, GE. gold. 7 yrs o I d . 3 0 1h x 6 7 1h $300/080. 54&·9628 Refs clean work good $60 & $100. Refrig FF, clean xlnt S200 Frzr. upright. clean, works good SIOO. Wshr. clean, works good $85. Dryr. gas clean . wonts good S7S 548-8513. 548-4485 ·------- Cle.sallied Ads Housekeeper. Mon & Thurs. 9 ·4 30 pm General c leaning . washing & ironing, plant care & meal prep for father & 2 sons . Newport Shores SIS/hr. Must be dependable. ref's req Please call between 5:»3:~m.646·8309 Housekeeper /Companion for elderly person. Live in orout. 833-2009. S a n t a A n a a r e a rrot.sskMtal LCllld 831 ·0480. Corpos atloft H-as t.he answer for your Medic.-al success in 1981. BACK OFFICE part· 2. Learn to market low time. N.B. EKG & chest cost lots and acreage i11 X·ray. Reply Classified So. Calif. We have lOo/. Ad #834, Dally Piiot, PO INT. rates. Earn SSOK to Box 1560. Costa Mesa. $1SOK, first year, un· •IUSIOYS• Male /Female. Full or P rr. day shifts. Apply in person. Plaza de Cafe. 4881 Birch St. N.8 . 95S-2484. salespeople to work In our Fashion Island store. We will train the right personnel. Contact .Ricardo or Joe at 7S9-9700. The po15ition requires a minimum of 2yrs. ex· perience + a minimum typing skill of 4Swpm. Shorthand desirable. but not mandatory. Xlnt. benefits Include: group health /den · tal /Ure/profit-sharing. Please call for In · ter vlew /appointment. 714-645-1611 . \\ere's a sure th\ng \or Orange HOUSEICllPERS We have an immediate opening for 2 ho\ISekeeper.i. Full lime po1ltlons. 10PM -6AM 1blfta. Excell. frlnge beneflta peckage. Apply in penon at: Advanced He.It h Center. 1300 Brl.stol St. North. Ste . #lOOi... Newport Beach. E.O.~.M /F Ca. 921626 limited leads & more! Medlc•l UclftM ......ared. RECEPTIONIST for For success fu 1981, ask Rest.aurant W ........ /W:altrelHI Exper'd .. p/time needed for dinner shift. $S. 75 per hour. No tips. Pvt. coun· try club. Call aft. 3PM. 644-5404 SALESPERSON Fulltlme, ambitious salesperson wanted to wo rk in marin e hardware store. Boating exper. preferred. Xlnt benefits & working con· dltions. 64S-1711. Sea & Pacific Skipper F.Qual Opportunity Employer M /F radiology office in N.B. for Mr . Telles !:xp preferred. M-F . gd , __ 9M-_3t02 __ &_83_l_.SSS_i __ ·--------1·--------1s e c r e tar y. Ty p Is t. benefits. 631-4422. RESTAURANT Salesperson Newport Beach Law or. Medical AtlSlstant In· ltlC.,,OHIST BOB'S COSMETICS rice. asll tor Cindy Ray temiat back office. af· With excellent typinf. High fashion atore, (714)MH518 skill• ror enclneettnc o . Newport Beach aree. ::;;;;;;;;;.;.;.;.-;.-;.-;_-;.-.-; IMMIDIATI ternoona onl)', exp nee. flce.C.M.1157-1141 HOMEOFTHE ExceDent benefiLs. Call: i• JOI LagunaNlauel,496-8011. ~~~~~~~~ BIOBOY' e.u.noo ••SICllT41•S•• r:: Sl00ft.rawel/FlS15,tOO OPPOITUMITY NLuVNrsin!11 M ..... -•·t t· Receptlonht/Typi1t No ex per ience is ·--------1 T90/Great0roupe$13.200 ...._ D..&a.. Piiot , .... . 'IC'WI • n;• ne«led for bus)' public necessary for these im· SIO/fralnLanlertl.IK n• ~J m ents. Good worku'I relaUont office. Hard m ediate o pe nings! Sales Reqit/l'~/FunSt0.900 It looking for a Motor c on d 1 t I o n a . N e w wCKt but run. 141•3907 Pleue come by to see us l&n' AL lJa fteindel'I A&ency Route Delivery Person •raduale accepteble. i----------between2PMlr4PM : c--•11JAMTS 40308lrchEat'14 EOE fot tbe Newport Beach M y rd Con I UC-.-... S~ vn_. N F a r e a . R e l \ a b I e esa e e va es· .-• '""' WAITBS 8 re • n e r • s R • n t ' ewport;m.tllO/ ree Tunal)ortatlon 11 • cent Hotpltal. Al C.enter L.laAL TIAIM Fumitun aeeb career m\dt.. For details call St .. Coa t• Mesa . Newport Bffch. Good WAITlftSH orierUd peraoo for en· SIX:RETARlES Fo1\er Ouellet at MW585. telephone m•nner Im· COOl(ft48"HS try level poe. ln home t U . 4321 M . F fr 0 m -------• portant. Type ISO wpm 71\1 Minier fu.mi$hinp . Breuner'a la IVICll HESTON I lO :Ollllm·t :OOpm. Nu.-is 541-283. atOothard CaHrornta•s llr1est _ • .... c ... t R~ISTERED '-------HUNTINGTON BEACH rum. rental co. • needa ..., ltafiMHlat or quaUftt\f ••let • m1mt. a ........... _ aya•___. ..,.URSE Pan/Full Time Receii· 2M02 Mer,uer\te ataffforexpendina mitt. ATempffelpS.rvlce _, ---· " tlonltt. Typln1. ll1 ht Partway at Ret.U ex9. prer'd. Wiii 141-14" Coli. Mesa. Ca. tt.a to 111.01 per hou•. bookluteplnt • otber AveryParllwa)' tnin. M. br., dePtn4~• ._.,,_rt IUvdL I q 11 •I OPP 0 rt • 'No .xpedence. J'ull and clerical work, Hauon Ii MISSlON VIEJO ol exp. P'Ull f>!~P/t.lme. s•• I".!!!. &111,..,er part Um.. Addltlonalfor Attoe.15M•t. E.0 .£. )I/JP. •on·Sal., .PM wort. ~;.;.;.;.;.;;;-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-.-. ... 5:JO • Sun. 12Noon· ~ SPM. p ontact: Jeff Jr.llCllfAIY COUNTY OF "OIANeE 1~~!!!!!!at!!!!MHm!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I wHted for Newport 1: .....,.. ftnn Rn. 7 to J: .... C.laet: ••. l'tlll, ~tlD ,, .. ·~····················· W., IOJOIMhc1l•111-IOIO Offke ,_.._.. & 1-------• A• s.r.ke. p~ Ndm tHO ....._ .... , rtM ....._ l•,•rM •••••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• .... ,. •• , 1011 •Ace••• ..... 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ct ... rta&, ... cuh DeCYLOPDIA ••••••••••••••••••••••• SACRIFICE ••··,·::::;.::;:::1••;•••• '78 Courier w /t hell , .,,...... t105 D.,_ t720 + mltc.'·IOld Jewelry + AllDICANA CC>PIM $400 -"•-"' • Oalrs. Cuttom tf'at.I, etc ••••••• .... •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• other_dia,MO-OIOI ~Ml. eaeeUnt orolftr.W.5'11eves JJ•6:VI .... wrntUSIDPAITS suoo. Atk for Dave '71 Alfa Spyder Convt Xlnt cond . al l vtr w /maroon Int Blaupunkl Am /Fm stereo 35.000 ml. S12S0/080 p p 5411 %184 '71 2lkXZ 2+2. xlnt cond. f.m/Fm cus. •le. a.nrf fH50. PP 640·1948 evesfwkends. --~i...:.. .,.. w... lmported ur parU -. tm. Id Ir Sliver. top doUu ~-m . ln:tl1' ,._.. & or.-. IOtO 27 ft. tw1i1 I JO IMPORT 1-------- Clua rinp? Nwpl kh Tennlt Club •.-.•••••••••••••••••••• ¥9he'a. M Alf!'OSUPPLY • li57-8053. ram. membttUJp avail, ULBRANSEN Spinet. ,.-.._ ...__. _ _. 101 N. Mane.heater Tl OMC 1 ton, dual cmpr d cond f7~ ----Anaheim 176-9900 tpedaJ. 4 wbl dr, fully loon DI•. S.50 eta.. SIOO. Call AnawerAd :n·CIPM • MZ·9l78 .... T ....... -.:. -lolded. 17000. ~ l .75cta H •v• •P· 1'51,SU..4300,24 bn 1---------...... ., ,_. .. "79 Chevy Luv. 4x4. 8500 eves ,.,. .• Datsun% pralsala. $31,000. Will LOWRY O R GAN. 2 .:'~it::lo D z S•c. C•ll for Into. arHtlD Rue 10'X18' keyboards, pedal. Ex· ' .... m._tOr 5$1-7'7' Blue/Wine main colors cellent condition. 9800. c-. '71-2691 hn. motor _. ml. air. a~ll. xlnt cond, Atldl 9707 911150.913-9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1---------1 ~/OB0-.1883 orrnakeorrer.960-5996 '18 ElCamlnoClasslc. all '77 AUDI FOX + ott.f',_.. l•rnond plerced ear· + ott.f',_.. Dynamite 2 door. sun 76a.s•J7 rlnp •. 50 ell. i\ppr. puperSavinp on AM way WURLITZER Plano with LIVE Al>Oard boat In 76a.S.37 !tras, super s hape. roof 4 s....-with stereo. ---- $J200. WUI sell $375. ~uct.s 809f orr & X b b t • 3 0 0 0 · D Y 5 : ~ • 82 Oh hb .. 00< IOZO 5$8..72'7S •Dlatrlbutors Inventory ench. E ony Spinet. L ve aboard alip. 40' (714 )738. 7454 : eves: Sharp! C779SPZ) 77 t ate aca, 5'7. > •• .. -•••••••••••••• clear~nce 851 .1058, Private Party. Owens ready to move I Porsche 914 western style M0-4'776. Sl4t5 ml. nu tires. good cond. de ''Crulffr'', bnand Must sacrifice men's 1~ 631.-1726 $900 631-6618 onto. NB. 642-4644 S:~;.~*20 ea. JIM MAllMO $2800. 8'1J..<17Bl __ ,a». carat gold diamond , ... 1 ..... wanted: Sheet Musk 30• Pacemaker '63. xlnt -----1'76 Datsun with shell, l VOUCSWAGIN '80280ZX·GL, T-to p. cass. 811·5019. rln1. New. $3000: $2000 "'" any condition. cond, 400 m l. range, Two UIO-lS & two G60·1.5 owner. 60,000 ml, xtra11, 18'711 Beach Blvd. brown, 9800 mi, xlnt rlrm. t<ltnball organ. LOSE IT 751·8875 Crusader diesel eng, lo tires on wood spoke asking $.WIO. 673·4624. 142-2000 <'Ond. 581·0082 wlnn ladles lO·s pd •· petr. condition . • ~JT $1100/080.Muskin style &EarnMoney I 11 f h dod ge rims $200 - ---pool. 1700 with equip. 82J-l241 SportllMJGooch I094 :a~t8io~i~~v:sbc>t[:~. 892-6856 · • Yw 9570 A~sffn 9709 '72DATSUN240Z 8 est o I fer . DY s : Teac 33408 tape deck. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dana p\.' $17 ,000 firm. ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lo mi, 1 owner. good llN ... Milterloh I025 661·~. Bon Low hrs, gr ... at "ond. For Sale: Bran d new Days (213)463-3249. Stockland Shell for GM or ''19 ~ Chevy Van. Im-'66 AusUn-Healey Sprite. rond. Call 645·2041 . ••••••••••••••••••• KA d p · __ .,_m .u.,7",....p"p Chryaler 15hp outboard ChevyShortbedPlck-Up Smaculale. Custom•intr runs good , s2100 1 -----:. wood 2 6 • I 1 t 18 n emars 1guet ......,m . .....-""' · englne, in the box. 1 yr 14• Motorboat without xlnt cond. $450/080 tereo. mags $4500/bst 549-l"216. Datsun 8210 Coupe. LI B. '19 ~· 0~ h~~d man's wh.lte gold wrist 17" rront·throw self· warranty. Ori1. $950. motor w/1 yr bch tie-up 645-43116 _orr. ~l·M.55 ¥ft S pm. -'76. am/fm stereo. very I .,1• ...... xtJ2'7 watch.645-913"1ext 127 propelled power+ AsklngS'TS0.751-8967 atBackbayS200M2-8674 .73 vw IMW 9712 gdrond,S2.995ororter • .. , .. . auto trans. air. • •. •••••••••. •• • ••• • • •• 842-4936. ~Ltr'l'f 1071 mower & edger. 2hp B&S M edlum women 's wet 32• p F ed Alltoa for Sale gd running cond, clean For the best deal in Orange County Come eng•--•. 20" snreader 1l •. --ed d" . ace. B II • V8's, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-....-. IOJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• """" .. " · su .. asso." iving Sacrifice! 2'705 W. Cst ·- ••••••••••••••••••• Air Compressor Service ~early new Best offer. _equipment. 751·8967 Hwy, NB: Bkr, 642·8200 1~m~~fJ' 1 hpPort. comp. S285 3-56T7. --Ston, ltntwl•t, READERS AND 9 590 SeeUs Today" Saje Pn'ce ., .. 0 ~-,, 21' 1977 Reinell Cruiser. -ulp. •••t7""eve" . '" . ._,., DIGGING EQU I P . I• 1095 ADVERTISERS .... ........ ..., .. 190 H.P. omc. Vanson ,,.--------u t...cil••-1010 "Makida" Elec Ham ••••••••••••••••••••••• I The price of it ems n;.;.. 1040 ,.... ----trlr. fuJ y equip, sips 4. "";Of'lllJ"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• mer w/barrow, shovels. Ice machine, flak e r , SSSOO/Or trade for V.W advertised by veh icle " •••••••••••••••••••• FLY INTERNATIONAL maddox xlnl cond. $400 needs repair, S200. Dys Van~2340 dealers in the vehicle ESHOJ'.'ilD Pups. AKC. on Pam Am with airline 67J..2Sl4 alt 3PM MS-0145; eves 964-6912 classified advertising amp sire M /F Pet & , • 9 • p columns does not in· h · · two-1or-0ne ticket slip. IVORY C "'IVl .... G TV ._., 7 218 enn Yan 200 hp Jil. Qw . Pvt ply Sin gap or e, Central "' " ' ' Turbo Diesel, full y elude a ny applicable ~3/697·134~~t 6 p~-America, Germany -640-8688 HIA, SM.o 1091 equipped. immac. cond taxes. Ucense. transfer ::z AAA HOME DOG ,.. TRAINING Domplete IN HOME "raining Obedien QF/P r obtem solvin1t . wotttt_!.on. 539·7615 .. 1JARKLESS BASENJ l l ed/white f' pups . AKC. sioo. 964·2119. 962 4657 -COcker Spaniel Blk A KC l )O' old. needs loving hme n ee to right home S$2·7903 Po od l es Toy & • 1n1ature . Rlack & ; wn. Males Femalt>s 3422, 58&-8526 I any of 11 countries. -••••••••••••••••••••••• Bargain priced . p p fees, fin ance charges. Hurry! Good until Feb. TRS-80 computer, 16K Color remote TV. 19 " 775_7125. 67J..37Z9. fees for air pollution con 28 700-1999 l eve I II. sort ware & Sha rp, xlnt cond, 16 mo. trol device certifications · ---manuals incl. $600/080 S300 10BO. 642·8592 loah, R...t/ or dealer docume ntary Lo•e lalooM 963-3714. --- -Charhr 9050 preparation charges un · Helium Bouquets de-Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr ••••••••••••••••••••••• less otherwise s pecified liver ed. Pe rfect for Super Savings on perfect wrnty. Free delivery •IMMACZ8'-l4' BOATS by the advertiser. every occasion. 673·4419 copies of 5 Romantic Sl48. 646-1786. 6112 1 ·d Perfumes. Joy, Norell. mo.Pans prepa1 'portable spa, pwr pack. C h an e I # 5 . wh ite Color 25" con so It> TV. from $180/mo. includin~ deliver. set up $2200. Shoulders. Shalimar. Sears. 5 yrs old. xlnt ~i_p_.~_s_ons 714 t964·5994 631-6519. 64.5·7285 Money Back Guarantee rond. S300/0BO 642 8592 loah, SaH 9060 ----M.0. or Cashier's Check Complete FISHER Stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ *H* only. $19.95/oz. + tax. L 53L 1104 Erickson 32'. '75, loaded. Junwe crdy & M Productions 177 f' v-custom int-ext. Bristol 23891 Taranto Bay Riverside Ave. Suite 1133 RCA 24 .. color TV. re· I rond. OCler or R. E P P Laguna Niguel I N B 92663631 1726 968 7903 968 002 Youarethewinnerof mote control. SI OO or 1 :___· -_ 4frfftickets Dinghy 2 inflatables bestoffer 645·2041 For Sale· Brand new <Sl4valueJ.to w t wooden floors & loah&Morine Chr~le~ 15hp outboard AttahftM fiberglass 851-2109 Equi,._... engme. in the box I yr 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '46 Ford Woodle. restored Sl3,000 ALSO '29 Model A Town Sedan. 4 dr. restored Ideal for s tu dent. $10.000 675·6161 '60 MGA Xlnt Cond , res tored . pers on a I plates read '60 MGA SS000/080 645 7531 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOP DOLLAR for top used cars foreign. domesllrs or classics. Jr your rar 1s extra clean. s ee us FIRST! ~ •l lnor-.c~ 2925 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 979-2500 WEIUY CLEAN CARS AMDTRUCKS ' COMMElL CHEVROLET ~ Harbor HI' 11 1·1~TA Mi-:.-..\ 546--1200 SADDLHACK VALLEY IMPORTS 28402 M arguer1te Pkwy Mission Viejo 831·2040 495-4949 Closed Sundays CREVIER &I ST & UOAOWAY SANTA AMA 835·3171 Iii[ ULTIMATE ORtlltNG MACHINE •USED IMWs• '776 30cs14 SP<•ed I02471 '75 2002a ((1035 1 ·79 320i I 7560 I "776 30 cs1autn100401 '80528iA sunrf 116251 Close-cf Sundays '74 IMW 2002 Rot 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SILL!!! lt76RAT 121 sroncoun 4 speed trans .. air cond1- t1oning, AM /FM stereo radio with cassette tape, Michelin tires & more ' $1700/besl offer Call 951·9550 6 PM to 9 PM. If no answer. PLEASF: keeptr~g! '78 Fiat 124 Spider Convertible Only 29.882 miles '• Make monthly pay - ments and down 1072UJS> BARWICK DATSUN San Juan C apl\trClftO 831-3311 '79 2000 Spider Roadstl'r Only 7500 miles Auto trans.Milli cond All rx tras S7 .000 or best offer 673-4617 or 675-6615 i Fttft to YCMI 8045 I • . .•..•.............. loot Show ••••••••••••••••••••••• warranty Or ig S950 Lg doghous e . s i7e G----1 90 10 AskingS7S0.751·8967 '62 Cor va1r Convert Lt blue. compl reblt, spoke whl rovers. all new. $3500 855-8809 HIGHIUYEtl Top dollars for Sports Cars. Bugs, Campt>r'i. 914 's, Audi"s 4 speed with -.te rro Very clean & t>rit?m;.il 193.SLHQ t Hondo 9727 l Free rat to good home. f(tay & white. 5 mo old, tlm 962·8584 Mar 4 thru Mar 8 SOx38x38 Well built ~ AnaheimConvent1on w s hake roof . S75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Center Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to 5514137 * * * Hobie 16 Red. wht. blue s ails. no trlr $1350 760·9072. Hot dea I $4895 ..••..•••.•..•..••...•. VISIT YOUR ORANGE COAST ~ 8050 rla1myourtickets ••••••••••••••••••••••• • * • Furniture & small ap plianres sale. Call art I PM: 494 7145 C. IOW'CJf'Oit 2389 Fordham Costa Mesa Recreatioftal 30' 5 meter SLOOP $6000 V.Wdft 9530 or best offer. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Ask for U 1c MGR JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Rlvd. lllJNTlNGTON BEACH 842-2000 JIM MARINO VOLKSW AGEM 18711 Reach Bhd 842·2000 HOMDA HEADQUARTERS . ·.; . **I BUY** a~ used f'urniture & AJpliances OR I will sell of:SELL for You MASTERS AUCTIOM M~616. 833-9625 IUY FURNITURE Cllf; 957 8133 Couch SISO, Dining Tbl ~ i ' rhrs S160. 4 SPort 14 ·· W h eels $80. W ood ~hanging baby ) $20 "1·5221 dayc;, 5488569 .,,,es u t{'t,ng Sz Bdrm Set S255. f'ull Sz Rdrm ~t SIOO Qoffee Tbl SIS. End Tbl ~. Sofa S'lS. Stereo S40 148·8569 eves. 751 5221 tays Llke nt>w rontemp blue sora wtmatchmg chair. po cash 968-4982 ~ f\i!dwood burl tablt' & 'lingsize wood head board. sar 957 8361 .... C.lass lop 38 in table iw t \?02 ant frenrh r hrs $195 ~-1849 ~I Top Sec'y. many "-!:aw/supply spaces. #y good $45()968.7260 J\mique dining room set ~ chairs Needlepoint ts Good condition . Call 642·3576 art 4 -~SIGNERS FURN .. SALE l enredon 2 matc h •utr hes 2/glass doors Wartin or London16 din· l g chairs /2 arm/4 side al Mode 1Counlr y renrh dining lablt> 2 taves. 64().6822 Sf lid wood oval din. table a 6 chairs, needs rertn. iioo. 151.8043 -S: fl ameweave sofa w. tatch. 6' loveseat, 4 yrs Id. new cond , S285. 0.4TI6 eves /wknds. Dbl Bed W /Frame 5 GoodCond . 548-2137 eves . Modem Sofa, loose lows. Beige, White. d Cond -.3288 eve. 1h ol1tered awl vel cker, antlq ue gold lvet $125, purchased 8 o ago. Uke new. 2137 ramar. Balboa Pen. M45CI SPIJT & SEASON F.O * FtREWOOD * • * * 848·9111 * •• ohn Wayne Tennis Cluh furn . membership. SI 100 incl transfer 644·1549 r vine Coast Country Club M em bers hip available 955·2699 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Pil'teon Hasty Ardor Pulpit PAGES You are thl' winner of 4 frH tickets IS14 value>. to Anah.im loot Show Mar 4 thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to ('(aim your Lickels * * * 832-2639 '78 Dodge RV Van Self contained Xtras. lo~ loah, Slips/ miles. 842·5241 Docks 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 w-. Dri••s 9550 MEWPORT MARIMA Slips Avail. 646·0551 Pvt boat dock on Newport Island. JO' max $160 mo. 752-2584 dys or 675-7267 eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mid-Week "·SPECIAL'· l-OPDOLLAR PAID FOR GOOO&CLEAH USED CARS! ORANGE C OUMTY 'S OLDEST Sales S<orvirt• l.t•a!.tnl! Roy Carver.Inc. Rolls Royc·c HM W omplete Beauty salon equipment & misc furn 536· 1855 My secretary is dumb She received a seed <'atalog in the mail and has a lready planted four PAGES. 15· fishing boat. like new. --- I ready to go. S895 U-shaped carpeted s hp miracle mazda 1540 .Jamborre Newport Rea1•h 640 li444 M sctlarteous 645·2898 for max 45 ' power boat * 1980 '75 IMW Dynamite 20 11 2 ;.iutomatit· with onl \ 51.000 orag1nal mlleo; Air rondit1oninR 'te rl'll Mint 1419NKQ1 W..ted 8081 • only All util paid Al ••• ••••• •• ••••••••••••• loafs. M_...e 64().. 1.203. 21 SO Heritor ll•d. CA Brown Washer like new $95. Sears Lady Kenmore Whl Port. Dis hwshr $75. 17 cu' Philco No f'ro s t f'r idge Frel'zer A vorado w ticem a k t>r S340 989 Victoria St llA·l CM 548·0130 See Manager WANT MEN'S BIKE. prefer Beach Cruiser 641·8309 aft 3 30 Lawnmower ed~er wanl ed. running or not Ca II 547 3182 Small Porlable F.ter Refrigerator 831 6311 8083 Redwood, 2 x 6's. xlnt dt>rking, 18.000' on hand Musical 55' /fl 645-9137 ext 127 lmtnlmeftts ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONN Director trombone Mobile Teleflhotte 963-5535 with case. F.xccllrnt -----condition, SlOO 675·11052 Semi Invalid Walker arter6PM w /brakes Portabl e Sl35/0B0963·8674 GU IT AR Yamaha ---------FG340 Like new Must 3 Metal Cat Carriers-. sell S175. 548·0645 $20/ea, other misc cat ¥Ccess. 842-0529 Reasonable! John Wayne Tennis Club Fainily Membership. 644·1613 or 759-9471 <Judy) Ibanez electric guitar. Pror model with Tree of Life going up to the nerk Woodgrain body with hard shell case S.SOO 548-6446 EquipMftf 9030 ------ ••••••••••••••••••••••• loats. Storagt" 9090 BARIENT WINCHES. used Sizes 28. 32 & 35. Stainless 642 2932. Rowing DORY. 16' glass Teak cap rails. gratl's Complete with light weight oars. 642 2932 For Sale Brand new Chryslt>r 15hp outboard engine. m the oox l yr warranty Orig. S950 Asking $750. 751-11967 71h hpHOHDA 1.ong shaft. x Int for sailboats S3ZS. 675·5994. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Lido Peninsula Boat I Storage . Storage , launcbing & c rane I service ror the d1 !> rriminating boater 14·30' 673-9330. 675 5901 I Steve> r ransportation ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aircraft 911 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1969 Beech Musketeer. midlime 150 Lycoming eng . 2 Com ·nav ·s transpond er 11404109 eves. lo~. •ow-9040 • •• -::.; •••• :·........... Motorhed l ikes 9140 16' CHRIS Tri-cabin.T IS. Gd cond . S19.000 673-9060 Have something you wa.1t to sell? Classified a ds do It well. 642·5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW PVCH MOrEDS Any Model -Wholesale Save up to S187. 631·2504 673-1455 PWQl'Ot I 03-$375 Cafl Debi. 536-1692 M~s/ 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MINI· BIKE Honda M R ·SO . (!ood rond. $200. 548-2591 eves '78 IT 175, good condition. 1000 mi. SSOO. 979.5173, 960-szrl Lien sale, Mar. 18, 9am. 755 W. 17th St. C.M. .CHEVY 4x4 3/4 TOM PICKUP Dual tanks. crui se control. tilt wheel stereo. rear sl1d1ng Window (IW27738) * COMMEll CHEVROLET 'X)i 11.irh H 1\1 \ d "t'>l\\1 ~~\ 541>-1200 76SUIARU 4WHHLDllVE WAGOM 4 ryUnder, 4 speed. AM · FM <OS2PPM > Excellent buy at only $2795 ~Uowmd VOll(SWAGfN INC 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove Costa MHO 645-5700 WANTED! Late model Toyotas an<! Volvos Call u ' TODAY!!! Earle Ike TOYOT.A·VOLVO n u H-1Mr l l•d. Cot le Meo• "'-44'-UOl w S40·f 0 1 PORSCHES WANTED Allow us the opi>0rtun1t v to consider the purchase . $5695 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Bea<'h Bhd 842-2000 IOI McLAREH's ll.50N. Reach Rl vd LA llARRA 15 Mi No of SA Fwv l 17 I 41522-533J° Sunday by Appl or trade-in of your clean •••••••••• Porsche Check with t.'s Today! •3631 Harl>OI Bl•ll C..oe<> G•OW' "' '36·2»l Top Dollar Paid For Your Car! JOHMSOM & SON ~ury 26218 Harbor Blva. Costa Mesa 540-5630 We Pay OVER llwlook . Divorced. must sar '79 3ZOI blk ttan. Luxus pkit Strve 731 2221. Iv ms..c opri 97 15 .....•.............•.•• '79 Capri Ghia auto trans. extremely lo m1, beaut r ar in perfc<'t rond Must sce ~l 3771 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76 DATSUN 210% • Kawasaki 500 motorcy. rle. l.D. #HI F19623. eng. #KAE89329 . Lir . #4G6634. MUST SELL '79Toyota Like new, low miles all options $6900/0 BO 968-5210 For Your Good VW, Porsche or Audi .. ~-. ~ t, \ 6 cylinder. 4 speed. far tory air conditioning. stereo. wire wheel rov. ers. Performance plus in this beautiful orange metall.ir with black In terior sports ra r !1457.SU> Enjoy yourself and enjoy owning this diamond for only $5999 IOIWfTHAM VOLkSWAGEM '80 BMW 250CC R·28. M.C. just overhauled, ·clean Call eves 640·7782. 12.000. ----'70 Dune Buggy, top cur· tains, roll bar. s treet legal $1800. 962·381 l ---Motor......_ S•I nteb 9560 R...t/Sfor• t I 60 ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'llO Datsun RENT: 22' lu x . mlr Pick-Up home. Sips Cl, self.cont. 5 1 peed • A m . Fm $275/wk . + 8 •/mi. cassetle,(lS47234) 640-8585. . S4tll WICANSILL YOUll.Y. 5-lJIM BAR WiCK DATSUN \ '1" llt'll i 1, I •r 'W"k VW-PORSCHE·AUDI 7600 Westmlnster Ave. 445 E . Coast Hiway In Westminster at Bayside Drive 89!MS51 638·7880 Newport Beach S13-0900 76 DATSUN DZ I 0 Premium prices 4 speed, air conditlon· paid for any used car Ing. AM ·F M. 1905182) I foreign or domestic l $2595 ln good condition. See,u1s•f'i•rsl!lt•! •11.it. ~~tt= ~ IM-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove ii888 llarbor Rl\'d Tr ....... Trntl ti 10 t'f.l-"t:i }lt•s¥ 540 03.'lO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..;;;========~·---==---=--_;._-__ _ 8) I ·) J I I tx.24 Arial.rout, like new '78 Toy. w/1hell. m a ny ......... ar .. d SS.000. CKP9158). JCtru, loolla sharp. ask· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..1e ma MOOO. M.2·9300 Atfe 1..... t701 ..... s.r.lce, ,... ·n I.ff. SCOUT. Auto, 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• &Mc11uall1 t400 cyl. l at HOO takes. LEASE 1~.;.;;;;;~iii;;;;;;;;;;~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 53f.M'71 For Sale ....;..'77.;_;,.Chffy____.;._ao_. h-,,-h-c-ube-1 DIRECTl IT'S EASY! Loe* for your nam~.-nd 1ddr.11 ln today's etautllri aecuoa. If )'OU nnd it, call MZ·M71 Ext. 172 and .. .. arn.p for y ou lO pick up '"' ticket• at the van, Gr auma n elum. CHIAPll bod1. ovtrhud door. ,,., ALPA ~ llled turbo kit air, Mn/tm tlel'eO, 11,000 IP.ID•S "76o"T40.taua !can ml, oril o_,.er. lllnt ._._. ___ .,.._.;...;_,..;...;..· ___ , ....;c~-'---.· "....;.•::..;...·_m__..1.-.oi..:-.__. llACH IMPORTS For Sale CHIAPl! S"*11 UMCl turbo k ll '76-,4DIUunZ cal'1 ,...,, TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES&SERVICE OLDSMOllLE HOMDA GMCTRUCKS 2850 Haroor Blvd. COSTA MESA 540.9640 78 HONDA CIVIC 5 s peed. radio. heater This is the one t>ver ybody wants. in superb condition v.ith lt>Ss than 36.000 miles A s 1h er beautv with blark m tenor· 132061 On s ale ror only $3899 IOIWITHAM VOUCSWAGEM 7600 Westminster Ave in Westminster 893 75.51 638-7880 •1976HOMDA 3-000R 5 speed' A cult> rar' 1021 PJDl ONLY $2995 HOWARD Chu~ Dove & Quail SL'i. NEWPORT BEACH 833-0555 '71HOMDA Dynamite 5 speed red hatch back. Only ZS.000 miles. CICINDYM l $3795 JIMMARIMO VOLkSWAGEfii 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 78 ACCORD LX 5spd. snrl. $4395 857-2264 ·77 Accord. 5spd. am/fm s t ereo, air . S3995 642-:IJSO '80 4-dr Accord. AIC. AM /FM cass .. snrf. mags. xtras. Assume lease $208.31 mo. or buy oul. S400 to take over. Dys 556·0571. Vince . Eves642·1150 Pete. '73 Honda Civic, 4spd, xlnt nmning cond. S1950. 842·9946 after 6pm. 848-7Z76. '74 Honda. has new eng, Sspd, dual ca.rb & dual exh. One or a kind. $2800. 842·9946 1 fte r 6pm. 848-7216. '80 Prelude xlnt cond. lo m lleage. $7400 /0 BO M l-TW J..... 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'UJ •• J.I J et bla ck Mark II. 4 speed with overdrive. Near mint. (515Cf1Q> $1ttl .IMMAllMO VOUSWAMM ll'7ll 8Hclt Blvd. lu.Joot 'tn J.,uar U MK US aU or11. v1ry "I~ m,ita .. talned Mu,at 56c:riftte .....,. "71 JAGUAR XJI, Xlnt cond. Well ma1ata1Md. .. /eft'. ""112 . __ .... 9714 ....................... ••,...elllriefthe W AHl'SD: VW 'l'YPI II l'JWreQl ...... c: .... .. .,..,. ...... flfnPOaT UACH ,. .... H ue I OIDIU l•• )'OU .:a;. -............. ur ........ , C'lalallled ~ ......... -08 --...it........... n.a.-.t1K111 I ......... --~·JI#'·~ t Ailtes.'•••rtM ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._ c•••._ t74o, ..... ._ "'' ••• u t110 c_.. tt11 ....................... . .................................................................. . :~~'i:,IJllSUJlAi!'~:.~ ·n Por•cbe t1' 1ood '•VWBus: Campertlt'd, "71 camaro. lood condl· 1>ome1•1c._ cond, needl •I wort Nbullt en1iH. am/fm Uon.nu,..mt, p " .,..m.s a 1teNO, new tires, new ...-r ' lrkel._ ..._.., ...... t7I clutch. llu•t aee! 7 0CAMAIO 7t M-llMI ....................... 12100/080. '714/49Z-3023 _ .. Showroom. new ZAOD "1 DEi' 'ER, .. us. WANl'EO : VWType II suao .... lpm wlth ODI)' 22,taO mU... 4 L " • • ." t"JGOtc411eaclnecue. CIM"•t 9920 s p eed, air, ateerlna, Jm ROY .....,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• en.die eontrol. Sf.ill In CAIVll 11 CH1VY MOVA factory warranty . ROLLS·ltOYCE '75 VW Bua. nu tires, Aut.om.tUc, power steer· !IZQ) AMJ F?t\ stereo. runs in t 1 di Sl''"I 1MtJ•"'...,." _ g, s ereo, a r con · NIWlllWt 1 .. c11 areal _,5, 116().3470 tloninl, radio & beater. JIM MAllMO ___ ... ......,... A very aharp I cylinder Vq.J(SWA... CLOHO$UNOAYS, •• VY/ Van, xlnt cond. with k>w mllet that you tml .. _a ..... -·d l2250. .._.., ,.,.,.1 would be proud to own. D'll" ...... DIY ' s• t7 6 .._........, Jt ls in excellent Condi• 142-JIOO ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ti ""~~ . I d f '71 Super with snrf, super on . .,,..,v11vm1ca an a • Met'eedes300$D·'79 L ... SE clean, S270-0. Serious rordable. (l28TWY> Maple yellow, striped, DIRECT•. buyers only call 67~162 S329t sunroor. stereotcass. aner4pm. IOI WITHAM polished wh eels . YOUCSWAGIH Beaut.ltul & mint cond. lfl 1 Sill 1975 VW IUS 7800Westminster Ave. $28,500. SS'7·9044: eves TURIOs Automatic. SSSOO. In Wettminster 700-tW 84().6427 893-75.51 131·7880 c 4SOSL/malnt. in xlnt. I cond. F. equip. Poss. neg . price. Dan · 646-2l28. IEACH IMPOITS Volvo 9772 MBZ ~ CPE 27K mi. beige S28.SOO 644·S833 wkltnds. eves S46·4S06 daily 848 Dove Strttt • ••• ••••••••• •• • • ••• • • • NEWPORT BEACH VOLVO 752-0900 -- ORANGE COUNTY SAAi SALIS, SBVICIE AMDLUSIMG OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS BUY or LEASE DIRECT '79 MB 450SLC. Silver OVERSEAS snrf. mint cond. Low DELIVERIES EARLE IKE mileage. 714·328·1730 VOLVO t MB '7S 450SEL. man~ , ... ,,,,1,u•1 •• ~. 1~~~:~xd. cond, fully equipped, "a ""f .!. .!. , 64 .. 9301540.9467 beauty" 115,000/0BO. -------- - Call (714)673·0110 aft 10 120GdrO••nGrow B1 0..,_ECOUMTY 7pm. wkdays & all day (°;,1rdron G111v l' '•30-9 190 VOLVO wk ends. Toyota 9765 '72 450SL. ver y clean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County! BUYorLEASE DIRECT both tops. 78,000 mi . $14.500. 494-7451 '57 Mercedes 190SL. beaut. cond. Both tops. must sell this week $10,500/080. SS7-01 18 '78 Mercedes Benz 450SL. immac cond, $26.000 SS9·4942. MBZ280 · 1973 XLNTCOND·S6500 Call 700-9278 ...-.------ '7 1CLASSIC2SOSL I Orig owner. 72.000 mi. a c. nu tires. 2 tops. Showroom sharp. Must see to apprec. Have all service records. $22.500. P.P. 54()..3136 MGI 9744 '78 Toyota Cehca Lftbck low miles. xlnt cond ~:=:~::··,,,s::: [t't9T('t., 19RO Toyota SR s. pkup. xlnt cond 5 spd. AM FM 10120 Garden Grove 81 stereo. hke new 831 7494 Garden Grove 530-9190 aft 5 '77 Celica GT liftback.1 ·68 Volvo ~-;;to. a c.~uns. xlnt rond. a te. auto. lo $1600/0BO mi, ~iOBO 631-6399 _ __ 962·5128 '73COROLLA $1600 Autos, Used 645-9502. 642·2434 Don • • •••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • --G...-al 9901 Vollswagen 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CARS WANTED• Sunroor.'75E~u~ELLENT RUNNlNG OR NCYr CONDITION!! I031179l ~= (4) 1979 • CNECUSSICS Air cond., automatic trans .. pwr. steering & brakes, pwr. windows. tilt, stereo. (513WYS) (994VOL) (222WYS) (517WYS~ YOUI atOICE s4995 (2) 1980 cncr CUSSlCS Atr cond., stereo. pwr wtndows & door locks, ttlt, cruise (982YXP) (100648). YOUI CHOICE s7295 CONNELL CHEVROLET -~ l!Jrbor Bl\ 1 cCISl\\111-.~\ 546-1200 ' ......••..•.•..•.••.... $3911 FREE TOWING OPEN WEEK ENDS 7 4 CHEVY HOV A Automatic, air condi· tioning, radio, tinted glass, deluxe wheel cov. ers. blue. Super Clean' (665211) j I I 79MGI COHVERTllLE 4 cylinder. 4 speed This is a British racing green with low mile s . C8 82WEA I It i s all original and on sale this week for the unbclteva- ble price of $5299 IOIWITHAM VOUCSWAGEH 7600 Westminster Ave in Westminster 893-75.51 638 7880 '79MGI 4 speed, 24.00 miles. new tires. stereo tape C936G ) CRfVIH IMW Isl & Broadway Santa Ana 835-3171 '69 MGB-G:r AM IFM radio/cassette. wire wheels. good mileage $2495. (714) SJ6.07S5 or 1213) 792·2952. Ask for Lam. '64 MGB. reblt eng & gear box. new top & int. new am /fm. new michelin radials. $2300. 640-8090 after6pm. Pftle)IOt 9741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! 1911 PEUGEOT TURIOs IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 79PEUGIOT 504 Diesel sedan with on- ly 22.000 original miles. OriginaJ rust red finish Automatic (12210) $7995 JIMMARIHO VOUSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 142-2000 Ponce. 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74r<>ISCHI914 4 cylinde r , S speed. stereo. Here It is · the classic "914". A black on black beauty for the penon who truly enjoys drivlnc the ultimate sports car. (3152) It is in s uperb roodltlon and on aakror .,, IOlwmt~ YOUCSWAMM '7800 Westn\lolter Ave. In Watmlnater 193-'7511 ... 7tl0 1'7tPOllCHI '"t21 .. COWI VI,~ apeed, air cond .. pwr. windows, erulae, Alltnf CMS. 6 under 18,000...U.! (--). U7.,. BARWICK DATSUN So" Juan C opo\trano 831-3311 Call Ed (714 )891 -0517 ------AMC 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Gremlin. brand new eng, xlnt cond. fantastic -----mileage. 11795. 700-9205. 75 VW RAlllT 759-1121 4. cylind~r_. a~to. trans . lllidi-ff j" O air ~1t1orung. stereo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A really great running '76 Electra 2 dr, loaded. Rabbit with Blaupunkt c; t e r e 0 A n i c e I y xlnt cond, clean S21SO equipped car and or _548-6833 --- coun1e VW reliab1hty 1977 Buick Regal, xlnt <OBOMVF> She 1s on sale cond. Loaded T -top. foronly I k . . 52699 ugg rac . wire rims. IOIWITHAM S3l·7~a~ - - VOLKSWAGEN '69 Buick, xtnt cond, full Sll95 ~u~ VOLKSWAGlN. INC 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove SEE US FIRST! We have a good selection o f NEW & USED Chevrolets ! CONNELL CHEVROLET X}< I l.1r1 ... 11 .. .i I", I!'-I \ \11 '> \ 7600Westminster Ave equip, S800. Call 645-9590 in Westminster aft. 6pm ___ ======== 546-1200 893-7551 63!1·7880 Cocllac 9915 76VWVAH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7 passenger. looks & runs great. All original. I (7270\ CREVIH IMW I 1st & Broadway Santa Ana 835-3171 '74VWIUS I 7 PASSEHGEll 4 cylinder. 4 speed. I stereo. This van is truly in excellent condition , • mechanically and in ap. pearance. <664KLH> Her s pacious interior and economy makes her a bargam for only $3199 IOIWfTHAM VOlKSW AGEH 7600 Westminster Ave in Westminster 893-7551 638-7880 --I 71VWIUG COHVHTlll.£ 4 cylinder. 4 speed. s tereo cassette This is the hard to find converti· ble in truly excellent condition with very low miles. Custom wheels add to the beauty. !l8SVAH) Mid-Weeki ·SPECIAL * 1979 El DORADO DIESEL BIARRITZ Loaded with op1101s1 ONLY 15,000 MILES! (397WYF) $12,999 * $6199 l~WJTHAM VOUSWAGIH 7800 Westminster' Ave. I COHHElL II CHEVROLET "' .. ""' 1 111 t .. ' ,, , In Westminster ' • ,._, I \ \1 I \ 893-7551 838-788() ~46-1 200 '60-'815 vw ten & right 1---------1 door. '73 left door~ S50 YOUI #I each. Western style whl CADILLAC rims for Super Beetle DEALBSHIP tM S20ea. 548-9144 ~I COUNTY! 'M for 11800. '67 for DllOO. Or Bert olfer p,p. MUST SAL~, SERVICE SEU.548-1085 AND LEASING '76MC>Mli 2 + 2. 4 cyl.. good mileage. a /c, radio. transferable warranty. S,7 ·3527 or 759-0060 . . .. LH.Felows 9040 Maza Circle Fountain Valley You are the winner of 4 free tickets !$14 value). to ........... loatSltow Mar. 4thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to claim your tickets. . .. . Fors!Ue '73Chev Impala. 4 dr. xlnt cond. bst ofr 963-2591 '68 Coupe good cond. 327 VS , must sell S7 00 964·2768 '79 Monza. good cond. air + xtras. Call aft. 6 or wknd. 556--0724. ----Chrysler 9925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75 CHIYSLElt COUOIA V-8, ractory air, power windows. power door lock. power steering. power brakes. AM-FM. copper. Super clean! !787MCE) $2695 ~w~ ~ V0\1($WAGlN. INC ~ AM100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove Conette 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Autotrana, '1186. V .. I.red "'11CAMPMOBILE N~R~ ----~·,.,.----1 CA ~ u.Mc .. u vw l970 Converl. loOOH.111x1t Blvtt 7tc ....... u2 Showrm cond. RbU ena C'l~MNlt-..1 SM)<')j()() ........ o .... ..... ~~~~~7.:!':~~:l.!~~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!U ~-· T • ., ..... , everythln1. Mechanlc eb, ....... ,. • .,. owner must aell. llOOO. wlad•wt, .,.,. C.fl09or-..z:m ....._ Sharp 'T9 VW llabblt L. blu., Mo, A/C. AM /nl, n• tirel. Ken Donahw. m.-nt.12. (llOYtlY) , ...... u • .ct Orange Coast Daily PllotM'ednnday. March 4 , 1981 Automati c tranamlaalon. power steef'ing, cruise c0ntrol, 1lr conditioning, till wheel, AM·FM stereo 'tape, Corvette mags and only 22,000 mllesl (305WXO). NOW ON~ $11,995 IAKER STREET USED CARS 1425 Baker Streel COSTA MESA 545.3334 '79CottVmE Low miles. Dead sharp. loaded & o r iginal! Dynamite! !693XVH > SI0,995 JIMMARIHO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 142-2000 Mid-Week ,.(SPEC I At~ * 1979 CHEVY CORVETI'E T-TOP Automa11c lrans pwr Windows & door locks tape. lilt wheel & in flaw· lesS cond1l1on 1 Has ONLY 1 t 586 one owner miles• (Ser 4052) (Stk 1398) Oller good 24 hours after pubhcalton $11,988 NtW,.ORT DATSUN ,· < ~~fJ ' .1 I / f ' ' I f ' 't 'f •,.' /, ; . ' 'r • ~ • ' I 833-1300 SHOWROOM COHD. '7ST·TOP Power brakes. power windows. power steering with tilt/telescoping steering wheel, air. AM /FM stereo. rear window defogger. automatic trans Snow wMte with Burgundy in tenor. 27.000 miles. Im · maculate thruout' S8 . lOO. 7S4·6790 o r Answer Ad ~209. 642-4300 -24hn . 9933 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 XR·7. lthr int, all power, gd cond , lo mileage. $4200. 968·2805. ·a.~ Must.• auto. air. /8. SJJ00/080. P .P . MO-la ''7w.-.e ' Red Htttior, bl•tk in· terier. Brand new steel betted rlldlala. Good run· ntn1 ~. 11700 or otrer. M0-10t9 or 8'2·•331 est 210. '71 Must.an& II Ghia reblt ens. nu paint. 11900 (714) 631-83 '73 Mustan1 Convt. 1 owner, 33.000 orig miles. Air, Am/Fm. auto, ps, _pb , $6500. Jerry : . 673-2549. '76 Mustang 11 Ghia $1900, reblt eng, nu pnt. 631·4083 o ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Olds. Cutlass SUpreme Brougham T ·top, full power.air, ex· tremely s harp! Make monthly payments and down. !S43VOY > Barwick Imports 131-lll 1 _._ -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• *SALE* 1979-1980 PINTOS • 30. to choose from $2895 (817XKSI ALL-Low Mileage A LL-Automatic Trans ALL-Power Steering ALL·Runabouts. 3dr. SOM E·Air Conditioning SOME-Station Wagons ALL-Guaranteed ORANGE COAST TRAHSPORT ATIOM CL(~ETOFREEWAYS 2167 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Call !714) 631 -1)4.tl ·72 4sp Pinto. black Nu tires. Gd run cond . $900/0BO 847-0372 ---p~"'°""' 9960 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Horizon. 4 dr, 4 spd. PS. lo ·mi Mint cond $34.50, eves 67 3-33216 '77 Volare. Low miles. New tires. $2,000. 64.5-4616 '74 Plymouth Gold Dust.er. SS,000 mi. auto. am/fm, air. xlnt cond. $2000 ftrm S59·09SS after 3pm. rottHac 9965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71POMTIAC RIHllD Air conditioning. power steering , stereo cassette, wire wheel covers. lilt wheel A beautiful silver-blue m etallic car with low miles and in superior condition. C682UCR > An excellent handling machine that you will enjoy owning for only $4999 IOIWITHAM VOUCSWAGEH 7600 Westminster Ave. in Westminster 893-75.51 638·7880 •PONTIAC '76 SUHlllD COUPE! Auto . trans .. power steering, light color. etc Neat little car! (6SlPVJ>. OHLYS2995! HOWARD Clwnolet Dove & Quail Sts. NEWPORT BEACH 833-0555 Dodge 9935 - ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Bonneville, 4 dr '78 Challenger. S spd, xlnt sedan, good cond, S2900 cond. amlfm. other ex· Wkdys 964-6468 ; eves & tr as. 548-3289. N. 8 . _ wknds 964·~-' '7S Dodge Monaco, xlnt TM...W. d 9970 cond. Sl950 firm. ••.e•••••••••••••••••••• 645-7350. Ford ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Granada Ghia 2dr. xlnt cond. p/s, full pwr am trm stereo, llhr seats, tinted windows 962-4939 i8 R.anchero. lo mi, air, radio, htr, $4250. Aft. 6pm,&U--OllSJ '77 LTD: Like new, 16,000 ml SlOOO cash. + take over payments. Leaving Country. 426 Princeton Dr. C.M. after 12PM. 1981 THUf!lBIRD LOADED! s240~ ~~~ .......... !!.5~ USI YOUI ORANGECOUNTY'S ' 0 I D LINCOLN~1acuRv PACTOIY · DEALERSHIP lmATI .01 ~ ?6ttllh• ~=· Lll'fCOi.N·MERCURv· • !!11 -~" ,., •• l"llAutoc.nterDr. M• SD Fwy-Lake Fores& !!!'.!! 1 alt ...,. ·1... ' . ' IRVJNE --•--1-000--.. SUllSIT ''71 Marqula wa1oa1 t pau. lo•ded. flew Mtchelln1. Xlnt cond . lllOOO. Oner, 8'7Mlfl 1981 MUSTANGS 1981 FAIRMONT UPTO UPTO 56 79 .~::;i. 56 7 4 CASH RllATI PLUS TOTAL DISCOONTS 1981 GRANADAS UPTO 5715 .~::~E PLUS TOTAL DISCOONTS PLUS TOTAL DISCOONTS 198 I T -BIRDS UPTO • 5 1157.~::.~. PLUS TOTAL DISCOONTS 1981 TRUCKS AND V AMS AMY NIW ltll 5600 TRUCK 01 YAN CASH REBATE IN STOCI PLUS INCWDIN• COURIERS TOT lL DISCOONTS 1980 CARS 1980 MUSTANGS 1980 FAIRMONTS PAYFACTOIY INVOICI AND •IT C4SH IHATI 1980 GRANADAS PAY FACTOIY INVOICI AMD GIT PAY FACTOIY INVOICI AND •IT CASH IHAT! 1980 T-BIRDS PAY FACTOIY INVOICI AND •IT s700 CASH s700 CASH. IHATI IHATI CASH REBATES MAY BE USED AS D 0 WM PA YMEMTS IF DESIRED . 1976 FOID COURIER r1c1eur Wlf\ .,,._. ~ -ahell '1w11 ~ I _ ... _ .. _...-~ --'""l>-111.AM<FM ,,....,...,. i.--Clooe.il(Ho P4'$4•) 53399 1971 .-ottD PAllMOMT 4 DOOi SIDAM e cY' , ltUlotMllc -· i.ctory •r eotNlllioftina. -II~_.,,_ t8doo. llOOy .... ,._,.. Uni eel Olaaa. -CO.W.. WI• -I only &t Ill -!Ser 1041! !Sek. P44M) 53499 53199 lt79 '°9tD fllMTO 4 Ctl. 4 --,..,__ llCI°"' '°' """""'°"'' A ... /FM -~ .,,,.,.,, llnlecl o .. aa. -oo. ..... waw llrM I Otlly n . 124 ""'••' (0:13WYQI !8'11 0118A21 1979 CHEVROLET , 0oor CHEVETTE HA TCHIACI ~~ ~ ....... ';~=:-~ lt7t llOID LTDWA.oM v• . .,_ "-· i.c.ory ., _...,......., ~ .. --. -. ,.._ .... "* .-fleel cov ........ "'" I CWllJ' f0,442 ....... 11'3Wl<8) (Siie. P4I03j 53999 ~ I I .! ~r- ed in l\e :a In· 1S · O· la; mt !es JO- an he he >Ut !31 to v·s ll .. d at~ :ed fl\· go. ia· •m- ). ms er- 1hn est - r u u 0 v l$ ,, It q BRAND NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH CHAMP This car gets super fuel economy! Equipment Includes 4 speed transmisslon. vinyl bucket seats. 1400 c.c. engine. white sidewall tires & morel (201048). 60/ INTEREST RllATI Al.LOWANCI /0 IACK FROM CHRYSLllJ!I BRAND NEW ATLAS' PRICE CHRYSLER REBATE 55495 ·5319 YOUR COST 55176 BUii NEW .. 34 ~s':MATE* 45 ~':MATE HICMfWAY* ·use these figures for comparison only. Your mileage may vary. Your h ighway mileage will probably be less. 1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 1981 PLYMOUTH TC3 mfl BRAND NEW ATLAS' 56295 PRICE CHRYSLER 5388 REBATE ~::5 5907 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., bench seat. body aide moldings. max. cooling. waw radial tires & more! (145687). 60/ IMTEUST RllATI -/0 Al.LOWAMCI IACK FROM CHRYSLER FINE YALIES ONIREAI 1981 CHRYSLER LEBARON 4· Dl ATLAS' 56695 PRICE CHRYSLER 54· 17 REBATE ~::56278 6 cyl.. automatic trans.. bench seat. power 11Mring & brakes, wsw tires & morel (142212). 6 0/ IMTlllST RllATE /0 ALLOWANCE IACK . FROM CHRYSLIRI iiiiiiiii~-....... USED CARS~__......._. ........ ___ ~~~~~~----.. r978 MERCURY ZEPHYR 1979 CHRYSLER LE BARON va. lll.ltomatic trans .. 'air cond., pwr. •tieanno & tnkas. 3 Mats. luggage rack. radio, wsw tires & morel ~~·s1995 1979 PLYMOUTH TC3 HATCHBACK 4 cytlndar engine, 4 speed trans., air eond .. pwr. steering & brakes. 2 tone petnt, AM-FM st9ree>. mega & morel {31987 1 ). 5'495 ' 1978 FORD FAIRMONT SEDAN va. automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr. ateerlng & brak•s. AM-FM stereo. wsw tires & morel (247UKK) 1980 PLYMOUTH ARROW COUPE Economical 4 eyl. angina. automatic trana., air cond., pwr. brakes, bucket ~·s4795 mo<al COUPE COUPE Economical 8 cyt. engine, automatic va. automatic trans .. air cond .• pwr. trans .• AM-FM c auatta, power at9ering & braMa, rlldio. wire wheel steering & ~ & morel (4251.JKY). cowra, w.. ti,.. & morel (951WOW). 52995 53795 1980 CHRYSLER LE BARON 1979 CHRYSLER CORDOBA SmHI Loedad with options Inc. auto. trans .. M air cond., pwr. atHring-b~it 4 Or. 8 cyt. auto. trans.. .ir cond., aeat & windows, tilt, cruise. AM-f:M pwr . .-rtng & brsiMa, apead control, ~. wire WhMI coYars, wsw tires· AM-FM...,_,, pwr. 9Mt & windows & & moral (984YOZ). nM>rel ~n 552t5 55295 FOR FLllT IALll & LIAll IMFOl.MAnOM, CALL .... ...._O 546-1934 NEID CASHI w.,., .... : .... fw .......... .... c_.._.._ Ceirt ....__ ..... ,__ ..... We ... .., ....... ,... ........... ~ 4 cyl., automatic trans.. air cond .. power brakes, AM/FM stereo 8 track & morel (1K69008) 1979 CHEVY MONTE CARLO Landau coupe. Loaded with options Inc. auto. trans .. sunroof. air oond .. vinyl top. pwr steering-brakes-split saat & windows, cruise. tilt, AM-FM 8 track & morel (939XWP). ?d in t n· S· n· a· ~ ~ ~ n le .. it ti .. 'a d1 1 ) ~ ) ' r ~ ... , g ,... I -11111111 llllY PIPll Wf:D NF <.:.[)AY MAR ( H l 'YHl OR ANGE COUN TY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Peoria fat her grieves 4 daughters all nleet Viol~nt deaths PEORIA, Ill. (AP) -His daughten are dead now, all four. Against the longest string of odds, each was sl&in or killed at different times in different ways. Less than a decade filled the painful gap between the first funeral and the fourth. . Now, staring al an old portrait, Donald Shreeves says he can't believe all bis girls are gon~. "It's like looking at a blank piece or paper," Shreeves said in an interview. "What the hell was wrong with us? That's what I'd like to know. Did we drink out or the wrong side of the cup or wbat?" His lastsurviving daughter, Candace Lang, was buried last week in a family plot in Iowa. Her husband has been charged in her shooting death. Shreeves found out about her death Feb. 22 when he was listen· ing to the car radio. He was driving from rus new Princeton, Mo. home to Peoria lo do some work on the family house be bad put on the mu:ltet. A few months aio, Shreeves and his wife, Bea, had given up their house here. It held too many bad memories, be said. The radio newscaster was saying something about a woman being shot to death in Schaeferville. "l knew that's where my last living dau1hter, Candy, lived," Shreeves said. "But I quickly dismissed It as impossible. It couldn't be Candy. A man simply does not lose aJJ four of bJs daughters.'' Shreeves lost bis first daughter. Debbie, "the saint of the fami- ly.'' in a fiery car wreck in 1972. Beverly dled in Chicago, where she had moved ln the summer of 1977. Soon alter she wrote her father that she believed she bad found Beverly's killer. Denise was discovered dead in an elevator in Chicago. She bad been lnjeeted with enough drues to kill a horse, the medical examiner said. But the father's lratedY did not end there. When Shreeves went to Chicago to try and find out what happened, he learned that his girls were not secretaries. They were prostitutes, he said. "1 raised them since they were babies. I held down two jobs, washed their diapers and ironed their dresses. I thought I knew them,·' he said. A man in an apartment next to hers was killed in what police So he and his wife moved to Missouri, to put it all behind them. believe was an underground war. Beverly, then 27, opened the door Then they heard a newscaster telling about a woman shot to · of her apartment to see what the shooting was about. Tbe kiJlers death ln Schaeferville. And Shreeves told himself it just couJdn't were leaving the opposite apartment, saw Beverly, pushed her be. back into the room and forced her onto a bed. They put a pillow Even now, a week after burying his last child, the against her head and fired two shots into her skull. retired Army Corps of Engineers worker tells himself it just Denise was two years younger than Beverly and followed her couldn't have happened again. Not a fourth time. older sister everywhere. She moved to Chicago and tried to find "Th.is simply can't happen to people." he said. "Are we the on- out who killed Beverly. .... ly ones out of 225 mill.ion who are out of step with everybody else?·· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Fighting quelled El Salvador • Ill o.i1y ~11 .. s.Mt ,._. ELECTRIC VAULT FILLED WITH FIRE RET AADANT FOAM Precaution• taken Tueaday In Huntington Beach Gas leak causes HB power outage Electrical power has been restored, but cleanup efforts con- tinued today in connection with an underground gasoline leak that caused a high-voltage utility vault in Huntington Beach to short-circuit Tuesday. Richard Grunbaum, a city fire inspector, said 1asoline was still leaking today from lines connect· ing Katt's Mobil Station at Ed- IRINlil CUil WllTHIR An inch of rain, pro- pelled by winds gusting up to 30 mph, is forecast for tonight. Thunderstorms also are possible in south- movlng front expected to clear partially Thursday, leaving ~ percent chance of showen. Lows tonight 48 alont coast, 53 inJand. Highs T)tW'Sday 58 to 63. 111111 TlllY Ed'-\ High School fn Hun- tmgton B•och b becom'ng hown 01 Tran1Jer Tech . Ffnd otd wh~ ht Rog•r Corr.otl'• coMmt Oft~ BS. 11111 Inger Avenue and Springdale Street to underground storage tanks. He said vacuum trucks have been drawing gasoline out of two pits dug by firemen as well as the underground power vault. Chemical foam was pumped in- to the underground vault to decreaae the hazard of an ex- plosion, Grunbaum said. Some Edinger Avenue traffic also has been rerouted around the digging site. The fire inspector said officials now esUmate that some 35,000 gallons o f gasoline have leaked from the underground lines dur· ing the past four months. "The condition of the under- groundplpes was terrible," Grun- baum said. "It has holes in it and was ruated." < The fire inspector said the lines were Installed before the city enacted a stricter code requirln• that gasoline Lines be equipped with greater pToteclion against HuntiJl1ton Beach's corrosive soil. Grunbaum saJd the service sta- tion would remain closed unW all pipln1 lt replaced and tanks are tested. I ' Bill Compton, area manacer for Southern California Edlaon, uld all homes and buaineas blacbd out b)' Twlday'a PGW•r failurearebac~tnservt~. MarblaHllh School, whlcb wu forced to ll&Spend claaae1 Tuee· day bteau.e ol the power outqe, waa back lnMUlon todaJ. No power currently ll belnl routed Uirou1b the undtrlfOUDd Sprlafdale·Bdln1er vault. Compton said, beeauseof thecon· tlntn1e.plotlonbat1rd. ' Rebels reported repelled SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP) -El Salvador's defense mllliaw clalma the leftist guer- rillu have been "smothered," but filbt.lne was. reported in the northeast part of the country and there were hit·and-run attacks in the capttal. "The Salvadoran army has suc· ceeded In Its objective of bringing peace to the nation with onJy the help of the people," Defense Minister Jose Guillermo Garcia REAGAN WON'T SEND TROOPS TO SALVADOR--M said Tuesday, adding that the guerrillas had been "smothered" and "every day the situation tends to improve." Meanwhile, military comman· ders reported "cleanup" opera· tions continuing against the guer· rillas in the northeast towns of Zacatecoluca, San Esteban Caterina andAracatao. In the San Salvador area, a carload of gunmen opened up with submacrune guns on Ilopango Airport.lheairforce's principal base 11 miles east ofthe city. and wounded two soldiers. Witnesses reported four civilians killed in a shootout near the airport, and police said two policemen were killed in a guer· rilla ambush in the northwest part of the capital. In Washington, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. began meeting with con - gressional leaders, seeking their support for the Reagan ad· ministration's proposal to send the junta $25 million in additional military aid and 20 more U.S. military advisers. The secretary.general or the Socialist International, Bernt Carlsson of Sweden, met with State Department officials in W aablngton on Tuesday seeking U.S. participation in an attempt by bis organlzation to med.late between the junta and the guer- r i 11 as. STATE HEALTH OFFICIALS FIND TRACES OF TOXIC CH!MICALS IN MUD DUMP n-.cre Ute la located acroa the atrHt from the campue of Edlaon High School Toxic chemicals found near school By PATRICK KENNEDY Ol 111e Dally rli.t Sufi Stale health officials have identHied traces of a toxic chemical on the surface of a 38-acre mud dump across the street from Edison High School in Huntington Beach. Miller Chambers, of the state Department of Health Services, said tests or surface tar at the Steverson Brothers' private dump at Magnolia and Hamilton s treets s howed traces of perchloreothylene, an industrial cleaning solvent. He said deeper samples or the tar-like substance will be taken In the next two weeks to de· termine if a potential hazard ex- ists. ''In (high concentrations, High court due male draft case WASHINGTON CAP) -The Supreme Court will hear argu· ment.a on the constitutionality of an all-male military draft and draft registr ation later this month. The draft case, perhaps the most closely watched of this court term, is scheduled to be argued March 24, a Tuesday, at 1 p.rn. · perchloreothylene could be tox- ic," Chambers said. "But nothing we have found in the surface tests indicate hazardous conditions. "We found no high concentra- tions, just enough to indicate there might be some toxic chemicals below the surface." Chambers said that for years the dump had an Orange County industrial waste permit allowing disposal of oil drilling muds. He said in the· early 1970s it was changed to a Class Ill dump, restricting disposal lo inert ob· jects. such as concrete. City officials say the private dump was used for oil drilling muds from 1950 until 1970. Chambers said oil drilling muds shouldn't contain toxic c hemicals unless substances were added to lubricate or pro- tect drilling equipment during operation. Chambers said s urface samples of the dump were taJten last October after a nearby resi- dent expressed concern about the site's proximity to the hlgh schools. City Planner Jim Barnes said he received several calls from concemed citizens after it was reported that another former dump in Huntington Beach, the so-called Boucher Landfill, con· tained various toxic chemicals. Footprints lead to HB • man 1n rape By PIULSNEIDERMAN Of IN Daily ~llef SU.ft A police officer's persistent tracking or a footprint trail has l~d to the arrest of a Huntington Beach man suspected or raping a 29-year-old woman in her home and terrorizing the victim's mother and 9-vear-old daughter with tear gas spray and a knife. Police said the suspect, Damon Wade Matheny, 19, was jailed Tuesday on suspicion of rape, burglary and parole violation. Huntington Beach police Sgt. Luis Ochoa said a man wearing a .;ki mask and gloves forced his way into a southeast Huntington Beach condominium at 7 a.m. Tuesday while the victim, her daughter and her 63-year-old mother were asleep. Ochoa said the intruder's ac· livity awoke the grandmother, who began to scream. The in- truder squirted the woman with tear gas and threw a blan~etover her. he said. The incident also roused the other two in the home , he said. The intruder forced the 29·year- old woman downstairs al knife· point and raped her arter t hreatening to harm the woman's daughter and mother, Ochoa said. Computer fouls returns The intruder sprayed the rape victim with tear gas, cut the home's telephone lines and fled with U2 from the residence, the detecUvesafd. Police officer Charles Nowot- ny, wborespondedtotheinddent, found a distinctive footprint where .the intruder apparently had fore~ bis way inside and followed similar print.a through the neighborhood to a nearby con· domlnJum. l Bal,lots don't match Sant,a Ana mpchine ByGLENN SCOTT Of•DMfy ........... ) For all tbetr lnroadt Into effi- ciency, computers atlll haven't managed to circumvent the old maxlmtbatyoucan'tputasquare pe1 into a round bole. Red .. yed Santa Ana offlcJal1 were palaf\&lly reminded of that fact M"'1 today u they aweated out computer malfunct.lODJ pre- ventlq uaounremeat ol lhe re- aulta ot Tuielday'• ctt1 electlonl untll almoltt: 41 a .m . today. Tbe problem: rectanaular bolu pm1dled ln about 7 ,000 com· putel' cardl UMd aa ballot.I didn't . matcb wtth tbe 1quare hol• on tbe ctty'1 lh1rr,uab• vote· counUnecomput.r. • Workers bad to repunch aU Uw ' / cards before the whiners were an- nounc~ today in final, unofficial reaulta. T he delay apparently was worth the wait tor lncumbenta Gordon Briclren and Daniel Grl1et, plus newcomer• John Acosta and Patricia McGw1an. who won teatt on the MVen· membercoundl. In a sebool board race, James Rlcbardl beat HVet\ otMr CM· d&date. Met.int tbe aeat vacated b)' gU.Ubetb ROberuoa. The ~ council retulta IP· pear.d to bt a victory for the clty'a •ta~bed ~wer bloc, wbleb bed IDdorMd the four wtn· nln1 candldattt. Brlcktn received 5,519 vota to I ~· defeat ML uel Rede, with 2.359 votes, in kd 1. In Waid 3, Acosta received 8 402 v~ compared to 1,90& for Mickey adden, 1,551 for Anoe Facnal and 1,215 for RJcbard Lontabon. GriHt received 5,539 votes In Ward •· Opponent S.dle Reid had l ,r7t. 1111. llcGW,u'1 5,tse votes ouuttatanced rival J . Richard Santo•12,m. RldwW fftelved 21• votea la UM rac. for tbe Mat OD UM Suta Au Unifted. Scbool Dlt· trlct'• Board of Tnaa'"'. Don P'rankllD ftalthed •ecoid ln tbe ballotlni wtt.b 1.191 Yot. Ad Donald liood ... tblrd with ... votet. The home wu aurrounded by police, a.nd suspect Mathen)' was found inside in the attic, Oeboa aald. He said the spray aUesedlY used In the earlier locldent also waafoundlnslde. Ochoa sald the vlc:tlm's descrtptloo Of 1c•rt and tatloolon the uaallant'• arD) also aided police in ldenUfytna the 1u1p4tet. Plane hita river . ~ A NT IOCH <AP> -" btrbiclde-laden. ,Ian• Dl..aecl' Into the San Joaq.Un J\{V... ~ stream front h•r• TuHday nt1bt, ~ U..•cltr to a dra1'1al"water.fron,\the/1ver. / • Orange CoMtOaUy P.llot/Wedneaday. March 4, 1981 Ash Wed11esdoy rites The Rev. Kerry Beaulieu at St. Joachim of Costa Mesa places a cross of ashes on forehead of Winifred Smith. 79, of Costa Mesa. Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, is the beginning of a 40-day period of penitence and spiritua l renewal. Director chose n . for Music Cente r By JODI CADENljEAD Ol IM D•lly Pilot SI.Ill Len Bedsow, former manager of the Cahrornia Civic Li ght Opera Association, has been named executive director or the future Orange County Music Center in Costa Mesa. One of Bedsow's first duties as director will be to help choose an architectural firm to design the future $40 million performing arts center near Bristol Street end the San Diego Freeway. · · 1 will be concerned with as· suring the aesthetic qualities of the structure are in concert with its professional and technical re· quiremenlS." Bedsow said Selection of an architectural firm to des ign the cultural center 1s expected by mid- M arch , according to music center offi cials Those firms interviewed were Albert C Martin & Associates. Ladd. Kelsey & Woodward in con1u n c t1 on with Arthur Eri c k so n Th e Lu ck m a n Partnership; Skidmore, Owings & Merrill . Welton Becket & As- soci ates ; \filliam Blurock & Partners 1C. R.S. a nd William Pereira. In addition to his duties as general manager for the Civic Light Opera. Bcdsow was ad· \'iser for the opening of the Los Angeles Mus ic Center. the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and t he Ahmanson Theater and supervised the restoration of the Orpheum Thealt'r in San Fran- C'isco He teachci. al the USC College of Continuing Education and lee lures at l'C'LA M us 1t Cent e r offici al s declined to state Bedso w's salary or how many other can- didates were considered for the HEADS MUSIC CENTER Len Bedsow Orange County position. Cons truction o f th e two theater complex adjacent to South Coast Repertory moved c lose r to r eality wh e n t he Segerstrom family pledged $5 million cash in January on the condition that another $6 million be raised by the end of March Las t month Jim Bentley, chai rm a n o f Bentley Laboratories in Irvine, and his wife. lrene, -· · S2 million toward the cc,.· agw ion of the cultural center in Co:,.~ Mesa. In addition to the estimated $40 million in construction costs. another $19 million is being raised for endowment purposes. HB S chool Dis trict cuts 54 from staff · Trustees of the Huntington Be ach Cit y (elem e nta r y> School District will Jay off four administrator s, two psychologists. two nurses and 46 teachers next year . Tuesday's action, a long with previous cuts that include clos- ing three elementary schools. are part of $1.4 million cutbacks ' ~aused by rising financial def-~c its and decreasinJ enroll- ment, according to district of- ficials. , Two principals singled out for layoffs are Bernie Rodgers of bwyer School and He\en Blair of Moffett School. District coordinator Fran Ben- nie and district psychologist Barney F le ishman also will have their jobs terminated . Superintendent Lawrence Kemper said that Rodgers will be reassigned as a vice principal atone of the middle schools. A total of 54 teachers m ay lose their jobs nexi year because the laid off admini s trators, psychologists and nurses could be reassigned as instructors, bumping current teachers out of work. according to Ron Brown, director of personnel. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Cleum.d advertlalng 71~M2·M71 All otMf department• 142~1 I J '• ' Thomu P. Haley ~ Robtt1 N. Weed ,.,.... M. l'homu KM11ll ... ThomM A., Murphtne ........ l. Charlee H. Looe ...................... 8emard 8ch11lman ~ ~ ~~0~00datd Jr MAIN OFFICE no W••I ... s. .. c .. i. MeM, CA. M•l• •clel,.M: ... IMO. Cati• Meu, CA . .,.,. Cotiyrltftl "" ~91199 c .... P11bll1111119 (Clml:NflY. No noW\ ''°riff. llhntr•nons, ec:tllorfal matl•r or •d• verthem•1>1I h,,.,,. may ti. rtproovod without 'Pe<lal P9m'llsloll ol c°"'rlofll owiwr. ff(Oftd CIHI !19$laoe peld ,, Coel• M•N, C•lllornl• IVPS 1f4-«IOI. Sllt>l<rll)flOll by~.,,,., JA,00 Mellll'llr; h m•ll i$ '° monthl¥, mllll•rY dUl!f\•llOlll JA,00 ITIO<lll!ly •, 0 A uthOr . say s anti-airport forces helped By 8Tl!VE •AaBLE OfU.CNlty ......... " A Caltech anthropologist who authored a 10-pase atudy on social effect• of John Wayne Airport jet noise has admitted under quesUonlng that be let an- ti-airport forces band-pick the people he interviewed. did fOf' the Marinel"I Comm..Wty Aasoclatloo. The "Martnera aroup lJ astuii that the airport be denied a noise variance. The variance is needed ii the airport is to con- tinue current jet noise levels, which exceed the state noise standard level. Scudder aaJd Uaat was newt t.e him. "Well, in your professional opinion, Is thJs a proper t.binc? Is it a good Idea to let someone select your Interviews?" asked Gatzke. Dr. Thayer Scudder, who took the wltness stand durln1 tbe eighth day of noise bearings in Costa Mesa, said he interviewed only 28 families in the study be The report, which coat the north Newport Homeowners group rouahly ss.ooo. states that 130 families were interviewed. Under queationlnl from Orange Coun ty attorney Michael Gatste, Scudder explained that 109 families were interviewed by Joseph Jorgensen. a resident of the Mariners community and a UC Irvine professor. In an attempt to discredit the anthropolosist 's study, Gatzke asked Scudder If he was aware that several or the homeowners wbo set up the interviews also are plaintiffs in a laws uit against the county and airport. "It would have been bad," ex- plained Scudder, "but tying it in with Jorgensen's interviews made it beU.~r." Grier replacements eyed Gatzke asked if the study would hold more validity if Scudder himself had seJe<:ted the interviews at random. Scud- der agreed that was true. But then a few minutes later, the an- thropologist corrected himself. "Our sampling was done by networks, community ties," be s aid. "In this case maybe it was better than a random sam- pling." Head of coumy agency nears re t irement Adminis trative Law Judge Robert Neher. who on several occasions has added a touch of levity to the technical hearings, interrupted the exchange between Scudder and attorney Gatzke at this point; Bert Scott, personnel director for Orange County. is considered to be the favored candidate to replace Margaret Grier when she retires on March 31 as dire<:· t or of the co unty Human Services Agency. Wate r bond approved for Catalina Avalon voters have approved a $400,000 water bond, which city omcials say will save 8.8 million ga llons of Catalina Island's fresh water supply annually . Avalon City Manager John Longley said the meas ure passed Tuesday by a 341 to 179 mar gin. A simple m ajority was needed to approve the bond. Longley said $348,000 in state funds will be added to the city's $400,000, enabling the city to ex- tend saJl water lines for fire pro· t ection and sewage. Passage of the salt waler service improvement measure will add an extra 60 cents on salt water rates charged all Catalina lsland residents, Longley said. Longley said almost all of Catalina's fresh water comes from rainfall. Improvement or salt water lines is expected to save from 7 to 8 percent of the is land's annual water supply. Longley said water conserva· tion is crucial since about 125 af. fordable housing units are to be ·built in Avalon this year. Use of s alt water for fire fighting and toilets saves about 40 percent of the fresh water. Longley said. HB awards downtown job contract The Huntington Beach City Co uncil has awarded a contract to a construction company to ren- ovate the old downtown shop- ping area by changing it into a semi-mall. The $321 ,245 bid of Damon Construction Company was the lowest or nine companies vying for the project. Jack Miller. city engineer in charge of the redevelopment, said construction could begin within on e m onth. First, however. federal officials must approve the construction com- pany because a Housing and Community Development grant is paying for the renovation. The prQject will convert a three-block section of Main Str eet from Fifth Street to Pacific Coast Highway into a one -way street with angled park- ing. Textured street surfaces, park benches, bicycle racks and planter boxes are planned for the s hopping area. The project could take up lo five months to complete, Miller said. Actors play · wachers in benefit game Television actors will play basketball against teachers and , staff members of . Ocean View Higb School Thursday night in the school gym. Proceed& from the admission price of $3.50 wUJ be used to buy equipment for the school's baseball teams , a school apoteawoman said. The game, sponsored by the Ocean View Hl1h School Baseball Club, begins at 8 p.m. at 17071 Gothard St. , Actors lnclud hll Mark Harmon, "Flamlnto Road," Stoney Jacklon, "The While Shadow," Lou Sandera , "Cb'"·" Dirk Benedict, "Bat- tltllar Oalactlcal' • Jimm ie Walker, "Good T mt• " and Robert GlDtJ, "Paper CuM.'' wlll 1ip "'°ll'•pbt at laalftllM, a acbool apok•maa aald . • Scott, 48, has been personnel director since 1974. Before that, he was chief deputy auditor- controller for seven years. week that she will leave her post as planned at the end of March. The supervisors had con- vinc~ Miss Grier last week to consider extending her 31-year tenure until summer to help with budget deliberations. But in a three·paragraph letter received Monday evening by board mem- bers. she said s he couldn't con- tinue "without substantial loss to me." However, Scott is not the only county administrator who is be· ing considered by the County Board or Supervisors as at least a temporary replacement for Miss Grier. "I suppose if I give you a bit more time, Dr. Scudder, you'd probably tell me this was the bes t possible way to do it (the in- terviews)." Others include C . Ke nley Mays, an assistant to County Ad- m in is tr a ti ve Officer Robert Thomas: Barbara Fox. assistant director of the county General Services Agency, a nd Bob Love, chief aide lo Supervisor Harriett Wieder. Miss Grier has not made her retirement plans public. Est a t e pla n cou rs.-. s la t f-A•I Under further questioning, Scudder said he wasn't an "ad- vocate" for the Mariners As· sociation anti-airport expansion cause. ''If any advocacy crept into my study it's only because after 25 years of studying these things I '\le come to realize that the im- pacts are f ar 2reater than anyone imagines," he explained. The board was expected lo confer today on how to replace Miss Grier, who s aid earlier this Estate pl anning will be the subject of a free four-part series beginning Friday at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. Solo n collapses WASHJNGTON IAP> Rep The programs will be held from 7 to 9 p.m . in Math Sciences Room 123. In his defense. Scudder said that his study was actually a re- port on what noise-weery homeowners "perceive" the problem to be William 0 . Ford, D-Mich .. faint· e d Tuesd ay night and was rus hed to Bethes da Nav a l Medical Center, where doctors said he apparently was suffering from exhaustion, an aide to the congressman said. He was listed in good condition. The sessions will focus on avoiding probate, holding title to property, reducing taxes and ad- minis tering wills . Newpor~ Beach attorney Thomas Gieser will serve as instructor. "Jus t because the residents tell me how they feel doesn't mean it isn't important," Scud- der said, adding that residents frequently expressed feelings of being "mocked. laughed at and even vilified" by public officials. SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribucio n of men's and women's clorrung. We trade with the most prestigious stores and the best ma nufacturers in the counrry. But we also deal directly with you -the individual traditional clothing con, sumer. Because yo u appreciate the classic scyles and the quality that our clo thing rep- resents. we would like you to understand exactly why we can offer you s uch substantial savings on the cloches you reall y want. To begin with. we deal in one very specific inventory: traditional styles. We don't do speculative buyi ng on trendy garments that go out of scyle and have co be sold at a loss. Knowing our market enables us to buy more efficiently. Secondly. we buy in quantity. As brokers we place huge volumes of high qualicy gar- ments in stores all over the country. Naturally. we face run offs and overages. These we sell at significant reductions directly to the dis- cerning public through our Brokerage. Finally, we feel that an individual whose preference is qualicy tJnd classic styling can appreciate the savings represented by o ur streamlined look. Because we don't s pend excessively on costly displays and fixtur~s. we don't have co pass those additional costs along to you. We at SOUSA & LEFKOVITS feel we have a meaningful concept to bring to the traditional man and woman: A vast inven- tory of the best quality classic and traditional fashions. sold in a tasteful streamlined atmos- phere, at the most significant savings avail- able anywhere. Tu1dn 621 South B St .. Tustin, CA 92680 (just ~hind Hadley's Fruit Orchard) Telephone 714/731-7151 Hovrs· Monday throuah Sarurday JO:OO a. m.-600 pm. Sunday U:OO noon·S.00 p.m. Wett L08 An1elet 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd . West Los Angeles. CA Q0064 Telephone 213/4 77 .. SQ95 Bagla to join new law fi"" Form~r U.S. Sen. Birch Bayb of lndiana is joining a new law firm that includes the campaign manager for the man who defeated Bayh in his effort to win a fourth Senate term. Bayh confirmed he will join the firm of Bayb, Tab· b e r t a nd Cape h art, with offices in Indianapolis and Wa s h · ington. One partner _., is Daniel F.. ...,,,, Evans J r ., ca mpa ign c hairman for S e n . D a n uvH Quayle, the Republican who defeated Bayh in November. • • 1 think what we brought together here is a pretty good mixture of Democrats and Re publicans. and they're all pretty good lawyers that can serve clients," said Bayh, a Democrat Ros~mary Ludgate, 23. gets kiss from David Lee, of Olney Parish Church in England, after win7Jing annual pan- cake race, covering winding 415-yard coursein62- seconds. P rince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer will marry J uly 29 in a world-televised ceremony that, in a break with royal tradition, will take place in St. Paul's Cathedral instead of Westminster Ab· bey. Buckingham Palace an- nounced the wedding date. six days after it disclosed the 32-year-old crown prince's e ngagement to Lady Diana, 19, d aughter o f o ne of Britian·s premier earls. A Palace s pokesman said Charles chose St. Paul's in· stead of Westminster Abby. where most royal weddings are performed, because the 273-year-old m asterpiece of sir Christopher Wren can hold more guests. The last Prince of Wales to be m arried in St. Paul's was Henry VIU's elder brother, Arthur Tudor. That was in 1501 in the original cathedral that was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666. M lndtul of P ruld e•l aea1u'1 aff ectlon for jelly- beans, an .Ucratt enalneer fl1ured that the world's laraieat transport r••ne could carry neJir y 44 rnllllOrt pl~es of the candy. Lockheed Corp.. based in Burbank, said that the jeJly. bean count was made by an entlneer of lts Lockheed· Marietta Co. unit. Last year, durtne the Carter admlnlstratjon, another Lockheed engineer . determined that the mam· moth C·SA aircraft , 81 of which were built by Lockheed , could carry 158,631,184 peanuts. Oth er cargo estimates were up to 25 ,844,746 ptngpong balls and 3,222,857 tortUlas. In military terms, th~ C·5A is designed to accommodalE two Chrysler XM ·l tanks, seven full-siled transcon· linental buses or five U.S. Air Force Fitihters -and 7i fully equipped soldiers. In a long expected a n nouncement . French P r esident Valer y Glsc:ard d'Estalng said he will seek a second seven-year term as the nation's chief executive. Actor Greg M orris of ABC-TV series·· Vega$," was reported in stable condition following sur· gery for injuries suffered ina trafficaccident. He suffered lacerations to his /ace, right arm and shoulder. Dr. Boe ttc l1er Irvine builder says • • rites St'l 1n S a c ra1ne nto Plans for a l ate ·Marc h memorial ser vice a r e being m a de in Sacr amento for Dr. Kenn eth Boettche r . fo rme r c h ai rm an or Or a n ge Coast College's Fine Arts Division, who died or a heart attack Feb. 25 . Housing's 'greatest period' lies ahead The former Costa Mesa resi· dent was visiting i'n Sun City, Ariz .. last Wednesday when he died He was 65. Dr. Boettcher joined the OCC faculty in 1948 as a music in· structor and became the division chairman a year later. He wrote the OCC alma mater. In 1955, he left the college to become president of American River College in Sacramento. re· Laining that post until retire· ment in 1979. He and his wife lived al Lake Tahoe. He 1s survived by his wife Corinne, a daughter. Mrs. Robert Harl of Exeter, and two grandchildren. Book., slttletl J or slmt-i11s The Friends of the Laguna Beach Library are sponsoriftg a delivery service of library books lo people unable to leave their homes. Drivers will deliver up to five books to library patrons and pick them up two weeks later. The program Is designed to help eld erl y shut-i n s and t h e physically bandlcal'J)ed. Those interested in participat· inl in the delivery program are a1ked to either write or telephone the libr ary . The mailing address is PO Box 36, Lag una Beach 92652. Tbe nu m ber to call is 497·1'133. ' By RICHARD GR EEN Of,._ Dally Pllet St.Ill A reduction in mortgage in· te rest rates and an attendant surge in new home sales can be expected if President Reagan's fiscal policies are carried out, ·hous ing expert Merrill Butler told 500 businessmen in Irvine. Sp,eaking Monday night at a Building Industry Association dinner, Butler, the past pres i· de nt of the National Association of Home Builders. said 1983 and 1984 promise to be the ··greatest period for housing this country has ever seen." But he was qu ick lo warn builders that the home sales pie· ture may not be so bright until mid-1982 when he expects Presi· dent Reagan's policies to begin to lake hold The key lo a lowering of home interest rates, said Butler. rests in federal spending cuts pro· posed by Reagan. whom he called "the best president since George Washington ." Butler said Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker won't act to reduce interest rates until he sees Congress car· ryin( out the spending cuts. The president of Buller Hous· ing Corp. <with offic4JS in Irvine and Newport Beach~ said that federal spending cuts could ease inflation, stimulate r eductions in interest rates and fuel new home sales. H e n oted. however, that builders attempting to gather capital ror new home construe· lion face competition from other industries. Butler pointed out that some economists in the White House favor the infusion of money into other industries a\ lhe expense of t he bome builders. This so- We're Listening ••• The Dally Pilot wants lo hear from •ts readers. wbllt you like about the paper and what. you ~·t li~e. We also would Uke to publish your views on any subje(t in our letters lo \he editor col· umn. Oall lhe nurnlMtr below Md your me11a1e wlll be recorded. Mee111n will be trarucribed 1ever1l Omes dally and deUvered to the desk of the appropr•ate editor. Mailbox conlribuUons will be delivered to the editorial paae editor. Mailbox c°"tribu&on 111ust lnclYde their name and ,telephone n\hllMr fGr ..nfteatlon. Ml rlrtul•U. calla, plea1e. Tell • wbal'I on your mind. Tbe number Is lft aervi~ a. biOiurt a day. aeven clap a week. SEES HOUSING SURGE Irvine'• Merrill Butler called reindustrialization of America's major industries is needed, he said, but poses a challenge to the builders. In his speech at the Airporter Inn, Butler said the building in· dus try should support federal s pending cuts, "even though 1,000 voices will be raised" against the cuts. In addition to the lower in· terest rates that may follow the cuts. the buiJders stand to gain from all easing of business taxes that can take place with a reduc· lion in federal spending, he said. "America was m ade great by the private businessmen and we must rewa r d private en· trepreneunhlp," he said. "For those who produce or save in great qatanUty, they de· serve as good a break on taxes aa others." Butler received a standin& ovation wh en b e closed bJs speech on an·up note . ·•Be very careful in 1981 . ~ becauee by 1982 we'll really be.In io bulld housing for America," he said. Gema, gold taken HILLSBOROUGH (AP> -A m an lD a mailman'• ..,.... aad a partDer handcllffed tbe wllt tA a Sa f"raaclaco real· ettat• man and mllde off wttb at · IH1t 1100,oot la J• elry encl loJd, Police H kl. Orange Coast Dally Pilot/Wednesday. March 4. 1981 A date with death Steven Judy. 24 <right > is scheduled to die in t he electric chair at lndiana State Prison March 9 and has refused to appeal the penalty. He was convicted of slaying an Indianapolis woman and her three young children. Judy's lawyer and his foster parents have said they will not oppose his wishes . County hails out HSA I $688,000 funded for welfare program .. By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL 01 U.. D•oly Pi let St•ll The Orange County Board of Supervisors has moved to erase a projected $3.6 million deficit racing the county's Huma n Services Agen cy. which is responsible for administering a vast a rray of health and welfare programs The board agreed Tuesday to draw $688,000 from contingency funds to continue payments the county must make to people seeking welfare assistance un· der the Aid to Families with Dependent Ch ildren and the General Relief progr ams. OF THAT SUM, $638,000 will go to bolster lhP. aid to families program through the remainder of the fiscal year, while $50,000 will be earmarked lo provide general relief through the end of the month. The board also called for of· ficials from the Human Services Agency and the county Ad· ministrative Office to return within a month with s pecific rec· ommendations on bow to deal with the remainder of the pro· jected deficit Vicki Yon, a county Ad· ministrative Offi ce analyst for Human Ser vice Agency matters, t old supe r visors the budget crunch resulted from an in· creased number of persons seek· ing aid and changes in the way the stale is providing subsidies to counties for h ealth and welfare programs. COMPOUNDING THE prob· lem for the county, she said, is the current state of the nation's economy and federal policies that have permitted the resettle· m ent of Indochinese refugees in the U.S. pa rticularly Orange County. The deficit could climb to more than S5 million in the fiscal year beginning July 1. Ms Yon said . unless the board takes ac· tion to find money Lo offset it. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified GPmolo1<i1t, AGS NEW GOLD RUSH hlta Aualralla The gold rush Is on again. This time, the locale is not the streams of northern California, but the wild "outback" region of Westem Australla. The rush was touc h ed o rf by t h e discovery of a h uge 1old nugget, weighing more than 26 pounds and valued at about $300,000. The discovery was mad e by a retired Autralian couple. T hey had sunk their life 's savlnt• i n to a four-wheel·drlve truck a nd two m eta l detectors, and bad set out across the rorblddiA1 Outback lo Hardi ol their fortune. The couple wou.Jdn •t say where they found the nu1eet. But , wM!l tbree school cl\lldren on a picn ic found a flve;pound nunet near the upie \O\lm of Wedderburn, the 1oldr usher1 bad 1 place to concentrate on. Australia bu bad 1old ftndl ID 't.b• put, lncludin1 a wbopplq 70·pound nuaet found 50 rears a10 ill tbe H ine atel fA t.be Outbactr. Birt, wttlt t0da1'• prtee1, ..., IOld dilC:O\'erJ iu .. oa •• adaed meuure of uclte 111ea t . Oold fe ver b11 deftatt.ely bit the folks OowD UMer. To find that money. the board was told. 1t will likely have lo re duce fund ing for other welfare type programs over whi ch the county has direct control. SU PE R V I SO R B R UCE Nest ande reacted angrily to the 15·page report from the county Administrative Office outlining the budget crunch. claiming the board was being asked to make ··monume ntal decisions" on budget cuts on extremely short notice. The letter was dated Feb 24 However. he joined fe llow members in supporting a plan of action that grew out of recom- m end alions advanced by the county Administrative Office. and supervisors Roger Stanton and Harriett Wieder. UN DE R THE action. none of the contingency money will be used to provide increased as· sistance for lndochinse ref· ugees. This condition was proposed by Stanton. who said ... This, in my JUdRme nt. r eaffirms the county policy that this is ) federal responsibility ·· Ms Yon warned that the coun· ty ·s share of provid1ng as· s istance to refugees will in· crease April l because of leg1sla; lion Lhat prevents 100 percent federal assistance to refugees who have been within the coun'.- try for more than three years. That alone will cost an estimated Sl.067.000 during the current fi scal year . of which the county's share would be about SJ00,000 During the nexl fiscal year, that cost could increase t.o $5.787 .000. of which the county's share Wl'Uld be St .6 m1llion, ac· cordinR to t he county Ad, min1strallv~ Office Airport passenger decline continues The number of commercial air carrier passengers using John Wayne Airport declined in January from December a nd was well below the figure one year ago. Statistics released this week by airport officials s how that 184,049 people enplaned or deplaned at the airport during Januar y, compared to 187,645 in December and 193 ,858 in J anuary of 1980. T HE FIGURES show t hat the nu·mber of commercial jet operations <takeoffs a nd land· ings > decreased s lightly in January to 2,454 , from De~em· ber's 2.475. Yet the number of commercial operations was 287. or 12 per 1 •111. ~•r QUARTZ cent, higher than in January 1980, indicating that the number of passengers per given fligt)t was down. Commuter flights also are down by 52 percent when figurefi for January and January t98b are compared. I OFFICIALS SAID that prival~ aircraft operations increas~ s li ghtly during January. COITl· pared to levels of a year ago. There were 34 ,331 general avia· tion operations in January com· pared to 34.303 in January 198>. General aviation operations account for more than 90 per· cent or the activity at J ohn Wayne Airport. the third busiest airport in the countrv. .......... ~ ~' ------ Which Pitlsar Quartz slim dress watch is right for you? Any Pulsar Ouortt wolCh you select 1t nght Eoch Qnd eve<y one 1s beovt1ful They oll give r'le0r-perfec1 11mekeepmg occurocy ond tlw bQtt8f"( losts fo, two yea~. Some offer ~weep &«OOd honds bil1ngvol doy dote colendor~ ond mere. See the •nitre collection to moke your wlect1on of bracelet or strop models Allot prices os slim 01 the styling. Pulscir. Quort:a:. Always a t>.ot b.yond. •n technol~y. In votue. · J. C..JJ""'l'luw~ J.-1.n MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @ 1823 NEWPORT SL.VO COSTA MESA ~ IN THE SAM• LO(ATION ~NCI 1t46 •1,,•rd-M ... tr Ch•rve ' . PHONE .. '"' Reagan qUlzzed bg Cronkite 'No .troops for El Salvador' '. I I I I .. • I .. •. '• 8CIM)OL DAIS DSPT. -Melwboly news eootlllw to tridde out ot our eoutal ~blie aeboo& 1yatem1 tlMM daya about no mooey for edueatl<*, teaeber layotfa ud prlnelpala 1ettl.DI demoted. It doetn't IOU.nd fOOCI. We've beanf t..bla kind ot aewt botb upcout at Hunt· lnl&on Beach and dowaeoat at Laiuna. Tbe U•bta are 10- lq ~at st:boolboulea everywbe(e. J:..n late toct.y, Newport-lhla Unlfted School Dis· trict ~ were 1atheriq to ctileu11 how to cope 1Vltb no cub and dwlndllDt 1tudeat enroUmmta. So far, tbe only solutJooa In any of our public school 1y1tem1 aeem to be ~ closln1 down exlstin1 schools and lettin1 • ~ \ teacben go. , r.\ _ T&OUBLE 18 with 10• •uRPHlll ~I/ all of lbls, nobody bas nl nl ~ come up with any in· · · novative notiooa on bow we might keep the schools 1otn1. Therefore, as a public service, I comulted my o.kl friend Dr. Rufus Theodore Fudd, the noted aoeloloeilt, economist, educator and one-time car wuh operator, on what innovations might be employed to keep the school systems going. Right away, he came up with a whole handful of schemes to pump up public education. For example, he suggested: T&AFFIC FINES: Right now, most or the fines for 55 in a 25 are collected by the cities. City cops do the arrest· ing. My genius friend Fudd suggested taking the fine money away from the cities and giving it to the school systems. This, old Rufus suggested slyly, would be a two-edged sword. Traffic cops would no longer figure they were "Every time I 'm in the tub, the clan beU ring!" gathering their own salaries when they slapped one on a hapless motorist. Therefore, they might be more tempted lo temper justice with mercy. And, more importantly, the cops when they did write a whole handful would be helping the educatjonal cause. NON-PARENTAL TAXES: Dr. Fudd cleverly deduced that one of the reasons for sagging student enrollment is that people just aren't producing enough babies. "It's another two-edged sword," Rufus chortled. "We hang a special $100-a-year tax on non-parents. Everybody over 18 pays. You either produce or you pay. If you pro- duce, you boost the school population and we win for education all Che way around." BYPRODUCT BINGO: Another fascinating way to save the schools as envisioned by the far·sighted Dr. Fudd. Actually, he admitted getting the notion from the parochial schools. "Every time we close a school, we invent a byproduct," Dr. F explained. "We tum the closed school into a 24-bour bingo operation. Good heavens, how the money'll roll in. "Bingo cash will keep the other schools open. If we have to close two schools, we go with bingo in one and a beer haU in the other. We'll just keep hyping the old school economy." CO·ED CONDOS: Doctor F admitted on this one that he was just hitching onto a current hous ing craze. "Everybody's converting buildings into condominiums," he noted. "Why not the empty schools ? Let 'em start col- lecting rent.·· Doc Fudd did admit that in converting some lower grade school buildings to living units, aduJts might find the bathroom fixtures are a bit close lo the ground. "But after alJ .'' he noted, "you have to sacrifice something for education ... " W ASHINOTON <AP) -Prell· ~t ~-lar'lq lt ~ b tlM Statee wW tend combat troopl to El Salvador, ls vowtnc to punue diplomatic ef· f orta ao "•• do aot juat •lt paulvely by and let tbh helm1pMre be lnvaded by out· aide forces." Hours before Re.,an'1 com· menu were aired In a televt.ion interview, however, State Department officlal1 quleldy di1mi11ed a aoelallat leader'• plea for U.S. participation ln Salvadoran peace talka. THAT 18 EL Salvador's bual· ness, department spokesman William Dyess said, and "we will not tell them what to do." Reagan, meanwhile, aald he foresees no circumstance in which U.S. combat troops wouJd be sent to El Salvador and cau-tlo~d against drawing parallels between the conflict in the tiny Central American country and the war in Vietnam. "I do aee our continued work In the field of diplomacy with neighboring countries that are interested in Central America, South America to bring this violence to a halt and to make s ure that we do not just sit passive ly by and lel this hemisphere be invaded by out· side forces," Reagan told CBS newsman Walter Cronkite. "I CERTAINLY don't see any likelihood of us going in with fighting forces." Acknowledging that com - parisons a re being made between U.S. involvement in El Salvador and Vietnam, the president insisted '"the difference is so profound.·' "What we are actually doing is at the request of a govern· ment, in one of our neighboring countries. helping, offering some help against the import or the export into the Western Hemisphere of terrorism . of dis· ruption. And it isn't just El Salvador. That happens to be the target at the moment." Reagan said the United States would have no trouble extrlcat· ing itself if necessary from El Salvador. "IF THAT government is no longer there, we're not going there without an invitation," he said. "We're not forcing ourselves upon them. And you · simply leave. And there aren't that many people to be ex- tricated." Reagan s aid the nation learned in Vietnam that "never again do we send an active fight- ing force to a country to fight un- less it is for a cause that we in· tend to win." Asked if that could translate into a commitment to use whatever military force might beome necessary to support the military-civilian junta, Reagan said: ''No. No. No. Because we are not sending combat troops exas raked by twisters Snow speck/,es Rockies to Great Lakes ~,!>r.owen tl~ety 1onl91>1 with some nder~ CMnce ot prec1pll.t· to percent lonlllhl, 20 percenl urMlay. Par1tat cteart1>9 Thur>Clay ltrnoon. Low• loniohl 41 10 SJ. fohs Thursday st to •l. Waltr 5'. 11.S •..... ,,, 60 '~hunder1torm1 r>rOduceG • hall· rtn •-o..,.r wutern Teau rtylOdaY. Ila lhundtntorm• moveG thrc>uQll nlr•I end tuttrn r .. u and 11trn Ken.as. Sftow JOrtad from central Rockies Into IM 111011 aln1. '9111 rein de,,.._., over Illa mid· UIU~ Velley l l9"1 snow fttt tr Ille Grt•I Lakff. •nd snow ---------------H-0~·-·-"-'..;;°".o.i"'--."'..;;<----... .,. ra 1911 owr tllt Roo1t1 •nd '"'· mounl.ttn reolon. Early morntno lemP•••turu nd lht Miion •ano-d from 1 In benon, N.H., to 12 In 8 rownsvllle, .. ,. 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And aaain, the dlffereDCe becomea very treat~" Rea1an did not rule out a naval blockade to bait weapona delivertee from Cuba, but noted that another approach wouJd be to "l.ntercept them when they are landiq al the other end or Road hog flDd them where they are ln the locale." The call for a neaottated set· tlement In El Salvador came from Secretary-General Bernt Carl11on of Social11t Interna- tional, which represent.a non· communist sociallat partlea around the world. "The medJatJoo couldn't even start" without U.S. parttclpa- llon, Carlason Hid in an in· terview. The sunesUon, however, was rejected even before it was formaUy· ouUined to senior State Department officials later Tues-day. APWl,._...te A 250-pound pig went hog wild on the Mar- q u a m Bridge in Portland, Ore.. after escaping from a truck Tuesday night. stop- ping traffic for an hour before officers used rope and battery j umper cables to subdue the rampaging porker. Children's deaths Third Vegru lwtel struck by arsonist scar Mardi Gras NEWORLEANS <AP)-Police say they will recommend safety changes for next year's Mardi Gras after two children were crushed to death beneath the wheels of parade floats as up to 1 million people packed the streets for the close of the gaudy carnival. An 8-year-old boy was thrown into the path of a noat when the ladder be was sitting on was top. pied by the surging crowd. A 2~ -year-old girl attending a parade with her father was run over by a float when she ran to pick up something beneath it, police said. l'OLJ<.:t; WILL recommend that 1982 floats be designed with lower sides to prevent anyone from falling beneath them, ac- cording to Officer Wayne Tam- borella, who investigated the girl's death. As Ash Wednesday dawned to- day, mark:ingthestartofLentand the end of the Mardi Gras r evelry that began s hortly after Christmas, the city was raced with a mountain of trash and an epidemic of hangovers . Parades are the day's family side, and children or a ll ages line the parade routes -in parents' arms. sitting on the shoulders. holding onto a hand. pushing through the crowd, or perching on wooden seats atop stepladders. Christian Lambert of J efferson Parish was sitting on a ladder when a surging crowd knocked il down, throwing the child between the cab and trailer of a float in a procession of home-decorated flatbed trucks, police said. A paramedic said he had lire marks on his back. HIS DEATH came soon after Margaret McKen zie of New Orleans was brought in dead, her skull crushed in an accident halfway across town. There were varying accounts of that accident. Some said she was holding her father 's hand at the end of the ZuJu parade's route when the crush or the crowd pulled her from his grasp. Others said she was in his arms, and a sudden bump knocked her to the ground. LAS VEGAS <AP ) Less than a month a ft e r de- liberately set blazes claimed eight lives at the Las Vegas Hilton. officials here are in· vestigating a case of arson that forced the evacuation of 1,000 casi no patrons from the Silverbird Hotel. No injuries were reported in Tuesday's small fire, which was set in a lounge at the Strip hotel. Clark County Fire Depart· ment s poke s man Ralph Dinsman said the "very minor" fire was definitely arson. He said fire officials had no sus- pects. Two hotel fires have hit the Las Vegas area within the last four months, killing a total or 92 and injuring hundreds more. Dinsman said the Si lverbird blaze started in a lounge, below the showroom stage, used by en- tertainers at the resort. The fire caused mini mal da mage to the room but did cause some smoke damage to other areas or the basement. £---.. --""·~ r~ t'ECITHIN ..,.. \~ 190R. . .l. 2.99 ... """'9A. .. ~ZINC ~~;: I I .~our 'charged in cop's death UNION CITY <AP> -Officials say they have cracked the mystery of who killed Police Chief William Cann after six years of invesUgalions fruatrated by the silence or potential witnesses. Three men· were in custody today and a fourth ,-as being sought for extradition in the fatal 1974 ibootingofCann, police said. Held in the Alameda 'County Jail we;e Angel Ramirez, 36, formerly of San Jose: Ruben Vizcarra, 57, formerly of Union City and Paul Mendoza of Oakland. OH lea.~ ltalt ••..,._ SACRAMENTO CAP> -A resolution to ask the Reagan Administration not to sell oil drilling leases in five basins off California's northern and central coast has advanced in the Legislature. NEWS BRIEFS semb~y~~n1s9amb lar:. ~: Carmel, went to the As· sem bly Rules Committee Tuesday on a 7·4 vote or the Energy and Natural Resources Committee. FoMr teen• 9edlt•I• raJW SAN' FRANCISCO <AP) Four youths have been found guilty of 50 charges connected with the brutal rape, kidnap and shooting of a student last Oc- tober. A Superior Court jur y returned the last of the verdicts Tuesday in the case against Michael Brown. 17. Clyde Jackson. 17, Larry Shephard, 17, and Da· mont Miller. 16 . ,..,,...._. Objects to tettthi119 Kasey Segraves, 13, son of "creationist" leader Kelly Segraves, testifies on the wit- ness stand in Sacramento's Superior Court evolution vs. creation trial. Kasey said that hi s sixth-grade class teacher told him, con- trary to his religious beliefs. ·'that we evolved from the ape." Orange Coast Dally PllottNednesday. March 4, 1981 Stat, Senate conunittee OKs legialation SACRAMENTO CAP> -Legislation to require annual inspections ol auto s mog equipment baa passed the Transportation Committee of the state Senate. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Is holding up about $860 mUUon in hiebway and sewaie funds until California adopts such inspec- tions for the San Oieeo, Los Aneeles, Fresno, San Francisco and Sacramento areas. But the Legislature has consistently declined to do so. Tuesday's 7-1 vote sent S.833 by Sen. Robert Pre.sley, 0 -Rlverside, to the Finance Committee, which could be less receptive. PRESLEY SAID A series of amendments ap- proved by the committee may have weakened ''quality control'' provisions. "We're going to have to evaluate each one of those amendments," he said, adding that he may seek to reverse some changes. The bill calls for th~ use or local service sta- tions and garages to test 1960 and later cars and light trucks to ensure that they meet emission standards. Originally, it would have authorized a three- pronged system that included centralized testing stations. But Presley re-wrote the bill in efforts to simplify it and soften criticism from Transporta· Uon Committee members. MOST OF THE amendments approved by the committee were sought by garage and service sta· lion owners. One proposed by Sen. Ray Johnson, R-Chico. would allow new cars sold outside the five urban areas to meet federal emission standards instead of the generaJly tougher California limits . Another by Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton, would aJJow service instead of buying new equip· 1ment that s upporte r s say is more tamper- resistant. Representatives of the California Service Sta- tion Council contended that new equipment wouldn't prevent a mechanic from rigging test re· suits Two amendments by Sen. Ollie Speraw, R· Long Beach, dropped a requirement that testers have magnetic tape recording devices to preaerv data, and eliminated a new olfice lntended to ove see the program. The Service Station Council eaid the prese Bureau of Automotive Repairs could handle th program, but bill sponsors said there was concer that the bureau was too friendly with gara1 owners. The committee a lso approved • Briggs amen ment expanrung the program to 1960 and later ca and light trucks. It had started with the 1969 mod year. Cost to triple? More power hikes seen LOS ANGELES <AP l -The price of electric · ty has risen SO percent in California sin mid-1979, and it will nearly triple again in the co · ing decade, says a report released today. The report by the California Council for E · vironmental Balance, an organization of busines , labor and other community leaders. urges rap development of more nuclear power in CaUforn' to slow the price increases. If there is a complete shutdown or nucle power in California, the average home's month electrical bill will rise to as much as five tim today's bills. the study says. IT PREDICTS T HAT even if the pendi nuclear plants a re all put into operation schedule, the average residential electrical bi I will rise from $33 .80 a month in 1980 to between $ and $135 in 1990. If all nuclear power plants in California a shut down, the average home electrical bill will as high as $166 per month by 1990, the report sai , basing estimates on a 20 percent avera~e increa in gas and oil prices during the 1980s The victim, a 24-year-old woman. was attacked as she unlocked her car door after attending classes at Golden Gate University on Oct. 6, 1980 Speclal edewattme told Nurses' dutks widened "The principal reason t>lectricity prices ha escalated sha rply 1s that California utiliti s ignificantly depend on high-priced oil and gas fuel to generate electricity." the study said. LOS ANGELES CAP> -The school board ex· plained at a hearing before Supenor Court Judge Paul Egly that certain minority schools in the inner city. although not involved in mandatory busing, have special education programs to offset any de- fects caused by racial isolation. Board rules they can prescribe drugs "IN CONTRAST, two representative out-o · state utiJities had an ave rage electricity price 1980 which was 40 percent lower than ... California utilities These two out.or-state utiliti produced ver y little electricity from oil and ga . They rely mainl y on coal and nuclear." the repo t said. The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups have complained in the past that the school district's integration plan excludes many inner city schools that are more likely to benefit from man· datory busing. Aid to El Sal.,ador prot*'•t.-d SACRAMENTO <AP> -About 250 persons turned out for a demonstnnion against U .S arms shipments to El Salvador. Speakers at Tuesday's rally, in front of the Federal Building in downtown Sacramento. said the ruling Junta or El Salvador is killing people in discriminately Organized by Roman Catholic and other churches. peace groups and labor unions. the dem- onstrators marched in a circle carrying placards. and singing "Give Peace A Chance" and "Peace ls Flowing Like a Ri ver." SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -In the hope of easing the shortage or bedside nurses, the state Board of Registered Nursing has ruled that California nurses can prescribe medicine. State officials and some nursing leaders believe that expanding nurses' responsibilities will make nursing a more desirable hne or work, and help al- leviatetheshortage. Cali!ornJa's 200,000 registered nurses would be enough to fill the need if they could be attracted to bedside nursing, officials say. MANY OF THE NURSES, tired of long hours and relatively low pay, turn to higher-paying jobs in public health, nursing education or nursing ad- ministration. according to hospital officials. Top pay for a nurse at San Francisco General Hospital is $22,204, officials said. California law allows hospitals, doctors and nurses to determine ·•standard procedures" to gov- ern nursing duties. The state Board of Registered Nursing has decided that nurses can prescribe such items as birth control pills and antibiotics for the treatment of infection. PUC halts utility ,µ/,probe THE END IS HERE! with MOUSE·O·LEUM TH• HANDS-OFF METHOD ... you NEVER touch a mouse again! The nurses would choose from a list or hospital- approveddrugs, under the board's plan. "That's what doctors do. and there's no reason a nurse can't do it," said Barbara Brusstar, a nurse and the executive secretary of the registered nursing board. "THE TRAINING NURSES have today is what doctorshadonJySOyears ago," she said. Doctors have strongly opposed the change, argu- ing that patients deserve the best possible medical care, and that only physicians can provide it. "You can have a situation where a high school graduate with two years of junior college education is prescribing, and that's a very delicate, sensitive area," said a spokesman for the CaHfomia Medical Association. "How far can you take this -to complicated heart surgery? Where do you draw the line?·· Offi cials say one of every five bedside nursing jobs in the state is vacant. and, because of the shortage. some patients have been refu sed ad- mission for treatment -even to intens1 ve care . It added that electricity rates today in Angeles. which relies on gas and oil, average 2 times more than in Sacramento, which gets mo t of its power from the Rancho Seco nuclear pla t and hydroelectric sources Nun charges torture SAO PAULO, Brazil CAP> Sister Marly fo'atima Lino, a Brazilian nun and member of the o . der of The Good Shepherd Jesus. has accused two d tecti ves here ortorturing her with electric shocks. The detectives denied the charge. and Poli Chief Rubens Liberatori said he was investigati the accusation. The 26·year-old nun said she was wearin civilian clothes when arrested on a Sao Paulo stre by the detectives who claimed she was a thief Sh said s he had no documents with her to prove her ide lily. Quantities and assortments are limited, so hurry in! SAN FRANCISCO (AP> The California Public Utilities Com - lrlission has once again halted a probe or ad- vertising by power com - panies. "It bas not been dem- onstrated that direct- ing the labeling of utility advertisements with tespect to whether the Jh a reholder s o r ratepayers pay for them ii in the public interest or ~easonable," the PUC said Tuesday. KILLS MICE • DISPOSABLE S•mo•v Fotd ~ntJ ft'uow ""''V Wt• sell firs t quality and tli~t·o11tinul'tl mc:rc·h<tndi~t.· rrom St•a r~ l<d;,iil and l ·at a log Dist ri hut ion. "\Va~" pril'l'S quotl'd :in· tht• n·gul<ir pn1·1 ·~ at \\h1d1 tlw lll•ms \.\l'l'I' formt.•rh orft'l'l'd hv 1 'atalog or 111 mall\ Sl'ar~ Ht.•tail stun·~ a·rnun<I tlw 1·c;u11lr~ Originally begun in 1976, the investigation w as resumed in No- Yember 1978. The PUC •anted to know whether •as and electric utilities lb the state should be re-cau I red to identify who paid for their ads - oustomer s o r .iockholders. The commission 4irect~ its staff to ex- j)ore the feasibility and tost of preparing an in- formaUon pamphlet ex- pJa ining the agency's '9temaking procedures. .current policy on ad- y~rllaing expenditures '>'utilities and the way In • blch expenses are al- c ate d between atepayer1 and •~eholden. . LA .JOLLA (AP) -An ternatlonally known nett r~arcber bu lped under prenure. ter H••n yeara a1 l•f of labor•torJ r•leH of tll1 e San 1•10 Veteraau .1~•1Mtal. Or. Jobe C. •• 1wperv1Hd llalf 'Oi nearly 100 wtdl •na•al bud1et of -·. •NON-TOXIC •EFFECTIVE . ... .. ~ ~ ' ' . " . • • ... .. • " . Free to the Publle FOCUS ON COMMUNITY HEALTH CO-SPONSORED BY PACIFICA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY STOP SMOKING CLASS 12 HOUR COURSE FOR SMOKERS 7:00 • 9:00 P.M . Monday, Mnrch 9 Wednesday. March 11 Monday. March 16 Wednesday, March 18 Monday, March 23 Wednesday. March 25 TO REOIST£1l PHONE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY 752·8600 ARMEN YUPPA CONFERENCE CENTE IHl9 Oe .. wart Street (~ lloelt Soutb of flbln) H11n ton leath Callfornla SEARS 310 POCKET CAMERA ettect1ve3/4re 1 SEARS KS 1000 MANUAL 35mm ELECTRONIC FLASH BUil T-IN SLR with 50mm f1. 7 LENS was29.50 NowS1999 32 DRAWER ORGANIZER ONLY $849 WM149" Now sgggg 2 8 ft #91327 . cu. . REFRIGERATOR •AVAILABLE IN CHERRY OR ALMOND wae289" Now •228'' (9 Only) INFANTS' WALKER AND CASE was 25500 Now~15999· (11 only) 6.0 cu. ft. -#90502 REFRIGERATOR wu2~. Now $19.899 , , • ~ unnoticed in tbe recent action by tbe Oranae Couty Board ol SUpervilon to approve the John Wayne A1rpmt muter plan wu a dlrecUve that airport offlclaJa develop a PfOC,l'.am of aanctiom that would apply to .. ,,.. ow,_en ol Jet aircraft that violate certain nolff atan· dardl. So-called noise fee pro,ram.1 have been implemented in eeveral f orel1n countries, but never in the United Stat.ea. '!be very menUon of the phrase raiaea the ire of the. airllne industry. For aooct reason. Under such a pro1ram, Jet operaton -be they commercial airlines or private cor· porations -would have to be accountable for the nolae their j• produce. If the operators became doppy about their takeoff procedures or other factors that could make their aircraft excesaively noisy, tbey would have to pay. Operators should be accounta~le. But there la nothin1 in the county's existing noise abatement proaram to ~chieve accountability. A letter iA all an operator can expect to receive if maximum ooiAe standards are ex- ceeded. Revenue generated from such a noise fee program could be used in several ways. For example, the $500,000 annual cost of the county's ooiAe monitoring and abate- ment program could be off set. Nor would it be unrealbtic for some of the money to go to the residents who suffer dally under the thunder of departing jets. One airport expert who testified recently during a state airport noise variance bearing said imposition of noise fees should not be viewed as punitive. It's hard to see how such a proaram could be viewed as anything but that. In the case of John Wayne Airport, however, a little punis.hment might go a long way to lowering the noise. A brake on crim.e Of the 100,000 persons released from state prison each year after completing their sentences or being granted parole, as many as 60 percent will be re-arrested and sent back to prison The rost of this so-called recidivism is staggering - an average of S13,500 per year to maintain a man in a state prison. Not to mention, of course, the cost to in- dividuals and businesses victimized by the thefts, fraud and burglaries that bring about the re-arrests. A solution of sorts may have been found in a program undertaken in Texas and Georgia. It's called TARP (Transitional Aid Research Project) and it involves pay- ing ex-prisoners unemployment benefits for up to six mqnths after their release. t-0 give them time to search rorwork. The amounts paid are modest -$63 a week in Texas and $70 in Georgia -but they provide subsistence and re- move the burden of support from the prisoners' usually· poor families. Most important, they remove the need to return to crime to make a living. Researchers from the University of California who examined the TARP project determined that prisoners in the transition program had fewer re-arrests than those receiving no benefits -and the longer they worked the less likely they were to return to crime. Since it 's obviously hard for an ex-prisoner to find a job, the idea of providing transitional help seems valid. Certainly it could be less expensive than payin1 for the revolving door of recidivism. Marriage penalty Once again this April, two-income married couples with both husband and wife making approximately the same salaries will be stung by the Internal Revenue Service. And no relief is in sight until at least next year. The idea of permitting husbands and wives to file joint tax returns initially was benevolent. With only one income there'd be a notable tax saving over the amount paid by a single person making the same sum. And if a working wife made much less then her husband, formerly often the case, the tax bite could be reduced by aver~ging their joint income. But with fem ale pay scales steadily rising, this bas backfired by boosting two-income families iJ\.to higher percentage tax brackets. For example, if both husband and wife make about $22,000 a year, pooling their income <as requfred by the IRS> puts them in a $44,000 tax bracket and will cost them $11,000 in taxes. That's $2,000 more than they'd pay if they were permitted to report their incomes in- dividually. There's a bill in Congr..ess to correct this "marriage penalty" but it won't even cross the committee threshold until later this year. So working couples once more will pay the tax penalty for maintainin1 thelr marital bonds. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 15e0. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 842-4321 . Boyd/Weightlifters BJ L. M. MYD Oeahy man, tissued over u What young weightlifters thought with soft 1pon1ea. · don't know that old wel1hWf-wonders why be didn't tera do know ls the body· leave it be. Or so I'm told. bulldinl iame comes with a catch at the end of It. Once you amau those pretty bul1es. you've 1ot to keep at it 10 they'U atay toned up. Stop the uerclles aad they turn Oabby. Many a larse However many &4 trillion iJ, that'• the number of p011i- ble combinaUons of inherited characteristics a child ean 1et trom its parenll. An Egyptian film critic In a Cairo daily recently report· ed: There iJ a new Arab star ln the U.S.A. foUowin« in the foot.steps ot Omar Sharif. He la Tunisian and bla name ii Ali Mai·raY(.'' Q . Wbo was tb• flrtt f amoua penon to 1aU Into thla country put th• Statue ol Llbert.y? A. Henry Ill. Stanley of "Dr. Llvfa11tone, I pre· IUIDl"famt. . ... wllo .,... the ....... .......... ,.....,tel to come from ti•• &outb. Tbole wtlo Deed tbe llDallllt htbad lliii eome trom tbt MW Wm.-.. . Wedn..Oay, March"· 1981 Thomas P. Haley/Publl1htr Barbara Krelbfch/Edltorl•I Peot Editor 5 .H11man rights policy shelved W ASHlNOTON -President Rea•aa a.nd hla 1ee,.tary of atate, Alexander !Ult, bave made clear that concern for bum an rttbta wW take a back aeat ln U.S. forelp pollcy to the fltht .. alnlt 1Dtematiqaa1 ter· rorlsm. But the man wbo bat ~ ap- pointed to tbe human rt1bta ebair at the State Depart- ment, Ernest W. Lefever, may be m~ intranst1ent than the pres· ldent i n - tends . B y moat ac · counts , Lefever la a rt1ht·win1 fanatic wbo seriously be lie ves the United States should pay no attention to the bum an riebts record. however deplorable, of regimes it chooses to s upport with mllltary and economic ald. BE WAS so ea1er to take com- mand of the Human Ri1bta Bureau that be baa served for a month without formal nomina- tion and without pay. Lefever has been an un- abHMd lupport« ol milltarJ dJctaton ranciDI from t.be late abah ol Iran to UM cllctator al Nlcar.,ua, Anutaalo Somou. He 1et1 worked up over repreuloa only when it 11 pl'.C:· Uced by pro-eommunllt iovera· menta. But Ul1 ruler per~ved 11 antl-commwallt, 1D Lefever'• vifw, la delervln1 ot American frtendlblp. Lefever'• wrltiqa bave alto appeared in two South African periodlcall that were revealed to have been heavily financed by the white minority iovemmenl 11 part of a campaltn to purchase favorable menUon 1D the international press. To bla credit, Lefever haa made no secret of bis opJ*itlon to human rllbta u a criterion for U.S. relailona with foreien governments. ln 1979, for exam· ple, be told a House aubcommit· tee forthrlpUy: "IN MY VIEW, the United States should remove from the statute books all clauses that establish a human righta stand- ard or condition that mu.st be met by another sovereign gov- ernment." Somewhat less to his credit, Lefever . as head of an ul· '~ treconaervatlve Waahln1ton tblnk tank, the Ethics and P\lbUc Polley Center, bu ac- ctpted money from the Swill· backed NeatJe contlomerate ln retum for attacb oa th01e who oppoae Nestle'• questionable marketmc of infant formula ln Third World nation.e. NESTLE 18 trylnt to wean Third World mot.hen away from breut feediq, despite scientiftc evidence tbat tbe uae of formula bat b.ad dlautroua effecta on in- futa 1D tbeM countries. A ,re- cent BruU1aD 1overnment aur· vey, f« aample, linked the sue· cnatul N..U. promotion of the formula to an tncreaae ln infant malnutrlUoo from 9 percent to 30 percent ln rural communlUes. Lefever vehemently denies the "chocolate connection," but Nestle documents show that company officials were "somewhat concerned that the company should not be seen as the dominant subscriber to the Ethics and Public Policy Center." But the memo went on eo say that "there are ways in which this matter can be satisfactorily handled," and stated that Nestle planned to "give every en- \ Ha.D ~STIU,9M ... l'U. JJ$T' ~ nE ~H (ff MIS O~R . I Andy Rooney couraiement" to Lefever'• pro- NeaUe propa1anda. AMONq LBPBVB&'S favorite tar1eta ror obloquy baa been t.be World Council of Cburchea, which be hu .characteri&ed aa domloated by "Mardata" marching under the banner of reU1too. . IntereallnglYI enough, sources told my reporters Lucette Lagoado and Julie Koeterlits that Lefever himself wu an or- dained min1ster. He served with the World Council's U.S. af- filiate. the National Council ol Churcha, in the early 1950s. Hla title was associate executive director for lntemaUonal Justice and goodwill. Lefever Insists that be is a "demonstrated champion" of human rights, and says be has been mallgned by the press. He claims his statements have been taken out of context. Lefever also insists that the trouble with Jimmy Carter's perspective on human rightl was that jt was too narrow, and ignored major violators lite the Soviet Union. He dis missed Carier's human rights policy aa "romanticism " that de m- ons trate d a "selective morality." FRIENDS IN NEED: When lbe American Emba ssy i n Islamabad, Pakistan, was over· run by a howling mob in late 1979, two Pakistanis risked their lives to proted U.S dependents from harm. Now the two Pakistanis , Siraj Patel and Col. Ismail Khan, want to come to the United States. Thei r devotion to the American women and children du r ing the embassy attack ear ned them disfavor among their countrymen. After I wrote about their heroism, Rep. Lester Wolff, D· N.Y .. introduced a private bill to give the two men immigrant vis· as. But Wolff was defeated in November, and the bill died. in the final confusion or the closing session. However, Patel and Khan have not been ro,gotten OD Capitol Hill. Rep. Steve Solarz. D·N.Y .. has taken up the cause. He is preparing lo introduce another private bill that will let the two Pakistanis start life anew in the country they served so well during a time of crisis. We can't go hack to 'good old days' • • • People aren't laughing at Ronald Reagan's old movies this week the way they were a year ago. That's because the changes be bas proposed are not your average, everyday changes that any new president proposes when he first lakes office, and there is nothing funny about them. Reagan is proposing that we stop governing ourselves the way we have been for the past 48 years and start let- ting the COUD· try run itself the way it did before Franklin Roosevelt gave the na· lion the New Deal. When Roosevelt toot office during the Great Depression in 1933, one out of every two gov- ernment workers was a mailman -if that Jives you aome idea bow few bureaucrats we had in Washington then. Now . one out of every six Americana worb for some form of 1ovemment, federal, state or local. BACK BEFORE Roosevelt, the government fought our wars printed our money, deliver~ our mall and made sure we didn't all die of smallpox, but lt didn't 1et into every comer of our lives the way lt does now. The wbole idea of 1ovemment was difterent. Before the New Deal, pemment clldil't pretend lt bad the power to make U1 rlcb or poor or happy or miserable, dependlnt on what laws tt paaaed. It JU1t tried to keep some order wbUe we fou1ht amont ounelvet for the money. The aploston of 1ovemment occurred between 1DO and 1.ll50. The population of lbe United Statet lncreued by 23 percent. Tbt number ot people worttnc for the federal aov·~-ln· creaMCl by m percent. TBS NBW DEAL tbeol'J <A 1ovft'lllMllt was that if we bad enou1h ol lt, aonnament could solve every Jl'Oblem tbere waa. For 1 wblle It lilM*ecl u tbGulla It mi•bt won,-. . ......., wmt well .n... WwM WM' D u.l lillo' th• um.. ,,. ........... ~mr._.•tllltllllrew•e. ............... IJ Uie la\e 1..... ilm01t .. ,~....,,.tMrew•toO much. At the same time, things started falling apart in the na· tion. Crime was up, moral stan- dards were down. Unemploy· ment was up, company profits were down. The Russians were up, we were down. Assuming there ls a rela- tions hl p between national decline and too much govern· ment, the American people in 1980 voted for someone who promised to lead them back to the pre-Roosevelt way of doing things. Don't loot here for any opinion a bout whether President Reagan is right or not. That's the thing I like best about not be- ing president. I don't have to mate hard decisions Ute that. I JUST HOPE Reagan and this kid economist he's got, David Stockman, know what Art Hoppe they're doing. In his first speech on the nation 's economy, Rea~an quoted one of the great thinkers of our age, Walter Lippmann. He used the quote to support his theory that we have to return to the free enterprise system. "WE CAN create the incen- tives which take advantage of the genius of our economic system, a system, as WaJter Lip- pmaM observed more than 40 years ago, which for the first time in history gave men •a way of producing weaJth in which the good fortune of others multiplied their own.'" Mr. Reagan probably hasn't read u much of Walter Lipp- man u I have. It's not that I'm a heavy reader but I've kept a book of Lippmann's next to my bed for 2S years and I often dip into it before going to sleep. In 1929. before we even had the kind of socialism that Reagan now wants to get away from, Lippman anticipated the whole cycle: "WHEN THE TIME comes. they are bound to find that the administration of industry under socialism, no less than under capitalism, depends on the character or the administrators. Corrupt, stupid and grasping functionaries will make at least as big a muddle of socialism as stupid, selfish and acquisitive employers ca n make of capitalism." And so it came to pass. Under the form of socialism we've had in 1his country, functionaries did make a muddle of it -just as those capitalists had ln the rirst part of the century. There never was any golden age or free en· terprise to which we can return. • • • but Thne wants us to try I wu not a bit surprised when the freshly shaven1 nattlly unif onned driver of tile 31 bus steppeddownfrombiaaeattobelp a stout, elderly womu in newly w b1tened tennis a hoes aboard. "The m01t important point," be said, anappinl her a salute, "la not to re- gard old peo. pie as some obecure 'they' or 'tbem .' We're taUdal about our f u t u r e selves." l ldentitled him Im · mediately u a reader of People, one ol the teven Tlmt, Inc., ma11aln11 tlaat ... concurrenUy bombard· in1 lbetr 1ubaertt..n wllb 21 aqarate e4ltor1a1 1ermon1 on the theme of ••American Renewal." And what a world ol •ood they .... doln1t 0 TBANK YOU," ~ elderly womaa, obvtoualy a Timt. reader, ..W to the drtYer. "But , n •• llM nmemlter t.Ut tbe r:'C::I:-at 1M ltalt ol· WU Mt Jtllt to ...... ..... _._.,_ .... bMt tMlt to •taWla• Jutice1 ---....... ~ulDo ua promote the general welfare.•· "You're absolutely rl1ht, ma'am," said a colored (nee black) teen-ager in saddle shoes, leaping up to give her bis seat. ••And pleue Inform me If I am playing Mantovanl too loudly on my little radio. As Henry Grunwald, editor-in-chief of Time, Inc., says, there 11 much evidence that, ln reaction to the permiaaive acesses or the Six- ties and Seventies, we young people have bel\ID to discover a desperate need for atandardl and that the aelf-wonblp ol the '111, decade' 11 Ii vine way to a new aenae ol rnutual 1upport." "TRAt"tl nus," aireed a youn1 secretary, wearln1 penny loafers and cuJtur.cl pearll and carrylnt a rolled·UP copy of Fortune. "llut oa a more prac· ttcal level, etalltarlan1 bue ne1lffW Ult truth that equalltJ muat live In ._.ton wtth other valu" Juat aa cberllbed. Or, to put It lnOtber way, I bave de- cided 11a1Jwt Mettnc a career and will lnltelld devote myMlf to aearchiq for )Ir. Rt•bt." "Good thtnlrfn., mlla.'' u&d a skinny old 1••tleman ln a baMball cap, looklu up from bis copy ol SPGN DIUltrM.ld. .. Thole who "'" UM -. c.w-tept wW be bitter ..... to .., into other areas of life and C!OD.· tribute very effectively. bOi.b for themselves and society." "Yea," sald a saJlor ln the back seat, "the years ahead will off er opportunities as well u risks for the U.S. and a re- vltall&ed forei1n an" defeDH policy must late account of both." "But there la aJway1 a ri11i: that the reforms proposed by Time wUJ lead to unforeseeable new problems,·' cautioned a youn1 111an with necktie and brlelcue. "YOU AaE for1ettln1," 1 aald, u l pW.Jed the cord for my 1top, "wbat Kr. Grunwald told UI readers ol Life. To believe ill an American rene•aJ on, mUlt ultimately beUeve ln Individual Amerlnn1, tboee countle11 clUI-who IO about tlaelr IA"' wllb coara1e and patteace, •laDO com~ W c~ pen..._... Tbete are buman vlrtu• with a very Amertcu acceat, IDd tbe •unlJ mal\ ia· apln a._. otloft ud bofe,'' A1 I 1t111ped down froin tbe bus, I wu nwanled t.1 mJ f•llo:ri::--witJa • Utf7 fare .. _ .. ac:-. d•rful --,_ Urll AIDlit•!ft Renen: ·· "HaYe a alee dayl" ~ ibOtlted. ........... __ _,,__..._._ -------· .. Orange Coaat Dally Piiot/Wednesday, March 4, 1981 s Posse · 'rides' against regulations 'I By PB'l'Ea AaNnT ---letM '""!\C.V ' fl • TIGERTON, Wis. -Meet tbe Posse, 1980 atyle. As in the days of the Old West, tbe)' come from the local community but now they ride pickup trucks, not horses. They wear bueball caps and well-pressed camouflage jacket.a instead of cow· boy hats and stained leather chaps. They stack semi-automatic military rifles in gun racks and hide .451 in their pockets in place of saddle·holstered Winchesters or alx-1uns at their hips. INSTEAD OF ASSEMBLING IN saloons, they gather at private mobile home parks. But they share somethJng with the posses of the West -a willingness to ride against the bad guys. The problem is, their deflnJtion of bad guy doesn't usually square with the sheriff's. They call themselves lhe Posse Comitatus - literally. Power of the County. In rural Wisconsin where they are most numerous. they are in con- siderableconllict with the law. Taking root in the past decade in the poor scrublands or northt!rn Wisconsin. the organization is trying to spread its philosophy or "power to the people" by tax revolt and other activities against state and federal regulations. It is reaching beyond the farmers to a wider audience in the dis- contented middle class. members aa ''deadly, cold-blooded, serious, but men of lntearity. They want t.o arm the people to buck what they' 1ee H a national monetary. tax and court conspiracy.·• Stale officials are Jess sympathetic, particularly judges who sometimes receive com- plaint letters from the Posse with this letterhead: "The Committee To Save Judges From Hangin& Even Though They Deserve It." Rep. David Obey, D-Wls .• has referred to the posse as "an extremist group with st.ormtrooper fantasies." The Milwaukee Journal has ca lled fo r "constant vigilance against the threat represented by the Posse's qjgotry and disrespect for the laws of duly elected, representative government." He said the poase has held joint paramillt~ry traininC se$1ion.s in tbe Sierra Nevada mountain• of Callfornia with the Klan and the Minutemen, a group 11rith a pbllQIOPbY ol radlm and ri&bt-wln& politics. Wickstrom said he bu ottered to send them "Green Beret-style" training teams he has . organized. Membership numbers are not known, outio::> leaders claim lo have cells in every state bu t 11A. Hawaii, with up t.o 2,000 members i~ 13 Wisconsin }b counties. Wickstrom received 16,000 votes last .,0 year in a run for a U .S. Senate seat from ·b Wisconsin; some 2 million vote.s were cast. • Posse Comitatus claims legitimacy from . English common law that authorized sheriffs to '!! seek assistance fro m the citizenry. In the J~ PEOPLE INTERVIEWED IN TIGERTON American West, the sheriff summoned the posse lo •tiJ Dells expressed concern about Posse activities. ' chase wrongdoers. But modern Posse me mbers Some suggested that large supplies of ammunition prefer to decide for themselves what is right or ,,o and guns were buried in the woods and that a wrong. .q system of underground bunkers bad been built. rH The group's leaders, who say they are less IN THE OLD WEST IT WAS always wrong to r1f concerned about speaking out now that a con-be a cattle rustler or a card cheat. often wrong to ,11 servative administration is in Washington, openl y be a Mexican or an lndJan and sometimes wrong identify with hate groups. to be a visitor from the East searching for law and . •'The KKK and the Minutemen know what we order. ru are talking about." said J ames Wickstrom, who For the Posse Comilatus, Jt is always wrong to it. describes himself as the "new national director of be a Jew or an agent for the Bureau of Alcohol ... ~ counterinsurgency of th'e posses of America." Tobacco and Firearms, often wrong to be a rent •'> POSSE CHIEF RECRUITS MEMBERS ' Jame• Wlckatrom head• armed group Wickstrom, a Vietnam veteran, said that while collector or a county official enforcing zoning reg· his group was "psychologically blended" with ulations and sometimes wrong to be a reporter rl JACK ANDERSON, AN investigative reporter su~h other groups, there were no plans to con· <See ARMED MEN. Page A14> •G for t~e West Bend C Wis.) News, describes Posse solid ate. 0 ~--,.,...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'"~~~~~~-- 15 Con11en1en1 Locauons Huntington Beac h ' Pacific Coast Hwy So. of Pier Newport Beach 1400 Pacific Coast Hwy ·-------------------------------------.. ! Why Are Doctors Recommending The ! i Pritikin Better Health Program? ! ·I I I I More'and mote pnys1C1dns ~re • MARK BROOKS 'My blood pressure I I •ttommen<11n9 1ne ~ind 01 Orel ano wenl Clown Jrom 1401104 10 132188 I I Ille slyle cnanae\ ~ ve o.onee•l'O Bi>tore Prih~on our qrocery bill averag«J I W1m the p,,,, , s~•le• Hl'1 th S7.J/wk now,, s SJ4 1w~ I I Proqram Memoer~n10 you tdn • OAVtO 5 RUSSON 1 hael a I I 1e<1uce 11s~ taclJ•~ o• "earl • tO<T'O e1e onys1<:a1 du11nq lhe si.lh week I I 01sease nyoenensoon 01aoe1e~ ot me course ano my oocJor told me I I I increase enerqy dna improve '"~ now "clve lhP blOOO cnem1s1ry ot a I I au~1o1y ot you• ,•e T""'" J•e nc,, '""dQer dn<l ye1 I am 40 years 01<1 I I t1ose 10 ? 000 n1rmoP•. Rp,u;1~ 01 • Corne to 1he 60 minute tree I I P111ik1n mPmOe•\ ' comphm1nt1ry lecture 10 le.irn abOol I • R I A f El SHAW 't\MllOu' t~r tne P11l1kon Bene• He.inn P1ogram 11 I P111o1un P•OQ•J"' wou1on t "" nere Memoe1s111p Hom .i Heallh I JI in ~~ · no1f,t~ro1 went '' ,... Reo•esenlahve Our Jascona11n9 dUOIO I 14!! to •llt "d•e no rnore rnQ·nd "sua1~ are ddv.inced beyona .iny bOOk I I 1 ~e 1os1 b8 oounn~ Nn morP oain on ine pr09r.am Come Clec•Cle lor I I no mmP meo1r ,111on· • ' 1u\I vour\ell Marl< vour caienaar I I oe4uMu I I I I NEWPORT BEACH •• 1 Lido Marina Yillue 1 I BIOg 3700 S<tott 1or ~s ,.,., oll N•W1>0n·S 10 I I v .. t'ft°e~~·s:f~".:te.ao I I Wed., Morch 4 ot 7:10 P."" I I 1'!.ra., Morch 5 ot 7:10 """ I I 1 S-. Morch I ot 6:00 """ I I ,0~ 1NrOHAT1011 cAu 11 u 1 UH~7 COLLECT '11111«111 HTTER HtAllH '110GAAM' I I •~0''"'"1 Dr !l'lr C.t .. •O'"'"' 8!MllJ O' AtiJ''~".-"0 Nu'S"1Q BA~ P.CNC1"' ~o 0140' ''>' 1• cont4<1 rw>t;1s J ,_ ---------------------------------- The HUNGRY YEARS ... I Rate Effective 3/5/81 ] 5.11 .8°/o · 14.383 °/o' ·~111 ..,,. '1111""" a t<tOstanhl fOffe<tut• fOf eaoty ·•.,1'10rt,.M Annual Yield • •II_...., l"O "''•-' -• •o "'"''"' on-1 IQt OM -•• 1111a ,.,.. lllle'_.I Cloe9 nol -n<I Oii l~oS l'IMI ol llCCOUlll io ru FAR WEST 'SAVINGS HUNIMTON llACH YtiJrSawtng1 llflGred To M00,000 19114 Magnolia At GOlfteld AcfOM "°"' 1(-Mort Nl\WOlf llACH «Xl1 MocMhur Blvd Near JombotM ~ood Semng Callfornlan1 Since 1111 To offer a growing popu- lace a better place to live, work and play in one of California's most desirable environments was an ambitious dream envisioned in the City's Gene ral Plan. And by combining a genuine affection for the land with t~oughtful planning a nd development, The frvine Company, the people and City government of Irvine are bringing the dream to life. Irvine's growth contin- ues to be carefully guided , by two important factors. The C ity's fars ighted, liv- ing G eneral Plan. And concerned residents from the community, City gov- e rnment and The Irvine Company who work to- gether to make it happen. We roay not always see eye-to-eye on every detail, but the result has been, and will continue to be, a city tha t gets bl'tter to li ve in every day. The dream is continu- ing to come true. Hous- ing, recreation, sh opping, educa tion, employment. All the things tha t an.• making Irvine a uniquely ba lanced and dynamic city are born of careful plan- ning. It's a commitment mad e to the community before the first ground breaking ceremony. A continuing comm1tment you can see in progtess every day. For information on this growin'g new city, please vis it or call The Irvine Company In forma - tion Center. C ulver Drive exit off San Di ego Fwy. (I -405). To corner of Barranca. (714) 551 -1500. Good elanning is making the <lream come tme. -~----' ._...,, ~ •)} ,fl ! ?. lfl ', .... 11 q I ' . . '· ,, .I ·'· ... h .1 •t " .,, l'. II '11 •q ,, ,. .. 11 , .1 •I rl. ·fJ ' .. 't!r. -~ •'•l ,,,, .:q "' • ;, J '.d q >' q . :1 .,. ·~ Q ,,t) ,, ·-~ OrMge Coatt Deity PllotrNednnday, March 4, 1981 The Treasury is going, out of. bu·siness, and from now until the da we finally close our doors, you'll find fabu ous bargains at all -eight Los Angeles area stores! -.. Shop early, and don't forget our special hours during all clearance events: MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. SATURDAY: 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. SUNDAY: CLOSED . ·- , -~ 1U>& llldt IW ..... rt ... : 'IDOO a. a"' 91. •' • I I'*"'° E. Oerlon ... = 700 Cly DwM So. NuaMs: 3520 TYtlr It.• ... AM: 9>0 8. lltleof St.• T.,._: ZlO'S , ...... ,. lhd. • W11 lll•MI • 21900 Vklary Blvd. ,~r• = I • 1L J ' . . '' r H/F Orange Coast Dally PllotfNednnday, March 4, 1981 ------N-Y--:--E-C~? o---=M:----:-P~O-SI_T_E_T~RA_N_S~A-C_TI_O_N_S_, ·~c. .UOY AYIONS t•CUID• '"•0110-T ....... ., ... MIDWIST, l'AC.,IC, ..... M>STOfll, oa1.-011 AltD CINCINNATI STOCll " -t~\\. F1 . da ll(~ANGll MIOllU,l'OeTtOaY~MC•MDAllOlll •. ll .. U · I.\' '" on •' . oranges victor Most of the Callrornia oranse crop Is eaten fresh. It's tbe home or lhe easy-to·peel navel orange. Most of the Florida orange crop is processed into orange juice. lrs lhe home of the juicy orange. John McPhee, in his book. "Oranges," put it this way: • 'CaUfornians say that ii you want to eat a Florida orange, you have to get mto a bathtub first . . . ln Florida, it is said that you can run over a California orange with a ten-ton truck and not even wet the pavement." Mc Phee's book was written 25 years ago. Who's wi nning today in this cross·country rivaJry over oranges? The answer would have to be: Florida. More and more o f th e orange erop , e v e n i •n California . is being processed into frozen con- centrate. Hard- 1 y anyone MILTON MllllWITZ ... squeezes fresh orange juice in the home any more At t he same time, consumption of fresh oranges has nosedived In 1950, Americans were eating fresh oranges at the rate of 27 oran~es per person a year By 1960 per capita consumption had dropped to 19 oranges a year. Now it's down lo 12. ORA NGE GROWERS IN FLORIDA have long benefitted from heavy promotional support. The F lorida Citrus Commission, a joint effort or the growers and the stale government. spends more than $30 million a year on advertismg. The funds for this advertising come from a levy on the growers. You 've probably seen t heir advertas· ing on television They run commercials pointing out that orange juice 1s "not just for breakfast any more.·· Some orange growers in California would like to see their state copy the Florida model They have proposed the formation of a California Navel Orange Commission lo promote the eating of fresh oranges. With fresh orange consumption in such a tailspin, you would think that all the California growers might be in favor of this plan. But they're not At least the leaders hip of Sunkist Grower. Inc has said flatly that 1t wants no part of it SUNKJST GROWERS IS ONE of the nation's largest farm cooperatives. It was organized an 1893 to market the oranges of s mall growers. Today, its rank\. include 6.500 citrus growers in California and Arizona. In 1980, Sunkist sold more than 3 billion pounds of fresh fruit grown by its members. bringing home sales of $645 million Various attempts hav<' been made to establish brand names for fresh fruits and vegetables but none has been as successful as Sunksst It has been a reg. istered trademark smce 1909 It was first s tamped on lhe skins of oranges m 1926. The people who run the Sunk1st co-op today do not want to forge any partnerships with the state of California or wi th Citrus growers who are outside the Sunkist rotd They fear that a promotional campaign on behalf of navel o ranges en gener al would undermine their brand name It would, in other words. be Like Bayer aspinn supporting a campaign for generic as pirin While the Sunkist people art' fighting against the idea of an umbrella campaign to promote the eating or fresh oranges. they arc pushing ahead on other fronts. FOR EXAMP LE, YOU may have seen the ads for Sunk1sl orange soda and Sunk1st dret orange soda. This might send nutritionists up the wall, but Sunkist Growers is cashing in on its brand name by licensing it to a big Massachusetts bottler and theater owner, General Cinema Corp. Last year Sunkist collected $8 mtllion in royalties from General Cinema. Fresh orange consumption may be going down but soft drink sales are going straight up. So who knows. Sunkist Growers may be able to find other products sn need of a wholesome brand name? Sunkist hot dogs. Sunkist potato chips Sunkist tarts They may make so mu<·h money licensing their valuable brand name that they can forget about growing oranges STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ··~ u• 15 .. lb>o. ""' ,,, 4 ' 2''~ • t ,. .. lS'• 111 .. .. - NEW YORIC(API Final Oo,..JonH avQ!.. tor TutMIAY Mu l STOCKS JO lrtcl 10 Tm IS Utl bS Stk lrtclu• Tr•n Utils 6S Su oii.n Hl!jtl I <tW Clow C"9 •n SS wt.Of "1 •S M 01 11 '1 3'7 91 ..01,01 393 ll JU '1 0 1J 107 97 108 •1 107 JI 108 08 0 OJ ln 06 J7S.J6 M 07 370 11> 1.70 '°"·IOO ?.H0, 100 S71.100 7,031,600 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK (AP! Mer t Ml'• 40~- 2&•, -~ i.•+ .,. . "' ... P~• AMERICAN LEADERS )Jl, Jtl.~ ,..,,, n., .,,. , .... .. ... '"' .. ,.. ''• • 1 ,~m ~ ' .,, • l:lio I .. .. .. 5' .. utc'fu Up 11.e Up 11:f OUp •. p •.o Up U Up U Up a.a uo .., Vo U Up ,.4 Viii .1 Vo ·' u11 7J ~= ::8 roo:J. day AOvMC..S ..1 Oe<llntd fWl..I bll Ur><f\e,..cl :I'll )'6 Tot•I In~ 19% 1'11 Ntw nl~ ., 99 Ntw '°""' tO ,, WHA1 ..... ex OIO NEW YORK (AP) M•r l P~v Adv-Tow. o;ro ~cllNd 33" m Un<NnQld ttS 217 TOl•I I•~ IOS ICM Ntw nlQM ,. n Nt wl-,, • METALS Copfff' U""'"8S CMI• a OOUtld, U.S. o-.u .... llOfl\ l.•H J2.)t C•nt~ e POUn4. llflC •l'Ao CMlt a pound, dtltlltt.0 Tl11 '4.•S•s Melell WMk comPOJltt lb A lt1lfll-1• onh • DOVnd N Y Me r<llO' ~.00 per .Ila~ l'l4IU-"'5.00lroyo1., N Y SILVER NEW YOAlt fAPI H-y & Har....n silver lod.IY J11.S10, ofl $0.H e11ge1naro sllwtr Jl 1.00, oll H H . lebt'lcatt<l sll .. r \12 211, off IQ.lU. GOLD QUOTATIONS ,, I I I I Oran Co•t Dally PUot/Wednetda , March•. 1981 PUBLIC NO'l'JCE P'18UC NOTIC& •1Wll NOTICE OF OEATH OF ...,,.... •emu roca .. nou NOTIC. 011 DllATH Of' L L 0 V D H E H R Y NOTtC• OP DUTM OP .... ..._,., .. ~CMll> A•L M. ~·~ ak• CARTER eka LLOYD H. a a N •IT JOI• PM • ._::~':':......_ llL MIL Luf'Tll CA RT ER AH D 0 f' MOaAN alra a•N•IT J . TM -.......... ..,_ ND OP PaTITION TO PE TITlON TO AO· MOllAN atia ••N•IT lllMW'...,.,._: , DMINll'l'•R llTATE MINISTER ESTATE NO. MOllAN •l• allNI• JOHNCHIAUNZAaMCHUH • A·1WIM. A107'519. M 0 a AN •AND 0 P =·:.:~ =.M~ T 0 • I ' h • I r I , T 0 • ' I h • I r I , p • T I T ' 0.. T 0 A D -a.ti.el le<WMY ---.,. ..... Jttn tflclerlts, creditors btntfkfarl .. , creditors MINllTI• llTATI NO. ~,!1'*11''..., ..... .., •"4 contingent cl"tdltors of and contingent crtclltors of A· 1171'5 94 , ... :W-: -~arl M. LOftls, aka Carl Lloyd Henry C.rter aka T o a I I h t I r 1 , co•o• 1NTIUNATIONAL -Miiton l..o"'• and Ptf'10tlS Lloyd H. C.rt.r of trvlnt, btntflclarl11, creditors Mo1.01•os. 11•cc .. ,. Walllkr11 ho may bt otherwfs. In· Callfornl• and persons •nd contingent crtcllt4H'I of ==•1~~~.:.~· m.i. e;Httd In the wlll and/or who may bt othtrwlM In· Ernest Joseph Moran and All • .., IMlnatt ,....,.,. a1111 .,. s&att: terested lntMWllland/Of' p ersons who may be -··-_...,1Mu..w.rw1w1t11111 Acpetltlon has been flled estate. otherwise lnttrffttd In tht :.~~=~..:.!~, .. ._ .. y rocker National Bank A petition hes bMn fifed wlll and/or estate: T11a 1ace1i. • ••"•ir.• detc,._. .... n the Superior Court of by Josephine H. Nelson In A petition has been flltd 11•t11a!H'OPfftytoll9treiw.,.,'".,•: ~range Coul"ltY requesting the Superior Co~rt of by Elizabeth Ann Ballmer me,,~1~.:;. ': ·~4:,'·C:~ hat Crocker National Orange County requesting In th• Suf)frlor Court of POrt•l>I• ,.,. ~ ,..,., ._,,..1 ank be appointed as that Josephine H. Nelson Orange County requesting k110wu1 encrtfl.tm.,,_.1 .. 1.1ac•tM t»ersonal representative to be appointed as personal that e 1111 beth Ann 11 .,,. wu1 u111 S1r .. 1, '"' 0• tdmlnlster U\e estate of representative to ad· B•llmer be appointed as ~::':'~=~_c-•Y °'Ori,, ... (:arl M. LOftls of I rvlne, m In I st er the estate of personal representative to The _.ac., ....s""' oei. on or •••• .tallfornla (under the In· Lloyd Henry Carter (UQ• administer tht est1te of wlllc11, tfll bulk trlMlar 1' I•.,.'°"' \lependent Administration der the lndepeindent Ad· Ernest Joseph Moran, wm:::'C:-~1ca 00wney Melll .~f Estates Act>. The petl· ministration of Estates Fount• In v a 11 e y, omu. mu u 1\.1,,. Av•""'· ~Ion Is set for hearing in Act> The petition Is set for C11Uornla (under the In· OowMy, ""J'W"i• •ow Me•<" u. Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic hearing In Dept. No. 3 at dapendtnt Administration ·~~~•m• ....., .. maci •1111 C>awMy (:enter Drive West, Santa 700 Civic Center Drive, of Estates Act). The Pttl· Mel11 on1ce .,_, 8Mll o1 A,,_~ <lf'na, California 92701 on West, In the City of Santa tlon Is set for hearing In •us.. 11021 L• R11111 Avt1111•, March 2S, 1981at 9:30 a.m . Ana, Callfornla on March Dept. No. 3 at 700 Clvlc ~,:~!:'."':O. 1111"' cl•lm~ 1, : IF YOU OBJECT to the 18, 1981at9:30 a.m. Ctnttr Df'lve West, S.nta Marc1120.1t11. t r anting of the petition, IF YOU OBJECT to the Ana, California 92701 on T111a blltll trMller I• •w1«1 to s.c- ifOU should either appear granting of the petit ion, March 2S, 1911 at 9: 30 a.m . u .... ,0..111 u.c-nwrcia1 c-. ~t the hearing and state you should either appear IF YOU OBJECT to the 011":g.!'.!:, 1our objections or f ile at the hearing and state granting of the petition, OerwCN•rtNa "rltten objectiOftS with the your objections or file you should either appear Tr_,_,, 1 ;tourt before the hearing. written objections with the at the hearing and state :,,::.4:':.t-, !\'our appearance may be court before the hearing. your objections or file Tr-~• ~n person or by your at-Your appearance may be written objections with the By: 1uc11an1coru .... ~orney. In person or by your at· court before the hearing. p111111==.. eo.s• D•llY Piiot, ;l. I F Y O U A R E A torney. Your appearance may be March •·'"' 101w1 ~REDITOR or a cont· IF Y 0 U ARE A In person or by your at·--------- ~ngent creditor of the de· CREDITOR or a con· torney. aeased, you must file your t lngent creditor of the de-I F Y 0 U A R E A (lalm with the court or cea sed, you must file your CREDITOR or a con · ~resent it to the personal claim with the court or tlngent creditor of the de· f.epresentatlve appointed present It to the personal ceased, you must file your by the court within four representative appointed claim with the court or cnonths from the date of by the court within four present It to the personal fi rst issuance of letters months from the date of representative appointed as provided in Section first Issuance of letters as by the court within four 100 of the Probate Code of provided In Section 8700 of months from the date of California. The tim e for the Probate Code of first Issuance ofletters as filing claims will not ex· Callfornla. The time for provided In Section 700 of ire prior to four months flltng claims wlll not ex-the Probate Code of rom the date of the hearing pi re prior to four months Calif ornia. The time for noticedabove. from the date of the hear· filing claims wlll not ex- YOU MAY EXAMINE ing noticed above. pire prior to four months the file kepi by the court. YOU MAY EXAMINE from the date of the hear· If you are Interested in the the file kept by the court. Ing noticed above. t state, you may file a re· If you are interested in the YOU MAY EXAMINE .Quest with the court to re· estate, you may file a re-the file kept by the court. teive special notice of the quest with the court to re-If you are interested in the tnventory of estate assets ceive special notice of ttie estate, you may file a re· and of the petitions. ac· inventory of estate assets quest with the court to re· < o u n t s and reports and of the petitions, ac· celve special notice of the described in Section 1200 co unts and reports inventory of estate assets 6f the California Probate described in Section 1200 and of the petitions, ac· Code. of the Callfornia Probate co unts and report s Code . ART H u R S . described in Section 1200 . Cooksey, Coleman & LEVINE, ESQ. of the California Probate ttoward, By : Cal H . STELL, LEV I NE & Code. Coleman, Attorney at BOOKMAN Law, 17712 E. 17th Street, 727 WntSevtnUI Stf"fft William w. Soukup, At· V' est a Id g ., Tu s t i n , Los Angeles, Ca. 90017 tornty at Law, 1600 N . California 92610. (714 ) Published Orange Coast Broadway, Sult• 601, San· 132·2474 Daily Piiot, March 4, 5, 11, ta Ana, California 92706. Published Orange Coast 1981 1077-81 (714) 973-1644. Daily Pilot, M arch 3, 4, 10. -Published Orange Coast ~981 1065·81 PUBLIC NOTICE . Dally Piiot, March 4\ S4 1 t, 1981 016-81 NOTICE OF DEATH OF -PUBLIC NOTICE Nmn N 0 R MA V I R G I N I A PUBLIC NOTICE PICTIT10UUUSINHS ST RACHbTA ANO OF ------- NAMI STATRMINT p E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 . ~ICTIT10US •USINIU Oll~~~~o.~owl119 Perions are doing MINISTER ESTATE NO. Tiie l=:i-::,i::~·.~. OOlng CREATIVE ENCOUNTERS ST. A 107878. b•.oslMSS .. : S""5 Weslm lnst., 8011levard, T 0 a I I h e i r s I MARTIN ~ SAUNDERS, 1100 wn~o!:.!:''o"'~;::i~',2:':, Enlleld benefici.aries, creditors ~:::::;,:.": ~1.101. coat• MIM, Clrc••. Wulmhuttr Calllor11I• and contingent creditors of John A. Mtr1ln ~ AsMKltttt, Inc . tlMJ . Norma Virginia Strachota I c.111-. corper•llon, llOO Wllilllt• OOUQIH Olvld Sl<UI, 10101 MelOOy and persons who may be Blvd., Lot~. Catllomla f005l ~~ Drive, c;a.-. Grove, CalllMnla ot!lerwlse interested in the la c~:~~ c!i.5=.'ci.1~:!:n~::;~· This buslnen IS conducted by • Wiii and/Of" estate: Tllh 1141sl,,.u h condu<ltd Dy a • ,,.,., P¥trw"111p. A petition has been filed ..,..,., ~p. , Roneld O Trl>Ott b R I Wiede . W•l9' 0 . S--rt ~ OollQl.n David 5«111 Y usse I nman In This sl.ll-t was llltd wllh 11M This stei-t wH 111ec1 with nw' the Superior Court of cou111y Cl•rk 01 orenoe Coun1v on ounty Clerk OI Or111ge Cou111y on Orange County requesting Fellr1Hry u. '"'· ltb. s, 1911 that Russell Wledenman J. 0 •100 IVANS PIS.UH LIONARD COMllOYS ~ Pul>ll!llled OrMlge Co.st Delly Pllol, be appointed aS personal Uwyt" f!e1>.11.11.u,N1arc11 •.t911 1.e .. 1 representative to ad· m1w1..,.... .. ve., ... P UBLIC NOTICE--m inister t he estate of ~~'l~CA .. io Norma Virginia Strachota ----<under the Independent TATIMINT o~ AMNDONMllNT Administration of Estates P11D11""" 0ran91 co.st Dally P1101, . l'tcT1nC:: ~.E:u •AM• Act) The petition Is set for Feb. 25• MM.•. 11· ••. 1"' •7w1 TIM 1o11ow111e 11ave • .,.,.. hearing in Dept. No. 3 at PUBLIC NOTICE ,..:. ~ ... .,.1111 .. 11ct119-.., .. ,,.., 700 Civic Center Drive, H: a. PROPER1us. uH West, in the City of Santa N1ttu ....,. °'1ve. N--1 .. 11<11, na, California on April 1, "~~~~!:~~·:::s ;:..'°"=k:=:. ....._ 1981 at 9: 30 a.m . Tll• 11111-1,,0 ~·son• .,. do1110 111> .._. •• maci :~_'! IF YOU OBJECT to the -•Mn•: -·.-ti f th t"tl SUSAN HARVARD ASSOCIATES, ,,..,~11 10.1'11. gran ng o e pe 1 on, 2 • ., O\ll'oftt 0rive. 51111•111, trvln., Tl--, ,.,,...,. Hal.,....., 1m you should either appear ca111orn1 .. 21u. 1,.,.... ,::.ve. "-' aatch, at the hearing and state T...,,_ R. ~rd, m s. Hope J.._ ...... 1'00 Galeiry Orlva. YOUt Ob jections Or file ~~~:;;,.~::7t'oor, Los Ang•lu, e..c11. c.e1110m11 nwo written objections with the JHft·-i. s.-itnv. 21n 011Pon1 ni. ,=.::_• <elldue_..lty • court before t he heating. Drive, S..11• 111, ,,..,1,,., c111101n1a T~ "· H•kllft9tr Your apearance may be In nn~r1i.,. "-'1....,,1 eor_..11°"· Tl\ls ...._. •• llled wlOI U. person Or by your at · 21'2 OllPOftl Drift, S..lte 111, lrvlM, ty Oerti of 0r.,.. ,_.., °" torney c1111or111•mu. tYU, I"'· ,..1141 I F • y 0 U A R E A Andr.,. Swavely, 21t2 011Po111 ~1-0r.,,..eo.sto1t1yPl1ot. CRE DITOR or a' con-~~11;~· s..1i. 111• trvi .... c.urornl• 'It. ll. Mw. 4• II, 1"1 QUI tigent Creditor Of the de• Tiiis IMlllllHI Is cond11Cled by I --ceased you must file your 11m11ec1 pertfte,..,..... P UBLIC NOTICE clai m w i th the court or Thli ~~·!':~;;wit" 1,,. -----------present It to the personal co11111y C••·~ 11• 0r111111t COllnty on "CTITIOUS •u11"115 r epresentative appointed F•t>. >, it11. MAMa ITATIMINT l'IUI" Tiie lotl11wtno ponons ere dolno by the COUrt Within four Publllllled Or-coesl Ollly Pllol, •IMu •: months from the date of Feb. 11, 11, u, M.rc11 •. 1"1 1...-1 FOREST MALL. L to .. oto f irst Issuance of letters as __ _.. _______ _ •cArthw 81""'" Sllll• uo. N•wPGrt lded I "-'t' 700 f PVBLI. C NOTICE ec11, ca111orn11•2M0 prov n .-... ion o 0 1 ... n111ac1 ,..,,,.,,c111 Co11tu11e1111, t h e Probate Cod e of 1------------ PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI TO c••D•To•s Oft •UlK TRANSl'I• IS.CL tltl~IW u.c.c.1 Nollet Is~ 111...,, 10 cr.Ollors of the wllhlll ,,.,,,.., lransl•ror 11\otl 1 114111< lrMlsl•r Is-. to 119 m-011 P•rson11 properly ll•rel11ellet CS.scribed. T lie n.emn .,,., IMlsl neu lddr•H ol Ille l111ot,_ lr111sl•ror 1ra: THE PIER, INC., e Callfornla CM· porello11, 2046 Br•• Mtll, Br••. C1lllor11la The natnn alld 1141slneu -•ns of Ille lnl•-lrlflSl•rHS are: VI NCE NT F. CHUANG a11C1 MARIA S. CHUANG. 6 Monter" Cir· Cll , Cor-dll Mer, C.lltornil tl6U Th•l lM P<-1Y i-rtl,,.nl Mr•to Is d•scrlbed In general as· c.n.a n A•· ..... -~ Wiii of llwlt rntaurant llusiMU MOw11 es THE PIER -11 IOCll•d II: io.. Bru Mall, Br11. Celllornlt. Tll• bWnesl nenw llY<I by lM Mid lr111sl•rM •I .. ,d IOUllOll is; THE PIER. Thal Mid IMllk tr-ler Is lnlencMO lo I>• co11s11mmaled al 1111 office ol: MARVIN 8 l(APELUS, 110 Newp0rt C•nl•r Ori v•. Su lie 250, Newport Buch, Cllllornl•. on .,.. 1t1er March "· "''· TIM ,,_ -eddrns of IM i-rS011 wllh whom clelms m•~ ti. Hied Is Mer .,ln 8. t<'1~1us, 110 Newport Cenl•r Orlv•, 51111• 250, Newport 811ch, Celllonli• "'60, -Ille 1n1 d1y hw 11111111 clalmt by any creollor shall 119 ""''Ch u. '"'' wlllcll Is Ille IMlslnns dlty before Ille GOM<1mm1tlon dal• specified tbove. So l•r " It llnOwn lo Mid lnl-T renslt,_ Mid ,,..._., TrMlfffor Ulad 1"9 lollowlfto -IUontl 1141slMU nemn -addlMMS wlOllll 1"9 """ VII" 1 .. 1 PMI: N-. Oiled MMcll 2. 1 .. 1 VlncanlF.""- MMll S.C"'-I'*""'°" T, _..,._ Pub•-0r.,,.. Colst Otlly Pllol, Merell 4, 1"1 1074.fl PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICll TO CX*TRACTORS CALLI ltG POtt Bl OS School Oltlrlcl OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL DISTRICT Bid 0Mdll11e: 2:00 o'clock pm. ol Ille 121hdrtlll~ll. ""· Pltet "' Bid Rece~I: BullMU OI· Ike, ,_ 8 Street. Hunllneton BH<h. C1lllornlan.16 Project lclllftClfk1Uon Herne: Repair of Fir• ~ II Vista vi.w Scllool, OcH n Vhlw Sci-I Olslrkl Pleet Pl-are°" Ille· Bwlneu 01· llct, CkHll View Scllool Oislrkl NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\otl Ille ebo...-INd Scllool Olslrlcl of Oran.,. Coumy, C..llfoml1, actlno 1>y a11d lhrougll II• Go.,er11l11g Bo•rd, ller•lnaller, rat.rrtd to as "Oltlrlct", wlll rec•lvw up lo, IMll not Iller INn Ille 1bow slalld llnw, ,,..led Did• tor Ille -•n:t of • conlracl lor tile •bovo proj•cl. BlcJ• ""'" .. ,....,...., In Ille place lda11llllad above, .,,., shall .. _...., 111d p..Dtkly rtld alOlld 11 IM above Hated llmt -p!IGI. Et ch bid ""''' conlotm •nd ti. r .. po11slve lo IM cOfltrect d0Cunwt11S. Ee<ll bid tl\all .. accompa11i.G by Ille HCllrllY rtfernd lo Ill Ille COii· lracl doc-•ncl by ttw Hsi ot Pl'O. -d s-1racmn. The DISTRICT rewrvK lllt rlOftl lo ••le<I •nvor tll bldtor tow1lw 111y Ir· reo11terllln Of lnfonn1llllH In Illy !>Ids or 111 Ille bldd"'91. TM Olstrk l NI oot •I ned lrom IM Olr•clor ol the Daparl,,,.,.I ol In· duslrlal Relal9-Ille ~,., Pl'•v•ll· lllO rel• of pe1 diem w~• 111 Ille loc•lllY 111 '°""cll 11111 _,... Is to 119 "rfOf'mtd tor a.ch cr•ll Of iv.-of workman -lo H:ecllle Ille COll-lrac:I. T-rltn 1ra on Ille ti IM Oltlrkl olflu toulld II 81/SlMH Of. lie•, Oc••n View Sclloot OlslrlCI. COCll .. ""Y .. obttlned 011 ~I. A COCIY ol t ..... ratnll\all l>aPOMadll I ... loll•l1•. 11 111111 119 ,,,....,...,y _, U.. Con· tr1c1or 10 wllom lh• co111r1ct Is ewe~. --any Sllfleonlrac:lor -r lllm, lo pay llOI ltU ltlln 1"9 tald tpeclfl9d rat.a to all ...,........,, employ9d lty llltnl 111 tM uacllllOll of the contrlCI. c., • ca111on111 carp0r••lon, •ffO California. The time for .::,~1,::.:;·.=e no. N•w.-t filing clalms will not ex· orapy 1. Giii • .,.., MacArt1111r plre to four months from ri1o~."~20, N•wporl BHCll, \ht date Of the hear ing No blCldltr ""Y wllhdr.,. 1111 l>ld for I period ol forty fl.,. 10 ) NYI l fltr l'ICTITlOUI •UMMlll the Clalt Ml tor U. -lllnt of tlldl. ...,... ITATIMINT A PIYINfll boftd.,,.. 1 performance T111, 111111rwn ,, c011tSvciec1 by 1 notice above. 1i.t1 ,.,,,,.""'-'· the file kept by the court. Graeort•.0111 If you are Interested In tM Tiii• '*-""-1 ..,.,. maci •1111 ,,,. estatewfiou may fll• • re 111y Clan of Or11191 Co1111ty .,, • "' .. • on.ary•. H11 quest th the court· to re-.~.,:, cetve special notice of the oiaa......... Inventory of estate assets ......... wi... and the petitions, accounts ---.cu1Ma and reports described In PlllMI..., 0r.,,.. c:..11 o.u~'::: Sect I on 12 00 of the . 11.11.u.MM.•, 1"1 m .. i California Problte COde. ROIERT L . PVBUC N&l'ICE HUMPMRIYS, •1 Dover Drive Wit a , tMwport ATUIBTO. ... 70.,..MHT •••c~. ca. 92663. (7H) OflUISOP 6'S.2711 f'lCT'l.,..,. euM"9tt ..... PYbOShtd or~ Coast Ila~==...::::-.:. Dally Piiot, March 4, S, 11, 1911 1078-81 PUBLIC NOTICE TIM lellooM!le --ert ..... llOftd wlll .. ,...,iracl pr!o<' to HK"' ........ •: tlon .. the COl'ltrtct. TM PIYfMftt bond CAMl'UI tJ LIMITaD, • lllall 119 In the torm Mt fcwtll 111 1"9 c:.tlf9nllt 0--11 ,_,,_...._, J02ID c..,tr9'1dllc-"· c...... OrM, ....... 9Hcll, Gowr"'"9 ... "' c:.e:-:-o-t. * ,..._ Oat ~~ ...... Sudlll-°"'· S-0..-, (all ........ "'12 PlltllllMd 0..Mtt Coast O.lly Piiot, Ma'11 c. c:.i-, Ul4 ..., ...... 21, ,,.,, •• ,., .11 .. certlefa ...... """'9rt 9Ncll, ------------c:.tltwftle .... ~ V. Ow-II II, JlflJ Vie ,..,._, ~ CMYM, Clllf9f'Na --------------911 f'tenTtOUI ........ JllWI J ...... Jr., D ·-..-STATeMSft PUBLIC NOTICE ..... ,,,,.,.., (allfwlll4t "114 'hit ........ ..,_ ............... 0.,., •. Oii "'-. 11t'1 ~ -.. . , ............ Vltlt.~•ftMI ···~v·~ TRAVIL.m ,_ •. ~. It ,..__, t. .......... I .. , C.-. Mea, I,,,.., ~tl114 CM .... ... TMI ...._ It c~ W a ..... ........, -.-. "* ...... ~... ........ ...,, '""'"'· Clllfwllla .._..LOr-llJtl T'MI ......... _ ........... l'Mt ............. .., ....... c-ity OWll "' 0.... c-ity -........ . ,__.,, .. ""· ..... .._ ..,.... TMe......._._ ............ ~Or ... c.... Deify,...... c-. Owtl .. Or-. c-.ey ... ..... , .. n. ...... "·Itel .,.., ........, , .. ""· .. ,_ PUBLIC NO'l'IC& ........ or.. c.... o.Hy ...... . .... , ..... Mir ... "·,.,, .... , --------~~~~---'-PUatlC NOTICE I» 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6. 4 2 • ClllllfllD ..................................................................... Al'\ftOUIK'tmenu Car Pool Lt1al llouc .. Looi ' f'""nd Pt1'14ftll-'• Sot••l a .... Tr~·~· SEIYICES s.rv .... 0.rwiOt) EMPLOYMENT & rtEPAIATIOM Sc--1 IAIU'U<llOfl Jol>Wam...i• HdpW.&lllOO,M6 t' MEICHAMDISE =::.. ~ EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY , .. ,,...,..,Mollee: All r eal estate ad· vertlaed i n this newapaper Is aubject to the l'iederal Fair Hous· lnr .\ct ol 1988 which makell it iUeeal to ad· vertiae "any preference. lim itation, or d is- ·crimlnation based on race. color. religion. sex. « national origin. or an Intention to make any aucb prefer ence, limitation. or dis · • crinUnation." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal estate which is in viola· tion ol the law. HIOIS: AdYetilwn ....W chKI& tlttlr ads .., cM report er-'°" ........ ....,. The DAILY rtLOT os-.s l.wlty for .... flnt l11correct h1sertlon -,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._,.. I 002 G....,... I 002 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IEAUTIFUL TOIEHOLD! MISAYlnl A tarp customlied Bue· cola bullt charmlnl 4 Bdnn home with formal dlnln• rm .. family rm .. 2 bath.I. 3 car 1araie. buraler alarm ayatem . hea21 • central •Ir, Im Ule, soft water un t • much more. Aals· lnl $242,900. Call to see. Clyde Johnson Rltr 549-2544. Whelan Real Estate la now ottering 90'k com· mission t o licensed agent.s. •No desk fees •No phone fees •No advert.bing fees We belong to five multi· pie boards. Call for an appointment. Ask for John. 540-3686 ASSUME 11/20/o LM. Only $113,500 ror this 3 Bdrm charmer with heated pool and fruit trees. Call now 979·5370 . ALLSTATE REALTORS ---- CdM COTIAGE $175,000 Oc.am,,_,D.,..• Only 3 yn okl. complete- ly fumlabed 3 Bdrm up· per 6 2 Bdrm lower, with biJ • car 1ara1e. Rent. U.ke magk cuz It 'a near reat aurants. all beach •nd bay activities etc. 8u.y now and get ln on the summer income. Seller will help finance $199,000. JACOBS REAL TY 671-'670 u.GTY + fdMs MOLOAMFHS! O~saya he will carry f i nanci n g on th is beautiful 3 BR/2"'1 BA executive townhome in BACK BAY AREA with ONLY 10~ DOWN Sunken living room c r ea t es cozy at mosphere for family or entertaining. Mu.st see to appreciate this beauty. SISS.CXX> FULL PRICE @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 1r4-631-6990 12°/oDOWM ~ 1 ................... .. :: COSTA MESA 2 Bd.nn charmer ! Wood burning fireplace. step. saver kitchen. High as· sumable 1st TD Owner will hel p fianance. 67J.8S50 Buys this 2 + den home. 6 months new. double i r on gated e ntry . cathedral ceilings. brick f ireplace. gourmet kitchen. French doors to patio. Owner will fina n ce Sl79.000 67J.8S50 rimw = Charming 4 Bdrm. 3 ba la» home with family room. 1(116 WI) 1100 lim •10 IOI) lll30 -111)1) Cor ner lot. VERY privat e yar ds. Im· maculate and ready to move in. $174.SOO This 3 Bdrm charmer was once a model home. Located on a huge cul· de.sac lot and filled wit h extras . FINISHED garage. Close to schools. Offered al S144.SOO. IRVINE THE REAL ESTATERS *** D. Ducote Sl2 1h Pointsettia Corona del Mar You are the winner of 4freetickets ($14 value>. to A.nalMitft loalShow Mar. 4 thru Mar 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642·5678, ext. Z72 to claim your tickets. *** What A V Glue! Lowest priced townhome in University Park /Deane home. 2 Bdrm 2 Ba smgle story home. Assume existing $59.900 loan and owner will help finance the balance. Great location. Ca II 556-2660 t;:SELECT tPROPERTIES DEJA VU =•lhwriai. c.-.... Eq111p-ftl c.u Oacs ~toYou ,,,,,..,..,.. mm -~ -~ Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba single family home with very PRIVATE yard. Xlnt location. close to schools. shopping and freeway. $164,SOO and ~~=,,.~~mnl~sr"I owner will carry 2nd. Deluxe t own house Homes like this are nol.4 thing of the past. This beautiful model home with its 3 bedrooms. lar ge family & living rooms. IS located on oae. of Westcliff's largest lots for maximum privacy. Super rmancing availa- ble. Call us for details P r oudly offered at S32S.CXX> c ..... Sa~ Honn HouM4oold C-• '-~'' u""IOO ....... _, ......... _. ......... -.. ••• 1..i M~•· fMCNrlM'fU.a ()((itt ''"" 6 l".~•1p PN M*> ~ Wiii IJOU llrll ~ ,a 1 ldl -!IOl7 *Cote Realty &: lnvest~enl 640-5777 duplex. 3 bdrm + fami· ly. 2'1'7 bath, ea<'h unit F r plcs. all bu1lt·1ns. decks & patios Park· like landscaping SELLER WILL HELP FI NANCE ! s.295.000! ~~~~~~ Sc>or\1111 c-. SlOt"t Rntaw.nnt Bat -*! IO!t3 -~ OPIHW/S-1-4 ~-=rop . 2044 0c ... lt.d •67S.7060• lcAoa Isa.ct Rlty 673-1700 ST&tSTOIEACH Two 2 Bdrm units. cor· ner lot. ocean view. ex· cellent summer /winter rental. $210.000. -i~·rlld"""'"' 54.,.., BOATS & MARINE EQUlrMENT -2 Bdrm. 1 bath cottage.1~~~~~~~~~~ Beam ceiling. frplc, 3 :-: C•ntr•I Boal• Ma1nt ~rv1rf' lloal>.Moflnt f'q•IP lloal>. Po..., 8oah.Jhn1 Chartrr lloal>.S.11 lloab .Shpa Doth l!oau.SpH<t ' Sk 1 bu.Stor •I• TIANSPORTATION A1"r1ft C.mpon.S.lr Rrnl f:krtllf .... ,. NoboltJlomH 1111-C)lc .... Scooter•• .._or H1n .. !.alt Rtnl Tralltn Tr .. tl l~~i;~~:·~•fl> ~ral AqTOMOBILE Aft\JClwt Cl .. J t\O lt.t<'rt•UOft VetutlH S11on> lbtt Rud• cW-ll>n•n Tnk'U v .... All40l.eu 1"I AllWOWanled AlfTOS. IMPOHED c_,., m1 All• Ro.,.o VlUll """' V1lll A""llnllHlt) ll'1Ull llMW t'lll Copn t'llJ au-m• Coil rm Dou•• VT• • .. ..,,.,. V1ZJ l'IAll 11715 HoM• !fin • J1>1•1r V'l3U Je,....n t7» K111cuMUh1• !17~ ~...... ..,. ... ~. 111• )(.,.. ... 1 .. lleu 111.u MU V1U 11011 . 11744 Uptl 117• PMl•r• 81'1 car parking. Priced at $295,CXX>. associated BRO•f RS REl\llO~S J O] '-lti Solt..,,.,, lt.b1 llACH HOUSE s 175,000 Believe it! 6 Bedroom. newly painted in & out, 2 blocks from ocean in Newport Beach. !t~~~o~~ly fora 30day ad in the ~-.: · .. ::: DAILY ""'"'" 111$$ 11o1i. Aort• . t'l:MI "°'.. t'IS! PILOT ~~. .mu c;:..v·.. . ........... ·:::: SERVICE ,..yott. . ... mt Tnoo~.-rm Ve!Nw• .. •· '"9 v..... ams. o tn1 llRECTORY c-.1 -DO IT NOW I um. ma ... ,..s.drtl ~1 = Your Dally Piiot N r' . •10 ~ce Dlrectory =~ :~ RepreleetaUve ~='· = ~~64J,.16~~~7~1.~nt~~l~l~I~ OMMt ., ~I -°"'-. .. 1131 ., .. • • tlD ... -~ ·1 ...... *' •.-n• 11 • ... ... . ::f _;., ',, ...... : .... ·= oe.-:CU."""'" :·~· ·: . = ~~." .• , ......... M t ~ ...... .. ~;.; ·:·::.·: .. :.·:. '.,.: VtP ................... •U ""-.... . MOW IS THI TIMI for job aeeken t.o cbtclt tJl• Dally Pilot Help Wanted c1 ... 1rtcatlon. II tht job you want ii not U... you ml•bt conalder otftrias your aervlcea wttb u ad ln U.. '"b Waated catecory. Piion• ...,. leoch loch. Pad Live in modem 1 Bdrm loft home and rent out older 2 Bdrm unit. The I Bdrm has a sunken tub. sundeck and sky lites. Owner will finance at 12 o/.~. Fu l l p rice S220.CXX>. $5,500 put.s you into your own 4 Bdrm. A /C home. 12 7 /80k rmancing. Call for deta ils on o ur "TICKET" program. A RED CARPET' -754-1202 Want Ada Call 642·5678 MESA WOODS Bright. airy 4 Bdrm pool home with spa & a few steps from the master suite. Dual fir eplace between family r oom and conver sation pit. this home makes enter· taining a delight. Full price Sl83.000. Call 751·3191 C:SELECT tPROPERTIES Looking for a home of your own? You'll find many homes advertised for sale in Classified everyday . STARTING A NEW BUSINESS? Aceorclng to C~ IU9&ne11 and Profetelon• COdt (hoi 11900 to 17130) aH pertoH dolftt IKtalnel• under • flcdllout MfM muet fie • 1tatement """ the County CC!ef1r and have It pu..,le,.ed tour tlfMt In • ,.. • ..,., ..,... ..... ,.. In ..... the buelneM ll loaltM. TM ........... II req'*-d .., llW and le MOellatY In ,...-.. your butlMeeMIM, Moel ....... ........ P'"f OI Mnt )o open ...... ,..., acco.-nta. TM DAILY PILOT prolltdet ._... """' Md ............ ... ..... • • ..... .. .. ........ ,, .... -........................ 0...... Co.-, c. ........ --:a;--...................... &.aGAL ... ~ •Ill. .......................... .. IUlll mil Ylll lllDlll lillY Ml W([)N£SOl\Y MAHfl'l •·rn1 OH ANGE COUN TV C Allf-On NIA LS CENTS Peoria fat her grievt;s 4 daughters all Dleet violeiit deaths PEORIA, Ill. CAP) -His daughters are dead now. all four. Against the longest string or odds, each was slain or killed at different times in different ways. Less than a decade filled the painful gap between the first funeraJ and the fourth. . Now, staring at an old portrait, Donald Shreeves says he can't believe all his girls are gone. "It's like looking at a blank piece of paper," Shreeves said in an interview. "What the heJI was wrong with us? That's what I'd like to know. Did we drink out of the wrong side or the cup or wbat?" His last surviving daughter. Candace Lang, was b~ed last w~ek in a family plot in Iowa. Her husband has been charged mbersbooUng death. Shreeves found out about her death Feb. 22 when he was listen· Ing to the car radio. He was driving from his new Princeton, Mo. home to Peoria to do some work on the family house be had put on the market. A few months a"o. Shreeves and his wife. Bea, had given up their house here. It held too many bad memories, he said. The radio newscaster wu saying sometbina about a woman being shot to death in Schaeferville. "I ltnew that's where my last living daughter, Candy, lived," Shreeves said. "But I quickly dismissed it u impossible. It couldn't be Candy. A man simply does not lose all four of bis daughters." · Shreeves tost his first daughter, Debbie, "the saint of the fami - ly,·· in a fiery car wreck in 1972. Beverly died in Chicago, where she bad moved in the summer of 1977. A man in an apartment next to hers was killed in what police believe was an underground war. Beverly, then Z7, opened the door of her apartment lo see what the shooting was about. The killers were leaving the opposite apartment, saw Beverly, pushed her back into the room and forced her onto a bed. They put a pillow against her head and fired two shots into her skull. Denise was two years younger than Beverly and followed her older sister everywhere. She moved to Chicago and tried to find out who k.ilJed Beverly. • SoQri after she wrote her father that she believed she had. found Bever)y 's killer. Denise was discovered dead in an elevgtor in Chicago. She had been injected with enough drugs to kill a horse, the medical examiner sajd. But the father's tragedy did not end there. When Shreeves went to Chicago to try and find out what happened, be learned that his girls were not secretaries. They were prostitutes, he said. "I raised them since they were babies. I held down two jobs, washed their diapers and ironed their dresses~ I thought I knew them," he said. So he and his wife moved to Missouri, to put it all behind them. Then they heard a newscaster telllng about a woman shot lo- death in Schaeferville. And Shreeves told himself it just couldn't be. Even now. a week a fter burying his last child. the retired Army Corps of Engineers worker tells himself it just couldn't have happened again. Not a fourth time. "This simply can't happen to people,'' he said. "Are we the on· ly ones out of 225 million who are out of step with everybody else?" Laguna delays cable rate hike Ash Wednes day rites The Rev . Kerry Beaulieu at St. Joachim of Costa Mesa places a cross of ashes on forehead of Winifred Smith, 79, of Costa Mesa. Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, is the beginning of a 40-day period of penitence and spiritual renewal. Director,chosen ~ - for Music Center By JODI CADENHEAD OI .. Delly ~i.t Si.ft Len Bedsow, former manager of the California Civic Light Opera Association, has been named executive djrector of the future Orange County Music Center in Costa Mesa. Liiht Opera,· Bedsow was ad- viser for the opening of the Los Angeles Music Center, the Dorothy Chandler PaVilion and the Ahmanson Theater and supervised the restoration of the Orpheum Theater in San Fran· clsco. He teaches at the USC College (See BEDSOW, Page A!) Council responds 'show us' B18TZV£ m TCB ELL ot .. o.11, .......... Storer TV aays great things are in the works for Laguna Beach viewers, but City Cou,ncil members sav they want to ~ee some of those extras before they'll consider a rate hike, for the cable rarm. The Lagun a Niguel-based company is seeking a rate in· crease from $7.SO to $8.SO per month for its customers, and a hike from $2 to $2.SO per month for additional outlets. After a nearly two-hour public hearing on the rate increase re· quest, council members voted Tuesday to hold off a decision . until June 2. Mayor Wayne Baglln said he wants to see more concrete evidence the cable company will be providing some of the services outlined by Renee Collins, manager of the Storer franchise. Ms. Collins said the company expects to erect an earth station by the end or April that bring at least seven more channels lo south county customers. Those chanilels, she said, will be provided at no extra cost, and customers will have an op· portunity to subscribe lo two movie channels. She said the firm also is con- sidering offering Ted Turner's "Super Station" on the cable, a 24·hour news service channel. and converters that can make a customer's 12-channel television set capable of receiving 35 chan- nels. The cable viewer would pay a one-time fee for the con· verter, she said. In addition, she said the com· pany wpuld be sending a ques- tionnaire to residents in Arch Beach Heilhts, Top of the World, an other areas in Laguna Beach that are not Ued to the cable, in an effort to see if there is enough interest in wir· ing out the cJty. She said the company is com· pleting the questionnaire and el· peel.I to send it lo residents in (SEE SHOW lJS, P~1e A!) Ceast Bfglawag ~ollfslon Dall• PllOI -·"Ga,..,·-- At least three people were injured in a four-car collision at about 9 :30 t his morn- ing on Coast Highway near Emerald Bay in Laguna Beach. A river of water, from an as yet undetermined source, flooded the highway, apparently causing at least two vehicles, including the Mustang above, to spin out on the slick highway. A sportscar. sedan and commercial truck were also in· volved. Police said they had no other de- taiJs by press time and the incident is un- der investigation. El Salvador claims rebels 'smothered' SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP> -El Salvador's defense minister claims the leftist guer- rillas have been "smothered," but fighting was reported in the northeast part of the country and there were hit-and-run attacks in the C'apital. •'The Salvadoran army has suc- ceeded in its objective of bringing peace to the nation with only the help of the people," Defense Minister Jose Guillermo Garcia REAGAN WON'T SEND TROOPS TO 8ALVADOA-A4 said Tuesday. adding that the guerrillas bad been "smothered" and "every day the situation tends to improve." Meanwhile, military comman- ders reported "cleanup" opera· tions continuJng agalnst the guer- rillas in the northeast towns of ZacatecoluCJl , San Esteban Caterina and Aracatao. In the San Salvador. area, a carl6adof gunmen opened 'IP with submachine guns on llopango Airport, the air force's principal base 11 mllel east of tbe city, and woundedtwosotdiers. ~ Witnesses reported four civilians killed in a shootout near the airport, and police said two policemen were killed in a guer- rilla ambush in the northwest part of the capital. Agen cy h e ad .. replacem e nt board topic Bert Scott, personnel director for Orange County, is considered to be the favored candidate to replace Margaret Grier when she retires on March 31 as direc· tor of the county Human Services Agency. Scott. 48~ has been personnel director since 1974. Before tbat, be was chief deputy auditor· controller for seven years. However, Scott is not the only county administrator wbo la be· ing considered by the County Board of SUperviJon as at least a · temporary replacement for Miss Grier. Motocross idea g ets LBapprovm Laguna Beach officials will be looking for organizations to con- struct and operate a bicycle motocross in Laguna Canyon following city council approval of the concept. Council members voted 4·1, Tuesday. with Neil Fitzpatrick opposed, to look into using the Act V parking lot for a motocross facility. The parking lot, localed on the north side of Laguna Canyon Road near the Boys Club, is cur- rently leased to the city by the Irvine Company. Councilman Kelly Boyd has suggested the site be used for weekend motocross events, and the council agreed Tuesday to discuss an amendment with the <See MOTO, Page A%) DRllGI CUil lllTHll One of Bedsow's first duties as director will be to help cbooee an architectural rinn to deslp the future $40 million performing arts center near Brlltol Street and tk San Die10 Freewar. "I will be concemed wlth as- aurinc tbe aesthetic quallUes of the structure are in concert with its profeulonal and technical re- quirement.I," Bedlow 1aid. computer fouls retu1 .. 1s ' I Others include C. Kenley Maya, an aulatant to County Ad· ministratlve Officer Robert Tho mu; Barbara Fox, asslltant director ol the county General Services Asency, and Bob Love, chief aide to SUpervltlor Harriett Wieder. An inch of rain, pro- pelled by winds gusting up to 30 mph, is forecast for tonight. Thunderstorms also are pouible in south· moving front expected to clear partially Thursday, leaving 20 percent chance or showers. Lowa tonilbt 48 along coast, S3 inland. fligbs Thursday S8 to 63. 111111 TllAY SelecUoa ol an &rC!hitfftural fir m to . desi1n the c ultural cent~r ii expected by mid· llarch, accor dln1 to music ~nter oft'ldall. Tlaole ftnm iDtervlewed .en Albert C, llilrUn • Auodatel; Ladd, ~ • Woodward In conjunction witb Artbur E r lck1on : Tb• L u ckman Partner'lllip ; Skldmore, Owtnat • llenW: Welton Bfflket • Al· aoelatft: William 8 Juroek • Partaen/C.R.S. and WUUam Pereln. la I addldoft to hi.I ctutles u l••ral mana1er for the CMc &dlOts don't match Santa Ana machine By GLltNN 8CO'M' °'-~,.... ... For alJ their lftroadl into efft- clency, computers aUll haven't manated to circumvent t.be old mulmtbat you can't put 1 aquare pes lntoa round bole. Rtd .. yed Santa Ana ottlclals were patatully remlnded of that ract early today u tbey sweated out computer malluncUona pre· venuni announcement of tM re- 1ult1 ~ Tuelday•1 otty eledkml untllaJmoat1:45a.m. tod11. Tbe problem ~ rectan1ular holea puqcbed In about 7 ,000 ~· puter eardl wed aa ballot. dldn 't match with tb'-aquare holes on t he clty'1 8 urrou1b1 vote· C'ountins computer. Worten bad to re_puncb all tbe cards belwe tbe wtnnen were an- noanCled today ln ftnal, vnofflciaJ retuJtl. Tbe del ay apparently wa1 worth the wait for tncumbentl , Gordon Brlcltea and Daniel Grl•et, plua newcomera lobn Acotta and Patricia lleGutaan. wbo woe aeata on U.. aeven- membet eouncll. . Jn a aebooJ board ra~. Jam• Richards but seven otber C~" didates Makiq the 1eat vacated by Ellubeth Robertlon. The city councU retult.1 ap. peand to be a victory tor tbe cfty'1 ett.bUtW.ed power bloc, which blld eadoraed tbe four win· nlnc candldatel. Brick• ncelved 5,Jlt vates to defeat .._..uel Rtde, with 2,351 Votes, tn Ward 1. ~ I n Ward I, Aeo.ta J'ff91"4 ~=~.==.-~. t!r"' ~ ramalen> and 1,111 for Rlc:bard Lon11hore. (lee 8AILOT8 ..... Al) The board was expected to cODfer today OD bow to replace MLll Grier, who laid earlier UUJ week tbat • will leave ber poet .. plumtd at ..... end ol llarell. Tb• 1upervl1or1 bad con - viDHCI Illa Grier lut ...-to eanakler attndlnl her ll·year tenun ..ul summer to llelp wltla budcet dtllbenUou. Bat ID a thni-paratriPla 1...-rec•wed Mondlf ........ bf board mem· ben1 abe 1ald lbe eou.ld.n't -.. un ... "wttbout 1u~a1 loll to me." Ml.II Grier b• nat m• ber retlnmmt plaDI public. Ed"°" H"11& School fft H~· '""'°" s.oclt •• bec:OttlMf kflo11111 a• f'raflt/•r Tech. F'hul 011t whw ~.. Roger • Car"°"'' col1mlft °" Po,,. BS. .11111 What's b11ggi11g yf»H? Laguna Beach High School drama students Pat Flynn (the spider on the left> and Liz Froman (the worker ant) rehearse for Thursday. Friday and Saturday production of "Bugs." a one· act play about the environment. "Bugs." and another play called "Guns" will be performed at the Artists' Theater at the high school · beginning at 8:01 p.m. all three nights. Admission is $3 for adults. $2 for students and children. Faculty director . is Jerry McCulloch ·voters in A val on .. pass water bond Avalon voters have approved a $400,000 water bond. which city •Officials say will save 8.8 million gallons of Catalina Island's fresh water supply annually. Avalon City Manager John Longley s aid t he me as ure ·passed Tuesday by a 341 to 179 margin. A simple majority was needed to approve the bond. Longley said $348,000 in state funds will be added to the city's $400,000. enabling the city to ex· tend salt water lines for fire pro· tection and sewage. Passage of the salt water service improvement measure will add an extra 60 rents on salt water rates charged all Catalina Island residents. Longley said. Longley said almost all of C.atalina's fresh water comes from rainfall. Improvement of salt water lines is expected to save from 7 to 8 percent of the island's annual water supply. Longley said water conserva· tion is crucial since about l2S af. fordable housing units are to be built in Avalon this year. Use of salt water for fire fighting and toilets saves about 40 percent or the fresh water. Lon elev said. Longley said work, to beJin this fall , is expected to be fin ished by the end of this year. Autlwr says an~i-Cti'rport forces helped 8y 8TSV& llA&al.E Ot ... Mty ""', .... A Caltech antbropotoclat who author.cl a 10·P•le study on social efftcts of John Wayne Airport jet nolae has admitted under questioning that be let an· tl·airport forces hand·pick tbe people he interviewed. Dr. Thayer Scudder, who took the witness stand durina the eighth day of noise bearings in Costa Mesa, said he interviewed only 28 families in the study he did for tbe llarlMFI Community AasociaUoa. The report, whleh coat the north Newport Homeowners group roughly $5,000, states that 130 families were interviewed. Under questioning from Orange County attorney Michael Gatzke, Scudder explained that 109 families were interviewed by Joseph J orgensen, a resident of the Mariners community and a UC Irvine professor. Tbe Mariners ~ is Ukioa that tbe airport be denied a noise variance. The variance Is needed if the airport is to con· tinue current jet noise levels, which exceed the state noise standard level. In an attempt to discredit the anthropolosist'a study. Gatzke asked Scudder if he was aware that several of the homeowners who set up the interviews also are plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the county and airport. Chemical at dump eyed Toxic substance found near HB sclwol By PATRICK KENNEDY Of tM o.lfy ~li.t 1-.H State health officials have identified traces of a toxic chemical on the surface of a 38-acre mud dump across the street from Edison High School in Huntington Beach. Miller Chambers, or the state Department of Health Services, said tests of surface tar at the Ste verson Brothers' private dump at Magnolia and Hamilton streets showed traces of perchloreothylene, a n industrial cleaning solvent. He said deeper samples of the tar-like substance will be taken in the next two weeks to de- termine if a potential hazard ex- ists. ··Jn high concentrations. perchloreothylene could be t.ox- 1 c." Chambers s aid . "But nothing we have found in the surface tests indicate hazardous condit.Jons ··we found no high concentra- tions. just enough to indicate th e r e might be some toxic Fro• Pagr Al BALLOTS .•. Grisel received 5,539 votes in Wa rd 4. Opponent Sadie Reid bad 2,376. Ms. McGuiJan's 5,158 votes outdistanced rival J . Richard Santo's 2,6'78. Richards received 2,288 votes in the race for tbe seat on the Santa Ana Unified School Dis· trict's Board of Trustees. Don Franklin finished second ln tbe ballotinl with 1,381 votes and Donald Wood was third witb 964 votes. -chemicals below the surface." Chambers said that for years the dump had an Orange County industrial waste permit allowing disposal of oil drilling muds. He said in the early 1970s it was changed to a Class Ill dump, restricting disposal to inert ob- jects, such as concrete. City officials say the private dump was used for oil drilling muds from 1950 until 1970. Chambe rs said oil drilling muds shouldn't contain toxic c hemicals unless s ubstances were added to lubricate or pro· tect drilling equipment during operation. Chambers s aid s urfa c e samples of the dump were taken last October after a nearby resi· dent expressed concern about the site's proximity to the high schools. City Planner Jim Barnes said he received several calls from concerned citizens after it wa~ Airline struc k MEXICO C ITY (AP) -A wildcat strike by Mexicana Airlines ground workers forced cancellation of 35daily. reported that another former dump in Huntington Beach, the so-called Boucher Landfill, con· tained various toxic chemicals. Ship;s pilot 'blameless' TAMPA, Fla. (AP> -After a 10-month fight to clear his name and possibly win back his license, Tampa Bay harbor pilot John Lerro has been found bl a me less in the Sunshine Skyway Bridge dis· aster that killed 35 people. A six-member state board of pilot commissioners voted unan· imously Tuesday to accept a state hearing examiner's finding that Lerro was not negligent in his handling of a ship that rammed the bridJ?e durinJ? a storm May 9. Lerro was piioting the empty 605-foot phosphate freighter Sum· mil Venture when it hit a bridge pilin g and collapsed a 1,400· section or the southbound span, hurling vehicles on the bridge lSO feet into Tampa Bay. No one on the ship was hurt. Scudder 111d that wu news to him. "Well. in your professional opinion, is this a proper thine? Is It a good idea to let someone select your inter views?·' asked Gatzke. "It would have been bad," ex· plained Scudder, ''but tying it in with J orgensen's interviews made it better." Gatzke asked if the study would hold more validity if Scudder himself had selected the interviews at random. Scud· der agreed that was true. But then a few minutes later, the an· thropologist corrected himself. ·'Our sampling was done by networks, community ties," he said. "In this case maybe it was better than a random sam· piing " Administrative Law Judge Robert Neher. who on several occasions has added a touch of levity to the technical bearings, interrupted the exc hange between Scudder and attorney Gatzke at this point : "I suppose if I give you a bit more time, Or. Scudder, you'd probably tell me this was the best possible way to do it (the in- ter views)." Under further questioning, Scudder said he wasn't an "ad· vocate" for the Mariners As· sociation anti·airport expansion cause. "H any advocacy crept into my study it's onl y because after 25 years of studying these things I've come to realize that the im· pac ts are far 2reater than anyone imagines." he explained. In his defense, Scudder said that his study was actually a re- port on what noise-wezry homeowners "pe rceive" the problem to be .. Just because the residents tell me how they feel doesn't mean it isn't important," Scud· der said, adding that residents frequently expressed feelings of being "mocked. laughed at and even vilified" by public officials. F,....PaflrAI SHOW US EVIDENCE. • • :" ; HEADS MUSIC CENTER .~ Len Bedaow , '" t'· 1~ Fro• Paflr A I PEDSOW ... , •, JSJ Continuing Education and lec-~res at UCLA. !;. Music Center officials ;feclined to s t ate Bedsow's :•alary or how many other can· :didates were considered for the Orange County position. ·i •: Construction or the lWO· bieater complex adjacent to 1$outh Coast Repertory moved ()loser to reality when the ~gerstrom family pledged $5 blilUon cash in January on the l ~ndit.ion that another S6 million ~ raised by the end of March. '. those areas within 30 days A major complaint about the cable company has been that it does not provide service to those hilltop communities. Council members also listened as the cable representati~ out- lined plans for a full·colof sftuilo within the next two years. use of a mobile television unit, and continued use of Channel 10 for locally produced programs, such as those put on by the Laguna Video Club. But some in the council cham· be rs said they didn't care about extra channels, color studios or home movies. "I don't care if they have 35 'ehannels , or 3,500,00 said one seven.year resident. · He said Storer currently pro· vides '"only poor service, poor response and poor followup to complaints." Long-time Lagunan Maggie Meggs said she is also unim· pressed with the company's pro- posals. "I don't care about Storer's future plans," she said. "I 'm in· terested in the $1 increase and what that will do lo me.' ·'Think of my cigarette costs," she quipped. ''Let's get down to basics." The council voted to continue the rate hike request until June in order to see il Storer does bring in additional channels. · · 1 · d like to see the question· naire sent lo Arch Beach Heights and Top of the World and an analysis of the results by June 2," Mayor Baglin said. In addition, he said he wanted to see a guarantee statement ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CI Hltfled ~1'"9 7141142·5'11 All other depMmenta 142-4321 Thoma P. Haley l'IMll* ~N.WHd c._,,._ 1"1 Or111tt c.etc ""'4111 .... ~ G.tr!INftY No new& tliCWln, 11111•rel!OM, edltorlel ni.11•r ., tel· fftll•~menlt lt«tlll mey IN nprodutff wlll1011I •pecl•l"""'1lleflof~Yf'ltMOWfttt. that local programs will con- tinue lo be produced on Channel 10: an analysis of service com- plaints: and a res ponse by Storer to requests for funding sought by the Laguna Video Club. Fro• Pagr A I MOTO ... Irvine Company to allow the facility to be constructed. Boyd says there is a need for a motocross for children. adding many Laguna Beach bike riders have to travel to Irvine and We stminster to compete in races. He said the Act V parking lot provides many advantages, in- cluding an existing parking area for up lo 300 cars. A city study of the lot shows the two-acre course would not be visible from Laguna Canyon Road; electricity Is already pro· vlded to the lot; the hillsides of· fer good spectator viewing, and there would be no complaints from residents in the secluded canyon area. Questioned about damage lo the grassy area, Boyd said, ''That area can be reseeded in one day and you'd never know it was there." / Councilwoman Sally Bellerue said she would have to support the facility, "or I can't go home to my kids." But she aald safety pf children crossinc the "danaeroua" can- yon road from the Boys Club to get to the track la a lllaJor fac· tor. ' Boyd s u1geated the en· trepreneur or or1anhation sponaortnc the event mltbt pro- vide croulng guards prior to the races. Councilman Fitcpatrick, wbo s aid motocross racing la dan1eroua, cut 1the only vote a11ln1t the propo11l. Cruh kills 3 BAltSTOW (AP) -A civilian an~ry penoenel were killed 1.ay lD t.IM eruh ol a m World War II bomber •IUle cm a tralDllal mluka out al Id ..... Mr J'Orft .... , I •ll.itU7i~ Mid. SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribution of men's and wo men's clothing. We trade with the most prestigious stores and the best manufacturers in the country. But we also deal directly with you -the individual traditional clothi ng con~ sumer. Because you appreciate the classic styles and the quality that our clothing re p- resents. we would like ypu to understand exactly why we can offer yo u such substantial savings on the clothes you really want. To begin with , we deal in one very s~cific inventory: traditional styles. We d on t d o speculative buying on trendy garments that go out of style and have co be sold at a loss. Knowing our market enables us to buy more efficiently. Secondly, we buy in quantity. As brokers we place huge volumes of high quality gar- ments in stores all over the country. Naturally. we face run offs and overages. These we 'sell at significant reductions directly to the dis- cerning public through ou~ Bro~erage. Finally, we feel that an individual whose preference is quality and classic styling can appreciate the savings represente~ by our streamlined look. Because we don t spend excessively on costly displays and fixtures. we don't have to pass those additional costs along to you. We at SOUSA & LEFKOVITS feel we have a meaningful concept to bring to the traditional man and woman: A vast inven- tory of the best quality classic and traditional fashions, sold \n a tasteful streamlined atmos- phere. at the moet .aignifi.cant savings avail- able anywhere. .. Tu1tln • 621 South B St .. Tustin. CA 92680 (Just behind Had&ey 's Fruit Orchard) Telephone 714/731 .. 7151 Houn: Monday through Saturdty lO:OO a.m.•600 pm. Sunday l2:00 noon•S:OOp.m Wett Lm An1elet 2251 South Sepulve_da Blvd . West Los Angeles. CA Q0064 Telephone 213/477-8095 -, Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml Wl:DNf50AV MARCH ·1 1ClH1 OHANGE COUNTY LALlf OANIA 25 CENTS $32.6 billion· defense budget· bared 'Peace through st~ength' tab historic WASHINGTON -Defense . Secretary Caspar Weinberger apr:aled Lo Congl'ess today Lo be p the Reaean administration carry out its goal of "peace through strenitb" by approving a two-year, $32.6 billion increase in defense spending. Weinberger told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the United States "cannot allow the milltary balance to swing further'• toward the Soviet Union and added: "I think It essential that we . . . do something about this as quickly as we can." absolutely essential." The proposal amounted Lo lbe largest increase in peacetime military spending sought by an incoming administration. It would raise the Carter ad· ministration's proposals to $177.7 billion in budget authority this fiscal year and to S222.8 billion in fisca l 1982, a peacetime record. Weinber1er, notln1 President Reagan 's plans to s lash domestic programs, told a news conference that "lome sacrifices are going to be re- quired" Lo compensate for the increases in U.S. military strength. Gen. David C. Jones, chairman of tbe Jolnt Chiefs of Staff, te1tifled, the Pentacon readied a selling campalp for the pro- posed boosts. The effort will be1in Sunday with a national television appearance by Wein· berger. missiles and other equipment. Of that, nearly $4.2 billion would go for ships for the Navy. Rear Adm. Sumner Shapiro, direcLor of naval intellieence, told the Senate Armed Services subcommittee on seapower Lo· day that the money is needed Lo counter • "spectacular" Soviet naval construction program. deepest diving submarine In the world." Al the same time. the Navy's pro1ram plaMing director, Vice Adm. M.S. Holcomb, Lold the House seapower subcommittee that lhe Reagan plan Includes proposals Lo bring the aircraft carrier Oriskany and the bat· tleship New Jersey out of mothballs and place them in service within three years· He said construction proposed by Reagan includes a nuclear al· tack submarine, a guided mis· site cruiser and two guided mis· site frigates. This would be in addition Lo the one s ubmarine. • But he also said the ad· ministration Is asking only "for things that we believe are The proposal would add $6.8 billion Lo Carter's proposal for this fiscal year and $25.8 billion in budget authority for nscal 1982, which begins Oct. 1. Only $5.8 billion of the pfO· posed increases would actually be spent in the two fiscal years. Most of the money, rather, would be "spent out" in future years as ships, planes and other equipment are produced. Even before Weinberger and The administration is askina for S20 billion to build about 200 planes and helicopters, 15 addi· tional ships, more than $1 .4 billion worth of Bf·l Abrams tanks and armored infantry· fighting vehicles, sophisticated ai r·defense weapons, tactical Shapiro said the Russians have undertaken "an aircraft carrier program of major pro- portions" and continued Lo de· velop submarines including one "jud~ed to be the fastest, two cruisers and one frigate pro.-· •. posed in Carter's 1982 budget. Dally llltlet,.... lly Gary A,.,..,_ Ash Wednesday rites The Rev. Kerry Beaulieu at St. Joachim of Costa Mesa places a cross of ashes on forehead of Winifred Smith, 79, of Costa Mesa. Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, is the beginning of a 40-day period of penitence and spiritual renewal. Scott top candidate for Grier's post? WASHINGTON <AP ) - Defense Secretary Caspar Wein· berger appealed to Congress todat to help the Reagan ad· ministration carry out its goal of "peace through strenght" by ap· proving a two-year. $32.6 bilJion increase in defense spending. · Scott, 48, has been persoMel direcLor since 1974. Before that, he was chief deputy auditor· controller for seven years. However. Scott is not the only county administrator who is be· ing considered by the County Board of Supervisors as at least a temporary replaceme nt for Miss Grier. Others include C. Kenley Mays, an assistant to County Ad· ministrative Officer Robert Thomas; Barbara Fox, assistant director of the county General Services Agency, and Bob Love, chief aide to Supervisor Harriett Wieder. T he board was expected to confer today on how lo replace Miss Grier, who said earlier this week that she will leave her post as planned at the end of March. The.A\Jpervisors had con· vlnced Miss Grier last week Lo consider extending her 31-year tenure until summer to help with budget deliberations . But lo a three-paragraph letter received Monday evening by board mem· bers, she aaid she couldn't con· 1 tinue "without substantial toes tome." Miss Grier bu not made her retlremen~ plans public. Noise survey biased? Anti-airport peopl.e picked interviewees By STEVE MARBLE Of U. Dally l"llM S&a!H A Caltech anthropologist who authored a 70-page study on social effects of J ohn Wayne Airport jet noise has admitted under questioning that he let an· ti-airport forces hand-pick the people he interviewed. Dr. Thayer Scudder, who took the witness stand during the eighth day of noise hearings in Costa Mesa, said he interviewed only 28 families in the study he Four seized in Mesa purse theft I Thant. to an Oran1e County deputy district atLomey, Costa Mesa police arrested four strong-arm robbery suspects late Tuesday after a 31-year-old woman was knocked to the ground and ber purse aLolen. Police said Deputy Di.strict At· torney Robert Romain saw the running youths, one carrying a purse, jump into a pickup truck near South Coast Plaza at about 8:10 p.m. · He jotted down the license plate number and called police. Just minutes before, Costa Mesa investigators said, Lan· Huong Thi Nguyen or Santa Ana had emerged from the plaza shopping area to be knocked down by a group of youths who fled with her purse containing about $30. Police said the woman, who reportedly injured a shoulder during the robbery, chased after her attackers bul lost them in the parking lot near Sears. Santa Ana police, alerted by a broadcast describing the truck spotted by Romain, later stopped four youths at McFad- den A venue and Spruce Street and held them for Costa Mesa' police. Arrested were Shelton Marcos Bush, 18, of Santa Ana a&1d three juveniles ranging IJetween 14 and f6 years of age for suspicion of strong-arm robbery. Investigators said Ms . Nguyen's purse was not re· covered. Bush is being held In Costa Mesa Jail wltb bail set at $10,000. Tbe other three youths are beinl held at Orange County Juvenile Hall, officers said. did for the Mariners Community Association. The report, which cost the north Newport Homeowners group roughly $5,000, states that 130 families were interviewed. Under questioning from Orange Co unty attorney Michael Gatzke, Scudder explained that 109 families were interviewed by Joseph Jorgensen. a resident of the Mariners community and a UC Jrvine professor. The Mariners group is asking LenBedsow that the airport be denied a noise variance. The variance Is needed if the airport is to con· tinue current jet noise levels , which exceed the slate noise standard level. In an attempt to discredit the anthropologist's study, Gatzke asked SCudder if he was aware that several of the homeowners who set up the interviews also are plaintiffs in a laws uit against the county and airport. Director chosen for Music Center HEADS MUSIC CENTER Len Bedaow By JODI CADENHEAD Of .. O.tty ~ ......... Len Bed.sow, former manager of the California Civic Light Opera Association. has been named ~xecutive director of the future Orange County Music Center in Costa Mesa. One of Bedsow's first duties as dlrecLor will be Lo help choose an a rchitectural firm to design the future $40 million performing arts center near Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway. ''I will be concerned with as-suring the aesthetic qualities or the structure are in concert with Its professional and technical re· quirements," Bedsow said. Selection of an architectural firm to design the cultural cente r is expected by mid· March, according to music center ofricials. Those firms interviewed were Albert C. Martin & Associates ; Ladd, Kelsey & Woodward in conjun ction with Arthur Erickson : The Lu c kman (See BEDSOW, Page AZ) El Salvador claims rebels 'smothered' '1The Salvadoran army bas suc· ceeded in its objective of brinling peace to the nation with only the help of the people,'· Defense Scudder said that was news Lo him . "Well, in your professional opinion, is this a proper thing? Is it a good idea to let someone select your interviews?" asked Gatzke. "Il would have been bad," ex· plained Scudder. "but tying il in with J orgensen's interviews made it better." Gatzke asked if the study would hold more validilv if <See AIRPORT, Pa1e AZ> * * * Air noise speaker stricken Public testimony in the noise variance hearings for J ohn Wayne Airpo rt came t o a dramatic halt today when a speaker suffered an apparent heart attack. Douglas Parmentier Jr. had just concluded his testimony in the ninth day of noise hearings ·when he slumped over in his seat. Other witnesses in Costa Mesa's Harpe r Community Center came to his aid, using mouth·lo-moutb resuscitation until Costa Mesa fire officials and paramedics arrived. Parmentier, who'd testified that the airport master plan should be rescinded by county supervisors, was rushed to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Hospital officials were unable to give a report on Parmentier's condition upon his arrival but sai<fhe was breathing. Parmentier was one of four people called to the witnes~ stand this morning. The hearing, scheduled to run until mid· afternoon today, is expected to be continued until April. Incumbent loser ST. LOUIS <AP) Alderman Vi ncent C. Schoemehl bas scored a huge upset victory over incumbent James F. Conway In the Democratic primary for mayor, virtually guaranteeint him succtess in the general elec· lion lo this heavily Democratic city. SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP) -El Salvador's defense minister claims the leftist ~er­ rillaa have been ''smothered," but fighting was reported ln the northeast part of the country and there were bil·and·run attacks ln the capital. Minister Joee Guillermo Garcia , DRlll~l l'lllT llAJlll said Tuesday, addlnc that the ' 1111• II guerrillas bad been "smothered" and "every day. the situation tendstolmprove." Pilot rapped for landing private plane The pilot of a privately owned tbree-encine Boeint 727 jet bas been admonlsbed for landing bis bea•J aJreraft at John Wayne Compu,ter fouls returns ' · Meanwblle, milltary comman· ders rePOlted "cleanup" opera· ,REAGAN WON'T UND Tf(OON TO IAl.VADOR-A4 An inc;h of rain, pro· pelled b:t winds 1uat1n1 up to 30 mph, is forecut for tonight. Thunderstorms also are poasible in south· moving front expected to clear partially Thursday, leavln1 3> percent chance of showers. Lowa t0Al1bt 48 alone cout, u inland. Hiths Thunday 58 Lo a . Airport. . D•nnil .Hornr airport chief of operatioal, Mid tbe Occidental fetroleum Corp. pUot, un· autJaortaed to land, apparently wM unaware ol COW11f nmway · ••ltbt ratr1ctloD1 and waa verbally cb.aaUMd by an airport olftdal. , Horn Mid tbe a1rcraltl ldded to =•off corporation p... I "-day and depart- ed ~boat• balf.bCMaf latar. Tlae airport nmwa1. ra4ied to hadllt Uc'ttaft ..... ti ol ap to ..... pamdl, w .. not dam.,..S, lfol'Dlatd. I n. ...... nlPt ol • ..., la1 TIT .. aatracted fer ....... INlllllabcMatUO,M ,, ... , ........ T•• Otelcl .. tal Petroleum ttaft, oumee.t wttla oCnetil - otMr ·::::-· ........ ....,. llA,ooO :Horn nUmlled. - Balwts don't match SanJ,a, Ana machine \ 87GLENN SCOTT Ot•o.tt'I ........... For all their lnroad.8 Lnto effl· clency, computen still baven't mana1ed to circumvent the old maxim that you can't put a square pe1 into a round bole. Red.eyed Santa ADI otnelala were pelnlully Ttminded1 of tbat fact early today u they swe1t.d out computer maltunctlom pre- ven~ aanoaatement of tba re· au.It.a Ol 1'1Mday'a dly tlectlona untU aJmoilll:'5a.m. today. The problem: reetan1uJar hol" puncbed in about 7 ,000 COID• puter ,.,.. used u baUotl dklla't match wtth the aquare bolel GD tbe city'• Burrou1b1 vote· counUnc computer. Workers bad lo repunch all~ •, card.I befOH tbe winoen were an· nounced today in fi.Dal , unofficial retUlls. The delay apparently was worth the wait for Incumbents Gordon Bricllen and Daniel Orlaet, plua newcomera John Acoeta and Patricia McOui1an, wbo 1!fOn Hatl on the aeven· m•atber c:ouMll. la a ICMGI bNrd race, James Jlicltardl .,._ MYm OdMI' ean-· dJUtM 111'1'11 Ille ... t Healed by SU.a._. ........ . TM dt1 eomcU ....ita IP' peand to .... .SJIJFJ for .... clt.J'• e1tablll•ld ,_., bloC, wblet.ludaata,..llleba' ..... -·~ ......... Brlcken ...eelYed S.111 Yotel to' defeat Manuel Rede, with 2.W vote1. ln Ward 1. In Warct I , Aeotta r~ved 3 401 WU. compared to 1,IOI t« iitclley Madden, 1,551 fOf' Aue Famalaro and 1,IU for .. RlcUrd 1..on1abcn. GrlNt r.celved s.-Yotea 111 Want 4. OJ!poamtSadit Rtld W 2,ITI. Ila. llcOut1an '1 1, lll YCICll ou~ ffvaJ J . R.lelW'd 1uto•1a.111. ~ ncetftd ...... la tM ne. for UM MM • tlM IUta Aaa UDlftM Sebool m.. tilct'I Joerd Of Tnmteel. Dall rr..-Dm1W MCGlldJD u.e balloellll wtt.b 1,111 ... -o.aiCU'ood .,., wrc1 w1t1a .. ~. ....... ~~······ ...... ---.........-....... .........-. ' ~· Uou caDtinulq as.Wt tbe ,..... rlllaa in the nortbeut Lowna ol Zacatecoluca, Sao E1teban Caterina and Aracatao. In the~ SalvacJol' area, a carloedofsun.menopeaedupwltb 1ubmachJM pm oa llopaqo .\lrport. t.be air tore.'• prtDdpal bate 11 mll• east ot tbe city, and woundedtwolOldien. Wltne11e1 reported four clvWUI killed ID t.lbocMut Dear the aJ.rpon. aDd police •aid two pollce1111111 ,,.,. twed ID a per- rtlla ambulb ID UM DOl'tllwelt pert otthec_.... la ,,........,, StcntarJ of · Stew Ala•...,. M. Rall Jr. be1aa meeUDI wU• toa· trHll .. I ....,., Hit' .. tMlr Hpport for ti•• •••I•• IHI· mlnlltrMkm='• np111I tiD amd tb• Junta .r.._ .Iii •••..i <"9 ..... Al) ' 111111 TlllY Ed'-t lfifA khool M ff•· Uftgton 8-cll u ~ IUIOtOft o• Tronaftr recll. Find o•t '°"' h• It.off' Coriao..•1 colllmft on PQflt 8$. 11111 P_,BIA, Ill. <AP> -H1I daupten are dead-., all four. Aplalt the lC)ftlett ltrlDt ol oddl, eaeb wq •lam or kUW al ifferent times in different ways. Less than • decade filled t1\e painful 181> between the fl.rst funeral and the fourth. . Now, i&ariPI at an old por:trait, Donald Shreeves says he can't -believe all tu atrll are 1one. "It'a Uke IPOklnl at a blank piece ol paper," Shreeves aald In an lntervi--. .. What the hell waa wronc with uat That's wbat I'd Jilr.e to know. Dld we drink out of the wron1 aide of the cup or )what?" His last surviving daughter, Candace Lang, wu buried lut week a family plot in Iowa. Her husband has been charged in her sbootln1 rea~hreeves round ou; abo~~-her death Feb. 22 when be was listen- inl to the car radio. He was driving from his new Princeton, Mo. '°home to Peoria to do some work on the ramily bou.se be bad put on the market. . A few months uo. Shreeves and his wife, Bea, had 1iven up PORTION OF COSTA MESA STREET GIVES WAY Mud, water gather at the potnt of rupture In water main Blpw11 w~ter main causes CM slide Water from a ruptured main b'uckled a strip of Sea Cove Lane Rjlvement and caused a minor rt\udslide in Costa Mesa's Sea Bluff condominium community (arlythismorning. · Ed Schnabel, manager of the Mesa Consolidated Water Dis· trict, said the break in the eight- inch main was reported at 6 a.m. by a newspaper carrier but that water probably began lo escape atabout3a.m. · He estimated the break in the main, constructed four feet beneath the street in 1978, damaged about 100 feet of north- bound paving. ~· The winding, asphalt street is the only access to the con- dominium subdivision. Mud and ground covering slipped down a nearby canyon wall, ripping out a wrought-iron fence before coming to rest against the back of the sub- division's clubhouse. The district manager said it is too early to determine fuU ex- tent or damage or estimate its cost. Water s upplies to the sub- division lying just west of Costa Mesa's Canyon Park were not in- terrupted. Schnabel said water was fed into the tract through another main. He said the southbound lane of privately owned Sea Cove Lane remains open for subdivision ac· cess and that clean.up operations along the street are underway. Fro• Pap> Al BEDSOW NAMED. . • • . P.artnership; Skidmore, Owings at Merrill; Welton Becket & As- spciates; William Blurock &· Partners/C.R.S. and William Pereira. : In addition to his duties as general manager for the Civic Light Opera, Bedsow was ad· ¥Iser for the opening or the Los Angeles Music Center, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and the Ahmanson Theater and sppervised the restoration of the Orpbewn Theater in San Fran·, cisco. He teaches at the U~C College f4 Continuing Education and lec- tures at UCLA. M uaic Center offi cl ala declined to state Bedaow's salary or how many other can- O"ANQE COAIT didates were considered for the Orange County position. Construction of the two- theater complex adjacent to Soutb Coast Repertory moved close r to reality when the Segerstrom family pledged $5 million cash in January on the condition that another $6 mUlion be raised by the end or March. Last month Jim Bentley, chai rman of Bentley Laboratories Ln Irvine, and his wife. Irene, pledged $2 million toward the construction of the cultural center in Costa Mesa. In addition to the estimated $40 million in construction coeta, another $19 milllon ls being raised for't!ftdowment purposes. Dilly Piiat MAIN Ol'FICa ~ Wtat-.,, It., Catt llMU, c;A. Mtll ...,_: .. 111 IM,C-..-.a. CA._. U.elr boule here. It beld too llWU' bed metDorin, be aald. The radio n.wacuter wu •Qina aometblni about a woman beins abot to death ln Sc:haefervllle. Sooo ~r 1bl wrote her father that ahe believed abe bad found Beverly's kilter, D•nlae waa discovered dead In a n elevator ln CbJca10. She had been injected with enoueh drup to kill a hone, t.l)e medical examiner said. "l knew that's where 1:ny laat Uvln1 dauabter, Candy, lived/' Shreeves said . .isut I qulckly diamtased it u tmpo11ible. It couldn't be Candy. A man limply does not lose au four of bJs dau1bt.ra." Shreeves lost his first daupter, Debbie, "the aaint of the fami- ly," in a fiery car wreck in 1972. But the fatber'a lra&edy did not end there. When Shreeves went to Chicago to try and find out what happened, be learned that his girla were not secretaries. They were prostituteal he said. Beverly died in Chicago, where she had moved in the summer of 1977. "I raised them since they were babies. J held aown two jobs, washed their diapers and ironed their dresses. I thought I knew them," he said. A man in an apartment next to hen was killed in what police believe wa.a an underaround war. Beverly, then 2:7, opened the door of her apartment to see what the shooting was about. The ldllers were leaving the opposite apartment , saw Beverly, pushed her back into the room and forced her onto a bed. They put a plllow a1ainst her bead and fired two shots into her skull. So he and his wife moved to Missouri, to put it au behind them. Then they heard a newscaster tellinl about a woman shot to· death in Scbaeferville. And Shreeves told himself it just couldn't be. Even now , a week after burying his laat child, the retired Army Corps of Engineers worker tells himself it just couldn't !lave happened again. Not a fourth time. Denise was two years younger than Beverly and followed her older sister everywhere. She moved to Chicago and tried to find out wbo killed Beverly. "This simply can't happen to people," he said. "Are we the on- ly ones out of 225 million who are out or step with everybody else?" Airport u:ar costing NB $100,000 Newport Beach city officials have spent close to $100,000 on at- torney and consultant fees in the past six months to fight expansion plans at John Wayne Airport. The tabulations, compiled at the request or the city council, show that since August, Newport has hired four law firms, two court reporters and one airport consultant. The largest bill came from Walter Gillfillan, the city's airport consultant. Between August and January, the city paid Gillfillan $37,725. He is still on tbe city's payroll. The Newport Beach Rutan and Tucker law firm was paid more than $14,000 during the six-month period wh'ile the Jaw firm or Wenke, Taylor and Evans billed the city for $27 ,513. A Washington O.C. law firm, Dykema, Gossett, Spencer, Good- now and Trigg, was paid $11,792 for its services while McDonough and Holland, a Newport firm, re- ceived $630. Court reporter costs and a luncheon meeting rounded out the financial picture, bringing the six-monthtotaJto$93,620. Last year. the Newport council set aside $257 ,569 for fighting airport related matters. This in- cluded three lawsuits. Although final figures for February are not available , the city is paying attorney Ray lkola $75 an hour to represent Newport at the state noise variance hear- ing. The hearings have lasted nine days so far. * * * Fro• P a,,r A I AIRPORT. • Scudder himself had selected the interviews at random. Scud- der agreed that was true. But then a few minutes later, the an- thropologist corrected himself. "Our sampling was done by networks, community ties," he s aid. "In this case maybe it was better than a random sam- pling." Administrative Law Judge Robert Neher, who on several occasions ha.s added a touch of levity to the technical hearings, interrupted the exchange between Scudder and attorney Gatzke at this point: "I suppose if I give you a bit more time, Dr. Scudder, you'd probably tell me this was the best possible way to do it (the in· terviews)." Under fu r ther questioning, Scudder said he wasn't an "ad- vocate'' for the Mariners As- sociation anti-airport expansion cause. "If any advocacy crept into my study It's only because after 25 years of studying these things I've come to realize that the Im- pacts are far Rreater than anyone imagines," he explained. Boy threatens to slay pal in store heist · T-.o boys, detcribed as about 14 years old, atole about '50 from a Costa Meaa market· deUcateaaen in what police called Ah "unusual robbery." A clerk at La Llnda Mlchoacano, eoo W. ltt.b St., told 1offlcen the boya wllted into the 1narket about 7:'5 a .1n. Tuetday, alMI one pulled a knife from blJ pocket. T he llnlte owner he ld bis weapon acalnat the throat ol the other boy and 1ald be would eut bl• friend tro,n ear to • ., if be dldD't -IDOM1 from the lton cubdraww. Tile eltrk told otncen be ....... to .... tMm ... ,.,,.. two...,. rwllltd lato tlMt e• ........ ,... ,.... tile ~ CM elirtr talll deen. Fire, setvage rues LEFT ..• military aid and 20 more U.S. military advisers. But President Reagan told CBS News in a televised interview, "I certainly don't see any likelihood of us go- ing in with fighting forces.'' Voters in Avalon pass water bond The secretary-general of the Socialist International, Bernt Carlsson or Sweden, met with State Department officials in Was hington on Tuesday seeking U.S. participation in an attempt by his organiiation to mediate between the junta and the guer- ri 11 as . State Department spokesman William Dyess said the administration would have nothing to do with it. The Socialist International, made up or the world's non- com munist socialist parties, is proposing that former Chancellor Willy Brandt of West Germany mediate. Both President Jose Napoleon Duarte, the civilian head or the ruling military- civilian junta, and the leftists have accepted the proposal. But Carlsson said U.S. participation is essential if mediation is to suc- ceed. Avalon voters have approved a $400,000 water bond, which city officials say will save 8.8 million gallons of Catalina Island's fresh water supply annually. Avalon City Manager John Longley said the meas ure passed Tuesday by a 341 to 179 margin. A simple majority was needed to approve the bond. Longley said $348,000 in state funds will be added to the city's $400,000, enabling the city to ex- tend salt water Jines for fire pro- tection and sewage. Passage or the salt wate r service improvement measure will add an extra 60 cents on salt water rates charged all Catalina Island residents, Longley said. Longley said almost all of Catalina's fresh water comes from rainfall. lmprovement or salt water lines is expected to save from 7 to 8 percent or the island's annual water supply. Longley said water conserva· tion is crucial since about 125 af- fordable housing units are to be built in Avalon this year. Use of salt water for fire fighting and toi lets saves about 40 percent of the fresh water. Lonizlev said. Longley said work, to begin this fall, is expected to be finished by the end or this year. High court due male draft c a se WASHINGTON <AP> -The Supreme Court will hear argu- ments on the constitutionality of an all.male military draft and draft registration later this month. The draft case, perhaps the most closely watched or this court term. is scheduled to be ·argued March 24, a Tuesday, at 1 p.m, SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribution of men's and women's dothing. W~trade with the most prestigious sto res and the best manufacturers in the country. But we also deal directly with you -the individual traditional clothing con- sumer. Because yo u appreciate the classic styles and the quality that our clothing rep-- resents, we wo uld like you to understa nd exaccly why we can offer you such substantial savings on the clothes you really want. To begin with, we deal in one very specific invento ry: traditional styles. We don't do speculative buying on trendy garments that go out of style and have to be sold at a los.s. Knowing our market enables us to buy more efficiently. Secondly, we buy in quantity. As brokers we place huge volumes of high quality gar- ments in stores all over the country. Narurally. we face run offs and overages. Tl)ese we sell at significant reductions directly to the dis- cerning public through our Brokerage. . Finally. we feel that an individual whose preference is qualicy and classic styling can appreciate the savings represented by o ur streamlined look. Because we don't spend excessively on cosdy displays and focrures, we don 't have to pass~ additional costs along to you. We at SOUSA &. LEFKOVlTS feel we have a meaningful concept to bring to the traditional man and woman: A vast inven- tory of the best qualicy classic and traditional. fa$hions, 50ld in a tas9dul streamlined atmos-- pherc. at the most significant savings avail- able anywhere. ~ Tu1tln 621 South B St.1 Tustin. CA 92680 (just behind Hadley's Fruit Orchard) Telephone 714/731-7151 f Houn: Monday duouah Sm.uday IO:OO a. m. -6:00 p. m Sunday 12:00 noon·S:OO p.m. Wat Lot Anselee 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd. West Los Anaelei. CA~ Telephone 213/477-8095 S.lft .... ~\!! ~lo,. ("9 AAA ' .AO 1 11 t~-"' I 24010 ,. .. \>'> ••••• I" 1.24 tl006 tt~+ IA Intl ,, 1'74 IS ... +t'-1... .. 1 1V. ..... ••• \11.\.t.\'t ~ ~"' 'Mt\.\"-+ ... ASA » .. 102 41 -'- A to ·'° • " =-... A\ll( _. 11 SS \It AlllOtLO l,Jll11 U6 5t\la,., •. A(-C t.411 1 I• 2'~+ V.. -.iot ,04 1 .. 41'1 ..... 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L60 9'h + 'I• •meron t . .io s 4 21 ... .. "mHO .60 I S4 U 'I+ .... . Amelk I 14 66 28V>-.,, ""''•< 1.4-1 S 43 2S~ ...•. ~~~P1:, '::I' ~l ~'(;~_'~ A 1., 4 ~ . ~ A f . i .,,~ c . 111 • • : 1 4 s . . • ... 1$ t~-:111 CLOSING 171.44 [~ •' . oranges Victor Most of ... e California orange crop is eaten fresh. lt's the home of the easy-to-peel navel orange. Most of the Florida orange crqp is proceRsed into orange juice. It's the home of the juicy orange. John McPhee, in his book. "Oranges," put it this way : "Californians say that if you want to eat a F'lorida orange, you have to get in to a bathtub first . , . In Florida, it is said that you can run over a California orange with a ten-ton truck and not even wet the pavement." McPhee's book was written 25 years ago. Who's winning today in this cross-country rivalry over oranges? The answer would have to be: Florida. More and more of the orange crop, even in Ca lifornia, is being processed into frozen con- centrate. Hard· l y anyone !~ ~ -----------~! ~., MILTON llllDWITZ ~ squeezes fresh orange juice in the home any more. At the same time, consumption of fresh oranges has nosedived. In 1950, Americans were eating fresh oranges at the rate of 27 oranges per person a year. By 1960 per capita consumptjon had dropped to 19 oranges a year. Now it's down to 12. ORANGE GROWERS IN FLORIDA have long benefitted from heavy promotional support. The Florida Citrus Commission, a joint effort of the growers and the state government. spends more than $30 million ll year on advertising. The funds for this advertising come from a levy on the growers. You 've probably seen their advertis- ing on television. They run commercials pointing out that orange juice is "not just for breakfast any more." Some orange growers in California would like to see their state copy the Florida model. They have proposed the formation of a California Navel Orange Commission to promote the eating of fresh or anges. With fresh orange consumption in such a tailspin, you would think that all the California growers might be in favor of this plart. But they're not. At least the leadership of Sunkist Grower, Inc. has said flatly that it wants no part or it. SUNKJST GROWERS IS ONE of the nation's largest farm cooperatives. It was organized in 1893 to market the oranges of smaJl growers. Today, its ranks include 6,500 citrus growers in California and Arizona. In 1980, Sunkist sold more than 3 billion poun'ds of fresh fruit grown by its members, bringing home sales of $645 million. Various attempts have been made to establish brand names for fresh fruits and vegetables but none has been as successfuJ as SunJcist. It has been a reg- istered trademark since 1909. It was first stamped on the skins of oranges in 1926. The people who run the SunJcist co·op today do not want to forge any partnerships with the s tate of California or with Citrus growers who are outside the Sunkist fold . They fear that a promotional campaign on behalf of navel oranges in general would undermine their brand name. It would, in other words. be like Bayer aspirin supporting a campaign for generic aspirin. While the Sunkist people are fighting against the !idea of an umbrella campaign to promote the eating ·of fresh oranges, they are pushing ahead on other fronts FOR EXAMPLE, YOU may have seen the ads for Sunkist orange soda and Sunkist diet orange soda. This might send nutritionists up the wall. but Sunkist Growers is cashing in on its brand name by licensing it to a big Massachusetts bottler and theater owner, General Cinema Corp. Last year Sunkist collected $8 million in royalties from General Cinema. Fresh orange consumption may be going down but soft drink sales ar e going straight up. So who knows, Sunkist Growers may be able to find other products in need of a wholesome brand name? Sunkist hot dogs. Sunkist potato chips. Sunkist tarts. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS 7t7 ,'IOO 650, !00 604,000 S12,JOO 471,000 H!.400 402,SOO 401,400 Jt7,400 179,700 M0,200 U3,JOO 305,MIO 302,400 2'2,JOO UPS AND DOWNS • !h • \lo .... . -. '~ + \lo + "' + Yt + '"' .,~ _, :. ;,.; +I • v. METALS Capper~ unu • 00000, U.S. de$tln.-11on, . ....... i:l-,)1 ~.pound, Zinc •IV• c.ntt • JIOIMld, ..+I"""'· Tiit $6.tstS WU.I• w .. 11 ~,,...ft. ID Ahtftl'-76UfllU .,.,,,.., NY, Mer<wy "'6.00 per 111.i. l'l1t1-ics.OOtroyo1., N.Y. SILVER NEW YORI<. (API -H.,,cty I. H•rmafl illver IOOly 111.no, 011 .o.U. f:no•lllarct 111ver l tt . .io, 011 to.u ; •1brt"tec1'"""'111,2111 011 ao.u~. ftlKIC NOftC& ftllUC NOl'IC& "18UC NOl'ICJB .,...,._ -. NOTlceOl'DIATHOI' IWMN ' ....-.... ~ flliftl9&l"•~NATMOP L ~ 0 VD HIN RY NOTIC801'NATMOP ,....._,., .. e1:::zrc.J I.: "'~ auCAllTaR'.IUU.OVDH.aaM•IT .IOl•PM • ._::::--................ a&! n Lul'Tll CA R T • ll A N 0 0 " MOllAN 1U l•N•IT J, TIM ,.._ _. __... ...,_ D TIOH T PaTt!TION TO AO· MO•AN elle .... llT ., ... ,,.....,_.,.t DMINll • ••TAT• MINISTeR UTAT• NO. MO •AN ••• I •••• cw1:r."&IA::.=::=~ • A·WW.: A 107'59. M 0 a A N A N D 0 -._.. AM ......... tUW' T o • I t h e I r 5 , T e a I I 9' e I r I , I' I T I T I 0 N T 0 A D • -.c1e1 1ecwttY __..,.. m•DM etteflclarles, creditors beneflclartH, creditor MINllT•• llTATI NO. ~~.::,:•._ ......... ...,.... ftd conC1...-nt cmltors of •net continOlftt ~,....._.. A·1.,_ ., .. ,,..,_..,.: erl M. Uftlt, •k• cert Lloyd Heftry ce.wr •kA T o a I t h 1 I r a, co'-o• '""""•T!!:::l. ltton Lofttt and pertons Lloyd H. cet11r of 1r11M, beneflclarlH, creditors ~oLf.1~~"!~c.,.~:,:r, ,.,::. ho may be otherwise In· Catlfornl• end persons end con&inoent crtdltor1 of ,~91 10.......-~. rHted In tht wlll and/« who may be otherwlM &ft. Ernest J__., Moran and All..., ........ ,._....-... tat•: ttrHttdlntheWllland/fWperaons who mey be*"-_..,..,.,_,_,., 11 --= A Pttttlan hes bffn filed estate. otherWIM lntereltM In ttt. :':,,.... .... :.,.:.., .. - y Crocker National Bank A petition Ml bMft flied wllt 1wd/01 ettate: , .. :5 .... ....; .. .._ri,u.. tht SUpef;lor Court of by Josephine H. Nelson In A~petltJon hes been flled o1111e r,..,,.,_,.,,.._, r•nge COUnty requesting the Superior .£!.~.of by 'Elizabeth Ann Bellmer -~1~ ': 1~18:::·: h•t Crocker National Orange '°""ty ·~ung In the SUperlor Court of _,_.... ,.,.. ~ , .... , 11u.-.. 181nk be appointed u th1t J~lne H. Nelson Orange County req~tlng •-"•r1<,.... ll111.,.,1-.1et•• ~rsonal re....-nt1t1v1 to be appot~ as personet that E 11 z •beth Ann •t •7ae ._,, 11111 llrtel. clly .. tdmlnlster ·the estate of reprMtntallve to •d-8allmer be appointed H :::':~•.'-'' ,. 0 """· (erl M. Loftis of lrvlne, mlnlst-r tht Htlt• o pertonal ,...,......,t•tlvt to Tiie ,iec., _,.,. .... "'., .. "" Eallfornla Cundtr tht In· Lloyd Henry C.,,.r (un· administer tM 11tatt of •"""• uw Wiii ,,_,tr''•• 11e con rtlependlnt Admlnlatr1tlort de{. the Independent Ad• Ernut JoMph Morin, •u111::~1~. ~' 1Mln ,Of Estates Act). The petf· m nlstrltlon of estates F o u n ta In Va I I e y , omn. 11ot1 1.1 1te1111 A'venu•. llon Is set for Mitring In Act) The petition Is Mt for Catlfornfa (under the In· O-My, c.-1._i. t02A1. Merell u . Ptpt. No. 3 at 70Q Clvlc hearing In O.,t. No. 3 at dependent Admlnlstr1tlon 1~~-lm• ,,...., 11t tlled •1111 DewMy Center Drive West, Santa 700 Civic Center Orlvt, of Est.tes Act>. The petl· Mein "'le.I 11renc11 • ..,. °' Al'Mf'IU "na, Callfornla 92701 on West, In the City of S.nta tlon 11 Mt for ~ring In NTUA. 11~u "••n• A••n111. March 25, 1981at9:301.m. An•, C.llf«nla on March Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic ~..:1~ .... :0, 1111119 c1,1,,.,1 1, IF YOU OBJECT to the 18, 1981 att:ao•.m. C•nter Drive West, S.nta MefCl\20, 1"1. 'cir anting of the petition, IF YOU OBJECT to the Ana, Callfornla 92701 on Tiii• w111trMlfer 11 1ub1ec1 io Sec· ~ou snould either appear grantlno of the petition, March 25, 19'1 at 9: 301.m. ''°" •••.• u.CMMwrclet GMe. t the hearing and state you should either appear IF YOU OBJECT to the 0•· .. ~~ our objectlons,,r file at th• hearing and stat• granting of the petition, CllHWCMenN.e ~rltten objections w ith the your objections or file ycx.i shOuld •lther appear Tr~ ._ ourt before the hearing. wrltt&n objections with the at the hearing and stat• =., ~ our appeerance may be court before the hearing. your objections or file Tr-1w" n person ·or by your at· Your appearance may be written objections w ith the ay: A1<11ere1CoruM, orney. In person °" by your •t· court before the heiring. ,.wi1.==.,. coesi Delly Piiot. • I F Yo U A R E A torney. Your appearance may be Me<c11 •. 1111 \ 101w1 tREDITOR or a cont· IF YOU ARE Aln person or by your at·- ngent creditor of the de· CREDITOR or a con· torney. PUBLIC NOTICE eased, you must file your tlngent creditor of the de· I F Y O U A R E A ---------- ,c lalm with the court or ceased, you must file your CREDITOR or a con· NOT1c1TOcH01TOtt1 tresent It to the personal cl aim with the court or tlngent creditor of the de· Of' aul.J( THNlll .. epresentatlve appointed present It to the personal ceased, you must flle your Noi1c!~.!!:!1!.ui:~~;.:,110110r y the court within four represent1tlve appolpted claim with the court or ,,,. w1t11kl nemed tr1Mferor ,,.., • months from the date of by the court within four present It to the personal 1M11a trentl9r 11 -io 111 m.-on first Issuance of letters months from the date of representative appointed perun11 property 11er11n111er as provided in Section first Issuance of letters as by the court within four 119~1':'m.. _ 11ut1,.,• eddr•» or 700 of the Probate COde of provided In Section 8700 of months from the date of 11111nt•nd9cl trenller• •re: California. The time for the Probate Code of first Issuance of letters as THEP1EA.1Nc.,ec111rorn11c01· fillnn claims will not ex· California. The time for provided In Section 700 of 11oret1on, 20" Ir•• M•ll, aru, " C•llfotni. p ire prior to four months flllng claims will not ex· the Probate Code of Th•~-11<n1netsldd<'ttu1 from thedateofthehearing plre prior to four months California. The time for 1111 1111enc111C1 tr-••r-1r•. notlcedabove. from the date of the hear· flllng claims wlll not ex· ""'"~lNi~~JA~o.~~:,,~., ~r~ YOU MAY EXAMINE Ing noticed above. plre prior to fcx.ir months c1e.cor-dll1Mr.c1111or'"•'»u the file kept by the court. YOU MAY EXAMINE from the date of the hear· Tl\11111eorape1"1yllff'llnen111ere1o 1a If you are Interested in the the file kept by the coµrt. Ing noticed above. d9uriblld in ~r• 11• c.r1•1n As· estate, you may file a re-If you are Interested in'ihe YOU MAY EXAMINE :,~11:! =., w!' ;~~111~1~~1~17! quest with the court to re-estate, you may file a re· the flle kept by the court. 1out1d 11· 2046 aru 11111a11. aru. celve special notice of the quest with the court to re· If you are Interested In the C•111ornl•. Inventory of estate assets ceive special notice of the estate, you may file a re-ir~:,.~"!:s.:S-:.°io:.,1:"\~~ and of the petitions, ac-Inventory of estate assets quest with the court to re-PIEA counts and reports and of the petitions, ac· celve special notice of the Tt11I Mldt1u111.1r .... r.,111n1-10 aescribed in Section 1200 c o u n ts a n d reports Inventory of estate assets ~~~~7~";'."':l~e~~~.~.:'~':!S:~ of the California Probate described In Section 1200 and of the petitions, ac· ce111er Orlv•. sull• uo. H1wpor1 COde. of the Callfornla Probate c o u n ts and reports eeec11, c.111orn11, on or •••r Merell C ode . A R T H u R S . desc ribed In Section 1200 '\:!'~-__ '"of 111e __ 1. Cooksey, Coleman & LEVINE, ESQ. of the Calitornla Probate wltll w'*91 Clllmt me1 De llled 11 noward, By: Cal H . STELL, LEVINE • Code. Mer•ln a. Kepelu•. 110 Newport roteman Attorney at BOOKMAN Center Ori .... Sult• uo, Newport \..,. 177121 E 17th St t 7 8ee<ll, CellrOl'ftl• '2*, encl Ille lesl aw, . ,... , 72 West Sevent" Street Wiiiiam w. Soukup, At· dey IOI' llllno Clllmt by 8'\y credllO< West 81 d g ., Tu st In, Los Angeles, C•. 90017 torney 1t Law, 1600 N. 111111 be Merch u, '"'· •1c11 11 ,,,. California 92610. (714) Published Orange Coast Broadway Sutt• 601 S.n· 11u11n .. 1dlybllfOl'e111e contuMme11on 132·2474 Daily Piiot, March 4, 5, 11, ta Ana, C..lltornla t2706. e11:~:C~ .. i.;:·:;::. to Mid in- Published Orange Coast 1981 1077-81 (714) '7~1644. Trens1...-Mid l'*-d Tr.,.t111« Daily P ilot, March 3, 4, 10, PubllShed Orange Coast ..... ,,. ..,._.... MC11u-1 11U11MU 1981 1065·81 PUBLICNOTICE OailyPilot,March4,54 11. ==-:=•1•""'111e""" -----19,81 1016-81 D11HMercllJ, l .. I PUBUC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF · vw.ant F. C"-'9 ---"-"'" ____ N 0 RM A VI RGI NI A PUBUC NOTICE ~_::.!;~.., f'ICTITIOUS 1us1MUS ST RAC HOT A ~ D OF -P111tll1Md Orenee C:O.st D•llY Piiot. M~ JTATHHNT P E T I T I ON TO A D • "ICT1T10UI IUllNHI IMrcll •. 1t'1 107UI ...,!l:~o!~"' per_,.,. cto•no MINISTER ESTATE NO. Tll• •=:!!='Z• oe1111 CREATIVE ENCOUNTERS ST, A107978.. IMdlnnse: PUBUC NOTICE HIS Wutmlnller Boult•lld, T D a I I h e I r s I MA .. TIN .. SAUNDERS, 1700 w11:;n1~:r0~::;;·~= E 11 1c1 beneficiaries, creditors ~::;,::;:.Sult• 201• co.i. MeM, NOT:J:.:,",.:':'c,~":,~~0•1 Clrc1:"' Wesim ln•l .. r c1111:r:11 and Contingent Creditors Of Jotwt A. ~n & Auoci.lin. Inc., S<llOOI Dltlrlct' OCEAN VIEW '2"2. ' ' Norma Virginia Strachota 1 Celiromt1 c.,,_allOf\ llllO Wllllllre SCHOOLDrSTAICT Dou911s O.Yld Skill. 10102 11111e110y and persons who may be 11-.c1 •• L• AllQlllas, Clllfoml• tOOS7 lld Deedllne: 1·00 o'clock p.m or ••r11. ori ... Ger"'"' Gt'OW. C.llforftl• otherwise interested in the W•1• 0· ~. 11151 eo. vis-111e nU1ci.-,o1-.:11.1"' ti Clrcle. Co&tl Mftl, Cellforllle 9261' Piece '11 8lcl Receipt &Ullness 04 is l»us!Mu 11 cond11c1ed "" • w l 11 and/or estate: T1111 11ut1neu h c .... c1ue1ec1 "" • 11u. ,.,.. 8 51,.... H...ilflll"" a.e<11. "1 pertneoNp A petition has been filed ...,.,., ~ c..111ornl•.,... A-Id o. Trvdltl R II WI...,,_ I Wener D. s--<1 ,_ 1 A ""--In "·•id ••ilf by US5e _,.,man n T~lt s•~t ••t ru~ •llll Ille Pro~I ldlntlflc.t on Heme: epelr """"" "" "" S " __.,_, .,. ol Fire Def'lllOlt 11 Vl1l~ View SCllool, Tlllt , ... ._, •• ,tiled wllll Ille t h e uperlor Court of Co<inty Clerk or Otonoe Co1111ty on OcunVlewSCllOOI Dltlrlcl 011nty Clerk of Orenoe Co<int y on Orange County requesting F.t>ru.ryu,it11. P1ec•"'-ereon111e BuslMHOf· et>. s.1t11. f'tssu• that Russell Wledenman ~·.~~~=son rice.O<Mnv1ewsc-1 o111r1e1 p.,1111tlltd 0r-. Cotti 0111.,, Piiot. be appointed as personal i..wven ,,:01T~_.!!~•::::;,1G~~.~:'ic:":: •b 11.11,u,M1rc11•."" , ... , representative to ad· "21Wllsllln.,,,._, or-~. c..11fl&lrnl1, ec11nQ by PUBLIC NOTICE--minister the estate Of ~~~CAMtt end tllr0"911 lls Grrernlno Board, Norma Virginia Strachota f'tMAn 11ere1 ... tter. reterrec110 11 "D111r1<1". -------·----<under the Independent =1 :=--:~'~i,:: ::.11::1:rd;r::; ITATIMINT o .. AllAND<*MINT Administration of Estates ,.ubll-Or ..... Coesl Diiiy Piiot. 1111 •••rd of. contre<I for"'-•bon ,.ICT1Tlo: =.:: .... Ml Act) The petition Is set for Feb. JS, Mir .•. II,"·~ .. ~ __ ._7,.._1 pro)tcl. aids 11\111 bl recelv.d ... Ille P IK• .i.!-": ,......,. --,.. .. -· hearing In Dept. No. 3 at PUBUC NOTICE 111en1111ec1 -... -""" 11e -"" .,. ... o1u.rkt11io..111ut1,.,s 700 Civic Center Drive ____ .,..,.....,.1c1y.-1-11111e-ve ._. w t . the Cit of Sa t • N7U11 Sllled 11 .... -pl.ce. .L H: 8. PltOl"EATIES, 122' es ' In. Y n a "ICTITIOUS au11wa11 Eecll bid must conrorm ••A ~ !!!''"....,. Dr'! .. , N-1 8Htll, Ana, Callfornla on April 1, NAMaSTATIMiNT r•N10r111 .. 1o111e contre<td0Cu..;;,11"."' ~~:=, llW 1981 at 9:30 a .m . Tiit loUowlno person1 ere doing Eecll bid 11\111 bl e<compenled by " IO ..,. •• = ~·~..; IF YOU OBJECT to the butlneu "' IM MCIH'llY r9'ffrecl to 1n 111e con· Y .. MIKlllt.1'71. granting of the petition, SUSAHHARVAROASSOCIATES, 1r.cld0Cllmtnlslndby lllell•lolpr1> 2''2 0..Pont Ori .. , 5"1111 Ill, lrwlM, polttCI t..OConlrlClon. 1,,...., ,.._.,. Held1"91f. 112' you Should either appear C11lfernf1'271S. Tiii DISTltlCT r.-v" 1M r'911t lo ..=.:::. ... N-1 llH<ll. at the hearing and State T"°"* R. ~.JU S. .._ •1le<lenywetlt*horlowe1 .. any lr· .__... .... 1,. ,,,_. __ ..... .._. your objections or file s1r .. 1, """ Floor. Loi •noe111, reou1ar11111 or 1n1orme1111e1 1n eny #--• .,. ...... Cetlfornl• tOD11. bl<ts or In,,.-"'°"· --... c.11,.,,,..-...0 written objections with the Jeen.Merte $paf11"9, 11'2 DuPont Tiit D1str1c1 ~ *•lned rrom 111e Tlllt llllllMM •• Cendll<Wd by e COUrt before the hearing DrlYt, Svlte 111, lrVIM, Cellfornle Director of IM D11>1rlrnent of 111· tr-••1 =-~;.. ....... .__, Your apearance may be In n1u. ou11r11r -.ie11otK i,,. geMr11 ore ... 11. ··-.. ~--Spertlfto lllYeltlNf'll Co,_111on, Int rlll ol -diem ,.. ... , In 1111 Tiils ....,,_,. .•• mec1 •1111""' person or by your at· J1'2 °"...,. 0r1 ... s..111111, 1rw1ne. 1ou111., 1n wtlkll 11111 -"'is 10 be 0.-Cy a.-tf•Or..,.. c-ty 111 torney. · c111tornle'271S.. perf11mM iw e.cll crell ot type of ~ IJ, ''"· ""'., I F y O U A R E A A11dr-Sw1v1ly, 21'2 D"Ponl wor•men -to execute 1111 con-~~llllN Or.,.. C..tt Diily Piiot, C REDITOR or a con ·~;',~~· Wt. 111. lr•lne, C•llfor1111 g:!k~=.:· .. °"a~~~~ ~. I, 2S, """'· 4• 11, ltll '3HI ti gent creditor Of the de-Tiils IMISIMU ls conchKlell t>y a flu, 0<18'\ View School Dl1trlcl. Ceased YOU must file your llmltM ~· C419le1 _,,lie llQ!ned °" reQWtt. A PUBLIC NOTICE Cl•lm with the court or Tllometll.SMPP1rd c419yofl'-ret"'11e111111poMecl•t111< '" Tlllt lta*'-1 WIS filed •Ill\ Ille jolUllt. present It to the personal Covnty Clerk Of 0r.,.. c ... nc, on II """ be ........,, -Ille Con· "'5!.'.T_!OUST?TalU!~~I representative ·~minted , .... J, '"'· lreclor le wllom 1111 con tree I Is -.. _ .. ' b th rt I n f"" •r f'tU1" ewer-... end """ lftY IUkOfltrectot Tiie fojlewlnt PtrMMIS ere clolnt Y e COU W vv Publl .... Or ..... Colll 0.lly Plrot, 11Mer 111m. 10 pey no( .... tf\ln Ille ... •: months from the date of '"· 11, 11, ts. MercJ1 •. ,.., 1...., .. ,. .,_lflM "'" to 111 WOf'llmen FO,.EST MALL. LTD .• o•o first Issuance of letters as ~----------~..-"".,.,.,,'" t11e ••ecut1., of ~A11rt. ~...!!..~ .... ~• '20• Newport prov lded In Section 700 of PUBUC NOTICE tlla '°"tr.a. ~ -.. -~ -d f Ho ........ !Ny Wlllldr•• Ills bid IOI 01,,.....,fled l'lnenclll COntullllnh, the pr 0 bate c 0 e 0 ,_ • perlOcl • forty ,, .... (0) cMyt •ff•r <., • Ce1H1tnl• corporetlOn, "'° Callfornla. The time for "tcTITIOUI..,..••• 111adet1te1tertr....nintotb1ctt. _!~·,::=• 610· .._fl0f1 filing cl alms wlll not ex· 111M111 ITATalMNT A ..-'""'11110ne1 _. • ,,.rtormenca 0:..,,,.., e. 06!1, "'° ""'-'"""' plre to tout months from ..!.':,..~ ...,_ .,. ._... :;::'.,•.::..,."'-:!~,.:::~~= •v• .. Svtt. uo, Newport a .. o . the date of the hearing CAMf'UI n 1.1M1no. • wll ... 1n .. ~ ... tor1t1 1n ""' T~IMI~ 1, coneuciec1 ..., 1 notrce above. ~ :::W ;:.--..: '°"'rtc=9o.rd 1tect.,..,..,. th• file kept by th• court. ClltlfWNt..., 9yMl••llSW.-ow GAFtYl.0111 If you are Interested In tht "*" e. OfWll. •• ,..,... °" c1er11 T111• ......,,.,,. •es 111111 """ '"' estate you may fl It a rt· Ore.._~. eel.,.,,,.• fll72 Pub1111WC1 °'Mft eo.a1 o.11y P11o1, ' ~,·. -r. ~'" .. Countt "" quest Wtth th9 court to re-.._. c. ~ nu "°" ,. ... u . ""'· •. '"' •11 .. .,. Catltett ...... .......,. ... , -----------.Of/lltf;K~ celve speol1I notice of the ~ .... .: .. --.. ..... Inventory of estate Htets -~!.: ~.~: ~ ..... w.;; and the petitions, •ccounts --.. _. ---,.-tc'll-n-... --... --.-.-.--...._,u.... and reports dllc:rlbed In ..., J, UM. Jr., n .. ...,. UMelTAThWNT ........ ~ _ ,,.. __ 0 11111,....,.1... S • c t I on 1 2 O O of t h 1 --. '"""'· c:.ltfWl!le t1m TM ,...... ,.,_ 11 ....., Ml· ~-·---._... • ' ,.. C I If I Pr_..._._ c--o.,,. "· °" ,._.., ""' c..-... -•: , . 11, , .. 25, Mir ... 1"1 1swi a om • --....... eta, ...... Vllj9, ~·... • '""~~•UM• TAAV•t.. .,. R 0 I E R T L . .,...... "· c:-, " ........ 1. ..-.., .... *· c:.... Mtta, PUBLIC NOTICE "oU.MPHRIY~ 111 ... Dover ·r:-c.::::n: ...... " . ~--....... ......,, , ... r ve' s.ltt 11,w,.n ,.._., ,.,_,..,.. ..,..,.,.. w.r, 1,_., c.tlfwllle AHMHYO.WNDDlltl • ..,. ltac l ca. tHU. (714) ....,, .. °'.... ..,.. WU19W Mf.1719 TMI ......._. -fMtll wttfl .. 1'1111 ........ lt~tM.,.,Mln· f'ICTtftM_.._. Pubtl ... or,. Coast c-t'l' OM., Ofllflllt c-ity'" ........ . ,.. =--===:~ O•llY PO~ March4,5, 11, ,..,_.,,a.1"'· ,.,_ Ttllt =..":"',..... _.111 .. -1tl1 107M1 ,........ Orall9t c-t o.11y Ntt. Clllllly a-"' o....... ClllMY • ....... ·-· ~ "·"" ..,.., ,._,., ~ .... ..,... ~or-. Clell o.ily ....... ,... .............. "" .... PUBLIC NOTICE "18UC NOl'ICE 'iM!ilimiiiiil"iliiliiiiiir-PUIUC NOTJCB • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • AftMIVn<'tmtnt1 Cir l'ool wcal/'lourn ....... f'""ftd P-1•• Sonat (1u bl• Tr•·~· SERVICES Ser•lf• l>lr...,ori EMPLOYMENT & nEPHATION Stlloob ... ,.,,.tloft JMW.a""1• Hdt> ..... .., ... f' MEICHANBISE ""'-1-,\pplj•~ Aurllon =r:.i:: M11tt1ab C1111eru. £,q1M-ftl C.u Doc> t"r•loVOY t"""lwtt c;..,..,.s.1. Horw• Ho.awbold G-. J-.t•r uvnlork MHh111er1 MtRtll•-MatC"tltaeeous \ilia.MM ......... r lmi1Nm4'ftl> Olritt ....... (q11lp , ... ~--=ti ~e.:. Span one Gooch Store.Rhl•vr•nt 8.tr ~~"fod10.lhf'1.Sl•rw :: ... IOll 1-1• :: l!QUM. HOUsaNO l: OPPORTUNITY :::: . 1: , ............... : :: All r .. 1 uhte ad· 1tit vertl1ed In thh IEAUJIFUL TOl&IOLD! MBAYlitT A 1.,.,. c...c.omlMd Bue· col• buUt ehenninl 4 Bdrm home wtlh formal dlnJna rm .. femlly rm .. 2 bat.M. s car 1•r••e, burlier alarm S)'lltem. helltede• I central •Jr, Im ~ Ule, soft watir un :S much more. Ask· ln1DO.to0. Callto1ee. C1yde Johnson Rltr 549--*4. • ::: newspeiper la aubject to '* the J'.stral Fair Hout· l: inC Act ol 1M8 which 1100 mU. tt UJe1al to •d· vertlM "any preference. l•Wbel .. •an•lllRe•.•,•E•aa~-·e•la limitation. or dh· now otrertng 904f com· crlmlnation bHed on race, color. reli1lon. mluion to licensed sex, or national orl1ln. aient.s. or an intention to make any auch pref,rence. •Nodealtfees llmltation . or di•· •Nophonefees crlniinaUon." •No advertising fees This newspaper will not knowinely accept any advertising for real estate which la In viola· tionolthe law. We belor\I to five mulU- ple boards. Call for an appointment. Ask for John. 540-3866 :: 191 ............ .. ASSUME 11120/o LM. .. --,. ~ :WO )lllJO 1100 --4000 -4100 •1$0 4lll0 ~ UlO ~ 1400 •UO 4100 ~ -~ ~ 7111S flCIU BlOIS: Adnrtfsen ....... dledl ..... d. claly .... report ... . ron ...... ahfy. The DAILY rtLOT os....-1 labilty ... .... first l11correct h•Hrtlo• Offty. Homesfof'Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA Charming 4 Bdrm. 3 ba home with family room. Corner l ot. VERY private ya rds . Im· m~culate and ready to move in. Sl74,SOO This 3 Bdrm charmer was once a model home Located on a huge cul· de.sac lot and filled with extras. FINISHED garage. Close to s chools. Offered at Sl44,SOO. IRVINE Only $113,500 for this 3 Bdrm charmer with heated pool and rFU)t trees. Call now 979·5370. A 'LLSTATE REALTORS ~----~ ---- CdM COTTAGE $175,000 2 Bdrm charmer ! Wood burning fireplace. step. saver kitchen. High as· sumable 1st TD. Owner will help lianance. 67U550 THE REAL ESTATERS ••• D.Ducoh 512"'1 Pointsettia Coronadel Mar You are the winner of 4frMHckets ($14 value I, to AM!hel• loatShow Mar 4 thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642·5678. ext. Z72 to claim your tickets. ••• Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba single tamily home with very PRIVATE yard. Xlnt location. close to schools. shopping and freeway. S1&4 .500 and 1-~~=~~r:riHT~'=s~ owner will carry 2nd Deluxe townhouse '*Cote Realty & Investment 640-5777 OP94 Sat/S.. 1-4 2044 0c ... 11.d duplex. 3 bdrm + fami· ly. 2'h bath, each unit. Frplcs. a ll buill·ins. decks & patios. Park· like landsc aping SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE! 1295,000! lcAoe lfl'f Prop. Realtors •675-7060• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o ....... o.,e.. 0n11 s rn old. compt•e-11 (\.lmlllled 3 Bdrm up. per • 2 Bdrm lower. with btl • car 1ar11e . Renta like MalJc Clll lt't near restaurant•. all beach and bay activities etc. Buy now and 1et in oa the aummer income. Seller wut help finance. -.1000. JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 WWW+YllMs MO LOAM FllS! Owner says he wlll carry rinancing on this beautiful 3 BR/2"'1 BA executive townhome in BACK BAY AREA with O NLY 10 ~ DOWN. Sunken living room c reates cozy at · mosphere for family or entertaining. Must see to appreciate this beauty. $155.000 FULL PRICE @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-63 J-6990 IZO/oDOWM Buys this 2 + den home. 6 months new. double iron gated e ntry . cathedral ceilings. brick fireplace. gourmet kitchen. French doors to patio. Ow n e r will f inance. Sl79.000 . 673-SSSO raw WWA.Value! Lowe s t pr ice d townhome in Universit y Park/Deane home. 2 Bdrm 2 Ba single s tory ho me. Assume existing $59,900 loan and owner will help finance the balance. Great location Ca II 556-2660 t;:SELECT I PROPERTIES DEJA VU Homes like this are not a thing of the past This bt"autiful model ho'*' with its 3 bedrooms. large family & living rooms. is located on one of Westcliff's lar~est lotS for maximum privacy. Super financing avails· ble Call us for details . Pro udly offe r ed at S32S.OOO . l'6oo Island Rtty 67)...8700 STIPS TO IEACH BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT 2 Bdrm. l bath cottage Beam ceiling. frplc. 3 ~~~~~~~~~~ Two 2 Bdrm units. cor- ner lot. ocean view. ex- cellent summer/winter rental. 1210.000. 9110 1110 tlJO 9140 tUO illiO tl'IO t!llO MM) U-al 11'7111 AV• Ito-II ln\111 A~t ll1VI AllOllDllul•> wTlll lllllW 11'712 C•pn •• • .• 11111 ~ ·········~t~ Oal.owl WT.II t'e<ran """ Plat lrnD .._. rm J•111•r .illll ,_ft tnSI Kat-1111 G-to VT)) ... •• .,_.w . . . .. 11111 lllud• . '7:11 llltn·•dtt-a ••u ~l4U ~u ~u MOii t'7~ Opel Viti ,...,,. '7(7 ,_...,. ff• PofKIM 1f'7~ ...... I\ -RQlll Ko1r• . - Ill our '"' ~ · ........ :.:: ......... := ;:,,;:;.~ . . .. . .. . . . . . . . ,,. TO)'Oll • • • • • • • , • '1tt TnuMp41 ... . . . .. . "'1 VollltWt1JH . . '"" VotYO • •• • • • .. f1n UTIS.lfl 0-.01. . .. - AITIS, usu Utwr1t., ••......... ·'··. MJ AlllC ., • "'" • • -lhlitk .••• 1 ..............•• •io CHill•t .• , ••. .•as Clo•-. . . . . .... .., Ole;,_ . .• • • - car parking. Priced at S295.000. associated BllOKfllS llfl\l TOllS , 1; i w e..,. b, " t. • ~ ti ~ RACH HOUS~ s 175,000 Believe It! 6 Bedroom. newly painted in & out, 2 blocks from ocean in Newport Beach. !t~ J1!~!~1y fora 30da)' ad In the DAILY PILOT SERVICE II RECTORY oorrNOWI MPwS•h Your Daily Pilot Senice l>tnetory ...,._tallv• 64J.1671. nt J 11 ~.ier.. .. ••.• -.......... IWtl~~~ 1 ........... -1~ .......... •• •11111 -1sTH1nu1 C..er . . ......... , .. ma ~'"' ""' 1>14r ....... , ............ · .... tor job H81len t.o cheek r:..,;.1;: . ;~:;:;;::~·· ... = tM Dally Pilot Help L1M0111 .. • • .. .... .. .. • Mt w.ud claulflcaUoa. It "'"' .. , ...... ,... ..., ........................ ·-__, .................... -..... ,.,., ,._ ..-.. ~ • ................. ·-there 100 _,ht cootlder =: · .. :·:::::::::::.:.: = .... , 1our aervlcee ~ ......... , .... -•• -wl&ll • IHI bt the Jub ~·:::::::::::.::: . .' = w_..s c•tAtCOrY. Phone ?::...;"'················ .. ...._ ' t.och laeh. Pad Live in modem l Bdrm loft home and re nt out older 2 Bdrm unit. The l Bdrm has a sunken tub. sundeck and sk ylites. Owner will finance at 12 ~~ Full pri ce $220,000 . $5,500 puts you lnto your own 4 Bdrm. A /C home. 12 1 18~ financing. Call for detail s o n ou r "TICKET" program. • RED CARPET 754-1202 MESA WOODS Bright. airy 4 Bdrm pool home with spa & a few steps from the master suite. Dual fire place between family room and conversation pit. this home makes enter· taining a delight. Full price Sl83.000 Call 751·3191 t;:SELECT I PROPERTIES Looking for a home of your own? You'll flod many homes advertised for sale in Classiried everyday. , STARlilNG A NEW BUSINESS?