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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-18 - Orange Coast PilotYlll llllllft llllY l'IPll ~rads mourn nameless girl BALTIMORE (AP> -For several minutes, the woman's bead was bowed in prayer. As she looked at the body or a little girl ly· ing inside the white casket, her eyes welled with tears. "What a waste," she muttered before moving away. Within hours, St. Pius V Roman Catholic Church here was packed with several thousand strangers who came to mourn an uniden· tlfied, abused child. The girl. found four months ago dangling from a chain·link fence, was be· ing buried today. The cause or her death is not known. The mourners streamed Into the church all day Tuesday. quiet· ly passing by the tiny body in the casket donated by a local un· dertaker. By niehtraU. se_veral thousand had come. "To an angel, from someone who cares," said one card. Anotherread: "God,please find a place in your kingdom for this forgotten child." she came Crom, why she was struck down in the prime or her life. •'Perhaps we are angered; perhaps we are Cilled with tears." he continued, "but she leaves behind . . . a ure that has touched you and me. She cried out to us through death, and each one or us responded. She's touched us, and I think we're richer for it." The people lined up several hours before the funeral Mass, trying to get a glimpse or the girl whose tiny hands clasped a single pink rose. A Catholic service was held because the Catholic church was made available. '· 1 just felt sorry for this child," said Rosa Ragland. "It was the least I could do 1s-<!ome and pay my respects . . . for someone who was discarded just like a shoe. That's the hurting part.·· MOURNERS FILE PAST THE CASKET OF NAMELESS GIRL AT BAL Tl MORE FUNERAL Services for child found deed IHt November drew thouHnd1; ceuH 1tlll unknown There were no seats left by the time the Rev. Joseph Benintende delivered an emotional, powerful eulogy that had the crowd shout· ing continuous "amens." "There is not a one of us sitting here that can tell us anything about this child," he said. "Where The black girl. about 9 to 13 years old, was found in Novt!mber tangled m the mesh of a fence a long Inters tate 70 in West Friendship. Her burial had been delayed by the hope her parents or someone who knew her might come forward. Noonedid. Authorities have not been able to determine how she happened to be on the hiJ!hway. A s tate • ' c1ence Woman reseued Fire destroys HB residence A cigarette smoldering in an overstuffed chair is the suspect· ed cause of a downtown Hunt- ington Beach fire that destroyed one home and dam aged a second, fire investigators report· ed today. Firefighters responded to a 7:30 p.m . call Tuesday a nd found a home at 309 11th St. fully engulfed in flames, Huntington Beach fire inspector Larry Marshburn said. He said the heat from this blaze caused an upstairs window at the adjacent home, 311 11th 1 St., to burst. spreadin~ the fire to the second residence. Authorities reported no major injuries in the blaze, but a 16- y ea r·ol d Ocean View High School student was credited with Dog door admits burglar in Irvine A burglar who had to squeeze through a dog run door to gain entry to an Irvine home has loot· ed it of $3,000 in belongings, the owner told police Tuesday. Carolyn Orlando told police whoever broke into her Butler Street home stole a stereo set, pearl and diamond ring and a ttecklace, according to in· vestigators. llllGI GOIST WllTHIR Increasing cloudiness with 10 percent chance or rain tonight, 50 percent Thursday. Lows tonight 48 a long the coast, S5 inland. Highs Thursday 60 to 66. 11 ~II!~ ~YBr~. tMre'a I no more riding the I mechanical bull. Ht• neclc IOQ.I broken m ttwr Louisville Urban Cowboil Bar. ~· Page A7. .•. 11111 8 helping to res cue one woman who was inside the second home. Paul Lepore, the student. said he was standing in a nearby store when a man rushed in, pleading for a dime to call the fire department. "I gave him a dime and ran down the street," Lepore said. "I could see fl ames and smoke." He said he pounded on the door of the first home and re· ceived no answer. He said he then pounded on the next home, 311 11th St., pushed open the door and found a frantic blond· haired woman inside. ·'I thought I he ard s ome screams, but I guess it must have been the flames hi ssing," Lepore recalled. He said he helped the woman out to the curb. The student said the woman tripped as she tried to run back inside to get her purse. "When she fell , all of a sudden the flames started really pop· ping." Lepore said. "Everything just went to hell." Fire officials identified the young woman as Kathy Tomlinson. 23, a resident of the house. Officials said she was the only person home at the time the blaze spread to her house. Fire investigators said no one was inside when the fire broke <See FIRE, Page A2l NB man saves choking woman's life By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 tlM o.ity ,.,,.. Sufi A Newport Beach man who keeps informed about emer1en· cy aid procedures becauae of bis wile's heart cooditlaa ii credited with saving the life of a eboklne woman in a Gardea Grove cafe. James A. TU.., 51, wbo was aittinl at a table beb1Dd Sal· ly Au1u1llne, IO, of Garden Grove, at Jorene'• Coffee Shop, aald he realised Immediately what was happenln•. Thaxton, a mechanic for the Edd le Hopper Chevrolet a1ency. said Mn. AufUIUne waa cbolt· in&, 1aclio1 and polnUn1 at ber throat. "( heard the waltre11 boller •my God, whit do we do?' " HY~ Tbuton, who baa eat.n at the aame care for 12 ye1ra and happened to be there on hf. lunch break J.ul Friday. l .... ,,...,.,. Putting up a howl Lt. Russell Herndon of the Clarksville, Tenn., police force howls back al a hound dog who put up a howl over his attempt to leave a parking ticket on his master's pickup truck. 'Disgusting lies' hit Caro.I !Jurnett on stand in Enquirer trial ·~·.,...... •otlQUITINO ••• uu· ·c.,.eumettt•atltle•• Fire Kill• three MSXJci> CITY <AP> -A tlrem• eel two bellboys were killed and • ~le llajured ln a ftre tbat tutted the top three noon of the plush Mart• Isabel Shel'aton R<f-el, authorltlea aald. LOS ANGELE S CAP > - Comedienne Carol Burnett. s tep- ping into the serious role of star witness at her $10 million libel trial, bas told of her anger and tears over a gossip column item, declaring: "It is disgusting and it is a pack of lies!" "It hurts,'' she said of the Na· llonal Enquirer article, "because words -once they'rt> printed -they've got • life of their own. ·•How was I going to explain this to my kids, my family, peo- ple l care about?" Miss Burnett salcf as she faced the jury Tues· day. Mias Burnett said she was haunted by the thought that the article would survive lon1er than she would. "Because lt was in print, lt will never be a part of me,'' she said. "When I'm dead and aone. It will be In my file for my children and 1randchlldren to look up." The entertainer. somber-faced ln a soft white dreaa and pearls, •poke ot betnl ••stunned" when ahe beard the Enquirer accused her of "botstel'O\ll" behavior ln ·a poab Wuhlnston , D .C. rett1W'ant ln 11'11. ·'I so& very 1n1ry," IM re· c1U.cl. "I started to cry. 1 start· ed to ahJ.ke, then I calmed &wn ind I cilled my lawyer. I said, ~ 'I'm going to sue. These are bad guys. I am going to sue'." Her lawyer warned such a lawsuit could take years, she said, but "I said, 'I don't care. They have no right to print a pack of lies like that and get away withit'." It took five years for Miss Burnett's case to reach trial. In the interim she became the sym· bolic leader or a n increasing roster of stars suing the tabloid for libel. She has said she hopes the paper is forced out of busi· ness. T h e Enquirer article, rublisbed llarcb 2, 1976, and ater retracted, 1aid Miss Burnett bad "e loud argument'' with fOl'1IMI' Secretary of State Henry Kl11ln1er at the restaurant, ''tralpeed around the place ~ everyone a bile of her dteHrt, ' aplUed wine on another dlMr and ''started Iii· <See8V&NE'IT,P11eAJ> Traffic anarled PHILADELPHIA CAP> - Strlklq transit workers set up picket Unes at a major com· muter hub on the frln1e olltbe cl· ty durin.I rush hour tht. 1n9m· ln1. lnterruptln1 aervlce on buaH and trolley• that llnk Phlladetphta and lta weatern aubu.rba. medical examiner ruled her death may have resulted from a type of blood disorder similar to sickle cell anemia. The autopsy also revealed signs that she had been beaten, and several or the bruises and cuts were fresh. Police conjecture that the fear of being caught on the fence, or the rear of being beaten again, may have pushed the blood disorder toa lethal state. "I reel awful about it,'' said Geraldine Hawkins of Baltimore, who came to mourn the child. "I guess the parents are afraid to come forward now. But they s hould have been a fraid from the start. It was a heartless thing t.o have done." have been someone I knew." said Bill Robinson, a recently retired Frederick-eounty-schoolteacher. "Unfortunately, she wasn't. It's a ver y sad thing. I still can 't see a family missing a chlld not saying anything at all.·· Funeral arrangements were donated by undertaker Charles I. Glover. who said he "would not be able to sleep nights" if he hadn't done something. ·· 1 hvc alone in the city." said Glover "I could die tomorrow und someone would have lo come forth and see that I got buried properly " Physician defends evolution By ROBERT LOCKE APSC~eWrlur ANAHEIM Science is fall· ing prey to "the cultists, the mis fits and the fools" because scientists have failed to explain and defend their profession, a Nobel laureate charges. ..We hav e fail ed t o act vigorously in defense of scien· tific truths," Dr. Arthur Kornberg said Monday. "We have shrugged off rather than rejected forcefully the cultists, the misfits and the fools who erode science '· He said it is sad tha t ··society, by ignorance, is as captive to c r e a ti on i s t s , a s t r o I o g e rs., evangelists. food faddists and all kinds of gurus as were our an· cestors <held captive> by fears of thunder and lightning." The Stanford University physi· cian, who shared lhe 1959 Nobel Prize for medicine for research on the material of heredity, was to have defended the theory of evolution earlier this month at a trial in Sacramento. The trial ended before he was called as an expert witness. Religious fundamentalists had argued that teaching evolution in public schools violated the re· ligious rights or their children and asked that the biblical story of creation be taught alongside evolutionary theory. The judge rejected those argu. ments, without considering the scientific merits or either side, and state attorneys claimed a victory. But Kornberg told a m~Ung of the California Medical As· sociatlon here that science didn't win. He 119ted that judicial decision warns schools and textbook publishers not to p resent evolu· tionary theory as an "official dogma taught as If lt's beyond dispute.'' "That," Kornber1 said, "is monstrous nonsense. Evolution ls beyond dispute. It's a fact of <See SCIENCE, Pafe A.J) MONTREAL' FOR YINCEt Los Angeles Rams quarterback Vlnce Fer· rasamo says there'• very little chance that he'll be toaslns puaes at the Bla A nextaeuon. He'• cloae to 1l1nln• a contract wt~ Montreal of the Canadian rootball # Lea1ue. John Sevano ftlea an exch11lv• report on . Pac• Et today. \ I· O•llY Pil•I PMt•t llf P•lrlcll 0'0.W..11 FIRE GUTS HOME IN DOWNTOWN HUNTINGI_OK_BEACH Fast thinking youth helped to prevent lnJurtee Fro• Page Al FIRE .•. out on the ground floor of the first home. The residents of that house, Robert Evans. 33. and Mike Wa rner. 25. arrived after firefighters were summoned Fire inspector Marshburn said the men's home was destroyed in the blaze. Damage to the structure and cont e nts was estimated at $150.000 . firefightf'rs were able to con· lain the blaze that spread to the second house, limiting damage tu a bout $15,000. Marshburn said . Marshburn said firefi ghters initially were hindered by spec- tators who parked on fire hoses as they were being connected. He said smoke from the blaze s pread southeas t through Hunt- ington Bea<'h, t r iggering a number of fi re calls from resi- dents . The blaze was brought under control shorUy before 8 pm., Marshburn said. Construction accident kills worker A worker at a construction site in Weir Canyon in northeast Orange County was killed when his head was crus hed on the swivel platform of a crane. Orange Cou nt y Sh e riff's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart identified the victim of the Tues· day morning accident as J ames Cory White, 24, of Hemet. Lieutenant Harl said While was employed as an oiler on the large crane working at a con· struction site about one mile north of Weir Canvon Road. Hart said White died instantly when his head became caught between the massive coun- terweight on the crane and the swivel platform. Girl beaten by 3 kids MERCED <AP > Three children carried away as many toys as they could gather after beating up an 8-yj:!ar-old girl at her home here, police said. Officers took the girls, age 7 and 9, into custody and con- tinued their search for an older boy for investigation of assaull' and burglary. Police said the boy struck Melissa Danielson's race, break- ing two front teeth after the girls knocked her down. ORANGE COAST Reagan call becomes arts cut debate LOS ANGELES <API Prest· dent Reagan called the Los Angeles Times theater critic to put in a good word for a musical comedy by his friend Buddy Ebsen and ended up debating the propriety of his budget cuts for the arts. critic Dan Sullivan reported today. Sullivan said the president began the surprise call by say· ing. "I know this is highly un· usual, but J understand Buddy Ebsen has a new musical play- ing out there called 'Turn to the Right' that you wrote a nice re- view of in the paper. "I just wonder if there isn't some way you could let people know that l sure hope it's still playing next time I get home so that I can see it." Reagan js planning a visit next month. Sullivan, who also had written a column critical of Reagan al· lowing his budget director to cut federal support for theater and music in half because the arts are "low priority," s aid he told the president: "I'm ashamed of you." Reagan replied, "Well. I'm sorry you feel that way," but stayed on the line and defended his cuts. Sullivan said. The writer told Reagan he believed the National Endow- ment for the Arts was tightly budgeted and administered, but Reagan contended that officials had discovered NEA boondog- gles like $1 ,500 going for a theater performance in a laun· dromat. Sullivan said he suggested boondoggles also existed in the Defense Department, which was the only part of the federal budget to be increased Reagan agreed . saying there were $4 billion worth at the Pen- tagon "and we've caught them." To Sullivao 's protestations that the ~overnment should fund the arts because they are "part of the nation's s piritual health," Reagan responded that it was a matter of balancing needs. R eagan insisted that Americans support t he arts more generously than anybody, but by private means. Israel snubs U.N. TEL AVIV, Is rael CAP ) -The Israeli army today sharply re· jected a demand by the U.N. peacekeeping force in Lebanon to withdraw C hri s ti a n militiamen following the death of two U.N. soldiers earlier this week. The U.N . troops have tried lo be a buffer between Pales tinian guerrillas and Israel's northern border. Dally Pilat MAIN()llf:te£ Thomu P. Heley ,......... ~N.WNd M. Thomes KHvll ,.... ~Murphlne ~H.Looa ................... ~Sehulm•n ~~ .. n ~ N. Oodderd Jr, ~--- l UO WHt e.ys.., eo.i. Me .. , CA. Mall MCI,..: ... IMO, Colle""-"· CA. '2t2' Copyr ..... 1•1 Ot-C..tl ,..,.,llN"9 CM!HIW. Iii• lltw\ \tofie\, llh1stret1ons, .Ollorl•I mMl•r or • .,. vtrlht-nlt llff•ln me y IM reproduod wll11ou1 \P9tl•I permlulOn Of col'Y•'9111 owNr. • !McOftd t l•u "°'' ... peld et c .. i. M•M, Cellfornl•. CUPS 1u..eoo1. SIAIKripllOll lly terrier MAIO mo!Wflly; by mell IUO mon4111y; mllllM'( dellklellOllt M.eo "'°""''" • TM Oruae County Board ol S..pervilorl baa autboriaed 12 poslUoae that offlclala aay are needed to otfaet tbe inttHlinl Clymore lawyer due in Syria By JOHN NEEDHAM Ol IM o.lly PllM SUit The Laguna Beacb attorney representing freed Orange Coun· ty hostage Craig Clymore says he wlU Oy to Damascus, Syria Monday to fight his client's threatened extradition to the United States, where he faces federal drug smuggling charges. Ronald Kreber said Tuesday he had received ·assurances Crom the Syrian Embassy in Washington, D.C., that he will be Issued a visa so he can enter the country. Kreber s ays he wants to re· so l ve the c harge*> against Clymore, wbo is accused oC be· ing the ringleader of a nine· member international drug s muggHng operation, before the 24-year-old man returns to the United States. Clymore, formerly of Lake Forest, was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani airliner hijacked by opponents of the Pakistan government March 2. Just hours after Clymore and the other hostages were released Saturday the news or a grand jury indictment naming him and eieht other alleged has hish and heroin smugglers was released by the U.S. Attorney's office in New York City. Syria and the United States have no extradition t r eaty. Kre ber is accusing federal drug e n forccment authorities of pressuring the Syrian govern· ment to arrest Clymore on a minor charge to force him to agree to extradition to the United Stales. But Kreber says he will at- tem pl to block the extradition of his client. He said Damascus will be the "battleground" for the drug case. "If they wanted him back here so badly, why did they release the indictment before he re· turned from Syria?·· Kreber said. Kreber said Cly more's father, Glen Cly more o f San Juan Capistrano, wouldn 't accom- pan y him 0 11 his trip t o Damascus. though he has re- peatedly said he wanted to go. Kreber denied reports that his client had been questioned at his Damascus hotel by U.S. of- fi cials. or that he was being followed by ell\bassy police. "His father and I spoke to him Tuesday morning and he didn't s ay anything about that." Kreber said. Fro• P.,,e Al SCIENCE ... nature a s co mpe lling a s gravity." He conceded some scientific dis pute over the precise mechanisms by wbicb evolution works, but said the theory it.self is beyond question and "lhe con- fusion stems from ignorance and semantics." The problem, he said, is the failure or scientists to explain themselves and the nature of science. That failure has serious impacts throughout society, he added. Kornberg said the government and the public often forget that t h e wonders of modern technology exist only because they are buj)t on a foundation of basic research -knowledge sought, not for profit or even for the good or society, but for the s ake of knowing. ·'This scientific base is oRen obscured and ignored when the refinements of· t echnology , heaped on oae another, make it seem that the marketed product is more important than the knowled1e that fathered it," he said. Government.a, foundations and cor porations that fund research often expect scientists lo aim their efforts at specific 1oats and problems. But, he said. "crusades agalnat a dJseue have uaually failed. The vast majority or medical d.lacoveries derive from unrelated baaic ln1l1bta." Wjd e Jy publicl1ed breakthroutha, Kornber1 said, are rarely Uie work of alqle 1clenU1t1. lnatead, they are merely the latest lD a ae1"l11 of amall atepe over many years. • '1\ la 1clence tbat la u- traordlnary, not the td.U.ta . • • It la the ldeat.lflc dlactplint that b•. permitted ordiaary peo. pie to achieff ma.lat WD11 ewer perloda ol bUndredl ol yean. •· • • weafaN Ull'l~ cuelQad ol tile eou.atJ Hu•an 8ervlce1 A1eney. Aa ol .... u1t of T\aeaday'a ac· lion, the county will employ by Au•u•l a total of M8 people whose aole duty la to determine who quallfte1 few several types of '911l1tance, ranalna from Medi-Cal to food stamps. tSee related story,Paae A3>. Board members, however, re- jected a request for the hlrln& of SO additional supervisors, who, according to HSA offlciala, would more clotely monitor Ute ellgiblllty worker 's Job performance. T he current ratio of workers to supervisors ii 8 lo l ; HSA of· ficiab are seeking to reduce the ratlo to 6 to l. They said auch a move could help the county re· duce its error rate in providing assistance to persons who should not receive it. About 90 percent of the c06t or hiring the 72 new employees wiU be paid by either the federal or state governments. The net county cost would be about $44,000. The )2 positions, while authoriied, will be filled onJy as caseload increases actually oc- cur. Yet, HSA officials made it clear in their thick report to the board that tbe new workers will be required by summer. Supervisor Harriett Wieder , who supported the addition of the 72 positions, led the opposi· tion against the hiring or addi· Land deal told NEW YORK (AP > The Wall Street Journal s aid today that President Reagan's nominee as head of the lnterior Depart- m ent ·s Office of Surface Mining bought land "potentially worth millions or dollars" rrom two coal-mining companies while he was chairman of committees res ponsible for strip-mining legislation. ors lJonal aupervilort. Slae aald HSA otttctall' u.er· lion that lncreued 1upervtJlon would lower the welfare at· alatance error rate waa "not well documented.'' She 1u11ested that the prern- lte should be teet~d vla a ''dem· onatration project" ln which error rates between eH1lbUlty units in which supervision la In· creased and units where it is not lncreaaed are compared. HSA officials said they wtll provlde further inlormaUoo lo the board ln the future on their justi(lcaUon for the increased number ol supervisortal posts. Ex-envoy revealed in sex scandal LONDON <AP> -SW Peter Hayman, former British a m- bassador in Canada who held numerous sensitive posts includ· ing assignments in NATO, was named tod ay as the senior diplomat invol_yed fo a c.hil.d porrfographiScanda I. Hayman, 66, was identified in the House of Commons by Geof- frey Dickens of the ruling Conservati ve Party, who accused the governme nt of a cover-up A.~'- and said Sir ~ P e ter c.o uld ~ have been "a lre m endous security risk . HAYMAN .. open to blackmail." Dickens named Hayman in two published questions asking authorities "to investigate the security implications" or the a f- fair and disclose whether the diplomat will be prosecuted. f'r••P.,,..4J r BURNETT •• 1Uni instead ot apoJ01utn1." On tbe wit.net• stand ln the, p1ck9d courtroom, Miu Burnett quietly 11Jd ahe believed the En .. qulrer had portrayed her as a drunk. Thla particularly Of· fendH her, ebe aald, beeauae both her parent.I were alcoboUn and dJtd at the a1e of 46 of': alcoholism. : "I'm not ashamed of it," she . uld of her parents' affliction ! and sald It spurred her to speak: out against alcoholism, hoping: . to he lp children of alcoholic! parents. "Some kids wrote to m e. They , said. 'My mother drinks; my ; father drlnks. U you can sur-: vive,lcan',''shesaid. : After the Enquirer article, she ; said she asked herself, "How l can 1 talk about alcohol and i have any credibility?" : She said she is still "a little· paranoid" as a result of the arti· cle, afraid lo laugh in public i places for fear it will be re· ported. · "Does this mean 1 can never . laugh in a restaurant again, that 1. can 't be m yself and enjoy , m yselr?" she asked : "( felt, oh, l felt awful." she-: said : On cross examination, En·· quirer attorney William Masterson asked M 1ss Burnett J whether she often portrayed a . drunk on her TV show to get: laughs ··r did a drunk on a show as a; loser," she replied ··n was · m•ver m a glamorous light; but it was in a humorous light." "'Is 1l your testimony that periodic abuse of alcohol is fun ·: ny ., .. Masterson said : "Al limes 1l <:an be runny toi som e people and sometimes: very reHahng and painful. .. she· anS'A t'red Cri1n~ fi ght OK'd LOS A~GELES 1AP 1 A' paekag<' or ant1 -r nme measures that will beer up law enforce-· ment. prosecutio n and prisoner · rev1e" programs has been adopted by the county Board of : Supervisors · SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribution of men's and women's clothing. We trade with the most prestigious stores and the best manufacturers in the country. But we also deal direccly with you -the individual traditional clothing con~ sumer. Because you apprecia te the classic sryles and the quality chat our clothing rep-- resents, we would like you to understand exactly why we can offer you such substanrial savings on the clothes you really want. To begin with. we d eal in one very specific inventory: traditional sryles. We do n't do speculative buying on trendy gannencs that go out of style and have to 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 reductions1directly to the dis, ccming public through ou~ Br?~erage . Finally, we feel chat an md1Vldual whose preference is quality and classic styling can appreciate the savings represented by o ur streamlined look. Because we don't spend excessively on costly displays and fixtures , we dQn't have to pass those additional costs along to you. We ar 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. Tu1tln 621 South B St., Tustin , CA 92680 (just behind Hadley's Fruit Orchard) Telephone 714/7 31-7151 Hoo!'I· Monday thro1.11h Satut'day lO:OO •· m -6:00 p.'m Sunday 12:00 nooo·S-00 p.m Wat Loe An1elee 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd. West Los Angeles. CA Q0064 Telephone 213/4 77 .. 8095 . . I I . I ,._ I l I I '' I I I Sen . Barry Keane. D-Mendocino, presented de- tails of his bill proposing Legalized midwifery in the state. then inspected one of his chief sup- porters -none other than The Stork. "Misery is one little child crying because it hurts to be hungry." ac- tress Liv Ullman told Congress in appealing for increased U.S. contribu- tions to U.N. Children's Fund. Highw ay's a skyway -Prinee talcel I another laU PrlMe c::.arlel tumbled to lbe turf tor the second Ume in four day1 ln hi• bid to qualify aa a steeplechase jockey. After sa11in1 Into 14th place ln a field ot 20 runners, the prince cra1hed off his mount, Good Prospect, at fence No. 10 halfway throu1h the 1ruelin1 t.hree·mlle Kim Muir pup Handicap Chase at Cheltenham race track. ''He got a bit tanaled up with the horse's legs as he fell," sald a BBC radio com· mentator, but the prince got up on his own steam and ap· peared to be all right. Sen. Bob Dole, R·Kan., r~ turned to the helm of the Senate Finance Committee after being hospitaliied more than three weeks following a kidney stone operation. Dole 58, who has only one kidney as a result of a World War II wound, was operated on at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. President Reagan welcomed the national poster child of the Mu scular Dystrophy Association to the White House and traded jokes with comedian Jerry Lewis, whose telethons have uiaed-more-than $400 m111ion for research on the disease. The president held S·year- o Id Christi Bartlett of Shreveport, La., in his arms, posing with Lewis for pie· lures in the Oval Office. Erle Clapton was showing improvement. from a perforated ulcer but the British rock star remained hospitalized in St. Paul in serious condition. Clapton. 36, was flown to St. PauJ in his private jet Saturday after suffering the perforated ulcer in a Friday ni g ht performance at Madison, Wis. KNXT newsman Ken Jones has been granted another week of vacation so he can resolve his difficulties with a bank that accused him of defrauding it of $200,000, a station spokesm an says. O n March 9, Secur ity P acific National Bank filed a $209.974 civil s uit against Jones for $196,234 he alleged· ly obtained with bad checks and for money he reportedly owes on a promissory note and credit card account. It's lunch time for the crew of this Cl.30 transport and there's not a taco stand in sight? Wrong. It's part of a joint U.S.-South Korea military exercise near Seoul. Highway links Korean capital with southern port city of Pusan. Road was con- structed so that it could be used as emergency runway in event of war. Tax crackdown ordered Wii~lding form ex~mptions eyed WASHJNGTON (AP> -The Internal Revenue Service bas ordered an employer-aided crackdown on income tax withholding in an attempt to head off what It says la a spread· ing scheme to borrow -If not s teal -from the government. New rules, requirlnl employer compliance, would bar worken lrom claiming an extraordinary number ol $1,000 exempUons on their W·4 withholdiqg forms when they are eUgible for only a few ror lhemselve.s and their families. The practice baa been moat noted ln the Fllnt, Mldl., area where, accordla1 to tbe IRS, thousands of autOworlren bave "'''ell l1Jtt1(1 ilzt The Dally Pilot wants to bear observations from ill readers particularly commentl abcMlt the paper Itself. Jt'1 easy to tell us your views. Just call the number below and your me .. a1e will be recorded. Messa1es will be lranacrtbed several Umea dally and delivered to the desk of the appropriate editor. No circulation calls, please. TeU ua what's on your mlnd. The number 11 In aervlce 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 842•8088 used it to avoid having any federal tax withheld from their paychecks. That, of course, does not ln any way reduce a worker's tax Ila bUlty. but at the least It postpones payment until the employee !Iles his tax return - .tn effect, an Inte rest-free method of borrowing. Construction workers at a nuclear power \plant site in Waablngton State also have been reported ualng the scheme tbla year, but IRS offtcla11 declined to offer specific nrure1 which would indicate bow pervaaive the practice baa become. Tbt new temporary re1ula· tlea, 'to be publlahed In the . Plderal Relister oo Tburtday, 1ay1 U..t whenever there ll a clllpuw Over wttbholdlnt exemp- tl on 1, an employer must withhold accordln1 to the number the lRS approvet rather tban the number a worker clalm1. ., Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Wedneaday, March 18, 1981 .. ·" . \~· They're 11ot 11eeded now ·~-1 ........ Bicycles, dusted with snow, hang from an apartment balcony in Yakutsk, Russia, waiting for the short but hot Siberian sum- mer. The regional capital of --Eastern Siberia can have temperatures as low as 40 degrees below zero. ~~~~~~~~ Relief program ailing OC ftmds expected to run out March 27 Despite more than $200,000 in budget transfers since the first of the month, Orange County government 's General Relief welfare program once again is facing financial insolvency. M.oney in the account used to provide cash assistance to persons who have ~xhausted all other sources of welfare aid likely will run out by March 27, the county Board of Supervisors was told Tuesday Supervisors first learned Maid cuffed in $100,000 NB robbery Three men broke in to a Newport Beach hou se. handcuffed a maid and ransacked the waterfront residence before fleeing with an es timated $100,000 in jewelry and firearms Newport detectives s ay the trio broke into the Brighton Road house in Cameo Shores shortly after 10 p. m. Monday and grabbed a surprised Robin Cooper. the maid The 23-year-old woman told of· ficers that two of the me n handcuffed her and threw her on a bed. She reported that she was un- harmed but could hear the in· truders rummaging through the house. After the robbers left. the maid said she struggled free of the cuffs and ran to a neighboring house to seek help. Owner Richard Golden was not home at the ti me of the incident. Police said the men made ore with jewelry, gold and guns. One of the intruders was believed to be in his 20s while a second was described as being about 50. No description was available on the third man. G e m Talk ByJ C. HUMPHRIES Cntifil'd Gemolo1<ist, AGS VOLCANOES create new gem The fierce · forces of nature which unleash volcanoes have also created what is being recognized as a new American gemstone . "Heliollte" is a shimmering stone -sometimes red, sometimes green -tbat was formed when lava flowed from the Ra bblt Hills near- L a k e view , Oregon many centuries ago. The lava was fluid basalt which, when it cooled, released tiny crystals of 9ther substances. The crystals, appearing in the lava like raisins in a loaf of bread, are mostly clear and are not of 1emstooe quality. Some, called "1unstones" have been picked up by amateur rock collectors. But other specimens, crushed by the welaht of t,be lava, took on an extra bardneu and refractive brilliance. Clalma have been staked out for mlnln1 these rare specimens. They are as hard u opa11 or 1raneta, and ~any have all ol the eolor In their center , -lth clear m 1r1lns, 1lvin1 them an wiu1ua1 beauty. Tiley are proof that nature, even at ill mott vl6lent, can produce arut beauty. ' March 3th. t the General Relief program budget was in trouble. Al that time, they approved a $50,000 transfer lo meet pay- ments through the end of the month. Las t Frida y, the board transferred an additonal $150,000 'to the program after receiving information that the previous transfer had been exhausted. "March was incredible. is in· credible," said Richard Ruiz, county Director of Social Services. "What's happening in the general relief program has no precedence in the history of the county." Ruiz said county officials originally had projected that about $170.000 would be needed for payments to General Relief recipients during March But asked by Supervisor Bruce Nestande if the true figure was going lo be "$300,000 lo $400,000." Ru iz replied, "That's right." . A general rise in the county unemployment rate and the re- cent 22 -day Orange County Transit District strike were cit· ed as possible factors that led to the dramatic increase in the number of persons seeking General Reli ef assistance. Ruiz said thue have been 1,500 new assistance requests so far this month. more than twice the figure during an "average" month. The social services director. who was strongly criticized Fri· day for the county's apparent in· ability to predict when the pro· gram's funding would be ex· hau s t ed. tol d supe r visors Tuesday that new monitoring procedures have been instituted. He said the county Auditor· Controller's office, which sends out the assistance checks, is pro· . vi ding a daily accounting of the funds remaining in the General Relief account. ' Ruiz said projections s how that funds. based on curre:it dai· ly expenditures of $14.400, will run out March 27. His staff is still examining what can be done to cool the de· mand for General Relief as· sistance. A report on those find· ings is lo be given to supervisors next week, Ruiz said. Mou nt Etna shakes, spews lava C ATANIA , Sicily <AP>- Mount Etna spewed molten rock in a s trong eruption after Europe's most active volcano was jolted by hundreds of earth tremors. officials reported. ··There is no Immediate danger but we're watching the situation carefully.·· Professor Mario Consentino of Catania's earthquake institute said Tues- day in a telephone interview. The lava poured from a crater at 7.500 feet and covered nearly a half mile on the northeastern slope by nightfall. Experts flew over the volcano in helicopters lo check the situtation. Consentino said the volcano began erupting around midday after it was jol.ted by more than 500 mild tremors in the last 24 hours. The volcano had also been pouring out black smoke and a s hes in the past 15 days in another sign an eruption was im· minent. An eruption in 1979 killed nine people in a tourist group during the volcano's strongest eruption in 20 years. Since then the upper rim of the volcano has bee n c losed to tourists. MEMER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 1823 NEWPORT BLVD . COSTA MESA 33 VEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION 8ankAmerlcard-M11ter Charge ~I Mt-3401 U810aY &BP&ATING DSn. -We. a.N reminded today that the modern era llD't tlM ooly time Uaat OW' Oran1e County sovernmeot bu aufterecl civic pratfalll m bulldm,c:outrucUon. ltcoes•waybad. Riehl now, the current veut.lon ls tbe county'• new Hall of Adminlatratlon. sometime referred to by b.) tbe wags u the Hall of Dislntegntion. · , ~\ Because the new ~ hall bu creaked and JIM MURPllll Ii j:racked, construction I "' crews are currently str· -------------inging steel cables through the place in an effort tosbore lt up. This could be called · · OperationSpaahetti. '' Reports on this current eovemmenlal embarrusment reminded long-time Orange Countian Florence Cook of earUerlimes. "IT BROUGHT TO MIND the old Hall of Records building across from the YMCA on Church Street, built around 1926 and torn down a rew years ago," Flo recalled. "When it was buUt and practically completed, they were ready to install the furnace. But it seems they bad no place to put it. "The steam registers. however. were all in place. So that's why the heat was piped in from the original old red courthouse. "I well remember Jim Sleeper, Bill Jerome and John Lamb shaking their heads as they discussed this oversight. At the time. I was writing tax bills by hand during sum· mer vacation. I'd hate to be doing it by hand now ... " WITH THAT LITTLE SLICE of history in mind, maybe the fix-up crew on the current county ball ought to Crewman stretching cablea between leaning count11 wolu check and see if it has a furnace in it. Maybe it's the one left over from the old Hall of Records. The lovely Mrs . Cook, by the way, is lhe wife of former Newport Beach councilman Dee Cook, now a supervisor for Inyo County who shuttles his way the 40 miles between his home in Bishop to the County Seat at Independence. At last report, unlike our own County Seat at Santa Ana. nothing seems to be cracking at Independence. AT OUR COUN'IY HALL up there on Civic Center Drive, some days it seems Hke the construction people out· number county e mployees. There are piles of plastic· sheathed steel cable all over the place. The re·builders have bored holes in the walls and are stringing cables through the place horizontally in parallel sets. Scaffolding has been erected both inside and outside the building to accomplish this work. So far, cable has been stretched through the second and third floors and they still have the third and fourth floors to go Crews hope lo wrap it all up (pardon the pun l by May 1. AFl'ER TH E CABLE-STRINGING is done, then comes what is called "the tensioning." That means they tighten up all the cables so the pride of our civic center gets held together Thus you're supposed to end up with a five-story post· tensioned building, at a cost of $225,000. It is anticipated that our county government will have spent $1 million to shore up the Hall of Administration before its aJI over. Now when the construction guys start tightening up a ll those cables on the county hall, let's all pray we don't hear anything loud that goes, "Twang!" Atlantans a void police ATLANTA (AP > Police have refused to approve an armed c itizens patrol d e· termined to protect children at a housing project. and only a handful of people turned out for a meeting aimed at uniting police and community in the city's investigation of 22 child slayings and disappearances. One of two meetings scheduled Monday night to kick off a series of police·community '·unity forums" had to be canceled for lack of interest when onJy 25 people attended the first session. Meanwhile, young men said they would arm themselves with baseball bats and walkie-talies to patrol a housing project near downtown Atlanta, des pite criticism from top law enforce· ment officials. ~RLD I NATION Salvador military aid rpushed. WAllllNOTON'CAP> -ID what •&1 be the onJy leaate tat of senior Democrat, Sen. Darnel K. loouye of Hawaii. ablt.alned. new U.S. mUttar1 aid tom Salvllclol', President Rea1an hN won Sen. Bob Kutenmeler, R·Wil .. tbe 1ubcommltlee'1 chalroian, 1ubcommlU.. tPOroY~ to Med 15 mlllioD wortb ot b•Ueopten and aald he l1 convinced U.S. military acUvily In El S\lvador will not otber...,f«uaeapln.ltleftist,uentllalDftJtratlon. ttcalatellkeltdldlnVlet.nam. , Tbe Senate Appropriatiom forelp Ol*'AUODI •"bcommlltee ,1. However, he ack:nowltdced that "all of us are worried about hH approved the t5 m01lon by a &-2 vote. A 1lmllar House aubcom· t ne fact that we have Americans now ln EJ Salvador and all of ue rnltt.ee la to vote oelt Tualday. are worried about the pos1lbWt.y of the United St•tes 1ettina em· Rea1ao l1 aendlna ao mlWon 1n mtutary aid under b1J own broiled in a dlfncult sltuation." emereency authority, but the two 1ubcommltteea have veto power Meanwhile, the WhJt.e Houae 11 publicly disputing a State over the addition al $5 million becaute lt is betne redirected from Department complaint that the news media overplayed the emert· pro1rama for which It WH orilinally appropriated. ln1 U.S. role in EJ Salvador. 'l'be ~ million Is earmarked for heUcoptera, patrol boafa, "The president ls runnlna forelen policy in this country. not radar and other equipment the admlniatration aaid El Salvador theSLateDepartment,''WhlteHowsepreassecretaryJamesS.Brady said after lencthy questionln1 on the subject Monday. need1 "to interdict the lnfiltraU°" of men, arma and equipment in· Acting Assistant Secretary of State John Bushnell said last week to El Salvador and to counter the conUnuln1 threat of Marxist that "our impression is that this stol"y is running about five times as ..•errtllu." •-big aa It really is." The two committee members voting a1ain1t the aid were Sen. Referring to 54 U.S. military advisers either in El Salvador or Mark Hatfield. R·Ore., chairman of the full Senate Appropriations 1oln1 there. Bushnell said, "Jud&lng by the press coverage of this, Com mlttee. and Sen. Patrick: Leah_....r ...... _o_._V_l_. _T_h_e_1u_bco __ m_m_it_te_e_'_s ___ l_w_o_ul_d,...h_a_v_e_t_h'-ou""g.._b.;..;t'-w;..;.e..;....:.;h..;;a..:;;d..:d:.:::eployed a whole di vision." .. Insurance on autos 'inflated' WASHINGTON (AP> -Auto insurance rates in most states should be lowered between S percent and 10 percent because high gasoline prices are causing people to drive less, a consumer group says. The report by the National Insurance Consumer Organiza- tion saJd a study could find no s tate where rate·making calculations have been changed to take into account current driving habits. R9bert Hunter, president of the consumer group and former head oC the Federal Insurance Administration, said to state in· surance officials, "We think the change in driving habits may be dramatic enough ror you to con- sider a rate rollback." T H E R E PO RT quoted an Energy Department finding that gasoline consumption declined nearly 12 percent between 1978 and last year. "It would indeed be ironic if the gasoline price rise. already resulting in windfall profits to OPEC and the oil companies, re· s uited in a second round of windfall profits for insurers," it said. Bruce Butterfield, assistant vice president of the Insurance Information Institute, an in· dustry group, said of Hunter's report, "I don't know where he is getting those numbers ." .,. .. ,.,.,... Ber boys Britain's Queen Mother Elizabeth sits with members of 1st Battalion Irish Guards at Chelsea Barracks in London after presenting shamrocks to them to observe St. Patrick's Day. --------- College aid applicants on 'hold' WASHINGTON tAP) Educa· tion Secretary T.H. Bell said his department has put a freeze on pro cessing applic ations for grants lo college s tudents whiJe it waits for word from Congress on whether it will go along with pro· posed reductions in the grants. Bell estimated that 250,000 stu· dents already have filed applica· lions for the basic educational op· portunity grants since March 1. when the government began tak ing applications for the 1981·82 school year. PRESIDENT REAGAN has proposed increasing the amount families are expected to con· tribute lo their children's educa lion. The effect would lower the income cutoff for the program from roughly $25,000 to $21 ,000 for a student from a family of four. "We can't process them until the Congress responds to our regulation changes . They have 45 days to respond," Bell s aid. STUDENTS ARE being sent postcards to tell them there will be a delay in notifying them ofthe size or their grants. The money eventually is sent to colleges for crediting to students' accounts. Bell said it normally takes six to eight weeks for an application to be processed and a grant made. He said he did not know how long this "lull" will last because ·'the - answer is contingent upon the Hill." 6,000 salute centenarian Butterfield said the inflation rate for auto insurance was 6.8 percent between January 1980 and January 1981 , "about half of the general inflation rate." He compared this to higher inflation in the things insurance pays for MILL VILLE. N . J . (AP> -The bil"thday party citizen of this factory city of 25,000 who requested 10.8 percent ror auto main· was grand indeed more than 6,000 well-wishers anonymity. tenance and repair, rO.l percent turned out -but don't expect lo find the man Gov. Brendan T. Byrne and Sen. Harrison A for medical care, 10.9 percent hailed as the dean of American glass manufactur· Williams, D·N.J ., hailed Wheaton as a giant of in for physician services. and 14 .8 ing away from his desk just because he's 100. dustry and dean of Am erican glass manufactur percent for -hos pital room Frank H. Wheaton Sr., head of Wheaton In· ing. charges. dustries. believes in work. In a vast warehouse Patrick Oesjonqueres. a customer since 1949, decorated and filled to overflowing, Wheaton's lOOth came from Blangy-Sur-Bresle, France, to praise "AUTO INSURANCE rates birthday was marked Monday by praises by a gov· Wheaton as "the true son of this everlasting coun- have been going up at a lower ernor. a senator, employees, customers and com· try." rate than the things it pays for," petitors. Even at 100, Wheaton maintains daily control Butterfield said. He added that "We all affectionately call him Father over the privately owned company founded by his some companies. mostly in the .-W;.;...:.h;.;:e;.;:a;.;.ton.:..:.;. _ _;b;..:u;..:t_a::.:l;...w_a;:.:y~s=-:;b;.;:e.;.;h..:;;ln.ccd~ru::.:· s:_:;b_;a_c_k.:...,'_' _s_a_id_o_n_e _ _;;_r;:;;;.at.:;;;h.;;..;e:;.;;r__;;;in;.:__;1;..;;:888="-· -------------- Mid west, have reduced pre· mlums to reflect reductions in driving. However, the consumer group said that none1 of about 50 cur· rent filings it studied have been adjusted to reflect the change In driving habits. "Recent rate fil. ings overstate the number of claims which wilJ occur under the new conditions," it said. Choose !OU' own money plan! DAY-IN/DAY-Otrl' DJTERESI' Miami hits 82 degrees Interest compounded on your dally balance! \ No monthly charge If your balance Is $750 or morel Nominal fee or $3 per month If your balance Is lower! No minimum for those 62 and overt S 1101f ' <hw j"rt>ni N P1{' England to Great LakeB 11.S •....... ,,, LIQhl "'°,. lturri.• moved tnlo Ille HOrlllUjl •• • men of cold elr lrom c ... ..s. •-ecrou IM r•o•on •nd oul IOM• Snow •''° mo_.a •«OH peril ol Ill• Roolu •ncl Iller• •••• 111011 "'Ind• In -l!Wr'n Tun hmpe•elltfH eround Ille n•tion el "°°" PST r.,.O lrom II al ~ull SI•. Merle,"'''"" IO,, •• M!eml. 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" Call ue tot fltle .-... ,,,.,, ,.,.., ,, P9nalty for •"Y withdrawal on term aooounta. r ----~ [, ~t/f/l//N/ /ta{ '11 // ~>11 ·t/l'l J j ... \ ---, IM.IOAIMNCH toO laet leMMMI l out1WM1. 111111, CA._, (714) t1W101 Addlttonal offtoM In t_..ouna e.ecti ... *4-7541 • L.taun• ttlllt ••.. ...,..,00 • Belmont Short •• (213) ~1 Si n Clemente ... 412· 11111 • 1.1~• llelnore ... t144111 • Murrlete ............... 117-1132 L.19una Niguel ... -.1201 • Otlve/O,.,. ... -1!100 • lalboe t1l1nd .......... 8764211 Olen A#on •••••• •1.0111 1 .I I I J ' l I •• I I I I I ' Sky's not the limit Bill Blackwood polishes his plane in Carlsbad's Palomar Airport. The nation's first Federal Aviation Administration- approved paraplegic nltot, he wa:s named flight instructor of the Yiar in 1973 and is one of 1,000 fliers with physicpl handicaps. . Lawn mowing op osed Group urges lwmeow~ers let grp.ss grow SAN DIEGO (AP > -A spokesman for a national group of fruit lovers has launched an attack against one of the most hallowed American homeowner traditions : the neatly manicured lawn. Nellie Shriver . national coordinator of the Fruitarian Network, an offshoot of the Com- mitte e o f American Vegetarians, says s he is spearheading a national drive to save grass. The organization says it wants peopl e to l ock up their Normal deliveries lawnmo•ers. ··we .-e strongly urging that everyont who owns grass should let it grow under their feet," Shriver said, "and over their ankles, and even up to their knees, il grass can grow that tall." ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, March 18, 1981 s 4Navy creWDlen rescued SAN DIEGO (AP) -The four crewmen of a Navy helicopter ditched at sea have been rescued wltboutb\jury, a spokesman said. The Navy ordered an lnvestlca· tlon lnto the cause of the accident, blamed temporarily on mechanical problems. The SH3H Sea King chopper was fiytng off the deck or the aircraft carrier Constellation in what wu described as support of routine night carrier flight opera- tions. The helicopter sanlc The Constallation, based in San Diego, is participating in ex- . ercisesoffSouthern California. Spare 'son, jury asked REDWOOD CITY CAP) -The mother of Luis Rodriguez. the man convicted last month of the murder of two California Highway Patrol officers, asked a San Mateo County jury to spare herson'slife. The killing of a policeman is a "special circumstance" under California law, meaning that Rodriguez faces either the death sentence or life imprisonment without the possibility of parDle. Victims win suits • in restaurant. rapes FRESNO (AP> -A Jury has awarded dama1ea to two waitresses who were raped durtn1 a robbery at a restaurant here. The jury this week found Sentry Intruaioo Detection Sy1tem1 75 percent responsible and Swift Janitorial Services 25 percent responsible for failing to guard the Black An1ua Restaurant properly and falling to lock the back door. One woman was awarded $25,000 because she was raped twice. The other victim was awarded $18,000. Three mas ked and NEWS BRIEFS armed bandits entered through the unlocked door after the restaurant had closed Sept. 21, 1979. Two of them raped the waitresses while the third served as lookout. Three men were later convicted. BMO•• lar~• trfal -J8 ••nf~r re1111t• LOS ANGELES l AP> -Angelo Buono Jr. has been ordered to stand trial on 10 counts of murder in the Hillside Strangler case, alter a lG-month closed-door hearing that included a gag order on attorneys. That gag order expired this week when Municipal Court Judge Randolph Moore ruled there was sufficient evidence to bring the 45-year-old Glendale upholsterer to trial, and scheduled a Superior Court arraignment for March 30. Man p~ad• fltdltw to ldflnap, r••~rw VAN NUYS <AP) -A 21-year-old Compton man, Markham Anderson. has pleaded guilty to kidnapping a woman who was a house guest at the Sherman Oaks home of electronics czar Earl "Madman" Muntz. Anderson a lso pleaded guilty to r obbing Muntz's houseboy and a second female guest during the Feb. 10 incident. Superior Court Judge Richard Kolostian set sentencing for Ander- son for April 16. --------~ after Caesareans? The reasons, Ms.Shriversays are m~. But the primary ones which cn>p up are the organiza- tion's belef that grass Is a living thing a~ has a "conscious- ness," * that large stands of grass •ould be home to thousan:;r tiny creatures who would rwise be slashed to •------------ SAN DIEGO (AP> -A study at Kaiser Hospital says many women who have delivered their first baby safely by Caesarean sec- tion can undergo norm al pet vie delivery in the future. As a result of the study made public today, seven Kaiser hospitals in Southern California said they now are considering vaginal delivery as a less risky alternative for women who have had Caesareans. Researchers say about 99 percent of women who deliver by Caesarean the first time traditionally deliver that way in subsequent births. The two Kaiser perinatologists, Ors. Richard Porreco and Paul Meier, said that of 66 women who attempted pelvic delivery after C- sections, 53 labored and gave birth without surgery or com- plications whiJe the other 13 underwent C-sections . Virtually every U.S. residency program in obstetrics and gynecology, according to Meier, teaches "once a C·section, alw.ays a C-section.'' But he and Or. Porreco reported successes otherwise at University of Colorado Hospital before moving to San Diego. Porreco said he believes best medical practice eventually will end elective repeat Caesareans. pieces b a lawnmower. Small rodents and insects aren't Utt only things that would be saved. Fruitarians say. Ac· cording I> the group's statistics more tt•n 55,000 people are killed or Injured by lawnmowers annuallyilationwide. In adcltion, the vegetarians say. hugJ quantities of fuel for power l•wnmowers would be saved. The efld results would be a yard r~ning rampant with weeds, •ch would eventually turn in~ a meadow, and a meadow IDto a forest. Once trees begin to take root. the group contends cool. shady areas and erosion-rtsistant soil would be the chief nefits .. Poison Prevention Week March 15th-21st ' Familiar Skull and Crossbones Symhf>I has been replaced by a new Poison Sy'11bol : Mr. YQk! new national for pois Clean Out Yolll'-Medicine Cabi Keep your children safe! Bayside Pharmacy wlll help you protect your famlly by offerl.ng per old. prescription container one Wfftlontrl 0 PURV!YORS OF OLDTIME NEIGHBORLINESS BAYSIDE' BHARMAC '-' 101' .. ,.,. •r. • 11ewport INocl) 760-0111 PREVIEW THE NEW CRUISE COLLECTION AND MEET BLEYLE'S PRESIDENT, TOM ROGERS New arrivals from Bleyle for Hooper. Light . easy-care knits with a decided freshness-yet always a timeless quality. H1ghli9hted here. a nautical mood in navy and white polyester. 8 lo 18. Navy blazer with while lapels. $172 Stripe polo. navy. green. black or blue with white. $34. Pull-on pleat skirt . navy Of white. $92 Also available: pull-on pant. white. navy. black. blue. red. tobacco or pale grey. $74 . Playdeck Tom Rogers, president of Bleyle, will personalty present the collection tomorrow at BW Newport Beach. Join us for Informal mQdellng from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. . BUllOC~~ ·wllS~ I~~ NEWPORT BEACH . I I I I •I . I . • -4• . . Orange Cout Oalty Pftot Brown-Hayd~n · act demeans politics A• year aao the state aovernment in Callfomla WU aufferinl u.oct.r the erratic bebavlor and lndllferenee of a 1overnor who thou1ht be wu a preUclftUal candidate. It 'a beldnnlna to look now u lf 1111 ta IOlnl to. be a allly ..W,ueI to that und11Unplabed chapter -ln Callfomla poUU~. · · . · Jerry Brown baa made it clear be la ColDC to run for . somethina In 1981, very poeslbly \be Senate seat now OC· cupled by Sam Hayakawa. • True to bis 1980 form, Brown already has indicated ttrat, · from now on, ·he'll avold at ,u costs taldn1 a leadership position on anythin1 that mll)lt conceivably cost him a vote. If that means abandoftlna. last year's · positions, you are supposed to be too dull -or dazzled -to notice or care. Meanwhile, the citisens of California have become in· creasi.ngly cynical about the governor'• political op· portunism. The "political animal" can turn himself into a political butterfly with astonishing ease. Trying to make some sense out of the governor's do· . ings or, more likely, non-doings, .the next year or so would · be tricky enough. But now we have another performer in the arena -Tom Hayden, the current spokesman for the D~mocratic left wing. . Sin'ce coyly declaring as late as last Nqvember that he might never again run for public office, Hayden has been busUy engaged in building an organization and posi- tioning himself for anything that becomes available that Brown isn't running for. The Campaign for Economic Democracy is his vehicle. · To add to the fun and games, it has become increas· ingly apparent that Hayden has become one of Brown's inner circle ot key political advisors, as Brown courts the favor of Hayden's "new left." This fact has not occasioned great joy among the ranks of slate Democrats because Hayden's record of "help" to De111ocratic causes is not exactly glorious~ -He is widely credited r.mong Democrats and some Republicans with electing Sam Hayakawa to the Senate in 1976 by running against incumbent Sen. John Tunney in the divisive Democratic primary. -·His successful urging or Gov. Brown to appoint Edisori Miller as county supervisor in Orange County in the summer of 1979 not only cost the Democrats that supervisoriat seat. but also cost Brown tremendous statewide and even national credibility and a lot of finan- cial support inside and outside Orange County. -A byproduct, the Miller flap caused Brown further embarrassment when the state Senale overwhelmingly rejected Brown's appointment or Jane Fonda (Mrs. Hayden) to the state Arts Council. · Hayden has publicly acknowledged that his efforts on behalf of Miller were a "major mistake -bad for evety- one concerned -the governor, Miller and Orange County politics.'.' So up to now, Hayden's record or political acumen doesn't give California Democrats much cause for cheer. During the coming·year, we can expect to be amused watching the governor's attempt to roller skate on both · sides of the political street while carrying water on both shoulders. To make the act less difficult, he 'ti try to keep the bu.ckets almost empty. And Hayden is raced with trying to come up with his own version of the same act. He has to keep his left wing supporters happy while trying to sell himself as a born- again moderate to the rank and file or Democrats. 'For the folks who like a combination or political circus and soap opera. the Brown-Hayden show o.aght'to be an entertaining new art form. Tests for teacher·s? Pondering the question or why Johnny and Jane seem to have so much trouble mastering the essential arts of reading and writif'!g, Assemblyman Gary Hart, 0 -Sant? Barbara, h-.is turned his attention to their teachers. Hart, a former school teacher himself, was sponsor of the law that now requires all high school seniors to pass basic proficiency tests before graduation. He now pro- poses a basic literacy test for teachers. While this may be regarded as an unnecessary pul- down in the eyes or teachers' organizations, it may not be all that far-fetched. . Hart cites a survey in one school district that found one-third of the applicants for teaching jobs were unable to pass an eighth-grade level lest in reading and writing. Just how anyone can obtain both a college· degree and a teaching credential under these circumstances is something of a mystery. But apparently it's possible. And the fact that almost half the freshmen entering the University of California need remedial English · courses certainly indicates something has been missing in their earlier.education. . Hart simply says that if basic literacy standards are appropriate for high school graduates, they should also apply t.othose involved in'Classroom teaching. Indeed they should. And those seeking the highly responsible job of preparing young people for their life's work should be more than willing lo prove compet~nce in handling the language that must be a principal tool of teaching. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment IS invited. Address The Dally Pildt. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71'4) 6-42·'4321. Boyd/Outdated aj L.M, BOYD Already men\ioned that · more than half 'the popula- tion doesn't know the mean· inl of "runnln1 boards," those aide steps on early can. Some other things that One •l* ol the man-ape cont"f•nY that we have never heard: What doel the ape think about belna Unked to mo?· F.K. most children can't even de· flne let alone describe: a carpet beater, a quarantine si1n, a palm leaf fan, an automobile crank, and, sur· prlain•ly, an 1« pick. Sir Lawrence Oltvltr la uid to be under t.be Im· preaaion that he bu a "mean 1i1pper Hp." He tberefore declines to wear a mmtaobe in any role that calla' for blm to appear H aa uaa1m· patheUc character. A mean upper 'lip, is It? Ex.amine your face in the mlrrorj pleaae. How would you labe your upper Up? Kean? Kind? Carele11? Maybe you can deacffbe It ta wlne lln10: ' Bruay? Silky? 8.byf l>rJ? lmperthMDt? · Yoq fellow, U your wi.lll meuurement II liM a , tt•• exacUJ U. NIM u tbet ol tennil cnat Bjorn Bots. , ' Thom-s P. Haley/Publlshtr Thoma1 Ktevll/£dltor Wedneeday, March 11. 1911 .. .. Rowt.nd E~am/Robert Novak · . · SOviets staking o~t Africa WA8HINGTON -Wheli tbe . flnt ol four Soviet naval vtllt1a • 41ipptd quietly l11to M arxlat Moaamblque'1 &nalD eon Feb. 19, poat·detente U .S.·Sovlet rtvalry ~cbed up to a new peak with the Kremlin aervin1 notJce 1t wo.uld trump President Reasu'• Caribbean ace. Thll 1bowa how bard it ll for the Rea1an admtni1tration to ' While •l'Plaud1Q1 t.be presideot and ~retary of State Alex· ander Hai1 for Joni-overdue drawl.q ol the lln.e. they have been concerned aoout too much talk. I . • WHIL~ MAIUNG no public criUcllm of a tou1h~~artb­ bean policy they appliuct, aimed at endlna the Soviet·backed arm1 sblpmenta to El Salvador, ·Rea1an'1 hard·line critics have privately cautioned admlhlatra- tlon olflciala that too much talk conduct a forceful , c a t c 'h · up foreign policy from a poei- t ion or relative mllita'ry w ea kness . The new policy of bold· ness in tbe • could promote Soviet responses. · These would come with the U.S. so far behin$1 in the arms race tbat countermeasures would be dlfflcult. Caribbean, overdue after years of futile courtship of· Cuba's Fidel Castro, has triggered a · heightened Soviet challenge in even more inportant regions where the Soviets hold the high cards. Such a Soviet response has been predicted by worried pro- Reagan· hard-liners ln Congress. Richard Reeves Arrival of the Sverdlov-cJass light cruiser Suvorov in the port· of Maputo Feb. 19 showed the accuracy of these waf'J\ings. The Suvorov was shortly followed by three other Soviet ships: A Kashln:class destroyer, a fri1at.e and an auxiliary vessel, all de- tached trom the Soviet Indian Ocean neet. That formidable naval power has now been added to a rapidly increaslng number of military and eeoaomlc "advllen" from the communlat bloc now num· berln1 more than 5,000, well over twice those worklnJ lo Mos .. mbique leH than three years aco. These lilctude 2,500 Soviet ·and East German milltary speclallst.a who, with 1,500 Cubana, are now training Mo1amblque mllltary officers to fly KlG 171, to operate SAM 3' antl·alrcraft missiles and to drive over 200 tanks. · THE STAKES ln the Southern Africa power game. where Mozambique ia one of the high cards held by the Soviet$, are breathtaklnf: eontrol of the most conc~ntrated mineral wealth anywhere in the world on land; and control of the oil-sea lane from the Persian Gulf down the East Coast of Africa. Europe geta ~ percent of its imported olJ through that route and 70 per- cent of it.a Imported minerals from Southern Africa. The Soviet game in Southern Africa is to win what Haig called "the era of the resource war" in testimony to a House subcommittee last fa ll , before be became secretary of atate. He said that lf "future ~. eapeclaUy in Southern Alrtoa, result ln alltnmenl with MOICOW of this criUcal raource uea, ttien the U.S.S.R. would cootrol as much ai 90 percent" of key minerala vital to the economy ol the U.S., Western Europe and Japan. The sudden' arrival of four naval vessels In Maputo. together with the steadily ex- pand Ing contingent of com- munist "advisers," show1 that "alignment with Moscow" l1 moving ahead fast. Indeed, some diplomats here believe that the Soviet bloc pushed hard for the unusuallf harsh edict ol the Mozamt>aque government that expelled four American Embassy oCficials last week on spy charges. 'Thal followed a daring South African raid Jan. 30 on the Maputo headquarters of the anti-South African Na· tional African Congress. USING ITS 1977 friendship with Mozambique. the Soviet Union is believed to be leaning on the Maputo government to in· vok e Artie le 9 of the treaty. pl edging Soviet aid to eliminate any "threat" to peace. South Africa, along with its racial problems. is the cement used by the Soviets to bind Moscow to bl<tc k Southern Africa and create a band of Sov· iet power across the Southern tip of the continent from Mozambi- que to Angola. Hoping to close the final link in that band. the Soviets fin a ll y ~on full d iplomatic relations with Zim babwe last month. · Dealing with this Soviet sub version in an area as important to the industrial democracies as the Persian Gulf is unavoidably more challenging than impos· ing a long.needed Car ibbean quarantine now planned by the new administration It requires mi litary strength the ex- istence of real power to compete with the Soviet Union Reagan has asked Congress to give him that, but he is far from possessing it. Until he gets it. his conservative critics wrn praise his r esolve. but continue to worry about too much loud talk in America's backyard .PolitiCians evade Socia l Security truth W ASHJNGTON P.aragraph· Two of Section B of the Budget Fact Sheet issued by the White House is a mildly interesting glimpse of Presictent Reagan's political plans\and a frightening projection of the nation's social future. The heading of Section B r eads : Budget and Program Priorities and Criteria Used In Deciding Upon Budget Savings : .. Paragraph Two reads : "The social safety net of i n co m e securit y measur es erected in the 19308 to protect the elderly (includin1 cost-of- li vi ng. protec:.tion), the un- employed and the poor, as well as veterans, must be main· tained." It can't be maintained. Social Security, as we know it and are practicln1 it, is collapsing of its own weight. Ronald Rea1an, lucky and plucky enou1b to be working at 70, knows that. But he has decided ·to i1nore the truth because -son of a gun! - be plans to run for president again when he is 73. Reagan Ukes to say that he will govern as if he intended to. serve only one term. He's kid· ding himself. Or us . He's afraid of his geriatric peers, the 24 million or so Americans who are now over 65 -old people vote much more heavily than young people -and the 3 million more · who will pass that age before 1984. "Cutting" the federal budget without going after Social Security is to government as psychic surgery is to medicine. These are the numbers the White House chose to ignore: IN THE SHORT range, ac· cording to the Congressional Budget Office. the government will save at least $28 . billion between now and 1986 stmply by increasing Social Security pay- ments only once a,Year instead of twice a year. The Increases are now man· dated to match increases ln the Consumer Price Index. Those are artificially high increases because the index reflects things like the rising costs of real estate ; so we are paying benefits on the assumption that old people are buying houses twice a year. If we continued. against rea- son. giving Social Security reclp· ients twice-annual raises. but restricted those increases to th~ average wage increases of workers in the country. the gov- ernment would save $26 bilHon right there between now and 1986. BUT THOSE numbers are chickenfeed compared to the long-range statistics. the budgetary consequences or the aging of America . Federal benefits for the elderly now make up more than 25 percent of the budget. That's the cost th.i s year of Social Secu,rity, Medicare, Supplementary Social Security benefits and generous federal pensions -with the over·65 population at a relative· ly low 12 percent of the natiori. But when the "baby -boom" generation -the Americans . now between 20 and 35 -begin retiring in 2010, the number of senior citizens will have reached about ·17 percent. By 2020, the percentage of the federal budget necessary to maintain the cur- r ent level of elderly benefits will be an astounding 63 percent. That's also an impossible 63 percent. By then. because of declining birth rates since 1960. ther e will be o nl y tw o Americans working for each one receiving Social Security . Those two folks better work like hell, because I intend to be the senior citizen they're supporting at the same lime they're trying to feed the mselves and their families. THOSE NUMBERS are ttte biggest and dirtiest secret in . American politics. No one run· ning for office will even admit that they exist. In their one de- bate last fall, in Cleveland, both Reagan and Jimmy Carter as· serted that the Social Security System wn sound and each pledged to keep it that way. They were both lying -which is what all politicians do about this issue. Social Security is col- 1 a ps ing and Ronald Reagan made It clear this week that he is going to do nothing a bout that un~ll after he tries lo wlf a second term. And, lf he does Win in 1984, he could end up being • the onJy protected senior citizen in the country. ----------------------------------------------------------------------~·· A,-t Ho ppe Disaste rs can have so nie unexpected aft erma ths The full effect.a of tbe Mount St. Helens nsajor volcanic erup. lion are now being felt nine months later. United Preti In- ternational rei>orb that matemi· ty wards in the area are filled to overflowing. • The baby boom com• u no 1u.rprlle to demo1rapben who have loni not- e ·d t h a t population 1rowtb I• most virulent lo backward countrle1 wbere there Is aMC>lutely not.bins to do after work. Well, hardly anythil\I. T1atM fhwtlnp were ceftaln.ly borae out In the Mount St. Releu area wtMre numerous rHtdtftta were .Hb·bound In tbell' bomea for claya. TYPICAL WU Oeora• <>«-· ""· ..... wtt., ......... ,... • ce 0 ntly produced their sixth child. "Boy,'.' sald the proud father• "what a diaast.erl" He 1ald tbe wont part was that the uh fall out apparently lnterf ered with bis television re· ception. "J tuned In the seven o'clock newt and alt I 1ot wu aaow," be said. ''Naturally, I fiddled with the aet. But when It 1ot to be 11:30, I said to Mabelllne, 'Aw, the beck wltb it; let's bit lbe hay.' " Another dl1uter vlcUm was Floaa Brawley, now the mother bf fou.r. "Me and m>: buaband Mfred, played cra1y elpta Md flab for 72 hours \lDUl I ftDally said, 'Alfrtd, cln't you W.-t)ll fllJthlna elle to do?' He did.'' Al A &allLT Ol lhtH ttqic atortH, the Federal Dl111i.er Coatrol Adminlltratioft ll DOW drastically re¥11lD1 It. maaual, "1-ol Not to Do affn Dtalafn ......... "J\nt,'' beClal lbe manual, "••ft"Y fa.mil~ .-ad laaft • •· .... ...... al kit la .......... la I addition to food and water, the kit should Include nasbUgbts, a b,allet)"<>~rated cassette player with 12 acid rock caaaettes, two •PY thrUJen, Monopoly, Scrab- ble and Mah-~0011 set.a and a bandy ,Wde on H0t0 to Make a MU&tt DoUart a •mall, Unmarlcild BUia #I Yow 8aetfMftt during Your Spar~ 1'fnw °"Yow Oton ~ Prfll. "Once diauter 1trikes. stay · calm I Do aot Upt candles. Use your ftaabliibtl instead .. If you are fortmate enou1h1 t.o have a wine cellar, tak• •helter anywlMre ..... And , above all, Quotes "Wlult l"oc'd DOW needl IDOlt lJ ,.bat Amertc, need• moet -a I~ wl coeftdtnt ~.n -A ah~at by Pord cutm. C ...... iilid .,. ..... , DHal• ... = a fter U1DoUDcl111 tbe lar1 full·JHr loH la Amerte • tol'pCWN~ • > t avoid touch dancing, particular· ly during earthquakes. Lastly, keep bundled up. The lack of adequate clothing can lead to serious comequence1 ... Federai official• believe that couplet who are thu1 pr~pared can hold out for u lon1 as four days -whJch should provide sufficient Ume for re1cue teams l to reach them w1tb emer1ency · portable televiaion sets equipPed : with videc>tapes of the entire ' 1980-81 prof eulonal football aeason .. WIULB A.LL well and ·IOOd. many. lluman1tartan1 feel that our 1ovemment should alto live thoulht to tale pllaht of our poor, underpr1vU•1•d fellow mH around t.bt •lob9 and lQel.,. color t.eleYilloa HU ln the Food for P~ ..-otram. ror C:::t!f a.ln WI btvt ... tbat m faee1 tbe dam~ betw .. mon ttltYllioe ..., ori mort ....... AM tben ean be Uttle doabt wlUella alttrudft mos& bu.manltarlMI pref•. 1 ' I 1 , I ~-.-~········--·······~· ,.,, .......... HARRY BRODA, 21, PARAL VZED AFTER FALL FROM BUCKING MECHANICAL BULL 'They ought to outtew •II of them,' embfttered Kentuckian declerea Tower controller fired GRAND RAPIDS. Mich. (APJ An air traffic controll er has been fired for leaving the tower at the Grand Rapids airport un- staffed as an airliner approached the city. according to federal of· fi cials. Rich ard Wheaton , Federal Aviation Ad ministration tower chief at Kent County lnterna· tional Airport. said the controller raced three charges of un- authorized absences from the job and one charge of leaving the tower J an. 14. Two violations stemmed from incidents in December . Wheaton said. The FAA tower chief refused to identify the controller and said the firing would take effect today. Wh eaton said the controller used a tower "hot line" to notify the Chicago FAA center that be needed a, replacement, then left the lower about midnight. During that period, the pilot of an incoming Republic Airlines jet contacted the tower and re- cei v ed no response. Wheaton said Republic personnel at the Grand Rapids airport notified airport employees, who went to the tower and found it empty. With the aid of Chicago con- trollers. the jet landed "without incident," Wheaton said . T he controller returned to the tower 35 minutes later a nd notified Chicago that he had re- turned, according to Wheaton. The controller then called Wheaton and asked for a replacement and remained in the tower until the replacement arrived. Controllers are prohibited by FAA rules from drinking or tak· ing barbiturates within eight hours of their time on the job. Wheaton s aid the controller violated t.he "abs tinence rule" on the night of the incident, but he did not elaborate. John Boese, presid ent of Chapter 318 of the Professional Air Traffi c Controllers Organization , said the man could appeal the action in an FAA hearing or file a grievance through the union local. Orange Cout DAILY PfLOT/W9dnetday, March 18, 1981 s 'It Sounded like fun' ~ But 'bull' rider won't walk again LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -1pine and lnltall a pacemaker lo La1t month, Harry Broda went to· hla chest because aplnaJ-cord ln· the Urban Cowboy Bar to have a Jurtea affect tbe aympatbetlc few been and ride "Bil Sid," tbe nervous ayatem that controlJ the ter'1 14 alfUlated faclUUea have never reported an injury like Broda's. mecbanieaJ bull. Now physical heart beat. therapiall are teacbin1 him how to write wttb bis mouth and pre· H E HAS AUN> been bothered parlna him for life In a · by respiratory problems and wheelchair. urinary-tract infections. His "They ou1ht to outlaw all of weight hu dropped from 185to154 them," the 21-year-old man said pounds. of the mechanical bulla, a na· "That bull, It hurt me bad," tionwiderage. Brodasald. AtthebarFeb.13,Brodasaldhe The mechanical bull fad drank three 12-ounce beers, pa&id popularized ln tbe movie, ·'Urban $1 to ride the bull -"It sounded Cowboy,'' began at Gilley's Club like fun" -and signed a docu· in Pasadena, Texas, where the ment without reading it. beast in residence has been rid· den almosll50,000times. THE DOCUMENT WAS a waiver that released the club from injuries incurred while rid· ing Bid Sid, a hydraulic contrap· lion that can be made to buck with increasing force. When Broda climbed on Big Sid for a third fide and told the operator he wanted to try it at a faster speed, he was flipped and landed bead-first on mattresses placed around the bull. "I went up in the air. When I came down, I beard three cracks and my whole body went numb," be said. HIS NECK WAS broken at the second and fifth vertebrae, ac- cording to Dr. Thomas A. Kelley. director of Louisville 's Institute of Physica l !tf edicine and Rehabilitation. ~Paralyzed , Broda ~an only shrug his shoulders and move his head now. Doctors hope he will re- gain movement in his upper-arm muscles, but say chances of ever moving again with his strength are less than l percent. Although nume rous inJuries ranging from bruises to broken bones have been blamed on falls from mechanical bulls, Broda is believed to be the fi rst ~erson in the country to be paralyzed in such an accident. Since Lhe accident , Broda has undergone operations to fuse his Jerry Wilricb, of the Bronco Shop, which manufactured the Gilley bull, said he has never heard of an injury as serious as Broda's from any of his customers. He said his firm has sold4.20mechanical bulls. AND A.M . BOWEN, ad· m inist.tator of the National Spinal Cord Injury Data Research Center in Phoenix, said the cen- WWII German bombs dug up HARFSEN, Netherlands (AP> -Army bomb disposal squads have begun removing nine buried German V-1 flying bombs from farmland just outside this village, a spokesman said. The missiles. each containing 20,570 pounds of high explosive, were buried during World War II. Lt. Col. J an Krommenhoek, commander of the bomb squad, said Tuesday the Germa ns had a V · l base near Harfsen from which they fi red rockets on Antwerp during 1944. The nine fly ing bombs were buried in two holes dug in the field after they failed just seconds alter launching, but did not explode . Ho1pit.all in Louisville have re· ported varioua injuries from the clty'1 two bulls. They include broken bones, spilt pelvises,, s prains, crushed testicles, gynecologlcal injuries and a punctured lung. Negligence suits have been flied in Colorado and Florida, seeking millions of dollars for plaintiffs burled fro m the mechanical bulls. At least one other man suffered a broken neck. And Jimmy Skaggs, manager of the Urban Cowboy. has sold Big Sjd. " "I FELT BAD about somebody getting hurt,'' Skaggs said. 1 'That was the first time in the three months we've had it, and I don't wantittohappen again." Skaggs said he doesn't have in· sura nce for such accidents. He said no one would sell it to him. Broda is undergoing physical and occupational therapy . Therapists are using a tilt table to prepare his body for remaining upright in a wheelchair. Last week. therapist Terri Wolfe began teaching him how to write with his mouth. "This is too embarrassing," said Broda. "I'm used lo writing with my hands and walking." AFTER WRITING his name, haphazardly but legibly, he said, "I hatethis ." Then he took the pencil again and slowly, but firmly, wrote· HELP. Bigger catch LOS ANGELES (AP> -A stakeout to capture a nude jogger who had been frequenting a cou- ple of school areas ended instead with the arrest of a murder sus- pect who aroused the suspicions of a juvenile officer. BBA·MBA NOW\N\TS \\ f\na\Oavs .. Next classes begin week of April 6. Call for your personal interview. tr-lne 957 6285 Laguna Niguel 831-8060 MCAS El Toro 559-3781 Westmln1ier 891·3761 Loa Alamitos (213) 431 -3649 MCAS Tustin 551·2263 l?fcTIONA~ ~NIVERSITY The HUNGRY YEARS ... Batie tn 1934 when Roy Rogers (second from nghtl w as still known as Leonard Slye the b•g time was a performance that included dinner Those were Roys hungry years The eilfly years with the Sons ot the Pioneers teft him with a true respect for a dollar and a genuine need to know h•s money was sale secure and worktnq tor him Today Roy saves at Far West Savings where prudent people have been earning 1he h19hes1 interest allowed by taw since 1889 and where savings are insured up to S 100 000 by an agency of the Try them' $1 0,000 mtn1mum deposit 6 month term Annual Yield I Rate Effective 3/19181 12.911% 12.346% .,,.,..,, .. ,,.Wit 'tllCJ l•fft'\ A ~'Otl.ll"tll .. f0t1f'•I·,.,. t )f ... u•f •. , .. drawtAI •ff Clt•"<-•llt" .. no •f'llif!'fh1 w'1" .. tu ,.,.,.,.,n _,,, Oft>tlt•' tm u,,.. ""'"'Al tf\t-).'"'" '"'"'"''' ~fl't ntlll C0rl"lt>011t'U, on'"'' IVOf' t>f ~Ctuunl FAR WEST SAVINGS HUNTINGlON MACH Your Saving• ln1ured Ta $100,000 19114 MoQnollo At Gotfield ~ lrom l<-Mort NlWPOll IEACH 4001 Mo<:Mhur 8'ld Near Jamboree ROOd Serving Callf ornlan1 Since 1889 it it's got wheels, you'll move it faster In a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you . turn your wheels Into cash. I Women 's Qiamond RINIS 95 Ct Reg S1 .549 ... $ 929 I.OS Ct. Reg. S1 .~99 .:. $1, 139.40 1.33 Ct Reg. S2,4~ .. SI ,499.40 Diamond Stud EARRINGS -- Ladies' Diamond PEMDAMT .89 ct. Reg. $1899 SALE 59" JEWELRY & GIFT ITEMS VALUES s I 00 TO $20.00 NOW • Men's Cluster Ring Reg. $1399 SALES799 MEN'S CLUSTER RINGS v .07 Ct. Reg.$ 189 .... $ I Gt .50 Ct. Reg. $1 ,399 .... $ 79 9 1.0 Ct. Reg. $2,299 ...... $ 1,379 1.5 Ct. Reg. $2.999 ...... $I , 7t t 2.0 Ct. Reg. $5.199 ...... SJ, 129 Watches --:-crackers take!ft Off shelves . EAS?HANOVER,N.J . <AP)- Nablseo Inc. bu pulled bon1 of, Country Crackers from retail 1rocery ahelves for fear the new1 product may have been con·1 laminated wiUi small bits of cop- per wire a company spokesman •aid. "While Nabisco believes there is no serious health hazard, it bas · voluntarily withdrawn the prod· uct," said Mel Grayson. Nabisco's director of public rela· tions. Although only "a s mall number" of boxes may have been contaminated. all previously dis· tributed boxes of crackers were recalled, be said. Grayson said be could not estimate the number recalled. Refunds will be sent to customers who send a Country Crackers boxtop to Consumer Service, Nabisco Inc., t;ast Hanover, N.J.,07936, be said. .. .,w ......... Bed8 eyed for ·wounded Ho1p i tal aid .•ought' in ca•e ~f ~ar WASHINGTON <AP> -Tbe Pentaaoo la ur11D1 the naUoa'I clvlllan bOI=-lo set ulde about !0,000 to help care for heavy cuualUes that would be expected early ln a majo.r war. Officials empbaslaed tb1a ef. fort is in no way prompted by any current tenaiona, but is part of prudent, long-term plannina "to build a wartime system oo foundation s exlstln1 in peacetime." , Help from civilian hospitals, especially ln the first month of ~ major war, would be vital because the anticipated casuaJUes likely would swamp military a~d Veterans Ad · ministration hospitals in the United Slates, officials said. DEFENSE SECRETARY Caspar Weinberger has signed an appeal for aid from civilian hospitals and the program. in the planning stage for about five years, has the backing of the American Hospital Association and the American Medical As- sociation. and mobtllae the neee11ary mlllta.ry medical support bue here ln tbe United States for • casualties returnin1 from a l'ar1e·1cale war foucbt In another part of the world," tbe defeue lffrelap said. 80 PA&, OPl'ICLU.s develop- in1 the Clvlllan·Mllltary Con· Un.Je~y ffos.J>ltal System report they have won voluntary aaree- ment.a from 58 civilian hospital~ to allocate nearly 4,200 bed.a ln the St. Louis, Seattle and Norfolk, Va .. areas. James T. Doherty, the pro-· 1ram di.rector, said in an in· terview be and aides planned to visit 28 areu of the country "to e xplain wby the system is needed and to solicit their in- terest." The objective is to enlist as m any civilian hospitals as possi- ble in the vicinity of existing military hospitals and within a relatively short reach of air bases into which casua lties would be flown from abroad. "Because of technical .ad· DOHERTY CON FE&RED early ln AprlJ and to lliaml- Tampa-Orlando, Fla., In late April. _ In the event a clvillan boepital accepted military casualties, of. flclab said, they would be paid for their Hrvicet. The boepitala would be expect· ed to use their staffs of doctors, .nurses and other personnel to treat the casualties, which ex- pert.a said would belin to arriv' in the United States from tM war zone within 48 boun ol lbe outbreak ol fiptina. Alter the inil\al Cl'Ul\Ch period, officials said, military boapl~ ln the states would gradually ex- pand to wartime capacity. ln· eluding assignment of reaervilt doctors who would be ordered to active duly. 'Sharks' aid • consenJation WILMINGTON, Del. (AP> - Why put a tiger in your lank when you can have a great white shark for just $1.SO? Contamination may have come from an. "extremely thin, very soft copper wire" that was used to reinforce a worn metal tube, through which ingredients were sent to a mixing vat. Fanai ly r esemblata(!e Blazer shows a strong likeness to his dame Wedgewood as they pause for a family portrait at their home, a Marshfield, Mass. farm. The week-old colt isn't straying too far yet. vances in weaponry on the bat-· · late last month with hospital of· tlefi eld, we are now faced with ficials in the Sacramento, San the possibility of s ubstantially Francisco and Oakland areas of high numbers of casualties in a California. · very short pe r iod of time," They are scheduled to make Capitalizing on the water s hortage in northern Delaware, students have painted bricks lo resemble the "Jaws " monster and are peddling the finished product as a hand y-dandy water-saver for toilet tanks . Passing the in gredients through the reinforced pipe could "conceivably result in minute pieces of very fine copper wire getting into the product,'' he said. N~ Enterainment For Your WEDDING or PARTY? lllMll LaVOY OIC .. STllAS 1714154M476 - FOR All YOUR ENTERTAINMENT NEEDS HA D KENT SAM RANDY MILLIONS TO LOAN NEW LOW RATES! $10,000 to $1,000,000 2ND • 3RD TRUST DEED LOANS Immediate Funding 90 Days lo 15 Years • SWING LOANS • 2N0-3RD T.D. LOAfllS • Residential Specialists • Apartments • commercial • WE IUY DISCOUNTED T.D.'s • We help structure notes tcx maximum saleability • \<'l1f <"'( .!/'arft<: /1l11r!t<1'f ·1i1r·. llClNSfO MOlllGAGf LOAN &l!OKlR CALL 714/955·1055 cOOO MocAlllHUll 90\AIVAAO KOU llNANCIAl TO'M RS • sun£ ~ 10 NfWPOllT lltACH CAUFOllHIA 02660 Ev~ing you've~ wanted in a Seafood Platter ••• and it's only $349 • Crt1py Flth • 2 Tat ty Shrimp • 2 Tender Scallop• •Fresh Cole Slew •Crunchy Hu1hpupple1 •Golden Fry•• Weinberger said. similar visits to Denver and the "In addition, we will not have Dallas· Fort Worth area of Texas the past luxury of time to build later this month, to Los Angeles United save~ you 592 o ff the regular Coach fare to Seattle. Just fly one of our selected fli ghts any day of the week. and you·11 fly for just $110 one way. Scats arc limited on Most nonstops to Seattle these flights. but there arc no advance· purchase or length-of-stay require· • , me nts at all. For information and reservations. call your Travel Agent. Or cal l United at 537-7521 . on our 7:30p.~ widebody. United is Partners in Travel with Westin Hotels-in Seattle, the Washington Plaza. sno onselec~d return flights, too. sno with no restrictions. S8250 for kids under tWelve you bring along. I t'U\(' 7:40 u.m'.' 11 m .1111 l ::Wp.m~ .t2.'; p Ill 1 li'>plll 7::30 p.m~ -----ArriH' 10: JO u.m . I .).) p 111 :1:55 p.m. .) .) I p 111 7 11 p 111 9:56 p~ I .111 .... 111d ... , 111 d1il• ...... 111iwc 1 '", fi.1111.:1 •s110 niith'' 'I I' . I I ...................................... -...... _.........,.__._.,. .. _._ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 DEATHS 82 Geometry profs get lesson from 17-year-old ... B2 ThoUsand.s ·ready to welcollle swallo_ws By JOHN NEEDHAM Ol tM Oally .. 1 ... Sutt The swallows arriving ln San Juan Capistrano Thursday from their winter homes In Goya, Argentina , will find the biggest welcoming party waiting to greet them at the San Juan Mis- sion. Festiviti/Js planned for San Juan 's big day San Juan Capistrano claiming to have the oldest and largest non- motorized parade in California. The parade will begin at the mission at noon and lravel down Ca mino Capistrano to Del Obispo Street and then return to the mission on El Camino Real. Leon Rene, composer of the song "When the Swallows Come Back to Capistrano," will be this year's master of ceremonies at the 23rd Fiesta de las Golon· drinas on St. Joseph's Day. The festivities will begin at 10 a.m. at the historic mission at 31921 Camino Capistrano. The mission's bells will ring to herald the swallows ' return and roving mariachi band~ will be lfeat·y dri11kers present to provide entertain- ment. Al so scheduled are aeveral performances by native lndian dancers and the crownint of the king and queen of the festival. Dick Landy, spokesman for the San Juan Capistralo Mis- sion, said more than 10,IOO vis- itor s are expected to visit the 205·year-old mission thr9t1ghout the day. Hotel and motel operators in San Juan and the surr9Unding areas are reportedly reafng the benefits of the swallows le.cen- ---. .... : .. . .. -- dary return to Capistrano on St. Joseph's Day. Rooms have been booked solid for months, accord- ing to city officials. For the first lime in 17 years Bill Smith, known as "the voice of the mission" for his manning or the telephone to announce the arrival lime or the swallows to callers and radio and television stations, wiJI not be at his post. Smith died just six weeks after last year's celebration at the age of 67 . Veteran mission bellringer Paul Arbiso, 85, will be replaced this year by his g r andson . Circus Vargas elephants are pretty big on social drinking. They gulp water from the hose and pass it along from trunk-to-trunk when they aren't munching on hay. The fello., lying down didn't drink too much, he's just \ajting a snooze. Circus opened in Costa Mes Tuesday and runs, through Thursday. Firemen find smoky pan in Newport An eighth fl oor NewP.ort Beach apartment resident, pre- paring to cook dinner on her balcony, put 35 firefighters and strike teams from Costa Mesa and Santa Ana into action when her electric skillet started smok· ing. At least a doien people alerted the fire deoartment when they spotted black smoke curling from Mr s . Robert Reed's balcony al the Lido Park apart- ments in Central Newport. Authorities say 35 firefighters were dis patched wit h six e ngines. t hree trucks, one paramedic unit and a second u· nit equipped with breathing ap- paratus Firemen, who rushed up to the eig hth fl oor . discovered a smokey skillet or grease bubbl· ing on the patio Monday even· ing. Airport parking lot coating OK'd A Sl4,880 contract for slurry seal coaling or the overflow park ing lot at J ohn Wayne Airport has been approved by the Orange County Board or Supervisors. P avement Coatings Co., of Anaheim. s ubmitted the low bid for the job. Meet Rqth for truth? Hunlinato n Beach Mayor Ruth Batley wlll tie available to dlacuu items of coaununlty int.rest at HuntlA1ton Center tbl1 weekend. Sbe wW bt 1taUoned ln an lnformatlon booth, probably titled "MHl t.be Mayor." She Hld it bu been 1u1· leJt.d, however, that the event h ave an eye· HlC!bP\I loto Uke "Ruth tn. Booth." "Tellln1 the lrUtb," she added. -------- Safari to OC Tourist 1pots on $6 route T he adventuro us t ouris t who has trave led tWndreds, perhaps thousands, o( miles to the wilds of Orange C~nty soon will have the opportunity to pay S6 for a 50·mile rjde to see the natives and their en,irons up close. The fi rst Summer Safari. operated by the Oranae County Transit District. will depart the morning or June 12 sw pping at such locations as· Disneyland. Anaheim Stadium. The Crystal Ca thedral, Garden Grove. The City ShoppiDg Center, Orange. South Coast Ploa, Costa Mesa. John Wayne Ai~ Newport Dune1 Aquatic Park. Newpo rt Ce ter a n d Fashion Island. Laguna Beach. Llon Country SafSi, Irvine. Summer Safari sen1ce, under preliminary plans a?e!oved by the district Board of .pirectors, will continue daily through Sept. l . operating every 65 to 75 minutes between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Travelers will have the choice or staying on the bus. or debark· ing at any or the 10 stops for closer inspection or perhaps to purchase a trinket or two Buses will run in both direc· tions. so that travelers fearing the unknown beyond can return lo their starting point without having to make a complete trip. Transit district directors ap· proved the safari route after be· ing told by their attorney. Ken· nard Smart, that the service would not pose legal problems for the district. Two private bus companies, Town Tour Funbus and Gray Line Tours, operate tour service between some of the locations proposed in the district plan. On e OCTD bus driver , however, warned t hat the natives are restless and predict· ed lhe district will face a lawsuit from the private operators Bus c6nter sought for HB's Gothard I The Huntington otach City tenance according to city of· Council has request~ that the ficials. Orange County Tran•t District Bua stop improvements along establish a bus s .. tlon on Pacific Coast Hiahway wlU in· Gothard Street ne al the San elude widening t he sidewalk by Diego Freeway. flve feet, relocatin g parking The council's unaiom ac-meten and railing, and adding lion included a rel• dedlk>n 17 bus benches. to spend $28,000 to t rove bus Three new stairways and one s tops on the bee alde of wheelchair ramp lo the city Pacific Cout Hlabw between beach also will be added. Lake and HunUnltoD The transportation center and The trantportatl bus stop i mprovements are would be locate estimated to cost $75,000, with northeast corner the city paying a maximum of Street and Center $28,500, and OCTD fundlna the the freeway. remainder, accordin1 to city of· Commuten could t•rk their ftci1ls. veblclet at that lOfatlon and OCTD allO has recommended t a k. e bus e 1 to v a r I o u 1 another transportation center ln metropolitan cent• accordln1 downtown HunUnatoa Beach. •toeltyofftclala. But the ctty Council aaktd for Intftltate bus Un llo would fo1tponemen\ until 1pec1flc IHve from th• tr•porteUon clo~ntown developmeat plus center,dlyofftctatu61. are made, or until tM eouaty de· OCTD recommendfd tbt st•· old•• tbe locatJoo of • ,....... tton lite lut Y•~-'-_nd wCMlW aent mua tran.lt eorrtdor ID Ule ·nence conalrUcUon nd malo· dlty. Michael Gastelum. Arblso re tired because of illness. At 1 p.m. the city's historical society will offer a tpur or the mission, founded by Father Junipero Serra in 1776. as well as surrounding historical areas for a $1 charge. Friday is officially ··Hoosegow Day" in the Spanish-style city Those not dressed an western garb will be arrested by h o n orary ''Sheriff'' Wes Williams and sentenced by self- styled "hanging judge" Dave Peters . Offenders will be tossed Mexico ties 'healthy' By JODI CADENHt;AU Of II• O•lly Pllol Sufi • Dr Julian Nava, U S. am- bassador to Mexico, says the is· sue of immigration will continue to play a large part in relations between Mexico and this country. In a speech lo the Ca lifornia Grape and Tree Fruit League in Newport Beach Tuesday. Nava described relations hetwecn the two nations a!. "healthy and sla ble.' · despite the thorny issue of immigration that has over· shadowed relations for nearly eight decades The California Grape and Tree Fruit League is made up of fruit tree and grape growers from California and Arizona who support agricultural inte rests Tuesday's meeting in Newport Beach was the organization's 45th annuaJ meeting When President Reagan and Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo meet for the second time April 27, immigration is ex· peeled to be the chief topic, said Dr. Nava. ·'The United States can no longer be a nation or unlimited immigrants," said Dr. Nava "It's clear that immigration has become a maJor problem The scope of the problem was outlined in a recently re leased report by the Select Com mission on Immigration. According to th at report ther e are 13 million JJeople want ing to move to the United States for political and economic rea· sons. Only half of the 3 5 to 6 million illegal residents living in the United Stales are Mexican nationals . according to 1978 stat1st1cs. The H arvard e ducated statesman said that Mexico I!> becoming as eager a!> the U.S. to curb the tide of workers leaving the country Ope11 .cl~•, son an jail and fined. The roundup or crimlnaJs begins at high noon. At 5:45 p.m. at Franciscan Plaza residents will compete in t he ··Hairiest Man" contest. Categories include prettiest, ug- liest and hairiest. Judging will be done by Miss - San Juan Capistrano, Kris Mocalis, and her court and the two Miss Fiestas, Ruth Bradley and Susan Wem ble. Franciscan Plaza is located at the corner or Camino Capistrano and Verdugo Street. Saturday is parade day. with D• 11 Y PI Iii SlilflJJiOlo RELATIONS 'HEAL THY' Amba1Hdor Neva S top li~l1t OK'(l n.-.ar HB t•o1npl•i.x The Huntington Beach City Council has approved s pending federal funds to put a slop light at Main and Florida Streets, near t he Wycllrfe Gardens senior ciliien complex. On a 4·2 vote. the council de- cided the recently-built complex housing 225 seniors increased the need for a traffic light at that intersection. The signal is estimated to cost $95,000 and be operating within six months. Cjty offi cials said federal Housing and Community Dt"velopment funds are availa· ble to pay for'thc stoplight. Councilmen Ron Pattinson and Bob Mandie opposed the signal because other intersec· lions rank in greater need or a !>toplight. according to a city s urvey. A priority list of intersections without stot>lights ranks Main and Florida streets sixth with 24 accide n ts reported th e r e between 1978 and 1980 . Li'l Abrier 1eta a massive doee of Yokumberry Tonic from Mammy a1 Pappy Yokum wtnce1 at Eltancla Hilh School. Jaime Alken as Abner, Karen Lindow a1 Mammy and John Vnlnl u Pappy are part of a c11t that includes Moonbeam McSwine, Stupefyin' Jona and other Al Capp ebaracten ln the school's production of .. lJ'l Abner'' at I p.m . 'lbunday throu1h Saturday. The whimaical mualcal will be 1ta1ed at Robina Hall at Newport Harbor Hi&h. 1'tcketl are D and $3.50. ' ,. Jmmediately following the parade the San Juan Capistrano Histori cal Society will hold an outdoor barbecue at Descanso Park behind City Hall. 32400 Paseo Adelanto Live music and clogging dem· onstrations are scheduled. The m enu includes an eight-ounce steak, beans. salad , salsa. tortillas, punch or coffee and bee r for S6 50. Leaman new head of USA Larry Leaman, director of the Orange County Community Services Agency and an 18-year county employee. has been named interim director of the county Human Services Agency. Leaman, 39. will replace Margaret Grier. who will retire March 31 after 31 years with the county . The HSA is the county 's largest superagency. with a staff or more than 2,800 and a budget or more than Sl76 million The agency adminsters a wide variety of health, welfare and social services programs By cont rast. the Community Services Agency is the county's smallest superagency, having a budget of about S2 million The agency oversees the operations of the public administration· public guardian office. veterans · ser vices. consu mer affairs, senior citizens' services and a cooperative extension program in volving agriculture, environ mental science, home economics and youth development. Leaman has served as CSA director since October 1979, re· ceiving the job only three months after the agency was formed. Its programs formerly were included in the HSA Prior to joining the CSA. Leaman was director or recrea· lion and open space programs for the county Environmental Management Agency Leaman joined the county as a purchasing trainee in 1973. after graduating from Cal Poly Pomona. In 1969, he Joined the then county Harbors . Beaches and Parks Department. He will assume temporary directorship of the HSA at a time when it is swirling in con- troversy The agency 1s under scrutiny by the Orange County grand jury. And twice in recent weeks. the county Board of Supervisors ha s been forced to tak e emergency action to keep the agency's General Rehef welfare program financia lly solvent. Leaman declined to specifical- 1 y address the apparent problems. "I have no preconceptions J sa id that when I was in· terviewed by the board mem- bers. I've been doing a lot of read ing about the agency. why its organizational structure is the way it is. I've been monitoring the apparent current fiscal pro- blems." Asked if he would seek the HSA directorship on a perma· nent basis, Leaman said. "I am . very interested in it at this point; the odds favor it." Tests slated for summer lifeguards Competitive teats for proapec· live summer llfeguards are scheduled Sunday mornin& at Huntm,ton Beach. · Competition for the clty jobs Includes • swi mming race around the municipal pier, an IOO·)'lrd run·awim-run race and a .00-yard turf &print. Top qu&Unen wlll be ellliblt to participate ln the city llf ••~•rd tr1lnln1 pro1ram ln Aprll/ Appllcanta must bt et leut 17 before June 1, and have 20·20 un· corrff\ed vllion. AppUcanta aJao mu't bl able to swim a 1,000 yard short coune ln let1 than 18 mlnuta. P'urtber 1hlformetlon can bt obtalDed bJ callln1 beach operet.klnl et m.m1. -- 1 .. QUEENIE -- ' ' "" &EVIL'S SllDE r---D£V1Ls SL1or SPla,o~F '• ~ ' Woman guilty in film pirating MIAMI (AP> -A federal court jury of n.ine women and three men have convicted a Los Angeles woman on a RICO (Racketeer Influence Corrupt Organization) count involving lbe sale and distribution of pirated film cassettes of such bit movies as "Jaws ," "Snow While," and "Saturday Night Fever ". The defendant, Barbara Gottesman, 4.5, was also convicted on l wo c harges of interstate tranaportation of stoJen property and a count of violation of the criminal copyright laws -a mis- demeanor. Mrs. Gottesman and her husband, Rubin Ruby Gottesman, were Indicted in February 1980 and charged with film pirating by the same federal grand jury which returned indictments in the Mipom -Miami pornography cases involving 44 defendants. HARBISON DEATH NOTICES MAX HARBISON. passed away at his residence on M a r c h 12 . 1981 Mr . Harbison was a se lf - HALL employed landscaper in the DONALD HAVEN HALL. Laguna Beach area, coming long-time resident o r the here from Texas in 1955. He Harbor area. died s uddenly was a member or the Chris- on March 16. 1981 in Costa ti an Science Church and a Mesa Memorial Hospital A veteran or World War II. He native or Aurora, Illinois. Mr is su rvived by a brother Hall had laved in Southern William O Harbison of California most of his life He Houston. Texas. a sister ~as a graduate or Art Center J y n at ha Lienhard o f in Pasadena. During World Oakland. Ca. No services Wa r 11 h ~ serve.d a s a will be held. Body will be Photomapp1ng OHlcer a s cremated and scattered at signed to t~c 64th Engine~r sea. Ray Family Laguna Photomapping Battalion in Beach Mortuary directors . the Ce~tral Pacific Theater RICE Following the war. with a CHARLOTTE <LOTTE > part~erheeslabhshedan ad RI C E . passed away on vert1 singagency oneofthe March 15. 198l in South earliest s uch age~c1es in Laguna , Ca . Born in O~ange County Later he England and has been a re- Joined the art department or sident of Laguna Beach. ca. EE<;O .. a Santa Ana elec-for 47 years coming from t~onics firm When he retired Los Angeles, ca. She is sur· 2 , yea!'5 a~o. he was Sales vived by a daughter Mrs. Promotion director Mr Hall Belly Cassell of Garden was a long-tu~e mef!!ber or Grove. Ca . 3 grandchildren, the Balboa Yacht Club .A Mrs Linda Conklin. Sharon member of St Andre w s Lee Crouse. Cristine E P r esbyterian Church an C 8 s s e 11 5 great . Newpart Beach. he was ac grandch ild~en . Made ly n t1ve in t h e Vo ya l'(e~s Conkl in, C hris Kristy F e I I 0 ~ 5 h 1 P · M e n 5 Conklin. Tony Conklin and Fellowship. and on the Audio· Shaylin Conklin and Sean Visual Committee of the C Se · ·11 be h Id . . rouse. rv1ces w1 e church He 1s sur vived by his Wednesday March 18 1981 wire. Asenath V Hal_I. at 11 OOA0M al the ' R ay daughters .• Mr s Jul_i e Family L aguna B each GlazebrookofSanDi.ego.Ca ·Chapel with Dr. Thies of the a~d Mrs. Dennis Brantley ol Community Presbyterian R1 vers1de. Ca .. sons Marshall C hurch officiating. Visila· andClyanHall ofCos taMesa. tlon will be held all day Ca'. brother Dean .~all of Tuesday, March 17, 1981. Ka1lua·Kona. 1-.lawau . step· Buri a I at Fairhaven mother Mrs . Lilhan Hall of Memorial Park following the Laguna Hills . Ca. and servi ces . Ray Family, grandsons Scott a.nd Todd Laguna Beach Mortuary Glazebrook. Sa~ Diego. Ca directors. Memonal services w11.1 be SMITH he ld at llAM on Frida.y RONALD ALBERT ~ . Mar ch20, 198~ at St Andrew 5 O'HAIR SMITH C.L.U .. resi· ~re sbyterian C hurch . dent of Newport Beach. Ca .. l"ewpart Beach. Ca ·with Dr for 11 years passed away John A .. Huffman. Jr ~nd M arch 15, 1981 in Los Dr David Wallace omc1al· Angeles. Ca. Survived by lng In heu of flowers the wire Arden. sons Michael. family request_ donallo!'s ~ Jerr y, and s t even . made to a special fund in h~s daughters Terry, and Heidi. memory at St Andrew s mother Lucille. 2 brothers Pres bylenan Church. 600 St. and 1 sister For m a ny years Andrews Road. Newport he has bee~ an member of peach. Ca the Newport Beach Rotary Cl b Memorial service will u . be held Thursday at 1 lAM al , .... Pac ific -View Chapel , IALT% IBGBOH Newpart Beach, Ca. Pacific SMf1l4 A TUTHILL View Mortuary director . WISTCLtFf CHAPIL 6«·2700 427 E 17th S t Costa Mesa N~Soclety 6•6-9371 CllallA . IMIMAL AT MA. --M&-7431 .... Cl lllOTHBS \'nr ._. _......, ...--'8•t ......... _ ....... _, ..,., SMITHS' MOltTUAl't ----Coil __ ,..... 627 Mein St ...... ............ ..._.ntmQton Bwach S36-6539 - r•clAC ••w ...ORIM.rMI c.m.tetY Mortuary Chepel 3500 Pec1f1c VtflW Drive \ NewPOrt Beech 644-2700 Because -- McCOIMK:ll MOITUAIMI laQun1 Beach you care, 494-9416 L9Qun1 H1ll1 send 768-0933 San Juan Ceplstrano 49$-1776 ftowers. / -- HAlllOI LA~WT. OUYf .: Mor1u.rv •Cemetery Cremetorv 1ma111erAve .. Col1•Meta 540-5554 ' ---·1ft0 ,_ClllOTHml t taLllOUWAY MOITUAl'f '10 8roadWllV Cott.,..... Hetpfns you Ny It rtsftt. 6'2-ttSO .... .... ·Consumerism s·kill valued ar IOYCB L &SNNEDY Deer leJn: Cu 1• ...U ..... , ..n el Mc• ...... I .... te w.n ta eeM&mer .._ •• .... , ........... JofN, -T.G., Sprtalfleld, •a11. Conaumer educafion ts a fteld where akllll and experienee outwel1h apecUlc academic creden· tial1. While 1tudies ln conaumer alf alra often are found ln colle1e and university home economic• pro1ram1 , Cornell University and a few CAREERS otbera have pro1ram1 explicitly in consumer economics , social science or political science with an emphasis on cooaumer issues. Susan MasUng, a consumer education and media specialist at the Federal Trade Com- missioo, describes the field u "social marketint" and empbulzes marketing, journalism, public re- lations and pollticaJ science as useful, alone with consumer group experience and a dedication to the issues. JOB POSSJBILJTIES ARE DIVERSE, tbougl\ very limited in number, and range widely in pay. While corporate consumer executives may earn above $50,000 a year, many people enter the fteld as volunteers. Internships can be an important foot in the door. Among potential work settings: -Industry: Nearly every major industry bas consumer affairs employees, who function as liaisons between citizens groups and management. -Government: Local, state and federal agen- cies hire consumer educators to handle com- plaints, develop brochures, organize conferences and translate technical information for the public. County exteruJion agents, for example, often are jointly paid by the county for which they work, state land-grant universities and the federal Agriculture Department. Because the hiring pro- cedure varies from state to state, call the county courthouse to locate the state extension service anctinquire how it works in your area. A master's degree is helpful in getting these jobs. -PRIVATE CONSUMER GROUPS: THESE organizations have outreach programs that utilize consumer educators . The pay is meager but the experience can be valuable. -Media: Ne wspapers, magazines and television and radio stations hire researchers and reporters on consumer affairs. Volunteer work can lead to a job. The bottom line on consumer education, ac- cording to Mary Boyles of the National Consumers League, is that there are more people with an ap· propriate background than jobs. On the other hand, the field is sufficiently unstructured that you can work your way in without pedigrees, begin- ning at the grassroots level. U.S. seamen popular PERTH, Australia CAP> -American seamen appear to have an enthusiastic following in the Australian town of Fremantle. Ever since an Australian woman's telephone was mistakenly listed as part or the "Dial·A- Sailor" welcome service, her phone has not stopped ringing, she says. "One little girl rang up last night and said, 'I want a sailor,"' said the woman, who requested anonymity. sentenced to life FITCHBURG , ('AP ) A A~W ......... ARTHUR KROLL. "1ZZU 0..-. Lowen (rtght) EDUCATION OBITUARIES • pnce war • . re1uming N&W YORK <AP> -Air fare wan are on a1ato. wltb Tram World Alrllnu and American AlrllnH 1laablna farea on dom..Uc nl1bu lo a move to lure puaen1en . TWA announced that lt would lower f area on mo1t domestic ' 011hu to *218 round trip for a five.week period be1lnnin1 April ,20. American then announced it would do the eame. Some other major airlines charge $288 roundtrlp on flights between New York and California only. Meanwhile, Republic Airlines announced lt will pay 300 travelers $25 each to fiy its route between Minneapolis-St. Paul and Seattle when the service be1im April 1 and give away five tickets on each of its two non-st.op daily flights until April 16. Pupil outscores testers Marked wrong, h·e proves answer right PRINCETON, N.J . (AP> -A Florida high school junior who bested a panel of 16 college pro- fessors on a geometry question has forced the Educational Test- ing Service to correct the scores of 250,000 students who took a col· lege board test. "It's kind of overwhelming," said Daniel Lowen, a 17-year-old honors student in math and German at Cocoa Beach High School. "I didn't expect it to be such a big thing when I wrote in. I was just worried about my own score.'' LOWEN WAS ONE of 1.3 million students who took the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test in October. The test was the first conducted under an ETS policy or sending students a copy of their test and the answer key. Wh en Lowen received his PSAT results in late December he noticed he had been marked wrong on a geometry problem in· volvingtwo pyramids. •'It never entered my mind that they bad made a mistake," Lowen said. But he sat with his father, an engineer on the s pace shuttle project at Cape Canaveral, and the two became convinced the boy's original answer was cor · reel. They \\>TOte ETS and found out they were right. THE QUESTION ASKEP how many sides there would be in a figure made by attaching two pyramJds, one with a three-sided base and one with a four-sided base. ETS sald seven, but the Lowen s argued for fi ve. The question was sent for re- view to math professors, accord· ing to Arthur M. Kroll, an ETS vice president. ''They all chose seven as the answer, but they all agreed that Daniel Lowen was correct when we gave them his reasoning," Kroll said. The ETS notified Lowen bis score on the math section of the test would be raised from 74to1S. The test is marked on a scale of 20 to 80 and the highest possible score on that particular test was a 77 , a c cording to ETS spokeswoman Mary Churchill. LOWEN OIUGINALL Y missed only two questions on the math test, Ms . Churchill said. His new total, adding scores on the verbal test, is 135 of a possible 160, she said. The ETS said it would also in- crease the scores of 250,000 other students who answered five in· stead of seven, but would not * * * penalize those who chose seven. "Most of the 250,000 students had their scores changed one or two points, and a very few had them changed three points or no points at all," said Robert Moulthrop, direct.or o( public in- formation for ETS. He said the change in scores de- pended on the ratio of total correct answers to Incorrect responses. THE TEST, wmcn also COO· tains a section testing skills in reading and writing, was given in two versions in October. Only one. taken by about 800,000 students, contained the disputed question, Moulthrop said. The PSAT is a warm·up for the Scholastic Aptitude Test, a col- lege entrance examination. and is used in selecting winners of Na· tlonal Me rit Scholarships . Moulthrop said. * * * Here's lww Dan reached solution By Tbe .bsoclated Press Here's how the problem works: The question showed two pyramids containing a total of nine sides, eight of them identical triangles. The question asked how many faces would be exposed If the two solids were placed together. The unexpected answer was seven, with two identical sides disappearing when placed together. "All you have to do is add up the faces -four on one and five on the other -and subtract two." Kroll said. But Lowen decided that when the pyramids were joined, four of the original triangular races would be merged in two quadrilateral faces of the new solid. That meant two fewer sides on the new solid, for a total of five. Quantities and assortrnents are lin1ited. so hurr}' in! d escribed a s a self-styled "son of Satan" who allegedly used terror to control a string of prostitutes was convicted of first·degree murder and sentenced to life in prison ln what witnesses claimed was the ritualistic slaying of a 20-year-old prostitute. W e s ell first quality a nd cl1s<.·onlinut•d m e rchandise from St.•ars Hl'la tl and Catalog Dis tribution. "Was" prices q uokd are th<.• rt•J.!ular pnt·e:-at wh1t·h lht• items were formerly offl•rt•d hy Cata log or 1n many Scars Retail s tort.•s around l hl' <·ountry Carl H. Drew was sentenced by Superior Court Judge Francis W. Keating after the Jury found him gullly In the 1980 killing of Karen Marsden of Fall River. PaOSEt:UTOR David Waxler charged that Drew, 26, ran a prostltullon ring and styled himself as a ''son of Satan'' to terrorize and control the women . Drew, who denied all cbar1ea, testified he was worklnl as a pimp In a Fall River bar the nl1ht Miss Marsden was killed. He saJd he didn't learn about the death untU the fo1Jowtn1 day. He also denied any lnvolYemmt in a satanic cult. TBS STATE'S star wu. .. , Robin Murphy, tutlfled that Miu llanden WU killed al "an o«ertn1" to S.tan. Only a akuU fra1ment from Ml11 lhnden '1 body bu been found. Drew'• trial wu moved to central Ma11acbusettl because of the publlclt1 It received in the 1outbe11t part of the ltate. Call 142-1171. ttut • raw words to work for COOKIE JAR was 1299 NOW s5 99 SALT & PEPPER CANNISTER was 29" was 4" NOW S2 99 NOW S1849 19" COLOR TV with Senaor Touch Chennel Selector was488" NOW 536999 EFFECTIVE 2111111 JAM & HONEY was 599 NOW S2 79 NAPKIN HOLDER was 399 S159 LIGHTED MAKE-UP MIRROR was 399 NOW S1 99 . 50Ptece AINLESS tLVEAWARE SET WM29't TOASTER OVEN #1331 NOW 52,799 ........... h•d• INSAd1M1 i\d•M1tlrM11 ... ia (714) IQ.-(-.1. . . . . • , .......... ..:. ...... .,. ........ .,, ...... ~ ELECTRIC KNIFE lf4190 was 1599 NOW S11 9 9 AMiFM STEREO SYSTEM wtthCeMtee#91•1 7 Piece WM 43916 NOW S26999 MUSHROOM COOKWARE SET WM .. I . .,. w1,.,,..,. Sal et• Ralph Nader , consumer activist, has urged United Auto Workers to laun c h an advertising campa ign em ph asiz ing th e "safety advantages" of American-built car s against autos imp orted fr om Japan. Couple joined in death ORMOND BEA C H. Fla. <AP > Relatives of Coy and Ltlhan Throp remember the couple as a loving pair who prom ised lo take care of each other "until the very end " But Throp's death last wee k a p· p arently c laimed her life as well . off1 c1als say Cmsl· --UlllCO CUClllS SUPllPllCI . C~:fP..,C ~ ---,.ca•• 15-0L Whit..~ Iott. t__ _ TOUI OMNCI: chic •1111 -..;., •mclD •Mll&IUTTU Autho ritie s said Th rop, 77. a ppare ntly died of a heart attack two to four days hcforc 1 ~....,1 they found him in the bathroom of th£• couplt"s I Ormond Heach home I AT THF. SAME time, Mrs Throp's body was discovered ~trapped into a reclining lounge chair in the living room {)f. All•ISEll ricials said s he eithe r !~~ 39~ died from a heart at · tack, lack of nourish m e nt or f r om th e Parkinson·s disease that had made her dependent 1s..oz. wti1i. atoc:ka Iott. on her hus band of 59 j;:::::;~~~~~~~~~;~::; yeari:. O ffi cial~ s aid Coy l often would strap her 1n to the chair because she was unabll' to !>il up un- aided ·'They were both real sick ," s aiCI T y lene Freeman. Mrs. Throp's s ister, who lives in Princeton. Ky. "They both prom~se d they would take care or each other until the very end. "S H E HAD Par · kin so n 's di sease, and he had taken care of ) NLAR 159 CUlllEAT· lmff 6 SUPll Pita .. CMRlll• 6-oz. Whl!. 1todtt ktat. her all this time. Ile was ,_.t'~=~i·---------, always taking care of h e r ." Mrs Freem an sa id "It 's JUSl terrible." The Throp s w e r e natives of Lyons County. Ky . where they will be burie d after f une ral ser vices Thursday in Princeton Most of their ma rr icd vea r s we r e s pent in Detroit. where they worked the same shift al the Wayne Coun- t y H ospi t a l a s supervisors. SllllLAC LIQUID IUDYTOnm SAU PllCE 1~' 32·01. Ploln Of with Iron. The couple m oved back to Kentucky when they retired but were ~------------~_, unhappy, so they moved to Florida in 1968, Mrs. L-----:~~ Freeman said. " TH E V W E R E 1-.-.~ always together. They were just so close. Two people couldn't be any closer," said Mrs . Freeman "They were closer than anybody I ever knew. One didn't do anything without the other And they were always happy," Officials sa id the bodies were discovered With fluoride. SfOCll 11p on tt. 1 ..... llMI after a n e ighbor !~ ......... _ .. ___ ......... ~ telephoned authorities 1 ,-~~~='!~~-...... ~'m.'"'\ and reported he hadn't i. seen anyone enter or leave the house for severaJ days . Th.e e xact time of deal" has not been de· t~rmined, but both have been ruled natural deaths. Cll:. mll.ISI AFTm l.IAlllll SHAvr. MIWS AFTll SllAYI f:M~ llG. 3.50 dSl tp IJ"TCll 1'' $MAii( /J!I ...... , ... .! ~ .... "' '°' Crltp, "9th K9flt, 4-oz. caEAMEllES s1 ·llACA1•4 . SUPll PllCI fOI 7-oz.Whl&ealockalott. a.ft,.tmll I llG.69t lox of 200 rwl~ply tin~. 199 .-m Sove o bur\dle on quollry 4· ply yarn In o tpeclrum of fcnhlon-rlght colon. Choose 3. I l'l-o~ 1olld1 0< 3-oa. var· ••gated ombre~. 8Ht buy I REG. 94t c SAND OR PATIO FOLDING CHAIR 99 YOUR CHOICE Just who! you neod for o \unny day on the great out door\ o foldong olumonum choor woth sturdy polyelhy lene strips webbed 10< wppo.-1 and comfort Plash< arms ,....---ir--m-----.\ NORTHLAND J~ ·a:~:€~~A llG. 3.29 2'' Non ·b•nding . stay-up top. Hygienrcolly lreo ted for freahnen Save ' STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE SERVICE FOR 4 MADE TO SEU FOR 590 99 Auramns NOT Ill All STOIES WHIU rroas WT DRYER & CURLING IRON IO T IOTH 15'' ~~PA~:~lY 22.38 FOR I 100 watt dryer hos '2 heal & speed •et11ngs Iron ho\ ready dot w111L1 nous lASTt uu•re·' 2 00 •&11 IM trlUTt • TOii '61 OlllT 13'' 3 PIECE CAST IRON SKILLET SET ,, IOVGMl 5',HATllY 10.07 5'' You II use the11P e"ery· day' 6 l 2 8 and 10- i 2 srze1 Real lO"er 1 . ' . . . . . . ~~---------~~~---~..---------....~~--=-----.... . . . . . . . ... . . . ' . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . · · The Tr~as·ury is going out of business, and .. · · from ·now until the da we finally close. our . . d9ors, yo·u'll find fabu ous bargains at all · · eight Los Angeles area stores! Shop early, and don't forget our . · . special hours ·cturi .ng all clearance events: f I I .. MONDAY :. • · THROUGH FRIDAY . 11 :00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. · . SATU ·RDAY: . · .· · · 9.:00 a.rn. to 5:00 p.m. . I ! . I . . . SUN .DAY:.· . . CLOSED ·. . . . . . . .. . .,._ P9ftl: 7105 a.ct1 B!Yd. • Oi•_.. .... : 18000 Chlttworth St. • Llifn aood: U70 E. CerlOn 9:\-• ~: 700 Cly OrM So. "'4•11de: 3520 ~ Sl • ... AM: 38008. Bril\OI St• TCHNnOe: 22015 ~ne at;d. •WO a lllli"MI Hmli: 211SOO VICDy &Mt. • '1 • I . ' . 1 r . I . ~-£1 ~ . . . I_,--· I' I \ " . . . ~ ! ' ' . . ! I I I . ·r / r I * . *We're taking 30% off every item! Your cashier vvill deduct the 30% from your total purchase · before tax, except dry clecrirg. The dry cleaner vvill remain open to serve our customers until the day we close. II II • . ShOp early for the best ~election I . . . •' ... PM&: 7105 BMdl 81'.td. • car..tl ... : 18000 Ctte*9 'Of1h Sl •I 1h1ue4. 2710 E ~a•~ 1oo Qy Ol'fllw 8o "'""*: 3520 Tyl« & • llnte AN: 3900 S. 8nMol St. • Tomnoe: 22015 Hlwthorne M . • Wa a ••Ml t991 21500 Vlc:t>ty M: . . II· II \ . ~,--I a : !' • 1l __ ~ -· ! . I ' I I I I I ' I " . I . 1 Nof %iger's property Two men walk past rowhouse in downtown Baltimore. Md .. owned by White House political director Lyn Nofziger. City officials said one of the three rowhouset owned by Nofziger s hould have been boarded up months ago. A woman and her five children live in the house. Nofziger said he will "fix up anything that needs repair." Missing 'Moonie' freed De programmers arrested for kidnapping SAN FRANCISCO <AP l -A 21 ·year·old Moon1e has been freed from four men who a l- legedly snatched her from a San F r ancisco s treet and tried lo ·'deprogram·· her from the Unification Church. police said. San Francisco police found Brenna Steinberg in a Walnut Creek home where they said she had been taken after her abduc- tion Friday THE FOUR MEN, who were being held in the City Prison, were arrested and booked for in· vestigalion of kidnapping and cons piracy, police said Sgt. Al Matteoni s aid Ms Steinberg told them she had been kidnapped and taken lo the house by the men, who constant· ly talked to her and watched her, even while she bathed The Walnut Creek residence was the h ome o f a woman whose daughter is a former Unification Church member. Police slill were sear ching for Susan Swatland. 24, a nother Moonie reported missing in the last five days and believed kid· napped by deprogrammers. NOAH ROSS, Northern California director or the church, said the young woman's parents were "unreasonably" hostile in the seven months their daughters were church me mbers . · · 1 ·m quite sur e the allege<\ ab- ductions were the work or pro- fessiona l crimina ls who in- timidate pare nts, frighten them and charge up lo $40,000 each to ·rescue' their children from the church." Ross said 'UFO' only a kite SAN ANTONIO, Texas <AP> Police with s potlights, in An "unidentified flying ob· patrol cars and on foot, joined ject" near San Antonio lnterna· the search. lional Airport touched off a five- hour search that turned up a child's bat-shaped kite. Adding to the confusion was a description of the UFO as a "large wing-t ype object " which was flying "much higher than approaching aircraft." Airport contro l t ower operators, nearby residents a nd a dozen police oHicers reported sightin~ the object A police helicopter finally located the kite and the officer in charge, Lt. Andres Lozano. grabbed its string and hauled it back to earth. Lozano said it was a 2-by·2· foot "Bat Kite" on the end of a long nylon cord. The cord ap· parently became entangled in a tree at a house near the airport. IT'S NOT HOW OR YOUARE. IT'S MART THAT COUNTS~ • --------..-..... PlllaUC NOTICE PtCYITIOUt aUMNHt .._.tTATaMeNT NATION PUBLIC NOTICE TM ... ._lftf _.,_, •r• titl"t W.l-••1, • remains WASHJNGTON (AP) -William P . Clark lJ worklnc here dally aa the No. 2 man at tbe Department of State altbouab be has not been •worn ln and blt pay contlnues to come from California where be lJ atJU on tbe payroll u a state Supreme Court justice. C l ark , confirm ed three week.a a10 as dep- uty a~retary of st.ate, said he hu written all the opinions he intends to write as a California jurist. But he said he does not want to relin· quia b hts seat on tbe bench until au the cases argued and resolved during bis tenure are filed and become law. "I THINK IT would be shirking my duty to litigants and their at· torneys to duck out from under cases w h ich I have heard argued and written opinions on," h e said in an interview. If he left the court "pre· m atur e ly." h e said, some cases might h ave to be reargued and re- determined. Clark said he believes he participated in only two cases in which the California court has not issued a formal opinion. He said hjs vote might not be needed to de- termine either case, but that he won't know for sure until the opinions are formalized. HE SA.JD HE hopes to 1 turn in his resignation as a California justice this week "unless of course some colleague. for some reason, should hold these cases up." Until then, Clark will get his a nnua l $72,855 salary as a California justice rather than the $51 , 112 annual pay his new job provides . Budget tight SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Squeezed by a tight budget, the city's library commission hu adopted a budget that would c lose seven branch libraries. ANAHllM HILLS CLeANlllS, Uot I . ~Im Hiii• """• AM!wllft Hlllt,C• . lhnd•ll M•m•lll , 1ot.u111, ... wport 9Ncll, C• '2'6a l(rfjt .. M9fnelll, JIU W Oc .. n ........ ~' .. .ell, c:.. '2.., Tlllt llMIMllHt It COllCklCI .. Dy • .. Mr•l -"-tftlll. lt-JIMMMlll Tllla at.temenl w•• lllecl wllll Ille Co..nty C: .. rll 01 Ora11 .. c:o .. n1r on Merell•."'' "'""' P .. 011 ..... Or-.O C..tl D•llY Pl .. I ¥•r 11, 11, U, ~ I, 1te1 11»-81 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI IUllNaH NAMa STATeMaNT TM fol-1"'<1 per-Ii OOtftt !NII· MOH COAST SOLAR SYSTEMS, 3511 SI•"• 1111i.. N-POl'l 8H<ll, Ct . tZMO c;.,1 Troy.,.o, 012 $1•rr• 11111•, Ntwpor1 IM..:11, CAI. '2MO flll1 b<Nneu II C...0..Clecl Dy all ln-clo•l-1. c..r1 Trov-T1111 ll•lem.nl wn lilecl will\ 1119 County Cltr-ol Ora11ge C.unty on PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE -" 'ICTITIOUt auao1•11 NAMe 1TATU1IUIT FICTITIOUS IUllNIH Tiie lol._"'9 __. fl dol1>9 llvil NAMI STATIMl!NT ,.. ... , Tne IOll-1119 per-I\ -"'ii Dull SU NDAN CE LANDSCAPE neuo MAINTENANCE. ?)I •lnd $trHI, PA C l AN T t C C 0 AS t NewPOr18"c:ll,Celllornltt,..3 OISl RI BUTE RS, 109 A1pen l•~ Rlcll•rd Lu Turner, 131 und Coit• Mtwo,C:.lllornl•t~27 S1ru1, Newport B .. cll. Calolornie Gery M "'-"<1111. l«I' A-" Lt,_ '2~ COiie -· C•llfornle ~17 Tiiis --1 11 <-led Dy .,. on Tllll -• "<-l•d Dy tn "' dl•kl.,tl. dovld.,el. Rklltro l 1 urner GMy M Mane lno Mtrcn 9, "" T1111 il•t-nl w•• 11iec1 will\ '"' Tnis 1t•I•"*'' wn lilecl wlln tk Co..nly Cltr• 01 Oranu• county 0,, County Cltr• ol OrMIV-County on '117471 Merci\ 2, "" "'s.nt Merell l. 19'1 1'1M~J PuDllSM4 0.•1199 Co.ti D•lly Pilot " 1111 -Or c I 0 II Pll I PuDllU•d Oranoo co ... Dally P•lfl Mtr "·II, H. Apr '· .... 12i0-tl Me:cll !. II, 11_~ .. ~· • y'°':.; Mtr<ll .. 11, 11, H, 1 .. 1 10.0 .. 1 P UBLIC NOTICE "CTIT10UI IUllN•H HAM• tTATIMl!NT T "' 1o1-1nv PffllOft la cto1no t>uso· ,,.,,., HARBOR CONTRACTORS, ltll Mue Drive, Stnl• Ane Hel9lll•. Ctlflornl• '2'.t27 Jol'ln Siedner Gregory , hJI Crutvlew Drive, NewPOrl BH<ll, Ctlllornlt '2'63 T1111t>uMneu11 conouc1ed Dy •non dlvldutl JonnGr_.y Tlllt sttl-1 wes lllecl will\ Ille Co..nly Cttr• ol Or.,.v-County on Feb 13, l .. I Fl~ PuDll.,... Or-eo.u Delly Poot, Ftb. 2S, Marci! 4, 11. 11, , .. , tt.._.l PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS I USINISS "'CTITIOUS I USINESS NAM£ STATIMINT HAMI STATEMENT r ,,..,,.,,_,,.... per"°" I\ d0"'9 bust· Tiie toll-"9 per"°" •• dO•nv INJO 1't\\ ., ~' ., PEBBLE BEACH VENTURE tOO t<AR80R EOUIPMENl CO lt?l 1SH EICltn A'Ve . C:O>lt Mew. Ct 9U1' Mu• Drove, S•nl• Ant HtiQl'lh, ~ r •nk Mu Songer. 1SS4 Ela111 C•lllornoa 9707 Avt CO•l•Mt•• C• 91•11 John Sledntr Gr eoory. HJ I T ,.;I\ t>u\ine\\' ,, conduc tto by • Cr1 \h't•w Dri ve N•wport 8••(;), ••m•tld f,lrilrtnf'rvuo C•l1forn1a .,...., Fran• Mn S•"90• Hus ...,..,,.u •s cono..ctoto D• .,, In Tn1\ \t4ltmeftt w•\ f1lf'd wun t"t d ••du•IJGN°' Gregory ~o.~~~Y' ~':.r." ot O••noe Counly on Tnts stal.,.......1 ••• 111.., ,.,111 ,1, ' FlSl4'J ~:~n~; ~~·• ol O••nQt County ~" PuDll\neG Or•nQ<I , ... ,. Dally P•lot F ISUU M•• I' 11, H. Apr '· 19'1 11J1 II PubllShed Orenve C041\I D••ly PoOfl Fell lS, Mattll 4 11 11 l'ltl 9H41 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE I PURI.IC NOTICE NA.Ml! STATEMENT l'ICTITIOUS IUSIN£SS I rne 1011owino por"'"' ar• doonv NOTICE OF DEATH OF F~C~T~~!:~!i:::s M onm .. ELEANOR BENIGNO Tne lollo•ln9 s>er ... ns •rt do•no ROAD'S ENO 1110 Nt wpor1 AN 0 0 F AMEND E 0 11<a1nau.. &l•d0·.~::• RMe,:a,,;.;:;~'.~~·L:,~!,ne P E T I T I 0 N F 0 R EAGLE MANAGEMENT COM· Avt ,lOOQBucn,C•lilorno•'°80l PROBAT E OF LOST PANY, 31141 Pewo Allo Pltno, S•n P•l,.Cla RllOadt\, I~ l • llerne WILL ANO FOR LET· Jutnc~-::~!r,•~;.~~":';~~!~~s 111•1 A••. Lonv Buen, C•lllornl• '<*l TE RS TE ST AME NT AR y ' P•s•o Allo Pl •no , Sen Ju•n d,!,~'~.~>OIWHO\ton<lueledDy •n •n 0 R , I N T H E C•PIStr-, C•lllornl• 92'1S Otnotl A R-\ IA LT E RN AT IVE , LET• C•rotyn Ru111 lltnNll, 31141 P•wo Allo Pleno. Sen Juan Ctp1>1r•no, Tht> \ltl_,.l w•• "1"" •olh ""' T E R S 0 F A 0 · C•hlorni. n•IS Counly Cl••• ol Orano• County on M I N I STRATI 0 N AN 0 Tnls buslntu I> conducted by d Ftt>rutryll.l'9I FIS61U AUTHORIZATION TO 11enertl ~":;:~~lpBen,.11 Pubh\hod 0r•"9" Cot>t O•oly Polo! A 0 MI NIST ER UN 0 E R CarOlynR BMnell IFtD 1S Mtr 4·11 18 '"'' ~1111 THE INDEPENDENT r111s statement ... 111ec1 w1tn 1n. P UBLIC NOTICE ADMINISTRATION OF CouMy Clerk ol Orenve Co..nly on IE S T AT E S A C T N o M•r<" ,, 1911 •1"t11 A 107560 . ~ ,.. IFICTITIOUS IUSIN£SS PuDll111te1 Or""go Co .. t Otoly Pilot, NAME STATEMENT T O a I I h ~ I r S , Merell •. n , II, H . 1"1 IOIS II '"' loll-ong per"°" ,, doonv bu\I ben e f ic I ar I es. c r ed I tors PUBLIC NOTICE n•h:e1.•CAN ENTERPR1zn ... 01and contingent c reditors of Ah\O Newport Buen cer.lo•n··1E leanor Benigno ano 97'4Jw.i11em R R•ll••. •10 •1 .. 0. persons who may b e N•wPO•l B.-cn, Celltorno• 92 .. 1 ot.herw1se interested in the lnl\ DuslnH\ IS COndUC:led t>y an on lw1fl and/Or estate ou~~:.,~o;~owonq P""'"' .,, do ino a••odu•• A petition has been filed ,nT~~s'\~1/t ~o~ ~-= v.~~ ~~ rno• :~:~~~ :~~1•;,1ec1 .,.,,n ,,.. by Grace J Benigno, aka FICTITIOUS euSINE SS NAME STATEMENT counly ci .... o• O••n~ counly on Grace B Riggs, in the E :~~·;":"~;:, ~~~~ A 101 Mm Mmn 1 1'i11 Superror Court of Orange verd• or E .c .... 1H"•~•.C• 92•2' FU••» Coun ty reques ting that Jo\tph Sptrk\, 1/H A 001. Mt•• Publl\neG 0r .. n~ CO<l\I 0•01• ~~0~j Grace J . Benigno, a ka \I.rd• Or E • CO\I• ""' .. ·Ct '7•2• M•rtll 4, 11, It. 2S. 1"1 G B R b ~ race . 1ggs, e ap r,,., Du1ono' "condu<l•a Dy • P UBLIC NOTICE pointed as executor or, in ;en•r•• ~ner\n•p Je>1epn Sparks I 1 h e a I I e r n a I 1 11 e , a d rn .. 11e11ment ... , "'"' wu11 '"' ,.,CT1Ttous 11us1NESS ministrator to the estate of County Cttrk or OrM>tl" County on NAMESTATIMENT Eleanor Benigno. The pelt~ Marci> •. l~I FIS74U fhe IOllOwlnQ perlOll I\ dOlf'l!I l>uu llOn iS Set fOr hearing tn Pu1>11srwc1 0.•"'14' coes1 Dally P•101 n•o;~ERGV BR EAK. s1s F•"'"' Dept. 3 at 700 Civic Center Mer II,,, 1S.AD• ' '"1 111 .. '' Bu1ld1n9, ,,, •. CO\lt Me .. C•hlorno• Drive. West, 1n the City of PUBLIC NOTICE 016.J LIFE AN O ACCI DENT AN O HEALTH SY NOPSIS OF TH E ANN UAi. STATEMENT OF COMMERCIAL BANKERS LIFE INS URAN CE COMPANY, 1.001 Oovt St . Su•tt SSO. Newport BHCll, Ctlllornoa ,,..0 Yur ended Oe<ernotr JI, l'ltO T olet tclmlllecl •neu u 1, 101 119 Total llat>olltles •3.0d ."l C•Pltel Pt•d up 400,000 C011lri11Ullon C.rllltult ~.000.000 Gron paid on -contrlDuted 1urp1 .. s J,11•.0I StM<i•I S..rplus F'uncls 0 uneulgMCI fund• (wrplusl 1 l~•.•'2• Geln llCK111rom-rellon\ JJI 110 lncruw I Dt<re•wl •n C•O•ltl tnd s .. rplUSdUrt"9 l'ltO 4,'7S.I)() .,.,,Edward G•o•q• Bruce. 5151Santa Ana, California on F•orlt• BuoldO"'<I, ::14, C0\14 M0\4, April t, 1981 at 9 :30 a.m . C•lllornoa91m IF YOU OBJECT to the d,!,~~.~,,,,. .. '' conou<1td Dv M '" granting of the pet1t1on, EO..Md 0 Brue• you should either appear lnls ..... _.., ... , "'"" woln ,,,. at the hearrng and state co..mnly Cler•°' Oren~ Countv on your ob1ect1ons or file F•Druervn.1"1 Fls.41' written objec tions with the PuDllll>td Or•~ Coe\! Oaoly Potol, COUrt before the hearing. Feb 1S Mer •. 11 11. "'' uu1 Your appearance may be PUBLIC NOTICE rn person or by your at- torney. IF YOU AREA l'ICT1Ttous1us1Nus CREDITOR or a contin· NAMESTATEMENT gent creditor of the d e· The wiM' inve4ttmem of money can be a complex decision. But it doesn't have lnsur•n<t '" FoH• N•llonwode 1 1~.ns.000 Accldtnt end lletlth pren••um• ln1uranct II\ For<• t>u:l~:,~o~~owino 0'"0n• ••• doing ceased, you mus t f 1 le your SOUIHWOOO LIQUOR. 1230 claim with the court or ~:;:Or &1..:1 c°'•• Me .. c.111orn1• present 11 to the personal Fr•nctw:o J Soto 43,. L .. Foor•• re presentat 1 ve appointed A•t . Yorbt 1.1nc1a.c~11lornoat2"6 by the court within four S.r9loCOrrea ROc1r19u.,, 0 16 L .. months from the date of Flor .. Aw . YortN Linda C•lltornt• first issuance of letters as lo be. The !iimplcsl palh is often the most profitable. As well as the safest. While some other people are trying to decide what involved finan· cial step to take next, you can simply be making money. Risk free . Newport Balboa Savings offers a full range of fina ncial services. with each account federctlly insured to $100,000. Smart. And safe. Stop by our nearby office and talk to your friends at Newport Ba lboa Savings. Discover what the bulls and the bears are missing. Write yourself a profit check. Why pay for a checking account when your checking account can pay you? Our new Profit C h eck service actually pays you 5 Y4 % interest on the b alance in your checking account. Very interesting! DINEW BALBOA Savings SMIRT! e Westcliff Plaza, '1100 Irvine Avenue, Newport ~ach, CA 9266S (714) 645-6505 9-5 Monday thru Thunday, 9-6 Friday, 9-1 Saturday. ESUC ---.... -... -... ... II.IT& Celltorftlt Buslneu Peve Accident .net llHllll S)t,OU,07' lt'tnli"ms •Direct C•lllorn•• lluslntn ~ 1,11).19• Wt lltret>y Cer'lll'( tllel IM tDOve lttl'llS ere In eccord•l\ct wllll Ille AMu•I St.t.,_,1 for Ille YH• tnded OettmDer Jl, IUO m•d• IO "'' lnwr...c• Convn111i-r ol tM Sltlt of C•lllornl•, ...,,._nl 10 l•w JOHN $NYOER "OUSSEAU, Presodenl MARSHAl.L A STRANGE, Secre•••Y PuDllslltCI Orenoit c ... ,, Oelly Pllol, Muell••. 11, 11, 19, 20, 1911 U•S-11 PUBLIC NOTICE CAU.,ORllPI T 0 It a N T R • I!,_~ • H T I A L f'ltot'9Rrr NOTICE IS HIEREllY 01\llEN IMI u. 8oerd of 5-<'vl~ of IN COUl!ty of Or•nee ll'ttncls to INst t• Ille 11'911tst ......,.., on• "*""-to-"'°""' 1N1ls, <~ ,...llllfttllll rHI prtoper- 1\t, "'°"""'to Ille C-y ol Ortn99, COfftrnClflfY !Meerlbed •• 110 U"l'ftrally Or Ive, .,.., ta. Unl'ftnllY Orlve, Cott• ¥eN, c.lllWftl•. Prop>Mlt lo rent N ici p,_nlff -1 tie wlltllltlecl In wtllilll , Oii foflftt fH'OYldecl by lllt CWl'IJ et Or.,., In ••IN enYel-. 10 1111 Clerk of Ill• ao.,d ol hlltr.,...,.., AGmllllatr•tlon •"''''"'· ,....., .s. 10 CMc Cel'llltr Pi.16, ...... AM, C:.11~, tvoa, •nd '""'* tit ,.. ctlVH .., IM Clel't. •t Nld ...,.._. Mtert 1:08 "'"'·· MeflHy, "41fll '· 1te1, lft ... '° ............. ... i.i.a •r er•I lllcll wlll .. c_,_.ed, ltent.I pnipoMI forms. •llf .._l_I '"lormlltlOfl H lo tllO ttrlftl •llf <-1-llent on -ell tlle ~Its wlll tit , ...... INiy 1111t -..nec1 trom: 111..., Cwn"ll'lh•lft, GSA/ltHI ael•tt Oh•I'*'• Cewlty ef °" .. ' 40t Cl•k Cel'ter Ori .. WU,, .. fltl An•, C•llfWM "711; ......... --.: (114) ..... , ......, le! ,,.jt(t YJt, Ul'l~0'1we, ' DelM! ,.,_.., 14, "'' e't' oi.Ol.R <>' THe IOAllO 0' su•••v11011s Of' ORANOI COUNT\', CAUPO!tNIA. CHA&.l .IUHI ALUAMOSll °"'"',.._.. .... ~ .. 0r ... ~.u. ~ Or1119t CMt4 ~IY '"°'• IMl«ll •,ti, U, 11, II. lt.11, ta. It, .. Hit 1t1MI '2... . ed . Se 00 This lluslllHJ Is condu<le<l Dy.,, on prOVld In CltOn 7 Of dt•ldu•' t h e Prob a t e c ode of nb ~~=~'!.~~11"" .,1111 ,,,. C~liforni~. The_ time for coulltY ~terk 01 or.nge County on fifing claims w111 not ex-FeDruery 73, 1'it1 pi re prior to four months Put>ll\Nd Or-co .. , 0•11~1~: •• from tr:ie date of the hear· F1D is Mer., 11 11 1 .. 1 t1o-11 ing not teed above. · __ ·_·_· YOU MAY EXAMINE PUBLIC NOTICE ~he file kept by the court. _ __ _ ___ If you are Interested in the fltCTmous 1us1Ntus estate, you may file a re· NAMI STATaM.INT quest with the court to re- "'• 100-"'9 JM'W'I " Oolnv ""'' ceive notice of the inven· n•n •• APOLLO CHEM GLASS, J'IOI S. Sycemore, S.nl• Ant, C•lllornl• 9'2107 O•I• Phll llo llun, 1'01 s. Sycamore, St,.1• Ant, Celllornle tt701 tory of estate asset s and of the petitions. accounts and reports described in Sec- tion 1200 of the California Probate COde. Je<Qutlyn Ann Bun, ,,01 S. Syumo••. S.nle An•. C•lllornl• J ill mes M. Has I an •1101 • p I I T1111 t>ustneu '' conducted by • Musick, ee er & Garrett, v•nare1,,.r1111r\lltp. Attorneys at Law, Ont o. .. PB••n W ils h ire Blv d . Los Tllh , .. ,_, we• 111ec1 wllh ,,,. A I C 90017'. t 1 • Coullly Cltr11 ol 0r•fl99 Co..nty Oft ngt IS, a . I e . Mtre111, 1''1. (213) 62t·77l5 "u"11 ~ublltlltd Ortn99 c ... 11 Otlly Piiot, Publl•'-0 Or4111Qe c ... il Delly Pilot Mllrcll 4, 11, 11, U . 1 .. 1 102MI M•r 11, ll, 11, 19'1 1214-11 -i PUBLIC NOTICE I P UBLIC NOTICE LI,. ANDA(CIDaNT ANO"aALTH SYNOPl .. 0,TH• AMNUALtTATaMellT YaA" •ND•Do•c•M••UI, 1•01' MIHLOUHIONL.,a IHW"ANCICOMPANY 14110....M.,hll• ....... .,.,.a..c-.'-.tU .. TOltltdl'lllllecltlMh , ... . . T04tl 11Hllltles .. C.,1 .. l"'d.. . . .. ............. .. Gronffldln.,.,,t-"lrlllul.O 1urplut ............. , ......... . \lneu"'*91""41tCt.,f'Plusl , ............................. .. OelnCl ... )lfOf'llOfltt•lllllll,,, ., .. .. .. ................ .. lll<rHM(Oetr-ll"c.tH .. l•llClhrDIWI \t,,,,..,, SU.071 to0,000 .,, .. ,. ISS.,°"I ,,,. dwrl1191'7S ... . .. .... ... .. .. ................ ......... 1Dt,l16 111auronc.lnf<orct N•llOflwl-.... .. . ... • • 1,6)1 1111.JtMtlll~t.t.C.tlfllf'l'l•IW-Pe.. • •••. • . . 1,~1.1• Wt ........ CHtlfr !Ml Ille ............ , .,. Ill 41(ttNMt• wllll II• An1111el ,._,_ ... IOI' Ille Yff( ... OeuM!Mr ,,, , .. m-. .. lllt 11\Wr~• c-· lftlM1 ..... r9'llleSl•1tofC.tlllorlll• • .-11ttolew "' Jotlft $1\yar ,...,,_., .......... 1'1Merth•llA $1r•...-"611.ltt,.._,., PlllHIW.0Hft .. C..M Otllf l'llM IMf'C.li It. \1, It. 1t, .. 1'9t I I I 1 I I . . ' Instead of counting sheep, come to our Aireloom Mattress Sale and count the dollars you'll save. During this sale our prices are so low you 'll probably be won- dering how we can do it. Not only that, but we have a selection that will open your eyes. King size, Queen size , doubles, • Orange Coast DAILY P1LOT/Wedneaday, March 18, 1981 twins. Aireloom mattresses are famous for their fine construction and carefully- crafted quality. So if you've been lying awake nights on a bad mattress, come to our Aireloom Mattress Sale. Our fine mattresses will let you rest easier. So will our -sale prices. I \ Your · favorite Designer wi 11 be happy to assist you . Professional Interior Designers Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. F.ri. 10 a.m . to 9 p.m . . Sat. 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 'I . 11 ., I I I [ . ~ l J l i I . I • shut case DEAR PAT DUNN: All t.be wel weather we have had bas caUJfd my drellft' drawers to stick. la there Aft>' •lld way • solve this problem? ,W,R .. J>aaa i'>oint s..-.pel'. a bloCfl ~ ~"'-•c.-.. wu, and maybie a lew U..b&ua afe au you'll need &o stop most dra.,__~ frem ltlck· Ing. . # Pull tbe drawers out and look for 1lll1Dy spob. Sud these spots down •UI the drawer moves amoo&bJy, then rab both dte drawer and the pans of the frame that touch It with the paraffin. Does the drawer still refUse &o close that last Uttle bit? The bottom edge In front 1Day be bumping the frame. You can raise the drawer by Inserting two or three large, smooth·headed thumbtacks along the fronts of the glides (the parts of the frame that the drawer rests on). Order o.,erdaw DEAR PAT DUNN : I ordered merchan· dise last December from Westport Home Products . but still haven't received it. I've written three times and enclosed copies or my canceled check. Help ~ J f .. Newport Beach Your overdue order is on Its way. Part of the reason you received no auwer to your le tte rs of inquiry may have been that Westport changed its customer service ad· dress. It is 94 East Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 06851. The customer service phone number is (Z03) 853·9433. Corre<-llon <-OntpH<"aled DEAR PAT DUNN : I had a problem with a department store bill recently and wrote lo the credit department saying an error had been made. However. my current bill shows m y credit limit reduced by the amount in question. I!. this legal" Will this disputed amount be reported as a non -payment to credit bureaus '.' T C .. Irvine A creditor can apply the amount in ques- tion against your credit limit. Once you have written about a possible error, the creditor m ay not give out Information about your non- payment or threaten to damage your credit rating. Until your lette r ls ans wer ed , the creditor also may not take any collection ac- tion on the a mount in question or keep you from using your account because of the dis· pule. However, after the bill has been ex· plained by the creditor -and if you still dis- agree in writing within the time allowed for payment and do not pay -theh the creditor can report you as overdue on your account and begin collection proceedings. If this is done, the creditor also must re- port that you question your bill, and you must be given in writing the name and address of each person to whom your credit information bas been given. When the matter ls settJed, ' the creditor mus t report the outcome to each person who received Information about you. If this sounds rnmplicated, it's because it is! COn~~rn grod ng DEAR PAT DUNN : I ordered $28 worth , or garden seeds from the Consumer Testing Center last July My order never arrived and I can't contact the firm because I lost the ad- dress. Can you help me ? tf.D .. Huntington Beach l Consumer Testing Center's address is 495 · Fifth Ave., New York, N.V. 10017. As reported last July In AVS, the center , Inflation Fighters Kit and Free Gifts -relat- ed firms -reached an agreement with the U.S. Postal Service that although no wrong· doing was admitted, they would offer money- back guarantees to consumers dissatisfied with their free gifts. The companies also agreed to make full refunds to cons umers who requested them within JO days of the request date. Since your order was never filled, request an Immediate refund and enclose a copy of the front and back of your canceled check. ' Aid arallabl~ DEAR PAT DUNN I need help filling out my tax return I can't go to an Internal Revenue Service offi ce during the week because I work. and I'm not able to pay to ha ve 1t done. Is there any place I can get help? G.D .. Santa Ana Heights Yes. VITA, Volunteer Income Tax As- "-sistance, sponsored by tbe IRS, offers free tax assistance to low-In come, eldf'rly and non·English·speaklng individuals. To find the closest VITA site, call (800) 242·4585. • "Got a problem'' Then wnte to Pat ..,. "" Dunn Pal W111 cul red rape. getting " .l. the answers and action you need lo solve mequ1t1es m government and business Motl your questions to Pat Dunn. Al Your Sennce. Orange COC13t Dally Pilot. P 0 Roz 1560 . Costa Mesa . CA 92626 As many Letters as posStble will be an$wered. but phoned mqumes or letters nor including the reader's full name. address and businus hours· plu.me number cannot be consulered. Thi$ column appears doily ex- cept Sundays · · The Senior Citizens Trust is proud to announce that the 1981 Health Provider Directory is now available to all Senior Citizens v.1thout charge. For the substantial list of physicians. dentists and other practit ioners offering their services at superb savings. call or write: Senior Citizens Trust. 1400 No. Harbor. Fullerton. Calif. 92635 Ste. 100. We will forward your 1.0. Card and Directory upo n receipt of your name. address. date of birth. and phone·number. THIS PIO•IAM IS ... TOALLS810U 1714117f.7MI Girl on slllp 'Wve boat' no more HONOLULU (AP ) -A aatlor based in San Die10 who hid an .Australian woman on his ship while it was al sea for nearly a month has been demoted followin1 a Hiarint aboard the ship, a Navy spokesman said. The man, a petty officer lhJrd class on tbe USS Barbour County. was reduced one 1rade following a cap· lain'• mast, the spokesman said. Linda Drummond· Hay. 23, boarded the small troop.carrier as a guest during a port call in Fremantle, Australia on Feb. 12, the spokesman said, and was not discovered until .. more than three weeks later, when she was ta ken off the ship near ' Okinawa by h elicopter. She was I flown lo Hawaii and deP,Orted to Australia. ' The sailor was not identified. The Barbour County, a a mall troop. carrier based in San Dte10, was car· ryln& 275 Marines from Kaneobe Marine Corps Air Station in Hawaii • at the Ume. The ship made a stop in ~ the Phili ppin es a fter leavi ng Australia and was sailing in the Western Paclflc when the woman was discovered. .......... ·•A frivolou s claim ," was billionair e Herber t Hunt's description of a dismissed $231 million antitrust suit against him and his brothers in dispute over oil fro m na · tion a lized Lib· yanoilfield. . llllJPllll WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1911 SLIM GOURME:T USING HERBS C3 ca Hot Cross Buns are traditional during the .Page95 There was a time, as it goes in plays. and novels, when the ltldy of the house complimented her cook on an and navor to add dimensioo to a meal. all incredibly easy .because you simply place tasty com- binatiOOB in muffin pans with aluminum foil liners, pour This is where super salad innovations take a· bow - eltceptiooally fine dinner. . Nowadays, the lady of ~e house ls likely to be 'the ·cook ·who plays comt>ination roles of wife, mother and businesswoman. So, daily food planning ls a challenge to muffin pan salads that begin with gelatin: . The8e salad marvels don't need to shatter the budget . because they use a. bevy of fruits and vegetables that probably already are on band. They r:night even include fruit flavored gelatin over them and chill. . Try diced apple and pear, or diced cantaloupe tamed with diced honeydew melon. Or, place shredded zucchini and carrot accented with minced onion in the liners and fill the cups with a mixture of lemon flavored gelatin. time. · leftovers. · · While many of todaJ's famil.Y menus m~y be _quick and easy to prepare,·often only last-minute thought goes . to important side dishes that make a meal excitmg. Happily, it's the fruit flavored gelatin that pull it altogether into harmonious sparkling side salads.· Where do th~y start? How about when Sunday roast · chicken is on the menu? · Whatever your choice, in just about two hours, you're on your way to un1t1olding these petite salads on crisp salad greens. Result? . . Little food harmony or few new eating experiences, All that's needed is a creative touch with color, texture · There's no limit to the possibilities of mixing and matching the combinations of fruits and vegetables. It's Now that you've discovered this concept for fruit flavored gelatin salads. show off your ingenuity by creating your own. Muffin Pan Fruit Salad I package (3 ounces l orange flavored gelatin I/& teaspoon salt · 11\1 teaspooon ginger l 1i!z cups boiling water 2 teaspoons lemon JUt'Ce l 'h cups (apptoximately) fruit combination• Dissolve gelatin, salt an~ ginger m boiling water. Add lemon juice. Place aluminum foil cup· cake liners in muffin pan. Place fruit combination in cups, filling each approximately % full. Then fill with.gelatin mixture Chill until firm. approx- imately 2 hours. Unmold carefully from foll cups. Serve with crisp salad greens. Makes approx- imately 3 Cl4J>S or 8 servi.ngs. SUGGESTED FRUIT COMBINATIONS: 1 can (8 ~ounces) fruit cocktail. drained. and 'h cup diced celery ~ cup each diced . fresh peaches and orange sections ~ cup each diced apple. a nd pear . ~ cup each diced cantaloupe and honeydew .m elon Vegetable Salad. 1 package (3ounces) lemon flavored gelatin 'h teaspoon salt . 1/4 teaspon celery salt 1 'fl cups boiling water 2 teaspoons vinegar 'h teaspoon prepared horseradish 1 •h cups <approximately l frujt or vegetable combination• Diasolve gelatin. salt and celery in boiling water. Add vinegar and horseradish. Place aluminum foil ' cupcake liners in muffin pan. Place salad ingredients in cups. filling each approximately % full. Then fill with gelatin mixture. Chill until firm, appr9ximately 2 hours. Unmold carefully from .foil cups. Serve with crisp salad greens Makes ap· proximately 3 cups or 8 servings. SUGGESTED COMBINATIONS: 2 medium oranges1 sectioned and diced, 1 small red onion, sliced into rings 1 1h cups cooked m1xtured vegetables and 1 tablespoon grated onion ¥4 cups each shredded zucchini and carrot and 2 tablespoons minced onion 1 cup cauliflower florets and 1 2 cuit diced green pepper Limelight Mold 1 3-0unce package lime flavored gelatin 1 3-0unce package lemon flavored gelatin 2 cups boiling water 1 20-0unce can crushed pineapple 1 8-0unce bottle cole slaw dressing 1 8-ounce package cream cheese Cold water 'h cup chopped nuts Lettuce 4 cups cantaloupe balls Dissolve gelatin in boiling water; cool. Drain pineapple, reserving syrup. Combine ~ cup re· served syrup, dressing and softened cream cheese. mixing until well blended. Add enough cold water . to remaining reserved syrup to measure 1 cup; add to gelatin. !-dd 1 cup dressing mixture lo gelaUn mixture, mixing until blended. Chill until partially set ; fold in pineapple and 1\Uts. Pour into lightly oiJed 6·cup ring mold; chill until firm. Un• mold; s urround with lettuce. Fill center with melon; serve with <tressing mixture. Makes 6 to 8 servings. ·. For best-dres~ed salads,. try·· combinations Wbem time or energy is in abort supply, start. with that pre-chilled head of icebert lettuce in the relriterator. Cut, shred' or tear it into the · shape you want. Add. a prote\n, sauce. then dre11 it up. . . · · ON A WEDGE Muh ripe avocado. Mix with lemon Julee, chopped anchovy, chopped, ooioo, parsley and seaioned salt aod pepper. Spoon over iceber1 •ed1eia, tomato 1Uces and tri&n1les of cold cuts. . ONCBUND · Marinate brt1ht blta of pimiento and sliced mu.ab"rooma (fresh or 'canned) ln a jar with French or ltaµan drea1in1. Pour over chunks of lceberl lettuce and cbeae and tou. ONIDED8 · Stir a iJttJe catiup or cblli sauce lnto mayomalte. Tbln with wlne vtneaat and Md a daab of curry. Tou icebert abredl wltb a can of lbrlmp, ~ wltb water to retr.b, and the dretline. • ON &Arl'S Combine 2 tablHpoona eacb of finely ·cbopped .,U..cb, watercre11 ud sr-_.... with t cup ol ma1onnalft. Acid 1 tables~ of , . • . , ...-... ~-· ... -. """" --......... __..._....,_. ······· '.( chopped capers and salt to tute. Lay a tb1p slice ol roast beef onto thick, crackllaa ralta and smother with the treen mayonnaile. PAULEY AN.D B0118&UD1811 To 1 cup of •alad dreulna, add ~ c1lp of · shredded dratned cucumber and t tab._poou each of chopped parsley and boraeradiah. WITH CREESE To 6 part.I cole slaw drteaint, add l . part cubed Swtaacbeete. . · JO& POTATO SALAD . To 2 paiU salad dre11ln1, add 1 part sour cream and a IWe chopped ireen onion. Makes superb pogto lalad dre11in1. rax F&BNCB To 1 part Frmcb clreaaift8, ~ 1 part blue cbe .......... Perteet few amed ......-. Or try equal _,.of ll'rench and eole •••"''°" cab-ba11 ia&.a.; · . Anodlei'. ft1 to do Frwb *••llBI II to adct WorelllM1ttrs NiDoe to tate ..S...,.. °"" ahrhnp • ..._.at ln 1.uuee-lbMd .._ .. , ....... GOITAUAN •. l· part Italian clrelllnl. add ~ parta ...... mayoona.11e and 1 part shredded Parmesan · cheese to accompany to1sed salads. 1 &USSIAN WITH F&BNCB ACC&NT To I parts. Ruulan dresllna, add 4 par~ French dressin1 and 1 part aoy aauee to serve over a a salad of fresh spt.Qaeh, bean sprouts. bamboo aboota and sliced carrots: • Another lood comblnaUon IJ equ'1 ~arts of Ru11ian and 1tallan dreulnl te pep up a chef's salad. WITH SANDWICBU To 1 a.ounce bottle of Italian ........ add 1 ~ teMPQOlll of Woreeitenbin aaaoe for a de- llcioualy cWrwedt taste. Or, add l teaapoon Worctlten.blre to I ounces of creamy French or · J teupoou to creamy blue ebeeee. Sene with 1our fnorlte ulacl _,r HD41wlctt. or on ve1etabl• u aaauce. · 1 roa •oa.D&D MLADI • To•,_.no.. ........... =-.... part blue eheele. Sent ovw molded ~ble 1aladl. · • SXPDDnJft' Add to mealtlme f\ln, in ~ preparation • and eating, by adding a dash or creativity a61d experimenting with many new dreasint •nil sauce combinations. • Try adding any. sauce <borseradiil, Worcestershire, mustard or whateve~) to a~ dressing to suit your last' and bud1et. Such penonall1ed dresalne can be ma• quick aa a wink to use at a moment's noUce t> . spruce up a last-minute me~. express y }>ersonatlty at a backyard picnic or impr your friends at a poUuck party. MORE IDEAS Few more 1ood salad ideas, a booklet call "Salad Drdainp and Sauces: Plain Facts• Fancy Fare" la available For " from the ioclallon tor Dre11ln11 and Sauces, 5775 . Peachtree-Dunwoocly Road, AUanta, Ga. Also, "Salada From Beltnnlnl to En:I · Over 235 Waf• to Make a Salecl"-IJ avail• rrom Kraft. Send ta plua one back label UPC symbol from an7 U Kraft rr.eb 'l'bouaand lalud cbwlhal u proof of pure · to Krlft '8Jad 9oot Ofhr, P.O. lox m, PP, South lioUand, m. tM'71. I ! I. ............. ~ ......... _.~._. ..... -·-· ... ,...,,.."-"' * . Oraoge Co•t DAILY PILOT/W9dnelday. March 18, 1981 If Grandma liftils ·from England , ••• While tlmea chance and familial roles flue· tuate accordln1ly . Grandma's special re· clfel d"8 are tbe mo1t ctvete• onea la aay limllr'• cheat of favorite foode. )llobody cook• like Gr;andma. Her recipes intlude that special toiach ol nosta11ia, an ln· 1redlent which comes only from the ex · pe.rience of living through two, three and sometimes four genera· lions. She can unveil an in· teresting history behind a certain kind of food. whether it is a daily • ethnic meaJ or a holiday special bread. Consider . for exam- ple, the story of Hot Cross Buns, a n Easter season bread. If your Grandma hails fr om England , s h e might remember that on ' Good Friday m orning Englis h hou sewives were doing one of two things -either rushing around the kitchen bak· ing Hot Cross Buns or look ing for a str eet vendor chanting. "One a penny, two a penny, Hot Cross Buns. If you have no daughters. give them to your sons. . .. Throughout the ages. buns and breads baked on Good Friday have been associated with many virtues. Good Fri· day bread, when hung over the chimneyplace insured that all bread baked thereafter would be perfect. It wu ai.o believed tbat h10 frienda could preserve tbolr lrtencbtdp U they brolre their baed bread witlaln the church door.a op Good P'rlday and ke.Pt the halves. HOT CROSS BVNS 4 t.o 41..\ cups flour 1 cup raisins 1 cup sugar 2 pkgs. active dry yeast 1 teaspoon ci n· namon 1.2 teaspoon salt Margarine 1 :z cup water 12 cup milk 2 eggs Quick Sugar Glaze In large mixing bowl, com bine 11'z cups flour, raisins and remaining dry ingredients. Heat 1 2 c op margarine, water and milk over low heat until warm. Add to flour mixture; beat 2 minutes at m edium s peed of electric mixer. Add 12 cup flour and eggs; beat 2 minutes at high speed. Stir in enough addi- tional flour to form a soft dough. On floured s urface. knead dough unt il smooth and elastic, about 5 minutes. Cover : let r ise until double in volume . a bout 20 minutes. Punch down dough; divide in half. Cut each half into twelve -------AIOUT 1 s1 99G•EAT I e DINNER (") 0 c "t) 0 z I Good for lllrff plecH ol 1u1cy golden brown Kentucky Fried Chicken, plu1 single servings ol cote siaw, mH hed potatoes and gravy and a rotl L1m1t two ollers Pf' purcheH Coupon good only tor comb1net1on whole/ derll orders Cut1omer pays all apptocab1e saies la• equal plecea. Shape each piece lnto smooth ball; place, 2 inches apart, on ereaaed cookie aheet. Br .. ,, U1ht1y with mel'*I ....,arine. Cov- er~ reMtarate 2 to 24 hours. Oncover; let stand 10 minutes . Cut shallow cro&a ln top of each bun. Bake at 375 d e grees , 15 to 20 minutes. Cool allehlly; glaze croaaet wlth: QUICK SUGAR GLAZE 2 cups sifted confec· lioners' sugar 2 tablespoons milk 1 teaspoon vanilla Combine ingredienu; m ix well. Makes 2 dozen buns. RICH DINNER ROLLS 1 package active dry yeast 1/3 cup warm water 2/3 cup milk 12 cup sugar Margarine 2 teaspoons sail 412 to 5 cups flour 3 eggs, s lightly beaten Di ssolve yeast in warm water. Heat milk. sugar. 1 :i cup margarine and sail over low heat until warm. In large mixing bowl, combine milk mixture and l lf• cups flour; Q'tlx well. Add yeast and eggs ; beat well. Stir in enough remaining flour to form a soft dough. On floured surface, knead dough until smooth and elastic Place in greased bowl ; bru1h with melted mar1arlne. Cover; let rite In warm place until double In volume, about l ~ houn. Punch down d o u I h . 0 n Ii I b t.l y floured 1urface, sha&>e u detlred followin1 dtrecUona ~low. FAN· TA.NS Divide dough into three equal pieces; shape each piece into a ball. Cover; let rest 10 minutes. Roll out each ball to 14 x 9-inch rec· tangle; brush with melt· ed margarine. Cut rec· tan1le lengthwise into six l ~·in c h s trips . Stack. Cut crosswise in· to eight ~-inch pieces. Pla ce i n g r ease d medium-size muffin pan, cut·side up. Cover ; let rise until double In volume. about 1 hour. Bake at 375 degrees. 15 minutes. Makes 2 dozen. BUTrERHORNS Divide dough into three equal pieces; shape each .piece into a ball. Cover; let rest 10- mlnutes_ Roll out each ball to 12-inch circle . Brush with melted margarine. Cut circle Into twelve wedges. Roll up each wedge, starting at wide end. Place rolls on greased coolcje sheet, polntside down. Brush with melted m argarine. Cover; let rise until dou· ble ,,tn volume. about I hour. Bak e at 400 degrees, 10 minutes. Makes 3 dozen -------AIOUT $5 ftft SUPERI e77DINNERI Good for nine pl9ce1 of juicy, golden b<own Kentucky F1ttd Chicken, wllh lour rOllt, e lerge cole slew, a large mHhtd potetoes end e m.Olum gravy L1m1t two ollers per purchH• Coupon good only for comb1net1on white/ derk orders Cuttomer P•Y• all appt1c1ble "let tex z 0 CL :::> 0 u P"ces may vary at par11c1pat1ng loca· t1ona Good only 1n Southern Cahlorn1a Oller expores I March 29 1981 P11ces may vary 11 par· ~ •1 -==;,_.--., I 1tc1p11tng loca1tons GOOd only on Soulhern I Calllorn11 where you ate . Amertca·s Flavorlle ~ ~. W•ndow Benner I NOW OPEN TO I SERVE YOU SEAFOOD SEAFOOD SPECIALS Small Bay Shrimp •4~ From the cold and clear walers of Alaska comes this delicious seafood Lreat Great for salads Fresh Little Neck Clams '2~ Fre1h from our eastern shores Always excellent steamed or raw. King Crab Legs •491sb. and Clams The Kint otall Crabs A seafood lovers delight. WINE CELLAR SPECIALS Berlnier Cheftln Blanc '299 A fine white wine . · IHI. MARKET HOUSE SPECIALS Seafood Kabob 'l ~?. East em scallops. Icelandic cod <the best I. gu lf s hrimp together wath garden fresh cherry tomat oes. bell pepper s , berm uda onion. mushrooms IMPORTED CHEESE SPECIAL '2'' Imported Jarlsberi tb. Norway's finest. excellent wTlh seafood and wine Stoned Wheat 'gllns Great wllh cheese. 14450 "D'' t'ulver-Open t ·I P.M. 7 Day1 A Week JR VINE -552·3«2 OURTOTALSATISFACTION IS ALWAYS GUARANTEE ; c • I • I FOOD HOT CROSS BUNS ARE TRADITIONAL FOR EASTER SEASON. -------------------------------9902BT I w~g~Y.! !~~M ! ........................ to•,.. ,...,,.....:11tr~tll'lff~t ....... ._"°"*.,.,"',,~'°"il-•·~·,,..,.,.._."""_,....,._., ..,,,.," ... ·-,. .• ,.. ... I ·~ .................. ~ ....... ~-0"' ....... ..,..._,~ ..... r.t .... ~"I (~{»W~ t~",,..,.,,. .. ~ ..... t-.•.........-.,_ ~ ... ,... .... 'l!,lio 1 --•4 •• •"" • ., "' ... ~·-•..-............. ' ..... .-.... .. .,. '"'•Co~--·-........ ~ ...... "'"' ........... ,. ... ~ "". .• -·"""· •. ..--... .. ~ • I "'°'" ...........,._ '~· ~,.,.... P.t '"'~ .... ............. I l ,..., lf"'fA ........ ,.........,,,.. ....... ..,,.~ ..... ....,-C:--_"°"' A .JI•• ........ 1 ·-"' .,, .... ~. it.llJo~ .... .,...~-....... ·-' "--"" ....... "90 ............... -........ -.......... "' .. ,..,. ...... , .. ,,_h.... • --....... ~"'_... .. , , .... ,.,. .-....~-.. ... ,19( ... ._.. .. "", ... ,..,,,,. .. ·~· ., ......... ··~··. ,. ••• ,,._.,,,,... ><I ""'"''""'"·~ 1·'6"r< ._.........,_... ... ""''"' ,.~ ... ·-... ··-·~--...... "'. ~ ... ~ .. ...,_,,.... <;(~J\l~ (...,,.fq.~··~ ,..........,... .. ,,*..._A1' JP., .... ,..,. ..... ••• 4"-~....ni--,.,.•• ,......,....,._.' ~ ,..,, .. ,,t.,,·~·~v~t _,, . .,~.,....,,...._.,. ..,.,.,_... ~ ...... ,...,.. ..... ;...-""""_ . .,. ....,.. __ '• ~. .. ..,..., ....... ...., .... \;-· ...... ,....,,.._~"! ..... ,,, ••• ...,....._... ......... 1 "' ""'•""·--.-.. ',. ... ""' .......... , ~ ~, .... ,,..,,~ .. "" ,..., ................ ,..,,,...' -'•··~ ~--11' .. t •f 4i'f(t(f)I ..... ~. 'orol,,,,,..,. , • .., ' ~fUlt O• ..... t 1•'1l"' ....... " .......... ··~··· l~!lfflo•f .... .,.,.,,,, I PROCTER& GAMBLE-STORE COUPON I 054980 1.:::. .~:; '.""; •.• , I OFF3 -------------------------------9602$$ I Find the whole Peanuts · 9an9 .everyday in the I I I I I ......................... ,,_ 0 1• V"' ... fffllfft lr-.Calt Ill< I I m: SPIC and SPAN The right clean. ;*· At the right price. , Chcarlie Brown . \ ~ I I '• I I ., I , . I 1 I I -... ____. ---~---· ------~-----., FOOD Orange CoHt DAIL y PILOT/Wednaday, Match 18, 1981 • SH• Ge•r11eee • Expense-account .food is hazard to health · .. CaUn• well la the ly ot the Jood , aot Ute ly and creaUveJy, even However. ll 1hould be time that a tao c or · or manaoa that bavt beat revence.'' an over· calorlecouat. U ll means leu Ume (or pointed out that Ju.at aa r ea po oda w ith the c roaaed the country worked executive once If you don' l ba ve m one y ) 1 pent on tbe "beat ol everylblnt" cheapest price. On the firat-cl .. a. told me u he chowed ealoriet to burn, apend aomec.hlnl elae that may isn't always the moat other band, frulll from down expenalvely -and catb: 10 abud and In· not be u important to fattening, neither Is it farawa y placea -What'• 11our "Colortc', extnva1anUy -on bl• dul1e youraelf I n your well·beln1 In lbe always the moat e x: v e ee tabl es from Quotint?" Do JIOU know corporate expense ,ac· lobater1 rupberrlea or loot run. . penal ve. Snob labels 1tran1e-soundJ01 lands how mortM colorlet a d411 count. From a health doldrums alont about w I th t b e ' ' 8 es t red·lear lettuce. Tbla approach can be have a way of addinl -provide the e.xtra ele· 11ou CM tot to amve al tM , s tandpoint, be wasn't now -a blue funk-of Ever)1blneDlet." And ll you don't have a •tartU.na cha.nae of at· costs. but not value, to ment of adventure, weight 11ou 1D011t to be?, 1 eatln1 very well at all. aelf-plty becauae an un· Eatin1 well CAN be tbe cub to apend, spend tltude lor many people, many products, and food almost U.ke send.i.n1 your Stnd a stomped, ul/· Between the pale de fola lair lod created aome the best reven1e for I time. Make Lhe extra ef· some women especially, is no exception. taatebuds on a vacation. addrtued e7tvelope Giid 35 gr as a nd the fudge yeople wbo can eat bot 1lu11iah, uncooperative fort to shop for the who have 1rown to re-Case ln point: fruits It's bard to reel deprived cent• to SUM GOURMET . mousse, he put away udge s undaes and metabolism, loo! Only freshest and the beat. gard themselves as the and vegetables a re at whenyou'resnacktn1on RECIPES F-O R SLIM· e nough calories and for1ot·tolnclude you -I in this case. "eaUne Make the time to pre· least important or their their best when locally dollar ·each klwl fruit MI NG , P .O. B oz 624 ,: cholesterol to clog the say, lndulee yourself well" refers to the quaU· pare your meals careful· mouths to reed. grown and in season. a flown ln from Australia Sparta, N.J. 01f1J. Lincoln Tunnel. Since then, I have ob· served many similar celebrants ln the plush h otel dining roo ms wh e r e bu s in ess travelers congreeate. Tb~ .. eood" (ricl;l, ex· pensive, fattening) meal charged to the company is a seU·lnnlcted oc· cupalional hazard un· consciously incurred in an effort lo seek redress for the tough duty some high level jobs inflict: tra vet, loneliness, long hours, boredom, discom- for t and inconvenience. The desire to seek re- venge, or at least pay· ment, from food seems to be common. And thal .Se1 m to. thinking about the unex· amined r esent m ents m ost of us poundage. prone people have about our metabolic defl cien· cies . . . the fact that nature has programmed some of us to fatten up on fewer calories than others. How often have you heard someone say, or said i t yo ur se lf , "Everything I eat turns to fat. while ... " The sen tence usually con· eludes by naming some luc ky rela tive or as · sociate who can, "Eat anything and never gain an ounce.'' An exaggeration, to be s ure, but the substance of t he statement has that irritating kernel of truth : some people DO have to watch what they eat, some don't. While it's pointless to dwell on it -eve~body has his or her own rea- son fo r knowin g that life isn't fair -it's also equally pointless to try to jolly the resentful dieter o ut of a s e lf. pitying mood. • The drive to seek com. for t or payment from food seems so universal l suspect it may be one o r food's "purposes" a fter all, despite what the experts say. So, if you're in the diet Onion is lily A "rose among roots" is what Robert Louis Stevenson called the onion 100 years ago. Actually, the pungent bulb is a member of the lily family as are its relatives garlic, chives and leeks, according to the California Di etetic Association. Fortunately for onion love r s a nd t h eir numbers are legion - this flower relative is not only savory but a source of calcium. Iron and potassium. Being low in sodium, it's also a boon to lovers of spicy foods who must curtail their sail intake . The onion la one of the best known members ol the vegetable and fruit group of the four food groups -milk. meat. veget a bles and fruits. breads and cereals . B Y -P R O D UCT VAalETY Among the most im- portant by-products or cattle, bop and sheep are variety meats, re· ports the National Live Stock and Meal Board. In addition to addln1 interest to menu plans, variety meats such as liver, kidney and heart are excellent IOUl'ces of many nutrienll includ- ing blp-quality protein, B-vlta mln a and the mlnerab troft and sine. Liver ltands out as an outatandln1 aource of · the vttamlna A and C. THE DIFFEREltCE AT VOrtS 11 DOUBLE • THE -DIFFEREltCE I GROCERIES IS°t ~BPed a..n. .59 it=chm & Bean• .77 ~--~ Clnn1mon pleHuce .97 -=-~P• Juice }43 ~CAA-AllTD l'l-Hew len Punch .76 t::~v11-A11 .27 ~i'1omato P .. t• .31 cr~d 104 Ar~M':yonn1l11 136 J~CAA-;ni Demint• "•d 1lmon 194 ~t'm thowdv .69 ;r OU!!CI: ~:N" CllOCl<l.ll oodl• omen • 72 lf>OUl'ICl CM.-Ou _, t St.wed Tometoea . 45 llOUl'Ott llO(:u.-oe -re Tomato 1tR p .99 ii:•=~i~-.20 at:dF':cs ......... J51 m:sv~ 3" ~c=rMU .96 ~.ctioc....:O.... 1" . MEATS SI HVI< ·1 S I /\I <><>I> =-~o::=-i:twa LI 399 r.d'f.:,,., P'111tt La 169 s=w~ LI 259 V< >NS< >WN I AHi I S JtCllaQ.CM von• Apttcot Helvu ..aMC Vona Tu• a.gs =~r .56 .99 .88 : .. ·~-.,..__ --. =----- 86 NE:i:Ess~,,... ROUND STEAKS TABLE KINO BEU fUU CUT U'o\fT 2 (Purch.111e Oller llmlHeg price lb I 98) ..___;.7 869 20<:00'11" REO PlllCE 2 79 PRODUCE f:;~h:k:: C11i.P'Prn Appl•• ~Ttelery ~ ,~IQl'Tl-1""91 f'Ul rtl AYOCldOI 0. .49 LI .39 IA .33 CA .33 ~rfr. Pink OrapefNlt IA .29 LI .19 IA .33 tit Al I tt L Bl.A<ll Y ~-ltOll'l'OL,-flQ.l.C)U .JO Ol'P ertlhempoo 188 r. .. ;t\ ... ·~JllOl'P ecm Pf'l1 • .99 t:drtnrlbleta J2!S ~~;e=c,..m .77 I l<J<I< >H ~PACI 329 ~:l'~btrRum 539 ~Oft. Win• 399 S: Mlgut l Chlblla 2 79 ~Mt.Ch.... 299 DLLICATESSl:N 110& '"°-~-,-TllZl l hNddld c hedder !~Ml.~ ,AT:-(>CUI rooD Wlt9ht WltChll"I Ch ... 1 I H< >I.I N I < >< >DS o=1.~, l'llh Pmttl 339 ~con cute 109 ~=:n"i:t Wefllel • 85 ~"\;.'1'f::~~ • 77 I I<> l BAKf RY a:==~ri~t;;, fl!CM'AI T J11A t Honey Duns Appr.: iru'~ov.,.. cu ... ~n;~ 149 6~]69 IA .59 3a9 V< >NS BAKI HY ~ii~ Wo~nchlrud ~~~. ~-p,.uqprt llWO Oii com/11\umn tf:'enrwtN .99 • 89 .49 105 .99 _____ ...__.,T'D-.a1•1 c.<U(llJ\t,.1-rolll.O(A"°" fl'l10lill.-.r-.nw.Nfl_"_,.l'IOf~ATWIM,»t4W,""trT• .,oe,.,.._l ... l'lllOk W..LOl..,....ll W,-9'.&.oe.,._IM __ ........ EVEREADY HEAVY DUn' BAlTERIES "M"~ 1.77 -0" 2"9dt 1. t 7 "(" 2.fl'lldt 1.17 .......... " .... Mn ............ .. c.e. ...... ,. I . 1n-..,_. eM 0ra"'9 Aft. -I! ISYM. ....,..,.,_ Cllll.T _._.,I M liliLY, --- TONE SOAP BATH SIZE 4.1'-0Z. ,49 Mufll ~ ' ""=•n....,_ 11• 9twct. AlleMI "".-.. c""''""" .. , c ...... °""""'°. °"'° ... ,. ,,.. . •110 .. MMe M . '""" ...IMM e.... L.-y., .......... nouiap ... .... ,.. ..... tOL.IOlll .. Ulld9 lllft'• ~ ... ,.,. ., i.-..... c.tlll.441.JM • O."'-~~-· ... ---·-a.ot o..-...e.-a.... taCI.' ,. tOl .., OA ...... ~ ...... mLOCllll.tHM. !• 11ct1·1 .,...._T"""r,ICICl<tl'MI U• _,, .. trf!lllM~ ..... ~ ...... I It 0.C.,,.,., ... lettl'I, IU I,. ' •' . . . . . . . :· :· :• . .. .. . . :~ . . :t . . :! . ., :-:i . . . . • .. . . ·~ . . :~ 1 ' Tangerine ••• good with s81.a Salad popularity la oo Ute rise. Mo~ tbaD ever people are aearehlq for menu item• that are treth, col· orful, wtth lntere1t1n1 flavors and tnturea. Somf are looklna for lower calorie fare. Salada often nu tbe bU1. Tangerinea are per/ ect IOlad • material, both tn the aalad and on top of it as dreuing. Salads also otter the 1ourmet or Ult nov&eit cook a 1reat way to ex· press creativity. Almoat 1nythin1 Joea. Thia la true of a ad dreulnts as well as the salad Itself. For variety . guests can even be of· fered more than one kind of dressing to lop a salad. Lower Prices Overall For the next few we e ks California - Arizona tangerines , minneola tangelos and kinnow mandarins wlll be in excellent supply. Sizes may be smaller than us ual but th e aroma and zesty flavor are still there. Tangerines are perfect salad material. both in salads or in the complementary dress· ings. So. to take adva'llage or this fresh, easy-to- peel fruit here are some new salad ideas for you to try. Each uses the dis- tinctive flavor of the tangerine to produce te mpting , i n v iting salads. TANGY TANGERINE SALAD SUPREME I package < 10 ounces) or I bunch fresh spinach. tom in bite-size pieces I small head Bibb or Boston lettuce. torn in bite-size pieces 2 to 3 tange rines, p ee I ed . s egmente d , seeded 114 po und fr esh mushrooms. sliced 4 ounces cooke d h a ~. c ut in julienne I strips Tange rine sala d dressing of your choice 1 2 hard-cooked eggs, sli ced I In a large bowl. com- bine spinach, .Bibb let 1 tuce . tange rine s eg· ments. mushrooms and ham; chill. To serve, pour one of the following tangerine salad dress· in gs over salad mixture; toss well. Garnish with s liced eggs . Makes 6 servings (about 9 cups>. C R EAMY BLUE CHEESE TANGE RI NE DRESSING 1"2 cup dairy sour cream 'r.t cup mayonnaise or salad dressing 114 cup (2 ounces) crumbled blue cheese Grated peel of 1 fresh tangerine 3 tablespoons fres h squeezed tangerine juice 2 tabl es poons chopped nuts Combine all ingre · dients, stirring well ; chill. Makes about 1 cup. CALORIE CONSCIOUS TANGERINE DRE~ING Grated peel or 1;.i fresh tangerine 'h c up fr es h squeezed tangerine Juice Juice of 'h fresh lemon I tablespoon s alad oil 1 tabl es poon granul a ted s ugar replacement 1"2 teaspoon salt 'h tea spoon chili powder 1h teaspoon dried thyme leaves, crushed In jar with lid, com- BUY BIG TO SA VE Consumers have an opportunity to save w hen they buy sub· primal meat cut.a. says the National Live Stock and Meat Board. By buying larger cuts and dividing them. i.nlo retail cuta at home, con· au mera can aave on their meat bill. Bulk meat purchues ·are 1eoerally priced 1811 per pou nd beca uae fewer labor C09U are in· volved. More and more fre- q u e n ti y , v a·c u u m · packa1ed 1ubprlmal1 are appearln1 at the aupermarket meat counter. • • • Clln1 peach aUcea ln ll&ht ayrup (economy rack> make a 1reat unch box fare . IElpeclally when they're packed wltb cottat• cbeeH ln a pluUc con- . taifter. By .Our Tripi the Difference Money Back Offer FRESH Aft ARTICHOKES u.• ~ llfftlM ~Celery N .39 frtt• ll! Romaine Lettuce ' ... 29 h ltt Slltfttt• m Tylenol Capsules S:;' 2. 29 SAVE UP T°<C~30% WITH IO FRILLS I PIHaCTI. •i..-... ,_ A G;e;~ B~u;n~ . ;; X o'i.nne~sc..·-·-.34 A° i>&ars--" ~-. 91 A° B;t;:g;~i"" LHll4ry2 . 2s wr • ceno -.29 .26 .75 .59 Nell lflfClfft "'' ••• 1• I-IUll •M 1' 1•1 ~ Crisco Oil ff! Htfllltf Spam 14 .. t 1.25 DU 1.25 11 .. , (lft Hf 1111111 Of Gllrta ¥all4"'411 •-ft • .. 29 .95 Designer Jeans SAVE UP TO 20% 01 IEW lllDIEll LUICH EATS l l~ ·-· .. , .... .. ... .. _ M•.P'llt .ICl ... r ~Meat Wieners 1.79 1.39 ~Me~t·e~ogna 1.89 1.79 1.79 1.59 Ht P'llf .. l r .... fl! Beef Wieners ft! Ch;j)p'&d Ham 1.59 1.49 Tripi• Th•Difference------. Guarantee! t llY U OIHUflll llUIS WOlllH 110 011 MOii( Al MAlll(T USl(I COIOUI ,lllClS IMIS W(U 011 IM( SAMl IT(MS af AllY OIHU MAJOll SUl'tllMAlllfl • 10Nl y ONI 01 (ACll ITfM 'UllCNAS(O MAY IE USfO Ill IH( COM'6111SOll I If hlflll IOIAl IS l0Wfll tlllNG YOUll ITfMIZlO M&Alfl IASlfl llfGISlfll UM AND IHI OIMlll SIOllf S ,lllC fS ro MAlllfT USIET ANO W( Will "' YOU U"l( '"' Otff(ll(NCI IN CA•M. ... , .. ,'"" ...... , .. ,,. ,.,.,, 4U 9".H tln ._.It HlflWO OOUU 10 OfllfOSOO IOOOUjtf ..CN•OCJOl U$f DECORATOR OR DESIGNER 79 1oum TOWELS ... &"·• ~ 63i10Win8 ____ 2.69 I 5 Ill ...... .52 ~ Refried Bean s 11 .. , Cl• ..,. .. ~ Pink Salmon I U ·ll 1 99 CI A • FA•ILY •EAT PACKS REDUCED 5c PER LI. OR •OREi m. FAMILY PACK. C.ftltf c11 l'llk m-Rib Chops m. FAMILY PACK."'' m-Sirloin Chops m_ FAMILY 'ACK, ... , ~Cube Steak "2 .43 FAMILY PACK._,,..,..,,,...,.,. ... tJ.! Thighs Or Drumsticks ... 1. 19 BONE-IN BEEF RU•P ROAST B! fll/lft ,_, ffff Of Pork Neck Bones ~ ... . Chuck Roa st f1t1• l'KlfK ~ Red Snapper ,J78 lb .49 It 1. 09 It 1. 89 _J_ 1 ·-I , Soup's plac .in history The soup pot hu aJwaya had a promlnHt place lo tM b1ltory of food preparaUoe. Fire waa tamed In about 1$0,000 B.C. fflatoriaN have proof that the technique of bolllns appeared lon1 before heatproof or waterproof containers were either . accldently or intentionally pro· duced. Soup probably was prepared in large shells, anlm al stomachs, stone pots or pieces of hollowed bamboo stop- pered with clay at one end. True pottery was not evolved until almost 6,000 B.C. Two centuries a10 the iron kettle simmered on the campfire or the kitchen hearth. Soup was the most important food on the family table. It nouris hed the young , s tuck lo the farmer's ribs and was the salvation of toothless elders. It was aJso prepared in portable form for the pock ets or travele r s, woodsmen and soldiers. Pocket soup was the forerunner of our bouillon cubes and in· slant soups. The importance of soups in today's diet hasn't diminished at all. Th ey are full of benefi cial nutrients, easy to make, provide an opportunity to use le ft overs and can be served hot or cold for every~ay family fare or as an elegant dinner course for guests. Soups h a v e been around for so long that it is difficult to come up with new ideas for se rv· ing and garnis hing them. A different ap· proach is to prepare a soup having contrasting color and taste. Eye· app e aling pureed vegetabl es lend them selves to all sorts of interesting flavor combinations. A bit of Roquefort cheese added ilves the soup its own dfstinctive identity. Th is s imple recipe was teste d with nine fresh vegetables: beets. as p a ragus, brussels sprouts. green be ans. cele r y, carrots, c ab- bage, broccoli and cauliflower. Two separate portions are made. One is the basic vegetable pure e and the second is made with potato for dee· orative purposes. The latter is left w-hite if added lo a dark vegeta· ble or ble nded with pars ley if added to a light vegetable so each soup has a contrasting color. POTAGE CREME AVEC ROQUEFORT <A Cream Soap with lloquefort> Vegetable Portion: 11,. to Y.i cup chopped onion Butter About 2 11. c up s chopped vegetable l 1h cups canned or fr es hly pr e pare d chicken broth ....... Salt, pepper ~ Saute the onion in a saucepan with a s mall amount or butter. Steam the vegetable selected for the soup until almost DEFa08TING TIPS Defrosting meat at room temperature is not recommended, accord- ing to the National Live Stock and Meat Board. Rather, frozen meat should be defrosted in the orleinal wrappine in tbe retrt1erator or in the microwave oven, follow- ing the oven manufac- turer's directiooa. The length of time for defrosting meat in the refrigerator la 4 to 7 hours per pound for laree roasts; 3 to S boun per poudd for small roasts. One-loch steaks or chops will defrolt in 12 to 14 houri. tender. PulM the onlou ato aatt and pep.,.,., and ltMIMCI ~etable "' eup crumbled Note: Chop up enouJb le a foo4 mi . Tbe oquefort c...... raw potato to meuW'e mJaCW. 61 too ~ foi 1 ~ adtk or Upt 1 ~ cupe wt.ea l*J'Hd. tll1• •• ,,.,. eont•mer eam Now 1l1nme-r Use two she bleQder motor. Parw&e,, watwcreu mlxturee In separate Co.mblne the pureed •rdlll,lfdelind saucepans un~ll t.he vesetablea with the Salt, pepper · flavors blend. It the chicken broth. Seaaon Steam the potato until ·soup I• to 'be presented wltll salt and pepper and oder. Puree tbe potato In a tureen, lint pour In set ulde. d Roquefort ln a food the bot vegetable mix· Note: Chop up enoueb ill. JI a ereen color 11 t.,n. ·Then slowly pour r a w v e I et a b I e to e1lred, puree 2 &.able· tbe Potato mixture lnto measure 2 cups when poon1 of partley or th• center of the tureen. purceed. .............__ atercreu with the With a knife blade make olllra.&lq ~-»otato. Blend with the a deal1n. Makea 61h 1 'h cups chopped In ilk and season with cups of soup. ~ ,.,.,~ ........ -. ... "'t"'"-..-"""'°-.. c-•- verall r f(>\' ~ .lieut FARMERJ4HN ~~v!29~U> PORK S~LDER97 ROAST • • ,.,,,_ Jallll."""" ~Style LD FRESH LE OF PORK Farm« JOM. llOIW·ln. flUtt netf LD 1 211 ~'!o~!!oJOHN r,usA~ IQI 1. 08 ~~~ E~O R~EfOAST .. 1.88 ~~~~~l~o~o STEAK,, 1. 98 BONELESS LEG.l)F PORK l.1.67 •• 1.58 .. 1.78 '"\>< . i PORK LOIN C S ;;~~ LOIN CH s IOINCl/l,. ~~~~!!.J<?HN~ .A~SAGE101 -.49 ~~MER JOHN,. ACON," .. , 1. 09 !!.<?,RIC NECK B~ES " • 68 ~~~N. ~!Y~~A~SAGE .. 1.88 ~~~N..2, BEEF' ,, 1 _ 18 OOH fll01' U CH O '°' ,._, 4 - ~~~~ooo5TEA1 "2.48 Blade Cut Chuck LB . . 98 Croll Rib Roast, NELESS BONDED BEE' CHUCK LB .. .. . 1 98 E·Z Cut Cube Ste LB 2.48 Bonelesa Whole COOKED. WATER i' tHAV. LB . 2 18). LB 1.98 Frying Chicken, SOUTHERN GRAOE 59 Fresh Turkey Bre WITH RIBS LB 1 78 Fresh Turkey Thi LB . . 1 •8 Tufkey Drumatlc FRESH OR WINGS, l 68 Shrlmo or Lobste Mi'Tl i'W'S FROZEN. 1 59 Lady LM Sliced 1 LI ~O , ..... Shrimp, FROZEN, Snow Crab Cluat Sole Fil~ 'AOZ True Cod Fillet, Turbot Fiiiet, '"° H1llbut SIHk, "' FrHh Fiiiet Of p i'VAILAIU THlMa, SAT. ONl.Y, L& •..•. F~Cherrvl· AV II.Alli T~I '" HI IHrLL.. LI . , FROZEN. LI ,, LB ................ 1.11 ZEN.LI ............ 1,•t .L8 ............. 1.51 IN, LI .... .. , , 3.58 o Red Snapper, I , ..................... , 44 Cllfnt 1.IAT.~Y. . .. 1. 11 pLADY LEE bCATSUP .79 pFRUIT bCOCKTAIL .49 UCIVIM 110? c... A ~~CA ~PPLESA~~ ,_ 1. 27 A ~~!!~<»~CHES A~~~~~~~G "°'""'•69 •011n. 79 A ~~,9~~_!~1COTS nolC .... 59 J. WELCH'S GRAPE JE~~! IA/I 1. 29 A ~~!~.~~KES "°' eo.1.12 A ~!.~, KRISPIES •101 eo.1 . 26 A ~Z-IT CRACKERS ,,01 901 • 99 59 r Appian Way Pizza Mix. 12", OZ BOX I; Nestle's Soups, INSTANT • VARIETIES p t 30Z PKG 62 ~ Royal Gelahns. 8 VARIETIES 6 eoz eo• 49 Post Toasties. CEREAL 18 oz BOX 98 b Marshmallow Creme. KRAFT TOPPING 1 OZ BTL b Golden Griddle Syrup. 7• oz BTL 59 1 59 pBALL PARK 6FRANKS Mtlt 18 Ot ,,., pLONGHORN 6CHEESE L..lke tOL..lkt • oz ""' J. !~LL PA~I( FRA~KS,.oz ..c 1.59 A ~l~IE.~INI<~ ... uoz -1 .49 A ~02~ .~A~MI .. ''°' "° 1.49 , Swiss Mias Puddings. 3 VARIETIES. 6 t80Z PKG . , Pillabury Blacu1t1, SWEETMILK 6 OR BUTT'ERMILK. 1'11 OZ CAN . . . , , l f b~a~K~~~~~: .~~.1~~~.~~~~1."'·. '. • • , Kraft CheeM Food, SINGLE WRi'P -\ SI.ICED AMERICAN OR SWISS. 120Z PKG ...... . , Fisher'• Ched·O·M•te. CHEESE 6 SUBSTITUT~. n OZ l'KG . .. .. .. .. . .97 .21 .85 1.59 .. 1.09 Orange CoU1 DAIL¥ PILOT/Wedneec:tay, March 18, 1981 ca J:STAR·KIST 169 CHUNK TUNA """ Mlat warw Pactr 121'> oz can Olf Oii Pldl l ~l~E~~·.RONI MIXES l HAWAIIAN PUNCH '·0180•·59 06 01 CNfo 75 . llOICM•83 p Francisco Croutons. 2 VARIETIES 1; eoz eo • . p Super Socco Drink, 32 oz en I; Swill Luncheon Loaf. t2 oz CAN A Seneca Grape Juice. •8 oz BTL Lindsay Olives. PITTEO MEDIUM p ll OZ CAN I; Lady LM Yams, 29 oz CAN p Mother's Cookies I; CHOCOLATE CHIP t t OZ PKG I )airy & I-·ro:en 75 65 99 1 43 85 69 1 12 pCORTON'S 6 FISHSTICKS 269 J. ~A~A~INE A ~~'!e~ TOPPING n Ol Plcg <I OI Cf11 .67 1101 "" .69 J. !~HNSTON'~ PIE SHE~~~ .. , .89 p N1blet1 Corn, GREEN Gli'NT WIBUT TER. 6 tOOZ PKG 75 , French Fries. ORE IOA 6 32 OZ BAG 1 03 , Comblnetlon Pizza. VAN OE KAMPS 6 23 4 OZ PKG . 2 99 , Broccoll Spears. BIROS·E'fE 6 10 OZ PKG . . 59 p little Ears Cob Co rn. BIRDS·EYE 6 8 CT PKG 1 05 P Strewb4trries, e1RDS·EYE. 6 10 OZ PKG . . . 79 I. iquor cl JJ ine ;; SMIRNOFF VODKA .,....,.,. 949 1 7$ UT ltl A =~~~.V.ET ,,,.,,,1' 10.69 A~~~~. Ht1n1n ~0.99 A ~~ ~~.~u.~. no••t\ 8. 99 A ~T.!.o~~~ "°"'n 2. 79 """ '"<• NOt lffleftW In Mntl l!Rltl encl Sin LUK OClflCIO (OUftt ... °""~ __ _.,....,__,,_, .... _,,.. --""""'--"'"' ; ·; Contrcuting colors and tcutes make soupa dbtinctive. =: This ii a cream . of celery soup decorated with a bright green mixture of pureed potato, Roquefort cheese and parsley. FRESH .49 CANTALOUPE F•nt ol rnt St;tSOO Full ol Flavor U> LARGE .23 AVOCADOS ca111om1n R~t Eacn LARGE .49 ARTICHOKES OttlCIOU\ racn LEAF LETTUCE ... -.24 l!fO "'""• afHN llOlllUlf ..CM.29 PASCAL CELERY ( .. ~""°~"" DELICIOUS APPLES ... 39 WA~fOflil l •UA •Mil(• GOl.OC" 11 ouiehold & /'el U OI r .... 38 A ~~~~lq~~J!~ITE .. 01 ... 1. 79 A ~~z.!_RD DEOOORI~~'~' «• 1.49 A ~~~~IES CAT FOOD i .oic•••31 r Tul·N·Ready Towels PAPER b 1osr ROLL r Lysol Spray DISINF fCT ANl b t20Z CAN p Windex Cleaner, GLASS w TRIGGER b 72BTL l Aluminum Foil, LADY l EE 25 SF ROLL A All Detergent. uou1D M oz "en 75 1 77 1 27 49 2 84 llt•a/thc.\ l/1·t1111r 1id.\ A COMTR.EX TABLETS. A ~.~~~~2!0DO~ANT101 1.19 r VITALIS I; """ .. O" -· l40ID A ~0~INSON BLADES •011.99 n1.27 Orallx Spec:lel, 2 •o z .. Tuma Tablett, PEPPERMINT OR ASSORTED l'Li'VORS 75-S Oleparene Baby Powder, W/CORNSTARCH. 12•11 OZ. ~:,~ ~~~~.~.l~~~~ ... ~.'~.PA~~~~·. 1 99 1 29 1.29 1.79 ve .. llM lnten1lve Ceret LOTION. REGULAR. U~A ST1'1N0 H OA HERli'L. 15 OZ .. • .. . .. . .. . , .... 1.99 Cutu Pollah RemoYer, AtGULAA. LEMON OA HEA8i'L.. I OZ .. . .. .. .. .. . . 79 Pond'• Cold Cream, AEGU\.AR. t 'Ol ......... , . . , •. . . .. . .. 2.29 Pond'• Skin c .... m. Of'V,. e oz . . .. 2.&9 J«t "-deltna ShamPoO • ._,LK a HONtY OA CONOITIONll'I. 11 OZ. .. .. . .. • .. .. ... 1 97 " . Tum your unuubles Into usable c•lll.C.11 Dally Piiot cl•11HIMI '42·5671. '""='= ..... ___ _ -------==·· 1--='"--- ~­~=.-.. ""_ ....,._ _ .. __ -·-- "'' .. ,..., __ . --..... ---...... ..,,.. ·-·-... __. j . 1 ·1 ,,_... ____ ----,..___. I 0rMge CoMt DAILY PtlOT/Wedneeday, Matah 18, 1891 FOOD Grown-up1 or tid1, who does1ft love pa1ta '! Warm 1trand1 of ' noodlet, cooked Jutt. UD· til tender, topped with an herb-laced aauce. Everyone'• Italian when it comes to eltjoy- ins this popular diab. Pasta can be ae.rved as a separate courae before the entree, aa a side dish with the en· tree, or ln the American tradition, as the main ,!. dish ltaelf. When the pasta dis h contalna enough protein, only a tossed green salad ls needed to complete the ·meal. For example. Almond Linguine Florentine con· tributes protein from whipping cream, left· over ham and blanched s livered a lmonds . Because of their de · licious flavor and won· ·derful crunchy texture, ·everyone loves almonds for eating enjoyment. . But there's another good reason to love almonds. Almonds are rich in plant protein. And like most other vegetable p r o t e i n.s , h a v e n o cholesterol and less s aturated rat• than would be ro und in animal protein sources. And that's not all . Almonds contribute m ag nesium , phosphorous, riboOavin and vitamin E. Almonds are a source of iron. ca l c ium , niacin , thiamine, vitamin B-6 and folacin. Pasta main dJshes are usually quick to fix , a boon to the busy cook. ·fl takes no more than 10 minutes or cooking time to make the sauce for Almond Linguine Florentine. Slivered almonds needed for the sauce and garnish are convenient, too.· In fact, almonds come in more ready-to· use for m s than a ny 'othe r nut -who le , · a dd crlinch t o pasta dish allt!ed , 1llvered , chopped, diced -lat• your pick, accord.lnc to your reetpe ,DMdl. Ju1t ton tbe bot 1ln1ulni with the de· lidOUI HUCe and for a color contrast, aerve tbl1 put.a dbh on a bed ol freeb 1plnach leavea. For Q>ore tood looks garnish with chopped parsley and a sprinkling of slivered almonds. If you've never con· aidered almonds for paata di.shes, you'll be pleased at how well they go with all varieties or pasta sauces. ALMOND LINGtJINI FLOaENTINE J 1plnaeh leav•. Garni1b wltb addiUoaal choDMd paraley and toalied sil vered almond1 . Makes • to 8 aervin11. Approximate cost per tervlnl i• $1.18 tor 4 servinp or 77 cents for 6 servings. • To toa1t atmonds, spread ln an unsreased baktns pan or skillet. Place in a 350-degree PEACHY IDEAS The Chinese method of stir-fry cooking is fast becoming an American favorite. It's quick , nut ritious a nd e co n o mi ca l . It 's oven or oftr medium· low beat OD Jfle 1tove IOp for s to ur"'mlnut. (de- pendln1 OD the form of almonds tbatJou are WI· Int> or wit almonds •re a ll1ht 1olden brown, aur once or twice to aaaure even brown. ins. Note that almonda will continue to brown slighUy after belng re· moved from the heat. especially delici ous when you 1Ur In cling peach slicea packed in light syrup (economy pack). Just drain the peaches, then stir in wlth the vegetables and cook until hot. Add crunch to linguini l1y using slivered almonds in the creamy sauce. Garnish with more slivered almonds. ~ cu p chopped ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ on.ion 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 tablespoo n s vegetable oil 3 tablespoons flour ~ teaspoon thyme Salt and pepper, to taste 1 can (13:Y.. ounces) beef broth :Y.. cup whipping cream 3 tablespoons Dijon- sty le mustard ir.i pound leftover cooked ham, cut in strips ~ cup choppe d parsley ~ c up blanched sl ivered almonds , toasted• 'h pound linguini , cooked al dente Spinach leaves In skillet, saule onions in butt.er and oil u.ntil limp. Blend in flour and seasonings ; cook and stir over low heat until flour is well blended. Gradually stir in broth and cr eam ; cook and stir over medJum heat until mixture thickens, a pproximat e l y 5 minute s . Stir i n mustard, ham, pars ley and almonds. Toss hot linguini with sauce; serve on a bed of fresh aeon s ......... t-· I I C .... ~ ... . f9ventel ~:. Chwft~u1ht ._., ........... o. .. ._. ... · -·T angerines are g ood b uy Fresh tangerines are an excellent candidate for a "best buy" on your food shopping list during the next several weeks. You probably will find them displaye d in markets as minneola tangelos and kinnow mandarins, two late r season varieties market· ed a s · tangerines by California and Arizona citrus growers. According lo Gordon Hende.rson. vice presi- dent of the Fresh Fruit M arketina Division at Sunkisl Growers, sup- • ·plies of both mlMeolas and k·innows will be good during the coming weeks. However. as in the case of the current ' navel orange crop, they f 1 are runnina much ·s m a ller in s ize than c l s I. p h h tl p c S I 0 • ft u re 1 r. pr Pl · P• I. l . normal. The minneola lan1elo can be recognized by its brilliant orange color and t he "knob-like" formation at the stem e nd . It ts a c ro~s between a tangerine and a grapefruit, has few seeds ancj a distinctive rich. tangy flavor. ·The kinnow mandarin, on the other hand has the flatter, more lradi- t ion a I s hape o f a tangerine. The skin will be s mooth, lighter in col· or, and wiU peel easily. This variety does have more seech, but has a marvelous flavor. . TANGYTANGEalNf; CRIC&EN SALAD 'h cup mayonnaise or salad dresalnc Grated peel of 1 fresh tan1ertne 114 teaspoon curry powder or poultry seaaonln1 · · v.-tea s poon seasoned salt 2 cups cubed cooked chicken 2 tan1ertnn, peeled, segmented, eeeded ~ cup chopped celery \4 ·cup chopped 1reen pepper \4 cup toa at.ed 1U vered almond.I Salad.,... 'In lar1e bowl, com- b In e m1yonnalle, t1n1erlne peel. cuny •• powder and seasoned salt. Stir in c hicken, tangerine segm e nts. celery. green pepper a nd almonds; mix well. Chill. Serve on slllad greens. Makes 4 serv· ings <about 31"2 cups l. A HONEY OF A CWESLAW v. cup salad oil Grated pee l of 'h fresh tangerine Jui ce of 1 fresh tangerine ( 114 cup) Juice or 1h fres h lemon 2 tablespoons honey 1 tablespoon toasted sesame seed (optional) 1 small head cab· bage, cul in long thin shreds (about S cups) 3 tangerines, peeled, segmented, cul in half, seeded 'h cup raisins 114 cup chopped nuts In jar with lid, com- bine oU, tangerine peel and juJce, lemon juice, honey and sesame seed; s hake well. In large bowl, combine cabbage, tangerines, raisins and salad dressing; chUI. To serve, add chopped nuts; toes gently. Makes 6 servings (about 7 cup1 ). Faun TANGEalNE AMBaOSIA 1 container (4 ouncea) froun whipped toppine. thawed 2 tablespoon s curacao or other oranae- flavored liqueur Grated peel of ir.i fresh tanierlne Generous dash 1rouad cinnamon or nulme1 8 t.aqerines, peeled, cut In cartwheell, seeded Shredded coconut or •llced almonds To make sauce, in bo.wl combine whipped toppln1 ,'curac10, tan1ertne peel and cln· namon· cblll. U1tn1 one llftl•rlM per aervtnc. a r raafe tan1erl1u cartwh .. 1 1Ucff, over· lapplq, on 8 lndlvldual detHri plates. Top each with aout 2 tablelpoom of sauce. lprtatle wttb coconut· oii almoada. Mates 8 Hf'Vtnp (about 1 cupaauce). Wh1ltM09K ._, ~·~-o.-0...... llt r.:=l Gou.,. LJ ...... -.~ol To po ce Toothpaste Aweri4t '9. Smebn "-" She 1..-• --With $249 ~ t~ 19c ~, .. , '~'-" El QUALITY MEA I! LOW PRICES! LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PRODUCE! Boneless Chuck Roast ..:::;i... 1111 DS Glad Wrap ~00:. 79• •Gordon's Gin ~ :: '9" Green Cabbage ":::':" • 15• Chuck Short Ribs o!:;;,, ., '1" 1-i Lucerne Yogurt :!:. 99• m:1 Irish Cream = •io .. 111 99 Premium Russet Potatoes .. 39• Cross Rib Roast ~ ., 11" ZS Green Gl~nt:::-.: ':! 43' ZS Vodka '==-:: 17'' Fresh Carrots ~:. 2 ~49' Beef Stew Meat "='c!:" • '2°' :=;Nabisco ~ •;.: 89• D; Inglenook.=.:=.·~ '2" Ruby Grapefruit ~... • 25' SAFEWAY YITAMll SALE! ......... . ...... , _.._4 .• ................ ,. ..... , ...... •WU-• n•-. ...,.., .. c...... ..... r11• ......... , • ,... .. 11 ............. --. ..... .,,. Arm Pot Roast =~ . 11" I-! Del Monte Catsup :.:: 49• D$ Liebfraumilch:: 3::.:. 111 Delicious Apples ,:_ • 39' 2-45' . .,... .... .................. Fresh Perch Fiiiets Chicken Liver ':-.:.:" Poffth 8lulagt "":.---- •1111 D; Bell Brand = 1~ 79• • Lambrusco - • 49' DIS Wide Noodles .!:: ':.:' 69' BAKERY •~ff • 1 •Swanson o:=... t.; 39' • Bread =..-=: • '1" 1118 Blue Bonnet ..:;... C:.:. 85• 11!$ Schnecken•-:=• • '1°' llS Detergent ':" ':: 11" 115; Bread .::...wzrg,. r.====:=====-. .. Minute Maid °'..:: :!:. 1157 DI Round Top 'T ... .., . ·-~Dr ..... .,.,...... . ,,, .... c.... ~ ............. •IHIS.. ....... s-te._ 2:: 15 Green Onions :::: Lovely Mum Plants 6 ~'4" DELI ~ 79' Vnty Pack Meatsl=. ':t: 1151 3.::. •1• ~tgert:i'S:. 99• , ~ ....... _ .. _ ......... ........... __ ,_ ................. ........ , . .-.....a , .............. ............... • ..... ,a-... .. ~ ......... .. ....... ... __ .............. .............. ....... ~ .......... ...... .... ........... ... , ...... .......... fll ... . ,.... .... .............. ... --. ...... ""' •I ... .......... --...,..~ .... ~·~....-~-·-···""'-----~~--.......... ______ ~ ........................... . ,,,. ,. ........ _.,, .. -. ·~..-41'\.·~···-.. ~...--. ......... ___ .,..~ ........ ,.... 1 I I FOOD Serve low-cal fish Calorie counUn1 can Cover; microwave on be such a bore . HIGll5to7 minutes. However, thHe two fish recipes wilJ help add ap-GOLDEN FISH PUFF peal and lntereat to 1 pound fillet of sole, wal1t-wh.lttlln1 menus. flounder or other fish Lo.Cal Fish Bake is a '4 cup water great recipe when .it''I Salt time to make up for a Y.i cup mayonnaise. weekend splurge. It's 1 tablespoon pre· pierced with a fork. Ar· ran1e on broiler pan. Combine mayonnaise, mustard, and pepper; spread over /lsh. Broll until puffed and ll1htly browned. Makes 3 to 4 servings. Orang• Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, March 18, 1981 Low-cal Fiih Bake is great recipe when it's time to make up for weekend splurge. • It's 105 calories ' per saving. I 105 calorie$ per serving. pared yellow mustard Haddock flJlets bake in a Dash red pepper or tomato sauce with cayenne pepper, if de- celery and green pep-sired. Arrange fish in per, enhanced with low skillet with salted water. calorie worcestershire Cover and simmer 8 to sauce. 10 minutes, until fi sh MICROWAVE : Com· bine fish with 1 to 2 tablespoons water in baking dish. Cover with plastic wrap and microwave on HIGH 4 to 6 minutes. Season with s alt. Top with mayon· naise mixture ; broil in conventional oven. ; Better yet, because flake s easily whe n this recipe can be pre· .~~~~~_.:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---.... pared in 15 t o 20 minutes, there's little time to get hungry and fill up on snacks while dinner cooks. To com- plete a low calorie sup- per. serve a tossed green salad . green beans, and fres h fruit for dessert'. For an entirely dif- ferent tas te trea t . Golden Fish Puff is an es pecially attractive way to prepare a fish dish that's easier than it looks. A combination of pr epa r ed ye llow mus t a rd a nd mayon- na ise adds a zesty and flavorful topping to fish fillets that puffs as it browns unde r th e broiler. E ven with the mayonnaise. this recipe is 215 calories per serv- ing. Add cooked spinach or broccoli with Lemon, carrot sticks. a nd sherbet to complete this m eal Both worces te rs hire sauce and mustard a re great condiments for calorie counting s ince they're hi gh in fla vor and low in calories. LO·CAL FISH BAKE 1 stalk celery. thinly sliced 12 m e dium s ize green pepper. c ul in strips I can (3 or 4 ounces> mushrooms, drained :1t4 cup tomato juice 1 tabl es p oo n Worcestershire sauce I pound fillet of had· dock or other fi sh Sall and pepper Sliced le mon Combine celery, green pepper. mus hroo ms. t o mato j uic e and worcestershire sauce an sm a ll saucepan: cover and simmer 5 minutes. Arrange fish in shallow baking dish ; season with salt and pepper. Spoon t omato mixture over fi sh. Bake. uncovered. at 400 degrees for 10 to 12 minutes. until fis h flake s easil y whe n pierced with a fork . Garnish with lemon. 3 to 4 servings. MICROWAVE : Com· bine celery and g reen pepper in bowl; cover with plastic wrap and microwave on HIGH 2 to 3 minutes. Assemble rec- ipe as directed above. Loosen labels To help r efunders save time and effort as w e ll as money, the following tips for r e m oving s tubborn labels are offered. Soda bottles. You don •t need the whole label. Peel off the top, somewhat transparent layer the one with the printing. Liquid dishwashing labels: Put the bottle in hot water for 10 qiinutes then peel off the thin printed layer. Liquid soaps, spray cleaners and fabric softeners . Soak overnight in a pail of hot waler (fill the bottle first so it won't float to the top.) -Don't accidently repaste the labels to your table or countertop. Once a wet label comes off, place it paste side up. Or place it paste side down on plain paper. a EAD THE LABEL Wh at's your beat guide to cut ldenUfica- ll o n at the meat counter? It's the label, 1ay1 the National Llve Stock and Meat Board. Accordin1 to th• Uniform Retail Meat lclentlty standarda uaecf b y m any su p e rm arkets throuihout the country the label on meat abould tell JOU u.e SI*... 91 m eat, t b e p rimal (wboletale) cut name and UM retall name •• .. -" I ~~-New Cropl·lweet Juicy .-~ .L ' , Valancl Top Slrlol· . Steak --~; •• .;: )' 1 per ' ' lb. ~~~~ lllced·lmported Dano la Ham • USDA Cholce-BHf Round Boneless London Broil USDA CHOICE USDA Choice-Large Meaty End Beef Rib Steak Ko1her Knockwur1t or Sholar Beef Franks USDA CHOICE Split Top or Sandwich-Wheat or Ralphs White Bread e oz. pkg. San Franclaco Style-Long Sour Dough Fresh Colombo French Bread Regular, Klrfb Size or BBQ Frltos Corn Chips per lb. 111 12oz.11a pkg. 1 Vt lb. loaf 18 oz. loaf 9 oz. bag .49 .49 .87 Prices effective Mar.19 thru Mar. 25, 1981 Ral.phs the ~fflclal Supermarket of the Los Angeles Blcentennlal ~LA200 ~--\ \~oranges I~! ... ,. i 1 • • 'i. IJ • ~.ti.. l . . , '· ' .· ~~~ ' ' ~· ..J f,f,. ~.!~~ ·, .. #'-'' Chunk Light Star-Kist Tuna In 011 or Weter -81/t oz. • lii1 can Noodln with Cream or Ch•••• Tuna Helper PLAIN WRAP. -Deaert Grown White Grapefruit Freeh Cut Carnations Orel AntlHptlc Slgnal Mouthwash Ao••, Rhine or Almaden Mt. Chablls Now Av•ll•b .... Funk a WagnaH• lncyclop:CUa Volumes 12 & 13 Regency Edition "C9"fltM 1H 1 9f 11 ..... Of-r c....-r. •• 11 ...... "-""• •• _,, ...... • llMll"',..... ....................... "' ............. AdvertlMd '""" In lhl• lld .,. the •• ,,.. jHICt Of tower In ... ''"'" ...,..,. evellelM. 'rte" ottMH then lldv~ prioee mer vMr d1p1ndll• llPO" locel compelleloo, ooet f8Ctort °' fMl'ephtc iooeeton • • ... , .... .. , .... • l 11* ST .. CIOI llSI PASO • fll.lml l.191l •.LS Cl.tD 8.AT ..... --·--- -SM-., UPllJ ll.LS 12M IMI, TISlll, ... , ...... 11111 1111 st_ TISfll l . ................ .-.. ............. ~ .. _.............. .. ............... ..-, _, .. CISYA llSI • , I • 7112 oz. pkg. .79 8 lb. cello bag 139 one dozen 249 32 oz. btl. 219 1.51tr. 279 btl. only 2 99 Volume 1-Stlll Only IC I .,. 1 .I I ' OrangeCout DAJLY PtLOT/Wedneaday, March 18, 1981 FOOD - Uerhs useful for freshe~ silver and cleaning furs $artlnl sprint clean· fl . la Tea ot Juniper Berrla GLOVES-IM 8AOWN UNt:N-1875 water to cover "'-? Uaeberbe whenator· 'It <Juolperus communh - ' • Make a t bl ck "Brown linen may be 1 cupmlnlleaves ~:,J:,ver-~;:H:!~: llJZll Ullfl <• heal:~:!°ZS~iar ':.u:~i;~: 0~Y f~~~:e~ ~e::n ~lfne~wU:!~ star~h tt1!nJ::1~~~fJ ln1 bouHhold air or _ 1 tablespoon juniper (Unum uaitaUsslmum -washed in starch-water water .-mmerclotbin1. berries health stores) in 1 cup and Tea of Hay," (or Cover; boll hay, water, Jn the llOOa, silver was 11lua whiskey (not 1 p o on ) m y r r b Boll 10 minutes; cool water; add a little dis· 1rau; Gramlneae or mint (20 minutes> until stored durlna summer aabot) <Balsamodendronmyrrh naturally; strain; spray aolvedtoilet soap (nolde· Poaceae). water ls dark green. Stir when parties were held In Mix well. Sprin.lde with -health a tor es>, In foul-smelUng rooms to teraent); when mixture So, have your eardene,.. through starcb. Soak 8'rdena. Try the recom· it. <Grannie's Remedies> sprinkled on floort1 and remove odors and kill cools, put on the gloves; save clippings when he linen ror 10 minutes. mendaUons of Hugo TO FaF.SHEN AIR -furnitureofaickrooms, is germs. rub with a piece or white mows. Dry In sun. Use In· .. The starch will clean Ziemann. steward of the 1• an exceJlentdeodorizer." Or set cut cloves of flannel wet with the mix· stead of soap. Add fresh the fabric without soap. .-Ute House, for seldom "Vlneear (1 cup) <Ziemann> garUcaroundrooms. lure. Do not wet gloves mlntleaveaforscent. Do not rinse." CBuckeye UHd silver pota on coffee bol.led with Cl table· Also, a good deodorizer TO CLEAN KID through." (Ziemann) llargepanful bay Cookery) tables: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- • SJLVE•TEAAND COPl'EEPOTS-1811 "When putting away those not in use every day, lay a lltUestick (run· ner) or (fresh > mint <from nurseries) across the top under the cover. Tbis will allow fresh air to, get in and prevent the mustiness of contents. familiar to hotel and boarding-house suf- ferers." -~E IRA LARGE LOOSE EGGS Crow seedlings 9f tancy (Tanacetum vul1are) from nurseries for this: TO WJUTEN CLOTHES -1875 Throw a handful of <fresh > tansy into the boiler in which clothes are boiling. fl will make the waler green, but will whiten clothes . And your clothing will be herbal fresh. IACH IGG LIMIT 1 DOZEN Even annua.I cleaning by professional furriers may not remove the yellow tinge that aging white furs acquire; but There's more to like PLUS LOW PRICES GRADI 'A' FRISH. YOU PICK 'IM FROM OUR BULK DISPLAY ;~::~~ lb.is will : TO CLEAN ERMINE - 1875 "Rub with meal of corn (Zea m ays -al mark_-ets ), r enewing meal as it becomes soiled," an anonymous author wrote. Rub corn- meal against grain of the fu r . Shake out thoroughly. Dis like the smell of moth ba.lls? Try fragrant herbs instead. PREVENT MOTHS - ISZS Ro sema r y ( R ose marinu s o f - ricinalis> was known as Guardrotie during the 16th century . Richard Banckes ( 1525> said. "Take flowers o f rosemary and put them in a chest among your clothes or a mong bokes (books l & moughtes <moths) shall not hur them." Stuff pockets of fur coats with rosemary rlowers; lay some under col I a rs. ove r c loset floors If you have no flower· ing rosemary pl ants, try these suggestions: MOTHS-1899 '·Place pieces of tobac- co leaves or whole cloves in drawers or closets, with furs and clothing to .be preserved from moths. They will never be harmed." <Ziemann) MOTH PREVEN · TATIVE -1818 12 drop s oil of caraway <Caraway carvi pharmacy) 12 drops oil of cloves <Ca ryoph yllus . aromaticus> 6 drops oil or lave nder (Lavandul a vera) 1 piece camphor Brownies with a crunch For the brownie lovers in the house (and who isn't ), here's a recipe idea that gives those chocolate squares an interesting bit of crunch. Press a mixture of flour. rolled oata, brown sugar, margarine and ch opped nuts in the bottom or your baking pan. Prepare fudge brownie mix, spread the dough on top and bake. Remove from the oven and tum out of the pan, "J>Side down, to cool. UPS ID E -DOW N BROWNIES ~ cup all purpose nour ~ cup roUed oats '-it cup packed brown sugar '14l cup chopped nuta ~ cup margarine or butler, melted 1 package (23 .5 ounces> fudge brownie mix Heat oven to 375 degrees. Lightly erease square pan (9x9x2 inche1). Mix flour, oata, brown sugar and nuts in bowl. Mix in maraarine thorou ghly . Preas mix tu re evenly in bottom of pan with Ushtly floured fingers. Prepare brownies aa directed on packa1e. Spread dou1h evenly over mixture in pan. Bake 35 to 40 minutes. Immediately lnvert on h eatproof surface ; remove pan. Cool ; cut Into about l~·lnch 1 q u aru. Makes 36 browniet. \ ·------- USO A Ct.01ce 8oneleu Beef lop Round 9 TERIYAKI STEAK t8 2 .4 l""" Do"' Not E """d 11 iot El RANCHO GROUND BEEF l8 2. 19 Center Cut Woter Added HAM SLICES l8 2 .49 IL RANCHO GROUND CHILI BEEF - (o\,fCl"''u ~!\NO' I 89 I " ff t.. Pf1dP I J.A• (Hill Ml~ LB. e -.I 0 1 89' - I CHEF SALUTO ENTREES V2.19 10 O/ Surh~,.,~ u. BLUE RIBBON COMBO .79 11 ''> ·01 8ovorion Chocolote SA~A LEE CAKE . 2 .39 BUMBU BEE TUNA 6 'l·OZ LIGHT CHUNK Oll·WATER 79c '""'bo ~oll BOUNTY TOWELS .93 ~ '• 01: CM W~ AA0901 Kv.tw So~t SKEWERED RED CLAMS 1.75 J 88 01 ~o loiOI I. IS PICKLED RADISHES 13 2-<>1 Wol ,oc VEG ET ABLE CU RRY 1.25 RUMP USDA s R 0 A 5 T ....... ~.~-~~~-~·-················· 77 LB. J <, 0 A n,.,., .. l!ovnd Cv• LB 1.75 BEEF OMAHA ROAST LB 1.89 SWISS STEAK I <) 0 ~ r~Ol(P ( """'_., Cvt I A ' • llov• d Cv• 18 1.29 BONELESS RUMP ROAST 18 2.49 BEEF SHANKS U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF :::.l!~O~T 53 ~B~ I ' [l A • "''' H· ''" ·••· \ f ,.,,n L~,,, tB • 99 BEEF STEW MEAT 18 2.59 THICK SLICED BACON .. ,( 2 .PACIFIC RED SNAPPER .......... L. I • 9 •I ' t •. Of •I• ,., '"' .• HALIBUT SHAKS . KING CRAB MIA T ~\ I • t• CREST A EN TREES 'I 11 't 18 3.89 o,. 4.99 1.79 I • I p I p It, •IX SOLi ........ SNOW CRAB MIA T 13 01 lorro1ne Sp1no<h OUELLE QUICHE 7 h () ~ I 1·1 18 2 .89 P•(, 4 .49 KNUDSEN ICE CREAM 2 .09 FRENCH FRIES 3.49 .99 BANQUET FRIED CHICKEN ~~2.79 t I I u I j1 1 .09 COB CORN ,·. ' " ....... If CELESTE PIZZA 1.29 I 6 01 Soro le" 1.99 POUND CAKE I l, I I '''* 1.J :), ('p•trrl AUNT JEMIMA WAFFLES .99 CRISCO OIL 14 oz BOTTLE 1.09 I /'I ,., ""')t,, "' 'f ,.,;~ .63 WHOLE BABY CARROTS 11 fl/ ~[Uft l,,,, APPLE PIE 1.79 1n "' 8u1h~y· .79 STRAWBERRIES 7 P~ 1.1 0 1 o .... P ()"n .95 JOHNSTON'$ PIE SHELLS NE511U MORSE SE~~--~~EET I • 9 9 ROUND BONE LAMB CHOPS LAMB STEN U S 0 A (ho.ce f ,,.,~ SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS BONELESS 2 .59 .89 II 1.89 NEW YORK STEAK CH~~c~~m 3 99 IOIN LB. • 1.99 1.99 10 S 01 Cf'rltfte\h ~PKG 1.99 VERA CRUZ COD HEINZ KETCHUP o Ol BOTTLE 1.29 N,...., (11u r,-t.i>i. 1101 co ... , FOlGERS COFFEE Hl.\6.90 6 P\ 17 01 Co•• •-o 0 .. 1 109~1 PEPSI COLA ... ,... . .. 1.99 RC 100 COLA 1.19 CRISP FRESH SPINACH Wt.1te 8·0Z PICG. FRISH MUSHROOMS . 79,~ f/I 0\,1 Jfr I •n,t--•aQo \o""'"" OREGON ANJOU PEARS U.S.NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES 111 Ovr Produo 0.pt. Fon<y 1901.PKG. c IUNKIST . 9 c TOFU .............. 59 LIMONS .... 2 II I 7~ liter .69 9.98 NOODLES BLACK VELVET CANADIAN 10,,, &tt l(j~liot:J''fl ...,.,.""'' WHISKEY SOUP BASE .85 lit .. r 1 S l•t•r 8 01 P\o !t•lfffn n• to,•t110110 Po"'f1t .85 CONVENTRY GIN 3.98 FOLONARI SOAVE 3.9 CANTON NOODLES 16 01 Normol l 1111 X Body·O.ly RIVLONFUX BAUAM I 69 SHAMPOO e 32-ot CloutMlll Whol•·Slic•d KOIHI• ltlCKUI ............. I. 19 2 Pit. It.ad-, to lo~. Nlll'I .-11A C.UIT ........... 99 Pko of 36 11 • .IOll~H CHILD'I AUt•IN. ..... ,. ............. . 1-ot lli<h'• 'o•lro"'I or SUCID WIY HAM ..... 1.59 8-01 Frt90 MOllABUA •ALLI UM• 1.29 2 5-01 ltte Anti l'rotp•ronl B•UT33 ITICK DIODO•AllT ............. 99 I WI CONTINUI TO ACCI~ COIW'ONI flltOM ALL OTHH WPHMA•ecns ... DITMI IN 1Tc>tt1J • NICfS IN EffECTTHUH., MAii. l9ftlr11 W!D .• MAR. 25, 1991. OPEN DAILYI A.M TO IOP.M. LIMIT IUOHTS ltESHV!D. NO SAlll TO D!Allltl. THIS ADO ONLY m•pcr1vt AT HUOHH u ~AMCHO AND HUOHH uoo . ... .. .... Orange Cout DAILY PiLOT/Wldneed•v. March 11. 1981 ~ "" .:~~~·Refunds dressed mother of the bride By MARTIN SLOANE Dear SUpermarket Shopper -I want to tell 'you how thrilled J was to walk down the aisle at my son's wedding in a beautiful dress paid for by my refundin&. I saved $175 to buy the dress. All of it came from manufacturers' refunds that I have re- ceived since 1 started refunding six monlhs ago. I live alone on a limited budget, so I think I did quite well for a beginner. I am only sorry that I didn't know about refunding years ago. -R.S.G. from Skokie, Ill. DEAR RSG -For a beginner -and a single one al that -you have done a terrific job. It's a pity that so many shoppers s tilJ don't know about the thous ands of refund of· fers on items that they use every da y. Your teller proves again that refunding re- ally is worth the effort. The average refund is now worth $1 .25. Most refunders with a few mouths to feed send for 10 to 20 refunds a week. That adds up to a lot of money. ' Why do manufacturers make refund of· fers? The a ns wer is s im ple : to sell the i r products. yo,µ a1most picked up. Do you aelect the bottle with the hang tag? If you are a money·conscious shopper, there is a good chance that you will. That is why manufacturers are making more refund offers than ever before -and why twice as many people are refunding lo· day than were three years ago. The best place to sta rt refunding is at your favor ite supermarket. Companies pubUcize their offers on forms that you usually must send in alon& with your proofs of purchase to obtain the refund . SOME SUPERMARKETS allow manufac- turers' salespeople to post pads of forms on the shelves right under the products featured in their refund orfers. Some stores help their cus tomers even more by ins taJling refund- form bulletin boards. Don't give up even if a walk around your store doesn't turn up at least a few refund forms. Try asking the clerks for forms. They m ay have put pads of forms with store managers . And don't forget the cashier . There is always a chance that the cashier has a few pa ds of forms under the counter . REFUND OF THE DAY A Frenchman's post-meal ceremony traditionally includes good conver sation, perhaps a demitasse, and a glass of the spirits of cordiality: a fine F r ench liqueur. SAY, FOR INSTANCE, that you are walk· ing down a supermarket aisle. Just as you are about to reach for a particular br and of vegetable oil, you see bright yellow t ags reading "$1 Refund Offer" hanging from the brand right next to it. You examine the tag and see that you can get $1 in return for two labels. You check the price. It is the same as that of the brand that Here are sever al refund forms that you can request on the s ame post card from Procter and Gamble: Comet Cash-Coupon Refund , Instant Hi gh Point $1 Coupon Offer. Zest Child's Wash Mill OHer Send your request before April 15, 198 1, to Box 432, Cincinnati, Ohio 45299 Be sure to mention each offer by name Liqueurs are to he savored -------------------------------------CLIP 'N' FILE REFUNDS MISCIELUINIEOUS NON·l'OOO PROOUCTS lrom tne 1rontJ ot tour No Non .. n~ Aegul.,. <,nee• C.ltp out tht\ f1lt M'td tll"P II with i1m1l•r c~f IO w •• , •• °""'" S..1• MtO Ot l(net H•9h~ P•9'•Qll'' toupon\ t:MtverltQI' refuno olfer'l •1tn e>ev...-~e •no JS tf'nt\ fOf Po\t•oir ~ "•nC11tn9 E11CMrt\ A.pr•t coupon\, tor rumple St.n co••tic:t•no Int nMOHJ JO. 1911 proof\ or pU•CN M ...... 100~11\Q IOr ""' requorltd r• PAPER MA IE FLAIR LIQUID PAPE A Oller funo fOf'""' •t me w~rm•rlc•t. 1n new~pers •nd Receivt two Ultr• Fine Fl•" Pen\. lour P•prer ~tt m•QAllM\, Ind when tr~1n9 with ffif'nds Otters Wr •If BrO\ Pen\ •nO L1Qu1d P•Pt' CortKhon Ftutd mey not be •v•1I•~• 1n •II ., .. ,.of the country Al S~r'\d tnt rtQu1red '''""° tor m •nd tour Un1Yet w l low 10 ..,._.,to rt<t •Vt ••en rttund Produc.t Goct.\ lrom •nv comtun•t•on ot P•P« ~le OUAAFLAME Aeluno OH•• 11.., ..... ,,,..,.,of " 8•11 Pen, Fl•or Point G ... ,., Porou• ~n Ult•• ~I 5'0. U 2) or U For" 5'0, ,..,., tr>e rtquored refund Fme Fl•or Porou• Pen. P•per M•t• Wrlle Bro. e.11 1orm tl'\f <•rton m•kff'\ W•I and ttw rt91\f•r r•· Ptt-n (tO e>«t.) lklutCI P•peor (otrecl•on Fluid or ce1pt or \1• flMntK from Ourafl•me wr«>pen RlbbOn PtOOU<.t Also ,,..nd lS cents tor POSl~ •nd F ot ~ H. wno the torm. two w•I' •nO • r•Qf\trr r•· "•na1mg E•Ptrt\ A\IQ Jt, 191\ Cf'IPI or 1l fl•mts For is. s•nd lht torrn. thrff WILTON Ht•tt•n 54-nt P~rtum• Ort•r Recewt • \t•I~ ano • ttc11pt Of 11 "fl•mes · Ea:pirt\ Junt lO, • ounct DO\tle ot Ht•ven Sf:'nr perfume valueO •l 1 .. 1 SI 5'0 S.ncl t"4 r~uored refund form, tr>e Unl•.,••I GENEAAl ELECTRIC Re!M1o Oller. Re<01vo • Product Cocle o• oroduct \loo numoer trom ...,y SO cent refund Send """ requorea ttlund form, tl>e Wilton t•ke ~n or kll, • >lore rtct1PI •ncl \I 21 tor n•me · Gro IL Sno,." cul lrom 1110 ~ck•~ ot poll-•ncl hM1dlln9 E•plr .. M•y 31, 1981 Gener•I Ele<lrrc-. e rtQhl Siok Gro IL Snow or P••nt Bonu•' Th1•ollor-1n I require• lorm Loghl Kil •ncl • reQlllor roct1pl Export> Aug 1. SOC I( '>E NSE NO NONSENSE Oller. P 0 Bo~ IUI 10o•. M.ale Pl•on, Minn 1!341 Ae<tlW •fro ~or NO NONSENSE euutotul Lo9> n u•""' Offer ot No Nonume PM1ly H.,.. S.nd lM wor<h "Sock R1<.e t11t U "'°'"' 01 N•tur•I Wotw::Jer Ev• M4ikt\.IP. S•ns.e ' from HW front boJtf\ 01 ,,n., 1hrtf p11r, of Send thf tf'Qv1rtC1 retuno Jorrn. full proctuct n...trnes Sock Sen"' Eao1rt"I M41 J1 Ifft _____________________________________ J As with wine, love and h a ule couture . t h e French approach the ritual of a fter dinner pleasantries just a little more imag inatively than their Ame rica n counterparts. According to Jean- Phillippe Bernard, vice president of exports for Marie Brizard liqueurs, a Frenc hman's post · meal cere mony tra di- tionally includes good (a nd offtlmes heated ) conversation, perhaps a demitasse, and a glass of one of the spirits of cordiality: a fine French li queur. "As the French have a lways known," says Bernard, "Uqueurs are meant to be savored by a ll the senses. They may be prese nted any nu m be r o f ways mixed iirto coffee or espresso. blended with other spirits, cream or juices, poured over ice or served st raight in a lovely piece of stemmed crystal " Although liqueurs (co r dials , as Americans som etimes call them) are sipped from the salons of Paris to the cafes of Ma rseille, Bernard reports that the m ost distinctive new arter runner drinks are coming out of Bordeaux, the city where he re· sides . Touted as the ne w gastronomic capital of F rance, Bo rdeaux is also the place wher e Ma rie Brizard, an en· terp r ising young F r e n c hwoman , first blended and sold her now fa mous anisette back in 1754 . "ll's as if the dazzling young chefs of Bordeaux a re creating a new wave of excitement fo r Ji . queur s ." ex p la i ns Bernard. Be rnard cites t he "Pear Helene," an after dinner drink served by C h e f J ea n -Pi er r e X irada ki s at t h e Bor deaux bist ro La T upina, as a simple but exquisite example of the perfect way lo end a m arvelous meal t he French way. PEAR HELENE Combine 4 ounces Pear Willi a m and 4 ounces Brown Cacao; serve in Cognac snifters at room temperature. ES PRE SS O AND ANI SETTE Pour 5 ounces of hot espresso coffee into dem · itasse c u ps Add 1 o unce Ma r ie Br izard Anisette. Garnish with le mon twists. B'l..ACK PEARL Combine 2 o unces Blackberry Brandy a nd 2 cups lemon yogurt in bl e n der ; bl e nd a t medium speed un ti l s m ooth. Pour over ice in tall glasses. ··'; ,, .. : /' ~toduce M~t. JoHt-a so..~s ..... . ·<.'i:. "WE W:LL t1J BE UNDERSOLD/11 '·,~~ (jlClc:::JCJc:::>CJCJ c::Jdc::::>r. D D 'n. d·~ . o .ira ,,,ons... .==::;;..--- 8 start at yo~~~~~~~.,1,~~~~· 0 Order Your Easter • Spiral sliced for easy servtng 0 • Whole or hall hams Ham Now! •Nationwide shipping service 0 • Full service Delicatessen We Ship Coast •Old wor1r1 Cheese Shop a8 To Coast "f lJ.!e]~tdu' ~;~::~s Phone ()defs Accepted ·~ M .. ~ J700 I . COAST HW'f., Cor-• def M• 'HOHi 67J.f000 24601 IA'fMOHD WA'f .. Ill. TOIO ID., IL TOIO. f'HOHI IJ7-llJJ ltOH HACH I LYD . .t GAa'411.D, HUHTIHGTOH HACH, .. HOHi 1414575 0 a A1SO Anaheim Orange Rancho Mirage La Habra. San Otego LakeWOOd D ·rt \!f'esllake Village. North Hollywood. Woodland H ills. Santa Monica. Pasadena n ~OOOc:::>c:::>OOOOOOOCJCCJCJQooocooo~ f SOM>less • 4/IUtPAClFIC CeM.te.t Cut' T' RED . ~·'!'~ .. ~ ~ SONE\-&SS ( c\od,) t)89 CPCKS lll8 RoASI.. -rs. 1-JoNE ~.±It CtU~KEN LEGS .. 7!~ BOILED ~.~14!. oodJ MOt. \8 tknw MO-t. V\~ @ If it's got clasSified help vou wheels, ad.call turn your you'll move ~2-5678 and a wheels Into It faster In a friendly ad~ cash. Dally Piiot viserwlll ~ f .. ' . - . I 1 I I l " Orange Cou t DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, March 18, 1981 -Sperial dfeis I Food combinations can affect yo11r health It's not ontr what you ut, but the comblna- tions ol foods in each meal that can affect your health. Thla is particul arly lru~ in the case of lroo·rlch foods that need the accom- paniment of a vitamin C rood for o ptim um absorption. Iron-deficiency can cause anemia. This stale can res ult from poor dietary habits or from increased need for iron at various stages of life, such as dµrin g adolescence and for w om en be tween the ages of 20 and SO. Th~role of iron in the body is to combine with protein and coppe r to produce hemoglobin - the red blood cells that transport nutrients and oxygen to every cell . Iron builds up the quality of the blood, and increases resistance lo s tress and disease. Women are thought to need 18 mg or iron daily. as compared to the need for 10 mg by men. The need for iron increases if there is loss of blood or periods of rapid growth. Good dietary sources of iron a re found in li ve r . osyters, lean meal, and tongue. Leafy green vegetables a re the best plant sources of iron. Co m bi ne th ese with a serving of citrus fruit. or high vit amin C content vegetables. such 1 as tomatoes, green pep· pers, and leafy green vegetables. to improve j iron absorption. Some people s uffer I from an over abundance of iron in the body. a co ndition called · · hemochromotosis . · · This may be an inherit· ed condition that shows up after the age of 40, whereby excess iron is deposited in t he liver and pancreas. This can lead to condi· tions such as cirrhosis of the liver and diabetes. There are medications and chelation thera pies that can remove excess iron from the blood. in such conditions. T h e average American diet includes only about 6 mg of iron fo r every 100 calories consumed. It 1s impor- t a nt for t h ose on a weight-red ucing diet to bear this in mind. and to plan t o take ext r a a mounts of high -iron foods if eating under 1500 calories each day. Here are some iron· rich recipes to help you to enjoy a healthier diet. SWEET AND SOUR TONGUE 1 pickled tongue, a bout 4 pounds 12 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon mustard 1 tablespoon nour 2 tablespoons wine vinegar 2 tablespoons lemon .j uice l cup water \• cu p seed I es s raisins In a heavy saucepan, cover the tongue with water and cook for 2'h to "3 hours, or until tender. 'Remove from water and pull off skin : re m ove any sma ll bones and 1gristle that may be on :the end. Cool. The n ./)lice. In a saucepan, m ix the brown sugar, mus tard . a nd flour together. Stir in the ;vinegar, le mon j uice ,;and water. blel)dlng un- ~11 smooth. Add raisins. ,Simmer over low heat .until sauce is thickened and raisins are soft and plump; stirring con · ,stantly. Spoon hot sauce ~over tongue slices and serve. Makes 6 to 8 serv- ings. : LIVER FRICASSEE I 1\14 pounds calf liver. cut intolongsttfps 1 onion, sliced t~in ..2 tablespoons corn oil ~cup sherry 1 can (20-ounce ) stewed tomatoes 'h teaspoon sweet 'basll • 'h teaspoon salt \-it teaspoon pepper \14 teaspoon garlic • • •• For a qui ck aDd ~lavorful lunch, 1erve a oasted cheese undwicll, a bowl of your avorlte eaup and a dish of . canned clln, peach sllce1 peeked a ll1ht ,. yrup (~y pack>. T h i• lua f.JI ls economical, autriUOU• and delklous. powder 3 cupa hot cooked rice Brown Uver strips and onlon ·lo oll, using a lar•e sldllet. Add wlne and simmer for severaJ minutes. Add stewed tomatoes, 1sweet basll, salt, pepper and garlic - .l. --~ powder; stir'. Cover. cover and le t sauce and simmer for 20 thicken. Serve over hot mlnutes, until liver la cooked rice. Makes 6 soft and tender. Remove servings. CUBaJED OY8TE&8 ' 2 tablespoons butter l tablespoon 1rated onion 1 tablespoon nour 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 quart os yteu, drained. liquid reserved 'h cup milk ~ teupooo salt ~ teupoon pepper Melt butter i n a saucepan and add erat· ed onion; atir lo flour and curry powder. When mixture bubbles, add ~ cup of the oyster liquid, milk, aalt, and pepper; stir constantly until mlx· ture la smooth and thickened. Add drained oysten; cook for ' to 5 minutes, until edges of oysters curl. Serve al on- ce. Makes6servin1s. June Roth la the author of more than 20 cookbooks, in c luding "Salt-free Cookl~g with · Herbs and Spices.". tf you have a special diet question, write to June Roth c/o the Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. Envlose. a self-addressed stamped envelope for a personal reply. rou MWAr1 SAVEi rtllll ITATll _,,. UJll-lOll ,.,,, LEO'S THIN •LICID MIAT• 2.6-0 Z 39•EACH Ill' II.ADI CUT Ll'I" CMUCK8ftAK 118'1.AllHlllD •1•• •1aaTIAK LI ... , •2•• MIUI ""° CU811TIAK LI LIAN NOT TO llOCID -~ PAT •1•• 1·RIU Mrl. •••••••••• LI llM ,,.,,, ,,,, .. ., 1111 •a•• aNMlatTUJC LI I T"lllWllT WHITI 0" PINK O"A'""UIT 89 c JUICE ..... " .... " ......... ~oz. I TENDU CHUNKI .. ., '673 · KEN L RATION .... »L•. ·t LAUNDRY LIQUID · ·PUREX ............ .. . .... M·OZ. •2•• f Pi0LMOLIYE 32.o z. $ I 3 9 a cDELoTARTISS0ue11ASSnO"TEO s • ~ . 8-ROLL I 1 f iiii-PADS . »CT. 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AT8 a ALA• WILIOll Olllfl"ID t•OI, 'I'' OILTA VALLO AMlllOAN .. l •••• MIATWll•la8 .. •••••• ' LA"QI IND 'I 7 9 LI ~ATlllOIC OlllAHY loLI ., .. 1111 M ILIOID TO OllDU IO Ll•21• CA••l•MAM IA aOAIT•llP "'" 11.ol I '~"" CllT ••••uA• .. •1•• 'ACKCNllll i t •1•• COFFEE :~~11~~ 0 NUTI DRIVE ~vr.r:: .. l t ELECTRASOL ~=::r· FINISH 8~\~~r~t" I I.OZ '2.24 1 .. 41 sen tM)I '1.59 I ~z S1J9 ' &M>Z s2.34 LI Quin SOAP ~~~~:~~~ENDER OR s1 99 U' COCOA eun(R "S-OZ • PUREX LIME ~llESH DIS" CtOUIO I »-OZ gr PINE POWER g~r::t,f'""'r I •M)z 97c GLAMORENE '"'"Eauu o I 3QL 52.19 l•=•~trJ ~ .... 73c l AIRWAND Sl3~:LO~L I CRACKER JACKS IOUI ' )11.IJ.Ol. 4r . s 58 t ·~ 1. LI. llOCCOLI l'ANCY TINOlll QllHN 39•LI. ASPARAIUS FANCY All OREE"i 99•LB HICEIOJHTIIESRH an!IM:Tllll OUllT wrt" o1o •HO s 2 9 9 =~i:t~~lll I" ro•CM • FROZE/I FOOD$ Fiii flSll ~~:~~·ot.·~: li~M'r" ... Wilt .. ... mTllUTmAI ... llSCITS ~~~i.:~· Pn lfTZ -.0 ,\~'r,i ..... ~-~r·"•'O I I I • • • •10 .. 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"""' ... ,.." .. ,.., ...... ... ----.. --------....... _ ----.--....... ... .._.......,.,...._ .. __ ....... ,... .. ..., ... ___ _ ...... _ .. , __ _ __ ..,. ·-· ... 10 ..... .MllllOMINl:l .... .... ,• 'I I' . =--""• ' -- FEATURES Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/WednMday, March 18, 1981 • Men need conditioning, too DEAR ANN LANDERS: Of late 10U bave been prtnUq lelten from a n-.mber ot MXually fnaatrated Wlvea. M 1 man wbo admires and retpecta women (I have beea marrltd fM 25 ,years), may I offer a point of view lb1t will probably be resented by tbe majority of your temalereadera? · We men, for 111 our vaunted mucullnity and aell·rellance, can be extremely ~nalUve to • woman's conduct. What a womari perceives as a man's sexual lnadeq\lacy may be c1u1ed by her behavior, ' Does she nag or complain? Does she talk too much? Is she critical? Demanding? Ex· travagant? When he is tired and worried does she Insist he go places of her choosing? If all or any ot the above Is true, he can be turned off ao completely that sexual activity is physically im· PoS•ible. So, ladies, with all due respect, If the man in your Ule can't deliver sat.idaction, consider the possibility that you may not be the victim but the cause. -KNOW WHEREOF I SPZJ.K •IN MODESTO Deu Mod: Ally womH .U. llall a workblg brain cell W04lld llave to acree tllat you llave made u excellent polat. Uaully I llear from women complalalllg about lacoulderate, uaffedloaa&e (not to men- , ... lllUIJlavea ud ubat. .. ecl) llubuda wllo ex- pect a.tut lovemaklag at the clrop of a verb. Tbaau for rem1Dd.ln1 us tbat mea need to be "condltloeed,'' too. ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband is friendly with two guys at work. Their wives are OK. but not the kind I would pick as chums on my own. Buddy likes to go out every Friday and Saturday night. We have a standing arrange- ment with these two men and their wives. Usually we go lo a combination restaurant- tavem that serves good rooaara reasonat>le price. There's a three-piece combo in the cocktail lounge. After dinner the men talk busi- ness and the two women dance with each other. I sit there like a dummy because I don't like to lllUllEll and be happy he doesn't go out alone and ch.eat. What do you think? -OPEN MIND IN WYOMJNG Beu Open: Don'& yoa people have bomea1 Wby mu& )'H 1pead all U.O.. llou1 II a &nera1 Bre .. die paUen by lavttlag ~m over for a meal aest -week. lnclade uotller couple, aomebody YOU Uke, for a cbaace. Tiie roatlae yoa describe eouclt deadly. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I work in an office that employs approximately SO people. Our desks a.re comfortably spaced. There Is one large wiabridged dictionary at the opposite end of the room . It's on a stand. and all or us consult it from time to time. Every office has a "Miss-Know-It-All." Ours happens to be seated right next to the die· tionary. Whenever anyone goes to look up something, she peers ovtlr that person's shoulder and asks, "What can't you spell?" This irritates the dickens out of me. Is there a solution? -HATE BEING BREATHED ON Dear H.B.: Circulate a petition requesting a second dictionary for the oppoal&e side of the room. I'll bet everyone wlll sip It. Wooruzngl.181t? W/14t'J O.K.J 11 .JIO\Laun't mre., you need some help. It's available in the booklet: ''Necking and Petting -What Are the Limits?" Mail your request to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611 , enclosing 50 cents and a Long. stamped, 1el/-Oddreued envelope. Joyce Mortin (from the left), K athii Bear and Jennifer Weber along with other members of the Nattonq.l Charity Juniors, Newport chapter, will be entertained Friday by the hit comedy "Same Time Next Year," playing at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse in Santa Ana. The funds from the event will be donated to the scholarship fund and High Hopes , a rehabilitation center for neurologically handicapped young adults. Vi~go: Make new starts Pen W olllen will host tea THURSDAY, MARCH 19 BySYDNEVOMARR ality. Favorable news received in connection with business enterprise Career gets boost. Aquarius. Leo and another Scorpio play key roles. Check small print. AMERICAN PEN WOMEN, Fountain Valley Branch, host tea for new and prospective mem- bers from 2 to 4 p.m . Saturday in home of Clara Peck Schultz. For more information call 962-2532. IRVINE TOASTMISTRESS CLUB meets at 11: 30 a . m . Monday in Little Joe's Restaurant in Newport Beach. For more information call 960-2087. ORANGE COASTAL PEO Reciprocity Bureau meets Friday at 9:30 a .m. in Glendale Federal Savings, 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. For more information call 534-2100. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR REPUBLICAN Women's Club meets at 3 p.m. Wednesday in CLUB CALENDAR the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Snow. For more information call 846· 7053. HIGHLANDERS CHAPTER of the Orange Coun· ty Philharmonic Society plans a trip to Pasadena in April, and tickets must be purchased by Mon- day. For more information call 642-9740 or 645-7342. ,CLIPPED WINGS, Orange County Chapter, mee ts at 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 25, at Personal Protection Systems of Fountain Valley. For more information call 846--0516. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION of University Women meets Tuesday for a symposium of the future and women's opportunities in it. Open to students, parents and counselors. For more in· formation call 833-6967 or 556-5765. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION of University Women, Laguna Beach Branch, meets for cof· fee Saturday in the home of Marjorie Swaffer. For more information call 830-3797. LAGUNA BEACH EXCHANGE CLUB'S annual "Search for Talent" is set for 6:30 p.m. Thurs- day in the Laguna Beach High School Auditorium. For more information call 494-6016. SOUTH COAST AUDUBON Society meets for field trip at the San Juan Loop Trail parking lot at 9 a.m. on Sunday. Car poolers should pieet at 8: 15 a.m. in the Thrifty Drug Store parking lot in San Clemente. For more information call 492-0873. LEAGUE OF WOMEN Voters of Orange Coast meets at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 19, in the home of Janice Hathaway of Irvine. For more information call 833·3165. HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWCOMERS Club meets at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, March 19, in the home of Jeanne Ackerman. For more informa- tion call 842-4589. BRIDGE GROUP of Newport Beach Senior Citizens Center meets 10: 30 a.m. Friday in the center, 2101 15th St., Newport Beach. For more information call 548· 7534. MADAME BU'ME RFLY CHAPTER of Orange County Music Center meets Tuesday in the home of Carolyn Noring. For more information call 846-2372. KAPPA DELTA of Newport Harbor meets Mon- day at 7:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs. James Giraud. For more information call 830-8311 . KAPPA ALPHA THETA El Camino Alumnae Club meets in home of Mrs. Albert Bonugli Thursday, March 19. For more information call 830-4781. Pl BETA PHI Alumnae of Central Orange County meets at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 19, in home of Mrs. George Flaherty. For more in· formation call 637·9789. TOASTMASTERS INTERNATIONAL area A-8 Speech Contest is set for 6 p.m. Saturday at the Terrace Clubhouse In Irvine. For more informa· lion call 642-8206. CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY. Orange County District, meets al 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Garden Grove Regional Library Community Room. For more information call 542-1147. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION of Retired Persons, Chapter 857, meets for two trips, one to Baja California and one lo Death Valley irnd Las Vegas on Monday. For more information on this and other coming AARP tours and trips call 963-9106. Club Calendar ruM each Wednesday in the Daily Pilot and contain! notices of women's and service club mutings and events open to the public for the Joi lowing week. ~ notices to Club CaJendar. Daily Pil.ot. P 0 . Box 1560, Costa Mua. CA 92626 Include 11our name and phone number. Notices must be an our hands three week$ in advance o/ an went To reque1t a picture, wnte or call the reature Deportmemt, 642·4321. between 2 and 5 p m. Photo requests are honored on a ,space availab~ bo.rls. ARJES (Mar. 21 ·Apr 19>: Misunderstand- ings are eradicated you can start with clean slate. Focus on work, hom e. coming to terms with one who can make JOb easier Taurus, Libra. Scorpio natives figure prominently. Highlight diplomacy. TAURUS (Apr 20-May 20 1: You make an im- pact emotions dominate, aura of drama sur- rounds scenario. Accent on affair of heart, a variety or sensations, children. speculation and the number 7. Decision is reached in connection with •·a very special memberofoppositesex." · GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 J: See property, basic values in realistic light be ready for added responsibility, investment opportunities and "creative challenges." Capricorn, Cancer natives rigure in scenario. One in authority seeks delay. Your position is strong. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Focus on travel, communication, education. versatility and ex- pression of intellectual curiosity. Major project will be completed. You gain added recognition Long·distance call revitalizes dormant plan_ Plaudits are due LEO I July 23·Aug 22 J · Emphasis on originality. fresh start, mnovative process. gel- ling to heart of mallt>rs and favorable set\lement of financial dispute. Aries, Sagittarius and another Leo figure pr<Jminently. Take initiative. Locate lost object VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Obtain valuable hint from Leo message Stress new starts. in· dependence. special appearances and courage of conviction. You 'll be at right place al right time. Follow through on hunch. You are going in right direction. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22>: Emphasis on • diversification versatility and increased social activity. Fears, doubts are erased as checkup proves favorable. Gemini. Virgo, Sag~tarius natives play important roles. Discussion of weight, body image plays major role in scenario. SCORPIO c Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Revision of plans provt>s beneficial. Wishes come into line with re· Orange Coast College presents li.ERSMA'S FAS WON EXTRAVAGANZA THEATRE. MUSIC. DANCE & FASHION! THURSDAY, MARCH 26 8 PM -ace AUDITORIUM SAGl'MARIUS I Nov. 22-0 ec. 21>: Special analysis of details. intricate machinery dom- inate scenario. Stimulating companion aids in solution of dilemmct Gemini. Virgo and another HOROSCOPE Sagitlarian figure prominently. Be ready for sur· prise, including change of scenery. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ) :-Focus on domestic adjustment, long·distance communica· lion. plans that include travel and educational project. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio natives play significant roles . Win rather than force your way diplomacy is your ally AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Feb 18): First im· pressions are not likely to be correct. Know it, delve beneath surface indications. Accent on credit ratings, taxes. leases, license require· men ls and partnership proposals Pisces, Cancer. Scorpio natives fi gure in scenario. PISCES (Feb 19·Mar. 20> · Individual who previously flashed green light may now seek de· lay Know it, have alternatives at hand. Open dialogue with one in authority. Capricorn, Cancer persons figure prominently. Contractual obliga- tions come into sharp, clear focus. Singles Calendar runs each Wedrn?sday and contains in/ormat1on on discussion groups. parties a nd events open to the public in the Orange Coast area Send notices to Singles Calendar. Dolly Pilot, P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Include your name and telephone number. Notices must be re· ceived two weeks in advance o/ an event 115 CONVENIENT. DISPOSABLE COLOPLAST· BRAND OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE! We ,.,.,._ ct" 1 " e omo•elP COL OPt AS I 1one me WRP • .,,. ,, R l•'L< ~blP 0\10"'1 c1ooi.anr e5 '" the Nfl'<l [ ""'ylh·riR '°' CO'<>'.IC>n'dll'\ •lef'Slomal~ ano urorwv ~IO~IP\ all w-111 conven>ent COlOPLAST CltSOO'idt:> ,1y fUl Qpt AST reltab•l•ly otvHase pac:I< economy Diners set spring feast 2701 hirvjew Ro.1d, Cost.1 Meu TICKETS: Advn1md Salr $3, At lhe Door . $4 VISA-MASTERCARD/INFO -556-5527 !'le \•J•e lfl "'i. t0< l'O<•' r R£ £ copy or 1NS1C.H I!>- •tie ooll41C'.dll()fl thcll s 1vst tor (Ou a1wayc. 1nctv0es coupons tor fret-c;amoles 7 .. 4714 MOUL TON PLAZA ftHA .. MACY 23ee5 Moulton Perkwey, Legune H11f1 (Pffxt to El Rencno Merket) PEOPLE SAMPLER social, led by Emily Coleman, will be held at 8 p.m. Friday, March 20, in Buena Park. For information, call 213-828-8949. RUTH PORTE will sponsor a discussion titled "Revelation and Identity: A Moment of Sharing for Singles" al 8 p.m. Friday, March 20, in the city of Orange. For informal.ion, call 524·?-406. SINGLES GOURMET DINING CLUB .has scheduled its annual spring dinner Friday, March 20, in Newport Beach. For information. call 631-5133. CORINTIUANS are holding a wine and cheese party at 7 :30 p.m. Friday, March 20, in Irvine. For information, caJI Betty at 551-4897. sOUTB COA.81' .JEWISH YOVTll will attend Shabbat services at 8 r..m. Friday, Much 20, In Newport Beach. For nformation, call Fred at 751·13'78. OUTDOOR SINGLES wllJ have a potluck din· DailyPillt Family Want Ads 3 Unes, 2 days, $5.95 642-5678 •For only SS.SS anv private party mav ptac• an ad to sell any artlda.. ·- of personal property any two d•Y• In• row. • ner, hayride and campfire at 6:30 p.m. Satur· day, March 21. For information, call 544-8276. ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a general meeting at 8 p.m. Friday, March 20, in Fullerton. For information, call Ann at 751·0291. SINGLE SET INTERNATIONAL will present a program titled "Person lo Person" at 8 p.m. SINGLES CALENDAR Friday, March 20, in Newport Beach. For in· formation, caJI 759-1122. WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP of Orange County will go bowling Saturday, March 21. For In· formation, call Maggie at 531-0701. WE CARE will hold a beach walk at 6 p.m. Thursday, March 19, ln Laiuna Beach. For in· rormaUon, call 837·1506. Continuous Wear Contact Lenses 24 Hrs/Day for 2 weeks WIU.IAM D. HARRISOH.zO.D. DOCTOR 01' Ol"TOME' RY 2UOCllAH AVE., V.OUNA IUC .. M7M THE VOYAGERS CLUB • AND KARAGEbRGIS CRUISES IN.VITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NIGHT TUESDAY MARCHH, lHI , 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. Al RPOR1ER INN, IRVINE Admission Free-St•tlnQ Limited UFRESHMENTS -DOOR PIUZSS -FILM ftlVP Hd!ICM TllAVWL -11f.111t MIWPORT'lll TM¥IL 144 I• It Daily Pilat A BARD HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER AUSTON STUDENTS & GRADUATES CAN BE SEEN IN: VOGUE GLAMOUR SEVENTEEN COSMOPOLITAN MADEMOISELLE INTERNATIONAL AGENCY AND ... ODEL ... ANAGE ... ENT OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE. YOU COULD BE A COVER GIRL TOOi ALSO ON THE COVERS OF ... ANY OTHEA LEADING INTERNATIONAL ... AGAZINES Your New Yotk • Toronto • P1r11 t.4odellng Connection MALE AND FUMLE CLASSES N<:$ FC>fWtNO CALL NOW 556-ttoo R A FR EV AL~TIOM ~..... ~ ..... I I , APW~ 3RD OENEAAT10N IMOK! EATER New York Ftrem•n Patrtck T•rpey Fighting fires family affair By J ULES LOH AP 5-1•1 c .. .....-... NEW YORK -Little boys dream of becoming Llcemen. Bul boys sec only the brass and lbe bells of the firehouse, not the choking hell that is a firem an's real place or work. Pat Tarpey knew about the hell. Even so, he recently became what in all his life he ever wanted to become: a fireman. He represents, in fact, the third generation or Tarpeys on the New York Fire Department . At his gr aduation. he wore the collar insignia his father had worn, and then was assigned to a firehouse where his grandfather had helped hitch the horses. "I KNOW MY FATHER WAS PROUD of me ," he s aid, "and I was proud lo wear his insignia. But it wasn't just family tradition that made me want to be a fireman." ll was something , apparently, far more com- pelling a drumbeat that firemen hear in their souls but rarely talk about. That 1s perhaps because their brother fire men AMERICA already know and those outside the brotherhood would find it hard to un- derstand . Tarpey's quest helps explain what it is. Pat is 29. When he was a boy an the Bronx, he recalled. he often dropped by his grandfather's firehouse which was located. conveniently. on the way home from school. "HE LET ME CLIMB ON THE trucks, slide down the pole. All the men were kind to me. They were tolerant, forgiving. I think that even then I sensed that I liked being around fi remen. I liked the sort of people t hey were. "When I was older. in hjgh school, I used to spend weekends al my father's firehouse. in ~arl em. The men were the same. They laughed, Joked, but they never talked about their work. "I knew the work was dangerous . My father would come home with his hands burned and bloodied. hls knees all cut up from glass and splin- ters . He would sleep a whole day. "He never talked about it, either. But he always made it a point to kiss each of us, my mother, my brothers, and me, every time he went off to work " DURING ONE OF THOSE FIREHOUSE weekends. when he was 17, Pat rode with his father in the truck to a fire. "lt was a tenement fire. Flames were licking out of all the windows and the front door. A woman was in a thlrd-noor window, screaming. I had never seen anything so horrifying. "When the truck rolled up, a fireman jumped off and went right through that flaming front door. They got the woman out. "I thought about that for a long lime. Every mortal instinct is to run away from fire, not toward it. Every creature runs away from fire, every single one except a fireman. "A FIREMAN DOESN'T DO IT for reward, or a m edal. He does it because it is his daily work, what he has chosen to do. "l wondered whether I could be able to do that. I decided I could, and that Ir I should save just one life by doing It, my own life would have a meaning." The following year, when he turned 18, Tarpey applied to the Fire Department for a job. To become one of the 11,500 men on the world's la rgest city fire force, however . is not simply a matter of making application. Tests, written and physical, cull 75,000 applicants to 3,000. Only one in 25 makes the grade. PAT TOOK AIM . HE WORKED by day, went to college at night. He did pushups on bis lunch breaks. He ran in t he park after dinner. It took him 11 years to hit bis target. Now he is Patrick Anthony Tarpey, Fireman. It is a proud name and a proud calling, a call- ing that mere mortals who run from fire can only look upon with awe, a nd gratitude. Cricket's song mating signal SOUTH BEND, Ind. <AP) -When Harald Each walks through • field on a summer even1n1, he Uatens for the music that drives female crickeu wild. Each, a biolon profetlOr at NotH Datne, knows when a crtctet 11 courUn1 cw~tUDI ready to flCbt, and can differeouai. betw fPKl.e• by the sonc beinl strummed on crtcket'a lap. Workioc ~t the uni•~ and t.hUlu Pluck JnaUtute for Behavloral lolop r. 8"1'1•en, w .. t Germany' Each ta ft.rat ,..... to IAMrt an ••~ lnto • criclset'• audial nern to 1u.wt) wbat bappeu when "·ftmale bean • mat•'• ser•a•. ~to hJI n..dbap-publlahed ln Ule "JoarnaJ fll Oomparattve ~." tbe maM ud female mcbl dep9ftd upoa IM maUq IODI to fin• Heb otber becHH ede-•t.I ban poor .,. .. llllt. • Tnlt ... ..,....., .., •• flttd •1111 lite 011ntr Cltrk of Ortnto County 011 arc II 1t: '"'· ,...,,.. ""''" Pvl>ll-Or .. CM\! 0.lly P'li.t, Publl"*I OrtllOt (Mii Dally Pilot, 1""'91 Mof. 11, U, /4/lr. 1, I, l"I IJ'l,_tl PUBUC NOTICE P'~TICMll 8UllNIH NAMe ITATl~NT Tiit ltlltwlnt "'ton' .,. dol"t Olltl,,.Ufl: PUBLIC NOTICE "ICT1Tlout llUMNIU NAMI ITAT•Ma•T Tll• 1a11-1,.. Ptrton• •rt dol119 tlntHM: PU8UC NOTICB PUBUC NOTICE "CTl110UI 8Ul1NIH NAMI ITATIMINT Tiit IOll-i"t llffMtt\ It dolnt DU\! ntM tl TOAAI t OOKKllPIHO, P 0 80• 111'2, 117t ....... 11 Gt"i., C~la "'-••· C.all1W"1• •• ,.. Snlrlt y Torre, 111• Hawaii Ctr<i., Co•la Mew. C.alllat"'• flti. Tiiis --·It COllOUC"'d OY t<1 11\ dtvlct1101 MMrlty Torre PUIWC NOl'ICS PUBLIC NOTICE N·711U P'ICTITIOUS a ustNIU NAMI STATIMINT r "' 1011owln9 PtftOll• ••• doi"Q llu•lntnat . CA~A ROMANllCA BY TH( S! A, J V , 1tl0 M.ttArlllur 81Vd • S11llt 21 I, Nowpo<I hacn. Ca '2MO P•"• Otvolopmo11t ComP•f'ly, 111c., • C.lllon•i• <OlllO••llon. ,.,0 MacAr.-8tvd . S-,itt Jll, N"•P011 a .. ,11. ce. .,..o. NEWS FEATURES .·-------------t ruauc NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI 8UllNISS NAMR STAT8M8NT P'ICTITl-aUdlNIH THR l!NIAOIZElt, >•OI J•m MAMI .. Tl ... INT °"'"· Newport ewe II, C•lllorftle CINCINNATI KIDS, 11'7 Newport .. ., ..... Ctlllot~ niZ7 Tlllt 1lettmtn1 wa• 111°' wltlt tllt County Ctork ot O•.,,to C-IY on Ma ren ••. '"' C•u Aom•nllca lnvulmo11I Growp f• Ce lllornl• tl mlle d PUlnorth1p), tH3' Vtnl11ra 11~0 . sn.rm•n O•h , C• ".OJ no:~,'.°''-'"' par_, " dolno ""P' llG SCOOP. 1!01 GorrilO• A••-· Sl..,IOll, c.111Mn4• _.,, Soon J• Lim. IUO Soulll E11ttld . TIM f91i.trl ..... ,..,.._. ••• dOI~ n..o LIMo ltuttl """'9fllll, 2'11 111<- orlo Orlw. ~ IHcll, C.lifOfnlo tliSI """' PuDlltNd Or-C..sl Otllr Pilot Apt U·A. ,._.,,.,, C•ilfDfftit t280J dl!r,;~:r"-,, tonducl•d b• .,. " 5oonJ•Lim .....,_..: Juli Ktll1eriftt H•rdt 11, Jt JH JANI! AN.l!L & 018.11! TlerM, UIQURt Ni91MI, C•lllorni• A N 0 a ~ d It. A N G E L . $ n .. 1. Marc II 11, u. A.prll t, '"' 1112 .. 1 $I c It ET A It,. L .. • I LL I N 0 Onkl Louil Yac:o, 114 '1•1 SlrHI, Vlf9 lnle 81•ncllud, 112 Lot 0111101, San Cltmtnlt, C•lllornl• ,, PUBLIC. NOTICE Tni• 11o11111eu" condu<1ec1 by .,. .... in<orporalld .. MKl•llOfl Ollltr tll•n a P•rlntrtlliP PARSA DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC Tiii\ •1•1-1 .... '""' •1111 IM Co11n1y Clork ot O<Wloe County on SEltVtCE$. JIS'i'Y AvtfliM, Ctsl• NtwPOrl e.ac11, Calllornlet~ Mew, ~llomi• » Tlllt !Xlti,,.H It COflOU<IM by • J.,.t A119otl, '9 SltilY Avtfl!M. M,,.rat --tlllp C~I• Me._, C..11 a ti.» Oavkl L. YKO Tllh ll<ltlMts I• tonducttd by • ..... , .. ~11. l'ICTITIOUS 8USINllS Linda A. Htl\'lllflill NAM• STATeMINT Tiii\ ttti-t was llltd wlllt Ille Tit• loliowtnt P9r'IOll It dolnQ bul l· 0 Jim P•r>•. Pro•ldenl Tiii\ \la ltmonl w•s lllfd w1lh Ille Counly Clerk 01 OronQt Covn1, on M•rcll•, 19'1 -r<n ••.1"1 FUI ... PuDl1\/llCI Or ..... Coa•I D•lly Plltl. ~r<ll It, 1S, April I, ti,'"' 1400_., OollOlt ,,.,..IJl'OJ 8rlttol AvtniM, J11t1 H•rden Apt. C, SMll• Mc (tlllornl• 92/IM Tltb ll4".,,.nt ••• llllCI wllll In. counly Clerll or OrWIQt Co10nly on nou et: __ ..... Tllh IXl\JMH .. conoucttd Dy • Co11nly Clt rk ot OrWIQt Cou1111 on llt'l•r•t ~rcll tt, I"'· l"tb. 20, 1'11 AVALON CONSTAUCTIOH CO., Fis.JM t12S L• CH iia. ~ounl•ln V•llo. l'U1Jot PuDlo\hoO Or-CO<l\I O•lly PolOI PUBLIC NOTICE J- "'" lie County Clerk M•rtll "· 1"1 ,..;ms P11bll.-0r.,... Coau Dally Pllol, llo\Alrtlt 11, U, Aprll I. I, 1911 1101·11 PUBLIC NOTICE Puoll.-OrtllOt C:O.\I 0.lly Piiot. Callfornl•tVOI Foo. u. Mt<dl 4. 11, 11. 1''1 .. ,..11 J •m•• Aunell Jon ... ttU L• PUBLIC NOTICE CHiia. FOUflt•ln Valley, C•lllornl• '210I Tnlt Dutlnou Is <onducltd by .., In 01111611•1 J-tJDfll\ M•r II It H . Apr I. 1'1tt lltO II PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS NAMI STATIMIENT FICTITIOUS IUSI NIU NAMI STATIEMINT rn. 1011-lnQ perM>n I\ doing OUl1 "''' ., 8EOTIME ~OPPE, •UIS Euctoo Stref't Fovnt•1n V•ll•Y. C•llforn1• 91109 ------------NOTICI 0" NON•ltll~SlllLITY Noll<t It lltrtby t i...,. llttl Ille Ull• der.ltned will no4 be ,._Ible for ~ICTITIOUS IUllNHS NAMI STATIMINT Tiit lollowlflQ perlOfl Is doln9 DUii· ntH t\' Tiii\ >IAll-1 ••> llllCI •1111 tl'IO Counly Clork of OrWlq,e Counly on Fob. 20, 1 .. 1. t ne to11ow1ng oerti0n' •re doing bu .. 1nau ., Bru(f 8 Ander>0n. ~11 Soulll•ll Torr•to. l••lno,Colll0<n1a91/U ----·------•nY cMllU Of' iiatMlillet Carllrt<ltd by RAINBOW YOGURT or PAC"IC YOGUAT COMPANY, on°" •llor llllt CS.le. (al BROCKMAN INVEST MENT CO . l b l 4 1\I STREET P U 8 LISHING CO (31 F RANK SPAGUCHI • P.O 8o• tns. 127 4hl $1-t, H-llOt'I 8..cll, ~alltomlt t2'6l FIS.M Publlsllld Or-COHI Dally Pllol, NEWHOPE INVESTMENTS. JOO W Fordll•m SI .• Sonia An<1, C• •110. C •rl Rotnud Lowl\, 4JH Cre\tv•••~ Norco, C• •t1'10 rh1\ t>u11ne-H ., conducted b1 en 1n d 1v1du•l eruct 8. ,.,,.,., \On STATIMINT o~ ~ICTlTIOUS f no IOllOWlnQ 11\e UM Ol 11\t llC IRIOOLOG AMERICA, IS Su•lo 81, Cml• Tllo F1c11•-• II•• •CNndonod 'bu)intts n•m• INSTITUTE OF Supt'nor Avtftue. . C.torornl• '7•17 )lntH ~•m• re • llllCI 111 Or•n~ 019 E 11n1 Ven '· l ~'f9 $uot' 1or Avt'n1.1f". Sutt .. I (O\t• Me\a C•htorn•• t2•27 ' rn .. ""''~• •• <on<1uc111c1 br .,, 1nOfvidu•I E1on1 Vt .. O\ Tn1s sl•ttrne ... w .. llleo w11n lll<t County Cler .. o( Or""~ County on M•rtll tit. l~l Fl-II PuOh\IWCI Or•• CCMl\I Ooily P1IOI, M•r<n It. U. A.~ t, I. Ifft t)lJ 11 P UBLIC: NOTICE ..-.ii "ICTITI~ 8USINEU NAME SWlTRMENT Tllo ro11ow1n9 ••rM>n• •r• c101n9 bUll"tH ., OREYER"S OF SANTA ANA. 11191 '"'"'" Bt,.., ~II• U1, fu\lln. C••1lorn1• 926IO Ortytr'\ 01 .. bulonQ Com1>41ny, • C•lllornl• CMPoMllon, clo Oro., ' Gr•nd IU Cr-, Inc , Sm Coll- Avenue.0...1-,C.l•IOf'n••• .. 1t T nos bu\I~• conctuc •o by • <Of' Po'•Hon Orey0<"\ ... strll>ul1n11 Co Edmund I. ,...nwell, Secret¥11 Tll1\ \1•11 ........ ••> 111o<I •11111 11\t C°""'' Ct9'k a#OrWlq,e Countr on M•r<ll 11.1"1 ~""" PuDll\Nd Or~ eo. .. O•lly Piiot, M•r II. H. A.pt ,. •• 1'11 Im.II P UBLIO NOTICE y, 1'1912 HIQll Ct0\I •lllorni• 92105 <ondY<led Dy 1n •ncl Wllel PHllloY ••• 111tc1 wnn tnt or •nge County on l'U1- Cool O•lly Pllol, '· '"' 1m 11 NOTjl ~U.LI NOh(t 11 ne Qlven 0Uf'WMU '° uclion> JOit M'4 1 of ll'le Clvll c- ot 1110 St•l• ol ••lfornl• lno un ctorsl9Mc1, Aulo bll In<. -CoH I TowlnQ Servlco, I Mii •1 llWll< •IK· lion, •• 132 I lri•I W•Y. Co.ta MH •, C•lllornl •I 10 00 a.m on ~"11 JO, 1 .. 1, I loll-1119 0.Krl- pro"r1V, l<>-wll ·11 C.Olllte, ~cenw No SJtTSS, St•le ol c a111ornf6 S.ld wit Is lot "'9 purpow ot wu .. tylnQ hon of lllt ....,_r\IQfllld for 1-- 1nQ •ncl \lor-... lllt ·-· of IOW· •nQ •ncl "°"-· .. tllt. •Hn COii\ ot advorll\lnQ ano _..,,"of w10 O•l•d ltll> 171Hllh of Martll, lffl J-IM .. PuDll\lltd 0. co .. 1 O•lly Pilot. M•rC11 It,'"' 140)-ft ------------- PUB LI NOTICE Otltd lllh 1.in NY ol ~rcll. , .. I Har<Md & Merion S1mond• 1016 C.lvtrt Avt ., Cmi. Mew. CA 9261' PuDll"'90 O.M\Qlt to.sl Delly P1101. NI., II. II, 14, 1"1 I .. t t PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS 8 USINISS NAMa STATUHNT Robert L. 8•0<-man. 111 4111 Slrotl, Nowporl 8U<ll, C•lllor11ie 926':1 Tiii> """""• It Conclutlled by t<I In "'''""''· II-rt L. 8roumen Tlllt \let-I ., .. llltd wllll ll'le Couftly Clerk or Ort<1Qt county on FeDr11eryU. 1 .. 1. ~U601 Pubtl.-Or-CoeH O•lly Piiot, T llt 1011owlng per'°"' •rt bu\1n•u a.$, dOlllg Fob. u , ""-•· 4, II, 11, 1"' no .. , OAISV PATCH OISCbUNI STORE, HH9 RO<-llold Blvd , Et Toro. CtlllMni•t~JO LOI\ Nlar~rO'I Z1mmermt<1. IU/ An 11oua W•v. Newport 8t•cn C•lilornl• 92WO Lino. 8oyd, , .. ,. ConH•ll•llon. ~unt1n91on 8Hcn, C.lolorn1• t2- f orrol J.,...., Zlmmerm .... Ul1 AnllOu• W•y. Nowporl Btull. C•l•tor"1• '2..0 F r•nl< TrHll 8oyd, t .. 11 Con\lolla I oon, HunlinQton Bta<n, c a111orn1• 92 .... fll1s l>uti,,.n I\ <onclucted Dy • gener•I N rtlw""•O UH\ Z1mmerm•n Tll1\ >1•1...,,.n1 .... lllecl wllll tl'IO Counly Clerk of OrW1q,e Counly on "".,, .. 16, '"' ,. .. ,.,. PuDll>Nd Or-oa>t O•o•y Pilot, Nl•r 11.JS,Aprlll.t.l'ltl 1-.1 PUBLIC NOTICE "'CTITIOUI 8USIMISS NAMI STAT•MINT TM lotl-1"111 Pf'\Ofl It doinQ b11\I '"" ., C J NI PROOUCTS. l.St1 L•rtllOrn Drive, HUfltll'IQIOn 8oecll, C.lllomla ,,_ Cltar lH Jou pn M'Pnot , UU L•rt11orn Or1,,., Hunli"910fl l t atll, Calllornl• ~. Tlllt l>lltlnet• I> conducltd by .,. In· divldu•I C.J. Mtf'l>ee Tlll1 \Ul-1 WH llltd Willl ltw County c .. rk of 0ro"9t Counly on l\Yrth 1, '"I PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS NAME STAT•MliNT Tit• lollowl119 "uons •r• doing IMl•iMn as RO't OLD F ASHIONED ICE CREAM, 1110 Wul 8•1tor SlrHI, Cotta Maw, C.lllomi• ti.t. Wllll•m II. PemDorton, ,., • Aimone Tr .. I.JI .. Al\4'11tlm. c.. 92tot P alrlclt II Ptmoerlon. UU A.l mond Tree L•n•. An•llelm. Calltorlll• '210t Tiiis al.al• I• <-.CllCI Dy "" In dlYldutl Wiiiiam II. Pemlltrlon Tiiis ••-1 wa• llllCI with lllt Counly Cltrk of Or-C°"nty on Fot>. 20. '"I F ts.»S Publl.,_ Or-Coa>I O•llf PllOC, Ftb. U , -di •. 11, II, 1 .. 1 '1M I PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS I UllNIESS NAMI STATIMIMT fllt IOll-lnQ par-. It do•nQ bull• MH e1 AUSTY HOOD. "'3 CDflllntfll•I Or • H....clftOlon 8tecll, C• '2- S!Mllty Ruutll HOOd. -l CDfl llM,.lal 0<., HuntlnQlDfl 8H<ll. C• .,_ Tll1\ lllnlnetS I\ CondlKled by t<1 1n dovldu•I si..-.1ov ~u\Wll HOOd Thh \t..iemient w•~ '•led w 1U\ thit Counly Ctora ot Ort<1q,e County on Mar<ll•. tM1 l'U•m l'U10J Publl\lllCI 0.-Co .. t Dally Piiot, Pullll.nlCI 0r<lftGt C<W\I O•oly Pilot Martll 4. II.''· JS. , .. , '°""'' M•r It •I. 2S, Apr I. .... 11tS,.tl P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Fob. 2S. Martll 4, 11, 11, t•ll '1t 11 PUBL-iC NOTICE N·111 .. STATIMINTO~ A8ANDOHMIENT 0 1' USI 01' l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMI rne fotlowlnQ °'''°"' h•v• •b•n donoo ltw uw ot 11\t tic llllOu• Du\lnou n.mo ol SUNBEAM ICE CREAM co •I ffO H•m•llOfl ............ HunllnQIOn 8u<ll,C• 92~ The f1(ttl1oui t>u\1ne'' n•mf' r~ terred to •OOYe was tiled "' Or•"fi>e County on November S, 19t0 llobtrf E So<enwn. Uri Crand•lll Or . Hun111>Qton BH<ll, C• E1,,.1 M Soronwn, •191 Cr•noau Or . HuntoRQIOfl 8'tec 11. Ca Hu~ ~ness •• , conouc.tl'd b• '" dfV'ldu•I' llobtn E Soron>en E 1,...1 M Soren>tn Thi\ \Wl~t ... , hied ...,Ith lf\f County Clerk ol Or.-.o-Counly on M•r<n•, '"' 1'14'1'1 Publotllod OrMIQt CCMl\I 0•11~ P1101 M•r II 11, 2S. A.pr I,'"' 119J II P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINI H NAMI STATIMIENT The tot1ow1no O•'"°"' art doing bulin•u•' tHIEllNATtONAI.. HOT DOG COM PANY. 011 Blr<ll Slreot, H••POrf Boe<n. CalllMnl• '2WO Sttvo n C. Tllomp>on, 1Ull h•l>tll•. M1u1on Vie jo, C•lllorno• t2'92 Aooln L Thompson, 1t2tJ I Hbtlla. Minion Vlolo. C•lilorn•• ,,..,, Tllh 11o1si,,.u I> conduttecl by In Olwidu•lt IH.-..S & Wilel S-C TllOnlP1-0f'I Tlllt >l•l-1 w.u Iliad •1111 111< Counly Clora of Or•noo County on ""4trc112, l"t I' I Mt It PuDll\lltd Or-Coa•I O•lly Pllol, M•rcll 4, 11, tt.1s, "" 1oew1 PUBLIC NOTICE N·11d2 l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS NAME STATIMINT Tiit loli-lftQ ~r_,, er• dOlnQ 11o1.1 ....... P ROFESSIONAi.. CONSULT ING N·111ff ,.ICTITIOUS IUllNISS GAOU P. 1200 N. Mel" Sir-. Sulla l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS NAMI STATIMUllT 04, S.nt. ,.,,., C.lllMnla '2101 NAMISTATIMENT Tllo IOllO•lnt portofls uo dOlnQ AOMAll CORP OllA.TION. • Tiie tollo•lnQ pertofl\ aro dOlllQ 0,,.,,..0 .. Ct lllorni. ""-etlarl, t?OO N Main bu\l ... u •• p L A N N E 0 E N E A G y SlrHI. s...llt 04, Sanl• Ana. C•lllornl• FORTUNA ENTEllPlllSES, 101 INTl!ANATIONAL, 0 1 PrO>POCI tt70I Sc11011 Pl•1a PH •U, N••PO•I 8ta<ll, SI rot I, Nowporl BUCll, Calllornl• Tllh -~• h <Ofldu<"'d Dy• cor c a. '2.., '2..0 00<•tlon Z•<lltry T Pedlclnl, 101 Sc110l1 Pt•nn•d EnerQy 111vulmt nl\. -...r CorponllDfl L & P ENfE1tPlfiS1!°5. ~ W F ordn<1m SI . S4nt• An•. C• '1110• ~l even I.to P1nktroon 7JI Claiborne, LOnQ e.ec11. C• ~30 W1U1•m Jenner E.111n~ at•OI Llo•e• Courl !Mlflt• "1>• C• "110~ Tn1\ bU\1nts\ I\ conducteo by t1 oener 11 JMrtMr\n1p c.. Rte t\4rd L•W•\ ff"H\ \l•t•rnenl w•l fllto w 1t'1 the t ounty CIHlt. ot Or&nCJP County on M•rch 'I 1'111 FU1tM. Pul>ll\Md 0rdll04' (Da\I D•lly PtlOI Mar 11, 11, l>. 4p• 1, 1'181 1'21 81 PUBLIC NOTICE N·1,.. l'tCTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMIE STATIMI NT Tiie IOllo•lflQ Ptr\Ofl 1> CIOlnQ bu\• "-H ., HUNSAKER OEVELOPMENI COMPANY, 111" Mlltllell. lfvln• C•l1forn11 911 t• llocha•d c HUflWktr, lSl2 Oto•n 81•<1 . Corona dtl M•r, C•l1lorn1• nus Th1\ \~ltfnfftl ••\ l1led with lhe einnny Clfr~ ol OrWIOO County on Maren i., 1'181 FtS/'11 Publl>""° 0r6"91' Ccw\I O•lly Pilot M•r<n It lS Ap111 1 I . Ifft 1l9' 11 P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS I USI NESS NAMIE STATEMENT r n.-follo.w1no oenon t\ 001nQ o"''' n~\\ ., Al..CHEMY INT ElllOR OE SIGN 4SSOCIATES, 111 Wl\I 17tn StrHI Suitt D•, (Oii• "'-s.., Cahtof'n1• •1•21 l r•o Walltr, Ill Wt\1 10111 SlrH I Co"• MoH. Cahlorm• '2d7 Tn1\ OU\1neu " cooouctd O• •" '" dtYldu•I ft« y Walt.tr fn1, \t•t&ment w•\ t1lf'd wilt\ thf' tount y Cl•rk of Or.nge County on Marcll II. ·~· 1'1,_I Publ•\1'eet 0rtll1Qe Co.ut D•tly P1tot M•rch 18, JS A.p11t I, I , 19f1 1:119 81 PUBLIC NOTICE Tiu\ bu\IMU I\ <onclutlOC Dy •n In G-1$11 dlv1du•I M>UTH COAST Rl<l'ltrdC Hunwkor AIA QUALITY "IAHA GEMENl fll•• >1•1-nl WH lllecl ...... ,,,. OISTIUCT County Cl•ro ot Or.,.1141 County on HIAltlNG aOAA O Fooruary 1' '"' NOTICE 0~ PUii.iC HIAIUNG TO 1'1MUS PuDll.,_ Or-CCMO•t D•••Y Pilol, Fell H . ,...r .. 11. 11, 1'191 '1S 11 PUBLIC NOTICE AECONSIOlll AN APPi.AL FllOM DENIAL 0 1' PEltlWllT TD OPEltATIE~H No. U..-1 NOTICE IS HEllEBV GIVEN 1"-1 1111! !>outll C.O.•I "" o.i.111y M•n•oe '!lent 0 1\l"CI Hurlnv 8o•ro *"' nold • publ•t n.e•r•f'MJ •• 10 00 • m on l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS lllut\O•y A.pril 1 ..... on Ill• Or•n~ NAME STATIMINT :ounty 8oa<O of S~P•••\Or\ Room r llt ro11ow1ng per\Ons .,0 doing !1S No Svc•mor• Slrffl, Stn l'ooor C>u''"''' ., >•nt• A~. C•l1torn1•. to tf!<On\1c:Mr •f' MARTIN & SAUNDERS, ITOO >PP••I lrom deni•I 01 pormll 10 AdAtn\ A¥ef"liUe. S.UU• 101. COILt Mew. >oer•I•.,, .. , pollutl()n (Ot'ltfOt Sy\l•m C•tifornl• ntM tnd A1' •t>r•\•W b'•U.U'Q \yst~ •I Jofln A Merlin .. A.\M>ti•ln In< : LA II AL c 0 • 0 Iv Is I 0 N 0 F 1 Ctlllorn1a corporallon, tlOO Wl,l$111r~ :;R tSWOl..0 INOUSTRIES. 1101 81vd . Lm Anqieln, Ctlllornl• 9CI051 Pluenlo• A¥tnuo Co•U Mo• Weller 0 SaunOtr•. ttsl Boe v ,, =•••torn•• •• c1rc1e. Cm141 Mew. Celltornl• t2'l• A <OPY ot IM pelltoon " <IV.•l•OI• '°' Thh buil,..ss 1, cond·ucted by • n\Pf'Chon It tf'\I' ott1ce of Uw H••'•"St genorel s>¥1ner\lllp 8o•rd Cltrk. '1SO E Fl•or Orivo. Et W•lltr o s..,,,.,.,. ~01ll•, C•lo tornl•. •no al Ill• Anall•1m Tiiis •ltlomonl ,.., weo .,11,. 1110 )lf1<e, 1610 E B•ll Rolld, Anatw1m Counly Ciera of OranQ<t c°"nly on =•l1torn1• Fet>ru•ry 11. 1911 lnttrHttC11 oerson\ m •v •ftet'ld •tld '· GltliOO EVANS 1uDm•I or.i or .... 11 ... \letemtnt\ •I LEONAltO COMEGYS int llo•rnlQ It " ro<1uoSIP<I 111•1 wt1I ...... ,.,.. len >l•temenl\ bO Wllmllltd ID Int tt21 w111111,. a tve., ~urino 8CMlra tov• O•Y• r.orore tn• S..lt• ti 1 •tu1n11 LMA_..,,,CA-tt OATEO ,..-.rcn11.1t" Soulll to.sl "'" Quallly --mtnl 01\lr I( I Hur 1 nQ 8o<I rd Htltn 0111l•na. PubtllMCI Or•nQe Coe•I O•ily Pilot, Feb H, Mer 4, 11. 11. '"' 91) I t PUBLIC NOTICE O.puly Cle•• PuOll\lled Ort<IQe , .... ,, 0•11• Piiot "'•r<ll "· '"' 1)17 11 Pl••• PH•1•. Ntwporl S.•<11, C• In<, • C.lllornla corporallo11. 01 llk ltt•dH Tor•I, '2MJ Pro>pecl SlrHt. Nowp0rl Buell, "'°"idonl l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIESS SldMY Flotsner. 102 ScllOll Plau C.lllorn4a ntt0. Tiii\ '"'""""'1 was lllecl wlln .,... NAME STATIMINT PUBLIC NOTICE PH•Z4,N...,Por18t«n,C•.t2Ml PL.ANNEOENIERGY County Clork of OrWlq,e County on Tllo IOll-onQ perM>n I\ doono l>u\I Tlllt bu•lnon It <Ondu<lod Dy • INlllESTMIENTS, INC Fellruery It, "" neu as vt,,.ral~P 81111t JOIMfl. ~1M,.1 MADDOX APARTMENTS. 70~1 Z.Cllery T Ptdltinl ,.,..._ Publl.,_ Or-CO<ltl O•lly P1101, Maddo• O<l•t, Huntonvton 8tac11. C• SidMY Flollllt• Tiiis si.c-1 was '""' willl Ille Foo. JS. -4• II,"· I"' .,._., ,, .. , Tiii\ tttltmonl w•• llltH:I wllll lllt Couftly Ciork ol Orenee Co1.,,ly on M•nl L BNumll<, 34 Mo\ly A.trt> Co11nly Clt l"k of Or.,.Qt Counly on ~rcll 2, 1 .. 1. PUBLIC NOTICE Road. lloillnQ Hllh E•l•I••. Ca 9021• M•rcll •• '"' AH 0 0 IE S, I( E N OA LL & HAR Tiii\ bu\lntu 1\ <Olldu<led by •n on 'ISIW AINOTOH dlvldu•I PuDll\Nd Or-CO<ISI Dally PllOI A P A 0 F IE S S I 0 H A L L A W N7IJtl _., I.. B"'°umla Mar 11, 11. 2S. ~ I, l"t 11'2 .. I CORPOAATION l'ICTITIOUI 8USINISS lnl\ >1•1-1 wH toled w1t11 tno '42" MteArtllllt 801.11tvard, Suitt IOl NAM9 STATIMINT County Ctork ot Orano-Counly on P UBLIC NOTICE Newport 9"cll, Catilomle.,..., Tiit lollowl1111 port ona •r• doin9 M.,<11 s, l'ltt Publls-OrM\Qlt Coa•I Oallr Pll01, l>usl,,.U .. : -----f.M rtll•,11.ll,U ,l"I l.J .. t H & H INVESTMENTS, LTD, THOMAl>WIU.S PICTITIOUI 8USINIU 1204 Ha ri.Gr loult•t rd, Gt rclon 4 uw c..._.ci.., Grove. Call-• nMO. Mt N••-1 C<lfltor Otho NAMI STATIMIENT PUBLIC NOTICE Joanno Holoman, IH'4 H•rbor Sulit tit Tiit 1o11-1n11 1>ertofl "OOltlg l>utl 8oulo•ard, G¥1len Grove, C•lltornla New,.rt ••Mii, ca. '2..0 neu •>. '2UO. Publltllld Oranqie Coa\I Dolly Pilot EDUCATIONAL STUFT', 111 VI• l'ICTITIOUSIUllNIU Jim Hogoall, IHt• H.,llor M•r. tt, lt.1S.Apr t. "'' l2Htl Koron, Nowporl 8ttell, Co . .,.., NAMI STAT•MINT 801.11tv•cl. Gardon Grow. C•lllornla Crltlln AM Sllulo. 211 V141 Koron. Tllo IOllOwlng portoft\ aro clolnQ '2...0 NtwPDM 8tecll, C.. ~ DU•intn ti Tllis t>vtln•H 11 conclu<l•d Dy • _ _pl.1.BUC NOTICE Tiii• lllnlnHI ii cono...c .... by ... In· ~ETWOAK MAlll(ETING COM· llml-~. 1~-------------- 0iwid11al. PANY, IUl KHI Orlwo, CMOM 0.1 Jlm H09ttll STATl,,..NTQf'A8ANDONMINT Crl•lin Sllul• AYr. C•. nus Tiii& auot-t .... llltd w llll ttw OP UH OP ~ICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAME STATEMENT Tiie tollowlnQ por\011\ •rt doonq l>utlMH •>. SHOllfCUT ENTERPRISE, 111 E••I Jl\I. CO\I• Mew, Cahlorn1a OUJ Eu~M •nd Jotn• M•f1ter, 111 E•>t 11\1, Cost• Mew. E•lllornl• '2•27 tn1, bu'•nitn ''conducted bf' ~ 1n dlYldu•I EuventG Me•\10( Tiii\ ••••-• .... t1IPG wlln 1~ Count• Clork of Or.,,Qt Counly Oft M•rcn I•.'"' FIH..., PuDh\Nd Orange CCMl\I O•llly P•IOI Maren 18, 7l, April 1. I. l•tt ll60 •1 P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS NAMI STATIMINT TIW toll-lnQ PtrM>n It doltlQ 1>uil n•t\ ., Tiii• tlel.t,,_I ••• llllCI wlllt lllt Denni•""' Scnoll, 101 KMI Ori••· Covnly Clerk ol <><•noe COl.lntr "" ,..CTITIOUS IUSIN•H MAMI l'ICTITI .. aUllNRSS Counly Clor• of O<WIQt C°"nty on Coron•··-· C.. '2•U ~rtll 2, 1,.1 Tiie folie.lflQ _ _.. llaW a!Mln NAMl.AT•M•MT M•r<11 •·1"' Tnomu 0 H•r Ptr. 24212 ....... doftodtlle-olltleflcllll-butlntH SIMPI.. Y FLOWE AS, 1"2 Walson Avenuo. CO\t• Mew, C•lltor"i• tZU• HolOfl I( ROclrlgue1, 1"1 W•I""" Avonuo, CO\I• Mew, C•lllor111a tlU•. The lollowlnWer~• •r• dol "111414 Ler•w-. Et Toro, Co ~ P11bll•lwd OranQt Counlr Oallr _, °"''........ ng PuDllJltld 0.t<IOO (OHi O•lly Piiot Tlllt bllSIMU I• (OndWCl•d by a Piiot. Martlt4. II. It. U.1 .. 1 1*'41 THE Ol!SION STUDIO,"" Wllll· ST IVES cAt.llEAS, P.O 80• M., 11, II, 25, A.pr. 1• 1"1 1221 .. I oon•rat pertnersnlp, tier A11e11uo, F·l 1, Cot la MtU, 1212. NtWPorl 11, C•lllM"la tJMJ. -Otwlls M. ScllOll Ct llfornla n.27 8u•lneu Offlc clo hit Acct<y Tlllt •WC-I ••~ llllCI wllll lllt PUBLIC NOTICE TN l'lcllli<Ma 81111-Na,,.. , .. Corp., JJO l lUI , Suite IU, Coal• PUBLIC NOTICE Couftly C~k ol 0..,,0t County on • lerrod 10 ...,. •M llltd In Or.,,Qe Mow, c.tlfoml 27 MarCll '· '"1 STATIMeMTOP A8ANDOMM•NT '°""''' °"'-''· 1m 8er-• ~ICTITIOUI 8UllNlll l'Ur4lt OP' UM O,. Donald A. Sl rvut, 12U Llltlt Newport INclt, NAMll STATllll•NT Publl""'° OrtnQt Coatl O•lly Pliol ~ICTITIOUI 8UMMIU •AMI Hart1o11r Orlvt, HuntlnQIOfl 8tacn, Manoln r<o Tiit foll-Ing ~'°"' ero do I no Mar 11• 11• :u. Apr. 1• 1"1 Ull .. I Ttw feliOwlftg --lltw ..,..,. C•llforflla .,.._ t.tvo Ad., buslnen as: OclMd Illa.,. of Ille fkllt6-llutlNH P•IOI Alllfl "'"'· ttJtt Sonia .,.,, KITC>41!N SAVl!ll OF OltANOI! PUBUC NOTICE ntmt: J-, .._..,,. V•ll•Y. C.lllC>r1'1a Tiii• IXISIM• cOflduCl•d h . COU N TY. 1201 Oa r den Oro.. THIMAILAOOM,2t001!.C•HI '17 .. •neral portlltr loultvUd, Uflll C, G•rden Orovt, P'ICTITiout •utt•lll Hl9flw•y. ear-., Mar, C.lllornl• T1111 -..--.,., <Oftducllld Cly a Mervin Cellfornlt .,..I. NMM ITATIMINT ft•ts. TN l'ltlltlow 8u"-t N•mt QtMr•l IMlf1Nrtltlp. Tith 11•1 Tony ~ • .,.,, 71 Gr•nl, lrvlno, T 1 11 ...... 1 roltt"rH lo....,.. -Iliad "'Oretl99 OoNICI A. Strout ouftly Clerk C•llfoml• '7114. _,":.,:.":"'" .. ":-s •rt do "' c-ty en Jiiiy 16, ltlO Tiii• •to..,,_t ·•u llletl wltll tllt rch 1•. "''· Ak lttnl J. Ir...,.,., 1m1 •-n CONSIGN Ol!SION. UOI Wettclltf J on•• Lorrol"• Harf'lt, 2&01 Cou111y Clork of o..,,.. c-ty Oft Wey, 0 ........ ~ow, C.illornle ~ Orlvo Svltt l02 NtwllOrt ltttlli 8wt kt f t Slreat, Newport 8eacll, l'tt>. 20, 1"1. Tltll llWlnett •• COMIK-., • Callf..;nlaftMO. , ColllwlllaftMG. •MOOll, 1t••DALL a HA•· Olnff•l ,.,_...,.p, Mtrforle a. l4lw.,U, JUI ltot19nl...etlleHomt,H078ucktye ltlNIHC* Tony,,_, Crtst'lllow ~ IM<ll C•llfttftle Strttt, Ntwp0rt 8tt<ll, Calllornl• P It 0 " I I I I 0 M A L L A W lti<._,.J, I r-'7t40 ' • nwo, O•P'OllATIOH Tiiis .... ...,_. .., .. fllM wltll ltle To,._ M. k Olllol'I llJ"I ...... Tlllt __,_. wM COftdu<tod bf • ltt MM.,._ --..,on, IWta IN cou11ty Gtttll of Oronee CWl!ty .,, ••••u ltltne. Htw"" Btocll: llmllM~. ,._....,...__,CalltenU .... Mar"' t, Itel. Cellltf'fllt "'66t. J-L. "°"" PlltMI PIMfM Tlllt Wllllltta la c~tM tty t Tlllt tlA'-' wat lllM •1111 Ille PullllallMI Ortnte Cotti 0.lly P'lltt, l"utllltlleCI 0r..,.. Cotti Oallr ,II .. , ...-rat,.,,,.... t41111Y Clt111 .. OrMtt C:OUtrty Oii FtO. ts, MM'cll 4. II, It ., .. , t 1M I M41rcll 4, ti, 1e. u. ltll 1•1.t1 iiMtient a.•••• trtO. 20, 1'11. Tlllt .....,_.,. -111• •1111 tM County C'"11 of Ortfltlt c;..,fllty .,, ,._,.,_Or .... CM'4 Dolly "llot, Mo~lt t, HI(. ~tO. H , Man:ll 4, ti, 11, Itel tn .. 1 1-----------PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE •ttllt1t • PICTITIOUI 8Ul1NIH ITAT•Me•TOf'A ... OCMIMl•t ~lllflMOrlfttlC:-tlOallYP'lltt, PUBLIC NOTICE NAllMITAHMINT Of' UM... ,.._,Cll 4, II, 1e. U, 1"1 1....-1 Tiit lolltwlftt --• •rt .. ,,.. Tnls Dutlneu" conouc•d by "' 1~ dlvlOu•I. Holon I( Roclrl91101 Tni\ >leltmtnl ••t llllCI wllll tno Counly Clerk of O•WIOt Covt1ly 0.. Marci\ I•, lftl. FU10• Publl.-0r.,... Coett O•lly Pll°' Merell It. ts, April I, I. t9tl US4~1 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8UllH•H NAM• ITAT•MINT Tlli lollowlno "r'°"' er• clol'\11 .... ......... SIA CH.A.AL.ES. L TO., l•U 011"'' Way,CoslAIMot.t.C•llfornlat2107 1 CMtltl 0.WIU Portor, 1422 Souf, O•rftMJ,S-AN,C.lllorlllat2101 ' Juclilll ~ Port.... Utt Soutll Ga rn...,., Sttlt. AN, Callfontla tJ101 Tllll l>lntftHI Is <etldll<ltH:I by ... If! 0111tdua1, J .01-POl'ltf' Tlllt .,_._, wu fllH •1111 t (OUflly Cltrll ol ~lftto Covllty 8fl Merell i., '"'· I FIS1'1'• Puo1i.11ec1 Orenoo CtHt D•llr Plltill Merell"· is. Aprll I, •• IMI IW·&' PUBUC NOTlCE llllCTlftOUI Mlat•M ....... lllvllll'tttot. TllO .......... ..,_....,....... -·auc NOTICE' ~•cT1T1ousau11••ss Nsw wo .. "o 011T•1•uT1No -------------' __.IN --.. lk"*-..,.._ .,.,., 111t NAMa ITATUHNT COM.ANY, M Well Ko•ll• A-"t. 'ICTITIOUS 8USINIH -! Tll• fOllowtnt __, It dolnt DUii· Ot• ... C•. '2 .. 1 • NAMC ITATIMINT THI Pl.ANTllt BOX, IOOO PICTITIOUllUllMISS ntHH: How•,. L•uner, J014 Alder, Tiit ltlltwlft9 "'Miit ut fol"• 8r lettl, lultt It, Mew-I ltKll, NAMe ITAT•lll&NT VISTA OEL.MAlt AltAltTMINTS, lr•I,.., Ct. '21U W.IMUM: C~t..,,...,_. Tiit ltli.wlftt ,.,_ It dolftt htl· 1"°1 Sell Clrtlt, HU111lrllt0fl .. tell, Artllvr l t1t111•11, 'U lolton• 0 • A H G & C 0 U M T Y Tiie "'~--....._ .._ .... -·· ea.~ Orl'llt,......,..~C. • ...SI lllltOP'IUIOMALOltOOMIHAllH<j ..,,... ...... -·~ lfl °'-Ill '"0'1!SSIONALS T~S. II) MOiii L .............. -Ml•tv Acrtt N•li-1 T,..,,., lflC., (• Cellltnll• 1'Ml ...... IMIBI, P't\11111111 V•ll•~ c-., Dllc ••• ""· P'ltO,. •UIONAL' c . EA Tl v ....... ltcMll11t1Hlll• ..... , ... ea. •OU• Ct •Hf•llen), .. l •tt Ko•ll• Aft•llllt, C•lll•rlll• .......... ~'!~·.,. 9-tffllll, c-. P'INANCI, UOJ loutll CtH I Orlvt, Tiii• .,.._ •• CtMIKltd .. , .., In• llllto tt•.o.-..... c.. tlMI Or•nee CtUllly PrtltHltf'I• -· _....,,... ...,, Wit• f, c.t.a MeM, C.llloml• ..... •Mwel. Allll Clltrl 8rtWf'I, 'ltl Wt1t ~~ AMII.. 16J01 lrtt11tt11rtt L.-o-n., tut callfOnllt, ,. •• Scott Hormell, UUI Men!L..IMwlllk MKA.....,.,JIW,,Ullltm.a-toAM, Ptt119'.t111V01i.,,C.tllf'Wlllo • •• HYMI ....... 9Ncll, CAlflf•IM• WMdtletll ~. Hl#ltll\fltft hoc II, Tiii• ... '""'9111 ... Ill .. •ltll llle c.. nm Tiii• ...,_It~ ..... 1111 .... ....,, C.lllorf'llo""1. Cw1111 Cl.tfll of °' ..... Co\llltr Oii Tiii• ~· I• ~OfMluetoe ., • lf'lt..,.., .... _ ... 1 ... ttlltf INll TMa ......... -~ llT • Tlllt ._,....It~~ ... tty t11 11'1· l!Mrcll l, !tit. e-r•I ,....... ,_,.,..,., . ....., .. ,.,....... ilfl4loi11, ""... AlllCMl'i9rwft, .... l(.OOIMY ~~ ... .__II .,....._,,_ ,......, ~ Tlllt ....._. ... llttilt wltll IM Tlllt , ............ -fllM wltll IM • '-Cllllllll.... 11111 .......... -..... tr6"1 ,._ Tlllt •--1 -lllM Wiii\ ,_,, CMril"' 0r-. ~ • '' CMlk If°"""' c-1, .... .......,.c..r..,,... c .... , ewti fff °'.,... c:-tr ... c-1., Cltftl tf 0r...-c.-tr ,.. .. ..,,.... rclll'-I"'· ....... Mwcll'-l'll. MM<-1116,1,.t. ,..,,. Pt ............. ca... PUl'IU .. on ~ ...... c.et Ditty ....... ~ltfl-. Orenp Olotl Otllr f'I ... , 1"11 .. t ... ONlllll C--Delly Pll.. 1"111111 ... ONllll ¢Mitt o.tlV l"lltlll l"MllU.. °'""' C-1 O.tltt .. II .. '-----~-------' P'W. U.~~ II, te."" -.I ~1111. U. A41tli I, e, Itel IMI.. Mor, ti, II. Ii.-'• I, ltl\ ,....., Mor. II, \t, 11,"", I, 1"1 IOMI Mere.II II. U. AW111,e, 1"1 tat .. i . _________ ...... --... -.-...---..-.--..... ----. , ..... ... TD FA•IL~ c1ac111 by Bil Keane by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) "I'm practicing to be a daddy." "Actually he's quite thin. He's just got his money btlt on." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Hold It! There's a limit to togetherness!" "Be fair about it, Bert ... I cut his hair last lime!" iJim:=:=:=::m:~Toooom I'll. TAKf MY CHANCf!> •.. M MISS PEACH ARTHVfZ1 ~ ~DVICE Cl-IN'C. FO~ Soi< t' 11l4 ~~9l.EM~ W•lt'4 I ~IQLS J • ) r e=::====n==::::::i ! MOON MULLINS l'M NOT AeovT TO INVOl\1£ JEANNIE! we HAVE A t.OVE ·HATE KIND OF REL.AtlON~IP! WMl!N !. M&l'T' A NICE Cillll..1 HOW CAN :t ~I.Ai MV B• ~i Ft:>OT' i:oirwA~o? MAY&E &Y THE TIME I (;ifT 0VT OF JAIL, 6HE'LL HAVE 6lOY4N THE QUAltfER·MIU.Ql' ON THE OTHER HAND. MAYM ~t4E1.L IWN ll UP TO A COUPLE OF MILLION! TfU THE 6ERC:>EANT If'~ NO D£AL.' by Mell Lazarius F='1rl~i1 YOlA TAI(£ 1-r OlAT or: YOlAIZ MOLATH .... by Ferd & Tom Johnson DIDN'T WoflK WELL 1 You ACROSS 51 fool 1 AdYoelte 52 Ouicll Ratph -55 Con1endlng 8 "'F.,._.... 58 Wlre 10 Thiok 11ce eo Egypt11n 14 &nlnate dlneef 15 Gen. lltecley • 1 Alien nurte 1e 0... piece 82 Aber 17 ...... 83 Vilcount 18 ,... t'NIOll 84 in.ti 20 lndlln 15 Requlei1• 21 Hodley pel- ece 23 Ir• 24 SCWM llCll'lll 2t COUMlrflll· DOWN ..... · .... UHrT£D F.-tin Syndicate Tueldiy'I Pume SoMd 1 2 I 4 I WE~EN1T SuP~SEl> To USE !~~ v,AcuuMr Orange Cont DAILY Pft.OT/Wtd.-day, March 18, 1981 PFANIJTI • F~OM WOOOSTOCK? I ~~ f«a> CJ F«lff«>S, . t>IDH'T EVEN KNOW ME AM ON MV W.W 10 ~s 60NE... 0 SAM JW4 CAPISTRANO ~~----, lOSEETHf~QUS I RETO~ ... " . f D ,_____. L/&11 .. Ll.JI 0 TlJMBLEW'EED8 ,_ _______ _, '(OLJ HAW10!-1 Mu.PN'AftP HAMttoc;KI!~ A1-R~VY PAIC71Hi= I WflJ .. N0:r MARRV 'tt>U. JU~E ~N ~KS 101lE "Jli~ KNo-ri UH1uUOGe, Ct.lJEWIS WOMAN INON MVL.~L ft1Gtii5 . by Chari• M. Schultz WILL WRITE MW l.W .. VOl.ll FWP, WOOOSTOCK- f.S. ~IS CAf'ISTRANO. by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmiller WHAT A SNEAKY WAY TO GET ME TO DO YOUR DISHES ~I? ~llJ6 AA~~ Z'V"fiO/>J~ "ff.VIN A ~IJ.all:. ~IT/ _ ..... _ .... ~<tJA by Tom Batiuk I HEARD WE WERE (:,QIN<:, TO 6ET A L.OCKER ~ECK DORIN& ~MEROOM GOOD! I COULD 05E T~E MONEY ! mew,>! r l ! Q BRABBLE ,.,, DR.SMOCK l.Ji.IA'f A ClJ'f£ t.1ffLE SN££ZE ! So OAlt.11'~ A~O SlllEE'f ! SAY. SANG, OU~ ANNUAL-NUFtS8S' e>eAU1'Y PA6t!AN"f" tS oveR., ANP "f" ... I! ll'OU""f"H . FtUNNe!Ft·UP, ANN eoNO, IS '1"HI! WtNNeFt .' na•ETl'E••• , •• W088E MICHF\E.L-1 ASKE.O'/OU ~ 1bPICKUP • THE~TO'(S F\GES AGO~ .../ 3·'• by Kevi n Fag an by George Lemont by Lynn Johnston G~ .. \WONOER IF lHE'( ACCEPT ,_.-. CHILDREN. I i l '. I• l. I' I,· I' .. ' I· ' I ii , . ar.,. Coalt DAIL V ptLOT/Wec:Jnelday, March 18, 1981 The selling of. 'Melvin' • • Offbeat flick for Mary Sieenburgen 87 808 THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"The offbeat appeals to me," admit.a Actdemy Award nominee Mary Steenbur•ea, whole career bu aoomed wtU. three marvelously ldlo.yncratle roles. Tbe not·SO-rood news ia that the three movies may have been too offbeat to appeal to the malnatream audience. Or, as MlH Steenbur1en suggests, the companlesdidn'tlmow bowlosell the films. Fl&8T CAME "Goin' South," ln which she played a spunky frontier lady to Jack Nicbolaon'a drifter. Paramo.nt tried to b.Jde the fact that lt was a west.em since westems haven't been sell· Ing. Nor did "Goin' South." Next, "Time after Time," with Steenburgen as a San Fran· ci•co bank teller in love with a time-warped H.G. Wells. played by her future husband, Malcolm McDowell. Observed the ac· tress: "Warner's didn't know whether to sell it as ,a J aclt the Ripper movie or science fiction. So they settled for the ad llne: •Jt took them 100 years to meet and a minutetofaJI in love." Now, "Melvi n and Howard ... which is on most critics' lO·best· of-1980 lists and which won sup· porting acting nominations for Miss Steenburgen and Jason Robards and another for Bo Goldman's script. SEVERAL AD campaigns later , Universal is still trying to ignite "Melvin and Howard" at the box office. The latest ploy is to place "and Howard" in parentheses "so it won't seem like a Howard Hughes movie," Miss Steenburgen reasons, Actually Hughes C Robards ) appears for onl y a few minutes. The rest of the s tory is of chronic loser Melvin Dummar (Paul LeMat) and his flighty wife <Steenburgen l and how they deaJ with their plastic lire. "I believe in the picture; in its own way it's a work of art," the actress commented. "It's sad that more people don't go see it. l 've been doing what I can to "~ . .,.,..,.. LOVERS IN 'MELVIN' ~ffnburgen, L•M•t convince them." Like interviews. Mary came to ours at a stylish French cafe bearing Lily Amanda McDowell. born J an. 22, 1981. No problem. Lily slept throughout the lunch in a marsupial pouch strapped in front of her mother . Said Mary: "She's always perfectly behaved in this thing and why not ? She's warm. feels her mother's heartbeat just Uke the womb.'' MISS STEENBURGEN (it's Dutch and the g is soft ) first read "Melvin and Howard" while she was making "Goin' South." "At that time Mike Nichols was going to direct it. and the script was sent to Jack," she re- c a I I ed. "He couldn't do it because of 'The Shining,· but he gave it to me to read ·as an ex· 12:00-2:()().4:00 8:00.-:00-10:00 ample al 1ood 1eript wrtt.lni.' I aarMcL Mc.t movie aertptt are like hamburcer: thl• ••• ateak." Later Jonathan Demme took over u director, and ahe wdi· Uoned tor him. Mary aald of hlm. : "He la a real Joy. Belldea belnl an artllt, he la Just pjaln fun. He kept up our morale when wt really needed it. Like the weddlq acene. We shot It after two month.I ln Lu Ve1as, and ll you're not lnto aamblln1. that'• a lona time. Jonathan appeared on the set in a llMOI tuxedo with a carnation. That lifted us all." LeMAT, SHE said, kept pretty much to himself durine fUmln1 -"he was quiet but responsive; he stepped into the part totally . . . . Jason and I had the flashier roles, but Paul was the one who had to carry It all. In a way il'snotfair." She admitted that the most dl!ficult scene was when Linda Dummar flings off her clothes and stallu out of her job as a go- g o dancer. She called her husband for ad vice. since McDowell has done nude scenes. He admitted it's tougher for an actress and advised her to simp· ly do her best and get it over with. "I knew Jonathan would do it tastefully and well , and there would be a skeleton crew." she said. "Wh at I didn't think about was that there would be 50 guys from Central Casting on the set." Fos t~r ~ ... t~ arnat ... ur r<)lt· NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP> - Movie actress Jodie Foster has managed to keep a low profile as a Yale University freshman, but her fans will have a chance to see her amateur stage debut this spring. · She will have a supporting role playing the early years or a former prostitute imprisoned for killing a cab driver in the play "Gettin Out." ... ,.r ••• •• ~c..-...,. •• nw s...-I 3iila5ia 1:15-3:30 ~ 5:4W:OO • 10:15 DAVID BOWIE "THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH" 1 :00·3:1 S-5:30 (R) 7:4S-10:00 Ma1ncoma1D'*11. DllCMr'11111t a nnn1 11111818 ... lo Im comer.....,..-. on 1111 DOii lne?? -'::!.~;.!'\' wcas I ~ Watch The Academy Awards March 30, on ABC CD1---1· •RllltlOTlUllH U.AftAU98rtiA-....... __ _ LONG" (A) I "ALL NIGHT . ., ..... ···•:•• ....... "FANTASIA" "INCMOtlLI , IHIJIMUNG twc>MAN" 'OIY'IL l MAX DSYllN' , ....... _. rt',·:~:: .. : "'°"T APAC•" I I "TRllUTI" "°"OINMV NOPLI'' (911 "mRCRAZY" ''Ulm>CAM .. • ...... WAY YOU CAN" "HONIYIUCKLI ' MOVIES Get• •~ti_, part Mel Tillis' dream . I .J finally comes true GREEN BAY, Wis. tAP> -Country 1tn1er Mel Tillb says be'a wanted to be an actol' slnce he wa1 ln hlth school. And it look& like tbat dream ls comin1 true. Tlll.lJJ and Pittsbur1h Steelers football atar Terl'y Bradabaw have roles lo an unreleued movle about stock car racin , "Tbe Cannonball Run," whose at.a.rs include Burt Reynoldl, Farrah Fawcett, Dean Martin. Sammy Davia Jr., Ro1er Moore and Bert Convy. And Just three weeks ago, a pilot was 1hot for a possible NBC television aeries 1plnoff, "The Stockers," starrine Bradshaw and Tillis. Tillis says he also has written a theme song for the pilot. " "We have reason to believe it will be a series," be said in an interview following a nitblclub performance here. TILLIS TUiia recalled that he wanted to appear ln plays when he was an hlth achool but wasn't allowed to because of a stuttering problem. which afflicts him only when he talks, not when be sings. APWI ........ Stan l111ddle Gloria Swanson and Oscar nominee Peter O'Toole get together at a party to celebrate the publication of Miss Swanson's autobio· graphy at L o nd o n 's Dorchester Hotel. "So I had to settle for pulling the curtain," he said. "And it really, really hurt me.·· ( Pilo\ogbook J Candid coDmmen:a,ries. ,., ' exclualvely In lhe II r. I DI ftRQI .. ~=~·I -·~:::"-r0~~,o;-' 1 994·2@ ................ .. ·-·"lltetl -._ ... , ., ...... ., .. .......... .....,__., ...... EYEWITNESS" (A) ,, .. , ........... , .. . .. TM .. -.Otf._4,,tALtfllllt4 ......... JMll\\wl u Mir.CS. ) "AMERICAN POP" IAI ••;•• •I Ro_,.,, "" IAt r ~.: ': .;•.•~ 111• ,_ ( 5 -•••••--9CJ4·2400 . "AMERICAN HOT WAJC IPG) ........... l'MCI..,.. "-' ... ' , .... " .... ,,_..,. ., u .... s1 879-9850 .,...,.,._Ola. -~wr &WMOI "THl "IPG) • , •• tt..1 ii, 1•• ....,,..... ... ,....," ......... "BACK AOADS" (A) ,, ........ , .. , . ...,, ......... ,......,l .. .-... "llACK AOADS" IAI .. ...,. , ••• --.. .,. J .. ..... '" .-u n. ..... OtO.A,..,._~.._.... · AMERICAN POP" (A) ......,.. ............. ,,. ··AMERICAN HOT WAJC" CPGI .....,.,. , ...... ~~,..... ..... " ......... ,.,... , ..... ., ... \. ... HAAAY'S WAA'. CPO) ..... 'HANOAA 11" CPO) II No AM CM ANIO Wllh lgnlllon At< .. Mrf er1r.v Y-Owl\ AM Po,,. ,' MMI ~[n;~ l..T~::::·:~::~~E~ .. <;:, I Ho AM CM Recllo Wllh lgnollon AcUIMrf 8ri"9 Y"OWr Own AM l'o<Vlll •• .,... ......... o..,.....,.. MANIAC ___ ,,_. i!lm~L_i~~~j MEAT CLLAvt'ir MAllACAE 1111 A,. ... ___ .... , MOJADO~WtA CON NOAA LA At8tLDt Afl 0,. ... AAT •• UYl•G --"AIEAICAN ~" (,.) .. ... ,. ~ "AMtAICAH HOT WAX" {NJ Wiii. 1911lllan ~caMty ... , ... Y-VWft AM ....... k-.Cltlf .. M••c;...,..-. ~, ... ,,......,. .. ,J .. J .... ~.... C\.IA-un\a·---o~: ~..::., -~ _,.l~NO IADOU• 1111 ,,., .. ., U, T .. ACAOIMY tt11 I No AMC. ~ Wllll llfllllan ~Clll-f ltrlfll ywr 0... AM ----~ ... _°'"'"""'" .......... _ "A•,.IC~ ,01'" (A) "TOMMY" (l'OI _...,. .. .._ .. "'",_ "THI 'UN HOUH" (A) -"THI lllANO" (A) ..__ ... _ No. NOA CON LAt ntll TVMttAI IMC .. ,,.. "CMIAIP T0,_!111' MIR'' (lit) ''TNI MUlllOtll aU\.t.a'T'' <NI (Ill -~ r•Mll "Beck Aoed•" (A) -r""" ......... 11,. ''AMERICAN POI'" -"EYEWITNESS" "INC .. EOIBLE SHAINKINO WOMAN" IU......,Aw .... N'l"41R-- "RAOfNQ BULL" 1•1 -"ll'HINX" t f' l I ""'.., . --. ·-::·.--: ............... G MAl.~ 'FMtUted· P*I 1•1 wtlO dttv. Ill • OMlolltlcHf ~ by; en I I • ...., .old t«ICll• btotter: I 70·yNr•Old dlloo ~ • MrlQinO ~..,.,..,. . • MOW **''It H~·· (11741 Cllet19e Otodln, end • bored IOCMlit• ~ leflfl Ille WOttd'I gtMl•t Orange Cout DAILY PILOT'/Wedneeday, March 18, 1981 •1 TUBE TOPPERS KHJ e -Lakers Basketball. The Phoenix Suns host the Los An1elea Lakers in a Western Dtvlslootlpoff. • ••• "The c... o.. din'' (1 .... ) OIOorllft Ken, ~Miiie Aoo--,...- 1111akH I dHpttlll ~ IO touefl lfte '-t of .. lofttty, dle1Urbed ~CIMt ... 1:10 I DTON.\L I:" llltCMI • *" ··coior .... Dead'' 11 ... 1rom Tryot1. cw~ .io.-, A -fPl9 "°'"a •IO•-I Ctlnt pol•on I• tUI I "**' to find Ille killer In t"8 ....... houri tie llM ..., to 11"9 1:ao1 NaWI UI MOYll I. I ~ lereen. A ._... I nenm•n•tutned·b1Jrtl•r MCurity tyttem In order to , ABC e 8 : 00 -·'The Greatest American Hero." A new. comedy series about a schoolteacher (William Katt) who is given superhuman powers . Robert Culp co-stars <photo ~tleft). •• LOYl80AT "AIM Of Man" It~ Butlle, Pltrtcll •l.abot1eull: ''F.,......'' ,,,,... o.tll. IMlt ~; "lo 'N' l•m" '"111p c11ar111 MecKMZle, MldlMI. TUOCI i fACI n41 IM*O llltlMtON: ~ * • .. OouOle Jeoc>etcty'' ( 1955) Rod c-on. Ja K.ity, A WMtthy tMI etlate men ..-11emp11 lo vtndlca1e lllmaelf from ctlatgea o4 havinO tnvrdefed an lalO<· tlonltl. . .. \H l>\:t.~I>:\ \' -EVBM6~ tt001•• ..we ITAMKYANO HUTCH Huggy 8-11 martced IOf dealh alter b91ng muOQ4ld while eettylng hol money 0 LYNH SHACKILFOllO Lynn talk• wllh ptaye<a about the Lall., bUitelball game aga1n11 11141 PhOeflb Suns Not too super tD M•A0 S•H Turned down IO< a lulu•• ~llOti II home. Cha•lff •• so Irate he retusea to lalk 10 anyone In the un11 Cl) OOOOTIMES William Katt stars as a caped crime fighter and Connie SeUecca is his girlfriend .in the new comedy series "The Greatest American Hero." pre· miering tonight at 8 on ABC. Channel 7. J J dec•dH 10 leach MiChaet ~hat he ttelleVff IS a badly nMded IHM>n 1n ruponsiblhly flll '11) El.ECTAIC OOMPAHY(A) Cll C88 NEWS OJ) ABCNEWS 8:20 D NBA e.ASKETBALL Loa Angeles L&kers vs Ph<>en1J1 Suns 8:30 G) WELCOME BACK, KOTTER Barbarino gals h11 ow" bachelor pod Cl) llENNYHILL Benny does an 1mpersona lion of a popul., sporlS comment al or fZi) DIPLOMA DEHIE.O An upl0<alt0n 1n10 lhe new requaremen1s of prol1· Cl9nC)' 1aS11ng 10< several levels ol e1emen11ry and secondary scha<M studooll •n the llete ol Ca1tl0<n1a {I!) STUDIOSEE Orlf!nteerang The n- spotl or 0<1oolee<1ng an Richmond. Ila is demon- straled. "'"' Al Harlag klle man thOtoughored hOtSH ••• 1•8•ned an Ocala. Fla (R). CHANNEL LISTINGS Cll NEWS @l BAAHEY MILLEA A detective arres11 a clll· 1en on a ch8Jge ol .. non. involvement.. when lhe man reluses to help calch a criminal · 7:00 I) CBS NEWS 0 NBCNEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN The Fonz learns lhal Ralph's parents have llled for divorce. U ABCHEWS G) M"A"S0H A gralelul patlen1 devolea h1msell lo Hawkeye while Radar falls 1n love and Kltnger marnes by short· wave <ad10 Q) STREETS Of SAN FRANCISCO When a co!lege teache< 1s accaoentally shot he •••uses 10 let the l)Oloee ••amine the bullet for rear ol losing a pt0motaon fZi) OVEAEASY G~ts Waltef and Grece Lantz OaYld H0<owatz (R) {I!) MACNEIL I ~REA REPORT (I) TIC T~ DOUGH 8 KN'<T <...8S1 L.;i-, A n1J1•1t .., O l\NBC 1 lllBC 1 Lo-.. An lf'l•• ... D l\TLA lla.l 1 LP· .. A11q,•1o•., U M SC IV 1 ABC1 Lo-, Anql'I'"' 8 .._fMB 1C8'>1 S.an (),,.qt> 0 l\HJ IV t lnll I Lo-, ·A11 w1,..., tO l\CSI tAllC..1 O..,,tn DH•l.j1I Q) I\ ff\ 1 ln1I I l l; An WI" Q) I\( OP rv 111) I 1 l11 ... Art, ........ fD l\L.( T r, PH'>• L , •\rt 1• '• .., ill> KOCE TV PH~ ti'"' •1111 "B• u t• • 9J MERV oAlf'RH Gue111 Jim Oare. Palti LuPone. Sammy Oav11 Jr 7:30 1J 2 ON THE TOWN Host• Steve Edwards. Melody Aogefl A CIOse·up ICtOk et lhe crime. the Joya, the eld.,ly J-ish commu- nity and lhe many lnt.,Nt• •no people Uvlng 1n llenloe; 8 rev•-of the hlllOry of l.os Angelee" streets end how t1141y got their nt1me1, a v111t with a 60-year-old woman who .. mothers" • lamaly of wild ducks In San Pedro 0 FAMILY FEUD D a.4AHAHA Guell Adtletlne Barbeau U HOU.YWOOD SOUAAU G) AU.eHTHEFAMILY A P<Ovoe&hY41 klSI Sj)8fkl a leud bet_, Archie and h1s 1tbefal daughler, Gl0<1a al MACHEJL I LEHRER REPORT '11) MOVIE * * * * "The Lion In Wiii· 1er (1967) Peter o ·T oo1e. Kaltlanne Hepburn Eng- land's Kang Hen<y II I- an agon111ng dee•slon over has IUQC4INOf u he con· templates hil llO<my mat· raage to 11141 11rong-wllled Eleanot ol Aquitaine (I) P.M. MAGAZINE A doclo< whO has proved !hat ballet dance<• are the besl alhle1H, a renowned bockwooda herb doctor 7:55 flll PLEDGE BREAK Rt10ularly scheduled pro· grammlng may be delayed due to pledge breaks 8:00 1J (I) ENOS Enos and Turk go under· cover as l11hermen to breax a burgl8JY rang prey· 1ng on a marina alMl_tfortune. • 0 THE GIWATUT. AMINCAHHPO (Preml«•I A normal Amer· lean achoolteec:tM!f (Wll· llem K1t1).l1 endowed with lupetlluman ~·- • P.M. MACMIJNE A doc:IOf who 191 proved that .°bellet dtineefa -Ille belt atNet .. ; • ~ blldtwooel• herb 4toctor llt.MOYllE • ••.t "Sodom And G_,-ell"' (1"3) St- Grenger, Piet Angell. Altef the twin cities are O.Slroyed. all thal remain ate the Het>t-_., Lors deuohl• end 11'4 q-·· bfottlef. ti) THE OAEAT81T AOVEHTUAE . Narrated by O;aon W..... and complemen1e<1 by NASA phologrephy. I .... h11tory of Ametic.n 1pac41 ••PIOflltOn II Ir~ from the invention ol the first liquid fuel rocket to Apollo 11 '1 hlet0<1C lending on lhe moon 8:30 G) CAAOl. BURHETT AHDFNEN08 GUHi: Tim Conwty. 8:00 G Cll MOVIE • * • "Kenny Rogers As The Gambler .. ( 19801 Ken- ny Rogere, Christine Bel· lord A P<Ofe .. lonai gam- oler becorn. lnvOlved in the hves of two other peo. pie while lravemno by 1ra1n 10 meal the son he never knew he had. (A) D DIFF'AEHT STROKES Mr Drummond seeks Arnold's advice aftet being turned down for • date by a pretty executive, 0 JOKEA'S WILD G) MERV OAIFFIH Guea1s Jim Dale. Patti LuPone, Sammy Devis Jr . Nell Cart•, OaYld Merraci< fl) THE FL YlHO WINO; WHAT HAPPE.NEO TO IT? A ntpriM of Cleta Aobertlf documentaty lnvest1ga11ng the scuttrlng o f the NO<'throp wcraft and the reasons behind Iha gov· ernment'a action 1:30 0 THE FACTS Of LIFE One or Mra Garrett's !Ona convinces Natalie ahe IS a lalented songwt1lef and should drop out of school to pursue a career. 0 TIC TAC OOUOH IU5 f£) THE FLYING WINO: FOLLOW-UP Clere Roberta )o•ns a panel dascuss;on with the prin<:I· pals 1nV01ved in ··Tt>e Fly- ing Wing .. story 10:00 0 QUINCY 'Dallas' rides ogai11 7 • ID top I 0 £Or 'CBS NEW YORK 1AP1 CBS claimed the fi ve most-watched shows in the week ending March 15. including "Dallas" in the No. 1 spot, winning the prime-time ratings race for the fourth con- secutive week, fi gures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed. ll was the 14th first-place finish for ... Dallas" in 19 weeks, but the first for the show since \he week ending Feb. 22. C B S CONTINUED to d,ominate the prime-time com- petition with an average rating for the week of 19.7 to 16.6 for ABC and 15.7 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average prime-time minute dur- ing the week , 19.7 percent of the nation's TV -equipped homes were tuned to CBS. C BS' "Evening News ," meanwhile,. remained No. 1 in its three-way race through the highly publicized transition from Walter Cronkite to Dan Rather. R ather. who s ucceeded Cronkite as "Evening News" anchorman on ·March 9, com- piled a rating for the week of Press1•re ti1ne J'BS bidding for cash again By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES IAPJ Public TV has been quick to seize upon lhe Reagan administration's proposed budget cuts as a fund-raising Simmick. holding Reagan's ax over viewers' heads with one hand . while holding outthe other hand for donations. . · : In Los Angeles. anyway, the threatofless money for the Corpora- tion for Public Broadcasting has been employed with unbridled en· thusiasm in the springtime money-raising effort. . AFTER RUNNING AN episode.of Carl Sagan's hugely popular :"Cosmos'' series last week, local station KCET took lo the pulpit to :Warn citizens that such programs "would be impo!)sible" if Reagan's 1roposals go through ... unless. of CO\Jrse, viewers dug a little ;steeper into their pockets . : Actually, only 20 percent of KCET's big-budget "Cosmos" was :-.>aid for by CPS. the largest hunk orthetab being picked up by Atlantic ·Richfield Corp. Public TV ls the source or the brightest, most thoughtful and, in . many ways, most entertaining "free television" programming in this :country. But golly, PBS never gets any better at the business of beg- £1ing money. · KCET is absolutely shrill in its pleas. threatening., cajoling, nag- .;ing. Last weekend, the station even borrowed Carol Burnett -in ;town for her libel suit against the National Enquirer-to dole out guilt :r those sne~ who watch public TV without sending money: . CHASTENED, I TURNED the channel. A commercial for de· signer jeans was my reward. I apologi&e, PBS. Alt.hough public TV's pleas for money are a bit irritating, they ome only three times a year. And apparently. PBS really could use Jome of the gtee~ stuff. "The Dick Cavett Show." for example, bas been cut down to 100 new episodes for next season. with 180 repeats tilling the remaining air time. · 15.1, compared with the 16.6 re- corded. by Cronkite during his final week. Cronkite's average for that last week including a huge audience for his last broad- cast. T HE RATI NG fo~ "Dallas'' was 32.3. Nielsen says that means of all the nation's homes· with television, nearly ~ third - 32.3 percent -saw at least part of the top-rated show. In all. CBS listed seven of the week's 10 highest-rated pro- grams, and a dozen of the top 20. ABC's top-rated show for the week, "Love Boat." was No. 6, and N BC's best, "CHIPs," finished eighth. Both CBS and NBC scored moderate success with made- for-TV motion pictures . "The Killing of Randy Webster" on CBS was No. 23 for the week, tied with "The Chicago Story" on NBC. Another CBS film, "Hellinger's Law," was 28th . NBC'S EFFORT for the week was hurt by a heavy representa· lion among the week's lowest- rated programs. An NBC movie, "The Million· Dollar Face," was 65th . fo llowed by two NBC shows, "Hill' Street Blues" lnd "The Gangster Chronicles," "That's My Line" from CBS, and "NBC Magazine with David Brinkley." Here are the week 's 10 highest-rated programs: . "Dallas," with a rating of 32.3 representing 25.1 million homes, "Dukes of Hazzard," 29.5 or 23 million, "60 Minutes." 26.1 or 20.3 million, "The Jeffersona," 26 or 20.2 million, and .. Alice." 25.5 or 19.8 million, all CBS; "Love Boat." 2-4 .5 or lt.l million, ABC; "M-A·S·H," 23.3 br 18.1 mHUon, CBS; "CHIPI,'' 23 .2 or 18 mllllon, NBC; "Magnum , P .I.," 23 or U .9 million, and "LilUe House on the Prairie," 21.6 or 16.8 million. NBC. CBS 9 9:00 -"The Garbbler." Ken- ny Rogers' hit song inspired this TV movie with Rogers cast in the title role with Bruce Boxle itner and Harold Goold <photo below> . Quincy eccldentally learns oC the planned aaaaUlna-I lion oC a oovetnment Offl- del l e•..wa 0 WGAt Oen. blinded In a buno1ee1 gang1and·atyte Shooting. 11rugglea to ov.,come hll handicap and find hla esaa1lan11 '11) VIOEO I ALM REVIEW .. The New Ametlcan I Movaemellet•'" A aurvey of lllma pr<Jjjueed outside ol the traditional Hollywood studio · 1y11em tealurea 1n1erviewl with produc.,a Ira Wohl and John Hanson 10:06 al THE 0088AMER AL8ATA088: FLIGHT OF IMAGINATION The llll)ht ol a 70-pound englneleu aircraft over lhe Engltah Channel by • team of American aviation enrhu11aat1 11 documenl- ed (R) 10-.30 G) NEWS Cl) INQEPEHOENT NETWONC NEWS 11:00 IJ 0 G (I) ®J NEWS 0 STARTAEK While galherlng vege1111on samples on a ._mingly 1ranqu11 ptane1. Kirk and Spock witness an ambush 0 NEWLYWED GAME G) M•A•S•H Hawtteye sutter• a concus- sion wnen he wrecks h11 JOHN DARLING . IMP and 11 rNCUed by • Koreen rainlly wt1o cannot understand English . • aAAETTA Tony finds hlmaelf befng followed .. .... -ctles 10< a dange<ous ....,.. thief SI OICKCA~· Guest Gra/lana CNpm8n .ill 0 MIUTAl'fY WIVU The ohen lonely and 190lat· ed """of .. ..,.,al _, mamed to sokllets 118. tk>ned at Fort l-•• Army Bate In Tacaom, Washing- ton ••• ••plored 11:30 IJ (I) MOVIE * * •;, "Dfacula A 0 1972"' ( t9721 Christopher LM. Peter Cushing A modern- Cl a y version or the bloodlhtrsty Transylvanlan count sets his saghta and fangs on an allractlve young h1pp1e 0 TONIGHT Hoal Johnny Carso" Guest J., Stephooson. U @l ABC NEWS NIOHTUNE • 0 BULLSEYE tD HOGAN'S HE~ Hogen poses as a Naz• ottacef to d11Cred1I a wit- ness's identlfacauon ol h•m uaspy 8l) {I!) CAPTIOHED ABC NEWS -Ml>HIGHT- 42:00 D MOVIE The, IMF -voodoo lo locate • cache or llolen oold hidden by • llUpetltl• tloua c:rlmlMI. • ONE ITU' llYONO "The o.vtra l.augllt.," A condemned • murde<er 11 led 10 11141 getlowa f()( .... c:utlon at a Brltlllll prlaon 12:30 D TOMOfW>W Guest singer Tammy w I• LET'S MAKJ! A OfAL . ONE STEP MYONO .. The H*"lted U·Bolt .. A 11tange pounding on a aut>marlne orelt terrifies lhe Cr-and lmpetala lhe ,..,..... 1:00 D OOH LAN£ Guests· Stac.ey KNCl't, Tim Evens, ~ Tull., Ray Burgeu. Bat~• Foulds tD MOVIE * * * .. Keepet 0 1 The F1eme· ( 11143) 1<1ther1ne Hepburn, Spencef Trtcy While reM8rChlng a llO<y on a ,...,_ned AmerlCan. a repotter lelrn1 lrom I'll• w•d-thll he was. an lllC1 a lasc111 Cl) INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS I: 10 G OJ) POLICE STORY Joe F0<rester ends a gang war, then help• the mem- bers l1nd 8 new way OI Ille 1:30 Q) MOVIE * • '"> "Murder Mantllon ( 1970) A"aha Gade. Evelyn St-erl A couple and 8 young he<ress spend & lraght·lliled night In a dreary Old house 1:40 1J NEWS. 1:55 0 NEWS 2..-00 0 NEWS D MOVIE • * .. Sa1an·s Hervesl l 1965) Ge0<ge Monlgom- ery. Tipp• Hedren 3:001 HIWI 3:21 HIW8 ••• MOVll • • "lnaunc1 F0< Survival" ( 11173) Ooa.unentary. N8f· reled by Ale1iand« Scour- by. Mtn't mating and ..,,. vivet 11abl11 lorm a CloM p&fllllel 10 lhOM of the enj. mat kingdom 4:2081 MOVIE • •;, .. Deval On WhNIS" (111 4 7) Darryl Htckman. NorMf'I Naeh A group of youn9 dellnquenta get t<>gethef IO< • ""IOY ride " T hur•dafl'• oa,,, b 11e .tlorie• -MORNIG- I 1:00 ti) * * "'Red R1vw Range · ( 11138) John Wayne, Ray C0<ragan The Three Mesquu-a set out 10 nab a gang of cattle lhaeves operating along Iha Red River 11:30 D •••,,"Return To Pey- ton Ptace" (Part 1) (1961) Carol Lynl&Y. Jell Chan- elle• -AFTERNOON- 12:00 G) * * * "The Story 01 Estner Costello· (1957) Joan Crawf0ta Rossano Brana Q) • * * ··The last Time I Saw Archie ( t96 t) Robeft M1lchum Jack Webb 3:00 ~ • • '• Every Man Needs One· 11972) Connie Stevens. Ken Be<ry 3:30 0 • * • Thos Eanh Is Mane ( 1959) Roctc Hud- son Jean Sammons by Armstrong & Batluk .JOHN, ~.5 IS CANPY ~ANE ! SHE.'S AN IN~ FROM STATE U. ANO 5t€S GOING "TO 0E ~51SilNC3' JAN IN ~e PROOUC.TION OF "It:>~ SHOW/ PLE.ASE.DIO ~YOU, CANDY/ "I'M ~ YOU'U-00 A GOOD JOe AND LEARN A LOT.' ANC> REMEM0Ei:;> ... Go1111Jlin ' naen NBC plans late laughs for Friday NEW YORK tAPJ NBC has announce d it will introduce "Network 90," featuring the Second City improvis ational troupe, following the "Tonight Show" on May8. "Network 90 ," will become a regular Friday night feature in the time slot, replacing NBC's Ion g ·run n i·n g ''Midnight Special " The new comedy series is de- signed to counter the success of ABC 's "Friday," which pre- miered last year and has since taken a substantial portion of the audience previously aligned with N BC "s "Saturday Night Live." Kenny Rogers (left) stars as an aging gambler and Bruce Boxleitner is an impetuous young card shark in the TV movie "The Gambler" based OI) Rogers' hit song tonight at 9 on CBS. Channel 2. NBC said "Network 90" will feature many of the perfor:mers who appeared during the four- ye a r run of the syndicated "Second City" com~dy show. --SlBIOm.JFM F:ASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH YOU'RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH. &.w,.,,,u.s ~ o _____ r.J. Watch Academy Award• March so on ABC Beat Cock-eyed Comedy SI M•k&H NOWSHOWINQ At~ end Driw--ln• Evervwheret COITA--.A EDW.CINEMA .CINTIR 17M1•1 FOUNTAIN YAL.LaY F.Y. lWtN Ul-1800 FOUNTAIN VALUY ,.V. DIW'l IN ..... Call IU-1171. "'' • f.,. •o"'• to work tor "l~G;:.: ll·----·--- '4& .-ftlftf.Q\1'11" ... ~---_ ... -. • ,., ""'"'" '" CPl"l\M•.toa WHTMINITI" IDWAllOI Clltl•A Wllf .. , ..... O"ANa. c-MH~~ MllllOH Y1EJO IOWAllOO YIUO TWI• • .. .... " COl tA•IA II.A.~ ...... ORANQI " ......... • 6391119•, l J . i I . 1 --.1• l VFFI •; •• • Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, March 18, 1981 . . . ' Important news forultra low tar smokers . • • • Now the MERITidea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar- New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERIT for those who prefer . an ultra low tar cigarette. New MERIT Ultra Lights. It's going to set a whole new taste . standard for ultra low tar smoking · 4 Only mg tar Regular& ~nthol 4 mg "tar:' 0.4 mg nicotine rv. per cigarette by FTC Method ' . ·:-·· ' .1 I I 1 _., Dally Pilat WE DNESDAY, MARCH 18, 1981 BUSINESS STOCKS ES E7 In today's economy, a penny saved i s a penny lost . . . E -5. H~s F erragalllo thrown Rallis a bomb? Quarter~ack is close to signing with Montreal ... maybe By .JOHN SEV ANO OflheOailyf'l ... Staff It's official ... or as close to official as the deftnition can be without being official. Confused? Well. join the bandwagon because a lot of things surrounding the fut ure of quarterback Vince Ferragamo have been confusing lately. But , at le~st for the moment, one th i{lg seems unquestionably clear - Ferragamo will not return as the Rams' q uarter back next season. ln fact, it ap- pears to be only a m atter of time before the strong-armed right-hander inks a contract with the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League. Ferragamo came as close to commit- ting himself as he could Tuesday after· noon at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. Orginally on hand to promote an up- coming tennis tournament co-sponsored with the Angels' Rod Carew in April, Ferragamo was quickly swayed from t he present issue to another of far greater importance. For months, Ram fana have been curious as to Ferragamo's intentions. Would he stay with the Rams? Would the Rams offer him enough? Would Vince really ju mp from tat NFL to the CFL? Tbe questions were endl•s -as were the r umors, t he a n s wers a nd the grumblings. Finally, after weeks of speculation, Fer ragamo's agefl#. -David Fishof - flatly predicted last week that his client would sign with Montreal "within the next few days." Fisbof batked off a day later, however , saying ._ was "mis· quoted and misunderstood," Ferragamo's quotes came across as clear as a bell Tuesday aNI, although he wasn't at liberty to say anything was fi nalized, he did ser ve up some pretty hard evidence toward that daeory. Hea•over-heels for baseball Among Ferragamo's points were these: The quarterback had met with Mon· treat owner Nelson Skalbania who is waiting CFL approva~ on his ownership of the Alouettes. -Neither Ferragamo or bis agent have met with the Rams since J anuary. -An y meetings t hat had been scheduled by the Ra ms or Fishof were cancelled by one party or t he other. -The Rams' present contract offer is indeed less than the one presented to him at mid-season last year. At that t ime the Ra ms reportedly of· fered Ferra~amo a three-year pact at $750,000. The University of Nebraska graduate first accepted, and then re- jected the pact. The two sides really haven't seen eye-to-eye since. Thus, the stalemate . Montreal, on the other hand, which will h ave to compens ate Hamilton <w h ich owns Ferragamo's original rights> has reportedly offered · Fer- ragamo numbers of $400,000 per for four years plus a cutofthe gale receipts. It's figures like those that appear to have made Ferragamo's decision much eas ier to make. "I'd like to get this over wtlh. I'd like to get t his behind me." says Fer- ragamo. "But I'm not in a position to generate any movement right now." Meaning nothing firm has been put in front of him as far as a contract is con- cerned. Numbers have been talked but they're not on paper. The reason for the delay is that Skalbania has n't been approved yet as Montreal's owner . Skalbania, inciden- tally. also owns the Calgary Flames of the NHL and Calgary Boomers of the NASL If or when that approval comes, the <See FERRAGA MO, Page E2> VINCEFERRAGAMO Mesanfifth Triathlon: it's no small feet By CU RT SEEDEN Of th• OlllJ Pilot Stall Whale he was in Hawaii last month. Tom Boughey managed to squeeze in a little s wimming, bicycling and running, which is n 't that big of an accomplish- ment But when you consider the 27 year-old Costa Mesan s wam 2.4 m iles. rode 112 miles and then completed a 26-mile marathon through lava fields - all in a mere 10 hours, 24 minutes you'll st art to wonder just what kind of masochist is this man? Actually. Boughey is nothing less than a competitor in one of the most rigorous sports events devised -the triathlon, a three- event, one-day endeavor re- served for the fittest of persons. O N F E B. 14, Bo ughey, a former Corona del Mar High and UC Irvine s wimmer, along with about 400 entrants jumped into the Pacific Ocean near the little town of Kona on the island of Hawaii at 7 a .m . to mark the first step in the triathlon. Since Boughey had plenty of s wimming experience , the 2.4 mile course in the warm blue waters was a ci nc h. Before the triathlon was over, Boughey had battled head winds and 90 degree temperatures in a desolate lava field to finish four th. And would you believe he may go back and do it again next year'> "WHEN I DECIDE D to enter the race again < Boughey was fifth in the triathlon last year in Hawaii>. I started lo step up my training around Oc t ober ," Boughey recalls. "I started run· ning 43 miles a week , riding 250 miles a week on my bike and swimming about 10.000 yards "Since I swam in high school and college and ran while an graduate school. I was in pretty good shape," he continues. Jt was at the University of Califo rni a, Berkeley wh ere Boughey received his Masters degree that he really started getting interested in running and riding. ·'I s tarted riding the bike on tours to the Sierras while I was up there. but I tapered off when I came back down here," he re· calls. Orange Coast College centerfielder Mike Vander burg makes a diving catch of a ba ll hit by Cerritos' Scott Raziano in Tuesday's South Coast Conference game at OCC. Vanderburg made the cat ch in the second inning and the Pirates went on to a 12-2 rout complimented by a fine pitching perfor mance from Don Smith <below l. For story. see E4. But that was just the begin- ning. With ABC's Wide World of S ports taping th e event . Boughey and the others exited the water for just enough lime lo change c lothes be fore they hopped on their bikes for the 112-mile race SURPRISI NG I. V, Boughey shys away from marathons. "I don 'l like marathons I like lo run and I don't want to spoil that by r un nin g too much ." the easygoing electrical engineering major adds. Now a design engineer for Nordon. Boughey lives in Costa Mesa with his wife. J oan and It's like ohl times again with Farmer WESTWOOD <AP> Larry Far mer brings a solid basket- b a 11 background , heavily s teeped in Joh n Woode n philosophy. and a diverting sense of humor to his new job a s UCLA's basketball coach. T he first attribute may help him bring a sense of continuity to the school's basketball pro· gr am , a nd the second might ease him over rough spots that contributed to the departure of his three immediate pred - ecessors. FARM E R, a 30-year-old former Bruin star under Wooden and a UCLA assistant for the past six years. was named Tues- day to replace Larry Brown as the team's coach. "It's been a tough six years for m e," Farmer said at a news conference. "I had to gel rid of three coaches to get the job. Now guys are lining up for my old spot for the same reason.'' Asked how long he thought lt COWEN ' NAME STILL POPl'UR B OST ON (AP > -Dave Cowens, who played basketball for the Boston Celtics unUJ be re- tired this season, found bis name ln print again recently -very small print. ' Ke was named oo the state treasurer'• published list ·of penon1 who are owed money from fw1otten bank accounts. "It WM Dice to ... my name ln pr!nt.," 1ald Cowens. "You have to lleep viltble." may lake for him to receive his first criticism . he grinned and said: "What time is it." Farmer said he's quite aware of the pressure of coachi.ng the Bruins, who won 10 NCAA titles under Wooden before the legen- dary coach retired in 1975. ''TIDS IS DAY one of what I hope is not a two-year stint.'' said Farmer. "I have been with the Bruin basketball program for 11 years and I intend to stay a lot longer.·· He will t ry to coach "like Lar ry Farmer ," he said. "My background is closely linked to John Wooden, so my foundation is rooted in Coach Wooden's style," Farmer ex- plained. "The icing on the cake is what I've teamed from Gene Bar tow, Gary Cunningham and Larry Brown while I served un- der them." ASKED IF his teams will re- semble Wooden'• OG tbe floor, F armer erlnned and replied: "I hope so . . . at tbe ea4 of the t ame ." Brown had a 22·10 record bis first )'ear at tbe ~. ud bis young Bruinl •Ul'DriMd mOlt ob- se rvers by ma~IDI it to the championship 1ame ·of the NCAA tournament, where UteJ lost to Loutaville. Thia 1euon, UCLA wu 20·7 ud lost H.1 open- ing pme of tbe playoff•, a IW'· prl•IDC 71-55 def eat by Brtabam Youns tut Saturday. The 1eneral responee of the Bnaln playen to the coacbln& cbanr. teeOMd oae of happlnlla for anner tad Heines• over Brown'• departuN. i <See MESAN, Page E2> We need to pick things up -Nixon DALLAS <AP> Pro basket· ball 's defending world cham· pions. the Los Angeles Lakers, are too lackadaisical and don't have enough momentum lo ex- pect to defend their title suc- cessfully. according to guard Norm Nixon. "We don't have as much mom entum going for us as we did this lime last year." said Nixon. "We really need to pick things up our last fi ve or six gam es before we head into the playoffs. "WE NEED TO play a lot bet· ter defense. We seem to have a tendency to get a big lead and sit on it. We have become too lackadaisical." Despite Nixon's assessment, the Laken fended off the feisty Da llas Maverick.I for a 114-109 National Balbtball Association victory ~Y nlsht, giving Coach Pa.al W•thead his lootb career NBA win. The triumph also m oved the Laken to Within a~ games of Paclflc DlYiakJo-leadlng Phoenix and kept tbem two games ahead of San Antonio In the quest for home-court playoff advanta1e. LOS -ANGELES, which has already clinched a playoff spot, plays the Suns at Phoenix tonlt hl. W eatbead admitted the La.ken we r e preuured to beat tbe Maver icks before 171828 fans, the te1m11 flit home sellout and, DaUu t .. m officials aald, the lar1eat audtence ever to wattb an NBA expansion team. ··I have a lot of respect for this Dallas club." the Los Angeles coach said. "They don't give you anything. I've always felt Dallas played well as a team and they did tonight." B l:JT DALLAS Coach Dick Motta was too busy complaining about the officiating to respond to Weslhead's compliments. ·'I told our team that one of· flcial made at least 12 mistakes out there and ten of them went against us," he said. "We have a right to make a ijving, just as much as the Lakers do." The La kers were led by Kareem Abd ul -J a bba r's 28 points, and Motta said the of· ficlals were too protective of the huge center. ':IT'S ALMOST impossible to play against Abdul-J abbar," said Motta . "We played hard and we played well, but I'm ashamed of our lea~e tont1ht. I'll probably get fined ~ for saying au this, but I'm re ly mad a bout the of. flciatlns." Los Angeles led by four at halftime, 54·50, and opened a 18·point lead ln the second half, but Dallas chipped away in the c lo1in1 minutes until Abdul· Jabbar and Jamaal Wilkes, who had 24 polntl, took command ol the 1ame'1 elollnC moments. Dallu acorlq WU led by Bill Robln1lne'1 H polnta. Gu.rd Brad Davit hid M and tied blJ club 1lftlle-1ame 1'9COl'd o11e u - 1l1ta. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneadrt. March 11, 1911 .-~--------------~~ ·~...:..----~--.....i~----'""""!~~--..iii..~--..... ~--------------------------~----------------------~--, Fn•AP ..... &e~ Exclalmlna "l'm a walkina t•1 ol dynamite," Ill New York Yankee superstar Rellie JacUon eom· plained Tuesday that hi• feud with team owner Georae Steinbrenner Is botherln1 bJJ• play. The commenta by Jackson came after an exhlbitiOn same incl· dent lnvolvtn1 the 1lu11er and Atlanta Bravea' pitcher Al Hraboeky with Jackson lrYlnl to catch a ffrabolky fastball wltb h1I barehand. "I can't hold in my feelln1s. any more <about Steinbrenner).' the outfielder aald in the Yankee clubhouse. "I so much want to have a conlrontation with him that I can't wait for it to happen. I want to tear this building down, but I know be won't come In here." The two have had no COD· versation since Jackson went into Stein· brenner's doghouse by reportlJll two days late at the start of spring trainina. Jackson is hoping to renegotiate bil contract. But Steinbrenner, upset by Jackson's lateness, JACKSON has delayed the negotiations. ''I'm tired of the whole situation," Jackson said Tuesday. "It's affected my play. It's affecting it right n0w. I talked to the front office over a ·week ago. The front omce knows bow I feel. There's only one way to solve It -but I won't say what it is ." J ackson said he feels that Steinbrenner mever wanted to sign him to a new contract in the first place. ~ackson'a five· year deaJ expires after the 1981 season and 1r he does not sign, he can become a free agent and seek employment with a new team. Jackson currently makes about a half-mUlion dollars ~ year roughly $1 million less annually less than the Yankees new~st free agent acquisition, Dave Winfield. Steinbrenner traces Jackson's feelings to "pressure he feels from Win· fi eld's presence." "( could have predicted it," said the Yankee owner. "Winfield has looked so good and you can see it in Reggie's actions. I've known him for four years. I know how he reacts to these things. Winfield l~ks so g~ ~nd Reg~ie is .strug~l­ ing defensively and offensively ~d it IS botbenng hi~. a ht· tie. That's Reggie's way of react10g and I must say it s not very mature But I know Reggie, and he'll be there when the time comes." .....-------flttot~ ol tlw d•• ----- ··1 started chasing him and then I asked myself, 'Whal am I going to do if I catch him?"' -Chicago Wh ite Sox infielder Mike Woll, after he tried to chase down a purse snatcher outside the team's spring train· ing hotel Kings get beat by hungry Sabres INGLEWOOD (AP> The National Hoc key League playoffs haven't officially start· ed yet, but the Buffalo Sabres don't seem to understand that fact. "You have to work at playing playoff hockey and that's what we did tonight. .. said Buffalo de fenseman Jim Schoenfeld after the Sabres whipped the Los A"ng e les Kings 3 1 Tuesda y night. "We were scrapping to get the points. "WE WANT to finish as high as possib.le and get the home-ice ad vantage so that we can win the Stanley Cup. We want to win it this year." The Sabres. 34-17-19, have 87 points. the fifth-highest total in the NHL . The Kin gs. m eanwhile, are now a step back at 38·23·10 and 86 points. Buffalo went ahead of the Kings for good on Danny Gare's power -play goal with 13 : 11 . re· maining in the second penod. sna pping a 1 ·1 tie It was the 38th goaJ of the season for Gare, tops on the Sabres. STEVE JENSEN'S power- play goal, his ltlb of the season, with 4: 21 left i• the first period gave the Kings a 1-0 lead. The Sabres tied it just 1: 17 later on Derek Smith's 19th goal of the campaign. · Gare s napped the d eadlock early in the second period and Buffalo added an ins urance goal with 4: 11 to go in the period when Craig Ramsay connected on his 21st goal of the season. The third period was score- less. Ramsay, who turned 29 Tues· d ay. was playing in his 63lst consecutive r egular·season game, moving him into second place on the all-time NHL iron· man list. Onl)' Garry Unger, who played In 914 s traight g ames. is ahead of Ramsay. "OUR ZONE DEFENSE was outstanding tollight." said Buf· Calo assistant coach Ron Smith Angels keep rolling PHOENIX <AP) Reserve catcher Brian Harper hit a two· out. two-run double in the eighth i nning Tues day , giving the Angels a 5·3 exhibition baseball victory over the San Francisco Giants. Losing pitcher Allen Ripley • walked Rod Carew and, after Rick Burleson la id down a sacrifice bunt, Fred Lynn was iven an intention a l walk. RlpJey then struck out Donnie Clark but wild-pitched the run- ners to second and third. Harper then lined his double off the left· field fence to break a 3·3 lie. Chris Knapp pitched the OnaJ four innings for the Angels to pick up the victory. Brian Downing of the Ange ls and Jack Clark each hit solo home runs in the sixth inning. Downing's homer was the Angels' first ia the five spring games they've played, a nd he also drove in a run with a first· inning single. Don Baylor had a pair of singles for the Angels, including one that accounted for his first run batted in tbis spring. The sharp-fielding Angels have made juJt two errors thus far In the exhibition season, and both of those were by pitchers. The Angel s meet th e M ii w aukee Bte.)Vers in Sun City o n Wednesday, with Dave LaRoche, Freddie Martinez and J ohn D'Acquisto pitching for the Halos FreMP.,,.EI FERRAGAMO ••• flftal step Is said lo be a mere formality. And just where do the Rams fit In all this? "We (Ferragamo and his a1ent) haven't talked to the Rems since January," he ad· mitted. "I 'm not bitter and maybe It's partly my faull -It t&kes two parties you know. "I know I was their No. 1 priority u far as st1ntn1 players were concerned, but really tbere'8 nothina to ne1otlate. They made thetr flnrl offer and we m'ade ours. •m not 1oln1 anywhere wtthln the NFL. lttbey •( l\ema) aren't interested, than ' neltheraml." I Part of Ferr11amo'1 problem Ll , In sleninl ls that M'1 ,,_,..., short of time. Tbe CJ'L IW'ta training in tbe ID*lt t1' llay unlike the NIL wldela UIUally starts at the _. t1' ,..., • "I Just want to lilt It out ol the way a1 soon .. poulble, 11y1 Ferragamo. "Nothlnt 11 really concrete yet . Nothlna '• factual. Everythlnt that has been ori.nt- ed 10 far hu been f actlUoua," he adds. "Everyqme ls aUll 1hoot.ln1 ln the dark.' Jn the darkl Maybe. Certainly noth1n1 ll for IW'e. But the ha~ truth appea.ra to have Fen"qamo chan1tni bll colon from tlll blue and IOld of the Jlama to t'9 red and wlUtt ol Montnal. 1.c-~~-· ............................................ ...-~ .............. <Ill••• .... ,,.,.,.. Ardl GW ..... lcored a 1am•Wah IO polnta, m lil~IUCl1DI elfbl alta.itbt In a three·JilDui. nW"l'Y lallt lD the fourth quarter, to lift Chl~110 to a 11 ... lCll National BHketball AuoclatJoli victory over Milwaukee T\aeaday nllb(. In ott..r NBA action ••. Larr1 ..,.. scored Z5 polnta to paee 1urC1n1 Boetoa to a U.Z..tl vlator'1 over 1lumpln1 Waablncton ... Deft ...._., malt· ln~oalJ b1I tlft.b 1lart of tbt Muon for Denver, 1corld al po ta ad ntM1"Ve1 Ga.. G•llrllllell and &*J v ..... pe 1p lt9d a •ecoad·half rally that llftH lbe Nu11eu to a lJ4·112 win over SeatUe ..• New Jene1'1 MHr1ee t..eH led a t-0 overtime scorina treniy as \be Neta •tunned dJvl1lon· leadµli Phlladelphl~z . 12'-120 ... <Hort• C..nla 1cored 23 point. and Ja•et 8uat 21 to lri&1er San Antonio to a M.ee wl)\ qver Utah . . . Mike lllkMlf scored 31 polnll and BUJ LallllJbeer had 2$ polnt.s and lt rebounds u Cleveland beat Atlanta, 122·107 for lta third 1trat1ht victory ..• Guarda &ay WU.Ila., and llle•ae' Ray scored 20 point.I apiece and New Ybrk turned in lta beat defensive effort of the season, trounc· Int Jndlana, 114-89 for lta third straltht win . . . JI• Pauoe, Kelvbl a._maey and Myd1al 'fto•PHD comb.hied for 87 poCnta a1 Portland beat San Die10. 127-112 ... Junior forward llHrtee WUUama wu named Most Valuable Player of the 19I0-8l 11SC basketball team . . . Ned Fowler, coach at Tyler TexN JunJor College waa named basketball coach at Tulane Universf\y. Foatna'• ,.._.r 'N* llHa ll'f • Geo(1e FOll&er bit a two-run homer and Cincin· Ill natl pitchers combined for a three-bitter Tuesday as the Reda haqded St. Louis its third straicbt Grapelrult Leaaue loss, S·2, to highll1bt exhibition baseball. In otber aames ... Southpaw Steve Carttoa, a 24 · 1ame-winner for Philadelphia last year. pitched four im· pressive inn.Inga in a 4·1 victory over Boston ... Detroit's Rlclale Hebner went 3-for-4 and drove in a oair or runs as the ] Tigers defeated Houston. 8·3 . . . Rafael Ramlrel doubled home the tie-breaking run in the ninth inning to pace Atlanta to a 6-f victory over the New York Yankees . . . An error by Montreal short.stop Cbrt1 Speier on a rundown play permitted Baltimore to score the tie-breaking run lo the sixth inn.Ing enroute to a 6·3 victory ... Du Driessen doubled home two runs in the first inning and four Cincinnati pitchers combined for a five-hitt~ as the ,.osru Reds' ~plit squad defeated Minnesota, 3·0 ... 'Dwayne Murphy's two-run double broke a seventh· inning tie as Oakland Pdsted a 3-1 win over Milwaukee ... Home runs by Hubie Brooks, Lee Ma11llll and Mike Jorgen.wa, led the New York Mets to an 11·4 victory over Pittsburgh . Cal Pol11 (Po•oraa) ••••• Car11f'l'Glf' POMONA -Dan Carnevale. an assistant m coach at Long Beach State for the past four years . was named head basketball coach Tuesday at Cal Poly <Pomona). Carnevale, 32, played his college basketball at the University of Delaware and was team captain in 1970-71. He also served as an assistant coach at Colorado State in 1973-77 before coming to Long Beach. " .................... .,.. ..... ,,,,.,. ... A 11 e &.a. seor.d two aOell, iaclucliaa a Sil tborthandlJd effort late lD tlae tadrd .Deriod, to siH ' the N .. York l1laaiden a N U. wW. lloetreal la NaUoul Horkey Lea.-.. p&lj 1'Mllda7 DJS)at • Montnal, wblch b• Iott JUlt ~ alnee Jan. 11, had IDOYed ahead 1-2 oa BM Ga1M1'1 IO-foct 1lapebot at 18:2t of 1" !second period, only 35 Mcondl after KaUur ltnotted tbe aeon wltb b1I lint coal of the nilbt .. a.al ClMU.r and Peter ltaa&ay aeored JOalt 21 ·~ apart durtn1 • tbJ'ee._,al barrace ill the third period u Quebec rallled from a 3-1 de· ficlt to beat Detroit, 4-3 . . . Jerry a.tier'• blaa1n1 abot from the rilht faceoff circle with leu than three mtnutea to play pve Vancouver a 4·3 win over Plttaburgh In a &•me marred by a first-period brawl. •-•aa..-•l•r•••n NEW ORLEANS -If the National Football m Leacue draft wefe belna held today. arid nobody 411 • called within the next five minutes, Reisman Trophy winner Georce Rogers would become a New Or lean Saint, Coach Bum Phillips said Tuesday. "But make sure you 1et that 'today,' In there, because it miaht not be true tomorrow," be said. Phillips said that in his S3 days as head coach of the Saints, he's bad a chance to review team personnel, talk to the players and get a handle on this sprtn1's draft. ·'I've learned a lot of good places to eat ,'· he added. Phillips. fired by Houston after last season, was named the Sainta' head coach replacin& Diu Stanfel. who served four games after the firing of Dick Nolan. Alt.hough the Saints' defense was victimized all season and Phillips said the team's offense was the strongest facet, he said be bad no ph.ilosopbical problems with drafting the South Caroli.ua running back. "He's the best player available," be said. ltfdge telb Raf.,._ I-A la tlw pl•rf' A judge denied Tuesd.ay the National Football • League's request to have the Raiders-NFL trial moved out of Los Angeles. The NFL contended that the antitrust suit, in which the Oakland Raiders and L.A. Coliseum Commission claim the NFL and others conspired to block the Raiders' move lo Los Angeles, could not be tried fairly in Los Angeles ... The Clev.eland Browns named Paul Kackett quarterback coach. Hackett, 33, had been in charge of the passing game at USC for the past five years ... The St. Louis Steamers were fined an un- disclosed amount of money and ordered to s uspend their public address announcer after he allegedly threw a punch at an opposing player during Major ~ague Indoor Soccer quarterfinals last week . . AJan Mlater, Britain's former world middleweight boxing champion, came back from a nervous start to outpoint Era.le Slagletary of Philadelphia in a 10-round bout at Wembley, England ... NBC Sports has signed a multiyear contract to broadcast seven PGA Tour events beginning in 1982 . . . Betb Madsen of Aspen. won the women's giant slalom at the U.S. Ski Association Junior Olympics ... The Los Angeles Aztecs announced they have acquired midfielder -defender Miile McLeaagben from the Toronto Blizzard for an undisclosed amount of cash. Roger Carlson A banner seaSon Reflections on a bas ketball campaign to re· Uni versity. too, found success under new TOMBOUGHEY Fro• Pagf' EI MESAN •.. two daughte r s. Maggie and Elizabeth. He's hoping to take all three with him lo Hawaii next year -if he decides to compete again. Boughey says the re were times during the 10-hour. 24· minute ordeal when the desire to pac k it in and look for the nearest jacuzzi and tequila sun- rise sounded like a good idea. ·'The running was the hardest part. The s wimming isn't too bad and the 112 miles of riding at least gives you something to support your body weight. But in running, your body weight is shifting with every move," he explains. "There's a time near the end of the bicycle race when you start thinking this might be a good time to quit.·' he adds. AND WHEN YOU realize you've still got a marathon in front of you, the Idea really sounds appealing. "There were a couple of hiUs when we started running, but after that, the next aix or seven miles were on a flat course along the coast," Baughey says of the marathon. Aided by stations along the way with either waler or ERG for the uklnc, a.nd even a few cheerleaders spurring them on, Bou1hey and the others managed to pull throuch the event, with times ranglne from the winnine nine hours, 38 minutes to "a 70-year-old guy who took 27 hours to do It. •'About the only thins that happened to me was I developed a raah," Bou1hey 11y1. But one unlucky participant was bit by a car du.rtnc the bike competJUon. "Thal happen1 when there's only one alpaJ and a couple ot atop alps ln such a UtUe town," Boupbe aaya, addinC that lbe com tor was not aerioualy ln· Jur . !nlerln1 the bicycle race, Bouabey wu ln 1lxlb pJace, but he faltered to 1.atb by the tlme be waa ready to tack.le tbe muatbon. It wu'durtn1 tbat nm be over· ca me nlnt pel"ICJftl to pull out the f 0Urtb•pl&t9flnla~. member: coach J eff Cunningha m . The Trojans earned a CIF Twenty times to the gate and a winner on 17 playoff bid for the first time in years. occasions in Cl F playoff action that has to be There were. of course. disappointments. one of the finest five-year records in Orange Coun· Costa Mesa never quite made it despite the ty coaching -and it belongs to Corona del Mar scoring of Ken Bardsley < 19 2J Ocean View's loss High Coach Jack Errion. lo Lakewood in the second round still has a lot of Errion's Sea Kings climaxed the 1980-81 people scratching their heads in wonderment. • seasbn Saturday night with a second CIF title dur-Maler Oei was a Cl F 4·A playoff entry. but the ing his reign . Monarchs have seen better limes than this year's Nol bad for a coach with 31 seasons under his 9·15 record. Like about a dozen straight winning belt. campaigns. And how about Fountain Valley's Dave Brown. who coached his team to 20 stra ight victories. in· AND, THERE IS still more when it comes to eluding all 10 in the competitive Sunset League? the positive side which brings us to one Larry Sunderman and his Estancia Eagles, who went to OR LAGUNA BEACH Coach Craig Falconer, the CIF 3·A semis. finishing 19-9 des pite no return- who in one year as a walk-on coach without a ing starters and no height. player over 6-3 and for the most part a virtual five· Sheer talent wins games and Sunderman prov- m an squad of 6·1 players, turned the Artists into a ed it with his coaching ability. The Eagles beat 17-7 CIF playoff entry. The 1979-80 team was 3-18 the odds and for it Sunderman was na med Orange a nd lost its last 14 before Falconer changed things Coast area and Orange County Coach of the Year quickly, winning four straight and eventually for 1981. knocking off San Clemente and Mission Viejo When yo u consider the competition he was in- (twjce> in league play. And there was Irvine volved with, hi s award deserves an asterisk. Coach Al Herring. who turned his Vaqueros Individual players? around and cam e within a victory of a CIF playoff It was the final year for Wayne•Carlander. invitation. Ocean View's 6·8 phenom who will leave a void OCEAN VIEW HIGH Coach Jim Harris and which will not be fill ed. his close friend Brown of Fountain Valley, had Neither will the sheer energy of Fountain Orange County's No. 1 and 2 teams in the rankings Valley's J eff Christensen be picked up, a nd in a flip-flop situation. • . Westminster is going to have to do some tall No one, despite an early season Ocean View searching to come up with someone to make the victory over Fountain Valley. could gel a handle Lions forget Mick DeLavallade. on just who was really No. 1. Both were ou.tst_and· Jeff Pries and Mark Spinn? Two more in a ing, and as fate would have it. both were ehmmat· long line of Corona del Mar standouts ... ed on the same night In the CIF 4-A second round. • • • Huntington Beach raced to an 11·2 non-league NOTES AND THINGS Cal State Dominguez record. Westminster stopped Compton and Tustin, Hills is the site of the Carson All-star basketball among others, Newport Harbor swept ~o another game Friday night (7). The all-star game will fea· CIF playoff bid and came within five pomts of one lure Servile High's Scott Sinek, Long Beach Poly's of the biggest upsets of the year before falling to Troy Carmon, Keat Seymour and Darryl Pat. Long Beach Poly, 45-40, and Marina finished 12·12. tersoa and many others . . . The recent CIF wrestling championships at Westminster High EDISON FINISHED second to Fountain were another rousing succ~ss, thanks to the ex· Valley in the Sunset League race with a lineup of pertise and enthusiasm or Westminster Athletic juniors, then proceeded to eliminate Compton and Director BW Boswell, one man who hasn't folded Notre Dame (Sherman Oaks ) from the 4·A his tent regardless of mounting duties ... playoffs before succumbing to San Marcos in a Westminster football star Miile Lewellya appears game much closer than anticipated. headed for Boise State. Quarterback David Hams Not one Sunset League team po8ted a losing hasn't decided yet , but Brown and Harvard are ~r~e~c~o~rd~-~~~~~--------------~~~-----highonth::.;..:e~l~is~t~·------------------------~ Q ; . . , •...•..•. -....... ...... _______ .......... ... l I I I I I \. 26 INCH MENS WITH BALLOON TIRES • 26 12 125" Balloon White wan Tires • Oelu1e Exira Comfort Sacldle M • Coaster Brake IVI ------MV.,.,..., MURRAY ....... "TEAM MURRAY ~ 20" BMX" ~-- SPECIAL VALUES · fOR TODAY THRO SUNDAY Se hoblo Espanol LA MIRADA 14207 ROSECRANS AVf. PHONE: 944·6437 fO• AUTO, I OATft HO"'f Ol •.V. ms AU • SIZE GlASSfS COSTA MESA Orange Coast DAILY PILOTJWed~ay, March 18,1981 MOlonnft• SPAii PLUGS IVY AN EXTRA SIT Al THHI LOW LOW NtaS s9~.~f9~ '" .. \E3 ~: I ~, .,I ---~ ,----=-=----=--. -. , j ·_,;-· l : -.-... ------I 1 --._I I \ "' \ • -I ' ~ , _'-J . -• . 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Of SAN Ollcn:> FWY PHONE: 870.0700 PHONE $49·1'33 OPEN MON. THRU F.RI I A.M.-9 P.M./SAT. I ~M.·6 P.M./SUN 9 A.M.-5 P.M. • • ' OrangtCout OAJLY PILOT/We4nffday, March 18, 1~1 BASEM~ /BOATING/ VOLLEVIALL =l C'alJo San ·Lttem r.aee Winds change qtiickly 81 .u.JION LOC&Aa&\' ........................ Feut or famine. That'• beeo an 1d11e ln yacht racln1 •lnce Ume lm· memorial. Botb the feut and the fam ine are uaually dllhed up by the weather man. The 190-mile Newport to Cabo San Lucu race la no excep. Uon. 1cramble the corrected time ltaDd· l lnl•· The •trool wlndl back near the eftd of the neet wu caualn1 eome prob-·•• lem1 u three boata reported 1ear failures that virtually put them out ol POa THE ftUT two days ol the race which started Saturday at 1 p .m., th e 87·foot sloop Merlin grabbed a "bone in her teeth" and wae holding down the elapsed Ume and COM"eCted Ume lead acrou the the race. Neil Underwood'• SUnkiat from Anacapa wae ln Turtle Bay with a broken maet 1pnader ; Dick Arneson'• Midnight Sun, San Die10, ""' was bead.in for •helter at Cedroe I Island, and f..1wam Stanley's Driller. J sailing under reduced aall while the crew attempted to repair a rudder J quadrant. l board. But thin&• cban1ed dramatically Tueaday when Merlin ran into Ucht air1 off Cape San Lazaro, 196 miles from the flnieh, while the smaller boata back ln the n eet were still en- joying strong windl. At the 8 a .m . J*itlon report Tues· day Merlin wa1 still holding the elapsed Ume lead but bad dropped to fifth in the over all corrected time standings. Moving up fa.st from the rear was Mike Schachter's Intrepid, a Class D entry. to take over the handicap lead in fleet. Second place in fleet was be- lng held by Bill Palmer's Shenan- doah, a Class C entry; third was Claaa 1tandlngs as of Tuesday at 8 a.m . CL~ A -1. Merlin, DiCk Steele, NHYC; 2. Hana Ho, Morrie Kirk, BYC; 3. Sunset Boulevard, Patrick Sullivan VYC CLASS B -1. Ghost, John Reynolds, NHYC ; 2. Free En- terprlae, EUinger/Turpin, NHYC ~ 3. 01' Roler. Kirk Elliott, NHYC. CLASS C -Shen andoah, Bill Palmer, NHYC; 2. Amiga, George LeFevre, SDYC; 3. Crescendo, William Banuch, SDYC. CLASS D -1. Intrepid, Mike Schachter, BYC; 2. Kind.red Spirit, Milt and Marty Vogel, LBYC; 3. Humblebee, Bob Lord, WCYC. Ghost, a Cius B entry skippered by C John Reynolds. and fourth was Free Eagles drop M E nterprise, a Class B entry co- skippered by Dick Ettinger and Estancia High, ranked sixth in this Hartley Turpin. week's Orange Count y volleyball OCC'S MIKE VANDERBURG SCORES ON A IACAIFICE FLY BY ED FARRELL IN THE FIFTH INNING. AT THE t A.M. ROLLCALL, Steele poll, upended No. 7 ranked Costa said he was tacking down wind with Mesa Tuesday night, 15-11, 12-15, a light spinnaker to maintain a 15-11, 1~10. Orange Coast back • ID form semblance of speed. He was still Estancia is now 3-0 in league play estimating a finish lime before noon while Costa Mesa dropped to 2-1. which would give Merlin a new Leading the way for the Eagles were elapsed time record. Steele said be middle blocker Bill Mattias and Brad believed hls closest competitor boat-Elligood. for-boat was Morrie Kirk's Hana Ho. In other matches, San Clemente about 50 miles astern. defeated Huntington Beach, 15-12, Pirates score easy 12-2 baseball uin over Cerritos T HE "IFFY" PART of the race 15-4, 15-9; La Quinta dropped Corona was yet to come. It is not unusual for del Mar. 1-15. 15-7, 15-7, 15-9; Irvine By CURT SEEDEN Ot IM 0.11, Pll•I Sult As strange as il :.ounds, Orange Coast College entered Tuesday's South Coast Conference baseball contest with visit- ing Cerritos with genuine concern. Coach Mike Mayne's Pirates. winners of 10 non-conference games against just one loss, had gotten off on the wrong foot Saturday in a setback to Santa Ana in the league opener. AND THE PIRATES were up against a team which had reeled off 11 straight victories en route to a 14·2 overall record. "I was afraid we had peaked too ear- ly," a relieved Mayne said after the Pirates destroyed Cerritos, 12·2 behind the pitching of ace starter Don Smith and the hitting of just about every starter in the lineup Mayne has said in the past that he was concerned with his team's ability to beat the tougher South Coast Con- ference opponents with consistency like the Bucs do in non-league outings. And after the Dons handed the Bucs a 4-3 setback in the league opener. Mayne's thoughts of a possible collapse seemed quite real. B UT ENTER SMITH. The sophomore right-hander who has won 15 straight games over a two-year period, scattered eight hits and was never really threatened as the Pirates evened their league record at 1-1. His pitching was backed up by the Pirates' 16-hit attack. The heart of the OCC batting order - namely Larry Lee, Mike Vanderburg, and Reggie Mootgomery did most of the damage. Lee, a sophomore second baseman, drilled a double and triple. the latter driving in two runs in the sixth inning, while Montgomery, who possesses a .462 batting average and a .750 slugging percentage, belted two doubles and picked upa couple of RBI. M EANWHJLI!;, Rich Amaral, who has found a home at third base and in the leadoff role for·the Pirates, rapped three singles and then turned in the de- fensive effort or the day with a leaping one-hand stab al a line drive destined for the left-field corner. At that time, the Bucs held a precarious 3-1 lead in the fourth inning . Earlier. Van- derburg's slidint catch or a drive in the second inning robbed Cerritos' Scott Raziano of a sure extra-base hit. It was a game where just about everything went right for the Pirates while the Falcont couldn't come up with the key hlt when It was needed. "They're a much better team than this," Mayne .said of Cerritos af- terwards. "But that's the way it is in this league. You can't get up for the vic- tories and you can't get down after de- feats." THE ,OCC COACH, who guided the Pirates to the stale championship last year, said as long as his team plays a yachts to spend several hours under beat El Toro, 14-16, 15-4, 15-9, 15-3; sound ball game mentally, be doesn't the lee of Cabo Falso, a few miles and Ocean View edged University. expect too many problems as the season from the finish. This could further 15-4, 12-15, 9-15, 15-12, 15-2. progresses. .~--------~--------'---'--~-------- "The league is a whole new season. Mentally, we played well against Santa Ana. We just didn't gel the hlts early," Mayneexplained. MOTICE 1--New ,,,..,_.. M.-,,,,.., "--1--1\otWI HALECIEST A ... Aft ..,.J9MS & I - --.. COSTA -557-7234 Tuesday, the Bucs jumped on l;erritos starter Mike Pinkard for two doubles, two walks and two runs in the first in· ning. They added three more in the next ~=========-'------------------­ four frames to take a comfortable 5-1 lead. MONTGOM ERY, the 6-2. 215-pound freshman from Fremont High, con- tinued his torrid hitting. The big right- handed power hitter ripped his pair or doubles and also smashed the ball hard in the sixth inning. Unfortunately for the Bucs, Cerritos second baseman Craig Owens snared the shot and con- verted it into a double play. "Reggie hit the ball well again," agreed Mayne. "He can hit anything." Montgomery's hitting streak reached 13 games with bis 2-for-5 performance. About the only bad mark on a near- perfect day was the end of Smith's string of innings without giving up an earned run. And it took a bas e hit by the Falcons' Tom Thomas with two out in the bottom of the ninth inning to break the string of 36 innings. I Thomas, in fact, knocked in both of the Falcons runs, sending Smith's ERA "up"to0.44. SUPER SPECIAL ON TH151 I SIDS MICHELIN X T••11WWtew• HURRY I THEYY«>N'T LASTI Lions blank Chargers Rustlers erupt for 19-6 win; Gauchos ~ fall SIZE l!o'-J '"6176" 14 SUGO EXCH PAICE s 1 ()()35 SALE PRICE S6990 MICHELIN XZX Westminster senior pitcher Rich Cas- tle scattered four hits as the Lions blanked Edison. 4-0, in a battle of Sunset League powers to highlight prep baseball action Tuesday. Here's how it went: Weltmfnlter 4, Edleon O The Lions are now 2-0 in league and 6-0 overall as Dan Twiss hit a double triple and two-run slngle to lead the at: tack for Westminster. Westminster scored a run in each of the first two innings, then added two more in the third. Vince Cook had an RBI double for the Lions who knocked out nine hits on the day. Huntington Beach a, Marina 2 In another Sunset League battle, the Oilers (1-1) scored rive r uns in the first inning and coasted behind pitcher Steve Buttons who allowed just three hits in six innings before being taken out with a sore back. Bobby Thompson drove in two runs with a triple in the inning and John GonzaJves, Greg Shirley and Brian Beard all dro,ye in one each. Shirley drove in another run in the second u the Oilers collected 10 hits again.at four Marina pitcben. Shirley. Thompson, Oorualves, Richy Carillo and Steve stutitz all had two hits for Huntington Beach. Marina dropped to l · 1 in league with the loss . Ftn. Valley I , Newpot1 3 The Barons 0 -1 i9 league, 6-3 overall) continued their wianing ways as they scored three runs in the ninth to break a 2-2 tie. Rick LaMarshe and Brian Ayers com· bined to limit Newport Harbor to just six hits whlle strikine out eight. In the ninth inning, Brian Bass singled to drive in two runs and Tim Martino followed wit.h a base hit for one more run. The Sailors are now 0·2 in league. Ocean View I , Kennedy O Junior left-h anded pitcher Kevin Stanley allowed just three hits In pick- ing up his lourth wia against no defeats and the Seahawks tsiproved their Em- pire League record i. 3·0. 7-0 overall. Stanley struck out 10 Kennedy bat- ters, giving him -41 1lrikeouts In 27 in- nings of work. He bas not Jlltowed an earned run this yeat. The Ocean View staff has allowed Jutt two earned runs all season. Golden West College spanJted out 17 hits enroute to a crushing 19-6 victory over LA Southwest while Sadd.leback fell to Chaffey, 2-1, to highlight com- munity college baseball action Tuesday. At LA Southwest, Wes Collins hit two home runs and drove In five runs to lead the Golden West assault as the Rustlers improve~heir conference record to J.2, 5-7 overall. Ironically. Collins' replacement, Bill McTeir, a freshman from Fountain Valley, pinch hit for Collins in t he eighth inning and smacked a home run that traveled some 500 feel , according to GWC Coach Fred Hoover. It was McTeir's first hit of the year. Marc Crockett picked up the win in relief of starter Mark Stone. Crockett, a freshman from El Dorado High, was the Dr. Pepper Orange County Player of the Year in 1980. Other Golden West batten having big days at the plate were Dave Ward who was 3-for-5 and scored three runa, Jack Settle 2-for-.4, including a double and tri· pie and Steve Springer who h·ad two bib and keyed a nine-run fifth inninl for the Rustlers with a three-run doable. TWO HUGE HAU.8 PACKED WITH TRUCKS ANO TRUCKING EQUIPMENT Anaheim ·eonnn11an r.enter (Acton from Oiantytlftd) ktll 18, 19, 20 · 1 ;00 to 8:30 p.m. DaNy MIER ON! TRUCK SHOW IN MERICA t t ' EA,._14 ~J '216/T6A14 s 107" 1 s7710 QA,.,. ut-J~Ul/76AUI Sl 1682 s7990 QA,.16 W-JJ.mn6Al6 .s131 61 s 8CJ90 ~16 UP-~/71A16 s1444s s 9990 LA,._16 ~J'-/16AUI Sl4892 s10490 LA,._16 MICHELIN X TUllLISS WHITIWALL 9UOG EXCHANGE OUlll PRICE BR78-1 3 .... $ 96.U .. 76.90 CR78-14 . . . . 100.35 . . 79 .90 ER78-14 .... 105.06 .. 8'.00 FR78-14 .... 107.41 .• 85.90 ~78-14 .. '. 116.03 .• 19.90 t-R78-14 . . . . 122.95 . • 92.00 ~78-1 5 .... 116.82 .. 93.00 t-R78-15 .... 121.52 •. 97.90 .R78-15 .... l'I/.79 .. 99.90 P165/75-13 .. 82.32 .• 6'.90 I uMfgt~J,~ DR16.S .... 149.00 •••• 126.90 815R16.5 .... 161.24 •••• 136.90 9916.5 .... 183.99 ' •.. 156.90 1<R16.5 .... 191.75 •••• 163.90 Shel''""' ...... fer,.,.... c... TllMffalMckw91 SOOG 0..1111 Do.ANGE PfllCE 1s.s..12 ...... S.58.99 .... a .oo 145-13 ...... 54.52 .... Cl.90 155-13 ...... 62.23 .... 49.90 165-13 ..... .' 69.80 .... 55.90 175-13 ...... 76.87 .... 59.90 165-14 ...... 72.75 .... SB.90 175-14 ...... 79.56 .... 6.1.90 185-14 ...... 86.30 ...• 68.90 185-14 Ren ... 95.36 .... 75.90 145-15 ...... 60.36 .... e .90 155-15 ...... 69.72 .... Sl90 165-15 ...... n.22 .... 59.90 70 SERIES 175/70-13 .. $75.03 •..• 59.90 185/70-13 .... 83.03' ... 65.90 185/70-14 .... 88.60 .... 69.90 ,XVS ANDXWX Shefhh41 .... , ............. IUOO DCHANOI 16S-13XAS .. $80.29 165-14XA.S . . . . 83.66 165-1~ .... 88.82 185-14XVS . . 120.\1 185/ZQ-XVS .. 117.1'7 195/70-14XVS 123.03 Z>S,170-14XVS 131.26 185/70-1 SXWX 181.36 205/70-lSXWX 'IJJ7.'.Ji 215/70-15XW>C 21460 0..1111 PllllCE 64.90 66.90 6'.90 95.to 92.90 97.90 105.00 1Sl90 116.00 113.00 ,,. ._..,._ .. I'.& T ol 1.11111 L_!D a e/Y~ffUe~ nau ............ .,. • SHOCI AllOU•S ··TUMI UP Jpoo I. COAST HWY •• CORONA DB. MAI PHOMI 644 1022 VIS4' JI j1 I ·' . ;1 ~I ~I . • • r 1 1 FOR THE RECORD/ BUSINESS -(__ > . 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U 14 sno•• on 110•• Bull••o 11 a • 2l Lo• Anotln911 u Go•h.s.Bufltlo. Edwtrd> LO\ 41'Qtln uu .. o A 10 Joi TYHCS.y •S<or .. Ouebet •. 0.1ro.1 J Mon I re•t ), NV t \l.tncJ•t, l V•ntou.,er 4. P1thbi.lrQh l WCT tournament , ............. . Stc•fld It-s1,,.111 Jimmy Con~s cltl. Tim Wllklnson. •2. .. 1. Busie< Mottram def B•l•u l •rouy, .. 2, •·l , Sanely Mayer 0.1 Boll Lull, .. ,, 4·1, Gene Mayer def. l(evln Curren, •·2, w. ll•oul ltamlrer oef. M.tnutl Or•ntn, i..t, t.-t, Roll c;.!lrlnQ 0.1 Marc Albert, t.-t, .... .... Women'• tournament , .......... ""''---~· Chro• Everl Lloyd ~I ••• BuO.ro••. • 0 6-t. H•"" -lko•• def Bell! Horton, .. 1. .... Wendy T11mbull O.f R-Blount, .. 1 • ._2, t-l, VlrQlnl• W-d9f Bttlln• Bunge, S·I. •-> ... l . 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HemmtrmtlSle<· Borroto IGI def WtlllnDIH'll· Tun1IAll, • 0, , .. , l·J Women ~NITY COt.1.llGI Or .... CNlt 1, ..... ~I SI ...... C11shlnt IOCCI O.f. RHd, ._l, H . 6 I, G .. llKll COCCI clef. F-, ._1, 1-J. S<'-'· l .. r COC(} dtf TtwNr, ._,, M , GIWfltkl COCCI *4. NtllOfl, 6-1, .. 2. ICllOrttr COCCI IMf. (.fflaftU, t-l, 6-2, Orn "''" IOCCI Ott Lope1, ...... M . o..ee.. C\lthln9.,on9 Cl'I dtl Scllo•llltr Ge rllelcl, i.. M , .... Goet!Mh AMCI COCCI def. T11rne•·Nllf0n, 6·0, •·l , KllOrtY· Oratmln COCCI clef Cottant•L-1, ._,, .. ,. Htthechool N---' N-17, M9nol~ I ~ I Mee,... INHI ci.1, A11tUn, 1 J, Ott H8"Af' IY, .. ,, #. (tawf-, 6-2, ca.t , HeyMJ, H , l..,.nftafl CNHI -.. t, •.O, t-1, t •J, J- Myort INHJ -M , M , •-t, 6•0, JOIWI Mytrl (NH) IOfl. ._,, -· M , •.O, 6·J. ~ 51•nHll·Smllll CNHI clef, G LYcley·JonH. 6-1, .. 0, *4. 81entlWlnli•I . LyO.y, Ml M ; Mllter-M<Oeftnoll CHHI -· 6-1, 6-', It· , .. 1. ,..., ..... 11.u•...,...,,, ~ Den Q•r CUI def. J tllftllOll, •• ,, def. 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HAs·Toronto, MacM Chit • M«- "'0" M.b "· ... , ••• , 4 tel lr-111~. l'te.I New Yori. 011 •U 00~ t I• t PllUDur9ll 001 001 ~4 9 7 Stoll, F•lcone CO, Bom~tk (~ROberh 191 . •no Tre•lno C~delarla. ry Ul. Jt<k>On (I), Ttllulvt 191 And N •••• W· Scoll L·C•ndtlarla. HA• N• York, Brook,. ~t11t11. Jor911nsen, PftUburon. Torres Moirlnen t, Pad rt> j S•n D•tllO l•t Ttm~;:r~ 14 s ll o SHUit 100 140 QOl.9 9 0 P•c•ll•, ti•mm co . 01msto••C11 tnd F•ney, P•rrou, 'Stein UI. Bacsl( (II ano N•rron. V•lle tlJ W~P•rroll ~P•ctll• HA S•n OofllO, MortftO A'll, lr-t<s 1 C•t SCottSO.lt , Arlt I E M1lw•ukee 000 100 1 4 0 0 ••1.tnO 000 100 ·l I 0 H .. s. ICHIOfl 141 Bo1t•no Ill Sim moll>, M.trllntt Cll, u~lord. " ISi, Fottr Ill ano O.mowy. W·Jon .. ,.l(uton HA·M tloNtWil.ff. OcJhvte A"9911 S, Gleftl.s l (II P-1111, Arl1.I CAlllornu1 200 001 d .s I o S•n Fr•Mo>eo 002 001 oa.1 10 O ltnn, ICn.oop 161, •no Oowni1 Harper •• , Hergesnelrne•. A•PIO ts>. Ytll (9) •na M•y, Sa~-(11. 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I.eland Ill •• Asnby, Polry, S...C1er 1•1 Wu•er Ill, ienni l•I And Oyer W Petry L Aunte H ,.HOU•lon, Bouqo• College ecorH Un••tr.,ty of S.n OofllO 1l·2, ,J C S.ntt BtrD••• 12 1 IW>concl 11•me 9 onn.s, d•rlo MU) USC 4. Oral Aoo..rtsl S..n D•lllO St 14, UCUI S Atusa Ptt1foc I. PePC>erdtne • Community collegf CMftey J. S.-N<k f Chelley 000 100 ~1 U I S.OOlelW<k 000 000 I I I OtH•rT. Kranr Cll. Still <•> Am.nt•, Amo• end Irwin W OeHaf1. -Am41ya 1 HI. 2B-<:01 ICNfleyl, Ev•ns wtneCNI CSeddle~ckl 3B Giii IChaH I HA Am•nlt CO..lleyl. ~-CN1t U, Cerrito Cerrotos 001 000 00 1 I I Or•n11t CCN>I 201 021 12"-n 1' l Plnk•rd, B•ll•~dale <S>. Ff-..,ly \11, Brown Cit MOCI HHrran, Smith• Dix. W Smltl\ U·OI. L -Plnkud. 28 t, Vin· dorbur9, Sliwinski, Montvomer COrenoe Coa U 1, Aul•no 1Cerrllo11 lB Let 1oren11• Coull G ...... Wiit It, LA le_ ... ,, GOldtnWest 001 290 34°"'" 11 0 L.4 Soulllwest 000 OtO 000-• 9 1 Stone, Crockett Ul. J ..og. l'I -.0 Stllull, Cou111ro Cl), Proctor , Herrl., U I, •net Young. Dll<lcMO 141 W-Crocktll I.fl. L Proc:ler (1·2) 29-$0<11\ger, c Golden West>. JB-S.llle, c Golden WHll; HA-Collin• CGolcMn Wtttl. Perkt< CUI SOlll Hlah acttool O<-View J. I(_., t<tnnody 000 000 Ocu n II-200 000 B•rton •nd Tl\yber9, SI •Y •nd M•lon•y W-Sl•nl.., 16-0) L--..,,, (.1) ".,.,..... .. ec11 •.""'-~a HunllnttonBNcll SIO 000 .... 10 1 Marin• 000 001 I J 2 B1111-. B"'k.. (61 Md Siii ; HllM, 9,,,,,.11 co, OflOfl CJ), Lvstlt CSI Nt- •ncl FIOrH. W-Butlof>f (l.f).1, • le- SlllrltY IH1111llnoton .. ecll>. ,==~ l.aM CM.trlrwo>. J8-Gonue1-.t ( H11ntl"91on llMclll. t • .. d' Lo.Ale .... TUUOAY'I ••tut.Tl ,_ .. ....._..._ ....... , "Int rec• -My lfN9t 10.-rf, n.oo. 10 40. ••; ~ ,,,. ltl<•fonl), 4.40, 1 tO; '"6y ~IK• t••l<l'lforfl, UO. U t J.. ec ta (t. II p.olf .. 7 .611. hco11• r•c• -S.H hnu CV1111110. '"•"•m l, 6.00, J '°· 2.IO; •01c1 StreH (A111Mll), 4.JO, J 00; H91y Corf IStatnermenl, 4.JO, Tlllrd ftct -l<l11f"I N1199ft ISMrr1111, 11.20, t.oo. uo llleck l"or•il o~ ........ uo. 4 • .0, Ml-. Hllnltr CLAClalrl, UO. Sl oaac .. 1111 1>11ldtl1LOO. fJ011r1fl rece -IM11.llla (!<"'°'"'', •.40, 3.40, UO; A!'CtY'I l>tM ITMcll, 1.tO, J,00/ IC 1119.s ·1 DtlllM• c 0.-.1, a.oo. l'lflh rtet -TIWI Punk l "Oleyl, t .tO, ),.0, UO; our Jett IKlleblar), UO, UO; Emor~ Olroct COruncty), l.<40. U •1tecltl t>SI NICI uuo. 51•11\ rte• -TAU A Ster (Wllllem.,, 12 40, $ 20, l 40; Cley H-ftr t SayloM>, 1.20, > 00; Gee Jet CAlolllllOWI, a.eo. S.nntll rec• -C91ma' Clllel <Son· nevlllel, 10.20, 4.40, 4.40, C:HlatlWMMw CAUOln), UO, UO; SIHCh 8lllOQI'-CShtf' ren>, t .tO. U•uc .. 11 .. 1,.19 uo.eo. U "'<• Sh1 C1·1+>-1·11 Nici $1' .... .IO wltll -•lnnl,. lkktl hl>l ltor-1. U PIO SA• <on•olellon peld $111.IO wltll 21 wlnnlnQ ll<U tJ Cflft llOr-J. Elfl\111 rec• -Sr<llM (Pt~l. t.00. S.tO. J.H , K•lllUtoa C Dunnl .. nl, 4.20, loo. Sc:ol<h Oouole tll•llencll,..,,.m), 2.to. Hlntll rtee Nency AnOuton COe-.1, uo, J oo. 2 tO; G .. llC 1Ti1llerl, l.00, 2.eo. Sir Relll CGrundy), 4 00 U ex.eta 12·11 peld l ll.20 Te n1n r•<• Cll•rcoel H•nover CICutble<I, 11 40, • tO, l .00, Hl9lll~O CMmp (AUl>onl, J 00, , tO, 89f'I Glen•••• c~ ntVlllt ). l.00. U U•Cta (k l 1>41]d U 7 00. Alltndanet -S,OJI. High achool treck Unlwnlty M, Cait111r.ne 11111ey n 100 1 Foll CCV>. 10.2. U A..O.r\On (UI, 10 S, l H1er IUI, 10 9 210 '· Ancler\on (UI, n 1. 1 Hotr IUI. 24 2, J Btll ICVI, 24 .• H O I Fosc~ (U), S2 9. 2 Homer IUI, S4 S, l Myrtek CUI, S4 9 UO I llJtl 51 Em..,y CUI. St Emt<y CUI. COIQUlll CUl.1 OJ 2 Miit ' 11111 Sc Eme•y IUI, SI Emery (UI, S 001. J A-•• IUI, S 01 o 2 Miit I l btl Mayer CUJ, DMh IUI. M<>orn CUI. tO JS 0 110 HH I l(lf\QSIOn lCVI. l• 7. 1 B•cnmtn CUI, I• I l Sl•Udt CUI. 11 S llO Lti I l<•n11ston ICVI O • 7 B•thm•n (Ul, 4l J l Sl•Udt CUI 0 9 .uo rt1•v' Un•v-er"t'f. •• 1 M il•,..,., 1 Un1ver,1ty, l .H 0 HJ ' Weuer11e10 ICVI • 0 1 MtL•u11n1on •UI • o. J Buccolt IUI. s ID. Pl/ , Bun IUI. 17 0 1 MCElh•ney ICV I. 11.0. l Ntl>On I UI. 10 D L.J I We>1erlit1d CCVI, ,. .... 1 Hot• IUI, II l'>, J M<Eih•ntY ICVI. 11·2 T J I H•yf\if ICVI, le S. 2 Bell IClll ll 10, l !>taudl IU>. lt·IO. SP I lnf\U IClll. Sl S. 2 Swteney CCV>. 4/ 9. J Morrtnon IUI, 0 ·9'1 Olstu> I WuterlotlO ICVI. lS8·1' 1, 2 ti•ll CU l, llSO, l S"'eeney CCVI. 129-'1 Hu11lln9te11 .. •<~ 104V., 8olw Gr•nele JI"> 100 l Brim IHBI. 10 J. 1 J •rrtll !BGl, 10,4, J Mendota CHBI, 10 S. llO I Brim (HBI, 2J 3 2 WHhlnQlon IBGI, 1J I , J Mendot• (H8l, 24 4 440 I. Gr•Mm IHBI, S4 2, 7 Newm••- IHBI, S• •. l B1>r.op CHBI, U I H O I Thomp•on CHB1. 2 07 S, 1 Jt mtnu CBGI. 1 21 6, l Torrl!t 1BGI. 2121 Miit I 0Ulf\Ontr (HBI, 4 47 I. 2 Hern•ll IHBI, 4 St 2, J Bollne IHB). s OJ.4 2 Milt I Ouonontt CHBI. 10 II 4, 2 Hor .. u IHB1. 10 ., 7. l HOlld•y IHBI 120 HH ' Toy CHBr. ••.• ? Ven Oor .. 1., IHB), 1._I, l G•rt•• IHBI. IH UO L.H I llent>ooat.r IHBI, 41 •. 1 lontH lBGI, Miit rtl•y I HUf'ltlnQlon Btach, J l9 S. HJ I Mlltennlor I HBI. s 10. 2 W•tal IBGI. S .. ! l Br-CBGI, S·I PV -I IMrrlll IBGI. 11.0 1 L- I BGI. 10-0. > E10eet1 CHBI, , .. LJ I Brom (HBI. JO.•O..... 1 Mol .. rmter IHBl,20-10, l S.ltri1tklCHBI. 190'1 T J -I S.tt<l•tlO IHBI, 41 11, 7 Gr1Mm CH81.no, loy tHBl.ll·•O SP , a. ... lord IHBI, •• I'>, 1 Nuu IH81,4l .. '•. l C>Qtt CBGl,0 I''> o .. cu> I Kendrick (HBI. , .... 2 C>Qlt IBGI. 114.0 l Be..,ford (HBI. Ill I Women MIGM SCHOOL U11ivenlty u , C•ltlstrane Valley O cJ:i;> 11 ~. ~:r·;~ ~~,!.;,!!·'c·c2J?. ,'·o~~~ 1. B•rroo> CUI, 1 2' &. Miit I Barrios CUI. S 23,0, 2·Mlle l Armtnlroul IUI, ll 02 I; 100 LH I Liao I UI, I& 9, 440 rtlAy I C•Pltlreno V•llty, H 0, Mile rel•Y I C•P••treno Vallty, 4 ••. o. LJ I Bush CUI, 1•·1. HJ I Molls (UI, S·4, SP I Mtlll IU), lS·4"-, Ol>eus 1 Mills IUJ. 110·1''> High echool volleyball S•n Ctemenl• O•f t-'4u1H1n91on 8•.cn. t~U. IS·4, IS 9 L• Ou1nl• Cltl Coron.a 0.1 M•r, I IS, IS-I IS I IS' lr••n•Ott El loro. 14" IS • IS'· •~·l Oce•n lltew d<rl Uno•trSlly, U '· IMS, •IS 1) 12, IS ) E•l•n<•• oer Coste Mew. IS 11. t2·1S, Ii II IS 10 Misc. Tua9day'• traneactlon• 8AHeALL A-rlUl'I Leltlllt MILWAUKEE BREWERS -Sant Jamie Coc:enowor, Wtldon Swill. OoUQ Jono, R- Oulnonu •net G11s OUlrO&. pltt,,.,., •nd Bill FoltJ, t•l<,,.r, lo their minor IH9ue ump lor run!Qn,._I eA51<1TeAL.L N•ll-1 a.11tetNll A1-lall911 DENVER NUGGETS -Attlv•l•d Jl mt> R•y, lorwerd Plated Ctdrlcll Hord110. lorw•rd, on lllt •nf11rocl list l'OOTeALL H•tieNt ,._...It '--AIM Cl.El/ELAND eROWNS -N•""d P•ul Heckt ll querterD•O coec11. NEW YORK JETS -S'11ntd C:.rtos HM• O••M>ll, wfely A<Qlllrtcl Mickey B•rlll•, -l<ktr. on walftn from llWI ewlf•lo 81111 ~,._"'--..... WINNIPEG I L.UE 80MIEAS -Sl.,ed MIU CllllOUr\, clefM"\'t encl, Ken TI-.. O.l•ntl•t tee•••. a nd Mare.M Emmett, oe- '•"'/v• back MOCICaY NetleMt Heel.., LH8'lt PHii.ADELPHiA FLYEllS -Si(lflocl Pet Olllnn. ,,.ad c..c:h, to a 11.,..yeer contr•<L 0-al U S. NATIONAL TIAM -Nemtd l.O\I V•lrt llld Tim Ttylor Hll•lenl tOICllH. cou.ao• CAL· POLY POMONA -Nam•d Oen C•tntYllt lleed INIMCMll COKI\. OEOltOIA TECH -N•mtf .IOM G11y 111 enl uant IQOllNll co.<11. HAVV -Nallltd R•r1 O. Ptl,lltl tn "'° tltl•nt foo4Mil CMCll, TULANI -N•,.,... NtO Fo..ler "9ttcl .,., ... , .... t6tcll. UCLA L.trrv .,_., hNcl bMll•-11 COHll, r~, ... .,,_. ldrtY '•M•t llt .. INtltelDell t Ote(ll. Thi• Weir'• trovt ptanta LOI AH•L•I -c .. telt LIM <11141 0.-111Mm ....... 1111.-ltl wk•, l.tW Ytt .. , ,.,,.., .... .._.,,..,, ... Ofllf'Mt ··~ ........... ""111 , ...... . tAll l •l•AaOt•O -(11Ul'lltl'tta• 0..-1 ...,_ I.Mt, 01811 Htltfl fl'•tll I.Mt. ••v•..... llY-wu, "9rrlt._.... Mii DlleO -.... LIM •tr RI..,,._., VlttMe ......... , ............ ,.,.,, MllTA M•MllA -O.wy ·-C,_, ~c,...a.uv11e1•1.,., ...... """ ..... -A._.... ~. U9llN Laa. 1.-.t "-" • Ora~ Co8!t DMLV PILOTtW9dMtday, March 18,1911 I ' Thrift not What it was Today'• ecorwmy would bewilder Franklin 87 IOBN ctTNNltf .......... ......,. NEW YORK-Few lhinl• more clearly dem- onstrate the tendency of eeonomlea to chan1• than when an old maxim, steeped in years, ap· pears to lOH its validity. Such as "a penny saved is a J>eMY earned." Were be alive today, for example, Ben Franklln ml1ht be confused too. In dedication to a conventional deflntuon of thrift, he mifht lose hla money, his reputation and conceivably his 1ood beatth H well. Thrift today, lhat ls, isn't what lt uaed to be, as the de· posltor ln a s ~ p e r cent passbook savln1s account at a so-called thrift ins titution ls learnin& to his chagrin. Interest earned at S'1'J percent, minus taxes, and minus inflation or 12 perce.ot or so, equals eventual poverty. And, as inflation continues, the old link between thrift and caution is likely to remain strained if not broken. Conservation of assets, once associated with riskless saving, may require greater risks today. It may even Involve debt, as many Americans have learned. Ir inflation continues. for example, a dollar borrowed today may not involve a similar dollar in payment tomorrow. A cheaper dollar can be used. Ordinarily cautious homeowners, the thrifty kind who once believed a loan was something to be r epaid as fas t as possible, now covet their mortgages, knowing that a 7 percent loan is like money in the bank. FOR THOSE WHO MADE such loans, such as the thrift instHutions savings banks and savings and loan associations such loans pave the road to the poorhouse. Wha t they thought was thrift was waste instead. Tough, say some of those who took advantage of the convolution that wiped out the old definition of thrift. But some <'ritics say the situation can't easily be dismissed. There are implications, they say. First. can Lhe country so easily pass off the misfortune of those who did believe there was a future to saving? Can the lost assets of such peo- ple, who helped raise capital for investment In the factories that built the economy, be dismissed as the grumblings of cranks? THERE IS THE MATTER of institutions. Can the thrift indus try be allcwed to deteriorate as it has? And if savings institutions become passe, who will provide the money for home mortgages? What happens to the economy in general if s avings -the rate is once more below S percent, lowest of all major industrial nations -becomes insufficient to support needed capital investments? Some answers already are evident. Growing companies, one answer to improving productivity, find it difficult to raise money at affordable rates . Companies in basic industries forego expansion Orange Coast College Spring '81 Business Seminar -.1\~j-.\~'J 1ace \~' Y1t1e ,... 1.1etP N'ar" This seminar will help you outline a business slrategy for dealing with Mexican companies and the government A realistic portrayal of the benefits and problems engendered by U.S. citizens doing business in Mexico Featuring Dr. Robert Molino. an expert in Mexica n business praclices SATURDAY, MARCH 21 Oran ge Coast College Fine Arts Bldg. 119 -9 a.m . · 3 p .m . 2701 Fe1rv1ew Road. Costa Mesa REGISTRATION: $45 per person VIH IM•tercard Acc.pted -55&-5880 CONSTRUCTION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • Re~idential up to 4 units. No takeout com- micment required • Commercial Buildings: Takeout commit- ment required along with leases. •Orange County Propenics. • Land Loans up to 1 year 50'.t of appraisal. ·Up to $750.000 Contact the Real Estate Loan Department: •Anaheim Office (714) 991-3860 •Irvine Airport Office (714) 833-3700. THE BUSINESS BA NKERS . Herit~e Bank Member FDIC D1ilyPillt Family Want Ads a II.ilea, z days,,'5.15 142.5171 •For Of'fy 15.S.S eny private SNrtY may Pl•e& •" ed to Mii any •r11de of pet'IOMI property any two days In• row . 4 . • ... .J and improvement. Production •fflclency de· terioratee. And aJ a consequence, prtces rlle. 8011ETBING EVEN MOaE perverse bap· pens; n.. bla beta are placed not oa the health of the future economy but on its d1fficu1Uea, on the hope ot conU.oued hlgb interest rates rather than a return to normal, on s peculaUona rather than in- vestments in companies o( S\lbatance. The answer, accord1n1 to some economists, lies in tax lncentivea to old fashioned thrift, the kind of t.hrllt that involved living within incomes, paying off bUls and saving small sums regularly. Ali such recommendations, however. depend on something else that seems t.o be badJy lacking: Faith in the future. With so many bets now placed on a continuation of inflation, that faith will be hard lo restore. 5-month low T-bill rate falls sharply WASHINGTON (AP> Yields on short-term Treasury securities plummeted more than a full percentage point this week, reaching their lowest level in nearly five months, the government re-ported. T~enty-six-week Treasury bills sold Monday for an average yield of 12.096 percent, down sharply from the 13.427 percent of a week ago, Treasury r e- ported after its weekly auction. The new yield is the lowest since the 11.407 percent reported Oct. 2<>. The average rate on 13-week T-b11ls dropped to 12.758 percent from the 13 996 percent reported March 9. The new Figure is the lowest since the 12.331 percent of Oct. 27. Yields on the securities have fallen in four of the last five weekly auctions, matching the general downward trend of interest rates outside the govern-ment. Beginning Thursday, banks and thrift institu- tions may pay as much as 12.346 percent interest on six-month money market certificates, which have interest rates limited to 0.25 percent above the 26- week Treasury r ate. The current interest ceiling on the $10,000 minimum-deposit certificates is 13.677 percent. Savers investing in 2Y2-year certificates can earn 12 percent at thrift institutions and 11 . 75 percent at commercial banks. Those yields are at their federally controlled ceilings. The discount rate on short-term Treasury bills understates the actual return because part of the price is refur.1ed at the time of purchase. The actual return, or investment' rate, came to an average of 13.06 percent on 26-week bills and 13.37 percent on 13-week bills at Monday's auction. $25,000 to $150 ,000 2nd Trust Deeds • Cons truction loans $500,000 minimum (/IJ .t1L-/.(/, / fl?fYll./__wn, 1'~t nanan (I' ~r-'/Or~<'l/I Koll Centre Newport, West Tower Suite 6800 4000 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach Get an Answer Page beeper-you'll never miss an important phone call again! 8 Wof1d's largest oomputert.zed paging agent. • Widest selection of pagers: aingle·tone, dual-tone, silent (vlbratlng)/audfble combination, memory st6rage and more. • Wlde-8'88 ooverag&--15,000 lqU8l'8 miles . • Direct dial 8C0981. • A location near you, ptui fleld represent&· tlves at your bed< and caN. • 24-hour eervloe. Wt ntvtr "'9p. • Dally rental or month·to-month. • Free unffmlted beeping, free ~ery and free full maintenance. • Quanttty dlacountl. • Call today for lltwature and a trH demonstrmdonl With Anewer P •• you may be out of reech, but you'll never be OUI of touch I ~l'ii5i"'ER PRGE &e 1342•731·7777•&11·2493 ............... ._ ....... _,. I I· ... • Orange Coatl DAILY PILOT /Wedrt~ad•Y. Marah 18. 1981 lri.dustrial outpµt off f erBonal income up O. 7 perc~nt in February 8y aoaEaT f'V&LOW WASHINGTON (AP> -The nation's in· dustrtal product10n decllned about 0.5 percent in !jebruary alter 1lx straight monthly lncreues, the gpvemment reported. · Federal Reserve Board officials said output dropped olf "in most major components" of the bQard's production index and that "sl(nificant drops occurred in the production of primary n;ietals , instrument.a, furniture and hnnber." The overall production index had been rising Longe r b.e 11ef its gone for so,ooo SACRAMENTO CAP > BegiMing next week, 50,000 Californians will lose $4 .4 million in federally funded extended unemployment benefits. state officials said. The funds began flowing to every state last July wh e n the f eder a l rate of insure d une mploym ent rose a bove the 4.5 percent "trigger " for those b(lnefits, which extend 13 weeks beyond the 26 weeks of jobless aid funded by the stale. ·•insured unemployed" everyone who had h e l d a job l ong e noug h to qu a lify for unemployment benefits account for only about 60 percent of the total jobless rate or 7.3 percent nationally and 7.6 percent statewide. Suzanne Schroeder or the s tate Employment Development Department in Sacramento said there are currently 50 .000 Californians receiving· extended benefits. by ever·tmaller percentaaes in recent moolhJ, and economltta had predicted lt ml1~ dip into negative fi1ure1 ln February. The new atatistlc la 1eneraUy In line with analysts' predictions of slug- gish economic performance in the Cint part or this year. In another report, the Commerce Department announced that Americans' personal lacome rose about 0.7 percent in February, an inorease that probably did not keep pace with inflation . February Income was up $15 billion to an annual rate of $2-.3 trillion. while personal spending rose $23.5 billion to a rate of $1.9 trillion, an increase of about 1.3 percent. The infiation rate, as measured by lhe con- sumer price index. has been rising at an annual rate of more than 10 percent. February's inflation rate is to be announced next week. FEBRUA R Y PRODUCTION l'IGUR ES s howed output declining about 0.7 percent f or prod· ucts and 0.3 percent for materials, according to the Federa! Reserve Board. The decline in output of products would have been greater except for .. a moderate increase in a utomotive products as auto assemblies increased nearly 7.5 percent to an annual rate of 5.8 million units from the very low J anuary rate," the report said. The· J anuary increase, reported eerlier at 0.6 per cent. was revised to 0.4 percent in the new re· port. The preliminary February figure also is sub· ject to later revision. I N OTH E R PRO D UCTION details. the Federal Reserve reported that mining output rose 0.7 percent in February, while utility output was down, "largely because of relatively mild weather and less demand for electricity " MOT ICE TELEPHONE ORDER DESK ,._.,...__, New-M~ M t mo.tt.htQ Ril•ll'O-Aorll I HALE CREST Trained Sales personnel will put a computerized system to work for you .. Increase your sales. cut your costs. Ge t prompt, .accurate invoice s shipping copies and order summaries. local· Statewide. Natio nal. 800 Numbers Available. · Phone Power, 835-7777 1.t. 744 Attention; SMALL BUSINESS If your small business would profit from s ome big mone y we're the one to call ... Today! Leasing & Loans Up to $250,000 24 Hour Commitments CALL 714-752-1411 C SECURITY PACFIC FINANCE CORP. ~,BUSI NESSMONEY 18552 MAC A RTHUR Bl VO .. SUITE 441 IRVINE. C A 92715 .., HI ,l(JIAI IV ,£I IJHI r., f•A(.lr IC U)HP1 )rlA' ION A'-.SE r..., 1.Nl fl :..•t! Bill 11 lN 1\1 1t1 • th1tu I ffl ,,1,t •1l)tt'"·lf tf•tJ1t tlft+tr P.., Jit"' J\rPf 5~ tn,l 'f' Of.l SP< utP(l t'l\ I on fl r Jhot )t (P.l\ ,.nO Pf''Sona1 Of00P'1\'" A ,.'fAn In·~ & SWIM "4lt Q.111 .. con• MH• 557-7234 ~0..81N(M4ATIHO Sol•' ••• ., tte•tMt St l1f 2• 1161 s,.,._..,.,. ''"'-5,..,,, .ti •our O<>o• IC an su·w• N••'"' vow •'e'' COSTA llKSA641 ·1289 UJtN•--. MllSIOH v1uo495-4401 1"12 C.INM C•-t"° fhn °'990 ,,_, •I A•..Y ,.lrwy I COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Cofna It St9mpa GOLD & SILVER Prices tor 3·17·81 Gold Clo .. 1105 SO Silver Cl. lU.llO awy Sell l(ru~"-' S.511.JS UH.U Mopr• l .. I U11M UU.00 100 (oron.s '45.• Mtl.00 >0 PO\O\ S.ZJM UU.00 'IO ... , • ., 84'9'> ·-,_ ,,.~.,........ ............ c..t ... c __ (714) SS&-el50 South Cout PIH• Yln•g• -.. --(Acr ___ C...._•l ' "Our 24th year" a_ Auto 3 Homeowners . ~-,I-~ Ouores By Pnone f MMEIS IMSUIANCE HOUP 541-5554 OJr IJ5-J 0 7 It 14 H.rilor ·Co.to Mo10 Call 642-5678 . Put a few words to work for ou. A reg1s1rolt0n slolement refol1ng lo these secur11tes hos been filed wit the Secu111tes ond Exc hange Commission bul hos nor vet become ettoct·ve Tt1ese secu 11tes mov not b e sold nor mov otte<s to buy be accepted p11or to the 11rne the reg1stro11on statement b econies ettecttve This od11ert1semen1 shall nor conslilule on otter lo sell or the so11c11011o n of on ott~r 10 buy lhese securtl1es nor shall mere b e onv safe of lhese securities 1n onv slate 1n which such offe• so1tc11011on or so le would b e unlawful prior to reg1s1ra1ton or quolrf1co11on 1Jnder the secur11tes iows of onv such sto le PROPOSED NEW ISS UE 700,000 Shores • ••u techno•oev 1!11 l·J I !""arketing illili incorporated Irvine. Ca lifornia COMMON STOCK (no par value) A copy of this prellmlnary Prospectus for review only may be obtained by colling or w riting to the address below. Montano Secu rities Corporation Members Pacific Slock Exchang e & SIPC 523 West Sixth St Suite 244 19752 MacArthur Blvd Suite 120 Los Angeles. C A Q0014 Irvine. CA 92715 (213) ~0-3620 (714) 752·6f65 Name: Address · State: Zip . ___ _ City : _______ _ Phone: (-l Microwave f oresi Rockwell International Corp. technicians inspect rows of microwave equipment at the company's Commercial Electronics Operations in Dallas . Rockwell has de - signed. produced and installed more than 2 million miles of microwave and is the largest independent supplier of microwave systems in the United States State indicators decline SACRAMENTO CAP> Ttie California Index months. but gains have outweighed declines since June. suggesting that the slale"s economy is con- tinu1ngtoshowsignsofstrength. Ms Graves said of Leading Economic Indicators declined slightly in December. state Finance Director Mary Ann Graves said. All but three of the nine components in the in- dex declined The index. used to forecas t the economy six months into the future. dropped to 130.3. down l l or .8 percent from November. The numbe r o f priva t e housing unit ~ authorized dropped 9 percent Help wanted ads were down 7 6 percent The series has been fl uctuating for several OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND 1J• 1 ll'-NoEurO 'Ii S 1 S"-.. N..wlNCh ?S'• HJ .. N ;rolPS 1 • 7 .._ N0.11l"ll 11 ll ,.n'"'' JJ. JJ . NASOAO SUMMARY 11 l J1 • )YC.Mtf IJ • J • 14 U .. ")Vlffl\~ jC; J6'• )T ..,. JI , >nM tO JO•• JO -l 1 l' • U' • Nvcoro ll'• I• ~n..wmt " 14. ,, / ,~ ' ,r· g~:~c1.~ 19 / 19'• OhFt-rro )~:: ~ .,g~ri:. ltJ"• 11 1. 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'J 'j ,..1, ·,"' • ·' .,,. 1•:t~ . ul' 1.a&1l 1ff U"-~ 1 " 'h'.. •4111 .$ 'U ,,. ..., u~W'':. ~.J!' lt .. • ._ "t.~lit~ IF:!' ii :1: l .. !·~ 1: u~1 ~ w,= t ""· ·:ud .. ~ n ... : ~ II,,.,'· iI l! t~ ·E 11"° ,,~, . ·~ m~.~& s 'Ji:~ ,: ;;U ., == 14 • ~ 1 : t2 t ... U~ ':I 1•14.... ' fJ v. • t,\ "°'' 1 !! nt fllll~ f+ e-. 11 11 M 1:t ~1fflMI 1a-I• ·, ~·'"t.11,~'i r.l+ill: " ~· .,, .,.:t MuRr · •1 Jl·"·~ t · · · · 1 ,... ..... _. I 11 4 .. l..IMHI J «t•-' llt ,. • ' • " u-.... I •!Iii • 1 t ~ N fll ., •'-+I I a • M 91 _ ~ U Ir-" •• • t ............ ~;.a- ( .... , .. , :(\• .._,~ Tax 1>ep.efits for parent care (ThU ii IM tlHrd of o nju.part •ITU• on how to'°"°" JIOU' 19'0 tau•.) If you are an adult son or dauahter contributlna to the support ol your elderly or a1lln1 parent. you are entitled to 11lgn1litant tax benelita -aseumtn1 your parent qualities as a dependent. A key require- ment for that qualification is that you contributed more than hall your parent's support during calendar 1980. ll your parent qualifies, then you. the child. may benefit from this major list of tax deductions: The dependency deduction . Deduction of unreimbursed medical expenses paid for the parent. Dependent care credit, and head-of-household rates if either or both of these are applicable In your situation . The inter · nal revenue Rev e nu e Service claimed until a few years ago that Medicare payments cov· --~ SYLVIA PURTIR , Z ering a doctor's care counted toward support. This meant that if substantial Medicare pay. ments were made for a parent's doctor bills, the child's own contributions to the parent's support might turn out to be less than half the total support for the year, which included the Medicare payments. This would have disqualified your parent as your de· pendent and barred you from the list of tax benefits above. The courts rejected this IRS view, which finally agreed that neither hospital nor doctor payments un· der Medicare count as s upport. But the IRS still insists that Medicaid payments. which are payments made by the states, do count as support . Now a 1980 tax court decision has held that the IRS is wrong in trying to distinguish be tween Medicaid and Medicare payments. Medicaid pay. ments are to be excluded from support for the same reasons that all Medicare payments are excluded from support. IF VOU ARE involved in a Medicaid situation, be on the alert: While the I RS still treats Medicaid payments as support, if any of your tax benefits depend on knock· ing out Medicaid as support. the lax court will back you against the IRS. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES N~W 'fOlll<IAPl Flnel Oow-Jon.. ••111• Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Dally Pilot. AMERICAN LEADERS ror T~av Noar 17 STOCKS ap.., HIQh Low Clow CllO JO IF\d IOQ] 0t 101' 08 9ll 17 "1 SJ 10 l6 10 T"' 47113 4J141 411S4OS19 194 IS Ull 10' ~ 110 S7 IOI SS IOI" 0 SA n s11t • n 3'1 u ll1 16 ll4 1~ 1 •s lndu\ •.nl.900 rren 1,S..l,too Ulllt 1ll.l00 \S St-I 133 IOO WHAT STOCKS DID Ml'W YORK lllPI Mar 11 AdVenud OKllMCI Unch-Tot•• lnuH NtW hlqhl Ntw IOW\ -Al "-"1£XOIO Tod•Y m 111 .., ,.,I •40 • NEW vOA~ !•Pl ,.,.., II Today Pow ~~ ... ,.. ,.,, ·~ • 14 Advtnced "' :n• p,,." dav ,., 231 ... ,,, ... .. .... " . '" Otcllned Uft(h-TOll'I lss.-s Ntw P,IQll\ Ntw 1~ 21] as JS I ,. \ • ~ METALS GOLD COINS l"hq ,,,., .... ... P<I Uo 16 0 Up 11 0 Uo 11 0 Up 10 • Uo •Ot Uo 10 • VP 10 l UP •I uo •? Uo t I UD II Uo 17 \Jp • l Uo 1' Uo 1• UD It Pel OH 11 t OH ti Oll I • 1"· ()fl I I ... 0 11 •• ..... .. I ... , .. 1'• , .. , .. Oll ' • 011 • I ()fl • J Oll • 0 011 s. flll s. Oll s' OH S 1 ,,_ ()ll s s .. Oll s, .... Oll 17 HEW YOAK tAPI PtiCtt ltlt MOl'Cley o1 gold calm. c-..i •ltlt Frldo J price Krll .. n'-, I troy 01., U21.00, up $6.00 M .......... I troy OJ., U IS.00. UP u.oo M .. I~ so POIO. I 2 troy 01 • $426.00. UC> woo A11t1rlefl 100 cro-. "°' troy 01 • "" 00, up $6 00 Co'"' SJ-..n cenh • pOurtd, v s dt\ltM If On\ LtaO 16 C@f\h a PCl<lltd line o •. ctnt\ • pouna. Ot'llvtred Tin SI 0717 M@l•ll Wffk tOmpO\tl• Ill Alt0ml"""' 1' tenlS • p0und, N V ""'"'""f U9S 00 per llH~ Pl•ll"41'1'1 MSS 00 lroy Ot , H Y SILVER T-y ly TIM MHCltled Pren H1ndy ~Harmen, $12 22 per troy ounu GOLD QUOTATIONS . T-y L•-· morning llxong "" ZS, 011 51 so L•-· allernoon llxl119 l4'l 1S, oll $6 lO ~arl1: •flemoon llalng l.SO u , 011 ~ •I ,,.,.lllwt; lll(lllQ l!OI 07, oll to.'19. l11tlO: l•le tlltrnoort llalnQ '493.00. 011 $6 00 ,, .. 00 .... .., "•"•"f & Marme11 · onoy d•lly quole l'9J 2S Oii $6 SO l11tel~: only detly quoit Mtl .JS. oll $6 so • 111 .. 1...,., Ottly .,.lly quoit U12 tt. olf $6 It SYMBOLS .. l I I ... 250-298 East 17th Street Costa l\'lesa SPRING CONSOLIDATION ~. SALE MARCH 21-22 Our LGrCJHt Sde Of The SealOft! Values Up To 75% Off • 1ewelry. belts •sleepwear •dresses • 1umpsu1ts •skirts • 1eans •blouses • t-sh1rts •sweaters •slacks • 1ackets and more! Shop early for best selection of styles. sizes ... and values! Mari-Bey LAMP&SHADE T llOI ~,\\'II" 111· l.1\ \1 l'SllAflES o:-; SALF. MANY REDUCED 50%! ! ! Hl•I( S4!i 95 Safe S24.95 He1t S:l7 95 Safe S18.95 RPduced 50~ ~Ian~ I.amµ~ ,Jl).O Dr a ... t rr11ll> Rt>ducPd Pl.L'S lfundn·d~ of FINIAi$ HeJ.( SI0.00 Sale 15.00 298 E. 17th St. Costa M esa 646.7753 SALE HOttRS· Sat. I 0:00 am -5<111 pm Sun. 11:00 am -4 00 pm 0 0 • ~ Newport Blvd. . Sidewalk Sa . March 21 & 22 TREDS & THREADS Treds & Threads. with the cooperation of Converse. has arranged for Preston Dennard of the Rams. one of the leading wide receivers in the NFL. to be at Hillgren Square Saturday. Mar. 21. 1981 . He'll be giving out autographed pictures and talking with the public. B e· there from 1 O am-12 noon o r you will miss him Come & meet one of the Rams all time greats. it's on us. Preston Dennard Wide Receiver Our thanks to the Converse Athletic Shoe Company, one of the leaders in sport shoes for football. basketball and every o ther major sport. SPORT SPECIALS Selected s'hoes from Nike Adidas. Converse, Brooks, and New Balance. UP TO 50°/o OFF Balls for most sports-Soccer, Ba:;ketball. Volleyball, Football UP TO 500/o OFF Selected Leisure & Athletic Clothing Including Swimwear from Ad idas, Levi. Spooner. O.P., Wrangler, Off Shore, Speedo. UP TO 500/o OFF Items on sale limited to stock on hand-illl sales FINAL 541-3323 Mon.•Frl. I o.6 s.t. f ·6 250-298 East 17th Street COST!\ MESA i t .. 17th ~ ~ !i -I .. ·C ~ 0 z . -~--.-.-1-.-.~.-.-.---.-.-.-.--~ .... -o----~~----.• -.------..-...:~--·------.-"' 250-298 East 17th Street Costa Mesa MARCH SALE Up To 75% Off Selected Mercl1 cmd1se I ,' . Fl•atunng • Hhvdes • Personal ~ • Julie Miller I f ' • Clara Lura • Sissies • CoCo • Su:oeaters by Ades • Sir James • l 'ppn Clas., • .Jn. Yurw A rid \lore' Something Special f emir1ine tns hiu ns 25f1 1-: 17111. Cost a .'We sa 64.5 .5 111 \\,.'I"'' 1.tl111· rn 1.1,111 .. n l••r rh• 1111"' f1f.!1tl1 ,,,,.,I 111111 l~ •UllG"CN SOUA"C 270 E 17T" S• COSTA MCS-'. CA 8282'7 C A5 Tl ... 0 SEPY c F tN[ Jt'.W[.l.q'f CUT STONCS ,7141 64!) 1909 r r r< IJ •, wr • .. C Af.1~ .... ,. s . , Jrwn ~"' To CUSTOM JEW[L RY orsrGN[O COLO 6 511..V[R f:'JN 01NG9 8 ""'0UNTJNC9 NEW ARRIVALS 14 K Yellow Gold Re-Mounts START THE SPRING WITH A NEW RING B. Y.O.G. ·<Bring your own Gem) Or Use One Of Ours SIDEWALK SALE MARCH 21-22nd Lapidary Equip. 20% Off Selected Jewelry ·20% Off Lapidary Demonstration IN STORE BARGAINS . . . Come In And Look At Our "TURKEY BOX" ·Sidewalk Sale Mai-ch 21 & 22 ·e !<I n. of ut IS ns 'II a be I. l Y \ ..... Orange Cou t DAILY PSLOT/WednMday, Match 1811981 rnaill~~~ ~~ ~rn The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678 63 .4o/c of Dally Pilot readers regularly read the classifieds. Annitium rnwnb ,., p~ lAC•I 'aht"tt U...6 ......... Pr,MJn•I\• tiWM'1•tClut.• Tra\of'I• SERVICES 'wthtc"f' l>1tf'f"tfW'~ EM'lOYMENT & mrARATION "'fWWih ln\ltV<UM Jvo" .. nu••t• Urlp 'tl ant~ ~ ' t MERCH ANDISE "nl'''"'' Appl141Mtt A Uf'tlOft ::~::: Melf'r••I' f..•mir'•'• t tu.upmPnt t· .. ,, Doc• tY,...111 'tnu J\trn11u,-f' , . .,.,f' '-1• '""""' uc_,, .. ~t;U1_,•1' Jf•rlr)' U"ntotk Maf'hfllllltt)' M 1vt'll•MOW\ lihM'f lllftf"OU\ ".nt•d ..._u,1rtl lft~ttvm .. nlt. Off1rf' • utl'f 6 t.qw1p ""' Pl•N» 4 (HU "' Y•lf'IC Mt<htM\ ~tine Gooch 'ilott M..-,t•wr•nt 8.at f~'.r.o'° U1t 1 "-lf'tPO BOATS&MHINE EQUlrMENT Lf'nt'tal Kf)ah M•ll'H ~rv•"'" &>•'' -..."" .. t .qutp flo.f\\ Po•Pr &•h Rf'M t Pl•rlf't fto,.b s ••• lkt•h "'P\ l.WM'h &••"~""' tto.t" !'il«•C" THNSPORTA TION A1tcrat\ i •mptor"J "•If' tt .. n1 UH1nc l •r' ~::,"" J;~r:7 Xoot•n • Mouw Hm, '-alt-Rrnt Tt•1..,u Tnul l::~~~!.~1!"i.,,~ AUTOMOBILE liftwr•l AMeq~• l l•••u ' Hr<rl'•l1"" \•ho,,., ~Jl'H"h fl•• .. Hud' t Wn~••Ori'n f,Vilh \ •n• ... 1.1\Vl,.f'••H"ll Awu,, W•nlf'i AUTOS. IMPORTED tt~Mt•l ~II• Kumt-u ..\1.#111 .\uahn u .... ,,., l!ICW l•~' ov-(.'uh lJ•hwn t f't' •r~ h1111 Hood .. J•l/w•r Jrrurn t\i111r"'"'nni..ft+• ~"'-°''"' M••d• M"r1 f'•lt-~ tWn1 ..... )lt.H \>p.f r •• , .. ,., f1eU1'1f\M t'onthf M•fta1.1U fWtb ltO)U ft,..,,.,. ~ ~ ... , .. TO}'OU rr1wmph Voth•Atef'() Voh~ l.•Mht A)IC: a..ta C.d•ll•~ AUTOS. NEW AUTOS.USED c ••• .-o C"M,rolti \,'."'>•l~r. Comet C-ttMMI ,.,,, ...... c.u.rar ~1· tm,..n •I '-'-• at•vtnttl .tf('Uf) ~~ P<Mo Pty ...... 1.h PeftUH 11MMditr-.rd , .••. •f't•r-M~ USITHI DAILY PILOT "PAST llSULT" SHYICI DlllCTOIY For Result Service Call ' 642·1671 llt.HJ .......... ....... ..... w. ....... ,.,.w. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,.,.. I 002 Ge•r• I OOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tie•rel I 002 ., .. ,.. I 002 ._.. I 002 Gftlffal I 002 I 0tJ ..... nALISTAn IMYIS1'M8fT ~.~~ ....... ~.~.~~ ........ ~:~.'::'..5:!:. .. ; .... ~.':':'..5:!:. .........•..... ~.~ .....• ! • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------------------... llWI ltll ,. -·-·-llM ... .... IOtl ·-,., llllT ·-,.,. '"' ·-... ·-... 111111 llllt IJOO l).W ltllO •• JIOI 11\JO IM llilO -11• 22liO UGO 1400 -J).111 -l'IOO -- EQUAL HOUSING OPPORT UNITY P ... .._..sMotlce: uctu-..-., Le.ant the Merel ot how lo purchase property creaUvely. Sat evening March 21. 7-lOPM. (71') 963-3110 blr SPM for re· servatlon Ii Info. ~II rea I estate ad· -~!!lfl-..... ---i v e r ti s e d i n t h i s OC & V AU.IY newspaper ia subject to V-.W the Federal Fair Hous-Cozy 3br, 2ba home, den, Ing Act ol 1968 which r I makes il illegal to ad· rp c. etc. vertise "any preference, + limitation . or dis· 3 more separate homes c rimlnation based on on lg lot. Call now ror race. color, religion, appt. $485.000. Owner sex. or national origin. willf1J1ance. or an intention to make loy McC_., IJtr any such prererence. 541-7729 I i m It a ti o n . o r d I s · 'I!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ crimination " I' This newspaper will not knowingly a ccept any advertising ror r eal estate which is in v iota. lion ol the law. NEW CONDOS XLNT TERMS IZIJZ....,_r 1100 DID UlO :woo :: , ................... .. E . or Harbor Blvd 641-1991 agt. = EIROltS: Adnrttsen -·HEWP--OIT--HT-S•.-C : sholikl chKtl tt..lr ads Comry home in desira ::, doily .ct Nport ff-ble area. Amenities :rt: rors itc•c•diahly. The galore! Priced right! :: DAILY PILOT au.Ms 675.1771 ~ liabilty for ... fl"t ::.:; iftcorr•ct lftsertioft ..... _..... ·~ _..,. ·~ MiW t4.!j) THE GOOD LIFE UNIV.PARK Townhome Living at its most prestigious. You'll enjoy cozy fires in the mstr. Bdrm. balconies orr 3 Bdrms. plus the run or manor redecorating with pa int and ne w TAXwamoFF EASTSIDE. C.M. Two well built houses on one lot. Pool. double garage. Live in 2 Bdrm. rent 3 Bdrm, S700 mo_ ca r pet The price or 1~~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SJ40,000 is the best in the,- area. Forinlormationon1-..... -.... -.. -t h is SE LE C T PROPERTY cal l 7S 1 3191 C:::SELECT T'PROPERTIES OWMB W /RMAMCE 12°/oDOWN IOo/o ASSUMAILE A sharp 3 Bdrm. corner lot in El Toro. New carpets and paint New central air conditioning. Large shaded yard. Ask- ing S98,8SO. VA and FHA terms available. For an appointment lo see. call S40-1 l51 ... e ~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS Buys this 2 plus den home. 56 months new. double iron gated entry, cathedral ceilings. brick r1replace , gourmet kitchen French doors to ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! patio Sl79.000. Call Ii-.......... _ .... 673·8.550 t¥JMW COSTA MESA 5 IR -SI 25,500 OWMER SAYS SELL Not an add-0n or con version A real 5 Bdrm family home in one or Costa Mesa's nicest areas. Handymans de· li "ht Call now and save! ~ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714·631 ·6990 WALK TO MWPT BEACH Your beach place this summer or all year long $209,900 Plenty or room ror the whole family with 4 large bdrms and family room Lovely re· ar garden and patio cov - er. Owner will help finance. Call 673·8S50 THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCU~ VACAMT Redu ced $25 ,000 . Desperate owner says bring a ll orrers. No qualifying. Low down. 4 Bdrm single story home. totally upgraded. Ca II rormoredetal~. <I) SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714·631-6990 CAMIO HIGHLANDS OCIAHYU Sll9,000 Reduced thouunda ! Spaclou1 llvlng room WHA rs UM19UE AIOUT UMIQUE DES I GN Brick s. beams, skylights a nd tile. 6 Bdrm!l, pool. s pa. back bay view. Reduced Lo $489.000 DOVER SHO R ES Spotless 4 Bdrm. 4 ba. overlooking the Back Ba y. with priva te beaches SSl0.000. SUNS ET FR O M Setting Sun. 4 Bdrm. pool. incredible CdM view. well financed. ree at 5595.000 ANYTIM E VIEWS 4 Bdrm. 2"'1 ba home on large lot in Harbor View Hills Views or ocean . bay and night II ghts ! Just $425,000. WARMTH & SOPHISTI CATlON-3 Bdrm. 2 ba on Spyglass. Spacious and open. As· sume 1st TD at t2W'lr . A value at SSJS.000. HARBOR RID GE DYNASTY Expanded 2 Bdrm or l Bdrm + den. proC decorated. sun room. city lights and mountain views . $00.000. SO. COAST VILLA-2 Bdrm l~ ba second story cond o . New carpet, drapes. full security. Only $85,000. LIGHT AND AIRY-4 Bdrm. 21,; ba pool home. private beach. 1324,500 ree. ptAnWHAT'S ·Utl9U1 AIOUT iJ.-.1001: 11()MH RealtGn.1'7~ . \\ I :--. I I ·, \. rrAYLOR CO. Hl.-1\l .'l lll\'-' ..... 11111 l~HI; llG CAMYOM DCWSIYI A FAIULOUS ''VHS.AIU.IS" SIZl,000 Deane Homes largest & most spectacular model & situated on the largest lot of Deane Homes. A glorious view looking thru a lovely yard with tall trees to the Big Canyon golf course. Huge patio surrounds the lge pool & spa + t he sweetest gazebo ever (even has a lovely chandelier). Gated e ntry to the front courtyd with fountain. Marble floor in foyer with glittering crystal chandelier. 4 BR, den & form DR. Call for apJX . WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO .. UALTOIS .21 11 S• JO..-... load HEWPORT CEMTIR, M.I. 644-49 I 0 COSTA MESA Channing 4 Bdrm. 3 ba home with family room. Corner lot. VERY private ya rd s . Im · maculale and ready to move in. S174,500 UMIEA T AILE THMS Only lSo/. down and owe the balance at a low interest rate. 3 lux urious units which in· elude owner's unit (3 Br 2 Ba w/frpk & 2 car garage>. Call now for complete detail s S56-2lli60 This 3 Bdrm charmer was once a model home. C:: SELECT Located on a huge cul· T' PROPERTIES de-sac lot and tilled with • ext ras . FINISHE D I garage. Close lo schools. I Orrered at $144.SOO. IRVINE Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba Single ramily home With very PRIVATE ya rd Xlnt location. close to schools. shopping and rreeway $164 ,500 a nd owner will carry 2nd *Cote Realty & Investment 640-5777 Trade your old stuff for neAW goodies with a Classified ad. 642-5678 RCTaylorCo 640 -9900 HAllOI VllW-HOMI 3 BR $225,000 lowest price in Harbor View . Owner (investor) may consider 100% FINANCING or trade for? RCTaylorCo 640 -9900 -ASSUMAILE LOAM/$ 141 ,000. ChclrcMMJ 4 bdnft hofM °" .... ul·de-sac Oft cllolce locatlH . Mafty upgradH plus excellHt fMmchH). Take o .. r MbfKt to Hl1tlng T.D. at 11/•% _..._ Int. rah.Mewtyofhnd. -ASSUMAILE LOAM + •iew. great lock lay •5-w. TaM ~ to S 180,000 T.D. at I 01/f'/o ....S ........... 4 bdnft, 3 bah. .... twp fCll'ft.Mn., 3 frplc1 • tpaee for boat or ca"'p•r. Off•r•d at SlZS,000. -llG CAMYOH -$435,000. DranMlflc ..tryway leack to tMt 10 .. ly lg• l bdr•, 21/J ba toWRhotM. H• llua & fGr"IMll dl ... r... leaut. brick patios. ExtrH••ly well priced w/al•I ~ ..... ·-· """ J ........ ·-... ,.,.... ·~ ....... _ ..... .. _ 759-1616 f e a t u r e s 11 o w I n I I '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I fireplace. 3 larae bdrma .-~=.:--1 ,,, .... .,,,_, IJ~ plua den. Great uauma· ble J.tt and owner will ~a aecond. Oall THE' ~EAL ESTATE RS $5,500 puts JOU llito ~r own t 8drm A/C home. 12 118,., ftnan~r. Call for detallt o n our MDCARP&T· i CKl!T" procram. ....,... ~.,our one-_ 754-1202 •top ...... cent.... l!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!I ··-.... ,._ .,. "°"' .. -·-"-·-D~ ·-·-,.,_ '"'_ .,_ ... "°" RE~&:=:~ .... I IS SANTA ANA HGTS? G au: Backbay, Npl Bch ME: range from older nice lrg lots to newer mes for the upcomin TYPE OF h o mes w semi/custom executive. '. IOMIMG: R-1. lt-2 & A-1 <equestrian) NICE RAMGE: $110.000·$2,000.000+ If you presently own a home in the Heights. call me for a free mar~~ i'Jli1iii~~-appraisal. We currently have sevefa ·homes lis t ed in the Heights fro $170,000-220,500. For a viewing appt., contact Traditional Realty 631-7370. ..... SULA POIMT llAC ... OMT • Panoramic view at wedge, from prime lar ge lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq . ft. featuring marine room. entry, living room. dining room . built-ins. etc. $1,38.5,000. LIDO ISU Newly remodeled traditional style 3 bdrm, 2 bath home featuring la rge recreation room & 2 patios. Living room has attractive beam ceilings. fireplace & french doors leading onto brick patio. Ne w kitchen bit-in aooliances. Close to tennis court-. sandy beaches & .clubhouse. $420,000 IAYNOMT We have several fine homes with pier & slip, starting at $1,500,000 RANCHO MIRAGE Springs Condo. 9th fairway. 3000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm. 3 bath . furn . Golf rib mbrs hp. Will trade for in vest. prop. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Roy\1d1· Dr•v•· N B blS blbl EE 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE LUXURY COMDO Convenient Location . T hree Bedrooms. 2 1/2 Baths. Plush Carpets. Plantation Shutters. Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up & Leave Whe n You Wi s h. Only $255.000 Plus Ass umable Firs t Trust Deed. ® ·--,. .......... . The ras test draw in the Trade your old sturr for West. .a Daily Pilot new goodies with a Classified Ad. 642-5678. Classified ad. 642-5678 WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE ~"' f.("ul~J, J'ul()t1rl\ M.tt\o~ "" ,,, 2438 W Coast Hwy Newpott Beach 631 -1400 '::~::'i' s~~c411A-1'~tis· .... MAI ~.., CU.Y I. POl4AM ----- •• ..., • .,. ....,.., ol .... lour ocro~led -"' be- low IO f-'°"' lllt\plt-"' I { j P i5 l1 0 I I l EDALL , ,. r I' I I I . f D A F E M I I 1 oon't think I oot euctt 1 ~,-jr---.fr---.1.--.1..--4 :r good dtll on my new cer. J • _ • _ _ _ ~ llOU;ht ti,.. guer1ntMC1 IOf r---------. 100,000 m1111 OI' 1,000 --. I R A T B E N I wttlc~ oomn tl'9\. :. ==i =1::1:· =i==i=: .• ~ .:-.... ~-::= -,..,.. ...... '-.. No,......., • ,.,,., NUMlllfO 1.un•s IN r r I' r r I ltUqOOAlfS _ _ • _ _ • LOVELY LINDA ISLE-LARGE Prohct.d by gr.ettery & °"water with room fOf' 3 boats. A "showcOM" 111 ••HY way. LanJe mailer bdnn. fonnal din. ""·· large fam. ""' with prot.11lonal step-dow" bar, dip pool & spa, s 1,395,000. ON WATER-FRONT ROW tWwly ~corat.d 2 bdrm. 2ba. co-op. Gor<JeOUS Catollfta and turNncj basifl •i•w. Assumable loan. S~ wlN enlist ifl financlfKJ. loot 1lip a•alW.. $285,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, IN{ HI Al I '>IATI I k. I .. , ,, ... 2436 W Coasl Hwy Newpott Beach 631-1400 111 '>IOI N 11111 HI Ill I •, T llr I '>I HVll I '> HEW EHGLAHD CHAR.MER Three bedroom townhome overlooks the village g reen . Beautifully upgr aded in traditional taste & old world craftsmanship. See this and you'll never want to leave. $170.000 Fee. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 2 "FIXER" CHM.UNGES 225 VIA OIVllTO o,.. Sat .. s. 1·5 OM UDO ISU LARGI HOME-GllAT LOC. w•s & Decorators llrttttd! l.Atwett pnc. cCMlple ....._ for fllA Ii• .._,.... • U4o ..... S..-.cl ...... ._.. ...... •1ataotpo1 ............. 2a....2 ............. ,~,..., ........ ....... -t-t .......... '"TLC ........ .. I., F ..... S2tt,OOO. I o 4 1-e Id I\. of Ul as l\S 'ti a ~e I. lY I I I I ~ Coatt OAjLY PILOT /Wed~. March 18, 1981 Cash in on 7 or 11..__ ... ,. ... tw•tMnt fotOten ... eounc,.ct. ...... ,._ • • There are two way• to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.1~-3 llnes Items totallng $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. ...... ,.... w. ........ ,.... w. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.... I 002 &1MNI . I 002 ~~!:' ....... !!~~ H ......... IMclt I 040 .................... -.~. ....................... . ..................... . ~· WILSON PARK CONOOMltlUMS ESTATE SALE College Park 4 Br, l~~ ba . u20.ooo osh . 805 /524 -15 9 0 o r 805/644.Ui(). -'•' ··CllCK & COMPARE TllSE FEATURES 10 75<¥, LOANfJJ'hree bedroom. 3 bath home. About 2100 sq. feet. Din· ing room. family room. brick fire place . Two story noor plan. Located on QUIET cul-de·sac Assume 10. 75o/. loan . owner will help finance. St54.090. TARB ELL, BK R. S40-1720 . 90% ANANCltl 123A% INTER. . BOR AREA LOCATIO I MICRO OVEN I COMPACTOR ./DISHWASHER I DBL GARAGE I SIZE-1650 SQ. FT. I ALL SHOPPING ~ BLOCJC ti AIR CONDITIONING I CEMENT DRIVES .WALK JN CLOSETS W/OPENER WAID INVESTMENT IMC. IACKIAY .SALIS °"'9Clf71416Jl-IOll llO W. WIMa St. MZ..JtOO C....W....c.lf. 3br. 2ba home plus ideal mother·in-law quarters . Compl. w/bath. $220,000. RoyMcC.-..Rtt.r 548-7729 associated &POKERS IHAL TORS lOl~ V. i olbQn b'' Jb61 MEWPORT HGHTS Deluxe townhouse duplex. 3 bdrm + fa m1 ly. 21"1 bath. each unit Frplrs. all built-ins. decks & patios Park like landst•aping SF.LLER WILL HF.LP f1 NANCE' S295.000' l~loyProp. Realtors •67S.7060• ••••••••••••••••••••••• j PETE J BARRETT :,. REALTY NEW CONDOS XLMTTERMS ONLY lLEFT LR private decks. & patios For 45 day escrow Rldr provides drapes 2000 Meyer Place ape.. daily I 2-4 64~ 19_9 I_ OCJI. EASTS I DE Only Sl 25,000 VA/FHA TERMS 3 Bdrm. Cplc . family room Call 645-9161 OCEANFRONT Distress Sale 2Br ro-op. view unit on sand & surf Exclusive adlt comm 24 I hr sec bld!i! Prired at t owner's rost for fa!.l escrow $179.000. R & H lnveshttettts 752-2197 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Goldeft West Estates Beautiful S&S Exer 4 bdrm home Elegant wet bar. bit-in bbq inside & many other amenities incl. a huge yard that back!> to a beautiful park Just 2 yrs ult!' Broker. 003·!4182 I Irvine 1044 . ...........•.......... * *DEERFIELD ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ CoroM det Mor 1022 'i. OPEN HOUSE REALTY /.' L a rges t model 1n Deerfield The Plan 5 done as never befort'' Pool. spa. magnificent decor and landsl'apinl? -------COMMEICIAL rtlOPERTY SPECIALISTS Learn brokerage & pro perty mgmt skills by joining a leading local firm. Call Ken at: 67S.6700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COURtry &cJllsh DUPLEX 9 mos new 4 bdrm + 2 -~----All th•~ and assumt-a bdrm unit. 3 fi replaces. 4 Foowulain Valey I 034 hiJ?h loan balance Call car gar .. used brick. ••••••••••••••••••••••• now. Fre n c h wind o~s . TRUEVALUE S385.<XX>. Call for appt 10 1n the ever popular ~I \\\)odbrldgc see. 851.91 3.5 rwill coop > Westmont homes 3 lrg o .. It Owner /bkr Bd + Bonus rm Bel0\4 ~a IJ -market price $127.000 551·3000 709 -709'.:Z Ort·h1d .. [Uj] ---------I Jasmine Creek decorator Call Anne Mccasland n zo Barnnu Pk .. ).lr~ln• W'ESTCLIFF home. plan I on green· 631 l~ :~f~.:~:~:f :E~,1~ .:·~:::·:~: .. ~ Uiiil lion 2 bdrms and 2 full br SJ0.000. s.1000 mo baths with brick 644 -1450A Morevebest Woodhndge Landini! Brand new 4Br. 3Ha. frplc 1n mstr sle. E-Z as sumable SlS0.000 $239.500 645·9850 agt Hwvtlngton INCh I 040 Costa Mesa I 024 ••••••••••••••• • • ••• •• • * * C 0 l l [ G [ ....................... ,_ ________ _ fireplace. mirrored bar. carpets and drapes. As sume low interest lst TD --------1 11 0/o lllMG AMY OFFER Lovely 3br. cstm home near beach & pa rk . formal dinin~. heavy shake roof. Call now for information regardinJ? the 9'V.."k assum loan Seller w /carry part of the buyers down pay. ment & says bring any offer PARK . 17141 671-4400' , ASSUMAILE Lowest price Syracuse in Coll ege P ark Owner's anxious Good location Assumable financing Call for de· tails. 12111 Ut.2121 . Te rrific starter home. HARBOR featunng 3 Bdrms. re· modeled kitchen. near new carpets and drapes. large lot. Askin~ only "96.900. For an appoint· menllo see. call 540-1151 A Division of Harbor Investment Co . -,, . ' Spyglas Spectoc.._. &ramatlc ocean. harbor and nite Lite views. Ex quisitely upgraded '4 Bdrm w/beautiful den. 2 fireplaces. cove re d patios S625.000. Owner will carry Of Ocewf1 •ta • Wehave8or9as a mal- ter of fact . We will take trades. exchanges or just sell with tremen· do us term ~. From ~.oooonup. We even have a couple of gorgeous oceanfront bluff lots In Encir)itas from 1225,000 on up with terms. JACOBS REALTY '75-6670 ., ,. HERITAGE • • REALTORS IESTPRICE IHTOWM e H/\NCH 1-:f/\L TY 1>1J1 ?000 4br. remodeled kitchen, TRY SSOOO pl ush carpets. custom 3 Bdr. 2 Ba, country like home in The Colony Take over existing loan & ow..c SJ0.000. 640-6677 Agt. Owner will consider a drapes, freshly pamled . VA or creative offers seller bought another & Cule 3 Bd 2 Ba home. has priced thousa nds Features sparkling pool. below market value for Priced to move fast. quick s ale. Creative YOU ASKED FORIT Greg Astle. 559-9400 terms ok·better hurry E1iiJf4I ~ .. G!~~tm~r We 've found it a spacious bdrm. 2'".r bu Townhome with nire sized family room Back patio overlooks green· belt. Within walkinl( di!i· lance to pool ··-·-·· '':.,,,~ ~ASSOCIATES 141-1511 Open.Sunday, 2-5pm , 1641 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Orchard Dr. 5bdrm. Jba, r freshly painled colonial beauty. Family room. separate din in JC room. frplc. new roof. Priced al Sl60,000. for quick sale. Xlnt fina ncing. THE WIEDEMA NS. 494·0066 or 751-4293. NEWPORT HACH 134.000 down. owner will finance at 13~'7r with $1500 /mo pay ments. Total price S279.000. East Bluff, Sbdrm. 3ba. call 64-4-7063. MOVIUPTO MESAVaDI This spaclout 4 8d 2-sty home has .. ouutand· Ing comer location and a 9~~ fully assumable loan. The price Is right at 1219,000. Call Anne McCasland. QJ.12198 I R~* I I fl I \I I ' 'II •YOU havea...,..toelf•or Joodlto.U,llK9aead In th D,aH1 Piiot CJlll!llW ........ Pbonl ..... GLEHMAR lge 4 Bdrm 2ba. up· gr aded w/s hake roof. hot tub, encl patio Love· ly area. $129.500. SUNSETR.F. 548-snl 846-8803 '".... I 044 't523 CAMPU,Da:lkVltlE ...................... - macnab I Irvine realty A SU981DIAftY Ofl TH£ IRYINE COMPANY THI llST IN THI YIU.AS! PllCI llDUCT10M Prime lbcation in Rancho San Joaquin Villas directly on golf course. 2BRS & den Solano model highly upgraded. Available for sale or lease/option at $199,900 and also for lease fumished or unfurnished. Tom Allinaon A 72. 1•~···· Comp.a Vriliay c.,... 64WJH I ' .... HoeMt Por S., HottM1 For S• Hom" For S. 0...... a..e htate <»ti. RMI lltat. ············~·········· ......••.........••.... ·······••·············· •••.•..........••....................•.•.•.•.• l"IM I 044 Mewport,leoch I OH Newport hoclt I 069 Moblt...... lncw Property 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ForS. I 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * *LINCOLN I VICTottlAM W.-stdlff 4 Br 2...., Ba. lrl( ••••••••••••••••••••••• COST A MESA • BEACH HOME comer lot. RV space. Mobile Home, 15X30. 1 Units. Bread & Butter. No, not lhtt President New 3 BR 3"" Ba. Quali S2SO ooo 1 bdrm. Costa Mesa. That's what these units but 8 be1utl(\il 3 Bdrm t y handcrafted oak · · aduJts. no pets. Sl0.900. are referred too. Ap· a ttac hed ho m e in thruout. Stained !(lass, SS0.000 down. AITD at 673-3826 prox ,., acre. conve gorgeous Woodbrldite spa · Estates. This Is the best 12 7527 yrs 768·0654 ---------nient to all stores 3 2Br priced produd of llF & 4 !Br S2SO.OOO Good t ype in thtt area Flexi· UMDA ISU EXCITING terms Po)>s tble t rade bit financing too. Call Plan_lllRealty bOM ~ 1·2 Yn. • • M c Na s h R e a It y . now. 752.6499 3 Boat Shps, 5br. meads Sacrifice 642 1334. 642·6578 eves. $165,900 quarters, owne r Is Beautiful customized Costa Mesa E side 4 lll--..a br oker contact Jim i4xS2 Lancer Home 7 1 ""'"'bridge IRYl.-TlllRACE Thompson (71') 828 1280 yrs old 2Br, 2Ba. ram ~3~~:~s~7 ~~~h d~~~· Realty POOL AMD VIEW '213)S98-ll63 room Garden tub w 1all OWC' balanre at 13'~ 13 9 551.3000 A rozy 3 bdrm home a pplla nces e nc I In x ~ross Prine· Only •mBarranu Pkwy, lrvlu with formal dininl( r m ~ Laguna ll1lls nicest star 640·0997 ond pool. Highly expan-park. 21 yrs & older LaCJllROleach 1041 dubleview othurborand S39,500.(JE8359J. Costa Mt•sa w side 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ocean. A great listin~ at Int luy In Town plex. poss cash flow THE SHAKES only $330,000 ,..,uur•rrucru.fNCtsl#Cr 1t., A Doll House. 20x42. 28r. S225.000 25•·; down W e at here d c edar 644-721 I I Ba. walk·in closets balanre ramed at 11 & !!hakes. that is Custom ~ NEWPORT HGHTS Many Klras. S22.500 12"{ 12 4 X l!ro..,i. Prinr designed 3 bdrm. ram s Open dally I ·5 CLASSIC Only 640 11997 rm, 2 baths Extensive ·~ 421 San lemardlfto MOllU HOME Ulie or wood glass & -Custom thr~ bedroom SALES [)upleK . Costa Mesa · t I o -I 2bdrm l'a A..,sumc l~t ceramic i e. ocam ce1 · Mpf Crest $65,000 home Family room with 2706 Harbor Ste 206 A ing. frplc S165.000 Beautiful Newport Cresl wet bar Every rletuil 540-5917 OW(' 2nd SI 53.500 Mission Realty 2 Bdrm + den condo. suggests quality Owner f.40-858.5 1714!494-0731 vinw from "very room will rar r y rom plele ----" ... r d !!INVESTORS!! Walk to beach $245.000 inancing .. own pay '79 Southwmd Motor lime• SUPER HOME Perfoct for all those prl' c1ous antiques Huge II' mg room. massive rrplc. heamed ce1hngs Priv spa off master F.uf,!e lot $375.000 Laquna Village R.E 497-1761 8%DOWH Only 8'i down to bu~ this fantastic 3 Bdrm dream home with magnificent view or the Pa<'iflt' Super assumable loan available $225.000 don osen real tor« 1213 N COAST HWY 1.A\rlfNA AE t\Cll 4!YT 4848 VIEW-VIEW Exclu!.1\l' Porlaf1n:i home with view M a!'>ter !'>u1le with f1rrp la r~ llufi?e decks . Den w iwf't har F.xe<'ul 1vt• neighborhood $345.000 Laquna Vinoge R.E 497-1761 Lease Option 3hdrm S30.t.JOO option monl'v s 12001mo S395,llllO <1ell price Print· On I' 497-1:.>5 2Rr cabana & trlr. '>Uhlet ting allowed. J pvt hrh ... pool & fi s h1n J,! p1t>r $29.900. (714 , 499 3fll6 1052 .......••.•............ LAKE PARK GARDE'-: llOMF. This charminR home has 4 Bdrms. 3 na. and 1)> ov'er 2000 sq ft It is localed in a countrv like settinJZ and 1s · JU!>l minutes to Dana Point Marina. and Re~1onal Park. $175.000 495 1720 Lingo Ru.lhuu On the Oranj?<' Coast look to Linli!O first MisliOft Viejo I 06 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME In the SUH! On a grassy hill' Beaut. vu! Adil, scc'd. peaceful comm. Pvt club w /pool. jac. sauna. & golf. 2 Br. single stry Qua lily rle· cor in warm neutrals ' $108.000 Fanlas t1t· price! Tolle Rltrs S86-8500 581 ·2994 LOWDOWN Versailles lBr/s tutlio. penthse condo. w /lg as s umable loans. only $105,500. Owner /agt. 645-3447. 979-S370 ask for Jim DESPHATE $34,000 down. owner will finance at 13~~ with $1500/mo payme,;;:ts Total price $279,000. East Bluff, Sbdrm. 3ba. call 644-7°'3. ...... ff ..... S,.cW .... ., ....... 4 bdrm, 2~ bath with plush ctrpet & wood floors . Family room with fireplace. Great flnanc:ln1 wllh a 13~ find nte ai 203 down. U•S,000. Hurry, wlth tenm Uke th la tt won't la1t1 !\• ., ll: ii I~~/) !1.1 "tit\' I I ,I 11 I 540 3666 m e n l f I e K • b I e lo 25' Class'A. BK mi. xlnl Long Be;wh 7 ll 9 5X qualified buyer Hay t·ond loaded w/xtra!'>· An<ihe1m4 l'lex !IX •Whelan view I Priced rndut•ed Los Anj!l'lc~ 6 l' 12X ... Ta ke 10 late morlcl p d l ' 1 x SJO.OOO' Now $330,000! Cad /Lancoln 631·1726 asa en<i 7 ~ 5 Real Estate Call for morl' info 631-7100 N.I . --------1 714 M7<w-i26 llGCANYOM GOLF COURSE LOT Owntt Must Sell ! A1itcnt. Dann Bibb 675 2311 640-7665 BLUFFS BA'RGAIN 3 Rr twnhme $155.500 /\Jt't 675 5930. 640 Rl4fl San Juan Capistrano 1078 ......••.•............. ..........•............ C Olftlllet"C lal Properly 1600 .................•..... I 0°/oOwn, I l1/:.r0/olnt. Near Westminster Mull. •--------•I 3 br. 2'"1 ~a condo Ten rozy clean 3 Br $20.000 Condominiums flown· n1s, pool. Jar Must sell. dn. 13'"""'. int. $94.500 houses for sale 1700 /\J?t 642·1523 /\gt 639-1204 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAMFRMT DUPLEX Othet-Rffll Estate 2Br rondo Fallbrook 2914 Oceanfront Corner ••••••••••••••••••••••• J?olf country S89.SOO Sell or trade Submit Mobile HCMIWs 7 I 4 5 4 II l Ii 9 R your deal. Own t/\gt Ofc For Sale I I 00 714 728-0366 642,9601. Res 846-3939 ···~··••••••••••••••••• DuDlexes/ Trailer at bch S14 .900 Onits S'ale 1800 ATTHEIEAC H Nice 3 Br house in s uper cond Terrific f1nancin1': $23.5,000. Terms. OWC or tradt• •• ••••••••• •• ••• • •• •. • • 499-31116 SUNSETR F. 542 5I03 846·8803 $40,000 and owe balance 7 yrs new 3 frplcs, view & steps lo beach Rafferty & Lloyd Bk rs. 963·5568 ___,__ New Modular type home. Oreanview· El Moro Beach Park. s p 70 2Ar. spare rent $175 mo 20 yrs lse. $69.900. 499 31116 •Oceanfront dplx. xlnl loc. fin. & price' Pr in only 673-7677.673·7873 Newport leoc:h I 06• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY HILLTOP ESTATE! Available and ready to occupy is this magnificent French Mediterranean 5BR vill a w/perfection in design, materials and craftsmanship. Elegant formal living rm and dining rm. gourmet kitchen. mas ter and executive suites w/cedar walk-in closets. 40' pool. $2,500,000. Lynne Valentine A70. llG CANYON -5 DllRWOODI Exquisite SBR English Normandy residence overlooking golf course. Circular staircase leads to master suite w/his & hers bath, s~una and spa, plus 3 guest rooms each w/bath. Four fireplaces, family room, library. billiard rm, 3 wet bars. Golf and nlght lights views. $2,000,000. Lynne Valentine A7l. ---U2·141T 111 7 ~ VoJ.y Cent., W~ Ctnt• 64J.8Jll 644-6111 901 [)o..., Onve HOltlor v-Centet ' HEAR THE SAND lal»oa Pett. Duplex Seronds to the water Excellent 3 BR owner'!> "home like" unit & 2 BR, 2 hH rental unit Ideal for home & in come Clo.'le to Newrort pier & shops ~.950 WesleyN. Taylor Co. Realtors 644-49 I 0 Income Property 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLE VALLEY Near ne w '4 -Plex . 2 bdrm. 2 bath each unit with fireplace. enclosed patio. double gara~e $165.000. Bill Grund y. Rltr. 675·6161 FOURPLEX Westside Costa Mesa. Need s s ome work . $22,000 yr Income. Full price S225 .000. Owner will carry 10"1.-interest w/S60.000dn. A PR€HIG€ .-q_----~-HOM€~ R.E. Investments 3333 W. Coast Hwy. NB 645-6646 INCOME PIOPIRTIES Looklnlf for Income un- its?! We have S pro- perties In C.M. Priced right at lest lhan llXGrosa. No bank nnancln« required. In· terested., Then call us. ., 714 /641·0'163 1787 Bri1tol St. Costa Mesa, CA 20 UNITS C .M. Al•aut I vt•Jr ol.t Twnh~e I 'n11-. f''rpll'' '.; 1 re a rco;J TSL l!'l\'ST~TS f>42 11io:1 I 2 UMITS..AMAHEIM l)(>luxl' 2 Hdrm 2 Ba !'ml!> 1.111·:.tted 1n heaut1ru1 l!art1{·n .,t' It' <'nm pit'~ \II re<' fa1·1htlf':. :.t\·;Jll fully occ·upll'd m<'lude-. (•a rpeltnl? ctrap<''> built in k1tchrn~ furred air ht•at & air S719 500 "It'" 7 S "; 3 fl v t• a r I 11 '' n ... ·1·uret1 In' .. -.1rn1•n1 ... 714 96.14Sl>i H fo:CC>HOl'llC; '-'Tl 'UICI Fully e<1u1ppt•d + a good 2 RR hnmt· Sllill 01111 /\gt (;4/) 4:ll«l Lots for Sale 2200 ..•••..•..•.......••.•• RIVERSIDE I+ /\c· n• Lots OWC'20'. DWN !179 730 0 994 217 1 0'4nt'r ai:(l ........••.•••••....... HAWAII Wr have a heaut new :lhr. 2ha hnmt' on KAUAI We <'an arrange to kN'p 1t rentt'd for .vou until you a rt· read~ lo make :.t mo''<' vou ·,e alwavs wanted to make Cuntart Karen Render I R081742 6 436 CR(.18!8'.!2·9477 Special Land Sale Orran view lots. Morro Ray area 2 lob SI0.990 F. Z term.., Reaut views nf the Pac·1fic Ocean. Estem Ra v & Cayucos Call 8057723958 or l!05. 772 8612 /\ l?l Out of State Property 2600 ......•................ 40 A scenir Ore~on Coast F.lectricity. fencect , out standmJl view access1 ble. owner 492 2499 Ranches. Farms. Groves 2700 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Ha ve two a<'re horse pro pertv & hou!!e in Norco W Ito register Arabian horses Wiii trade for property in Costa Mesa or Newport Beach area. Phone 714-737-4081 . Real Estate Ex~ 2100 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Mobile Homes-Lakeside Big Bear Ltke or Ocnfront Laguna Bch. terms or trade. 4~-381& '58 Owens 31' Express Cruiser. Top shape. Repltcemenl value $30,000. Exchan1e for local R.E. equity. Bob: (714)491-2229. ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ,. I ... 3107 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Charmin« s bdnn, 3 bath bayfront wl\b 38' 'boat float. SHOO mo. Blll GNndy.fTWdl. Ftnd What you want In Dally Pilot Cla11lfteda. ........ -............ r--·--·........_..... ......... ,. ..................... .,,... ....... .-..... -.... , ; ~ l ~ .. ~."!~.~.... Orange Co•st DAIL PfLOT~ne.dey. March 18,1981 n COtMMiile Jl24 Af IQOlita~ Afmka .. a~ 1Yecsif11 .... 4UO Offtee-..W .. .. .. ................... ··••······••······•·•·· .......................................................................................... ~ llrl • C .... Mete • Jl24 ... .,... IMc6 Jl6f On lhe beach' 2 Br 200e ..,. ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... w ~anr . t (Lo ACCOUNTAHT • c u't _ .... , ............. ....................... Luary btdMd.aal type ~ 3bdrm., Jbe, HW. ll.•/mo CTW41J.OW7, Ne~lf d~r. IH pd... $461 'H....__ za. 8 bd d "'" · wer Attny, or ot.htr prof'• ~ n c • a r • p 0 0 I • .--. paclous ~ rm ~D 0 Unit>. Weekly ot' Mon· wan~ to nu run SVC H · d /washor Adults . 2 cl\lldru oll·no ,,.ts. 2Y.t ba.Quietk>c. UtlyT»tm .... _.. •~~ •-. ............ Jl6t 5S7·1"'4 546<IUI imS/mo _ ec ,..,.,., • l"Cww. Ww SU..S073 --'-63M75','31.4744, ....... ~ 4lOO dow oles •vaU lmmecL ••••••••••••••••••••••• BALBOA JSLAND RAYFRONT. S h ort term ,_tal. Avail now unW J '91e lS. Olllstaod· ln1 4 Bdrm 3 ba upper duplex apt , 2 ca r 1a~. SlOOO/mo. Lou Brechtel 4r Au"c ----------I Spaclou• 3 Br Ouplu Newe:r Iara• lbr w11ar. ?Sf...tlOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cmptt Tu Ub In conl '410. Pool ft laundry tac. Adult.I. nopetJ. $370/mo Movln1! Avoid deposit• rm Nttr Jrvlnt City! c ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUSCASITAS f'um l br. •pt ms 4' up. Encl. ur. Adults, no pell. 2110 Newpe>rt Bl, 543·41188 btwna& 5PM 543-95.'iefrom 12·7PM. ~--3 8 r 2 Ba . Inc I . ac cut Uvlnr expenaff! Hall Call Mr Vanrft Clean East.aide 28r. 251 stovetrefrig, yrly rental Proreulon•lly since S-49-4023 _____ _ Near new 2bdrm. 2ba, 16 th p 1 N 0 net 11 S67S/mo. Agt. 873-~ 197!. ~OltT a• ... CH j frplc:, laund'>' rac, oew ,. HOUS• .......... TIS nsnr -C!rpta.drps&palnt. ~cl SUS/mo Evei; Cll ll . Versailles !Br/studio mTi~ IXICSUms . ur. '475. Adults. no 979·3848 penlt~e condo. adlts.no Pre1U"k>u11 buildin1t 1f ns.m1 Harbor V. hOmea. 4Br. l•m rm .. 2 story, xlnt cond. A vall J /S. Tel: &u-51197. CASA DI ORO ALL lM'ILITIES PAID pets. 8'13·2113. 494-5758 2 Br. 1 Ba w/garage. Pet pets. S450 mo. + tst IH t Male 4CM5 shr Sbr. 2ba, One fl(t'wpon Pl Recep eves OK. ~ mo. Ask ror + sec. dep. 845·3447, hse. C M. Spa Nr SC t1onl:1t , waitin~ room. Mike. 641·0763 979-S370Jim Plaza & Frwy. szoo. Shr con rt-r e n c e r oo "!..• 2Br. l~Ba. w/gar. Adlts. Compar e before you rent. Custom design features: Pool, BBQ, cov'rd carage , new rurnlture. s urrounded with pluah landscaping. Adult living at iti best Nopeta. • cplls. drJ>O, bltns, fncd yd . water pd 636·4120. 687 Victoria St. sos 2619 "J" Santa An• Ave. ----utils. 6'1·4913. serretarial space. i1up Au i I now . I, A R c, E IEST Y ALUE port services. From 120 ml .... c IHch 3240 3 Br. 2 Ba. large yard, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• car garage. S74S m o l BR. new cpts. drps. 67S·<ti62. BACH El.OR w /patio In Versailles comer p~n *Shared Ll•"'t * sq ft 714/IJ33..8l00 • quiet a!iult complex. lhouse2Br28a.comm Counselors topersonally Small:,ffi ~: 18 ~7 Pool spa bbq no pets pool. Jae .. wgt room . 11elect your compatible WestcUrr Or NB. Good H ..... U.fawlalMd S4JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• U02 walk to bch. Clean & pvt. 1400. lst + ~. dep. 536·6288 Yearly rental 3 Bd, 2 Ba. inc l. stove 1750 /m o S32'". mo · M e~a Pine~ 1700/mo. 675-3787 rmmte lo s uit your "' " Hf I Sh ed L' lot 1150 per mo. 631-0980-A pt,;. 2650 H arlu C ute 2 Br . 1 Ba . estye ar · 1v1ng. ____ _ tlle81iB.IHJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• By OWNER. formal din. 3 br; pool. Now avail. Arr o whead Country C lub area , San Bernardino. 1·864·1732. 1-884-7258 -Possible lease option Exec. Home. Cul·de·sac Agt. 673·33SS I Bdrm furnished '420 2 Bdrm furnished S480 ~ W Wilson, 642-1971 UAITMEMTS Beautifully landscaped garden apts . Patios or d erks. Pool & s pa. Heat paid, covered parkinit Adults, no pets. l or 2 persons OK. c:.9 ..... 7 833 Dover Or Suite 31 NB Offi'ce/ e'--··-OC .,.. .....,. fireplace. garage in lov 631•1801 · war '"""'e nr e ly Newport Hei~hts Airport, 1800 sq n offices $385/mo 2bdrm , Iba duplex. no dogs. 645 V1(' to r1a :>46-9124 3br 3ba fam rm SS35. 675-0349 Fem wanted to shr home & warehouse. Offices Gardener. 1750 lea se SPACIOUS N.I . 2131378-32167. TOWNHOUSE New 2 br, 2'h be. Back Bay Joe. Gar. pvt patio S895 mo. Susan· 957·6507. ~().7238 Bach. Apts. Utils. paid Weekly or Monthly M cNash Realty 642-1334, 642-6518 eves. IAYTIMIERS SPAC I OUS w / s a m e n r O c c full carpeted & aircond Versailles. 2 Br 2ba. de· 1225/mo Refs r eq Assume 11,AJyrs at S750 r or ator mirrors SS50. 540.0608 mo or negotiate longer BEDROOM Sandy 642·6149 term wtownr. SS6-9900 · Colorado woman would 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR. encl gar , adlts. no pets. '450. 113 W. Wilson. 631-48119 3bdrm house, cul·de·sac. nr Westminster Mall Fenced yard. dbl gar. 16SO/mo. No fee to te· nants. Coats & Wallare 3 Bdnn. frpk. walk to 962-4454. beach, pool & tennis St unning Lge !bdrm garden apt . pool /rec area S37S. 710 W. 18th St I Bdnn S39(). $400 22SOVanguard Way ~96216 or 548·2'408 Prplc. lrg patio. walk in rloset. dishwasher. gar. pool & lndry far 399 W Bay St 646 9883 Versailles. Beaut P 1H hke toshr vour rurn apt 2Br 2ba suites Mirrors Promontor.v Pt pre thru-out. bltin wine re rred L ve me11!> rack View or bay. S750. 12131821·6676 New p ort Ce nter Pre11t1g1ous 9th rtoor view location appr&x --------Hwttlwcjton leach 37 40 ------• 17'45 Agt 760-9278 Adult complex. 2bdrm, ILUFFS -Sandy 642-6149 1395 F.tSide 2 BR 1 Ra. Cross from bch. Lg bright 230 0 SQ (t 17141640 15flO·Mr J oe Fletcher 2 Br 2 full bath condo 2 car gar. Pool. jacuzzi. Gas pd. 1700/mo. Days 213/861 ·8207, h o me 213/923.2660 2ba, atrium , pool. spa. tennis. million dollar clubhouse. S650tmo. Call Phyllis 962·4454. 3 bdnn, 21"1 baths. fam rm. !950. 2 bdrm. 2 bath. S875 3 Bdrm. ram rm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $375/up 1·2 bdrm. pool, jac. adlt. 18992 Florida, H.B. 842.2834 or 642·3172 2bdrm. 1 1-'l ba , di s hwasher . crpts, drpi.. gar . 995-3311 SHO 995·3.11 l. EASTSIDE <'h il d OK , no Pt'li. 2Brlba,par,trum.D /W, 54 15331:646 2325 patio $650/yrly. 968-8263 Jo;ai;tside. l~c J br. 21 '.· ba. 2 s ty. dbl ,l(ar. 2 piltin .... 1mmar S7f>01mo Rerit. 642·1123.5 Will shr my plush, s par home. m1 r m, frplr. pool. hot tub. on l!Olf roursc in Back Bav, N R Chris tian pnnr1 ples rref no smoke1dr1nk 85 1 1910 OFFfCE/W AHHOUSI SUI-LEASE Coats & Wallace $1100 Pools . Rltr. COUllfrv Woods 5 Br. 3 Ba 2 Sty SI 100 mo. lse. -644·0134. 2 Br. & Stucfy. split-level. _ __ LC14J1MOINCh 3748 f ireplare. s k y li ght. 3 br i i,.; ba f/p, dshwsher.1 ... ~llllllll!lllll!l!llll!ll .. ~•-I ••••••••••••••••••••••• derk. No rhildren or stove. bar-b.que. patio.1• NEWPORT CREST 2 Br Studio. tux. s pa, TV. pets. SS35. 180 E .2111t. St. EASTSIDE NewPort Heights Duplex 2 Br. I Ba. Adults. no pets. S495 mo. Is l. last deposit. 517 Bolsa. Days 631-3520. Eves & Wknds 548·S<MI. Resp Non·Smkr Fem lo shr 3br. 3h11 hse avail 1mmed CdM S22s 1mo 760-8499. 752 7000\.'XI 223(} 4 ortlres. r ereption , warehouse w 11rg slidinl! I door. ~ec SYStem, new paint. new r rpt. Redhill nr Rri:1tol Avail arter :J 251111 l 51vr lse Call 644·6500or760-1377 .,. 494-0066 refrig, gardner & water maid service. pbone. Days 646·4262. Eve<; C~ Woods incl. Call 968-6596 or +den. 211• ba. S8SO SlOO/wk. 499.2227 645-9643. Larj!e 2 Br 2 Ba loft HuJle3br ,2ba.submit on 848·4619. LUXURY VIEW CON ------. apt $545 mo No kids & pets. avail now, ---------DO 2 Br. 2ba. Security N•wporl l.ach 3769 2 HUGE Hedrooms 1n rhildren or pets 18021 st 1625. 631 -6994 Hwd~ bld2. S12SO/mo. ....................... super loratton Fully St Dav~ 646 4262. f':ves OCEANFRONT 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba Duplex Upstairs 2 car 1?araj!c w iauto opener. washer &drverincld Ava11.4·1 fo'emale. non smoker. to 2 Stor.v Orr.re wipriv en s harr 2 Rr. 2 ha. ('ostii lr:rnl'e, balh Great. Mesa $262 546 6303 Oc·ran Vir~ $475 631-7770 ----HmiNMr 3242 lfVH custom 3 Br, 5ba Fabulous, Oceanfront ca rpeted . built-ins , 6459543 2bdrm, Iba duplex, ~ar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w lpool Professionally Wkly, Easter. Summer. ground noor Adults. no washer/dryer hook·up, View condo. 3bdrm. Jba. decorated . Com pl Now 2·'4 Br Pnme lor. pets. S3SO mo. Apply Apt Dana Point 3826 ' new noors, rrpts, paint 2 frplc. dbl gar. patio. ocean/bay view S2SOO 673·7873 E 568 w w i I ~ 0 n ••••••••••••••••••••••• S475 + dep. I small child tennis. pool. spa . xlnt LIDO ISLE. 2 Br, 1~ ba 64s-44n Vacant $490 mo 1st & ok. No pets 1952 Meyer cond $1175 631·0995 home Yearly SJ200/mo Lux u r Y 0 c ea n r r 0 n t las t. DJO sec Frpk. bit TSL.MGMT 642·1603 Quiet 2 Br I B<i with ga r aj!e . patio poo l Adults. no pets 1801 II 15th S t Newpo r t Heights $450 642·7340 Ot•eanrrunt Vt' rv n H·r 3Br. yrlv. need 2 rmmte~ ror brlrm mstr" .. ~ own hakonv & hath G75 4!319 NR r-;x f.C SUITE Prim(• Newport Rrh !or Pr~( deror con r Lge gar. tiny hse. lbr. 1 ba . adults. no pets, S400tmo 892·3731 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~9·3484 '"'--32.... Weekly 2or 3 Br Comp I •2Br.2 Ba CondonrSC' rns Nodogs 5423597 -.... WaterfrontHomes,lnc rurn inc ld linens t Plaza. SA Pool s.soo \ audio visual seminar & other fa r1 I 752 5299 Secluded 2 Br I Ba. patio home with comm pool Adults only , no pets Avail J.13·81 SSOO per mo. 2'453 Orange Ave Manager Apt. B Ne w. dlx 3 br. 21? ba. frpk, dbl Rar w topener. yards. pall~. ~ardener Kids /pets OK S750 Lorri, wkdys 5'47-9571: eves /wknds 5"46·~34 . COUNTRY RENTAL BY P UBLIC <S EALED I BIO on April 6, 1981 <one ) 2 & 3 bdrm homes Backbav Univ Or a rea. Por info call COUNTY O P ORANGE GSA REAL ESTATf: DIVISION 17141 834-2550 Refurbished 3bdrm. lba. crport. lrg fncd bkyrd. patio. c rpts . no pels. sssoimo Slit 1116 QUtCK MOVE IH Hu~e near ne w 3 Br 2 Ba Townhouse type, 2 car ~ara~e . patio. fireplace Small child. s mall pet OK. Like your own home S595 mo Wont last Drive by 2195 Maple St then r all 642·1603 F.'side attrar 2Br Iba. no pets. Avail. Mar 15. $450. 546·3937 3 Br 2 Ba Family r1>0m. fire place. RV access. corner. en rlsd yard 971 ·9511 & 546-4093 LGE 2br home, cpts. stv. refril!. fncd y d. 2ar ad11llc;. S35(Hmo 644·9806 Northwood Mdl house 2 stry 4 Br. 21"1 ba 2500 · s If S9SOlmo 551 8731 Brand new 2 Br. I'? ba rondo Sl600/mo No pets 770.5578 2 Br I Ba No pets I child OK 2097 Maple Ave New crpts. d r1>5. utils in cld Realtors 631-1'400 -~o~ __ Child OK. 549 3232 or 2 Br 1 Ba with refrige . Large 3 Br Condo2•, Ba 1~~~~~~~~~~ 641 .1460 built ins. rarpets & Din area. ramily r m. r ---drapes $410 951 Ofl81 or frplr. cr pt . 2 s tory . The Bluffs. 4bdrm. 3ba. E Side triplex Jhr 2ba 951 7630 Ask ror Louie comm pool Avail 3·16. fam nn. patio. on green 1mmed OC('UP no pet!> 33801 Mariana S86Smo +deposit Call belt. comm pool S550 mo ind utll 752·1.282 9to4 Sl200/mo 759·1685 851·9647 LEASE Turtleroc k Glenn. lrj!esl sin2le fam home. 5bdrm, 3ba. fam rm. central air. 3 car gar. walk to pool & Len· nis SJ.050 Call Gary after 6pm · 752·8318 NEWPORT HACH 1 "• blocks to the ocean beach Three bedroom two bath home Yearly lease Pirst and la'it $1000 per month 631·7:.lO. BKH YUR·AOUND FUN: Sunny 2 Br upstairs apt E'side Gar. derk. laund rm. no pets. $450/mo Avail Apr I. 631· 1094 2 br. 13. ba. nu c·rpts. wet bar. frpll', sunderk . ocean vu Must see S.SSO 493-6384. 661 9343 2 br. balton y. 0 W <'lean. coin laundry & wshr, gar. nr ocean 493-~ aft 5PM San Jumt Capistrano 3878 ·····••················ 2bdrm. 2ba penthouse. 1 level. very l\t'at $400 496·81.22 Gloria Ff:'m rmmte ~ilnlc•rl to s hr w 'iame N<'wpotl <'Ondo S2SO mo 631 2259 ev wknd F'<•malr <;hr h~e Ea"h1<ll' I !\o1 S2SO + ulll a\ail 4 1 ·HI 646 27AA art 6pm Will sharp 2tx.I 2ba Park Soutt. Laguna 3886 Nrwport SJOO mo rurn. • 1 ••••••••••••••••••••• rn rl ut1I & linen" w rc~p Oceanfront studio a pt em p w om n e f s with patio, overlooking f>40 8693 pvt beach. $550/mo ut1I incl 499.2253 or 499·5021 Office Rental 4400 HARBOR VIEW Super exer 5 Brlrm w tvu. $1350 m o. A~t 644.9990 WESTBAY AP'I'S New garden apts. palms. pool. spa. Adults. no pets H•dlwqtun leach 3840 Apartments Furnished ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Uitfuntls~ 3900 THE WHIFFLETREE ••••••••r••••••••••r••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• F.leeanl pror hid~ 1n 11 A 8.'>• per sq rt be• Red C'arpet.1193 1351 2Br. 2ba S480·S485 398 W. Wilson. 631-5583 NWPT PENINSULA Exer offi celi in elej!an,1 s urroundings A<'ros~ from Ci ty llall All su~ port w rv1 res available.- From 2'lS lo 4750 sq.I\\ fi73 3f02 ·: ... N R De'\IJ(n Plaza. I of4 r1<·e in s uite. orean view ~ha re r ece pt rm-. $.1.')()1mo Set"y & ans ser\' avail Call Tues nr ... ri 1)4(). 89114 17th STREET Costa Mesa 3 rm suite A t' Plenty or parkinit 545 sq ft 75' sq ft Rcalonomirs 675·6700 Por Lease Woodbridge 4 Br 3 Ba 2 Story home on rut-de sac Warmly decorated Immaculate. Private atrium & patios with brirk work $900 per mo melds Gardener & assoc fees. 731·6395 Orean View' L11e 2br Condo .ser bldg adults only S795 1lse 528 5111 Social Ac11v1t1es 01 •ec1..,r • Free Svnoa~ B1vn cn •BBQ s •Pai ties • Plvs mvch more GREAT RECREATION. Tennis• Free Lessons tpro & pro shop)• '2 Hea1111 Ctvbs •Savna . Hydromassage • SW1m mong • 011v1ng Range 1 Br $395 2 Rr I Ba $465 Luxury Adult units at ar S E A W I N D fordable living 1,2 & 3 VILLAGE Br We ll d ecorated 1617 Westrhrr N R Want 0 r1nanc1al inst 7()()()s r lusiftess lt...tal 445 Beaut 2 Br l Ba. double j!ara~e Many extras S650 mo 548·6023 & 675·8918 Woodbnd~e Townhouse 2 story. JBr. 11'1 ba. pool. ll'nms & lake S650 mo 551·5.526. 750.3403 WOODBRIDGE 3 Ar 11 1 Ba C'onrlo S600 mo Wrk 1714 )833·6029 Rama H ome 12131498-6090 T u r t I c r o <' k N e ~ townhouse 2 Master bdrm. fam rm. 21, Ba 1750sq ft. Prof derorat· ed Pvt patio Pool. ten nis. park close. $900 mo R33·82'77 or 752-6492. RENTALS 2+!1en.212ba 3br I'• ba 3br2ba 3br 2ba 3br211ba 4br21<:>ba $750 $550 $67S $775 $12.50 furn S850 $900 Steps to the beal'h. ler 4 br dplx. 2'" ba. patio. 2 sty. immar $1000 yrl,\ 673-2507 LI! 3Br. 21"1 Ba Condo. rpl dbl ~ar $775. 36' boat slip option al S200 675-l225 Comfortable llouse with pool. private. n1celv landscaped S995 mo 3 Rr 2 Ba + 2 ut1htv bedrooms ram rm . rireplare 640·1327, BEAUTIFUL APART· MENTS S1ng1es 1 & '1 Beo1ooms • F vi n1sneo & Unlvrn.sheo • Aoutl L·••ng •No Pets • Mooeis Ooe11 oa y 9 10 6 Oakwood Garden Apartments Newport Beach/So. 1700 16111 SI Oo.~· •j •61"• 17141 642-5113 Newport Beach/No. 880 '"'"e ,, 101~1 17141 645-1104 161 E 18th 642 0856 Weat:field FAMILYA"S. Brand new beautirul lrg apt, for families with I or 2 r hildren Near park Heat paid No pets 3Br. 2 Ba. SS60 398 W. Wilson. 631·5583 Newly painted 2 Br 2 Ra Patio. buill·ins. ~arai:e ArlulLs, no pets lmmed ore· 645·98.57. ~8-4291 Olympic site pool. ll~hl· eel tennis court. Ja(•uzzi . park hke landscaping Most beautiful bldg in HB Prom SJ60 846·0619 -------- \~O ADULT . ~~. LIVING • 1 & 'l 8'I Pa110 ApU • 01ihwu11ers & 880 s • Pool & Rec Room \ G•1oen l•nOsc•p1119 • Joo 10 Buen & Sl\op~ S G 559·6188. office 75!1·6S97 1-.---------· WALLACE ST. APTS. Newlv decorated 2 Ar I Ra . S42s Small rhilcl OK . no pet s 2049 i#allace at. 645·6452 SEA ENVIRO NMENT %32 HAMIL TON H 8 962 4500 3 Bdrm. Jl7 ba SC Plaza area. Newly dee. k1rls OK. S650. 557-2783 ----- Concbniniums Unfurnished 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lux <."Ondo. 3bdr m . 1'.,ba. pvt patio. 2 car car /elec opener. <'lose to S C Plaza SS95 mo lse ~9·0259 3br. l''lba 2 mi frotn ocn. pool SS25 <2131486 812l! Paul (7 14 >963 7758 <home I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3802 • •••••••••••••••••••••• APTMTS FOR RENT H B . NB . Costa Mesa Something for Everyone Bach to '4 Br. Unrurn NEAR MEW 2 Bdrm w /frplc. hit in~. quiet neighborhood. walk to park & shop $495. Isl. last + dep Call Ha l. 631·7900 I br. Iba, frplc. OW . e ncl 11ar Nr llunl Harhnr Jan. 841"1186 3 Br 21'1 Ra 2 Story. frplc. ln!iry rm 1n 4 Plex Bo lsa Chi c a 1 Wamer area $580 per mo 84(). 550<t Apts Certain location!l 2 Bd 1 Ba. !375 \lean & orrer Pool . spa. quiet.nokids tpet~ rall 2 & 3 Bedr ooms fireplace. laun .room. Craig 631 1266 S400.S450 Kids OK. no beamed c e1l1ngs, · pets p lease Water urages. all built-ins. Iii i ~ ~-Trash Paid Carport Ga~den & T ownhouse • · 964·2S66or973·2971 ARI . design r f TSL MGMT 642· 1603 r. • j no ee I .....___ -P~-:;--3-107 --_ _ _ 2 Bdrm. 2 ba cpts. drps. a.---a 2bd lh d tw. encl 0 ar bearh & 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. a. xlnt lor " • 2 Bdrm.tbathatl5th St !ac r oss s t fr om Po rnts area S4SOimo 1495 mo. incl. util No Oakwood Apts I Rear 1142·8032 pets. 675-S800Agent patio. SS2S tmo. 645·3114 2 Br 2 ba. microwave. -.... ----------- 1s t nllOr Agent 541 5032 ICOLL CENTER NEWPORT F:legant cxerut1ve 'Ulll·~ in pres tige lol·at1on With romplete support services 71<1 85 J.()681 New 1&2 bdrm luxury adult apts in 14 plans from 1440. 2 bdrm from SSOS + pools . tennis. waterfalls. ponds' ,Gas fo r C'OOking & hea I IOI! paid. From San DieKo Frwy drive North on Beach to Mr F adden then Wesl on McFadden t o Seawind Vill aj!t'. <71'41893-5198 450 "Q ft Del1 J?htru1 wo rk1n2 s pat•e w11h orean view fo'ull bath 3 Rooms 4000 yr old bldg S450 mo ••••••••••r•••••••••••• TurnerAssoc'l .494 1177 Laguna Beach Motor Inn. 985 No Paciri<" Coast Hwy, Laguna Bearh Dailv. Weeklv, Kitr hen avaflable. Low wintl!r rates. 494.5294 Room with kitchen priv Near bus & shoppin_g center 962·7520 art 6PM or wknds. Unrumished Room lite kitchen priv, I m i to heh. priv ba Sl75 963·11187 Room ror rent SleepinJ! r oom only. S45 wk 631 -1254 YounK male. pvt home Mesa Verde area. k1l rh priv 642-4 546 wk ~9·9847 hm Room & pvt Ba. HB area. w oman prererred . S2001mo 962·3168 MD's fac1I. 1n HB 2.000 sq rt Redured tn $1200 mo lse Red \<HPt'l 1193·13.'il NEWPORT CENTER Full Ser v1cc Su11 es SCUTCOSTS $ A 11 vou need ror one monthly rce' 640-5470 •DELUXE OFFICES* From I room up lo 2300 ... q ft $1 08 per c;q rt 3 rooms and u p No le11se required 2172 OuPonl Or Adj A1rporter Hotel RJ.') 3223. 9 12 N R 2700 sq ft full~ 1m proved space. SI 5 '>Q ft pleasant!\• divided into 8 omces, 2 sec'y areas. + conferenre room Pt>r in formation 1714 l 644 6580. 84fi.0287 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For store & offire space at reasonable rates. 500 to 2700 SQ Ft. - MESA VERDE bR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E . C.M 545-4121 Newport Buch. Sl .ZS sq rt New dlx o(fice or relail w l pvt bath c;ecunty. a c. 800·2400 sq rt 509 3 lst St I next to Bank of Newport,. l.1do Cannery a rea 1 fi75·3236. 12131641 9700 ftrime Location 1270 Sq rt on busy Beach Boulevard· Hunt in gt on Re arh Ideal for real estate orrice. store br other suitable business 2 Pnvate baths, availa !)le immediately 10 Year lease Attractively priced 642-021, Hf 286 Weekdays Pn.. Hcri»or 11•4· Location. 2000 sq [!. St500tmo S48·1U6. evfd 675·2213 ColNMf'Claf ltftlhlls 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Store Space for leaa.e:. 1500 sq. n & 12e0 sq. n 1n Huntington Bea c h Plex1b l e t er m s 2131596-7202. Sharp East.side house on quiet street. 3 Br l Ba frplc. refrige. dshwshr. garage. S625. Wayne, Agent 646·8816. 3 Br. 2 Ra in The Terrare 172.5 Avail 416 644·4895: 644·9000 Wendy Beam Ocean Vie w ' Lge 2br Condo sec bid~. adults only $795/lse 528·5111 --------Spacious I Br w /garage, laundry facil. SS2S. Ask ror Faye. 640.9900 Cor'OftCldet Mer 1822 Cozy 1 Br guellt unit rrplc. S500tmo Ca ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• E 'side. Util pd Avail 963·6490o rdriveby21792 Apr 19th. S42S. 645·6625 Brookhursl Apt 18, P.le~ant Suite. pool Pash I No s moke. S385 640·6594. 540-3822 Joyre -------- Hotels, Motels 4 I 00 Cd M Deluxe Su1tei.. A<'. ampl pk2. ut1I pd 2!155 F. Cst Hwy 1175·6.q()() 4.000 sq ft for lse. storage work area. potential of. flee. se t -up Wi ll n egot iate good lse . Harbor & Warner. S A 546·3700 I t I 2bdrm end unit, mas ter bdrm with balcon y , prime location. S750/mo Ca II Phyllis 962·4454. Coats & Wallace 5br. 2ba. S8SO/mo tst /last 1300 security n e w cpt/pnt. seperate dlnin111 754.al86 4br. 2ba hm w t(p, bttns. dbl gar. nice yd In College Pk Kids ok $750 ~147. 646-6789 Woodbridge a rea Ir~ 3 Br 2""1 Ba. 2 car gara2e. fam nn. din area, frplc. c rpts. drps. window COY· PR EE RENT lil 3/31 181 Hntg Landmark 3 RR r ondo. brand new Adults only over 40 yrs. S650 mo. 759-9386 ers Comm. pool. Avail 2br. 2ba, pool /jar/clbhse, a ft J.25. S82S per mo + nr S.C. Plaza $.500/mo deposit. 7~·12829-4. 557·~1 eves __ L..-l._;h----n48 Tow.._. ••••••••••••••••••••••• U ....... lhed 3525 New 2Br. 2Ba Mobile Home. good ocn view. pvt bch, l8SO mo Adlts only '499-3816 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice Twnhse. '495 mo 2br, lli!rba. Savage Wild & Co. 675-6606 Avail. Apri l 1st. 2 Br 2 Ba. with sundcck. Close to beach. No pets. $700 mo 675-0124 Jackie. -------- 2 Br I ba. E'side Pool. gar, pvt yard. new c pl/. paint. $450. 673·0731 2Br. tBa duplex Di s· hwas h e r , newly re FR EE RENT lil 3131 /81 Hntg Landmark 3 BR c ondo Brand new Adults only over <10 y rs S650 mo. 759·9386 modeled, laundry hook Bachelor 3 blks to bch Dix ocean vu. I Br. ne wly up. S52S lease. 646·2135. Stove & refrige, ut1ls decor ated. w /g ar · -paid.424 '"19th St Call Adults 1675/mo. Ask for EAST SIDE 968-0020aft 6PM Faye 640-9990 203 E. 19TH ST H ti......to-- 2Br. lBa. frpk Will H-~'!" South of PCH. 2bdrm , show Fri 4·6PM $485 __. 1 b a . r r p I c . d e c k . mo. Ownr. 549-2042 ••••••••• ••• ••••••• ••• • washer /dryer S675 3bdr m. 2ba. l.'lose to 3842 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa Inn oceanfront. Low winter rates. Daily or weekly . Kitr henette S90 & up. 675·8740. SEA LARK MOTEL •Weekly rentals now avail •S98 and up •Color TV •Phones in roorna. 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. 646·7445. ----67S·2424aft5pm Townhomeapt,2Br.2Ba. water . tennis. pool Oceanfmt lBr. trlr + 3 Br 1"'1 Ba. Townhome. c lo s e to s ho pplnR . 18()()/mo 968-3495. Oceanview Studio Apt. cabana, deck, pvl bch. pool. HB. Near beach. Separate house . newly ~;= 1495 mo. Al!t. Ntwporl t.ocll--)16' s.1SO&ae;,~~\~eposit. fumtunfum. adlls only. children welcome No decorated c ha rming _ __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• et -15 0•2 4474 2bdrm. Iba. Well located S 20 E /SIDE 3 BR l aty condo. 1750 mo. 499·38:.._16 ____ 1 P s . .., . <>" • or on quiet st. 1700. No pets. Lrg 2Br. I Ba. duplx. gar PARK NEWPORT •owowr Rtwhlh 4 0 I J I Dbl 968-9222. W ID hlrup, no nots. '425 ••••••••••••••.,•••••••• w/gepaUo/aruzz . 3 Bdrm /den. 3 Bu 871-3017. ...-T gar .. '700.6*4380 tmmed. lease l850. 1075 D.plexnU ..... 3'00 _;_;.;:...:.::..:..:...;_ _____ 1 2178 B . Place ntia COUMTIYCLUI OCEANFRON SUM· -9596 ... •••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrm, l da. d eck. 545-7983 UVlo.&#1. ME R RENTALS 16$0 H.,;rJrl• IHclt 3240 Non a. 556-1656. 760· d 1•• ..... , • ••30 ....,.. wk. Adil" only. Now tak· .,.. S47S/mo. 2bdrm. lba. a u "'·no~· ..... e.., · Singles, llc2 bedroom ln"-rvatio"'• ........ ""79 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocnfront Mobile Home Costa Mesa. 81~73or644-6382 3Br. 2Ba. 4·plex. gar. apll, ctr townhouses. .. ·~ ...... ...,....., S bib to ocean. Ele1ant 2 28 r . pvt bch, Sl.OOO mo. 963-1800 adults. no pets. $480. 1040 From 1429 644 . 1900 v-.............._ It.....,. 4210 bdrm ram rm ctr den I bdrm duplex yearly ren· C. Valencia 545-7983 --. · vrly, 1dlta only. fum /un· • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cl7SO mo). Plush crpt1.; ·..:.1.1:..:...m:..:...499-...:.:.:....:.38_1..:.8 _____ 1..__INwGlla Fwilla ... d tal. '4$0/mo . 873-3801. Oceanfront ror Winter Big Bear. cloee to slopes. 2"'1 be, Cf!dar • J iau . -.......-844·2252. 984-5752. INST AMT IN Ren. tals P'urnlshed & ilpll 8 trplc .... /day Dbl C vt .. r II I--..... )2•0 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• 3 Bd 2 8 Xt 1 _., ar p •r. u y -...--11> rm. •· ra r 11 u.nfum. Broker. 875·•12. 1175/wlrly 5'6 OlUI art m alnt . yd. Adultai no ••••n••••••••••••••••• ..... ltlmld J706 3BR 2ba -S750/mo. Apt, 2 story. 2 car · • pet.t. Inquire at 527 8th. HOMES FOR RENT ••••••N••u••••••••••• Property Mart .rarage, frplc, yard, w /d NO FEEi Apt. Ir Condo _6..:P_m__;_. --------1 St. 71'/HO·SUJ or 3 le 4 Bdrm. IS6S.-~7S. Bachtlor . Attrattlve 840-9019 hook up. Small child , renlals.Vlll1Rental1'.· NEWPALMSPRINOS 118().5112. F e n c e d y 8 rd 1 It w /beam cellln•. wood C ... ....___ 312.. 1m111 pet OK. A mutt to 875-4912 Broker Kid It t panelin1. phaah carpet. • .__ .. see. Fully rum. condo. Ten· 4 Br. 1~ ba, 1tn1le (amity «•1•aea. ~ 258r0; ln& MOO. 21J/SST·353S. ••• .... •••••••••••••••• TSL MGMT 842·1803 2 br. J~ ba + 1ar. Hoaa nit, ,JJOQl1. Wknds, 1150. bcftnt. 1700/mo. Rer1. we come . · f · MIWLYDICOI. --------ffoap area, nu decor. Wkly.DJO.MS-8171 plea.M. M7•l f13-2f7l. AJt .. no ee. c._ .. Mw J7J2 l Br .... Jld, enc l 1ar. St unnlnJ Ltre 1 bdrm. C>pen hM S.t le Sun 11·3. i....;.:...:.:.:::~;..;.;.;...;..;.;~---1 .._.,.,..._.. JZ6 ....... •••••••••••••••• d/wuher.O)ool. Adults. 1arden apt, pool/rec uu Htl erla Way. Wlllrenttlme-1h1recon• 1 BR. 1 ba.. bew pluah •••••••••••••••••••••• Fantaatlc townbou1e. &42·5073 • areaD5S.7lOW.18thSt. l500/mo.U0.5875 do.2wb,AprlM-May 8. Cc':O,,:: ~·-~r~o Newport Shores Canal pool, &ennia court. Zlr. 1 ·~ 2_8r. ~ cpta. drpt, 2271 Vertalllff 1 -b-r -/i-tu_d_l-o. ~:b~~C:!~tah::~~ h - _..,._ front 4bdrm, Iba. newly 1121/mo. TIO-tllT.. M ...i.... _ p 1 M · ·lit + --P· decorated. 2 bloclta to Newl1 dteor. 1.1 pd, a,...... -mo. new trpt, drapet. PoOI. , Yucatan, en n, tx· Suite avail. approx 1 llMl sq.ft Newport Arches Marina Bldg. 642·'4644 Use "'6wer A~ service when placing your. ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... ypu call In at your convenience during office hours and.get the responses to your ad ... this service is onlv S7.50 · week. For more Informa- tion and to place your ad call 642-5678. m..-ocean • ..._,, StJl with &ASEi • ft cl I a r • P o o I • 545-aOOC rec,* blda. Adultt, no Jeo. Incl. 2 qn 11 bda, dal· lt'••IA&U.& d /WHher . Adi.lilt . s*a tlTS+lat,laat.lft. ly maid tve. 17GO. Don, Cl...atledAdl lltdltltema ta.5118 CJ...an.d AdllCUml eca.son W1n.t Ad Renb Mt.a?I ...:d:.:•.r.;P·~-~-~·====l=Ml=.,,=·=at=-===~=======~----:~=~==~ -4' •e td II. tr ot as Q.S '11 a ~e I . ty ... I 1E ; ~ · 1 . J. ) '._<ii· '.:o..., '.: ; •: ·~ ! P./1 , :·: lJ ._-6 r ·~ .. ) ~ ._ .~ .. -~iii' 1111 ; .. ~-~ .. t' "·• .. . •: ·1 · :;·· ,) :. ti I :·i ~~, Aa!! ~ ! . ., ft ·• ~ I ,_ • -.• . -l M·. ,·, ., ... --M -- ()qnge COMt DAILY PILOT/WednHday, _Mateh 191~1181 ..,... C• • '~111 • •*'•II -•• •••-----,~,... r..-.-1.--"'' ••r.m•t ••• ••-••••-•••••• r /W••• _.. --W .._,... .r ; -. . ........................................................................................... ·····-···············~ ................ ~ ................................................ . SUMlll SPECIAL ~arpeolry, plamblnt Is Paliot. DrlYewa11 6 ILIC'J1UCIAN PJ'I~ Yard ~ue.. Tree HAJlDWOOD n.oc>RS IX ltC\JTI VI! "'111 RALPH'S PAINTING Prot • ...-vi~ to Hvt you elertrital. tJ~. eontrae· wa.1tw1,11, 1 .... Rat.ea nsM. ,,_ tttlma~ oa tr Im • rem ova I . aeaned • Wutd tiouMatt, x\nt rd1, ex· Uc. lnt/Ext. Low Rate. lime •money. Newport tor.OeM,SGIUJ. t..lc'd .-Tl. IU•0919, l~~;::au~._. CleHllP•· Free Ht. Aa}t!me,-..1S.A .4 per'd.tf7·5407.Mt-IJ48 f'red'.at. 994-5511 Padllell.!.MS-W 8'1·1171 Lie. l .,,~-'7Q.1M H I i L-...L.ol. rf Remo6-Repall'"Rt11•ble U ~---DAVE'S PAINTING I ...... t'.7!'!~,y Fences ••tff dock • C ... C... Top Qu,allt.y, Dependable "Q" OARDf:NINO •• .....-;••••••••••••••••• i.••••H•••••••••••••••• Servtng uea 9 years Let ua belp you whh homes,dc.Ata1&.aN ' ....................... SerViee Reu. Rat.a. J8 Landlc:ape malnl, cln· HauJ,cleaoup.cone.rete ..._ ... UJWC• Mostreuonable boneet per1on1llud fora C LIC. CJnLD C~RI'. yn npmcnee.,531·5055 upa lteu rat• Free removal. Dump truck. Problem•'! J Write any lnaured. llc'd 780-7301 aervtce. 1peclallllnt In .,.ts.nice flfyODrooadeUhr m :wab&e ......t7a Qufckaerv.MZ-7638 rkk. lo, monthly rates. -~· Onn1e Co. are. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bome fn.*5 Electrician -Sm. jobs. tPi~J.DI.~ Palntln1: Comm'I, In· Ore. Joe H B Ca ll -~~d DAILY Pilaf Shampoo fr alum clean. malnt. • repairs. Lie. • • II W..t.4 Tree/abrub trim. con· • ... • duatrlal. Residential. '82·8MO. Col« brf•hteoera. wht SJl.fOJWI( HmOS.Ct0.541-5203 M=.~1.rakln1. ~~~~':.~~~1-~~an· ........... : ........... Fru l:tt. Low ratea crpta 10 min. bleach. Rot lunch. C.fltl. Chrta· ELECTRICAL 1nd re· •we• PI n I · f' re e RtD0¥1tlnf·RototillJng &73-073'7 Hall. Uv.-d.ln. rmt SIS: UanPretchool.MC·SUS modelt .. •. A .. alltv with fttl~es. ~8·0944 or H"ULING ICLE"NING 5-...1 .. i.1 I I -----1vf nn ST.50: couch SJO: ... ""' ., 145-,,, .. , n " .,.-u-era· awns-c nups QUALITY PAINTERS chr 15. Guar. ellm pet T .L.C. Chltd Care . thet>.tprice.831·2004 Treetrlm&Palntlng DavelM2-4853 Ba,.gaiorates thru4/8 odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrs anytlmo.'tlCp'd, r•f•. f;ledriclan·trouble call•. CL!AN·UPS/LA WN or'' Ray· 964·4276 Bud 646-8481 Free eat. 848-5684 exp. Oo work myself ,,,....., &41·1Tll ,..p1lr. addltlons. ln•tall M 1 l n t e n • n c e · Hauling' Dump Jobs. ...__, WINTER RATES RefS.S:Jl•OlOI ----outlet•. remod•l1 . Land.lcape "·k'orRandy ••••••• • ..... ........................ QUALITv ROOFING All type11, tru e•t. Visa, MC. Ml-5930 HARBOR ROOFING Tlle s•vte• DtUCTO.Y OOJTNOWI AtllPor'-*e Your 01Jly Piiot Service Directory Repttaentatl ve C ..... Serortc. "' F~est. 642·9907 "" '' · •• ••••••••••••• lnt./ext. Painting WeCare CarpetCleaners ••••••••••••••••••••••• S48·tlll . 646 ·3854 IM1·M2'7 BRICKWORK : Small Cleanouts.fastservice ••••••••••••••••••••••• Steam clean & uphols. New...-Qeanlni Serv. Wheeler f:lectric, Inc. Exp. Gardener-mow. H--a...-.i..... J obi Newport. Costa S36-980l Tile iMtalled. all kinds. '4J..1'71, ext J I I k T k -· In F -------.. Mua. Irvine , Refs. iruaranteed, refs. John W or I u a r . r u c c a r pet . Up ho I . D.C. ELECTRIC edse. c -ups. ree eat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 175.3175 893-l&87 ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11_m~ount~~un~it~. 645-~~17~1~8'.___ Houaecle1nln1. Win· lndua./Retld./Comm. Ranbl. CM area. ~IJ-4891 Want 1 REALLY CLEAN --------Colletie Student F.xp'd BUY WHOLESALE ::1~~Hardwood rlra, Quallty wark.freeeat ........ ~lcet HOUSE? Call Gingham MASONRY and remodel· ~~{1e~ie~n~/-~~~or less! BOOKKEEPING &TAX SERVICE Reu. rate11. 496-0913 Thru Carpet Installer. t.lc. 400143. (213l867-38S7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Girl. Free est . IMS.5123 lf\g. Quality with the Free est. Also carpels Cwtc .. 1-G • • Complete mobile home Expertise hou.sekuping. kit price. 83l-2004 A,... laid & reptired Jay ........................ • reg aer vke relevel11 to re-equ i p & su ppli es Mo•"-J ••~•••••••••••••••••••• 754-6S50. ConltrUCt.lon·All type11 ·:~;;;:;~~;~·R;C~:;:• models: 968-4341 rumi1lhed. lrustworthy & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parkm~ lot r epairs. sealcoat1ng S&S Asphalt. 646·4871 Lic'd. 20 yrs exp. Free est. L _ .. __ · t 1 H_...... de JIU.' •"""o st d__. ill NOSTEAMISHAMPOO Lie. 1*589. 645-5973 a""'"""apematn ·C nupa wwwfM• P-_,., • ~m w move you at Stain speciallal. fast ----__ George.549-2015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MRS.CLEAN MAKES IT '1:6"~:::1.~·1493. dry. Free est. 839-1582 RESIDENTIAL & Com· Landscaping·Cleanups HOME IMPROVEMENT GLEAM! Homes, apts, i--___ _ ---merclal remodeling. Remodeling Oddjobs M · ., Th s · l•lu__ Cellftg. A.cMSffc Quality with the best Tree trimming-Haullnl( 28 Y"' ex per. 979_2265 office. Carpet. 646·2240 o vang . e tarvrng •••=••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• price. 631_2004 Maintenance. Free est College Students Moving • u C ·11 Amie, 543-8414 Carpen•~. caba'n ... •. roof ROB!N'SCLEANlNG 00. has grown, Insured ,.. EN. CONSTRUCTION nCOWI c el ngs ------.. T "'"" .,_ vice tho hi Painting. Int/ext Rentals our spedalty Prompt Seaside Painting Gre11. 536-4806 •STEVENS PAINTING I nllexl. F ree item ated e!!l Neat. qual. work 546-4561, 642 9659 Plotter /l.,.W ••••••••••••••••••••••• Custom Ceramic Tiie New-Remodel-Repair Free est. Chuck. 494·5887 .............. 1: Tlt.Co. Ceramic New.remod. reu. ratn 675-2284 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expert Tree Trimmer Ten years experien<'e ~1865. 751 2128 u •-h dle t ri a 0---11 repairs, plumbing. Free .;,er a roug Y s~me good ser vi<'c Additions. Remodels +<'us..,m an x u n,. ',__, ••ATRfUMS•• <'lean house ~0-0857 L' Ii M k979-4411 Li<'.3119944. 532.5549 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Do your Indoor/outdoor est. Call Ans we r Ad -__:_ -I 124 ·436 Li<'ense I NeatpatC'hes&textures WIRdowC.......,-- 1c ns. ar "'-~/c -.a.... -Drvwall Specialist atriums need planting or •461,642-4300. 24 hrs. HOUSECLEANING ~l-8427 ~ nt. lt3-1 4lt ••••••••••••••••••••••• C .. • '--.-c.............. Qua I -& prod New & re· "' 1· bl f ----orpes er ....................... mod 13119944 5325549 refurbishing? Call Carpentry/Htndyman r.xper.reaa e.re s. P~jPoperiltCJ "LetTheSunshmeln" •••••••••••••••••••••••Foundations. Retaining --·--· -·---Newport Atrium . Drywall. •painting, ___ 645-8394 __ •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ED'S PLASTF.RING CallSunsh1ne Window Rfi:i~~;~R~:b~~~~ ~alls. Sffillside Rpest~ra -DRYWALL our ex ~-0027 patio covers, misc. re-HOUSECLEANING Fiat ext/int paintinR by AllTypes Int/Ext Clea!'-~l(.Lld ~8·~3 2nd generation.17 yrs in t1 on{c la .bs , . ~taos. ~rtase .. Quallty with the EXPERT LAWN CAR E pairs. Your s pe<'i flca lSOUR BUSINESS! Rkhard Sinor. Lie. jns. 645-8258 F'REF. F.ST area. Lic'd. Top qua I. Bloc & Bnck Lac d. raght pnc4:.._ ~31 ~--MonthJy service. Trees lions. Quality work Janice's RaRRedY Ann. Try me 631·~_10 (24 hrs> ---~r Pa lombo. 962·8_314 _ 642·8387 eves/960-383S Uyoo're look in a ror a bet-& <'leanu"". 548-2049 754-01•9 675-2514 lnl•r/Exter •Refinis hinf.(. ~ -• ..,.. l L ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOMTNTERIOR rl'rade your old stuff for ter JOb, you won't want •---------Remodel. Repairs, Paint. Make your s hopping <'•lings /wallpaper 1" Holleman P lumbinR CARPENTRY new goodies with a to rruss the employment Cluaified Ads, your one-Panel no job too small easier by using the Daily _!ain &Sons. 898·5l05 Sales·Service-Repa1rs By J ay 642-8809 Clauified ad. 642·51'78 columns m Classified. stop shopping center. qual wor.k only ~S-2901 Pilot Classified Ads. Walll Ad Results 642-5678 Free estimates 552-7183 No need lo travel all over town to look for garage sales .. you'll (ind lhem n ght here m Classified To place your garage sale ad, call 642-5678. ls:chlltric:I Rftltal 4500 MOMJ Wmwhtcl 5030Lost & FowKI 5300 PenoftCl!h 5350 H•lp W..t.d 7100 Help Wanhd 7100 H.a, Wanted 7100 H.tp Wanhd 7 l 00 H•lp W-.hd 7 I 00 .•..........................•............................•........... ·······················1 .....•.•.•..••.•.................................••.................. ~up 1640' lndus'l/Of· Private party want s Found· small white nuffy FIRST L •DY 1 •CCOUNTl ... G AUTOMOTIVE ~ ~~c~. 18101 Redondo Cr S200K·S2SOK I year note. adult dog, rhinestone A "' " * LOT PBSOHS! Bqking P ~u~t_B~h. 842-2834 secured. b)'. 1st T D. on collar vie 22nd & Irvine Es'orf. Modals A.MD /OI Chevy dealer offers full Cndit Checker PnmeCampusDr l 'h million dolla r Blvd,N B 645·4533. ~ ... IOOllklEPIMG orpart-llme Permanent Part Time. nu. hrs ' ~at1'on Bayfronl home. Phone - -----,_... DCMCen. positions to youlM to a s-I . T p ' ' LAI\: 64S·919S res iden ce -·1 To assist in developini · · h bod · rvane. op ay AcrOBs from Airport 642·1~1 office . Found black dog with * 972-1345 * the p & L. Work under s1st int e y & service lrv111e Personnel Agy OHlce/WarehouseSpace ----white rollar. male By MC&VlSAAccepted minimum supervision . depts . in varied , In-481E.17th.Costa.Mesa Reasonable Moit~1. Tnnt El Rancho Store in E . _ _ R . edt . d teresUng tasks. Opp. for Sul\e224 642-1470 ""'~ 5035 Bluff. N.B 675-1209. eqwr d 0 use an epen· advancement See Mr. - - --LeaseTerms .,__ dent ju gement May Wn'""t. Owner549-4066 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F~und ~old rin~. Cj;h Gr.atCOMp«My assign work to lower HOWARD Cl:.•rolttt 1---------• ---SattlerMfcJ.Co. World parkino lot, Escorts level clerks. Xl nt com Banking MES .A. •11 t r I l t " pany benefits Call Dove &QuailSts. A n ypes o r,ea es a e Adams & Magnolia . 24Hrs 641-0180 u1·11 ie after 9am NEWPORT BEACH TELLER llllJDUSTRIAL investmentss nee 1949 H B 962-4370after5:30. Casl:/Checb Ms-Sfl>O. ------ f"'lt SpKlalhlltc) la - ----AM s... .. /MCfVlsa AUTOMOTIVE N~PORT OFFICE PARK 2ndTD Found· Cockatiel. C M -.. EXrtltflMCED Excellent opportunity 642-2171 5;5-061 1 N.B. area Call & iden· AUTO CA.SHIH for an individual with a --lify. 645.8626 ---ACCOUNTING Ex~llenl working <'On· minimum six months 711W.17tt:.St. Widow has money for -... FOXYL"'DY• ditions &frinaebenefits experience Will be . Found F Doberman. • ~ CLERK " r · w • <' CostaMfla.CaAlf. 2ND TD 's any sae OUTCALLONLY including retirement per orm ing ne a 6 '"2·'"'""3 above Sl0.000 No ('redit ears not cropped. Nwpt VISA MC plan. 40 hours per week. counts duties as well as ...... ., Harbor HS 979-14\Seves Major Oil company has all teller functions Wi ll ./,no pnlty For acllon -----••72-1131• anexcellent opportunlty Salary commens urate contider s h a rpe in 1 l870 sq fl. Unil avail for 1mmed O<'<'Upancy I ·2900 sq ft. & I ·3700 sq rt unil(S) avail. April 1 s t 2 S t orage Warehouses avail (or immed. occupancy, 2000 & 2800 sq. ft. •3Jt-:w sq ft. •Leasing office hrs <'all AGT 673 7311 FOUND· Female Pup foranaccountini(clerk with experience Call dividualw1th sixmonths anytime s h e p h e r d v 1 c botk EscOf"h with 2 years expenence. Stan at C'astUerang baC'kground Baker/Bear CM 558-1946 Two years or college IC NABER~ & ZS wpm lypinR Con M~AahMt.J. 557·2844 24 Hr.Servl<'e <'ou nting preferred. tact: SINCE 1981 --Se , 0 Ct Must have ability lo CADILL ~. 1st&2ndTDs, SSOK StM + FOUND· Female Kitten rvtllg r . Y operate 10-key by touch. ~ I"" ~ d1~~n67\~~ O wner /Non Ow n er Brwn/Blklong hair viC' Good sala r y a n d li.OOH,t1i>otl}lv<1 l...OSANGELF.S SFRs & Condo• CM 557.9921 A TLAMT1S MASSA.el benefits. Please call In c '"'·' ,..,...._, ">40 '>IOO FEDERAL ~ Mon thru Fri 8·4 Sat 10-2 Commerdal&lndustrial -------SPA confidence to. Eva SAVJNGS&LOAN PETER DOBBS Found Blk & fawn Be pampered by 16 Taylor. Employff Rela -AUTOM01'IVE Equal()ppty Employer 1000 sq. fl. $325.00 mull> purpose-f o r en t repr e n e ur 629 Terminal Way 1114 ( 17lt1 N P Blvd. I 64~4636 640-6016 673-9043 femaledog Vt<' Edison Beaut Gi rls Op e n tions C714)540-llll --Hioh , Hunt Bea<'h IOAM -4PM 7 da ys. ft.ft.llU!!.1 "'SOIL PIOFISSIONA.L Want investor for Npt " Phone64S-3433 --SBVICI bayfront home. Give 968-5528 --COMPANY Of lftESINT A TIVE well secured 1st or 2nd Found Sml Collie type • • CA.UFOltMIA. Roy Carver Rolls Roy<'e TD. A~.675·6161 puppy Male Blk. <'amel SPIRITUAL 1 3160Alrway Ave is looking for a n ex- ---& white Greenville Bl RF.ADINGS Costa Mesa. CA 92626 perienced professional 2 nd Tr ust Deed Sunnower 631·4498 or lOam·lOpm. Fully L1c'd Affirmative Aclton servke representative 1900 sq fl Orri <'e & Warehouse Main St lrv1neS9S01mo 631 ·7770 purchases a rranged 548_3353 492.7296 or 492-9034 1815 Employer f or details. call 960-1957 ---S Camino Real . San ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!I If you ha ve l h e bk -= _ q u a I if IC' al ions . ca II r__ Reward. Cross & chain Clem Daryl Sickle for an ap-. Advertising lost Sund. 3115 at Cocos. pointment al 1100 sq ft 2 offices, front Answ.1WM15'h/ Nardssus. CdM. Sen 1---------1 ...,WANTED 640.6444 ac rear entry overhead Ptnoftelh/ limenlal value 646-1460 THE Sales representative lo door. 220 power $310 Oil Lott & FcM.d --call on Reader Ad busi· lease. 67S.6251 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost M 1 r r o f is<' h e Girlfriends ness accts. tor advertis- s.__ 4550 machine in 11.ray <'ase ... ESCO-S• ing, Mon-Fri., 9A M· ..... ....,.. Lost & Fo.d 5300 Vi<' Costa Mesa fnn Cout ,.. "• SPM. Base + romm. Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• side> R E W A R D H-/Offlu/Hohl benefits Will train. Neat Stor.age Warehouses 1n 759 1216 appearan<'e & gd. spell· Costa Mesa avail. for 17142~ 1836 ---* • * ing essential. Apply · lmmed. occupancy. 2000 Lost: Cameo pin in or 24Hrs NowHirin11. Pennys aver, 1660 &2800sq ft 3Jtper sq fOUNOAOS d k' MC Visa PlacentiaAve .. CM AUTOMOTIVE •MITAL WOllH! BEA U TI C IAN HAIRl>RESSERS. with following. assistance & manicurists. Applies lions now beinl'I: accept ed for busy growing N B Salon. TOP PAY Mar<' 642-616t Bea ut y Consul t a n t needed to leach makeup Will train Call after 5pm: IS1·637i. BE YOOR OWN BOSS. SET Y OU R O WN HOURS. Sales & de livery Fuller Brus h PhonelMZ-3169, 5·9PM. --------- - ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOKKHPEI Permanent, 30 to 40 hrs wk. Prestigious Newport Beach insurance agen cy Good <'O benefits. non-smoker Call Twyla at 6#-4242 l~Clertr Full time, ex per helpful but not nee. Many <'Om pany benefits Apply at 1660 Placentia Ave Costa Mesa PART TIME SALES CLERK We hcrYe an iilllMdlate opeNnc) foe-a part· tfiM sal.s elm. We ... GMWChaiaof dlscomwt book 1tore~ on the West Coost of- f~ bfft wte.n at ... t.tial , ......... If p are CMft-90Mcj Cleaning person needed. 2 days a week. S63. fn lerview req 546 0037 CU:RJCAI. Sales Dept lookmR for an eneri;:el1 <' person to io1n our sa le s s larf Ahi l itv to w or k w lfq~u reii. p h oneii heavy typini: SSwpm, & orJ1:anizat1onal sk>lls re quired Mag <'ard ex per helpful Please <'all for an 1nler v1 cw Wells Fargo Alarm Serv1('es. division of Raker In dustr1cs 1761\2 Cowan. Irv 549.3455 F.OF. IMF CLERICAL Type 60wpm. fil1nR telephone . run errands 646 0221 CLERICAL Gen Oft' P lt1me pos for mature person. In· leresting w o rk in pleasant ofc on P C.H . Npt. B<'h Exp a must A<'<'urate ty ping, no shrthd 20 hr wk Hrs Sun. Mon, Tue~. Wed 9 to !PM. Sat 10 30 to 2 30PM Call 646 7431 and lo•• tt.. wortd of 1--------• books, w• ift•it• you to ~ iii penott and SH tt. ....,aipr at: CROWN BOOKS WEST 2700W•1t Pacific Coast Hiqhway. # 145 Newport leach An F.qual Opportunity Employer Clerical rAITTIME DOCUMENT COKTIOl CLEtUC Laguna Bea<'h mfgr. needs part time help in enl'l:ineering prml room Cleri('al duties. operat inl'I: blueprint ma<'h .. Xerox equipmt No ex per fie<' Typing helpful 15 to 20 hr; per wk . mornings or afternoons Call for appt Personnel Dept., Telomc Berkeley. 714 -494-940 1, La11una Beach. E O.E ft. Call &ii.4463 Mon: a roun par 1ng area1 .. ~!!!~~~~!!!~~I Red Onion Restaur ant, 1- thru_F_!I. 8-4. Sat 10-2. ARE FREE Pete r'11 Landing, H. AMBER formerly with COVER GIRL is now with THE GIRLFRIENDS' A.EAOllC IMSTIUCTOI Exp. only . Newport Beach area. 76().0461. Body shop expansion! Excellent pay. working <'Onditions at busy body shop in J ohn Wayne Airport complex. 4 yrs. experience & hand tools required. Fiber1lass OP· lion11. Opp. for advance· ment. See Mr. Wright. BOAT SHOW l-'!!!!!!!!~~-1 --- CLERICAL Clerk for r;e- lail store Must be ex· per Call Balboa Marine. 549·9671, F:.0 .E. M /FfH Storage Garages C. M 541-3171 Harbor 3/13181 . Sen Call: timental value Reward 1213)541 4461 HOWA.IDCi.•roa.t Dove & Quail Sts. 642-5671 NEWPORT BEACH Fen<'ed Ya r d 8000' bathroom. fa<', ele<'. Lost: Black & white WANTED: Balding men ideal for contra<'lor i.---------• f e m a I e A I as k a n & women. For infor Toll 548-9831 days Malamute VI<' Victoria Free· 800-772-3545 oper A.IDIJHOUS&•a 11 :36-7 :30, Various duties. Friday & Sat nights. Newport Villa . 642-5861 . AUTO TllAMS. REWARD SSO. for return Beach area. Please con· 20fl R & R MAN F ull lime. Tools required. 548-2288 4600 or the two fully equipped tact 497-2713. Babysitter needed Mar ch ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reliable party wants to lease home with water view & beach -access. Newport/Laguna area Auic .. Sept. Oct. Must be furn Turnke y (7141328-9820 electricians belt.s taken from my residence on Anaheim Ave Either re· tum or send lnformal1on lo Mari or Audrey. P P Box 1107, Newport ReaC'h, Ca No questions asked. • L OST : Ala s kan Malamute Male (puppy ) C.M. Wallacel19th. Of. rering Reward. 642-5225 • Swed1s'h exchanRe slu· dent. 19. male. needs to rent room. 4/mo period Starting 2nd week April. s peak s Swedish , English, 50me Ger man N 8 area Reas ~9-92!M. 549-9295 Lost: Mar. 11. Keeba. a 12yr old M Irish setter. E -s ide C M, REWARD 646.4667. 536-2878 1..-.1jlstn1t/ Fke•u ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ Ou-haJty 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Cat REWARD S mtll Blac k Fem N.B./C.M. area. Needs medicttlon 541-65311 L1dles figure aalon. LOST: Olk w/gold eyes established 15/yr clien· Bermese cat. Reward tele. Fully equipped. ~ $15,000. Call 631·2444. _ _... _____ _ LOST CAT: Lrg, all blk, M .. Ina h r , 8 /9 . REWARD. 494-0092 Business for aale Burglar Alarms. Wireless. Home bus . vehicle $24 ,950. (714)848-3180 Lott: l1n It bloode Shellie '--.,-,-.. -.. -,-----croa Rettntly 1p1yed. On• tualty 1011 t /mo. MS-21.e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOAN llMJO or more. Dbl. your money. Loan \s 1ecUNd b1 unprecedent. ed 1.t ln film nnanctn1 blttor)'.114-157 ..... L.oet:lewwd Wiit M•ftH• Do9 welilll• 711ts. M•I• ••iwert t• "P,J ." ... , ••••• 4111 ., •• DOtn S&L .,...... w. J/t4 •• ----- LOST, $50 IEW A.ID Keeshound-gray & black furry dol( nr 23rd & San ta Ana St 962-7188 or 851·0140. PHONE FUN 8A M·12PM M.C./VJSA ( 7 l 4 I 636-4)853 -----F'or A therapeauli<' massage b y a li c'd therapist S20 lo all NEW clients M I F 10·7PM 548-2817 ~d-: young -,;;ale Dobie, rust ('Olor . free lo gd home. 968-1483. - - ---Starving Entrepreneur f ound altered male. needs lo raise money• A.IDIMHDID for par a l y zed y ng woman Mon-Fri. Must drive. Will train. Salary open . Balboa Island 61S-ses2 An~wering Service Pleasant ofc. )I.e. Ex· per. or will train. 8AM· 4PM shift. M-F. 831-5511 . 30 thru Apri l 24 . 8:»1:30. Boy 8 on year round school vacation. Herital{e Ptrk area. 551-8035. Babysitter. Irvine, work- ing mom needs loving mature person to care for 6/mo old baby. Call S59-8057. black Poodle mix. White Will do anything legal.1---.. -... llllllll~••l•l!llll!ll!lml-•-•--I spot on chest. Can 't confldenlials.41-5989 A.SSB••S Banldna keep. 963-1562. --Lo l N rt 8 h ----------P sychic reader & ad· Irvine electronlc1 dis· ca ewpo etc Found: "or adopt" gray visor Past , present. triWDn ndl. Cable A1-Sid. needl k>an aervice Cockapoo wl\h black future. Love marriage, semblers. Solder ing supervisor . Min imum a round eyes Si mo. health. character. busl-ex per. nee. Excell. 3yrs. exper. Mwil know d working conds. & co. all aspecla of loan 546·9344 ne51 Rea ings In all benefits. Cont.act: Bob servicing. Must be In· areas. For info & appt M F l 8 5 Found: Keeshound. F ; 87s,7o.a. .Tracy, on-r ·• · · dependent aelf·s\arter. Terripoo. old, white. M: 54f..a.4 SaJary commenaur1te 4 puppies. mostly black. r ... .,.. 5450 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I with exper. Contact Ma. Newport Beach Animal ••••••••••••••••••••••• --•••• .. ••al Denn_y P&Nla: ~-Shelter. 844·3656 ' ' V I v e Le s a c r e · ASSB• as E.0 .E. mercenalre'' Looking • --Mia 1 VI Jo co l~~iiiiiiiiiifiiiii~ FOUND: Wht Dog w/3 tor overaeas work . ;;;'.d1 A:.:ible~ w12 II legs. Fem. vie E . Bluffs 873·a21 yrs. exp. Cudldatea Cancha 7~8423 -.. -----&----ml.lit hive gd. manu1I FOUND: Pink Women'11 =.=! de~ty, ad. eyetlght. Wallet Safeway Bayside ••••••••••••••••••••••• neat tn appearance 6: de. Or 780-Jm ScMek & pendable. Wortr Is in life 1_...... 100I aupPort medical elec· Found : C rulaer on ••••••••••••••••••••••• tronlc•. Gd. benefits. Trinidad Island. Hunt· Guitar. Beslnnera. Onh reariooalb le &naton Beach. Ca II Children or Adulh . :::i:;!r.'n:d~~ 8'0-1+n. Rick. L 11 u n a are a . S . ply. call: Mn1. Parelll. P.t 111 Ila UIO S1t1Nnt -.44oe sa1.aao • •• • ••• • •• •••••• •••• •• • ...... W..r.4, 1071 I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! PRE LAW atudent need• ••••••••••••••••~•••••• 1:2$,000. WUI do af\1thln1 Back otnce Nu.ne. LVN Le1al. Confidential aeeb f\all time '1"Plo1· DVM. P.O. Bo• 3242, mtnt. 1n N.8 . t. C.M. AlllST MAMA .. Auto rental. Pfo Pl*'. nee.aary. Call ""'8IX ormaoo. B1nldn1 New Accounts Counselor Eq>erience Preferred Aleo part time posJtlonJ anllable In our South Coast P111.1 ornce. Call: Kath~=rgey CALIFORNIA FEDERAL Housewives, students P I T temp . h elp Cashiers. ticket-takers. parking lot attend .. el<'. Call Maureen 646-3963 Bodysho Experienced mettl-man needed for non-production body shop. Metal finishing & lead work desired. Flat r ate & comm ission Mon.-frl. 8-5. 631-4939 for 1ppt. Bookkeeper /Secretary, PIT. R.E. development I construction b• ck ground help(uL Send re sume to P.O. Box 8209 • Newport Beach. 92660. Rusiness expanding. need ambitious goal oriented people. o p· portunity lo earn un· limited, tax benefits For app't <'all 496-4436 eves6-8pm --- •CAI DRIVERS• Checker Cah 770-0222 CAR WASH CASHlERSpltlme. N.R & Orange. 644-4460 CA.SHIBS IOXl'lllSOHS Now accepting applies· tions. P\time. Will tram Nr Alr,,ort. 838-9570 CASHlll Full/time. good pay. Growth rompany. 5 loct· lions. Co. benefits . We train. METROCARWASH 2950Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Bookkeeper. construc- tion ldevelopemenl firm In H.B. Req. mature person to work with m In. s up e r vision . Respontlbtutles Incl all boolrkeepln1/accounl· CASHIER in8 functions. Both HOUSEWARESALES manual le EDP sytems. Apply in person : Crown 21yrs eitp nee. S900/mo Hardwire. lO'l4 Irvine. to ala rt . Ca II Sa II :r ,_<W_est_cl_i'f_r_P_la_z_•_> _N_B __ 53141112. IOOU•IMG ..e1oa ACCOUMTIMG To .-st Ill developln1 the P • L. Work under minimum supervlalon. Required to u.te lndepen· dent jud1ement. May aaalp work to lower- level cwu. Xlnt. corn· pany benefit•. Call M lllle afler tam . M5-9IO. CASHIERS . U.TVTIM MARKETS For 2nd It 3rd Shll\a We promote to manage· ment It supervl1Jlon rrom within. WANT A CARE!Rf C()tta lleea lll Del Mir 131'"21 your hou.el That '• r.: 7AM. ll~llH rtl)ltl llyou!lave5":or --~ Ht-1426 mart home equity. then ..... ..-rtnt Home lnvetlmtnlt , __ ......_ _____ _ N.8 • .-S. 875-11'* ~~~~-----COVIi C'ilRL Nune/~mpanlon up AUTOllMTALA•T No exper. a.c•11ary. Call,,,... or'ITMSSO. .... f!&Le9 • Towii C.ter o-,. Jutt mcmd lnto townT ~II••· Ca taa Then l •l. acquainted ~I Opportalt7 .,.... tbe a..1ftld Ada . I lA1una Beath ..... can lsllp you make..._ Lott: l*.n Tortoise. Nr No 6•tre•" In your Newport Ret1hta. P\ah t. monUllJ __ bou .. p11· l•11t• ta1 . Needs m.a.Cd (114).,..2112 IQ...,_,..,.. . . • ourcAu. • w /eonni.tcent " eldt r· f6S.0'77I MC/VlSA ly, xlnt lot ref 'a a --------1 da11/•lt M /hr ne1ot. WantAd.ff.tpf IU·M7t _..,. WAHT AcrlOfU Owtt1tM1-..a • DD....,_ Thef'rt tbe • ...._ WllJ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I to ftad ,_ t11t ....,, • .,. ..mc.,.n...s. . H~Beach .-11.1 CLERK/TYPIST Permane nt & tem - f>Orary. Newport Beach mortgage banking com- pany has o~nings for <'lerical positions, both perma nent & tem· porary Some previous offire exper Typing & 1().key by touch desira- ble. For appl . call 640-4580, ext. t202 .. F..O.E. COCIT A.IL LOUMGE Bartende r I Btrm aid. Cocktail Wtltress I Waiter+ Food 675·1094 COMM'L cleane rs for of(' bldgs . Dependable. flex. hrs. Equlpml. & training provided. Pay by job. Min . SS. hr Lag. Hills area. Call: Lo. 831-8856 eves Co mptnlon live-In ~ework. mutt have· a car Counter aalesperaon (or drycleanlng s tore in C.M. 2-Tpm, Sat . \t day. Call 7Sl·3115 before !pm. CUSTOMm mAnOMs lnatallaUon delk, tsMvr. phora, ~ • bll . Ina. 901 Wett letb St. Newport &.adl IQ.- . . 1) ...... ~···~-................ _ ... ., ........ . f HefpW..... 7100 Orf'geCoutOAILYFILOT~ay. Mw:ch.18,191 ' --.:'"~·· ....................... ---~~ ..... ?!.~~ WW:il-~.?~~~ ........ ~.1 •• •.• •• .w,w..... ,... PAn' 11MI ~~~~~-. '.·=~ .~.~.~ .. -... ''. "'°l .... ~ .. w •• ~ JIN ~wllllli 7100 .,. ~· ••••-• .. •••••••••••• Seml~ret!red OJC Sao ''""' • •••! ••.• ••• •••••••• • • ••••••••••••• •••:;.•-••••••••••••••• DA1'A mfl'a\'()PCR *•11111 ffOS'll./ll08T Mtllill•/..... AneonloWinery.MS•to ~ SAU.:S•dlaeoaatd,.... luretuy , Uwpm , · -~-IHI. •. llUCTMIA&; fllatwt) Woll'IH •1 •P •cla lty run u .. ••·lti~ M• .,,. mature. J dt• wk. traMCrtMes muhlH llC'T l8C9T. • ' ,,.... 61Mlll Wattr..twalter. Short llore. l'•ll t ime. Part Ume. IUO/br. + be ,...._.. 6 well' Tllur6 rrt...._1_ int ...... ntW omc-t l'or email CPA nrm . ...... ill•I-hobn.. rNo 0,.) Good Clothla1 •JllN'. N,.c,. boH1 ChooH houra: 1roomec1. •..,meet· ~l!IQRSON, luide, dutiH. Xlat ula rJ o.tla will •leo Incl. O,.W .......... for ab· t:•p'd ..._,~ ..... hourtJ ••let, 'rhate CnU,, lae. •1• 10.20/wlli:. rat)' wora. 1t11 lhe pu.Mfc, lequJNt mut be upu•d In So'*'cnft.-mH Aud.Jo w~. ID>IOlt, clatf....U ,,.._. fw t:.':.'::C-.. ':,y "; cl•. Am tor ltllrtey: ..... ,.r, Office work . .....,.. tO::.m,"~: aypf::: plumblns fleld , 1ur C714)~ Sf!ltVICE STATION AT· loM .... ua1,..nt. beaettu '° u.e rtsbt fTS.nat. cotll'Qr b•lp for food Lrt Ji Phone"~• pre S'JSO mo. Comm . ..... ... IT TENDANT. IAM to Cad .. lnGf'e bllo. Tod .,.,__~ ~-Hnlce. SeHoaal. <• n1 .... ferred. P'un Nhlpany benefits, tralnlnt for ~-·A JPM. Apply Sbtrll Sta l"llllS.,,n~+iasY"i•, ntaoo ~----mo.). H.B. ue.. C.11 E. C _, .. , ,.... btnerlte. Appiyr-Pen. msmt. P«entJal t1500 + Pul>Htblna tlnn baa Im· tlon, lnii. 6 Irvine, NB .... _, !•P llecftul AMIR.ant, S• •kc _.J eo..,..01. (114)5H•.Q71 ctrrt:n nyuver, ieeo Pla~nua per mo. Pleueapplythe mediate openlna for "2·1.Z!e -"-front 6 back, brt 6 E1ec. family. lovtn• orW'l'kelWlAcaclaDT Ave CM Earl'• Ph1mbln1 28922 aec.-retary with 1 ood ---------~ .. ~1.~~.-~~-ppl.y, ulary open. Non· 1uPfl"Yilionfor2bo11.10 Twtlo Ca,_, • Adi.Iha with outatandln1 ' · Camino Caplatranu composition 6 typlna Service Station Atten _.v..,,., -.& "' amoler.540-a7$. •11.<'leuAq,evttm .. I, ,-' · · ::~~J:':~~e: ._... ....... 495-0«>J •kllhl who wlll al10 be dant. P /T , evu 4r Del I L «r11nda6 1hoPPhi1.Car MA.MA.. _... -Challe1111lni f•t paced ruponalble for ad wllend1 Neat ap. Tim::':,~ t::' Nt FREE TRAJNINO. Xln\ JHOvided, own room 1.nd Servtce 8laticwl, xlnt op. t!ounMJlnl youth a1ei position Open In one of Saleapel'IOO needed. Part coordination. Xlnt. co. pearance le ha ndwrlt ' C.M. S400/SOO + lnto«M. Convenient hrs. bathorUveout andwork pty. prvttt •harina. buy ~~~ ve'jlngs • Newport Beaches most time. FleJible houra. benefits, & ptount Ing Apply at 2S90 VANDA BEAUTY"°°". tol, Sday •ffll. outplanotrered.f7S.3320 Per w1vala~l~r~ prettliious re•I estate Over 18. Phone : wor king cond. Call Newport81vd.C.M. bon1a.Me-Oa7,M8·5'44. COUNSELOR needa En1U.b apea.lrln1. drtv. 2:30-$:30pm. Mon lhru brokerage and d~velop· 759·9951. IOAM·SPM BarbaraR.54M834. -·• •s•••T you. -.12'21......... In(! req. Newport Beal'h. MANIC•IST .. I ment co. We are -.ekina Fashion Island S..lce ,.,...., F~'~air.iJ: Ex-Refs. required. Salary Newport Beach Salon. r r · 642•4321 ext. 343 a reliable contenlai needed for our Hunt· pe_t. pre. t. GP offke. Full time -employee for open.94&-58Gll0.5 pm. Abletodoacryllcnalla. Aak fi~orLort. diplomatJc pers°" able SALISPHSOH *E~!fCeoo~=Ju~ lngton Bch location. In ~ aaaeinbly ti t!lean-up. Houskeeper/Companion Wiii guarantee lar1e Coett to juggle busy, busy Experienced o nly . F C ~ div. must be a sell Will tni~, S3.J5/hr. HPS Live-In. Must have car: cllentele + 7~ to 80">; riot phones, typing .. SO sates F . T I P . T . W a It a h A::~~y·rr::i4.400 starter, Interested in re .,_... • ....._. Systema.MS-9552. Nos otlnc Call art romm.Callsoon. ~~•aM~saStr.Ceea.l & administrative staff Clarke's So. 'Coast SecylTrainLanler> tail operations. Duties Chalrtlde, RDA It X-ray .m · · 673-tUJS 873-8644 ....,... " etrlciently, comfortably Plaza, Cos ta Mesa will include cashiering, 11.... req. .. ,L day w'". FUU: nau: Graveyard. 3PM. 640-0088. E q u a I 0 p p o r l . & with a senu of hvmor. 751-7500. SlS.800 1tockln1. pricing and " •.,..,, .. A N E l Liz Reinders Agency benetlta, salary open n• .. aerv. 0 exp nee. Housekeepers wanted. ... ... -... mpoyer Excellenttyplng~lllsa s••-r11s0Mi..11l .o20BlrchEst 'S4EO!: various other retail N.B. aru 842·080. Call.•·Ul2EOE Seaclitr Mot 1 1ee1 So --" PART TIME Perion must. Realeatate•rre. ~ ,. Ne-183J..8l90/Free duties. Expr. pref. Jn 17i.JtO:twtna6evea. e · SICllTAIY v1ous r eceptlonis & nuded for contem--...,.. terested applicants app G..aAL OPfltCI Coast Hwy. Laguna Mature penon for small needed in Book pasteup. phone experience de-porary women's wear . ly In person. See Mgl'. Dental Recep - tloniat/A11latant. exp, needed for new office in Mission Viejo. X·Ray lie. req. C213)Sll0-3091. Typlq Ir 10.lley adding Beach. 494 • 4892 · technical organization Mon & Tues. No exp slrable. Paid holidays Must be exper'd. Salary SECRETARY /Gen Ofc Ms Schwambe rger. machine. IZ72'Z Western H uaet C I in SJC. Typing, cor-nee. Apply: 1660 Placen· Major medical. pension plus romm. Please app-See ad under Gen Office M015katers Inc. 6862 Ect. Ave .. Garden Grove. 0 eeper/ ompa~ on r espondence, quot a-tia Ave .. C.M & profit sharing Call ly or call : A pro po, Inger Av, HB a.mi for elderly,persoo. Live· lions. sales leads & Pat Parkinson. 752-1920 644 ~ or •29 Fashion SSS-2000. EOE/M IF . in or out. 833-2009. mailers. Excell, skills . Part T1"me & -----Island. Npt Bch -GeneralOfficeWorker RECPT/GEN OFC See SHIPPING I R · · Dental X-Ray Tech. New office Santa Maria, or· tho ti peri. exp. Call (213)540-4101. Musttype40wpm. Housekeeper wanted r eq'd Mus t be self. SAL~TRAINEES & Secret.ry ece1ving CoataMesa 549'-3942 wee kends for older starter & work without Temporary Jobs ::S.~t'r Gen Off1<•e DELIVERY DRIVERS EXICUTIVI ~~~:al J:~~!r::s~1vS: ----------woman lo replace re-sfupervislon. Gr~attjodb -----Full or pr/time. ex.cell. SICllETARY "C" Ai"rport Loop Dr .' •-•• -c1 gular lllelp's day ofr. or career orien e A ~I bl , ti to Marketing Dir 1n ___ _...., .. gg.cccoe. Salary commensura te V .. 3 8 oppty. ior co ege stu-CM I Redhill btw" Immediate o ... lling in _ .. _._________ Restaurant den•· •· moonli·ahters financial services firm. "" w/exper. Call: 491-6624 Clerks. Secretaries "" .. .. Baker&405> DP.:NTAL OFFICE MANAGER. Busy of· fice. You name it. We'll pay It. 645-7580 ~~r :;~as;:~~:.V~~~ HOUSEIC18tHS for appt. E.O.E. Receptionists, all No~~~~~~~art ~:tty J:~;i a~~!~~;;2 ~ne!~·! ;~~~en:~nell 8 po:; SHIPPING Cl;rk pa rt xlnt typing skills & a We have an immediate Ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 0 t f i Ce S k i I I s time. Days, eves Great btwn l-4PM securities. ins urance. time. Must have exper pleasing p h dne ope n in g for 2 Maturepersonforladies' Needed!! r areer opportunities. -real est.at e .. Xln t. Call: Balboa Marine DISl45M ll«itN .. personalJty. Duties will housekeepers. Full time figur e control salon. On-the-job training. For School Director shrthdttyping skills re· 549-9671 E o E M /FIH also include filing, order positions. lOPM-&AM Prr.mornings.642·3630. fVICKI HESTON_, more info. c all Ex~'d.-<lynamic. E<.:E q'd.714·1UO-Ol23 _: •· · •· -tak·ng nd othe g I shirts. Excell. fringe s ·tt d · I 1 a r enera 754·9943, or inquire at & lem Ed. units req'd . 1 er neede ocras1ona Mfg. co. in Mission Viejo area need.a ~xper. in e lectrical connector~. hermetic seals . transducer design, com ponenta materials & methods. 0 ( f I• c o k XI t benefits packaae. Apply MEDICAL Of P rt & e w r · n " c.-a 3141 Harbor Blvd Costa 642-0411 or~RET•RY ly S201day, in our Wood ::7t=s ~,;o!k~'!!::!,~ ~:i~nca.!~t~~~a ~~~~ ~t~':cek~~.'f~ ~~~ f~~ht ~s!~=i·~~I Mesa. -SCTllY jlCn. -loOKk&ri. F/C b~1dge ho~e A1vail .on company. Apply in Bristol St. North. Ste Exrell. working cond's TemporaryCler ical Lite typing and record Wide vanety of duties s7"'2o~tl lnlodt1te .,55alurl51~ person at: It 100. Newport Beach. in prestigious area. Send Personnel> ltlSTAUltAMT keeping required for sail for sm business. lnclud· e~e; ays, · "" THE JOLLY ROG E R E.0 .E. M/F resume to : #789, Daily 540-0400 Sandwich Maker tl rs making bus iness in ing r1111tomer serv. bill· Duties include design. drafting, materials test ing & R&D pro1ects Mechanical Engineer· ing d egree prer'd Qualified cand idates send resume to· Mrs. Jan s , 23891 Via Fabncante, Suite 603. M lssion Viejo, Ca. 92891 INC. HOUSHarH Pilot, P O. Box 1560, ------7 A M. 3 PM Mon Fr 1, Newport Beach. Start ing, & posting. Pleasant 1700Gillette Ave Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 PHOTO CLERK·S4 oo per 646·8883 S700 mo. Call 631·466-0, atmosphere 645-2247 Irvine Full time, 5 day week. -hr .. 9-6 Wed. 9·6 Thur & --646-5806 STATIONERY Store in CdM needs sales 714 /5'6-0331 live-in or out Refs req'd Meclcal Fro.t offic•, 9 l Fri. 64S.0404 Retail Sales ---------1 Call Answer Ad •357, 646-39()3 I --Women's FIT retail, SEC.IT•RY person ftt1me. 5 days. ,,_ Xlnt working ronds GBBAL OflFtCI 642·0>0. 24 hours ----I Pool Maintenance. days. exp. preferrtd. Local. leading pest coo-PORT M f MIDtCAL COURIER Laguna Beach x Int benefits Ct 11 trol company nee d s IM . anal(~r or Must have own trans & 497-5109. 770.1677askforLar ry. SECRETARY Light bookkeep1nJe Plumbing knQwledge Healthcare ml(mt ro 1n F:s peciall.v fine cltentele Irvine has an 1mmed opening for 1nd1v to p~one&M-74S2forappt i eneralofficepersonnel. Pers ian & O riental _ _ __ __ Entry-level position. r~gs S yr.1 ex per re· be familiar w/Califomia he l pful Fulltime 848·3636 perform secretarial STOCK Clerk part time duties for 5 of o ur ro r marine hardware Medical Dept s taff The 1.tore Call Ba lboa ideal candidate wi ll Manne, 549 9671. E o f: work well under pre· M IF'IH ~ DLVra Laguna Beac h e lec tronics manufacturer needs: •an experienced person to be respqnsible for drafting & mechanical design functions . Must ha ve th o r o ugh knowledge or drarting procedures. PC board layoot, digital, analog, microwave circuit de· sign, & some knowledge or electr o·mechanical packaging Opportunity for advan. c ement & caree r growth. We offer xlnt. pay ti benefits + 4 DAY WOik WIB Facility is in beautiful Laguna Canyon near Beach & Resort areas Call for appt: Personnel Dept. Telonic Berkeley 714-494 ·9401. Laguna Beach. E.0. E. Donut shop. Early AM shin. No exper. nee. J\p. ply : Dippity Donuts. 1854 Newport Blv d C.M •DltAFTB STRUCTIMAL 675-6110 o..... .... __ , Exp'd Hostess /Book· keeper Wed-Sun days apply 3-'4 :30PM at 16360 Pacific Coast Hwy EOE Typing & office exper. q d M~t have the com f'rwy system No sales. h e 1 pr u I ca II Tim : prehens1ve business ex pleasant position for in- Thursday, 3-19 btwn 9 & P e r . of p e r s I an dividual who enjoys 3. ~. J>aodmade carpets 1n driving M -_!:9-~7_68_·_8500 G98AL OfflCE Lite btkpg, recep't & typing fuU-p/t, nex hrs . pleasant working cond in engineers ofc. Sal open c all for appt. 644-6660 Dale Karjala & Assoc. Iran. Must speak. read & Medical write Farsi & English AtONT OFACE Must have exper in FlJLLTIME Japanese export busi Receptionist Sec'y & ness. SI.JOO-mo. Send Boo kkee p e r . Exp resume to: Oriental Rug n e c e s s a r y S a n Gallery. 3617 F.. Coast Clemente Write Ad lf823 Hwv .. Corona del Mar, 1·/o Daily Pilot PO BOX Ca .92625 IS60 CM CA 92626. GENERAL front ofc. INSURA-NCE 2·8PM. Mus t ty pe & Medical. Offi ce Manager for pediatric practice Experience required Write ad no. 794 Daily Pilot. P.O Box #1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 spe ll . Ideal f o r homemaker or irtudent 979. 1711 ---·------ Gf:H OFC /RIClrT. Duties will include IJreeting clients. answer-1n g phones, typing & other gen duties. Posi· lion apen April l Com- pet1t1ve salary for good expr and typing skills. Will train word process- ing. teletype and com- puter terminal If not ex· pr'd In these areas. FM appt call Marilyn Seiley 9~-2000 ------- •UARDS Full & part lime. All areas. Uniforms furn'd. Age11 21 or over, retired welcomt'. No ex per nee. Apply : Un i ve r s al Protection Service, 1226 W 5th St . Santa Ana. Interview hrs: 9·12& 1·4, Mon· Fri * •HIY KIDS•• Here·s your chance to make extra s pending money. Career Opportunities have never been so Close lo Home lnterestinl( diversified work with an established insurance co Insurance experience not required We will train Pleasant working ronditions. xlnt employee benefits Jn· duding profit sharing bonus. s avings, plan. medical/dental Appl> in person. Mon thru f'ri day8.30to2. Sat.co e...-..ce c:t:•' 17570 B hurst, F'V Ph: 962-7711 --------- Medical back office for NB urology orflce F.x· per req'd &44·8722 Messenger-Office Helper for N B law firm Must havt' reliable car F rT 8 J0.5: 30 S4 thr + 2&' a mile Call Joyce 640.5650 for interview MGITRAIHll Learn Film Processing. Sl600/mo. guaranteed No exper. nee. will train. Call97J-9201 <Lou! Models. Sha rp, fem only M aJCaline Non-fashion 642·6282, Bob I NS URAN C E Age n CY -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiij service rep; comm'!. Motel lines acct. handling, 753 HOUSE.,EEPER ofc .. 25% field . Un· ft derwriting. service sales Ex per • d b 1tin Rua1 p os Car e xpense . pref'd salary , comm Min 3 L ~ yrs. romm'I underwrit ~ ,..: ing exper. Must have f' & C lie Oran"e & LA 1Sl5S Coast Or., CM Counties Call · 14«>atHarbor Bl I Pre·school Teacher want ed. credenl1a Is or t-x p F rr CaJI 640-8820 PUSSMAHM/F A B DI C K & 3 M Camera, multihth, 21C Hamada, 25·• Harris We are looking for people wrexp who can do quail ly work. Salary open for r apabl e p erson Ins uran ce & o th e r benefits. Irvine Im: Call Pat 8 ·30-SP M M F 979-1834 P 'T Counter lOfrice person. for equipment rental store. Typing req. approx 25 hr s Saturdays req Salary open United Rent All of Costa Mesa 645-0760 Real Estate SUCCESSOR FAILURE IN '8 I ? I Have you considered the pitfalls of com mercial & residential re- al estate? For example 17"l INT rates. long escrows, farming fo r !~t ings , compet1t1on etr ' · P~Land Corporation Ha·s the answer for your surress in 1981 2 Learn to market lnw t-ost lots and acreage in So. Calif. We have 1ow. INT. rates. Earn SSOK to SISOK, first year year. unlimited leads & morP' uc ..... ,...-,..d. For success in 19111 , ask for Mr Telles. 95..5-3402 & §31.sss1 RU&. EST A TE R....WS.s lmm ed ope n1n j? pleasant working roo41 lions, apply in person Ripple's Office Suppty F.I Adobe> Plaza S J .C. RETAIL MANAGEa Apropo, a women's con temporary Europea n speciality shop Is sed! inJC a sellini mgr Exp'd in fashion & with top re· ferences for Org. Co. !oration. Salary open, full be ne fits Ca ll 714 ,838-6262 RN ll-7 Charge nurse -88 bed ECF Full & part time. gd salary Mesa Vt-rde Conv Hospt.. 661 Center St . CM 548-5585 Secntary /Chwch 25 hrstwk. Mon-Fri. lyp tnl(, gen ofc. exper Mature CdM 644 ln45 Mon-Fri Secretary ENTRY LEVEL H unting t o n B ch Insurance Co. suks a take charge individual w /gd secretarial skills & t elephone voice . The ideal candidate will be one who enjoys a quiet working atmosphere, & workinl( alone. Apph· cants must type at least SS /wpm. Salary com- m ensurate with skills & experience -We ofrer competitive Roule dnverswantedfor salaries & an Xlnt ssure. ha ve the ability to establish prlontles. bt dependable & havt' self initiative Shorthand or s peedwr it1ng pref'd Medica l b k g rnd & c r edentialing exper. pref'd Gd. salary & (r. inge benefits pkg For 1 n t e r view. con I a c· t · S haron Ra s 1n s. 714·641 1616 f:OF: M IF' SICafARY to hotel reservations SOwpm typing, filing It phone exper 80wpm s horthand & Wlll tra m on reservations S900 mo STOCKROOM ASST. TRAINEE Pull eleclronir parts & fill kits for production in sm . fnendly firm over lookinj? ocean. Work in dean, quiet en vi ron- ment. Lite lifting & at· tention to detail needed S6SO per mo to start. ra1seJOl1ays 645-3693 STUDENTS PART TIM F: II sales & mgmt with high commissions & sc holarship benefits sound good, ca II a fl 4PM.833-l974 Send resume to 1703. i---------Daily Pilot. P O Rox SUIDIYISION ~~ Costa Mesa. Ca lt«MNllRS & DISIGHRS DIAFT'SPHSON deliveries of new snack benefrts package For food products to local a ppt call C harles s uperma rkets Some Palomino 1n O ranie. ~~~~!!~~~!!!I exp, gd driving record. <7141937 4446 Perm position 848 1900. --------SAL~ Clerk for retail marine hardware store. P ltlme, ex pe r nee Call Balboa Marine, THEnAYELHS Equal Oppor employer M/F/H 549-9871. E.O E M/F /H SECRETARY P rr - Sain DeM Clertl Ins ide u les duties & heavy typing in friendly atmosphere of small company near ocean Good benefits Ca II Don na : 645-3632. Life lnsuranre ngency needs a mature. ex· pe rienced secretary Typing. s horthand re· quired. Prr 9-1. Salary rom mensurate w /ex per 557-5642 S "'LIS Secretary needed for • busy Newport Bch law lmmed part time open· office Speed & skills u i n tc for Reader Ad must. Legal exper not representative for inside . re Qui r ed c 0 n ta c t sales position Gd com- pany benefits Apply in _Dolores. 644~~50 _ ---------•I Career oppo rtunity SECRETARY avail for talented & ex per'd individual with well e!ltablished & grow· mg Civil Engineering A challenging position is rirm nr O.C Ai rport available with a leadinJC Apply '" per.;on with re savings and loan As sume to: Mr Fuentes at S e c r e tar y t o o ur Robert Bein. W1l11am Regional Mana1c:e r. you F'rost & Ass0tiates. 1401 will be in volved in a Quail St . Newport variet y of serretaria1.._B•e•a•ch------• and adm1nistrat1v e,. duties Strong typing and dictaphone skills. plea s ant ph o n e personality and good fiiture aptitude are re quired Some branch operations exptrience would be helpful SWITCHIOARD Ol'TR P /time. days. wknds Will train. 642·3013 T!ACHER Sat only Exper'd ECF: req'd Garden Grove area 9'71 ·SS33 Earn to $8/hr. Set your own hrs. car & phone nee. 846-2172. working only a few days a week ? Become a sub-. scription salesperson for the Daily Pilot. Earn as much as SS0.00 PER WEEJC! Positions open in Hunti11gton Beach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa If you are outgoing, enthusiastic and at least 12 years old, C A L L TODAY !!!! !642-4321 Ext. 211 before 6pm. Ask for Vic Owens Diane Bullock 1~~~~95~7!·5M~l~~~·I 833-9550 E 0 F: I - person : Pennysave r , Secretarytryp1st. P rT . 4 1660 Placentia Ave . hr~ pr da y . H B nr SALES C M Mon f'n . 1 SPM Beach I Adams 963 0516 Leading real estate com --- Located in our beautiful Newport Beach offi ce, this position offer-; an Te!.phoooe Sotic itors excellent salary and out Res ponds1ble young B.lCTIOMIC IMTBIOR PLAMT panv seeks professional Saleslady. expen enred. s err e t a r y B u 5 ~ Hwsery Y«dlllan people to manage resale full lime or Prr High Secretariat svce. needs tododeliveriesandhelp otrices Prime areas pay S48·1007 1803 competent secr etary di be f I d women to work eveo; stan ng ne its inc u 5 30-9PM Sun Thur .. mg profit sharinit and ASSIMILH Sea level electronic as· sembler needed fo r rapidly expanding in· ternational company In stable energy lleld Qualified candidate must have 6 mos expr In PCB assembly . Excel working cond. & com- petlUve benefits offered. For more Info. contact Ray Gilman at Scientific Drilling International. 557·9ml. E.O. E. CAii TICHNICIAH Starting position avail with Tustin based plant Co. Will train-health In· surance. Arboretum Jn terior Plants. Ask for Wendy. (714 )730-6460 w /s tocking P'/tim e avail Xlnt pa y & WestcUffDr.NB Fest. accurate typist wkdys Apply In person henefits E 0 F. 9S7-9331 paid m edical /d ental eamS3.SO.SSSO/hrtoap· Pl I ply call Kellv 540·4~ afl coverage. ease epp y • ·JOS Th Tues thru Fri Ask for ___ 17l4>983-S671 SALES Jerry Lloyd's Nursery ---------•] Secretary Fashion Isl on MONDAY. March 16, J ~ urs from 9·30 a m lo 3 JO pm Telephon e Solicitor s o r on TH UR SD A Y · Needed immediately To March 19. from 2 pm to 4 work J.9. Mon.-Fn. No & Landscape Co 2038 Real Estate Sales Newport Bl . C M 646-7441 Experienced agents are Or._. Cont hlfyPllot Eq ual Opport . Employer Find what you want In Dally Pl.lot Cluatftecb. ---------~1 ·•••••• Daily Pilat • • : Editor's : : Secretary • • A challenging opportunity i1 bdn1 offered .• • by the Daily Pila\ for tomeone with the Intelligence. wit and skUla required to bt' • •.. 1ecretary to the editor. lt'1 an lntereat.1n1 e Potltlon requJrin1 the toola Of the trade - 80 wpm d ictation , 70 wpm typln1 • Janitorial route-resp honest couple HBIFV Top pay, reliable people. own phone & trans 581-2730 LMAL SICIET ARY Laguna Beach, full time w /mlnlmu'1' 4 yrs ex· perience for sole practl· tioner. Emphasis on criminal, P l. & family law . Salary co m · mensurate w /exper 714 /497-1789 ---------- ---- MUISIS AIDIS Needed to Jiive TLC to e lderly patie nts. Will train quallfled person· nel. Earn while you learn. Apply 1445 Superior. -------Office Assistant: T ype SOwpm , some ex - perience necessary Will train. Non.Smoker. Send resume to P.O. Box 826, Sunset Beach. 90742. OfllllCICLBk U9UOI NrTE F rr accoontln1/general MANAGB off Ice d u t 1 u x Int Exp necessary 18/hr benefit•. t!a ll Bob must haveJood rtf'1, 110.um wine know! ge. accep. table driving reront ap-PACl.AGHS ply ln person eves 2937 13.40/hr to start. Merit E. Cout Hwy CdM ralaet. 1517 Monrovia • dictaphone -and the abll!_ty to 11\tft • • mentaJ 1ean on •hort noUt!e The benefit.a • • are 1enerou1, the pay reasonable .• Appllcatlon1 belnr accepted only °"'°""h Mtchine ... amect" _A_v_e_ .. _N_.B_. ____ -i unskille d tral••ea. PAJNTER-Neat. rella· SupNtDt S..-..nn1 ble, exp'd, custom work. .. W. • a. ... , C, fulltJme. U l -4410 e ;f!°lntnwont by callln1 . . 1142-4321, ext .• Cll ...... • • • Camera · • ~-- : Operator : '"' ~ • prototyl)e Part-lime sales. Earn up to S100 weekly to at.,t . Car. phone needed . PhooeSOS:Ull, 5·9PM • • wodt .... Pl'OducUon PART-T I MB 4·5h rs. £xperfencett at least 5 )'Hrt. Mual be wort an vertfc.I mUI • 1eneral omce for C.M. • able lo use newapaper camera and • lat.he. had blueprint.a, Sub-contnc:tor. "2·9137. • Pl•temaldns 111tem1. E•cellent w.,.. • ownlooll. E.0 .1:. • and benelJta. Ap9ly In person wtra ume • 3;!t_~UW1 .... ENT51• -. PAlt1'.Tlll E lo Oranp Cout DaUy Pilot. -""1ISlll .. ..,.. Pk:ll own hn • lllcome. • • ffunttMtioa 8-da ...... _ U'" I • 0 -c..t •~ Am.--. ...e peop e. • ~ • f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!f Call b-•• .,...,.., • 330 ITa~ 1 • llAO CAltD 11Word --'• '°"' ad•m lalei ' Cotta Mn., CA • P rOHNl•I Operator . ._IO fut.Mr! ilbt ,l:"Aual Opnnrt··-'tv 11'-i-.-• hp, . .i1. IApl Me)' ,_. '•lt,111 rtf/r/ .. , -« ,.., """ <f ._......,..,.,. tn .... M• l lltote r . la .. ClllllftM MdJoia •••••••••••••••• tJ.8. ...l400 ~ H wa paper. i needed to work with ex· erutive level clients. Must have proven track record . You will be working w ith p ro fessional associate11. Our office offers; •Best beach location •Liberal comm. pro· gram •Nat' I referral program Call now for appointment Walt Hemplllill. 673-7300 RlC.,.IOMIST Experience helpful. lite typing & figure work. Xlnt. co. benelit.s. ln· formal office. C.M. Call MilUeafl. 9AM. 8(5.5800. uc.nONIST Exciting poeitlon In our design st\ldiol Busy phones. TYPING & FILING. Near John Wayne Airport. s:lf·l601. R e ceptionls t /T y pist. rapidly growin1 Co. hH openlns. Od phone voice It typlnt aktlls. Xlnt working cond & Co. beneftta. Douglas Corp, Irvine. 754·Ul6S. ~ONf ST Corporate otftce. Pleaaant per1onallty. Lite typln1 . Newport Beath.~. Metropol itan net-ds multi·line sales reps. Training prov id ed Salary lo SSOO wkly. Call Mr. Silva, 634·4922 Good typinl( & record keeping skills impor- tant. Ptr or F rr. Salary open. 545· 1555. pm at· ex~rience nee No sell- FIDELITY ' n g . Ca II a Her 1 PM 966·0151 - TELEPH ON E Equal Oppty Employer SECRET ARY FEDERAL Need xlnt. telephone 5-T'---.d SALIS Newport Beach leading Jewelers seeking full time Emplo yee well versed In sales & office procedures. S day week mcludlng Saturday, no evenings. Call 673-9334. voice & manners for '""r Huntington Beach of. t.o..Atlft. SOLICITORS Home. contract. no sell · lnl(. non-profit org, P /1' 714 638-3122 flee. Work includes ISlSWestcllff secretarial. billing. & (al Dover > some Insur ance work. Newport Beach Xlnt. benefits. Respond Equal Oppty with resume & salary re· 1~~~!E!m!'!p!lo!y!e!r!'!~!'I quiremenls lo: ad no. 1~ Sell with EASE! It's a BREEZE Classified Ads 642-5678 193, Daily Pilot. P .O. Box #1560. Costa Mesa. Ca 9218216 tn5:'e~~~e·s THERAPIST Infan t Developmt. Program, P /time. Member of transdlsciplinary team NOT & feeding bkgrnd. important Call: Jackie Popp, 5'6-S760 -;,.~~~~~~- I Sales HERE'S A GEM Slavick's Jewelers has an opentn1 for a Jewelry Salesperson to wort closely w,ith customers in 1electia1 fine jewelry and custom desiJm. The Job requires a high dell"ff of responsibility and. aooa knoWledge of Jewelry merchandile. Z.eellent Company Benefit Paekqa. COMl'ACT Ml. ttdmMOT'T f7 I 4J 644-IJIO SLAVICK'S Fine Jewete,. Since 1917 •; most tux urious ex ecutive office s uites TOPLESS MODELS Sec/Rec for diversified 175 DAY. PAID DAILY. professional si-ople. Co. benefits. Good t yping Noexp.nec.826-2S83 s kill •: Outsolng TRAVEL AGENT . r;nonahty a must. Call m ot iva t ed n e w ag. 3l·U.S •resslve C'Omm'I agen· Sec urity officer, P IT. cy.lrvtne.Mln2 yrs u wkend.~ for lrg apt. com-pr. Exnl working condl plex In N.B 13.SO/hr. tlons. Call 714/975-0JOO For Info contat!t Jim Lupil at 844-ltoO. Sn ........ Tuea .. T hur1., Fri.. 12PM.aAM. Sat. 5PM· l AW. llutt have O'Wn tr u u ,ort ataon. talephoM, CPI traJnU11 Ir aome es per. "'d. TlAY&AGIMCY Newport Center needs delivery person w /lt. ty1>1n1. can take Instruc- tion. own vehlcle. M-F 8 :80·1:!0. Hrl y + m ltH1e. Dolores,, M4·1R TltUCK DllYll ~per'd.. wlU. current DMV Report. for Il"V'IM furniture m fr . nna Ar m1tron1. Irvine. ~ Plea11 ~•II for •Pft TYP111n9 · US·'fHI Jlloa-rr " Wltll , ..... , ... l :»IP• 11o c-1•"· ,.,..tau ope I.' 0... .... Dau ff• .. iOiMtll&ft1 ·eo MU? Pt. ,... C••po11 ... Cl..tn.d .. do~welL l~~-.... x .- -------"Tl ..... ":c... I • If! td n. of Ul hwtMSlpeedTudem Bike SlTI. rm Ganl'Mlt ........ Dr.C.M ~lm l'PllT 2 blade Schwinn cndHra a· yelloW velvet aora. pair " u .... 2·• days per nao • swo •tr•mlnt bladt • while c1wc.-Ud SCRAM 'ETS v~atioa ttller. Ap. eond•Tlrl ...... ?050 chalra, colfee table, ,_ et: 18'0 PlacenUa. taW.. pair 1las1 lampt H1$WERS t• ac... USID 1•1s m~ d.Y1. UMpm. "" TYPISTS ___ eo.;._2_1n ____ 1 Oak dWU. aet.. puq•l ~ Ladle l __ _..ta•a"--1-11 t.op •• 1 yr old. must sell. Ftmed Banter um_, ""'vr>1&1• Women's bicycle, •Int DllO FLATS /tlme.r /tim e. Temp. cond. SlOO/bet otr. N.ed · IMl-721'7. 1 don't think 1 lot 1uch u r nwi:.To~,~~!au Tod to sell. 752·7511 dya, couch. end tables. corr.. good deel on my new rvi 751·'7075eyes table. tar. J bouaht tlret ,....___ca_a_t _maoo _ _,_. _. __ , ____ .;.._ _____ , M().~7 after6pm. 11uaranteed ror 100.000 ---------• miles or 1.000 P'J.t\TS, pitta ypists 50WPM Dicta Sec'ys • Exec Sec'ys ;ca. • .-,e ..... 1 L ...... fw• .. c ......... . ~ o,;11t-.,1 &; temporary jobs as r shopping LOOI We ve lon,r ai short term i·a available in the !C. Airport area. Week paichecks. quarterly nu:< trips Never a ftt , II for appt. loday .. 557.0045 U\·Lfn: '1Jl'OllAllY Pfl!SOHNll SCIVICtS "~l7Zl llrclt Stre.t ~ Mt~l.eoch ............. , ......... Mahotany Treatle dlnllll whichever comes flr11t. a9WOOO J Jl 6•a rm tbl. 2 leaves. I chn. Jntl"Odudna quality line S 4 S. Xlnt. decldn1. lOK' MSC>. 548-lW of sww Aloe Vern pro· In from mill. 55• /ft. duct.a enriched with Jo· :::U!~37 ext t 127 ~e~ft~ ~i~:'e1~"';: Joba Panthenol. vitamin round tbl. umbNIJa, 4 F. & m u ch m o r ei 1>99' 1040 chl'I. Also: s ChaJae. 2 Oe1l1Cnl'd by Sasco lu ••••••••••••••••••••••• chain. ottoman, s laH make you naturally KE'310ND Pupe. AKC. lbl. 790-121.2. 2f~mC•ll M2·805lf uf\cr Champ sire. M /F. Pet & ...,., Brown Jordan. 4dub chrs. w /2 tbls. Camtl w /bel1e cuahlons 711().1212 s how . P vt ply . 213197·13'5 altl pm. AAA HOME DOG TRAINING Complete IN HOME Train in g , Obedien· cet Problem Solving. protection. 139-7615. Red vel vet hlah back chair aood rondltlon. $45 $31 3474 7P<' J.udwl• drum11 S4M> 4 ma11 rim!! w/tlre11 $45 de11k11mirrors8U·8909 Lo ... ~. ll('llum Bouquets de· II vt-rl'd Prrfc-ct fo r t'vrry ()('t'a11lon 67!"4410 Larie Hldt' a bt>d Ml1ct1 .. CM1t Springer Spanlel puppies . Good Condition W..t.d IOI t A K C C h a m P i o n W 6!1 !'474 • ••••••••••••••••• ••• • • bloodline. S150. 545-8527. --~ IOH Wa ntt'd Display space -~ for h1,1n11 c arved de German Sh epherd in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• coro\or bird deroyl\ 30'~ telligeot pupa. 6/wks. New pur se!l 110 t•t1., rum 11aid Bru c t• AK C . white . Sl75. Draf\inii Tbl s.s<l . old 1'114>54.'i7R76 963-0331 dining rm' rhr.1 <G> Sl!'l-0. Golden Retriever pups , AKC, It. golden. champ. lines. Sff Dame & sire. 979· 7392. eves Oriental rug Sl75 1438 M111lcal Dorothea Pluc·e . I.a htstrwMnh 1083 Habra <213) 691·31RS ••••••••••••••••••••••• M O VI NG S/\LF.: CONN Director t rombone with <'a l'ie Exc elle nt rond1t1on. StOO fi75·8052 arterfiPM '79•2111' PeM Van. 200 hp turbo diesel. rully equipped. lmmec. cond Burtain prit'«I Pvt par· ty. 775-7125.$73-3729 Rent motr bm. sips 8. Wiil tnde Bl• Bear Lake self-cont • nn-s mkrs or ocnfront Mobile prer P P S40 d y . Home or trlra for 1port 55&-84118 rl1hln1 boat-31 '. 499-3816 T-------r~ T,.. .. 1 1"7223' VNl f,,YTF: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''SEA PUP" 8x24 Ariat~at. like new New <81 > Chry11 SS.800. (KPW8). VR F'WC 499-3816 New Canvas. bottom paint Blue book value 112.000 $8500 646-9000 'ACIACA44 .. .U9'JIDA TIOH '79 mW1l be 901d. ~hrs. Al!IO 41 ' avail. Jndtr dis· treas condition. O..ld,....... .llC. 714/673-5252 MUST SELL $12,500 ormakeofftt Pnce MC)OHabfe Cal after 6pm 675-2695 1955 Pllfrim. l2x55'. Im· mac. cond. SIOOO. 1·526-6083 '71·25' Alrstream. good cond. alps 2. fum S5000 845-4530 bef 5. Est in pk, C.M. S7500. Low space rent. furn "t7 Nomad 8x32. < N9883 >. Elite 1194 ~I '76 Terry. established .. apace rent 1105. compl rum, incl TV, <S5945> Elite 894-~1 Troiltn, Ufflty 9 110 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Sm11ll lockable utility trlr. S35 548-3316 ___ , Allfo Senlce, Parh & AccHIOriet 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fors• Datsun Z motor + otherparh 768-5837 Hnted-Handyman (re· Ured /sem 1-ret1rt-d > for ~pl maintenance in ex ~bange for rent·fr~ sgl rurn apt 642·8670 AKC Gold. Rel. pups. see parents. rem . 125-0. male S208 831·S389 Wa s h er /Dr ye r . Rerrige r ator. Bt-d s. Chrs. other misc items 2542 Santa Ana Avt-CM 631·7<Jl6 all week lon2 '62 R a mbler All or 6STRING ACOUSTIC loafs. SaJI 9060 nothinJr: S225 Dr 11 ---frfftoY• 8045 GUITAH ••••:•••••••••••••••••• home Apl 8 206 425 Me r $225 675.11172 1t Enckson 27. spotlcs'>. nmacC M Merct.Mlse ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Black Labrador. 6 /mo ¥f'l•u 1005 old. free Has all shots. u• •••••••••••••••••••• 549·9847 al\ er 6pm. W AMTEO TO IUY Free to you Chow /Shepherd Pup· pies Rousehold sale. 22 cu' Amana rerrigera t o r · fr~r. dishwshr. lawn care items. babv items. etc Fri 3 20 6962 Paula Circle H B 848·60!M 1 dsl. sips 5. $24 .500 Office Furnitun & •833-~18. 640·0300• !qlli......,t 1015 . •••••••••••••••••••••• F.rick:-.on 32 '75 loaded. 2 rlesks. 30"x60" w 40.. Bristol cond Offt-r R E return 2 exec r hair.; or terms 9611 7903 640·11230 or 640 9900 968-Cl!72 I buy old guns . dl.amonds. ivory. jade & &olleclibles Call ( 714 > 972·4926& ask for Dane Jewelry 1070 557·94M ••••••••••••••••••••••• F.Xt'l' dt-s k w. chr + Nt-wporl Bch moonnii w1J2ft yawl 19~ sis. 000 644 9904 ~ --------F' 1 d PE R d' d credenza Rnd lblt> w t6 .,..t'e Lovable Dalmatian me a A 1amon r ' · 3 63 A k r h a i r s & s I o r a g e CHEAP!! Slightly ust'd turbo k 1t '70 '74 Datsun Z cars 768-5837 Great deal Sci roct·o a I loy whet>ls Used I vr S300 bs t ofrt-r 644 1311! lU30 Chippendale dining r oom set. Table & 6 l!hairs Server. china. mix 8mo. 631.J813 or r1n2. . cli. s 1ng $27 000 Al I d ca hine t S-425 Call 673·6833 ask for Richard. · so· a ----ROUND diamond rm11 . 752 8353 Autos few Sale O'dav 12. xlnt eonct. with ••••••••••••••••••••••• fl-1·0489_ -- Qaby Grand Piano. Burl walnut Fr Orttsden. t er. P ·p 546 8209. '62·00l9 Ugliest dog in tht> world 3.31cts askin2 St2.000. Typt>writer table $25 Of trailer. S800 54S.428R free to you . Male. Pvt.party 21J.838-4768 f' h ...,. Ut'lt t ice c air ..,.,, 1 ' Y a F 1 x er u pp er o Ide r 675-1127 ___ Heavy 14KG Heart Shape ble $2.5. 675·8172 sailboat w 's lip Newpon Furniture 8050 Pill box w 2 Rubies Orfice furn iture. desks. Beach. 75J.!1967 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3501080 •-d h . ----759 1643 tvping "' SI e c 3 !rs. 25' C·Class Catamaran ..\aicrican Oak roll top * * I BUY * * ------· trash cans & some misc with trailer. Isl S975. J!ts k. S-curve. X Int Good used Furniture & Misc...._, 8010 items Can he seen. at SJ.1.7331 d ys ;cond P I P 546·8209. Appliances ORlwillsell ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange Coast Dail y ----- fM2·00l9 orSP.:U..forVou 6'portable spa.pwrpack. Pilot, 330 W Bay St. loots.Slips/ M .. S--.S ._UCTIOM deliver. set up S2200 Costa Mesa Ask fo r Docks 9070 """'k dt'11k . Hoosier chop-"' 1 -"' 631 '""19 ., •• 7""c: G A K "'" 64 ... •616, 11~ 9625 . ..., . .,..J . ...,., ,eorge rauz or en ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~'"I! blocks & mort--r -Goddard •TRADE• 146·3037. 645·7848 John Wayne Tennis Club 8017 Us t' of boat for slip We ?' ----I IUY FURMrTUltl ram m e m bers h 1 p . Peh have 25• sailboat. nei!d ~~~ ....... !~.1.~ Ln -----_ 957·8133 SI 100. inc l transfer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nt-wport slip Will teach : HARBOR AREA 12' cstm made couch. JI' 644·u.49 U11 ly. loving, devott-d I sailing also Ross or Im •"PPLIANCESERVlCE sofa ·t1ble inlaid Tapa s I & fa mily.type yg M S hep da. 1·535·1161 ..,, WANTED· trol e r mix t> 966-1528 - ---- --- ·w e buyusedappliances s hell.ll'cstmmadecof· highchair also m »t -26• Sailboat. .;ound & .. we sell recond. guar feetable. must see to ap-baby items 751-8967 ~ Pianos & OnJGfts 1090 seaworthy 56' mooring, appliances. 549·3077 preelat~ 760-8239_ -----••••••••••••••••••••••• N 8 s16.ooo 675· 7 138 ""1 -IUY--.a.--1.a. ucES Medit Bdrm set. 6 pcs J ohn Waynbee Tehnms SCllOOOub Hammond Organ. Model eves "', ....... "'" reg. mem rs 1p. M t02A Just hke nt-w .Les 957-8133 C no bed > S200 Tradi-incl transfer 675 5455 x Int tont-& response .a.. tional Dining Rm s t-t. 6 ----Sl3001714 1675 1724 flashers. Dryers· Refrig. chairs. 2 leaves . solid RH>WOOD 2 X 6's . Slips available. Nt-wport Bt-ach 25·.35· Avail now. 642·4644 IMPORTANT NOTICF.TO READERS AND AOVERTISF.RS Tht> price or Items advertised bv vehicle dealers in th'e veh1 clt- r lass1f1ed ad vertii.in ~ columns does not 1n c ludt' any applil·a blt> taxes. license. transfer fees. fina nce charges. fees for air pollution con trol device certiricallons or dealer documentary preparation charges un less otherwise spt>c1f1ed by the advertiser A~/ Classics 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '46 Ford Woo die . restored. SlJ.000 ALSO ·29 Model A T~Sedan. 4 dr. rt>Slort-~-_l~t-al for s tudent SI0 .000 675-6161 Whirlpool. Kenmo re. wood. beaut nnish $250. S 4 S Xlnt decking. !OK' Mayta2. Recond. r e Corne r Bdrm group in from mill 55r1 (t finished. guarantee d ! St5054~9223 645·9137 ex t •1 27 Spint-t piano. unusually small + bench. antique rinish S300 963-7~ NEF.D t-nd tie for 25· '58 Chevy Impala. 8 eyl. Trimaran w 118' beam b I k . 2 d r J-1 u r r v t155 delivered 750·3103 -------anytime !' ---Custom country Ii v. rm. :sears Refrigerator. Top xlnt cond. S800 fir m . -of the line. 17 cu n.. Xlnt 832·2828 aft 6. EQUIP "Makita " Model 8900N. Jack Ham mer S375 w /barrow. shovels. m attocks 125. xlnt cond 673-2514 aft 3PM °fond. S300. G.E Porta · .b:le Dish wuher 1150. ~ars Room Air cond ~· 545-9223. .,,...,. (j:f:. uprlRhl freezer. gd icond. 1150. ~ 546-0010 Cl': refril[tfreeur. 21 cu :rt. ia?maker. 9 mo old. llitte new. warr. S450 :SS2-1717 aft 6 -------- llR EEZER 15 3 cu ft ~rostless Sears Coldspol ps. 759-1685 l aytag Washer /Gas :i>rrer 7mos old cost S900 el forS700645·1679 . GE no-frost Refria. Xlnt ~ond clean Sl2S 548·9487. &73·0012 MOntgomery Ward 18 cu i(t frost rree refrig, used limo. S32S firm. 751·3294 ..., _______ _ !k&rS 16cu rt. Refrig. xlnt sond. Like new. Frost· Jree icemaker. 494-1390. Twin beds w /corner table & lamp. Includes covers & bolsters in xlnt cond. S300 (714) 675-1724 Firestone <R78-t5l Used I mo. Sell 5 tires for S160 Country Frenc h King 900-0015 Headboard fwoodl. New S400 . sacrlfice Sl95. 759-168S Dinin11 Rm Tbl + 4 Caneback chrs S200. An· tique Green Striped Chr S&O. Spanish Dresser-2 tbls SlOO. Coffee Tbl + 2 end This S22S Xlnt Cond. 955·~ Couch & Love Seat S300, Glass top din rm table with 6 chairs S300. 1 Sofa Bed n>O Call 963·2550 aft 6 --~----- Reasonable! John Wayne Tenn is Club F am1l v Membership 644·1613 or 759-9471 <Judyl ANGEL TICKETS Call Dr Me al\ 8pm L1m1ted supply''' 673-7795 Amer Oak dresser S250 3x3 Garden window new Sl50. Painlin!(s & prints Stained glass. 646·3478 S600 Glo ria Marshall Membership $500/080 673-82 13 Frigidaire Gldtone Cstm IRVINE COAST COUN l mperialcuft.S350.Din-TRY CLU B Famllv ing Set Mahogany w 16 I membership. 644·8036. ch rs. buffet & others t0am-5pm wkdavs 955·0325. 759-0226 . . Beaut mahog. 3W' slate 8' Sofa+ matching 41.".I' pool table . Leath love seal 1100. Dining pockets. Must see $800, "lJPRJGHT FREEZER Tbl w/leaf + 4 chrs S50. 646-3037. 845·7848 ,;,. Like new. $300. &40.2560 '4S·22!J7 ---------•camper shell. 617 · long. tlhirlpool 2 speed W. M. 2 Couches. 2 dressers. 1 5 · wide. 2•~:' high. S75 _.Int cond. Sl50. Call barwtthstools SSOO. PP. Philco refr1fL S300 SP INF:T 31'2 y r s old Teak wood Excel rond Sacrifice S950. 548·8956 Call · 548·6432 or ~2· 1660 S32001besl ofr 83.1-0340 art 5PM TV, Radio, Hltq, St.r.o 55' SLIP. Balboa Marine 11124 Avail now til Junt- IOH 1 ~~I~ bt~~ 9·5. 644·9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JO' dock. power boat o r Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr Tabernca le Mast No wrnty Free delivery ovemightt-rs St60lmo S148 646-1786 752-2584. 23" color Hitachi. s uper picture. stand incl $195 PP. 559-0166 Hoffman Console F.a rly Amencan Radio S50 63)·3474 loah&MariM ATTN · PVT DOCK OWNF:RS NWPT BAY Beautiful 30' sailboat needs s lip in Newport Bay. Busint-ss exec & wife are sole owners No kids. nodo,l!s 964·2080 Mustan~ '65 Conv p /s. dis c brks, pwr lop, auto. pony intr. 289 4·V enl!. straight body. xlnt mech. wire whl cvrs. tonneau, boot On!( pvt pty 1714 1968 2042 1963 Volvo Sedan. good eniz. body needs some repair SI 100 Owner 548-7249 '60 pORSCHE 356D CONVERTIBLE Ptly restored. needs s ome work . $8250 879-1687 •• ~~~•••••••••••Tr~ '48 Lin~,,c0on1dt MEar~ I l'!..-.....---1 90 I • ••••••••••••••• •••••• • Cpe ...,,....., s ngine .. ............--Aircraft 91 I 0 1192TPL> 661·6210 ....................... ------••••••••••••••••••••••• ON~N 11enerato~. 1969 Beech Musketeer. '28 FORD Model 'A' manne. overhauled. in m idllme. 15P Lycomin.I! Rumble Seat. fine car. xlnt cond 548·9617 _ __ en .I!. 2 Comm . n av. s best offer64G-3526 loafs, MaifttfftC9tce / transponder 840·4109 ''79SEVILLE Service f020 eves/wknds. new. loaded. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C~ SaN/ 631·2244 or966·1055 Marine Electrician Rtitt ' 9120 - - Design/install /repair ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64 Thund~rblrd_ conv~rt .. Qual. work. 549·2520eve •76 COLEMAN TENT 68.400 ong. m1., sw1 n6'· -----away steering whl auto BOAT MAl.NTENANCE T~LR. Sleeps 6 <Used 4 spd . control. AtC'. full Specialize In Teak Times >Stove. Sink. Ex· K I H T· . . t r a c a n v 8 11 power. e sey ayes Waxing & Restoring ,714)9915-8!189 · bird wire whls, Sl2.000. 979-2728 _ D ya 7 s 2. 2 5 5 2 . e v e s lor:.:;.M--Motoriwdlltes 9140 955-3283 Mr. Phillips. 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E ........ 9 30 Peugeot 103 2 Corvalr Pickup Trucks, 1978 ATSUN L.W.B. Pl~KUI! Equipment lnclud• a 5 speed tran1., a ir cond itioning and AM·FM radio . Thia truck has low miles & 11 In excellent condition• (6879) (Stx. 1396). $ ·77 GMC 1•1 ton P tJ ps. pb. lo mileage . xlnt co nd . S3800 OB() 492·3023 '70 Ford I ton. a l'. radio ht-att-r. util bed w ith lumber rack SIOOO OBO 645-7325 '72 '1 tun P l' . xlnt ronc1 S2000 ORO 842·4538 ·16 GMC Sprint 3.50 eni. ask in~ SJIOO. 897-4565 '14 FORD COURIER Rt-bit motor. clutch. hv' dty radiator. needs only minor body & elel' work $1800 54~8831 Jt>wt-1 '72 Dod~t' Pll. 1 ~ ton. fi tyl. auto. trat'tion . .vellow 642·4610 '68 Ranrhero. mint concl rompl rt-stored. m<11!' $5400 645·4832 Buy or tradt-'70 GM(' • • ton P U Good cond Call 546-4986 '76. Toyota l.11n 11b1'd AM FM r adio i:oorl s hape S2750. Ru rt 64fi-7S97 '78 Ford F 100. lo m1 6 rvl. am fm radio. xlnt cond 549 :.J5(J aft 5 '73 4WD Dodge. power. dt-pendable. Slfi75 4924281 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Value Rated Used Can!! '81 GMC Rally Van 7,000 miles, power win dows. tilt wheel. cruise rontml. air, 3 seals. and more (J267·AI $10 500 1977 DODGE "SHOIT .. VAM Automatic trans.. pwr sl . AM /FM tape, full professional int. inc icebox. wide wheels & really cute ~ OJ884531. Limited offer Cup to 2 Yrs.) service contract on most late model used cars backed by major ins. co. . OMLY $5995 IAICB STltEET USED CARS 1425 Baker Street COSTA MESA 545-3334 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ssooor best orfer. w /side ramp, spare eng New stett<> cabinets. roll Weddings 0 ff ' fr 4 cyl Volvo marine w I Call Debbie: 536·1692 S2SOO all. 548--9617 '61 Corvair Van runs ~ves 631 ·1675. S40.*74 548-0130. iaytag washer & gas ~ryer. Almost new llOO. gear box. needs some --. · top bar cabinets for Bullocks vault. must work.646-4624 MotorcrdH/ Drt•n 9510 good. needs pa1.nl. 11200. -780-l.212 vans. bookshelves. new sell. never work Cana· Scoot.rs 9 150 ••• •••••••••••••••••••• 494-0648. 30" gas stove IAlmondl. d ian Red F ox. full lcHlh.'oww 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 Chevy Luv 4X4 -,77--Che-v_y_Be_a_u_v_il-le-.-lo ~ S'A C R I FI CE ! Sea rs ~ortable dlshwuher. Int cond. S75 M2-4314 v arious h s eh Id length. large collar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • / hell f t 1 r t Curnllure. 536·6676 aft med. size. Appraised at LIVE Aboard boat I~ ~l~~k 7!7ex~~:. rkd:;~ : ~ rallco .• a :j a ~c~ mlg. 10,Sded. Xlnt Cond SPM S8500 : S5500 or ofr Live-aboard slip. 40 t 14 ooo OBO system. radar detect.or Best of er494-4060 988-8042AM's Owens ready to move ~h::S~,.,_:3192 · S6700 t080. 631·6306 A.to•-'-9510 2 trundle beds with cov· 1---------onto. NB. 642·4644 eves. •••••=~•••••••••• erlettll llSO Have something lo sell? H D '61 S t t Call &3761. Clualfied ads do It well II' Electric Dufrleld boat. · · po~ er cus .. rtlCb . 9560 .. I Mere ... leM T=::==:::::::=:=::::=-.:.::.:,:.:.:.:..:...:.,:__....!.;:;::==y:==;===:=::=~ Uke new. yellow & blue. Weber car · MUST ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bestleasepncearound s; Must sell asc>o. 673-6111. SELL. Dennis. 96().3192 S,.Clal Broker 963-0221 You can be a WINNER Just by 1end.l.a1 u1 your name and addreu and by watching for yoar name In the cla11lfled acb of the Dally Pl.lot. "l• :.=' to t~lrc-.m, arp amuaemt~l at ra or •1JO ••tllP. lust rm out lhl• coupon Md mall lt a.y te .,.. : a..... Depal'UMll& • DaU7 1tlot m w. •1 ~ c.ea ...-;, CA,.. : I .. ' :0 l c . ~ . i : : : : . . . . . . . . . ' : : : J . . . . I JJ8 831·7777 '71UIOOOLTD Pwc ..... ll Auto.W..ted 95t0 ·eo Hunter Tri-cabin. 44 " W !Xtras. Black .t Red •••••••••••••••-•••••• Just hauled & painted. Xlnt Cond. 7300 rclle1 Lo~M-....1 WE PAV TOP DOLLAR new canva1. everything l2400.ArterSPM ltl04ttMl.dl1pcl. fo r top used cars but radar. 631·4221 d)'s. <714 >586-2766 w... ,ldl u,·. forel-n. domestics or '15-<nelevea ,75 xR75 uunl ex· TnNftdl• ctau1ca. rt your car la ---------1 h t ..... d r d ~;."%..Ill eFxlRSTtra !clean, see us 42' Unlntte. An.. Cab. •73, aUI • m""' er en er11. ~ t w. dala, loeded wtxtraa, pla1tlcmdorotank. runs terms Aval!.. aaklna 11tron1. irood cond. 9:295 ~ I I UK I m a k e of re r . 55M801 Charlie. 6"«· lll05 ...t ualMr ,.,...11t1 ITH<m. leo.172$ eves, '80 §Cl Special with fir· lnl , 11 Is .00 after 5pm . •'Cablncndserrblten1. Cbrllt4z.t7• ,,, .. _,._ VHT. full e11nvu l.n all ~_,,..--. area. many xtrat l4IOO 'TT'iot Mako 250, hardly •HarborBJvd. COSTA MESA =0·'4'71. UH> =fut. 1700/080. WantAdl Call141.arta, ___ t _7_t._J_l_OO __ ·_ CONNELL C HfVROU T •• --I '' • I I r ' \' t ~4'>-1100 HIGHIUYH Top dollart for Sp()rta Cal'!l, Bu••· Campers. 91''s, Audi's A4k for U/C MGR JtMMAaJMO VOUSWAGIH 18711 Beach Blvd . llUNTJNGTON BEACH 142.zooo TOPDOLLAR , PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAM USED CARS! miracle mazda CREVIER •USIDIMWa• '7620028/R 142186 ) '7$ 5.llOIA SIR 12419> '716.~ctl auto <00401 '79 320I (7560) '80 51.81A sunrf. (1625) Closeds.da I The Mott hclt!IMJ P.tOfYow IMWPwchoMOr LHMCO..Wle McLAlren IMW!! luy0rl.eCIH ly Ow PhoM "•" C714J 522-5333 Ol.AHGE COUNTY'S OLDEST 2150 ......_. 11•4 Salt'S·Serv1ce·Leasini COiie MeM 645-5700 Rov CarYer,lnc. WA ..... ED! Rolls ltoyct-BMW f"'lll I 1540Jamhoree Late model Toyotas and Newport Aeach 640·64-44 V o I v o s . C a II u ~ Dat··-9720 TODAY '!! _.. liarlelke TOYOTA-VOLVO 1t••H.,._ lt•d. C••••M•H ""'•o.uo1. HO·t01 PORSCHES WANTED Allow us tht-opportun1t\ to c.-ons1der tht> pun·ha'e or trade· in or your C'lt-a n Porsche Check with l '' Todav' tl6lt Hatbut Ul-.o C.1den GtOYf' •w U..1Jll Top Dollar Paid For Your Car ' JOHMSOH & SOM Lincoln-Mttcury 2626 llarhor Bl vd Costa Mesa 540 5fi:IO W~Pay OVER llue Boole For Your Coc>rl VW. Porsche or Aurl1 VW PORSCllF. i\ DI 445 E Coast H1wav at Bavs1de OnH• t'WPort Beach 673 0900 Prt-mium pnr<'~ paid for anv U!>t>d l'ar 1 foreign or domei.111• 1 1n iood cond1t1on See Us First ' :!Hli8 Harbor lil\n ('11~t ~1 .\11·~.1 ~ .. 111 0:1:10 Allfos, lmportflt' ••••••••••••••••••••••• AHa Romeo 9705 • •••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! 1981 ALFA SPIDERS BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACll 752-0900 '78 Alfa Spyder Convt Xlnt cond . s ilver w l m aroon 1nl Blaupunkt Am t Fm s tert-o . 35.000 mi . $725010 80 P P 54R 2tll4 t'VeS . •·••·•·•··············· 1980DATSUM ZOOSX LIFTIACK 5 lipeed trans .. AM /FM stl'reo cass & onl y 6.700 milt'!i! <672ZUF:) Limil ed offer <up to 2 Yrs > s t-rv1c·e rontrart on most late modt-1 used can hal'ked by major ins t'o ONLY $7699 BAKER STREET USED CARS 1425 Bakt-r Street COSTA MESA 545-3334 ' CHEAP!! Shl!htlv used turbo kit '70 ·74 OaL'iun Z cars 768 5837 '711 280Z 2+2. xlnt cond . /\m Fm c·as!> a c. snrf !i7451l PP 6 40 19HI t'Vl'~ wkencb '7K 280Z 2 • 2 )( lnl cnn<I am rm 1·a,~. :i <·. """· !i7 .300 l('ri1·k1t'l pp fi40 194Kt-vt·~ wknds 1976 2802. 2+ 2 Automat1 <' Transm1ss1on Air Con c11t ion1n£ l\"'1 F~1 S t <'r<'o ~1a2 c; Xlnl Cond $5.555 17 1'1 • 5211 1~4 ·74 260Z. nt'\\ paint. air po lished ma,l!s. xln1 S4fi00 ORO fi45-Rl71 '70 Datsun pickup !it500 or hest orrer Ca II a rt 5PM fi42·2011 '78 Silvt-r Datsun 280Z A IC. am 1rm s ler<'o $7 100 t bc s t n fft'r 640·5799 ·72 240Z nt-w pnt 'uphol 73 K or1.I! mi Grev maroon i nt 5572792 '71 Datsun 510. 2<1r sedan blu. grt-at shape. S2500 962 7145 eYt'S ·110 Air rond . sunroof am rm . l!o ld . low m1lt-a1?c S5000 955-2689 '76 280Z 2+2. looks new. o;lvr. onlv 57K m1. auto. A C. FM. S5300 Call all 6 30548·~ '78 Datsun P lJ . Joni! bc.-d. i\ C. lo m1 . & more M 150 F.ves 642·5941 240Z Reblt. motor. new tires. new paint. Rest of rer near S3800. 549-2096 Ffat 9725 ···················~··~ •74 Spyder, mctl silv<'r. '74 Fiat Xt9. am /fm am lfm i;tcreo. lo m1. nu s tereo cass. S2500/0 BO top. S4500. 646· 1815. 960·8254 •73 Spyder: Pe rfect cond. Honda 9727 New top. low miles. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4500. 548.3398 VISIT YOUR Altdi 9707 ORANGE COAST • •••••••••••••••••••••• '78 5000. loaded, lo ml. no HONDA down & I ease. HR•Aftll•RTERS $231.74 /mo 673-MlO ~ ....... -- MW 9712 TODAY!!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• For The Best Buy Or Lease Deal In Orange County ComeSeeU1Today1 SADDLHACK IMW 2M02Mar1uerlte Pkwy. Mlssron Viejo Avery Pkwy. exit (5 Fwy.) 131·2040 4'5·4949 Cloeed Sund a ya "72 BMW 2002. 4spd. looks •reat. 13400. 494·14'1&. la1er b1.1Y•ra rHd tbe Ctualfied eda every day. It )'OU have aomethlna for we; ,..ch ttMm r11t IDd iMal*'ll\lely, etll '°""'· UMIVHSITY SALE.5 ai SERVICE OlDSMOllLE HOMDA GMCTaUCkS 2850 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 540.9640 '73 Honda Civic, 4spd, xlnt rvnn1ng cond. S1950~ 842·9946 arter Spm. 848·72'76. '76CvccMK mis. s:MOO'. Good Cond. 144.9904 MOW IS·THI TIMI for Job leeken to cb9ek the DellJ Pilot ff•lp W..ad ca...tncaUoe. If ~Job '°" •ant " llOt there 10U mt1bt COil• 1ldtr offerta1 1ou ............ ~ .. .: tb• Jott Wa led ~ ..... I ••• .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, March 18,1981 -------... ..,.. t7H • &.1..1.. t7l4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-.. •111 -lft ..... ALER IN U:" A" ••••••••••••••••••••••• UE. ·. .~ •• 73 COMVMTllLI KMMAMM•HIA Hard to find model. 4 speed lrans .. AM /FM cassetl~ It this one Is ex· lra sharp I <820XKA). OMLY $4995 IAKIASTlllT USIDCARS 1425 Baker Slreet COSTA M ESA 54S.ll34 M.~ .... '740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SELLING YOUR MB• WErAY .TOPDOU.AR SS Call Jack Bacon JIMSLEMOHS IMPORTS 1970 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 631 -1276 333.9300 MBZ280 1973 XLNTCONO. S6000 CALL 760-9278 '79 300SO. I 1k e n e w 6000mi, slvr tblk. snrf. S29.000. 95.5-2699 '68 280SE. orii own.er. we ll maint. drk l(rn Beaut. $4100. Call evrs 675-4560 IOY CARVER ROLLS·ROYCE IMOJilftW.. NIW,.,. .. Hll ,.__ __ ... ......,.. CLOSED $UNOAV~ Saab 9760 ..•......• ~ ......•..... LEASE DIRECT! 1981 SAAi TURI Os IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NF:WPORT BEACH 752-0900 ORAHGE COUNTY SAAB BUY or I.EASE DIRECT OVERSEAS DELIVERIES I 0 120 GctrdPr'l Grove 8 1 Garrlr•n Gr• >vf> 'l30·9 1 90 A111o t we '13 llOO ES· 80,000 mllH. Pri>b1Hls1 J wrtte any Xlnt ~d t8500 Call risk. lo moolhly rates ev .. • wtnds 558-31161. Pll'UI Jnt.ftf.*5 days213/M8-~ -----------'67 VW Camper tlOOcc ....... Mew 9100 new trant . transaxle ••••••••••••••••••••••• new. newt.ires. Baja r•· ady askin1 l25004M·2'782 1978 VW Convert Cham· paane Edit 8.000 ml. Michelin t ires. ct\ro me wheels. AM /F M tass. S7850. Ca ll Dean. 675-6000 '79VWIUG Super clean, 7 ps11r .. 4 speed. Original brown & beij.?e. CIS710221 $69'5 JIMMARIHO VOLkSWA~EN 18711 Beach Blvd 842·2000 '79VWRAlllT Custom 2 door 4 speed. low m iles. fact air It's squeaky l'lean 1832 XIHI $4995 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Rlvd 842·2000 '79VWRAlllT Dynamite low mileal(e. c u s t o m 2 d oo r . automatic. air. or iginal sharp car. 17925071 S4995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Bea<·h Bl vd 842·2000 M id-W eek SPE CIAL · s:.s.t f ds WlllTil1 M• Says Only 3 Days Left For Factory Rebates "' Tl 1157°0 Make Your Best Deal Then Take The Cash O Use It As Part 0 1 Your Down Payment Sunsel Ford SUNSET 1'(.i;, F ~RD 636·40 I 0 '69 2=-i a bsolutely mint' A I ways ~araied $4990 • ·77 E MS in like new l'Ond. only 35.000 m i. a ":. a m 1fm. $4600 or best of~ fer 551·9441 '79 VW Rabbit ·1; Blue auto. a l'. a m 1fm . new Autot. Used Gordon 675 9137 Toyota 9765 tires. best offer Ken .....•.....••.......... 9901 197' CHIVIOLIT c..-.1tt14DI. 4 speed traftl .• •Ir cond .. AM/FM 1tereo cHs Ir Z?,000 miles, (36497'7 ). Limited offer Cup to Z vra.) service contract on mo5t late model used cars backtd by m ajor Ins ro OHLYSJttS IAK .. STlllT USIDCARS 1425 Baker Stree t COSTA MESA 54S.3334 S'7 Ford Station runa. IZ50. 846-.. '71 Ford Station Waaon. l(d shape. 548-5918 '80 F a irmont Wa11on. A tC. AM /FM stereo. 2Jmpi . 848 ·19'0. 848-SS311. t6995. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Maverick great cond. nuns l(reat A IC new SEE US FIRST! We have a good selection ~_!S· 1.300080979·7592 0 ( N E w & u s E 0 Mucury \ Chevrolets ! •• •• •••• •• • •• •• ••• • •• •• COHHEll . CHEVROLET 'l\.'}<lt.11IN•I Iii\ I ""'l\\H '\ 546-1200 •16MONZA 2+2 . 4 cyl. good m ileage. a '<'. r adio. ttansferTa ble war ranty 557-~ or 7SS.0060 ·79 Monza. good cond. u1r ORANGE COUNTY'S FtMEST LINCOLN-MERCURY OF.ALERSHIP ~~t.ttJ.• LINCOLN M1':Rcun·y· 16-18 Auto \enter Dr SD Fwy La ke f'ort>'it ex1l IRVINE 830-7000 + xtras Call a ft 6 or wknd. 556-0724 '78 Marquis wa,IH>n. 1973 4 Dr Impala with air Good tond O" ner S1350 548·7249 '65 Chevy lm pal:t, needs work. $100 o r best offer Call Harry 642·7003 '77 Nova <.'oncour~e 4dr. power. air. $2600 494.2569 C ontinefttal 9930 ...............•....... '79 Mark V Collector's S!.'nes 28 .000 actual m iles I owner fo'ulh equipped Must o;ee to pass loaded Nrw Mtchelins Xlnt t·<incl $.5000 Owner. 675·616 l '78 7.ephvr. x Int 1•11nf1 poW<'r llSOCI 540 7!l87 MustmteJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1970 MUST ANG GRANDE White with Yinyl top Aircond. Runs StroncJ! ! Great Trans. Car!! Re<JUlar Gas!! '79 M.IEHZ Showroom new 240D. on Iv 22.000 miles. "till in ~·a rranty. 4 spel'd. air. s t e e r 1 n J! . t' r u 1 ., <' . ori~inal ' l.1ke New ' (12200) • • • ••••••••• • •• • • • •• •• • Donahue 979·4200 ·71 Tovot'a Corolla 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• appreciate Call ll(•c;c11 Good Mlleoqe!! $1200 SI 5,995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 ·77 450SEL Metallic Blue. 1 owner $19,000 751 1641 arter IOPM. wai?orl Good condition. '66 Bui.? Go<i<l (·ond1t1on needs enj.!tne rebuilt I radio. ne'A duteh plall• S400or make offer Sl500 OR0675 5105 mu't 830 3157 sell ·79 TovotC1 Supra 24.000 '66 VW Bu~ Re tJ?e iiood I m1. 5spd. fullv equip cond S1800631 ·18.16 day-.. "'1th ~nrf S7200 firm 642-8019eve)\ 497 56.59 '78 Cehca l.1f1ba<"k 5spd Air. pwr s t eerini.? & br;ikes AM F'M ic·ass 50.000 frwv m iles Im mac S4850. 499.4128. '78 VW VAN Rlaupunkt am fm Rt rk. tinted win dows. xlnt <"Ond must se II s.s990 95 I 7982 '72 VW Ru~ fi2950 <>II 0 75 1 02:1fl '69 Corona. 4dr. 1600. nd~ '57 Mercedes 190SL. xlnt €.'nlC hody pe rf f ndo;; cond Both lops 91.900 pnll.$450 f>42·6099 ••'73VW Beetlexlnt 111 & Must sell 557·UllR out. new pnl. st<•rc•o. '75 Toyota pit'k·up nc" rcid1Ctls . runs l1kl' ne" MG 9742 <'nR·She ll . ha kit s un S2750 PPR46·4395 • • • • • •••••• • •• • • •• • • • • • roof S2900 oho 548 1477 MG Midi.?et '73 Runs. '78 \'W Ra h h1t "I. ' looks xlnt Lo mlleaJ?<' Triumph 9767 Oeluxe. ~nrf. 4 dr. S2000 5262672 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM FM Cass A C.Xlnl 9748 ·79 Spitfire xlnt cond 17K l'Ond S5000 or makl' ofr Pe&NJeOf mi. radials . s tereo. 675~ ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • S4000 544 050R LEASE DIRECT! I 98 I PEUGEOT TURI Os BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Stret>t NF:WPORT BF.ACll 752-0900 '79PEUGEOT 504 d ie sel s unroof automatic and 1usl likt• new ( 12210) $7995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 ·77 Spitfire nl'W hard top. r"tm 'teer mJ? "hi s tit k shift S3500 OB0673 5041 '70 VW Ru.I(. facton .. nrf. lots of "tra~ call <•vt•, 7'!-0-1128 · 7 8 V W (' o n ,. t a <' Volksw~ 9770 am rm ca~s all chrome ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~(t r C'\'f bra. xtrus · 9K '79 VW mt. S1JIOOR30 8910 SCIROCCO 7!! VW AL'S A c )>lt'reo O vnam1te pla ti num Sport Coupe. 4 speed l'ass. tinted w111clow.., air maJ?S & stereo. onl~ "Int ~~d 551 !l331 t>ves 31.CXX!.m~es on this heau-Volvo 9772 tY (f .. ZCurt> ••••••••••••••••••••••• $6495 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 11171 I Re ach Blvd 842·2000 79 VWDIESEL VOLVO SALES, SERVICE AHO LEASING OVER~F.AS DF:l.IVEHV F.XPF.HTS 9750 'I.· Mod<'I 4 door. sun roof with stereo J et hlack ht'auty' '525X DB 1 S5995 EARLEIKE VOLVO 1966 Harhor Rl vd COSTA MF.SA 646-9303 540-9467 .....•..•....•......... PORSCHE 1979 928 Fullv loaded 15.40!1 orii.? mi xlnt cond in side & out Blue b<>ok wholesale 1s $26.375. our sale price 1s S26 775 12003681 Ask for Duke or Mike THEODORE ROBINS FORD '2060 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA 64'2 0010 J IM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Rl vd 842-2000 ·w ·s.s vw left & nRhl door. ·73 left door $.50 each Western st vie "hi rims for Super Beetle S20 ea 548·9744 '66 (or $1600 '67 for S2600 Or Rest offer p.p MUST SELi. 5411-1095 ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO Lan~est Volvo Dealer in Oran~e Count v • Bl'Y or L F:AS F. DIRF.CT 10120 Garden Grove Bl Garden Grove 530-9190 •CARS WANTED• RUNNING OR NOT S25 $300 I 842 6679 c;1en 1CoMeffe 9932 Eves. 640.5527 CASll f'R F:F. TOWING OPF:N WF:F:K F:N l>S Call Ed 17141891 0517 Buick 9910 ..•.................... • · 74 (.' r n I u n 4 cl r c·asi.etle. loaclt>d Ciood cond 673 7677 or ft'73 787:1 Cadilac: 9915 .............•......... YOUR #I CADILLAC DEALERSHIP IN ORANGE COUNTY! SAl.fo:S. St-:BVll'E A!lll> l.EASINC; ~~11¥L~ l t..00 H.1r1Xlf BNll (0'>1,1 ~ ')40 IJIOO SeV1ll e F:h.•2ant<' HI . dte 'lel. e\'rn opt ion r J8K m1 891 1588art 5PM '7tl Scvtll<'. '<In! coml loaded all extra,, $6450 fo: V('~ 499 3745 ti\<; 951 9500 ·77 S.-V1lle dl'4'rrt Ro.'>e ('olnr. loaded "' extr<1!. $11950 Rill A31 12.'i7 'lltl fo:ldo. blk on hlk loaclN1 lake• nvl'r lease•. S4631mo 544 o:i.1:1 '75 Coupe.• Dl.'V1llC' Wh11 1• lkst OHH R.'i I 904!1 Camero 9917 ....................... '781'amaro Air. automatic r1ower .,teermJ?. 27.%1 mile" IAA2VF:I I $4988 Barwick Import.. 8 31·3311 •..•.•.•............•.. 1979 CHEVROLET CORVETTE T-TOP Auto tram; . pwr steer '65 Mu.-.1 <'nn' Han· op lions Sc't• ad undt•r %20 Antique~ Classu·" in~. lilt. air l'Ond '70 Mu.,lan,1?0t1j.?own cruise. AM f'M ~tercu <'' eniniis Lap<'. V<'lle ma2s & 900 1874 22.000 miles IJ05WX D I L1m1tf'd offer t up to 2 '65 Nl•w paint. nr" t1ri·, Yrs l sl.'rv1<'1' c·ontral·l Goocl c•ond l'ric·NI to on mOlit late model used :.ell 67:i .ii;23 aft Ii dav:-. cars ba<"ked bv major 575.:nOt ins co ONLY SI 1,995 BAKER STREET USED CARS 1425 Baker Slrl'et COSTA MESA 545.3334 SHOWROOM COHO. '75 T TOP Power hra k e~. po"t'r w1nrlow ... powc•r -.t<•erin.I( \lo it h l ii I l l' I e st' o p In J! .;;teerinJ? wh<'t'I air AM FM .,terl'o rc·c1 r ,,.,nd o " d e foj.!.l(<'r automatic trnns Sno" ,,. h1te with Hunwnd~ in tenor 27.noo mile-. Im maculat<' thruout ' SR 100 754 6790 or Answer Ad :r2(,q f>.i2 -!JOO 24 hrs '68 T top. 427-390 hp. bp<I I owner. S6000 t 714 1673 36J.S '80 Vette 9K m1 exlend«.>d warranty. all option' S13 tm must iwll 830 R!HtJ Cougar 9933 ....................... "A8SOLUTEL Y" "IMMACULATE" Must see to apprec·1at«.>. 't\7 \Ol'GAR XR 7. 72K :Jl'tual m1 . auto. fl ., r b. a 1C'. Wl rl' whec>I ('0\ ers. best offc•r °'er s2soo 962-5900 Oldsmobi~ 9955 ••••.......•........... '64 r 85. I owner. run~ l!ood. $375 or l><'st offto r 557 211:24 '70 Olds !lll. l?Uarantt·l·<I tra n~m1si.1on & dri' l' t rain Ru n)\ wt•ll " all Xtr<i' 51 000 m1 211 2 W a I I a t' r S t l' M t\31 424:1 fi75 1 ~ P into 9957 ··········•······•····· *SALE* 1979-1980 PINTOS • 30. 111 chc'ln!'I' from $2895 1!117XKS t ALL Low M lll•aJ:l' ALL Autom:itu· Tr<in'- A LL PllWl'r Sll'l'rlllJ! ALL l!unabout!'t, 3dr SOMF. A1r ('onc11l1<1ntnl! SOM fo:.St;it1nn }\'al(ort~ At.I. Guaranteed ORANGE COAST TRANSPORTATION ('l.OSF.TO f'RF.EWAYS 2167 lla rhor Blvd Costa Mesa Call 1714 I 631 644 1 '72 Pinto ~Int cond. OodcJe 9935 t·as'> tapt' maR wheels . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4,pd 640 6010 clays.Jene. 't\7 OodRe Cha ri.?er 325 hp R.57 4475 rves Chnrolet 9920 383cu xlnt cnnd or1,1? ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1800963·7298 ·73 Runabout Sharri. 2 • 1978 CHEVY CHEVETTE 4-0R. Auto tra ns . air C'Ond .. e t c Cute little car' n93UZVl OMLY S2995 HOWARD CIMnolet Dove & Quail Sts Ford tnne. o c 4-.p<I Sl200 9 9 4 0 968 f;.596 ....................... ·72 LTD damai?ed rear d riveable . parts /restore S350 /best 960. 0015 ·73 Pinto Squirt• W!!n runs fine. nec•d-. ho1h work Sf,CIO 497 S 14 1 Placing a Classified ad 1s Plyrnoutft 9960 J '76 911 S. 5spd. m aj.?s. stereo cass. s nrf. sil ver . i mmac. $12,950. PP 640-1948 eves /wk ends . ·73 VW Convertible. Ex· cellent. radial t ires. Best o ff er over SJOOO 494.2407 Must see. Sell or trade Find what you want in NF:WPORT BEAC ll Dally Pilot Classifieds 833-0555 as easy as dialing your ••••••••••••••• • • •••••• phone. Give us a call. ·so llorizon 4 !Ir 4 o;pd We'll do the rest. 642_5678 22.oon mt. h1J?h mp!(. xlnt r '67 912 5spd. am /fm 8trk. clean. new shocks /muf fler. rblt seats $5200 752-8786 days. 551 5076 eves /wknds 'llO P orsche 91 lSC P etrol Blue. full equip 556·4347. 642-8722 '64 Porsche. superb cond. no rust. Sl0.000. SSS-1966 d ys or 54Hl822eves. ·77 91 IS Porsche. black on Ir black. lthr seals. elec window. snrC. telephone. ful l y l o aded . 1714 )~2995. 0 1 Cl w ~ '66 Porsche 912. x lnt cond. reblt eng. ne w st painl. beautiful classic w /many xtras 15.695 I best ofr. 559·8664 or c 559-1186.1 Autos, UHd Autos, UHd Autos, Used ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ('Ond R42 4379 Pontiac: 9965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1965GTO This one's in j.?ood condi· lion. $1295.00. Please <'&11675·1763 after tip m 1979 POMTIAC SAFARI WAGON Automatic trans . pwr st . air cond .. roof rack. radio & only 15.000 miles t915WZSl L 1m1t ed ofrer (Up to 2 Y~ l se r vice <'ontracl on most late model used cars backed by major Ins. co OMLYSHts 1u•sT11n USIDCARS 1425 Baker Street COSTA MESA 545.3334 '71 Le Mans. 76K ml, V 8. reg gas, good cond. S'760. 846-0747 •n V•p. Oood around town .,.,, Call M5-'7141 orUl-0111. $ 19900 DELIVERS ANY DOWN ADVERTISB> PLUS TAX VEHICl;E! • LITTLE OR MO CREDIT? • NEW IN CAL'1FOINIA 1 • NEW OM JOI? • SHORT ON DOWN PAYMENT? • SLOW CREDIT HISTORY? • MILITARY? WE CAN HELP! AMY MIW ltll TRUCK oRYAN IM STOCK IMCWDIMG COURIERS 5600 CASH REBATE PLUS TOTAL OISCOONTS 1980 CARS 1980 MUSTANGS 1980 FAIRMOHTS rAY FACTORY INVOICE AND GIT 6600 CASH RHATI 1980 GRANADAS PAY FACTORY INVOICI AND GIT PAY FACTORY IMVOICI AMD GIT 5600 CASH RHAft 1980 T -BIRDS PAY FACTORY INVOICE AMD GIT 5700 .i:!~. 5700 CASH IHATI ROBINS-READY TRADEINS OVER I 00 TO CHOOSE FROM! 197' l'OltD rtMTO • cyt • ~ 1~ tactory 111 c~CIO"lf"9 A,U f M ... ., Vll"fyt •nf.,,or ttnfed gla.H ....... c:xw era ws""' ht• & oN-1 22 '2• tntle11 OllWYGl 15'\ 0178A?o 53399 I 979 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE HA TCHIAOC • l)ool • ~ engtN OU-llC If--I•" ....... ... '"" and only 1 921 tO* _. nu ... t (19'1VW) '"' l'OltD LlDWA•OM V8 IUIOtNhC: !rant ladOf'f aor c0<1d1hon1nq - si .. rono. --... rllOIO. !Int"" OIHI rool ·-· •h••I co¥etl ••-' '"•• & only .. 0 ... 4? mO••' .. ,,~ .. '"'sj999 1•P01D Plll'PICIUP AlllOm9llC ww •a• ... otf'dlllONnll, --· Hlf. -W-. AMIN .-.o. cuatom .....,. - 11110 ---M11911 (aw caoo.11 $6999 1971 l'OU FAllMOMT 4 Doo. SIDAM e cyl au1oma1oc ,,_ lactOf'f ,,,, _......,.. ••-•no -twak .. radto bocty -...-., 11n1 ""gl&H ·-._. """ l11e1 & only U .111 Set 1 0401 $11< P4408 53499 '''° l'OltD rtMTO IUMAIOUT e.,...pm.,.. ·--.,, ..,.OfNlk -- ., .. nno ---r.olo -"*--lo• lo•,..,_.! I l !llAHI 53899 ttlO CHIYIOUT MAL*ICOUPI 8 Cfl •-IC llW l9d0tr,,, -.-..0.llt ... -.. _...., ----.................... _ -••• -& onlY H.110 ......., 1191ZLQ). 1-. .. .. ., s5552 I ' E•..-y Chrysler and Plymouth Is sale-priced for EASY deli•ery! We must reduce inventory IMMEDIATELY! Giant wlectlon! Liberal trade-in allowances! AMO DON'T FORGET THE 6°/o INTEREST REBATE AL--· -----~LOWAMCE FROM THE FACTORY WHICH -ENDS FRIDAY. MARCH 20. BRAND NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH CHAMP 6% 1• . This car gest super fuel economy! Equipment includes 4 speed transmission, vinyl bucket ... ts. 1400 c c engine, rear window defroster, radio. white s1dew1ll ttrM & more• (200657) ATus· PRICE CHRYSLER REBATE Y•R COST 55689 5330 55359 BRAND NEW 1981 CHRYSLER CORDOBA LS VB automatic trans bucket seats power steering & t>rakes radio body side & deck stripes & wsw radial tares 11365281 ATLAS1 PRICE CHRYSLER REBATE 57395 5487 YOUR COST 56908 6 0/ INTEREST REIA TE .ALLOWANCE /0 FROM CHRYSLER!!! IMTIREST REIA Tl ALLOWANCE IACK FIOM CHRYSLIRI BRAND NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT ATLAS' 56295 PRICE CHRYSLER 5388 REBATE YOU~ COST $ 5907 6 Yo 4 cyt. engine. 4 speed trans.. bench seat. body IMTIREST REIA TE side moldings, max. cooling. wsw radial tares & 34 MrG ESTIMATE• 45 MrG ESTIMATE HIGHWAY• ALLOWANCE IACK moret (145e87> FIOM CHRYSLER ~N-EW-19-8 l_P_L_YM_O_UT_H .... H-OR-IZ_O_N ' Economical 4 cylinder enoone 4 speed trans bucket seats wolh fold rtown ,. .. ar seat ma• cootano wsw class belted radial hrPs & more' f 1%4751 NOW ONLY FOi FLllT SALES & t I AS I INFOIMA TION, CALL (JIMI NAMCO 546-1934 NEED CASH! w • .., .. .._._--4.._ .... _.. ·-1wc.. .......... ,__...,, •• .......... .., ,....,......, .... -..,it! SERVICE HOURS: Moftdcry ...... Friday 7:30 ...... to 5:30 """ s... ., 1:00 ....... to 5:00 p.M. SEE OUR SERVICE DErARTMENT AIOUT RIHTIHG A 'I I CHIYSLB 01 PLYMOUTH. All vehicles are aul)Ject to prior ..... All prices are plus taJ1. license. documentary and (used vehicles) amoo fees, and are valid until 10 om Sunday, March 22. 1981 with the ex· ceptlon of rebatet which end this Fri· day. March20, 1981 11 I I I r In or er .. .. lllllCI CUil Ylll lllD• llllY PIPll WEDNE ~DAY MAfH tt lt1 l•tHl OHAN G l: COUNT V C ALIFOR NIA 25 C ENTS ... . .. ands tnoarn nameless girl MOURNERS FILE PAST THE CASKET OF NAMELESS GIRL AT BAL Tl MORE FUNERAL Services for chlld found deed lest November drew thouHnda; ceuae stlll unknown . BALTIMORE (AP) -For several minutes, the woman's bead was bowed In prayer. As she looked at the body or a little girl Jy. ing lrulde the while-casket, her eyes welled with tears. "What a waste," she muttered before moving a way. Within hours, St. Pius V Roman Catholic Church here was packed with several thousand strangers who came to mourn an uniden· tified, abused child. The girl. found four months ago dangling from a chain-link fence, was be· ing buried today. The cause or her death ls not known. The mourners streamed into the church all day Tuesday. quiet· ly passing by the tiny body in the casket donated by a local un- dertaker. By nightfall, several thousand had come. "To an angel, from someone who cares," said one card. Another read : •'God. please find a place in your kingdom for this forgotten child.·' There were no seats lert by the time the Rev. Joseph Benintende delivered an emotional, powerful eulogy that had the crowd shout· ing continuous" amens " "There 1s not a one of us sitting here that can tell us anything about this child," he said ''Where she came from. why she was struck down in the prime of her life. "Perhaps we are angered; perhaps we are filled with tears,·· he continued, "but she leaves behind ... a life that has touched you and me. She cried out lo us through death, and each one of us responded. She's touched us, and lthankwe're richerforat " The people lined up several hours before the funeral Mass, trying to get a glimpse of the girl whose tiny hands clasped a single pink rose A Catholi c service was held because the Catholic church was made available. ·'I just felt sorry for this child,·· said Rosa Ragland. "It was the least I could do is come and pay my respects . . for someone who was discarded just .like a shoe . That's the hurting part.·· The black girl, <tbout 9 to 13 years old, was found in Novem~r tangled in the mesh of a fence along Interstate 70 in West Friendship. Her burial had been delayed by the hope her parenls or someone who knew her m1ghtcomeforward Noonedad Authorities have not be('n able to determine how she happened to be on the hi£hwav A state medical examiner rull'd her death may have resulted from a type of blood disorder similar to sickle cell anemia. The autopsy also revealed signs that she had been beaten, and several o( the bruises and cut.a were fresh. Police conjeclurethal the fear of being caught on lbe fence. or the rear or being beaten again. may have pushed the blood disorder to a lethal state. "I reel awful about it," said Geraldine H awki ns of Baltimore, who came to mourn the child. "I guess the parents are afraid to come forward now. But they s hould h ave been afr aid from the start. It was a heartless thing to have done." ·· J didn't know whether it might have been someone I knew,'· said Ball Robinson. a recently retired Frederick County schoolteacher. "Unfortunately, she wasn't. It's a very sad thing I still can't see a famjly missing a child not saying a nything at all." Funeral arrangemehts were donated by undertaker Charles I. Glover, who said he ··would not be able to sleep nights" if he hadn't donl' ~omething "I live alone in the t·1ty." said Glover "I could du.· tomorrow and someone would have to come forth and .!.ee that I ~ot buned properly W oDian saved in Huntington fire Evolution defended Science 'prey to fools' By ROBERT LOCKE Al' kletou Writer ANAHEIM Science is fall· ing prey lo "the cultists, the misfits and the fools" because scientists have failed to explain a nd defend their profession. a Nobel laureate charges. .. We have failed to act vigorously in defense of scien· lific truths ," Or. Arthur Kornberg said Monday "We Freed II B ~tor High court review of MacDonald eyed FA YET'TEVILLE, NC. tAPJ Government attorneys in Washington today were expect ed to ask the U.S. Supreme Court lo review a lower court 'ruling which overturned the 1979 conviction or Dr Jetfrey Mac Donald for the murder of his wife and two children at Fort Bragg in 1970. Bryan Murtaugh, one of the government prosecutors in the case. said this morning that a writ of certiorari asking the Supreme Court to review the de· cis ion was printed Tuesday night and was to be filed this af· ternoon. After receiving a written reply from Ma cDonald's attorneys on the writ, the court will decide whether to review the July 30, 1980, decision by a panel or the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that MacDonald was denied his right to a speedy trial, Murtau~h said. The 4th Circuit Court of Ap· peals turned down in December a government request for a re· ORAIGI COAST WIATHIR Increasing c loudiness with 10 percent chance or rain tonight. SO percent Thursday. Lows tonight 48 along the coast, SS inland. Highs Thursday 60 to 66. hearing on the panel's decision by the full court. The government attorneys re quired approval or the u s. Soli citor General before pro· ceeding with the request to the Supreme Court. Ma cDonald's attorneys will be required to file a response to the writ, and the time delay in pre· paring the response probably means the Supreme Court will not decide whether to hear the request by the end of this year's term in July, Murtaugh said. ··My gut fe.eling is that I doubt all the paperwork will be filed by the end of the court's session in July," he said. Attempts to contact Mac· Donald or his attorney. Bernard Segal of San Francisco, were un- successful this morning. Alfred and Mildred Kassab, the parents of MacDonald's s lain wi fe, Colette, said this morning that the decision to file the appeal to the Supreme Court came as no surprise lo them. MacDonald was convicted in August. 1979, on three counts or murder in the Feb. 17 , 1970, bludgeoning and stabbing deaths of his pregnant wife and two young daughters. have shrugged off rather than rejected forcefully the cultiats, the ml.sfita and the fools wbo erode science." He said it is sad that "society. by ignorance. is as captive to creationists. astrologers, evangelists, food faddists a nd alJ kinds of gurus as were our an- cestors <held captive) by fears of thunder and lightning." The Stanford University physi· cian, who shared the 1959 Nobel Prize for medicine for resea.rch on the material or heredity. was to have defended the theory of evolution earlier this month at a trial in Sacramento. The trial ended before he was called as an expert witness. Religious fundamentalists had argued that teaching evolution in public schools violated the re· ligious rights of their children and asked that the biblical story of creation be taught alongside evolutionary theory. The judge rejected those argu- ments. without considering the scientific merits of either side, and state attorneys claimed a victory. But Kornberg told a meeting of the California Medical As· <See SCIENCE, Page A2 ) HB approves • excavation safeguards The Huntington Beach Plan- ning Commission has approved safety measures to be taken dur- ing excavation of an abandoned chemical dump. The unanimous action Tues· day allows a developer lo dig up an estimated 72,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil from the so- c ailed Boucher Landfill, 700 feel southeast of Warner Avenue and Bolsa Chica Street. Cigarette in chair cause? A cl1aretle smoldering In an overstuffed chair is l.he suspect· ed cause of a downtown Hunt· ington Beach fire that destroyed one home a nd damaged a second, fire investigators report· ed today. Firefighters responded to a 7 : 30 p. m . call Tuesday and found a home at 309 11th St. full y engulfed in names. Huntington Beach fire ins pector Larry Marshburn said. He said the heat from this blaze caused an upstairs window at the adjacent home, 311 11th St .. to burst. spreadin~ the fire to the second residence. Authorities reported no major injuries in the blaze. but a 16· year-old Ocean View High School student was credited with helping to rescue one woman who was ins ide the second home. Paul Lepore. the stude,nt, said he was standing an a nearby store when a man rushed in, pleading for a dime to call the fire d epartment. "I gave him a dime and ran down the street.·· Lepore said "I could see flames and s moke." He said he pounded on the door of the first home and re· ceived no answer. He said he then pounded on the next home, 311 lllh St.. pushed open the door and found a frantic blond· haired woman inside. "I thought I heard some screams. but I guess it must have been the flames hi ssing," Lepore recalled. He said he helped the woman out to the curb. The student said the woman tripped as she tried to run back Inside to get her purse. "When she fell, all of a sudden the flames started really pop· ping," Lepore said. "Everything just went to hell." Fire officials identified the yo ung woman as Kath y Tomlinson, 23, a resident of the house. Officials said she was the only person home at the time the blaze spread to her house. ' O•lly Pilot PM1• .. , a .. , ..... _ CHARRED INTERIOR OF HUNTINGTON BEACH HOME County fireman Greg Hemaley, a neighbor, view• acene Sweet sorrow Wife g ·lad hubby '/ired' By PATRICK KENNEDY Of 11M Doily l'ilel Sull ·'The best news I've had in year s." was the reaction of Terry Greer after reading that Huntington Beach Councilman John Thomas fired her husband, Bruce Greer. from the Planning Commission. "I wish John would have talked lo Bruce before he fired him. but John's the councilman. We'll all remain the best of friends," she said. "Bruce will be saddened, but I'm not." ~~ 111101 TODAY illj Girl drowns in home pool Safety measures include air. monitoring for toxic fumes and an emergency evacuatlon plan in case dangerous gases are re- leased during the dig. Fire investi1ators said no one was inside when the fire broke C~ FlllE, Pate AZ) "Mr. Thomas has done me a big favor. Now I can clean out the pilea of city papers and Bruce can ltay bome at nlaht.'' She said Greer's birthday was last Sunday and when he returns from Korea this week she'll greet him at the airport with a birthday card containing the newspaper clip of his dl11ml.ssal. atA cq . . !: .. F'or HarTJI Brod11. there's no more riding the mechankal bvll. Hf1 neck wcu broUn in IM L.ouilvtUe Urban Cowbos/ Bar. SH Pag11 Al. r AMUIMl!n Ot _,..¥let CH-I Mv .... ~ ...... IUlleNINewt A• l"W4k .... k .. N.04 h••leNw ., ...,.. It,. M«iM.NMtt ., ,........ 01 ,.....,. .,._, We.._, A4 W.n.MNI M H/f A 2·year·old HuntiJlstoa Beach girl drowned Tuetday att«noon in her family'• backyerd pool, Fountain Valley ftn oftlclall re- ported. • The dead &trl wu kleaUfted as Katie Worley. Fountain Valley Fire Chief Tom Feierabend aald few details were immediately avallable In the incident, which occurred In the 8200 block of Dancy Clrcle ln Huntlncton Beach. Jfe uid Fountain Valley paramedic• responded to a medical ald call at the Huntlniton Beach home under th• term• of a cooperative aid pact. He 11.ld paramedic attempts to rt· 1u1cltate the atrl were unauc~ ae11ful. " t I ~; --o-.. ·--:.-. --. •. IAld•ft.--• ..... The excavation Is scheduled to begin April l, according to of· rtcials of the Bolsa Development Corp. State Health of/iclals will oversee the project. In January, the City Council approved the controversial proJ· ect, pendina a plan for safety precautJona by the developer. State Health official• Indicat- ed that st.ron1, but barmleaa, odor• will be releaaed during lbe excavation. Tbe thrH·acre landf Ul 11Va1 u.ted f« oU reftnery wastes ln the lNOI. Offtdals o( the State o.part. ment at Hultb Service• recom· mend.cl lut 1ear lb.at the dump (lee DVllP, Pa1e AJ) · ' MONTREAL FOR VINCE? Lo• Angel es Rams quarterback Vince Fer· ra1amo HY• there'• very little cha.nee th•' he'll be to11ina pu1es at the Big A nextHuon. Ht'• clON to 1l1nln1 a contract wttb Montreal of th• Canadian Football Leasue. John Sevano flies aft excha1lve report on Pase El today. • A COD1ultant for an intema· tlonal tool company, Greer, 54 , is in Korea on bmlneas and is una1¥U'8 that he's been l"emoved from publie..offlce, his wife said. Tbomu pu6llcly fired Greer Monday 'because be said Greer ml1111 too many meeting• when he leaves town on business. Thomas appointed Greer to the commission in October, 1979. Plannlna commiaaioners 1et $1S a meeUng. "My husband lan't here t.o de- fend blmlelf so I want t.o defend him," said Mra. Greer. She 1ald her bUiband makes up tor frequent absences by "hard work 1tudyln1 clty bull· ness." ' l I "It's John'• loss and my gain," Mra. Greer said. Girl beaten by 3 kids MERCED <AP) -Three cbtldren carried away H many toys u they could 1alber after beatlnc up an a.year-old litl at 1 her home here, poUc. aalcl. Otncen took tbe stria, a1• 'I and 9, Into cuatod1 encl CCIII• Unued tbelr March for aa ...._, boy f« lnvt1tJ1aUon of ••ult and burllary. • • H/F Orange Cout DAILY PlLOT/Wednnday, March 11, 1811 P•llt Pllol St.If PMto 'IN LISTENING MOOD' Governor In Newport FV council OKs complex near hospital D1sm1ss1ng protests that a life· threatening traffic hazard will be created in front of Fountain Valley Community Hospital, lhe Fountain Valley City Council has approved the design of an of· fice complex lo be built adjacent lo the medical center Al Tuesday night's meeting, the council unanimously voted to uphold a Planning Commission decision allowing the new office complex to be built with a park- ing lot in the rear Dr. Richard Ayers. represent· 1ng the Fountain Valley Medkal Development Company which owns the hospital. argued that the two and three -story office !--buildings facing Euclid Avenue I immediately south of the f hospital will block the view of motorists leaving the facility. "We have people coming out of the hospital who have been under tremendous stress." Ayers said. "They'r e not always the best drivers or the most pa· tient. .. Ayers urged that the office complex be constructed with a parking lot in front, thereby im· proving the view for motorists leaving the hospital. But Wendell Rylee, archjtect and developer of the new office complex. claimed the buildings. as presently des igned, will be set back far enough to permit motorists a clear view of Euclid Street traffic. Fountain Valley Plan ning Director Clint Sherrod said he and the city's traffic engineer had determined that the current design will not create a traffic hazard. Joining her comrades in ap· proving the current des ign, Councilwoman Barbara Brown observed, ··1 too am concerned about accidents and trarfic safe· ty. But at this point, I'm not con· vinced that movinJ those build· ings back will do anything to solve these problems." Fro• Pa9f* Al DUMP .•. be excavated to remove poten- tial future hazards such as con· lamination of the underground water supply or underground buildup of explosive methane gas. The excavation could take up to three months, with trucks hauling the contaminated soil to a privately owned hazardous waste dump in West Covina, ac· cording to city officials. The developer plans to build 224 condominiums on 12.5 acres that includes the abandoned dump. Governor pressed • on, transit ~ BJ ITSVB MAULi oe•o.11,,.. ... ,..,. Clalmine he wouldn't have come to Newport Beach ti "I dJdn't have any aood news," Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. ottered little of that good news when t.be subject turned to Oran1e Coun· ty's transportation problems. "I'm in a llstenina mood tonight," Brown told busi· nesamen and local politicians gathered at a reception Tuesday night in the Big Canyon Country Club hosted by the Irvine Com· pany. Brown, who sipped coffee as he answered questions, said be has not reached a decision whether to support a bill to in· crease state gasoline tax by two cents a gallon to help finance road projects. "Given the political trauma or the past year.·· said the gov- ernor. "I want to listen to the people before considering a new tax." Brown opened himself to some transportation-type jokes when he arrived at the evening recep· tion an hour late. :·There's a rumor, Governor, that you were late because you got stuck in a traffic jam." sug- gested Irvine Company Presi· dent Peter Kre mer, who in· troduced Brown. Brown offered sympathy to local businessmen interested in unjamming Orange County's frequent traffic snarls. He said he would be willing to adjust truck·weight fees to help provide money for transportation proj- ects. Putting in a plug for an elec· tric car he said he'd recently read about, Brown also suggest· ed that future answers to transportation problems could be eased with use of a high· s peed rail system . "I'm interested in that." re· marked the governor, "even though all the experts say it doesn't make any sense." He added, "We probably ought lo wipe out our three auto com· panies if they don't get moving a little faster.·· Brown also suggested that the key to mass transit is through development. He suggested that clustered or high density de· velopments would reduce the need for roads. Brown. who told listeners he was looking for a "deepening re· lationship" with Orange County, said that his top priority as gov· ernor is to combat the increas- ing crime rate. He also said he is "thinking care fully" about running for a U.S . Senate s pot. Guests at the reception in· eluded Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson and Assemblyman Richard Robinson. Three county supervisors Harriett Wieder. Bruce Nestande and Tom Riley also were on hand. Following the reception, Brown attended a fundraiser at the Balboa Bay Cl ub for As· semblyman Richard Robinson. a Santa Ana Democrat. SCIENCE .•• sociation here that science didn't win. He noted that judicial decision warns schools a nd textbook publishers not to present evolu· tionary theory as an "official dogma taught as. if it's beyond dispute." "That." Kornberg said, "is monstrous non.sense. Evolution is beyond dispute. It's a fact of nature as compelling as gravity." He conceded some scientific dispute over the precise mechanisms by which evolution works, but said the theory itself is beyond question and·"the con- fusion stems from ignorance and semantics." The problem, he said, is the failure of scientists to explain themselves and the nature or science. Kornberg said the government , and the public often forget that the wonders of modern technology exist only because they are built on a foundation of basic research -knowledge sought, not for profit or even for the good of society. but for the sake of knowing. ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat CIH.itlecl edvettllfng 7141142·1171 All other deputmenta 142-4n1 • Thomaa P. Haley ~ Robert N. Weed ........... M. Thom•• KHVll ....,. Thomaa A. Murphlne ......... - ChtrteeH.Loo• --...r-1:,:d Sohulman Cer1 CantenMn ._.... °"""" Ken!Wth N. Oodd•rd Jr. ~~ MAIN OFFICE UO Wul..., SC., Coele AM .. , Cit.. M•ll ~BM: ... IMO, C•I• Me .. , Cit.. nt2' \ oe11, Pllet SUll Pllelo LOSES HIS HOME Robert Evens Fro• Pa9f* Al FIRE ... out on the ground floor of the first home The residents of that house. Robert Evans. 33, and Mike Warne r , 25, arrived after firefighters were summoned. Fire inspector Marshburn said the men's home was destroyed in the blaze. Damage lo the stru cture and contents was estimated al $150,000. Firefighters were able to con· lain the blaze that s pread to the second house, limiting damage to about $15,000, Marshburn said Marshburn said firefighters initially were hindered by spec- tators who parked on fire hoses as they were being connected. He said smoke from the blaze spread southeast through Hunt- ington Beach , triggering a number of fire calls from resi· dents. The blaze was brought under control s hortly before 8 p.m., Marshburn said Cremation of indigent dead OK'd By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of I ... O•llt Pllol SI.All In a split vote, the Orange County Board of Supervisors has approved procedures for cremating the indigent dead where no religious or cultural opposition exists. Under policies adopted Tues· day. burial will be permitted on· ly in cases where it can be de- termined that cremation would violate the religious or cultural beliefs of the deceased. In such cases, burial will be conducted by religious or com· munity groups at their own ex· pense. Thal policy is based on a rul· ing by county Counsel Adrian Kuyper that county subsidy of burials made on religious grounds could violate the doc· lrine of separation of church and state . Supervisors gave preliminary approval lo cremation, rather than burial, of indigents in Oc· tober after learning that the county cemetery districts no longer would provide indigent burial al reduced rates. About 100 Indigents are buried in the county annually. Supervisors Bruce Neslande and Harriett Wieder dissented when the policies came to a vote. N estande said the county should not be in the position of cremating an Indigent unless It can be determined the person favored cremation . He said cremation was "generally not accepted" in Judaeo-Christian ethic. Mrs. Wieder said she wa1 dis· turbed by Kuyper's opinion that the county should not provide a sub~ldy to religious or communi- ty troupe who agree to bury ln· dl1ent1 whose beliefs do not permlt cremation. "II WI 8t0Up wants special attenUon, they should pay for It," responded Ralph Clark, board chalrman. County omctal1 soon will neiotlate wtth funeral horna a rate ror cremations. • I ------~ ~ Carson'• attack on Enquirer cited LOS ANGELES <AP) - Juron beu:tq Carol Burnett'• StO mlWoa Ubil suit a1aln.at the NatJonal Enquirer were ques· tloned secretly today by the Judie and attorneys to find out If they beard Johnny Carson'a na- tional TV attack on the tabloid during the night. <Related story, A5.) "If they hadn't printed the story, the whole lncldent on the Johnny Carson show would not have happened. U they can 1enerate that kind of thing and then come in and complain in court, it doesn't seem right," Langeberg saJd Anne De Wolf, a Loa AneeJe~ spokeswoman for the LanlanaJ Fla .·based publication, sai<t there would be no comment orl the Carson attack until after thft Burnett trial was finished. At the request of attorneys for the Enquirer~ the judge be1an. calllna jurors individually into hJs chambers, where attorneys were able to question them out- side the presence of the press and public. Misa Burnett, also excluded from the chambers, told re- porters she had seen a replay of Carson's comments before she came to court. Choking restauran ~ patron's life saved i ''I thought he was wonderful," she saJd of Carson, adding she hoped that jurors had followed the judge's instructions not to watch any TV broadcasts deal· ing with the trial. Although she said she hoped the comments would have no ef· feet on her case, she hoped it would affect the public's attitude toward the Enquirer. "It should have a great impact on the public," s he s aid. ''Hopefully it would put doubts in the public mind (about thlngs printed in the Enquirer). I don't think the public should believe a bunch of lies." William Masterson, attorney for the Enquirer, said Carson's comments could have a negative effect on the progress of the cur - rent trial By ilTBUa R. VINSEL Of -~•Y ~• ... 1i.11 A Newport Beach man who keeps informed about emergen· cy aid procedures because of his wife's heart condition is credited with saving the life of a choking woman in a Garden Grove cafe. James A. Thaxton, 51, who was silting at a table behind Sal· ly Augustine, 60, of Garden Grove, at Jorene's Coffee Shop, said he realized immediately what was happening. Thaxton. a mechanic for the Eddie Hopper Chevrolet agency. s aid Mrs. Augustine was chok· ing, gagging and pointing at her throat. "I heard the waitress holler 'my God, what do we do'?' " says Thaxton, who has eaten at the same cafe for 12 years and happened to be there on his lunch break last Friday. Thaxton immediately applied the so -ca lled H ei mli ch Maneuver used for people chok· ing on some object. O•tlr P otol SUll Pl>OIO KNEW WHAT TO DO , Hero Jim Thaxton "J think it's a serious matter and it could have an adverse im· pact on the Enquirer's right to a fair trial," Masterson said. ··we're supp<>sed to decide this case on evidence, n ot o n someone else's opinion of a story." This involves grabbing the vie tim from behind a nd sharply poking just under the breastbone. which usually p<>ps out the food or foreign obJ~Cl. Village mob1ll· home park, 300 E Coast l11ghway Attorney Barry Langeberg, representing Miss Burnett. said the outburst by Carson was es· sentially the Enquirer's fault. "I had never done it before. so I figured now is as good a time as any and I guess it worked." said the soft-s poken mechanic. who lives in the DeAnza Bavs1dl• Fir(• Capt Jo(' Chandler. who was d1sputl·hed to the crisis, said Mrs /\ugu~tine didn't re quir<• hosp1tallzalwn <ind he can cclt•d a (·all for paramedll'S before thl'Y t•vt•n a rn vcd SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribution of men's and women's cloching. We trade with the mtlSt prestigious stores and the best manufacturer1> in the country. But we also deal directly with you-the individual traditional clothing con- sumer. Because you appreciate the classic styles and the quality that our clothing rep- resents, we would like you to understand exactly why we can offer you such substanual savings on the cloches you really want. To begin with. we deal in one very specific inventory: traditional styles. We don't do speculative buying on trendy garments that go out of style and have to 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. Narurally, 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 re presented by o ur 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 cradirional fashions, sold in a tasteful streamlined atmos- phere, at the most significant savings avail- able anywhere. Tua tin 621 South B Sc.. Tustin. CA 92680 (Just behind Hadley's Fruit O rchard) Telephone 714/7 31-7151 Houn· Monday through Saturday 10:00 a m -6-00 p m Sunday 12:00 noon-5:00 p.m Wett Lot An1elet 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd. West Los Angeles. CA 90064 Telephone 213/477-8095 I • • Sen . Barry Keane , D·Mendocino, presented de· tails of his bill proposing legalized midwifery in the state. then inspected one of his chief sui>- porters -none other than The Stork: ·'Misery is one little child crying because it hurts to be hungry.'' ac· tress Liv Ullman told Congress in appealing for increased U.S. co71t ribu· tions to U.N. Children's Fund. Highway's a skyway Prin~etakft PrlMt Qarlet tumbled to the turf for the MeODd Ume In four days In bis bid to qualify as a steeplechase Jockey. After 1a11ln1 tnto 14th· place in a field ot 20 runners, the prtMe craehed off hls mount, Good Pr0;apect, at fence No. 10 balfWay , throufb t.be cruelln1 three-mile Kim Muir Cup Handicap Chase at Cheltenham nee track. · "He 1ot a bit tan1led up with t.be bone's le11 aa be fell," said a BBC radio com· mentator, but t.be prince tot up on biJ own steam and ap- peared to be all right. Sea. Bob Dole,' R·Kan., re.' turned to the helm of the Senate Finance Committee after being hospitalized more than three weeks following a kidney stone operation. Dole 58, who has only one kidney as a l'esult of a World War II wound, was operated on at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Pres ldeet Rea1an welcomed the national poster child of the Muscular Dystrophy Association to the White House a nd traded jokes with comedian Jerry Lewis, whose telethons have raised more than $400 million 'for research on the.disease. The presldent held 5-year- o Id Christi Bartlett of Shreveport, La., in his arms, posing with Lewis for pic- tures in the Oval Office . Eric Clapton was showing improvement from a perforated ulcer but the British rock star remained hospitalized in St: Paul in serious condition. Clapton, 36, was rlown to St. Paul in his private jet Saturday after suffering the perforated ulcer in a Friday night per'formance at Madison, Wis. KNXT newsman Ken .Jones has been granted another week of vacation so he can resolve his difficulties with a bank that accused him of defrauding it of $200,000, a station spokesman says. On March 9, Security Pacific National Bank filed a $209,974 civil suit against Jones for $196,234 he alleged· ly obtained with bad checks and for money he reportedly owes on a promissory note and credit card account. It's lunch lime for the crew of this Cl30 transport and there's not a taco stand in sight? Wrong. It's part of a joiJ)t U.S.-South Korea military exercise near Seoul. Highway links Korean capital with southern port city of Pusan. Road was con· stru cted so that it could be used as emergency runway in event of war. Tax crackdown ordered Withlwlding form exemptions eyed WASHINGTON (AP> -The Internal Revenue Service has ordered an employer-aided crackdown on Incom e tax withholding lo an attempt to head off what It says ia a spread· _ Ing scheme to borrow -If not steal -from the government. New rules, requiring employer compliance, would bar worken from clalming an extraordinary number of $1,000 exemptions on their W-4 withholding forms when they are eligible for only a few for themselves and their famllles. The practie'e haa been ~oet not~d in the Flint, lllch., irea where, accordina to tlae IRS, thou1ands ol autoworbn bave U4 1'ttl /iJttlnint The Daily Pilot wanll to bear obleruUons from Ill readers -particularly comments about the paper Itself. It'• tuy to tell UI rour views. Just call the number below and your Mftlllt wll be recorded. Messaces will be tran1cribed several llmee dally and delivered to the desk or the appropri~te Hltor. No circulation calla. please. Tell UI what's. on yoUI' mlnd. The number la In 1trvtce 24 hours a day, aeven days a week. 842•8086 ----------·----~ .. ... ~-·r . used it to avoid havJng any federal tax withheld from their paychecks. , That, of course, doe• not In any way reduce a worker's tax liability, but at the leaat it postpones payment until th~ employee files his tax return - In effect, an Interest-free method of borrowlni. Construction workers at a nuclear power plant site In Washiniton St.ate also have been reported utlnl the scheme thla year, but IRS officlala declined to offer apeclflci fl1urea wblcb would indJcate bow pervaalve tbe prac:Uce ba1 become. Tiie new temporary retul•· tloo, to be publlabtd ln the P•ral ft...._ OD Tbunday, HY• that whenever there ii a dispute over wttbboldiftl exemp- tl on •, an employer mull withhold aecordln1 to tbt number the IRS epprov• rather than the number a worker claims, . ,. . l • • . . • • • # l • They're 11ot 1aeeded 11ow Bicycles, dusted with snow. hang from an apartment balcony in Yakutsk, Russia. waiting for the short but hot Siberian sum· mer. The regional capital of Eastern Siberia can have temperatures as low as 40 degrees below zero. Relief program ailing OC ftmds expected to run out March 27 Despite more than $200,000 in budget transfers since the first of the month, Orange County government's General Relier welfare program once again is facing fin ancial insolvency. Money in the account used to provide cash assistance to persons who have ~xhausted all other sources of welfare aid likely will run out by March 2'7. the county Board or Supervisors was told Tuesday. Supervisors firs t learned Maid cuffed in $100,000 NB robbery Two men broke into a Newport B eac h hou se, handcuffed a maid and ransacked tbe waterfront residence before neeing with an estimated $100,000 in jewelry and firearms. Newport detectives say the men broke into the Brighton Road house in Cameo Shores shortly after 10 p.m. Monday and grabbed a surprised Robin Cooper, the maid The 23-year-old woman told of· fi cers that the m en hand cuffed her and threw her on a bed. She reported that she was un - harmed but could hear the in · truders. rummaging through the house. After the robbers left, the maid said she struggled free of the cuffs and ran to a neighboring house to se~k help. Owner Richard Golden was not home at the time of the incident. Police said the men made off with jewelry, gold and gun~. One or the intruders was believed to be in his 20s while the second was described as being about 50. Gem Talk By J.C. H UMPHRIES c ,.rtified GemoloRi•t. ACS VOLCANOES create new gem The fierce · forces of nature which unleash volcanoes have also created what is being recognized as a new American gemstone. "Heliolite" is a shimmering stone -sometimes red, sometimes green -that was formed when lava flowed from the Rabbit Hills near Lakeview, Oregon many centuries ago. The Java was fluid basalt which, when It cooled, released Uny crystals of other substances. The crystals, appearing lq the lava like raisins in a loaf of bread, are mo1tly clear and are not o( 1em1tone quality. Some, called "sunstones" have been picked up by amateur rock collectors. But other specimens, cruahed by the welfht of the lava, took on an extra 'hardneu and refractive brllllance. ClaJm1 bave been 1taked out for mlnlnc tbeae rare 1peclmen1. They are .. hard .. opal• or 1raneu, and maa1, have all of tbe color In their center, wltb clear marat.111, 1l•lna them an unusual beauty. They are proof that nature, even at ill lftOlt vJolent, can produce 1rt1t beauty. March 3 th; l the General Relief program budget was in trouble. At that time, they approved a SS0,000 transfer to meet pay- ments through the end of the month Last Friday , the board transferred an additonal $150,000 to the program after receiving information that the previous transfer had been exhausted .. "March was incredible. is in· credible ," said Richard Ruiz. county Director o f Social Services. "What's happenin g in the general relief program has no precedence in the history of the county." Ruiz said county oHicials originally had projected that about $170,000 would be needed for payments to General Relief recipients during March. But asked by Supervisor Bruce Nestande if the true figure was going to be · '$300,000 to $400,000,'' Ruiz replied, "That's right." A general rise In the county unemployment rate and the re- cent 22 -da y Orange County Transit District stri ke were cit- ed as possible factors that led to the dramatic increase in the number of persons seeking General Relief assistance. Ruiz said there have been 1,500 new assistance requests so far this month, more than twice the figure during an "average" month. The social ser vices director. who was strongly criticized Fri- day for the county's apparent in- ability to predict when the pro· gram's funding would be ex· hausted , told s upervisor s Tuesday that new monitoring procedures have been instituted. He said the county Auditor· Controller's offi ce, which sends out the assistance checks. is pro- viding a dally accounting of the funds remaining in the General Relief account. Ruiz said projections show that funds, based on curre:lt dai- ly expenditures of $14,400, will run out March 27 His staff is still examining what can be done to cool the de- mand for General Relief as- sistance. A report on those find· ings is lo be given to supervisors next week , Ruiz said. Mount Etna shakes, spews lava CATAN IA, Sicily <A P >- Moupt Etna spewed molten rock in a strong eruption after Europe's most actiVt' volcano was jolted by hundreds of earth tremors. officials reported. ''There is no immediate danger but we're watching the situation car efully." Professor Mario Consentino of Catania's earthquake institute said Tues- day in a telephone interview. The lava poured from a crater at 7 .500 feet and covered nearly a half mile on the northeastern s lope by nightfall. Experts new over the volcano in helicopters to check the situtation. Consentino s aid the volca no began erupting around midday after it was jolted by more than 500 mild tremors in the last 24 hours. T he volcano had also been pouring out black smoke and ashes in the past 15 days in another sign an eruption was im- minent. An eruption in 1979 killed nine people in a tourist group during the volcano's strongest eruption in 20 years. Since then the upper rim of the volcano has been closed to tourists.· . MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @ 1823 NE'M>OAT BLW COSTA MESA ~ 33 YEAAS IN THE SAME LOCATION I I I . 81nkA!Mflotl'd-Muter Cherge Pr.tONE ~1 • > I i I A4 . H/F * ~co.it DAILY PtLOT/WedM9CMy, March 11. 1•1 t YtORLD I NATION Na t l •••I •lewd ow• •ea r' . T~ Bod a prayer , B Usiness nroP,ts .falling off 'llDTO&Y &&PSAftNG D&Pr, -We an re•hd1~ today that the modem era llD't the OD11 Ume tbat ow Oran1e County covemmeat b.u 1\lffered clvic pratf alll in bulldinl constructlon. It 1oes 'way back. Riaht now, the current veuUoa ii the county's new Hall of Administration, sometimes referred to · ~ by the waas as the HaU of Disintegration. • ._ Because the new ~ hall has creaked and ~ cracked, construction JDfl1 fl1HPlllll , crews are currently strin1ing steel cables through the place ln an effort to shore it up. This could be called "Operation Spa1hett.l. ·' Reports on this current governmental embarruament reminded long·time Orange Countian Florence Coot of earlier times. • "IT BROUGHT TO MIND the old Hall of Records building across from the YMCA on Church Street, bullt aTound 1926 and torn down a few years a10," Flo recalled. "When it was built and practically completed, they were ready to i.nstaU the rumace. But it seems they bad no place to put il. "The steam registers, however, were all in place. So that's why the heat was piped in from the original old red courthouse. "I well remember Jim Sleeper, Bill Jerome and John Lamb shaking their heads as they discussed this oversight. At the time, I was writing tax bills by band during sum· mer vacation. I'd hate to be doing it by hand now ... " WASHINGTON (AP)-Prallta of Amerlcu bullDe1111 aio-.ct lD tb• fOW'tb r of lut year, aJMl the na '• 1rou naUoa.al product roM ..., than prevloully eatlmated, the 1overnmeot reported today. The report came one day after 1ovemment a1encles releued new 1tatlltlc1 that lndlcated a Jon1·predlcted national economic slowdown may be close at band. <Relatedstortes, Pace E6). BEFO&E·TAX corporate profits rose 4.9 percent lo the fourth quarter of 1980 after climbln& 9 percent lo the third, the Commerce Department reported today. Afler·tax profits rose 3.1 percent compared with 8.8 percent for the previous ~ months. The "real" gross national product -the value of goods and services after adjustment for inflatioo -rose at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.8 percent ln the fourth quarter to $2. 7t.rUUon, the report said. The Commerce Department originally reported a S percent fourth quarter annual rate or increase, but revised it to 4 percent last month and then revlMd lt 11alD today lo tab Into accpunt updated and more accu.rate lnlormatloa. INPIAnGN, .U meuured b1 tbe broad ·baaed GNP flxed·.,.tabted price i_ndex, roee at an annual rale of 10 percent lo the fourth quarter compared to 9.2 percent lo the tblrd, tbe department reported. It bad reported a 10. 7 percent fourth quarterfliure earlier. Tbe new report said corporate before·tax ~oflts rose to a seasonally a uated annual rate of $249.2 bH on in the fourth quarter, ~blle after·tax profits rose to$164.1 bllllon. Corporate profits from c&&rrent production -adjustln1 for depreciation and inventory replacement coats -rbse 2.9 percent to an annual rate of $183 billion after rising 5.1 percent In tbetbirdquarter. ECONOMISTS inside and outside government stopped short or saying the February statistics released a day earlier mi&bt be harbingers or a new recession. But private economist David Ernst said "these are certainly uneocour1•inl numbtra." The commerce Department 1ald boulln1 starts were down ~ eercenl lo February, a dramatic Clecllne tbat housln& industry •Pokeamen said was inevitable lo U1bt of b11h mort1age interest rates. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige said the report means Contreas should acjopt the Reaean administration's· economic policies lo brlng down lofl&Uon and interest rates. E&NST. A VICE president or Evans Economics Inc., a private Waahm,tonfll'm,saidadecllnein interest rates -already under way -"will avert any relUm to receuloo." And William Cox. deputy cblef economist for the Commerce Department, aaJd the production decline was probably just a pause after last year's receulon recovery rather than the a tart of a contlnuln& downward trend. . "This may be klnd of a pause• the production machinery shlfta gears downward" to a slower speed. he said. But other analysts indicated the new report.a were clearly in line with predictions of sluuish growth -or no growth at aJi -in the next few months. WITH THAT LITTLE SLICE or history in mind. maybe the fix.up crew on the current county hall ought to Russ ease tense nianeuver 'threat' Crewman !tretching cablea bd~en ~aning county wolb check and see if it has a furnace in it. Maybe it's the one left over from the old Hall of Records. The lovely Mrs. Cook, by the way, is the wire of former Newport Beach councilman Dee Cook, now a supervisor for Inyo County who shuttles his way the 40 miles between his home in Bishop to the County Seat at Independence. At last report, unlike our own County Seat at Santa Ana, nothing seems to be cracking at Independence. AT OUR COUNTY HALL up there on Civic Center Drive. some days it seems like the construction people out· number county employees. There are piles or plastic· sheathed steel cable all over the place. The re·buiJders have bored holes in the wails and are stringing cables through the place horizontally in parallel sets. Scaffolding has been erttted both inside and outside the building to accomplish this work. • So far. cable has been stretched through the second and third fl oors and they still have the third and fourth floors to go. Crews hope to wrap it all up (pardon the pun) by May l. AFTER THE CABLE·STRINGING is done, tben comes what is called "the tensioning." That means they tighten up all the cables so the pride or our civic center seta held together. Thus you're supposed to end up with a five·story post· tensioned building. at a cost of $225,000. It is anticipated that our county government will have spent $1 million to s hore up the Hall of Administration before it's all over. Now when the construction guys start tighterun1 up all those cables on the county hall, let's all pray we don't hear anything loud that goes, ''Twang!·· WASHINGTON (AP)-U.S.of· ricials say new assurances rrom the Soviet Union have aJleviated some of the Reaglln adminbtra· lion's concern that upcoming Warsaw Pact maneuvers may mask Soviet military interven· Navy ahi/ta builders of nuke subs WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy is bypassing a trouble· plagued Connecticut shipyard and giving a $1 billion contract for three nuclear·powered attack submarines to Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. in Virginia. Navy Secretary John Lehman said "very serious problems in the delivery schedules of 21 sub- marines" under contract to the Electric Boat shipyard in Groton, Conn., plus the Navy's desire to keep prodllction and manage· ment teams intact at Newport News, were import influences in bis decision. Electric Boal, a division of General Dynamics Corp .. said in a statement it had been unfairly criticized. Winds whip Southwest Blizzard buries sectiom of Maine Cocutal aceatller r--~-------.....,,... ....... ,. .... NHllvlllt 7J ., I ncrH\lnQ CIOU<llneu Cf\tnces or t•ln 10 perc.,.I tonight, SO pert en1 fllur\dt y CoHtt l low •I lonlgllt, hlgn tO ThurMSty lnl•nCI, SS IOnlQlll, '6 Thur\dty. 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AYI Mu Dir ltH911 I I IJ I t WIW Sell"~ I J ti 2 J W lf .. ,.rt I I U I J W 11110 .... c-.ty J 4 II I 4 W Ovtflla,., ~: ~ ............... , ........ """ _.. ....... ~ ! I • lion in Poland. As recently a s Frid ay. Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. was expressing concern to reporters about an apparent threat to Poland and to peace in Europe over a "huge exercise about to take place" on Poland's frontiers. Also at that time, a senior of· ficial who asked not to be iden· tified said the apparent large size of the exercise, along with a "hardening line" by the Soviets toward the independent labor movement in Poland, made the situation "somewhat more tense than it was three weeks ago.·• Now, just five days later, those concerns seem to be ebbing. Tbe shift started when Jack F. Matlock, the top U.S. diplomat now in Moscow, was told by Soviet officials, apparently Friday. that fewer than 25,000 troops will be in· volved in the exercises and that no large.scale crossings of the Polish border will occur. The Helsinki Accords require the Soviet Union and other coun. tries which signed them to give advance notification of all troop movements involving 25,000 or more military personnel. No such notice has been received from the Soviets regarding the upcoming maneuvers in Eastern Europe. Another State Department of· fi cial, who preferred to remain anonymous, called the upcoming maneuvers "fairly standard for this time or year'' and suggested that, "in hindsight," Haig may have exaggerated the potential threat. Tumor gone Three·year-0ld Melynda Wallace, shown with her mother. Pamela, of Grants Pass, Ore., has been pronounced healthy by doctors after a malignant tumor wrapped around her brain stem disappeared. Her parents say their prayers were answered after medical treatment had little effect. Big jackpot only 2nd b e st RENO (AP> A California man who turned a 25 cent invest- ment into a payorf of $77,335.10 last week at Harolds Club set a record, but not a record for a quarter slot machine. it turns out. When Ronny Whitlock, 38, of Greenfield, Calif., parlayed his investment into a big return March 10, Harolds called it the "world's largest quarter jackpot." But that distinction goes to another Californian. playing another progressive slot machine in Hawthorne .130milessoutheast of Reno. Charles H. Aflleje of Lemoore. Calif., south of F'resno, hit a jackpot of $81 ,722.70 at Hawthorne's El Capitan Club last Oct. 10, according to club of· ficials. Choose""'' Rll IDOlleY plan! DIY-IN/DAY-OUT DITERESI' Interest compounded on your daily balance! ' • Cllec:kl .. lccaants No monthly charge If your balance is $750 or morel Nominal fee ot $3 per month if your balance is lowerl Cell•'°'""' ....... """,...., P9natty for •rtv wtthdNMI on term aooounta.. ~ ' I ~~tr/11/11'1 /' u{ 'll'tl. _C.111 ·t/10J j M.La~ aRANCH IOO ......... hull Hftl ..... ,CA tatl1 (71•) 1"6l701 Additional offte111n No minimum for those62 and overt uo~ IMch •.. 494-7&41 • Laauna Htn1 .•.. -.&100 • ... mont Short .• (213) 43&-t421 Stnelemtnte , .. 412·1115 • LalieElllnort ... 17._'1t1 • Munittl ............... 871.-2 LagunaN19Ue' ... 4•1201 • Oll*Orlntt· .. • 1100 • •ll>Ot lelencl .......... 875-3212 Oi.rtA~ ..... , 111-0111 \ ' . ' ~STATE Driver f11Dd 0 ;:facing cuts ... 11 SACRAMENTO (AP> -Behind-the-wheel •Clrlver trainln1 ln the Calllomia schools is ln doubt: An Assembly committee has rejected a ·four-year extenaJon of the rules. · 1 Tuesday's vote would not abolish the program, 1but it may let Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. cut most of ill state funding this summer. · • The Democratic governor bu propoeed cut- ting the program from $19 million to $900,000 in the r~lacal year starttnc July 1, continuJn1 bebind-the- 1 wbeel lraJning tor only an estimated 8,200 ban- dlcapped hi1h school students. Brown wants to shift the rest of the money to other state programs. ~ ,,..,,. r•Ule• •• 8ftlr •reta '· REDLANDS (AP> -No damage was reported ·after a moderate earthquake measuring 4.0 on the l Richter scale was reported near Big Bear Lake, a 1kl recreation area in the San Bernardino National Forest. The epicenter of the tremor, which hit at 10:07 9 .m . Tuesday, was about eight miles eas~­ 'Dortheast of this San Bernardino County eommun1· .. ly, about 70 miles east of Los Angel~s. said Dennis •· M ered ith of the California Institute of ·?'-NEWS BRIEFS Technology in Pasadena. The tremor was felt 45 miles to the southeast. in Palm Springs, accord· ing to a writer at The Desert Sun newspaper. But be said the jolt was so slight that there was a de· •.bate over whether there had really been an earth· ~'Quake. t· · (111""9 alloaoed ie,.er dNl,..e ::; SACRAMENTO (AP> -State Treasurer Jesse ~~nruh, arrested for drunken driving the second :lime in just over five years, will ::be allowed to plead guilty to :~eckless driving, a prosecutor :.3ays. :: Chief Deputy District Al· ! torney L. Anthony White said : Tuesday lhat there are stand· ! ard written guidelines allow- · :i n g guilty pleas to lesser : tharges for persons with low ~~lood-alcohol content, between ~.10 percent and 0.13 percent. uN11u" ::· They must also have had no accident, and :inust have had no drunken driving arrest in the :'prior three years. under the guidelines. . • :.:LA C'o1111iw to eld ~ ear• LOS ANGELES CAP) -On a 3-2 vote, the County Board of Supervisors has approved a policy that would curtail medical treatment at county hospitals and health centers for thousands of illegal immigrants . Despite opposition from 300 community ac- tivists, health care workers, union leaders and at· torneys who were on hand Tuesday to oppose the move. the supervisors approved a policy requiring everyone wanting medical treatment to apply for Medi.Cal benefits. The Medi-Cal application includes a form that must be turned over to the lmmi~ration and Naturalization Service. ·~lc~••·llre e .. ,.. ,,,..,,pefl POMONA (AP > -Due to insufficient evidence, a. judge has dismissed reckless·f.ire charges agamst an Azusa man accused of startmg last November's Bradbury fire. which bladc:ened 6,000 acres and damaged or destroyed 75 homes. One man died in the blaze when he suffered a heart attack. A two-count felony complaint against John Michael Budish, 23, INas dismissed by Superior Judge Sam Cianchetti on March 5, Deputy District Attorney Ronald Grey said Tuesday. Wriggling ldnner Ivan Cornelius of San Leandro holds aloft his Rotary racer with a gloved hand after winning the 14th annual St: Patrick's Day snake race. The reptile race at San Fran- cisco's Zellerbach Plaza was one of several festivities staged in San Francisco on St. Patrick's Day. Carson· blasu Enquirer on TV LOS ANGELES (AP> -Comedian Johnny Carson in a departure from the usuaJ format of his "T~nigbt Show," blasted the National Enquirer as a publication that traffics in "speculation" and "innuendo." . Carson told the audience of the hit NBC-TV variety show Tuesday night that the Enquirer, which currently is defending itsell against a $10 million libel suit fil ed by entertainer Carol Burnett. had prtnted a story that his third mar- riage was heading for divorce. He said the publication cited "close friends" as among its sources . "I WANT TO GO ON record right here in front of the American public, because this is the only forum I have," said Carson. "They have this publication. I have the show. This is absolutely completely, 100 percent Jalsehoods. lt's untrue for openers. "Now I guess J should be used to this stuff be- ing in the entertainment business as long as I have been, but they also attack my wife in this particular article ... and when they attack my wile, then I get a Uttle bit angry. "Now I think it is becoming very aware in this country, especially during the past few weeks, because of the national publicity via certain lawsuits tbat have been filed against this publica- tion, how the National Enquirer works. It's based on innuendo. it's based on gossip, it's based on half-truths, it's based on speculation ... " HE SAID HE HAD NO plans to s ue the publication "because I do not want to go through four or five years of litigation in which they call friends in and sources and put you through the mill." "So I'm going to call the National Enquirer and the people who wrote this 'liars .' Now that's slander, or they can sue me for slander . You know where l ~m. gentlemen." Poison Prevention Week March 15th-21st Familiar Skull and Crossbones Symbol has been replaced by a new Polson Symbol: Mr. Yuk! new national symbol for poison Clean Out Yom-· Medicine Cabinet Keep your children safe! Bayside Pharmacy·wllJ help you protect your famlly by offering .. 5~ per old prescription ··container oneWHkontyt "PURVEYORS Of OLDTIM~ NEIQHIORLINESS" BA~SIDE' PHARMAQ[ '-"1016 ..,_.. 4r. • MW,ort INoch . 760-0111 Of'arige Cout OAJL Y PtLOT/WednMday, March 11, 1981 H/F ~4a Teachers. hit bus ban Injunction •oughl agairut U board· LOS ANGELES (AP) -The United Teacberi of Lo• Anceles bas promised to 10 to court -as ear- ly aa today -to seek an lnJunction to atop the school bQanl from ending mandatory businc at mid-semester. It ls grossly unfair to both the students and the teacben to make any changes this late in the year. It would be extremely disruptive," UTLA President Judy Solkovits said Tuesday. The board voled Monday to end forced busing in the nation's second largest school system on Aprll 10, despite an outcry from teachers and busing ad· vocatea. THE SCHOOL BOARD had been under court or- ders to bus chUdren until a week ago, when the state Supreme Court let stand an appeals court ruling that the Proposition 1 anti-busing amendment wu con- stitutional. State voters approved Prop. l in 1979. The court action culminitted 18 yean of UU1a· tion over school integration, but the UTLA vowed Tuesday to use every means it could to retain bus• ing unW the school year ends June 19. The organization, which represents 30,000 teachers, counselors and other certificated person- nel, wants to help the school board build "a logical, rational p~ogram for next year.'' Ms. Solkovits said. A PLAINTIFF IN the 18-year-old integration case, the American Civil Liberties Union, also plans court action to extend the busing deadline. And ACL.U attorney Fred Okrand said earlier he also plans to ask the state Supreme Cou rt this week to reconsider its Prop. t decision. Meanwhile, officials at two San Fernando Valley junior high schools said 12 students who had be~n at· tending private schools have re-enrolled there m the wakeorthe Proposition 1 ruling. · At Monday nJthl'• noisy, fou.r·bour 1cbool board meeting, UTLA was among about a dozen 1pea~era from parent, teacher, non-teachln1 board employee and student or1anizations beard before the board's 5·0 vote. The only busing suppo?Ur and only black on the board, Rita Walters, was absent from the meet- ing -attending a Washington, D.C., conference. HER STATEMENT, URGING the board not to ''turn back the clock" on desegregation of the 525,000·pupildistrlct, was read aloud. Many speakers supported endlne busing in the 710-square-mile district next f aJI, but shared UTLA 's concern over potential disruptions if massive mid semester student tritnsfers were allowed. Superior Court Judge Paul Egly's order last July 7 expanded mandatory integration through 1st-9th grades this school year. The 10th, 11th and 12th grades were to be added in ensuing years. The board supported an all-voluntary approach to school de· segregation. EGLV REMOVED HIMSELF from the case Monday, saying he lacked jurisdiction following the Supreme Court ruling. To implement the board's action ending forced busing between 163 schools, questionnaires will be mailed lo parents or 23,000 children involved. Parents' meetings we re set for March 24 ·25 al each school. Reassignments are to be issued April 10, the last day before a 10-day spring vacation, and implement- ed when children return to school April 20. School-ad· ministrators have said they expect most parents will want to keep their children in their present schools through June 19, despite the bus rides involved. to maintain educational continuity. PREVIEW THE NEW CRUISE COLLECTION AND MEET BLEYLE 'S PRESIDENT, TOM ROGERS New arrivals from Bleyle for Hooper. Light, easy-care knits with a decided freshness-yet always a timeless quality. Highlighted here. a naullcal mood In navy and white polyester 8 to 18. Navy blazer with white lapels, $172. Stripe polo. navy, green. black or blue with white, .$34. Pull-on pleat skirt. navy or white. $92 Also available: pull-on pant . wh ite. navy. black. blue, red . tobacco or pale grey. $74. Playdeck rom Rogers, president of Bleyle, wll/·personally present the coJ/ection tomorrow at BW Newpbrt Blach. Join us tor informal modeling from f 1:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. B~llOC~~ WllS~rn[ NEWPORT BEACH , Brown-Hayde,n· act . . demeans politics ' A year aao the 'state 1ovemment 1n Calllom1a WU sufferfna under the erraUc behavior and lndiff erence of a aovel'DOI" who thou.ht be was a presldenUaJ candidate. lt'i belinnbaa to look novr u if 1981 is 1oin1 to be a 11Uy .eQueJ to that undlsUnrulshed chapter In California politics. . · . . · Jerry Brown has made it clear he is gomg to run for somethlnl in 1981, very possibly the Senate seat now oc· copied by Sam Hayakawa. . True to bis 1980 form, Brown already has indicated · that, from now on, ·he'll avoid at 411 costs taking a leadership PoSition on anything that midlt conc~lvably coat him a vote. If that means abandonin«i . last year's· positions, you are supposed to be too dull -or dazzled -to notice or care. Meanwhile, the citizens of California have become in· creasingly cynical about the governor's political OP· portunism. The "political animal" can turn himself into a political butterfly with astonishing ease. Trying to make some sense out or the governor's do· ings or, more likely, non.doings, .the next year or so would· be tricky enough. But now we have another performer in the arena -Tom Hayden. the current · spokesman for the D~mocratic left wing. Si.rice coyly declaring as late as last Nqvember that he might never again run for public office, Hayden has been busily engaged in building an organization and posi· tioning himself for anything that. becomes available tbat Brown isn't running for. The Campaign for Economic Democracy is his vehicle. To add to the fun and games, it has become increas· ingly apparent that Hayden has become one of Brown's inner circle of key political advisors, as Brown courts the favor of Hayden's "new left." This fact has not occasioned great joy among the ranks of state Democrats because Hayden's record of "help" to Democratic causes is not exactly glorious: -He is widely credited among Democrats and some Republicans with electing Sam Hayakawa to the Senate in 1976 by running against incumbent Sen. John Tunney in the divisive Democratic primary. - 'His successful urging of Gov. Brown to appoint Edisori Miller as county s upervisor in Orange County in the summer of 1979 not only cost the Democrats that supervisorial seat, but a'lso cost Brown tremendous statewide and even national credibility and a lot of finan· cial support inside and outside Orange County. -A byproduct. the Miller flap caused Brown further embarrassment when the state Senale overwhelmingly rejected Brown's appointment of Jane Fonda (Mrs. Hayden> to the state Arts Council. · Hayden has publicly acknowledged that his efforts on behalf of Miller were a "major mistake -bad for evety· one concerned -the governor. Miller and Orange County politics.'.' . So up to now. Hayden's record of political acumen doesn't give California De mocrats much cause for cheer. During the coming ·year, we can expect to be amused watching the governor's attempt to roller skate on both sides of the political street while carrying water on both shoulders. To make the act less difficult, he'll try to keep the bu.ckets al most empty. And Hayden is faced with trying to come up with his own version of the same act. He has to keep his left wing supporters happy while trying to seU himself as a born· again moderate to the rank and file of Democrats . For the folks who like a combination of political circus and soap opera. the Brown-Hayden show owght to be an entertaining new art form. Tests for teacher·s? Pondering the question of why Johnny and J ane seem to have so much trouble mastering the essential arts of reading and writi11g, Assemblyman Gary Hart, D-Sant~ Barbara, h'lS turned his attention to their teachers. Hart, a former school teacher himself. was sponsor of the law that now requires all high school seniors to pass basic proficiency tests before graduation. He now pro- poses a basic literacy test for teachers. While this may be regarded as an unnecessary put· down in the eyes of teachers' organizations. it may not be all that far.fetched. Hart cites a survey in one school district that found one-third of the applicants for teaching jobs were unable to pass an eighth-grade level test in reading and writing. Just how anyone can obtain both a college· degree and a teaching credential under these cir~umstances is something of a mystery. But apparently it's possible. And the fact that almost half the freshmen entering the University of California need remedial English · courses certainly indicates something has been missing in their earlier.education. Hart simply says that if basic literacy standards are appropriate for high school graduates, they s hould also apply to those involved in·classroom teaching. Indeed they s hould. And those seeking the highly responsible job of preparing young people for their life's work should be more than willing to prove competence in handling the language that must be a principal tool of teaching. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those ol the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment IS invited. Address The Daily Pilot. p 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Outdated BjLM. BOYD Already mentioned that more tban half the popula· Uon doesn't know the mean· ln1 of "running boards," those slde steps on early can. Sc?me other things that ·~ One tide~ th• men·ape contMtrlY that we have Dever heard : What doll the ape think about beln1 linked to man1 • F.K. mos t children can't even de· flne let alone describe: a carpet beater, a quarantine sign, a palm leaf fan , an ~automobile crank, and, SUT· prisingly, an ice pick. ' Sir Lawrence Olivier la said to be under the lm· pression that he baa a "mean 11pper lip." He therefore declines to wear • muatache in any role that ca1a.· for him to appear H an un1ym· pathetic character. A mean upper Up. 11 It? Examine your face }n the mirror, please. How would you label your upper Up? Mean? Kind? Careleaa? Maybe you can detcrlbe it in wlne lln10: BrHIY? Silky? Shy? Dry? Im pertinent 7 · YoUftl feUow , lf JOU!' wa.lat measurement la 1be'1Z, It'• exac"1 the ••me • that Of tennlJ JNat Bjorn 8ot1. J ·-·-.. Rowland E~am/Robert Novo · · SOviets -staking. out Africa W A.SHlNGTON -Wbtn the flret of four Sovlet naval veaaels ·slipped quietly into Marxist Moumbtque's main port Feb. 19, ~ost-detente u.s .. sovlet rivalry notched up to a new peak with the Kremlin aervint notice It wo.uld trump Pres I dent Rea1an's Caribbean ace. This shows how hard it ls for the Rea1an administration to co nduct a f orce ru1 . catch -up foreign policy from a posl· lion or r e l ative milita"t y w ea kn ess . The n e w policy or bold· ness In the Caribbean, overdue after years of futile courtship of Cuba's Fidel Castro, has trig&ered a · heightened Soviet challenge in even more inportant regions where the Soviets hold the high cards Such a Soviet response has been predicted by worried pro· Reagan· hard-liners in Congress. Richard Reeves While apPlaudinc tM president and Secretary of State Alex· ander Hali tor lon1-overdue drawlq of the Une, they have been concerned ab'out too much talk. · WHILE MA.KING no public critkilm 'of a toughej)edii.Carlb- bean policy they applaud, aimed at endlng the Soviet-backed arms shipments to El Salvador, ·Reagan's hard-line critics have privately cautioned adminiltra· tion officials that too much talk could promote Soviet responses. · These would come with the U.S. so far behind in the arms race that countermeasures would be difficult. . Arrival of the Sverdlov-class Ught cruiser Suvorov in the port or M aput.o Feb. 19 showed the accuracy or these warpings. The Suvorov was shortly followed by three other Soviet s hips : A Kashin:class destroyer, a frigate a nd an auxiliary vessel. all de· tached from the Soviet Indian Ocean fleet. That formidable naval power has now been added to a rapidly increlmiig number or military and eC:onomh: "advisers" from tbe communbt bloc now num· betin1 more than 5,000, well over twice those worktna in Mozambique less than three years ago. These Uiclude 2,500 Soviet and East German military s peclalisL'I who, with 1,500 CUbans, a're now training Mozambique military offi cers t-0. rty MlG 17s, to operate SAM 3 anti-aircraft missiles and to drive over 200 tanks . THE STAKES in the Southern Africa power game , where Mozambique is one of the high cards held by the Soviets, are breathtaking: control of the most concentrated min e ral wealth anywhere in the world on land; and control of the oil -sea lane from the Persian Gulf down the East Coast of Africa Europe gets 20 percent of its imported oi l through that route and 70 per· cent of its imported minerals from Southern Africa. The Soviet game in Southern Africa is to win what Haig called "the era of the resource war" in testimony to a House subcommittee last fall, before ' be became •~cretary of atate. He said that lf "future trends, especially in Southern Africa, result in alignment with MOllCOW of this critical resource area. Oien ttie U.S.S.R. woold control as much as 90 percent" of key minerals vital to the economy ol the U .s.. Western Euro~ and J apan . The s udden. arrival of four naval vessels In Maputo, together with the steadily ex· panding contingent or com· munist "advisers," shows that "a lignment with Moscow" ls moving ahead fast. Indeed, some diplom1tts here believe that the Soviet ~loc pushed hard ror the unusually hars h edict of the Mozamoaque government that expelled four American Embassy officials last week on spy charges . 'That followed a. daring South African raid Jan JO on the Maputo headquarters of the anti-South African Na- tional African Congress USING ITS 1977 friendship with Mozambique, the Soviet Union as believed to be leaning on the Maputo government to in· voke Article 9 of the treat y. pledging Soviet aid to eliminate any "threat" to peace. South Afnca . along with its racial problems. is the cement used by the Soviets to bind Moscow to blac k Southe rn Africa and create a band of Sov· iet power across the Southern lip of the continent fN?m Mozambi· que to Angola. Hoping to close the final link in that band. the S o vi e t s fina ll y ~on full diplomatic relations with Zim· babwe last month. · Dealing with this Soviet sub· version in an area as important to the industrial democracies as the Persian Gulf is unavoidably rnore chall enging than impos 1ng a lon g-needed Caribbean quarantine now planned by the ne w administration It requires m ilitar y strength the e x· 1stence of real power to compete with the Soviet Union Rea~an has asked Congress to ~1ve him that. but he is far from µassessing it Until he gets it. has l'Onscrvative cntacs w.ill praise ha s resolve, but continue to worry about too much loud talk an America 's backyard .Politicians evade Social Security truth WASHING TON P.aragraph Two of Section 8 of the Budget Fact Sheet issued by the White House is a mildly interesting glimpse of Presi~ent Reagan's political plans and a frightening projection of the nation's social future. The heading of Section B reads: Budget a nd Program Priorities and Criteria Used in Decidin g Upon Budget Savi ng s .·· Paragraph Two reads: ''The social safety net of income sec ur ity measures erected in the 1930s to proteet the elderly (including cost-of· living prote~.t ion ), the un· employed and the poor, as well a s veterans, must be main· tained." It can't be:, maintained. Social Security, as we know it and are practicing it, is collapsing of its own weight. Ronald Reagan, luc ky and plucky enough to be working at 70. knows that. But he has decided ·to ignore the truth because -son of a gun! - ~Hoppe he plans to run for president again when he is 73. Reagan likes to say that he will govern as if he intended to serve only one term. He's kid· ding himself. Or us . He's afraid or his geriatric peers. the 24 million or so Americans who are now over 65 -old people vote much more heavily than young people -and the 3 million more who will pass that age before 1984. "Cutting" the federal budget without going after Social Security Is to government as psychic surgery is to medicine. These are the numbe rs the White House chose to ignore IN THE SHORT range, ac· cording to the .Congr essional Budget Office, tJ:ie government will save at leas t $28 . billion between now and 1986 simply bY. increasing Social Security pay· ments only once a.year instead of twice a year. The increases are now man· dated to match increases in the Consumer Price Index. Those are a rtificially high increases because the index reflects things like the rising costs of real estate ; so we are paying benefits on the assumption that old people are buying houses t wace a year. lf we continued. against rea· son. giving Social Security rec1p· ients twice-annual r aises, but restricted those increases to th~ average wage an c reas es of workers in the country. the gov- ernment would save $26 billion right there between now and 1986. BUT THOSE numbers are chickenfeed compared to the lo ng -r a nge statistics. the budgetary consequences of the aging of America Federal benefits for the elderly now make up moce than 25 percent of the budget. That's the cost this year o f Social Se c l\rity. Medicare , Supplementary Social Security benefits and generous federal pensions with the over-65 population at a relative· ly low 12 percent of the nation But when the "baby boom " generation the Americans now between 20 and 35 -begin retiring in 2010, the number of senior citizens will have reached about ·17 percent. Jly 2020, the per centage of the federal budget necessary to maintain the cur· rent level of elderly benefits will be an astounding 63 percent. That's also an impossible 63 pe r cent By then, bec ause of declining birth rates since 1960, there will b e on l y two Americans working for each one receiving Social Security. Those two folks better work like hell , because I intend to be the senior citizen they're supporting at the same time they're trying to feed themselves and their families. THOSE NUMBERS are ttie biggest and dirtiest secret in · American politics. No one run· ning for office will even admit that they exist. In their one de· bate last fall, in Cleveland. both Reagan and Jimmy Carter as· serted that1 the Social Security System wlfS sound and each p ledged to keep it that way. They were both lying which is what all politicians do about this i.';sue. Social Security is col· lapsing and Ronald Reagan made it clear t his week th.at he is going to do nothing a bout that un ~i l after he tries to win a second term. And. if he does win in 1984, he could end up being the only protected senior citizen in the country. Disasters can have so01e unexpected after1naths The full effects of the Mount St. Helens major volcanic erup· tion are now being felt nine month& later. United Press In· ternationaJ reports that matemi· ty wards in the area are filled lo overflowing . The baby boom comes as no surprise to .demographers who have lonk not· ed that population growth is most virulent lo backward countries where .there la abtolutely notbinl to do arur work. Well, hardly aoyU\lnc. • Thete findings were certainly borne out In the Mount St. Helena area where numerous resident• were .Hh·bound in thelr homes (or day1. TYPICAL wu Geor1e Offen· cuff, wboN wtle. lllbelllne, re· •• cently produced their sixth child. "Boy,'.' said the proud father, "what a dJaaster!" He said the worst part was that the ath fallout apparently Interfered with his television re· ception. "I tuned in the seven o'clock news and all I got was snow," be said. "Naturally, I fiddled wtth the set. But when lt got to be 11 : 30, l said to Mabelllne, 'Aw, the beck with It ; let's hit the hay.' " Another dJsuter vlcllm was Fiona Brawley, now the mother of four. ''Me and my husband ,t..llred, played cr.uy •l•hta end rtsh for 72 hour• unUl I ftnalb 1a1d, 'Alfred, c_,,•t )'OU lb.ink of fDYtblnf el.at to do?' Ht did.'' AS A &P.8VLT of tbett t.ractc 1torlee, the Federal Dlsa1ter Coutrol Admlnlat.raUoc 11 now dtastkally revllln1 ill muual, What Not to Do ofttr DQod~ ICrCqt, "nnt," bectna the manual, "every family 1t.o.dd have a dla· ut.r nrvtval ldt tn UM home. ln addition to food and water, the kit should include (lashlights, a b11ttery-0perated cassette player with 12 acid rock cassettes, two spy thrillers, Monopoly, Ser ab· ble and Mah-Jongg sets and a handy guide on How to Make o Million DoUoa m ~mall, Unmarlctd Billi in Y~ ~t during Your Spart Ttmt on Your Own Printfng Pr•u. ''Once diauter strikes, stay · calm I Do not lllht candles. Use your Oubll1ht.s Instead. ·If you are fortunat. enough to have a wlne cellar, take shelter anywhere ebe. And, above aJI, Quote8 "What Ford now needs most It what Americ4 nffd.I m* -a 1t.r0o1 and COftftdenl economy."" -A atat•m•nt bJ P'ord C~alnlu ftlllp CaNwell and Prt1l .. •t DoHld P•&•rtH, after announcln1 tbe l1r1eat full.year Ion In American corporate biatory. ' avoid touch dancing, particular·. ly during earthquakes. Lastly, keep bundled up. The lack of adequate clothing can lead to serious consequences.'' Federal officiala believe that. couples who are thua pr~pared can hold out for as lon1 as four days -which should provtde sufficient time for rescue tum• 1 to reach them with emer1ency portable television sets equipped· with •ide0t1pes of the enUre 1980·81 proreuional football 1 season.. , • I WH.lLE ALL well and 1ood, many. bumanJtariana feel that • our 1ovemment should also stve. thought to the pll1bt of our poor, I underprhHe1ed fellow men around the 1tobe and incl~ color te'evtaion HU ln the Paod for Peace e>rocram. tor once aaaln we have ...., that manklnd" tac• the dlai~ between more t.levlttoe Mta oe more people. And there can W little doubt wblcb alternaUft most humanitartant prefer. ) . • I .... Daily Pilot · ~ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11,1911 ·DEATHS 82 Geometry profs get lesson from 17-year-old ... B2 D 0 Thousands ready to welconie swallows 81 'OUN NEEDHAM Of tM OellV ftli.t Stiff The swallows arriving ln San Juan Capistrano Thursday from · their winter homes in Goya, Argentina, will find the bi11est welcoming party wailln1 to greet them at the San Juan Mis- sion. Festivities planned for San Juan's big day Leon Rene, composer of the song "When the Swallows Come Back to Capistrano." wlll be this year's master of ceremonies at the 23rd Fiesta de las Golon- drinas on St. Joseph's Day. The festivities will begin at 10 a .m. at the historic mission at 31921 Camino Capistrano. The mission's bells will ring to herald the swallows' return and roving mariachi bands will be Heaey dri11kers present to provide entertain· ment. Also scheduled are several performances by native Indian dancers and the crowning of the king and queen of the festival. Dick Landy, spokesman for the San Juan Caplatrano Mis· sion, said more than 10,000 vis· itors are expeded to visit the 205-year-old mission throughout the day. Hotel and motel operators ln San Juan and the surrounding areas are reportedly reaping the benefits of the swallows' legen- dary return to Capistrano on St. Joseph's Day. Rooms have been booked solid for months, accord- in« to city officials. For the first lime in 17 years Bill Smith, known as "lbe voice of the mission'' for bis manning of the telephone to announce the arrival time or the swallows to callers and radio and television stations, will not be at his post. Smith died just six weeks after last year's celebration al the age of 67. Veteran mission bell ringer Paul Arbiso, 85, will be replaced this year by his grandson, Circus Vargas elephants are pretty big on social drinking. They gulp water from t he hose and pass it along from trunk-lo-trunk when they aren't munching on hay. The fellow lying down didn'tdrink too much, he's jual laking a snooze. Circus opened in Costa Mesa Tuesday and runs through Thursday. Firemen find smoky pan in Newport An eighth floor Newport Beach apartment resident, pre· paring to cook dinner on her balcony. put 35 firefighters and strike teams from Costa Mesa and Santa Ana into action when her electric skillet started smok· ing At least a dozen people alerted the fire deoartment when they spotted black smoke curling from Mrs . Robert Reed's balcony at the Lido Park apart· ments in Central Newport. Authorities say 35 firefighters were dispa tched with six engines. three trucks. one paramedic unit and a second U· nit equipped with breathing ap· paratus. Firemen. who rushed up lo the eighth floor . di scovered a smokey skillet of grease bubbl- ing on the patio Monday even- ing. Airport parking lot coating OK'd A $14,880 contract for slurry seal coating of the overflow parking lot at John Wayne Airport has been approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. · Pavement Coatings Co., of Anaheim, submitted the low bid for the job. ., . # Meet Ruth for truth? Huntington Beach Mayor Ruth Balley will be available to d.iscuaa items of cooununlty lnterest at Huntlnctoo Center this weekend. Sbe will be stationed tn an Information bootb, probably Utled "Meet the Mayor." She said it baa been 1u1: teated, however, that the event have an eye· cate~ 1010 like ••autb In a Booth." "Tellin1 the truth," abe added. . . Safari to OC Tourist spots on $6 route The adventurou s tourist who has traveled hundreds , perhaps thousands, of miles to the wilds of Orange County soon will have the opportunity to pay S6 for a 50·mile ride to see the natives and their environs up close. The first Summer Safari, operated by the Orange County Transit District, will depart the morning of June 12 stopping at such locations as: Disneyland. Anaheim Stadium The Crystal Cathedral, Garden Grove. The City Shopping Center. Orange. South Coast Plaza. Costa Mesa. John Wayne Airport. Newport Dunes Aquatic Park. Newport Center and Fashion Island. Laguna Beach. Lion Country Safari, Irvine. Summer Safari service, under preliminary plans approved by the district Board of Directors, will continue daiJy through Sept. 1. operating every 65 to 75 minutes between 9 a .m. and 6 p.m. Travelers will have the choice of staying on the bus. or debark· ing at any of the 10 stops for closer inspection or perhaps to purchase a trinket or two. Buses will run in both direc· lions. so that travelers fearing the unknown beyond can return to their starting point without having to make a complete trip. Transit district directors ap- proved the safari route after be· ing told by their attorney. Ken· nard Smart, that the service would not pose legal problems for the district. Two private bus companies, Town Tour Funbus and Gray Line Tours, operate lour service between some of the locations proposed in the district plan. One OCTD bus driver, however. warned that the natives are restless and predict· ed \he district will face a lawsuit from the private operators. Bus center sought I or u ·B's Gothard The Huntington Beach City Council has requested that the Orange County Transit District establish a bus station on Gothard Street near the San Diego Freeway. The councll's unanimous ac· lion included a related declaion to spend $28,000 to improve bus stops on the beach side of Pacific Coast Highway between Lake and Huntington streets. The transportation station would be located on lbe northeast corner of Gothard Street and Center Drive, near the freeway. Commuten could park thetr vehicles at that location and take buses to varlou• metropolitan centers accordlnl to clly offlelala. Intent&~ but llnea a1ao would leave from the traaaportatlon center,elt.yofflclal1Hid. OCTD recommended the Ila· lion late lut year and would "nanct toUtnactlon and malD· tenance according to city of- ficials. Bus stop improvements along Pacific Coast Highway will ln· elude widening the sidewalk by five feet, relocating parking meters and railing, and adding 17 bus benches. Three new stairways and one wheelchair ramp to the city beach also will be added. The tran.tportation center and bus stop lmprovemenls are estimated to cost f75,000, with the clty paying a maximum of $28,500, and OCTD f\lndlnl lbe remainder, accordiq to city of· fldaJs. OCTD alto baa recommended another transportation center ln downtown HunUnaton Beach. But the City CouncU med for poatponement UJatU 1pedfl c downtown developmn& pl ... ate made, or until the county de- cides the loeatloe ol a ,.... •• nent mut truWl corrtdor la t.M city. • • Michael Gastelum. Arbiso re- tired because of illness. Al 1 p.m. the city's historical society will offer a tour of the mission, founded by Father Junipero Serra in 1776, as well as surrounding historical areas for a $1 charge. Friday is officially ··Hoosegow Day" in the Spanish·style city. Those not dressed in western garb will be arres ted by hono rary · 'Sh•eriff' · Wes Williams and sentenced by self- styled "hanging judge" Dave Peters. Offenders will be tossed Mexico • ties seen 'healthy' ~ By JODI CADENH~AU OI tlw Dall, Pelot SUit Dr. Julian Nava, U.S. am- bassador to Mexico. says the is· sue of immigration will continue to play a large part in relations between Mexi co and this country. Jn a speech to the California Grape and Tree Fruit League in Newport Beach Tuesday. Nava described relations between the two nations as "healthy and sta- ble," despite the thorny issue of immigration that has over- shadowed relations for nearly eight decades. The California Grape and Tree Fruit League is made up of fruit tree and grape growers from CaUfornia and Arizona who support agricultural interests. Tuesday's meeting in Newport Beach was the organization's 45th annual meeting. When President Reagan and Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo meet for the second time April 27. immigration is ex- pected lo be the chief topic, said Dr. Nava. "The United States can no longer be a nation of unlimited imm igrants," said Dr. Nava . "It's clear that immigration has become a major problem. The scope of the problem was outlined in a recently re· leased report by the Select Com· mission on Immigration . According to that report there are 13 million people want- ing to move to the United States for political and economic rea· sons. Only half of the 3.5 to 6 million illegal residents living in the United States are Mexican nationals . according to 1978 statistics. . The H arvard-educated statesman said that Mexico is becoming as eager as the U.S. lo Ope11 .Cide, son in jail and fined. The roundup or criminals begins at high noon. At 5:•5 p.m. at Franciscan Plaza residents will compete in the "Hairiest Man" contest. Categories lnclude prettiest, ug- liest and hairiest. Judging will be done by Miss San Juan Capistrano, Kris Mocalls, and her court and the two Miss Fiestas, Ruth Bradley and Susan Wemble. Franciscan Plaza is located at the corner of Camino Capistrano and Verdugo Street. Saturday is parade day. with RELATIONS 'HEALTHY' AmbeHedor Neve curb the tide of workers leaving the country. .. More and more professionals are leaving Mexico to work in the U.S.," said Dr. Nava. "This is a brain drain in Mexico. No lon ger is it merely farm workers." Nava touched on the other is- sues: MEXICAN OIL -"The role oi l plays in Mexican develop· menl can easily be exaggerated. Oil only represents 7 percent of the Gross National Product. We must abandon the notion of Mex- ico replacing the Middle East <as an oil supplier.)" EL SALVADOR -"Most peo· pie in Mexico are against Com- munism and would certainly want lo resist the Communist re· gime. especially so close to them. We have to stop another Cuba from being planted in South America " TRADE Between 1978 and 1980 trade between Mexico and the U.S. increased from $12 billion lo $27.6 billion. Last year the U.S. exported S2 billion in agricultural products and im· ported $1.2 billion. Ll'l Abner &els a massive dose of Yokumberry Tonic from Mammy aa Pappy Yokum winces at Estancia Hith School. Jaime Aiken as Abner, Karen Lindow u Mammy and John Vninl u Pappy are part of a cut that lncludes Moonbeam llcSwine, Stupefyin' Jooet and other Al Capp cbaracten ID the achool'• production of "Li'l Abner" at I p.m. 'lbunday tbrouab Saturday.11\e whlm1lca1 mualcal will be atqed at Robina Hall at Newport Harbor Hiab. Tlcketa are S3 and '8.50. .. .. San Juan Capistrano claiming to have the oldest and largest non· motorized parade in California. The parade will begin at the mission at noon and travel down Camino Capistrano to Del Obispo Street and then return lo the mission on El Camino Real. J m mediately following the parade the San Juan Capistrano Historical Society will hold an outdoor barbecue at Oescanso Park behind City Hall. 32400 Paseo Adelanto. Live music and clogging dem· onstrations are scheduled. The menu includes an eight-ounce steak, beans, salad, salsa. tortillas, punch or coffee and beer for $6.50. Leaman new head of BSA Larry Leaman. director of the Orange County Community Services Agency and an 18-year county employee, has been named interim director of the county Human Services Agency Leaman, 39, will replace Margaret Grier, who will retire March 31 after 31 years with the county. The HSA is the county's largest superagency, with a staff of more than 2,800 and a budget of more than $176 million. The agency adminsters a wide variety of health, welfare and social services programs. By contrast. the Community Services Agency is the county's smallest superagency, having a budget of about $2 million. The agency oversees the operations of the public administration. public guardian office. veterans' services, consumer affairs, senior citizens· services and a cooperative extension program involving agriculture, environ· mental science, home economics and youth development. Leaman has served as CSA director since October 1979, re- ceiving the job only three months after the agency was formed. Its programs formerly were included in the HSA Prior to joining the CSA , Leaman was director of recrea· tion and open space programs for the county Environmental Management Agency. Leaman joined the county as a purchasing trainee in 1973, after graduating from Cal Poly Pomona. In 1969, he joined the then county Harbors. Beaches and Parks Department. He will assume temporary directorshjp of the HSA at a time when it is swirling in con- troversy. The agency is under scrutiny by the Orange County grand jury. And twice in recent weeks. the county Board of Supervisors ha s been forced to t a ke emergency action to keep the agency's General Relief welfare program financially solvent. Leaman declined to specifical- 1 y address the apparent problems. "I have no preconceptions. I said that when I was in· terviewed by the board mem· bers. I've been doing a lot of reading about the agency. why its organizational structure. is the way it is. I've been monitoring the apparent current fiscal pr~ blems." Asked if he would seek the HSA directorship on a perma- nent basis, Leaman said, "I am . very interested in it at this point; the odds favor it." Tests slated for summer lifeguards Competitive teats for prospec- tive summer lifeguards are scheduled Sunday morning at Huntlqton Beach. Competition for the city jobs Includes a 1wtmmln1 race around the municipal pier, an IOO•yard run-awtm-run race and a •OO-yard aurt s print. Top quallften will be ellcible to participate lo the city Ufe1uard tralnln1 pro1ram ln AprU. AppUcanta muat be at leaat l'7 before June 1, and bave IQ.JO un· conected vi.aloft. Appllcanta alto muat be aW. to awtm a 1.000 yard lbort coune ID ..., tbu 11 mlnut.. J'urt.IMr lnformatioe can be ollt•~alllq be8d weratlonl et . I I 1 I QUEENIE -- Seelal •arketl_, Consumerism skill valued· SJ IOYCB L. &IENNBDY DMr .i.,e.: c .. , .. tell ........... " bae~1,....l ...... ,,_la ww.-1· tlwT ..... uetlae)ebtT -T.o.,s,n.snew ...... ·r -- consumer educafion la a fteld where akilll and experimte outweich apecUlc academic creden· Uala. Wblle atudlee ,in couu.mer aff alra often are fouod ln college and un.lveralty home economics CAREERS pro1ram1, Cornell University and a few others have pro1rams expllclUy ln consumer economics , social L science or political acleoce with an emphasis on consumer l11ues. Susan Maallng, a consumer education end media specialist at the Federal Trade Com- mlaalon, describes the field as "social marketing" and empbaalles marketing, journalism, public re· .... ~ ART'tM KROU, PUZZLE Denlel Lowen (rtoht) mtEATION • pnce_ t11ar • re1uming NEW YORK CAP> -AJr fare wars are oo a1atn, with Tram World AlrUnet and American AlrUJles 1luhinc fares on domestic ru1ht.1 ln a move to lure ~er1. TWA ann0unced lhat lt would lower fare. on moat domestic nJghta to $298 round trip for a five-week period begtnntna April 20. American then announced il would do the same. Some other major airlines c harge $298 roundtrlp on fH1hts between New York and California only. Meanwhile. Republic Alrlinea announced it wlll pay 300 travelers S2S each to fly its route between Minneapolis ·St. Paul and Seattle when the service begins April 1 and give away five tickets on each of its two non-stop daily nights until April 16. Woman guilty in fihn pirating t iationa and political science as useful, along with consumer group experience and a dedication to the issues. Pupil outscores testers MIAMI (AP> -A federal court jury of nine women and three men have convicted a Los Angeles woman on a RICO <Racketeer lnfluence CorrUpt Organization) count lnvolvin1 the sale and distribution of pirated film cassettes of sucb hit movies as "Jaws," "Snow White," and "Saturday Night Fever ". The defendant, Barbara Gottesman, 45, was also convicted on two charges of interstate transportation of stolen property and a count of violation of the crimiJlal copyright Jaws -a mis- de meanor. Mrs. Gottesman and her husband. Rubin Ruby Gottesman, were indicted in ·February 1980 and charged with film pirating by the same federal grand jury which returned indictments in the Mipom -Mi ami pornography cases Involving « defendants. DEATH NOTICES HALL DO~Al.D llA\.EI' HALL. long llmt' res ident or the Harbor area. died suddenly on M arc.-h 16. 1981 1n Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. A native of Aurora. lllino1s. Mr llall had llv('d in Southern C:ahfornia most of his life He was a graduate or Art Center in Pasadl'n<J During World W;i r II he s e r ved a s a Pho t oma pp1n g O ffi c e r ass1~ned to the 64th Engineer Photomappmg Battalion in the Central Pac.-1hc.-Theater Following thl' wa r. \\1th a Pusher jailed SAN DIEGO <AP> - A fe deral judge has sentenced Michael Lynn McClurg of El Centro to three years in custody a nd thr ee year s probation for incidents involving distribution of cocaine. McClurg is a 30 -year -old former Imperial County deputy probation officer. ~~~~~1·1~1~; 3e::~~;1sh~~e a0~---------- the earliest such agen<.'ies in Neotme Society Ora nge County Later he c•1Uftll. ~ATMA joined the art department of .... 7431 EE CO . a Santa Ana ~ e le<.'lronics firm When ne Ye.r ... ,.I __ , .... ·-,.·· ..... 1 ...... -"-"'· •• , .... , retired 21, ye;irs ai:o. he was -----Sales Promotion director c.1 ... -...-1• 1w ~· :\f r llall W<J!> a long.time ~======~~~~ rnem l>t'r or the Balboa Yac.-ht ----------Clu b A membt'r or St An dr(•\\ i. P re~by te r1 a n Churc.-h 1n ~e"' port Beac.-h. he \\as <JCll\ <' in the Voyagers r ell o w s h1p . M e n 's F e l lo wsh1 µ, a nd o n the r\ud1o·V1sual Committee of the c.-hurc.-h Ile 1s survived by his wife. Ai.enalh V Hall. d;iught ers . Mrs . Julie Glazebrook of San Diego. Ca .. and Mrs Dennis Brantley or Riverside, Ca . sons Mars hall ;ind Clyan llall of Costa Mesa. Ca • brother Dean Hall of K a 1lua Ko n a . Ha wa11. step·mother Mrs Lillian Hall of Laguna Hills. Ca .. and g randsons Scott and Todd Glazebrook. San Diego. Ca Me morial sen 1c.-es will be held al II AM on Friday. ;'rtarc.-h20. l98latSl Andrew's\ Pres b y terian Churc.-h . Newport Beach. Ca . with Or. John A. Huffman. J r and Or. David Wallace ofricialing. In heu of flowers the family request donations be made to a special fund In his memory. at St Andrew·s Presbyterian Churc h. 600 St Andrews Road. Newport Beac.-h, Ca IALTZIHGHO .. SMITH & TUTHILL WHTCUFJ CH•nL. •27 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-9371 rtHCI llO'IHaS SMm4S' MOITU .. Y 627 Main St HuntmQton Bttach 536-6539 rAewtc ••w MIMOllAL PAH Cemtlef'Y Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Orwe NewPOrt Beach W-2700 MllCOU«ll MOITU•t•S Laouna Beach 49+94t5' L11Quna Hills 788-0833 San Juan C.01strano 49S-1776 HAll80tl U~MT. OUVlf Mortuary • Ce rne lef'Y CrematOtV 1825 Gl&l9f Ave .. Because you care, send flowers. Helping you s.1y it right. PUBUC NOTICE MUNICl .. ALCOUln 0, ORANG• COUNTY/W•tTOat.HGa JUDICIAL DllTIUCT ., .. ,.Mrw, W"......_,CAfltll .. lah1tltf: lltSUllAMCa COMPAMY 0, NOllTH W.lllCA Del ...... : DAVID W. S\UllMalll; .. ATlllCIC H. 'U11t1all .... oo•t 1 """"'"· ...... -IUMMOffl c:........,,.,,,, NOTICll Y• ......... ..-. T1- <Ml't IMY et<* ...... ,_ •'-,_...., .._. ...... ,. .. ,..... wllltl••M,... ...... ...._..... ..... AVllOI U .... 1111 .... ,,-..uc1• •I lrii....al ...... -.i. """"• u-. NII HiiMtocla a -.. U•. , ....... .... ,.. ...... u. .. .....,_ ... .-.aie-. II you wit!\ .. -• 11111 ...,,CA .t 114\ a11ornay 111 llllt -w. ,..., •NllN .. '° prom,lly M 0 1et l ... ' wrUte11 ••IPOflM. 11....,, l'IWty M IHMI M II-. $1 Ulled .... telk.IW t i<_ .... IHI • .,.... tft .... _.., ~·· lleterlo ,,,.,,,..,.u~t•, • ett• ..................... fftfl~ ..... .., .............. _,....., .... , ....... . I, TO TH• DC,tNOAfff: A clt11 _,, • .,,. ............. " ... ,i.lft. tiff ... !Mt .,.... If Y9ll wllfl .. ..,.... t11h lewwlt. ...., "'41111. wl\tllft • -~ ..... ""' ~ .. -"'" ti\ .,..,, ,. .. •1111 11111 C-l ......... ·-..... ~Ill. Uftlftl '911 ..... ywr def.wt! wlll N .,.,..,. .. M ·~ Pll<etle11ef11111pi.l11IHI,llf\d11111 c-t INY •~•I~ ... IMt 'l'Oll lM relief~ kl Ille ~•hit, wlll<ll <Ollld l'ftllll lfl .. mlMrftllftt • ..... , .. 1 .... _., ... ,., ... "" M r r,ellef .......... In IM '""'' "'"'· OtteOJlilyll, t• o......• Co.ta Meta 540-5554 •~=~-=,_ • ......, '"1111 IC... I ' .o ... .,.. --..u .... " lllCHAllOJ. HAQ(, Qeftr tulAH LYHCM, .... ,::-ci .. C.tt °"''' ,. ... •ell 1e, U. """ I. I, net ,..., .. , JOB POSSIBILITIES ARE DIVERSE, tbougb very limited in number, and range widely in pay. While corporate consumer executives may earn above $50,000 a year, many people enter the field as volunteers. Internships can be an important foot in the door. Among potential work settings: -Industry: Nearly every major Industry bas consumer affairs employees, who function as liaisons between citizens grou~ and management. -Government: Local. state and federal agen- cies hire consumer educators to handle com- plaints, develop brochures, organize conlerences and translate technical information for the public. County extension agents, for example, orten are jointly paid by the county for which they work, state land-grant universities and the rederal Agriculture Department. Because the hiring pro- cedure varies from state to state, call the county courthouse to locate the stale extension service and inquire how it works in your area. A master's degree is helpful In getting these jobs. -PRIVATE CONSUMER GROUPS: THESE organizations have outreach programs that utilise consumer educators . The pay is meager but the experience can be valuable. Media : Newspapers, magazines and television and radio stations hire researchers and reporters on consumer affairs. Volunteer work can lead to a job. The bottom line on consumer education, ac- cording to Mary Boyles of the National Consumers League, is that there are more people with an ap- propriate background than jobs. On .the other hand, the field is sufficiently unstructured that you can work your way in without pedigrees, begin- ning at the grassroots level. U.S. seamen popular PERTH, Australia (AP) -American seamen appear to have an enthusiastic following in the Auatrallan town of FremanUe. Ever 1lnce an Australian woman's telephone wu m.latabn.ly listed as part of the "Dial-A- Sailor" welcome service, her phone bas not stopped ringing, she says. "OM little girl rang up last night and said, 'I want a sailor,"' said the woman, who requested anonymity. 'Satan' sc,n sentenced to life FITCHBURG , ( AP l A Marked wrong, he proves answer right, PRINCETON, N.J . <AP) -A Florida high school junior who ~sted a panel of 16 college pro- f esson on a geoD)etry question has forced the Educational Test- ing Service to correct the scores of 250,000 students who t.ook a col- lege board test. "It's kind of overwhelming," said Daniel Lowen, a 17-year-old honors student in math and German at Cocoa Beach High School. "I didn't expect it to be s uch a big thing when I wrote in. I was just worried abou.t m y own scor~·· LOWEN WAS ONE of 1.3 million students who took the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test in October. The test was the first conducted under an ETS policy of sending students a copy or their test and the answer key. When Lowen received his PSAT results In late December he noticed he had been marked wrong on a geometry problem in- volving two pyramids. "It never entered my mind that they had made a mistake ... Lowen said. But he sat with his father, an engineer on the space shuttle project at Cape Canaveral, and the two became convinced the boy's original answer was cor- rect. They wrote ETS and found out they were right. THE QUESTION ASKED how many sides there would be in a figure made by attaching two pyramids, one with a three-sided base and one with a four-sided base. ETS sajd seven, but the Lowens argued for five. The question was sent for re- view to math professors. accord- ing to Arthur M. Kroll, an ETS vice president. "They all chose seven as the answer, but they all agreed that Daniel Lowen was correct when we save them his reasoning," Kroll said. The ETS notified Lowen his score oo the math section of the test would be raised from 74 to 75. The test ls marked on a scale of 20 to 80 and the highest possible score on that particular test was a 77 , according to ETS spokeswoman Mary Churchill. LOWEN ORIGIN ALL V missed only two questions on the math lest, Ms. Churchill s aid. His new total, adding scores on the verbal test, is 135 of a possible 160, she said. The ETS said it would also in- crease the scores of 250,000 other students who answered five in· stead or seven. but would not * * * pen al.ize those who chose seven. "Most of the 250,000 students had their scores changed one or two points, and a very few had them changed three points or no points at all," said Robert Moulthrop, director of public in· formation for ETS. He said the change in scores de· pended on the ratio of total correct answers to incorrect responses. THE TEST, WHICH also con- tains a section testing skills in reading and writing, was given in two versions in October. Only one, taken by about 800,000 students. contained the disputed question. Moulthrop said. The PSAT is a warm-up for the Scholastic Aptitude Test, a col· lege entrance exam ination, and is used in selecting winners of Na· tional Merit Scholars hips . Moulthrop said. * * * Here's how Dan reached solution By Tbe Aasoclat.ed Press Here's bow the problem works: The question showed two pyramids containing a total of nine sides, eight of them identical triangles. The question asked how many faces would be exposed if the two solids were placed together. The unexpected answer was seven. with two identical sides disappearing when placed together. "All you have to do is add up the faces -four on one and five on the other -and subtract two," Kroll said. • But Lowen decided that when the pyramids were joined, four of the original triangular faces would be merged 1in two quadrilat.eral faces of the new solid. That meant two fewer sides on the new solid, for a total of five. OuantitiPs and assortments are limited. so hurry in! d esc rib e d as a se lf-styled "so n o f Satan" who allegedly used terror to control a s tring of prostitutes was convicted of fint-degree murder and sentenced to life In prison in what witnesses claimed was the ritualisUc slaying of a 20-year-old prostitute. We sell firs t quality and discontinued m erchandise from Scars Retail and Catalog Distribution. "Was" prices quoted <in• llw f'l•g ular prit.·t.•s al whil'h lhl· item s were formerly offcrt.•d hy C..1talog or in m any Sears Retail stores around lht.• t.·ounlry. Carl ff. Drew was sentenced by Superior Court Judie Francis W. Keatinc after the jury found him guilty in the 1980 ldlJlng of Karen Marsden of Fall River. P&08ECUTOR David Waxler charged that Drew , 28, ran a proaUtuUon ring and atyled himaelf as a "aon of Satan'' to terroriie and control the women. Drew, who denied all char1n. testified be wa1 workin1 u a pimp in a Fall River bar the nlpt Mlu Maraden wa• ldlled. He 1ald be didn't learn about tbe death until t.be following day. He al10 dtnltd .any involvement in a aatanit cult. TBS STATE'S star wttn ... , Robin Murphy, tutllied that Miu Manden wu IEWed a1 "an ottertnc•• to Satan. Only a 1kull tra1ment from Ml11 Marsden'• body hN been found. Drew'• trial waa moved to ctntral Ma11acbUMUI beca"UM of tbe publl city tt rtcelved in tb• 1outbeaat part of tbe •tat.. Calt 142•H11 . "'' • few word1 to work tor COOKIE JAR was 1299 NOW S699 SALT & PEPPER CANNISTER was 29" was4" NOW S299 NOW S1849 19" COLOR TV was..- NOW s35999 JAM & HONEY was 599 NOW S279 NAPKIN HOLDER was 399 s1s9 LIGHTED MAKE-UP MIRROR was3" NOW S1 99 TOASTER OVEN ... was29" NOW '1999 NOW s2799 ELECTRIC KNIFE 11 4790 was 1599 NOW S11 99 AMi FM STEREO SYSTEM 'NOW 26999 7 Piece MUSHROOM COOKWARE SET Wat .. NOW 52599 i\1111 abMt ~·"" t"'41t plHll. Orange Cout OAJL Y ptLOT ,w.dMtday, Maroh us, 1N1 H/F It you are an adult aon or dau1hter conlribulinl to the aupport of your elderly or a1linl parent, you are enUtled to significant tax beneflta -aaau1nln1 your parent qualifies as a dependent. A Irey require· ment for that qualJfication ls that you contributed more than half your parent's support durtn1 calendar 1980. If your parent quallrlea, then you, the child, may benefit from this major list of tax deducUons: The dependency deduction. Deduction of unrelmbursed medical expense& paid for the parent. Dependent care credit, and head-of-household rates if either or both of the11e are applicable In your situation. The Inter nal rev e nue Rev e n ue Service claimed until a few years ago that Medicar e payments cov- --~ SYLVIA PURTIR ~ ~ ering a doctor's care counted toward support .. This meant that if ~ubstantial Medicare pay- ments were made for a parent's doctor bills. the child 's own contributions to the parent's support might turn out to be less than half the total support tor the year, which included the Medicare payments. This would have disqualHied your parent as your de· pendent and barred you from the list of tax benefits above. The courts rejected this IRS view, which finally agreed that neither hospital nor doctor payments un- der Medicare count as support. But the IRS still insists that Medicaid payments, which are payments made by the states, do count as support. ~ Now a 1980 taJC coll't't decision has held that the 1 RS is wrong in trying to distinguish between Medicaid and Medicare payments. Medicaid pay· ments are to be excluded from support for the same reasons lhal all Medicare pay ments are excluded from support. IF YOU ARE involved in a Medicaid situalion. be on the alert While the I RS still treats Medicaid payments as support, if any of your tax benefits depend on knock- ing out Medicaid as support. the tax court will back you against the IRS. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES STOCKS I NTME SPOTl.IGHT N~""' YUIUCIAPl Flnel OO•·J-•YO> NEW YORK IA.Pl ulo" tlo.,no proo lor T....S•v M•r 11 •nO net "'""°" Of ,,. 1111 .. n mo\I •W•• STOCKS ,.., Low Cklw (' Ntw YOrk Slo<k EA<h•n~ IHUO\, lr•OlnQ lO Ind ~0. IOl~Ol "6 11 "7 U 10 ~ n•llon•llY •t mort tr.on ti .IO Trn •1183 •:ti " •11 S6 OS t• I " Sony Corp 1 111,000 II'' ... IS Utl tO. .. 110 S1 IOI SS IOI" 0 S. !> .. f\ A~b •H,'00 , I .. u so -n ,.I " ., I• .. '~ 'ts I( Mert •H.100 It" IN!u\ • ~)t 'GO 18M 70l . .OO ..... .. fr•n l.~),.00 lnl fl, T ., •• 000 JI"' _. Utll• 7'1.JDO C.on Motor• 611.•00 $!-., • •11 \SSI~ 183ll00 Dow C"'9m ~1 .100 )l't• 1 / Amor u.T H• 100 u... ... WHAT STOCKS DID otonnotoll IS), •00 )J• • • .,. Ael\ln Pur ~ ... ~ IJ • • WnA1rnl1'1 S..O.JOO •O • r-~ ro1>coC:pn ,, .... soo ,,,,. 1'· Std O•I OfU 0'1,000 U'• • 1• US Stffl 01,300 ltl• I Penny JC •H .100 111• • '- AMERICAN LEADERS p rt(' arhw ,,._ NFW VOAIC fAP! N>er ti Advenced O.cltned U"<"•"°"" Tot•I l\\W"\ Ntw hi~\ N•w '°""" WHAT AMODIO '°""" e:n ,., ., ,.,. ,.., ' NfW YOlllC l•Pl ""•r H .. •ov•Mod Todo 1W n• 113 llJS 3S ' • Oitt n""' .. u,,,,,_ '• ToU~I l\'\l#'' ' Ntw hid'\\ • 1 \I\ Nf!w IO'W" s UPS AND DOWNS NFW VOAK ••Pt Th~ tollowlno 11\1 '"°"' "-New YOO StoO £~<"•­,,()(~t Mtd w4trr•nt l fh1tt f'llvt QOnf' up ltw """1 •ncl <IOWn IM mo•I ba...O on r:;'"'~·~~~~n~ r~t\,,11•" of YOlUfTlf' No \KurlllH trelllno bolo"' '1 ••• lnCI udfad Nf"t Af"O pHtf'nt•Of" (f\1~' M• tN' dlff•rf'f'<" ~twH'n U\_.. pntvk)u\ < 10\lnQ pr •t• •f\c:t Tue\dav tp~~<I' ,...,... I "'' (ho Pet I l'l-"'1 ot• 1'• • )• Up 16 0 1 Wttt"'°""' 17,.., • tll# Up t1 0 J PenM('o ot '°' .· 10'" Uo It 0 • C.•Mter ot lO' ) Uo 10 I S WrV'lr 1ot 76 • 1' • Uo tO t • N'odulC,..Sv• n ""' • 1"-Uo 10 • ' H,..,..1'P Ceo • " uo 10 J e Tu1n 1 '°"' 11! 7' uo • r 'f&ton<"O Of ~ •'• ltp • 1 10 v .... oa Co 1 •. uo ' t 11tllPw•7()pl II ' I' Uo ti g g~z-::: l"i&i. ~!'. ;'· ~~ : ~ U '"""'°"•'"0 I '· "' Uo 1 • 11 1t11N'l,,.r ot lH• 11, Vo 1 • 16 r 1nnnnlYllll\ 7V• ''" Up 11 DOWNS Ne""' I Tot<oCP" J l!utl«tnt "~'.,. r~~'• Prl OH 1J t OH •t •• 00 •• W ()ti I I 3 Chaf'lerCo w1 • THOl'O .... t S Jot>n-£F 6 Cw£ R '4lof8 1 Nor!llQI .. n I CffllrnO.IA • A"'SNPB ' :~ r::~•JF;"I t1 r.w.,1nt • 1l •rchOM Ni ,. TW Coro wt U GOV Inc I. "'"!'4'Y GOLD COINS ,, .. ,. '~ "' 11 61'' ... ,., .. " ... ,. ll' .. ""' ,, ... ... ll"· ;w• .. I'" , .. 0 11 •• •• k .. t .. I .. ,., 11 , .. ,, Olf • '· 0 11 •• Off • 3 Off '° 0 11 s• f\11 s' ()fl s. OH SI 0 11 s s v, 0 11 11 , .. Oft 11 NEW 'l'O~K IAPI Prlc .. 11te 1110.0av ol gold <Otllt. tompartd "'"" Monday·, PtlCt Kr_tr_, I llOf 01 , Ol4 00, UP I ll 00 Majlle IMf. I trn 01., Ult 00, llP Ill 00 MHI< ... JO p .. o, 1.1 llOV 01., 1 .. 1 00, \IP ,,, 00 AuUrta11 100 crown • ..,, 1roro1 . UIM 00, llP lit 00 Sauro 0.. Ptrtr• METALS Due to late transmission today's listing w ill not appear in the Dally Pilot. SILVER Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. GOLD QUOTATIONS I.•-" morn1nv toa1no UIO H , up'" 00 \.enden •llernoon l1a1ng U O• 00, "P '11 IS Per". 1t11rnoon I laing 'S4• '1, up '7 03 'r•1tlf.,,,. ''"'"9 \SU 00, up '10 tt Z11rlt~ ,.,. afternoon 11.1ng uo~ 00. "" lll 00 'jOI 00 Hked Ha11t1y I Herma11 onlv O••'' Q1101t lSO. 00. llP ll) I) En1ell\ard only d•lly quot• H O. 00, uo 'l) H 1111•11\arll only CS.lly Qvol• tet>rl"toel U2• 1•. U9 Ill >• SYMBOLS Daily Piiat * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT twedneaday. Ma~h 18, 1981 250-298 East 17th Street Costa Mesa .· SPRING CONSOLIDATION SALE MARCH 21-22 Our LanJeit S• Of The Sea10t1! Values Up To 75% Off • 1ewelry, belts •sleepwear •d resses • 1umpsu1ts •skirts • 1eans •blouses • t-shirts •sweaters •slacks •Jackets and more' Shop early for best selection of styles. sizes ... and values! Mari-Bey LAMP&SHADE rtlOl"SA~l>S OF LA:'tl PSllAIH:S 0:--l SALE MANV REDUCED 50%! ! ! Smallc·r r!Ull'rl ~hac1e~ Rt duced 5-0~ Man~ I.amp~ Jl!.O l>r;l'.,llq1ll} Reduced PLl'S llundrl'<ls of flN IAl~4' Rt•g SIU 011 Sale SS.00 298 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 646-7753 SALE HOl 'RS. .. Sidewalk Sale March 21 & 22 TREDS & THREADS · Treds & Threads, with the cooperation of Converse. has arranged for Preston Dennard of the Rams. one of the lead ing wide receivers in the NFL. to be at Hlllgren Square Saturday. Mar. 21 . 1981: He'll be giving out autographed pictures and talking with the public. Be· there from 10 am-12 noon or you will miss him Come & meet one of the Rams all time greats .. it's on us. Preston Dennard Wide Receiver Our thanks to the Converse Athletic Shoe Company. one of the leaders in sport sho~s for football. basketball and every other maior sport. SPORT SPECIALS Selected shoes from Nike Adidas. Conve rse, Brooks. and New Balance. UP TO 50°/o OFF Balls for most sports-Soccer. Basketball . Vo lleyball. Football UP TO 500/o OFF Selected Leisure & Athletic Clothing Includ ing Swi mwear from Adidas. Levi, Spooner. O.P .. Wrangler. Off Shore, Speedo. UP TO 500/o OFF Items on sale limited to stock on hand-ell sales FINAL 541-3323 MOll.•Frt. I o.6 s.t. f·' 250-298 East 17th Street COST!\ MESA i t .. 1m I ~ ; -1·.1 .. .. -. -.,,.,,,........ . . .. 250-298 East 17th Street Costa Mesa I • l'er.'ioool • v .. • .Ju/ 1(• .\111/i>r ' J • Clara / ,uru .,,-_·- • .'i1ssws • C1JC11 • Swt•c1/t'r., 1>11 Ades • .'iir .Jame\ • I ppn Clo." • /11 Ymw A 111/ \l11n" / Something Special /£'111111111<· f(ls}11uns 'l.511 1-: 17th. Costa ,'\frsa fi4!i .51/ I \\I 'I" t 1.d111 Ill l.1 '11•111 '"' '"' n11 .... , ru.·11.. 11• 11h1 u J"C H~Ll.G .. CN so •RC 270 E 17,,. ST ,,.OGTA MC•A CA 92ft2-7 C•~T1Na srn1 (_ F IN'-Jt:WrlflV Cur STONr~. r ! r r ,, ' ", ~ t •• , 1•4 • < ' J',., ~· .... n C.USTOM JEWF'LR Y rJFSIGNfl1 NEW ARRIVALS 14 K Yellow Gold Re-Mounts START THE SPRING WITH A NEW RING B.Y .0 .G. '(Bring your own Gem ) Or Use One Of Ours SIDEWALK SALE MARCH 21-22nd Lapidary Equip. 20% Off Selected Jewelry ·20% Off Lapida ~y Demonstration IN STORE BARGA I NS Come In And Look At Our "TURKEY BOX" Sidewalk Sale March 21 & 22 1 ,. r• 11111111llllY1'11111 W l UN l SU 1\ Y MAH l t I 1 B 1 q B 1 OHAN CiE COUN 1 Y C ALIFOf~NIA ]'1 C ENT'-. Grads mourn nameless fiirl MOURNERS FILE PAST THE CASKET OF NAMELESS GIRL AT BALTIMORE FUNERAL Service• for child found de•d IHt November dr•w thouHnd1; c•uH 1tlll unknown BALTIMORE (AP> -For several minutes, the woman's bead w11 bowed in prayer. AJ she lookM atthe body of a llttle 1lrl ly· ln1 wide the white casket, her eyes welled with tura. · ''What a waste," she muttered before movin1 away. Within hours, St. Pius V Roman Catholic Church here was packed with several thousand stran1ers who came to mourn an unJden- tlfled, abused child. The girl. found four months ago dangling from a chain·llnk fence, was be- ine buried today. The cause or her death ls not known. The mourners streamed into the church all day Tuesday, quiet- ly passing by the tiny body In the casket donated by a local un- dertaker. By nightfall, several thousand had come. "To an angel, from someone who cares," said one card. Another read: .. God, please rind a place in your kingdom for this forgotten child." There were no seats left by the time the Rev. Joseph Benintende delivered an emotional. powerful eulogy t.hat had the crowd shout· ing continuous" amens." "There is not a one or us sitting here that can tell us anything about this child." he said. "Where she came from, why she was struck down in the prime of her life. •·Perhaps we are angered; perbaps we are filled with tears,·· he continued, "but she leaves behind . . . a life that has touched you and me. She cried out to us throu1h death, and each one of us responded. She's touched us, and I think we're richer for it.'· The 1 people lined up several hours before the funeral Mass •. tryine to get a glimpse of the girl whose tiny hands clasped a 11ingle pink rose. A Catholic service was held because the Catholic church was made available. '· 1 just felt sorry lor this child,'· said Rosa Ragland. "It was the least I could do Is come and pay my respects ... for someone who was discarded just Uke a shoe. That's the hurt.Ing part." The black girl, about 9 to 13 year s old, was found In November tangled in the mesh of a fence along Interstate 70 in West Friendship. Her burial had been delayed by the hope her parents or someone who knew her might come forward. Noone did Authorities have not been able lo determine how she happened to be on the hiJ?hway A state medical examine r ruled her Newport visitor death may have resulted from a type of blood disorder similar to sickle cell anemia. The autopsy also revealed signs that she had been beaten, and several of the bruises and cuta were fresh. Police conjecture that th~ fear or being caught on I.he fence, or the fear of being beaten aeain, may have pushed the blood disorder to a lethal state . .. .d .. J reel awful about ll, sa1 Geraldine Hawkins of Baltimore, who came to mourn the child. "J guess the parents are a fraid to come forward now. But they should have been afraid from the start. Jt was a heartless thing to have done." "I didn't know whether it might have been someone I knew," said Bill Robinson, a recently retired Frederick County schoolteacher. "Unfortunately, she wasn't. It's a very sad thing. I still can't se~ a family missing a child not saying anything at a ll.·· Funeral arrangements were donated by undertaker Charles I Glover, who said he ·· would not be able lo sleep nights" if he hadn't done something "I live alone an the city," said Glover "I could die tomorrow and someone would have to come forth and see that I got buried propei=ly ·· LB plan nixed Brown quiet Residents oppose hilltop homes hearing on the proposal Tuesday night. about transit By STEVE MITCHELL °' 11w Delly Pll .. Stall Laguna Hench Ci t y Council members havt' unanimously re· jected a developer's plans ror a 29-lot subdivision on a 97·acre parcel located 1usl over the r idge from lhl' Top of the World community. A standing-room-only crowd or hilltop residents opposed lo the oroject attended a three hour The Kralow Company of Irvine so"ght council approval for a 29·1ot su bdivision 1tbat would include individual build· ing spots from a quarter acre to nearly 17 acres in size. . In addition, the developer said a 58-acre portion or the vacant parcel would remain in open space. Freed H B ~tor High court review of MacDonald eyed FA YEITEVJLLE, N.C: (J\PI Government attorneys in Washington today were expect- • ed to ask the U.S Supreme Court to review a lower court ruling which overturned the 1979 conviction of Or. J effrey Mac· Donald for the murder or his wife and two children at Fort Bragg in 1970 The government attorneys re quired approval of the U.S Solicitor General before µro· ceedmg with the request to the Supreme Court M acOonald's attorneys will be required lo file a response lo lhe writ. and the time delllY in pre paring the response probC1bly CSee REVI EW, Pa~e AZ > The 97 -acre site overlooks Aliso Canyon and Is on land that is partially designated as open apace and partially low deD4ll.f resldenU&l on the clty'1 general plan. Access to the lots would have been off Nestall Road, about 1,000 feet east or Mountain View Drive. But council members said they had concems about a road with no loop circulation or emergency entrance and ex1t from I.he hilltop site. They noted cul-de-sacs pro- posed for the development ex· ceed 750 feet in length that would make it difficult for emergency vehicles to enter the area and residents to depart in the case of an emergency. Residents expressed concerns about the development intruding into the Aliso Creek view shed, the fire danger in the brushy hi lltop area and the traffic im- pact on Pflrk Avenue and other streets in Top of the World. In addition, council members said there are three probable landslide areas within the pro- posed development. The city planning commission had recommended denial of the subdivision following four meet- ings on the project D•"' l'ilet sun ,,,.... 'IN LISTENING MOOD' Governor In Newport By STEVE MARBLE CW Ula O•ilf l'llet Stall Claiming he wouldn't have come to Newport Beach if "I dido 'l have any good news ." Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. offered little of that good news when the subject turned lo Orange Coun· ty 's transportation problems "J 'm in a listenine mood tonlaht." Brown told bual- nesameo and local pollUclan1 l•thered at a recepUon Tuesday nilbl lo tbe Big Canyon Country Club hosted by the Irvine Com- pany. Brown, who sipped coffee as he answered questions, said he has not reached a decision whether to support a bill to in- crease state gasoline tax by two cents a gallon lo help finance road projects. "Given the political trauma of the past year," said the gov· ernor. "I want lo listen to the people before considering a new tax." Brown opened himself to some transportation-type jokes when he arrived at the evening recep· lion an hour late. Bryan Murtaugh, one of the government prosecut~rs 1n the case. said this morning that a writ or certiorari asking the Supreme Court to review the de· cision was printed Tuesday night and was to be filed this af- Evolution defended "There's a rumor. Governor, that you were late because you got stuck in a traffic jam." su~ gested Irvine Company Pres1· dent Peter Kremer. who in- troduced Brown. Brown offered sympathy to local businessmen interested in unjamming Orange County's frequent traffic snarls. He ~aid he would be willing lo adJust truck-weight fees to help provide money for transportation proJ· ects. ternoon. . After receiving a written reply from MacDonald's <1ttorneys on the writ. the court will decide whether to review the July JO, 1980, decision by a panel or the 4th Ci r cuit Court of Appeals, which ruled that MacDonald was denied his right to a speedy trial, Murtau${h said Science 'prey to fools' The 4th Circuit Court of Ap peals turned down in December a government reques~ for ~ .re· hearing on the panel s dec1s1on bv the full court. ORAIGI COAST WIATHf R · Increasing cloudiness with 10 percent chance of rain tonl&hl, 50 percent Thursday. Lows tonight 48 alon1 the coast, 55 lnland. Hl&h• Thursday eo to 66. 111101 TIDAY For HofTJI Brod11. thu1'1 no more rid t no the mechonlcol bull. Hit ntck WOI ~ in tM LouuviUe Urban Cowbot/ Bar. See Pagt A1. 11111 AtYMr...-.ke M L.M...... M ·--... , C.llffwlllle .. c.reen •• Cl-'f... ,,. CeMIC• Dt C......... IN AMLAMln In ..... °'"' ..... -..... .. NelleNI ..... M , ... " ....... ..... ., ......... , ...,.. ... . Mee• ....... , By ROBERT LOCKE Al'ki...c:awnt ... ANAHEIM Science is fall· ing prey to "the cultists, the misfits and the fools" because scientists have failed lo explain and defend their profession. a Nobel laureate charges. •·We have failed to act vigorously in defense of scien- ti fl c truths," Dr. Arthur Kornberg said Monday. "We have shrugged off rather than rejected forcefully the cuJUsts, the mbflta and the fools who erode science." He said it is sad that ''society. by ignorance, ls aa captive to creation ists, astrologers, evan1ell!ts, food fadcli1ll and all kinda of gurut as were our an- cestors <held captive) br fears of thunder and Uptn.lq.' The Stanford Ualvenk.r '*"I· clan, who shared UM Uft Mtibel Prize for med.lclae for NM•ch on the matertal ol bereclty, wu to have defended UM tMory of evolution earlier tlU moatb It a trial in Sacrame9to. TIM trial ended before IM waa cal19d u an expert wttneN. o. .......... ........... ........... ..., ,...... . ,... CUlll .._ ..... Reliaioua tundamentaU1t1 h•d arcued that teachln1 evolution in pubUc acboolt vtolat.cl the rt· t11lowt .rtabta of their tbUdrtp> and ukecf tbat the biblical •ler'r of creation be tn1bt aJoqltdt evolutJoury-t.beory. 1 Tb• Judo re~ tbo1e att»- menu; wfthout eonat4'na1 U.. ldndfle mertta ~ ....._ lldl, L . and atN aUonM11 ei.tmed • •lctory. ,......... ., TIIMllft ..., ~ M ..,.. .... M But Kornberg told a meeting of the California Medical As· soclatlon here that science didn't wtn. He noted that judicial decision warns school s and textbook publishers not lo present evolu- tionary 'theory as an "official dogma taught as if it's beyond dispute." "That " Kornberg said, "is monstroWi nonaeoae. Evolution la beyond d1apute. It's a fact of nature as compelli ng a s gr a vlty." He conceded somt scientific dispute over the precise mechanJsma by which evolution works, but said t.he theory itMl.C la beyond queaUon and "th., con- fusion stemt from l1norance and semantics." Mf)NTREAL FOR VINCE? The problem, he said, is the failure of scientists to explain themselves and the nature or science. Kornberg said the government and the public often for1et that t he wonders of modern technology 'exist only because they are buill on a foundation of basic research -knowledee sought, not for profit or even for the aood of society, but for the sake of knowing. Putting in a plug for an elec- tric ear he said he'd recenUy read about, Brown also suggest· ed that future answers to transportation problems could be eased with u11e ol a hltih· speed rail system. "l 'Ql Interested in that," re· marked the governor, "even though aJl the experts say It iioesn 't make any sense.'• Roadjama · • to continue "Thia scientific base ts often obscured and ignored when the refinements o f technology , heaped on one another, make it seem that the marketed product ts more Important than the Tralflc Jams to Newport knowled1e that fathered it," he Beach near tile Paclllc said. Coaat m,tawai brtd1e are Government., foundaUont and expect.cl to continue thla corporati004 that fund research wHk wbaJe workmen close often espect sclenU1t1 to aim otr a wtetbound lane of their ettoru at specific 1oaJs traffic. and problem1. Tbt llftale lane between B•t. he uld, "cruudea Bayildl uct Dover drives a11lnat a dlteaae have usually wlU be cloMd from 7 a .m. falled. Tbt v11t m1Jorlty of to a:• p.m. Thunday and medical diacoverlet dtrlve from Frid · Loa An1elu Ram• unrelated baalc tnalahta.'' p!f&ce are uktn1 quarterback Vince Fer· w t d e 1 y p u b 11 e I a e d motoriatl to take other raaamo •art there'• very brealrthroupa, Kornberf •alct, routn lt po11lble durtns little chanff U.at M'U be are rarely tbt work ol •mile uu. ptriod or elM plan for tot1lq PUMI at Ute Bt1 A 1elent11t1. !natead, tl••Y are del•P became of &rattle next aeuon. m.,.11 tM latett ln a ..,.... of eoq..uon. ff•'• clOM to 1t1ntn1 a •mall....,. over many ye.,., TIM roedwort It belna contract witb Moalreal of "It ta 1etence th•t t1 H · doM an conJuncUCID wltii th• Caaadlan Pootball tr~, not UNI ..... u.u , eoHtrucUoo of a ne" IA•••· .i• 8evano tun .•• ft II UM MtmtUle dilltfHN brld11. Tiie .... brl4•• an Haluln r•Port on u.aa Mi l*"IDtUed Of'4lliaaF1 peo-1 L .nu M thrM lann wider Pa11 El tM&t. pie a. achieve major ......, ov... ~ u.a. the.,........ brldte • '-------~------.,,.,... ol bundnd.a of,..,.... ...... ___ ~ ...... ---~-- • He added, "We probably ought to wipe out our three auto ~om­ panies if they don't get moving a little faster · · Brown also suggested that lhe key to mass transit is through development He suggest~d that --i clustered or high density de- velopments would reduce the need for roads. Brown, who told listen~rs he was looking for a "deepening re· <See BROWN; Pa1e AZ> Clymore lawyer due in Syria By JOHN NEEDHAM O! llw Dally l'llel Sl•ll The Laguna Beach attorney representing freed Orange Coun- ty hostage Craig Clymore .sa~s he will ny to Damascus, Syna Monday to fight his client's threatened extradition lo the United States. where he faces federal drug smuggling charges. Ronald Kreber said Tuesday he had received assuranc~s fro m the Syrian Embassy an Washington. D.C., that he will be issued a visa so he can enter the country Kreber says he wants lo re· sol ve the cha rges against Clymore. who 1s accused of_ be- ing the ringleader of a nme- m e mber international drug smuggling operation, before the 24-year·old man returns to the United States. Clymore, formerly of Lake Forest, was one of more than 100 hoitages aboard a Pakistani airliner hijacked by opponents or the Pakistan government March 2. Just hours after Clymore and the other hostages were released SaturdfU' the new• or a 1rand jury Indictment namln1 hlm and elaht other alleied baabilb and heroin smugglera waa reJeued by the U.S. Attorney's office in New York City. Syria ind the Unlted State• have no .extradition treaty. Kreber la accuslna federal drug enforcement authoriUea of preaaurina the Syrian 1ovem· ment to 1rr11t Clymore on • minor char1e to force him to a1ree to extradition to the United States. But Kreber 11y1 he wW at· tempt to block the extradition of hla client. He aaid Damucua wUI be the "batt1e1round" for the druc cue. "If they wanted blm back here ao badly, why did t.hey releue the Indictment before b• H · turned from Syria?" Kreber Hid. Kr•btr lakl Ctymon•e faUMr, Olen Clymor• of Saa .luan C1pl1traao, woeNa'\ aecom· pany blm on 1111 trip to Dam~.-...~ llau ,.. ptat.dl; Wet bii •••ed ~IO· • Orenge Coelt DAILY PfLOTIWedneeday. M-'Ch it-1M1 I I Tlae •·(qot aloop Merlin, •klJ:•ar• :b1 Dkll Steel•. cr...t .. nn.llb u.. at e:.c»dd&..,,,,in1. breakln• all reeordi lD t.be UO·mll• NewpGrttoCaboS... Lueu yacht race. Merlin had held the elapted tlnu lead throu1bout mNt of the race, but had dropped to fifth in the over-all correct· ed ti me standings Tuesday. Merlin's speedy finish. re· portedly broke ttie race rec· ord by nearly 12 hours. See earlier story, Sports, Page E4. Reagan call becoDles arts clash LOS ANGELES CAPJ Presi· dent Reagan called the Los Angeles Times theater critic to put in a good word for a musical comedy by his friend Buddy Ebsen and ended up debating the propriety of his budget cuts for the arts, critic Dan Sullivan reported today. Sullivan said the president began the surprise call by say· ing, "I know this is highly un· usual, but I understand Buddy Ebsen has a new musical play- ing out there called 'Turn lo the Ri ght' that you wrote a nice re- view of in the paper. "I just wonder if there isn't some way you could let people know that I sure hope it's s till playing next time I get home so that I can see 1l .. Reagan J~ planning a visit next month Sullivan. who also had written a column critical of Reagan al· lowing hJs budget director to cut federal support for theater and music in half because the arts are "low priority." said he told the president: "I'm ashamed of you ." Reagan repli ed, "Well. I'm sorry you feel that way," but stayed on the line and defended his ~uts, Sullivan soid. The writer told Reagan he believed the National Endow· ment for the Arls was tightly budgeted and administered, but Reagan contended that officials had discovered NEA boondog- gles like Sl.500 going for a thepter performance in a laun· dromat Sullivan said he s uggested boondoggles alsb existed in the Defense Department, which was the only part of the federal budget to be increased. Reagan agreed, saying there were S4 billion worth at the Pen· tagon "and we've caught them ... To Su Iii van's protestations that the government should fund the arts because they are "part of the nation 's spiritual health," Reagan responded that it was a matter of balancing needs. R e agan in s i s ted that Americans s upport the arts more generously than anybody, but by private means. Fro•Pa9eAI REVIEW ... means the Supreme Court will not decide whether to hear the request by the end of this year's term in July. Murtaugh s aid. "My gut feeling is that I doubt all the paperwork will be filed by the end of the court's session in July," he said. Attempts to contact Mac- Donald or his attorney. Bernard Segal of San Francisco, were un· successful this morning. Alfred and Mildred Kassab, the parents or MacDonald's s lain wife, Colette. sald this morning that the decision lo file the appeal tQ the Supreme Court came as no surprise to them. MacDonald was convicted in August, 1979, on three counts of murder in the Feb. 17, 1970, bludgeoning and stabbil)g deaths of his pregnant wife and two young daughters. He was sentenced lo three con- secutive life terms for the lriple- m urder conviction. . The Or8Dl9 CountJ Board o1 Supervtson bu autborbed 12 poattlonl that officla.la 111 ace fteeded to offset the lacruat.na welfare aulltance caaeloed of the county Human Services A1ency. As of resutt of Tuesday's ac· tlon, the county will e mploy by August a total of 668 people whose sole duty ia to determine who qualifies for several types of assistance, ranging from Medi-Cal to food stamps. (See related story.Page Al). Board members, however, re· jected a request for the hiring of 50 additionaJ supervisors, who, according to HSA officials, vfould more closely monitor the eligibility worker 's job performance. The current ratio of workers to supervisors is 8 to 1; HSA of· (icials are seeking to reduce the ratio to 6 to 1. They said such a move could help the county re· duce its error rate in providing assistance to persons who should not receive it. A bout 90 percent of the cost of hiring the 72 new employees will be paid by either the federal or state governments. The net county cost would be about $44 ,000. The 72 positions , while authorized. will be filled onJy as caseload increases actually OC· cur. Yet. HSA officials made it clear in their thick report lo the board that the new workers will be required by summer. Supervisor Harriett Wieder. who supported the addition of the 72 positions. led the opposi· lion against the hiring of addi· tional supervisors. She said HSA officials' asser· tioo that increased supervision would lower the welfare as- s istance error rate was "not well documented." She suggested that the prem- ise should be tested via a "dem· onstration project" in which error rates between eligibility units in which supervision is in· creased and units where it is not increased are compared. HSA officials said they will provide further information to the board in the ft.llure on their justlrication for the increased number of supervisorial posts. UCI doctors attach man's severed arm A 48-year-old man is in fair con- dition today at UC Irvine Medical Center after doctors reattached his right arm that was severed when he jumped from a moving train. Luis Rodriquez Leon of Mexico was jumping from a moving train in Brea with a friend Thursday when he fell under the wheels. His arm wascutoff attheelbow. A team of plastic surgeons employed special mico·surgery techniques during the 12 hour operation. Toby Milligan, a hospital s pokeswoman, said it will be several weeks before it is known whether Leon will regain the use of his arm. Brea police Lt. Tom Christian said that Leon and another man, Delores Calderon, apparently had boarded the train in San Diego, hoping to reach Sacramento. The two decided to jump at 2 a.m. after they thought that they were headed in the wrong direc· tion, said Lt. Christian. Police said Calderon went to a nearby house for help. When police arrived they found l..eon carrying his severed arm. Doctors said that the traln wheel pinched Leon's veins and arteries shut so that he lost little blood . He was transported to the medical center and rushed into surgery. Crime fight OK'd LOS ANGELES (AP) -A package of anti·crime measures that will beer up law enforce· ment, prosecution and prisoner review programs has been adopted by the county Board of Supervisors. ORANG! COAST\ Dally Pilat CIHatfted ~llng 7141'42·1171 Att ottwr depertrnenh 142"'321 Thoma P. Hiley "MllW • Aoti.11 N. Weed -M. Thom11 l<eevll ... Thomae A. Murphlne ............ _' ChwleeH. LOOI ,, .................. hrnerd Schulman ~ ~~n Kenneth N. Goddard Jr ~ ..... MAIN OfFtCE J)O Well kY SC., C•te ~M. CA. Mel1 ..,_, k• 1560, C•t. INM, CA . .,._ Cottyr ..... t•t Or .... CoHI l'UIMllN"' C-y. HO ,,.,., llorlet, llluslr•tlol>s, ••lllorl•I m<ltler or eO. nrtlHmenh "••eln m•r ~ reproduced w11Plqv1 -1•1 ..,.mluloft of topyr19111 o.,.,,.,. VOL. 7'• NO. 71 • APW....,._.. 'DISGUSTING .•• LIES' C•roC Bumett teetHI•• Cre1nation policy approved By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM 09lty Piiot 51•11 In a split vote, the Orange County Board of Supervisors has approved procedures for cr e mating the indigent dead where no religious or cultural opposition exists. Under policies adopted Tues- day. burial will be permitted on· ly in c;ases where it can be de· termined that cremation would violate the religious or cultural beliefs of the deceased. In such cases, burial will be conducted by religious or com- munity groups at their own ex- pense That policy is based on a rul· ing by county Counsel Adrian Kuyper that county s ubsidy of burials made on religious grounds could violate the doc- 1 trine of separation of church and state. Supervisors gave preliminary approval to cremation, rather than burial, of indigents in Oc· tober after learning that the county cemetery districts no longer would provide indigent · burial at reduced rates. About 100 indigents are buried in1the county annually. Supervisors Bruce Nestande and Harriett Wieder dissented wh~ the policies came to a vC/(e. Neslande s aid the county s hould not be in the position or cremating an indigent unless it can be determined the person favored cremation. He s aid cremation was .. generally not accepted" in Judaeo-Christian ethic. Mrs. Wieder said she was dis· turbed by Kuyper's opinion that the county should not provide a subsidy to religious or communi- ty groups who agree to bury in· digents whose beliefs do not permit cremation. "If this group wants special attention. they should pay for it," responded Ralph Clark. board chairman. County official s soon will negotiate with fun eral homes a rate for cremations. Fro•P.,,eAJ BROWN ... lationship" with Orange County, said that his top priority as gov· ernor is to combat the increas. ing crime rate. He also said he is "thinking carefully" about running for a U.S. Senate spot. Guests at the reception in· eluded Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson and Assemblyman Richard Robinson. Three county supervisors -Harriett Wieder, Bruce Nestande and Tom Riley -also were on hand. Following the reception, Brown attended a fundraiser at the Balboa Bay Club for As· semblyman Richard Robinson, a Santa Ana Democrat. Veering auto hits mayor PACOIMA (AP) -A car crashed through the front wall o( a restaurant and into a table where the mayor of San Fernan· do was sitting with his mother and a San Fernando police of- Cicer, injuring the three diners a nd a waitress, police said. Police 'arrested the car's driver, Julio Mendoza; 33, of Van Nuys. Mayor Michael Majera, 31, and officer Aviva Slnderman, 33. were taken to Serra Memorial Hosplt.a.1 where they were treat· ed and released for cuts and brulaet. The mayor's mother, Glady• M.Uera. 56, was kept at the holpital for observation. The waltr.,, who was not identified, said 1he wouJd aee her own doc· tor. Canon comments on Burnett case . ' LOS ANGtLES (AP) -ho membert ol the JurJ beariaa Carol 8umttt'a $10 mUUoa Na· tJonaJ Enqulrer Ubel ault were dlamtued tod•Y after they told the Judie they bad '1eea Johnny Car1011°1 teJev1aed attack on the tablo'd Tuead•Y nltht. calllnJ juron individually lnto hla dlambeta, where attomeya were able to question them out· 1lde the presence of the press and public. Car on's comments before she came to court. ''After wel1hln& the matt.er, the court reluctantly had to ex· cuse theae Jurors because It would seriously Impede the chances of the oartlea to get a fair trial ln this matter," said Superior Court Judge Peter S. Smltb. (Related story Page A5) Mias Burnett, also excluded from the chambers, told re· porters she had seen a replay or "l thought be was wonderful," she said of Carson. adding she hoped that Jurors had followed the Judee's instructions not to watch any TV broadcasts deal· ing with the trial. Choking restaurant • With only one alternate jurol' left to fill an empty chair, at· tomeys for both sides agreed to continue the trial with only 11 jurors. In civil trials, a panel of l2 is not necessarily required. patron's life saved "Every juror and alternate ~ was questioned rather ex- tensively as the result of certain publicity that went on last night on television," the judge told the remaining jurors when he re- turned to the courtroom from the secret hearing. He did not elaborate on the content of the "publicity." "There were a substantial number of jurors who used their common sense," he said, refer- ring lo those who either did not watch the show or turned it off immediately when tl)ey realii.ed tf>e subject matter related to the trial. Jurors are under orders not to watch any TV shows or read anything which may influence them in deciding the case. "I would hope you would con· tinue to use your common sense." the judge told the panelists. B)' OTllVR ll. VINSEL CM ... o.lty Pli.t si.tt A Newport Beach man who keeps informed about emergen· cy aid procedures because of his wife's heart condition is credited with saving the life of a choking woman in a Garden Grove cafe. James A. Thaxton, 51, who was sitting at a table behind Sal- ly Augustine. 60, of Garden Grove, at Jorene's Coffee Shop. said he realized immediately what was happening. Thaxton, a mechanic for the Eddie Hopper Chevrolet agency, said Mrs. Augustine was chok· ing, gagging and pointing at her throat. "I heard the waitress holler 'my God, what do we do?' " says Thaxton, who has eaten at the same cafe for 12 years and happened to be there on hi s lunch break last Friday. Thaxton immediately applied the s o -called H e imlich Maneuver used for people chok· ing on some object. 0•11l P 1101 $~11 PhO\O KNEW WHAT TO DO Hero Jim Thaxton Smith told reporters he would release the transcript or the in. chambers hearing today. He had refused a media request to have one reporter present at the session. This involves grabbing the vir· tim from behind and sharply poking just under th e breastbone. which usually pops out the food or foreign object. \'1lla ~e mobile home:: park. :WO E. CoaM lhgh"a) At the request of attorneys for the Enquirer. the judge began "I had never done it before, so I figured now is as good a time as any and I guess it worked," s aid the sofl-spoken mechanic, who lives in the DeAnza Bavside Fire C&.1pt Joe Chandler. "ho was dispatched to the cris is. said Mrs Au~u!.ltne didn't re· quirt• hosp1talirnt1on &.1 nd he can celed a t·al l for paramedics bt'fore lht•y Pvt•n arri\'ed SOUSA & LEFKOVITS is a whole new concept in the distribution o f men's and women's clothing. We trade with the most prestigious stores and the best manufacturer::. in the country~ But we also deal directl y with yo u -the individual traditional clothing con· sumer. Because you appreciate the cla ssic sryles and the quality chat our clothing rep- resents, we would like you to understand exactly why we can offer you such substantial savings on the clothes you really want. To begin with, we deal in o ne very specific inventory: traditional styles. We don't do speculative buying on trendy garmencs that go out of sryle and have to be sold at a loss. Knowing our market enables us to buy more efficiently. Secondly, we buy in quantiry. As brokers we place huge volumes of high quaJiry gar~ ments in stores all over the counay. Naturally. we face run offs and overages. These we sell at significant reductions directly to the dis· ccming public through our Brokerage. Finally, we feel that an individual whose preference is quality and classic sryling can appreciate the savings represented by our I 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 co bring to the traditional man and woman: A vast inven· tory of the best quality classic and tradinonal fashions, sold in a tasteful streamlined armos· phere, at the most significant savings avail- able anywhere. Tu1dn • 621 South B Sc .. Tustin , CA 92680 (Just behind Hadley's Fruit Orchard) Telephone 714/731-7151 Hours. Monday throu11h Saturday 10:00 a.m ·6.00 p.m liiiiiil Sunday 12:00 noon-S:OO pm Weit Loa Anaela 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd. Wes1 Los Angeles. CA 90064 Telepho~e 213/477-8095 -,._ I • IUICE mil WlONLSOAY MARC.ti P\ 1•it;1 Science 'prey to nDsfits By ROBEaT LOCKE AJlki..c.Wrl!ff ANAHEIM -Science is fall· ing prey t.o ''the cultist.a, the mlaflta and the fools" because aclentiata have failed to explain a nd defend their profession, a Nobel laureate charees. "We have failed to act vigorously in defense of scien- tific trutba," Dr. Arthur Kornberg said Monday. "We have shrugged off rather than rejected forcefully t.be cultllts, the misfits and the fools who erode science." Re aai(\ it is sad that "society, by ienorance, la aa captive to creationists , astrologers, evaneellata, food faddists and all kinds of gurus u were our an- cestors Ctleld captive) by fears of thunder and lightning." The Stanford University pbysi- ciao, who s hared the 1959 Nobel Prize for medicine for research on the material of heredity. was to bave defended the theory of evoluUon earlier thia month at a trial ln Sacramento. The trial ended before he was called u an ·expert witness. Religious fundamentalists bad argued that teachlne evolution in public schools violated the re- ligious rights or their children Irvine hospital? , Firm seeks 172-bed facility By RICHARD GREEN OI , ... o~u, ..... , SU.II A Tennessee-based hospital chain has officially proposed to build a 172-bed hospital in Jr vine. Hospital Affiliates Interna· tional, operators of Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, has filed a "Notice of Intent'' for the proj- ect with the slate Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. A s pokeswomun for the hospital chain said a second and more detailed project proposal will be filed with state health of· fi cials May 8. Meanwhile, lloag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach also intends to announce plans later this month for the development Harbor Cet1ter of a hospital in Irvine, according to Hoag adminis trator Mike Stephens. The constru ction of any hospital in Irvine would have to be approved by stale and county health officials. The filing of a Notice of Intent is the first step in a lengthy chain of governmental review of hospital proposals. In addition t.o the interests of Hoag Memorial Hospital and Hospital Affiliates Lntemational in locating in Irvine, UC Irvine officials and Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital officials ha ve talked about eventually participating in an Irvine-based hospit.al project. Hospital Affiliates lnterna- Two gunmen get $20,000 gems Hazel lngmundson. 72, both of Costa Mesa, then were forced with the store personnel to climb to a stairway landing leading to (See GEMS, Page AZ> tional, which has 157 member hospitals. is the first to file a notice of intent during the recent round of hospital proposals that began with UC Irvine's plans t.o build an outpatient clinic on the Irvine campus. The proposal for the clinic, which UCI offi cials hope to tum into an Inpatient hospital. comes before the UC Regents Thursday in San Francisco. On March 24, the Irvine city staff will present a report to the Irvine City Council, outlining the medical care needs of the grow- ing Irvine population. The Irvine city General Plan calls for the ultimate construc- tion of two hospitals. PreaenUy Irvine is one ol the largest cities in California with no major hospital within its borders, according to Irvine City Councilman David Sills. But Orange County Health Plannina Council offlciab note that while Irvine may be laddna in IJ\edlcal facilltlet, there la an actual surplus of hospital beds ln the greater Orange County area. Therefore, In order to operate an inpatient hospital in Irvine, any hospital would probably have to "buy out" licensed hospital beds in "overbedded" areas of the county. health of· ficials say. and asked thal the biblical story of creation be taught alon1side evolutJonary theory. The Judge rejected those argu- ments, without considering the scientltlc merits of either side. and it.ate attorneys claimed a victory. But Kornberg told a meeting of the California MedicaJ As· sociatlon here that scien ce didn't win. o.11, Jll ... Haft ,,_. 'IN LISTENING MOOD' Governor In Newport Two men who held customers a nd employees at gunpoint escaped from Kirk Jewelers in Costa Mesa's Harbor Shopping Center with what police believe is more than $20,000 worth of jewelry and about $200 in cash. Officers said store employees still are compiling a list of the "selected items" taken in the Tuesday morning holdup that was set up when one of the robbers sought out manager Wyant Bell, 50, to discuss a poss ible purchase. Nameless girl buried ' As the two talked, a n in· vesligator said, the second bandit "burst through the door" bran- dishing a small pistol. The gunman jumped a counter and forced Bell and employees Dora Davies, 50, and Shawn McGrath, 20, both of Costa Mesa, to the center of the store. When shopper Helen Rhoden, 50. also of Costa Mesa. stopped -outside the jewelry store to look at a window display, investigators said, the gunman rushed outside and draged her into the store She and two other customers. Richard McCormack, 44 , and Prime falls NEW YORK <AP> New York's Chemical Bank this af- ternoon cut its prime lending rate by half a point to 17 per- cent. 111111 CUil WllTHIR Increasing cloudiness with 10 percent chance of rain tonight, 50 percent Thursday. Lows tonight -'8 along the coast. 55 inland Hl1hs ThursdJy eo to 66. 111111 TlllY For HOr'f'Jl Brod11, IMre'• no more rfdfnp the mechanical bull. Hu neck '°°' ~ m ,,._ Lo1dm11e Urban Cowboal Sar.~' Page A1. 11111 Thousands drawn to Baltimore services BALTIMORE <A P > -For several minutes, the woman's head was bowed in prayer. As she looked at the body of a little girl ly, ing inside the white casket, her eyes welled with tears. "What a waste," she muttered before moving away. Within hours. St. Pius V Roman Catholic Church here was packed UCI doctors attach man's severed arm A 48·year·old man is in fair con· dition today at UC Irvine Medical Center after doctors reattached his right arm thal was severed when he jumped from a moving train. Luis Rodriquez Leon of Mexico was jumping from a moving train in Brea with a friend Thursday when he fell under the wheels. His arm wasculoffattheelbow. A team of plastic s urgeons employed special mico-surgery techniques during the 12 hour operation. Toby Milligan, a hospital spokeswoman, said it wlll be several weeks before it 1a known whether Leon will re1aln tbe use of his arm. Brea police Lt. Tom CbrtllUan said that Leon and...,.._ man, Delores Calderon, appanntl1 had boarded t.be trala In San Dle10 , h o p ln1 to reac h Sacramento. The two decided to j ump at 2 a .m . after they thoulht that they were headed ln the •ront 4lrec· tlon, said Lt. Christian. Ponce 1aid Calderon went to a nearby bouH for help. When police an1ved they found Leon car1'1lnl bi.a severed arm. Doctor1 Hid that t he train wheel pinched Leon'• vtlna and arteriee shut so that be Iott little blood. He w., transported to tbe medical cent« and rushed into 1ur1ery. with several thousand strangers who came t.o mourn an uniden- tified, abused child. The girl. found four months ago dangling from a chain-link fence, was be· ing buried t.oday. The cause of her death is not known. The mourners streamed into the church all day Tuesday, quiet· ly passing by the tiny body in the casket donated by a local un- dertaker. By nightfall, several thousand had come. "To an angel, from someone who cares," said one card. Another read: ·'God, please find a place in your kingdom for this forgotten child ." There were no seats left by the lime the Rev. Joseph Benintende delivered an emotional, powerful eulogy that had the crowd shout· ing continuous'' amens.'' ''There is not a one of us sitting here that can tell us anything abouttbls child," be said. "Where she came from, why she was struck down in the prime or her life. ·'Perhaps we are angered: perhaps we are rilled with tears," he continued, "but she leaves behind . . . a life that has touched you and me. She cried out to us through death, and each one of us responded. She's touched us, and I think we'rericher for It." The people lined up several hours before the funeral Mass, MONTREAL FOR JllNCEf Loa An1trlea R ama qu1rterback Vince Fer- raaamo 18)'1 there'• very little chance tbat he'll be toAlq puHI at the Bil A next M&IOft. Re'• eJOH to 11plnf • contract wttb Montrea of the Canadian J'ootball Le11ue. Jobn Sevano files an excluaive report on P11e El today. trying to get a glimpse of the girl whose tiny hands clasped a single pink rose. <See GIRL, Page A2 1 Bribery case figure out of country? An attorney for two fired Irvine building inspectors pre· sented a cruise ship's passenger list and an airline ticket that he said prove charges that one of his clients received payoffs are unfounded. De fense attorney Vance Simonds told a s tate ad· minlstrative law judge Tuesday tbe documents show that his client was on a cruise ship in the Caribbean at the Ume city of- ficials claim he took a bottle of liquor from a contractor. In questioning hls two clients during a Cily personnel hearing at City Hall. Simonds also tried t.o show that all city officiaJs can prove ls that the inspectors merely accepted one free luncb and one free bottle of liquor each from a building contract.or two weeks before Christmas. City attorneys are trying t.o show that the men took ; gratultiet of Uquor, food and overtime pay In excbanae for speedy butldlna approvals. A personnel hearln1 into those alle1at.1on1 wUl reconvene April 14 In Irvine City Hall. Bruce Bullard, 50, of Colt.a Mesa, and Arthur Ped. ·51, of Anaheim, requeated the beartn1 before an admlnl1t.ratlve law Judse after th•Y were fired becaute ol the alle1aUona. , A tblrd lnapector, Lowell Shepbl.J'\t, who WH demoted in connecticm with the controver1y, 11 to appeal hll demotion ln a peraonneJ heann1 1tartlnc Fri· day ln City Hall. ' -llllllM llllY NIU 0ind fools' He noted that judicial decision warns schools and textbook publishers not t.o present evolu- tionary theory as an "official dogma taught as if it's beyond dispute." . "That," Kornberg said, "is monstrous nonsense. Evolution is beyond dispute. It's a fact of nature as compelling as gravity." He conceded some scientific d as pule over tbe precise mechanisms by which evolution works, but said the theory itself is beyond question and "the COD· fusion stems from ignorance and semantics" The problem. he said, is the failure of scientists to explain themselves and the nature of science. That failure has serious Impacts throughout society, he added. N ewport v isitor Brown quiet about transit By STEVE MARBLE 01 UM Oall, Jlll<ll 5UIH Claiming he wouldn't have come to Newport Beach if "I didn't have any good news," Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. offered little of that good news when the subject turned to Orange Coun· ty's transportation problems. "I 'm in a listening mood tonight ," Brown told busi - nessmen and local politicians gathered al a reception Tuesday night in the Big Canyon Country Club hosted by the Irvine Com- pany. Brown, who sipped coffee as he answered questions, said he has not reached a decision whether to support a bill to in· crease state gasoline tax by lwo cents a gallon to help finance road projects. "Given the political trauma of the past year.·' said the gov- ernor, "I want to listen t.o the people before considering a new lax." Brown opened himself to some transport.aUon-type jokes when he arrived at the evening recep- tion an boUJ' late. ·'There's a rumor, Governor, that you were late because you got stuck ln a tra ffic jam." sug· gested Irvine Company Presi- dent Peter Kremer. who in· lroduced Brown. Brown offered sympathy to local businessmen interested in unjamming Orange County's frequent traffic snarls. He said he would be willing to adjust truck-weight fees to help provide money for transportation proj· eels. Putting in a plug for an elec- tric car he said he'd recently read about, Brown also suggest· e d that futu re answers to trans portation problems could be eased with use of a high· speed rail system. "I'm interested in that," re- marked the governor, "even though all· the experts say il rioesn"t make any sense.'' He added, "We probably ought to wipe out our three auto com- panies if they don't get moving a little faster." Brown also suggested that the key to mass transit is througb development. He suggested that clustered or high density de·• velopmenls would reduce the need for roads. Brown. who told listeners he was looking for a "deepening re· lationship" with Orange County, said that his top priority as gov- ernor. is to combat the increas- ing chme rate. He also said he is "thinking carefully" about running for a U.S. Senate s pot. Guests at the reception in- cluded Assemblywoman Marian, Bergeson and Assemblyman Richard Robinson. Three county Road jams • to continue Traffic jams in Newport Beach near the Pacific Coast Hltbway bridge are expected to cootlnue this week wblle workmen close off a westbound lane of traffic. The ainll• lane between Bayalde IDd Dover drives will be doled from 7 a.m. to I :• p.m. Thursday and J'rlday. Pollet are a1ktn1 motorllta to t ake other routes lf possible during tbls period or else plan for delaya because of traffic con1eat.ton. The ~dwork ls beln1 done ln conjunction wltb construction -or a new brldl•· The aew bridte will be three Ian• wider than tb4t preaent brtdae. supervisors Harriett Wieder, Bruce Nestande and Tom Riley also were on hand F ollowing the r eception. Brown attended a fundraiser at the Balboa Bay Club for As- semblyman Richard Robinson. a Santa Ana Democr at Irvine Co. to bankroll center plan Jn an effort to help sell its plan to expand Newport Center. the Irvine Company has announced it will bankroll a network of road improvements and launch a share·a nde program at the center The programs are aimed at answering charges that the center expan•lon will create new traffic bottlenecks in Newport Beach. The Irvine Company is asking permiss ion to expand the circular shopping and business center by nearly 25 percent. The proposed project includes a SOO·room hotel, 80,000 square feet of office space, a 165-room expansion of the Marriott Hotel and a new 20,000 square fool shopping and office village. The center plan, projected to bring 6.600 new employees to the center, will be reviewed by the Newport Beach Planning Com- mission Thursday night. But Irvine Company officials ~ early this week released data ' from a transportation study on the center as well as information from a Newport Cen t er economic study. The proposed share-a-ride pro- gram. according to t he study by ATE Management and Service ISee CENTER. Page A2) Mesa bac ks condo unit subdivision Construction of a 244-unit con- dominium subdivision has been approved for about 11 acres at Fairview Road and South Coast Drive in Costa Mesa owned by Nellie Ruth Segerstrom. The City Council unanimously approved the housing project re- submitted by McLain Develop- men t Co. of Newport Beach after the firm trimmed six units from oriltnal plans turned down by the ~ell in December. McClain officials wanted the extra units to lower the sales price on bachelor and some one. be,droom homes to meet "al· fordable" housing standards. But city Planning Com mtasion members recommended to the City Council that McClaln add SO more p arking spacea to t he project, a move M cClain apokHmen said would trim back unit.a and lncreaae sales prices. T he revlaed p roJecl adds . about $2,000 to the co.t of each unit, planners ai>eculate. Lowat prlce bachelor units wlll p for about .-i,ooo and tw0<o~ modelt will fflJ for an ettlmated $127,000. The walled project~ ~ailed "The Streams," wUI uUllae carportl lute.ad ol p,r..-...S la still 1bout llO parkln• ll*M abort ol ctty ordinance f"lulN- 1\enta. ' Th• lf.fQOt •loop Merlln, akippend by Otek Steele, croued tllie lblJP line at e: a uaa. mom.in•· breaklnt all reeOrdi ln the 'nlO·llMle Newpert t.o C&bo SID U.eu yacbtrace. Merlin had held the e lap 1e~ time lead tbrou1hout most of the race. but had dropped to filth in the over.all correct- ed ti me standings Tuesday. Merlin'• speedy flnish re- portedly broke the race rec- ord by nearly 12 hours. See earlier story. Sports, Page E4. Tot bitten by rattler said 'fair' DIAMOND BAR <API An l8·month-0ld boy was in fair con· dition today at County-USC Medical Center after he was bit· ten on the hand by a baby rat· tlesnake that was later trapped by the boy's mother, authorities said. Steven Leibrecht's prognosis was good. according to Dr. Willis Wingert, director of the hospital's venom laboratory. But he said the boy would remain hospitalized at least five days. T he infant was on the back porch of his Iron bark Drive home around 12:30 p.m. Tuesday when the 14-inch snake struck. Dog door admits burglar in Irvine A burglar who had to squeeze through a dog run door to gain entry to an Irvine home has loot- ed it of $3,000 in belongings. the owner told police Tuesday. Carolyn Orla ndo told police whoever broke into her Butler Street home stole a stereo set, pearl and diamond ring and a necklace . accordin g to in - vestigators. ., ta&DDICK ICllOSllS& .... ~ .......... Jn a 1pllt vote, t.be Oran1e County Board ol Supervlaort bu approved procedutea IQr crematJnt the indl1ent dead where no rellaloua Of cultW'al opposiUon esiltl. ~ Under policies ad&pted Tues· day, burial wiU be permitted on· ly in cues where lt can be de· termlned that cremation would violate the religious or cultural beliefs of the deceased. In such cases, burial will be conducted by religious or com- munity groups at t!aelr own ex- pense. That policy is baled on a ruJ. ing by county Counsel Adrian Kuyper that county subsidy of burials made on r e ligious grounds could violate the doc· trine of separation of church and state. Supervisors gave preliminary approval to cremation. rather than burial. of indigents in Oc- tober after learning that the county cemetery districts no longer would provide indigent burial at reduced rates. About 100 indigents a re buried in the county annually. Supervisors Bruce Nestande and Harriett Wieder dissented when the policies came to a vote. Nestande said the county should not be in the position of cre m ating an indigent unless it can be determined the person fav ored cremation. He s aid cremation was "generally not accepted" in Judaeo·Christian ethic. Mrs. Wieder said she was dis- turbed by Kuyper's opinion that the county should not provide a subsidy to reLigious or communi- ty groups who agree to bury in· digents whose beliefs do not permit cremation. ··If th.is group wants special atte ntion. they should pay for it." responded Ralph Clark, board chairman. County .officials soon will negotiate with funeral homes a rate for cremations F,....P.,,.AJ CENTER PROJECT. • • Co .. could reduce peak·hour traffic generated by employees by 50 percent by the late 1980s. The program. projected to cost $250.000 a year. woul<i in· eh~~'t q~r and vJn .pooling, e>C· panded bus service . public transit subsidies. preferential parking for pooling vehicles and free transportation within the center. The Irvine Company has agreed to foot the bill for the program for at least two years. In the future. the development firm claims. the bill would be shared by all Newport Center employers. Report authors ATE, a Cincin· nati firm. claim similar share-a· ride programs have been s ue· cessful in other parts or the country. The Irvine Company also is of· fering lo put in $8 .2 million worth of road improvements around the center. The largest of the road im· prove ments would be creation of the MacArthur Boulevard c oup l et. A s e n vis ion ed, MacArthur between Pacific Coast Highway and its intenec· lion with Avocado· Avenue would carry traffic one way. Avocado. which run• paraUel to MacArthur would carry traf- fic in the opposite direction. MacArthur. be tween its Avocado intersection and its proposed hookup with the un· built San Joaquin Transporta- tion Corridor. would be wideneo by one lane in either direction. Jamboree Road from Pacific Coast Highwa y to Santa Barbara Drive wo uld be widened by two lanes. A new rlght ·hand turn passageway from Pacific Coast Highway to Jamboree also would be con- structed. Irvine Company officials con- tend that an economic study shows that the center expansion will mean an S8 million revenue increase to the city ovf!r the next decade. Combined with what ex· is ts at the center, company of· fieials say the city will earn a total of $25 million this decade. F...-P,..eAJ APWI .......... 'DtSOUSTING ••• LIES' C•rol Burnett te•tlfl•• 72 welfare • • positions authorized The Orange County Board of Supervisors has authoriied 72 positions that officials say are needed to offset the increasing welfare assistance caseload of t he county Human Ser vices Agency As of result of Tuesday's ac· tion. the county will employ by August a total of 668 people whose sole duty is to determine who qualifies for several types of assistance, ranging from Medi-Cal to food stamps. <See related story, Page A3). Board members. however. re- jected a request for the hiring of 50 additional supervisors, who, according to HSA officials, would more closely monitor the e li gibility work e r 's job performance. The current ratio of workers to supervisors is 8 to 1; HSA of- ficials are seeking to reduce the ratio to 6 to 1. They said such a move couJd help the county re· duce its error rate in providing assistance to persons who should not receive it. A bout 90 percent of the cost of hiring the 72 new employees will be paid by either the federal or stale governments . The net county cost would be about $-«,000. The 72 positions, while autborited, will be filJed only as c11elo1d increases actually oc- cur. Yet, HSA officials made it clear in their thick report to the board that the new workers will be required by summer. Supervisor Harriett Wieder. who supported the addition of the 72 positions, led the opposi- tion against the hirin)? of addi- tional supervisors. She said HSA offi cials' asser- tion that increased s upervision would lower the welfare a s· sistance error rate was "not well documented." She suggested that the prem- ise should be tested via a "dem- onstration projeet" in which error rates between eligibility units in which supervision is in· creased and units where it is not increased are compared. HSA officials said they will provide further information to the board in the future on their jus tification for the increased number of supervisorial posts. GIRL MOURNED IN BALTIMORE. • A Catholic service was held because the Catholic church was made available. ·'I just felt sorry for this child,·· said Rosa Ragland. "It was the least I could do is come and pay my respects. . . for someone who was discarded just like a shoe. Thal 's the hurtjng part." The black girl. about 9 to 13 years old, was found in November tangled in the mesh or a fence a lon g Interstate 70 in West Friendship. Her burial had been delayed by the hope her parenta- or someone who knew her - mt1htcomeforward. Noone did. Authorities have not been able to determine how she happened to be on the hhthw ay . A state m edical examiner ruled her death may baye resulted rrom a type of blood disorder similar to sickle cell anemia. The autopsy also revealed signs that she had been beaten. and several of the bruises and cuts were fresh. Police conjecture that the fear of being caught on the fence, or the fear of belng beaten again , may have pushed the blood disorder to a lethal state. "I feel awful about it," said Geraldine Hawkins o f BalUmore. who came to mourn the child. "I guess the parents are afraid to come forward now. But they s hould have been afraid from the start. It was a heartless ihing to have done." ·'I didn't know whether It might have. been someone l knew." said Bill Robinson, a r ecently retired Frederick County schoolteacher. liiiiy Pilat MAINOFPICI Thomtlt P. Haley ...... =:JN.Weed ~ Thomaa KHYll ~Murphlne ~~:c... ~Schulman ~~ ~ttdJt. W '#HI ..., St., eo.ce Meta, CA. ~II ....,_: ... ,_,, GateaMM, CA ..... c.p.,,..,.. ,., °' .... Ceelt "'*lllfllnt ~ ... newt ''°""'· 11111t1r1ti.ns. .-itorlel men.r ., •If.. Vtt11H~lt lltreln me, IN reprodw<ecl wllltOul • ~let ""'"'''"°"of copyrlflll owner. Se<Oflf <1•11 Pot .... peld el Cotle M-.., CellloNlla IUPS ,...,..,, S.-.CrlPllOn n cerrler IA 00 "*'"'''; •• mell t.UO _111.,, muftery dHtlnatlen1 IAOO _ .. ,.., "Unfortunately, she wasn't. It's a very sad thing. I still can't see a family missing a child not saying anythingatall." Funeral arrangements were donated by undertaker C~arles I. Glover, who said he ··would not be able to sleep nights" if he hadn't done something. "l live alone in tbe city," said Glover . "I couJd die tomorrow and someone would have to come forth and see that I got buried properly." GEMS •.. the shop's second noor. The bandits took jewelry from cases and then began binding their victims, invesU1ators said. The nervous duo taped Ms. Rhoden's wrists and ankles and then decided the task was Lakins too long and fied, inveaUgators r"· ported. None Of the vlctlms WU injured. T he band.ill were de1crtbed as Cauculana. The 1unman, about 37, had dirty brown hair, blue eye., 1tood about alx feet tall and wetahed about 145 pounds. Hia companJon, who wore a blue denim lhlrt, blue trouaen and a&Ul(lUHt, weltbJ about 220 poundt, la about five feet, 10 tn- chea tall and •POC'll 1 bu1hy black muat•cbe, pollcuald . Ga~on comments on Burnett case t • .... LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two membtn of the jut)' b•ariat Carol Bumett•• '10 mlllloll Na· tJonal Enquirer libel suit were dismiased today alter they told the Judie they had seen Johnny Carson'• televised attack on the tabloid Tuesday night. calUn1 juron lndlvlduaJly into hlJ cbamben, where. att.omey1 were able to question them out- side the praence of the press and public. Carson's commenlB before she came to court. · Miss Burnell, also excluded from the chambe rs, told re· portel'I she had seen a replay of ''I t.boupt he waa wonderfuJ," she said of Carson. adding she hoped that jurors had followed the judge's instructions not to watch any TV broadcasts deal- ing with the trial. "After weighing the matter . the court reluctantly had to ex- cuse these jurors because it would seriously impede the chances of the parties to eet a fair trial in this matter," said Superior Court Judge Peter S. Smith. (Related story Page AS) With only one alternate juror left to fill an empty chair, et· torneys for both sides agreed to continue the trial with only 11 jurora. In civil trials, a panel of 12 is not neeessarily required. Choking restaurant patron's life saved ··Every juror and alternate was questioned rather ex - tens ively as the result of certain publicity that went on last night on television," the judge told the remaining jurors when he re· turned to the courtroom from the secret hearing. He did not elaborate on the content of the "publieity." "There were a su bstantial number of j~rs who used their common sens~" he said. refer- ring to those who either did not watch the show or turned i~ off immediately when they realized the subject m atter related to the trial. Jurors are under orders not to watch any TV shows or read anything which may influence them in deciding the case. lly UTllVlt R. VINSEL OI -CHllr Plle4 SU.II A Newport Beach man who keeps informed about emergen- cy aid procedures because of his wife's heart condition is credited with saving the life of a choking woman in a Garden Grove cafe. James A. Thaxton. 51 . who was sitting at a table behind Sal· ly Augustine. 60, of Garden Grove, at Jorene's Coffee Shop. said he realized immediately what was happening. Thaxton, a mechanic for the Eddie Hopper Chevrolet agency. said Mrs. Augustine was chok· ing, gagging and pointing at her throat. "I heard the waitress holler 'my God. what do we do?' " says Thaxton. who has eaten at the same cafe for 12 years and happened to be there on has lunch break last Friday O•oly Po lot ~1•11 PllOlo · · 1 would hope you would con· tinue to use your common sen se." the judge told the panelists. Thaxton immediately applied the so -ca lled H e im l ic h Maneuver used for people chok · ing on some object. This involves grabbing the vie tim from behind and sha rply pok i ng just und e r th e breastbone, which usually pops out the food or foreign obj.:!cl. KNEW WHAT TO DO Hero Jim Thaxton Smith told reporters he would release the transcript of the in· chambers hearing today. He had refused a med ia reques t to have one r eporter p resent at the session \'ill age mobtlt> home park. 300 E Coast Highway At the request of attorneys for the Enquirer. the judge began "I had never done it before. so l figured now is as good a time as any and 1 guess it worked ... said the soft-spoken mechanic. who Lives in the DeAnza Bayside fire Capt Joe• Chandl er. who was d1spalC"ht!d to the crisis. said Mrs /\ugusttn<.• didn't re~ quire hosp1t altzat1on and ht' can· celed a call ror paramedics berore they C'\en arrived SOUSA & LEFKOVlTS ts a whole new concept in the distribution of men's and women's clothing. We trade wi th the most prestigious stores and ehe best manufacturers in ehe country. 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Because we don't spend exces.sively on costly displays and fixtures. we don't have to pass those additional costs along co you. We at SOUSA & LEFKOVJTS feel we have a meaningful concept co bring to the traditional man and woman: A vase 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. Tuttln 621 South B St., Tustin, CA 92680 (just behind Hadley's Fruit Orch~rd ) Telephone 714/731 .. 7151 Houn: Mondf thro"'Ch S.turdav 10(() 1 m. ·6:00 p m SUnday Ll:OO noon·SOO pm. Wett Loe Anaelee 2251 South Sepulveda Blvd. West Los Angeles. CA Q0064 Telephone 213/477 .. 8095 . . , Orange Cout DAIL y ptLOTtNedneeday, March 18, 1881 Dow JOnes Final Tax benefits I Thia u the third of a niM·parl SnUI on how to aov. on your 1980 taze1.J 1 If you are an adult son or daughter contributing to the support of your elderly or ailing parent, you are entitled to significant tax benefits -assuming your parent quaiifies as a dependent. A key require- ment for that qualification is that you contributed more than half your parent's support during calendar 1980. lf your parent qualifies, then you. the child, may benefit from this major list or lax deductions : The dependency deduction. Deduction of unreimbursed medical expenses paid for the parent. Dependent care credit, and head-of.household rates if either or both of these are applicable in your situation. The inter - nal revenue Revenu e Serv i ce claimed until a fe w years ago that Medicare payments cov· --~ SYlVIA PDRTfR , z ering a doctor·s care counted toward support. This meant that if substantial Medicare pay- ments were m~de for a parent's doctor bills, the child's own contributions to the parent's support might turn out to be less than half the total support for the year, which included the Medicare payments. This would have disqualified your parent as your de- pendent and barred you from the list of tax benefits above The courts re1ected this IRS view, which finally agreed that neither hospital nor doctor payments un- der Medicare count as support. But the I RS still insists that Medicaid payments, which are payments made by the states, do count as s upport. Now a 1980 lax court decision has held that the lRS is wrong in trying to distinguish between Medicaid and Medicare payments. Medicaid pay- ments are to be excluded from support for the same reasons that all Medicare payments are excluded from support IF YOU ARE involved in a Medicaid situation, be on the alert: • While the I RS still treats Medicaid payments as support. if any or your tax benefits depend on knock- ing out Medicaid as support, the tax court wilJ back you again.st the I RS. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT Touco II'< Clo<o, Co Scllll!J en. ~~T~ F\tPA Mlq Gu• Moton Coton Poenn Konnecolt GullWS1 \ Sonv Corp Aat~tnPur PhlllPMorr IBM WnAlr Lin Ht fOO ''° 100 Jtt 000 461 100 "' 100 U S600 OS.600 • 11 100 Jtf,100 3S7 .100 :m . .ao lU,900 lO•.l(IO ?'11,800 797 iioo UPS ANO DOWNS N.,,,. I FslPa MtQ 2 Transcn Lin J 8aclle wt 4 ICln<K p1 I IC Ind\ •Suon Ind I Nat~ I Fl-I'd\ I~ t~l~,!' It CalthnMnQ 12 GU. Corp • 1l Ttt0n> F't'I U T"°roP pl ISL-• 16 PSEG •.08llf 11 Tm• Corp i.i.me I LH!le Fay 'eon..... J L~BP • l'\Allkll Ind S EmoOE pf/> • OD~CO 1 7 s.dcol l'C f I USAlr 1.1711f ',.,.s .... ' to Aon.,.. 1t lnSllQI ~ a i~t't'!o 14 P~COI 1$ lldQa.t CV pf 1' UtlJlllUll'> pt 17 VffldO Co GOLD COINS J6:1., 141• 10'· , ... SJ , .... , .. , , . ., .1 .. . ,,, S3"' • 1 13'"' •I' ... ... SJ"" 16., 1711. ... 13'"' Sl'l\o "'"' 10 •• Pel. Up 11 J Up IJ.0 Up 17 s Uo 11 I Up 11.6 Up 101 Up 10 0 Up 1 3 Up ,, Uo t • Up IS Up I l Up t l Up 11 Up 7 6 Up I • Up 1 4 NEW YORK !AP/ Prlu• .... T11t~Y 01 001a coin\, toMl>••<td wltll Monday-. i>r•u Krtt .. ,.,.-. I troy O&., \Ut 00, UP su .oo. Meptt ... ,, I lroy 01., U:it.00. UP SU.00. Mulca" SO peso, 1.1 lroy 01 •• S'42.00. uP it•.OO. A11llrl.., 100 crown, ·"°?troy o&., SjOt.00, u1>112.oo. AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YON! IH'l -klM, ,_ -- -~ ....... -~.IOC1--­~ -· lf.Olftg ""'........, •• --~ldfwld (p ISt, 100 1•• • "- UnlvAtvC\ • US,6()0 21'-• '"' lrn~ll A q IOl.000 Mfil. Gr_,.,... • 100 S'"' • IV. Ad-Aes IS 600 Jt'I. I'> Warn.Corr WI IS 100 ""' • .._ FtlrnntOll • 61 • .tOO S1'* • i• Wanca e • 60,100 l6'"' "• h,,.C:h Int SS,100 1' • 1 Mou()llM st.AGO .. ,,.. • V. METALS Due to late transm ission t oday's listing will not appear in the Daily Pilot. S~Y!'o late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Daily Pilot. GOLD QUOTATIONS Ltl>fer1· morntnca fl•l"9 U10 U. up ltl.00, Lor1den : afternoon lt•lnQ \506.00. up $11.H Parl1: •lter.-.. loa1no $SU '1 up U.CU Fr1r1-fwt: 11•1"9 $.511 00. UP 510 .. l11rlcll: lalo allorMOn fixing UOS 00. uo $1100 "°9.00-tCI Har1•y & Har"'•" Oflly dally Quott U0..00, I.IC> SIUS E,,..._., only oa11y quoit U06 oo. up SU.IS E"latl\Wct: only d41tly quote lallrl<.fttd 016 h , UP $13 16 SYMBOLS I • ? I 250-298 East 17th Street Costa Mesa .• SPRING · CONSOLIDATION .SALE MARCH 21-22 Ow LWCJ••t S• Of The SealOft! Values Up To 75% OH • 1ewelry. belts •sleepwear •dresses • 1umpsu1ts • skirts • 1eans •blouses • t-sh1rts •sweaters •slacks • iackets •. and more' Shop early for best selection of styles. sizes ... and values! , Mari-Bey LAMP&SHADE TllOt"S1\~DS OF 1.A:\1 PSllAOES O~ SAl,E MANY REDUCED 50%! ! ! l.ari.:1· tlutt·d ,hadl'S Hel! S49 95 Salt SZ.t.95 Smallt·r rlult•<I \ha<h>i. Rei? S3i 95 Salt Sl8.95 ~am l.amµi. a!\o Oriilllll"\l llY Redured l'Ll'S llundrc·ds of FINIAL."i HI.'~ $10 00 Sale SS.UO 298 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 648·775.1 SALE HOURS: SaL I 0;00 am -5:30 pm Sun. 11 :00 am -<4:00 p Newport Blvd. L lint-a _..An-• - Sidewalk Sale March 21 .& 22 . ' . . TREDS & THREADS Treds & Threads. with the cooperation of Converse. has arranged for Preston Dennard of the Rams. one of the leading wide receivers in the NFL to be at Hillgren Square Saturday. Mar. 21 . 1981 . He'll be giving out autographed pictures and talking with the public. Be· there from 10 am-12 noon or you will miss him C.Ome & meet one of the Rams all time greats. it's on us. .-- Preston Dennard Wide Receiver Our thanks to the Converse Athletic Shoe Company. one of the leaders tn sport shoes tor football. basketball and every other maior sport. SPORT SPECIALS Selected shoes from Nike Ad idas, Converse, Brooks, and New Balan.ce. : . UP TO 50°/o OFF Balls for most sports-Soccer, Basketball, Volleyball, Football UP TO 50°/o OFF Selected Leisure & Athletic Clothing Including Swimwear from Adidas. Lev i. Spooner. O.P., Wrangler, Off Shore, Speedo. UP TO 500/o OFF Items on sale limited to stock on hand-'<111 sales FINAL 541-3323 MH.•Frl. I CM s.t. f ·6 250-298 East 17th Street COST!\ MESA ( i t .. 11t~ ~ • -_1.i ~ I 250-298 East 17th Street Costa Mesa Ft•it t unng • /OUJdl'~ • I 11·rs1111<1/ J • .lulw \/11/t'r ,,.--1 • • C'lom l.11m • S1s.\w' • ('11C11 • .\u e11/1•r\ "" . \de' • Sir ./ut'W.\ • I JJ1>i' r C'ICI" • I 11 y 111111 I I Something Speuial I ( J "1111 111 ( I I (J s} II (} II.\ :!:>II F 17111 <"11~111 \lno ti·l 1 11 JI \\I I' f I I /• ,, , '""fj ~ q f 1111' \ J 1 1 11• I q t •"' .. .~ ,. ~' . ') .-·~r·"' _. St". r F t"tl J' .,V[U4V r , • Pt .. •, l. r S1rHlr'• ...... ,, NEW ARRIVALS 14 K Yellow Gold Re-Mounts START THE SPRING WITH A NEW RING B. Y .0 .G. (Bring your own Gem) Or Use One Of Ours SIDEWALK SALE MARCH 21-22nd Lapidary Equip. 20% Off Selected Jewelry 20% Off Lapidary Demonstration IN STORE BARGA I NS Come In And Look At Our "TURKEY BOX" Sidewalk Sale March 21 & 22 · • -.~· ·-• # ,..~-... • ~ -·" ""·"· ~•rf ;~·..., ._ --,.., •. · •. ' '~..._ ~ & _.··'--'"'C'r":•"-·-· .. ...-11" .... ~~r-~'•.:___ !'11.• '~/f~ • .,-,'--!______;_' " --"'" · --"""'"~:...P._