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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-23 - Orange Coast Pilot----------·------ .IUlll ClllT MO NDAY MARCH ./J l'Hll ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Jobless boxer seeks cash, finds death JOHNSTOWN, Pa. <AP> -. Ronald Miller's relatives tried to talk the S.foot-7 former Marine out of competing in a local fight, but he was unemployed and desperate for the $500 prize money. As Miller zeroed in on bis third opponent in the Tough man Cham· pionship fl1ht, his nose started to bleed and he got sick to bis stomach. Sunday. aner emer~en· cy surgery, the 23-year-old man died of brain hemorrhagin1. authorities said. "I tried to talk him out of it. But he was desperate. He needed the $500. He thought he had a chance, but he was too small," said Miller's father, Robert. Mille r . who weighed 169 pounds, started three bouts at the Johnstown War Memorial. where f ... r --~·.' preliminary competition was held in the Third Annual Tou1bman Championship. The ti- tle fi1ht, scheduled for October int Pontiac, Mich., has a top prize of $50,000. Miller knocked out one oppo- nent Friday night a nd bis first op- ponent Saturday. "The audience went crazy over him . They gave him a complete standin~ ovation." said Robert Law, Miller's urrcle. Miller had been seeing double and had been dizzy after the first bout Saturday. Yet he started the second. Between fights. he complained of fatigue, said hi s brother. Robert Miller Jr. ·'The big man who was running it said to my brother, 'You have five minutes.· My brother s aid, 'I'm too tired. How about ~iving me 10 minutes'?" Robert Jr said. Miller then was knocked down several times, and when his nose began to bleed, the referee called the bout. When the fighter threw up, a doctor in the audience said Miller should be hospitalized. "There's not much question about what killed him," Cambria County Coroner John Barron said. "It had to be ('aused by a blow tot-he head. . ··These guys fight with gloves and they have kidney belts and protection in the groin. but there's no helmet on the head," Barron said. "That's what I can't un ders tand. Even the pros wear:tha1 in practice, and the pros are trained to slip a pun('h When you ge t a 220 pounder throwing haymakers. wow!" IUgitive erueifled ; Ski1•t·wearing father -and he Ukes it kieked off eampus Ide n tities s oug ht • • samm Skirf i 11~ i ssu ._.? Man ordered off campus SAN RAFAEL <AP > A man who says he "always·· wears skirts because they're more comfortable than pants has been told to keep off the San Rafael School District campus , or else. Bill Cushing, a 36-year -old former cons truction worker who says he is neither a homosexual nor a transvestite, acknowledged that he wore skirts several limes for school conferences about his son's prog- ress. -District ·superintendent Car l Couch said he asked Cushing to stay off school property or face possible arrest. "If I were to have him re· moved, it would be because he would be disrupted to the cam- pus ... He could cause problems that interfere with the learning process." Couch said his order banning Cushlng was made in part to protect him from possible harm by outraged students. "l couldn't guarantee safety," Couch added. Cushing compared his prob- lem to women who experienced negative reactions when they began wearing pants. "Women have made their lives more meaningful by free· ing themselves from clothing stereotypes," he said. "I think 111111 CUil lllTllR Low clouds and local fog late ni1ht and morning, then moatly sunny Tues- day afternoon . Lowa tonight 48 along the coast, 54 lnland. Hi1hs Tuesday 70 to 78. 111111 TlllY "Cool Alfnn'• Om.ghler" u OM of f"1e me>VW• Mmmated for but ptchire ot the AcCIMm, Atoardl Oft Morch JO. Sn llw fird fn a HN• o/ rnfftif °" tlw tuma on Pa,. B:f. 11111 Al'#-~ M ::=: 5 ~ ~ '""... .. .......... Al == 1 .: ........ Ct<I ... " o • the same should be true for males ." Cushing said he planned to ap· peal the superintendent's order to the state Superintendent of Public I nst ru ction in Sacramento. 'Crucified' on pole, man having ball ALBANY. Ore. <AP> -A man listed as a fugitive from the Oregon Correctional Institution was found nailed by one hand to a telephone pole today. police said. Albany police dispatcher Kathy Wyatt said officers were notified by the fire department shortly after 3 a.m. that a man was nailed to a pole in the downtown area in this community 60 miles south of Portland. Fire department paramedic Bob Omstead said that when he and his partner arrived at the pole, they found Stephen L. Phillipi, 'n, who not only was nailed to the pole, he didn't want to leave. "We got there and we found this gentleman with his right hand with his palm to the pole with a 16-penny nail through it ." Omsteadsaid. He sald Phillipi said only that he had been ln a fight with somebody and they nailed him to the pole. "He didn't want to go," Omsteadsaid. "Hewantedtostay ri1ht there . He threatened physical harm if we tried to re· lease him. ••A bunch ol passersby were passlng a jug around. They were just having a party.·' Fire thwarts f ood f reeze SANGER <AP> -Offtclala at S.abrook Foocl1, tbe nation's lara .. t fn>Mn food p?Oeellinl plant, ..,...,.. for teaaporUJ refripraUon Uftlta today ln the wake ol a llre lhat wtped out the flrm •• rel\llar rerrtaeratlon. They alto wert coQ&dert.n1 movlnl IOIDe ol t.M 11 million pou.ndl ol trosen broecoll and splnecb ·ln 1tora1e to other plac .. to avotd 1po6lace. TIM fin belu la Stabl"OOlt's en1tne roorn wblch houud 2 GOO-ti.an.pow• .. trlrtc IDcKon l'at raa tefrlttrallon com· ,......... U11 expe«.•t ed uisit ••r Newport Beach fireman chec ks out damage after compact car driven by 59· year-old Rahileh Kaviani of Fountain Valley ended up in livingroom of apart· ment at 1985 Sherington Place. Police said s he lost control of her car late Sunday after pulling into a driveway at the Oakwood Garden Apartments and plowed throug~ a wall and into living room. Nobody was m · ju red in the 11 :45 p .m . incident. George Bush 'not shot' Vice p resident squelches DC rumors WASHINGTON CAP> -It was the rumor of rumors in a city that thrives on gossip, but a Reagan administration official says re- ports that Vice President George Bush had been shot at and re- ceived a minor wound were "withoulfoundation. ·• The rumor had many varia· lions, centering on the Idea that the s hootin1 look place on a Capitol HiU street late one nilrht. "In retrospect, he (Bush) is pleased the ltory is out because It'll probably stop the rumor mlll," Peter Teeley, the vice president's spokesman, said Sunday. Teeley said Bush was told Saturd1y that the W11hin.u>n Post would publish a story on the rumors and that It would suggest that there was no truth to them. "He hoped the story the Post put together would put an end to it,·· the spokesman said. At the White House last week, reporters asked deputy press secretary Larry Speakes If the president was "concerned about the large number of 'rumors" about the alleged incident. Speakes responded by saying he would "check on the president's concern . . . ol the rumor of rumors." Late Saturday, James S. Brady, the president's press secretary. described the whole rumor as belnt "without f OUDd•· lion." So n thi;-ew m o m to d eath ? CORPUS CHRISTI, Texu <AP ) -A man accused of tbro.tna hl1 mother from an el1htb·fioor ho1pltal window whUe lbouUnl "ffallehaJab'' aJ. 111edJy told poUM" bt did It because abl ••wu kMDU\I Jt1ua from Nturnlnt to tbe •orld," of. ftcenaakl. Police Hid lb•J probablJ would ... 1r a peJcbiatric H · .. amlnaUon for the man, whole name bu not been released. Tbt man wu arrnted after Fn1ta Lo,.1 of Mathia wae tooed out lbt wlndow to ber d11tb. He wu found slttlnt on tbt noorottbeholpltalroom, ~ltldon· 11 lD bit •aduwNr ud chaatlnl ''rellpoua atuff,'' polln Capt. Carloa Cavuoa 11td Sunday. . 0. The Washington Post and several Associated Press re· porters who checked on the rumor agreed that it had no basis in fact. The Post said Sunday that the story began when a young woman ran into the street one night last month to help an auto accident victim and encounte red a policeman she knew. The woman, who declined to be ldentifled in the Post story. said the officer told her that the vice pre,ldenl had been shot earlier -a comment the officer later denied ever hav- ing m ade. The woman returned to her home expectln1 to hear or read accounts of the Bush incident. When she didn't she called two friends and told them about whit the policeman had alle1edly11ld. Tbat wu enouth tp put the rumor lnto clrculatlon. RepoiUra who beard the rumor were told It WH falH b1 the local police Secret Service, U.S. Attorney and Bush•1omc.. Tb• nacnor nnally r .. cbtd an 1ntr1 ud cll1btllerin1 Busb, tbt n1w1paper Hid. Althou1b lt w11n1t conduetlnt an lnvetllca· tJoa of tM matt.I' Buth asked the r81 to lntemew Mm about It for llle rteord, the Poltaald. 2 girls alllong • • V I C lllllS LONG BEACH IAP I Polit<' we re seeking public ass1!>lanct· today in an attempt to identify two young girls found s uffor ated in a motel room. The girls, who di<i not a ppe::.r to have been sexuall y a bus~. wer e among fi ve victims of homid des reported here Sun day. authorities sa id The body of a ma n who had been badly beaten was foun<I in a tras h dumpster . the body of another m a n . 1dt!nt1fied 3 !> Gregory Smith. 25. of Whittier. was found fl oatin g off the m a rina jetty here with a bullet m his head. and the body of a third man. wh o appe ared lo have been s hot, was fou nd lying in an alley , Identities of thl' othe r t wo men were not immediately dis<'los•:d by authorities ·A maid discovered the girls' full y clothed bod1 c!'.t at a boul 11 ; 30 a .m . Sunday at the Ra mada Inn on Paciric Coast Highway. One girl sat in a chair the other in bed. and both had pillows over their heads. said police. "There was no indication that they were abused,'. said S~t Ron Carpenter. Sgt. Dick Wood said there was no evidence that th e girls. believed about 7 and 10 years of age , had been b o und or restrained in any way by the slayer. Police were having difficulty identifying the girls. "We have checked with all nearby police agencies," Wood said .. "and no children answer· ing to this description have be<!n reported missing.·· Don Focht, manager of the 105-room motel, said a "single individual" had registered in the room three days before the' bodies were discovered. He would not elaborate. Motel employees did not re member seeing any children with a man who reportedly rent- ed the room1 Wood said. • He said penfODftel of a nearby nl1htclub and other people who may have been In the vicinity wer e being questioned in the hope of developing leads In the case. Serape chokes man THREE ROCKS <AP> ' A farm worker w11 choked to death by bis serape whtft lt lo\ uu1bt ln the power drtve or 1 tractor west of here, Fresno County coroner's office reported. Wlnd baaw th• serape into a 10.horaepower pump on the rear ol the tractor and apun Marin BaraJu around at a fteld near lneratatt 5, authorltlea 11td. s Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mondi~. March 23, 1881 I. a .... i,.,..... Sovieis i11 orbif Mission commander Vladimir Dzhanibekov. 38, left, and .Jugderdemidiyn Gurragcha, a 33-year-old Mongolian, have been lofted into earth orbit and will link with two cosmonauts who have been aboard Soviet space station Salyut-6 since March 12. It's second mission for Dzhanibekov, the first for Gurragcha. Audit alleges new HB fund violation By PATRICK KENNEDY Ot Ille D•ily Piiot St•tl The latest audit of Huntington Beach's federally funded job training program alleges the ci- ty may have to pay back $22.215 spent in alleged violation of gov- e rnment regulations. * * * Ex-director of job pane l surrenders The former director of Hunt- ington Beach's federa l job train- ing program has surrendered at Orange County Jail after plead- ing guilty last week to two felony counts of misusing public funds. Robert L. Cunningham. 35. former chief of the city's Com- prehensive Employment Train- ing Act program, had been or- dered by Orange County Superior Court Judge Everett W Dickey to turn himself in by Sunday. Cunnin_gham will be sent to the men's prison at Chino for 90 days of diagnostic tests and then, come back lo Orange County for formal sentencing on June 16. The former public official, who changed his plea from innocent to guilty last Monday only moments before his trial was to begin, could face up to four years in state prison He turned himself in Sun- day Cunningham was char ged with embezzling $16,000 in federal funds for his personal use. The Orange County Grand Jury had indicted him last October. In entering his guilty pleas in court last week. he admitted to charges lhat between June, 1979, and January, 1980, while working as jobs chief in Huntington Beach and as president of Western In s titute o f Careers, he fraudulently appropriated the money. Prosecutor Dave Himelsonsaid Cunningham us ed the money as a down payment on a new home in the south county. Cunningham later repaid the funds in two installments. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Harts aid the form er CET A director turned himself in to authorities al 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the jail. Cun- ningham previously had been al- lowed to remain free without bail. Court backs abortion law WASHINGTON <AP> The U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that state law may require that the parents or a girl who seeks an abortion be notified. The court's 6-3 decision upheld a Utah law challenged by a girl identified only as "HL." who sought an abortion in 1978 at the age of 15. A doctor recommended the a bortlon but refused lo perform it without notifyi ng her parent.a. as required by the state law. The audit, by Peat, Marwick. · Mitchell & Co., covers the city's Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA> pro- gram from 1976 up to 1979. City officials released it Friday. The latest audit is separate from a much-publicized audit of the city's CETA program for 1979. T h at audit, relea s ed in January, was conducted by Orange County Manpower Com- mission auditor Gerald Salotti after charges were lodged of mismanagement and misuse of funds in the program. T he Manpower Commission audit alleged the city may have to pay back more than Sl 70,000 s pent in violation of CETA reg- ulationsduring 1979. T he three-year audit released F riday identifies S'!_,~2 paid in wages and benefits, and $14,393 of expenditures as disallowable under CETA guidelines. Ben Arguello, chief of ad- ministrative services for the ci- ty, said $22,215 identified in the audit is about three -tenths of one percent of the more than S8 million of CETA funds spent by the city between 1976 and 1979. He said the latest audit ln· dicates the city's accounting system is "good and headed in the right direction." The city's internal controls over CETA expenditures had been criticized by the Ma npower audit released previoosly for al- lowing large, allegedly un- authorized expenditures in 1979, including leases of buildings and purc hases of equipment , furniture and insurance. Those expenditures reportedly were set up by Robert L. Cun- ningham. former CET A direc- tor. to establish a non-profit cor- poration that took over the city's job program in October 1979. Last Tuesday, Cunningham pleaded guilty in Orange County Superior Court to two counts of embezzling $16,000 of CETA funds in June of 1979. Cunningham, 35, had been the city's CETA director from 1~4 until October 1979. Deputies save three hikers By Tbe Associated 'Press Three hikers were rescued by ~s A~geles County sheriff's dep- µties tn two separate incidents in the San Gabriel Mountains, the rescuers carrying one man more than two miles down a steep, rocky canyon to a waiting ambulance. Ronnie Avila . 18, of Los An2eJeii. suffered a broken wrist a nd leg in a fall Sunday in Eaton Canyon several miles northeast of Altadena, said Sgt. Rodney Graham. Avila was listed in sta· ble condition at St. Luke Hospital in Pasadena. Graham said the sberifrs de- partment wu noUfied at about 6 p.m . by Avila's friends and that rescuers found him three hours later. OAANGe COAST Daily Pilat a .. ...,.._.. .. 1141142-N11 ~ AH othef depettmenn 642...u21 ·"' ThomM P. ~aiey ~ Robtr1 N. Weed ,,_ M. Thomas KM¥11 ..... Thoma A. Murphln• ........ r- Cl'lar1-H. LOOI .................. Bemerd Sohulman a..- Car1 Cart*'Mn ........ .._ Ktnnettl N. Goddard Jr. ~~ MAIN Offtel iJO Wetl ..., k ., c.ta MIN , CA. Mell.-.. .... I.MO, C.le ,_.,.,CA ..... Advisers SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (A P> -All 5' American miUtary advlaera promised to help train Salvadoran troops have arrived in the war-torn Central American country . Twelve U .S . Army Green Berets landed Sunday at JI . lopango Airport, the m ain gov- ernment airbase. but reporters were not allowed to question them. State Department officials said last week the American advisers will be out of El Salvador by Sep- tember , but that more would be sent if needed . The civilian-military junta ls fighting leftist guerrillas who the United States contends are armed by Cuba and other allies of the Soviet Union. In fighting reported Sunday, residents near Morambala said guerrillas blew up a key bridge, cutting off the coastal highway near the city. 50 miles southwest of San Salvador. An Army s pokesman said un· identified gunmen fired two s h ots from a bazooka-like weapon at an armored vehicle in which Interior Minister Ovidio Hernandez was riding Saturday in the capital. The armored car was one of three that arrived Friday from the United States as part of the Reagan ad- ministration's aid package. One of the shots caused minor injuries to a m an and his daughter in a nearby car. but those inside the armored vehicle were nc.t in- jured, the spokesman said. The government reported no developments in a major drive against the guerrillas in the mountainous northern provinces. In a homily delivered Sunday at a Mass in San Salvador marking the anniversary of the assassina- tion of Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero a critic of the govern- ment and of U.S. intervention in his country -a priest criticized calls by U.S. priests for a halt in military aid. "l am not going lo discuss the theory of whether it is right or wrong to send guns to El Salvador." the Rev. Roberto Amilcar Torruella said. "What I want to do is denounce the conduct of these persons. who without ever having been in this country. without knowing the roots of our problems ... take options that are so tremendous they can affect the destiny of our country.'· Al'}lilcar Torruella. a eriest in a parish attended bY many of the government security forces. said El Salvador apparently was becoming the scene of an East- Wesl power struggle. •'Perhaps the United Stales and the Soviet Union are playing for power, trying to set the limits of their physical frontiers and their political. economic and military power in the area of the Carib- bean and Central America," he said. Pilots still seek wreck, two Mesans \ Civil Air Patrol pilots concen- trating on the Sierra Nevada south and west of Mammoth Lakes tod~ continued hunting wreckage of a white plane which carriedtwoCosta Mesans. Hopes for Robert Reed and Michael Thompson, both 2S 1md both from Costa Mesa. were dim- ming. They vanished .in the Cessna 210 last Thursday in a snowstorm . Adding to t he bleak prospects is the fact one to three feet of fresh snow fell in the area over the weekend, and temperatures have dropped into the 20s at night. Civil Air Patrol Lt. Col. Lloyd Goodale. search coordinator based at Bishop Airport, said that, in his opinion, no trace will be found of the plane or occupants until the s pring snow melts. Reed, a management trainee with Ralphs Grocery Co., based at their Laguna Hills market and Thompson, aocarpenter and son of Newport B~ach Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson, had been on a two-day ski trip. They left about l p. m. Thursday en route to pick up three com- panions wailing al Bishop Airport despite pleas of authorities at Mammoth-June Lakes Airport not to riik the dangerous flight. Reed had radioed the Mam- moth·June Lakes Airport he was · 1oln1 to hop over the mountains and down to Fresno before 10In1 to 8lshopThunday. Shortly thereafter, contact with his plane was lost. Inmate stabbed LOS ANGELES (AP) -An ln- mate ot tM'-M An1ile1 County JaU wq ltabbed to death by Hotbe:rlnmate while the two men were con.ftned to a "cll1cipU.nary module" uud to contain troubleaome prlaoners, tbe 1herltr1 department Hya. Af'W~ Ba .. •k f o f lie 1ri Ids Stagger, the hawk, flaps its wings and flies away from Steven Leonard of Picton, Ont .. after being released. The bird was one of three hawks freed after they had been cared for by Kit Chubb of Verona, who has been helping injured birds for years. 'Operation Zebra' ·suit High court uplwlds paying lawyer fees WASHINGTON (AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court refused to- day lo free San Francisco of- ficials from paying $45,000 in lawyer fees for people who sued in 1974 over "Operation Zebra," a police manhunt for mass murderers. The court, by a 7-2 vote, left intact decisions awarding the $45,000. City Attorney George Agnost had argued that , under circumstances of the case, the award s hould not have been authorized under a federal law allowing people who mount suc- cessful civiJ rights lawsuits to recover their lawyer fees. Defendants in the 1974 suit were then-Mayor Joseph Alioto, Police Chief Donald Scott. Chief of Ins pectors Charles B~rca. Captain of Inspectors Mortimer Mcinerney and police com· mission members Washington Garner and Marvin Cordoza. Twelve people were killed and six others injured in San Fran- cisco s h ooti ngs between December 1973 and April 1974 in Irvine crash • • • Injures six; I in hospital Six people were injured in a bead-on traffic collision Sunday in Irvine, police said tod_ay. Karen Lynn Baker, 17, of 3152 Irvine Blvd .. Tustin. remains in Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital with a mild concussion and a broken finger. Nurses said the girl, a passenger. is in good condition. The other five were treated and released from the hospital after the 10:32 a.m. smashup at th e intersection of Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road. Officers said the two vehicles collided when one turned left on a yellow light and the other car tried to make it through the in- tersection. what came to be known as the "Zebra" crimes. Each victim was white, and each survivor described the at- tackers as black men. On April 17. 1974, city police put "Operation Zebra" into ef- fect. Within days, police stopped for interrogation a nd frisk se arches some 600 black men who fit spar sely detailed descriptions of the suspected murderers. Two lawsuits were filed to challenge the police tactics, at- tacking them as a violation of the civil rights or those people who were stopped or likely to be stopped. U.S. District Jud~e Alphonse Zirpoli o rdered that t h e challenge tactics be halted . Before the city officials' appeal was acted on by the 9th US. Circuit Court of Appeals , four men were apprehended, convict- ed as the "Zebra" killers and sentenced to long prison terms. The appeals court thus ruled that the case had become moot, and returned it to Judge Zlrpoli. When those people who sued over the police tactics asked for lawyer fe e compensation. Zirpoli ruled that they were en- titled to such an award as "pre- vailing parties." The city officials again ap· pealed to the 9th Circuit court. but the award was upheld Aug. 29. In seeking Supreme Court re· Clouds forecast ove r north state By The Associated Press Increasing clouds a re expect- ed over Northern California to- day . with a chance of light s howers north of Shelter Cove a nd Mount Shasta today and tonight. Riain may spread to Santa Rosa, Red Bluff and Lake Tahoe Tuesday. The snow level w;u be near 5,000 feet in the northwest to 7 ,000 feet at Lake Tahoe. view. Agnost argued that no award of lawyer fees should be made "without a meaningful right to appeal." He said that under the circumstances of the case. the city officials never had a chance to defend the police tactics and have Judge Zirpoli's injunction overturned. Justices William H. Rehnquis t and Byron R. White dissented from today's court action , voting instead to overturn the 9th Circuit court's ruling. Sniper given 2 life t e rms in slayings SALT LAKE CITY <AP> A defiant Joseph Paul F'rankhn was sentenced today to two con 'iecutive terms of life imprison ment on federal civil rights violations in the sniper deaths of two black joggers. The judgt also denied a-motion for a new trial. The sente nce was the max imum penalty under the law and the proceedings were interrupt ed when Franklin. an avowed racist. rushed toward the bench and had to be restrained and wrestled to the floor by 10 marshals. The outburs t came afte r Franklin told U .S . District Judge Bruce Jenkins. "This whole thing is a farce." He also called the prosecutor s in the case, "a trained monkey" and "a faggot." Prior to sentencing, Jenkins denied a defense motion to grant a new trial for Franklin, 30. or Mobile AJa. Franklin . also charged by authorities in two other states in the slayings of three black men and one white woman, WfS con- victed March 4 by a federal court jury of violating the civil rights of David Martin, 18, and Ted Fields, 20. They were shot to death Aug. 20 near Liberty Park while jogging with two white women. ------------------ At the Garage ... 10°" cotton IZOD ~ LACOST'roxford dress shins in a rainbow of colors ' I / ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISL.ANO NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 ' .. -.... ----··--···-···· ... ,·-·· ......... -. __ ......... -·--------------· ... ······-. .._ .. .. ·o~ime a hot issue Bills burgeon in Capitol SACRAMENTO <AP) -The. ne w crime statistics for California are awesome : Burglary up lD percent since 1979, rape up 11 percent. homicides \Jp 17 percent. rob· bery up 18 .per<'.ent.. anti-crime legislation up about 175 percent. Fighting crime is the hottest, most popular political issue of 1981 in the Catifornia · Legislature: About 350 pieces of legislation, one bill out of every five thrown in the hopper since last Dec. 1. involve either stiffer criminal penalties; changes in arrest. bail, trial, parole or probation procedures. or other anti-crime proposals. That Oood of law-and-order legislation compares with' about 125 to 150 s uch measures pro- posed in the first three months of the 1979-80 legislative session. Politicians of both parties ar:e crowding onto the crime-fighting bandwagon, from Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and Republican Attorney General George Deukmejian on down. So tar. at least 67 of the 120 mem- bers of the Legislature have in- troduced anti-crime bills. "Crjme has become an in- tensely political issue." sav$ Officials· warn~ng of tornado apathy WASHINGTON <AP ) Weathe r and emergencv of. ficial:; are hoping the extrem ely low tornado death toll last year won't lead to public indif- ference as a new twister season gets under way. "It is vital that people not re- lax their vigilance against these ,1 destructive storms. If they do, we couJd witness an unwarrant- ed number of -casulaties,." warned National Weather Service Director Richard E. Hallgren. Last year. tornadoes killed 28 people in the United Stales. That is well below the annual average of 177 fatali ties and is the second lowes t annual toll since 1916, when the National Weather Service began keeping s uch rec- ords. But that doesn't mean 1981 also will be a hght year. "The nation's experience with tornadoes has taught us that they may strike anywhere at any time. Individual c itizens and com munjties must be prepared to take shelter if a killer tornado approaches,·· said Bernard T Gallagher, acting director of the Federal Emergency Manage- m ent Agency. Ga llagher recalled the torn adoes of April 2 3. 1974 , ··which required presidential major disaster declarations for 10 s tates one weelrend. Hundreds died and hundreds of millions of dollars were needed to rebuild. ll could happen again." For the people of Grand Island, Neb., it wasn't· such. a mild tornado season last year, Hallgren pointed out. Seven twisters hit that community June 3, killing five and causing an estimated $300 million in damage. Major tornadoes also struck last year in Kansas, Iowa, In- diana and Pennsylvania. But the all-time worst out· break. according to the weather service, took place March 18. 1925. That twister gowged a 220-mile path through southern Missouri. Illinois and Indiana. killing 689 · The lowest annual death toll in National Weather Service rec· ords was 10 1972. when 27 died. Last year's figure of 28 deaths was preceded by two other below-average tornado death tolls 53 in 1978 and 84 m 1979. ~The low tornado death rate last year can be attr\buted. in part, to the occurrence o( only fi ve major killer tornadoes. compare<J to 20 in an average year ," said Frederick P. Ostby Jr .. director of the NOAA 's Na- llonal Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City Other contributing 'factors. he said . "incl ude the NOAA tornado watch and warning pro· grams1 local spotter groups and the tornado preparedness ac- tivities of the FEMA. Democrat Terry Goggin of San Bernardino, new chairman of the Assembly· Criminal Justice Committee. "In recent weeks. politicians at all levels have been scrambling to establish their positions on thls issue.·· 0( course the numbel' of bills introduced on any s ubject has little to do with the number or measures enacted .. or with the effectiveness or impact of the bills which become law. And th'ere is enormous duplication among the bills introduced so Tar this year. But the volume of anti-crime legislation is a good measure of the political prior ities of the Legislature. And that, in tum, is a good predictor or areas where in ajor legislative changes can be expected. ·'Crime Is the No. 1 issue of. 1981," Brown says, promising among other things to provide $40 million in the coming year for new county jails and an addi· tional $27 million for new st ate prisons The Democratic governor said he wants to see t o ugher penalties for iuvel)iles convicted of violent crimes, and that he would support a proposal to give judges the authority to deny bail to persons they believe may be dangerous . Most of the anti crime bills before the Legislature this year lack the symbolic impact of the death penally battles of previous years or the simple. black·and- white alternatives of mandatory ·prison terms for us ing a gun in the comm1ss1on of a crime The anti-crime bills this year tend to be more technical. aimed at plugging alleged loopholes in the Jay,. lc•ngthcnmg sentencl's and making it harder for _dl· fense attorneys to delay trial!. or get evidence thrown out 011 grounds it Yta s im properly gathered during an arrest or se;,1 rch "The principal problem 1s no longer putting tougher sentenc ing laws on the books,' Goggin says, citing a long hst or Lough sentencing bills enacted over the past three years. "The problem now is to get more conv1cllons," which mvolves many technical or subtle changes in the laws m - vol ving searches. evidence and rights of defendants However , longer sentenc:es have clear voter appeal, and are politically among the mos t popular anti-crime measures. 'Real . . ' embarra,ssment $1 million suit fil e d in NB drug arrest By STEVE MARBLE Ol lh• Dally P•l•I Sw tl Former parking valet J erry Thomas Wynne says he was walking the car lot, wailing for business at the Newpor t Beach restaurant to pick up when the drug bust went down. "All of a sudden this guy comes running around the comer pointing a g un a t me," recalls the 28· year-old North Car olina native '·He put the gun to my head and pushed me against the wall. He said he was going lo blow me away if I moved." Wynne, a part-time flight in· structor, says it Look several seconds before he realized the man with the g un was a plainclothed 'policeman The July 3 drug bust, which resulted in the seizure of 83 grams of cocaine and the arrest of a restaurant cook who now face s felon y charges. cost Wynne 24 hours in jail. He says it cost him a lot of embarrass- ment too. Wynne claims he was only an innocent bystander w ho hap- pened to be standing i!l the ·wrong place at the wrong time. Fullerton police. who conduct· ed the drug swee p · in the rear parki n g lot of Dillm e n 's Restaurant, say Wynne was ar- rested but never charged with an y crime. Represented by Santa Ana at- tor'ney George Chula , Wynne has file<;! a $1 million lawsuit against the c ities of Fuller ton and Newport Beach. The suit nam ed 12 policeman, mostly Fullerton officers, and seeks damages for false arrest and imprisonment, infliction of mental and emotional distress Oally Pil•I Swtl Photo , FILES LAWSUIT Ex-valet Wynne and assault and battery. "It's been a real em harrass· ment to me,'! says the soft. speaking blond man . ··Even when I tell people what really happened, l get the feeling they don't believe me. "In this country you're sup- posed to be innocent until proven guilty. But in the general public's mind, it seems like it's just the other way around." Police in both cities say 'they can't discuss the case because of the lawsuit. One Fullerton investigator, after being told Wynne's Vt!rsion of the incident, said "some of it is similar lo our report, aome of It lsn 't." "'''ltl //Jtt11Ji119 The Dally Pilot wants t.o hea r observatlona from lt.s re~ders -partteuJarly comment.I about the paper i'"lf. ll'1 easy to tell us your views. Juat call the number below and your meuaae will be reoorded. Metaa1es wUI be t.ranacrtbed several tlmes dally and deUvered to the desk of the appropriate editor. No clrculatlon calls, pteue. · Tell ua what'• on your mlnd. The num ber la ln Hrvice 2'4 hourt a day, 1even days a week. 842•8088 He said he couldn't go twyond that. Newport officials s tress lhc July· 3 incident was a Fullerton case that happened to take place in Newport Bearh Fulle rton police say this 1s true, that Newport simply pro,·1tled backup support Wynne. who says he sold a flight instruction bus iness he owned and operated m Colorado before moving to NC'wport. stat- ed that the whole episode started around 5 that summer night "I'd JUSt shown up for ~ork and was wailing around ror 1t tQ get busy." recalls Wy nne fie says the lot was practically empty . A fellow employee was silting in a Camaro with another man. Wynne says, ·1 was mind- ing my own bus iness " lie says the restaurant worker got out or the car, walked over and asked him 1f he could change a $100 bill "So I did. I always kept at least that much ch<inge on me when I was working the lol anyway. People always were as king for change and I was get- ting tips," s ays the ex·parking valet Wynne claims he handed lhe employee five $20 bills and didn't think anymore about it. He says he was walking back toward the board where the keys were kept when the action started. "I honestly didn't know what the hell was happening,.. says Wynne. "There were at least 12 policemen. only a couple in uni· form. They handcuffed me and I could hear them arguing whether they were goin~ to cul me loose." Wynne says at one point an of· ficer pushed a gun into his cheek and said "If you move two more inches this gun will be in your mouth and I'll blow your head off.'' "I didn't move," Wynne says, adding that he was pushed In· side a police wagon and then thrown up · against a wall by another policeman. He claims he was questioned and over- heard more converaalion about releaslng hlm. ''The other auy lrom the restaurant was on , the around, handculred,'' Wynne explains. "That's when I realised the other llzy In the car. had been. a policeman -an undercover IUf." ~ .- Orange Coast DAIL v·PflOT/Monday, March 23. 1981 .... -·--. ·-• • ,.,.,, .... ta WEEK AFTER WEEK, VOLUNTEERS SCOUR ATLANTA FOR CLUES TO SLAVINGS Dog handler and hli charge probe deep wood• near ctty'a auburbt Atlanta: painful search D eatli p robe afflicte d b y f rustra~ions ATLANTA t/\P t The hunt for the killer!> of 20 bla<'k children is a setn•ttVl', sl'eming- ly disJointl'd S7,700 a da) tffort in sc<trl'h of a suspt>c·t or l wo, or 10. ur m ... vtw l'\'en 20 An orgJn11Jl111nal n 1 g ht m ... r l'. · · ., a 1 d T 1 mu th~ Dowd. the• n:t1n·d !"t·.,.. York ('1 ty cletcctin• who lt·d the inquiry that C'fa<'kt•d tht• Son of Sam c·asc, a series of unt·xplatncd at liH'k!'i that ll'ft !'!IX Ql'<ICI and :-.t>\ l'n y,.oun1kd 111 I 97fi 1!177 The\ 'n· no t'losl·r no.,.. lhJn lh1:v "'~·re 1n Ja11uarv ." :-.;i1d an FBi !'!OUrct· ramil1ar \\ ith lhl' in qu1r~ Although t\tlant;1 l'uhlil' SJf(• t ~· C"omm1ss1om•r Ll'l' P Broy, n a·s~erl:-., "Wt kno\\ a lot murl' no"' than ""<' dtd a <la~ ago, •• week <igo or a month ;_igo," hl· acknowledgt>s lhl'n· s no hrc·,1k in sight, e\'en ID l WO (':JSt'S IO which relall\es ar<' :-.us pend1·d "What we m•cd mo:.l 1:-an eyewitness." said Brown. who oversees the 80-membt•r ta~k forc e investigating the unsolvE:'d deaths of 20 black children and the disappearances of two others in the past20 months The investigutors hu.ve nearly as many causes of death as they have bodies; one victim was s hot. two were struck on the tread, one was stabbed. four were suffocated and six were strangled. Six bodies were so de composed that 1n\·est1gators d on 't know ho\\ the c hildre n died In a public relatums sense. lht· task forct> 1s doomed lo at least short tt•rm failun• Onl' prol.tlem, Brown sav:-.. 1s that "c•n·n if wt• catch :-onwone respons1 ble for some or the killing:-, the sean·h will not be o\'er · Man~ invcst1g<1tor:-. f Pt•I lht•re ar<• as many a!'. 10 killers And dc:-.p1ll' ev1d~·nt'l' such a:-:-.1milar fiht•rs in o;l•\cn cas<•s . Rro.,..n sa111 1n an intl'r\ll'"' there Yt as no C\'ICIC'ncl' lo rult· nut the poss1bil1t) that all 20 killings were unconnt•<'lt'd lthough then• 1s a \\ ldt·I~ puhlic1zl'd agrt•l'mcnt amoni.: la"' enfort·ement JUr1Sd1<:l1ons lo coordinate dfort:-., a II is not W<'ll in the downtown building lhal houst:s the Atlanta M ctropolitari Task fo'ro cc on M 1s sinJ.: and Murdered Childn.•n. /\sid<' from the• problc>m:-nf mu)tiplc mysteries. multiple JUr1sd1C't1ons and multiple mt•d1<.;al cxamtnl'rs, the task forl'e which has spent about SI million since 1l was formt•d la!>l J ulv has other troubles It ha~ had three commanders Critics -.a) 11 only recently ac quired t·no.u~h expcrienct•d the nation's murder capital, to reC'ord a 13 percent decrease in homicides last year, with 200 The police rate for "clearing" horn 1C'ide cases in 1979 was 69 percent, four points below lhe national <iverage. : The tas k force ha s 26 t1·lc·phonl' lines for .a 24 ·.hour Ma11y rnvestzgators feel there are as many as 10 killers And despite> evzdence Brown sazd there was 110 evzdence to rule out the poss1bilzty tha! all 20 kill mys werC' Wl<'mmected h11m111dc 1nvt·-.t1gators And t hl•rt• s ... tcrt ain 1 rr1tallon among memhers over µay Most cril1c1sm has been hurlt·d at Hrown, wh1J rouLLncly rl·ru:-.es 10 comment on the 1r. qu1ry lie says of thl• silent treat mcnt. We're prepared lo take our lumps on that " The 43·Vl'ar old Aro"' n has what l.)ow°d calls the toughest JOb in Amt>rica today. and he has spent his hfe prepann~ for 1t. He has master's degrees in soc1olog~ and criminology H e a doctorate in criminology. lie has worked as a street cop and co ll ege professor, and in Oregon. as a sheriff and county justice services director Atlanta. with a population of 456.200. has cnme statis tics that a re not alarming compared lo other big t•1ties ll rebounded, from 1979, .,.. hen ll .,.. as dubbed hotline Somt• 150 to 200 calls are· recc•1 \·cd dally with tips or clues. When a name is added to the list ur a bodv 1s found. telephone lint•:-jam· In one such week, 7,000 calls wc•re recorded. Brown said The special force which has imported homicide experts and been aided by the FBI, 1s not working a lone /\ $100,000 reward has been of- f cred. New York's Guardian Angels are in town. Volunteeni hold weekly searches. A psychic was brought in et police ex- pense. and dozens have come on their own. Brown says tips from 1.500 psychics have been com- piled for computer analysis All to no avail. But. adds Brown. who has been working. non-slop. 18-hour days "Our efforts are untiring, and we shall <'Ontmue. ·· British intelligence chief double agent? LONDON <AP1 Legislators called on Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher·:,, govl•rnmcnl today for a statement on allega- l1o ns that the late Sir. Hoger Hollis. a former head of British coun- ter mtl'lligenC'e. Wat; s uspected of being a Soviet "mole" and p£'rhap:-··the mo:-.t damaging spy in history ·· llol11s was, d1rector-geoeral of the M 15 counter-intelligence wrv1n• from 1956 to 1965 Tht• Dally Mail newspaper said today that following his retire- mt•nt, Hollis was strongly suspected of having worked for the Sov- iets but he d1l'd m 1973 before investigators could prove anything As somt' legislators demanded a statement in Parliament by Mr:. Thatchc•r. a spokesman for her oHice said: "We have noted the· report but have no comment We don't make comments on secunty matters .. the hzaf roll ... our claseic pmrrr gort.s graat with )U-'t a'c:o.A, (l'V2.rylli~ _ includ~. c casuol ~ts or d~ddhiaj. . from ( 'OLl·:·J ft\/\~ m 2 c.ola-e, vint..egz. wim and blacl< r _..,. ____ ............ ... ........... --.----....... -;.;-~;-;i-~-;;-;-;,;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ila•••••••••••••••••••"'"••------------------------------------ I . Trail to sainthood ALONG THE MISSION TbJL: Every year about this Ume, when Mission San Joan Capiatrano draws considera. ble attention because of the swallows' return, some thought Is given to honorin& the mission founder And t\'s a good thought, too. He was, of course. a Franciscan pries t named Junipero Serra, who trekked the length of California, founding missions and aiding native Indians in the 1700s. When Spain began it:i occupation of Alta Calilornla Father Serra joined b.)' the expedition of Gaspar de Portola and on July • 16. 1769, founded the ,._ ~ii~~ s;nti~e~~.ing, Mis-TOM MURPHINI ®~' It s easy to r e· .,, member when the good padre founded "The Jewel of the Missions" at San Juan Capistrano. That was in 1776, a year strongly linked with the birth of a nation IN MANY CALIFORNIA circles of Roman Catholic leadership, sainthood has been advocated for Father Serra. The first step toward such canonization by the pope, however, is beatification. The cau_se for beatification of Father Serra began 47 years ago. IO 1934, under leadership or Father Maynard Geiger, OFM. archivist for Mission Santa Bar bara. He gathered all the written material a nd wrote two volumes on Serra's life. Then there was a hearing an 1950. Beatification is a very f~rmal process, with a trial like hearing held before the. offl~e of the Roman Catholic Curia. The bishops of California ple<1ded Father Serra 's case. The process even 0 .. 1, PolOI Stall PllOto Statue of Sena with Indian lad at M13$1011 San Juan Caputrono in rnl"es a de\'il's advocate < 1f you'll pardon the ex· press1on1 who tried lo quest ion the saintly qualities of the good father and mission founder According to som e Cal1'olic sources. one of the prob- le ms with Padre Serr a's candid<1cy 1s a lack of proven m1raclt>s LEGEND HAS IT, however. that Serra foi.1nded each of his m1ss1ons within one day's walk of each other Judg· 1n ~ the distance between some of our missions. the padrC' must have been one whale of a walker '.'t1 aybe that alont' could count for one mir.icle Th<1t aside, the re is some anticipation that Father S<:'rra may soon take the first step toward sainthood "0llR BISHOPS OF California have recently peti tioned Rome on behaH of beatification a nd sainthood for Father Serra ," reported Father William Krekelberg. who is archivist for Mission San Juan Capistrano. Meanwhile. it is known that Timothy Cardinal Man· ning of Los Angeles recently met with Pope J ohn Paul II ~n the island of Guam and there were certain prayers said in our state that the Serra question might have been dis- cussed There were also som e report!> that Cardinal Manning r ece1vt'd an official telephone call from the Vatican on the question of Ser ra's beatification recently to suggest that "something is going on '· Cardinal Manning has said nothing on the i.ubJCCt, however IT IS KNOWN that th(• pope plans an offt c1al visit to California in the not loo distant future and 1l would not be unprecedented ror an announcement of beatification to come at the same time as such a v1s1t by His Holiness. If Serra 1s elevated to the first step toward sainthood, he would lhen be known as, "The Blessed Father Serra " And that would be blessed indeed for all Cahforniari s mt.erested in the rich heritage of the Golden Slate \. . Agents, volunleera guard buildings on, near campus FORT WORTH <AP) -The atmotpbere at Tena Chrlltlan building are signs offering a $5,000 reward for information leading Unlverslty is tense as firefl1hten and poUce patrol the oak·llned to the arrest ot the araonlsta. campu.e around the clock. on the lookout for suspicious characters "No one can gel any work done because we're all eyeballing who might be connected with five deliberately set fires. every sneaky character that walks by." said Sally Bohon. Although the university's 6,000 students are on spring break secretary of the university's honors program. this week, the campus security rorce baa been more than doubled. Deli~rately set blazes erupted ln the past nine days tn the Federal agents and citizen volunteers i uard buUdln1s on and off scien« building, the art and .music buildinc and the Baptist Stu- campus, and ldentlflcalion is required on campus after dark. dent Union on campus. and in the University Christian Church. One observer ~aid , "The psychological orientation of these guys Dorm visilatiop has been suspended and tights burn alt nlgbt could be anything. It <'Ould be revenge, someone doing it for kicks. tn academic buildings, which are locked at 5 p .m . Posted ln every anything." · Cancer technique 'proJDising' CHICAGO (AP) -Japanese physicians have invented a new way to deliver powerful doses or anti-cancer drugs directly to a tumor. a method which American doctors say has "considerable potential." The Japanese described the tec hnique which they call "chemoembolization" -in the Journal of the American Medical Association. In a separate editorial, JAMA editors said the technique "pr e- sents an inter esting concept with considerable potential'· in cancer treatment because It attacks tumors in two separate ways. DOCl'ORSAT Akita University School or Medicine encapsulated tmy doses of a virulent anti· cancer drug called mitomycin into cellulose capsules tiny enough to pass through the bloodstream but lodge near the tumor site. Then, using a catheter, doctors squirted the capsules into arteries at the site of maLignant tumors in 56 patients suffering from severaJ types of cancers. at two-to five- week intervals . Pre liminary results appeared to be impressive. "Substantial tumor reduction of greater than 30 percent in measurable max- imum diameter was found in 65 percent of the tumors," the report said. IT ADDED that 80 percent of the patients who underwent the treatment noticed a decrease in pa in a nd that the technique "facilitated" tumor surgery in 82 percent of cases when used before the operations Thirty.seven patients. who un- derwent the experiment from March 1978 to December 1979 re- main alive, they said. Doctors said the technique ap· parently worked in two ways : it directed the drug used to be twice as high as normal ; a nd the capsules also tended to cut orr blood flow to the tumor, depn ving it o r oxygen and nutrients . The cellulose shell acted as a lime-release capsule to deliver drugs more efficiently than in the bloodstream. they said. Yet the treatment was not without side effects. Symptoms included varying degrees of blood toxicity, local pain and occasional high fever. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Free ride Cruising along by the shores of Bachman Lake in Dallas are David Halston, of Switzerland, left . Susan Ralston of Dallas. and Robert Heye of Lubbock. Texas. who take advantage of windy conditions with roller skates and an umbrella. Balanced budget pushed WASHINGTON <AP> House Democratic leader Jim Wright of Texas broke with House Speake r Thomas P O'Neill Jr and other top De mocratic leade rs and called for legislation re- quiring a balanced federa l budget by 1984 . Wright joined Minority Whip Trent Lott, R· Miss .• and conservative Rep. Phil Gr amm. D· Texas, m announcing their sponsorship or a bill to permit deficit spending only in wartime or during other national emergencies . .. It's time lo have some drastic surgery." Wright said. He acknowledged he hadn't made much headway in pers uading O'Neill or other top Democrats Lo go along with the forced balanced· budget approach a move generally associated Coalition's demise predicted EAST LANSING <AP> with Republicans in Congress Wright said he was sponsoring the bill "as an mdividual" and not as a spokes man for the House's Democrati c ma1onty. He said he unsuc cessfully tried to sell Democratic leaders on a similar balanced-budget bill in 1980. Wright call rd the issue non.partis an and added that his bill. 1f enacted. would also force President Reagan to make good on his promise to achieve a balanced budget by 1984 "This is not just a pious platitude or a concept in Jell·O, .. Wright said . The legislation would require the president to begin the process by submitting the first balanced budgel in Ja nuary 1983 for fiscal year 1984. which begins Oct. 1, 1983. Winter slams Virginia A Mi<'higan State University professor says the conservative re- I 1 g i o us coa l ition represented by Moral Majority reached its peak of power in the 1980 presidential election. He predicts it will br eak apart into factions within two years. It contains "basicaJJy incompatible elements." says Milton Powell, a specialist on religion in American history and author of a book on the subject. 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SI Edmol\IOll >• I »n Gt l>fi.t " M) Montr .. 1 4l JO S.nl• AN 12 SI 011•-· 0 JO SAnla Bl'O-rt •• S• 10 Rtoin• JI ' S•ni. M41ri. u s. lJ lo•on10 •• n S•nl• MoniO •• s. Vtn<Ou-,, ,, OJ S10<kl011 •• •• Wlf\l\l"Q >• ,. hllOeV .. lty .. JJ TMrmt f tl st ......... .: ... , ....... ...., ........ Htlvl\1 111 IMl Ptfloel 111 '9<0M\ Swrf ...., ..,. •-n SwtH lwell ..., .. ...... ...... ~ Ave ...... 01, t11me , l 10 l J WiW ~ni· MOl\l(f I J 10 , J WSW ••g:t I • " 1 l w Siii' Itel C:llUllly J u l J w 01111M11 •or rww•r. Lin,."""" He s ays t here in- evitably will be splits between new and old con- servatives as well as con- flict among r e ligious groups which temporari- ly had suppressed dif- ferences during the cam· paign. "T,he religious tem- perament represented by Moral Majority is op· posed lo compromise." he says, predicting the breakup will be triggered by disappointment in President R eagan , a "comprom iser and a pragmatist." The stability of the group also will be hurt by the switch from a de· tensive to an offensive posture, now that victory is sensed, Powell says. ''T h e d yna mi cs of politics says that coali- tions hold together better if they're on the de- fensive. They're less like· ly to fight among themselves." Firms to pay HAYWARD (AP) - Five companies have agreed to pay for clean· in1 up alle1edly toxic wastea discovered at a dump alon11\de San Franclaco Bay..t olflclal.a uy. State othclala or- dered the removal of •bout 600 b arrel• o chemlcall from tbe dump operated b1 Bl Al's Super Service In Hayward. . ....a~~~~~~~~~~ ,, , . ·-·--.. ,., ................. _____ ,. _ _...._.....__ -· .... ... -- Our exclusive sport shirts in cotton gingham The gingham s hirt has long been a favorite among Brooks Brothers men. We offer these cot- ton ginghams in Tattersalls of blue/black, red/ black, gold/black, brown/blac k-and in small c hecks o f navy, gold, red or blue, on white. Button-down collar, so it is correct worn with a tie or without. Sizes 14 '12 to 16Vi. $31.50 Use your Brooks Brothers charge account or American Express. ISTAIUSHID 1111 ~~~ ~IX~ Furnlsblng!l tor llitn . Womm ~·B oys )30 WBST 711i STREBT. LOS ANGBLHS, CALIF. 90014 FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEAOi 92660 ...... __ ...,.. ___ ............. _ .... --.. #o I ,,.. . . .. . . . -, .... , .,. -~..._. .. ____ _ ____ , Orange Coast DAILY ptLOT/Monday, March 23, 1981 s 41 • Tauntillg teens tu17i adults into vigilantes . PETALUMA <AP) -Resldenta of one neighborhood bere say harassment by youths Ls ao terrible they must act as vi1ilantes, but police say the teen·ageu' antics near Petaluma High School are no worae than in any other part of Ws normally quiet city 40 miles north of San Francisco. Sharon Hoyt, a '2·)'ear-old mot.her, says she reelJ bad about 4 recent shooting incident which resulted in her being booked for ln· veatlgation of assault with a deadly weapon. "Violence is never the answer," says Mrs. Hoyt. "I just fell a total sense of helplessness when we had these visits in the night and nothing was done lo help u.s . . . "We bad tried every means available to us, but the harass- ment continued and continued and continued," said Mrs. Hoyt of the shooting incident in which Richard Denny was woundf'd with " .22-caliberrifleallegedly fired from Mrs. Hoyt's garage. Two or Denny's rriends were arrested the n-ext day after they aUegedly tried to run down one of the Efoyts' 10 chifdren. Petafuma Punch • 1979. Punch Pubis llo " ... and even if we catch the poachers red -handed, the fine for nicking a Peregrine falcon is only a hundred bucks." Impe r s onation c harged HAYWARD (AP> A man who falsely pledged $600,000 to a telethon last September has been booked for investigation of im- personating a police officer Friday. authorities said. Daniel Lee Garrett. 35, was held in lieu of S500 bail after being arrested in San Bernardino County on a warrant issued by Hayward police. Authorities said he had posed as an undercover officer to Hayward merchants and also to a woman he had become roman· tically involved with. Garrell was involved in a bogus $600,000 pledge to the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy telethon last year but was not charged in the case. Police Officer Warde Miller said. One of the pair was a juvenile; the other, Cheryl Martin, wu booked for invesUaation of assault with a deadly weapon -a car, Miller aald. Complaint.a by Mrs. Hoyt, her husband Richard, and nel1hbors wbo live near Petaluma High ln the hilly, westem end of tbe city allege that students race cars up and down the block at night, burl eggs and taunt residents with obsentities. One woman wrote Mrs. Hoyt after her arrest: "Please know that a couple of thousand of~ have been living under the same teen-age tyranny ... My thoughts turn to guns and vigilante com- mittees." Officer Miller doesn't think the situation's unique. ''l'~e been here 15 years. That one (Petaluma High) Is no worse than any of the other schools in Petaluma," he said. Police Chief Robert 8 . Murphy believes that increased dru' and alcohol use by teen-agen has aggravated violence. As for a vigilante approach, Miller says "It's never good when you take things in your own hands. Even when police are slow" ln responding to citizen complainta, it's better to leave uneasy sltua· tions to police, Mlller advises. Neighbors have complain~ that police don't respond to com- plainta fast enough. Last week, Miller arrested Thomas King, 18, aft.er Richard Hoyt stopped King's car and tried to make a citizen's arrest for disturbing the peace. "The kid wouldn't get out or the car and Mr. Hoylamashed the windshield with a golf club," Miller recalled. Hoyt was arrested in 1979 after a teen-ager claimed Hoyt shot a hole in his car with a gun. Hoyt was acquitted. The neighborhood mobilization has had one tangible result. achieved without vigilantism. After neighbors signed a petition, circulated by Mrs. Hoyt, stop signs were placed on her street Tues- day, tne day she was released from Sonoma County Jail on her own recognizance. Neighbors hope the stop signs will discourage teen-agers from turning their street into a drag strip. Monkey hub of mystery Missing 2 months, ape tracked down COLTON (AP> -Charlie the macaque ts an ape, and there are some missing links m the story of where he's been for two months. If the San Bernardino County Sheriff's detectives can prove there was foul play involved, there may be a monJtey trial soon. It all began at Gentle Jungle, an animal ranch that teaches trainers how to handle exotic animals and provides animals for films. One morning Charlie's cage and that of a bobcat were found open and the two were gone. The bobcat was found later, but Charlie, the macaque member of the baboon ramily, had high- tailed itoutofthere. "WE DIDN'T know if he had gotten out. and opened the bob· cat's cage for some reason. or if someone had done it. This is an ongoing thing. This has been happening for two years," said Mollie Latour, the Gentle Jungle controller. Charlie, 7. was reported miss· ing and nothing was heard of him until last Monday. when a man named Mario Montanez began cleaning out the garage his ex-tenant had left. Montanez said he became SUS· picious when he saw the tiny handprints smudged around the room and a bike tire hanging from the rafters. He pried off a board covering a space un- derneatn a workbench and came face to race with Charlie. Montanez called the Gentle Jungle and asked if they wanted a baboon. Although they didn't know it was Charlie, they said they'd take him. But before they arrived, two men came along. One said that Charlie was his and he had papers for him. Montanez got the man's address, turned over the macaque in a cage. and called Colton police. "He got suspicious because he didn't think you could have papers for a monkey," said Sheriff's Detective Hans Van der Veen. He said, .. We don't know for certain if the people that had the monkey stole it or what. We're going to let the district attorney review it to see if a complaint should be issued." VAN DER VEEN said that Montanez' ex-tenant and his friend, who picked up Charlie, told him they were fishing at a park two months ago when they heard a noise and discovered a weak. wet, monkey up a tree. They coaxed it down, threw a sleeping bag over it and took it home. One of the men. Carl Denny, was bitten by the "monkey" and didn't want to keep it anymore, so the other man. Bob Chnstner. put it in a cage in his rented garage, they told the detective Recently Christner moved out of his rented quarters '·He was going up north and he swung by and told Denny if he wanted the monkey he could go gel it again: it was in the garage," Van der Veen said. When Denny picked up the monkey, Montanez called the Colton police. which had an all points bulletin out for a dangerous monkey AP Wirepholo Portd~rbag Gray Davis, Gov. Brown's chief of staff for six years. will take time off job jext month to consider running for public offi ce. possibly lieutenant governor Loan firm bankruptcy seen SACRAMENTO <AP) Ajudgehasauthorized the state to seek federal bankruptcy court protec- tion for Atlas Mortgage Loan Co .. now under state conservatorship. "There is an imminent need for a unified, com- prehensive administration of said corporation's business transactions, lawsuits, debts. collections and other matters:• said Superior Court Judge Horace Cecchettini. Chief Deputy Corporations Commissioner Steven Gourley said the stale would file "Chapter 11'' bankruptcy documents in federal court and ask that a San I' ranc1sco attorney oe named trustee of Alias and its affiliated companies . Cecchettini said the Department of Corpora· lions had performed a "valuable function" in seek- ing stale conservatorship over the companies. which attracted more than S35 million from 4,000 in· vestors during 1980 on a promise of up to 25 percent interest The state contended the companies were insol- vent and that stockholders Barry Richards a nd Glen Cashwheeler had misused up to $2 million in investors funds. I 11 I -· ~- I "I made a New Year's Resolution to lose 20 pounds!' "I can buy a size smaller in clothes than I ever could and that's just the l f .. ..I c z greatest to me." l>t·hhu-l:111mp.1p.1. l<;~ D1>-1grw r .incl lloltda' Spu H.-.olth l ·tuli 1111·111lw1 LAST DAYS TO GET 1980 RATES! It's not too late t.o make your New Year's Resolution t.o shape, trim, firm and just feel great! But join now before rates increase. Drop by for a free guest t.our t.oday. Hol~ Spa I lealth Clubs for Men and Women LA COUNTY Cha .. worth/Nol'thridl• 9143 Dt Soto Avt ot Nordhof1'.12131882·5912 Eeclno 17031 VH1tvre Blvd . WHt o( Balboa. t213l ~30 Hollrrood 7080 Hollywood Blvd . Comer La Brea An. ot S.fo M.diml Center, 12131469-6307 Lons 8-eh 4101 Al.lanlJc BlYd..ComerofCanon.•2131428-8874 w..t Loe A.,. ... 1914 So. Bundy IMAr Olympic Blvrl 1 •213> 820-7671 ....,...... 200'0 Hawthorne Blvd. al Del Amo Blvd., In Ult 8-. P1ua C.ni.r. 12131 642-351 I Cerritoe/Lakewood Announc:ini our newetl loc•tlon 11881 Del Amo Blvd In C.rritoa at Pioneer, 3 block.I £.at of 605 frwway.12131 924-1514 ORANGE COUNTY Bue-Park 510 So. S..ch Blvd. South of Un.coin Ave .. 17141826-0381 CoRa M ... 2300 Harbor Blvd~ IS.hind Tbril\y Oru,1, 17141 549-3368 MIMlon Viejo 244-0l Alicia Pk11i)'. al S.n Dltt0 ,.,..w.y, 1714) 770.Q8H -~------• Oranp 622 Eaet Kal4'lla Ave., Wnt or1\u1lin Avf', 171416,19-2441 WeolmlnaMr 6757 WeBtmln11U>r Av• 111 O<>ldtn W .. t. t714189'·M87 INLAND LOCATION lllontclalr 5360 Olive Street lal ~nlral Ave. oppoal~ MontKomery Ward I. 171416~3593 RJv.-.. 4020 M,aidlton Cal Arlinaton>. 17141687·1315 San Bemardlno 333 North H St. at 3rd loP90elte Cenll'lll Ci\y Malit, t7t4l 888-1861 ... -II. .. I I Orange Coast Oa11y Piiiot Monday, March 23. 1981 Editorial Page ~--------------------------...-- nomts P Halty1Publl5her Thomas K"vtt1Edltor Barbara Krelbicht Edltor111 Page Editor· Bus fare hike was inevitable More than one Orange Countr Transit District bus dder must be wondering why thedistnct board of directors chose \o instltute a two·step pricing p0licy that will raise fares to 75 cent.s during peak commuting times and 60 cents during other hours oft he day. Since the district began operating buses nine years ago, a single fare policy has applied. Today, regular riders pay 50 cents per one-way trip, regardless of the time they board the bus. , Under the new policy. higher fares will be charged between6and9a.m . and3and6p.m. The theory behind charging a higher fare during peak periods is to keep buses most available to those persons who are commuting. It is during these commuting hours that the demand for bus seats is at a premium. The fare structure en courages riders who don't need to be on the bus during commuting hours to ride at other times at reduced rates. No one, of course, is happy with a rate increase. But the district seemed to have little choice but to impose one, particuJarly in light o( a state law that requires that a fixed per centage of its operattng revenue be generated through the farebox. Perhaps riders c an ;est somewhat easier knowing that officials say this will be the last fare inc rease for at least two years. Vets n eed centers Sen . Alan Cranston has vowed to fight the Reagan Administration's plan to close · 91 storefront counselin~ cente rs for Vietnam veterans across the country by Sept. 30. The centers were establis hed by Congress just a year ago, after an eight .year e ffort. Cranston seems to be getting congression al support. Roth the Hous e and Senate vete rans affairs committees have voted to e xtend funding for the centers through fis- cal 1982. The Reagan budget cutters insist VA hospitals can provide adequate counseling for the Vietnam vets. Cranston says this is not so. noting that the storefront centers offering peer counseling a nd job help have been heavily patronized by veterans and their families who s uffered psychological. if not physical. wounds as a result of Vietnam service. While the 300.000 men who s uffered physical wounds in the war have received needed treatment at VA hospitals. Cranston and supporters of the counseling cen· ters contend all of the 2.8 million men and women who o;;erved m the Vietnam theater are entitled to help if they n eed it. Apparently they do. Orange County was one of the l<1 st areas to r eceive funding for a storefront center. Sm ee it opened in Anaheim las t November, its three counselo rs have ~l'rved an estimated 400 veterans and de- pendents . Then~ 1s no d o ubt many s uffered deeply from society 's failure to adequately recognize and assis t them If President Reagan was sincere in calling for s uch r~cogmt1on. he should not remove this crumb that has bee n thrown lo the m Bette r place to cut Government cost ·c utte rs seeking ways to reduce federal spending could make cons iderable progress without gomg outs ide the boundaries of Washington, D.C . And in so d oing they might s tart to uns narl the awful tangle of the ever -growing federal bureaucracy. For example . When Franklin Roosevelt took office m 1933. his White House s taff numbered 37. Today the com· bined work force of the President's staff and the Ex- ecutive Office of the Presid e nt has g rown to a startling t ,200. The Bureau of Budget then was operated by 35 em ployees. Today there are 600 workers in the Office of Management and Budget. On Capitol Hill. the staffs of senators and represen - tatives numbered 10,000 last year. In 1947, 2.000 office workers served both houses of Congress. In one s taffing s tudy, the whole mess was described as .. a bloated and disorderly grab bag of separate and mutually s uspicious s taffs. units. councils. boards and g r oups" in which too many workers spend their time "creating nuisance work. inventing projects and hatching intrigues " • Obvious ly the~e tax·s upported hordes tend to impede rather than s m ooth the processes of orderly government. There's a move a foot in Congress to c ut committee Starrs by 10 percent. The figure probably should be doubled and the cuts extended from the White House itself down through the e ntire bureaucracy. And that would be a fine example for states, counties a nd cities s uffering from the s ame over·staffing disease. • Op1ntons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those or their authors and artists Reader comme nt is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 Boy d/Toe touch By L.M. BOYD Take orr your shoes and socks. Close your eyes. Ask so meone to pul a few familiar objects a comb, teaspoon or door key on the rtoor wtthlo easy reach or .. lllllY Ill They must have dif· feren t kinds of llma beans In Japan than here. I've seen better piles of rocks in cow pa s tur~s than that 11 culpturc nt South Coast Plaza R 1 •. 0 yo ur reel Touc h these articles with your toes. Can you identify them by toe touch? Most people can't But if they touch them with their ringers, they know im mediately which is which. No , your toes are not as capable as your fingers in this matter or tactile rec· ognition. Why is this? Lack of sensitivity in those toes or just lack ortraining? Hunc hed over Is the normal posture of the 1orllla. Jr I were a cartoonist. I'd draw two or those beasts. a mother standing stooped, her offspring standing straight up. and in the caption quote the mother: ••Honey. you· ve got to do something aJ>out your posture." You know that William Al · ten White said. ·•A llttle learning Is not o dan1erous thtn1 to one who does not mistake It for o great deal." ... J ack Ander on Haig style troubles Congress WASHING TON Secret1try of State Alexander Haig made his first appearance before the Howse Foreign Affairs Commit· tee a few days ago, and his performance drew mixed re· views from the members pres· ent. ft was a closed session, called to hear Haig explain the Reagan adminlstra· tlon '11 policy on El Sal · v a'dor . For several of lhe co mmi ttee member s. it wa s th ei r first exposure to Haig. Both his c ritics and his ra ns were influe nced as much by Haig·s pe rsonal style as by the subs tance of what he was saying Some like what he said and the way he s aid it , many didn't. llaig's brusque military man ner turned off some of the mem- bers "lie s ays things and then he glares at you." one con - gressman told m y a-;sociate Lucette Lagnado Others eomplained that he .. talked down" to the t'o mm1ttee in the ma nn1..•r of a general lee tu ring a groua of junior offi cers This csper1 <1Jfy irritated senior members of the ('om m ittee. who Andy R ooney felt they wuc being con· descendt'd to by someone they consider o ne wcomer to the complexities of l.:il111 Ameri cun policy On the other h and, .some com mittec mcmbtirs found llalg's no.n onsense s t yle refreshing "Secretury H aiti is un im prcssive mun," ont.' Republican s<1id with obvious enlhus iasm "He 's pC'rfH tly forthright in wha t ht• say!>, clear und de· c1s ivt· .. THE PRO·llAJG ml'mber!>, in· eluding a C'OUIJh.· of Democrats, said the were 1nsp1rcd b> Haig's selC·conf1dence and blunt approaC'h to problem s F'ar from being ~·orried b} the prospect or lla1g in t•harge of the nation's foreign poht·y. theM• legislators s aid they W<'rt' reu!>surecl b> the> closed door briefing Ha ig had exactly tht• opµos1tl.' effect on other comm1ttt•t· mem bers "We've watched Kiss inger , Vance. even Mu!>k11·:· said one veteran. "and tht-y were all pn•tty soph ist1 C'atf'd <'O mpared to llu1g ·· Another member s<iid llllig 'displ ayed a bitter conlt•m pt for ('ongress:• ;ind attributed 1l to tht• general's role as Whitt• lloust• chH·f of stuff during the fi nal months of the Watergate mt•ss W h at o ff t' n d l' d s <· \ t· r a I legislators was Ha1J(!> lf's1> than diplomaUc insistence that he ex pected cooperation from <..:ongress and was sick and tired or opposition from Capitol Hill. Thts struck some or bis listeners as evidence that Haig might be less dedicated to the system or legis lative checks on the Ex· cculive Branch than he lns1sled he was at his Senate confirma- tion hearings. BEYOND HAIG'S pe rsona l -;tyle. his C'ritics were concernet.l about his seeming o bsession with a military solution to the Salvadoran s1wation. They got the impression he was me rely paying lip service to the need for economic and social solutions to El Salvador's problems At one point, Rep J onathan Hingham. D·N Y . challenged lla1g's assertion that Cuba was at the ('Ore or the Salvadoran t•onfhcl The secretary backed off. a('knowledging that ther e would still be problem s even without Cuba. Haig's impact on the Foreign Affairs Committee was perhaps bes t s ummed up b y o ne Repuhlican me mbe r who op poses the adminis tra tion 's mil1tury ap1>ro l!Ch in El Salvador "He 1s extrem ely art1eulate. a nd has an excellent co mma nd of th e Englis h languagl'.'. he said of lla1g. add· mg "He's brilliant, actually.·· But the coniressman said he intends to keep an eye on the secretary lo make s ure he "doesn't get out of hund " I NTELLIGl-:NCE DIGEST : The Iraqi army ls quietly con solidating its hold on the ter· ritory it has seized from Iran. Intelligence reports speculate that Iraq will form a separate Arab state on the occupied ter· ritory It would probably be recognized by most Ar ab nations. U.S strategists believe that Soviet Pres id e nt Leonid Brezhnev is pressing for a sum· m1t meeting as the bes t stage for fulminating against the neutron born b He revealed his attitude in a secret letter to ex· President J immy Carter "We are prepared to enter into negotiations on this matter at any moment.'' wrote Brezhnev several months ago. ·'Such an agree m ent would respond to the spirit of the times, to the interests or s tre ngthening peaC'e and detente ... " -T H .. : K R EMUN e ither employs 1nc·o mpetent English translators or puts out distorted veri.1o ns of important com munication!> llere is the secret S tate lh•partment appraisal after C'Ompann~ the texts of a rcc·ent doC'ument "Soviets in- 1t1 a ll y ~ave u~ only English· la nguagl• \'ers1on We now have Russian language text And 1t 1 ~ evid e n t Soviet Eng li s h tran!>latwn wa!> inaccurate in several placc~ ·· American analysts are wor ried about North Korean die tator Kim II Sung's next move A secret analysis points out that his "efforts tu undermine tht' I South Korl'an 1 government thro ugh political subvers ion amt guerr illa \\ ;.u•fart• ha H' fa tied: that he "probably cx1.1ects' ~uuth Kcirt·a to make major 1mprovt·ment~ 1n lb defense capabilll1l's " and that the "Unit- ed State~ rcallr has no intention of withdrawing ull of its combllt fort>l'S from Korea " Concludes the ci nalys1s "Tht•se unsettling fa<'tors s uggt·st that we may havt• t•nlt•rcd a period when the risk of war <><'Curri ng 1s very high Pyong~ang may mis l'akulalc and aC'l out or a sense that thl' lonj.!t>r a dec-i ~wn to al· tempi rt•unif1 cat1on b> militar y mt-ans 1s delaved. the less viable fon·t• n •m:.11n., a~ an at•ceptable option ·· English is the most practical language Wht'n I listened lo Pre:,,1dl•nt Reagan 's denun ('iat1on uf re d t>ral programs designed to support bilingual education in tht• United States the other l'Ve· ning. I would have stood and cheerrd 1f I hadn't been em· harrasscd about agreeing with s uch a conservative. hllrd-hat opinion It would h ave been awkward for me to stund at the time anyway, becaus(• I wa~ wa tc hing telev1s1on from th<' comfort or a n easy chair in my ltv1ng room and 1 had a drink in my hand 'll 1s absolukly wrong. Rea gan said. "a nd againsl Am e ri can con <'e pts to ha ve a bi I 1 n g u a I edU<'U lion program tha t 1s now o penl y , adm itte dl y dedicated lo pr ese rvin g their nati ve language and neve r gelling the m adequate in E nglish so they ran go out into the job market and pa rl1<:ipule." lie was rcrerrin~t. of eourse. to the large number of children in our school syste m now who speak only Spanish and. to a lesser extl'nt. to the large Sydnf>y H arris numlwr ''ho ~pl'ak 11111.\ Bla1·I. Engh~h Thi~ m.1, not ht• mudi of a prohll·m in \ 11ur honw town, h U t I t I~ I f \ tt U 11 V l' I n l.11" An~l·le~. M1:1n11 or ~l'\\ Ynrk T ht• vt'r.\ t'llfH'l'PI of languai.:1• t'alls for um• ~y~tcm of word u~1· l<> b<' spokl'n :rnd "rittcn hy 1•ven·11r1t· 1ntt·r<'"t<·d 1n com mun(talln~ with ont• anolht•r If we· re going to undNSI a nd each ol ht•r. w1• ;ill ha\'(' •o agrt·c· on wh at words s tunrl for what 1deJ-. \'ou t·ould ~uildc•nh cfto ('1dt• to t•ull J c·ha1r .i franak:ipun 1r you w;intt•rl to hut nn ont• would know \\hat vou meant In English \.\(' c·all a · t·ha1r a chll1r and all F:ngli~h -;1w;1k1ng P<'OPI<' understand IT IS WRON<: fnr JO.\ largc· number of people• to ckC'1de thl'} want to Sllt'ak anolhN languagt• because they aln•ady s pN1k 11 and bcC'ause it's part of their he r i lag e II · s part 11 r w hut Spanish·six-aking peopl1 · should have been willing to l(iV<' up when they cam<' hen· Languag<' 1~ un 1'mot111nal IS· sue. whic:h is why :i lot of people will be irritatNJ by whut I just said. Some of us m;1y learn two o r three languugl'S in our lifetime. but we're only sen· timental about th e on e we picked up by os mosis from our parents wht>n \H' were s mall children. F.ngl1 ... h ~IH'.l king IH·Oplc. 1•s p t'l'1ally Amcrieuns. ha ve a I w a vs been Ul'l'llSt'd of being pig h·<'uded in lht·1r refus<tl tu do hu si nl'ss 1n an yon1• c lsc·s languagP. Wc'v<• hcl'n uC'c·used nf using our c<·on om1 c and military rnus clt• to s hove our language down foreign throats. No doubt M' weTl' ort<.•n guilty of SOffiC' rPrff\of national COOCL•it, but j~a r as t h<' Eng lis h lanRuage goe~. we probably huvt• a lot to be <·o nct•1 lcd about It 1s a v<'ry good. vNy useful "tool II has doubll' the numbl'r of word!> of llnv other language and 1s probabl)· thc most precise language on earth IF WE.VE BF.F.N ovcrbcartnj( as l!old1ers. tourist~ or bus1 nessmen when it rame lo insist mg everyone who wanted lo talk to us spt•ak in Englts h. we hav1• been morP democratic about uc ccpting foreiJtn words into our lan~u ;1 ~e We 've tak en in foreq~n words just as we·v(' ta ken in immigrants . We don 't huV<.' the same hangups about the purity or our language as the French do. fo r instance. and as a result. Engltsh is a more useful la nguage than French Evidence that we are not language snobs IS the ruct that i;omething like 75 percent of all lhe words we use ar e derived from soml' other language. Thl'rC' 1~ a good case to be ma<fr for t-:n~h sh a~ thr one m· tcrnat1onal languagt• if th<' day c•vt•r tomt•s wh1..•n we have one Not only 1~ En,gl1sh the language with thL• most words, hut also it St'l'ms lo bl' the language most arn•ptablt• to other pPople If' A VOTE were taken among a II the• pt'ople in the world and they were asked to choose fi ve I anguaJ(l'S in orde r of pref~ t>rent"t'. l'ach nationality would no doubt rank its own language first. so there wouldn't be any agn•<'mcnt on the first choice Rut th1• pcopll' of all nations \\ould hc,nn<l doubt m a k e En1?l1sh thc~r M't·ontl cho1ct' Spanis h 1s a magn1f1cent l<inguaj(e with a grt•at literary t rad 1 lion and a sound lo it that is heltt•r than EnJ:?lish. a nd I can undt'rst<ind anyone~ r('lut·tance to give 11 up "Rluck English " is not a lanJ(uagc al all Some great words and expressions have com4! from 1t and they'll be takc•n into standard English alonJ:? with so m any other ~ood w o rds Eng lis h has adopted. Arter that. it should be rejected and abandoned as soon as possi· ble just as anything called "Black Arithmetic" would be if it cla1mt'd 2 times 2 equals 5. Storytelling art prObably-can't be learned Why can some people write a the author revc•als hi mi.elf as a The fictional ~~lent .. it occurs sellers have lhis knack· and no stor y that you believe and -;tor vtel lc>r or not to me, ls more hke being an ac· matter how shallow or contrived other cannot? I haven:t the Al an t•arly tl l(\'. I knew I wal\ tor than a writer per u You or even meretricious the books vaguest answer to this question. •1 writ.er. and not much later are either an actor .or you are may be. the pubUc resp0nds to but I am cer· than that 1 knew I would never hopeless; you can either throw their imaginative universe. lain that the write a short story, much less a yoursetr into another character. s torytelling novel. because I totally lack the and become that character. or ability has ability to create convincing you remain a dumb stiff clod n o t h I n g characters who wolk and talk on mouthing Unes no one believes. whatsoever to their own power and ('arry their The actor has the imaginative do with any own authenticity with them. power to proJ~ct himself out or k I n d o r hhs skin and into another's; llterary s klll SOME OF THE rines l writers likewise. the born storyteller or merit. are natural storyteller11. while can make other people come By now I can pick up a n~w mystery or •P>' novel and read one page to know It I want. to take it home and dip Into I\ Just a few lines of dialog. or a paragraph of description. and •• othera are not. And 1ome or the olive under his pen. It may be no mosl deplorably deficient a c cident that the greatest styltst.s have the natural gm or master o( creatlna characters. tlctlon. and llttle else. It la Dickens. was also an immeruiely aJmost Uke hem< double·Jolnt.ed, 1uccessruJ public reader or bis or beln8 able to wbJatl1 throu1h novels, ch1n1ln1 voice and your teeth a knack that I.a ir· personality as he read. relevant to anyt.hlna else. Most or the popular best- ' " -----~----------..... ----~-------------... ------~·· T H E WILL cannot be made to do \he job or the imagination; no s ktll or artifice can compen!18te for a lack of the storytelling ability. In fiction, it 111 what Sir James Barrie said about charm: .. H you have It. you don't need anything else; if you don't have It, nothing elae helps.·· So many fledallna novelists wowd 111ve themselves years of arief and dl11ppolntment lf they honeltl)' teated themselvu for the absolute pitch that ls requ.lred to make the fictional scale rtnc true. ... -• -•• ,.. ............ 4t -•••• - • -••• -• • • I t . . -• J . ..... .. ··--·--···-.. ... .. ----··-... •·'-""' .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. March 23, 1981 .-1· :Wonien Marines: .combat role? • PARRIS ISLAND, S .C . <AP> - Marit'le Pvt. Michele Funke t.binlts th• day is coming when women wlll be on the batt!et'ield fighting wars alongside men. Why else, she reasons, would the Marine Corps be putting her through combat training. The 19-year-old St. Charles, Mo .. recruit is one of about 120 women in the first female Marine boot camp to un· dergo combat exercises. THE WOMEN ABE firing M·l6 rifles, tossing hand grenades. dodtln& mines and boobytraps, and going through various combat field exercises. Marine officials are quick to say that women are not being primed for the battlefield. "This is in no way related to com· bat," said Lt. Col. Paul Barra. com· manding officer or the Weapons Train· ing BattaJfon at Parris Island's Marine Corps Recruit Depot. The facility is the only Marine camp where women recruits are trained. Last year . 2,500 women went through basic training here. RECRUITS LISTEN TO WEAPONRY INSTRUCTIONS Muln•• tr•lnlng fem•I•• In comb•t technique• SIGHTING INSTRUCTIONS ON AIFLE RANGE Wom•n tr•lnH prep•r•• to fire M·11 MARINE SPOKESWOMAN Gunnery Sgt. Judy Vina said the combat training is "defensive familiarization only." "The new training is not a change in the Corps' policy or not assigning women to combat roles," she said. ··Its purpose is to provide women with the basic skills necessary to function and survive in a field environment." Ms . Faucett made the comments while waiting in line at the firing range. Dressed in camouflage battle fatigues, the 5-foot 5, 110-pound recruit sat on a bencb and balance d a n M-16 rifle between her knees n a tionwide showed women were graduating from boot camp without the skills necessary to be effective in a com bat s upport unit. Such units are behind the front battle lines . Graduates FOR THE RECORD .must rise earlier Bir• .. FOUNTAIN II ALLEY COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Ft ....... ry21 Mf and M r\ Th•Odeu\ "-o••lc1yk, MADISON. Wis. <AP> 1rv.nuo1 U n i V e r S i t y O f M t •no Mr\ W•tr•n Jonn. (0'1• ,. Mf\4,9 1,t Wi scons in g radu ates ,.,..,. ... ,,11 WiJI have lO get Up a lit-Mt anO Mt~ Fr~ertco Ba,,t<IO F ounld1n \l•Hty.Qtrf tie earlier this year if M• •nd Mr\ EOward Pdul Hunl they want to pick up ~:~':~~1:':~=••inv.,. • ., 00,. their Sheeps kins. Mr dnO Ml\ RocNorO C.enl•r Hunt It's part of an effort ~~'0;n~·~:\Q•~ •• n cnou Fount41n by university officials to "•"" l>O• restore dignity lO the M r •no Mt\ '>ul>C<ln SIWI" >ounl•tn V•ll•v.Qir! spring commencement 1Mrcft1 Ceremony, Which in r e· M r dnO Mr\ (narlh B•rM> Hunt 1n9to'1 Be•cn, 91rt Cent years has featured M r ano Mrs St•-.n Hollon. Hunl drinking and graduates 1n91on Be.en 9''' attaching heliUm·filled Mr dnU Ml\ ::::.~h~dUQhdn, Foul\ b a I 1 o on s l o t h e i r 1a1n 11a119,.1>0, mortarboards. Mr •no Ml\ :::;:,:,•,,...,r•• co"• Those ceremonies M•w.111r1 Were held in the after-M r dnO Mr\ o'::;:~~nQ, Hunl•nQIOn noon, giving graduates Buen Q•" Wh0 feel 3 need t o M r dnQ M" ":.:~!~'l'or\ltr Hunt celebrate more time to .n91onB••<n 9.,, s tart imbibing. Mr •no Mr> rnom•' M<C•rtnr Jr F ountd•n V•lltV t>Oy But this year. the May _,,,,11 17 ceremony will begin M r •no M r• '>••P"•" e.,, ... ,,, . h-' Founla1n V•ll•y bOv 3 t 9 : 30 8 . m • . WI t Mr •od M " Aldn 0<111'!> Hunl1n9lon graduates asked to con-B••<n.t>o, g r e gate 45 minutes M r dnOMt\ :!~~ft~~l\btrrv Foun before that. '"'""""•• 9"' Refugees inf late The u n iversity estimates that some 4.200 will get degrees. Those who go to the ceremony have been asked not to brin g alcoholic beverages "or other items that detract rrom the significance or TB count the occasion." CHINESE EYE BOOK PEKI NG <AP I China wil'I publis h a Chinese adaptation of the Enc yc lop ed i a Britannica in coopera- tion with Encyclopedia Britannica of the United States. the offi cia l Xinhua news agency re· ported. Xinbua s aid Britan- ni c a Vice President Laurence J . M a h e r made the announcement al the opening of a Britannica exhibition in Pekin~. Ding Bo. general manager or the China National Publications Import and Export Corp .. said his corpora· tion recently bought more than 1,000 sets ' ATLANTA cAP > The influx of Southeast As ian refugees has in· flated the n umber of tuberculosis cases re· ported in California . where al least one-third of the refugees have set· tied. according to the national Centers for Dis· ease Control. The state reported 3,639 newly ac· Live tuberculosis cases 10 1979. or 16 cases per 100,000 population. This was 288 cases more than in 1978. the agency said T hrough October 1980, 130 more cases were re· ported than during the s ame period in 1979. Tuberculosis has been o n the decline n a tionw1de since 1970. but the number of cases has increased in California because of the influx of immigrants s uffering from the disease. the Center said. The agency said the , PIHClllOntlH SMITHS' MOITUAllY 627 Main SI Huntington Beach SJ&-6539 'ACIAC YllW ......,RW.PMK Ceiretery Mortuary Chapel "' refugees .. pose no public health threat" because a ll had begun treat· ments for TB before lea viog r esettlement ca mps in Southeast Asia. 3500 Pac1ftc View Dr111e Newport Beach ~-2700 McCORMa MORTUA .. S Laguna Beach 4!M·!M1S Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan cap11trano 49s-1ns MMIOll LAWN-MT. OUYI Mortuary • Ce~tef'Y Crematory 1625 G11ler Ave .. ... CostaMeu s.40-5554 -...n ..... ott ....,.. • TUna&. Wlt~CHAPIL 417 e 17th St. Cotta~ Me-9371 - "But they do require re-examination. a full course of therapy and continued close monitor ing," the report said. Wage talk banned PEKING <AP> -The Worker's Daily told readers not to ask forel,eners aboul wages or reveal 1ta~ secret.t. It said asking about wages may be con· sldered lmpollte, and that when "converslna with foreign guests, we should avoid political controversies. '·When we need to answer varlous ques· lions, we should use cor· reel, conclae and re· served lanaua1e and be sure lo protect state secrets." C.11 1.u-1111. "'' • tew word• toworll for u . NO MED.ALS THIS YE.4R VATICAN CITY <AP> -The 1 ,800 la y emp loyees at the Vatican will not receive free papal medals this year for the first time in m e mory because of a dispute over si Iv e r . bronze and charity. In the past , wh1te- collar workers such as clerks and typists got a silver medal. Blue- collar worke rs like mechanics got a bronze one. But the recruits themselves are con· vinced the training is the first step toward assigning women to the infan· try. Ms . Funke said females are destined for the battlefield "or they wouldn't have women doing things like this. I. for one. am willing to go." KATHE RINE FAUCETT, 25, of Springfield, M.o .• said she was frightened when she found out she would be among the first women to get the battlefield training. But s he said ··1·ve been looking forward to this for a long time Some day. women will be going to wa r and it's good for us to know." In front of her , women lay prone. cradling rifles and firing at targets 300 yards away. BARRA S(\ID THE women are as capable as t~ men on the firing range "I hope ~en they leave here. they can pick up a rifle. properly handle it. and engage a target with it." he said The offi cer said he hopes wom en never are assigned to battle roles ··The Germans had women JO combat on the Russian front and the lsraehs used them in the Golan Heights and both had poor experiences with them as far as casualties." he s aid M arme Commandant Gen. Robert Barrow approved the combat training m October after a s urvey of commands "Women will gain cr edibility. when fitting into these um ts," 98id Capt. Joan Van Allen. a training officer at Parris Isla nd ... And , I think they will feel more like they are a part of the Marine Corps." Mi ile on target POINT Ml'Gl' 1AP J F'or the third timl'. a L'S Na\'y Tomahawk Cruise missile scored a direct hit on a target s hip 10 the N<Hfs offshore Pacifi c M1s- s1l c Test Center The submarine launched ant1·ship mi ss ile "'as fired fro m the lJSS Gu1tarro while the submarine was sub· ml'rged. utcordinit to Lt Jg Susan G lutt10g Pocket $10.76 worth of coupons with an April bus pass. That's right. An OCTD April bus pass means more than unlimited bus rides. Now, you also get coupons good for the offers shown below when you buy an April pass. That's a bigger bargain than ever before!!! Don 't waste money at the pump. For just $1Z50* a month on regular routes ($13.00 students), you can ride as often as you want- every day of the week-for less than it would cost you to drive. And with one set of coupons per monthly cus- or otheryparticipating OCTD pass sales outlets. Call 636-RIDE for the address closest to you. To order by mail, send a check or money order, payable to OCTD to: Orange County Transit District, Box 3005, Garden Grove, CA 92642. The OCTD monthly bus pass is good news. Pass it on! *express routes at additional cost, tomer, you also save in other ways. seniors and handicapped qualify for Call 636-RIDE Se Habla Espanol Between March 25-April 10, lower rates. you can buy your April bus pass and --r We're going your way. get your coupons at OCTD's offices ----.... ~-----::: __. in Garden Grove, Albertson's. J.C. f///IJIJ .....,.... .... Penney, Laguna Federal Savings. ----~·s _,_ _. oo~'t '3-\~t. / f///IJIJ ~~ot. co~ 1'\1'o ~f-~ ~ f///IJIJ o r,t.1'o't\f ~O\A~ 1'\os't "'ot \l\~ a· -• \ c(.\9\<.(\ \ fa\C· \~ f ·ou" \\a'>'C \0 \a\ di~ cJ. (.c).Of \ ~_. ~ at a# 00ie.~ _,..cf!>\ \S ~· a& ~\(\S t{S .,. .... --... ~~ ... """~''"' \fl ~ ~~;a~°i~1ot 'ti ~a\~9\ ~·hi, IA:/,,~ 1~~ ~\ ll"l/flfl 1'.·~ttffl . # ~' l'.1 L~~ ~"/ I ~S~·~'l~l.p).p~ " ·~ .. ~~~,~£ I # ~ .. ~ -T/'~ ~· zl1~·~it ti I 4."r.c~i~ ~ttYI ~, ~ l ( ( ( ( ( ( 1------ el'-9\fC.S ~ ~-----....... ------... .-... --..._, ........ ......_ ......... ......... _ ( ( I ( , ' -.... \ l l -----J. ) -. --.... ----___ _J_ ) --,,.- l l ) ) ) l ) \ ' l ) \ ' \ ' .. "" ,. ..... ,,. .... ~,,.. ~----. ... .-.~--... --· ........ ., ..... , .. _____ ... __ , _______ . ••••••••••• •• • Sp. T ~~ ...................... .. l. ~ Ralimonx suit started trend NEW YORK CAP) -You don't have to be mar· rted. You don't even have to live toselber. The "palimony" whammy can strike at anyUme. Some people blame Marvin Mitebelson for this. Re's the IUY who started it. Mltcbel1on aays men at social gatherings ometimes sidle up to him and hiss commenta like, 'You traitor I" He doesn 't really mind. In fa~t. he's leased with what he's done. ' ~ THE TANNED, WHITE-HAIRED Los Angeles ~ttorney commented in an interview: "I bad to reate lbe law to get a repled for these pie. here was an inequity, a hole in 3;e law. and a~be$e people were lert with no legal recourse." "These people" are unmarried people who are burned in break-ups with live-in lovers. Mitchelson found them a remedy after he agreed to represent Michelle Triola Marvin. Ms. Marvin legally changed her name and dropped her show busi· ness career during the six years she lived with actor Lee Marvin. After their break-up, s he sued. Lee Marvin had not married her, but in 1979 a California judge awarded her $104,000. The award is still under appeal. "Up to that time people who li ve together had no place to go," he said. "Marriage APW1rep1to10 was the only game in MITCHELSON town." DURING THE MARVIN CASE, THE California Supreme Court agreed with Mitchelson that unmar- ried couples can have contracts written, oral, even implied -and can sue each other claiming breach of contract. Since then, M 1tche lson says. things have s nowballed In Califorrua, a marned man is being sued by his former mistress. She s ays he promised her the world including marriage and then left her. He unsuc· cessfuJly asked a judge to dis miss the suit. noting UBTT INSURANCE "Our :.Mlh yt·ar" ~ Auto & Homeown~rs ·~:;..... Quotes By Phone FAIMEIS IMSUHICE , .. , S4a.SSS4 w IJS..)07 ,, .......... c .......... COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Cofn1 & Stemp• GOLD & SILVER Prices for 3-20-81 Cold Clo .. U:I' 00 Sil••• Cl. UJ.SO luy Soll I< ru9er,.nd• • USl.00 $,.LOO Ma(>I~ l..,I U4•.00 $U7.00 IUO CorOMs Ult.SO Ul1.SO ~0 PUO\ ... l.00 $'77 ... 'IO Solver 9•9• IOU... 111S.._ ,,.~..,,.....,..,.. ....... c:.o .... __ (714)5~ South CoHI Plaza VIiiage ___ .. IAc ___ C-_I NO FRILLS TEETH WANING OMLYs22 SOUTH COAST DEHT AL GIOUP 642-0112 l l 05 tt.iMw ltfd.. c:o.t. .... r:-. ~ •1•lll>'f-·-.... ----!·l.3 "Oope. rourth noor. RedecoraUnc!" that be never moved in with her. Mttchelson quotes the judge's comment: "He who enjoys the benefits of a polygamous lifestyle must be prepared to meet the financial burdens." A CALIFORNIA MAN WON UH,tH in palimony after ~is live-in jilted him. A.n elderly California woman wnose married lover died after a 49-year affair and left her nothing in his will is suing his estate. And it's not just in California. "Courts in nearly 30 states have evolved with the Marvin decision,'' M itchelson said. ·'I believe that in five years all states will have ~ither a law or a high court ruling about live-togethers. · · As palimony spread, Milchelson started writing. He visited here recently to promote his new book : "Livlng Together: A Practical Guide lo Help You Understand.·· The book covers the legalities of every kind of situa· "'ov1H tiori from the average young couple that decides to ltve together to the average young homosexual couple that decides to live together. Bul the bottom line, saad Mitchelson, is this: "This field of law is in such an unsettled state that every couple that decides to live together ought to have a written agreement." Unclaimed FURS THE VOYAGERS CLUB AND KARAGEORGIS CRUISES INVITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NIGHT TUESDAY MARCH 24 . 1981 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M AIR PORTER INN, IRV INE Admission Free-Seating Limited REF'RESHMENTS -DOOR PRJZES -FILM RSVP ' I J I ~ ..... , -1'{\ ''"1 ~ ..• , • C"'~'I·• _, Starting e New Bu1lnesa HARBOR TRAVEL -675-1311 NEWPORTER TRAVEL 644·03IO TRAVEL HORIZONS 752-9031 TRAVEL COUNTRY OF IAVINE 551·2t2t Acccordlng 10 Celllornl• Buel,..U end ProlH llon• Cod9 (Sec. 17100 lo 17130) •II pereon• dol"Q buelneH under • ~ n•m• muel Ill• • eletement with th• County Cl•rlt end hew• It pvbll•h•d lour llm •• In • newepeper M•-4"9 the •••• In which th• bualt1•H le toc.t•d. Ii BALTZ-BERGERON SMITH & TUTHILL WESTCLIFF MORTUARY "A/fordable fu~erals" Cremation Plans Available 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa PHONE 646·9371 ., The etetem•lll I• required ~ lew end la 11ecHHry In ptotectlnQ your bu•l11eH neme. Mo•I 11•1111• require proof of n11119 to °'"" co111111erd• KCOVnt•. The DAIL "I PILOT provldH 11111411 ftllng e11d publlc•tlqn Mnlce•. We hewe 9" 11'9 -IMty 101111• e11d mel11t•n • · deity H rvlce lo Ille Oren ge Cou11ty CourtllouM. lither ~ by on e ol ou r conwe111lnt office• or phone the LlGAL DIPAftTMlNT 14~21 . lat. 332 for "'or• lnf.,111etloll llftd ......... Civil Grumbling ... Gloomy Gu1 In the llllyPlat __ J DEAR PAT DUNN : la lt le1al for a store to cbaree a higher price for an item than the amount marked on lt'! I've run into th.la situa- tion several times. The merchant says the price haa gone up and that I bave to Pt.Y the increued amount. I've also been ulred to pay more than the marked prtce with the ex· planation that the merchandise bad been priced incorrectly. Do I have any recourse in these situations'! K. W., Huntiniton Beach Veer -.Jy optloll a. Lo .a.., elMwlileTe. Stores are uder llO le1al ebll1aUoa .. MU ea Item .ty at die marked prtce. A Pe*ral T1'ade Commlaaloll offtclal says die e-..•er .... 1eneral, laat • rece.ne" ..&eu &a.ere II evldeaee ot laabltllal cleceptioa or baJ&.a ... awltcb 1alea tadlc1. If a doft falls Lo l&Kk ltem1 at advertised prlcea, It may be nltjed· ed to a formal complalat Lo tile FTC fer U · faJr practJcea. Rote to~•••• e~ DEAR PAT DUNN: My husband's em· ployer transferred him to Qranee County-250 miles from our former home. We always file a 1040A tax form, and wonder if we can still use it when we claim our moving expenses. S.L., Huntington Beach No. IRS saya that movlDI espenaea muat be claimed on Form 3tt3, "Movla& Espeaae Adjuatmeat,'' wblcb 11 aUacbed Lo the lNt return. Yoa may aot file the lNtA. However, c..1re1 ........... .... DEA& llEADEU: 1'le •Ulllladllnr ti \Jattnl hlel ~ •Hiii .......... • cer· taJa ............................. , .. ••la• 1&1 ef'fwu .. e.rnd a ,....,al..,_. wllillcla ••J caue aenre ...,._ ........ fromes,....u4ftret. TM ,,.pa• .. re,aaee &M eeelnle la be .. C ~ ltJ th llolMmlllila• C.tnla Co. of &kllil .... , Va., la etiopet'a&M wlda t.M c .. a .. er Proftet Saf.tf C......._. Stace 1_., ta.ere a.ave -. at leatt • deallaa aDd et severe '"'""' cH1ed by ea· ploa .... ot ••ter llea&en eq .. pped wl&JI tlteae coatnla. Tbe watalac coven th Ual&NI model Ut aad model at. About l,• ol tlileM eo11troa. are beUeved Lo be .. aae, mabaly la nral, vacatloD or weekead lilomea. Vmu caa be tdeaWled by lookllll for Ualtnl lit oa the face of tile ceatrol, or for Ualtrol Zit oe the temperatare dial. Da&e eodea wttla the let&er tom,...adoaa LV, AY, BY or CY are stamped ant Lo tile 1aa pllot o.tlet. Couumera owaleg t~ w1ter beaten 1laoald ceatad Kobertsbaw at Its Loll·free aamber: (811) ZCZ· 1173. FoUowta1 a free la· 1pectloa, the Orm wUl 181t1ll HW CODtrola lf 1pproprlate. • "Col a problem' Then wnle lo Pal ""'"'I Dunn Pat wall cut red tape, getting • .! the an1Wer1 and action you need to 1olve mequ1tu:1 tn government and bwineu. Motl your questions to Pat Dunn, Al Your ~e. Orange CO<Ut Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Al many letter1 as pou1ble wall be amwered. bul phoned inquirie1 or letters not including the reader's full name. addreu and bu1mess hours' phone number cannot be conl1dered This colu'mn appear1 daily er· cepl Sundays " GUESS WHAT YOU CAN EATON WEIGHT WATCHERS WINE POPCORN HONEY YES YES YES D D D NO NO NO D D D PEANUT HOMEBAKED CHOCOLATE BUTTER YES BREAD YES CAKE YES D D D NO NO NO D D D RAISINS SWEET FIGS YES POTATO YES YES D . D D NO NO NO 0 D D THE NEW 1981 FOOD PLANS Wine? Yes Popcorn and peanut but- ter? Yes . Homebaked bread? Yes. Sweet pctatoes and honey? Yes. yes. You can learn to eat all these foods- within l1m1ts of course-and still lose weight. With Weight Watchers exciting new personalized food plans and com- plete. time-tested program you can take off the pounds. deliciously! Just join a We ight Wat chers class near you and our instructors will teach you the sensible way to good eating habits. With wine. pcpconi. peanut but- ter and more. how can you lose? WEIGHT WATCHERS" PS. You guessed 1t. the chocolate layer cake 1s still a "no-no:· $12 flr1t weetl, $5 weekly th«e~tter, no contr.ctal ----------, i WEIGHT WATCHERS I I $4.00 OP I I INSTANT I I REBATE I I ON HC1$TIAflOH AHO ,11$1 MHllNC flf I I OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 11181 I Offer valid only as a discount and I may not be combined with any other I I discount or speclal rate. Offer vaild I ;.: n Area 43. OHER GOOO ONl.Y WITH THIS TICkU..I --------' LAST CHANCE ( 835-5505) The most successful YJeight loss program in the Y10rld. • •I ---~ 700 P"' tOOam • 30 p m /OOp m /W pm t JO ."' IOOom I JO am -'---·-T-y S OOpm -1.AQUl'tA NACH- u.--....... -~·-_, 900pm -UOUMA HILU, lllMSlte>ft YIUO-_ ._ _ .._... c- aatOL•Pu Aot<I Leovno Htllo CA 121~ -· tJOpm T-•Y tOOI"' ,_" 100 p '" w..,_., • 00 • "' w-r 10011m r_, IJO•m ~, ... IOOpm ........ , .l>Clllft -LA ...... 4-._. .. u_ flmpeNI -'-"I .__,,A_ ,_.., 1000•"' n.e.drf . . • JO f) "' w......-v .. l)OpM ;:~ .....-~c:..e 11 ... W ......... lw.Mof l•~ _, A TCXlp"' ~· ........ __.,°"' au.ctt-...................... ~,..,uet ....... ............... , .... ............... .... , __ --..,_ ... , ....... .. CCNTIA- lll_T_C- I01N l•-1-of ~I ,_.. aJOp"' ~AHOa­_ .. o...,.. ,.,. ..... ..,.,_ .. ..... ~ ... -...... ) '""°"°"-·-· ~I -. _, 1..-d"I' r..-.., w~ T-y ...... ~ 10 00 .'" TOO p m 400 P"' 700pm 700 P"' 1000•"' '*H T""4.,(llllllellll u ... .., ' • ,~.'" -e.ut ~MPffl­u.,oM,...... IOI Nonh ll 0..-Ill_. ,,,..,.,., ... .. • • .. p'" -tANT4AMA-WtllMW ..... 0-.. !!041--·-~ .......... ..._ M-y , .... 700f1M T_, .SOOP"' -r. •oo•"' W......,.y • • 1t;OO a m ,_, ''°'"' -1US,._ -~ ,,_ ......... 1-' .. ...._, ....,., ~ ........ l'loMI ,....., ... . ,,.,"' ·~ ........ ... --y ......... ... ----- .. -· ..... , .... _ ......... ... .. ""'_.._....~-·-------... .. .-..-.--.... .-..-.. ~~ .... ---..---""-----.... -.... --.-.. ~ ~ . . The stars • • • JoANNE CARNER 1980 -26 events. won $185,916; ranked No 5, sconng average 71.89 JoAnne won th e fir st Women's Kemper Open a t Mesa Verde Country Club 1n a five-way playoff that included Nanc y Lopez-Melton, Jan Stephenson, Donna Caponi and Chako Higuchi. She turned pro at a late date after posting one of the most impressive amateur records of all-time. She won the U.S. Open five times and was a member of four Curtis Cup teams and even won an LPGA event as an amateur. She has won 28 tour events including live last season. BETH DANIEL 1980 -27 events . won '231 ,000; ranked No. 1. sconng average 71 59 Beth is a very longh1tter and an eKcellent putter, but her middle irons may be the strongest part of her game. She is an emotional player who demands perfection of herself and apparently has found ti on the LPGA tour. As an amateur, Beth won the U.S. amateur c ham· pionshtp tn 1975 and again tn 1977 and played on the Curtis Cup team tn 1976 and 1978. Beth's first victory as a pro was in the World Ladies Championship in Japan in the spring of 1979. AMYALCOTI 1980 -28 events , won 1219,111: ranUcl No 3; scoring overage 11.SI . Amy sometimes calls Mesa Verde a home course beuuse s he grew ,up In Sou thern Callfornla and played the cours. often In her Junior golf· Ing days. As an amateur, she won the USGA Junior girts tltle In 1973 at 1ge 17. She once shot a 70 at P.c>bfe Beach, breaking the .c ourse record of Babe Zaharlas for women. She Is an accomplished scrembler and cepable of some out1t1ndlng b irdie 1truk1 end 11 one of the l\1rdutworkerson the tour. NANCY LOPEZ-MEL TON 1980 -24 events . won 1209.078, ranked No. f . sconng average 71.81 Nancy is the defending c hampion of the Women's Kemper Open and in 1979, lost in a five-way playoff for the It · tie. The super star of the LPGA tour for the past three vears, she curtailed her play last season but will be back to defend her t itle at Mesa Verde CC this week. In her brief pro career that s tarted in the summer of 1977, she has won 21 lour events, has been rookie of the year and player of the year two times, losing the latter title to Beth Daniel in 1980. DONNA CAPONI 1980 -30 events. won 1220.619: ranked No 2. sconng average 71.IJ(). A winner of five tour events in 1980, Donna is one of the most consistent performers on the tour and tends to gain confidence and momentum with a good performance. The 1980 season was easily her best ever as she picked up S220,619 along with her five victories while chasing Beth Daniel lo the wire for leading money winner honors. After finishing in a tie for first in 1979 at the Women's Kemper Open, Donna dropped lo a tie for 22nd last year but had a good second round with a 69 score. PAT BRADLEY I UO -31 eoentt; won $183,317; ranked No. 6; scoring over•1US. Above average In strength, Pat Is one of the longest hitters on the LPGA tour and her low, drawing shOt Is effective Into the wind. After wlnnln9 the New England women s amateur tlUes In 1972 and 1973, she turned professional in 197' after being medalist at the qualifying school. She has Hven tour tltles to her credit, winning two of them In 1980 In· cludl,,g the prestigious Peter Jackson CCanad'4tn Open> till• which she savs Is her greatest thrill H • prof.,.~slonal . • Daily Pilat MONDAY, March 23, 1981 COMICS STOCKS TELEVISION B4 BS B7 Ma reel Dionne scores two goals, as Kings win. 82. D ·a fudiana against LSU Hoosiers' Tho01as leads way BLOOMINGTON, Ind. CAP> - Ray Tolbert and Landon Turner provided the muscle and Is iah Thomas applied the moxie Sun· day to give Indiana a 78·46 victory over St. Joseph's, Pa .. and sent the Hoosiers into their fifth Final Four appearance. Thomas had 12 assists and eight points to spearhead an Indiana of· fense that has grown rich with ef· ficiency "AT THE BEGINN ING of the year, Isiah was a bit r eluctant to say 'This is the way we're going to do it ' But that reluctance has dis· sipated over the season ." said In- diana Coach Bobby Knight, who will try for his second NCAA title a s a coach in the past five years next weekend in Philadelphia. "Isiah has done a great JOb tak· ing over ... Knight said "If you're going to be good, this leaders hip has to come from somebody on the floor By doing this. Isiah not only made the team better. but tt made h1mabetterplayer.too " Turne r. who fouled out with 11 12 to play and Tolbert each scored 14 points as Indiana com - pletely dominated the inside. holding a 33·21 rebounding edge And Turner. a 6·10 Junior. and Tolbe rt. a 6·9 senior. were the men who so stymied St Joseph's offe nse that the Hawks came away with a 33 percent field goal mark for the game. ATTHESAMEtime, Turner hit 7-of·8 shots and Tolbert 6-of-8 to contribute to Indiana 's 68.6 field goal percentage . "Tolbert's play has been ex· celleot." Knjghtsaid. "There's no doubt in my mind that he was the Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten this year . His play from the beginning of t he confe rence season was instrumental in us winning the championship." Knight won his only other NCAA title in 1976, beating Michigan 86-68. His Hoos iers will face LSU Saturday in the semifinalsofthe Final Hour. The loss ended the Cinderella story of the Hawks. whose stun· ning 49-48 upset of top-ranked De Paul in the s ubregionals got them to Bloomington. "We were hoping a l the outset to spread their defense :· said llawks Coach Jim Lynam. who was a player for St. Joe's when the team made its only Final Fourap· pea ranee in 1961 "BUT INDIANA 'S such a ter · rifle defensive team. bas kets are ha rd to come by." Playing Knight's lraditional man t o -man defen se . Lhe lloos1eri-. never a ll owed St Joseph's to execute its plan. On the Hawks" first possession. they came out in a four-corners of· fense. hoping lo ktll time a nd keep the game close But the India na de fende rs so beleaguered St Joe 's that the Hawks found themselves down by 16 points with the l?ame less than 17 minutes old "When you fall behind very early hke we did, a ny kind of a s pre ad offense becomes that much less effecti ve.'· Lynam said . "Teams ha ve defended (the four-corm.•rs ) well agains t us, but not as well as Indiana." Guard Randy Wittman had all eight of his points before the half, and he sat out the second half. as Knight rested his starters for the trip to Philadelphia. Jim Thomas replaced Wittman and scored 10 of his 12 points after intermission Isiah Thomas added eight points. APWtre~oto RAY TOLBERT, MARCELLUS WILLIAMS VIE FOR BALL. Lak._.r switeh Wilkes ' injury worries Magic OAKLA ND (/\Pl The Los Angeles Lake rs have s topped worrying whc tht'r Earvin '"Ma~ic" Johnson will be at full stre ngth for th<' comin~ National Bas ketball Association playoffs. He made 24 points Sunday. driving for the winning basket with one second re ma ining lie also grabbed eight r('bounds and totaled nine assists 10 a 120· 118 \"l<.'tory over the Godlden State Warriors T H E 6-9 GUA RD h ad 21 points, 12 rebounds and eight as s is ts the previous night at Portland The La kers. although probably destined for a second place' finis h in the Pac ific Division. are 9.4 sm ce Jhonson's return from a knee injury. It"s Magic's time to worry now. about teammate Jamaal Wilkes. .. we·re coming along like we wanted lo for the playoffs. But JamaaJ is banged up. What he needs is rest. We 've played three games in three days and only have one day off before we play again," Johnson s aid. Wilkes. nursing a leg injury. missed his first game in three seasons Friday night. But the forward came back to score 15 points in Saturday night's vie· tory at Portland, and he was back to full-time duty Sunday, gelling 27 points. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 31 points against the Warriors. but Johnson and Wilkes did most of the s<.'oring as the Lakers came from behind in the final 15 minutes of the game. With three minutes remaining in the third period. the defending NBA champions trailed the Warriors 93-76 "BUT THEY CUT 1t from 17 po ints to 10 in those last three minutes ... noted Warriors Coach Al Attles. "Then. the little seg- ment that hurt us most was al t he start of the fourth quarter when J .B. Carroll took three or four shots that wouldn't go in. "They were the kind he'd been making all day, but the fact that he's been going 40 minutes almost every game s hould tell you something about why he was missing." Carroll, the rookie center. had 23 points in the game but none in the last period. Larry Smith, the other frontcourt rookie standout. had 24 rebounds. Tigers get pas t Wichita St. NEW ORLEANS t APJ Louis iana State Coac h Dale Brown said Sunday he wo uld give his team a few hours to savor its 96·85 victory over Wichita State in the NCAA Midwest Regio nal But the task of preparing for Indiana and the Final Four, he added, would begin almost immediately. "Tomorrow morning when we wake up we'll be ready to charge the mountain again,·· Brown said. WHEN T H E B UZZE R sounded, Brown led his team across the court where he a nd his players gestured their thanks to the supporters in a c rowd of 32,474 in the Superdome, some of them 19 s tories above the floor LSU center Greg Cook said he wa sn't wa1tmg until Monday to begin thinking about the next hur die "I'm t ired of saying I've been the re:· Cook said. r eferring to the fact that u; has bowed out twice before reaching a regional champions hip Los ing Coa<.'h Gene Smithson was ph1losoph1cal about the de· feat "We've been lo the dance and we 'll be back." hesa1d Smithson said his team let the ga m e gel away f rom them midway through the first half. when 1..SU went on a 14 ·0tear ··w e didn't get our s hare of the easy buckets. a nd LS L' got theirs:· he said. LSU'S STAR forward, Rudy M acklin, who had 21 points and 10 rebounds for the afternoon. said he got some pre game advice from Da rrell Griffith. the s tar at Louisville last year when they whipped LSU in the Midwest Regional championship game Griffith has gone on to the Na· tional Bas ketball Association, but he a nd Macklin continue a friendship that began when they played against each other in the eighthgrade in Louisville, Ky ·'I told ht m I couldn "t get any sleep thinking about ever ything.·· Macklin said. "He told me to get out of the room and do something crazy. He said to play like we were going one -on-one .. Macklin sai d he did d o something crazy, although he wouldn't s ay what it was . Once the game began. however, he was a ll busin ess, going agains t Wi chita State's powerful front line. THE VICTORY over Wichita State sends LSU to the Final Four Saturday to fa<.'e Indiana. a 78-46 victorover St. Joseph. Wichita State held a narrow lead through early s tages and bat tied LSU on even t('rm s in the first six minutesofthegame But Macklin hit a 12-foot Jumper to start the 14-0 scoring spree and capped 1t with a two- point stuff at 10 minutes into the contest He had six points m the binge. while Cook. who finished with 19points, had four Macklin suffered a cut finger on his right hand with 10 13 left in the game and an LSU s pokesman s aid the injury will require stitches. LSU subs tituted liberally throughout the contes\. playing 10 m e n in the first hair and e mptying the bench in the final three minutes. Wichita State forward Antoine Carr led all scorers with 22 points. 14 of them in the second half. Teammate Cliff Levingston had 17 points. LSU advances to the Final Four with a 31-3 record Wi<.'hita State's year ends with a 26-7s late. Women pros head for Mesa Verde CC By HO\IARD L. HANDY 01 11 .. D•llY Pitel SI.alt If lightning docs s trike twice in the same place as evidenced by the come·from-behind victory of Donna Caponi in the Desert Inn pro-am LPGA golf tournament Sunday, Nancy Lopez-Mellon s hould be in great s hape to record another victor y in the Women's Kemper Open this week in Costa Mesa. Lopez-Melton, the leader· in Las Vegas for three rounds despite a 77 on Saturday. fell to a 76 Sunday as Caponi fired a 68 to capture the title for the second strai$lht year . "Yes, I'll be in Costa Mesa this week and hope to do better than last year there," Caponi said by telephone from Las Vegas Sunday night. "Mesa Verde Is a fabulous golf course and one that all or the players like and are looking forward to playing," s he said. In discussing her round at the Desert Inn course In the final round, abe termed the victory "Incredible. How can you be 12 shots back and win a •qtttoumamenl? It's fabuJous. "Perhepa It's the experience that I have and the feet that I hit the balf we!J today. 1 was able to hit a lot of high. c ut shots which held these hard greens. It boiled down to good course manageme nt on m y part." .. But I'm really looking forward to playing In Costa Mesa. I love that golf course." Lopez-Melton also mentioned the Mesa Verde CC layout "I fell like I was still hitting the ball well to- day ... she said. "But I pushed a few drives to the right. I'm just going to go on to Costa Mesa to de· fend my title there." lier troubles came off the tee Sunday. One of her misplaced drives put her under some olive trees on the ninth hole and led to an out-of-bounds shot when she pus hed a seven-Iron. She finished with a double-bogey six on that hole. For Caponi, an 80-fool pull from six feet off the 15th green where she couldJl't see the cup, went in for an eagle and she went ln front to stay at that point She also pitched in from 20 feet oft the green on the rtnaJ hole lor a birdie. Lopez-Melton, lbe delendina champion, Caponi <See LPGA, Pace 8%) Ke mpe r facts WHO LPGA players. WHAT -Third annual Women's Kemper Open golf tournement. WHERE -Mesa Verde Country Club In Cotta Mesa. WH•N -Thursday throu1b Sunday. 72-holes or cbampionablp pley preceded by Wednesday's pro-am. WHY -For $175,000 In prize mo n ey with Hoag Memorial Hospital or Costa Meu u chief beneficiary. PRICE OF ADMISSION - SeHon tlckelt, tu. available tbrou1h Saturday at the , .... ; dA1l)' Ucket, Wtdnes· day t.broueh Sunday, S8. .. ' ... ="" .. ______ , .. _____ _ ____ .,....,.._., ___ ......-.-. .. __. . ..__. ______ _.,........._____ ....... __ ,...._..... _________________ .. _____ ..... , Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mond•y. March 23, 1981 j 4 .. I SPORTS BREAK J HOCKEY I BASEBALL I I ..I f : . ------------------------.-.--- From AP dlJpakMI MIAMI -Baltimore Orioles Mana1er Earl • Weaver was suspended Sunday for three spring training exhibition games. The suspension -the fourth of Weaver's career -was imposed by American League President Lee MacPhail who attended Sunday's game between the Orioles and the Texas Rangers. MacPhail acted after the Orioles forfeited last Thursday's game against the Kansas City Royals when Weaver took hts team off the field following a dispute with the umpires over the lineup card "What happened happened in a spring training game. so I see no reason why the suspension shouldn't be served down here," said MacPhail. The BalHmore manager i~ to begin serving his suspension today, he noted. Weaver, Insisting that he doesn't believe in suspensions. said he would stage , a "sit-out" instead. wun1t "I think I'll stage a th.ree·day sit-out," Weaver said. "Maybe I can get Lee a little more productivity and do something with the league office and the people who work for him." Terming has "sit-out" as "a form of protest," Weaver said his action "is in support more or less of President Reagan 's program. He wants more productivity and wants us to eliminate stupidity, waste, bureaucratic uselessness and red tape," He expressed dissatis faction with MacPhail. "I think Mr. MacPhail will agree he 's not doing his job properly," Weaver said. "That's what the sit-out is about And then maybe out of this will come a ballgame that will be played with an official batting order.·· Dod9~r rally falb dtori In nfnd1 VERO BEACH Atlanta scored four runs in • the lop of the ninth inning and held off a Los Angeles rally in the bottom of the inning to post an 8·7 exhibition baseball victory over the Dodgers Sunday. Los Angeles. blanked for seven innings. scored two runs in the eighth and five m ore in the ninth before Atlanta re· liever Al Hrabos ky choked off the raJlies. Catcher Mall Sinatro doubled twice and singled to lead a 15-hil Atlanta attack. Dale Murphy had a double and two singles and Mike Lum had a triple and a single for the Braves. Bill Russell. playing in only his second exhibition game. led the Dodgers' 12-hit attack with two doubles and a single The Los Angeles s horts top 1s 4 for-7 the spring, three of them doubles. Wi1111ipeg tumbles, 7.5 . .......... i.•"-• Jllwntb ,. .. , •I 8e11lr• Forward Lee ••Truell" RoblalOD scored U m point• and arabbed 10 rebound• 11 Phoenix trounced Seattle 107-91 in National Basketball Al· 1ociation play Sunday. The victory wu No. SS for the Suns and tied a club record for moat wins lo a season ... Elsewhere l.n the NBA Kevla Gr~vey •tored 14 of hi• game-hlgh 24 points in the third quarter as W asblnaton rout ed Atlanta. 121-101 ... Davtd Tllompeon acored 13 points In tbe third period as Denver rallled from a 1 four·polnt deficit to defeat Utah. 113-108 . . . Sidney Moncrief scored 23 p0inlis to lead Milw1&ukee to a 125·116 win over New Jerst!y in u aame In which the Bucks never trailed . BUly Knight scored 33 points lo spark Indiana to a come-from-behind 107 -101 victory over Cleveland. Indiana was down by as many as 10 points in the first quarter ... George Gervin scored 29 point11 to lead San Antonio to a 107·99 win over San Diego that virtually killed the 1toe1N50N Clippers' hopes of gaining an NBA playoff berth ... Center Motes Malone scored a game-high 32 points and pulled down 17 rebounds to power Houston to a 114·108 victory over Kansas City . Jullus Erving scored 24 points a. Philadelphia regained first place in the Atlantic Division with a 126·94 rout of the Boston Celtics . David Greenwood scored 23 points. leading Chicago lo a 109 103 win over Detroit. The Bulls won their fifth s traight game and 10th 1n the last 12. .------QMete ot the "-•• ----- : "I want to get along with you guys. These pens are a · gesture of friendship. I hope they don't turn out to be I swords." -New York Met Dave K.lllgmaa, after giving out silver engraved fountain pens to members of the of· ten-critical New York media. Kfng1J1Gn lto•ers propel He•• oeer \'anlu Dave Kingman hat two long home runs and Ii Mookle Wilson had five hits and drove in two runs as the New York Mels outscored the New York Yankees 9·6 Sunday in exhibition basebull . . Mlke PhllUps' two-out pinch·hit single capped a four-run San Diego ra lly in the bottom of the 10th inning that carried the Padres to a 12-11 win over Seattle . Jlm Sexton scored on a loth-inning sacrifice rt y by Toni Armas to give Oakland a 10-9 win over Cleveland . . Home runs by Mike Ivie, Milt May and J ohnnie LeMaater powered San Francisco over the Chicago Cubs. 8·3 ... First baseman Lamar Johnson hammered a home run and two singles to lead the Chicago While Sox past Kansas City, 12·5 Anthony Johnson's ground-ball single up the middle scored Bobby Ramos with the only run Montreal needed in a 3·0 win over a Kansas City split squad Outfielder .1 Dan Duran hat a three-run homer in the KINGMAN seventh to give Texas a 10-7 win over Baltimore Hain caused cancellation of the Boston-Minnesota. Philadelphia Toronto. Houston-Cincinnati, Detroit·St. Louis and St . Louis Cs plil-squadl-Piltsburgh games , Kansas Cit y has offered pitcher Dennis Leonard a five.year contract extensio n worth $3.4 million . The Yankees will continue to wear a black arm band this year in honor of the late Elston Howard who died an December at age 51 of a heart attack Kings just too fast for Jets • ··A couple of goals were. not of WINNIPEG. Manitoba <AP> The Los Angeles K ings aren't ter ribly worried about how many goals they give up during a game It's the points they really hate to surrender. The Kings got two third-period goals to beat the Wininlpeg J ets. 7-5. in a National Hockey League game Sunday night. Los Angeles now has 90 points, one behind the fiflh-place Buffalo Sabres and three ahead of the Calgar y Flames . Marcel Dionne. who scored twice and assisted on two other goals. said the win meant a lot to the Kings . "This game is so important for us,·· said Dionne, who now has 126 points, second-best behind the 145 points of scoring leader Wayne G retz:ky of Edmonton Oilers. "Calgary lost tonight and we're fighting for position in the stand· in gs as far as home-ice advantage is con~med in the second round. "It was a l(ame of mistakes, a Vegas wintaer lot of rebounds and not a good checking hockey game. But it seems it's been going like that for us "We've given up 11 goals in two games and we walk away with three points. so we're very fortunate. Andre St. Laurent had two second-period goals for the Kings. who held 2·1 and 5·3 period leads. Dave Taylor. Billy Harris and Steve Jensen got the othe rs. The Winnipeg scorers were Morris Lukowich, Daniel Geof· frion. Tim Trimper a nd Rick BownessandDonSpring, whohad his first NHL goal. Los Angeles coach Bob Berry said he was satisfied with his team's over-all play, despite the numberof goals it gave up. "We've been trying lo improve our defensive play a ll season, and l d idn't think we played bad de· fense although we gave up rive goals," hesaid. Caponi repeats LAS VEGAS !AP> Donna Caponi fired a four-under-par 68 Sunday to capture the Desert Inn Pro-Am women's golf tourna· ment for the second consecutive year . Caponi was 10 strokes off the pace halfway through the 72-hole Ladle. Professional Goll Associa· tion event over the 6,237-yard, par-72 Desert Inn Country Club course, but came back on rol.inds of69Saturday and68Sunday. pace of Nancy Lopez-Mellon en· tering the final round. Lopez. Melton came in with a four-over· par 76 and finished in a tie for fourth place at292. Pat Bradley had a final-round 71 and finished second at 289. She earned $19,600. Next al 290 was Jane Blalock, who carded a 72· Sunday. She collected $14,000. LoJ>H·Melton tied for fourth with Cathy Reynolds and Judy Rankin. Reynolds finished with a 73 and Rankin closed with a 72. the soft variety. but longer shots, al mostknuckleballs. · · Winnipeg associate Coach Mike Smith said there were many good aspects to the Jets' performance. the most important of which was desire "We came to play tonight.'" Smith said. "But again it seemed that we do enou(i(h to win. but we don't seem to win. .. They <J ets) were out of the game twice and got themselves back into it twice. Even when we got behind 7-5, we were knocking at the door lt was a superb ef· rort ... MARCEL DIONNE Sconiers sparks Angels PALM SPRINGS I AP> - Former Orange Coast College Star Daryl Sconiers' single with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning scored Botlby Clark- from third base with the winning run Sunday, giving the Angels a 3·2 exhibition baseball victory over the Milwaukee Brewers Newport loses rugby match PEBBLE BEACH IAPl Santa Monica dominated most of the game and held off a late Newport Beach surge lo take the Monterey National Invitational rugby tournament, 11 ·4, Sunday. It was the third Monterey title for Santa Monica, seeded fourth going into the tournament. Clark drew a two-out walk off M ilwa~kee right-h ander Dan Boitana, went to third on rookie third bacieman J e ff Bertoni's single and scored when Sconiers lashed Boitano's first pitch Into right field. Four Angel pitchers held the Hrewers to five hits. Milwaukee's only runs came on a two-run homer in the first inning by catcherTedSlmmonsoffrtght· hander Freddie Martinez, who hit Ben Oglivie with a pitch prior to Simmons' blast over the right· field fence. The Angels tied the game with single runs olf Milwaukee starter Moose Haas in the first two in· nlngs. St••••• ••••lie• re•lcW •rerf119 ..... smashed the National Hockey Lea1ue record for ' , Czechoalovallian expatriate Pet.er 8ta1tay ~ points and assist& by a rookie wltb 1 goal and two assista Sunday as Quebec and the Ne York Rangers skated to a wild 7.7 tte ... Elsewhere around the league: Pau.I Holmgren scored two 1oal1 and aaalated on two others as Philadelphia defeated Cal1ary, 6-Z •. Mike Ro1en' 4oth goal of thti seuon, with 1 :40 remalnln&. cave Hartford a 3-3 \le with Toronto . . St. 1,oula defenseman .lack 8f'OWDSCbJdle broke away to score a t hort·ha.nded 1011 in t he third period as the Blues trimmed Buffalo, 6·5 . Marlo Trembley'• goal at 4:22 of the third period gave Montreal a 2·2 lie with Washington . , Mike Boll)' lied an NHL record with his 28th power-play goal as he collected his 66th and 67th scores of the season to leait the New York Island· ers to their sixth straight victory, 6·2, over Chicago . . Minnesota rookie winger Dino Ckcarelll credited linemate Bobby Sml&h for his four-f(oa l game when the North Stars ripped Detroit, 9·3. Costa H~•a brothers win oll-raad ~•a•• A pair of brothers from Costa Mesa. Scott and Ill Kent PfelffH, won the 250 cubic centimeter motorcycle class and took second overall in the SCORE Mel(icali 250 off.road race this weekend .. Defendin g national c hampion Johnny Rutherford opened the lndy car season with a solid victory In the Jimmy Bryan 150 at Phoenix. Geoff Brabham of San Clemente was eighth and Dick Simon or Capistrano was e leventh . . A series of thunderstorms forced a one·day postponement in the final round of the Tournament Players Championship at Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. . . James F. "Jumbo" Elllott, track coach al Villanova University since 1935, died of a heart attack Sunday at home at the age of 67 ... Heavyweight Mlchael "Dynamite" Dokes scored a ma- jority decision over Randy "Tu" Cobb in Las Vegas .. Rainy weather forced postponement of the IHRA winterna· tional drag racing finals to Saturday al Darlington Interns· tional Raceway. T~~""''• Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings ar e . ~" ~ 'excellent; •• ' worth watchino; • • fair. ' forget it ii{3 8p.m.,Chenne113 .././I NIT BASKETBALL: Syracuse vs. Purdue. Announcers: Marv Albert, Bucky Waters and Digger Phelps. A semifinal game in the NIT from New York Syracuse has come a lono way in the last two weeks and has a 21 ·I1 record with six straight victories. Coach Jim Boehe1m's Orangemen are led by 1·0 senior center Dan Schayes and guard ErlCh Sant1fer. Purdue Coach Gene Keady has a 20·10 record and re11es on seniors Keith Edmonson. Drake Morris and Brian Walker along with freshman Drake Morris (taped). OTHER TELEVISION Golf Tournament Players Champ1onsh1p by tape delay ot linal roundtrom Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla , 4 p.m .. Channel 2 RADIO Baseball New York Mets vs. Dodgers at SI. Petersburg, Fla .. 4. 10p.m., KABC ( 790). TUESDAY RADIO Baseball -DOdgers vs. Cinc1nnat1 at Tampa, 10. 10 a m , KABC <790); Seattle vs. Angels at Palm Springs, 12 .SS p.m . KMPC(710). Anteaters play at Pepperdine MAl.18 • UC Ir vi n e 's baseball team accom plashed what many felt was the 1mposs1 ble last season when al rimshed second to perennial power Cal Stale <Fullerton> in the Southern California Baseball Assoc1atwn standin~s. A club picked to finis h no higher than fourth wht'n the 1980 season started. the Anteater~ fought the Titans all the way Out now. they ('nter a con ference which reatures Pep pcrd1ne. and tht'1 r old nemei-1s. th<• Titan:., "'ho an· frt'sh £rom w1nnani.: thl' SC BA Lournamt•nl plj~ t.•d t•arhcr 1n lhl' month f 'rorn Page BI LPGA ... down the stretch losin~ out b)' who comes to CoRta Mesa for the a m ere game in the end d · The UCI baseball team secon straight year as cham· circa l98l is faced with 11 pion of the Las Vegas event, JoAnne Carner. the first s imilar dilemma Tuesday as it Women's Kemper Open winner, opens SCBA play here a~ainst and most of the other top names Pepperdine. Des pite their 16·4 on the LPGA tour wall be here record and 13th ranking in the this week nation. the Anteaters still have their s keptics and non-believers Tournament action will be Faced with another uphill bat preceded by Wednesday·s pro tie. the Anteaters begin their am with 43 fivesomes of four climb by (acing the Waves 12 30 amateurs and one LPGA pro m p.m .). a team ranked No 10 in each group playing lhe Mesa the latest national rankings. Verde CC course. The 72-hole Left-hander Josh Randall. a tournament gets under way community college transfer Thursday and runs through Sun from Cerritos College. is expect day with NBC CChannel 41 ed to start on the mound. He will televasanJ( the final two rounds of e nter with a 4·1 record and a 5.57 play ERA. Tournament director Don Despite a 10-day layoff. the Ruhter says there are still open. Anteaters are hoping lo keep i n g s f 0 r c a d d i e 5 f 0 r their hitting in high gear as they Wednesday's pro-am event with will lake 8 lofty .295 team all experienced caddies and average into the contest, led by area high school and college the efforts of s ho rtstop Mike golfers urged to report to the Nagle, who is batting at a .434 caddy lent by 7 a.m. Wednes- c lip. day The two sides split their four A field of 120 touring pro· meetings last year , each win fessionals. four club pros and nlng two games on the other's three amateurs I 127 l will tee off home territory. in the third annual Women's The Anteaters, who were Kemper Open Thursday. 19-9 in the SCBA last season and An amateur qualifying round 37·25·1 over all. are currently orr with four players for three spots to the best start in the school's in the tournament field, was The Dolphins won two kickoffs to break tie games to advance to the finals. In the firs t. Jason Thompson's infield out scored Rick Burleson from third. In the second, Larry Harlow led off with a walk, went to third on a out-out ground rule double by Butch Hobson and scored on Bob Davis' sacrificeny. history. played today. .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--''---~~~~~~~~~~ Caponi, who earned $30,000, called the comeback "my best ever in terms of distance." She was 12 strokes back early in the third round before belinDlnl her rally and finished with a tot.al of 286. Caponi was two shots off the Lope'l·Melton was going for her second straight LPGA victory. She bad won the Arizona Copper Classic in Tucson two weeks ago, but sat out last week's Sun City Classic. L DIRECT In third place were the No. 1 seeded Old Blues. The team beat Old Mission Beach of San Diego, 14 ·3. Zillgitt and Wright Q What does a marathon runner have in common with a Volkswagen? LONG ~-~~ifiiii~ ~ . -I.· ------ lnsu~ncc agtT1t1 and broken Menufecturere: ln11urance c<»t• rlalna ' Contact us for competllivc quotes on rro~r­ t)'. Llablllty. Dlfflcult Products Liability. Commercial Auto. Group Life and Medlul as wfll 111 Wnrke1 ·a Compcnotlon ln1111renct Bob Guffin J9Jt MIC Arthur 8oukYml Nnrpor1 Buch. Ca 91660 <rwSm-905s A -•- DISTANCE MILEAGE! ' ,; __________ ...._.._.._,..._~--·· • . ........... -.,,--.-. ... ..., •• -••••• _, " • • • .. 1 FOR THE RECORD I BOATING NBA WISTl•HCON~l•INCI P'.c111c o r.111.., w L P'<I GI •-Pnoeni. SS 1) /OS • Lnt n n 1' "' ) • Porll•no 41 JI U• 14 Go10<rn Sl4itt n tO .. , 11 ~" 01190 JS 0 ... '° S.•tllt JJ 4S .,l u M._w .. 101• ...... ,.~nAnt°"4<1 so l• ... , HOUitOn )1 " •I• ll K•nU\ (lly )1 ., .,. ll Oen"•' l• .. .,. •• Vl•h ll SI ) .. 11 0•11•• le ... 1/9 :i. IASTl•NCOHFl•IHCI Atl•ntk Ol•ltl.., • Pn1l•delph1• •O t• IS9 • Bo\\on S9 " IS. 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IOO-t.O llrown(UCLA1, t.St. ... 2.McG<se (Tl, I .~I ... , S.S WOllam11T1, 1 Jl l• 1,soo-1 Hareltfl Ill. J ooo, J R11uall I UCLAI. , 0 ... J wnncomD IUCLAI • J 4'.0I S,000-t.MOMslVCl.Al. I• Ol I , J Pltln\.., IUCLAl 1' ~ J, J Mttd..,ITI, 1' )4 l . J,000 tlff91KMH-1. Oitnltlt I UCLAl, • H .00; J. L .... ,, IUCl.AI, ,. s1,50; J Flo1d tTl,t.OHO llOHH I, A. Pl>lllipl IVCLAI, 13 ... i G•11ll (fl, UDI, > AllenlUCL41, U 09 'OOIH-1 A. Pnllllps IUCLAI, 4' 12, 1 PatrlO (Tl." IJ, J Sltnluncl I UCLAI, ~· I •OOrtlty I UCLA,>t.Sl Mlltrtl•y 1 UCLA.l 07 U HJ t B•1'1n !UCL.Al,• 10, 2 Town> \Tl. •·l .l Sy~I Tl,U lJ-t Gtlmts I TJ, lS-4, , 0 Wlllltms IUCLAl,JS·J.,1, l lltid( Tl, 12 .... l J I 0 Wllllamt IUCLAI, S• 10. 2 S11tr I T I SO l•t. l Sl•uch I UCLAI, .. 10 PV I C11tr""1 CVCLAI II• J ThllU n !UCLAl,1•0,l Caot.ITl,ls.6 SP-t LOCkt CTI, •1 1, 1 Ltttow IUCLAI. SI·• .... l Ntwelll Tl,Sl·•4 0 T I L•H-1 UCLA/. llO t l RO••n C Tl 111 •, l Ntwtlltf), llf.2. JT I Anclor>0n IUCLAt. H t S ) Niel.on 1Tl,704lLeonitUCLAl,lfO 10 HIOHSCHOOLSC .. EDULES Mater Del Thuti., Mlrch 2._St P..,1· thomal NI.ref\ 11·2'-la-St.ch Troony -· Tnurs . Aprll 2-Bhl\Op Montoom.ry• 11\omtl Thurs., Aj>rll ~ Bosl"IOP 4mal' (hom•I AP•ll 10.11 Orange Countv Cl'lam plon•nlP> •• Mlulon vi.Jo WtO . 4prll U •I Strwltt' 5411 , April U Tuslln lltlav• Tnurt, "°'" » Loyal• ,,..mtl S.t .. ,...y 1 l t-Prtllm' fl Sa,,IA .a.,.. Coll-oe, 10 •.m F•I , ,...V I LAaout llnal~ •I 541111• 4N Coll-oe, 1 p.m. • -dtnOlt\ Anotlus Le<tQue lkl•I matt All cltHI "-"at l uni .... otntrwlM not.ct lnlern1tlon1I 1ourn1ment t•I •otttro.m, HttM•l•nd'I S1n9lt1 Ft"'" Jimmy l onMr \ Of' Gt"nt MO•f' o I 'O • , IConno" "'"' U~.000· OOllblU Ftn•lt Fftll BY~nn1nQ f-rt'()dy r 4YQ•n Oft C,.~n~ •nd '>•nGf M•Y•' I & t & • .c Women's 1ourn1men1 tat Bostonl SU\tlM. Ft"•l\ Chrt\ E'ftor1 LJoyO O~t M1m• J•u~vt<. •·•,. 4 OOllblH F1n•" B•rb•r• Potl~t Sfl•fOn Wf l\n dt-1 Joannt Ru\\r lf Vu 91n1• Aut•< • ) I • • • J 81ntaAnlt1 SUNOAY'S•ISULTI IUtll.tll4fYlll9!1t1 ... ,rt4m•llfltl Flttl ra<t-Tull •ncl Sl11fl I 0.1•1\ou•wyel, 1.00, f,00, J.IO, F•Mly All•lr I Pln<AYI. l.IO, t 80; Ot1a11-.~rlftl),l.10 S.cond , .... -OffettM C_ .. I (M<CM rool, II JD, 4 IO, l IO. ~I ~rktl IHa"'ltYl. • ao. i JO, 0n '"'" ,~.....,.,.. > fll u O.lly tlO\lll6t I ti SI, $.19 SO Tnlrdr.ce lt•lou1C•• tM<H•rouet, !t 10 l.t0,1.t0,Su1e>0tSUC1\Sr-moer1,e 10.• 10. CatlttStrHIJIQIOli•ar•>l.2 tO Fourth rtGt !>hO•t Satl IH•w1tv•. 1.60. • 60, J 20 Gifted O•n<t• CTorol, 14 IO. S.IO. Iona I 001-..,wytl, l 00 f 1rtn r.c.e C.r•y O•nd'f 1Mct'4•rvu.» 1S 10.' 00. S liO P.,\tC IL•l>fl•ml I 10. • 20. Gold Pt1ncttM<C•rront l •O u .. a <t• 1 .. HI P••dUll SO S••tn r•ct An Httr About H 1m tOtllhouUaye), 2' 00, ~Ml o 10. M10n10M Mint I M<C•"""' • •O l 20 Po<ktl M.n CMCcHa<QUCll.f f() Se-.1nU\ r.ct M ,91'\h A••urn (P1AC.ayl. 14 00, f t0, ) 80, Voflljfy (Vt l .. QUtll 11 IO. • IO, BortoHS-ITI•U•t,J 10 Ut••Cl• 14.al pa td\S•I SO U P in 5,., ~ I 1 ... , ... P•td I• <St •0••111 Sa ••nn1n9 h<leh ttlvt hOrwi• U Pltlt Sh ton\Olallon ~10 Vf.IO with I.Ill w1nn1nQ I IC Uh ctour nonu1 E10Mn r.ct rne \/Uy Ont \ Vtl•loQ'uelJ, I 0 0 , 4 80 J •O Mt 1rty OoattS 1 O•l•hou .. aytl, 11 60, • 00, 'l<k ' S.C.rtt CShotm•ktrl l .0 N 1n1n r•ct Crtmion Comm•nO•r I LIPll•m l. I tO • 00, ] "°· Jot &lot I P1nu.1. • 00, 4 tO Q.,.11ou11on IMcCarronl. S tO \S tH< t• I/ SI pal(l $111.00 A lltnO•n<t ••.120 Jimmy Bryen 100 CllP-nl•I 1 Jonnny Ru l h•rford '"•"•''•' Coswortll. ISO 11• .. , 1 8ool>r Un>••. P•nS~•·Co•worth ISO J rom Srwv•, Phoen1• Cotwortrt, ut • Ro'k MHr\. Ptn\kt ·C0\*0'1h. ltl s 8 111.AIWO, PtnslLe C.OSllWOrth, Id o Goroon Johncock W1ld<•t Co11wor1n, tU I P•n<ho C•rler. P~n'kl'-Coiwo~ '"· 1.u I Gtoll Br•O'l<lm, Pen11<t Cos .. ortf\, '" 9 H "V l(•rl. lttrl CIH!•rolt l. 10 10 0 •<• Simon Wahon-C~worth 140 'I MArtO Andrftli. W1IOC•I (tM•ortn, 1)9 17 801> I.Atilt Pen••• Co••ortn. 1 i. IJ Boo Frey, Eaqle Ofltnh•uur, IJA If Ph1l o<rtuQtr. E•t11t·C:M•ro1tt, l)J IS Scoll Bravton Ptns•• Cos,.orln, Ill lb J 1m Bu•<k, E•qlt·Chorottt, SJ 17 4 1 Unwr. Lon9f>Orn COlwortn, ll ti 8 1U femprro, Mc~•rtn CMvro1et. lO 19 Jim M<EtrHlh, Photn .. Cos•o•ln >7 10 L•"Y C..,non, W1ldc•I Olltn h•u .. r 8 n Jostle Ci••••· Ptn,•t Col worTn. 1 H Tom Fr•nU E•t1lt·Otltnh•u~• 0 Misc. Wffltend tr1n11etlon1 IAH•Al.1. A-l<Mtl.a .... BAL TIMOlllE O•IOLU Oollonecl Ct t AIPktll Jr . third Dutm•n, Orunoo Haiew-. ovtllelCltr, •nd OM> Loe<tll, 1n- ll•lttef, to Aot,,.\ltr ol ll>t lntetM llOnal LHO"*· So<lt CORl•8<.CI of Pelt Torr•t encl Joli" Valle, outlltlders, 10 Rochttft• HEW YOltlC YANKEES -Qpllo ... o Mlk• Mo•11•n, Pil<Mt, and TtCI WllbOfll, out tttt .. r, •• Colwmbus of IM lnlt •n•t,.._.1 LHtll• $eftl Paul &«It. Gil ,. ........... Jim L•wlt •nd Cwrl t<aulman, pllt htfl, Teel M•1. 1Ct¥lt1 illannon •nd P•t Cattaf\011, <•l<htrt, ~r,..•11 llral'll, llrtl MHman, •ncl Tuotr At!llO<d, tl!lrd IHMmll'I, 10 lllelr minor ,...,. compitM •I Holl1•ood, l'la., ,., , .... ltfll'llOlll. .. ............. .. P'HILAOILP'HIA P'HILLIES AtlHIAd Elll Hallet!, pllcl'Wr MOCKIY H .. lolMl"llCIMYIA .... COLO•AOO aOCICllS PC••CI Eel 1tw•IM11, 01~16' ti mark•llne c:o~•·· IAJTllUll WASHINOTOH .4MO-M IMI •t OllllOlt.. MM IMIMllOll CMCll, wlll '911" •I IN tftf 6f IN c11rr911I M•-· 'llllali H Afl -NolNd TOI" L~ ...... ~._,. TllllNITY -N1lftOOll St ... 10 o • ...,.. .. .......... _..,,_ ... Ot'ange Coast DAil, y PILOT/Mond8y. March 23. 1981 lta 1984 Olgmpics Board sailors to compete The U.S. Olympic Yachting Commltlee bu an· nounced initial steps for prepartne the natlon'a board sailors to compete in the 1984 Olympic games at Long Beach. This will be the flrat time the rapidly growing sport of board salllng will •P· pear in Olympic competition. A two-day regatta will be preceded by a two· day clinic June 16·19 lo be held al the Severn Sail· ing Association in Annapolis, Md. Gary Jobson will be program coordinator. with Ken Winner and Ma· Nautical book now on coast Voyagers along the west coast of the U.S .. Mexico and Canada -or ror that matter any place else in the world are confronted with many problems and emergencies from fixing one's position at sea lo emergency childbirth on board. Whatever the problem, it is covered in a new 850-page publication, "Reed 's Nautical Almanac & Coast Pilot," the rirst West Coast and Pacific edi· lion ever published by Thomas Reed Publications Ltd .. long a virtual Bible for British and European seamen both professional and amateur . Reed's Nautical Almanac. West Coast Edition, supplies virtually all the data needed to cruise the Pacific from the Queen Charlotte Islands (54 degrees north latitude) to Salina Cruz I 15 degrees north> and the Hawaiian Is lands. The book details such information as · -The GHAs (t;reenwich hour angels! for two hour intervals a nd a correction table for cor reel ing one·hour intervals Radio jids to nav1gat1<>n Tide t~les Tidal current charts Light list and list or lights Bridge elevations. Marine radio telephone frequt.>nc1 es Radio beacons Weatht!r forecasting Loran C. vers me. traverse and conversion tables. Judging manual now available The United States Yacht Racing Union has an· nounced the publication or a new and authoritative USY RU Judging Manual which is now available to all certified and non-cert1fied regatta judges and to other individuals and organizations. The new manual replaces the original one published by USYRU (then NAYRU> in 1974. Cur· rent information essential to all judges and race administrators -and or interest to all racing sailors is presented in clear. concise language framed by the USYRU Committee on Judges in conformance with the 1981·84 yacht racing rules. "It is as important for a judge to have this manual as it is to have the racing rules." said Jack Feller, USY RU senior jud5te and editor of the new text. S.,-..c.. T~5,_,, •I YOuf Ooof tC ... Store,_.,., "°"" As•tl COSTa -641-1289 , .. ..__ ··-~95-0401 -~~ .... 19011 Dtt9o '""' tt A•ery ~•_, I "1981 CARS I ~TRUCKS• ........................................ -~ .... 1 . '~. J wt... ; Businessmen I I/ yuu au• dn1ng h u s iness u11der a :f'1c /1t1ous nu:uness ~ \am e you are required ~ lly law 1 Hu.mtess and ~ l>ru/ess1ons Code Sec i /791111 to 179.JfJ / tu /tie a 'f '1ct1/1ous Rus1ness : \'ame Statement and : have 11 publuhed fur 'four ronsecutiue week$ .WI-: a t t he DAILY 'I'll.OT can help with hvth Call rhe l.f..'CiAI. D f: PA R TM f; NT fi42·4.J21 Erl 332 further m/nrmalwn jor Hall as guest experts and Sam Merrick at race committee chairman. Winner is the current world champion in the BOATING Windsurfer Class and Hall is the editor of Yacht Racing/Cruising magazine. Entries will be limited to 40 contestants chosen by Jobson, Winner and Hall on the buis of one· page resumes. The top eight finishers in the re1at· la will receive travel grants for a program o f four regattas in Europe under the supervision and direction or Hall. who has been apPQinted coach for the project USOYC grants will be between Sl.200 and $1 ,500 to each or those going to Europe depend- ing on the length of the program which is still be- ing formulated Local yachts score high LOS ANGELES Two loca l yachts scored high in the third race of Los Angeles Yacht Club's Whitney. Los Angeles Times. Little Whitney and Todd Pacific senes The race around lht' buoys was sailed Satur- day in a light breeze that forced the race commit let' to shorten the C'ourse to 14 miles. In the Whitney Series for International Off. shore Rule ratings. the Class A winner was II lusion. skippered b) Ed Mc Dowell. King Harbor Yacht Club The Class H winner wa!:I Tomahawk. skippered by John Arens, Halboa Yacht Club, and the Class C winner wus Pop N L's. Pett' Kent. Long Beach Yacht Club In the I.us Angeles Times Series for Performancl' Handicap Racing Fleet yachts the Class A Y.inncr was Masquerade. John ThaY.ley, Ventura Yacht Club, but a protest 1s pending Class B winnt•r was Temper, co-s kipper ed by Jol' Smith and Ray Booth, Balboa Yacht Club, and the Class C winner was Sunshine. Dennis Hum · phrey. Cabn llo Beach Yacht Club Rohrs captures race river. s kippered by Bill Rohrs. Voyager~ Yacht Club was the winner in the Racing Class in th e third race of Voyagers Yacht Club':. Hot Rum Series . Winner in the Cruising Class was Wildhre, Linda Gronsk1 . VYC Trophy winners in each class RACING CLASS 1 Fiver, 8111 Rohr5. VYC 2. Tiger Lilly, Rasmussen-Shelley. VYC : 3 Vortex. Bruce Twichell . VYC; 4. Wind Charmer, Steve Crosby. VYC. CRUISING CLASS Wildfire. Linda Gronski. VYC: 2. Wild One. Leo Fortouni. VYC : 3. Moon bou. J ohn W1evcl. VYC This Weeks Sr>ecial ...... 1980 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE t.ealhrr covered seating area. cruise control. dual i:omfon seats & AM fM stereo w tape cM6YMX1 !S }}, 995 ~ti (or• S•ltfttt Tn Pnor S4J4' AU "'"1rH PIM Ttu £ l.W"f'Ulr ~miJ!!;i1!~1 U~Tr:m~ :: :::¥tG DISCOUNT ON ANY FULL FACILITY MEMBERSHIP • Lunriou Locker FacWUes for Mea Ir Women • Free Baby SUtlag Service • Jf Claamptoa1bJp Racquet· ALL MAKES! 833-0555 ~ fw lay, WSl SllCUUST at HOWMO Chtwroltt C.-f/10... ... CMI .. NEV*ORT BEA'CH • Sa.a, S&eam, lacaaal, Maua1e • 2 Sud Volleyball Coarta • ~ Mlle JoQ'iag Track • bdlvW1u.l Eserclse Propam1 • Gymaaatam <Basketball/ Volleyball) ball Coam • NAtmLVS EQUIPMENT • Spedal Aerobic Claase1 • Z5 llMer Olympic Pool Its.deck • ProSIMJp ' • llntauut, Bar a Soclal Lo-ae 3601 Jamboree Road• Newport Beach Call 712.0111 ror addltlonal lnformauon INFORMS In the llillPlllt ' '------· I L f 11 Orange Collt DAILY PtLOT/Mondly, March 23, t981 TllE F.-lllLt' c1ac111 "I'll never understand grown-ups if I live to be eight." 1 ·-1 by Virgil Partch (VIP) "I hate Mondays." I MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum \ 3·2.'~ {~ 1/P~ ''Pray all you want... you're not getting Into that bed tonight!'' JUOOE PARKER ~A -~· " .• <--;> ~ ' D /'.,.~··0 ! -:>-· --:---:i ~ ~ /' . 3-23 ' I ~ (... ., ........ ~: "We just want you to know ... you were a GREAT snowman, wh tle you lasted." by Harold Le Ooux A&eEY'~ ON THE PHONE FWM THE AIRPO RT.' HER FR:tENO MAGC:11 V'4ASN'T ON lrlE Ft.16HT ~HE MET! ARE 'YOU !;URE lHl6 WAo lHE DAY 5 HE WA~ ourro~w 10 ARRIVE., M155 5PENCER 7 ~AM DRIVER. YOU CAN ~VERY EXA6 PERAllNG Al l tME6.' HER Fl..10HT ARRIVED ON TIME! IF !>HE HAD M1!:76ED IT, ~E WOULD HAVE rHONED.' GARFIELD MOON MULLINS LEND M~ A BUCI< FO~ SHOW ~ TELL . FIRST, IT WAS Wo~TH !HIS MUCH ACROSS 5 l Otlllty UNI TEO Feature Syndicate 1 Undlfoar· 52 Hwth Saturdey'i Pum. Sol¥ed "*''' 55 Hvnlld 5 Four·beooe< 59 OwellinQt 10 Mr Speaker 61 Cover vc> 14 Dltturbance 62 TOWlf l'M WORRIED:,.-~ti\ by Ferd & Tom Johnson wor's 1H' P~OBLEM? you <50T IT BACK. , 15 Vacuout 63 Gentry :J:JJJJ 3JliJ iJ!J:JrJ :111.JJ!l '.l1.1.J .J J;JOCJ !Jll:U.J .J::l.JiJ.JJ!'JUU :J J J J ,j '...1.J .J r.:J:J :J ~ U .. 18 Flow« &4 AeQulat 17 Slun dl ..... 65Coolld 16 PIMllng M Outmoded 20 On - -67 Ol~alchld VtQUant 22 Eye pttll DOWN 23 Olffft 2• Bridge I Imp 25 Magic word 2 Amutnl %8 Sclentltta 3 High rating 32 Ballet • Sho911fl• 330rHI 5--:Litt r.1 u .n .J J JJ.JJJ.J'.liJ J :.J .. m..:.u .JJ.JCIJJ '.lU.J:J JJCJ 3:.J.hi J .:JJ.• J J'J .. U '.lJJ J.J'J J J.J:.J :.u~ JJ.-' 1.J .J .:.U.:.LLJIJ.J.J JJ'JiJ U.J..JU .J.'.J..t 'u" .n J~J iJ'.l .J :JJJJ:J.tlliJJ U.Jt . .hJ.J :.JiJ:.JiJ 'J.JiJ:.:J ~:.:J.'JUlJ ll:UJ ..... U..1 .J~ULil! 35 Gin 10w 2• Wltp « Aoet 3t Slgnatute 8 Unique lllll'lt 26 Eatller 4 7 Abounded pert: Abbt. 7 Beer lngrtd· 2f 8c>hett 49 Og1¥11 31 -CM'' lent 27 Allen noblea 51 Me. 0wtt Endind 8 ~pt. 28 f\IWgr..i 62 A161n *-~ HiW11y 11 Formula 29 ~ -63 OrMd 41 Mcwter1 10 E~lon 30 Ooc1or M Um 4' .,.... 11 """ 11 Keme11 M Tay 41YOIMI01W 12 Ker · S. "9lctotl M,.,.,.., 41....,.,eON 13<»-* 37WOC*ed 57Perldlle .. 11.-i DR di 1t ..,._.,. at 0.0 Ma.ti In 50 DieMa ti ..... '2 ~ drtNl 10 CMdo't note • • PMNIJTI HEV, CHOCK, U0J WOOU> '(OU LIKE TO HELP OUT MV TEAM TMIS '(EAi(? TlJM8Ll1tEED8 l ·ZJ J -------.... No. WE'RE TRVIN6 10 RAISE A ume .w>NEY. MD WE NEED SOMEOOE TO SELL POPCOOL GAAP~ A A.OUR - IN "THE FJLJNS? Ya! by Charin M. Schultz TMAT ~ WEIRDb816 ~~ .. I COOL MEAR '(OOf{ FACE FALL CLEAR 0JT IN THE OTHER ROOM ! by Tom K. Ryan <i I . I ·~ '---~ _,~:1 ~ANCl' i....-----...i...OK A BAG OF JELLY-~ GORDO I WANT ONLY LICORICE ON ES Wf! rot.J'T ~ED lv.J'I ~ACI( WtTc..-Y!~ 'TOOA'-'f SORRY--- THEY'RE ALL M IXED S L UGGO--- W H Y A RE YOU W EARING-- THO SE ? I FUNK l' "INKERBEA N I WONDER IF I 5~0ULD CAL..l IN SIC.I<. AND(£) 5HOPf'ING ~RRO<.O~ 111Al'5 RE.AL..l<..,1 KIND OF A SNEAKQ ~ING ro 00 ~o lf'5 REAU..Y 001' FAIR lO THE 5{.H()'.)L ! DR A BB LE OAO, 'OOlO '40\.I ~~LP ~( ll)rh4 ~1'141Mb 1 OH 1'.iC llJA-4 ~E H~O"' Sl llOOL, OwE: Of M-4 1'1RES PtlKE.0 vi' A IJA.H .... FOa 8ETTEaoa FOa •oa11 WHEN HE '/EU.S HEEL, f'Af\l.E'I HU\S, W~ t-\E "(E\.LS S\T• fPfq.f'f ~ ... Jo FW' WHEN t\E '/E.US COME HE COMES - RIGHT? by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushm iller I LIKE O NLY LICOR ICE JELLYBEANS by Gus Arriola ~lttf.J l I.JO <OeT IN ... ~E ~ME 15' 'TODA" (i;NIN6' v\ACitC AWA-.(f by Tom Bat1uk by Kevin Fagan I ORO~£. A FE w MILES 6E~ORE I RH U'Z 11' IUAS rt.A1". by George Lemont by Lynn Johnston NoPE.. WHEN HE )\:LlS FOOD HE. COME.S . L I Orange Coast DAILY PCLOT/Monday, March 23, 1981 r- C /a SS if i ed ads work for you I Daily Pilot classified ads work . They work -whether they sell a $10 tool or a $1,000,000 home -by reaching a known audience and eliciting responses from that audience. The Daily Pilot reader audience is young, educated and affluent. Sixty-four percent of them consult the classified pages regularly. And, combined with the Coast Life audience, they number more than 340,000. Ways you can put that audience to work for you through the Daily Pilot classified section include : ·i -Dime-A-Line ads, where you can turn your clutter into quick cash with 10 -ce nt-per-lin~ ads on ....... ~items priced up to $50. -Penny Pincher ads, where you can sell up to $100 worth of items for $2 for three lines running twice. ~ -Piiot Powa' ads, where you get four Ii nes any Wednesday for $2. The ad appears in both the Daily Pilot and Coa st Life, reaching more than 340,000 readers. -The 1-:1-;-;-\iJ-c-9-4-.1-1-;1-)[;-i .... , ... ,;"""'\'I-, where you can find reasonably priced help or advertise your se rvice, from babysitting to window washing. .----------1 -•CCMllCXI 8D5 1 ,where you can save L..; __________ , valuabl e time and gasoline shopping locally advertised values. -You can even put Daily Pilot classified ads to work in your absence with Answer lld telephone answering service, which takes messages from people responding to your ad for only $7 .50 per week. -Put the Daily Pilot classified section to work for you. Ca 11 642-5678 today. Daily Pilat 642-5678 "~·-----------""----- s •• OranQ9 Co•t OAll Y PILOT/Monday. Mateh 23. 1981 ~Coal Miner' Oscar gold for Spacek~ r l'lrn o/ fiw mM1D• on "'°"*' ..omtllalfd /M btn pcture Oxar ot Che s.Jrd A~ AtOClrda Cft'flMl'I~ March .,J By JEaaY HEaTENSTEIN I Of-0.11, ...... IUff Sissy Spacek's actinc hu been widely rec- b anized since her stirring performance In "Car-ne." But in no role has she been more versatUt ~ao that of Loretta Lynn ln "Coal Miner's 11.1au1hter." She ls n o minate d fo r best· ~ctress Oscar. She Is OSCARS RAC[ ~ikely to win, though the i:Year -old film's chances ito capture best picture !ior which it's nommated appear sum. l The Bernard Schwartz:·produced movie tells !the story of Loretta's struggle, heartache, works .and success well des pite some contrivances (i.e., *Sissy singing next to an old wash tub. Tommy Lee Jones as Loretta's husband Doolittle <Mooney) Lynn getting cozy with a camival·booth girl and fighting while Loretta makes htr Grand Old Opry debull . The picture as in two parts -the first that of Appalachia as Loretta grows up poverty-stricken in Butcher Hollow. Ky a nd act two her rise to stardom Tbe f\nl hall woru best. Two of the film's eeven Oscar nominaUona are for ~rt dlrectlon and dnematolJ"apby. Rall D. Bode wu director of photography, John W. Corao producUoo dlrcictor. Slaay ts believable as 14·year-old Loretta Webb. She Uat~na to the Opry on radio each Satur· day n!i.ht with brothers and sisters, mother Clara ( PbyUfs .Boyens) and father Ted (Levon Hehn). She repo~)' loet 13 pound.a to ph1y th• part of a skinny kid who catches the eye or · · Ooo, ·' just re· turned lo the Kentucky hllls from World War 11. DOOU'ITLE llAS A choice or working as moonshine r, coal miner or finding his future elsewhere and decides on the latter when he takes a job as logger ln Washington State. It's while in the Northwes t Doolittle pursuades Loretta (by now the mother or four) to sing at a local honky-tonk. He buys her a guitar for an anniversary present rather than the wedding ring she has longed for. Vlsill to every Podunk radio station in Ken· tucky and Tennessee to push Loretta's first cut, "Honky-tonk Girl," which she also wrote. finally work after she vents her anger at a disc-jockey at the first station visited for lying about playing the record T he Lyons later learn Loretta's song as 14th on the charts and from there It'• on to the Grand Old Opry and the bi.Z time But success Is not without traaedy. Loretta has already lost her father throu1h death, crony Patsy Kllne is kl11ed In a plane crash and Loretta's con· tlnual migraine headaches leads to a nervous breakdown on sta1e . (Palay elves Loretta her big break by co-starring with her on the fair circuit l. LORE'ITA'S MARRIAGE 18 In danger when OooUttJe becomes angered by her independence, in- cluding her use ol makeup. It was he, after all, that got her to the Opry. And despite success, Doo continues to chide Loretta for her ignorance. He has been frustrated Crom the first days of their marriage by her lack of cooking and sexual knowledge. Beverly D'Aneelo Is good as Patsy Cline, Jen- nifer and Jessica Beasley play the Lynn twins Patsy and Peggy convincingly In another bit of contrivance. MS. SPACEK NOT ONL V looks the role or kid but matures as the picture progresses. Her portrayal of glamour star is one Spi.cek rans are unaccustomed to ENTERTAINMENT LORETTA WITH COAL MINING FA THER Levon Helm and St11y Spacek 'Mommie' star signed She doe~ her own singing and guitar playing as well. Late-rught television viewers will recall Sissy appeared shortly after the film's release doing more of the ~retta bit on "Midnight Special." .. Coal Miner's Daughter" was touted winner ltOLLYWOOO I AP 1 Diana Scarwid has Blondie's 'Rapture' on top at its release and has appealed to non.country fans been signed by Paramount Pictures to star with ai-; well as those who worshipped that music long Faye Dunaway an ··Momm1e Dearest " before the current country fad. The movie i!> bas ed on the best-selling book by But the film is going to have a difficult time Christina Cr awford, about growing up as Joan wi nning March 30 because s tronger movies have Crawford's daughter Miss Scarwid wall play the By The Associated PreH The following are Billboard's hot record hits for this week as they appear ln Billboard magazine . 10. "What Kind of F'ool" Barbra Streisand & Barry Gibb (Columbia> TOP LPS 1 _s_c-;r;e;e:n;e:;d;;::s;i;n:;c:;e:S;p:;r:;i;n:;g;;;1;980;::;;;;. ~;::;;;;:;:;:;;::;;;::;;::;;;;;;;---r-a_u=l=h=o=r=f=ro=m==he=r teens to yo-~~ ad u I thood. HOT SINGLES I "Rapture" Blondie <Chrysalis> 2. "Woman" John Lennon (GeffenJ 3. "The Best of Times" Styx IA&M > 4. "Keep on Loving You" REO Speedwagon 1 Epic> s. "Crying" Don McLean c M1ll enniumJ 6 .. Hello Again" :'JOPS IN POPS Neil Diamond (Capitol> 7 .. 9 to 5" Dolly Parton C RCAI 8. "Just the Two of ·us" Grover Washington Jr.< Elektra> . 9 "Kass on My Last" Daryl Hall & John Oates <RCA > Pair together again llOLLYWOOD (AP1 John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd will star in "Neighbors ... based on the book by Thomas Berger The movie. for Zanuck·Brown Productions and Columbia Pictures. goes into production April 20 in New York City Belushi and Aykroyd ga med fame on N BC's "Saturday Night Live" and were together in "The Blues Brothers ·· R Unit.ad Albtta edwards LIDO CINEMA MIW,O«T IUD. 4 T YIA UDO 1. "High Infidelity" REO Speedwagon t Epic> 2. ··Paradise Theater" Styx (A&MJ 3. "Moving Pictures" Rush (Mer cury) 4. "Double Fantasy" John Lennon·Yoko Ono (Geffen ) 5. "The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond CCapitoll 6. "Arc of a Diver" Steve Winwood Osland) 7. "Zenyatta Mondatta" The Police <A&M 1 8 "Crimes o f Passion" Pat Benatar !Chrysalis> !I. "Captured" Journey <Columb1a1 KOGM RADIO STEREO ml FM FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING a t OS NOTICE tSHE RE.BY GIVEN tfl41t Int 8otrd Of Tru\IMS of tllt Cotti Com munoty Coll-Ol•lrktol Or-Coun ''· C•HfOf"N•. wltl rKellf'e M•led btdt wp lo 11 OD• m , T ... ~1r. ""'4trcn Jt. lttl fl llw Purtf\41tl"O ()eptrl,.....nt of .. ,d toll-dl\lrtcl loc•ltd •I IJIO A<Mm• A.,. to\t• Mt~, CA. ti .,~,,~ l1,.,~ '~Id bkh •111 Ot OVOh< ly OPf'ntO •r'\Ort..Ofcw LE ASE PURCHA!>E Off!>E I Pl!INTINGSYSTEMS.0 MO CCC PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICIE 01' IHTINTION TO COLLltl ANO TO OIEMOVIE l"IOSONAL l"OOl"IOTJ "OOfltl TMI. STATI O" CALll'OONIA In ,,,. tNtf._r of the E'"''' ot Jonn G••n•m Mt. Oon.•o NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo •ii ptr \On\ •nl•rt\ltO wnetn~r ., creo1too. r.1r-\ t~IM\ or otv•~~ or t"f •c.>V9 ,...~a a.cf'•~ •no\.t ,.,, 111no•n •Odr~u w4n 80• 1111 H•tbor Or•oon lh•I Lt!tler\ o• T .,1.m.-nt•r• w•r• t\\uf'd ro 1Ct11n.ttn • H1f'U\1MOn, 1)1121 ~h<•n 8•'Y Or1v•. Brooklnq\, Or-oon •1•1~ Dy IM Co•w•t Coutt 01 ,,. Sl•I• of Ot-oon of Curry County,• tourt of comprtrnt '"'''\.d•C l f'm• ·m:f~· J ~!;~~7.·Yr~;:·--o ....... .-.cl. 1'-...JMtf .,. ..... ., •• .,. Nll·I ~r~· l .~:.~~".~:~.:~~:~I:~ ...,...........ct .... ._,.,.,.,. ... ,.,. u• , ........ ,. "-'• -.......... .,._, FEAR NO EVIL {llJ , ................. .a .,•~ Mell. MC"°'-IOlll ...0 It a..: t. \..AiMM THf POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGI TWICE 1111 ., ... J tl•t .. ·••· ... • ,.,..~IOUMt Welt Otenoy'a FANTASIA 1111 ht, ....... lllM.0 1J••>••t••t ••ttU .... __ WALT DISNEY'S FANTASIA 101 1•-lrft•O U M •>•·t411 ·1•·t1• ne &.Mt CMAffflJt ttrf fMI O•M Tllt-..OO' THE FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 1,. •. , ......... , •• •MCl.AIN ..-cl: " ..... ,..., l.Af , ..... ff. .,,...flD ,_ .. ~ A•AAO. "TEU'' ll"Ol ............ ..-. ........... ,...., ............ ·tACK AOAOS CAI ,, ........ , ... . .. ., .. ....,,. " ..... _.,,..,,,.. ...... . '"'4.4.t '91.0 • ro..• t..ft ....,... IACK ROADS 1•0 ..,...,.. , ........ ,,..,,.. , .. ..... -• ' ti. ,, " ..,..._.,._o '°"" rwo •c1t.oe.-. ... .,.a. THE COMPIE:TITION ,_ ..,.._.,.. •••t••t Af/'liUlli t• .•. , .... NOW PLAY ING MEWP'ORT IEJ.CH 67l·ll50 ...... All bid\.,. to bt 1n ~(COfdMI<• ... ,n 'nc 81d FCM'm tn\tfu<.t1on' •nd C.ond1 t1ons •no Soe<lt•<•t•Gn\ wn•<" •r• now .>n file •nd rrwy bf M<.urttd 1n the Ofl•<t ,, the PurtM.\1nQ AQltf'1 of t ••d COfltOt l•\lr•<I E•<h b1001r mu\f \Ubm1t w1thh1\ bid • <•\P'11et' <.n.tk, <trl1f1ed <l'I•<•. or l>•d!M• \-.Om-Pt~•DIOIOINoratr ol tn•C041slCommun•ly Coll-01\lr ltt Bo.rd ot Tru•tH \ 1n •n •mount not ••n tlltn live per<tnt t S'I ol IN 'um b•O •• • ou•r•ntM lh.At '"• b1ctct.t' w UI enter 1n· to tllt P•-" Contr.ttl II 11\t .. mt" •w•rd•Otohlm In thlt tvenl ol t•11ure 10 enttr •nlo,ucn to<1trec t. tllt proc"d' of th• Ch•<-WIO be forfeUed, Of 1n thr <.•M ot • bOnel, lht tun wm lner.al Wtll bt IOrt .. ttdlO\O•dtOll-dl\lrltl loon ol Ille St•tt 01 OreQOn ·~r:'lr:'ll:lrJIJIJDIJl\ll\ll\llllllllll:l:ICS:••••:ll~ Tr'l•t eite.h of tnt foflOW•l"'Q named " inotbt.O •o or 1\ h0'01nQ puson•t pro- ,.,,., ot tht w•d deteOent PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICIE INVITING at OS NOT ICE ISHERE6V GIVEN 11\•llllt 110.ira'ot Tru\lof'\ or ,,_. Cool <.om .,..unity Coll-O•\lroct ol OranQOJ Coun h . C•tttof'n1•, will rt<.uve \t•~td C,.d\ ~P 10 ti JO• m . T..e\d•Y. M•rcn JI '"' •• on. Purch .. •nq Oep•rtmtnt ot woo toll-d"lrott IOUlf(I •I UIO A<Mm\ Avt . C~tt Me~•. CA ti who< n time w •d o.a~ w•H be publtt li; oCHtned •ndf'•MifOf PUllCNASE OF TYPESETTING l OUI PMENT JOUllNALISM OCC AH b•d\ .,. to 0. In •C<Otd~<• *''" Ille B•O Form '"""" '"'"' end <.onot Uon\ •M 5.pt(1tt<•hon' wtu<" •r• now on,,,. endtn4y be M<urf'O In t"t Offt<•OI ~ Purcn.~u'llQ A.91ntot \e\d toH991r d" trltt E •c h tMddllr mu1t iUl>m•I with h11 bid • c•\Puer \ c.he<~ c1rUt1ed en•<". or ,,,_, \ l>Oncl m-P'Y• Ott to tlW order 01 ,,,. Cotu Com n un1tv Cou~ 01\HIU 8oerd ot Tr"''"' In •n emount not l•n lh•n live oerct'lt I )'I ot the \um l>•d o • ev•r•n•• ·~· '"' btOO.r •Ill tnt•r onto the pr-ud Co<1lretl II the ,,ame 11 •w•rdld to h•m tn ow 1v1nl of ••11ur1 10 1nlt' tnlo 'h'<." conltAC t, tllt prl)(H<I\ o< !ht t r..o w•ll be torfetltd, or tn the <•'4 of• bond, the lull s11m llWrtol will tw IO<lt•t•CI to ,..,o coll-dl\lrkl f'lo blooer mey wlll\Or•• nl\ o•d lor • period of lo'1y It•• US. do• 411., tllt det• ••I lot the-n1no thtrtOI Tiit Botrd of Trv\ltes rnor•u ,,,. prl•1ltQt of rtltcllnQ eny •nd •II b1d\ or to w11vt •nv trr1gut•r1t10. or 1n form•llllo In •ny bid or 1n I,. t>lddlnQ NORMAN E WATSON Sr<ret•rr, BoerdotTru\IH\ Cot•ICommun1ly (041-01\lrn I Put>to\lwd Or-Cot\! Oe1t, Pilot Mer 16,1). 1'11 IU2 II ~. ... .... . .. .. DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTJTIOUS NAME7 II • JOW h•Ye j11el fll•d 1011r 110• flct1t10111 l111l111u Nome •I'd "... r>ot pl •llllftlltt•d " tor iw~tlofl. p6oooo 001''1 for9ot 111•1 Ille ll"'ltollol' le JO d•J• from date of "*"'· Tiie DAILY jtlLOT w ill '"""''" .,out ····-flt for IJl.10 . 011r clfclltetiofl lllClllldo• '"° onllro Oran10 Cont .,.. •lld ..... ~· ..... , In ... odlltofll . lfl or•o1 to 1111tmlt yowr at o t0Mo11t f or pultlloollofl 1011d . ,,,.,,.... .,. ..... ollooll to • THI DAILY '"·OT, ... 0 ... , 1MO. c. .. ollilloM,CA ... . ......... , .... f., lflferllt .......... ..... odffnt-. ,__ ... MJ'4JJ1f .. m. PUBLIC NOTICE F •dttity Ftdet 411 S.••"9\ and lo.onl iCllr:l~r-=:~~~=-~~~~~~~=~~~=--···· Anocl•llon. l&S~ Herl;or 8oule•••d. ........ 1 .._ .. _ ..,_ ---t:A6 Co>I• Mow, C:.htornl• 9'11o21 _..flr1 :ti, _,, .......,.. l :IO _, • HOTICE 01' TIU.ISTlt'S SAllE lOANN0.••1"6-6 Th•t ,,. uno.r11Qneo d•"'•• 10,. IMjtORUNJ NOTICI' CNllDIUN UNOEll 12fllU! T S. NO. SIMM WE STER N REAi. ESTATE FINANCIAL. INC .. Ouly •PPotnled Tru•IH -tM 1011ow1n11 oe.crot>eo OHO ol truit Will SEU. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HtGHES7 81DOER FOR CASH l~y•l>lt I I time 01 ••It 111 •••f111 money ol Ille United Ste tnl ell ro9ht, tlllt eno •Mt rnt convoyt<I to MWI now ,,.ICI by II Ul>dtr ~10 OHO al Tru•I In IM pr-rty ner11n•fte< dn<.r'bed TRUHOR WILLIAM F NORTON Ill,• >1119tem.,. BENEFICIARY CITY FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOt;'ATION. t COt'por•hOft Atcoro.o OclOber I • .,,, ., •n•tr No ll).IQ 1n -tu.3. PtCll HI ol 01••< 1•1 RKO<d\ on ,,,. Dlll<t of tilt Rtordtr of Ot-Coullly. H td CIHO No l>idd0t me y wllhduw 1111 bod for • perlOCI of IOftY·llvt 10 ) d41YI •ll•r tilt d•ltS•l lorl,.OOO"lt19lhereol Tll• Bo.rd o< Tr11SIMS reu rvn U>t orivlltQlt o• r•JKlln9 eny ~dell 1>1dt or 10 •••¥1: •"Y" 1rr1oul•r•U11 or 1n tormll•llHln enyt>odor on Int 1>1001n9 NORMANE WATSON Sot< r t141r V • Boerdof Tru\lffl Cot1ICommun1ty COii-0 1\lfltl PuDllU>td 0r ... 90 Cot•I 0 •1ty Pilot MIH .!!.....?.:' 1~ ti.) ll PUBLIC NOTICE 01 1<11•1 ooctob•• Int lollow1n9 LI.GAL NOTICE ll'OPUIY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\.tt Lot .. , of Tr..: I No 1117 ........ City '"" fOllOWll\O •l•m• of found or ••••d Of Cott• -w. Counh of O•MICll, Sl•le pr09trty IW.,. tlffn ... Id l>Y lht Pot1u ot C•lllorn•• •• , per m•P recorCMd in O•p.arlment ot Hw CUy of Cotla Mtw Book SJ PtQtS 41 tllru ••,for• oerlOd In .. ou of ninety !'GI M"o"-• M41Ps. In Ill• office of O•Yl Ille CoUtlly RKorO.r of ~ICI County. Boys'\ Or""Ot SCllwlnn Lo Tour 111 Eactpl lherelrom t it 011.11n. ml!Wrels Btcyclt, Boy"' ll<t•Clt Huffy S.nt• Ft •no other n;orou•bon• below• o.ptll Blocit. Boy'• BIK• Cotuml>tt 1 SPCI 01 IOO IMI. without ttw rlgllt ot •url•ce Bl< ye It , Boy·1 Rtd &utllcoml>t r entry, ., r•~r..,.O 1n jn\truments of Blcycf1, Boy., Sliver SUnot•Y Blcyclt , rt cO•d. Boy's Ytllow Motol>•<•"• 10 SPO l•H Stet• Annu•. Co•t• Meu . Blcyclt, t lrkk T-Plo•r. K Merl Cellfornl• Sotld !itett AIM Bleck lhdlo, Ski Ill • '''"' •ddreu or common R•<~. Rt<ord•, M4IO WllHIS, Toot1. dot11n•llon '" •ho•n et>o ..... no Orlll' Money. werr•ntv I> QIVtfl •• IO ,,, NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN 111•1 comp101-.1 or corrtclntttl." ol no OWl'ltr ._,,. •nCI prov" 1111 Tl>• !MMf•t1••v under H id Ot•CI of own.rslllp of lh• pr-rty wllllln uvtn Tru•t. l>Y '""'"(if• l>rHth or 0.f•ull fll d•Y• IOllOWl"Q '"" pUl>llUllon of on l"t OClllQellO"S ltcU<td IMrtl>y, lhl• NOlitt, lllt lltlt llltrt lO '11•11 VHI htrtloforo .. ocuttd •nd dtlivt rtd lo In lllt ttndlor. ti lhtrt bt ON. or In IM Ille unoorolQMd • wn lltn Otcl.,•llon City of Cott• MtU, tn wllltll <H• 1"9 of Otl•ull eno O.m.,.O for S.lt, en1 property •htll t>t •Old •I puDllc 011c11on ••llttn nollce ol t>r-t> •no of tltctlon ti t llmt •ndml to ti. ennOUflttO lo c•uM tllt und41n<Qll<ICI lo H it "''d DATED ), I ttroperly to .. ttlly Mid oClllQotllO.,_, R , NETH eno llltr•fter ttw uno.rol-CI t euwel CH EF 01' POLtCIE: w ld notice OI .,.. .. ,,.end of tletllon lo Put>lltlltd Or""Ot C~SI Oollv Pllol. be Rocordtd Oettmbtr II. 1'90, H M•rcn U , i.tt I •u-tJ instr No llllS ol U ld Qlllttt l -- Rt coro• PUBLIC NOTICE ceive the w1d per\~•I Pf'OQertv or to c,.olle<.t the tl•1m\ ~to rtmov• from ti\• St•I• ol CO!of()(ni• lo tfl• •••a ~l•I• th•t L•ll•r\ T•\t•mtnt•ry or of Ad mln1slr•llon ~¥• c.en "'~d Alt ~''°"' "•"•"9 claim\ •oa1n~t tn. t4•d dit<l<ftnt Of WhO h•v• .,.. I" tere\t 1n \a1d .,.,.,., M\O •hO wl\h lo Ol)ttct to '"'" r.-movel. mu\t give written noll<• of \UC.h Obje<.hon co'"' oe''°" or penC11• ,,..,.l>l•d 10. or hold· 1no l)O•MINll P<-•ly ol llW d4!t..Otnl, •• ttw .cklreu •• tn.ted Mlow. wllhlf\ '"'" 111 mono .. •II•• llr~t o..1>11c•1•on Of t"•• ... OUCf' D•ltd M1C1 ltr\I pul>IO\MCI M•r~~ • .... Kt,,_.lh A H1991nton. i>.r--.1 R-......,1•to•~ of 1ne E\1411t of IOl\n Gr-m Mt OoNld c o O.v1d A For tier Altor!Wy•l Low P 0 Box to;.J Brooklf>!P. On 910S Publo\floel 0r"'9f Cot\! O•lly Polot. M•r<h • 1•. 11. lO. 1'111 10.. 11 Going Into Business? At required by law, new butlnesses using a Flctltlout Bu1lneH Name must regl1ter that name with the County Cterk, Call lhe DAILY PILOT LEGAL DEPARTMENT for form• and further Information. 642-4321 Ext. 332 PUBLIC NOTICE -------S.•d Ml• wtll bt m-. !NI •llllOUI cow•n•nl or w•rt•nh. ••Pr•n or tmpllt<I, r19trdl"11 llllt. poueulon, or oncumt>r-tl, to pey llW """'"'"' prlrtclp" wm of lht nottlll -Uftd lty Mid o..o o1 Tr ... 1. wllll l"ltrwst., lrt "''o not• prtwldtd • .ovencn, ti tflY. unOtr tllt '""'' ol w ld Ottd ol Trwst, fto. <"•'Cit' •"d ••P'""' of ,,.. TruUM -ol -ll\lttl tr .. ltd 11>1' M id OHd ol Trlltl Soto ..... •Ill be lltld on WtdrwldAJ, ~II IS, , .. , el It 00 • m •I Ille Ollkt ot T D. :M•vlo Compenv. tM\11 of Amtrlco fowor, kilt t 110, ON City ~,,,.,d Wt .. , Orlfl .. , CA. L. .. 1 AND AWolHT ANO llUL.TH SYNOll"Sll 0" THI. ANNUAl. ITA TIMI.NT 0" Y•Alt INOIO OICl.MalEO JI, I• al.ST U"I. AUUllANC• COMl"ANY Of CAl.ll'OAHIA •»1 l lr<ll lfrMI, No#'°r' .. Kii. Celltttnlit ,_.. 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"'° "''""' ""' tnwra11u '"force· Hellonwl• t P•tt U. 11,.,.12, Cot. 10 ·Whole dloll•"I A«lcttnl •rtd llHllll ll't ll'lltiml ""-""'' H Col I, I.Int II '"'"'~ in 'w~ l;at1for1111 lwtl,.•t• ,. ... \1,000,000 111 ......... , ..................... ¥ ..... \ •• ~;;. F:::l:::r:V~L1•t~I 11 No AM Car RecllO Wiii! lgnttl.,, Actft-Y 811"9 Y-0-11 AM Porta I .......... ft;.,....., .......... ..... ~•a ~["i~ .. ~::::·~:~·;:' 11 No AM C11r R-0 Wiit> 19,,.llon Ao<eft-Y lltl .. Y-0-fl AM....,,. 'ffffl!t• :.·~~? I --~~~~;;:: .. 3 ~~~~ 879-9'~ SUMMER CAMP lllt f No -Ctr Rodio Wiii! tenmon NUU.f ..... """'Own AM ,....,. 1 @rs• ~,.~ ~~~:~~-= "-" 0...-.MC* • .. ........ ,.!;."!::.':~, n-..~l'Wi&L~YS .i!.Li.lt.UJll.;.mL-_..: .. :.:'.::' .. ::.:...' -..J t.MUIK:AN GIGOLO 1•1 f No AM Ctr R..,lo Wiii! lg,,.11• Actft-Y ...... Y-0..n Afltl ....,,. .... " .... \19 ••<Ht ... c, ...... , ..... ~ M l ••I ............................... "All NIGHT LONG" (R) cu•-unu · °'"" _,, --• BLAZING SAOOLES -1•1 UP TMf ACAOEMY 1111 .. ..... ~... ,.._., ................... ~ t.o .. --'IAll NO IVIL 1•1 Gt•..,,.,..... ..... Q ' . "' '"'1 ALLIGA Toti 1•1 I HO AM C11r ltM!o Wiii! ltfllll• Ace>-.-f .,,.. .,.... Own AM~ -w.<o..-•--t-'"' 'INAL CONfLICT 1111 -MANtt.C .. - -11 ------·--TIC l'\IN HOUSE 1•1 -T.-Ill.ANO 1111 ....,,_At_IM_ IACfC AOAOI 1111 -lllONCO I M. Y tHt -~ .. -Tt®•llO COM ILltCltlOANO •Mid Tr111tM , l y T ,0 $l•V1Cl l\.•llt lll""'' --·-...... Ateldfnt -11Hlt11.,..,.111me · Olroa '-111111111• ntl POITlllAN A&.WAYI 0 COl!llltANY, ~ .. Oltl•.W,C.. At••tMt S.Utwv 0... ell'( a.tilt¥.,. We•I, o..,...,CA ..... Tthl1141 _.. l11tlMU ..... (1,,1,. U, QI. 21 '27,110 Wt _.., {trtlfY \Ml tM IM"t IWM\ lt't Ill «<trCletl(t "Ith IM AMuel tit .... TW9Cf - kilt .....,. 1w 1f10 .,_ t,... ~'"''°" JI, "" ,.,.,. 10 lflf tnwreno c.tn-llSIL;~===~===:;:=~--.:."'::MP=='"="':.:QtGC=:(M;:.0:_:111::.,1 -JI! mini-ol 1'11 Wit OI C.lltor,.l•, INfWOl\I -I-r "-' J . COf\111 ~ Jefln(.V~•I 1tvt11.._. Ol'Mt9 CMst o.lly l'llot .• '-------------...,tllU. .. •11•, ,., 14)141 '-tf'91.,, 11'11•11 .... 0r .... C.tt Oelly ~._. IMMltt .......... 21, 1•1 , _,_ __ ...... ____ , _______ ........, .. ,.,..._,._ ...... ____ ,...... .... _ ---......... "'IAfll NO IV"." wi1 ..... ,..... tn••• I \ICl'\I>\'\ -EVBING ~ 1:00 I 0. NEWS W0HD£R WOMAN ' Wonder Wom•n Joins IOfcet 'With • lri.ndly •li.n to pr....,,t the destructtot1 ol the WOtld. IPW'l I) I TICTACOOUOl'I w·A·s·H H••"'t casvllllles 11<rtvmo at Ill• compound create tevfH'• problem• lor the unit ti.cause they are nearly out ol pentothat What a night • GOOD TIMES Penny painfully d1scover1 tnat smoking 11 dangerout to mot• than one's health SI FAIRMONT LEADERSHIP COHfERO.CE Robert Mandran and Katherine Helmond recall their wedding night on "Soap" tonight at lQ on ABC, Channel 7. Host Chuck Stone takes a 10011 at the Fairmont Black Leade1$h1p Conterence neld 1n San Franc1S<10 last December with guests Dr Milton Fttadman and Edwin Meese 111 QI!) ELECTRIC COMPANY (Rl (J) C88NEWS t1J) ABC NEWS 1:30 Cl) BULLSEYE G» WELCOME BACK, KOTTER w"en Mr wooaman goes lo the "Ospital !Or a bunion ()pe(at1on, Barbat1no ace•· dentally misplaces nlm II) BENNY HILL The Three Musketeers nde again into another esca· pade wllh pretly maidens ~ STUOIOSEE "Gymnas11c1" Young gym- nas1s lrain tor future Olym- pic compe11t1on. two ~ods from Nebraska ma11e 11 sci- ence hcllon him !RI (J) NEWS ®J BARNEY MILLER A h•st-stage smog alert causes much d1scomto11 to those 1n 11111 city. Fish in partic;.;lar 8:56 6 EDITORIAL CHANNEL LISTINGS 7:00 II C8S NEWS D NBC NEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAjN Fonzie is afraid thll glass· es 1ren'1 "cool" and refuses to wear tllem U ABCNEWS 0 JOKER·s WILD ID M·A·s·H The dOCIOtS Of the '077th "8ve more than they can handle on a bad day 1n the 1 OR g) STREETS Of SAN FAAHCISCO Hos daughter nearly causes him to walk into a trip. but, with Keller·s help, Stone apprehends the men ne os alte< 6) OVEREASY Guests Peter and Salty Marshall IRI (Ii) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH @) MEAV ORIFflN Guests Liv Ullmann. Cha1le5 Gro<11n. Alabama. Heten Gurley Brown 7 306 20N THE TOWN HoSls Su1ve Edwards MelOdy ROQ&<S A IOOlc al some of Los A11941tes pt1- vate Clut>s where m11mbe•· shoos ar11 not open to the public. the posSlblhly ol 6 KN X T 1CBS1 L h An4"'"' 0 KNBC NBC1 lo-. Anqet .. , 0 K1 L A drnl 1 Lu., Angl'te., u MSC rv 1ABL1 l<h AnQ(•ll"• 't: "FMB 1CBS1 S.1n D·Pgo f> KHJ TV t Ind 1 lo~ Anqplp., ~ KCST 1A.BC1 Sdn 011'QO G» K rT\11 Intl 1 L Ll~ An4l'li'.., «I) KCOP TV tlnd 1 Lo"> AngPIP<o &l KCE T rv 1PBS1 LOS An\jdt''.> (Ii) KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunf•nQton BeJcti peftonan~.a wilts through · vldeotaii-. a look at the newest trend, celibacy, en 1n1er v1ew .,.,,,. lormer Olympie 1wlmme1 Bruee Futntsa D AOHT BACK WITH DAVID HOROWITZ A IOOk II evac><><ated milk In lead SOidered cans. • Lipton soup taste test. video dating, now lo avOld bankruptcy. 8 SHANANA Guest Phyths DOiii G HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 0 FACE THE MUSIC Q) ALL IN THE FAMILY M1k11 teains the hard way that games are not always child's play &:I MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT ~ONCE UPON A CLASSIC Tile Tahsrnan Saladin s Phys1C1an Et Hakim goes to Ille European camp w11" Kenn111" and gives Richard a pohoo whoc:h cures hom (Part 31 (R) ()) P.M. MAGAZINE lloS•I with Ille Blue AngeJs. the Navy s Ace FllQhl Dem· onstrallon Squadro" at the" winter 1ra1n1r"19 1n Et Cenrro 11:00 t) (J) THE WHITE SHADOW w arren Coolidge tells Coach Reeves he wal'IS 10 quit school and try 01.1t lo• me Harlem Globetrotters (RI 0 LITTLE HOUSE OH THE PRAIRIE Charlft 11\d "1s son-1n·tew Almanzo 1>eeome Plf11'«S tn • fretghtlng company CR) 8 MOVIE • • • 'i't "The lpc1es1 Fiie" f 1965) Mlc;hMI caine. Nigel Green A prisoner Snapshot clicks Photo sold 'Mandrell Sisters' By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES IAP> -Marty Krofft, producer of NBC's "Barbara Mandrell Show," was considering the subjeC't oC variety shpws, how they were the foundation of television and such. Still. a visitor wondered how Krorrt and his brother Sid managed to sell the Mandrell show to NBC. consider· ing the unhappy fate that has met so many variety shows lately_ "Variety is the thing we know best." says Krofft. adding with pride. ·•jn 1975, we created and produced the last successful variety show together a show with Barbara Man- dre ll, I told him I couldn't sell her. Not by herself. anyway. •· 1 asked if she had any relatives thaJ. played or sang. He showed me this picture." At which point, Krom wh1ps out a w.orn snapshot. featuring the lovely sis t e rs Mandre ll in a sort of "Charlie's Angels" pose The photo- graph used to be stationed in Mama M andrell's wallet. Krofft refuses to part with it. He sold a series on that photograph. Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Mond1y, March 23. 1981 IMiQ'*' to 8rltlth Almy lnttHl~e 11 commit• lioned 10 retrlewi • dellect- td tcllntlat 1 TUBE TOPPERS Hvu tne Hit ot an ~0111aty I petton and IWO young mel\ oecome Old Wfll outlaw•. IRJ • THA r1 IHCAEDICll.I ~11ttd: • r....otutlOnaiy N,._ .. WIO O.Viet; a man who I• alffWglc to t1moe1 ~:·~ . loolbtll preyw; • ~div· ~~or Retriev.t. * * * "Welk, Doll"! Ru11" ( 1"6) Cary Or1111, Samtn• Iha Ego.,. A mlddft.mQ9d man tri.. 10 ptay Cupid for the f"#o young ~ ne la fOfced to ,,,,. with during the Toliyo Olymplc;t • P .M. MAGAZINE Male"'~' on tOUI. lhe auction of a paychedellc 19545 EMntley that once ~ to Jolln Lennon, 1 cnat whh Lanie Hall: Chet Tell mallet pork wllh prun.. Or WNCO on lht work ol nur..-pt~lltlon· tf'I. II) COL1.EGE 8ASl<ET8ALL PurGue ""' Syr41<v.M 1n thl Ne llonal l<1•1l•llonet lournement ttepe CHIO) • OAEAT PERFORMANCES "Live From Lincoln c.tl· ter·· Joen Sutherla./\d, M8f· llyn Home and Luciano Pavarotti -lhrM legend· ary ope!' 1 star 1 ·-1)8(10f m together tot the first Ume on ttaga In a ooooert from A 'i«'/ F1Shef Hell In Lincoln Cant11<. Richard Bonynge conducts the ,....,. York City Qi>era Orchestra 61!) CHARLIE CHAPLIN COMEDY niEA TRE Mabel Al T1>11 Wheel' I 19141 Ch1rt1e Is a dastard- ly villain who ,,,., to putsmtrt his rival by wfn. nmg both Mebel and the ~motorcycle race Ml IS THERE A FAMILY IN THE HOUSE? Hosts Jonnny and June Cash or esent a reaHstic and t>Qoelul tool< 11 the Ameroc:en lam111. teeturlng dramatic &Cenes of real 1am1Ues 1n cr1s1s Guests 1nclud11 Bob Ho~. Cheryt Ladd. Roeh Lillie. Bill Blx· by Andy Grtll1th. Eddie Albert. Dennis Weave< 8:30 Q) CAROL 8URNETT AND FRIENDS '1!) GREAT PERFORMANCES Love From L•ncoln Cen- ter Joon Sut,.ertand, Mar- ilyn Horne and Luciano Pavarollo • three leOencf· ary op11ra stars ·-perform together lor lhfl first' time on $111Qll 1n a t:onoer1 trom Avery F1sh11r Hall in Lincoln Center Richard Bon~ I cond<K.ts the ~ Yori< City Ope<a Orchestra 9:00t)()) M•A•s·H Hot Loos· lether the lamous old soldier ·How1tze< • Al· Houlihan. VISllS the 40771h (R) 0 MOVIE "The Monkey MIMl<>n·· (Premiere) Robert Blah. K-an Wynn A l>'hlate ..,. Is htfed by • group of WNllhy Eur~ to tteal a 119"' that they claim belong• to lhetn "°"' a wetl-QUarded mu-.im KTLA tll 8:00 -"The lpcresa File." Michael Came attempts to brin8 back a British scientist in thLS espionage drama with Nigel Green. . KCET QI 8:00 -Live From Uncoln Center. Operatic s u.perstars Joan Sutherland, Marilyn Home and Luciano Pavarotti pe rform in this musical s pecial (story below). · NBC 8 9: 00 -·'The Monkey Mis- si<?n -" Robert B~ake plays a tough private eye plotting to break into a museum to retrieve a priceless art treas ure in this m ovie with Keenan Wynn (photo below>. 8 DYNASTY .Blake finds Steven and Ted emb<mcong. and Kryt- tltl make• • drHllC decl· SIOl'I attlN' a confronlahon with Blake ove< the lake neclclace. • MEAVOAlfflN Gu1111 Liv Ullmann. Chlrlas Grodin, Al1t>am1. Helen Gur141y Brown. Marty COhall 9:30 8 (J) HOUSE CALLS The be&t ac>PllClnl IOf I wrgleal vacancy at me hospltal turnt out to be a t>Mu11ru1 woman IRI 10:00 8 (J) LOU OAANT The T rib 11 aeculed ot being anfl-buSl!lfls in 1• coverage ol a lactOfy lire eom News 8 SOAP Burl and Saunders tead I commando fao<I on the fOf- tress wriefe JOdl9 '' being h eld and Chester ann01.1nc.tS that he and Ann19 are married 10:30 G» NEWS II) IHOEPEHDEHT NETWORK NEWS &a RENATA SCOTTO, PRIMA DONNA Cameras traveJ t>ellond the stage into th• p11vate world of lh•s QPef• wper- star as she rehearses lier ptemoec.e oe<tormance ol Pucc1n1 s Manon Les- caut'' with the Dallas C1v1c Opera IRJ 11:00UDU(J)t!t NEWS 8 BILLY ORAHAM CRUSADE f> HEWL VWEO OAME aJ M•A •S•H Hawkeye laces • COUii· martolll When hit running leud wnh Frank llare1 up white COi Potter Is Ol.lt OI the camp and Franlc IS 1n charoe 61) BARETTA • DICK CAVETT Guest Nicol w 1111am1on (Part f ot 2) Cl) RENATA SCOTTO. PRIMAOONNA Cameras travel ~Ind the stage into the private world of this opera super- ster as she renea1ses her pre<n1e<a performance ol Puccini's "Minon Lea· caur· with tne Dallas C1•1C Opara IA) 11:30 IJ Cl) QUINCY. M.E. A mystfH'10U1 and unknown poison 111111 two people Md •t IOOks Ilka Sam will be Its neat V1C11m D TH£8EST0f CARSON Guests Joan Rivers. Der Robinson Clark Terry, Bobby Kelton. M1qoe Gortner (R) 0 9 A8CNEWS NIOHTUNE G L.ET"S MAKE A DEAL G» REX HUMBARD ta Cl) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS . ~MOIGHT- 12:00 8 SPACE: 19" Commander Koenig 1s captured on • pl,.nel PllS· on run Dy alien cat-women 8 @) FANTASY ISLAND A lamous comedienne JOHN DARLING • GUN8MOKl A lormer COllVICI errlve• In Dodge Meltlng , .... •Qalnat tM man who 'C*'Md hltCIPILHe . -~; ""'°'818l.I A bO•i.,g 1><omoter tied lo a crll'\lnat •vndlcate t>tcome• tne terget of int IMF • <>HE 8TlP BEYOHO 'Ordeal On Locuat Str .. r· Anna 1nvitlll her flww:., Oannv. ror dinner '4•·1 the llrat outllde< to 111111 the houM In 8 year 12:80 0 TOMOAAOW Guest• JamH Brown. for-"* l>fO lootblll coach John M•dden. M1deline Kahn. formlN' LI S Senator SllTI Ervin. actor Timothy Hutton (RI «D ONE 8lEP BEYOND Tiie Rlddle An Amell<:an tou1111 traveling by traon in lndll -1n old man wllh a rooster and apparently ~s berse1k 12:40 8 ()) HARRV 0 Harry tron lo help a wom- an who lormerly worked w11h a con man c;reete a "ew hie for herMll fR) t:OO 8 MOVIE • • Ti\e Singing Cow- bof I 1936) Gene Autry lo1s Wilde A min gets hood'Wonked by hlS CohOfl 'Whan gold IS dlSCOV9fed on the" Cstllorn1a ranch G DON LANE Guests 11a1eroe Perrine The Village People Harry Medved, Rolf Hams Q) SPEAK OUT Q) INOEPENOEN1 NETWORK NEWS 1!10 G MOVIE J • •" ··Embassy" (1972) Richard Roundtree. Chuek Conno1s. A" American missionary lt1es to smug- gle a Russian detector out ol Be11ut II}) ADAM· 12 The olloGer5 tengMI with a bow-and-arrow-w1eldmg lnd•an and wnh an armed and wounded robber 1:30 Q) MOVIE • • Dl!coy For Terror ( 19701 William K11v1n,.Jean Ch115topher A 1ov11ly your'IQ wOfhan acts u a police decoy to trap an art 1st suspected or murdering several ol nos former mod els 1:50 Q HEWS T~•da11"• Daytl•e Mo.,le• 11:00. * * ''The Lonely Trall'f ( 1938) Jolln Wayne. Ann Ruthertord A gang ol oul· law. tenortz•• loc;el ranetl· . ers until one man laltlll COl'lrol I 11:30 IJ * • *" The King And I" (P111 2) ( t956) Deborah Kerr Yul Brynner An Eng· llsh gov11rness tra•els to Siam to teach the chlldr~ of the King -AFTERNOON- 12:00 G» • • • "The Pum~tn Eate1 (196•1 Anoe B•I'· crolt Pete< F1ncti A wom- an discovers '"" "er IOl.lrth husband 11 unfa111>- lul but decides that h8f unborn ch•ld and ner 10\/9 lor ner husband are mote 1mportan1 Cl) • • • ··The Jazz Sing- .,. 11953) Danny ThOmu Peogy Lee A young Je...- osn t>oy deloes hlS lather's wish that he oec:ome a prayer leader and turns 10 thfl stage as a 1azz s1ng6f 3:00 ®l • • '' Tile Bounty Man ( 1972J Chnt Walt.et. Richard Basehar I B11tause ot her amazing lo~eness to his dead Wiie a bounty hunier t>ecomei; drawn lo me g1rllroend ol a c"m1na1 he has caotured 3:30 G • • * ' > "Our ~an f'llnt ( t9661 James Coburn . Gila Golan A SeGret agent •S called 1n 10 toack down a group ben4 on controll•no the plenet s weatlW!r Opera smorgasbord tonight By MAllY CAMPBELL NEW YORK <AP) -The "Live from Lincoln Cen.ter" broadc~st tonight at .8 on KCET, Channel 28, 1s an operatic superstars' summit -tenor Lu- ciano Pavarotti. soprano Joan Sutherland mezzo. replied. "I can't write a book. I'm too nice to say all the things I want to say." She laughed at her ~wn rem.ark and ~iss Sutherland's, and added. Honey, 1r you can t laugh at yoursel! in this busi· ness. you 're dead." soprano Marilyn Horne . ' The three singers, all in jolly spirit after an . ~IS.S SUTHERLAND AND Miss Horne will Aver-r Fisher Hall orchestra rehearsal conducted s an g 111 "N~rma'' as they did at Miss Horne's by Richard Bonynge, Miss Sutherland's husband Met debut m 1969 at the San Francisco Opera in ~ave been warm friends and colleagues for som~ 1982. It will be their first "Norma" together in 12 lime. years. . Miss Horne said. "I'm opening San Fran- . MISS SUTHERLAND, A star in Europe, and c1sco's season next fall in ·Semiramide · with M1~s Home, an unknown, made their highly ac· Richard conductin _ Joan has deserted us.'· !!la1med New York debuts together, at Town Hall. ,--~~=-=.====!A;__::.~~~~~:::.:.:~~'..:-- m a concert performance of "Beatrice di Tenda'' · i~ 1970 .. Pavarotti. singing bel canto and hitting eight high Cs. became the overnight toast of the town and the nation opposite Miss Sutherland In "The Daughter of the Re giment" at the Metrop<>litan Opera in 1972. -R ,. ·Donny and Marie: ·· Yeah, that's a point. . "(took the idea to ABC and CBS," says Krofft . "and they turned it down. Then l ·we nt to Saul llson ( N BC's vice president in charge of variet y and comedy) and said. 'Saul, this is what I have.· I gave him the pie· I~~· ~ap~r But all three have been too acclaimed and in .. AND DON'T FORGET," he adds, Rober ·t Blake stars too much demand worldw.ide for any two or them NOW PLAYING .to have run their careers as a team. "Our lives MAllll llHA 'LAZA still beaming, "you're talking to the as a private eye plot· have criss-crossed ." Miss Sutherland said. 81 " !>29 !> 339 "MODERN ture . guy who produced 'Pink Lady.'" ting to recover a HWA"DI' llfW,DflT ROMANCE" (PO) It l·s observed that "p1-1. L d .. "I KNOW TH T · Newport Buen 644·0760 ua a y, A Fred Silverman pri<:eless jewel from PAVAROTTI RECALLED celebrating 1.. • -~-- perhaps the goofiest television al-didn't. lqlow t he Ma ndrells, but he a museum in "The "beautifully" his 301.h birthday in Brisbane on the ~::~! 2!>!>J I ... ·LL NIGuT tempt in history, wasn't something can see. Saul too. He looked at the Monkey Mission " 14-week tour of Australia h e made with the L"'ONG" (Rn) you'd want to put on a resume. photograph and said. •If you can get tonight at 9 on NBC, Bonynges in 1965. "It was 45 nights of pleasure for ::!~!,o"~s~• Krofft, of the puppet family Krofft, them, you've got a pilot.' " Channel 4. me .. .. ' a mos as .cu a tame se Ung That's a nice "limpse' a·nto the ·inner -----------"In the same day, Joan sang -full voice -Wufmlnstt1 893·1305 "FINAL had I t dirf l It . l . UA TWiii ClltlMAI I . ' Barbara Mandrell as he had with • the f' al dr h I f L CONFL workings of network television m ess re earsa o • a Sonnambula' and "l''""a ICT" (A) "Pink Lady." And Barbara Mandrell ~uckily for NBC. Barbara Mandreti Filming moves 'La. T~avia.ta." I thought, 'Let me try to see if I can ~!~~,!,~al~e~l~:~ :.~·~l·IM speaks good Englinh. Better than is more than eyeball medicine do 1t. I think I was strangled in 1he middle of the ,.,,,,0 I ~~~he~~glish. actually, it's good (although her sisters , Louise and HOLLYWOOD (AP> second thing. She went over the two things like MIUIOllCMllYl·IM l r~ene, h~ven't yet proved to be). Filming on the NBC drinking a glass of water." Sa" Juan Clp.s11ano 493-4545 "I'd. been trying to get a country Miss Mandrell brought with her to miniseries "Marco Miss Sutherland reminded Miss Horne or a IOPAllH&cctPTlD I "THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE" (lit) music variety show off the ground for television a sizable following, earned Polo" has moved lo "Semiramide,'' an opera they often sang together '°" , .. , IWIUIOIT · "TffE JAZZ SINGER" (POJ years,'' Krofft says. "The networks by such recording hits as "If Loving Morocco after three in Boston, when Miss Horne sang the warrior in W•kh \tit AtHtll, wouldn't listen. So when a fellow You is Wrong" and "Married Bul months in Rome and beard ahd mustache, 1ix months pregnant. Miss Anrdl •Match JO came to me and asked about putting Not to Each Other... Venlce. Horne. who used a copy or Pavarotti's autobio-~:§§§§§§~;:::~~ •••-•-•• -;.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_-:_:_:_:_:_::_:_:_~-:_:_::_~:_~ r --------------------eraphy as a back cuabion d~g the interview, fl ( THE FINAL CONFLICT THE LASTCHAPTE~ INIBE~TRILOGY ., .. I tWl .. Tltl" ~NlUfl• 10. liil• W•tch Ac•d•my Award• March 30, on ABC L ... 80YD ) tM'ORMI fn the ' llilyPllat ING SAT., MAR. 28 7 P.M. ONLY! ~Ann ........ -~».:""'-• * IAIGAIN IPICIAL * ALL llATI .2.00 ALL DAT l•ery Menll_, & Tvet4eyl -· ·------.. ms:;-s;;,.~ \!.!:5 , .. , .. : @NO ON1 UN0111 ".-.oM.nwo !Ate-,,., ..., ..,_.,.... lll4 Gl!ll NfD Ii 'UM lllCIM '"' ·~ °' '"' llllOTlON 'ICT\Jfltl coot OI 11.V lltOUl.ATIOM Going Into Bualnesa? Ae f~ bf l•w, new bueln••••• Ullftl I PlotltlOUI '""" ......... """" re1111er that fta•ne ......... Counlr CWk. Coll IM DAIL 1 PR.OT LIGAL DIPM'nmlfT '°' '°""" end ..,..., lftforM.eloft. ''INClllDtel.a IHNNKINO WOMM" 'DIML a MAX DIVLIN'' I "l'tAAIMG 9UU." "' "PORTUAC .... "ITMI CRAZY" '"*Oc:Alt•". . ....._ ... ...... """""' c...-......... ...... ~ ....... Orange Co ast DAIL y PILOT/M onday, March 23 198 \ ' 1 I I ~ I ~ I 'i -· - -:::-- Warning . Th S . e urgeon G That Cigarette Smoking Is Oeneral Has Determined . angerous to Your Health. --- 20 c i.>55 A ctG~pETfES inston ULTRA EasY Going Taste 'M Ultra LOW Tar 0 tltt ~ lllY-OI TOMCCOCO. 10.os ;ngTaste "~ .ow Tar 5 mg "ti .. 0 · r · .6 mg. mcottnt IV. per c1ga11tta by FTC . . .. ..,, -..... -...... , method. ·. ' • D1HyPilat MARCH 23, 1981 AN N LAN[)ERS HEALTH HELP HOROSCOPE .. I' ·It would be impossible to include or describe all the supreme work that the land and light of California has inspired over the past century. As long as the sun comes up and there is a stone or a blade of grass Leff, I hope there will be an artist to deal with them .' Newport museum· shows California landscapes By JEFF PARKER Of Ille 0.11, ,.llet St.ill Over 100 r e nditions of the California landscape, wrought by 80 artists, are now on display in the Newport Harbo r Art Museum exhibit "California : The StateofLabdscape." The collection was gathered by museum c u rato r Betty Turnbull over a one year period. ranging in content from William Keith's "Mt. Tamalpais" com- pleted in 1897, to George Geyer and Tom McMillan's "Surf Line Breakdown," done at Irvine Cove in Laguna Beach last November. "We tried to get a represent- ative collection of work," said Turnbull. "There were many schools and movements that in· fluenced art in this state, as they did all over the world. We want- ed to include works from as many of those as possible." Such diverse influences as the Hudson River sch ool , the "eu calypt us school ," im- pressionism . a bs tract ex- pre ssionis m . s urrea l is m , photorealism and minimalism have left their marks on our landscape. An exuberance of light, color and optimism mark many of the works. "Often those artists visit- ing from the East Coast will re- mark about the 'incredible light,"' writes Turnbull in the catalogue introduction to the show. "We all know it Is not the same in San Francisco as it is in lbe central valleys or the l..o5 Angeles area yet it draws the same reaction in each of those regions. Perhaps it is more psychic than phenomenal, but it seems to be the common de- nominator of aJI the factors that motivates artists in California," she continued. Rex Brandl, the Corona del Mar watercolorist who has two works in the ex h ibit, has described the light in his own ba c k yard as "rounded ," hypothesizing that the coastal moisture may be a major factor. Brandt's "On the Road to San Jacinto." a watercolor done in 1938 , shows his fascination with how the California light inspires commonplace scenes with an almost animated sense or urgen- cy. (Whether or not California moonlight h~ the same magical qualities as its sunlight is a sub- ject currently in debate, but Brandt's "Moonlight Promon- tory Point" is one of the most beautifully haunting works in t he exhibit.) Other notable works include those by Gottardo Piar.zoni. Edward Weston. Ansel Adams. Rich ard Diebenkorn , Roger Kuntz. Wayne Thiebaud, Lewis Balt7., David Hockney. Philip Dike, Edward Biberman, Lita Albequerque, Marlo Bartels and Darrell Forney. It would be impossible to in- c I u de or describe all the supreme work that the land and light of California has inspired over the past century . . . As long as the sun comes up and there is a stone or a blade of grass left, I hope there will be an artist to deal with them, .. Turnbull concludes. Although this show opened on Friday the 13th, two days before the Ides of March, museum of- ficials have boldly claimed that it will continue to run Tuesdays through Sundays from 11 a.m. to S p.m. and Friday evenings to 9 P·f'!'l ·· through May 3. Curator Betty Turnbull gathered collection C2 C2 C2 Selling. a screenplay takes time ... C2 Lewis Baltz's ·The New Industrial Parks near I rvine.· 1974 William Keith's Mt. Tamalpais. 1872 ~ ... Renai,ssance Mimi on the move , 4 Mimi Stein, a woman for all seaa~s Mimi Sharon Stein is a painter, singer, &uitartst and teacher who likes to think of herself as a Renaissance woman. As a 10-year resident of Newport Beach, Stein has given dozens of courses in paintin&. performed widely as a balladeer and still finds time to produce her own works of a rt which have been featured for over nine months In the Shirley Meyers Gallery in Laruna Beach. Mrs. Stein's art classes, currenUy offered through the city of Newport Beach, stress individual expression over technique -a philosophy which keeps her classes full of both aspiring and weekend painters. "The most important lhinJ for studenta to learn is to use their own personaliUea. Moat teachers put their personal stamps on their student.I, mutn1 them copy the strokes. My theory ii to encourqe even bec:tnnlnl painters to express themselves personally \b:routh paint," abe said. Rather than restrict herself and her student.I to oils, watercolor and acrylics, Stein's cluaea combine various media into provocative combinations. Her beat-known mixed medium worb uUliu ink wuh, acrylic paint and montage bita collected from unexpected IOW'cea. "I wu drhi n1 home one day and I aaw a trash con· tainer someone had aet on fire," abe aald. "I watched the palnt peelln1 off and lhou1ht what a beauutul color it was. So r. collected aome and took it home to combine with pain ta and waab on one of my mixed medJa works.'' The paint thip1 fell off tbe paper, but tbe aoot broutht a dazzllnt aeme of ur1enc1 to the work. "My mixed media coll• worb 1enerally at.an wlth a ceature stroke. Tbia la a l\dde to the palnti.q as a whole, but lt can be chanted and ldjuated u a pertoa see. the ob- ject they'n t.rylnl to paint wttb more ~artty," aha ••Id. '' Pa1nUn1 la the art of aeeint. The beautr of palDllftl la 1etUn1 the form of wbat you .... A lot of teachiDI la 1ett1n1 your .•tudenta to ... asun," lbe ..... ''I a.Ila tty to teacb my 1tu111D&a to 1at Hcltement into their bruah atrolrea. Tbe ... 11 no .,.. trJU., to paint a pie· lure Uke you're paintlnc a bOuM. Baellll"Ud and fore. around are important too," IM1Ud. Mn. Mn wu 1tn1tn1 ,.,...._all, Ntwe 1bt be1an her HriOUI palnUnl car ..... Wldle llvtq la IM An1•1et with ber bulband Mort, Mn. 9t"8 wu ,.1rv111tn1 balllldl and aceomPl"Jln• btrMll on IUltar. Mort, woR.lDI ta publle relatlonl at t.be dma, wu opeD.11 ....... to liq blmMlf. "Ae wu •lD1tn1, I waa . yaandnl," he aaid. "J fOl IO Uf'ed of MUI• hci.m talk abcNt llnslftl and Dot do~ about It, I nu.111 JUlt told blm to do It,'' •b• 1akt. == the •trclnl adftca, ..,,,.....S lD ~olc• leleou, ud up b1a fldt&r wan. Ua&q Ida ettena\ve Ml· ness travels in Europe as a springboard for performing abroad, Mort and Mimi perfor med together in England, France and Switzerland . "We'd just call our agent when we knew Mort's itinerary and see if he could book us along the way," she said. The duo met with enough enthusiasm for their balladeering that dates in Hong Kone and Buenos Aires soon followed their European performances. "We both have professionally trained voices," Mn. Stein points out. "So although we're singing folk music, It's done in a very interesting way." Voice problems and schedule demands have taken Mort into lecturing and writing, but Mlmi still performs her ballads for groups here In the county. StUI hungry for new areas or expertise, Renaissance Mimi recently began a career as a professional color con- sultant. "I realized that colors affected people in different ways a long time ago, but only recently I've tried to adopt t hat knowledge to help people. "Mort, for inatance is actually physic ally and mental· ly weakened by the color yellow. It's a abame too, because it's bis favorite color," she saJd. These color "allergies '' are what Mrs. Stein la seekin1 lo eliminate. Using a simple muscle teat, Mn. Steln finds what col· ors have adverse affecta on her customers. A friend who ls a dancer is weakened by the color brown. .. I could actually see her enern decreaslnt over the months," said Stein. "When we realized that lt waa her wardrobe, we eUmtnated the browns and her enerty re· turned.'' Mort's favorite yellow shirts and p~amaa are now safely barricaded ln a d~r drawer, expoaed aa Hb- veralve elementa to his enercy. "You can aee the lmpUcaUon.a ol color aller11n to bu•lness and lnduetry,'' ha aaJd. ''If you're a buaiDeu es- ecutlve 1utrounded by coton th•l are dralntn1 your enerl)', produotlvll)' will be redueed." Mimi h., no color allerct•. Tbe only allerp ahe .,_ have la an aversion to atandlnc 1tUl aa a Ren&Jaaaqce woman. ''Some people thlnll that llOlnl from OM cla11 to tbt next, Uke • butterfly on ftower., 11 tbe way to Uva," lbt Hid. "And, ... peos.I• •Imply IOM latareat In one tbiai IO • tlaey can do another. "ll'a Important to do a Sot of tblnp, but JOU •bcNkl do them well. I'm muld·tal•t.d, but lt hua't kept me from excell.._, at 1 number of. tblnp. I WM tM tne artJlt la ue1Uve in maft1 dJff erent areu, alwaya bun111 for a new waytoexpr ... that art,'' 1be1ud. • I -J~,,,..., .. ~ I .. . ~ .... .. a • Orange Coat DAIL V PILOT/Monday, M11eh 23, 1811 { FEATURES He's bugged all right,. but . not elect~anically e-..C~~==.~=-~J::;y an~ tt.. f aet \bat It 18 poulbl• to put a device ln 1 •1•11MMI '° tbat the wearer cao take pletures IMl lllllll .., •---- ol wla.t be .... without th• knowl~t of the ._ ·- Hven tim• a day to'" ••u eve~ la all ritbt" hit home. In my cue. 1 am tbe OM who doe• tbe phonlnf. . I ct.n'l attord a paycbJatriat, to wW you please tell me wby a pown daupter wtio la married and supPQ9ed to be on her OW'll bu to be In 1uch cloae touch wlth her mother? SomeUmes lt's more than seven callJ -it'• more Uke 10 or 12. .... ;. ...... .,, ........................ , ,...., ............. ,. . pMpl• wbo are belnC pbotoaraphedT Allo, 1 have been able to bus falae teeth so •------- that every word spoil.en ll t.ranamlU.ed to a recorder. Tbia may IOWld ridJculou.a to the aver11e perlOll, but I have actually perfected these devldl and uae them re1ularly. When I menUan lh1s to trienda the)' don't believe me. Please stve me the backlnl I need. 1 am Ured or people hiDUnl that I am a little cra1y. -BETWEEN CHICAGO ~D THE MOON Dear•-: I m ade a few,.._. calla .. W.•ln a._t tllefeulbWty tlyev p......,..pllkudrecenltaC ... •Ht. Th pee,&el &alkMte.._ptl wua fltUeeraay. I dH'Cbn wltat la IMlCCl91 Y• IMll lt'uot eleear.Ae. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your reply to the neurotic mother who telephoned her dauahter 1 am a&.&re 1 drive her cruy, althou1h 1he never complaJne. Please help me sort thie one out. -HUNG UP IN DALLAS Dear Hu•: Tltoee plloee calla p.rovlde you wltla a .-.eola.llrlty. YHMed&olbMI09t wlay yoeanao ... areofyoulell. Voe aJM A re your partmt1 too strict? Hard to reoch? Ann Londera' booklet, •·Bugged 811 Parenti? How to Get More f'reedOff\," could help 11ou bridge the genera· tlon gap. Send SO cent a with your requelt and a long. 1tomped, 1el/-addre11ed envelope to Ann Landen. P.O Boz 11995, Chicago. Ill. 60611 Nutritionist at Chapman STOP <Salute to Outstanding PersonsJ, the annu.al fund- raising luncheon and fashion show of the Women 's BIOCB ElllST CALVIN LANG of the Univenit)' of Louisville School of Med.lclne will epeak on "Nutrition and Aging in Moaqulloll , Mice and Men " at 7 p.m . Tuesday, at Chapman College. For information, call 997 -6831. A DISCUBmON on services available to mentally ill patients will be held at 7 p.m . Tues- day, in Tustjo . Sponsored by Friends HFJLTH HELP and Relatives o( the Mentally Disabled of Orange County. the discussion wUl feature a panel of mental health professionals. For in- formation, call 547 · 7559. WEST COUNTY COUNSEUNG CENTEll will sponsor a "Movement and Awareness" group therapy series beginning Wednesday. in Huntington Bea c h . Fee is S25 per session in a six-week program. J'or mforma· bion. call 891-5233. SUCCESSFUL LIVING, a seminar on re· ducing stress and increasing self-esteem will begin Wednesday i n liarden Urove . There wilJ be three 1e11lona. For lntormation. call 840-1507. EDUCATOR STANLEY WATERS wlll lead a program on leamln1 elyl• l\ a meeUna of In· teraction, a non-prortt iroup provldlna Informa- tion on leamint dJubllltlt• at 7:30 p.m Thurs- day in Dana llohtl For Information. call 492-6585. "FREEDOM AND FORGIVENESS" ls the title of a seminar led by peycholo1tst Robert Renouf at 7 :30 p.m . Friday In Tus tin . For Information, call W · l020. BLOOD PRESSURE SCREENING will be orrered by the Mu Epsilon Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Sorority from 1 to 4 p.m. Satur· day In Santa Ana For information . call SS9-4246. OBESITY assessment and intervention will be the sub\ect of a day long seminar Saturday. at Golden West Colle ge A pa_n e l of health professlnnals will discuss obesity's rela· lion to American society, nutrition , psychological aspects. weight reduction and drugs and firming up the mind and body. For information, call 892·7711 ext. 504. A uxihary. Orange County Branch of the Arthritis Foundation. will ht: held April 1. at the Newporter Inn, Newport Beach. Plannmg the affair are I from left J Mrs . Pat Bonadio. treasurer. Mrs. Mary Goodwin. luncheon chairman. and Mrs. Carola Campbell, patron chairman. 0••'' Pot.c Sutt-· Screenwriters at last Gemini: Don't be rushed By J EFF PARKER Of Ille Oallf Pl ... Slalt It took a year oC Saturdays to write it, and two fuJJ years to sell it, but Dayne Burns and Paul Morrison are finally screenwriters. By SYDNEY OMAJlR TUESDAY, M .\RCHZ4, lt8t ARJES (Mar. 21.·Apr 19): It is necessary to take inventory. Check belongings, make special markings -someone wants something for nothing and you collld be prime target. You regain sense of direction. Financial affairs are due to be "straightened." TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20): If flexible. significant gains result. Don't force issues. Ex· hibit versatility, humor. Good news due in con- nection with legal matters. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius natives figure prominently. You suc· ceed on third attempt -know it and act accord- ingly. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What appears to be a restriction s hould be regarded as time for "breathing room." Refuse to be rushed, chided or tempted into snap decisions. Build on solid base; you have gr and opportunity to enhance basic security CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Focus on tim· ing, speculation, affairs of heart and intensified relationships. Imprint style. express views in dynamic. graphic manner. Gemini , Virgo, Sagittarius persons play important roles. You could win contest. Stick with number S. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus on home property, family relationships a.nd long-term agreements. Domestic affairs are spotlighted. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio natives play important A look at hairstyles The latest hairstyles will be on view in Golden Weal College's annual spring hair show, "Lightning Hair," at 7 p.m. March 31 in the col· lege theater. Approximately 40 of the beat students in the school's cosmetology program will present a lavish ehow of hairstyles and matching fashions, accor ding to a Golden West spokesman. Trophies will be awarded for most artistic, best daytime and best quick hairstyles. Admission Is tree. roles. Know when to draw line. Puzile pieces w1U fal! into place . VUlGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: Plans will be changed -telephone tall or special message requires revision. rewritmg and a more re· alistic view. See people as they are, not merely through haze of wishful thinking. Pisces, Cancer, Scorpio natives figure prominently. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22 ): Solid investment procedure becomes available. Accent on pay- ments, collections and ability lo locate needed material. Cancer, Capricorn persons figure prominently. Additional funds are "on the way." Get into production! SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): You can strike chord of universal appeal. Popularity increases HOROSCOPE and you 'll be at right place at crucial moment. New start in new direction proves beneficial. Aries. Libra persons figure ttrominently. Tim· ing is sharp! SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Clouds of deception are dispersed. New insights are gained -you'll get peek behind scenes Leo. Aquarius persons figure prominently. Exciting contact is made through club, group or or · ganization. Be ready for unusual visitor. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Get files, material in order. Consolidate recent gains, ad· vantages. Cancer and another Capricorn figure in scenario. Invest in your own career. business. State needs, define terms. Avoid brooding about past -take plunge into future. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): You gain additional "operating room." Focus on business atrairs, added responsibility, challenge and chance to prove worth to superior. Gemini, Libra and another Aquarian figure prominently. Expand yo4r horizons. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Revise, review. rebuild and draw bead on potential. Travel, cor· respondence and educational pursuits dominate scenario. Sales ability heightened ; what had been dormant will be revived. Aquarius, Scorpio. Leo persons figure prominently. Their feature-length original screenplay. "Free Clinic," was recently optioned by Chelsea Productions, which plans to begin pro· duction on the comedy a year from now. The play bounced around Hollywood for two year s, landing everywhere from Johnny Carson's production company (they "loved" it> to the desk of Woody Allen's producer, Charles Jof(e <he "hated" it> and dozens of places in between. "At $5 a copy, it got to be a tittle ex· pensive," said Burns, a 27-year old salesman for a Newport Beach computer firm. "Free Clinic" is the story about a a clinic in a smaJI Northern California town, whose doc- tors and ctioicians are sicker and crazier than the people they're supposed to help. The real trouble in the clinic slam when a swine nu inoculation program gets mixed up with some venereal disease tests and the whole town is apparently ridden with v .d. "It's a psychological comedy," said Burns. "We're poking fun at psychology, minorities. feminists. everybody. "The main character is Or . Frisbee, who thinks that everyone is either in the middle of a nervous breakdown or is about to have one. His theory is to get bis patients to break down as soon as possible to get it over with. "Opposed to Or. Frisbee is Dr. King, a black psychiatrist who believes that if you ig· nore your problems they'll go away," said Burns. Burns and Morrison met at the Anaheim Free Clinic several years ago, where they were both work.ing as adrr.inistrators. "We couldn't stand each olher when we first met," Bums recalled. "He said 'J don't socialize with people at work' when l asked him to lunch. A few weeks later. we finally got together for lunch and found out we had a lot of things in common. We both hated to wash cars, for instance, which we regarded as a u.seless act. Working in the clinic, it was irresistible to write about.•' Each Saturday for the next year, six hours at a time, Burns and Morrison worked on the screenplay. "I started out as the organizing, plodding influence, and Paul was the creative influence," "prll 1, 19'1 11 I 1 00 • m . •I IN Ollie• >f T 0 S.rvlo Com~ny, B•~ll of To••r. Sult• 1110, On<t '"' 80Uit'Ve"I NHI, Or-.. C..lif0<n•e At IM U!N ol the lnlhel CNbloc•l•on >I ""' noli<e, .,,. IOlel e..-nt ol Ille JnPllO bel•no of tll• oblog•hon ~ur•d by Ille 1bov• d<tKrl-ci.eo ol SALE OF FURS ,, EX PERI ENCE D .. 0mn~ CUSTOM FRAMING Speela llzln9 In Hand Flnleh.ct Fr•mH 1803 Newpart Blvd. '""' encl ullmat•o '°'''· ••IM"Hl, •nd adva~llS It '33,l,,,0 To del.,.mlrw the O!Mfnlng bid, you "''' cau 11141 n1.-. Oate · llUrcll •• ltll T.O. HltYICE COMPANY H14114Tntt ... , LINA MAJM, Allt. S.o-ry 0... Cltf ...... WMt o.-.... ca.n ... C714)US .... Publl•'*I Oranoe Coul Dally Pilot M.,ch 1', 23, JO, lfll ll•t1 Find '\Alai\ I J' Some of the most lot:>ulous furs os . \/~ • seen on TV ond 1n the movies ore now nere tor your selection WE DUY YOU TO DtffUfHTIATl THf MEW 0..-S flOM THf RESALES. The ..... t ..t.cllon of luxwy fur• •• heft 9"' ahown, \ lncWint deaitnet I """ 91"9 ONE Of A KIND epecWs. Costa Mesa 548-451 ~ Continuous Weor Contact Lenses 24 Hrs/Day for 2 ~s WILLI~ 0. HAIUttSOH,, 0.0. OOCT0110"0PTOMITllY ,.,, OCEAN AYE •• LAGUNA a a AC .. ,.,, .. Dayne Burns -a year of Saturdays said Bums. ··But after a while the roles began to change back and forth. We're completely dif- ferent people. and together we form a whole that ·s greater and more creative than either one of us." Since "Free Clinic" was completed two years ago. Burns and Morrison have co-written four other treat.men ts which they are now sending to producers in Hollywood. The four treatments include "Why Does It Still Feel Like High School?," the story of a 26· year old accountant who goes back to high school to catch up with what me missed the first time around; "No Harm, No Foul," the story of five black basketball players with professiona .aspirations. and ''The Carrier," a supernatural thriller exploring schizophrenia. Repairing Whle You RH t Complete Shoe Service Sui~ Slw. Slw, . sa.....,.. .c ........ s.-. ·e ........ . W.+ r ')';:' L-.t ......... 10"-OH s.iel' C...._Dlu1 ' 551 -5667 5394W._. the whole Peanuts 9an9 evervdav in the Imagine buying a line tur stole for under \200,, a line mink 1acket that was onty wom once Of twice Of a mink coat that was a prize on a TV grveaway show They'1e all hefe tor your Mleehon now II yoo kOO'<ll 1u1s. yoo can buy a family hetlloom tor a hachon ot its value CAREER WOMEN llllJPllll Al ... Cr• (lartl ........ ,, .... 142--4321 _______ .....;·-·-- Don't leave your Image tochance ... Leaveitto POWERS Orange County 5'7-8228 ~1,n,f?t./e!/t flu~ !J > TEN COMMANDMENTS SPARK SCHOOL DEBATE ~ boerd membere, p•r•n .. dlacuaa poetlng of coplH , Commandment debate hits Kentucky schools FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP> -Thou s halt post the Ten Commandments on the classroom walls, says a 1978 Kentucky law. Thou shalt not, says the U.S. Supreme Court. Help! say confused local school boards. A group of Crittenden County resi· dents sued when their school board decided to remove copies of the Ten Commandments from the public schools. In Bullitt county, an angry woman shouted. "And I thought we had Christians on this board ?" after her local school board voted 3·2 to re- move copies ol the Ten Command- ments from classrooms SUCH PASSION IS butting up against the vow of a Louisville civil rights attorney, the lawyer who originally took the matter to the na· lion's highest court. He says he'll go to court against any school board that votes to leave up the Ten Com- mandments. ·The controversy began three years ago with passage of the state law re- quiring copies of the commandments to be posted in all public school c lassrooms. The law was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court last fall. Backers of the law, led by the Ken- tucky Heritage Foundation in ··Jt was o ne of hardest decisions I had to make .. the ever Louisville. contend the ruling struck only the law and does not apply lo donated copies. BUT STATE ATTORNEY General Steve Beshear, asked for an opinion by state school officials, s ays he believes the Supreme Court meant to ban the posting or the Ten Command· ments in public c lassrooms under any circumstances. A random survey by The Associat- ed Press turned up 10 districts whose boards voted to lake the copies down and 10 districts whose boards voted to keep them up despite Beshear's opinion that the boards are leaving themselves open to legal action. The state has 180 school districts. John Wilson , chairman of the Shelby County Board of Education. said he didn't feel his board was de· fying the law in keeping up the copies. "IF THERE WAS a state law or c lear instruction that they come down, I'm s ure they would come down promptly," Wilson said. There is also a political danger in· volved, as the three members or the Bullitt County board who voted to re· move the Ten Commandments found out. "You're on our list," Kenneth Mills. one In a large crowd that at- tended the board meeting, said to the three. Mills and others urged that board members Bill Dawson, Charles Hamilton and James Robards be vot- ed out of office when their terms ex- pire. THE BOWLING GREEN Indepen- dent school board decided in January t.o remove the command- ments from the classroom walls. The Warren County bo~rd votetl March 9 to keep them up a1ainat the advice of ita attorney. "We felt Uke the parents don't real· ly want them taken down," said board chairman Henry Mou. "We ft'ere elected t.o serve the pubUc and if the public wanta them up then we Will keep them up as long H we can." Tbe Hopklna County Board of Education pa111ed a motion Feb. 2 11yina it would allow the command-me.nta to remalD posted "for the time betn11." The bOard received petJUons Hoetage8 Dy free WASHl.NGTON (AP) -New York Alt, wblcb recenU1 beau • abuWe ••rvlc1 between Wathlo1ton ud New Yon, recelv-4 pennilakln tool· fer l1fe&lme free trm1port.Mlon to tbe Ameriealil IMld boetaf• ID lraD Md tbeir ......... Cl•U A .... HtlCI 8oenl w o.mced , c with -more than 4,000 signatures urg· ing that the commandments remain posted until the ques tion is settled A PETITION CONTAINING nearly 6 ,000 signatures was cir culated in Christian County to keep the com mandments pos ted. but the local board voted to take the m down ·'It is one of the hardest decisions I ever had to make m my life." said board chairman Ric hard Brame ··r·m bound by m y oath to uphold the law." Wolfe County Schools Superinten d ent Richard Jett s aid. ·My recom mendation will be that, unless we have a sujt, we leave them up as long as we have ·rn God We Trust· on the dollar bill " T o m Riner, execut1 ve director o( the Heritage Foundation, says has or· ganization has volunteered to pay legal costs for any school board that is sued. It is also providing legal aid for the 90 disgruntled Crittenden County resid ents who filed s uit March 4 seeking to have the Ten Commandments put back up in their schools . BVT BILL STONE, the Kentucky Civil Liberties Union attorney who ·successfully pursued the original suit that challenged the law. predicts the Crittenden County suit won't be the last one on the matter He said sooner or later his group will file suits against every district that doesn't comply with the Supreme Court ruling. Stone says he is waiting to see what the Jefferson County Board of Education. which controls the state'.s largest school district , will do when 1t votes on the issue The J efferson County board has not scheduled that vole. "If they do vote to lake them down. it may influence other counties that are still debating,'' Stone sa id HE ADDED, HOWEVER, that tf 1t becomes necessary he will go to federal court on a civil rights suit and s eek the largest possible damages against both the local board and its individual members . "If I have to battle this casr any further. I will pick out a situation where the facts best a11ow me to hit the school districts with a substantial amount of damages." Stone said "l don't feel a federal judge will waste 20 minutes on a case that is SO· blatantly clear ... Spurned Romeo seeks payment /or 'injury' SAN FRANCISCO (AP> A man whose romantic overtures we re s purned by a female co-worker claims "an industrial injury to his nervous system" that makes him un- able to work and says he should re. eel ve disability pay. Michael P . Muessig,. 40. who worked as a property clerk for the state Transportation Department in Eureka, petitioned the California Supreme Court to force the payment of workers' compensation benefits. The court did not immediaiely act on bis request. HE TOLD TBt: court he would still be at work if be bad not met the woman on ~ job, and thus his dis- ability ii Jot>-related and he is en· UUed to compensation. Muess i g aald the w o m a n , Stephan.le Laun.er, came to work aa an office ualllant in Auaust 1'78 in the Eureka offlce. She mrted with him , he aaid, but when he asked ber out, she refuaed. , * • MUF..8810 SENT HEil poem1 and nowers and proposed marrla1e, ae· COTctinl to testimony al the hearin,.. The woman eventually filed a com· plaint wttb local police becaue, ahe aald, be woukt not leave her alone. Mueul•t according to ie.Umony. waa totd by blt aupervlton t.o IHve the woman alone. He a aid be flnaU1 became so dlatrau.thl lb at h• quit co- lnl".to wortl. Words '?f,gays collated I SACltAMENTO (,:l>J The word "ho mosex- u a I " might isou nd clinical, but some com- mon words to describe people's sexual orienta- tions shouldn't be used at all, accl>'ding to a glossary published by the state. The glossary was pre- pa r e d by the Sexual Orientation Project, an office established by the state to enforce Gover· nor Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's 1979 executive or- 1 de r banning di s - crimination against homosexuals in the state workforce. "WE'VE FOUND that people don't know how t o u se the ga y lan guage ," said at· torney Lee Walker , who ser ved months as the project's director. The state is advertis- ing for a replacement for Walker at an annual salary of $25,000 to $31 ,000. Because s late l a w prohibits di s - crimination, the direc- tor may be eithe r homo- or heterosexual. The guide notes that "Sexual orientation" is more accurate and ac- ceptable than ··sexual prefe rence" because "c urrent resear ch in- d 1 c a tes tha t sexual orientation may nol be a m atter of choice ... IT SAVS 'homosex ual" 1s acceptable. but can carr y a "formal. c linical tone." The ac- ceptable ter m . it says. 1s ··gay a nd or lesbian." The g loss ary s ays "gay" 1s an older term tha n homosexual and can refer to both men and women, but some gay women s trongly prefer the term lesbian. so worke rs should say "les bians and gay men·· when referring to both sexes. "Dyk e, f ag and queer " are th e eq uivale nt o r hate terms and "are c ruel, derogatory and of. re nsive, and s hould no\ be used," the glossary s aid. WALKER SAID his s u ccessor is likely to have a diffic ult time because the n ext manager is goin g to ha ve to approach thousands of m anagers and supervisors wh<> have never heard of the governor's order. "Discrimination is not going to end overnight," said Wa lker , who is a homosexual. "We want to be abl e to s tand around the water cooler in the mornin~ and talk openly about dates from the night befor e the sam e way heterosexua ls do." The project has been a t a rg e t f or co n servative politicians. who have threatened lo cut funding ·'This 1s one of the m ost asinine programs 1 've ever seen." said Republican s tale Sen J ohn Doohttle. ··rt over- s teps the bounds of rea- s onableness.·· Racetrack touts eye drillers I INGLEWOOD <APl A Fullerton company is to begin drilling for oil and natural gas in an unu sed s e ction o f 'H o ll y w oo d Park Racetrack. David Robbins. a n at- torney for the track. said the Casex Co. has been granted permission to sink exploratory wells near a training track on the northeast sectlorr of Hollywood Park's prop· erty. The racetrack Is to rt· ceive 23 percent of the proceeds If oil or gas is discover ed , Robbins sald. Casex ts t.o bear alt coata of the exploratory oper•tlON. Oran e Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Maroh 23, 1981 6 ClAlllf 110 4 INDE~ 2 • 5 6' 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 I T I C L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • Te Place YMr A•. C1n 642·5678 NOUS£$ fOI SAU 1.. ..... .i .. , ....... 1 ... .. lbn• Vfft;MWI• l~•J>'MU,_ ~H~ C....,..tklMor Coat1 Mtta l»•l l''"M t:I Tore Y0Wnt•1" \'11Ut)' H\inhl\f\on l\fl l rt\ ''"'""' La&wft• tJ.•rh IAC..,• 11111• 1..11wna N1111 .. 1 M1htM \utw ~:r.::r::~~ ~ ~ft Jw•ft ( •IH'h •~' '°-"'u Ant v ot 11 .. <h ~thl 4IVI•• .. , ... '""""'" ~~i. Uorrw11 '•'• 1mmrn "' , ... ,. '°' ,.1 .. AtJ•rlnwt't•~ IM '•I• ltiuc-hr·<~rh ikt111fte'"> Pt4.1t..-t"h I ffflf'l•O I.vi .. ct\ .... 'omttwt"•t .,,~,,, I ""4oln•'U""'~ '•It Uwpte11•11 t ftll\ "•I .. ~"'"" 'Ao-.•o IMOIPf' Pf'4•~r111 lndliiloln1f t't"i#f\\ l.M.-fet S.tt \1100. ... H.-. t llr f'" \llw-Mn DrW'tt M•110H lllf•:7"''" "'°'" ~~vi ~:i~~:u~l>ll fi\•M M" t •Un' (•fu"• Mu i t •t•lf t •' h•ntlr M._I tA\•l• IA •Aini llNTAlS tlw'" t\;rn1i."'•d HfN\"\ l nh.11 nhh•d Uvwllh t 1.u n .. 1r t "' f'Uf't'1'Jn11f'11unn t>urt\ t <.iindum1n1um' \ nt lu•n"°'u•"• t>vtl\ lu"t\N~''" I I'! l)Mptn~ t u, n l~plh .. .,t Al Aph huu ""' \ "'"'" A~\ tu;n ••t t nl k1111nh Kt.-~m " t\•,1t1' lluh•I\ \t1101 .. '•"'""1•11itiw\ "'-..1\ln"\of"t K•nh1-. \•Ul'6n H.in1.h H•IH•I• lu "'~u •• •·•• •1•. hlf Kt "t Ufft4f' Hf'f'll11I ................ k .. ,_ ••• lhd'°'"\u•t lhn• 4\ ..... ,, .... k .. ne ,.1'\ "'•nlMJ """"' kr'-'•h BUSINESS, INVEST MENT, FINANCE tt10 ,,. ,..,, •• ,.. k., .. ~.'\ Y.•ntrll lt11.-'" ... "' ""~"' ll'IH'\tm•,,l 'tt.,.flhtl '14 ..... , ••• ,,, .. ,, \I ~ .. , "~"1 .. d• .... ,, ••• , •• flt ANNOUNCEMENTS, PERSONALS ' LOST & FOUND 4t1fio11Uft• t>frl-•At, f .. , •••• ,, .... , ... ,, ...... 1,,., • t wnd ''"'"""'•!'\" '9• t•I I lurA• ,, ..... ,. SERVICES EMPLOYMENT & PREPAIA TION "loifhilt111h· fntilri..1111tf'I '11~w • .,11ir:1•t• UrlJI "'•ntf'"<t \4 '-t rmCHANOISE .\~l!llWI'\ "'t.i"Vh•flHr'\ Alol('tKlin tr;.~: ... , .... ,, l •nw••• 6 tAl1i1;'"""""' l~h r;oc;, tlH'lO Yow t\,nvUwt r,., ••• ieki """'' --a-. Jca-.11) L.i.ntor• lillM'lrttlllttY M•M'fll•IWC*• Mf:t..ttU6l'W"OW' ~ efttH Mwu<•I ''"'''-'™'"h Ufft«' t W-1'1 • t qw1p l'•h c.~~~~r~~ ~ ....... O(iid, \torr Mnhwr •f'll bet ~~;r.o,o ..... .,..,,'"'4, BOATS & MAllNE EQUIPMENT . ... ,.,,., "°•l\ "••"' .....,.t\HI' l\t1at'\ iW•rlnf' t t;Ulli HuM\ Jln••r &i,.,, Jilrf'll I h41 \rr MiJ.th ,.,, HfJah "•P• l>i'lf '' IVU1h """""'° ~ , ... kr .. h ~I,, .... TRANSPORTATION .\ut•r•tt 1 •mp.tr• ,.,, .. kflnl ~IHHH t t1I • ~~o!-" ~;~r.:' "'~'"' '\. "''1" Un,,"'-•" 1-i .. ru 1,.,, .. ,.. r, ..... , I r •llf'n I !11th Autu..,.r\11,. V•t\ AUTOMOBILC ,, .. , ... , ., \nh••""'" • '•"'•• • H4'C f• •h•1n \ • h11 Ir. 'V~' ""'I k· .. 1 I Vtl'ln"f liH t ,, ...... " \ .n \wlu l • •""' ......... ,..,.,,,.,,.., AUTOS, IMPORTED lo -ftrle l \11• H11Mii-11 \~t \lii•f·ll ...... ,. \ ....... '•Pf't c'"'-'u'' ""'•'-n ~ .. ,, .. , .... , ltund• J .. .-w .. ~ J"'n>f'n f\4rm...nn hh•• l..o"'borfhlN "'*"'"' "'''•' 1f, ..... "' ,.,, .. , . ._ ,., ... , t•1tn1t••• "•"'-'"'," ''"'" l\f' "'"'"''' ~1tt\ ... t4.1.1'f•• "'""' :O.••" !l\111 !'iub4fU fi1)11I• tr,_.nwn \ullt•"" •ii.'.f'" \ufH.1 u.,,,,,., Oh Mu111 - AUTOS, NEW AUTOS, USED ' •ll•lf•t l:•tft•r-. ,-. ....... '"•.>•l•t .......... ·~._., .. '"h"'" t::.·· t•w'f l•w r1•I ...._n ,..,., ... illl'f•vO :'~t. .• V"no t'ltlftQW19' f'luftt.,~ ThtiUKfl,,l>IM \•t• ·rt. ptjf ""' IWI llQI 1001 IO\l loi:t lu:M Iii. !OJI 111)4 ,...., 1004 l'* IU:.) IOOI IOI! , .... 101~ Hf/'• .... ..... '* .... llllJ \JUll \t 41 , .. ... 1"4,All "'°" 101.- :1tt1 •..11•1 , ..... . " ... ... , ... .... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY PuMltMr's Motlc•: All real estate ad ver tl sed in th i s newspaper ts subject to the Federal Fair Hous 1ng Act of 1968 wh1t'h makes 11 illegal lo ad- vertise "any preference, l1m1lat1on. o r dis t'r1mination based on race, color, religion. sex. or national ongin. or an mtentton to make any s uch preferenre, l1m1tat1on , or d1~ crimination " This newspaper will not knowmgly acl'ept an} advertisrng for real estate which 1~ tn viola t1on0Cthelaw ERROtlS: Advert;sers sho.lkf ctwclc their ads daily and report tt· ron immediately. The DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the first incorred Insertion only . Howws for Sale ..••..••..•............ 1002 ..••••........••.••.... 2 UNITS $94,900 Super mvest ment ' T"o 2 Bdrm unit:;. Ont' 14 11 h I fireplal'e' Current m t·ome S740 mo rmanc· 1 n i:' l ) r horn(• protct· t ion plan 1nC'lude d llurry, this won·t last 646 7171 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS HcMit1n For Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• INVESTORS TICKET • Is now ln Costa Mesa uf fermg residen\1111 pro pertywlth: No Negative Cash Flow NoTenal\t Problems Capital Gams Only High Returns I not 2nd Trust Deeds t ~£.all for information ., RED CARPET ·-754-1202 LAGUNA OLDIE $110,000 Oldie but good1e t Hdrm . l'entrally l()(.'ated Walk 1nK distance to hl'il\'h and shoppmg Nf'11. 1·op pt>r pipes, roof and wood fen('<' Owner \'Cf\ motiva ted. will l'ilrr~ fmant'tnl! l'a II 752 1700 fl4ftd Lots of Charm i n t hi s I o v e I y I r f:' l' shaded bunKalow 11n ex tra largt• lot 3 ll rlrm IJt>am ('t'1l1n~' worki.hop St89.aOli E }14 NlW CONDOS XLNT TERMS 121 32 Edinqer of Harbor lllnl 64l l99li1Kt COMMERCfAL PROPERTY SPECIALISTS lllESTOIS FIX ANt>SAVE Holl up your sleeves. 4 Br l~ ba home. Owner wllling to negot iate. • $98,500. Call now 536-9311 ALLSTATE. REALTORS ATTENTION INVESTORS This be1tullful view pro-pert y 1n Newport 1s priced below markel value and below ap pra1sal Space age k1tdien with breakfast area Huge hvmg room lanai with view f trt'plac·e and open beamed l'athedral l'ell mgs lllde a wa) maste1 suite, separate rh1drem w1nt: Dash to the P<>OI Call today for details _ Owner highly motivated and will work with veq{ treat1ve finant'mg. Call 752 1700 THE REAL ESTATERS ~ I 1 t •t • / H· : 1 ~-• .. J I"""" r)t_• l ~ · • J.8 H(AL tSr•rC (IC(Ll(NCf $INC(,,,, COSTA MESA Twtn townhouse t) pe dul'lex Two bedrooms u psta1rs f''ull bath u I' and half bath do"' n Pn' alt'. fen(·ed pat 10s Fo ur t•Jr carport Storage Submi t on terms. Sl41.SOO 631-7300 M.I . THE GOOD LIFE COST A MESA Learn brokeragt• & pro UNIV. PARK Tuwnhume lt\'111.: al its mc~l prf'sl1i:111us You 'll ('flJOY ('OZ~ ftrts lfl the mstr Bdrm. balt•mtl'S off 3 Bdrms. plus the fun of mtnor redecoraltnR with pa int und new nirpet The prit·e of St40.000 1s the best m the arf:'a For 1nformat1on on t h 1 s 5 t: L E C T,. PROPEHTY call 1~1 3191 5IR-S125,500 perty mgml ~ktlb IJ~ Ow .... ER. S ... YS SELL jommg a leadtnl( l<H'al " ~ firm Call Ken at Not an add-on or con· 6700 version. A real S Bdrm l•--•6•711i5•·-----family home in one or Costa M ~sa ·s n1(•est areas Handymans de Ught. C@nd '"'" SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-63 J-6990 COLLEGE PK. I A ~~~~~~~~ful dean and near 3 Brlrm :! II bath home Countr) k1 trhen. familv arl•a wi th huge• -brtl'k fircplact' Gn•at f1nlln t· mg Priee only St 18.000 Ac·t now. call 546·2:113 THE REAL ESTATS:RS SUMMER SPECIAL $1.67 Per Day Thal'!> ALI. \OU Jla' for a JOda\' ad mthe DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DO IT NOW ~ Ask for Sandra Your Dai Iv Pilot Servit'e Oirector.v Representative 642-56 78. ext l 1 l -·-·-..........- ' I ~ ,. ; \ I ~ :~ • ,,~'(·1 Starting eNew Bu1ln•H WES TC LIFF VACANT He du l'ed $25.000 Desperale o14nl•r i.a)s bring Jll ntrc•rs ~o qualifytnR l..o" down 4 Bdrm stnitlt•ston home. totall) upJ!r<1c11•d ('all for more rl<•t.11 !:- CD SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 ASSUME SI 00,000 Of loan:. at 12', tnl<>n•st. on this fantast11· ~ki.a Verde 4 lldrrn 2 hath home. wtth 2 f1rc•plac·es, l'xpanded famtl) room. J 900 ~q ft of I I\ 1 n I! Priced al onl\ Sl39,!150 Act now' t•a ll 546 2:113 THE REAL ESTATERS C::SELECT T'PROPERTIES 4-PLEX FIXER! Easlstdf:' Costa Me!:ta I bargain ' All 2 Bdrms' Wa lk to ~hoppmg ' Pnn' only S22S.000' Call for more detil tls !>46·2313 THE REAL ESTATS:RS Appealinq ... And Price Sawifym~ to the pocket ' book as well as the eyer Vas t 1mprovments will make 11 u df'h.l(ht to live 1n thll> 3 Bdrm home. lot·att>d on a tranquil tu I- de i.at· SI l0.000 556-2660 «=:SELECT , I PROPERTIES, S F:l.I. tdlt' 1tt•ms with ''· n ail\• 1'1lot ('la ... s1firrl Ad I I I '-,II I ,~Ill\, 11111 I <.,I/Ill <.,f llYlf I <., • •f> CAREFREE AND SECURE .Jasmir1l' Cn•ck Pl<in 11. 2 BR. :+- {'07.V d~n . Bt!autifully decorated in warm earth tones . Located on one or the la rgest and lovelies t lo~s. Call for detail ~ o n very desirabl e financing. $326,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 STAR GA'ZER'•..._ a.;...;::.:;;;..;...:....:..:..,.. ___ ,h CL'\Y R POU'\N----.----t ' ' '" ... •I •I t ' .. ... " ' ... • I Orange Coat DAIL V PILOT/Monday, March 23, 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • , .. ,.. IOOZ .... ,.. tOOJ ........ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOPHISTICATED a.EGA.NCI! Expanded. custom Dynasty model. 2 bedrooms. or 1 be droom plus a den, 2 baths and a unique sun room. Professionally decorated. Quiet location with great view of city lights. The Lakes , and pi c turesque mountains. Presented at $410,000. U~l()UI: t1()Mt=~ REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 EHi CoHt Highway. Corona del Mar WE HAVE 43 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOW[ll REALTORS 675-5511 LOVELY "E" PLAN. Most ~ MOct.I •••r bullt In the lluffs: Situated 011 .,_.ctacular .,......,."with w1toM •lew. 3 Bdr, F.R. lest buy 111 HM orea at $252,900. COLE OF HEWPOIT IWTOIS 2 51 S E. Coost Hwy., CoroM ct.I Mar 675-5511 Perf!c~~!~g~!n ac MESA VERDE t1ve family Lari:l', BEAUT! enclosed yard, famtl~ , This beautiful home ex· room. 3 car garal(e, all emplifys Mesa Verde In a great a r l' a , The quiet cul de sac Reduced toS329.750 location and the family 1714) 673-4400' 1Jlll 6Zl-2121 HARBOR /\ 1>1\ 1~1r1n of 11.irhor Im t•-.1 m1•nl ( }1 , oriented floor plan allow the home owner the maximum enJoyment or this best or all Cos ta Mesa communities There's even a play house. Call 752 7100 THE REAL ESTATERS HARBOR VU tlLLS Spacious & Open 5 Bdrm hotM Oft corner with loads of room for the family. L9e patio, motw. grHMt"Y & mini view. $375,000. ~ offers. owner will assist w /financincJ. TRADITIONAL & BEAUTIFUL Eastern charm ... quality throucJhout. Spacious 2-story 3 beet 1orcJe ll•ifKJ, family & dinift9 room. VU from upper float-. Mo" e--in now. lridt & warmth. $392.000. WA ffRF-RONT HOME:.S. tNC Rl ·\l 1.,lAlt I •llo t ~· ... I 63l-l400 CE GEDllE ELll?fS ca . OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE MESA YHDE • IEST IUY No Qul·<it111n Hut What This I~ Ont· Of Th ~ FtM·~t Buys In Tht· An· a ' Loveh· Four Bedroom Homt· On A Large C<,rn l·r Lot Complt•lcly Hemodl'lf-'d Large Assurnuhl1· Loan Suhrn1l Offer~. Only $145.000 HEWrORT HEIGHTS FOUR-PL.IX Located On Quiet Street Nl'tt r Shopping . Excellent Condition. Good Rent In come. Minimum V a c a n c y F a c t o r . ..~ o u r Two·Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans. Ins pect With Offer. Reduced To $350.000. (!) ·--....... ., .... 759-9100 #2Cotp0t ... ,._. NewporlC_.... LIMDA ISLI You must see long water view from 6 bdrm, 4 bath lagoon home. Remodeled traditional · home. Priced to sell qutc}\ly at $1,300,000. Call for gate pass. LIDO IS&..£ Newly remodeled traditional 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Best in price at $420,000. PEMIHSULA POINT IEACHFROHT Panoramic view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room. e ntry, ti ving room. dining room. built-ins, etc. $1,385,000. RANCHO MIRAGE Springs Condo, 9th fairway, 300 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm, 3 bath, furn. Golf clb. mbrshp. Trade for beach invest. prop. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\odt Dr•v•· NB bl':l 6161 OCEAMFftOMT Choice corner duplex. 3 bdrm, 2 bath up. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath down. Can convert to a larger home. SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE ' $895,000! 8al»oa lay Prop. RHltors . •67S-7060• PeMnSMlaPoiftt 175 I Plcno del Sur 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, frpk BUILDER'S BARGAIN Outstanding builder's lot, fli6x:D>' with charm tnl 3 bdrm home, COY ered patio. Live there while you build! Lot next d oo r also for sale 66xJ00 '. Nr . Newport's Back Bay Hurry. call for details. 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS Free & clear Owner will ---------carry 1st. Priced at SJl0,000 associated BROKERS Rf Al TORS lOH I/lo 9olboo b 1 l 166 l INVESTORS SPECIAL $68,900 If you have little cash and are looking for a golden opp()rtuntty to own your own home. don't wait, this 1s 1t ' This lovely condominium is a 2 Bdrm. very clean and neat. and located m a quiet area Approx imately $2,950 down and owner will carry 2nd with small payments Call now for all the de tails 752· 1700 THE REAL ESTATERS OCEAM & VALLEY VIEW I Coty Jbr. Zba home. den, frplc. etc + 3 more ~eparate homt>:. on lg lot Call now for a !>Pl $485,000 Ownt•r will rmance. Roy McCord~. Rttr 548-7729 Fantastic Selection Of Oceanfronts We have 8 or 9 as a mat ter of fact We will take trade~. exchanges or just sell with tremen dous term s From $599.000on up We even have a couple or gorgeous oceanfront blufr lots in Encinitas from S22S.OOO on up with terms JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 macnab I irvtne realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY THE BEST IN THE VILLAS! PRICE REDUCTl<>toa! Primt• loc al1on 1n Hanc ho San Joaquin Villas directly on golf coui·st" 2BHS & den Solano model highly upgraded. Availahlt.> for sale or leas t• option at $199.000 and also for leas e turnishcd or unfurnished. Tom J\llinson 642-8235 864. 752-1414 551-1700 <'""'"'"I/ 111,.v ( ~~'"" w,,..,rlb..,lg-• CM•"' 64J-1235 644-6200 PIMIMSULA IAYFROMT COM DO This two bedroom two l>ath adult c·ondo has a lwautiful main bay vi~w with boat slip availability. Excellent ownel' financing with low down payment. Only $335.000 fee. 644 9990 673-1020 ·':::' S<C\\cj}~-~£~s·::: -----..... ~ C:U1 .. --·=·::·st:"':...: ::: ...... ..,. ........ _. I llUCCS I r I r I • ;w~;r-wa\m11' r r r r I' r r 1 • ~=· Lnmno I I I I I I I I SCUM-&.ITS A•t•H't .. Clft......._ 1100 - Hou.sForS. .................••••......•...••.••.. , ....... ·················••···• ··•···············•··•· ...................... . ~e.r.e I 001 G ... _... I OOJ c ....... ,_.. I OZZ C .... MIN I 024 t"a.. 1 M4 ·····••·······•···•·•·• ...•...................••.••••.••...•.•.•.•••• ······~················ .................••...• \ \ I ' ·I I ·, '\ 1~AYLOR CO. 10 1\I I ( 11 ;·., 'JI .< I l~t ·lli OM ltG CAMYOM ~ COUISI Spectacular Deane Hom es ",Versailles" located on huge corner site. Beaut. golf course view looking thr\:lugh the tall trees of huge landscaped yard. Large secluded pool & s pa + a most attractive gazebo. Gated front court yard e ntry w/fo~mta.in . Marble floor in foyer w/ghtterrng chandelier. 4 · Bedrms. den, formal DR & 4 "2 baths. ~··· ....... .... 1212,100 OR 3 Bdrm 2ba home with laolated maater bdrm(can be parent retreat or ln·law qrtral and a 2 Bdrcn cottage. ANY WAY you describe It Jt'a charmin1 up to date · beautifully localed. CAU FOi OET AILS '44-7JI I mm -------- ..... sr.,. ••-...AMC•• Mutl Mll np.r I •r A bome for t.be di•· townbomei!~'"'bridt crlmln.atinc executlve patio. +• al ~ family. Beautifully reaturw. cdlent, II· coordlo•led decor aum•W. toao • o.-oer tbrouahout. 2 ator)' willualat.l\educedto home wtU1 aoarlna entry Sl.216,990 and livlna room, for•al - dlnina rm. warm family gl\bod•r1d-rm & kitchen plus lovely ..-. muter suite with VU. 3 Re1h1 Bdrm plus loll/den 551 3Cltl Huse new spa in a •n t>ti~).lnlM 1enerous yard. Cut.de· 1 ________ _ 11c location. 1320,000 WATERfRONT HOM LS REAL ESTATE 631-1400 WETIEE Lowest price t Br + loft. condo. Sharp end unit. $83,960 WISUY M. TAYLOR CO .. UAL TORS 1111 S• Jo ..... HllkRood $50K Own , Cameo1--------- Shores. 1695K. 3 brand new condo/ dplx. k20K ea . Agt . 673 ·7161 , 640-5357 C/JIM.w C ...... MIWPOIT CENTER. H.I. 644-49 t 0 WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS CHECK & COMPARE THESE FEATURES 90% ANANCING 1234% INTER. ~HARBOR AREA LOCATION 760-l:ln BACH PARADISE LEASE OPTION Beaut 2br. 2ba Irvine Terrace Pool Home Spa. lae lot. 2 car gar. room to build $4000 dwn S2 700/mo Bryan 640.5681 SDVClloss 4 Bdrm Popufa*r Tradewinds 9.5 INTEREST Assume S38K down Lov ely 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. fami- ly room. fireplace. open beamed ceilings , new copper plumbing. large yard. double gar11ge, skylight. Only s112.soo Call 1)45.9161 .; OPEN HOUSt ••$15M! Try $15,000 down and a• sume this braod new 2 Bdrm attached home in super Woodbridge. Ask· ing only $117 ,500 and available right now ~bridge Rcalru 551·:JOOO &tto Barnnc•a l'k,.). lrYlnl' I SlZE-1650 SQ. FT. I MICRO OVEN .f ALL SHOPPING "'2 BLOCK I COMPACTOR REALTY /.' Model-Owner very anx· • Northwood Park Sgl 1ous. This 4 Bdrm home Family, 2st .> hom e has many dJfferent ways of flll8ncing, including l•--------1 LO<'aled on qu1l'l cul de- trades, exchanges or ., Fountain Valey I 034 sac with Ol<'t' \'1cw or I AJR CONDITIONING I DISHWASHER 'CEMENT DRIVES I DBL GARAGE {WALK IN CLOSETS W OPENER WARD INVESTMENT IMC. S495.000 park orr ma~tcr bdrm ••••••••••••••••••••••• balcony -lb r, 2 11h a , SALIS OfftCI C7141 Ul-5015 llO W. WINa St. MZ-ZOOO c .... w....c.lf. RCTaylorCo 040 <)C)OQ OWNER WILL FINANCE Large 3 bdrm ('Ustom home in prest1g1ous area Immaculate Owner w11l l·arry li.t TD of Sl00,000 al 12', in- terest only Prit·ed at $I 57 .000 C11 II now 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS SHOPPER'S SPECIAL Lowest priced 4 bdrm home in area Very at tractive noor plan Clost: lo beach. Will sell VA Only $147.500 Call today 919.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS AXER W /TlllMS Large 5 Bdrm 3 Bath home located in Mesa del Mar. Two fireplaces. pool, add-on ram1ly room and RV parking are some of the features The owner will sell on a conlracl with low down Full price $164,900 STANDOUT A beautifully upl(raded fo'ranc1scan F'ount111ns home. Frt'llh pumt inside Lind out. PIU!i luxurloui; new carpet A spac111us 4 Bdrm 2 Hu twouty w11h formal dinlnl(, breukra,.t room and more Super rinanc1na by ownu A11klna 1200.000 BcAool..-Rffy 673-1700 ~-­~~ 75 .. 1111 ASSUME 91h% INT Only $763/Mo Earthtone decor. s tep down family rrrrw frplc Tiered fi s hpond As· sume 2nd, owner will carry 3rd t 21 Starbird. HB 962·4450 OCEAN Vlt-:W CONDO Owner must i.ell th1s unit NOW ' 2 Br 2 ba Versa1lll'!> condo with excel assumable fmanc· mg Only St55,950 675-1771 MIEWPOllT IEACH ONLY SJ9,SOO Like new 2 Bdrm 2 bath mobile home Patio. carport, pool, spa and friendly people Easy Financing OCEANFftOMT 2 Bdrms. 2 ba. unfurn New S850 yrly BAYFROHT 3 Bdrm. I ba, unfurn Mint cond. $850 yrly CHAHMEL FRONT 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. unfurn. S750yrly associated BA 0 I< f A <; A E 11 t T CJ R S JO]'. W Bo•t "" b'' I tit.., ss.ooo DOWN! Paymentll of St.~ on $90,900 loans Beautiful 3 Bdrm 2 hath horn<' with dining fBm1ly unn Shaded c•overed patio. douhlt• 1(11r111(l', l'llll rm more dett11l11 546·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS Bolboo Isa.cl I 006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAYNOHT :M> x 101 lol Older Ouplu Custom homt' site on the water 1695.000. Will exchange 768-0654 Waterfront older duplex. $695,000. Wiii exchange 768-0&M Boltoo re•wla I 007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S200t< At I 21/J% FtNANCING CDMCOTTAGE PLUS INCOME Or Jbr. 2ba home. w isolated mas t e r bdrm/Parent retreat or In-Law quarters +-2br cottage Anywa y you descnbe 1t, 1t 's charm 1n1c up t o date. & beautirully decorated Priced at $280,000 with very spet·1al rmam'mg CAU FOR DETAILS 644-7211 ~ . . ' 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESAVBlDE Sharp 3 Bdrm on corner lot Featuring 2 r1replace~. new roof. copper plumbing and much more Owner will assist with the financing and will also consider a lease option. Priced at $130.500 For more de tails. call S40-ll51 ·'s~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS Open Sunday, 2-5pm. 1641 Orchard Or 5bdrm, Jba. freshly painted colonial beauty Family room. separate dmmg room, frplc, new roof Priced I at S160.000 for quick sale Xlnt financing THE Wl EDEM ANS 494·0066 or 751·4293. MOVE UP TO MESA VERDE This spacious 4 8d 2 sty home has an outstand mg comer location and a 9''1'( fully assumable loan The price 1s right at 1219,000. Call Anni' McCasland. 631 ·1266 ESTATE SALE <.'ollt'll" I' ark 4 llr. 1 •1 • bH l \:?0,000 l'Uh 110~ ~24 1~!10 ur ~ &44 ~:W-.0 MISA VBDI Ue11ut1ful ~HR 1'1101 home nr 1totr t•our111• w/lr11 n1111umable loun No agtB plellllt' J ohn 631 ·1286 &Ill • VA-48d S I OIK • VA appraised 4 Br 2ba Nodtl pmnt to vets Prine only 751-6836 _ BIGCAMYOH Dramatic entr yway leada to lovely, lur11e. 3 bdrm, 2i.-.i ba townhome . Huce Uv rm & formal din rm. Walls or glass lead lo brick patios. Priced under the market MOTIVATED: Owner will help finance lhis FlVE bedroom home. Dining, family room, fireplace. Tile entry . Nenled amongst shady wltb dnt financin11 Only l•--------CUSTOM HOME tree1. ClOlle to schools $435.000. 75'-1616 THIS MIST 15 HATHHID Within lhe atcunty gates of Jasmine Creek, net1tle down to comfortable llvln11 In this 3 Bdrm home. The plantation 11 huttera , parquet floor11 , lu11h carpet, tutefulll decorated room" nec<I no Improvement. '331.000. hllcMr•••• and ahopa. $128,000, Stepe to bay and beach. TARBELL. BKR. Call This beautiful new home 540-1720 features: 3 Bdrms, fami· ly room and llbrary, 2\.t s ..... ca.- baths . ceramic tile N'rSo.CoaatPlaaa.3br. thruout. 4 flreplacea. 2 ba. Only 1114,900. SSOOO 0 a k cabi net a , 2 dn to qual. buyer. Ann, skyli&hts. atalned a1au 1_t7_9-_1Kl __ .14$. __ t1_s_1. __ windows, French doora. 2 patlOI and xtra large M1Bt5 nc 1araie and buullful Drtve to 1l80 Monrovia. spa elf the master bdrm. (Above ltlh St) Th\1 3 Br Offered at 1477,000. For l~ bta, MP gar. frplc. .n a--' .. tm-t to see co-pool. Fixer. A•· call i;:'il.51 "'" ' au~ie loan. Priced at · HERITAGE tH "1 HlRS 1115,000. Open Sat/Sun l -5. Century 21 Gold Coaal 548-Utll IHVESTORS SPECIAL! l'~xecut1ve Duplex ror d1sl•riminalinl( tas tl' Jbr. 3ba. each. central air, woodburnmg frpln •. t·u~tom drapes l'arpt'tll heavv shake roof 11 ' ,. , loan · 1s assumablr . no qualifying necessar~ S I Ok Down Or Less +built ins ow e at jJ!l,c•:', for 2 yt•arl! With zor; dwn Stll0.500 l'all John 640 317-t ur 7 30 3894 eves HIGH ASSUMABLE 4br oome w !>p ll. "Int cond Sl69.000 ~52 6940 LOVELY TO LOOK AT l=:xc1ting 4 bdrm. ram rm Deane Homt'. in t''t qu1s1te sett1nJ,! and beautifully land!>ca ped This fanta,t1t· r .. m 1h home 1s "arm Iv dt.: <:orated and in :-:pll' n s pan cond1t1on ''ou owl' 11 to yourself 10 're th1!> nne S24 I .50tl MOVES YOU IH N o qualif y 1n ,.: nec·essary Yuur mun thly payment c·an be ad· Justed to meet your mon thly budgt'l We• h:I\ (> 't523 c.otPOS T\..,IRVIPIE many J& 4bdrm homt' 1n "" bt>sl Orange Counl) locations w these terms GCJ'l'G leoc:h I 048 Call our specialist for ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • more information THE SHAMES ~60LDENWEST ~ REALTORS • • ..,.~ ~ASSOCIATES Wt.>athered cedu r shakes. that 1!. Cui.tom designed 3 bdrm. ram rm. 2 baths l::Xll'nS1\(' use or wood ~la~s & ceramll' lilt' IW.!m re1 l 848-8588 mg. frpk SIG.5,000 --milliillliiiiili•--1 M1s!>10n Ilea It) 171.t 14~ 0731 BRIHG ANY OFfER Lovely Jbr. cstm home nf'ar beach & park. formal d1n1ng. heavy shake roof Call now for 1nformat1on regarding the 9'\•', assum loan Seller w1carry part or the buyers down pay ment & says brinJ( any orrer. IESTPRICE IHTOWH 4br, remodeled k1tt·hl'11. plush carpeti.. t•u:.tum drapes, freshl) pomll•d. Keller bought anotht•r & has prit·ed lh1"1i.111uh below market \ 111111• r111 Q U i (' k S U I 1• l ' I I' II t I\ •' terms ok bt>t11·r h111 n ~ 6DLDENWEST ~ REALTORS .,.,.,',}-~A~SO{IAl I' t41j!ll SH.IOODOWM , .. ,,... .. 11'0\'t!li )°'I tnlO l~lll j W• 111 Mine fwu urma1 '* dtntn.i fii bunui. 11\\ lqilr, Ooly Sil~ "''II \',111 llUW~ 11311 ALLSTATE AEALTO .. S GLEHMAI lge 4 Bdr m 2ba. up graded w/ahakt roor. hOt tub, encl patio. Love ly area. $129,500. SUNSETR.E. 548·5!0l 846-8803 Spectacular Beacbwalk Townhome. Choi('e of plans from 1136,500. Bkr 848-0108 H•t~ "......... 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Go1MW•1tht.ht Betutlful S&S Exec. 4 bdrm home. Ele1ant wet bar, bit.in bbq Inside 6 many other amenities Incl. a huge yard tha\ backl lo a beautiful park. Just 2 yrs old I Broker, 963-8182 OH1MIWATB Chatnu + Adj lot with boat allp. 5br. 4ba "4·1811 a1l. i63·48Ge J ohn 2Br c·ubana & t rlr. !>uhl1•t ting allowed. 3 pvl b<'h-.. pool & r1:.h111 1: plt'f S29.900 11141 .t9'J 3816 P("t It..,,• "'1 4 I'-4 I t• • SPRINGTIME INSANJUAH L o ' tt l) . p r t ' •• t ,. '' bt'dnll."lm 1·1mdom111111111 1n mul·h '01111h1 aftt•r 11rr• ur 1\1111 Ju1tn t'ap1~lr11111• 1<:"1'1t1n11 r1num·111.: U\ uil11Mt' II• l.llilihf11t1f l•U\ 1•r t.O't\ ''''"'" \"<\\\111'111 t''A'l\C'f "ill ~~-·~1 "1lh l'\~h ~.~Ill IXICUTIVI OCIAMNOMT li1\l'~>U> r.1.1tn• and '"1~~ 11t'w l'°'·atoo on 1m-..t t"\-.1\'t'lll~)t 1md dt' itlrt1bl•• It'\"' of llt't'Utlty h"1ht111ic MtWt' 1n 1m 111tldliltt-l)• 11nd "!\JO)' lhl11 two bt-tlroom. 2 bath ""1th billrooy $~.ooo Km HILL fo'1n1 rt'11&le of W tllt't Mutlt-1 4 bdrms. 2 baths, l•fl<"tarular rul de sa(' 1111 , lovely decor , hoouufully lundscuped Ci o o d a s 11 u m 11 b I e loan.. 12'79.500 4tt·ll20 Ht-OIH __ e.-..., -~ JUSTFO•YOU Super 2 Bdrm home In Village of South La11una. Vaulted ceilings, lge master, prvt patio. frplc. All the charm you would want for only 1171.750. L_,...VHlop. R.l 497 • l-'-7-'-6-'-I -- WOOOS CO Vl Char m ing wo od shlngled 4 Bdrm home with loads ()f glass and aootbint 1pa. Amid towerln1 tree.a. In de· 11lnble Wood• Cove. Flexible tlnanclna or a poaslble luse option 1289 ••. don osen I• .1l t ••I •· 12UN. COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH ..., ...... MISAY•DI '""" 1044 ............ IOU I OlJ Great ... wn•ble. 2400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••• .. •••••••••••• '" beaut.,J. New ever· a Bdr, 2 Ba, country llkt Newff 3 Bd.rm home. Al• Jumlne a.ts decorator Yl~. LoYely landlcap. home lo The Colonr. tumable 1J\ilf~ ln. Mon home, plu l on l?MD· 1._,. Xlnl flnancln1. T-.k• over allllnl lo"' t.hnl rrt. 714/519-o&zl or beklnuuc. saouoo Won't last. '2401..000. •<:INC uo,ooo. NMl11 2u1u1.uae Evu • NNJ'5 PriMoalr.Ml.-Dkr. Att. ......114/MO·UU . ,..,,, -··--··· ' ...... Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Monday, March 2.3, 1981 'Cash in on:' or't'~-Here'eeewe tNntfotOranteCow\tytlctvenlMre- Th8r8 are two waya to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad • Aun 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes Daily Pilat • Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. Hwttt For S. "°6H For Sde 0...... IHI...... Oftleto ltHI .... HOllMI u.......... OWi U..fw_..d ....... , UltfwM9'1H Apa lw4tlh ,_,.,shed ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Mlt.-Ylefo I 067 M•wpori 1Hc• I 06' !~!!': ............ !!!~ ~~~~!!! .. ~~.~~ ~~!.'!~!!? .. ~~.~! ~~:!'!~ ....... ??!~ ~':~ ............ ??.~~ ~.~~~~~~ ... ?~.~~ ~~!~~~ ....... ~?.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S Br. 3 Ba. 2 Sty. 11100 WOODBRlDGE 3 Br. 11. HOME la the SUMI OCIAMRT DPLX. * •fflSfMll' mo. lse NEWPORT HACH SUS CA.SIT AS Ooa'grassyhill!Beaut. On the und. Sell or UllRI ,.....LACMIMAOCIAtRONT Ba. Coodo. 1600/mo. l \'a blockslotheocean Furnlbr,apt.S32S&up vu! Adlt. sec'd, peaceful trade down. for condo, 445 Paclllc·Tusfln. p · L B h f t 4'4-0066 Wrk (714)833-8029 · beach. Three bedroom Encl. gar AdulU, no comm. Pvt ·club w/pool, h ., •u:o 000 Owner's anxious. Brina fl me aguna eac ocean r on R a m a . H o m e two bath home. Yearly pets. 2110 Newport 81 jac. sauna, & golf. 2 Br, c~~~e R~E &u.0601 'aea ~ a II olfera. Restored fixer.upper. Unobstructed panoramic 2~~r~~Y:~P~~k!:~: (213)498-6090. lease. First and last. 548·4968 btwn 8 & 5PM single stry. Quality de-644•4720 beauty on "'• acre. For view. Steps to beautiful sandy beach. S loo o per m o n th cor in warm neutrals ' mou info call Ranch f)WC at 10% down. $975,000. new floors, crpts, paint. Tur t I er o c It . New 631-7300, BKR. Bach. AptS. Utals. paid Weekly or Monthly McNash Realty 642 1334. 642-6578 eves 1\011 ,000 Fantastic R alt ~12000 k75 + dep. 1 imaJI child townhouae. 2 Master price ! Tolle Rltrs. ok. No pet.a l952 Meyer. bdrm, fam rm. 21,.; Ba Comfortable House with 586-8SOO sst-2994 VILLA IALIOA J Cf)UAIL PLACI S4&-3484. nsosq. ft. Prof. decorat· pool. private. nicely Prestigious Adult Con· PIOPlltT11S Seduded 2 Br. 1 Ba. patio ed Pvt patio. Pool. ten· landscaped. S995. mo. 3 ..... __.... •---h I 069 dos on the Bluffs above nia. ~"""close. 1900/m o Br 2 Ba. .... 2 utility S325 Mo Deluxe Mobile "" ~..-• ~ N rt B home with comm. pool. .,.. .. T ••••••••••••••••••••••• ewpo ay are now 8J3.32'nor 7S2-M92. bedrooms. fam rm. Home. Mature adults a vailable for re.sale 7IJ•lfJO Adults only, no pets . $50,000DOWM withatlractiveassuma· A.u..--lt--'L..........._ Avail 3-13-81. SSOO per Cireplace. 640-t 327. No pets . Quiet. !.eturi.> $200 000 12 75 ble loans. Some with VTnlrr ,....,.l'UTW mo. 2453 Orange Ave. 2+denR.~~LS 5750 559-6188,office759·6597. 1991 Newport Bhd 1 • • ocean & mountain ••••••••••••••••••••••• Manager Apt. B. 3br 2Vaba S75-0 WESTCLIFF . Xlnt loc-646.8373 lomtfor 21 Y•an. views. Priced from MobleHotMI New. dlx 3 br, 21-'l ba, 3br 2ba S675-S775 3Br 2ba. lovely yard. Large com er lot. Large $184.000. For deta ils. For Sale 1100 IMCOMEPROPHTIES LobforSal4t 2200 3br2ba Sl2SOfurn gardener provided house4 Br. 21,.; Ba RV please Aall. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lookfno for income un-••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc.dblear.w/opener . 3br 2'""ba ~.,,.,.. ' • "" S....,., StOOO t m o . 646 6789. Bachelor llir, & unfurn 2br. S385·S485. tt-nn 1i; s auna. iac \ olleyball pool, adults. :.urf) no pets 5.57 0075 s pace behind loc ked JRL PROPERTIES Trailer at bch $14 ,900. its"! We have 5 pro· yards, patios. gardener •br 2, ,ba 900 64&67lO gates. A ll this in 645-4566 &45-6459 Terms.OWCor trade perues in C.M. Priced MEWPOltTIEACH Kids /pets OK. S725. Westcliff.Noloanquah· Askforl>ff 499-3816 right at less than llGCANYON Lorri. wkdys S47-9571 ; fying. l lXGross . No bank GoffCOWM Lot eveslwknds 546-S434. 7SS.0654 New Modular type home. financing required. In· Owner Must Sell! ----------·· ----·--------• Oce an view · E l Moro tereeted?Then call us. Agent. Dan Bibb COUNTRY RENTAL BY VICTORIAN Hirbor Yl4tw HCMM Beach Park. sp 70. 2 Br. 675_2311 640. 7665 PUBLIC <SE ALE D I BEACH HOME 3 BrS22S,OOO lowest price s pace rent Sl75 mo. 20 .Jx• BID on April 6. 1981 New3BR3\.'J Ba Quah· in Harbor View. Owner yrslse.$69.900.499·3816 N£ICC'CD Arch Beach Heig h ts (one>2&3bdrmhomes. l y handcrafted oak <investor) may consider UUL!"\. betw~n 1950 & 1972 Del Backbay Univ. Dr. area lhruout. Stained glass. 100"'< FINANCING or leoc:h & lovfroftt <J.H!IJ-~11~ Mar Ave. Ocean view For info call· COUNTY s pa. trade for? LIDO PENmSULA 714 641 ·0763 Approx. 25x80 Eves OF ORANGE GSA RCTaylorCo ( ·4ll ll<Jtx) Plan_NRealty 75.2-6499 Funushed 2 Br mobile 2787 Bristol St call213/J20..8S42. R EA L EST A T E By owner. St 15 ,000. Costa Mesa. CA DIVISION (7141834·2SS-O 714 /1-346-3523 MCHMtain, Dewrl, ----------Resort 2400 1/1l•toOce• S58,SOO 2 Br 2ba sep sun COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• tt523 CAMPU5 Da: IRVl .. E r..~·rff, Est......_ rm + own pvt prking. ._._ ........ WESTCUFF S41.soo spotless 2Br 2ba. 7 Units. Bread & Butter I That's what these units I a re referred loo. Ap- prox \'a acre . conve nient to all stores 3 2Br. & 4 lBr. SZS0,000. Good terms. Possible trade M c Na s h R ea lt y , 642-l334. 642·6578 eves Special Lc.d Sole Ocean view lots. Morro Bay area. 2 lots Sl0,990 E-Z terms. Beaut views of the Pacific Ocean. Estero Bay & Cayucos Call 805-772 3958 or 80S·m ·8612. Agt. qtllCK MOVE IM Huge near new 3 Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse type, 2 car garage. pat io, fireplace Small child. s mall pel OK Like your o wn home S595 m o. Wont last. Drive by 2195 Maple St then call 642-1603. Woodbridge area lrg 3 Br 2•,, Ba 2 car garage, ram nn. din area, fr pk. crpts, drps, window cov ers Comm. pool Avail aft. 3-25. S82S per mo + depas1t. 75.2-1282 9-4. Special den. encl extra rm Prof lnhtt1t Rah .~AR~ER . dee 4 bdrm. 2'"2 bath with I Special financ!n~ avail. S38,SOO 2Brf 2ba. lovely plush carpet & wood on this trad1t1onal 4 ram rmwlsep wet bar floors. Family room Bdrm -+: den home on S37,000, Spacious. Owner with fir eplace G reat pool s ized torn e r . anxious. 2Br 2Ba. Con- financmg with a 13'1 popularly pri~ed at tact Janel Rousseau fixed rate & 20'"'t down SZS0,000. For detailed In· Agt. 7~6046or559-8Sl7 LEVERAGE Mountain Proper ties. Northwood Mdl house. 2 Free list. Homes. Acres: stry 4 Br. 2i,, ba. 2500 Town.house . Univ. Park. 3 Br2l,2 Ba. pool, Jae .. & much more. Adults only. S75-0/mo Dys 642-9909, Eves 559-9020 S245.000. Hurry. with rormation call Harry Pride of owners h ip terms like this 1t won't Frederich al 631 \266 Acr.ocp f« Sole 1200 fourplex located within Mobiles, etc. 839-7 163 str S950t mo 551·8731 Rancho San Joaquin View Condo 2bdr m widen Free rent till 3-31. $750/mo. 644 -5598 '"" um ~l0:i"+.J~~~~:.: jf g;f ~: r,~;~ '°A,_, 0"'"" Co•" want 35% yield annual-garages. Assume 12'1•% Electricity, fenced. out· CONDO NWPRT BEACH ly, purchase S200.000two loan and owner will standing view. accessi· Redhill ~Realty 1;1:~ 1:wo 0..tofStah Property 2600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new 2 Br. l "'-1 ba condo. S6001mo No pets. 77().~8 4br-.-2-ba-.-S8SO--tm_o_l_st-/-la-s--t Nice 4bdrm. 21,,ba house. ---------· year deed or trust bear· 2 d . h 20'7. bl 492 "•99 S2,500 DOWN ing zoq. mterest on 25 carry n wll ' e.owner ·~ S300 security n ew 2 frplc, nr s hopping cptlpnt. formal dining cent.er. pool , jac. tennis. 7S4--0986 S725. 551-6931after6PM. ~ Br. 3 Ba. Harbor view Home $349 .500 Owne r/ Agt Comm pool. 673-7761 Bachelor nat. 500 sq ft acre avocado grove in d 0 w n · Fu 11 Price Alb. N.M. New custom Co mmunit y p oo l . inactive development Szso.ooo. built3,000sqft f.plexes. jacuzzi. total security area near Vista. Com-Very positive cash effect condo No qualify1ng bined 8% \st. + this in· for so% bracket in- S107,500. Owner Prin· ves tment re pres ents vestor. l lU,000. Bldr · ci pals only. 9711-0423 less than 503 of the ap-(714)846-8570. $ W OODB Rl DG E 2bdrm wtgar. 385. new "CREEKSIDE" Willow crpU. rncd yrd. water llGCANTON GOLF COURSE LOT O.....MU1tS•H! -praised value of land. $20.000 down /AITD MAI appraisal on adja· Ranc:het,Farmt, l 21 1 8 '1r f o r 2 Yrs cent 2i., acre parcel at Grov" 2700 pd. 2228 "D .. Placentia . Plan. Professionally landscaped Model home 636-412JO. on the park. 4 Br. 3 Ba. 2 East.aide Condo. lae 2 br, Story. Fam rm., Din . l~ ba. pvt patio, encl. rrplc, dshwsr. 111i9ro· gar. pool. Adults. no wave. $850 mo. No pets. Agent. Dann Bibb 675-2311 640-1665 MlWPOIT CIEST Two prime front units. 180 deg view. Pool & ten· nis. 640-5357 C /21 Mew Cntr. $10,111 CASH ON 1 Br. furnished condo nr Hoag Hosp. Pool. spa. security. Assume loans 640.5357 C/21 He Cntr. 1HEILUFFS 3P-S~L••el Finest original area Massive greenbelt vista Smartly decorated in popular tones. nearby pool. Offered at S212.000 (with assumable h1 bal. loan ry 543,000 down l Agt. 640-5560. •Oceanfront dplx. xlnt loc. fin. & price! Pnn only. 67J. 7677. 67J. 7873 I 00/olhm, I 31h%1nt. 3 br, 21,; ba condo. Ten· nis. pool. jac. Must sell Agt. 642-152.3 Ea s lb I u ff .. An ll a · · S 150. 000 eac h . Ca II ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Karen. Agt Pacesetter 7141751-48216; 493-lW or ----------Have two acre horse pro- Realty. 768-7413 756-~. RECORDING STUDIO-perty jc house in Norco i----------Fully equipped+ a good W /10 re gister Arabian BOAT PEOPLE CoR-rcW 2-BR home. Sl60,000 horses. Will trade for Property 1600 Agt.fW6.QIO; 642·'447 property in C06l& Mesa PEN'JltOUSE CONDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Newport Beach area. with boat dock 280 deg l•--------•I •---------p .. ___ 7"" 4081 forever view Fee land. HEWPOltT ILVD ,,_ IR••sfwMtlti '"""'714. ,,,. · Assumable loan. ROHT AGE MEWPORT BEACH Real &tat. 640.5357 Parcel sz· 64,000 sq ft. Exchange C /21 New Clttr. Bldg sz. 15,000 sq ft. C,...,,.... .. DEL M •1t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl JOO 000 G bb & El ""'V'l""A A Mobile Homes-Lakeside 2100 pets. 1495. 548-2990 964-2566 Agent. no fee. Beaut. 2Br adult only Ranch Really has leases . townhse. 2 car gar many to choose from La u n dr y . p utt i n g S49S-S950. Call for in· course . very quiet. fo rmation. $600/mo. Ask for Bob 962-~l.or 531·4750 C H/\f'Jl.H Hf AL TY '.J~i l 2000 KIDS/PETS OK E·Side 2 Bdrm S49S. 1 Br. S395 W /Garage . 642-2510, 646·4848 LIMJ!ftl leach 3241 ----••••••••••••••••••••••• us' ~o~ 0o':: 833-2900. 2Triplexes in a Row Big Bear Lake or ' · · on Oceanside of PCH Ocnfroot Laguna Bch. Luxunous. custom con-New 2Br. 2Ba Mobile BUY ONE OR ALL terms or trade . .(99-3816 do. 1700 sq ft. 2 frplcs. 3 Home. good ocn view. BLUFFS FROHT ROW VIEW Popular s plit level 3 Br. IALIOA ISLAND Small dn payment OK 4,000 sq . ft . comm'I bldg. Vacant can move in SSS0.000. Leasehold. NOW' Call645·7221 Best comm'I. corner. Ground nr shops .. 2nd _Wfftc:l!ff Rlty C.!__ fir l & 2 BR apts. Ask JUST SUPER for Jenny. 7S2·0202 Beautiful 4 + den + ram CoftdoMlfthllftS/ToWft• rm. 2 sty w sparkling houses for so14t 1700 pool. jac .. fi repil. w 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ple nty of s pace for gard en, yard and vehicles. Great floor plan wl2 master bdrms . Cldeal for guests) 3/car gar Be fu"Sl to see this g r eat ho m e Ruth Laurie. Rllr. 646-4380 or 642-4447 ---- Co ndos f o r sale · Capistrano beach. s pec· tacular ocean vie w, builder has plan s 661-287l Fresno ~.950. 2Br 2ba new condo. 13'h% assm In 2091255-6248 --- San Juan OulPMJCet/ C••trono I 071 Oflih Sale 1800 IALIOA PENIH. Two duplexes and one triplex in a row. 1 lot from sand and surf. BUY ONE OR ALL Ideal for partnerships or syndications HP'T ISLHD ARlA Duplex with dock for JO ft boat. NEWPORT HGHTS. Triplex with Pool fountain Valley. Fourplex and many many more!!! -bdrm, 21.; baths. S800 pvt bch. S85o mo. Adlls .. .... _m_o_.642_·_4623 __ . _____ only.499-_38_1_6 __ _ .. ..................... HwvtlnC)t°" leach 3240 Homes Ftlrnl"'9cl • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • ••• • • • •• • •• • • • S blks w ocean Elegant 2 Copilfrallo hoch 3118 bdrm. Cam nn & den. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ($750 mol. Plush crpts, Luxury individual t ype 2~ ba, ~ar & glass. home. 3bdrm. 2ba. new. Dbl car pvt gar. fully Sl,000/mo. (714)493-0467. ma int. yd. Adults. no pets. Inquire at 527 18th. Oceanfrnt tBr. trlr + cabana. deck. pvt bch. furnlunlum, adlts only S7SO mo. 499-31116 Ocnfront Mobile Home 2Br. pvt bch, Sl,000 mo, yrly, adlts only. fum/un· Cum 499·3816 Hewportleoch 3169 St. 7141960-6331 o r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-5112. OCEAN SIDE OF Harbor V homes 48r ra m rm .. 2 story, xlnt cond Avail 5·1 Tel 644-5997. N_e_w_c_o_n_d_o--ln_S_e_a_s-id_e_1 HWY· Vl.llage, o~ach & Allan· 3br. 2ba w/pool. Year """ round lease s1200 la Blvd, 2 br. deo. 2tn ba, 494·75.54 or 49'1-1561 1650 sq ft. sec. gate. ten- nis cts. pool & jac. Mluion Vieto 3267 S975/mo. (213)833-1369; ••••••••••••••••••••••• eves & wk n d s . HOME FOR RENT ---------............................................. . Al,...._ Propertl•t and Locationa Villa Balboa Condo Prof. decor. comp!. furn. 2 br, 2 ba, den, din. rm. ram. nn. Lse SlSOO/mo. S47-4156 (213)831-5734. 3 Bdrm. '675. F enced yard & garage. Kids & ----------Brand new house for d is· pets welcome. 964-2566 IACKIAY 3br. 2ba home plus 1dea 1 mother-in-law quarters Compl. w/balh. $220,000. Roy McC_.., Riter 541-7729 $40,000 and C'NIC balance. 7 yrs new. 3 frplcs. view & steps lo beach Rafferty & f.loyd Bk rs. ~5568 Weatcl.lff 4 Br 2~ Ba. lrg corner lot. RV space, $250. 000. IS0.000 down. AITD al 12. 75 27 yrs. 188-0654 UHOAISLI L ... 0......1·2Yrs. 3 Boat Silpe. 5br, m aids quarters. own er is broker contact Jim Tbompaon ('114) 128·1280 (213)-1383 BLUFFS BAROAlN 3 Br twnhme SW .500 3 Miles Fr Morifto Two 2bdnn units at 1553 WITHOCEAMVIEW Orange Ave C.M. VA. C~21 Rmteho S• JIMlft FHA or cash to loan. Open Sunday 1·4pm. Mtwport ..ter Estatft Price Realty S48-3209, 640.5357 Over 3,000 sq.ft . or 751.4287 !•--------elegance. Exclusive new homes, from 1515.000. l41,-li% financing avail. Charter Rily & Invest. 496-8122 831 ·881 l ~ h•c-Properly 2000 •• ••••••••••••••••••••• ASSUME LOW IA. TES Condo, 2bdrm. 2ba . TAX SllELT£1!! 16 UNITS • North of Dis- ney I and. Over 155,000 gra.s income-158.500 May lst! Assume lli.A1% SZS0,000 lsl. Owner will help finance a bundle! $649,500. *cote Realty & Investment 640-5777 Anaheim, S80,000. 4 unit.a. H.B., 1217,500. 6 units, C.M .. k 75,000. Comm'I, H.B .• Adams & Magnolia, 1576,000. Commercial, R a n cho Temecula, Sl,000.000. ProfMsloMll Paclflc 1 ........... llC. •• (1l4)1184-4M5 DUPLEX CASITAS DEL ALJPAZ Enjoy these newly de· corated units both with 2 bdrms. 2 bath.a. moun- tain view, comm. pool, apa and special financ- ing available. Both units l•--------o ff ered at $104,00·o. 2 br. 1 ba, 2 car 1ar, aeparate focd yard( arut cood 1129,500. Cal -..8505 49MS51 blQ.gO Am.IVAUIY Near new •·Plex. 2 bdrm. 2 blith eacb unlt with fireplace, enclosed patio, double garage. $165.000. Biii Grundy, Rltr. 87Ml81. HOUMI Utlfw-Mlhed ••••••••••••••••••••••• G........ 3202 ••••••••••••••••••••••• criminallng ramily. 3 or973-2971.Agt .. nofee blks to ocean. 3 Br. 3 Ba .. fam. rm. Tot.ally .Wwport hoch 3269 upgraded & customized. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1200 8"3 014"' NewllV\rl Shores Canal By O"""ER. formal dln, m 0 · " • " r-'"'.. AM /PM front 4bdrm. 3ba, newly 3 br; pool. Now avail. 1----·------1 decorated, 2 blocks to Arrowhead Country 3 BR. 1 ba, new plush ocean. 962·66113 C I u b a r e a . S a n 'd Bernardino. 1-86'·1'132. c~ .• f~ drpsd • colvk t . 3 Br. 2 Ba large yard. 2 1 -· ,,_., patio, "" .... yr .• wa o ...,_,....., bch. $625. lat+ S300dep. car garage. $745 mo. 3206 1_536-GM~~~-~~~-_6'1_5-0562~-·----~ ~;·;;::::.~~·:;:~t;;:; 1 BR. new cpts, drps , SPACIOUS M.I . 1. 4 Br 2 Ba. $960 Yearly walk lo bch. Clean Ii pvt. TOWMHOUSI lease, avail. June 27, 3 kOO. lat + 1250. dep. New 2 br, 2\AJ ba, Back Br 21,4 Ba, may be furn. _S38-82118 _________ Bay loc. Gar, pvt. pa\lo. A ... 67" ....... S895mo. Suian : 957-6507, ••· -E~ec. Home. Cul-de-sac. 540-7231 ,.._., •• , ... 1207 3br. 3ba. hm rm . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gardener. 175-0 leaae. 3 Bdrm, frplc. walk" to OCEANFRONT CONDO. 213/371-326'7. beach. pool & unnla. 2 Br+den. 2 ba. 2 under· ----....-----1 l'r~. Al\.190-lll'ITI ard puklna. Ast. Clctetobuch.3Brt~ba, --------- 875-8120 dbl car. LI l/r, frpl, corn H.AllOI VllW lot, quiet cul-de-aac, Super euc 5 Bdrm COf'OM .. Ms 1222 tncd yrd . Seoo incl w/vu. Sl350fmo. A1t. •• ••••••••••••••••••• • • aardlmer. (411 m.-2788 ....__, 2 Bil 1 Ba, W ID, far, So. 1-"-........ -----3-2-,.-4-i--------- of Hwy. Call Mtke or -"' te111 to lhe beach, 11e 4 Toni, 8-5581: 640-7440 ••••••••••••••••••••••• br dplx, Z~ ba, paUo. t LarplBr. Condo2~ Ba. 1t)', l~ac. SlOOO yl'l)'. _A_it;:;......875-_5'30 __ ._MO-l __ i_.e __ a On the Oran1e Coaat.- Shopptn a strip Hunt· tniton Bch Comm bids Santa Ana, tt other Com· mer1cal/lnd1.11trta1 pro- pert.la Pleue caU now BIU·All· UM.2$1 Beaut. 2br, Iba, lrvl.ne Din area. famll)' rm. ffl-11117 fOUIPLIX hi Terrace Pool home. Spa, frplc, crpt, I atory, r--------- Weatalde Cottt Meaa. ~~ I I "0 lat patio, z car 1ar. comm. pool. AvaU. 3-18. • ..... -.-.•a• .. -w ... •.n •A-2-B•r 2 ~on• lr1 lot. All looktoUnioflnt aorta of potent 1 a t.5 -_..---.----,-0-1-0 S1401000. Alt Nl·0743. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• HOUM •a car pr nr blah S 12.100 DM IC bool. Fee I and · a Br 1 Ba cuttom bome. Sll0,000. AclM1.o7'3. tree Uncd 1t. Auumable PHA loan. OWC will 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo on carl'y balanH. Total Newport Bay. PraUI• talH price US,otO. loutiion. Le ... IOC' Op-N>--U on to purcha1e . U5·JUO. 710·UU •• wtill _wt~:--Mn'-E'Yel_ACrt_._ON_?__ ... -..= C\ulffed Adi MZ·MTI Need• 1orne workYY J "f $U.OQ/MO. to A1.11uat 31. •mo. •~,P(lllt. Call Yu..LJ\ n..unv Sl2.G80 tneome. Full ••••••••••••••••••••••• lryan...-:t TAo•tto4. l~ ba,oceaft riew\ •v•U prlc• 6U.ooo. Owner ITOP llMTI• 1----.------1 abort W.,.-fmo. wUl CUT1 l0% ln~rett 8UY1'0Ul'O'nladmtrtal t Bt. P'.R .• D..Jl. Pool. BAI .. Turllerock VSRSAl.LLD a8r tba, wlteo OOOdn unit . 1000·-.ot 14 ft. oew cpg • drpa, 8tOO 01-. lrl..t ainlle tam hasW')' f\am Ooedo. S~ ~ · AvaU.ioKB.orn'.Call mo.C>wner7.0..UC77. home, lbdm\, lb9, tam Lttml. _ !lE\TIGE Paw545-D7 .... _unitbraden,llt rm, C*rt.ral atr. 3 car WMSfNltllom-.lne ___ ,_HOfll(~ Leh--... --Wt---.-2-H-'";:'nt~ Minl vitw. $1100. :r:.· ~~~ ~J •o~; a.ellon •·1400 R.11:.IJay.;tfti.ou ••••••••• ...... •••••••• A .. ~ aft.erlplD:'7»Gll. maw6~~~,>'· NB ~~'fJ. Hatbor Vln Home, = Woodbridle Tonhoue 2 --flflC•DWN Iba, r.-,.c, 1 'If lie l\Orf 18r l~ ba pool Have~'-• \o Mll1 t11·11H, tt4·2111 no pet1 t'4·T2H or --*' ... tieio11no'. Cl..tllededldoltwell. OW.t act. 64N'1ll u1.-; ,...,.. ~~~.:....;~~~~~-··~-~~~~:--~~ LIDO ISLE Spacious 3 bdrm + conv den Lge s unny pat io . wide 47' lot. $1200 mo Lawson Realty.675·4562 Hun19M)ton l each 3740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S:rJS/up I 2 bdrlll. pool jac. adll. 1899'.! florida. H .B. 84.2 2834 or 842 3172 3 Br 2 Ba. incl refrig. fenced yrd. S750 mo yr LOCJl.-.cl l~h 37 48 ly Agt 673--3355 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Studio. lux s pa rv. 3 Br F.R .. DR Pool, maid sernt·l' µh onl' new cpts & drps. S900 $1()()/wk 499 2221 mo Owner 760-1507 Walk to beach. Beaut Newport Crest 4 br con do, ram. rm. din rm pool, tennis. SIJ OO 646-0686 HARBOR RIDGE 3Br. 3Ba. study, view decks. J3C, pool, lenms. S2.0U0 mo 675-4078. 549·9099 3280 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S475 tst. tast + S 150 2bdrm. Iba. drive by 2006 S . Gar n sey 644 5069 3 Br l '12 Ba , newly de corated, ni ce So Coast Plaza area, kids OK 557·Z783. $595. Spic & redec 2Br 2ba condo w/country lutch WI D. patio & gar Pool. Xlnl loc near Mtle Square Pa rk S5so. 631 1098 1 bdrm. l ba hse 411 W Richland. SJOO f m o 95l-4273 aft 6 pm ----------SOlllft LOl)llllO 3286 M~wport leach 3769 ....•..........•....... Dlic. . Oceanfront Wkl\ Easter. Summer Nu"' 2 4 Br Prlml' lo( 613-1813 Luxury Oc·eJ nfr o nl Weeki). 2 ur 3 t~r t'um11 r u r n 1 n 1· I d I 111 t• 11 ., 640-4784 Fantast1t·ally furr11-,hc'd townhouse. '41th ot•t'Jll view Tennis l'Ourl pool S925 mo 760 91 17 AP.C:* hoefth UnfurnlsMd .•..••.•..•.......•.... 3802 . •.•••••...••.•....•... An-MTS FOR REMT H B . N B . Costa Mesa Somethltlg for Everyone Bach. lO 4 Br Unfurn. Apts. Certain lo(·ations o ffer P oo l , spa .I fireplace, laun room. beamed celli n g~. garages. all built ins Garden & Townhouse design. TSLMGMT 642·1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lolboa ,enin~a 3807 OCEANFRONT HOME •• • •••• •• •• ••• • • •••• •. • O'looks pvt ~ach. 2 br. 2 Bdrm, 1 bath at t5th St 2""1 ba. den. dm rm. lge $495 mo. incl. utll No deck. $1200/mo. 499·2~3. pets. 675-5800 Agent 499-5021 . -----Cor"OM Ml Mor 3822 Tustin 32'0 ••••••••••••••••••• ••• -. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious I Br w garaRe. 3 BR. f«;n~ pool ho~e. laundry fac1l S525 Ac;I(. lge patio, dbl gar . quiet for Faye 640 9900 nbrhd. S700 m o Agl 646-4380 Avail. April 1st 2 Br 2 C_,..niniumi Ba. with sundeck Close· Fumlthed 3400 to beach No pets S70Q• ••••••••••• ••• ••••..... mo. 675-0l24 J ark 1~ • Upgraded condo nr clubhse, pool & jac 3 br. 2 ''1 b a t h . 8 4 0 I 7 8 9 . 846-1371 (Mary Ellen I Dix oeean \'U. I Ar. nl'~lv decorate d w ~Jr Adults S67S mo ,\~k for Faye. 640 9990 3425 Separate ht)ll!lt'. new!~ decorated t•harmini:t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdrm. Iba Well lu<'aled Bachelor CONDO vacanl. on qwet st S700 No µet s $500/mo . Newport 67J.J0l7 Beach 978-0423 2 Bdrm. I Ba . der k. 2br. 2ba, pool/jac/clbhse. adults. no pets Lse SSJO . nr S.C. Plaza IS001mo 673-04730r 644.6382 551-4351 eves 3br H.B. Condo, new dee. Tennis, pool, sauna. nr ocean. $650. 962· 7469 Lge 2br. 2ba condo. Villa Balboa S750/mo 1st/last + sec deposit 645-2158 3525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MONTICELLO 2br, 2ba Twnhse. Lge 2sty model. encl 2 car gar w/opener. Pool/Clbh.se privileges. Avail approx. April lst. $525/mo. 963-7144 days, .(98--1812eves lbdnn duplex yearly ren- tal. S4SO tmo. 673·3801, 644-~2. 964 5752 2 Br 2 ba wt m aster 1rn1te. beamed ceilings. walk to Little Corona. S650 mo to mo. 644-7211 Agl. • One bedroom and den. Two baths . Key l o, private beach. Excellent location. Grea~ ocean. view. No pets one adult: only. 5695 mo. Yearly lease. Ap nt, 760-0189. D.,..•" ""*-" 3600 ~.~:~~~ ••••••• ?~!.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• S47~/mo. 2bdrm, lba. Costa Meta. ~ :z Br. 1.Ba. Completely re· MEWLY DECOR. . I Br. gu pd. encl 1ar. d/waaher, pool. Adults, 642$13 modeted, laundry hook· 2 Ir. f lo ADf up, d1-nwaaher. Near Newly decor Ciaa pd, be•ch. $525 mo. 846-2135. e n c l & 1 r , p o o I , d /wuher . Adults. ~ d M 4 b r ts 2 ~ b a . 642·'°73 w/f'tplc, 2100', call r----- 8"-'7220or 549-8155 l Ir TowwlloUM New\f decor. aaa pd .• ..__._. &.-1.-'-...& enc gar ., gool, ~ ~™'rw---d /waahe r . A ulta. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .__..._. J706,_M2_-scm ____ _ •••• .... ••••••••••••••• Spacious a Br Duplex LO•eb Nortb Bayfronl 1410. Poot• laundry f ac, Duplex 3bdrm , 2b•, a.tsst Ideal ioc. Avail April J to r-------- J une 15. SU~/mo. IT...Ueftl. mtetni8118 81c1'tlor. Attractive Bea~~ped wlbeam ctlU.1, wood l•rdea apta Pa&. or ,......._ phllll carpet· deeb. Pool It epa. Heat llll· ._, na;arr.... pakl. COftred pa~1n.1. c....---...._----l-1-24-• Adllllta, no ,.ca. t or 2 ·······--1·•········ ,.....Ott, lldrm -l\HDlftl t.1• lbdrm 18dnn2Ba '500 11rdtn •Pl. pool/rec m>Van&\lardWay -~. 7lOW. llUllt. MO--or~ .. ,.Ir..... • .... s...... Me11 •7, ,.......,,,.,.,... ,.,.,..., -...................................................................................................................................................................................... . ~-------i FOWldaUOM. a.ta•1 hpQlaallty,De"9dable Complete mobile home MRS.CLEANllAKESIT BRICKWORK: Small Collt1e Studeot·Exp'd. Prol.Nl'Vketoaaveyou -Bu I I LA I W.U.. llWlide a..ton• &erwiet. a... a.&.. II Mrvicl. ,...vela to N · GLF.A.11 1 Homee apu Jot. Newport Coata lot/ex any Job for le11' t.lme • mooey. New..,ott Uon, Slab•. P~tlot , ynupee ........ 511.~ lftOdell.~ oltle..carpet.e.:2240 ' MHa, lrvlne.' Refs. CallAln151·93'11 PatiflcR.E.MS-llU Block a Brick. Uc d. ~ H ... 875-1175 ........ a••-..a.on-....... 0 tOl87ev•/-... Elec:trtdU -Im. JODI, •z;a• ROBIN'SCLEANINO 1---------•Pa1ntin1,lnl/ext. Rentals ••-'-"'Ju ~ ~-_.. ~-~ ma.lat 6 resaaln Uc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Servi atborou1bl Mo¥1MJ l Jt p ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1J1 .. !! wpl hr CWWC.. tam..ctO.Mt-saU . HOM£1MPROVEMENT cleanhouse.S40-085l ....................... ~~P~in •. ~~r.· RESUMES"l11'1 ••u•••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••-••••••• ••~.-.... Remadel1nc--Odd.)ob41 Student will move you at 538-4808 • Oe1l 1ne d to pro· Thal'aAU.)'OU 1 C\JSTOMINTERIOR lJC.auu>CARE r.--.-v1dao·trwb&e calla, Zlyrux~r. 979-2245 HOUSF.cLEANlNO reas. rates. 752.1•9a feulonally pretenl fora CARPENTRY YyCoronadelllar repair, addltlona, ln•taU Carpentry, cablneta, roof lSOURBUSINESS! 848-37'T1orM7-3308 ' PIOflOT...a.... akllll, quallflcatioo1 fr •day ad 8 J ... ., _,,.. honw 87J.2NS outlet•, remodtla. Jan.lce'1Ra11edy Ano --... potenUal lb prospective lnthe Y *Y ,...._,., 548·9881, •••·3854 repairt, plumblJ\I. Free 875-~H ' Movln1? Tbe Starving ••••••••••••••••••••••• employers 534-72"8 J D""'LY I b'-•. SJ 1.fO~IC Wheeler Eleclric, lne . e1t. Call An1wer Ad Coll-eStudenta Movlna EXPERT PIANO tunlni "" arpentry, P um wl • C .. _,_ ' 1481 ........... hn o 1 H C -• "' &t repair. Member PTO. I~ PILOT electrical. Uc. cont.tac· Hot lunch. .M. ,....... 0 0 ELECTRIC • .......,, .... . enera oueecleanlng o. has grown, Insured 848-8818 .::";~~••••••••••••••• SaVICI tA>r.Gene,IMZ·B537. tla.oPresebool.Ne-5Ua lnd · ·/Retld /C H•dwudAoon Reliable, refs., trans . ume aood service. QUALITY ROOFING n. •• ~: k · 1 omm · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962·0510 t T 124 · • 36 Lice n 1 e . rtaahr/R--•r AJltypea, rree eat. DIUCTOllY Remod·R-ir·Rellable T .L .C. C hild Care, .,. ...... ywor , reeeat. HAR.OW ... 1......... .....-OOl'fNOWI ~-'d " Lie. ~1 .... (Zt•)..,.7.-.,7 OOD FLOORS HOUSF.cLEANING '" -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Visa, MC. $41·5930 Fences, aatea, docks, anytime, exp ·re.a. ...., -" -_,, ,... ___ __. •-w --" ---------N l '"'l h & •-t HARBOR ROOFING Alll,_.S .. homea,e\c. Al87s.GN tmM646,14'-8761 m--.... ie .. -..• ax~ Prompt, Proreu ional '•WMg/PopertftcJ ea ,... c es ..,.x ures vouroali:Jti; ~ Anytjme,832·41818.A. Refettncea557-5690 ....................... F .... n t. 893-1 4 39 .,~ .. -n.1--..0Ary -..A .. _.__ ca...-a.... llr--.1-" ••••••••••••••••••••••• H F. /ln . . ....,..,,, ...... uu~w -...... __ ,,_ ..___,, _.......... ..... Hot ltt'--me ext t paintmg by New & recovers. Repair s pec:1al is t / sl a Y· bu1y Representative ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~'f!-..~ Ll/r~~O. ~?<>. LDic. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Allell "".i Richard Sinor. Lie, ins. h •-I N .. ....-Clea-•·a Serv .... ~ ~ cu •• • •••••••••••• • • • •• • •• T 641-5671. ext J 11 ampoo • ateam c ean. .......... IUP • Haul, cleanup, concrete .,. XE CUT IV E w 111 ry me. 631-4410 (24 hrs) ~~~~~~~~~I Color brt1ht.enen, wht C a r p e t • U P h o I • 13lllDIO. rea a-2652 1 Dum "' .:.. crpta 10 min. bleach. Houaecleao1og. Win · remova · ptruck. house.sit, xlot refs, ex· lnter/Exter/Refiniahing, ED'S PLASTERING prices. Reliable. $48-0512 AllTypes Int/Ext -.__1 645-8268 FREE EST Sew....., ~affolt1 BOOKKEEPING &TAXSERVICE Hall, Uv.-dln. rms 115; dowa Hardwood firs. Gw •1± i Quick serv. 842·7e311 per'd. 947-5407, 644-1.248 ceilinp/wallpaper. Lie. ~ ...•.......•..•••...... avg rm $'7.50 ; couch 110; _63_1·_-_,, ______ 1 •VERY LOW PRICES• Tret/ahrub trim, con· htcOIM Ta Cain 6Som, 8118-5105 INT./EXT plaster patching, 30 yrs exp NealMS-2977 I Paul> • •••••••••••••••••••••• Dressmaking and alter•· lions done with expert quality and service by chr SS. Guar. eUm. pet Cad ector Landaca~malot·clnups c rete removal, clean· ....................... RALPH'SPAINTING ---------•odor. Crpt repair . 1S yrs r~-ups Free est 557 8271 TAXIC'C! A..... exp. Do work myself. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ae. 549-201S · · • .,..., AND Lie. Int/Ext. Low Rates Reas. rates. •91-0913 appt 842 DiO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs.~1·0101 Construction-All types Landacapi.n1·Cleanups HAUUNG/CLEANING INV~TMENTS Free Elt. 9M·SS66 Driveways, parking lot •----------• 20 yrs exp. Free est. Tree trim & Pa inting Tax prep, shelters, TDs Holleman Plumbing repairs. sealcoalln1. We Care Carpet Cleaners Lie. 133o&589. 645-5973 Treetrimmlng·Hau!Jng or ?? Ray. 9M.4276 Mr. Leonard. 641·9343. S&S Asphalt. 646·4871 Steam clean & uphols. Maintenance. Free est. lro~ Ljc'd. Work o u a r . Truc k Drywal Amie, 548-841• Hau.ling & Dump Jobs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 • • •••••••••••••• • •• • • • • • "-k f R mount unit. Ms-3716 Drywall Special.tat MIKE'S LAWN CARE "" or andy. I RONI NG ~~~•••••••••••• BUY WHOL~ALE QuaJ. & prod. New & re-Monthly service. Trees 641·8427 Protesaional ironing Infants & toddlers. Go back to work & worry less. I adore children and my background in· eludes traininl in child r aisin g. Irvine area 7am-6pm 559-0734 Thru Carpel Installer. mod. #389944. S32·SS49 _&_c_le_an_ups_._548-__ 204_9 __ REMOVAL: concrete. & alterations. 64S-887s Free esl. Also ca rpets DRYWALL-Our E x · Yard maintenance. Tree u pb, grading, lot clean- laid & repaired . Jay. pertise. We can handle l rim & r e m 0 v 8 1 up, saw, break & re· 7$4·6550. 1 63 ..,.,,. Cle anups . Free est. move.Hrlyorbid. yourprobems. !·"'""" 2 ,.,.. 549-2411 NOSTEAM/SHAMPOO 7S . ._9 Electrical Stain specialist. fast ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN·UPS/LAWN H~ ln.......ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto ....... Oftct P roblems ? Any risk. SR-22s, low m onthly rates. Pirkel Ins 646-3995 dry. Free eat. 839-1582 ELECTRICIAN-priced M a I n l e n a n c e · right, free estimate on Landscape lui..,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... GIOftl"Y Want a REALLY CLEAN •• ••••••• •••••• • •• • •• •. • •• ••••••• ••• • • • • • • • • • • Cti .... Acouatic REMOD&IMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• large or small jobs. Free est. 642-9907 HOUSE? Call Gingham MASONRY & T ILE Resid./comm. No job Acoustic Ceilings Lie. #396621 673-0359 Exp. Gardener-mow, Girl. Free est. 645-5123 Our Speciall y We solve too lgeor small. 631·2004 + cuswm hand texturing Lie. :B9944. 532.5549 Make your shoppinf! easier by usinf! the Daily Classified Ads. your one· Pilot Classified Ads ~~shopping center. REMODELING edge, cln·ups. Free est. Electrical Work Rsnbl CM area. S48-4891 Resid./Commerc1al 631-2004 Want Ad Res ults 642-5678 I Expertise housekeeping, e quip & s uppl ies furnished, trustworthy & dep641-4970 your problems 631·2004 ----- FRPLCS built, refaced, brick/stone veneers . 30 yrs exp. 893-3743 .,_....,.,.h &Wwa. '+*Iwata &Wwa. '+* lwuh u.fw.. •'+* hauh u.fw.. I Rooma 4000 Offiu R...tal 4400 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Costo Mesa ]824 Coda Mesa 3824 HwllRgtua hoclt 3140 Mtwporf lffch 3169 Room with kitchen Pi:1V. 1617 Westclirt N.B. Want ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Near bus & shoppang financial inst 70005 .f Ro T center. 962·7520 aft 6PM l t n Ag t c•1.c"32 2bdrm , l 1'2 ba , di s · INSTANT IM 2 Br 2 ba, microwave, OCEAMF M orwknds s · oor. e n ... ~ · hwashe r. crpls, drps, 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Xtra lrg frplc. $500/mo. Call 3 ~· 2 Ba Duplex KOLLCEHTEll gar. 99S 3311 $470 Apt. 2 s tory, 2 car 96J.6490 ordriveby21792 Upst.airs. 2 car garage Hottls,Moteb 4100 NEWPORT 995-3311. garage. frplc. yard, w/d Brookhurst Apt 1.8. w/auto _opener• ~asher ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elegant executive suites hook up. Small child . &dryer1ncld.Ava11.4·1 Balboa lM oceanfront. EASTSIDE small pet OK. A must lo Near new xtra dlx wwnhs TSL MGMT 642· 1603 Low winter rates. Daily tn prest ige location Co.trvWooch see. apt lrg 3br. 2ba, frplc, ----or weekly. Kitchenette. With complete s upport 2 Br. & Stuay. splil·level. • TSL MGMT 642-1603 b I l n s. w I d h k u P . Quiel 2 Br. 1 Ba . with $90 & up. 675-8740. services. fireplace, s k y lig ht, skylights, vaulted ceil-garage, patio. pool 7141851·0681 deck. No children or s3es/mo . 2bdrm , I ba ings, dlb attc h gar, Adults. no pets. I801 H. ~rt LAii pets.SS3.5. I80E.2lsl.Sl. duplex,nodogs,645Vic· many xlras . $S2S . lSlh St . Newport ~ BEST RATE Days 646·4262. Eves toria S46-9124 $45-3004. Height~: S4SO. 642·7340 MOTEL in 64S·9543. . -.-Eastside, lge 3 br. 2\~ ba, HUNTHARBOUR AREA 3br. 2ba yrly. great loc in •Weekly rentals now NEWPORT BEACH 2 HUGE Bedrooms 1n 2 sly. dbl gar, 2 patios, Xtra lge 2br. 2ba S49S N.8 . Broker avail. •$98 and up super location. F.ully immac. s1ootmo. Berit, pool/jacadultsonJy 675·4912 •Color TV. •Phones in car peted. bu1lt·1n s, agl.6'2·823S. CATSWELCOME 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo on rooms. growld floor. Adults, no I~Lynn 12 846-35.U Newport Bay. Prestige 227• Newport Blvd. C.M peE ts. S350Wmo. Awp·p1ly Apt EASTSIDE Spacious 2Br. ki~ OK. location Lease or Op-646-7445. S68 1 son . ~Woock NrBeach&Slater S37S. tl o n l o pur c ha se. Oceanview Studio Apl. 646--"77. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. loft lstllast.9S2·383'1 67S·l S70. 760·1933. $3SO&securitydeposlt. E Sule tnplex Jbr, 2ba. a Pl. S s4 5 m 0 · N ° S48-!IC»4 Eves 673-41$4 smmed occup. no pets chiklrenorpets.1802lst. Lge3br.2ba. frplc. lndry ------ S550/ m o in c l ut1I. St Days 646-4262,Eves hook·up, patio. Ed· NrHoag,redec.2 BRl''.1 SUlftlMrR...tab 4200 851·9647 645-~. in ger I Bois a Chic a . Ba. $500. adlts no pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• t£X:> to 4200 Sq. Ft. •Janitorial Service & Ut.illtiea included • Ml)acent w Airport & Restaurant Row •Access to 3 Major Fwys. 833 ~81 ~ DAVE'S PAINTING Serving area 9 years Most reasonable Insured, Uc'd. 76G-7301 Sales·Service·Repairs Tile ""'lalled, all kinds, Free estimates 5S2-7183 guaranteed. rers. John 893-1667 ~~.~!~~;~~~!~.. Custom CA!ram1c Tile Paintin&: Comm'I, In-New Remodel Repair Swuruning Pool Service · dustrial. Residential. 1-·r~est Ch ck 4n~ 5887 Rehable. Repairs/ Acid ... -.o • u · ,.... Free Est. Lo w rates Washes. Reas. 557 2783 H·~on leach 673-0737 _,. .. ...,. --------P O lo R al Tile Co. QUALITY PAINTERS .:.: ••• ~ •• ~ •• ~••••••• Ceramic New remod. Bargain rates thru 4/8 Irvine/Newport post or. reas. rates. 675·2284 Free est. 848-5684 flee boxes unavailable? Window CleClftinc) WINTER RATES R e n t · a · Bo x f r o m • •• •••••••• •• ••• •••• • •• Int.I ext. Painting privately-owned postal ··Let The Sunshine In" Cleanouts·fastservice service THE MAI L CallSunshmeWmdow S36-980l SUITE, 549.4733 for Cleanintt, l.td. $48-8853 •STEVENS PAINTING Int/ext. Free item ized est. Neat. quality work. S46-456l rates/services H you're lookinic for a bet ter job. you won't want lo miss the employment columns ln Classlried. Window 1-:xpert, window bhngs, screens & mir rors Reas rates. depen dable free est call Gene 545.0225 Office R...+al 4400 lusiness Rtfttal 4450 IU1iftffs/lftn1t/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Finance Suite avail. approx 1100 sq fl. Newport Ar ches Marina Bldg. 642·4644 Small o rr 1ce 1827 W estcliH Dr N B. Good loc. SlSO per mo. 631 -0900 0Hice/warC!h<>USe nr 0C Airport, lib> sq ft offices & warehouse Offices full carpeted & aircond. Assume l 1'3yrs at $750 mo. or negotiate longer term wlownr. 556-9900 Newport Ce n ter Prestigious 9th floor v iew local1on appr ox 2300 s q f l (714 )640·1560-Mr. J oe Fletcher. OFACE/W AltEHOUSE SUl-LlASE 4 offices, reception. warehouse w/lr g sliding door. sec system. new paint. new crpt. Redhill PRIME WATERFRONT RETAIL SPACE 1st TIME AVAILABLE 500. 2600 Sq . Ft. NEWPORT BEACH SPECIALTY CENTER . ......•............... lusiftess Opponunity 5005 ........•...........••. Mountain Bus 1nesse5, Free List, Resorts, Mo te l s , Gas , E t c 839 1163 ln•shntnt Opportw.ity 5015 . ....••.•...•.......•.. LOAN SSOO or more. Dbl. your money. Loan is secured by unprecedent· ed Isl m film financing history 714 ·9S7 ·4086 Agl wants to work with in vestors to secure sound comm1mduslrial Income property Bill 831·1257 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Business loans lOK up. Isl & 2nd mortgages. SK IOm1I 494 7108 Avail.4/l.SSS0.846-3129 Palo1os. 631 3888 ; OCEANFRONT SU M· rd L 2bdrm. l 112ba, W. side. •----------,,.., .,...... MER RENTALS $6SO Lovely ga en apt. r g. k25 +sec dep. No pets. ~ 3Br. 2Ba. frplc, bit ms .,u _ Lg 3 br 2ba. frplc, encl wk. Adlls only. Now tak· Call day 63 1·4402. ----""-"'-·------gar. New plush cpts. 2 l br. gar. prkg, yrly . ingreservation.s 4~3S79 k ... _ _.. ,......, M t S teps to beach. Avail 450 sq ft Deltghtful I nr Bnswl. Avail after working s pace w ith 3125181. 1-5/yr lse. Call ocean view Full bath. 3 644-6500 or 700.1377 HICJh Visibility "main stre.t" Traffic Location 2nd TD. 16', int. IS yrs I fully amortized Bkr 731 8550. night: 700.0734. Spacious 2 BR. $365. 1..,,. .,.. ........ us see. now. S400 673-3958 eves Vocatioft Rtfttalt 4250 Pool & laundry racil. 792.l Holt. Call 3 w 7 pm Sunny 2 Br upstairs apt 548-95S6 wkdys.Sat/Sun 847-4803 Huge 2 Br. 1 Ba. Steps to E'side Gar. deck, laund 2 Br. 2 Ba. Crpls, drps. beach. 1600 Properl y rm. no pets. '450/mo. 1 Br 1 ba, patio. Laund Hous 642 38SO or AvailAprl.631·1094 bltos, oven, range , e . · · facil, encl garages, new· •u2 010 dshwsr. e nclsd oar.. '" ·l ly dee. Walk to abop-"' -----W~BAV APTS pina. Min. from bcb. 968-1021. New garden apts, patios, Ready roroccup. April 5. pool. spa. Adults. no 2Br , l VJ Ba condo. 2-story. pets S350 mo w mo. 646-0341 Pool. spa. tennis. Im · 2Br, 1Ba '465 _o_r_~ __ 6_155 ______ maculale. $600/mo. 2Br. 2Ba S480·S48S lbdnn, frplc. beam ceil· 1_963-_797_9_. ------ 398W. Wilson, 63l·SS83 Ing, gd area. 1385/mo. 1st. last. dep. No pets. I Br S395 646-3420. 2 Br. l Ba . . . . . . . .S46S --------- 161 E.18th. 642·0856 Eaatside quiet garden Hunt. Landmark lbdrm condo. 40/yr age min., s ec. & many other amenities. S400. 960-1347 . 3 Br. 1 Ba. Steps lo beach . S640. Property House. 642·:11SOOr 642·1010. Deluxe 2br, 2ba $560 steps to bay/bch. 675-5464 tbdrm condo with pool. very pvt on Rutland Rd. Adult.sonly. Call 833-3622 or 640-8557. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large Big Bear Cabin Pool table, color TV. 2 frplcs, sips 14. $45-6916 On the beach! 2 Brr 2006 W. Oceanfront. <Lower Unit). Weekly or Mon· thly 759-1677 NEW PALM SPRJNGS Fully furn. condo. Ten- nis, pools. Wknds. $150. Wkly, $000. 645-8171 apt. lBr, Adults, Avail 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse. 2Br. lBa S46S Apr l S350 indlda util & Near beach. Garage. MAMMont 1 Br condo nr lifts 7·8, avail now. 76G-l933, SCB-9094 ------------- lSlE.21stSl.S48·2408 refrlg. 1s t & las t Adults. S46S. 960-1279 or +ucurily.631·2124 831·8065 Wcat:fleld ·----------Townhouse Eaataide 2Br. "Int 3144 Oceanfront Charming l Big Bear Sun. Sum. 3br br lower apt No view. 2ba 2.sty. tyr, frplc. walk kOOmo/yrly 675-3823 t o ski . US/night. 3176 _6_7_5-_0500_. ____ _ F'"' ..... ILY ... -s. 1..., ba 2 Sty. 3 yrs. old, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..r • N ••• .,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• a~ to sL.-4100 Brand new beautiful lrg gar 0 pets . ......, mo. Irvine/Woodbridge 3 Br. N s c ,,_ 1 H 3 _.._.. ~ 675-8133 . . i r . . '"'nera oep. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• apt, for families with l 11/• Ba. All amen1hes n· br. frplc, 2. ba, stove, Moving? Avoid deposits or 2chlldren. Near park. D-P-i-.& 3126 cld.ll580mo.~7690. crpts, av811. Apr 4, •-cut Uvino ex-nses! Heat paid. No pets _.. • ... ,,, 89 • "' .... 2Br. l Ba. '470 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ewport leoch 3169 ....., mo. l·li44 Professionally sin ce 3Br 2Ba $560 2 br, balcony, O.W , ••••••••••••••••••••••• s • .-. 1971. yr old bldg S4SO mo Turner MSOCS .. 494·1177 :aiw Wilson 631·5583 clean. coin laundry & pu. llWPOIT C-'1t1w 3171 HOUSIMATES ------·----w1hr, gar, n r ocean. ,_ ...,. 832-4134 W Au.ACE ST. APTS. 493-581S3 aft 5PM '•••••••••••••••••••••• ----------MD's facll, In HB. 2,000 COUMTIY CLUI Condo. lBr, rrplc, encl. *1r1..-...1 Ll•IRcJ* ft Red ... Sl200 Newly decorated 2 Br. l c NT aar Wa•-•-gas paid _.._ sq . · uc~ to VA A 1 tv•..uit. · ""'' • · Co ........ lors •~ pe-onally I R d C l Ba. S42S . Small child d 1 f 1 ..... ~ No.-. k2S 775-211• ... _ "' ... mo. se. e arpe • 2bdrm u p ex, rp c. Singles, l~ bedroom ...--· · •el-your compatible 89 35 OK , no pela. 200 bl i s490 •-•-ho 0 ~· 3-1 l Wallacell,Ms-6452 carport, t· na, · apt.a, • ..,wn usea. 2bdrm, 2ba penthouse, 1 r mmte to suit your --------- 831-3126or 49'3-2252. From$S10 644·1900 level, very neat. $490. lifestyle. Shared·Living. MEWPORT CEHTER NIAi NIW H•H•tl• le.cit 3140 Oceanfront for Winter •96-8122 Gloria. 833 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB Full Service Suites 2 Bdrm w/frric, blt·lna, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rentals. Furnished & SOlllltLGIJMo 1116 631·1801 SCUTCOSTS S quiet nelg borhood, THIWHIMITllH unrum. 8roker. 675·4912. ••••••••••••••••••••••• N.8 . oo+ 00 shr 2br. 2ba All younl~l ffor,one walk lo park & •hop. Lu1tn"" Adult unit• at af· d condo patio frplc mon Y ee. k2S, lit. tut + dep. Call rordi"ble living. 1,2 le 3 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo Oceanfront atu lo apt • · • ~$470 Ha~631·'7900 Br. Well decorated. rentala. Villa Rentals. with patio, overlooklnft phone,$290.646-7332. 2·Swr)' Office w/priv en tra nce, bath. Great I Ocean View S475 631· 7770 MWPT PEMIMSULA Exec offices in elegant s urroundings . Across rrom City Hall. All SUP· port services available. From 225 w 4750 sq.ft. 673-:.JOZ 17th STREET Costa Mesa. 3 rm suite. AIC. Plenty of parking_. S4S sq. ft. 75" sq. ft. Realonomics 675-6700 Special Lea1inc) lncentin1 Mow 1714'6 7S-8662 Prime Locatioft 1270 Sq ft on busy Beach Boulev a rd-Hunting ton Beach. Ideal for real estate om ce. store of other suitable business. 2 Private baths. availa· ble immediately. 10 Year lease. Attractively priced. 642°4321 t Ht 286 Weekoays DANA POINT'S Best lndulfrial Rental 4500 location. 250' Sl7S mo. •••••••••••••••• •• •• ••• --- MOfteYWant.d 5030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Private party wants $200K-1250K l year note. secured by lsl T.D. on 1•,, millio n doll ar Bayfront home. Phone 64S-9195 res idence . 642· 1081 ofrice Motl~•· Trvst Dftdi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sattler t;.ff9-Co. All types or real estate investments since 1949. SpecialiWc) hi 2ftdTD1 642-2171 545-06 I 1 utlls incl. 97S.l120 ~~ .,.,,,. I d 'I/Of --------..,.,., up. 1.,..., n us M~ Floh MtcJ. ~ E. l7th. St. fice. 18101 Redondo Cr SINCE 1981 COSTA MESA __:.~~Hunt Bch. 842·2834_ tst&2ndTDs. SSOK·SlM + FROM75"SQ. FT. MESA O wner/Non O wner 165-900 sq. ft . air cond. SFRs & Condos office suites for immed. 1..._.DUSTRIAL C-Ommercial & Industrial occupancy. All ulils. " PE"l'ER DOBBS janitorial serv .. con!. PARK 640-6016 673-9043 rm., parking. Call Terry Cressman: 554-9000. AJIPORT AREA Furnished o r un- furnished Execut ive Suites In Irvine, walking distance to Airport. All ser vices avail. You r Secretary or Ours. 2021 Buaineas Center Dr . Suite 213. 7W7S2·0234 Pl.Ali EXECUTIVE SUITES "There Is a difference." 711W.17th. St. Costo Mesa, Collf. 642-446] Want mveslor for Npl bayfronl home. Give. well secured lsl or 2nd T.D. Agt, 675-6161. 2 nd Tru s t Dee·d purchases arranged . For details, call 964>-1957 bkr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5100 Olympic 1lse pool, li&ht· 6'75-4912Broker pvt beach. IS:iO/mo ut I Will share 2bd 2ba Park •DB.UXEOFftCES• 1-1870 sq. n.. Unit avail. for immed occupancy. 1-2900 sq. fl. & 1·3700 sq. ft. unit(&) a vail. April Isl . 2 Storage Warehouses avail. for immed. occupancy, 2000 & BM> sq. rt. ·~·34• sq. rt. •Leasing office hrs. Mon thru Fri. 8·4. Sat. 10-2. ·------------• •••••••••••••••••••••• 2Bel 1 Ba, $375. Clean & _,. ·--•-J . incl.499-2253or•99-5021. N _ ,.....,.. f From 1 room up w 1000 7141 752 0234 .. 1.-.. , .. _/ c 11 cu \CUl.IUI cow1, acuni, 2 b l 'At b H a e-...,. • .._, mo um, t\ Sl Oii n 3 • 1100 an tl. 2 offices. front ~"'-'· 00 •iwt pets. a park Uke landscaping. r, a + gar, oa T•tllt lltO incl ulll-lc llnens w/resp sq. · · per aq. · 2082 Michelson Or. 1212 .., ff'•&U I~ ral&. 63l·l21M Mott beautiful bid&. ln Hosp area, nu decor, ••••••••••••••••••••••• em P. w 0 m . Re r . s coo~ and up. No lpease 2021 BualnessCntr1213 " rear entry. overhead ~·~ H 8 open hie Sat 6 Sun 11·3, Se uri bd " required. 2172 Du ont door, 220 power. S310 on · ~ ..,, -.oea 4 ua H ii a r la W a y , c ty apt.a,pdl rmd 1 _64().-8883________ Dr. Adj. Airporter Hotel. c ustom. executive office, lease. 675-6251 l_.(1$ 38r. 28•, 4·p'u , 1ar, adulta, no pell. $480. 1040 C, V aleftcia :MS-7911 Newport Hta. lrl lbdrm. lba, new crpta, 1tbve, yrd, 370 La Perle Lo. b'15. 71CMJ7S8. Stuoolna L1e lbdrm, 1arden apt, pool/rec arealaS.'7tOW. lllh8t. ,.,,,_, ll0-5875 2bdrm, utll • a u la, 833-3223. 9-12 • .t.. .... • P·'" bath wit. h •---------RINft -mo. no pets. From 1375. Spectacular view w/sec wu.., ... n u d Id MI Orcus-Unlty -pool j Sl•"/ CdM Delwi'"' Sult-. AC, shower. Balboa Peoln. o er-pr ce on a n .,_.. ltall paclou.a abdrm condo 831-550S. · gall • • 7~·1._ .... mo. ... "'" 1215 mo 842-C:J St .• Irvine. 2350aq ft Of· ~v.a -c - 2'At tMa. QmetJoc. .,. lleaats ,_. .... d + . · _. ,,._ ampl pk1. ulil pd. 211!5 · · nee ware. $950. 831-7770 1 know ~~~ulon ls •imo. ora.ofwlll•d JtOO Spat!. condo, Bluffs, prof. E .CstHwy.875-8900 .............. 4450 not over . I met my doc· lll·171t.ta1-47.,., •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• tA>1Hrw/aame, see to ap-------'--'-----•·•••••••••••••••••••••• s.,,. 4550 tor 00 a plane and be StlOO p1"tc.7a>-1750eves. I 0,000 s~. Ft. For store . office apace ••••••••••••••••••••••• waa nutRtrTQURIST . S E A W I .._. D at reaaonable rates. Storage Warehouses lo 1 ___ • .,..;._ .. ...;:'•=--------. swmYllW ~ n "URGENT" F /rmmte SINGLE SER IOOtoJ700S41.Ft. Costa Mesa avall. for Latll 2 Br. J Ba. over-' VILLAGE 1hr apt Bal lalaod watil • 11~ VERDE DR lmmed. occupancy. 2000 tt&,__. IJOO looiln1 Back Bay. New lW bdrm luxury endolJuneS200873-8813 OFFICc PLAZA tt.BM>Cai'r~~.:S~pe:.~~· •••••••••••••••••••• •• Loaa. of clout•, adult apta tn i. plan• B'·'D~ 1S25M v rdeE c M '" nrtplac., 2 carport.a, 2 from s.40, 2 bdrm from Sophladcated Retp Fem '" w. eu e • · • thru Fri. M . Sall 2. balCOQ,yS. 745 Domlnto S505 + pool•, tennla, to 1hare lovely decor. 54S.41ZJ 'r . ~\.I J' 11 : ""' ';i£: l'V1N 1 • -~ n.:. ' pfl • OnflwllMf•' llO. • POOi & "IC Roolll 11 Ga1Clilll Ulldtclp!llO • .100 to ltaetl & SllOPJ ' .. ....... ', f f, ~ ~J J I H ' ' "JM f N I ....... •. ' ' .. Dr. Call before SPM. watafallo1, ponds! o.. w..uurr apt, pool WID 85 Newport Btacb, tl.25 ...._1/lllyat/ '725 . .,.._Cll'IQ-IJIO.. for coolll.nt " beatlna S2aO+~uU1M2-&492 ~ aq. ft. New dlx office or FM•n •--b / lb l..._ 'Wu ._ I 8 B pakl. From San Dteio retaU w /~vt bath, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ne.., ...... l r w tar, r, -· c , un. enc • u te 2 r . 1 a ., Frwy drlvt NO('th on Wantedi P'em. roommate pm"aq. ft. ._.____ Adulta,oopeta."70/mo. 1ar. Hr unt. Harbor. ftrep\ae., pra1e Ln lo•· aud to llcFadden to lht, Bd home. Irv. aeourily, a c. 800·2400 - $41-58 Jan .... u•. ely NtwpOrt ff•llbll. then Weet OD McFadden n•.75 + uUl. 5St-8050 IY._ ...... , &fl lq. ft, IOI Jut St. (next °''' m.lty 500& .... _ IT5-0M9 / "'"'-~ lo Bank of Newport, ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• 2 Br.1Ba.w/1ara ... Pet a •• Bedroom•. -· to S.awlnd vm .... Avall.t l. OCCUPANCY Lido Cannery area). An\UateBranchOfc. OK • ._ rno. Atk for M»tao. KJdl OK, no roe. tNGl ~b. L& brilllt C'7l.4>-.St•c --. M-.-.. -e-rri_m_a-c/_H_ar_bo_r 175-JDS, (213>8'1·9700 Mlke.Ml..oTU ~•t• pltaat. Water/ 2Br1ba,..,ttwn.J>/W, a.-• 4000 2br, l~ba.m7/mo. ll.Oft· 405Fwy/Herbor 81. H '-ownerahlp of lo· •--------- A v ail now. LARGE .:...-=-~~~-:~: ~-/pty.••I ....................... tmkr BAOIELOR wlpaUo ln oofa 111e-. 1 rt 0 lltlCIU Du,a.a ltoom C: ':a~!-P'DI 7•98Md1.S5'1-55MtV1 COMMERCE quiet adult complea. • I •· J ... AdllU, llO roam :;HISt · Offlee...... 4400 Pool 1pa, bbq, no•· 2 Bdrm, I ta., cpla, d.,,., ,.ea. Mii. mo. lit, ,.It -·-•••••••••••••••'.. PAIK uu' mo. )IHa Pl•H d/w, mcl pr, beach. I dtpalll. ll'J lolaa. D&Y• Cdll, nlc.. Pn••ta •· Ele-lll'OI~ le H.B. 9~•1 Apt• .. 2uo Herta. Polala aru. '4IOl1no. Ill·-· Cv• • Wbdl lruce, patio. Puna, vtU II' '* eq.Jt. &..: Jled M9-2447 NZ.-Ml IN1 Incl. SSD/mo. 719-1111. Carpet, -. .. 1 Prt.tH.t.w 8"& vntWaU .. t,necontull· LOST: Cat ltEWAap Location, 2000 1q rt. hl1fttm. LA/OfaqeCo. Small Black Ftlll tl.900/mo. 541-1151, eves Performanett + '450 N.8 ,/C.M. area. Netdl fTl.IDJ ca1h req. R•fundable. medlcaUOll.-1 __ ....;_ ______ , Draw a1alntt proflta. Approx IOO-llOO 1q fL lld1. utban1• tr LOST: 8lk w/tokl e,.. A•aU DOW. Wanter·HB P•rtoDal tntervlt" B•nntM cat. R•••rd ane. onr alU 111·1217 1W?D010l.Hl l2. ...... I • • •• • • •• !~~ :."_;_ -·~ ·~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~~~ ..... ?!!!t.~~~~ .•... ?~.~ Orange Coat ~AJLY Ptl.,OT/Mo~y. March 23, 1981 er .. -..:. &.1c. ........ w~ 1011 ..,w...,,. aaftldq~~ • ••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~ •••••••••••••••••• • ...... II ~. Vlc ..... _ ............... Ad ..... , I • ' ,-!. F c . ' H~ ....... 7100 H .. Wmlld 71 O~Hetp WGlllH 7100" Wlllhd 7100 ...... -;•cti7;•N:.;;;.•LVN !::'ca ~~~w.'f.1 TE,[LERS CUii/TYPiST ---~= -·:'· ~ ·~OflftCI ffouaekeepera wanted. 1f&g :.•••tel red .-. f\111 Ume empjoy· .,.._ aeeta for adverti... PtranHt • tem· Dlllet• Ty It 10.key 1ddln1 Seaclilf Motrl l&el So . • r ... Ian en.._ lo N.8 . It C.•. int, llod·Frl., tAM· piorwy. Newport e.ach ~ ma . 1J'122 W•tern Coast Hwy. Lacuna ttl" ~. llDOI. wwen 17$-110I IPll. Bue+ comm. Co. ~ beytq com· Laauna Buctl 1Jec· Ave .. 01rden Grove, Beach, -.-8)2. &• Kuh. MO·SIH or btcMftl. WWlraln.Neat Wiry -de,.n • I• •ti.In 11, 1~10 pay ... openlap ror tronlc. manufacturer _898-__ mi_. ____ _ --AIDE/COMPANION appurw. Ir td. apeil· t. Sf'71 ~ ..-..:. ' 1 ..._ M & ..,t cJeriea1 l)Cl910ou, bot!! oeedl: HouaekeeperlCook for Lott : Miniature 8y female cauca1lan, Ina aaentlal. Apply: .... •p•••• ..... .,_. lleclll & .,.... permanent• tem •lft experienced penon GeoeralOlllceWorlcer. active pef'IOD. Live In xlat Beverly .Hilla reft, Penovaa ver lUO .,.._ __...__,... t _ ... __....._ 't--porVJ Some prevloua to be re1pon1lble ror ,.~ Mta~•t)'ape¥1wf..ro9,-..... Balboll. 873-1879 YerbbJn. "Jerem)'". car/~Jla/lt bHh•P· PlacemUa Ave., CM .-..,...,...,. Y"*' •--.. • .,.,. ...... , otne. tllQNll'. T)'pin1 & draft.Ina • mechanical "Ult • .... ~ llWA.RD. ln1. Daya fJulble. • howntf', •• coaaw.r "'"' .,,.c..ta 10.key by touch dealra· detlln funclloaa. Must ~n.zm. etdera puf'd. (213) AllOllC wtMI llH~ c•l1,../-. "-•• ••'-H ble. For appt .• cell : b ave tho r o u ab Lotr: BlkCat "CASrY" 152-t'TUalU:30PM. fHSTRUCTOI WrM. we wll MtMt y .. • 5 .. tr.•lllt oa 640-010, ext 1202. knowtedst of drafting "" E t N ._ .. •-'-. " E.0.E. pr<K'edurn. PC board f' • m •I e. v I c . H~W....., 7100 xp. on Y· twport _. --r l•r,out dJaital analoo .. -'I I I .. .,. Beach uu 780-0461 -....... r.::-...&...11.-1 ....._ & .._........ • • .,. • ..._. a At anta Lthr ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• · · ~. ,.. r-·-··--r --"" m crowave circuit de· e.ollarreward 531-96'0 Aplltment M1na1er As-. lul11 l•t 2wks •ec•tloa la I fl I & Clerkal 1i1n, fs aome knowledge FOUND. Small brown AAMAAAAAAAAAAA slstanl: Experienced, .-........ n1l1t.ce P'09 CLERK ot electro-mechanical dot w/whJte feet Vic ACCOUMTAMT for 100 Unlta, Coata ......_~Ill ,.noa w ... ...,, Mwclt ~=iy ror advan- Bliihard/Garfield · H 8 ' 0e1ree in Acctg. 5 yrs. Mesa. Work Sunday + 1 25tlt btWa I OAM & 2PM • ...... of ftte c e me n t & c a re e r ad-ll30 ' · · ex per• Gd · com · weekday. On cell Even· follewl:y locllffotli: JYPIST growth. We offer xlnt. · munl cat)ve akllls . inp fr Weekends. Free Fo·'-.. ·. ..ale Miniature $20 000 . be Uf I I IO We1tcMff Dr ..... ,...... leoclt C D 1 C pay & benefits + unu • Lu Reinders A1ency apartment 1.n au u or r-. . . orporallon is 4 DAY WORK WEEIC Apricot Poodle , vie ... _.,Blrch""-t '•"EOE adultcomplex.6'2-4907. looklna for a versatile F llil ls . be t•t 1 Broothunt & F.dlnger. -.,.. 99 200 I MlcMtao. Dr .. In• lndlvidual w perform a •c Y in au 1 u WUco Sbopplna Center. Newpcwt/83S-8l90/Free Ap~~a~o~sll ~n& ac-1.0.1. M/F variety ol penonnel of· ~=:~hn~ <it~~~~n a~:a~r 531·19. ce...-. or u e parts • flee duties. Must type Call ' pt P 1· ------~--·---------i driver/shop helper. 40.50 wpm accurately. iorap : ersonne G&a.AL OfftCI I minedlate opening In our pu.rchaalng dept. for an expr'd peraon with xlnt typing skill• & 11 ple11in1 •phone penonallty. Duties will also include filing, order taklna and other general office wo r k . XI n t benefilll & working con· ditions with 11 growing company. Apply In person at. THE JOLLY ROG ER INC 1700Glllelte Ave FoYnd : Ladies Bulova Background in pressure Previous office ex -Dept. Telonic Berkeley. watch, vie Devis School, ACCOUNTING cleaning equipment CAI WASH perience helpful. Good 714·494-9401. Laguna' - C.M. ~-AHD/Olt , helpful. Calif. driver's BANKING CASHIERS p/Ume, N.B. benefits, as well as Beach. E.O.E. Ir vine 714/~0331 LOST : A Small Klesbound puppy, nut- ty, blk/brwn. If found call M.5-8587, 673-0139 IOOllCWIMG license Ir &ood drivin1 It Oranie. 6'4-4460 growth pot~tial. To aulat in developin1 record a must. $3.50 per T£WI Ctl bs-•otety, the p & L. Work under hour to start. Apply CASHllaS 5 ... 51 1822 minimum supervision. rrrn Main Street, Su.ite Bilingual IOX PBSOHS -. --- PenH .. s nso :ee:~~:!n~~e:an; A, Irvine. I Spanish/ =· aNT~\t~rr:~~: aJl.;.~f e~~i>-2 ••••••••••••••••••••••, assign work to lower-~i h) Nr Airport. 831-9570. Coata Mesa PRE level clerks. X.lnt com· ASSlt•LMS S szs.rlt.:1~d~e::.~~r:; pany benefits . Call lrvlne electronics dis· lmmediat opportunity CASHlll Equal()ppty Empt. M/F Le1al. Confidential Millie after 9am . lribW:lnnds.CableAs· for a person w wok lo Weekdays Ir mornings DVM Po B 2 645-5800. semblen. Soldering ex-our Santa An• branch. on ly. 9 :30AM·lPM. • • • OX 324 . ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j pe Ex 11 k N.B. 92663. -r. nee. ce · wor · Some S & L/b1nklng ex· Mature person with -------114 C C 0 U HT IM G COVER GIRL cLHJC ing conds. & co. benefits. perience preferred but cashiering experience a Conl1ct: Bob Tracy. will consider a trainee must. Photo experience Mc.Fri.,8-5.549-0954 with cash hand ling lfpouible. Photography background. Our com· Unlimited, 16889 Beach pany offers excellent ad· Blvd. H.B. * OUTCALL * The Jolly Roger Inc. has BS3-on8 MC/VISA an entry-level position 11iiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;; available in our sales & 11 FIRST LADY Escort. Models P..ty D-.cen. • 972-1345. MC & VlSA Accepted cash accounting dept. for a person who has limited experience. but is ambitious & willing to team. lyi', exper. pre- fel'l"ed . Duties include: auditing ol sales reports, some filing, mail· ---------1 processing & general clerical work Xlnt. ._c..,_y lscortt 2.Ulrs. 641·0180 Cosh/C'-cb benefits & working con- ditions with a growing co. Apply in person: ASSEMILEIS vancement opportunity --------- and paid benefits. Con-CASHIER Loe. Mission Viejo co. needs Assemblers w/2 yrs. exp. Candidates must have gd. manual dexterity, gd. eyesight, tact: HOUSEWARESALES Ellen Cuesta m4 > 83J..8383 Apply in person: Crown Hardware, 1024 Irvine, (West cliff Plaia > NB neat in appearance & de· fAI WES pend.able. Work is an lire T CASHIEIS s upport medical elec-S ~Ir 1 --lronics. Gd. benefits. G'I 1oovm1 0 n I y res po n s i b I e Equal port unity I persons seeking perma· Employer M/F/H/V I u TDTE M npfy~t c~ry:~. n;~e~fi. -------- COOK 6AM·2:30PM. Some cooking exp . nee . JnslituUonal bkgmd. de· slrable. '4.50 per hr. + depending on quallfica· tioM. Call: 548·5585 for appt. COUNTER HELP : Ex· perlenced. Sandwich Shop. Over 18. Costa Mesa area. Call btwn 9·2. 646-1004. COUNTER HELP Mon-Fri se-4867 Donut shop. Early AM s hift. No exper. nee Ap ply . Dippity Donuts , 1854 Newport Blvd .. CM. •DIAFTEll STRUCTURAL 675-6110 ------------ Drapery Manufactur er needs exp hemmer. <bl.ind stitch operator I F I T. Mon -Thurs, 7•5:~m or PIT. C.M «rea. 642-1843. Driver Meyerhof's. primary supplier or good food to the Irvine corporate community nee ds a res ponsible deli very person to drive our van Good driving record necessary, M ·F'. 8 :30 2 Start: Min. Call Don or Susie: 5.57-6232. GftifERAL Couner/Clerk, part time needed for Npt Bl·h medical lab Perm PoS Prefer mature peri;on Phone Jan H1llyt'r 640.0140 GENERAL OFFICE Exp. helpful, gd typing ability, profH·1e n cy wlfigures, lO·key by touch. xlnt. co. benefits Informal ofr CM Call M ii lie art 9AM, 645·5800 GENERAL OFFICE Immediate flt Position dependable individual to a ssist marketin g & general orfiee Good lyp ing. & va riety offit•c s kill s r equi red an dynamic work environ menl Newport Marine Engineering 645·3632 HOUSBHPERS We hav~ an lmmechate open1ne r or 2 housekeepers Full time poaltions 10PM-6AM ahlfts. Excell. frlngye benefits package. Appl in person at: Advanced Health Center, 1300 Bristol St. North, Ste f 100, Newport Bear h E.O E. M/F INSURANCE Agenl'Y ser vice rep. l'omm ·1 lines acct. handling. 75' ofc , 25% field Ua dcrwr1tang, ser\"lce sa It's pos. Car ex pe n se. salary, comm Min 3 yrs comm I underwrll ang ex per M u.sl have I"' & C IJc Oranl(e & I. I\ Counties Call Diane Bullock 833·~ ~ 0 F INTERIOR 01-:SI GN SALES Flair fur de curating neces sar~ Flexible hour!'. Wll tram 499·1461 J~ Mechanic Exp'cf.Serv1ce Mana~er. m1n1mum r e quire mcnts, IOyr~ exp. musl be factory trained. good refs. salary S20001 mo J u s t J a g u a rs I n 1° (714 )951·3288. LEGAL SECRET ARY Laf(wia Beach. full tlml• w/mmamum -I yrs r\ penence for !>oh• prat•l 1 t1onc>r Empha ... 1~ 01 criminal. Pl, & fomtl la " Salar) rnm mens urate ~ t"<p1•r 714 .i97 1789 'The Jolly Roger Inc. 1700GIUetteAve. Irv 714·S46-0331 _ ....... '? .... <MC_..1vili1iiso._1 •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;;jAccounting Clerk, part· BE AU T 1 C I ANS & S8l·38:KI MANICURISTS, follow- ing pref. To work in warm, friendly salon. Hrs. nexible. The Hair MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shifts We promote to manage- ment & supervision from within. COUNTBtHK.P Dry ce.01Mr1. Expr. 111atwe lady. 5 day w..ti.646-•Hl Dunban RHtauront Exp'd Hostess Book keeper Wed-Sun days apply 3-4::r>PM al 16360 Pacific Coast Hwy EOE G.nerof Office Full time office help n eeded Duties ind learning propert> mngmt offact' & com puter input 1 wk vara t1on aft 6mo 1900 mo to s tart Call Ot•n1 549-7681 LEGAL SECRET ARY A S A P Full 11 me .\ the heach m LaRun;1 ' :! allys Vanct) pract1n• S.i I Jr) Jtenerou!'o f.x 11 onl, Call 494 7503 tud.1~ •FOXYLADY • OtrrcALL ONLY VISA MC * t72·1 Ill* A TUHTIS MASSAGE SPA Be pampered by 16 Beaut. Girls . Open 10AM-4PM 7 day s . Phone 645-3433 lime, A.IP, AIR. PI R & bank recs Multiple books for la nd develop- men t Co. By O .C. Airport 9S7-MSl. Administrative Sec'y F . V. firm needs well. rounded individual to handle Gen. office dulies. P(R, some book· keeping. Typing 80, die· • • ' ta phone; no s /h. Will SPIRITUAL train on WP. Salary READINGS commensurate with exp. 10am-10pm. Fully Lic'd. =C;a;l;I ;M;ar;yiiiiiiii963-m 6560iiiiiiii;·-- 492·7296 or 492·9034 1815 • S. Camino Real, San Clem Adverlislna ASSEMBLERS. We wall train . Apply 7AM MacGregor Yachts, 1631 Placentia. Costa Mesa . AUTOTRAHS. R & R MAN. Full lime. Tools required. 548-2288 Banking Local Newport Beach S&L needs loan service supervisor. Minimum 3yrs. exper. Must know all aspects o( loan servicing. Must be in· dependent sell-starter. Salary commensurate with exper. Cont.ct Ms . Denny Parisia: 64~6505. MIDIA DIPT. Newport Balboa Sav· THE Girlfriends •ISCOITS• H-/Offlce/Hotet • 759-1216. Two entry level pos. 1~in~p~-~E~-~O~.E~-~~~~~ Typing 50wpm . gd . 1: cleric1l skills. IA*I.._ 2(ffrs Now Harmg MC Visa AMBER formerly w1lh COVER GIRL as now with THE OlRLFRIENOS' --------PHONE FUN 8AM·l2PM M.C./VISA (714) 636·6853 -------Fof A therape auti c massage by a lic'd lher1pist S20 lo a II NEW clients M F 10·7 PM 548-2.817 Starving Entrepreneur needs lo raise money' Will do anything legal. conlldenl1al 641 ·5989 Psychic reader & ad· vlaor. Past. present. future. Love marriage. health. character, bus1 ne11 Readings an all areas. For inro & appt 67~7046. *flSS T'S• ESCORTS 24HOURS 549-1519 Ta.AfffC DEPT. Typing 50wpm. or . ganizational skills a must. Ability lo· work with varioos personalities. ACCTS SEllVICES Exec Secretarial avail. Al least 2 yrs. gd. secretarial exper. req'd. Typing 65wpm , short.hand or speedwrit- ing req'd. OFC MESSENGER/ GENERAL OFC. Requires valid Calif. driver 's lie .. gd. driving rec .. ro. car provided. PBX relief & lite Clerical skills. Good ro. benefits includ- ing medical. dental. life. Exce ll career op- portwtity. Call btwn. 9AM-l2PM or send resume to: Wells, Rich, Greenerrownsend Advertising, 4931 Birch St., Newport Beach, Ca. 92660 Attn: Personnel. ~ Classified Ads are the answer to a successful garage or yard sale! lt 's a better way to tell more people! ------------------- 1- fl] f Cljfil WFNtfo ~ ~~~..._~~ : ~ ott-et col~( • ,j)~ 1 ,\ I -.__ L<::~~~ ~ """"",_ Use ,,,..,,, At/ servjce when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad .:.. .. we take your messages i4 hours a day ... you call In at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service fs only $7.SO week. For more Informa- tion and to place your ad call 642-5678. Southern California Savinp TB.l.BlP/T Prefer S & Lor romm'I experience, will train qualified applicants. Hew/14.ccomh Prefer recent s.tL ex- perience. Must be well groomed & enjoy public contact. Accurate typing required, some Satur- day houn. For the above positions available in Irvine contact for ap· pointmenl. (714)5.59-4493 (714)534-1102 EOE Banking New kc111rts C111~ Experience Preferred Also part time positions available in our South Coast Plaza office. Call· Kathy Amburgey ~4066 CAUFOINIA fEDEIAL ~&Lomt 695Town Center Dr. Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 F.qual Opportunity Employer Banking TaLER Local Newport Beach savings & loan has Im· med. opening for a Teller. Savings & loan exper. preferred. We of· fer excellent salary, fulJ insurance benefits & paid career apparel. Pleueclll: Ma. Denny Parisia 71~ HIWPOltT IALiOA SAYIM(H & LOAM E.O.E. . SUlllEI I SPECIAL t~.7~J3Jy fora IOdayad In the DAILY PILQT SmlCI IMllCTOIY DOrMfOWI ...,.,. ..... Y°'V Da"1 Pl~ s.vt~Dlredory ..,,.....u .. '4N671. .. J 11 ! • Depot. 5.57·2234. Beauty •JOJOIA• Nonsurgical contour facelift. Will train five career·oriented people to become make-up artists & teachers. Only serious·minded need ap. ply. Co m mission - management potential. Call for appt, Mrs . Thafl>, 537-7609. loaf MmnfH•Ce MI F needed for boat c l ean ln1. Newport Beach. Part-time, Incl. weekenda. $3.50/hr. No experience nee. 645-7100. BodyshOp-E•perienced metal-men needed for non-production body abop. Met.II flniahlna 6 lead work desired. Flat rate & commission. Mon.-Fri. 8-5. 831-4939 for aPJ)t Bookkeeper/Secretary, PIT, R.E. development I construction bac k· ground helpful. Send re· sume lO P.O. Box 8209. Newport Beach, 92660. IOOIKllPIMG AMD/OR ACCOUNTING To assist in developing the P & L. Work under minimum supervision. Required to use indepen- dent judgement. May assign work to lower· level clerks. Xlnt. com· pany benefits. Call Mallie after 9am . 645-58X). Bookkeeper. construc- tionldevelopement firm an H.B Req. mature persoo lO work with min supe rvision . Responsibilities Incl ajl bookkeeping/accou~r Ing functions . Both manual & EDP sytems. 2/yrs exp nee. S900/mo to start. Call Sally 536-8832. IOOICICllPH Permanent, 30 to 40 hrs wk . Presllgious Newport Beach Insurance agen- cy. Good co. benerlts. non-amoker. Call Twyla at644-4242 IOOKICHPa/F.C • for realty m1mt co. Pit, nr Coaat Hwy & Dover. 955-2381 WANr A CAREER? Costa Mesa 111 Del Mar 63l·!M21 Laguna Beach 494.9233 Hunt.ington Beach 962-9116 Civil CIVIL INGIMIH lmmed. openln1 with prQft!SSive O.C. Conault- ina rum for qualified project en1lneer. Re· quired: minimum 5 yrs exp In subdiviaion work. Ca. re1l1tratlon pref, E.I.T. req. Resume Ir wort aamples required at interview. hl'-c!'.:"--· 3-5 yra um exp in Civil Subdiviaion req., resume • won samples required for interview. 1 mmed opening for right penan. DllAFTSMAM 2 yrs. mirumum drafting exp req. for qualified person. Work samples required. TOP PAY XI.NT BENEFITS Church Engineering Inc. 3931 Birch St. N. B. (714)540-7377 CLEA.MING PEllSOH for pvt home nr Coast Hwy/Dover, Npt Bch. 1 dy/wlt. 548-9215 Clerical SUPPOIT ASSIST AMT Hunt. Beach a1ency ofc. for mjr. insurance co. seeks a take charge in· dividual with secretarlaJ & communications skills. PO&. involves as- sisting start & agents with Li.le & Health policy sales & maintenance. The ideal candidate will be one who enjoys a quiet •working al· mosphere It working alone. Applicants must type at least 45wpm le have a gd. math ap· tltude. ThJs is a challenging posltioo for ri&ht person who is willln& w leam about insurance. We of· fer competitive salary & an excell. benerita pkg. as well u adv1ncement opportunitiea. For appt, call: Charles Palomino ln Ora.nae. 714·f37-4441 1HITRAVB.HS loaldnetlng'Clert Equal Opp !mplyr Full lime, bper. helpful 1._ ___ m•'•"•h __ _ but not nee. Many com. 1• pany benellta. Apply at: 1680 Placer1t11 Ave., Coet.a Meaa Clerical BOOKKEEPER P/T late PM/Eva. A/It., A/P. Exp. nee. Non· amtu. n.Un .m.1aoo Varied General office duUea incl aupport for Prealdent of leadln1 1tereo m1n\lf1cturer ln Irvine erea . Type 50wpm from traucrlber . Good secretarial HPQl\IN Ir IOOllW• P/C 1rowtb opportunity. ra11Uoa l1lud lnveet· (714)511Ml93. mem nnn. Excell. op. • pottunlb'. l•per. It Clerical malwity req 'd. Call: OIDmt DISa CL•I '714-MD-OUI Jnalde ..... duUt• a buvy t.J ... bl frltnctly •lmotpfiert or •mall Brl1bt, Matu,.. pert0n compo117 near ocean. who lova cllUdnn to Good beaeftta. Call Doo· help p/U.. la PedlaLri· u : --d .. olt. No •fer NC. l·C-AIHJ--ICll-/-Clertl--for--,...- Mn. Amtm, ~ Lail ...._ Jl..t .._ a:· ptr. Call : Balboa Martae.Mt-tm, S.0 .£. 111/P/H COUMTBt HELP FIT Mr Best Cleaners 675-:m& Dato Process~ Operator needed for nix dorf/entrix systcmis for long term assignment Call for more info. Tod Services. 979-8900 De n tal -Exp 'd en· thusiaslic assistant to compliment our Pedo staff. Xlnt salary & benefits to the right person. 548-S.580. DINT AL ASSIST. Fill~ chairalde. Ex· per. pref. GP office. 545-4563. Nr So. Coast Plaza. DISIGH ····-Mfg. co. ln Mluloo Viejo area needa exper. In electrlc1I connectors. h ermetic sea ls . transducer design, com- ponents materials & methods. Duties include design, dratting, materials lest· lng &: R&O projects. Mechanical Engineer· i ng degree pre('d . Qualified candidates send resume to: Mrs. Jans , 23891 Via Fabrlcante, Suite 6-03, Mission Viejo, Ca. 92691 SELL idle Items with a Daily Pilot Classifit>d Ad •EHGIMEER SntUCTURAL 675-6110 --------Exp. Medical Assistant. front & bar k, hrs. & s alary open . Non smoker. 540.4376. ---------- FfME JEWELRY Broadway, Fashion Isl. Newport Beach Mature person. Call Mary Meazner 644-1212, ext237. GBBAL OFFICE P /time. JI you have good typin1 skills and a pleuant phone voi~ we need your assistance. btwn 8am & noon. mon thru fri. Please contact M 1ry Patterson for appt. Paul Dozier Assoc. 556-7075 General Fill .PAIT TIME STUDENTS OK Exciting pay1. c.ompany benefits, hara workers only. NO U,EllENCE Cal I Oam to lpm 714-847-2422 ·•••••• Daily Pilai I Special Feabres : : Editor : • Immediate opening an our Marketing • Services Department for a Special • .Features Editor Candidate must have a • • Colle&e Degree, writing & editing . • expertise. and some experience preferred .• Challenging position with growth potential. • Excellent fringe benerits. Send resume to: • • Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca .• 92626. Attn: Personnel. • • : Editor's : • Secretary • • A challeneing opportunity is being offerei • • by the Daily Pilot for someone wilh the • • Intelligence. wit and skills required to be • secretary lo the editor. It's an Interesting • position requiring the tools or the trade -• •. 80 wpm dictation , 70 wpm typing, • • diclaphone end the ability lo shift • mental 1ears on short notice. The benerlls • are generous, the pay reasonable .• Maurice B Dillow t'o 17782Skypark Blvd i:A Irvine. CA 92714 GENERAL front ore 2·8PM Musi typl' & s p ell I deal f ur homemaker or studl•nl 979-1711 General T-lalboa lay Club Is now hlrin9: Food Waitet"!Waittt$S Exp'd. 6::1oAM ·2 30PM Host/HoJtess Sat/Swi, Mon/Tue 5 30PM-11PM. Exp'd Security Guard ., Tues. thru 'Fn . 12PM · SAM. Sat. SPM IAM Mu s t h ave own tran spo rl at1on , telephone. CPR tra1nin).l & at least 6 mos exp StoreCl•rit Fri., Sat . Sun Gat.PHSon Tues, Wed . Thurs. Must be n ex1ble Please call for appl. 645-7358 Mo n -l"'r1 ., 8:Jo.5PM GENERAL OFFICE Looking for a very m terestin1 part lime job in pleasant offi ce? Clerical. for mature person Location PC II .. Npt. Bch. Exper a m usl. Acrurate typing. no shorthand 20 hr week includes Sat & Sun Call : 646-7431 GUARDS Full & part tame All areas. Uniforms fum'd Ages 21 or over. retired welcome No ex per nee Apply : Universal Protection Service, 1226 W. Sth SL . Santa Ana lnten-lewhrs. 9·12& I 4, "Mon·Frr. Hand SpiMer wanted to s pin on Spinning Wheel, will train, aB so pro fesslonal hand knitters. 499.211117 HOSTESS/HOST (Mature) Waitress/Walter. Short hours. (No tiP8 > OOod hourly wages, private club. Ask for Shirley: 673-7730. LIFEGUARDS Swim lnstn.ctors Now being hired by C1l\ of lluntinRlon Hea!"h t' a II City Pool. 96(J.IIB8<1 Uc;>UOR HITE MAHA.GER t-:xp nceesl.ary SH hr must have RO<Jd rer·~ wine knowledl(1•. lll"l't'P table dnvmg ret'llrd aµ ply m peri>on eve" 2937 E Coast Hwy CdM MAIDS, EXPER . Immediate hare, appl) Angie. San Clemente Inn. MAINTENANCE ENGINEER Immediate ope-nincj for a working engineer with 1-2 years ex perifttc:e in light paint in9, carpentry and maintftMllKe. This position in our shopptn9 center of· fers good starting salary, pold •acation, free rwwdfcal/life in· surance, generous yea~nd bonus and othtt be-Mfit~ CoH for on appoint· ment: (7141675-8662 EOE MI" Makeup & Skin Ca rl' Best pr&!uct & l!rcate~t caree r oppur111n11' 5.52 1428 MAHA.GER/ Assist. Wo m e n 's s 1H·C1alt} s t o r e F u I I I 1 m 1• Clothan l! expr Nann Craa~. Inc 556 1495 Manager, Office work. counter help for food ser vice. Seasonal. (6 mo. I H.B area Call E Songrath. (714 1544 5378 or write 14581 Aracla Dr. Tuslln, Ca 92680 MATERIAL HA.MDU HG lmmed. opening for parts clerk, rubber hose products. mul'l pass co physical including back x'·ray. Taking applica· lions belwn 8 & lOam on ly. Stratoflex, 17671 Armstrong Ave .. Irv .. EOE A Kendavis Ind, Co. ---------• AppllcaUON beln& accepted only through • . ·• appointment by calling 642-4321. ext. • Hotel MEDICAL COURIER 277 .. ,, .a. Mual have own trans & • Camera e ·~111•11,.r be ramUiar w/.Caurorna1 • M n.t/f\o Frwy aystem No !!ales. • •. We are aeeklnl re,able pleasant position for in-Op&rllOr people orlen~ peraons. dlvldual who enjoys • • Enjoy ucellent co. drlvlna M·FIJ-5768-8500 • Experienced •t leaat S yeart. Muat be • benefUa ~ludJnJ' a free 1ble to use newsp1per camera and meal per ahUl. Apply in MEDICAL • platemsklng syatema. Excellent wain • pel"llOll IAM·Noon, 'Mon-Phlebotomlst/ Recep- d "'·-...1l A I l I Fri 11!>...-.--·1 llonilt. Exper'd . for Np\ e an UCDC'1 t.. PP Y n .,ronoo w re1ume • · .. ,.,~ · B~h. lab. Thi.a Is a ti.Ill • to Oranae Coast Dally lot. • MAlllon HOTa tlme, permanent poa. IOO~portCent.erDr. Ph J Hill e .._, 1_.._ e Nwpone.ach ~~:J •n yer. • n•1 ._.. • Equl°IEmrJirll/F 1-------• r.t Tile • MBMCAL ASSIST. • . • HOUSllm'll r=..°'1Tu:=~· ~'b~. • With at leaat 1 yhr experience, ~trably • I ....... , fw 2 ot no.-. M Se newapaper. Excellent compMy benelitl, Exec. famll:y , lavtna c. • n . ara e PM ah!ft. Appl)' between 9AM It 8PM. e aupll'Vtaloftrornoya, 10 Medical. omce Manaaer • Mooday throu1h Friday. • • U. clt9nlftf, '"' mul, for pediatrk practlc . o -c..t •rnndl •ahotPln1. Car Experience required. • r£ I Pf'CWtded. °""' rooen a'Dd Wrt\e M no. 79'. Dally e -wD. .~_..;..,,. bathrU~outandwork Pl'°'-po. ~ tlHO, \ -., ~ • DOOll to I . 5 day week. eo.tallleu CA92Gt Cotta Mesa. CA !Dlllll a,..iu., dr1"· · · Equal Opportunit)' Employer e lo1 NII Newport '9acb. SELL kilt ltem• with a ••••••••••••••• :;!:~O:s~r)' ~lly Pilot Cla.slneij " ....... . i I j '1 ! I I I! 1 l I: ' i ' 11· I I I! I• I .~ ~~~,. -o-,~_QoU1 DAILY PtlOTIMOnday, March 23, 1981 H•W..-M 11ff H•W..tM 7111 A t'fi e IOOI Dw 1040 Mleulmum. 'IMO ··•l"··················· .. ~'1'.41 ......................................... ;.--;.i; ........................................ . Nli;:w.i.1-:;.-iioo Hei.·w..., ~·11:·-"'·-~ w-4 7tH H•W-'M 7900 .......,,PartUme TMct• OOlontY ..SOM Oermao Shtpbtrd ID· WANTID: Stroller ". ·~-·•••••• .. •••• •••1 .. ••••••••••••••••• •••••••-• .. ••-••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• C.U ~1\aet •Hoon ht. cmly..:. bper'cl. Eel: • telU .. llt (llollpe, l /wks. bl&Jaelaalr alto ml1e 1 =blicl oft\d fw Part umo, •••d am· -~.-· ---S.DtMC-.. _ ... 1.I07 _ re4f'd. '!ardeo Grove 0 0 N NO&. AN AKC, white. flU . ba-.,a&em..111..., a8kif D,... nca'd bltlou.a aoal orleoted "-1 IDilatelaJ• laahSe u1ea d1au .. • 8tt""'8r7 .,..., fn 911 Plll8fT ..at, JobD Wayne Teula Ch•b . . • P"Ph OJtportWtlty to ·~ •••ta are beavy lYJUI ln frltodJy H UN TI Me T 0" , .......... llMW aMWM'M ... -•o AXC Gold. Rel~-,'" rtt. membenblp, 11000 ---------• urn i.utOmlted , lax Deeded to work wttb tx• atrae>Qh•r• or ••all llACH -•'d~ ---·~-.-w ..-lo 1 U1lall '75-54.51 11W....r-Ofnce Helper bnllftt.I Por app'l call ec11Uvo level cllent1 compln)' Har ocean. lb~~c. ECE • SALi G,._· rem • mala c · er. ffl, N.9. law ftnn. lllut __.._ ... pm. Ml&lt have proven track Good beneftta. Call Doa· ~'!::~~~~ ~1!: ~· · UllJta req'd. !\_!_tJCl'*p1°' ~ w1orlddt ln 200.131·~ a.a~ maboJ. 3"'" 1i.te bit raUable car. FIT. record. You wlll bt na: 16-932. ... C.Ufoml uK! ala aya"' •• ns pool table Leath a~ S:ID. U lbr + 20t a 'Al'r'TIMI worlriot with pro· Salet ........ ••me .... ...,... 84'~ • h .. r. T•!:£:t°'" 8ollcllou. dtalen.· '-As• IOIO pocMta. lluat.aee. llOC> ~ m ~ oyc. _._ Seml·reUred OK. San ,ua_._. a_uoc • ea . ..,.r needed for fun summer ""-.. -----· _. -· ,._., J .._...._,....,,. ' 1--1 I t ,,,_ '\Ill u ,............ N l.--··-·111a~l . To ....,._.... •.t, 17. 21, 29 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... -• .ua7.u• . :· rqriaWview. Antonio Winery. 84$.lttO olficeotfera: Job PIHH ipply in SICRRAIY W0$ ~•. lldn.· . No Tlurn .. Frl .. 8at. MOPll **I IUY * * . , q ~-a •Bat beach loc.atJoo . • h ' Xlnt. carifr opportunity t1...n-c. nee. No Mii· Suncby Noon.epm. Good l.IHd Furnlt.ure " C~mper tlwll,. 6~ lone . liN'K TIAJMH ._. '"--& •Ubel'al comm1Hlon J)Cr1Cln. Mon.· '· btwn tor uperienc9d penon ln1. Call alter lPM. ln lhe Comme.rce Blda. A ipllances--OR I wtu aell 5 wide. 2.,.. hlsb. •15. 1At.amntmProceuln1. ,..,,_ Pl"Olr•m. ~:~~';::,~~ wltb1trcq1horthand6 Mf.0151. OltAMftlCOUHTY ofsr:u.torYou Phllco refrlf, Uoo. J.HOO/mo. auaranteed. T a.a... •Nan referral proanm Ave Batbo'.. Island typina 1kllla. Send r•· Tei-a.-...-••·tt FAllHOUMDS MASTllS AUCTION _MS-0 __ 130_.· ____ _ Nioexpe.r. nee, will train. •••mry ~ Call now for appt. · ' 1ume to: MWD, 30181 H ..,,...,.":_._., ... ora U Adm. IUO. Free park· , ...... , eJl-t•U wed din I• o tr ! fr Callt11·830l(Lou). . Wah.Hemp!?lll,rra.1aoo SALE>indi•~oun\ dren Town Ctnler Dr ome,con..-att,noH · ma • 8 11 .. 1 A'..Mla.a. -L•IWl.INilutl. ·' ln1. non-profit or1. P IT · u oc..1 vau l . r;nuat li(Mda. Sharp, ftm. only. lMIZZW ahop, mature, 2 dya wk. (7W)•am Pl.ateCollecton 1 IUY FUIMITUIE aell, never work Cana· Miapaine. Non·raablon. Clerks.Secretaries ltlC.-rlOMIST Tbur&Frt.&4ate65 Goebel Hummel plate• Let "7·1133 dlan Red Fox. full IC-GR. Bob Receptionists, alt Excltina pc»ltJon lt1 our SALIS • •SICllTA~I • * 6holdera,1972& 197•·79. lenrth. larre colla r , m~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm;;;j d ' t di ' 8 Ac-· .. •··t/n-""000 ,....OMI •-Hummel to match. Medit. Bdrm set, 6 pea med. sue. Appralaed at • Off Ic e S k 11 Is esign au o . u1l lmmed. par\ time open· A~ct'.;p;'y'/T.,. i4'.4oo 4-_ ''"""' (no bed> $200. Tradl· 19500 .. s5500 or ofr Meal Needed!! pFhloLnlNesG .. TNYeParINJCobn Ina for Reade r Add Secy(Traln' ·nler) CAU.911 • .,.UJOH tlonal Dlnln& Rm set, 8 .... -..., AM ' Ofaat..._ re~resentatlve for lnsl e S1a • .OO-from home, pert t.lmt, chairs, 2 leaves, iolld .._._ a •. ._..: SllUVISEEPIOllCI iVICKI HESTONI R::::~=-~:~~ ~::; l::!~t~'. ~~pf;'r~ t:1Re~e~~;,~~~ ~~~~t~~.::=r~!r ~=::~;:::.~E~!.:~~r ~::;et;ea~~rn~1a::~P 20~~~~!~Set & .... ,IOC•-et kids inachool. Some tyn. person: Penn yaaver , -Blr"h ""·t .... EOE 1150. ~9223 1250/080. SS7·~75 ~ "" r 1680 Placentia Ave.. ..._, ... .,.. -dlnint chn. Sml excep-BfUncuaJ exper'd pref'd, (Specializlng in Ina. 11-2: 30pm. Hrly c M. Mon· Fri.. l-5PM Newpor1/83Ml90/Free tionally nlce Icebox. but. will train t.he right TemporaryClerical rate. Irvine area -beaut. hardware oe,.an, . Personnel> 549-11186. "'-'•E£ 875-C*l New a~no cabineta. roll top bar cabinets for vana, bookshelves. new W aterbed-kg si, incl headboard 1250. 645-2322 ~r: 0 0 -------SAUSPHSOM llU : LoQ.Wa 540.. 4 0 RECEPTIONIST·For Ex.ferlenced only . Secretary E11cell. opportunity to u.....a.-1• 1-------;; h F / p T W It h EX,.,.UTivE become a aklll.td technl· Oak: Round table. roll rroot rue cab,~ cof tble. 2 c\llJtom prinl hi back chra. love aeat. odds " end1. Call btwn 10·2. 675-4854 30" cu 1tove (Almond 1. --------- v a r Io u 11 h s eh Id Basic Tiffany's mem· furniture. 536-6676 aft ~nhip. $200. 538-7625, n _.-I• busy board. Nwpt Be . . . . a a -... ~l.5S. COul Dr .• CM PBX Good typing & spelling Clarke'• So Coast SICRITARY clan ln arowln1 IUloma. ., (OatHarborBI l skUla a mu.st. $900 mo Plaza. Costa Mesa lo Marketln~ Dir In lion field. Job lnvolvea 95H84l •Y nlKalfOI Call Pat 67.,.6610 151-7500. ahlpplna 6 warehou1e r-DA Ul"UU. oJ° financial 1erv cea rtrm. work plua repairlna 6PM leave meuage. Couch, end tables, coffee table. Seara 3.5 hp Eager One mower 11lnt. 185. Girls' 24" NI.silo S 11pd bike. S30 64S-urn ·'" HURSE· lt.H. l!J.edical ofc Full time poeltlon avail /S SALES PElltSOM Resp .. cbailengln1 pos electo.tflechanlcal & for day shift wilb rotat-Recepf .c'y Wanted for attractive involving area or electronic lnduatrlal In American oak double bed ~2347 after 8pm. Ophthalmology expr. pref. Salary open Gd b.enefits . Resum e N..e w po r t C e n t e r 759-8921 In" weekends. Qualified Neat, front office ap wom•n'a a"~ d'"'pl i'n securities. insurance, strwnenu. Gd. salary & • pearance r.,.uired for ... '"""' "' real estate XI t applicant will be relia· ~.. Fasluon Island Full or · n · beneflu. Pia. phone Bob with new mallress, ~. Mahog.any Trestle dmln& 548-a542 _ __ _ rm lbl. 2 leaves, 6 r hra ble person with pleasant this prestigioU31y local I E i shrthd/typing skills re-Dodda for appt. & efficient phone man-ed ftnn. Mu.st have good part-t me. 64:7~~~ ence q 'd. 714-s.G-0123 PRIME CONTROLS CO Franklin Mint Gold Medal C<1ll,.t·1111n ''' WHtem Art in J>ortfolV1 ner. Enjoy excellent co. office experience. Will necessary -·__ • 18632 Milliken Ave. be in direct contact with - Antiques & used furn. k50. 548-Jl.52 Pastry tbl. oak roll top R~d velvet hllh back desk, oak Serpentine chair IOOd condition dreuer. Humidor, k benefits including a free 1 1 . f Sales SECRETARY w'ith a-t Irvine 754·6300 meal per shift. Apply top eve executives or 9AM·Noon. Mon-Fri. multi-national organiza Prof. Sa6t1people least 4 years experience Y rt1m f'~ t"uf~rt 11.lfl, ) '' p11lntin&a Villl#' ,,,,., ::.NURSES AIDES !'ijiteded to &ive TLC to ~l{lerly patients. Will train qualified person· nel. Earn while you .o.;.rn. Apply 1445 S11perior. Personnel lion. XJnt oppty for right Owly for well est. constr./prop M ••RIOTI HOTEL person to grow wilh Marketing Reps. to sell rngmt co., Costa Mesa. TY,ISETTH With pule up ex· perience. Positions open 1n Qieta Mesa & Dana Pl. The Composing Room. 9'79-3541. Rosewood fire screen. 5 . 83l a.74 Bamboo hall tree, p\c-LaraeHld•"» bed IUttJ, wll '"' YJ.11 <:.,1 1rN'h61 -company. Med.Dental a product that is wanted $1200 benefits & xlnt 900 Newport Center Dr. benefits. & needed by everyone f ' H · h lures & more. Sun/Mon Good Cond1llon ff«•u& kA>( •r4'S.llll ,,,, ... t '7 :i M a I'' a " " \ 'f \ CorutJIC' ,.,, •11~ "'"' yr t I~. RA'fnat~:wtnr 112:. playpl"tl 11.:. Z/~J Kini( f>lac-.-cuh 1inly Newport Beach u t u r e 1 g Equal Opp Emplyr M/F .ACQUIS CORP. Earning potential: responsibility job for only. 1610 Tuatin Ave. $85 63l 3474 CM1~3 -- - Nursing Pre·school Teacher want- . LYN ed. credentials or exp. 11.'7 relief $7 .25 per hr FIT Call640-8820 Gd. working conditions. --- 5JI bed facility EOE PRESSMAN M F A &Wyview Convalescent growing shop needs a HQS~-. 2065 Thurm, CM 2/C Hamada operator 642-3505MalissaGrants w/uper who can do PAINTER Neal. reha quality work Salary ble, exp'd, custom work. open fo r capable pers.on. f 11 . 631.4410 I Ins & other benefits ~~!___ Irvine loc Call Pat Nursing LVM :r.Jl. fuU lime. 59 bed hitility. Excell working conditions & benefits EOE. Bayview Con v;A lescent Hospt . 2055 1'hurin. CM. 642·3505 Malis.!la Grants Pert.time in a 4-girl of ffce at small friendly mfg. co. nr S.C. Plaza f~one, typing. filing . figures. etc Gd benefits ~·7101 " PART TIME Pick own hrs & income Ambitious, like people Call for appl, 557 S675 Psi Tine c OIMMNIMJ youth c~ Adults with outstandm~ attractive personalities t9 s pend 15 hrs per week counsel.mg youth age~ 10-15 Evenings & Weekends Available Sn per wk C al 8 · J0.5 Mon-Fri 979· 1834 PRINTER. F T . exp. custom color & B&W Must be familiar w1type · ·c" & C1ebachrome pnnung, Hbr area lab. rull benefits. gd pay 646·2136 ask for Bill, Mon·rri. 9-6PM Pt T Count er Off ice person. for equipment rental st.ore. Typing req, appr ox 25 hrs Saturda ys req Salary open Umted Rent All of Costa Mesa. 645-0760 QUALITY COMTROL lmmed. opening in final ansi:>«l1on. hose & fit- t 1 ng . must pass co physical including back X·ray Taking applica· lions btwn 8 & tOa m on- 1 y St ratoflex . 1767 1 Armstrong Ave. Irv . EOE A Kenda\•is Ind . Co 18952 $40,000-S50,000 hard worker in small of· * Co. Training Moc.Arttwr llvd. n ee to learn all phases or (NexttoChanteclairJ • Q~~t~1'.;dcl'::ads business. Lite bookkeep lrvtne CA 9271~ ing, lOkey. Non-Smoker Contact Julie aft 8: 30AM LlquidyM fiMN)y Send resume t.o Ad 11698. 752·6003 Syshtwl Daily Pilot. P .0 Box ----Al. 7~. ~6793 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca RECEl'TIONIST I s~ nRSOHMEL ! m2f>. .Acch.R~c. needed for conte m -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9I Reqwres typtng 10-key porary women's wear 1s a must' good phone Must be exper'd. Salary skills Entry.level . plus comm Please app- $950/mo with quarterly ly or call Apropo. r e v i e w M e d 1 c a I 644-2652 or •29 Fashion benefits. Jack Carnahan Island. Npl Bch lnc. 754-1371. Sales PEP BOYS SECRETARY to hotel reservat ions SOwpm typmg, filing & phone expe r 80wpm shorthand & will tram on reservations $900 m o Send resume to •703, Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 TYPISTS Start your career The State or California has operungs for full time & part Ume workers in a variety of interesting settings <Me dica l . Legal, Receptionists , Clen cal Pools, etc ) We offer excellent fringe benefits & promotional opportunities Requires High School Graduation & typing 4 0 wpm Sa lanes start at. SS36 or with one y r exper S904!mo. 5"/, raise after RECEPTIONIST Full lime Mon· rr1 Must be personable & well groomed. & enjoy meet ing the public Requires good spelling & pen manship No typing Phone experience pre- ferred. F'ull rompany benefits. Apply Pen· nysaver. 1660 Placentia Ave .C M Manny, Moe and J ack • SALIS rEOrLE -------_ _ _ 6 months. For more in· Security officer. P IT . format ion . ca ll wkends for lrg apt. com 71 4-954-S 12 l Eq u a I plex in N.B. $3.SO/hr. Employment O p · RECEPTIONIST With or without typing needed. Top pay 1'em· porary & full lime. Call TodSe.rvices al 919-8900. RIHT .AL AGIHT P•nn.nt po1ftlo1t1 a•aff. Growlft9 tool ,....... firM. .......... pearaftce. Good helftdwr Hlrawg. l..wflh. W ii traill. Apply 19 3 0 N~wporl ll•d, Costa MelCL « 22600 Lam- tMrt ·Ste. 1203, 1203 El Toro. •STOCKING Take advantage of this opportunity to join one of the nations leading auto parts retailers We offer. both good pay and a fast friendly work ing en- vironment. For 1 n Co cont a ct J 1 m 1~po!!!rt!wu!'!ti!ea!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Lupis at 644-1900. r- SEC'Y /lkKrR Secretarial. bookkeep ing & general office Ty pe 60 wpm. Costa Mesa location. 549-3443. SOUND lNTERESTING., LETS GET AQUAJNTED!' SEU AVON Apply in person at FULL TIME PEP BOYS EarnS6ormoreanhr I 5221 IHch ll•d. ___ c_a1_1966-_os_22_ Wn ...... hr, Co. SERVICE STATION AT "--1 0 ~ it T ENOANT 6A M to ....,....ppolWI y 3PM. Apply Shell Sta __ =c.-11111r:._.M•/illF __ , lion. 17th & Irvine, NB. 642-1.259 ---------- SALIS Ser;jce Station Atten- TYrlST F'or dynamic invest- ment fir m . U p t o S1 200/mo. to start. Outstanding ~rowth potential for bright in- dividual. Collins Assoc . 567SanNlcolaa. NB. Typ111t Varied offi ce dultes incl support for President of leading stereo manufac· turer 1n Irvine area Type 50 wpm from transcriber Good secretarial e11posure & gr owth opportunity 1714)556-6193 Typist -------- .APfll-cn 10 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORSAU!H Seara 220 one unit elec· tnc washer/dryer com. bi nation (retails S750 > Only $300. One gas dryer which works grea\-S4>0 Call S48-7827-MUST sell! -------- HARBOR AREA APPLIANCE SERVICE We buy used appliances · we sell recond. guar appliances S49<J077 Movl.nt Sale Sofa SW. dbl bed 100, Yrl&e 17:,, Butcher Blk Tbl wt 4 chn1 1100. will l1tke ufra 831 -S8'l5 2 pc "L " shaped sofa. xlnt oond, xlnl buy. Suo 646-0930 af\ 5 30 11 n wru.1 .. , l )'""' Lollt 1275 Stufftd u11fuh SI O(J Ch~m ti.lr ) l(lluo1war~ S250 g75 3175 Pollens k1l'k whttl. SC.S Kmg Siu Bed really good Fir pillow SIO Llama fur shapeSlOO 631 7383 seat coven 120 Nu up hol chrS20. 64.S 9153 6' couch 11lnt cond s100. Mi ~ wood bar w 3 atools SlOO ~.t.d 8081 84(}-5874 ......•.........•...... I IUY .ArrLIAHCES MOVING SALE Beds Les 957·8l33 dinette. desk, tables, Wanted stroller, high chair. car seat. mist On ly 1n good c ont! 751 8967 Sears Refrigerator, Top lamps. chairs. book of the line. 17 cu ft. Xlnt cases Misc 7~1 8328 cond. $300. G. E. Porta· ble Dishwasher $150 Sears Room Air cond. S50. 545-9223. ---------UPRIGHT FREEZER Like new, 1250. 645-2297 ----------Whirlpool 2 speed WM. Xlnl cond. $150 Call eves. 631·16i5 -Chair. upholstered an An Wanted older sailboat tique gold velvet 6 mo w s lip in Newport old, like new Sl2S 2137 Harbor 751-8967 M i r a m a r . B a I b o a MuiicaS - Peninsula 673 6456 IMtrurn.fth 8083 Twin mattress sets $25 • ••• ••••:•• •• • •• • • •• • • • ea Set of 8 dining chairs CONN Director !rombone S100 Childs or sewing with case 1'.Xl'ellent desk $2S Danelle & 4 cond1lton. SIOO 675·8052 chairs $100. S4S..8242 afler5PM G .E oven·range ·hood D1mng room table & 4 1150 Westlnghse s.c dbl chairs, Teak wood. S150 oven-stove 122.S. 549-3510 495-26216 6 STRI NG ACOUSTIC GUITAR $22.S 675-8172 Refrigerator. frost-free. Low sohd oak table. «" e11cellent,$200. round , JU Sl ref1n S48-8513. 548-4485 S32S fi rm 646·01SO aft 5 30 Sears Elec Dryer . like new B&D Elec Lawn Edger Sl9 548-8242 · 16 Cubic Foot UPRIGHT FREEZER $90. (714) 840-4268 Oak . Rnd tble. roll front file cab. sq cof tble, 2 custom print h1 back chrs. love seat, odds & ends. Call btwn 10 2. 675-4954 Gibson acoustic guitar 20 year old classic S400 ----548 0905 Office Fwnitun & fcpaipmettt 8085 .....•..•.............. 2 desks. 30"x60" w 40" return. 2 exec chairs 64(}.~ or 640-9900 2:J0.5 30pm Mon thn Fri. 642·4321 ext 343 Ask for Lori. , ,. On.c)e Coa1t RE.Al ESTATE SALESPEOPLE 100"'~ Comm. Must be in lerested in learning to syndicate real estate for l•--------•I d e v e I o p e r p a r t Restau.rant REPRHEMT ATIVI dant , P T . eves & New sales position for w ken d s Neat a p southern California re-pearance & handwrit· ta il/inst1 lutiona l ing. Apply al 2590 market. Base & substan-Newport Blvd, C.M. tlal commission Xlnt - benefits Career op- portunity. Send resume F V. firm needs report typist. Will tram on WP. Typing 50. d1ctaphone: no s/h. Call Mary at 963-6560. Washer & Dryer 1125 ea. PATIO-POOL Furniture Sm Freezer SlOO. Port. Be au t 1 f u I , l 0 Y r Typewriter table S2S. or rice ch.air SJS. Utility ta ble $25. 6i5·8172 • •· Dailv Pilot • 330W. !Jay Street 1· Costa Mesa, Ca. Equal Op port Employer owners hip opply. Can McDONALD'S also list & sell while Now hiring full & part learning. Ray Ballard. time. Days, eves. Great 67J.6105or 646-0404 career opportunities to . RBD. 30131 Town Cente r Or . Laguna Ship/R.cel•incJ "'·~Ca.ril FuUUme. Contact Garry Ga111e. s.9·7522. S.A. TYPIST Dishwaher 1100646-5848 Guarantee 839·7239 STENORETTE Di e - -taphone. Barely used Re fr. & uprt freeze r. White wood 4 poster twin Good cond. Only $220. work good, S100 ea. bed with mattress & boJC 646-3375. S48-8513, 548·4485 springs. S50. 646-3.175 --PART TI ME Person •needed in Book pasteup Mon & Tues No exp nee Apply· \660 Placen tia Ave .C.M ---------On-th&-job training, For REALEST A TE m ore i n f o . . c a 11 Ni~uel. --~---1-------------- Part time. 2·3 days per wk Vacation relief. Ap- ply al: 1660 Placentia, Costa r,tesa Pianos & OrcJan• 8 09 0 Washer & gas dryer, $95 BEDS, X·long, X·f1rm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ea. A~·Sz dryer, UOV. Beautyreat twins, like Beautiful Rosewood S6o. 960-8994 new. $200 pr. 962·9645 Upright Contemporary S.ALES 7S4·9!M3, or inquire al SECRET.ARY Light bookkeepin g Plumbing knowledge h el pful Fulltime. 848·3638. Leading real est.ate com-3141 Harbor Blvd. Costa pany seeks professional Mesa. people to manage resale Part-time offices . Prime areas avail Xlnt pay & benefits. E.0 E (714196J..S671 HOMEMAKERS Real ~~~ESS OR Hart.time evening posi FAILURE IN '117 tions now available t.Have you considered _Houn 6PM·9PM. Mon the pitfalls of com- •day·Fl"iday work mg m mercial & residential re- ·oor olfice at 1601 E Ed-al estate? For eumple · inger, Santa Ana Good 17~ INT. rates. long starting salary a nd escrows. farming for benefits. No uperience listings, competition, necessary. Paid train· etc.! ing Call Dave af_ter ProfftaiOMll Land lOAM for an appoint C at'-- menl al 83S·0300 CM-por ""' Has the answer for your RCA Service Company Equal Opportunity fhnployer M/F/H H ' ( success ln 1981. 2.Leam to market low coat Iota and acreage In So. Calif. We have 10~ INT. rates. Eam $50K to 1150K. first year. year. unlimited leads Ir more! Uc.....~Nd. For success In 1981 , ask for Mr. Telles. 9M-3402 " 831 ·8SS7 11UN M~tlClllCIOGY ..... a I : ~· --noomAA. 1C111101111t Ever hear of a part-rime 14"h that 1<an1 t w1d'\ a SI. 500 bonus~ Th1rnnc does But the ; /. nicest bonus is the tralnina \'Ou receive from , ~:: top-notch Army schools nnd tht> hands-on Ir experience you aaln workmiz with a local I ,. Reserve unit. 8cs1des the bonus. you'll also J •o earn over $1 . 100 a year for one weekend a • ~" month and tw0wccksof annual traininiz. And ' you can even join while vo\J're scill In hirth School. if you're 17 ornlder. Formorcinforma· non. stop~· or call us. .tm'~ . -... •1• Ullill • 111m• ., ........... , ...... .... .~ ...... ..., .... °'* ' m.un Restaurant Meyerhof's. primary supplier or good food to t he Irvine corporate community nei!ds people for sandwich-making & simple food prep. M F 8 -3 No exper necessary. Start. Mm Call Don or S usie 557.6232 Retail Sales Women's F T retail. da ys, exp. preferred, xlnt benefits Call 770-1677 ask for Larry RN , P/time. rnid week, eves Westminster Medical Group Call Mrs. Decker ,893·132 1 Route Walker Jogaers, earn while you Jog! $4 /hr + bonu~ 5/hrtl a day. Liquidyne Energy Systems Call Al : 7S4-t\535. ------- Salesperson needed. Part lime. Flnlble hours. Over 18 . Phone : 759-9951. 10AM ·5PM Fash.Ion taland SALES Metropolitan need• multl·llne ules reps. Training pro vided. Salary to '500 wkly. Call llr. Sl.lva, e3H922 Equal <>911ty Employer Secretary . Bu s y Secretarial svce needs competent secretar y . Fast, accurate typist 957.9331 SECRETARY Sm busineaa has 1m· med. need for individual w/good typing, phone exper. varied gen. ok duties. 30 hr week. Call· 557·5112 SECRETARY Need xlnt. telephone voice & manners for Huntington Beach of· fl ee. Work includes secretarial, bllllna. & some insurance work. X.lnt. benefits. Respond with resume• salary re· quirementa to: ad no. 793, Dally Piiot, P .O. 8011 #1560. Coeta Mesa. Ca 92l826. -------- SECRET.ARY P /T afternoon• a ood s kills. t y p l na " shorthand call for an app. 644·44.92 SECRETARY Typlnalau'I office altUll; itlnt phone man· nera. R.E. uper. pref. Salary commen1urale w/capt1bllitle1. Nr O.C. Airport. Gloria, ~4880. SICllT AltY Stock bc'okera1e firm In S •LIS Fa•hlon laland haa Im· A med . optnlna tor Newport Be1ch lead\na ucret.ary . back•uf Jewelera aeeklna full operation• up. Rrt . time Employee well Hra 8,4: 30. Contact. vened In aalea fr office Helen McGlnley for procedures. 5 day week lncludlna Sat\lrday, no _•..:.P;...P_'t._'6f._an __ . __ _ eveninp. Call 8'7J.9S34. &ecrtWiaJ Salaperaon for outald• Hl11. Sal.al')', pr,-.nla bld,1harp. 'TlH40·104.S. === ..... . ' .... etiol ol .. llil~-,········~~ KiiHDHD:Aria l:xecuUvt Secret.at)' for 1 person R.£. offlc.. Xlnt dictaphant 6 typ-U.a atma. Mu1t have troat oMt!t 1ppearaan • abUlty to deal wkb cU.U, lharp te&.llbolM KlPe a matt. Call Ule ...... --- SHIPPING FULL& P /tlme help. In-, ... _______ _ terviews held 12· 1 Mon 1• thru Sal. Lunasea. 212 MainSl.HB. TYPISTS REFRIGERATOR Frigldaire. good cond, $~.Call 759--0993. Reg11ter today for local temporary asalgnments. Sitter needed occasional· S5J ftlU£ Coldspot Refrlg, gd work-ly. $20/day, in our Wood· "°"""' ing cond, S75. Call eves: bridge home Avail on -751~- short notice Laurie· r'81"\.•Lf'l"\.9.::, For sale electric range, 752-5111 days . SSl-1506 U \ I \ like -.... double oven. T(~ rflSOHNfl SflMCES ,...,_ eves. Call after 5pm. 960-3152. 3723 lirch Strfft South Laguna Village h llcyct.I 1020 IA0n~mafloHrosppi1tat I les111oop ."d· t-te~ ~ ••• •••• •••••• •• •• •• •••• '" l•--------•IWomen's bicycle. JClnt groomer·can lead to flt cond. SUlO/bsl ofr. Need work, profit sharing TYftlSTS to sell. 752-7511 dys. 499-5378 •Immediate Openings 751-'1075 evea Antique rattan table, Sl20. Decor. club chair & 1895. 16().1.501 ottoman. like new. 1175 Piano: Mahogany up- 675-0558 right w/mirror . Good Garage Sale U SS cond. S8500BO. 646-7050 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Sportiftg Gooch 109 4 New purses SlO /ea . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Draftinr Tbl S50 . old 3001b Olympic barbell set dininC nn ch rs (6) $150. W /bench & squat rack. Oriental rug S175 1438 S 250 538 7625. Ive Dorothea Place. La message. Habra (213) 691·3185 ------- 1070 Seiko dive watch. good lo Jew.try 150 meters. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 751·896'7 Heavy 14KG Heart Shape Pill box w/2 Rubies TV, Radio, ST ... TIOMdY • P/Ume,F/tlme. Temp. "" •Top Pay Store in CdM needs salea For more Info, call Tod person f/time, 5 days. S · """8900 S350/0BO HilR. Stereo 8098 Girl's bicycle. antique 759-1643 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1940 Roll·Faat. 24" Perl -- orl& cond. k50, 897-9405 Gold & silver. top dollars. . Class rings? Xlnt working conds. ervicesat ...... · Beautiful Color TV. 2' yr wrnty. Free delivery $148. 646-1786. Especially fine cllentele phone 644· 7 482 for a ppt. STUDIHTS ---------1schwinn boys 10 spd. 967-8053 TYPIST silver. like new, $110 .. --------,...-Hoffman Console Early Gen. lnaurance a1Y. nds . 6'15·0558 BARGAIN. LONG tN'ES American Radio. faal accurate policy QUARTZ. Elegant 14 ct sso 831·3474 typlit. Gd. salary fr paid Sch w 1 n" Var 51 t Y 1 O &old dress watch. In box co. benellta. Call Llnda •peed. s9o obo Call Cost $4000, sell for S2200. at 714-549-8181 642·2231 968-8S63. Work after school and Saturdays. Securing or· den for Oran1e Coun· ty 's Number One Newspaper. $ S I plus ________ 1Wl6Mj Mahrial• 1025 trips, prizes . Call Wtlter/Wolitnss ••••••••••••••••••••, .. Heavy 14KG Heart Shape 25 · · console color TV. 1225. 15" color RCA w/1land, $95. 968-5253 6'2-4321 Circulation Apply btwn aAM It ltlDWOOD Zx6'1 Dept. Aak for Biii lZPM. Charlie's Chill. 548, x.lnt decking. New Chance. Leave name 3001 Redhl\1, Bide. 112, load-18,000 ft in from Pill box w/2 Rubies 23" dlaeonaJ Zenitb solid 1350/080759-1643 a t ate TV console Mkctl•1CMtt IOIO :: l~ t 6 44. 1 49 4 ....................... 1----------and phone t lfnot In. S ru .......... mill, 51'/ft CM 645-9137 le. 122111 ......... ,,_ XlZ7 an ... 'me -----------~------• ____ , .. ______ Hydr. pallet truck, 8 Color1V. Ul .. Sears.$150. ••--ISi_.. WAITRESS/WAITER Alum patio rooms pallets, $150. 1780 Portable. Xlnt cond. _,.,. "" W /car for wicker baaket M rovla A 3 C M 842.6234 ...... , & I u n c h 1 e r v l e e . ~~C:.:~~~~I~ ,_Ml-_0_~_14 __ · _·_. __ · _ .. --------- DISt6tmS 9:30-1 :30PM. Mon.Fri. vah.ae ror$2(>00.89'1-IM05 •. Sony receiver, 25 watta, DIAPTSPllSOM Earn $125·$1$0 wkly .•----------Taylor.Dunn 1011 cart, Pioneer direct drive Career opporlunity Ill.Ill be neat, penona· Doti& 1040 new controller, bat· turntbl. 646-5137 art avail. for talented A:... ble • ener&etlc. t79·0'7•7 ;.-.i;•••••••••••••••••• terlea, $1150/080 1780 UAM. pe~'d. lndivldpal wltb eltlOAMf0t1ppt. KEE$10ND Pupe. AKC. Monrovia, A.·3, C.M. --------- well •tabU.hed • froW· Champ 1lre. M/F. Pet 6 MS-Ml4 loeh & Mwm 1n1 Civil 1tn1lneertn1 M.,ch••" •bow . P vt Pt Y · llDWOOO 116•1 .. ~.\!!'!.1!!'! .......... . flrm nr. O.C. Airrrt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21J/.,.J.XS afU pm. ........ tO l O Apply~ pen~.wlt re· ......... 1001 YELLOW Lab/Golden Ne~O:~~~~n'i In ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUll\eto.Mr.r .. enteaat ••••••••••••••••••••••• R.. ·-cubt r mlJlrab/ft C U BOATTDAJL""R f•r Robert Bein, William · .... pupa . ._,, a wn rom ,_. · ..... n ~ " rroa • Auociates, 1401 W AMTID TO IUY 1 • 5Pll. 5116-1110, e.t. MS-ttrr xm anytime Deep K~ Cal·20SD>. Quall St., Newport 1 bu>' o Id I u n •. 211,atk fQl'Jlm NEWhide-•·bed 6 refrli, <'114) 84CM2ll lieadt :~~=~~&hja~~.~· Sprlnser Spaniel Pupa. 18 cu.ft. Whirlpool. Plt11 IMh,, t1illlctH•u/ 112.a.•aJkforDane. AJCC champ. blood llne. ponitbl.Al·mlev1 Senlce fOZO SWYTCHIOAID Sm.a. MMU"1 -----b--oh--,--••••••••-·•••••••••••• -lHO Chl~aJe dlnin1 Orta lJtho 1 J n ..... n. llariM &led.ridan P /tlme d.;~ wltnds. room ae\. Ttbla It I DOO from ''Bal Ont". o.tp/butt.alllrtpaJ.r WW i;;l,,. '4W011 cbatn. Setver, chlH. DOG ntAININO •1uo. 6»-5115. QuaL Work • .., .. eve Obtdlenee/Probtem 1---------1 Tl:ACHft• Pftlcboo\6 -~-------Sol.-,. ........... BOATllAlN'l'ENANCE Aidlln.cteid. l:lwl. Bc.b Oalr ._, HOOIMf ell1op. AMDOOTRAlkl'NG Helium Bouquet• d•· Stecl•li•lnTuk ., ... Cati lhrl\ya pint bl~k• • mor., _... livered. Ptrftcl for ,1 Wuia&•Rt1tortn1 IC'J-6116 ..... aon, .. .,.. ·-·-·-·-----~-. tftr)'OCCM ... ~lt fTl..2711 .J -··---.~~,, .. -.............. ~...... ~ Yw 9170 .-...1.,orttd Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Monday, March 23, 1981 ~ ~~..... I 9 tOlO ••1• tl20 ....................... ........................ 71!"'~ ...... ,................ ....................... ....................... ..... Alltl t707 A111e1 .......... ......_..,,....., ~....._UMd ....._UM4 laft. ,. .... , ••• , .. =· ... lallboat 10\IDd • '41 rord Woodle. UMc:..&J ............................ ; ............... , ................................................................. .. "-ta-. lol.11 ":".t Hawiorthy. ae• moonni. !"......._tu.• ALIO lt7f ,_..Y 'TlllOO, loedod. loml, oo H... ·t7J1 Pen• t71 ....... tfOI ........ ffn-·· u~ ..... CT14>7N-l'Tll NB tll,000. 815·7111 »llldllATowalldao, C b.. do W D • Io a Io • ..................... ~. euuu .. eeeuueu•••• u••uuueuuuuuH ............... ••••-. dn. tv• '*· mhrwd. Ideal for 'c I ......... tlll.T'-'mo. m•10 VISIT YOUI "10 tul Coupe. beaut blk •CAlS WAMTID• SHOWIOOMCOMd.; 14' Dary fWUaa'boat, II' ;.,~~t. uo.ooo .• ~~:r .. c~t~~ IMW t71J o&ttlelCOAIT W/fttW tlr•• • alloy RUNNING OR NOT '1ST·TOP ... awordftab plank, tuna fr•1p1 ...._ . loWaiilit. ....................... HAa.;.ID .._ rtma. D ml on rblt ens. 125-laOO Power 8'rakt•. pow41r toww.IT~.17~11 ........................ 1MI Yoho Sedan. lood u..-) '°',... .. , vr-. A DOWlrUl/Clut~. uu." CASH wlodon power•~ ________ ,...._.., ti 10 llll boclr Medi IOCD• Bu:rOrlA ... Deal HIAD9UAITllS • fut car 6 ruu l'R!ETOWING wlth uit1tele1coplnl ...... ,....., t040 ....................... r.palr. •uoo. OwaeJ'. $6395 InOr..-Counly... TOD~Ylfl bealldhally.tlNIOOaakfor OP&NWEEKENDS., 1teerln1 wheel, air. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lNt S..ch llu1ket .. r. 541-TMI ComoSeellaToday!. A • Nlck«·U57or951.0200 Call F.d (714)891·0517 AM /Fii 1lereo. rear LIVE Aboard boat ln mldtlme. Up Lycomln1 • 1.uv.as..v window detos1•r. I Lln·a~ard 1llp, 40' •011 2. Comm-nav'1 ''TtSEVlLLE $ • .,.. . ._ "' ... leyce 9716 AMC tt05 automatic trant. Snow Owem ready -to move trao1pcmder. '40·4109 new, &oadod. SAL!8•S£RVICE 'At••t.•.:•••••••••••••-•• ~··•••••••••••••••••••• white with Bursundy In OCllO. NB.1¢4164 ev•/wlmd.a. 631-22ttor-.1055 " OLDSMOllLI •1 utALER IN [S.A: 14 Javelin Sporty. mag lerlor. ?7,000 mlla. lnl· SADDl.llACI HOMO A ' whl1, radJo. a / c. vinyl mac u I ate th r u out I f 2S'Cabl.ncruilorrbltena. '79Senec.ll.l:iOTT: bru 'MThwlderbirdcoo. vert.. GiMCTaUCICS rm ROY topbestolfer831·5925 sa.100. 154.8790 or VHF. IUll canvat in aft Ir akl ext; d1x clb Hall; •.400 OriJ. ml .. awina· _..,,,.ua:rl1~ .. P'"wv. m>Harbor Blvd CARVER Anlwer Ad 1208, 8'2-4310 area. many xtras k500 3 bid popa; fu.11 collln1, away tteerin& wbl, auto -"" wu-t~"' .. , COSTA MESA · ROllS·ROYC( '76 AMC Pace:r p/a, p/b, . 24 hn . . _<_2_1_a_u _•_3_·9_•_1s_._(_so_s_> HSI, 115dme. full cple • tpd cootrol, AIC. full ..._llQI\ Averyi,~;le~lt (5 540.9640 '*"'•"'._. •le. amtfm cas1 ater~. i-D-..._------9-9-H-· 4864319 &llcle slope, Iona range power, Kelley Hayes T· -.MM 83l MM ' ~~ .. ec11 green556-~ .._,,. " h d t 'f"N'tRN ·-Fwy.) -·····················-26' Cbrlscrafl Cabin tan 1' eavy u Y bird wire whlt, Sl2,000. lll·Z040 495-4949 Honda Civic ·75. clean" aostDSUHOAY lttlc:k 9910 'SiCMraer 383culnen~ brakes, stereo. sound Dys 752-2552, eves SurferClean. '6SVWvan. shiny 56 ooo mi ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 t d 0 1 I • Cruiser xlnt cond SS500 ......-_ l rt 1_, u Phllli _.. OoeedSunday1 S ' • x n con . r I na . · • · riJVU1wg,1npa -oo· 955-3'2J63-r. Pl· new br-ea. Just tuned, 2200/0BO. 551·5493 s.. 9760 •'H Century 4 dr Sl000 961-2586 846-7522. Y! Never da,maged" a must see to belleve, wkend1/eve1. 731 ·6706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cassette. loaded. Good __ ,;_' --------- Will t:rade Big Bear Lake beauty. 117 .50 0 . Corval:r Pjckup Trucks, SUIOO. 54().0737 or 646-5865 wltda~. cond. 673-7677 or 673-7873 rd 9940 or ocnfront Mobile <714>54(M8ll. w/slde resnp, spare en1. (Big Tony). J.....;.. LEASE •••••••••••••••••••··~· Home or lrln for sport S2500all. 5'8-9617 ---9730 '65 sml V·B. xlnt mpg, 80K ·n Granada 4dr. nice lat, ti.a c-.. S•/ A.eo. Wmhd tHO &' sr • llOAOWAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• DIRECT! orig · xlnt cond. IS75. great for real estate or a hing boat·31 '. 499-3816 .....,.. ~ t I 20 'SS Ford 2dr, hardtop, ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAHrA AHA '67 Jaeua r 3.8 MK llS all Answer Ad 11270, 642·4300 family 80K mi. make of· Glasaply. 17. l/O. 120 hp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• orlginal.7~3965 • W.EPAYTOPDOLLAR 835.3171 orig. very well main· 1911 SAAi 24hn fer~7429 Mere. v hull w/trailer. Oettmo ready for the f or top used cars· talned Must Sacrifice TUllOi -------------.. foreion. domestics or '"1 umMA'l'I0111V1Ho MACH•111 •a ... ,..,o oclloc 9915 1978 Ford Fairmont Very clean. S2900, summer. I have a nice '29 Ford 1~ ton truck • ....,..,,,. C 11 .,,.,..2878 classics. If your car is •USIDIMWt• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waaon Squire. Ex· s.&-1330or64S-0775 camper. a ...... . cbasal.s w/cab ln pieces. XI t d '6 J ---------1 S450. '29 sport coupe extra clean , see us '765.:.MAS/R (2419) n con . 7 aguar, IEACH IMPORTS YOUR # I cellent condition. clean, rACIFtC/444 '78 COLEMAN TENT body w/cloors. no lid. FIRST! '778.~csiauto (0040) mintcond,Ca.car.$3900 848DoveStrfft CADILLAC air. power iteerina . ...U'i)UIDA TIOH TRLR. Sleept 6, used 4 13SO. 67~3175 ~ •79 m (7560> . a real tac. 846-8570 NEWPORT BEACH DEALBSH!r IH power brakes . .all new .79 mustbesold.250hrs times. stove, sink, xtra '793:nAS/R (7089) TA I( I OVER 752.0900 ORAMGECOUMTY! Michelina. t897UDY / Abo41' avail. under dis· canvas. 17H )995-8989. •c......_.. '80S2.Bi.Asunrf. (0013) llSS0.~0894. tress condition. Mo-:= / VelllcJo.s 95 30 le ao..d Swtdoys PYMNTS. ORANG I COUNTY SALES. SERVICE .19 Ford futura 16,000 DGYkt Fnnff htc. S • 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1471 /MO. '79 x J 6L. SAAi AND LEASING 714;673-5252 •••••••••••••••••••••••'78 Dod1gedRVXVan Se1 ll #1 i.<>r-..c..ty TMMostbclffllcJ Green w/beige mt all BUYorLEASE :~io~~::S~e new ---------'75 XR7S B I conta ne tras, ow 292SHarborBlvd. rwtOfYow extras. eves 494·50S7. DIRECT ~M~ BAYLINER haust, mud~~5re'!td:r~: miles. 942-5241 COSTA MESA IMW ftwchaM Or 640-9!186wkdays OVERSEAS plasticendorotanlc:,runs 'WhHIDri•n 9550 979-2500 a....C.Wlo l(a,....Ghia 9734 DELIVERIES L J\ strona. good cond. S295 ••••••••••••••••••••••• McL..ft IMW!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ... ,~.·~·••II:~. 2600 H.\rbor 8tv<1 1973, 27 feet 559-6901Charlle, 6«·1805 '76 Landcruiser w~. lo WE IUY 73 COHYHTllLE r -~, Cos1.1 Mesi\. S40-<>100 Twlut 110 Yol•o's '80 MO Special with far· mi, ale, 4 spd, 500 CLEAN CARS ly ~ c:r..!:.o;.-._, KAltMAHH GHIA ---- D.. lridc)e Ing, as is S900 after 5pm 546-0l7? _ .... .._..,.TRUCKS Hard to find model. 4 '76 Seville. xlnt cond .. ••1 •lttiHi Chris642-9768 ntdta 9560 "'""' (7141522·5333 speed trans .. AM/FM 10 120GaraenGrove8t loaded.allextras.S64SO. Ford camper speeial for sale. both lots or extrss Call 646-8207 --------- ·10 Ford Falcon sale. Call 8Sl 1345 rrom 3·9pm wkn1ghts. 9.9 wknds 1300. ~wltti ead ••••••••••••••••••••••• cassette&thisorieisex-G.irOPnGrove530·9190 Ev~s 499.3745 . dys & ~y. S ... ps 6. '79 Suzuki RMl.25. never ORAHGECOUMTY'S trasharp! 1820XKA ). 9Sl·9SOO •rcary ''50· O..Traiw. raced, like new. best oC· Spec&.I OLDEST OHLY $4995 Toyota 9765 --••••••••••••••••••••••• fer.831·6876uft.5. PwcheN!! & IAl<Ell STREET ••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 Eldo, blk on blk, ORANGECOUNTY 'S MUST SELL Low MMe-! us-C "•S '79 Toyota Supra, 24.000 loaded. take over lease. FtHIST , Honda ATCllO. less than "-T" a1 """ m1 . 5spd . fully equip $4631mo 544.0333 LINCOLN·MERCURY 12 hrs on S699mk ofr 19104tpd.mtd51pd. 142SBa.kerStreet with snrf. 17200/firm DEALERSHIP ~ S 12,500 963-<&15 Dahm rick Up's Sales·Serv1ce·Leas1ng COSTA MESA 497 5659. '75 Coupe De Ville White or mall• offfr -1979 YAMAHA 80cc TrtlMRdotlt HIGH IUYER I RocCarver,lnc. --545-3334 '75 Corolla. gd cond. 4 sp Be855t1.~~e9r ~?&.UI•• ,,;, ... .......ti-LI-Top dollars for Sports I Rolls BMW """" -~T"·-LikeNew$400 SCI¥:%!!! yce Mcnda 97)8 12300 firm 851-1138 eves C~ after 6pM 966-l390 ....,.~-_ Cars. Bugs, Campers. 1S40Jamboree ••••••••••••••••••••••• & wk ends LlNCOLN·MERCURY • 16-18 Auto Center Or SD Fwy.Lake Forest ex at 675 2695 ....._ -" 914's. Audi's Newport Beach 640.6444 '73 Maida RX-3 Stallon ---• MotorJiws, S•I Clftd11•onthty paytNRt1 Ask forU/C MGR ----Wagon. lo m1 , .:d cond Volk1w09" 9770 '77 Seville, loaded w x tra s Mu s t S a c READY FOR FtSHIMG I ll...t/Storop 9160 JIM MARIHO MUST SIU IU>OO. 497·5l26. • •••••••••••••••••••••• Trojan 2s· Expr ess ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOUCSWAGIH '78BMW 733.67~4821 '60 '6.S VW left & right $8950 best ofr Bill 831 ·1257 IRVINE 810.7000 Cruiser .. fully e9u1pped, WE CAH SELL 18711 Beach Blvd -------·74 Mazda RX 2. 2 dr door. '73 left door I SO fatho, live bait tank, YOUR R.V HUNTINGTON BEACH BMW 320i '78. loaded, Sedan. xlnt cond One each Western style whl Camoro 94117 ................•....•. O /R, VHF. & much • 842-2000 newtires&clutch.mint Owner Sl 650 Call rims for Super Beetle more. Less than 200 hrs. M9-1304 cond ! Best offer SBl-4015 S48·3SSS 120 ea 548-9744 '78Camaro '78 Marquis wagon. 9 pass. loaded . New M achehns Xlnt cond. $4000. Owner. 67S·6f61 8GPH at 20 knots 3 boat --, ----evestwknds owner Sacrifice llS,000 RENT: 22 lux mtr TOP DOLLAR -----M•rudH hM 9740 '66 VW Bug Beige ~ood Dys 640·1633. Eves home. Sips 6. self.cont '76 Toyot a Longbed. s Capri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• condS1800631·4836 days. Air. automatic, power steering. 27.961 miles. <882VEI) 675-8883 1 275/wk + 8< m1 . spd.AM/FMradio,good ,AIDFOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6428019eves --640-8585. s hape S2750 , Burl GOOD & CLEAN '74 Capri. good mileage. SEU..ING YOUR MB ? $4988 Barwick Imports lll·lll I 8 Mercury Zepher Z7 . lo m1, PS. PB. auto. v1n top SJ:m 979.5099 PP 2 5 ' Mako . float on 646-1597 I I 8 0 0 I 0 B 0 . D y s WE r A Y aluminum trailer. 23.5hp '76 Tioga Mot~rbome. ---------• USED CARS! n4-4144, (John> eves TOP DOLLA• SS • • ·73 VW Beetle x Int in & out. new pnt, stereo, Johnson. VHF radio. complete roof air, 18500 '78 Ford F·lOO. lo mi. 6 730-5379 CallJackBac:on depths recorder. out rig· or best offer. 631·0295. cyl. amlfm radio. xlnt Datt. 9720 JIM SLEMOHS radials. runs like new '78 Camaro LT. lo m 1. buy 12750 PP 846 4395 o r a s s u m e I e a s e . '67 Montclair 4 dr, pwr. great cond S925 646·5l37 aft HAM gers Call after 6pm 556-3778. cond. 549·:.>50 aft 5 1~o•T·S (714)&U·OOS3 -------••••••••••••••••••••••• ....--9' ------1151/mo 646-0686 '78 VW Rabbit 'L '' --- ---ntc.cJ 9'S2 __ Trailln, Tf"CIYef ti 70 '77 Dodge pickup ~. ton, 1910 DATSUN 1970 Harbor Blvd. BoatPartnerWanted ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4WD. xJnt cond. ISOOO. 200SXUFTIACK COSTA MESA Deluxe. snrf. 4 dr. IM-.rolet AM /FM/Cass AIC. Xlnt •••••••••••••••••••••• 9920 • ••••••••••••••••••••• lmmac 24' Sea Ray 8JC24 Aristrocat, like new 63J.7622 2950 ~ lhcl s speed tran.a .. AM/FM 1--•63•1•·1Z7-6•8J3.-•9300--• Sundancer. rishlng or 13,800. (KP6858). ---------i ,..__._ , .. tt tt700 slereo cus ... only 6,700 cond. $:;()()()or make ofr. • 1979 CHEVY 815-8994 M<>t«A 2-DR. '69 Mustang, xlnt cond. actual 37.000 miles. air, w w covers. scoop. vinyl roof. 644·4122. 833-02al. 499-31116 '76 GMC El Camino _...._ •-• cr uise. Exper helpful. miles! <672ZUE). Limit· s s Sprint. 350 en1. Aaking ss;~:.;, + 1301 mo. ~s:~~:\;~~·~~· ~~ _1_21_50_ . .., __ -4565 __ .____ WANTED! ::~C:r~fra':t!n ~'!st N d 8 32 ( N,.. .. 3) •7 T Dod ~ p u Late model Toyotas and late model used cars '80 °-yltner L1'--rty 20· oma x · "°" 4 \.':a ge •x.. · · V I C I I b ,__.,, b j · 04 "" 1· ood .. _ Rb" t o v o s a u s aciu:u y ma or ms. co 120H.P in /out w/trlr E ite894-440l g Suape. n rans. TODAY!!! ,..,,..Y $7699 ----Valuable 1lereo ~ slip avail. $9600673-6919 '76 Terry, established., w/t:ruck. Upper console lilB SftEn Grand Banks 32 1972 apace rent ll05. compl & dual tanks. cargo box, USED CAltS beaut 1fu11 y m. a Int ru~. incl TV· lSSS4S) · new Holly Econo-master 10 Baker Street Brand new l1 s t1ng Eht.eS94-4'0l carb. 13 m i per gal ltUH~lh& COSTA MESA 67J.:B'>1 __ TraHon, Utillty 9I10 l .2300, 557-2153 C•••• M••• 545-l3l4 _ ""•4'·UOl w '40·'4'7 loots. Rent/ • ••••••••••••••• ••••••• '71 El Camino very clean Chortff 9050 4'x~~.~~~:~~~eels goodpaint,S3000. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1100 ~ 1390 (S4-S01.5 •IMMAC28'·34' BOATS 6112mo. plans prepaid Auto Senice, rar1$ '56 GMC. S400 cash 516-7996 from 1180/mo. mcludmg & AccntoriH 9400 slip. lessons714/964-5994 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v .. -9570 loats. Sail 9060 For.. • •• •••••• •• •• • •• • • • • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Erickson 32', '75 loaded. Bristol cond. Offer, R. E. or terms 968 7903. 968-~2 Datsun Z motor + ott.r ,.,., 761-5U7 Fixer upper older sailboatwlslip.Newport '62 Ramble r .All or Beach 751·8967 nothing S225 Dr 11 '81 model 22· Wmdrose, w /trlr Sacrifice Call Don or Earl bet 8·4 wkdys 554·6132 Lido 14 #3173, compl. red- condihoned. full rigging. sails. lrlr & boat CO\ er Sl700 Pete Ke ndall 2 13t 462·3161 dys . 2 1 3 1 545 S l9 6 home. Apt B206 425 Mer. r1mac C.M. CHEAP!! Slightly used turbo kit '70.'74 Datsun Z cars 768-583'7 Great deal. Scirocco alloy whls. Used l yr best offer. 644-1318 eves•wknds Wanted -dependable. small block Che vy Wanted older sailboat englne l960or later w /sltp in Newport 548-0895day1. Harbor 751·8967 loots. Slips/ Docks -327 engine with power 9070 glldet:rans. 1175. 631·7585. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slips available, Newport Beach. 25 '·3S' Avail A.tosfwSalo now. 642·4644 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT NOTICE TO READERS AND ADVERTISERS NEED end tie for 25' Trimaran w/18' beam. Call: 54&-6432 or 552· 1660 aft5PM v._Rated UMdCcrs!! 'llGMCR.,Van 7.000 miles, power win· dows, till wheel. cruise control. air. 3 seals. and more (3267-A) $10,500 LAWIA~l ,495{8)j &31 ~ 1977DOOGE "SHOIT"YAH Automatic t:rans.. pwr st.. AM/FM t1pe, tull professional int. in c. icebox, wide wheel• & really cute! 11J88453). Limited offer (up to 2 Yrs. l service contract on moet late model iaed care backed by major Ins. co. PORSCHES WANTED t363t Hl'bOf 81vtt Garoen G•O't'f! "1 &Jl·Dl' '"' Dlllar Pait For Your Car! JOHHSOH & SOH Uncollt-Mwcwy 2626 Harbor Blvd" Costa Mesa 54~5630 WePoy OVER llYolook For Your Good VW. Poncheor Audi . -. . . "' ' .... i ; • VW·PORSCHE·AUOI 445 E. Coast Hiway at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673-0900 Premium prices paid for any used car (foreign or domestic> in good condition. See Us First! CHEAP!! Slightly used turbo kit ·1~ '74 Datsun Z cars 768-583'7 '18 280Z 2+2, xlnt cond. Am/Fm cass ale. snrf. S74SO. PP 640-1948 eves/wkends '72 240Z new pntluphol, 73K orig ml . Grey/maroon int. 557.2792 '76 280Z 2+2, looks new. slvr . only 57K mi. auto. AIC. FM, 15300 Call af\ 6. 30 54&-S!q '78 Datsun P.U., long· bed, A/C, lo mi, a more. S41SO. Eves 642·5941 '73 240Z, air, cruise con· trol, auto, am/fm case. 498-2503. S3SOO/OBO. ·79 280ZX 2+2, 5spd, grand deluxe, 2 lone, 21K ml, 19800 492-4852 eves MBZ280 · l973 XLNT COND. S6000 CALL 760-9278 -----Economical S·s peed '78 VW Convt. a c. trans,, & more ' Ex· am/fm cass. all chrome, cellent! Cute little car' car cvr. bra, xtras' 9K (052XJU> •57 Mercedes l~L. xlnt mi :__S9l00-~89IO OHL Y Sl99S cond. Both topi; $8,900. '79 VW BUS A1C, stt?reo HOWARD CIM•rolet Must sell. 557·0~18·__ cass. tinted windows, Dove & Quail Sts. '65 190 Sdn. nw pnt nice cond. best offer 646--0141 MG 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MG Midget ·73 Runs. looks xlnt Lo mileage 12000. 526-2672. reugeot 9741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! I 911 ,EUGEOT TURIOt IEACH IM,OITS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 '80 ~ Diesel Sta Wgn. 4600 m1. Xlnt cond . Brand new! Lgt. blue metallic w/camel int. SU ,500. 770..9513 days, 4»3745 evet xlnt cond. 551 9331 eves NEWPORT BEACH '68 Bug, auto.S9SO 49'2·0610, after 6pm 496-6508 •79 VW Westfall& Camper Poptop. xlnt cond. lo mileage, sips 5, refrlg, sink. stereo tape deck. am/fm radio, elec. hook up, storaf(e compart m en t s . table Sll ,000/0BO. 631-5350 after Spm. Bill or Claire VW Baja. new 183S motor, sandblaster tires & much m ore Sac 12000. 957·2708 '69 VW Bus. late duel port motor, new paint. needs int work Sl250/080. 957·Z7<MI. '71 VW Bug rblt eng. new brakes. good cond. best offer over 11900. 552-9418 aft 5PM 641·8700 days X211 lll-0555 1---------- I 97' CHEVROUT CHEVmE4DR. 4 speed trans .. air cond .. AM/FM stereo cass. & 27.000 miles. (364977 1. Limited offer <up to 2 Yrs > ser vice contract on most late model used cars backed by maJor ins. co. OHLYS399S IAKElt STllEET USEOCARS 10 Baker Street COSTA MESA 545-lll4 SHUS FIRST! We have a good selection or NEW & USED Chevrolets! COHHELL . CHEVROLET '>\." 11." I• 'I H • •"°I\ \H " \ S4i>-I 200 f'orsc.he 9750 White wtblack top. Many '76 MOMZA 0 •••••••••••••••••••••• xtras Must see. $49SO 2 + 2 . 4 c y I . g 0 0 d r<>RSCHE 1979 ~bo·642·3231 mileage, a le. radio. 928. f'ully loaded. lS,400 Auto lft141roftce transferrable wal'T'anty. orig. m1 . xlnt cond in· 557·3:>27 or 759·0060 Problems? An y risk, -------- side & out. Blue book SR·22's, low month ly 19734 Or Impala with air. wholesale 11 S26,3'1S: our r1tes. Pirkel Jns646-3995 'Good cond. Owner sale price is S26.775. ----s <200.168>. Ask (or Duke Vo&-.o 9772 1350· or Mike. • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •548 __ · 7_24_9 __ _ THEODORE ROBINS FORD 10t 0 HARBOR kl VO CO~TA ,_.!\A f,.17 0010 VOLVO SALES, SEltYICE AHDLEASIHG OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS 72 Chevy Kingswood Estate SW . AIC. lug. gage rack, all elect. doors & windows, Am·8 track stereo & many xtras. Xlnt cond. 11200 or olr.1162-5~ tt30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUSTANG II Auto. AIC. lo m i. 12SOO or bst ofr. 968· 1630 '67 Mustang. Mint cond S2SOO /offer. E ve 832·4002. '65 Must 2+2 289. PIS, PB. new tires. reas. 494-4S33 '66MUSTANG Fair cond,.SlSOO 646-6468 "55 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64 F-85, l owner, runs good, S3'75 or best offer 557.2824 '70 Olds 98. guaranteed transm ission & drive train. Runs well w/all xtras. 51.000 mi. 2112 Walla ce St. C M 631·4Z.43, 675· l:O. ---- '79 Olds Della 88 Ro)'111 2dr, economical. loaded. IS375 545 ·2526 . (213)536-1532 ·so Cutlass Suprem e brougham. lS.SOO ml. many options. 832· 2247 ri..to 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *SALE* ' 1979-1980 Pl MT OS • 30. tochooee from s2a95 ; .... 1817XKS> ALL-Low Mlleaae ALL-Automatic Trani:• ALL-PowerSteerina - AJ..L.Runabouta, 3 dr M&Al:r Condltlonln1 SOM&StaUon W11ona- '76 911S , 5spd. mags. stereo cau. snrf. silver , immac. Sl2,950. PP. 640-1948 eves/ wk ends . LUI.EIKE VOLVO 1986Harbor Blvd. •79 Mark V Collector's ALL-Guaranteed 55' SUP. Balboa Manne #124. Avail now til June I. Call btwn 9-5. 644·9730 30' dock, power boat. or Taberncale Mast. No overnighters. S160/mo. 152·2584. The price of items advertised by vehicle dealers In the vehicle cla11ifled advertising columns doe. not In· elude any applicable taxes, license, transfer fee1. finance charges, fees for air pollution con· trot device certifications or dealer documentary preparation charges un· leas olherwiae 1peclfled by the advertiser. OHLYSHts lilBSTaHT USIDCARS 1425 Balter Street COSTA MESA 54 3334 •79 Datsun 280Z. silver gray, 5 spd. am/fm cas1 stereo. a/c, mag whl1, xlnt cond. S6500. C1ll 962·se64. '!Ml Por1che 91 lSC Petrol Blue. full equip. '81 Data~ 810 MAXIMA ~7.642·8722 Sedan, Sll.500 PP780-M34 COSTA MF.SA 646-930) 540.9467 OlllAHGE COUNTY VOLVO Ser les. 28,000 actual ~COAST miles. 1 owner. Fully TIAMSPOMATIOH· equipped. Muat see to CLaiETOFREEWAYS appreciate. Call Re1co: 2187 Harbor Blvd. 60'MOORIMG 18' boat. 125,000 Tony 876-0815. 831 ·4286 Eager bu ers read the Claulfled 1d1 every day . If you have something ror ule, re· ach them fut end lnex· penelvely, call 142·58'78. 'You can be a WINNER Just by seadln1 u1 YMll' name and address ud by watdallag for your name ID &he. cle111nec1 ads of the D alb Piiot. • w•= to the circus, a19a •mUQrntot attra -....1 or aoortla.1 evenu. Juet r out Ulla cou -man It ton1 to UM : C1uaUled Dep1nmeet, Dally rtlet 33t W. Bay Street, Colta Meu, CA tJl2' )' = : : I .. . . . . . . ; I .. i • = ., z u ... :!888 11 u1 hor Rl\'d ('oiita :\ll'!Ht f).10 03:!0 '14 aeaz. new paint. air, polilhed mas•. xlnt. Belt otter. IM.W111. LEASE '78 Datsun 280Z 2 + 2, DIRECT! upd, lolldtd. cover. Im· mac. HK ml. S'14H. lfll Al.JA IPIDMS llACH IMPOITS .. Do\'• 8treet NEWPORT B&ACH 711MOO 95"7115,518-0283. '71 • ..,_,, auto, alr, now tlru, $2450. Lve m...,. PP -1·2307 .... t7ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77SPYD• '715'1der: P•tfeet cond. __ Lo_m1_._aJ_at_.1_S1ot112 __ _ Now top, low mllt1. l"lnd wbat .YOU want In k500. --Dally Pllot Cla11tned1 '72 914, clean, rblt en1. cover, am/hn cass. bra. many xtr•s 14200 845-6418 '75 914 Porsche 2.0. Larpet Volvo Dealer In Orange County! BUY or LEASE DIRECT Special wbls , C B. -~-M_u_;:_t _•_e_c:_~_s~_e_.r_;_:_:1_': " • ., '82 Cabriolet Convert. 10120a.rdtnGrove81 Compl. reato:ratlon, xlnt Garden~ &»9190 cond. Mutt 1en 113.000 obo. 2W343-030I ---------1'fJ 1IOO !S: I0,000 milH. '57 Speedtter Replica, Xlnt coed. ll500. Call leather Int, duel port ev• fr wtmd1 556-31181, motor, duel cart>. many dap213/841-S!G. more xtru. Undtr l ,000 ,_....;... ______ _ mt Divorce fore .. 11le. Volvo Cl•ulc. '11, 111,500/080. Wiii con· PUOOES . totally 1ldtr lrlde. 957·?709. ~. aakinl MOO. (1H)4'f..Jlll aller5p'm. c1 ... 1c '11 Porsche COft• vertlblt, Incl hardtop w/etec eun.roof. id COftd •·tm. •• 1441 tdr. auto. llSTOFFER 55T41110 ..,Ume 842..es79. Glen. Cotta Ilea• .,...... 99J2, __ c.i_1<_1_H_>_u_1_ .... _•~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... t961 I 979 CHIYaOLIT ••H••••••••• .. ••••••- COIYITTl T ·TOr lt7'POMT1AC . Auto. t:rant .. pwr. 1teer· SUAll W A4tOM Ina. tilt, alr cond., AutomaUc trana. pwr'~ crube. AM/FM 1lereo -•· __ ... --·1 ,,, i. V t •. 1t ..... ainu,. l"OOf r.c.,, tape. et e maa• • radio • only u .oop 22,000 mllet. (305WXD). mllet. (IUWZS>. Umlt Um!Wd otter <up to 2 od ..M ( to a y > Yrs.> service contrecl ... ,., up ,.,, Hrvke COftlract on mOlt on moat late model used late model "led 0 ..i. can backed by major bacbd by m.ior lfta. «>[ w .;._Yll l,ftl OMLYllHI LdlRSftll1' ':~:' U19 CMS ua ..,..,._ imaaas.ltrMt OOITAlllSA C081AMDA Ml-IH4 Ml-JH4 ,I . .. ,,.,, .. 'IO V.U. tK mJ. uloMed •••'"•••••··~·••• ur•• warranty, all optlou 'Tl V111&. Oooit ol"CMlilit SlJ,000 M\11\ Hll UO.•lt ...._ ._ Call •TICl orlll.fltl. .. I Ora19t COMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 23, 1981 mm tant news for'ultra low tar smokers. , I .•. . • Now the MERIT idea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar- New MERIT Ultra lights. A milder MERIT fer those who prefer an ultra low tar cigp,rette. New MERIT Ultra lights. It's going to set a whole new taste standard fer ultra low tar smoking 4 mg "11r:· 0.4 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ' L-------------OPlllllpMonlalnc. IMJ ' I \ t • . '·· ·,.. . .... Ylll lllOlll llllY PIPER M O NDAY . MARCH 23. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY CALlf U HNIA :.?'> CENTS I I Scrf.lnalJling for HB lifeguard jobs I .. " .. ·- -" . . . . . • " . -.. ~ . , ....,.-_ . .. While you were loafing around the house Sunday. these 75 young men and women were competing for a chance to become lifeguards in Huntington Beach. In photo above they are sprinting to water for swim to bait house on Hun· tington Beach Pier and back. Randy Gates. 17, Garden Grove edJZed Tod Pickett. 20. Costa Mesa. in this race D•1ty P1to1 PllOIO\ t>y Potno 0 0 ...... 11 <photo a t left>. However , Pickett. a Golden Wes t Coll ege stu_dent, won both the around-the-pier swi m a nd the r un- sw1m-run event. About 30 of Sunday's competitors will be selected for training during Eas te r week a nd about 10 of those will get summer jobs. BB faces new job program tab Lo11~ 8 eaeh n1yst e r y 5 killings stump cops LONG BEACH (AP> Police were seeking public assistance today in an atte mpt to identify two young girls found suffocated in a motel room. The girls. who did not appear to have been sexually abused, we re among five victims of homic ides re ported her e Sun· day. a uthor ities s aid. The body or a man who had been badly beaten was found an a tras h dumpster : the body of another m a n . id e ntifie d as Gregory Smith. 25, or Whittier , was found flo ating o ff the marina jetty here with a bullet in his head; and the body of a third man, who appeared to have been shot. was found lying in an alley. Identities of the other two men we re not immediately dis closed by a uthorities. A maid discove red the girls' fully clothed bodies al about 11 : 30 a . m . S unday at the Ra mada Inn on Pacific Coast Highway. One girl sat in a ct\.air, the other in bed. and both had pillows over their heads, said po lice. "The re was no indication that Burnett sees moral w i n o ver Enqui r e r By F R EDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM Dolly 1'11.t SYtt they were abus ed," said Sat. Ron Carpenter. Sgt. Dick Wood said there was no evidence that the girls, believed about 7 and 10 years or age , had b een bound or restrained in any way by the s layer. Police were having difficulty identifying the girls . "We have checked with all nearby police agencies," Wood s aid., "and no children answer· ing lo this description have been reported missing." Don Focht, manage r of the 105-room motel, said a "single individual" had registered in the r oom three days before the bodies we re disco ver e d . He would not elaborate. Motel employees did not re· me mber see ing any c hildren with a man who reportedly rent· ed the room. Wood said. He said personnel of a nearby nightclub and other people who may have been in t he vicinity we re being questioned in the hope of developing leads in the ease AP Wtrep"oto S o c ie f.s i11 orbif. Mission commandeT Vladimir Dzhanibekov. 38. le ft , a nd Jugderde midiyn Gurragcha. a 33-year-old Mongolian. have been lofted into earth orbit and will link with t·..-o cos monauts who have been aboard Soviet space st ation Saly ut-6 s ince Ma r ch 12. It's second mission for Dzhanibekov, the fi rst for Gurr agcha . Audit r esults r eveale d By PATRICK KENNEDY Of I~• D•••r P•IOI Su fi T he latest audit of Huntin~ton Bea ch's fedt'rally funded Job training program all e~es t he ci~ ly may have to pay ba ck $22,215 Spent 10 alleged Vl<JlallO n Of go\' ern ment regulations The audit. by Peat. Mar wick. Mitchell & Co .. covers the city's Com pre he ns ive E m ploy m ent a nd Tra ining /\cl 1CETA1 pro- gram from 1976 up to 1979 City officials released 1t Frid;iy The latest audit is separate from a much publicized audit of t he city's C ETA prog ram fur 1979 T h a l a udit. rl'lt'.'ased 111 J a nuary , w as conducted b) Or ange County Ma npower Com mission auditor Gerald Salotti a fte r chargl'S we r l' lodged of m1smanagemt•nl und m1su!>e or funds in the progr a m The Ma npowe r Com m1s~1on audit alleged the c ity may have to pav back morC' than $170.000 spent in violatio n of C ET A reK- ulations dunng 1979 A s miling Carol Burnett sa id this morning that s he belie ves she will have won a moral vie· tory regardless or the verdict re· turned by the j ury in her $10 million libel s uit agains t the Na· tional Enquirer periodical. "No matter what happens, I haven't lost ," Miss Burnett declared as she strode down a corridor encir cled by news re· porter s a nd tel evis i o n cameramen. "We have won a moral victory." · Miss Burnett's legal action s tems from an Enquirer story in which it was stated that she s pilled wine on a diner and became involved in a loud argu· ment with Henry Kissinger former U.S. Secretary of State. Man dies after bout The three-year audit releasl'd Frid ay identifies S7 ,822 paid in wages and benefits:-and $14.393 of expenditures as d isallo wable under CETA guide lines. Emerging from a Los Angeles County courtroom, the actress and comedienne said her legal challenge of an Enquirer story on her behavior in a Washinglon restaurant s ix years ag9 has placed "a very healthy doubt" in tbe public's mind over the En· quirer's objectivity. ORlll;f COAST lllTHIR Low clouds and loc al fog late night and morning, then mosUy sunny Tues- d a y afte rnoon . Low s tonight 48 along the coast , 54 inland. Highs Tuesday 70 to 78. 118101 TODAY "Cool Mfner'• Doughier" 11 one of fiw mow• nominated for but picture at the Academ11 Awordl on March :to. See the firit fn a Hritt of rt1Mw• on Clw film1 on Page 86. 11111 The Enquirer later retracted the story. In final arguments to the 11 · member jry, Miss Burnett's attorney Ed Bronson. said Miss Burnett was libeled because the article was false. He s aid the periodical acted with malice against his cUent and defamed her. ·'I am feeling very good win, lose or draw," Miss Burnett said. "I didn't do anything, they Ctbe Enquirer > did it to themselves." The jury sitting before Superior Court Judie Peter Smith la expected to receive the Cale today. Bronsoo said be will request monetary dama1ee leH than the amount specified ln the lawsuit. Followin1 la the paragraph that led to Miu Burnett's filing of the lawsuit: "ln a Wublniton restaurant, a boi1terou.s Carol Burnett bad a loud ar1ume n t with another diner, Henry Ki11ln1er." Then 1be tripped around the place, of. ferin1 eveey one a bite of her de11ert. But Carol really rabed •1ebrow1 when the accldental· ly knocked over a 1laa1 of wine over one diner and •tarted ti•· tllnt lnltead of apololidn1. 1'tM ru1 wun't amuaed and • acddeft· tally' 1pUJed a alUt of water over Carol'1dreu." J OHNSTOWN . Pa. <AP> - Rona ld Miller's relatives tried to talk the 5-foot-7 former Marine out of competing in a local fight, but he was unemployed and des perate for the $500 prize money. As Mille r zeroed in on his third opponent in the Toughm an Cham· plonship fight, his nose started lo bleed and he got sick to his stomach. Sunday. after emergen· cy surgery. the 23-year-old man HB s tation hit b y thug A gunman who forced a Hunt· lngton Beach service station at· tendant lo handcuff himself lo a water pipe early today fled with about '619 in station receipts, police reported. Pollce Lt. John Foster said the incident began at 3:30 a .m .. w h e n a man walked lo and betan cliatttn1 with an attend· ant at the Mobll Station at 18001 Beach Blvd. . Fo1ter said the vlaltor dlsap· peared lnto a back room, and wbtn the attendant followed, he found the autpect brandlahlng an automatic pl1tol. The fUJ\· man ordered the attendant to handcul hlmaelf to the plpe, then th• auapect took money from the 1tatlon'1 caah drawers and ned. heHld. -- died of brain he morrhaging . authorities s aid. "l tried to talk him out of it. But he was despe rate. He needed the $500. He thought he had a chance, but he was too s mall," said Mille r 's rather . Robert. Mill e r , who weighed 169 pounds, started three bouts at the Johnstown War Memorial. where preliminary competition was held in the Third Annual Toughman Championship. Thell· tie fight, scheduJed for October in Pontiac, Mich., has a lop prize of SS0,000. Mill er knocked out one oppo- nent Friday night and his first op- ponent Saturday. "The audience went cruy over him. They gave blm a complete standing ovation." said Robert Law, Mlller'auncle. Mill er had been seeing double and bad been dbay after the lint bout Saturday. Yet he started the second. Between rigbta, he complained ol faU1ue, 1a.ld hie brother, Robert Miller Jr. "Tbe bi1 man who waa runnlna it said to my brother. 'You have live mlnutea.' My brother Hid, 'I'm too Ured. How about ctvtna me 10 minutes'?" Robert Jr. Hld. Muter then waa knocked down several t1met1 and when bll we becan to bleea, the Nfertt cau.d the bout. When the n1hter uar.. up, a doctor In the audience 111d -.. .--------·---··-·--····,,..·-···-·· .. ····-... ,.--··------------· Mill er should be hos pitalized. ·'There's not much question about what killed him." Ca mbria County Coroner John Barron said. "It had to be caused by a blow to the head. Be n Arguello, chie f of ad· m in1 strative services for the ci ty, s aid $22,215 ide ntified in the audit is about thre e-tenths of one pe rcent of the more than $8 <See JOBS, Page AZ) * * * CETA ex-director reports to OC jail The former director of Hunt· in1ton Beach's federal job train· lng program has surrendered at Oran1e County Jail after plead· ing guilty lut week to two felony countsofmisualnapubllcfunds. Robert L. Cunningham, 35, former chief of the city's Com· prehenslve Em ployment Train· Ina Act program, had been or· dered by Oran1e County Superior CO'frl J~e Everett W. Dickey to turn hlmaelf ln by Sunday. Cunninibam wlll be sent to the men •a prison al Chino for 90 days of dlapoetlc tests and th.en come back to Oran1e County for formal aenttnclnt on lune 18. Tb• former public ofllclal, who chanled hi• plea from Innocent to 1uUty lut Monday only momenta before hit trial waa to be1ln, could face up to four yean ln state prllOll. He twntd hlmnll ln Sun· day. Cunnlnaham was char1ed with ' ., .. embeizling $16,000 in fede ra l funds for his personal use The Orange County Grand Jury had indicted him last October. In entering his guilty pleas in court last week, he admitted to charges that betwe en June, 1979, and January, 1980, while working u jobs chief in Huntington Beach and as president o f Western In s titute of C areers. he fraudulently appropriated the money. Prosecutor Dave Himelsons ald Cunningham used the money as a down payment on a new home In the south county. Cunningham later repaid the funds ln two Installments. Sherlfra Lt. Wyatt Hartaaid the former CETA director turned himself ln to authorllle• at 5:30 p.m . Sunday at the Jail. Cun· nln1ham previously had beeG al· lowed to remain free wllhout bail. ' t . ... -.................. r ... , 0r-. Cout DAIL y PILOT/Monday, Match 23, 1981 /I sub is bflrll Amid a mass of balloons, the attack submarine Houston slides into the water after being christened in Newport News, Va. The ship is nuclear powered and is 360 feet long. Huntington seeks state park funds The Huntington Beach City Council has applied for $636.436 Crom the California Parklands Bond Act of 1980 to purchase land lo expand lhe 300-acrc Central P<1rk . The C<1hfornia Department of Parks and Recreation has recom- mended that sum as the city"s share of the bond act , which was Proposition I on last November"s st<1te ballot . City officials also applied for an additional $126.000 from a Seminar set on burglary Burglary prevention lips will be provided Wednesday at a free meeting s ponsored by Huntington Beach Neighborhood Watch. a crime prevention group. The session will begin at 7:30 p rn-in Hope View School. 17622 Flintstone Lane . 'A spokesman for Neighborhood Walch s aid 55 resi d e ntial burglaries h<1ve occurred during the past three months in the area bounded by Goldenwest Street. Warner Avenue, Bolsa Chica Street and Ellis Avenue. A film on home security will be shown. Also. police detective J im Wehr will offer bur glary preven- llon tips and answer quest ions. separate state fund for parks. If approved. money from the two applications would be used to expand the Central Park by 15 acres in an area south to Ellis Avenue between Golden West and Edwards streets The cost of purchasing the 179 small. privately owned lots there is estimate<! at Sl million, accord- ing to city officials . Norm Worthy, c ity parks superintendent, said the bond act requires the city to pay 25 percent of any acquisition made with bond funds. He s aid the city would have to pay more than 25 percent. about $250,000. to complete pruchaseofthe 179 lots. The application fits into a n overall S7 million proposal by Vince Moorhouse. director of the city's community services. to ul - timately expand the Central Park by 75acres. Moorhouse proposes to add revenue-generating attractions to the park including hotels , restaurants, water slides, YMCA and an overnight camping facility at a proposedtroutfishing lake. Woman burned DETROIT (AP> An elderly wo man was critically burned and 42 other people were injured in a fire that engulfed an east side nursing home. officials s ay. • • arrive m Salvador SAN 8ALVAOOR, El Salvador (AP> -Al154Amerlcan military advisen promised to help train Salvadoran troops have arrived In the war-tom Central American country. Twelve U.S. Army Green Berets landed Sunday at 11- lopango Airport, the main gov· ernment airbase, but reporters were not allowed to question them. State Department officials said last week the American advisers will be out of El Salvador by Sep· tem ber, but that more would be sent if needed. The civilian-military junta is fighting leflist guerrillas who the United States contends are armed by Cuba and other allies of the Soviet·Uruon. li:t fighting reported Sunday, residents near Morambala said gue~rillas blew up a key bridge, cutting off the coastal highway near the city, 50 miles southwest of San Salvador. An Army spokesman said un- identified gunmen fired two s hots from a bazooka-like weapon at an armored vehicle in which Interior Minister Ovidio Hernandez was riding Saturday in the capital. The armored car was one of three that arrived Friday from the United States as p a rt or the Reagan ad- ministration's a id package. One of the shots caused minor injuries to a man and his daughter in a nearby car. but those inside the armored vehicle were not in- jured, the spokesman said. The government reported no developments in a major drive against the guerrillas in the mountainous northern provinces. Pipe fitters picket at county plant Pipe filters picketing today in front or the Orange County Sanitation Dis trict plant at Brookhurst Street and Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach didn't interfere with normal operations of the plant, district officials said. R ay Young, senior ad- ministrative assis tant for the district, said the pickets are a result of a wildcat strike by member s of th e Steam Refrigeration-Air Conditioning and Pipe Fitters union. Young said union pipefitters. who are doing construction work at the plant, have become em- broiled in a dispute with a con- tractor for the project. He sa id the dispute is expected to be settled within a few days . George Bush 'not shot' Vice president squelches DC rumors WASHINGTON <API ll was the rumor of rumors in a city that thrives on gossip, but a Reagan administration official says re- ports that Vice President George Bush had been shot at and re- ceived a minor wound were "withoutroundation ·· The rumor had many varia· lions. centering on the idea that the shooting took place on a Capitol Hill street late one ni~ht. "In retrospect, he ( Bush) is pleased the story is out because it'll probably stop the rumor mill ,.. Peter Teeley. the vice president 's spokesman, said Sunday. Teeley said Bus h was told Saturdav that the Washin.1tton Post would publish a story on the rumors and that it would s ugges t that there was no truth to them. ··He hoped the story the Post put together would put an end to Ll, ·•the spokesman said. At the White House last week, reporters asked deputy press secretary Larry Speakes if the pres ident was "concerned about the large number or rumors" a bout the alle~ed incident. Speakes responded by saying he would "check on the president's concern . of the rumor or rumors." Late Saturday, J a m es S. Brady, the pres ident's press secretary, described the whole rumor as being "without founda-tion ... The Was hing ton Post and several Associated Press re - porters who checked on the rumor agreed that it had no basis in fact. The Post said Sunday that the story began when a young woman ran into the street one night last month to he lp an auto accident vic tim and e n co untered a policeman she knew. The woman, who declined to be identified in the Pos t story. said theofficertold her that the vice president had been ·s hot earlier -a comment the officer later denied ever hav- ing made. The won.an returned to her home expecting to hear or read accounts of the Bush incident. Whe n she didn't she called two Cr lends and told them a bout what ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHatfMcl lldwfU.mt 714/M2·M71 All other ~,_nte Mt..u21 .. Tnomu P. Haley ~ Robert N. Weed ,.,...,,. M. ThomH Keevll ~ Thomaa A. Murphln• ........,.(_ en.ti .. H. LOOI .. _...,_.....,_ BerNrd Schulman ~ ~z.--.=n KtnMth N. Goddard Jr. ~ow- ' I the policeman had ~legedly said. That was enoug'h to put the rumor into circulation. Reporters who heard the rumor were told it was false by the local police, Secret Service, U.S. Attorney and Bus h'sofCice. Pilots still seek wreck, two Mesans Civil Air Patrol pilots concen- trating on the Sierra Nevada south and west or Mammoth Lakes today continued hunting wreck1tge of a white plane which carried two Costa Mesans . Hopes for Robert Reed and Michael Tilompson, both 25 and both from Costa Mesa, were dim- ming. They vanished in the Cessna 210 last Thursday in a snowstorm. Adding to the bleak prospects Is the .tact one to three feet of fresh snow fell in the area over tbe weekend, and temperatures have droppedintolbe20s at night. ClvU Air Patrol Lt. Col. Lloyd Goodale, search coordinator baaed at Bishop Airport, sald that, in his opinion, no trace wtll be found of the plane or occupants u:ntU the spring snow melts. Reed, a menagement trainee wltb Ralphs Grocery Co., baaed at their Lal\llla HlU1 markei and Tbompt<>n, a carpenter andaonof Newport Beach DetecUve Sgt. Ken Thompt0n, had been on a two·d1y1kl trip. They left about 1 p.m . Tbunday en route to-pick up three com- pa n lona waiting a t Biahop Alrport deapite pleu of author1Ue1 at Mammotb·JLlnt Lakes Airport not to risk the danceroua ru1ht. Hoir-roisi119 efforf Long jumper Dawn Troiano, 9, competes in Fountain Valley Girl Scout Olympics. More than 400 competitors competed at Fountain Valley High School Saturday with city girls from kindergarten to ninth grade dem· onstrating their athletic ability. Winners will compete in Orange County Girl S cout Olympics May 16 at Westminster High. ~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~.:.....__~- Clymore arrest hit Complaint charges V.S. complicity By .IOHN NEEDHAM Of llw 0-41' ~li.t Stall The lawyer representing freed Pakistani hijack hostage Craig Clymore filed a formal com- plaint with California Sen. Alan C ranston's offi ce today in Washington, D.C., protesting the arrest of his client by Syrian authorities in Damascus Satur- day. The complaint, filed by at- torney Ronald Kreber of Laguna Beac h, charges U.S. Embassy complicity in Clymore's arrest on undisclosed charges, a spokesman at Kreber 's office said. · Kre ber is in Washington l"ro• Pag~ A I JOBS ... million of CETA funds spe nt by the city between 1976 and 1979. He said the latest audit in· dicates the city's accounting system is "good and headed in the r ight direction.·· The cit y's internal controls over CET A expenditures had been criticized by the Ma npower audit released previously for al- lowing large, a llegedly un· authorized expenditures in 1979. including leases of buildings and purch ases o f eq uipment. furniture and insurance. Those expenditures reportedly were set up by Robert L. Cun- ningham, former CETA direc· tor , to establish a non· profit cor· poration that took over the city's job program in October 1979. Last Tuesday, Cunningham pleaded guilty in Orange County Superior Court to two counts of embezzling $16,000 o f CETA funds in June or 1979. Cunningham, 35 • ...fiad been the city's CETA director from 1974 until October 1979. • At the Garage ... a waiting the processing of his vis a that will allow him to visit Clymore in Da mascus. Clymore. 24, formerly of Lake Forest, is accused or being the ringleader of a nine-member. $12 million hashish and heroin s muggling operation involving seven other Southern Califor- nians. Clymore was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jet tha t was hijacked March 2 on a flight fro m Karach i t o Pes hawar. The plane, seized by three op- ponents of the Pakistan govern· m ent. was eventually flown to Damascus, where the hos tages were released March 14 in ex- change for the freedom of 54 jailed Pakistani political prisoners. . Just hours after the Hostages' release. news or a grand jury in dictment naming Clymore and eight other Californians was re- leased by the U.S. Attorney's of- fice in New York. On Saturday Clymore was ar - rested at his Damascus hotel, whe re he had been staying since his release. The arrest came two days after he was evicted from his hotel room and forced to turn over all his money to satisfy the hote l bill. Kreber char11?ed the U.S. Em- bassy in Damascus with pres- suring the Syrians into arres t· ing Clymore to force him to re· turn to the United States and face the drug s mugglin g charges. Syria a nd the United States have no extradition treaty. The spokesman at Kreber's of. fice s aid Clymore had agreed Friday to sign a waiver or sur· render and return to the United States. The spokes man said Kreber advised the U.S. Embassy in Damascus of Clymore's willing· ness to return, and s aid his client wouJd sign the waiver as 100% cotton lZOO • LACOSTroKford dress stuns 1n a rainbow of colors soon as he reached Damascus Wednesday. However , since Clymore was arrested, Kreber may postpone his client's return until more favorable arrangements for his surrender can be agreed upon, the spokesman s aid. "The agree m ent was that if Clym ore was taken into custody nothing would be signed ... the spokesman said. "We have re- quested that the embassy not have Craig sign an extradition waiver without Mr Kreber be- ing present. Since t he request was made. the e mbassy has asked Craill? to s i.1tn five t1 mes." Desert park crash ·kills two countians Two Orange County men were killed when the pi ckup truck in which they were riding plunged over a c liff in Anu-Borrego Desert State Park. De puty San Diego County Coroner Jay Johnson said the mis hap, which occwrred at noon Saturday, took the lives or Jeffery Lynn Hart. 27, of Huntington Beach, and Michael James Pem- berton, 23, of Garden Grove. J ohnson said Hart was driving westbound on Mason Valley Truck Trail when he apparently lost control of his truck which plunged down a 700-foot em- bankment. Harl was thrown from the vehi- cle, while Pemberton was pinned ins ide, Johnson said. Two companions following in a second vehicle witnessed the ac· c ide nt and contac ted park rangers. Hart and Pe mberton were pronounced dead at the scene, Johnson said ALSGAAAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (71 4) 644-7030 f . . t -.---·....--.------~-~------------............... 11!1!!!! ............................................................................... ._ .................. ------...... -... ... --~··· • Lynn Fontanne presents Bob Hope with the National Artists Award from the American National Theater and Academy as Steve Allen r top center J and Donald R. Seawell. ANT A chairman r top right J look on. Actress Brenda Vaccaro, who rose to stardom in the movie "Midnight Cowboy" and has s ince won an Oscar nomination and an Emmy, will marry a New York City commercial photographer in two months. Ms . Vaccaro and Charles Cannizzaro met through mutual friends in New York. It will be tht! third mar riage for Ms . Vaccaro and the second for Cann1 izaro Her second marriage. to at torney William Bishop in 1977 , was annulled Cannizzaro, 27, li ves in New York but will move lo Ms . Vaccaro's Beverly Hills home after tht! May 17 wed ding , which will he held at the home o r actress Lee Grant and Joe f'eury in Ma libu. P resident Reagan asked former Sen. Jacob K. Javlts lo accept a U.N . a mbas . sadorship. but the veteran New York Republican didn't accept immediately, a White Houae spokesman said. . \ ' - Author Gore Vidal. saying he 'd like to "abolish the presidency." may quit writing novels and "concentrate on politics before the dummies we've got running the country succeed in burning it down ... He's considering running for a Senate seat. Old a i rplane f llghf sf a lls A vlnta1e plane nown by San Dleso bualnesaman Ted GUdred encountered enclne trouble three quarters ol tb.e way throueb a co m - ml'moratlve fli1ht to Ecuagjor. Gildred and his co-pilot spent the weekend in Panama while repairs were sc heduled on their 1942 Stinson Reliant aircraft. The plane's e ngine has been erratic throughout the fllghl which began March 13 at San Diego's Lindbergh Field. Gild.red's flight duplicates the 18 -da y itinerary established exactly 50 years ago by Glldred's father, who made the trip in an aircraft similar to the one used by C harles Lindbergh on his historic trans ·Allantic solo journey. The Orange County Transit District didn't exactly recruit a stranger when it hired Michael Burns to fill it s n e w position as communications manager. Barnes. from Huntington Beach, has worked the past eight years as director or the news bureau for the Southern California Rapid Transit District in Los Angeles. He will be in charge of virtually a ll of the information emanating from the OCTD headquarters in Garden Grove. whether a news release. a mark~ting s logan, or facts on bus schedules provided by the t ele phone information center . There's some information Barnes doesn 't wis h lo divulge. though, his age and hi s sa lar y, which i s somewhere in the range of $27.564 and $41 ,988 a year R oma n Cathol i c civil rights activist Bernadette Devlin McAliskey, still on crutches after being shot five tim es in a Jan 16 as. s ination attempt, says she will run again for a seat in Parliament. Mrs. McAliskey announced that s he would run as an independent April 9. The by- election follows the death last month of legis lator Fraa.k Maguire, also a Catholic. who sat as an independent. 'Real embarrassment.' $1 m illio n suit file d in N B dru g arr est By STEVE MARBLE Of t~t D•lly Pllol St.ti! Former parking valet Jerry Thomas Wynne says he was walking the car lot, waiting for business at the Newport Beach restaurant to pick up when the drug bust went down. "All of a sudden this guy comes running around the corner pointing a gun at me." r ecalls.the 28·year·old North C arolina native. ··He put the gun to my head and pushed me against the wall He said he was going to blow me away if I moved ." Wynne. a part.time flight in structor, says it took several seconds before he realized the man with th e gun was a plainclothed policeman. The July 3 drug bust. which res ulted in the seizure of SJ grams of cocaine and the arrest of a restaurant cook who now faces fe lony c harges. cost Wynne 24 hours in jail. He says it cost him a lot of embarrass· ment too. Wynne claims he was only an innocent bystander who hap pened to be standing i!l the wrong place at the wrong tame. Fullerton police. who conduct· e d the drug sweep in the rear parking l ot of Dillm 2 n 's Restaurant. say Wynne was ar· rested but never c harged with any crime. Represented by Santa Ana at torney George Chula. Wynne has filed a Sl million lawsuit against the cities of Fullerton and Newport Beach. The suit named 12 policeman. mostly Fullerton officers. and seeks damages for false arrest and Imprisonment, infliction of mental and emotional distress Dally P 1IOI SI.All PllOIO FILES LAWSUIT Ex-valet Wy{tne and assault a nd battery. "Lt's been a real embarrass· ment to me," says the sort speaking blond man. "Even when I tell people what really happened. r get the feeling they don't believe me. "In this country you're s up- posed to be innocent until proven guilty . But in the general public's mind. it seem s like it's just the other way around." Police in both cities say they can't discuss the case because of the lawsuit. One Fullerton investigator, arter being told Wynne's version of the incident. said "some of it is similar to our report. some of it isn't." U4•'Ce /lJtenl119 The Dally Pilot wante to hear observations from its readers -particularly comments about the paper itself. It's easy lo tell us your views. Just call the number below and your messaae will be recorded. Mesaa1ea will.~ transcribed several Umea daUy and delivered to the desk of the appropriate edltor. No clrculaUon calJ•, please. . Tell ua what's on your mlnd. The number i• in service 24 houra a day. 1evenday11 week. 842•8088 lie said he couldn't go beyond that. Newport offiC'ia ls s tress the July 3 incident was a Fullerton c•ase that happened to take place in Newport Beach. Fullerton police sa y this is true. that Ne wport si mpl y provided bal•kup support. Wynne. who says he sold a flight instruction business he owned and opcr<1ted in Colorado before moving to Newport. stat- ed that the whole episode started around 5 that summer night. "I'd Just shown up for work and was waiting around for it to get busy," recalls Wynne. He says thl.' lot was practically empty A fell ow employee was s itting in a Camaro with another man Wynne says, "I was mind· ing m y own business " He says the restaurant worker got out or the car . walked over a nd a sked him if he could cha nge a $100 bill. "So I did. I always kept at least that much change on me when l was working the lot anyway People a lways were asking for change and I was 1:;et· ting tips," sa ys the ex·parkmg valet. Wynne claims he handed the employee five $20 bills and didn 'l think anymore about it. He says he was walking back toward the board where the keys were kept when the action started. · · 1 honestly dldn 't know what the hell was happening," says Wynne. "There were at least 12 policemen, only a couple in uni· form . They handcufred me and I could hear them arguing whether they were going to cut me loose." Wynne says at one point an of· ficer pushed a gun into his cheek and said "if you move two more inches thJs gun will be in your mouth a nd I'll blow your head off." . "l didn't move ... Wynne says. adding that he was pushed In· side a police wagon and ttien thrown up against a wall by another policeman. He claims he was questioned and over· heard more conversation about r eleasing him. "The other 1uy from the restaurant was on the 1round. handcuffed," Wynne explalna. "Th"'• when I reallied the other IUY ln tbe car had been a policeman an undercover fUY " Oran~ Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Monday, March 23. 1981 . ~· ~---­APWor•-le WEEK A FTER WEEK, VOLUNTEERS SCOUR ATLAN TA FOR CLUES TO SLAYINGS Dog h•ndler •nd hi• charge probe deep wood• near ctty'a euburba Atlanta: painful search Death probe afflicted by f r ustrations ATLANTA (AP1 The hunt for the killers or 20 black children is a secretive. seeming· ly disjointed $7 .100.a ·day effort in search of a s uspect or two, or JO, or maybe even 20 "An organ izat ional nightmare," said Timothy Dowd. the retired New York Ci· ty detective who led the inquiry that cracked the Son of Sam case. a series of unexplained at· tacks that left s ix dead and seven wounded in 1976-1977 ··They're no closer now than they were in January," said an FBI source familiar with the in· quiry. Although Atlanta Public Safe ty Commissioner Lee P. Rrown asserts. "W e know a lot more now than we did a day ago, a week ago or a month ago," he acknowledges there's no break in sight. even in two cases in which relatives are suspended. "·What we need most is an eyewitness," said Brown, who oversees the 80·mem ber task force investigating the unsolved deaths of 20 black children and the disappearances of two others in the past 20 months. The investigators have nearly as many causes of death as they have bodies: one victJm was shot, two were struck on the head. one was stabbed. four were suffocated and six were strangled. Six bodies· were so de- composed that investigators don't know how the children died. In a public relations sense, the task force is doomed to at least short·term failure. One problem. Brown says, is that "even if we catch someone respons ible for some of the killings. the search will not be over ." Many investigators feel there are as many as 10 killers. And des pite evidence such as si milar fibers in seven cases. Brown said in an interview there was no evidence to rule out the possibility that all 20 killings were unconnected A It hough there is a widely publicized agreement among law enforcement Jurisdictions to coordinate efforts. all Is not well in the downtown building that houses the Atlanta Metropolitan Task Froce >on Mi ssing and Murdered Chiadren Aside from the problems of multiple mysteries. multiple jurisdictions and mul\iple medical examiners, the task force which has spent about SI million since it was formed last July has other troubles It has had three commanders . Critics say it only recently ac· quired e nough experie nced the nation's murde r capital. to record a 13 percent decrease in homit'ides last year , with 200. The police rate for "clearing" hom 1c1de cases in 1979 was 69 percent, four points below the national avl•rage Thi.' ta s k fo r ce ha s 26 teleµhonc lines for a 24·hour Many investlgators feel there are as many as 10 kzllers. And despzt e evzdence Brown sazd there was no evidence to rule out the poss1b1l1ty that all 20 killings were unconnected homicide inves tigat o rs And tht•re 's a c.-ertain irr itation among members over pay M ost t'riticis m ha s been hurled at Brown, who routinely refuses to comment on the in quiry . He says of the s ilent treat ment. "We're prepared to takl• our lumps on that." The 43·year-old Brown has what Dowd calls the toughest job in America today. and he has spent his life preparing for it. He has master's degrees in sociology and criminology He a doctorate in eriminology. He has worked as a s treet cop and college professor . and 1n Oregon, as a s heriff and county justice services director Atlanta. with a population of 456.200. has crime statistics that are not alarming C'ompared to other big cities. It rebounded from 1979, when it was dubbed hotline Some 150 to 200 calls are received daily with tips or clues When a name 1s added to the list or a hody is round. telephone lines jam In one such wee k. 7 .000 <.'alls wt•rc n•corded. Brown said Thi.' ~pecial force which has imported homicide e xperts and been aided by the FBI, is not working alone I\ $100,000 reward has been of· fe red New York's Guardian Angels are in town. Volunteers hold weekly searches. A psychic was brought in at police ex· pense. and dozens have come on their own. Brown says tips frorn 1.500 psychics have been com· piled for computer analysis. All to no avail But. adds Brown, who has been working non·stop, 18-hour days . "Our efforts are untiring. and Wt' shall continue ·· British inte lligence c hie f double a ge nt? LONDON IAP1 Legislators l'alled on Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government today for a statement on allega. lions that the late Sir Roger Hollis, a former head of British coun· ter·intelligence. was suspected of being a Soviet "mole" and perhaps "the most damaging spy in histor y." Hollis was director-general or the M 15 counter.intelligence service from 1956 to 1965. The Daily Mail newspaper said today that following his retire· ment. Hollis was strongly s uspected of having worked for the Sov· 1ets but he died in 1973 before investigators could prove anything. As some legislators demanded a statement in Parliament by Mrs Thatcher, a spokes man for her offi ce said . "We have noted the report but have no comment We don't make comments on security matters." thz bmf roll ... -·· •1 ·--·--·-- ---------• .,,,..-.-...... ---------··----·· -..·--· ----- " + -_ _. __________ _ .. H/F Pa~• fe11fatl~ t ALONG THE MISSION TllAIL: Evtry year 1bout lhll tJme. when Mlsslon San Juan CaDlttrano draws comidera· ble fUenUon because of the 1wallow1' return, some U>oucht is I veo to bonorio1 the mi.sak>n foundel'. And It's a 1ood lhou1ht.. too. Coal industry strike looms He was, ot course, a Franelscan priest named Junipero Serra. who trekked the lenath of CaUtomla, founding missions and aiding native Indians in the lTOOS. When Spain be1an ill occupation of AJia CaUfomla, FJther S erra Joined ~ the expedition or Oas par de Portola and on July • 16 , 1769, founded the . ~ first of the string, Mis· ~ sion San Diego. TOM MURPHll' : r, ll 's e a sy to r e · I ,,, mem ber when the good padre founded "The J ewel of the Missions" at San Juan Capistr ano. That was In 1776, a year strongly Linked with the birth of a nation. IN MANY CALIFORNIA circles of Roman Catholic lead ershi p, sainthood has been advoc&ted for Father Serr a The first step toward such canonization by the pope. however. 1s beatification. The cause for beatification of Father Serra began 47 years ago, in 193-4, under leadership of Father Maynard Geiger, OFM, archivist for Mission Santa Barbara. He ~athered all the written material and wrote two volumes on Serra's life. Then there was a heanng in 1950. Beatification is a very formal process. with a trial·like hearing held before the oHice of the Roman Catholic Curia. The bishops or California pleaded Father Serra's case. The process even o.i1,,.1i.cS!Mf"IM4• Statue of Serra With I ndian lad al Minion San JU41l CopiltroM involves a devil's advocatte (if you'll pardon the ex· press ion ' who tried to question the saintly qualities or the good father and mission founder According to some Catt-olic sources. one of the prob- lems With Padre Serra's candidacy is a lack or proven miracles LEGF.ND llAS IT, however. that Serra fo 1.1nded each of his m1ss1ons within one day's walk or each other. Judg· i n ~ th(• d istance betwecn some of our missions , the padre mu:,t have bl-en Onl' whale or a walker. Maybt· that alone could count fo r one miracle. That aside . there i!. i.ome anticipation that Father St:rra may soon take the first step toward sainthood. "OlJR BISHOPS OF California have recently peti· lloned Rome on behalf or beatification and sainthood for Father Serra," reported F ather William Krekelberg, who is archivist for Mission San Juan Capistrano. Meanwhile. it Is known that Timothy Cardinal Man· ning of Los Angeles recently met with Pope John Paul ti on t he island of Guam and there were certain prayers sa id 1n our ~tale that the Serra question might have been dis· c·ussed There were also some reports that Cardinal Manning rece1n·d an official telephone call from the Vatican on the question or $t>rra's beatifi cation recently to s uggest that "something 1i. going on " Cardinal Manning has said nolhinJ! on the subject. however IT IS KNOWN that the iK>pe plans an offi cial visit lo California in thl' not too distant future and it would not be unprec(;•dt'nted for an ann ouncement of beatifi cation to c·ome at the same ti me as such a visit by His Holiness. If Serra is elevated to the first step toward sainthood, he would then be known a s. "The Blessed Father Serra .. And that would be blessed indeed for all Californiar.s interested in the ri ch heritage of the Golden State. , W ASHINOTON <AP) - Neaottatora for the •oft coal ln· duatry and the United Mine Workers union reached tenudve a1reement today on • new th~· year contract. But a •trike Friday \ Sta tu to Ty rape law upheld WASHJNGTON CAP> -State "statutory" rape laws do not discriminate against men. a deeply divided U.S . Supreme Court ruled t.OClay. By a S-4 vote, the justices up- held a California law that makes it a crime for men or boys to have sexual intercourse with consenting females not yet 18. The court's majority said the law does not represent a form of unconstitutional sex discrimina· tion just because women and girls cannot be charged with the same crime for having sex with boys not yet 18. FOUR OF THE court's mem- bers . led by Justice William H. Rehnquist, said such state laws do not violate the Constitution's gua rantee or equal protection. Justice Harry A. Blackmon s upplied the vital fifth vote n ecessar y t o uphold the California law. In a separate opinion. he said the California law was a legitimate -and con· stitutional -effort to control the problem of teen·age pregnan· cies. Challenging the California law w e re lawye r s for a young Sonoma County man identified in court docume nts only as Michael M .. who is charged with s tatutory rape in a 1978 incident. Michael was 17 when he and a ~irl identified only as Sharon. then 16, engaged in sexual in· te r c ourse after what a Ca l ifornia court called an "amorous interlude on a park bench." BECAUSE SHARON was not his wife and was under 18, Mic hael wa11 char1ed with s tatutory rape. He now will have to stand trial. If convicted, he could be sente nced to eight ye ars in prison. In his opinion, Rehnquist said, "We need not be medical doc- tors to discern that young men and young wo me n are not similarly situated with respect to the problems and the risks or sexual intercourse." "Onl y women may become pregnant and they s uffer dis· proportiona tely the profound ph ysi c al , e motional and psychological consequences or sexual activity," Re hnquist added. Winter slams Virginia 7 inches of srww closes schools, highways Cocutal "'eatlter LO• doud\ n1QM •ncJ morn nQ no"''"· ot~w•W '•" uuouon Tut"\ O•f' LOW\ ton191\t ·d on,,..,. 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Htltlflt In IMI ,..,.IHI In lffOlldt. , -·-lwf ..... "911 lwell .... ... ,. """ Mo ..... ... ..... Dir Zwma 1 ' 10 t I WJW a.111aMoN(t t J 10 1 1 W$W ,.,.&:'.. J • II t J w .... C-y , • tl t ) • 0 111 ..... MrT1e•r1 \.ltt1tcllMfe. -·----·-. .-.--.__....__ ··--· ..... -···-·-·· by the union'• 180,000 membera 1till appeared lnevitable and UD· Ion prealdent Sam Church pre· dieted lt would last tour to five day1. "We have a settleMent," Church exclaimed to reporters five boura after union and ln· dustry bar1alnera began meetint at a Washington hotel all: 45a.m. The two aides had not talked since last Tuesday and were felt to be further apart on several is- sues than today's surprise a1ree· ment seemed to Indicate. THE UNION'S 39-me11tber bargaining council, summoned to Washington by Church, will take up the proposal Tuesday. union of· flcia said. If ratified by the council, the proposal muat still be approved by the rank·and·fiJe -a process that normally takes 10 days. Church expressed confidence that the pact would win approval. While the union had said last week that process could be shortened. a strike of at least a few days' duration appeared cer· lain. The current pact expires at 9:01 a .m. PST Friday. A contract was desperately needed because, Church said Sun· day, "our people must not suf· fer ." ASKED TODAY what had led to the breakthrough, Church said, "I'm not going to get Into detalls of the laniua"e or the contract before the bargaining council has a chance to see It. .. As he spoke to reporters, Church was accompanied by B.R. Brown, head or the Bituminous Coal Operators Association team of negotiators. Brown said. "The onlv com· ment I could make would be to second what Mr. Church has said and to say it would be inap· propriate to comment at this lime on terms of the tentative settle· ment." Before talks resumed, Church said the industry negotiators were demanding that the UMW make a key concession: that the union give up a contract provision -first negotiated in 1964 -re· quiring the BCOA 's 130 coal com· panies which sl1ned the contract to pay rouchly $1.90 a ton to the Uft· ion's health and retirement fWMh for each ton of non-union coal purchased. Warsaw walkout canceled WARSAW , P oland <AP) Solidarity's Warsaw chapter called ore a two·hour warning strike today after the Communist Party Polit· buro accused the in- dependent labor federa· lion of "creatin1 a state of anarchy" with Its pro· tests against the beating of union leaders by police. Solidarity 's national leaders a nnounced a meeting toda y in Bydgoszcz. where the police action took place. The union called on all local chapters to refrain Crom strike actions until the leaders decide what to do. SOLIDARITY'S Warsaw loc al. the largest In the country, said it would remain on strike alert and act ac· cording to the decisions of the national union leaders . Meanwhile. Wars aw Radio reported that Gen . Wojclech Jaruzelskl. Poland's premier and defens e minister. met Sunday in southern Poland with other Warsaw Pact com· manders dlrect1n1 the Soviet Bloc spring maneuvers now under way In Poland and lta communiat neighbors. OFFICIALS IN Byd1<>11c1, an lnduatrlal city 170 miles northweat of W araaw. ordered the police t.o clear a union delegaUon out ot the city hall lut Thunday after aovernment repreaen· tatlvea 1uapended talka on unionJ1aUon demand• by farmers holdinl a •it· In at the local held· quarters ot tht pro· communl1t United Peauntl' Party. About 200 police went into ac· tlon, ud three ot tbe Solldarlty men were beaten 10 badly thtY" bad to bt holpltaJJ1ed. i ldentitu discovered? David Hartman's chat with amnesia victim "Jane Doe" on television last month may have led to her identity. The woman found naked and near death in a Florida state park s~ven months ago, appeare~ on the p~ogram i~ a.n effort to find her identity. Investigators said today it ts most likely she is Cheryl Ann Tomiczek, 34 , of Roselle. Ill., who dropped from sight seve n years ago. Alllericans recall Archbishop's death By The Associated Press Americans fasted, marched and prayed for an end to violence in El Salvador as churches and groups in several cities prepared to mark the anniversary of the assassin ation or Salvador an Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero. Churches planned me morial services, while groups opposed to U.S. support for El Salvador 's military.civilian junta were organiz ing more rallies and vigils in memory or the cleric slain a year ago Tuesday. On March 24, 1980, an alleged right.wing terrorist fired one bullet through Romero's heart. killing the 62·year-old ar chbishop instantly as he celebrated Mass in a San Salvador hospital chapel. In Hartford, Conn .. about 30 people. protesting what they say is U.S. government s upport for "right·wing terror squads" in El Salvador. fasted24 hours in memory of Romero. The Hartford Coalition for Justice in El Salvador sponsored Sun· day'sfast. whichspokesmen said was staged in support or a three·day hunger strike being conducted by about l~ other organizations op- posing U.S. aid to El Salvador. Our exclusive sport shirts ·in cotton gingham The gingham s hirt has lo ng been a favorite among Brooks Brothers men. We offer these cot- ton ginghams in Tattersalls of blue/black, red/ blac k, gold/black, brown/blac k-and in small checks of navy, go ld , red or blue, o n whi tc. Butto n-down collar, so it is correct worn with a tic or without. Sizes 141/2 to 161/2. $31.50 Ust your Brooks Broth1rs chargt account or American Express. HTA•USHID 1111 ~~ ~~11~ J'urntshtngt for~ Womfn :r 8oy.s ~)0 WEST r m STRBBT, LOS ANGELBS. CALIF. 90014 PAStll9)N ISLAND, NBWPORT BI!AOi 92660 ~ffiU~ Embezzled cash to Ali? Boxer reportedly unaware of source LOS ANGELES <AP > - Former heavyweight boxln1 champion Muhammad AU was ' pald about $1 million from funds alletedly embeuled from the Welb Fargo BanJt, but there ls · no evidence he knew the source of the money, the Los Ange lea Times reported today. The newspaper said it was told by sources close t-0 the investiga- tion that the payments, in the form of Wells Fargo cashier's checks. were personally en· dorsed by Ali and drawn on ac· counts held by now-defunct Muhammad Alt Professional Sports, Inc. of suburban Santa Monica. Attempts to reach Ali were un· successful. His home telephone has been disconnected and no new number was given. GEORGE CAULFIELD, a Wells Fargo vice president, declined to comment on the re· port. The bank has flied a civil suit, naming some MAPS of-. ficials, contending $21 .3 milllon was $ipboned from the bank 11· legally over a two year period. Ali received a fee from MAPS for the use of his name. He bu dlsasaociated himself from the aroup. The former champion pre· vlously has said he received about $1 million for selling his name and providing other pro· motlonal help to MAPS and its founder. Aarold J . Smith. AS RECENTL \' as January, the Times quoted sources as saying, Ali was paid about $100,000 fro m allegedly em- bezzled funds . The sources said All 's la wyer s returned the money. Ali -a close friend of Smith, who wa.s named in the bank suit Orange COut DAIL:Y Pilar/Monday, March 23, 1981 Piertop protest Feller files suit against Enquirer has been interviewed by the FBI but is not considered a·sus· peel, the Times quoted sources as saying. Smith has been in hiding for several weeks. More than 350 demonstrators marched through Santa Cruz and to the municipal wharf Saturday to protest the Reagan ad· ministration's proposal to grant off shore oil drilling leases along Northern and Cen- tral California. The r ally was sponsored by the Save Our Shores ecology group. LOS ANGELES (AP > - Minus three of the original jurors and three of the original co-defendants, Carol Burnett's $10 million libel suit against the National Enquirer was drawing to a close today a s a nother celebrity's legal attack on the tabloid was beginning. panel, which originally num- bered 12 panelists and two alternates, shrank to 11 during the trial. One juror was dis· missed for undisclosed reasons. Khomeini hackers incited riot Miss Burnett's final testimony and both sides' closing ar gu- ments were scheduled today. Deliberations are likely to begin Tuesday after jurors receive in- structions from the judge . Meanwhile, baseball Hall-of· Farner Bob Feller has filed a S3 million libel s uit in Cleveland against the Lantana , F'la .,-based publication. charging it defamed him in an April issue. THE ITEM that triggered the complaint referred to Fe ller as "a shameless m oocher " who is "living on handouts," Ute suit contends. Anothe r cele brit y recently challenged the Enquirer to sue 1him. Drawing applause from the / studio audience, Johnny Carson denounced the publication on the "Tonight Show" for an ite m that his marriage was heading ror divorce. Two juro r s h earing the Burnell case were sent home after they disclosed that they knew about Carson's televised attack on the Enquirer. The IN CIVIL trials, 12 jurors are not necessarily requir ed . Nine votes are needed for a decision. On Friday, Judge Peter Smith r e m oved three co-defendants, leaving the Enquirer as sole de- fendant in Miss Burnett's s uit H e di s missed a ccu s ations a ga ins t editor Iain C alder . gossip columnist Ste ve Tinney and a distributor , ARA Services Inc. Other celebrities who have charged that the Enquirer print ed untrue stories a bout them in· elude: Actress Shirley Jones and her husband, Marty Ingels, who filed a $20 million suit over a full-page Enquirer story saying that Ingels' mis behavior was driving his wife to drink. -Actor Rory Calhoun, who filed a $10 million suit in connec· lion with a story reporting that the actor has cancer. -Comedian Paul Lynde, who asks $10 million in damages, contending the Enquirer raL!ely reported his career bad been dama«ed by drunkenness. LOS ANGELES (AP> -Police blame supporters ot Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini for most of the violence in a three-hour clash with anti-Khomeini protesters that forced the closing of Wils hire Boulevard and prompted the arrests of 10 people. Mounted police drove back the angry crowd of a bout 1.200 Sun- day. One man was treated for a broken nose and two anti· Khomeini demonstrators were tossed into a lake as several scuf. fies flared up between the two groups near downtown MacArthur Park, police said. rep!°eJ.erious injuries were NEWS BRI [f S P olice Capt. Ro bert --------Taylor said his officers con- fiscated tear gas, bottles; pipes and chains from the pro-Khomeini de monstrators . "They're the ones t hrowing rocks . They're the ones beating people up," Taylor said. Supporters of the Iranian revolutiona ry leader a nd members of the Communist Revolutionary Party gathered and began chant· ing "Death to fugitive criminals" hours before a scheduled 11 a .m . demonstration in the park by the anti-Khomeini Iranians in Exile group, police said. Gun111an dlr• BALDWIN HILLS <AP> -An armed man who held off police for eight hours despite the use of tear gas to flush him out or his barricaded apartment died of a possible heart attack after leaping from a second-floor window, authorities said. Willie Hudspeth. 37, died of a possible cardiac arrest at Brot- man Memorial Hospital about an hour after the incident ended Saturday, a hoepital spokeswoman sald. Police seid lbe sie1e began shortly after Hudspeth allegedly threatened a neighbor with a gun. Police fired more than 20 tear "I made a New Year's Resolution to lose 20 pounds:' "I can buy a size smaller in clothes than I ever could and that's just the greatest to m e." IM1b1l' <:mmpap.1. Thy Oe>'1~m·r .1ntl Holidav Sp11 lit•ollh l'luh nwniht-r LAST DAYS TO GET 1980 RATES! It's not too lat.e to make your New Year's Resolution to shape, trim, firm and just feel great! But join now before rates increase. Drop by for a free guest tour today. Hol~ spa I lealth Clubs for Men and Women gas canisters into the apartment when they railed to get Hudspeth Jo surrender. Hudspeth reportedly fi red a shot as oHa cers entered the build· ing. then jumped from a second-floor bathroom window. Custody t"Ohffl'•tf!'d PASADENA t AP 1 As the birth or her child drew nearer. "s urrogate mother " Denise Lucy Thrane continued he r battle for custody of the ba by she once agreed to give away. The divorced mothe r of three from Arcadia agreed last year to conceive and bear a baby ror J ames Noyes or New York City and his wtfe. But aft er she was artif1 c1ally inseminated in June with Noyes· sperm. s he decided s he wanted lo keep t he infant Noyes and his wife s ued for c ustody of the baby. which 1s d ue to be born any day now Mad bull fellfl'd SAN YSIDRO IAP> A ram paging bull gored a racehorse. sm ashed a truck a nd knocked two cowboys to the ground before being killed by shotgun blasts. a uthorities said. After breaking free while being taken from a ha uli ng truck Sunday, the l,400·pound Charolais breeding bull knocked another horse into the Tia Juana River a nd led a wild. two·hour romp along the Mexican border Cannon '"t.fire• SAN Dl EGO (AP ) A cannon a ccident durm g the re- enactment of the 1803 battle of San Diego Bay has left a 27-year.old Ramona man with a serious hand injury. Lawrence Peebles was injured when a cannon misfired during the mock battle commemorating the skirmish between American and Spanish forces. -· ~ I .. -' tC z -II. LA COUNTY C1'•uworth/Northrid1• 9143 De Soto Ave. at NordhofT. clll31882-6912 ltnelno 17031 Ventun Blvd., w.-ot Bal~. 12\Sl 98&-6330 Hollywood 7080 HollyWood Blvd., Comer lA Bru Aft. Cerrftoe/Llak••ood Announcln1 our neweet location 11881 Del Amo Blvd. In Cenitot at Plon"r• 3 block• Eaat of eo& Pneway, tlll3l 92t·l&14 Oranl• 6112 Eau Kai.Ila Ave., Weat or"'-tJn Ave .. 17141 6a9-244J We1\.fnh,"4lr 67&7 WH lmh11t.er Ave. 11t Ooldttn Weat, 17141894·3387 INLAND LOCATIONS at. Wa Me41eal Center, 12131469-630'7 Lone leaelt 4101 AUanuc Blvd .. Com•r otCanon, 12131 <tU,8874 .._Lo. A ...... 1914 So. Bundy fnnr Olympic 81vit •. 12131 820-7511 ....,._.. 20CMO Hawthomt Blvd. al Otl Amo Blvd., In I.he a.. Plua C.nt.r, C213l 642-aal I ORANOB COUNTY Buena Ptark 510 So. BtKh Blvd. South otUncqln Ave., 17141826-0381 C0ti1a ..... 2300 Harbor 8lvd .. 18thJncl Thrifty Dnlfl, 17141649-33U MINton Viejo 2t401 Allele P\wy. al 9.tn Diero "9tway.17W 770.0922 Mont.c.lalr 53&0 Ollw &reel lat Central Ave. Opt>OAIW! MontMomery Ward I. 1714> 828-3693 Rlve...We 4020 Madi.on (at Arlin,tc>nl, 17141 887-J3lG San BerMNlao 83S North H St. al 3rd 1oppo11li. Central City Malit 17J41888-1361 --..................................... ,.. .-__. ... ,...,_ .. ' Bus fare hike Was inevit'.able Mon lhu one Oran1e CoUnty Trana it District bus rider m uat be wOGderina why the district board of dlrecton c hoe to lnatitute a two-atep prlclnJ poUcy that will ral1e Jar• to 75 centa ~I peak commutlna time• and eo centa durin1 other hours of the day. Since the district beian operatin1 buses nine years ago. a single fare Polley has applied. Today, regular ridera pay 50 cents per one-way trip, r~1ardless of the t.ime they board the bus. . Under the new policy, hl1her fares will be charged between6and9a.m. and3and6p.m. T he theory behind charging a higher fare during peak periods ls to keep buses moet available to those persons who are commutinJ. It is during these commuting hours that the demand for bus seats is at a premium. The fare structure encourages riders who don't need to be on the bus during commuting hours to ride at other times -at reduced rates. Noone, of course, is happy with a rate increase. But the district seemed to have little choice but to impose one. particuJarly in light of a state law that requires that a fixed percentage of its operating revenue be generated through the f arebox. Perhaps riders can ,·est somewhat easier knowing that officials say this will be the last fare increase for at least two years . Vets need centers Sen. Alan Cranston has vowed to fight the Reagan Administration's plan to close 91 storefront counseling centers for Vietnam veterans across the country by Sept. 30. The centers were established by Congress just a year ago, after an eight-year effort. Cranston seems to be getting congressional support. Both the House and Senate vete rans affairs committees have voted to e xtend funding for the centers through fis- cal 1982. The Reagan budget cutters insist VA hospitals can provide adequate counseling for the Vietnam vets. Cranston says this is not so. noting that the storefront centers offering peer counseling and job help have been heavily patronized by veterans and their families who suffered psychological. 1f not physical. wounds as a result of Vietna m service. While the 300,000 men who suffered physical wounds in the war have received needed treatment at VA hospita ls . Cranston and supporters of the counseling cen· ters contend all of the 2.8 million men and women who serv~d in the Vietnam theater are entitled to help if they need it. Apparently they do. Orange County was one of the last areas to receive funding for a storefront center . Si n ce it opened in Anaheim last November. its three counse1ors have served an estimated 400 veterans and de· pendents . There is no doubt many suffered deeply from society's failure to adequately recognize and assist them . If President Reagan was sincere in calling for such recognition. he should not remove this crumb that has been thrown to them Better place to cut Government cost-cutters seeking ways to reduce federal spending could make considerable progress without going outside the boundaries of Washington , D.C. And in so doing they might start to unsnarl the awful ta ngle of the ever-growing federal bureaucracy. For example: When Franklin Roosevelt took office in 1933. his White House staff numbered 37. Today the com - bined work force of the President's staff and the Ex- ecutive Office of the President has grown to a startling 1,200. The Bureau of Budget then was operated by 35 e mployees. Today there are 600 workers in the Office of Management and.Budget. On Capitol Hill. the staffs of senators and represen- tatives number.ed 10.000 last year. In 1947, 2,000 office workers served both houses of Congress. Jn one staffing study, the whole mess was described as ··a bloated and disorderly grab bag of separate and mutually suspicious staffs, units. councils. boards and groups" in which too many workers spend their time "creating nuis ance work. inventing projects and hatching intrigues." Obvious ly these tax-supported hordes tend to impede rather than smooth the processes of orderly government. There's a move afoot in Congress to cut committee staffs by 10 percent. The figure probably should be doubled a nd the cuts extended from the White House itself down through the entire bureaucracy. And that would be a fine example for states, counties and cities suffering from the same over-staffing disease. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321 Boyd/Toe touch By L.M. BOYD Take orr your shoes and socks. Cloee your eyes. Ask so meo ne to put a rew familiar object.a a comb. teaspoon or door key -on the floor within eaay reach of Tho mHt have dU· ferent kinda of llma bean• In Japan than here. I've '"" better pllea or rocks ln cow pas tures t h an that sculptur e at South Cout Plaza. R.L.D. ' yo ur reel. Tou c h the se articles with your toes. Can you identify them by toe touch? Most people can't. But if they touch them with their fingers. they know Im- mediately which is which. No. your toes are not as capable as your ringers In this matte r of tactile rec· 01nltlon. Why is this? Lack oC sensitivity In those toes or just lack oltralnlng? Hunc hed over ts the normal poelure of the gorilla. U l were a cartoonist, I'd , draw two of those beast.a, a mother atandinc stooped, her ofr1prin1 1tandln1 1tral1ht up, and ln the caption quote the mother: "Honey, you've aot to do somethln1 about your potture. ·' You know lhat Willlain Al· len White uld: "A llttl• learnln1 la not a den•erom thins to one who doea ncJt mlltalte It for a 1reat deal.•• Monday. Mat0h 23, 1981 -Thom11 P. H1ley1Publl1"4tr T~s l<ttvl,tEdrtor 8•r~r1.Krelblc:h /Edltorl11 P991 Editor Jack Anderson Haig style troubles Congress W ASRJNGTON -Secretary of State AJexander Hals made h1' flnt appearance belore the ffo\lle Foretp Affairs Commit- tee • few daya aao. and hi• performance drew mixed re· vlewa from the members pres· ent. It was a closed session, called to hear Haig explain the Reagan admlnlatra- Uon'e policy on El Sal - vador. For several or the committee members. It wa s their first exposure to Haig. B ot h hi s c r itics a nd his fans were i nflue n ced as much by Haig's personal style as by the substance of what he was seying. Some like what he s aid and the way he said it; m any didn't. Haig's brusque military man- ner turned off some of the mem- bers. "He says thi ng~ and then he glares at you," one con- gressman told m y a ssociate Lucette Lagnado. O thers compl ained that he "talked down·· to the committee in the manner or a general lee· luring a group of junior officers. This especially irritated senior members or the_committee, who felt they were being con- descended to by aomeone they consider a n ewcomer to tbe complelllUes of Latln American policy. On the other hand, some com- mittee members round Halg'a no-nonsense style re freahln1. "Secretary Haig Is an Im- pressive man," one Republican said with obvious entb\lslum. "He's pe r!ertly forthright in what he says, cle11r and de- cisive." ' THE PRO-HAIG members, in· eluding a couple or Democrats, said they -were ins pired by Haig's setr-confidence and blunt approach lo problems. Far from being worried by the prospect or Haig in charge or the nation's foreign policy. these legislators said they were reassured by the closed-door briefing. Haig had exactly the opposite effect on other committee mem- bers. "We've watched Kiss- inger. Vance. even Mus kie," s aid one veteran. "a nd they we re all pretty sophisticated ('Om pared to Haig." Anothe r me mber said Haig "dis played a bitter contempt for Congress." and attributed it to the general's role as White House chief of staff during the final months of the Watergate mess. What o ff e nd e d sever al legislators was Haig's less than diplomatic insistence that he ex- pected cooperation from Congress and was sick and tired of Oppotltion from Capitol Hlll. Thia st.ruck some or his lhiteners as evidence that Haig might be leaa dedicated to the system of lealalative checks on the Ex- ecutive Branch than he Insisted he was at his Senate conflrma· lion hearings . BEYOND HAIG'S personal style, his critics wer e concerned about his 11ee ming obsession with 3 military solution to the Salvadoran situation. They got the impression he was merely paying lip service to the need for economic and social solutions to El Salvador's problems At one point, Rep. J onathan Bingham. 0 -N. Y . challenged Haig's assertion that Cuba was at the core of the Salvadoran conflict. The secretary backed orr. a('knowledging that there would still be problems even without Cuba. Haig's impact on the Foreign Affairs Committee was perhaps best s umm e d up b y o n e Republican m e mbe r who op- p oses the a dminis tration's m i lita ry approach in El Salvador. "He is extreme ly arti"ulate. and has an excellent ('O mmand o f t h e English language," he said of ll ai~. add lntc : "Re's brilliant, actually." But lb• congressman said he Intends to keep an eye on the secretary to make s ure he "doesn't get out or hand." INTELLIGENCE DIGEST : The Iraqi army lt quietly con· solldatlng its hold on the ler· rltory It has seized from Iran. Intelligence reports speculate that Iraq will form a separate Arab state on the occupied ter- ritor y. It would probably be recognized by most Arab nations . U.S. strategists believe that Soviet Presi d e nt Leonid Brezhnev Is presslng for a sum· mil meeting as ihe best stage for fulminating against the neutron bomb He revealed his attitude in a secret letter to ex-President J1mmyCarter "Weare prepared to enter into negotiations on this matter at any moment," wrote Brezhnev i.everal months ago. "SU('h an agr eem e nt wo uld respond to the spirit of the limes, to lht> intert>Sls of strengthening µea('e and detente " -THF. KREMUN e ither e mploys in competent English translators ur puts out distorted ver s ion ~ of impor tant com ~ munical1ons ller e is the secret State Departme nt appraisal after comparing thl' texts or a recent dorumcnt: "Soviets in· it1ally p ve us only English- language version We now have Russian languaJ,!e text And it is ev ide nt Sov i e t English translation was inaccurate in several pl ares " Amencan analysts are wor- ried about North Korean die tator Kim II Sung's next move A St.'Crt~t analysis points out that his "efforts to undermine the (South Korean ' govern ment throu~h polttirnl subversion anri gut•rrilla "'urfun· haH' failed. that h(' proba bly experts' ~nulh Kon·~· 111 rnakl' maJOT 1m pr<>vt.•m t.•nb in its defense capab1ht1l·~" and that the "Unit C'd St alt.·~ reall y ha~ no intention of withdrawing all of its combat fon·e~ from Kon•a .. Concludes tht• <•nulysis 'These unsettling factors su~gl·~t that we may havt• t.•ntt.•rc•d a 1a•riod when tht' risk of war 11C·c·u rrinj( 1s V<'ry high Pyon~.,ang may mis calculatt.• and ;.te·t out of a SL·nse that the• longer a dc·<·1sion lo al tempt r<.'unif1 callon by military •+ mea ns 1s delayed, the less viable forr(' remums as an acceptable option " Andy Rooney English • IS the most practical language When I liste ned lo P resident Reagan 's d e nuncia tio n o f federal programs designed to s upport bilingual education in the United States the other eve· nlng, 1 would have stood and cheered if I hadn't been em- barrassed about agreeing with s uch a conservative. hard-hat opinion. It would have been awkward for me to stand at the tim e anyway, because I was watching t elevision fro m the comfort or an easy chair in my Ii ving room and I had a drink in my hand. "It is absolutely wrong," Rea gan said . "and against American ron cepts to have a bi · I i n g u a I e du c a - tion program th at is now o p e nl y , a dmittedl y de dicated to pr eserving t heir native language and ne ver getting them adequate in English so they can go out into the job market and participate." He was referring, of course, to the large number of c hildren in our srhool system now who speak only Spanis h and, to a lesser extent. to the large Sydney Harris. num ber who speak only "Black English." This may not be much of a proble m in your hom etown , but it is if you live in Los Angeles, Miami or New York. The very concept or language calls for one syste m of word-use to be spoken and writte n by ever yone inter est ed in com· municatlng with one another. Ir we're going to understand each other, we all have to agree on what words s tand for what ideas. You c;ould suddenly de· cide to rail a chair a franakapan it you wanted to. but no one would know what you meant. In English we call a ch,!ir a chair and all English-speaking people understand IT IS WRONG for any large number of people to decide they want to speak another language because they already speak it and because it's part of their he ritage . It's part o f what Spanish-speaking people should have been willing lo give up when they came here. Language Is an emotional Is· sue, which is why a lot or people will be irritated by what I just said. Some of us may le~rn two or three languages i n our lifetime. but we're only sen· time ntal about the one we picked up by osmosis from our parents when we were small children. E n glish-speu k1nJ{ pcopl.:. espedally Amt•rit'ans. hav(' always been act'used of being pig-headed in their refusal to do bus iness in anyon e e lse's la nguage. We 've --been accused of using our econo mic and military ~usc le to shove our langu~ down foreign throats No doubt we were often guilty or some form of national conceit, but a s far as the Englis h language goes. we probably have a lot to be conceited a bout. It is a very good, very useful tool. It has double the number or words of any other language and is probably the mos t prer1se language on earth. IF WE'VE BEEN overbearing as soldie rs. tourists or bus1 nessmen when it came to insist· ing everyone who wanted to talk to us speak in English. we have been more democralir about ac· cepling foreign words into our l a n guage . We 've tak e n in fore ign words j us t a s we've take n in immigrants We don't have the same han~ups about the purity or our language as the French do, for instance. and as a result, English is a more useful language than Frenc h . Evidence that we are not language s nobs is the fact that some thing like 75 percent or all the word!i we use are derived from some other language. Tht•rt• 1~ a ~·KXJ ca~t· t<J hi: mad(' for En~lbh a~ the one in ternat1onal l:mJ?ua~c· 1f tht• duy ('ver comt•s whC'n wt· havr nne Not only 1s F.nghsh tht.• languag<· with thl' most worcb. hul a lso it 1H•e ms to be.• lht• lan~uagt.• most lH'l't.'pl able to olh.:r p1·oplt• IF A VOTF. wen' takl'n a mong all the people in the world and they wcr<' askl'd to rhoose fivc languattcs in ord er of pref erencc. c·aC'h nat wnality would no douht rank Its own language first. so the rt• wou ldn 'l be any agret•menl on the first choi ce. But th(' people of 1111 nations • would beyond doubt m a ke English their Sl'<·ond choice S panis h 1s a m ;1gn 1fi ctc•nt languag<' with a ~rt·at literary tradition and a sound to 1l that is better than F.nglish. and I can understand anyone's relu<.'tance to g1 vc it up "Bl at.'k English'' 1s not a language at all. Some great words und expressions have com<• from it and they'll be taken into s tandard English along with so m any other good words English has adopted. After that , It should be rejected and abandoned as soon as possi· ble just as anything railed "Black Arithmetic" would be if IL rlaimcd 2 limes 2 equals 5. Storytelling art probably can't he learned Why can some people write a the author r eveals himself as a The fictlooaJ talent, It occun sellers have lhi~1 knack · a':t : story that you believe and storyteller or not to me, is more like being an IC· m atter how sha ow or cont v others cannot? I baven:t the At an early age, I knew 1 was tor than a writer per "· You or even meretricious the bootts vaguest answer to thia question, a writ.er, and not much later are either an act.or or you are may !>e· the public responds to but I am cer· than that I knew I would never hopeless; you can either throw their 1maglnatlve universe. taln that U\e write a ahort story, much led a yourHlf Into another character, atorytellln1 novel, because I totally lack tbe and become that character, or a bll lty has ability to create convlndn1 you remain a dumb atlff tlod n o t h I n I tharaC!tera who walk and talk oo mouthing tlnet no one believes. whataoever to thtlr own power and carry their The actor has the lma1lnallve do with an1 own authenticity with them. power-to pro,_ct himself out of k i n d o f hla akin and into another's: lllerary aklll to•• OP THE rtneat wrtten Ukewlse. the born 1toryteller or mertt. .,. natural 1toryt.llet1, · •b11e can make other people come e>lMn are not. And aome of tbt alive under hlJ pen. It may be no moat deplorably d11lel1DL accident that the 1reateat styU.ta have the natural -1ft of maater or creatlng characters, fiction, and llttl• ei.e. It la Dickena wu alao an tmmenaety al.m09t lite bllnl doubl•~. aucc ... tuJ public nsader of h1I or bllftl able to whlatJ• thr'OQlb novel•. c ban11n1 votu and yo1u talt.h -a knack that lJ lr· peraooallty u he read. By DOW I unpick up a Qew mystery or •PY novel and read one P•I• to know If I want• lo take It home and dip Into It. Jutl a rew lines of dlalo1. or a p•n•raph of dt1crlptlon. and relevant to anyt.h1n1 elff. Moat of the popular but· THF. Wll.L rannot be made to do the job or the Imagination: no aklll or artifice can conu>enaate for a lack of the storytelllng ability. In fiction, It la what Sir James Berrie said about charm: ''If you have It. you don't need anything else; Lr you don't have It, nolh1n1 else he I pa.'' So many ned1Un1 novellJu would save themMJvea years of 1rl•f and dluppolntment If they honestly tt1t1d themselves for the ~b1olut. phcb that la requlred to make lh nctlonal •cal• rtn1 true. -. ... ... . .. . . -- OBITUARIES Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Man::h 23, 1981 H/F Women Marines: conihat role? .. • PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. l AP) - Marine Pvt. Michele Funke th1n.k.a the day ls comJna when women will be on the battlefteld lllbting wars aloo11kle men. Why else, she reasons, would the Marine Corps be putting her throuth com bat training. The 19·year-old St. Charles, Mo .. recruit la one of about 120 women ln the fJrst female Marine boot camp to un- dergo combat exercises. THE WOMEN ARE firing M-18 rifles, tossing hand grenades, dodging mlnes and boobytraps, and goine through various combat field exercises. Marine officials are quick to say that women are not being primed for the battlefield. "Thia is in no way related to com- bat," said Lt. Col. Paul Barra, com - manding officer of the Weapons Train- ing Batlalion at Parris Island's Marine Corps Recruit Depot. The facility is the only Marine camp where women recruits are trained. Last year, 2,500 women went through 'basic training here. MARINE SPOKESWOMAN Gurutery Sgt. Judy Vina said the combat training is .. defensive familiarization only." RECRUITS LISTEN TO WEAPONRY INITRUCTtONS M•rtnea tr•lnlng t•malea In combat t.chnlqu•• SIGHTING INSTRUCTIONS ON RIFLE RANGE Wom•n tr•lnee pr..,.r•• to ftre M-11 Commissione d FOR THE RECORD NO MEDALS Coast Guard Ensign THIS YEAR Lori A. Keller, daQghter or Charles E . and Lois Seldon of 25311 Via Piedra Blanca. Laguna N ig u e l , wa s c om · missioned upon gradua· lion from Officer Can. didate School at Yorktown, Va. DEATH NOTICES ........ FOUNTAINVALL£Y COMMUNITY HOSPITAL l"e-.ry27 M< .ind M r \ fl\-u\ KOWlllclyk , Irvine. OOy Mr end Mn Warr~ Jone\, (OSI• Me\•,CJlfl ......... "11 M r •no Mr\ Freoen<o B•rrtoo. F"ount•tnV.tlfty, 9irl M t •AO Mn Edw•rd Paul HMn1 1n9tot'l B•~n.oov Svs•nC••v. FOYnl••n V•11ey, C>Oy Mr •nd M r\ A1crwrd Gf'nl•r. Hunt 1n9ton 8~.c:n oir• M f ·~ M') Sl"l1•1\ ("O\I l=OtJr'lllll•n ll•lley bOv M' •nd Mo ~bOdn Shllh ,.:oun11111n HOPKISS V•lltr,Qtrl IRA J HOPKINS. resident IM•tt11 of South La0 una. c·a Passed Mr •no Mn cn.rltt e.r,,.,, Hunl ,.. •no1on 8Pdlch 9irf VATICAN CITY (AP> -The 1 .800 lay em p Io ye-es at t h e Vatican will not receive free papal medals this year for the first time in memory because of a dispute o ver s ilve r , bronze and charity. In the past . wh1te - collar workers such as clerks and typists got a silver m e dal. Blue - coll ar worke r s lik e mechanics got a bronze one. "The new trairung is not a change in the Corps' policy of not assigning women to combat roles," she said. ''Its purpose is to provide women with the bas ic skills necessary to function and survive in a field environment." But the recruits themselves are con- vinced the training is the first step toward assigning women to the infan· try . Ms. Funke said females a re destined for the battlefield "or they wouldn't have women doing things like this. I, for one, am willing to go." KATHER INE FAUCETT, 25, of Springfield, Mo., said she was frightened when s he found out s he would be among the first women to get the battlefi eld training. Bu\ she s aid· "I've been looking forward to this for a long time. Some- day. women will be going to war and it's good for us to know." Ms . Faucett made the comments while waiting in line at the firing range. Dressed in camouflage battle fatigues. the 5-fool-5, 110-pound recruit sat on a benc h and balanced an M-16 rifle between her knees. ' rn front of her, women lay prone, cradling rifles and firing at targets 300 yards away . BARRA SAID THE women are as capable as the men on the firing range. "I hope when they leave here, they can pick up a rifle, properly handle it , and engage a target with it," he said. The officer said he hopes women never a re assigned to ball.le roles. "The Germans had women in combat on the Russia n front and the Israeli s used them in the Golan Heights and both had poor experiences with them as far as casualties:· he s aid. M arme Commandant Gen. Robert Barrow approved the combat training in October after a survey of commands nationwide s h owed women were graduating from boot camp without the skills necessary to be effective in a com bat support unit. Such units are behind the front battle lines. "Women will gain credibility when fitting into these units," said Capt. Joan Van Allen, a training officer at Parris Island. "And. I think they will feel more like they a re a part of the Marine Corps." Missile on target POINT M UGU <AP> For the third time, a U.S. Navy Tomahawk Cruise missile scored a direct hit on a target ship in the Navy's offs hore Pacific Mis - sile Test Center The submarine-l aunched anti-s hip missil e was fired from the USS Guitarro while the submarine was s ub- m er ged. according to Lt. j.g. Susan Glutting a\\a\' on MarC'h 22. 1981 lie M r •no Mo Slt•tn HOiion. Hun!-.----------·------------------~~:~o~~"o~nMl~~~hs~9~';"~ on91onemn,9~rc11z Pomet $!0 716 of courpons M' •nd Mr\ O•v1d Vaugh-an. Foun and has been a n~s1dent of •••nv•11.,.00Y • Sout h Laguna. Ca ~1 n re M.trcll• 1955 Ill' IS ~un·I\ rd by hlS M r •nO Mr\ M.tn..-I Cn..orrt Co•I• v.1fe Emmu. 2 son~ Ho"·ard M•w·9''1 AMrc:fll \' llopkinsorSouthLafCuna. Mr •ndMr•o .. oc:1 1<1n9.Hun11n111on with April bus SS Ca and l Warren llopktns Bu en Qtrl M.lrc ll• an pa of Las Veitas. Nevada; he IS Mr •nd Mr• ""'"' Fo,.t••. Hunt • a I s n s u r \' I ,. (' d b y 6 1n9ton a .. cn, 9"' g r a n d C' h 1 Id re n a n d 4 Mr and Mr\. H>0m•s M<C.or1ny Jr . gr ea l grand C' hi Id re n Fount.tinV•lu~~:;ic1h,0 Ser\' ices Wiii be held on M r •nO M r. S1tpnen e.n .. ••n That's right. An OCTD April bus pass... or other participating OCTD pass c lil Wednesda\'. March 25. 1981 F'ounldlnll•ll•r.oov h ,. . db 'd I ti t c II 636 RIDE f th a at 1 I OOAM at Pac·1fic· View' Mr .no Mr• Alin 0.90.Hun11n9lon means more t an un 1m1te us " es. sa es OU e s. a -or e e .. cn bOv d I T. d b M emorial Park C{lapel. M.l•c11iz Now, you also get coupons good for ad ress c osest to you. 10 or er y c Cl r 0 n a de l M a r \ c a Mr •nO Mr\ Mdrk Ellsber<y Foun th ff h b I h b ma1·1, send a check or money order., 636 ·RIDE Interment at Pac1ftt' View 1••"11•11••·11"1 e 0 erS S OWn e OW W en YOU UY M emorial Park Parif1c an Aprilpass. That 'sabiggerbargain payable to OCTD to: Orange County view Mortuar~· directors Re~uuees than ever before!!! Don't waste money Transit District, Box 3005, Garden J 1 e at the pump. For just $17.50* a month Grove, CA 92642. Se Habla Espanol llATHS ELSEWHERE in ~late on regular routes ($13.00 students), '.I you can ride as often as you want-The OCTD monthly bus pass is good news. Pass it on! NEW YORK GPI 0 . John Rogge, 77. a former l ' S assistant allorne} !(eneral who won conv1c lions th11t broke up thr lluey L on iz po l1t1 ca l machine in Lou1s1ana. died Sunday PARIS 1 /\P 1 )fetropolltan Georl(es, 88, Ea s tern Orthodox a rchb~hop of France and Western Europe, dird here Sunday followin1t a long ill ness. church officials re ported C ARMEL 1AP 1 Richard Talmadge, 88. lht ~randfather of movie stuntmen. has died al h1~ rNiremenl home of canrer Bl'RBANK 1AP 1 Ysabel MacC'loskey, best known for her role as ··Aunt llaizatha .. on the television series .. Bewitched... died M arch II followinit a short illness TB count ATLANTA l AP > The influx of .Southeast As ian refugees has in- flate d the number of tuberculosis cases re- po rted in California. where at least one-third of the refugees have set - tled. according to the national Centers for Dis· ease Control. The state reported 3,639 newly ac- tive tuberculosis cases in 1979, or 16 cases per 100,000 population. This was 288 cases more than in 1978. the agency said. Through October 1980. 130 more cases were re· ported than during the same period in 1979. Tuberculosis has been o n the decl ine na · tionwide since 1970. but the number of cases has increased in California because of the influx of immigrants s uffering from the disease. the Center said. The agency said the , '9HCI MOTMllS SMmtS' MOITUMIY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 r.+.Cllllte YllW MIMOllALrAal Ce"9tery Mortuary Chapel ~ refugees "pose no pubU c health threat" because all had begun treat· ments for TB befor e leaving resettlement ca mps in Southeast Asia. 3500 Pac1l1c View Drive NewPort Beach 644-2700 ..-cOIMICll MOITUilllS Laguna Beach 494-9'15 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Ceplstr1no 495-1776 HAaOI LAW.._MT. OUYI Mortuary • C."9tery Cr~tory 1625 01sler Ave . Costa.Meaa ~5554 ,_CIMOTNMI l&LMOA8WAY WOITUAllY 110 Bfoedway eo.taMeu 642-9150 , .... "But they do require re-examination, a full course of therapy and continued clos'e monitor- ing," the report said. Wage talk banned PEKING <AP> -The !Worker's Daily told readers not to ask foreiinen about wages or reveal slate aecreta. It said asking about wages may be con- sidered i mpo lite, and that when "conversing with foreign gueata, we •hould avoid political controversies. ••When we need to answer various que&· tlont, we thould use cor • rect, conclae and re- served laniuaee and bt ture to protect sta\e secreta." · C.11142-1171. Put • tew word• toW'eflc for every day of the week-for less than it would cost you to drive. And with one set of coupons per monthly cus- tomer, you also save in other ways. *express routes at additional cost, Between March 25-April tO, seniors and handicapped quality for you can buy your April bus pass and lower rates. r get your coupons at OCTD 's offices ------.... ......_ in Garden Grove, Albertson's, J.C. _,. ......,.... ......_ Penney, Laguna Federal Savings. ----~·~ ......,.... _,. _. cout\'t ot$'T\" --~t'--0~ \)\. "'~ ~~-~--o r.~o't'' ~___.!:i • "'os't \\ tso(~\s \ ff;C\9~(\ \ fl)\C· \\a°'c \0 \~\al d~~of \ --' ~ at a#' c)l;>t.cf\S . _.-.. \S w · • "\(\S 'lr{S CtlV"'. ((\21\\\~ ~~oU" ft\C(\S· ~(. l(()( \fl ~ ;'!a~i l\ot .., ~at~\~ /~·/Ii,, 1tt: t,.~ f ,p ~ ~ .. ~ ".~~ ~'1cjT ~$ ! 1.'~+r!~}Iffl 1./'/h7lff ' ,.1.'~~~f~~~ er I !i~~ .. t~ ~ .. .f/:/f!._.·l I tt~lf "~Ii ~, ~ .-------------------------------~~--..--------...--.. ............ ----------...-. .,,..,,.. .-. ........... ,_......, ----------------~ l ' ( l ( ( ( l ______ _ .{-_,..., -- ( ( I ( I l ( \ l \ ( l ...-. ---.................. -... -..... ........... ~ --- " ' . -...._ -.. \ .j l ) I ----.l ) ----.... -.,..-- - - - _ _j_ ) _,_ ) I ) ' ' , ' , l l ' l ) ) I .. -- Orange Coeat DAIL y PILoT/Monday, Maroh 23, 1981 Palimony suit started trend NEW YORK (AP>-Youdoo't baveto be mar. ried. You don't even have to live to1ether. The ·'palimony" whammy can strike at any lime. Some people blame Marvin MitcbeJM>n for tbi1. He's the CUY who a tarted tt. JiUtchelson ••ya men at social 1atherln11 ometimes sidle up lo him and hill comments like, 'You traitor I·• He doesn't really mind. In fact. he's leaaedwtthwhatbe'adone. THE TANNED, WWTE-HAlaED Loi An1eies ttomey commented ln an interview: "I bad lo reate the law to set a remedy for these people. There was an inequity. a bole in the law, and all these people were left with no legal recourse." "These people" are unmarried people who are burned in breaJt-ups with live-in lovers. Mitcbelaon found them a remedy after he agreed to represent Michelle Triola Marvin. Ms. Marvin legally changed her name and dropped her show busi· ness career during the six years she lived with actor Lee Marvin. After their break-up, s he sued. Lee Marvin had not married her, but in 1979 a Californi a j udge awarded her $104 ,000. The award is still under appeal. "Up to that time people who live • together had no place to go," he said. "Marriage AP .w1 .. ,...,. was the only game in MITCHELSON town." UllTT INSUIANCE "Our 2•1th ve:1r·· ~-· A uto & Homeown&rs ~ ;;, ~ Ouotes Bv Phone FAIMEIS INSUl•E , .. , S41-S554 or llS.l4l7 It 14 ...... • Co•to MHo NO FRILLS TEETH QEANING OHLY s22 SOUTH COAST DENT AL GIOUP 642-0112 1105......_ ..... c.... ...... .,.,"""_.__ .... _,.,.._ "()ope. Fourth floor. RedecortU"ll" that be never moved in with her. Mltchelaon quotes the iud&e's comment· "He who enjoys the beneflta of• pol)'lamou1 lifestyle mwit be prepared to moet the ftn.ncl•I burdens." A CALIFORNIA MAN WON tHt,tH i n palimony after hi!! live-In jilted him An elderly California woman wnose married lovor died after• 49-year affair and left her nothina In hla wlll l1111uln11 his est.ate. And il's not just in California. "Courts in nearly 30 states havt> evolved with the Marvin decision," Mltchelson suld. "l believe that In five years all stutu will have either a law or u hhlh c·ourt rullna aboutlive-togethers." As palimony sprei.d , Mitc helson started writing. He visited here recently to promote his new book: "Living Together· A Practical Guide to Help You Understand." The book co v e r s the legalities of every kind of situa· MAlllllH tion from the average young couple that decides to live together to the average young homosexual couple that decides to live together . But the bottom line, said Mitchelson, is this: "This field of law is in such an unsettled state that every couple that decides to live together ought to have a written agreement." r .. Proctltl'la l•bo~ to•-.-.<ry ol ons\ft o/ I Mponacl llln Other i.bota lr«B • CARnc; AC-CEPTEO ..,,,,.," Amont .. hnnt l•m•n •nd_1totts . • tWrr •• lht-f«lr)' o/ t,,,..... run t"rn•n trom IUM lO llrM' •~• •lwrk • • •llb tun 11w M.,.notl ket • l1r1• 1roup ol t..n oa •AH b) Hobdal)' • • t ... un whH'tt wtU ao at fatMMUc-Pf1Nt tn lM Or-~ Coaa• •r~• On • e "'"' r1M hn IOI'.,,_,,.. d114t .... ,...-b1 lu>uo .,_...,. \1111 loM O • b'• /'IEW-.,. ,,,..., r.. lobl>IH M<Ond hand....., : Full length Mink Coats like new $999 • Couturier Mink Wrap $199 • • lklclaimed Restyled Furs $99 e It ... ~ .. sr•AI .. ..,. to buy • r;,,. IMed ft>t 0o&t f0t 4iollM .,.... 19\ e 1 lwll•r buy fM ¥0Ur IDOl"Y $o tf YOU WIJll IO buy I Jood ... lad • up bat-J••n .. • lur. of you ""t to '90nd llund....S. ol doll&n •nolMll • o1 t'--nd• lor tlw wry ro-MINK. bolt.a• ._ -ty '" odd•· • hoft. Y'''"" fond • l••t• .. tKtlOft ol NEW -of ·•·kond fun from • ,...,w.., t\or~ 'omr \ ")t'K) M •"d ~•OflO fur~ tno 11 lff'-U rcduchOfh : fl R ( O" l S lftl k£TS. STOLE::. ••d K ll•to ••II 10 " lo-. lo-. • r'f'i<<• .. •m.111 ckpu.,1 •111 hold y<Nr l•)'•••t • THE MARRIOTT HOTEL : Pacific Ballroom • • • •900 Newport Center Dr .. Ne rt Beach Ca.••• .......... r,...,. THE VOYAGERS CLUB AND --·---- '' n KARAGEORGIS CRUISES INVITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NIGHT TUESDAY MARCH 24, 1981 7 P.M . TO 9 P.M. AIR PORTER INN, IRVINE Admission Free-Seating Limited REF'RESHMENTS -DOOR PRIZES -FILM RSVP HARBOR TRAVEL -675-1311 NEWPORTER TRAVEL 144-0ltO TRAVEL HORtZON& 152·t031 TRAVEL COUNTRY OF IRVINE 511·2921 BALTZ -BERGERON SMITH & TUTHILL WESTCLIFF MORTUARY "Affordable funerals" Cremation Plans Available 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa· PHONE 646·9371 • ~ .... 1-tJ )l l, ~~ Starting •New Bualneaa "CCCOtdlng to ColHotnl• au.lneM and ,.rotanlone Cod9 (Soc. t 1100 to 11no1 oil po;•on• dolft9 tlvelMH 11nder • lldldouo nonM 11111•1 lllo 0 •latolllOftl wltll tllo ~ty Clorll ond llowo M pulllll•ll•d fOllt lllfte• In o .... ~...-. _.,..,. tllo •••• In wlllch tllo bU•lne .. I• localed. The •totelftant I• req11lrod br law ond I• nOCOllOfY In pn1toctlnt 1011r b11•ln••• nolfte. Moet banlte raq11lre proof of flllnt to 090n commorclol oc:count•. Tiie DAILY "ILOT provld .. llotll ftllnt ond publlcotton -'l!co•. Wo llavo aH tM n-HOIJ form• ond nutlmoln • d•ll1 ••rvlco to Ille Orengo County Co11rtllouoo. lltllor stop by ono o f 011r cor1var1lent otilco• or pllone Ille LIOAL Of .. AlllTMINT N~. 111. 112 tor Moro lnf-•llon Oftd i.w-. Civil Grumbling ... Gloomy Gu• '"th• ..., ..... J DE.AA PAT DUNN; la it lecal lot a llOH lo chars• a bl1her price for 1n ltom than lhe amount marked on ll? I've nan lnto thJa altua. tlon 1everal Umea. Th• merchaat uya the r.rtce hu •one up and that I have to pay the ncreued amount. I've aJJo been asked to pay more than the marked price with the ex- planation that the merchancliae bad been priced lncorrecUy. Do I have any recount In the1e aituallon11 K. W., Huntinaton Beach Your oal)' option la to llMtp elHwMre. Stores .,. uder u le1al obUtaUoa '9 sell aa Ito• oel)' at tlMJ marked prtee. A P•ral Trade Comma.am otnelal aa19 dM c.-.•er "IA 1e.eral laaa H ree•rae" ..ae-ta.ere II evlde11n1 OI tiabl&HI clecepdoa er baJ&·aM· 1 1wHcla aalet &acttca. If a a&ere fallt to Hoell Item• at advertlaed prices, It mar be HbJect· ed to a formal complaint to tM fTC for D · fair prac:Ucn. .. .,,,.~···-~~ DEAR PAT DUNN : My hwsband's em- ployerlnmllferred him toOran1eCounty -250 mllea from our former home. We always file a \040A lox form, and wonder lf we can still u11c• It when we l'lalm our moving expenses. S. L .. Huntington Beach No. IRS uya &ba& mov&a1 espeaaea must be dalmed on t'orm 3113, "MovlD1 Expea1e AdJuetment," which I• auiicbed to tbe IHI return. You may no& Ille the lMtA. However, CONSUMER c..ir.1 ............. .. D&All SEADEU: .,._ • ._,actarw et \lallhl,... n.tt..a met ............ -tef• &a• ...... ,,.., ....... ..., MaMn .. .... ........ eftoru .. ~ ............ eet w'1t'la .. , eaae 1Here ...,.. a.II •a~ fro•e ........ ..ann.. n. ,....., .. &o ,.,Jae. &a.. ~ a. bela1 ~ ~, ............ Cea*rob Co. et &Sela__., Va., ta e.operaU. wl&lt tlae C•••mer Pl'oftet Safe&y C..•luioll. 8a.& .... dtere laue beea a& leaa& ti dea~ ud • tenn tMJna eaued by es· plo1'°81 of water lleatera flf1111pped wttal tkae coat roll. The w1nlD1 covers the Ualtro& model nt a-4 model Jlt. Abotlt 1,tll of &MM c:o11tnla are believed to be ta ue. malaly la rval, neadoa or weellncl llomea. Valu eaa be lduttned by loold81 for U•ltrol Ht oe tlMJ face of Ute CGetrol, or for UaHr°' Ztt on tile temperatare dJaJ. Date codes wta.. tile letter comblaaUou LV, A Y, BY or CY are stamped •est &o Ute IH pUot oa&let. Couumers owai..1 tlaese water beat.era alaoald CGetacl aober11laaw at Its \olJ.free Hmber: (MO) ZU-1113. Followla& a frH ID· apedlon, lhe firm will laatall aew coatrola U approprtat.e. • ··Gor a problem·' TMTI wnle lo Pat \..1 Dunn Pat wall cut red tape. getting • thf' answt'r& and act10f1 you need to • sol~ 1nequ1t1es m g~rnmenl and ,... buame.u Mall your queshon.s to Pot I I Dunn, At Your St>rvu:e, Orangt Coast Dody Pile!. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many letter,, a.s pos!ible will be answered. but phoned 1nqu1ne11 or letters not including the reader"s full name. address and business hours' phone number cannot be coruidt>red This column a~ar:s dally ez. cept Sundays " GUESS WHAT YOU CAN EATON , WEIGHT WATCHERS WINE POPCORN HONEY YES YES YES D D d D NO NO NO 0 D D PEANUT HOME BAKED CHOCOLATE BUTTER YES BREAD ytf CAKE tf 0 NO NO NO 0 0 0 RAISINS SWEET FIGS YES POTATO YES YES 0 0 0 NO NO NO 0 0 D THE NEW 1981 FOOD PLANS Wine? Yes .. Popcorn and peanut but- ter? Yes . Homebaked bread? Yes. Sweet potatoes and honey? Yes. yes. P.S . You guessed it. the chocolate layer cake is still a "no-no:· $12 ftt"lt WMk, $5 WMkly thefeaft«, no contrectal You can learn to eat all these foods- within limits of course-and still lose weight. With '#eight Watchers exciting ~ personal ized food plans and com- plete. time-tested program you can take off the pounds. deliciously! ... ---------, I WEIGHT WATCHERS I I $4.00 DP I Just join a Weight Watchers class near you and our instructors will teach you the sensible way to good eating habits. With wine. popcorn. peanut but- ter and more. how can you lose? I INSTANT I I REBATE I I OH HGISTIAflOH ANO '"S' MUTING Hl I I OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 1181 I I Offer valid only as a discount and I may not be combined with any other 1, discount or special rate. Oller valld I n Area43. OffH GOOO OHl.Y WITH THIS TICKfT I ________ ..... WEIGHT WATCHERS~ LAST CHANCE ( sas-ssoD The most successful \Wight loss program in the world. .....,..,., fwftO•y ,_, ,_, woo-.. ,_, 1_, s.turesoy ,,_,,, .. _ POOP"' tOOa m 430 """ 100 P"' I WP"' t)I)."' 700P"' t lOa m ht19"1<' ,_ c- 1210I Ytli.y o/- W-y l »P"' ~TOM M.Aet4--• .._,..w_ c-t 77»Edl,.., 1-r'°"' _.,..on c.n.1 _, .. ,., .... -Y .. . ... 1'00pm ,__., •.• 130 .... l~ tOOpm T.....i.y .• 700 P"' w-y llOo,,,. w_, . 100,.,, Tll.Mdly .. MO • ftl Thuftclty • .. 't«I p "' T11..-y . . .. 700pm ,_, '···•••"' ''*" .. . . . .. •30•"' ~· ............ ... ....,_.......,. 9'01Y_A_ «••--> t........, .......... ... ,,,,,,,., . .. .... "' _....._ ........ ~­.. ~ ~ ...... . ,.... ............. MaWI klerlU 1- 6*'1 W .... l .,_.. -·-'~ S ooo.m '-U.OUNA NACH- ueo--...... -~---... .,,,.,., tiJO prn -UOUNA HllU. ..... IOHVICJO-__ ,_..._.,. ~ HJtOi..Pull- 1..aeuna -CA '*3 _, SlOPm ,_.., t OO om T-y 700 pm "'"'-' •OO•"' W-y TOOP"' ,_, tlO•"' ,_, 100 .... s.!Uf\tay . • lO • '" -4.A ""*'"-.......... u. _ (1-1111 tnf ._,,, ..._,._ . T.....SW 1000 • m ,........, •30•"' w-, ..... u o, ... ~=-~ --~~ ,, .. ..........., r-oiueA-1 ........, • . • • 11111, ... ,,,_, ......... ... -MWOM eucM-~ ,,.._ .... ......... ._..... .............. . , ..... ......._ .......... ..,., __ ............ . ............. ,,. -#Ut:aNTl- ....,..,-~ IOI N .,_ ,_,,. ol °"_, ,_ llOpm -oRAHOl- --O..,.. ,.,.,..,-....... ...,. , .... ,.,.,. AucMOfl\tf'n) lltltOU9"_ ,_o_. ~I _, "'°'*' ,_.., ,.....,.., •000 .... 700p"' 400 P"' 100 Ol'ft 700 '"' 1000 .'" woo_, ,....,_, __ .._ 10 $ N Tuai., Ill 1111 .. •I Stl_, '"'"' -IAH CUlllllHn-.......... ,__. IOI -II C-04'\011 .. 1 ,,......,.y . ' .4 lO p"' ' -IAHT A N4A-we11114 W....,... O-'°4•--·-0owM1 .. n ......,,.. "-"' -y 100•"' '-. •oo""' w.-,. . . ·~·"' w..-1 ttGO•"' T._.,_y • • l.lDpM -~ Tllelll"-_.......,_ ,_. __,, a.-1 '---..._..,..... f\l9lllllJ • JO .... ..,,..... .... ... _, ..... ... Cllilil .... ..... ---... --- Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Mondlly, March 23, 1881 .,,.------------~---------------------------------------------------- H/F NY E COMPOSITE · TRANSACTIONS OUOTAt!OtdtNC'l.l#Ol HAOU 0 .. tlll( ttaW YO•K, MIOWI"• l'•tl'IC. l'I• llOUOM, OIT•Olf t.tlO Clll(ltlNATI •fOCll lia(MANOUAMb ••NOl'O av fNI ...... .U.OllllTtM•t • • .... ,..... ...... " ........ -....... ,. .. unsyDlpathetic f Port .U of o •f'U• of cotumiu on aavmg on ~r 1no lncomti tana.J Tu deducUoos ror education expenses can be ex· tremely valuable -not only ln the dollar amount you , can save by deductions but in benefit.a to your whole ' Ufe inherent in the ecjucaUon you obtain. Bu\ while expenses of education intended to sharpen or improve skills in performing your job are I deductible, you must be able to show courses you took were chosen for the purposes you claim. Expect no 11ympalhy from the Tax Court if th e Internal Re venue --~ IYlVIA PD RTE R ,, z Service disallows your deduction for the courses you took because the courses are not reasonably related to your job. AS AN ILLUSTRATION, a lawyer who speciallzed in handling cases on appeal claimed a de · duction for certain graduate level courses in English literature at Georgetown University on the basis that the courses helped him by improving his writing and speaking skills required in the practice of law. The IRS barred his deduction and in 1980, the Tax Court agreed. The connection between the courses he took and his job of preparing legal briers and present- ing legal arguments as an appellate attorney was in· sufficient and too remote. The Tax Court noted that not one of the courses be took was related to improving writing skills as a course in creative writing might do. THE IMPLICATION SEEMS to be that the court might have upheld his deduction for courses that directly improved his writing skills on the grounds it would enable him lo write better legal briefs. Another Tax Court decision stressed the im· portance of being able to prove courses directly help improve your job skills. Here a clinical social worker decided to undergo psychoanalysis to help her distinguish her own personality problems from those of her patients and thereby enable her to provide better treatment for them. SHE ALREADV WAS certified and licensed un· der state law as a clinical social worker so she didn't need the psychoanalysis for that purpose, nor did she need it to retain that status. She deducted the cost of her psychoanalysis as a business education expense IRS disallowed the deduction. But the Tax Court upheld the social worker because her psychoanalysis maintained and improved the skills required in her profession. and didn't qualify her for a new pro- ress1on. Because this is so significant an area for income- tax deductions and many key points are misun- derstood, here are answers to frequent queries about education, jobs and careers. Q. I am a physician in general practice, taking courses to qualify as a surgeon. Are these deducli· ble? A. Yes. A physician is permlt&.ed to deduct the costs ot qaaUfylng for a specialty wl~bJD tile medical field. Q. Are laboratory fees, books. etc .. included a long with tuition in education expenses? A. Yes. Q. ls lhe cost of a correspondence school course deductible if it meets all other requirements? A. Yes. Q. To attend college so l can take courses to hold my job, J mW5t travel to another city. Are these costs de· ductible? A. II your education expenses quaUfy for deduc- tion, then your coat of travel, meals, shelter wbUe away from home also are deductJble, assuming tbe coils are prtmartly to take the courses. Gold metals quotations (.ifJld By The AssodaUd Press Selected world gold prices today · London: morning fixing $535.75. up $19.00. London: afternoon fixing $526.00, up $9.25 Paris: afternoon fixing $549.50, up $17.35. Frankfurt: fixing $538.00, up $27 .49. Zurich: late afternoon fixing $527.00, up $17 00. $530.00 asked. Handy & Harman: only daily quote $526.00. up $9.25. Engelhard: only daily quote $526.00. up $9.25. Engelhard: only dally quote fabricated $547 .04, up $9.62. Met ab NEW YORK (AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prices to- day: Copper 87%-91 cents a pound. Lead 36 cents a pound. Zl.nc 41 v. cents a pound, delivered. Tia $7.0362 Metals Week composite lb. Alamlnm 76 cents a pound, N. Y. Mercllr)' $400.00 per nask. Plattaam $51~.oo troy 01., N. Y. Gefdcoi11• NEW YORK CAP) -Prices late Friday of gold coiftS. compared with Thursday's price. I Kn1errud, 1 troy 01., $566.00, up 130.00. Maple leaf, l troy oz .. ~1.00, up $30.00. Mnlcaa SO peso, 1.2 troy 01., SM0.00, up $218.00. A111b1u 100 crown, .9802 troy 01., $53'1.00. up 129.00. Source: Deak-Perera 11 Tlllt Aleodated Pne1 Handy 6 K•rman, Sla.210 per troy ounce. Orange Cout OAlLY PILOT/Monday, March 23, 1981 . ··.coal Miner' Oscar goW for Spacek~ lhe charts and from Lb rt lt'I on to the Grand Old r rtrit of Jiw ~· on movau nomilwated Jor bffl jlikwre O.car at the 53rd Acodrmy ~"'°rdl cn"nnOllW March 30J. 8y J£aav H£aTENSTEIN OI .. o.it, Hiit ......, Si.sly Spacek's acUng bas been widely rec· ognized since her stirring performance in "Car· rie." But in no role has she been more versatile tban that of Loretta Lynn in "t,;oal Miner 's Daughter.'· S h e is aomi nated for bes t actreaa Oscar. She is OSCARS RAC£ likely to win. though the year-old film's chances to capture best picture for which it's nominated a ppear sum. The Bernard Schwartz-produced movie tells the story or Loretta's struggle, heartache, works and success well despite some contrivances (i.e., Sissy singing next to an old wash tub, Tommy Lee Jones as Loretta's husband Doolittle (Mooney) Lynn getting cozy with a carnival-booth girl and fighting while Loretta makes ht>r Grand Old Opry debut). The picture is in two parts the first that or Appalachia as Loretta grows up poverty-stricken in Butcher Hollow, Ky and act two -her rise to stardom The nrst halt works beat. Two or lbe ttlm'a uven <>sear nominations are for art dlrectlon and cinematography. Ratr D. Bode waa director or photography, John W. Corso production director. Sissy ls believable as 14·year-old Loretta We bb. She listena to the Opry on radio each Satur- day night with brothers and slaters, mother Clara (Phyllis Boyens) and father Ted (Levon Helm>. She reportedly lost l3 pounds to play the part of a skinny kid who catches the eye or "Doo," jusl re· turned to the Kentuc~y hills from World War II. DOOLITTLE HAS A choice of working as moons hiner, coal miner or finding his future elsewhere and decides on the latter when he takes a job as logger in Washington State. It's while in the Northwest Dooll\lle pursuades ~etta Cby now the mother or four) to sing at a local honky-tonk. He buys her a guitar for an anniversary present rather than the wedding ring she has longed for. Visits to every Podunk radio station in Ken- tucky and Tennessee to push Loretta's first cut, "Honky-tonk Girl," which she also wrote, finally work after she vents her anger at a disc-jockey at the first station visited for lying about playing the record. The Lynns later learn Loretta's song is 14th on Blondie's 'Rapture ' on top By The Assoda&ed Press 10. "Whal Kind of Fool" Barbra Streisand & Barry Gibb (Columbia> Opry and the bl« tlme. But succeaa la not without traaecb. Loretta bu already loet hel' f alher lhn>qb death, crony Patsy Kllne la kllled ln 1 plane eruh and Lorett'\'• con· tinual mlaralne headaches leads to a nervous 1 breakdown on ataae. < Patay •Ives U>retta her bia brelo\k by co-1tarrtng with her on the fair clrcultl. LOllE1TA'S MARRIAGE IS in dan&er when DooUttle becomes angered by her lndepenilence, in· cludlng her use or makeup. It was he, aner all, t hut got her to the Opry. And despite success, Doo continues to chide Loretta for her ignorance. He has been frustrated from the first days or their marriage by her lack of cooklnl( und sexual knowledge. Heverly O'Angelo is good as Patsy Cline, Jen· niter ond Jessica Beasley play the Lynn twins Patsy and Peggy convincingly in another bit of contrivance. MS. SPACEK NOT ONLY looks the role of kid but matures as the picture progresses. Her portrayal or glamour star is one Sp&cek rans are unaccustomed to. She does her own singing and guitar playing as well Late-night television viewers will recall Sissy appeared shortly after the film's release doing more or the Loretta bit on ··Midnight Special.·· "Coal Miner's Daughter " was touted winner at its release and has appealed to non-country fans as well as those who wors hipped that music long before the current country fad. But the film is gomg to have a difficult time wanning March 30 because stronger movies have screened since Spring 1980. ENTERTAINMENT LORETTA WITH COAL MINING FATHER Levon Helm and SfHy Spaeek 'Momm ie' star signed HOLLYWOOD IAP> Diana Scarwid has been signed by Paramount Pictures lo star with Faye Dunaway in "Mommie Dearest " The movie is based on the best-selling book by Christina Crawford, about growmg up as J oan Crawford's daughter Miss Scarwad will play the author from her teens to young adulthood The following are Billboard's hot record hits for this week as they appear in Billboard magazine· TOP LPS 11;;:;::;.;:;::;:;:::wm;~;:m:~;:;:;::;::;:;.--r=:::::::::==:::::::::: HOT SINGLES 1. "Rapture" Blondie (Chrysalis) 2. "Woman" John Lennon (Geffen) 3. "The Best or Times" Styx <A&M > , 4. "Keep on Loving You" REO Speedwagon , <Epic> 5. "Crying" Don McLean I Millennium) ·~~~~~~~~~~ ; TOPS IN POPS 6. ··Hello Again'' Netl Diamond (Capitol> 7 "9 to 5" Dolly Parton (RCA l ! 8 "Just the Two of : Us" Grover Washington Jr c Elektrai I 9. "Kiss on My Lis t" Daryl Hall & John Oates CRCA I !Pair togeth er again I HOLLYWOOD (AP 1 John Belus hi and Dan I Aykroyd will star m "Nt-ighbors," based on the book •by Thomas Berger ! The mov1t', for Zanuck Brown Productions and i Columbia Pictures. goes into production April 20 in I. New York City Belushi and /\ykroyd gained fame on N BC's "Saturday Night Llvt"' and were together in "The Blues Brothers " R Unt led Att11ts edwa rds LIDO CINEMA NEWPORT llllD. AT lllA LIDO 1. "High Infidelity" REO Speed wagon <Epic) 2. "Paradise Theater" Styx (A&M > 3. "Moving Pictures" Rush (Mercury) 4. "Double Fantasy" J ohn Lennon-Yoko Ono IGerren> 5. "The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond <Cap1tol 1 6. "Arc of a Diver" Steve Winwood <Island> 7 "Zenyatta Mondatta" The Police (A&M I 8. "Crimes o f Pass ion " Pat Benatar <Chrysalis> !I. "Captured" Journey <Columb1a) KOGM RADIO STEIEORIFM FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING OIOS NOTICE ISHEREB'I" GIVEN tlWlt Ille B°'"ro of Tru\t~ Of the (O.\I Com mu"'IY Colt-OotlrKtolOr""oc Co"" l'f. C•llfO<nt•. •Ill rf'C•tvf' \••l•O OHh up to II 00 • m . T~•Y ...Wrch JI, '"' •I IM Purttwuno OePOrlmenl of Wld COll'9t C11\lrtCI IOU\ed •I 1)10 AO•ms AW • CO!lt• M.e~. CA, •• wh•< h time , •• d bed\ W iii tw CWOh< ., ope""d anore.OtOf" LEASE PURCHASE OFFSET PR IN TINGSVSTEMS.O MO CCC Alf bids •re to «» 1n •<<Ord•n<t-w1tn t~ 81d F0tm tn\lru<llC)f"I\ •no Condi tion\ •nd Siof-<•f•<•tion\ .-n1<ft •re no~ lf" f•lf •n Oma•~ ~ur•d 1n Ow offl<f' Of IM PurC,,.\tnQ A~nt ot \••0 COlleqit :11slrtct PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 0 " INTE N TION TO cou.acr AHO TO "EMOVI ltEIUOHAL PtlOP'ElllTy ""OM fHE $fATE O" CALll"OlllHIA In llWI nwtter of ""' Est.I• of Jolln Gr•ll•m "'<l>oNICI ( '4111 -~:!~• ) ,~:.~~R-~ =~.-:.~~~~ .~·~ e.aa.t.IN N JCI! ... ~ U.t '"Tll , ... ~ • II .. NU~ll .,~~~r~· l -~~.F.::~. ~~;r.~~7°· ......... f"tMCI ..... ,....... ... , , ........ .. hw .... f•....,. t• '""" •• ._ w---. FEAR NO EVIL 1a1 ,, .. , ................ " .. ~ NCNOt...eo. AllO Jtat.e:A LUIGI THIE POSTMAN ALWA'l'S RINGS TWICE 1•1 ., .... , , ......... , ... ,,.,.,~fC SOVfltO W•ll Dl•ney'1 FANTASIA 1G1 UIJ ... llaMO U U • I .. • • II• I 01 • 11 ll ,,. __ _ WALT DISNEY'S FANTASIA 101 1•-•TWMo u•·>•·••·••·11• "'-~t Ctt.Aftf(llt ... Ott OMl.M tttM..OOt TH£ FINAL CONFLICT t•1 ,, .. , ......... "• .,...,."-.0 fllO" _. ACAOI.'" AWltt#llOI "'THl"IPOI ....... ,. ,._. ............ ,..., .............. "IACK ltOADS" (ltl u • ,., .... r•.•11 I l•MMO• ~ ... T&.1 •P• IA14'* 1Lt• tAU-T ,._L-0 • TOMM ¥ t..lt .tOMl_I BACK ROADS 1111 ..,.. ..,_ ' ........ , ....... J-et ........ u .•• ,. .,_..llif'l:O HM ntrO t.c:Aot•V ••AllOI THE COMPETITION 11'G NOW PLAYING NEWPORT BEACH 673-1350 •··•civ E•c.n b•OOlr ,,..u\C 1oUbm•t ... un h1\ b10 d catn1•r' <-,,.ck cert1l1•0 chr<k. or thdMr !t. bOnd m.ot p.ay•ble to ttw ordt r OI the CCWstCommun•IY (Olltlje 01\lr IC I eoaro ot T '"''"\ 1n •n •mOYnt not te'' 111•n l•ve~rcMt IS""I ot the sum bid <1\ a Qu•r•nlff that lht b1d<tfH w1111ntrr 1n to tht propot..f'd ContrM.t 1t '"''~•mt I\ •-•rde-dtot'11m tnthtt•¥entott•ltureto '"'•' 1nCO\UCh contrM' t. the prO< Hd\ ot "" <-h•t " WIU be t04' t•'1t4, or'" ow t •U ol • t>onO, tr.. tull sum thereof w111 Ot torlel1eato .. 1acoll~d"lr1cl NOT ICE IS HEREBY G IVEN IO •II pf'r'\On\ 1nt1 resltd. whethe r •t tttd1IOf"~. ,..Ir\. l~tH\0 CW Ol"V1WI'\ ot th• •tJow n.lmtd Ot<t•Wd -~ t•\1 known •dOrt\\ wa' Bo• 2111, H~HbOt Or~QOn. trtel Lf'ltf'rt o f l •it•ment•rv were tuueict to Ktnneln A H1nn1n\.on, ls-2 Pw:ltc.,, 86y Or1¥t , BrOOk•"9• Or-91•1S by,,,. CtrCUll Court ot ttw Stilt o1 Orf90n OI Curry (oYn11. •court Of competent 1ur1wj1c hon OI '"" Sl•I• of Orovon r,,., .. ,h °' ,,,. .......... "') "•mto ·~llll:••11:11:11:11t1t1Clalalaaaaaa11111:11:11:11:11J 1noebttd 10 or os llolcllnq pe,..o•••t pre> ~'IV Of 1n. \<l•d Cll!Cod~t PUBLIC NOTICE MOTtC£ INVITIMG lllOS NOTICE tSHE REB'I' GIVEN 111•1 Int 80.•d'<>l Tru"t.., ot 111~ Go1\I Com mun•tv Cotleqt 01\tr1c.tot Or•nve Coun t11 Caltform•. wilt rf'<.ftw~ ,.e•ltd b•ch UO ,to II lO am , T_,.\daV, M<1r<1t )I 1'81 11 lht Pvrcll•\•"9 Dep.orlment ol w fd <Ollf9" dt>l,.cl 1001.a ., IJIO Adam' Ave., Coste Mits.e. CA •t wfl•<n ''''" Uitct btcU WIU ~ OuOllCIV OQoeMO aoarudlor ' PURCHASE OF TY PE SET rt NG lpUtPME NT JOURNALISM OCC ' II b1Cb •r• to be 1n •tcord~nc.1 •tlh B•d For/fl IMlruc t•OM •no Condi '•no Sc»etfiC•llon\ wn1cn 4'rt no'*' Oll"1 Ue •nd ~f be'-.C.UF.,Oln •~0H1t• ot 1"9 PurclWls1nQA90n101 >•1dco11~a" lrlcl E•<" btOCler "'"''' \ubn\11 with hi\ bl'd • <•vutr-' cneck c1r11t 1•0 cr•u. or t>o-r s _..d m-NU 11111 lo tht oratr of tl>e C°"\t Com Talntly Cotleoe O•it,-1<1 8o•rO ot Tnts.tee1 tn •n •mount not leu tn•n 11i-perctnt 1s-.1 of Ille \um bid•\• 9oMr•11t• IMI lne Olddtr "''" •nit• i'llO Illa P<Ol>O\•d (ontr•t I II 11\t ,.-ne I\ •w•r~ to l'Nm In IM'"*"' of.taUure lo tf'ltet •nto \VCh COf"ltrl't<t, I,,. procHOs of "" ctw>o ••II Ot f«ltfttCI, or 1n tllt t a\<! ol •bond, tn. '"'' \um thereot w1U bit t0f'9t1\td to ..id coll-dl\trKI No bidder "'4tV Wtlndr•w "'' O•CI for• oerloa 01 lortv ,,,.. 10 1 O•v• aller tht tMtt WI lor tlltQ9tlllnQ lhtrtol f h• 8oud of Trutlff\ rt\trvt\ 1n. pfjvlle<ie of rtl1<t1n9•ny •nd •II b•CI• O• to ••ht anv 1rr19ul•rlflt\ Ot 1n IOf"mtllllesln•nybldor 1n tho b1dd1n9 NORMAN E W,t. TSON s.c,.,.,.,, &o.rdof TrutlH\ Coes1Commu1J1ly Goll-01""<' publltr.d Or..,91! CO.\I 011fy PllOI Mir ll, ll, "" 13'2 11 ) ... I S. ,.,, ... .. DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? It rou II•,,. !"•' nte d ro11r new F "1110111 l111l11•u Ho"'• ond llno "°' rot M.tlMnltt•O M for pullkotlon. P.•M do11'1 lor9ot 11101 111• ll1111totlo11 lo JO ll•r• '"'"' dato ol """' The DAii. Y lllLOT wltt pulltl•ll '°"' ····-"' for t Jl.10 . 011 r clfculotlon 1nci-.. the 011Ure Oro111• CoH I orU Olld ..... l!Oflffo •Pl"" In itlt .-.iont, In ordOf to OUltt911t JOllf o teto"'ont tor p11bllc •llon e ono ,,,,.,,. ... copy olld • cll•Cll to '"' OAll.Y lllLOT, 11.0 . h1I 1MI, C.Mo ...... CA .... •••• do ... ,.., ,., lltforlll.clofl .... ...., odllortltllle ,..._ c:.t1 ... , .. ,11 (Ill. an. PUBLIC NOTICE MOTICE OF TRUSTEl:'S SALE LOAN HO. 9l8J64-,l T •• NO.HJ41-l W E~1ERN RE ,t.L E!>T ,t.T E FIN,t.N(l,t.L, IN( '"Ouly appo1nlfd rru\lff' Undff" lhf' follOIH'lnQ d~SCrlDf'<I Ona ol lnl\I WILL ')ELL AT PU81.1C AUCT ION TO Tt1E t11G t1ES7 8100E R l'OR CAt>i l!Wt'•blt •I tim e o• \•It ~n l•wtul moe"ey of the Untied S••tt\I •If rtQhl title •nd rnt~,,~, <Onvf 'ffd to ~ now M>ICI O't •• uMer WICI Offd of I "al •n IM prOQfl ty Mrt1n•fttt dt-"ribed lRUHOR WILLl,t.M F NORTON 111.•\•0Qltm_.n BENEFICl,t.RY (IT'f FEDERAL >'VINC.S & LOAN AS5.0f;'ATION. • cOrPor•l•on RtcorOto Ck tot>er I 9'~ as instr NO 11}.IO .n -IJ~l. IMGe 9SI or 0"•< 1•• Record\ 1n thl' ott1c~ of tl'\e A•corOf'r ot Otan91 Cout'l\y \a10 0...-d No b1ddfr m•v w1thdr•w h•~ 01d tor• perooa o• lor1y·ll•• td l Cl•n •lier '"" Cl•t• \ti for II• openln9 .,,,,,..,, The 80.f'd of Tr-u\l•\ rt••rvr\ tnt on v1JeQe of re1~ttnQ •"~•no •It btCh or to w•1v• •nv 1rf'e9wl•r tt1es or tn torm•hl•f\1n ttnY b1dot 1n lht C>1001nQ NORMAHE WATSON SKr•t•ry, eo.root T, u\ttts Ca.\tCommuf'l•1• C0Ut9101\tt1CI Put>ll\lltCI O.onqo Co.st O••ly P•IOI M A,-'"" 1\ t4M\ t l4.J 11 PUBLIC NOTICE o t tr u" aot robu tllf lollow1n9 LEGAL NOTICE P'OPtrly NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ln•t LOI •• , 01 lr~I No 181] '"IM (•IV Ille fOll0 .. 1"9 •\em\ of lound or U••O of (O\t• Mew, County ot Or""~· St•lt oroPtrty Mvo bffn M id by Ille PollU 01 C•l1lorn1• ••per mo19 rtcora.a •n Oeou1-111 of tr.. (llV of Cotl• Mn.o 60 0 ~ ~J. P•9•• •I tllru ~•.tor• period"' e•uss ol n1nely l'IOI M 1\t tll•'W<Aa Mal>', 1n '"' Offl(f o f d•Yi> tno Counl~ Retorcler ol H id County Boo s Or..,<ie Schwinn Lt Tour 111 E •COOI t~rtfrom •II 011, Qat, mlner•ls 6icytte, Boys Beo<ie Huffy S.nl• Ft •nd OlhO!• hyorourbons below • depth Btty<le, Boy• Bf~k Columbl• l Spa of )00 fMt, w•lhoul I~ ri91\t of surf~• B•<VCle, Boyt Rtd Bt•t flt omber 1ntry, •\ reur.•o •n lnst1umenu of Bl<Y<I•. Boy"s 511,..r Sllnor•v Blcycl•. rtto1d Boy·1 'l'ellow Motobecon• to Spa 1·1~ St•t• ~vonu•, Cost• Mt••. B1<ycl1, 8 Tr.c• T-Pl•ver, I( M•rt C•lolorno• Solid St•le AIM Bt•t k R•dlO, Ski Ill • strffl •doron or common Rtck, Rtcoras. M•9 Wllffts, Tool>. df'S1Q n•lton '' shown above. no Oftll & MlNW'f. worr•nty i\ Olven •• to It > NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN 111•1 compteteneu~ Of tOf rKtMS\) " u no owne' •PPl•O ano otov•~ "'' Tllo ti.nelltlory unOer Hid 0..0 or owne,.lllP ol 1111 pr-rty within Hvtn fru\I. Oy rtffon Of• brtKh Gr cltlflUft 171 dOS lollowf"9 IM puOllCttlon OI •n Ir-. 001111411ons \KUrtCI tnerelly. this Nottce, tr.. 11111 1nereto th•ll v"I ne•etofo~~ ,.,cut.a •nd clellvertd to In Ille llnde<, 11 tllert lit one, or In tM lllt undt'rtf9"f(I • written Oe<loratlon City of Cost• Melt, on wlllcll CIH tr.. ot Otlt ufl -o.m..,o tor S.lt, •n1 11roperty 1Mll be sOICI •• put>1lc 1uclfon "'''tten riohtt 01 tlrN<ll •nd "' el1<tlon •I• time •nO ci.tt to bt ..,nounctd to uu .. Ow unc1t1n1cineo town "''Cl OATEO S.IMI. property lo t•1114y s.ald obll911tlon1, A E NIE TH Ind ......... lt.r Ille U-r\leMd Cl\lia4 CHIEF OF POLICE Mid notice Ol ll<Ncll -of t lKllon lo PublltNd Or~ Coo>I O•flv PllOI, be Recora.a Otu'7\ber 11, l'llO, •• March u . "'' 14»-IJ 1ns1r Ho 111n ol .. ,d 0111c111 Rt coras S.1CI >tit "''II be m-. l>UI "lt'-1 <O'Wenaf\l or w•rrant'f. ••Pr•'' or 1mp1tea, r19erdl119 title, ~MUlon, w oncumll<tn<H, lo on lllt rlfTl•lnlnv ~lnClpol """ OI lhe nott(l l -...red 11'1' "'° 0..0 OI Trvtl, wllll lllttrttl es In .. 10 not• P'O•IOtd, M•an<n, II -""· lillcltlr tlle 1 .. m, of Yid 0..0 of Tr11tl, , .... <ll•r901 a na ••Hn1ts of tile frutlN -OI Ille •rusts er-.,, w 1e1 OHd of rrvst. s.10 YI• w111 .. Mid on Weaneld•y. Aorll u, "" •I 11 00 •·"'-•I OM ofllo off o. Se-vie. Comp!Mly, BMlk of Amerio T- "111• 1110, OM cu, llo<H•varo wni Orantt. CA ' At IM u-of Ille 1nwe1 P'*k.el'-> ell 1111.iflOlka,IM.Ut-\et\M 11npald Miene• of IM o•Ht•ll• .. ~llrtd by Ille •llO,,. cleKrlllled .... tfll" anCI HUlllMeCI f.O\I•, ·--. •ncl edtflln(ff 1, i,.,,. .. .o. T1> Clfttr~ Ille -111no 1>141. you Mar Ull (11') tt1·0ft'. Datt 111\Mcn 1>, ("' WHTl!fllH fll£AL IE•T.t. 1 I l'IHAM(IAI., IHC: •Mid Tf'lllt.,., •r T .O SllllVICI co~•ANY, """' • ., (Nit Je,ca, Att111.-*'""'' ai., ... -....-....... Ot"Wlft,CA .... T,i l~MI ..._ PUBLIC NOTI CE '""""*Or .... C..•t Delly f'li.t ~\.__----------' ~'" u.-......., •· t•1 un-11 f1dellty Foclortl S.••"9• •nCI Lo .... cs11:•~=~~~~~~~::'!~~~~~:~=1tmaqi An<><i•tlon. llSS H.,11or Boule.•rd, fllorl-4''1 1.,5 ..... lotn, ..-1 1:00 .,_.., 1:'5 CO~I• Meu. G•hlornl• H&ll ·-• 111•1 1ho vnaer"'QM<I oes""' 10 rt· IMPORTANT NOTICE• CHllOlllN UNOlll 12 flUE' ter1wi1 tne w1d peru11•I pro.pert.,. or to c.ollt<.t uw ti••'"' ano to remove from ' H1f State ot C•t1torn1a to the \.tlO St•lt lh•t L~tltr\ Tr\tamenta,-y or of Ad~ tntl'H\tr•llon Nve bffn ~swe-o All Pt''°"' navin9 t ta1m' •o.a1n\I Int u 10 oe<.ectent or who h•vt an '" t1re\t 1n \•td e\'-4tlt •no whO *'~" to 0011< 1 10 \ucn remov•I, musl o•v• .wr1Utn no11ce ot 'u<li obfKhOn 10 \nit perwn o, PH\ans •f\Otblt<J to, or no•d· 1nO persOt\lit prQoCMrly ot tne det~.-nt. •' \ht: Mktrt'\\ •\, h\tl'd ~tow, w~ttun• 1"re1 llJ month\ •lttr ftr\t e>ut>f•c•h0f1 ot UH\ NOIKt" O•tt-O M'\O ftf"~t OUbhS"°f'd M•rc,, • .... t<fl"nttn 4 H•cw•n\CWt Person..I R•CH"tWnl•tive o' tht E\i.to of lolvl Gr.rwm Mc OoMIO c. o 0.1110 ~ Forlitr ~tlOTnt?Y •I U "" PO Boa tOO B1001u1\9s, O.e 9/0S Pulll"""° OrM19* (OO\I O••lv Polol, M•rc~ • t• 2l lO, 1911 1006 ti Going Into Business? Aa required by l•w. new bu1lne11e1 ualng • Flctltto ua Bualne11 N1me must Teglater th•t n•me with the County Clerk. Cell the DAILY PILOT LEGAL DEPARTMENT tor form• end further lnformeUon. 1542-4321 EJlt. 332 PUBLIC NOTICE ~~~~~.l~a F, .... .,.. .. ... f .. Ofifl'.AJllOOfil\T l ;s •I Lt,,_ SI FLESH G,2!'00N 1•1 3 ..,! .. ;. _ __ 879=9850 SUMMER CAMP !Jlt I No AM c.w R.0010 ""'"" l90"llon ACCftMltY 11<1no ...... r °'""AM,.,,.,. ... ""'"' .... c~·n.~,..., M •10-dlHI vo .. ,, ..... , H I JAtl THIE FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 -THE VISITOR 1•1 -----"AU. NIOHT LONQ" (R) -MANIAC ,.. __ ,,_ ii Ho AM Car Roelle Wllll l9nlllon Aece-y 8'11141 Y-0.n AM Pon.I I I c ·· I .... , .. ••wit ..... U.-eH! Go'•"""''"'*·· '" . ., CU•-unu. Miff -- ---· ILAZINO SADDLES ""' 1111 UP THE ACADEMY !Jlt I Ho AM CM Radio With l9nltlon ACCel_, .. I ... y-°'"" "'"' l"otU ..._~..... ,... .... , ....... ~ ......... -v-.-~==-l'UR ~VIL 1111 1, 0 ... ••J Al.l.IOA TOR 1•1 f Ho AMC. lllOdlo Wltn t.,.Wtl.i ACU.-'f 8rlno '9llf OWft A}ll. l'INVllM _w._ .. __ , .... Tffl l'IHAL CON,LICT ... -MANIAC .. __ .,_ ...... _,,,._ ........... ~ ... ...._ _...,. ........ -- THI '"" ..ouM !Oii -THI 114.AND I .. ..., ..... ,~~­I ACIC ROAOS 1111 -I RONCO llLL Y 1N1 --""-TtQUllRO CON ILMl .. ICANO "~-... --...~ -. ......... --. ·-.. ' f Ylll llllTlll llllY PIPfl ~1JNO A'f MARl H 2 J l •J81 ORAN GE COUNTY CALIFOHNIA 25 CENTS CarOI . Buniett claims 'victory' By t"&EDE&JCK SCHOEMEHL Of .. o.i1r l'llee Stall A smmna Carol Burnett said this morning that she believes she will have won a moral vic- tory regardless or the verdict re- turned b' the jury in her $10 million libel suit against the Na- tional Enquirer periodical. Emerging from a Los Angeles County courtroom, the actress and comedienne said her legal challenge of an Enquirer story on her behavior in a Washington restaurant six years ago bas placed "a very healthy doobt" in the public's mind over the En- quirer's objectivity. "No matter what happens, I haven't lost." Miss Burnett declared as she strode down a corridor encircled by news re· porters and television Baek to tl1e 1uilds cameramen. "We have won a moral victory." Miss Burnett's legal action stems from an Enquirer story 1n which it was stated that sbe spilled wine on a diner and became involved in a loud argu- ment with Henry Kissinger former U.S. Secretary or State. The Enquirer later retracted the story. (Earlier story A5) In final arguments to the 11- member jry, Mi as Burnett's attorney Ed Broruson, said Miss Burnett was libeled because the article was raise. He said the periodical acted with malice against his client and defamed ber. "I am !eelini very good win, lose or draw," Miss Burnett said. "I didn't do anything, they (the Enquirer) did it to themselves." The jury sitting before Superior Court Judge Peter Smith is expected lo receive the case today. Bronson said he will request monetary damages less than the amount specified in the lawsuit. Following is the paragraph that led to Miss Burnett's filing of the lawsuit: "In a Washington restaurant. a boisterous Carol Burnett had a 'U.S. complicity' loud argument with a nother diner, Henry Kissinger." Then she tripped around the place. of· rering every one a bite of her dessert. But Carol really raised "t!yebrows when she accidental- ly knocked over a glass of wine over one diner and started gig· gling instead of apologizing. The guy wasn't amused and 'acciden- tally' spilled a glass or water over Carol'sdress " Oyinore arrest hit By .JOHN NEEDHAM Of Ille O•Ur Pl ... Slaff The lawyer representing freed Pakistaru hijack hostage Craig Clymore filed a form al com- plaint with California Sen. Alan Cranston 's oHice today in Washington, D.C., protesting the arrest of his client l>y Syrian authorities in Damascus Satur- day. The complaint, filed by at- torney Ronald Kreber of Laguna Beach, charges U S. Embassy complicity in Clymore's arrest on undisclosed c harges, a spokesman at Kreber's office said. Kreber is in Washington awaiting the processing of his visa that will allow him to visit Clymore in Damascus. Clymore, 24, formerly of Lake Forest, is accused of being the ringleader of a nine-member, $12 million hashish and heroin smuggling operation involving seven other Southern Califor- nians. 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jet that was hijacked March 2 on a flight fro m Karachi to Peshawar. The plane. seized by three op- ponents of the Pakistan govern- ment, was eventually flown to Damascus, where the hostages were released March 14 in ex· change for the freedom or 54 jailed Pakistani political prisoners. Just hours after the hostages' release, news of a grand jury in· dictment naming Clymore and eight other Californians was re· leased by the U.S. Attorney's of fice in New York. On Saturday Clymore was ar· rested at his Damascus hotel, where he had been staying since his release. The arrest came two days after he was evicted from his hotel room and forced to turn over all his money to satisfy the hotel bill. turn to the United States and fa ce the drug s mugg ling charges Syria and the United Stat es have no e xtradition treaty The spokes man at Kreber's of fice said Clymore had agreed F'riday to sign a waiver of sur· rend er and return to the t:nited States The spokesman said Kreber advised the U S Embassy in Damascus of Clymore's willing- ness to r eturn. and s aid his client would sign the waiver as soon as he reached Damascus Wednesday However. since Clymore was arrested. Kreber ma y postpone his client's return until more favorable arrangements for his surrender can be agreed upon , the spokesman said. Stagger, the hawk, flaps its wings and flies away from Steven Leonard of Picton. Ont., J after being released. The bird was one of three hawks freed after they had been cared for by Kit Chubb of Ve rona, who has been helping injured birds for years. Clymore was one o( more than Kreber charged the U.S. Em· bassy in Damascus with pres· suring the Syrians into arrest· ing Clymore to force him to re- "The C1greemenl was that if Clymore was taken into custody nothing would be s igned," the spokes man said "We have re· quested thC1t the embassy not have Craig sign an extradition <See CLYMOR E, Page A2> J ( f s f ~ \ s 5 killings stump cops LONG BEACH <A P > -Police were seeking public assistance today in an attempt to identify two young girls found suffocated in a motel room. The girls, who did not appear to have been sexuall y abused, were among five victims of homicides reported here Sun· day. authorities said. The body of a man who had been badly beaten was found in a trash dumpster: the body of another man, identified as Gregory Smith, 25. of WbiWer, was found floa ll n g of! t h e marina jetty here with a bullet in his head ; and lhe body or a third man, who appeared lo have been shot. was found lylng in an alley. Identities of the other two men were not immediately disclosed by authorities. Skirt-we aring man barred by s chool SAN RAFAEL IAP> A man who says he ··always" wears skirts because they're more comfortable than pants has been told to keep off the San Rafael School District campus, or else. Bill Cushing , a ~6-year-old former constructio n worker who says he is neither a homosexual nor a transvestite, acknowledged that he wore skirts several limes for school conferences about his son's prog- ress. • District Superintendent Carl Couch said he asked Cushing to IRlllil CUil lllTHIR Low clouds and local fog late night and morning, then mostly sunny Tues- day afternoon. Lowa tonight 48 along the coast, 54 inland. Hi1hs Tuesday 70 to 78. 111111 TllAY "Coal Mfftn'• Daughter" u OM o/ /iVf movf.e• nomtnat~ for bHI pict"u al the AcodcmJI Atoantl on Morch 30. SH tht /fnt in o 1ene1 o/ relMwe on tlw film• on Pa,,. Bl. 11111 ···-~· .. .......... ... .......... •1111.....-.n a •"'* ..., ilelleMl-M c......... "' C ......... CM C-k• .. ""'""" .. ==-: = $~ ( ........... M.CI ............. . ...,.. ., .. .............. .. .,........ ., ~ ... , ....., M ........ M L stay off school property or face possible arrest. "Ir I were to have him re- moved, it would be because he would be disruptive to the cam- pus ... He could cause problems that interfere with the learning process." Couch said his order banning Cushing was made in part lo protect him from possible harm by outraged students. "I couldn't guarantee safety ," Couch added. Cushing compared his prob· lem lo women who experienced negative reactions when they began wearing pants. "Women have made their lives more meaningful by free· ing themselves from clothing stereotypes," he said. "I think the same should be true for males." Cushing said he planned to ap· peal the superintendent's order to the state Superintendent or Public Instruction i n Sacramento. Tree climber electrocuted PORTERVILLE <AP> -A U-year-old Portervme boy wH electroeuted when be climbed a trH and touched hl1b~votta1e line•. Authorities Hid tb4! boy buni un~ from th• ao.foot tall tree by one foot for 20 to JO minutes Sun d ay unttl param..Uca and ftremen aot him do'l'n by formln1 a human chain .• The younpt.er' WU l&lttD to Sltrra View Rotpllal for tmtr~J tna•...a bet wu proDCMmeed dead later. "'·· A maid discovered the girls' fully clothed bodies at about 11 :30 a .m . Sunday al tbe R amada Inn on Pacific Coast Highway. One girl sat in a chair, the other in bed, and both had pillows over their heads, said police. "There was no indication that they were abused," said Sgt. Ron Carpenter. Sgt. Dick Wood said there was no eviden ce that the girls, believed about 7 and 10 years or age, h ad been bound o r restrained in any way by the slayer Police were having difficulty identifying the girls. "We have checked with all nearby police agencies," Wood said., "and no children answer· ing to this description have been reported missing.·· Don Focht. manager or the 105-room motel, said a "single individual" had registered in the room three days before the bodies were discovered. He would not elaborate. Motel employees did not re- member seeing any children with a man who reportedly rent- ed the room, Wood said. . He said personnel of a nearby nightclub and other people who may have been in the vicinity were being questioned in the hope of developing leads in the case. Cheerf 111 f rio President and Mrs. Reagan share a laugh with the 1981 March of Dimes poster child, Mary Melissa Jablonski of St. Louis during her visit to the White House today. Man dies after bouts JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP> - Ronald Miller's relatives tried to talk the S-foot-7 former Marine out of competin1 in a local fight. but he was unemployed and desperate for the $500 prize money. Aa Miller zeroed in on his third opponent ln the Toughman Cham- pionship llaht, his nose started to bleed ancf he aot slck to his stomach. Sunday, after emergen- cy 1ur1ery, the 23-year-old man died or brain hemorrhatlng. autborttlea tald. "I tried to talk blm out or it. Bµt he waa desperate. He needed the '500. He tboupt ht had a chance. but H wu too small,'' aald MUltr'a father. Robert. Mllltr, wbo w1l1b1d let eoundll. llt.INd thrM *" at tbe Jobnaton War Memorial, when preUmlnary compeUUon 'waa beld in the T blrd Annual Tou11unaa CbampiomhJp. The U· Ut ftlllt. tdMdultd fOf' •October ID Pontiac. Mich.. waa a top pme o1 ll0,000. t \ Miller knocked out one oppo- nent Friday nJght and his Cirst op- ponent Saturday. "The audJence went crazy over him. They 1ave him a complete standing ovation," said Robert Law, MUler'auncle. Miller had been seelng double and bad been diuy after tbe first bout Saturday. Yet he started the second. Between fiahts, be compl&lned Clouds forecast o ver north state B1fteANOCta&ecl Pn11 Inereu1n1 clouds are expect- ed over Nortbem CaUfornta to- d a1. wltb a chance or ll1ht 1bo,rtn nortb ol lll•ltitr Cove and Mouat Sllaat• toda1 and tonl111t. lhln may . ~_prtad to Santa lloea, W Blutr ud LUe Tabiol '1'1MMQ, TM IDOW Jriil will be, ...... ~..-Mt la tM ioftlrftlt to T"°° ,_at LUe Taboe. of fatigue, said his brother, Robert Miller Jr. "The big man who was running it said to my brother, 'You have five minutes.• My brother said. 'I 'm too tired. How about Riving me 10 minutes'?" Robert Jr. said. Miller then was knocked down several times1 and when hls nose began to bleea, the referee C'tllled the bout. When the Uahter threw up. a doctor in the' audience aald MiUtrahouldbehospitaliaed. "There's not much question about what killed him," Cambria Cou nty Coroner John Barron aald. "It had to be cauaed by a blow to the head. ''TheH IUYI n1ht wlth tlov• and they h.ave kidney beltl and prot~lnthetroln, butthere't no behnet on the head," Barron 111d . ''That's what I can't un- dentUd. Sven the P"°' wear that ta pradke, and Ult proe are tr.u..d to lllp a pac:b. WhlG )'OU 1•l • UO·po.aader Utrowlll1 be1m..,.,wowr• 'Not shot,' VP Bush d e clares WASHINGTON IAPI It was the rumor of rumors in a city that thrives on gossip, but a Reagan administration official savs re· ports that Vice President George Bush had been shot at and re· ceived a minor wound were "without foundation " The rumor had many varia lions. center ing on the idea that the shoolin~ took place on a Ca pi to I Hill street late one nieht. "In retrospect, he t Bush> is pleased the story 1s out because it 'JI probably stop the rumor mill," Peter Tcelcy, the vice ·president's spokesman. said Sunday. Teeley said Bush was told Saturday that the Washineton Post would publish a story on the rumors and that at would suggest <Sff BUSH, Page AZ) Sn ip e r given 2 life t erms in s layings SALT LAKE ClTY (APJ · A defiant Joseph Paul Franklin was sentenced today to two con· secutive terms of life imprison· me nt on federal civil rights violations In the sniper deaths of two black joggers. The judgt: also denied a motion for a new trial. The sentence was the max- imum penalty under the law and the proceedings were interrupt- ed when FranJtUn, an avowed racist, rushed toward the bench and had to be restrained and wrestled to the floor by 10 marshals. The outburst ca me after Franklin told U .S. District Judae Bruce Jenklna. "This whole thing ls a farce." He aJso called the prosecuton in the case, "a trained monkey" and ··1 rauot." Prior to aentenclnJ, Jenkins denied a defenJe mouon to grant a new trial for Franklin, 30, of Mobile Ala. Franklin, also char1ed by aut borttles ln two other slates lq th• alaytnp of three black men and one whlte woman. was ton· vlcted March 4 by a federal court Jury of vloletJnc Lbe ctvU rl1bta of David Martin, 18, IDd Ted Fieldl, 20. They were shot to death Aua. 20 near Liberty Pull wblle Jo1tlQI wlth nro wblte women. L OfMge Co•t OAJL Y PtLOTIMonday, Matett 23, 1981 Advisers • • arrive 1n Salvador SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP> -All SC American mllitary advisers promised to hflP train Salvadoran troops have arrived in the war-torn Central American country. Twelve U.S. Army Green Berets landed Sunday at 11· lopango Airport. the main gov· ernment airbase, but reporters were not allowed to question them. (Related stor)' A4). State Department officials said last week the American advisers will be out of El Salvador by Sep- tember. but that more would be senlif needed. The civilian-mllltary junta is fighting leftist guerrillas who the United States contends are armed by Cuba and other allies of the Soviet Union. In fighting reported Sundar. residents near Morambala s8ld guerrillas blew up a key ~ridge. cutting off the coastal highway near the city. 50 miles southwest of San Salvador. An Army spokesman said un· identified gunmen fired two s h ots from a bazooka-like weapon at an armored vehicle ~n which Interior Minister Ovid10 Hernandez was riding Saturday in the capital. The armored car was one of three that arrived Friday from the United States as part of the Reagan ad· ministration's aid package. One of the shots caused minor injuries to a man and his daughter an a near by car . but those inside the armored vehicle were not in- jured, lhespokesman said. The government reported no developments an a major drive against the guerrillas in the mountainous northern orovinces . In a homily delivered Sunday at a Mass in San Salvador marking the anniversary of the assassina- tion of Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero a critic of the govern- ment and of U.S. intervention in his country a priest criticized calls by U.S. priests for a halt in military aid. ". r am not going lo discuss the theory of whether it is right or wrong t o send guns to E l Sa Iv ador." the Rev Roberto Amilcar Torruell a said. 'Crucified' on pole, man having ball ALBANY. Ore. <AP> A man listed as a fugitive from the Oregon Correctional Institution was found nailed by one hand to a telephone pole today, policesaid. A I bany police dispatcher Kathy Wyatt said officers were notified by the fire department shortly after 3 a.m . that a m an was nailed to a pole in the downtown area in this community 60 miles south of Portland. Fire department paramedic Bob Omstead said that when he and his partner arrived at the pole. they found Stephen L. Phillipi. 27. who not only was nailed to the pole, he didn't want to leave. ··We got there and we found this gentleman with his right ~and with hi s palm to the pole with a 16-penny nail through it,'' Omsteadsaid. He said Phillipi said only that he had been in a fight with somebody and they nailed him to the pole. "He didn't want to go.'' Omsteadsaid. "He wantedtostay right there. He threatened physical harm if we tried to re- lease him. "A bunch of passersby were passing a jug around. They were just having a party." Front Page A I CLYMORE. • waiver without Mr. Kreber be· ing present. Since the reqlleSt was made. the embaHy has asked Crai~ to sign five times." Th e U .S . Embassy i n Damascus has denied any com- plicity or previous knowledge ot Clymore's arrest. On Saturday, embassy officials said they had not been informed of the Syrian charges against Clymore. 6iijPi1at Thomu P. H•l•y ~ ~N.Wffd ........ M. Thomae KteYll ,_ ~Murphln• Cher1ee H. Loot ~ ........ --Bemerd k,,ulrnan ~ £:a~ KtnMth N. OoddMd .If. ~c.- Zebra' suit High ~ouri up_ho.lds paying lawyer fees ",. . .,..,,_ Soviets i11 orbit WASlllNGTON <AP> -Tiie U.S. ~me Court refused to- day to free San Prancllco ol· ficiala from pa,tn1 Sd,000 In lawyer fees ror people wbo sued In 1974 over "Operation Zebra," a police manhunt for mass murderers. The court, by a 7-2 vote. left intact declaions awarding the $45,000. City Attorney George Agnosl had argued that . under circumstances of the case, the award should not have been authorized under a federal law allowing ~pie who mount suc· cessfuJ civif rights lawsuits to recover their lawyer fees. Defendants in the 1974 suit were then-Mayor J oseph Alioto, Police Chief Donald Scott. Chief of lnapeetors Charles Ba.ru, Captain ol Inspectors Mortimer Mctherney -nd police com· ml11lon members Weahlniton Gamer and Marvin Co~doza. Twelve people were killed and six others injured In San Fran- c is co shootin1s between December 1973 and April lr74 in what came to be known as the "Zebra" crimes. Each victim was white, and each survivor described the at- tackers as black men. On April 17, 1974, city police put "Operation Zebra" into ef- fect. Within days. police stopped for interrogation a nd frisk searches some 600 black men who fit s parse ly detailed descriptions of the suspected murderers. Mission commander Vladimir Dzbanibekov 38, left. ~nd Jugderdemidiyn Gurragcha, a 33-year-old Mongohan, have been lofted into earth orbit and will link with two cosmonauts who have been aboard Soviet space station Salyut-6 sin ce March 12 . It's second mission for Dzhanibekov, the first for Gurragcha. Three sessio11s Pilots still seek wreck, two Mesans Civil Air Patrol pilots concen- trating on the Sierra Nevada south and west of Mammoth Lakes today continued hunting wreckage of a white plane which carried two Costa Mesans. Hopes for Robert Reed and Michael Thompson. both 25 and both from Costa Mesa. were dim· ming. They vanished in the Cessna 210 last Thursday in a snowstorm. Adding to the bleak prospects is the fact one to three feet of fresh snow fell in the area over the weekend. and temperatures have dropped into the 20s at night. Civil Air Patrol Lt. Col. Lloyd Goodale, search coordinator based at Bishop Airport, said that. in his opinion, no trace will be found of the plane or occupants until the spring snow m elts. Reed, a management trainee with Ralphs Grocery Co., based at their Laguna Hills market and Thompson. a carpenter and son of Newport Beach Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. had been on a two-day skit.rip. They left a_boull p.m. Thursday en route to pick up three com- P 'l n ions waiting at Bishop Airport d espite pleas of authorities at Mammoth-June Lakes Airport not to risk the dangerous flight. Reed had radfoed the Mam- moth-June Lakes Airport he was going to hop over the mountains and down to Fresno before going to Bishop Thursday. Shortly thereafter . contact with his plane was lost. Woman hurt in S. Laguna auto crash. · A 78-year-old Laguna Beach woman wu listed in stable condi· tion at South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna today after her car colllded with two other vehicles. A spokesman for the California Highway patrol said Lois Chap- man was making a left tum onto 7th Street from the southbound lane of Coast Highway in South Laguna when she crossed the path of a northbound vehicle and was hit at about 12:45p.m. Sunday. The CHP identified the driver of the second vehicle as Harold Jones, 23. of Laguna Beach. Reportedly the Impact of the cMlsh pushed Mrs. Chapman's vehicle Into a car driven by Shawn Mercer, 17. also of Laguna Beach. Both Jones and Mercer re· portedly received minor injuries, and were treated and released at South Coast Medical Center. Woman burned DETROIT (AP> -An elderly woman was critically burned and 42 other people were injured In a fire that engulfed an east aide nursing home, officiat. aay. Fro• Page A I BUSH ... that there was no truth to them. ·•He hoped the story the Post put together would put an end to it," the spokesman said. At the White House last week. reporters asked deputy press secretary Larry Speakes if the president was "concerned about the large number of rumors" about the alleged incident. Speakes responded by sa}ing he would "check on the president's concern of the rumor of rumors " Late Saturday. James S. Brady. the president's press secretary. described the whole rumor as being "without founda· lion." The Washington Post and ~veral Associated Press re· porters who checked on the rumor agreed that it had no basis in fact. The Post said Sunday that the story began when a young woman ran into the street one night last month to help an auto accident victim and encounte red a policeman she knew. The woman. who declined to be Identified in the Post story. said the officer told her that the vice president bad been shot earlier -a comment the officer later denied ever hav- ing made. The woman returned to her home expecting to hear or read accounts of the Bush incident. Wh en she didn't she called two friends and told them about what the policeman had allegedly saici. That was enough to put the rumor into circulation. Reporters who heard the rumor were told it was false by the local police, Secret Service. U.S. Attorney and Bush'soffi ce. The rumor finally reached an angry and disbelieving Bush. the newspaper said. Although it wasn't conducting an investiga- tion oflhe matter. Bush asked the FBI to interview him about it for the record, the Post said. Pipe fitters picket at county plant Pipe fitters picketing today in front of the Orange County Sanitation District plant at Brookhunt Street and Pacific Coast Highway In Huntington Beach didn't interfere with '1ormal operations of the plant. district offi cials said. Ray Young , senior ad· miniatraUve assistant for the district, said the pickets are a r esult of a wildcat strike by m e mb ers o f the Steam Refrigeration-Air Conditioning and Pipe Fitters union. Youns said union plpefltters. who are doing construction work at the plant, have become em- broiled In a c:lhpute with a con- tractor for the project. He said the dispute ls expected to be settled within a few days. Many trains facing budget derailment Laguna plan papers due council study The Laguna Beach City Council m embers will meet on three separate occasions this month and next to review five elements of the General Plan. The elements . which were co mpleted by five citizens groups, are being reviewed by the planning commission. When finally adopted by the council, they will be incorporat- ed into the general plan as goals and object ives for Laguna Beach's future growth. The council will be reviewing the five committee reports. along with recommended changes by the planning com- mission. City officials figure each ele- ment will require about two A s11h is h•1r11 hours of council time, a nd the first meeting -on the noise and land use element will be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. in council chambers. A second meeting witl be held March 28 in council chambers to review the circulation element and the housing element to the general plan. That Saturday meeting will be held at 9 a .m. And the council will meet again April 4 to review t he open sµace and conservation element and the seismic and public safe· ty element. The Saturday meet- ing will also be held at 9 a.m. Me mbers of the five citizens groups. as well as other resi- dents. are invited to attend the sessions Amid a mass of balloons, the attack submari!le Houston slides into the water after being christened 1r:i Newport News. Va . The ship is nuclear powered and is 360 feet long. ~· Two lawaulta were" filed to challenge the polJce tactics, •t· tacld.n& them · 11 a violatioll or the civil rtlhb ol those people ... who were slopped or llkely to be stopped. U.S. District Judge Alphonse Zjrpoll ordered that the challen&e tactics be halted. Before the city officials' appeal was ected on by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, four men were apprehended. convict· ed as the "Zebra" killers and sentenced to Ion" prison terms. The appeals court thus ruled that the case had become moot. and returned it to Judge Zlrpoli. When those people who sued over the police tactics asked for lawyer fee compensation. Zirpoli ruled that they were en- titled to such an award as "pre- vailing parties." The city officials again ap- pealed to the 9th Circuit ~urt . but the award was upheld Aug. 29. In seeking Supreme Court re- view. Agnost a r gued that no award of lawyer fees should be m ade "without a meaningful right to appeal." He said that under the circumstances of the case. the city offi cials never had a chance to defend the police tactics and have Judge Zirpoli's injunction overturned. Justices William H. Rehnquist and Byron R. White dissented from today's court action. voting instead lo overturn the.9th Circuit court's ruling Ira Hopkins dead at 93; • services set Funeral services for retired cattleman Ira J . Hopkins. a 26· vear resident of South Laguna ~ho du~d Sunday at 93 . will be held Wednesday in Corona del Mar. Rites for Mr. Hopkins are scheduled at 11 a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel. w1lh interment to follow in the cemetery there. Mortuary spokes men said Mr. Hopkins came to the Orange Coast in 1955 after he retired as sa les manager of a major livestock company. He and his widow Emma made their home on Pacific Coast Highway Additional survivors include sons Howard V. Hopkins. also of South Laguna . I Warren Hopkins. of Las Vegas. plus six grandchildren and four great grandchildren Plea fails; killer to die TUSCU MB IA. Ala <AP) A 31 -year-old man has been sen· lenced to die in Alabama's elec- tric chair for killing two people, despite a plea for mercy from his sister the mother of one of his victims A Colbert County jury set the. pe nalty late Saturday for Samuel Daniel Crosslin. 31. of Sheffield, who was convicted in the July, 1980. s hootings of his niece. Bobbie Sue Morris. and her husband. Barry Betty Miller. Crosslin's sister and mother of Mrs. Morris. took the stand in the sentencing phase of the trial WASHlNGTON CAP> -The nation'• major pasaenaer train operator 1la1hed ill request for fede ral aublldy today and re- newed ill claim that the ad- m t nl1trat1on' 1 even·sllmmer propOlaJ would nr.an dropping almost all trains outside the Bolton·Wuhlntton corridor. -------------- The warnlnl from Amtrak Pruldent Alan S. Boyd in t11tlmony prepered for the Senate AppropriaUona aubcom· mlttee on tr1naportatlon con· tridhrted admlniatraUon ttale· mentl that Amtrak could ftnd themoneytokMp~meualDI runnlnC ~llewben. At the Garage ... 100% conon IZOO • LACOST£9o)(ford dress shirts 1n a ra1nboW ot oolOrs ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714 ) 644·7030 .. l i. t i • . I • i ,. IUlll COIT Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml MU NDAY MAR<..H .'~ 11IHI ORANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS B111nett reduces claim. to $1.5 By FREDERICK SCHOEMEW. OI .. Deity ~-'"" LOS ANGELES -Actress Carol Burnett asked a superior court jury today lo award her $1.5 million in damages from the national Enqµirer which she claims libeled her in a 1976 gossip column account. Though Mlaa Burnett original· ly sought $10 milHon, her at- torney said that the lesser sum, equal to one year's net earnings for the periodical, would be ade· quate. (See earlier story, page AS.) In his final argument to the jury, attorney Ed Bronson said the award s hould be large enough "to send a message lo them Hhe Enquirer) back in Atlanta: 'll'stimetostop'." ''To deter the corporation you've got to get them where it hurts. That's in the pocket." Miss Burnell sale! she would not comment directly on the amount of the damages her at- torney requested but sbe did in- dicate that she has specia l plans for any award she might re- ceive. "I'll have something 14) say on that later," sa id Miss Burnett. ·"No matter what happens, I ha ve n't lost," Miss Burne tt declared as s he strode down a corridor encircled by news re- porters and t e l ev i s i o n cameramen. "We have won a moral victory .'' Miss Burnett's legal action stems from an Enquirer story in which it was stated that she spilled wine on a dine r and became involved in a loud argu· ment with He nry Kissinger former U.S. Secretarv of Stale The EDQulrer later retracted the story. (Earlier story A5) In final ar~uments to the 11· member jury, Miss Burnett's attorney Ed Bronson, said Mias Burneu was libeled because the article was false. He said the pe r iodical acted with malice against his <.'lient and defamed her ··I am feeJin~ very good win. lose or draw." Miss Burnett said. "I didn't do anything, they (the Enqui re r> did It t o themselves." Th e jury s itting before Superior Court Judge Peter Smith ls expected to receive the case today. Bronson said he will request monetary damages less than the amount s pecified in the lawsuit. Following is the para~raph CSee CLAIM, Pa«e AZ) Business copters churn protests Cycle cop hurt during chase By JERRY CLAUSEN Of I ... D•llY , .... 51Afl A Newport Beach motorcycle officer on his way to work from his home in Mission Viejo suf- fered rp.inor injuries this morn· ing when a fleeing taxicab he pursued aJlegedly veered on the Santa Ana Freeway, forcing tum to Jose control or his motorcycle. Highway Patrol officers said motor officer Jim Coe joined the U.S. Border Patrol pursuit near Newport may buy helic opte r Th.e Newport Beach City Coun· cil will be asked tonight to ap- prove the purchase of a new Sl 11 .000 police helicopter and to formaliz.e a response agreement with Costa Mesa. Police in Newport have been working with only one helicopter since early November when the <.'ity's newest <.'opter crashed in the surfline off west Newport Beach. The crumpled heli copter was beyond repair, police said . According t o p a trol rom· mandcr Lt. Don Chandler. the police helicopter program is a "mere shadow" of what it was whe n two birds were patrolling the city ··No one believes it to be more than marg inally e frective as CStt COPTER, Page AZ) P ilots still seek wreck, two Mesans Civi l Air Patrol pilots concen· trating on the Sie rra Nevada south and wes t of Mammoth Lakes today continued hunting wreckage of a white plane which carriedtwoCosta Mesans. Hopes for Robert Reed and Michael Thompson, both 25 and both from Costa Mesa , were dim- ming. They vanished in the Cessna 210 last Thursday In a snowstorm. Adding to the bleak prospects is the fact one to three feet of fresh snow (ell In the area over the weekend, and temperatures have dropped Into the 20s al night. Civil Air Patrol Lt. Col. Lloyd Goodale, search coordinator based at Bishop Airport, said that, in tlis opinion, no trace will be found of the plane or occupants until the 11prin1 snow melts. Reed, a management trainee with Ralphs Grocery Co ., baaed at their Laguna Hiils market and Thompson, a carpenter and son of Newport Beach Detective S,i. Ken Thompson, had been on a two.day ski trip. They left about l p.m. Thuraday en route to. pick up three COlll· panlona watttn1 at Blthop Airport duplte pl•u of authorltlet at Mammotb-lune Lakes Airport not to a11k the d•n••roua ruibt. -Reed had radk*t the Ihm· moth-June Lakn Airport be w11 JO.int to hop oter th• mountalna and down to fr .. no t..fore Soinl toBllhopTbunday. Shortly ~Iller. contact wtt.b .. , ........... . El Toro Road on the northbound freeway shortly a fter the cab al· Jegedly drove through the alien <-'h eck point at San Onofre without stopping at about 9· 10 a.m. Patrolma n l.H. Lopez said Coe's motorcycle began to wob· ble from one lane to another near Lake Forest Drive before he lost control, s kidding a n estimated 500 feet a cross the freeway pavement. The red taxicab, registered for operation i.n El Cajon, finally was s topped ne ar Harbo r Boulevard and Ball Road in Anaheim by Irvine police of- fice rs who joined the pursuit near Jeffrey Road. said Irvine Lt. Sam Allevato. The cab, he said, blew a rear tire as it sped north on the Freeway and cut orr at the Harbor offramp. Arrested after a struggle with Irvine officers and then taken to UCI Medical Center was Arthur D. Moore, 27. of El Ca ion. Moore, a dri ve r for the Seaport Cab Co. in El Cajon. was arrested for suspicion or as· sault with a deadly weapon <his cab) and evading arrest . The case is being handled by the Orange County Sheriff's Department. Officer Coe was reported in good condition later this morn ing at Mission Com m unity Hospital, Mission Viejo. where he was treated for an ar m in· jury. Hi ghway Pa trolman Lopez s aid the 45-m ile -long pursuit . reached speeds u p to 90 mil es an hour as the red taxi wovC' in and out of traffic with the Border Patrol. Hi ghway Pa trol a nd Irvine officers giving chase Irvine police said the taxi car· ried hatchets and knives. Claeerf11I trio U11exp ected visitor Newport Beach fireman checks out damage after compact car driven by 59· year.old Ra hileh Kaviani of Fountain Va lley ended up in living room of apart- m ent at 1985 Sherington Place. Police said she loet control of her car late Sunday after pulling into a driveway at the Oakwood Garden Apartments and plowed through a wall and into living room. Nobody was in- j ured in the 11 :45 p.m . incident. Man dies after bouts JOHNSTOWN. Pa l AP> Ronald Mill<'r 's relatives tried to talk the 5·foot·7 fo rmer Marine oul of competing in a local fi ght. but he was unemployed and desperate for the $500 prize money As Miller zeroed in on his third opponent in the Tough man Cham· p1onship fight. his nose started to bleed and he got sirk to his stomach Sunda y. after emer~en· <-'Y surgery. the 23-year-old man died or brain hemorrhaging, authorities said "I t ned to talk him out of it. But h e was desperate He n<'eded the $500 He thought he had a chance. but he was too s m all,·· said Mille r 's fa ther. Robert. Miller. who weighed 169 pounds. started three bouts at the Johnstown War Memorial. where pre limina r y competition was h e ld in the T h i rd Annual Toughman Cha mpionship. The t i· tie fight, scheduled for •October in Pontiac. Mich .. has a top prize of $50,000 . Miller knocked out one oppo- nent Friday night and his fi rst op ponent Saturday "The audience went crazy over him T hey gave him a complete standing ovation." said Robert Miller had been seeing double and had been dizzy after the fi rst bout Saturday. Yet he star ted the second. Between fights, he compla ined o f f atigue. said his brother, Robe rt Miller Jr "The big man who was running it sa id to my brother . 'You have fi ve minutes.' My brother said , Tm too lired. How a bout giving me 10 minutes">" Robert Jr said Miller then was knocked down several times, a nd when his nose began to bleed, the refe ree called the bout. When the fighte r threw up, a doctor in the audien<.'e said M iller should be hospitalized. "There's not much q uestion about what killed him." Cambria Cou nty Coroner J ohn Barron said. "It had to be caused by a blow to the head. ·'These guys fi ght with gloves and they have kidney belts and protection in the groin, but there ·s no helmet on the head.·· Barron said. "That 's what I can't un· ders tand. Even the pros wear that i n practice, and the pros are trained to slip a punch . When you get a 220·pounde r throwing ha ymakers,wow !" Law,·e r eo111plai11s Cly more's arrest b y Syria protested By IOBN NEEDHAM OfU.Delty ~It.fl The lawyer representing freed Pakistani hijack hoata1e CraJ1 Clymore filed a formal com- plaint with CaUfornla Sen. Alan Cranston's otfice today In Waahinctoo. D.C., protealln1 the arre1t of hJ1 cUent by Syrian authorities ln Dama1cu1 Satur- day. The complalnt, filed by at· torney Ronald Kreber of Laguna Beach, charge1 U.S. Emb111y compUcity in Clymore'• IJTett on undl1clo1td ebar1e• a spokesman at Kreber'1 ~ce 11ld. Kreber l1 ln Waahln1ton awaltiftl the proc"'ln1 of b.11 vlta \hat wl11 allow blm to vii~ Clya:unla DamaacUI. seven other Southern cauror: nians. Clymore was one of more than 100 hoataces aboard a Paldltani jet that was hijacked March 2 on a fll1bt from Karachi to Peshawar. The plane, seized by three op- ponents of t.be Pakiatan 1ovem· ment, waa eventuaJly nown to Damucua, where th• h01ta1e1 were released March 1' ln u - chan1e for the fMedom ol 54 jailed P1ki1tanl poUUcal prltonen. • Juat houri after the h°'ta1t1 • releaM, news ol a 1rand Jury in· dlctmeat aa~ Ctymont ud ~ilht otber CalilomlaN wu re- leased by tM U .9. Attorney'• of. flt• lD Hew Yon. Pretident and Mra. Rea•an •bare • la~b with the 1981 March of Dimes ooeter child, Mary Meliita Jablonski ot St. Louil durin1 ber villt ta tbe White Houle today. CIJmON, It, fol'm•rlJ ot l..aJl• rons~ II eeeuM( ol be'8a tM , ........... of ............. . •11 ............. b ud .... 1mu.,U.1 operaUoe lllY01¥Wr o--..a.turclay Clymore waa at- r•t.d al laAI DalllUC\11 botel, ........... Md bMn •ta1inl llDte "11 nt1 ••· Tbe &n'ft\ came two ,..,.a.noas. ••••Al> Irv ine firlllS blamed By RICHARD GREEN Of,,.. D•llf ,.11•1 S!Alt Responding to <.'itizen com- p I a in l s. the I rvine P olice De pa rtment has told three Irvine-based companies to make s ure the ir helicop ters don't needlessly stray over residential neighborhoods The companies Fluor. Oc· cldental Petroleum and Wright Air Lift all <.'ontended their whirlybirds don't fl y over res- idential areas. The poli<.'e department con- tacted the firms after Irvine Ci· ty Councilman Larry Agran told Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart that a number of citizens in the University Park and Culverdale area or Irvine were upset with noise and vibration allegedly caused by private choppers fly. ing over their homes. ··Anytime anybody s ees a copter doing anytbtng they blame ft on ·us," complained Fluor Corp. Vice Pres ident Jay Reed. who noted that the cor· poratlon's two helicopte rs each average six to 12 flights per day. Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart said that residents or the Park West Apartments, localed just south of the Fluor headquarters, have complained that the cor- por a tion's helicopter s circled over the a partme nts before landing at the Fluor landing pad. Federal Aviation Administra- tion orricaals a lso not ed that Irvine res ide nts mig ht hear private heli copters that follow the San Diego Freeway on the route to San Diego. There is no minimum altitude a t which helicopte rs are r e- q uir ed to fly over congested areas. Peart said. He noted. however, that pilots <.'ould be breaking municipal or state law if they fly their heli<.'opters in- tentionally and uont!Cessarily tow over congested areas. "The only effective means or com batting this problem is lo have complainants obtain com- plete descriptive information (including the registration and numbe r ) c once rning the aircraft," Peart said. "Specific complaints can then be forwarded lo the Federal A vlation Agency, Flight Service District Office 65, 2815 E. Spring St., Long Beach. 90806," he said. CSee CHURN, Pa1e .\Z) ORANlil CUil llATHll Low clouds and local fog late night and mornine. then mostly suntly Tues- day afte rnoon. Lows tonight 48 along the coast, 54 Inland. HJgbs Tuesday 10 to 78. llllDf TIDAY ''CoaJ Mltwr'• Doughllr" ii 01lf of /itJf '"°1M1 nommatftl for but ptct"" ot th• Acoam~ AtDOrdl Oil llorch 30. SH the Jir.C m o ••ri•• o/ rlV~w.t on tlw fUm. on P• Bf 11111 Orange Coelt OAJL V PfLOT/Mond•y. Much 23, 1981 SerarnlJI -, . . -. . . ' ·--< • " . • Y: ' _, .. ) Koll firm project on agenda The Irvine City Council wi ll consider a Koll Co. zoning reques1 Tuesday for a commerc ial center that 1s to include six office build ings, a 50().room hotel and a resta urant Koll Center-Irvine is to be built on 46 2 acres of land on the northeast and northwest comers of the Mi c hels on Drive-Von Karman Avenue intersection. The land 1s presently zoned for research and light indus trial de· velopment The council members will consider changin g that zon· ing to a commercial designation. More than a million square reel of offi ce space is to be provided in four 10-story buildings, a seven- story building and a fi ve-story building. The 500-room hotel is to be 12 stor ies high Also beforc theC1tyCouncil A proposal by a partners hip 1 including Koll Co investors> to build a 10,000-s pectator am- phitheater at Lion Country Safari. A public hearing on the planned.widening of two lanes or University Drive between Culver L>rrve a n d the San Diego Freeway. A city staff report on the city's needs for health care fac-ilities. Man indicted in holdup of coast banks A man arrested on stolen car charges in Albuquerque, N.M .• three months ago has been indict- ed by a federal grand jury on six counts of bank robbery, four of them reported on the Orange Coas t. Richard Douglas Jones. 23, a transient. has been transferred to the Terminal Island Federal Cor- rectional Institution in Long Beach Harbor pending his next court appearance . No date has been set for his ar- raignment on the federal chanres. Newport Beach police say they believe Jones robbed the United California Bank branch, 3141 E . Coast Highway. of $2,228 last Christmas Eve. He is also alleged to have robbed the Bank of America branch al 3000 E . Coast Highway in Newport Beach of $285 last Halloween. authorities say. According to FBI spokesman John Hooe, Jones was also indict· ed on holdup cbargea at the Security Pacific Bank, 196 E. 17th St .. Costa Me5a, where $305 was taken the day after Thanksgiving. He la also-charged with lhe Sl ,600 holdup a month earlier of the California First N atlonal Bank, 17122 Beach Blvd., Hunt- ington Beach. Hoos said. OftANOE COAST COPTER ... pres ently constituted ... said Chandler of the city's reduced copter service. At the time of the crash, police rn Costa Mesa and Newport had been asked by councilmen from tJoth c ities to explore the possibility of combining police helicopter patrols. According to Chandler. such an arrangement would be costly, cumbersome and ineffective .. Councilmen from Costa Mesa and Newport came up with the combination idea last year dur- ing a joint brainstorming session at the Balboa Bay Club. Chandler reports that the primary problem with this idea would come in deployment. He said establishing priorities for response would be difficult. A report by Chandler to the ci- ty council also notes that Costa Mes a 1s geographically larger and has more crime incidents. meaning the copters would spend more time there. Further. notes Chandler, it would cost less on a per-hour basis Cor Newport to buy a new bird than to contract with Costa Mesa Cor helicopter service. If councilmen go along with the plan to buy the new Hughes Skyknight helicopter , the city would have to s pend another SS.000 to customize it for police ser vice. The two cities currently have an informal response agree- ment. Police are recommending that a formal agreement be drawn up and that respective helicopter s upe rvisors meet monthly to help promote cooperation. CLYMORE. • days after he was evicted from his hotel room and forced lo turn over all his money to satisfy the hotel bill. Kreber charged the U.S. Em- bassy in Damascus with pres- suring the Syrians into arrest- ing Clymore to force him to re- turn to the United States and face the drug smuggling \!harges. Syria and the United States have no extrad ition treaty. The spokesman at Kreber's of- fice said Clymore had agreed Friday to sign a waiver of sur· render and return lo the United States. The spokesman said Kreber advised the U.S. Embassy in Damascus of Clymore's wilUng- ness to return, and said bis client wouJd sign the waiver as soon as he reached Damascus Wednesday. However, since Clymore was arrested. Kreber may postpone his client's return untll more favorable arrangements for his surrender can be agreed upon, the spokesman said. "The agreement was that lf Clymore wu taken into custody nothing would be si1ned,'' tbe spokesman said. Dilly Pilat MAINOPP'tee Thomu P. Haley ,,__., AobtnN WHd ,._ M. Thom .. KffVll ..... I.,~~~~·forpl'\lne Ch•'-H. Looa ,._.. ......... ~ .... Bernetd Schulman ~ ~~1..~ l(ennelfl N. Ooddatd Jr. ~..., ' m Wttl..., St .. t•t. MtM, CA. Mall...,_: .. ,. IMO, C..IA lll'tM, CA, mJt c.,1,ltlll ••• 0r...,. t#tt ~'..,."' ,.,..,.,,,, ... ,,_. •Witt. 111111t•••'-· ecmo•••• ,,..,., or •• .. MIHffteflf\ ll«elfl fft•y tie rt••odv<M #It~ -ltl il'tffl!IHlol\ of ,.,,.,ltM O#lltf'. • I ' While you were loafing around the house Sunday, these 75 young men and women were competing for a chance to become lifeguards in Huntington Beach. In photo above they are sprinting to water for swim to bait house on Hun- tington Beach Pier and back. Randy Gates. 17, Garden Grove edged Tod Pickett. 20, Costa Mesa, in this race C photo at left>. However, Pickett. a Golden West College student. won both the around-the -pier swim and the run- swim-run event. About JO of Sunday's competitors will be selected for training during Easter week and about 10 of those will get s ummer jobs . ----- Mission commander Vladimir Dzhanibekov, 38, left, and Jugderdemidiyn Gurragcha. a 33-year-old Mongolian, have been lofted into earth orbit and will link with two cosmonauts who have been aboard Soviet space station Salyut-6 since March 12. It's s econd mission for Dzhanibekov, the first for Gurragcha. New group formed to boost Newport Newport Beac h res idents familiar with local groups with catchy names like SPON and SPIN can now add SUN to that list. SUN, standing for Speak Up Newport, is led by former Newport mayor Don Mcinnis, who claims the group will steer clear of politics and spread good news concerning the Harbor Area. Mcinnis, who intends to formally introduce SUN at a Tuesday morning press con - ference. claims the group will speak for Newport's "silent ma- jority." ·'We want t o artic ulate Newport's positive aspects as opposed to other groups that take the negative approach," said Mcinnis. ''We're tired of negativism." The former mayor said SUN will hold social functions and may take out newspaper ads to com munlcate with the com- munity -an approach already used by SPON <Stop Polluting Our Newport>. Fre•P~AI CHURN •.. Peart noted that while there are only three helicopters known to operate out of Irvine, "literal- ly thousanch of helicopters are registered In So uthern Caltfornla.'' which have the potenUal of fiyln1 over the city. Spokesman for Wright Air Lift and Occidental Petroleum were unavailable for comment on their helicopter operatlona. Chief Peart said that while Fluor officials denied that their cbopeers tty over residential nelabbort\ooda, they agreed to notify the corporation's chief pllot of the concerns of the cltlaena. Mc innis said SUN is not being formed to "counterpunch" the SPON messages. .. If they I SPON 1 gel too far out of line." added Mcinnis, "we may be tempted lo point that out.·· SPON. a 400-member group headed by Jean Watt. is general· ly regarded as an advocate of slow growth Mcinnis said he will. reveal SUN's board of directors at the Tuesday conference. Mcinnis is president of the group and re- altor Pete Barrett is vice presi- dent. SPIN (Stop Pornography in Newport), just for the record, is a non-political group formed to help force the closure of an adult bookstore. 111 Lo11g Beireh Parents of slain girls found dead LONG BEACH <API The par ents of two girls round suf- focated in a motel room this weekend have als o been found dead in their home, and police s aid they were investigating the ca se as a possible triple murder a nd suicide. Police would not release the names of any of the victims. Of- ficers said the woman was shot to death but did not r eveal how the man died The man was reported to be a 42-ye ar-old doctor. his wife was 39. and the two children were 7 ye ars old, police said. Police had been seeking public assistance Sunday m an attempt to identify the girls arter a maid at the motel discovered their bodies at a Ramada Inn on Pacifit' Coast Highway. Det~tive Ron Nelson said in· vestigators received a lip that the girls were daughters of the doctor. a nd whe n police in- vestigated the family ho me. they found the additional bodies The body of a man who had been badly beaten was found rn a trash dumpster . the body of anothe r man, ide ntified a s Gregory Smith, 25 , of Whittier, wa s found floating off th e marina jetty here with a bullet CLAIM ... that led to Miss Burnett's filing of the lawsuit: ·'In a Washington res taurant, a boisterous Carol Burnett had a loud argument with anothe r diner, Henry Kissinger " Then s he tripped around the place, of· fering every one a bite of her dessert. But Carol really raised eyebrows when sfie accidental- ly knocked over a glass of wine over one diner and started gig- gling instead of apologizing. The guy wasn't amused and · a cciden· tally' spilled a glass or water over Carol's dress." in his head; and the body of a third m an, who appeared to have been shot, was found lyin~ in an alley. Identities of the other two men were not immediately disclosed by authorities A m ard discovered the girls ' fully clothed bodies at about 11 30 a m S unday a t the Ra mada Inn on Pacifi c Coast Highway. One girl sat in a chair, the other in bed. a nd both had pillows over their heads, said police .. There wa~ no ind1cat1on tha1 they were abused ," said Sgt Ron Carpenter Sgt Di ck Wood s a id there was n o evidence that the girls , believed about 7 and 10 years of age . had b e en bound or restrained in any way by the s layer. Police were having difficulty identifying the girls. "We have "c hec ked with all nearby police agencies ," Wood s aid .. "and no children answer ing to this description have been reported misstn~." Don Focht. manager of the 105-room motel. said a "single individual" had registered in the room three days before the bodies were discovered. He would not elaborate Motel employees did not . re m ember seeing any children with a man who reportedly rent- ed the room. Wood said. Ile said personnel of a nearby nightclub and other people who may have been in the vicinity were being questioned in the hope of developing leads in the r ase Fir~ deaths told NEW ORLEANS I A P l Fire officials called off the search t hr o ugh th e ruins of a fire-ravaged apartment building a fter finding the bodies of an e lderl y woman and four children. Cause of the blaze was under investigation. -----------~----- At the Garage ... AL'S GARAGE Gold prices ri8e • r LONDON (AP) -Gold price. rote aa much u t:26 an ounce ln Europe today, reflecUna concern over the lateat labor unreat ln Poland. EJt.,.C~fUona of a b&lt ln the decline °' U.S. lnterest rat.. helped the dollar 1alD a1almt major curttnc•"· 10~ 00t1on IZOO • ucosTroxford dress shirts in a rainbow of colors 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 i f • • ' ITE TRAN ACTION OUOlATICMd IM(.1.llOf HAOliO• , ... 111'1• YO•• MlllWl\T, •M:•flC..••• '°''o ... ou•o" 41110 C1WCIM1114Tt ifOCI' flC .. AltO .. AMO •lfOllTfO I Y fMI N.UOAlllOINUllllT • N ... Dow Jones Final Up 11.44 Ctoelng 1,004.24 ... ,~'­.~,. Tax court \1 unsympathetic r Part nr of a sent& of columns on saving on your 19llO income to.:tts.J Tax deductions for education expenses can be ex· tremely valuable not only in the dollar amount you can save by deductions but m benefits lo your whole life inherent in the education you obtain. But while expenses of education intended to sharpen or Improve skills in performing your job are deductible. you must be able to show courses you took were chosen for the purposes you claim. Expect no sympathy from the Tax Court if the Internal R eve n ue -~ SYlVIA PORTIR ~ , Service disallows your deduction for the courses you took because the courses are not reasonably related to your job. AS AN ILLUSTR ATION. a lawyer who specialized in handling cases on appeal claimed a de· ductio:i for certain graduate level courses in English literature at Georgetown Unjversity on the basis that the courses helped him by improving his writing and speaking skills required in the practice of law The IRS barred his deduction a nd in 1980, the Tax Court agreed. The connection between the courses he took and his job of preparing legal briefs and present· Ing legal arguments as an appellate attorney was in· sufficient and loo remote. The Tax Court noted that not one of the courses be took was related to improving wntmg skills al> a course m creative writing might do. THE IMPLICATION SEEMS to be that the court m ight have upheld his deduction for courses lhal directly improved has writing skills on the grounds 1t would enable him to wnte better legal bnefs. Another Tax Court decision stressed the 1m· portance of being able to prove courses directly help improve your .1ob skills. Here a clinical social worker decided to undergo psychoanalysis lo help her distinguish her own personality problems from those of her patients and thereby enable her to provide better treatment for them . SHE ALREADY WAS certified and licensed un· der state law as a clinical social worker so she didn't need the psychoanalyi.is for that purpose. nor did she need it lo retain that sta tus. IRS rusallowed the deduction. Bot the Tu Court upheld the social worke r becaUBe her psychoanalysis maintained and Improved the skills required in her profession, and dldn 't qualify her for a new pro· Cession. _She deducted the cost of her psychoanalysis as a business education expense. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS T•o~o Int SH rsAoell Sony (.crp ClllCO•P j11t1Alcnl1 s Mobll IBM jllm~ N•ol Alrt (;en MOion S<ott P-• ~'ft:. ~tt.t Int:; R•lstnP\lr UPS AND DOWNS Uf>I L••~ .... c.~~' .,.~ . ,.,., ,,,, t ' 101-o • I 11''-' ,~ ~. 1~ 2"-• ,,,. 19~ • I~ .av. • ,.,., ~:.· '"- l HI CllO . '" u .... u~-,,,_ ... .,.. , ... ,. :I J\11 -..... l"' v. ,;~ 1~ 16 I 31 . ,, , '''• '• 181.. . '• 'JAi• s, ... . ~ ..... . , .. u .. lA"" . '• JO'• '• ~ ... ~ ,," ... IO '• ui• ..... '"' • IJ•. . ' . P(I UP II' Up US Up 111 Up II 0 Up 101 Up 10 2 Up 100 Up t t Up " Up t 0 Pct Oft IS t Off U.2 011 IJ 2 Off 7 t Oii '·' ~I 6.1 ' •. J II 6.7 011 s• Oii 5. METAL S C-r II-. •1 tellh • POunO U S Oe\to,,. hons L•U .i. Cttll\ • -nd ZiA< '''"• <•nh • poufld o.11vrrPO Tift SI OJO ~t•I• W"• comoo"lt lb "''""'1"""' '' '""" • ooun0. ,. v M•rcwry S400 00 .,., 110\k Pl•ll"""' SSIS.00 troy 01 N Y SILVER h Tlte 4•-i.tM Prttl H•l'IOy & H•rmon. Sil 110 per 1rot oun<t GOLD QUOTATIONS L•ft .. ft. rnorn1r>Q """9 Un 00, uP Slf 00 L•....,.: •Iler,_ ••••nv U l• 00. up n 1S "•''' a lier._, 1111n9 U•• ~ up JI/ H I ~u,.lltvt1 lox1r>Q UJI 00, up U f 49 lwrlcll. 1•1• •lltr.-r1 '"""0 S~11 00, liO , '11 00. UJO 00 ••UG H•"•Y • H••m•ft Only d••ly 11uoto U16 00, up St 11 E .... tllard. CW\IY <l•llY quote U l6.00, llf) \9.H '"••Illa,•: onlv d•llv quot• l•bricottd UO 04, up U o1 SYMBOLS ,, ( OrMlQe CoMt OA1L Y PtLOT/Monda~, Maroh 23. 1981 \ 'Cool, Miner' Oscar gold for Spacek~ (Pini oJ /it» ,.\Mw, on"'°'*' 110miftalfd /or 1»1t The llnl hall workt belt. Two ot tbe film's the chart.II and from there lt'1 on to the Grand Old pkt11n OIC'Or at tlw $1rd AcodfmJI AIPtlt'ds en~ seven Oscar noml.oaUOlU are for art dJredlon and Opry and lbe bi< time. Morch 30) clnematopaphy. Ralf 0 . Bode was director of But success is not without t.r.,edy. Loretta has a J photograph)', John W. Corao production director. already lost her father throu&b death, cron)' Patsy Y E~•.!0'!~~;?:~STEIN Siuy LI believable u 1'·year·old Loretta Kline is killed In a plane c:ruh and Loretta'• con· Slaty Spacek'a act101 bas been widely rec:· Webb. She Utlens lo the Opry on r1dlo Heh Satur· tlnual miaraine head1c:hes leads to a nervous 'ocnlied slnce her stirrin1 performance in "Car· day nJght wlt.b brolhera and al1t~n. mother Clara breakdown on stage. ( Patay alves Loretta ber big rte." But in no role has she been more versatile < PhylUs Boyena> and father Ted <Levon Helm>. break by co-starring with her on the faJr c:lrc:ult>. than that of Loretta Lynn in "Coal Miner's She reportedly lost 13 pounds to play the part of a D au1hter.' • She I s skinny kid who catches the eye of "Doo." just re· oomfnated for beat-turnedtotheKentuckyhUls fromWorldWi.ril. ac:tresa Oscar. She Is OSCARS RAC[ likely to win, though the year-old film's chances to capture best picture for which It's nominated appear stim The Bernard Schwartz-produced movie tells the story of Loretta's struggle , heartache, works and success well despite some contrivances <I.e .. Sissy singing next to an old wash tub. Tommy Lee Jones as Loretta's husband Doolittle (Mooney> Lynn getting cozy with a carnival-booth girl and fighting while Loretta makes her Grand Old Opry debut). The picture is in two parts the first that or Appalachia as Loretta grows up poverty-stricken in Butcher Hollow, Ky and act two her rise to stardom DOOU 1TLE HAS A choice of working 1.111 moonshiner, coal miner or finding ~Is future elsewhere and decides on the latter when he takes a job as logger in Washington Statt'. It's while In the Northwest Doolittle pursuades Loretta <by now the mother or four) to sing at a local honky-tonk. He buy11 her a guitar ror an anniversary present rather than the wedding ring she has longed for. Visits to every Podunk radio station in Ken· tucky and Tennessee to push Lorettu'11 first cut, "Honky-tonk Girl," which she also wrote, finally work after she vents her anger at a disc-jockey at t he first station visited for lying about playing the record The Lynns later learn Loretta's song 1s 14th on Blondie's 'Rapture' on top By Thf' Associated Press The following a re Billboard's hot record hits for this week as they a ppear in Billboard magazine : HOT SI NGLES 1. "Rapture" Blondie (Chrys alis l 2. "Woman" J ohn L~nnon <GeHen) 3. "The Best of Times" Styx <A&M > 4. "Keep on Loving You" REO Speedwagon <Epic> 5. "Crying" Don McLean (Millennium I TOPS IN POPS 6 "He llo Again " Neil Diamond <Capitol > 7. "9 to 5" Dolly Parton < RCA I 8 "Just lhe Two of Us" Grover WC1shington Jr <Elektra> 9. "Kiss on My L11>t" Daryl Hall & John Oates <RCA> Pair togethe r a g ain HOLLYWOOD 1A P 1 John 13elus hi and Dan Aykroyd will star 1n ·Ne1ghb"rs." based on the book by Thomas Berger The movie. for Zanul·k Brown Pri>ductions and Columbia Pil'turr:., J.!OC'~ into produ('tton April 20 in New York City Belushi and A~·kroyd gained fam e on NBC's "Saturday N1J.(ht l.1 v(• and were together in "The Blues Rrothcrs .. r R NOW PLAYING United Alt11t1 ,, edwards LIDO CINEMA HEW .. OltT I LVO AT ¥IA LIDO 10. "What Kind of Fool" Barbra Streisand & Barry Gibb <Columbia I TOP LPS l "High lnfidelily" REO Speedwagon I Epic> 2. "Paradise Theater" Styx (A&M l 3 "Moving Pictur es" Rush (Mercury 1 4 . "Double Fantasy" John Lennon· Yoko Ono ( Gefferi l 5. "The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond (Capitol l 6. "Arc or a Diver" Steve Winwood (Island> 7. "Zenyatta Mondatta" The Police <A&M 1 8. "Crimes o f P assio n " Pat Be natar I Chrysalis) ll. "Captured" Journey <Columbia> 10 DOM RADIO STEREO ml FM FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INV ITING llDI NOT ICE 1SHE~Eavc;1vEN•~· • ... Boud ol Tru""' ol ,,.,. C.,.\I Com mun•t1 Coi1191 D•,lrktolOrM1ge Coun •v. C•llf0tn1•. ••II re<e1v• H•••d l>td\ up lo II 00 • m , ,.,...,.Y, M•«ll 31 '"' •• ,,.,. Pu<c,...•no °"""'1,.,.n1 01 W •d coll-dt>tft<I IO<•llCI •I IJIO AO.m' A.. Coll• MIM, CA, •I wh1< h ume , •• o Otch w•ll bl outtht ly OC>et'tif'd ilndT•olid fOf LEASE Pu~CHASE OFF\E I P~INTINCSYSTEMS.OMO CCC A.If btch •re to bf''" •'corO•n(• ...,,,,, 1~ 8 •0 F0tm 1nS1htCt1on\ •no (Of"d1 t1on\ •"o Soitcu1c•hon\ wn1tn •'~no"" >n tit• •nd m•v br \efu,.d '"' tM OU•<~ 1t tn. Purc:tw·\•nQ AQt'nt ot \••O (Ollfot 11\tr1cl P UBLIC NOTICE NOTI(.( OF INTENTIOH TO COLLECT AND TO llEMOVE PERSONAL PllOPEllTy FllOM THE ITAT( OF CALll'OllNIA In llM -lier ol llW e. .. 1. ol John Gr•"•m Mc.~ld LORE'M'A'S MAltalAGE 18 tn danaer wben Doollttle becomes a ngered by her independence, in· eluding her use of makeup. It was he. after all, that got her to the Opry . And despite success, Doo contlnuea to chide Lorett11 tor her ignorance. He has been frustrated from the first days of their marriage by her lack of cooking and sexual knowledge. Beverly D'Angelo Is good as Patsy Cline, Jen· nifer and Jessica Beasley play the Lynn twins Paby and Peggy convincingly in another bit of t•ontrivance. MS. SPACEK NOT ONLY looks the role of kid but mutures as the picture progresses. Her portrayal of glamour star is one Spacek fans are unuccu11tomed to. She docs her own singing and guitar playing as well. Latc-rughl television viewers will recall Sissy appeared shortly after the film's release doing more of the Loretta bit on "Midnight Special." "Coal Miner's Daughter" was touted winner at its release and has appealed to non-country fans as well as those who ~orshipped that music long before the r urrent country fad. But the film is going lo have a difficult time winning March 30 because stronger movies have screened since Spring 1980. \ f'lll M;ff f;• I -:"::~;~!~1·~!;,:""o • .,._...,tea_,_ ... ,., .... ~ •.•• \ Mii 81~~;;' I i~:.~~A.~ =~.-:.~~~~ :.·~ • ..,..,.,..""°'.,., ,.,., .. , 'lk •• , ...... fMI LA.If CMAl'fl.A ... TMC O•M f.,OQT THE FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 I ti • JM• t ••I tt • tt• aAl'OA.MI N tCI ..,.. t.uu.t 1&•••• .,,. F.c:ully ••c..ndl•-JllrU•·•SIO F.c:ully 11c.no•·-JIJ/Ul·tSIO n ...... , • ..,..,., ..... ~._~ FEAA NO EVIL 1•1 t) •• ' ............... , ... JoACll NICHl()lM)M AMO Jtl l W:A ~ THE POSTMAN ALWAYS AINOS TWICE 101 ,, .... ,., ......... , .. ITUllOl'NCHUC .OUM> Waft Disney. FANTASIA IClj 1111 >MMl1'lAl.0 ,, ... , ... , ...... "" .. ._ ... __ WALT DISNEY'S FANTASIA 101 UM• t••ttl·t •• tt • ,._, LA.a r CMA.P-fl• * fMI OtH.N flUl.00¥ THE FINAL CONFLICT i•1 tJ••)Ol•ll0·••·11 JO ., ..... u10 '°" tu ACAOl.w't ••M• "THI" ll"OI ..... ,,,.,, .. ..,,......,,,.f...,-u. ...... "BACK ROAOS" (A) .,. , ..... ,. t tl 1M.L,. ••LO t tOllMI• U'I ~ BACK AOAOS 1•1 .,. "" ' ......... ,,.,,. ·--........ " ... " ..,.......,l.D HMll rwo ACAOllHAWAA09 THE COMPETITIO N ""o ..,_nu r •·••·IAf"9Utl Joe . ,. . , ..... E•cn 0100tr mu\t \ubm1t ;ii,1tn h•~ b•d I \._ .-,,;,.ua.""..., ·• ,, ... , ,.~1 ..... ., ,.,~..._..._...,._f".o, __.,) • t •s.n1tr \ t~<k. certit1ed cntck 0' HEW,O RT I EACH 673-8350 NOTIC.E 15 HERESY GIVEN to •II Pf'' \On\ 1nl•'f"~tfd wh•lnt-r .,_ creo11~, nt1t\ teQ.1ttts or oevu.•n of lhf' abow AUTWO dfl:••Wd •hO\~ ••\I ''-Ow n •Odft'\\ w .t\ Bo• 78' I H•rbOt Ortigon th•I Ltlt•r'S ot T f\t•me-nt•rv wt~ '"\Wd to t<tnntlh A H1nn1MOn 'Sll1 Pt1tc4n e., Or1VP. 8fOOk1nq\. OrPOOf\ ~1'1) Oy tn• C1rcu1t Cour1 of the' St•tt Of 0rf9C)n cl Curry (ou"•• •court ot comoet•nt '""WH .. t•on or lhe St•t• ot Or f90n Th•t r.ch 01 th@' fOllo,.,nq namtd ·~ ~l:ll:ll:l:EEKK•••••••::l::l:l:Jl:Jl:JICICIClrJ 1naeotflJ to 01 1\ hOl01nq ~r~•I 0' o- 0t' ty Of ,,.. Yid ditl rdt'nl ...__ ____ ...=.;;..;..;:;;"'-=_;.::'-'c:;:.;;..._.~'-"'....::.::...!.:.:..::."-".=::.:...----/ b•d~r \ oono m40f ~1•blt to tf'\f' oraer PUBLIC NOTICE HOTI CE INVITING &IDS NOTICE ISHE RE9YC.1VE N 1nal 1ho 801ro·-0• Tru\ttf'\ ot lnft C:o•\t (om mun11v Collq 01\lr ''I ol Or~"~ Coun tv. C•llforn1•, w1t1 t f'Cfl•v• \,.jffd O•O\ up lo 11 lO • m lu<'•d•V M•rtn )I t'tt '1 ll'W Purtt'ld\•nQ De1>•rlm~nt of s.a1d coll~ d•\tr•(-t IO<atf'O 01 1J10 Ad•m' Ave , (O\I• Me\•. CA at wn1<,, Um• Wld Did' will ~ ~ubht ly OPf'Md •nd re•dfO' PURCHASE O~ TV PE Sf l TI Ne; EQUIPMENT JOURNALISM OCC All 01d' •rt 10 o. '" d((Ol'd•nt ' with the 8 1d F0tm ln\trut l•OI" •n<I (.ondt t1ons •rut Sot<tflC•flon\ wh1t h '-'''now ( on f 1l••nom•y t» \ttureo 1n lftf olt•c•ot •.th• Purct\e\lnQAQent ot \•1d<Ollt9f d•~ , '''Cl ~ E.tch O..dder mu1t 1"ubm11 with tut l"b1d • c•\h1er \ <ht<k. Cftflf1•d <llt <k, or btddt• ' Dond m..,,. p.oya 1>1• lo IM orclf• 01 ,,,. Coa•t lom nuntty Coll~ 01\tr1c1 8o•rd ot T ""'"' 1n •n amounl not If\\ th•n /t't11 H rcent CS ,.J ot the '"'m b•d ~n • \guar1nlet ll\et l'-btdder wilt tnttr Into tn• proposod Conl,.ct •f th• J•me ti 1w1ro.a 10 n1m tn uw tv•nt of t•ltu,-e to e-nter into \u<.n COl\trAct Ille prO<ffCI\ OI lh• <""<~ Wiii 0. fOflelttd, or 1n '""cu~ ol •bond, tht full \um Uwr.at will bl' fort11te<1 to Wld (Olltol' dl\lrt<I No bidder rrwy wtlhdr•w h1\ bid tor• .,.,.OCI of forty hve !0 1 <1•1• •lltr tilt O•tt .. 1 lor lllt-n•"CllhtrtOI 1 The Bo.rd of Tru\tee\ rt\trv11 the pt lvl1tci-01 rt1tct•nu •ny •nll •" b•d' o• Ito w•1111 •n~ lrreoul•rit1f \ or 1n form•llllHln •nybldor 1n lht b1<101n9 NORMAN E WA TSON S.cret.,y, Bo.lrdol Trust"' c ... ,1commun1ty Co11e91 Oi\lri<I Publl"•d OranQ&' '°'" D•ilv Pilot .,.,.., 14, U, 19tl 1~1 II ' DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? II you hH• 11.111 flied f Ot.tr new P'lctltlout l u1lne u N1111e a nd fine ll9t yfl hbmltted h lot pullk.etlofl, plH H don't Iott•• 11111 Ill• ll1Rlle llon It 30 d•f • frOlll _.. of ftllflt, T ~ OA IL Y PILOT wlll publlt h '°"' ..... ,,..,.1 f or t it.t o. 01.1r clrc11l•lloll IMhid H tM entire Ottnt• Co11t ~ are• •lld .... I llOtlcH .. ,..t 11'1 ... edition•. In ord•r lo 1111111111 your a1•1 •111 •nl l ot p 1111110 1 tlo11 ••11d .,,...,.. ... aottJ •nd • chuk 10 THI DAILY PtLOT, ,,0. to11 IMO, C.ttl ...... CA .. lt. We'll .. IM'"'·'~ lllfoflllotloft "'°"' ..... '"'""'""' ,..... c ... Ml4*'1 &. U2. . PUBLIC NOTICE ol IM C.Oi\IC.ommunot~ ColltQ&' O"'"' t Bo•ro of Tru\IH\ 1n •n •mount not It\\ th.•" t1vt percent t S .._,of the \um b10 ., • Qu•r•ntH lfWl tt'l•b100~r w1ll •l'Utr 1n r •d•u•v Fe0rr•• s."""9' •no Lo.,, 9JDdl':::~~~~~~~=~=~=~:::,:;i-l11:KI Anoc11tlon, !US Harbor Boult vord, • llorl.f'fl 1·11 ..... ""'· ~· 1:00 11\o. e...1 1:"5 (.O\t• Mt \•, C•l1torn1• 92'..21 HOT!CE OF TAUSTE ~·s SALE 10 IM Prc>PO\ff Contr.cl 11 In• ••mt •\ That '"" unoerwun" ""'"., 10,. IMPORlllH NOTICl! CHllDRUI UNOl R 12 fllH 1 LOAN NO UOl.._. •.,•rdtdlon1m lnllwevenloff••lurtfo T s NO SU41·J •n1tr1nlo\utn <onlti< 1, IM procHO\OI W f ~IE RN RE .. L E~T ATE ln•cno<~w1lllM'lorltolff,Orinlne <••t F IN.,NC.IAl. INC •\ Oul• aPPo•nled ol • 00<\d, llW full 'um lhertol w.tl i... f ru~tr~ un~, thp touo""'"Q de\cr1be-d tort•lteoto\a1dc.oll~d1\tr1ct dt'PO i>• tru\t WILL SELL AT PUBLIC Not>1d0frm•v••t~r • ..-n1\b•d for. AU C.. I I 0 N T 0 I ti E H I C. HES: P<!ftOO Of IOM1 l1vt f 0 1 d.V\ •lier IM Bl DOER FOR CASH IP•Y•Dlf .. tom• dalf\fl!Orll>eoc>eninul,..,rtol o• \alt 1n ldwful mC>nf''f' ot 1tw uniteo Th• 8oaro of Tru\tHs rtserve~ tnt St•lf \) •'' rtQhl t•ll~ •no •nt•rrsl pnviltQt ot reJ•<t•no•ny .nd •II btd'i o• tonveo;td 10 ~no now hf:tld tiy •t vnoer to w•1vf' •nv irrtQul•r•h•\ or 1n \•1d Ot-l'd Of trust in t~ praperty torm•lll1P\1nM1'(b•d OrintN'01001nQ nfrtm•ller elf\< flbl!d NORMAN E WA I SON TRUSIOR WILLIAM F NORTON S..<rtl••1, It I • \•nQlf' m6n Boa root Trv\lff\ 8E N EFICIARY Cl TY F EOERAL C.0i\tCommvn1ty SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOr;'ATION • Coll-Oi\lro<I toroor•t•on Pubh\rw<I C>Mtoit (041\t O•itY PHOI Recorded Ocl-a. 1919 •• instr MM i• " 1'1111 IJU 11 l'jO lll-0 m Do<* IJlO, O.Qt 9SI ol ou., ••• RKorch '" IN" othCf' ot tht R.-corder of Or.nQt County 1i••d a .. .a PUBLIC NOTICE Of t rv \I dt\c r •D~\ lt\f •OllO••nQ LEGAL NOTICE P"OPtrlr NOT1CE tS HEREBY GIVEN thil Lo• '•' 01 h •CI No 11711n tt\f' C•tv tM toltow1nq items off~ or s•v..O ol Co•I• _,.,, Countr of 0«•"9t· S1•1t proc>trlt ,,..t tlffn IM!d by llM Pollo of C•lllorn•• •• , per m•P ,.c.ordit-d '" 0 tO•f1mtnt Of tM c11, ot '°''• Mtt-• Boo• ~l P•\l•S "' t h ru "'·tar • P9ftod 1n ••<•n of n1~1y •'01 M1\t"H1trwou1 ~os. 1n tnt ottict of dl'f\. tn~ C.ot.1nh R1<.or0fr of ~••d County 801\ i Or•"Of Scnwri'fnn Lt four I 11 E •<•PI owretrvm a u Ott, Q•\, m1ner•ls 8 1cyctP. Boy s 8e•oe Hufty S..nt• ~. •nd otl'ltr rtydrouroon> o.1ow •depth B1<yC1t, Boys 81.ck Columbl• J spa 01 \00 toe1. ,.llhout 1ne r1cihl 01 •vrlact 81<1<1t. Boy\ Rtd eucncomber entry, e\ rt\.frved 1n 1n,trumtnts of 81cycte, 80'Y"\ Stiver Stl~r•y 8l<yc1e • record Boy·, Yellow Motobt<•nt 10 Spd 1.!S S11t1 Av~nu•, Co\t• Mts•. 8 i<ycle, I Tr.c.k T•pe Pl1yer, I( M1rt Ce111orn1a Solld !itilt A1M BllCk Rtd10, $kl (If • ~he-et addrtu or common R•ck, Aec.ords, M.IQ Wheels, Tool\, dt11onat1on I\. •hown •bove, no OrUI I. Money. w • rr • n I y IS Q l v• n a> IO 1 I\ NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVE N lhil romplettntU or corrtclne u> If no owner •ppe•ri •nd prov•' hit Int o~nefl<1••Y under ••Id Doed of owntrshlpol lhtpr-rty within 'even lru•I, br •N •on ol a brtACll or d<tl•ull (I) d•y\ lo1lowlng Ille publlcillon ol '" l~t 011ll9e1lon• secured thereby, lnl\ Notice, tM llllt IMrtto \h•ll ••" ner1totor1 t•1cuted •nd ~fiver.CS to In \he Hndff, U ,,,.,. bt otte, or In tt\.e lh• unclet\IQned • wfllltn De<ll••llon City ol CMI• ~ ... 1n wnlch t1H IM ol D•••ull .,,d Dem.,id lor Sil•. •n1 propert11Mll be \old •I Pllbll< t uctlon wrlttPn nott<e of br.-ch •nd .>f ete<tlon 1t •time •nd 0.11 to be M1nounc.1d 10 (tUW ..... undersicinect lo stll Mid DA TEO J.ta II pn>ptrly lo HliSly M id obllQAllOn,, R E NETH end llMrNlltr 11\e un<1tr\1Qntd ceu~ CHIEF 01' POLICE ••Id noh<t ol l>rHCn ..,d of ele<tton lo PubUslled Or-COil! Delly Piiot ~tl~M::ed .. ~·r::-~.:~· ~~~I~~ M•rcn U , ... , IO J.I) A•coro s PUBLIC NOTICE tt1v~ thtt w 1d l)tr\Cl'•I pro~rry or 10 c.ollttt trw ct•1tn\ and to r1tmove from tnf St&tt of C•llforn1a 10 tntt l ••d Stalt lh•I L•ll•'' T•\l•MtfllifV O• OI Ad I m1nt~lt4'f10f'\ hav• ~n 1~\Vtd All Pt"r\OI'\\ n•v1no c111m\ •o~""'' tn• w •d de<•dt'nt o..-who ndvw an ,,, ttr•\t •n \li•d t\~lf •nO •no wish to oo1t ct to \>utn removal, mu\t Qhe 1Nr1tten not1cl" of \UCtl 001KhOn 10 ,,... ~r \Of'\ Of' pitr\01\ 1n0fbte-O to, or hOld· 1n4;1 Pfr\~I Pf'"C>Pf't"ly of tht det t'dent. "' the lddff'\\ •' h\led bttlow4 w 1ttun tnret tll month\ alter t1r\I pubh<•t1on Of tn1\ HOl1t f O•tf'd end ,.,,, s>ubfl\f'\.fod Mat<h •. Ifft i<•nnatn A H1901n.\an, Penon•I Repr•w-nl•hvf ot I"" f\wltOI JO"" c;,.,,.,,. Mt OoNIO c o O.v•d R foruu Allorney 11 wow PO Boa 100 8r"°"'~ Ort O clS Publl~-Or-Coa\I 011ly Pilot M.,tl>' t•. 13. JO I'll! 10.0 II Going Into Business? As required by lew, n e w bu sln e11es using a Fictitious Bu1lne11 Neme mutt reg lller that name with the County Clerk. Call the DAILY PILOT LEGAL DEPARTMENT for torm1 and further lntormetlon. 642-4321 Ext. 332 PUBLIC NOTICE -------S••d .. ,~ will be mllcle, bul *•tr>oul coven•nt or w•,.r•ntr . esptess or 1mpu~. r-e9Ard1~ t•ll•, POJHSston, °' •"tuml>r.,..H, to PIY trw •-•lnl119 prlnc1,..1 wm of Ille nolt lsl Mtuted l>y H id 0..0 of Trust, with lnterul •s u\ \.aid ""4• prow•oect. ~ven<H, If any, ,,_, IM terms of Wld Oud ol Tr1KI, ltu . cnarges •nd t1e>ensu of the Tr11stff -Of Ille trusts trNllCI ..., .. 1d Oetd of Truit Sold w le will be lleld Oft -ICl•r. AP"ll U, ltll •I I I 00. m ••• llM Olli<• Of T .0. Senrlct Comp..,y, a.n-01 Amertc. Tow.,., S..ltt 1110, One C•IY loultYl fO Wffl, Or•nve, CA Ll~O ACCIOINT AND HIAl.TH IYNOPSl501' THI ANNUAl.$TATIMINT 01' YIAll I NOID OICIMIUI JI, IM IUT Lll'I AUUllANCI COMPAllY 01' CALll'OllNIA Utl l lrcll llrMI, New,.'1 h«ll. C•lllerwll ,,... At Ille Tim. ol 1"9 lnUl•I puClll<•llOn Of llllS f\O(ICe, 1"9 IOll l lmo..111 Of UM unpeld l>•l1nu of Ill• obllll•tlon MC1.1r.O l>y 1"9 •bOvt °"'rilled ae.O OI lrvsl end ettlmlleo costs ... .,.""'· Incl ld¥11'Ut 1> l 76,Ut.'°. To cltlermlne llw ooenlnQ l>ld, ro1.1 mey can t1t41 fl7·°"6. Oelt, Mertll U. (tel • WEJTl!ltN REAL ESH.t E FINANCIAi., INC. Tote• •ctm•tlt<I HMlt · f Pege J, hM 111 Tol•l llellfilllH t P-J, llM , .. C•Pll•l peld UP f P-l , llM ,,Al 11n1 JIAJ AoundU'll IP1>91 l, llnt 1781 Grou pild In Ind conlrlbllt.O w r1>1ut I PtQlt J, tine 11> Sc>eclel S..rpl~ F-• t Peci-l . llM 1<1AI Unanll!Md hinds 1t1.1rplu.i I PIQt ) 11111 1'8 mlnu\ J'CI Oein 11.out lrom"l)e••l1on• (P•oe 4,llnt JH lnUH H ( 0.C•-1 II\ CWll•• •llO Surpl1,1a CIYrlllO 1'7• IP-l, llM ilCI, tttO mlr111• lt7'1 lllt11r•nte In FOf'Ci. Netlonwldll ! P•V-U, llM U, Cot. 10 • Wllolt 0o11trt> Actldenl and ._Ith prtmh1rr" khectul• H C04 t, Ltne t) IMur•nc:.e In Fortt C•lf10tnl1 811al11tn P- '1.000,000 m l l,)07.•t> FrHw1y.i •I IA,,,_ St 879-9850 "'• ..... h ...... " ...... w ....... ~._._. F"EAA NO EVIL 1•1 ..... ALLIGATOR 1•1 HAAAY'S WAA" (PG) -'HANOAA 11" (PO) II"'° AM CM R.O.o Wllll lgnt11on "''"\OIY 8'1na Your Own AM Port.I wt Mt f .. ONI ANO Oflfl • mrma ~["n;£ 1 :~E:::~~== ::: f "'<>AM CM RICllO With l9ntt1on Ac~"\OIY Br•"I l'Ol.I' Owft AM PorUbl n. ...... 0.-. ... , ... ~,...,, THE FINAL CONFLICT i•1 -THE VISITOR 101 IM.1 ~ NL.Ot 6 fOtlfllY l tt .M>Nll BACK AOADS 1•1 .... 9 AONCO BILLY '"°' I "'°AM CM RICllO WIU. l11n111on AcC•\OIY ...... YOU< Uwn AM Port.I &. .. .,,.,... ......~ .......... ........ '° ,, c;...-"ALL NIGHT LONG" (Al Gro.,,. r, .... -. ""9 B ••. llo4I MANIAC ... o .. -" - II"<> AM c.. RICllo Wltll l9nlllon Ac<•-Y ar1,,. YOIJf Own AM Pof1I .,.._. .... , ... w.-o... .... c;, .... ,, .... ., fl! »-t) CUA~ \.mL.I • °'"'.......,. --• BLAZING I ADOU!8 -1•1 UP THE ACADEMY 1111 ........ ~ ...... -, ..... THE FINAL CONFLICT ,., -MANIAC ,.. --" - ...,,_,,_'--_ IACK "OAOI 1111 -a"ONCO 111..U tNt ....,...._,,._ HOUll"O CON IL MIJCICANO tiMMI Tr11stM, IY T .O tE1'V IC.I 11.•M '7 To~t) --·-"""'" Ateldefll llMI llHllll 11f'eml1.1ma • Dtr•<t Calllornl• THll llOITllAN Al.WAYS ·O COMPANY, ...,.I ly Cllflt )jl'((I, "-"•IMll lec••IMY 0... C:tty hll!""erO We•I, C>f111tt.CAf'l ... '"' 0141 au• Plll>lltllef Or1119t Coeit 0.lly Pllet, 111alntu p ... (~Ille H, C:.I ti U l,110 we ner-wy c.nlly 11111 .,,. lllon ne111• er• '" 1"et<11ftu wn~ lhe A11111.1•I IUNOI TWICI - Stattmtnl for lht ,. .. , tnOH O.C•"'-)I,'"°...-to IM 111••"""' COfll.-lliil~:;-;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::=:~=::_--:A::MS::.;".:,:ICA~;,;,N;_OM:;,:CI0::.;-4.::0:..,::111:1_..llj 111101-el IM Stat• fl Callletnl•, lhlftwlll lo l•w r TMrn.n J Cllhlll ~ JoN\ C:. V.,..,Kflr .. f • __ __ --------~ Mlrt ll U. a.~ 6, 1•1 14»,., SKretery 11'11011•"'4 Or .... COll1 Oelly Plle4. MMt'I "·I•, u. n. JI ,. .. taJt II REVEALS In lht Diiiy Piiat LORETTA WITH COAL MINING FATHER Levon Helm and SIHy Spacek 'Mommie' star signed HOLLYWOO D t AP I Diana Sctirw1d has been signed by P aramount Pictures to star with Faye Dunaway in .. Mom m1 e Dearest " The movie is based on the best-selling book by Christina Crawford. about growing up as Joan Crawford's daugt}ter. Miss Scarw1d will play the author from her teens to young adulthood