Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-30 - Orange Coast PilotIUJll ClllT MONO A Y. MARCH Jn 1l41i1 • .. YIUR HDllTlll llllY PINI ORANGE COUNTY CAL lfORNIA 25 CENTS Union action eases tensions f Polish strike averted near dead1ine BULLETIN WA&SAW, Polaad (AP) - • The hldepelMleat ..... Solklari· ty. after laat·miaa&e talb wit.It tbe sovenmeat, today called oft a nationwide seaeral a&rl•e threa&eaed Taeaday over tl•e beating or three uaJoa members, the Polish news agency PAP Hid. ficials resumed talks with the in· dependent trade union Solidari· ty. prime consideration is to remove reasons for the enormous tension in the country u a result of the don't want tt But we have 'no other way ... The Warsaw radio broadcast excerpts of a speech made at the party meeting by Inte rnal Ar· f airs Mini s ter Miroslav Milewski. He said people "who hanker after power and are ir- responsible in their actions" have penetrated Solidarity. with Polish workers in their fac· torles and told workers to "put an end to strikes." the olficial PAP news agency reported. . Bydgoszcz conflict.·· Wa lesa said the government m ust negotiate seriously and not stall for time ii the union is to be able to rescind its strike call. The statement, issued alter 18 hours of orten·stormy discussion ended at 3:50 a.m .. also called for a n expla nation o f th e Bydgoszcz incident. which pre- cipitated the grave labor crisis. WARSAW , Poland <AP> - The Communist Party's Central Committee gave its r uling Polit· buro a vote of confidence today. a nd with less than 24 hours befo re a threatened general strike, Polish government of· Solidarity leader Lech Walesa a nd D e puty P re m ie r Mieczyslaw Rakows ki met in a g o vernme ml build i ng In downtown Warsaw to continue negotiations on Solidarity's de- mands, chJef among them the dis missal of those responsible for beaUnes of union leaders in Bydgoszcz. The negotiations stood in recess Sunday while the 140-member Central Committee met. Solidarity's deputy chair man, Andrzej Gwiazda, said "at the moment we are exactly where we h ave been before nowhere." Another union leader. Andrzej Slowik, said a strike would be a last resort. ·'The time has come to curb the widespread lawlessness and lack of observance of the law,· he said. The lO·million-member labor federation charges that police in the industrial city beat up 23 un· ion activists March 19 the first police violence against the independent labor movement re· oor ted s ince t he nationwide Rak ows~i told r eporte rs b efore t h e m eetin g : ·~The "We don't want it, the govern· ment doesn't want it, the people In addition to s tatang its sup port o f the Co mmuni s t leadership, the committee called on .r!overnmcnt offi<'tals to meet <See POLAND. Pue AZ> Who'll win? TONIGHT AT 7 P .M. ON CHANNEL 7 OSCAR'S BALLOT (M ar k an X in box in front of your favorite) Best picture: O "Raging Bull" O "Tess" D "Coal Miner's Daughter" D "Ordinary People" O "The Elephant Man" Best actor: 0 Robert Duvall 0 John Hurt D Robert De Niro D Peter O'Toole O Jack Lemmon 1Best actress: 0 Ellen Burstyn D Goldie Hawn O Mary Tyler Moore O Gena Rowlands O Sissy Spacek Best supporting actor: O Judd Hirsch O Joe Pesci 0 Jason Robards O Timothy Hutton D Michael O'Keefe Best supporting actress: O Eileen Brennan O Eva Le Gallienne O Cathy Moriarty O Mary Steenburgen O Diana Scarwid Best director: O David Lynch 0 Robert Redford O Richard Rush 0 Martin Scorsese 0 Roman Polanski Best song: O "Fame" O "Nine to Five" D "On the Road Again" O "People Alone" .D "Honeysuckle Rose" O ''Out Here on My Own" Academy Awards [cliches sure bet I By n :aav HERTENSTEIN Of ... ,,.., ........... • When s pring arr ives can ·oacar be far behind? show again the "cra1y" with hJs rainbow-colored hair. As sure as the Acade my Awardl have been an American ·mainstay for 53 years you can count on the followint to happen ionl1bt at tbe Music Center. 1 Some wtnner will use the OC· culon to live a political state- ment. <Other stories, Pase• 88·7). • Each victor makes a secret pled1e to not be as corny u U.anktn1 Mom and Dad. But someone wlU do Juat that u they 1tand before a capacity Dorothy ~andler Pavilion aud1ence and estimated 100 mllllon evlllon vi.wen worldwide. Edy WlWama will arrive for the ceremony 1ca.nWy drwed uder an opea tur coat and belnc led by an Af pa.n bound or IOCM 1ucb mlmaJ. Star aasen wbo have been eamped ln the portable 1tandl at the Loi Anaei. llulc C.... will QPlaud anyone IUDUDOMCI to Anny Archer'• mlcropbooe. Th teln11lon camera• wlll The working presa, few of whom sit in the main auditorium to see the awards Jive, wlll watch the TV monitors in the pre11 room lucked away in the (See OSCAU, Pase .\2) SPORIS, ~ CUSH TONIGHI' If )'OU want to watch the Academy Awardl -but don't want to mJu the end of the NCAA bHketball championship 1ame - you'll bave a problem on your handl tonfpt. The batketbaU same, pltUnc North Carolina •l•lnlt lndJana, betln• at I p.m. on NBC, Cbannel 4. Tbe Olean pt under way at 1 p.m. on ABC, CbaMel 7. Man flees hijackers or om ecision' Karen's parents thankful NEWARK . N.J. (AP > -Tues· day will mark the rifth an- niversary of a controversial court ruling allowing Karen Ann Quinlan's parents to wean their a dopted daughter from her respirator. On Sunday, the Quinlans celebrated Karen's 27th birth· day with a quiet Rom an Catholic m ass at her bedside at t he Morris View Nursing Home. After a year.tong court battle. New Jersey's highest court is· sued the much·publicized righ~· to·die ruling. Karen has clung stubbornly lo life since the life-s uslaimng machine was turned off. While Julia Quinlan says s he never thought Karen would live long. the five years has given the fa mily time to adjust lo Karen's comatose condition and her in- evitable death. "I didn't feel s he would sur- vive this long," Julia Quinlan told The Associated Press re - cently. "I was only trying to cope with the situation as well as I could. "I'm very tha nkful she didn't die. We're fortunate because we've had the oppor tunity lo have her for five years and to make this adjustment. "But when she dies. it will be just another adjustment." He r hus band. J oseph , also wanted more time wit h his daughter. "Joe had said he didn't want her to die," recalls the Rev. Thomas Trapasso, the Quinlans' priest. "He said it should be left to nature. "I think we all are surprised."' Trapasso added . J oseph Qu inlan, who visits· Karen at the Morris View Nurs- ing Home early each m orning on his way to work and again at night, says with the court de· cision rive years In the past. "everything Is very quiet now." "We pray a lot together. I always tell Karen I'll pray for her . You never know if a coma· tose person can hear you and If they mJght wake up.·· Karen lapsed l nto a coma on April U , 1975, at a friend's birth· day party. Partyeoers said she had consumed several gin and tonic• on top of ''therapeuUc" amounte of a mild tranquilber and aaplrin. Teet 1ucce11ful POINT MUGU NAVAL AJR STATION CAP) -A aubmarine· launched Tomahawk crulH mil· 111• IUCCMlfulJy flew IOO miles to a N•nda tar1et alte Saturday ln tb• .. apon'1 ftnt •H ·to-land tut, the Navy announctd. . I .... , ....... KARL SCHNEIDER (RIGHT) EARLIER WITH SON KARL JR . Father shot In b•ck fleeing for freedom Youth shot, killed driving on freeway Brea Police are investigating the shooting death of an 18-year· old Santa Ana youth who died early Sunday all.er he was hit by a single gunshot to the head as h e d rove o n t h e Ora nge Freeway. David Lee Estrella was found dead at 3 a.m. by paramedics ~yback /or 8th year NEW YORK (AP> - P roducer Danny Arnold a ppa rently chan1ed bit mind after announcln1 pl-. to cancel "Barney Miller" at tM end of t.he 1ea1on, and the pro1r._m wilt return for an elfhlh y,ear on ABC this fall, the network said U)day. who reached his 1964 Chevrolet after It swerved off the south· bound side of the freeway and across the Lam bert Road off. ramp. Lt . Tom Christian said anyone with information about a light blue car seen on the freeway should contact bis office. He added that two passen1ers ln Estrella'• car, Adol!o Gomez, 26, and a 18-year-old juvenile, both of Santa Ana, were not in· Jured. Botb were detained by police for quesUontna . but were later releued, Christian aald. The passengers Initially aave "considerable contuclln& in- formation,'' he said. An a&ttopey ia scheduled today for Estrella. Chri•Uan uld u.e 1un1hot wound lt con1ldered tM probable cause of death. T h e lieutenant uld In· veatJ1aton aren't ruliftl out UM poasibllJty that the 1h00Un1 was 1an1 "lated. The bullet hit Eatrella, lbt driver, on t.he left aJde of hi.I head . HBson thankful dad alive Br PATRIC K K E NNEDY OflMD.ilyl"l ... IUtf The Huntington Beach son of the American shot by hijackers of an Indonesian jetliner said today that his father, Ka r l Schneider. 44, was lucky but m ade the right decision to run for freedom. ·-rm thankful he's alive," said Karl Schneider Jr. "Yesterday, when I fi rst heard the news re- ports I was confused and scared. but today I found he'~ in fair con· d i lion with n o per m ane nt damage. ··It appears he made the right decision because the hijackers have changed their demands and the situation is uncertain over there,'· said Schneider, 26. His father, 44, jumped from the hijacked jetliner and ran from the hijackers Sunday, but was shot in the back. A bullet lodged in his spine. Karl Jr. said he's been in con- stant communication with the U.S. State Department and his brother Stephen. 21, of Hunt· ington Beach, and sister Vicki Polito, 24. of San Diego. The elder Schneider is manager of the Mitchem Indonesian opera· lion. He was en route to Sumatra on a business trip when the hjjack· ing occurred, according to of· fi cials . Meanwhile, the plane hijackers described by Indonesian sour~es <See HIJACK, Page AZ> DRlll;f CUil 114Jll Mostly sunny through Tuesday. Gusty northwes t w inds 20 to 35 mph, decreasing late this eve· ning. Highs 67 to 72. Lows tonight 48 to55. 111101 TllAY Ro llertkathg 110 1 mush~ into a iport for 45 m illion Attaericoiu. See Page 83. \ 11111 UY-...... U ·= cS 0....... O.tl ~ ... =-·· .. ·~=i ..... . ~c..-.. • ' •1 •. s o.r:... eo_. DAL V PILOT/Monday, Maf(:h 30, 1Ni ., ......... SCENE O' HIJACK Situation 'uncertain' l're•P9fleAl lllJACK ... •s fanatic Moslems let another deadline pass today without a p- parent harm to their 55 hostages. including two Americans. The;- a re dema nding $1.5 million ransom and freedom for 80 "political prisoners" an Jn. donesia . Thai police sh arp shooters ringed the plane and a g roup of In· donesian commandos was report· ed a t the Bangkok airport. Thai officials said they oppose Indonesia yielding to the hi· jackers' demands, which have been a lte red severa l times since the Garuda Indonesian Air lines DC-9 was seized Saturday. There was djscussion with Indonesian authorities about a com mando a t· tack on the aircraft G over n m e nt sources in Jakarta. the Indonesian capita l, s aid the demands would not be met. The sources. who asked not to be identified . said Indonesia would allow Thai officials to at- tempt a peaceful settlement with the hijackers If the attem pt fail s. one source said, "we wall move in " The five gunmen. a r med wi th machine guns and explosives, origina lly dem a nded that 20 pr isone rs be freed. Wh en In· donesian P resi d e nt Suha r to agr eed. the hijackers increased the number to 84, and agreement again was a nnounced Sunday. 362 aliens seized near San Clemente U.S . Border Patrol agents rounded up 362 illegal aliens within a four-hour per iod Sun· d ay after reopending the check· point two m iles south or San Clemente unexpectedly Agent in cha rge Alan Gordon said the checkpoint was kept open most of the weekend, caus- ing a flood or smuggler s to hold their loads of aliens in limbo Sunday afternoon. al about 4 p. m . agents closed the station, and Gordon sai d sm ugglers "began to push them through," in large numbers. Bu t agents reopened the checkpoint less than an hour late r, ca_tching ma ny s muggJers by surprise. Gordon said most of the illegal passengers were returned to M.exico. but a few were ke pt as witnesses aga1ni.t s uspected smugglers House f ii led Death p:Dalty ap~ refused WASHINGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supre m e Co urt turned a way a broad cons titutional challenge today to CaUfornJa's death penalty law. . The justices, without provld· ing an explanation , refused to hear death row inmate Earl Lloyd Jackson's appeal seeking to overturn the 1977 law and his 1977 death sentence. Jackson was sentenced to die in the state's gas chamber for the 1977 murde rs of 90 -year-old Gladys Ott and 81 -year-old Vernita Curtis, neighbors in a LonJI( Beach a partment house. Prosecutors s aid J ackson beat Basketball, Oscars vie for audience LOS A NG E LES <AP> Vie wers accustomed to network television counter-programming m ight be inclined to bl ame that tactic for tonight's j uxt aposition of the Academy A wards and the college basketball champions hip tournament It might seem that A BC is us ang Oscar to hurt NBC's cov erage o f t he NCAA cham - pionship. or vice versa. But the networks. given as they may be to counter -programming tncks. are innocent here. The :"ICAA tournament wa~ scheduled years in advance. and by the NCAA. not by NBC Network influence as more strongly felt with the Oscar show . but the movie academy still got to choose the bag date Oscar night usually comes an the first two weeks of Apn l. a week or more after the college basketball championship. But this year. the Nationa l Assocaa lion of Broadcast Employees and Technicians contract ex pir es in April. and the academy wa nted to take no cha nces. Oscar night was moved up two weeks. Things could have been worse The Oscar show and the basket· ball show -two of T V's biggest annual attractions will only be in direct competition for a half-hour or less. The basketball game begins at 5 p.m . PST <channel 4) a nd should be con- cluding just as Oscar is getting cr a nked following its 7 p.m PST start <channel 11 Woman raped in Mesa lot Costa Mesa police are seeking the driver of a sm all foreign made station wagon w ho raped a 24 -year-o ld C h in o wom a n . clubbed her on the head a nd left h e r un co n scio u s i n a supe rmarket parking lot. Investigators said the woman was walking to her car after vis· iting her brother in central Cost a Mesa at about 5·30 a.m. F'riday. A man described as in his 20s. stocky and a bout five feet. 10 inches ta ll forced her in· to his vehicle. She was left lying in a parking lot behind Ralphs s upermarket. 2300 Har bor Blvd. both women to death during burglaries. The California Supreme Court upheld Jacks on's conviction and death sentence Oct. 23. In seekine he lp from the na- tion's highest court, Jackson's l a w ye r a rgu e d that th e California death penalty law lacks the proper guidelines to a void arbitrary and capricious sentencing. Thus. the appeal s aid , the law violates the 8th Amendment's ban on cruel a nd unus ual punish· m ent. T he appea l alleged four m ain defects in the law: It does not require j uries to weigh mitigating and aggravat- ing circumsta nces those sug- gesting life or death, respective· ly. as the appropriate punish- ment It does not require juries to find al least one statutory ag- gr avating circumstance beyond a r easonable doubt before im· posing a death sentence. It does not require the jury lo be unanim ous in a finding of an aggravating factor. It does not require written fi ndings or aggravating factors. More than 40 people a re on death row in California Neooda says Oscar not sporty type LAS VEGAS <A P > Movie fans wanting to place a wager on their favorite Oscar nominees are out of luc k this year at least in Nevada where gaming authorities have outlawed non· s port belting in casino race and s ports books. · "T his year the Oscars wi ll have to go on without us," said oddsmaker Bob Ma rtin. con · slde red by many lo be the dean of Nevada oddsm a kers. In previous years Martin has set odds for the Union Plaza ~otel on the Oscars along with Just a bout any othe r betting p roposition known to m an . But sta te gaming authorities cr acked down recently after a wave of publicity over Martin ta king bets on who shot J .R. in the "Dallas" television sen es. It was not his most unusual Line - once last year he gave a Los Angeles man 5,000 to one odds that a n earthquake wouldn't destroy Los Angeles on a day chosen by the bettor but gam · ing offi cials decided it was time to put an end to non.sport bet· ting · · 1 guess they didn't like our sense or humor." said Martin. "Now t hey won't a llow us to do anything that isn't a sporting event." * * * Fro• Pag~ Al OSCARS ... New face for Lolita o.ily l'lleol ........ , LH ... .,.. H un~ingto n Beach ho usewife Virginia Castillo, founder a nd president of Ninos Lisiados, checks young Maria Dolores "Lolita'' Quiroz, 12, before the girl's trip home to Honduras following plastic surgery at UC Irvine Medical Center. The 20-hour .iob reshaped Lolita 's terribly deformed face. Samuel Jiminez. 5 months of Ti· juana. looks bored . He had cleft paiate cor-r~c~ed by volunteer s urgical team. Ninos ~1siado ~eans scarred or crippled children in S p a nis h . Volunteer g r o up brings children to Unite~ St a tes for surgery and cares for them while thev are here. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;;:_~~ -~~ ~ ~ Deprogramming hacked Minnesota cowt sides uith parents WASHINGTON IAPI The L' S. Supreme Court today let stand Minnesota rulings which al lowed pare nts to lock up an adult "child" and try to "deprogram " her out or a rehgaous cull The justices. as usual. did not explain the action. leaving open the option or tackling at some Fro• Pagr Al POLAND ... strike wave last summ er Solidarity s taged a four hour wa rning s trike F riday a nd called a general s trike Tuesday in protest. Warsaw Radio said the Cen tr a I Com mi ttee's r esolution called on party mem bers "to counteract the influe nce or the e nemies of socialism o n in- dividual cells of Solidar ity, and to carry out consistent counter· action against the transforma tion of this union into a political orgartlzation causing a state of social tension and a nxiety .. The r esolution str essed that central authority and party dis c1pline should not be q uestioned. Rumors circulated that the en- tire 10-mem ber Politburo re· signed But Warsaw Radio re· ported only three resignations a nd said they were rejected. T he committee m et as Moscow made its gr immest public assess- ment yet of the Polish crisis. say· ang the country was tottering on the brink of anarchy. And Pope John Paul II ap- pealed for fellow country m en to be allowed to set t le t heir proble ms future date the thorny questions o f religio u s fr eed om and "brainwashing." Susan Louise Peterson g rew up on a far m near Bird Island. Minn .. with her Luthe r a n parent s. No r m a n a nd M argaret Jungclaus. She joined a religious or ganization ca lle d the Way M i n istr y w hile a t te nding Moorhead State College As the Minnesota Supr eme Court late r summarized it. ··The Jungclauses grew increasingly a la rmed by the per son ality changes they witnessed in their d aughter: overly tired . unusually pale, distraught and irritable, she exhibited an increasing ali ena lion from family, diminished in terest in education and decline an academic performance.·· They concluded. the court said , tha t Ms. Peterson "had been re d uced to a co n d it ion o f psychological bondage." On May 24. 1976, Jungclaus packed up his da ughter . then 21 , at the college . Instead of driving her home. she clai med. he drove her to a house in Minneapolis where she was held and subjected to intense persuasions to leave The Way Ministry by a pair of "deprogrammers " F'or the first three days, the state court said. Ms Peterson re- sisted and was physically con· fi ned She later stopped resisting. a nd was a llowed freedom of movement. On the 16th day. however. s he flagged down a police car and left to reJoin her fia nce ·~The Way Ministry Ms Peterson then filed a lawsuit against her parents a nd the deprogra m mers. char ging false im prisonment and the inten- tional inflicllon of em otiona l dis- tres!l She soug ht an injunction against further harassment. one dollar an symboli c da m ages from her pa rents a nd SI0,000 an punitive damages from deprogrammers Veronica Morge! a nd Kathy Malls A state trial jury rejected the chargeoffalse imprisonment. but assessed Ms Morge! $4,000 a nd Ms Mills $6,000 for inflicting emo- t aon al distress Dog saves cop Of /icer sinks in quicksand LON DON (AP> Police officer Christophe r Read was chasing a car theft suspect when he fell from a fence into a quicksand-like drainage ditch filled with mud. As he sank into the s li me, his only hope was his German she pherd police dog. Bruno. Read yanked on Bruno's 2().foot leash a nd the dog responde'i by digging his paws into the ground and pulling hard. huge complex. They will battle Mea r1wh 1le. Warsaw Pa c t for a spot in front or the small military maneuvers continued in "This stopped m e sinking and J was able to ha ul mys If out." the 30-year-o ld officer was q uoted as saying today in ·e· ports or the weekend incident at Maidenhe ad, northwest of L )n· don. st age whe re the winne rs a re a nd around Poland. The E ast asked the same tired questions. Ge r man news agency ADN There will be journalists from said the communist allies sent in the other side of each ocean who "new units" to take part in the have been on a week 's tour of IO·day-old sprang war games in the studios yet will be lucky to Poland. Czechoslovakia a nd "Without him. I would not be her e today My head went un- der several times. J could feel m yself being slowly suc ked under just like in quicksand. I thought to myself. 'this is it · " Read. who keeps Bruno at home with him dunng non- working hours, said he gave his lafe-savang companion his favorite reward . som e chocolate dog bones I with garbage Man killed feeding cat get a single s tory an print. , East Ger many The Oscar announcements are .----------- carefully calculated so the films can be re-released and it means milli ons extra in box offi ce bucks for the studios. I SA N L EANDRO (AP) Local health offi cials said they ha ve discove red tons or rotting garbage and huma n and animal wastes piled high in the home of a family which apparently al· lowed the trash lo accumulate in their home for years . Sanitation workers wearing surgical masks Lo block the stench said they removed 18 tons of refuse from the home includ- ing enough human and' animal feces piled in the rooms and smeared on the walls, to fill four 00-gallon steel drums. "We Utterally had to dig our way into the place," s aid San Leandro s anitation super visor Robert· Lawrence Sunday "It's the worst thing I've seen in 30 vears in the business A 57-year -old Newport Beach man was killed Sunday morning when he lost his balance while try. ing to feed a cat outside his second-floor a partme nt and tumbled down a flight of stairs, breaking his neck. A workman reported tanctmg J ean Paul Steele f ace-down beneath the m an's 410 32nd St. a p a rtment. Ste e l e , a groundkeeper at the Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa. was pronounced dead at the scene. Investigators said they believe Steele lost his balance and fell Into a fiberglass guardrail that broke, causing him lo fall down the stairway. Funeral services are pending. T h e re-re leases provide a second chance for thos~ who s hrUli!li!ed off the picture when it fir st scr een e d . The Osca r nom inees are discussed in the of- fi ce lunchroom . at the bar. among friends. Each movie buff thinks he or she has some inside track to the winne rs. And as you sta re at the lube to ah those actresses in their Edith Head-designed gowns or the ac· tors with chlns looking like they were chisled from granite, you will no doubt be predicting the big wlMers before the envelopes are opened. Here are m y picks : Best pic ture -"Ordinary P eople;" Best ac tor -Peter r--------------------------i' O'Toole: Best actress -Sissy Spacek: Best supporting actor -Joe Pesci; Best supporting actress -E va le Gallienne ; Bes t director -Ro bert Red- ford ; Best song -"Nine to Five." ORANGE COAIT lilly Pilat ThomM P. Haley ~ ~N.Wffd M. Thomat K"Yll ... ~Mutphln• ?.=..t.:f.!.~:.., ·r:::,a Schulman ~~ ~l;~etdJr. MAINC>fftCE UO Wttl ky SC., C•i. MHe, CA. --.11....._, ... UtO. c.i. ~.CA..,._ Quick now, who were the 1980 wlnnen? Trial opening NEW ORLEANS <AP> Reputed Malla chieftain Carlos Marcello and four other men were to ao on trial today In U.S. Dletrtct Court for racketeer1q, con1plracy and mall fraud in tbt covernment'a second BrJiab protecuUon. ·-•- ---------------------- Al's Garage and Sea Bags 'Heavy duly Canvas Bags 1n shapes and sizes to Ill any occasion Seams are double stitched to prO'{lde a hfehme of durabhly All Sea Bags are water repellent and learura a shoulder strap for easy carrying ALS GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 6 44-7030 Tax: skYr's_ li1Dit Social Security levies to surge W ASH.l.NGTON (AP) -The So(l•l Security AdmlllltlreUoo U)'t the meJtlmum annual pa)'roU tax, now et $1,9'15, ls H · peeted to exceed f',000 by 1-.S and to aurge past SS,000 by 1980. Four years aco. It waa leaa thao Sl,000. Figures obtained from Social Security's actuaries ahow the projected payroll tax and benefits ror the next 70 years. Jus t ice, 7 7, to r e tire ? SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - State Supreme Court Justice Mathew Tobriner, one of th~ na- tion 's mos t promine nt slate jurists, said that he is con· sidering retirement "in a few months," but declined lo give an exact date. "I am going to be 77 years old ne xt week and r etirement is something I have been thinking about," To briner, the senior justice on the high court, said. "I would say it may be in a few months." White House fwid WASHINGTON (AP) A new list or contributors to a fund to redecorate President and Mrs. Reagan's White House living quarters s hows the total has grown to $822,641 , including a Sl0,000 gift from Frank Sinatra, the White House announced Fri· day Just as benertll for the 3e million people who cet Sodal Sec u rity are tied to the Consumer Price Index and rlH automatically with inflation, the wa1e bue -the tqp amount taxed for Social Security -rises a u tomatically each year as workers' average earnlnca in· crease. The wage base in 1977 was $16,SOO for a maximum tax of $96S. This year, the max1mum is a tax of $1,975 on earnings of $29,700 or more. The actuaries expect the wage base to rise by rouahly $3,000 or more a year during this decade, bitting ~.500 in 1985 for a top tax of $3,067, and reaching $66,900 in 1990, when the levy would be $5,118. When Congres s raised tbe Social Security tax and the wage base in 1977 to lift the system out of its last fiscal crisis, the gov- ernment expected the maximum tax to climb more s lowly. It was thought then that in 1985 the ceil· ing would be $38,100 for a max- imum tax of $2,686. But Social Security has been knocked into another crisis by a combination of high unemploy- ment and a decline in workers' productivity. Workers' wages have trailed inflation in the past two years, creating a drain on the trust fund. Congress and the Reagan ad- minis tration are considering ways lo ease the system 's finan· cial crunch, which would deplete the Old Age and · Survivors Insurance trust fund in late 1982 or 1983. The' other two trust funds for disability insurance and Medicare are runnina in the black and their surpluses could be uted to buttreaa the old age fund. The actuarlea' long.term pro- jections are baaed on an expec· tatlon that workers' waces utltlmately wUJ go up 5.75 per· c~nt' a year while inflation will only rise 4 percent. The ac· tuaries build ln higher rates of both wace Increases and infla· ti on for the rest of this century, but use the lower figures for the 21s t century. They reswt ln some stagger- ing estimates of both how much workers will earn in the next century and how laree the Social Security checks will be. For instance, in 1990, the average worker is expected to earn $30,263 and the average Social Security benefit for a re- tiring SS.year-old will be $11,660. The maximum benefit for that worker who made the maximum of $66,900 would be $15,553. In the year 2000, the average wage would be $60,503 and the avarage benefit $23,615; the maximum taxed would be $138,900 and the maximum benefit would be $33,472. In 202<>, the average wage would be $185,809 and the average benefit $73,369. The maximum taxed would be $432,000, leading lo a maximum benefit or $113,657. By 2050, the average worker would be nearing Sl million - $994 ,212 -and the a verage benefit would be $392,592. The maximum t a xed would be $2 ,314,200 and the maximum benefit wowd be $614,068. Israelis seeking dictator? TEL AVIV, Israel UP J If public opinion polls and com- ments from average citizens are any guide. Israelis are so fed up with their leaders there is grow- ing sentiment for dictatorship in Israel. Typical of the feeling were re· marks made by five passengers riding in a taxi from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv. They were heatedly debating what to do a bout inflation. strikes and "those foolish politi- c ia n s ." Wh a t this country needed. everyone agreed. was a di ctatorshi p. Chilling words for a country tha t has c he r ishe d 1ls dem- ocra t ic freed o m s through wars. terrorism and economic turmoil a country whose peo- ple still bear the scars of the Nazi dictatorship of Adolf Hitler. But the commen ts relected widespread feelings in a country that is losing faith in its leaders and its political syste m. Those feelings we re un· derlined by a recent public opin· ion poll in which 40.8 percent or Israelis said they want to "com- pletely change the political system and set up a strong re- gime of leaders independent of the political parties." The poll, publis hed in the monthly magazine Monitin by Dr. Mina Tzemach, a respected pollster, stunned the nation and unleashed a torrent or debate. S halmon Rosenfeld, former editor of the daily Maariv, called it "so serious that the en- tire political establishment . . . must put its mind to wondering what will become of us ." "People have had enough of political parties. enough of the press. enough or strikes," says columnist Nahum Barnea in Davar. journal of the opposition Labor Party. The image Israelis have in mind is the country's first prime minister, David Ben· Gurion, who was both a strong leader and a founder of Is rael's democratic institutions, Barnea said. Daniel Bloc h . a le ading political commentator, rinds a disturbing longing for a leader who would be expected ·'to rule in an undemocratic manner: send the army lo break strikes, control freedom of speech, apply the death penalty lo rapists and murderers .. ·· Surveying his r ealm three months before general elections, the lsraen citizen sees an infla- tion rate that reached 132.9 per- cent last year, and a ris ing crime wave whose latest victims are helpless old people robbed and murdered for their meager social security allowances . And when newspapers and TV r eport all this bad news, 55.5 percent of those polled by Dr. Tzemach say the media showd be res tricted because it is .. damaging to the national in- terest and harmful to morale." In the present election cam- paign, neither Prime Minister Menachem Begin nor the Labor Party's Shimon Peres seem to have inspired any hope among the broad majority of voters. Begin is trailing in the polls, but few voters have forgotten that only four years ago they ousted the Labor Party. and there is no wave of enthusiasm to re-elect it so soon. Weather hits Midwest ·Rai"' uinds, hail strike Mississippi Val/,ey v.s .......... All.,.ICC:ty " .. Plloenla II Sl Litbofl u SS BeltlmO<tl 11 • PlltltM.lrlh 7S 0 Lon6on SI so A 1ow-oren11re •Ylt•m bro11oht 81 rm'"""" 11 u 01 Pttencl,Me II 40 MeOrlO .., .. Bl""•r<k st 2t Pllencl.Ore n ., 01 Mentte ts IS ,.. •• ., rein. 1tr11n9 wll1Ch end l\ell Into aoi w u 3' .11 RePldC:lty ., " Montrt•I Sl 1l 11\e Mlu lulppl Vell•Y on Suncl<ly H Botton II 4J Reno S4 • MoKOW n " •trc1no w1...n tW99I tl\e Gree! P14Hn• 8rown1•ll• .. 11 SeltLeb . , • Huwu m SI Wlnd1 were etio 1trono over 81111•10 •I SS s.no1eoo •S s• Hew0.1111 ., M nortllwnl H...,.0• A Pe<lllc fro"' C:llerlstnSC 10 Sl S.nFren S6 so OJ Hitolie 10 H •n tem brouol\I terge emo1mlt of C:ller1$111WV 11 S6 S.•111• so •• JJ o.io Jt ,. relnl•tt 10 Ille We111it191on Cout. (lll<lnMll 74 SI SILOVls .. S1 I .. Peril .. !A Sllowen will\ 1now In l,.. ,,,.,..... C:lovetend ,. Sl SIP· Tempe IO 41 Rio '° 10 teiM eat.-!ram 11\e Hori"'""' Columbus II SJ StSteM.,le SI 40 10 Rome 10 0 co .. 1 to u. no'111Hn Rotkl.. Tf\ere Oel·l'IWUI I• SJ .. SpolteM ., 40 S.0Peu10 .. .. were oonor•lly lelr lklo In ll\e Denver 60 JS 04 T11lu IS st Ol S.oul SS ,. So11lf\wnt to llle Solllllwfff Pleln1, OelMOllWl II ~ ·" Wellllnotn IO so Slnoeporw .. ~· •nd along Ille Allenllc tout Detroit I• IO Slotllllolm ll " Etsawh•r•~ Ui:tes were mo'"' °"""" 40 u • .eo WOllLD Sydney 11 u cto..Oy. Hartford IO 11 Am•l-•1 .. Telpel ., " Showen -"'''""""°"''"wore Helen• u JI .113 AlheM 1J SS TelAwlw 11 S6 oor•t •U tCllO•Y o ... r m 11<n 01 tn• Honol11l11 IJ II ••nekOll tl .. Toll yo SI 0 nor111eut. Rein wllll snow In Ille Houlton 10 St .JI 8era..oot .. 1J Toronto st 41 mounl•IM wet ••Pl<led trom Ille lndneplls I• S6 • IS 8elr111 14 st Vanc°"wr S4 .. Pe<llk Horl,,_ll Into tlle nortllern JecUn•ll• IO st a.1orede u 0 Vlenn• •I ll RoOI••· Mostly '"""' lklH • .,. t<e111Clly ., S4 .'2 Borlin " q forocul from Ille Solllll-•l Into lhe LHV99H IO ., Boeota 70 0 CAUPIOllNIA Pleln• encl Mlwts:,r:I Velloy LlllleRock 61 SJ .SI 8ruuel1 u so A~le Velley .. « II wu expect to bl pertly 10 LOlAnget11 u " &'Aires 11 t4 l•k•rslleld 11 .. mostly t /oudy e1..-r1. L.011l1v111e n II .01 C•lro II so Berttow I I .. Tempereluru In Ill• 101 were Mempfll• 10 .. t.H ,.,., .. ... •J leeumont S4 0 torecul o.,.r Ille so.otMrn Ptelns end Mleml ,. •• COflenf\e91;1 Q ,. w11lorn Gull Cotll .,., l'lorlde COOi Mllw..,ll .. •• " .n 0..llOn " 0 819 Boer SI 24 •Os llld so. ••r• ••P«ltd In Ille M4111.Sl.P t4 4' .JI Frankt11r1 t4 .. llu.of 1J ,. Peclllc Mort"'"1t Mid lntormountllln Hul\vllle IS st .02 O*"IVA ., Q 8 1ytM .. st reoton to I.lie _.tllem Plelna, etrOM He•OrlMM IS •I .Jt HAHM 11 t4 • Catellnt ., S6 Ille Great I.All• IMO .. 1'10<'1 .... •I Hew Yon 11 4-4 Hetalnlll ,. " •1 Genin> 11 .. Tiie re11 "' Ille Miion wH lonK•ll to Nortolll 1S •• HOftll<Afll II ,, Eureu " 4S .h lleve p~ '-r•"'res In Ille OllleClty •• .. Jer11NIMI u .. l'rHllO 10 .. IOI •nCI 1'l. CHnalla S6 41 .3S JoMllWrt 1S so Le11<Hler ., .. Tempofelllrff arownd 1111 nett ... Orlendo IO 60 Kio., ,, 21 LOftl IMcll ., " S""4ay r ....... fl'Of'll t tow of U In Pl\ltll~ 11 JI LlrM 71 .. Mary1 .. 111e ., S2 Aini•-· Httl.. lo • lllQll of IS In Moftrovle ll SJ l rownn llte, Teu.-. ._ ...... €•HI• ..... ..,,...,..,., Mon .. ,.., to " Ml.Wit-61 ,, Te.per•t•,... ......... • sa H.ilM 111 ..... "'9'*1 In socN!ft. .. .. -'~ It ,. ..... , .• ..,. ..,. ... ... ......... 0...1-.. S) OMMle It SS Ml "'-P'W 'If ... , .... ~ A, .... ow p .. "'..,,.... ,, SJ ,.,._, • ~ IH'IO 4 I = ... .-. , .. Al"'-•l JI °' nteMenlu a • It ,_ .. __ " 47 Al'llMllle ., 40 ~c_., J • ll 2 J •W llM lhlff .. » AllM .. lllo ST ,. • a_ ,.,.. ....... t:llY .. $4 .n Alleme ,. ,. 0111_._,.,...,, 0oc~llHf..,_... ,._ J4 .. '"'_..... " .. lellftH '1 SI lelll«Mn!M .. jl ._..,,_ n ,. .OI s.tlloAM .. JI ' Selle. ..,..,. .. .. a.11 .. Mtrle " Jt ...... Meftlet ., ,. ""'t~ /lJteninf ----.. '° , ..... ., .. ,., SI 10 Ti.tl'llll JI PMAM&•ICAM ~Ice • .. The DaUt Pilot wanll to hear obMrvaUou tl'OID tu re8Mrt ..,.... • 1l ..... " ff -particular y comm.nta •bout tllle peCk.!,taelf. lt't HIY t,o ..al ...... " " C:-Mtl .. ,.. ua YOW' views. Juat call tbe number ud rour • ...,. ,,..,.,. 1t wlU be l"9COl'ffd ....... ,.. wUI be trwmbed 8"Wal u .. ll•••t•-• JI dally ud cMllver-9 to tbe cNA ol UM •PPIOP't• .. .a-. Ito o.-.... • .. • ..._ .. ... drculatlon caU., pie.... ~ !( ...... .. " Teil U1 wb•t't Oil JOQT mlad. TIM aambll' II .. ••ltle Iii ........... .. 11 ....... n • boura a day, .. ..., days a ""*· fl4':1•fl0Bfl --" n ..... (Mr ,. • .......... • .. ...... , . .. J.-.. "' • ...... .. .. ~J •, Orange Coast DAJL Y PtLOT/Mon~y. March 30, 1881 ,....,.. lilY lte-o..._ I STUDENT LINDA SCHAFER MANIPULATES CONTROLS IN RECORDING STUDIO ' Golden West College hH 16-track studio tor H plr1ng englneer1 It's next best thing Mus ic h er love, r ecording the path By PHIL SNEIDERMAN ' Of ... O•llY l'llet Stell Linda Scha fer of Fountain Va lley can't perform rock ·n· roll, so her career goal 1s to cap· lure it. Linda caught hel' first case of music fever at a Beatles concert in Cleveland 17 years ago. and she's been affl icted ever since "The total pandemonium at that concert. the total cr aziness showed me the power music has to reach people.·· she recalls its sound man a nd wa nted Linda to handle the chore She snapped at the chance. ··Actua l ly. I was s nowing them because I "d never touched Brothe r s, Sist e r s united Now 28, Linda has decided that becoming a recording studio engineer is the best way to steer her love for wailing guitars and driving drums into a Any traces of sibli ng rivalry full-time job. will cease to exist when the Big Concluding a two-year record Brothe rs and Big Siste rs of ing arts program at Golden West Orange County become part of College, she sees two hurdles. the same local family First , studio openings arc T he nat iona l non -profit or· rare, and competition is fierce. ga nization that administers both Beyond this, Linda m ust in· groups already is one agency, vade a male -dom inated in· but t h e two g r o up s we r e dustry and convince skeptical separate in the county until an studio managers that her goal is ag reement was reached this to juggle control knobs not week which tr ansfers the girls rock musicians, mto the boys' organization But as Linda sees it, s he"s T he arrangement was made. paid her dues. however. under less than ideal In San Diego. she s pent one circ umstances ye ar as a .. roadie, .. moving /The national organization's equipment and dn ving a truck 'board of directors voted last for a family band that played 8 month in San Diego ito disaf steady string of Jewish wedding Cili ate Big Sisters of Orange · d b · h County for failu re lo m eet receptions an ar mitiva s minimum standa rds set for fu ll She then moved to another men's field, joinmg t he stage members. crews at two San Diego theaters. The group he ld provis ional To test her mettle. one stage status for several years but was manager forced her to climb a under agreement to seek full 30 f ff Id h r d m e m be r s h i p . s a i d D a v i d . oot sea o t e irst ay on Baylmann. executi ve vice presi-the job. Linda became intc•res ted in dentofthe nationalorganization. sound mixing and recording Ca rol Geffn e r. executive while helping set up for con director of Big Sister_s or Orange certs. County for the last six months, Unable to afford private re-said a new board of directors cording courses, she moved to and staff had been organized Orange County in order to at and a public relations firm was tend the free program at Go lden lined up lo sta rt a new fund- West. <The college now charges raising effort a modest $25 mate ri als fee per But the disaffiliation announ sem ester.1 cem ent halted the plans. she The program teaches elec-said tronics. business management, .. The important thing 1s that live concert recording tech· the service wi ll continue for our a soundboard like that before,"; she recalls .. But I j ust went up there a nd figured it o ut. ft· worked out fi ne ·· Linda later signed on for a three-mont h stint a s a sound. m i xer at Costa Mesa·s now· closed Cuckoo"s Nest Last autumn. a friend t ipped her lo a part time opening at a recording studio in Irvine · Beginnmg as a .. gofer." Linda' graduated to assistant engineer-' ing jobs on projects as diverse · as a gospel recording. back·' ground music for a slide show, and a movie soundtrack Be lt·t 1g ht e nin g measures squeezed Landa out of the Irvine• job. but she's already knockin( doors at otner studios. She believes lhe audio in·' dustry 1s a h eld in which womerr are sorely underrepresented . Of the 80 students who entered the Golden West recording pro-: gram 1n Linda's c lass, only.!> seven were women T he number increased slightly last fall. ·· 1 was never scared of al~ tho!>e knobs and controls."· Lin- da says .. A lot or men try to_,, dazzle you with the technology .• and that ·s what scares a lot of women awav She does ·admit that a studio1 JOb can play ha \·oc with a' wom an·s social life. Linda says a male friend re·• cently offered to fi x dtnner for; her When her recording session ran overtime. she had to call several times to say she'd been· delayed ' lier dale finall y complained ' that dinner was ruined • Linda hopes to follow the ex- a m pie of women rock musi· cians, who are moving into more~ prominent roles. · '"If they can do it, why can't I be involved in this business.1 too?" she asks. "I don't know if 1"11 be able to, find a full time job or have toi settle for part-ti me studio work.! But I know I never want to be kept from doing it because I'm a woman ·· nlques and taping The college is girls and fo r new girls.·· she ·equipped with a 1s tr ack re said Solar salt pond corder. The current 135 big sisler·little Linda put her studies to work s ister m atc hes will be ad· LOS ANGELES !AP > -If the when ,a Tust in band called ministered by the Big Brothers state Legislature will donate Q "Automatic Pilot .. anviled her to orga"ization. which has full million, the nation's first solari its Hollywood concert m ember status. It will change salt pond power plant will be T he night before the event. she its name to Big Brothers-Big Sis· operating in a now·dry lake bed learned the band had just fired ters of Ora nge County. in the Owens Va lley by mid-1983.r -=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ for ~t, hzachor just QI)je1jlaj ... our ~ IZOO· LACOSTE" jacl<a.t, ~with 100%nylon eh<ill aro,, all cotion Uz.rry lini~. · "' I I • Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 NATION ./ WOALD British scandal raiseS ghOsts .LONDON <AP> -The report that Ute former bead or the BrltJab counter.aplona1e a1enc)', the late Sir Roser Hollis, was 1uapeeted ot belnl a Soviet a1et1t hu ralsed tbe 1b0tll ol a line or hl1hly placed traitors who bav• haunted 8rltaln alnce World Viar II. , The seeds ol their treacbe,Y were sown nearl'-50 years a10 ln ~the hallowed cloisters and quadrantles of Britain s two most pret· tlgiou1 unlveralties, Cam bridge and Oxford. 1 Soviet spymuter1, 1eeklog recruits among Britons aner 1 security authorities rolled up their network of Russian agents ln • the 1920s, established their flrat cell In Cambridge in the summer of 1931. IT WAS MADE up of a 1roup or brilllant, politically dis· lllusioned young men who became a generation or traitors. These you n1 ideaUsts infiltrated the -upper echelons or British in· telllaence, then run by the "old boy" network, and the class- conscious governing Establishme .. t. • . One, Anthony Blunt. exposed by Prime Minister Mar1aret Thatcher in November 1979 as a tongt.ime Soviet agent, wormed bis way lnto the royal household as Queen Elizabeth H's art his· tori an. . Tax bite increases for Californians WASHINGTON <AP J Californians paid a lot more state taxes last year than they did the year before and resi- dents of most other states paid at least a little more, but state lax collections declined slightly in Vermont and Mi chigan. the Census Bureau reports. It also reported that m inority ; groups made greater pe rcentage ; population gains in California than they did in the nation as a whole during the 1970s. While the white majority decreased from 87 .5 percent to 83.2 percent in the nation as a whole, the proportion of whites in California fell from 88.9 per· cent to 76.2 percent. according to a bur:pu r eport released Thurs· day . The largest population in- crease in California was or Spanish-speaking residents. up 92 percent from 2.37 million in 1970 to 4.54 million at the end of the decade THE NUMBE R of blacks in the s tate grew by 30 percent. ··Asian and Pacific Is landers" by 140 percent and .. American Indian, Eskimo and Aleuts" by 121 percent Concerning taxes. the bureau said that Mi chigan. plagued by increasing unemployme nt in the auto industry. saw its tax collec· lions slip from S6 billion to $5 9 billion. Mic higan sales taxes collec· lions dropped from $2 57 billion to $2.55 billion. and individual 1n come tax receipts were down from $1.94 billion to $1.91 billion In Ve rmont. the only other s tate with a dec line, overall Charlie Brown ~'J -cg ) ·~ ~ .,.,,,. -... ~."" .,._---.·· ... , state tax collections were down from $267 million to $266 million. primarily a result or a de cline in corporate income taxes. In· divid\µll mcome taxes aiso were off slightly in Vermont, but sales taxes inched up CALIFO R N I A, the mos t populous state, showed the big- gest change in actual dollars. collecting $19.3 billion in state taxes in 1980, up from $16.3 billion the year before California sales taxes were up more than Sl billton. but the big- gest increase came in state in- come tax collections. which rose . from $4 . 7 billion in 1979 to $6.5 billion last year. The Cens us report issued Thursday noted that a t least part or the big jump in income tax was attributed to the after· effects of Propos ition 13. which placed a limit in property taxes in the state. The major reduc- tions in credits for real estate property taxes P4'id local jurisdiction s r esulted in in · creased s tate income ·tax liabili · ty for residents of the state. the s tatisticians observed. T HREE OTHER states also had big increases in state tax collections. Alaska got a 76 per· cent boost. mostly from oil pro- duction and corporate income taxes. while Texas, 18 8 percent. and Oklahoma. 17.2 percent. also increased taxes collected on oil. gas and mine rals taken from the stale / Nationwide. state tax rev· enues increased 9.6 percent in 1980. to a total of $136.9 billion. Sales taxes accounted for nearly half of the total. $67,7 billion. MOICOw tOok adv9i!1l•1e ot the youna. well-connect~ under· 1rad uata' blttem... about the collapte of Britain'• tint Labor 1ovemment in the economic catutrophe of 1931 and the hunaer or 2 million Ul'employed. For them, t he Soviet Unlon was the soclaUst panacea and, amid Britaln'• policy of appeasement , the only hope ol combat.tna faaellm. TWO -'EY flaures emerged. One was Samuel Caban, the Kremlin'• top man ln Britain before the war, who spun the web of well~placed a1ents . The other was Blunt, a Cambridge t utor who helped Cahan recruit and worked with MI~. the British counter·lntelllgence agency. durln1 and alter the war. The 1930s recruits included Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean, two members of the diplomatic service who defected in 1951 as British agents were closing in on Maclean. Blunt is believed to have warned' Burgess to nee also and to have arranged their escape. Another was Harold "Kim" Philby, who became a key figure in Ml-6, the wide-ranaing British secret service, and worked close- ly with U.S. intelligence. He sat out the crackdown following the defection of Burgess and Maclean but fled to Moscow In 1963 after being warned that his cover had been blown . BURGESS died in Moscow. Maclean and Philby are st.ill there. Blunt, Burgess and Maclean were also linked by their homOS4;X· ualily. One of their Oxford contemporaries was the admitted homosexual Tom Driberg, a senior Labor Party official and member of Parliament who died in 1976. Veteran defense reporter Chapman Pincher, who touched off the latest scandal this week with the report that Hollis had been suspected of being a double agent. reported Driberg worked secretly for both the Soviet KGB and M 1·5 and that both knew it. Hollis was an Oxford man who joined M 1·5 before World War II and became its director-general for nine years. There bas been no intimation that he was homosexual, but he had an arrair for 18 years with his secretary and m;Jrried her after he retired and divorced his wire. He died in 1973. ... ~ ........... BLUNT, WHO some intelligence sources believe was the linchpin in the whole network he helped set up, was uncovered in 1963 after U.S. intelligence sources identifi ed him as a traitor. PARK AVENUE DUPLEX PRICE: $10.5 MILLION Features Include 34 room1, theater, gym ,,,. ........... Pntalftr r~er•ftf Sonia Linder , sentenced to the death penalty for killing a Florida highwa y patrolman in the 1970s, had her death sentence reversed by the Florida S upreme Court. 510.5 million price Duplex draws biggies NEW YORK <Al» For sale: Dplx apt. 34 rms. AC.Magni( vu. Price: $10.5 million Potential buyers : .. Very. very big names which I can't divulge," says Carol Ann Ma rshall The apartment. currently owned by Saul P. Steinberg, chairman of T he Reliance Group. oc· cupies the 15th and 16th floors of an 18·story build· ing constructed in 1929 for John D. Rockefeller J r. Ms. Marshall, of Sotheby's International Real· ty, which is handling the sale, said there already have been "a number of requests" from people who want the co·ope,ative at 740 Park Ave . on Manhattan's prestigious Upper East Side. T HE A P ART M ENT is unfurnis hed. Ms . Marshall said, but it does have amenities like mar· ble fireplaces in almost every room, elaborate wood paneling. a private movie theater, s taff quarters. central air conditioning and a full com- mercial kitchen. Adjoining the kitchen is a pantry. floor·to· ceiling cabinets for china storage line lhree walls "It's just immaculate, .. said Ms. Marshall The purchaser won't have to worry about details like leaky fa ucets or a crack tn the plaster. T HE APARTMENT contains 20,000 SQuare feet of rtoor space and terraces. many with views or Pa rk Avenue. The two floors are linked by a large. curving stairway, as well as by a private e levator There are 15·foot ceilings, a 60·foot en· trance galle ry with an inlaid wood floor . a formal dining room, a breakfast room with marble fireplace, of course mirrored coat closets and a fully equipped laundry There a rc four master bedrooms. five staff be drooms and a total of 13 bathroo ms . The c hildren's wmg on the 16th floor includes a suite for a governess two bedrooms. two bathrooms . a livi ng room and a kitchenette AL..."'° ON the 16th floor is the entertainment wing the movie theater . the steam room. gy m a nd sauna. The building in which the apartment is located has been designated a historic landmark ll was de- s igned by architect Rosano Candela, and the Rockefeller family once occupied 90 of its rooms . According to Sotheby's. the Sl0.5·million price tag is the highes t ever for a Manhattan residence If you're mterest ed . Ms. Marshall says lht maintenance is "over $10.000 a month." C 1W '-'" ,,... t • •·•'·•'" \, 1 .,,.. ,,, Snoopy NO FRILLS TEETH a.EANING s22 SoutH COAST OHL y DENT AL GIOUP. Cl tN U,,••e(I f ~•'"'" S,n~t• •IP I• t Woodstock ~ Find the whole Peanuts ' 9an9 everyday in'the . 111111111 142-4321 • 642-0112 31 OS t...._ 11¥d.. C.... MeM trans national funding announces a new program 2nd TRUST mDS • 110,000 TO 1500,000 * FAST FUNDING * NO PA!PAY I AllUMAILI * 30 YEAA AMOATIZID I Uf' TO 15 YEAR Alf'AY • OWN!A I NON..OWNI A OCCU,ll D * f'UACHAH MONIY I I WINO LOANI CALI. TODAY ~'OR A QIJ01't AT NO 08UC:ATION (714) 975-1121 CAU. WILLIAM I . MITCHILL ... IMC M1'HU'9 IM.¥0. NIWPCMT .aACtt • • Introducing_ The $1,000 Thrift Certificate That Earns 12.40% Annual Interest Rate After J t1st 3 Months. If you really want your eyes opened, read this ad, then compare with other ads by banks and savings & loan 811SOCialione. You11 see why we believe "The 90 Day Won· der" juMt may he the finest thrift package in America I.Oday. The key 111 an unbeatable rmnbinatitm of heneftl.'!. Short 3 month term. Low $1,000 minimum. High 12.40':t interest with an effect.Ive annual yield of l~ when com· pounded quarterly.• Even on early withdrawals, you earn 61' annual interest. rate, no matt.er whal Look at what banka and savings & loans offer and you11 see how they compare. With their 90 month cer- lificateA, your money la tied up at t.oda~'• i?&Uf'ut ratu /<Yr i'.t ytc.rs! And if you withdraw early you forfeit six months' interest. Their six month oerti!lcat.ea nquire 110,()()() mini- m1tm. .. with forfeiture of 3 months' lntenwt for early withdrawal. So for the finit time you can get certificate aiz.e rat.ea witlt. UMM tl&4t giw ~u frt«Jqm to 1'.M )O'IT ~ v1'tert it can do p tAe moet good. To take adn,n. tage of a high rate. To invest In opportunity when It knocka. Even In an emetpnc:y, you still get 61li lnten11t rat. rorearly withdrawal. While conventional puelfo!< accounta otter a ma> I mum of~ int.erest, the lowest pollibl• lnterelt from '8-lon...,....11tlllt...,.r11& Rlc.t '1191 ._ Uni&td attiir. our Thrift Certificate, after penalty, is 6%-still 1,t% higher. So, if you'd like t.o see your money begin earning what it's n•ally t(orlh. without having it hopeles!!ly tied up ... send this coupon with your check or money order, or hring it into a Commercial Credit office. Available to Cali· fomia resident,, only. r------------.. I I I I Here's my check or money onler for a8 month Thrift Certificate in the amount nf $ ($l,(n> minimum) Type of IKX'Ollnt: 0 Individual 0 Jolnl Tenancy O Trustee 0 Corporat.ion In thename(1)ol:-------------(pleut pr1rll l Ky Sianature-------------- I ~. lltW'e (lfjoi.-':"woc.ee1 ____________ _ I Aa:nunt ~-----------,__-I Cl\1 I My Soclal S«urit,y/IU l.D. • f>tlont.__ __________ .:..,..~-~ ~---·ZIJ>--- I COMMERCIAL CRJ,DIT I · COMME.ltflAI. aim rt.AN. 1~no ·------------" Anahehn. 86() s. Brookhunl St. ~T 17UJl¥J • eoroa.. 504 F.alt Sixth St. 917a>. (213) ~1132 ~!':':i::~·~~t-~:7~. 714) m~-=: :::~h~·~:,r.!:~~· ... . ... ' ~ffiUa I , Drug policy I 'violates' law' SACRAMENTO (AP> -State Attorney General George Deukmejian says a new policy of allowing registered nurses to prescribe and administer drug§ under certain conditions violates state law. In a formal opinion, Deukme· jian said that only doctors can legally prescribe drugs, and nurses cannot furnish or ad· minister drugs without a doctor's direction and supervision. An attorney general's op1ruon lacks the force of law but is often followed unttl a court has ruled. The slate po hey. part of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr."s effort to ease restrictions on the practice of medicine. was based on liberalization in 1974 and 1980 or the state Nurse Practice Act. It said nurses could ad · Chemical illness up minister drugs as needed to carry out treatment ordered by a doctor, and could change a pa· tient's treatment regimen ac- cording to "standardized pro· cedures" developed by hospitals or clinics. Last March the state Board of Registered Nursing said nurses were allowed to prescribe and dispense drugs under "stand· ardized procedures.'' Brown's Health Services De partment this year stopped penalizing hospitals and clinics that let registered nurses pre· scribe and dispense drugs under those procedures. But Deukmejian's opinion, written by Deputy Attorney General Ronald Weiskopf, said laws regulating the practice of medicine require a doctor to pers onall y presc ribe and supervise the furnis hing of drugs lo individual patients. Rules of game Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30. 1981 s A•. State r eport Motorists driving more, but slower SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Motorist.a •e driving more but slower, says the latest monthly report on California travel trends. The report was compiled by the s tate Department of Transportation. The bighlighta: Highway travel rose 5.3 per- cent in January over the same month in 1980, but remained the same as in January W79. Weekend trave l o n state highways rose 8.5 percent in January over the same month in 1980, but remained 2.2 percent less than l.n January 1979. The proportion of motorists exceeding the 55 mile-an-hour speed limit during the fourth quarter of 1980 was 58.4 percent, the lowest in the last three years. The proportion exceeding 60 miles an hour was 20.9 per- cent, considerably lower than the 30.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 1979. Transit bus ridership rose 6.9 p ercent in J anuary ove r J a nuary 1980. in January over the same month in 1980, and 42 percent over January 1979. Air travel declined for the 13th consecutive month -down almost 10 percent in December 1980 compared to the same month ln 1979. Judges set /orfreewar circuit ride SAN FRANCISCO <AP) California will be getting circuit- riding judges again -but this time they'll be traveling on freeways instead of horse trails. The idea is to bring the Courts of AppeaJ to the cases in their jurisdictions, rather than mak- ing those involved travel to the courts, permanent locations in all cases. The California Judicial Coun- cil announced the experiment, pending comments. but didn't say how long it might last. SACRAMENT O CAP ) - Pesli.cide-related illness reports on California farm workers rose 38 percent last year, says an in· ternal report of the state Depart· ment of Food and Agriculture. The opinion said the nursing 1aw's reference to "standardized procedures" does not appear to extend to the prescribing or arl- minis tering of drugs to 111 dividual patients , independent of a doctor's orders After accidentally taking a few nips out of his master's hand. this dog gets a firm explanation of Frisbee eti· quelte. The twosome were working out at Santa Cruz Beach. Ridership on the Caltrans- Am trak sponsored "San Joa· quin" and "San Dlegan " trains rose 6.4 percent in J anuary over the same month in 1980, and 51 percent over January 1979. Intercity bus travel on the two major carriers rose 17.8 percent Under the council's rule, each Court of Appeal -there are five around the state, in San Fran- cisco, Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Diego-San Bernardino and Fresno -would adopt its own procedures. ' Wines tested by chefs SAN JOSE <AP> For y~ars. California winemakers have touted their bel-l wmes as the equal of their Frenc~counterparls But when a true test presented nself. the results were in· conclusive. "It's impossible to compare," said Paul Bocuse. the "Lion of Lyon." who along with 109 other French chefs toured Northern California The chefs are members of the Ma1tres Cuisiniers de France. an organization to which only the most highly regarded chefs belong. "The comparison of wines 1s an endless con· versation." Would you compare Brigitte Bardot and Jane Fonda?" asked Rocuse, one of Just 19 chefs whose restaurants boast the coveted three-star rat ing of the Guide Michelin. ANDRE VRINAT, whoH Ta1llevenl restaurant in Pari s is also a three star establish m ent, called fi ve Paul Masson wines the chefs lasted "very pleasant. but very difficult to com· pare with French wines " And another three·slar master chef. Guy Thivard of Vienne. said. "Some are very good, but they were also very different and ::.urprising for a French palate. "Since ~is 1s the first lime many of us have been exposeo lo thl•sc wines. wt• arc very open· minded " Of five wanes tasted, the chefs shoY.ed a pref erence for a 1978 Gewurztramin<.'r. But Bocuse, Vrinal and Thivard all liked a non vintage Chablis the best. "A REAL su<:<·e~s.' Vrinat called 1t "ll "'as striking that there was not an audible m· take of breath when \\ e used the phrase ·California Chablis','' said Masson spokesman Jan Wells. Such a reference to a famous wim·-J{rowing region of France·· might be understood to be a little painful for Frenchmen," he added. The reception for the wines may have been compromised somewhat by the fact that the tour, which also had s tops 1n New York and Las Vegas. was undcrwntlt•n b) M a~son toJ{elhcr with the 1 Mumms compan) of France Both arc owned by J oseph E Se;1gr<1m . thl' world's largest liquor manufacturer THE CHEFS got a taste of real American cooking at the Valhalla restaurant in Sausalito, where they lunched on steak and hakcd potatoes with a side order of zucchini and carrots All agreed that the steak was terrific. . GUESS WHAT YOU CAN EATON WEIGHT WATCHERS WINE POPCORN HONEY YES YES YES D D D NO NO .NO D 0 D PEANUT HOME BAKED CHOCOLATE BUTTER YES BREAD YES CAKE YES D 0 D NO NO NO D D D RAISINS SWEET FIGS YES POTATO YES -YES D D D NO NO NO D D 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 llrat week, $5 weekly thereafter, no contrectal You can learn to eat all these foods- within limits of course-and still lose weight. With Weight Watchers exciting new personalized food plans and com- pl ete. time-tested program you can take off the pounds, deliciously! r---------., I WEIGHT WATCHERS I ,I $4.00 CP I II INSTANT I Just join a Weight Watchers class near you and our instructots will teach you the sensible way to good eating habits. With wine. popcorn. peanut but- ter and more, how can you lose? 1 1 REBATE I I ON H GISTRAJIOH ANO FIRST MUTING fH I ·I OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 1181 I Offer 11alld only aa a discount and may not be combined with any other lscount or special rate. Offer 11alld 1 1 n Area43. OfFH GOOD ONlY WITH THIS TICICU ... WEIGHT WATCHERS~ --------LAST CHANCE ( 835-5505 ) The most successful weight loss progran in the YJOrlcl. Or.""• County ~, ........ ,30.,.., ••• ~ ••.• 500P"' ~ T.....-y .••. 700PM • ....,.._°""9< Fncley •••• IOOIM IMO W L""'°"" Uftot I Seturo.y~JO 1"' C-llMctl -Oolel ~..,.. ci.. t.loftdlyr ' · UO P"' 10111 "'°°"I' A-t.loftdly. . • .. . . , 00 p"' ,,,.., .... ,._, T....ci.y • . . • • . t JO I "' Th"'9dl• e -T-.y ,., .700pM ', ........ • -P"' Wed-y . . . . . . •. I 30 1 "' -DANA l'OINT-W~y ........ 7'00P"' ~: Tt1urldly . • 100 p"' loll 11-.........,,1 , T-.cley ....... t301M T -AHAHIJlll ...u-~ . . . • JO p"' C..,...-ldlMI ~TOH-C~--Hll"lcNGll ~ .. ~ .. ,....,............., T~ ........... l:JOpm C-~ ... I) ........ "-~ esACH-'flllldty ••••••.••.. I JO I"' c_.._i.-·--. ..... , ... tlOIM -16~~-~ , ........ ,,.llOP"' _, ··········''°°""' ·dllld--~ ..., ..... .._.. .... ... ... ~· Met!CN "'°""" ~ w......_ ..... IOI•"' tOllH _...._ w--.. ....... ._ 1 111. ~ ............ 1001.111 T~ ..... , IJOI"' r....,_, ........... 11111&1111 -cotTAMUA. __..,.... ~ '°' ..,.. NlfA-o.ew a. ..... ..-o.-c-..-....... ,,.. '-".... IPOI M, ..... "-fT_ ... ~0.0.. ,-,CA-llMllOIT~ ~ ,,, .... , .. •J01111 ....,..., ••••••••.•• ,.1:GD1111 ~~-T~ •••• ••·•••••t'.IO•'" ._...,_o.r.i.t T~ ............. P.001111 f11f0.-~ •••• , •. 11 w1111 iw.•~-•ter11 ..._., •• 1 ....... •A•fll ...,,., ........ ," toO•t11 t WlitM~lflfllM IMI Moncley . r .... 1«1 ""' T..-ay .; t1IO I"' T.-y . ..,,,,. r_.,. 1000 .. w-, IWP"' """"""'' llO •"' T........, 700pM ... .....,, ........ 130 om ... ..., __ ea··~ &l!aOjllftt °"'.., 12••1 Volley V-WIO~ ........ •30pm ~TOMIUCH-' .............. c.io. ,.,,, l*""' C-"-.-.-C-1 ......, ............... ..... "'°'*' . . . . . . . . , 00 , 1111 T'......, ............... ..... ,....., ........... :00 .. ... T~ ........... 100p111 ~ ......... 1.30•"' w........, .......... 1:00 '·"" """9dly ......... ' ...... fll ~ ........... ,,.,,,. ~ ............ 7'4!011111 ,......., .............. .... ,~ ................. ... .._.._ ........ , .... ...,.. ......... .._.. ., ... ....._"_ ... .._._, , ...................... . """'-' ............ .. _..,,.._ -...... ~""­.. ~ ~ .......... .. Melllk .... ..... ......... ~QINTIA­· ·~ I --T--~ r-, ... • ... J:IO p.m. IOI H ........, ....... -u::~ c~~1 .lllDP"' 2'0 OoMfl A---4'1MGl--y .......... l'CIOpM ..... °"9119t -LAGUNA....... TUltlft --.... flllMtON 'tl&IC)-.... CU..-. A-) ........................ (llVOUgll-l"'ll'0-11 C.. ·~I ai*UIP11"-~ .......... , ,ICHIO OM U.-._CA.... ...,,., .... ,, . •··• t.llO '·"' ....,_, •••••••• &,JO pm T~ .......... 400p111 T-, . tOOaM T'....., '"' ••· .71'01'-"' T-, . . . 100pM. ........ .. ••• 1-001111 w-,, .. .. 11111 .... ,........, •• •• •• • • io. .... W-,, , 71!0.M ...... .._ T-,. . . . . . t-JO .. ,.. 1• N TllllM t• IC.alllll T-y ••••• , •••• 7'0011111 ............. ,., .. ,tll..,,. ............. , ..•• io .. 1111 -MMC' ,,.._ ....... -t:J:::'A-~=:: :.. .. ..... (lfllpe!W-9-j r....., .............. "'""' ...._,.,._ -4MlfA_.. T~ ••••••• , •• ,.lettelll. ..... _ .... ,__, ........ , •. :t:Jrt,~ .. r_....._.._ ·~ ............................ ..... ~ .................. ·····"'°'-"' -.o1111 a°"'"" ,...., ........... \ ... , ... .......t.11111.-~ ......, ·········t!!! ..... ,,.. ... ......,. ..... ......... -... (WIMtlLAa~ ~ ............. ,-"' ~·············'··· --~ '":4:;.;-iiflzlill'iO..Di··n·;.·.:,• ==:... ==:-u:=..... =-~? ec.... ....... ~·············,...... '---................... ..... ... ,.---. ....................... ... T ---.e ~·····••• ,l:lllJll Faced with ataggerin( increases Lo monthly costs, the Orange County Board of Supervisors will consider tomorrow a multi-pronged plan to tighten the purse strlngson the general relief welfare assistance program. The county has some of the most liberal Policies among the state's 58 counties for determining both who qualifies for such assistance and how much they may re- ceive. ,Clearly. some change~ are in ~rder. While court challenges may be likely, it seems wise that the county have some type of residency requirement to prevent persons from other counties or other states from benefit- ing from the local program. The one-year requirement proposed by the county staff. might ~ a bit stilf; a six- month requirement probably 1s more m order. Aside from that, the county, as the staff has pro- posed, should reduce the amount of assets, ~th Ii.quid and non-liquid, that a person may possess 1/ he is to qualify for general r elief assistance. . . Nor does it seem unreasonable to require able-bodied welfare recipients to go to work on public projects in re- turn for receiving general relief. Such a program has been in effect. But it needs to be both strengthened and expanded. But perhaps the strongest action supervisors can take is to stop the practice of issuing direct cash payments to qualified recipients. Vouchers to grocery stores, landlords and providers of other necessities would go a long way to separating the truly needy from those whosimp- 1y are looking for some extra money at taxpayers' ex· pense. The county has a legal and moral obligation to pro- vide general relief assistance to qualified applicants. But there's no requirement in the law that the county cannot take steps necessary to insure that only the truly needy receive benefits and that the associated costs are reasonably constrained. Highway debacle Jn two Northern California ·counties last year, de- teriorating asphalt road paving was replaced with gravel because there wasn 't enough money to repave. Elsewhere. counties a re confining their road repair projects to patching cracks and potholes instead of re- surfacing. The renowned California highway system is in bad shape and getting worse. And the deficit in highway funds. estimated at $915 million over the next five years by the Brown Ad· ministration, is more accurately projected at anywhere from $1.8 billion to $2.4 billion. Part of the problem can be laid on the s houlders of Caltrans Director Adriana Gianturco. who has withheld funds for road improvements and maintenance at a time when costs were steadily rising. But the California Transportation Commission cites three principal factors in the budget s hortfall: Decreasing ga'Soline consumption -down from 11.3 billion gallons a year to 10.25 billion gallons. cutting $60 million to $70 million off gasoline tax revenues. Failure to increase the 7·cent-per-gallon state gasoline tax since 1963. -Inllation, which has sent the cost of supplies and labor soaring. All this being true. the state Legislature is turning its attention to ways a nd means of boosting the highway fund. And it seems quite clear that John Q. Motorist. one way or another, will be footing the bill. A Senate measure by Democrat John Foran would add 2 cents a gallon to the present 7-cent state tax, in- c rease driver's li cense and vehicle registration fees and raise truck weight fees. The measure also would recapture for highway uses more of the 6 percent gasoline sales tax which is imposed on top of the per-gallon tax. Thanks to rising gasoline prices, the sales tax has become a real windfall for the state. flowing mos tly into the general fund. An aJternative Republican measure in the Assembly does not call for an increase in the per-gallon tax, but would rely on increased fees and diversion of the windfall sales tax revenue into transportation programs. The Foran bill would raise an estimated $3.3 billion over the next five years, while the Republican measure would produce $2.24 billion. Also in the legal machinery are proposals t-o guarantee counties a minimum return '>f locally raised gasoline tax revenues to meet local needs. Meanwhile Orange County and Los Angeles officials have been pushing for a 6-cent-per-gallon tax increase in- stead of Foran's proposed 2 cents, They contend the cur- rent bills would do little more than wipe out the pending deficit, leaving little or nothing for new projects. But such an increase has been termed unrealistic in Sacramento. . Whatever the outcome, it's obvious the h1ghwa.Y fund must be rescued and that the highway users will be doing the rescuing. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd/Magazines ByLM. BOYD Publishers bll and little ln thia country started up about • 200 new ma1uinea laat year. Maybe 201WI come out. That would be 10 percent. And 10 percent la tbe t;yplcal sur- vival rat. in tbat 1a111e. Maybe you didn't know JI Uncle Sam aUU "walu IOft.IJ INt ur· rill a tllf lt.IC!k" ll'I u•ually a 1ti~ll of 'cand.y. D.111. that chickens, too, stampede. They do. One wild stampede can suffocate hundreds of them. The big national dish In Ireland ls not lri•h stew, but bacon-and-cabbage. Just about hall of the •oo.ooo Jewish aurvlvors of the Nazi concentration camps now live ln Israel. To hie Utt redundancle1, our Langu,1e man haa added: "hot water heater." · Q. How many of tbe Na· tlonal Football Le.,u.·s • head coacbea them11lvea played profeulonal foo(ball? A. P'llleen. Q , What'• tbe raUo of Prietta to Roman Catboltc. ln lM. CGUDlry? A. One ta llO, 1ceoNJn1 to VaUcu ftrur-. • \ Jaek Andenon i ThOmas P. Hlltyl Publlshtr Thomas kHYll/Edltor Bar'bara krtlblch/Edttorlal P• Editor Budget shortage hampers ms W ASKJNGTON -American tupayen will 1et a break from the Rea1an adminiatratlon'1 proposed lncome tu cut.a. But they'd get an even biager tax break if the Internal Revenue Service were given the money it needs to go after the cheaters who underreport their income each year. Unfortunately, our society has not yet outgrown the hoodlum ethos, which admires peo- ple who eel away with tax chisellne. Yet their thievery coata th e hone s t taxpayers literally billions or d o ll a rs a year. For tax year 1976, the IRS estimated that as much as $135 billion in income had gone UD· reported the year before. The amount h as undoubtedly s ky r ocketed since this last estimate especially as the cheaters realize that their chances ol 1etunc e1u1ht are 1Um. Participant.a ln thl1 ''under eround economy" are not all hardened crimlna11, althou1h a larae part of the unreported in· come la aenerated by Mob en- terprl1e1 1ucb aa dru1 1muc- gUn1. Many pf tbe tax cheaters are auppdsedly respectable pro- fesslonall and bualne111men, who make their transaction• in un- traceable cub and lben don't re- port tbe income.to the IRS. Last year, about 10 percent of the Groes National Product went unreported, accordinc t-0 Peter GutmaM, whoee 1977 study of the underground economy ·spurred a flurry or IRS studies, congressional hearings and in· vestlgations by the General Ac· counting Office. YET FOR SOME unfathoma· ble reason, the IRS has been un· able t o persuade budget directors in both Democratic and Republican administrations that increasing the collection agency's e nforcement funds would be money well spent. In 1975. for example, the IRS spent U7 .4 million on one ch at· catching program and collected more than $180 million lo taxes that would otherwise have slipped through the cracks . That's a return on investment of roughly SS for every dollar a pent. The program is a relatively simple one, but it is time- consuming and requires a lot or manpowe r . What it does is match individual tax returns against forms s ubmitted by employers, banks, corporations and other sources or income. But the IRS currently has the capacity to match Qnly 2S per- cent ol the available documents. Former IRS Commissioner Jerome Kurtz told Congress last year that increasing the document-matching capability to SO percent would have brought in between $30 million and $40 million in additional revenue. IF THE MATCHING pro- gram were expanded, types of income that are now not covered would be subject to the cross· checking scrutiny everything 'If A~'IJ C!:MtS WITH A fRE£.LAlD ·OFF UAW MEH\6ER,WHO RtPl.Jl(tS 1H£ Bl1SAND PIECES fa< Ya.J AS-rnEY FALLO'Ff.' Earl Waters from alimony payments to In - terest on Treasury bills. In a study r eq u ested by th e Coneresslonal Budget Otflce, the Treasury Department estimated that "as much aa $20 billion a year in interest and dividend in· come is not reported by tax· payers, resulting in a revenue loss or $2 billion to $3 billion a year." Document matching could also be used to enforce the windfall profits tax levied on the oil industry. Believe it or oot, l RS at present has no erfective way to monitor the oil com- panies' compliance with the windfall lax. One insider told my reporter Deborah Latish that the government won't even come close to collecting the amount lhe oil compames owe the Treasury. Without more enforcement funds. though, IRS is h~dcuffed in its efforts to catch the tax chiselers. Worse yet, as word gels around that cheaters have a good chance of succeeding, the number or people willing to take the risk will increase. And that means an even bigger burden on the taxpayers who report their income honestly DIPLOMATIC DIGEST - French Foreign Minister Jean Francois· Poncet was definitely turned off by his recent ex· po s ure to the Reagan ad· ministration. according to re· ports filtering back lo the State Department Francois· Poncet privately sniffed that the Wbite House seemed interested only in El Salvador. and complained that he was "condemned largely to holding monologues." As for his mee ting with President Reagan. the Frenchman dis- missed 11 as "particularly in- s ignificant .. They discussed nothing but "banalities," he pouted . The Austrian gov- ernment was outraged by one ar gument the Pentagon used to get congressional approval for the sale of F-16s to the little Alpine nation The generals said the sale would tend to draw Austria into the Western Euro· pean defense system. Not true. cried the Austrians in a note to the State Department Austria is neutral, they pointed out ; in- deed. her strict neutrality is con- sidered the best protection Crom the Communist countries that all but surround Au stria. Money not key to judge retirement age A proposal has been made by Sen. John Schmitz to raise the retirement age for judges to 75. A non-lawyer. he said his reason was to save money for the jud$es' retirement fund by re· ducing the payouts. (f the age or retirement for judges is to be set solely on the basis of how much money can be saved in pensions, it should be up- ped to 80 or~ th e n there would be practically no payouts. But, lik e most judgments which are based upon the cheapest price, it would be a bad bargain. Actually there is no man- datory retirement age for judges, although a constitutional amendment to compel their re- tirement at age 70 w.as passed by the Senate about 2!i years ago. The Senators had reacted to Charles McCabe co mplaints statewi de of superannuated judges sleeping during trials or ot herwise evidencing senility. B UT YIELDING to the "Oliver Wendell Holmes" argu- ment and conceding that whatever age was selected it would be an arbitrary decision, the Senators compromised. They settled for an "incentive" retirement plan which orrered half pay for those who retired by age 70. Those who stayed could only retire thereafter under the old pension provisions which were considerably less than SO percent. In the years since the program went into errect it has worked well to pare oU from the judiciary those who have grown old on the job, although some who should have retired have foregone the age 70 benefits to remain active. ALTHOUGH, In recognition of the "Holmes" argument, no great judicial minds are necessarily lost by reason of re· tirement since the chief justice was given authority to recall for court assignments r etir ed judges, the fact remains that most judges should retire by age 70. Some long before. Furthermore, the argument that one can function brilliantly as a judge after 70 using Justice Holmes as an example, ignores the fact that he sat on a court of review. There is a great difference in the demands made upon a judge who sita on a trial court as com· pared to lbose on the appellate level. In the latter, their duties are sedate, performed in the quiet, unemotional atmosphere of their chambers. Only a s mall percentage of their time is spent sitting as a court to hear plead· ings. CONVERSELY, trial judges, who constitute most of the state's judiciary, must daily sit through the husUe and bustle or the courtroom, often highJy emo· lional, and always dealing face to face with people, lawyers. jurors, witnesses, plaintiffs and defendants. For that reason it takes people with "judicial temperament" as we ll as legal knowledge to prop· erly conduct the courts. Un· fortunately. however suited a lawyer may be when he goes on the bench, the years take their toll. Most judges become sated which leads to impatience, can· tankerousness. and arrogance. Ideall y, then no judge s hould re· main on a trial court longer than 20 years. WHILE SAVING m oney on government operations is most always a noble goal, it is mis- directed in the Schmitz bill. Schmitz, a strong law and order advocate. should be thinki.ng about improving the courts not making them less effective by encouraging judges in their dotage to continue on the bench. Experience has shown too many judges get that way after 70. Reagan's Irishness conies out of the closet If there is any one thing Ronald Reagan has tried to downplay in bis political Ille, it's the fact that he's Irish. This la said to be lbe result of gentle preaaure from the Missus, who la said to think of tbe Irilb u harps and micka who project an lma1e of Jovial corruption. You know, lbe derbled bacman. There la a alzeable school of opinion that bolds the president chan1ed his name from n Re1an to Re11an at ...,,... 1ome time of ,.. hi1 llfe. Guys • named Re1an te nd to set called 8l1t1 or tome othet; pejorative. Thll Rea1an hH MWt wanted any part of ll. In hll Callfomta political cam-palpa bll DOlitical coaultuta praem.ct blm u a PtotMt111t equlre, rat.ber tbao the barp that be la. Mr. Reapn ii not u lrtab • padd.J"• l'&a. 11 am J: but IDOll of wbal &. la ta lrllb. H1a latMr was fully from the old country, and the rest of him is Scotch and En1li1b on hit mother's side. WHAT NAME la on the presi- dent 'a birth certificate I do not know, but that la not from want of trytq. I have made several effort.a 'to set his birth certiftcate from offlclala ln bis native Tam- pico, llllnola. ll does not seem to e'Xl1t. Instead, aome county ol- nctal aendl you an attestation that one Ronald Rea1an wu born on 1ueh and euch a day. Now, .. an added burden of tbt pl"Mldency, R••1•n'• Jmb. oe11 bu come out o tbe clOMt, doubt1 .. tothedl1plea1ureotUM .lll11u. Tb• Wall Street lown.al rec.ntly b.ct a front par• etory dlqiDt deeply into tbt •llole 1eamy tale. The story quoted Debrett'1 , the lrithh 1eaeU.,.ScaJ •uUtority. Accordlns to Debrett'a, Rea1a11•1 P'••l·fl'HdfaU..r, wbo ume to WI toUatr1 la ... WU a member of tM 0' ..... clu al Dootia, .. ., ta.. .wq. al • ...,,...... . la Cout.1 ,,,. .. .,, .. bMr..u'• .... tUt .... 0' Re1u1 of tbl1 area 111 £ descended from Rai1un (pro- nounced Ree1ao), nephew of King Brian Boru, who died in 1014 at tbe battle of Clontarf, which freed Ireland from domination of the Danes. ALL TRIS &OY AL 1tuff is about as tenuous u a bru1h wttb a cobweb. Practically all the Irtlh allese descent from one ktn1 or another, and tn many cases the connecUon-11 real lt tenuous. Even Debrett'I con- ceded tbi.I point. "It you work it out mathematlcall)', two by two, from anybody who lived that Ions a10 " aeld ••nlor 1entalo1lcal re1tarcber Hu1h PHltett, "it's a wonder tbey1re not all cruy with lnc•t." Debrett'• alto claim• tbat· Rea1an N a •Pllllnf.ll walmown I.a lrel~. 1bmt DO doubt, then, that eomeou lD tlM faml· ly, at tom• time or· another, cbaased tbe nam• from O'ltepa ta ~an. Tbe Mud •..wttr ol ...... would ... WalJ eoat=•d ltMlf t0 a IUD "'° .... t ..... to be --u Juu aaotber old·fHhloaed l>emoeratlc INh pol. 4 As for his connection with Brian Boru, the president mi&ht juat u well 10 with the now. There is no more pa11ion- 1tlrrlne name ln Irish b.iltory than the bluff hero of Clontarf. The connection will never do him harm. And th' lady who made him what he la today ml1ht Juat as well lie down and play do110. ON RJ8 WAY to the Wldte House, lboltlh. there la no doubt that h1I name at the time wu spelled Rea1an. The Moral lla- Jorlty, the Pebble Beach Matta, and tbe collection of n1btllt 1roupa that send him on hll way !\ave no p-eat love for tbe rrtab., or tbe lrl1h Catholics. The O'R1 .. am were aU CatboUca and tbllr baptlamaJ records are 1WJ In tbl Sallyporeen Catholic Church. lllr. a..,an 111•1 bu• been makiq 1mCOllldoUI ame.dl tor tb• r•J•cUon of bll lrl1b ber1ta1• wbea be na•ed 1 Re1u ta be Mefttar7 GI 1111 rr......,. ID tnltb. Mr. a-... baa dcllll '""'"'"-nellJ to'a«ied tb• lrta NATION How do you spell snafu? SPRINGFIELD, 111. <AP) - The new Republican clerk in the Illinois House decided to send a memo to his staff reminding them to be accurate in all their written material. Unfortunately. bis memo had nine grammatical , typo- graphical and spelling errors. Even more unfortunate, the Democrats found out about it and gleefully made it public. "Can a guy have a classic s nafu , or can a guy have a classic snafu?" asked the mis- erable clerk, Tony Leone. Here's one excerpt from the memorable memo: "Typos and imput errors are never acceptable for material distributed by the Cle rk's Office. Make sure your work product 1s proofed before it is relesed to the public. Observance of these rules will help insure the effec· live operation of the Clerk·s of fice." ·~•1....-. Jack London fan Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 Law of supply, demand New rhetoric of eoorwmics called confusing WASIUNGTON CAP) -Only two years 110. the term "8Up· ply-1lde eeonomlca'' waa alien to virtually everyone except economists. Today, it trips Qff the tips of politicians' tongues and joumallsta' pens, a catch phrase for President Reagan's untested brand of economic theory. While the Reagan administra· tlon champions the "supply side," opponents of the presi· dent's economic program are routinely referred to as "de· mand-siders." The rhetoric can be confusln1. but needlessly. For supply-side artd demand-side economics ac· tually are two sides of the same coin. "IT IS NOT AT all a choice between supply and demand," says economist Richard Dym. "For years, the scale has tipped toward controlling the economy by controlling federal spending and consumption. Now. it may begin to lean toward stimulating production through incentives." NEWS ANALYSIS Laffer, who helped populanze supply-side thinking and the no- tion of a 30 percent cut in income tax rates which Reagan adopted. Inevitably, says Laffer, this economic growth will raise enough tax revenues to more than offset the original lax cut. thus shrinking the federal deficit and reducing inflation. Applying this theory. the Reagan administration foresees a far rosier future than tradi· tional economists. If Congress approves the president's pro· posed reductions in taxes and federal spending , the ad ministration predicts. inflation will be cut in half by 1984 and the economy now virtuall y stagnant will grow more than 4 percent a year beginning in 1982. The supply-side rs· guiding principle 1s incentive. David A. Stockman says the ris· ing tax burden ls "unjust, unfair and counterproductive." In e ffect. R obe rt s and Stockman are talking about the price or work and investment versus leisure and consumption. High tax rates decrease the price of labor and profits : lowered rates increase these prices. Just as farmers will plant more corn when its price ris es so will people invetlt more and work harder when the incentive to do so increases. says Roberts . "I'm not saying that people will run out and save huge chunks of their income," says Roberts. ··But if every worker took only a slightly better al· titude toward work , then a little for one can be multiplied by 100 million," he says T H E AVERAGE AMERICAN s aves about five cents of every after-tax dollar he or s he earns. The administration hopes this rate can be increased to seven or eight cents by 1984. .. lmput" should have been s pelled .. input." "relesed" s hould have been .. r eleased " and "insure" should have been s pelled .. ensure " Author and book store owner Russ Kingan stands in a single sp<>tlight in his Glen Ellen, Calif .. shop, backed ~Y play bills. pic tures and letters of Jack London and his m ovie-versioned stories. Similarly. the supply-side argument is neither liberal nor conservative, Democrat nor Republican. One of Its early legislative advocates was Sen. Lloyd Bentsen , D·Texas. who promoted the con cept as chairman of the congressional J oint Economic Committee. "WHY SAVE MONEY if double·digil inflation eats up in· terest ?" they ask. "Wh y work harder if taxes steal away earn· ings?" Those savings become the pool of money that business can bor- row to expand pla nts. bu y new equipment and tventually hire new workers Su pply-siders also favor re- ducing government regulation to free more money for productive uses rather than paperwork. They also repudiate wage and price controls. or l•ven voluntary guid elines . claiming th ese artir1cial limits reduce incen- tives High school seniors' grades higher WASHINGTON <API Hi gh Center for Education Statistics said Professor Irving Kristo! calls inflation and the progressive lax system an "unholy alliance." school seniors are studying less but getting higher grades these days than their counterparts of a few years ago, a government s urvey indicates. The class of 1980 also ap peared more money-consciou~ and less concerned about redressing social wrongs than the class of 1972. the National The center s urveyed 58,000 seniors last spring. asking them many of the same questions posed to students eight years earlier Many differen(•es in attitudes were striking. The percentage of seniors who spent five hours or more per week on homework dropped from 36 percent in 1972 to 25 per· cent in 1980. But 33 percent of last year's seniors got all A's or As and Bs compared with 29 percent in 1972 Only 13 percent of the class of 1980 felt that .. working to cor· reel social a nd economic ine· qualities" was very important, com pared with 27 percent or the class of 1972. Supply -siders believe that significant cuts in the tax rate lead to greater economic growth, encouraging people to work, save and invest -as op· posed to spending for more lux- urious. consum er-o riented items, or speculating in real estate and commodities "MORE WORK, production and savings mean higher pro· ductivity. less unemployment and less poverty,.. says Arthur A lot of blue-collar workers to· day are m the 40 pe rcent to 50 percent tax bracket," says Paul Craig Roberts, Reagan's choice as assistant treasury secretary for economic affairs .. Every additional dollar they make, they can keep only half of it. That increases absenteeism and their decision whether lo up· grade s kills." s a ys Roberts ..They ask. 'Why make all that effort and gel so littlt'back' ., " R eagan budget d i r ecto r !'lever befort ha~ government emphasized thl' cconom~ ·~ ~UP· pl y side so forceful!~. c:n>n though most supporters acknowledge lhal the theory still awaits proof that 11 w ork~ H owever . St ockman s a>~ 'The old theone~ have been tried. and we know their resulb. ·· m[ fOR[l(jN WORKS 0-"TSUN & TOYOT-" SPl:Cl-"LIST VlM' - 1855-9220 1 I 0 YEARS EXPERIENCE I-CAR SERVICE Monday thnl Friday 8-6 p.a Sat-Appoilllwic..t ORiy 51 .WTO C[NTtR OR .. " 14 • lln'INl. C4. 9'l714 IM THE IRVIHE AUTO CEHTH ~,.~--------· Q ·----------1\ ~ ~ ~ -~ ~ ~ ~' ~ ~ ~ ::-JI ~' i ~ ~ ~ I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ _-J ~I -~ ~ ~I ~ r ~ -~ -The famous Brooks Brothers ~ ~ poplin suits for Su mmer 1 ~ -Thi::. i'I the warm weather favorit1.:. our own 1• . wa!:>h-anJ-wear 3-hu11un ~uit maJ1.: nnl~ for ; ~1 Brook~ Brother~. I t'~ crn)I, h as a cri~p look, a nJ j~ ~I ~ 'I it's a l·lassic. Blc nJ of polyester-uHwn. in the ' ~ three wanted color~: ran. oltvc, nav\'. Our rcgu-~ , ~I lar sizes. plus 48 and 50 regular and long. and I· ~ 48 extra long. Coat anJ trnusers. $140 ,~~ 1 U ,.. '""" H'"''k.1 H,..thm •ha''" "' ""'"' "' A '""iran E <P'"" : ·~ ~ C~£oii1---~ ~ ' Furnts~tng!l for ijlcn . Women ~· 8 oyJ J ~ ~30 W6 T ?TH STRl::ET, LOS ANGELES. CALIP. 90014 , FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT 8eAOt 92660 • ~· -·~..Ar! ICEL~ The world's most effective alliance -has waged the peace for 32 years. It has defended 8,579,489 square miles of territory. It has protected 5 70 million people. It has been tested by the stresses of a turbulent era. It has never fired a shot in anger. Since April 4, 1949, NATO -t he North Atlantic Treaty Organizat ion - has been a deterrent shield for 15 nations of the Atlant ic com munity. This alliance continues to be a splendid example of w aging peace through strength. Dedicated to the mutual defense of individual freedoms, NATO members have worked to settle d ~sputes by p~ace­ fu l means; and to develop their individual and collective capacity to resist attack, as pr ovided by A rticle 5 1 of the United Nations Charter. On A pril 4, NATO will begin its 33r d year of service to the free peop le of the Atlantic Alliance. To mark t h is significant anniversary, pl ants and offices of McDonnell Douglas w ill be closed and our personnel w orldwide w ill enjoy a paid holiday. r--------------------------------~~-- 1 For more information. write: / NATO Folder, MCDONNELL DOUG&.A9 ~-­ Box 14628, St. Louis. MO 83178. , I I I I I I I I I I City St11e Zip f L~--~--------~------~-----------~--~---~--~-~ . ' I ., .... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. March 30, 1981 • • • • Now the MERIT idea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar- New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERIT for those who prefer an ultra low tar cigarette. New MERIT Ultra Lights. It's going to set a whole new taste standard ./Or ultra low tar smoking. I , 0 I MERIT MERIT n y I Ultra Lights Ultra Ughts . 4mgtar 1 Regular& rvtenthol 4 mg "tar:· 0.4 mg nicotine IY. per cigarene by FTC Method Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determ ined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. L----------' Of'lttllp Morrltlnc. '"' .I,. ' i' . Renegade scientist Linus Pauling is convinced vitamin C is help/ ul in treatnient of all forms of cancer By JOEL C. DON Of Ille Dally Pilot Stall Linus Pauling, the Nobel laureate who some believe is a renegade in the scientific com- munity, is reeling just fine. He hasn't had a sniffle since he began a daily regimen of mega-doses of vitamin C more than 10 years ago. Recently entering his 80th year , Pauling has yet to give ground on bis conviction that the dietary nutrient can prevent and fight colds. Jn fact, since hi s book , "Vitamin C and the Common Cold." was published in l!nO, Pauling has advocated vitamin C as a helpful therapy in other viral infections, bacterial dis- eases and his most recent and controversial proposition that vitamin C is helpful in the treat- ment or all forms or cancer. 0 R"U G s T 0 R E s A N 0 HEALTH food businesses have reaped profits from a nutrition· conscious society. Controversial megavitamin therapies fill bookstore shelves and are ap- plied to schizophrenic and men- tally retarded persons as well as the new generation or health seekers. Nutritionists and the medical co mmunity, though, have welcomed the res pected chemist's dietary recommenda- tion with a less than enthusiastic reception. Some called the oc- tog enerlan a cr ank ; others dimissed his ideas as a sign of old age. But when Pa uling recently walked into a lion's den of sorts. speaking at a meeting of physi· ciaos in Costa Mesa, there was less questioning about the ef- ficacy of vitamin C than con- cerns about the possible side ef- fects of taking large daily doses of the nutrient. On that issue. Pauling was adamant. ··Vitamin C is one of the least toxic s ubstances known," he said, at a meeting sponsored by Kaiser Foundation hospitals and the Southern Cali f ornia Permanente Medical Group ·'People have ingested up to a hair a pound at a time without any serious side effects.'' He drew a chuckle from the audience at that quantity and a s light gasp when he offered ttis recommendation for dail y vitamin C intake. PAULING'S PRESCRIPTION for good health is a daily dose of 10,000 milligrams, 167 times the a mount recommended by the Food and Nutrition Board of the prestigious National Academy of Sciences. The 60 milligrams recom- mended by the government is pitifully low, Pauling said. While it'll prevent a person from de- veloping scurvy, the once deadly plague of seafarer s, Pauling believes human beings need at least 10 grams (or 10,000 mg> per day to stay in the best of health. "There's something special about vitamin C," he said. ''Every animal species requires a series o f vitamins. The primeval a ncestors of these Daily Pilai MARCH 30, 1981 JUST COASTING HEALTH HELP ANN LANDERS s p ecies lost the abi lity to sythensize these substances. "Plants still have the ability but some animals have lost the ability because they were get- ting the substances from the plants that they were eating ... Vitamin C 1s s till manufac- tured by 99 percent of the animal population with the ex- ception of a few mammals, in- cluding man. "A GOAT WEIG HING 70 kilograms (1S4 pounds> has been reported to synthesize 13 grams of vitamin Ca day," he said "I asked about the goat. Wh y doesn't the goat make only 12 grams a day Why 13 grams a day? "It must be that that 13 grams is beneficial to him and genera lion after generation continues lo manufacture this a mount." Pauling pulled a test lube from his coat pocket lo illustrate the amount of vitamin C manufactured by a 70 kg goat. Then he pulled out another test tube lo illustrate how much vitamin C is made by the human body per day The tube was empty "I think the goat knows more about th.is matter than the Food and Nutrition Board," h e snapped, whipping up generous laughter from the physicians "A BOARD of veterinary groups recommends the feeding of laboratory animals 70 times as much (vitamin C > fo r monkeys as does the Food and Nutrition Board does for human ~ D I Heart disease topic B2 of UCI lecture 0 B2 B2 series ... B2 ~ Linus Paulmg hasn't had a snzfflein over IO years Diiiy Pllol Pl>Olelly Palrl<k 0'0-11 beings,'' he added Pauling t'Xpla1ned that vitamin C boosts the human im- mune system's production or disease-fighling agents such as a ntibodies. He noted a recent study bas s hown the production of in- terferon. touted as a potential cancer -fi g hting agent. is in- creased with large doses of vitamin C But Pauling owes vitamin C's role in cancer to its connection with the production of collagen. the human body's "intercellular cement." ''The intercellular cement is strl'ngthened by fibrils or col- lagen in the s ame way rods of steel reinforce concrete," he said "We knew 1n the 1930s that vitamin C is required for the synthesis of colla~en "CONSEQUENTLY WE FOUND 1f yo u give more vita min C to a patient this should strengthen his normaJ tis· sues and help resist the infiltra· ti on ~or diseast') .. Pauling stops s hort or claim- 1n~ vitamin C as a cure for cancer He said it's at best a helpfu l therapy that's shown in som e studies to increase a pa- tient's longevity and bolster a more positive. healthy outlook. The Mayo Clinic r eported more than a year ago no ehange in cancer patients receiving 10 grams of vitamin C per day Pauling contested the study . claim ing the patients were also receiving chemotherapy trea t· m en ts Chemothe rapy lends t o weaken the body's immune system. he said , destroying the effectiveness or the nutrient The clinic plans a new study treating patients onl y with vitamin C. Even if the study shows htUe o r n o effectiveness it 's doubtful Pauling will give up the fight. HE WON the 1954 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work on molecular bonds and is s till con- s id eted a pioneering c hemist and mentor to many in the world scientific community After atomic born bs were dropped on Hiros hima and Nagasaki. Pauling was one of the first to launch a campaign against the arm s race and above-ground nuclear testing. For his efforts, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1963. In an interview following ttis s peech, Pauling said he just wished more of his colleagues would read his books on vitamin C treatment for colds and flu and the most recent. "Cancer and Vitamin C." written in col- laboration with surgeon Ewan Cameron. ··The general impression I get from scientists who know me from way back is 'I don't know much about these medical mat- ters but Dr. Pauling says something that's worthwhile. He's been right so often that he's probably right this time.'·· SOME PHYSICIANS at the meeting brought up concerns that excessive vitamin C could prove harmful lo patients with kidney stones, gout or dangerous for pregnant wome n . Kidney stone or gout patients can take the nutrient in the form of sodium ascorbate rather than the common ascor bic acid. And he said there's no apparent danger to pregnant women. Vitamin C may produce a lax- ative effect in some individuals, although Pauling said that was just fine with him. He said it doesn 't matter il the 10 grams are taken in one dose or in partial doses throughout the day. ·•And the best vitamin C is the cheapest one ... He added only 10 to 15 percent of vitamin C is los t in the urine. "And of course that which is lost in the urine helps prevent blad- der cancer." As ked when vitamin C will enter the medical mainstream, Pauling said he's willing lo wait for physicians to catch up. In the meantime. he continues public speaking and research at the Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine near Stan· ford. ·'This is about the gestation lime for new ideas in medicine," he said. of the 11 years since he published his firs t book on vitamin C. "I've been predicting that in a year or so doctors will all jump on the bandwagon - use or vitamin C as a supple· menl to other therapy will just be accepted by the medical com· munily." Cults • • • Troubled people in search of something Profile of a prospective cultist : a mental cripple. li ving on the fringe of society or prone to fall.in'g into just about any extremist group that comes along. Not so. according to a UC Berkeley psychologist who's studied some of the 2,500 to 3,000 cult groups that have sprung to life in the United States during the past two decades. In on-going research or more than 500 form er cult members, Dr. Margaret Singer paints quite a different picture of victims of modem-day messiahs. "Two-thirds were individuals who were es- sentially average, normal (penons) who went into a vulnerable period," s he told a group of physicians at a recent California Medical As- sociation meeting in Anaheim. OtTEN THE CULT member had a major family upset, a troubled romance or suffered emotional shock durine the transition from bl1b school to colle1e or colleee to iraduate school. Coupled with the chanee in social environment is a mild to moderate depretsion,aheaald. Typically, the troubled lndividual makea firal contact witb lb• cult ll'OOP In public plac11 -bua stations, airport termiDall, community parka, busy city streets. Cult mtmben are trained to spot protpecUve memben by tbetr telltale lonellnea, depreuklll or purpoHleu wandertnt. Then it'• time for wbat Dr. Sln1tr calJJ "love boinbiq": a concentrated ditplay ot llfec· Uon and concern. "Wbat tbey really do 11 a eoJl.ftd.nce 1ame," the Hld. '11t Nally la a 1treet bu.th In_ t.be 1eme that mott of the remdtinf la done by direct contact in the street.·· Often working in pairs , cultists use flattery and the most up-to-date street language to win attention. THEY'Li. SAY YO U seem like an open, lov ing person; a compliment designed to strike a pos itive cord in just about any individual. Dr. Singer said training manuals have been developed to help cultists gain new members And those who walk the streets for the groups are well-trained and rehearsed for their task. Sl'le noted one group sends an older cuJt member paired with a rookie. The. new member is hut.ructed to get close to the individual, penetrating the "zone of intimacy" generally only entered by family members. The most easily recruited individuals are middle class and not "street smart," she said Lower claaa persons. she said, can spot cons and street hu.sUes. Some cult groups prey on organized social or church groups, spotting loners or people who appeared troubled and inviting them out for cof- fee or a ride home. "'l'llEY WANT TO PICK people who are socially oriented and available," she said. Wltbln lhree to four weeks of first contact, the cult will have a new devotee. And once you are In, you're expected to stay virtually forever or as Jong aa the leader re- malu in a position of authority. You are told what to do, say and think. Thus the term de-pro1rammlni wu derived from parent.a and telaUves of cult members who dtteribed tbelr loved ones u "programmed" to act in a rigid fashion. Dr. Singer said . If you want to leave. the cultists might say your father will have a stroke, your mother will become ill or other calamities might befall your family READING MATERIALS are screened and any negative publicity appearing in the news media is attacked or ridiculed as false. "They totally twist any information brought in that the outside world is against them," she said. "And it's important to note that not all the c ults are religious in nature," she added. "Because of the F irst Amendment many cull groups have started out as psychological groups but then incorporated as religious entitles." Dr. Singer has classified a number of types of grou;>s including spiritual, flyin1 saucer or outer space. Zen, neo-Christian, political, com- munal living and satanic groups, to name a few. "Cults are led by seU-appointed messianic persons who say they have a commission in life," she said. "Many cults do institutionalize and survive but most die when the leader dies." CULTS CAN BE dlst1ngu1shed rrom other unified, tight-knit groups, s he explained. Cults have only two purposes or goals: recruiting new members and fund raisln1. The leaders generally are charilmaUc and domlneerina, m<>1t groups have a "doomsday" outlook on Ure and they operate on a double set of ethics wtth no appeal for memben to a 1rt1ter ayatem of justice, she 11ld. Dr. Sineer told the physicians, attendin& a day)_ona lecture series on medical fada, quackery and extremist groups, cults a re here to stay. "They appear to be innovative but they're as old as recorded history." Many cults s prouted out or the social turmoil of the '60s and today have about 3 million members in the U.S., mainly in the 18-to 25-year-old age bracket, she said. "WHERE THERE IS a breakdown of the structure of society there a re people seeking simple answers," Dr. Singer said, in an in· tervlew following her lecture. "Cult leaders tend to say they have the answers." Dr. Singer, who also is a professor In the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Francisco Med ical School, brightened the somewhat tarnished image of de·programmen, who try to pull cultists from their alleged captivity. She said of the former cultists interviewed ror her study. about 75 percent were lured from a cult by a relative and 25 percent had walked away. She admitted a small percenta«e of de· programmers uae forcible reetralntl to bold a cultist, but 1enerall)' the de-pro1rammln1 proceas involves simple r.ortentatlon and education. The cultist.a are ahown newapa_per c:lipptn1s on their 1roup and tnformatton ~a1' \ manaeement and p1ycbolo1lcal pr~ techniques. "It'• ooth1q ma1lc: or brutal." tlM aald. addlnc. 1n fact, "mott cle--procrammen are former (cu.It) memben.'' -JNlC.O. U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 FEATURES ~\ Whe r e' --Vi-i~-~-o-.-. _D_e_t_e_c_t_c_l_ue_s_---:----.. -:~-;~-·~~.::..;.:;..;..;:.~~~:..:.;;.;;;L• \~\\\ h h? TVESDA Y M ARCH 31 cooperate with one who shares mtcrests . '" "° JAMN ,.,, l e no-growl • , Reach new understl'lndin~ with dyoomic ... :A1H~r .. t~.r:.c"!A~tv•!!.t.!! By SYDNEY OMAltR member of opposite sex. Gemini, Sat:1l '''"'" -,,,. tollow"'9 dfioCrl- NUMBERING OUR NOSES: You hear a lot of talk these days about how we are now in a no.growth society in our region. School enrollments generally are in decline Few babies are joining us . New housing starts bave ebbed. ARIES <Mar. 21-Apr. 19); Focus on neeoUations, desires, reaching for poten· tial and not settling for subsUtules . You gain wider attenUon for efforts -valid business or career opportunity is part of scenario. Leo, Sagittarius and another Aries ri&ure prominently. laraus and another Varao pl·•v key role'-°"" 01 ""'' w rLL SELL AT Pv11..1c " ,.,, "' AU CT ION 10 THE HIGHl!5T LIBRA <SeJ)t 23 Oct. 22). Spt•caul rela a100E.1t r o R t.ASH t1Mr•11•ut 1tm• , ti On h p . t•> (\ 'fl j ol ••1t on lnt111t m«WY ot tllt Vnoi.• 1 an .. n:-11 es , g1 s, s urpr ~cs. ,,.,0 , •" ,,9111, 1111• •"41 '"'••ul • Yet you might ask over the last decade, how much no· erowth did we actually have? Tbe latest census figures, comparing 1980 lo 1970, might give you som e clue. During that 10-year period. Orange County population increased by almost half a million souls -or 458,911 , to be more precise. domestic adjustment!>, ~realer e m ol1<111<tl <on••r•o 10 "'"'now,,.,., by 11 """" security d o minate excitin g s t•t•n Jri11 See Live '9•o o .. .,"' '"'" '" ·~ 11•GPtnr Taurus, Scorpio and unolhc1 Lib1 J f1g ur1· "'~i;;~·:;·~.,""".:,',\~~AM f" NORTON prominently. Focus also Oil '>Pl'l'Ulal11111 Chicks Hatch "' t \t"lll•M dfl b'Jd ( IJI lllf tCIAR V C.lfV fEOERAL c I ren and change 0 SCl!rll'r) SA\11 ... (.~ & LOAN ASSOt;'ATION,. SCORP IO <Oct 2:J Nov 21 J !';potht:ht 011 j :omtt to Hv n11ng1on Cente1 '""'"'•1°0•• land, properly, IJ valid way or d"f1n1nu See the ttle Cycle of an ROlu•O.d 0<1001·• ' 1919 "' ""1' ... " E f No IU .ov '" bo"" t)J•). P•Qt 9$1 01 "territorial rights " J'rncc:., Can1·1•r and aster chick rom tncubatDf u'"'"' Rtt4.l(oJ• .,, "'" o""' or ,,,. That hardly seems to count ais no-growth. The 10-year popula · lion boost, broken down between our 26 cities, shows several instances TAUR US (Apr. 20-May 20): Blocks, ob· slacles are temporary -fresh start is part of scenario. Hopes. desires are subject to change. Emotions dominate -you could another Scorpio pla y important rolt•:, I ITl to broudor Oa1ly hatch ' Rttu•ht of Or«l{lt Co11nly, ... o Oettd 12 30 lo 3 p rn API I th1u 01 "''" Oo<r11>•• •II• 1011ow1n9'; print style, highlight c reat1v1ty and 11·lJ ltH 1a m :r{lf)I 6tn & m1 &:hool l ,;'~~~111:1 ,., 1• 0 .. No 11111 ," 1119 ,,1~ ·> HOROSCOPE that member of oppos1l1• '''" t•;er,·~ \ 1'1 1 & youth rJrnup" welcome 01, ., .. 1, M~ ... <.oun1y 01 O•..,,Qt, s1•1e ~ ffiUCh . f->h 11rtt• tt9f 2533 UI I ~lolOlto•ol "' P<'I m•o •t COrCl&O In ~. , i"w\ of startling growth. The TOM MURPHINI -I'/ city or Irvine was the l .~ m o s t a w e s o m e ..._ ________ ....;;.;.M~.....i-performer . BACK IN 1970, Irvine probably had m ore cows than people. There were just 7 ,570 human folk The cow-count is unknown. Ten years later. those 7,570 had been Joined by a whop- ping 54,564 new faces. giving the new city a grand totaJ population for 1980 of 62, 134 So much for no·growth. San Juan Capa~trano. our next newest city, had only 3.781 souls an the quiet little m1ss1on village in 1970. It grew by 15.178 in the decade for a total headcount of 18.959 in fall madly In love. Cycle is one of excite ment, challenge and ultimate fulfillment. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 ): Abstrcict principles are c larified your philosophy is defined, lines of communication come Into focus. Cancer , Capricorn. Aquarius pe r sons figure prominently. First im pressions now lend to be accurate. CANCER <June 21 -July 22>: Dig beneath surface get facts concerning finances, borrowing and lending procedures Gemini, Libra, Aquarius natives figure prominenUy. Unusual ··social invitation" cou ld actually be a money-making scheme LEO (July 23 Aug. 22): Go slow, attend to details. make necessary revisions. check agreements. deeds, contracts. Aquarius, Scorpio a nd a nother Leo figure prominently . One who does care will prove it. Hold fast to principles. You are going to be rewarded! VIRGO (Aug 23·Sepl. 22): Detect clues , accent perception . willingness lo SAGITTARIUS (Nov :!l l>c:<· 21 t ,,.,.. 1tt u•" 1' "''"'" ., 111 ru H . IM1•••11.,.,._,w M .10\ u1 th~ 0"1ct ot c ontact leads to t'XC:tllng , l'f"l'Jll\ I l'X Pl'BLIC NOTICE .... "V'"• R ... Uldfl u1 •••d C011nly c hange or tdE'liS Write. C'a ll, l'01nn1un11.1ll' I'"~""''"''"""""'' II .. '"'""'.'' with relatives. lake Ot'l'l'SSUrv s hor l t n p NOTICE OF D EATH OF ;:"\O!J';::.··:.':;;:,.~· .. ~~" • .':;.~0:.:u~~:~: Many of your questio ns \\ tll tw .in ... ~· I I'd J A M E s D •. ,, ' ·" ··--·" J n """"'"'"" Of You'll soonbe "go1ng 111top111<lult 11•11 SC HWEICKERT ANO O F '"~'1 ,,,. A,.,, .. ~ 1 , .. 1• M "'d ('APRICOR N I D<.•t 22 .I an \'I 1" h P ET t T I 0 N T 0 AO • ·• n• flow gets boos t. roadliltu·k to pr11i,:r1•':-. 1., M IN ISTF"R ESTATE NO removed l.osl art1d <• \\di ht• Jo1;.il(•d A IC•S llO I ,., .... , tl•J'• ur tommon ' ..... , n '"'" 1D1,1v• "0 Aries. Leo. Sa g 1tL.t1 1u-. p1·r-.ons l1 i,:u1 t· prominent!) Major t .1~k \\tll lw <11111111•1, d Aggressa\e a s!>Ol'n&lc· l·\htlill 111111 1 111q.11I·· than logic AQUARll'S <J an <W I , 1o !~ 111 daviduahty is h1ghhghll•d I 1k1 rnJt1.1t1\ ,. make n{'\\ start 111 n t \\ tf111·1•11111 1., pioneer Trust \our O\\ n 1udgriw111 J· It• me nt of l1m<.· wr1rks ror \1111 You'll h1 · .it right µIan• \\ ht·n 11 1·1111111 ... l.1·11 1• 111 fl" tu r e P ISCES ( Fl'11 l!I M.ll ~)j 111 h' Pll priva('\.', protN·t 1·1111r1cte 1111 el ... 111111.. \,. Cl'nl on d ubs . 111sl 1t11 t1 1111" ... p1•1·1.tl l'""ll' and a pnss1bl1· h<t~p1t a l 1·1..,1t \ '"' \\.1V.1· up" With attSWl'I' ('Ja11d1',°'lllfll' I 11·1·11111 w ill h(• on .1i,:t·11<1<1 \qw 1 1111~ 1s m 1111·11111 •'tit I r l•dr!Jr II fl t.1r I 1 " 111 I t I• ·\.I ' t1;, .. ' I I If I '" urt ot Vl•ty I I.JI <,ltr1q lo N I( k• r I ... '' , ,, I" I I \ t.Jtr• lru \ f Jt'( '>U fld j '" 1 "''''' 11 "".,. , ·•flt , .-o re\" or I (J 1 I 11 mut t ,, , Qnf I lllJ •·II• ~\'\~\\10n fJ( ',. "'11t,r '" • \ c 1 ~i t lh• tfl'n••n•no p1 "' 11 i ,,t•i •f ftll 1(1!1 \J \f"t.tJl••d t" .11 I ·•·•••t JI 1 ru • N l'.n 1nttr .. 0.1 •I\ it~ 1 J' Jlt '" 111111111 •ltJ••nt-~\, 1! fif\1 "'"''' 1111 l•rn \JI • .. 1111 U•f"Cl u• r ru'' '',. I 1,1 11'fj •(}t•n,t t1I lht• "-J\1tt ••"1J .,t 1tw h .1\I~ 11·dl•·f1 ti., .1111 [Ji •l i ,,\,,I "Jul ... ,1 ... will ~ Like slap in f ace ,,, ,, IV••H•t '°''' AJHil 1, ,.,.,, Jt 11 U I n; 11 Oft< Jf I 1 1 I ' U ,,. t, t1 t (. ,,,._,, t t.ittn• tJI A1111 ''' 1 r1>"""' I ' .S Cenvus counter }mdrng bootleg renter rn Laguna 1980 Cons idering the humble beginmng in number~. this too was a hefty 1 ne rease AMONG ALL 26 of our Orange Count) l'ltaes you have t o look prNty hard to find a pure c ase of no gruv. th during the last de<'ade Perhaps the closes t example would be our s mall up- coast commun1tv o f Los Ala mitos The offi c ial cens us in dacated Los Alamitos gained onl) 183 citizens during the decade The c it y \\{'nl from 11 ,346 to 11.529 during the JO years Obviously. if Lo:-Ala mitos \\ants to jOan the growth c t11es. offtt·1al s LhN<.' m ust insist the L'S. Census people lake thl•ir hcadc:ounts during the surge· of incoming popula lton on ra('t'tra<'k nights S LIRPRISINGI.\', fluC'na Park 1s the next bes t exam pi e of nearly no growth during the decade past. Des pite its fame for Knoll's lkrry Farm a nd other nearby attr ac lions. thC' cens us dc clart'd that Buena Park gained only 701 res idents dunn~ th(' 10 year pe riod Dirt.>ctly along our eoastlinc. Sea l Beach , with a 10· year gain of 1.534 people. was the least growth-oriented community Laguna l'kac•h. long touted a~ a heartland of no.growth phalo!.oph). s ttll po1>pcd up \\ilh 3.310 new races. going from 11.550 in 1970 to 17.860 in the 1980 headcount Laguna officials stall don't think the census people caught up with e\'C'r~body li ving in bootlegged apartments or the count for 1980 \\Ould ha\'e been m ore like 34.000 DEAR ANN LANDERS· I was offended by the letle r about th e man who stood by his wife's cask et, patted her hair and said. "Goodbye. lloney " It s eems the next·door ne ighbor wrote to tell you she knew the couple well. a nd over the years she had hea rd th<.· man call has wife lolo; of names. but "Hon('y" wasn't one of them I was married fo r 40 years to a won derful woman We had a fin e re lallonshap. a nd r was very good lo her r called her "lloney." "Darling" and dozens ANN LANDIRS of other pet names when she was alive. She passed away a fe w months ago. I. too, stood by the casket and said a few farewell words before they lowered the lid. Reading that letter in your column was like a slap in the face. I believe you owe me an apology. NOT GUILTY Dear Not: Your letter brought to m ind an old Hebrew saying: "U you throw a stone into a pack of dogs, the one that is bit barks." How come I heard from you? natur('. otht•1 ~ 111·1·d 111 h·· ,.,~ 1·d 111•11 lea ding q ut•-.t11111-. I f111 "'" 11 'o•n ~h' I promise m\'t·lf I Y.d l •1p1n 11 111 111• d ol'tor 'nt•\I t 1m 1· hut I fl•\'' , ""' l, t • abk to do 11 Plea se. \nn u1 ~1· d 111 to , ,,, 1~1-. fl 111, dareC't qul'~l1un ., \l f(\111 111 IH FRANK Dear Frank; If \our elm·aor t.1k1·' lh•· t i m t' I 0 a S k i ( ~ 0 U .! J I h ,f \ i II f.: ·1 n \ problem!t, l'On'>idf'r \OUr"·JC l1wkL lf1• <or s he) is a ~t'm. To expt'cl a unrea!>onahft•. resent it. doclor to g 11 h• \lllllf lltat '" In 'al't, """'•' 411·11111•· 11111-{ltl l> F: A H ,\ '\ ', I \ '\ I> 1-. I: , 19 yt•a r old girl \d111 \\ ;1 ""' 1 \•" tw t" I havt• tht•si· 11·1111111· .1 11·tcli 11• tr\\ ·I! o vrr m j ho<h l's p1 •1·1.1l h 1111 rll\' hq,... lf•<l stomach ancf un n1' luP.t,1:-. I h .t11• lhP \,,,~ i I look I han• a \\'<HHkrful 1111\ f111 11tl o111d »ll< 111 these da\s I kno\I. \\ i· o,1. tif •,.. : "tl111: intimal<.· 0 Thl' thought or t11n. , I lfli' 11 ...... ( marks mak(•s mt• s ick ) 111 'Ill'• lh•' ,\•II turn ham off Plc:asi· t•·ll n11 · ii .111 can b<' dont• to g1•t rad 111 th1•rn LOOKl'.'\C FOHWAH I> 'IO l'll L MOM E!'JT Dear Not Looking: Strrtch mark ... fal11 with time. The1 e ic, no kno"n m1·th11d uf 1 getting rid or them. Your ff'ar!'t. ho~C'\<f'r , arf' urifuunJ1•1l r..r I ~ 111 Ill• '1• ··' llQ '"'' y f jl I J l' •t I , fl L I\ .,,. """' ,.,,n• Pl ' HI .I(' 'JOTI(' 1-: r I k O l t(l O f l k Tf N T I O N ro tOLLECT AN O TO llEM OV[ P ERSONA L t'ROPE lll v I l<OM fH( ~TATE OF'CALtfOllNIA I "'' 1t1.1llfo1 ... "" l ... t.:UI ,, Jofln "·• M F)h1 t f'J 11_,, .. ~l~•~l/E:~IC1 dtl I'' ''• ,, ''' •1 ,. , .. ,n..,,-d\ C..I ~._,,., .. ,.~ IN l.1Ha'SA. C'\'en counting heads can trigge r a de bate Ne wport Be ae h . too, cll'arly fa iled to escape the grov. th p<1Ltern by gu1n1ng 13.893 new residents OH 'r the 1hoc<1d1• DEAR ANN LANDERS· From tim e to lime you deliver m essages to certain g r oups of people H ow about s aying something to doctors today -especially g y necologists? Through thf' )••ars l'\f• rt'ff'h 1•d hun1lrt>d., Gu'>ld\ll.' S Ch,1brt• 1101 or le tters from nwn tC'll ing mt• ahout lhi n~' D 0 v I' s I s u 11 c 2 2 s. that tum lht'm orr '>f'XUalh. Mri•t<•h m:iri.. ... NeNIJ:HI Ill lCh CA q2660 have nevt•r h<'t'n m<'ntionr.d. 111 1 ~)J OJ~.! ,, , , •r •11 ,,., "''""" tw-• ,-, 1 '"''"d And. wag~ might .s uggt'!>l, a ll IJ ,893 of the new people try lo get across Ne\\ port Bay Bridge every a fternoon, prec1sel) al 5 :m Us ua lly al the elose of the appointment. the doctor will ask. "Is ther e anything you Wc)Uld like lo discuss?" Or. "Arc you having any proble ms 7 " While this might encourage some people to open up about topics of an intimate Actual!~· th1• u ~linr'' i., ma~n1fh·t1 111 ' ~·our mind. StrN,·h mark~ an· 0 111 that disfigurin~. \\omt•n v.h11 an • bothrr1·1f h' 1 them should lo.1°l'll th<· ligh t-. turnNI Inv. l'l'RI I<' 'OTIC E uo~ "0T>Cl O• ~ao t f• t•r ,,..,, "''""'" ~Hn\ dQdln\I 1 1 )r •· Jiil•M! ,, wnu rM vf' Ml •n I r, ._ 1111 • 'l·•ff" dMd wno N '" 10 Heart disease topic P RE VENTION OF H EART DISEASE will be the topic of a 10 week lecture series cit l T Irvine, beginning Tuesday "Biology of II earl Disease " or Biolog~ 51> may be attended by community members at no charge Cours<' c r edit 1s available for IJCI a od Uni versily Extens ion s tudents Organized by UCI students. the lecture series features clin1c1ans and researchers in the field of cardiology Subjects inc lude an in troduction to the c ardiovascular system and the relations hip of heart disease and diet. stress, exercise and risk factors 1\ho. ca rdio pulmonary res uscitatio n <C PR1 instruction will be available The lectun• series, co-sponsored by the American Heart Association a nd the UCI Sc hool of Biological Scie nces. will be held Tuesrh1y ;:irui Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m For more information, call 838·5318. For Univers ity Extension c-rcdit information. call 833-5414 . ROLFING, the integration of human struc ture. is offered Wednesday evenings in Costa Me s a by certified rolfer R Grant Powers . The free lecture and demonstration series begins at 7 p .m For information, call 640 7661 CARDIO-PULMONAR V RESUSCITATION I CPR ) cours e sponsored by the Orange County Call 642-5678 "Put a few words to work for you 0mars "~ CUSTOM~MING . • 1 Sped•llrlng In SHADOW BOXES • 1803 Pllewport Blvd. costaMet9 ~ Repairing While You Rut ~·Shoe Servk• Sui~ Slw" Slwp l"'-OH..., Cltlu DI 111 •f 5Jt4W ... 551-5667 lntM HEALTH HELP chapter of the American Red Cross begins Saturday, m Laguna Nig uel To register or for information. call 831 6582 VSC coach due John Robin~on. coac h of the USC football l<'a m . is to appear as a guest s peaker at a C'ha mpagne brunch s ponsored by the Un iversity of Southern California South Orange County Alumni Club . T he event will start with a no-host social hour at 11 :30 a .m .. followed by a brunc h at 12:30 Pm . Sunda y. April s. at the' Holiday Inn in Laguna Hills . USC alumni. their friends and guests. are welcome to attend Space is limited so reserva lions should be made early Reservalt0n deadline dale is March 26. flrunch tickets are available for $12.50 per pe rs on throul(h Pam Reese at 32911 Stays ail Or . Dana Point. CAREER WOMEN Don't leave your image to chance ... Leave it to POWERS Orange County 547-8228 /tlttt~f.< t't Jf.uv u or orr. She riff, chiefs to talk safety 'Ar(· We S.tft• 1n Our 11111111" •• 11o1 , 11 • •11• Streets~· will h1• tht.· top11 1 'l'lnt•·d ll\ 01 111).!t County She riff HrJd <:atl'' .1111! ;1 '""''I "' "" po li ce ch1 l•fs at a C1t11, n-. \ch '"'"', c , 11H1 111 ,. 1C'A C 1 dinne r Thur'-d.I\ .11 th• ll11111t11i.;t1111 Beach Inn Sponson•d fl\ '-,uJH'f\ .-.11r I t.11 111·1 t \\ 11•d1 1 the dinner m\.•t•l tn J!' an· "'''rl tu '''J1;11ul •111 ,.., s ues of distncl "ult· c11n1·1•rn Joining Shl•rarr c;:1t1's v.111 tw 1'11111·1· c 1., .. 1~ Orbrey Ouke. Frank K1·!>.,lt>r Earlt• Hoh1l.1 ill• Kels on Mc D;m11·I. Sta<'\ P11·aM·1:i .tnd 1!011.tld Johnson re pn•:-ertting l'~prc:s~. Canlt·n (;111\1• Huntington fkad 1, 1.o., \lamtlo!> S t•;d l~•·.11'11 and Stanton "All citizt'n!> an· <H'lllt•lv a w;ir .. 11f 1111·11·;1~ ing crimt' in our art.·a and 111 lh1• r ounlr). nol,·d Supervisor Wiedt•r 'Thi:-1~ .111 opµ11 rt l1111ty to get the facts from lltl' prorf'~:-1on.i b rn our lnt•.tl police deparlml•nts anc1 l1•arn v.hal th1· s1t11a1w11 really is·· Dinner bt•gins promptl\ at Ii :10 p m 1'01 .111 ditaonal 1nform~11 1on .incl d1r11i-·r rl'~t·r, .1t1111b ca II 834 3220 t •£H'o0 ... AL P MOl>Llll t AT f'"llVA t f ~Al f 0#' I '' l,1fl I j 1•11,, • I •1• I II JI ' , .. 1 '" ,1 V''' "~ 1nn.-..t>t. o ro . .,, rio10 "1 , .. r. "'"' ;.11 .(>f->rfy ;I Hu Ot"tl'd £-nt ·'' '" .~I t11"\ "'"' l1"h."f1 b• lo.-. w1th1n "r 1 I fllu11tn• ._. .... , '" ,f ouOl1c..-.11on ,, "'' ,.,,,,,. 11• '' md ''',I oublt\hH t MMf n ~ I ~i; I , 'IH1t"IM A t-i 1QQ1f'\\CI'\ p,' .tm~'I H .. p,,. ,..-ntdl1vt tit lh1 [t.ldloont J""" 1,,,u .. em M1 Oun,. tJ 0 DtHlld ~ ,. 01 ,,,.. AHMN''t' ,11 t .. ...., I ho• '04] Ut O\J\ Utt ~··'~ w ' ~''" fJ ()r "'n(')f' (™ ,1 DA '• f'1hlf '·.,_ t• IJ J ~ ,,g, 1.Joo SI Pl'BUC NOTICE s un SYNOPSIS OF THE 4"'NU4L STATEME NT OF ~ t omµ4nv or Ptt d 1<. t.._tt I tit .. on •afman Av~"ut ,.,. t 1' I ''"•a •2/!\ Y or l:ncNd D•o mC>or ll lttO ' .1.,1 •• om11tea,t\\t>h \22 ~11 q)8 f c>t•l •••t-th l1t-\ b ~l,..30,. \04 c. ••I \tuo.., funo' > C.4'Qt1illSMtO UO '"'"'4f'll't' 1wf ,, •ti,.,,•• ( d flildl \ttlli.;fnr., c ., po._,, I 000 000 o"H 1twlf'O '"'Olu· J SOO,C,.00 Un'"' '-'"Pd •und"'' u1plu'tl I Jl C.H '-nitp!.;\ d·, 11•Q•r<h '~''"'' ''-' 1,,., , pt)I yr..)ICJ•·•' 11 .o 1 '" 1>· 1, "'' 11!nQ .u\il 01'1.btJf ,rm••nl\ fnr \ l)l,6S• ... 16l,7J) I ' 1 •' h ' '•• "1~ ,,, ,, ~ "' tmJ fnt.onu fa• lhfl .,..,.,,, ¥11 • 1 , , \!'" • .i t!i. 1'i.'' •• t otl11• thf• "'"" 11 ia1.n .- lo1 ·H•'f I trn 1fr1 r Ht l" .. 1 t•1 .. HH11."t1on W t· "'l"•o., 1.1•,l1fy lhllll Int abO~e ' ' 1 ,., t'u f.111 1 ,1, ,. 1ti.• 1trm\ ,.,,. •t A\t t.·fd.tl'l(t" wllh the An I 1 11 ""' 1111J 1f1t M.r•n 1•11\1 nv1H 'lt41t m1•n• tor tht ve•r rnded ~\'11t1 1•11 f; ~,, r ·•• J,,,,, Ot c. f"m b1•r JI 1 qllO madt to th~ '""l" M U1 ""'"'fl" ; fn\ur M"f" Comm'""''°"t!'' of the Stat@ l •t'tVlO' ul lht' f;\littfl JI C...ttl1,tun1• pur\u.,nl 10 14hw 1f ·d•tJ r ., f'<Jtottt '1 W Bono"h r Pre~1dertt Ou•ts"1,.n& "~"•'·'"' '-' < t .. t~f\lon. Sec retary Aog•rG Ou•ttm .. n. l'1Jbf1\~ Or"n~ (O.\t D•1ly P1tot Jl•E Htttcrntlll•O SI• •1S I M.u ""' Jt •o• 1 1 J 19'1 Hl081 1"91twOO<l,CAfOJOl lllll •lt - AHor1My1f0t E.••cvto" Jf h II" """'"IW<I on~o-Co•" O•••• "••vi U \ <' Som ct lnR lo se I ""~· "JO )1 'Ion•• , .. , ii• ••I Cluss1f1ed ads doll well GOING OUT OF BUSINESS EYERTIHING MUST GOii 50%-70% off Dtcoraffon1 IOtchetlw ... Cohctobf•• ....... lclby Acu11oriu WrapphKJ• Stuff.ct Toya Doll• 1111u-.... C.-da CYt:ltltfi1:&t ~ g~ 426 J I at s.r...t • M.wport ....._ CA 92663 ...... : (71 4) 67J.6140 , .... ..... ~,. . .. ILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 Pinstripes to blaek tights NY executive, 48, '1kating nut' NEW YORK (AP > By day some 45 miUion Amcnl'aftl -a sport business industry officials say is wort h well into the billions. Jerry Stone is a Brooks Brothers dream, a study in three-piece pinstripes and sensible shoes. By night the 48-year-old ex- ecutive swaps pinstripes for black tights and leg warmers, slips a red bandana around his head and strangles his feet in $300 roller skates. IT IS ATTRACTI NG older men ano women wno skated as youngsters, as well as those who never before stood on wheels from the bank executives, lawyers and celebrities who dis- co skate at the Roxy, to lhe s kat· ing families at the Apple Valley Rink In Minnesota, to the out- door hotdoggers or Venice, Calif. Dr . Gerald F. Raschella. of Westwood, has been n amed executive director of the Orange County Community Development Council in charge of anti-poverty pro- gr.ams. "No one believes I've become a skating nut, because every one thinks only the tre ndy set and teeny boppers do it." he said, as he s kidded to a s top on the side of his wheels at the Roxy RolJer Rink in New York "l haven't felt this liberated in years . And it's the first time since college that I look forward to doing anything athletic." ··Roller skating offers three things: it's a healthy Corm of ex· ercise. it tends to be more fun than disco dancing and unlike swim ming, 1ogg1ng and 1>1cy- cling, it is more easily done year 'round in terms of facilities," s aid Steven Greenberg, Roxy's owne r. R OLL E R S K ATING I S no longer just another passing fan- cy for the fad follo we rs . It has mus hroomed into a sport for A study last year by National F'amily Opinion found that 41 OEAR READ E RS: An 80-page ener gy conservation booklet compiled by Orange Coast College hom e economics proressor. Audrey M. Fels tha mmel, is available free at OCC's Consume r Resources, located in the college's Student Center Building. Titled "In T he Hom e -Energy Mat· lers," the bookle t contains m any low-cost and no-cost measures t hat can safely reduce hom e energy cons &&m ption. Suggestions aJso are made for most costly steps that can be budgeted for an imple mented in the ruture. For Information, phone OCC's Cons umer Resource Center at 556-5732. • ..,, C'.'~ ...... ,, ~ ".,,, DEAR PAT Dl'NN We would hke to add some information concerning the safety of chlorine-action automatic in-tank toilet bowl cleaners in view of the derogatory remarks by another company regarding these pro- ducl t>, which were• publis hed in your column The Olin Corp . a principal producer of chlor:ine. r ecently 1s:-.ued the results of tests based on ats 2' :i years of research which "have s hown no functional part damage or failure of plumbing mechanis m s an toilets ca used bv C'hlorine based to ilet bowl cleaners."· National Testing Laboratories, an inde· pendent researcher. abo has released a report which. referring to the chlorine content in "2,000 Flushes." states. "These we ak solu· taons of chlonne are not capable or any cor · rosive attack on ferrous or copper a lloys. us ua lly associated wath plumbing fixtures or m echanisms. sinc<' the) arc weakly alkaline. Thes e solutions would hnve no deleterious ef· feet on rubber or plastics." A F: • Englewood Cliffs . N J Smokers' clwice 'deadly' FRAMIN GHA M , Mass. <AP> · Smokers who s witch from non· filter cigarettes to fi Ile rs do not r e duc<' their chances of developing heart disease. according to a s tudy that has m onitored heart prob lt'mS since the 1940s ··Filters are not doing what they are reputed to be doing. You're still getting the poison," said study Director Wilham Cast<'lli. in an inter view wath th e Middlesex News T H E F IN DINGS o f the Framingham I lt.>art Study indicate that the rate of heart diseai.c has not c hang ed a m o n g smokers despite the an- trod uct1on o f faltt'rcd c i ga r e tte s i n t h t' m1d ·l960s Smokers arc l w1ce as likely to have a heart at tack as non-s moker!> and five times as likely lo die a sudden death from a heart attack as non· s moker s Th ese s t a tis tics remain the same for both filtered and non f ilte r ed ciga rettes. according to the research "In all our experienee wat h filter c igarettes Sance the mad-1960s. we have found no lowering of the subsequent heart attack rate." Castelli saad percent or all skaters have been s kating more than rive years. But Stone. who has three children, never thought of s kat- ing until he visited a daughter last year m Venice "She took me skating on the beach and told me I embar rassed her because I didn't know how," he said . "So I started s kating and every month l learned somethi ng n e w I'm ready for figure skating now.'· Holler s kates were patented in 1863 as crude, heavy, wooden de vices that only the very brave dared strap to their feel Today, roller s kates are as sophistical ed as the best bicycles and as costly A pair C'an C'ost as little as $30 or more than $600. AMERICANS UOMINAT EO the roller skating competition at the 1979 Pan American Carnes. ; accordi ng to the American Federation of Skating, with 22- y ear-old T om P e ters on of Tacoma, Wash. winning four gold medals . Enthusiasts are campaigning to ha ve roller s kating made the s ummer equivalent of wanter ice skating in the Olympics Roller skating will be in the US Olympic Committee's Na- l1onal Sports Festi val this sum- m c r . but a committee s p o k esman s aid the sport doesn't qualify for the Olympics because too few C'Ountries com· pete. Roller skating buffs. however, r emain optimistic. "We feel confident that our f u t u r c i s 0 I y m p i a n , ' ' ··s a i d George Pit'kard . exec uti ve director or the Roller Skating Rank Operators Ai.soc1at1on in Lincoln. Neb Seela "'~ Janie Marie O'Brien, 20, "Miss Huntington Beach," is one of 50 girls who will com- pet e for California Citrus Queen title on opening night , of the 66th National Orange S how in San Be rnardino. May 7. Put our new Combined Balance Service to work for you. Now you e. .rn gel C 1liiorniJ\ 1110<.,1 ( onwnil'nl c helking (vwn lntN<.''-1 ( becking) lrt•(• oi month!) c harge'>. \\ 1thouc h,1 ing to h.ePp .lll ol your qu.1l1fy1ng l>,d,rnu:• in dwc h.ing. Bt·c au~e now your 'dving!> n>unt, to<>. Th ,rn k-, lo Combined Bc1l,rntC" )ervi(('. Earn 11.75% on your qualifying Annual Yie ld r ~~ (R.tte~ ~hown are in effect M.trch llJ th'mugh April I, 11181.) balance. With Comhint>fl Bal- ,in< t' ~ervic E:', you can u1.,t• thl' b<1l,1nc.L' in one 1.,.av1ng1., cl( ( ount. (om- l>111t •c/ \\ 11h th<.> b.1lance 111 \our th(1t king .it count to nll'l'I the h,11.rnt l' rl'CflllrC'nwnt •• IW ( hl'< king frl'l' Ill n1onthl~ 1.,prvr< t• l hcl l).~l'"· And rh.11\ nol ,111 ( omb111Pcl B.1lanu• "<'r\'lt l' ,il..,o gr\C'" \ou tlw tl<•\1/)1/1t\ ot h.v<·prng ,111 or p.lrt oi vour qu,1l1tv1ng b.il,rnc t' in,, h1gher-t•cirn1ng r 1me Certifil .lit· For l'X.implt>. vou c cll'l now l\Jrra tlw c urrenl hagh r.llt· ot 11.7=)c4 onour2 1l.1-Ye.irlimc•( <•rt1IH,lll'':·,,._hilt• u1.,ing tho"t ' .,,rnw luncls lo gPt < lwt h.rng Ir<'<' ol monthly < h.1rgc1.,. And. no m,llll'r wlm h ..,,wrng ... ,1( < ount vou c h<>O'-P. )ou'll .ilway1., earn the higheo.,t 1ntt•rt·1.,I r.1lp tlw l.1w .1 llow1., U'> to P•W At lht> ..,,rnw 11mP, ii vou htWP our lnterp1.,t Chc•c h.rng account. wl''ll JMY ~ou 51/.i Ck on 1he h,rl,in((» So you t.111 earn interl'"' /\\"way..,~ Now, more than ever, it pays to check and save with us. Wilh m or<' th~rn l ,000 loc .1 1ion., throughoul lh<' ..,ltlle, A YS is willing to present both sides of this controveri.y and appreciates receivin g the viewpoint of F lush co Inc.. maker of "2,000 F lushes." Drackett Co.. which pro· vided the initial infor m ation about possible ha rmful effects of in-tank cleaners which utilize calcium hypochlorite, also appeared to have done extensive research on this subject. The choice -OA confusing one -ls up to the consumer. AVS ad vises c hecking with a trusted plumber before ma king a decision on the sarety of chlorine-action bowl clo ners. T HE FRAMINGHAM H eart Studv h as m o nitored the cardiovascular health of several thousand Fram- ing ham residents s1ncr· the 194-0s . The prospeC'ls fo r a safe cigarette are stall quite far off. Cas t<'lh saad e wp'n.> probJbly m•.Hby. So 1.,lop in .1nd ask U'> tiboul 0 r S Combined Ba lane c• Sc·rvic l'. We'll 1.,how vou U a~'1ngs how VOllf ..,,wing1., l an llOW help YOU !-WI l 1' C1l1torn1a\ mo'>l tonv('l11l 'lll c hec.k1~g lrc.•c ol Tra~~lpaC'.'~ttrotfbleso.w DEAR PAT DUNN: I received a travel packet from Exxon about a year ago. I don't need this service and wrote to Exxon six or seven months ago a nd asked them to stop billin~ me SJ 50 a month. Last December Ex· xon wrote as king why I didn't want the travel service I provided an explanation, but re· ceived another travel club packet in J anuary I r e fused deli very but am being billed anyway. I believe that Exxon owes me about $21 for these dues. which I paid. and have never used Do I have any rights in this situa- tion? V L .. Huntington Beach Exxon's Houston headquarters say you must have signed a card requesting the travel packets. If the s ignature shown on the orde r form ls not yours, sign the form Exxon ls sending to you. If you .kept a copy of the le tter you wrote about this previously, also mall that w Exxon. If this sort or mlxup oc· cu rs again, don't hesitate w write the com - p any immediately. State that an error bas been made and that you wtll ,.ot be responsl· ble for unsoUclted malllngs or related bills. If this matter is not stra ig htened out to your satisfaction, let AVS know. "Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn Pat will cul red tape, getting the answers and actwn you need to solve 1neq1.uties in go~mment and bwmeu Mall your queataons to Pat Dunn. At Your Stttnce. Orange Coo.&t Daily Pilot. P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa , CA 9262ti. A• many Letters as poss1ble wait be answered. but phom!d mquines or letters not including Ille reader's full name. address and busmess hours' phone numoo cannot be conw ered This column a~ars dail11 ex- cept Sundays " ··Research in this area is still in its infancy It's safer to quit than to switt'h brands." Re s ear c h e r s monitored the health or about l.400 men and 700 wom en all of· them s m o ke rs from t he m 1d -1960s to the la te 1970s. More than 95 per- cent of those who smoke favor filtered cigarettes. but the heart attack rate has not declined IN HIS ANN AL r e· port on smoking and health. Surgeon General Julius 8 . Richmond said low-tar and low-nicotine c igarettes could pose less danger of heart dis· ease. but "no such con- clus ion can be r eached for cardiovascular dis· ease." Most of the low-tar. low-nicotine cigar ette brands are filtered. In hjs report. issued last January. Richmond s aid, "the single most e rrective way to reduce hazards of s mokinf con· tinues lo be that o quit- t ing entirely." T he American Ca ncer Society says about 50 mi ll ion Ameri cans smoke. Auto &-Homeownera , '5k:• Ouotn 8Y Phone f-.SllSRMa .., 14 .. 1114 w 111-1417 ........... e..t. ...... can now help you check ~~;.~~~ free of · monthly~ charges. (ft BANKOFAMERICA 0hdud~~ 6-Month Money ~arket Certified It's and Money Market Account~. 0 'Thcre i" no monthly chargt' (or lnle~st Checking ;iny month YoU maintain a $2,000 minimum Of $4,000 average daily b.llance In )"{>11r < hecking or \,win~;. account or• combtnatlM of both. No monthly charge (or other perM>nal <ht-eking account$ ;iny month you m,11nt3in tl mm bin('(/ S 1.000 minimum or tomblned $2,000 a~ragt dally ba!ance. tS 1,00 ml~imum deposit for 2 \l\·'l\!.ir Time Certificates. ubstanti.ll int('l'l'"t penalty for early wlthdrtlwal. Annual yleld ~~on daily compoondang C>( 1nlere~t when dt-1~it and Interest are not wlthdr.lwn for a year. BA.NM°' 4Mtllll()A H'TUA. Ml.-11' l'OIC • ,. -......... Or1ng1 Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 THE f AMltl' Cl8CU8 by Bil Keane " ... an d know what else, Grondma? Mommy got reol mod at Doddy 'cause he .... " MA RM ADUKE /:' by Brad Anderson 0 ~ s ! i { . .. I i ~ ~~~ ... "'!' } ; ,_, rn-m~·(. ~ .. • -. ,\ ,',I~ ~-lifjj;;, II\,' t ~f/ 1f.1ll I/ ;\ J'I' I I 11• • ' II r It I I II I I ' /'1 .,.1t,·,,.1v1 111 • •• , ,,, I I 11•1)., !> 11 I llt,j I I If' , I'· J / ,,, ,,\1,,(f,, '•' 'lfl • . ,, r" ,11,111 11 1J?~il "It's the third time this week I've seen him with her ... they must be going steady!" J l "DGE P ARK ER WAITtN(;i FOR A CAl.L FROM It[ R I DOCI01<"5 OFf ICE MAC1Lil NN~N 15 RELIE. VH> W\.tf N I 1H£ rHARN1ACl:>T l"'l fORM~ Hff Hf ftA~ ~EE AUTH(l~ IZE{"I TO RfflLL 1Hf PRE::-CRIPTION ' GA Rt'IEl,O BIG GEORGIE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "I hate Mondays." Hank Ketchum ANYBODY can -;tring beads Miss Ryan But how many coulo hit that clock two times out of three with em? by Harold Le Ooux I Ht '' l11>:f)( F:INU .:ti tl\r~•l 1 E~· lN5lfAf) 1); ·..r l l~·l'AI J 1._)• llf fl l 11\f )()LI 10 \\AIU AN J\f'l'l'INlMlNl A~1 ~l()ON kJ )('LI lo:£ h .1 N' __,,__ by Jim Davis UU5T REME.MeER, GARFIELO. WHEN WE GETTO THE FARM YOO ARE THERE TO RELAX 1 ~ LAeT 1lME. YOU 0lJT YOO 00 NOT Gf'CtN WANTED TO e E HELPFUL... CHICKENS e v PLANTINGt MOO~ Ml'LLll\S ACROSS 1 A Churchill 6 Swine 10 Tears 14 UPP!' crust 15 Spflnt 16 Grrl s name 17 Kind ol hfy 18 Ftowtf 19 Orotl 20Scolft<I 22 Prescribe 24 Earth sup- pc>r1tf 26 Roofing 27 Beach llnd 30 M11ce1eoe 31 Deer 32 W11thtr jndlct1t0f 37 St 38 Pusners 40 Milne animal • 1 lmmlgrallon , .... 2 word• 43 Carta 44 Aur~ 45 Chainciel1 41BeWI SI Kllltel 52 Bestowed UNITED Feature Syndicate 54 Means to Saturday·s Puttle Solved se Prono 59 Alaska cny 61 Speclal lhtng ~!-Ffil 62 Emmets 63 Smooth ::JiJ::m :J .JO.JO :JOiJIJ iJ'.ll.JJ ::liJ03 !JC!rJO '.l.J.J'.l.J .J.J.JJ ..:.oaa .J::i;;u" :.J .. u ::i :.u mm 64 C1rcumytt1t 65 At>odt 66 Hollow 67 Noelllll DOWN 1 Minute pta. 2 Wolfhound 3 Ve• • tn lfl';CIN : 2 worda 5 Fireplace .J:J.J::J .J.J~LJL][](J '.lJYJJO~J .J!JiJ .J:J::J JJ LiDJ~.u ::Jr.m ii ::J J J .J.J :JO:: :: ::"JU[J ::l.lJ 1.:l.JJ.J 8 0:.Jl)l] .JU J JLl:J:.1&.iC!ULl :J .. l.J.HJJ JLJO:J .:l:.:l.JJJJ.JJ J~OIJUD .JllJ_, _;~J'..l r.J:J(:JlJU o:.i.1 J '..lLl:JJ aaooa ..l.JJJ J '.J . .U J[J~rJU 6 H09t ctlftl: 25 Toll«a 43 Wlldom deity 2 WO<d• 27 AIMan biggie 46 -Simeon 7 Scutt 28 Houae part 47 Ftllne 8 Sour 2t Expen11 48 Fiend 9 TV !WI 33 Flt>elbft 411 Cord 10 Say lglln 34 2114 50 Get• excited 11 - -.... '°"'°' 53 PIUnged 12 Oentutt 35 Time perloda 55 Cloee 13 Ptlllotophn 3e Debeclt 68 Flot1d• ccun- 21 Cot'O". Of 38 Endwt 1Y old 31 Set 57 Hofy llgl 23 Mo!IUU• 42 Mott lovfd eo Ma111 CHICK~te IN -n..e GROONO! 1 2 3 • 5 14 17 PMNUTI Oll:AV, CMOCK, ~'VE BEEN PESTERIN6 ME FO~ A Oti\NCE TO PITCM .. LET'S SEE WHAT '(OU CAN 00 ... TUMBLEttEED8 SHOE MY ONLY STAMP \v'ON'T STICK AND I DON'T HAVE ANY GLUE fiU R DO Wt-{'( 5"0LJL..D ~LS &1'1111<?> MD WCIC MOft.E 'TAAN AJ..N OTM~ !!lfi:lDf lf5 THE LASl Of THE NINTH lWO OUTS AHD WE~E AAf.AD FIFTV TO NOTHING ... WE'RE SO FAA ~fAD WE CAN'T L05E .. '(OU Pl TC H TI-IE LAST M, CHUCK. AMP I'll SELL THE POPCORN! HE:Y C1MON1 'Wf:Et75 ! <&f:T W11H rr, MAN: 1i11NK POSITIVE! I PROM ISED SLUG GO I'D MAIL THIS TO 1-41M TO~Y NEXT DAY t'l ~K\' "l ~KERBEA ' OOE Flt.JAL l.AX>RD BEroRE lA£ STAR! OUR. BAND CANOO DRIVE ... ~'T Efff 1l)() MUCJ1 OF IT lX><JR5ELF ! BRABBLE 'IOU l(~Oul, N~IL., I.UENO~ CAN R.f.AL.\.'{ 0C '100 t>O•f 1 ~Al.J~ 1'0 1'Al<f. INSUL.1'~ Of( OF by Charles M. Schultz by Tom K. Ryan by Jeff MacNelly I I. •• ~I .. ~: ~~ by Ernie Bushm1ller ---A N D TELL NANCY NOTTO USE JAM F OR GLUE by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk by Kevtn Fagan WEL.\., ~O\J &C'f1"A 'fAKE 1\IE.M Of~ Mt ~'AU SE'. 1·~ ~Ol)R. £0\'fO!< \ by George Lemont H ISY, <SANG, L-OOK A.'T" "T"HI S.' NO ·NO, K tPc:>o.' l W A.S "T"Al.-KI N<S "Tl:> 'T"HE! 5 -rAFF .' •'OR BETTER OR fOa •OR8£ LOOK, tT18 NOT THAT \ OONT RPPRECIRTE 1'\ ~~~' I LIKE SIMPLE fOOD, 1HRT'5 f\LL ! I COULD PROBABL'{ EATltiE. Sf\ME THING- e.\JER'/ DR'/ \ • . , , .~ . !~ From the Ranch to You! • • RAMS FOOTBALL STARS APPE ARING HOT AIR BALLOONS ALL DAY, DAILY RIDES 9-11 A.M. USDA CHOICE MEAT POULTRY• FISH - PRODUCE DELICATESSEN REFRES HMENTS PEPSI CHALLENGE WIN! • Ram Game Tickets • Side of Beef • Ram Team Aut09raphed Footballs Get your entry blanks at California Ranch Mcrtc~ ALTA DENA DAIRY PRODUCTS GOURMET COFFEES OVEN FRESH BAKERY NATURAL FOODS GENERAL GROCERIES CALIFORNIA WINES ACROSS FROM K-MART, MAGNOLIA AT GARFIELD 714 963-4252 Huntiil~on Beach LoaJlly OYJned &: o~tsd Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:00-8:00 Sunday 9:00-7:00 . . I , _ _...___ __ _ I -Orange Cout O~L Y PILOT/Monday. March 30, 1981 ENTEAT AINMENT Once again • • • 'the envelope please' Al'WI ......... 8y YA&DENA A&A.a LOS ANGELES <AP> -The ballota are in, the last feathers are beina sewn on those Bob Mackle orlJlnala, the limousines are being pollsh.ed and movie-lovers worldwide are holdlne tbelr collective breath as the biggest celebrity ritual of them a.II gets set to roll tonight. It's Oscar time again -a bit early this year because the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences feared. when lt se~ the date tast spring for its S3rd annual awards ceremony. that the more traditional m Id-April presentation might run afoul of a te levision t echnicians strike. who had a date with Oscer went home early to sprqce up, thus mak· In• the dey a total loss. Finally, Norman J'wi•on lo •l"ff· ing to produce the live teJeeut had expressed a strong preference for a later sbowtlme because he felt hav- ing the stars show up at around 5:30 .in the afternoon local time "made lt look like people were walking around at high noon in tuxedos and evening gowns," Samo said. Birt hday boy THE SHOW BEGINS at 7 p .m . PST -an hour later than it did last year. Academ y spokesman Art Sarno said last year's ceremony 9 p.m . <EST> start time was an experiment aimed at captur· ing more of the East Coast audience, whirh tends to fade out by the time a 10 p.m telecast ends, about 1 a.m . ANYWAY. IT LOOKS like a vin· tage year for Oscar watching, whether you planned l-0 get up al dawn today and stake out a seat on the bleac hers o uts ide the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Music Center here or just sit down in front of the family tube and tune into the ABC telecast along with an estimated 300 million others in the U S. and 65 other nations. OE NllllO O'TOOLE OUllALL. Playwright Tennessee Williams adjusts his glasses during a Chi cago party for his 70lh birthday attended by some 200 guests . Williams was in Chicago for the opening of "A House Not Meant to Stand." More than 30 Hollywood personalities -from Alan Arkin to Franco Zefftrelli -are slated to pre· sent gold statuettes m 20 categories. one fewer than last year. The best adapted film scor e category bit the dust due to lack or qualified can· did ates. APW1rt_ .. , TWO OF THESE 10 WILL WALK AWAY WITH OSCARS TONIGHT ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "What happened (last year} was that the ratings improved in the East but went down in the West, so there was no real gain," Sarno said. least one opera s inger and one U S president. 'Rapture' lwlJ.s top single spot The earlier show also elicited some beefs from local production com· panies since actresses and actors And if the s tars of the present don't grab you, there'll be a generous help· ing of stars past -not to mention at IN KEEPING WITH its the me, "Film Is Forever ," the three hour plus show will open with a s pecial production number featuring Lucic Arnaz and a montage or great mo· ments in celluloid including Marlon By The Associated Press The following are Billboard's hot record hits for this wcC'k ali they appear in Billboard magazine: HOT SINGLF.S 1 .. Rapture"' Blondie I Chrysah~ > 2 "Woman" John Lennon tGeffen 1 3 "The Best of T1 mes" Styx I A& Ml 4 "Kiss on M) l.1lit · Daryl llall & John Oate~ <RCA > 5. "Crvmg" Don Mr l.c·an 1 M1llcnnium1 · 6 ··11e llo Again " TOPS IN POPS ;-.;ell Diamond 1Capitol1 7 ··Just the Two of l '.., .. Grover Was hington Jr 1 Elekt ra > 8 · Ke>ep On Loving You" REO Spl'l'dwagon I f;'°nc1 9. "While \'ou Sc'<' a Chance' Stl'vl' Wmwood (Is land! 10 ''Whal Ki nd of Fool' He1rbra Streisand & Barry Gibb tC11luml11<.1 1 TOP LPs I "Paradise Thea ter" Stvx 1A&M 1 2 .. Hi Infidelity" H EO Speed wagon I t:p1c / * * * * * 'P e ople' winner with Inoviegoers * "Ordinary People " proved to be the favorite motion picture or the theatergoing public who cast their votes in KHJ-TV's 16th annual "Your Choice for the Oscars" awards special. Winners accepting their awards on the pro· gr am were best actress. Sissy Sparek ; best actor. Jack Lemmon cwho has won for two consecutive years 1. and best supporting actress. Eileen Bren· nan. Other winners were : best s upporting actor, Timothy Hutton whose award was a ccepted by War· ren Oates, an old family friend. and best song, Willi e Nelson for "On The Road Again." Slim Pickens, his co·star in "Honeysuckle Rose," accepted Nelson's award 3 "Movmg P1ctures"Hush 1McrC'ury1 '911 ' • J d 4 ··ArC' of a Diver" Steve Winwood !Island I mOV Je p 8DDe 5 "Double Fantasy" John Lennon & Yoko Ono <Geffen1 HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Meredith Baxter 6. "ThC' Jazz Singer" Neil Oiamond l Capitol 1 Birney and Don J ohnson star in .. Dial 911," a new 7 "Zenvalla Mondatta" The PoliC'e I A&M I movie for CBS now filming around Los Angeles. 8 "Crimes of Pa!>i.to n Pat Ben atar !Chrysah~J Robert Webber, Dolph Sweet, Kene Holliday 9 "Captured" Journey 1Columh1a1 and Salome Jens also star. Philip Leacock Is to .. Another Tic·kl'l ' EnC' Clapton 1RSO 1 directing from a screenplay by Ann Beckett. ~~~~~~~~- KOCM RADIO STEREO 103.1 FM FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH THE FINAL CONFLICT THI: L·\STC HAIYfl:R I;\' Tiil OMENTRJU)(;y * BARGAIN SPECIAL * ALL llATS $2.00 ALL DAY Ivery Monday & tue1•y1 mSoutn~~.EJ m.~~E .. r~:..-·-.. . . NOW PLAYING MAii IAU PLAZA Bre<i 5:>9 5339 EDWHDI' I EWPOAT NewP<Jfl ~ch 64'·0760 Cl•DOME Oranoe 63.4·2553 IDWH DI' '1UO TWll M1sst0n Vte10 630·6990 UA TWiii CllUU• Wes1mlns1er 893·1305 .. ,_ .... ) FOUNTAIN HllU DflllE·IN Fountain Valley 962 2481 lflO LA MIM DA IMUH·IN L.i M11aoa ~23 931 o NO PH•H ACCEPTU fOll Tiii EMIAIUIDT MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE r,.. OCll«-al ,,,.••-.. ro ....,,.., _, ·-.... tuf•OM)r al ITO.,.~ lb "9•ng 01 llhe11t (~ All K1l G ANO IJ!l "lMS AECU\IE THE SEAi. ~ f>iE MOTJ()Oo PICTUllE COOE Of SElr llEOUlAflOH • • • • • • Turn your unusables i nto usable cash. call Daily Pilot classified 642-5678. "THIEF" I ._,_ "ALL NIGHT LONG" "XANADU" 1•1 ..,. ..... I "FINAL CONFLICT" (R) I "THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE" (A) 1 ........ -!N Z±:at • I "THEJAZZ SINGER" (PG) "INCREDIBLE SHRINKING WOMAN" "DEVIL I MAX DEVLIN" I "FUN HOUSE" "THe ISLAND" 11111 1. I "TRIBUTE" 11111 """ ~eatur• ~ I "m ACRAZY" "UM O-CMtl" 11111 ijiW(. "FINAL CONFLICT" "THI FUAY" (R) ....... ....__ .,. .... ~, c...--.,-·-~·.eo- Call 142-5171. Put a few word• to work for ou. I I.A Mlr..S. ) _,., '°"" "'"" ,.11011 ~El'.l at Ro1«r.,• "EYES OF A STRANGER" (R) I. 2 . 99•·2490 ' .............. ,. .. ~flM::a.._--f'..uMT "Tkt•r• II• lA Mirad.e 1 THI'""''~--... '"' OMIN r-..oo, !li!l\T\¥11 at Ro1«r.,, THE FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 \ 3 !_,!!!!!!! 99•·2'9() . ' ............... .. ......... llWC:I-. n..iaa1 .. &.•••• •• \,,. .. c..-..... (;.# .... ,, ...... "'•'' ( L M. BOYO ) INFORMS In the JAOI ---A"ll JCN<CA ._._ THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINOS TWICE 1•1 u .............. u. JAm-1 CAAJll • fUl-IOA t WU..O "THIEF" (R) ,, •• J ........... 1'. ~I CAM• f\il:aGAt .. LO "THIEF" (R) , •.•••• ••.11 .. ~\Alt CKAPTl.A .. tMt O•• fllUl..OQ'f THE FINAL CONFLICT 1~1 n-••JM •IM·t••tt • ..,_..TIO POa ._ ~ AWAADI "T'Ell"IPOI , ....... ,·~·· ................... l ....... "BACK ROADS" (R) .... ,. '°""' PMn • ...0 "EYH Of' A STRANOVI" (RI .,...... , ... .. ut .. :t•.1 ... 1:•.1•,••• ..,_...TIO fllC)tll rw() ACAM•t AWM OI "ALTERED STATES" (RI till) ...... , ..... ... , ..... , .... ·-. " , .. ,. "All NIGHT LONO" (R) ... .. "ILAZINO I AOOLH" (fll --·-·--· ... -"THI FINAL CON,llCT" (fl) ...... "THE V111T0fl" (fl) -·CAMI • nMlllA¥-.0 "THI"" (fl) "-119 "LOVI ANO I U\.LITI" (91Q) cu-unu·---...,.. ...... "IUZlttO IAODl.ll" (fl) -"'Tot:I "°""" (fl) Brando's anguished "1 could've been a contend<'r " in "On th<' Waterfront" and Humphrey Bogart':-. farewell tu Ingrid Bergman in "Casablanca " Altogt!thcr a record 155 films will be represented in clip!. The Best Song award will be pre sented by tenor Luciano Pavarotti. who will sing· 'Toma a Surriento .. "SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES" ~USllll "PRIVATE BENJAMIN" \1ClNDAY -EVENING- 1:0011 NEWS U WONDER WOMAN Wonder Woman dft1roy1 the rorrmila ol • dange.oua ••p401l11t1 Chamlcal so that II won'r fall ll\IO -v hal\dl II AH EVEHIHO WITH 08CAR A4igi1 Phlll>tl\ Incl CYf\dY Gat'119y host thtS pr .. Oaeat pr-tatlon 0 TIC TAC OOUOH m M ·A·s·H Father Muleahy wrlt11 a pr .. Chrlatmaa letter home to hi• altrer CIJ GOOOTIMES T helm• I• ecstatic: Wl\er't her fl"t pll y os ChOeer\ for productk>tl until a/wt dis- covers lhe ··catch " mw ELECTRIC COMPAHY (A) C88NEW8 ®)ABC NEWS 8:30 0 BULLSEYE G) WELCOME BAOI<, KOTTER Epslell\ and Mr WOO<l- man'• nleee tall on love and decide 10 11ve tpgether Q) BENNYHIU Watch tor Benny's 10011 al Hollywood and the "Gran· ny ol the Year Jumping Conte.I " el) PROFILES OF POWER Guest Assemblym811 R•ch- erd Alatorre chaorman ol Assembly elections and re1pporl1onmen1 comm11 tee W STVOIOSEE Hol\or Dance" An Al•· bama debutante. a" Okla- homa lnd111n and Dallas's YO\.lth On The Move Cho1r are hlghloghled (R) Cl) NEWS @) BARNEY MILLEA A shooting Incident leads the detectives or the 12th prec1nc1 10 ponder the dil· CHANNEL LISTINGS Little soft shoe John Denver and George Burns pay tributt' to some great performers of the past on "Two of a Kind" tonight at 9:30 (or afll'r the Oscars) on I\ BC. Channel 7 lerence between ae• therapy end prostitution. t :66 0 EOITOIUAL 1:00 6 C8S NEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Tt>e Cunnlngllame decide to bolld • lamily bomb shelter •"d try to keep u 1 seaa1 U ®l ACADEMY AWAAOS The 53rd annual present•· tlon of 1nese awards honoring excellence In all llelds or lhe motion picture business will be presenled live from tne Dorothy Chandler Pavilion 1n Los Angeles 0 JOKER'S WILD CD w ·A·s·H Hawkeye records a letter to hos fa11>er deta1hng hlS day 1n tr>e 0 A w111> a mad Turk a missing corpse and a gun·h•PPy OHICtlr Q) STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO A guest otticar lrom New York, Slone and Ketle1 employ clashing metl>ods 1n 1ry1ng 10 apprel>end a killer el) 0\IEAEASY Gu.ills actress Mary Mar- ton consumer 1nves11ga1or Diena W11tllf fR) W MACNEIL / L.E>fAEA REPORT ({) TIC T~ DOUGH 1·20 D SPORTSWOALD Bo•l"O •• Tomorrow's Champ!Onl, lealunno a 6- <0\.l('CI heevywe-ohl bO<lt IMlt-Ct>rls McDonald 81\d Steve Hun11,,g1on (from Allanuc C11y, NJ I 7:30 0 2 ON THE TOWN Ho11s Steve Edwards. MelOOy Rogers Spend tt>e day et the busy Palmdale Air T ralllc Control Center; learn o bit about t>ow to fly a commercial a1rfiner, meet 1 11ewerdess who Is a p11va1e p1101, V1S1l ll>e Condor Squadron 0 SHANANA Guest& The Angels 0 FACE THE MUSIC m All IN THE FAMILY Ir-Lorenzo chali8f'IOeS Arcnle 10 a game or !>00 at Kelsey's liver" el) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT W ONCEUPONA CLASSIC "The Talisman" King Rich· Ord learn1 1ha1 Kennett> deserted hos post oul 01 love lor E<l111> and sentenc- es him to dealh f Part 4) (R) T P M. MAGAZINE Saving 1ha OIOes1 1n at1 tt>rougn 1&58< tt>erapy 8'()0 0 (I; ™E BUGS 0 "'•'i ( B' .\111:• I 0 "-"ltl\ · .H• , > A" ,, , 0 1\11 ., I• ' l I ,,, •I• ,. BUNNY EASTER SPECIAL Animated Bugs Bunny and some ol nos buddies help 111\d a 1ep1acemen1 for tht> Easter Bonny wno 11 bedridden w11h a cold. 0 '\'\Ht r, AHl l , .\., ,, , & -r \11-i 1.-H" '-> ,, 0 10 m ... Tr' Ill l ' (f) "' (JP f'. fD "E" w '\ lCf ' .· Q KNBC SPECIAL "Gun,,fng For Crime" 0 MOVIE • • • Five Million Years To Earth" (1968) Jam" Donald AnOrew Keir An uneat11>80 llme capsule conlams clu<H to a prehos- 1or1C Mat111n v1so1 to Ear1h G MOW ••• "S-t Bird Of Youth" ( 1912) Paul "'-· 111#1, Ger8lcllne l"age. To •Ind 1 mo\rle contract. a corrupt young mari tak11 lldvantaga or a former moYla 1111 wno lhrM In a r>a.ra Of narcotic. •"d alco- hol G) l".M.MAOAZNE A vltlt wllh Lorette Ly1tn and SIMy Space6c, e 42- V--old bod)'b<>lldet • MOYIE *••'Ai "Rio Br1vo" ( 1951>) John W1yne, DMt1 Mlr11n An Old crtpple. • former deputy-turl\ed· drunk, a young qulckdr- ounlllnger end • girl help • sheriff to outematt a pow- llffut rancher whO wanta to get hie klllar brother r ... ued from prllOfl flll GllfAT PEAFORMAHCU "o.nca In ArnerlCI: The Ttml)M1" Mlct>M SrTKM'I luff-length •ballet bued on Shak~ra'1 romentlc com4ldy II !*form.a by the San Francieco Ballet from tl>I W11 Memorial OperaHouM Qll) CHAN.IE CHAPLIN OOMB>Y THEATRE "The Floorwalker" (1918) Charlie ponra~ • cullom- ., In a depar1manl atore WhO h8ppen1 to be the exact double or a crooked floorwalker. 1:30 G) CAAOI.. ~ETT AHOFNEHD8 m> MOVIE • * "Down Argel\llne Weot·• (UMO) Betty Grable Don A~ A belulllul hell ... IOl!ows a weaJtt>y Sou11> American from New York to Argentina 9:00 0 (1) M'A•S•H A sniper attack on the camp c1uses Major. Wln- ChHl8f 10 become even more reclusive end 1n1ros- pact1ve G) MERV GRIFFIN Ouasts Tony Orlando Rober'I Urlcn, Oollle Wes!. Larry C.._..I, Geo<gie Ka~. Cl>eryl Handy 9-30 0 (I) HOUSE CALLS Wl>llf'I Ch1tley brNka two dalH ti\ 1 raw with Ann, Sl>e l.leComM annoyed end fu1n1 her lnter•t 10 a hll\dlOfM plllent. D CIACLEOFSTAAS "Merle HIOQerd" 0 @) JOtiN DEHV£A AHO GEOAOE BURNS Jot"' Denver end George Burne gel together lor 811 hOur of comedy and mutlc tO:OO 0 (I) LOU GRAHT Lou dlacovers a whOle ,_ world ol acc:.ntrlc•ty while working with the r>lght.ide stat! (R) uam NEWS EE) THE CHUNO TRIO W 8ACK8TAOIE:A LOOt< AT BARNABY JOH ES Tl>e procesa of producing the popular televlalon Hrlet starring Buddy Eb-. and Laa Meriwether from 11>1 lnltiet concept llve>ugl> broadcltt pr-- latlOn IS dllalled llve>ugh int~ with 11>11 llciora. producer• 8lld directors - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 TUBE TOPPERS ABC D 7:00 Academy Awards Johnny Carson hosts this 53rd annual Oscar prese{ltation as bests of the year in movies a re honored. CBS $ 8 :00 8ugs Bunny Easter Special. An encore performance of an a nimated holiday show featuring Bu~s and the other Warner Bros ca rtoon characters. KHJ 0 8:00 "Sweet Bird of Youth." Paul Newman and Geraldine Page star in this movie version of the T ennessee Williams drama about a young man using a faded movie star to gain a Hollywood contract. with Shil'lev Knight and Ed Begley. · 10:30 I. NEWS IHOW au81HE88 David Froe1 and Sanoy Hiii IOOll et Iha bval""8 Of en11t1eln"*'1t, tocvalf>g on 1"41 GrHIOB, producera and the people and places lnvotv9d In 8hOw boalnesa -~ Nl'TWOAK NEWS • roAGOTTEN FAONTIEA Armando Sierra narrat .. a portr11t ol Iha mluiOtlS .. , 1blishecl on the Sparntll bOtderlend• by Jesuit and Frencl9cln "pll<lres " «i) MASTEAPIECE THEATRE "D•nger UXB" Bnan s Ille hangs 1n 1111 balance wnan • mtne 8kp100as on a boo· by-trappeO pier (Part 12) !iii BARNEY MILLEA Barney and his men lace the perplHlng task or delullng e student-built nuc1e11 devte4! 11:00 II (I) ®l NEWS U ST AA TREK The En1erpr111e encounters en Immense gr1v1tatl0flll pull wnich propels tt>e stMp •nto • ume wa1p 0 NEWL YWEO GAME G) M•A•&•H Rad11r'1 tudden promotion to lleutenen1 stunt every- one bul Hawlleye and B J who _,. rasponslble Q) BAAETTA Tony becomes a 1arg11 when he sets out to link a major atllPITlll\1 of drugs to the top Crimi IM04lt In Iha city fD OtCK CAVETT "Twin• 01\ Twins" G..sta Franee1 Mclaughlln-GIU Katharyn M c Laugh tin. Abl>!}' (Plt1 I Of 2) 11;30 fJ (I) QUINCY, M.E. A IWIOphyle meglClan dies while perlormlng a we1e1 tank lllu1lon tnat waa his teacher'• c1a1m to lame D THEBESTOF CARSON G~ll Angle Dicl11nson Tom SnyOer, Rey Pr1ce (R) II NEWS 0 L.ErB MAKE A DEAL G) REX HUMBARD Ell) W CAPTIONED ABC NEWS (}]) SHOW BUSINESS David Frost and Sandy Hiii look 81 Ille bus1nes.s of entertainment, locuslng on fl>e creator~. producers and the poople ond p1sces Involve<! '" show busmess -MIDNIGHT- 12:00 U SPACE. t9" Moonbese Alpha makes contact w1111 Te•as C11y U S A plane I Ear1h. and plan1 are made 10 transler the Alphans back to Eanh 0 ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE 0 GUNSMOKE Marshal Dillon rides 1n10 " r an9e w1r while pursuing an outlaw G) MISSION: IMP08818LE JOHN DARLING A5 A6515TANT 10 "THE~ ON THE tW?L/"%91Pw, CJANOY ... 'l'OU'LL HAVE LEARN HOW ID OEA.L WITH JOHN.' The IMF "" our to rtneu• two ec: ..... t .. 11 enO prevellt lht kldl\4IPPlnO ol a third • ONE STEP 81YONO 'WhO All Y"4.J A 12·yfff· Old Qltl 'm1r1e;uloully r.co- v11e from e ecarlet ,.,,., attac;k and ... ma 10 have l>Mn 1ten1lormed 11\tC. another glrl 11:)0 Q TOMORROW GuHtt director fr•rok Copra ~ Wave rcici.er Elvia Co•l•llO Donald W11dn on the l>HO or Coa- llllon •or Belt., TV ate>t<· "'g comedian M1c1>•t1 WlnMc>w (R) D MOVIE * * * * "Who'a Alratd 01 Vlrgll\I• ~Wool!?" ( t1>86) Ell.Ubelh hyk>< Richard Burton A c111u111 gel· 1oge1ner belwt'HH'I two ur11- vers1ty proleHor\ 81\d thetr w'-a• explexles •n a nlgM or p&yt.no1og1ca1 furor tnal reve•i. Iha inner tens1on1 an<l mar11a1 tur- nioll1 aHec:11ng one of lhe couple& ti) ONE STEP BEYOND Call From Tom0<<ow' An ror,,_ 11etres• de~pond· 8"11 over Ille death OI l>er CIHld, tries 10 make 8 comeback ®J THE ROCKFORD ALES Rockford ordl'•od 10 I' in u theropy group 111es lo help • patient who ct11•mr. stt•' , rec9'v1ng threalb frc-n 1n11 underworld 12'.40 0 '1 HARRY 0 Harry stumble, a •05S a blaci. market ""II dealing 1n velu•blo 0f1ttf'it11 .:trt 118JSu•e~ (RI I 000 MOVIE • M~u <it It;, he, .. I 1?Jb1 C,on...-A try Franctts Gr.-rnt A cow ruJ)' 5th·es ar1 tmur,ndm ,,,,qd t1on pro1 .. t• ffl"\rtt 0;at~' • • logo 0 DON LANE Guest' A,.t,,~,, ctdL<.' two A.s1on cu'" c 'OdlQ•H:si lf'rry Wille~· 1,e Ctu ,,,,,. 0 Ool\nell IJ "'YI S '"'~" m SPEAKOUT (f) INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS 130@ MOVIE • • , Par" H ·•e• 1Jb II Sidney Po1I'<'' Pl\01 t.1-o ... man A pau ut Aft~··• tu-., 1n Par•' '"'"·•n1 ~ l'lil 11 10 on vaC·•••un 1:50 0 NEWS 2:000 NEWS 2:20 0 EDITOAIAL 2:25 0 MOVIE • ,,. Wht-trf t1a\ifl A • • ,, Paople Gone? Paler O•tvt• Bloom All•• moat of E er th 1 poputetton I• dMtroyed by redleUon, '"- ..urvtvor111ruogte 10 llv• 3000CIJ NEWS 'l 'tw!lldoy·11 ,.,.,,, im-.. H1n·i.- 1 t:OO Q) • il WHIW8rd Ho" ( 1935) John Wayne, Shella Mennor• A cowt>oy 1earn1 that '"* 1a1der or • gang who mvrdt1ttKI h11 pa•eni. •• f\tt own t.1rr.thet -AFTERNOON- 1 t 30 0 • • • . I us1 For , Lllt1 1r .111 ~' i 19~6) Kirk Ooo.gla~ An1r1011y Ou1nn • lla~urt c>r1 Hiil novot by hv111y ~h>11~ Painter Vin· c11111 Vu11 C.1>411 leads 1 tumutlu ,., , ltnooted tt••S.. ftftlCf!t 12:00 Q) • • • '''" ,,.ag1c Bo• I 1'1 .. •t I• I ,.,1 Oon81, u.1t~f1ltJ t)I ,.,., Wilham Ff •l~~e c >' r+~ t• 1r1 .. ~ntot Of tht-nn1IU'Jf1 p• tut•~ amera. lf~1'dS, .. ,, •Q• ,,,., w • • I "'''. (. ,, tp Hill I 1959) C:.r~UI'( f'ock Har- 'r Gu .. Hi.tinr Amer1can fl)rres b1J11!f' tr talto the tamc.iu~ "'~ ,..,,,, tHll t1op1ng lo '\ICIP lrtf~ c.o,-,.•murn\tS 31)()10 •,. 1 .. cna<lw1ck Su,m111 ~11t f1~d M&c.- Muu .t~ ~ atn•f-"'ftr Mago.re A l(IM 1, '"' ... ~ a c•usntnG: 1•mot1or •I'..• S•'> 3 30 0 • • '••OOn Fl!H 1 I,.;,., 1 l••iNIJft Granqa,, ',, -lt ... .-.. n~ A m nrt sacqf. " ,. , 1 1 "-'"" le 1;r•d wealth 111 J nol' P.f"t1••r1ccu1 emer- 1lcl '" nt 11 ' ttu Silke ot the ~ un ,,. ' 1 * ,_., by Armstrong & Batiuk Move over, Sissy; here comes Annette Bv J E RRY Bl'C'K I.OS AN ELES t AP 1 Anncttt• O 'Toolc said she would pla} the roll' of country singer Tam m' \\'\neltc in "Stand B' Your Man·"onh rf she also c<iuld do the stnging Al first. M1s!> O'Toole turned down tht• movie For one lhmg. Shl' was starring in "\'anil1es" at lhl' Wt•s twor1d Pla vhous(' when the :,,cnpt arri\'ed Produr lion would start the dav afll'r she finish<.•d llw :-.lagt• pla~ and she wouldn't hliv<: lime• to pn• pare Another th111g lhul ten<kcl lo dissuade ht•r "as lh;,it the hf<' slor~ of another l'llUntr~ s 1n1H't Loretta Lynn. had been .,o brilliantly enacted b~ Srss~ Spacek 1n the hit mov1t• · ('ual M iner·s Daughter .. "I fmall\' said I would d o 111f I could also' do the singing." said Miss O'Toolc•. an a cl rt•ss "ho began ~ts a teen-ager a s a singer and dancer As soon as :,,he had u da~ off from "Vanities, .. sht• flew to Las Vegas and watched M 1ss Wynette perform. 0 TOOt.E WVHETTE l'hl' result l'an he• st.•t•n TUl·~ da.' <il 9 un ('BS, Channt'I 2. in Stancl B\ \our :\1an. \\h1eh t.ikt·s 11" lrlll' from M1 -.s W) ncltt·., p11p11l;1r .,inglt.• The rerord. tn fat·l. ,., om· of the larges t ... citing ~.inglt.'" 1n lhl' h1., ton of t•ountr\' mu~rt· Thl' mo,·1~ alsc. stars Tim MclnlirP as Gc•orge .Jon('S. ~IS'> Wynctte·~ childhood idol and l h i rd h us b a n d It f 11 c· us c• s pnrnarily on tht•1r rl'latronship: allhough Miss Wynetlt• w<ts mar ned fi\·e times "'The produl'crs "t•rt• r l'IH•\'t•cl when I said I '' anll'd to do the• singing ... sa11l ..., ,.,., 0 Toolt> "Tamm\ wanlrd to hc·ar me She· rould al\\a\s re do lht' mus ic 1f she d1dn't.ltke 1l She's not trained as a singer and ha., no vibrato in her voice. "hll'h most country s ingers don 't ha\'e She hits a note straight on-&:> when I sang like her. I'd sing without vibrato. It wasn't tht' rirsl time s he'd had to scl aside· her music train· 1ng She had lo stng with an un- tra 1nt>d \'OIC'l' tn the TV version of "The EntC'rtainer ... which st ... rred Jack Lemmon. "I went in lo sing for Marvin llamlisch." s he recalled. I was to play a t.x'auly conlt·s tanl. and he said the girl wasn't a singer lie told me lo '>tng above my \'Oice lhtn .ind re<'dv .. ~t i-; s 0 ·Too I e · f 1 n 1 shed "\'an1t1es" r>n a Sunday and started lo \\Ork on lhc movie the next day · I didn't have time to prepare." she said. "but il was one of those times you just find something in yourself and do it. "Tammy came Lo the set Naturallv. she wanll'd lo see what \\:J's happening She dis- tracted me \'en much. IL was much easier when s he wasn't there "I remember one scene at a police station I was trying to get c ustod) of I he kids back. l very close lo lh<' wa\ 1l hap pened " Miss O'Toolc. 28. plays M1..,s Wynelte from age 17 to 33. encl in g with her divorce from Jont•.., "lt 's reall) made mt· a c;eorgl' Jones ran," the a<'lress ~aid l h eard so much of his mus1t I was so happy the other night w hen he won the gramm) .. The movie was filmed m Lo~ A ngelcs. hut lht•n 1l "a'> dt•C'idt•cl that somt· of lhl' location sc-t•nt•s didn't look authentic· C'rtough. So M rss O'Toole w <•~ ~cnt lo Nashville for :.ome outdoor scenes "I'd thought the prcturi• was over and I wouldn't have to "ear lho:.c wigs again ... she said "I wear four "tgs and lht.·~ 'rt' l'Xl'rlll'lallllg :\<11 s:-. 0 Took \\ ,,.., 111 11 rt 111 llou ... 11111 hut 1·,1m1 111 I 1 Angl'll'" .1l l'I ftt 111.11>.1 111 ·1 111 '' ll•:,,srnnal cit-hut ••II Tiu ll:rn11\ Ka\ t.' Shn" · !-..h1 h.1 ... 1111' 111•1" a gut':-. l on :-. tt t' h .., ht•\\ ., 1 · C:un~moke... l>a11 \ugu,f and ·narrrnh~ .111111·~.. and in ~u1·h T\' min 11·, ,1 -. Thi· t-:rilt•1 ti.l llH'I' . 'Tht• \\ .i I' Ill'!\\ t't'll 1111• Talcs.'' "l.o\'1' f111 H1·111 .111d 1111· llJH'lltng l'l.ll~Odt• of '('J.1., ... ,iJ 'fi~. lier lheatnc·JI fllrll'-1111 l11d" One on One" I 011l111i: \round,' "Smrt· .ind 1'1111 111 th<• Gyp~l('S '>hl' ... t.11tt'<I II •Merton of th" :\111\ 11·... .\1111 H 1chard ThomJ-. on t h1• ... 1.1~··· Call 642-5678 .... "' ,,." f'\lltl\ C ;~l l\r' \\Ill ho~I (he p1 ,. \(',l(ll•rn \\~ell d~ .... how \ 11 r:, l'11111,.. '"' h '>~<.'Jr· '"'h H1 g1~ l'I 1l l1111 lo111ght at Ii 1111 \ IH' < h.t1H1t·l 7 The family that stays together. plays togethe r ... among other things. J~JJ.L{] J1:0DJ~J Put a rcw words lo work for you. li D;1 ·1 DJ'JJ'°Jl;lD 'JY. PORT FRENCH· WITH SUB·TtnES "They'd originally planned to have Tammy do the singtng ." she said "They didn't thin k the•\ could find someone to do th<' singin~ and acting." "I had ht•r music going con s tantl) o;o I l'Ould sin ~ like her. looked at Tammy and she was , ;~: ,..C"'. tt,,~~,.t~ crying. so 1 t must _h~a~v:e~b~e:e~n-_Jlll•••••••••l!!ll!ll!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!ll!l!!!!!l!ll!!!!l!ll!•lllll!!l!l!I!~ NOW PLAYING m ~ Savory savings. -------''°"' -------AIOUT 1 s1 99G•EAT I 9 DINNER () $5 ftftsuPE .. e 7-·yDINNERI 0 c 'll 0 z I OOOCI IOf tl'tree plec.s ot juicy, gold•n brown Kentucky Fmtd Cnlc:k•n. plus alngl• 1t1Ylng1 of col• 1l1w, mHhtd pot1toes ind gravy, •"d • 1011 Llmll lwo 01!•11 per purchH•. Coupon gOOd Ol\ly for combination whltt/ dlfk otd•rt. Cu1tomer pays all 1ppllc:1bl1 HIH tax. Good lot n1n1 plec:H of juicy. ooto.n orown t<•ntuc:ky Fned Cl'tlckan, wlll't fov1 10111, 1 lerge cOle 1lew, e l11ge m11hed pol1to11 and a m.olum'grevy. Limit two olfef9 per purc'111• Coupon gOOd only for combination white/ dark Ord•r• Cvatomer p1y1 111 •PPllctble.lllH tH. 0 119< UPtrH I Apnl 12 1981 P1lcH m1y vary et Prlcaa may vary et Pll· par11e1p1t1ng IOC•· I tlclpatlng roc1t1on1 GOOcl 11on1 GOOd onty 1n only In Sov1~n lout"-'" CalilOfnla 1 Celll0tnlt whtr• you '" whtte you'" Amt1lce'1 Fll 'l'Oflle Amer1c•'1 Fl1VOfltt Window B•nnlf ,£;;.:::;:;~.,,. .... ~~~.r ....... United Artists •-----NDW llLAVINCI-----• • ... ,. n1• UA Mov1u llncolA D•··· I~ Saddltb4c~ <11 •1MO 7™ <11 •1m '°" (714) 111 4070 111'1 ~81 !1880 mtml• alCI --IUllllllSTll l-"11d1i fw1n WOOdbf1d&t l CfMdOtllt C•11tt111 Wnt (lit) Ml om (7\4) SSI 06S~ 11JC)l34 u~ (11 4) 891 393S NO .. A ... AC'.ialPTIO l'Of' ~· IN0-.04lM9N'I ,._. ........... a-. llwtll ll •MC I l I , 1 l .. I - Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 ' Ultra low tar. ~./, High country taste. ,tf ~· Above all in refreshmen · .j • ii . At only 5 mg 'l/· ' 6 mg. "tar". 0.4 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by nc method. -· --------........,=---~·· . --- C ''" • I Ill•"°' Ot tCHl4CCO CO Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ' I .. J l 4 .. DETERMINATION OF A WINNER Pat Bradley, who led the Women's Kemper Open from wire-to-wire. is a picture of con· centration as s he blasts out of a sand trap surrounding the 13th hole. Her efforts were Daily Pilat MONOAY,MARCH30, 1981 BUSINESS C4 STOCKS CS rewarded. however. fi ve holes later as she claimed victory for the tournament with a four-day total of 284. five strokes better than second place Debbie Massey. Indiana's basketball players aren't the only Hoosiers drawing headlines in Philly . Can you guess who else is? See C2. This KeD1per belonged to Pat Bradley By HOWARD L. HANDY 04 Ille Da lly ~lee Slaff Pat Bradley won't be car rying a piano on her back now that s he has won t he Women's Kemper Open golf tournament but she will be doing the next best thing. "I'm very excited but it was a little tougher than I thought. This morning the course was very conducive to birdies and Jane Blalock made a pretty good charge Bradley won the third annual event at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa Sunday by rive strokes over runner-up Debbie Massey with a one under-par 70 and a 72-hole total of 284. A crowd an nounced al 5,800 brought the week's total to 18,923 ··when I birdied the 14th hole on top of a birdie by Joyce <Kazmierski ), I felt pretty good and breatherl a sigh of relief right there. When Bradley was finished, she threw her VI· sor high in the air, one of the few limes during the week that s he had shown any emotion on the course. "I still wasn't takrng anything for granted but it all started on 14. I just started jumping up and down but tried to conserve it until the end. But it was bu1ld10g up 10s1de me to the final putt. I'm emotional but I have lo be in a good position lo show it. "I told myself as soon as I won a tournament this year. I was going to buy a piano and that's what I am going to do, then learn to pl ay it." s he said. "I'm sorry about not breaking the tournament scnring record But I won! .. Then she turned to her final round and the thrill of victorv. Bradley was one under-par going to the final hole. Her tee shot on the par-three 18th was wide lo the left of the hole and Shl' lagged toward the cup but 1t went about six fe<'l beyond She missed th<> r<.'turn putt and settled for a bogey to finish at 284, equal par for the 72 holes Will Kemper return to Mesa Verde CC? When Jim Poteet, the general chairman of the third annual Women ·~ Kemper Open golf tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa said, .. the party's over" following conclusion of play Sunday, he may have given an ominous warning. Poteet was referring to the end of play in this year's event but indications are strong that the LPGA event will not return to Mesa Verde CC again. [:::i JUOJBTS : • :• KBl1P2R ·=· ~ • • ... No one with authority, either with the club or the sponso rin g K e mper I nsurance Company. would comment definitely on the future status of the tournament. "We had a one-year contract with a two-year option," Poteet said. "Right. now. no decision has been made on the future • .--~r.:: tournament here." "We haven't decided anything d · t ely as yet,'' tournament director Don Ruhter said "We have to com- pile all of the Uiformatlon and a decisi wlll be made by Ke mper Sports Management but noth1 will be an· nounced until a contract is signed-if that happens." James Kemper. the board chairman of the sponsorine organization, said: "We have to have a skull session and take another look at it. "This 11 the most beautifully run operation anyplace. It is a fine tournament on one of lht finest golf courses anywhere.'' Then he added: "Each year we take a look at it alter the tournament is concluded. l'U tell you one thin&. If it remalna as a tournament and ln Callfornla, It will atay rl1ht here at Meta Verde as lon1 as they want it to remain here." At the awards ceremony on th• 11th areen Sunday. winner Pat Bradley presented club _president . "M aft~ ... 'Leo Iverson with a plaque on "' rv • .... ' behalf ol t.be LPGA playen and at the ,am• Ume pralMd the course: "The iolf coune la In wmendoua shape and one of the ftne1t we play on all year." -llow1rdL. HalMly NCAA final to feature team concept PH I LADELPHIA (AP> Defense, rebounding, patience o n offense a nd above a ll teamwork that's the gospel according to Bobby Knight and Dean Smith and that's the kind of bas ketball to be played tonight when Indiana takes on North Carolina for the NCAA championship. Although Knight was the focus of controversy following a run-in .with a Louisiana State fan at a hotel Saturday night, t hat sideshow didn't diminish the ap- peal or tonight's glittering finaJ. The records may be tarnished ninth-ranked Indiana is 25-9 a nd sixth-rated North Carolina Is 29· 7 -but everything elae about the title gam e is pure gold. Both schools have great basketball traditions. Both coachee, KaiJht of Indiana and S mith of NOrth Carolina, are a mo.ng the ~cknowled1ed leaden or their profession. Both teams have brilUanl lndtvicNal alblet.et, but both utilize them within the team concept -JUlt the way the basketball purtat would want lt. And both are playln1 at UM top of their camea, to the polnl where both coHbel aay you can lpore the ,...&&It of th•lr molt recent meeUaf, a SS.M North Carolina triumph ln Dffember. ''That iame ts so lone a90, you're probably talkln~ about two dllfereat teama, ' Hld Knt1ht. "In each case, we're a rar better team today. ''We're.both different clubl <See TEAM, Pate CJ) Her total equalled that of Nancy Lopez.Melton last year and m ade this the third year in a row that no player has broken par for the 72 holes of tournament play. hit one out-of-bounds and look a triple bogey after a bogey at 16 Massey. playing with Carner and Shelley llamhn, was wired for sound and the trio started with a loose attitudC' Bradley, who reached her 30th birthday Tues· day. cited her personal goals. "I would like to be No. 1 on the money li st. reach the Sl milhon mark a nd win the LPGA and U S Open championships before I'm through." ·'It was one or the neatest things I've ever don<.' and I hope 1t helped the people at home watching TV ... Massey said. Turning to her game. she added· "I am very comfortable on this golf course. It reminds me of USGA courses that I played as a kid. It is demand- ing and not very forgiving and I love the greens . She has a string of two second places and a first in her last three tournaments It was her first· ever victory in California She picked up $26,250 for the win. "When I finished. I felt lik<' going right out and playing the front nine again .. Massey. a brides maid for the second straight vear <she finished in a tic with Jo Ann Washam last year>, had a final round 69 to pick up $17,150 with JoAnne Carner, Blalock and Kazmierski tied for third at 291. She likened her back nine "here she had four birdies in a row 114 17 1 to being in a race car and that of Blalock. who charged to within two strokes of Bradley then fell back. to going on four nat tires · Washam and Dale Lundquist tied for sixth. Washam had an opportunity to finish second again this year until she reached the 17th hole where s he "I feel vc•ry s trongly about courses of this <See KEMPER, Page C2l A big sea of green envy Kemper fiekl couldn't tame Mesa Verde , By EDZINTEL Of Ille D•lly ~llet Stall Had it been a year-end finan· cial print out for a major cor· poration, the company execs would have loved it. But in golf. the idea is to get into the red, not stay away from it. For the players competing in the Women 's Kemper Open however, that was easier said than done. • THE LEADER BOARD over· looking the 18th hole at Mesa Verde looked like a St. Patrick's Day massacre. It was so green, the women must have thought it was part of the fairway. That's probably why so many balls wound up near it. The only red Cbelow par) that could be found on the board Sun- day was beside Pat Bradley's na m e and that was for only five holes . The closest anyone else gol to the red was Jane Blalock al two over. And ahe had to 10 on a hot atrealt lo do that. None of the women seemed too franl•d by alJ that 1reen thou1h. No one in the 128·pla,yer field had been in the red alnce Tburaday'a openin1 round aftJW87. After ah~ collected her paycbetk, Bradley ruahed into the clubbcMate to Hll IMr motber on the phone. But after abe bua1 up, the liMI remained OJ*I the r•tt ·" Ute aftemooa. Tbll wu n°*'* to nil lloal• about. 11J1T WllAT happened durln1 the nan. Of four dAJI at ... Verde waa a rt9Ult of Hftl'al faeton. Fint, tber• wH tbe wlnd. Sally Lillie, a 10-year veteran scores in their recent recollec· with more th an $500,000 in tion. career earnings shot a fi ve· unde r 66 Sunday to lie the HERE'S A sampling or what Women's Kemper Open record the women had to s ay about the set by Nancy Lopez-Melton two tournament and themselves foll- years ago. But all tha t did for ing the final round Sunday: Little was bring her 72-hole Little: "The first couple or score to a nine-over -par 293. Lit-days, l couldn't pick the right tie certainly wasn't looking for a clubs for the life of m e. The phone. weather conditions were over- . 'The firs t ~ay was out· bearing. When you can't pick the rageous," Little said in a ref· right club, lhen you're not put- erence to the 45 mph winds that ting yourself in birdie range. I blew throughout {he day "I don't like this cour se, It's one of my know how anyone could have favorites. But I was afraid to do played in that kind of wind. I certain things because I didri't don't know about the others, but want to lose myself completely I was playing scared out there." by takinl( a gamble." • Another big factor in the Hollis S tacy (11-over-p llr Green Par ade was the Mesa 295): "I just couidn't hit the bllll Verde course. Even though this well at all ror four days. I dldltt is the third straight year the have problems compensatina f._, women have played yere, the the wind, J just couldn't putt. To. course seem s to give them more day I switched my putter and and more problems each year. helped (she had a final SUFFICE TO say, Mesa scoreoftwo-under-parlll)." Verde beat the LPOA Crom Beth DanJel, Ul80 Player of March 36·29. A par 284 Uke Year <295): "The ereena were B J hard the first couple of d•ys rad ey b .. usually -doean't wtn waa frustraUng. I don't know toarnammta, much le11 by nve they watered them or what 1 strokes. Al the women checked .out n11ht but they were cert I h .... l bo&dlq mucb bet&er todaJ, w t "'e r 1corecard1 Sunday I was blttiq u.e ball weU and beaded up the bank toward which la the ll1'9t. Um• In the clubhoule, ~ery f•w wen (ab• h..s t • a.-.a ..... ) .. 1mtllq. None want.d to loot ~ · back at the aea ol ll'M• pOl&d Alcott (17"°"""f9r IOl)! 11r on tile maln aconboard. ln a amall •IUIQ riflat -. For on• ol lbe • ..., ,.,.. Um•, ' waan 't httUn1 tM talrw.,. Lopn·fll•lton hatl UM cbaDN to was mllltq &be .,..... W. bH& the partiq lot traffte. ·la aad out of '*" to Sb• waan't aloae however. reallr too eoecerud. •• Veter-WI• Sudra PahiMr, Jan Stephenaon, Amy Alcott and Jerilyn Brita, Just to nam• a · few. hid flnJ1hed with th• wont DONNA CAPONI ( ll·OVW 298) : "Tbil wu a ner•• wr <IM GllSEN, .... Cl) Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 r---------------------"""".!• Knight didn't appreciate the label 'Tiger Bait' From AP Dtlpalclae1 PKJLADELPHIA -Indiana Coach Bobby m Knight, s tirred to a nger when a fan rro m Louisiana Stale University shouted an obscenity at him, shoved the the man against a wall in a motel Saturday nieht. Knight explained the incident Sunday and said be bad no regrets. no apologies and wouJd do the same tbln in tbe same situation again. Knight appeared at a news conference and said he wanted to set the record straight about the s hoving incident with the man identified as Louis Bonnecaze Jr .. a certified aoccountant from Baton Rouge, La. "We dldn't trade shoves. I did the shoving," said Knight. "And we didn't trade insuJts. He did the insuJting." As Knight described the incident, here is what happened: He·was walking into the lounge of the Cherry Hill Inn in New Jersey, across the river from Philadelphia. with four or five other persons about 7 p.m . Saturday when a man "dressed in purple and gold" ap- proached him. ''The LSU rans had been yelling, 'Tiger Bait, Tiger Bail, Here Comes Tiger Bait,' to the players," said Knight. "Well, he comes up and s ays. 'Congratulations,· and I turned around and said, ·we weren't really tiger bait after all, were we?' "The guy turned around and shouted, • .. .' "I walked over to him. I walked swiftly over to him and asked him. ·would you like to say again what you Just did?' "He said, 'I just gave you a compliment a nd you were sarcastic.' I said 'I wasn't sar{'astic ,' and he s aid, 'Well, you're an ... · "So I grabbed him and s hoved him up against the wall and then walked away And 1f that m eans I've done something wrong, so be it "If it happens again tomorrow. I'll be wrong again tomorrow " .-------fleu•ff• "' llu• duu -----...... Maybe next year we should drop one fashion feature and do a photo series on callouses. Maybe we can in· teresl Ma{'k truc k , Caterpillar Tr actor and Bull Durham." Golfer Jan Stephenson, who re{'ently posed in the official LPGA magazine in a series of photos showing her in a revealing gown. reacting angrily to her tour-mates who did not see eye-to-eye on the idea. ~••kfl ••rpa•.n &ponio'• •arlc Wayne Gretsky assisted on three goals lo m establish a NHL S{'o ring re{'ord for a s ingle season , and lie the all-lime league record for assists m a season as he he lped Edmonton beat Pittsburgh. 5-2. to highlight a{'tion Sunday Gretsky's first assist. for his 153rd point of the s eason. broke the s ingle-season record set by Boston's Phil Espos ito of 152 m the 1970·71 season . Elsewhere'. J acques Rich ard scored his 49lh and 50lh goals of the season and Quebec goaltender Da niel Bouchard stopped 18 shots in handing Montreal its first shutout of the season as the Nordiques blanked the Canadiens. 4·0 . Reg Kerr's 40-foot slapshot past Detroit goalie Larry Lozinski midway in the third period gave Chicago a 4 3 triumph over the Red Wings Paul Holmgren scored twice as Philadelphia whipped Hartford. 4 I Mike Rossy's 68th goal of the s eason llftt•d the New York Islanders to a 4 3 win over Washington Rookie Paul Gagne S{'Ored with 3·24 to play to give Colorado a narrow 2·1 edge over Winnipeg Short handed goals b~ Mik~ Polich and Tom Youn)lhans s parked Minnesota lo a .i 2 \'IClory over Vancouver Dodg~r• IJaU~r E.rpo• for 18 r-• VERO BEACll . F'la Pedro Guerrero • homered. doubled and drove in fi ve runs to lead. a n 18-hit Los Angeles attack Sunday as the Dodgers pounded the Montreal Expos 19·5 10 exhib1t1on baseball Ste_ve Gar vey knocked in three runs and Dave Lopes had three ~m~les and .was on base five times as the Dodgers post· ed their biggest victory or the exhibition season . Montreal score d three runs in the first inning against ~erry Re uss. but the Dodgers paraded 12 batters to the plate in the fourth inning, S{'oring nine runs on six hats The Los Angeles rally was aided by two of Montreal's fi ve errors . T~e Dodgers scored two unearned runs in sixth and eight more m the seventh, two on J oe Ferguson's first home r of tbe s pring. Former University High and Saddleback College star Tim Wallach homered for the Expos lefe •• • •••r u 61•••• •• Mike h ie collected three bits ror the second • consecullvt aame and powered San Francisco to a 5-3 victory over Milwaukee to hl1hU1ht exhibition bi&seball action Sunday. One of Jvle's hill was a 400-Coot solo home run In the Cifth innlna . . . Elsewhere Bucky Dent'• three-run homer and Jolmay Oate.'1 1010 shot helped the New Vorlc Yankees to u 6-4 victory over the world champJon Pt\Uadelphl• Phillies . . Jolm Stearn• contributed three of New York's 16 hits and knocked an four runs as the Mets belted Minnesota , 13·3 ... Lloyd Moseby doubled to drive In one run and scored one as Toronto scored a narrow 3·2 decision over St. Louis Mike Easler belted two home runs, includ ln& a two-run shot in the bottom of the ninth Inning to give Pittsburgh a 9·8 win over Kansas City ... Wayne Gross drove in three runs. including the game-winner in the loth inning, and Rob Plcciolo had five hits as Oakland edged the Chicago Cubs, 7·6 Garry Hancoc:k drilled a homer and a single and Glenn Hoffman lined three hits as Boston dumped the Chicago White Sox. 9·5 . . Pinch·hitter Larry Llttleton's two.run single In the eig hth inning snapped a lie and enabled Cleveland to beat Seatite. 10-7 . . Rookie pitche rs Howard Balley and Jerry Ujdur S{'attered nine hits as Detroit whipped Cin{'innati, 4·1 . Rookie Tommy Harper hit a grand-slam home run and Bob Horner and Dale Murphy added homers lo lead Atlanta to an 8·4 win over Baltimore .. Rookie se{'ond baseman Mike Ric hardt had three hits and three runs batted in to lead Texas to a 9.3 decision over Ho us ton. ~i•, Saa A at.-. rfp Boeuioa San Antonio ended regular-season . play by m ro1;1ting Houston, 135-109, behind a game-high 30 pomts from George Gervln, who finished his fourth {'Onsecutive season with more than 2,000 points ~ .. Elsewhere on the fina l day of NBA action, Boston outran speedy Philadelphia early and, with Larry Bird and Robert Parlsb scoring 24 points each, held on ror a 98·94 victory that gave the Celtics the Atlantic Divis ion title and a playoff bye. Both teams ended the regular season with the NBA's best record, 62-20. They a lso were tied in head-to-head competition. 3-3. and in their record against Eastern Con- fe rence opponents, 42·16. But Boston daamed the crown with a better division record, 19·5 lo 15·9 . . . Kevin Porter scored 27 points and handed off 18 assists, leading Washington to a 138·103 victory over Cle veland Ray Williams S{'Ored 19 points to lead the playoff-bound New 0111v1N York Knicks to a 103-95 win over New Jersey . Guard Walter Davis and r eserve forward Joel Kramer led a balanced Phoenix attack with 16 points apiece as the Suns ran away from Utah. 105·90 ... Scott Wedman S{'ored a game-high 27 points to lift Kansas City to a 113·104 victory over Dallas and a berth in the NBA playoffs for the third _year in a row Billy Ray Bates scored a career-high 40 points lo lead Portland lo its fourth s traight win, a 144-129 decision over San Diego ... Sidney Moncrelf S{'Ored five points in the las t 29 seconds or an overtime period lo give Milwaukee a 132-128 win over Atlanta . . Ricky Sobers and Artis Gilmore ea"h scored in the final 42 seconds, giving Chiugo a 101·97 triumph over Indiana ... Seattle's James Ba lley had eight of his 24 points in the fourth quarter to pace the SuperSonics to a 96-92 win over Golden State. ll.ofler• ••••• e.., _.,. Jlre8••re Bill Roger s, under pressure from four • players . grimly clung to a one-shot lead over the last four holes and, with a {'losing one-under-par 70. won the Heritage Classic in South Carolina. Flogers, the leader throughout the final round. claimed only t he second PGA tour title of his seven-year {'areer. Finishing second. one shot behind, were Hale lrwln, Gii Mor1an, Craig Stadler and Bruce Devlin ... USC's James Sanford won the 100-mete r dash at the 12th Martin Luther King Jr Freedom Games with a time of 10.10 seconds, the best lime in the world this season. 'I'~~ ....... l-011 ow 1n9 dre tht' top ~porl) t!Yenb on rv tor11ghl Ratings · · • e .. ct'llt'nl .••• worlh Wdtch1ng, •• lair, torget 11 ~ 5 p.m., Channel 4 ' ' ' ' N CAA BASKETBALL: Indiana 11'> North Carolina Announcers: Dick Enbt!rg, Billy Packer and A 1 M cGuire Bobby Knight s Indiana Hoosiers <2~·91 tak e on Dean :>m 1th ., North Carolina r ar Heel'> tor Int! NCAA cnamp1onsh1p dnd bragging rtght'> tor th.: next yt'ar Tne Hoo'>1er'> are led Uf yuard Isiah Tnomas, while lhe T d ' H&t!I~ 1001<. 1or torw.ir\J A l Wood 10 µrov1de thei r ollen.,1vl! attack OTHER TELEVISION ' ;,port.,wond Heavywt'1ght'> Chr1'> M cDona1a ,, Ji ana :>lt!Vt' Huntington 1 10 vi mt'el in a .,cneau1t>O .,. .. r ouna oou1 taped 1n Atlantic City. Marv Albert and Dr. Ferdie Pacheco re· por t RADIO N u L'vl:'n h '>C.h1.:du1ea TUESDAY RADIO tid'>t!bdil L1nt1tll1dl 1 V') Dodger'> d i Vt'rU dtc>.ttn. I.; II) d m. KA BC l 1u1 SPORTS BREAK /BASKETBALL/GOLF Agafnst Houston Lakers get ready f Or the playoffs INGLEWOOD <AP) -The Los Angeles Lakers are headed for the National Basketball t\J. sociation playoffs as the defend- ing NBA c hampion s . Denver isn't going anywhere, but Nuigets Coach Doug Moe s till savored his team's victory over the Lakers in the regular season finale. "We've gone 23·13 In our last 36 games." Moe said after the Nuggets downed the Lakers 148-146 in overtime Sun· day night. "That ranks us with the best. We got off to a tough start " David Thompson soere d 43 points as the Nuggets came from behind in regulation play and finally won in overtime as the Lakers committed two costly turnovers. Denver finished its season al 37-45. "THE GAME didn't mean a nything but look how we p layed," said Moe. "We 've gained confidence." However . the Lake rs . who ended regular season play with a 54-28 record, seemed to have their minds more on their up- coming playoffs mini-series with Houston tha n on Denve r. Coach Paul Westhead rested center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and banged-up forward J amaal Wilkes for mu{'h of the game. "I wanted to rest Kareem and Jamaal as mu{'h as I could and play Magic (J ohnson} as much a s possible, Norman I Nixon> as mu"h as possible and other key re serves and Mark Landsberger ," he sa 1d .. I never s a c rifice a game I didn't think about bringing in Kareem late in the ga m e because I Fro• Pq~ CJ GREEN ... mg week for everyone After m) win in last week ·~ tournament c the Desert Inn Nationa l Pro a m } I had a big let down . Givt.• me a day off and I'll be back next week ... Jo Ann Washam <e1ght·over· par 292> .. For som<.' reason. I can't figure the last three hole!> on this course. I came out strong today, then fell off I can't un d er sta nd why eithe r These an• good . fast g reens Ma) be l rushed it a little loo much I tried talking to myself and every ~hin~. Nothing worked . Yet I s till love this {'ours" I look forward to playing here every year for number one. the peoph.'. and number two. the s ponsors They're all super " Carner c seven.over-par 291 > "I think that after playing such s hort cour se s up until this tournament. that a lot or t he girls weren't prepared We 'r" used to hitting short irons. Th1!> course presents a true test of yo ur game T h <.' wind was murder, sure . hut I hit some awfu l pulls too." Blalock c 291 I "I have mixed emotions I hit a bad tee shot off 10 that really affe{'ted my con centration I kept tryin~ to go to the pin from there on but you {'an 't force it on a course lik<' this. Yet I love this layout If we played here all year long, I think I'd be the happiest person in the world " thought we {'Ould win and rest our key people " THOMPSON T IED the game in regulation al 140 with 25 seconds to play on a 20-footer from the top of the key. The Lak~rs played for one s hot. but Magic Johnson turned into Ken Higgs for an offensive foul with two seconds r emaining and Higgs missed a 22-footer from the comer at the buzzer to send the game into overtime . Alex English, who had 28 points for the Nuggets. gave his team a 145· 144 lead with a basket after 2. 20 of the extra period. Thompson scored and then Dave Robisch converted one free throw to give Denver a four -point lead a t 148 144 before J 1m Chones S{'Ored the Lakers· last basket Denver didn't score, and then the Lakers foiled to get a shot off before the 24-second c-lock ex- pired. After a Robasch m1s!>, the Lakers played for one shot and Chones let a p<1ss go through his l<'gs 1n the final !>econd~ Abdul.Jabbar scored only 10 points in has l1m1ted aoot.·a run('e f'rowe Pq~ Cl KEMPER. • • naturt', .. Masse y said ·1 tflJOY hittmg some !ltrong irons and you get to do that here It 1s one of the toughest we play I would say it ranks with the top three or four each year and lhl!> type of cours{' happens to <1ppeal to me " Carner, the {'hampaon an a five-way playoff the first year of the tourna ment at Mesa Verde C'C. carded an even-par 71 for the day to f1n1sh in a third place tie When dl'fl'nding c hampion Nancy Lopez Melton st<1rtcd her round al 7. 42 1n the morning. she had less lhan 50 in her gallery Hut by the C'nct of nine hol<'s. the usual throng \\-as "atchmg her t•verv move a:. she carded a two- unde·r·par 69 and a 293 total She finished in a tic for eighth with Sally Little. Kathy Posll{'wail. Cathy Heynolds and Hamlin L1ltlt• came from far back in the pack to {'ard the lo west score of the four days , a five under- par 66 This tied Lopez· Me lton's tournament s ingle round re{'Ord Blalo{'k made the biggC'st {'barge at Bradley and at one tame pulled to within l\\O strokes of the leader But s he> faltered on the back nme. :.oaring to a 40 after a 32 for the first nine holes. There were 13 rounds under par on Sunday, the most fo r an) !>Ingle day or this year's tourna· ment Another seven players equalll'd par Postlewa it and J uhe Stanger l'3('h had 68 behind Little's 66 with Reth Daniels. Lopez Melton. Lundquis t. Cathy Heynolds. llollis Stacy and Massey all in at 69. Joining Bradley al 70 were Therese llcssion . Pat Meyers a nd Penny Putz with even par rounds re{'orded by Carner. Washam. Harbara Mizrah1e , Barbara Barrow. Kathy Martin . Mary Mills and Judy Kimball L DIRECT -*O Zi llgitt and Wright f insur.inrc ;i~cnls :ind brokrr~ rTHE SPORTING HOUSE Q Manufacturers: lnsuram•r <'"''" ri~in.1:"' <'onlact u~ for compc•ltlt"t' quoh•' un l'ropc'r t ~. l.1ah1hl\ Otrftcult l'rodur ls l.1ab1ltt\. ('ommt•rr1;il \uto c;roup l.trl' and :'t1rd1r al a ., 1t. t• 11 a ' W o r k t' r ' C" n m p c· n ' ii I 1 on I nMtrant·t· Bob Guffin 1931 Mac Arthur Boulrv.ird NC"'J>Orf Buch. c ;J 91660 (714) 751. 90SS ' Where Health Is a Way of Llfe and Conditioning Is a Way of Llving , .. I WE WILL ANY ONE OF OUR MEMBERSHIPS •LUortou1 Loobf Facllttt11 for .... • women •launa. lttcun, Jacunl •frH laby lltttng lertlct •11 CIMl~~quttball Cou"1 •NAU11 ......... ,.-...... •2 '°*' Velyttolt Cou"1 •1/1 .. JOlllMTrack ............ fjf1111M """"" •IJMGllut (lnUtllal~ VolltyHll) •8"olalAlfOltloCk111e1 •2' ..... OtJ• Pool• lundlck •Pro.., •l11ta1ra11t, lar • loclal Lounge Call 752-0565 for addlttonal Information 3601 tl•mbot .. Rd., N-.port Be•ch --........... ~--··-. ···--·--.., ~... ~ .... , BOATING Orenge Coast DAILY PtLOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 U.S. yachts dis IJTegularitia pul a cloud on.Admiral's Cup ' • NEW YORK <AP) -fr. En1l1nd in the summer and Acadia and Wllllwaw wert: re1ulariUa related to handicap culminating in the Fastnet replaced on the U.S. team by ratln1a have prompted the re· Race. Stare & Stripes, owned by Pat moval ol two of the yachts from Louisiana Crude had not been Malloy ol Sa1 Harbor, N.Y . The the United Stat.es team in the up-selected for the U.S. team, h•v· third boat on the team ls coming Admiral's Cup aeries, Ing beep sold by American Scaramouche, owned by Chuck according to a story in the Satur-owners Tom Dreyfus of New Kirsh of Sturgis, 1'Uch. day editions of the New York Orleans and Dick Jennings of Tlmes. Chicago to a Swedish interest As a resuJt of the alleged ir-soon alter tbe Southern series regularities, the selection com-ended last month. mittee for the Admiral's Cup Neither Dreyfus nor Jennings • team has removed Acadia, was avaJfa6fe for comment, but 'o wned by Burt Keenan of an attorney for Dreyfus, Gree Lafayette, La., and Williwaw, Gambel of New Orleans. said owned by Seymore Sinett or the proble m was due to a Plainfield, N.J ., and skippered measurer's error. by Dennis Conner, the America's Cup champion. Don Sorrenson, executive secretary of the Southern circuit, said, "Some people have been so blatant in their cheating now that others are getting fed up and are coming forward. We've had problems for years that have not been dealt with harshly enough." DENNIS CONNER In each case, the irregularities allegedly involved alterations of the weight of the boats prior to the time of official measurement before the recent six-race series of the Southern Ocean Racing Conference and the lime the rac- Did U.S. yachtsmen cheat? ing began. The owners of both boats have denied any wrongdoing and both say they will have their vessels remeasured. / A third yacht. Louisiana Crude, was also implicated The Admiral's Cur. whose American competitors usually are selected on the basis of their s uccess in the Southern circuit, a Florida and Bahama-based series. is a biennial series of na- tion a I team races held off NEW YORK (AP> -Harman Hawkins, a New York attorney and head of the United States Yacht Racing Union, says a Jlearing may be needed lo de- termine if alleged irregularities in handicap ratings or three top American orfshore racing ,yac hts were attributable to cheating or genuine error. Hawkins said he will ask the USYRU board at the a nnual spring meeting in Chicago next Sunday whether it would like to lake action und~ a regulation that deals with "gross infringe- ment·· of yacht racing rules If s uch an infriniemenl is proven, it could result in dis• qualification of the owner, the owner 's representative helmsman or the crew of a yacht for any period seen fit by · the board. The alleged irregularities in measurement of the boat led lo the removal last week of the yachts Acadia and Williwaw from the U.S. team in the Ad- miral's Cup international race series next summer, as well as a re-scoring of the re<'ent six- r ace series in the Southern Ocean Racing Conference, in which those two vessels and the boat Louisiana Crude took the top three spots. Louisiana Crude. not selected for the Admiral's Cup team because of a pending sale to Swedish Interests, had its rating certificate. which makes it eligi- ble to race, withdrawn by the Racing Union for the same al· leged offense. The owners of Acadia and Williwaw have denied any wrongdoing, as has an attorney representing the American owners of Louisiana Crude. Hawkins said boat measure- ments are "sensitive" and that "hone.st errors can be made." Boating r esults Temerity sails to win r T his Week s Specia l ....... LOS ANGELES Tementy, skip· pered by T. W. Kerr of Bahia Corin· thian was first to finish the slow· going 87-mile Santa Barbara Island race Sunday, taking more than 20 hours to cover the course. LA YC said a numbe r of the yachts did not finish until 6 p.m. Sunday after a slow start on Saturday. The race was the fourth of the Whitney Series for International Offshore Rule Yachts and the Los Angeles Times Series for Performance Han- dicap Racing Fleet r atings . On Saturday LA YC sent the Midget Ocean Racing Class in the Lillie Whitney Series and the Srnallboat Ocean Racing Association yachts in the Todd Pacific Series on a short day race around Eagle Rock off Catalina Island and return. Results tOR A I r.,,,.,., •. T W Kerr. BCYC I Altl4 "::.::~~ H.,..00, NH'!'(,) S"ltr 0,..nt Ton• 0.tltno, IOR·B I RKI S/>111, Alu C.0.U Jim K•Dlt LAYC., Hurrall, 8111 lllal<nly, LAYC, J A-clovt , Mike Kon ,,.Cly.LAY( IOll·C ' Toni<•. A H•-• ...,.. YC. 1 -•ne ::c· BOC> l.Ane, l.BYC. l !>tt~r. Mou W•t!Wft. C:.PO PHRF·A I Voclort•. One C•ll_,, LAYC, 1 W•rroor, o. .. Stt•,,., LBYC. l Ma-ra•. Jolln Tlla•l•y, Von YC PHRF 8 l. To"'"'. JM Sm1t1> R•y Bootll, BYC, 1 Hot Rum, Al C..tlllon·Cllr" S.llen, KHYC, l. Blue Bayou. JM Jacon1. KHYC. PHRF c I Tom•••. Oou9 •nd Tom Jorgt-. LAYC, 2 So<n\llone. 0.nnl\ Humpftro, CBYC l °"'"~ 81ouom. M 1(1,,,,.y, LBYC MOR( I lmov•a.<. Bruce AnCltrton. C.00 BYC. 1 F1recr•c1<tr, Sieve Grllfon, KHVC, l Bronco, Bob An Cler'°", Hoy Y C SBORA I G•~r Alt, Andy Ay•te. A8YC. 1 LIO E11t11on. Tom ~n. LBYC l H.,O T a<I<. Jim Ne•<• WCYC . A-..I••• S~rin beflltu Fifth Performance Handicap Rae iog Fleet yachts turned out Saturday for the first race of Bahia Connthian Yac ht Club's Angelman Series, an 18-mile circ uit of Emmy Oil Island starting from off the Balboa Pier. The race was sailed under ideal weather conditions in a steady 12· knot southeasterly breeze. Winners in each class CLASS A l Fover, 8•11 Rol\r\, VYC 1 Cygnet, O.n OtH•vtn, BCYC, l Tory, Rol>trl Dadds, HHYC CLASS 8 l Soarrow H•wk. Bud o. .. nberQ. BYC 2 T rtl Go<CIO. O.vt P"ce BC 'I'( l 81"" ll1bl>on. Oo11 "•rvold, 1.1 'l'C CLASS c I. Alo,.,. 11. G1enn R•~. SSYC:. 1 Sl.ybord, M•rv Lonupre, BCYC l Sl•Aw~rry J•m Ju\lon M<C•rtlly, BYC: CLASS 8 I -kon•c. 1 On lne W.•. l Going i..11, Sltvt FrM>I•. OPYC CLASS C l C..nci.11. OouQ Jono, OPYC, 1 ll1va<t, B•ll Clore. OPYC, l G..,ci.11, O•,,. Mc Kinley. OPYC CRUISING CLASS ' HOI CllOCOl•tt 1.ton.,o !t<"uPOl. C-BYC. 1 P•not MOUW!, G•rY :.<n•ll-, OPYC. l Lone R•nQtr. J.t<I< Vold K•mp, Capo BYC SI NGLEHANDED I 0••• St•r. R•ndy OtZort. OP'l'C. 1 FUNIY F11t1n Pelt Me.at, C.00 eve l ~rtn• Jonn Wllltt, OPYC PoHzzf l••llfl cto..laat~• The Polizzi family dominated the Adult Sabot class in Dana Point Yacht Club's Dinghy Regatta Sun day. First place went to Bert Polizzi. second to Rick and third to Carl. Winners in other classes : SABOT A I Greg 0 _,,otlson, 1 Kenny l(ravH, l Al•• JOhn\on SABOT 8 I P•ul W.non 2 J•yn. Fen,,..., J_ Bonny 01c-.1n\.Ot\ LASER I S<oll NII'°" 1 Ruth'-' l Mark RurCIOn Sl•mm SAN TANA 10 I G•ry Allon 1 C•roll ... Fenner, l Aoy Fenntt S a" Dl~go S t . tops rf"8& S~ DIEGO San Diego State with skippers Jack i''ranco and Scott Harris outscored eight rivals Sunday in the make-up race for the second of the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association 's Southern Series. The race made up for the postpone- ment of the race at Santa Barbara Feb. 8 which was aborted because of heavy weather Four races of the series have now been completed with two remaining. The top six schools in the series are eligible to compete in the Pacific Coast Championship at Berkeley. May 9·10. Cook a .,old• •blaap NEW ORLEANS· -Betty Cook of Newport Beach survived the tragic New Orleans~Halter Marine 200 offshore-power boat race on Lake Pontchartrain, finishing a close second behind Michael Meynard. Concord. Mass. Cook. the only woman driver in the rugged sport, is a former two-time national and world champion. Both Meynard and Cook were driving catamaran hulls . •~kl••~ lei•• ~ IAHdelu get ear .. ,_,, Mackinac. skippe red by Wes Richard and Gretchen Loufek of Thompson of Dana Point Yacht Club Newport Beach continued their was the overall and Class 8 winner domination of the Prindle Cat-16 fleet Saturday in DPYC's Spring Regatta. Saturday and Sunday with a victory The event drew 50 boats m five in the first California Point Series classes sailing outside the harbor in and National Qualification races. 10-12-knol breezes. Eighty-one boats turned out for the Second overall was Mas Rapido regatta which was sailed at Dana with Blaine Rorick of DPYC at the Point in light to moderate breezes. helm . and third was On The Way, Al Runner-up in the 16A class was Nelson. DPYC Steve and Bari Boehne of Dana Class winners: ' Point, and third was Frank and, Lynn Cl.ASS A -1. Mat Rac>•CIO, 2 Meglc LIQlll, HOl>lt 8 L.L.....td h Att .... OPYC; 1 Rancty r.r. Greg ~nd,, OPYC rec ... n u • ge, Lof\g Beac . Prindle Ca t s race for 88 Prindle Cat sailors are laking seriously the late Hugh Angelman's quip a b out r acing for "money, ma r bles or' cha lk" tbe Prindle Callers preferring the monev. Prindle Fleet 3. in con. j unction with a group calling themselves Pro· SatUng, ls sponsoring a rtJalta ln San Diego Sunday ln which the winners in three classes wUI receive cash prizes totalin1 Sl,000 ln caah. T h e t h ree cla-ssea tom pet1n1 for cub prt1e1 wlll be Prl ndle·th, Hla and llBa. Flnt pt1ae in the 11 and 11 clu-. will bt llDO: ......., Pl'be1 1100; ~ ........................... l[lll ...... llllill~1 LEASllll? 1981M=~ MANY MODELS ON DISPLAY FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE DELIVERY. WE LEASE ALJ. MAKE CARS AND ftUCIS. "WE ·yr GOT WHAT YOU 'Rf l OOKING FOR. THEODORE 'ROBINS LEASING CO. 1979 CADIUAC COUPE DE VILLE Factory 2 tone paint. Cadillac wire wheel covers & an "A1troroof " 1768WKTJ sg995 All Co" I•,,._.,. To ,.,._Soll AJI ,._., Ptw Tu • i..- I R!M:!JI U~TS:i :::~ca NOW - - - ,,,...,,,,.~€1 TEAM CONCEPT • • • since the first game," agreed Smith, who ls the Final Four for the sixth Ume but has never won the championship. "They are a much better team. For one thing, they've settled on the lineup, which they didn't have then. And we've made progress since then, too. "Hey, when you get this far, both teams should be good." Both teams are. Indiana, which won the title here in 1976, has won 18 of its last 22 games and has over· whelmed its four NCAA tourney opponents by an average of 25 points. That includes a 67-49 de· cision over LSU in Saturday's semifinal. North Carolina, meanwhile, has taken 11 of its last 12 starts, including a 78-65 semifinal victory over Virginia. And then there are the coaches. Knight is the martinet. the dis· ciplinarlan who couldn't resist a verbal taunt Saturday night that prompted an LSU fan to respond with insults which Knight answered by shoving the man against a wall. You may not like his manner. but there ts no deny· ing his coaching genius Few teams take the court better pre· pared. and few coaches have players as dedicled to them as Knight does "IF SOMETHING gets to him, he lets people know about it," said Randy Wittman. Indiana's 6·6 s wingman who may draw the de fens ive assignment against 0 0 Norl.h Carolina stu Al Wood. "He doesn't aJfow the same mil· takes to happen over and over. I don't think we have too muc~ fear of his an1er, because you can't play basketball out of feat a nd he's never chewed out anyone who didn't deserve it. ··It's a respect for his knowledge o( the game." Smith may not have Kni&hl's tough reputation, but there's no question about who is the key figure in the North Carolina pro- sram. The players fill roles or else they don't play, and the roles are designed by Smith, who orchestrates the Tar Heels through a variety of offensive and defensive patterns. There's nothing subtle about Indiana's defense. "YOU KNOW what they're go- ing to do,·· said Wood, the 6-6 senior whose 39 points against Virginia set a record for an NCAA s emifinal and left him Just three points short of 2.000 for his career. "They come out in s traight man-to-man pressure, pressure. pressure.·· Knight would have it no other ' way. "Two of my all-time favorite people are ex-coaches Henry Iba and Pete Newell," said Knight. ' "If I was to play a zone they ' would disown me. So I <'an'l do it I have to keep at least two friends "There are a lot of ways to skin a squirrel," he added - - u E -(_ > . NBA l'IHAI. $T AHDIHGS WISTlllH COHl'llllHCI Pacific Dlvbl• w L l'ct. y Photn1a H H ••s I L ..... ,., S• u •59 • Porlt•nd 0 JI .j.jt Go10.n Sl•tf ,. 0 .,. S•n Di•QO .i. .. .,. !>e•lll• 3• .. O S Midwett Ot.11•• 'I !.•n AntOf'\•O n lO ~ , HOU)lon 44 ., .. A K•n\•1 C1ly 40 0 .. o,nvt• JI 0 d i U14n 11 s.. 341 0 .. 11., IS •I 1'3 EASTERN C:OHl'llllHClf AllMh< Ol•itl .. 'f 80\ton u 20 IS. A Pn11e d1Plptu• •1 20 IS. • Ntw VQO ~ n •IO W.t\r\•nQton Jt 4l .,. N~"' Jt'tW'f ,. ~ l'll Ce1th•t 01Yti.llft (>() 11 IJJ o• l 11 •• ti n 12 ,, IS 1• l7 11 n ll "Mllw •ulll,.,. .-;tn ""° ' •nd1•nd Atl•nle l lrwf"l•f'\d U~tro1t •I JI S•t U u JI Sll I• ll SI J ll 1'I 18 S• 341 31 ,, •• 2S. J9 y wort d1.,1\1on l•llt "ov•M1t<J lor Pl•fOU\ ~VfUl•Y't Sc Of'tl Ot'n11u ,4ti l .. kffl 140 1011 M1h .. uk•• IJ/ Alldlll• 118 loll 80\ton If~. Phll.OtrlC:Hltct IJ.t lt'utdQt# HJI. lli(J1(ttM VI Sdn Anlomo U\ l'-too\ton tCW S•.JI ""YO, vo1<1tn St~t• 'I Wa \h1nQfOfl I j8 t IC'Vtl .. nO IOJ N•w 'fun IOJ Nr w Jor '<'Y 91 -<•n.-•~<'h llJ Uolld' 10.. Pnoen1c 10S Utdh 'It) Porll•nd 14' S..n Oo~o 12~ Nuggets 148. Lakere 146 OENVER EnQh\1111 Roo1 .. 11 "· 1 ... 1 Ill, H199\ I), r"omp\On 43 V•no.w•QM 11. M< l(,n,_.y 10, Gonclr•rn> 1 Dunn J R•• 0 1•1•11 ~ J1 •I , .. LOS ANGELES Cl\O<,.I 11 W1lkU 10. Attau• J•bD.tr tO, Ja"n\on ll Mi.son 14 (OQptr 18 L.tn<hOirt ~' to Holl•nd 10 ..... ,..,,, JClto..tn" Tol•I\ 6!> 16 1l U 6 k ore Dr Ou•rltn Ot>r1•t>' ~ ,,. U .. , JI I 1"41 lo,An\lf"I )I )q J~ )I ' '" , uu !!"t'J at,,;C Ne;nt I Otftl foul\ 0.nlftf IJ L ' A ,.~. It'\ l6 • I )O~ Playoffs 11 a glance FIRST ROUND llktl of T'11, .. 1 w.,, ....... '°"'"'~· W-HUY'I O•mu t-eousion •t Ukws, n <.in\•\ C•t., •• Pon1ano. n ~rldey'1Gtmu l •ktrt •I t-i°'.n.ton n l'orlldncl •I K•nlHl1 C.tly. n SWldtyGtmH 1"40u,lon "' L.tlrtt't, tf ne<f'S\•r., rt dn\•\ C.dy •t Portland , 11 ne<eU•r~ EoternCOftf ... ....:e ru .. do'•OtmH lnd1•0d di Ph•t•O.loh••. n Ch1t_<110QJt N~ww VC)f'a.. n r,,.,,.,..,., G•me Pn11.~1unu1 4't tnd1an• n Fnd•y't G•m• N••-N l"urir. dll (h1t6QO n Sund•Y'• Game in1J1•n·t •I Pt11t.t0rfpM1a tf n•ces.-s•r'f' '""'• .>QO 11t Ntw Yo,,. 1t n~Cf\~ry Santa Anita SUNDAYS llESULTS 1101~ 01 11 de>' l"°ro...,.• .. o '""'"""' * '"' • •r;tt l.,.OQc 1 Peoro1•• ll .io. u .. ..o " •J Kono Rull•h 1(•\t1n.-ct4i, • .o. l 00 Jt'' \\.co l t'httd•' l &O "' ( uno , .. ,, A,,,011no 'McH1r9ue1, 1J 4r, 10 00 o-Ml Jtll \ En( Off' f L•pt\•mt •o \ •O W'1t•r"d H •lttH tV•ld1v11\0J 10 IO '' 'Jdtll UOUblt' 1 J1 OdtO sJfl 10 1 nird '•lt' Ml\\ th•b.t Lou c V•lcJ1v1f \Ot 1111tf1 11..ao. •80 OH f=oot1\h Girl tP1trCtf, 110 '•J lJH 1;11.,. eaoa IV•lt~111tl•I. ~.10 , ;1J Ot~ dt'•dhe•I ,or 't'COnd r1u,ln '•"' l' Or.,.t(P\f'CI (011v4lrt\I, t• 10, IJ t ~Y ~JQt:r \ 010 1P1ncao 4 80.l10 M1d111rJOi M1r'W' W1nlttnd1 4 00 • '"" ,~··· f'CdQ•OQ fontnt ~l•Pf'l•mL II • "' J 10 () J"nmy Int• 010 ll•16d•I. tt • / oo 'Jh'""'r' 'l."''•n•o•t O "'1'11.i.111••....U tr01n ,.,,1 10 \t-cond \S •••<la 'J u.ii1CI \lit JO , • 1h ,.,.. f •\"t.ut•vt Cou n\e1 .,.,_,,.,ll"l"l t '"0 > }() J 1(J '< •noroo tourt no .. mlflrf'f • 6 •O l 80 Sn1m ' Fool ,. ,.,,,I I~) , .. "."'" '•"P c,, .. mmctl• lP•n<.4Y). t 10. '•o J UU '"" T 1J\.ttr I P1trt~) ~ 00, l 00 ..... • '\h•~Mdillt•, J #Kl \\ •a•<i. CJ i1 P11d 11 ' , P t ll )•• J ft 4 I 4 11 P4•0 ll.4lt 20 with w ,nn1"Q f+(.11-h f1vt l\Or~\J '1 Pttlt. S1A ,, O•dt1vn Ooa•O ,11~ 00 •11n 100 '#IM •no ••I tournorw'' ·~r 'h '«''" John Htn•y tP•n<4yJ. 2 40 l 1 I Pl A ~r • .ttl'tOwY ~ Vttlttt1ue1i1t l 10 1 tQ A a:1nt .. ro 1!)ha.M•t1:ff'J 2 lO, l 10 SS •tt •~ l 11 tM•O H \/O ~ nit ,.,.... PIP•\uff' ~-(.ir.. l P1n<•yJ •l • 1t. ) 1111 l«101IM IMtHtrQW I l llO, , 1 J N tel f?m tM•l~r 1n11 ~ 10 \) •••<t• I• P••d lo}) 00 illr•n<Mnc.e ~.Ill WCT Cup lel Mil..,, lltfJI Sl"tlM l'lritl JoM McEnr04t O.I 81orn Bor9, 1·6, •·•· M<E M°" COHe<b U5,000. 0.WIMf<lntl R •ul R•miru 8r1t11 Golllrltd def Mt Enro. Pitt"' lltnnen. I •• 6·l C•I SlndolO .... ,., WOii Otrmt11YI SJfltlOI l'IMI o .. n l ondl Clef Cflfl' Ltw1', • J, 6.0, •I . ) Men'• tournament ltl ... ,.1 Sl .. l•l'IM I ~tmmy Gl•mm•I•• dol Scoit 0••"· .. 1. l I • I 0..-. .... 1 .. 1 '""' Meyollt Al<' Meyor d •f Johll ,.., .. freer Otl.Atte, • J, k , I • Women'• tournement , .. MM!-.....,. 0.,...., Slfltlo• l'IMI M••lll ... Navrellto.t dlf Andrte J"9W. • ). I• N•~•ftllO\lt <tflOCh lt00,000 J-r <OllK1' lD,000 Tfllrtll'lact 8•t1111t 11""'9 Otl Srh•ca H•n"•· >-1, ..... l t lrtllrtdl ,._ nUtctt t.>0,000 H.,.Cu UllKI• p0,000 NHL WAL«5 CONl'llllNCI Monlrt•I l..ot A11991 .. P1llSOur91' Hertford 0.1ro11 ...,.,bOlvl•l.- W L T 01' GA Pb ., 11 1) lit 111 " 0 ll ,, 121 27' ,. ?9 lS 11 m JJO 10 10 1' II 112 lSI M " ., •• 1~ )11 S4 A-• Dlrilleol 8uflelo >I It " JU 1u ts aouon ,. 1t 12 lOS >•• 14 M1nnuote ll 11 II 11' 1U ., OuUe< 1' lO II 1't l01 1S Toronto 11 JI IJ lll JSI •I CAMl'alLLCONl'llllNCI Pelrlcll Divis .... N'I' 1'1-U 0 II 14 J.41 1H 104 Pl\1le0.1pnle •I 13 13 l11 14S 0 C.•l9•ry JI 11 IJ 31l lllS II N'f Re"91'U 11 JS 1) lOt J U •t w .. ,.1n9100 1• JS 11 111 J09 .. SmrtlM Dlv1.t., •·SI Louil •4 I• I• JJ8 UI 10. Cl\1c•90 lO 32 IS 1'11 lo. II Vancouver 1• JO 19 111 214 IS Edmonton 11 31 IS 310 319 l9 Color•dO 11 •• 11 U• l:IO SS W1nn1pe9 9 SS 11 JJI 311 )0 .~c1mcrwt0 dl"1slon t•tlt. s ...... , .. s ..... N v 111-u s. wu,.1119ton • Pnll•<Mlpl\1• •. H•r11ord 1 C"IU(IO 4. O.lro1I ) Edmonton s. POhbur9" 1 Ou•bec •. Monlre•I o Color.002. W1m 1pe9 1 M 1nnnot• •. Y•ncou._., 2 T_ ... l 'tG•mH 80\lon •I Bull•lo P111l-lllfl<• •I NY R•nQefl C•t Ta • 1'11.1 lahlbttlon T~•-t Detroit 00 011 001 4 It 0 Cln<ll>Mtl 100 000 009-t t I 8•11••• UJder 161 Ml ,.,., , &ooor, Prlet 111 M141 e.,,c11, O' .. rry Ill. W a.ir.,.1..-* .. ' ~" ...... . 1.1tv-eeec-. ..... 1 ~, .... , -110 •t-• 14 ' ..... ,.,... -.... _,, ,. t Out•, WwtNm 141, ...,,,.all Ul, ll•- 111 -C:.., _._ C•ll 't-, "-Ill Alld 'f•-· W-'--t. L -......... Hlb MOftlfffl, Wtflacfl. '--A ....... Owr· rero. l'tr(IWIOfl. ........ , ......... . i.i ............... , Chi, ... CALI •t -,.._. U 0 80.IO<I Ill ltt tllt-t U I H .. ln1tt11, R--~, 111 -l'I•. Hiii UI; CfawlW. .,, '--Cit- It) lrll .t.llMffft, o.4111e11 Il l . W - Crtwlorf, L -E._.a H'tl -Clllc: ... , Kulllt, t.t ..... '"4 .. , "-«ll . ., ............... . lflt .... ~I 1'1111••~ .. llO ...... , t .... YOfl lot.I.I 001 410 OI._. 10 I I t•IMt411 •••= (~U Nel .. If), McGraw (I> aM I • C.S..,.. 111 •• ._. .. m .wo.~ m. •-o.iwv ... L _ ,........_ Hlb .. 1"111••••· kMtl& ..... ,. ... o.MI. OHi • ........ ~. , ............. , NtW Ytrll CHI.I • f~I •t-U It o -~ .... _, jJ &Mltrt • ....,,. m. ~ m, .... .., ltt .. ~~ ........ Ill (4), MM,._.,. Ill, c:.r..1 Cit IN Ill, ........ W -&adlrf. L -.......,., H'--~ ........ v... 11Wun1,c.r-..1a1 ( ............... , ... , ftottft4e MO 1• • I lt.Ullle -.. , !Ot-l • I '-•el. Mcl..MllNlft "'· .., ... (I) J~ll­"' .,.. Mii" .• ., .... MM-lift,.,, ...... ttJ flMI ., __ , W -LMl L -1.,.._ ptf .......... . i.e ........ ,.., ICtlllH (Uy •t oeo Ma It I l'lltMWtfl .. ~ 102-' ,, i Galt. a. ...... , ... ltl, OUIWI .... ,., m. T•llf\t ltl 8M Gl'ote, ~ i.1: s.i-, TthlW ISi, JKU. (ti .... ~I. W - J e''-'--TWl"I'• Hlb -~~ 'tMl~ Al•-r, le....-t. Ma41ecll. 't-..rtt,"6-J 191 C-, ~la.I ,.... ooo no IMO t '' 1 HOU•lon .. 011 Oii-i • I lelK«ll, MMkfl ta> eftf ~., C-a m. IC~. o. SM1111 111. $.tMtllto m. Rollerve Ctl lftf '-OWrb, IC111Ct1J CTI W - MHlt ll I.. -K,...,..... .,._,,,on ..... .......... tMclll,flla.1 atlllMO<• 102 000 100-4 t 0 .t.11 ... ,. 4311 010 00•-t • • SI-, Umberee< c.I, StMda'd (I) - O.mp"'• Gr.,..m C•I; &oo111, ~Iller 171, oev1ey lfl 111141 Po<orOO., HehOl'OdnJ (71. w ... 8 e9g1, I.. SIO<lt. H At -.t.llellte, Ha rper, Horner, Mii'""'· """9tllll ...... , , Cet V-., ArlLI Ct llfornla t:IO 111 101-11 U o ~II Dl090 000 410 100-I IS 1 1Cnt1>9, Jtlfenon 141. Witt 111. S.l)cl\et 111 •nd Do.ming, R-r Ill. Wiie. UHl' ISi, r.11me11 111. si..... (t i ...., KtnMdy, Sllmec t•I W -Jtlfff\Gn L -Whe HRS - C•1ltor111e, H-. Groen ,,..._ "·Marl-• , , .. , ............. , .. , Cle .. ltnd 001 llJ Ol0-10 I• I SH llle :IOO 00J *-I 11 I eer,•r. ~llner ISi. Gl•wr 111, -.. Ill and Oler, .llJIODll. Finell Cll. Clarll Ill, '\ndolrwn Ill, S..mi.nto ltl end Gulden, Bulling Ctl W -Gtewr I.. Fin<,.. HR - CleYt l•nd, -ng OleMJ S, .,_.,_ J ,., ...... 1 ........ 1 M1lw ... k.. ooi 100 000-l II I S.11 Fr....:1"0 110 010 OOa -S 10 0 Sitton. EHltrlJ 161. Finger\ Ill end Moore. M•rt1ne1, 8 tue, Ro•l•nCI fl J, Lavelle !ti end Mey. S-11 ltl w -81ue L Sl•lon HR $en Fr•ncl.-:o, '"" A'•1,C••• ltl 5cotliMUlt, Mir.I Cl\IUllO 1 NLI I IJ 000 100 O-• IS ) O•lllend 101 101 100 1-1 ll I Krukow, Ceudlll (•>, Ca p1ll• 111. Horn•ndtt c 101 •nd Blackwell, McCettv. F11.,. ti/, Souu ltl and H .. th W -~l~. l H•r-1 HR ChlC•QO, Durham. College scores UC Btrlletey l, UCl.t. 2 Ar110M 10, use • Arllone SI '· Stenf0<d o COLLEGE SCBA atandlngs C•• St•I• Fullerloo u or S.n 01t90 l..on9 8eecn SI••• Ptpperdlnt W L l T GB 0 - l..Oyol• Cal St•le LOI AllQelOI UClr•1ne UC s ..... BMI»•• T"""'"y'1Gemot J 2 1 , 0 I 0 1 ' 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 l 0 1 I l lOl\9 Btecll St•lt •t C•I St•t• Fuller ion Cal Sitto Lo• AnQel•> •t UC l"'1ne l..OJOI• •I Pe-rd11W COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Coal! Conference Ct rr1tO\ Sen D•t90~H Ortn90 eo. .. Fullerton S.ntt AM Ml Sen Antonio Gronmonl T• .. •y'tGemH S•nte AN •I Or•"9• COHI Grou.--1 II Futrerion Cerritos•• S6n D1e90 ~,. W L GB . ' l l l l 3 11) l l •• .., 1 l 1 2 ) , 1 4 l'n Southern Cal Conference S.nl• Monica Cypre11 LA Herl>O<' Goldoln w .. 1 E"I LA R10H~ l..O\ At199le\ CC L4'Soutll-t T-r'•-" Gol«Hn W..I ti E•tl LA L4> Al\lltit\ CC el S.nte _,,,. LA HetDor t i Cypnos LA Soutllwest •t AIO Ii..- w L oe • l I 4 I I 4 I • s 1 • s l s • l J ' .... I t .... Mlaalon Conference SOUTHlllll OIVISIOlll ~n Dl090CC S.Odlebe<ll ~,,.., .. , .. n W L 0 1 s ) -s • .,. • 1 • 1\11 HOllTHlllN DIVISl()tt A1w•r\tOt ~11 Bernardino C1lrv' c ... 11., T ...... J'IO-U S.ddl-O •t Chaffey R1-.,.10e.i Cllru> S•n Berrwar<11no •I Soul"•""'" !>tn Diego C<: •I Ptlomtr • J s • 5 • HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS Sunset League Wutmln\IH EdlM>n W L Ga s 0 M•rltt• Hunlinoton a.at" Fountain V•ll•Y Newport Harbor T"""'''' Gemes Edl\on el Newport Harbor HMnll~on a.ec11 et Wotm1n•ler W""'°..S.Y'•Geme • 1 1 l 2 l , l 0 s F ount•ltt V'•Uty "' M.trtn• •I 8 1••t F111ct 111 Empire Le•gue K•l•ll• l041• Ck••" V'•w LOI At•rn1t0\ Cypreu Kennedy r-.,·.o ...... C.ypro" •I Ocean V••w l<•ltfl• et Ktnnedy LO• Alemllo. ., Loar• Misc. w L Ga s ' s I ) l 1 l 4 l I 4 )11> 1 • JI'> FOR THE RECORD I BUSINESS ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS I The boards of directors of Coldwell, Banker~ Co. and ftnt Newport Corp. have rnched an ' agreement ln principle on the terms of a merier of First Newport Into Coldwell Ban.lter'a commerciat real estate subsidiary. Coldwell Banker Com· merclal Group Inc. Walter UadJey has Joined North American · ' Economk Research Corp., a division of Newport Beach·bued NJMC, as head ol ill floancJaJ and economic research department. Kemteth a. Walts ia vice president, Bertea Aerospace Group or Irvine· based Parker Hannifin Corp. Leslie E. Card, formerly manager of transportation services for lbe city of Irvine. bas Joined the civil en1lneerin1 and planning firm of Jrvine·based Van Dell and Associates . Daniel C. Munhno or Orange has been uppointed to the board or directors or VTN Corp. or Irvine. American Dla1ao1tlu Corp. of Newport Beach has Wed with the Securities and Ex· change Commission a registra· lion s tatement relating to a pro· posed public offering of 550,000 shares or Its common stock. in· eluding 501000 outs tanding shares for account of selllng sh areholders. WALTZ J oseph Me•lll is president of Coda Enterprises Inc. of Irvine, a wholly owned sub· sidiary of Modulearn Inc. Coda CAiio ·manufactures and markets mic roprocessor ·based postal scale and piece counters. Fluor Corp. promoted William E. Nelson to vice president·corporate security and Dr. Gerald B. Slnykln to vice president·medical services. Both are based at corporate headquarters in Irvine. The Newport Beach architectural firm of Blurock and Partners has reorganized under the name Blurock Partnerships. Company president is Willfam Blurock of Newport Beach. Other senior partners are Alan E. Smith also of Newport Beach and Robert Hench or Laguna Beach USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5678 Ext. 322 BU~ ~var~ ~s v1c~ president cashier for the n.ew .M1s~10~ V1e~o National Bank now in organiza. lion m M1ss1on Viejo. 8U)lncl»AnftlM~~~~ In Business To Make Business Happen At Creatcve we have the money you need Loans from $25.000.00· for any business or investment purpose Where you deal directly with the Lender and not a loan broker. ·All loans secured by a combination of real and personal property 4425JAM 00REE ROAD • SUITE 180 . NEWPORT BEACH C ALIFORNIA 9266CJ C7141 75 2·7923 CONSIDERED REAL ESTATE INVESTING? EXCLUSIVE MEW PROGRAM llw, 1-. not a n nffc:r to <ot.'11 nor ,, •,o lK1tat1<in ut a111lffl.-r tu hu\' rh'-~ '•c:l1.lnOl~ llw offc:nn~ L., made onl~ bv rhl· Oftl'rtn~ ( "1rLUlar The trouble-tree way to invest en real estate FREE Seminar Wednesday. April 1. 7 00 to 8 30 pm in Newport Beach NO Negative cash flow NO Vacancy factor NO Landlord problems NO Maintenance problems • Conservative investment • Higher than average return * Long-term capital gains • Yearly tax shelter * Local single-family type property 1 ~o.ooo ro 2101000 Shan.!!> Heritage Bank Common Stock PRICE: $10.00 per c.hare F..1r an Uf°fl.nn~ ( 1rlular anJ a ~ub'i<:nroun A1.rrn·rnc:nr , pll'a.'>(: l llntat1 thl' R.-ink by ma1l 11r Mr-.. Hdl'n Web.on, A'"l~t:Jnt ( ·o rpor:itl' '°X'l.Tl'C:Jr,, hv tdl'phorw· ANAHEIM MAIN OFFICE 721 Nonh Eud1d Srn~ Anahc:1m, t.tl1tom1a 9ZHl11 1714 )991·3~) THE REAL ESTATERS LIMITED SU TIHG C.U DorltM today I 9 o.fft. to 4 P."'-1 • S•'W'tet ~Stana •t 'f0t.;, Of.\O' (Cell St0t• N•Mnt "°"' ., •• , COITA -... 641 -1289 ""'"-•"'•· 111111110H v_,495-0401 ,_,c._c. ........... (le" '*fl> ,,., el •• _, P•wy ) Prices for 3·27·81 e-111 et-1.W.M SllHr c1. su.11 ~~,:-~=- 100Cor-s SO Puos 90% SCI ver a.q. •• , loll U4S.OI SUI.to U.tt.oo IHt.ot uea.u un.u '4SUO ,..,_.. 1111% 106S'!lt ,,_. __ ,._I" Celfw•-..-• (714) 556-6150 Soulh CoHt Ptei• VIiiage -.. -... CM ___ Coet4,...,t) 751-6191 ''Succeaafu/ retirement planning atrategl•• for th• 11180'•" A look .at tax-sheltered Keogh (H.R. 10) and Individual Retirement Accounts O.te: 1\Meclaw, March 31 at nm.: 8:30 p.m. Bank of Newport Headquarters 2200 Pacific Coast Highway at Avocado Newport Beach . California The 1980's will be a challenging decade for persons of all ages. Successful retirement planning In today's complex tax and economic environment requires that you have a complete understanding of the options available to you. "Succeasful retirement planning strategles·for the 19801s,·· sponsored by the Bank of Newport, Is designed to help you develop a succeufUI personal retirement program. If you· are aelf-employed Qr not presently participating In a quallfted penalOn program you won't want 'to ml• this popular seminar. PINM call Kathy Barker a1 (714) 7eo.6000 tor further Information and r ... rvatlona. .... ,,. ,,..klltfl • ..,..,, •• Its the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 Everyone appreciates a winner, and Daily Pilot readers are no exception. 1980 Orange County Press Club First Place winner --Gary Ambrose :. Best Inside Page Layout and Sports Photo . Gary Ambrose MUD OLYMPICS Award winning photo coverage of your community comes to you every day in the Daily Pilai 642-4321 ,._Metl9tvHHMt•llln,IMllrtlM• \ • Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 QUEENIE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE IY~tl 0,. TMa AlflfllAL ITATaMaWT 0' CAVALIElt INSUllANCI COlll'OltATIOH, -St. ~ Pl«e. kltl,_, MOJU02. Tolel edmlttedUM1J 117.Jtt,• Tetel llAlllllllft •.t".1'2 S..clel wrplw lwncK f • c .. lt•• l*~/Gwren1, C..1>1i..ll "-'"'°'' o.-11 .. .-.ooo Greu ii.lct-111 -u ntrllluled '61rphn U1 ... 7,YO U11eu19ned l..nft (Wl'JMYJI .. 1,4111,u.t S..rpl111 H r999rd1 POlkyfloldff' $21,W .,otS lnc.,,,e for I .. .,.., Ul .. 7',SJll Olt11ur,_111or tr. 19., .. n.ose,m W• llereoy '9rllfy 11\el the ebo,,. llt,.,. .,.. In «<onlll11u •ltll 11\e ""-' $11teone111 lor Ille .,.., 9nded Oe<•m-JI, '"°· ...-to Ille 111-enc;e Com· mlu loner Ol tlle State of C..llfornle, __ .,. 10 1-. J. E. B ... Of', PrHICl9nl 111.C. Fel,.rstOll, Secretary P11llll1hed OtMIVt Coesl Delly P llol, MMcll JO, ll. April t. J, l. ,,., 15'1-tt PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE atU7 NOTIC• 0' TltUIT•al IALa S.VNOl"SllO,THI U.Ne. T.S. Ne.S~ ANNUAL STATIM•NT T .0 . SEllVICE COMPANY u chily o.. •l>POlnt..:i TnistM ""*r ,,,. 1o1-1no Stlec l 111surente Compeny, JOIS deurllled cMed OI lruJI WILL, SELL CederSpr!n91,0ell•J,Tuu/Ult AT P UBLIC AUCTION TO THE v .......... OKe-ll, ,.. HIGH EST BIOOEll FOR CASH Tole l edmltled •u•h UJ,1St,9U (PO•lll• et time OI H ie In •••lul Tot•l ll•llllitleJ )l,7ot,I .. money OI Ille Ulllteel St•lHI •II ri91\I, StM<o•I 1un>1u1 '"""' o Hiie end onternl COll~•.,.O lo end now Cepil•l IHlld-Ul)/G ... renly M id lly II -Mid Deed OI Tront In Cet)ll•llStelutory Oepoill U00,000 Ille pr-n y llereln.fter dK<rl- Gron paid-In -T lllUSTOlll GOROOH BltAHAM elld <Ofttrilluled ,..,pluJ .. eos.JJt NANCY CARROLL. BENEFICIARY. Uneulgned lunch hurpluu S.J0 ,4" OIVERSIFIEO VENTURES, INC., e $11rplu1 •• r-rd1 C elllornil corPor ellon. Recorded pollcyllolder• 11.uo.1:11 Auouu 11. '"° n fftStr No JOOS 1n l11Come ror111e y .. r 1•.m .ttJ Dook 1l10S P•o• 1110 of Olflcl•• OllllurlHMnh ror Ateord1 In IN olh<• ol the Recorder Ille yur H,llt~4 of Or•1191 c:-ty, wid -OI tru1I we 1>er11>y ce'11r1 '"•' Ille •Do•• de1cr1111, llle ro11-1no pr_,,, 111m1 i re on ectorcwnu •iln Ille An· A Co11oomlnl"m con11111no or tne n11el Sletemen l for 1111 y .. r ended rollowlno Otctmller JI. ttlO, m •d• 10 tn• tel Urtlt No U in Ille County ol 11\lurenu Commiu l-r or Ille St•le Ore1109, Sitt• of C..lilornt•, of 11\el of C•llrorlll•, Pu<l•Hntto ••• c ., u •n Condomlnl um pr o r 1 <1 O.W. 8e11nlller . Pr1J1dent ducrllled An 111•1 etrt•ln Co n· R.C Fetllerston. S.Crttery domlnlum P!en recorded In -10/90 Publls~ Or-Coeat Oelly Piiot P90• ~. Olflclol RecOf'd\, In Ille olllCt M•rch JO, JI, April 1, l, 1. tftl U1'·1l or lh• <CM#ll' recorder of 0r .. oe Coun· ly ilucl\ iHen 11t1no llerelnefler •• ---!erred to u "Ille Condominium PUBLIC NOTICE Plen"I. -••defined In 11\et cert.in Oetl•r•llon of Covenenh, Conditions ''"' SYNOPSIS 0' THI( ANNUAL STAf•MINT 0' •nd Reatrlctlon1 for NtWPOrt Cresl Hom•o-f\ AJIOCl•tlon, recorded In -IOMI, -• .,. OfflCl•I Records or O••noe County -In Amendment recorded In -IOJM, -.. ,, Of· Gull llUurenu Comp•ny , 0 10 hc••I Record\, •nd Amendnwnl , .. Bell .. 1tw, l(en~1 Coty, Mluourl Miit corded In -107'1, -Sii, Ofllcl•I Yt1r E ..... Dec•-JI,,.. Rteordl ("llle Otcl•rMlOll"I -Ille Tolel edmttt.O llMIJ Jll2,Mt,ott O.Clerellon OI Mt>eutlOft tor Lot J of Totel lle llililfH IOS,907,SI) fr•<I Ho. 7'11 (Ille OtclerlltlOft of An· Spec1e11urplu• runch O ,..utlOftl recor-Ot-11 1tn '" C•Pll•I pe1d·up1G ... ren1y Cep•l•ll -1oai. -SAJ, Offl<lel RecOf'd\, Ste1u1ory 0.POJll S,000,000 In 1111 ollk e OI IN ,_, Re<°'*r OI Gron P•iO-<n encl Orenoe County conlrolluled 1urplu• :i..°",IJO I DJ An undiY•-l/UCll onternl In \Jn•U•Qned fund• rsurplu\I H .lll.•'1 end 10 Ille ,_., .. 95 deilned In Surplu' •• r-rdJ Ille Oecler11t1on -In tlW O.ClarlltlOft Pohcynoldef\ l•,Ul,UJ ol Anneutlon lltlno Loil of TrKt No. Income ror lhe Y••• l•.JSl,S41 1111 ,. per mep recorded In -JOI Oilllur~hlor P•O~I " end H of MIK•ll•neou; Ille yur 7l,l41,79' Mep1. on Ille othu ol Ille Co.,111, We ner.c>y <•'111Y 111•1 Ille •llO•• Recorder.,. ..,d 0r._ County_ •tem\ ••• '" eccordence '"''"Ille An l<I Eacluslw HJement• -r•· "U•I St•t•menl IOr Ille y .. r •nded ,,.,,, 10 Y id Unit No. ~ •II •• ~· Otc•mller ll, ltlO. m•d• to 1111 spec1f1telly deloned In Ille Co n- 1n1urenu Commlul-r of Ille St•le clomlnlum P!en •ncl Ille Oe<leretlOft ot i:a1o1orrw•, --nt 10 11.. ld l A -•<l~w .. ~, to UM O W B•nlllJltr, Presldenl Ille co.....-•r• -r«Ultln Of llle 111 C Fetller1lon, Secret••' proitet tOfll<ll ,.. .. -or will lie de· P ub11.-Orenoe Coell Oelly Pilot, •tlooed on IN following deKrl-rNI ~ere II J0, )1, AP.Al 1, 2. J, 1'91 Ull-11 pr-rty PUBLIC NOTICE ( 11 Lot I OI Tr« I No. 1151, H per mep rec~ In -J02, ~ 1 tot one luslve, Mltcellaneout Meets. re<· ordsotOr-c-ty,C..llfornle. EXCEPTING THEREFROM 111•1 porllon ol l•nd Incl-wltllln Peret• I I H 11\0wn °" • m~ rec:orded in -H , Pftll ,. of Percel Ma~. In Ille OI· Allenltt l~urence Company, JOU r1Ce ol Ille C:-ty Recorder ol Oranoe Ceder $prll\9l, Oelles. T .. H 7S21t County, c.tllorlll•. a tut SYNOl'SISO, TH• ANNUAL STAT•M•NT 0 .. Y .. ~ ...... ~lt, t• IJI LOii I, Jend4ol Tr«I Ho. 7111, Tole• edmlned eJMh .... 111.111 H per mep rec:or-In llooel lOI, i>aoe• Totel ltellllltle\ •.IU ,$11 ll •nd M, Mltcall-1 Meps, re<· Speclel JU<ptu11unc1, O ordlofOr-C-ly,C•lllorrtle. Capil•I l'el<hlPIG ... renly E II CE PT I NG THEREFROM Cepil•llSt•tutory Oepoill J.000,000 l\OWe••r. enr -ell ••<lusl ...... Grou pelct-on end m enll eppurtene nt to e ll Con· COfttrllluled w rphn IU,.al dofl'llnhun Unll$, H C..,Cl119 Mid Uno I Unoul~ lund• 1 surplus I t ,4t0, t IJ No U , -or .., ... ..., referred to In sur,lus •H*9<0<d• Ille Oe<ler .. lon Of' IM Oe<lerMIOll, H Policyl\Otde,. •.>u.s•• •menc1t<1 lllCome lor Ille , .. , S,•73 ... 1 EXCEPT THEREFROM ell oll, OH, Ol11Nr.-11 for ml,..rel1 elld otller 11,drocer llons, IM, .. , S,Ml,4ll lltlow • de9l1I of 500 fMI, wllllout Ille We 1>ttot0y cerltfy lllel Ille •Don rllll!I ol Jurfeet entry, H reMnt<I In Ito"'' •re 1n eccorcwnu .. 1111 Ille All· 111strumenll OI record.. nuel Sletement ror tlle yeer ended Tiie P'-1Y-.... deKrflltd _, Oecem oer JI, ltto. med• t o the no1 hi¥• • .. ,., -"'or CommOft 111111r•nc• CornmlMi-r of the Sl•t• dHlgnetlon Olr«llona sulfklent to ot Cellrorfll•. oo;r-111to 1ew. •oc•t• Ille pr-rty mer lie ootelMd O W Benftlller, Pretldellt 11, i..11mlt11119 •-m en r._11 wltllln Ill C Fetl\enlOft, 5e<r•l•ry ten d•J'' rr..., Ille flrsl puOflcellOft ot Publl1 ..... Or-C-1 Oelly Piiot. 11111 notice to Ille -lk l<lry •hoJe MN<ll JO, JI, AO<ll I, J, J, 1 .. 1 UJl .. I neme ---ll . OIVERSIFIEO ------------~VENTURES, INC., IJOO Main Street, •tOO,Solll•AN,Cellfomlet1101. 'AC911C YllW ....., .. Al,AH Cemet~ Mortuary Chaoel 3500 Pac1f1c ViflW Drive Newport Beach 644-2700 MceobKll MOnvA .. S Laqun• Beech 494-9415 LaQuna Hills 788-0933 8*\ Ju.n C.plstreno 496-1776 tullCM LA~MT. OUYI Mortuwv • C.""t•rv Cret19tory 1625 Glalef Ave . Cotta Mese ~ "(If• llrwt --or common <IH· 1enet10ft 11 ,._,, a!IOY•. no w•rr..,IY 11 o lvtn H to '" comptetoneu or cor- reclneu> "Tiie lltnefkl•ry under H id Oold of Trvst, llY fHIOll ot llrHCh or aer.1111 In ,.,. ot1ll9et1on1 H<ured 111erelly, IWretolore ••«uted encl d• livered to Ille 11nd1nlone<1 • written Oec/erellon of 0.f•ull end O.mencl lor ~It, -written notice Of llrH <ll t nd ol •••<lion 10 ceuu the 11n· de rs19,..d to Mii H id property to t•Ulfy Y id Ol>floetlonl, e nd l,_rufler Ille lllldertlllled ceuwel wld notice of llrH cll end el electlon to lie recor- 0.etmlltr •. 19IO' • lnltr. No. 11• In llOO« 1 .. 1 119111 .00, Of .. Id Offl<lel Record,, S.ld ,.,. •Ill De -· llul •lt'-1 <••en•nl "' werrenly, ,._, or Im. pllH , r...,-dlng 11111, llMNMIOft, or en<UITllN'lnCft, to pey tlW r-.lnlno prl11Cl1NI _,. Of Ille "°"UI ~wed •v wlf o.e.i et Trwt, wltll IMemt at lfl..._-~~llaflY, un<llr Ille WIN ti MN a..-fll Trwt, lffl , Cllar .. t .,._ • ...,._ el tl\e r,.,, ... .,..., ._.,.,... "....,..., Ml40..-f/1Tf\lll.. Self Wlf Wiii M lltlf on T,,..y, ... '· "'' .. 11:• •. ,,, .. •t ,,. efftc• ti T.O. Senl<• ~y. 8Mlll el r-er, Mte 11 .. 101 One City 9o<M•er• ... ,. Ot ... c;.eillWllN. Al tM 1lnw tf IN lftlti.t Ml~lell " 1111• Mtice ....... .,_. .... ,,.,.1<1 Ml•111tt tf llM ellll .. tlen MtllfM 9' 1119-.W 411t<rllled ...._el ·~ .............. eott• ••• ,_.., .,. .--11 .U,Ut.4S. ,. ....,,,,.,. tN '""""' *· ¥911 ..,.y <ell (7HJ '17 ...... Oeta: ~llt, 1•1 T .O. N•Wtea COMf'MtY •NlclT,_..., ..... ...,... a.l. .._..,., o..c.ter ........ ...... c.. ..... ,,.., __ 1'•11•-Or .. CMtl Oellt' l"llCIC M41r<ll "·II, •. l•1 IMHt u,. ........... , ..... , .. ,. ,__, __ to ...... -~ col • C1.1116fW;- 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • .5 6 . 7 8 ( t~'l'ntfth IA11I f\oht tt ............... PtOOftt l•• Soc'••J c.~lvt.• Tn lff'I• SERVICES Stnttt Otrf'CitN') EMPl.OYMENT & raErAHTION ~~. lt1•tr1Ht~ Jut.W•n't~• ll•IP Wontf<I M .. f' MERCHANDISE Gt'M'fll a..b.tih1M Mt .,K'e lo.u M•nN &~1p loMa,Po.tt lotit• Rtttt l1'trttt Aoau ,S..11 loottSlopo Doth ...... ~·~· 806u.Stor•a• TUNSrGITATION AJrtr1n ~:~~-,~~ M•M =~~!:~ .... ""' Motor Hm• S.le Rtftt Trti'-n.Trewtl X::;.'ti~~1!1'i.,o AUTOMOBILE a.,..,., ~ AM#qliW9 i.'11.Ulth Alf'C'U•lMHl Vd uflo ~.t~!~.~od- Trwh v .... ""'" lA•u•c AwtM Wanlrd AUTOS, IMromo Gttwu l AJf•k~o Audi A\Ot .. t"'•lt) .... ..:.,,. er.-O•lt\U\ ... ,,., . .... i -· J•.:w•r JI#'*"" K•',..."""'"'• .._ ..... .... d. Mt'ttt'f'I~• .._,nt loll. MOil """' '-*••• P.-v.:f'Vf t'ut••,... kltlUlwll lloli. ""1'" "°'" ~·b £.':':r" TtYul• Triumph Voa•••••• Voho AUT8S, NEW ~ NEW ·-·-. ., ... .. ·--•• 1111 lat IW .... IW 1• , .. IWI ·-IOll ,.,. 1• ... ·-·-... ·-IM 1))0 ... 11119 JD lllO ·-·--21• 2D ---<DM -,,. -- -•10 .. , -----------.,,. --ml --.., ------ liOIO -!WO ---ttrlO -.., 1110 tlJO "JO 9140 "'° •llO tllll tllQ - M l -WIU WI) '"' ... -tlll'I -llNI llW ... -""' .u tN1 ---Ml ---In• BUllNlllMIN Cor'9eot th• DAILY ltlLOTfof .............. ,..., ....... eounty r•qulrt••"" ftr ..atn1 • 9'1oUUoue .................. MMlt1 UT.• ·- .. OBITUARIES It , .... ......,. Metke: All r .. a eatate •d· verthed In tbla Dtwtpaper I.a subject to t.he Federal Falr HOul· LD1 Act ol 1918 which mak• It Wepl to Id· vertlle "any preference, llmltatlon. or dh· crlmlnatlon baaed on r ace, color, religion, sex, or national orlcln . or an lntA!nUon to make any such preference, Jim itetlon, or dla· crtmlnat.lal." Thia newspaper will not knowlnf ly eccept eny advert sin g ror real eatate which la in viota- tlon of the lew. YIOIS: ....... Mn slMMIW cMdl tt.o6r .. dolly ... =~ ron •••••· n.. DAILY PtLOT •.-s labllty for .... flnt h1corr.ct IHertlo11 Giiiy. HMHsforSale ' The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 ...... For We ...... Fors. He.Ms For Wt ....... for We ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ...,... IOO:l G._NI 1002 Q..._... IOOJ G1M1.. · 1002 ........•............................... , ........••.......................•................. \\ I ',I I '1 '\ TAYLOR CO. 1\1.,\1 r c1 1\:--.. '.11w1· l!Ht; HAllOI VIEW HIUs--+475,000 Lovely 5 Bdrm , 2·story "Hillsborough '' home for large family. Pvt rear yard w/pool, huge patio & tall trees. Inviting 2-sty lge entrance hall w/vaulted ceiling , spacious liv. rm .. formal din. rm & f am. rm. Sundeck off master bdrm, 2 fireplcs, 3-car garage. Inch.ad~~ land. . WISLEY M. TAYLOI CO .. UAL.TORS 2 I I I S.. JCHNf!M ... load NEWPORT CIMTEI, M.A. 644-49 I 0 EASTSIDE s 112,000 Lovely 2 Bdrm, 1 ~ bath condo in East.side Costa ........... 1751 PknadelSw WILSON PAii COllDlllUMS CHECI & COMPARE 11ISE FEATURES 90% RNltl:ltC 123A% INTER. r HARBOR AREA LOCATIO I SIZE-l~ SQ. FT. I ALL SHOPPING i.; BLOCK I AJR CONDITIONING I CEMENT DRIV ES (WALK IN CLOSE.J'S I MICRO OVEN I COMPACTOR I DISHWASHER I DBL GARAGE W/OPENER. WAID INVESTMENT INC. SALIS OMCI C714) 6Jl ... I JIO w. w.... ..... ~ ... e....w....c.. Cole ~ o/ newporl Mesa with double car garage. Owner anx· •••••••••e••••••••••••• ious-will help finance! G .... ral I 002 Take advantage! Catt 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, frplc . Free & clear. Owner will carry 1st. Priced at $310,000. associated J REALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64$.7171 ASSUME 81120/o LN. l•~~·~~~llllll­~1im'1~3h~~~~ t~rt~ !"~~1~ -t:~~,!I~ heated pool and frui; ~§'9i§fi:J::J trees. Callnow979-5370. -• - ALLSTATE AEALTOAS 2 UNITS $941900 OCEAHNONT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unfum. New SSSOyrly. IAYRtOHT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum Mint cond. S8SO yrty. 8110 1< E RS Rf A l TORS JUJ 1 W 8olhoa f, 1 l lbb • PRIDE OF MESA VERDE This beautiful home ex- em plif ys Mesa Verde. The quiet cul de sac location and the family oriented floor plan allow the home owner the maximum enjoyment of this best of all Costa 675·5511 -- LOVELY "E" ftLAH. Most popular MCHS.I enr bullt 111 the lluffs: Situated °" sptehcular C)f'e.,._lt wfth wt• •iew. l ldr, F.R. IHt buy 111 ffM area at $252,900. COLE OF NIW'OIT llAL TOIS 2 5 15 E. Coast Hwy., CorOM ~ Mar 675-5511 Super investment' Two 2-Bdrm units. one with fir eplace ! Current in· come-S7.c> mo. Flnanc· ing ! 1 yr home protec· tion plan inc luded. Hurry. this won't last. 646. 71'11 CHANNa fttOKT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. unfum S7SO yrly. associated Mesa comm uni lies . !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There's even a play I· THE REAL ESTATERS COSTAMISA 511-$125,500 OWMY SAYS SEU Not an add-00 or con· version. A real 5 Bdrm femily home in one of Costa Mesa's nicest areas. Handymans de- U&bt. CaU now and seve! @ Sf.A COVE PROPERTIES 714-63 J ·6990 SI 081500 REMODELED Costa Mesa 3 Bdrm, pride of ownership beau- ty on tree-lined street. Compl w/hot tub! Total· ly remodeled; vaulted open beamed c lgs . skylights, lots of glass. Huge covered patio w/builtin BBQ. A rare rind -ca ll to aee ! 646-71'11 THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCUFf VACA.MT Reduced $25,000. Desperate owner says bring . all offers. No quallfying. Low down. 4 Bdrm single story home. totelly upgraded. Call for mor~ details. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 ·6990 - FIXER! $10,500 Total ·cash needed to close escrow on this 4 Bdrm, den, 3 bath, raml· ly room, fl.replace, patio, huge yard . "A Han- dyman's Speeial". Only $1'15,000. CaU us todey for an appointment for details on thia revolu- tion ary new program called T.l.C.K.E .T . Me-2113 THE :REAL ESTATE RS v.tte.suo.1• Tb1e remodeled backbay home baa a ll'Nl view ol the mountains and backbay atta. J Bdrma, den, faaall)t room, pool Ir 1pa are some of the fHtUrH. Tbt ..... t•r 1uJte baa v•Wttd e.U· in.. CWIWD We work lo tht bat.la ud a ba9cony. ·Owner will consider Wit Ind T.D. wtth ID'Xt ...... BROKERS REALTORS 'O.'' 'W 8olbr,rJt.o 1 • !b&I OLDIE BUT GOODIE Older home in Laguna. 1 Bdrm , centrally located. We tking distance to beach a nd shopping. New copper pipes, roof and wood fence. Owner very m otivated, will carry rinancinc. Call '152-1700 THE REAL ESTATE RS Learn how you c an enjoy a profitable real estat e invest m e nt without negative cash fl o w , pr o p e rty house. Call 752--1700 THE REAL ESTATERS OCEANFftOMT Choice comer duplex. 3 bdrm . 2 bath up. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath down. Can convert to a larger home. SELLER WILL H ELP l''l NANC E ! $895,000! lalboa lay ftrop. .""°"' •675-7060• NOD()WN VA 3 Bdrm, dining room, 1500 sq.ft. o( living area. No down VA. $93,950. Cell now. 540-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS management, vacancy i----------• factor. 7:30 MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 27, IN OUR OFFICE, 2515 E. COAST HIGHWAY. PLEASE CALL FOR RES ERVATI O N S . 6'75·3411. ~J LohofC...,,.. in this lovely tree· shaded bungalow on ex· tra large lot. 3 Bdrm, beam ce i li n g s , worksho . 189.500. Rr SIOFNTIA. RI Al r Sf All, !)fR\llCfS HOME + GUEST APARTMENT On the BALBOA PENINSULA this well located 3 bedroom 2 bath home with 2 fireplac es & spectacular night view has a bonus in a quaint 2 Bedroom 1 bath guest A~. $400,000 IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 POlITICIAH C S H R W H 8 H 0 [ S R 0 H K R A 0 E E z A N P 0 L I T I C A N S X P S L 0 E N R N W 0 F I C I S C M A H T E R T O O l A A A W F T P P E E N A R M U E A S 0 I U I W I 1 E H T 0 T R R K E MI Ht CE l l REC ASE EEK .IR Q H A R 1 S 0 A R A M E M S K V P N D S•KTTPNNSGTOSAORTGY N 8 E A I T T 0 N I N I M E W £ N M A W I R T L Y N 1 R Q k W 1 I € R G A Z I A Y P 0 K N 0 r Y A I Y Q 0 K T K U k M L I N V R I L S E Y S N J E E G NAA LUAYAETAD 1 DNACRR C I R R F I I E R E L E £ H 0 R A W S H N U R J L 1 E k N l K I Q U R 0 E A NEWPORT LOCATl~Ol Totally upgraded Hd chor1nh19ly decorahd hotne, cloM to schools ..ct lhoppllMJ. With l bd. + daft. this holM offers 11t11tral carpets, "'ir rond wardrobes, heat.ct pool, dtcb, copptt" plwllbi11g 011d many other ClfMftltfH. OwMt-will a11lst 111 fhlc.dRg. S 192,500. WATERFRONT HOME . tM HLAI t <,lA H °"'·'• H111 , ... J, ,, .. , 315 Marine Ave Balboa Island 673-6900 CE llDBll ILllRS CD. OVER SS YEARS OF SERVICE MESA YBDE -llST IUY No Question, But What This Is One Of The Finest Bu.ya Jn The Area! Lovely Four Bedroom Home On A Large Comer Lot. Completely Remodeled. Large Alssumable Loan. Submit Offers. Only $1'5,000. NEWflORT HEl~HTS FOUi.PLO Located On Quiet Street Near Shopping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income. Mi n im um Vacancy F ector. Four Two-Bedroom Units . Assumable Loans. inspect With Offer. Reduced To $350,000. 759-9100 ·--•r••••w•··· #2 Corpor• fltna Mewport c ...... STAR GAZER~.,:., &--::...:.;.-'-'-.;.;..,---&t ti H ll POLL~l' J'1. \'MW 0o1/1 ""'"''' (N.de J:i. Y Au•'''"' ro lh• Ston To d••tlOI> mtuo~ lo• Tutsdoy. reod WO<d• CO<•~ong IO .......i,,.,.. of you. Zodooc btr•h sign .. ... 1-, .............. ··~61\t ·-10.0 ,. '°""' t Otr 10M1y "0.0 "°" 1>C011 ltQI 1t eo..i ••Aid ., ..... .. , ..... ··-lOY-11 •ecn n•-n-, ....... ·-·-,, .... ·-It-JOOto, )I ()o U O.t ))Wt;•• >f •tiM<t• »•~· ... ___ ,,...,_ ... ,...,,.. ,. .. .,. 600.--•t~tC ., .. _ QA ... .... w.,. .. Ot .. '"'"" •fYWf .. c.. .. .. ,,._ '°' ... 11 fo 1110. .,._ ....... .. _ .. ,_ ., ... ... ·-.. ,_ l l W .. fll u ...... UOt .. N ....... .. .._ ·-ltlo ...... ·-10c... ... '''W\el'IC:•t ,,.,,._ n w..-,._ ""' n r-n M•• N OIM...C. "-· '°"" It At .. ·-D I• .. .._ ·-·-.,_ ·-·-·-)Qt f)Nc1Knl '::~=' SCC\\.4llA-~~~s· ------N11o4"' C:UY I ..... ..................... ,... ._ ttt'Cllllbled _. .... ... 10 forCll i-...,.,i. _. I TAMDAL • I )' I I I I SCURH I • 1 111'1 l .... .... .... , _N_E_H ... ,,__NA-1 ~l TM llfltlt company '* a r I' I I 11range way of telllftO you that --• • • Yo'Uf 1>111 •• O'l9l'dlle. TMy !Mll ·1:::o:A::v:L~:t:o:::i rov aome-. l I I' I' I I 1 • e-= :-.. ~ ~· ----.... -... -----yeti ...... "-......... ' ...... • ,...._ ....... JlQ .................... ....... •• • -: H ,.,. w. ...... Por w. I ....... ,..,. We Orange Cout OAil. y ~LOT/Monc!!f. March 30. 1981 a H1•" ,_ S. ~...._...for S. ~ •• ••••• ••••• • • ••••••••••• ····•••• •••• ·~·••••••••• .................. _ .......................... c.·;;;;•· ........ iooz •••: • 1001 c .... w... IOt4 Mlian,..,. s. .....,, ,_ S. Minn,_ S. "--t '-S-. ••-• • 100 61•1• tOOJ ttr •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............................................... ••••••••• Cuyoualfordhom.pay· H•U•••.._. IO ... t044 ... .,..,...... 1069 ... .,....._. INt OIAJIE COUNTY'S ti. ·1 •El OFFERS MOTIYATill PtJ$ ti% co..essaOH NQDUll..S MOPHO.-PllS NO ADVHTI~ •S 5 MULTIPU IOAID$ FIH SICUY'AJtY. 12'.!.~ 540.3666 ol ··-.. .._ IW VEm •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .................... ••• m•ts ·-·-per ------------moatb. but don't have a •STAllll HOME '-'l.4.-<a<a~ ~~::.-:a~~~:~: ~;,~~-=~ ~;.:'~°';~ :::·~b~-a=u: ''LINDA 1ra.r" )pm. VERY PRIVATE yarcb. formal dJnln•. heavy fixer. Owner will help &t. ...... ., lmmacu.lat and ready 1bakt roal. Call QOW '°" wltb coat. Call for de· LIOO ,_ ,...... t006 lo move In. Close lo lnformatlOD ,.,.,dins En.Joy Newport &each to ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1choolt lad 1boppla1. UM ~"' uawn. loan. the fullelt in tbl1 lu:x· IAY .. OMT '1'15.900. Seller w/carey part of wiout condooo the bay. do You'll have a 1tt down 30al0llhl'. '* "" R alt tbt b11yen wn P•Y· view from u .. Uvln1 Older Duplt.x. Cmtom Cote ~ Y men\ Is UYt brtn1 any room aad from your home site on the w*ter. & lnvestm~t offer b•lcony you have au the sets,000. WlU ucban1e. 640-5777 llST ratel * *$151J11. color and drema that an '1eB-06S4 IMTOWM artJst could conjure up ...... ,., b 11 1007 4br, remodeled kitchen, Try SlJ,OOOdown and H · M.50,000. ••••• •••••••••••••••••• HOUSE on bulldable R·2 pl1asb carpeta, custom sume this brand new 2 '3 I• 7 lOO M.I. lot. W estaide Bluff area. drape1, rre.h\y painted, Bdrm allacbecl home In CUSTOMH~• All 557 5150 11 ............. __ _. .. _r •-auper Woodbridge. Aak· _. · · ae er -........ .., • Ing only SlU,900 and •--....._ p • • baa priced tbousaada -•-• MESA del Mar, ta. 5 br. 3 t>.low maritel value for avallablerilhtnow. Stepa to tMty and beach. ba, remd1d. kitch, choice quick aale. Creative . , . INVESTORS ~-~I ',''' I I ' , , I .' 111() TICll1' o,,.n JJ.01'6• Satlrday and W., APRIL 4tta Alll 5111 FOR SALE -MME OFFER !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j 11 now in Coata Mesa and orrerin& ruidential pro- perty with: No Ne&atlve CHh Flow features: 3 Bdnna, fam\. sw.ooo. Alt. 557-51.50 terms ok·beUer buny · ~I ridge batha, ceramic tile Desirable Eutaide·Abbie f,, 80lOCIMICS Pos si ble Lease Optio n . OWNER·&.~OKER on Premises! Boat Slip for 65' Yacht. 5 Bdrm, security Gate, + Community Tennis Courts and Clubhouse. This beautiful new home of cpt. Under milt at I!J\\bodlt ly room and library, 2"41 ~ T Reak1 thruout. 4 fireplaces, Way 2 Br. Bil eoxuo· r: L"WL 551·3000 Oak cabine t s. 2 lot. Fruit trees. alt. REALTORS tnt arrHuftw~.lrvw c~·L OCIAM AV ALLEY VIEW Co1y 3br, 2ba home, den, frplc, etc. + 3 more separate homes on le lot. Call now for a~pt. $485,000. Owner wJll rioance. • Roy McC ..... Rttr 541-7729 EXECUTIVE MESA VERDE Very papular Republic home with covered en· try, massive living room and f amily r oo m , rireplaces. elegant SIDIM SI 0.000 clowa Owner wants out! Huge famlly room, formal dining room, huge cor· ner lot. Bring all orfers. SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 LUSE Of'TIOM Lux urlous. custom con· do. 1700 sq. ft. 2 frplcs . 3 bdrm, 21h baths. S800 mo. 642-4623. fo rm al dining room. ------ huge country kitc hen leCMttiful Co.dos overlooks sparkling (i)UAILMEADOWS pool. 3 car garage and TUSTI ... many extras Owner will " carry 1st TD at 12% in-5% Dow.. 5% c~ terest. Priced only al to selling agt. or will pay S265,000. Call to see. all buyers closing costs. 546-2313 Very lrg, rrplc, gourmet THE REAL ESTATERS kitchen, pool, whirlpool, tennis crts . spacious grounds. 832-2300 Ask for Sandy IA YFROMT COMDO-SUIMIT Fantas tic value with excellent owner financing. This 2 bedroom adult condo has a beautiful main bay view on fee land with boat s tip a vailabitity. This is the best priced main-bay waterfront condo in Newport Beach. SUBMIT ON TERMS. $335,000. 644 ·9990 673· 1020 skyliaht.s. stained glus garage, covered patio, ' ... 1 ~ASSOCIATES ~ windows, French doon, wine cellar, remodeled 1-..111 -bgiHleedt IO 17141121-1210or121Jtltl-ll6J No Tenant Problems Capital Gains Only Hi&b Returns (not 2nd Trust Deeds> 2 patios and xtra lar&e bath. S130,000. Flexible ••••••••••••••••••• •••• IY APPOIMTMINT OHL Y aarage and beautiful linanclng . owner. THISHAICIS , ............ -.... spa off the mast~r bdrm. 642.8683 W e a t h e r ed c e d a r -...-... Offered at $477,000. For Inf........ shakes, that ii. Custom ~~ an appointment to 1ee, E . Side C .M. 3Br. Clean & sharp Tri-Plex designed 3 bdrm. ram Call for ln!ormatlon • RED CARPET 754-1202 call 5'0-1151 $117,500. Recent 500 sq. in best H.B. location. rm, 2 baths. Extensive -----------------• n. addition. New kltch, Seller ~ willing lo carry use or wood glass & ,~.s:. HERITAGE den, restucco 60xl25, 291 paper & use a graduated ceramic Ule. Beam cell· Monte Vista. OHer. payment plan with a ing, frplc.$1~.ooo. Ow /B .. ,,,.,, ~-minimum down pay· Missioo Realty n r-.. _._. ment. CaU now for more 1714)4~-0?31. . • REALTORS DOLLHOUSI Coplstr.oleoclt 1011 Imm aculate 2bdrm info. •• •• •••• ••••••••••• • ••• townhouse, many xtras· The owner of this pro-SPECTACULAR owner will rlnance. pe rty &tarted at the OCR-..... VJ..-Broker participation. ground and worked his ~ s'" St 14 .950. 646·21'2 or way up through the Walk lo beach. custom 759.41.81 . kitchen, bath and roor. 3Br 3ba, ~acre. Pines & ------~-- Then he painted. carpet· pvt drive. $650,000. LIG ASSUM. ed and detailed The re· Be a c h Ro ad R It Y · LOAN suit is a beautiful cot· 496-0998 tage near downtown C----........ -Mcr---,-0-Z-2 Balboa Island and the oroeo un So Bay front. You must •••··~··••••••••••••••• see this one. Asking Jasmine Creek decorator S2'14 950 home. plan l on green- Assume SBs,000 at 91A%. OWC 2nd. Beaut 5 Br pool home In Mesa Verde. Only 1215,000. J o h n & Sally Cox 21drM $17,500 Gr eat starter or rental h o m e . Qui el nei&bborhood. SOX130' R3 lot has plenty of room for kids to play. Seller has agreed to carry a 2nd and yoo can assume the loan with monthly payments of $865/mo. Beller Hurry-Call Now' 2Br cabana & trlr. sublet- ting allowed, 3 pvt bchs, pool & fishing pier . $29,900. (714) 499-3816 • ~ lslautd RJty belt immac. s:m.soo 67).8700 6'0-8l4.S DU..UXRXER! OCEAHVIEW Bring your paintbrush & broom to save$$$ on this di rt y dawg! ! Prime Laguna Beach duplex w/attached garage. Sub· mil oHer! 759·1501 or 752·7373. LAND I =~:.::~L::· ~GOLDENWEST _ .... I lie OOM'T CALL ME New 3Br 3ba condo with ·,..,~,.,.· t:s'~J;I.~f-e~ REAL ESTATE Prime M· 1. approx 60,000sq ft. SI 0.55 Pr Ff Seller wiU carry rinanc· ing at below market rates CaU 751-3191 •DUPLEX frpk. $138,500. Facing 48-ISH OPEHHOUSE beautiful park. Pool,~~~·~~~~~! IMllALDIAY SAT/SUH 1·5 jac. Own /Agt6'2·2l643 = Spectacular NEW de· I'm a perfect home for JUST LISTED FOR THIS H..ti!MJt• signer custom home o wner/occupant or WEEKEND!Sl99SOOVA. HorMtlr 1042 avail. mid·summer. ma y b e . two as a Darling 3 BR 't VJ ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• 760-0715 partnersh.ip. Two nearly house Huge yard with Goldett WHt &hlhs ---------i Ocean :J.l'Onl This SOOO Sq. ·Ft; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for <3> 55'·70 ' Yachts. For Sale or Trade . We ·a r e developers so submit land .or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. 17141121-1210 12111 Stl-ll63 11001 JSJ.3710 equal 2 Bdrm 2 ba units love! · atio arden & Beautiful S4'S Exec. 4 1°10 DOWH with mas te r s uites. 1 .t~r:es ~~in&Co bdrmhome.EleJantwet Only8%downtobuythis l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ &tone frplcs . & wood .,r-;'216368 . . bar. blt·in bbq inside " rantastic 3 Bdrm dream 1: On C ClllClll FrOftt Lrg 3 Br 2 Ba home on canal front. Beautiful patio leads you to your own sandy beach. Only $259.500 JACOBS REALTY 67S.6670 51EOllOOMS Spacious Some rset Model in Harbor View Homes. Large family room. 3 car garage, all on extra large lot. 1329,750 owner will help riance. ·-17141673-4400.' I Z I JI US.2121 HARBOR beam ceilings. On .. an ,,.. · ma ny other ameniliei home with magnificent oversize lot w/pvt patios incl. a h.uge yard that view of the Pae1fi c. $50,000 DOWN Hoose ~ 2 car gar nr high and deck. New on the MUST 58.1. backs lo a beautiful Super assumable loan market at $D>,OOO. 41 HOURS park. Juat 2 YT• old! available. $225,000. S200000 1271 sch oo l . Fee land • • • $130.000. Agt 641·0763 Loa. for 21 ,..,... 2 houses on a lrg lot All Large comer lot. Large sorts of pot ential house 4 Br. 21,AJ Ba. RV S1'0,000. Agt 641·0063. a pace behind locked -----"------ 479 MonMRig Cp. Low down on this lovely Broker. 8182 Col 644-7211 4bdrm with spa. Assume l"IM I 044 /Jn Nl[1£l nearly 90% financing at ••••••··~··•••••••••••• 12114%. $1.84.900. Call agt (}/\Ill Y b. ASSOCIATES 631·5751. DOUHOUSI SZOOKAt 121120/o SJ,000 DOWN FIHAMCIHG COTT"''-E 3 bedroom, liv rm CDM ~,.. w/(rplc, blgb ceilings f'LUS INCOME throughout, stained Or 3br, 2ba ho m e , glass dutch door, new w/iaolated master paint. white w/dutcb bdrm/ Parent retreat or blue trim, 2 car gar .. lrg. ln·Law quarters + 2br landscaped lot. Home cottage. Anyway rou warranty. MUST SELL describe It. it•s charm-FAST. sw.500. '94·1096 ing, up to date, & eve&. beautifully decorated.1--------- Priced at $280,000 with i---------very special financmg. CAU FOil DETAILS 644-7211 $112,500 HIGH ASSUMAIU 4br home w/s pa, xinl rood. $1118,000. 552-6940 *UllY. PAii Lr& 4 Bdrm 2~ Bath home in prestigious Unlvenlty Park. steps rrom pool and greenbe)t. Asaumable financing. Call for detaill. e--; l,,,f\;1 of 1;1 .. 1 I v' • ,1 • 1 .'I)()() 'YOU ASKED FORIT don osen 1 t .J t "I .... 1213 N. COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH 497-4848 RETIR E M ENT BOUND! Spacious 2 Bdrm condo · near everything! Walk lo beach. gates . All t h is i n Westcliff. No loan quah· bing. 788--0654 ,... VICTOllJAM BEACH HOME New 3 BR 3"'1 Ba. Quall· ty h andcrafted oak tbruout. Stained glass. apa. IOAT PEOPLE PENTHOUSE CONDO with boat dock. 280 deg forever view. Fee land Assumable loan. 640-5357 C/21 MewportCntr. OCEANFRNT DUPLEX 3+2 Bdrm. Sharp. Sell or trade down for condo Ll,_1 H• I OSO ·· ttT n--•t or house or ? S550.000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plan l..J( RCCll Y Ed Leonelli Own/ Agt. I ~ 752-6499 842·9601 or res: 644-4720 L..-.V .. R.E. 4'7-1761 5 Br. 3 Ba. Harbor view IMYISTOllS/IUYERS H o m e . I 3 4 9 , 5 o O . LOW DOWH Owner/Agt. Comm . Versailles tbdrm & pool. 673-1761 studio condos with lrg aa1urnable k>ans. From ltG CANYON S109.900. Jim Schumann ~----~!'-.-Harbor lnvei.tment ~... \ • • A Div1s10n of ~ I~~~~~~ Ii! Lovely 3 Bdnn. 2 bath. family room with open beam ed ceiliog s , rireplace. New copper plumbing, large yard. l>ouble garage. Call 6'5·9161 w e ·ve r ound I t a spacious 3 bdnn. 2"'1ba, Townhome with nice sized ra mlly room. Back patio over loob green· belt. Within walking dis· lance lo pool. 1141,500. SELLER WJLL HELP BUYER TO OBTAIN NECESSARY FINANCING ! GOLF COUISI LOT a1t. 919·5370. Owwar Miid ~I HBR. View Homes .. Mon· OPPORTUNITIES FOR IUILDERS-OECORATORs-fHYESTOas TheM properti•s offft> tt. poe..ffctl to ~I. r4td•corote or bulkt o MW poptrty: All located ht Newport IHch. Feb•lo.. Mewport tocotlo11 wltlt h ••Rdotts VIEW of .... lay. lo.e llp far a.g. yocltt. Fe. 1-4 H. emtt.g Z...twy a.o... .... ,._. & ,...,.... ... -~ IR stllet price. Int prtc.d CNt leyfrowf. S"S,000. EXCEPTIONAL HILLTlf ESTAlt! ,..._....._. Hert»or Rldp Loe'"-wft9' 110-vu of ley, oc .. '"""" = .......... ....., ' ........... _ ... .. IWt 1700 141-'ft, .............. .. ~yowoww•wtarlWt..,_. ..... ..... 4 ltff. ta.r.y, ............. ,.,. ............ ""' -ti•.,... whr ...._ wt.. flraflri:•. ~ .... 1r .... ...,..... ........... .,~sclll• l:111U1ow•. t. ., ~ lt-of ... tLMhxtV.__. ...... s . . 00. QUIET BEACHFRONJ uanm. ..UCID TO Slfl,001. ...... J ... llw -,,,.. ef ••W DIJ lllf• Phi ,.11lltltltle1I OWNll WILL HIL, ll'MAMCll . \ WATERFRONT HO'kES. 1 ltl!~L tSTAf£ ~. ,...,.,,.,. Ptt'l>"ll\ Mo.....,_,.. 2.-W Coatl Hwy ......,Beech ~ 75t.1111 IACKIAY PLUS VIEW Executive beauty with fantastic view. 4 bdrms. 3 bath. din. rm, huge ram. rm. 3 frplcs. Room for your trailer or your boat. Great view!' 759·1616 ASSUME Lfi. 9'120/o LM 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home +p oo l. Pride of ownership home. Take a d vantage . Only $105,900. Call 979·5370 now. ALLSTATE REALTORS $5,000 DOWN! Payments of Sl,OIO on $90,900 loans. Beautiful 3 Bdrm 2 tMtth home with diningtramlly area. Shaded cove~ patio, double aaraae, caU for more detalla. 546-211~ THE !<EAL ESTATE:RS Good Duplex on best street, pool, hi income. Owner. $320,000. Prine. only . 64().4999. ~ OPEN HOUSE , ~ ~REAlTY / •• This 4 bedroom, 2'h bath home on a corner lot features a custom pool and spa, low main- tenance yard and stained glass. $250.000. (115-1720 Agent, Dann Bibb tego'~ br, 2 ba, fee land. 675·2311 ~7665 XJnt fin. 67~2139 l :~... , IY OW"8. SAVE ---....-· 3Br, 2Ba, 2300sq. ft. 2 View! Location! Ocean & h.ills . Prime Harbor Vu area. Ask for Bev. Cov· ~~~~~~~~~ lngton, Brk. 770-8887, a. v..., 1034 833 860()~"'1.,.-J Lingo Fine&t original area. rrplcs, spa. Financing Massive greenbelt vista. avail.4 196,500, or trade. Smartly decorated in Call AMwer Ad #397 at papular tone&, nearby 1142.4300 24hra per day pool. Ofrered at 1212,000 --------- <with uawnable hi bal. Pn••Caua:ualty loan-try $43,000 down>. Spectacular 3br, 2ba, •.i&t611 768~3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • DUPLEX VA/ff4A TllMS Agt. 640-5580. amenities (spa, etc). Blk Sl91,000 In tbe ever popular 't5Z3CAMPU5Dtd~tttl IOU •Oceanfroot dplx, xlnl to beach . SU15 ,000I ! Rieb, 759-4408, 646--9530. k W tm nl hom.. 3 lra 1 -o Hr.-. loc, fin. & price! Prin. 1 er. each Wl'th sha e es o ...... ----------..... •• l ••••••••••••••••••••• only.873-78'17,87S-m3. ..., ... .___ roor. Can convert to 2 8d + Bonus rm. Be ow "' ~sow Br. house & add on. Call market price. Sl2'7,000. * * Gm£0US! .. ,. ... Gnc.....r' UDO ISU J STY for details. Bernita Call Anne McCasland lfyouareadllcriminat· ~ IAC.IAY l~oOOWM Eile rtsen, Broke r , 631·1266 i'ng buyer who ap· 3br,2ba ....... -...plusldeal NO a UALIFYING . "oc""" 4br,2~ba,prol.decorat· ...,,.._ R b 675-2373or77.,..,,_,. preclales lbe very best· ed Is landscaped. Shows moUter·in.faw wth· Beaut ful 4 B . 4 a this mapifictnt home ii ke a model. Lge. H · Compl. w/bath. ,000. e9late. Steoa lo private ESTATE ~llf for you. Cu•tcmlOa 5 u m • b 1 e 1 0 a n . loy Mcc..lt, IJhr beach · and bay. Open ML bannisters, Pecan noor· 500 547729 beamed vaulted ceil· 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, frplc, .=:::::=.:::::..;.. _ __.. ___ 1 lng, celling moldin&s.11~0w~~n~e~r~/A~&~~~~9~·~~·~~i:===~==~~~l tnc•. Majestic ma1ter & So_uth or Coast Hwy. lO H•tletgta.IMdt 1040 etc. etc. 3 car aarage 1uest aulte1.SS2S,OOFP. mB. mute walkl .IA>t. beb~~h ...... :: ................ and so much more. Call Beautiful Back.bay 3br, SHORELINE ASSOC. Y owner. nVl mg s. for details. ... __ __. ·---I 06t 848--2262 C h nl For •-•orma ,_ ,.-. • -3ba home. Great auum. ---------as o y. uu· • '242.500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ha,...--.&TE ti o n contact Pat rtnancin1. S2"70,000 Open _., ___ B u r I e s o n . A d · 1' I OOo/o l'tRaKz':I* House 3/'ZS, %l>O Heather Only $2:5,000 down talces ministr a t or . 426 I!J\\Qod~rl· 12.5%.3~~3be, a/r. Lane631-0517 It! Hilb balan.ce as-Armaley Square, On· II Ownr mouv. Baycrest. aumable tina.ncing. No tario. Calif. 91762 or call Rea I Prine only. Btr. 751•8838 Ocaa ..... 10% h quallfyln1. Spacious 2 7141984-3120 tr someone told you that 551·3'0t OpenHMSat/Sun 1·5. Br 2 Ba, encl. gara1e. 1.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-_-.•1you wo uld save 4111 aau l'tlwy.lrvl91 l"M 1044 2Jl10W.Oceantn.t Hurry! Gre1 Astle. I ' thousands of DOLLARS , _________ ••••••••••••••••••••••• a Br, 3 Ba, corner. owe when buying or selllna AITD. Lease option. $,YM.ASS 1·-.R~~* HNIBMIOIO 4 Bdrm 3 Bath, hiSbly upgraded. Pool, jacuui, spe.ctacular ocean Ir night Upt vtews ! f195000 RCTc1ylorC c > I .1\ I ')()(I )'OUr property ar still Owner/Al\. CIR Rltn. have the total and quail· macneb I Irvine Ul-3199 or 175-1307 ty ser vice of a pro· $4'15,000 fesalonal real\or, would raaltg you take the time to call ..... I \ I A IU8SIDIARY O' T .. 1 .. V1NI COM,ANY 1 . r 1 ' •I' macnab I Irvine raaltg Cott.Mele ---------1 ······················· I024 B ·Hl I -1<· ·'> , .. •ooo UN IM OUMMTllll Largest patio home -Plan 4 -in good location. 3BRS or 2BRS, den and family rm, vaulted ceiling and fireplace make this an ex~lonal floor plan. The professlo.nally landscaped patio makes a 1reat setting for indoor /outdoor livtn1. Community amenities include POOi and tennis. $U9,900. Katbfeen A ...... AftYOI TMI ftwlMI COWM• co...-ct.AL PIOf&iY SPICfAUSTS Leana bt:'ok•.,e Is Pto-e m,..n. atUJa by a~ local ~au KM> •t: 67M700 MISAV... Sharp I Bdrm oa eorner lot. Featurtn1 21•1111•11• flreplace1, new roofL OW Wll.L copper plumblnl ana CAllY ... :~ s:ona.:= ~~ WALK'rt>B&ACHI and wtlJ u.o .. u VA. a+z+fmDnnRV.Sub- mtt "LOW" dowll. AGT. PHA. Prf~ et flJl,000. ...IMt ::.il::" clataill, call 0peoea.ae.t-1 · Hf RiTAGE U I /\I l t lol', ··~ .. -· VA 1:-;1tt t ... .. ... ~ .. ... PNc••-- Kelle.y. C-74. • ... -... .. WOMCI J., ............... . llMJ41 PllCl llDUCnoM OM IXC.,..OtW. ... c.AMYOM 00¥11! Elesant, hand10111ety up1raded 2BR " den residence w /~ of eth falrway. Features 1ecW'jt1 pte. crown mold i n11, cuatom wall-eoverln11 and lar1• wblte brlck patio w /room for 1pa. $449,500. Lynne Valentine. <C·'13 .. ~GOO. "'"'·~ ... c~v.;c.... ...... • • ... _____ ... , ••• a .. INnt fOf Orantte COWftly •.ntMra- There ere two way• to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad Run 7 days for $7.77 11 daya for $11.11.-3 llnes lll.IJ Pl.lat Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate . ....... Fer W. ott.-IHl llw. C>tt..r .... ..... Othr .... lltate Hones U ....... tliitd HOUMS U ........ thed H.ttn U1tfwwi1Md Apa IMe11h u.r.. Apel,,,...,. .. u.tww.. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~ ... !~.~! ~=~!!! .. ~~~~ ~~~!.~! .. ~~~~ ~:.~..ty ZHO :.~!~~~~ ....... ?~~~ ~':~ ............ ??.~~ !~~!~ ............ ??.~~ :.~~?:'~.~~ ... !~!~ ~~:~~~~ ....... ?~.~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••Duplex. l bdhn. l bath 2Br Sin1le family, S62S ADULTS COURTYARD 3BR2ba·$750/mo NEWLYDECC>a. Office Bide. l7000sq ft. 1 plus living area. Private mo. + uUI. ~1JS3 dys, TWNHSE 2bdrm, 1'"-ba, Pro-rty Mart VILLA BAlBOA IESAl.ES PllMILA.uMA OCIAMllOMT Prime Laguna Beach oceanfront · fixer-upper. Unobstructed panoramic view. Steps to beautiful sandy beach. owe al 10% down. $975,000. + acre 1md Just ort .,... ,... 1 Br. aaa pd, encl gar. · entrance & patio area. 834·0277 eves atlached~ar. frplc, air, <1Un9019 d / Hwy 5 Oceanside. Stove&refrii.incl.4360 1 R 11 S '""' washer. pool. Adults S2SO,OOO will handle. l· w db poo · • or .A. 642·5073 433•1723 Bkr mo. 787Y:. Joann St. 00 ridge Twnhae 2 Frwy. SSSO /mo. Call Spacious 1 Br w/garage. ------- 963-8182. Do not disturb aty, 3br, 1Ytba, pool, ten· 731·7186or752·282'7. laundry facil. $S7S Ask 2 Ir. I lo Apt BeauUful San Diego. 48 tenanla. nis. lake. S650/mo. forFaye.60-9900 Newly decor C:as pd, 2 Bdrm , 3 ba , microwave, hu&e deck, security. pool, Jacuzzi, BBQ. Vacant. Owner uxiou1. $290,000. 3br units. All amenities. -N-PT--H--S-----~l-SS26. West.a. .. ., J291 Co•to M--3124 en c I gar , po o I . ""UAIL ~Cl Subjecttol03lexc. Prln· br. 2Y:. gb~.t~.nl~~a~ RENTALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• : •••• :::"•••••••••••• d wa s h er Adults . ' ..,. ciplea please. 1.550,000 loc. w /frpl, fam rm, 2br l~ ba $550 4 Br 1,,,. Ba. Family 642-5073 rlOratllS will handle. 1-433· 1723 laun. rm, attached gar Jbr 2ba S77S room, frplc, large yard. 3 Ir Townhouse Bkr. S725mo.646-0329 3br2ba S825fum. ~~~s3 O~ S645. Call .~ Newly decor gas pd .. Completely furnished 752 I f20 o..t of State 3br 2ba Sl2SO rum. 1 4 l· · FAMILY AnS. e 11 c 1 gar . p 0 0 1 . with antiques, china. • Pro__... 2600 Large 2 Br. 1 Ba. D~pl.ex. 3br 21,Aiba S800 c --.... -.L-1..-d I wa s her Adu 1 t b ,..... '' Fenc .. d yard Avail 1m --Brand new beautiful lrg ailver. crystal a nd a ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' · · · U1t....._, .. ahod ]425 642 5073 med $475 + $250 dep """"-apt. for familtes with l ••world of mirrors" & 40 A scenic Oregon Coast. . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• or 2 children. Near park ele1ant decor. Security Mobile H-. i---------•I Electricity, fenced , out· Children OK. 963-7600· Bachelor CONDO vacant. Heat paid. No pets b ldg . Large pa.tio. ForS• llOO lt1•n-... standing view. accessi-645·8369 SSOO /mo. Newport 2Br.1Ba. S47o SpaCious and coordmat· ble owner492 2499 ---------Beach 97~0423 398 w w·tso ed. 2 Bdrm. Reduced to •••••••••n•••••••••••• OpportwMt _ · · __ 3br: 2ba house, dble gar, ___ ._a_ n, 631-~3 S398000 C o..ao..aay 11 • li.l'ho.Nx Ronche1,Fsw., n ice yrd, 16SO /mo. Spacious lbr, avail the WALLACEST .APTS • ' . A"" Vl~GE 10 units in great rental Grona 2700 642·9772 WATERFRONT Steps to the Water. 2Br Ci . C t -------lst. Pool, Jae. club hse Newly decorated 2 Br I HOMES 2ba , sunken tub in acea near vi~ e~ er. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DGlla Point l226 close to So. Coast Plaza. Ba. S42S. Small t•h1ld REAL ESTATE master bath. Pool, pets Perfectly mai.nlained 19 Acres, leveled, lrrigat· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults. $400/mo Call OK . no pets 2049 631-1400 are allowed. a.nd o~ner will he lp ed farm land. Xlnt for VACANT DUPLEX 2br 't573 C.OtPU5l>a·IRVl .. E 644·8048 Wallace lfl. 645-6452 fina ncing. An excep-mobile homes or r e· • · · · PricereducedtoS62,SOO. tional vlaue at only sid tiallOU Adjtocil 2ba.frplc,bulltbUJlt·ms, Owner anxious. Sl60 000 s.56-2660 en · Y carport S47S 1st/last + Open Sat/Sun 1·5 ' · water/gas. 31,1a ml west $300 542-3597 731·Sl2S SPllHG FIVM 700 Lido Park Dr. 1122. of 4th ave on 8th St, . . V u m a . Ar I z o n a H..tlnc)ton leach 3240 Fabulousentertalnlng in WATERFRONT $250,000 7141497-1982 ••••••••••••••••••••••• this gazebo-style indoor/ HOMES 5 blks to ocean. Elegant 2 0 u t d 0 0 r pa v i Ii 0 n . REAL ESTATE Custom 3 Bdrm Newport 63l-1400 APPLE VAL.LEY R...tol1 bdrm. fam rm & den, Beach home with all the~~~~~~~~~~ N Pl 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••! ($750 mo). Plush crpts. 1. ear new 4· ex, H ~-t..L.......... 2112 ba. cedar & glass amenities . Privacy is 1 bdrm 2 bath ea~h unit CMtlel ~ I here. surrounded by $33,000 Assumable Loan.I ·th r" pl ~ 1 d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dbl car pvt gar. fully w1 . ire ace. enc ose 1 _ .... _ 1 1 _ _. 3106 ma ant. yd. Adults. no oversii~.k>C...!~fX' 2~~m +den, 2ba. 24X60 patio. double garage -a •--1 c...., !8th e4:Z,.I VI V1kmg. New crpt. all an. Sl6S 000 B'll G d ••••••••••••••••••••••• peta. nqwre at""'' . j PETE J BARRETI .. REALTY .. • 1 run y, St. 714 /960-6331 or I pliances incl. Really Rltr.675·6161. Cute 3br. avail Apnl 1 · 960.5112 sharp. F P. S48,SOO. Pvt ----F-0.,..--.-.,, .. -.-v June 13 S6S01mo 209 · Party. Prine Only Uftr'i.CA Garnet 1-!61-0693 Brand new house for dis· 960-3029 Westside Costa Mesa lolboa Penillaulo 3107 criminating ram1ly 3 C...teryloh/ Needs some w ork ••••••••••••••••••••••• blks to ocean. 3 Br 3 Cryph 1500 S~.000 yr mcome Full 2 BR + garage + patio. Ba.• ram. rm To~ally ---------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• p~1ce S22S,OOO .. Owner s7so+ dep for period upgraded & customized will carry U>'1 mterest from Apr 22 thru June Sl200 mo. 833-0 14 5 w/$60,000dn. ~5. 213/446-6247 AM /PM LOCJUftO leach 3248 Landmark Condo 2br . 2 Bd I Ba, S37S Clean & ••••••••••••••••••••••• golf. pool. security. Very quiet. no kidslpets Call Oceanfrnt 1Br, lrlr + nice H.B. ~~>S.?4-04_60 Craig 631-1.266 cabana, deck, pvt bch. fum/unrurn. adlts only $750 mo. 499-3816 -----Newport leach 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba large yard, 2 car garage S74S mo 675·0562 SPACIOUSM.I . TOWNHOUSE New 2 br, 2'; ba, Back Bay loc. Gar. pvt patio S89S mo Suaan. 957-6507. 54(). 7238 Newport·CM Condo 4br. 3ba. pool. spa, ten- rus 673-333.5 eves R~Mrte R t:Al.TClftS Aportmetlb Furllishe-d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stunning Lge 1&2 br. 2 ba Costa Mete1 3724 garden apt, pool rec ••••••••••••••••••••••• area 710W 18thSt SUSCASrTAS Furn I br. apt. S32S & up Encl gar. Adults. no pets 2110 Newport Bl Spacious 3 BR. $395 Pool & laundry rac1I 548-9556 548·4~ btwn 8& SP~_ 1 Br I ba. pauo Laund S33S Mo Deluxe Mobile rac1I. encl garages. new Home. Mature Adults. ly dee Walk to shop ping Min from bch No pets. Quiet. secure Ready for occup April S 9'e8liBllU APARTMENTS Beautifully landscaped garden apts Patios or decks Pool & spa. Heat paid. covered parking. Adults, no pets I or 2 persons OK I Bdrm S400 2 Bdrm 2 Ba $500 2250 Vanguard Wa y 540·9626 or 548·2408 2 Bdrm 1 Ba $465 2 Bdrm 2 Ba $480-485 398 W Wi lson, 631-~3 2 H UGE Bedrooms 1n super locallon Fully ca rpeted, bu1ll·1n s . ground noor Adults. no pets $350 mo Apply Apt E 568 W Wilson 646 4477 BEAUTIFUL 2 !:Ir 2 Ba Mesa Verde, 1100 sq ft fplc, lndry. patio, dis· hwshr. encl gar. Adults. no pets. S.SOO. 3103 Mat'e ~o 4400 MCHJlll&e..t Moalla Pacific View Memorial Waterfront townhouse Pk G.rave A&B Lot 519 •co·op. 3Br 21,'J ba. Dock Bayview .Terrace. 2 lots & pool. for the pnce or 1 A PR€HIG€ '--J-----1-HOM€S 3 Bdrm. frplc. walk to beach. pool & tennis S725. Agt 760-9278 ---Newport leach 3169 Villa Pac. 3 Br. Atrium. ••••• •••••••••••••••••• tennis. pools. spa 1 mi l•---------1991 Newport Blvd $350 mo to mo S46·0341 646·8~--_ or 5 4 s . 6 1 s s 19 7 o Dona Poiltt 3826 Roger Brown R.E . ~ Com pl rum. 2 Br 2:\-'• Ba, ocean. $675 mo. 962-7469 NEW PORT CREST 2 Br 2 Br apt. Adults. no pets. Wallace, C.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• Btwn7am&6pminqu1re 2 br. bal.cony. D W __ 87_5_· 1_483_o_r_67_3·_2_1s_1_ COllHllerclat BLUFFS BARGAIN 3 Property 1600 R. E. Investments 3333 W. Coast Hwy, NB short term OK. Price neg S9SO 673· 1624 or 3 Brdrm +den. jac, quiet cul-de·sac super Joe by central park with lake & horseback riding S7SO /mo . No pets . 646-4025 eves. +den, 2''• ba. S72S 179'"1 Rochester. <rear> BEAUTIFUL 3 Br 2 Ba. rlean coin laundry & LUXURY VIEW CON - ------Mesa Verde 1600 sq rt. 2 wshr: gar. nr ocean 673·5261 Bdrm lwnhme $155,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walk to everything · RISTAUllANT IMCOMEP'ROPERTIES DO. 2 Br. 2ba. Security H11111thtqtoftleoch 3740 frplc, lndry hook up. 493·S9S3art5PM bldg. $1250/mo •••••• ••••••••••••••••• patio, du1hwshr. dbl encl - 645-6646 pool, tennis, . schools, CotNMrclal lldcJ. Looking for int'ome un park & shoppmg. Agt Lge LoMt.tdftg its?~ We have S pro· LI DO ISLE charm mg 3 bdrm, 2 bath, playroom. Just remodeled. Sl6SO mo to mo Bill Grundy. 675-6161 HVH custom 3 Br. Sba $375/up 1.2 bdrm. pool. gar. Adults, no pets. Fountain ValS.y 383<4 w/pool. Professionally jac, adlt. 18992 Florida. S6SO 3103 M ace ••••••••••••••••••••••• decorated Co mp! H.B.842-2834 or842·3172 540-4400. Beaut Condo, bright & 875-5930, 60-8146 Near Ocem froftt perties in C M Priced right at less than ocean/bay view. $2500 ----------cheery, 2br, 2ba, lrg 4Br. 11".Ba, liv rm, frplc. LIDO ISLE. 2 Br. 1:14 ba Bachelor apt. util pd. 1 Lrg 1 Br Adult Near patio wtatlach 21; Cdr POOL HOME JUST LISfED. lovely 4 BR 3~ ba + den with wetbar + Fam rm. and deli,htful kitchen over· look1na pool and jacuzzi on cul de sac street Separate master & guest lay llYd. Con.er 11 X Gross No bank lelow lll1lt $447,000 financing required In· Westchrr 3bdrm, den, 3ba. nr schools, park. com pl ete l y rurn Water/gardener pd. S97 s mo 646-8635 lg encl yd, 2 car gar. home. Yearly $1200/mo blk to bch/p1er, $130 aft shops, pool, all ut1l pd gar S62Smo. Orr 751 8911> grdnr incl. S650 mo. 1 yr Spm 960-2551 1884 Monrovia S48 0336 or (H-2_ 675-~ Ow....-wtl &.ce terested? Then call us. BURR WHITE REALTOR. IMC. 675-4630 NEl5sf.R lse . PP 968 1257 . W r H 1 -----ater ronl omes, nc 2Br, lba fourplex Water H...+ill""'-INCh 3840 962·8672 Realtors 631-1400 LocJ-o leach l748 .,.-. ,._ _________ i ••••••••••••••••••••••• incl. S475/mo wk dys ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 4 Br. 2 sty, lge '" call 7S9·417S THE WHIFR.E TREE h Xln f H B Studio. lux. spa , TV. L d 1 u 11111 w ru /1 t: 2bdrm , Iba, steps to ocean, April 1-June lS S400/m o Agt Judy 559-9400. ome. t area o . NEWPORT IEACH maid service. phone. uxury A u l w11ts at af Nr ocean. Prof. garden· 1', blocka to the ocean S1001wk. 499-2227 Near new 2Br,2Ra. frplc . fordable living 1.2 & 3 or mother·in·law bdrm ----------1 with own baths. 3 car aarage + xtra parking Call now, agt. 646-4380, or 642·4447 for appt SHOPPING CENTER 21,SOO sq rt. Glendora New. ptly leased. Sched. 714 641 0763 2787 Bristol St Cn:1>ta ;\1esa. CA ing 1ncld S730 mo beach Thrtt bedroom ----laundry rac. new rrpts. Br Well derorated 962-7940. two bath home Yearly Waterfront. private drps & paint Encl gar. Olympic s1i.e pool, light ----------lease. First and last beach. security. pool 2 S47S. Adults. no pets ed tennis court, Jacuzzi. Near beach. 3Br. 2~Ba S 1 OOO 1 h Br rully rum. Luxury 673·2113&760-6782 park hke landscapmg income Sl97,000on triple ----------i Villa Balboa Condo. net leases. Owner must OCEAN VIEW Beaut vu. ocean & lites Crpts, A~. frplc. bit· Per m 0 0 Most beautiful bldg. in .... .,., 631 7300, BKR Mobile Home. S8SO mo. b H B ins. wash/dry hookups, 642.18020r97S-0545 3 r . 2•..,ba . 2 rrplcs. sell. Sl,600,000. Agt, DUPLEX Pror dee. comp!. rum. 2 HARIOR RIDGE (213)SS3·9552 days, or Drastic reduct ion on Br. 2ba, den, d /r, fir gar. S79S. 536-0021 Steps to the beach. lge 4 atrium w/waterrall. dbl From $.'SS. 846-0619 br dplx, 21'.I ba, patio, 2 Newport leoch l769 gar, adults, no pets loc 3 Bdrm with loft, 3 (714l846-3278eves. brand new Balboa SlSOO per mo lse $S7S : 3 Br Home. yard. balconies. beautifully duplex. t.st owners 200,.4 547·4156 __ __ patio, garage. frplc. sty. immar 11000 yrly ••••••••••••••••••••••• in Npl Hgts area 283 673-2507 •Dix Oceanfront. Wkly. Kn ox St S850 /m o . landscaped. upgraded. Duplexes/ Heil/Edinger area. Call Near tennis courts & 011it1 SaM 1800 depreciation. Great ren· 3 Br. 2ba Nicely ·rum. 2l3/S92·2474 Eves & 3 Br 2 Ba. Incl. refr1g, Easter, Smr, Now. 2·4 67S·14S8 for appt pool. $479,000. Assume ••••••••••••••••••••••• tal area. lOO feet rrom Avail May & Jone. S6SO. Wknds. renced yrd, $750/mo yr- large loan. 2·2 BR. Iba. l~ VA loan beach. Large 3 bdrm. 3 Agt 631·1400 ____ l"t...e -324 .. ly Ag_t.673-~ Br. Xlnt loc. 673-SURF Fantastically furnished townhouse. with ocean view. Tennis court. pool. S925 /mo. 760-9117 Xtra lg 3Br 3ba. Cpts. drps, range, nr new. 2660 Elden. Open Set/Sun. S6SO, 548-4391 al 179 .ooo. Price bathplus2 bdrm.2bath. -· "' ., Sl30 000 Agt "'"'7 5150 Owner will a ssist in H •••••••••••••••••••••••The Blurrs 3 Br 1'~ Ba ' · ·....., · financing. $425,000. OUHI U.....,,.lhed DOVBSHORES 'SPECT ACULAI VUS Breathtaking ocean.1-• .... •IEW .. •.•~ .... l.£ .. •c•H--t lilhl • mtn. vie'-"s from " ,...,_ 1 ~ Redh1ll~Rl'.1lty I;-;-;{ -;-; )lit I ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMrol 3202 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 3 Br. Condo 2\.'l Ba. near stores. & schools. Din area, family rm, 64().5274 rrplc, crpt, 2 story, comm. pool. Avail. 3-16. S865 mo. +deposit. Call ----------COZY lbdrm, adult/no 2 br. 2 ba nicely rum. pet.a or bus & stores $325 Adults. 6/15 · 9/1. SS3S 645-7836 thiJI lar1e. one of a kind, Walk to ocean, super quality home on Galaxy shop, 4br, 2ba + 3br, & Driv~. Beautifully de· 2ba. furnished. BKR 1 _________ ... By OWNER. formal din. 3 br. pool. Now avail. Arrow head Country Cl ub area . San Bernardino. 1·864·1732, HIS.4-7258 7S2·12829to4. Npt Crest condo, 4 8r 21"1 Ba . s plit level. dbl garage Lease S800 mo 1st. last & dc:_p. 957 930~ mo. Rers . No pets. -- ----631-7874. Large newer 1 Br patio & cor a led. 1 andsc aped ,._<•2•13•)•945--•3>48------i ---------- with sparkling pool. on,. Whelan extra a lar1e lot. 4 ME.AR l1'41 SAND Bdr ma, 4 Ba, many oul· Re·~I Estate Turllerock . New townhouse. 2 Master bdrm, fam rm, 2Ya Ba. 1750 sq. ft. Prof. decorat ed. Pvt patio. Pool, len- nia, park close. S900/mo 833-8277 or 752-6492. Harbor Highlland 3br, 2ba. frplc, 1700. thru Aug. 979-3494. 522·7305 SHORT TERM Rentals Weekly& monthly Agent, 675-8170 garage. AduJts. no pets S37S. 645-5577 NEW BREED AP'I"S Bach-S31S. Fr pie. rec room. pool. Jacun.i. enclosed garage Gas & water pd. Adult, no pets. 393 Hamilton, C M. 645-«11 ----COf"Ofto def Mer l222 s la n d in g q u a 11 l y lalboo P-. ~ll. a features. S850.000. Seconds to the water. 4 units. s uruts. 6 units. 12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NARlott.alDGE SPECTACULAR VU 4 Brdm (2 nutr stes), formal dining room, large 1ameroom, quiet cul-de·sac. Unusual courtyard entry w/foun· tain and running brook. Many upgrades. $950,000 HARIOR VIEW HOME 3 Br. S223,000, lowest. 'Price ln Harbor View. Auum able Joana. Sub· µiltoo down or trade. RCi1ylorCo ! { ' I q I( ) Excellent 3 BR owner's uni···. 16 uru·ts. 32 units Shoreclirfs 2. br & den, lge "home·like" unit & 2 "' d Min I S 00 BR b I · All have good financing. yar · 7 1 v ew 11 ILUFfS New 3br. 2ba, Bonita Plan . 1 story, ett' SI 150/mo. 644·2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . 2 a. renta urut. Agent 6 J.5354 Ideal for home & in· Good loans. Call for de· · Woodbridge area lrg 3 GeMrol 3102 come. Close to Newport tails. 540-3666 Costa Mesa 3224 Br. 2Y:. Ba. 2 car garage, pier&shopg.S289,950. ••••••••••••••••••••••• famrm,dinarea,frplc. Harbo r View Homes. APTMTSFORRENT Spic & Span lBrupper. ....................... ------ w etley H. y-a-Co. ,.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.12bdrm, lba duplex. gar, crpts, drpe, window cov. 3bdrm, 2ba, nice street. H.B .. N. B .. Costa Mesa Ma lure adulta. No pets .,..... h /d h k era. Comm. pool. Avai'I ardener Incl. S8SO. SomelhlngforEveryone Kitchen, bit. Ina. Dis· IHffon 644-4910 .... EW•ORtl••cH was er ryer oo -up, " ,. ~ new noora, crpts, paint. aft. J.2S. S825 per mo + 640.4829. al\er6pm. Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. hwasher. Call aft. 4PM . 1---.-•r.ws-+y 2000 PllME $450 + dep. 1 small child deposit. 752-1282 M . Apts. Certain locations 8'2«4044. ..,...,..... r--,.-n1 Beautifully decorated 4 r f p I 1----------•••••• • •••••••••••••••• Du..a..lln & Trl.Jaxe1 ok. No peta. 1952 Meyer. r I 0 er : oo · 5 p,a · w id I 20 UNITS C.M. Beautiful I year old Townhouse Units . Frplca. Nice area. TSL INVSfMTS642·1603 ,...... ,...... • W O O D B R I D G E B d 2 b a , 2 r P c s fireplace, laun. rooln, ests e Dup ex ·Apt. S3 million plus in income :>49·3484 n ft A ·1 u · 2 B 1 B · "CREEKSIDE" Willow o-aycrest .area. va1 beamed ceilinf.s, psta1rs. r . a. property listings. I $89 C II'""' 7408 R f I I d 4br, 2ba, $8.SO/mo 1st/l&1t Plan. 'Professionally 4 1. 5, a ....,. garages, all built-ns. e r ge, stove, enc s Centwy21 MewportCettt..- 640.SJ57 S300 security new landscaped Model home Garden & Townhouse gar. No pets or small cpt/pnt, formal dining on th pa .... • Br 3 Ba 2 design children. S390. 77().5629 e ..... • · · Large 3 Bdrm 2 ba TSL MGMT. 642·1603 ---------754·0986 Story. Fam rm., Dln., Weslcliff. Lovely yard. E. Side 2 Br t Ba, good frplc, dshwsr. micro· S 6 6 89 1-.... -a 1-1-....1 3106 I i •· ••"" COST• MU• Eastalde Condo. lge 2 br. S87 N 1000/mo. 64 · 7 or --ocat on, no pe .... ...,.,, "' "' 1~ ba, pvt patio, encl. wave. 5 mo. 0 pe~. 646-6710 ••••.••••••••••••••••••• Im med. 631-6155. 7 Unlta. Bread" Butter. UNITS!! UNITS!! "ar. pool. Adults, no 964·2566 Atenl, no fee. Extremely amall but cute That's what these units U · Lon a-h Xln " efficiency. Prlv patio are referred too. Ap· 7 nlls g ucac t pets. $495. 548-2990 Northwood Model house. ILUFFS I I cond. No vacancies. B B S275/mo yrly inc utl . prox. ~ acre, conve· 18 Unit• Lennox. Cash KIDS/ftm ()I( 2 slry, 4 r , 2""' a. 2500 3 bdrma, fam rm. SllOO. 875-6022 Ive mss1 , ~C~•-nient to allatores. 82Br. paying tenants. • E ·Slde 2 Bdrm. '495. a/f. $950/mo. 551-8731. 2 bdrm, 2 bath S87S. ....... 1071 6 4 lBr. $250,000. Good 6 Units L.A. Uke new. W /Gara(e. 842·2510, Woodbrl,."e Townhome, Pools. Rltr,644·0134. Adorable lbdrm apt on EASTSIDE 3 br, 2 ba, fireplace, 11. deck. Ideal toe. nr. 17th. $585 mo. 646·0329 ••••••••••••••••••••••• terma. P091ible trade. No rent control. ~ -.......... ''"b --the bay. Balboa S.75 mo. I Br. Sunny Apt. Carpets, ', JMNtt~Mst.e M c Nash Re ally , 4 Units Anaheim · 2 story, ,.,...rm, ln a, Weal Nwpt. nrbch, 2br, 175-6491673-4799 drapes, secluded. No WITHOCIAHVllW 642-l334,642..e.57tevea. Owners unit. Pride or EutaldelYTOldEn1U.h pool , tennis" lake. den, 2ba. dble 1ar ...... p t .. 1107 peta.5'8-<M4or731-6829 ,~a AOUL T ..dl~. LIVING • I & ? flA P•l•O Apl\ • O•\n,. Hnr,, & 8BCJ • Poo & Hrt ~c.iu11 • ("'' "'" l .1f\O'tt 40it'Q • Joo tn e .. cn & !>• 00' • Setu10I C.•tr) SEA ENVIRONMENT ':16Jl HAMii TON H B 961 4500 1br.1 ba. frplc. OW. encl. gar. Nr Hunt. Harbor Jan, 846-1186 2 Bdrm, 2 ba, cpt.s, drps, dt w, encl gar. Beach & S Points area S4SO mo 842-8032 HUNT HARBOUR AREA Xtra lge 2br. 2ba $495 pool/Jae odultsonly CATS WELCOME 16885 Lynn #2 846-3541 - ------- Lg 3 br 2ba, frplc, encl gar. New pluah cpls. 2 kids ok. $495. Must see. 7921 Holt. Call 3 to 7 pm wkdys. Sat/Sun 847-4803 : · 2Br, 1 ~Ba condo. 2-story. Pool, spa, tennis. Im· maculate. S600/mo. 963-7979. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse. Near beach. Garage. Toddler OK. S46S. 980-12'79 or &31-8085 ~ block to beach. lbdrm. adults. S375. 1.22 9th St. 538-8149, 98M416. ! • 1~-•-....._ RECORDING STUDIO-Ownerahlp. Tudor, 3 br. 2"' ba. $715, flZS/mo. 7»-0iu. 9800/mo or partly furn, If 1 A1enl ---Broker 714/847-8518 A k f B 111 Woodb-"4• ... S? Avail April 18-Sept 1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·---------Spacious cathedral pen· ...... Fully equipped+ a &ood mo· 1 0 r • ._e r.itlatea (2l3)92'1·2ll5 '210 Nie' Bach. Reap. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Newer Apt. lhouae 3 Br 2 ba, sky 'bver 3,000 aq.ft. of 2-BR home, 1180,000. Lohf9f-S. 2200 5'e·Sl80. NewLlDcoln3br,2~ba. adulta.Nopeta.Utillln· Built-Ins. air. garaae. lites. dbl balcony. ele1ance. Exch.wlve new Aat. ~; 6'2-4447 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Nice Townhouse. $4815. 2 fam. (m, lDdry rm. 2 S..ta AH 3210 cld. 108 E. Bay Ave. Apt Adults, no pets. S.35. Sln1lea delilht or family 11!>~!'fin• '~!515aJ·0001 · a houses on 1 lot, MIWPOITllACH Br. 1~ Ba. Avail. April ~1:00~=J:~4maU •••••••••••••••••••••• 9· _645 __ •4837 __ • ______ retreat. $625/mo. Agt ,.....,.,,, ·enc .... av · Rlvertlde. 110.000 dn. 116 c;AMYOH 1. Savaae WUde • Co. Mis. lat. laat + 1150· CorotM .. Ma-' 1122 b Zb Id Gre1. 957-l507 CllarterRJty•Inveat. Prln i-DCL I t 875·810tl North-'ood overl~ln& 2bdrm . tba, drtve by. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 r, h a,/1dar, cptb ralcpes, ----------1-.al.22 131-8811 • Ofty. nva · •eHCtmM&..t ... · _.. 200& s. Garnse y wu er ryer oo ·up, menta. 71'1•1·1721 OwnerMUltS.U! 3 BR, 2 sty, Back Bay park, 4 Br, 2"' Ba, 2000 144·50lt. , Avail. April lit. 2 Br. 2 patio, 2 kld1-oo pell 2Mb~:1!f.•:~Hpvt ftexlble floor' plan, 4,5, or Afent. Dan Bibb condo. Pool • jacual. 14 ft, F.R., trpl, form. Ba. with aundeck. Clott , SUS/mo. 645-9'55. 181.ff , •bdrau to flt your D111plu, Cotta Mesa, l7S.2l l N0-7ee.s $8$0. Pl..el96, Hk for dJn, lmtnac. Avail 5/1. 2 Br 2 Ba condo, pool/· to beach. No peta. 1700 Del Mar St patio, Jar. Adulu. $415. famllJ'• Dleda. 2IOO' ot 28drm ea. Allwoe bt Ruth or Steve "50.151-CMll jac .• nr So-. Cout Plata mo. 175-01.M Jackie. -----· ----4922 Edinaer. 84().3808, ~ ••• l hf.,.,11..n I 1 OWO lnd. SUa,soo. C1traordlnarv ~ acre ............. , &&>'1"6351 ..... .....__.. _ .... __ en. _____ _ BICR. pace . " Northwood Racquet _.......,. -· Db ocean vu, 1 Br, newly "....,.,._, ·_ 111,000 .... 1 .640-1515 La1un~_!lcb c':tom !aaulde, ll•ll>r, 2~ I>•. Club 4bdm> Iba air .---.. ,_ JJl6 chcorated, w /1ar, AP~ l..ar1e a BR 2~ ba, wllb .. _...._ San ,,, ·-Du I 3 home YICW •Ile, •• ooK. 2 sty, dbl 1ar. 2 patlot, ' ' f • --........... d l _, ... k ' 2 8d saoo Plua tilt 1ara1e. Kida .• pet• . _. ._ IMO ~•mm-. Pell, Owner/ao, 7eo.el07. lmmac '700/mo. Berit ~dener. •lift condl, ....................... A u u ..... mo."" or rm. · u • ....................... y.., old, I blk to pier. qt. M2.W. • /mo. r'ls:.oTJa. OCEANrROtiTKOME Faye. 84()._, ::t~~='· No peta. No welcome. 1 mile to •UBMIT : Tbrte ah arp IBr. 2Ba H . o..rt, •--··1 ..a-otlak O'looktJWt .... cb,2 br, ocean.talOmo.184·2117 Mdroom bome taattf\ll. M0,000 dW'Q, SU0.000. ....... 2400 1:.s. Small 1 Bt. °'-plea ---cwar ...... • l'i ba dee, cllD. nn. lie Zbr, lba + ...,., ad•, no a.so ~!lvd. N • w , n •a r Ku at 11 decorated wltb DCL lnveltmenta <n 4> •••••••••••••••••••• .. • 1•ra1e, yard, atove A h'om Ulla .,.eq ft J.M. ~ 1Jii}....,-.m3, r,ta· Avail AprO 15. Harbour nr 2 full eartllton•. Jlarchrood •M72' S~L.-lllS. refrl1e. OH• water Petet1 townhome. 2 iiMiii1 oo/mo Ul·Hll : lbr. •ton relrti1, crpta balha,diid.i,blt•luat· '!loon bl cllllna room. OHaa ..._ .__ M-a.1 •-NOPITI matrbdrma,-.J~ba. --1·---10 drapea -.. 1d1/-t1 •-b ........ -"Lari• c~rt4 patJo. I 0"'9 DWM CAIH a. ~;7.;;1110iiov P•hu.-mo. · Prplc, from dlalaa, n.Hla ,._ .... : " ' ..., •• -· _ .. _c_1_u ..... ----·-~- 1 .._, to ~J. ,.,.... 11&.0W .,.i te~ ...... ~ 1• ... .. ..... ClllL, A/C, tom· , .......... _ ................ Illa. ._ ..._ .aoomo • ....._ •LOOI• wU1 .._., wt&la t.,.,, H t1alt1, JUy~ratde, of "• hd.lk Ocean, nu. Idle ~ db • mllllll1 paal _. ....U.. L&lll'tlwooll Tow._. a M•• ,......, ..taha, t..p llN'. l~ tnhm• lamu. a ...... l\o\ bth ~t .. 71f, TAaBILL, •H!!.t. Ow•er/A1t. a.a.. 1u ft~. DaU, PUot QaulOtd Do ••U '1110 . llr. lJd la. Wmo. No a'> peh:-',.tH •tn. apt ar llo9pkal/lhopa tWClo t•all .. ltuo mo. .... 1'11 liMUA1arlT'H'm. CaU<114Jf'5.Tm, ~ 11CJ-...•Tll,_U e-:144-.1111117. 17M4T1. 1411/moAcrt .. I I CaJIMa. . ..aJ ----~ ... --i1 .. ._.;................ CttMWt/Co1tctifw &.ctrlc.. • Hudvm• Houstc'"""9t Mo•... '• ...... ti'•"... ,.O.loa._.. \ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BURGLA Foundatt()(lj, Retalnln& ELEC'rRICIAN prlct'd QUALITY RF.AS COST HOUSECLEANING ABC MOVING, E1tper PAJNTING·lnt/e.t. P01t8oxOCAirport • Wall•. Hll.laJde Reator•· rilhl, rree esUmute on GEN lNT/fo;)('T INS'fL ISOURBUSIN~! prof, low ra~a. quick Freeest.Lowprices. Mew S4f·2217 lion, Slabs, Patios , laraeorsmallJob Pl,U MUING JJIG , Janke's RaiaedyAnn, cuefullervice.5S2·0UO Mt·l903 (4-10pm> Block. Brick. Lic'd Llc ~1 673 0~11 SMALLC.1li':t'6l3 4833 675-2514 64.2·8387eves/960-31W --------THE "MOVTN·MAN'' is Peffos Electrician Sm JOb:;, tlantl yman r c pu1 r11, HOUSECLEANING by Careful, courteous & ••••••••••••••••••••••• REMOVAL· concrete, mainl & repairs Lit-J Id E 'd aspch, arading, lot clean· #2l3l08·ClO .•• 05203 t'ilrpentry, plumbina, upanese a y. xp , •C heap. Please call Wood, brick. concrete . ••••••••••••••••••••••• • re· ---.,...,. electru:al. etc 675 3014 dependable. S49-l029 64.2·1329 Free eat, aua.r work C.rpentry, plumbing •· up, saw, brea_k & P 17'"'-" "" H I b d D G. ELECTRJC H II H ltt' au -·°"· 1J;~,J~o~y fora ~:1':d Alarm.a 25% orr 5'5-SS29 looft.t ~ ··················•·t·· QUALITY ROOFING All type9, rree est. Viaa, MC. 541·5'30 HARBOR ROOFIN<J c.., ..... ; DAILY I'll.OT savtc1 DlltlCTOIY DO IT NOW ! ... ForS-*a Your Daily Pilot Service Directory electrical. Lie. contrac· move r Y or 1 · lndus./Resld /Comm au nCJ OUIH "'9 Palltt"'91Pmpar ... tor.Gene,&&2-8537 549-2411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Pta.oT....i...... New Is recoven. Re...,ir Quality work, free e:sl --... - C hllclC ll.iul.cle1111u11,t·on1•r(·te EXECUT I VE will Floe ext/lnt painting by ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1peclali1t/1tay·b\11y From the around up: °" Lac· 4ooi4J <213l86'7 :~7 r1•mo\ ol Ou111p truck I llousesat, xlnt refs. ex· Richard Sinor. Lie, in11. EXPERT PlANO tunin1 prices. Reliable. 548,0512 hom es , docks, boa ls, ......... ,............. REMOI>F.l.ING Qu1<-k -;1•n · 1;42 7638 per'd 497·5400, 644·1248 Try me. 631-4410 (24 hrs) & repalrs:e: 18 t>er PTG ... u~ c a b i n e t s . LIC.CHJLOCARE ,_ Remod/repalr. 67S-6294 My Coronadel Mar Eleclm·al Work UUMP JORS Income Tax RALPH'S PAJNTING •••••••••••••••••.-...•• --home 67J.2945 Resad tComnwrnal Sm ull Movin.: Joi.ii. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie. Int/Ext. Low Rates rlaster/Repalr Custom Ceramk'nle C...,..t Senlc• SJ I 90/WK 631 20Cl.I CJll MIKE t~lli 1~1 TAXES AND Free Est. 964·5566 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New·RemOdel·Repair Represent.live •••••••••••••••••••••• • INVC:>'TMENTS Neatpatchea&textures 'Free est. Chuck,4~1881 Shampoo & steam clean. Hot lunch. C M. Chris· Ffoors Trc(' 'hrub trim. 1·11n Tax prep, shelters, TDs DAVE'S PAINTING Fr.. est. 893-1439 Color bri~hteners, wht lian Preschool 646-5423 ··~·~~~·i:;~~·;~;;••• 1·rt'l1• rt'mo' al. clean Mr Leonard, 661·9343. Serving area 9 years crpts 10 man bleach • ~ · : > up' l-'11•t-t>'l 557 8271 Most reasonable HaJl, liv -dln. rms 115. CleonlltcJ s.ntcft lnstalled/repaH"ed Lk Masonry Insured, lic'd. 760-7301 Asplaolt avg rm S'1.50; couch$l0. •••••••••••••·~··•••••• •369260.;_ Greg499 2G52 UAl"Ll~G <I 1:-.ANINC: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·5'78, •.xt J 11 ED'S PLASTERING All Types Int/Ext 645-8258 FREE EST. H•ti19• Tl.Co. Ceramic. New-remod, reaa. rates. 67~2284 •••••••••••••••••••••• chr $5. Guur. elim pet Newport Clearung Serv Gardenin«J Tn·l'lrim& l>.i1ntinj.' BRICKWOHK . Small Painting . Comm'!. In Driveways, parking lot odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrs Carpet , . Up ho I . ••••••••••••••••••••••• or.,., It.iv !11>4 <1276 Jobs Newport. Costa dus traal, Residential. INT./EXT. plaster repairs, sealcoating. exp. Do work myself. Hous ecleaning, Wan VERY LOW PRIC!o'S• Mei, a , Irvine, Re rs Free Est. Low rates patching,30yrsexp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r .... s • .-.1c. S&S Asphalt. 646·4871 Refs 531.0101 dows llardwood rlrs, • .. ll;iuhng& l>umpJnbs 675 3175 673.0737 Tree/Shrub trim, re Llc'd . · __ 631-41277 Landscapema111l l'lnup.., t\~kro1 Hawh Neat545-2977 (Paul> W C'eoruc 549 2015 MASONRY &TILE move, cleanups, haul llabvs&Na-.. e Care Carpet Cleaners -----• ., Ml 11-127 QUALITY PAJNTERS PluMbhtg Concrete dirt, etc Jim .••• ~;;;::?........... Steam clean & uphols Contractor MIKE'S-LAWN t'i\HI'; II t:l I~ Our Specialty We solve Bargain rateslhru418 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631-4530 Licensed ch.aid care Nr l W ork guar Truck ••••••••••••••••••••••• Monthl\' ser.1<'e Tne-. i\ . •\,At ~ou r problems 631-2004 Free est 848-5684 Holleman Plumbing ---- mount unit 64~3716 Construc!Jon AJI types & l.,IUIO. l I.I". \N l I' Sales·Serva·cA.RApa·ars Typi-Senfc. So. Cst Plaza. Blrth·4 -----20 y rs exp Free est. clcanup1> 548-2049 Free est i.:11 !'-15:J f'RPLCS bwlt, refaced, WI NTER RATf; c-"' ··'II o & · h rt Jo~rce estimates :>52-7183 ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs. ay swmg s .1 s I BUY WHOLESALE Lie. 11334589 645-5973 Yard mamlenanl'C ·i·re•· H bru·k !>lone veneers, 30 Int.text. Paint ng P rof. Qlty typing. Cass 557·2140. Th c 1 11 ~ ousecleaninn .... ~37 • ., ru arpet nsta er. trim •· rem ov JI '1 )rsexµ 0 " ... ..., Cleanouts·fastservic:e PoolSerYict',Repoln transcriptions, ph'onf -i F Carpentry & Additions "' • • •• • ••• ••••. •• •••••••• . BABYSlTl'INGmyhome ree est. Also carpets Repurs·SmallJobs Cleanups Free e .. t w.rntaRJ::Al.l.Yt"l.EAN EXPERT BRIC K & __ 536.:_~--•••••••••••••••••••••••diet, letters, reports M F · d 3 •-laid & repaired. J ay, 752·1"'"9 I Swimmino Pool Service forms resumes terrr on· r1, ays, ages °' 754.6550. Lie 3091~ 548·27HI ,,., llOIJSJ-;·· t'all C:111~hain Masonry Small jobs & College Student-Exp"d. Reliable .• Repaars/Acid pape~s . e n veiopes up. Hot lunches provided -------D II CLfo:AN·l 'l'S L \\.\'I/ <;111 Ft,,. t ~1 f.IJ il:!.I I repair:. l'·rptc: racings int/ex any job for less' Washes. Reas. :>57-2783 labels, disc volume H.B.area.840-4109 NoSteamJNoShampoo rywa I Hef!> 551 ~.7S0.7074 c llAI 85 937 w ,_ M · I S . 11 r ••••••••••••••••••••••• M a 1 n te n a n 1· 1• l'.,.,11<·rt1,.t• ho11.,•·k1• .. p111g. a ex l· l or .. guar aria B b ·u P IT taan spec1a st , ast . L nd -----17 yrs exper. working 636-0756 a )'SI er , my dry Freeest 8J9·IS82 Orywal1 Spe<:1<1hst <1 !>UIJ)e 1 • •111 p ~ ll1'1'll1"> VERVRF.ASONABLE Paantmg,mt/ext Rentals ---------house, high school stu --------Qua I & prod New & re 1:-'rt.•f• est 1;.1:• 'l'IOi l111111~llt'1I II u .... ll41)nh\ ti. Bn<'k, bloc:k. stone. lile our specialty. Prompt w/all makes or equip. w· do c~ d l ° K C U 2 od ">ONU• . I State contracwr's he. & Ill w .....__.., en · · a 1 noon UPHOL-DRAPES·CRPT m . "JO"' ...... 532.5549 Handy"'an tlt 11 i.11 •·r;11 L11:"d. l>o11dl!<l Sbaside Pa·~i·ang. Greg, 5 642 5013 -----.,. ~ "' ms. Porch Construction ••••••••••••••••··~···" pm...:.__.:___·_ Cleaningatyourh,?me DRYWALi. Our Ex ••••••••••••••••••••••• \IHS l"l !-,.\'\l \IAKl·~'-11' llob541!2753.5369906 536·4806 Co.673·3316 "LelTheSWlShi~eUi" lulld•rs TIP-TOP CARPET & pertise We can handle 'HOME IMPHO\.'E:'IH:N't i 1:u· \ \1 ll11i•1• apt•;, Movinn G Call Sunshine Wand.ow Floor Care 960-6266 R od I l'-1... 1 ~ •STEVENS PAJ_NTIN P.O . lox R ......... _.s Cleaning Ltd c:•o 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ _ _ your problems 631-2004 em e mg ""Jo>" ulf1 , 1 ;1q1l'I 1.11: ·1:1.w ••••••• •••••••••••••••• -·n• · · ~ REMODBJNG - -28yrs e IX' •r.•t .,21 Int/ext. Free 1tem1zed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ceilin9 Acoustic El t •al x r ·• ~ •·• M11,1ni:'' The Starving esl Neat,qualilywork Irvine /Newport posl or Wind ow Exper,t Res1d. /comm. No job •••••••~••••••••••••••• ec rte (' II 11111"\ . ...,1'1 I· \' 17'.f College Students Moving •= · d blmds loo lge or small. 631·2004 ••••••••••••••••••••••• arpf'nlry, ctthrnd~ rout !'lt•r' i• ,. ,1 tluu "u).'hh C h • I d 546-,...,.,1 race boxes unavailable"' wm ows . . screen ---"------Acouslac Ceilings . Electr1c1an-trouble calli.. repairs. plumbmc f. n·1· lt-.in 11.,11" •llt •Ill:>• 0 J!> ~ro"n, nsure ----Ren l ·a Box r r o m & mirrors Reas. Det>en Remodeling, cabinetry. +custom hand texturing repair, add1t1ons. install est Cu ll /\11"" .. r \rl :~!n~· l:l~u.ct !>Cqace I Pamtang & Papering, 11 privately-owned poslal dable. Free est Gem c arpentry . Qua lily l.~~389944 532-554~ outlets, remodeli. #461 .t;-12 431.JO 24hr-.. < c•1wr;tl l111u"''"l•••11111~· -1 1•4 ·I.lb Lin·n se yrsexper service THE MAIL 545-0225 work , ref. Lie:. Call 548 9881, 646 3854 H1·!1altl1 rel, tr 111~ l)4l l!l27 646-1433 SU ITE , 549.4733 for 537-4837 . Want Ads Call 642-5678 Wheelt'r lo:le<'tr1c. loc. Sell 1dlc 1ll•ms 1;.12 ~~iiH !Hi'J n.~111 Want 1\di. Call 012 5671( Classified Ad;~2.5e1s rates/services. Want Ad Help? 642·5678 Apari•Hnh Uwfum. ,Apartments Uwfum. Vacation Rft'ltab 4250 Office Rental 410C Office R~al 4400 Business Rental 4450 lusineu/lnvest/ •••••••••••••••••••••••1••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fi"ance MoMy to Loan 5025 Mort~gn. Trvst ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deeds 5035 H1Mtingtan lf'och 3840 Newport leoch 3869 Steps to bc:h, lbr. home 1617 Y. eskhrf ~ 11 \\ 111' NWPT PENINSULA For storl' & office space ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• sleep:. ii. rent wkl~ rindncaal an:-l ;ooo,, I 1:,. l off,,, . ., "' l't'.11 I dl rl'<J!>OnJble rates. lu1ine11 Rales a re DOWN' Good money for ver y large, medium or small 2nd T.O.'S Interest on· ly. Fast service . BKH 855·9111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 & 3 Be.dr oo m s. PARllNEWPQRT 673-1633 1st floorAgPnL541~•0:1:.: 11:•111 .. 1111111 \1111" 500to2700Sqft. Opporlunity 5005 $400.$450. Kids OK. no I\ lr11m I 1lv ll:tll \11 "'P ~ESA VERDEDR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mack~ Rah Mtg. SINCE 1981 • lst&2nd TOs, SSOK·S~ + Owner/Non Ow-oer SF Rs & Condos~ Commercial & Industrial PETER DOBOS..· pets please Water COUMTRYCLUB Rentals to Sh~ 4300 t<OLLCEHTER ' IAH t "l\ll't·!' i\a1l.tl1l1· PLAZA IUSINESS Tras h Paid. Carport LIVING ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT I· "'111 :!:•!, 111 1 •~' ~'I fl 1525 M t>sa V(•rde E. C.M OPPORTUNITY 964 .,=., 973297 S 1 & bed Moving? Avoid deposab L'I lid .1••12 545-4123 M k . ·~or · I t\gt , anges. l 2 room & l I . , .-.egantt•xt·1·ut111•q11t1· I a e yourt1me worth no fee apts &townhouses cu avml{ expe~st's an pr.·~L1gl· 1111 1111•11 • several hundred dollars 2nd TD. 18'1 int fully amortized 731-8550 15 1yrs BKR 640-6016 67J.9043 _.,. From. S510 ,,.A,1900 Profe:.i,wnally since , · · OFFICE/WAREHOUSE PRIME , .,..... 1971 With c·omp!P\1 ,11pp11n per hour Call Erar ~er\ 1('t>.; SUB-LEASE 17 14>539 1706. Adult condo.2br.l',ba, S1ud10 acros!> fr o m HOUSEMATES 114X:..ll•illl I 1 11lf1l" 1•••pl1011 frplc, S500 +ulils, Apr 3 be ach Adults Pool 832·4134 ~.1rt'l111u 1·" Ir ,l11lin1~ WATERFRONT 968·5572__ -l.aund . closed ~a r 5 BEST RATE dom st·•· \ r.•111 , nt'" L I h 3848 gallon view Yrly $360 •SharedlivincJ• pauil OI'•' 1·1111 ltNllulll OCJUfta eoc: · Counselors to personally n1 Hra·,1111 ''·''' .1/\1'1 RETAIL e •• • • e e e e e ••• e e e • • • • • e • 640·5078 Ul ---select your rompal1 bl(' 1 :!:. HJ 1 , " lw 1";tll Watch the surf from this San Cle~ 3876 rmmte to s uit vour NEWPORT BEACH Mlt\;:i11 1u1 .1~ •.f"t beaut 1 Br. Condo $800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lifestyle Sharc.'<i·Li YmJ! SPACE mo. l s t, last -+ sec Nr S.C. General Hosp. 833 0over0rSuilr31NH / :> r •4 /'X., 1 17th STREET 772·305J. 3br. frpk . 2ba SlOV(', (;Jl 1801 Newly decorated 2Brr, $.i"s':it~0.a~:11~:pr 4 N B 30+ to i,hr 2hr. 2ha 2Da. duplex. On Ch r con do. patio . frpl <'. Drive Miles or white San Juan phone. $290 646 7332 water view Adults. no Capistrano 3878 . pets . $075. 494· 7891 •• ••••• •••••••••••••••• Father & -.on wall sh an• ;-Bdr~. North ~d Walk 2br. 2ba penthouse . I Jbr dup nr bch '1 or Jo' lo beach. lnclds ti' level very neat S490 dys 642 8(117, t'Ve 673-5191 u s 496-6458 art 6PM Gloria $4.25. ·~· 1526 Agt Newport leoch 3869 Tustin 3890 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •...................... Oceanfront for Winier Security apts. lbdrm & Rentals Furnis hed & 2bdrm. util pd, adults, unfurn. ~ro~e.!" ~75-4912 no pets Fro m $375 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo SJ!·5S06 rentals . Villa Rentals Apartments Fumished 675-4912 Broker or Unfumished 3900 2 br. l 1'2 ba + gar, Hoag Hosp a rea, nu decor. open hse Sat & Sun 1 l 3. 4238 H ilaria Wa y. SSOO t mo. 8»5875 IESTVALUI Versailles comer pen thouse 2 Br 2 Ba. comm pool. jac .. wgt room $700/mo. 675-3787 Cute 2 Br. 1 Ba . fireplace, garage an lov ely Newport Heig hts $535. 675-0349 OCIANNONT Furn. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba 2 car garage with office. washer & dryer meld Avail. 4·1 to9·15. TSL MGMT. 642-1603 3 Br. 1 Ba. Steps to beach $625. Property House 642·3850 or 642-1010 ..................•.... SEAWIND VILLAGE New 1&2 bdrm luxury adult apts an 14 plans rrom $440, 2 bdrm from S505 + pools. tennis. waterfalls. ponds' Gas ror cooking & healing paid. From San Diego Frwy drive North on Beach to Mc F adden lhen West on McFadden to Seawind Vallafte (714 )89J.5198 Rooms 4000 ....... , •...........•.. Laguna Beach Motor Inn. 985 No Paciric Coasl Hwy, Laguna Beach Daily, Weekly, Kitchen available. Low winle r rates. 494·5294. Room with refri11.e & macro.wave. private ba\h & entrance Steps to beach Pool & tennis court. 1275. 548·5366 3 Rr ("Ondo SJ C 1-'em prer Pool laund rm $1115+ I~ Utt! 493 f)M.'i Fe malt' rm ml£' wantt>d lo shan· 1 ,rent & util N<1 pets. non·smoker. CdM 644·8377 to'em non smk r 26 > r~ bC'h condo uttl pd $200 771 4550 'I 16. 963-8891 Mature F to shr beJUI rurn 2hr 21 ~l>a twnhii<: N pl II gls. S250 m11 641). 7555 ('\ (' Fem to sharl' " samt· 3S 45 2 Br 2 Ba ,\II amenities \1 £'Sa \'erdt· area S275 Do nna 557·5367 aft5 30P:'t1 Hmm le wanted lo shr lg<' condo nr S.C Pla1.<1 Sauna •pool. jacua1 Privalt• balh Availabt.• May Isl $250 + ex pense!. Call 5..'i7-3S27 or 759 0060 Wall share 2&1 2Ba Park Newport $300 mo rurn wtremale rf'f's 640·1169:1 Roommate wanted to shr 2 Br 2bu house 1n Wood bridge Own bdrm. ba Access lo :ill re<' fal·•I $250 mo + utal Ca ll 640-0770 or 5.S2·9794 Ben. Oceanfront. Charming I br lower apt. No view $400 mo/yrly. One adult. no pets. 675-31123 blwn 5·7PM N .B. prof. man to shr his Lease or Lease Option. ·spac. Jbr condo 2~ba. Quiet loc. 1695/mo 631 ·1759, 631 ·4744, 759·9100. 2 Br. 1~ Ba. Adults, no peta. $395. ~21682 beaut. 3br. 2ba hom e Hot•ls,Mohls 4100 w t indepcodenl lady ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30 45. $325 C'Ompl. Balboa Inn oceanfront. 760.08()2 Low winter rates Dally or weekly. Kitchenette. S90 & up. 67~8740. SEA LARI Male /Female P vt bdrm. balh rm . Hous(' privileges. pool, sauna. jacuu.i, tennis. S295/mo 631·4601. { 0 ... 1;1 Mt·i.u l rm "utl••. A t' l'lt-nt' .. r p.irk1•w Ula ht1r!. lncludf'li I 545 SQ fl ;~i "<I rt * AdJac·cnl to \1 rpon rt.-a lufl•)f 1tc·-. 117~ ••• /(~)I 1st TI ME AVAILABLE 500-2600 Sq. Ft. & Rci,taurant Ito" I 1 • A ('('(•SS' lo J M aJllr llAN A f>(ll l'\'I ·s 1\1•,I I fwyi, loctt1on ~'ill )l'i1 mo I 83 3881 3 I Ulll5 Uld 9'7:> 1 llfl I U!-.lorn .• Xt'l'Ull\t """ t'. .. 00 'iQ ri ,., l hnth "•lh NEWPORT BEACH ~huwer kJlbo;1 1•,•n1r I I S2tt:'i mo Mi! 16<!;1 SPECIAL TY Of1• "1th h;11h~. "'h" r r.. I I k 111·hrn .4 ,1dJ 11;x:! 'l CENTER I i.101 .11!t• iia1 • dli •111;i; 1 1 2 1 ltfu •·· \ lkt < t• fv I Hi9h Visibility '-l..r tf!I' l'nm1· Im 'Ont "main sMet" hltl1• :-•'"' 11 • •· > i;:L'>I• Traffic location Dt•lu,t• orru , ... p.lt'l' for II rl•ut 1·111,..11 ., H;ink Special leasi"CJ Bualtl111L' .all 1.. lilh :..i I 11 7 nc: 1 entt 416 " 7 ve 5 s-8N 6 o 6 w 2 I' \I ( "It I ,1 l' I 1' a I j: I' ~1111s11n or 1..i.11 "'"'"I Iii 11!1', I l''t.WI cPRIME HARBOR BLVD. NEWPORT CENTER 1'11 .,l l'I •I It t'otn \II'\\ full s1 r' 11111 ~HI .,11\Wh<t !I l~M i IX11 C .M. l.ol'Jl1on. 2000 sq rt S151'4J mo 548 1150, eves fi7f> 221~l f'lll'1 1· ('Ol<'\l.H <'d\1 Rentals 4475 I C ommerc:ial ·" :o~n ~q rt .• , :ul irn ••••••••••••••••••••••• "''cl ror 1 ••• ~.. h1~h1s1ore SpUC(' for lease. 1d111 l1t\ l1>1J l11•n 1111 tSOO sq.ft &l260sq.rt. !'('II an HunlinRlOn Beach. •l•l•,tl n .. 111111 1lo-nt.1I. Flex11'll' t erms MU ::.. 1ar1l. 111 11 11 2 1K111 <.,q rt Redur1·d 11, St:•t11• me> l~e Rl'c1 Caq111, I 893 11"\1 It .ti I l-11\' C llltlllll'l l'lotl 21:l '1!16 7202 .,11 ll't ... ·~·· :IHO 1,..r 11111 tu•luw Industrial Rental 4500 fll:trkt•t; ""•114•r \\'Ill ••••••••••••.••••••~··•• nc•Lnt1:H1· tl'IOcHkl Call SSOO up 1640 Indus I/Qr. face. 18101 R<'<iondo Cr. "P" lint Dch 842·2834 NEWPORT CENTER Full Servic<' Suitt•.., S CUT COSTS S All )OU need for on• monthly frl•' 640.5-170 *DELUXE O~ICES * From I room up to 1000 sq ft. $1 .08 per sq ft 3 rooms and up No lease required. 2172 DuPont Dr Adj Alrporter Hotel 83.1-3223 9-12 CdM Deluxe Suites. AC. ampl pkg, ulil pd 2855 E . C11t llwy 67~6900 T1111 Sin.II 11v ~1 n1· .~ f'l1>1JPrltt'S f1111k1•ra~1· I. "11 I 11 -;-·.:· lilll 1 I 1:wo qi 11 •H, .111 \ u. L<ti;unJ lkh Sl()(KI mo lea~r W4 •Klftll 99' Sq. Ft. 4 Wind ow Offtt r Suites + 2 stor:.tl!•' an •as All 756 sq rl r or $748 44 mo or :r7R '11 fl for $39h !1111 mo 0 t ' A I r p 0 rt r r w \ l 11 I' 833 2440 FORLUSI MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK 711 W .17th. St. Costa Mesa. Callf. 642-4463 Eastbluff. Spac. 1 Br. pool, sundeck. Quiet pleaunt area. Adlt.s. no peta. k90/mo. 144-4767 MOTEl Femaletoaharelg.fum.small o rri<'e 1827 Approxlmntely 2000 Sq Ft PnmcSpacti. Ground Floor Fashion Is land, Corporatt' Plaw Area $3500 Pr Mo 4 Year Lease + Option Call 1 1870 sq. rt Unit avail ror 1mmt'd occupancy . 1·2900 sq ft. & 1-3700 sq. rt. unit (s) avail. April Isl. 2 Stor age Warehouses avail. for immed. occupancy, 2000 & 2800 sq n.. •JJ<-34• sq ft. • Le1111J1g office hrs. Mon thru Frl 8-<t. Sat. 10.2 •Weekly ref\lals now av ail. •Sllll and up. •Color TV •Phones in ho m e b y o c ea n WestcUrf Or. N R Good Wash /dryer, garage loc. Sl50per mo 631·0900' $300. Call 493-9604 ---- rooms. Dix condo2t>r 2ba 2cr gar 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. •Free Room /B oard * ' • frplc pool 213/431-47se 646-7445. Fem non·smkr ~referic art 8 or wknds. sam e in exchltnge for Bachelor Room. 2306 W. hakpg & babysitting E. Bluffs Condo. 4Br, Oceanfront. Newport 752·2093,837·3962 38a, sundk, pool, $900 Beach. ---....----- mo . 645·3474, (213) Kltchen•Bath 541-4490 S2IO mo + aecurity d~p. ••• •: NewpOrt Relghu Duplex _67_M_™-------i Reaponslble, employee$ 2 Br. 1 Ba. Adulta. no v-~--•-&....L. 4•50 fem to shr !Wt BACK -----.. BAY CONDO w/prof pet,. $525. mo. lit. laat • ••••••••••••••••••••••• woman tc daughter. dePQ11lt. 517 Boa.a. Daye Large Bl1BearCabln Prlv. fum rm, bath, gar, t1•1 u1.mo, Ev• ta Wllnd11 Pool ublt, color TV, 2 cookln~dry tac. All 565041. frplc • slpa H . 5'5-81118 amen. /mo Incl utH. 1 Br. Yearl", l•"'•I• On tbe beacbl 2 In'. 2IOOt No dePQ91t, but r•f's an' , • req: Phoae 54&-0883 evell ,.ni.1. stepe to btHh. W. Offutroat. (Lower fn•luld *40 mo. 144·tlt9, UDJO •• ....., ot Mon·~~~~~~~~ l'Tlo-t.t\11 '1at-ll7'1 ·~ ~~~~~~~ --~~~~~~~·Offlcea..ltl 4400 ~tan View padooe, 1'.oaa, Bl 2 Br. Condo ............ -......... . luurloot 2 br/I b1 Ne~r HU... . ..-.,. •· Dtu•t fl'fll bldt i. 11.8. VerHlll•• eondo, all f.IO to ..... "W•ly'' Ill per ~.ft. lM. ~ amedMl.t7tO. --1-1~ --t CAJ'!!l'~llJUll I 0,000 Sq. Ft. SINGLE USER OFFICE BLDG. P61Q· tl. IMMIDIATI OOCUPANCY 40:5 Fwy/Harbor Bl. COMMERCE PARK 87.~•7 759·9100. Broker If;,.;;;, Rental 4-4-50 8000 sq ft w/2 loading doors 4' hi. 28' sq ft, Irv ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' o.330 A 114/l Newp<>r\ S..1i1f'h, Sl Z!) area. 556-· va · sq ft Ncwdlxofflce or 8700 s q ft office + retail w t pvt bath, worehou11e, Irvine In· secutlty, a /c, 600·2400 dwitrial. Call 844-1044 or ~q. fl S09 3lllt St <next l11quire Man»I Co. 16753 to B11nk or Newport, Noyes, 957·9196. Bkn. Lido Cannery aru). Cooplnvlted. 675-3238, (213)641 9700 110 -----Storeg• 4 Pti• Loeatloft •• • • • • •. ••• ••••• • •• • ... 1270 Sq lloo b~)' Beach Storale Warehou1es ln Boulcvard·Huntlngton Cotta Mt .. avail. for Beach. ldenl for real tmmed occupancy. IOOO e.tale otrl~. 1tort or' ' 2800 iq. ft. • ,er Ml· "Other 1W1abl b lneu. ft. Call 142.-"'3 llon. 2 Private balha, avail•· lhru Frt. M . Sat 10.t. ble Im tnedlalely. 10 Vear le&R A1tucUvt1ly prk~. 642-021 ..... Jl6 w.-u,. Own your own Wane·O G ram business Na taonally acclaimed. One time S3500 investment Write 9 Tilden Ln. Ch aco. Ca 95926 1916 )891-8502. S TART NOW ~Local Amway distributor of fers opply ror good earn angs. You pack the hrs, we assist, call 548-9140 Unlhnited Potefttial AM MW Products West Coast Distributor c apitol secu r ed b y merchandise. Fantastic net Easy sell. Call Mr Brody collect , wkdys 9 5, Sun 10 ·3 . 714-973· 1629 ---- MEATMARKET Busy shopping center lor in Ont ario 60'1 meat. 40'1-groceries. beer & wine. Good lease $125,000 Lucille B Scotl, Bkr. 714/981-2011 lnvestmeflt Opportunity 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOAN S.SOO or more Dbl your money Loan as secured by unprecedent· ed 1st an film financing history. 714-957-4086 SOLID SECURITY XLMTRITURN Fully managed invest menl program dealing an single family homes an So. Calif. Earn sub· s tantaal retOms on your capital; with strong tax s heltering benefits. You are secured by 100% owners hip or property, yet completely free or manager burdens-call Mr Doyle (213)277-~l ----- Mort9aCJH. Trvst Duds 5035 ....................... Sattlet-Mtq. Co. 15 yrs to pay 2nd, 3rd TO 's Low rates, ,fast personal all. Any amt Bkr, Nonnan. 962·4681. All t ypes of real estate investments since 1949 Aftfto•cemetlh/ SpKiatiziftcJ in Personah/ lnd TDs Lost & Found • ..•.•..•............... !4~2171 _!45-061 .!_ Anno•cemetlh 51 oo Widow has money for 2N 0 T . D.'s any size above $10,000. No credit •. no pnlty For action call AGT 673 -7311 anytime 2nd Trusl Deed purch ases arranged. For details, caJI 960-1957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Malady Crush - Henna Deadly - CANDLES The light company has a strange way of telling you thal your bill is aver· bkr. ----due. They mail you some Secured Short Term R E. CANDLES. loans-fast ~ecisions on Lo_s_t_&_FCMllld _____ S.l __ O_O complex s 1tuat1ons·be ••••••••••••••••••••••• pleasantly surprased . 1 _________ _ call 760-0715 S65.000 2nd TO. 18 '1, FOUND ADS ' 3 /yrs, $50,000 req Owner /Agt. 544·0333 or ARE fl(( 673-6720. $275,000 2nd TD. 25% int &all: Due 18/mo. Secur ed $2M eq u i l y . Owner I Ag t. ~~~6~4~2~·~5~67~8~~~ 544·0333 or 673-6720. 1-• T-D--fo-r_s_a-le-. -S-l50-,000--a-t Lost, Santa Ana & Monte Vista, CM . Male cat 17<7, int. Due 2 yrs. Sec. grey w /blk stripes. by $350,000. Newport REW Beach home with Sr. ARD645-7604 . loan of $68,000. 768·0454 Want 2 1-22% Yiftd7 On your T.D 's Noles URa1sers-lnveswrsU Call Dennison Assoc. 67J.7314 GARAGE SALE ads in the Daily Pilot bl'ing happy results. To place your drawing card , ~hone 642-5678 today! Lost. Cream fem. cat wt darke r markiqgs. White paws. Shoreoliffs vic ini t y, C dM . REW A RD. 760-6057 • Lost : 3126, male white To y Poodle , vie, T eWinkle Park, C.M. 751-8727. Lost . 3 mos . bid Leesbund puppy. Red collar. Vic: Harbor High. Loved family dog. Reward. 645-8587 or 675·8145 Found: ladies' watch , 3/27, vie . Lake & v I Adams, Hunt. Bch. 536-7674 Found Black Mecijum Poodles . Vic . Euclld /Edlns;er . 775.0075 ' Use ,,,...,. At/ servic~ -when placing your ad ... a Daily Piiot ad number wilt appear in your classified ad Found German ShePb,erd bl a c ll I tan fem lc-i e . German she pherd silver /black male. Hmlan male fl ame polnt. Newport &each Animal Shelter. ~1156 Found: wblte Toy Poo- d le, female, vlo. on B roadway, C1M . Fl'fthly IJ'OOID . .-1m. . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this servlct Is only $7 .. 50 week. For more Inform•· tlon and to place v.our ad cal I 642-5678. roun'9 : Cocllapoo female . Youn 1 . sro/bl ll. 1"rlen6ly. Hamllton/Plieeatia. Cotta ..... --- Foud: ... Nl'IJ 1:IP ,med II dOI , v;;. Nt•bope/JWI. ... "'2 , ~I~~ , _ OtangeCout DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 ~~.!!~ ..... !!~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~!~~.~:.~ ..... ?!~ ~~!!~ ..... ?!!4! ~~.,.~~ ..... !!!! ~I,... IJIO M•W-... 7IOOMet.Wi111114 7100 H .. Wmhd 7IOO CLERK Part tlmt to Eambta•troowkPC>MI• •UAIDS lflture Woman Aide to RealEa&.a&e ., • .. •M•••••••••••••••• ueT .. ••••••••••••••••• ~~~Te._~•e_•••_•••,·~··•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• work ln photo clrlve· bl•. JO~ cocnml11loft. Full 6 part Ume. A.JI car• for bancUcapped SUCCBS OI • ~: while female AIDB ,,,,. CASH•S tbrv, mornln1 ahlft •1-w anat. Unlfonna fum'd. alert lady, mu.t have FAILUll .... 17 -.. Jtd at .... V.,. Bukia~ Photo or Nlall up. pre-' A&" 21 or.tl'fw, Nt.lted car to accom colJas-i· 1 Have )'OU c:ould9red ~6.....,,s.5-IOlll S:.O to .u·~· Varlltd LMll 1o..t. 101,.SOtilS .,l.'d.butaotAQ'd.Apply •-----welcome.Nouper.oee. blewhkhr.t.5.U .25per tbe plHalla of com .,...... •110 dayi, n .»UO Fri 41 "4.&IVAL ~ Now aceept.la1 applica· lat: 2118 N9wport Blvd. •1-1...._••~,....... Apply: Unhtrnl hour NB Loe Call merclallrretkitnUalre r' ...,.__ • Sal. ror rellremeot """.. Uooa. Pltlme. Will lraln. ,.~ .. M --= A --Prolfftion Servi . -· ' -~· ....................... b om•. Mu• t. b av• Clerk ,.._ availabt.. Nr Al.-.... 1570. """'ta eu, at. _,.. Fait ll"OW1nl ln•-ma· ce, LDt US.M3 ... at.et. .... ~um . PRE LAW awdeet ..S. toowled .. workJnl with 'N MA/GN)IA loan ,_.. tbruApriUnd. f Co. Ii .. W. Kb St., Santa Ana. --11'1> INT rat.a, . I aliOOO. WW do ~a eLderlJ pei!Jpk. MMl8l packafinl experience CASJU£R/ Clerk for re-tlou ~ n •la bit Interview b.n: •12 Ir 1+4, MedlgL escrowa. rannln• for Leu I. Confident! al · helpfu . Will coulder tall •tore. Mwt be 0 . Clerk• eane1r91aydl '"'l•c:h.utronnffdi" aro1~ Moa·Fri. Jl .. AY TICH ll1tln11. t>ompetltlon nll. P.O. Bba rut, AIRCRAFT Diap111A:her/ lraltlln1 a PtnOfl with per. Call . Balboa Twodeskcletbwanled bl...... ... Part time. 30hn/wk elt'.I N!B.ta't. Reuptloni1t. Huvy feneral olllce Marine.~111'11,E.O.E. for Costa lleH Motel. Q:a'ilttca6oJt,~1~;;. Wa~~~o~~:front M ·F . Por omce In 'rofftelaa•&..ct pbooa, Ute secretarial nowled1e. Call Miu M/F /H Day 4' Eve •hill avall. e •Per. In e I e cl r o Salon ...... ,~-Newport Beach. ARRC c.,.,...._ C 0 VER GIRL work ~ llOllUons avaU-BradJey. Wiil traln u nee. Call l2 h I l bl v•v -Ir C RT re q u l red Haa lbe wwer for your ,4 • OUfCAU • aftenoona Ir whds. COLDW&.LIA.MkH CHILDCARE for 2.,... yr noon lo8pm.8*74'S. PC~ :.~e:b,;,s~U wl~: HARDWARE SALES 631-4422. •uccfltt In u.1. ~~ MC/vts• Knowledce of alrc:ra/\ Re&ldent.lalMort1a1e oldglrl hmto3pmdal· loa. harneuloa. & Fullllme/partllme.Ap-MO.._Mi.IA.. 2.Learn to market low ---·-" helpful Paraona' Air, Services ly. WeatcUCf area. Call CLllUC/TY'1ST mechanical assembly; ply in person: Crown ~. coat Iota and acreage In FIRST LADY &acort. Models 557·1900 Irvine.Ca a/t8pm.5'8-8075 For hotel corp. FuJIUme. be able to train ... Hardware, 1024 Irvine, Comm 'ls, films, ex· So. Calli. We bave 103 (714)975-1080 Call8Sl·l325<Joyce). semblera ; oraanhe (WestclilfPt..za>NB traa ... SCAS needs new INT. rates. EamSSOK to Apartment Manaaer As-E.0.E. manpower & material fac:e1, all aaes. 957·0282. SlSOK, lint year. year, 1lstant. E•perleneed. Civil En11neer Companloo., responsible, resourcet; & display HELP NllDIO -unUntited leads & mor,. ! :mrrw-. Mature Couple ror 100 Be SUIDIVISIOH mature person needed lo food leadership akllls. Cooks, Buapersoo11 OFFICI CLIRIC LlctMe N~ '" ... Unlta.C01t,a Meaa.Work au~JOJOIA• IM..,MlaS& stay nights w/older Qualified applicants AndHoetPerson Fullllmedaya.Account· Forsuccessin1981,ask MIC Ir VISA Accepted Sunday + 1 weekday. o-M'IL .... _S woman. Plea.sant aur-should contact Ray Full/Part time all poei-In&. aeneral oHle~ for Mr.Telles. - On call Evenlnp. Free Non surai~al contour DRA;;;'.;ilSOH rounds. Laguna Beach. Gilman at Scientific lion•. Apply in person duties . Ca ll Bob : 955-340Uc831·8S57 'f' .. ~r.-e......v apartment. No salary. facelift W l train five Career opportunity 4lM·4~7 Drilling lnlu-nalional Mon·Frl 3-SPM Rubin E. 770-1877. _ _, _________ 1 Beautiful Adult com· career·Orienled people avail. for talented le ex· COOK/EXP'D ~7·9051, E.0.E. Lees 151 E. Coaat Hwy p ART .Tl ME . person ''"' llcorfl . Uffra. 841·0180 1 C..-/Checka · At.hp/MC/Visa *FOXY LADY • OUTCALL ONLY VISA MC ,., • 972-1131 * •• , . SPIRITUAL READINGS ·lOpm. Fully Llc'd 296 or 492.9034 1815 ,,, Camino Real, San C\tm _..._ ___ _ THE u-.G irffriends ···•ISCOITS• t{pmuOHk.(Hotel ,,• 759-12 6 * Plex &42·4907 to become make-up NB · · •rtiats "tea~rs. Only per'd. individual with Fulltime 9am-Spm. 0 fm· · · Friday-Secretary, mWlt Applications being ac-serioua·tnindedneedap. wellestabllabed&grow. mediate opening . INGR.·9UAL Hoateu/Hc9t: 2·3 days, drive, some It travel ceptedforfuUtimeparts ply. Commiuion.'wlth ing Civil Engineering Newport Beach. Call Exp. in QC or QA. Saale hours flaible. $3.50 to locally, duties incl driver/shop helper. manaeement potential. rlrm nr. O.C Airport. 833-384 electro·mech exp. start. Spaihetti Bender. makine appts, pay bills. Background In pressure Call for appt. Mrs. Apply in persco with re-1. helpful. Energ deg. 64.S-O&Sl shopping, nex hrs~ hr cleaning equipment Tharp.~2322.960-232.4 sume to: Mr. Fuentes at Cook needed for Conv Salary to :.>K. Top co.. +expenses 646-lMt8 h.elpful. Calif. dri.ve.r 's Bi'lling Cl--'-(or water RFobetr! ~~ .. Willi1a0m Hosp. F/T, 9:30·6.00. full bnfts. no fee. Grove ---.,,,.. ros ex "-""'ates. 4 l Xlnt salary & benefits Employment Aeency. Hotel p license & good dnving dist. CRT exp pref. Xlnt Quall St.. Newport incl ins. vacation & sick 12112 Brookhurst. a G .... H~r art Tine record a must. $3.SO per benefits. Hrs 8·5pm. ,~~B~e~a~c~h~~~~~~!'I pay. Apply Beverly _537_·_3_l89_______ f'lll c-...._YOYth hour to start. Ap~ly Mon-Fri. Starting salary M E-M T1-.-/1L. ----... 17777 ~am Street. Su1te 1902/mo. Please call • anor 340 Victoria. CM FILE CLERIC rwm ·-"""'" c..n.n A lrvlne cu o..... Cleaning Person. Apart E.0 .E. G j We are seek~ reliable Adults with outstandmg • · _,...,...,, Mrs. Finneaan or Mrs real ob for student or 1 · • ment Bld0 ". Full time. h peop e onent persons. attractive personalities Ridgway at631 1200 .... ousewife desiring part E · 11 ARCHITECTURAL lnlermed. Draftsperson Newport Beach Office W Rylee AJA 640-2912. ARCHITECT Project ArcWtect ArchJobCaptaift Space,..__.. Architectural degree. exp. required, exciting NB architectural & in- terior design nrm. H.D. & Assoc. G6().6266 · · Costa Mesa. Newport COOK. Piua Ir short or-lime position. Flexible b nJofy !?xce ent co. to spend l5 hrs per week IOODllPll Beach area. der. Must be 18. Ex· hours. No experience ene its including a free counsellng youth ages Newport Beach Real Estate Developer needs full charge bkkpr lo as· sume respoosibllily for multiple set of books. Salary open Call 546·9316 for interview appt. --lookkHpinc) Cieri! Full time, exper. helpful but not nee. Many com TSl.MGMT 642·l603 perience a plus. Mull •• h meal per shift. Apply in 10-15 Evenings & ----Lynch 's. 311 Palm . :~~essary .,./ r. Apply person 9AM-Noon, Mon· Weekends Available. $75 CLERICAL Balboa Pen . Sid · TheJollyRogerlnc. Fri.Personnel. per wk c a 11 675-1556. t7042Gillelte Ave., Irv MARllonHOTEL 2:30·5:30pm. Mon thru ---900 Newport Center Dr. Fri. 642·4321 ext 343 I of the nation's all-lines Newport Beach Ask for Lori. General Equal Opp Emplyr M/F Orege Coast fULL·PARJ TIME Hotel San Maarten of S T U D E M T S Laguna Beach requires: OK Bell Assistants, working Daifv,Uot 330 W. aay Street Costa Mesa. Ca Equal Opport Employer 2dtrs MC ,_-_-.-; _______ , paoy benefits. Apply ate Now Hiring,.. 1660 Placentia Ave .. Visa ASSIMILIEIS Costa Mesa COUNTER HELP insurance companies Food Service. Busy de· bas SEVERAL entry. Ii ·Caterin g. Exper. level clerical positions. pref., but will train We w i 11 train l h e Feasts. 494.4772 qualified applicant that --------- types at least 45wpm. Counter help, F I T These are challenging Kuster's Cleaners. 186 positions for the person E. 16th 5411-4243. who has been out of the job market for quite some time & w1Shes to' return to work or so-I meone who is Just start·' mg out C Must be 18J Exc1t1ng pay. company benefits. Car needed. Head Housekeeper. mature security person· net Full & part time for all shifts. XJnt. working cond Apply in person btwn lOAM & noon daily PART TIME Person needed in Book pasteup. Mon & Tues No exp nee. Apply l660 Placen· l.Ja Ave .. C.M -~-------Loe. Mission Viejo co. - - - -UJ,__ -needs Assemblers w/2 BOOKKEEPER AM'bER formerly with yrs. exp. Candidates! PIT late PM /Eves AI R COVER GIRL 1s now must have gd. manual · · w 1 t h T H E dexterity, gd. eyesight. AI P. Exp. nee. Non GIRLFRIENDS' neat in appearance & de-smkr. Tuslln. 832-7300 _ ~ PHONE FUN I pendable Work 1s in hfe _________ , 8AM ·l2PM Mc VISA support medical elec· IOOICICEIPB F/C tron1cs Gd benefits Fashion Island invest ~_i7~1_636-GMJ On I y res pons i b I e menl firm. Excell op-persons seekmg perma-F or a t herapeutl l' nentemplymt.needap· portunity. Exper & massage ~Y a l1c 'd ply Call: Mrs. Parelb. maturity req'd Call therapist S25 lo all NEW 581 3830 714-640.0123 cli,en t s M f' 10 7 PM :.:::.:.;;~~~~~~·1~~~~~~~~- _54'1-_ !817 -Bright, mature person Psychic reader & ad visor. Past. present. fot."re Love marriage, twalth. character, bust· ne•s. Readings in a II areas t•or info & appl 675·7046. 27 yr old w-male Sagit ta nan would like to meet remale comparuon I'm a. /elf employed artist W'1th 1nter !>l 1n Palmistry. Numeroloo. Music. Travel & hav1n~ a ·aood lJme looking for gaJ with a sense of humor & same tnterei.ts Randy ~7019 "t AnAHTIC MASSAGE SPA by 16 Open days Be pampered Beaut Girls lOA M -4AM 7 Phone 64S-3433 SQ Assistant Cook Ex· who loves children to pertence or Trainee. help pltime in Pediatn Cooking Italian foods. ciaos ofc. Mrs Austen. S p a g he tl i 8 e nd e r , 645·4670 645·0651 ---------IUS PEISOMS ------- AUTO MECHANIC General repair. Must be full y expe rien ced . sala ry + commission. 51'l dys per wk . Call Erni e 6pm lo 9pm 661 9196 I AUTOMCYnV~ LOT MAH Full time. Responsible. mature person needed ror s pecial duties . References required. EVENINGS. Dillman·s Restaurant Apply in person 801 E. Balboa Blvd. Balboa • C Al DRIVERS• Checker Cab 770.0222 CASHIER HOUSEWARESALES Apply in person: Crown Hardware, 1024 Irvine, cWestcliff Plaza) NB Must have 2 years ex·.._ ________ _ perience Call Steve'" Harvey for an appomt· ment ROY CARVER ROLLS ROYCE ,fcl~f44 CASHIERS UTDTEM We offer compet1t1ve salaries & a n xlnt. benefits package Call To Charles Palomino for appt 714 937·4416 THE TRAVELERS E 0 E M/F/H Clerical G.O. TYPISTS Register today for local tern porary assignments 557-0045 CT\-Lll\: 1£MPOllAllV PlllSONNH SflMCfS 3723 lirch Street H•wDOri ~och t .O.E. CLBUCAL Insurance co. offers an entry level pos as 8111· tng Clerk Typing 40 45wpm Gd compan) benefits S4 15 an hour. Data ProcnaMc) Operator needed for nix· dorf /entrix systems for long term assignment. Call for more info. Tod Services. 979-8900 DEHT AL ASSIST AHT Corona del Mar 644-7162 DEHTALASSIST. F/t1me chairside. Ex· per. pref. GP office. S45·4553. Nr So. Coast Plaza. ---------- Dl\lltal Front Office Receptionist. beac h area. Very pleasant at mosphere. Salary com· mensurate with exp. 645-7580 ask for Darlene. DENTAL Front office. HB . Desirable pos. in busy, quality o re Friendly atmosphere awaits experience Salary neg. CaJI Joanne at 962·3310 -------Dental Nurse: Cha1rs1de, Non Smoker. Pedo Ex per. pref. Fash.ion Ts. 644.()6) l. Call Laura. 833·8450,1---------•I 14 01 Dove St . N B DESIGNER E 0 E I DRAFTY CLERK Laguna Beac:h elec· Drapery /mfgr needs tronics manufacturer ind lo coordina te in needs: stallat1on scheduling. •an experienced person Salary + ben will tram to be r esponsible for Beach Drapery. 16692 drafting & mechanical MARKETS Milliken, lrv~6478 design functions. Must ~6'1W•c1 CaU IO..to 3!'.!! 696 So Coast Hw y. 714-847-2422 Laguna Beach_ 1-Pa•rt•.•T•im•e ___ ..., Hotel STUDENTS ~~~~~~~I TURNDOWH HOMIMAl<ERS •GEHEttALOFftCE• SHIFT Earn extra money, Answer phones, typing. B1hngual Apply lo Miss working p/time 10 your filing & help organize Ma rc1. Surf & Sand own home. introducing our airport ofcs Part Hotel. Laguna Beach. the New Daily Pilot to time/Full time Reha· 497·4477, ext. 365 The Orange Coast Area• ble. confident ind1v1dual HSIC,R/C---Set yourownhours' Call mus t have neat ap -··..,..--...... Weekdays between 4pm pear a nee. Call Laurie Refined-over 50 for older & 6pm, ~1.527. for details: 833-0440 writer. Small home on ._ ________ ~ -----Bay. own room & bath GENERAL OFFICE Light work. live in. must Immediate opening 1n drive, no smoking. Send our purchasing dept for resume to P.O. Box 403, an expr'd person with -~~~!:a De~~fltr. 92625_ xlnt typing skills & a p 1 ea s Ing p h 0 0 e INSURANCE. property. personality. Duties will c a s u a l l y c I e r k I also include filini. order s_ecretary .. Personal taking and other general Lines. Established agen· office work Xlnl cy, Cor ona del Mar benefits & worktng con· 673_·8650 ________ _ Part Tine & Temporary Jobs Amable Clerks. Secretaries Receptionists , all Office Skills Needed!! d1hons with a growing ~om pany Apply 10 person at Insurance Agency needs IVJCKJ Hl:STONI competent person. Must _ • THE JOLLY ROGER INC 17042 Gillette Ave Irvine 714 /S46-033l type, will tram personal & AtlOCICltft I.mes P T to start, xlnt opportunity Brennan <Spec1ahzing to Co H B. 962-3597. Temporary Clerical INS_U_R-AN_C_E -;;e-nc-y l48?84e~o GEHSlAL ser vice rep. comm 'L --- Courier/Clerk, part lime lines acct handling, 75r; Part Time needed for Npt Bch. ofc .. 25'X rield Un-1 Areyoutooy0411tCJ medical lab. Perm pos. derwr1tmg. service sales for 0 ~fob? Prefer mature person po s Ca r ex pens e . N 0 e x p e r 1 e n c e Phone. Jan Hillyer, salary, romm. Min. 3 necessary You will be _64_0_·0140 _ _ _ yrs. comm'I. underwrit· trained Earn big com Ing exper. Must have F missions. PLUS allrac & C lie. Orange & L.A. live bonuses Contact Real Eat.ate Sales Experienced agents are needed to work with ex eculive level clients. Must have proven track record You will be working with pro- fessional associates. Our office offers • • Best ~ach location •Liberal commission Program •Nat'I referral program Call now for appt . Walt Hemphill, 673-7300 RECEPTIONIST. part- time for prof ofc, C.M , 18th & Nwpt. 642·8752 RECEPTIONIST · Newport B each architectural firm. Good telephone personality. lite typing H.D & As· soc. 640·6266 R.ceptionist Part Full Receptiorust Typing. light bookkeep· 1ng & other clerical work Hasson & Assoc. 851 1651 RECEPTIONIST Needed for busy lrvme law office Light typmg Call Pal. 833-3622. RECIP'T/SECY Type 65 wpm , transcrib-ing & 10 key skills req'd Salary based on exper lmmed opening 957.5850 Rose RECEPTIONIST needed for Ir vi ne Es<"row ofr Must have neat appearance and pleasant phone manner Hrs 8 5 Mon lhru Fri. Call for appt. 552 4050 Toni RECEPTIONIST Doctor's office. Newport Beach. Some secretarial s k 111 s 640-0760 RECEPTIONIST Full time Mon-Fn Musl be personable & well groomed. & enjoy meet- ing the public Requires good s pelling & pen: manship No typing Phone experience pre ferred Full company benefits. Apply Pen nysaver. 1660 Placentia Ave., C M RECEPTlOHIST With or without typing needed Top pay. Tern porary & full time. Call Tod Services at 979-8900 Attractive lady desires to meet gentleman over 40. PO Box 8611, Fountain ~alley 927Cll. •AUTO SALES For2nd&3rdShirts ----have thorough AHD LIASING! We promote to manage Clerical knowledge of drafting GEHERA.L OFFICE Looking for a very in· terealing part time job in pleasant o rfice? Clerical, tor mature person. Location P.C.H . Npt. Bch. Exper. a must. Accurate typing, no shorthand. 20 hr. week includes Sat & Sun. Call: 646-7431 Counties Call : Circulation Depart ---------Rec pt/Sec 'y V.1.P. llR!Moy.,...& ,...,.Clffon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobs Wanhd. 7075 ·~t··················· E'-~cutlve Sec retary wwits secret.anal work ~ Sal. at your office 5*9280aft6 7100 Get set for '81·'82 & the ment & supervision from FILE CLERIC procedures. PC board J ·Car! Neat Chevy store within. ln11urance co. needs layout. digital. analog. in exciting Airport in· WANT A CAREER·~ person to be responsible microwave circuit de· dustrial complex will C11 05 1 Dela Ml Mesaar ror the File Room. sign, & some knowledge add 3 combination Duties also include of electro·mechanical salespersons now for EZ 631·9421 switchboard relief Gd. packaging. straight sell & lease. company benefits S4.15 Opportunity for advan· Generous pay & demo Laguna Beach an hour Call Laura, ce ment & c areer plan. Auto exp. not re-494·9233 833 8450, 1401 Dove St . growth. We offer xlnl. quired, but previous sell· HuntingtOn Beach N. B E 0 .E. pay & ~nefits + •G-en•e•r•a•I -----•I ing helpful. See Sales 962-9116 Class1f1ed Ads. your one 4 DA y WOR1C WEEK T Mgr CSat&SwiOK> l~~~~~~~~~·j stop~hopping center Facility is in beautiful IMICllNMllayCi..b Diane Bullock ment, 642·4321. leave 833·9550 E.O.E. name & phone number -----You will be contacted JANITORS Wkdays or eves. Exp or will tram. $3.75·S5.501hr. depending on exp N B. 642·6824. Ka.. a PBX PBX OPERATOR Recpt/SK'y. HELP! HELP! Busy So Calif corp needs you to .. answer phones, type. screen calls & most important· ly. set up appointments for our Acct. Reps. Base salary plus percentage of the sale. Call now for more details. 631·5991 HOW AID CIMnolet I . -Laguna Canyon near la now Wring: ~i·~·oc·Lu-~:;·.·;;·~· N~~;~~~E~~H •••••• .. Da1·ly P-1.IO{ ~=~c~r~p~o~~~!i s~ HELP NEEDED Part time Mon·& Fri 6-3 e very other Sat 6·4. every Sun 8·6 no exp 631 -1030 or apply 1n Person 125 Mesa Dr. CM ask for Dawn Full time position avail for day shirt with rotat ing weekends. Qualified apphcant will be relia ble person with pleasant & efficient phone man· ner. Enjoy excellent co.--------- ll;Rft .,. Dept. Telonic Berkeley: The Jolly Roger Inc hs Auto Se1et • • 714-494 -9401. Laguna an entry-level position Cort.-a.&....... • A t p bl •. Beach. E.O.E. aV.ilable in our sales le ........... • • ccoun s aya e • 1------ d•h accounting dept. I X p • r I • fl C • d lookkee-for a person who has t I ht I I • f r -· • ReMnatloft • Type 50wpm , (i Ing. phone exper. StonCIHtl Fri .. Sat., Sun. LIFEGUARDS Easter week & summer vacations Irvine 968-0311 ~lted experience, but I r • 9 I• A ull·lime position is available DESIGN IJ.ambitlou,, & wllling to ,.,..... Ml~ for e for accurate person with a l least e ENGINEER G• ,.,.._ • MAIMTEHANCE! benefits including a free meal per shift Apply 9AM ·Noon, Mon-Fri Personnel MARRlon HOTEl 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr M/F le,rn. lyr. exper. pre· Hfeltlthedtfore •• two years expe rien ce in . Mfg.co.inMissionViejo T Wed Th Permanent position ~t~~?i;g~:f'es~ec~~~:. N..-oMoton e processing accounts payable for e !f::trfce:1dsco~~~~~~r~~ ~eus~tberi~xib~~· Ideal for retiree-type P~~~~=c: aom e filing . ma i I· I 5451 hoch llYd. • computer input. cash reporting • .h er m et i c sea I s. Pl ::o~n~k~:e ~~~. t~i~i~~ Leading local pest.con- RIEMTALAGEKT '•r•aMttt positions GYall. Growhtg tool ,........ fina. Neat .. p•ara11ce. Good e.-dwritfltg. S.-fits.. W llttrain..,,.., 1930 Newport ll•d, Costa Mesa. or 22600 L-.. bert ·St.. I 203, 1203 llTOf"O. proceuing & general WRttwWbtt e and disbursement scheduling and e transducer design, com-64~~~~5~al~~0~. F~f~: lain offices and do light trol company needs t»rical work. Xlnt. lt4-JJIJ • forecasting. Will prepare bank • ponenls materials & S:30-SPM noor Janitorial, five and route technician for --------- IMneflts & working con· -----+-----i deposits. Mus t possess good methods. ~~~~~~~~~I a half days in pleasant steady Job. Entry level Re~cufli8"A&.D•S ditlona with a growing • ff. k ' I I p • Duties include design, -dino• Good position. We train . no co.Apply lo person: Babysitter needed for o ice s 1 s . ermanent position drafting, materials test· GEN OFFICE -Exciting :un"dou:en';'iils. /:~ expr. nee. Call Tim on TheJollyRo1erlnc. alewardeas w/10 mos. • with good salary. Company paid e ing & R&D projects. fin. Co. need s eager ServlceMgr. Monday.SU-5922 Now hiring tuJI & part 170420llletteAve. Irv. baby flex hrs exp pref e life, hospital. medical and dental • Mechanical Engineer-person w/all around of· HOWARDCIM•roa.t .. .._-.. .._----..1111--.1111--.1111_11111 time. Days, eves. Great 714-546-0331 673-4029 • benefits . Company credit union. • ing d egree pref'd . flee skills. Some bkkpa. ""'' ·1s ., -P/T - -career opportunities. ' A l O Qualified candidates Dovele...,..au ta. On·the·job trainin1. For ACCTSlllC. BABYSITTER • pp Y at range Coast Daily • send resume to: Mrs. •typlngreq.Cbancetor NEWPORT BEACH CREDI1'CHECKER m ore info .. call : Penon to work w/com· Help! Working Mother • Pi lot between 8 AM ·5 PM or call • J a n s . 2 3 8 9 1 V i a advancement for rilhl _M_A_N_A. _____ / AW--=-. -.t-.-Credit experience pref . 754-9943, or Inquire at: er. Adept at AIR bk· needs reliable Baby1lt· • 642·4321 , ext. 277. • Fabric ante, Su1te 603, person. Call for appl. .., • . 1 Oexible bn, lrv. 3141 Harbor Blvd. Cost& Coll cU • rt ti In Lon Mi.ssio Vil j c -1 '44-.a4. "omen 8 spec1a ly Mesa. . e on exper ~er, pa me g • Cameraman • n e O, a. -Co I I Fin l store. f'ull time . lrvlne ~nonnel Agy :lilul. Gd office mach Be a ch. Ca II Irene mm ere a anc na h ·-E. 1 ...... "-ta M ..... a .. •-... ,_ Co be Services Clot Int expr. Nancy -•ut """' .... :;-,;:.;:f0;"~e r1r~: 2131438-2&02. e ·Experienced at least 5 years. e DISKCLllK --------1 _-C..=a-::''~·::•":-t-;.•;;;:H:--9S:::~·~S-~ui~te~E4,~~~-~tt~2~·l!!!l!47~o RISTAIMAMT Room for advancement Babysitter P IT. my • Must be able to use newspaper e NCR '2IOO exP. desired. GROC• Maoaaer. Ottl~e work, -Sandwich Maker hrs •r.noftalirowth.Call boUJe,Calll.2nooo·Spm e camera .and plalemaklng . AM•PMabills.Apply We are 1eektn1 counterhelpfor foodP/Tlruck&equipmenl 7AM ·3PM Mon-Fri, 'o ap ......... ~~ ·~" '""13 In person, Aliso Crffk mana1erW type ptl'10n b d /h ·&.e~!-~JS~-----.... 'eo ..;;~ . 1 -·-e system s . Excellent wages and e Inn. 31108 Cout Hwy, with knowledp of Mid· service. Seaaonal, 16 waa er. 4 ays, ao rs - _ m Services ucan • benefits . Aj>ply in person • SoulbLaeuna. die Et1tern culture. mo.). H.B. a.ru. Call E. week. United Rent All, BaDklna • e w /r esume to Orange Coast Daily e AblUJy to 1peu. read• Sontralh. (714)544-5378 C.M. 845-0780. ~ertialq MIW +.Cl•tJ Pilot. , DJETITIAN · RD for 82 write Arabic a neceul· ~.wrtte 14511 Acaci,or. ftUAUTY HILPWAMTIO flli-•-• • bed paychlatrlc boap. ty. Knowledl• of food 1~atln,Ca.93MO. "" RetaUSalel • Women'• F IT retail, days. esp. rref erred'1 •lrH benef ts. Cal 770.tm uUort.arry. a.le• ,repreMntaUve to • Part Time Eve1111· gs • RuronslbllitiH Incl bu1lnt11 11 an HHl. . C~OL 11 on R..ser Ad b 1 C•Slllr tota menu plan11tn1. Ma y requl re 1om e MASSIUSI lmmed. e>penina ln final :.. accta. for adv~: : C.. ..... Y ..... ~ • dltlary con1ultallon tr ave I l n 1 . Sa I a r y Part time. Pvt. country lnapecUoa, hoH 6 flt· RH / NunU., Coordinator' "'*·Mon.Fri., UM· J;!5;~.:U-me~=• Adults wHh outstanding e w/docton • palienta fr ne10Uable. Anaheim club. Call for Interview. Una, mu•tJau co. 'for adult Paycblatrlc 5Plt a...+ aomlft Co available tn our South attractive pe HU h 1upervl1lon of dietary area. FM Wboleule 844-$404 pbyelc:al lncl ln1 back P r o I r a m . beneftU. WWtraln. Ntal e . rs on a es w 0 e at a ff . p, • v 10 u 1 o r o ~ e r 1 1 n c . , ' X·ray. Taltln1 appllca· Ra1>9"1lbWU. lnclud( appqrance A 1c1. •pell· Coe~L Plau otnee. Call: • en.JOY working with 10.J.S year old • Ho1p/1upervl1ory ex· 714·AM5'70 MAT81AI. Uou btwn I Ir 10.m on-iupervllloo ol own avn· it. HaalJ•I. Apply: ath~l•Y e youths. Start a l $4.00/hour. 2:30 e P e r t e 0 c • n • c . HA-.J... ly . Stratollex, 17871 Ina atart, tdladuUns. pa: •ayuur, ino PM and 5:30 PM. 642-4821 E>rt. Caplttrdlo br llM 8u ••~ Tmmad. optnJn1 for Ar~ttron1 Ave. Irv ,, Uent atatnnc, eva haa· c..ua Aw .. CM CA119U • 2.50. Ask ror Lori. • H•ad o,.,,..., .. p•r part. clert, rullbtr "°'' EOE ,. Kiindavla Ind., tlona .. luervlc, ... • • • Roap ..... s. HM•cl bJ HUnUa~on prodacta. aum paa co. Co· \ ahtnca. ~ppUcn& i.n AMOllC 11 ~ .-. . . • • Drapery rnuulHtu.rer ••eh Cit1 lthool Ollt. phy•lcal lneludln1 INtk • • mut have 1tMQ1 com~ .n, ~ fEIOll ••·. D ;::-1• 8"dt won room ..._. 1a01 o . po a I t Ion •·ray. 'tdllll applfoa· Nanel malcat.lea • PtOblil~ ~~"'.i'o.Jr. Newport h I W •er. "UI trUn. lltlf .. :m>•::a"' IDOOUl Uonabetwnl lOamoo-bow DIM>' NDt a.a. •ohhl alt I lla • ~.............. ~'r:.,. &.e. ,.. 330L . aySt.reet Tlnan.T-5:llPllorP/T. ~eo=-=•• llJ!•n ~~ ly. S&ratoC~u . 111111 lfttd .,_ ~ ~ hPtr•IMrY -~ •TOWllCeill#Dr. ' Coata Mesa CA C.JI •Ne.IOJl&a. ... r '1e!eb. Annal,._, AVt ., rv., ...... wlli~M.lt.J la ... ~'adltb· for male ta c.ta ..... ea·nr-~F.qu1J OpportunJty1 Employer • ·· COi A~ ..... ~OW .... P•IUoa la M•·Prl ~-, llloe.46t. ~ -...... -_ ~ :'\"~ • Drlhn nMded. Part -.-1. ·~ Ce. I 'ac , -" ~ ,, '9 ,.,, ,.. ,. ......, IDQ be na..._:J '•k•k ... PI L ' -~ . ' •••••••••••••• u.. ... -. •• ailabkL ,,.. .. ,.. ...... a+·'"'n oMl.,..._'I{ ~I ..... ~.,,,. ... N1.lntll&llW1• . . . __ ... _ • CaUlclr~:llMllL ~'i ,D9UJPllll~. !!!p \lf!nj ....... '"'' _ "~ .. 1 ...... __ 1 -·~ -· .[ii!> ' ~ ; ·1: \,: .. ... l ,. .,,. . . .14.' 11 -•\ 1f -----... . ..... - ... «:II ~.~!!~ ..... ?!!! ..... ~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~ !!~~-~ ..... ?L~~ ~: ............. ~~~~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 S.let/ Advmlainc *** Pref1Ssl1nal ca!!~~~E~ ple ror 1rowin1So. Calli. eorp. Earnln& potential.. •lat yurb>-MOK •Company tralnlna w/pay •Hl•h Income Potential •Unlimited ca.ualiried leada Call: Jobllfe Ne ws, 714-631-5991 SIC-"•y Service StaUon Atten-WAITllH/WAITH AKC Bcaal• pupplea, ,_....... IOIO hcd•11• 1010 ~a...... ......rower f040 -·-/T M l e Private Club d h r lb ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••Ill ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fut 1rowln1 Oranae dent, P • eve1 • . a ur . . 1ran <' amp. a er, ' •••• •'•••••••••••••••• 44 PACIFICA. '7t/2JO Co. lllCml Cootulllna wkends. Nut ap lotervlew1 Thunday, 8/wbold,S175.~7.a119. Game table + lut, ' llOWOOOb61 .... ,.. 90IO bra. ute. All ra,..,_, op. firm ae.b ll&Wed ~y. 1>4'arance • handf'l'lt· ll·•PY. UM>l B•r•ld• chalre. xlnt eond. $650. 8"",slntdedd.Da; ••••••••••••••••••••••• tlons Stt7 .ioo~ 41 capable of handlln1 Ina. Apply at 2Sto Dr.Cdtl. Poodle Pupa: Apricot, 730-3505. New load-11,000 ln KAYAK paddle le 1klrt PAClflCA del HM wide variety of office NewportBlvd,C.M. Wauhouu /dell very ~i4,~C,:.S2:S0.Call Belae6Goldl0"Daven· from mW. ~/ft, C.M. rtber11a11,sood1hape. N er uied si11seo· fu.ncllona. We otter xlnt Se I (In Sho l Xlnt person for party rent1l port. Gd con.cl. S~yra 6'5-91J7 Xl2T anytime. •100 $46-21874 o!t'h located,~-: oppty ror Jl'Owth llonl rv ce-p . . tor PIT I """'"' PUPPIES R ad ror Id SI...,. ... -..... PRAM .. _... .,. Y ....,._ 11• .,_ .. wltb compreheulve oppty • benefit• for ~ •· rt 81· d•pt ~ ~-.. Euter~l2!>2e Y 0 · ..... -..·-(uevY Buuy> Sall or power boat trlr. 4 rraaer ac..... ,....__,,, compenaaUon le btoefill mechanlcally·lncllned ewpo v • · ' 4 wem rilht now G.,...a s.. 1015 UkeNew SW wheels, heavy duty. lo• S.. tO•O paclraJH. 2.a yn exper: lndlvld1.1al with basic Warebou.ae Ir Delivery. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8314335 $375. • .... ~--••••••••••••••••••••••• typln1at80wpn.;some electrical knowled1e. F I T , relax~d at 0 Garaae Sale· Sat tr Sun MlttJcel _.._ lllCISOMll dlctaUon or dlctapbone S.0-6300. moaphere. Call Bob ,......._. 1 SO March 28 & 2Jllh baby f ..._ 1 101~ • H h lpful • ••• •••••••••••••••••• • • M«Ut ~ 14 outboard, 11ber1lu1 & llat-e or Cru1ae ••per e . "7·0538. * I BUY * * bald, mlac:. 1902i8 AbaJo ••••••••••••••••••••••• wood. saoo .. 631·1710 or fo'ull elect.roolca, e bas•. p R O DUCT 1 O N SHI,,... * F.V. CONN Dlrectortrombone r7H205 roller lurlln&, dbl balu DYNAMICS FULL6P/Umehelp.ln· Wlndow~~her,exp Good used Furniture &HMtet.oidG-oodal065 with cue. Excellent lo.ts M.. ;{ · core hall/NB Slip CORPORATION tervlews held 12·1 Mon Ap~llanca-OR r will sell ••••••••••••••••••••••• condition, SlOO. 875-8052 S • 1_ 11 •c• 020 "6-6356 IS th S t L 212 646-9780· or ELLforYou acterSPM. .,.,..... ---------l8008Sltypark B , te 100 ru a . unasea. .-. llxlO crpt1. new, tan ••••••••••••••••••••••• 27• ERICKSON Dal spot.- Irvine, 912714 Main St. HB. WORD PROCESSOR MASTSlS AUCTION plush, S1'5or bell orter · Ibanez • • Butterly · · Marine Electrician leH. alps 5, Npt B~b slip 714-754..Q88 ~~~~~~~~~I N B Law Firm. Call 646-1616, 133-9625 962·4974 aft. 5. a coustic guitar, new Design/in.stall/repair avail. S24,500.833-0818 _________ ,l __ A_s_k_.;..(A._lt_fo_r_S_ua_an_>_ ISHIPPING Clerk part Nikki . llSS-2411. J•w•lry 1070 w/hardshell cue. Black Qual. work. ~2S20eve Sales time. Must have exper. MerclNllMIM Bedroom set. good cond. ....................... with pearl inlay, S375. Boat Refurblshln&. ex· loat1, Sllpa/ . ",.. IXCm .... '"" Secretary Call: Balboa Marine, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9drwr. dresser, 2 end Heavy l4KG Heart Shape Peavey Backstage 30 pert paint, vambh. re· Docltt 9070 """ nw TITLESICRETARY 549-9671,E.O.E.M/F/H .,...., 1005 tables, headboard . Pill box w/2 Rubies amp new, SlOO. MXR pai rs Reas rates ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. SALES Ol'PTY. lmmed. ~-'"I with 1 South Laguna Village ••••••••••••••••••••••• _838_·_3_15_7 ______ S350/0B07SS.1643 "100" Phase Shifter, like 496-8954. eves. . so· mooring, 18' boat, We a re entering a V)"C•>U• W .a. ... TIO TO IUY new, S8S. Barcus-Berry -Worried about beln1 tremendous oew rield or yr. mll)imum exper. Gd. Anlmal Hospital is look· ~" English oak armoire Wanted : Gold, silver, "1330" Pre.amp, like loett, M.-evicted ? Why not own entertainment that ls compin~benefits.C•ll: i ng for p /t e xp"d I bu y o ld aun s , S300,girl'syeUowchest diamonds,guns.PPwill new,$37.50.Acou.sllc lSO Eq.I,...... 9030 your own+ equity. sweeping I.he nation. We Jerry Miller. ~1114 to grooiner-can lead to rtt diamonds. ivory, jade & bed. SlOO. 84.S-7406 pick ilp. Cash964-4224_ lead amp & lOS 4·12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Ul.SOO 631-6300 ext. 4. are looking for a sales set up an appointment. work , profit sharing collectibles Call (71<1 l cabinet, S27S 549.87,.1, Inn. Tender, 8'4" hyp ~sg oriented person who has STEWilTTmE 499.5378 9'72·4926&ulcforDane. QUEEN For Sale Seiko dive 751.8516,548-0995 New in box. Sells 1849, BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT a d esi re for above 900N.Broadway, SOFA/SLEEPER watch , good to ISO -sac S399. (714)754-1732 NPTBCH.2S'·35'. average income You Santa Ana ST ATIOHIRY Antique Admiralty desk, 1'75 meters. in xlnt cond DRUMS· 4 lud shls, 5 zit dys. 642 _ 4644 must be personable & E.0 .E M/F Store in CdM needs saJes hand tooled leather, 96().SSIJO 751·8967 cym comp!. cases & '80 Evinrude 9 9 hp 0 8 , 11• SI-DI Tll Marcus channel SlOO/mo 673-8145 confident in your ability!~~~~~~~~~~ person l/time, 5 days. light Oak S1700.96C>-.s.580 Le . G . C 1 b hardwareS800541H«6 gas tank. elec start. 10 to communicate with -Xlnt working conds . av1ng state must sell enu1ne o om 1an others & have dependa Secretary, FIT. Tues· Especially fine clientele White Porcelain statues entire contents or my 12 EM ERA LOS, only S20 Spc Drum set. xlnt for hrs. like new, S695 ble tra.nsportallon. We Sat. General orric e phone644_7482 rorappl from China SSOea. 10 rm home. Example each! studentS2SO.bstofr 559·5010,644·0778 will train d necessary duties, pvt COWllry club s m a 11 er Po r c e I a 1 n Solid oak parquet inlaid 640-8688 557-8393. loats Power 9040 Excell. fnnge benefits. Call 6«-5404 STRUCTURALD~IGN statues from China s · c 0 ffee t b 1 w / 2 h 1071 --•••••;••••••••••••••••• Tr•1pottatkMI Apply al: Teleprompter ---------.-i DRAFTING Sloea. Japanese Doll an matching end tbls, just Mac inet"Y E I e c t r i c g u i t a r 17 rt 110 F'be 1. bit ••••••••••••••••••••••• of Newport Beach 901 Secretary/Receptionist Newport Beach orrice glass case (mint cond) pd s800 sell for S400. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/amplirie.r S200 · 1 rg ass re CQM~N. S•/ W. 16th St., Ne~port for growing C.M. firm. 67S.6110 SL25. 3 hand hooked wool DeWall 9" tablesaw. 644-6829 outdr1 ve Ask1 Fis h Reftt 9120 Beach Mus t be gd t ypist.--------thro w rugs S20ea M/attint; 60"hwlall unpdit s teel cabinet mount. S2000. 760-8160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P o s us good Phone SUPERVISORS 536-9439 eve. please or ; 9 ao ~~s°:! Isl e ;:s7 5 radial arm S17S. 673-4619 Offlee FwNhre & Will trade Big Bea r Lake '78 Dodge Club Cab truck skills . Xlnt salary, Noon Supervi so r s alldaySunda_y.___ Th 'JI k. IOIO Equipment 1015 or ocntront Mobil e w/setr contained 12' Sales & Engraving £xp. benefits & growth poten· urgently needed by Hun-omasvi e 11 pc mg Mlsc.!ICllMOUS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Home or trlrs for sport camper. Full equip. Xlnl helpful, will train. Apply !_!a_l._<_714_>54G-_ 6955 __ ·---1 ling ton Bearh City size bdrm ensemble, pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEAL IT MUST SELL f h. bo t 31' 499 3816 cond. asking $8900/080 t n person : Noac k Srhool Dist. S4.35/hr. SPf~i41Altti4Ne S4600, sell for $2600. Also .Lo••lalootta Conferenc~ table. 14ft ~~-a . 64S·0946aft4pm .. Trophy & Engraving l•--------•I 1~.2hrs per day. Apply ~UCTION have brass bdrm set, an. He hum Bouquets de· solid oak. Sl500. Day : Glass ply. l7' ltO. 120 hp Co .. 170 E. 17th St .. Ste Se t 735 Hth St. Huntington tique reproduction 48" live red f'.er fect for 646·9048, Eves. 661 ·2990. Mere. v hull wltrailcr Motorlaedllbl 9140 #117 ,C.M ere ary Beach CASl6-88Sl. · Tuesday, March 31, at ball & claw tbl w/6 dbl everyoc~3:110!_1.:_673·44.!!_ - ------Ver y c lean. S2900, ••••••••••••••··~··•••• Jr.Secretcry 6pm Fine selection of pressed back chrs , pd Copy Machine CANON 546-l330orS45-077S NEW PUCH MOPEDS Sales GRIEATHOUJlS 9AM-2PM or 4PM-9P'M Major Newport Beach SWITCHIOARD Frenc h & Ame r ican St600, sell for S900. AU Basic Tiffany's m em 5000 plain paper copier. $479 Finance low as firm has an immed furniture , c loc k s. herculon sofa. loveseat bers hip. S200. SJB-7625, Cost overS9K new. Has BAYLINER S22 85 mo. SSO dwn. opening for a Junior OPT1l s m alls, e t c Larry wt matching chr & ol leave.message. been under preventative MOPEDLAND 631·2504. Secretary 60wpm typ-P /time, days, wknds. Morgan Antiques. 1685 Lo I 22SS Harbor.CM . & ti hrth d Willtrain64230l3 Toronto Way, Costa loman .Just pdSl200 sell Store r1xtw-es Greetang mamt. w mo. renta ----- must. Excell. working reacher wanted Aft Mesa 540.3955 1 h t 1 r co n d 1t1 on s & co rm sofa & oveseat. cor mg, wood & glass S2S pure ase a any ime 1 600 m1, xlnt cond Ask101 ang le s 0 an a _ ___: _ _:.__ ---ror S400 Formal living card r acks. SZ> Shelv w 100% credit against 197~ 27 feet 1978 Honda Hobbit, only benefits Pleasecall school Sdaysiwk IPM Appliancn 80101 relating wood & glass Dis pla y c ase St25 you want to own ll Twitt 30Volvo's S38S Call after 4pm Join the Los Angeles Lynn Stansfield 1 6 PM or 3 PM 6 PM •••••••••••••••••••••••! tbls. lg oak chma buffet. 646-6380, l-993-565.S 556·9900 Mr. Johnson Fly~ 646·3175 Times C1rculat1on Team 1714> 644-5800 Certificate or ex per HARBOR AREA big claw root cu n o, New elec SCM portable Cobin withkHd Motorcr..c~-/ & adapt your work I Ext. 7549or7853 Call Susan. ~8820 APPLIANCE SERVICE s ta r k 1ng book cases, Vinyl Floonng, no wax. typewriter, Sl50/0BO & Gal.y. S...ps 6. Scoo ~ 91 SO sc h e du I e to you r • · · ----We buy used appliances h 1 de a bed I amps remnants Approx 200 0. Troilet- Ltrestyle WorkShri. day l Af7f4VCO TUCHYS we sellrerond,guar was h·e; dry.er & to~ yards Sa~ at $4 yd. 7 552·8SJ0 <8am-8pm> MUST SE. LL••••••••••••••••••••••• in a Times Circulation L....JU8E~L GROUP'REft appltanres 549.3077 much to mention By digit elec add.log mar h Pianoi&n.-.. 8090 '78K11000LTD sales office near you r And ESL being hired appt call anytime will sso. check writer S90 ••••••••;;:.;:::....... W Xtras, Slark & Red home & have more time 620 Newport Center Dr now fo r employment for Gas dryer, elec dryer, be home ,2~>-~3575 C,:all 530 0989 a ft 5 pm AEOLIAN Wmter Spinet Xlnt Cond. 7300 miles for your family, studies, Newport Beach, 92660 summer 1981 with stu S65 ea pi a no /bench . Walnut. S 12,500 $2400 After 5PM orle1surelypenods We EqualOppEmplyr dente1tchangeprogram 675-20?2 Cor ner Group (2 J o hn Wayne T ennis New SlS-00. sell $950. ortne*eoff..-<7 141586-2766 pa y hourly wages & Call between 8am·6pm bed scovers, s torage Membership !Famlly J 536.3100 aft SPM. Sat. & PriceMC)OtiabM comm1ss10ns. Mon-Sat 966·1709 or Westinghouse dbl oven bolstercomertblwalnut S850 inc l tra ns fer wknds. caHcrfter6-•--------~ 551-3480 elec range. $22:5 760·1516. finish> SlS0545-9223 644·1549 r·· LOS ANGELES TIM ES ••SECRETARIES•• ----857 1291 -------· PIANO 675-2695 1375 S unflower Av e AdmanAsst /CorpS18,000 Teacher Antique Vanity, very nice John Wayne Tennis Club PREMIER C.M. Recpt/1'66/FunSlS,600 Mature Teacher's Aide Lady Kenmore apt sz S350.S59·6353 or Family m e mbers hip 540-0301 WordProc/8rea/Sl3,200 wanted for Irvine pre washer & dryer, llOv 761-2004 S1000 incl trans fer IAIY GRAND Equal Opp<>rtunity Employer ---- Sales GO/"Doitall"Sl2,000 srhool.552·7494. lyr o ld . S400 Sears ---------675·5455 New condi t io n AcrtDegMfgS20,400 rcfrig, Top of the hne, 17 Cortee table (Walnut SJOOO/obo. P.P. Terr Liz Reinders Agency TEACHER cu rt. Xlnt cond 1300 formica > $25, Couch SSO Strato·lounger recliner, New cond. SJOOO/obo 40208irchF.st'64EOE Sat.only.Exper'd .ECE 8 .E Po rtable Di s · unique, good cond. bs t brwn vinyl S2SO ppTerryW.93009·6 Newpart/833-8190/Free r eq 'd Garden Grove hwasher SlSO Sears 962·4974 al\5 Royal upright vacuum, or ~4522eves area. 971-5533 ~5~~/i r cond $252 --y-ea_r_s_n_e_w_w_es_te_m_s_t_y_le ~~k cc~nrd$50~~~7~~Ul1Vt" Sporting Goods 8094 SECRETARY Teacher Director ----leather couch, chair, ot-••••••••••••••••••••••• READY FOR FfSHIHG Trojan 25' Express Cruiser, fully equipped. ratho, hve bait lank. 0 /R , VHF, & much more Less than 200 hrs, 8G PH at 20 knots 3 boat owner Sarrif1re SlS,000 Dys 640 1633, E ves 675-8883 '75 Honda 750, full dress, A I cond. Only 12K. Must sell 548-6250 aft 6pm. '71 DTZSO F:NDURO Recently bored , MX h ea d , exp an si on chamber S400 Call after Spm . b e fo r e 7pm . 545·2501 Matt ·79 KAW ASAKI KZ-400 70 mpg like new & xtra 's. St,05-0 546-0739 HICKORY FARMS Opportunity to sell gourmet foods & gifts Flex. hours. Will train. Westcliff Plaza. 642·0972 or Fas hion Island , 640·6030 Top professional real Exp'd.-<iynamic. ECE New 30'' Gas Stove toman&3matcttlngend Pa u I BI a 1 n e Fo r Sale Seiko dive estate orrtce now m· & Elem. Ed. units req'd <Almond) $225/080 tbls + lamp$295 759--0850 Henri Z4x48" framed w al c h . good to 150 '62 Owens Tatuuan. '40, 1979 Honda Express like t er v 1ew1 n g r or 00-0411 53&-6676eves oil-Tahiti Cove. $500 meters. m xlnt cond avail N 8. sbp new 650 m1. sec re t arial position ------Red, plu.shScbair. Jft. by 673-6223. 751 8967 00-4644 S250 9&4-4413 Must be e1tpenenred, Telephone Sollc1tors 19 cu ft Frigidaire frost 6ft. S150. Good rond ---------'77-23' Mako, loaded ror ·18 1Tl75 Good Condition able to handle busy Needed immediately To free,wh1te.S175 556-9'28. CHINOOK Fireplace, TY, Radio, fis hing, center coni.. llOO m1 S400 979·5173 or ~hones . Call Redhill work 3·9, Mon.-Frt No 759-lotS. ....:......:......_______ wood burning, never Hlfi, Shrto 8098 '711-235 hp Johnson OB. 536 0273 SALES ealty, 673-7300, ask for experience nee. ~o sell· GE rrostr~ rern·g, con. N!~~f~. Air King Sz used. NewS582,sellS300. ••••••••••Co••1•••T•••••••• St3.000/oHer . 1mmac Honda Express II Im med. part lJme open ~ -ing. Call after I PM ·~ .. ~......, 538·3100 aft 6PM. Sal. & Beautiful or V, 2 yr 673·8310. 540-0312 in g for Reader Ad,._ ________ -! 9S6-0l51. pertone, good rond, S195 631·24.23 wknds. wrnty. Free delivery 170 miles. rrunt rond. representative fo r 1ns1de1• 552·8378 Sl48 646-1786. '78 20' WELLCRA ,.~T $400 551-1149 sales position Gd c:om Secretary 1------------New 6 sectional earth Children·s EuJ,er stories. w/trlr. 175 HP evanrude pany benefits Apply 1n b•c. Secntary W k Coppertone apartme nt tone luxury sofa s et 3 delightful stories. only RCA XL-100 21 " rolor. o/b, vhf, & much more, '79 CR250 HONDA person . Pennysaver. 2·4 yrs exp Gd lYP· Tele• Ir s ize refrtgerator, S85 Cost Sl,800, Best orre r. 11. 6 stories s2 Also S200 Quasar 19" color, i mm a c, S8900 d 8 y s With new top end. Very 1660 Placentia Ave , ang /s hrthdreq'd.Sleady Mature person to work 495·5636 559·5981. personalued East e r SI00.559-1075 641·4748,644·956.feves very dean 891·49L9Glen C_._M_. M~n-f'ri .. I 5PM work 'g bkgrnd. Gd. !1nngthroerirahoppom1.entmcaennvlSas1sn 2 refrig. S7S ea. run good. 1 __..-_-__ -__ --1010 Bunny letter Terry's 119 M'-cellm•a. IOIO Mlscel ... OUI 8080 Motor HOIMI, Sale/ S .a.115 benes. Judy 540-6055. F M 1c-s H 8 92648 .. j R.nt/S'--f 160 ,,,.._ Coastal Personnel Agy, San Juan Capistrano & 323 E l8lh St. Apt. • · · · _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~··••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••~:::;'; ••••••••• Newport aearh leading 2790 Harbor Bl. CM. San Clemenle.Xlnt op-C.M 64S·LS7~ WI CAM SILL Jewelers seeking full Never a ree. EOE portunity f<!r person who O'Keefe & Me rril gas YOUI l.Y. lime Employee well ~an be dedicated l? this stove w/renter iiriddle & versed in sales & orrice1 _________ -t 1ob & who genuinely adj broiler, good rond, procedures. 5 day week SECRF.TARY cares about people s1s. 831 .2429 including Saturday, no Stead y, year ·r o und - evenings. Call 673-9334. employment. Phone col· Refrig, Sears. 14 cu rt, PERSONNEL I e c t , Bab Y Phot o frost free. nearly new, SALESPERSON DEPARTMENT graphers or America, almond color , S310 Exp e r i en red on I y SECRET ARY (213)920-8801. 851.1944, 644·0866 FT /P .T . Wal lah Clark e 's So Coas t GEHERALOFflCE FRIGIDAIRE 1 dr Plaza . Costa Mesa f elephoneSales refrigerator/freezer 751 -7500. DalVEIY S80 080 631·1449 SALIS,llS_O_M_ SEg::~AL Experienced Exclusive handbag boutique South Coast Plaza. Full time Call for appt. 549-2649 SALES '8SOHHR neede d for conte m porary women's wear Must be exper'd Salary plus romm. Please app. ly o r ca ll , Apro po. 644-2652 or #29 Fashion Island, Npt Sch SALES Sarah Conntry -'"'elry Nee ds Looking for career minded people In So. Coast area . Earn while you learn. For more information call 963-8971 CAU TOOAY! 714-549-791 I ASK FOR TAP'f #491 AVAIL.AILE 24HOURS 7 DAYSAWHI< •• [<\~~~\] ~ OaAKI tNfl aNATIOMAl. um .. l'lf 4000 llrc:h St. #IOI Deliver pre·sold vaca tion paks. to bus area llcyclH 8020 AM only Good romm • • •• • • ••••••• •••• • ••• •• plus gas allow Call STOLEN 543·7957. lOAM ·Noon s100 reward <$50 each) only Blue & yellow Diamond ----Back racing bike & blue Travel Agenry requires & white XR-7 racing document delivery bike 494·0167 eves, person for busy office 557.0551 dys Must be 21 yrs of age, ---- h a v e v a Ii d Ca I d hilding Mahriah 1025 driver's license & good ••••••••••••••••••••••• driving record Entry REDWOOO 2x6'1 level position w/oppl 'y $48, xlnt declung. New to advance. Excell com· load-18,000 ft ln from pany benefits. Call Tom mill, 55</ft CM 645-9137 mie 83J..2977 ~127 anytime __ _ TRUCK DRIVEtt SAWS & MILLS Class 1 Driver to haul Call 960·2445 for more tn· boats in Western U.S. fo. aft 12 ;30 Wide loadexper. a must. CClfftuas-& Call : Boat Trans it, Equi,....... 1030 546·7172 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Secretary for medical of. Newport hoch. TYPIST CHIN ON CFA 35mm. 6 lice. typing & some bk· Ca. 92'60 Part lime, 2.3 days per mot. new, MUST SELL! kp'g exper. req'd. Box 714-151-9041 wk. Va catioo relier. Ap· S300/0 B041M·6739 ,41, Dally Pilot. PO· Box 10_, 0 ply at: UMIO Placentia, D-1040 lse<>, Costa Mesa, Ca v 7 • C sta Mesa -'JI· EMPLOYB rAID 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -92626-------~~~~~~~~11--~~~~--I KEESHOND Pupt. AKC. SICllT AIY r: TYPIST Champ sire. M/F Pet & To young bualness eit· Security orficer, P /T , Gen. lnaurancean. nds. show . Pvt pt y . eculivea, apeed" skills a wkends for lrg apt. com-rut, accurate policy 213/897·13&5 aft 6 pm. must < 80 + w Pm ) . plu In N. 8. $3.SO/hr. typist. Gd. salary le paid AKC Gold. Ret. pup1, aee Fashion Ille location. For Info contact Jim co. benerrt.a. Call Linda parenll, rem. S2SO, male Top aalary! ~5111 _L~u~pci1~at~6'4-~~1900~.~~~l:~a~t~1~1+~M~N1~n~~~~,;s200;;;· 13;;1·;~;1;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I SICUTAJtY ~ICUlrTY GoUARDS Part time 711).1507 Open Inga ror qualltied TYPtSn DOG TRAINING ---:;..;..;...:.;;..;.; ______ , lndlvlduaJa. Good start· •Immedlate()penin1s SECRETARY tn1 pay. Refundable un· •P/tJme,F/timt, Temp. Obedience/ Problem Conaenlal Alrport law lform depoalta. lr78-7243 •Top Pay Solvln1.00 0 firm. Top skills. Setr· _lc_638_·8_1_e1 _____ For m<>N lnfo. call Tod AAA D ~AJNIN st• rter, non• molter . SILL AYON ~Se~rv~l~c~es~a~t.!fm..8900~~:::...· :---f.~~~~~~~~~I Jo.1eas1-9G25. .. .. •nMI vet ln ·•<te to han rv.. er ary "' ' Easter pupa , AKC. SICllTAJtY die ph•nn•cy, caabler, Blchon P'riMpupe. To aulat Prea. 6 V. Eamleormoreanbr. pleasant penon with ........ ..... cau-.oua u bU _._ .. . Pru. ol R.!. Develop. abl ty to meet pu c, ment Co. Exceptional ~ll cotmeltcs avtr•I• handle record•. Will Toto pupp6es. American llpiol It oraanilatJonaJ SIO/day. WUJ train. Por traln. N.B. loc 40/br K e n n e I C l u b , 1k1U1, ,..u1ted . CalJ lnt.rYlew Ill-IOU w .. k. Salary dependent c al r n Terr I• r a . • Aao (TWE-9150. ._.;....~....;....-...· -----1 on ea p , alt 1 tu de . BNuUfu.l pupPeil. '250. SEllVlCS STATION AT-M2·1NO. S250/lnS.55Ml74. S.Dlq anJWn1 wtt.h 1 TSNDANT. IAM to DaUJ PUot cta.."'-1 Ad IPM. A~y Sbell "-· SELL Idle Sa-wllh a Ttrrier Mia~- II a ...... mau.r •. , U., mf.-• 1rviM. fQ, Dally ?Uot Claulfled 4 mould. a .. jultCllll...,.,, M1·19 M . en.am FOR SAFETY ... SECURITY ... CONVENIENCE Automatic Garage Door Operators by Stanley LOWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY "We Are Never Undersold" FREE extra transmitter with garage door opener Stanley Digital "High Security" _Radio controls -three signals \ ~~ :.;_:.y ' STANLEY .J Q _ Day or Night Prompt. courteous - conscientious service. Springs • ttc..ctw ... • Garap Doors • Repairs "uad/l'tfl lnalall•r ol Automatic Door Opener• In Ota•• County" IRVINE DOOR COMPANY Salea & Service 55~1411 Insured, Bonded & L:fcenMd Oontr, No. 312361 559-1304 ----RENT 22' tux . mtr home. Sips 6. self-cont. S27S /wk + 8< mi . 640-8585 Trall..-1, Tra•.! 9170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Est in pk, C.M. 1'7500. Low s pace rent, furn. '77 Nomad 8x32, CN9883). Elite 8941-4401 -----'7 6 Terry, established., space rent SlO.S, com;I rum. inn TV, (55945). Ehle 8!M·4401 ---- TERRY. self cont. 19'. sips 6. gd cond, xtras, S2750 firm. 8'2·39M Trait.rs, Utilty 9 110 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Fiberglass tra iler! 6'X3"'2' with clamshel cover, $175. 642·3622. AlltoSe"k•,Pcrh &Accnsoriff 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ForNM Datsun% motor + .,.._.,..... 76'-5'37 '71 Pinto Trani . Complete. S75. Call Joe Dya 557-2157 , e•e 873-1489 CHEAP!! sua~tly used turbo kit '70-'74 Dal.tun Z cars 79'5837 7 by 14 American ved9.t ma11 4 for SlOO. Uaed '1 week~l.8. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT N<mCE'ro REAODSAND AOVERTIS&RI The price or lt•m• advertl1td by vebl«:lt deateu Ln the .. 1111ca. clH1lrled edvtrtl1la1 columa• cto. 1IOt I•· elude any appllceblt tu•. u~ tnMfW r .... flue~ eba,..., ,_,.. ... _ lroldnkie ...... ~-=lw1t1e.,... ........... ·er~ you( own Hr'~t of-th~ w~k n\9(kek with a 1/6\ily ~lot BU?ine4h f;uilder: .. Daily Pilat b4'2--5b76 ...... l•••-W 1.,.a:tM ...._.l•11rW ...... UMd ...... u..4 ~/ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 416 v-9170 .._. f707 t727 '760 Wdl tflO c.n.... ffJJ 9120 ......................................................................................................................................... . ~·••••••••••••••••••••• '1f Pord OMawau cua&om '71 AUDI POX ldr Cll>d, YlllTYOUI LEASE For S•le: 'TO Buick W ~r=u.~0,Ulo teooonne uo vu. :m-::•::;1·,,rpM~m-OIANelCOAIT Rl•S.ra, onlY •.ooo ml SHO ~~~~:. '21Mode\ATowDSNu (Tee). leoe c.'OOler, slllk, · HOND"' DIRECT! •lat cond, tuoo. Cail. power brak" power , dr, ~.Idell for watertank,dlnette, pwr IMW t71J " -.050'1. wtndows,...-'aie.rlal ttud•nl. uo,ooo . converter, hltch, elec ••••••••••••••••••••••• HIAD9UAITlll lfll SA.Al c..._ ffll wltb tllt/ttlt1copln1 17$.fltl. bralea, J:lmip Je~c•. like For'lbea.t TOD"'Y!ll T&lllO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1teertn1 wbeel, air, oew . • • HOO. Bu,YOrlA ... Deal " COM~---AM/Flf stereo, rear 1155GMC~T.P\ekup '"825f. JnOranpCounty... UMIVm9arn·· 1•.a.cH 1~01Ts ...... wladow dtlo••·;·, leputa.M.Uolftr. ComeSeeUaTodayl. ,.. .. _. .-..,.... CADIL.AC7 autom1tic tnma. Snow Je:tr-.-, &ft. I Alllel W..t.4 tltO · , SALES6SERVICE l4I Dove Street We sp«lall&e LD leua wbite wttb Bu.rpndy ln· ·-auw -••••••••••••••••••••••• I ~ • OLDSMOllLa NEWPO•TsV•Cff for tbe butlneH ex-t.erior. 2"1,000 mJla. Im· •• • _;A, cJuatc WEPAYTOPDOu.AR ._ W HONDA ... ~ ecutlve6pr'Oleuion.al. ma c ulate thruoutL rare cpe, auto. trans, fo r top used cars -""-MCTIUC"S 752.otOO &..,.eS.lectlell $8, 100. 754-UtO br prime cond eq. •body. forel1n, domHtica or SADOUiAC• .. " OIAMH C:QUNTY OfMtw lfll Answer Ad ID, gu.'30(J nu radtala, nu uphol. clusfcs. u your car IA IMW ~~~~~d. IAAI CnMu-t _·_24_h_n_. _____ _ $10,500. CM. Evea/lv extra clean, see us 21402 Mar~e Pkw". N .. tr....__LI '11 Vette Ll2, ~ spd, on'f. ms1.N24l57 FIRST! u •-· Viejo ' 5~t640 BUYorLEASE ow .-• ........ ~ fact 2 tone slvr patn . '29 FORD Model 'A' Ex· ~· Avery Pkwy. exit (5 ...... 9710 DIRECT lflnt , extras. Ofc. presa Truck. Complete Fwy.) ~··•••••••••••••••••••• D~~~~ 838-1311. evea557·7830 but unauembled. $3000. Ul-2040 4tS.494t 17 Ja1uar 3.8 MK us au I Al.lo Sport Coupe body CloNdSundays orl1. very welJ main· I ·~,l;iiJ~. 2600H.Art>or BNd. Cou1• ttll ~~:.~Zn~~ deck lid. #t .. °'-'9 c.-y ~~~o Must Sacrifice :i>:!J : Cosu Mes.\. ~9100 ·~;;;:;;,~·u7~;;;,~• ~ 29.ZSHarbOrBlvd. '77 Ja1uar XJ6, xlnt 10 120Garden Grove Bl '71 Seville. yellow, lthr, 4t 7-49IS VeMcJe. t5JO <'ffr.'lfi8 & 1 ST 6 t•OADWAV cond, $8lll50 Garden Grove 530·9!90 1unro0f, loaded. 37X ml, Dodp t935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847-6298 $10,500. 1-.9218 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Dodie RV Van. Self· WI SANTA ANA s.ban f7'2 , . ••Charier au. Cd body contained. Xtraa, low IUY 835·3171 •--Gtlla 9734 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 Cad Seville, wbt, "motor. Ori& oda some miles. 842--5.24l CLIAN CAii THfULT•MAT[OA1Y•HOM11CH•NE ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Subaru 2 dr x.lnt con· wired Int, xlnt cood. work. $900. •2518 AMDTIUCICI •USIDIMWt• 7JCOMVllTIILE diUon.S2llC50. • s5900. 979.9930 dys. 9940 DUNE BUGGY ICAIMAHN GHIA 494-7296 875-9142 evea. Ford Older, VW motor, street '765.30iAS/R (2419) Ha rd &o fmd model. 4 •••••••••••••••••••··~· Jic'd , '7'78.30csiauto (0040l speed trans., AM/FM '79 SUBAR U w /'81 Private Party. Offers. '70 Ranch Wgn, good AS ISN50 FIRM '79 320i l7560) engine, new paint job, s Beautiful 1978 Eldorado famlt5i transportation , . cassette Ir this one i.a ex-r B1·arritz Cadillac. C .. •a ..,001 B04""" -31 833·135.5499-1731 79 320iA SIR (7089) tra aha '(820·v"' &) spd, ront whl drive. -_•_• ___ ... _ ....... ___ _ '80 528iA sunrf. (0013> rp. ~ · S3000/bst 548-7809 Blanca Yellow. Leather 4 Wt.HI Drtfn 9550 Clo OMLY $4tf5 upholstery. All extras. ....................... Md S_.ya IAIC• SftHT Toyota 9765 ti~. Ne1otiable. Call '72 Ford LTD Brougham, xlnt cond, $1600 or beat. 496-7321 '77 Plymouth Trail TL-"""'-t& IA&..-USIDC••~ "~"o-- -Cn--_, ~ • •• • • • •••••••••• • •••••• '""'" .-Duster. 0ri1inal Owner. HIGHIUYBl P--'"OfY-142SBakerStreet .79 T ---------1 Low miles. Xlnt cood. Top dollars for Sports _,, -COSTA MESA . oyota Corolla '79 SeVille brand new! '72 FordWgn9pass. rune $ 3 9 0 0 . H o m e Cers. Bup, Campers, IMW rwc-. Or 54r.333·4 Lirtback. Sspd, xlnt cond Loaded. 988-105.5 good '475 contact ad 714 /855-9022, work 914's,Audi's . l. Coth:fh. ~ $3lOO/or assumepymnts 631·2244 #437642·430024hours 497·5407. Ask forU/C MGR Met:.. IMWll ofS168.24/mo.644-11SO '74 Jeep Wagoneer, lo mileage, air, power, all xtras. Blue/black . 557-1868. Trucks '560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Special ,we .... !! BARWICK DATSUN Son Juon C op,.t.m>e> 831 -3311 * Ce.•.MU'IO LUV 1/J-toft Sh*e with dual rears! Ideal for landscapers. etc. <Ser. 6056). ONLY $6491 HOW ARD ce..,,olet Dove & Quail Sts. NEW PORT BEACH llJ..0555 $99 ova IHYOICE SALE OH All TRUCKS IN STOCK!!! Sale ends Tues., 3/31/81 at close of business. AU trucks subject to prior sale. HEW PORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH lll-1300 1955GMC 1,'i Ton Pickup in parts. Make offer. Jeff &&S-9:9, aft. 3 '79 Dal Kng Cab. Yellow/blk, 4 apd, snrl, AM /FM, CB, white spokes, map, new tires, 2" body lilt. Super coad. $4500, 75&-0832 19 Ford F250 Ranier 4x4, AM /FM caaaatereo, PS, PB, AT, till wbl, AC, 17,000 ml, lk new. ttaoo. Johnnie 642-1252 '66 G MC ~ ton pickup, xlnt cond, $1500. 498-5916 Aluminum Camper shell fo.r sale, short bed Toyota P .U . a ide widows. nip window In back, $400. Call after 2: 30pm 544-3300. JIM MARINO Mencia t7ll ,74 c r GT . Transportation special, '71 FMsta H"back Vo• 11sw•GRU luy Or Lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• .e ica : Rebuilt 1970 Couiie deVille full 2dr. 4spd, r adials. le -"' ......,. ' 0 ;'m{:)T' '79 RX 7 GS ~od 1 e n gin e. Good cond. d·. miles , great fue l 18711 Beach Blvd. JI :'ff 'o\ • .... e ' x.lnt a m/rm a/c Ma gs $3000 pwr, runs great, g urea HUNT~~~~::EACH 41 a ~.~ :~~1'!u:,c::!!i or offer' Ev~s ~W. ~~16~:;!· ~. 638-4762 ~-~~~!Asking $2995. To, AAll I .a.I -ORAHGECOUMTY'S ~~~~i::.~~Y· v-a.aw-9770 C•Hro 9917 Mercwy 9950 .,..,..._,.. C>LDEST v.. -~u ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,AID FOi Merc ... 8-9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78Camaro ORANGE COUNTY·s ""-OOD 'c•....... ~ ....................... '60-'8S vw left & right Air. automatic, power FtNIST w ~" \I door. '73 left door. SSO steering, 27,961 miles. LINCOLN-MERCURY USID CAIS! SELLING YOUR MB ! each. Western style whl (882VE1> DEALERSHIP miracle mazda 2150 ltYd. Cothi Mesa 64 S.5 700 WA MT ED! Late model Toyotas and Volvos C all u s TODAY !!! Earle Ike TOTOTA·VOLVO l '66H~ll•<l c ......... . ""64'·'10) -'40·•4'7 PORSCHES WANTED Allow us the opportunity to consider the purchase or trade-in of your clean Porsche. Check with Us Today! 13631 H.,l>O, Bl•tl G&•den Grove"' 13&·:n.l3 Top Ollar Paid For Your Car! JOHHSON & SOH Liiie~ 2628 Harbor Blvd'. Costa Mesa 54().5630 W•P!t.. OVtK .... look For Your Good VW , Ponche or Audi -Y' .... ' .. . . . ' VW-PORSCHE·AUDl 445 E. Coast Hiway at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673-0900 Premium prices paid for any used car <foreign or domestic) in good condition. SeeUsFint! 5tles-~ce-Le~·ng WEP"'Y r ims for Super Beetle 54911 Oy --"' $20 ea. 548-9744 -.... • • Tor DOU.AR SS Barwick Imports ~ ";t.tlJ.1 Rolls Royce BMW Call Jack Bacon Allto ...... u 1lI·ll1 I LINCOLN-MERCURY . 1540Jamboree JIM SLIMONS P roblems! Any risk. '77 Camaro. Red. Black 16·18 Auto Center Dr. Newport Beach 640-6444 IMPORTS SR·22's , low monthly 1970 Harbor Blvd. rates. Pirkel Ins 646-3995 vinyl top. New paint SD Fwy-Lake Forest AM /FM /8trk . Xlnl exit BMW 530i, '78, mint cond Wkd ays 95 1·5006 . wknds/eves 4!J9.5146 ~--------'73 BMW 2002 clean body, runs good S3SOO/OBO 644·5758 cosr A MESA 631-1Z76 833-9300 M BZ 280 -1973 XLNT COND. S6000 CALL 760-9278 '77 VW BUG, mint cood, cood. 631·7889. IRVlNE 39,000 mi. sunrf, radio, CIM'fl'°'9t 9920 ___ l_l_~_7_00_0 __ _ kSOO/bst ofr 8.11-2926 '78 M · 9 ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• arqu1s wagon, '72 Super Beetle. Original I t7t CHEVaOUT paint & low miles. Xlnt CHEVE1TI 4 DR. pass . loaded . New Michelins Xlnt cond. $4000. Owner, 67S.6161 cond. Must see to ap-4 ~ t · d ·72 BMW 2002, 4spd, air, .80 3 D C 1 .....,00 9022 s rans .. air con .. xlnt all around. S3400 00 hampagne. pre<: ate. -· . 8SS-• A . /FM at.ereo cass. & 78 Mercury Zepher Z7, lo mi. PS. PB, auto, 11ln top. $3300. 979-5009 PP 494•1475. Caaset, sunroof. $21SOO work497-S407. 27 ,000 miles. (364977 ). OACN820) 752.5999 Limited offer (up to 2 Capri 9715 '72 Super Bug. Xlnt. cood. Yrs.) service contract ••••••••••••••••••••••• MBZ '78 :.>OD. sir , cass. Chrome whls, radials. on most late model used '74 Capri,goodmpg,new 47M , mint, $16,500. S2450.644·7269· cus backed by major '76 Wagon . Loaded tires, battery & brakes , 752·9200 dys ; 644·0547 '71 Squareback. Good lns. co. needs seat covers. $1400. eves. transportation. Runs OMLY $3995 Below wholesale. $1600. 661-1369 Mtnt99 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847-6825 '71 280 SE. Xlnt cond. great. 631-7889. IAKB STREIT Doh• t720 New paint A/C. Rblt .69 Squareback : New USID CARS MUSTANG 11 •••••••••••··~··••••••• eog. S6400. Call 992-2197 1425 Baker Street Auto. A/C, lo mi. $2500 19.0 D "'TSU..-Fullerton. engine. trans, brakes. COSTA MESA or bst ofr. 968-1630 "' " ---------radials $2780. Call 200SX UFnACK 848-8058 ___ 5_4_S-_l _l _l 4 ___ '79 Mustang Ghia. V8. On· S speed trans .. AM/FM MGI 9744 --,7-5-VW-C_A_M_P..._E_R__ Sii US FtlSTI ly 22,000mi. Xlnl. cond. stereo cass. & only 6,700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loaded w/opt1ons . m·les• (672ZUE) Lim1·t Pop top shun S6000 We have a. good seltttion 1 · · . '79 MGB overdrive 19K . ' -,., 0 f NEW & USE o $4,950. 714-955-1010 Mon.· ed o.rrer (up to 2 Yrs.) ml. stereo, road · bar, 960-2133 Cbevroleta! Fri; 714·76()..8512 eves & ser vice contract on most am/fm, ~548-5892 •87 BaJ'a Bug. l600engi·ne. wknds. late model used car11 ---------•----------backed by major ina. co. P..tera 9747 Snrr. Pop-open rear win· S dows. Roll Cage. Du.I '65 2 + 2. 289. auto, gd ONLY 76tt ••••••••••••••••••••••• d •2000 ..._ f M i c k e y Thom P son coo . • or ~t o r I .a.,,_ S..,EIT '7~ Pantera. runs gd, nds M t II"..,. ,,..,.c "'.._ '" shocks lo rear. Cut & us se .,._......., USED CAIS some body wort, S14,9SO --------0 B O . Bern i e . turned f r on l e nd _ __;=======-i1968 Ford Mustang, Y·8. 1425Baker-Street (213 )583-4196 dys ; w/Thompaon shocks . •76 MOHU Red exterior. black COSTA MESA (714 )844-2472 Jackman wheels & CB vinyl interior. New steef 545-3334 • ...__ fr 2 + 2 . 4 c y 1 • good ---------iP...-ot 9741 radio66(,2200or ~to er. mileage, a /c, radio, belted tires, runs good. CHEAP!! Slightly used turbo kit '70· '74 Datsun Z cars 768-5837. '78 Datsun p ic k up , lon1bed. Air cond. Low miles. Good cond. Will sell by 4-2-81 to highest bidder. Eves: 642-5941. '76 280Z 2+2. silver. auto, fm. a /c, gd rood. 16100. 548-9908. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _642_·_7 __ . _____ tranaferrable warranty. $1495. 642-4321, ext 210 or 557·3S27 or759-0060. evenings 840-7049. LEASE DIRECT! '87 VW VAN a m/fm cass, runs good $1300 67~4872 '79 Malibu classic SW ful· '73 Mustang Convt, blue. ltll NUGIOT TUUOt ly loaded Am /Fm cass. xlnt cond, $4,500. '71 1VW Bus, Camper, new unde r coat ed $5, 500 493-6938 eo1 clean inside. $2200. 551·8903 '70 Mustang Mach J. 675-4876 '79 Chev diesel ~ too Cleveland 351 eng, orig pickup. Am/fm cass. owner. Stablizer bar, A/C 20K mi. Take over shaker box. SlS00/080 . .I .&CH i~ons ·79 vw Diesel Rabbit, ~ .....-40mpg & 53mpg hwy . 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-MOO Mist Green, 4dr, 20K ml, caaa stereo. air, S.pd, xlnt cond. Take over low int. 48/mo lease al $218. 78/mo. Lease end PonclM 9750 ob Ii 1 a tioo $3646. 1ea1e or best offer. 546-1357 Ive mess . 846·1501a.Iler5:30pm. '77 Must. II, Ut nu. V6. i8 Impala station wgn, upd. air. Xtras $2595 air, ps, pb, xint cood, (TI8RXH> 960-1807 S2:850. S48-673'7 OkhMOblt 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wkends : 752-6067 ; Dys : '78 Malibu, silver, to ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Cutlass Supreme gd cond. St.sOO/OBO 559-1831 PORSCHE I t79 752-8952. mileage, good cond. 928. Fully loaded. 15,400 -. _G_d______ ~3636. orig. mi., xlnt cond. ln· 89 ol Volvo 1425, rblt ---------• side & out. Blue book en1. very good cood. 1964 Malibu SS. AM/FM --------- wholesale ls $26,375; our $1S00/0 B0760-9195 casaette, $1 ,200. Good '80 Cull au Supreme sale price is $26,775. Vol•o transportation . Call Brougham, 16,000 mi. (200368). Ask for Duke 9772 A n a we r Ad # 3 5 9 • many options. 832-2247. or Mike. •••••••v&vo••••••• 642-4300. 24 houn. Pillto 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Datsun E210, 4spd, '65 Impala waaoo. Xlnt. ~·••••••••••••••••••,•• 1977 DODGE llMrJ•lllll re bit e n g & trans , S"'LIS, SBVICE body/engine/Ura $450 76 Pinto. 4spd, air, "SH_.. V,,. ..-r a d i a I s . c I e a n . "' 499•5754. · stereo, 1ood cond. $1990. .,_, "'" $2000/0BO. 760-21691 or AMDLIASING ---------1 957·4017after5:15pm. AutomaUc trans., pwr. 7&0-1936. OVERSEASDELIVERY Mt.ts.II .,,_1 •'* 9960 at., AM /FM tape, Cuti EXPERTS • MONTE C .-..,_... ....... "roresslonal Int. inc. Flat 9725 73 ARLO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r bo Sliver w/ burgundy in· , ice x, wide wheels Ir :!888 llarbor 111\d ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Porsche 924, black, IARLlllCE terlor. Power brakes, 72 Plymouth FUry P/B rully cum! (1J88453). Costa .\k~u f>-1410:1:10 '76 124 Spyder, Sspd, con· 1 t cond $7 300 VOLVO ~rinl. A/C $500~':'1t.'!r. Limited offer (up to 2 vt. Am /Fm stereo, ma1 "n · ' · • .....,., _,...., ... Yrs.) service con 1 tract A.lltot, 8-aarted whla, choc. bm. lmmac. ____ 4_93-41938 ___ .___ 1~o:r~~A~ · _______ 7_68-_5837 __ 1--------- on mo.t late mode used •••••• ;.;~~.;.;........... 37 . 000 m I. A I way 11 ·77 911S Targa, silver. 64._93015~9467 '72 Chevy Kin1swood '72 Plymouth Fury l400. !=an backed by major Alfa Romeo t705 garaged. Orig owner. black int. Air, P-6 Urea, Estate SW. A/C, lu1-Price ne1otiable-Must ma. co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• kSOO. 642-3719. 28 ,000 mi, ~owered . ORAH.HJ:.OJINTY 1a1e rack, all elect. ~~;avln1 country ~~.Ys$!.HHT5 LEASE 75 PIATXlf S17.000.9a>-6325. YOLYO doora 6 windows, Am·------- '"'" '" strack stereo " many P..tlec 9965 us•CAIS DIRECT! COMVBTllLI '711PORSCHE912E Lar1eatVolvoDealer xtraa. Xlnt cond. $1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l425BalterSlreet IMialC I 1el Mint. air, aunrf, lo ml. lnOrweCounty! oroffer.9G-5355 197t'°"11AC COSTA MESA lfll .&1 •A Am /FmStereo 1reatmp1.&-1642 BUYor~E C....__._,. S"'P"'IUW"'~ 54S.JJ34 ,,.... Must Sell/Best Offer DIR.I:;"• -1-· ttZS "' A "'~ SPIDlll Call after5 548-5956 olh Royce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AutomaUc trans .. pwr. v .. Rated pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ I '70 Chrysler New Yorker at., alr cond., root rad:, I ' U7M4t ~v'.' llACH IMl'OITS ~~••••••••••••!?!! . "1 OlALEROIN [S.a:· ,~·~.esu-.H~.s t:!i ~':,OS.::\>..~~ ~u~~~ c:.3Jl'>. t~1r:ft~ C_...,.._ NEWPORTBEACH Xlot. cond. '4K mUet. 1 CARVER servlceconcractonmMt ....,. MSDoveStreet '78HondaCVCCsta. was. ~ I Y t J ll°' 24boun ed otter (up to 2 Yrs.) C.8 ., atereo, air, power 7SJ..Of00 owner. Steel radlala, ROUS-ROYCE Q10120 Garden Grove,81. ~~~ ......... !!.~~ late n>ockl uaed cara ateerlo1, Immaculate, ---------1 newbrakel,oew carb ~ 1MU•~ ardenGrove530-9\90 ltJf~OUT backedbJ~lu.ro. low miles. Tbe tuteat draw ln the haul. '3000 firm. 754-all :=' .. ec.,. ~·" OHL Y SIHI (1.M211Za8) Wtll ... a Dally PUot· d1y1. or 541-1175 aft. '71Volvo,-.4dr11oeded. CotlYln'IT·TOfl IA .. ITlllT $6395 ClltlilledAd.'42-56'78. IPM CLOSIOSUNO~V\. • Lo mt, llHID&Ole loan Auto. tram .. pwr. lleer· UlmC.AIS -· "'------.. .......... -... .. ·-···--·--ALLEN ' I W 'I l ii' r-:----=::===::::=-------.1---r--:--:--:--:--tf or buy w/iood credit. le I • Ulh .• air cond.. 1'25 BlbrStreet 1 PP. Call '75·80l2 or crulM. Am/Fii lt.e"*> COSTA MDA 1 .....,.1 tape, Vette ma11 fr . l41-HJ4 Yoµ can be a WINNER Just by aeadlag u1 your aame and address and by watchlag for your aame In the cla11lfled ads of the Dally Piiot. Wla Ucketa to tb• clreum. ar11 •muaemtt)t •ttr•~ or 1Pt>i11n• •~enu. JU1t nu out wa C!OUpoll-mall ll tocray to the: a....... 0epen.-,:8'1l11 Piiot ue w. Bay Street, c-. M.a, CA .... 1 . 1---------1 22.000 mllet. (IDl5WX0).1-------- I t; ... ..-. 11 _ __. .Uml~ offer <-.p to 2 '70 Flrtblrd '5C> cu. AA. -•-Yra.) Mnlce toeltact l• •• :..-, ... t f • : •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• on mott ~ IDOdeJ uaecl en/., .. e, •-.,. o r. .& ttOI art bac:bd "'' 111aJor t7 ·OM1ora1-1au. I ~ ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••••• &:. co. '11 Trau Am l .f Utre I' •CAllWAMTm• OMLYSI t,nl n11ne. ,.,..... brak-. RtJNNUllOORNOI' u.m11m1 power l\ttrtaa. '°"'' ..... u .. CMS wtadow1 aueo locklaa PRU~G •• .._...,_ doOft, ;OM wtlal b&td, tilt OPUWUXZNDI COftA KDA wMel, 'l' 'hp. -c.- Call Sd (TU)lll417 1 .... 1114 to lllJer Lib~ toea ol .... c.u~ Part Uae Mtc1holc. •T·-GT•a. ..... _ ..... __ .... ----- Wtt11rn•1 6 a... or.. lOWMr.W. Vfl. 8nlrll Mil to 11.. {1M,.,,._, Jor OHrh•I•. ralr Hue .... ..., to ..au ~--u. Cl? ,, ....... k•elt .. : , .. . . . . . . HB IUICI CIAIT YOUR HBllllll llllY PIPll . MONDAY . MARCH 30 1981 ORANGE COUNTY C AI If OH NIA 25 CENTS Alcala prosecutor unruffled by charge By DAVID K UTZMANN 01 -O•ily P1i.1 '1•11 T he Orange County d eput) llstrict attorney who prosecuted ·onvicted child kille r Rodney ) a m es Alcala says there is still •nough evidence to prove Alcala ~uilt y even 1f the testimon} of wo ja1lhouse "sn1tch e!>" 1s 1roved to be perjured R ich a r d F arnell . Y.h o wrsuaded a n Oran~c Count) 'u pen o r Court 1urv to convict a nd sentence Alcala to death tor the 1979 kidna p-murder of 12· ~·ear-old Robin !:iamsoe or Hunt· ington Beach . said today the re· m a ining evide nce against the Monterey Park man is "more than suffi<'1ent. .. The California Supre me Court last Thursday ordered a hearing sought by Alcala's attorneys on whe ther two Orange County Jail inm ates could have lied a bout the <'Onvicted killer's alleged in volvement In Miss Samsoe's d is- a ppeara nce The hearing was ordered arter Santa Ana lawyers Keith C. Mo n roe a nd David A. Zim· m e rman filed documents which said that one or the j ail inform· a nts who t P::.tifi e d a gainst Alcala admitte d that he a nd another so·called "snitc h" lied on the witness st and "I don't know wha t they're saving." prosecutor Farnell said this morninJ: "We have not re ceived the ir I a ppeals> pa pers .. Defense la wyer John Burnett. who represented Akallt at his 1980 trial. said he felt a ll along there was pe rj ury during the prosecution phase of the pro ceed ings Describing the case ;is hight~ emotional. Ha rne tt said. "ev eryone wanted lo get on the bandwagon a nd kill Rodne} · The two informun ls in que" lion. Robert Dove and M icbael llt'l'rt'ra. testified tha t Alcala admitted while al Orange Coun· t.r Jail that he slapped Miss Samsoe unconscious a fter ab· d ucting her from Huntingto n Bench1nJune.1979 llo\\e\'er. 1n papt'rs filed !>t'l'relly with the statc Supreme Court tY.o we('ks ago. Monroe ~aid thal Do\'e recantc'.J his ll'St1mon~ during an mtervle\\ "1th tY.O ml•mber.: of th(' l'OUnt~ rubllc Defender's sturr The fo rmer prosecution wit· ness u l so a dm i tt e d t o a couru;elor with the S t r a ight Ahead drug abuse program in Tustin that he and Herrera lied on the witness stand. Dove is re- <'t'tving treatment for heroin ad- d iction al the drug clinic AdmittinJ( that he was "not !-tu r pnsed" at the lall'Sl develop· ml'nt in the prosecutor <'ase. ISee ALCALA. Pal(e At> Who'll win? I Indonesia to free 80 TONIGHT AT 1 P.M . ON CHANNEL 7 OSCAR'S BALLOT (M ark an X in bOx 1n front of your favorite) Bes t picture : O "Raging Bull" LJ "Tess" D "Coal M iner's Daughter" LJ "Ordinary People" O "The Elephant M an" Best actor: 0 Robert Duvall LJ John Hurt O Robert De N iro U Peter O'Toole O Jack Lem mon Best actress: D Ellen Burstyn LJ Goldie Haw n O M ary Tyler M oore O Gena Rowlands D Sissy Spacek Best supporting aactor : O Judd H irsch L J Joe Pesci 0 J ason Robards [J Timothy Hutton O M ichael O'Keefe Best supporting actress : lJ Eileen Brennan O Eva Le Gallienne O Cathy M or iarty O Mary Steenbur gen D Diana Scarw id Best director: O David Lynch 0 Robert Redford O Richar d Rush 0 Martin Scorsese O Rom an Polanski Best song : O "Fame" O "Nine to Five" O "On the Road Again" O "People Alone" O "Honeysuckl e Rose" O "Out Here on M y Own" Academy Awards cliches sure bet By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Of 1111 Daily Pll•l Statt 1 Wh en s pring a rrives can >scar be far behind? As sure as the Acad e my 1.wards have been an American nains tay for 53 year s you can ount on the following to happen -0night at the Music Center C)om e winner will usc the 0<:· 1asion to g ive a political stale· Qe nt. «Other ston es. Paf'es f6-7 ) E ach victor m akes a secret )ledge to not be as corny as hanking Mom and Dad . But omeone will do jus t that as they .tand before a capacity Dorothy ~handler Pavilion audience and SPOKIS, OSCARS CUSH TONIGHI' If you want to watch the Ac ademy Awards but don't want to miss the end or the NCAA b111ketball c hamplon1 hlp 1am e you 'II havt a problem on your hands tonf1hi. 'The buketball 1ame. p l tttn1 North Carolin. a11ln1t Indiana. be1tn1 at ~ p.m . on NBC. Channel 4. The 01c:art 1et under way at 1 p.m . on ABC. Channel 1 an estimated 300 mill ion television viewers worldwide. Edv Williams will arrive for the ceremony scantily dressed under an open fur coat a nd being led by an ¥gha n hound or som e such animal. Star gazers who have been camped in the port able stands at the Los Angeles Music Center will applaud anyone summoned to Army Archer's mic rophone. The television came ras will show again the "crazy" with his rainbow-colored hair. The working p.ress. rew of whom sit in the main auditorium to s ee the awards live, will watch the TV monitors in the press room tucked away In the huge complex. They will battle for a spot in front of the small stage where t he wlnners are asked the same tir ed questions. There will be journalists from the other slde ol each ocean who· have been cm a week's tour of the studios yet will be lucky to get a single story ln print. The Oscar announce~eJlla are carefuJly calculated so Ult fllm1 can be re-released and It means mllllons extra ln box office bucks for the studios. The re·releues pr ovide a second chance for those who 1hruued off tile picture when It tlrat screened . The Oscar nominees are discu11ed tn the of· nee l unchroom. at the bar, C9ee 09CAllS, Pa1e All I how to hijackers • ID HB son • praises dad's act lh' PATRICK KENNEDY • Of,,,. 0 .. 1, Pilot Sl•tl The llunllngton Beach son of the American shot while fleeing fro m :.i h ijacked I ndon esian jctliner s a id today th a t his fath e r . Karl Schneide r. was l uc k v h ut mad e the right decision to run for freedom "I'm thankful he's alive," said K a rl Sc hn e id e r Jr . 26 "Ye!>terday, when I first heard the news reports I was confused and sca red. but today I found out he's In fair condition and there will be no pe rmanent d a mage. "It appears he made the right decision The hijac kers have chanf?e<i their demands and the s 1tuat1 on 1s u ncertain over t here." said Schne ider. an accountant 1n Costa Mesa llis fa ther. 44. appa rently jum ped from tht' jetliner and ra n to escape the hija cker s Sunday in Aan~kok. He was shot m the back and the bullet lodged 1n h is s p ine . The s lug wa s n•m ovcd in a n o p e r ut ion Sund4:1 y Schnelffrr 1s the m anager of a l111uston-bascd oil firm . M ilchem Inc . operating an Indonesia . Origin ally f rom T e x as. Schm•idl•r has hved outside the l'n 1ted Stal<'~ for 15 yt•ars In thl' p a ~I year. he moved from (;reece to Indonesia I I 1s son s aid there has been frequcnt communication among the l ' S Stall' Departme nt. his brotht•r . S t ep h en. 2 1. o f lluntmgton Reach. a nd his sister \'1c·k1 Polito. 24. of San Diego. Th<' cider Schneider's former "1f<o. Ma rtha Moren. lives in llun t 1ngto n Beach a nd his mot her Grace Porter. lives in 1.uhbnck . Texas Sc hneid er's I Stt FATHER . Page A2> Slwts fired a1, presidem; 3 men hnrt WA SHI N GTON 1AP > Severa l gunshots were fired al President Reaga n as he left a downtown Washington hotel to· d ay Secret Service agents shoved the preside nt into his armored lim ousine. which sJ)ed away fro m the Washington Hilto n Hotel. leaving at least three men lying on the ground only a rew feet from where Reagan had bee n standing. The three men were said to be wounded. The Sec ret Service s aid they included one agent and a Washlngton policeman. The president had dell vered a s peech to the AFL-CJO's Build· Ina Cons truction Trades Con· (erence meeting at the hotel. Police grabbed a sandy-haired man who appeared lo be ln his late 30I or ear ly 40s. CBS News reported. One reporter said he heard five shot.a. The scene out.side the hotel im · mediately ~ame one of chaos. A 1rowd aathered. Rea1an had emeried trom the hotel'• VIP entrance and re· porten were auempUn1 to shout questtona at hlm when there was 1 rapld~n ... 1ucce slon or shots. J I APWI,.,_ .. KARL SCHNEIDER (RIGHT) EARLIER WITH SON KARL JR. Father shot In back fleelng for freedom ------------ Strike in Poland canceled by union WARSAW. Poland IAP 1 T h e i n depe n dent un i on Sohdaril) loda) ca lled off a n a t1 o nw1de general s t rike threatened for Tuesday over the beating of three union mc m b<>rs. the Polish news agenC'y PJ\P S4:1id The d ecision was madc after ta lks with governme nt officials at whic h progress had been reported toward meeting union demands for punishment of those res ponsible for the beatings . There was no immediate word on terms that led to catastrophic consequences in this Soviet bloc country wracked by labor and econom ic turm<'il. PAP s aid the negotiators were prepari ng a joint communique T he talks were between Lech Walesa. le ade r of the Solidarity independent union. and Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Ra kowski. Wars aw Pa c t military maneuver s continued In and a r ound Pola nd. an ominous background to the tulks . The Soviet news agency Tass quoted a Polis h Communis t Party offi c ial as s a y ing . regarding a general strike. "our country has no reserves t hat would enable It to survive this c atastrophe economically . Therefore the structure or our state and its very 5urvlval are al stake .'' The official. Kulmicn Barc lkows kl. spoke at a meeting of the party '• C entral Com""ttee which gave Its rultn1 Politburo a vote or confidence to deal wttb the situation after stormy d bate. After nexlng lta mu1clea in a f our·hour warnln1 •trike Friday. the union, anaered by the bl·at1ng of three nwmbl'rs m B~d~oszcz on :\1 arch 19. threatened an ind<'f1m tc general ~trikt• starting at G ;i m Tuesda:- t 14 PST toni1?ht 1 1f its dem ands were not met in the lust-ditch talks. The l'h1ef dema nd is dismissal of those r esponsihle for the beatings. "We fa.Cl' a general strike with ~ f f e c· t s t h a t m a y b e catastrophi<'." said Ra kowski. ch ief la bor trouble s hooter for the go\'ernmen t in comm ents r eported by t he Polish news a~cncy PAP from the session of the party's central committee "The gcncra l strike would he the threshold of a precipice:· he was quoted as sayinR. Woman bites purse thief A youth who tried to get his hands on a downtown Huntington Beach woman's purse got a handful of toothmarks instead. police reported. Police said a 29-ynr·old wom an was ste pping out of her ca r near her homt' Friday nlaht. when a slender youth ln his late teens attempted to grab her pur5e. The woman screamed and bit the youth on the hand, cauaina him to nee on foot empty-handM, except ror tht' tooth marka, pollc .aid. Otrlcers alerted local hosplt•I to be on the lookout for any emergency room paUenta ~k ing lreatrnenl tor bite wnund1. 2 Yanks • re Illa In on plane HA!"Cl\0 1\, Thailand 1A P 1 I 11done:-1a ha!> agrct·d to release· HO pnsnnt·r~ :-;ought by airplane h1Ja<'kl'r~ holding 55 hostaj!l'S. including l\\O Amc·n<'<.>ns. T hai g n ,. t• r n m l' n t s p o k l' ~ m a n Tra1rong S11\\ank1n announte<I todtl\ Tr.air1111g '>aid lndonc•-.ian of- 1'1c·1:.il!> hJ\'l' prom1:-l•d tu ha\'e thl· frN•d pnsom·r., 1n H<mgkok h~ :l pm PST Ill' !-tatcl tht' h11ackcr!> dt' m anded an international flight tfl''' and J lonj? range aircraft to a th1rcl , un1denur1c•d countr) Then: was no 1mmed1ate word on the Indonesian go\•crnmcnt n·spon~l· to dem and~ fo r Sl.5 m1l11on ransom. added hy lhe h1 1;.1ckt·r~ t1wla~ 1\ rt·spon!-tl' b~ tht• h11ackers "as not 1mmed1ately reported E arht•r. the plant• hiJac kers de:-c·nll<'d b' lndom·s1a n source~ a:. fanat1t ~losll'ms let a nC1ther deudlinC' pass curlier t oda~ without appt1re nt h<t r m to their hosta!-(l'!-t T h r~ art· ck nrnnd 1ng SI 5 million ninsom and frt•t•dom for 80 "P<>htirnl µrisom•rs" in In· donl'Sli:I T ha i pnl1 Cl' s h <i rps h ooter ~ nnJ,ted th<' pl ane a nd a group ofln- d onesian commando!> was report- l'd al the Bangkok airpor t. Thai officials said they oppose Indonesia yielding to the hi· Jackers· demand!>, which have hN.'n a lterc>d several times since the Garuda Indonesian Airlines DC 9 wa!> 'e1Led Saturd ay. The re \\as d1!-ttUss1on with Indonesian authon t1c::. about a commando at· tack on the:.i1rc rart GcHernment so u rces in Jakarta. the Indone sian capital. said the dc•m ands would not be met Tht> sources. who as ked not to be 1dent1fied. said Indonesia would allow Thai officials to at- te mpt a peac:eful settle me nt with the h1jackcrs . If the atte mpt fails. one.• source said. "we will move 1n The fi ve gunmen. <irmed with m achine guns and explosives. o r iginally de m a nded that 20 prisoners be freed. When In- d o nesian Pres ide nl S uha rto <Stt HIJACK, Pag~ A21 DRAIGf COAST WfATHfR Mostly s unny th rough Tuesday. Gusty northwest wind s 20 to 35 mph , d ecreasing late this eve- ning. Highs 67 to 72 Lows tonight48to5S. INSIDf TllAY R o ll t>rak at1n g h as mushroomf'd into a sport /or 45 million Amt'ri cona. Su Pagt' H3. 11111 H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. March 30, 198 1 Arre•t lfkelfl R~fugee jobs Clymore flies · ruged By FaEDERICK SCHOEMEHL home Tuesday Of .. Dallf ,. ...... .,. lnco mina lndoC"h inese r ef· ugees would be better served by policies that prom ote job train· in g a nd e mploy m e nt over we lfare, sa ys the director of the stale Oftlce or Refugee Resettle· m enl. Speakin g al a conference of the ·Nation a l Association for Vietna mese Ame rican Educa- tion. Nguyen Van Ha nh a lso sug. cested that more emphasis be plac~d on resettling refugees in a g r 1cu~t u r~I a n d fis h i n g cooperatives instead or forcing them to live in an urban environ- ment. Hanh said officia ls responsible for creating refugee resettlement policy should look at what has been learned since 1975 when refugees first began arriving after the fall of Saigon in Vietnam and develop programs to en rourage training or persons with few Job skills and employment of those who poi.sess suc·h skills. Surh a shi rt in policy is more critical today. ll anh said . because rl'fugec•s now arriving because rerugrt.'CS now arrt\'lng a p pear to possess fewer JOb skills. Many or the rerugl'es arc from rural arca!'> in Cambod1<1 and L<1os. But if they don't choose to seek s uc h training. opportunities s hould be mad<.' available to the refugees lo puri.ue the hfestvle of their homeland. ~uch a~· in :igriculture or f1i.hing Hanh. Y.hO spoke on the 1!>!.ue of !'>elr-sufftc1enc~ among ref uj.let'!.. said tht' ratio of C'On!>ump lion to produC't1\'ll~ rcma1n~ nt•gall\'<' If Y.t' UH' that l .\PC' of framl:'"ork lhl• lndoc·h1nese rdugC'e!'> an· not thl'r<' yc•t c pro duct(lg more than the~ con sumer1." llangsa1d Rut c1l'i.p1lc such problem!> as languagt• burricri.. ph) s teal and mental health arrihat1ons and a lack of skilli>. "wt.• have found generally that rl'fuJ.(t•t•!-. ha\'e made vcr~ good proj!ress ." Hanh said A pplicat1on of "ork n•lated policies. Hanh said . also beeomc more important bf!cauM• of an impending April I dc•adltne. after Y.h1ch rcfugel'!'> "ho have been in the L'n1ted Statc·s more lhan lhree ~ears no lonli(cr ma~ r eceive r1nant1al a ssistance through the federal I ndochine:::.e Refugee Ass1stam·c Program l.eg1slat1on authored by Rep Dan Lungren. R Long Reach. \\OUld extt.•nd thl' dt.•adhne for 18 months to t•ast• the• potential 1m pacts on ~tatt.• and loC'al ai. :::.1stance program., The confrr«nn• c·oncluded Sunday at lh<' Inn at tht· Park in Anaheim Fro• Page A l OSCARS ... among friends Each movie buff thinks h(' or s he has soml• 1ns1dt• track to the win ners. And as you stare at the tube lo ah t hose actresses in their Edith Head·dt>signed gowns or the ac tors with chins looking like they were chisled from granite. you will no doubt be predic ting the big winners before the envelopes are opened Here are m y p1cki. Best pictur<.' ··Ordinary People .. Bes t actor Peter O'Toole. Best actress Sissv Soacek. Best s upporting acto'r New face for Loli ta ll untin gton Beach housewife V 1 q~1n1a Castillo. founder and pres ident uf '.'jinus Lisiados. c hecks youn g Maria Dolores "Lolita " Quiroz. 12. before the girl's tr ip hom e to Honduras following plast ic s ur~en· at L'C Irvine Medical Center The 20-hou'r job reshaped Lolita's te rr ibly deformed face Samuel Jiminez. 5 mon ths. of T i· juana. looks bored. He had cleft palate cor- rected b~· volunteer s urgical team Ninos L1siado mean s scarred or crippled children in Spanish . Volunteer group b r i n g!'! children to L'nited States for surger~· and <'C:ll'l'S for tht'm wh ilt• tht•v an• h1'rt' Fro• Page A l ALCALA ... Farnell said he had seen nothing yet that specific<1lly says Dove admitted to perjuring himself He said a District Attorne\ ·~ investigator had been looking ·in to the matter and he would i.oon confer with that person As Alcata·s defense law\er during his trial. Barnett had. in troduced rebuttal test1 moO\ th<it Do\'e and Herrera ht>d · Reacting Lo the latest d(;'vt>lop ment. Barnell said today. ··Wt• felt during the cours<.' uf lht• trial that the Jailhouse snitchc~ wen• all lying .. Barnett. who still m<iintain!'> that Akala Y.as <'onvi<'tt.•d and condrmned to death on lhe has is of a violent criminal past bcfon• the Samsot' killing. !'><tid thl· test1monv of the 1allhou~e 1n formants· ··was ta1olrt'd to givt- the prosecution the test1mom it needed lo put Rodncy 1n the gai. C'hamber ·· The defense laY. ver addcd This is a chilling reminder of the vagaries or the c riminal Justice system It 's a ven c hilling t ype of a situation Th.1: i m plicalions of this a re very far reaching.·· · Barnell termed Dove's rccan talion and the Supreme Court's ordering or a h<.'aring ··absolute· h incredible .. developments · The climate of hystt-r1a c which s urrounded thl' caSl'I may be s tarting to have calmed down ... he said The hearing on lht• allL·gcdly perjured testimony would take place in Orange County Superior Court in t.•arly April Course s late d • 10 t e ar gas Registration is being C'onduct ed now for a two-hour tear gas i ns t r uction cour se scheduled April 9 at Lake Par k Clubhouse in Huntington Beach Valley hoard eyes closure connnittee R~ P HIL S~E IDERMA:\' Of Ille Oa11, Pilot Sl•ll Fountain Vall<.•y School Ub · tr1<·t truslt.·e~ Jrt• preparing to .,t•lf!tt 11 Ol'"' pl'opll• to serve on u sC'hool c·lo~un· ad\'lson· com m1tl<'l'. IO lhl• \\<Jkt• of a board clt•c·1!>10n lo thi.~olvl' tht· group th•1t has ha ndlt·cl th1!'> c-hore dur ing the pa~t thn•t· \ t•ars Appl1<·at11m!'> to · !'>l'rve on thi~ c·omm1tt<.•t•, \\h1<"h makl."s re<'om- rnl•ndation:-to th<.' trustet·~ n · I-! u rd 1 ng i.dwol l'los u res and t hl· u~t· of i.urplu!'> pro1wr1' are be• 1ng 1•ollt•t·tt•d ;.11 lh<.· d1s1 nc·t ·i. l.1 g h thou st• L<im· ht•actq u<1 rt{•r:- Th 1• nt'" c·11mm1lt£'l• will hi' st.•lt1<'ll'<1 ~la.' 7 through <i com b1nat1on of n.indom drawings •irH1 appornlmt•nl!'> b)· tru:.tecs The c11~triC't ·., original (•lo!'>urc t•omm1lll't'. formt·d 1n lah• 197K. A buse case girls re turned to mother Two young daughll·ri. of former Cambodian lt·ader Lon :--'ol h<1 v1· been returned to the cu!>todv of their moth{·r. who i.ttll facE's c.hild ubuse pro<'t'eding~ along with an older son 1n North Ore:inge County M un1cipal Court Two othC'r ('hildrl'n. however. sons ag<.'d 13 and 15. will remCJin at th<.' county'i. Albt'rt Stllon Homt' for dependent c·hildren Th<.' fi and fl year-old daughters of Lon Nol. A9. and Lon Sovann<1. 37 . noY. living in Fullerton. were ullowc•d hack to the C'are or their mother after a JUvenil<.' court tommiss1un<.'r determined t~cy w(.'rt• no longer 1n danger of "ex cei.~1vc phyi.1ca l discipline .. TY.o. hOY.l'\er. Y.ere declared dc•pl•ndt.'nl <'hlldrcn mc;.nrng the:-Y.ould !'>llll bC' under court superns1on had askl'd 1h1-. ~pring to bt' al lo\\ ed lo l'Ontinut· tht•1r work lhrouj.lh lht· coming .,C'hnol \Car This c·omm1ttt.·t.· <·onductl'd hl'<Jringi. an<I madt.• n•<·ommen datinns in 1979 that lht.· d1~tr1C'I c·lost• l.<.tmh .ind ~tc•Do\\t•ll i.C'honls. <J~ Y. l·ll a:. u portwn of Bu~hard S(·hcml Tht·M· rf..'l'Om mendal111ns Y.t•n• l'rtat•tt•d ll\ thl• trustl'l'i. · The.• group \\a~ n•a('ll\'all•<I 111 19811 to ('Ons1 dcr acl<l1l1onal 1·losurl's 1-:arh thb H·ur the t·om m1tt1· .. rt•t·omm<.•n1ll·d · thal WardlO\\ and Hu)oih ard srhools bt• do~t·d ht·<·aui.t· of rktlin1ng l'l1 rol lml•nt · Tht> trui.ll'l'S. ho"' t•n•r clc· nded to dc·la~ l'lo~urc• of tht• t"o .,1lt•i. for at lt.·a!'>t annth<•r 't•ar During a ch~t·ui.i.1on ·on tht• futurt• of this ('<1mm 1lll'l'. tru~tee Carol ~lohan suggt.·~ll•d thal tht• original group ht• <11.,.,olved and that a rte\\ comm1th·l· be· c·hoM•n While• pra1!'>tnJ.! thl' group. ~Trs \lohan obsl'n't•d. ·1 d hkl• 10 .,et· U!'> ha\l• a rrei.h -.t;.irt Sh(' notl•d th;it nt•Y. n •s1dt•nt., ha' l' moH•d into I h<· dt.,lntl bul ha n• not IK'en a bit• lo pa rt 1<·11wtl' on the l'omm1t11•t• Ho:.irct pn·s1 cll•nt llc·tt\ '.\lt~nanC'lh abo -.aid ~omt· con ('l'rn has bt'l'n r;.11i.l'C1 ht•('aU!W lhn•t.• eomm1lll'l' mt.·mlH'r~ h\'C' nt••H" Tamur:i School. a po!'>Slhl« C'losurl's1te 1n lhl' nt•ar futurt.· Thi." tru~kt•i. nott•d that thl' l'Ompl1.•x10n of thl' c·omm111rt• h_ai. changt•d bt•1·auM· of rt•sij.!na lions from lht• or11.unul group l\bo. desp1tt• random st•l1•c•tions. the n>mmittc.•t· tntlurlt•s a husband and "1fC' A motwn lo cl1!'>solH· the.• j.lroup .ind select n<.•w ('Omm1ttN• mem ht.'ri. "'as apprm eel 4 () 1 Trui-tN' Cher~ I :\'.orton "'a~ ab'>t•nt 1 !ht• d1i.tnct will accept ap phcat1ons for the group until s p m Frida~. April 24 Eaeh trustee ha-. lht' option of appo1nt1n J.! ont• comm1ltee member Th<· remaining people "'tll bt' selt•ctt•d throuJ,?h a run dom drawtnj.l 8 y STEVE MITCHELL Of •• D•Clr ~llet t1a11 F reed Pa k is t ani h ijack hostag.e Craig Clymore will be returning to the United States Tuesday to turn him self in to f~~eral d rug enforcement or. f1c1als. A spok esm a n for Laguna B~ach attorney Ronald Kreber s a id Clymore will arrive at Los Angeles International Airport at 5 p .m. Tuesday aboard a Luft hansa airlines jet from Fraknuft Wes l Germany. · , C::ly more. who is wanted in the L.:mled Sl~tes o!" dr ug smuggling charges. 1s being accom panied by Kreber. a spokeswoman ror the attorney said this morning The pair were to have left Damascus . Syria over tht' weekend. and were schedult•d to spe nd Sunday night 1n Frankfurt The 24-year-old formt•r Lah "'orest resident 1s expee tt·d tCJ bc• m e t by his parents. GIC'n and Thelma Clymort• of San Juan C:1pistrano. and o ther n•luti\'t·~ when tht• airliner arr1 Vl's Barney b ack for 8th year NEW YORK t /\l'1 Product>r Dann\ rnold apparent!) C'ha.ngt.·d his m tnd after <1nnounc1ng plans to cancel · Rarnl'\ :\tiller·· <ti th(• t.•nd of th~· i.eason. and lht• pro~rum \\ tll return for an t.·1ghth ~ear on AHC' th1h fall. th<· netY.ork said toda~ Civic le ade r R. Tornquis t • service set Gr a n·s1de fu nl' ra I :-.i.• rv1 t<•-. wt•re C'o ndu ('l t•d today 1n Redlands for longtime Sunst·I Beach resident and Wt•sl Counl' busines:,, and c1 \'1c· leadc>r Richard Alden Tornquist. "ho d1t.·d Thur~ day at the age of BO Mr Tornquist o" ned his "" n T o rnquis t Manufa ctur1n~. a hea\') tool and marh1nt.·r~ com pany 11 <.' hacl sern·d as u m1:mbcr or the II u n l Ing t <> n He a c· h (' 1 t ' <<>lemC'nlar~ 1 Se hoot Board . prt: s 1dent of the Sunset Reach C'hambC'r of Comm c·rce. a member of lfunt1ngton Reach M asoniC' Lodge• :'\o 380. ancl ai. a patronofthe E<tslern :itar lie also wai. a member of the• St'al Bc•ach Lions Club and was a membt'r of the County Coast As soc1ation. Sur\'lvors include his w1fr. Alicia M White Tornquist. and daughters. Mary J a nt' Scott uf Muncie. Ind . and Ald1m· Alicia Scott of llonolulu Seven grandchildrc•n and t"o great·j.lrandchtldren ulso '>Ur \'l\'e Dollar sh o ws gain LONDON cA P 1 The dollar i.urged ahead toda~ on world m~ney markets "'hll<' gold prices slipped in a "'ave of profit ta king Stl nr also "ai. down Joe Pesc1. Rest supporting actress Eva le Gallienne: The class. beginning at 7 p m . will be sponsored by the lnterna· tional Association of Security Professionals. a non.profit cor poration. Lon Sm a nna and her 18-year· old son. Lon R1th. both face mis- demeanor child abuse charges aris1n~ from alleged beatings of the children with a horsewhip ---------------- Best director Robert Red· ford : Best song .. Nine to Five .. Quick now. who were the 1980 winners? Huma n r e la tions talk set at GWC Im proving human r elations within a large company will be the subject or a free pr ogram slated Wednesday at Golden West College in H unting ton Beach. Man ag e ment consult ant Marion Morse Wood. who has worked with Lockheed. TRW. Security Pacific Bank and other firms. will present the program. whic h begins at 1. 30 p.m . in Fine Arts Room 222. 0"ANGE COAIT A S22 ree covers the cc1ur~e and permit that \\ill allow participatnts to carrv and purchase tear gas. T hose interest ed can sign up at Edison Center. 21377 Magnolia St .. or Murdy Center at Golden West Str<.'<.'t nnd Norma Drive. 3 he ld in fra ud EL CAJON I AP 1 Three peo· pie were arrested in connection with a scheme that a llegedly defrauded furniture und ap· plia nce stores in rour states or almost SS00.000 in the past two years. authorities say Arrested Sund ay w ere Patrick J Cavanaugh. 45: his w1fe Diana Lea. 27. and her brother. Joseph Cioffe . 31. Daily Piiat MAIN OfflCl lJO WH I 94, $1 , C°'la IMM, Cll. Thoma• P. Haley ,....... Robar1 N WHd ,.._,. M. ThomH KH vll ..... Mall adll<fll ... U•, C:•ta Mau, Cll. tt•>t The two daughters were re· turned lo their mother under 1>uperv1sion of the county's Social Services Department The two hoyc; were to remain al Sitton I lomc for an indefinite period. Lon SovannCJ a nd Lon Rilh are ~c heduled ror pre-t rial headngs tn north court in lat<.' April. Fro• Page Al FATHER. • • wife. Linda. is with him in Bangkok. the son s aid "My grandmother ·and '1 are hoptng he'll rome back to the Llnited State1> to recuperate.'· the son said "He's lucky to be alive .. Schneider's daughter. V1ck1. a housewife in San Diego. agreed with her brot her t hat their father "might be in better condi-tion than the rest of the passengers" who still a re being held prisoner by the hijackers. She said Mitche m officials called her this morning and said he r father Is alert and is able to m ove his toes. "We were afraid he might be paralyzed.'' she said . l' S Druic Enforcement Ad min istration officers were also expected to he at p laneside Tuesday when the former L.ug u na Beach High School graduate return11 . . C_l ymore Wah arrested bv Syrian authorities MarC'h 21 and "us Jailed pending dforts b v L'S. officials to have• him re turned to California to answer tn drug charge~ Clymore wah om· of more than 100 . host<igc•s h eld aboard a J>uk1stan1 Jl'I thal "as h1Jacked 1'.larch 2 un a fl1gh1 from Ka ra('ht to Pl•!'>haY. a r 11 "usn t unt1 I lh1· hoMagei. ~ l'rt• n•lc•a)oit·cl 1:1 chH s lal£'r that (.I~ mon• \\<JS publH·I~ <Jl'('USE'd IO a i:rand JUn 1nd1(•lml·n1 of be 1ng th<.• ringlt·aclt·r 111 a Sl2 m 1II1 on ha!'> h • ., h .1 rt cl h l' rc11 n !'>m uggltng opcrat 111n Clymon· -.1t•uc1fo,tl~ 11•fu.,t·d 10 ~1gn <1 ":JI\ l'I of surrt•tlfll'r in S) ria thal Y.Olllcl h<t\'l' ullo" l'<I him to ht• lakc·n 1n10 c·u-.t•1<1' •mcl n•tunwd l11 lh1· l'n1lc•d SI <•!l's llut i..lftl'I' h1-. arrc•i.t II\ s, nan olf1nals a \H'l'k and .1 half ugo. h1~ attorn!'\ !'>aul thin).!~ "''re• j.!t•lt 1ng out nl hancl. ancl suggc·!'>l t•d l'I~ mor·t• n·lurn lo l'al1f11rnia f\1t'111•1 flt•" 111 D;1ma.-.eu!'> a '~ t'C·k JJ.:o 1n an dfo1 I 111 ~~11n ( I\ n11irt·' n·lt·a-.1· f1 om 1ail and t'-'flt'cl1l1• h1i. n•lurn 111 lht• l 'ntll'd ~l:tlt'" * • * f 'ro• Page A l HIJACK ... agrc•t•d lhl· hlJi.lc·kt•r., 1ntrt.·a!'>t·cl tht• numlx·r tu K-1. ancl aj.!rc·t·rnt·n1 ··~aHI \loa!'>;Jnnuunct·dSunda\ But loda~ Y. llhoul explan~lmn I h l' T h a 1 g 11 ,. 1• r n m t' n t -. 'Pllkl·!'>m.m for lhl· orclt•al 'Jtd th1· h IJ at• kc·r!'> \\ho took no ac·t 1on "'ht·n lh1•1 r Ii ..i m PST d1·adhn1· pa!'>.,t•tl Jnnoun('(•d lht•\ Y.t111ld .H'l'l'IJI lht• rt•ll'as1· 11f HO. in:-. It-ad of >M JJr l!'>Ortt'r!'> In .Jakarta . ln<l11n1·!'>1Jn \'1t1· Pn•s1<l1•nt Aclam M ahk !'>aH1 the· j.!tl\'t•rnml·nt .., full~ rt'!'>prms1hl1• tu i.111\ t• tlw h1Ja<'k1rtJ.( trugccl\ ti\ <ill nwan!'> a~ .,oon a~ pn-.i.ililt· hut Y.ould nol 1·omml·nt he\11nd :icl<ltnl-!. nt•got1at111n., un• u0nr1t•1 \\a) Sharpshooll'ri. 'urroundt·d th1· C; <• r u <I a I n do 11l's1;1 n ,\ 1 r \\ a ' t J)(' 9. parkl•cl ahoul a milt· fn;ni I h t• l l' r m 1 n a I h u 1 I cl 1 n ~ a 1 B.rngkok ·., l>on ~ UJn).! a1qwrt Bandit back for seconds? Ont• of \Y.o gunmen Y.h o rohbf'd a llunlington Reach liq uor i.tore Su n da~ night 1!'> bc•lievc.•cl to bt• the man "'ho held up th1.• s ame business 12 davi. t•a rlit•r. polict• said toda~ · A r lerk at (' and M Liquor 9602 Ha m ilton St.. told polic•t• ht· recognized om• of two men who walkPd into the s tore at 8 40 pm Om• of the men drC'w a re volver. ordered the C'lerk and I wo cu!>lomers to the floor and took S70 from the cash registe1 befort' flet•tn g. pollct' said Picke ts jam transit P 11 1LAoE1. r 111 A 1 " r 1 Striktn~ city trans it Y.orkers set up p1ckt•t lines al a Transport of New Jersl'Y bui. terminal during lhl" morning rush hour toda). Thoma• A. Murphln• .......... _ Secorwt clan llOtt ... "let et Cotta'M•w, Celllornla CU~ 1 .. .-1. S~ripllon llV Ufrter Sf 00 montllly •• """ u.to _,,,,,, mllll••• O.ttlflaUont S• oO mOf\1111, Mllchem Is a ~ubsidlary or Ba ker International. It employs abo ut 1 .400 p eo pl e and speclalliea in drilling fluids and related eouioment . I ---------------- Chtw ... H. Loot A ...... ~·-Befnard Sc:hulmen ~ Carl C&rl™'Mn ..-.oio- l(enneth N OOOOerCI Jr QreiMllft~ VOL 14,NO.M The younaer Schnelder it em ployed by the Spar ks and Company accountlng firm a t 2845 Mesa Verde Drive East. Costa Mtu. , Al's Garage and Sea Bags Heavy Clu!y Canvas Bags 1n·shapes and sizes 10 ht any occasion Seams are double &filched ro provide a 1tte11me ol durabllity All Sea Bags are water repellent Jnd learur a shouldor strap tor easy carrying ' AL S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644 7030 .. All wet and hung out to dry are entertainer Mel Tillis rleft J and Pittsburgh .Steel.f!rS 9uarterback Terry Bradshaw on set of their movie. "Cannonball Run. Film is based on real transcontinental auto race. "The Cannonball Sea -to-Shrnmg-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash ... It's called budget cul. In Britain the hol haircut m ay be the Lady Di . bul in Wa s hin gton it 's th e Stockman. in imitation of the longish mane of Budget Director David Stockm an. J esus Rodriguez, owner of Washington 's Exec ut1 ve Men ·s l-la irstylang. s ays customers have started ask ing for the Stockman by name The Stock man s t yle 1s straight hair. parted on the right and falling a bit over the ears "I guess they wanted to blend in with thE' adm in1stra lion,' Rodnguez was quoted as saying 1n People magazine Former Secretary of St ate Edmund S. Mus kie has been awarded the oldest honor bestowed o n American Catholics. the Univers ity of Notre Dame 's Laetarc Medal Muskie. who rece1 ved an honorary degree from Notre Dame in 1969. 1s one or several publi c servants to re· ce1ve the medal since 1t was instituted in 1883 Last year's recipient wai. l' S House Speaker Thom as P. "Tip" O'NeUI J r. Cheryl Prewitt . 1980 Miss America. will marry gospel singer Terry Blackwood on Easter Sunday in her hometown of Ackerman. Miss. Queen Elizabeth II named th e Rt Rev G r a h am Leon ar d, 59. as the n ew Bis hop of London . third highest post in the Anglican church. Ex-Sen Gaylord Nelson, working as an environmental lobbyist after bei ng defeated in a re·clection bid. says he misses Congress. and "who wouldn't·•·· "When I'm up on Capitol 11111 and I see old friends in the S<'nate. I think 11 would be fun to be involved 1n the f ight." tht' Wi scons in Dem ocra t said 1n People magazine · ' Ev er,. time I 've b e e n o ,. e r NELSON there when a roll call bell rings. <411 of a sudden I'm alerted to think that the~··re <·ai ling m{'. when the fact is. they aren't." Rut Nc•lson. 64, sayi. he's not moping about the past. The founding father of Earth Day keeps busy a s •ttie salarit•d director of the Wilderness Society And his $30.000 government pension helps Retired Gen Roberto Viola has begun a three year term as president of Argentina. pledging t o continue im- plementing the "National Reorganization·· announced by the military when it seized power from President Isabel Peron 1n 1976 Major storm rips Idaho. 87 mph u:inds cul power to 22,000 lwmes C1nc1nn•li I• U '>U c:o .. tal tDeatlaft- Gu\ly norlhw••I """d' 70 10 lS mph, d•cr••sino l•t• thl\ ev1n1no Co••I•• low "'· tnl•nd SS Co•\lal noon 12. •nlano '1 W•lor s~ ----.-~Lii C11ve11nd 16 H Oo ColumOu\ 11 SI 11 E•s••hert, n0tlhwt\t wind\ 10 to JO knots with • to •·foot \e1h Wino\ 17 10 11 knoli from Newport Buell 10 tne Mule.-. OOrO.r w11n J lo S loot wind w•Y9S Winch dtc.rt•\1no ••t• 1on10111 DoKomlno norlhwHt•rly 10 10 10 kt>OI\ T,_Ml4Y Woltrly \wtll 1 10 3 Itel Motly c1 .. , Tuna.v Tll11ndert10tm1 o,_111 heavy r•ln 10 lllt Gvlf <;oa$1 statH t•rly locley. •nd t"underthower\ rumbted ovt r lllt Ortat llHln lnlo lllt Ct nlrt l RocklH '"''' .,., '"°"' tn tM ,.,oner elev•Uo"'· •nd • tew ifto•er\ ...... ,tel.,..., llW P.clfle Nor1hwHI A major •larm in ldehO Sunday shrrtd wlndl to 17 mpl\, Ul>"OOlln9 tree\, ~m.a.1.Nno wtnoo•' •nd hOuU• •nd le•ving al I••'' 11,000 hOme• •nd t>u1inHW1 w1lh0ut oow.r t0t IN'' ot IMOay Plly.,cal O.m--•rtd 10 be mo1t """" In • north 8olwo rtJldtfl hal are•. wtwre ab0u1 10 tr•t •ere Ujlrooltd and.,....~ rooh of lhrw hOllMI "lt'I 1rw-n111arm I've '"n 11110 Vt•"·" u ld lob Brown. • spokom.., IOI' Ille Idaho Power C.o. Raln•llowert and Hm• lhlln· dtfltlOwen -• upocltd lo rMCll from c.ntrtl Florida 10 no•tlle .. ltrn Mlnnoota and along the Atlantic Co.II to N-Enol•nd 011rlno Ille d•y. Forec•lert Mld •n-llurrle• wlll lCatCer over llW nonntrn AoO•" and .--.tern Ut•ll to "°r-rn ArlaoM't moufttalnt, cllanolno to uiunoer-t O¥er Ille no<thern In- ner m-1111 10 fie "°rtllern third 9f -P.clflc Goatl. lhrougll r .. ..,.~ Mt•nwru1e. Lo\ An91lt\ Coun11 M-•rcn .tnO rtw:ue ttAm\ <ombltd th• Mount W•lerman •r•• of lhe S•n G•br1e1 Mounl•1n\, 1b01.tt JO m•••' nortnu•I ol LO• "not1u. for t•o \Iller\ reported m"\lnQ Sund•Y n19hl S1>tt1ll • SQI. George G•lttn•r WliCI 11\t P•'""" ot 5'oll Fr.,.cl\ 2l. •nd Ktv1n Lloyd, 1!, r-rled 11\al Ill~ men were w1rm1y dr•ue<S and •• u111n1 ski tr•. National W••ther Servitt IOttC .. ltfl ulO lht wfnci. Are jMrl of a lllQll·prft611rt Sy\ltm edQlllQ OYtr tlle •late from 111e Pacific Ou.,. Wtll to 'IOUlllwul winds of ZS to 40 mph In Ille mounl•ins and d .. trh, •<compenotd Oy bl-lno s.-.d and Ou•I, Wl'f't lo c1W11>99 to Ille northwttl •nO OtcrMM lalt IOfti9'1I WlnO• of ZS 10 JO mt>h wtrt lor•<atl for Ille coa•t•I •r•••· the wrv•c• w ld Mo11n1aln ruort arH high ltm· peraturH ~d re.ch lht ~ TllOS· day, ""llll lowo IOftlQht JS to JS. E ., ... ,.,., mostly CIH r .... , .,. pr•O•cteo tnrOUQn Tut'Ml•Y with .,,on ltmptra1Uf'h rt.Ching Ille low IO mid JO\, 1ac1pt 1n tht low11 Color•OO. Im~"•' •nd co1ch1lla v•lltY\ w .. ro hlQllS .. 111 r .. cll ,,... IO• IO\ Te.perat11rn NATION "' Lo f>Cll Al1><1nv 80 SI AlbiJqllO ., JI AIY'larlllo 61 • A1llevillt SI S4 1 06 Allent~ 75 SI 41 Atlante Cly .. •• Ba1tlmort II '° Birm1norvn II SI no Bltrnaro SI u Boho 61 )0 11 Boston II u 8rowntvll1 .. s• B11llt10 ., SI OJ Cl\erlttnSC 10 ., Cl\arl1tn WV II SI 01 ClleytllM JI 1t c111u90 u !O 11 TamperMll<Ol will be -10 owr Ille MIO.Atltnlk co.ti, tM Tt -•Wt 6nd fftld-.WUluiwl vol'-Yt and Ille C...1101 l'lollll and -'"9rn lloclllot wllll IOs o .. r ,..,._n "'°"cit and •-I 90111 ...,.,.,n Tt U'- 8otdtlena C'•Ule ...... nrl NlferC Hellfll In le«. 1'9rlod In Meondt. <:.u1 ..... a. ............ Travaltrt Mvlaottea were In tfla<I IOftl911t far tlt'Oflt, twtlY wlnot Wll to olO "'Ph In.,,.,...,... Mid -lalns, wl11dt llYI tllOvld la•,.. So11tllarn Callforllle •llh motlly clHr s-lff A, ~ DI~ 2 J "' 2 J w 2 _ 4 WNW · U4''ttl /iJtt1nint The Dally Pilot waau to hear obHrvaUou from ill rHde" -partlcUlarly eommenta •bout &be pacr ftlelf. Jt'I •HY to tell ' UI rour vleWa. Just call the number Jow and your meua,. wll be recorded. Meaaa1es wm be traaacrtbtd several um .. daily and delivered to the •t of tbe appropriate editor No drcuJaUon calla, pleaae. · TeU ~ what's on your mind. Tbe number I.a lD Hnlce 14 hours a day, Hven days a week. 842•8088 • Oti Fl Wlh 16 •9 Denver 61 JS Oo Moo,,., 63 •I ll Orlro11 16 SO Duluth •I JS J1 H•rlfora 80 SI Helen• '1 JS 21 Hono1 ulu ll 69 Hou\lon 10 U lndn•ph• 16 S• 11 J•CIL\nWllt I() •I K•n• CllV 61 0 LH Vt~\ IO SI L•llll Aoo .. Sl SI LO\ Angell'\ 6S SS LOVISYllll /1 S6 61 Mtmph1\ 10 SI 11J M1•m1 I) II M 1lw•ukH •• O 2• MPl\·SI P U • I• NOllY1tlt 7S S• I )I Now Ori Hr" Is •I 1 JI Ntw Yori< /1 SI NorlOll< 7S S9 O•I• Clly 69 0 Om•h• SI 0 01 Oti•ndo 110 6• PMl•dPll•• 12 S6 P1,.,.n1• 11 SI P1ll•OurQ11 H SJ 11 Pll•nd. M4 17 u Piiand. Ort Sl 0 OS Rapid C1ly 61 :IO Reno S• :IO 04 S•ll Lakt 62 ~ JS San 01t90 U SI S•n Fran S6 •I 02 SUlllt SO 0 St LOUI• 69 S2 1 S~ SI P Tam!M IO 6S SI Sit Merit SS 0 111 SpoUnt •I 33 I l ulu IS •I I WHlllnOlll IO U CALlflOllNIA I Baura11e10 11 n Blylht ~ 60 Eurtkt U 3' 11 Fre•no 70 u L.•no\ltr 67 q M•ry1Ylllt 61 19 Monlarty 60 m N .. CllH IO m O•kland tO m PH• AOlll.. .. .i Atd 8111« .. 42 lltcrw.M CHy 60 .. .01 Atrio 54 lO .04 S.C:remenlo 6) )I Sallnu ., ll Santa lerMra tt O StoOIOft .. m TMrMal IO S1 Uklall S7 m .0) •• , .. o. " .. 819 lffr SI U lltl!op IJ J4 C.lallM U S6 , a1 C.ntre II ., LOfl9 IN<ll U 52 Mcuwowl• ta 53 MIWlllClfl H JI Ntw~ hKll 10 S6 Ollterlo t2 u Palm ap,11191 71 S2 ,. ..... _ .... S.n larMrolno 60 SI S.nJOH 72 0 01 lenlt AM ti St f tflel Yetley SI JO B-.111 .. -.TW.I TOOAY lecllM llltft t ;'I p,m J.I leco1141'"' t11• p m t I TUHOAY ,,,.. ... 111• '·"'· • * PW.1111111 .,v •. m. ... lte91141-1:•"'"' •. , lwl .... t ; 11 "'"'·· ti ... T~ l :d t .11\, .---:-~----~~-~-.;..~~-----=1:.:.~..:..:.~~~--~~..:.--Jj MeM rl• ,......., I et •.m, .U t:Upfft, Orange Coaet OAJLY PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 ,,_ 1ty ,_...,Goe,.... I STUDENT LINDA SCHAFER MANIPULATES CONTROLS IN RECORDING STUDIO ' Golden Weat College h .. 11-track studio for Hph1ng engineer• It's next best thing Music her love, recording the path By PHIL SNEIDERMAN DI IN O.lly l'llet St.ti! Linda Schafer of f'ountain Valley can't perform rock 'n' roll, so her career goal is to cap lure it Linda caught her first case of music fever at a Beatles ('onc·ert in Cleveland t7 years ago. and she's been afflicted ever since. ·'The total pandemonium at that concert. the total craziness showed me the power mus ic has to reach people," she recalls its sound man and wanted Linda to handle the chore She snapped at the chance .. Actually. I was snowing them because I'd never touched Brothers, Sisters united Now 28. Linda has decided that becoming a recording studio engineer 1s the best way to steer her lovc• for wailing guitars and driving drums into a Any traces of sibling rivalry full-time Job will cease to exist when the Big Concluding a two year record Brothers and Big Sisters of ing arts program at Golden West Orange County become part of Co llege. she sees two hurdles the same local family · First. studio ope nings are The national non profit or rare, and competition is fierce. ganizalion that administers both Beyond this, Linda must m groups already is one agency. vade a male dominated in-but the two g roups were dustry and convince skeptical separate in the county until an studio managers that her goal js agreement was reached this to juggle control knobs not week which transfers the g1rb rock musicians into the boys' oq.~anization But as Linda sees it. she's The arrangement was made. paid her dues however. under less than ideal In San Diego, she s pent one circumstances ) ear as a "roadie ... mo\'mg /The national organization's equipment and driving a truck 'board of directors voted last for a family band that played a month in San Diego 1to d1saf stead y string of Jewish wedding filiate Big Sisters of Orange receptions and bar mitzvahs County for failure to meet She then moved to another minimum standards set for full men's field, Joining the stage members. crews at two San Diego theaters The group held provisional To test her mettle. one stage status for several years but was manager forced her to climb a under agreement to seek full JO.foot scaffold the first day on members hi P . said David the job Baylmann, executive vice pres1- Linda became interested in dentofthenationalorganization. sound mixing and recording Carol Geffner, exec utive while helping i.et up for con-director of Big Sisters of Orange certs. Co_unty for the last six months, Unable to afford private re-said a new board of directors cording courses, s he moved to and staff had been organized Orange County in order to at-and a public relations firm was lend the free prnli(ram at Golden lined up to start a new fund- West. (The coll ege now charges raising effort. a modest $25 matcriuls fee per But the disaffiliation announ- semestcr ) cement halted the plans. she The program teaches elec said. t.ronics. business management. "The important thing 1s that h.ve concert record 1 ng tech the service will continue for our a soundboard like that before " ' she recalls ··But I just went ~p· there and fi gured it out. It worked out fine " Linda later signed on for a three month s tint as a sound · mixer at Costa Mesa 's now- closed Cuckoo's Nest Last autumn, a friend lipped her to a part time opening at a recording studio in Irvine. Be~inning as a "gofe r," Linda g raduated to assistant engineer .. 1ng JOb~ on projects as diverse as a gospel recording, back·· ground music for a s lide show, and a movie soundtrack Helt tightening measures squeeLed Linda out of the Irvine job. but she's already knocking> doors at otner studios. She believes the audio in- dustry 1s a field in which women are sorely underrepresented. Of the 80 students who entered the Gold('n West recording pro· gram in Linda's c l ass, only st•vcn wt'rC women The number 1ncrcascd s lightly last fall ··1 was never scared of all thost• knobs and controls." Lin· da says "A lot of men try to dazzle you with the technology. and that's what scares a lot of "omen aw:Jy" She docs admit that a studio JOb can play havoc with a woman's social hfe Linda says a male friend re-· ccnlly offered to fix dinner for her When her recording session ran overtime. s he had to call several times to say she'd been delayed lier date finally complained that dinner was ruined Linda hopes to follow the ex· am pie of women rock musi· cians. who are moving into more prominent roles. "If they can do it, why can't I be involved in this business. too'! .. she asks. "I don't know if I'll be able to find a full-lime job or have to settle for part·time studio work. But I know I never want lo bO kept from doing it because I'm a. woman " mques and taping The college is girls and for new girls." she ecoqrudieprped with a 16 track re-said Solar salt pond The current 135 big sister-little Linda put her studies to work s ister matches will be ad-LOS ANGELES (A P l If the when a Tus tin band called ministered by the Big Brothers s tale Legislature will donate $2 "Automatic Pilot" invited her to or ganization, which has full million. the nation's first solar its Hollywood concert m ember status. It will change s ail pond power plant will be The night before the event. she its name to Big Brothers-Big Sis-operating in a now-dry lake bed learned the band had just fired ters of Orange County. in the Owens Valley by mid-1983 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__:..:_:;.::_...;..:.:.=.....:~~ for l:oat, 'bzachor just <mjC1finfj ... OJr ~ IZOO' LACOSTE jecka.t, mrli -w1th 100%nylon ~<Z.11 an::l-- ell cation tnny lining. · aveileble in navy, nz.d end Kcz.l ly: •• I H/F Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, M•rch 30. 1981 NATION .1/ WO Al~ 1Mongolia seaceman ends 8-day mission MOSCOW <AP> -Mongolia's first space traveler and his So· viet commander returned to Earth today after an eight·day space mission tbat included a Unk·UP with the Salyul·\apace station, the orrtcial news agency Tass reported. . The cosmonauts, Jugderdemjdiyn Gurragcha, 33, or MoncoUa and Vladimir Dzhanibekov, 38, were launched into apace March 23. Th.ere was no immediate word on whether two other coa· monauts launched over two weeks ago would soon return t-0 Earth. Vladimir Kovalyonok, 39, and Vilrtor Savlnyk:h, 41, were launched March l3 and have been apoard the space station, The government said the two cosmonauts were "feeUn1 well" 1 after landing at 2:42 p.m . Moscow time <3:42 a.m. PST> 105 milet southeast of the city or Dzhezkazgan ln the southern Soviet Un.loo. Search for victims amid debm entla COCO BEACH, Fla. CAP> 'The search for bodies amid the broken concrete and twisted meal of a collapsed five·slory con· dominium has been halted by officials who say the 11th bod~ pulled from the rubble probably is the last. The whereabouts of several workers who may have been al the building site when the collapse occurred Friday still were unknown. But authorities no longer believe they were pinned beneath the tons of debris . The search for bodies ended early today. Skeleton i<knti/Wd in Flmida find WEEKI WACHEE, FLA. <AP) -A skeleton uncovered in the backyard of a sex offender's house has been pos itively identified as that of a 15·year -old Ohio girl who disappeared five years ago when s he left her parents' camper to take a shower. Her skeleton was among the remains of three people dug up in the backyard of im · prisoned sex offender Willia m Mansfield Sr . 56, whose two eldest sons alsoarejailed on cha rges of killing a woman. , Riva/, gangs declare truce in Chicago · CHICAGO <AP) Rival gangs at the violence-ridden Cabrini· Green public housing project where Mayor Jane Byrne has l~ken an apartment have declared a truce that could end a wave of violence that has left 11 dead and 37 injured, the Chicago Tribune repor ted to· day. Honth.uas reneging on prison release? TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras !AP > -The military government of Honduras apparently 1s reneging on a deal to free 15 jailed Salvadoran and Honduran leftists reportedly promised to the hi· Jackers of a Honduran airliner before they s urrendered in Panama. U.S. military office target of bombs FRANKFURT, West Germany <AP > Attacker s threw firebombs through the windows or a U.S. military e mployment office ·early today. causing S5.000 worth of damage but no injuries. authorities said Kennedy opposes ant• Mlle .WASHINGTON 1AP1 If the Reagan administration.is figh.ting terrorism it should stop selling "offensive" a rms to Saudi Arabia, a supplier of terrorists. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said today. Kennedy spoke to the Jewish National Fund in New York City. 1 .,.~ ... Tre atme nt I of s oldier · rapped Wilson denies overthr~w plot .... .,.,..... Quick dra"' Don Crook, Yakima, displays portrait of actor Denver Pyle that he drew in the 20·minute Quick Draw at the 13th C.M. Russell Auction of Original Western Art Sunday. Crook painted a tribute to artist Charlie Russell that won best of show in painting in this year's event at Great Falls, Mont. LONDON <AP> Contradict· Ing his closest associate whJle he was prime ministe r , Sir ,Harold Wilson denied her char1e that the late Earl Mountbatten plotted to overthrow his Labor government in 1968. Wilson in a statement said there was a plot by ··one or two people high up in the press." He said they approached Mountbat· ten, the World War II hero and cousin of Quee n Elizabeth II and Sir Solly Zuckerman. hif government's chief scientific ad viser. ·'Mo untba tten a n d Sir Sollv sent them oackiniz In the bes t quarter-deck manner ," said Wilson after the Sunday Times revealed the alleged plot. H owever, J>Ubl isher Cecil King, one of the a lleged plotters na med by the Sunday Times. said Mountbatten approached h im and his deputy, H ugh Cudlipp .. about lette rs to the queen complaining about the Wilson government. King said he told the earl the A modern-day Mil]ie? Lobbyist te l'ls of abortion payoff WASHINGTON <AP) --Lob· byist Paula Parkinson, who s ays s he has a videotape of sexual rela· lions with a member of Congress. did nothing "that a modern-day Millie wouldn't do in Washington with its present·day climate." her lawyer says Mrs . Parkinson. who has ad· milted affairs with "fewer than a dozen" Re publican members of the House of Representatives. tf)ld The Was hington Post in an article published Sunday she col- lected S500 for an abortion from the lawyer of a congressman she believed to be the father of her un- born child. Th e 30 -yea r -o ld Mrs . Piirkinson, who posed nude for Playboy magazine, has "violated no federal law." said her lawyer. Mark Sandground , alter Justice Department officials and FBI agents interviewed her Saturday. He declined to say what she said in the intervJews. The Justice Department has said that at the request of Rep. Philip Cr ane, R· Ill., it is "looking into" Mrs. Parkinson's activities but has not begun a formal investigation. As ked If his client. a registered lobb yist for ins urance com · panies . has traded her sexual favors for votes, Sandground replied "absolutely oot." Three membe rs of the House. all of whom voted with the in- surance industry on the losing side in the 235-150 d efeat of a crop insurance bill last September , have acknowledged sharing a cot- tage with Mrs . Pa rkinson on a Florida golfing vacation in January 1980. · Treasures uncovered KEY WEST , Fla . I AP) Divers have found a bronze can· non, several coins and an anchor that may have com e fro m a Spanish galleon that sank in a 1622 hurrican e , a marine archaeologist said. Marine archaeologist R. Dun· can Mathewson examined and measured the coral·en crusted cannon Saturday after it arrived in Key West. He said it was the second one modern-day divers have found from the Santa Marg arita, whi c h wa s shipwrecked on the coral reefs 359 years ago The Spaniards salvaged m any of the Margarita's cannons short· ly after it sank in a hurricane. Mathewson sajd An estimate of the treasure's va lue w as not imm ediately available. "We just had a pretty good feeling about it a ll." said diver Dick Klaudt, of Aspen. Colo .. who spotted the lump on the ocean floor on Saturday. I time might com e when ~he armed forces and the mon cb "might have a part to play, ut It certainly was not then." Wilson's former polltlhl secr etary, Ma r cia Willialh8', who took the name of Lady Falkender after he made bet a life peeress. said Mountatlen was "a prime mover " in the plot. the Sunday Times reported. Wilson said the charge was "an unwarranted s lur" o n the soldier.statesm an, who was as· s as s inated by the Irish Republican Army in 1979. Mountbatten was the fourth prominent dead m an attaclle<I by a British newspape r with.lh a week. The Daily Mail reported last week that Sir Roger Hollis. former head of M I-5. the coun- ter-intelligence agency. was SUS· peeled of being a Soviet spy and n ever clea r e d , that Tom Driberg . longtime Labor member or Parliament and chairman briefly of the Labor Party . was a double agent i or MI-5 and the Soviet KGB, and that Charles Howard Ellis, Bri· ta in ·s No. 3 intelligence officer at the end or World War II. COO· fessed in 1965 that he had spied for both :-.Zaz1 Germ any and the Soviet L'nion Senate c a se 'R ' rate d WA SHINGTON <AP> -If you· re under 1.. don't bother s howing up at Sen Jeremiah Denton·s h earin g Tuesday without a parent or guardian: The hearing is rated "ll" because of a him "t hat uses nudity. profanity and explicit sexual lanf.:ua~e ," the senator says The Alabama Republican will take the c hair of the full Labor Com millee session on m aterial~ used in family planning clinics because of his work in what Chairman Orr10 Hatch. R-Utah. sa id last week was the apparent use of federal funds "to support a series of activities designed to manipula te and c hange the moral attitudes or America's teen-agers with regard to sexual attitudes. having children, con- sulting parents and establishlng fa m ilies." FORT BENNING. Ga. \AP > An Army .,rivate who was ordered lo a drill field hours after he was released from a hospital was sub· jected to "demeaning and a busive treatment" Qefore he died of heat Uroke, an Arm y in · vestigation has con - cluded NO FRIU.S TEETH QEANING Maj. Roland J . White, who conducted the in- vestigation , said the tre atment of Jeffrey Ray Savoy, 17, resulted from "his superiors' ac- tions. insensitivity and lac k of concern for his condition." ONLY s22 SoutHCOAST DENT AL &IOUP. 642-0112 3 IOS , .. .._ ""9.. C.... Mete ll ESUL TS of White's 1-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--------;m-.:-1 investigation last fall were p~lished Sunday in The llanta Journal and T e Atlant a Constitution. They were obtained by the Atlanta Journ a l under the Freedom of Information Act. Savoy. a recruit from Ke nt. Wash .. died of heat stroke Sept. 16, 1980 -the sam e day be was released fr om a boapitaJ. He ha d lost 40 pou n ds during hi s month· long hospital stay. but doctors were unable to find any physical ill· ness . WITNESSES whose statementa are recorded in tbe documents ob· talned by the Journal trans national flnling ar\nouncee a new program 2ncl TRUST mDS • 810,000 TO 1500,000 • FAST FUNDING • HO PREPAY I ASSUMABLE • 30 YEAR AMORTIZED I UP TO 15 YEAR A!PA Y • OWNER I NON-OWNER OCCUPIED • l"URCHASE MONEY I SWING LOANS CALL TODAY roR A QUOT'£ AT NO OBUCJATION (714) 975-1121 say Sa•oy vomited re· CALL peatedly but WU denied WILLIAM •• MITetmJ. BROKERS water by hi• superion -llMCAltMMaVD. W~LC9MED and •u dJ'fHed, at Ed· ~ ~!!!!!!!N!!IWllOfn'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IUCit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!_~ monda' orders, until his .._ pants •ere pushed down around hil kneea. After • bearina In November, Baker and Edmondl received writ· ten reprimands for ua· Ing bad jud,meot In not re s pondlnt to the 11oldler's repeated com· plaints of sickness. The Army did nol releaH the result11 of White'• ln- veat\gat\on at that time. J I • Introducing_The $1,000 Thrift Certificate Tfhat Earns 12.40 % Annual Interest Rate After J t1st 3 Months. If you really want your eyes opened, refd this ad, then oompare with other ads by banks and savings & loan 8880Ciations. You11 see why we believe "The 90 Day Won- der" just may be the finest thrirt package in America today. The key is an unbeatable rombinotion of benefits. Short 3 month term. Low $1,000 minimum High 12."°"' interest with an effective annual yield of 13% when com- pounded quarterly.• Even on early withdrawals, you earn 6% annual Interest rate, no matter what. Look at what bank.8 and savings & loans offer and you11 see how they oompare. With their 30 month cer- tificates, your money is tW up at toda11'3 inkre#t rata for~ yta.rw! And It you withdraw early you forfeit alx months' int.creel Their six month certificates fflllli" 110,()(J() miKi- ?ttum ... with forfeiture of 3 months' interest for early withdrawal. So tor the tll'll time you can get. certllicate size rata Wit U"'"" tJ11J.t glW JPU /T'fJttdum W Ute ~r ~ u&re it C41' do~ U.. ""°8t good. Th take advan-t.aae of a high rate. To Invest In opportunity when It knocka. Even in an emerpncy, you ttlll get~ lntereat rate for early withdrawal. While oonvenUonal puabook accounts ofter a max· lmum ol 5~ inier.t.. the iow.t.poeelble lntemt from ·a..s .. ,.._... UltMllll .... R.ece_, cMrwe. u~ "'I•· our Thrift Certificate, after penalty. is 6%-still ~% higher. So, if you'd like LO see your money begin earning what it's l"('ally uwth. without having it hopelessly tied up ... send this coupon with your check or money order, or bring it into a Commercial Credit office. Available to Cali- fornia residents only. r------------., I I I I Here's my check or money onlcr ror a 8 month Thrift Certificate in the amount or$ ($1,00> minimum) Type o! ~nt: O I ndMdual 0Joint Tenancy 0 Trustee 0Corporation lnJ...-t)ol!----------1.,.._....., JC7~.._ ___________ _ I ~'=='~~~~~~~~-I A.llDoaa\..._,~~~-~------ I I I I I I 1 Cl\1 I My Soda! S.Urit,yl'l'u l.D. • s~,--_,ZIP---I Pl!one----------------1 I COMMERCIAL CR.EDIT COM~ aim rt»t. INC~TtO I I I . ____________ .. ~hehn. erio . Brookhurtt St. 928'>4. (7141174-014/J • Coroea. 004 EMt Sixth St. ~tm C213) 734.3t32 c-......., 31Q FAit l?th St. '¥WI. (714) 645Jr100 • .RudftllOD 8-c:h, 16075 Golden\¥$ St. 92647. C114) 847-m l Mi.ton~ KM> Alicia Par1cway m679. (714) 'rn).2651 • &.Dia Au. 1224 Ea.t 17th Strm 92701, (714) 5'7·5811 • . . Newton faces • prison t e rm WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe U.S. 'supreme Court today left intact Black Panther Party founder Huey Newton's 1978 conviction for the 11- leeal possession of two guns. Newton may soon have to begin serving a two· year prison sentence for the conviction. Newton was charged in the Aug. 16, 1974, pistol-whipping of an Oakland tailor, Preston Callins. A state trial jury acqui\ted Newton of as- sault with a deadly weapon. Tun die in air crash RANCHO CALIFORNIA (AP> -Two men died and another was badly injured when a single· engine Cessna crashed in a remote, mountainous area one mile southwest of this Sduthern California community . Two rescuers also were in- jured, authorities said. The crash occurred at 3:07 p.m. Sunday in an area covered with brush 10 feet high, said a spokesman for tht! Riverside County Sheriff's Department. Identity of the dead and injured from the crash had not been established · by late Sunday night, nor was the cause of the crash known. authorities said. Tekthon set,s rerord LOS ANGELES tAPl This year's Easter Seal telethon completed its 20-hour broadcast earning a record total of $17,007 in cash. checks and pledges for the rehabilitation of disabled children and adults. telethon officials say. The 10th annual ~lethon originated here but was carried on 130 television stations nationwide. The program ended Sunday. Man dies in shootout LONG BEACH !API -A rooming house resi- dent. who neighbors said had spent all his Social Security money on handguns during the past two years. was killed by four police officers after al· legedly firing s hots at them . WilUam Andrew Jernigan. 64. who was called "Old Dad" by other residents al the rooming house, died after he was shot by officers in· vestigating a report or s hots being fired. police said today. Teen s/wt to <kalh. LOS ANGELES !AP> Despite a police task force initiated lo guard the growth of street gangs along Hollywood Boulevard. a 16-year-old gang member was s hot to death on the famed "Walk of Stars." Eric Lucero died of a single gunshot wound to the upper torso after he was hit by a shot from a passing car Sunday. said Lt. Bob M artln. Martin said it was the first gang-related murder that he knew of along the popular thoroughfare which is implanted with gold stars honoring hundreds of film and television personalities. . ........... Littlest marchers These kids stayed up past their bedtime to take part in a candlelight procession of nearly 400 demonstrators who marched through Santa Cruz in memory of El Salvador's Archbishop Romero who was slain a year ago. Many of the marchers carried signs protesting U.S. involvement in the small Central American country . Woman dies, man injured sky diving LAKE ELSINORE <API A49-year-old woman who had made more than 3,000 skydives died when she apparently failed to open her parachutes, and a 60-year-old novice jumper was hurt when he landed in a mobile home park in an unrelated incident, authorities said Sunday Jeanni McCombs of San Francisco was pro· nounced dead where s he fell Saturday afternoon near a busy intersection on the west side of this popular skydiving community . Sheriff's officials said Ms. McCombs , along with three companions, had jumped from a plane at an altitutde of 1,350 feet, which is considered low for most jumping, said SJ(t. Gary Orrell . "Both of her parachutes were found to be un· opened and intact," Orrell said, noting that she landed within 100 feet of three mobile homes. ·'It appears to me s he had a problem finding the ripcord on her chutes." said Deputy County Coroner William Kyle, who preliminarily ruled herdeath was due to contact with the ground. He said an autopsy would be performed to determine if she was con· scious when s he landed. In the other incident, Viner Jensen of Anaheim suffered a compound fracture of his left leg when be landed too hard while trying to avoid hitting a car in a mobile home park. ,_. ....... _.,_.. . .. ___........ . . ,,.. ...... ·-·--..... --.. -· .. _... Four in family slain Bodies found in canyon target-shooting area SAN DIEGO (AP> -Police were searchln1 for t.artel·shooUng weapons believed to have been used tn the execut.lon-style deaths of a »year-old woman • her _son, dau_ihter and 1randdau1hter. The four bodlea were round on a blanket in a , canyon where the family had 1one target-sbooUng not far from the famlb' home ln Poway, a com· munity 15 miles northlaat ot here, a relative sard Sunday. Each of the adults was shot several times in the head and back, and the toddler had been a hot in the head and abdomen, said San Diego Deputy Coroner David Lodge. THE VICl'IMS WE R E identified as Mary Lou Gorka; her 25-year-old so,n, Jay Alan Gorka: her 18-year-old daughter Karen Gor.ka, and Miss Gorka's 2-year-old daughter, Jessica Murray. Police said the bodies were discovered Satur· day by two passersby In an area frequented by target-shooters. Sgt. Ted Armijo said it was possi· ble they had been slain with their own weapons. "It's possible that they just sat there and trust- ed whoever came up behind them -and that was their downfall," Armijo said. However, police said none of the weapons was found with the bodies. •'They went out there for some recreational shooting," said Kevin Gorka. who was at work when his mother. brother, sister and niece went to the canyon Saturday. HE SAID THE FAMILY enjoyed occasional target practice, but "not a whole lot." Mary Lou Gorka's husband, Donald, an in· dustriaJ engineer. was reported en route to San Diego Sunday from Sheridan. Wyo.. where he works for a mining company. Kevin's brother. Scott, was re ported on maneuvers with the National Guard at 1''ort trwm near Barstow. He too was expected to arrive ln San Diego Sunday. Homicide detectives were at the canyon Sun· day. but they said they had no motive for the murders and no witnesses. Burro killing ordered ended CHINA LAKE (AP> -The killing of burros at the Naval Weapons Center has been stopped by legal action, but the Navy says it already has eliminated as many of the animals as it needed to. The halt in the Navy-sponsored shootings came when .U.S. District Judge Edward Dean Price in Fresno issued a temporary restraining or· der forbidding the killing of any more burros at the MoJave uesert center unu1 an April 6 hearing. The Animal Protection Institute of Sacramento, represented by Joyce Tischler of Attorneys for Animal Rights of San Francisco. had asked for the restraining order. More than 640 burros were killed after the Navy declared the wild animals a hazard to a utomobiles and to aircraft on the center's runways. :fhe Navy had said the animals were straying onto the runways. "We ·have already announced' that we have &reached our objective and do not intend to go in for another emergency reduction in the near future." said S.G. Payne, public affairs officer at China Lake. C1v1han marksmen under the s upervision or a civilian natural resources specialist did the shoot· ing. An estimated 400 burros remain in the area. GUESS WHAT mu CAN EATON WEIGHT WATCHERS WINE POPCORN HONEY YES YES YES D D D NO NO .NO D D D PEANUT HOME BAKED CHOCOLATE BUTIER YES BREAD YES CAKE YES D 0 D NO NO NO D D D RAISINS SWEET FIGS YES POTATO YES YES 0 D D NO NO NO D D D I THE N~W 1981 FOOD PLANS Wine? Yes. Popcorn and peanut but- ter? Yes . Homebaked bread? Yes. Sweet potatoes and honey? Yes . yes. PS. You guessed it. the chocolate layer cake is still a "no-no:· $12 flnl week, $5 WMkly INrfffter, no contrec:tal You can learn to eat all these foods- within limits of course-and still lose weight. With We ight Watchers exciting new personalized food plans and com- pl ete. t ime-tested program you can take off the pounds. deliciously! r---------., I WEIGHT WATCHERS I I $4.00 OP I Just join a Weight Watchers class near you and our instructors will teach you th~ 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 ON ltf(;ISTIAJIOH ANO "IST "'ffllN(; JI( I I OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 1981 I I Offer valid only as 1 discount and I may not be combined with any other I t:lacount or apeclal rate. Offer valid I n Area43. OffH GOOO ONlY WITH THIS TICICU • ________ .... WEIGHT WA~HERS" . LAST CHANCE (!35-5505 ) The most successful YJeight loss progtatet in the wOrld. 0 C nty ~ . "'° .... r•nge OU r,,_., .. . . .. . . &.oo , ,,, -AHAHllllt-tl••••-y . . . NJO pm •--•-°"*' ,,,..., t oo .... -w ~ l)nll I ........,.-CYPM~.30 .... cw-'-" -~J c,,._ ht'9 Clllll ~ . .. •. .. •• 30 p "" 10••1 Moofr "'- -· • 7-llO p"' • c.-r ... "-di T~ • • t~I"' r-.--y .. t30pM r--, . . .10011"' -0iUM "*IT- W...,_.y t :IO 1 m C...., ~ w......,., . 71)0 p"' ,., .... Jwtl T~ ...... 100p"' ,....._., .. . tJO•"' Colf.,.._.'--~1 -NMHIW Ha.La-,.,.... .. .. • •» ..... c:-..-...... -f!UU.91TON- CCeMlfle-.-.o """ICllOOll =-=.... ltO I (~ ...,_, =~~-I f~... . ..... ,... - ~MACH-.,....., ....... t:JOe.111 c..--a.-•w......, ............... . ...,. OoMllltO ,._ ,.__ • • • • • • • • , Ill ................... 001111 ........ _..... _-.,._ ...., ...... ........ .... ...... I.a_.,,.,,.,.. 0.. -10-1111 1011 N,..,.., eo.-11 ~--• ..... , -T·-........ ,.,,:001.M .................. ••11111 ~. Oo ~ ........... , ... ~ ......... ... ~A~ _....,~ IO. Uln'A ~ ._.Olr ,_. ......... ~~ a1• .......... \ 1101 H ~ ......... jf-wc:-tyO.-, ,.,.._,CA .. -·"~ ~ .......... , ... .... ' • .... ,.,M .. ••1 ..,.._: 'T---.. ................ 1111 .... ._o.. ,....., ......... .,,.,.,,. 1r•ci- ~ ··· .. 11••• i-· ....... -~ ......... . ... ,_ ... -. .......... ... c __ ......_. '"'' lflC ..... ~y 100pM r~ . . ..tooun f-y 430pm T-., • I OOpM ... -. /Wpm ,__., ... t>c>o ... '""'"'Y .. .. .. . . 1-00 p"' ._..,...,.., ......... tao1 m ..... .,.... ... a....,~c.. 11141 \ltlllly-w..._.,, . . .. .. • ao '"' _..,.,,..,.. ....__. ~--=-0... c---.-....~· ....._ ............. tao .. ... ....,...,, ,.,,. .... 1-00pM ,_,... ................ 111 ,....., ... ., ... 400jlM .,....., ............. ,., ... .......,. .... , .......... "". w---., .......... , .• , ... ~ .............. ,,. T~ ....... 110011• """"-• • • • • .. .. '. " Ill ,,..., ................ "" , ................... ..,,. -..., .• •• , •••• ,IJIOa"' ............... •1v.._._ ~~'. ....... u ...... ~ ........... ,,. . ..-wM,-_. ..... =="""' ~ . ..,.,. ... ..._ ·=--- 4M1Mlc-r..-.y . .. j ;OOp.m. -\.AOUM NACM-IAllMM ,_ ..... illOOolerlA- .._,, .......... t-OO pm -'AOllNA ~ ~YW.IO--= ... -. ...... .... I.a,..,,. _ ~1t111t,CA'"6> ~ ... 1>0, .. T "°'""' t 00 1 m ~ .• , ••. 1.CIOpm ........,, .......... 00 .... w--, ... roo11"' T~ , .t.J01m ~. ... .. ,., ... ._....,,.... • .. eao .... -UNMM.-............... =::::-"' ~ ........... I0-001111 T~ .. , ,.,.,.,If.,,,, ...................... f'll ... .... ....... ~ .... If .......... . i-...... ....... ....... ........ ·'-""" """:;?.. . . . . ..... ,,. -UORTIUCM-._.,...._ .... ,..,...,"* .... ;i:r ..... , .. ,, .. , • ..... _ ........ _,._.... ·~· • t ........... . . Orange Coast Oally P"01 • W .elf are strings need tightening Faced with staggering increases in monthly costs, the Orange County Board of Supervisors will consider tomorrow a multi-pronged plan to tighten the purse strings on the general relief welfare assistance program. The county has some of the most liberal 1><>11c1es among the state's S8 counties for determining both who qualifies for such assistance and how much they may re· ceive. Clearly. some changes are in order. While court challenges may be likely, it seems wise that the county have some type of residency requirement to prevent persons from other counties or other states from benefit· ing from the local program. The one.year requirement proposed by the county staff might be a bit stiff; a six· month requirement probably is more in order. Aside from that, the county. as the staff has pro· posed, should reduce the amount of assets, both liquid and non-liquid, that a person may possess if he is to qualify for general relief assistance. Nor does it seem unreasonable to require able· bodied welfare recipients to go to work on public projects in re- turn for receiving general relief. Such a program has been in effect. But it needs to be both strengthened and expanded. But perhaps the strongest action supervisors can take is to stop the practice of issuing direct cash payments to qualified r ecipients. Vouchers to grocery stores. landlords and providers of other necessities would go a long way to separa ting the truly needy from those who simp· ly are looking for some extra money at taxpayers' ex· pense. ' The county has a legal and moral obligation to pro- vide general relief assistance to qualified applicants. But there's no requirement in the law that the county cannot take steps necessary to insure that only the truly needy receive benefits and that the associated costs are reasonably constrained. Highway debacle In two Northern California counties last year. de· teriorating asphalt road paving was replaced with gravel because there wasn't enough money to re pave. Elsewhere. counties are confining their road repair projects to patching cracks and potholes ins tead of re- surfacing. The renowned California highway system is in bad s hape a nd getting worse. And the de fi c it in highway funds. estimated at $915 millio n over the next five years by the Brown Ad· ministration. is more accurately projected at any where from $1.8 billion to $2.4 billion. Part of the problem can be laid on the shoulders of Caltrans Director Adriana Gianturco. who has withheld funds for road improvements and maintenance at a time when costs were steadily rising But the California Transportation Co mmission cites three principal factors in the budget s hortfall: Decreasing gasoline consumption -down from 11 .3 billion gallons a year to 10.25 billion gallons, cutting $60 million to $70 million off gasoline tax revenues. Failure to inc rease the ?·cent-per-gallon state gasoline tax since 1963 Inflation. which has sent the cost of supplies and labor soaring All this being true , the state Legislature is turning its attention to ways and means of boosting the highway fund. And it seems quite clear that John Q. Motorist, one way or another . will be footing the bill. A Senate measure bv Democrat John Foran would add 2 cents a gallon to the present 7-cent state tax. in· crease driver's license and vehicle registration fees and raise truck weight fees. The measure also would recapture for highway uses more of the 6 percent gasoline sales tax whic h is imposed on top of the per-gallon tax. Thanks to rising gasoline prices, the sales lax has become a real windfall for the state, flowing mostly into the general fund. An alternative Republican meas ure in the Assembly does not call for a n increase in the per-gallon tax, but would rely on increased fees and diversion of the windfall sales tax revenue into transportation programs. The Foran bill would raise an estimated $3.3 billion over the next five years. while the Republican measure would produce $2.24 billion. Also in the legal machinery are proposals to guarantee counties a minimum return '>f locally raised gasoline tax revenues to meet local needs. Meanwhile Orange County and Los Angeles officials have been pushing for a 6·cent·per·gaJlon tax increase in- s tead of Foran's proposed 2 cents , They contend the cur- rent bills would do little more than wipe out the pending deficit. leaving little or nothing for new projects. But s u c h an increase has been termed unrealistic in Sacramento. Whateve r the outcome. it's obvious the highway fund must be rescued -and that the highway users will be doing the rescuing. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642·4321 Boyd/Magazines By L.M. BOYD Publisbers big and little in this country started up about 200 new magazines last year. Maybe 3> still come out. That would be 10 percent. And 10 percent is the typical sur- vival rate in that game. Maybe you didn't know If U ncle Sam 1Ull "walks softly '*l Cir· rte1 a big at.lck" lt'a UIUlll)' a 1Uek Of 'candy. D.11. that chickens, too, stampede. They do. One wild stampede can suffocate hundreds of them. The big national dish In Ireland Is not Irish stew, but bacon·and·cabbage. Just about half or the 400,000 Jewish survivors or tbe Nazi concentration camps now Uve ln Is rael. To hla list redundancies, our Langua1e min haa added: "hot water heat.r." · Q. How many or' the Na· Uonal FootbaU Lea1ue'1 28 heed coach•• tbemHlvea played ptOfeaslOftaJ football? A. Flfteen. Q . Wb1l '1 the ratio of prle1U to Roman Cat.boUca ln tht. eauntry? A. OM to •. aeeorillq to V aUcu ft;unl. Thomn P. H1tey/Publl1her Tttome1 Keevll l!dttor &.r-.ra KrelblehlEdllorl•l P-oe Editor Budget shortage hampers ms W ASHlNGTON -American taxpayers will 1et a break from the Reagan administration's proposed Income tax cuts. But they'd get an even bluer tax break if the Internal Revenue Service "7ere elven the money lt needs t.o go after the cbeatera who u.nderreport their income each year. Unfortunately, our society ha.s not yet outgrown the hoodlum ethos, which admires peo- ple who get away with tax chiseling. Yet their thievery costs the honest tax payers literally billions of dollar s a year. For tax year 1976, the IRS estimated that as much as $135 billion in income had gone UD· reported the year before. The amount has undoubtedly skyrocketed since this last estimate especially as the ch eaters realize that their chances of eetting caught are slim . Partlclpanu lo this "under· cround economy.. are not au hardened criminals, although a lar1e part of the unreported ln· come ls 1enerated by Mob en- terprlaes such as drug amug- •Ung. Many of the tax cheaten are supposedly respectable pro- fe11l011ala and businessmen. who make their transactions in un- traceable cuh and then don't re· port the income to the IRS. Last year, about 10 percent of the Gross National Product went unreported, .according to Peter Gutmann, whose 1977 study of the underground economy spurred a flurry of I RS studies. congressional hearings and in· vestlgations by the General Ac· counting Office. VET FOR SOME unfathoma- ble reason, the I RS has been un· able to persuade budget directors -in bolh Democratic and Republican administrations that increasing the collection agency's enforcement fund s would be money well s pent. In 1975. for example, the I RS spent S37 .4 million on one cheat- catching pro1ram and collected more than $180 million in taxes that would otherwise have slipped through the cracks. That's a return on Investment of roughly $5 for every dollar spent. The program ls a relatively simple one, but It Is time· consuming and requires a lot of manpower. What it does Is match individual tax returns against forms submitted by e mployers, banks, corporations and other sources of income. But the IRS currently has the capacity to match only 25 per. cent of the avaiJable documents. Former IRS Commission er Jerome Kurtz told Congress last year that inc r eas ing the document-matching capability to 50 percent wo uld have brought in between $30 million and $40 million in additional revenue IF THE MATCHING pro· gram were expanded, types of income that are now not covered would be subject to the cross· checking scrutiny everything from alimony payments to in· terest on Treasury bills. In a study requ ested by the Congressional Budget Office, the Treasury Department estimated that "as much as $20 billion a year In interest and dividend in· come is not reported by tax- payers, resuJting in a revenue loss or S2 billion to SJ billion a year ." Document matching could also be used to enforce the windfaJI profits tax levied on the oil industry. Believe it or not, I RS at present has no effective way to monitor the oil com- panies' compliance with the windfall tax. One insider told m y reporter Deborah Latish that the government won't even come close to collecting the amount the oil companies owe the Treasury. Without more enforcement funds. though, IRS is handcuffed in its efforts to catch the tax chiselers Worse yet. as word gets around that cheaters have a good chance of succeeding, the number of people willing to take the risk will increase And that ·means an even bigger burden on the taxpayers who report their income honestly D IPLOMAT IC DIGEST French Foreign Manaster Jean Francois-Poncet was definitely turned off by has recent ex- posure to the R eagan ad ministration, according to re ports filtering back to the State Department. Francois Poncet privately sniffed that the Wlnte House seemed interested only an El Salvador. and complained that he was .. condemned largely to holding monologues. ' As for his meeti ng with Pres ident Reagan , the Fr enchman dis missed it as .. particularly in s~n1f1canl · · They di scussed nothing but 'banalities:· he pouted The Austrian gov~ ernment was outraged by one argument the Pentagon used to get congressional approval for the sale of F'~l 6::. to tht' little Alpine nation. The gcnt'rals said lht' ::.ale would tend to draw Austria into the Western Euro pean defense system Not true. ·rr A~(j) C!MtS WITH fl.. fRE£.LA1D·OFf UAW MEMBER , WHO RtPl.Jl(fS 1H£ BllS AND PJECES fa< YOU ~ 11-ltY FAU.OFF. I · cried the Austrians an a note to the State Department Austria as neutral, they pointed out: in deed, her strict neulrcilaty is con sidered the best protection from the Communist countries that all but o;ur round Austria Earl Water Money not key to judge retirement age A proposal has been made by Sen John Schmatz to raise the retirement age for Judges to 75 A non-lawyer, he said his reason was to save money for the judges' retirement fund by re- ducing lhe payouts. lf the age of retirement for judges is to be set solely on the basis of how much money can be saved in pensions , il should be up- ped to 80 or 85 then there would be practically no payouts. But. lake m ost judgments which are based upon the cheapest price, it would be a bad bargain. Actually the r e is no man- datory retirement age for judges, although a constitutional amendment lo compel their re· tiremenl at age 70 w.as passed by the Senate about 25 years ago. The Senators had reacted to Charles McCabe complaints s tatewide of superannuated Judges sleeping during trials or otherwise evidencing senility BUT YIELDING lo the "'Oliver Wendell Holmes" argu- ment and conceding that whatever age was selected it would be an arbitrary decision, the Senators compromised. They setlled for an "incentive" retirement plan which offered half pay for those who retired by age 70. Those who stayed could only retire thereafter under the old pension provisions which were considerably less lhan SO percent. In the years since the program went into effect it has worked well to pare off from the judiciary those who have grown old on the job, although some who should have retired have foregone lhe age 70 benefits to remain active. ALTHOUGH, in recognition of the "Holmes" argument, no great judicial minds are necessarily lost by reason of re- tirement since the chief justice was given authority to recaJl for court assignments retired judges, the fact remains lhat most judges should retire by age 70. Some long before. Furthermore. the argument that one can function brilliantly as a judge alter 70 using Justice Holmes as an example, ignores the fact that he sat on a court of review. There is a great difference in the demands made upon a judge who sits on a trial court as com- pared to those on the appellate level. In lhe latter, their duties are sedate, performed in the quiet, unemotional atmosphere of their chambers. Only a smaU percentage of their time is spent sitting as a court to hear plead- ings . CONVERSELY, trial judges, who constitute most of the state's judiciary. must daily sit through lhe hus tle and bustle of the courtroom. often highly emo- tional, and alway!> dealing face to face with people, lawyers. jurors, witnesses. plaintiffs and defendants. For that reason it takes people with "judicial temperament" as well as legaJ knowledge to prop· erly conduct the courts . Un- fortunately, however suited a lawyer may be when he goes on the bench. lhe years take their toll. Most judges become sated which leads to impatience, can· tankerousness, and arrogance. Ideally, then no judge should re- main on a trial court longer than 20 years. WHILE SAVING money on government operations is most always a noble goal, it is mis- directed in the Schmitz bill. Schmitz, a strong law and order advocate, should be thinking about improving the courts not making lhem Jess effective by e ncouraging judges in their dotage to continue on the bench. Experience has shown too many judges get lhat way after 70. Reagan's lrishness comes out of the closet If there is any one thing Ronald Reagan has tried to downplay in bis political life, It's the fact ttfat he's Irish. This is said to be the result of eenUe pressure from the Mlasus, who is said to tbiok of the Irish as harps and micks who project an image of jovial corruption . You know, the derbied bagman. There ls a sizeable school of opinion that bolcb the president c haneed hi• n1me from Re1an to Rea1an at 1ome time of hla Ille. Guys named Re11n tend to 1et called 8lat1 or 1om1 otber pejorative. T hia R•••H hH never wanted any put of It. lo hl1 California pofiUcal cam· ,a11u bll political couWt.ama prH•ed blm U • Proteltanl 14utre, raUMr than the harp that be ta. Mr. Ae•••n ii not u lrtab aa paddJ'I pl&, U AIJI 1; but IDGlt ~ wlaat lie ll la lria.ll. Hit fatlllr was fully from the old country, and the rest of him is Scotch and English on his mother's side. WHAT NAME ls OD the presl· dent's birth certificate I do not know, but that la not from want of trYtni. I have made several eftorta to eet hil birth certlfkate from officials ln hi• native Tam· pico, llllnols. It does not seem to exl1t .. Instead, some county of. llclal sends y0u an atteatatkm tbat one Rooald Rea•an waa bom on 1ucb and 1ucb a da)'. Now, u u added burden ol tbe praldeacy, Re1•q'1 lrilb· neaa bu come out. ot the eloeet, doubtleutolhedlapleaaureofthe MlHUI. The Wall Street Journal recently had a hont PAI• story dJ11lJll deeply Into the wbole Hamy tale.-TIM 1tor1 qucMd Oebrett '1 , tbe Brlllab 1eae~AI alilthortty. Aceordl•I to Debre\t'a, Rea1an'1 •reat·1raa41al1Mf', who ume to Udl couatQ lll ..., ., .. • ... .,... o1 u.. o· ... u c1u ol Dlaalla • ..., ta.. rila. " ·~·!" .~:.i~ m. .. , of tlal1 area an ' .. descended from Ralgun (pro· nounced Reegan), nephew of King Brian Boru, who died in 101' at the batUe of Clontarf, which freed Ireland from domination of the Danes . ALL TRIS llOY AL ahaff ia about u tenuous as a bru1h wtth a cobweb. PuctlcaUy all the lrtah alleee descent from one ldna or another, and in many cases the connection i• real if tenuou1 .• Even Debrett'1 con· ceded th1I Point. "If you work lt out mat.Mm1t.lcally, two by two, from anybody who lived that lon1 a10." aald 1enlor 1•n1alo1tcal reaearcher Hu1h P11kett, "i~'I a WOJlder they're DOl all craay wtlb incest." Oebretl'• al10 claim• lbat ...... U I tpelUaJ II u.nkDown ID INiand. There la no doubt, taen, tbat eomeone lD t.-e faml· ly, at aome lime or a1'0tblr, c ba11ed Uu name from o•a ..... '° Reaau, n. bland ·-•Ulity ol a..,an 1'0Uld cer· lUll1 oomn..ad ttMJt to a mu fto .._.'t WWI to M no. u ~el aaoU1er ol•·fH._l .. ..S moetatklrWtpel • As for his connection wath Brian Boru, the president might just as welJ go with the flow. There is no more passion· stirring name ln Irish b.iatory th1n the bluff hero of Clontarf. The connection will never do him harm. And the lady wbo made him what be is today mltht juat as well Ile down and play do81o. ON HIS W&Y to the Wblte Hou1e, t.houeh, there ls no doubt that bls name at the Ume wu 1pelled.. Reaaan. The Moral Ma· jorlty, \be Pebble Beacb Mat\1, and the coUeetloa of rlthUat aroupa that ttftd him on bla way hive no ireat love ror the Irlth. or tbe lrl•b Cathollc1. The O'Rea&an• were all Catbollca and tbelr bept.11.-iaJ r9COrda an atlll in the Ballyporeen CathoUc Ch.arch. Mr. Re.1an may i.an bMo naaklnl UtclMC!loua amndl for lb• reJeetloa of b51 Jrlab 'berltaae •ll•n be named • a.,... to ... aeentarJ ol ... ,.....,_,, la nu., llr . ._... ....... Ms.,.., ..... lM lrtlll. • , . Reneg<tdP scientist Linus Pauling is co1u'it1ced vitaniin C is helpful ;,, treat111 e 111 of all fornis of cancer By JOEL('. DON 0 1 Ille O•oly P1IOI SUit Linus Pauling, the Nobel laureate who some believe 1s a renegade in the scientific com· munity, is feeling just fine. He hasn't had a sniffle since he began a daily. regimen of mega-doses of vitamin C more than 10 years ago. Recently entering his 80lh year, Pauling has yet to give ground on his conv1 ct1on that the dietary nutrient can prevent and fight colds. In fact, s ince his book . "Vitamin C and the Common Cold," was published in 1970. Pauling has advocated vitamin C as a helpful therapy in other viral infections. bacterial dis- eases and his most recent and controversial proposition that vitamin C is helpful m the treat ment of all forms of cancer DRUGSTORE S AND HEALTH food businesses have reaped profits from a nutrition conscious society Controversial m egavitamin the r apies fill bookstore shelves and are ap plted to schizophrenic and men tally retarded persons as well as the new generation of health seekers. Nutritionists and the medical community , though , h ave wel co med the res pe cted chemist's dietary recommenda· lion with a less than enthusiastic reception Some called the <><: togenerian a c rank . others dimissed his ideas as a sign of old age. But when Pauling recently walked into a lion's den of sorts. speaking at a meeting of physi- cians in Costa Mesa, there was less questioning about the er fi cacy of vitamin C than con cerns about the possible side ef- fects of taking large daily doses of the nutrient. On that issue, Pauling was adamant. "Vitamin C is one of the least toxic substances known," he said, at a meeting sponsored by Kaiser Foundation hospitals and the Southern Ca liforni a Permanente Medical Group. .. People have ingested up to a half a pound at a lime without any serious side effects." He drew a chuckle from the audience al that quantity and a slight gasp when he offered his r ecommendati on for daily vitamin C intake PAULING'S PRESCRIPTION for good health is a daily dose of 10 ,000 milligrams. 167 times the amount re com mt'nded by the Food and Nutrition Board of the pr estigious National Academy of Sciences. T he 60 milligrams recom· mended by the government is pitifully low, Pauling said . Wh ile it'll prevent a person from de · veloping scurvy, the once deadly plague of seafarers. Pauling believes human beings need at least IO grams (or 10,000 mg> per day to stay in the best of health. "There's something special abo ut vitamin C." he said .. Every animal species requi res a series of v ita m ins . The primeval ances tors of these Daily Pilai MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1981 COMICS MOVIES TELEVISION s pecies lost the ability to :.ythensize these substances. .. Plants still have the ability but some animals have lost the abiltty because they were get ting the subst ances from the plants that they were eating." Vitamin C 1s still manufac- tu r ed by 99 percent of the animal population with the ex - ception of a few mamm als, in- cluding man. "A GOAT WF.IGH I NG 70 kilograms I 154 pounds ) has been reported to synthesize 13 grams of vitamin Cu day," he said. "I asked about t he goat. Wh y doesn't the goat make only 12 grams a day Why 13 grams a dav·• :. It must be that that 13 grams 1s beneficial lo him and genera- tion after generation continues to manufacture this amount." Pauling pulled a test tube from his coat pocket lo illustrate the amount o f vita min C manufactured by a 70 kg goat. Then he pulled out another test tube lo illustrate how much vitamin C 1s made by the human body per day. The tube was empty. · · 1 think the goat knows more about this matter than the Food and Nutrition Board," he snapped, whipping up generous laughter from the physicians. "A BOARD of veterinary groups recommends the feeding of laboratory animals 70 times a s much (v itamin C > for monkeys as does the Food and Nutrition Board does for human ..... H/F D I Heart disease topic 84 of UCI lecture 0 86 87 series ... B2 ..j ' Linus Pauling hasn't had a sniffle in over IO years beings." he added. Pauling explained that vitamin C boosts the human im- mune system's production of disease-fighting agents such as antibodies. He noted a recent study has s ho wn the production of in terferon, touted as a potential can cer-fighting agent. is in- creased with largl' doses of vitamin C. But Pauling owes vitamin C's role in cancer to its connection with the production of collagen, the human body's "intercellular cement." "The intercell ular cement is strengthened by fibrils of col- lagen in the same way rods of steel reinforce concrete." he said. "We knew in the 1930s that vitamin C is required for the synthesis of collagen "CONSEQUF:NTLV WE FOUND if you give mo re vitamin C to a patient this should strengthen his normal tis- sues and help resist the infiltra- tion <of disease 1 " Pauling stops short of claim- ing vitamin C as a cure for cancer. He said it's al best a helpful therapy that 's shown in some studies to increase a pa- tient's longevity and bolster a more positive. healthy outlook The Mayo Clinic reported more than a year ago no change in cancer patients receiving 10 grams of vitamin C per day Pauling contested the study, claiming the patients were also receiving chemotherapy treat- ments. C h emotherap y te nds lo weaken the body 's immune system, he said. destroying the effectiveness of the nutrient The clinic plans a new study treating patients only with vitamin C. Even if the study shows little or no efrectivencss it's doubtful Pauling will give up the fight. HE WON the 1954 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work on molecular bonds and is s till con- s idered a pioneering chemist and mentor to many in the world scientifi c community. After atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima a nd Nagasaki. Pauling was one of the first to launch a campaign against the arms race and above-ground nuclear testing. For his efforts. h e was awarded the Nobel Peat'e Prize tn 1963. In an inte rview follo wing his speech. Pauling said he just wished more of his colleagues would read his books on vitamin C treatment for cold s and nu and the most recent. "Cancer and Vita min C." written in col- laboration with surgeon Ewan Cameron. "The general impression I get from scientists who know me from way back is 'I don't know much about these medical mat- te r s but Dr. Pa uling says something that's worthwhile. He's been right so often that he's probably rightlhis time.'" SOME PHYSICIANS at the ' meeting brought up concerns that excessive vitamin C could prove harmful to patients with kidney stones. gout or dangerous for pregnant women Kidney stone or gout patients can take the nutrient in the form of sodium ascor bate rather than the common ascorbic acid And he said the re's no apparent danger to pregnant women. Vitamin C may produce a lax attve effect in some individuals, although Pauling said that was JUSl fine with him He said it doesn't matter if the 10 grams are taken in one dose or in partial doses throughout the day .. And the best vitamin C 1s the cheapest one " He added only 10 to 15 percent of vitamin C is lost in the urine. "And of course that which is lost in the urine helps prevent blad- der cancer." Asked when vitamin C will enter the medical mainstream, Pauling said he's willing to wait for physicians lo catc h up. In the meantime. he continues public speaking and research at the Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine near Stan- ford. "This is about the gestation time for new ideas in medicine," he said, of the 11 years since he published his firs t book on vitamin C "I've been predicting that in a year or so doctors wiU all jump on the bandwagon - use of vitamin C as a supple- ment to other therapy will just be accepted by the medical com- m unity " Cults • • • Troubled people in search of something . - Profil e of a prospective cultist· a mental cripple. living on the fringe of society or prone to falling into JU Sl about any extremist group that comes along Not so, according lo a UC Berkeley psyc hologist who's studied some of the 2.500 to 3,000 cult groups that have sprung lo life in the United Stales during the past two decades. In on-going research of more than 500 former cult me mbers. Dr. Margaret Singer paints quite a different picture of victims of modern-d ay messiahs . "Two-thirds were Individuals who were es- sentially average, normal <persons) who went into a vulnerable period.'' she told a group of physicians at a recent California Medical As- sociation meeting in Anaheim. OFTEN THE CULT member had a major family upset, a troubled romance or suffered emotional shock during the transition from high school lo college or college lo graduate school. Coupled with the change in social environment is a mildtomoderatedepressioo,shesaid. Typically, the troubled individual makes first contact with the cult 1roup lo public places -bus stations. airport terminals, community parks, busy clty streeu. Cult memben are trained to spot proepective memben by thelr telltale lonelinetR, depression or purpoaele11 wandering. Tbefl ll'a time for what Dr. Sln1er calla "love bombinC": a concentrated dlapJay of affec· Uon and concern. '· Wbal they ruJly do la a ~nfldence 1a me," abe aald. "ll really ll a street huatJt ln lb• aeue that moet of the reeruJUnc la done bv direct contact in the street. .. Often working in pairs. cultists use nattery and the most up-to-dale street language to win attention. THEY'LL SA V YOU seem like an open, lov· mg person; a compliment designed to strike a positive cord in just about any individual. Dr. Singer said training manuals have been developed to help cultists gain new members. And those who walk the streets (or the groups are well-trained and rehearsed for their task. She noted one group sends an older cult member paifed with a rookie. The new member is instructed lo get close t.d the inaividual, penetrating the "zone of intimacy" generally only entered by family members. The most easil y recruited Individuals are middle class and not "street smart.'' she said. Lower class persons, she said, can spot cons and street hustles. Some cult groups prey on organized social or church groups, spotting loners or people who appeared troubled and inviting lhem out for cof· fee or a ride home. "THEY WANT TO PICK people who are socially oriented and available," she said. Within three to four weeu of first contact, lbe cult wtll have a new devotee. And once you arc in, you're expected to atay virtually forever or as lona 11 the leader re· mains in a potlllon of authority. You are told what to do.·~ and think. Tbua the term de-prosrammln1 wu duhed from parents and relatives of cult members who deacrlbed their loved ones as "protrammed" to act in a rigid fa shion. Dr. Si nger said. If you want to leave, the cultists might say your father will bave a stroke, your mother will become ill or other calamities might befall your family. READING MATERIALS ~e screened and any negative publi city appearing in the news media is attacked or ridiculed as false. "They totall y twist any information brought in that the outside world is against them." she said. .. And it's important to note that not all the cults are religious in nature," s he added. "Because of the Firs t Amendment many cult groups have started out as psychological groups but then incorporated as religious entlti~s." Dr. Singer has classified a number of types of groups including spiritual, flying saucer or outer space, Zen, neo·Christian, political, com- munal liying and satanic groups, to name a few. "Cults are led by self-appointed messianic persons who say they have a commission In lire," she said. "Many cults do lnstltutlonaliie and survive but most die when the leader dies." CULTS CAN BE dlstinruilhed from other unified, tight-knit 1roup1. she explained. Cults have only two pu.rpoMt or goals: recruiUn1 new members and fund ralsln1. 'Jlhe leaden 1enerally are cbariamauc and domineertn1. most 1roupt have a "doomsday .. outlook on life and they operate on a double set ol ethlca ,nth no appeal for memben to a. 1nat.er system ot juatlce, •be HJd. Dr. sm,... told the physicians, att.endlnt a daylon1 lecture serfea on medical fad•, quackery and extremist groups, cults are here to stay "They appear to be innovative but they're as old as recorded history " Many cults s prouted out of the social turmoil of the '60s and today have about 3 million members in the U.S .. mainly in the 18-to 25-year-old age bracket, she said. "WHERE THERE IS a breakdown of the structure of society there are people seeking simple answers," Dr. Singer said, in an in· terview following her lecture. "Cult leaders tend to say they have the answers." Dr. Singer, who also is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Francitto Medical School, brightened the somewhat tarnished image of de·programmers, who try to pull cultists from their alleged captivity. She said of the former cultists interviewed for her study, about 75 percent were lured from a cult by a relative and 25 percent had walked away. She admitted a small percenta«e of de- pro1rammen use forclble restrainll to bold a cultist, but generally the de·pro1rammln1 process Involves almple reorientation and education. The cuJUats are s hown newspaper cllppln11 on their 1roup and informatlon oft aoclaJ mana1emenl and p1ycholo1lcal prenur• techniques. "It's not.hint ma1k or lll'vtai," &M said, addln1. In fact, "moet ck..,,.,,.,.mmera an former (cull) members.'' -Jo.JC.DR } ,· NUMBERING OUR NOSES: You hear a lot of LalJt these days about how we are now In a no-growth society In our re1ion. School enrollments 1enerally are In decUne. Few babies are jolninti us. New housing starts have ebbed Yet you mlflht ask over the lu\ decade, how much no- 1rowlb dJd we actually have? Tbe latest census fl•ures, compartn1 1980 to uno. mi•ht a!ve you some clue. Ourln1 that 10-year period, Orange County populaUon Increased by almost halt a million souls -or 458,911 , to be more precise. That hardly s eems lo count as no.growth. The lO·ye1i1r p0pula· lion booll, broken down between our 26 cities. shows several Instances , ~' of startling growth. The TOM MURPHINf ~ city of lrvlne was the ,, m o K t a w e 11 o m e ~~~~~~~~~--._._..._ performer BACK IN 1970, Irvine probably had more cows than people. There were just 7,570 human folk. The cow-count is unknown Ten years later . those 7.570 had been joined by a whop· ping 54,564 new faces, giving the new city a grand total population for 1980 of 62,134. So much ror no-growth. San Juan Capistra no. our next newest cit y, had only 3,781 souls in the quiet little mission village in 1970. lt grew by 15.178 in thP decade for 8 tota l headcount Of 18,959 In l' .Ii Ceruu.~ counter /mdmg bootleg renter in Lo,quno l9RO Considen nE: the humble beginning in numbers. too was a he ft y inc·rease this AMONG AL.L 26 of our Orange County cities, you have to look pretty hard to find a pure case or no-growth during the last dec<1de Pl'rha ps the closest example would he our small up- roast community of Los Alamitos The official <'ens us in~ dicated Los Alamitos gamed only 183 citizens during the decade The city went from I l.341l to 11 ,529 dunng the 10 'l'ars · Ohvious ly, 1f Los Alamitos we1nts to JO tn the growth t•1t1t•i., om c1als then· must IO!oo ll>l lht• L's Census people tah their headcounts during thf' surge of incoming popula lJOn on rat•t•trac·k nights SliRPRISINGl.V. Bueno f'ark 1s the next best exam· pll· or n<'ar l) no growth during the decade past Despite its fame for Knoll's lkrry Farm and other nearby a ttra<' lions. the• c•t•nsus dl'clared lhat Buena Park gained only 701 residents during th<' 10.year period Di rectly al on~ our coastline, Seal Beach . with a 10- year gain of 1,53<1 people. was the least growth-oriented rommunity Laguna Re<ich. long toutl'd as a heartland of no-growth µhilosophy o;tJll popped up with 3.310 new faces. going rrom 14.550 1n 1970 lo 17 ,860 IO the 1980 headcount Laguna officials still don't think the t·ens us people caught up with 1•v1•rvhody ltv1ng tn hootlegged apurtments or the Munt for 19Rll \\ould have• hN·n more like 34.000 IN l,M~UNi\, ev1•n ('ountiniir heads c an tnl(~<'r a de· I.Hilt• \lewpor1 Beach, too, clearly failed lo esrape the ~rnwth pattcrn h:oi ~aininl! 1;$,893 new residents ov1•1 the <leradc• J\ncl. wag~ m1ghl s uggc:-.t all l:l,893 of the new people I ry to ~ct arros:-. Newport Ra} Rridge every afternoon. precisely al 5 :m FEATURES Virgo: Detect clues PtJBUC NOTICS NOTICI Ofl '9".,. l 'I ULll ~-....... TtJESDA\', MAACIUI 8)' SYDNEY OMAllll ABIES (Mar. 21 -Apr. 19): Focu11 on ne10Uatlons. destres, reachinc ror poten· tlal and not aettUng for substitutes. You 1aln wider attention for dtorta -valid bu1lnea1 or career opportunity 11 part or 1cenarlo. Leo. Safltlarlu1 and another AriH filU" prominently. TAUBUS (Apr. »May 20): Blocks, ob· 1t1cle1 are temporary -fresh atart ls part ot scenario. Hopes, desires are subject t.o change. Emotions dominate -you could HOROSCOPE fall madly in love. Cycle ls one of excite · ment, challenge and ultimate fulfillment. GEMINI <May 21 -June 20): Abstract principles are clarllled -your philosophy is defined, lines of communication come into focus. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius persons figure prominently First Im pressions now tend lo be accurate. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Dig beneath surface -gel facts concerning finances, borrowing and lending procedures. Gemini, Libra, Aquarius natives figure prominently. Unusual "social invitation" could actually be a money-making scheme. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Go slow, a tte nd to details. make necessary revisions, c hec k agreements, deeds, contracts, Aquarius, Scorpio and another Leo figure prominently. One who does care will prove it. Hold fast to principles. You are going to be rewarded! VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Detect clues, a ccent pe r ception, willingness t o cooperate with one who abaret lnlertala u.-. ....,., Reach new understandlnu wt•i. dynamlc • 1 " 1 •" ••Ai. • •""' • • U1 """'"•CIAL.. INC "' M y .....,_IM member of oppo Ile sex . Gem ini, Saclt-. '"'•••_.,.,.,....,Ille._,._.. tarlus and another Vlroo play key rolea. -.. .. 1rw1w11..1..111..1.. ,., ll'U•1.•c o AUCTION TO THI MIOHIST LJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Special rela-11oou 'o" CAIH •~t•IH• ''time lions hip Intensifies; 1trts, aurprtaea. ;~:i!':11~11t~::,~: ·~~"'1~:;~.~ domeStlC adjU8tmefll8, jreater emotional COtlVeyed 10 -now held by 11 tlftW security d ominate excllln, scenario See Uve wid 0 .. 11 "' T•vt1 in 1,.. P•-•1Y c -I ,,.,.1"'"" o.tc•1~ Taurus. ~orplo and anoth ·r ,!bra r gure Ch1·cks Hatch IAVHOA WILLI AM F NORTON prominently. l'~ocua alBo on 11pec·ulatlon. 111 • "not•m.n Children and chanae or scen .. ry &ENE"•c1•11" c•1" 11eoe11AL "' " SAVINGS ~ l.OAN 4$S0t;'ATION. t SCO&PIO (Oct. 23·Nov 211 SpoUlght on Come lo Huntington Center. corporeuon land, pro-.rty, " valid way of deflnln~ See the life cycle of 1n "•<o•o.o 0c1-' •. 1"' 0 1"11' ,,.., • E hi f I No 11~ '" -•iMJ. P-'" or "territorial rights." Pisces, Cancer an aater c ck rom ncubator 0111c111 "-•a1 '" 1,,. o1110 of ,,,. another Scorpio pluy important roles. Im to brooder. Dally "hatch" thcor0erot0tan90 co1>n1,, "'" .,..., print styl6, hhchllgbl cre ativity and realiie 12•30 lo 3 pm Apr 1 lhru ol lru1I due rib" 1111 rollowtno that member of opposite sex cares very 18 e1tcepl eth & 7th School "'~:~·,•:, 01 Tr.cc No ,.,, in 1n. c1w & youth groups welcome o1 co"•1111e ... countt o1 o"'''""· s111• much. Phone 897·2633. or C•I•'"'""· ti .... m.oo rnOt-In SAGl1TARIUS <Nov 22-0 ec 21 J New loo s1. Ptou 4 1 "''" ••. M"u""'""°'" "'-P•. "' 1,,. Ofllct ol contact leads to l!X<'iUng, creative e x PUBLIC NOTICE 1n. coun11 Atcoroer or •••ti coun1, change of idcms. Write, coll , communicate E•0 P• ,,,.,,,,°"' •" °'' o ... m•n.••11 i h I I k h eno 011-.r rivorouroon1 !:MIO• • oepln w t re al ves. ta e necessary s ort trip. NOTICE OF Ol!'ATH OF 01 100 r .. 1 ... 11,_1 ow r1g111 °' '"'''"'• Ma ny or your question:s will be answered J A M E s o . """'· •• ·•~'~•o 1n ''"'""n~u of II t•t ord You' soonbe"goinglntoproducliun •· SCHWEICKERT AND OF 1.1> )l•I• Am•v• co•I• Mtu , CAPRICORN I Oec. 22-.lan. 191 Cash PETIT I 0 N T 0 A 0 · C•"'o•nte rl ts boo di I k MINISTER ESTATE NO. '"••I'"' aocsro""' (ommon ow gc st ; roa ) UC lo progress is CIO\IQn•l•on " •llown •boo , 110 r~moved. Lost article will be located. AI08l90. ...,,.,,,, "o•u n .. to 11. Aries, Leo. Sagittarius µersons figure oenrel~ci!r',~s. hc~e~{10sr ~ '°7':.1·~:;::;.~~;.~"'~',::~·::io a..41 .,. prominently . Major task will he t·ompleted and contmgenl creditors 01 r.u" or •u•ono• • orott11or oe1au11 Aggres~lve asso<'ialeexh1b1ts more impulse· I James D. Schweickert and ~:.~7;,0~":::;~7:., ·;~·: .. !~;.,'°r.; than logic. 1 p e r '>o n s w ho ma y b r: 1n1 una•,.•011tc1 • '"""'" Oo< ter•hon AQUARIUS (J an 20 Fcl> IHJ In-:itht:rw1se interested In the 0' 0 •1•u11 ..,,, Oomina 10• !>I••. •111 ..-.irllten notltf' of btt•cn •"d or •hKtlon divlduality is highlighted Ta kt' 1n1tiatlve, wtll and/or estate 10 uu .. 1.-. """""IOI'•" 10 "" ,.10 make new start in new direction, be 11 A petition has been !tied p1oper1, 10 ,.1 .. •v ,.,., 0011ci11ion1, pioneer Trust your own Judgment. Ele· by Ann P Schwetekert in :;,~ •::;.~·~·0~~~cu:!~~·~~";1'!,<1~;.~ ment of lime works for you You'll be al I llP Superior Court ot "" Ae<o•o.o o....,,,.,.., 11 1tt0 ., . Orange Counly requesting ""1' No ''"> o• ,.,., o"'"'' right plucc "when il rounb " Le(') is in pie-lhdt Ann p Schweickert Aoto•o• tu re .· '>••o •••• '"'" .,.. "'""' ou1 "''""'u1 P S be appointeo as personal •O••"•"' o• '"'"'"'' .. P••n o• I CES I FelJ 19-Mar. 20). Insist on representat111e to ad .mP••t" ··~·o·no1•11• POu1u1on,or pri vacy, protect confidential sourct·s Ac m1n1s1er the estate ol •n<umb••"'"· 1° PA' in. '""•'"'"O cent on clubs, institution:., special groups James D SchwetCkert ~~·~~::·~11"'0,0~,'~:i ";,11~~~1!;'!~;!~ and a possible hospital visit You "wake (under the Independent on utonotoo•o••dea •ci••ncu .•••nr. up" with answers Clandt.·stin<' meE>ting Adm1n1stra1ion of E'>tale'> u11<11• 1"" 1''"""' "''" ouo or t•u>1, II h • Atll The pet1t100 IS set for 1'"· lhd•04'\ '"" .. oonao 0' lht w1 .,eon agenda Aq uarius 1s in p1c·ture r.u .... •nd o1 ,,,., """' cou1ec1 oy hedr1ng in Dept No 3 at u oo O•eo o• l•u>I !>.>10 '"' '"'" i.. Like slap • ID face 100 C1vrc: Ce nter Drive, ne•o on w"°"""'•' "'o"' u 1~11 •• Wt:St in the City ot Santa "oo., m "' tneort•vo• r o ~· .. <• ' (Omp.tnf, 8.,-ii. 01 Am~r•f.t To"''' Ana, Cal1torn1c1 on April s~•t• 1110. ane C••r Bnu•••.,a w .. 1. 22, 1981 at q JO a .m Or•no•.<.A IF YOU OBJECT I~ the °' ~~11,n~;~; ~',.!i0;~·11:).,~~:·~~,;~; UEAR ANN LANDERS · I was offended by the letter about the man who stood by his wife's cas ket, palled her hair and said, "Goodbye. Honey " It seems the next-door ne ighbor wrote to tell you she knew the couple well, and over the years she had he ard the man call his wife lots of names. but ··Honey" wasn't one of them. I was married for 40 years to a w o nde rful w o man We had a f in e re lationship, and I was very good lo her l <'a iled her "Honey," "Darling" and dozens ANN lANDfRS of other pet names when she was alive She passed away a few months ago. l , loo, stood by the casket and s aid a few farewell words before they lowered the lid. Reading that letter in your column was like a slap in the face. I believe you owe me an apology. NOT GUILTY Our Not: Your letter broapt to mind an old Hebrew sayln1: "U yoa Ulirow a stone lnto a pack of do11, tlile one ~at ls bit barb." How come I beard from yoa? DEAR ANN LANDERS: From lime to time you deliver m essages to certain groups of people. How about s aying something to doctors today -es pecially gynecologists? Usually al the close of the appointment. the doctor will ask, "Is the re anything you would like to discuss?" Or, "Are you having any problems?" While this might encourage some peopl e to open up about topics of an intimate nature, Ot hers need lo 11<• asked more granting Of the petition, unp••a 0•'""" ol 1n• 11bl•11•11on you Should either appear M (Ulfd Dy IM •Do••"~"",,.., Cl .. CI o• leading questions I, for one. 11m vt·ry shy di lhP hearing and state ~:;~0·.".~t.'.''.':':;:~,~~1•. ••v•"•t> I promise myi.t•lf I Wi ii Opc'n up to lhe your o b1ec 11ons or file lo Clt'I .. ,.,,,.... 11"' 01>"'""11 boCI ruu doctor "next tim<'.·· but I never 'l't'm Lo he wr1tter obiec11on-. w1lh the m ... _.,, 11•1 •)1~ a ble to do it tour t before the he>a ring O•" M••<n 1J 1t11 Please, Ann, ur~t· doctor:-. lo ask more Your appearanc:1t may be ;:"1~~;c'::LR~:z BTt.•E direct quc.>~lion s Al-'HJ\11> TO BF. in person or by your at ...... ar.u,,..., FRANK lorney B• 1 o SE MV•CE I I F y 0 u A R f:: A COMPANY ti DeartFrankk:1,u your doct<h1r ta1kes the CRED ITOR or a c:o nltn ~~~r .. Jo,c. me o as you art' av ng any gent creditor of the de ........ n1s,.,,.,.,, problems, considf'r yourst•U lucky. lie (or < Pased you mus I I tie you r °"" C•1v Boul•wo w .. 1 b ) I • th 0••"9< C•9'1...a s e s a gem. t la1m with t: court or 1,., ,, .. 1831 ,,.. To expect a doctor to go beyond that is pr t'Sl'l11 II to the persona I r•uo"'""° o •• ,.~ co1.1 o •• ,, P1101 unreasonablt'. In ra cl, somP JH'Ople might rpµr c•<,t>ntat111e appoin ted M•""11 JO •P,,,& '~' 10111 resent It. t>y the: court w1 lh1n tour · . . 1nonlh<, lrom th1· dale of PUBLIC NOTICE DEAR ANN L ANU l'.HS I a m a l1r c,t 1<;suanc:e ot lette r'> as 19-year-old girl who was nncc very heavy provided rn Sec lron JOO ot No11ce o, •NT ENT1 0N To l ha ve thest· tcrrihll' stret,·h marks all jthe Probate Code: o f AN D To 11 ~~L;~~TP11tsoHu over my body es pecia lly on my hips and C.il tf orn1a. The t1mf! tor PllOl'EllT, sto m ach and on my breast~ I hale the wav tiling claims wil l no l ex FAOM THE STATE oFc"'L"o"""' I took ptrP prior to four monl hs c..';,.~n,:. ;;::;:;,.~~ tM E •t.o•• or Jonn I have a wonderful boyfriend and one of from the dale of thl' hecH Nonce rs HEQtB• c.1veN 10 .,. h d ll 'b rng noticed abovt' ""'''"' "'"'""" ....... .,., ,, ~ t:se ays I kno w we "."I ~ gelli ng I YOU MAY EXAMINE ,,.0.10•1 ,...,,, 1eo.utt\.,. a. .. ""' ant1mate The thoug.ht of ,hi m seeing lhe~e the hie kPpt by the courr ~~,!"~"~-=~~ .:':: .. ", d;:~·~: ... .,~~· marks makes me sick I m sure they will II you are 1n1erested 1n thf> H••Do« orooon , 1n11 Ltll•n or turn him off. Please. tell me if anything l''>tall', you may Ille a re hu•m•nl••v .,..,. '"u"° ro 1<onn11n can be done lo get rid of lhem NOT QUPSI w1 lh the courl to re " Honnin•on. 1sa1 ~uun 8•Y o .. v. Btn.ok1nQ~. Or•oon OH~ by tr.t (lt<u1t LOO KING FO RWAR D TO TH E BIG (r>1111> '>Pec1al not1c.eof lhelcourio111,.s1•••o•o••oo"d c.,,,, MOMENT inventory ot estale d'>Sels CounlY.•<ou•lol tompe1tnt1ur .. oo< and OI the pel1l10n'> ac roonollheSl•ltofOt-Dear Not Looking: Stretch marks fade with time. There ls no known mt>thod or getting rid or them. Your fearfil, however, are unfounded. Through the years I've received hundreds of let ters from men telling me about things that tum them off sexually. Stretch marks have never ~en mentioned. Actually the ugliness is mal(nified lo your mind. Stretch marks art' not that disfiguring. Womt'n who arc botherf'd by them should keep thf' lhthti. turned low - or off. , l "•' t-4<1'1 of tne I011owu''Q n•mto '' c O u n I '> a n d r (; PO r t s 1no•o11cJ to or "noto•nci .,..,..,,,., o•o d1•scr1bed 1n Section 1200 o.,1v or 1n. "''""'""'"1 ot lhr· Calrforn1a Probate Foc!•hly FtO.• .. s ... no• •l'CI Lo ... Code> ~~:~!~~:· c~~~~0,~~;';"~21Boutmrd, Gusta ve S. Chabre, 1101 1na1 1n. unot•tio.,•o a .. ,, .. 10,. D o v e S t . , S u 1 t e 2 2 S , ~:;~;, 11~~ ~::.:;~~·:::::::'~!~ ~;0~ Newport Beach, CA 92660. '"• Sl•I• or c111rorn•• 10 1nr '""SI••• (714) 9SS·OOS1. lfl•I l •tlt,. tt\ltmonl••• O• of "'" Put>llihed Or•.n~ t.CM\I CJtl1ty PtlOI m.n ... 1r41ton r\ave ()IHln l\,ufO Mitrc.n 19.1• AJ>1it • t~I U>fl 11 A11 Of'tM>n\ n•1i11nQ tt•im \ •e>••nil PUBLIC NOTICE CIOJ NOllCE OF SALE OF PEASONAL PAOl'EATY AT PAIVATESALE No. A 104•St thr u •d dt<f<Jt>nt Of •no "•v• M1 '" Heart disease topic Sheriff, chiefs to talk safety In th•• ~•IDf"rlOr (0Ur'1 Of HU• St•I" Of C.•Hfo'"•d 10, tnt• tuuntvo t Or•ne>P lo ,,.... M•tl"' Of In• EttdlffOf LUt 't R" llARO'ION •k• Lo.ICY I IH< •IAROWN O..tu~a N11f1 I· 1\ n.-rttOt Q1¥•n U~fll ttw 1,;n t1fft\1Ql•ftd Wiii \fll •t P t1Yjl,. \41t 10 l'tf" h•\1,....,,\1 Jtf\4.J bt\I OlddH \Ubjfl( t to "u"'" m At1on ot "110 Su~nc>t 'ou,t 011 ut "''"' tP'W> 10th day ot April, '''' "' tot nft•t'" of Uu1hm4., a. HvO"t\. llH IJt l Hill• rt\1 Blvd Sultfl 41) '""It N•tUO. (A qo101 County of OuH\Q,. 'ttlh qt Ll lifO,nu• •U Inti '•Ohl litl• ftl'l:I tnlftf'\t OI \•10 O~ 1tfft\.-4,I •' ,,.,. t•m~ tJf ~atn ftnd •fl lhe r tQt\f fill" •nd 1nlff P\l ,,,., '"''* tt\l•t• of "t•td dffc.••"•d tt•\ "' ~utttO by ULN"•"'l•On ''' IA~ nr othftWt'W' olh•t tnAn 0' .n •Ckl1tion to th•t ot \•td ~ ,,.,,~, '" , •• o t\t••~ •no wno •• ,,.. to ftOJttl to \U(h r•mO'IAI m uJ,I QIVI' '#flll•n nol•<f or \ucn ObJf'<Uon to ttlt- O.•r'\On Or per~Qn\ tt'IOfOltO 10, or nold •"0 P'tt\ona1 P'OPf'rt-; o, tht dt c•df'nt "' t~ aOdrf!'\\ ., fl\lt!d Mlnw, w ithin thrff! '11 month\"""' '''\I publtc•t•Oll of ltH\ NOt•t.t" 0 Atf'O ttno tir\t P4JOl1\hPd M•rch ' l•tr Ktl'l"~I" A H1QQ1n\Of\, Pprson.I Af'pf'e\.fnt•1t¥e of tnft E't.tr or JolYI Gttn.m M< OOi>t•CI l o D•"•d R r ort1•, AflOtr•-; 4f L•w PRt:VENTION OF llF.ART DISK.\St: wi ll be lhe topic of a 10 week lecture ~cries al UC" Irvine, beginning Tuesday. "Biology of Ilea rt Disease" or Biology 50 may ~ attended by community members at no cha rge. Course credit is available for UC I and University Extension students. Organized by UC I students, the lecture series features clinicians and researchers in the fi eld of cardiology . Subjects include an in troduclion lo lhe cardiovascular system and the relationship of heart disease and diet. stress, exercise and risk factors , Also. eardif)pulmonary resuscitation 1C'PH1 1nstruct1on will be availabl e The lecture series, co-sponsored by the Am eriran lleart Association and the UCI School of Biological Scien<'es . will be held Tue"rlny Anti Thursday from 7 lo 9 p.m F'or more info rmation, call R.lll 5318. For University Ext ens ion credit information, rall 833 5414 ROLFING, the mlegra taon of human slrue l ure. is offered Wednesday evenings In Costa Mesa by cert ifi ed rolfer R. Grant Powers . The free lecture and de monstr ation !leries begins at 7 p.m . For Information, call 640·7661. HEALTH HELP ch a pter of the Ame rican Red Cross begins Saturday, in Laguna Niguel To registe r or tor mfo rmation, call 83 1-6582. USC coach diw John Rollinson, roarh or the USC football team , is to appear as a guest speaker at a l'hampagne brunch sponsored by the University or Southern California South Orange County Alumni Club. The event wll l s tart with a no.host social hour at 11:30 a.m .. followed by a brunch at 12:30 p.m . Sunday, April 5, a t lhe Holiday Inn in Laguna Hills. USC alumni, their friends and guests, are welcome to attend Space is lifilted so reserve · lions should be m ade early Reserva tion deadline date ls March 26. Brunch tickets a re available for $12.50 per pe rson through Pam Re ese al 32911 Staysail Dr .. Dana Point "Are We Safo in Our Hom<'" und 011 Ou r Streets ?" will be the topic explored hy Orange County Shc:'rtff Brad Gates an<I a pant>I of six police chiefs at a Citizens Advisorv Comm1ll<'e ICAC> dinner , Thursday, al the> lluntington Bea ch Inn Sponsored by Supt1rvisor llurnetl Wietkr. the dinner mcetin~s arc used to exp11nd on 1s- sue11 of clis lrict-wide concern ,Joining Sheriff Gates will bt' Police Chiefs Or brey Duke. F rank KC'ssler. F.arll• Rob1ta1lle. Kelson McUanil'I. Starv Picasc1a and Ronald J ohnson represenling l:ypress, Gordt.•n Grove. Huntington Beach, Los Alamitos. SC'ul Oeul'h and Stanton "All citizens are acutely awart• of increas- ing crime in our un ·u and in the country," noted Supe rvisor Wieder ·'This is an o pportunity to tte t the facts from the professionals in our lo<'al Police departments and lcurn what th<' situation re ally is." Dinner begins promptly at ti .JO pm l"or ad· ditional information and dinner reser vations call 834 ·3220 P 0 Boa 104] 8rocMo.1no• Ort ~l"I Pvoti'""° Ora110" Co.u Oelly P1lol M••<I> ~ lb, IJ, JO 1'11 1066 II PUBLIC NOTICE 1 .. ,.,,.Cl ttl the 11mti o• Of'•U\ 1n •fHJ to I U1' SYNOPSIS 0, THI ANN UAL STATIMINT 0 , al 1n ... "''"'" of'ri onat p1opr1ty lnHu•nt f Com o•nv o' P•<tflc. \lfu4'1,.n 1n SAn lu•n C•P•\tranu, Coun Cod\1 1taJt Von t<•rm•" A•t,,v• tv nt 0f An~tt. SlAte ol C.•lllOrnlA, tr..,lnt, C.ttlltornle 0111) p.1rl1tul+i1rlY dtt\lrit:MtO 4, tn110""'· lo Y••r E,,... 0M.t"'4Mr J1, 1'IO ,.,1 lolll•Clmtllltd•H•h JU .'11.•st It/I RoH~w•y Mobil llomt. L" lol•lll•D<llllH ••.II• JO• •1r.1 .. s.,, •s.u sv JP•170 S•• ~cltl>luayruncs• o • S••ll( CtPil•lpeicl-yp c;.,.,.,.,., , ,., "'" '' \Atf , "'n '" l•wful mon•y C•P1t•t St•tutory O•OO\tt 01 '"" lJn1tfld St•t~\ un <.ontr•f\i•l•on o• G t O\\ P••d 1n •no , 000,000 ...... ,,, u•' t t •"" .,.,, t.itttAn<" contr1butf'(f1urptu\ l.500.000 ..., d""' rt1 Qy not, , .. tu,•<t bV Un•n1onedtund\f\urplu\l t,JU.•S• MO, IQAO• 0' r f'\ol\I 0 H d on ow 0'\.IOf' ~urplus ., '•9'1'0• 1,. \O \Uld l w•nh Uvt Ottt tnt ot PQUcynotdfrs Amuvnt b•O to Of cttPo\lt.n with bid tntome for ttw Y••r 010' '>' o•t"'' to oe 1n wfHlng •"d Oltbur\.mtnti fGt l,l>l1U• 14,,.l,IJS wdl hn reoc..-1ved •I th~ •'ort\•uJ otflct tf\e Vt•' JJ,1ll,1S• 11 tnr 1tm• •'''' 1111 llr\t publlcellon Wt lltroby urlllv 111•1 Ille •DO•t ~•,.OI tnd DOior• d•I• or'"'' lttm> .,. 1n •ccordln<t •1111 tllt An O•l•O lhO\ 11111 d•Y or M••<n •~•1 nu•! Sttttmtnl lor 1110 vou tl'dtd Wllll•M 0 RICl'le•O•"" Otctmbtt JI , ltl O, m•d• 10 "" Jtl'l\Ct\ M Rlcnt•d"°" ln•ur•n~e CommlH1on., ol IM Slatt l •f'tutof\of UM t'l•lt of C•llforn••. O\if'W.l"lt tot•w of '"'d Ot<•OMI 0 W Bannltltt, P,.110.nt D11ll\me11&HytMi,lfK . Ac F'tlMrtlon, St<reltry lle .. rO Olllu....,., PuOlllJllO Ottna-Cot \! Oelly PllOI, lfll)l71-- All•rMp•fWI Jt<lllert H elhl l II " Pub1l1111td O•anot coe11 D•"Y Piiot ave som · na o se . Mtrc~ >0. 11. A11<1t •. 1"1 uu 11 Classified ads do It well. CAROIO-PULMONARV RESUSCITATION !CPR> course sponsored by the Orange County ~~ai~m~n=r=s~~mi-~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'- U• I Hlllcr"lllv• ...... l U l MtrCft JO. JI. Aorll I,, J. 1 .. 1 ljJO ., lfttl•w-,C:AMltl, Ct111842-5678. "Pv1 • few word a to work for vou CUSTOM ~MllltQ lpeel•llllftt '" • SHADOW BOXES ·..:. 1803 Newport Blvd. cur Rtpalr"lilgW'hleYoulett Complete Shot s.mct S;J~ SL,. Siu,r .,... ...... •C..,_..._._.. ·e·· .... Wet I :t.: ~.,..... .. I ft Oft .... ~1111 a' 1Jt4W ... 111·1667 ....... CAREER WOMEN Don't leave your image to chance .. Leave It to POWERS Orange County 5-i7-8228 f<1,,~~11J?.u ~ IJ IOlll OUT OF BUSINESS EYan1111 MUST IOll 50%-70% off rYt:t/P:tlit6/ ~ 4HJht ....... •Ml ........ CAftMI ...111171416716141 ....~ ....... ,. .. D1•1Wh1 I . I '· DETERMINATION OF A WINNER -Pat Bradley, who led the Women's Kemper Open from wire-to-wire, is a picture of con· centration as she blasts out of a sand trap surrounding the 13th hole. Her efforts were ....... _..... ., Daily Pillt MONOAY,MARCH30, 1981 BUSINESS C4 STOCKS CS rewarded, however, five holes later as she claimed vicfory for the tournament with a four:day total of 284, fi ve strokes better than second place Debbie Massey. Indiana's basketball players aren't the only Hoosiers drawing headlines in Philly. Can you guess who else is? See C2 . This KeIDper belonged to Pat Bradley By HOWARD L. HANDY Of tlle o.lly ...... Matt Pat Bradley won't be carrying a piano on her back now that s he has won the Women's Kemper Open golf tournament but s he will be doing the next best thing. "I'm very excited but it was a litUe tougher than I thought. This morning the course was very conducive to birdies and Jane BlaJock made a pretty good charge. "When I birdied the 14th hole on top of a birdie by Joyce <Kazmierski>, I felt pretty good and breathed a sigt:i of relief right there. Bradley won the third annual event at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa Sunday by fi ve strokes over runne r-up Debbie Massey with a one· under-par 70 and a 72-hole total of 284. A crowd an· nounced at 5,800 brought the week's totaJ to 18,923. When Bradley was finished, she threw her vi- sor high in the air. one of the few times during the week that she had shown any emotion on the course. "I still wasn't taking anything for granted but it all started on 14. I just st arted jumping up and down but tried to conser ve it until the end. But it was building up inside me to the final putt. I'm emotional but I have to be in a good position to show it. "I told myself as soon as I won a tournament this year, I was going to buy a piano and that's what I am going to do. then learn to play it," she said. "I'm sorry about not breaking the tournament scoring record. But I won!·· Then she turned to her final round and the thrill of victorv. Bradley was one-under-par going to the final hole. Her tee shot on the par-three 18th was wide to the left of the hole and she lagged toward the cup but it went about six-feet beyond. She missed the return putt and settled for a bogey to finish al 2&4, equal par for the 72 holes. Will Kemper return W Mesa Verde CC? When Jim Poteet, the generaJ chairman of the third annual Women's Kemper Open golf tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa said, "the party's over" following conclusion of play Sunday, he may have given an ominous warning. Poteet was referring to the end of play in this year's event but indications are strong that the LPGA event will not return to Mesa Verde CC again. ( :::1· U01B rs : • ! Kl!lllP!R ·=· 11'211 • • -.. No one with authority. either with the club or the s pon soring Kemp e r Insurance Compan y, would comment definitely on the future status of the tournament. "We had a one-year contract with a two-year option," Poteet aaid. "Right· ndw, no decision has been made on the future of the tournament here." "We haven't decided anything definitely as yet," tournament dinctor Don Ruhter aaid. "We have to com- pile aJI of the information ~d a decision wlll be made by Kemper Sport.a Management bot nothin1 wlll be an- nounced untll a contract is signed-if that happens." James Kemper, the board chairman of the sponaortnc or1ani1ation, aaid: "We have to have a akull seaalon and take another look at It. "Th.ls la the mo.t beautifully run operation anyplace. It I.I a fine tournament on one of the finest golf courses anywhere." Then he added: "Each year we take a look at lt after the tournament is concluded. I'll tell you one thin&, if it remalDI aa a tournament and ln CaUlornla, lt will stay riaht here at Mna Verde at Iona u they want it to remain here." At tbe awards ceremoQy OD the tltll ireen Sunday, wiDDer Pat Brad.le)' pn1ented club pr..W.t Leo lverton wltb a plaque oa ~II '°'1WRT 1118alf ol UM LPOA pla1ers .-at UM Mme Um• pr~ t.be coune: "TM IOlf coane ta Ill tnmtndoua lbape aad OIM ol the ftnat we play OD all yMJ'," _ ... &NL.~ NCAA final to feature team c~ncept · PHILADELPHIA <AP) - Defense. rebounding, patience o n offense a nd above all teamwork -that's the gospel according to Bobby Knight and Dean Smith and that's the kind of basketball to be played tonight when Indiana takes on North Carolina for the NCAA championship. Although Knight was the focus of controversy following a run-In with a Louisiana State fan at a hote l Saturday night, that sideshow didn't diminish the ap- peal of tonight's glittering final. The records may be tarnished -ntntb·ranked lndiana is 25-9 and alxth-rated North Carolina is 29·7 -but everything else a bout the title game is pure gold. Both schools have great baa ht ball traditlona. Both coaches, Knllbt of lndlana and Smlth of Ne>rth Carolina, are amon1 the acknowledaed leaden ol tbelr profession. Botb teama have brilliant lndlvtdual athletes, but both utilise tbem wlthln the team concept -Jmt the way the basketball purllt would want lt. And both are playlnc at tbe top of tMlr 1amea, U. the polat where boUI coacbel aa1 YoU cu lpore tbe NIUlt ot their molt recent meetln~L a 85-M Nortla CaJ'Ollna triumpa lD Deeember. '',That same la IO loq qo, you're Pl'Obabb talklal abcNt two dllfereat team1, •• Hid Knlallt. "ID eaeb , ... , we're a far betW tHm today. "We're _ both dift .... nt chlbe C._TIAM. PaaeCI) • Her total equalled that of Nancy Lopez-Melton last year and made this the third year in a row that no playtt has broken par for the 72 holes of tournament play. Bradley, who reached her 30th birthday Tues- d ay, cited her personal goals. "I would like to be No. 1 on the money list, reach the SI million mark and win the LPGA and U.S. Open championships before I'm through.·· She has a string of two second places and a fi rst in her last three tournaments. It was her first· ever victory in California. She picked up $26,250 for the win. Massey. a bridesmaid for the second straight .vear (she finished in a lie with Jo Ann Washam last year), had a final round 69 to pick up $17,150 with J oAnne Carner. Blalock and Kazmierski tied for third at 291 . Washam and Dale Lundquist tied for sixth. Washam had an opportunity to finish second again this year until she reached t he 17th hole where she hit one out-of-bounds and took a triple bogey after a bogey at 16 Massey, playing with Carner and Shelley Hamlin. was wired for sound and the trio started with a loose attitude '"It was one of the neatest things I've ever done and J hope it helped the people al home watching TV," Massey said Turning to her game. she added: '"I am very comfortable on this golf course. It reminds me of USGA courses that I played as a kid. It is demand- ing and not very forgiving and I love the greens. ··When I finished. I felt like going right out and playing the front nine again.·· She likened her back nine where she had four . birdies in a row ( 14-17 > lo being in a race car and that of Blalock, who charged to within two strokes ~f Bradley then fell back. to going on four fl at tires. · • • 1 feel very strongly about courses of this <See KEMPER. Page O> A big sea of green envy Kemper field couldn't tame Mesa Verde By ED ZINTEL Sally Little, a IO-year veteran scores in their recent recollec-ol Ille Delly l'llM Sult . h Had It been a year -e nd fi nan· wit more than $500,000 In lion. cial print out for a major cor-career earnings shot a five -s poration, the company execs under 66 Sunday to lie the HERE'S A sampling of what would have loved it. Women's Kemper Open record the women had to say about th" B t i If h 'd · t set by Nancy Lopez-Melton two tournament and themselves foll· u n go · t e 1 ea 15 0 get years ago. But all that did for Ing the final round Sunday: :r.to the red, not stay away from Little was bring he r 72-hole Little: "The first couple of For the players competing in scor e to a nine-over-par 293. Lit-days, 1 couldn't pick the right the Women 's Kemper Open tie certainly wasn't looking for a clubs for the life of me. The .thhoawnedonver,e.that was easl~r said ~h~'nTeh. e fi'rst ~ay was out· weather conditions were over-bearing. When you can't plct the rageous." LltUe said in a ref· right club, then you 're not put· THE LEADER BOARD over-erence to the 45 mph winds that ling you~elf in birdie range. I looking the 18th hole at Mesa blew throughout the day "l don't like t his course, it's one of my Verde looked like a St. Patrick's know how anyone could have favorites. But I was afraid to do Day massacre. It was so green, played in that kind of wind. I certain thin1s because I didn't the women must have thought it don't know about the others, but want to lose myself complett!l~ was part of the fairway. That's I was playing scared out there." by takin" a gamble." ~ probably why so many balls Another big factor in the Hollis Stacy_ ( 11 -over-pf, wound up near It. Green Parade was the Mesa 295): "I just couJdn't hit the The only red (below par> that Verde course. Even though this well at all for four days. I di could be found on the board Sun· is the third straight year the have problems compensating fi day waa betide Pat Bradley's women have played yere, the the wind, J just couldn't putt. T name and that was for only five course seema to live them more day I switched my putter and holes. The cloeeat anyone else and more problems each year. helped (she bad a final got to the red waa Jane Blalock SUPl'ICJ: TO uy, Mesa score oftwo-under-par88)." Oant atwhoto oavtrere.a~ntod J_hthe ahta.d to 10 Verde . beat tbe LPGA from Beth Daniel, lt80 Pia.Yer ol a uu u ... Year (215): "The greens were None ol the women seemed too -area •·n. A 1ar 214 llke hard the first couple of days franled by all· that areen Bra.U., W muallJ dona't 'wln was fnaatratin1. I don't know thoulb. No one In the 128-player tounaam-., mucla l•s by flve they watered them or what I field bad been ln the red alnce 'ti.::':b. women checked out nl1ht but they were cert Thursday'• openln1 round wttb tbelr acorecarda Sundav holdln1 much better todar. Pl anyway. " I was blttinl \be ball wel tod Aebesfter sbt collected h er and beaded up U.. bank toward which la the rant tJme lD B di b.-,_._ \be elallbauM, •9'1 few _.. b .. P•J' • fl ., f\11 ---•mUlq. Nooe W8Dtecl to look (I • had ... 9Waday). the tlubltouM to caU laer madaer but at tlM Ha ot ,...... .,._. Alcott (11-ov•-par IOU : "I oa th• phone. But after .... W.1 on tbe main ICONbMrd. . la a slUIJ ..... rtpt DOW up, UM liMI remaa.ed opea U.. l'or one rt \be ·~ran UIDea, waan't blWat UM ft,lrwQt teet " ta. ~· Tbtl WU 1 -.o. ,__._ ,..._ y n .... to eaU ........ aboat. -.--·Melt.oa W e....-to waa m -*I ..-ll'ffDI· • beattM~lot&nmc. ln aad oat ol llatpe IO rm IVft' WIMT u...-. chiltaa ''• .... ·t aJoae .. oweHr. rHtb too eoeeentd." ..... ee.M., .... ~..,.\-.... v ...... be .............. Venle WM a NRlt al .....i lH ..,...._, A•J Alritt ud DONNA C&fONI ( ll-oYtr~ facton. Pint, t.Mre waa tbe 1•'"1a lrtta, Jut to aame a JM>: ''TIU wu • Mr'" wllld. 1' ftw, hid flldlbed wttb.UM wont < ... GaSIN, P•CI> ' . I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, March 301 1981 Knight didn't appreciate the label 'Tiger Bait' From AP Dlapatcltel PHJLADELPHJA -Indiana Coach Bobby m Knight, stirred to anger when 1 fan from Louisiana State University ihouted an ob&cenlty at hJm, shoved the the man a1ainst a wall In a motel Saturday night. Knight explained the Incident Sunday and said he had no re ret.s no a loaies and would do the same thine in the same situation again. Knight appeared at a news conference and said he wanted to set the record straight about the shoving incident with the man identified as Louis BonnecHe Jr , a certified aoccountant from Baton Rouge, La. "We didn't trade shoves. I did the shoving," said Knight. "And we didn't trade insults. He did the insulting." As Knight described the incident, here is what happened: He was walking into the lounge of the Cherry Hill Inn in New Jersey, across the river from Philadelphia, with four or rive other persons about 7 p.m . Saturday when a man .. dressed in purple and gold" ap- proached him. "The LSU fans had been yelling, ·Tiger Bait, Tiger Bait, Here Comes Tiger Bait.' to the players, .. said Knight. .. Well. he comes up and says, 'Congratulations.' and I turned around and said, 'We weren't really tiger bait after all, were we?' "The guy turned around and shouted, · .. .' .. I walked over to him. I walked swiftly over to him and as ked him, ·would you like to say again what you just did?· .. He s aid, 'I just gave you a compliment and you were sarcastic.' l said 'l wasn't sarcastic,' and he said, 'Well. you're an ... · "So l grabbed him and shoved him up against the wall and then walked away And if that means I've done something wrong, so be it. "Ir it happens again tomorrow, {'II be wrong again tomorrow ... ..------''""',. flf llw dafl -----.... Maybe next year we should drop one fashion feature and do a photo series on caJlouses. Maybe we can in· teresl Mack lruck , Caterpillar Tractor and Bull Durham." Goller J a n Stepbenson, who recently posed in the official LPGA magazine in a series of photos showing her in a revealing gown, reacting angrily lo her tour.mates who did not see eye·to-eye on the idea. ~ •• ,,,, ••rp••.a &peftto'• .. r1c Wayne Gretsky assis ted on three goals to ~ establish a NHL scoring record for a single season ' and tie the all·time league record for ass ists in a season as he helped Edmonton beat Pittsburgh. 5·2, to highlight action Sunday. Gretsky's first assist, for his 153rd point of the season, broke the single·season record set by Boston's P hil Esposito or 152 in the 1970·71 season . Elsewhere. J acques Richard scored his 49th and SOth goals of the season and Quebec goaltender Daniel Bouchard stopped 18 shots in h<1nding Montreal its first shutout of the season as the Nord1ques blanked the Canadiens, 4·0 ... Reg Ker r's 40·foot s lapshot past Detroit goalie Larry Lozinski midway in the third period ga ve Chicago a 4-3 triumph over the R~ Wings P aul Holmgren scored twice as Philadelphia whipped Hartford. 4 I Mike Rossy's 68th goal of the season hfted the New York Islanders to a 4·3 win over Washington Rook 1e Paul Gagne scored with 3: 24 to play to give Colorado a narrow 2·1 edge over Winnipeg . . Short- handed goals by Mike Polich and Tom \'ounghans s parked Minnesota to a 4·2 victory over Vancouver. Dod_.r• batter E%JHJ• for 19 r-• VERO BEACH, Fla Pedro Guerrero Iii homered, doubled and drove in five runs to lead an 18-hit Los Angeles attack Sonday as the Dodgers pounded the Montreal Expos 19·5 in exhibition baseball. Steve Garvey knocked in three runs and Dave Lopes had three singles and was on base five times as the Dodgers post- ed their biggest victory of the exhibition season. Montrea l scored three runs in the first inning against Jerry Reuss, but the Dodgers paraded 12 batters to the plate in the fourth inning. scoring nine runs on six hits . The Los Angeles rally was aided by two of Montreal's five errors . The Dodgers scored two unearned runs in sixth and eight more in the seventh, two on Joe Ferji?uson's first homer of tbe spring. Former University High and Saddleback College star Tim Wallach homered for the Expos. lefe •• • Ce.r u 61••1• ... Mike h ie collected three bits for tbe second Iii consecutive same aad powered San Fr1ncl1co to a S-3 victory ovu 1111 ... aulcH to bitbli~ht exhibition baseball acUon Sunday One of lvle 1 hlta waa a 400·foot solo home run In the fifth lnnina . . . Elsewhere. Bmelcy Dea&'• three.run homer and .Job•1 Oate1'1 solo shot helped the New York Yanicees to a M victory over the world champion Phllad•lphia Phillies ... Jolul Steanas contributed three of New York's 16 hits and knocked 1n rour runs as the Meta belted Minnesota. 13-3 ... Uoyd Moteb)' doubled lo drive in one run and scored one as Toronto scored a narrow 3·2 decis ion over St. Louis . , . Mike Eaaler belted two home runs, lnclud· Ing a two.run shot In the bottom of the ninth inning to give Pittsburgh a 9·8 win over Kansais City ... Wayae Groat drove ln three runs. includina the aame·wlnner in the 10th inning, and aob Plcdolo had five hits as Oakland edged the Chicago Cubs, 7·6 ... Gar ry Hanc~k drilled a homer and a 1ln1te and Glenn Hoffman lined three hits as Boston dumped the Chicago White Sox , 9·5 ... Pinch-hitter Larr y LltUeton's two·run single In the eighth inning snapped a tie and enabled Cleveland lo beat Seattle, 10-7 .. Rookie pitchers Howard Balley and Jerry Ujdu r scattered nine hits as Detroit whipped Cincinnati, 4·1 ... Rookie Tommy Harper hit a grand-s lam home run and Bob Horaer and Dale Mu rphy added homers to lead Atlanta to an 8·4 win over Baltimore . . Rookie second baseman Mike Rich ardt had three hits and three runs batted in to lead Texas to a 9.3 decision over Houston. Geft,i11~ Sa11 A .. , .... rip B• .. t•11 San Antonio ended regular-season play by -m routing Houston, 135-109, behind a game-high 30 points from Geor1e Ger vin, who finished his fourth consecutive season with more than 2,000 point.s ... Elsewhere on the final day of NBA action, Boston outran speedy Philadelphia early and, with Larry Bird and Robert P aris h scoring 24 points each, held on for a 98-94 victory that gave the Celtics the Atlantic Division title and a playoff bye Both learns ended the regular season with the NBA's best record, 62·20. They also were lied in head-to-head competition, 3.3, and in their record against Eastern Con- ference opponents, 42·16. But Boston claimed the crown with a better division record, 19·5 to 15-9 . . . Kevin Porter scored 27 1':>ints and handed off 18 assists. leading Washington to a 138-103 victory over Cleveland ... R ay WU Uams scor ed 19 points to lead the playoff-bound New ouvu• York Knicks to a 103·95 win over New Jersey ... Guard Walter Davis and reserve forward .Joel Kramer led a bahnced Phoenix attack with 16 points apiece as the Suns ran away from Utah, 105·90 ... Scott Wedman scored a game·high 27 points to Lift Kansas City to a 113· 104 victory over Dallas and a berth in the NBA playoffs for the third year in a row ... Billy Ray Bates scored a career·high 40 points lo lead Portland to its fourth straight win, a 144· 129 decis ion over San Diego .. Sidney Monuelf scored five points in the last 29 seconds of an overtime period lo give Milwaukee a 132·128 win over Atlanta ... Ricky Sobers and Artis Gilmore each scored in the final 42 seconds, giving Chicago a 101·97 triumph over Indiana . . Seattle's J ames Bailey had eight of his 24 points in the fourth quarter to pace the SuperSonics to a 96·92 win over Golden State Dodger•get~alldf'ftltcri•frafk ORLANDO, Fla. -The Minnesota Twins lo· Iii day traded center fielder Ken Landreaux to the Los Angeles Dodgers for third baseman Mickey Hatcher. first baseman Ke lly Snider and left. hander pitcher Mall Reeves. Hatcher, 26, batted .226 with the Dodgers last year and hit .359 with Albuquerque of the Pacific Coast League last year. In 1979, Hatcher led the PCL with a .371 average. Hatcher . who also played football ror Oklahoma, will re· port to the Twms immediately. Snider and Reeves will move to the Twms· Toledo farm team. T~...,rtltli• 1-011ow1119 dre the: lop sport> !!vent"> on T v ton19nt Rd lings d i t! . · . ei<c.ellent , ... worth Wdl<.t11ng ... fair. forget 1t ~ S p.m., Cha nnel 4 ' ' ' ' NCAA BASKETBALL: 1nd1ana v ~. Norlh (drol1na . Announcers: D1c.k Enoerg, Billy Pac.ker dnd A1 Mc.Guire dobby Knight's Indiana Hoosiers (2S·91 take on Dean ~m11n ~ North Carol ma Tar Heels lor tne NCAA champ1onsn1p dnd Ordgg1ng rights lor th .: next yedr The Hoosiers dre led 1.>1 yudrd Isiah Tnomds, Wh tie the T dr Heels look for IOrWdfU Al Nood 10 orov1de their ot1en\.1ve alldCk. OTHER TELEVISION Sportsworld Heavyweights Chris McDonald 11 u1 dncl Steve Huntington l IO·IJI meet 1n d ~c hedu•t!d ~·x rouno oout taped in Atlantic City. Marv Albert and Dr. Ferdie Pacheco re.' port RADIO No event:. '>C.ht!duted TUESDAY RADIO tld!K'Odll C1nc.1nr)dl1 v~ Dooger~ di Vt!ru t;t!d(h, IJ llJ d m, KAB C 1NoJ1 Zillgitt an d Wright SPORTS BREAK I BASKETBALL I GOLF Against ROll8ton Lakers get ready for the playoffs INGLEWOOD <AP > -The Los Angeles Lakers are headed for lhe National Basketball As· sociation playoffs as the derend- ing NBA champions. Denver isn't going anywhere, but Nuggets Coach Doug Moe stlll savored his team's victory over the Lakers in the regular season finale. "We've gone 23-13 In our last 36 games," Moe said after the Nuggets downed the Lakers 148-146 in overtime Sun· day night. ·'That ranks us with the beat. We got off to a tough start." David Thompson socred 43 points as the Nuggets came from behind in regulation play and finally won in overtime as the Lakers committed two costly turnovers. Denver finished its season at 37-45. "THE GAME didn't mean anything but look how we played," said Moe. "We've gained confidence.'· However, the Lakers, who ended regular season play with a 54-28 record, seemed to have their minds more on their up- coming playoffs mini·series with Houston than on Den ver. Coach Paul Westhead rested center Kareem Abdul·Jabbar and banged-up forward Jamaal Wilkes for much of the game . "I wanted to rest Kareem and Jamaal as much as I could and play Magic <Johnson ) as much as possible, Norman <Nixon ) as much as possible and other key re se rve s and Mark Landsberger." he said. "I never s acrifice a game -I didn"t think about bringing in Kareem late in the game because l f'ro• Page CJ GREEN ... ing week for everyone After my win in last week's tournament 1 lhe Desert Inn National Pro· a m J I had a big let down. Give me a day off and 1"11 be back next week " Jo Ann Was ham · (e ighl·over par 2921 · "Fo r some reason, I can 't figure the las t three holes on this course. l came out strong today. then fell off. I can't un ders tand why either These are good, fas t gr eens . May be I rushed it a little too much . I tried talking to m yself and every thing Nothing worked. Yet l s till love this course I look forward to playing here every year for number one. the people. and number two. the sponsors They're all s uper ... Carner <seven·over·par 2911 · "I think that after playing such s hort courses up until this tournament, that a lot of the girls weren't prepared. We're used to hilling short irons This course presents a true test or your game The wind was murder. sure. but I hit some awful pulls too." Blalock ( 291J . "I have mixed e motions. I hit a bad lee shot off 10 that really affected my con· centration. I kept trying to go to the pin from there on but you c an 't force it on a course like this Yet I love this layout. If we played here all year long. I think I'd be the happiest person in the world ·· thought we could win and rest our key people.·' T HOMPSON TIED the aame in regulation at 140 with 25 seconds to play on a 20·footer from the top of the key. The Lakers played for one shot. but Magic Johnson turned Into Ken Higgs for an offensive foul with two seconds remaining and Higgs missed a 22·footer from the comer at the buzzer to send the game into overtime. Alex English, who had 28 points for the Nuggets, gave his team a 145-144 lead with a basket arter 2: 20 of the extra period. Thompson scored and then Dave Robisch converted one free throw to give Denver a four·point lead at 148·144 before J im Chones scored the Lakers' last basket. Denver didn 'l score . and then the Lakers failed to get a shot off before the 24·second clock ex· p1red. After a Robisch miss. the Lakers played for one s hot and Chones let a pass go through his legs in the final seconds Abdul·Jabbar scored only JO points in his limited appearance f'ro• Page C l KEMPER. • • na ture," Massey said .. I en1oy hitting some strong irons and you get to do that here It is one of the toughest we play I would ~ay it ra nks with the top three or four each year and this type or course happens to appeal to me." Carner. the champion in a fi ve way playoff the first year of the tournament at Mesa Verde CC. carded an even par 71 for the day to finish m a third place tie When defe nding c hampion Nancy Lopez-Me lton s tarted her round at 7 42 in the morning, she had less than 50 in her gallery. But by the end or nine holes. the us ual throng was watching her every move as she carde d a two- under par 69 and a 293 total. She finis hed in a tie for eighth with Sally Little. Kathy Pos tlewait. Cathy Heynolds and Hamlin. Little came from far back in the pack to c<1rd the lowest score of the four days. a fi ve-under par 66 This tied Lopez.Melton's tournament single round record BI a lock made the b1 ggesl c ha rge at Bradley a nd at one time pulled to within two strokes of the leader But she faltered on the back nine. soaring to a 40 arter a 32 for the first nine holes There were 13 rounds under par on Sunday, the most for any s ingle day of this year's tourna- m ent. Ano ther seven players equalled par Postlewait and Julie Stanger each had 68 behind Little's 66 with Be th Daniel s . Lopez Melton. Lundquis t , C athy Rey nolds. Hollis S tacy and Massey a ll in at 69 J oining Bradley at 70 were Therese Hession. Pat Meyers and Penny Putz with even par rounds recorded by Carner. Washam. Barb ar a M izrahie. Barbara Barrow. Kathy Martin. Ma r y Mills and Judy Kimball L DIRECT insurance agents .md brokers ~f~i~rrHE SPORTING HOUSE Q A Manufacturers: Insurance ro~h ri~1n1:' Contact us for Mmpe1111vt-(lUOll'~ on Proper I~. Liab1hl~. D1fflr ult Produri.. Liability. Com merc1al >\uto. <; roup Life and :\ledical ;i s we ll a ll Worker's ('11mpensat io n Insurance Bob Guffin 3931 Mac Arthur Boulr<r.1rd Newport Beach. C;i 92&00 (714) 7S2 90S'> What does a marathon runner have in common with a Volkswagen? LONG DISTANCE MILEAGE! ' Where Health Is a Way of Life a nd Conditioning Is a Way of Living • I WE WILL ANY ONE OF OUR MEMBERSHIPS •L.uxurkM11 LoOtr Pacltm11 tor .... a Women •Pret laby llttlng lerYlc• •la.a, lttam, Jacuzt .·t~ CltamplonlMD lacquetball Courtl •MalMUI a M...... .-UTIWI ......-r •2 IOfMI YolylMIU Courtl ........ A1roltfo oea ... •1/I 11111 J ...... Tracll •29 llltlr OfyflPIO Poot A lundeoa ·= .. ••· ...... ""'9• .,,. "'°' • ,._ .. -. (lelUIMI(. YlleylMlll) •llltalfOftf, lar A loctal LOtlftle Call 7 52-0565 for addtttonal lnfona• 3601.la•boree Rd .• Newport Buch \ Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 H/F ca ~-------------------------------------------------------------------------------. ,,-.-------------------, Budweiser Hudwe1ser beer , having conquered th_, U S market, is going over eas In a bis way. And why not? We 're now lmportln,& 99 t>rands of roreisn beer. So why s houldn'ta J.Utle Am~rtctan beer flow the other way? Anhe user-Busch , the St. Louis brewer of Budweiser, has already been shipping some beer to Japan and it's aboutto step up these exports. ll's also going to invade Europe, from whence it came 100 years ago. The com pany's brew- ery in W it liamsburg , Va .. Is loading , ,., MllTDlll IDlllWITZ •• cases of 16·oun<.'e cans for shipment to Sweden , where Budweiser will be promoted under the theme, .. All the way from the US.A "A can of Bud is expected tosellror $1.35 in Sweden. If the overseas market looks promis in ~. Anheuser-Bus ch is prepared to build plants there . ANHEUSER·BUSCH'S international push follows a sensational year in its home market. In first place here since 1957, when it displaced Schlitz. the brewer of Budweiser , Michelob. Natural Light and Bu~ch lengthened its lead in 1980. Jn f979, Anheuser -Busch brewed 46 million barrels of beer Last year it broke the 50 mill ion-barrel bar rier Jn 1979. Anheuser · Bui.ch held 26 percent of the L' S beer mark el. Last year 1t captured 28 percent In 1979, Anheuse r· Busch had revenues of S2 7 billion on which it earned $144 mil hon after taxes Last year al had revenues of SJ.3 billion on which it made a profitof$171 milljon. There are other contributors to this pot corn syrup, yeast, theme parks in Williamsburg and Tampa, the St Louis Cardin ab but bel·r ll> at the heart or this empire No t•ompany anywhere 1n !he world has ever brewed as much . IT WAS CONSIDE RED sensational a couple of years ago when Anheuser-Busch reached the point where 1t was supplying one out or four bre ws downed 1n the country. Today 1t 'son the way lo supplying one out of three In California. the biggest beer market an the nation. Anheuser· Busch 's share has mounted to nearly 50 percent So concentrated has the L' S. beer market become lhal two companies now control JUSt Clbo ut half of 1t Milwaukee's Miller Brewing, a satcll1te of tobacco giant Ph1hp Morris. ranks second in the market Miller cranked out 37 million barrels in 1980 , taking down a little over 21 per<.'ent of the business Pabst Bre wing look over third place m 1980 with salei. of 15.1 million barrels, edging out Schlitz. whose output was pegged at 15 mil hon barrels Holding down fifth place in the indu!>try 1s Colorado's Coors Nuclear mishap spurs profits WASlllNGTON <A P) The nation's worst nuclear power accident did mOrl' th~n raise public fears over atomic energy and stagger the ut1ht1es industry It pumped billion!. of dollars mto the pocke ts of those who design and build nuclear reactors anrl plants. It did so. too. at a time when the nuclear manufacturing industry was looking ahead to a significant drop in business because few nuclear reactors we re being ordered in this country and plans for others were being she I ved. It's estimated that government orders and regulations springing from the near "meltdown" at Pennsylvania's Three Ma le Is land plant two years ago could cost between S20 million and $70 millfon for each of the country's 70 operating nuclear plants. WHJLE THIS PROVIDES incom e to manufacturers of reactors. and the architects, engineers and others who build and equip nuclear plants, it does little for t he finances of an already-ailing utilities industry that faces billions of dollars an other costs res ulting from TMI And, eventually. all those costs will be passed on to the pubhc in the form of higherclectnc bills. The sequence or events that led to the accident at T MJ reactor unit 2 began JUSl a fter 4 a.m . on March 28, 1979 In the lime since, the Nuclear Regulatory Com mission has ordered dozens of changes to upgrade atomic power plan tl> TO COMBAT HUMAN ERROR, it demanded more reactor personnel a nd mor e training, much of which 1s done by reactor manufacturers . It orde red better monatonng of radiation, improved equipment, and e mergency centers separate from the r eactor control room , which became snarled at TM I as more workers moved in to prevent greater damage As the N RC worked to meet the safety concerns of an mt'reasingly nervous public, it also delayed the opening of more than a dozen atomic plants. Gold metals quotations Gold By The AsSOC!l•ted Press Selected world gold prices today London: morning fixing $529.50, off S9.25. London: afternoon fix ing $526.50, off $12.25 Paris: afternoon fixing unavailable. Frankfurt: fixing $529.99, off $18.98. Zuricb: late afternoon fixing $525.00. off SlS 00 $S28.00 as'ked. Handy & Harman: only daily quote $526.50, oH $12.25. Engelbard: only daily quote $526.50, off $12.25. E ngelbard: only dally quote fabricated $547 56. off $12. 74. -~, ... NEW YORK CAP> Spot nonfe rrous metal prices to· day: Copper 87~-92 cents a pound, U.S. destinations . Lead 34-36 centa 3 pound. Zinc 41V4·43\4 cents a pound, deUvered. Tia S'7.0415 Metals Week composite lb. AJamla•m 76 cents a pound, N. V Mercary $420.00 per Oask. PlaUaum '522.00 troy oi .• N Y. Sllvt-f' Handy & Harman. Sl2.200 per troy ounce. o,.,. ~ut OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Maroh·30, 1981 Gun aids withdrawal ASBSBORO, N.C. <AP> -The ftnt Claltolaer •bo walked lDto UM braada al t1M • ...,.,.,.. 8aM met 1'r1llt Co. Oii °":!::f clQ ~wried a IUD tled u&t tllne empio,ee;( ~ to till tbem ~91"9 n.lDI .nth • tubltultial amount al telb, poUce1Ud. PlTBU C NO'rtCS '-••-........... hC .. llMIU .... s.ec ... ~ ..... C:•ltel ...... (JIMtMI., C..ltel/ , .. , .... ., o...i• OtOU ...-.111 .... c .. lrilllllecl PVBUC NOTICE . .. ....... ~1116 '-W .4'7,JJO u~...,.,_.. ... 1 .,,,..,* ......... ,...t* .... IC~t .. ,411,tH ·---... "91' '11.41'.• Of~••.,.., .. ,,, .. ,m •• ...,... cwtllr t ............... , ............. •<-•• •IUI ... ~ Met.....,. fer W......, -.Ill DK•m-JI, '"°·,.,.....to tN 1111111t-C--"""'-' °' ttle Stet• .. CelllOtllla, fl'll'l\lllt!C " .... J. I[ ....... fllfftidllll R.C. ,..,,.,_, S.etet.rr .. u1111.-0r.,... c:.ett O.llr Piiot, MMcll JO, JI, .-11 '· 2. J. "" IS.I.ti PUBU C NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 11u. aim SYNOl"Sll 011 TMC SY~ll 011 TMC ANNUAL STATUo\ENT ANNUAL STATCMENT 011 011 Gwll lnturante Company, 010 Select lns11re11ce Compe"'· JOIS eellevlew, K-tClty, MltM>Url Mlll CIH!er $ptil\el, OallM, Teus 1J21t Y .. t ..... Oeu ....... )I, 1,_ y .. , a ... O.C........ JI, I .. Toctl adll'liti.cl auets 5112.,146,°'9 Tot at....,......,_ JA3.Jff,t2S Totel lfelHllUH 101,907,SlS Total llollOltles Jt,70'f,116 Specl•l •lll'l)lUtlUl\dt 4 Specl•l wrplutlutldt -0· Cepltal peld-up/G,..ranty Ceplt•ll Cepltel 1191°"'P/O....ranty Stelutory Oepotll S,000,000 Cai>ltal/St•tutory 0e9otlt 1,.soo.000 Gron petd-ln and Grou peld-111 •lld cOl\trlbuled JUfplu• lt.Ott.IJO t Ol\trlOuted wrplus •.IOl,2Jt U11au l9Mc1 '"""' l•urplull JS,Ul,•t2 unaulet*I ,_ f1vrplu>I ),US,•" Surplus •t r~ro• Surplu~ •• ·-m pot1cr1101ars 7•.m .sn pollcy1101c1eu 11,Ho.1• Income lor I ... y .. r U.U •. )AI lftCome fort,_ y .. r 1',lt2.'9.J Ohllur_.,,.,.u ror OllOur-.iu tor Ille yHr 71,S.t,/" Ille YHr lS,IJt,•,)A W• ll•rel>Y urtlly ,,,., .... •DO•• W• ,,_, urtlly '"•' Ille •Dove •tems ere In •«ordanc• ••Ill tlle An· llem1 are In •«ordanu wltll tlle An nual Statement tor Ille yHr ended 11ual Slolernent for Ille yH r •IWl•d December 11. 1980. made to Ille O•t•mbu JI, 1910, made to tne lnsurante Commlnloner ol Ille Stat• lnturance Commits'-• ol Ill• State ol Caltlornla, -MM>nl to law ol Cahlorlll•, --nt to taw 0 W BaM<ller, Prnldent O.W. 8.,,,,.tler. PrHkMnt JI C. Ftt11en1on. Se<retary Jl.C. F.ttwrtlon, Se<tetary Put>h•Nd Or-CN•I Dally P1101. PvllllSIWd 0r-. Coetl Dally Poot '•"" lO. JI, April I, 2, J, '"' IU).11 Muell JO. JI. "'"'II'· l , l, '"' ll2'·11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ~~~~~~~~~----- 11140 NOTICa 011 TRUITCaS $4&.a SYNOl'SIS Of' THIE ~ -T.S. .... ~ ANNUAL STATEMEN T T 0 SERVICE COMPANY et Oul' Oii eP90lntit0 Trlltl" ..-r I.,. lollowl119 Allanht Insurance C-11y, JOU de M:rl--°' lrutt WI&.&. SELL CedarSptlftQ$,0allet,T .. ull>19 AT PU8&.IC AUCTION TO THE Y•.,.•-Oe<-Jt, 1,_ HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH Tot•• admllted ••Wlt ll•,111,171 IPO •lll• •I time of .. ,. In l••fvl Totel ll•IMllll•• •.llS,Sl2 mo,.., of , ... Ul\lted SU.IHI •II rlQllt, Specl•I Wf'Pllit fund~ o title and 1111 .... 1 <onwred to and l\Ow Capital paid-up1G.,.ren1, lleld lly •t .....,., Mid Deed of Trust Ill ~~~·~s.:.~:~ l>epotlt J,000,000 ~":u;~~~":~lt:~A~~"::s COl\lrobuted SU•PI~ us ... 1 NANCY CARROLL. BENEFICIAllY U11oul9NC1 funds UurPlu\I •.•90, 111 OtVIE RSIFIEO VENTURES, INC., a Surplul H r~rd• C•lllornl• torPOrallOll. Recorded POllcylloldlerl •.JIS,St• Auguu II, IMO es l1"tr No. 2WS In Income tor Ille y .. r ),tlJ.4'7 llOOk IJIOS P•ll• 1120 ol Ollld•I Ol•t>ur...._u f0< Retorlh 111 IM ollk• of lhe Jl ecorder tlle rur S,llt.•ll ot Oref\91 County. ,..., -ol Jrull Wt nereor ur111, tll•I ,.,. •Do .. d .. crr ... u. lol-if>Q ..,_,, •tem1 are In ectorO.ntt w1111 11>e An A Condoml11lum con1l1llnQ of Ille nuat Slatement lor tr•• rur ended lollOwinQ. Oecemt>tr JI, IUO. mid• to tlle l •I Uftlt No. U In I.,. Coum1 ol Insurance CommlUIOller of Ille Sl•I• OranQll, SU.ta ol C.lllorrwe. ol lllel ,.Celllorrila.Pur""'n1101aw cer ta in Condominium project o.w B•nnlller, Presioenl d•tcrlt>ed In ll'oat <•rt•l11 Con R C. Fetnerl!Oll. Se<retar1 clomlnlum Plan recoroeo In 110011 101't0 Publl•Nd Oref\9e Coos! O•llr Pilot, POO• tot, Ofll<l•I Recoron, 1., ,.,. of her Marero JO. JI. April I. 2. J. 1'181 I UI •• ot 11\e ,_,1y recor-of OranQll '°"" ty llu<.11 -belllQ llertlNlter re t•rr•O to •1 t"• Conoomln1um DEATH NOTICES ALDRICH ST EPHEN MIC HAEL ALDRICH. passed away on March 28, 1961 He 1s sur vived by his parents R ichard and Georgette Aldrich of Tustin. Ca . sis ter Carolyn, brother Philip and sister Jackie Aldrich all of Tustin. Ca . aunt Margollte ~u1k1n1 or Franc e Graveside services will be held on Tuesday, March Jl. 1981 al 11 OOAM al Harbor Lawn-Mount Ohve Memorial Park Services under the direction of Harbor Lawn :\1ount Olive Mortuarv of Costa ~1esa ~0-55!>4 • MILLER Pl an .. ), -•• delllled In tllel certeln Oecteretlon ol CoWftenll. C-lllOlll and Restrictl011s for Newport Crttl Homeowne" Auoclatlon, retordeo In book 10)41, pege m. Ofllc lOI Record• 01 Ora"9e Coul\IJ -In Amendment recorded 111 -tm.t, ,,._. 4'1. 01 11<1•1 Reawdl, -.,,..._"' re corded •n -107'1, ,,._. Sit. Olflcl•I Jlec0<d\ !"'Ille Oe<leretl011··1 and Ille Oecleratlon °' Alllleu llon for 1..01 l of Traci No. 7111 II.,. Oe<"'retJOI\ ot An· nuellonl. recorded Oclol»< II, 1971 In -10:111. pege ~. Ollltlel Recordt, In int office of IN c ...... 1, Recorder ot Orange C-.IJ. 1111 An ..,,.,Mded ll•SI!\ lntffetl In •"41 to t.,. c~ er• H deflfted In Ille OeclMetlOn -111 ,.,. Oe<l•nllon ol Anneutlon belnQ 1..01 J ol Trecl No. 7117, ••per mep ruor-In llOOll JOe, pages lJ and 3' ol Mitct ll•MOUl Mapt, m Ille olflce ol Ille County Jletorde< ol Mid 0r•"9e COIHll?. let Eaclull .. utemenll -..r .. Mnl lo Mid Unit No u. •II H ,,.,.,... 1pec111celly dellneo In Ill• Con domlnl""' ""°" -Ille Oe<leretlon IOI A ,_..ICClullw •• _....., 10 UM Ille CO""'-arN -le<lltllH of Ille protect wlllcll 11e .. lilJHft or will be de· •••-""Iha 1011-1n11 OHcribed rHI properly. 111 &.ol I ol Trec:t No 11$2. H per mep re<..,_ In llOOll Jin. 1>999• I IO• 1nc11nlw, MIK.ell•-~. •K ord•ol0r...,.c-1,Celllor-Ne. EXCEPTING THEREF JIOM t11el portlOll ol lond lflcl-tfllllln Percel I H ·-Oft. mep rKOf'Oed In Dook o , page :i. °' Parcel ""41..s, in IN of· lice of IN C-ty Recordler ol Or-County, Celllo..,1le. 111 l.OC• I, 2-. of Tree:! No. 1111, C a . h 1 s p a t e r n a I .. per ,..... rKor-In llOOll a . lleQllt grandmother Viola Miller of U a11d l4, MIK.elleneou1 ~ rec. Le· W Id L · onhotOrMOtc:-.tr,C•llforllle R OBERT COLEMA N MILLER 1COL.E 1. age 31. resident or Santa Monica. Ca Beloved son of Robert and Jean Miller died al Hoag Memorial Hospital on Thursday. March :!ii. 1981 He is s urvive d by his parents or Corona del Mar. 1s ure o r . aguna !EXCEPTI NG THIEltEFJIOM Hills. Ca . and his daughter 11ow••er • .,,, -•II aoc1.n1 ........ Orisina of San Luis Obis po. menu appurtenent 10 ell Co11 Ca . Family services have dom1111um u11111, u ceptlnQ .. id unit b I No. 6J, now or .,.rulter referred to In een he d and burial at sea 111e o.c1ere11on w 111e 0e<:1aret1011, .. conducted by lhe Neptune emellded. Society In heu Of flowers EXCEPT THER&FROM ell 011, Qn , C 0 n t r i but ·1 0 n 5 t 0 t h e m1t1ertll and otller llydrocarllOflt, , below • de9lfl of JOO '"'· wlthovt ,.,. l.:ltrasound Fund. Hoag r10111 .. -'•• e11trr, et ,....,..,..,'" Memorial Hospital would be lnllrumentsofrecons. · t"" Tiie ...-rty •bow clttcrlbed doe• apprec1a "" not ..... • strMt -••n or comm°" dulol'Allon. OlrKllOM wlllcle111 to lo<•I• ttle pr-rty may ... of>IOIMd by •ullmllll119 • ... 111 ... ,_, w1111111 PA~YllW ...,....,Ml Cemllef'V Mortuary Chapel 3500 PK1fic View Drive Newpart Beach 644-2700 ~wonuu•s L11Quna Beech 494,9415 Laauna t4illa 76&-0933 San "'-1 Qaplatrano 496-1ne HAMGe LAWN-WY, OUYI Mortuwv • Cematery CrematC>fY 1825 Gisler Ave., CO.ta~ ~5554 ,..c1•cmms 1&&.•0UWAT MOllTUAIT 110 Btoedwey CO.ta.,.._ &42-9150 IMiTiiiii110tt 1Mr1MIMM&. -nw.r1~ Cotta~ ~71 ten 11o.,1 lram ,.. lint ll&Alll<•llon ot llllt notlee lo ,.,. benelk .. ry ·-"•!"• and addtlM II ; OIVEJISIFIEO Vl!NTURES, INC, 1200 Mell\ Strett. • 'I00,5MlteAN, Celltwn1at1101. ·«II • 1treet .-. ... Of' common Cle•· l1111a11on It •--·· llO warreioty It given et to 111 t-'9t-H or COf'· rectMU) ... Tiie bel\efkl.,., ullller u td Deed of Tnat, llY •••114111 of breecll or defewll In Ille e11119etlon1 wcwred 111ere11y, IWAtOlwe tuculed...., *" 11 .. red w Ille 111\dtrMlfted a written O.cleratlon ol o.f1111lt -o.t!IMd fOf' Sele, end wrfltt<\ 11Dllce of IWHCll end of elKllon to ceu1• Ill• wn· itfllQMCI to NII H id propertr to MllJly -., .. t._ .,., IN•Mfler Ille 111\def ...... c-M id llOtlc.e Of Ol'HCll -°' •lec:UM " tie recor ... Oe<emllff 4, IMO ff lnttr. Ne. 1141 111 boM , .. , P89t .... ot Mlf Otlklat Rocwf-. '8141 Mfe Wiii 111 •-, llUI •II~ cov•11-w werrenwf 8'H'•H or lm-plled, r~ mi-. ,.._"'°"· or Hltumllr-ft, i. ,., ,,. rt!Nllnlftt prlMlpel lll'ft f/f lllt -1•1 t«,,. .. by Ml4 0.. ff fNtl, Wllll f"'Orell .. In told not•,,.. ........... _ ... If.,,,, ,,_, "" tlffM fl MW Owf ef Trwt. ..... ( ........... ·~· .. ""' Trwleo -.. IN lrvt• <r..._. ay .. ,.~"''"''·· kif .... wfll ......... ,.,..,, ""'" 7, ttll et 11:• e.m., et U. tfflcie ol T.O. lon k• ~J. leftlt OI T .. tf, ..... lllf, OM City ....._._.,.. .... Onllel. Cli ........ . At 111e II-flf Ille ,.,., ... ,._keta... tf W.natko, ............... .. ""'''· .. ,_ ., tllO ...... 119'1 *"'" .... Mew tliN(( ........ .. ., ................. _ .... ......... lllld..._..11 ..... ... , • ..,... .. ~1119 ..... m•r cell ,,.., ,.,..,... De .. :~ .. "" TA..,,_ C*llN'AllY ................. , ....... _ ........ ...,_., __ .... .... -=-==-"'~ °"""' c.... Odllf ...... Mllr<llt .. n.a.1t11 ,..., • 5 6_ 7 .8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • ~tmtMI Cat Pool t..tc•JNGt1rn .............. Pn.oft.alt• Sot1alt.•h,.-.• Trtwrl• SEIYICES ~lft:Du"1orr EMPLonmn & rtEPAIATION »~ .. IMlr.wuon JobWJUUM• lfflp 'ti,.._.., M 6 r MCICHANDISE APlttqlH't All!*_ .. """-::t:.= .. •l"' .,. Canwru A. t:qu.pm.-AI ""' Doc• l'h• lo v ... l'\iirNhW9 c ..... Sol< --~ ,.. .. ,., l.1..-nlod MM~IW1')' lil*'f'll•"""*.t ih.tttll~ "•nt•d Muw•l lntlrunwnu. Of'hrt furn 6 t-"1•P ..... :..-:~~c~:. ~ .. a... SlGtt R.Ht..w-aM 8.ar ~r ..... M1f1 SitHM IOATS & MAllNE EQVIPMEJIT u,. ... ,., A.nttclWft l'l•Ulh Aett••IKM Vtth1t•tt s,on, ... , ... oa_, 4WftffiUn"et Ttwk.I v-:::::.~~~ .. o \ AllTOS, IMPOnrD Cenrrrel A.U• lt.otnto """' . 4'°u" 1'4•1•> •MW C:•,ptt ~ o ....... .. .,,._,. .t'1.W -· J .. , ..... JitnHQ K .. rm.nnUfu• .._.,.,.. .. M••df M•rt"1ttlf~ """"' Mil MCll O!Nt ..... , .. P • ...., .... Pont"• "" ..... It flollt MO); t ftO\ff 5H b ..... $.ttw.ru TO)'Gla Tnu.Mpfli v ......... . Yoho O""t•I UTtS, ltfW -·-,., ..It ·-... 1• ·-... . .. .... I .. ... 1• I"' ·-IA ,.,. ·-, .. IOM IOM ... 1• Ult IJilO ·-... J• 1100 •• ... , -, .. ---JM --ZM -- ~ . .. •I> -IUD -11)1') -111<$ ---~ --'> -.., Ml llOID -IOl1 -.., ---- <IOID -----"'" -- 9110 11ao 11:111 ,.. ... ,.. 111' ••• - .... Ml -••• ••• •n --... = -----Rn -., -_, --:r. OBITUARIES The marketplace on the Orange Coast .. :642 -5678 , ............... : All r e al e eta t e a d · v ert la ed l n tb h newepaJ* It eubjet't to the Federal Fair Houa· lq Act ~ 1111 which malt.. It Ulepl to ad· vertlaf "any pre(ereo~. li mitation, o r d i•· crlmlnaUoa bH ed on race, color, re llclon, aex, or naUonal orl1ln, or an lnt.entloo to make any aucb prefe rence, llm ltatlon , or d i•· crlminaUoo. '' Thi.a newapaper will not know inf ly accept an y ad ve r t 1ln1 for r eal eatate which la In viola- tion of the law. BltOIS: Ad¥f'rt1Mn tt.o.lclct.ckte..irech cMllymd=er-,..,.. l••m~. n.. DAILY PILOT ••-11 • ...., far .... first lacorr ect h•Hrtloa .. ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• iooi • ....., 1002 ....................... ···~·················· \\I :·,1 ~ ·, ·~ TAYLOR CO. I\ I . :\ I . , f 11 : ~. . I 11 • I. I : , · l 1; HAllOI VllW HIU.S S471,000 Lo v e l y S Bdrm , 2 -s t ory "Hills bo rough " ho me for large family. Pvt rear yard w/pool, huge patio &: tall trees. Inviting 2·sty lge entrance h a ll w /vaulted ceiling , spacious liv. rm., formal din. rm & ram. rm. Sundeck off master bdrm, 2 fireplcs. 3-car garage. Inchld~ land. 7 WISLEY H. TAYLOI CO .. UALTOltS 2111 S•J~ ... llMd HIWPORT CIHTEI, M.I. 644-49 I 0 EASTSIDE SI 12,000 Lovely 2 Bdrm, 1 % bath condo in Eastalde COtlta PHm••Poa..t 1751 PlcnacW Sw HCMtMt far 5de Mesa with double car gar age. Owne r a n x-;,;.:::::: ••••• ••••• •10••0•2• ious-wilJ help finance! 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, frplc . Free & clear. Owner will carry 11l. Priced at S310,000. .._...._ Take advantage! Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·7111 associated ASSUM! l 'IJO/o LH. ·~Rl!~·~~l!la Only 1113,500 for this 3 i.Jta:?m-~·!.!I :::lr:d c~f"!~~ 7/~i~ r:f.=itiillf® B II fl ... f R S II E l\L T 0 RS ltJ]', W liult;.--,o I:.' I lbb, trees. Call now 979-5370. ,,. -•---·-PRIDE OF MESA VERDE ALLSTATE REALTORS 2 UNITS $94,900 OCEAHRtONT 2 Bdrms. 2 ba, unfum . New. S850yrly. IAYFtlOHT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unrurn Mint cond. S8SO yrly. CHAHHB. FRONT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum. $750 yrly. associated BRO~ E llS II[ Al TORS l !/','l/w 8u 1h<o~?'I A61 Thia beautilul home ex· em plifys Mesa Verde. The q uiet cul de sac location and the family oriented floor plan allow th e home owne r the maxim um enjoyment of this best or all Costa Mesa communities . There's even a play house. Call 752-1700 Super invest ment! Two 2-Bdrm units, one with firep lace! Current in· come-S740 mo. Financ- ing! 1 yr home protec· lion p lan included . Hur ry. this won 'l last. 646.1111 l~~~~~~~~I THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATERS COSTA MESA 5 IR-$125,500 OWHB SAYS SEU Not an add-on or con- venion . A real 5 Bdrm family home In one or Costa Mesa's n icest areas. Handymans de- Ught. Call now and save! CD SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 '4·63 '·6990 SI 08,500 REMODELED Cost a Mesa 3 Bdrm, pride of ownenth.ip beau· ly on tree-lined street. Compl w /hol tub! Total· ly remodeled; vaulted open b eamed clgs , skylights, lots of glass. Huge cover ed patio w/buillin BBQ. A rare f i nd -cal l to see ! 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS WESTCUFF VAC AHT Re d uced $25 ,000. Deaperate owner says b r inf all offers. No quali yin1. Low down. • Bdrm sin1le story home, totally upgraded. Call for m ore details. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 14-63 1:6990 - FIXER! s 10,500 To tal c aah needed to clote escrow oo this ' Bdrm, den, 3 bath, fa m i- ly room, fireplace, patio, hu1e p rd. "A Han· dyman • Special". Only $175,000. Call 111 today for an appotntmenl for detaU. on um revolu· tlonar y new pro1ram call•d T.l .C.K.E .T. 54&-2Sll THE REAL ESTATE RS Y•H-W0,100 Tb .. lwmai.Wed b9ckba.)' home bal • IJUt view ol the mouohlne and baUNJ ..... I Bdrmt • ctn, famU, room, pool It 1pa are •om• of the teaturff. Tbe ma•ter •ult. llu ••ulMd celJ. ' 1a,.l caatom Ult wort hi tbe u.Ul and. baieoQ. Owner wUl eOD11der laqe -.I T.D. wtlll IK ..... OLDIE BUT GOODIE Older home in Laguna . l Bdrm, centrally located. Wa lking dist ance t o beach and s ho pping . New coppe.r pipes, roof and wood fence. Owne r very m otivat ed, will carry financing. Call 752·1700 THE REAL ESTATERS OCEANRONT Choice corner duplex 3 bd rm, 2 bath u p . 2 Bdrm, 2 bath down. Can con vert to a larger home. SELLER WILL H ELP F rNANCE ' $895,000! lal>oo lay Prop. RHlton •675-7060• NO DOWN VA 3 Bdrm. dining room. 150() sq.ft. of living area. No d own VA. S93,950 Call now. s..6-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS LohofC....... i n this lovely l ree· shaded bungalow on ex· tra large lot. 3 Bdrm. b eam ceili n gs , worke ho . 189,500. LIDOISLI OPIH SUH 1·5 214 VIA ITHACA Newly remodeled traditional 3 bdrm, 2 '"bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Best in price at $420,000. NHIHSULA POINT llACHFtlONT Panoramic vie w at wedge, from prime large lot , 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home, 3700 sq. rt. featuring marine r oom, entry, living room , dining room, built-ins , et c. $1,385,000. ltAHCHO M~E Springs Condo, 9th fairway. 3000 sq.ft. 3 B<;lrm , 3 bath, furn. Golf clb. mbrsbp. Trade for beach invest. prop. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR I ! ' " .. y .. t I" • "J !\ Ii/', (,\ b 1 R£S10CN11Al ~r Al FS!A![ Sf~\llC£S HOMI + •UIST APM'TM9« On the BALBOA PENINSULA this well located 3 bedroom 2 bath home with 2 fireplaces & apectacula.-ntsht view b u a bonus In a quaint 2 Bedroom l bath a u.est Apt. $400,000 ....... ,.,. s. HeeM.,.,.,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cs ... , .. 1002 Gt•r• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CllCK & COMPARE TllSE FEATURES 90% ANAtl:HI 123,4% INTER. r HARBOR AREA LOCATION I SIZE-1~ SQ. FT. I MICRO OVEN I ALL SHOPPING \.\BLOCK I CO MPACTOR I AIR CONDITIONING I DISHWASHER I CEMENT DRIVES I DBL GARAGE {WALK JN CLOSE.18 W/OPENER - WARD INVISTMBn' INC. SALIS OfllllCIC7 14J6J l ..... 1 JIO w. w... St. 642-2"0 C.... ..... c.lf. REALTORS 675-5511 LOVB. Y "E" PLAN. Mo.t populcr MOdel HU built In th• llufft: Situated H tpKtocular greanlMtt with .....taln v5-w. l ldr, F.R. lot buy In th. ana at $252,900. COLE OF NIWrOIT llAL TOii 2 5 1 5 E. Coast Hwy., Corona dal Mar 675-5111 NEWPORT LOCATION-POOL Totally up9r aded and cllar •in9ly dtcoraffd 9'0fM, CloH to tchooh cmd WlpplftCJ. Witt. l bet. + .... thh llolM off•rt n•utral carp•h. Mlrrond wm cit ob.1, t..ohd pooa, decJ&s, CGppff ..... lnCJ and 111any ott.r ....UtlH . OwMt-wlll a11i1t ht flnwiMJ. S 192,500. W ATERFRONT HOMES, IN< RI Al I ~TATI "'-·I• "<••'1 f 1npoll "'· .,. t • 315 Marine Ave Balboa Island 673-6900 CE 110111 ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEA RS OF SERVICE MESA vaoE -IEST IUY No Question, Bul What This ls One Of The Finest Buys In The Area! Lovely Four Bedroom Home On A Large Com er Lot. Completely Remodeled. Large Assumable Loan . Submit Offers. Only $145,000. H!WroRT HEIGHTS FOUR.PLO Locate d On Quiel Street Near Shopping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income . M i n i mum V a cancy F actor. Four Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans . Jnspecl With Offer. Reduced To $350,000. 75S.9100 ·--........... #2 CCMpcM .. •,,.._ H•wport C...ter ~-S T A R GAZ EKflit .. t---"-'-'-'-..-----&t (LI\) ~ l"OLLAN---...-----t J:). M y.,,,,. 0..11 .A<t,.,,., ~ V AiuorJ'"" ,o ,,.. Srou To d..,•lcw m t HOQe for Tuudov. read wonk COtrt\pond•nQ 10 number\ ol VtJUf ZodlOC birth ••l)n .... ,_ , __ ·-·-•Goo '" ·-· '°"' tOMay 110« 1'0o IJi;..o "°' ••C-...... ,,_ tlT'M .. _ ··-.,, .. au .... '10ood '"'"" ,, ..... ·-... 111-. ·-·-__ , JtO. »O., ,.,., ... ,....,... .. »-·-,,......_ .... _. ·-000---··~·~ .,_ .., ..... ...... .. .,, .. ... _ ., ... .. .. c.... .. _ .... '"• "'°" .,, .... ....... __ .,_ "'°" .... .. -., .... t1W~ff' .,_ a or .. -. ..... ·-., '• ·-·-IOc...t ... "'~·· ,,,_ ,,_ ··-""' ,._ ,,_ ,._ .. -. ·-.,.,. ·-lilt 1M"-·-·-.,_ . ·-·-·-JO• C)Nc~1n• ':~::'I' S~\\ctl~-Jlf..trs· ... ... ------.._. ... QAY L "*Alll ------ •r:=~ ~.~ low IO ,_ tW< 11,,.ie _.. Y AMD AL I I' I I I I SCUlH ~ I I r I I ~[H MA . I I' I I Orange Coaat DAIL V PfLOT/Mond8y. March 30, 1981 -!11111-----••lw~l .. l.,w ...,_ C• ... /C11ar• ._atrk.. H..._•. H....c..... ....... P•Wlilt/'•••lll!t P.O.lexl1 t• Sii.Jiii ·······················•······················ ......................... -;;;:; •........................................................................................................... . ,. l'ound1U•u1.Ret1inJn1 ELECTRJClAN-prlced QUALITY REAS COST. HOUSElCLl:.ANINO ABC MOVING, Exper PAINTl NG ·h>tlcxt. Po.t aorOCA1.r1'(111 Sllrf'lll BUR 1 LA Walla, HW.aot Ratofl· "rt1ht. free eatim•t• OD GEN INT/EX'T lNSTL lSOURBUSlNf.SSI prof, low r1tea, qulclc rr .... t.Lowpricn. Newpert 149 Ht17 iru.w. tJon, Slaba, Patios, la.r1eoumaJIJobll. PLUMBINO BIO J1nlct'•JlaaedyAnn. c1refultervice.m -ouo 544·1IOl(4-LOpm) ·:z;;:; S Blotlr 6 Brlck. Llc'd. Lie. '318121 1575-0358 SMALL CHET833-'833 ' 1575-ZIL4 leoflltt 1 1J1..... AJ1rm12S,,olfl4$-SQI 842.._,ev•/MC).3835 THE "MOVlN-MAN" is ,..... ••••••••••••••••••••~• Tbu'iALLy~y Electrician Sm. Jobs, H1ndym1n-re 1lr1 , HOUSECLEANlNOby Cueful, coW'teoua fr ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALJTYROOPING. Ion c..,..... REii OVAL: concr ete, miint. • repairs. Uc. cupeotry, plu blDI. Japanete lady. Exp'd, •Chup. Pleau c•ll Wood, brick, concrete. AJ1type1, treeest:...1.... •da d •••••••••••••••••••••• upb, 1radlal, lot cltan· tmtot..ClO. S48-5203 electricaJ. etc. 875-3014 dependable. 549-1029 6'2·1329 Free eat, auar work Vlaa, MC. 5'1·:191111 ln:C C1rpeotry, plumbtna & up, •••. brMlc • re-P 1780-8785 HARBOR ROOnN~ electric•l. Uc. contr•c· move. ffrlyorbld. D.G. ELECTRIC au1NMJ HownlftiMJ Pelfttlllt/P•rilMJ · •u · DAIL y tor. Oene, 6'2·1537.. s..a.u lndu../Resid./Comm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pa-T..-... New • reco¥en. Retfalr ""°' ----------iClllldC • Qualitywork,freeest. Haul,cleanup,concrete EXECUTIVE wil l Pine ext/int paintina by •••••••••••:••••••••••• t pecl1lltt/1t1y.,.,., SMVICI From the around f'P : _.. Uc . .001'3. <213)867-385'7 removal. Dump truck. hou1esit, xlnt refs, ex· Richard SJnor. Lie, ins. EXPERT PIANO tunin& prices. Rell1ble. 5'1.mll DlllCTOIY homes, doclca, t>oata, ••••••••••••••••••••••• REMODELING Qu.ickserv.642·7638 per'd.497·5407,844-1248 Tryme.631"'410(24hra) •rep1lr.MemberPTG. Tl ~ c a b l n e t 5 . LJC. CIULOCARE IMMlllB .. DO JTNOW I Remod/repalr. 875-6294 My Corona del Mu Elect.ric1I Work DUMP JOBS lncOMe Ta RALPH'S PAINTING •••••••••••••••••-,••• A .. ,_. s.dro home 87~2945 Reaid./Commercial Small Moving Job!I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie. Int/Ext. Low Ratea rt.ahr/..,... Custom Ceramic We You.rDai1¥Pil« C.,.,.ts.rtlu SJI fO/WK 631·2004 Call MIKE646-1391 TAXESAND FreeEat. 964-$S66 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New-Remodel-Repalf' Service Directory •••••• •••••••••••••••• • INVESTMENTS Neat patches le te•turea 1 Jl"l'ee ett. O.uck, .,._., Repraenutive Shampoo & steam clea11 Hot lunch. C.M. Chris· Floors Tree/shrub trim, con Tax prep, 1helten1. TOs. DAVE'S PAINTING Frff est. 193-1439 642·1671, en 311 Color brifhteners, wht tlan Preschool. 646-5423 ··~·~;:;·~~·;~~·· crete removal. clean· Mr. Leonard, 661-9343. Servin& area 9 years crpts 10 min. bleach. Ch &... .r--1_ ln t lied/ .j ed Ll ups. Free est. 557·8271 M MOllt reuooable Hall, liv.-din. rms SU; ... _,, _......~.. s a rep r · c. aSORry lnaured, lic'd. 766-7301 Aa,e.elt avg rm $7.50; couch $10; ....................... 1369260. Gre1499-216S2 HAULINGICLEANfNG ....................... ----------1 ED'S PLASTERING AU Types Jot/Ext ~-8~ FREE EST H ............. n.c.. Ceramic. New-remod, re11. rate.I. 67S.2284 •••••••••••••••••••••• chr SS. Guar. eUm. pet Newport Cleaning Serv. G_...._, Treetrim&Pamtlng BRICKWORK: Small Palntina: Comm'I. In· Drlvew1ys, parking lot odor. Crpt repair. is yrs Carpet. Up ho_ I, ••••••••~••••••••••••• or?? Ray, 964"'276 Jobs. Newport, Costa dustrial, Residential. IN'1'./EXT. plaster Tre. SerYke repairs, sealcoating. exp Do work m"selr Housecleanlna Win· Mesa , Irvine. Refs . Free Est. Low rates pa"l"t ·ch' .. 0 • ""yrsevp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sa.s A h It "•6 4871 . ~ . H d. •VERY LOW PRlCES• Haulino •·Dump J obs. 6 ... ., "" ,. • spa · '"'· Rera.531-0101 dows ardwoo llrs, L d int 1 ..... 75.3175 673-0737 Tree/S hr u b tra·m Llc'd. ----------1 631-9277 10 scape ma ·C nups Ask for Randy. ----------• Neat 545-2977 <Paull • re-G s.9-201.5 MASONRY •·TILE move, cleanups, b1ul. ......... &M&.... We Care Carpet Cleaners eorge, 641·8427 .. QUALITY PAINTERS ...._.lttg Concrete dirt, etc ''Jim -ya ... ...,. Steam clean & uphols. COftfroctor , Our Specialty We solve B i t th •/8 MIKE SLAWN CARE HAULING•· arga nra es ry.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·4530 ••••••• •••••••••••••• • W or It au a r Truck ••••••• •••••••••••• •••• .. your problems. 631·2004 Free est 848-5684 ----------Licensed child care. Nr. mount un1·t. '"~3716 Construction-All types Monthly service. Trees QUICK CLEAN-UP . Holleman Plumbing T ..J .r-1 So C P h .,....... & I a 548-2049 · Sales-Service-Repairs y,..ftC) _......,. c.e . at laza. Birt ·4 -----------1 20yrsexp. Freeest. c e oupe. Freeest. 631 0953 FRPLCS bum. refaced. WINTER RAT~ Free estimates 552_7183 •••••••••••••••••••-•· ~";:2~~~ le swing shifts.I BUY WHOLESALE Llc. 13345119. 645-5&'13 Var~ maintenance. Tree Ho..Hc~ brick/stone veneers. 30 Int.text. Pamtang Pror. Qlt)' lyping. C.aa Thru Carpet Installer. Carpentry & Additions tram & rem ova I . ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs exp. 893-37"3 Clean outs-fast service Pool SH•K., lepain transcriptions. pbent BABYSITTINGmybome Free est. Al.so carpets Repairs-SmallJobs Cleanups. Free est WantaREALLYCLEAN EXPERT BRICK & 536-9110l ••••••••••••••••••••••• diet, letters. reports Mon-Fri, days, ages 3 & IBld & repaired. Jay. Lie. 3091~ 543-2719 7S2·1349 HOUSE? CaJI Gingham Masonry. Small J'obs & Swimming Pool Service forms, resumes. term ff 1 hes 754·6550 -College Student·Exp'd. Reliable. Repairs/Acid pa pera, en\lelopes up. ot unc provided ----------1D H CLEAN-UPS/LAWN Girl. Freeest.645-5123 repairs. Frplc racings. int/ex. any job for less' Washes. Reas.557·2783 labels, disc volume H.B. area. ~109 No Steam/No Shampoo rywo M Refs. 551·4555, 760-7074 c 11 Al oc1 9371 w k M .... t . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• a i n ten an c e · Expertise housekeeping, a ex...,· or guar. a.1a Babysitter P IT, m y Stain specialist. fast DrywaUSpeciallst Landscape equi p & su pplies VERYREASONARLE 17 yrs exper. working 636-0756 house, high school stu· ~ry . Free est. Sl!HS82 Qual. & prod. New & re· Free est. 642·9907 furnished, trustworthy & Brick, block, stone, tile. Painting, int/ext. Rentals w/all makes of equip. w--------- dent O.K. Call 12 noon· UPHOL·DRAPFS·CRPT mod. lf389944. 532.5549 H d· dep 641·4970 Lic'd, bonded. our specialty. Prompt. State contractor's lie. & Htdow Cltcwkc; ·-Spm 642·5013 Cl · h Oft ymon -----B hc:Ao 2753 5.,., 9906 Seaside Painting. Greg, ins. Porch Construction ••••••••••••••••••••.•h . . eanmgatyour ome. DRYWALL-Our Ex·••••••••••••••••••••••• MRS.CLEAN MAKES IT __ o_.....,_·--~---· -536-4806 Co.673-3316 "LetTheSunahineln" Widen TIP·TOPCARPET& pertlse. We can handle HOME IMPROVEMENT GLEAM! Homes. apts, Mo•lng G Call Sunshine Window •••••••••••••••••••••• Floor Care. 960-6266 your problems. 631·2'>04 Remodeling Odd Jobs office. Carpet. 646-2240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *STEVENS P~NTl~ P.O . lox R...tah Cleaning, Ud. 548-~ llEMOOBJMG 28 979 2265 Int/ext. Free 1tem1zed ••••••••••••••••••••••• CelHfMJ Acomtk n-........ _. yrs exper . Moving ? The Starving est. Neat. quality work. Irvine/Newport ""St or-W ind o w _Ex Pe M -Resid./comm. No job •••••••~••••••••••••••• 1::11W'C1'T1C1111 ---------ROBIN'S CLEANING College Students Movmg ,.,., too lae or small. 631·2004 . . •••••·.·~··••••••••••••• Carpentry. cabinets. roof Service a thoroughly Co. has grown, Insured 546-4561 face boxes unavailable? windows, blinds, screen AcousllcCealings . Electric1an-trouble calls. repairs. plumbmg Free dean house ~0857 Rent-a . Box from & mirrors Reas. Depen Remodeling, cabinetry, +customhandtextunng repair, additions. install est. Call Answer Ad ~~~~4 .~~~d L5ie/ev~~! Painting & Papering, 11 privately·owned postal dable. Free est Gem carpentry. Quality Lac 38994-4. 532·5549 outlets. remodels ll461.642·4:.>0,24hrs. GeneralHousecleanmg 641_8427 yrsexper. service. THE MAIL S.U·0225 work, ref. Lie. Call S48·9881, 646·3854 -I Reliable.re(s .. trans -------646-1433 SUITE. 549-4733 for ------ "7·4837. Want Ads Call 642·5678 Wheeler Electric, Inc. Sell idle items 642-567~ 1 ___ -~-~10 Want Ads Call 642·5678 ClassiCied Ads 642-5678 rates/services. Want Ad Help? 642-5678 Apalt111~nfl lMfum. 1Aport1Mntl ~ hcotion Rentals 4250 Office Rental 440Cl Office R...tal 4400 lu1lne11 Rental 4450 lttslnHs/lnnst/ •••••••••••••••••••••••)••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FlaC11tce H.tlngton-.OC:h 3840 M•wport hoch 3869 Steps to bch. Jbr. home. 1617 Westcl.JH. N B Want MWPT PENINSULA For store & office space ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sleeps 4, rent wkly financial inst 7000s r. Exec offices m elegant at reasonable rates. lushtess 2 & 3 B edroo m s PARI NEWPORT 673-1633 1st noor.Agent5415032 surroundings Across 500to2700SqFt. Opport.ity SOOS 1400-1450. K.Jds OK, no ----from City Hall. All sup-MESA VERDE DR ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets please. Water COUMTllYCLUI Retttol1t0Shcre 4300 KOLLCEHTER port services available PLAZA IUSIMESS Trash Paid. Carpo rt LIVING ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT From 225 to 4750 sq ft 1525 Mesa Verde E. C.M OPPORTUNITY 964-2566 or 973-2971 Agt., Singles, 1&2 bedroom Moving ?. Avoid deposit~ Elegant executive suites 673·3002 545-4123 Make your time worth no fee. apts, & townhouses. ~ c~t bvmg 1~xpe~ses . in prestige location . OFFICE/W•REHOUS E several hundred dollars From S510 644-1900 ro essiona Y s ince With complete support SUl-L~•SE PRIME per hour Call Eric 1971. services. .._ (714 )539·1706. Adult condo, 2 br. 11,oi ba. Studio across from HOUSEMATES 714/851·0681 4 offi ces. reception. frptc. SSOO +utils, Apr. 3. beach Adults. Pool. 832-4134 warehouse w/lrg sliding WATERFRONT 968·5577 Laund. closed gar. s BEST RATE 'door, sec system, new L I h 3848 gallon view. Yrly $360, *Shared LlvlncJ • paint. new crpt. Redhill .!'!:':~ •• ~••••••••••• 640.5078 Counselors to personally in nr Bri.st.ol. Avail after RETAIL ---select your compatible 3/25/81. 1·5/yr lse. Call Wbeatch theBsurfCofrodm S800th15 San C le1Mnte 3876 rmmte to suit your NEWPORT BEACH 644-6500or700.1377 aut. 1 r. n o. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lifestyle. Shared-Living. SPACE f1°· Isl, last + sec Nr S.C. General Hosp. 8330overDrSuite31NB bOOio 4200Sq Ft 17 .. STRHT 72·3053 ______ 3br, frplc, 2ba, stove, 631 _L80_1___ Costa Mesa. 3 rm suite. •JanitoriaJService& c Pl of rkin Newly decorated 2Br, crpts. avail Apr 4· N.B. 30+ to shr 2br, 2ba UtiUUeslncluded A/ · enty pa g. 2Ba. duplex On Cliff S4SO/mo.89l·l64-4. condo, patio, (rplc, •AdjacerittoAirport t:!::!:.!~~sq:'ks..6700 Drive. Miles of white Son JYOn phone, SZ90. 64&-7332. & Restaurant Row water view. Adults, no Caplitn.o 3878 --. ---•Access to 3 Major pets. $67S. 494-7891 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Father & son Wlll share Fwys. 2b 2b h 3br dup nr bch. M or F lBdrm.NorthEnd.Walk r , 3 pent ou.se, 1 dys 642·earl eve67~5 191 833-8813 to beach. lnclds ulils. level, very neat. 14~· ---' ---- 1425. 499-1.526 ~~~~S8 art 6PM. Gloria 3 Br condo. SJC Fem pref Pool. laund rm. H.wport leach 3869 udHt 3890 Sl85+ \"J util 493·6665 ....................... ....................... ___ , Oceanfront for Winter Secur)ty apts. lbdrm & Female rmmte wanted to Rentals. Furnished & 2bdrm. ulil pd. adults, share t,.4jrent & util No unrum. Broker.675-4912. no pets. From s375. pets, non-smoker CdM 644-8377 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo _836·5506._ _ ---- rentals. VUJa Rentals. Apartmftlh Fumithd Fem non-smkr 26 yrs bch 675-4912 Broker or Unt...nist.d 3900 condo util pd S200 ----------• • •• • • • •••••••••• •• • • •• 771 4550 x 16, 963-8891 DANA POINT'S Best location. 250' Sl75 mo. util11 incl. 97>1120 Custom, executive orfice, 400 sq. rt. Pvt bath with shower. Balboa Penin. 1285 mo. 642--4623. Ofc with baths, shwr & kitchen + adJ. 16ic24 storage_~r. 548-97~ _ 1·2 Offices & Recep & Storage Prime loc Xlnt bldg services 7S2·6S50 ----- 1st TIME AVAILABLE 500-2600 Sq. Ft. NEWPOIT BEACH SPECIALTY CENTER H igh VislhHltv "mains.;;;.-.f Traffic LocaffOfl Special Leo1"9c) Own your own Wine·O· Gram business. Na· tionally acclaimed One time SJSOO investment Write : 9 Tilden Ln, Chico. Ca . 95926 (916)891·8502. START NOW -Local Amway distributor of· rers oppty for good earn- ings. You pick the hrs. we aaalst, call 548-9140 UftllMfted Pohfttial AllMw~h West Coast Distributor ca pilot secured by mer chandise. Fantastic net. Easy sell. Call Mr. Brody collect, wkdys 9 -5 ; Sun . 10 -3 , 714·973-1629 2 br. 1i,.; ba + gar, Hoag Hosp area, nu decor, open hse Sat & Sun 11·3. 42 38 Hilaria Wa y. SSOO/mo. 8»5875 SEAWIMD VILLAGE New 1&2 bdrm luxury adult aplB in 14 plans from $440, 2 bdrm from S505 + pools. tennis. waterfalls. ponds ! Gas for cooking & heating paid. From San Diego Frwy drive North on Bea ch to McFadden then West on McFadden to Seawind Village. (714 )893·5198. Mature/F to shr beaut furn 2br 212ba twnhse Npt Hgts. S2501mo. 646-7555 eve Deluxe office space for rent Ciluens Bank Building :.JI E. 17lh St. CM Contact Paige Simson of John Walsh MEAT MARKET Busy shopping center loc. in Ontario. 60% meat, 40% groceries. beer & wine. Good lease. Sl25,000. Lucille B. Scott. Bltr. 7141981-2011 lncl'tlti•n Mow _17_1_4_J6_7_§.1_6_6_2 __ 1 ln•H hneftt llSTVALUI Versailles comer pen- thouse 2 Br 2 Ba. comm pool, jac., wgt room. 1700/mo. 87S.3787 Cute 2 Br I Ba ., fireplace, garage in lov· ely Newport Heights . SSlS. 67>0349 OCIANFIONT Furn. 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 car 1arace with omce. washer Ir dryer incld. Avail. 4-1 to9-1.5. TSL MGMT. 642-1603 3 Br. 1 Ba. Steps to beach SUS. Property House. 642·3850 or 642· 1010. Oceanfront. Charming 1 br lower apt. No view. S.00 mo/yrly. One adult. no pets. 87S.3823 Lease or Lease Option. Spac. 3br condo 2i.tba. Quiet loc. $695/mo. t31·1759, 631 ·4744, 75e-9100. 2 Br. l"' Ba. Adults, DO peta. S38S. ~31J82 EHtbluff. Spac. l Br, llooms Fem to share w/same. 35·45 2 Br 2 Ba. All amenities. Mesa Verde area S275 Donna 557·5367 al'l 5 :.>PM. Rmmle wanted to shr lge condo nr S.C Plaza. Sauna, pool, Jacuzzi. Private bath. Available May 1st. 1250 + ex- 4000 penses. Call 557-3.527 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 759·0060 --------- Laguna Beach Motor Inn, -MD's facil, in HB 2,000 985 No. Pacific Coast Will share 28d 2Ba Park sq.ft. Reduced to 11200 H"'.Y· Laguna B_each. Newport $:MlO mo. furn mo. lse. Red Carpet, Daily. Weekly, Kitchen w/female ref's 64(}.8693 893-13.51 available. Low winter rates. 494·5294. Roommate wanted to shr ----------1 2 Br 2ba house in Wood- Room with refrige & br idge. Ow1l bdrm. ba. micro-wave, private Access t.o all rec. facil. bath & entrance. Steps S250/mo + utll. Call to beach. Pool le tennis 640-0770 or 552.9794 Ben. cour t . $275 . 548·5366 btwn 5·7PM. N.B. prof. man to shr his beaut. 3br. 2ba home Hotel•, Mahfs 4100 w /lndependent lady ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30-45. S325 comp!. Balbo• IM oceanfront. 760-0802 MEWPOttT CENTER Ful I Service Suites SCUTCOSTSS All you need for one monthly ree ! 640-5470 •DELUXE OfflCES * From l room up to 1000 IQ. ft. Sl.1>11 per SQ. ft. 3 rooms and up. No lease reQulred. 2172 DuPont Low winter ra~s. Daily ------1 or weekly. KJtche~tte. S90 & up. 87s.8740. Ma I e / Fem a le. pvt. Dr. Adj. Airporter Hotel. 833-3223. 9-12 SEA I.All Mom bdrm, bath rm .. House --------- privlleiea. pool, sauna, CdM Deluxe Sullea, AC. Jacuul, tennis. $295/mo. ampl pkc. uUI pd. 2855 63H601. E. Cat Hwy. 87S.tl800 Female to share lg. rum. Sm a I I off Ice : 18 2 7 h o m e by o c ea n . Weatcllff Pr. N.B. Good W u h/dryer. 11ra1e. loc. 1150 per mo. 631•0900 SJOO. C1ll •98CM pool, aundeck. Quiet •Weekly rentals now pl .. H ot are•. Adlll, DO 1vall. •198 a nd up. peta. SdO/mo. 644-•71'7 •Color TV. •Phones In room a. ---------- Opport.lty 5015 (7141979-4200 PRIME HARIOR ILVD. --------C.M. • • •• • • • • ••••••• • • • • •• • • MEWPOIT CENTER Location 2000 sq. rt LOAN SS00 or more. Dbl. Prestigious ocean view 11500/mo.' 548-1156. eves your money. Loan is r u 11 5 e r vice s u 1 t e 675.2213_ secured by unprecedenl· 200-SOOO sq. rt 644· 7180. ed 1st In film financing Commercial history. 714·957-4086 PRIME coRNER, CdM Retttoh 4475 SOLID SICUlln •2,380 sq.rt. avail, am· ••••••••••••••••••••••• XL.,.T UTUlto..11 med. for lease . high Store Space for lease. " " identity location on 1500 sq. fl. & 1260 sq. Ct. PCH_ in Huntington Beach. •ldeal medJcal, dental, F I ex i b I e t e r m s . real estate. commercial 213/596· 7:1UZ. offices. -------i •12,380 per mo. <below lftdustrial Rftlfal 4500 market l. Owner will ••••••••••••:•••••~•·• negotiate remodel. Call ~ up. 1640 lndus I/Of· Tim S loat Busin ess ~!c~; 18101 ~e®ndo Cr. Properties Brokerage p ·Hot Be · 842•2834 Co. 714-752-8011 1200 sq ft. ocean vu . Laguna Bch, 11000/mo. tease. 494·0066 t9•5Q.Ft. 4 Window olnce Suites + 2 storage areas. All 756 sq. ft for 1748.44 /mo. or 378 aq rt. for UH.90/mo O.C. Airporttrrwy !oc 833-2440. 'OILIASI MESA INDUSTRIAL -PARK - 7 11W.17th. St. CostoMna.Calf. 642-4463 1-1870 sq. ft. Unit avail. for lmmed occup1ncy. 1·2900 SQ. ft. le 1·3700 IQ. rt. unit<~ avall. April 1 11 t . ~-S l o r a f e Warehouses av1il. or lmmed. occupancy, 2000 le 2800 IQ. ft. 11t33'·34• IQ. ft. • Leuing olft«! bra. Mon thl'u Fr\. M . Sat. 10.2. Fully managed Invest· ment program dealing in single family homes in So. Calif. Earn sub- stantial returns oo your capital; with strong tax sheltering benefits. You are secured by 100% own era hip or property. yet completely free or manager burdens-call Mr. Doyle (213)277-4661. Money to Loan 5025 Morh)~ T,,.f · ••••••••••••••••••••••• D•eds 5035 Rates are DOWN ! ••• • •••••••••••••··~· •• Good money for very Mockffel Rah MS large, medium or small SINCE l.981 • 2nd T.D.'S. Interest on· lst&.2nd TI>s, S50K·Sfil + ly Fast service. BKR Owner/Non Owiier 855· 9111 SF Rs & Conclo&.. 2nd TD. 18% mt. 15/yrs fully amortized. BKR. 731-SSSO Commercial & lnduatrial PETER DOBBS 640·6016 67~3 MortgoC)H, Trvst 15 yrs to pay 2nd, 3rd Deed1 5035 TD's. Low rates, fast ••••••••••••••••••••••• personal au. Any amt. Sottt.r MtCJ. Co. Bkr, Norman, 962·4681. All types of real estate investments since 1949. AMouncet'Mtlh/ s,.c1a11u.q 1n PenoMlh/ 2ftd TDa Lost & FCMld ................. -.•... 642-2 171 545-0611 Annowtc......ts s 1 oo Widow has money for 2NO T.O.'s any size above Sl0,000. No credit ./. no pnlty For action call AGT 673-7311 anytime 2nd Trust Deed purchases arranged. For details. cat'I 960-1957 bkr ••••••••••••••••••••••• SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIS Ma lady -Crush -Henna -Deadly ;_ CANDLES The light company hu a strange way ol telHng you that your biJI is over- due. They mail you some Secured Short Term R E. _C_A_N_D_L_ES_. ----- loans-fast ~ecisi~ns on Lost & Fo...d SHO complex s1tuat1ons-be ••••••••••••••••••••••• pleasantly surprised, 1 _________ _ call 760·071.5 165,000 2nd , TD. 18%, FOUND ADS 3 /yrs . $50,000 req . Owner/Agt. 544-0333 or ARE FREE 673-6720. S275.000 2nd TD. 25% int. Cai Due 18/mo. Secured S2M .: eq u 1 t y . Owner/ Ag t. ~~~6~4~2~·~5~'7~1~~~ 544-0333 or 67U720. 1- Lost. Santa Ana le Monte TD for sale. St50,000 al Vista, CM. Male 'ut 17% int. Due 2 yrs. Sec. grey w/blk stri~.es. by $350,000. N~wporl REWARD64.H604 Beach home with Sr. • loanofS68,000. 768-0454 Lost. Cream fem: .. ,cat Wattt 21-220/o Yield? On your T.D.'s Notes SSRaiaers-lnvestor.sSS Call Dennison Assoc. 67~7314 GARAGE SALE ads ln the Daily Pilot brmg happy results. To place your drawine c1r d, phone M2·5678 today! .. w/darker merkiots. White paws. Shorttltffs vici n ity, CdM . REWARD. 766«157 Lost: 3/26, male White Toy Poodle, v.ic TeWiokle Park. ~..M. 7!11·8727. ' Lost : 3 mos . <Ol d Leesh und puppy . .Jled coll1r. Vic : ff1l"bor HJah . Loved family doa . Rewar d. e•S·8511HOr 675·8145 Found : h1dlea' wth, 3/27, vie . Lak 6 v/Ad1m1, Hunt. ch. 538·717• 3 Found Bl1ek W.f,m Poo d le•. V . E u clld /Edl n •r. T7S..0075 Dix cGIKlo2br2ba 2cr 11r 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. •Free Room /Board* trplc pool 2131431-4756 Ml-7645. Fem non-smkr prefen alUorwknda 11me ln exchan1e for · Bachelor Room. 2308 W. htkPI fl b1by1htln1. t:. Blufh Condo, 4Br, Oceanfront . Newport 752-20n, 01.-:1 lB•. 1uncll. pool, '90IJ BelCb. ---------~1 mo. 145·1474 , (2U) Kltcben&Bath * * * M1·4te0 taO mo+ MCUrlty dep. I 0,000 Sq. Ft. SIN&LE USER OFFICE BLDG. . Approxim•~ly 2000 .Sq Ft Prime Space, Ground Floor Fuhion lll1nd, Corpora~ Pin• Area. $3500 Pr Mo. • Year Le1ae + Option. Call 751-9100. Broiler l••H• ._... 4450 8000 sq ft w/2 lo1dln1 doors. 4'b1. ZF sq ft, Irv ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS&-0330 A U 4/1 Newport Be1ch, 11.25 •re•. · vi sq. ft. New dh otfice or 1700 IQ ft office + reull w/pvt b1th, wa.rebou.e, l"lne In· aecurlty; 1/c, IOO·UOO duatrlal. Clll ..,.1°'4 or 141. ft. $OI 31.tt St. <n••l tnqui,.. Maroel Co. 11751 to Bank or N•wport, No1e•. t57·nM. Blcre . Use ,,...,., At/ Service when placing your ad ... a Dally Piiot ad number wllt appear In. your classified ad Found German Shepherd blac lc /tan te ma1t. Germ a a a he pherd 11lv.r/blaclr ma1e . Hmlan male flame pola t. Newport Beach Anlm1l 8belttr. e.4-.,. l"oued : wblt. T01: j?pc> dlt, female, vlc. on Bro e 'd w • r.c C ..z.!.. rr.b&y ...-. .... ~. F o\I ad : C o e ka••o fem1 le . YO\ID4 • •ra1/bllc. Prlt1•t 1. Ham lltoo /Platta~a . C-talf ........... ..__..-e.t-· Duftl•• _r7_1o._4_114 _______ Reapol\alble, 91'.Dplo)'ed • _........ ...-r fem to w IUIC "BACK I It'. t Ba. Mutt.a, ao ....... ..... 4210 BA y CONDO w/prof peQ.Slll. mo. lat. "9t6 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• woman • dau1hter. tepmtt. fl'r Bolt•. D111 L1r1t 8" Bear Cabin Prtv. tum rm, bath, au, en.-. E"9 • Wtnda Pool table, coiol' TV, 2 cookJn1/lnd.ry rac. All NN061. h'plc., •1PI W. kMtlt amen. AOO/mo bacl utll. 1 Br. Yt arlf , 1a ra1e On UM betdll 2 Br. 200I No dtOOAJt, but ref'a •rt ,.n_,,...,.to beae~. w. ~ ........ <Lower ~·~--e•a tuo ao. U 4·H tt, Vait). w.-i~ or •••-------1 ""-~w---1 '~wn-:--.:--_:--:-10tlflii' ..._. 44H Ott aa V'1ew-...pac*1, ICAma, Bl I Ir. c.do .............. •••••••••• haxua.,.. J brtt tta N .. r HI.Hoa. ....,. I. Dttut pniMU lDh.8. Verum .. CGDClo, 111 J.H &o 1.11. "W'11" • ,., 111.ft. r... w a ...... a.1tr10.lfT·lllf --1 Cerpet.•1111 405 Fwy /Harbor Bl. COMt8CE ..... 171-911 Udo Cannery arH). Coop lnvlttd. 175-1339, (DJ)Ml·t'JOO • ..,.,, 4110 Pre..L11..._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lJTO Sq ft• •1 leach Stora&• WanbOuMt la 8oultvant·ff 1mtln1ton Coeta 11•• anll. for Beaclll. Ideal for rt•I tmmed. ~y. IOCIO •tat. Clfftce. •ton or' • -14.. ft.• Pll' Ml· o&Mr tui&able hwlmtu. n. O•ll Ml.._ lloo. I Private bltllit, ••a.Ila· tllnl rrt. M . Sal 10.1. bl• l•••dl•ttlf 10 Yttr ...... A&&rectlvely 9'otat • ,...... lor Niil. pciffd, 0. ..... Pm ...... to 641-4~~="' ,. ... (~.) • m.-a..-. . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call In at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ••• this service Is only $7 .so week. For more Informa- tion and to place your ad call 642-5678. ' I ~.~.~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!~! ~~~~ ••... ?~.~ ~~.!!~ ..... ?!~!~ de 0ranoe CoMt DAat.:Y PILOT/Monday. March 30, 1981 L.:ta ..... A t11tNe11.W.-. 71H ._. .... ••••••••••••••• .9~T ........... •••••••• 8l::th\13 ..... r_.,.,; wlllt• l••••• AIDB ,, "4/VYA .ue . H.t.Wmhd 7100 CLERK Part Ume to Earn bl•SS-flOOwk p0ttl· ..~T••••••••••••••••••• work In photo drlv•· ble, JOCX. commlulon. CASHBS tbru, mornlna 1hlft. _11_1-tat ______ _ •UAIDS Pull • part Umt. ,411 1re14, Unlfonnt furn'd. Atw21 or over, retlttd lhture Wom•n A\d• to c•r• lot bandJc•pped alen lady, mutt have car to accom. collaptl· ble whlcbr 9 5. *4.25 per bour. NB Loe. Ctlll ~ ....... V_. a.n PodJaa avala.ble. Dr\•Babr.S.U.lOlll. s:ao to ll:IO Varied P'NMA /GNMA loea •r d1ys. U :»1:IO rrt. • .. I Photoorreullex~p,...i-•· .................. 1 IOX ,_SONS .J'd. b11i oct ..-q'd. Apply lllCTIOMC welcome. No uper. nee. Now acteptlft1 arpUca. (at: 21a Newport Blvd .. Uooa. PU.l.llM. WU train. "-•· ... _ .. Mar -h •ss--.y I • ... ... A pp I y ; u n Ive ti • I Pllnl•• I JIO S•t. for utlremt11t pac.af n1 Hpe.rtenu ••¥••••••••••••• .. •••• bome. llual have belpfu . Wiii conaldu PRt LAW ttudeot needa lmowledll wort1o1 with tralnlos a ~ with Nr Airport at6TO ....-... •--· . _. · thru April 2nd. 8'.S-39Sll • -.-Protect.Ion Service. 122S FHt 1rowln1 lntema· w. 5th St., &ant.a An1 --------- ti on a I Co, In at•ble lntervlewhn: 9-12 & ,_.., Med~L _., TICH '' •·•·WW do aayth.la1 t lderly pel)l)&e. Mt-5'fl. •n•owo 1•.dri~. C0a1'1 ',.' c11•1 L•••L Conlldeetlal Ir ~ OVll P.f). a.. 3142, A.IRCRAF"f Dttpeuher/ Bradley. CA.SHIER/ Clu1l for re- lall 1l0,... Mutt be ex· per. Call : B•lboa Marine, Sf.9.W71, E.O.E N.8 • ...._ Receptloal1t. Htevy COLOWa&. IA.1«11 pboaea, Ute 11eentarlal RHidenllal llort111e ·cova &IRL work. 2 pc191Uona av•u-Serv1ca M/F /H •fterooona • wknda. Irvine, Ca ClULDCARE for 2~ yr I.I •• ovrcAU. * Knowledae ol at.-craft (114)'75-lll!O old &lrl. hm to 3pm dal· 8U4Tft MC/VISA helpful. Panons' Air, E.0.E. ly. WealcUff area. Call 'IRST LADY JSS~.,·~1t00~----J~~~~~~~l -a-ft ....:e p~m_. 5'1-_...;.,80'7_s;;___ Escort. Models ~~=~':~t~;!:f,8:c:;: Beau~ JOJOIA * Civil En11neer r~m. Mature Couple for 100 Nonaur1ical contour SUIDIVISION O~* 'IT'ii-i i41 * Unit.a. ~ta Mesa. Work facelift. Will train five IHGIMBS & ·»c • ~n .... A ... ...t Sunday + l weekday. career-oriented people DISIGNHS _,....~--·-~ __ c_ce_..,...._ .. _1 On call Evenlnes. Free to become make -up DRAFTSPaSON '·:·~ ' 24Hr1. 641·0180 ,.. Cetlt/CMdla ·~•l:p/MC/VIM apartment. No salary. artist& & teachers. Only Career opportunity Beautiful Adult com· ierioua-minded need ap-avail. for talented & ex- plex. &42·t907. ply. Comml$slon, with per'd. lnd1vldual with manaiement potential. well established & grow· Applications bein1 ac-Call for appt, Mrs. ing Civil Engineering cepted for full time paru Tharp,M)-2322, 960-2324 firm nr O.C Airport driver /s hop helper. . . Background In pressure Billing Clerk for water Apply in person with re-dial CRT f XI l sume to· Mr. Fuentes at Clerlu Two desk clerks wanted fot Cosla Mesa Motel Day Ii Eve shit\ a\•all WUI train as nee. Call 12 noon to 8pm. 146-7445. CLERK/TYPIST For hotel corp. Fu.lltime. Call 851·1325 <Joyce>. Companion, responsible, mature person needed to stay nights w /older woman. Pleasant sur· rounds. Laguna Beach. 494.4457 enern field bu need for Mon-Pri. ll••A a teed electronic as --------~ •em b I Y Per• o o HAtaSTYUST Part lime. 30hr1/wlil QuallricaUon1 incl. 'lyta Wanted tor Bayfront M f . For o ffice in exper . In electro Salon.f73-7438 Newport Beach. ARRO mechanical assembly, & CRT required . PCB auembly, Coll wir· HARDWARE SALES 831·4422. Ing, harnessinii . & Fulltlme/parttime AP. mechanical assembly: ply In person: Crown be able to train as-Hardware. lO'U Irvine, sem biers : organize <WeatcWf Plaza> NS manpower Ii material resources: & display HELP NllDED good leadenhlp skllls. Cooks, Buapersons Qua lified appli c ants AndHostPerson MODIUMG, Comm '11, rllms. ex traa ... SCAS needs new faces, all ages. 957·0282. OFFICE CLlllK Full time days. Account· in g, general office duties Call Bob : 770·1677. s hould contact Ray 'Full/Part lime all posi· Gilman at Scientific tlons. Apply in peraon Drilling International Mon-Fri 3-SPM Rubin E. SS7·9051, E.O.E. Lees 151 E. Coast Hwy COOK/EXP'D Fulllime 9am-Spm. Im· - med ia l e ·op P n Ing Newport Beaeh Call N.B. EMCiL9UAL Hostess/Host: 2-3 days, Exp. in QC or QA. Saale hours flexible. S3.SO to elec tro·mech . exp. start. Spaghetti Bender, helpful. En1r1 de1. MS-~l 833-3841. RfflE1tu9 SUCCIHOI FAIWlllM .. 17 l.Have you COIWdered the pitfall• of fOSD · morclal Ir residential re· at eaute? For example 17"'o INT. rates, Ions eaerowa, farml111 for ll1tln11. comp•tltlon, etc.! ftrofeMIDn .. Lmd c..,.. .... HH the answer for your 1ucce11 ln tflll. - 2 Learn to market low coat loll and acreage in So. Calif. We have 10% INT. ralea. Earn SSOK to SUOK, rint year. year, unlimited leads Ir more! ... LICeMerl~ .. ;i,. For success In 1981, ask for Mr. TeUes. 9SS·3402 & 831·8557 Real EltateSales Experienced agents are needed to work with ex ecutlve level clients Must have proven track record. You will be wo rk 1ng with pro· cle1nln1 equipme nt . . exp pre . n Robe rt Bein, William helpful. Calif. driver's beneftt.s . Hr~ 8·Spm · Frost & Associates. 1401 Cook needed for Conv Hosp. FIT, 9:30-6:00 Xlnl salary & benerils tncl ms. vacation & sick pay Apply Beverly Manor 340 Victoria, CM Salary to JOK. Top co., ---------- full bnfts, n.o ree. Grovei---------•I Employment Agency Hotel PART-T IM E-p e rson Friday Secretary. muJ1t drive, some It travel locally. dutiea ancl making appts, pay bills. shopping. nex brs SS hr + expenses. 646-9418 -ress1onal associates Our *FOXY LADY * .1.&..0UTCALL ONLY vr~A MC * 972-1131 * •• •• SPIRITUAL I)~ READINGS lVllm-lOpm. Fully Llc'd. 412-7296 or 492.9034 181S S.\ Camino Real. San ~m O• THE ·,,·< G irffriends ~· .. •ISCOITS• .,~scr.I!{~°!·' license " good driving Mon-Fn. Starting salary Q 1 record a must. S3.SO per S902/m_o. Please 1 all S:a~h St · Newport hour to s tart. Apply M_rs. Fmnegan or Mrs 1~~~~~-~~~~I 17771 Main Street, Suite R1d1way at631-l.200. r A, Irvine. SfS.8407 IOOICICllPll ARCHITECTURAL New11ort Beach Real lntermed. Draftsperson Estate Developer needs Newport Beach Office full charge bkkpr to as- W. Rylee AlA 640-2912. sume responslbiUty for multiple set or books ARCHITECT Sa l ary open Ca ll ''°fed Architect S46·9316 for interview Arcl..._C .. aln appt. -· Space,....._. lookkHpinc) Clertc Archilectural degree, Full time, exper. hetprul exp. required, excllingl but not nee. Many com NB architectural & in· pany benefits. Apply al terior desiin firm. H.D. 1660 Place ntia Ave .. & ASIOC. 640-82166 Costa Mesa Cleaning Persoo, Apart· ~ O_._E_. ____ _ ment Bldgs Full time . Costa Mesa. Newport COOK. Ptua & short or Beach area. der. Must be 18. Ex· TSL MGMT 642-1603 perience a plus. Mutt -' L y nch ·s. 311 Palm. CLERICAL Balboa P e n . Sid · 67S·lSS6. --------- 1 or the nation's all-lines COUNTER HELP ins urance companies Food Service. Busy de· has SEVERAL entry· Ii. catering Exper level clerical positions. prer .. but will train W e w i 11 tr ai n l he Feasts, 494-4772. quahried applicant that -- ~rs Now Hiring •--------•I BOOKKEEPER Visa ASS1t•LE1tS types at least 4Swpm Counter help, F IT These are challenging Kuster's Cleaners. 186 positions for the person E . 16th S48-4243. who has been out of the -------- job market for quite Doto ,rocnaincJ some lime & wishes to Operator needed for ntx· return lo work or so-I dorf /entrix systems for meone who 1s Just start ' long term assignment . AMBER formerly wath COVER GIRL 1s now !u_i t h T H E -~.....,._""tH_L_F_R_J ENDS' PHONE FUN 8AM-12PM M.C. VISA (714)~ Loe. Mission Viejo co. P IT late PM/Eves. AIR. needs Assemblers w/2 A/P . Exp_ nee Non· yrs. exp. Candidates I smkr. Tustin. 832·7300 must hive gd. manual ---------•i dext-:raty, gd. eyesight. IOOICICEIPER F/C neat an appeara~ce. & ~e-Fashion Island invest pendable. Wor:ti IS m Life ment firm. Excell op-sup~r_t medical el_ec· portunily. Exper & tronacs. Gd. ben«;f1ts. maturity req'd Call· Only responsible 714.540-0123 persons seekmg perma· ~~~~~~~--·! nent emplymt. need ap. - ing out I Ca 1l for more mfo. Tod We orfer competitive Services.979-8900 salaries &.... an xlnt - ---- benefits pael<age Call DENT AL ASSIST AMT To Charles Palomino for Corona del Mar appt 714 937 4446 644-7162 THE TR.A VELERS -- E.O E M t FIH DENT AL ASSIST. ply. CaU: Mrs. Parelli, Bright, mature person --1111111------•I Clerical ~-·-~_1a:rookhurst. G G •PM HIUSlkeeper Ftdl TIMt/h•• FILE CLERK Great JOb for student or hou1ew1re desirmg part time position F'lexible hours No expe rience ne~essary S4/hr Apply at . The Jolly Roger Inc 17042 Gillette Ave., Irv General We are seeking reliable people oriented persons. Enjoy excellent co benefits tncluding a free meal per shift. Apply in person 9AM·Noon. Mon- F'ri. Personnel. MARRIOTT HOTEL 900 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr M/F Part Tine Cow.MllMJ Y outft c.n.n Adull.'I with outstanding attractive personahta.es to spend 15 hrs per week counseling youth ages 10-lS Evenings & Weekends Available. S7S per wk Call 2:30·S:30pm. Mon thru Fri. 642-4321 ext. 343 Ask for Lori. fUll·PART TIME Hotel San Maarten of STUD EMT S Laguna Beach requires: Orange Coast Daily Pilot 330 W. Aay St reel Costa Mesa, Ca Equal O pp o rl Employer OK Bell Assistants. working Head Housekeeper. mafore secunly person· (Must be t81 Exciting pay, t·ompany benefits Car needed. ~6'iWii~c1 nel Full & part lime for all shifts Xlnt working cond Apply Ill person btwn lOAM & noon daal) PART TIME Pcrbon needed in Book pasteup. Mon & Tues No ex p nee. Apply 1660 Placen tia Ave .C M Coll IO..to 3~ 696 So Coast Hwy 714-847-2422 Laguna Beach. 1-P-art_T.1m•e ___ __ Hotel STUDEMTS ------~•-I TURN DOWN HOMEM.IJ<EltS SHIFT Earn extra money, 81hngual. Apply to Miss working p/l1me in your Marci. Surr & Sand own home. introducing Hotel, Laguna Beach. the New Daily Pilot lo 497-4477. ext. 36S The Orange Coast Area' Set your own hours' Call office oCfers. •Best beach location •Liberal commission Program. •Nat'I referral program Call now for appl . Walt Hemplull, 6'13-7300 RECEPTIONIST. part time for prof ofc, C.M .. 18th & Nwpt. 642-8752 RECEPTIONIST Newport Bea ch architectural firm. Good telephone personality, Ille typing. II D & As SOt' 640 6266 R.ceptioftist Part t Full Recepuomst Typing, light bookkeep m g & other clerical work Hasson & Assol' 851·16Sl RECEPTIONIST Needed for busy Irvine law office Llghl l} pin~ Call Pat,833-3622 RECEPT/SECY Type 6S wpm. lranscnb mg & 10 key skills req'd Salary based on exper lmmed openin g 957 ~R~e For a therape uti c massage by u llc'd therapist S2S to all NEW c11 en ts M I F I 0 · 7 PM 548-2817 S81·3830 who loves children to help p/time in Pediatr1 cians ore. Mrs A~ten. G.D. TYPISTS F tame chairs1de. Eit per pref GP office. 545·4553 Nr So. Coast Plaza Answer phones, typing, filing & help organize our airport ofcs Part hme t Full lime Reha· ble. conr1dent md1v1dual must have neat ap pearance Call Laurie ror details. KJ3.0440. HSK,R/Componion Weekdays between 4pm Rerined-0ver SO for older & 6pm, 960-1527 RECEPTIONIST writer. Small home on 1•--------• need ed f o r I r \' l n e Psychic reader & ad· v~sor. Past. present. hj1ure. Love marriage. he,alth, character. busi· ness. Readings in all areas. For info & apvt 6'1S-7046. Assistant Cook . Ex· perience or Trainee. Cooking Italian foods. Spagh ett i Bender, 645·0651 645-4670 Register today for loeal temporary assignments Dental Front Office R eceptio nis t. beach area . Very pleasant at mosphere Salary com· mens urale with exp. 64S-7S80 ask for Darlene. Bay, own room & bath. • --Escrow ore Must ha\'e IUS ,ERSOMS EVENINGS. Dallman's R estaurant Apply 1n person. 801 E Balboa Blvd. Balboa 557-0045 Cf\· Lin: GENERAL OFFICE Light work. live In , must p ft T• & neat appeorance and Immediate opening in drive, no smoking. Send a lme pleasant phone manner our purchasing dept ror resume to P 0. Box 403, Temporary Jabs Hrs 8·5 Mon thru F'n, an expr'd person with Corona Del Mar, 92625 Call for appl 552 405(l · --Toni xlnt typing skills & a INSU RANCE. property .~l...&.le 'nAYr old "''male Sag1t tanan would like to meet hunale companion 1·m a self employed artist w hh inters t in Palmistry. Numerology, Muslc, Travel & ha\-ing a good lime looking for gal wath a sense of humor & same anteresb Randy 646-7019 ATLAHTIC MASSAG£ Sr A by 16 Open days . 9~ pampered Beaut. Girls 1,~,A M ·4AM 7 ~one 645-3433 AUTO MECHANIC General repair Must be fully expe r ienced, •CAIDRJVERS• salar y + commission, I Checker Cab S1'2 dys pe r wk. Call 77().0222 E~n1e 6pm to 9pm 1 ------ 66l-9196. -----CASHIER llMl'OllAR'r Pfl!SON"lll Slll\llCIS 3 7 2 3 llrch Strttt N~wport leoch 'EOE CLERICAL AUTOMCYTIVE HOUSEWARE SALES LOTMAH Apply in person· Crown Insurance <'O orrers an DENTAL Front otrice HB. Desirable pos in busy, quality ore Friendly atmosphere awaits expe r ience Salary neg. Call Joanne at 962-3310 Dental Nurse Cha1rs1de, Non Smoker Pedo Ex per prer F'ashaon Is Hardware. 1024 Irvine. entry level pos as B1ll- Full lime. Responsible. <WestcliffPlaia)NB 1ng C lerk T y ping mature person needed __ 40·45wpm Gd company for s pec ial duties 1----------benerats S415 an hour ______ _ References required. CASHIERS Call Laura. 833 IS4~0.l---------•I 644-0611 Must have 2 years ex-14 01 Dove St . N B . DESIGNElt perience Call Steve E o E I D""r-rRa Harvey for an appoint· """"'• ~ menl U TOTEM CLERK "Laguna Beach e let• ROY CARVER Drapery 1mrgr need~ tronics manufacturer ROLLS ROYCE · and to coordinate an needs Ir w MARKETS stallat1on scheduling •an experienred person 64&.~444 For2nd&3rdShirts Salary+ ben. w11l lram lo b~ responsible for Beach Drapery. 16692 dra!tang & mechanical --------We promote lo manage-Milhken. Irv S40.6478 design runcllons . Must p I e a s in g p h o n e •• .., personality Duties wall r a s u a I t y c I e r k I I Secretary Personal Clerks . Secretaries a so inc ude filing. order taking and other general Imes Establlshed agen Recept1on1sts. all o ffi ce work Xlnt ry, Corona del Ma r Office Skills benefits & working con 673·865-0 Needed! 1 dllaons with a growing -· co mpany Apply in Insurance Agency needs IVICKI HESTON I person at competent person Must _ • THE JOLL y ROG t-: R type. will train personal Ii AtlOCICltff INC lines P T to start. xlnt 17042G11lelle Avl' opportunity Brennan Irvine I Co. 11.B 962·SS97 714 546-0331 -- GEHERAL Courier /Clerk, part lime needed for Npt Och medical lab. Perm. pos. Prefer mature person Phone Jan Hillyer, 640·0140 1 NS U RANC E Agency !Spec1ahzang an Tern porary Cleric a I {48?84eNo .... Part Tame Are you too YOUftCJ for o "'9U1or job? RECEPTIONIST Doctor 's office. Newport Beach Some secretarial skills 640-0760 RECS'TIONIST Full lime Mon-Fri Muse be personable & well groomed. & enjoy meet- ing the public. Requires good spelling & pen mans h1p No ly pang Phone experience pre fe rred F'ull company benehls Apply Pen nysaver. 1660 Placenli:.i Ave .C M RECS'TIONIST With or without typing needed Top pay Tem· porary & Cull time. Call Tod Services at 979-8900. .... Attractive lady desires lo meet genlleman over 40 PO Box 11611, Fountain \1-ttlJey 9'n08. * AUTO SALES ment & supervision from h a v e t h o r o u g h within. C AMD UASIMCi! WANT A CAREER? ler1cal knowledge of drafting Get set for '81· "82 & the C FILE CLERK procedures. PC board GENERAL OFFICE Looking for a very in· terestlng part time Job in p leasant office ? Clerical, for mature person Location P.C It .. Npt Bch . Exper a must Accurate typing. no s horthand. 20 hr . week includes Sat & Sun. Ca 11 . 646-7431 ser vice rep. comm'I lines acct handhng, 7sr;. ofc . 2S'7c field . Un· derwrillng. service s ales po s Car ex pense, salary, comm Min. 3 yrs. comm'I. underwrit mg exper. Must have F & C he. Orange & L.A. Counties. Call : Diane Bullock No exver1en<·e necessary You will be trained. Eam big com missions. PLUS altrac I tive bonuses Contal'l Circulation Depart ---------ment. 642·4321 , leave1 Recpt/Sec'y. J-Car ! Neat Chevy store osta Mesa Insurance co needs layput. digital, analog, 8.13·9550 E.0 . E. name & phone number Y.1.P. .ll EINtloy.....t& ,,..,.,atiOll I 11 Del Mar microwave circuit de in extiting Airport in· 63l n•2J person to be responsible . .,... for the F'1le Room sign,&some knowledge JANITORS ~ou will be contacted R~cpt/SK'y. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,., w CMled, 7 07 5 •• 1 •••••••••••••••••••• Ej(,ecutive Secretary. 11Unts Heretarlal work on Sal. al your office. ~-9280 aft 6. ~~.~~ ..... !!~~ ACCOUMTIMC'i cuu Tlte Jolly Roger Inc. hs ab entry-level position available in our sales & dustrial complex will add 3 combination Laguna Beach Duties also in dude of electro-mechanical salespersons now for EZ 494.9233 switchboard relief Gd packaging. straight sell & lease. company benefits. S4.15 Opportunity for advan· Generous pay & demo Huntington Beach an hour. Call Laura. cement & ca r ee r plan. Auto exp. not re· 962•9116 833-8450. 1401 Dove St . growth. We offer xlnl quired. but previous sell----------111 N.B E 0 E pay & benefits+ Ing helpful. See Sales D •1 ,--.,---... -. 4 DAY WORJ( WEa< ~~~s~~sc.:.~... ······~ II y I DI ~:~1~~~ ~~~y~a~l~f~: Dove & Quail Sts. • Beach & Resort areas NEWPORT BEACH •• Camera • Call for appt · Personnel Dept. Telonic Berkeley Allto Wet e Operator •. 114.494 .9401 Laguna COr¥tffn • 1~B~ea~c~h-~E~.o~.E~.~~~I I • , • r I • "C • d F:xvt•n1.•nt•t>d al li•a'I S Har' Mu"it be • I: • uhl1• 111 U"l' nf'"'ll a1a•r 1·amcra and It r a I 9 ht I e 11 • plalcmJk1n1? !>~:-t•·m~ f:xrrllent Y.agt>i. • ~ ..... afvd f-• a111I ht•111•f1t' /\pph 111 p(•r,nn " rc•wmc • r-· --·· lllilWll •• to Oranµ1• Cm1t;t ll,111\ 1'11111 nhlltlthed ..... • • Nero Moton 15451 a....llYd. . .-• Proof Reader • DESIGN ENCilMHR General The lcAoa loy Club Is it0w hirinc): R .. !~6"'. T y pe sow m , fl'ing, phone ex per. StoreClertc Fri . Sat.. Sun Ci ... , ..... Tues. Wed .. Thurs . Must be nexible. Wkdays or eves. Exp or will tr a an. S3. 75-$.5.SOl hr depending on exp. N 8 642-6824. ----- KEHHa HELP NEEDED Part time Mon-& Fri. 6·3 every other Sat 6·4, every Sun 8·6 no exp 63 1-1030 or apply in Person 12.5 Mesa Dr. CM ask for Dawn LIFEGUARDS Euler week & s ummer vacations Irvine 968·0311 • MAtMTB4ANCE! PBX PBX OPERATOR Full time pos1t1on avail ror day shift with rotat ing weekends Qualified apphcant will be reha ble person with pleasant & erficient phone man ner Enjoy exrellent co bener.ts includmg a free meal per shift Apply 9A M-Noon, Mon Fra Personnel MARRIOTI HOTEL 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr MI F rEST COMTaOL TECHMICIAM Leading local pest con trot company needs HELP! HELP! Busy So Calif corp needs you to .. a nswer phones. type, screen calls & most important- ly, set up appointments for our Acct Reps. Base salary plus percentage of the sale Call now for more details. 631-S991 RENTAL.AGENT '•r•Heftt posftioftl ••oll. CirowlttcJ tool ,....... fi""" Meat .. peora111ce. Good h.dwriffncJ. leMfltl. Wlntr-~1930 Newport llYd. Cotto MHo. or 22600 La. bert ·Ste. 1203, 1203 El Toro. ~h accountin1 dept. a person who hH ~lted experience, but ~.ambitious & willlng to ll!am. lyr. exper. pre- ferred. Duties include: auditlna cl aalea report•, GCme. flllna. mall· ''oceuipg & 1eneral clerical work. Xlnt. be.nefita • wortclng con· 'lftt!W • Part Time • •. With al lc<isl l,Yl'Ur rxp11r1tm<'l'. prf'frrnhl~· •• Mfg. co. in Mission VieJo area needs exper. in electrical connectors, herm e t i c s eal s . transducer design, com· ponenls materials & methods. Please call for appt 645·7358 Mon Fri., 8:30-SPM Permanent position idea I for retiree-type who likes ftxin · things around the office. Main· lain offices and do light floor janitorial. five and a half days in pleasant surroundings. G<>Qd pay a nd benefits. See Service Mar. route technician tor1·--------- steady job. Entry level position. We train no expr. nee. Call Tim on Monday. 642·S9'l2 di\1001 wttb a growlng1---------co. Apply ln penon: Babysitter needed for The Jolly Roler Inc. stewardess w/10 mos. 17°'2 Gillette Ave. Irv baby nex hn exp prer '114-546-0331 673-•029 BA BYSITl'ER Help! Wortina Mother needs reliable Babysit· ter, part Ume In Long Beach . Call I rene 2131438-2802. 1 ACCTSUC. 6fnoa to work w I com- wator. Adept at AIR bk· ltp.J. Collection exper helpful. Gd otrlce mach 1111111 req. Xlnt Co. ben. w/1rowint NB firm. --------~ IWOm for idvancement Babysitter P I T , my 6 penoul Jrowth. Call ttou.e, Call 12Doon·Spm 1,,. appt . ..._... 8'2·S013 fif>«Dmerdal P'\nancln1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;j Strvlc.. .. Bukltl1 Ad•;r:.,~ AMTID Mew kc1nts s.a.. ,...,.......uve to C I uu Oft .... r Ad butl· .... ., oat afd&. for lldvertia· &•a-n.nc:. Preferred ln1, Mon-Fri .. tAM· Alto part Ume pc19ltiOn1 $PM . .Bue+ aomm1 Co. antlable In our South be~. WW t.rm. Jl'Hl Coa1t l!lua offtct. Call: ,~, .... fd. .,.u. l•th~1•1 I 1 .... nua1. Apply : l eaa11aver1 u•o . ltSMnU.A.._, cM newspu_P.er f<.xn~ll<•nl 1•ornp1111y h1.•nt•f1t~ • PM sh1fl Apph· hetwN•n !11\M & liPM. • • Monday throul!h ~·rnht' • e Or~Cont e • Dally "lot • • 330 W. Bay Street e Costa Mesa. CA •. Equal Opportunity Employer •• ~~·-············ 1111[ & RNlt POllTICIAH C S H R W H Q H 0 E S R 0 H K R A D E E Z A N ~ P 0 l I T I C A N S X P S l 'O [ N R N W 0 F I C I S C M A H T E R T D D l A A A W F T P P E E N A R M U E A S 0 I U 8 W I I E H T 0 T R R K E M I H I C E L l R E C A S E E E K I R Q H A R I S 0 A R A M £ M S K V P N D I R K T T P N N S G T 0 S A 0 R T G Y N G E A l T T 0 H I N I M E W £ N M A W I R T L Y H I R G K W I I I R G A Z I A y'p 0 KM 0 E YA I Y G 0 KT KU k M L a ! N v R a l s E y s N J [ E G NAALUAYAETAOJONACRR C I R R F I 8 E A l l E E H 0 R A W S HMURJLIEkNLkIQUAOEA .,1 AllOllC c ... ; ,, .~pori fEBlt · .... ~==-·~~:::.~ d.,...,....., lcir' .. &&.Mi ,..... er-111m ..._ ii ....... ~Dr. &..-... --~ ~ " It to; rem •I• la c.ta .... ca~ 1 ,1 II "'u ,......_ .., "-" j ICWr, lloa.·lel. ~ -· _ •.•' 'kr tr ,...._.. ~ • yer•a IL Is k ... NI~~~~;;;·-!!~!~ i c .... W., lla:MIMr OeflHMt Sl'·l"IM.9'• _ r... .-, , ,.1 1 ~ , T 11 1A.01W t Duties include design, drafting. materials test· Ing & R&D projects. Mechanical Eng1neer- i n g degree pref'd. Qualified candidates sefld resume to: Mrs. Jans , 23891 Via Fabricante, Suite 603, Mlsslon Viejo, Ca. 921691 GEN OFFICE -Exciting fin . Co. needs eager person w/all around or. fice skills. Some bkkpg, & typing req. Chance for advancement for right person. Call for appl. 644 -4684. Commercial Fina.nclnc Services HOW AID ChtYroltt 1111111w---.illllilllll-flllllll.-..-..-.. ; Dove&Qu.allSts. - - -PtT --~ NEWPORT BEACH CREDIT CHECKER MAMACill/ A1tlit. Credit experience pref , Wome n 's specialty Oexlblehrs,lrv. s lore . Jo' u 11 time . Irvine Per1onnel Al'/ Clotblna ex pr. Nancy 418 E.l7t.h, Coeta Meaa Craig, Inc. S56-1495 Suite UC _ 6'2·147~ DISK CL.Bk NCR '200 exp dealred GROC• Maoaser. Office work,~ AM & PM ahU\.1. Apply W e a re s • e It I n g counter help tor food PIT truck & equipment ln person, Aliso Crttk manaaerial type person service. Seasonal. <e washer. 4 daya, 201hns lnn. suoe Cout Hwy, with llnowledte of Mid· South Laguna. die Eutern culture. mo.). H.B. area. Call E. week. ·United Rent All, Ability to a peak, reed Ii Son1uth, (714 l5'4·5378 C .M. &cs-cneo. DIETITIAN · RD for 82 write Arable: a neceul··,.:.r write 1'581 Acacia Dr, ftllA&JTY bed psychiatric hoap. ty. Knowledlt of fqod L.~ uatltl, Ca. 921880. C,..;:.._OL Reafon1lblllti11 Incl bu1lnea1 i. an aaaet. """"''" tota menu pl1nnln1, M ay require aom e MASSIUSI Immed. opftlnf IA final dietary consultation travelln1. S•lary Part ltme. Pvt. country mspecUoo, hole fl flt. w/doctors., paUenll 6 ne1otlable. Aoab4l!1' club. Call for lntervlew. ttn1. muat pu1' co. auperviJion ol dietary '!rea. Fii Whote•,e -~--·-5404--...------• phy1lcal lncludln1 back a t • fl, pre v l 0 u 1 O r o c er 1 I n c . • M ... .-..... x-ray. Taklnt appllca· H l '114·UO·l5'70 ._,_._ Uon1btwn"lIr10.m on• o1p/1uperv ior y U · ---------1 .H ... ..-......... ly. St raton u , l'l1'1l p o r I t n C t n e c . •10•--._._.."9 A A I ea i ,.,,_ _ _._ lrnmed. openln• for rm1tron1 ve, rv., u.o! atruo by the Se• Head Oroundakteper parta clerk, rubber h0te EOE (' Keod.avll Ind .. P· 4-.srot needed by HunUnrton producta, m•t &>a'• co. _C_o_. _ __. _____ ,.1 Or•P•tY mHufacturer Beach Clty Sehc,lol Dt.t. phyalc•I lncludln1 b,car ""'4• won rootn htm· l t m o . po a i t I o e • x-ray. Tak"1, a ppltca· -.r. ww tram. Mfn,· !1W-'111m, per MOnth. UOn• btlwn 't 10.11! on· Tbura. '1·5:10Pll or PIT. uepn •I lli>OD tit· I)'. Stratof n, I 1171 c.11. •rta.Ml•lMI. perleiDN. AlliPl1 T• 14th .Armatroni Ave.., Irv .. St. Hutliillon Beach. EOE A X.S.•• lnd, Driven nHded. Part ~l. . . Co. Utne poelticm anUablt. l'\Dcl wMt JOU wut In C1_Ullfted ___ AA»_.-your--oa..---1 cau 1or appl: lllMllL 0'"1 Pllat a ... lneda. at.op..., ceotar. --. ------------------~ ' Reft.JlUUDl •• Mcuu..A&.D1S Now hiring full & part time. Days, eves. Great career opportunities. On-the-job training. For more Info .• call 7S4·9943, or inquire at 31'1 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. . llSTA.UIAMT Sandwich Maller bra 7AM ·3P..M llon-f'rl. 646-93 RetaJI Salea Women'• f"IT r etail, days, exp. preferred, xlnt benetlll. Call '1'7o.lf77 ult forLal'T). AN I Nurtlne Coordinator rot adult P1ychl•tt·lc proarem 1'Hpon1lblllU. lnclude 1uper\llllon ol' Oft nW'1 .. lnl 1taff, 1t'8daill.n•. P•· Uent statrtna, evatua. tlona • lnaervlce H · 1lat•nce. Appllcant ml.la\ l\f \'t tll'Onl corn· auaalca,Uon • probJem. aolvt.1 akl&ll • 111pe"laory •perieece la a PIYctnt.ric tadUty. P•~loa ll lloa.-rrl, Murt aa11 be n..lble. CapbtnmlJfttSea ... ,.,. ......... -~ J I ~··· 1111111 CUil YOUR Hlllllll llllY PAPIR MONOAV . MAHC H JO. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Shots fired at Reagan WASHIN G T ON <AP > - Several gunshots were fired at President Reagan as he left a downtown Washington hotel to- day. The president was hit, and so was his press secretary . James S. Brady, a long with two others. The Secret Ser vice said a white man was arrested afte r four to six shots were fi red Brady was rushed to George Was hington Un\versity Hospital. Reagan was re ported to be ~n­ scious and his condition was sta· ble . He was hit in the left side. Secret Ser vice agents shoved the president into his armored limousine. which sped away from the Washington Hilton Hotel. The president had delivered a speech to the A FL·ClO's Building Construction Trades Conference meeting atthe hotel. Reagan had emerged from the hotel's Vl·P entrance a nd re- porters were attempting to shout questions at him when there was a rapid fire succession or shots. The scene outside the hotel im· m ediately becam e one of chaos. A crowd gathered Al the White House. Deputy press secretary Larry Speakes s aid, secretary James S. Brady and others -"agents or police I don't know which" were hit. "There was some pus h ing and shoving when the president went into the car." A videota pe of the incident showed Brady lying on the ground sever al feet from the doorway of the Washington Hilton hotel. There was blood on the sidewalk near his head. Reagan came out of the hotel smiling and was walking toward has limousine. JUSl a few paces away. He turned to a c knowledge shouts of "Mr . President. Mr. P resident" from the crowd when the shots were heard at close range. Reagan appeared !>tunned. the llmile faded Crom has laps . agents drew their weapons as others shoved the president forcefull y in to his car. Ar WI ...... WOUNDED IN AnACK Pre11 Secrete Bred ____...___ I Who'll win? I Polish • union averts TONIGHT AT 1 P.M . ON CHA NNEL 7 OSCAR'S BALLOT (Mark an X in box in f ront of your favorite) B est picture: D "Raging Bull" O "Tess" D "Coal Miner's Daughter" O "Ordinary People" O "The Elephant Man" Best actor : 0 Robert Duvall 0 John Hurt O Robert De Niro D Peter O'Toole O Jack Lemmon Best actress: D Ellen Burstyn 0 Goldie Hawn O M ary Tyler Moore O Gena Rowlands D Sissy Spac•k ,. Best supporting actor: O Judd Hirsch O Joe Pesci D Jason Robards O Timothy Hutton O Michael O'Keefe Best supporti ng actr ess: O Eileen Brennan D Eva Le Gallienne O Cathy Moriarty O Marv Steenburoen O Diana Scarwid Best director: O Dav id Lynch 0 Robert Redford O Richard Rush D Martin Scorsese O Roman Polanski Best song: O "Fame" O "Nine to Five" O "On the Road Again" O "People Alone" O "Honeysuckle Rose" D "Out Here on My Own" Acade m y Awards c liches sure bet By JERRY HERTENSTEIN OI tlllf Dall't Pll .. Slefl When s pring arrives can Oscar be tar behind? As s ure a s the Aca de m y Awards have been a n Am erican mainstay for 53 years you can count on the following to happen tonight at the Music Center. Some winner will use the oc· casion to give a political state· me nt. IOthe r stories. Pages 86-7). Each victor makes a secret pledge to not be ~s corny as thanking Mom and Dad. But someone will do just that as they stand before a capacity Dorothy Chandler Pavilion audience and SPOHFS, OSC4RS CL4SH TONIGllI' If you want to watch the Academy Awarda -but don't want to miss the end or the NCAA buketball cb1mpion1hlp 1ame - you'U have a problem on )'OUr band.a toni1ht. • The buketbaJl 1ame, plttlnt North Carolina •l•loat lncliana, Mltn• at 5 p.m. on NBC, ChaMeJ 4. The Otcart tet under way at 7 p.m. on ABC, Channel 7. an estimated 300 million television viewers worldwide. Edy Williams will arrive for the ceremony scantily dressed under an open fur coat and being led by an Afghan hound or some such animal. Star gazers who have been ca mped in the portable stands at the Los Angeles Mus ic Center will applaud anyone summoned to ·Army Archerd's microphone. The televis ion cameras will show again the "crazy" with his rainbow-colored hair. The working press, rew or whom sit ln the main auditorium to see the awards live, will watch the TV monitors in the press room tucked away ln the hu1e complex. They will batUe for a apot ln front of the small atage where the winners are aaked the same Ured questions. There wUI be Joumallsll from the otber tlde of each ocean who· have been on a week'• tour ol the atudloe yet wUl be Juclly to get a ainale story in print. Tbe Oscar announcement.I are carefully calculated so the ftlma can be re-reJeued and It mea.na mllllon1 extra In box offtee bucka for t.b• atudJoe. The re·rtletHI p'fovlde • second chance for tboH wbo 1tuuaaed otr the llleture when lt ttrat 1creened. Tbe 01car nomlllMI are diacu11ed ln the ol· flee lunchroom, at tbe bar, <&le 08CA&I, Pait Al) 'catastrophic' strike Cly rrwre e n route home By STEVE MITCHELL OI ... Dallr Pi .. t Stall F r e e d P a ki s t a n i hijack hos tage Craig Cly more will be returning to the United States Tuesday to t urn himself in to feder al drug enforcem e nt of· fic1a ls. A s po kesman fo r Laguna Beach attorney Ronald Kreber said Clymore will arrive at Los Aqelw lnlernatrlOllal Airport at 5 p.m. Tuesday a board a Luft- hansa airlines jet from Fraknult, West Germany. Clymore. who is wanted in the United States on drug smuggling cha rges, is being accompanied by Kreber . a spokeswoman for the attorney said this morning. The pair wer e to have left Da mascus . Syri a over the weekend, and were scheduled to s p e nd Sunday n ig ht in Fra nkfurt. The 24-year·old former Lake Forest resident is expected to be met by his parents, Glen and Thelma Clymore of San Juan Capistrano. and other relatives when Lhe airliner arrives. U S. Drug Enfo rcem ent Ad· ministration officers were also c x peeled to be a l p I aneside Tuesday w he n t he fo r mer Laguna Beach High School graduate returns . Cly more was arres ted by Syrian authorities Ma rch 21 a nd was jailed pending e fforts by U.S. officials to have him re· turned to California to answer to d rug cha rges Cly more was one of more than 100 hos t ages he ld a board a Pakistani jet that was hijacked M arch 2 on a fl igh t from Ka rachi to Peshawar. It wasn't until the hostages were released 13 days la ter Lhat Clymore was publicly accused in a grand Jury indictment of be· ing the ringleader or a $12 m illion h as his h and heroin s muggling ope ration . Clymore steadfastly refused to sign a waiver of surre nder in Syria that would have allowed him to be taken into custody and returned to the United St ates. 362 alie n s seize d n ear San Cle m e nte \ U.S . Border P~trol agents rounded up 362 tllegal aliens within a four-hour period Sun- day after reopendJng the check· point two miles south of San Clemente unexpectedly. Aient in charce Alan Gordon said the checkpoint was kept open most of the weekend, caua· in& a flood or amuctlera to bold their loads of 1Jien1 In Jimbo. Sunday afternoon, a\ about 4 p.m . 11ent1 clOHd the station, and Gordon aaid 1nau111er1 "beCatl to pub them tbf'OU&h," ln Jarte numbers. • Bat a1ent1 reopened the cbt~llpolnt Je11 than an bout later, c.•~hlnt many 1mQ11lera b7="· 0 aald moat of the UJegaJ pauea1en were returned to llellieo. but a few were kept u WllDHHI a11inat 1u1pected amu11len .• r I • A~WI ....... KARL SCHNEIDER (RIGHT) EARLIER WITH SON KARL JR. Father •hot In back fleeing for freedom. Shot man's HB so n 'thankful he's alive' By PATRICK KENNED\' OI tllO Deur ~l .. t Stefl The Huntington Beach son of the American shot while fleeing from a hijacked Indonesian jetliner said today tha t his fa ther, Karl Schneider. was lu c k y but m a d e the right decision to run for freedom. "I'm thankful he's ali ve," said K a rl Sc hnei d e r Jr .. 26 . "Yesterday. when J first heard the news reports l was confused and scared. but today I found out he's in fair condition and there will be no pe rma nent damage. "It appears he made the right decision. The hija cke rs have changed their demands and the s ituation is uncertain ove r the re." said Schneider, an accountant in Costa Mesa . Hls father, 44, a ppare ntly jumped from the Jetliner and ran to e scape the hijackers Sunday In Bangkok. He was s hot In the back and the bullet lodged In hia spine. The slug was rem oved in an o p e ration Sunday. Schnelder la the manager of n Houaton-bued oU firm, Milchem Inc., operattngln lndoneala. Orlalnally Crom Texu. Scbneldet' haa lived out.aide the United ~~ tor l5 YHrt. In the put year. be moved from Greece to lndon .. la. ffl• '°" aald tbere haa beta freq'*lt communlc1Uon amona the U'.S. St.aw Department, hla brother. Stephen, JI, of Hununct-Buth. and b.LI allter Vlckl Polito. It, ol SU Dhao. Tbe eldtr Sc.bMtder'• fonntt ~lf•, Martha Moren. llves lo ll untin~t on Bea ch and his mother. Grace Porter, lives in Lu bbock, Texas Schneider's wife, Linda. is with h i m in Bangkok, the son said. "My grandmother and l are hoping he'll come back to the United States to recuperate." t he son said "He's lucky to be a live .. Schneider's daughter , Vicki. a housewife in San Diego. agreed wi th her brothe r tha t their fath e r "mig ht be in bette r condition than the rest of the passengers'' Boy, 8 , leads lmanenon merry chase The pare nts became con- cerned Friday niaht when they couldn't find their 8-y ear-old ion . They called the Orance County Sheriff's Department. Search and rescue personnel were dispatched to the Lafuna HUia nelehborhood and for aix hours trted to find tbe boy. At 2: U a.m. S.turday mom· ln1, the Coata Neu Police helicopter joined the 1 .. reb. The 1earchln• telftponrU)' halted at a a.m. It wu decided to "•'n anew au a .m . The Matchen dldn't have to return. The youth, wbo a lhtriffl depu\)' s&ld WU Upy at bit parents, came boGM. He had apent the nlcht at a lrtfttld'a house two doon away. A c tion r e lieves • t e nsion WARSAW , Poland 1/\P I The i n depe n d e n t u n io n Solid arity today called off a nat ionw id e gene r a l strike th re:.itened for Tuesday over the beating of three union m embers, t he Polish news agency PAP said The decision was made after talks with gover nment officials at whic h progresi. had been reported toward meeting union dem ands for punishment of those ntaJM>nsible for the beatings. There was no immediate word on terms that led to catastrophic consequence~ in this Soviet bloc country wracked by labor and economic turmoil. PAP said the neJ(ot1ators were pre p aring a joint communique . The talks were between Lech Walesa. leade r of the Solidarity inde pendent union, and Deputy Premier Mieczysla w Ra kowski. W arsaw P a c t m i li ta r y man euvers cont inued an and aro und Poland, a n o m ino .. us background to the talks. The Soviet news agency Tass quote d a Polish Communis t Pa rty o f fi c i a l a s s aying , regarding a general strike , "our country has no reserves that "ould enable it to survive this c a tas l rophe e cono m ica I l y . Therefore the structure of our state and its very s urvival are at s take ·· T h e offic i a l, K azi m ier z Ha rc rkowski. s poke at a meeting o f the p a r ty 's C e nt r al Committee which gave its ruling Politburo a vote of confidence to dea l wi th t he situation afte r s torm y debate. After fl exing ils muscles in a four-hour warning strike Friday. th e unio n, a nger ed b y the beating of three membe rs in By d go s zcz o n M a r c h 19 , thre atened an indefinite general strike starting al 6 a.m. Tuesday c 8 PST tonight) if rts demands were not met in t he last-ditch t a lks . The chie f de mand is dis missal of those responsible for the beatings. "We face a genera l strike with e ff ec t s tha t m ay be catastrophic." said Rakowski. chief labor trouble s hooter for <See POLAND. Pat~ AZ> DRAllH COOT WIATHll , Mostly sunny through Tuesday. Gusty northwest winds 20 to 3~ mph , decreasing late this eve· ning. Highs 67 to 72. Lowi; toni&ht 48toS5. 111111 TllAY R o lltr1ko tfng ho 1 muth~ fftto o .,,ort for fS mlUion AmtrfCOl'll. Set Pogt 83 11111 L <>rmnge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday. March 30, 1981 Alcala prosecutor 11n1·11fflea by charge By DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. o.6ly ,,.... ltMf The Orance County deputy dis\rlct attomey who prosecuted convicted child klller Rodney Jam ea Alcala says there Is 1WI enou1h evidence to prove Alcala guilty even if the testimony of two jaltbouse "snitches" is or oved to be perjured. Richa rd Farnell , who persuaded an Orange County Supe rior Cou rt jury to convict and sentence Alcala to death for the 1979 kidnap-murder of 12· year -old Robin Samsoe of Hunt- ington Beach, said today the re- m alning evidence against the ~aguna to scan • permits Laguna Beach City Council members will meet Tuesday to discuss what Councilman Kelly Boyd describes as "confusing terms" used frequently tn re- quests for building permits and variances. · , In particular. the councilman 1 .says words such as "mass." r :r"bulk" and "village at· f 1.:·mosphere," are too vague to be used in deciding what a builde r . can or cannot add to his home k Boyd is expected .to review a -variety of recent requests before ~ the Design Review Board in r. which decisions were made based on s uch terminology He says there appear to be no set standards for the committee's approvals and for the granting of variances The council will meet at City Hall . 505 Forest Ave at 5:30 pm to discuss Boyd's concerns That session will be followed at 7 30 p. m . with a joint meeting of the C1 ty Council and Laguna Beach l 1nifiedSchool District trustees f're• Pa9~ Al OSCARS ... a mong friends. Each movie buff thinks he or s he has some inside track to the winners. And as you stare at the tube to ah those actresses in their Edith Head-designed gowns or the ac- tors with c hins looking like they were chisled from granite. you will no doubt be predicting the big winners before the envelopes a re opened Here are my picks · Best picture "Ordinary People ;" Best actor Peter O'Toole . Best actress Sissy Spacek. Best s upporting actor Joe Pe sci ; Best supporting actress Eva le Gallienne ; Best director Ho bert Red ford ; Bes t song ··Nine to Five." Quick now. who were the 1980 winners ? Sessions set on first aid The South Orange County Chapter of the American Red Cross will sponsor two first aid courses in April at its head quarters at 27324 Camino Capistrano in Laguna Niguel. The first class will meet April 9 from 9:30 a.m. to I :30 p .m . T he second class will meet April ~5 from8a m.to5p m The courses feature filmed demons t r ation s, practice sessions a nd work books. The classes will be taught by Red CrosSafety Services instructors. There 1s a $7 fee for the courses. To register and for additional in- formation call the Red Cross center at 831 ·6582. Antique music box stolen in Laguna Operators of Kubisac·s An· tiques in Laguna Beach told police someone walked in the • -s hop during business hours Sun- day. taking a music box valued at $3,300. Police said they have no sus· peels ln the shoplifting incident at 3295 Laguna Canyon Road. Monterey Park man ls ·•more than1utnclent.~· The California Supreme Court laat Thursday ordered a hearing sou1ht by Alcala'• attorneys on whether two Oran1e CounLy Jail Inmates could have Ued about . the convicted killer 's alleged in· volvement in Mlss Samsoe's dis· appearance. The hearing was ordered after Santa Ana lawyers Keith C. Monroe a nd David A. Zlm · merman filed documents which said that one or the jail ln!orm- a n ts who testified against Alcala admitted that he and another so-called "snitch" lied • on the witness stand. "I don't know what they're llYlnt.'' prosecutor Farnell said this mornJng. "We have not re· cetved their I appeals> papers." Def enae lawyer John Barnett, who re~resented Alcala at hi• 1980 tl· l, said he felt all along there • as perjury during the prosec lion phase of the pro· ceedings. Describing the case as highly e m otional, Harnett said, "ev· e r yone wanted to get on the bandwagon a nd kill Rodney " T he two informants in ques- tion, Robert Dove and Michael Herrera. testified that Alcala admitted while at Oran1e Coun· ty J all that he a lapped Ml11 Samsoe unconsclou1 after ab· ductlna her from Huntington Beach In June, 1979. However, in p a pers filed secretly with the state Supreme Court two weeks ago, Monroe said that Dove recanted his testimony during an interview with two m em bers of the county Public Defender's starf. The rormer prosecution wit· ne ss a lso admitted to a counselor with the Straight Ahead drug abuse program in Tustin that he and Herrera lied on the "Aitness stand. Dove is re- New face for Lolita Huntington Beach housewife Virginia Castillo, founder and president of Ninos Lisiados. chec ks young Maria Dolores .. Lolita''. Quiroz. 12. before the girl's trip home to Honduras following plastic surgery at UC Irvine Medical Center. The 20-hour job reshaped Lolita's terribly deformed face . Samuel Jiminez. 5 months, of T1 juana, looks bored. He had cleft palate cor· rected by volunteer s urgical team !'linos Lisiados means scarred or crippled c hildren in Span ish. Volunteer group brings children to United States for surgery. and cares for the m while they are he r.!:__ f'ro• P•9~ Al POLAND ... the government in comments r eported by the Polish news agency PAP from the session of the party's central committee "The general strike would be the threshold of a prec1p1ce." he was quoted as saying. "The time has come to curb the widespread lawlessness and lack of obser vance of the law." he s aid. In addition to stating its sup- port o f the Co mmun ist leadership. the committee called on ~overnment omcials to m eet with Polish workers in their fac- tories and told workers to "put an end to strikes." the official PAP news agency reported . The statement. issued after 18 hours of often stormy discussion ended at 3:50 a .m . also called fo r an explanation or the Bydgoszcz incident. which pre· cipitated the grave labor crisis The 10-mtllion-m ember labor federation charges that police in the industrial city beat up 23 un- ion activists March 19 the first palice viole nce against the independent labor moveme nt re QOrted since the nat1onw1dc strike wave last summer Solidarity staged a four hour warning strike Frid ay and called a general strike Tuesday in protes t. Warsaw Radio said th1• Cen· tra I Committee's rel'lolution called on party members "to counteract the influence of the enemies of socialis m on In · dividual cells of Solidarity, and to carry out consistent counter- action against the tranatorma· lion of this union Into a political organization causing a state or social tension and a nxiety." The resolution atreaaed that central a uthority a nd party dl1· cipline s hould not be qucsllonod . Rumors circulated that the en· Ure 10-member Politburo re- signed. But Warsa w Radio re- ported only three re1lanatlon1• and said they were rejected. Youth shot, killed driving on freeway Brea Police are investigating the shooting death or an 18-year- old Santa Ana youth who died early Sunday after he was hit by a s ingle gunshot to the head as he drove o n th e Ora ng e F'reeway David Lee Estrella was found dead at 3 a m by paramedics Abuse case girh returned to mother Two young daughte rs of former Cambod,ian leader Lon Nol have been returned to the c us tody of th1..•1 r mother. who sti II faces child abuse proceedings C:tlong with an older son in North Orange County Municipal Court Two other childre n, however. !>Ons aged 13 and 15. will remain at the county's Albert Sitton llome for dependent children T he 6 and ff year old daughters of Lo n Nol. 69, and Lon Sovanna. 37. now living in Fullerton. were a llowed back in the cure of thei r, mother after a juvenile court commissioner determined they were no lo nger m dunJlcr of "ex cessivephysit•ulclh1c1plinc " Two, howt•vcr, wt•rt• declared dependent children. meaning they would still be under court ~upervislon Lon Sovunna and her 18-year old son, Lon Rith, both face mis demeanor child abuMe charge!! arising from alleged beatings or the c hildr en with a horsewhip. The two dttul(hters were re- turned to their mother under 1rnpervlslon of the county's Social Services Department The two boy11 were to remain al Silton Home tor an Indefinite period. who reached his 1964 Chevrolet after 1t swerved off the south- bound side of the freeway and across the Lambert Road off· ramp. Lt Tom Christian said anyone with information about a hght blue car seen on the freeway should contact his office. lie added that two passengers in E strella'!> l'ar. Adolfo Gomez. 26, and a 16-year old Juvenile. both of Santa Ana. were not in jured Bolh wen~ detained by police ror questioning. but were later released. Christian said The pa!>sengers initially gave ·considerable conflic ting 1n rormation," he s aid. An autopsy is scheduled today for Estrt'lla Chris tian said the gunshot wound is considered the probable cause of death T h e lieutenan t said 1n vestigators aren't ruling out the possibility that the s hooting was ~ang related The bullet hit E s trella. the driver. on the left s ide of his head celvln1 treatment ror heroin ad· diction at the drua clinic. AdmJltln1 tb1t he wae "not surprised" at the latest develop· m ent In the prosecutor cue, Farnell 1a.ld he had seen nothlnt yet that specifically HY• Dove admitted to perj uring himself. He said a District Attorney's investigator had been looking In- to the matter and he would soon confer with that person. As Alcala's defense lawyer during his trial. Barnell had in· traduced rebuttal testimony that Dove and He rrera lied Reacting to the latest develop· ment. Barnett said today, "We Two hurt 3-car smashup • Ill Two perso n s r e ma i n hos pitalized a nd three others escaped with scrapes and bruises following a three-ca r collision Saturday near Salt Creek California Highway Patrol spokesmen said Ronald Gregory. 33, of Laguna Beach was driving southbound on Coast Highway late Saturday when he struck the rear of a car driven by Robert Barlett, 49, of Brea. Gregory lost control of his car. which then slid sideways into the northbound Janes where 1t col· hded with a car driven by Ken- neth Brongo. 24. of Capistrano Beach Gregory remains in fair cond1 tion afte r being taken to the trauma center at Mission Com m unity Hospital Marion Maie r, 73, of San Fran- cisco. a passenger 1n the Brongo vehicle. was listed in guarded but stable condition at South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna Brongo and his wife. J ennifer . also 24 , were both treated and later released from San Clemente General Hospital following the crash Henry Maier. 37, of San Fran· cisco. another passenger 1n the Brongo car, a lso wa!I treated at the San Clemente hospital and sent home. Spring rec signups set in Laguna Spring classes s ponsored by the Laguna Beach Recreation Department are scheduled to bejtin April 6. Registrations are now being taken for courses in sailing, ten- nis. swimming, volleyball, self- d ef e nse , c r e ative writing, basketball and numerous other classes. Information on class hours and rees may be obtained by calling 497-3311. extension 201. The recreation department of. fice hours are from 8 a .m . to noon and from 1 t o S p .m . weekdays. The offi ce is located at City Hall. SlS Forest Ave. For a free schedule of course offerings, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to the recreation de- partment. ·;----------------------------------------------------.' Lon Sovanna and Lon Rlth are scheduled for pre.trial hearings In north court In late April. . .., ' I" iii1yliat ThomMP. Haley ~ ~N.WMd ......... M. Thomu Keevll .... ~Murphlne ~tt.Loos .................... ~8chulman ~~ K~ N. Goddard Jr. ~- ' MAIN OPPICI .. WHt..., It., CllU M9M, CA, Miii .._· ... l ... ,CWUMeu, CA.,,.. 4 Nuke f oea picket in San Clemente About !! nuclear power plant opponents carried ptacardl and handed out lnlormauon aheeta ln San Cteme:nte Saturday, on the second anntveraary of lb• Three Mlle lllandd1aa1ter. The arouP held a noon vllil at the cornerot Aveftida .S.l Mar and El Camino Real, bolat1n1 ~ In~ airforpa11ln1 motorbtl. • , Al 's Garage and Sea Bags Heavy duly Canvas Bags In shapes and atz.es to fit any OCC1Ston Sta'"' are double stitched to provide • 1~et1me ot durability. All Sea Bags are weter repellent end feature a shoulder strap tor easy carrying. ' felt during the course or the trial that the jallhou11e snitches were a ll lying . . " Barnett. who 11tlll maintains that Alcala was convicted and condemned to death on the basis of a violent criminal put before the S11msoe killlnll. s aid t he testimony of the jailhouse in- rormanu "WBA taiolred lo give the pro.ecution the testimony 1t needed to put Rodney In the gas c hamber " Thl' defen11e lawyer added. "Th111 111 a c·h1lhng reminder of the vagaries or the c riminal Ju11t1ce system It's a very c hilling typt' of a situation." Barney back for 8th year NEW YO RK (AP 1 Producer Danny Arnold a pparently c hanged h1:. mind a fll'r announ t•1ng plans to cancel · Rarney M •lier" at the end of the season. and the program will return for an e1~hth )ear on ABC this fall. the nNwork l:.Jld toda) Deprogram ruling affirmed WAS! IJNGTON t AP> The L' S Suprem e Court today let stand Minnesota rulings which al- low ed parent!> to lock up an adult "child" and tr) to "deprogram" her out of a religious cult The Justices. as us ual, did not explain the action . leaving open the option of tackling at some future date tht• thorny questions o f r elig1ou5 freedom and "brainwashing .. Susan Louise Peterson grew up on a farm near Bird Island, Minn .. with her Lutheran parents . Norman and Mar ga r e t Jungcla u:. She Joined a religious organization called the Way Minis try while att<•nding Moorhead State Collej!e A<:. the M 1nncsota Supreme Court later summarized 1t. "The Jungclauses grew mcrea!>ingly alarmed by the persona lity changes they witnessed in their daughter. overly tired. unus ually pale. distraught a nd irritable. she exhibited an increasing aliena lion from family. diminished m terest in eduC'at1on and decline 1n academic performance .. They concluded. the court said. that Ms . Peterson "had been re du c ed lo a co nditi o n o f psychological bondage .. On Ma~· 24. 1976, Jungclaus picked up.his daughter. then 21. al the college. Instead of dnving her home. s he claimed. he dro~e her to a house in Mmneapohs where she was held and 5ubjected to intense persuasions to leave The Way Ministry by a pair of "deprogrammers " For the first three days. the slate court said, Ms. Peterson re· sisted and was physica lly con· fmed She later s topped r esistinj!. and was allowed freedom of movement. On the 16th day. however . she flagged down a police car and left to rejoin her fiance in The Way Ministry ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714 ) 644-7030 i- n a I· I· n >t 0 d n l · s i· ft !e ·e e ,. Is lt 1e l · tll a a (f Ul Ii- al 1'· 1y ... et Ill 1e 1r ly ,. ID f • "· at 1!'- IP ' ed on a 11t el De to i. lr'I· ps ri· c e as h e Uy r e a .nd ~nt -!I • • a ..., /114 ' tr' o h as a -... llllY Ml • MO NDA Y MARCH W l<IHI OHAN G l COUN t Y C Al IFO RNIA 25 CENTS Presidenl, press secretary wounded I • Ots ire Who'll . ., wm. TONIGHT AT 1 P.M. ON CHANNEL 1 N OSCAR'S BALLOT <Mark an X 1n bOx in front of your favorite) Best picture: O "Raging Bull" O "Tess" 0 "Coal Miner's Daughter" O "Ordinary People" O "The Elephant Man" Best actor: 0 Robert Duvall O John Hurt 0 Robert De Niro O Peter O'Toole O J ack Lemmon Best actress: 0 Ellen Burstyn Goldie Hawn 0 Mary Tyler Moore O Gena Rowlands D Sissy Spacek Best supporting actor: 0 Judd Hir5Cb 0 Jo, Pesci GJ Jason R~.,.,.~ 0 Timothy Hutton O Michael O'Keefe Best supporting actress: 0 Eileen Brennan O Eva Le Gallienne 0 Cathy Moriarty O Mary Steenburgen 0 Diana Scarwid Best director: O David Lynch 0 Robert Redford 0 Richard Rush 0 Martin Scorsese O Roman Polanski Best song: 0 "Fame" O "Nine to Five" O "On the Road Again" O "People Alone" 0 "Honeysuckle Rose" D "Out Here on My Own" Academy Awards cliches sure bet B y JERRY HERTENSTEIN Ol tllt Oellf ~llM Stall When spring arrives ca n Oscar be far behind'! As s ure as the Academy Awards have been an American mainstay ror 53 years you can count on the following lo happen tonight at the Music Center. Some winner will use the OC· casion to give a political stale· ment. I Other stories, Pages B6·71 under an open fur coal and being led by an Afghan hound or some such animal. Star gazers who have been camped In the portable stands al the Los Angeles Music Center will applaud anyone summoned to ·Army Archerd's microphone. Th e television cameras wiJI show again the "crazy" with his rainbow=colored hair. The working p ress, few of whom sit in the main auditorium tcr see the awards live. will watch the TV monitors in the press room tucked away In the huge complex. They will batUe for a spot ln front of the small 1ta1e where tbe winners are son • praises dad's act By PATRICK KENNEDY DI ._ 0.llf ~llM SIMf The Huntington Beach son of the American shot while fleeing from a hijacked Indonesian Jetliner said today that his father. Karl Schneider. was lucky but made t he r ight decision lo run for rreedom. "I'm thankful he's alive," said Karl Sch n eider Jr .. Z6 . "Yesterday, when I first heard the news reports I was confused and scared, but today J found out he's in fair condition and there will be no permanent damage. "1.t appears he m ade the right dec1s1on The hijackers have changed their demands and the s ituation is uncertain over BULLETIN BANGKOK, ThaUand <AP> - Thal lroops on today attacked a hijacked lndoaeslan jetUDer parked on an airport naaway here with 55 hostages and five ar~ed blJackera aboard, wlt· nesaes uld. It WH aot Im· medla&ely knowa If aayoae was hurt. ,,.., :a ,,. .• '' .-;w >• t here," said Schneider, an accouct&.ant in Costa Heu. Hts father. '4, apparently Jumped from the jetliner and ran lo escape the hija ckers Sunday in Bangkok. He was shot in the back and the bullet lodged 1n his spine . T he s lug was removed 1n an operation Sunday Schneider is the manager of a llouston·based oil firm. Mitchem Inc . operating in Indonesia. Originally fr om Texas. Schneider has lived outside the United States for 15 years . In the •past year. he moved from Greece to Indonesia. llis son said there has been rrequent communication among the U.S. State Department, his brother. Stephen . 2 1, o f Huntington Beach, and his sister Vicki Polito. 24 . or San Diego. The elder Schneider 's former I wife. Martha Moreri. lives in II u nlington Beach an d his mother. Grace Porter, lives in Lubbock. Texas. Schneider's wife. Linda. is with him in Bangkok. the son said. .. My grandmother and 1 are hoping he'll come back to the United States to recuperate." the son said. "He's lucky to be alive." Schneider's daughter, Vicki, a housewife in San Diego, agreed with her brother that their father "m ight be in better condition than the rest or the passengers" who still are being held prisoner by the hijackers. She said Milchem officials called her this morning and said her father is alert and is able to move his toes. "We were afraid he might be paralyied," she said . ' Mil chem Is a subsidiary of Baker International. It employs abo ut 1 ,400 people and speclaJJzes in drilling fluids and related eouloment. Each victor makes a secret pledge to not be as corny as thanking Mom and Dad. But someone will do Just that as they stand before> capacity Dorothy Chandler Pavilion audience and an estimate d 300 million televlalon viewers worldwide. Edy Williama wlU arrive for the ceremony scanUJy dressed asked the aame tired quesuons. M .. an ki.lled There will be JoumaUsll from the other aide of each ocean who· have been on a week'• tou.r of SPOKIS, ~ CLASH TONIGRI' rr you want to watch the Academy Awards -but don't WJnl to ml11 the end of the NCAA bHketball c hamplonahlp 1ame - you'll have a problem on your hand.a tonl1ht. The bHketball 11me, plttln1 North Caronna a1aln1t Indiana, be1lnl •t 5 p .m . on NBC, Channel '· Tbe Olean •et under way at 7 p.m. on AIC, Channel 7. the lludlOI yet will be lucky to feedJ• ng t 11t a atniJe ator)' ln Or1nt. C8 The Otear annouacementa art carefully caJeula~ ao the ftlm• I A 57·ye&.r·old Newport Beach can be re-releued and lt mean1 man was kllled Sunday momtnc mllliona extra in box office , when hel01thlsbalancewhJletry· bucks for the studios. · lnl to feed a cat outside hla The re·releHea provide a second-floor apartment and second chance for tboae who tumbled down a nt1ht of stain, ahruaied off the picture "hen tt breatc.lnchlan•ck. flrat •creened. Tbt Ou•r · A workman r•r.rted rancun1 nominees are diacuHed In tJie of. Jtan Paul Stet • fact·down lice lunchroom, at the ber, 1 bentat.b•the man'• 410 32nd St. amona tr1end1. • P a rt m • n t . S t e e l e , a Each rnovle buff thinks he or ' 1roundll.eper at lb• Kua Verde •ht h .. some Inside track to the ' Couatry Club ln Colla M•a, wu 1•lnftm. pr~dtad at tbetcene. And 11 you at.are at tht lube to ' lnv•tlt•ton Hld UM,,. bellevt · ab thole actre11n ln their Edith 1 StHlt IOlt h1I balance and ftU into ffead·delllMd 1own1 or UM ac· a,..,_.. .. 1uardraJl lh.i brolct, tort wtt.b chine Jookln• Ilk• they caualnf ldm to fall dDwn the (._,..,. ... U P ataJrwa~. Funeral Hnie.e .,.. -~n , a1t Al> peadlq. .. ,, . I ------------------·----·---..J ,'----... --· & at ea an .... 1111'.&D A~WI......., ~,L SCHNEIDER (RIQHT) EAAUS. WITH SON KARL JR. Fattt.r Mot In INIOll ft••lftl for ffle•dom Newport wOman cop nabs man in bush By STEVE MARBLE Ollllt0-41f ~'""'"'" A housewife-turned-police re· serve offi cer brought a late· night sear ch for a robbery suspect to an end when she coll ared a man hid· ing in bushes in a quiet Newport Ilea ch neighborhood . Marilyn Bishop. a petite 45. year-old mother who Joined the reserve force last year. said she was in the Bayport area late Fri· day listening to her police scan· ner . The police broadcast. she said, noted that a man believed to be a possible robber had j\1$l been in· volved lna hlt·and·run accident. The man. the broadcast <'!aimed, was last seen running toward Bayport Way. "I went outside and saw the poli ce h e licopter buzzing around," s he recalled. "I saw some officers down the street. I told them I'd be helping out.·' While the officers went one way. she went the other. "I didn't go very far." she ex· plained. "I saw what looked like CMlllf PIMC S&Mf -GETS HER MAN Reaerve Officer Blattop the white pants under a bush. The description said the guy was wearlna while painter 's pants." (See CAPTURE, Page A2) Strike called off by Polish union WARSAW. Poland (AP> - Th e Independent unio n Solidarity today called off a naUonwlde 1eneral atrllte threatened for Tuesday ove, tbe beatina of three union memben, th~ Polish news 11ency PAP said. The decl1lon WH made after talks with 1ovemment offtclala at which pro1re11 bad betn rePONd toward mHtlnt llftion demands for punlahment of thole reaponslblt f« tbe be.Un••· There WM no lmmedlate werd on ttrma U.at ltd fo catatll'ODblc conaequencu Jn this So.let bloc . oouatry wraclltd by labor 8Dd eeonoade turmoil. P~ukl the netotiaton..,. pre •joint comm.-..-. T • weN betWMD Ledl waa.a. ...... ot tbt leUd8rUJ lndep1•ll1Dt .......... DllM1 PremMir ••1•law lluowal. Waruw Pael mllltao I maneuvers continued In and around Poland. an omlnou~ back(l'Ot&Dd to the talks. The Soviet news a1ency Tua quoted a Polish Communist Party ortlclal aa sayln1 , re•ardln1 a 1eneral strike, "our country hu no reserves that would enable lt to survive thla catutrophe economically. Therefote the atrueture ol our Atat• and lta very au.rvlval are at l&akt." " The official, Kul•l•ra BarcUr.owlkl, 1po1'e at 1 meetiu of tbe part1 '1 Central Com milt.le whtdl ,, ... lta rullnt l'oUlburo a vote ol coaAdtDle to dtal wttb Ult ·•l&uauoa after atormrdlbett. • After nam, lta mueltil bl a four·hour •arnlDC 1Uiu mar. tbt unlon, an1ered lty the beaUAI ol &llNe memben ln Byd11oe1ea on Marola lt, flee f'OL\ND, .... Al• •\ Police arrest suspect W ASHJNGTON (AP I Presi- dent Reagan was wounded in an assassination attempt today. a top White House aide said. He was reported to be con- scious and his condition was sla· ble, according to Lyn Nofziger. A White llouse s pokesman first said that Reagan was not hit when a gunman fired rour to six shots at him as he emerged from the Washington Hilton Hotel Three other men were hit, in· eluding presidential press secretary James S. Brady "I can confirm that the presi· dent was shot once an the left side." Nofziger said at George Washington Hospital. wbere Reagan and Brady were taken. "A bullet entered his left side He 's in stable condition and con· scious and Mrs. Reagan is al his side." Nofziger said. "The president was shot in the left chest. The bu llet did not hit the heart. "lie is not undergoing surgery at th is time ." Nofziger. the W~ite House political director, said But, he added . "my un· derstanding is the bullet is still in hhn .. Washington police said a Secr et Service agent and a policeman also were wounded by the gunman. The policeman was reported in critical condi · lion al the Washington Hospital Center '!' s andy-haired man, iden· ttfaed as John Warnock Hinldey Jr . 22 of Evergreen. Colo .. was hustled into custody. The Seeret Service <.'Onfirmed that one man had been arrested outside the hotel. A television cameraman near the a ll eged assailant said Brady was shot in the forehead. the cameraman said the gunman "just opened 1,&p and started fir· ing, ··about 10 feel from Reagan. Was hington police s aid at least four shots were fired. A re· porter's tape recorder picked up six loud reports. The burst of gunfire sounded a~ Reagan left the Washington H1~ton Hotel ~fler addressing a union convention. The president strode smillng from the hotel and walked toward his limousine a few paces away. He turned to acknowledge the shouts of .. Mr . President" from reporters seek· ing to question him. Then came the burst of gun. fire, at least rour shots, perhaps as many as six. Reagan appeared momentari· ly s tunned. Secret Service agents drew thei r pistols as others hustled Reagan into the limousine. One shot apparently h it the aut omo bil e before Reagan got into it, blasting a hole in the rear window. ''There was some pushing and shovlni when the president ~ent <See SHOTS. Paie AZ) 111111 CIAIT 1111111 Mostly sunny lhrouah Tuesday. Gusty north•e•l winds 20 to 35 mph, decreuin1 late t.h1a eve· nln1. Hishs 67 to 72. Lows tont1hU8 to SS. 111111 11111 I R o ll•r1kotfng ho• minhroom..i Into o tp0rt JM 45 miWon Am1rlcoru. s.-Poo• 83. 11111 ' ' VCIN Orange Coat OAtLY PfLOT/Monday, March 30. 1981 AJ_cala p,rosec tor By DAVID KUTZ•ANN Of ....... Net ..... The Orance County deputy dJlti'lct attorft•Y who prOMCut.ed convicted child kUler Rodney Jam• Alc1la 1ay1 there i• 1ttll enou1h evldenc~ to prove Alcala 1ullty even lf the teaUmony of two Jailbouse n•nltches" is oroved to be perjured. Richard Faroell , wha persuaded an Oranae County Superior Court Jury to convict and sentence Alcala to death ror \he 1979 kidnap-murder of 12· rear·old Robin Samsoe of Hunt. mgton Beach, said today the re· ~aining evidence against the Monterey Park man la .. more than aulflcient. · · Tbe California Suprerne Court l11t 'Thursday ordered a hearin1 1ou1bt by Alcala's attorneys on whether two Orantie touoty Jail lamatet could have Ued about the convicted klller' a alleged In· volvement in Miss Samsoe's dis· appearance. The bearing was ordered after Santa Ana lawyers Keith C. Mon-roe and David A. Zim· merman filed documents which said that one of the jail inform· ants who testlfled again,t ·Alcala admitted that be and a noth,.r so-called "snitch" lied on the wttaeta atllnd. "I c1oa•t know what tbey:C-e aaylnc, .. prmecu&or FaroeU aa.ld thu me>nUn1 . "ff• have not re- ceived their (appe1J1) papera." Defense lawyer John Barnett, who represented Alcala at hi.I 1980 trlal. said he felt aJl along there was perjury during tbe prosecution phase of the pr<>· ceedlnja. Deamiblng the case as hi~bly emotlonal. Harnett aaid, 'ev· e ryone wanted to get on the bandwa1on and kill Rodney." The two informants In ques· tlon. Robert Dove and Michael Herrera. testified that Alcala admitted fthU• at Ora.p•• Coun· l)' lall tbat lie •lapped l.11 Samto1 uncoMdoua all~ 11>- ducu., her from Jhantlatton BeatblDJune, 1979. Howaver, in papera flied aecreUy with the state Supreme Court two weeks a10, Monroe said that Dove recanted his testimony durtn1 an interview with two members of the county Public Defender's statr. The former prosecution wit· ness aho admitted to a counselor with the Straight Ahead drug abuse program in Tustin that he and Herrera lied on the witness stand Dove Is re· celvlna tr•atment for heroin •d· dkt.Joa al the dru1 clinic. Admittinl Ullt be w11 "not •~rprt.Md" at the lateat dtvelop. ment In the proaecutor case. Farn•U aald he had aetn nothln.t )'tt that 1peciflcally 11y1 Dove admitted to perjurina himself. He aaid a District Attomey's inveaticator bad been lookinc In- to the matter and he would soon confer with that person. As Alcala's defense lawyer d uring his trial, Barnett had in- troduced rebuttal testimony that Dove and Herrera lied. Reacting to the latest develop. ment, Barnett said today, "We Arrest likely· felt durin1 the course of the trial that the jailhouse t nltches were all lyln1 ... " Barnet\, who still maintains that Alcala was convicted and condemned to death on the bail.a of a vlolent criminal paat before the Samsoe klllln.c. said the testimony of the jailhouse in· formants "was talolred to give the prosecution the testimony it needed to put Rodney in the gas chamber ·: The defense lawyer added, .. This Is a chilling reminder of the vaear ies of the criminal JUStace system It's a very chilling type of a situation Mesa seu talks on Clymore flies copters Costa Mesa City Council mem- bers will consider at 7:30 tonight problems caused by privately owned helicopters that fly over north Mesa, reportedly rattling windows and jarring plates from shelves and pictures from walls. home Tuesday The public study session in t.he council chambers. 77 Fair Drive, precedes a public hearing scheduled April 6 on requests for two helicopter landing pads in the north Mesa area Pads are sought by the Los Ani!eles Times for its Orange County facility on Sunflower /\venue near Harbor Boulevard and by Downey Savings and Loan an the Town Center complex near Bristol Street and Anton A venue. 1 n addition to the two pad re- quests, council members say they will study proposals for a city policy for all future heliport re· quests, a policy suggested after north Mesans complained about con s tant helicopte r noise throughout most days. Council members have re- ceived a 42-page report from the city planning staff that includes noise monitoring data gathered over two days just north and south of the San Diego Freeway cutting through the northern portion of the city. That report, including analysis by con s ulting acoustical engineers Hilliard and Bricken of Santa Ana. indicates that more than 30 helicopters flew over north Mesa in a single day. Rites held for Newport's R. C. Williams Pri vate family funeral services have bee·n h eld for onetime Newport Harbor High School and California Honor Band choice Robert Coleman "COi e .. Williams. who died Thursday. He was 31 and had entered Hoag Memorial Hospital only two days before for tests and evaluation. a family member said Cremation and burial at sea were under direction of the Nep- tune Society. His musical specialty was the baritone horn and Mr. Williams. a member of the Class of 1967, was cited for excellence both at the Sailor campus and two con- sec utive years with the California Honor Band. a high school unit. He attended Or a nge Coast College and the USC School of Mus ic. For the past six years he operated his own commercial refrigeration installation and re- pair business. He lived in Santa Monica for six years. Survivors Include his parents, Robert and J ean Miller, of Corona del Mar; a daughter, Drlsina, 6. of San Luis Obispo; and h.is paternal grandmother. Mrs. Viola Miller, of Leisure World, Laguna Hills Picke ts jam transit P HILADELPHIA CAP> - Striking cit.y transit workers set up picket llnea at a Transport of New Jersey bus terminal durinc the morning rush hour today, New face for Lolita Huntington Beach housewife Vi r ginia Castillo, founder and president of Ninos Lisiados. checks young Maria Dolores .. Lolita" Quiroz, 12. before the girl's trip home to Honduras following plastic surgery at UC Irvine Medical Center. The 20-hour job reshaped Lolita ·s terribly deformed fa ce. Samuel Jiminez. 5 months. of Ti- juana. looks bored. He had cleft palate cor- rected by volunteer s urgical team. Ninos Lisiados means scarred or crippled Fro• Pa9~ A l CAPTURE. • Pulling out he r gun, s he marched over to the bush and grabbed the man's shoulder. ··He turned around, looked up at me and said. ·get out of here. lady' ... the reserve offi cer re- called .. Then. I guess he saw the gun. He threw his hands in the air and got on his feet." She said she marched the man, later identified as Victor Junior Reyna. over to a patrol car and waited as he was handcuffed arid put in the back seat of a police vehicle Reyna, 19. was booked on rob· bery charges and held on $25.000 bail. Police said they found a ski mask and a shotgun In the back seat of Reyna's car. which had been abandoned near the scene of the accident. Mrs. Bishop, who said she got into the police business because she had "tons of lime on her hands," said this wasn't her first arrest. Newport Beach uses at least 30 reserve officers, most of whom put in 15 to 20 hours each month. The 45-year-old mother is one of the few full-ime reserve officers with the force. F re• P•9~ A l OSCARS ... were chisled from granite, you will no doubt be predicting the big winners before the envelopes are opened. Here are my picks: Best picture "Ordinary People;" Beat actor Peter O'Toole; Best actress -Sissy Spacek; Best supporting actor -Joe Pesci; Best supporting actress -Eva le Galllenne; Best director -Robert Red· ford ; Best song -"Nine to Five." Quick now, who were the 1980 winners? children JP Spanis h . Volunteer group brings children to United States for surgery and cares for them while they are here . Court drops one Bonin murde r c ount Los Angeles County pros ecutors dro pped murder charges today against William Bonin an connec:t1on with the 1979 death of a 16-year old Newport B eac h yo uth . Rob e rt Christopher Wirostc.:k . A lack of evidence was cited today · by prosecutors during a rourt proceeding The recent !>U1r1de of Vernon Bulti., who was expected to testify against Bonin. presumably was at the root of the act inn Charges also were dropped in a second murder case involving un unidentified youth Wirostek's body was found in R1 vers1de County on Sept. 27 . 1979 Bonin still is charged in 12 oth~r death~ of youths in Los Angeles and Ora nge counties Before his s uicide. Butts was charged in six killings Woman raped in Mes a lot Costa Mesa police are seeking the driver or a small foreign· made station wagon who raped a 24 -year-old C hino woman . clubbed her on the head and left her uncon sc iou s in a supermarket parking lot Investigators said the wom~n was walking to her car after vis· iting her brother in central Costa Mesa at about 5:30 a.m. Friday. A man described as in his 20s stocky and about five feet, 10° inches tall forced her in· to his vehicle. She was left lying in a parking lol behind Ralphs supermarket, 2300 Harbor Blvd. SHOTS ..• Fro• Pag~ A J POLAND ... threatened an indefinite general strike starting at 6 a m Tuesday !8 PST tonight> if its de mands were not met in the last-ditch talks The c hie f d e mand is dismissal of those respon&ible for the beatings .. We face a general strike with effec t s that ma y be l'atastroph1c :· said Rakowski . c hief labor trouble shooter for the government in comments reported by the Polish news agency PAP from the session of the party·s central committee. .. The general s trike would be the threshold of a prec1p1ce:· he. "as quoted as saying "The time has come to curb the wides pread lawlessness and lack of observance of the law," he s aid In addition lo staling its sup- port of the Co mmunist leadership, the committee called on ~ovemment offi cials to meet with Polish workers in their fac· tories and told workers to "put an end to strikes.·· the official PAP news agency reported. The statement. issued after 18 hours of often-stormy discussion ended at 3:50 a.m ., also called fo r an explanation o f the Bydgoszcz incident, which pre· cipitated the grave labor crisis. By STEVE MITCHELL °' t11t o.i1, ,., ... "~" Freed Pakis tani hijack hostage Craig Clymor e will be returning to the United States Tuesday to turn himself in to federal drug enfor cement of· ficials. A s pokes man for Laguna Beach attorney Ron ald Kreber said Clymore will arrive at Los Angeles International Airport at 5 p m Tuesday aboard a Luft· hansa airlines jet from F'raknuft. West Germany Cly more, who is wanted in the United States on drug smuggling charges, is being accompanied Fire cause sought in Costa Mesa Costa Mes a fire officials were still sifting through as hes today looking for the cause of the blaze that destroyed a 6,600-square· foot General Monitors Inc. build· ing Saturday. F iremen s aid this morning l ey were wrong in early reports indicating the fire had s tarted in a reception area near the front of the concrete-slab building and are seeking other origins . Damage to the building at 3019 Enterpnse St.. one of four hous· in g the corporation's Costa Mesa fa cility. was estimated today at $100.000. with contents losses listed at about $500,000 Administrative ftrt.· Chief Jim R i'•hey said this morning that th e blaze's r a pid s pread is bla med on reflective insulation in the building's ceilin~ The insulation mater ial. Richey s aid. burns rapidly "Fire just flashes from one cor· ner lo the other." The entire building was destroyed in what one fireman described as a .. big stubborn building fire." The firm, which e mploys 100 workers, constructed electronic devices to monitor fumes from flammable and toxic gases in the destroyed structure. The concrete-slab building had been honeycombed with what fire men described as a "maze" o f offices. electronics and chemical laboratories and draft- ing areas that hampe red fire- fighting efforts . ORANCll COAST lilly Plllt CIHtlfted ....... 1141M 2·M71 AM otMr d1p1rtfM"'9 142_.., 'nt.o the car, but lhe president was not seriously hurt." deputy p~ealdential press secretary Larry Speakes first said. Tbe aeene outside the hotel was one of pandemonium. There were ahoUll from eecurity men and a crowd quickly iathered al the MWJ , about a mile from the Whtte House. ThomM P. Haley ,_...., ~N.WMCS M. Th0ma1 l<MYU ..., ~Murphlna ~°L t:zct ldtutman r=...~ ~Goddard Jt. • I ' ' I 850,000 r aised SACRAMENTO <AP> A Sacrarnento croup baa ratted sso.ooo to lnve1tl1ate th• po11lbW~ ol a world'• fair of 11rlculture at Cal· l:apo at. SacraaMD&o. tbe atat.t'• perm•· neat flllraroundt and 1lte bl tbe annual ILlt. ra1.r. · . I ' ---~ -~-- Al's Garage arid Sea Bags Heavy duty Canvas Bags 1n shapeS and Sll89 to ftl any ooc&StOn Seams are double st11cned to provide a bfet1me ol durabOrty All Sea Bags ere water reQGllenl al'ld teature a snoulder strap 10< eesy carrying • by K reber. a spokeswoman for the attorney said this morning Tht' pair were to have left Damasrus. Syria civer the weekend. and wen· ~cheduled to s p e nd Sunda} night 1n Frankfurt. The 24 year-old former Lake Forl'st resident 1s cxpl·rted to be met by his parents. Glen and Thelma Clymore of San Juan Capistrano, and otbl'r relative~ when the a irliner arn \'t'!> l ' S Drug Enforcl'ment Ad ministration officer~ wcrl• also ex pl·cted to he al pl<.tnl's1de Tuesday "hen thl' fo rmer Laguna Reach ll 1gh School gr aduate returns Clymore \\as arreHed by Syrian authorities Marth 21 and wa~, Jailed pending efforts by L'S. officials to have him re· turned to Cahforma to answer to drug l·harges. Clymore was one of more than 100 host ages he ld aboard a Pak1!>tan1 jet that was h1JaCked March 2 on a fli g h t f rom Karachi to Peshawar It wasn't until the hostages were released 13 day~ later that Cly mOrt' was publiC'ly al'cused in a grand jury indictment or be 1ng thl• ringlead er of a S12 m lll1o n h ashis h ancl heroin !>mugghng operation Clymore s teadfastly rl'fui.cd to !!1gn a waiver or surrt'nder m Syria that would havt• allo"ed him to be taken into custody and rC'lurned to the United States But after his arrest by Synan offi cials a week and a half ago. his attornev said things were getting out of hand. and i.uggest ed Clymore return to California Kreber rtew to Dama!>CU!> a 'heck ago in an effort to gain Clymore's release from Jail and expedite his return to thl' United Statei. Barney back for 8th year NEW YORK IAP1 Producer Danny Arnold apparently changed his mind after announcin g plans to cancel "Barney Miller" at the end of the season. and the program will return for an eighth year on ABC this fall . the network said today ALSGARAGE 66 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 . President, press secretary h it . ' WO Who'll . ~ WID. I HB ,son • TONIGHT AT 7 P .M. ON CHANNEL 7 _tf pi:-aises OSCAR'S BALLOT dad's act By PATRICK KENNEDY Of 11111 OMlr ,.. ... 5utt (Mark an X i n box 1n front of your favorite) The Huntington Beach son of the American shot while fleeing fro m a hijacked Indonesian jetliner said today that his father, Karl Schneider, ·was lucky but made the right decision lo run for freedom. Best picture: O "Raging Bull" O "Tess" O "Coal Miner's Daughter" O "Ordinary People" "I'm thankful he's alive," said Karl Schn eider Jr., 26 . ··Yesterd1:1y, when I first heard the news reports I was confused and scared. but today I found out he's in fa ir condition and there will be no pe rmanent damage O "The Elephant Man" Best actor: 0 Robert Duvall 0 John Hurt "It appears he made the right decision. The hiJackers have changed their demands and the situation is unce rtain over 0 Robert De Niro O Peter O'Toole 0 Jack Lemmon Best actress: BULLETIN ' 0 Ellen Burstyn O Goldie Hawn BANGKOK, Thailand CAP) - Thal troops oa today attacked a hijacked ladonealaa jetllDer parked on an airport runway here with SS botta«ea aad five armed hijackers aboard, wit· neuea said. It was aot Im· mediately known II HJMte wu 0 Mary Tyler Moore O Gena Rowlands 0 Sissy Spacek Best supporting actor: D Judd Hirsch D Joe Pesci O Jason RotNIM5 0 Timothy Hutton O Michael O'Keefe '""· . . there," s aid Schnelder, an accountant in Costa Ilea.. Best supporting actress: 0 Eileen Brennan O Eva Le Gallienne 0 Cathy Moriarty O Mary Steenburoen 0 Diana Scarwid . His father, 44, apparently Jumped from the jetliner and ran to escape the hijackers · Sunday in Bangkok. He was shot ~n th~ back and the bullet lodged 1n his s pine The slug was rem oved in an ope rati on Sunday.· Best director: O David Lynch 0 Robert Redford 0 Richard Rush 0 Martin Scorsese O Roman Polanski Schneider is the manager of a Houston-based oil firm, Mitchem rnc., operating in Indonesia. O rigin ally Cr o m Texas Schneider has li ved outside th~ United States for lS years. In the •past year. he moved from Greece to lndoneaia. Best song: 0 "Fame" O "Nine to Five" O "On the Road Again" O "People Alone" His son said there has been frequent communication among the U.S. Stale Department, his b r other , Ste ph e n . 21 . of Huntington Beach, and his sister Vicki Polito. 24 , or San Diego. O "Honeysuckle Rose" O "Out Here on My·OWn" I _The elder Schneide(s former wife. Martha Moren. lives in Huntington Beach a nd his Academy Awards cliche.s sure bet mother . Grace Porter, lives in Lubbock. Tex as. Schneider's wife, Linda, is with him in Bangkok. the son said. "My grandmother and 1 are hoping he'll come back to the United States to recuperate " the son said. "He's lucky to be alive ... By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Ot , .. Daily ,. .... Staff When s pring arrives can Oscar be far behind? As sure as the Academy Awards have been an American mainstay for 53 years you can count on the following to happen tonight al the Music Center . Some winner wilJ use the oc- casion to give a political slate· ment. <Other stories, Pages B6-7). Each victor makes a secret pledge to not be as corny as thanking Mom and Dad. But someone will do just that as they stand before a capacity Dorothy ChandJer Pavilion audience and 1an estimated 300 m illion television viewers worldwide. Edy Williams will arrive for the ceremony scantily dressed SPOKrS, ~ CL4SH TON/Gill' If you want t~ watch the Academy Awards -but don't want to mi.a the end of the NCAA baaketball cbantplonshlp same - you'll bave ' problem on ' your handa tonlpt. The ba1ketball •a11ae, plttln1 Nortb Carollna •••lnlt lndlau, be•lnl at 19.m. on NBC, Cbunel 4. TM Olean tel under way at 7 p.m. on ABC, Cba .. 1 7. • under an open fur coat and being led by an Afghan hound or some such animal. Star gazers who have been camped in \he portable stands at the Los Angeles M uslc Center will applaud anyone summoned to·Army Archerd's microphone. The television cameras will s how again the "crazy'' with his rainbow-colored hair. Schneider's daughter. Vicki, a housewife in San Diego, agreed with he r brother that their father "might be in better condition than the rest of the passe~gers" who stlll are being held prisoner by the hijackers. She said Milchem officials called her this morning and said her father is alert and Is able to move his toes: "We were afraid he mieht be paraly%ed, ·· she said. Milcbem is a subsidiary of Baker Inte rnational. It employs about 1,400 people and specializes In drilling fluids and related eouipment. The working press, few of whom sit in the main auditorium to see the awards live. will watch the TV monJlors in the press room tucked away in the huge complex. They will battle for a spot in front· of the smaJI stage where the winners are asked the same tired questions. • There will be JoumaUsu from Man ki.Jled the other side of each ocean wbo · have been on a week'• tour of · the l tudloe yet will be lueky to f eedin• cat get a slnJCle story ln print. . e Tbe Oscar anaouneementl-ve carefull7 c!alcuiated IO th• fthna • A S'l·year-old Newport Beach c:en be re-releued UICI lt means 1 1 man wu killed Sunday morntn1 mllliona extra ln box office . wbenheto.thiabalancewbiletry- buctl for the studloe. · ln1 to teed a cat outside his The re-releHH provide a second-rtoor ap1rtment and second chance for those who tum bled down a nt1ht of stain, abru•Uled off the plct~re when lt breakln& h1a neck. llrlt sereened. Tile Oaur · .A workman rer.rted nncsm1 nomlneet are d1Jeua1ed ln the of. Je111 Paul Stet e f1ee·down • flee lunchroom, 1t the bar beneath the man'• 4JO Janet St. arnoni frMadl. ' a P a rt m • D t • 8 t • e & e , ·a lacb mOvte bu.ff think• he or 1rounclneper at th• Mesa Vtnlt •he hu t0me lrWd• traek to th• Country Club ln Cotta Mesa, wu wlnnen. pronounted dead at the seeae. And 11 you start at tbe blbe to lnv.U,aton •aid tbe7 believe · ab UMIN ectreuet ln their ldltlt • ~le loet his balance and r.D lDto HHd.._.ped 1owu or the ae-• ft~w pardraU tbat brols1, , tun 1rit.h cblna lookla• Ute they caualn1 him to f11J clown lhe cae.oec••• P ~ ata1nr11. l'uneral 1•mt111 .,.. ,..._, ••• Al> pudln1. i .,, OH AN ·-.l C.OIJ N 1 't l Al IH>tHHA 4>5 CENT'.) ' s ea I .Ml'l SCHNEIDER (RtOHl} ~ER Wint SON KARLA Father •hot tn bectc ""'!" tOt hedom Newport woman cop nabs man in hush By STEVE MARBLE 0t tw o.llf "I ... s .. H A housewife-turned-police re- serve officer brought a Jate-night search for a robbery suspect to an end when she collared a man hid· ing in bushes in a quiet Newport aeach neighborhood. Marilyn Bishop, a petite 45. year-old mother who joined the reserve force last year, said she was In the Bayport a rea late Fri- day listening to her poUce scan- ner. The police broadcast. s he said, noted lhal a man believed to be a possible robber had just been in- volved In a hit-and-run accident. The man, the broadcast claimed, was last seen running toward Bayport Way. "l went out.side and saw the pol Ice helicopter buzzing around," she recalled. "l saw some officers down the street. J loldthem I'd behelpingout.'' While the officers went one way, she went the other. "I didn't go very far." she ex- plained. "I saw what looked like D•flr..._IUff,.... GETS HER MAN Reaerve Officer Bl1hop the white pants under a bush. The description said the guy was weerlng white painter's pants." . (See CAPTURE, Pace AZ) Str.ike called off by Polish union WARSAW, Pola~d <AP> - The Independent union Solldarlty today called off a nationwide 1ene.ral strike threatened for Tuesday over the beatlna of tJ\ree unlon-memben, the Pollsh news a1ency PAP Hid. The declllon was made after talks with IO••mment offidall at whlch pro1re11 bad been reported ~arct meeUq unklft demandl fqr puniab.ment ot U.. rapomlblefortbe beaUJl&a. 1'bere wu no lmmedlMe word on terma that led to eatum.pblc CODltquenota ln tblt 8o¥Mt bloc COWltry wratW b.J labor and IC ...... lunnGU. ... -...U•1Clft .... pre JMDteomm_.... .. 1 .,....llllrilD.IAD ., ........... fll ........... tadtp11•1at _..., Mil Dltlll ·Pre•• ... ~.,.··· ....... W•ra•w Paet muu1;, maneuvers continued in and around Poland, an ominous back1round to the talks. Tbe Soviet news a1ency Tass quoted a Polish Comrnunl•l Party offlclal u uyln1. re1ardln1 a 1enera1 strike, "our country has no reaervn tbal would enable It to survive lbls eatutropbe economically. Therel~ the 1tru~u... of our atate Md lt1 very 1...-.lval are at Jl•k•." The offlclal, Ka1lmtera Barclkowa_., apolle at a meatln, of th• part1 '1 Centra Commlu.e wblc:liJa•• ltl rulla1 Polltlliiai'O • Yot• ~ to deal Wttll tbe 1ltMUoil att.r •• ,., ..... le. After ftalnl ltl 11aUMlll ln a four...._ •U'nlDI 1titb rrwa1, ttae unloa, an1ered 1>1 tbe beaUQI of lhrH membtn ln l1d•o1u1 on ,Marcia U , ctM fOLAND, .... AIJ an Police arrest suspect w ASHINvTUN (AP ) Presi- dent Reagan was wounded in the left side in an assassination at- tempt today. His press secretary and two officers also were shot. Reagan was conscious and hJs condition was stable. according to top White House aide Lyn Nof~iger. Another spokesman, David Gergen. said the presi- d e nt had walked into the hospital and .. a decision is now being made whether to operate to remove the bullet." A BC News reported that the bullet had punctured a Jung. A White House spokesman fi_rst said that Reagan was not hit when a gunman fired fbur to six shots at him as he emerged from the Was hington Hilton Hotel. Three other men were hit in- c lud ing preside ntia l p~ess secretary James S. Brady. "I can confirm that the presi- dent was shot onee in the left side,". Nofziger said al George Washington Hospita l. where Rea gan and Brady were taken. "A buJlet entered his left side He's in stable condition and con: scious and Mrs. Reagan is at his side." Nofziger said, ··The president was shot in the left chest. The bullet did not hit the heart. "He_ is not undergoing s urgery al· _this time," Nofziger, the While House political director said. ' But, he ·add ed , "m y un- derstanding is the bullet is still in him." The Secret Service said John Wa rnock Hinkley J r . 22 , of Evergreen. Colo .. was arrested. Secret Service spokesman Jack Warner s aid the s uspect had fired a .38-caliber revolver. Vice President George Bush in Texas for an address to th~ slate legislature, headed back to Washington aboard Air Force Two. upon hearing of the as- sassination attempt. A Sec r et Servi ce agent '.J'imolhy J . McCarthy, was shot m the chest. A city policeman also was wounded and was re- ported in critical condition at the Washington Hospital Center. A television cameraman near the all eged assailant said Brady 1 was shot in the forehead. The I cameraman said the gunman "just opened up and started fir- ing," about 10 feet from Reagan. Hank Brown, a cameraman ror ABC, said he saw a while man with blond hair in his 30s fire at Reagan from about 10 feet away with a .38-caliber pistol. He said Brady appeared to have been hit in the head . "He just opened up and con- tinued squeezing the trigger." Brown said. He said the assailant did not say anything. Brown said the man appeared to have (See SHOTS, Pa•e AZ) 011111 ClllT lllTHll I . Mostly sunny throu1h Tuesday. Gusty northwest winds 20 to 35 mph, decreulng late this eve- ning. Hlgba 67 to 72. Lows tonlehUltoS5. llllllTllAY ' ltolleralcathag Ito • muilaroomed iftlo a tp0rr /or 4S miU'°'1 .4m•ncon1. S•e Page 83. . . . 11~11 .(1 :.::. = ' 'I ' J • \ . • N ~ Cout DAIL V PILOT/Monday, Merch 30, 1•1 By DAVU>IUJTIMANN ................. The Ora.nge County deputy diatri~t elt~y who protecuted convicted cbtld kllJer Rodney James Alcala says there la ltUI enough evldebce to prove Aleata guilty even if the testlmon~ of two jailbouse "snitches' Is proved to be perjured. Ric.hard Farnell . who pers uadtfct an Orange County ·superior Court jury lo convict and sentence Alcala to death (or the 1979 kidnap-murder or 12· year·oJd Robln Samsoe or Hunt- ington Beach. said today the re· m ~inintt evidence against the SHOTS .•. 'penetrat ed lhe pr ess corps ... ·· Washington pohce said at least four shots were fired. A re· porter's tape recorder picked up six loud reports. The burst of gunfire sounded as Reagan left the Washington Billon Hotel after addressing a union convention. The president strode smiling from the hotel · and walked toward his limousine a few paces away. He turned to acknowl<.'dge the shouts or ··Mr. President" from newsmen seek· ing to question him. Then came the burst of gun- fire. at least four shots, perhaps as many as six. Reagan appeared momentari- ly stunned Secret Ser vice a"gents drew their pistols as . others hustled Reagan into the limousine One shot apparently hit the aut omobtle before Reagan got into it, blasting a hole in the rear window. ·'There was some pushing and shoving when the president went into the car. but the president was not seriously hurt." deputy presidenti al pre ss secretary Larry Speakes first said. The scene outside the hotel was one of pandemonium There were s houts from security men and a crowd quickly gathered at the hotel. about a mile from the White House Secret Ser vi ce agents and police pinned the apparent as· sai lant to the wall then lo the ground A videotape of the incident s howed Brady l y in~ on the ground several feet from the doorway of the hotel There was blood on the sidewalk near his head. After the s hots were fired. the re was a scream and then agents shouted "back up, back µp . get back. get back ~ .. Senate Re publican leader Howard H Baker or Tennessee adjourned the Senate, consider· in~ Reagan·s package of tax cuts . Sen. Edward M Kennedy, D·M ass . whose two brothers were s lain in the 1960s , declared: ··With our prayers for those who have been wounded, I think must go our resolution to rid our society of hatred. ··Violence and hatred are alien to everything this country is about;· he said. Shuttle set for launching CA PE CANAV ERAL, Fla . <AP I Kennedy Space Center workers are prea pring for a. final countdown tentatively lead- ing to an April 10 launch of America ·s trouble-plagued space shuttle Columbia. ··We feel the 10th is a viable launch date ... shuttle launch director George Page said Sun· day after an exhaustive physical mspection confirmed tne suc· cess of two critical tests of the sysle m ·s s ilo -s haped aluminum fuel tank The 73-hour launch countdown is set to start at 2:30 a.m. PST Sunday. Page told reporters at a briefing. $50,000 raised SACRAMENTO <AP> -A Sacramento group has raised $50 ,000 to investigate the possibility of a world's fair of agriculture at Cal· Expo at Sacramento. the state's perma· nent Cairgro~nds and site of the annual Stale Fair. Montney Park man 11 .. _,,. tban •Ufftdent. '· Tb• C.Ufornla Supreme Ceurt la1t Thunday orderff a heulnc souaht by Alcala's attorne)ll on wlM&ber two Oru1• County Jail lnmatte eouJd have lied about the convtcttd killer's alleged ln· volvernent in Miss Samsoe's dll· appearance. The hearing was ordered after Santa Ana lawyers Keith C. Monroe and David A. Zlm· merman filed documents which said that one of the jail inform- ants who testified against Alcala admitted that he and anothPr so-called "snitch'' lied 'bu WtilN lland. " dola'i know what lMy•re Hyl 1.'' protecutor Farnell said Ud1 mon\lnt. "We have not re- ceived their <appeals) papers." Defense lawyer John Barnett, who represented AlcaJa at hia 1980 trial, aaid he rell all along there was perjury during the prosecution phase or the pro- ceedings. Describing the case as hlF,hly emotional. Harnett said. 'ev· eryone wanted to get on the bandwagon and kill Rodney." The two informants in ques· . lion. Robert Dove and Michael Herrera. testified that Alcala New face for Lolita admita.s wb.Ue et Oraaa• CoUa· ty Jail that be 111p~ Ml11 Samaoe uncOUciOUJ alt•r ab- ductla• her from HuntlnltOO Beech {n June, 1979. However, Jn papen filed aecretl)' with the slate Supreme Court two weeks ago, Monroe said that Dove recanted his testimony during an lntervlew with two members or the county Public Defender's starr. The former prosecution wit· n ess also admitted to a counselor with the Straight Ahead drug abuse program ln Tustin that he and Herrera lied on the witness stand. Dove ls re- Huntington Beach housewife Virginia Castillo. founder and president of Ninos Lisiados. checks young Maria Dolores "Lolita" Quiroz, 12. before the girJ's trip home to Honduras following plastic surgery at tJC Irvine Medical Center. Tpe 20-hour job reshaped Lolita's terribly deformed face. Samuel Jiminez. 5 months . of Ti · juana. looks bored. He had cleft palate cor - rected by volunteer s urgical team. Ninos Lisiados means s carred or crippled Fro• Pa9~ AJ CAPTURE. • Pu lling out her gun , s he marched over to the bush and grabbed the man·s shoulder. ··He turned around, looked up at me and said. ·get out of here. lady';· the reser ve officer re- called. ·'Then. I guess he saw the gun. He threw his hands in the air and got on his feet · · She said she marched the man, later identified as Victor Junior Reyna. over to a patrol car and waited as he was handcuffed and put in the back seat of a police vehicle. Reyna. 19. was booked on rob· bery charges and held on $25.000 bail. Police said they found a ski mask and a shotgun in the back seat of Reyna's car. which had been abandoned near the scene or the accident. Mrs. Bishop. who said she got into the police business because -she had "tons of time on her hands;· said this wasn't her first arrest. Newport Beach uses at l~asl 30 reserve officers, most of whom put in 15 lo 20 hours each month. The 45-year-old mother is one of the few fuJl-ime reserve officers with the force. ,.,... r .. e Al OSCARS ... were chisled from granite, you will no doubt be predicting the big winners before the envelopes are opened. Here are my picks . Best picture -"Ordinary People;" Best actor -Peter O'Toole; Best actress -Sissy Spacek ; Best supporting actor -Joe Pescl; Best supporting actress -Eva le GaUienne; Best director -Robert Red· ford : Best song "Nine to Five." Quick now, who were the 1980 winners? c hildren IP Spanish . Volunteer group brings children to United States for surgery and cares for them while they are here . Court drops one Bonin murder count Los Angeles County pros eculors dropped murder charges today against William Bonin in connection with the 1979 death of a 16-year -old Newport B e a c h yout h . R obe rt Christopher Wirostek A lack of evidence was cited today by prosecutors during a cour t proceeding The recent suicide of Vernon Butts, who was expected to testify against Bonin, presumably was at the root of the action Charges also were dropped in a second murder case invol vin~ an unidentified youth. Wirostek's body was found in Riverside County on Sept. 27. 1979. Bonin still is charged in 12 other deaths of youths in Los Angeles and Orange counties. Before his suicide. Bulls was charged in six killings. Woman raped in Mesa lot Costa Mesa police are seeking the driver of a small foreign· made station wagon who raped a 24-year -old Chino w oman . clubbed her on the head and left h e r uncon scio u s in a supermarket parking lot. Investigators said the woman was walking to her car after vis· iting her brother in central Cos ta Mesa al about 5:30 a .m. Friday. A man described as in his 20s, stocky and about five reel, 10 inches tall forced her in· to his vehicle. She was left lying in a parking lot behind Ralphs supermarket, 2300 Harbor Blvd. North to get rain By The Auoclated Press ----- Fro• Pag~ Al POLAND ... threatened an indefinite general strike starting at 6 a.m. Tuesday 18 PST toni~hl > if its demands were not met in the last-ditch talks The chie f demand is dismissal of those responsible for the beatings . .. We face a general strike with e ff ects that m ay b e cata strophic ... said Rakowski. chief labor trouble shooter for the government tn comments reported by lhe Po li sh news age ncy PAP from the session of the p:frty·s central committee. "The general strike would be the threshold of a precipice." he was quoted as sayin~ ·'The lime has come to curb the widespread lawlessness and lack of observance of the law ... he said. In addition to staling its sup- port o f the Co mmuni s t leadership. the committee called on government officials to meet with Polish workers in their fac· tories and told workers to "put an end to strikes:· the official PAP news agency reported. The statement, issued after 18 hours of often-stormy discussion ended at 3:50 a.m., also called fo r an explanation or the Bydgoszcz incident. which pre- cipitated the grave labor crisis. hY charge eel*' lr9tment for beroln ad· dl""8 Ill the dru1 cUnlc. A ......... tbat he WU ''not surprieed'' at the lai.tt develop- ment ln tbe protecutor case, Farnell utd be bad tffn nothlnc yet that apecJt1cally uys Dove admitted to perjuring hJmtelf. He said a Dlatricl Attorney's Investigator had been looking ln· to the matter a-nd he would aoon confer with that person. As Alcala's defense lawyer durina his trial. Barnett had in· troduced rebuttal testjmony that Dove and Herrera lied Reacting to the latest develop- ment, Barnett said today, "We Arre•t lf.kely fell during the course of the trial that the jallhouse snitches were ell lylnc ... " Barnett. who s till maintains that Alcala was convicted and condemned to death on \be basis ol a violent criminal put before t he Samsoe killln1. said the testimony or the jallhouse in· form ants ··was talolred to give the prosecution the testimony it needed lo put Rodney in the gas chamber." The defense lawyer added, "This is a chilling reminder or the vagaries or the cr1m1n al justice system It's a very chilling type of a situation Clymore flies home Tuesday By STEVE MITCHELL Of t• O•llr "llet Sl•lt Freed Paki s tani hij ack hostage Craig Clymore will be returning lo the United States Tuesday to turn himself in lo federal drug enforcement of· ficials. A spokes man for Laguna Beach attorney Ronald Kreber s aid Clymore will arri ve at Los Angeles International Airport at 5 p.m . Tuesday aboard a Luft hansa airlines Jet from Fraknuft. West Germany. Clymore. who is wanted in the United States on drug smuggling charges. is being accompanied Rites held for Newpott's R..C. Williams Pri vate fami l y fun eral s ervices have been held for onetime Newport Harbor High School and Cali fornia llonor Band choice Robert Coleman ··cote " Williams, who died Thursday. He was 31 and had entered Hoag Memorial Hos pital only two day~ before for tests and evaluation. a family member said. Cremation and burial at sea were under direction of the Nep· tune Society. His musi<:al s pecialty was the baritone horn and Mr Williams. a member of the Class of 1967. was cited for excellence both at the Sailor campus and two con s ec ut ive yea r s with the California Honor Band. a hig h school unit. li e attended Orange Coas t College and the USC School or Mus ic. For the past six years he operated his own commercial refrigeration installation and re pair business. He li ved in Santa Monica for six years. Survivors include his parents. Robert a nd Jean Miller. of Corona del Mar: a daughter. Drisina. 6. of San Luis Obispo; and his paternal grandmother Deputies attacked FRESNO <A Pl -Rocks and bottles were thrown al Fresno County sheriffs deputies trying to break up fighting among a group of about 200 people at a recreation area northeast of here Sunday. authorities said. Mrs \'iolu ~t ill l'r. of Ll•tsurt' World. Luguna Jlilb b) Krebl'r. a spok1• ... woman tor tht' attorne) <..aid th1i, mornrng The patr wert' to ban-ldl Dam as 1· us . S' r 1 a '' ~ t• r th t' weekend. and -...(•n · ..,l'heduled lo s p <'nd Su nda ) n ig ht 1n f'r ankfurt The 24 yt'ar-old form l•r Lakf;' Fon •st rt'stclt•nt 1 ... t'XJ>l'l't<·d 111 be met b) hi ., pan•111... r. lt·n and Thc•lma C'I) mon · of San .Juan Capistrano and oth1·r n·lulln·s "hC'n lht' airh11 er a rrl\ es l' S Dru g Enfllrtcm<'nl Ad m1n1stration offin·r ... Y. l'rt' al so l'X JH'Cled to he ..it pl:1nt•std l' Tu esda) v. hen the· for m c·r Lag u na Ht•uc h l1 1g h Srhool grOJcfuate rc•t urns C'I) m ore• \\as :11 rt·:·.ll'cf by S) nan authonl1c-; ~arch 21 and W U!--Jailed 1wndmg d fort' h.\ L's offieials to hu\t' him n• turned lo California to uns-...1:1 tu drug chargl'S Cl ymon · "as ont· of nwrt· than 100 hos ta gl''> ht'ld a ho<i rd a Pa kl'tarn J<'l t hat wa ... ht ,.ickprJ :\t a r c h 2 11 n a fl 1 g h I f rom Karuchi to Pt>s ha war It wasn't until lht hosl..ig<'s -...e re relt·asl·d 13 d<n -.. b tt•r that Clymore was puhhc•l\' atTu-.l'd '" a grand Jury tndtt'lnu·nt of he· m g the nnglPach•r of a Sl2 million h ;ish1 s h a nd hl'roin smuggling ope ration Clymore Sll•adf<tstly rl'fu-..c•d tn sign a waiver of s urrender tn Syria that would h<J\'C allO\\Cd h1 m to be tak<'n into l'UStody and n •turned to the Un1lf'd States But after his arn•!>l b) S~ nan offlt·ials a week and a half ago. his attorney s aid things wen· getting out of hand. and suggt•s t ed Clvmnrl' rl'turn to Cahforn1a K rebcr flew to Dam as1·us u wel'k ago in an l'ffort to gain Clymore·s release from jail anci expedite his rf.'turn to the l 'n1ted States. Barney back for 8th year NEW YORK 1AP1 Producer Danny Arnold apparently changed his mind aft e r announcin~ plans to cancel ··Barne) Mille r .. at the end of the season. and the program will return for an ei~hth year on ABC this fall. the network said today MAINC>ffa A travelers' advisory has been issued in the southern Sierra Nevada today . but most or Northern California was expect- ed to have fair weather today. with increasln f clouds and c hance o f ra n rrom the northwest tonight. Rain was ex- pected to be likely along the north coast by Tuesday. · Thoma P. Haley .._.._ Aobeft N. WNd ,.,....... M. Thom• KMYll .... ThofN9 A. Murphlne .............. CMfMH, Loot ~ ............. t=:,G ~ulman ~=-" ~~'2odd9fd Jr. m WH t..., k , C..U MIU, CA. Mell..._, ....... C-te Mete, CA. mJt Wrong front page A handful of Newport Beach 1ub11cr1bere to the OallY Pilot were tr eated to an ex - traordinary front pa•e Friday when they rttel ved copi• of a f acalmU. edlllon lfttended for In·· ttrnal dlltrlbutlon . Our 1polotlt1 to thole ptnsled by the unu1ual 11tory teleelion. ··---------------~------- Al's Garage and Sea Bags • Heavy duty Canvas Bags m shapes and sizes to 111 any ooca&On Seams are oooble Stitched to prOVlde a hfet1me of durability All Sea Baos are water repellent and feature a shoulder strap lor easy carrvl'9. AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (71'4) 644·7030 II " It ~I .. " .. ~ t2 "' ... .., ... • .: ~ I LI \. Orange Cout DAil. Y PILOT/Monday, March 30, 1981 N OMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS OUOlATIOHI lli(~UO( t•AOU OH'"' HIW VO•K. MIOWlll, ""''"" l'IW 10\TON 01 Y•OIT AHO Clli(•lilll&TI noc.1 l•CM•NOllAHO 11"'•110 I Y Tltl 1tA•O &ltO UUTIHl l DOW Jones Final , Off 2.62 Cloal~g. 992.11 Budweiser 8udwe1ser beer. having conquered the U.S. market. ls going overseas in a big wa~ And why not'> We 're now Importing 99 brands or foreign beer So why shouldn'la litUe American beerflowlheotherway'> Anheuser · Busch. the St. Louis brewer of Budweiser has already been shipping some beer to Japan a~dit'sabouttostepuptheseexports lt'salso going to invade Eu rope, from whence it came 100 years ago The com pany's brew ery in Wil liam sburg , Va .. 1s loading \~ ..... MILTON MOlllWITZ ~- cases of 16·ounce cans for shipment lo Sweden, where Budweiser will be promoted under the theme. "All the way from the U .S.A "A can of Bud is expected to sell for $1 35 in Sweden. . ir the overseas market looks promising. Anheuser· Busch is prepared to build plants there• ANHEUSER-BUSCH'S international push follows a sensational year in its home market In first place here since 1957. when 1t displaced Schlitz, the brewer of Budweiser. Michelob, Natural L1ghl and Busch lengthened its lead in 1980. In 1979, AnheusC'r·Busch brewed 46 ma I hon barrel!> of beer. Last y~ar it broke the 50 malhon-barrel bar raer. In 1979, Anheuser· Busch held 26 percent of the t,; S beer market Last year itcaptured28percent. In 1979. Anheuser-Busch had revenues of $2.7 billion on which 1t earned $144 ma Ilion arter taxes Last year it had revenues of $3 3 billion on which at made a profitof$171 malhon There arc other contributors to this pot corn syrup. yeast. lht•me parks in Williamsburg and Tamp~. the St Louis Cardinals but beer IS at the heart or this em pare No company anywhere an the world has ever brewed as much IT WAS CONSIDE RED sensational a couple of years ago when Anheuser ·Busch reached the poi~t where 1t was supplying one out of four brews downed in the country Today at"s on the way to supplying one out of three. In California, the biggest beer market an the nation, Anheuser· Busch's share has mounted to nearly 50percent. So concentrated has the t,; S beer market become that two companies now control JUSt about half of it Milwaukee's Miller Brewing. a satellite of tobacco giant Philip Morris, ranks second in the market Miller cranked out 37 million barrels in 1980, taking down a little over21 percent of the business Pabst Brewing took over third place in 1980 with sales of 15 1 mil hon barrels, edging out Schhtz, whose output was pegged at 15 million barrels. Holding down fifth place in the industry is Colorado's Coors. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT Sony Co<P Amer C•n 18M NtMe<iCr• > G\llfUtdCP MaratOll TanoyCp • Euoo Kmart Amer T&T Falrcllld s SHnRoeb AllRlcllll s GenTel&EI Unll Tech 1~.00 l(ll,IClll )l.1,1(11) ~.JOO 1 .. ,lOO 1 .. ,IOO ™·'°° 119,.00 222,SCIO 111,.00 l .. ,'IOO 1'3,400 "1,000 1/1,100 114.700 UPS AND DOWNS AMERICAN LEADERS l«\IW "°""' 1!11"1 -ki.. noon Pt•<» ono ,.. ~ ol Irle _, ftl\Otl t.(:t+N .,,..,~ ~ ~ -lrod•"G n1l-•lly II ,.,..... .,_, lnstrum Su 111,100 ''"' T~a > 1»,100 1.. 1'> HovOllM IJS,SCIO ~ -Cl\amp Ho .. i.oo 1'• ~cllltGs s 11.'00 """ '-WaNlrCom W1 7t,'OO "'• Y> ClalllrCp > 71,lOO ''"' '" AIHl<e Alr1 66,.00 S... • II) 8111yK Id ... SCIO 6'"' "' TeosAlrCp S.,IOO 13 • ,,.. METALS c ... ,., 11-. 97 <•nn • PC>UnO. u S aul'"• hons LtM :14 ll>t<!fll\• PC>UnO l it'< •fli·· 4)1• Ctt'lti • POUnd dtl1wreo Tift u ()oU ~l•I• WM• comc>Ot•I• Ill Al•ml..., l•cenl•• p0una N v MtrCllrYJA10 OOC-""'" Pl•ll-un 00 lrOY 01 H y SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS LolMlon morn1nv1t••nvlH4 )(),011 s•.u LOftdoll •lltrnoon ll•lng UU SO, Oii Sl1 U Parlt: 1tt.,naon •••1n9 un•..,•ll•b4t ~raftlll..,,. fo .,nq U7t "· oll lit 'It Zwrlcll. 1a1t •fltrnoon ll••nQ UH 00 olf l IS.00 Ult 00 •~•..i M•fll•Y & "'""'•" on ly d•••• quo~• U2• SO, 041JI)1S e,...i_. only Claoly quOlt UJ• SO all SU.JS tl ..... 11¥d on11 Gally quoit febucelld $5-tl S4, Oii Sl1 14 _sYMBOLS Orano-Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Maroh 30, 1981 OBITUARIES ____ ...... ____________________________________________________________________ ;;.;;.;..;.;;;;.;..;.;,;:;.:. Gun aids witlidrawal AIHEBORO, N.C. <AP) -Tbe ftnt ctlllomer wM» walk9d into tM brancb ot UM Ra.ndolph auk Md Tnllt Co. on openlnc day cam9d • sua. Ued u' lbree employeet and t.bteai.oed to ltlU tbem Wore lleelq wttb a aut.taodaJ amount of cub, police 1-.ld. PVBLIC NOTICE PVBLIC NOTICE tYMOPSK fW TM& A•UAL ITAT ..... T Of' C:AVAl.lllt IHJVltAHC:I COlt'°ltATl()ft. M I I. ~ ll'lece, .. ,~,,_., JAOtl•. YMt l..e.. ~Ji, I• ,, .. ., Mm!......... .,,., .... ,. .. ., llallilltlfl ···"·'" a..ci.1 _.,..~ '"'* • • CNll•I ~OW.rtn•• Cn l .. lf SIAl11IOf'Y o.-11 .. ,D ,lllO ~OU ,.,.Ill Md <Mlflillul•d tll'11l11• W ,4t7,UI u11 ... 1.,.. '"'* c*"'p1"'' .. 1,tJQ,.t,W 141r~h•o•,.....rdt polk J'flolde" &U,"7 ,oo IOK-fer lht .-..r p 1 ... >•.JU 0411111,_ tor Ille yur ,_lt,QM,71) We ~ <trtlly llltt Ille -•• 1temt we In ec<onlen<t •II~ llM All-I ·$1•1-nl few Ille YHr eflded Oe<emw JI, '"°· -10 Ille in ..... -. Com mini.Mr of Ille SIM• 01 eat11wn11, --1o 1-. 'J. I ......... Pr"ldlnl lt.C. Fet.,...tloll, Sllcretery P..Oll_()r.,._. CMtt 0.11, Piiot. ~JO, l l, Ap<ll 1, J. J, t•t U61 .. I PVBLIC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE l lut llW SYHCWSl5 0, THI SYMOPSIS 0' TMI ANNUAi. STATIMIHT ANNUAi. STATIMINT 0, 0, Gull lnturenu Comp1ny 010 Select tllsurence Compeny, JOU Bellev•ew, l(IM6\ Clly, Mluo .. r1..,111 Ced•r SP'lft9', Delles, Tu .. 1n1• Year•-Dec•~ JI,'* Veer,,,... OK•-JI,,,. To1111dmmee1 ••wll $1'2"46.ll't Tot•• edMllt.O .... " JAJ.lJ•.ns Tolel ll•blllliH IOS,'I01,S1S Tot11 t1eblhUff Jl.709,1 .. Spec oat •urptu• ,._, 0 Specie I •urplu• runcl\ -O- Cop1lel 1Nld 11111G ... rMly C1pltel1 Capile l 1Nld·UC1 G ... rlf'IY Sletutor, ~II S,000,000 C-.>llel/$YIUlW'r 0.PoSll 1.'°°,000 Gron pelc>-ln •nd Grou pelcl-ln encl <Otltrit>uled 'urplu\ Jt,ott,IJO COtllfll>uled ,urpl•ll •.IOS.2H UnlUlgned tund• t •urplu•I JS,lll,•'1 unanlgMCI lunch (surplu•I S,ld,4'1'1 Surplu• Hr-rd• Surptu1 es r-rd• POll<Yl'IOlcler\ I•, 93',SU POii< y!IOl<ler• 11.SS0.13' Income lc..-IM YN' ••.ua,S•I 1ncom1 tor tlW y11r 2•.m."'1 Ot11>ur,.menl\ tor Oost>uriements tor t ... 'rt•r IJ.S.1,1'1'1 t"• yHr lS,tJt,U • We "•r•t>r corllly '"•I 1"41 •OO•• Wt nertt>y certoty 1"'' lht •bo•• otem• are 1n eccordtnct w11n ,,.. An 11em1 1,. In accordlnce •Ith tl>t An· nuat Statement tor lh• YHr tndtd nu•I Sleltmtnl tor the yur ended December 3'. !980. medt to 1111 December JI. 1980, mede to lhe tn•u,.nce Comm••"oner ot lh• Stett tn\ur1nc1 C.ornmlulonor ot 1n1 S••tt of C•t1torn1a, pur\u•nl to l•w of C•l1tornt•, p\,tt'su•nt to l•w. 0. W 8ann1\ter, Pre\JOtnt D w B•nnl•ter-, Preudenl AC Ftthel\tOll, S.crtt1ry A c. Ftlhtr\IOtl, Stcrttery Put>los"4HI Orange Coe" Oeoly Piiot PuDll\Md O<e.noe Coe\I Ot il'( Potot ~ar<h30,Jl.Aprllt,1,J,1981 l>Jlll MerchlO.Jt.Aprllt,1.J,1'1'1 IS1'·11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE -----~ aiuo NOTICI 01' TltUITllS S.Al.I SYHOl"SIS 01' THE I._ Ne. T.S. NI. JMlt-4 ANNUAi. STATI MENT T 0 SERVICE COMPANY •• outy OF ePPO•nltd TrultM under IN lottowi119 At11n1oc ln•u•M<• C-ny, JOU d.,<rlt>tO -"' trull Wll.l SEl.l C..iarSpr1119S,0ell .. ,Teu•7SJ.. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE Yeetl!-0.C•->t.t"° HIGHEST BIDDER FOR C ASH Totel eOmltltd a1 .. i. \It.Ill 111 I Poe bit el time of u le In l•wrul Tol•l ll•l>tllll•• •.71S,St1 money Of .... Untied Sl•tHI •II ro9'1I, Special wrpfu1 tuno1 o titlt •ncl lnlert\I <Otl .. Yt<l lo -now Cepllel Plld-up G ... r•nty "•Id DY II -WiO Ottd "' Trust In C1111t11 Sletutorw Dfl>o1ot 1.000 ooo 1110 p•opertr r.ereonelltr <IH<ri.,.., Gron peld on encl r RVS TOR GORDON aRAH.llM •ncl COlllrllkottdSurplu\ .. I ._J NANCY CARROl.L. 8ENEFICIARY UneHlgned luncl\ .. urpluU .... 0, 111 01 VE RSI FtEO V~NTURES, INC .• • S11rplus •s re9i1ra\ C•l1fornt• corpor•tt°" Rw<oraeo poll< ynotclef\ •.Jal I'• Au9ut1 II, '"'° .. lnslr No. 206SI on lncomtlOf .,,., .. r S,'1J ... I Dool!. IJlOS P•9• 1110 ol Ollic••I Olsbur\e,,,..,is tor Records In the Olf•<t ot the Rt<ordtr the yur l,Sll.•ll ot Or•119f County. H•d deed of lru•I We n.,fl>y cet11ly 1n11 ttv •t>o•• O•Kr11>e1 t"' lollow1119 pr-rt• item' •re 1n •C<Of'CS.~t •lf'1 uw ~n A Condominium consl\Un9 of ttw· n11•I St•lement tor tn• v••r enO.d t0Uow1n9 OtctmDtr )I, ... o. m•O• to Int t•I Utill No ~ 1n .,.. Coulltf ot lt1llir•n<t Comm1u1onor or lhe Stelt Or•noe. 51•1• ot Cetllornle, of 11\11 ,, C•llforn••. purst.Unt to ••w '•rt• 1 n Condom• n1 ym p' o t t < t 0 .W 8•nnl\.t1r1 P,-t\td•nt ct•,c r 1bect Jn lh•t <•rt•tn Con· R c . Fet,,.r\IOll, S.crtl••Y dom1n1um Plan recorded In bOOI< 10790 Put>lls"4HI Oran~ Coe\I Oeoly Piiot, P•9• 90., Oltoclel R<Kords. In lt>t oll1u M•rch JO, JI, Aprol 1, 1, J. 1te1 UJ• 91 or the county recorder ot Ortn91 Coun ly 4\uCh Ot•t1 befnQ her•iMUer rt l•rr1d to., ·tne tondomin1um DEATH NOTICES ALDRICH STEPllE~ :\1I C ll 1\EL ALDRICH. passed awa~ on ~1 arch 28. 1981 lie Ill ... ur v 1 \' e d h \ h 1 ., p J r <' n t ... Richard and G<'nr(l<'tle r\Jdrich nf Tu~tin Ca . i.1:.tl'r Carolyn, broth<'r l'htltp and s1stt>r Jackw Aldnch all of Tustin. Ca . aunt MarRohtt' Qu1k1n1 of 1-·ru nc·e Gravestd<' '>C'n·tr<'s 1.1.111 be held on Tuesday. Murch 31 1981 at 11 OOAM at Harbor Lawn-Mount OhH Memorial Park Serv 1ct>~ under th' dirertion of Harbor l.u~n Mount 011\e Mortuurv or Costa Mesa 5411 55f>4 MIU.ER R 0 H E H T C 0 L f<: M A ~ MILLER r<:Ol.E1 a.:t• 31. res1denl of S;inta Mon1ra, Ca Rclon'fl son or Roht•rt and .Jean ~ltll('r d trd at Hoaj( l\lrmonal llosp1lal on Thursda~. :\I arch 21l. 1981 li t> ts s un t\'ed h\ ht!' parent!> of Corona ttei Mar. Ca ht \ putrrnal grand mother \'101:.i ~11llrr of Leisu re World. L:tJ(u na llills. Ca . and h1~ d:tul(hler Dn:.tna of San l.u1c; Obispo. Ca famil~ ~<'n irt>:. ha\<' been held and bunul at sea conduclt'd by thr Neplunt> Sor1ety In lieu of flower' c ontr1but1oni. t o the L'llrasound Fund . lloaR Memonal Hospital would be appreciatt>d rACIAC YllW MB«>llAl , Alt. Cematerv Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1l1c View Drive Newport Beech 644-2700 McCOllMICll MOITUAl•s LeQuna Beach 494·9415 LeQuna Hiiis 76&-0933 5#1 Juan C.plstrano 496-tn6 KADCM LA~MT. OUYI Mortuary• C.rreterv Crematort 1625 G111ef Ave , Costa Mesa ~55s.4 N1Ca1mnm1 ..-•MOftVMy 117M.-n St ~onleec" ..... A Plan ·1, and•• <Mltntd In It.II Ctrtal" 0.< 1ua11on Of Covenan1., COt1d1toon1 •nd lhttroctoons for Nt•PGrl CrHI Homtownen AsSOCt•tion. rec.orcMd 1n Dook 1034, -6'1. ()fllclel Records ot Orange County end on Amtndmenl recordtO In -IOlM, -.. ,, Of h<•el Rt<orcb, M>CI 4mendmtnl rt <Ordt<I on -1om . -Sii. Olflcoel Record\ f 1r.e Oe<toraloon I and ttw 0.ct•rehon of Annt•411on ror l.ot 2 01 Tr•tl No 7111 llr. DKl•r•hon of An n1~•1ton• recOt'"o.d Oc: lobf,-11, 1t11 tn OOolt 10•1 "'-SO, Olt1c111 At<oro•. on lht ofltCt of -County Rtc0<CM< of Oren~ County. tDI An llllC!ovo«Hd It.SI~ tt\IOrtll on ...., to tr.e common eret n dtfoM<I on t"4t Ottlerellon end 1n Ille Dt<leretlOtl Of Anno .. toon bel119 Lot 1 ot Troe I Ho 1111, e• Off map rt<Mdtd on -JOI, p19u lJ eno l~ ol Ml\cellaneou• Mop1, on tt>t ollo<t ol ll>t Counly Recordtr ol wod O<tnoe C°""ty lC) f'CIU\.1\1 t •\.ttntntt •ppurte nent to W•d Unit No u • .u •• more \Pt< ff•<•lly dtfln•O tn the Con· domln1um Pl.n •nd tM Oecl•r•t•on. (d i A ROn·U Clull\lt HHm ... 1 lo .... IM (Ommot'I ., .. •nd '•'-'••h•t of tt"I• P•01ect which ,,,.., been or wlll be de veioo•O on ttw follow1n9 d•scr.bfid ,-e•• orooerly (I) LOI I ot Troe I No 1151, a• per m•p rtcoreltd on -Jiil, P•Ot• 7 lot onclusl••. Ml.c1llaneou' M•p1, rte ord1olOr-County,C•lllornl1. EXCEPTING THEREFROM tllel portion ot l•nd lnch.CWd •ll'llon P•rctl t '' \.-.Own on • m•P reco,-Ofd 1n boOk 0 , P•ge U ol Perce! MIPS. In -ol· t1et ot IM County Rt<ordtr of Or-• County, Celolornl•. 111 Loll I, 2 •ncl . of Trtct No. 7117, •• per m.., r~d tn -JOI. pages ll •nd U, Mlteet,....ous ~Pl, re< otd,ol0<""'91Counly,C.llfornle EXCEPTI N G THEREFRO M now ever. ~'r •nd •If ••<htt.tw •••• m t nll •PPurt tnenl to ell Con- dornono"'" Until, ucfl)l1119 uod Un•I No •l. rM>W or r-e11after r1f1,-,..d to 1n lht Dt<••rellon or I"" OtctaretlOtl, •• amended EXCEPT T~£REFROM ell oil, 9H. m1n1r•l1 •ftd other hydroc•rOOns~ below • clepllt ol SOO 1,.t, wllllOut Ille right Of -IKI .. try, H rtservt<I '" 1n,trvment1 of rKord The .,._rty ebo,,. <N>crlt>tO-. not t\•-.• • 1treel addres1 or common doi9n111on Directions sulliclttnt to 10011 tr.. proe>erty mer be ot>1alned by sut>mllllno • written rttqUest wllllln .. n d1ys trom the llrtl pUIMIUMion ot !Ills t'IOll<t to t"" btnelkoery whose n•mt and eddrHs I\: DIVERSIFIED Vl!NTUAES. INC., 1200 Mein Streff, • tOO. Setlte AN, Celltornle'1 IOI. " (II e street --or common c1e .. 19netl011 Is shown •t>ovt, no werrM\ty It olven u lolls completenu1 c..-cor retlneu )." TM -ll<l•ry under selO OH<I or T ru\I, t>y , .. ,°" ol br•ec h or Otl•uil In l~tt ot>llgatlons .ecured 1t1ttreby, .,...etolore uecuted encl d•· livered Ill IN unclerstgned e wrltl.,, Oecteretlon Of Oel•ull ..,d O.m~d tor Siie, M>CI wrlllen nollc.tt ol t>rHch end or •••<tlon to ceuH the un· clertlgneO to wll H id properly 10 wlltly wld ollll91tloM, e nd t!Mreelter the ulldtrst9'*1 c.usecl Hid notice of .,, .. ,,, -Of etecllon to be recor- Oe<ember 4, 1'90 es ln\lr. No "" In -1•1 --600, ol wld Olflcl•I ltecordt. Sold wte will be mNI, bUt wit'*'! covenant or .,.,,.,.ty, .. .,..u or Im· plied, r191rdfng ""'· ~•Ion, or H1<11m_,1M ... to ,.., IN remolt1l119 ortnclpet _,,, of Ille notetsl Mewed Dy N ld OeW., Truet. wlllt lntt rtil ., In w ld llCl(e Pf'O~ded edVlflCH, If any, under IN liff"'ll ti Mid Oee4 ol Truat, reu. cl\er9H ..-oapenH• ol Ille rruttM -ti tllt l,.b cr•otff lly w it DMOolTrwt. 5-lcl ... , will 11t lltlel on Tuetd41y. ~II 7, t•t at 11:00 em , ti ttie oltke o( T,O, ... YICt ~y, ._.. of fewH, tulte Hltl,OM City llolllev••d !Nttt, Of Met. c.tlfwlll•. Al Ille llme ol lllt l11ltMll _.k elltll of llllt MtlU, .. ~I -t of tflt llllll•ld IMll•llte ti lllf tllll .. llOt1 *"'" w llw t0ow ClekrlOtd t9Nd ot trlltl 9"CI ttllmMld CMI, t•INftHI, Mid.-._..,. t»,ut.d . To .. twmlM tM •"'"9 1114, you m•' cell OWi .., ...... 0.te: Mtl'<I .. 1•1 T .D. MiYtca COM,AMY ...... = ...... ............ a.a...ry o..a., .... ~ca. .... OM>--~-..,_. °'""" c-t Otllr ,llot ~" '" .... ,.., ,...., 6 4 . 2 • 5 6 7 8 -D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s f I F I E .D 6 4 2. • 5 6 7 8 INDEX ,, ,... , • .,, Cll 642·5&78 llMES fH SAU 0-al -~ ...... -~~ lltt t11• 1111 -o...:=: ,. tu 'ht9 Ulllll ~t', ... jth ltll 1,.. ... I~ e::•IM'h '°"' 11111, IS ~ ...... :m .. 1.-ltjl t:~':.-:h ·-'"" s.,,J ... c,,..,,. ... ""' louoUAno 1• s..a ..... .... -hl.allv•• lil--4•1"'4" •• ·-illalMllll-•llal• 1100 mt mm ......... ,.,, '"" IM APM1-fll• for Sale llllO t."'.!:~.;:rt, I~ llGO C.""l«t) Lob Crnou IMIO ~=-=.~:~:;:r;1> )11111 1100 Dwpk ... t.•o41Mlc llllO -lo boMO\H llCIO lftlt'QMt ,,.,..,.0 -lnd...tnol Pr•f1> llOI l.oU'-MI• DIG w-. .. Hnv Trlr Pth tXQ Mou.Mii' 0.Mrl k•"°'' 1<00 lt,-,}~: •• t'~ .... 1lOO -Owu1i..o1.~~ 1'tlO Ila.MM• t'af"" Gro\H 21'0• •t•I l.llMf' t!lfh•"I' -llttal t..l•l~ ._ •M" noo RENTALS ''°'"~" fWrrw•htd JIW 1-l'lllw<OllllH la:c> tkliwu• t\.rn cw t..nf l3W Condom1Ao1tn• t vrn )40Q CONSomtftilwm• l nf ~ To-~fwrn llW T~""'°"'., lftf ~ DYpteu,. f\lrn ~ °""'""'"' "'°" Aph f"\lirn J7QO Aph t..nti.trn :lllOO Apt\ t'lirn or I •I :a.JO Koom ... IOOO Room .t. 00.ra ._ Hoitt• Motth <IOU Gwa1 Homtto mu ~mnlof't R.-nl1b •:tw \'af•Oon R•~••b U.'IO Mf'Nlh to Shir•• •:W.O G•t•&f'• fQ( Rrnt Ul() Olho Htntal uw l:Wt1~ ftl>Mal 4<.IU Jftltl11•U••I fttnt1I lllll ~·.,: "•'"-" 41!0 ...., Miu tt ... N •h -IUSINESS, lltYCST· MEltl, fl NANCE Hiw.\IN'O ~pott• !olA» ~•fte'n\Riantf'd :Mil• '"""''""''" f.Jpporl " llll\ "'"«•l'M"4 V.•Mf'd -MU.Wt tot..,.,. W) MUtM't "•M.ct• 'o(lJO Mor11Hf'\ TU' lllU AHNOUNCEMENTS, '£1SONALS l LOST l FOUND Anft(NM•,,._N, )l()j <•t p~ \llll Liraal '°'M"t• \2!lO ............ .., U)ll ''''°"·"· \;1)9 '-x°•.t (tut.• ~ Trt"f'I• !><\II SERVICES "''"ltf' IJOHIM) MW EMPLOYMENT & rmAUTION Vht.Jl;I\ ln.tMUfllO#\ 1~ Jvb w.nlt'll* 1\11) Utlp '4 •Rtrd \t &: • 1100 MCRCHANDISE AM.q\ln lOl.<I Apyh•n.~., ..... A'°""°" lllOU ::u.';; M•lf't1•I' llflll "llll t tMfr•' 6 t qw1pm .. n1 'Juli) t •h ~ °""' -"'" 10 '°" IO)U f\.r1't,Uff' -~., .. " ...... lllM -00 t•M'Mlikl (.(.liUilll, -h •flt') "°" '-''""°'' ..,,l MH~llW,-) llOli M1V"t0AIWQ•O -M1.M'f'tl•llW'OW.,. •Aird ••• -..wuul lft\lrW"'4',,.h "00 Olftf'"-r turn 6 ~ qu111 ... p,., !Mi C!':: ~~~~:~: --~ .... c....i. -"ilou ""'..,,,,."' a., -r:·r.,..o ..... '*''" !fa> -IOATS & MUIN( EQUlrMENT l.f'N'f•I 111(JiU lk>•h M•1nt. 'wt\t<f' 'i(Q) 8t'>•h \hrtnf' t QUIP ,.... lku1h f't>•ff ... :i.o Roal.a. M•M C h•rt•r ....... &•h'•'• IO:HI &.•h "'P" °""''' ..:ll O -. ..,.. ......... ...., Koah~lW•ll• .... ) TRANSrQIT ATION Aorr•rt ""' C e1T1Ptr~d~11•• Mf'tU ~Ill) Uft1ri<' C •" !rtl,1'J ~=·~~f~s.-m• VI IO tUO MCA0t llm .. '91t fhnl YIMI T teil.-r' TU\'•f ._110 t::.~~~.~·!0t., .. .,.., fMOO AUTOMOBILE l1t'Mt •I ,.., .. Anlt~ucrt t l•'•u t •l.'o• ""' ,. .• ,KH'I \ ""'' '·~ ..... ~~:.':..~:~.~lod' .. .,., 6)o1 y,..,..,_. -\ •"" ~;-.. o\wt••l.f'1n;jn.i -""''"" w."'"" ,,.., AUTOS, IMrolTED t.f'f'Wr•I •iul \U• Ku,,....w •ho '""'' JM Aw•hn '""'" •h• 10111 w111 l •Pf• '"~ av-111' l oll ..,,,, »•UWI ,-;.., ... ,,.,, '11.:J ...... lii~ ltU4JJo11 '1UT J•ll!W•I PJo1 Jt1nuft 11 .. l\•rnwnn U ft1• ·~ ........ .,. .... ,,. -····· •l.a """~·1 .... ~"' Vltu \ho ,,., ..... ~ .,, .. ''"'' lit• .,.,u ..... -1H1 t'rwii'.,.•fl .... t6Uf'lf," lllu Ml"ft•Ull 11'116 K~I' kO)t• .,. .. .. , .. , Cilj )l t"" ~a .. , • t!rw .,.. ., ... Torrtta Vl!U rr1umph ml \utk•'*'•lfft """ Vohg vm AUTOS, NfW c ...... ,.. ...I) AUTOS.USED fJf'Mr•I Ml 11:..1 ... atw1i WtO Wd•U•' WIS C•M•H• ltll Qw,,-...,. -llth •••r ~ '°"'"' IOWI ~•MM•I -U,,H•4t• -t:\':"' •JJ .,.;J• --1 ........ 1 '9W '-"'• ...., .. "."'' ..., ...... ..,, -::.::L ... ""' -..... illll ~"':"" --~r ... rd -V•c• Wh ""'*Ml ~ NIW BUllNlllMIN ConlHt Ute DAILY "I.OT "' lnfanNtton "''''*" IN county requirement• for ualnt 1 Plolllloua au.aneteNe•. Ml-4111 UT.• . . The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5618 ...... ...-.Nolle•: HouMt for Sde I All rul utate a~ vertl1ed In th l1 newspaper I.I subject to the Peden! Fair Hou1- ln1 Act ol 1988 which m•ke1 It Wecal to ad· vertiH "any preference, llmltatlon. or dla · crlminatlon baaed on race, color, religion, aex, or national origin, or an intention to make any such pre ference, limitation , or d is· crlmlnatlon." ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G.....-'ooi GeMNI I 002 GtMrol I OOJ G....... I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisin g for real estate which is in viola- tion orthe law. ERRORS: A.dYriMn thoMld chtdi ... od1 doily _. report .,.. ron IM•clatety. TM DA.IL Y PILOT OSWIMS llabllty f'or the flnt Incorrect insertion °"'Y· HouH1forS• W LSI 1·.Y N TAYLOR CO. Ht-:A l.TOHS s 111ce HM() HAlllOll VIEW HIU$.-S475,000 Lov e l y 5 Bdrm , 2 ·story "Hillsborou gh" home for large family. Pvt r eat yard w/pool. huge patio & tall trees. Inviting 2-sty lge entrance hall w /vaulted ceiling, spacious li v. rm .. format din. rm & fam. rm. Sundeck orf mast.er bdrm. 2 fireplcs. 3-tar garage. lnclud".!~ land. WESLEY M. TA. YLOR CO.. UAL TORS 21 I I Son Joc.quM tMs Rood MfWPORT CENTER, M.I. · 644-49 I 0 EASTSIDE -,_-_-:_ __ _ S I 12 000 P.niftsulo Poiftt ' 1751 Plata def Sur Lovely 2 Bdrm, P·• bath 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. frplc rondo 1n l::~ls1de <.:o!<t:J 1-'ree & clear Owner will Mesa with double cur carry Isl Priced at garage. Owner anx SJl0,000. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• lous will help ftnunc·e' G•Mrol I 002 Take advantage' Cull associated ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·7171 ASSUME 8112% LM. BROKERS-REALTORS 202~ W Bolboa 611·H 6 , gdi; m51 ~3b~ ~~~ o;f t ~ ,,,,_;_;1~ -;l:?f ~\!Ii~ healed pool and fruit ~~}1=1 1--------- trees. Call now979·5370 -• PRIDE Of ALLSTATE 2 B~r;~~~~~~um T~~~!r~~!~~ REALTORS New S850yrly ernpllfy!> Mesa Vcrdl' 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment' Two 2 Bdrm units. one with fire place! Current an- come -$740 mo rinanc· ing ! 1 YT home prolec- l ion p lan included Hur ry. t.his won •t last 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS COSTA.MESA. 5 BR-$125,500 OWMER SA.YS SELL Not an add-on or con version. A real 5 Bdrm family home in one or Costa Mesa's nices t areas. Handymans de· light. Call now and save~ @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 SI 08,500 REMODELED Costa Mesa 3 Bdrm. pride o f ownership beau ty on lree·lined street Compl w/bot tub! Total· ly remodeled; ·vaulted open beamed cl g s. s kylights. I~ of glass . H uge cover ed patio w/builtin BAQ. A rare f i nd ca ll l o see~ 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCUFF VA.CANT R educe d $25 ,000 Desperate owner says brlnf all offers. No quali ying. Low down 4 Bdrm s111gle story home. totally upgraded. Call for more details. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 FIXER! $I 0,500 Total cash needed lo close escrow on this 4 Bdrm, den, 3 bath, raml· ly room. (I.replace, patio. huge yard. "A Han- dyman's Special". Only $175,000. Call us today for an appointment ror details on this revolu- tlolla ry new program called T .l.C .K .E .T . 548-2313 THE ~EAL ESTATERS •• " ... Sll0,100 Thia remodeled backb•)' bome bu a (Teat vtew ol tbe mountalna and bad bay area. a .Bdrm•, den, faml.ly room. pool It s pa are IOJDe of the reaturH. TIM tnHlOr suite baa vaulted. ceil• trtp c~ tile WOl'k lo lb• bath and a balcony. O~ner wlll coptlder larie 2nd T.O. wt~ aKt doWft, B "YFROMT The qu1e1 cul d~ sar "" lol·at10n and lhe ramil} 3 Bdrm. l ba. unfurn orwnlcd floor plan allow Mtnl cond. S850 yrly the home owner the CHA.MMEl. FRONT maximum enjoyment of 3 Bdrm. 2 bu, unrurn this bt>st of all Cosl:t S7~yrly :\l l'~a l'Ommun1 t1 ~i.. associated BROK ER S-REALTORS 202~ W l olboa '71 JU ) OLDIE BUT GOODIE Older home in La~una I Bdrm. centrally lol'a ted W a I kin Jl d 1sl an1· e to beac h and :.hopping New copper pipi.•s, r1111f and wood fence Owm•r very motivated. will carry rrnanc1n g C'a II 752·1700 THE REAL ESTATERS enJU) d e~ 111 t c· '41thout f Io w . Then· 'i. e\ en a pla} house <.:all 752 nuo THE REAL ESTATE RS OCE.AHFROHT Cho1re comer duplex 3 bdrm . 2 bath up 2 Bdrm. 2 bath down Can n1n vert lo ;i larger home SELLER WILL H ELP FINANC E ' SX95.000' Balboa Bay Prop. R.alton * 675-7060• NO DOWN VA f&LtsH® 1 Lots of Charm 1 111 this lovely t ree, shaded bungalow on ex~ tra laq!l' lot. 3 B<.lrm, bc·.im re1 l1nli(s . works hop. $1119.500 LIDO ISLE OPEM SUM 1-5 214 V1A. ITHACA. Newly remodeled trad ition al 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge r ecreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings . Best in price at $420.000. PENIMSULA. POINT llEACHFROMT Panoramic v iew a t wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq . ft. fe~turing marine room. ent r y, li ving room. dining room, built -ins, etc. $1.385,000. RA.NCHO MIRAGE Springs Condo, 9th fairway. 3000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm, 3 b a th, furn. Golf clb. mbrshp. Trade for beach invest. prop. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR l·ll l\oy\od•· 011111• N H 6 75 6161 HOMI + GUIST APARTMIHT On t he BALBOA PENINSULA this well Located 8 bedroom 2 bath home with 2 fireplaces & spectacular night view has a bonus ,in a quaint 2 Bedroom 1 bath guest Apt. $400,000 IN NkWPORT CENT,R 644-9060 WILSON PARK CONOOMltlUMS CHECK & COMPARE THESE FEATURES 90% f1NANCltli 12%% INTER. V HARBOR AREA LOCATION I SlZE-1650 SQ. FT I MICRO OVEN I ALL SHOPPING lt'l BLOCK I COMP ACTOR I AIR CONDJTIONJNG I DISHWASHER 'CEMENT DRIVES I DBL GARAG E { W"1..K IN CLOSE.TS W /OPENER WARD INVESTMENT IMC. SA.LIS OMCI 11141 Hl·IOll JIOW. W.... St.641-2000 c .... MeM, Calf. REALTORS 675-5511 LOVELY "E" PLA.M. Most popular mod.I ever built in the Bluffs: Situated on 'pectacular 9reenbelt witti mountain view. 3 Bdr, F.R. Best buy ht the area at $252,900. COLE OF NEWPORT IE.Al.TOIS 2 S I 5 E. Coast Hwy., Corona *I Mar 675-5511 NEWPORT LOCATION-POOL Totally up9raded and charmln9ly dKorated home, cloH to 5Choolt and 5hoppin9. Witt. 3 bd. + deft. thit home offers neutral carpets, mlrrorec:t wardrobes, heated po°', dedcs, CopfMr plumbin9 and many other arnenltlH. Owner will auist In financlncJ. S 192.500. WA"I t-Rr RON I HOMES, IM Hl •\I 1-.11\11 I , ' t \\ 315 Marone Ave Balboa Island 673-6900 CE SEDRBE ELllRS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE MESA VERDE -BEST BUY No Question, But What This Is One Of The rinest Buys In The Area ! Lovely Four Bedroom Home On A Large Com er Lot. Com pletely Remodeled Large Assumable Loan. Submit Offers Only $145,000. NEWPORT HEIGHTS FOUR-PLEX Localed On Quiet Street Near Shopping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income . Minimum Vacan cy Factor Fo u r Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans. Inspect Wilh Offer. Reduced To $350,000. ·.~ .. -.. :--. 759-9100 # 2 c Otp«at• Pina MewportC......,. - £~ STAR GAZER*'~~ 1,-....;..;.....;...:...;..;.----81 ti I\ R "•II I:>; M YOtlt Oo.I, Act1·,,.tr Civrd• V Auo,J,,.g to tlit• S•O'I Ji. fu dt vtlop r"nt'\\09C' t , Tut \l't•lv teod \iltOfd\ t"<-"'~Pf"W""d+ntJ I nu11'.)C!r• ol you< Zod10< btr•., ''ll" .... 1 ......... J~.nt • ...., • ·~00'\itl'll ~·­t c:let ,. ·-· t O•" tO lliil•, 110.9'1 1100 tJC~ ''Ot 1aeo-1t.A.o ,, '"''' ,, ,.,. ,,,, ... 10• .... 11r.c1• 2JYOVI 110.... ,.,_ " ..... Jlh<'"'''"' Uh•r ••Hoc1e1H ·-·-· t YAMDAL I I' I I I I SCURH l 's ~ I I 11 I . 1 llO. "°"' J.)Wflt• )4A..-CU ,,lu,p1t .... ,. ....... , . l1 "-Q•tOO~ ••• ,.~Ptl ,...,.,, ilOQ-¥.,~•o-"\ H~ftTW-4JhtOI• ., ..... «W•r f)01 ... 11•"09 .tt YO¥' .. eow ... •• "OM04• to•ou '"• ~°" wv .... ....... M-. .. ,~. ''"°" .... ·-· '°'""'.,,.. ®l\J ........ 61W1tf'lo ., ..... tJ()t .......,..., M ~-.. .._ 81 fo &IH~p "Oooo•• roe, .. ,, .. '1111'1"1~• ,,.,WI' . t1Wou-.. , .•.. "' .. nr-,,.., ... "O.tt....c• "--· 904,. .,.,., ., .... Ill•• .. _ .. ·--·-., ....... ·-·-·->'>• ( Nunul r-"-'-H_N_A_""'I ~& The llQlll company tlaa a I' I' I I 11range way of telllnt you ttlat • . -• yOUr bJll la overdue. Tn.y mall _I _O_A_Y_i._E_D_ ... ,you 11e>m1 ~ I I' I' I I o ei::::: ~~ "=" '--...&......1.-..._...i...-..-. ,.., ......... '--Ho. I W... • PllNl NIMCHO lltltU r IN ltllSf $91.!A!U rrrrr r1 SCIAMUTSA.M..na.Ct111tfta••ll• .i . , -11111111 llllY NPll O R ANGl: COUN 1 V C AL H 011 N IA 25 CENT S • res1 ea s ot; era est ' . * * * * * * * * * * * * ' * * * * * * Press chief, agent, polieernan wounded * * Siwek, anger voiced * Irvine City Councilman David Sills, former son-in-law of Presi· dent Reagan, was stunned when he was informed by a reporter about the shooting of the presi· dent. "I didn't hear anything about it ... I was at lunch." Sills said s hakily. "I'm just s peechless . . . It's not just a political thing for mt-it's a personal thing he was my father·in·law'." Sills was married to President Reagan's daughter, Maureen, from 1964 to 1967. "Reagan likes to meet people ... he's very friendly . It would be difficult to keep him away from crowds. ''It's just so tragic In our society that we think our presi· dent has to live in a bullet-proof bubble ." Congressman Dan Lungren, who represents Long Beach and part of Huntington Beach, said he waa sitting in his Waablnatoo. D .C. office when he heard about 'the atte mpt o n Pres ident . Reagan's llfe · ·'The mood back here is very somber honest to God It's so mber," said Lungre n , a Republican. "I'm shocked. The whole town is shocked," he said, adding, ·'To see someone like Reagan who tries so hard to be accessi· ble -It just makes you wonder. "You don't want to wrap the president up in a cocoon but now you have to wonder. T he whole thing is unbelievable ." Orange County residents and leaders also expressed shock over the shooting. First District Orange County Supervisor Roger Stanton. who was monitoring reports of the s hooting incident, observed, "We're extremely concerned about the situation. ·'It's tragic that everyone in the country isn't pulling together despite some different points or view, that some people still feel they have to make their state- ments by attempting to as- sassinate the president. .. But this should in no way be seen as a characteristic of our great country. There are just a few isolated individuals who are off the deep end." A ssemblywoman Mari a n Bergeson , ft-Newport Beach, said, "I was stunned and shocked at what we beard and <See SHOCK, Pa1e AZ> llAICI CDAIT llATHIR • Mo1tly sunny throuah Tuesday. Gusty northwest winds 20 to 35 mph , decreulna late this eve- nlns. Hllha 87 to 72. Lowa tonlsht• to 55. Roller1kofing ho• mtahroomaf iftto a sport /or 45 mUlfon American•. See Pag• 83. 11111 I , . .,,. ... :: 1 1 r.:s :.=.. = AP~ TARGET OF GUNMAN IN WASHINGTON STREET Prealdent A••oan undergoea aurgery for wound Assassination tries on Ford recalled SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -The attack on President Reagan to· day recalled two incidents in 1975 involving assassination at- tempts against Gerald Ford, the" firs t by Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a follower of mass murderer Charles Manson. Miss Fromme, 32, currentJy Is· serving a life sentence In federal prison at Alderson. W. Va .. for aiming a gun at President Ford during a visit to Sacramento on Sept. s. 1975. Some two weeks later on Sept. 22, Sara Jane Moore took a shot at Ford u he came out of a hotel in San Fr•ncisco. She too was s~ntenced to life In prison . In the fint incident, Secret Service agents wrestled the Army Colt .45 platol away from the red-haired woman. She was held on $1 million bond and con- vlded ln November on cbaraes or attempted uaauination. Wltnesaea to the incident aald M1. Fromme'• •Y•• "look4'd 1laa1y" when Ford wa.lk-S aion. a rope, 1hUU., bandl. Al Pora e.plalned later, be 1aw a bud .. and there WU • IUD ta that hand." Sandra Good, a roomm~ al Ms. Fromme'• who, Uk her won a l'ed·booded roM 1 fy, IDC tllly nn nu la tbe c of conYlcted murderer Manion: aald Ille didn't know her frtena h•d•-· Ille uld the and "111111 Fromme "work.t to tav• UM Kart.Iii to•• anotber courtroom forll81110ft ." Wben U .s. Dl1lrlct Judt• ThomH J . MacBrld• pro· nounced lent.H, M1. Fromme beflD 1briektn1 and bit her· prosecutor wit.Han apple. "I want Manson out. I want my world at peace. I know none of you can bring it,'' she shouted. As Ms. Fromme was led out of the Sacramento courtroom, Ms. Good arose from the spectators' section a nd s houted , "You animals." Miss Fromme was transferred to West Virginia from a federal prison in Pleasanton, Calif., about l 1h years ago. * •· * Market closes after news of shootings NEW YORK CAP> -Wall Street'• 1tock exchan1e1 batted au tradlna today when t.be newt reached t.he flnuclal center that PrHldent Rea11n bad been wounded In an uaa1alnatloa al· leplpt. Tbe New York and American atoek nchan1es bo'h 1lopped tradlna lhorU1 after 12: 1S p.m. . PIT .. moment1 a 1aw1 .......... ~rted ....... laadW.lllil'F,...., · BoUlaebaq• tald tbe1 would notNOP1Df• ........ &od•1. Tb• Dow Jo._H ladu1trlal n•r• WM up 11boa&~ at 11:• a.111. PIT• N-aefMd Wall ..... tMt W bffn flNd it._ . ..,....,• be left •• ......,.,. io&el. Accouata •ltOrtb tberHfter _ Hid tbe ........ t.841 Mtbl.ablt · udwauafe. · Bush flying home; Reagan in. surgery WASHINGTON <AP> -President Reagan was shot in the left chest in an assassination attempt to· day. Reagan's press secretary, a Secret Service agent and a policeman were also shot as the man virtually emptied his pistol. The president received treatment at the George Was hington University Hospital emergency room. Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. said the chief executive had been shot in the left lung and was taken to surgery. A suspect was arrested immediately after the shooting outside a Washington hotel. Earlier, Lyn Nofziger, a top Reagan aide, told reporters, "The bullet did not hit the heart." HAIG SAJD THE PRESIDENT "had one round in his body in the left side, into the left lung, and there is surgery underway now. When the president entered surgery, he was conscious and his condition is stable." Mrs. Reagan went immediately to the hospital and ran inside. Vice President George Bush was hurrying back lio Wptiington P<>ard Air Fot~t; ~~ jrom Texq, where be was to address the state legblature. Haig said ~~!':J ·'as of now, 1 !m ll.\ control in the White House penolni 'Uie retum of th~ vlce prest- dent." White House SPQ.ketman David Gergen said the president walked into the hospital. Meanwhile, press secretary James S. Brady was reported by the hospital as in "extremely critical" condition and also was undergoing surgery for a ~unshot wound in the head. THE GUNMAN APPA&E~TLY HAD waited among reporters gathered outside a Washington hotel where Reagan had addressed an AFL-CIO con- ference. He was wrestled down immediately by Secret Service after firing between four and six shots. The gunman was described as a white male with light brown hair. The man arrested was identified by the Secret Service as John Warnock Hinkley Jr., 22 , of Evergreen, Colo. Jack Warner of the Secret Service said the gun- man, who appeared to be acting alone, was armed with a .22-caliber revolver. Earlier, authorities re· ported the weapon was a .38-caliber pistol, but th~t was based on finding a receipt for such a weapon in the suspect's pocket. The gun itself proved to be a .22-caliber. A television cameraman said the assailant, standing 10 feet away from the president, "just opened up and continued squeezing the trigger." REAGAN WAS WAVING AT the reporters when the shots rang out. He seemed to wince and then was shoved into his limousine by a Secret Service agent. the car immediately sped away, directly to the hospital, a mUe away. ·Left behind were three victims of the shooting: Brady, Secret Service agent Timothy J . McCarthy, and a cltx policeman not immediately identified. Brady was shot in the head, but his condition was not known. A cameraman who stood near the press secretary said the wound waa "very bad" but that Brady was able to ''move a little bit" after he was hit. The policeman, Thomas K. Delahanty, 45, was in serious condition with a wound in the shoulder and neck. He bad flrat been listed in critical condition. McCarthy, shot in the cheat. wu undereotna sur· gery. Washington police said at least four 1bota were fired. A reporter's tape recorder picked up 1ix loud re- ports. The burst of 1untire sounded u Rea1an left the Wa1hintton Hilton Hotel after addl9llq tbe AF~ CIO's Buildinl and Coftltructlaa Tr ... tanlerence at the Wuhlnston Hilton Hott&. Tbe llotel ii about a mUenorthoftheWhlteHOUHonCoaneetieutA.vnue. Re11an had emeried from U. bote1•1 VIP en· trance and .reporten were attempdal to about qua· Uons at him •en there wu a rapid fin 1ueeeaton of •hots. The lffDI outatde the botel lmlMdialel)' Mellfte one of obaoa. A crowd 11tbeNd. AT TBE' WBITI: BOVIE, deput1-pre11 HentarJ ~-·lpeu• uAd at ftnt tht tbl PNl· .. , .. -:'c . '-~·:.-::-... -.~=== tamt, .. _,........... . A. vtileata" ot• llMlt t IM•• li'IMb a,.,. · c ... · auaa ..,,.. .. , .... Al) .,. .......... WOUNDED IN A TT ACK PreH Secretary Brady Brady uit jJopular c' uithpress WA SHINGTON <AP > - James Brady, the Wh ile House press secretary wounded today in a s hooting attack on President Reagan, is a former Chicago public relations man known for his wit in dealing with reporters. Brady was shot as he accom- panied the president from a speech at the Washington Hilton Hotel. Reagan was also wounded in the attack. The 40-year·old Brady was a late bloomer In Reagan's pres · ldential campaign, joining the e ffort after his first choice. former Texas Gov. John Connal· ly. dropped out of the GOP primary race. During the fall campaign. the rotund Brady was deputy to Lyn Nofzige r . Re agan 's c hief spokesman. He waited a long time to be name d presidential press secretary and actively cam· pai1ned for the job. He took the post on an "act· ing" basis after Nofziger s aid he didn't want it, then waited for a formal appointment while more than a half dozen journalists re- portedly turned the job down. Brady's reputation for wit was developed during his early days as press secretary. Before Reagan took office, Brady was asked if the then president-elect bad said anythinl about Cabinet appointments as he visited a meat locker. "The president-elect did not confirm any Cabinet people at the meat locker. There waa a lot at stake," be replied. Brady is from Centralia, Ill., the onJy child of railroad man Harold Brady and hi• wife, Oorothy. He learned bis <See BRADY, Paie A2> 11 DA VlD ICtJTl•ANN °' ...... , ........... Tbe 'Oranae County deputy dlslllct attorney who ptoaeeut.d convicted chUd killer Rodney Jame• Alcala HY• there ls aUU enoush ri\dence to prove Alcala guilty even if the tesllmonf ol twt jalthouse nsnitchea' Is proved to be perjured. R ic hard Farnell, who persuaded an Orange County Superior Court Jur.y to convict and sentence Alcala to death for the 1979 kidnap.murder of .12· rear·old Robin Samsoe of Hunt. lngton Beach, said today the re· maining evidence against the l"r •• Pa~ AJ SHOCK ... {· m anxious to get information. My deepest concerns are with the president." Irvine city Councilman Larry Agran said, "It is always shock· ing when something like this takes place. In many ways we ar e still a very uncivilized society." Rita Sprinkle, a Newport Beach resident. said she and her husband Reed were scheduled to have dinner with Reagan a week from Tuesday. "It's so sad," she commented. "but we've known Reagan for a long time and he's a strong man. very strong. "I wouldn 't be surprised at all 1f he pulls himself up and stiU keeps the dinner date with us." , Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather described herself as "distressed doing a lot of hopin_g and praying. "It reminds me of when Ken· ncdy was shot," she s aid, "the oews keeps leaking o ut and each time it seems a little worse.'· Mrs. Heather said the incident points out the danger of being in public life. ··it's extremely dangerous with so many mentally deranged people running around with guns ," she said. "My first reaction was one of disbelief."' said Second District Orange County Supervisor Har· rielt Wi eder. "My prayers are for President R eagan and for Nancy." She added." It's just hard to ac- cept that we live in as violent a societv as we seem to be in ." Mrs· Wieder who said she is personally acquainted with Nan· cy Reagan believes the presi· dent's wife will be very strong through the current crisis. "Her whole life has been cen· tered on her husband and her children:· Mrs Wieder said. "My thoughts immediately went to her ·· Huntington Beach ci ty Coun· cilman Jack Ke lly said, "It's just made me sick to my s tomach. I can't fa thom what the devil's go. ing on. Ifs something that has to ~trik e fear in the heart of all of us and the people throughout the world who are looking for some sort of stabilization "I can't speak of it. It's un· thinkable that the president could have been killed." Newport Beach resident Gary Hunt. who was in charge of Reagan's inaugural ball. said he 1s ··absolutelyshocked ·'I just don't know what to think. I JUSt hope to God he's all right. ll 's hard to believe this could hap- pen " lie said the incident will un· doubtedly lead to "screaming for gun control on one hand and yell· jog for keeping the President out of the public on the other.·· "I was really shocked and dis· mayed that this could happen," s aid Huntington Beach Mayor Ruth Bailey. ··With aJI the security measures we take. I didn't think this would be able to happen." she said. ··Maybe we should make those measures more foolproof Maybe we'rejust too trus ting." * * * Reagan ta lk a t Oscars off HOLLYWOOD <AP) -The S3rd aMual Oscar awards by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts a nd Sciences have been tarnished by the attempted as· sasslnation or President Ronald Reagan. The president's videotaped ad· dress to the gathering tonight was canceled. Monterey Park man la "men than 1utnclent." TM Calltomla Suprt .. Court last Tbunday ordered a hearin1 aou1ht by Alcala's attorney• on whttber two Oran1e Count,)' Jail tnmatea eould have Uff about the eQevteted 1t1Uer'1 •lleaed ln· volvtmenl in Miss Samaoe'a dlJ· appearance. The bearing waa ordered after Santa Ana lawyers Keilh C. Monroe and David A. Zim· merman filed documents which satd that one of the Jail Inform· ants who testified against Alcala admitted that he and anoth,.r SO·called "snitch" lied oa UM ..... stand. "I don't know what U.ey're 11yln1," proeecutor Farnell aald tbla mom1n1. "We have not re· celved their (appeal•> papen." Defense lawyer John Barnett. who represented AJcala at hi• 1980 trial. aald he felt 111 alon1 there wH perjury durln1 the proaecuUoo pbaae of the pro· ceedlnp. De1crlbtn1 the case aa hl~hly emotional, Hamett' said, ev· eryone wanted lo get on the bandwagon and kill Rodney.·· The two informant. In ques· . lion. Robert Dove and Michael Herrera. testified that Alcala ,. ............ KARL SCHNEIDER (RIGHT) EARLIER WITH SON KARL JR. Father ahot In beck tiffing for freedom Shot man's HB son 'thankful he's alive' The Huntington Beach son of the American shot while fleeing from a hijacked Indonesian jetliner said today that his fath er . Karl Schneider. was lucky but made the right decision to run for freedom "I'm thankful he's ahve:· said K a rl Schneider Jr . 26 "Yesterday, when I first heard the news reports I was confused and scared. but today I found out he's in fair condition and there will be no permanent damage .. It appears he made the right decision. The hiJac kers have changed their demands and the s itu ation is uncertain over there." said Sc hneider . an accountant in Costa Mesa. His father. 44 . a pparently BULLETIN BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> - T h a'I troops today attacked a hijacked Indonesian jetliner parked on an airport rWlway here with 55 hostages and nve armed hijackers aboard, wit· nessu s aid. It was not im· mediately known if anyone was hurt. jumped from the jetliner and ran to escape the hijackers Sunday m Bangkok. He was shot in the back and the bullet lodged i n his s pine . The s lug was r e m oved in a n o p e ration Sunday. Schneider is the m anager of a Houston-based oil firm. M ilchem Inc .. operating in Indonesia. l",....r,,.A J REAGAN WOUNDED .. the ground several feet from the doorway of the hotel. There was blood on the sidewalk near his head. Reagan came out of the hotel smiling and was walking toward his limousine.just a few paces away. He turned to acknowledge' shouts of "Mr. Presi· dent. Mr. President" from the crowd when the shots were heard at close range. Reagan appeared stunned; the smile faded from his lips; agents drew their weapons as others s hoved the president forcefully into his car. AFl'ER THE SHOTS WER E FIR ED, there was a scream and then agents shouted "back up. back up, get back. get back!" Hank Brown. a cameraman for ABC. said he saw a white man with blond hair in his 30s fire at Reagan from a bout 10 feet away with a pistol. He said Brady a ppeared to have been hit in the head. "He just opened up and started firing," Brown said. He said the assailant did not say anything. Brown said the alleged gunman appeared to have "penetrated the press corps .... " Senate Republican leader Howard H. Baker of Tennessee adjourned the Senate, considering Reagan's package of tax cuts. Sen. Edward M. Ken· nedy, D·Mass .. whose two brothers were slain in the 1960s, declared: "With our prayers for those who have been wounded, I think must go our resolution to rid our socie· ty of hatred. "VIOLENCE AND HATRED are alien to ev· erything th.is country is about,'• he said. Sen. Claiborne Pell. 0 -R.I .. said the "l{eneral at· mo sphere of all of us is one of shock and horror.·· He said news of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy seemed "like only a month ago." Sen. Henry M. Jackson, 0-Wash., a former presidential candidate himself, said "We're reminded · once again of how dangerous this world is.·· Again, our hopes .are dashed "that violence once again would not visit an American president,•' Jackson said. "Wbatcan onesay?" "Obviously the man (the shooting suspect) had to be a fanatic." j ackson said. iiijNat a. ................. 714/Ml-Mn SPOkrS, OSCARS CL4SH TONIGHr All ot'* ............... ...., lllAIN Of'PtCI ...... ...,a..c....-...eA. Mell...,_: ... , .. , c-.-... '"· .... If you want to watch the Academy Awards -but don't wut to miss the end ot t he NCAA baaketball c hamptonsblp game you'll have a problem on your banda tonight. The basketball aame, plttlnl North Carolina a1alnlt. lndlna, bellnl at I Jt.sn. OD NBC, Channel A. The Otun cet under way at 1 p.ill. cm ABC, Cbannel 7. admlu.d whlle at Oru-Coun· lY Jail tbat be slapped NIH SamlOI unconstloua after ab- ducllna her from Huntln1ton 8HcblnJune, 1979. However, lo papers filed affreUy with the state SUpreme Court two weeks a10. 1ifonroe said that Dove recanted his testimony during an interview with two members of the county Public Defender's staff. The former prosecution wit· ness also admitted to a counselor with the Stral1hl Ahead dru1 abuse program Lo Tustin that he and Herrera lied on the witness stand. Dove is re· celvln• treatment for heroln ad· diet.loo at tbe dru1 clinic. Admltdna that he waa "not 1urprlted'' at the latest develop· ment 1n the prosecutor case, Farnell said he had teen DOlhlng yet that apeclficaUy 11y1 Dove admitted to perjurin8 himself. He said a Dlstrict Attorney's Lnvest11ator had been lookine ln· to the matter and he would soon confer with that person. Al Alcala's defense lawyer during his trial, .Barnett had In· troduced rebuttaJ testimony that Dove and Herrera !Jed Reacting to the latest develop. ment, Barnett said today , "We felt durlnf the course of the trial that the jailhouse snitches were all lylns . . .. Barnett, who still maintains that Alcala was convicted and condemned to death on tbe basis or a violent criminal past before the Samsoe killinic. said the testimony of the ja ilhouse in· formants "was tailored lo give the prosecution the testimony it needed to put Rodney in the gas chamber." The defense lawyer added , "This is a chilling reminder of the vagaries of the criminal justice system It's a very chilling type of a s1tuauon · · Strike called off Poland reports talks prog ress WARSAW, Poland <AP ) - The independe nt union Solidarity today called off a nationwide genera l strike threatened for Tuesday over the beating of three union members, the Polish news agency PAP said. The decision was made after talks with government officials at which progress had been reported toward meeting union demands for punishment or those responsible for the beatings. There was no immediate word o n te rm s that averte d catastrophic consequences in this Soviet bloc country wracked by labor and economic turmoil. PAP said the negotiators were preparing a joint communique. state and its very survival arc at stake." Th e off icial . Kaztmicrz Barcikowski. spoke at a meeting o r th e party 's Ce ntr al Com mittee which gave its ruling Politburo a vote of confidence to deal with the situation after stormy debate . After '1exing its muscles in a four·hour warning strike Friday, the union. angered by the beating of three m embers in B yd~os zcz on M arch 19, threatened an indefinite general strike starting at 6 a.m Tuesday < 8 P ST tonighU if its demands were not met in the last-ditch talks. The chief d emand 1s di~miss<.11 of those respon:.1bk for thl• lx.·;tl1ngs .. We faC'<: a general stnk<.• with c ffe e t s that ma\ be catastrophic ... s<.11d Rakowski. ch1er labor trouble -,hoot£•r for th<.• government in l'Ornments reported b~ the Pnl1 sli nc•ws agency PAP from tht• st•ss1on of the party'!-> central comm1tte<: .. The J?Cneral s tnkt-"ould be the threshold or a pn.·t·1p1n·. he was quolt'd as sa' 1ng "The t1m(• ha:. come to t'urb the widespread lawlt·ssncss and lack or obsrrvance of tht• lc.i \.\ ... he said T he talks were between Lech Walesa, leader of the Solidarity independent union. and Deputy Premier Mi eczyslaw Rakowski. Newport woman cop W a r saw Pa ct mili t a r y maneuvers continued in and around Poland. 'an ominous background to the talks . nabs man in bush The Soviet news agency Tass quoted a Polish Com munisl Party offi cial as s aying , regarding a ge neral strike, .. our country has no r eserves that would enable it to survive this ca t a str o phe econ omical l y Therefore the structure or our l"re• Pag~ A l BRADY ..• Republican politics at home. since his mother was an active c ampaign worker and his grandfather was member of the Ma rion County Board of Supervisors. He was graduated from the University of Illinois in 1962, with majors in journalism and political science. He spent two years at the university's law school before joining a Chicago ad ve rtising firm wher e he worked for seven years . Brady spent a year on the s tarr of Sen at e Republican Leader Everett Dirksen. He also was d.ireclor of legislative and public affairs for the Illinois Stale Medical Society before moving to Washington in 1968 to be a communications consultant to the House. He later handled press rela· tions for the Office of Manage· ment and Budget in 1977·79 and for Sen. William Roth. a DeJaware Republican. Brady's wife. Sarah, is a former director of administra· tion for the Re publican National Committee. By STEVE MARBLE Ott .. o.lly ,., ... Slaff A housewife-turned·police re· serve officer brought a late·night search for a robbery suspect to an end when she collared a man hid- ing in bushes in a quiet Newport Beach neighborhood. Marilyn Bishop. a petite 45- year-old mother who Joined the reserve force last year , s aid she as in the Bayport area late Fri- day liste ning to her police scan· ner. The police broadcast. she said, no\ed that a man believed to be a possible robber had just been in· volved in a hit·and·run accident The man, the broadcast claimed. was last seen running toward Bayport Way. "I went outside and s aw the poli ce h e licopter buzzing around,'' she recalled. "I saw some officers down t he street I told them I'd be helping out '· While the officers went one way. she went the other ··1 didn't go very far," she ex· plained. "l saw what looked like the while pants under a bush. The description said the guy was wearing white painter·s pants." Pulling out her gun. s he marched over to the bush and grabbed the man's shoulder . ··He turned around. looked up at me a nd said, ·get out of here. lady'," the reserve officer •re- called. ''Then. l guess he s aw the gun. He threw his hands in the air and got on his feet." She said she marched the man. later identified as Victor Junior Reyna. over to a patrol car and waited as he was handcuffed and I O•ilr Ptlol Sl•ll -·· GETS HER MAN Reserve Officer Bishop put in the back scat of a police vehicle Reyna. 19. w<.1s booked on roh bery charges and held on S25,000 bai l. Police said thev round a ~ki mask and a shotgun 1n the bark seat of Reyna's car. which had been abandoned near the -.<·cne of the accident Mrs. Bishop, who '\a1d s he got into the pol ice busine~s because she had .. tons of time on her ha nds, .. said this wasn't her first arrest. Newport Beach uses at least 30 reserve officers. most of whom put m 15 to 20 hours each month. The 45-year-old mother is one of the few full·im e reserve officers with the force ----------------------- Al's Garage and Sea Bags Heavy duty Canvas Bags 1n woes and s11es 10111 any occasion Seams ere double 611tched to prcMde a hfeume c:A durabili1Y All Sea Bags are water repellent and feature a Shoulder 8trap tor~ carrying. ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644 7030