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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-16 - Orange Coast Pilot... r Ym 1110111 IAllY Plllll .. 01.1\N G t COIJ N I Y CAL H OHNIA 25 C [NTS Ne~ort teachers m~y lose pay ground I I • Newport-Mesa School Diatrict · trustees have refused to offer teachers any salary lncreaaea for next year and noted that teachers may be asked to atve up some frin1e benefill they've already won. The mesaage came Tuesday In the board's inltlal answer to teacher union demands for cost· of-livin1 raises ranging between 12 and 24 percent. "The districrs almost total de· pendence upon the state Legislature for funding makes it necessaiy to delay submitting these proposals until ... rev· enues for 1981·82 are decided by the Legislature," the board noted. NOBODY AT the ad · ministrative level seems to .. know when thetLegislature will act on school money issues tbis year. When it does, the board noted, the money expected next year must be at 1'8-St equal to tbiB year's income before a raiae will be considered. And if allocations are less, the board indicated, teacben will be asked to give up some of their •lready-won ben~flta includlna health, -tat and Ule in1urance items as well aa some vacation and holidays. Depending on final state legislative acUon, district ad· ministraton predict they'll have to trtm next year's bud1et by u much as ~million. MOST OF THAT budget, about 90 percent, goes for salaries -including those of about 700 non ·leachin& employees. Tbose employees, represented by tbe CaJiforni a School Employees Association, got an answer to their pay demandl Tuesday that was nearly Iden· lical U> that received by the Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers. Non·leachJnt employees ar~ seek.Inc pay increues of about 21 percent next ye4f. Teachers' demandl for salarJ and frin•e bendlt lnerftHI for next year would ~ the district an estimated additional $3.5 milllon, the board reported. ; Non-teacbin1 employee de-; mands would cost about $2. millon more, it noted. 7 FLEE COLORADO TRAGEDY ast traps :-Troops sought , ·in strike YONKERS. N. Y (AP> Mayor Gerald Loehr said today he has asked the governor to send the National Guard to help beleaguered city officials after public works employees joined firefighters and fire officers on strike in the state's fourth largest city. ''The important thing for the citizens or Yonkers is to stay calm and realize this is an illegal strike." Loehr said. "We are im plementing steps to continue pro· · tection." Loehr aisosa1d the city was tak· ing legal action lo hall the walkout called in violation or the state's Taylor Law, which forbids strikes by public emP.loyees A SPOKESMAN FOR Gov Hugh L Carey said he had not re· eel ved the request. City lawyers went to State Supreme Court today an nearby White Plains to seek an injunction forcing the workers back on the job. '"The injunction has been signed and in the process or being served."' Loehr said later As striking firefighters looked on, the mayor, the fire com· missioner and a few civilians fought suspicious overnight (ires that destroyed at least four build· ings and five cars. Scores of people fled the burn· CSff FIRES, Pa1e .U) DRllGI COAST lllTHll • Night and morning low clouds. with only partial clearin1 along beaches Friday afternoon. Lows tonight 50 alon1 the coast, 56 inland. Hlgba Friday mld 60s to near 'W. llllDlTIUY Dnma,k, ol all places. ii cnttcal of tht hU te~ Hrfea "Dalla.a.'' Set Page Cll. llDfl .,.,_..,_. ... ..... .--.. ............ .. ....... 01 .~ .. ==-·~ ~ Cl ._...... AM ........ rt C:..tt ......... ...., MJdJ 'I M ............ .,...,..,.. SECOND CHOICE -Teresa Carpenter of New York's Village Voice celebrates after winning the Pulitzer Prlze for feature writing. She was honored after the original winner, ·Jan el Cooke of the Washington Post, ad· milted her story was fabricated (story, Page Cl2). Saudi prince • suspect 1n FV dope case Fountain Valley police had a brush wilh royalty when a man arrested on charges of possession of narcotics turned out 'to be a 29-year-old Saudi Arabian prince. His Royal Highness Mashour Ben Saud,. who liated his address as 2110 Yacht Mischler. Newpbrt Beach, wu pulled over on a routine traffic stop at Masnolia Street and Warn~r Avenue early Mohday, police said. Besides u small amount of quaaludes allegedly found in the prince's car, police discovered he abo had a year-old tratnc warrant for bis arrest. After calla to the U.S. State Department off lee In J Los Anteles and the Protocol Duty Office \n Waablngton D.C., police discovered Saud bad no dlplomatlc lmmuruty. Be wu booked into Oranie County Jail with a $1,000 ball for th• nucoUet ~Jsara• and tl45 ball .tor tbe traftlc warrant, poUe. 111d. .. R01al K.-teM, • 1peet'1 _, for tbe U.S. State Depai't#llatJD Loa An1elea, said there •• "quite a few" princes tn Sa.U Ara~la., IA ·drops Alcala charge BY DAVID KUTZMANN Of Ille D...., ,..._. S'9ff Convicted child killer Rodney James Alcala -on San Quen· tin's Death Row .awaiting the outcome of Orange County hear· ings that could lead to a new trial had unrelated murder charges against him dropped in a Burbank court Wednesday. Because of the unreliability of a key prosecution witness, the Los Angeles County District Al· torney"s Office asked Municipal Court Judge Marion Gubler to dismiss charges against Alcala, 37. The murder count had been filed against the Monterey Pa,rk man last summer in connection with the strangulation death of a 21-year-old Burbank woman. Only several weeks earlier. Alcala was sentenced lo die in the California gas chamber for the 1979 kidnap-murder of 12· year-old Robin Samsoe of Hunt· ington Beach. THE DISMISSAL or·the murder charge against Alcala coincides with an Orange County Superior Court hearing on whether two Orange County Jail informants committed perjury in testifying against the amateur photographer during the Samsoe trial last year . Tbe bearings were ordered by the California'6upreme Court. In the Burbank case, charges ~re dropped becau~e yet another jailhouse informant against Alcala had shown himself to be unreliable. Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney David Disco said a ma· <See ALCALA, Pa•e A%) Future dim for Braniff DALLAS (AP) -Independent auditors say Braniff Interna- tional Corp., which reported an alrline-lndustry record $131 mllllon toes for J,.980, may not be able to survive. 4' "There are condltlon1 whicb indicate that tbe company· may be unable l9 cantJnoe as a 1oina concern," 1aid• the report pre- pared by Deloitte Ha1ldn1 and S.lla. A ••aotni c:ohcem" 11 defined aa a company nl)eeted t.o coo· tlnu. ln bu.linMs lndeflll1te1)'. ~ Trediq ln Bran!ff •tock wu O.lted t1mporarU1 after \)!• .Udlt«'11DDOUDc1ment Wednei· day. The atoct doiMd at •~, down '1 a Iba" from UM ,_. clay cloalDI price. • ners Sculptor Ali ~han help1 guide into polition support beam of red metal 'VoJcano.' Mesa mulls tower Official says sculpture defies order BY .IEUY CLAUSEN Ofu.._., ......... Costa Mesa's aulatant city at· t.orney. Mark Heublcb, was pon- dertn1 the ltaoian quesUoo to- day at City Hall. For the third time ln Je11 than a year, Iranian hnml1rant Ali Rou1hao erected a towertncl red metal sculpture ln front or hll Superior. ~venue weldin1 lhop Tuetday in deflanc:e of clty or· dinances. But Huebech bellevea the ac- tion a1ao defiea tbe Oran1e Coun· ty Superior Court order restrain· tn1 tbe lraDlan from any eonatruetlon at 1550 Supertor A"ie. • 1'he city bu i nted a lawsuit eont4'ftdlna that Roulban must comply wf~ ordinance& lD ered· lAI the fortllt ol red meta.I •true· turu bt lnllltl 11 art. But, Huebsch admitted, the court probably won't take action unless the city fUea some sort of complaint. He said be ls evaluat· int thai move. Huebsch's comment. came u Rousban and a handful of friends popped corks on cbam· paint bottles ln his weldint abop &her two hours of work with a 45·t.on, yellow crane ln HUtna bl1 newest cteaUon, "Volcano," In place. Despite the Superior Court edict re1ardill1 no more lttuc- tures, the fiery Iranian bqan moviq the tall plec~ lnto poet. tlon at 1 p.m. u be bad prom· latd. ftoUJban pooh·pOOhl COD• tendoae that 111' towera violate at Jeut two ctty lawa, one Umtt- tn1 tbe'•Wlht ol coutructlOD lD t.be lDdulU{al aone to ao feet and · tbe Other requlr1nf any coq- 1tnactiaa to be reviewed by d'Y otftctall. aomban and bla Amerlean ClvU Ubutln Unloa law1a. AU.Pa'8AJ) Rescuers stalled by gases REDSTONE. Colo. <AP> - Rescue crews inched their way along a 7,200-foot sloping mine s haft today, trying to reach 15 miners trapped by an explosion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek No. l coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope. Seven men came out or the mine in two groups arter the blast Wednesday. Four were un· Injured, but three were admitted to Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs for treatment of burns. bruises and shock, of· ficials said. One of those who escaped un· hurt, C\avid Chiarello, said that when the explosion occurred, ""Air came at me sort or Uke a hurricane. lt didn't knock me over but there was so much dust I turned around and tucked my head m."' COMPANY RESCUE ~ams making their way toward the 15 , men, estimated to be as far as 7 .000 feet into the mine,· were having to stop occasionally to test the mine's air for deadly gases, a spokesman said. Mining officials said they were unable to predict when the trapped miners would be reached or whether they are alive. Kescuers were less than 1,000 feet from where the men were believed to be, but progress wu slow. After keeping vl1U near the mine ror more than 17 hours, most of the miners' families went home at daybreak. But a crowd of miners and reporters stood at the entrance of the road that winds 10 miles up to the mouth of the mine. The public was ha.mid from the immediate area around the mine. "We'N praying that there wlU be 15 men comlnc out today," one miner who declined to atve bi1 name said. "There'• a buneb (See MINE, Pace AZ> WYOMING •Oenvet •Redstone COLORAbo BCE NE OF BLAST JS mm.rt trowed \ l J • ,.,, ......... Pre8ident ~ work;t at Ida deM "'·th.I ""'111 o/ llN Mdle Houw renunce. Hu aurgeon 1ay1 he could have died from h1.1bulld100Und had hi not gotl.n immectiale m«lkal attention. From Page A1 ALCALA. • • jor element of the case against Alcala was statements be al- legedly made to fellow Orange County Jail inmate John Mul- queen. Reagan 'uxu inch away from death' HOWEVER. DISCO said, Mui· queen admitted committing per· Jury in an unrelated Orange County drug smuggling case in .July . ruinRtg whatever credibili· ty he may have had. .. , n vww of this, the people can't proceed." prosecutors told Judgt: Gubler Wednesday. Alcola hodibecn charged with. killing Jill ~ane Parenteau in J unl·. 1979 . only days before ~ 1:.s Samsoe du.appeared from tht• St'a:.hore 1n Huntington HeaC'h M+s6 ~ertteau was ~tingled aftl>r an intruder broke into her "~'tond story apartment. accord· 1n1>: to Hurbank police in vt·st1galor~ ALCALA BECAME a suspect 1n lhe.:,laymg 1n August, 1979. At the time. 1t wo~ reported tt.~t c·,·1denC'c• mduded blood slams lt•ft at tht• scene that matched Al c ala's to a degree that would cli min alt· 90 percent of all other humans Alcalil allegedly met the woman al a bar and danced with h N. but she reJt•c:ted h ii. efforts to date her ; Disco said 8urbank police in· vcst1gators did a thorough job on the case. but "came up dry" with r egard to material 1Jv 1d cnce He said charges could be re flied agains t Alcala 1r new evidence should turn up SANTA ANA LAWYER Keith Mon roe. who 1s representing Alcala in the California Supreme Court a ppeal of his Orange County conviction, s aid the likelihood of refiling charges In the Parenteau case "is remote " MeanwhHe. the hearing on al· ~gations that perjury was com· O"litted during the Samsoe case tontinues Friday in Orange ounty Superior Court Judge hilip Schwab's courtroom in anta Ana. ~One of the informants against lcala. Robert Frank Dove. ad· itted last week he lied to a Jury when he said Alcala told him he slapped the youngster unconscious after abducting her on June 20. 1979 Acting mayor ~Is himseH ANNAPOLIS. Md <API Act ing Ma yo r Gustav J . Akerland, who apparently was in des pair over city finances when he fired two bullets into his head. has died at a hospital here, officials say. The 60-year old Republican died Wednesday al Anne Arundel General hospital. He J>ad been taken there Sathrday f: y police who round him when hey responded to a silent alarm n the municipal building. . Police investigators found five pocuments in Akerland's office. ~ncluding a \wo-page memor&n· ~um in which the acting mayor ~espaired over his inability to omplete lhe 1982 budget before be April 30 dea<Sllne. , /.. ORANGE COAST W ASlilNGTON <AP) -Con· trary to initial denials, the bullet that s truck President Reagan stopped only an inch from his heart. says the surgeon who re· moved it. Dr Benjamin Aaron said be almost ten the explosive bullet where it was because of difficulty in getting it out. The president, Aaron said. "was right on the margin" when he arrived at the emergency room March JO. ''If the president had been taken to the White House after he was shot instead of to George .Washington Unive~s1ty Hespital. or taken to a more distant or lesser hospital. I think he would have been in big trouble," Aaron said in an interv\ew published in today's Washington Post. "He could have been another Dr Michael Halberstam " H alberstam, a noted cardiologist. died on the operat· ing table after being shot by a burglar al his Washington home in December. The account by Aaron. director of chest and cardiovascular sur- gery at the hospital, generally confirmed grim descriptions by others invol'fed and contradicted the first reau\U'ing sta\ements by the h06pital's offlcial !lpok.esman, Dr. DennisO'Le•ry ()·Leary has admitted he was trying to be as opttm1stlc as he Judge orders seized U.S. yacht sale SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The rertoated former presidential yacht Potomac. which sank last month after having been seized in a marijuana smuggling case, has been ordered sold by a federal judge. U S. District Judge William Schwarzer found Wednesday the Potomac "ls liable lo perish or waste or be greatly reduced in v a I ue" if kept by the U.S. Customs Service and that the ex· pense or keeping it is "dis· proportionate to its value." No date was set for sale of the 165-foot vessel, which was a favorite of President Roosevelt. Court documents said when the vessel was seized Sept. 11 at Pier 26 in San Francisco, its value was appraised at $250,000. The leaky yacht sank while moored at Treasure Island, wu refloated recently Jt.nd ia now stored at Pacific Drydock and Repair Co al Oakland. George Brokaw, the Customs Service director . said llle service has spent about $60,00o for salvage and emergency re· pairs to keep the vessel aOoat. He added that the Potomac is costing $470 a day for maln· tenance and repair. He continued in an arfldavit that the vessel could be van· dallied ~auae or its valuable fittlrtjS and other equipment. A forfeiture request by the U.S. attorney's otrice said the Potomac had been used to .transport and facilitate the im· portaUon and landing of marl· iJ,aana and thus ls 1ubJect lo forfeitnre. Daily Piiat MAINOffa Thol'MI P. Hiley ......... Robert N. WNd ~ M. Thom11 Keevil ~ Thomas A. Murphlne .,,...,. .• Ch1tlel H. Looi ....... .........,. .... Bernatd Scttulm1n 0...... Cetlcattt.nMn ~'*- Kenneth N. Goddard Jr. ~~ JJD ... , ...., .... ~ ....... CA. INll Mdn9 .... 1•.C.tallilllfta.CA. ... coultl and sometimes w~ work· ing with less-than-complete in- formation. • O'Leary said March 30 the bullet lodged "several inches" Crom Reagan ·s heart. Aaron said he twice almost gave up efforts to find the bullet in Reagan's lung but "had a strona feeUng" that it sboul not be left there. Only later did physicians learn that the .22-callber projec- tile was explosive. "I think there's no question but that we would have had to go back into his chest again and take it out," the surgeon said, ''because 1t might have cuptured and slaJ:1- ed leaking." .From Page A1 FIRES. • • ing buildings during the chilly night, and many stood crying as their homes went up ins moke. THE FIRES WERE out by mid· morning, and no serious injuries were reported, authorities said. Meanwhile, the city's 420 sanitation workers walked out to- day in a dispute over fringe benefits, the same reason lhe city's 300 firefighters and 127 uniformed fire officers went on strike Wednesday Loehr s aid contingency plans to handle garbaee collection, usual- ly performed by members of Teamsters' Local 456, would be put into effect in this city of 204,000. Yonkers Fire Commissioner Richard Smith said firefighters came from the neighboring WestchesterCountycommunilles 'Of Ardsley. Dobbs Ferry. Green· ville, Hastings, Mount Vernon and Tarrytown to help, but were dismissed after the strikers start· ed harassing them. "I didn't want any bloodshed." Smith said. There were numerous false alarms, Smith said, wltb more than 35 separate alarms for reaJ and non-existent fires since the strike began Wednesday until 3:30a m.today. NO NEGOTIATIONS were scheduled although leaders and rank-and-fil e members of the firefighters' union, the United Firefighters Association Local 628, planned m eetings today. The law penalizes strikers two days' pay for each day on strike and provides for large fines for unions. The fire unions, the Teamsters and \be Captains, Lieutenants and Ser1eants Association - representing ranking police of· ficers -have been bargaining with the city over fringe benefits to be included in ~ontracts retroactlvetoJuly. A tentative agreement on a wage package was.r~ached last September, bulfailuretoagreeon the fringe benefits prevented the contracts from being rallfied. Gem smuggl,e mPrefiled SEATTLE <AP> -Beverly Guy. the King County court re- porter who aatd she didn't re· atbe she had diamond• in her bra when she went tbrouah airport customs 18 montba aeo. must stand trial again May 218. Federal prOtJecutors refiled · dtamond-smunHnc ch'arces aaatnst the SS.year-old Federal W •S' woman whose first trial ended in a buna jury laat month . Autborlttea cont.end M1. Guy's boyfriend, Carl Edward Zehner,. a Federal Way hypnoUJt, wu Involved ln diamond 1mucalln1 and bad Ma. Guy carry the stones lnto the counlJ'y for him. Funds all~ated SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown lr. bu •lined a b1U to Pa7 the •u mllllon cc>1t o1 fta)ltlna the lledlt.erraneaa ttatt ny in santa Clara Cowrt7. B1 TM A.Moclated Preti Some srumbled, some •ot ar· tested UM! Ame sot tee ere~ aa mllllont of Americans waited until the la.st minute lo meet the deadline for filini 1980 lncome tax returna. Seven tax protatera were ar· rested for disorderly conduct in New York, and three ROD)aD Catholic priests In Pit~gh publicly paid only _part of their tax ea -a type ¢'"objection that dates in this/country to the Boston 'l'ea ~Y. '•A h4favy O\JJll of the taxes coes to tb mlUtary," War Reslsten Le ue member Ed Hedemann, onei of 20 protesters outside the IR,8' main Manhat· tan office, uid Wednesday. "The money is being misspent. We urge people to consider not paying some or all of their in· come tax." ''OUR ll'l:LIGION teaches that •ar ls immoral," the Rev. Jack -o· Malley said in Pitts· burgh. He and two other priests tol<t IRS cashiers they would not pay the 35 percent or their taxes which would go to military spending under the proposed na· lional budget. "We're not paying ror any type or violence," he said. From Page A1 ALI ••• Meir Westreicb, argue the meta! objects are works of art, not "structures" and are protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The first tower. dubbed "Waterfall," was. erected last June before Roushan's battle for proper city permits was culminated. Howev.er, the IRS sald, the o•· lion haa a more than to pfteent voluot.ary compliance rate witb the income tax. The IRS said ·the record 9' million income tax retum1 ex· peeled this yeer will yield $325 billi~. nearl;Y half the federal government's revenue. A FEW PEOPLE, however, said they will not file, and even If audited they will not pay. "I don't pay taxes," Hamden, Conn., businessman Irwin Schiff said . His comments came from the Allentown, Pa., federal prison camp, where he is serving a six·· month sentence for tax fraud. In Chicago, one tax-paying motorist, Kevin Magors, wu so anxious lo wash his hands of the affair that he sped away from the scene before withdrawing his arm from a mail pouch held by a postal worker, dislocating his shoulder. Magors stopped and a policeman popped his shoulder back into place with a bear hug. ln New Orleans, people stood in line for assistance at lRS of· fices for two hours. and 75 IRS employees in Newark, N.J ., fielded 10,000 calls for help from taxpayers who chose to use the eleventh hour (or the average 60 minutes tax preparers say It takes to fill out standard Form 1040. IN DENVER, THE post office had I RS employees in the lobby 'to help befuddled taxpayers Th.roughout the country. post o ffic es had uniform e d employees outside at curbside until midnight, sometimes on all four corners and on both sides of the street, to ease traffic jams by grabbing returns and selling stamps:-- Outside Chicago's main post office. a Baskin -Robbins DMty ..... ,,.... Crane hoi.8t1 45-/oot tower mlo po1ition in front of Co1ta MelC welding ahop. .. .-oLSll Prime time from Rotex. franch.lae made lut·mJnut.e tax· paurlnJ more palatable by &lv1P1 away a 1coop of lee ereat0 with eacb return after 10 p.m. Most postal offi cial• said anythlnc in mallboxet or mallbaa• by mldniabt would earn the coveted Aprll 15 postmitrk. Orlando, Fla,, Poatal Service sp1>kesman Charles Brown said the returns of anyone simply in line at mid· night would be postmarlced before midnight, no matter what time they were actually sorted. "Why people wait until 10 or 11 o'clock to mail their forms. I just don't understand," Loa Angeles Postal Service spokesman David Mazer said. "I J UST NEGLECTED to do it earlier," shrugged Jose Mon- tero. 27, a Sew York City ac· counting clerk. as he eathered the proper forms at a Manhattan post office. ' .. I think it's probably due to the inflationary creep which has · put people in h igh e r tax brackets which mean fewer and : smaller refunds." Raymond . Hite, a private tax preparer in Washington, O.C. said. "People owe more money, so they're not . rus hing to file ·' From Page A1 MINE •.• of good men down there and a lot or good friends. "WE'RE LIKE a family up here At times like this, everybody bands together There are about 400 people waiting at home to hear what's happened"- One mming official, who asked not to be identified, said there appeared to be no methane in the chambers where rescue teams were working But that could mean a buildup of the gas on the other side or the rubble that trapped the miners, he speculated Methane 1s a colorless. odor· less. toxic and highly explosive gas s imilar to propane and natural gas. It occurs naturally underground and tends lo form 1n pockets Radioactive vials stolen? SAN DIEGO <AP) A city dis a ster readiness official says tests will begin today to de term1ne whether radioactive rn atenals allegedly bought at a swap meet were stolen. Sgt. Bill Wolf, San Diego dis- aster readiness coordinator said Wednesday that mforma.' lion concerning the five vials of radioactive material was handed over to the FBI and the city attorney's offi ce for in- vestigation of possible legal violations. Robert Lacy, operations of· ficer for the San Diego County Orrice or Disaster Preparedness, says tests will be conducted by a radiological systems team at General Atomic Co .• operated by the Nuclear Regulatory Com mission PCB spilled FREMOYf <AP> Four peo· ple were ~plattered with te>xic PCB when their car r ammed a utility pole in Fremont, accord· ing to officials. c Su~rb Rolex watthes for men and women. In 18 karat yellow 901.d with hidd~n-clasp bracelets: A. Oyster Quartz Oatejust for men In stalnl~ steel, S1,350. e. Lady's Datejust, SS,750. C. Man·~ Day-Date, S7.950. ·~ Albert Finney, who will portr~y Daddy Warbuclfs in the Columbiu Pictures production of" Annie," r,acts calmly to"'various stages of shearing in New York. Fil ming is scheduled to begin late this month. Daviaamo~ 'like actreu' Bette Davis, whose <1•S· linctive smoking style is an acting trademark, says she "learned to swear and smoke" when she first went to Hollywood so "they would think I was an actress.'· Miss Davis, in an interview published in the May edition of the Ladies' Home Journal, said she arrived in California as a non -smoking, non- d rinking. "silly -looking person." "I thought. ·Whal can I do?' " said the Academy Awa~d-winning actress So she started 1mokin". "I d1scovered that I could do a lot with a cigarette in a drama." slle said, "I don't just take two puffs and put it down. I srnoke. I never in· haled whtth gave it a very peculiar look." Miss Davis. 73, said abe pities modern young ac- tresses who have to strip ln movies. She said she never would have agreed to that. "Never! Never!" she said. ' · · 1 was on a set only Qnce with a girl playing a part in a film of mine stark naked. I was in a state or absolute horror." Muppet femme fatale Miss Piggy advises readers of her fliet and e:tercise guide to{" Ntver eat anything at one !it- ting that you can't Li~." The guide appears in May issue of Ladiea Home Journal.• W aatiinetoo 'reporters, beware: there's & fiedtllnl Dewsbound sniffing around your town. and be wants to know how you made de- cisiona on some ot the bi&· eeat stories of the last four y~rs. The new boy on the bus is former White House Press Secretary Jody Powell, who's writing a book on the news tnedia and the pres- idency. Powell bas signed a con· tra~t. said to be worth six figures, with William Mor- row & Co. in New York City. He said his book would describe w.hat oCficial.5 and reporters were t.hl{lking and doing during five or six im- portant events or Jimmy Carter's presidency, includ- ing the Camp David summit. Although his list of topics is tentative. Powell has said be may include the l.!'JlllilUl hostage· cnSTs and the early Kennedy-Carter race. But reporters need not rear retribution. "I'm not going to come out and say 'So and so is an unworthy reporter'," said Powell. Carl Sagan, lbe space scientist who e njoys speculating about intelligent non-human life from ~yond, has been named "Humanist of the Year." 1 The dowp-to-earth award from The Amfrican Humanist Association will be presented Sat\,ltday night at tbe 1roup'1 annual con· -. rerence in San ptego. Tbe usodflt9n Hid the award ls beln$ conferred on Saean ''for hl• lnCluentlal work in educaUnt the public about science, and for his pioneering efforts in astronomy and' space ex· ploratlon. ·· Rain heavy in Texas Sections of Rio Grande V, alley get 6 inches Cheyenne " Uxutal, weather C.fll~o iO ---.-.--..... Clndrwwtl ~ LIOlll and varl•bl• wind• with •mOOlll -Ill Ole nlll!I -m«lll"' 11011rt 111re11oh \OftlQlll W••I lo M>lllhwft\ winch 10 to 1• 1'not• In ••· l•r-WH!Kly -I 1 lo 1 1"4 Part~I cl-tno In •11....-n .o U.S. summary Locally i..,,., rain ccnllll\led Wed ne1dey over wettern T•••• end Halern New -alco, end a1reno winos a<_..., -•• fll ,,. no.-n Plell'a. Some peru ol the central Rio Grondt va11.., --wrn T• .. • llOI 11p to >la lncllft ol rain In h tA "°"" endlno -.day •fl•r-, wllll other M-oanine ~--and •-lncl'lft Very tlrontl. lllllY wind• ol "II to «I M!lfl 111 .. owr 1'lt ~rn P1elna. wllll .,._.,. _, reduclftt vlalblllly lo as I-.. a Mlle and --II al Gronc1For1't,N.0 Sl'towera were wldelY acallered OV9r tlw central RocklH and lroM Arllana• ecroH ,,.,..,...,,, Mlululppl end AlebeM•. Ral11 wn movlno HllOr• •'°"9 the P8cltlc Nort'-tt CM ti. Gala •-'9 ...,... In effect •IO"I • nDf"tlwrn Hew E1191and aa • cold air m••• '"'•Pt acrou Ille Allanllc ....... ,., ... _.,.,,. _ ... 1...-tor 111• Mo.,nl•lna of Morylend 91\d VlrOlnlo, -lroat ..,.,n1,.. _,.. In etlec;t I• Ille rem.inclltt' ol ~ lWO •letM ..... I • o.i-er• 1:1 ..... ,,., •• -... r. litmpafel11rt1 _,_ In h IOI .,.i '°' owr fll0<1-.' lh• G1111 co.-11 •nd the 1111end So11tl'twut. TallahHtH and Fo'1 Myera, Flo .. .,_.. reporled record high• of"· TaMPefldw .. .,OYNI IM Mtlon at Midday Wodne9dey r8f10ed from a to"' of 2S etGr-llle,l\Mlne, toe lllQhof •u1crouClty, Fl•. Udifomia Tiie Soutl\lend w\11 c~lnue to lleve "'"'' _,,...... -<!Olm and,.. 111 , ................ ., •••a•. Otllonwl .. _.,., 111 all -wlll be fair "'""4'1 Friday. Llttte lam- perablreC'Mftlalt ll .. ly. OrM9t C-W., can upect ,,..,... i. M011ntaln lllgfla In llle 6411 Lowa lS \04$. • Nort11er11 11e .. r1 1111111 IOa, tOa southern deMrU. i..owa O to SS northern clnerta, SJ lo.AS _,tlwrn cfo. aar11 I Temperatures Ml L• u n .. ,. JI .. ,. 24 70 47 7• S6 ., 4' i6 .. n n -----------. der -,.,...,,.....,.,rom IN 1111411 71 ,, , .Oa 11 tlle tlff<IM• t. lo-r 10. I l•r1Mr ........ ~., <INrlnt .... .,..,..... 11 .. llNCML Lows a .. JI. llllallilll ,,.....,. WiN lll'vO l1ltlll lft tllo 7ts 1., , ....... , t"'o ll•r•· Ov_..,.. .... lfttMSOL 76 • . ,. a •7 40 JO '1 61 .. - , Souihem Califoinia '1U1f report ..................... .... "" ............. ow hlM I I U I I IW IMte..... I I 1 ti I I IW I I I '-I I IW .._CllllttY 2 a ,, 2 a w lltlilillrlllr''*r: YJUodlalltl. I Cleve I-" Col""'""' s.c Oel-l"lWlh .. O.n~ 71 o.1Mo1,.. n Del roll • 0\1111111 n Fair ti.rib JI Har11«d 4t Halefle 14 H-lwfll ll Hou a ton " 1-apll• ~ Jacll.tnvlle ll J11nu11 :M K•n• City n LaaVltOM • Llllla Roell .. l.Ouhvllla M ~mplllt 11 MlaMI u Mllwa11k" 41 Mpla·Sl.P U Nuhvlll• 70 ..... 0r1-.. New Yon. n Norfotll. 5' Okla City 60 Om•lle ti Orlando • Pllll-lpt,ia SI PIWlenla t2 PllbOv.._, 50 Piiand, Nw 4J Piiand, Ott .i ltapld City 74 lttno 1J ltl<hmonel U leltl•lle 6S '8attla ., St Loula '1 CAU f'OIUUA 4' ... " • W MIUNGTQN (AP) -htsl· dent Re11an b., aruttd uneon- dltlonal Nrdolit i. two former FBI otUctala convtci•d of autborlalQC llle~al~r ak·lnt dunna tbe ••ency • o( •· ti-war rldleala dortne • Nl:icon admlnUtraUon. · W. Mark Felt ud Edward S. Mlller acted •1not wttb criminal intent, but ln the belief that they bad lf&ntl 6f autborlty Ha~hlnt to t.he hlchest level• o, 1ovem. ~·at,r' .., • ., •aid.lo. writ~ atatemeot. • 'Ainerica w•• aeneroua to thoae who ref\jSed to serve tbe1r country in the Vietnam war,1' the president aaid. "We can be no less generous to two men wbo acted on high principle to brini Jur}i ·~acqUits man iil s·fiooting case A 20-year-0ld man accused ol attempted murder has been ac- q ultted tut an Orange County • Superior Court jury even thou'b 'his victim identified him u the gunman' at a preliminary hear- ing. However, because the man wbo bad been shot disappeared before the trial of Thanh Minh Vu began, the jury had to rely on the r~ad1ng of transcripts from · the earlier court hearing. On Tuesday, the panel re- turned with its verdict of inno- cent. Prosecutor Michael Pear, who decided to continue with the case without hls most important witness, said he doesn't know what became of Thiet, Van N-M board -OKs list of layoffs A list containing the 128 names of teachers and related person- nel scheduled for possible layoff in June was approved Tuellday night by the Newport-Mesa School District board. Huynh, 21, who suffered a bullet wound to the head. The shooting incident. oc- curred in Santa Ana latt No- vem ber. Huynh was shot as be stood ln a telephone booth in a furniture store. Several weeks earlier. the vie· tim and Vu were involved in a physical confrontation in Anaheim. Though it was never proved, Pear said Huynh may~ have been a member of one Viet n am ese gang and Vu the member of another. Vu was taken into custody in January and at hls preUn:Unary hearing, Huynh identified h.im as the man who shot him in the head. However. Pear said Huynh disappeared in late February or early March. Further complicating his case, he said, was another witness re- c a nting damaging testimony again.st Vu at the trial. At the top of the list and first to go according to seniority ia an • elementary school teacher. The last is an Instrumental music In- structor. The list was compiled by ad· rninistrators who considered both seniority and -when seniority dates are Identical - special teaching skW. required in the diBtrict. Final layoff notices are to be mailed before May 15 to teachers in the district bit by lagglng income and declines in • student enrollment. The school board plpps to eliminate what it calls a&'5ut 85 "fulltime equivalencies" in June. Several positions to be eliminated are part-time duties, so more than 85 teachers will be cut, an administrator noted. , . The reductions still must oe ruled upon by an administrative law judge, according lo state I aw . and his bearings are scheduled at Harper Community ~ Center in Costa Mesa on April 22 u and 23. ~ Teacher cuts including two ~ administrators with teaching ;: credentials. psycho loglsts. n nurses and librarians will re· ~ suit from closing two schools a. and trimming such programs as an end to t.M temtritm that w tbreateninC our nation."\ I ; P&l:D F)eldillt, tbe grtt( dent's oounsel, MJd the didl t.o look into the cuo came R~a1an's own laJt1atJve. Flel in1 aald Rea1an •l•ned tb pardon March 28. but ••even overtook It" and delayed public announcement. Rea1an waa ebot in an a1eaaelnatJon attempt •March 30. Brian Gettfnas, a lawyer for Felt, s&ld tbtt pardon erases the s&lgma of convicUoq. "ft 's a vindication." be said. ''They belleW!ld at every slngle moment that they were acting in the best interest.a or the country and they were doing nothlq wrong. It hu been recognized by no less than the president of the United .States. It means everything to them." G ETflNGS said be had not re-• quested the pardon, but was generally aware it was being. considered. He Jocated FeJt in his doct.Qr's office to inform him.' Felt's response was : "l don't, think I need to see the doetor." Later, Felt declared "I am ex- tremely grateful, just more grateful than I can possibly say, and I thank him C Reagan)." Miller also expressed gratitude. FELT and MiUer were appeal- ing their U.S. J)istrict Court con· victions of violating the civil rights of friends and relatives of members of the Weather Under· ground, a radical anti-war group. !! instrumental music, middle u.......- .. school shop classes. language ii classes in high schools, driver OUTING -Former Iran bostaee Richard Morefield, bis ~ education, counseling services son Steven, and wife Dorothea take a carriage ride dur- :w and health care ing break in group sessions being held for the ex-hostages ~ In a similar move last year, in White Sulphur Springs, W.V. Experts are evaluating • the board cut about 90 positions. the former captives' re-adjustment to freedom. ~! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 21 x 44 ,. 11 51 ... " M ,. 72 • JO ... 41 u 45 .. 45 • • !j WASHINGTON <~i>) -With n,bie b&llkQfU.S. mW~ -1dttillto be ••t, AmefCcan arms lhlP. '°"entst.)EJhlvador already have ··topped tbe toml.,e of weapons tbat tbe ae.,an admlnistntlcJD :~ntenda Soviet·bloe countries · ,osmuccJed to letUtt 1uerrillu. • '(f The Defense Department said that tbe Unlted States ba1 ·f~ent 3'3.2tom ot_.Utary auppU• -w El Salva4'ol' atAce Jan. L That O"eomparea with an earlier Stfte Departmenteatimateof200tomof Soviet-bloc weaPODJ in the bands of tbe.lf\leµUJU . PoUciea rapped NEW Q.ELHJ, Iadla (AP) - Small Communl1t demonstra-tions and angry newspaper 11,,editoriaJs condemning Prime 1, Minister Margaret Thatcher's /~acial policies greeted her j~.when she arrived for a four-day 1 .visit to India. ", About two dozen noisy youths 'i¥aved blackswatcbesofclothand shouted "Go back! Go back!" as {. Jb1. Tbatcbe.r and P11l~e Mlnllter-lndira Gandhi left 1the • airport. Sev•ral doaeo ,111ore routba dlanted and pufed out leaflets u the mQtorcad,reacbed ~ .e~al palace where the B~ 'fiaitor ta 1taytn1. ~'quiet',,. . LONDON (AP~ -Ybun1 black rloten in Brbcthli etayed off the streeta for a Di~. lett!ni the slum district in Sou~ ~ aleep undittwbed for the first time in five nigbta. Report pre~ WARSAW, Poland (AP) Poland's Communist party newspaper baa aaid that reports the 1overnment was expandi.ne foo rat1ooi.n1 were "pre-mature." Trybuna Ludi, the official party paper, said the Polish Cabinet bad ·reviewed a draft plan for expand· log food raUonini but that no fmal decision had been taken. Pace approved ,,,: ROME CA P > -Foot-and· ' mouth disease poses a serious BRUSSELS, Belgium CAP) - threat lo Europe's livestock in· India and the European Com· ... 1.dustry despite steady improve· moo Market have reached . ment in controllinc it, a · U.N.-agreement on a five-year pact BRADLEY'S FINAL SALUTE -The caissoh bearinR the body of the late General of the Army Omar Bradley, followed by his five. star fi!lg and riderless horse, crosses into -~ .. ,....... Arlington National Cemetery where he was buried Tuesday. Bradley, last of the five-star leaclers who shaped victory 36 years ago, died April 8 at age 88. I LONDON <AP> -Lea of noo-communtat naUo_p1 and ~eir newspapers b.avt matched '"Ptrlatlvea ln aatutlb• tbe .fll1ht or the apace tbu\Ue .Columbia. They said lt beraldl both a new era ln ·~ace eJCplqr•· lion and the re.-urcence of Amerlcu technolol)'. ''The shutUe it Star Trek, Star Wars and the Empire Strtlles Back in life," said the Guar- dian, a liberal Britlab dally. "It is beautiful, futuristic and patriotic in an era wbeo Americans have founcl-little to cheer about." "Through Columbia's victory, American preatiae baa been launched again in the world,'' said the Rome leftist newspaper L,,. Repubblic.a. Japanese Prime Mln~"1' 1.enko S~ukl called lbe fli1bt "magnificent," U .N . Secretary General Kurt Waldh ei m sai d it was "dramatic" and the Chinese news agency H.sinhua used the word "historic." A COMMENTATOR on Yugoslav state television, nar· rating footage of Columbia's landing, e xclaimed, "Spec· tacular!" A bakery owner in Islamabad, Pakistan, said, "All praise to Allah, who enables men and women to think. plan and operate such wonder machines as the shuttle." Congratulations went to Washington from the Canadian Parliament, Italian President Sandro Pertini and Korean sponsored commission said. for trade and economic coopera- Recent outbreaks on the island Uon . •. ·of Jersey and the Isle of Wight •.<were the first in 13 years in Dunne the negotiations Ihdia .1 Great Britain. The main source sought concessions to spW' Euro- n11or tontainlft'ation in-::E"Uicipe bu pean purcha!les of lndlanprod-> become vaccine fairURs or the ucts. The agreement must be ··escape of the virus from , ratified by India and all 10 Com· _J!anda: h-.ets -2nd ~e ::;~;;~~~;;.~ij~~~ ~-Ro be rt Crippen -and the laboratories. man Market countries. oal strike talks ( forts to end the 20-day coal news conference. "If we knew ~strike a re stalled, with who the person wn, we would · negotiators for the nation's soft. arrest him." ~ coal industry and the United ~ Mine Workers trading charges link atudied ' ~ on who is lo blame for the latest , deadlock. : Union and industry bargainers ~ met for about five hours, but; ~ ended the la.lb wlth both sides ~ reporting no progr~ss. • ' ~ FBI rapped, . f ATLANTA ~AP) ...:. An FBI aeent's comment that some al the slayinea of youof blacks here were comm!tted bf their parents was denounced by Atlanta Public Safety Com- missioner Lee Brown as "an ir· responsible statement." . "We do not know who killed MlA}fl (A P > -Police say they don't 1D<>w if there b any link between last month'c-'arreata of 13 men in a commando training ~ratiollnear anuclearplantand the arretts of two of those men on weaJ)()OS charm ln conaedion with an 8™ged terrori~l plot. FBI drill aet OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP> - FBI agents and police traininc to Us.ht terrorlata and free hostqes planned secret 4rilla ln this eHy built during Wqrld War II to manufacture at()m bombl. ~Reagan 'decorated' ' . I Manne hards over Purp~e Heart WASHINGTON lAP> -A dis-Deputy While House press ; abled Vietnam veteran sent secretary Larry Speakes said i Preaident Reagan one of bis both the presiaent and the first three Purple Hearts along with lady were "clearly very touched I• wishes for a speedf recovery by the eesture." from the bullet wound Rea1an He said Mra. Reaean baa hune suffered in an attempt op hil the medal on the waU of the llv· life, the president's spokesman In& room on the second fioor of said. the White House. t "I believe you deserve this Franco, 35, was born in Purple Heart mare than l do,.. Guadalajara, Mexico and draft· wrote Ishmael Franco. "I want ed into the Marinet In UMS. He you to have it and tell Mn. was wouncled in action twice in Reagan she don't have to bq it Vietnam an\l also received a in the liviq room." auperficUll gunshot wound to the Franco, • former Marine cor-b e a d . · He h 'C on 1 l de red poraJ, Uveit in Fremont. Calil. permanent.ty d.laabled. II YOU PAm.-TOo MUCH 110A 10UI' HIALTN .. IUllJ4Cm •1 .000,000 GAOOP OR tNOMDUM. ,.. 9mlt c.a.....,. ~ technical expertise that sent A 1 H · H · ' t•ll d " i· them aloft on a rocket and s a over, sing-sing s s 1 a Ing-a-ing brought them home Tuesd~)' on a ghder to a wheels·down land- WASHINGTON CAP ) -Poor onlywaytoinlerprethisgrowl. Zoo s pokes man Mic hael ing inlbeCaliformadesert. H si ng· H si ng · Hi s Pand a But from Hsing-Hsing's room Morgan confirmed again what "It is a tribute to the courage girlfriend is making goo-goo eyes came the "here.I come ready or everybody knows from previous of the two men who ventured In· at him again and he still can't not" bleat. courtships: "He just can't figure to space and to the skills of your figure out what to do after eight so the old boy was given outwhattodo." scientists," said Waldheim in a years of trying. another chance. Zoo officials have been trying to ca ble to President Reagan from This time. Hsing-Hsing was Alotofgooditdid him. breed a panda ever s ince Geneva supposed to give way to a rival -He tried several times _ Hsing-Hsing Jand Ling-Lrng West German President Karl and still may, lftherivalturnsout nothmg. Ling-Ung finally got so arrived in 1972 as a gift from Carstens told Reagan, "With to be interested. frustraled she started whacking China in honor of President Nix-this successfuJ flight. America Hs ing-Hsing's intended. her would-be lover, prompting on's trip there. If they succeed, has made a great step forward Ling-Ling, got in the mood him tobeatahastyretrelttothe itwlllbeonJythesecondpanda in man's in vestigatio n of Tuesday, about two weeks early, othersideofthecage. born in captivity. space." and started giving "come hither" --------------------------------------signs. She bleated and iJnored her food. More Important for an amorous male panda, she walked backward, the sign that "today's the day." Officials of the National Zoo quickly bustled Chia-Chia, imported from London to take Hsing·Hsing's place as father of the boped-for baby panda, into her presence, with a screen bet ween them. "I want to be alone," wb the \ Accused scientist • qmts post VIENNA, Austria CAP> -J Soviet researcher at Au.atrla:s Institute for Applied Systems Analysis resigned followin"g reports that be supplied fb e KremliD with secret data ion production of North Sea abd other oil. The allegations first aurfaQed in lhe conservative British weekly Now. and accQrding to newspaper reports , the researcher already bas left Austria. Tbe researcher, Arkaiiy Beloxerov, dented the espionage charges but reai1ned "in the best interest" of the institute, spokesman Peter Scblilke said. lo ·a l~tter to the ioatitute'a dlrectors."Beloxerov said he wa• resigning so that "the'te false cbar1es'' would not t>e used to hrm the institute. Sohll.fke aafcl Belozerov'• work at the institute was "completely . satisfactory." SPRINGB *89 DE R NEW ORLEANS tt79 CHICAGOti79 NEW W)ltl(/NEWARK tJS8t COLORADO SPRINGS tt9 OKLAHOMA cnv..,. . DENVERset . GRAND JUNCTION tff9 PEORIAtf99 TULSAttAt k.ANSAS CITY ttA9 WICHITA SU9 NEW LOW FA.HS 10 EYEIY.YIHERE. Don't wait for summer to have fun. lake a spring break. Now you can .fly to your favorite city at a price that won't break your budget. ContinentaJ's having a special spring sale to Denver and fuany other cities throughout the country. Contipental can take you to Denver or beyond from the.airport nearest you. Burbank, Ontario. Or Los Angeles International. To tBke advantige of our spring break sale, just PllfChase your ticket within three days after making your reservations. Should you need to change or cancel your plans, there is a $10 charge. Seats are limited. Pares are effective ApriJ 18 and all travel must be comple(ed by 'May) I, 1981 ~These discount fares are one-way Coach on , sc:leeted flights. ~on other flights an: slightly higher: Spring fo( a ~· And call your travel agent, company travel department or Continental .,_,_ '""" ...... Ilk '"" o..wt.1 ~ .. •lollMIJ difktut, N" ,,,.,_....,.IHI_. (mm a...-. t SUI fww IO,..._ 'lllf\/f'le-_...., "': ufi""""'-.. iwtl-.ktltw. eJCC'pl """in llmi!N i llfcalw 4116 ..... i' CONT-INENTA • I • • Killer 1entenced 1BAKERSFIELD <AP> -A 21-year-old man convicted of murder and 15 other felonies bas been sentenced to die in the gu chamber.,.. · Jeem County Superior Court Judge Marvln Ferguson accept· ed the jury's .recommendaUon that David Balderu be given U;le death penalty. . . &cecuiion set SAN DIEGO <AP> -The ex· ecution of Robert Alton Hanis, c()nvicted of murdering two boys, bas been set for July 7 amid predictions it may be many months away. As the 28-year-old Visalia man listened without emotion, the ... w---date was anmRllfCed by-Supir10r Court Judge Donald W. Smith. But a deputy state attorney tteneral, Michael D. Wellington, uid "this is not going to be it." .... Of'ange CO"t OAJLY PllOT/ThUl'ldly, April 18, 1981 s Al VISALIA (AP> --A Tulare County man bu pleaded tnoo- cent to two count.I ol m\ltllatin• corpses prepared for bu.rial at a f\.meral chapel bere. , I I I Al'l'altnment for Roy Hqhes White, 23, of G01ben wH scheduled in Vllalla Municipal Court for April 211. Bal' wu Ht at $65,000. • lleari111J dslayed FRESNO (AP) -A pre- llmlnary bearin& for a convicted murderer accused of mastennindln1 a triple 1layin1 for reven1e at Fran's· Market here bu been debyed. Lovesick woi-ker denied benefits Both attorneys a1re~d they needed more time to ' prepare their cases for Clarence Ray Al· len, :I(), a Folsom P rison inmate. A new bearing date was set for M~y 18. Cang8 targeMd LOS ANGELES (AP > -A community organization bas started an anti-gang campaign with an announcement lha\ 60 billboards have been donated for advertising in an effort to stem gang violence in Los Angeles County. SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - California's hiehest court has re· fused to consider a former state employee's bid for disability benefits because his attempts at romance with a co-worker turned sour The Supreme Court denied without oomtnent a hearing sought by Michael Muessig, 40, who said a one·sided romance caused problems which left him unable to work. He had been a property clerk with the state Department of Transportation in Eureka until September 1979, and claimed he suffered an industrial injury to his nervous system because of The campaign, called "Pray for Peace in Our Barrios," b~in.s next week. wit.tl..t.ae... first--f~ blue~ and yellow billboards carrying the slogan and a pic- ture of hands clasped in prayer, said Lily Cruz of the Community Service Organization. _ _ _ _ -• ...,........,. -~e~posn re TO-stresses and 1>ROP" IN B(fCKET -About 2 million of the 10.9 million strains in the course and scope taxpayers in California and Haw ail mail their federal in-of his employment." come tax returns Jft.:ecisely on deadline. This is one of Muessig said there were no three large trucks ferrying bundles of returns to IRS problems until a new employee. center in Fresno. The bulk will arrive Friday. Stephanie Launer, started work. "halc:yori day5~ <ZTlOl"OOls ... moda in bilston, <inglerrl ··a pq.rftzct ~rt fur c:zoet<z.r or any .ep:iciel OC~lon ." 44 Foahion laland • N~port &!ach • 714/644·5070 1001 Westwood Blod. • We•twood VIiiage • 213/208-3273 25°k OFF SILK FLOWERS l·OI. GllAT GLASS STAIN Aasorted Colors New & E11e1tlng P11terns for 1981 ggc rl. C A Reed & Paper"" SOLID COLOR PARTY GO,ODS 20°/o OFF NEW ... SHORT ROLLS OF SATIN RIBBON Her predecessor sent writfen requisitions for supplies. but Miss Launer made requests 'in person -sometimes several times a day and "insisted that Mu essig personally file her 9r ders " Meuss1g became attached to her, according to his petition. and proposed marriage. Miss Launer complained to police because Muessig refused to stop trying to contact her The state denied a disability claim. saymg the problem was personal and not work -related. It said the Labor Code pro vides-\i1~l ~votbtltary-particlpa· lion in any off-duty recreational. social or athletic activity not con stituti n g part o r the employtt's work related duties shall not be cons1d~red in dust rial." SOLID COLOR STREAMERS 1 7/8·x 2~ yds CREPE PAPER reg 55 ea 20 "•21/2 yds 2 pkg./1°0 STREAMERS 500 2.19 SPRAY PAINT ' · . ·Y) MARKET • Reg . 88 1 39 ~ ... #3·#9 50 yd s. rl. # 40 25 yds. rl. • MORNING FRESH PRODUCE !Aew Ranch Fre1b Spinach ...... zte bncb. Sweet Green Onions or Racllshes lie bneb. So. Amerlcaa Bananas ...... 4 lb9. for $1.M . - PREE HOME DELJVEaY SERVICE ($50 minimum> dellvertd In our completely refrigerated trucks. Your order la under refrigeration from our store to your door. • "SPRINKLE TWINKLE" ... FUN & EASY ' . MOD PODGE Glo11 or Matte ~ 02., reg. 1.59 I oz .. reg 2.59 11 oz., reg 3.59 32 oz .. reg. 5.99 1.22 1.88 2.88 3.88 I oz. CRYSTAL GLITTER · reg. 2.~9 1.88 FREE JNST~UCTION SHEETS AVAILABLE BE SURE TO SEE OUR WEEKLY MANAGERS SPECIALS + GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON EASTER MERCHANDISE 5' CELLOPHANE Auorte6' coiore 69°rt .... AY I IS "CINCO OE MAYO" PINATAS 1.99 & 3.99 SALE ENDS MON. APRIL 20 Cl..OSEO UITER TOR9'ANCE (21II11HJ,U \.A MUA UCOHCMOQ (114t•MHJ (714)1U.UH ... LOS A.NOEL.ES <AP) -ID a twJ1t In chlld·cuatody cues, a tlrl born out of wedlpck '"' years qo le 1utn1 ln an atteDJpt to force ber father to vt.lt her. ltUt 1tatt Court of Appeal .Juttlce Robert Ktn11ley tald thJt wee •·t even lf \be ~ l11ued "11 order requ1rtn1 Owen C. Olptn to vt1lt bl1 dau1bter, he WH uncertain lt ~ould be en· force able. "-•·re tbe 1berlff 1otn1 to 10 out and handcult papa, dra1 him to mama's house and say, 'Sit there tor two houra and I'll let you 1obomef'" Kln11ley ulled. The aUlt wu brou,bt ~alnat Olpin, a member o the pres· ti1ious Los An(ele1 law firm of O'Melveny and Myers, on behalf of Kimberly Anne Olpin. Kim· btrl7'1 mother, Vlrslnla M. Louden, '"' tile ftled tM ault dffplt. a court order that the motJJfl' • ald tbe chUd in con· taettna the father. ''IF AN adult bu a rl•bt to en· force vt.sltation a1aln1~ cblldren, the child baa a ri1bt to entor~e vl1ttaUoo qal!Llt an adult," aaid M•. Louden, a Ucenaed attorney in other states wbo bu yet to pus the Calltomia bar exaDt. She aaJd the visitation hlea came about after tbe child be1an comln1 home from 1cbool "demandln1 : "Wbere'a my daddy?" "She started tellln1 people be was on Mars, be lived 1n a apace ship," M.s. Louden saJd. The Superior Court ln whteb • • the 1ult wu orilinally ftled r• • Jected tbe-tUlt, wbtcb the mother Hld uptet Kbpberly. "8BE CaJa about 1,," ahe Hid. ''TM court baa elven It. approval to emotionally aban· donln1 a chtld." The 2nd Dlatrict Court of Ap- peal hu 90 day1 to decide alter Tu-sday'a oral ariumenta. Olpin, who i nitially acknowledged beint Kimberly's father and voluntarily contribut· ed to her support, stopped the paymeota a year after her birth in 1978. But Ms. Louden estaD- llished paternity in a Superior Court Judiment a1aln1t him in 1979, which he did not con~eat. During Tuesday's bearini. Workman realizes· ighest ambition Kln11ley wondered if forclnl Olpin to visit bis d4u1hter wouldn't aimply result in frustration for the father and daughter because of the lack of spontaneity or happiness. .... .. WE CAN lead a horse to water but can't make him drink. Isn't that this case?" Kingsley asked. Attorney James Griffm, arguing on behalf of the girl and NEW YORK <AP) -Jim Cook enjoyed his lO·year win· dow-washlna career in London. but always there was a yearning for the Big Time Ktng Kong's stomping grounds, the Empire State Building. This week, Cook's dream became reality. And as a r~ult. a single pane on the 78th floor ot the 102-story landmark may never again shine so brilllanUy. ··A-MY.zing, truly amyzing," said Cook. a Cockney, as he dangled 1,000 feet above 33rd Street, secured only by a har· ness. Cook had won the cttance to make his dream come true in a . Wteey.~. Si« ~~.,.wt&-· have opportunities to join a Parisian can.can team, nm the marathon at Marathon in Greece, or live with elephants in Sri Lanka. ANOTHER MAN plans to ake the Pentecost Leap at a Pacific atoll leaping from a rree, with a vine tied to his ~nkle fO break the fall. : In comparison. Cook doesn't tee! his dream is either bizarre pr dangerous · · 1 reel very 'ecure," he said, though gusUJ as high as 50 mph were measured on the windward side or the building "It's not dangerous." he said. I t811t llJ ll(YHOlOS 1011 .. CCOCOMP&NY "You're just doidg this window. her mother, conceded that could There's nothing else to worry be a problem but insisted such about.'' d an or er wu a proper first step Even the sight of the "very rather than simply allowing him tiny people" below did not daunt to "take a walk" out of his Cook. Contest organiiers did daughter's life. take out a $2.2 million insurance ·'It is one thing to order him to policy, just in case, and they spend the Ume and another to postponed the culmination of pass judgment on the quality of Cook's dream by one day the time spent." Griffin said. because ot ra~ "The court can order such a COOK SPENT about an hour thing to happen. What happena washing a single pane, aa wave is left up to the human qualities upon wave of reporters went to of the parent." · the window to interview him. Ms Louden added, ·•How "He's in bis glory," said many children .would not have Barbara Medid. who works on taken a road to crime, im· the floor for Diesse Shoes, but poverishment and jail had they took time out to watch Cook's had their father's AUCJltiQn and..... nptotu. ---. . • -~ --Tove-and not been shunned first In the end, the window was by their fathers and then by clean. Actually. it had been society for having been born out cleaned earlier that morning by of wedlock?" American window washers Pleading on behalf ot the before Cook arrived. according father, attorney Lesley A. An· to Bill Pilch, who has scrubbed drus argued that there was no the Empire State Building's win· legal authority for such a court dows for three years and other order and that to issue one Manhattan panes for 22 years. would violate the 13th Amend· "A window is a window," said ment to the U.S. Constitution Pilch. "What's the difference? If r orb id ding in v o I u n tar y he was here for a while, he'd servitude. reel the same way." "While the goal or any society AFTERWARDS, Cook accept-should be to Coster an.d en· ed a golden statuette of the courage close parental·child re- building and an honorary mem· lationships, ~uch rela~io~s~ips bership and set of tools from the cannot be legislated or 1ud1c1ally Window Washers Union. ordered," Ms. Andrus said. • 20 ..... "'-'* --*"'.,.,,,~r-,,," •:• ... • ..... GENERAL NEWS - "\ Spee di ... _ law eas~ inNevadk CARSON CITY <AP> - Nevada Hl1bwey Patrol troopers bave been advlttd to start 1.uu1n1 $5 "••rn r.-in1" ftna tor drivert trav 1 between 55 mph u4 70 m , ln line with a new law 1t1oe4 by Gov. Bob Ult. Troopers were also told nbt to view the eued 1~1 law u a 1l1nal tO stop wrftln1 ticket. tor driven travelin1 up to 70 mpb ln S5 mph zones. But Patrol Col. Pete Zadra conceded tbetf'I a ''deflnJte ~aibllity" of fewer tickets bein1 issued. Zadra also aaJd the troopers- wlll have to plan tor "u in- crease in deatlu and.severt in· jury accidents. There's no doubt in our minds." But he also aaid the state Legislature and Gov. List did what they had to do. ·'I feel the goveRnor and the Legislature represented the )>eo- ple of this state. They would not have introduced a bill of tbi8 type and the governor certainly would not have signed it If they didn't think thl.8 was what ,the people want.ed," he added. Llst, who signed the blll tbi8 week before a cheering crowd at a Hawthorne town meettns, in- sisted that the change in the law was not a signal to drivers to violate the S5 mph limit. Kimberly Anne Olptn, 4~. holda photo of her father, Owen C. Olpin, a Los Angele1 lotofln. The child, living wtth her mother, ia ming for Witation rlghU from her father. The law, which took effect im- mediately once List signed it. makes Nevada the second state to ease penalties for ~xceedine the federally mandated~mph speed hmil KFAR YASSIF, Israel CAP) - Tension runs high in this ChriB· tian village after two people were killed by a Moslem mob that rampaged through the town seeking vengeance for the kill· ing or a youth at a soccer match. Police arrested five men and searched all vehicles entering Kfar Yassif. eight miles east of the Mediterranean, to prevent the villagers Crom stockpiling weapons for another round in the vendetta. Kfar Yass 1f leaders com· plained bitterly that Is raeli A ~ police failed to prevent the at· old Daoud Habib, was killed in tack. and that many of the arms hi s house as he and his wife used against them were Israeli were baking pastries for Eaater. army issue. They decreed a two· witnesses said. Later, an 18· day general strike in the village. year -old high school student, More•than 100 attackers came Tahsin Jvriq, died in a hospital. by foot and car from the Ten other' Kfar Yassif people neighboring settlement of J~re wounded. this week and shot up Kfar Yassif with submachine-gun fire Sixty · one hou ses we re and threw grenades. ' damaged, three or them gutted Both villages are lsraeh Arab, by fire, and hatr a doien cars but Kfar Yassif is Christian, were torched. The windows or while Julis is populated by the church were smashed and its Oruse who follow an offshoot rooftop cross hit by bullets. Kfar doctrine of Islam. J Yassif residents said several A Klar Yassif man, 33-year stores were looted -~~~~~~~~~~ r FllT(R CIGARETTES 20 CIGARETTES 20 CIGARETTES ( ' LOW TAR · CAMEL QUALITY 8 mg; "tlf. 0.8 mg. nicotine w. per clgaflnt by FTC method . .. _, ____ _ ,.,. ......... Mead Dizon, board chairman at Harrah'•, points to origfnal «att seal of California which he uiU return thU 11ear. Seiil to go home Nevada to return California emblem RENO <AP> -After an absence of a century and a quarter, California is getting back its original state seal. The hand-painted seal, which disappeared after a fire destroyed the state Capitol in 1854, has been on display at Har- rah 's Automobile Collection since 1962, viewed annually by thousands of Californians un- aware th~y were looking at a missing part of their state'& his- tory. "It is truly an historic object, and it's because of the im· portance of that object lo the state of California that we at Harrah's have decided . . that we will return this seal to the • ~ t.1 t e-;'~ H'v r·ra h ... S' Cti a i rm u i- Mead Dixon announced Tues- day . DIXON SAID the seal would remain at the automobile collec- tion in nearby Sparks during the peak summer tourism months while the two states decide on "an appropr;iate time and method to tender that return so that its significance will not be lost. Dixon said Harrah's officiaJs were surprised by the furor that broke out in the California Legislature this year when it VI/ as learned that tbe biatorlc emblem was in Nevada hands. · The Assembly backed a res- • oluUon by William Leonard, R· San Bernardino, calling for the return of the seal, used at the first meeting of the Legislature in San Jose in 1850. Noting the resolution urged "all Californians lo help in get- ting the seal back," Dixon said, "l expected to have 20 million Cahf<n-nians coming over the border." HE SAID THAT once Harrah's learned of California's interest in getting the seal back. there never was a question of its re· turn. T he seal hung ill -tl)e state Capifol from 18.S2-185.(. when a fire destroyed the building. The governor managed to rescue the seal, but it became lost in the confusion. It reappeared in a Sacramento bank vault in 1932 and became part of the collection of W. Parker Lyon. a collector of memorabilia and a descendant of Caleb Lyon, who designed the seal. The ·late Wflllam H arrah purchased the contents of the Lyon museum in Arcadia, Calif., in 1955 and moved the artifacts. including the seal. to Reno. 20 CIGARETTES ~JMI~ G LIGHTS~ .. t ' ' .... ' • /,, r SALEM, Or,. (AP) -The state ol Orep, nsurtn1 that 100 years la a lona enou1h arace period, ll dunni.Dt tbe United Statea for pQment of Civil ·War claim• t.otanna $1.8 mlllioa. State biatorian Cecil Edwards said Ore•on ran up the bijl wben it mustered local raldenta to , man garriaona a1awt Indian attacks after federal troops pulled out to help fl•bt the Confederacy. The state Senate ha• voted unanimously for a memorial ur1itii Congrea1 to. relmbune Ore1on for · '1ub1tantlal expenses incurred ln fumlab.lq troops and aiding the , Unltecl States In maintalniq1 t be common defense of tbe Oreeon Trail, miners and setUen ln the Civil War period." ' SEN. E.D. P01T8, D-Granta Pau .. said the money plus lnterest comes to abo,µt $45 million, but the state ll willing to settle for $1.3 million, today's ~uivalent of Its expenses during the Civil War. ·"We are offering Con1ress a bargain basement type of settlement," Potts tQld the Senate. "C¢ainly mo~e than 100 years Hems to me ~ be an excessive grace period." I The state's efforts to °'ake the federal government pay seemed headed for success when in 1906 the case went to the U.S. Court of Claims. A headline in the Morning Oregonian of June 30, 1906, stated: "Oregon Claims Soon To Be Paid." I N 1908, THE court agreed that part of Oregon'a claim should be reimbursed. But the roart satd -un~ stare.. ltemllf for repayment of ~ea and extra wages used to entice men to replace U.S. soldiers should not be borne by the federal government. No payment was ever made for any of the claim, Edwards said. Congres~ never passed an appropriation bill authorizing payment. Oregon made stabs over the years to get the money. but the c laim I ay forgotten until Edwards found old newspaper clippings referring lo the Civil War expenses and renewed the effort. .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Aprll 18, 198-t ~h your new floor installed bV r>mfesslonals, ) and you'll knoW why we can offer·511eh an excellent warranty. , , FK9 SOlanan" •valable onty at our Armstrong Roof FaShlon cermtr store. s200 Save ~'yd StrOng warranaes go wtth supertor proc:tucts and servtces. we sen the best ftOOrs made bV ArmstronQ, Amenca'S 1ead1no ftOOrlno manufacturer. and tnen lnSt3H tnem bV s'<llled craftsmen. we back uP vour new floor wtttt dOUble warranty CCM!r.lge: • The Qualttv of matenal Is guaranteed by Armstrong; • lnstallat10n ts guaranteed bV our FIOor Fashion center• stolie. we tnvtte you to come In to read our warranty. we think vou 11 aoree It could come ontv from a company than confldent of the qua11tv of Its productS and proud of Its services and peopte e LOS ANGE.IS 1325 O.Onn"'t St. I > I I C•1to0tn•• CoM••CIO<"t l.--17211l ..... -. C-.c10<·1 L._ ll06 COSTA MESA 2127 J....,. -~ .... ., ..... (714) 751 ·2324 Olympe & ...._. (213)627-47,. • e LOMG HACH HIO .,..._Dr. A.aw~ Lo..,._ Slaa,,L IC-. IZIJt 4J0.7HI 0,.-D.my t-4: s.t. 10., f!NAMCING 20 CIGARETTES ( r ......... M-. & fri. 'fl t AVAILAI LI 20 CIGARETTES LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE • ' • ( • South county water grant.first in state , One aouth county water dis· \rict hu been the first to receive state conservation bond funds to create a water reclamation system to utilize sewage water now being pumped out to sea. Officials at the South Coast County Water Dis trict, which serves South Laguna and parts of Laguna Niguel and Dana Point, were told about the grant ap· provaJ last week. The district will receive S2 million , to combine with matching funds from developers an·d other sour ces. to create reclamation facilities. The innovative plan will see developers, like Avco, and county agencies and school districts con- tribute funds for tertiary treat- jnent facilities, booster pump sta- tions and a storage reservoir for reclaimed water. Why would private de- velopers, county officials and other agencies want to kick in for a $4 million reclamation project? Because the reclaimed water can be used for landscape lrrlP· tion on golf courses, county me- dians and playgrounds for about 20 percent Jess than drinkable water. The matching funds from those groups will be in the form of advance user fees. In the cue of Avco, the user fee would be depleted over an estimated 25 years. Currently users receive im· ported water for landscape watering, and in the event of a drought or water shortage, that use probably would be the first to be cut. But with a reclaimed water system, greenbelts, golf courses and parks wit.Qin the district will remain green -at a reduced cost. Job pendnlum swings Once it seemed that anyone who landed a job as a public employee pretty well had a job for life and a decent pension. although pay in earlier days seemed lower than comparable jobs in free en- terprise. It appears the pendulum has swung. · Newport-Mesa Unified School District administrators are get- ting ready to lay off 90 more feachers and administrators with teaching credentials in July beaauseof continued declining stu- dent enrollme nt and cuts in tax in- come sources. Many of those teachers have been working in the district for nearly 11 years. hiring on back in 1970 Although there are fewer teachers as time goes by about 90 others were laid off last year the pay keeps getting better. Administrators calculate that the average teacher salary in the district for 10 months of work now stands at $26,457 plus fringe benefits. The teachers' union is seeking raises this next year that would boost that s alary to about $30,000 for the same amount of work. Pay has gotten so good in jobs throughout the district that more than 90 percent of next year's budget is expected to go toward salaries and fringe benefits. Now the job pays well but the security seems to be disap- pearing · Curfew neeth teeth Jn less than two weeks, resi· dents living below Jet departure paths at J ohn Wayne Airport will get an additional hour of quiet on Sunday mornings As part of its recent a pproval of the airport master plan, the county Board of Super:visors or· dered a rollback in the Sunday morning curfew from 7 a.m . to 8 a,m . The change becomes effec- tive April 26. But how is it. one might uk, that jets still are heard taking off afterthe curfew begins at l01J.m . each night? The reason is that many private jet.s -those that are considered quiet -are ex· empted from the curfew pro- visions. • Other curfew violators are subject to losing permission to use the airport That's probably not enough punis hment and the county airport ~staff seem s to realize this. What's needed are some stiff fines. Thus. violators would feel it where it hurts. And, at the same time, the county would be generating some badly needed revenue _for airport projed.s. It is understood that a penal· ty fee program of some sort is be· ing developed by airport officials. One should be implemented as soon as possible. Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is inv1t ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone < 71•> 6-42-4321. L.M. Boyd / Hold that tiger Mentioned long ago that the tiger in that elderly piece of music called "Tiger Rag" alluded not to-a big cat but to the lowest possible poker hand. Jazz musicians called such an un- fortunate hand of cards a tiger. In a money game. it was exceedingly dangerous to bluff with a hand lik~1 that. "Hold that tiger"· became a card player's taunt. It should be not- ed, further, that the card game's ex- preHlon also popularized the phrase: "To have a tiger by the tail." The early "midwife" most usually was a man. The \'VOrd doesn't m~n that the person so identified is some sort or wUe . It means the person is "with (the> wife " M an7 a love and war expert has c_,mplled a Ual of places where 1tn1le women in search of masculine c•mpanloutnp can 10 to filld aame. Such u saltwater fishing cruises. ;: mbint 'supply 1torea. And diesel ecbanlet' 1ehoolt. But rare ta the ter ot rpota wb~re men ln iearcb oMaoatt.I~ women can fO. Kindl)' exclude dueoe. t.avern1, loun1n. slnalea barf, and lbt llke. Neltber lbe men nor women who vl1ttthete Jolnta t•nd to act themaelvea when lhel'eln. ~ven the aentlett one 9f these fellow• ''emt to llU"D lnto a comic. ti.ll.loo ORANGE COAST lailJ Pilat ' once inside. And each of the women, no matter how unaffected elsewhere. suddenly conveys the quaint notion that she thinks she's Cleopatra. Q. What's the "ring gauge" of a cigar? A. The diameter of that cigar and of ils little paper ring. Measured to l /64th of an inch. Common ring sizes are 34, 38, 40, 42, 46 and 50. Am told you can now buy popcorn that tastes like chocolate, orange or coffee. if you·d like . Q Did the Nation's heaviest Presi- dent, William Howard Taft, lose weight while in that demandJng job? A. On the contrary. He picked up 22 pounds. Putting him up to 332 pounds total. Few realize tbat Dr. Franken· stein's orllinal momte:r bad a nam• -Adam. In the colleaes, one out or every 20 cheerleaden lt a youn1 man. In Lbe hl1h 1cboolt, it't cft\ly one out of evtry~. There wu a time on this earth, you know, when tbe beavers were tfVtn feet tall. Thomas P. Hilty Publl.Wr ThomasK .. vU Editor 81r1N1ra Krtlblch Editorial P~• Edltcu- Social Security goal fa ding A special panel appoin ted by Congress has recommended sweeping changes in the Social Security program. And wttile there can be oo denying the need for changes to restore a measure of integrity to it, some of the proposals would come near to defeating the original intent and purpose of lhe pro· gram Commenced in 1937 as a retirement program to fill the void which existed both in private and public employment. 1t has come to its present disastrous financial condition through-tampering by congressmen more interested in gaining re-election by playing Santa ·c1aus than in the long.term success of the program. Thus the plan has been broadened to include a raft of unearned benefits which threaten its solvency. These "add-ons•· include payments to students 18 to 22. to disabled workers at any age. and Medi-care. HAD THE . PENSION program been fully funded and the money invested properly there would still be need for changes. One of the recommendations is to divorce Medicare from SS whlch, of course. was never planned to carry that load. President Reagan has taken the position that the time has come to remove all of the .. add·ons" and revert SS to Its basic retirement role. These are sound r ecommendations and essential if the program is to fulfill lts original purpose But many in Congress are reluctant lo eliminate the "add-ons" and instead are leaning t8 the proposal to raise the eligibility age to 68 and that of early retirement to 65 as a means to save money by reducing payouts. As a money-saving device it could on- ly be improved by raising the eligibility IARl WATIRS age eveo higher . As it stands countless workers die before reaching the present eligibility age and, without survivors. the funds they have paid in remain with the government. lC the age is raised there will be even fewer around to col· lect the pensions for which they paid their money all their working years, THE PROPONENTS of a higher age contend that the average age of life ex- pectancy has Increased dramatically in the years since SS was established Ac- cording to the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics, an estimated 68 per- cent of aJI babies born in lb.e U.S. today will be alive at age 70 and more than 25 percent will still be around al age 85. That may be so but insurance tabl e~ show life expectancy presently to be an average age 70 for white males and 77 for wrute females and about six years less for non-caucasians. Those figures clearly show that a sub· stantial percentage of male workers would be dead before reaching age 68 and another large percentage just a couple of years away from death. Pension programs have been sold to the public on the idea that workers would be provided with :. few years in which to relax and enJOY life after a lifetime of labor D~ the Congressmen now think people should have to work until they di e'> FURTHERMORE. the life expectan· cy tables do not reflect what percentage of those who do live beyond 65 are still physically or mentally able to continue work. The fact is that many retire early for physical reai:.ons and many elderly who may want to continue to work find their ages bar them from most en- deavors One change whi<.'h not only 1s long overdu~ but would eliminate an "add· on '' provision never contemplated originally 1s the l1m1tat1on on earnings for those collect1ng SS No less an a uthor 1t} than Senator Barry Goldwater has declared the SS money belongs to the workers. not the govern ment and the ceilings on earnings dis- courages older people from. remaining productive The fact 1s an assured in· come enable!> m<i ny. ~ho have worked at menial JOb!> all their h ves of neccss1 ty. to find fulfillment in endeavors they enJOY • ' Federal money policies tax savers To the Editor: A noted economist was quoted recent- ly as saying that If the government were put In charge o ( the Sahara Desert. in five years we would be out of sand. This may be true. For example, the mysterious Federal Reaerve Board pursues monetary policies Uke an old woman trying to cross Highway s on foot. First going in one direction. lben another, nobody knows what to expect next. Meanwhile, people are urged to cut down spending and save money and get it into savings accounts lf possible. Right? And what happens to the ln· terest we get on these accounts: it is taxed as income, right? But that's wrong! 'This is double taxation, or worse -those hard-held dollars han already been taxed into morbjdity. It Is only one -part of the Giant Snafu In Washington, but it does happen to be one that could easily be corrected: simply abolish income tax on savings interest and let us use that money to help squeak by the continually higher cost of staying alive. MRS. L.'W. HUNDSDOERF~R To the Edllor: I didn't realize how far behind the times in regard lo land values I had become until I read your Sunday. April S editorial entitled. "Stale voters beat park funding costs." In 1919-23 at the University of California at Davia, we were taught that tt was almott financially unprofitable to ffrm land costing more than $1,000 an acre. In ~ article, in reprd to the state buying 'land adjacent to presently owned •tte land, "thia means the state will be le to roceed with aome much needed ark ~velopment, ln 1plte ot the fact that new Interior Secretary James~ Watt.a 11 convinced tbe b8'f tlonal p rk ll)'Stem ii aJreay toc»lar1i and d 't want to aped any mor• money , it." MOSTI OF thla land concerned l1 un· develop4!(1 land unsuited for •lrlculture, buti peed in the artJclt to be worth more tb SU, 78' per acr•. (t:J,500,000 dtvlded tom acre1). Pie teU me that I haven't ;otten 10 far behlDd th• Ume, that poulbb' UD· needed recreaUob land it today wortb more than eleven times w. bat rood a1ricultura.l land wu worth ln my coU.1• day1. GtJSJ. GERSON TM ~ &I lhGt fhU '8 eolMld GI poe.,.. Ual IMZV~ ~. "°' ~nar. ,.. fJwdtUP*I• °''''""'• acre for adjocmt Land in tM note park and the Irvine Compan11'• 500-acr• land gift for the park woa ool~ at $l2 miUion, or $24,000 on acre ~cauu of U1 d~lopment paten· Ual. Ti~• have m.tUed changed along the OranQe Coo.rt. Editor. ~pomibility To the Editor: Kudos to Jim Wood of Corona del Mar for his exceUent article in the Sunday. April S paper titled "Acting MAILBOX Responsib1Uty Worth Oscar, Too.'' Maybe one more person should come forward in the John Hinckley case and that's the judge from Charlotte. South Carolina who fined Hinckley $67 for try- ing to carry three guns on an airplane when the federal penalty was $5,000 and s years in jail~the judge trying to keep lt a mu,deipal caae rather than a fe~eraJ case maybe did the country a disservice. People being responsible for their ac- tions Is the key. JIM DEBOOM MUinfonnalwn To the Editor: I have been appalled at the lack of preciseness among the media regardina the sutementa or Secretary of State Haig on devolution of presidential power. Secretary Hall WU wrona In saytna the Constitution authorh:ed him to take char1e. and ao are you ln 1ayin1 the stme thtn8 . put.tins him further down the line. THE CONSTITUTION doet not pro· vlde for aevolutlon of power to the Speaker ot the House ot Repraen· tatlvea, th• Pretident Prq Tent of the Senate, the Secr4'tary of State, etc. Artl· rlo u, S.CUon I provJtt.a for devolution upon the Vlce Pr•ldent apd further provlda that Contrta• tnay by law pro- vide for turtber devolution. Consreu baa b.Y law provided for aucb but this may be chanied by act ot Coner ... alone, recru1rlnt no amendment to the Con1tttudoa nor ratlficaUOD bJ the States. The prov1s1on does not n se to constitutional stature. The XXV Amendment provides inter alia for the temporary abdication of power of the President or temporary as· sumption of power by the Vice Presi- dent. You might ~onsider apologizing to the school children among you r readers and setting the record straight. .JAMES W BURTON Citizens ousted To the Editor , You should be aware of the growing scandal in the community over pro- fessors from vanous local colleges as- signing students to attend the recent public hearing on the Bolsa Chica de- velopment plans Many people in the audience over - heard teachers taking roll just prior to the Board of Supervisors hearing oa April 1. In the Santa Ana City CounclJ chambers. CITIZENS WHO arrived on time for the hearing also were unable to find seats and were forced to stand outside because many seats were being saved by students who were assigned to arrive early. Dr. Peter Green. a teacher at GoldeJ> West Collep and one or the group of teachers who form the leadership or the Amigos de Bolaa Chica. threatened a grand jury lnvc11tlgalion because be did not like the recommendations of Lb1f county planners on the Bolsa Chica t,. 1ue. I think the Grand Jury abould bl· vestl1ate possible misuse of publt~ funds amon1 the taxpayer·au.ppo~ teachers who ar~ tpln1 the acbool u • bue ol operation• for their o"" Political schemes. BILLHANSO ·My ftipe for the d•y: P~le wtio anlvt tarly atsarai• •al .. and ptct ·~ over before tbolf courteoua ~ lo, wait forthedell,nated hour aet there. N .•. I , , • ., . "AT FIRST GLANCE, the Western Sahara -a dreary stretch of real estate encompassing craggy mountains, end· less sand dunes and rocky planes that resemble the surface of the moon - hardly seems worth righting over. What the war boils down to is prestige, phosphates and patriotism. "Hassan laid bis prestige -and possibly his throne -on the line when he declared the Western Sahara a part of historic Morocco in 1976. He also un· doubtedly had his eye on the enormous phosphate deposits in the area, worth an estimated S6 billion. Moel Western observers agree that the war has now become a matter of seU-preservalion fo r Hassan; they doubt that bis regime would survive a withdrawal from the area. "For the native tribes that furnish the bl ea• eil.lit•nc• ·to Al1ertan refu1ee camp•, ~here t~t1 fled to e1cape Marocoaa:l'\alef ~ "I found that the Polltarios have or· ganlzed the ref Pleet 4-wbo include many nomad.a from drou1bt-1tricken areu al W• Atri~ u well as an eatlmAUllll 100,000 SUraoQl inbabi~anta of the Westen Sala..-. -lnto a 1partan communal Mdlt7 wbere Ute state COO· trofil tll actlYIUte, Cblldreo are put ln boardMI acboola •t the &I• of 8 and be1ln mllltary tralnlnl at lO, l'be •tru&- gle "'l&alnat~ Moroceo la the overriding theme ol the retu;ea' •Siltence. . 'THOv6s BEA VIL y oatDUDlbered by the Moroccan troop• the Pe>liaario guerrillas have an equabaer: tbeir ln· timate lmowledle ol the tettaln. They have been able to forca Hu11n'1 soldiers into defen1lve perimeters around the major population centers, while the guerrillas roam the coO.O· tryside at will. ••I traveled in Polisario Land R~en all the way from a refugee camp in Tin- douf, Algeria, to the Atlantic Ocean, and from the Mauritanian border on the south to abandoned Moroccan bases in the northern Ouarkziz Mountains. The guerrillas showed no sign of concern that they might meet enemy forces. We traveled in broad daylight, lit campfires at night and only rarely squinted up to see...tf Moroccan planes were attacking out of the sun. • .. In an entire week. not a sine le Moroccan patrol was sighted as we crisscrossed the Western Sahara. We BENT-A~ltEYSfONE·KOP : Ad-mlniltratton plant {o eut the Federal Protective Service from 2,800 offlcen to Otano• Cout OAJLY PfLOT/Thurwday, ~,,, 18, 1181 toO wJll ~qa,; twt tM ~of Uotlt Sua'1 ='11•:·~ to tu q.._a • com~ ,Ol private pardl "'9Q b't ena baff Mllllill'tty '° •l'Nt aiinlilall t.beJ 111•1 ca&da red· handed. Tbla dublO\ll MODUlJ-~H 7lll bHte4 a a>-yeu trt1ld tiWd .... Hiil· a-cop'' •Yfttm, whleb UI taereued from 107 1uant1 eovetlac a PQCel\t .. of federal ,roperty 1n t.teo »to a pro~ 3,100 pardina more t.ba.o bail of our fe4eral bul1dln1s thi• year. The fncreue in rent·a ·cop blrtn1 has been J>&ralleled by an lncreue In ertme on U.S. property. La~t year alone, property thett.a ln federal bulldinp rose 177.,.rcentover 1'19. Police reportl are rife wltb lncldent.l tn ~blcb cootract 1uarda •bot at etch other tsy mhtake, mhlatd tbelt- sldeenm or bad tbem stolen, and were founa aleepll>f or drinkln1 on duty. , Wben a rented 1uard doet maH1e tq nab a suspect, be muat call Federal Protective Service offt«n on mobile patrol. The1e mobile umtl wUl be eliminated by the proposed budCet 'ut. l Ironically. amon1 the bllJJ·ran,lnl 1overnttlent offlclals now ~ted by the FPS iB the man who want. to cui their atreoith, Bud1et Director Davtcl Stockman. ' ) DisbSters seem to bind us· together ~ ourselves without need of divine int tervention -but if we want to see thf har,d of God in such event.a, they artt more properly interpreted as a reproach and a r~minder You may t.bink it cold, or cruel, or even downright stupid of me, but I did not feel u bad as most people did when Mount St. Helen• erupted last year. Secretly, t hoped lt would happen every- where und the globe durins tbe fire and the flood. William James said that manJcind needs to find "the moral equivalent" of war, and so far in time it ls only widespread catastrophe from the natural order that fits the bill A REMINDER that all of us live in year. IN THESE embattled and divisive precarious mutuality upon this Uni .For it · QQ.ly wlteJl we are fightini the days, it is wishing well, not ill, for the piece of earth; that, despite all ou; anomall of nat.Qlle that we stop for a _human race to hope for such eruptions grandeur and power. we remain at thi tilne fiih amon1 the family of man. d d d It ls only when 10niething bigger than ~ mercy of r;re and water an wtn an • us deac nds, unexpec tedly and ice and allthe elemental forces we max . p subdue b~t cannot conquer. And a calaml ly, that we recognize Cim-reproach that w~ !!Pend so much of ou~ pllcitly, at leut) our amallness, our ~;~t time. our wealth and our spirit in takin vulne.rabilJty, our common threat of dis-SYDflfY HARRIS up arms against one another instead aster fropi the Indifferent forces of linking arms to make the e~rth mor nature. in every region, to divert governments habitable. more life-sustaining and life• PEOPLE WESE lost In the volcano, from killing people to rescuing them, enhancing. of course, put far fewer than are killed from bombing homes to rebuilding It is only when the locusts come. every daY:\n the auto accidents we think th.em, from polluting the atmosphere to when the crops wither. when the waters Uttle of; and while the auto crashes trying to clean it up. ruah over the rooftops. that we rise to e voke only Indifference, the volcane>-the fullest dimension of our bumanbood. brought out the belt 1n people -their In the Biblical er a. fl?Q_ds and plagues and act as we should act without thes1 courae.~1 theJr carln1ness, t heir and famines were visited upon the dire incentives. And only when a peopte cooperauqn. wrangling tribes at regular Intervals -are preoccupied with widespr;-ead All the sentiment and energy and ag· and these were interpreted as God's calamity do they refrain from ventin~ gressivenesa lhai ordinarily go into "punishment" for violating the com· their hostility upon their brother~ warfare against human enemies were mandments. I do not happen to believe acroi;s the border. Is universal dasaste~ channelec\ into the a~g1le agaiMt the In a God of puni~hment -w~ punis1' the only road to univers al peace? i ------~~----------~~--------~-:-r:-----:============--r::;;:;;;;;;=:;;;;:::===::;;:;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::-r----~------------~~--------~--------------------~1 TAX SHELTERS 0.1 & Gos • Red Eito•• • M "-'-0-ATIMO ---....... 51 le 111157 TRAiii llATIOIAL FUllllH llllOUICES I IEW PROIUI S!omp. • ~ lecM>q DIDUCTIOHS W' Aft TNS Yid 6UA&.D L 10%M PIMAHCLM. S.VtcH 1f4/f44.JI07 T~ 5th ANNUAL collar 'n cuff . . TIE HAPPENING Just gather up old worn-out ties and for every one you bring 1n we'll g1Ve you $4.00 towards each new one you purchase. collar 'n cuff 333 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa fNO OPEN MOM. ttwv Fltl. ICM I SAT. 10-4:30 PHOMI: 642-1111 t\esa \7erde \J ine and 19iquor FETZER WINE SALE!! Pricft efhcHw .. S-.. 4 /19 Reg. $4.50 s344 FETZER 1980 CHENIN BLANC 11t• Little bit of sweetness. Great for sipping fish or fowl. Reg. $5.00 FETZER 1978 MENOCINO CABERNET SAUVIGNON , · Best with red meats. ~ EXCEPTIONAL WINEs s5 I UNDER Jerry Mead Is the ~ne writer lor the Santa' Ana Register. Both of the above wines are on hie "INSIDER'S LIST OF EXCEPTIONAL WINES PRlCED •5 end UNDER." We're offering the• two Fetzer wtne1 at r.auceo pr1a.1 to. ""'°' ~ to v;alt our amaH, f•mlly~wnect Jl6r• and to ... our fine selection. of ·~"Oriced, exceptional wtnee. We found 73 w1,,._ In our regular stock that made Jerry Meld'• list. It wae great to hive.• ouf t11t•• confirmed by an expert. Come .. Ull i;..,...,. ~ s._ •• y.,... ao... IC-"'"""-........ A•H I CCWfA..,.841-1289 , . .._._ ..... vaio49~1 .-~~­(Soft IJloti9 ~ _. A...,. ,,__., .) 2110 TRUST DEEDS • Ho Prepay I AllumatMI • Fut Funding • 30-y•r AmOrttZld Up lo 15 yra. Aepey • loanl-$10,000 to $500,000 • OWnw-Non·Owner • Swt1'9 l..oen1IP'UrchHI Money (714) 975-1128 Gall WIUlam 8. Mltehell-Brokers Wefcome 15 Convenient Locations HuntJngton Beach Paclftc Cdast Hwy So. of Pl~r Newport Beach 1400 Pacific Coast Hwy Enjoy the tlmeless fashions of Ralph Lauren and view tne current collection of Ralph Lauren Separates 5aturday, April 18 Fash1or Show at 2 p.m. Polo S op, &Jjacentto . Wo en's Designer port swear, · ~p~r Level SOUTH COAST PLAZA Storytelling by Delores Bowles &atrix Po~r Authority CAROUSEL COURT · April 16-18 at 2, 3, 4 p.m. - Only service to Seattle from Orange County. 2 flights daily-$110 one way- Fares subject to change without notice. Just call your travel agent and say you want to fly Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060. l j h ., ,, '· :.. ,z t l .. I I ' I ' I I I L.: .> . I • { . I ,• \ I WHY .AUDEN'S . ~ - I / .J . . . . ' . I ' .. . , . . l " We show more than thirty manufacturer's carpet lines with approx- imately 3000 samples. We carry about 100 rolls of carpet at special prices. In our remnant room are hundreds of remnants from tiny to • room size. ~ .Every American manufacture.r of vinyl is re.presented in our vinyl display: ~rm .strong, Congoleum,· Gaf, Mannington and Biscayne. ·Roi ls and remnants in stock at special prices. Our dra·pery department inc .ude.s custom draperies. ''Levelors,"~ Woven Wood Blinds, Custom Bedspreads and special treatments for unusual windows. We notonty have a specialist in this department, but our own excellent insta Iler as wel I. Wood floors are represented by several manufacturers such as Bruce, Harris and Sykes. Patterns include Pl.ank and Parquet de- signs. Dozens of ceramic tiles of various sizes . and shapes for every type of floor use. J ~ -.. · featuring . . . ' .. Orange Coa•t OAJLY PILOT/Thurlday, Aprll 18, 1981 HAIHVILLI:. Teu. <AP> -CNty Lau wu w_M!Ui dllllll u ,..._ Mo 1n ber ldtcbea lD But MOda, Ill., wbea iUe bepn tinalDI the Jim Reev• hll "Four Walla." UtUe did I.be know that tJlll t~tY would lead to a reeordinl contract and pl,jee beramonc country muaic't top tlD1en. Her husband, Lee Stoller, who wu watcbins the World Series on televiaioo at the time, beard her tlnl and waa 'tmpteued. Throu1b bit de- termination, th~ be1an 1lDatn1 in niahtclubt, moved to Nuhvtlle in 19'72 ana bu been releatlnl Top 10 recorda alnce 1V77, BEA LATEST BIT it "I Rave a Dream." Lut October, Billboard maautne, the trade public•· • lion, picked her u t.be fourth top female artt.t in country muai~1ahead o( aupentan like Barbara Mandrell, Douy Parton and Loretta Lynn. The ma1aztne cboee her "One Day at a Time" u coun· try muaic's aecood most popular sln1le reconlina or the year. He wu t0 lm~ be Mat i..-ol ber votce to radio ttaUom Jad open..t a DIJbtclub ln Eut Peoria ln 1981 fqr ber to dltplay ber talent. · • THE l'.\MJLY •ovBD to NuhvWe thl'ff yean later, Uld stoller bqan a record company for the main P\lJ1>0M of upolUll bla wUe't talent. Sbe wu alped to Uberty Beeorda, a major label, two yeart a10. Mila Lane, wbo bu a Mvep-piece road band, It quick to crWtt her pll)e4moking husband for much of her tuecesa. "I'm really 1lad it happened now and not when I was a teen-a1er. I'm able to ban.die it now. I can enjoy life." Parliament ahmys a sobering /onun Her career ia all the more remarkable for ill similarity lb Miu Lynn's1 Both were encoura1ed by LONDON (AP) -British legislators are never their husbands, and both began sinlin1 pro· drunk on duty, and that's official. feasionally after starting families. The statement was made by Speaker Geor1e Miss Lane, 41, baa ~auibters aged 19 and 20 Tbomu, a lifelong teetotaller, after a member of and a 17-year-old son. the House of Lords accused lawmakers in the "My kids sacrificed a lot," saya Mila Lane, . lower chamber House of Commons of "almoal who was voled the top new female vocalist by the. perpetual drunkenness." JUST DUCKY -Fuzzy one·day-0ld ducklings waddle over Pedro, a two-year-old tom cat at the Salinas duck ranch of John Metzer. Metzer sends more than 20,000 ducks to market annually for Easter. Academy of Country Music in 1979. "They lumed , .. All my predecessors have ruled that no out well." member of thi.a House is ever too much under the Stoller, a salesman, had never beard bi.a wiff! influence of drink," Thomas said. sing during seven years of marriage before bill Amid laughter, lawmaker Arthur Lewis baseball-watching was interrupted by her sweet added, "You and I know there are a few members but hWlky voice in 1986. who do have a drink occeiooally. but never 's "I beard her and aaJd, 'That's great,"' be re· anyone drunk in this place becaUBe it iB against the calls. "She blushed and sani a little more." rules." PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE . NOTtU OfleottllDl•ATION Ofl P•IYIOUI&. Y ...... A.ID Ila fllCTITIOUI 8UllNllS The Irvine Renell Weter Ol1trlct N-. ITATaMINT plaftl lo ._ IN l'INI En¥1renmentel Tiie lclllowlng --Is dolno i.u.I· lmpacl "-1 IEIRI -loully !In· MU H ; !Nrecl fer tlw Muftkl ... 1 W.._, Olsltkl W A A L • V A N D Y K E of Dr1119 c.fty !MW DOCI. enllti..t PROPERTIES, LTD., 4 Limited Fl"•I EIR, Diemer l'lllratlo" p.,tftei'INCI, 1U1 Dow StrMt, Sul'9 PlanVSelCJego ,,.._, l"Wftle, del· 1.0, N•W11CWl 8Nc.ll, C.lllomla t2WO. H No ... ...., 1m .... lb censl-•llon STEPHEN CH.UE. " Eefll.U, of llM elh<lwlft UW envl,_.,1 of U. I nine, C.lllomle '2714. pro)ect dlnul-e.iow. Tiie El R <-This buslneu Is conc111ct•d lly • •Ider• , .. -~ ett.cts of IN llmlled part,,...ll>tp. Diemer l'lllr•ll.,. Plel\l/Santlego s'"'*' Cllaaa, Aq-..C:t ,_ Pro)«t, wllkll of. Gene<•I P.,.,ner lecll .,. e.1..-'° e. .,. ...,.. •• T1tt1 Jtat....,,. was lllecl wltll Ille lflOle 01 u. Dlwkrs Pt'OJe<t. CopMsot coun1r c1er11 of 0r.,. County o" .. kl El Ren Oft Ille al IN District of· Apr II •. ltll lkeencl.,..evell-forpulMkl-· STl .. NINM. CNASI lion at wch office -el .... IOU-Ing ATTO•MIY AT LAW 1«en-: 1111 o. ... ,......, wee 119 1. o.-.c.nvi.aw Llllr.,-,, SUN. M••-18Mdl,Ce-..... .... Flower.~Ane.CA. !7141 t:D-1141 I. Orenve County Llllrery, OU S.-..rvW•1. ,,....,,.,CA Pu1111-0r.,. c,ou1 Delly Piiot, J. Or ..... c.fty U br.,-,, 17tu Lo. Aprll t, 1•, U, JO, 1•1 Alamo., l'CUllaln Yafle1, CA Tiie Project wm e. conll4erect 104' ep. prov.I or ell-•• by IM eq.,d of Olrecton of Ille Dlllrk1 el Its "'"''"' to lie helclonAprll 11, 1•1. PUBLIC NOTICE The Profaclconailtsofthelollowlng NJn• Project IMme: Pvrclleaa of Dl_.r fllCTITIOUI 8U$1NEI$ lnlertloC.-111. NAMl ITATEMENT Pro Jee I LOU1tlon: A ,,..nk•l 'f<•llon Tiie lollowlno perMlft1 ere dolno IM Ille Project ... -.. , .. tl!K• .,,. buslnHt as. ProJecl c-1.U ol tlW -<MM of SPACE . TEI< INIXJSTRIES, 1'22 capiult'I' In Ill• Ol•mer 1111erlle. Plecenlla Avenue. coil• Mu•. UIUmalllly, IN Projact Me1 llenefll C.lltornla gv, -11oMollllel,..,,lne R-hWe'9rDI... FRANK I . FARGO, 17 Toulon, wlct, whkl\ C«flPl'l1n _...11nata1., .., _ _, ... ,. c.i1tom1a ...._ ... JJI --ol tlw s.uu..c.ntr•I -· MARIE M. FAAGO. 17 Toulon, tloft of o.-.,.. c.n1. New11«1 ...,., c.111orn1e nwo. Peacrlj)llon Of N•tur•, ,..,,_ -Thia .....,_ i. , __ by 111- a.n.tlclol'losof Pro)« I ; dlwlduall (-.. Wit.). Tiie Profacl c-l•b ol U>e Olslrlc1 Fr~ 8 Fwgo 1"'•"'-111111 59 c..c.k feel por -or Merle M. Far.., IHI el '*'-1-...a ,,...... wetor T11l1 -wM tllad --~llyfnimMWDOC.TM--el Cevnl'I' Clor11 o1 Or-~yon tM Prolect Is to ,_, tlw iwe)«llld Aprll J, ltl'I vtlllullon ot etller weter tupply P11MU -U• _..i1, COft'9mpieled by .... Pullll~ er.,. Cont Delly Piiot, Dlatrlcl The banefk lery of IN "'ofacl AP<ll t , 1•. ZJ. JO, 1"1 lm.t'I lttlM Ir.....,. Renell Water Dl*lcl. Com-ere '""'lecl on h -~101--. ..... .-1111- "' 1M IS-of _.,,_, Its .... 11 .... -law In U. ~etlon of INI PUBLIC NOTICE Pro)«t. c.nrn.ncs .,. alto,_,.., N-72303 ute--u.r•an.,ya1gn1t1c.en1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF ettectsof.,,.Pnfact-lch an'*••· JAME s HOW ARO emlMd In tlw pnYIO•ltly _.., El R _w_u.n.,.. ... ,.1 .. ,,..11 ... REINHART, ak'a JAMES orm111 .. 11on-...., .. 1ortt1eProj.c:1 H. REINHART, aka JIM wllkh.,...._c_rec11n11wE1". RE I NHART ANO OF Heme Of AetftCy U.-.tHl"I Pro-D Ject: lr•IMAenc11we1oro1a1rtct PETIT I 0 N T 0 A • Cont..:1"'9non:OreeH•lru MINISTER ESTATE NO • ..,._, <114>m-1m A·101315 Pvbll-0r.,. C.O.tt Dally P11o1, T ·a 1 1 h e ·1 r s Aprll l •• 1911 ,,,,_., 0 • , PUBLIC NOTICE beneficiar ies, creditors and conti~ent creditors of James Howard Reinhart, ""''"" aka James H . Reinhart, o • ,. A " T "' • N T o " aka Jim Reinhart and tJIANll'OttTATIC* h b NOTICE TO CONTUoC:TO.. p e r s 0 n s w 0 ma y e s .. 1 ... P"-11 wlll lie r•cel¥0d •I otherwise Interested in the u. Deper1Jften1 o1 Tr.._....uon. 120 will and/or estate: South Sc>rlnv Stroet, Room 1000. Los A petition has been filed Ant•lu , ce111ornl• too12. un111 J by Eleanor P. Reinhart in .. clock p.m. on Aprll JO, 1•1. at wllkh ume 111e, w111 e. ~1c1y -""" enc1 th e Superior Court o f rNd In "oom 1 •• Mid -.... for Orange County requesting con1tructlon on Stai. hltftw•Y In K · E p R · h t <••dance with ..... speclllc•llont that leanor . e1n ar !Mnlor, to -II 111Klel relerence II be appointed aS personal 1NM ... 1o1iows representative to ad- i....A,......_OrM1Je Count1u.•1 minister the estate of .,.,lout loc.ell-(07·LA. Ora Jt,.OS, I, s. ,., "· n. '°· •ll. _.,,.,,, 1ra111c James Howard Reinhart, tlef\elconlrOllentolle reple<ltd of Costa Mesa, ca. (Unde 11~ .,..r-1re<11 .... 1,,. ... 11,. "'°"' the Ind ependent Ad clncr111ec1 ,,...,n f E t t Pl•ftl, -llk•tlon•. anc1 p.-1 minis tration o s a e fwm1 tor lllddlng 11111 pro)ec1 ,.,. only Act). The petition is set to M 0111a1Md at 111e Oapartmen1 01 hearl~ In Dept. No. 3 a Tren~lon, Pl•M •ncl 8lcl Docu· 00 c · I c t 0 Iv menb. R_,, ,., Tr-'911on lulld 7 IV C en er r 1119, 1120 M s''"'· Po ao• u"· West, Santa Ana, Ca 9270 S.Cr•mento. ea111orn1e ••1 ,.,,_ on May 6, 1981at9:30 a .m . ::-::~:i:!·:: e':'8J. ~:: :: : IF YOU OBJECT to the Dlttrlct Dtr9Ctorl of Tren-tallon el granting Of the petition, Los A"91tln, Sen Frenc:ltco, •nd ,,.. yo" should either appear dfsltlclln Wlllch IM won. lulluetH. at the hearing and State Tiie succaMful blclder 11\ell fUf'nlsh • f 11 peymenl llond •nd • perlormanc• vour objections or e '*'d. written objections with the Tiie ~·of Tr.,..rution court before the hearl~, llefetiy Nl41fln •11 l>kl*ra tllet 11 wlll Your •pnaarance may be #flrm•tl,..,., lnwn -In ..,1 eon. .. ..-trect •nWetl -_.......,to""' •d· in person or by your al· Mftl .. ment, mlnor11., bull Mu •n· torney. te•prllMtl wlll lie •ffordff 11111 op· I F y O U A R E A ......... ,.., .. ......,, ••In,.._ .. to W• 111 .. 1tetloft -w111 not .. di•· CREDITOR <Jr a clJnt- cr11111MtN ..,.in11 on IN er~• 01 lngent creditor of the de. nee, -· • net1one1 °'''"' In <an· ceased, you must file you INw•tlonfwen_.. Mlnlmvm.,...rew.tor11111pro1«1 claim w ith the court or ...... "'""",... bf 111e Sacr.w,., of present It to the personal u..r _ ... 1ort11 ant1 In .,,. -<1•1 representative appointed """"'-"' .,,. ..,. ... , _..... by the court within four ........... ..,~ ... ---..... ··~ ~ ........ Hettc• • months from the date of c.trec-. • ..,._,, -c.ittec:t." first Issuance of letters a _.lft~o1..i. .... 1Mtme1M lded I "'-'ti 700 of 51ftlno4 et the ume eflfCH H rrOV n ~ on ,,.,.. her•l•Mlere wtMre 111o ht Probat~ Code of =: •· ..-c111u11-. -pr ..... 1 Callfornl•. The time for ,._::;:..-:=-::::-..:=:-:: flllng c111m1 will not tx· ...... ..,,._...._..,.,......,., •. plrt prior to four rrlon\1\1 _ .. ......_ "111ww 11 • ,.,,.,_. from the ~te of the htw· .,..,_ .. "'"'-.... ,... ..., ln~notlced •boVt . ...,,..... "' ... ~ .. Llillllr 8M t• '""•lllAt .... , .... ., OU MAY EXAMINS "'"''"" "' u. ....._ w ''"'"• the flle kfPt by the court. C.••"~111• • "'...,.,.,. CMtr•• ff you .,.. 1n-.rested In tht =.i:.:r.::::..,,...,_ Ht•t•, you 1nay file a ,._. ,..,.._ .. ._, •• , .. m., .. ~ ~est with the court to re'-c.m • ..,. ...., .. ,,_.1"" , ... ot celvt spe(laat notice of the ..... "' .. C9!MY "'"'*""" _. Inventory of estate assets ~.,.~:=A-:..:::::: 1":. and of the P9tltlons, ac· ...,.., .........,_ ,,,_ ., ... ,_ counts and reports ~ ... , '" !:'~1t.~r!r::,~.~ described In Sectlol\ 1200 ,·.:::=.. ......... ....,._. of the Clllfomla Probate =~· Nin lfM<ttw .... Code. _._. • ..:::.:::::':'::.."': D.vld Stertlnt Tl119~er ..-.t11e1 ......_.,.. ,...,._ .. Law eor,., Atterwey 1t ••1111C,,._11tflW,...,.,.._ L.aw, -Newpert ~ YOUll CHOICE ZYNOLYTE FABRIC OR VINYL FABSPRAY t3 oz. Aaorttd color• . .... ...... 2.28aa. DI,_.~,.;"" Drive Wtt ttl. Ne.,.,t 0 •1,..'"'1 .,,,_._ •tacft CA HMo· (7H) ' fit' 9' .... ...,. ....... ' ~-=-.... MA I -:::.:;..M\·--~· ... ,,_.o. ..... .... Publllhld Or•• Cotst ~•• ._ ....J:~:.. o.1, ,,__ Dally Piiot, April 1Ss..1~1 '""';;i-t ,-. .. Mrtt ...... "" ,,.,.., :12, .,., 17 ..... 1 ! ... ;...; ...... lYNOL m 1000' F HI· TEMP SPIAY PAllT 13 oz. Self priming. ....... 2.48 lYIOLm EPOXY SPRAY PAJNT 13 oz. .... UI 1.98 lYIOLm EPOXY RUST·MATE 13 oz. spfay .... UI 2.28 Ouar1 ... ..... 3.88 lYIOLm SPEED-E·llAMEL 13 oz sptay Aast'd. colors. ....1.41 ·aac LATE BLOOMER Vocalist Cmty Lane ~rolyte Speed· E·Narrel !> .... , .. ""_ ~, .. .,,._ .... _ ... _, r \ , '1 •, ~ DEAR PAT DUNN: The Appliance· Doc· tor ln Colta Mela lmtalled a new oven ln m7 kitchen lut Dec. 15. He took obe of my toUd oak kitchen drawers out to be recut to flt tbe new opentna. and baa, never returned tbe drawer. I've called many Umes only to be told repeatedly, "I'll drop lt off tomorrow." Can you help me 1et my drawer back? J .C., Colla Meta ll took AY8 more U.ab a 1D011dil of repeal· ed plMMle uJ.la &oo, bat Ila.Uy &be auepabed dnwer wH relaraed &e you. A reliable to•rce for wood taUla& Joi» of aU kbMb llu bee• ll•ea &o you, alld tiJa repair you repoa1 can be aceompll1Med wltbob& fua11ler del.,. Plants get border check DEAR PAT DUNN: We will be movtn1 to another state this summer and plan to take our house plants in the car with us. Will we have any trouble takinl these plants across the Arizona border? D.R., Huntlillton Beach An ID1pector for the a1rleaUaral com mlasloaer's office 11y1 your pluta _wW be checked mainly for lnaed1 at &lie Arhoaa border. If tbey pa11 tbe te1t, yoa'U be allowed &o brlnl '-hem Into &be s&.a&e. U Dot, tlley .W t;e eoaflaeated. 'l'WI appllea t. tile aaaal house plaaa., bat aet &o cttna treh of any alle, whle~ may aot le1allr be tranapoa1ed om of t ... 1tate. Tbe apieu.ltual tomm•aloMr'• otnee at Hit 8. Barbor, Allallelm wW lalpect JOU plant•, bat alloald &lley attract aay lut·mlnate lnaectl before. tlae border . laapedloa, tbey wW be ~ate4. AYS aa11e1t1 pla.ntl be IHpeeted la Oraaae County alld Ulen bathed ID a mlmue ol ~ tableapooDI of horr Flake• tlloroa11t11 · dl110lved ln a 1alloa of water, or ca ref.Uy 1prayed wltb a cllemlul ln1ectlclde recoinmended by your auraery. Eltller method 1bouJd kUI olf any aew bu11 aad allow your plant. &o pass ln1pecUon. e "Got a problem' Then wnte to Pat 1 Dunn. Pat will cul red ta~. getting~ .. the an1wer1 and action you nud to • aolve 1nequ1t1e1 an government and ,.... bu.i1neas. Matt your questions to Pat I I Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Cocut Daily Pilot, P 0. Boz 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As many l.etten o.s pou1ble will be ~red, but phoned inqu1rit1 or l.etten not including the reader'• full name. oddreu and business houri' ~ mJmber 'cannot be conndued. Th11 column appears dailY ez cept SundaJI• " >. .. ' • -- n GENERAL ~ews / CONSUMER SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP) -A faul· ty chair Wt tbal uuured 17 1kJert lut week UD· derwent aeveral repair• b•fore atate in · ve1Uaator1 arrlved to ln1ped jt. la,_,y;ra for Heavenly Valley Ski Resort admit. "We are dl1turbed that equipmeni bu been moved out of la. ort1ln•l loc atlon," Art Carter, chief of the 1tate Drvlaloo o( OccupaUonal Health and s.ftty, Hid. ''Thia may affect the lftnltllatlon inaofar 11 determln.tn1 the came." THE ACCIDENT hap· pened April I when a Ufl cable afipped ita track and aix cbaira feU. three hitlini the ground. Six of the 17 injured persona were hospitalized: the most seriously injured was former San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto's granddaughter , Michaela Alioto, who may be permanently paralyzed. ~z.!~,.!.\•aova Ttie Columbr. bu landed. lt w11 smoother than O'Hare or JFK. One could not belp but think perhaps lt was too smooth. Sooner or not too much later, aucb craft as these ~II be u common u scheduled airlines, c artlns ordinary eartbllnp to nearby orbl for holiday amone ~be rocks and rillJ. There, we will camp out where there can be nb campfire, tell ghost stories where we are the only ehosta. And later, but not much, en· trepreneura will improve our ad· venturom yearnings. We will be offered wei1htless roller coasters at some Disneyland among the stars, forgetting to aak what good is a roller coaster ln weightlessness. SOMEWHERE, way above or below, watchinji over or under us as t..tie cue may be, will be the Space Force -sleek, short· wln1ed, silver corsairs, laser 1un1 at the ready, jUBt ln cue there is an enemy, nay alien, shadow in the galaxy, coming from heaven·knows·where. .... ..,.... Before state in· vestisaton urived the folio wine day, a chair guard that was used to control awin&in& Utt chairs had been bent back into shape, aaid Barry Buns haft, a lawyer tor Heavenly Valley. Meanwhile, back on Earth, lo some parliament or coneresa, there will be b~artnea on the re- currlne conta*1lination of the lunar surface from tbe deeua• Ln1 of Hefty bap laden witb pie· nic debris; the Space Park ~rvlce will be admonlabed to le•ve the moon just e.a we found U in 1969; and New York City The aft end of Columbia's cargo bay and tail auembly are slwwn in photo to.ken from still camera aboard th€ space shuttle. BE SAID some other repairs were made un· der supervision of the U.S . Forest Service, which leases the land to the resort. "They (state officials) are trying to imply that something sinister ls happening," Bunshaft said. "I am not sure what their problem is." ... wiU be forbidden to dump its aludee of( the crut of Mars. And we w l1 be miuing something. THERE 18 no question : capable of orbital and intra· · orbital acrobatics, and capable of breaking tl'le four-minute mile, or whatever else record of achievement is. We will press on. We will press on. And we will be missing something. The danger Is letting it all become commonplace, of reduc· \ng the adventure to agate type, of forgetting Gagarin and Glenn, or Ed White taking an un· believable step intQ. the void, or the silver humanoid silhouettes doing a bunny hop on the moon , or the ache of mind and im· agination looking at Saturn and Jupiter and Mars. The unavoidable peril in suc- cess is taking it for granted Lawyers for one of the accident victims have gotten a San Francisco Superior Court to pro- hibit Heavenly Valley from makin,g further re· pairs or modilicaUona to equipment involved in the accident. Columbia was a.s inevitable aa the DC·3, the Boeing 707, the Boeing 747. Sooner or later these flat-tummied hybrids of space and air will be rising and descending with at least the regularity or Concordes, p!cking up the mute and tire<t aateflltes of yesteryear and replacing them with beeping offspring, destined to serve earth for years to come. Bail set at $10 million Nor will it stop there. because mankind doesn't stop anywhere. The Columbia will breed its own kin, maneuverable space ships SANTA BARBARA <AP ) A Texas man held on drug and assault charges had his bail boosted to a hefty $10 million after the judge said he learned a jet was "waiting to whisk you Rob1nsori's THE CHIPYARD _ OUR NEW SHOP IN NEWPORT iOASTS c«>KIES SO "FRESH, THE OLDEST IS ONLY 25 MINUTES OUT OF THE OVEN. out of the state ." Judge Joseph Lodge said he raised the bail from its original $250,000 because he believed 40-year-old Michael Bickers of Dallas would flee if he was freed on bond PAS.ADENA <AP> - • 'Vouna people are to: tn1 to 1pace. Jt'a J..t a que•tlon of economic• and ttme for this &e&MI'•· tlon," a NASA education officer predict.. .nm Poindexter. who 1top'*l over here brtef • ly on hia way trom Edward• Air Poree Bale to Hou.ton, said be believed the apace shut· tie had 1lven the coun· try a mucb·needed morale boott and will in· spire more youngsters to become astronauu, making regular apace travel just a matter of time. .. Althoueh I am not a prophet, I am a pilot and an educator.'' Poindex · ter said. "The en · thusiasm I have seen on the part or students and instructors is very positive. The young people's minds are made up. They are go- ing to go Into space." 0 f the successful voyage of the shuttle, he added. "The country needed something positive, and the Colum· bia provided it." • Frost toll heavy in orchards MODE.51'0 (AP) -As the effects of a weekend frost became more evi· dent. growers and farm officials in the northern San Joaquin Valley have issued worsening im· pr essions of damage. Paul La V i n e, Stanislaus County farm adviser , said the most serious damage oc - c urred in almond , walnut and apricot or· chards . He said he expects growers to seek a dis- aster declaration from co unty supervisors because some farmers sustained total losses. 1 · I I . .. 'M <>ranae Cowsty $QJ>etvllor Bruce N ..... Yl41WI it, IP'01'°th ~8::'·0lriNe Co\anty la 9ro-tar~H rfJddly than coii1ltUctloa of lb.-necessary ttansport.aUon ticWUea to serve it. . The result: overcrowded streets and bl1hways. Tension beblnd the steerine wheel. fiestande woa backing from fellow supervisors Wednesday for a 45-day study by several Rules kept oll adult bJUinesses The OQinge County Board of Supervisors bas extended for eight months an ''ureeocy or- dinance" regulating studios featuring nude modeling or so- called •·encounter .. sessions. Under the ordinance. such_ studios are prohibited within 500 feel of residential areas and l ,000 feet of churches and schools. The urgency measure was ap- proved last December, primari- ly to stop additional adult bu.si - nesses from opening in Midway City, an unincorporated com- munity near Westminster. The law does not affect businesses that already are in operation. County officials are preparing a zonibg ordinance that wouJd permanently regulate such busi- neSBes in i.utlncorporated areas. That ordinance is expected to be presented to the board prior to the Dec. 16 expiration of the urgency measure. Supervisor Roger Stanton, whose district includes Midway ca,v. said he bad observed strong public support for ex· tension of the urgency' or- dinance. Stanton said he was ·'strongly In favor of regulating' the type of adult ent.ertainmenl it.at motivated th1.I ordinance." ·Stanton said be intends to work closely with county of· ficials in preparation of the permanent ordinance before it is submitted lo the county Plan- ning Commission and the Board of Supervisors for approval. County OKs $83,333 for NB bay work , Orange County government wUI join Newport Beach and the Irvine Company in bearing the cost of an "early action plan" to rt!'move massive silt deposits from Upper Newport Bay. The county Board of Su· pervisors Wednesday approved s pending $83 ,333 toward a $250,000 matching fund that wilJ permit the cit y lo receive $4 million in state funds for the clean-up effort. L Newport Beach and the Irvine (.;ompany previously agreed to pay the remaining two-thirds of the $250,000. THE EARLY action plan oalls for dredging of the upper bay and construction of basins that would catch silt from San Diego Creek before it enters the bay. The county's share of the cost would come from surplus funds budseted for storm-related re- pairs along the Santa Ana River cbannel. ' Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose district includes the bay, noted that over the past three years the coubty bas spent $1.13 million for aedlment removal from S4n Di Ho Creek. which empties into the bay. Riley said the proposed early acUon plan would benefit the covnty by preventing future sedlmentaUon. ''This. is an addi- tion to protecttn1 a valuable · public resource," be said ln a letter to other supervisors. UNDEa THE ... miJUon pro- pOaaJ, the atate would provide Sl,'48,000 ln clHn water bond funds and Sl,304,000 ln enertY resource tunds. A local e atcb of tl million would be made by -the trvi.ne Company by provldln1 a site for t.be di.posat of the drecl1lng1, in aldltton to olle·thlrd of tbe .-,ooo cam mateh. An envtnmmental impart re- 5*'1 :i••'!::fj" plan atW mut bt before aet wpt becla· $-pha' cN»iee . · , . De0 91:¥rad of ~t-bi.. ... ... ei.ctilid aopbocnion ea.. prnldtnt ~ ·~!Lremaat Mm't Coll••• for tbe lac 11eedemJI )'tar. . . L . •Pi ..... ..._ ... ., ....... ,....._.._,_.,..._.r1ir111~"•r..n~u··~·~'•"""''li'.,~•·.-·~v~~.,.,.,,.-.,,,,,v,.14 county aaencies into bow the situation can be tmprov4;Cl. · THE STUDY will focus Oil e:it· isttnt and potential metboda - both in the public and private sectors -to finance new tnnsportation projects. Of primary concern. Nestande said, is fin4tbg ways to pay for the proposed San J-oaquin Hills and Foothill transportation cor- ridors. The San Joaquin -corridor would lnelude a freeway and mass tran.alt facWtiet and WO\lld extf:nd from Newport Beach to San Juu Capistrano. The Foothill corridor, as de~crtbed in concept, would be constructed Inland of the Santa Ana Freeway, llnkini the north and south sectors of the county. Both corridors have been viewed as necessary to relieve existing and future congestion on the San Diego and Santa Ana ( freeways and Pactflc Hitbway. .NESTANDI! SAID that money raised by the atate tax on . gasoline IJt "totally inadequate to fund needed trantportatlon aystem expanllon at both state and local levet.. '"- The transportation money crunch, be 1atd, baa become mor, acute since the pusa1e of PropoaitlQQ 13, the property tax· DECORATORS EGGED ON -Irvine youngsters spent some of their vacation in preparation for Easter. Under auspices of the city's Community Services Department, they °""' ...... "-W"'..., ........ were encouraged to tap their imagination while dabbling, tearing paper trim, pasting and painµng plastic eggs during workshops at University Community Park. COLORFUL CREATIONS -Patricia Estrada {above) helps Matt Johnson, 7, while Sue Cho (below, left) proves concentration works. Results ol the workshop can be gathered in the basket made &y Christine Chen, 7. cutt~ .ne.-ure approved by voten in 1971t. "Final)dlli ot both local and reaional trampod'atlon facWUes can no tonier be accomplllbed by 1overnmeot •alone, and in- novative approaches are re- quired it we ~ to implement "eeded transportation f acllitles," Nestande said. The atudy will be conduct- ~<t by the county Administrative .. Office, Eovlror)lnental Manaae· ment Agency, Counael's Ofll~ and special counsel f.or bond 1\f sues. The vote to support the study was unanimous . Boarld Chairman Ralph Clark, aho 4a member of tbe co unty Transportation Commissioa , said Nestande's approach wa "right on" and "very •I· propriate." -FREDERICK SCHOEMERL . Chiefs cookd Firemen get air conditioned units ~ When battalion chiefs for the Orange County Fire Depjlrtment direct firefighting operations in the heat this summer, their six new four-wheel-drive vehicles will be air-conditioned. The air conditioning is sup- posed to keep the chiefs cool and unfettered during long days on the fire lines. THE FIKE department almost didn't get the air condi- Uontng, though. The $4,242 re- quest was denied by analysts in the County Administrative Of. fice as unnecessary and an ex· pensive precedent. None of the department's 101 other vehicles has air condition- ing. Fire Chief Larry Holms, I how ever , persuaded lbe coun~ Board of Supervisors to pay $707 per vehicle to add air condition- ing. Supervisors said it would be ins talled only in command vehicles. "CHJEF OFFICERS maintain a high degree of public and in- teragency contact while operat- ing in hostile environments as- sociated with incidents occur- ring in wildland areas." Holms wrote lo the supervisors. "This exposure to dust, smoke and extreme temperatures in· troduces a significant fatigue factor that can be alleviated, for the most part, by allowing the personnel the option of sealing their vehicles and using air con· ditioning .. It's trashy''job, but he's dedicated ( Trash ii Tim Newman's bu.si· ness. The young Newport Beach policeman deals with snapebots of messy yards and overturned trash cam rather than crime re- ports. He walks a beat, on the lookout for litterbugs. He bandies individual cases and complaint.S. At least 30 each ~ontb. Newman is Newport's official litter control coordinator. His buddies at the police station call him the "trash cop." He calls himself the ''resident trash specialist." ALTHOUGH HE gets some ribbing from fellow officers, he lakes the job seriously. Litter is regarded as a serious problem in Newport, ranked by residents in \be top three crimes category right after illegally parked can and stray dogs, he says. Tbe litter post was created by the City Council last September at the urging of Councilwoman Evelyn Hart. Newman, also on the depart- ment's SWAT team, says his duties include coordinating the activity of the city's Litter Con- trol Committee. talking with homeowners groups and pulling together cleanup drives. Much of his effort, he pyl, has gone into making sense of stdlte and fedeNll litter laws which fall under myriad tiead- ings including health and safety codes, agriculture laws, vehicle codes and civil laws. WITH MOaE THAN' slx months ol trash control under bis belt, Newman bflleves it's both possible and impossible to get a real bandie on litter. •'People always want to know wby Newport can't look like Dis- neyland," says ~ewman, "and the answer is that Dkneyland spends more tlian S8 million a year picking up trash." Newport, on tbe other band, spends less than $1 mUJloo and much ol that is directed toward "" e>.itr~tets...,.,,_ LITTER PATROL Tim Newman routing tras h collections and beach JObs, which yield 16,000 tons of debris annually. Newman says it's hard to do in _:;ix months what the "Keep America Beautiful.. campaign has been trying to do for years. For instance, he explains, ti) nab a litterbug at tbe beach he if· required to observe litter in the culprit's possession. watch that person toss the trash on the sand and then see that person walk away. ''THAT COULD TAKE alt day ," Newman suggests, "especiaJJyiflhe guy's going to be lying on bis towel all day right next lothetrasb. '' But some headway bas ~ made, he says. Trash pickups" Newport's "litter impactef1 area•· are lo be increased ~ summer from once to twic, weekly. And a massive cit)' cleanup, coordinated with tile Newport Harbor Area Cb~ .. of Commerce, is set for la~ June. Congressmen set <JC refugee he_aring1 Five coqreamen -includlnc The commlttH will conduct the cbalrmu oft, a House com-informal hearhlC between 9: mlttM that ov.,..... JndoehlneH. and 10:45 a.m . in Room 19 of UM ref\aaM 1,.·01ra1ns -wUl vlllt county En1lneerln1·Flnance Oran1e Cou'r J'rida,y for a BuUdJna at 625 Rola St., Sa.td:a flnt..._.. ..... at tbe COUDty'1 Ana. i refU(M ~eat etrorta. Local elected otnda~a tnTttl9d bf ·~ Hantett repreaentatlvea of retuiee Wh~der an Bomaao MUJGll, D-Uement aieocla are e Kentuck1. cbaJrmaa of tbe to teatlfy. House Committee on Immtir•· Followlnt tbe bearla1. i tion, a.IQ&e• and tm.raatklftal con,.....aien wlU vtllt tbe . Law, u4 commltue GMmben Aau•lm' 1 lmml1raat •D Hamilton 1'1b, R·New York· Retu1• CommultJ CeoUit kl Sam Hall"' D·Tesa1; BUi Garden Grove, then tra'fel tO llcCullam, n-Fk>rida, and Dan Lons 'Beach for a alm\lar brief· .Lun1r9', R-Lonl Beach. ., ln1 with local ott\clall. • I ! .... --·~· --"'? ~ ·--~'\:' ""' • -w .... ·-......... --• 4 HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A1Jaly1ia of thousand• of P"tnandel lndicat.M there II a ..ater tlill OI M b dtMh •= Wuta wtioM motlaen .un Mver. memla or ~•re beavy smokers durin1 pnpa~y, a medJcaJ reeearcher Hyt. Tbe ~ wu developed by Di'. Richard Nae1e, chairman of · lke patholoay de~rtment at the Pennsylvania ~te University Medical ScboOt, located 1t Herabey Medical Center. N aeye sa'ld the research wu baaed on studies of 60,000 pre1nancies over a six-year period. '"TBBOUGB statistics, we've found tbeae ra ctora are independent or other factors that can cause SIDS (sudden infant death srndrome)." Naeye said in a telephone interview. ·'Smoking and anemia, b<>wever, won't explain all lbe SIDS death. We don't know the rtst of the reasons." Na eye sald smoking reduces lbe oxygen flow in the blood vessels feeding the unborn infant. He said one cigarette can constrict blood vessels for five to 15 minutes. BE SAID research has determined the cottrol cent.en in the brain ate~ responsible for such basic functions as breathing and heart action, have a higher requirement for oxygen before birth. "The mechanisms controlling breathing and heart action are only a primary control within the first few months after , birth," Naeye said. ~--­LAGGARDS BEWARE -Big Dane Boris loves to go for walks. But woe to him (or her, in this case) wbo ~an·t keep pace. As little Julia Koenig discovers on her stroll down a street in Vienna, Austria, Boris uses a few whatks from his muscular tail as a reminder to speed up. Special services set -Area churches planning Good Friday observances Several churches along the Orange Coast are planning Good Friday observances. Church of Resurrection at 7;30 p.m . for a tradi· tional Tenebrae Service. Many congregations will gather in a single location for the traditional afternoon services while others will worship Friday evening. Among the churches and congregations an· nouncmg services are the following A Tenebrae Service will be held al 7:30 p.m . al Ml111loa Lotberall Claarcll, 2'360 Yosemite Road, Laguna Niguel for tbe veiling of the crosa. A service will be held at 12:30 p.rit: at the Lutheran Cburcb of the Master, 2900 Pacific View Dr., Corona del Mar. Associate Pastor Don Thies will lelld an in· formal scriptur e reading at noon for the Comauml· ty Presbyterian Cbucb, 415 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. I A-dramatic rendering of the last words of Christ will be sponsored by the Community Church, Congregational of Corona del Mar; The Newport Center Methodist of Corona del Mar; St. Mark's Presbyterian of Corona del Mar and the Lutheran Church of the Master. Newport Harbor La&beran Cbureb will have a Tenebrae Service at 7:30 p.m. al 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Good Sheperd Lutheran Church, 4800 Irvine Center Drive, Irvine, will join with the Lutheran St. Edward'• Catholic Cltarcb! 339216 Calle Primaver, Dana Point, will have Stations, 'J>assion and Communion at 2 and 7:30 p .m. The same service will be held in Spanish at 7:30 p.m. in Capistrano Beach at Domingo and Sepulveda. Reagan invitation off Harvard cites protocol to discourage his, appearance BOSTON <AP> -Harvard University protocol bas disrupted a plan by graduate students J,o invite President Reagan lo speak at their commencement. Because Reagan would not be attending the full university graduation ceremonies -or getting an honorary degree - the office o f University President Derek Bok discouraged the graduating class at the John F . KeMedy School of Government from invltlng the president. The students agreed to change their plans. The Boston Globe reported that student leaders at the Kennedy School approached the White House last week to ask if Reagan would address their separate ceremony, which follows mom.Ing commencement exerciaes for the entire univenity. The students contacted a White House official , who encouraged them to send an invitation lo the president through White House aide Michael Deaver, the newspaper said, but when the invitation came to Bok 's attention, be discouraged it. NOaMAN SMITH, an assistant dean at the Kennedy School, said he checked last week with the university administration on the protocol of' the invitation. Smith sal(l he was told there was great concern about having a sitting president appear on commencement day without appearing at the full university commencement ceremony. "We would never want lo suggest that we would snub the president,'' Smith said. Another problem , ad - ministrators Hid, was the un- Engineers. top-pay list' for graduates BETHLEHEM, Pa. CAP) - Englneen top the salary liet for this year's collese eradtiatea, the College Placement Council eaya .. Accord.fna to the Council'• March 1981 "Salary Survey," nearly all of the 24 •Pffialty cate1orles 1urve1ed at the b acbelor'a level reported lncreues ln 1tartln1 salariea over thole ln a July 1880 report. Students majorln1 lo petroleum eaClneerm1 d.r.w top off er1 of ian avera1e 128,JU ••n••llY, a 10.1 percent lDc UHt. Seconcl·rabktcl cllaalal ~I It .. ,21'1, tbOwed a u.a percent ••· TM . 11 enlineertng fiel.dJ had at least 8 percent taim OlU Jut July. Althoueh enalrieeriDI majon make up only 1 percent al the projected bachelor'• de1ree graduates in 1810-11, l'-_•}' received 63 pereeet al the Job off era reported lD tM survey. Three busineaa dlacipUnea, with 218 percent al tM bachelor'• Offen, reported tncreau of 9 to 11 percent, w1tb the bl1best averqe otter, SU~ lolni to accOQlllUQf majors. Com,..r ldenft ar.duatel rtpORld an ~ averace al $11,.WllilllotW~oalMd ~ ldioeea Ne chd ID 11 perc..t J_, a\ '21,tu. i iversity policy or not granting honorary degrees to presidents while they are in office. The only exception this century was Theodore Roosevelt, a HaNard alumnus. Bok'• office said it would be rude to have the pr~ident speak without awarding him an honorary degree. The graduate students now are considering other speakers, including journalist Oriana Fallaci, Sen. Howatd Baker, 1\-Tenn., and White House aide glhabeth Dole. I~ years • • gaven m 888ault case . S50 from DAVIS·BROWN • VIA II • Quartz Electronlc • Program Remote Control Tunl119 :~~~ S 50 from DAVIS-BROWN u:TCv1111 . -.... 2SIEMll60C Performance SOW'ld Color TV • JI"........ • 4'" ...... ...., • N ff :._ .......... 1tyted c•-.+ S 100 from DAVIS-BROWN 11:......v1111re•c11t ClltNlll~ C111P TV • MC Automatic r ff9quency ContrOI • ~ ConsciOuJ • Sohd ~ State ChoulS IH',rr~rm.mcr • IM.Wle 86oclt Motrut Plctule lube • Modwlor C"<lss.tl Design • CU$10m Picture C()(ltrol • Automatic Cob Control ::.t.~.:°' COi~ rv .,, '. HOW OHL Y s349 95 (II) 11': .... M, PIPll-ClllP TV Stvt\ You • J Cydn· lt0<mol. Pffm Prn\ ""' Polynlt< "'"" e J W1\tt/ R111w ,..,..,. Stftcl•O"\ Wllh tll9ty wv•ltf cold W111f' tt•V .s .. 11 .. 4 £•1•1 R1~ • Autom11oc 81ocfl o'"''"~ V1h1tblt Counlt• Sp1<t' JVM46 E vt l tvel conooh to ,.irci r '"'' 11• Ttmpt"""' cvok•n• 1nd po-• •~•h OtC. y l"'lh fU\I • wnplt ""'"'' Wttll lhr Sp1um1ktr M1t1o•nt s499•s Ovtn and vour o•n untt. you haw 1 com1lt1t coo to1n'• '-'"-''-''----------fl') l1Ht-l1 PatscnW llllWAllEI • i Cvct• Wn" St1ec11en '" cludint'lhlllfr Suu~' lot 11011 '"" '~' 1 Enerty s,..., Ory Cycle 12 ltvtl Wll'llllftt Actte. •S DllOW • SIHtl 1-... , Orange Co1tt OAtL Y ptLOT/Thul'lday, Apr)t 18, 1H1 ... V ANCOUVa WUla. (A'> -11-. $n ap. parentJ.y' bu atop~ oOatnl ~ tbe trater ol I llou.nt St. KeleDI *'id tbe t of'eillcf 1 eruptioo alert baa been Hied, eetent1ltl 1atd. , Favorable weather .UO.ed U.S. GeOaoatcaJ Survey acteaUata eo belleopter Into the crat.i thl.t "Th•crlevance committee hu left .. Avoid Mideast, poll indicates NEW YORK (AP) -The Middle Eut is lbe region American tourists' should avoid moet, while England is the "most friendly" and France tbe ''least friendly" country in the world to American travelers, according to a poll conducted by North American travel writers. . Mexico leads the list of "best vacation spots" for the average American tourist, followed by Portugal, New Zealand, Alaska and Hawaii ,, The poll, released this week by the Society of American Travel Writers, excluded Egypt and Israel from countries Americans ought to avoid in the Mideut. ACCORDING TO SOCIETY President Myra Waldo, 114 member writers and editors from the United States and Canada submUted their choices of the t1>P five countries in each category : most friendly to American travelers, least friendly, best foreign destination, best U.S. destination. and the region which Americans should be cautioned against visiting. • The poll results, concluded Feb. 25, with the percentage of times the destination appeared on the top.five lists, are as follows: The countries where Amert cam "are most likely to get a friendly r1Ception": England (57 percent), Canada (52). Australia (34), Japan (28) and Mexico (26). THE COUNTRIES ''least friendly " to Americans. France (38), the Soviet Union (28). Iran (23). East Germany ( 15) and Jamaica (12). The "most favored" destinations out.side lhe United States: Mexico (40), Canada (32), Carib· bean (26), England (20) and Portugal ( 18) "Best vacation" cities in lhe United States: San Francisco (33), New York (32.5), Washington, O.C. (31.6), New Orleans (16.7) and San Diego (14). Besides the Middle East, receiving votes from 31 percent of the writers, unspecified areas of Cen· tral America, the Caribbean and Africa were cited as places the travel writers warned "travelers away from , al least temporarily." Violence, political instability and hostility t oward Ame ricans were given as the main reasons U.S. to sell Squaw arena? SACRAMENTO (AP> -The federal govern· ment wants to sell Blyth Arena at Squaw Valley, built for the 1960 W-\oter Olympics. says The Sacramento Bee. The U.S. Forest Service owns the 8,SOQ-seat arena, used largely as an ice skating rink. The Bee's story said U.S. Rep. Eugene Chap· pie, R-Roseville, has introduced legislation to sell the arena, saying the money would best be used to acquire Forest Service land. A 3-year lease or· the arena was sianed last week wtth the Carville Sierra Corp .• which plans to use it for skating, ice hockey and a.s a convention center. The story quoted lhe firm's operations manager. H.UIOI u.w.._MT. OUYE Mo<tuary • Ce tnP tery Crematory 16~ Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5'0-555• PlllCINOTMIH llU •OAOW,. Y MOtrTUAaY 110 Brolldwav CottaMeaa 6'2·9150 IA1.Tl& ...... OM SMmf .. T'Ul'H&1. WISTCU# C~~N. • •21 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 8'6-9371 Frog /ever SPRINGFIELD, S.C <AP> -This joint is jumpln'. T hey're convertin& the old post office into • frog-jump museum ; they're clearing some wooded }Jnd downtown for a ftot-jump •re~. and they're buUdint-a conceuion stand for all the frog-Jump spec· tatora. But then, Sprjngfield i• the home of the an· nual Gove rnor Froa Jump festlval, wblcb at· tracted 15,000 visltora 111t year, and \bey jut want to do lt up riabt for tb1I yur't feaUval today t.broueh Saturday. ••Eventual plans call for a fountain, 1undla1, fro1 jump aJ"ena, coo- ce11iM locadon for the fro' Ju~p and re1ttoom1," Mayor .Richard PbfUlpl Hid. Jn iddidon, tM town'• Oldtl& buUctt..1, wblch fh&Ucl out U a pott Qf • flee 9nd bat been a l~ acban1e and a t>vbw lhOp._ will be r•nonted into a fros· Jump muHum or a ltbr•tJ f« welcomlnJ ~~----..-....;.111111111~« .Yltlton to tbe fntlval. week to meuure the mound of bardeaed tan on the noor ol ~ crater. - lt ap~ared a1 11 there wu little, JI any, arowth ln \be dome, said Thom Cor<:oru, Forest &'rvlce spokesman. EARTBQUUE ACl'IVITY ON the volcano has cootinued a little above normal but the level of seismic acUvtty was unchanced •lnce &mday, ac- cordln1 to A.B. Adams, spok'eaman for the University of Wuhineton 1eophysici center in Seattle. Corcoran seid the latest dome arowtb, as- sociated with the cloud-sbfO'.aded eruption lut Fri· day. W815 slmllar to earlier non-explosive etupt1ona in which tbe eruption danaer eued after the volcano squeezed more molten rock into the crater. Though a minor stea~ and ash eruption oc· curred, eeologista were not sure when lbe addition to the lava dome began._ said Susan lluHell· Robinson, USGS geologist. • "WE BELIEVE THE LAVA dome ·started growing before lRst Friday," she said. • The eruption alert was downgraded by USGS and University of Washington scientists, and some access was provided to the mountain for loggers and others with permits. But the Forest Service kept the red zone -within 12 miles of lhe volcano -closed to all but scientists, Corcoran saJd. Dome's height reflects added lava ~eied in· aide. an actkm that relieve a preuure1 threaten· ing eruptkm. The U.S. Geological Survey and AP ...... I ""'='= ;:::__ ~ •- University of Wa3hington scienti3ts have down· grad.eel an eruptkm alert and limited access to the mountain hils been permitted. Roger's Specialn Easter Baskets ' Delight that special someone with a Roger's Easter Basket. Spring is in full bloom at Rogers Gardens and that means the best selection ever of our bright and colorful hanging baskets and pots. An easter basket from Roger's will be a lasting gift throughout the spring. FOR YOUR PATIO {J. ~ ' Roger's Gallery offers a variety of the finest patio and garden furniture: Tropitone, Brown ~- Jordan, Triconfort, Allibert and more are on display now and are available for immediate delivery. Roger's features a unique assortment of candles, umbrellas and Easter gifts. That special gift is right here at Roger's. IN YOUR HOME Enjoy colorful Ranunculus, Daffodils, Tulips and Roses. Fresh~ut flowers from Roger's will brighten any room. Miniature African Violet. W.ith Oxygen-Plus care, this perennial will produce cotor year-round. Special "'SO ~ Reiger Begonia, Er. This hybrid perennial is a living bouque.t in a beautiful selection of colors. Specfal '12.95 ~ »' r ' A living centerpiece or a unique gift, a 1 C1' Roger's color pot designed for that someone special. '11.95 · PIANT PROFESSOR GORDON BAKER LLOYD, noted garden expert, will be.at Roger's Gardens every Friday, beg~nning April 3rd, from 10:30-2:30 to answer air-plant questions. He will also be presenting special seminars: April 9th, 1 too A.M. "How to Water''. April 23rd,11 :00 A.M. "Pest Control". FOR YOUR GARDEN MARTHA WASHINGTON GERANIUMS, 1 gal. In a sunny spot this beautiful plant provides consistent color. reg. $3.75 Special S2.75 " Hibiscus, 5 gal. This showy star of the flower wor1d, alive with color, indoor or out. reg. S11 .00 Special 18.99 The Easter Buhny Will be et Roger's Gardens •.. Easter Sunday, 2-4 P.M.! Prices effect!~ thru Aprll 22, '81 and subject to qual'\lltlff on hand -~ =--:--;- ==-=-• -f - ,. ' ' I , .. .•. , , 'l ,, ;I ;\ ,. II ,,............ ... -: .... • PVBUC NOTICB P\111UC NOTIC8 Pvm.IC NOl'ICI: Ptcmieutl'WPRP ...,,_ • I ')$ "8UC ......... MmttAT'Ullllrt ..-.cnn..IMlll .. M 4" ...... ._..., fllM.., " • I llle .......... ~an ..... .....aTATSMalr'f ~ CMW ..... ,......., Wte ---· .· '"-...._ .......... ,. .... -~ IMdl. Cl!...,., ... WATla !IMO .... ~Tl'-IT'f' ._.... .; ~-=-... e1tin .,..,_, tt•I.,_. ct:llUll#V; .._ .._. ..... IUTI ,..,.._ MltYtCe, •• ...... llteu ....... Ill, ......... ,. llMCll, (al ......... , .. VI• .. Clf'f\19,~ Hlllt. C.....,..._.._,.,,,Cllhoer_.. 9"1 c.i........ •1•; a..-........... e-- """ ........... Dl6W letWe,.. ~-........... ,.,,_.._. *9.... ... VllUI Odot, ~ ~ .. llM~Wft*°11111M• ...... _. City ••. " ............... c;a,."" .... = .... "'I .... ,,.._" "" ~........ .., ... ~'T~~VJJ• -.. i:::.::§,7-·C:::--~ .. ~ ......... -··· ... • u.. ....... -......... ..,........... ltMt~l ....... ..... ···~v...~tt7• ""'"~-. ............... ' n 11 ........ ~ cee ..... .., • II ltVllUC HCAAIHO .. " ....... ._.,, ~.......... .. ..... IC ... 9' .. 0ty~ll Oftc'9r U.. 1.-..1 .. tlw CllY -lr'fl• Oii AINJI a, 1'91, TMt ....... -... .. Tiiis ....,...._ ..... •I'll .... ,, ... "" .,. ...... ~~ .. ~ '*'-" Or-c...y .. C-ty (.l9r't. .. °' ... e-.ty ... 5-"' .. City C:..11 o.m-~1114, ,,., cJ Aiwll t, Hit. , 1"""9 IMtrl"' Clvl~ Cellt«, ,...., ,,...,. 171 • "'"'"'•• ..... I rvl"•· ......... ar.... o.y.... ...... .... or-. c...i o.lly ..... C.lllNnlie. --· ... ».. • ....,,. ttrl "1M1 •. ,,Q, •. Mey7, ,.., 1111.., ,ff "'"'"'""' ,.._ t ..... 1~111 .,au .c U.efflce fll UM ..... .,. N~c• _ , •• •c NOTICD "'""11-, o. .... 1._m ... 1 °'"'" .... "'· PtJBLIC NOTICE ruu~ v•~ D ..-u...-s. lrvlM IMwlln C:lvk ~ AllM•, ------------tlOt ,.,o •• Avt11w•. lrvlnt , ------,.------- • c.11ton111. P1CT1nou1 au11...u ,,1CT1T1out au1u1•U "ICTIT10W 9U$t •• ,ICTITIOUt eUIUtlM D•ttvTY CITY C1.8•1t 0" NAM9 IT AT•M•MT NAM• ST ATUHlfT llAMll ITAT .... ..., llAMll STA,._en' TMI CITY°' 1•V1N• Tht IOll-1"' ...,_ It 4IOlllO b<l.i· Tht lellowl1>11 perlOllt ere 4elnt ... .!~ ~l ,.._. .,_ ... ,. Tiie letleWI ... ~ Wt dol... f'1111fllhed Or.,.._ CMN o.lly f'llet, nett ea. bull"ffi •· --llolli-•: ,.,..1116 Itel 111141 AelA AHTIQUES, Suitt Cl. UOl 111 CHILOAENS MEOICAL P\lBUC NOTICS 0C8ANAI"• AiltAIHM8Mfl, ...... o•NT ~llTl•S, I : • H•rl>O< •1..,,, c:o.i. ""'''·CA '2U•. TEACHING AIDS IJI PAGLIARINI ., ............. 11111 Tel=.:--t4111•ll ... t11 Vlt '#e aten, Ntwporl aeech, ~ Mr MlCllMI Wood. Apt. •17, UOI ll(S (lllt puDlltlllng cllvltlon of M'""' -.. .-..,or•"~'""' .. , .. _ Ennl.lal. ---ri.-t .... , ... t'nu-• .~... .. 0 -....cai ~--' CelllO+"nletJWO PUBUC NOTICE Werner AIH H.a\llnoton It.ell. CA C.M.T,A.) ... s....wcllt '°""· ---" -··• ..., .. ""r"' "' '"""'"'"' ,,. ... ~• ,, ... """ ,_ r"' • -•"' ....,.,.....,'ti 0.Yld K. Limit. -__...,.., Wllllem e talr Ari'fttt•INIO, 21 '2647 lotcll Ctllloml• nwo. &.CWftn the Prinu of Wolei _,, ',...,., ""--5,,._., '--' __. .. -.. • ....... Wte ... ltlllte, CtllfllCIN• N., ........ Ntwport •••ell,. Tnl• bu>IMU It conducle<I D~ ... Ill• ,,_.,~ .. le c.eu.-. ,, Sun•'* Cottrl, UT9U......., UJUnU -·-1we• _,, • ..,._nc· 917U ~ CelllonlletJWO C.OI cl•v'*•' N••-1 aetdl CAHfofnletJMe. Afttnftl1 them ore thb nnir of com---•1w m•1111 Jelut Ml~. INll Attflvr T....,_ M. u..ian. ''° S.....Jre, IU .. ••te• ClOU•TCWCAUllCMINIA M. Wood Mery.,, .. -: *2 0-Nte A-W . .. _ . ..., r-"Mn"V".M -• atv• •• .,.te ... ltv• Ctlll«ai• .,..,. ,....._~...a COUNn'CWLOIAHaLU r111a necwnent wH llltd '"'II lllt Wutmi-. C.hl0<nl•tMI. tVU ' l.clwl11 A. MtMrvt, 110 Ille In U. MlltW el e1tPOA llAa• Co1mly Clerk ol Ortngt County on Tllh bUtlMU It conducl.O DY • Mehr••• lll•n• 11, USU Wt1len, ~ -..11. CellfOnll• OAltCIAMlllDI' Marc112•,1t11 eenerti--slllt> llU<Ar111W 91v&. ..... 441, lrvM, nMO CAM MU ..... A-1-,,.... -""" CA141- Cellf9n161 n7U Tlllt llUMMH It concllKlff llY • CtTATIOlt Publllhtd Orengo Coot Delly Piiot, Preileltnl Lad,Y Diana's family 0.Yld I(, LtfM L llmltM ~. ,,....... ,.,,_ . • Merell 2', Aprll 2, t, i., 1911 ,_,, Thh &lat-I ••~ flltll wlllt lllt JtfWIMIMr · •--A..~ ,......,~_,~ Cowlty Cl•,_ of Or.,.11t Cottnlf on ...,.._ lt....alt Tllll .,__.,. -ftled wltlt -CAeMIDOHllMNTl PUBLIC NOTICE M41rcn ,., 1,.1. Tiiis ......... -.. """ tM C_t., Clefll of Oranoo C:-y ... (Re: ADOPTION) '""'74 C..,nt., Clerll et Or---C:-.., t11 April J, 1'11. To: Pl.ORO c.ARCIA .... PeOlt PuDOIN<I Or-C-•I D••lv Piiot. Aprll 14, ltl:I. I MAI.COM& DALY ANTONIO GAltCIA (prowmed f'ICTITIOUI llUM•aM M•rCll 2'. Aprll l. t, i•. "" , .. H I ..,... •*Mec'o11W....._ lttllttl Wlltrttllo1111 111111nown. ...-..nAT8Ma'" 1"111111"'911 Or.,.._ C...-Delly f'llllt ......... ._..,CiAftMI AUltO"A QON.ZALES CASTILLO au The fOl-nt --Is ..... ._,. A11f.1',U,90,May7,t•t1 lllH1 ,,,..., AUltOltA GONiALES'ula AUltORA Mtaet . , • • to(lnst attraction PUBLIC NOTICE LONDON <AP> -Americ'°5 are lining up for Britain's lat.est tourist attraction -lunch with the Earl of Spencer. father of Prince Charles' fiancee Lady Diana, and tea witb ber step-grandmother. best·selling romantic novelist Barbara Cartland. ,.111111.,..0rM91C-O.lly .. lltt, GONlAL.IU GAltCIA (Metllttl CAL IRAOM, JI» Detew.,. •4, I 'So Mrs. Ot -fancy that really be· PUBLIC NOTJCB ~-"· u. ..... ., 1. 1•1 lllMt •lltrtellOWll 11nll110wn, •nel to •II Hunllnot1on 8Mcll. CA '2'41. N·12ffJ ing her name -says. I J'uat hope it _________ __.____ ,.,..,.., cleiml .. to .. IM latiwr or •-w I( .... "" 21• Olt-9 ... f'ICTtTIOU1a u1011.u -II•~ of .... mlllDI' PH-MIOwt MWlll ....... a..ctt,CA...... NAM&ITATtlM9NT ian 't going to be a crashing failure." PICTITIOUS au..1 .. 11 PUBUC NOTICE """"· Thi• IMIMM Is CAllMIYcltd w"' 1n r11e 1011-11111 per"'"' .,. e101n8 Th · I d 15·•· Willi •AMalfAT9Mfln ly or .. r of thll Ct11rl yOCi tr• 111,,1_,.1 l>llslneues e me u es v ..... \o am The ......... ..,_ 1• .... ....,. "ICTITIOUl .. USl••U hereDy ctt.cl -,_.red to....... ~ .... I( '9rft 11.AlLEY & HANSE N , u Sha peare's birthplace in Strat--.u: •AMalTA.,....,. .....,e -"""' .............. o.c--t· Tiii• .-t0 ... Ill .. with .,. Corporal• Pin• Ori••· Newport f 0 A St h g 't f ST"EETTOYSAUTO•ODY TIWfol_.... __ ........ Nl--·U4.1t .... 1-1t1ofU.-.tft·c ..... 1.,ctwtoofOrtft9tc:o..Mrtl"lffCll,Ctllfornl•ne.o 0 . n von; one en e. IU e 0 ANO .. AINT.MOWttllnllS"-t•M. _ .. , lllllCI court, lo<ttlCI .. C"IMINAL MtrcllJl,1"1 ••AZLIY & COMPANY •• Miss Cartland, 79, whose more than 300 romantic novels have sold 100 million copies around the world. says ahe devised the toun with a New York travel f i r01 before Charles, 32, h eir to the British throne, and Lady Diana, 19, an- nounced their engagement Feb. 24. one Age cultur e r elics; and C•teMitu.c.ttfoo'Netlll7 HAMIL.TON ,...0 ASSOC•ATas. cou"T aurLotHG, 110 w. T•"'9l•. , ,.,,... c eiuwn•• corpweuon. 0 toioor•t• Longleat mansion, as well as tea Jtlftfy Alleft n.._.., az c-te '* c.-sv.tt. LtlWN a..h, L.otA,.....CA11trOl"flt••1z...,J-P111t11.-0r.,...c.e.io.11.,P11ot, p:ua or1ve, Newport •••ch. ... I.th M;•s Cartland and lunch with MeM 5etwt. Cate*-'· c.tlfwftl• cemorn1anu1 u. '"'· •t t:oo a.m. ot 11\el .. ,, ,..,. AIH'll It 16 D 1'11 ti.wt c a111orni.ni.o .. .,. '2621 It I chard 0 . HeMlllO"· ,.. and 1"'r• IO -c-. If ... ., ,... -• • • • MEAL' N HA H s EN I H the Spencers at their stately home, Tiii• "-'-1• c~ • ., .. lft· c.ie1111a Streot, L•e1111• a .. o have, """ Mill ...,._ .,,._ ,,., tit PUBLIC NOTICE co1tPORATEo • Cttlfomi• corper• • ... -... Cell!Omlll""'' dtel-,,... '""""" <OnlrDI of -lien, 1"71 ...K11 afvcl., ,.,, .. IOIA Althorp Hall. "'"""Al-TllMltts Thia...,,_ It cCIMUCltd ,., M In pertnl• ecCAlnll"' to IM Pttllton on -H11nllfltll0n a.Kh,CAlllwnl• "'°'' The Earl of Spencer. 56, opened the This .....,.,,. -tiled "'"" tlw div....... ,. .. hertll\. ,,ICTITIOUS •UMNUS Tltl• b<lsl""• •• conel11Clt<I • ., • I c-tr Otttl ., Or .... c:.uMY Oft "ICNAI 0 . Htmlltoll ,., , ......... ~ "°" "''' .. NAM• STAT•M•NT gefWrti PArtMrllllt>. fami y's Elizabethan mansion to the ,.,,,111., ""· Tlllt .....,,.... _ 11 ... ••ut u. ·11Mmtd.,.lt'IOl•C1M1t.emptotc-1. T11e tgjto.lftll ...,_ 11 ...,.,. ...,,, ...,...,& ~y raying pubJic in 1979 to help meet ita I ,.,.... co..ntr 0tr11 of 0r.,... c.-tr Yeu -...,.., ....., ... "' ... ., ...... •• o. T ...,...,, lo 000 uaJ in L ~Or-. Cett4 0.-., .. llot. AIM'lf 1'4, ltll, vlNella ti 01111 Ceclf tm.S llfltkh pr• CAMEL SIGtfT ANO SOU NO, Prtlllllnt 1 , 8DD ma teDanCe COSUI. AIM'. 16,12, .. ...,.7. ltlf 11Ji .. I l'tx ,,,_ vldt Utt llldllt IMll I advlte Ille mlllOf' 2205-11 Mtlll Street, Huntlnotlon Tiii& Ao'"'*'I ., .. 111..S •1111 IN "WE'RE GETTING A LOT~ stick about it now, but the idea was first JDOOted two years ago,·· Miss Cartland said in a telephone in- terview from her 400-acre home at Potters Bar, 15 miles north of Lon- don. • * * PYIMI .... Or.._,GMM Oelty l"llot. M4 lhe _...a, f present, Of tht rlefll ltt<ll, Gtllfomla ta.it COYlllY Clfftl ol Or.,.ge Covnty on Pv•LIC NOTIC.. "'1'· t•. n. • . ...,. 7. ltll 1 .... 1 t• ll•n c-.. -'· TIW cowrt s._, ••-o.nn.woy, ,_2 M4irc11 v . ,.,. "I wasn't very interested at first as I'm very busy. But I ~greed because the tourists are coming by state· owned British Airways, and I'm very patriotic. "I 'll just be having the Americans to tea, so that won't be so bad," said Miss Cartland. whose daughter, Raine, is the second wife of th~ Earl of Spencer and Lady Diana's step· mother. "My daughter and son·in· law have a much tgger place, and the tourists will lun there." THE FIRST RO U P of 12 Americans, reportedly paying $1 ,S40 each for a seven·day tour, arrive April Z7. Further tours of 25 people are scheduled through the summer by the travel firm, World of Oz. "Business• is terrific. When we worked out the deal the couple weren't engaged. We've just been in- . credibly lucky." World of Oz presi· dent Wynne Oz was quoted as saying. "It's not every day you get to sit down with the future father·in-law of the futur:e king." CHARLES AND DIANA are due to marry at London 's St. Paul 's CathedraJ on July 29. Asked whether she thought the royal wedding connection would boost tour saJes. Miss Cart.land said: Need help? . Royalty ban on T-shirts 'upsetting' LONDON <AP ) British manufacturers expecting to capitalize on Prince Charles' wed· ding this summer say they'll suffer financially because of a paJace edict forbidding them from printing royal faces on T·shlrts. They say foreign manufacturen will ignore the ban. issued by Buck- ingham Palace, and make a bundle on T-shirts adorned with the beaming faces of Charles and his bride·to.be, Lady Diana Spencer. Said Colin Purvis. assistant direc- tor of the British Textile Confedera· ti on · · · Jt would be an intolerable situation if T-shlru with pictures of the royal couple were being im- ported." He said the industry would "not lightly ignore" the royal family's wishes. but he said no deci.aioo had been made yet about whether to com- ply with the order. A palace spokesman conceded the ban has no legal force, but "manufacturers have always com· plied with our wishes In the past," although "foreigners don't always abide by the rules." Have you Mnt for merchan- dl•• and not received It? I• city hall giving you the run-a-round? Are you having a dlugree- ment with • bllllng computer? "At Your · Service" offers help In all theM matten and more. You can count on Pat Dunn and her "At Your Servlee'' column to help ~v• probl•me. lhe caa locMe lo8t Item•, atralghten out utlltty blh, get action trom lawm•ket'a, and Jutt ...... Nd ta,,e. H "* Med help, mall your que¥ton• to P•y D\lnn, At Your ae~. Orange Coaat Dally Piiot, P.O. Bo• 1llO, f Coet9 Meea CA t2121. Be eunt ID lni:llUde ~Ill ..... num D -=-I me' tPPOlnt -IO ~nt ""' Applt•ood Circle, Huntl""°" a.tell. '1MtU ------------mlri« --., not"" mlri« 1• 0~ C•lllornl•.,,... P11bli.... Or-c-11 O•llr Piiot • f'ICTITICIUI •ut4•... PUBLIC NOTICE lo •llorcl "°""""· -11 tlWr are.,.... Tiits -.... "~DY.,. In .-...11 J. t, '" u, 1t11 1'U.fl 9'11.Ma ITATaMaen' Dlt lo 811-~_.. _, -'nt cll•ldvei. -----Tiie lellOWlflt ,_.._ ere Wl&e C_,MI to_. "'9 -tftlL S..-1 GtnNl-Y DUSlllns•· •onca INVITIM91105 Tiie petition llltd ~''" ta for ,,,. Tiii• ·-•• llled with ""' DAl(IN .• wooowo•1C1 1..... •IDlnMNO.• pwr-o11 .. 1,,.""..,.1e<tch11c11or " • -NOTICE 1$ HEltl.IY GIVEN INI pt -lw-..Clon Cownly Cterll of O<tnve County on ~.~~·~· SMtt -.........,., -1" proflOMls 9111 1119 ,.. .. ,,.. 11y ~:ltd. Aprll t. '"' · Merell JI, ,,.1, ,,1_. "oa.n ~ UM Orchid Hiii T1W Gll'f ol Gotto Mftt, to wit: The Cl· JONI J . CMcoree. Pubil""° 0r.,... co .. 1 Delly Piiot, f'ltc• ,_.. -H~ Ctllfoml• ty C-11, ,._,Office aoa 1•. C-to c:-.t't Cle<'1l Ae><ll 1, t, "· n. ,,., t , .... , 91707 ' .,.. .. , Ctllforlll• t»•, ., or tltforo a,. "' Kllnlpo, W•rne ·-141 E ' , ... Street. IM -of 11 :00 '·"'· on Frt ... .,, Mtt DeclutY CM!• Me.a Gtllfor:.i_ .,,.iJ 1, ltll. It -I .. tlw ..._.i111111y o4 J0..11 M. LAMOtl, Tllll tus'INU It clMIChKlecl 11y • llw Ill-lo .. II..., 1111 l>ld to tlw Cll't c-ty ~ ~...,.1 ,__.,,... Cl-'1CWflco11y llW pr°""r --MAltTIM •. W••K•S. f'ICTITIOUI 8U51N•lS lt-1~ Umo ..... wlll .. P\llllkly _... .... 0..-Cr C-y '-' NAM• ITATIM•NT Thlt Me-I WM lllacl Wltll Ille l'M<I ·-9' ll.• Lift., ., .. -CriMl ... c-1a........ Tl>t foll-1119 pe.--. It 00"'9 tlwst Cown1, Clerk GI O<anoo ewnty ., thtret twr os pr.ctkMllt, on FrkMy, llt W. T...,.•..,... l•Pll ntH •• 17SU1 Mey I, ltll, In tlw C-ll o-NMra, L.ff A ....... CA•U SUHIL COMPANY. L~ Angole• ,,1 ... Clly Holl, n Felr O<Mt, C:.to MfM, Ttl: t7~ 8 It ... , Elect IC Strtte CYP<OH P..C.il.,_, Or .... CMll Dell' .. llot. Ct lllornlt , for tht l11r11hhln9 ol PUl>ll.,_, Or ... Cotu Delly Piiot, c "t7< • 1 .o.» r ' • 7 .... 1 LAIOR ANO MATElt l AL TO~ 1' U.JO May 7 1 .. 1 1121-11 al ort1 e I Apr, .. ,1l,10,MtV7, ltll 1 ...,. ltEWORK THE DEHUMIDIFYING . ' • ' Hyunchul l(lm, tt.i Eltclr t SYSTEM 1'011 THIE COMPUTE It StrMI, Cy..._.., C•hlornle .0.JO PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS 8Ulllll55 NII.Ma l"TATUol•NT Tiit lol:-11111 per-• art llolnt l>ll•ineu .. , Ill IENEFIT PL.AN AOMINISTAATO"S, Ill I P A, IOJI E. 4111 Strwt. Swlte 106, S-.te AN, Celllornle 91105 It-"" Woyno Mutert, 2' WllllU· lne Swen, lrvlN, Celllorni• t 1714 HtrOICI H. Oenltll. MU Acnl• Orlvt, CYDrtU, Celll..,nie .o.» Tllll b<ISlntU I• tc>n<lu,ltG Dy A ~nor •I per1Mrslllp ' A-kl. W M41tlart ,,,ii •IAl'-1 ••• !tied •• , .. lh• Covnt1 Cler-of Orange Cou.,ty on ltOOM. PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii& Dlnlntu It conclU<ttd Dy en :n Aclclltlonel Mb of'"' tpoclltc.llOM Cll•iclu•I~--... •: l(lm ,.,....,. m•r be .... 1 .... •I tlw Office GI IN ~·-~-PuDlt"'9CI Or-Cotsl Delly Piiot, "'•"" ''· '"' PUBLIC NOTICE MOTIC8 DI' A~l"U(ATION TO SU.L. •1 CO"OUC MY••A911 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEltN: SEYA.. MOeC>ftU aM SUlUYO at'e tpplylng to th• o.,.,,"'."' ol Al<ol>ollc ..... , ... Centrot IM "41" Oft S.lt .... & 1111\N (~. Eat. Pt.I lo Mii Olt .... k ..... , .... al 17113 9'NCI\ loult vtrcl, H11ttln1ton leecll. Ceillornlan.a. P11bilahed Or-CMll O.lly Pllol Aprll 1•, ,., 111~1 PUBLIC NOTICE CAH NO. AltMa Tlllt ~et-t wes 111..S wllll !fie Aprll 1. t, 16, ll, ltll H22 .. I ~:::.h~ ~..;:;..:1,r,:1~":; GNAMOa Of' NII.Ma County Clerk Of Or111ge County on returMCI to u. • ....,,;... of u. City In tht _.., of ._ Allelllutlon el Merell lt. I'll ,..,. In • _.... ......... ....,..,..., DANG, THI XIEM For Cl\enee ol ,o~ " Ntlfte. Pvbfi"*' Or-CoHI 09'1y Piiot, Ill• Ollllldt with'"' llcl llt m OAOEA TO SHOW CAUH! ,.OR Ap Ill t .. ~ '"' 1560.fl N·7-N11mtatr -tho()penl ... O.tt. CHANGE 01' NAME DANG, THI r • • • • 'ICTITIOU5 8 UllM•H Eeclt ... ""11 -11r H ell •nel XI EM hM llled • .-titlWI In tllh c-1 ----NII.Ml STATIMINT try Item• MC for1h 1" tllt -111~ lot an order 011-1119 petllloMr lo PUBLIC NOTICE Tho loilowlnn P""'"' art <lo Ing u ..... ,.,,., -.. , .. , ..... t• llW • -lllc•tlanl ,_. • CIMrl'f N-chen~ nltllwr Mmt lrom DANG, __ __ __ bu"ntn ._ In tht Did -fellwre to wt -.,., THI XIEMIODAHG,ANHTRAM. N7Jffl WALNUT JOINT VENTURE. 1010 Item In'"' apKlllc.eUont '"'"be lllt,,.,._,,or-..&NtellPtf''°"I "CTITIOUS8USINEU 8utlnou Ctnltr Orl•t, lrvlnt . 9rouncltforrtjecllew1olU.bld lllltrHtocl In ... onatt.tr el ........ ,.. NAME STATEMENT C1111ornle'271S E It lllcl .,..II I lh t,,. f 1 peer Wot't IN• C-1 In Detltt't,,....I Tne follo••nu per'°",, <IO"'ll D11t1 Dal•• HouH Corpor111on or nem9! -r~ : all ...,..:;:. NO J .i Tm Civic Gen .... Orlve WHI, ntu H Celllornla, a C..lllwnla tOl"POrtllOll, PUBLIC NOTICE -parties 1 .......... In IN ,._.11 Stnle AN, Celllomle, Oii J-J, 1 .. 1. P .. W 01 L t NV ES TORS LT 0 , 1114 1070 lwllneU Genter Orlvo. lrvlnt, "'CTITIOUI 1u11••11 .. prlnclclela. '"UM "'corporatloN ti 10:30 O'Clo(k a.m ., -tllon ..... ~::t.::'~.,f;;!: Or••• 11200 Now port Calllornl• '271S llAMll ITATaM8•T lnclwoe IN ...,.... tf t1w ..,_1111111· l"'rt ""°"" c .. M. II .,., tflt'f have, Oerol I( PaulH" t•l4t Cartbov Tocle A.-rlce Inc d/DI• TOdt Tiie lell-'"U ~ I• ~ llwal· 5t<retery T.-.r -~ ' ""' .. ic1 potlllon lw d\tll99 of ,..,_ Fo..nt•1n V•llo, CA ;210/I ' Conatrw<llon of Arnerlc•. 1 Ht• Vwk The CltY C:...:11 of• tlw Cit ef ~to lllOUkl rlCll tit ll'tnlff. Tiii s l>u.,neu '' conelucltd Dy o corpora lloft, 1070 811t1n•u Cenltt Mt.Sea: PLANT PltOOUCTIOfl$, J...-J Overl•u. E: Toro. Gtllforftle tlUD Mery J-Teylor, 1-.a2 o ..... u . ' II It f~ CW,..rod llla1 • cot>'f ol hmtled 11"lntrU11p Orlvt. lrvlnt, Celllwni. t271S ::: :,::"" tlw ,..,,. 10 rejecl .,.., lfllt MOltr IO -~ bt ~1.-01r01 I( Peulwn Tiii& b<ltineu It conclu<ltCI by • Oottd· "-<II It ltll In ORANGE CX>AST OAILY Pll.OT, e Cofu'::t, I~~~·~: o~!..:i:!eclco':~ry I~ -ret pe-p • t T Mo, CAllroml.e t2'.10 ,....,11.;_ 0r.;.. Cot.i O.Uy ,.1 ... n•••peper of eenerel clrcwletlon, M•rcll 2J 1911 0.1•• HouM Corp Aprll 16 1"1 11»-11 pul>ll-In INt t-ly .i IMst Ofl<t a ,.._.U OI C.Hlornla Thia ~NH 11 <-lecl • ., t .,._ .. ,.,,... ~. ,,,,,,,., Ttrlor · · :':. :.,':" ... C:::::e -k• prior M:rucD~'f.'.':S,~1•2n<r. ~~~1oe11y1f,tj_•~i PUBUC NOTICE °''"" """1111. 1te1 This ......,.... -flied with tlw c.,.1., Cltrtt e1 o.-..,.. c-r "" ,....1114, 1'91. ,,,._ "'* ....... Or ... CMtl Otlly ....... A ........ za.•.Mey7,tte1 111>41 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS au ....... •MMllTATaMaltT The~,.,_ll dotrltllllll· MUH: ltACl,,IC GUL" •NT•"l"tllSal, H l OcHll Hiii Ori.,., H•tlft9t91t a..ch, Ctlifofftla ... Otvld JMlllnt;a, ., ()ca. Miii Orin, ..-f ... I 9Mc11. Cellfontl• nMI nw. ..._ la C9ft111Kltd Dy en !ft. •tvict..tl o.v...._.. ST AT•MaNT Of' A8AllOONM• NT DI' Ula OP ' "'CTITIOUS llUll••U NII.Me Tlla foOowfnv ~ II•• eoanclOMcl Ille llM ol"" llctlU-lll!Jlnou 1>tma A ANO I ELllCT-filC, 11• "" Slr .. i, N--1 e.ec11, CA tt~. OAltO, ntlXlllM ltlllltlll•-~. , ......... ea. ... m.1m.-. PvlllllNcl c. .... CiNll o.tt¥ ~ .... Aprlll6,U,JO,M4oy7,1 .. I 1~1. ----------- Tiit FlctlllOUI luMntU H•mt ,.. ftrrtcl to...,,. w• llltll '"Oren .. - GCIUlllY Oii ~ It, ttlO PUBl,.IC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI a UMMall MAM9ITATa.tldNT Ar'tllllf EclmwllCI Woll, 41°' River AIH., .. _, e.ec11, CA~ TlllS ~I wet Condwcleel l>y .,. lflcllv~I. ...,,,,.,, E WOii Tiiis Itel-I •• lliecl wllll Illa County Ct-of Ortnee Collniy on M41rtll 2•. ltll. ,. ...... Pullll-0rllnQe Cotti 0.liy Piiot. March 26, ""'" 2 ••• 16, "" UIWI TM lollewlfltl ..,._ 11 .... ~ -·" CUSTOM COHSTRUCTION, 1•1 l( ..... ._ ............... 11.CA..t*I "...., J . CecU, ••1 "'-...... Tiiis ......_ -fllM wltll .. 1------------1 Goun•r °'"' of 0r-. CeuMy • PUBUC NOTICE ,.,,,.. ,.,,., .. 14• '"'· ,,,_ 1------------1 Pvllll .... Or ... Cotat Delly ....... PvttllllWd 0r.,... c-lll Deity ""°" .. ~........ ~" '· 1e. D. •• "" ,.,,,,. "· za.• . ...,.,,"" 1aw1 .,_...,ATUlllllT PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI eUM•HI •AIM ITAT11MIHfT The.......,..,.,.. .......... ....... : a•ACH GltJ'f'HICI, 191 111fl $trttt • 10, HitAtl111te11 attcll, Ce lllOf'lllll ... Slwr...,. 11.Nra O'.,....., m t ltll street •IO, H11nt1ntt•11 •••ell, <:1111~ ... Thls .......... la~.-,.,...._ lllvlckltl. . ~,_.O'ar. Tlllt ......,..,. -,.... """ .,. COUfll(. Ctlrll tf Or11199 c:.-.ty .,. ,.., .. 4, 1"1. ,.,_ Tiie ... ......_. ,_,_ trt .. 1.._ ..... : IHOlt8L1Na O"A~ll"Y ll•VIC8, -Wlltttiw t0-11, C.U • (el"""" "'17. .,_...,., ... ~ .... .,_ ........ .,.Gtl ............ t • u .. ~ .. •liu..tll M""-, 141 .. J-Or ....... "'"' Cel...,,... '· Tiii• ....... CllltdllctM ..., "' Ill· '--tltL ..... Tlllt ....,.... -, .... """ .. ,., C1erll ., Ot.... CHlltY -""· 1•. ..._ ~ ...... Clrt1191 c;,.. Delly ~ II t, t, It. O., ltlt I 1.u; PUBUC NOTICE • ~....., OrMll:t c...-o.11r ,..~ A¥· ,.,»..•Mrt 1, "" 111MI 1----------.--------""'-------ll<tCTl'nOUI ... " ... ..... ITAft-•T TM !el ....... ----_.,., ------------~-: , AOG it•O"l"T1t•1 •HO __ ................... --"·~ .... Dt .... w. °" ....,,., ••. l'w10MI, s.utlt ~ Cal!MM,..,, All...., ,.,.._ 1P9t Vlt lllt..._, MIW..V ..... ~"'1S St• ca.M, M1P ...-._.,. IMl'MC. Ntwpen .__.C:.U,.,_ ._. Tt•• ........ t..-.Cled..., • .,._., ..... ...... o. w. Ot,.,.,... Tiii• ~ ......... •ltlt tile c-1., ~ fl 0r..._ c.witr .,. Met<ll *'· 1'1t. . "' ..__..Or.,. c...e Oellr ~ ,.,.,... 1, t, "'».. ttll , ... , PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cll"Patl4 NOT I CS CW TIIUSH8'1 llAL.a ,._ PuDll ...... C.-C-11 Delly Piiot, 1•1H1 PUBLIC NOTICE ,,,....__ E8'FEL REPAIR -Giant cranes rise from ground to first level of Eiffel Tower in Paris. The 75,()00..ton, 985-foot high Grande Dame of Paria, visited laat year by more than 3.8 million tourists, is underlfOing repairs started a month ago. Defections shock Soviets MOSCOW <AP> -The defecUon of,SOviet con- ductor Maxim Shostakovich, son or the late com- poser Dmitri Shostakovich, is a new shock lo the So\liet cultural establishment, already riddled with losses through defections and emigration. In recen\, years, a steady stream or musicians, writers and dancers has deserted the Soviet Union and some members of the Soviet cultural world believe that more flexible policies by government officials could help stem the flow. ·'Some of our visa policies are clearly out of date," one middle-ranking cultural official acknowledged privately this week. "If people want to perform abroad more, we should let them do it as m.uch as they want." BUT OTHERS BELIEVE that the kind of freedom that many writers, musicians and ballet artists want is basically incompatible with Soviet life. The regular loss of artists, those people say, is a tragedy built mto the Soviet system. Shostakovich, 42, and his 19-year-old son, Dmitri asked for political asylum last Saturday durlna a concert tour in West Germany. They re- portedly are seeking to enter the United States. The conductor is divorced . Dmitri Shostakovich, one of the Soviet Union's greatest cotbpo5ers, died in 1975. A. FAMILY FRIEND SA.ID Maxim Shostakovich gave no sign before his latest trip to the West that he planned lo defect, and sources in the Soviet music world said they could not speculate on his motives. But many recent defectors and emigrants were disillusioned by a Soviet cultural world that is heavily laced with politics and official paternalism. Government officials must approve foreign travel by cultural figures, and many artists rind it humlliating to have to submit Invitations from prestigious theaters and orchestras abroad to political decision makers here. , Just as some writers have trouble getting their books published by state-controlled publishing houses, musicians believe that cultural authorities sometimes modify concert programs to spotli1ht the works of officially favored composers or to downplay avant•garde music. Colleges face bias complaint SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Minority groups have flied a complaint again.st California's com- mublty colleges, alleging discrimmation towards women and minorities in vocational appren· Uceship programs. The complaint was filed this week by the Mex· icaQ American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People and Equal Rlghta A endment advocates. CAIRO FOllDO CAPRI MARRA%ZI SAHA FONDO MARRAZZI SAHA ABACO - · BUCI I DECID WOUBOISE Kit includ• two bracket. and ta.ten--. Add the a.. lwnber you need and you'" got a super adju.t&b!. work platform. sm 7 1~" I ¥t BP CllCUUISAW ~ute a deep 2%0 at 90 clegr1u, and 11'0 at 48 c1ecrnee. 10 amp burnout protect.cl motor. CLIDDDIPID BOUSE PAllT 8!! Glldd•n Spr.d HoUM b wper acrylic, co~ in thouaa.nd.. of colon. hiQh hiclin{I, CUNe toWJh. c1una up with plain water. RAIN GUTTER 10' LENGTH QALVANJZED 1.•7 2•7 - The ones that outlast regular carbon batteri• by a country mile. Where can you get them for this low a price? (Besides here, that is.) & FOOT HAID SPLIT CEDAR GRAPE STAUS Tl TUii 12" AC/DC IUCllWBITE TELIVlllOI 777 9! 69~ Get on• and ••tcj:d~• Angel.. and Shorty on Channel S (I 't know Shorty pla,..d for th• Angel... ) SHILL FllE I ICE lOW/40 WT. ll.L SEASOI MOTOR OIL 77~. Had to bu7 a can &om a station to .hoot it for TV befon w. 9ot OW' ehipment ... paid elm09t two bucUt, Oh wowt c, D, AAA, AA ~UBLE PAK OR 9 VOLT SINGLE PAK CALIFOUIA CLIPPER US MOWEIS Four 0701-engin•. plenty of aafety fMturee. 21~ REAJt BA.OGER. 3.9HP 22" DELUXE 167" ~BAGGER. 12278 SCOTTS TURF BUILDER PLUS 2 2000 80. FT. 777 4000 SO. FT. 1377 F..d. over a longer period of tizne, dry formula, no "ugh" odor. IUCI I DECIEI 16" DOUILE EDCE SHRUB AID HEDGE TRIMMER 27?:~. Fut. 3000 cutting n.roa.. per minute, .. PAK cute cominq bt.loing With double edge factoJT sharp •· 2.4 aJnP motor. --------------------------------..... --------------------------------..... I MECUIAl'I LIFETIME WISS llETAL . · '°":=' ~I SllPS·-~ ·· W.llOniiluuTD SEAT CUSllOIS .. ,~. ILLllOl IO&D 1 IAttDI CUIUI/ SOlllflOOITD ··:997 _, •· ... 1 3~-3 Wla Wisa whla. who think.a up th ... n.am .. ? 1.Uten, lt doee jun what the nam• aa711, cute lightweight 1'1\.t.al fut. ' Newport Auxiliary's 'Smr~e a' Art' success Br MABY SANE 8CAACELLO .............. ' TH'£ NJ:WPORT •uxlUary of th• CbUdren'• Home Society provtded an evenln1 of art for children'• sake with lta 12th "Soiree d'Art." Guesta enjoyed champape and hon d'oeuvre• while viewing artwork auctioned after an HAPPENINGS international dinner provided by Park A venue Caterers. ti'laes from many nations added to the worldl)' flavor of the dinner, held at the Plaza de Cate. In Irvine. • Cooked-while-you-wait tempura and tostadu, roast beef sandwiches, fresh fruit and a dessert table preceded a spirited art auction conducted by Robert Guggenheim. President Mrs. Hugh Sutherland welcomed him back (he's served as auctioneer at five previous solrees> and reminded iUeats that proceeds from the evening would 10 towahi the Children's Home Society's expanded child welfare services. Buyers of the 42 paintings showed a slroni preference for traditional styles and local scenes. One Newport Beach artist, Jo Ann Mb. offered to paint a portrait of the buyer's choice rather than put • com~--portrait up forr. Hi~ price ot eteiltnc went to ·• pu at ~ ' by Ray friea • Ind totaJ art HI were $28,.ciuu, a n•w SolrM retord Mn. Rudy Baron wae Jn cbarl• 'pf the $3$-&-pel"IOCl party, and IU WU aw.teCl b>' l(rt. Charles PHkerian, Kr1. Don Ru•t_•ll~ Mra. Gordoa Marshall, Mr1. Robert Rude, Mn. Jame• deBoom, Mn. James Rountree, Mn. Riobard Lockman, Mrs. Richard Carrlntton,I Mrs. Raymond De Mott, Mn. Robert Beechner, Rae Jean Ryan and Mn. Gared Smith. Arnont the art fan1 were Mr. and M'n. Ed Schrader, Mr. and Mra. Loren Dake, Mr. ~~ Mn. Per Trebler, Barbara Aune and Mr. and Mrs . .lack Buzzard. , HARP MUSIC was the appropriate background to a president's t.ea held for offtcen of the guild.I and cbapten 1upportin1 the Oran1e Count)C Music Center. • Mr. and Mrs. Harold Seeentrom opeoeld their Santa Alla home to the almost 200 who came from all over the county to 1lp cbampape or c~ee and enjoy the hors d'oeuvres catered b> the South Coast Plaza Hotel. John Rau, president of the Oran•e County Muaic Center. welcomed tbe croup, u dfd Elaine Redfield, chairman of the board of dJrecton. She began the tea tradition la1t year durin1 Mr,.s . Charles Pcukerian f leftJ and Mrs. Rudy Baron adnure one of the paintings auctioned at the Children's Home Society's·• Soiree d'Art." Genius kids ovenvhelming Stories about children who are geniuses absolutely antngue me l read about a little girl re· cently who, at the age of 7 months, was reading off the diaper box. At age 3, she read an instruction booklet out loud covering the 1040 tax forms. and one night when she was 2, she met her daddy at the door by reciting Shakespeare with a childish lisp, "ls thy name Robert a fair name? I'll have nc father if you be not him." That's putting it on the line. l read of another child who waa 2YJ years old, spoke five languages, pla)'ed the cultar and built bis own computer out of the telephone ln bia mother's kitchen. Yacht meet slated A panel of experta will provide tips and answer questions for ski'ppen and crews plannln& to enter the 1981 Ensenada Race afBalboa Yacht Club's Ensenada Send-Off Luncheon onThu~ay, April 23. ~ Festivities will begin with social hour at 11 a.m . and luncheon will be served at 12:15 at Balboa Yacht Club,1801 Bayaide Drive~Corona del Mar. This combined men's and women•• luncheon is open to all interested in the Ensenada Race. Make reservations by calling 673·3515. RUFFELL'S urHOLSTllY ~ .............. ltU MAUOl .. YD. I thinJc I got a Christmas n~wsletter from them last year. In fact, there are 2.5 million youngsters in this country who are certifiably gifted. Thirty.five of them lived on our block. It was very intimidating and I played the game as long as l could. Whenever all the mothers got together, th~ first liar didn't stand a chance. If I said my child had "slept dry'' for three nights, another mother said her child had not only stayed dry. but had sat up wttb two bedwetters who needed help to g~t through the nisht. If my child played "Theme From Dr. Zhivago" on his nose, the next mother informed the group that her toddler was cuest conductor for the Cincinnati Symphony next season. After awhile, I just couldn't keep up. They di•· covered my child couldn't speed-read when be was busily tracing his finger back and forth across six or seven books a minute -and the books were up· aide down. They discovered be bad indeed mixed bis own formula for hb bottle -but be was 7 years old at the time. ThioiJ really came to a bead one day w)len I was in the supermarket and uke:d my child to put a loaf of bread In my basket: He said be couldn't remember which one was mine and a mother of a 1eniua said. "You can't miss it. It'• the one with your brother in it." Did you know that. Elnat.ein failed bls entrance exams at Polytechnic ln1titut.e In Zurich? At times like that, it's nice to think abouL • OPEN HOI ISE ROSE CRAVEN PAT CULMER PEARL FIERSTEIN I •~ proud to ann~ee tf.e opening of COIT.A MllA-.141-1116 ·'THE GOOD LIFE TRAVEL'" /' 4'70 CAMPUS DRl\E NE~ORT BEACH, CA. 92660 714. ,,7 -6052 r • OeMy p ....... """- John M . .Rau (left), Margot Quon, Mrt. Har old Seger.tram, Sandrc Seger1trom and Linda Kidder at the Of'cinge County Mu.ic Center'1 pn~'I tea. her term aa president and was delltbted that Rau is continwnc it. "It's valuable to meet and compare notea,'' s he said. Support for the Music Center, oraanbed with the help of Georgia Spooner, is divided Into nine guilas in different areas of the county. Each &uild is divided into chapters, which now number43. "We limit each cbapt.er to a membenibip of 100, and when lt goes above that, they split into new chapters," Mrs. Redfield said. Money raised by the iroups will ao toward construction of a performing center near· South Coast Plua. H ARRY BABBITT will be h~nored by the Newport-Balboa Rotary Club at Its annual charity benefit Aprtt 2~ at the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach. After retiring from a show business career. Babbitt moved to Newport Beach, where he has donated hls talents at more than 200 community charity events. Reservations are $50 per person and include cocktam with a silent auction. dinner and a live auction as well as dancing to "The Society for the Preservation of Big Bands.·· Ticket information is available from James Lyons ~t 759·1515 or 640·9104. L OCAL WOMEN'S clubs were bil winners when the Orange District California Federation of Women's Clubs held their 25th annual convention in Buena Park. Among small clubs, the Ebell Club of lrvine won first place in nine areas, and Irene Iverson won the General-Junior Coordinator award. For medium clubs, Fountain Valley Women's Club won first in Gerontology, and the Women's Club of Huntington Beach won first in Consumer Concern, Legislation and Literature and Creative Writing. Among intermediate clubs, EbeU of Newport Beach won a first in Citizenship and Costa Mesa Women's Club won first in Publicity. With large c lubs, Wo men's Club of San Clemente took a first in Bulletin and Epsilon Sigma Omicron. Local scholarship winners include Laura Crain and Julian McGrath, sponsored by the Women's Club of Huntington Beach, who took first and second places in art. Cher yl Martineg won a second place in conservation and was sponsored b¥ the Ebell Club of Irvine. T.iE BIG Canyon Committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society plans to open a few doors for a home tour on April 24 Featured homes belong to Mr. and Mrs Frank O' Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. William Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. Maury DeWald and Mr_ and Mrs. Steven Toth. The tour will include such features as floral stained glass windows patterned after chintz fabric and an antique East Indian temple corbel. Tickets are S8 and include tea and light refreshment. Anyone interested in attending should call Mrs . Stuart Moore at 640·4926 or Mrs. James Herrell at 759·0378. Taurus: Focus on moderation FRIDAY, APRIL 17. 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <Mar. 21·Apr. 19>: Exchange ideas with individuals whose views appear to be opposite your own. You're in position to learn, to gain access to vital information. FocUJ on public resporues, le1al affairs and the overcoming of obstacles. TAVBlJS (Apr. 20-May 20 ): Focus on moderation, diplomacy reconciliation with family member. Libra, Scorpio and another Taurus figure lo scenario. Accent on employment, health, depeodentl and promotion of basic interests. Money iJ "on the way." GEMINI (May 21.Juoe 20): Creative and romantic interests are hilhllchted. Sianlflcant change occun -you'll obtain deflnltlon of term1 and will stream.line tecbn.iques. You alao 1aln glimpse ol operaUoDI that occur behind scenes. CANCEa (June 21.July 22): Older lndJridual aids in clo.ln1 tranaactton. Let to of lo1ln1 propoeltioo. You have "paid your dues." Pbcea, Scorpio and another Cancer flaure promlnenUy. Rebuildina proceaa ii under way. You'll be 'beneficiary. • LEO (July 23-Aui. 22): RecotniH nugieroua options. Unusual opportunity exhta to enhance poputartty and loaure security. One you respect seeks yGUP optnlon. Telephone call enJbles you to gain needed informaUoa. Aries I.I hi p•cture. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): New •ppro1ch brings profit. Accent on payment:a, coUectlou and locating ol mllsin1 material. Stresa independence, originality and pioneering 1plrlt. What you require will be handed you on proverbial 1Uver platter. L18JlA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Sense of direction ma NOW ENROL.LIN~ GUITAR CLASSES . comes mto sharp, clear focus You 'll be at proper place at right time Gain indicated through personal appearan(:eS Appeals bring favorable responses. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 l You 'll be participant in special group or club activity. You might be asked to appear before the media. Give full play to intellectual curiosity. Gemini, Libra. Aquarius persons figure in scenario. Dream! SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Revise, review, correct past rqistakes and start building on a more solid structure. Business investment HOROSCOPE will pay dividends.. Some of your fondest aspiratiom are close to becoming realities. CAPBJCOBN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) · You have more "working room." Gain indicated throu1h written word. Express feelings, communicate with superior and get view• on paper. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons fiiure prominently. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Good Moon aspect coincides now with distance, ability to articuiate views, travel and recognition of where you stand with loved one. Don 't force issues. Diplomacy is your ally. Financial reward Is forthcoming. PISCES (Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Delve beaeath surface Indications. Emphasis on investments, financial status of close associate, partner or mate. Define terms, avoid self-deception. Intuitive flash brings answers long sought. Romantic interests are heightened. ' Pri"*Y Cou,.. ..................... ege 4 tot ~d funciamentalt .......... 91 to 11 !tectone Of981'\, G.uttar ... , ......•..•.. All egee CompolttlOn., .......... : •.. ·:,.. Undlr 1ge 16 I I I .to bef, but ebe 1aya b~r healtb bas ti« belm the aame 1lnce. · la &enital berpa detectable throu&b a blood test? II IO, woUld It be too aWfuJ to uk a would-be lover to ptaeat a.cleap bill of health from • doctor beton aolq tp bed wlth him? . . l This may seem like a st.t.n1e anel un· romantic request, but you ltoow. Ann. Herpes Simplex II ls epldeQlfe in tbu country, -'1d there is no-cur• for lt yet. It isn't just tramps who 1et infected. You might trust your lover, but who knows where his previous girlfriend has been? No lecture on .morals, pleue -just some answers. Is berpe11 like syphilla - detectable? Is It unreasonable t.o expect a ~und·be·lover to accommodate such, a re· , • .. Oranga.Coaat DAILY ptLOT/Thuractay, Aprll 18, 1981 _______ __. PVBUC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUI IUllNIN IT •fhMINT M AU.00.MllfT MMIRAT .... fT .a o .. u.-·ofl Tl\e lotlfwlllt ....... It ..._ Dutl• "Cfl'l'lOUI llWHelN ffAM• -~ Tiie .............. -. .. -.n.:... ........ ~ .. ··; .... ~--~ ........ :.;...1a. ... ,, A COHITlll\l<;TION co ....... Ow ""~ ... flc)lll-llli1a .. "° _.._.. ~~~ 1st-Wt ,C..141 1MM.CA~t1. ,..me: ' ~ -•.,_·~-~-nu.at 819Mf de•~ lo ... _. to Ttal The-Si\l"t, 10.0 Meitl• It.. HUN1fNOTOH llACH Tll.I, MJlullj traumtued dJie ..... Wrtte to c.. .. AM .. ,c.oHv ''If' Ott"4r41 w .. 1. Mun1l1191•" --. at -ll!tLP/"'ana/ ... p-t-a•to Tl\h """-ill condo;<l9d h "'tft• M41Cll,Celi"'111•ttM1i -Dr. IU7Dno o .-IU , tlMdUel T ... 'fell,_ ~t Nf>llW ,.. Ca1lf. tatZ. Tl'•S.•ne Tul 1.,-red 10 .,. ... ,,, .. '" 0. ... 11 Tllll 11"'-1 .... flied •1111 llW C-lf Oil J-••. ltlO . J .. DEA'D ANN t!DERS• M b b d Coi;nty Clerto. ol Ote11 .. C011111v Oii AtroTre(t~!·l•C•lll~cor· .111 • · Y WI &D Merell 24, "" WOllOll, f1Jll ~rd Mr ... , Jjunt 1r•duated from a hool of denUatry and •u•n •11111on .. ec11. c.111or111• •»'7 ...,;..r" ed -1n Pub11-Orenoe '°"''OM•~ PflOt. Aero rrec• c;orp .,pen ah VI. ce owntown. He knew it Mt1u1~.••\.•. ,., , .. , ,,.., ... , "-1."'-11'""· '!odJuldd Itake. while to 1et efl•bU.bed, and Tl\lt ,:=-" .. Ill.a will\ Ille ..., , PVBt.lC NOTICE Covntr c1etll ., Orentt Co.,nh on Tbe problem la Bill'• relaUves. He did a M•rcni•.•"'· lot of w~k fl'• bia aunt and uncle and two 1T•T••llf1'0f'A...,DOU1M1•T ,.,,...,. "(' -0" UM Of' PwblltlWCI Orenw CH\I 0•11• PllOI, cousins (same family ). They l&nore his ,,nmouuuu••• MAM• Marc11 2'. Aprll t, '· "· "'' , .. ,., bUl1, which are mode1t compared to what '"' ,.......,.. ,..._ • ..... ,,.., Ille -ef U. llC'llU.W----: other denUsts charee. They say, "We went •v•tto"••,. LfM IT• o PUBUC NOTICE to BlU because be neecb experience. If we PAllTMHlt4tP, mt ,..,,. D•-a.. ... i -..., c:-..--. QH,.,,... ..... PICTITIOUli aultN•U NMM ITATaMllfT TIM,..._.,..~ It cloln9 IMIM· fteUH: 111.new ne wu 10 01 to charge us we would '"' "lcUu.. ..,_ .._ ,.. have 1one to a REAL dentiat." ..,., .. • -.w ... 11tot1 '" 0r-.. What &bouJd he do? -MAD AS HELL ?i':l:s 911 s.. 14• '"'· "'L• NO. Dear Mad: He 1hoalO iet 1mart ud leara from esperlence. All dental feet 1laoald be dlaeu11ed la advance. Tiii• m••u wit.la relatives. frieacb ... every-body. Parenti, what 1hould you do 1/ ~r teftl· a~r ti having anual relaticM? Ann l.Anders' new booldet~High School Sn and How to Deal With lt-,¥Guide for Teem and Their Parenti,'' givea no-non.teme advice on how to handle thu delicate lritualion. For each boolcUt. send 50 cents plw a long. stamped, ael/-addre,,ed envelope lo Ann L.onden, P.O. Boi: 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. •1~110 VAH IYK, t»t NoVe Dome, C..U MmN, Calffenlle ,.,._ •kNnl VAi\ IY'I Tl\11 ..-.-C ... Ill• •ilfl Ille c-•Y Ct«• et OrMtit c-v on Apr II 7, ltll . '"'*1"'" or.,,.. Coett o.u, ~•i.t. ..,II t, 1'-n, JO, 1'11 ,..,_., ------------ PUBLIC NOTICE ,,. .... THE ¥EOIA CO .. 200S w .. 1 9e1~ Stv• .• N-porl llUCI\, CA. Ht6J Wllll•m H. Morrlt, 11• ,. .. ._ Avenw,-...,,, S.e<ll, CA ,, .. J lllll ii..iMM ... '41ftdUC.leO by en In· dlvldV ... WIHleM H Morrlt Thll tlalenwnl w .. lllllCI wltll IM Cou111y c .. rtr. ol OrAn119 County on Al"ll J, 1 .. 1. • PUtfll Put>llth,ct Orenge C:O.tt Delly Piiot, ""'" '· ••. n. JO, '"' THE fl.t:CTRIC WINO, 1•11 Plect ftll•, CKI• Moe, C•lltornl• -t2U7 f"fCTITIOUI 8USINISS StepfW<I LethroP HIWl\llN..,, ~ NAM« STATUUNT Sent• Ana Avenue, Colle MaH, Tiie loll-Ing penon 11 dofn9 bull· Cellfornle ml'] ,,._, •1 Thi•""""'"'' cendutleO .. , en In· s STAR GENER"IL CONTllAC OIYIOUtl TORS, 11JO '#hltllef A....,ue, U. Costa Steptwn L. H11rnpnrey Mese,Cetllotnlet1'V Tllll ti.I-I wes filed wl\11 the ltOIEIU EOWAllv S TEI H · county Clerk of OrM\9e County on &ltOHER, 11SO Wllltt .. r Av..,ue, es, Aprll 7, '"' CotteMtw,C&lltornlet,.17 .,..... fl\lt _,,. .. fJ t-u<l•d by ... In· Puolll!Md 0r.,,.. c:-11 o e11r Piiot, dh11duet • April t, 16, U, JO,'"' 17»41 ftoOWI E. S .. lnt>r- PUBUC NOTICE- "ICTITIOUf 8UllNIH llMI• ITATIMINT TM --··· ........ . TA•GRT ~OIM ... f CO .. IN' w .. 1 .. ard War. Colla MeH, CA Wiiiiam ,. l'lltlltr. JI~ var H11111111,.ltfl e .. cl\, CA '1'4.. ' Tiii• IM!lllwu •• conch>Cwd llr 4111 oi.,....., . Wllllem P Putney ll\ll ~I ., .. llllKI will\ {,;. County Clerk Of Oreno-Cou"I~ f6 ~cn 2•, ne1 "'*" PublishtKI Or-cout Deily Plitt Mertll lt. ,Y.112, t, 1', lttl 1 .. ).11 "TtT P\IBUC NOTICE.-~ --,,CffTIOUS IUllNIH NAM« STATIMINT • I .. ll\t followm9 i-rson •• cloln9 bilt.I n1,t ., W"I rll!rtlOVRNE SERVI Cl$ lUl W•\l\ll\910'1, Co•t• Mel• '12•1t , J • m t ' T 8 u t n e n • ~ .1.M1 wu1111191on. Co&u -. •• CA '1•» Tl\I• bu\l~j I\ conOl><l•d by -".Ill• dl~idUtf I l • , j·-· T Buen.Mn ,, Th" , .. l•mer;il w•• ltlt'CI wllfl 6' Counly Cttr• ol OrtnQt c:eun1y "" Moren 1• l'ltl " .. ,,..., p.,01,.ned O••AQe co .. 1 D•••r ~/(cit M•rcn l• ""'" 1 ~ ••• "" UU.tt PUBLIC NOTICE PICTfTIOUI IUllNISS NAMl I TATEM«NT TM t0410Wl"9 ~ I> doing ~· ....... , CllE Al lVE M"lltK ETING CONSUL TING, l/tll Joto.in A- • llC. 1tv•ne,C•l•lort11•t2/IS GEORGE A LflOAl.. or-ef' CM, I rv1,,., C•ltlornl• t,11• Tll" b<lilnnt 1s conducleCI b' an In· dlvlOU•I ~~A LaldAI , Tll" >lettOmHll was llllKI ••11> the CouMy Cit•• of Oreno-County on APrtl / 1qe1 f'ISMG Publtshe<I °'-, ..... O•tly Pilot. "IPrll t , 1•, 11, lO, 1911 1129ef PUBLIC NOTICE fl\I\ 1441-l .... ltltd wnn the l'ICTITIOUS 8USINEU County C .. r, of Or.,119 C-"'Y on NAME STA.TEMENT Aprll 7, '"' l'Ufftt Tno followln9 c>erM>nJ •'• d1Jf11 f"ICTIYIOU18UJINllS PubllshedOrtnge CCMl•t Delly Pilot, l>u\l~•;~~'EMS HOUSE .... .MJ. NAME ITATIMINT Ajllll t, ••• U, 10. ••• _1111-11 RIPl•Y o ..... Cypfth C•lllor~ The followln11 person• art doing ~. bU\ll'IUU\. PUBLIC NOTICE 1..•rrv W•ll•• OlnQu\, 1a E. ~ "ORCHID CLEANERS," 1~4t Strttl a 8101 C~I• Mittw (llll<o#ftk Easter FaShion Sale! PUBLIC NOTICE LEVl~STUDENTSS3299 CORD BLAZERS ~young man will I~ his "Sunday besl" in this wlde·IM!le corduroy blazer ~ le\ll's T radlttons Assorted colors, siudent Siles 14 20 Regularly sso. STUDENTS' LEVI'S SLACKS Student's rwtll slacks ~Levi's are a handsome complement ro 1heir blazer Student wasil sizes 25·30; in 1an or ~ blue pa~er. L1m11ed supply. Regularly S19. COOL MADRAS SHIRTS FOR MEN Cool. comfortable short s~ Madras shirts are grear for warmed· up weather Choose from assooed plaids in conon/poly Men S·M·L· XL Regularly S22.50. LEVI'S ACTION s1 s99 SLACKS FOR MEN Comfort rs lhe name ol the game. and you can't beat Actfon Slacks from le\ll's Sf>of1~r . Their 2 WlloJ strelch wais1band puts a man 111 ease, in style1 Assorted colors, men's waists Slyle 11-9027 Regularly S25. Stile priers "" good thrv 4118 ... t11k wpp/1rs I.ts/ ~ shov.n ire rtpr~tan ... ol the~ BLIND FAITH JR. WRAPDRESS $19.99 All adorable spring Slyle. il's a wrap dress with tie shoulders. In prints and pasjtl stripes for junlOl'S 5· 13. Regularly S26. MEN'S "NAUTILUS" BY STREETCARS $34.99 581.e on the popular "Naulllus •· shoes by SCrectcars. In ran; men'ulzn. SMe #1201. Ragulertv $46. • Catch tf!e April savings! OX#AltO 200 EfP/Ml<Jf Dn't'f oppo11ft Tiit EsplMtMle ctnttr 8051415·~ l'AIADlllA 3660 E Foothlll 8~. ltostmHll & Footh1H 2131578·1692 /lfJlllTI Hit.LI 111$1 E Col/ml. HJI of Pllfflll Hilts Mill 213/H'-6121 M'lfltMJI 3502 r~ IN1' tlOor to Thi TfNl1/f1 114/611-1322 ...... OMI 1520 ~Ill Hll'/l lfWJ. 11U1 to HllO/lt• M1rUl 213111J·2511 IMITA MM 3430 S B111ltl A#. t/4-111111 "°""of S~ CO.II Pll.11 7141"1·1100 IAllTA IMWA 120 Stiff St, In Ol>wn'°'"' Slllll 9irw1 '°51NN345 Sii """" ~ :::;· '°· TIJ.W·Slt to.T. $Ult fM TOMl*:l 21124 ~ ltd. l/4·m#t "'41111 of Dfl Amo 2131173-IJf' Wfft'lll#ITflt 15412 SI St, ntd lo G°"1ftl Wttt Colltgt 1141•-IHt I • Ad•m ' Avon"'· Coit• ""•'•· ,,.,, C•11:;~~HG LH ~ _,_,...., "~~~~!:~!·::r C•rooyn $l\afVlOt1 Jtnlltn\. M41Mt. Orlvt, L• Pel,.,.., C•lif~nlt tOU3 r11e following ~rM>n> ••• oo.nv lltpley Ortvt (yprtu C•l•lor11lt H~A YOUNG LEE ,._, M•N-bu••ne" •~ ~JO Orlvt , L• Ptl,,..,Callf~nlt9062l. rHf TRANSFER F"ICTOR¥ llU/0 Tn1> bu .. nt u •> <ondu<lrd by t Tllll busjness I> condu<l9d bY ., In· Butn 81•d., H.,nungton 8t•U>, CA v•ntrol pertMr"'•P dlYldlll l RICky ()to1V11$ S.mutl•. 10141 (•II•• Urry Wdlltr O•nq•\ WON YOUNG LEE Burn'"'" H\11\hngton s .. cn, CA Tl"' •i.ttmenl WI• t11eo .,,,,. Ult Tiii> s~t wet Ill.a •llll Ute Cnrl\llr>a S.,,,...IS. 10~•1 C•"•• Burn Counly CloH ol Oun9" Counly 9fl county Clerk of Or.n~ Co<lftty on Ctrtlt 11 .... 11nvton &u<.n CA April 1 1911 40tll1" 1•i '""Out•"•"'' 1\ tondut f•·O b'f' Ft....., PlfMH nu•bono ano-..1tt PuD"•"*" 0.-'°"'' O•••v Piiot, Pullllllleel Or-CCMISt Delly Pllo1. RtOV S.muel\ "lprll ..... 1l JO. "" ....... Aprll t, t•.1l, l0, 1 .. 1 172 ... 1 Tht> si..-1 wi\ "'"° .,,,,. '"" - ---Counly Clorlt ot Or""~ Counly on PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUllNllS NAME. STATHHNl Tn• foo•-•na per'°" ll oolnQ !><Isl· """ .. CUS T O M OE SIGN SAH08L"15TIHG, ldl2 S•nt• F• Aven.,., Cao4~1r..,.. S.IKh, C.llfornlt m1• Brien J-&..re-, JI.., L06 litto•. Sen Juan Capl1tr-. C.~0<nl• $7S Thi• --",_ ... br.,. 1n dlvldu•I 9rl_, JtmH 9..n:ombe Thi> stat-I w•1 lllllCI with - Cownty Clerk ol or.,... C0<1nly °" Aprll 1 '"' Pl PvblllhtKI Oranve Coe•I O•lfl Piiot, April t, t•, 2J JO. lttl I 12MI PUBLIC NOTICE Marc n 1•. 19tU FUUto PuOltt.n.d Or...-.ot Coa\I CJ•1ly P1101. M•r<ll i.. """"I. 9 •• lo/II ...... PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTl('F: SUPEIUa.ICOURTOI' CALIFOtlNIA,COUHTY OF ORANGE 011.0IER TO SHOW C4UU l'Oll CH"INGE Ofl NAMIE P1HHCWM", J.,,. RO\"' !..e•n ha1 filed 1 0tUtlon'" tn'-' court •or trt or- der •llo.,tnv iw1t1toner lo t"•"llP "-r n •m• from J1nr AoS\~r $1•rt to Oorollly J-R~r II " llerot>v .,..ci.rea th•I 111 pe•IOM lnterttftd In Uw ,,,.tttr •forn.e1d •r>-"*" belort ll\ls co..rl '" O.~rl~ Ho. J ti 700 Cl•I< Center Orio 111/elt. San••,..,., Ct lll0<nl•, on M•~ ,,, '"'· et 10 lO o'tlD<~ • m , •nG tll@n ano ll\er• ,,_ t-. 11 any they h•••. wlly Mid peUtJon IO< tn.not OI -'"°"fd nol i.11<.,,teG II Is lurthtr -red lhll • c°"" of \hi' orcMr to "'°"' c.avn tw PYDfltMCI In Delly Pltot. • ,,.wspellfr of 91'1erel <lrtul•tlon, P<Jl>ll~htd In lllh tountv •I IMll on<t • ., .. , for lour conse<utl•• wttlll ,.,lor to \NI Clay o4 \aid he"'~ OATEO A&l<ll 7,_ t•t &l'fUl..t:W SUMNEll, Jvelgltof I he Super lot Court DANllLJ.COOPIE•. IESO NUNTlll&VOSS ~.o .... ,.,,, Irv ... , c:.tlfenll• tVU C7141 tss-1 .. 1 P'*lfllled Oranga CCM11t Dolly I"-. All<"'· ••. n. JO. '"' '':n• -PUBUC NOTICE ' l'ICffTIOUS 8UltN•U NAMI STATali\aMT Tlt9 foUowlno per10n1 erf dOI bu•lneues: THE GOOD LIFE TRAVEL, t ~:;,""' 0r1.,., ....._, .. ectl, ~ Row c,..-.... C.pe Cod, !NIM. CA '111• ' P•lrl< .. Culmer. OIS Seton 8M41.l Irvine, CA '11U I 'I , Tfll1 bual,,.u 1$ c""duct..i lir • 9enertl pe~t/\lp, I RoteCre..i Patricia CUimer Tllll _......_. wM tiled wlUI tlO Cwnty C-al OrenQll °" "-"" 71 "" Nwrlt I~, lllC. •11• c ..... Orlft, ...... t No•fM(t ...... CA. taMt Publltlltcl Or ..... Coe.e Delly Piie\, April t, ll, ll, JO, t•t ltl\ .. I PUBUC NOTICE "• . I r I ·' .. l I quality in fashion ·~rid services ; ..... .. Experience the iOy of spring with beautiful si• flowers · . and unique gifts. Wc§tcltjf CDr'ltrs In the comer betwetn 1100 lmne Ave. Savon & Mmttet BaUet Newport Beach with that personal touch • • • m~s ·am1es., 19ens • -. • ' SCNU.ETT OHMA . . . ~ ....... --....~ . The fW1otious oppoachto ~fcrthe prom ... with 50ft ruff* 9':ifnmif IC) the ~~~ into o circle,, delicof9 &w.s on volie. I 132 Irvine Ave. Newport Beod-1 • '+"~ I , . ' 631~ Share Easter .. joy Remember fri~nds and family wtth beautiful Hallmark cards for Sunday, Aprll 19. © 1~ H1llm1'1\ ~'°':Inc WID6WOOD MITM .... ~ ..,_~MllllH ,..,.,.., ..... ....., ............. • Come see our new Spring Colle~tion . . . as soft and colorful as a rose . CHILH84'S WIAI I OU Im., Wntclff Pima Mewportheclt . # . • Postal Service gets ready to issue new stamps ... C5 ' Greedy Laso rd& • "wanting SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Tom my Lasorda would like to see his Dodgers do a little more hilting. ' It's the kind of •reediness any other baseball mana1er wouJd understand. "A couple of the guys haven't done much hitting yet -Davey Lopes, Dusty Baker -but we've gotten well-pitched ballgames the limes we haven't scored a lot of runs." Lasorda said Wednes· day night. BURT HOOTON, z.e, and re· liever Bobby Castillo supplied the good pitching as the Dodgers remained unbeaten through six games of the 1981 season, beat· ing the San Franc!isco Gianlll 4·2. Hooton also had two hits, in· eluding a two-run double In the fourth inning, to help himself en route to his 10th straight victory at Candlestick Park. "We've had great pitching. hitting and defense," Hooton said in describing the Dodgers' roaring start, the best by the team since the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers opened with 10 straight victories. "1 was on that team ," said Lasorda. the onetime relief pitcher "1 warmed up in the bullpen a lot but never pitched in those 10 games. We didn't need relievers much." Shooty Babitt got back safely as the ball squirts past Rick Burleson. Babitt wasn't just safe -he advanced to third base. THE GIANTS, who were hot at the end of spring training and hoped it would carry over to the regular season, are 2·5 after be· ing swept by the Dodgers In the three-game series w.hich ended Wednesday night. !:la~~:·r~= .Goat horns to Hassler at Santa Anita Armas' three-run homer turned the trick, 5-3 .. Maybe the timing is right for us lo go on the road. Maybe we can relax and start hitting," said Jack Clark, whose batting average dipped to .172 with an O-for -4 effort against Hooton. ~RCADIA (~P l -; Today's r~ing card at Santa Anita was c1ttceled late Wednes8ay after· aeon. but It appears that the boycott of thoroughbred horse owners and trainers against the track won't last more than the one day. The Horsemen's Benevolent and Proledive Association de· cided to postpone a final vote on an advance training proposal until this morning, m aking it too late to put together a card for that day The horsemen had,refused on Tuesday to enter norses for Thursday in a protest over de· tails of the advanced training program. Racing went on as scheduled Wednesday. In past years, the racing as- sociation has made its tracks available for the preparation of unraced horses upon the closing of each track's season. Citing in· creased costs, however, the as - sociation had designated the half· mile Los Angeles County Fair· grounds in Pomona for advanced training. The owners and trainers said the Pomona facility was inade· quate for training and they· bad 8w EDZJNTEL of'tlw Dally ~llllt SW! For nearly three hours Wednesday night, the Angela had seemingly risen to first two aames of this series, finally came alive somewhat Wednesday aa fo~ Lhe first time thls year, the club went into double figures In hita (10). after going to a 3-0 co~nt on Dwayne ~urphy Hassler completed the walk to Murphy afJd then walked pinch-hitter Cliff Johnson to load the bases. Frank Robinson. the Giants' new manager, was asked what pleased tum about the team dur- ing the season -o pening homestand, and his answer.was understandably short: "The pitching and Larry Herndon." the cries of the fans. o. The boo birds were sitting quietly in their places, chirping only when another fellow fan dropped an easy pop foul or when Oakland A's Manager Billy Martin trotted out to the mound. But in this already crazy 1981 season, if it's not one thin~. it's been another for But these A's are fiesty. Oh , are they riesty. Lucky No. 7 for the A's came along when Tony Armas' three-run eighth inning homer sailed over the waU in deep left center field It was the second game win· ning blast for 27-year-old right fielder from Venezuela in this series, as Oakland won its seventh consecutive victory and third over the Angels. 5.3 before 27 ,371 at Anaheim Stadium. 'Today I'm the goat, tomorrow I may be the hero. That's how it goes .' HENDERSON SCORED when pinch· hitter Tim Hosley grounded into a forceout, setting the stage for Armas' fourth homer of the year . The A's added a run in the ninth on an RBI single by Murphy before Hassler gave way to Don Aase who got the final two outs. Rick Langford (2·0) went the distance again In beating the Angels for the sixth consecutive lime and giving the A's their sixth complete game of the season. But a possible problem on the pitc hing staff developed Wednesday night. Starter Ed Whitson. 0·1. hurt his back slid· ing in the fifth inning and was sent to a hospital for examina· tion. HERNDON. BATTING .407 through seven games, tripled off Hooton in the second inning and scored on Mike Ivie's sacrifice fl y, and he singled home a run in the eighth. Jim Fregosi 's frustrated troops. This time. it was the bullpen which let down He wasn't particularly sharp but good enough for Armas and the rest of the op- portunistic A's. ARMAS' HOMER CAME off reliever An· dy Ha·ssler (1-1) after starter Jesse Jef· ferson had allowed his first run of the even· ing on three walks and a ground ball. The Angels (3-4 ) had gone out to a 3·0 lead with the aid of four hits by shortstop Rick Burleson. Burleson hiked his average to .444, singl· Ing home the first run of the game in the third inning and. tripling to lead orr the six- th, scoring on a sacrifice fly by Fred Lynn JEFFERSON, WHO COMPILED a 4·13 record at Toronto last year but who earned a spot in the starting r~ation this spring with a 1.99 ERA in seven exhibition ap- pearances. allowed JUSt two hits through 711.! innings before tiring. "'He (Jellerson) motloned lo me and so we went to Hassler.' Fregosi"said. "He was our best reliever last year a nd I thought he could do it." HAS.SLER, WHO WAS 5·1 with a 2.49 ERA for the Angels after being acquired forom Pittsburgh in June of 1980, ex- plained that nine times out of 10, he would have thrown the same pitch to Armas that he hit out of the ballpark -a fastball. "Only I wouldn't have put it up high like I did. He (Armas) just hit the hell out of the The Giants open a road trip Friday night, facing the Atlanta Braves, and the Dodgers will be in San Diego to play the Pa~res . The Dodgers have allowed a total of 12 runs in their first six games and have committed only three errors. Two of those er- rors, by shortstop Bill Russell and left fielder Baker, came in the fifU1 inning Wednesday night bud did not lead to any San Francisco runs ball. , The Angel bats, all but silenced in the With one out in the Oakland eighth, Rickey Henderson walked and Jefferson, who had atiowed only two hits, came out "ft was too bad because 1 felt good when I came in. I'm a short reliever and I enjoy (See ANGELS, Page CZ> Keough's himself again After 'hellish' years with Charlie 0., he's happy ~ Th.ey used to call these characters who wear the green and yellow, Charlie's A's. That's not to be confused with Charlle's Angels. These guys were anything but Angela when Charlie 0 . Finley took over as the personally-appointed Master of all Operations f9r the then Kansas City Athletics. Under Finley. the Athletics and later the Oakland A's got reputatlon.s u bratt. And they earned it despite tbelr winning habit.a, including th~ world champlonahlp glory yean of the 1970.. BUT AS THE BIGGBST BRAT ot Lhem ' all, Re1ate Jackaon mi8ht have 1~d. "Tbe devil made me do it." And gues1 who the devil was? · They're no tonier Charlie's A's. Charlie la 1one and aa much u they like to aay 19--none of today'• ~'s mJ.sa him. Matt Keoup, wbO~eveJoped b1a own· klnd of reputation ln 9, ii one of today'a A'I, the cbeerler, btJ Y·to-lucky A'• of General Manaaer antf I eld Manqer BW7 MarUn . Keoqb, the at-year.old aoo ol fonner major leaiuer Marty~ec>Qlh and ntpbew of Joe Keouib, once oullleldtr for th~ A '1, waa the lau1 ln11tock of tbt American Learu• for e lOftl, horreDdoul 1ea1on two yean a10. Tbat wu th9 year that tbt Corona cltl Mar Hlp 1raduate macU major leasue bl1&0r1 by Joems b1a ftnt 14 tarts o1 tu year. ft8t wu tbe )'ear ot a 2·11 MUOD· endlnc reeons Ud an EaA ot ioa. '«Oii IUU-Jflt; 1'4 be . . a fool to say I didn't ." Keough sa.1d earlier this week as he awaited his tum to pitch tonight against the An1els at Anaheim Stadium. "But the first thing I think of when I think of that nightmare is Charlie. Playing for him wrui, weH, hellish." Hell turned to heaven for Keough and the rest of the A's in 1980 however when , 'But the first thing I think 'of when I think of that nightmare is · Charlie. Playing for him \U)as, well, ?iellish.' Finley sold the club to a IJ"OUP of youn1 bu1lne11meo •llo bad made their fortunes by the Ifft ol thelr panta -literally. Tbat WH th• Levt Strauaa Cd. In' the three aeuom prior to i.o, th• A'• had nGt'won eo •amea ln any one of them. In Keouah'• dllutrou• 1'71, the A'a bad their wont year ln t•o decades, wlnnlnl U and l011na 108 under Manaier Jlm Mar1haU. But with Martin came a new at· moepMre. ~b refen to It •• "my iecond(am11J." , TBI a&1uv1:4TBD A~ Ju1Dpid ltOm aei:u' .r•ce ID tbt AL W•ten Dtvlllon -a•11niont 1.:~ 'J>;, ~. wlUt btJp from. auuft and f ~ I pitching coach Art Fowler, a long lime as- sociate of Martin, also dramatically turned things around. His record Improved to 16-13 and his 2.92 ERA ranked fourth in the league. His 20 complete games was third best in the league behind teammates Rick Langford and Mike Norris and Keou•h earned the Sporting News Comeback Player of the Year award. Suddenly, Keough is himself •lain, feel· Ing confident. It's a far cry from the day1_ when he felt embarrassed every time bl took the mound. "1'HAT YEAR TAUGHT ME some awful lessons ~bout life," Keou1h, who en· ten bis second start of the seuoa tonltbt alter allowtn1 Juat six hlta ln a S--0 blank· lnt of Minnesota latl Saturday. "l alto learned what humiliation meana. I cbertab every lime J aet the chance'° pitch now." Keouab, wbo played baae'ball, buketbaU and go.tl al Corona del Mar before aotna OD to UCLA u a pre-law major, la to thll da7 pu11led about wbat cauaed hit downfall In '71. But he'• net punuln• t.be matter. "I could 1ay that the ankle J broke lD a plck·\IP buketbaU 1ame Juat before th• Haaod ·~ bwt me but that would bt a cop out.'' be aaid. ''I 1lmplJ didn't ha,. conndence like I do now.•• lnttead, Keou1b tallrl about wbat \ brou,rrt him back and about today a.Del tomorrow. U,\aT (l'OWLB•> O&DD•D •• to 1top tAtowina tb• aUder, to Juat ~· trate OQ the a.Di• Md e'*"9 ball. aid It •eovoa, .... c1,~ I ~ KJvericks oo~ V..gDµa's SarDtisOn From APdllpa&ebH . CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va. -Dallu m Mavericks owner Donald Carter bu met witb University of Vir1inla basketball star Ralph Sampson and presented a specJally produc.S videotape on hls National Basketball AlaoclaUon team and tbe Dallas area. The two met Tuesday in the office of Vlrlinta Coach Terry Holland. The 7 ·4 sophomore center led tbe Cavaliers to the Atlantic Cout Conference regular-season title this seuon and a berth in the NCAA Final Four. "I've asked Ralph several times, 'Is there a dollar fi1ure that you Yt'ould 10 for?· " Holland said. "And every time, be has tolst me, 'No.' " "He's curious about the money, bul not obsessed by it. He knows ~·s 101n1 to Sa pson be wealthy. It's juat a matter of wben be m becomes wealthy.'' The tape shown by Carter included a 1eneral look at the • city. a segment Crom Mavericks General Mana1er Norm Son· ju, a coaching philosophy discussion by Coach Dlcll Motta, and comments from Roger Staubach and Drew Pearson on business opportunities In the city. Sampson h~ until midnight, April 25 to declare his lnten· lion of being eligible for the 1981 NBA draft. Five days later, Dallas and the Detroit Pistons will nip a coin to decide who has the No. l pick in the June 9 draft. QUOTE OF THE DAY Dodger Manager Tommy Latonia: "A mana1er probably makes more decisions ln the course of one gamethan a businessman makesinanentire week." GERVIN'S BUCKET SPURS SAN ANTONIO Swift San Antonio forward Geor1e m Gervin hat a back-breaking basket with 13 s econd!\. to play Wednesday to give the Spurs a 101 -96 N<At1onal Basketball Association Western Conference semifinal playoff victory over the Houston Rockets The Spurs. facing elimination in the best·of-seven series. evened the playoffs at three games each with the de· cisive eventh game scheduled Friday in San Antonio. The Rockets, trying to become the first team in • :~ -~· 13 years lo reach a conference final with a losing regular season record. has edged ahead of the aggressive Spurs early in the fourth quarter on four straight baskets by Rockets center Moses Malone, who scored a game-high 36 points. .Guards Maurice Cheeks and Lionel Hollins each scored 20 points and Philadelphia repelled a final quarter rally to beat Milwaukee 116·99. and take a 3·2 lead in their Eastern Con· Gervin ference series. Sidney Moncrief and Mickey Johnson each had 20 points for the losing Bucks. Guard Walter Davis scored 16 of his 20 points in a pivotal first half and veteran forward Len "Truck" Robinson grabbed 20 rl'bounds as Phoenix fought off elimination and defeated Kansas City. 101 89 The Phoenix victory cut Kansas City's lead to 3 2 in the best of seven Western Conference semifinal 'i('rl('S OILERS OWNERS SENDS FANS TICKETS EDMONTON. Alberta -Some of them don't m know at yet. but the Edmonton Oilers 17,000 season ticket holders hiive become the owners of season tickets for the Edmonton Drillers of the North American Soccer League. At a news conference Wednesday, the Drillers said team owner Peter Picklington. also owner ol the National Hockey League Oilers, had decided lo reward Oller fans for their support by sending them "free" sea,on tickets to the Drillers. The plan will allow Oilers ticket holders to see the first three Orillt•r home games free. After the th.ird game they have the option to purchase the rest of the season ticket package or return the remaining tickets at no charge. The Drillers have 4,100 reguJar season ticket holders. Last year they averaged about 11,000 a game in the 43,000· seat Commonwealth Stadium. Farewell to Louis F.ans, friends pay last respects LAS VEGAS I AP I Fans and friends of Joe Louis paid t~eir I ast respects to the Brown Born ber today when his body was in repose in the sports pavilion at Caesars Palace where he had watched so many prize fights. , Family s pokeswoman Ella Kay Mays said the body or the former heavyweight boxing c h ampion will be rlown to Wash.ington. D.C .. on Friday for burial 't'tth full military honor• at Arllneton National Cemetery. Earlier plans had called for burial here. but Mays said plana were chan&ed after a ,eall from the White Houae. Army officiab said ln Wuhin1ton that Presi- dent Rea1an had ordered that Louis be buried at ArUn1ton. A number of current and former boxtn1 champions wu expected to be on hand at lhe m emorial 1ervlce, lnckadln1 Holmea, Muhammad All, Ken Norton, Su1ar Ray Robinson, Floyd Patterson and flaht pro- moter Don K1n1. The day lona vlewtn1 w1ll be followed by memorial aervlcn where the Rev. Je11e Jack.Ion . wllJ preteot the eulol)'. . Loult, M, died Sunday mom· tn1 of card11c IJ'."fft. Hl• cuket ••• placed lntlde a boxln1 rln1, accordinJ to a .cau~ Palace sp0ke1woman, and mourners were able to cUmb up a platform to IM rtq apron for vtewtn1. ' "H• WOuld bava wanted lt Udl 1·w1y,'' 1ald Louil' .Ut, Matb.a. • "He wouJd have wanted to be in a sports arena. It seems ap· propriate." The public bega'b lo pay its respects Wednesday morning at Palm Mot'tuary where the casket containing Louts' body, rtanked by two uniformed, helmeted enlisted men from nearby Nellis Air Force Base, lay in a quiet viewln1 room. A neatly fdlded American fla1 wu tucked into a corner of the open casket. • Louis' last ni1hl had been spent at the Larry Holmes· Trevor Bet'btck heavyweiaht U· tle fight at Caesars Palace where he wu accorded a stand· ln1 ovation when be waa wheeled Into the arena. Confined to a wheelchair tiJlce 19'77 ..men he 1uffered a stroke and UD· derwent heart turaery, .tb• former champion atteaded many boxini matebea and other sperta functfom in Lu Ve1u. Louts , wbo held tbe heavyweiaht title for 12 yean and defended lt 25 tlmt1 between 1937 untU be reUred ln ltO, became a 1ymbol ·of patrtotilm to Americant lJ) the dark days ol Wol'ld War D. Ht Joined the Army, put on dounl of exh.lbltlon boUtl, and dbftated pur1.. from aeveral filhlt to mlUtlr1 relief fundl. £ntatainer Bob Hope, wbO at· t•ndld m•1 ftlbtl with LOUtt chu1al tba war 1: q.-ct IWD • HJtl'll at -~.:!..1f1•,. ..... na win tbit war beoauseOOil'a • our aide." Y ASTRZEMSKI TYRNS ANOTHER CORNER v..,.an C.rt Y~lllilllll droY• tn thrM nau •. tn bi1198l American aiue debut w..-..11 ...,. TM)' Pwel bit a l·blown two-nm bom•r u Botton defeated BaJUmore, 1·2. Tbe 41·7ea1-old Y11tnemlki llMd a two-nm lloil• tn t.be fourth tonm1 f«W h1t l,llOtb ~ leque bit .. ~ l>Mlpated b.ltter AJ OU•tf', mired tn a 2..for·ll alump, keocked ln thr• runa wttb a homer. double ad a lletder'lf cbotce 1rou.nder to back the tolld pltcbln1 of Doc II~ and Texu rolled to an 8·0 victory over Cltiveland . . . 8obb7 Molluro'• pinch ·~'!ce fty ln tho etOtb •cored 11....W a to CUT)' the Cblc110 White Sox to a Ml~ over llUwall.ket. Tbo victory werit to err Boyt (Z--4), who allowed' two bl tbl lut °''" innint• . . . Dan a-.ema ~ a alx·bitter in hb '11 debut ancJ. Al Coweu tripled home a run to lead Detroit to a •.o trlumpJI over Kanau City. LaJ'ry awn. 0.1, 11ve up aeven bijl ln abaorbin, the loea al Det.rolt 1wept a tw~1am1 eet . Oteat Gam~le'• t0lo homer and DaYe "1alleld'1 two-run 1ln1led keyed a ftve·tun fourth imPhC that carried the New York Yankeea to a 1-3 victory over Toronto ... aJc-.a. Ziik and Joe SAmpeaa each knocked in two rum and Jerry Doll Gleaa. pitched four-hit ball for seven. lnnin11 u Seattle de· feated Minnesota, S.S. CARTER'S CLUTCH HITS BEATS CUBS Gary Caner sin1led home Aadre Da"'" from Ill tblrd base to c~ a two-run raUy ln the ellbt.b ln· nln1 as Montre opeDed it.a l3tb home teuon with a 5·4 Lriumpb o er the Chica10 CUbs Wednesday. Playln1 before ~1003 in temperaturu announced at 39 de1rees at aame UIJle. the ExPQS struck for three second· innin& l'Wll with tbe belp ol two erron by Chlca10'1 Ina DeJesm . • • Houston's Nolu &ya• allowed three hit.a ln seven lnn.inp and surpa11ed Bob Glbeoe on' the all-Limef strikeout Utt wben he moved hit career wbilf liat put the 3,117 plateau. Ryan aave way to Fruk Lacorte in the eighth and the two combined tor a 2·0, victory over Atlanta . . . Gary Mat· thews' leacloff home run off Enrique Romo ln the bottom of the 11th gave Philadelphia a •-3 victory over Pttt.tburgh. Matthews smacked a 2-0 pitch deep over the left. center field fence after Pitt.sbur1h loaded Cann · the bases in the top of the 11th, but were turned away empty-banded a1ainJt Ta& McGraw . . . Dou& Flynn sintled home two nmi and Mootie wu.oa tripled in two more u the New York Mets dumped St. LouJs, 5-3 ... Dan Drtasen and Geor&e Fo.&er eacb homered to help Mario Soto win his first game of the year u Cincinnati swept Its three-same series with San Diego with a 10-1 romp. BASEBALL TODAY On this date i,n baseball in 1978: Bob Forsch of the St. Louis Cardinals hurled a no· hitter to beat the Philadelphia Phillies 5-0. On this date in 1972: Burt Hooton of the Chicago Cubs no-hit the Philadelphla Phillies 4-0. \ On this date in 1940: Bob Feller or the Cleveland Indians fired the only Opening Day no-h.itter in major league history. beating the Chicago White Sox 1-0. On this date in 1938: The St. Louis Cardinals shocked the baseball world by trading pitching ace Dizzy Dean to the Chicago Cubs for pitchers Curt Davis and Clyde Shoun and outfielder George Stainback. RAIDERS ' DAY IN caJRT NEARS The oft·delayed antitrust suit trial, in which • the Oakland Raiders and the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission have brought action against the National Football League, is now scheduled to begin on May 11 . . . Salt Walt.her has been added to the list of drivers for the Indianapolis 500 on May 24 Claud~ Ruel, who guided Montreal to a divisional championship and third place overall in the 1980-81 National Hockey League season. resigned as head coach . . . Bob Beamon, the world record holder and 1968 Olympic gold medalist in the long jump (29·2~ feet). has been appointed head track and neld coach at York College. . . VWanova University ls dropping its football program after tr1 seasons, effective Immediate- ly . . . The United States ice hockey team overcame a 6-4 deficit and defeated West Germany, 10·6, In the world cham· plonship5 in Goteborg, Sweden . . . Ase House finished strong to win the La Puente Stakes by 1 ~ lengths before 26, 191 at Santa Anita under the hand or Biil Shoemaker. TELEVISION, RADIO TV: No events scheduJed. RADIO: Baseball -Oakland at Angels. 7:30 p.m .. KMPC (710). . From Page C1 ANGELS. • • lhat pos1t1on. Today 1·m the goat. tomorrow I may be the hero. That'showlfgoes." In the other dressing room, A's Manager Billy Martin was feeling better than the nieht before which was pretty good .. "Ir 7 ·O isn't rolling. nothing is," he said. "It's great. The klds are excited and we're going home Friday to a sold-out crowd. I'd take 7-0 any tlme of the year." And so would the Angela. Toni1ht, former Corona del Mar Hilh star Matt Keou1h (1-0) takes the mound for the A's a1alnat rookie Mike Witt (0-0), a product of Servite tush in Anaheim. ..J Friday nlaht, the Minnesota Twlnt are ln town for a three· 1ame weekend Ht. "I think we're 1tartln1 to bit the ball a UtUe better now," Fr•aos~91 said optamlatlcally. ".Jesae pitched extremely 1VtU, Ha11ler Juat overthrew • olt. '' A•~ed about the boolnc flltar· ins down from lhe stands to th• field durlft1 .A(Jlel mlsf orwn ... Freaoet tald, "They'r~ entwed to boo." *' AHlLftOTal-1"" A._ =t=•t Mia ... t•t et Me"'9M ~ty ttHI tc 1ttY .,, .. , .. .., ........ ,...... ... -"'''*" CtMt.i• •.• ,.,,.,...._ .. ~u..-.. ._ ............... ~....,,.._.,_.l~.NMCll, .. m ... Q'1 ..... n.~...,. ...... "'··... ..... .. -... A, "·* .,..,... ..,,_ ........... . wtllt f'9l't .................. ... .................................. _ oc ....... "c:::t='•••-....,.,.. ....... .. A't----ri•111••~--n1111 ltil .................. . ...... ..... .... AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L· Pct. GB Oakland 7 O l.000 Chicago 3 J .750 2"'2 .\Dleil 3 4 .429 4 Texas 2 3 .400 4 Seattle 2 4 .333 41h Kansas City 1 3 .250 41h Minnesota 1 S .167 5"'2 East Division Detroit New York BalUmore Boston Milwaukee Toronto Cleveland 4 1 .800 - 3 2 .600 1 2 2 .~ l~ 2 2 .500 1" 2 2 .500 1~ 2 3 .400 2 1 3 .250 2~ -. ..... ................ ....._ Matt Keough i8oneof Oakland'syoungp~. From Page C1 KEOUGH READY • • • worked," Keough said "He and Billy also taught me how to win and how to win in bunches.·· He's been doing a lot of that lately as part of a dynamic.' five· man rotation that has all the baseball world turning heads. Still. all that training and superior coaching isn't worth the price of a resin bag without the psychological comfort that only a caring and understanding front office can provide "The first thing the new owners disposed of was the multi·year contracts." Keough, who himself is in the fifth of a six-year pact said. "lthink that's great It takes the pressure off the guys going out for personal goals to try and hve uptohighsalaries " "WE ALSO GOT RID of a few guys last season. who we didn't need. who weren't contri butmg to the team ball concept Billy doesn't like to stand back for a moment. If there's a base to steal, a bunt to make. whatever. than Billy says take it " Critics have already begun putting the rap on Martin 's philosophy of allowing his starters to go as far as they can before going to the bullpen -as a last resort. "Hey just because you go seven or more innings doesn't mean that you're taxing yourself,·· Keough who logjed 250 iMings last season said. "There's been much to do about Billy overusing his starters but believe me, the bullpen will gel plenty or time to pitch ... So far they haven't, having appeared just once in six g;imes NATIONAL LEAGUE West DlvlatoD W L Pct. GB Dod1en 65 2o l.'~ -1,L CinciMati 114 TII Atlanta 3 3 .500 3 Houston 2 4 .333 4 San Diego ·2 s .286 41At San Francisco 2 5 .286 4" East Divl1ioa New York 3 1 .750 -· Mo(\treal 2 1 .867 'At Philadelphia 3 2 .600 ~ St. Louis 1 2 .333 1 ~ Chica10 1 3 .250 2 Pttttburah 1 3 .2!50 2 .........,..sc.. ~4,IM,rMCIK0 2 MMCtMI '·Olk .... H tw Y "1l S, St. Laule ) ................ l"lttahrp J ('' ,....._, .. ..,. ................ 0 CIM!Nwti 11, IM DI..-1 T....,.,._ Olk ... 111:,_ H I .. ..,,.,.... uwiu- MI M. t...-11u11te11MI et lffw Yerll Ck911MI l"I ....... CO, ,_...._Ml et ll'llll•llJiN• ICl!tlt....._•11 ~; ............. Fowler concurs "For the first time in their careers, these kids are being treated like human be· ings Charlie couldn 't have cared less about any one of the m . Before. these pitchers were expected to make perfect pitches every time because we had no sticks " As for K eoug h , Fowler believes he is and will continue to be a gem in the A's sea or diamonds "Matt throws harder than he reali zes and yes, we do expect a lot from all o ur pitchers If we had a Goose Gossage or a <Sparky I Lyle than maybe we wouldn't have to ask so much of Mall and the others. But we don't So I'm glad to see Matt pitching so well " Keough says that he's never been happier in his hfe than he as now He's satisfied with h.is patching, his contract C'Tm liv- ing comfortably, I never thought I'd be making this much money playing baseball anyway," he says> a nd h is position in Oakland He still calls Newport Beach hom e where his parents live although he admits he doesn't like the "rat race'' atmosphere of Southern California. Keough, who has become a real estate investor of sorts, also has a home in the Bay Area and is buying some property with hls father In the Saddleback moun· ta ins. .. r feel like r 've paid my dues," Keough says ... Before. all I dreamed about was playing in the majors. Now , we <Oakland) are all thinking about World Series rings." -by Ed Zlntel Are temm win 1haridily Ocean V~w Hl1b'a Seahawks t>reesed to the Santa Marina lnvitaUonal championship, Mater Dei cootinued lta winnin1 waya in the Ansel\il Lea1ue an~ Marina capture~ a non·lea1ue skirmish wilJi St. John Bosco ln a big day for Orange Coast area prep baseball teams. Here's bdw lt went : Ocean View 7, Savanna 3 The Seahawks breezed behind the pitchlne of Kevin Stanley lo record their 13th victory· in 19 starts as Savanna fell in the Santa Marina tourna- ment finals ,_t Elka Field. • Doug Ir-Vine was the tourney's most valuable player after getting on base in every trip to the PREP IUSEB4U COAST GENERAL TIRE ~ 2855 HARBOR BLVD . -COSTAMESA • 540-5710 8A78x 13 ................ 0.00 OR78x 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 .00 EA78x14 ................ 49.'5 FR78x14 ................ 51.91 GA78x14 .... : . . . . .. . .. Sl.'5 HR78x 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SS. '5 FR78x15 ................ 52.tS GR78x15 ................ s•.95 HR78x 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 51. 95 LR78x 15 . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . 61. t5 175fl0R13 .............. $.19.50 185flOR13 .............. $45.80 185fl OR14 .............. $47 .50 205fl0R14 ........ .' ..... ~7.76 GUAIAMTllD 9UALITY RETREADS FREE! s21•s PRESSUR REGULATOR $8.69 '10 PC. 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Torunce; t. Cele, It. 1111\op oteeo. Misc. • a I 6 H FOR :THE RECORD I CVTDOORS /BOATING a , Trout season nears start, outlook appears on the up By JIM NIEMIEC Dell., Plltl OllWtoar Wr1.., With the opening of California's general trout season less than two wPeks away, the attention of many Southland anglers is centered on the High Sierras Even though most all of Southern California's trout waters are open on a reduced limit basis throughout the year. thousands of fresh water fishermen journey to the high country to challenge th~ streams and lakes for rainbow, brown and brook trout . Stream and roadside lake conditions att prime for a very good opening weekend. There is not a great deal of snowpack in the higher mountains and most all reachable waters should be fishable with lower than nor mal water levels prevaillng . Lakes below 8.000 feet are fairly ice free . although there might be a light crust on some lakes early In the morning CROWLEY LAKE should produce good to ex· cellent rainbow trout fi s hing for the thousands of anglers who traditionally flock to this popular lake on opening weekend . The' average rainbow causht out of this lake is in the 12 to 14 inch class, but the blgser fish are browns that can run to 10 pounds and more. ti doesn't seem to matter what kind of bait is used rn this la\-ge lake, as limits are lhe rule rather than the exception for both shore and boat ALL ROADSIDE STREAMS will be heavily s tocked prior to the opening and should kick out plenty of pan sized rainbows. Usually early In the year bait works better than flies but those tossing lures seem to catch their fair share or trout. Anyone who plans on heading to the Sierras s hould carry chains and make sure that their anti· freeze is up to protection It 1s impossible to predict OUTDOORS ll lhe we ather m this country and heavy snow storms have caught many anglers un-prepared in years' pas t Closer to home, Or ange county County lakes are providing anglers with some very good trout, bass and crappie fishing. lrvme Lake is very good for lunker trout lo seven pounds while some good bass fishing 1s also on tap for those who !Mee to toss surface plugs into the brush. Irvine is rising daily and heavy stockings of trout should continue through July. Also look to this popular lake to produce some very good catches of crappie, catfish and bluegill as the lake's water temperature continues to Increase. • anslers. t June Lake.LOJ)p will produce some nice trophy trout helped by last fall's brood stocking program by the Dcfpartment of Fish and Game. Brid1ewrt Lake and the Twtn Lakes abc>ve Robinson Cree.k will most likely reward an analer with a fiant trophy brown trout in the 15 pound claaa. Every year the biggest trout of the operung week comes from these brown trout waters. ANAHEIM LAKE le also good for stocked rainbows, both for shore and boat anglers. Those who are coming off these two lakes with the eiirUest UmJta are currently using very light mono to fool the fishJ'n clear water. Alm<>1t all the lakes in Southern California now are fivtog 'Up good catches of a vari~ty of fish. Tbe San Dieso City lakes are hilh on the list of baas fisherman as outlt~ndioa catches contJnue to be made. Lake Hodges. El Cap and Lower Otay are all red hot for good quantities of bass. Three races end at Newport Bea~h Gauchos roll lo 20-3 win ..Pen Amaya, Rick Irwin and R'it\ty Evans belted home .runs Wednesday to spark Saddleback Collese to an easy 20·3 victory over Los Angeles CC in non· conference baaebal) action «t the Gauch<>'' field. . , Newport Beach will be the terminal point of lhree offshore races this weekend as yacht clubs from the north and south und racers here for the st'Kt of the Newport to Ensenadi race the foUowtna wetkend. , All of the arrivals will b8 part BOATING of the reeorct entry flat of 615 boat. tlped for this year'a 1Dde down the coast ln t,be 8'tb &n· nual l!!Nenada race. Main event. for the races to Newport wlll be California Yacht Club'• Mayor'• Trophy Race, Ute 1econd or tbe Overton Series -•l*I\ wUl brinf a host of yachtl from. the Marifta del Rey arM. Also comlnt from~1lleth wllJ be a n.t ol &al Offshore Rule ud 1 uc:e HancJlcap RaclJ\f J'l:::J ca. ill Anacapa Yacht Qlulia Channel l~lands to Newport race. Coronado Yacht Club wlll host the race from .San Dieeo to Newport With the-PHRJI' y•cbts 1eekiq the ..,Uend'1'.son · Tropfty and 'tOR ratinat sallln1 for the Ackerman 'ltoph,Y. A neet or 14 lOR yachts start· ed <;0mpetltion today in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's defense of the 78-yea,r old Lipton ChaUenae Tropby. 1 Southern California Y.uhtlhc A11oclatfon •}\en~, Let Ae1ele.-L0111 Beacb· <No re11attu scheduJed) sa.ia: Moat ca »•1 ~ Cafifornla Yacht Club Mayor'• Troplty Race, Overton Serlea .. uoa,· PHRF> starts Sat"ntl)'. 1 • Amaya went Uor·4 ·and tot· leoied three RBI, while Evana was 2-for-5 and Irwin 2·for·2 u the G•uchos evened their OTer- all record at 12·12. Coach Dick Stueti, who hu announced he wtll step down u the Saddleback coach after um aeaaoo, uaed four pltcben, and treshman Rlcb Rooney. from Matar Del Hiib, collected the victory with three lnnina, of ~erfect b411. Id all, the Gaucho. ~ out 1.$ blt.t and toot advn ~ nine Loa An1e1es CC flel mlscues. MprJn.a Yacht Club -Oil b ace (fff ll1'~ Satprday ...:-1~1 Y1cht otub -An@elu1 ,title} Clrquit (Lltht.nln•> to; .. ,.,, , d1Y;Fri4•>'· Saturday. Mater Del Hiib cllnchd UM COranado C11s Y •cht Club -Anj•lua Leatue dual track~ Ot~l'I• i.La~ko Trophy, Sprtn1 ~amplOD1hli. tlednesday 1 1 setltl, S.tllfdµ. vlctory over 'hrvlt~. 1nd Corooado'\'acht Club -•onarcbl m aow 1.0 on tbe Co,onado to Newport race. 1111on. •W'tf:lat~. k•viD l_lllP., u4 llltc:b llklY .;OCilanaid'e-:;"yacht Club __, doubled for the llonaretw, i'ltb Eaater £ci rio.t (Sabol) Sat.Ur· SddJ, .CJDIY a IC>pbo9ore1 t*u • d.a7. .... \be ••"<4:M.I) aad two-ia.Ui Santa Clara <Raclft.I ~·· UO:Ol.0). 11::...-Sprint SorlH ( 111 HtplnO-tlto 1311 (Ill t_... •> ~!!.. -iow bUrdltl (14.5). •• Oil t ... _..... ... ..,_ alto tot two MCOllldl'ud a 1 Anacapa Y.cht Club -Ctian· from Paul WIWtlDI • nef Ia1anda to Newport race. ln tbt • Uc1 Joiat Jump pd start.a Saturday. -abowid tn UM too. - \ OLLYWOOD <AP> -A ma- ,_ 1barebolder ot UA-Columbia Cal»lniltOI\ lac. bat anaounctld pl~~ to •arner 1 near 50 per· eeat lnterat ln OA·Columbla •l..,e4 at blocttnc a toint ~trfer bid tor the cabl•TV CQ>pany by two publlahinl COil· Cftnl. Unlted ArtiJta Theatre Circuit Ine. eald lt _p}ana to bealn today a teiader olfer tbrou1b one ot ltl un(tl of '85 a abare for up to 725,000 shares Qf UA·Colwnbla, or about 22 percent of Ila com· mon stock outstandlne. for a tota l value of $63.8 million. lJATC, A CHAIN of movie t beaten based in San Francisco, already owns about 27.6 percent of U A·Columbia , b ased in Westport, Conn .. a nd the na· lion's nintb·largest cable·TV systems operator with 430,000 s ubscribe r s ma i nly in the Southwest and Northeast. L ast Feb r u a r y, a $237.6 million joint mer ger bid for UA· Columbia was made by Dow · Jones & Co. lnc. and Knight- Ridder Newspapers Inc. It later boosted the offer to $75 a share , o r $247 .5 m i llion. ro r UA· Columbia's 3.3 million shares. That tentative agreement was narr owly appr o·ved 8·6 last month by UA·Columbia's board, with its five UATC officers vol· ing against it. AT THAT TIME, UATC said at "has no intention of disposing or its holdings. in UA·Columbia," and would .. vigorously resist , by litigation if necessary," the joint merger. Get more value for your dime with the famous Dime-A-line ods where items worth up to $50 sell fast. every Saturday in the DlllJ Plllt Or•tNe Coat DAILY PILOT/Thured8Y, April 11, 1981 ca lndeed, UATC a1ao an.noun* Wednesday it WU ftllq court actloos tn Coanectlcuf, New Jeraey and Del1wan alaied at blockina the bld by Dow Jones and Knlgbt-Rldd~r :.-. •'T hey're explortn1 every way posaible to block tbe mer1er they can," sald one analyst ,mo follows UATC, notln1 a IUC· ceaaful tender offer by the com· pany would ove lt comlderably more power on UA-Columbla'a board. THE ANALYST, WHO uked not to be named , also aaid U ATC's price of $85 a share, despite being $10 a share hi1ber than the joint merger offer. waa ·•a steal" considering that rev· en ues from growing subscrip· tlons to UA·Columbia are likely to arow with matching s tren&lh. The U.S. Poetal Service baa released photos of a num~ of stamps to be t.- s u e d shortly . T h e American Flaa stamps, top row, will be available April 24 at Portland , Maine. Each of tb& 11-cent stamps highlights a phrase from •'America the Beautiful." On the bottom row, the 18-cent Red Cross stamp wlll be released on May 1 in Washington , D .C., while the other 18-cent stamp, representing the nation's s avings and loans, will be issued May " 8 in Chicago. The 6-cent stamp will make its first appearance in Portland, Maine April 24. UATC said its tender offer was not conditioned on a minimum number of shares bein& ten· dered , and that the offer woUtd begln pursuant to tbe filin& to- day of appropriate documents wit h the Securities anft Ex· change Commission. While som e industry ob· servers speculated that UATC's opposition to the merge r bid reflected unhappiness with tbe offering price, others believ~ the company simply doesn't want to lose its participa tion in the cable·TV industry . State called suitable for rubber growth Research report claims production of guayule possible in desf!rt areas OHiciaJs for UATC were not available for com ment. ~ott Ledbetter , UA·Colum bia vice president of .finance, said the compa ny had "no comment at this time." New York-based Dow J ones, which publishes The Wall Street Journal, Barron 's and Book Digest magazines, said it had no immediate comme nt on UATC's actions. F r ank N Hawkins Jr .. a spokesm an for Miam i-based Knight-Ridder , would say onJy th at the news paper publisher A" as "looking at the situation." F RESNO (AP> -Large Se<:· lions or California may be s uita· hie for commercial production o f a rubbe r -producinc plant called guayule , a research re· port indicates. The southeastern desert, the central valleys and the south central coast all have the poten· tlal for profitable cultivation of the crop, said the report, pre· p a red by t he University of Arizona 's Office of Arid Lands Stu d ies and t h e Mi dwest Research Institute. THE PLANT, WHICIJ grows wild in parts of the Southwest. is being eyed as a way ~o solve rubber shortages if they arise. Besides California, it might be grown commercially in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. · 'Guayule rubber cultivation could benefit farmers· and other s m all h olders. inc l u4ing American Indians, by providing an alternative cash crop," the report states. "Guayule also could provide a domestic source ' ol natural rubber to U.S. tire and rubber companies. "Economic benefits would ac. cr ue to communities in the U.S. Southwest. Finally. guayule rub· ber cultivation would offset the current trade deficit in natural r ubber." But a man who worked on guayule around World War II discounts Its vaJue. "Th e gu ay ul e rubi>e r is so frrmly bound to a resin that I doubt t h a t it ca n be economically separated," says Earl B. Working of Downey "I doubt that it can com pete ser iously with other crops, such as the sorghums, that wi ll grow in semi·arid conditions ·' W o r king, in a letter to California Farmer magazine, said that commercial guayule plants would have to be started in a nursery. then transplanted to the desert, then dug up after fi 9e years to get rubber from the roots T he Arizona researchers con- cede "It is not known exactly un· der what conditions economic production will be obtained." One problem is figuring how muc h water to prov ide to nourish the rowtna lant, but not inhibit the rubber content Guayule doesn't need as muc water as many crops, making 1 attractive to some 0Hlc1als fo developing uncultivated dese areas. "MOST GUA YUL E producf tion in California would requ1r• irrigation." the report says. "II) areas that have ground wateJ overdraft. such as the San J oal quin Valley, µsing guayule as a alternative crop would serve a a conservation measure " The cr op might grow well 1 some coastal a reas without 1 rig ation , but, "the impacts ore paoded urbanization and hig la nd cost s m ay con strai guayule growth'' t here, the r rt s ays. 27% '° 12 MONTH TUMS ALL SICUllD T.D. $5,000 MIN. EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH <ts t. 1 t .1; ,f tJ ~!~~~~E~~ S.C .P.M. (7141640.7t9J 7 14 -631 -3651 ,------c.•1tt~ 8U)lncl» n!l;ll., ... aPW'litaaif"lf9.----- ' n Business To Make Business Happen At Creative we have the money you need. t st in Features, Performance, Price! TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER • Spectacular Color • Graphic• and Exciting Sound • Plug-In Program Pak• tor Entertainment, Personal Ute I CALL LINDA BLUE FORA FULLYASSUMABLELOAN - 1 NTEREST ONLY. ! -Newpor~.~~~1~!.~.~~;,·f,~c ~ Loans from $25.000.00• tor any business or investment purpose Where you deal direc tly with the Lender and n ot a loan broker. Froml389 • Write Your Own Programs And Save Them on Caaaettea • Eaay for Beginner• to Use. Expandable tor Experts USP your own COlr1r TV ~nrl cas!>ette recoroe• o• ouv ou• I I I (714) 7 60-6060 .. I •All loans secured by a combination or real and personal property 4425 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 (71 41 752·7923 Show Your Clear~Appreciation. Secretaries' Week, April 20--24. ' RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000. AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES. COMPUTER CENTERS ANO DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS. •• '• I .. 't • J• • •• :. ', ·~ I ', • •• • •• • ,. ', , ,, ' l• f , Tired of paying . taxes on your Savings Certificates? Sure it's a good feeling to earn interest at the rate of 12% -or even 14% -on your CD's. So many people are doing it, in fact , that over S 100 billion in 6-month certificates are matum'lg this month alone. But Apnl is also the month when Uncle Sam wants his share, and those high inte,-est rates sud~nly don't look so high. If you're in the 49% br.1l l-.t•t. for example, that 12% interest rate delivers only 6.12% after taxes. You can change that-even earn interest on what you would ordinarily • pay in taxes-by taking advantage of the modem annuity. It's an old name with a new face and a better way to save for futu~ income. April 20·24 T007 Annuities currently offer 12.50% to 13.25%. They are safe. they arc flex- ible, there is no sales charge and, best of all. y'>u avoid current incom\ taxes. To find out more about this remarkable tax planning tool-the modern annuity-mail the coupon. t Kidder Peabody Insurance Agency, Inc.-----1 1 A •11bttdiary °' lelltoe Wud · 203 Marine Avenue ColCa ar.a • Harbor Shopping Center • 2300 Harbor Blvd. I"* · Newport Fruwny et East Oyer Rd. l ?21 East Dyer Rd. 1allt Poteet · 08"1·5 at Lake Forest Drtve 22873 Lake Forest Driw Tel.cftora'• "You're Clearly The Sett" Aoral Des\t Set. lt'• a beautiful way to chank 10mcone spcct,l. The tet coruiatl of a lovely lucltc pen holder and bod vue. The holder comet ~lied wlrh 1 •leek, white, rtAllabk pen. And the ~tyatal dear bud vase will look kwely holdlnt a •inJle rote-' lt'a pretty, profetalonal and reat0nably prl~ed. So corne by or call to order one soon. Tcldlona'• AonJ Deak Set. tr'll mtlc.t 11£. at the office even rosier. 1447' cmm J>r. . iaVJWE W.I DELfVER 857-1111 YOU R FULL 1 SE RVICE FLORIST Kidder, Peabody & Co. • 11 ll'COIJ)Orllttd , 610 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, CA 92660 i I Tll: (114) 6'6-°10to I I PleaM prov1dt me with lnform.tion on the modem annuity. I I I ~1""-~~~~~~~~"--~~~~~~~·1 I Statt·~~~------------~Cky..-_ ______ .__ __ __, __ ~~P·~----~-< :~-------------------------~~~J ., , $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • l•••r••• o.tv pe~• ··~ ·~ •Jl-W-tial • w .... v c:_.._.. •Noadllv......._• • 6 _... to J .,.an • Soe ........ c.au-.a. ( If f,H f IHH lo.n lnfo,,..tlon ••nrlc:e f11t vuur ftndnnnq nt1~d~ (71•) 759-1515 AMEllllCAN ..olotf MOln'~ 230 Newpor1 Ce"1e1 O••ve OH•O" Pleza Newport Beach Ca111orn1e 92660 --·-CTORS CORNEA R•r• Cofna & lt•mpa GOl.O & SILVER Prices for 4-1s-t1 o.wt1eteMJu• 111-c1.•11.u ..., .... I(, ..... ,... ... • ..,, .. ~,.u.,. ..., .. Mtt.• 100 eor-• ...... _.., ... lO P .. OI MN.U MtUt Sii-BeQll .,,,,, '"" ,,_ .. ___ .. c.e•-..-(714> 551-aSO South Coaet Ptau Vlll•g• -.. -.. tAc_.,.....,.. __ , WHAT IS By Terry Grant, R. Ph. This type or kidney disease is usually caused by inrecl\ous germs . Oflen, the patient has had an acute sore throat or an upper respiratory infection The germs apparently get into the kidneys by way or the blood stream The ilomeruh. which are the nutting portion of the kidneys, strain out the 1erm1 whlch c an mwllply qu!ckly THE LIGHT TOUCH Etiquette: leariung to yawn with your mouth closed ..... Kids grow up so quickly One day you look at the gas gauge and realize thev're teenagers ••• People usually get what's coming to them unless It's been mailed ••• There's nothing wrong with dnnking like a fish provided you drink what a fish drinks. ••• Sign on bulletin board at weather bureau. "We are a non-prophet or· ganlzauon. ·· ..... ... This formerly hard·to·cure disease can now be succusfully treated by the new antl·lnfective drugs we stock. But, diagnosis a nd treatment must not be Come into Tire City, 1950 Newport Blvd . Costa Mesa where you'll find the best values in tires and wheels .. .. COURTEOUS, PROFESSIONAL, TRAINED ••• Describes TAB O~~tors and Servt«. CONFIDENCE Oescribn Our Cu1tomen· Feellngs About TAB . TAB OPERATORS Will . T akt Messages • T akt Ord en • Quote Pnctt • Relay Calls• Makt Appointmenrs • Tek1e· · and F ecs1mllt Service • Beepers for all Southttn Callfornla • Wakt·up Service Rotu and &rvlce to At Your·Nttda 714-547-7m =1t..b EXT. 711 TELEPHONE ANSWERING BUREAU delayed YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a med!clne Pick up your prescription Ir shopping nearby. or we wlll deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people 1-------------1 entrtl1lt us with their pre1crlpllon1. May we compound yours'? PAii UDOPHAJtMACY "'-Dlhw? Jll.....__ ...... ...;;;;:;-...... 64 .... Call 642-5678. Put a rew word1 to work ror ou. J1wel1 by Joaeph purchun d1amond1, gemstonee. gold and eltver Jl'Otn Pf1vftt lndM- ~ai. and .. ta\98 Careful eicAmlnatlon end evaluatlon by our 1JCperts Highest P<IC* peld. IQ.Q dally, &It 10-6 Cloeed Sunday. Phone today Alk ror Betty Gr11ce or Eric lalalkut A fU.OITl()lj Of l'-USI IC>'-OVl'-tlJ YCAM •• . t JEW(LS by JOS[PH # ~~----------------------~ "" I• 8oul1 Coatt PfllU, Coete Ml8a • 54o.80H :I I ·· 1 LL & to., Discount Broken! I : ' I STOCKS CHECK AND COMPARE OPTIONS I ·1 I 'I I : I I :·1 I ~· I a.ci on• !MphOne •""'9V 8.fO Atlltll mey 1191)1 MINIMUM COMMIMIO"I ~ 00 • ~· NASO I ~ 1, PLUS: lllTllREBT PAID ON Cll~"!T BALANCES; t I ~ ~ 1-----~-----· llN I a. CO., lllC.1 : I NDIPORT/~c;..nty ' .. ~'14) ... 1933 ' I (800) 462-8870 NAML------:--~---::---::- AOOA£&a.~~~~~~~~~~-"".""~~::"":"~~ ClfY_...__._ ___ l'TATI-----~. COCA COLA, CHINESE STYLE - A woman worker picks out a rejected bottle in the production tine of the new Coca Cola plant in a suburb or Peking, China. With parts of A .......... the equipment donated by the Coca Cola Co .. the plant c-an produce 300 bottles a minute, or 2 million cases annually. S&L sltuns state conditions LOS ANGELES <AP> -Great Western Sav· ings & Loan has refused to accept conditions im-pose<t~y state officials for approval of Its proposed merger with Financial Federation Inc. and said it intends to pursue the union under federal regula- tions. State Commissioner of Savings & Loans Linda Tsao Yang approved the merger March 23 subject to certain conditions, including a pledge that Great Western would lend up to $1.25 billion in depressed areas over a four-year period and buy $100 million in mortgage loans from minority.owned savings associations. Yang's decision was greeted with widespread protest in the financial community. .. Great Western has always bad, and intends to continue. a commitment to help solve the hous· OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS ing problems in California with emphasis on loans to low and moderale·income borrowers." Great Western President James Montgomery said. "We are opposed, however, to the principle of government·imposed quotas on our business." v said. "Further, in today's adverse and uncertain economic environment. it is impossible for Great Western to determine what specific dollar amounts will be available for such programs in the future." Montgomery itaid Great Western. which operates under a stale charter, was moving to con- vert to a federally chartered thrif'l institution and said he hoped Financial Federation would do the same so that the two companies could seek federal approval for the merger. N-AmS<;rgy Jhlrmk wl ln11M1 IEMSA KCR Tech Alla Owl Le-In EAL wt.I HYtnH&a Bio Tell Me1<CO Amkor '"'"""" IPM Tch t LkCll)'Mn Tlpr..-, ~~ "" L.olll< "" c coA N11<IPti Oa1vt11 EIKl\l gt Alld!i« Unllle1 u~ tt~·.. .'-;,, ,.... . " t\O • ," 1 • " 11... • , lV. • " , • .,., + ' sv. • " 4-. " • .. 1V. >'-• .... 1 ~.. • >-1• '1\ • 1U I + I ,.,. . ,.. .. ,."" . '""' 101h • ,.,.. H + '" ,.,,. + ... 11•J. • 1 1" + ... SV> + '-2111. • 111> ~ + 'Mo J'4 • •• Ole -7 -Jll> -Jiit -2'11. --"" -"' -... -"' -1 -"" -..... -1 -w. -"" -"" -"" -1 --.-.. ..... "" -II> "" w. "" l'CL Up 17..S \.Ip 11 .l Up U.D Up U.1 Up 21.t Up 20.0 Up lta Up 1'.7 Up 1U Up tt.1 Up 1'-0 UP 1H Up U .t. Up 1U Up 14.l Up I U Up IJ.S Up U..J Up 11.l Up U 1 Up 13.0 Up ll-9 Up 11.7 Up n.s UP It S PCI. Off ao Off Z1.l Off J0.4 Off 11.0 Off u .o <>« 1•.a Off l•U Off 12.S Off 10-9 Off IO..S Off 10.2 Ott •.s Off t.J Off t.1 Off t.I Off t.1 Off t.1 Oft ... 81: H Off 7.7 Off 7.7 Off 7.7 Off 7.4 Off 7.4 Off J.C ~~~· ::::: :t iauu t . ..i 10.» Mid AM N 5tf'fln Gt 10..ot NL NL Slll'rm 81 11.• N&. NL St5tr .. I ltW. fq Inc 21.41 NL facll JS.» NL Meoet J0.411 NL Mun 9d .. '7 ll'ldel lt.71 G•l Sec 1.9' HtfftU llJ4 HI Vici f0.42 I.I M\lfl 741 ~ ..... ,, 11.67 '411"" ... thrll1 t .10 Tr9nf J1.U lne11Cl•I Pl"OQ; o,n, a.JI NL tlldutl U6 NL lncom I.II NL ti,,,.....,..., 8/ld ._ 1U6 1U7 OltcAI 10.27 11.n 0•"'111 I0.11 11.,. 111eom 6.7J 7.a Prot S. IJ UI MMllOPI r .. lb l.1' 32' MONV f' Sto<ll Sel«I s PlaaUc surgery haa spread across all barriera ot income, education, sex and a1e. It la reachlna mau market proportions that dery credulity. Nearly one of five Americans who undergoes aeathetlc or re· construction surgery bas an income of JU,000 or less. And, for a form of surgery sllll believed by most people to be the virtually exclusive domain of Hollywood-type celebrities and the wealthy, other fin· dings emerging from a study by the Chicago-~ b a s e d American So c iety of ----------,.:-Plastic and Reconstructive SYlVIA PORTER ~-,, Surgeons ~~ <ASPRS> are: -A FULL 35 PERCENT of patients undergoing the surgery are men, and 43 percent are 35 years or younger. -MORE THAN l MIUJON of the patients un· dergo the surgery in the hospital and tens ot thousands more in the surgeon's office. The surgery ii. rising al a rate of 5 percent to 10 percent a year -OF ALL THE OPERATIONS, 40 percent are for rhytidoplasty (face lifU, rhinoplasty (nose sur· gery). breast augmentation and other cosmetic sur- gery. The other 60 percent involve post-mastectomy cons truction, cranioracial reconstruction (skull> and other forms of surgery concentrating on such areas as bums, cancer. etc. While plastic surgery is one of the fastest grow· ing specialties in U S. medicine, it is not inexpensive. A face lift can range from $2,000 to $5.000: nose re· construction, from $1,000 to $3,000; chin implant around $750 and breast building. Sl,000-$2,000. Jn addition to the 18 percent of the patients with incomes of $15,000 or less who have these operations, 34 percenl come from the $15,000-$25,000 income group: 29 percent, from the $25,000 to SS0.000 category, and 19 percent from SS0.000.plus groups STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ; HEW VOlll(IAPI Fl""I Dow-.1-. •"OL: lof Wed • Al>< U , •TOCIU II H ~ Clow t lO l11d ~ u ,::r;, "1.G.> 1001.71 +,?.:ti lO Trn '37 JO .. '7 US.01 .-.M • l.'1'1 U Ull IOS JQ 10. '1 10..t4 106 J:I • 0 ... u Slk .. IS 1'3.1• .. S7 JtUS+ s.n lftdu• •.'7•, IOI fren •.llJ,4llO Ullh tot• ., Slk •• ,.. WHAT STOCKS DID HEW VOllk IAPI A'1J( U """•"'ed O<tcll- UllCN "Oecl lolel I•-• H•• lllOftl H•• lows """'T AM(• 010 T~o1. 501 .. ''°' '" 10 HEW YOMK IAPI A'1J( 1S A4'¥ enc.., Oe<ll-Urtc:r..ftOICI lotell-H•• night N•w lowt METALS W-Y Pnv. ~r, .. m 110 » ,, c...-11 .... 1 ants•_,., u.s a..u... "°"" l.• .. ••centsa~ lllK 4J\lo C-. e ~. dellWrecl Tie ~7'1$ Ml\.elJ W-c-11• lb .... --. 7• ,.,ts. l*llld. u.s Mel"<WY '420.00 per II•~• "'•"-~.00 lroy OJ .• H. V W..,,_y SllY•r 111 '*> per lrO!' O\ln<e, Handy & Her,...•n only dally-· COLO OUOJ!!U!~S L...-...: -119 llaltlg MI0.2J, off U .7S. L••-· •ll•rnoon 11•1119 ... ,. u . Mi '4.7S. P'•rl•: e11«,_, 1t11ne U16.'7, oll .a M, '•••II,_,: fixing '4e0.1•, off U.U. ; lenO: late alt-llalr>Q, 141' 00. ~ u oo . ._.,. oo nucs. wf "•••Y & Mertftaa· only dally q • '476 2S, off M. 7S 111991Mn' only O.lly quote ._.7'.U , ttt '4.7S. ! ...... _.., only dally -· l•twkat'-M•S.JO, otl '1 .02. S • • 111f I ever get to be on angel I'd rather play a guitar." by Virg il Partch (VIP) --.....--'·•'-1/?p "Any port In• 1tonn, I 1lw1y111y." 0 ' I l • SHOE Mt\RMt\DtkE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum I 8 ·~ i ! ~ l'! I H-.--· -~~ ' ~_.~~t.118 .. "Must you always have the last bark?" 'Me an 'Ruff don't enter any dog shows cause we don t ltke to get dressed up ... j NANC't' GORDO Jl'DGE PARKER by Harold Le Ooux GARFIELD IF n.E.P.E I~ SOCM A ™1"1($ A~ F\EINCAP.NATION, l'V Ll"'E TO COME MC.K 16 A MOVIE Si AR 37MI"°"" ...... H Ptrtt 42 Germen dty 430.. ,, .... ..,.. 4'0ittnemt 4C#IM°" so ...... .,,.. .. ......... .. ....,. WHAT WJUL0 YOU LIKE. TO COME 0ACK AS, GARFIELC7? "THE COURSE IS DRY ENOUGH "TO Pl./:N ON ! I .. I DON'T KNOW. bAM: ~ THAT'!> WHY THEf>E ~OC ~T~ kAVE 6EEN f>UCH A. NI~: by Jim Davis A DOGCATCHER, OfCOUR~ "THI!:> I~ A VER<.' IMPREt,btVE ~C.i l.X)(.J HAVE HERE, «,t)(JN& MAN ! DR.SMOCK YOU PO A 1,..0.,... OF "l!!!l!!!A. HUNTING WHE!!N YOU'Aet Ncn" WO~KI N~, l!!!H I F~l!IP ~ HAVE <X>IJ BE.EN A&.£ 10 PrlJ< UP AWfHJN& wrr H C..OOR HOM€1'AAD€ RAD/0- 1B..E6C.0Pt ? USE ONLV As OlltECTEO ~ c:J .,..,,~ .. 'Qo..' .. ~ . . . ..:r;,I(~ by Tom K. Ryan MAY I RECOMMeN'7 OVR HI~ INiet<~ SAVfNGS C!aRll F'ICA1l:S? ~------' ~"' by Tom Bat1uk WE.U. I NOTl·H N(:, Of.FINl1£ , 51R ... BUT I'IYl AWA111NG CONFtRMAllON ON ~ NEW PULSAR5 FROM 1'1E fYIO~T Wll.SON OBSERVATORt..> ! by Kevin Fagan E1fMEfl 1'1411'1",~ ~'4·~ iR'41W~ 1"0 1'~U.. '{OU •---....... SOME:'fl<l1~& by George Lemont J Th_ua1 we have a score which bOutl aucb did stanaa.rdl aa .. With a Soq in lly Heart," .. !· Billy Dee Williams I • 1· 1 • • • staying a ive I By BOBTllOllAS AIMc'ieW.,_...., HOLL YWOOO -Bllly Dee WWlams bu• a simple pblloeophy for bia career: '1'he only way to aunln is to never 1et cauaht dead. Alwaya 1et cau1ht alive." Hia theory of survival is illustra~ed by bit wide . range or performance: from sta1e mualcata · "Hellelujah, Baby," to biolJ'apbiea, ''I Have a : DrJam," television dramas "Brian's Scull," and : movies that include romance ''Maho1any,'' comedy . ''Blneo Lon1," and space adventure "Tbe Empire . Strikes Beck." Tlals month brings a new departure. Williama costars in "Ni1bthawks" with Sylvester Stallone . as cop partnen ln the New York CitJ decoy squad. They ate ~ted to trap an international terrol'Ut aiming a boetage scheme at the United States. . WllLIAllS, who bad been called a black Clark : Gable after "Lady Sings the Blues," admitted that : be had been looltlng for romantic roles. He was not · overwhelmed by the "Niehtbawb" role as lt ap- . pured in David Shaber' s acript. "ft wu the kind ,of part.( played yean qo: tou1h euys, crazy IUY•." laid'tbe Harlem-born ac- .. When or When:' "Tbe Lady la a Tramp,'' "M1 l'u.D.Q)' Valeniln•," ''Johnny <>De Note," "S~all Hotel" ud the tJtle tune all packed Into Ot.te pro- ducUoo. Tbe belt of Rod1en and Hart. •• It were. They doe't alwa,1 mnb smoothly with the ac· Uon, cl coune, but Ulla 1' &be Hincan.Uoa o( u tr• when ~ waa aubtem~t to t0a1, eo wby nitpick? Davia but la splendid and Yll• Uµbler'• dance DUqlbert (notably the Me«td act ballet H · queoce> ate exceptional. ' Ray S.ar and th• plxielah Leith Scarritt are "'U c"°"° for the leadin1 rola of the fOUDC com-pC>aer . and b11 ~borlne flame, re·enactUi1 the lamlliar etory of a younf abowblJ pair 1trivtD1 for the bi. break. The com1ca1, bisb·•teJ>pinl ~d bananas are impressively performed by Michael Norrla and Cathy Susan Pyla. The token vllJalna of the plece are played to the hilt by 'ack Rltschel u the oner of tor. He discussed cban1ea with the ftlm makers -.. . NOW PLAYING MAllfUU Brea 529·5339 AMC OMMGE MALL Orange 537.0:µ0 MANI SOUTH COAIT Costa Mesa 546·2711 fDWARDl'WflTlllOOK Garden Grove 530 4401 fDWAROI' IADDU HCK El Toro 581 ·5880 UA CITI CINEMA Orange 634·3911 · and with Stallone, whom he had never met before. Williama prepared for the role b y get-LJ•-.-: Williams decided to go along with the project. ting acquainted with Stallone, since l.My were to "l wanted to work, I felt like workin&," be ex-port ray life-or-death partners on tbe streets of plained. "Sometimes youJust have to 10 ahud on New York. They spent a week with the real-life de- fattb. It's not like. the ol days when the mo1ul.s coy squad, watching from vans as the cops posed would throw you into one role after another. Now as women and senior citizens to attract mu11en. an actor bas to find bis own opportunities, and lf "They're very much like acton," WUlianu ob- you're a minority, you're not in the mainltrea01. served. "ln fact, they remind me ol 1ome Acton It's hard to find innovative roles. Producen tend Studio people I have known. Before 1oin1 out on a · to thinJc ot Jewa, ltaliana, Puerto RJcam, blacks lD Job, they use a Jot of profanity and build up thelr _t_er_m_s_of_s_te_reot_ .... pes.___· -----------..·e.ner . " ........ ..,__CO.~A~-MlllUC!m ----NOW SHOWING ---- .... CISU •SA IUlll WUTMllSTll Anaheim Onn In UA Cu~ma UA City C1n,m1 H1 Way 39 Omt 111 879-98SO S4G-05'4 634·3911 891 ·3693 WUN!lml UA Tw11'1 893-1305 ll .S. -China Trade Relations Examined on 'The Business Exchange' Program airs Fri., 4/17 - The United States Is Chln.'s second largest tr•dln9 partner. "The ~uslntss Exch•nge" looks :t ma Inland Ct)lne and Its tr• • potentlel under the Reegan administration when It elrs Frldey, April 17 et 7:30 p.m. on l<OCE, Channel so. ""' Joining host Bob Helde are trade con1u1tant1 •nd lntern•Uonel bualnesamen who explore Chlr-..'1 recent "retonehment" which . rHultM In • halt to over $2.7 ~mon In tor.tan lndustrl•I proJects. This ec:onOfnlc reedJu1tment In which -erlculture and light Industry take Pr•c~ tffeGu m•Jor Orange countr ~cuttp•,.••• and r••••• que1tl0ftl llbout ChlM11·crM1blllty I thetredeeru. _ ..... __ ...., -· .. - . I lO YtM!t IJ MAY ..... 1111 G .. AAICM ..-.Jm rns:;.~~E ~ .. ,,.u I I Admit 2 '°' Ute prtc. oi 1 """ ..... edl • BARGAIN SNCtAL • DAILY MA flNeU AJt .. _. t:uo ti• p.m. ·ntelLA~ .......... ILIEPING 81AUTY ..... lrjl& ''THIEF" CR> "ANAL CC?Nf:IJC't''.., Back when you had to ·--.. -..::e.:-;i~!l ~ ....... '*itV--. ::.~:.=,\i:=:..o::..,~.. ~ ..... ~~.···A..,,...._.~· ....... tM•CAn v ........................................................ -.w..., h&ieW#'f. ········•·····•··••••f•••••······1·····•···•1 ~MM'fttt ...,,,,...,, ,......,. ........................ ' .....•. \' ........• *1' ,. .... •-y~ ............................................. krf~ J-1~0--...........•.....•............... ~--~ fa~:".·:··.:·.:::::.:.:.:::.:.:.:.:::.:.:.:::.:.:.:::.:.:.:.:.:::~.:::.:.:.:.:-.:::::::::·f ~ = ~ .. ~~1. ~-....•...•.........•..•..•.••......••.....• CMrllll9 ~ ~ ............................................... : ........ .,,.. &;;; b·~'.:-.:.:_:_:,:_:_:.: ... :_:_:,:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:_:_:_:_:.:_:,:_:.:.:.:_:,:.:.:.:_:_:_:,:.:_:_:,:_:_:_::_::'S'E for a featured role and a male modeUn1 direct.or for technical adviser o .. an upcomtni TV movie "Ob•t:Mioo With Terror" ... pictures and res- umes should be sent to 3303 Harbor Blvd .. Studio K-7, Costa Mesa 92626, or call Eva Nerres at 957-0282. beat It ·. <.._ ' before ~ ' =d ~.\ A TURMAN-FOSTER ~ PrOO.di~ 'tAVEMAH' ~llltGO STARR,, BARBARA BACH· DENNIS QUAID SIE.1.EY I.ONG· JOHN MATUSZAK NIBrt SCJltEIBER ff JACK GI.FORD bi"" fUJ< Deu.rA ff CARL OOTTUEB Plalt8!i,, lAYtma TURMAN ¥1] [J\VID FffiTER ru111..aUCOl'ft-O ~11yCARLGOTIUEB ~tiyLAl.OroilFRIN ~"' ~ .... ............. ~~°"'.... '--"' ............ _ ....... .._,.. ~ ...... --Tunrtadlrbata ... ~ .. ~, ------STARTS TOMORROW------ Mlmtll COSTA MESA 1Yllf£ OIAll5£ Anaheim Dme-ln Bristol Woodbndge C1nedome (71') 879-9850 (71 4) 540·7 444 (7 14) 55 l ·0655 (7 14) 634-2553 llU U ,.. U'UllA W£STMllSTtl UA Movies Saddleback South Coast H1·Way 39 Onve·ln (714) 990-4022 (714) 581 ·5880 014)494-1514 (71 4) 891 ·3693 WUTMIMSJ(I UA Twin ( 71 4) 893-1305 l "l know fl°" hate 1tU:h approranct1. But tllat'• the bu.dneu we·~ in." On a NCenl Mero Grl/ftn pro- gram IN r~ hotD 1he told mm he could /oil lril phobia. "When JIOU malce JIOUT littJ. ~JIOU apeech, do ) \ l ~I)• ·NJl'O tried out Uds ptye.bojoa 111 • cept. ilii ~Wt Hrller bonor. AM tic~ off so 1ucc.-!ulC,Y IM deddecl he'd bean bull fDd ed.ead tbt O,Car ceremoahm. U um U.. Wi11Det lo llill eatesory, ,he'd apeak tail , but with eboUlh eonftdeu' to 4o lt naturally, at Robert De Niro. I • ,, TRIS STORY •,4DB u1 re111ember anot•·arat but batbtul tiar Paul Mupl. Io early televil~ ¥ cOOHDted to snake blJ Gilb' Uxe TV Interview on "lb' Gardner CaUina.". Wben be &Ped bow tona It would be, M.,.Slyn told bim, "Aroupd 10 or 15 minutes, Mr. MWU." A/Ur V.. altot.O. w thook llandl and not~td hta W1'• q oold. ''.Aftllfhtfto 10l"OllQ, Jlr. ltlvM,'!" toe culccd. "No/' tlw ~"II actor ~ '1lri(ed. "But," he conf11Md, "I toa1 wrv Mm>UI. I IMwe pla11ed monJ1 "°"' m m11 U/1tf1M. Bllt Ud.I ii tlM! Jirat ttm1 I ewr ~Pmil Mtnd!" ~ "T,.. Raging. Bull," '°' undnatand atemmed f rom on amc~ ror arltc~1) Ja1" LoMotta OflU wrote /or True ~· W• 6m*.t tlw I~ mid· cti.wdght ~ to come °" our taUc •hot.o and ~- Old fashioned, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style. . . and the Gr...n<l PorUg(' h<r« olkts you an t.'\'Cfling w compett' with your t'avorire memory ~ !inkling dinm . .,. music, elegant candlelit table ~uings. the grandeur of ~ing tahl~ide cookery The: ultimatdy dam:cab~ Dick Powell Trio i~ fearured Thursday through Sarurday 7 w 12, and soft pa.ano orhcr evenings. Vakt parking SEAFOOD CONNOISSEURS Thu r..day. Friday. Saturday ask for our '"Flying Loh!.ter'" dinner fr~h Maine lohstcr.., oyster.., dam.ti, flown in from Boston Displaced Easterner... rejoice! ~REGISTRY IR800 Ma<:Anhur Boukv:uid (7 t4) 7 S2-8777 fhr "'1P"'4" •t.i.•d <.._,"fl'....-.tlkllll llWt. Tn.. A giant of a man against a general seeking glory ... a spectacular adventure of arch enemies in battle. Tlw Tnle book-lngth featUTW atorCcd Oft .paQI 40, wUh lak# wrUbtg, "I'm not trrfng to wldlftOOl/a m11,.lf ... I woa a thU/. I t'""1 a lfl11t , .• I did fwo temu tn jajl and I'm luckfl I Uloln't a murderer ... Bui t"'-rata wllo nm boimg mode me &oc* UM Little Lord FauntlnotJ ... " WE STILL BA VE an audio dbe of thla ln· tervlew and (lf it's aUll playable and tlndable) think there's enough meat ln It ror a follow-up column. Or perhaps • • Ra1lng Bull -Part Two." Smd JIOUr quelttoru to HJI Gordner, "Glad Y°" A11ud That," core o/ thil ~. P.O. Boz 15'0, Coata Mua, Calif. '2626. Marilyn and Hy Gordner wiU an.norr "' man11 qve1honl "' &MJI can m tMir column, but the w hnM of mail make• ~tonal r-i>U. • fmpoaible. MM·Sfil ~~~~~ ~~--.._. .. , .............. .... ~i~· i =~r~E!-r=~= --·-... ' .............. - -·---·~ THl HO~IHO ca1 ,,.. .......... _ ... ._.. ,, . ......_. CAIMt • n.M A'f --.0 THIEF IJIJ , ...... ,, . ·---. •". , .... · 1 II_,.. Timi._ r& r•P • IAT4Ult TIL t• '"-STAR WAAS IN! ,_, .... _ .. ,. __ ,..._., __ _ -l'teT\lfll .... --OflDtHARY PEOPLE 1111 ....,, ... ._ . ............... ,. .... ,,..~ MAMA IOLfTA MEXICO NORTE IT'I a&CICI 8TAA WAAS t"'I -METEOR - -~ .... --°"otHARY P£0PU 1•1 -ALL NIGHT LOHO l'I <*_., 8'1119 'I'-0...11 AM ,._,,. ·-·-t.AHT•ft*M-KHl0HT"40IRI 1111 -JAQUA" UVES t"t ........ -,....~ TMl'~~NO 1111 1*CHh • .D4'1M 11t1 . . Robert DeNiro ... Oacar'• raging bull MmlCAAll "THIEF" 1111 I I I I I 111 1-\ '-.II \ ' --1u.-=..... Welftder wonwn "°"' .,_ blldl.._... ... Of • .................... °""" dlllOI l)'IMm ~ ..... I TIC TNJ OOU8H M•A•l•H Af* at~ utlnQ • pint of f'ranl: ·a bfoocl, HllWtl9)"9~1*nof ~~ ... .GOOD,.. Thelma'•,_~ 1tanda to I09e Ille oontrKt end J.J ,_ the J9we of • ~ IOWI lt'8ftt. (Pw1 4) • TOMOMOW/ TODAY MIXED REACTIONS -A deaf hospital employee <David Purdham) is uncertain of his feelings about the news of an operation which could restore his bearing on "Nurse" tonight at 10 on Channel 2. A looll II the l1lat In tom· mul\ICtlion •at•llllaa, wewil• aatety In the a19c- lron\Ca lnduetry. • 1tart1lng atct>MOloglcel dllcOwry In Iha Bay Are&. G 8*lTNC OOMPNIV ~()118 .... di A8CNIWI ... MIU.MYI WB..COMa BACK. l<OTTP """ lo9lng a fight, Epataln dl~ra bacauM ha car>'I tllta Iha hataaamenl the other s-tt100• gl\19 "'"' • MHNYHIU A return 111111 la paid 10 Iha Hotel Sotdlde with Benny In Cllatge of rOOffl ~ • KceT NEWAE.AT G 8TUl*>1& 'Tubing" Cowt)Oy OMny Sweitzer rldaa WI • wild mustang roundup, C.lhy Sherrill tubae OOwn Fenn· ~:.=-IR) 9 IAMEY tA.LE1' Whll• Wolo caraena CHANNEL LISTINGS -~ *"' Yofll In a ~ C91>, IN dllt8Ct~ "' the prec:lnel "-10 cope witll en undar~ lll-1lglltlOll ~lntwn•Altaln. ua• IDITONAL 1:001 C:.NRWI N90 .... HAPP't DAYa AGAIN Marlon 1rana1onna L .. tt_ TUIC9daro Into • lo""Y young lady I<>< • mllltary '*'· I A8CNEW8 JOQA'8WtU> • w•A•l•H Aner IM mall con-. Trae>9" mall• plllfll to "-! and Frank ,..,. r angel hll atOdl portfOlio • ITMET8 CW SAN ""-+MCl800 A wanted alien wlthOul • gr-. card get• lnlo trou- ble t>alora Stone an<I l(eller o-in ~on the rMlk .. • OVIREMY G.-ta MllCI\ Miller. Con· g,....,,_, Ron Oelluma. (R) fJ KNXl 1CBSJ Los Angel~s 0 KNBC 1NBCl Los Angeles 8 KTLA I I no I Los Angeles D KABC rv 1ABCI Los Angeles (I) KFMB 1CBS1 Sc1n Diego 8 KHJ· TV (Ind I Los Anqeies @) KCST (ABC1 San 01,..go CD KTIV (lnO 1 LO"> Anqt>le..., • KCOP TV (lnu l Los AnqelPS fD KCE T rv t PBS> LOS Anqt>IP'i '1il KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunt nqton Beacn a....v..,.. Ou.ta: Nell c.ner. Brlln Kerwin. WM Stwlnar, Sonny SNoyer. 1:ao. 2 ON THI TOWN Hosta ..SleYe Eftwdl and Melody Rogers lM• • '°'* ••llow•-d~• hit,~ how It me11 .. the ctlar1 and cllmba to the t09; • 50 r-~ty Nlul•. I fAJll&.Y mJO IHANANA Gu.I: l(rlalty McHlchol • lYawTTNa8 L.Oe AH'Vlfl ~& ,,_ Peci<OH and P111t Moyet tllte a 1oo1t at Iha big qyelle, AIWI Marga- ,., and 007 ~ !Of ••acuti\191 Q ''"THE MU9C • AU. IN ™E FAMtl.. y Milla pteC>llt• l0t Ilia llnal ··-end the l.mlfy at lut ,_ tl'll C>foaoact ol hla COiiage gr eduallOn • MACNa, I LEMM1' AEPOftT 69 NEWI CJ) P.M. MAQAlJHE A manied couple who co- IUlhOt romanoa f\O\'M, I man wno ac:utpla d ay on akulll to r..ctella Illa IM· tur" of murOer vlcllma t:OO 8 Cl) CHECl<INQ IN A rowdy loolt>ell laam. coached by l yla' a old high IChoot ~. Cheekl Into Iha St Freclerlel< D llUCK AOGER1 A rnenactng w1tlord thr .. lana Iha &nip .nan &Jell offera Mnctuary 10 a belutlful atowaway 8 MOWE * * 'h "WlnchMle< 73" I I 9411) Tom Tryon. Jofln Suori A mM. I priald rlfta "a1<>1en, 1n<1 ha wait• for 11 '°'°~~-­........... ~ =--~ ...., ....... Cota c-.:-• !'I'...-· "; • • ·~ ''Ctlllnt ~ rrr• Ct"4a) ....... .___ efl, .._..,. w.-. A ~~.,, ,,. ,-r-Gld -" .... wrOfttf\1111 lmlkttoned •n..w...pw.. ..... ,.. Peter~~ ttllt dr~ Oii,.... thl~•~nov­ .. -In the 1QOa. about • O'OUIP ot ~··· drlnJUna "t•r '~"• ~.. ---IMlmllell .,,... .. ~ by mc.· ... ..... • • • ''Ttle t.Mpoell-" (1M1) ~Lenn. Peter a..... 8...cl °" IN~ by ~ BerfWd Shaw. A~~­ foroed ~,_tattler'• .. to many • man with a Cf,IOd ._.,_ ~. • ONaTAGI: MM04 YNJ«111~ a.\dl Lunwt aeta out "The~ .... ..,_,. wyp69yot11c 1p '11uand lllOt«*lll Md .......... . Thi Prenlt ........ .... dating bedl to tl'll 11th -tury. • At.EICHf~ STOftV "The GOiden Hol~" ~ Ring Lardner. A r.tlf'ad ~ C-'-Whitmore. T-Wr1gtlt)~ In Florida find tl*r mar- riage 9/ulkan "'""' 8he 9n00Unten an ptd bM<J 1st__. Elllot1). IR> uoeCI> PAM~ The t_,... dallgtlter of I l'tlppl9 ~ ..... i.gal md to be *'°"I.cl ln10 a ~family. •<m90IC>M~ Kip ftnally gell I cNlnolt to talta Sonny out on the town (R) H08(1) MAONUM,PJ. Meoni-le hln1d to find • -·· mlalf1Q llancle. ind pan of Iha Job 1nc1uda1 entering a matalt>on awtm-run-bilte r-D MOVE * • • "Famll)' Ptot" ( 11ms1 Wlnt•m Devane. Bruce Own A fortuneteller end '* ca~ boyll1end Mt out 10 ~ta a weanhy widow'• m!Nlng ,.,.., and c;oll9C1 • 110,000 r-d (R) • 9 llAMEY MILl.8' A ,_ datac:tM accu.. 86rney and hla aqu9d ol being on the talce (R) • Fll.MO'l1 CllarlH Cllamplln 1n<1 Oatry E..t 11091 thl9 ~ cl.i Nghllghllng dlpa Ind lootage of UC)COfnlng ltlma' lncludlng ~Cimino'• "HM-''• G1ffl" end Ab91 Oance'a 11121 4-ttour ~ ... ~ ... -~~ Roger Eber1 and Ger'8 SOMETHING ROTl1EN IN DENMARK Orahge COut OAJL:Y PtLOT/lhu~. Ap(ll 1t, 1181 Cll) TUBE TOPPERS · • KCOP. 1:00. Mllllooalreu.'' SophJa and tM late Peter Sellen 1tar in tb1t movie about a woman wbo mu.t r:n8rri a 1ooa. buslneumao because of the terms of ber f ather'a will. KCET at 8:00 -''On Stale: ~~ Y~1'9". Lumet.'' Lumet act.a out "The Dybbuk," a te1end of poueulon and "Hershele the-Prankster," about a jester in the 17th century. NBC 8 9:00 -"Femlly Plot." A suspense movie about a couple's fearcll for • mlsaJn& man leadinl to discoveries of crimes by an unknown person. Stars Karen Black, Bruce Dern, Barbara Harri.a and WilliafD Devane. a.a .. ,_. "' ~ ..... lo<* at whet'• -.. the lllCM9a. uoeo TAXI Mlle Vylnt '° ,_ • -cab *'-· Lou+a dr'-• c.ib lrtlo • lltUI oMf led)' ~ oft • cub and .. eoc::ked wfttl • ,.,.. ~'-"- • TOMOMOWI TOO.\Y A NpOf1 on ~llft ol the 2 'It oantury; en eJl.lll'llM- tlon ot ,_,and~ p.-oduoed by tolw po.-. • IOOlt •l ... eplnal lnjuty care ut11t •• v~ Medlc:<ll Center; -" p.-edlctlona for r9\IOl\i1lonery c:heno- ln "-lean WOf1C h•blta due to advancea In ·~•Ion•. . ·~ ''The A9Cllng Game: Hor- ~ .. A dlll.reugM -~ In lid and Qlico "haft hi• calabrlty r80Motaa II llolan alter mailtlng • highly publlca.ed ~-... grand ma._{Par13) 11l00 • Cl) 9 ..... l#t'YNK Tiie ~ ...... '°" !Idea with • "'"ID'~ craft In outer~- I NIWl. YWB> GAME M•A•e•H Aed9t II ~led to the "FMIOUI Laa VagM Writ- .,. School" Ind begln• -ding hit! ~· of Ille 4077th. • llNfYHIU. 10:00. Cl) NVMa Benny portraya Te11 Cym- bel, Ille Ooldaf\ Boy of Pop. A deal hoapltal employee rMCll In en UMllpeoted mann. to Mary'a ,_. that hit heating Clll be r.(Ofed. • ••• NIWI l!l I0/2111 • MM 10# tea: ntlATM "Thar••• Requln" Altllough any end wtt h- dr~. Thar-11 alrongly attracted IO her aldcly hua-1 bat><I 'a <*I achOol Irland 1Par1 IJO ~-NEwa • IND9UC)8fT NETWOMNEWI • l**CAVITT 0._1: Pater Shen.. 1,:ao.(I) TI41~ een11ay ...... <Horga'a acMca. lilt-10 "· and wlnda up In jaljl. (RI 8 TONGHT Hoa4· Johnny Caraon 0-•: 0on Mc:Lawi, Lor· na Panaraon. 89 MCMIWS NIGHTUNE I LIT'I MAKE A DIA&. HOOAN'8 ""'°° Hogan ~ .,, Officln' dub tor Stalag 13 • loUWfTA Ari unc:ooper ...... wit- JOHN DARLING ........... ,My • l'Mdl M ltlit MWctlr ..... !!.!!! o.t.ITllO .. MO .me.H._•M• ... ,,,. ••111'111'•, .............. aft "" ................ '° -........ ~ .... _....,.........,. '*"'~ ,., " .. .._ .. (tlM,,,.... ~ P"1· .,...,.. ~ A .... VOWllOtdltMIMtl ., ,,,.c::= ...... •• --Whit.....-. • CNWtY on CNttl9'• ,.oht ........... dlecowet lllilllcwl9 "' oo6d ~ hldd9rt l*ow the declll. (ft) . ...,. ..... A ~ hlQNy ,....,.cted ...... and • lnend of Matt'a. la now • Mk>ol'I bwn, and Matt declCMa to Nllp'*11. ..... -..Cll ILi The W ..U M to lll'CI IN oon\IPI C111Wr9 of two P'~ f\.wld r-.ra tor d\lrity. ttaO 8 TOMOMOW OuHt•: •lnoar Tad Nugent; 8-\. Jeremi.11 o.nton (A-Ale.). .OHi.,..~ "Encounl«" "" ~ pllol la m)'1terlou1ly abduc:led oul of l"9 ale)', and auOdenly ~ ~of mllN wwey t:OO. P9YCMC Pl•tOfmt" "Setl4iltMty And CtNIM· ly" Ho91: Damien Silnp- aon. Gue111· Dennie Waa11ar, Lynda Oay- George, Chrlalopllar ,..,. """' ...,,. .. ~NNcM. 9 CWQ.••HJll•U,.llTfWT Al.a ..... ----~.re_.· ::i~ .. " "Nttlllt lft ...,..,. (1117) JoM c ......... ~...,. .MCMI •••• ,_,, ~ .. (1 ... ) ,. .... )' c::ioon.y, Jedi =1e.= .. mYONM. ..... .. ~ ••'4 ''TM Oun M4 The ..,,,.... ( ,.,,, ..... Owl. ... ~. uo•~ * • "Hoff0t ,.._ FrOlft TM Tllfftb" (1170) Paul ~. EMtM Cohen. Ht ..... l:tO MCMI * * "Roetlnu OutctwnenH 11Ma1 Dermot w-.i . .,_ 119y Teller. ._.MCMI *'Ai "The 04ant 0-" ( 1N7) Jeff M«row. Mllfa Cotd9)' .... , .... '* ..,. • * "Ghoat Ship" ( 1852) Oermo1 Wal1h, Hazel Court Frida11'• Da111 I~ .flol'I~• -MORllNG- 11•. * "o-t Trait" (1835) John WWfne. Mary Korn- man. A rodeo atar Mia out a-~ •..ov. * 11t * "Anat0tny Of A Murder" (1968) Jamee St.-wt, a.ti Gazuta A am ell-town all or nay ~ en Army lteutan- .,,, wtW> II acc:uaed of k 111- lng a man ~ell ol attadllng hie wife. I to ttap • gang of bani< 1 robt>era. t t:IO Q * * * "The Fabuloua I World Of JutM Verna'' 11NI) l.<><M TOdt. &n.I Navar• • llD• 11 IDINT NITWOM..W. 1:10e MOYIE **'Ai '"Trapped BenMth The See" (1874) lAe J Cobb. t.Aertln e.IMn\ Four ,.,.,, .,.. 1r llPP9d ,,, an I underwlter room deCMlnd-I ant upon raaa.e ,_.,.,.lo -AFTERNOON-------- 12:00 • • * * "Out OI The PMI" ( 11147) KJnl Oouglu, J-Ot- • •• "8'rt u~·· The AR 01 Noetl" I 1976) Oocu- m.ntary S:IO Q * * 'n "\/anlahlng Alri- ca" (1977) ~lary by Armstrong & Batluk Controversial 'Dallas' a mixed revkw abroad By WllLIAMC. MANN . ._ ..... ,..._ ...... COPENHAGEN, Denmark As if the unhappy Ewing family doesn't have troubles enough in Dallas, CBS' hi\ series is being derided in Denmark as a plastic, perverted mess unworthy of Danish TV. A leftist parliamentarian even ls advocating in.direct censorship, a dirty word in free- thinking Denmark, to get the show off the air. Denmark was late in joining the worldwide bandwagon for "Dallas," the phenomenally popular night-time soap opera that details the tribulations of the oil-rich Ewing family. But "Dallas'' has been among Danish television's most popular series since its first screening last Dec. 26. Joergen trverseo, entertainment director for the country's lone, publicly owned, TV station, said audience sur- veys in February showed more than half the S million Danes watch every Friday night ei>isode. Carsten Kyhn of the Left- Sociallst party was not im- pressed, however, and he calJed Ifversen before Lhe Radio Coun- cil not long ago to express his displeasure. The council is the advisory body established by parliament for the channel. At the mettiog, it developed that other council members ,,........,.,,, ... =,.-,............. fl ____ .....,.., .,..... AU.AGE•~o .....,....._ were not overwhelmed with the caliber of "Dallas," either. lt was criticized for poor artistic quality and simplistic charac- terization. "Perverted charac- terizations," "a perverse mess" arid ·'TV's answer to sob-sister magazines" were some of the epithets. Once council member joked that she was surprised the U.S. Embassy had not filed a diplomatic protest over the pro- Jim Davia, patriarch of the infamous Ewing family in "Dallas." gram for portraying American society in such an UJlf avorable light. The summons to Ifversen wu to discuss his reasons for buying the series' first 18 episodes, which he recently gave on a show called ''TV on TT": 300 million people in the Western world watch the show. he rea- son~d. so Danes st\ould get a chahce to pass judgment. In addition. Ifversen said, sta- tions in West Germany. which reach 40 percent of the Danish audience, and in Sweden, which reach 50 percent, were to air the program. lf Danish TV de- 'Valley' updat.e in productwn HOLLYWOOD <AP) -An updated version of "Valley of the Dolls" is now in production for CBS, starring Catherine Hicks, Lisa Hartman, Veronica Hamel, David Birney, Jean Simmons and James Coburn. Rehee Valente la producing the four-hour miniseries at 20t.h Century-Fox. baaed on the novel by Jacqueline Susann. It •u made into a movie in 1961. The miniseries &Do features Gary Colllnit, Bert Convy, Carol Lawrence and Steve Inwood. TEAR GAS ca> Protect Youneff ~ O.mcd Shield _,.... -c...w i.., .. u.,.. hf'· We otter tl'I• f9qUlred 2 hour cou,. end permit ~ carry *' gas. All ca..... taught by police offlcen. oi ..... held 8t our ottl09 or at you,. f0t 118.20 Onclud" clut end pertnll I c1....-1..e p.m. Wldneadaya, 10-12 Noon e.tunfeyt. c1 ..... held at your offlot by tor 15 01 m~rt -no .,dltl<INI coet. murred, he said, that would have cheated 10 perceeit of the country out of one of the most popular television shows in his· tory. "So what if 300 million Americans and Europeans have got themselves involved ln the ups and downs of the plastic family Ewing?" Kyhn retorted. "What about those 900 mlllion Chinese who haven't seen it? ••I think Radio Denmark should stick its antenna into Danish soil." Kyhn still fumed the next day. ·'There are 2.8 million Danes who look at this stupid thing," he said. He said informal rules for en- tertainment programs on Danish television call for preservation or "some kind of quality. This series has no quality at all." Irversen, who said he counts himselr among the fans of "Dallu," disagreed with Kyhn's opinion and said hundreds <11 thousands of Danes do, too. He said he was deluged with letters a few weeks ago when newspapers speculated that the series would not live past 18 episodes. The Radio Council has no a\4.&hority to order a program oft the air, but Kyhn said he wan~ his colleagues to make it clear to Ifversen that, "OK. Wf!'ve had lB numbers of "Dallas," and we don't want any more." Cheoking out 'Checking In' BY PETEJl J . BOYE& A,,......._.,_ LOS ANGELES -You know what tbey say about inbreeding? It's true. Meet "Checking lo," the idiot grandchild of ·•All in the Family." This unfortunate CBS bomozygote comes to prime time out of "The Jeffenona," which came to prime Ume out of "Alf in the FamUy." "CbeckinB In" is at least the filth show with rootJ in "All in tbe Family." "Maude," "The Jeffersona," "Good Times" and "Mr. Dooly" were lhe others. "AU In the Famlly" was drawn from the Btiliab comedy, "Til Death Do Us Part." The bad genes bad rd surface eventually. The spinning off here is much tbe same as it was for "Tbe Jef- fersoQS ," wbo moved uptown to a betl,er life and lesser ga1• when they left Archie's Houser Stn!et for their own show. A sassy mald came with the Jeffersons' new life, and it turned out that Marla Gibbs' Florence was the beat thins about "The Jeffersons," which continues to be a ratings bit for CBS aft.er seven yean. Thus. "C heck~ng In," Florence'& move to a better llte anlt l~r gap. She haa found a job"'*s maid supervisor ln a rilly hotel. Instead of tradln1 lnlulll with' Gt!orge Jeffei'IOll, who at 1'aat bad the routi.De down, she aoea at ~ witb Lury Linville, the "M-A-S-H" drip who's now a mean hotel manager. Some samples of their clever word- duels: Florence: "You'd love it if I quit, wouldn't you?" Linville: "I'd love it so much I think I'd die!" Florence: "Oooh, that sounds so temptln' ! " One of F1orence's maids, Bet- ty, I think her name ls, off en a special treat for viewers wbo long for mlnstcel shows. When Florence tells the frightened maid there la no such lhinl u shoats, the offensive thing rolla her eyes and replies, ''Well, no. ah ain' saytn• they 11, and· ab aln' •a.Yin' they altl' ." Lawdy, where's Stepinfetcbit! ... WASHJNG10N ~AP) "-Wuhlnjtoa POlt N· porter ~ Oooll• bu ~. u;. PWltNr Prlae ancJ rftl,.ed from Cbl ...,,.,_,.r after acknowl~ her ttory 'Of u .. yearo0Jd herom addict WU DO& true. ExecuUve r.dltol' BenJamln Bradltt told tht 'Pulltser Prise board tbat Mill Cookt bad d•· termlned 1he could not accei>t Uat prbt, U· nounced Modda1, becaun ber ltol'1 wu ~ com· posite, "tbe quotes attributed to the ebJld Wtr• in fact fabricated" and eventl llM elalnt4"1 to have wltneued did not occur. ~ Btadlee alao told a meetlnl ol Polt tdtten •net rePQrten what bad happened. lit •aid Miu Cooke, 26, bad offered her reaisnattoo and tbat "It baa MIWPOlr -IMAllBOR CRUISE • SUteAY mlMCH· AT THI CAll•Y 714 671-7122 ~ LO~G T*M TtOANs T*1 TO s VRSs ! VERY COM PETITIVE RATES ~ f ON REAL E~'T~ 2nd & 3rd TD S g: ~ (714)851·1840 DA\'S ..J • ~ ~ WEEKENDS 759.9553 NIGHTS ~ ! 0 RANGE COAST EQUITY FUNDS ~ ..., w -r--,,, . ._~ :-.fl~ St0.000 TO St .000.000 SECVRED BY REAL & o. MERCURY SAVINGS and loan 4NOC14lion E~«:utive Offices: 7812 Edln11•r Ave., Huntington Beach, CA 92647 Southern C.llfoml• Aeglon•I OlflcH: 5877 E La Palm.:s Ave , Anatwlm, CA 92907 81165 Valley VI-St . e.,.,.,a Pm. CA 90&20 1~ Amell! Rd •• Camarlllo, CA 93010 20715 S. Av•IOn Blvd , C....on CA 90746 23021 Lake~,., Or , (Lake ~Ofeat), El Toro, CA 92630 1001 E l1'1199'ial Hwy., La Habta. CA 90631 G:t 4140 Lo(lg Bea<:I\ BIYd , Long Beach. CA 90807 • 22939 Hawthorne Blvd . Tqrrance, CA 90506 1095 Ir.Ina Blvd , Tualln. ~ 92980 .. ~';~, 235 N Citrus Ave • West Covina. CA 91793 llNOU "Mercury Room" ava11101e on • reserved O•tls FORGIVE THEM FATtB • • • C.Ome hear the meaning THS Holy Week at Newport Hatbor Lutheran Church Maundy Thursday Service - Thursday, Apnl 16 Good Friday Friday. April 1 7 • "Meal in the Upper Room" been 1cceptec11 '' iiDd •aid be llaued \be 1tatement "wltb ~t aadoaa and relfet." "TAMt ~ waa a particularly promlaln& and taluted 14*n• reparter," be said. "She re1reta tbese e'ieott u much u The Wublntton Po1t teareta the\D·" ' Mlsa Coote, wbo Joined Ule Pott lri December 11'19 att. ~ for the Toledo (Ohio) Blade, could not be reached for commeat. ln New York, a 1pokeanian for Columbia Unlvenity, wblcb awardJ the prtus upon recom· mendatJon of the Pulitzer Prize board, said Wednelday the board would have no immediate comment on the award. "lt'a not rilbt for U5 to comment at lhi1 point," said Fred Knubel. the e·oo and 7 30 p.m. • Tenebrae Service 730pm to stay In hOt water j • EASTEI SUMDA Y Festival Services Easter Sunday at.8:00 and 10:30 1.m. A Panc.ke Feast will be hei<t before both aen1icea Bring the whole neighborhood! For re .. rvatlona. please call the church olftce Fndlly morning. II you're 5 yea,. old (or YoU"98'l· there will be an EASTER EGG HUNT al 10 00 Lm Newport H•rbor Luther•n Church 7~ Dover Or., Newport Beach S~·3631or~ Baby11tter available tor all aervlcea. CALL TOM MARSTON ; • FOR A i .FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN- 1 INTEREST ON~Y .. 'Newpo~.~~!~'!'!;.I;:c I . 714 780-8060 ® -HOLY WEEK 1981 GOOD FRIDAY 12 noon through 2 p.m. Welk the Way of the c...s WI"' US,. Comf1'.iunlon and special music. EAITEA"EVE (Saturday) 7:30 p.m. Walt !~expectation with us The Great C.ndellght VlgU, Baptism and First E~rl1t.ot Easter 30-gallon water heater with ene rgy aavt ng I imi4i·;·~· 40-pn... .1 .... 124.95 50-felleti ...... 184.95 double hibachi Cut Iron double hlbechl with edjuatlng twin grllliea. 10"x17". 11364 Reg. 8.99 . make H a hobby to do H right Dramel Moto Tool• with over 30 acce11ortes la 34•• your complete hobby kit 1261. Reg. 57 95 boolee canvas beach chair More comfort than. ever on the beech or .POOi deck Blue canvaa 'bn a folding aluminum frame. Quick-drying atyle. . 14.95. • trim up tlll ...... Mclane 2 h.p. edger/ • trtmlMI' tlwe you profee· ~~~~~:: 15911 colle1e apokesman. "We 've received no official word on It." -It wu belleve there wu/only one prevloua case ln which a prize, once awarded, waa cban1ed. That was ln 1'78 when a picture taken by a free· laoce photographer was submitted by United PreH lntematiooal aa tbct Y(ork of a atalfer throu1b what wb ealled "an honest mbtake." When tbe error wu discovered the ·board took the prize away and 1ave the $1,000 award to the free lancer. o The statements from the Post follpwed a re· port Wednesday In the Waahlngtoo Star that the Poat \\fOuld return the prize. professional touch and cut 7'1.'' circular aaw from Skll. Gives extra cutting capacity combined with super comfort and handling ability Pl• h.p. motor. #574 STANLEY powertocll• Pl425 Exclusive 25'111" wide blade stays rigid up to 7'. t 88 Power return Belt cllp Reg 15 49 dlnt119 comfort gets around Quality 42" d iameter glass-top table with aturdy aluminum frame. Outdoor dining made elegant! #142. Aeg. 110.95. hey, Ylgoro , ............. Vlgofo lawn tertlllz« with controlled time release formula tor healthy, gr"n lawnt. 25 lb. bag. Aeg.10.M . I for safe 1teppl119 Derby 4' wooden atep lad· der features palnl/utlllty shelf with popular aide spreader locklr'lg-device. Sturdy construction. wob· 13•• ble real1tant. #390 Reg 1IU5 cool 'n comfy Open w .. Y. vinyl strap chalra to complement your new patio tabla. Cool 4 1 91 and comfortable aeatlng. 1900. Reg. 80.96. . support your locll ....... Galvantud wtre tomtito support to Insure t\Mlthy, large fNltl. SERVICES *•itt Dtrtf1 or~ EMPLOYMENT & HErAIATION x"°°" lftatrU('(H)ft JObW••~· Help W-..t 11 6 f NEt t)tAMDISl ... • llOO IJIO I)» .... 1* )tao 17'1 llllO ltOO 2(Dj 2IOll DOG DOO , .......... Hottu: AU real estate ad- vert i 1 ed ln thls newtpaper Is aubjttt to the Federal Fair Hoos· 41>1 Act al 191111 whJcb mak.. lt Uleaal to ad-vertlM •·any preference. llmltatlon, or du· crlmlnatJon based on THE REAL ESTATERS race, color. religion,-------- HX. or natiooal origin, or an lntmtion to make any nch preferen<;e. limitation. or dis- crimination." COSTAMISA 511-$125,500 :: Thia new1paper will not ~ knowinflY accept any :: advert sine for real ZSJO estate wh.ich is in viola- 2\IOO lion of the law. OWMEI SAYS SB.L Not an add-on or con· version. A real S Bdrm family home in one of Costa Mesa's nicest areas. Handymans de· light. Call now and save! MIOIS: ~Hffffn -L-.....a..a ~......_._od SEA COVE -c--.._...-1 PROPERTIES cWty ... report ~ ron 1-r1•cty. Ta.. 714-631-6990 DAILY l"tLOT•1-u W A L K T O ••HHy for .... fint l11correct l111ertlon BEACH oely. Giant 4 Bdrm pnced right! Spacious hv1ng room features wood HotlN'sforS. burning fire place ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Owner aASl5ted f1nanc IOO ing. Hurry,caU67J..8MO •••••••••••••••••••••• MESAYBDE S IEDROOM 3 IATH $192,SOO 751·319 I NO DOWN PAYMENT THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCUFf VACANT Redu ced $25.000. ~Desperate owner says bring all offe rs. No qualifying, Low down 4 Bdrm single stOry home. totally upgraded. Call for more details. '<"'6 Pay closing rosts only ! nm Buy your own home! 11w Must qualify for mon @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES lhly payments. Exciting : new concept. Call today ""~ for Cull det.ail.a. 67~ 11(1:11) 71 4-63 f-6990 HOME ~ _, ~ .... HOU llO.IO --~ MO llO'I) lli1l1 llCllll QI IJOl!3 hi& U'I ~ llllll3 -~ ll(M Wlllll llCHO 1'(llO -woo ~ THE REAL ES~ATERS 31RCHAIMER '91.000 Sharp 3 Br. 2-sty home. huge family rm. formal dining rm, util. rm. Loads Of Storage I Love• ly neighborhood Giant Jot ! Call Ten Marquez 15~·1.221 R&'Mtte I! Ei\ 1.1 OHS IN THE LAKES $81,SOO. Beautiful single story condom111ium. de corated in earthtones and woods Excellent location Close to pool. spa, lennl.!I couru. shop. ring , schools, etc Love y lush park -l ike land sc aped co m munstuy. Great for busy executive. Call 7S2·1100 THE REAL ESTATERS VIEW = CAMEO HIGHLANDS = OCEAMVIEW OwMt'wil~ 3 Bdrm Cliff Haven beauty Owner will con· sider all reason.,ble or rers 2 SPAS, one indoor. one outdoor. 2 rireplaces. used brick entertainers pool area Cabana. fire ring. view Saddleback Mountall\S, Fashion Island. ligttts Newly remodeled, new kitchen Call today for appointment. OHL Y I Oo/o DOWN :::,: Now reduced thousands ' too Spacious living room. ::: re a l u r es g I ow 1 n g t1110 fireplace, 3 large bdrms ::: +den. Great assumable ll«lll l.at and owner will help t'IUI '7Ull • 'llCTI ,.,.. fht rm .'711 9711 V1:IO IT'D '1121 fill mo •Ttl na t'l1I 'Ila 1'1• 11141 t7'4 n• finance Call 67J.8550 THE REAL ESTATERS Cl) SPYGUSS SEA COVE Spectacular views from PROPERTIES thlt 4 bedroom 2 story home. Hi&hly upgraded 7 14 -631-6990 with wood plank floors, ---------1 pool ·1i jacuizi. Wood ~ IR TO~HOM£ panelled living & dininS • '"" 19 room. Game room with Upgrad:f1is9:: w/frplc. deck. '795,000. Auume !At, 2nd & 3rd RCTaylorCo ·1<i 'l')()() with total payment. of 1834. Seller is motivated. A.sit Cor Wendy Sitler. 7S9-ltll ~: ~~===========:;..._j l'IM SELL Idle Items with a --------:J: Daily Pilot Classified Have soroethinl l., sell? . : Ad. Cla11lfled ads do It well. "" ,,. "" ,,., '"' rm ... CRAFTSMEN C G R E S I R E R E T S L 0 H P U N 8 S M U £ T £ R W C A P E R k P l E K E T L E L R A E 8 8 S S J T R L Z E N G £ R I I A Y A P T P T E M J R R l L l P L M Y C R l W 0 l T R E R E A C S M R U l H M It R t N N A T 0 R S [ U M tUIR AM ARkENQ OO ST RTW "V V S E L t £ P C E.C M B S 0 E T 0 A l 0 G 1 R R W U R k L L C Y T R T A M M F I Z A It 0 T A 0 M 0 P l T E M KAH PC MSA TWHJ IBHOAE T HL OTP L ~E GM AH R E PAP T G£ OOP£RRE8 MU LP TE A £1UX Q RORM lP~Q~WOD MT ATRA1•V NHUQETR £NLFT OME OF THE IEST VIEWS IN TOWN! Newport Harbor. Catalina, The Pavillion and Palos Verdes. All from this 4 bedroom pool home on a hill above Corona Del Mar. Owner will help finance. the purchase price is $595,000. the land is held in fee. U~l()U~ t-i()M~i REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 E.aat Coaat Highway. Corona ~el Mar WI HA YI 47 OF THI HST "'"" IM TOWM ' . Need A Tax Shehr7 Call the investment spec1ahsls Touchstone Realty, Inc. 96J.~ Save 6·1% selling your home yeunelf. free tnfo. package, call 646-15'4 HEW EXCLUSIVE SPYGLASS LISTING This beautiful 6 bedroom house is the crown jewel of Spyglass Hill. Decorated in a traditional style, it features e l egant wallpapers. window coverings, carpet, and wood flooring. You can enjoy the spectacular ocean view from the kitchen, family room. living room, o r mas ter s uite and from the custo m poo l and spa in the e legantly landscaped backyard. $925,000 Ask for Cathy. -== S(C~lt\-/&~~s· = MloM '1 QAY I.,__ ____ _ ·~·=~~~ ._lo,_,_.,._. A mong people loolqng for a r ental, 70% read real estate classified ads. ~ l'I BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR o/ r/.wpori REALTORS 675-5511 I. ASSUMAU LOAN -t> •i brMj11t .ct ct.ery Pf'~ McNW. Ullf.,.nity ,.,. Ill He•V. Q ~ wttli Qlfom ........... .,. ( b w ..... .,. Lo.,.., ,oHo & ~ o.ty ~ 54.500. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Cont Hwy •• C... c111 Mw 675-5511 $3 597.50 la all' you have to put down on ~ 2 bdrm homes. Xlnt opportunity lo buy! Seller wants quick s ale !! Only S71 ,9SO . 759-UOl or 7S2·1373 WALKER&LEE R.E. OCEANFRON T COM>O MEWl"ORT CREST 4 Bdrm 2~ Ba. F.R., pool. tenin. & spa. Agt. Roy. ~~--or64e-0686 Whelan Real Estate NEWPORT CHARMER-POOL .,. f-'ly .,... -.... street. L..Qe pool c..d ~ _... Ill a MCWed bocli yard Hrrotlllded by ...... ,,. ()pew IM•J rOOM wttt. .-wty rwdel1d ldtc.-. Two ~ + ... M cO.W be 3rd IMdro ..... $I 85,000 fff. AXER-SREA T LOCATIOl-VU AIMiost IClftd Y ... Pant fp Poiilt ... JI CICl"Oll froM bcry -blodl tr.. ocem. light acroH fro• Newport Heritor Yadlt cw.. UH,000. I VILLA BALBOA .RESM.E-VIEW 2 ldrlft., 2 IA, '-Je ~ llllcrowa.,. & .,_.d kftchew. Pool, Jocmd. gas llQ. Vac..t, OWMr .mo.. $290,000. HARBOR VU llU.S S,OCICH11 & Ope11 5 ... e.o.. °" con.er wttta loocls of r.-for tt.e fcally. "9e poffo, MDhn gra~ """' .,,... $375,000. SlllMNt • .,........ ......... w /flftCMCiN}. VILLA BALBOA RWl.E-VIEW 2 ...._ 2 IA. ..... ~ Mlcrowa.,. & .....-d 111tc...... rooe. t--sJ. gas DQ. Vacant. OWMt" _._ $290,000. WATERFRONT HOMES. INC REAL EST A TE ~In R~~•I• P10llfflY M•n•'I""'*"' 2436 W Coast Hwy Newport Beach 631-1400 -llGlll ILllll CD . OVER 66 'fEARS OF SERVICE MINI IASTll.U .. caeo Former Model With View Of Big Canyon. Three Bedroo1D1 Plus ConvertJble Den, 2~ Bl&bl. Wet B a r . In ter-C om . Lov e ly Appol n t rn en t a Thr ou_.hout. COmmunlty Pool. a..t Yalue In Area. Llated Under ~,000. A .. Joy Of NeWPOrt ., Liatina. ·MIWPOIT MAUOI NW HO.. ' OUtatucilna Monte10 On Pee Land. Cor11er Location. Secluded .Yard Wlt19 Spa . B ea '~fll Lu1 h LandScapbt(. Nl1bt View Of F.11blon b l and • Ba~ Canyon . Owner MoUv•~· $295,000. ].it Koy,,d .. U1111•· N R 6/'J 61() I 4 BR HOME SI 04,950 Prime area, spacious 4 Bdrm home, large enter tainment area with coiy fireplace. Plush carpet- ing! Lush landscaping• A real steal. Offered FHA, VA 98U767 THE REAL ESTATERS SB.LU W /flMAMCE Beautiful executive home. S Bdrm, 2 mast.er suites, stereo thruout Fountain Valley 641-1991 , agt rooL SHARJC 1 ThJS spacious custom built home comes com plete with a full siie re gulation pool table and a fabulous paneled game rm. to put 1t an. 4 bdrrqs. + an outside office Formal dining rm $449,500 C7 I 4t 673-4400 IZUI Ul-2121 HARBOR A pivh 100 or lldrbor Investment Co !' : . .. : .. : , ... : .. •', IAYCREST Attractive three bedroom hom e Cathedral ceilings in h v ing and dining rooms. Oak plank Oooring. Cozy fireplace. Huge covered patio. Pool siie yard. Owner motivated. r.,ake offer. $310,000. 631 -7300 ...... ltsycresfa.-ty Homes like this are not a thing of the put This beautiful model home. with its 3 Bdnns, lar~ family & living rooms. 1s located on on e of WestcUffs lareest lots for maximum pr1vacy Large auw:nable first. owe balance. cau us for detalb. Proudly offered at 1325,000. 1-"oe blmMI Uy 67U700 SOUTH LAGUNA Ma1olftcent ocean view frorn this rustic La1una Beach aettlns. a Bdrm. Cull basement xlnt financing. All foi 1185,000! CAPE COD BEAUTY S Bdrm. family room, Buccola built! On cul• sac near Newport•s Back Bay Covered patio, workshop, plus complete s e c urity system Call now to set! This won't last at ortly $115,000! 646-1111 THE REAL ESTATERS VA TERMS Nt>ver easier to buy than now. 3 Bdnn2 Ba POOL&SPA Summertune fun starts here for your family. at only S128,SOO We recom· mend quick action. 556-2660 C::. ":>fl H l -f""'PHOP~Hlll'--, BUILDER1S BARGAIN Outstanding builders lot. 66X300' with chann- 1ng 3 Bdrm home. cov· ered palJO Live there while you bwld' Lot next doo r al so for ule 66XJOO' Near Newport's Back Bay Call to see, 646-7171 OCEAHROMT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unrurn. New.~yrly. IAYRtONT 3 Bdrm, J ba. uni~. Mint cond.18S()yrly. CHAHMB. RtOMT I 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. unfuro. $750 yrly. associated BPO• £RS . PE.Al TORS l0}', W ft,,tt'l'lO & 11 lt>ti l LOWDOWN Versailles 1 bdrm studio penthouse condo with large assumable loans. $109,900. Call today 979-5370 ALLSTATE. REALTORS DISTINGUISHED I MESAYERDE Dlecover this on e I s buae bdrms, 3 baths, rorm al dining room, gourmet kitchen, 2500 sq. ft. o( traditional ele1ance. Meu Verde's finest. $220,000. act now. c alt 54&-231.3 THE !<EAL ESTATE RS l ' I • SEIVICES s.. .... o. ..... ..,, EMrt.OYMENT & nErAIATION Sc ....... IMtr~•­JuO W•nlett• Hetpll.&l\l...S Ill .. f' MEttJf ANDISE ...... "'_ A-.-n Awhatt :..~~ ... ,.,..1. C•nwtu 6 f...qw1pm•nt (&l> I.Jo«• f)e."' y..., t\tNUhltt c,;., ... s. •• Hanft ~Cood' J~•~•rv u•tt.IO<k ~ .. ffl_) M•M"ellarwous )lhtc•\\•l"lieOIJ.t ~ M\\11l )Cuucal JM&r\imf'nh Olf1r. rurn .It t quip Pou ~"':, ~~~~~·. Sl>o<\Jlll GAod• Slort-,ltntaurant DH f':~t'..to0,thtUwro BOATS & MARIN£ EQUIPMENT ams.mt 0-.1 ...... ....,,. Notlu: All real estate ad· ve rtlaed in this newspaper ii subject to the Federal f&U' Hous· "21 Act al 1988 which mak• it rne,.1 to ad· vertlse ''any preference, limitation, or dis· crlmlnaUoo based on race, color , religion, 1eJ1 , or natJooa.l origin, or an inteotioo to make any s uch preferen~e. limitation, o r dis- crim in at.ion " This newspaper wm not knowlnf ly accept any advert sing for real estate which is In viola· tlon of the law. THE ~EAL ESTATE RS COSTAMISA 511-$125,500 OWMER SAYS SB.L Not an add-On or con· version. A real S Bdrm family home in one of Costa Mesa's nicest areas. Handymans de· light. Call now and save! BIOIS: Ad'terthen .L.-.....a..11 ~ .o&.......a.. od SEA COVE -c--.._-1 PROPERTIES .. .., -report .,.. '°" 1-r1a1.1y. ,... 714-631-6990 DAILYrtLOTot.-.. w A L K T 0 labllty for ... fint lacornct hH.rtloft BEACH Giiiy. Giant 4 Bdrm priced right 1 Spacious living retom features wood Hc.HtforSale burni ng fireplace •• • • ••• • •••••••••• •• • • • Owner assisted r1nanc 1 OO ing. Hurry, caU 673-85.50 • eooo i WI l~l) ftl.At 'jQIO -l(JlO lli)Ofl ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• MESAVBDE 5 IEDROOM 3 IATH Spa cious t...b-story on tree lm~treet. Priced tosell 0 y S 92,SOO 751-3191 C::::. C.,f l H T ...,.... PHO Pf Hl IE C, NO DOWN PAYMENT Pay cl<>11mg costs only! Buy your own home' Must qual!Jy for mon· thly payments. Exciting new concept. Call today for full deta1ls. 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS 31RCHAAMER 1111,000 Sharp 3 Br, 2-sly home, huge family rm. formal d ining rm. ut1l rm . Loads of storage 1 Love· ly neighborhood ~ Giant lot ! Call Teri Marquez. 7S9-1221 R&'Mrte H EAi.TORS 'lttSO llC110 CAMEO HIGHLA.MDS :J OCEAHVIEW OML Y I Oo/o DOWN :~ Now reduced thousands' 1110 Spacious living room. ::: r e a t u res g I o w 1 n g mo fireplace, 3 large bdrms ::~ +den. Grut assumable MOO lst and owner will help finance. Call 67J.8SSO THE REAL ESTAT&:RS THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCUFF VACANT Reduced $25,000 . Desperate owner sa ys bring all offers. No quahrying. Low down 4 Bdrm single sfury home. totally upgraded Call for more details @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 HOME IM THE LAKES $81,500. Beautiful single story condommjum. de corated an earthtones and woods Excellent location Close to PoOl. spa, tennis courts. shap ring, schools, ell'. Love y lush park -l ik e landscaped com mumtuy. Great ror busy executive. Call 752 1700 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS . VIEW OwMrwtl~ 3 Bdrm Cliff Haven beauty Owner will con- sider all reason.'tble of rers. 2 SPAS, onetndoor, one o utd oor, 2 fireplaces. used brick entertainers pool area Cabana. fire nng. view Saddleback Mountains. Fashion Island, lights. Newly remodeled. new kitchen. Call today for appointment ~ :;: SPYCAASS SEA COVE •. -.;:,. sh~ctacular views from PROPERTIES .~ •• • l .., 4 bedroom 2 story .~l~ home. Hi.ably uparaded 714-631·6990 ~~ with wood plank noors. ~g pool " Jacuzii. Wood l IR TOWHHOME 1111 }>anelled Uving & dining $ll3,900 ::= room. Game room with Upgraded 2-sty w /frplc t'!» deck. S'79S,OOO. Assume J.st, 2nd & 3rd :: with total payments ·of r74t 1834. Seller Is mot1vated ::!! ..Uk (or Wendy Sitler . l'f4t 759-lZll ::~·--=~============:::_~ riit SELL Idle Items with a ---------= Dally Pilot Classified Have something to sell? rm Ad. Claaatnedadado lt well = ,,. l'fC ..,... tTD .. CAAFT5"EN MTIS.hQ =c~.... .. = .... , .. ............ . .. .• C Q ll £ S I R E R E T S L 0 H P U H B S M U E T E R W C A P E R k P Z E .K E T L E l R A E 8 8 S S J T R l Z E H G E ll 8 1 A V A P T P T E M J R R L L 1 P l N V C R I W 0 I T R £ R E A C S N R U l H M IC R E N H A T O R S £ U M V N ll A N A " K E H Q 0 0 S T R T V N V Y S E' L E £ P C £ C M 8 S 0 E T 0 A l 0 Q l R l W U R R L L C Y T R T ANMFZZAKOTAOMOPJTEN c.MOl•t •••.... ··a c.-........ ... ~~ ...... • .. ~"'· ....... . I • ft f ,., wC..•1A1"'9lll-111 ................. = 8=:U· ...... . ~, .......•••• i~ ..... r:.!tii'.·:: .... ··.-:·:~:·.:.:.:.:~·:.···:_':;§ =f-........ ttn a::a~ :.::::::·.:.:. : ·=· ~ . ::·::.:." . . .. , ~-... .......... ····a M I •••• ''••--'· ~, ....... •• t ,., I ........................ .,. OftehMMt .. KAH PCMSATWHJIBHOAE THL DTPLRE$MAHREPAP T G E 0 0 P E R R E 8 M U l P T E A E J U X 8 ll 0 R H l P K Q N N 0 0 " T R T R A S N Y IC H U Q E T l E It L f T : ~ ... Wow.,..., fofWW. ..... ...-. -. • ._. ot dl111 •· Firwt Mdl • 11o11 It 111. !!! Tw. Mrl«ft """ ,. r-c.r,... ,._.....,; -Coo,., It..... ti ...... _, Uf!Milllll• • ...,, ,....., ~·-- T--..: l11"'*1c:t OHE OF THE HST VIEWS IM TOWM! Newport H arbor. Catalina, The Pavillion and Palos Verdes. All from this 4 bedroom pool home on a hill above Corona Del Mar. Owner will h~lp finance. the purchase price is $595,000. the land is held in fee. U,_.l()U~ ti()MI:' REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 E••t Cout Highway, Corona ~rl Mar WI HA YI 47 Of THI UST A'91Ml'S IM TOWN H•.cf A Tm Slwltff? Call the investment spec1ahsts Save 6· 7% selling your home yourself, rree info. package, ca.U &46-1544 Touchi.tone Realty, Inc ~~ HEW EXCLUSIVE SPYGLASS LISTING This beautiful 6 bedroom house is the crown jewel of Spyglass Hill. Decoraled in a traditional style, it features e lega nt wallpapers, window coverin gs, carpet, and wood flooring. You can enjoy the spectacular ocean view from the kitchen, family room, living room. or m aster suite a nd from the custom pool a nd spa in the elegantly landscaped backyard. $925,000. Ask for Cathy. 644-9990 760-08 35 .... _ ,_ , .... 4CMC.li . .._ '°""'' r fodliv • •o.-.-.. •o- '' Vow .,_ tJOI" t40•-"" ,~,~· ,, .. ,.,.,. '' "'°"• ,,., ,., ... 10M"Kl9t ''°" ,,~ .. ., ll fNI'! 1•0. ·-· ao... ''°' ......... ,. .. _ •O.... ~~ ':~f:i' S<a~~-4i,~S· .... .... ..... .., CUT I. l'a&MI -----.... _ ......... °' .... ·-~ ..... .,. .... ........ _ ...... _. I HECSPY I Z 0 TAP I~ r I I I S 0 T H I I ~ I I I " A mqng people lookiijji tor a rental, 70% read real' estate classified ads. ~ · o/ 'f!ewporf REALTORS 675-5511 ASSUMUU LOAM -1> ., ~ ... ~ Pf'~eto. Modsf, ......... ,., P..tr uL ... -v. 01.'Conlhd .... QSfom dr.,.., .wtera A ... .,.,. Lo.,ety poffo & ....-. °"" ~54,500. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 25 IS E. Coest Hwy .. C.... .. W.- 675-55 I I $3,597.50 is all you have to put down on these 2 bdrm homes Xlnl opportunity lo buy ! Selle r wants quic k sale !! Only $7 1,950 759-1501 or 752-7373 WALKE R&LEE R E OCEAMFROHT CONDO HEWPORT CREST 4 Bdrm 2"' Ba, F.R., pool, tennis & spa. Agt. Roy. S40--or 646-0686 Whelan Real Estate NEWPORT CHARMER-POOL ... f-ly .,.... °" 0 ............. lArcJe pool Giid deck _... la a tedll':ted betels yord avrrCHHtded by CJ""Mry. ()petl 11.a.g "°°"' wlfft _.wty ,..., dat.d ldtclwft. Two bedroOIM + dill tlNlt ccMd be 3rd bedroo111. SI 15,000 fee. AXER-GREAT LOCATION-VU Allnott ICMd .,..._, P1•1llla,.. .... x CllCl'OU frotft bcry -block ff'Olft OCHll. Right oc:rou from H•wporl Harbor Yocht Chlb. SlJS,000. VILLA BALBOA .RESM.E-VIEW 2 ........ 2 IA, t.g. cMck, ftlicroowCl'I• & ~oded ldtchn. Pool, toc-d. gen aq. Voc..t, OWMt' ....... $290,000. HARBOR VU llUS Spoclot11 & OpH 5 ..._ i.o.. on con•r with lood1 of r'OOM for tt.. .......,. LAJ-pcrffo, ........ 9'9 ... .-Y & M111I •l•w. $375,000. w-ft oH.n, owner wll onJst w /~ VILLA BALBOA RESALE-VIEW 2 ....... 2 fA, ...... dKll. Mierow..,• & ..... d llltclt•t1. Pool, toe-II. CJOI nQ. Vacant. OWMr _._ $290,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE ~t.' Rf'nl•tt P'flOf'''V Mdn~mpnt 2438 W Coast Hwy ~Port Beach 631-1400 CIE llDlll ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE .l-SUNI IASTl&.U .. C09e0 Forme~ ~odel With View Of Big Canyon. ~bree Bedrooms Plus Convertible Den, 2~ Baths. Wet .. Bar . Inter -Com . Lovely Appointments Throu1bout. Community-Pool. Belt Value In' Area. Listed Under $200,000. A. .. Joy Of N~wPOrt " Llattn1. ·MIWPOat HAllOI NW HO ... Outltandlng Mooi.10 Oo Fee Land. Coratr Location. Secluded .Yard Wltb Spa . Beau~l ul Luab Landaeapln&. Nliht View Of Fa1blon Island & 111 Canyon. Owner Motivated. ~.ooo. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 l Bny\od•· D11v1· N 8 67'l 6161 4 BR HOME $104,950 .PHme area, spacious 4 fBdrm home. large enter tainment area with cozy fireplace. Plush carpet ing! Lush landscaping! A real steal. Offered FHA,VA.~67 THE REAL ESTATE RS SELLER W /AMAMCE BeautHul executive home. S Bdrm, 2 master suites, stereo thruout Fountai n Valley 641 -1991 , agt POOLSHARk7 This spacious custom built home comes com plete with a full site re gulatlon pool table and a fabulous paneled game rm. to put it in 4 bdrrus + an outside office Formal dining rm $449,500 c 7141 6 73-4400 121 JI Ul-2121 HARBOR A l>1\·1-.1on of If arbor ln\'estment Co . . . ,• . . • .. ; ... : t . . .. ~ . : .. IAYCREST • Att r active th r ee be dr oom home Cathedral ceilings U\ llv ing and dining rooms. Oak plank Ooonng Cozy fireplace. Huge covered patio. Pool size yard . Owner mot.ivated. r.,ake offer $310,000. 631-7300 M.I . laycrat hcMy Homes like this are not a thing of the past Thl!I beautiful model home. with its 3 Bdrms. large family & Llvlllg rooms. as located on one of Westcllff's largest lots for maximum privacy Large asswnable first, OWC balance Call us for det.aila. Proudly offered at S32S,OOO. lolboo I.a.ct Uy 67J.t700 SOUTH LAGUNA Magnificent ocean view frorn this rustic Laauna Beach aettlna. a Bdrm, full basement x.lnt financlna. All ro; 1185,000! CAPE COD BEAUTY s Bdrm, family room . Buccola built! On cul ca, sac near Newpor t's Back Bay Covered patio. workshop. plus complete sel"ur i t y system Call now to see! This won't last at only $175,000! 646-7171 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS VA TERMS Never easier to buy than now 3 Bdrm 2 Ba POOL&SPA Summertime fun starts het"e for your family at only $128,500 We recom- mend quack action. 556-2660 C::::. C,H f-( l ........ PHO~"-H 1 ll <.., BUILDER'S BARGAIN Outstanding builders lot. 66X300' with charm ang 3 Bdrm home. cov ered patio Live there while you bwld ' Lot neX1 door also r or \ale 66XJOO' Near Newport•s Back Bay Call to see, 71 OCEAHRONT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba. unfum. New. $8SO yrty IAYFRONT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum. Mint cond. S8SO yrly CHAHMB. FllOMT I 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. uniUrQ S7SO yrly associated BPO~fPS -PEAlTOPS JOl '. W So•h~o bl1 JH l LOWDOWN Versailles I bdrm studio penthouse condo with large assumable loans. Sl09,900. Call today 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS DISTINGUISHED! MESA VERDE Dlacover this one I 5 huge bdrms, 3 baths, formal dlning room, gourmet kitchen, 2500 aq . rt. of traditional eleaance. Mesa Verde's finest. $220,000. act IM>w. call S46-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS LOC>.TIOM, LOCA'nOM. LOCA'10M Thia 1$ ,lt! Oversiied lot on LltUe Island South Bay Front.'~· r I • BR. older home "4th o expansion PQtentlal . Private Pier sup~ Sandy beach. .MqnJlteeot vieW1. ~150,000 Fe.e. I .' WowYOuCan Sell More ... with Daily Pilot PENNY PINCHER ADS Only $3 3 lines tor 2 days only $1 .50 a day Advertise one or more items valued up to $100. Each additional line Is only 66c tor the two days. Sorry, no commercial ads allowed. Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your BankAmericard or Master Card <ffeoW...<ffeeW... • More value for DIMES your •1 . ,,.. In the f amQus Dally Pilot I DIMES-A-LINE ADS AdvertlH ltemt 11p to S50 In velue In Dlmn·A-LIM .SI every S1turd•y In th• Dally Piiot. 8""9 yOUf ad with cath to 1ny of our thr•• con'tenlent office• or mall your 009y with • chadl or inoney order for the corrac:t 1mount. 20c per lln•. $1 .00 minimum. Sorry, no llvettocll. produce or pl•nt1 end no commel'Cl91 edt •r• allo•ed. Each lt•m mutt be priced ..tit\ no Item ov•t UO. Olme•A·Lln• ed• m•y be pieced al the Cot ta MeH offtc. unttl 3 p.m. Fridey. untll noon Friday at the L•euna .. .ch ot Huntington Beach office•. THE BtGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~~u.. condo 1~:~11on • ..... 9IAU1'Y cate,.. ' Toucbatam Reidy. lDc. .,.., • Balboa Ptn&uula 2 newer cu.tom bouMl..on corner lot. Each w rz car 1ar. 2 bdrm, 2ba, balconlea w /oc:p fl bay vl1w1, patb. "2$.000. L&e aa1um. lat. 175-<1127 or"4-9.W AISUMf&ILOAM Llte, alr1, c hMrfGl ••••••••••••·-·-•••• bob:le UnlwnJty Park. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil GOW..W..t ...... Beautiful 868 J:aet. 4 bdrm home. !leaant wet bar. bll·ln bbq lnalde fl many other amenlUe1 incl. a buae yard lhat backl to • beautiful park. Just 2 yrs old I Broker. ~81.8Z WI• ~ lot acrop from pool 6 tenntt. EASTSIOE W4'0d abutters. Stained wc:iod l>&Mllna. Cove'" pUO. Private 1pa. Take B 2 ovr,r 1ubjec:t to i.t T.D. • J QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES 712-1920 at lOWll. Newly offered ~model z Bdrm, 2 1-------..i et '19(1,000. · bath. tUelllace. AlJ.ey ac· CO..-CIAL 719·1616 cea1. t2'X&5. Hurry! PIOf Ml r &4.5-t1'1 Tlred of tel.liq bouaes 7 d.ay1 • week? We need c·~· DEL 110 one Ueeuee to team the llM UPl N HO\J':ll RlAllY / 11tlll1 to maaase Ii ..... lfllMlwCHllD• broiler commerclal rul Xlnt t.,-Dll. 1"' interest ettat•. Income rrom for 3 yean. 12132 PA· mimt while you learn. iJller-cloM to Harbor~~~~~~~~~! Super benefit.a; Ure ln· Blvd. FOUUUX BY OWNER 1urance; health ln· OPENWEEKENDS l-S 1urance f& deot.al plan. 631"'381, •It· Xlnt F\nancin11 lnlH 104 •••••••••••••••••••••• **$15M! Try S15,000down and aa· aume thil brand new 2 Bdrm attached bome in 1uper Woodbridge. Aak· ing only $117.SOO and avallable right now CootactlCen, '7~. _____ __::.__ __ ---------?~!.~~ ..... ~~~ $310,000 675-0073 MISADB.MAI \\bodbrld~ Re•ltu 551 -3000 4t%0Barunn Pk,.,),lnlnt GOLF COURSE W4nt Balboa ltland H(>me-have Calabau• land· Iota. 675·3'57 till s,turday. (213)888-~2 VIEW' Meaa Verde'• ;lnett l car-. .. ...-1022 atory home I Elegant i.~.~·••••••••••••••••• covered entry, formal Jaamlne CJ'ftk decorator living and dlnl.ng room bome, plan 1 on gTeen· family room , br ick beltlmmac. •.~ fireplace, large coun· MG-81'5 lrhy kitchen. Four alat.e· ly bdrma, 2 baths, 3 car urage. A FANTASTIC VJEW OF GOLF COU RSE. Privacy! Many. many extras. On· ly $279,900, call now. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS The Sunniest Home in : JASMIMICUH 2bdrm &t den, cbeeery kitchen, plant.atJon 1but- tera, pvt comm. with pool, jac ai tennia. $285,000. By Owner. 158-U71. PAanesHIP DUPUX a Bdrm 3 Ba, family nn. pool, 2·1ty, Sl79,000 5 Bdrm 3 Ba, family rm, pool.1. RV access, 2 frplc, OWl:. $114.900 4 Bdrm 2 Ba. wet bar. 1700 aq n. owe $132,900 4 Bdrm 2 Ba, 1700 sq ft , asaume loan, low dwn. $130.000 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, ''T"·plan, 1600aq ft. owe. $121,900. *•STARTER! Your chance to live in lrvme 1 br condo in gorgeous Northwood area of Irvine. Great e m otional appeal & owner will help finance. Call for details, This 5000 Sq. Ft ; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart or Ne wport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. We are developers so submit land or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. C714) 121-1210 l21JJ 591-1363 1100) 352-3710 LEASES Laguna leadt I 041 Ranch Realty, the leas ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.AC«l.AY 1ng leader has many DUrLEX RXHI I Sl60,000.-r.-.. 1---------, The perfect dual IKl'\.EX ownenrup property with MESA VERDE Cute 3br pool home 10% dn. very lge l~ assurh. leases to choose from OCEAN V1EW $495 to SllOO per month Bnng your plintbrush & Call now. broom to save SSS on this dirty dawg!' Prime Laguna Beach duplu w /att._ched garage Sub mil offer' 759 1501 or 752·7373 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home plWl ideal mother-in-law quar t ers Co mpl w /bath. S220.000. Roy Mcc.cle. Ur. s.-.11zt , 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. 2 nearly equal 2 Bdrm. 2 Fireplace. built-ins. Ex· ba unita with mHler ceUent rental ae1 Near au.ltn, stone fireplaces be1cb Ii bay. S28S.OOO. and wood beamed cell· 6'2·2253 eves. inp. on an overs!~ lot with pvt patios and decks. $320,000. 10% int financlng. associated 011<)~11/', llflllTOS:.'; J I 411• tit b 1ll.o <l t, 1 t;t I s 12,000 DOWN Pride of ownership 3 C.AU.MOW 644-721 I m.wa loan Prtn only Agt /owner, 91J6.17U ----10 75 'k L O AN J bedroom. three bath home. About 2100 aqua re feet. Dining room. ram•· ly room. brick fireplace Two st ory floorplan. Localed on QUIET cul de Bae Assume 10. 75"1. loan, owner will help finan ce $1 54.090 TARBEL L . HKR S40-1720 1032 Bdrm 2 bath. family !>Ups to CdM Beach. Lov· kitchen area with brick e l y 3 8 r h o m e o n fireplace. Covered patio beautiful street. Prine fl Toro overlooks Orange. only Brier. 962·2900 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• A v o c a d o a n d 675-0704. IY OWNER Macadem1a nuts Pride ---------Jbr, 2ba. Creeks ide of ownership. Owner will l•--------1 Home in El Toro Brick helf finance 1121,500. I • Y • I d • D r • patio. spa w tredwood Cal for more details W .. oaftowt deck , lge assum no 546-2313 ~xciUng custom home qualifying Principals Incredible lot site only 1129.SOO no.8660 or THE REAL ESTATERS MIWPOIT HGKTS Deluxe townhouse duplex, 3 bdrm + fami· ly, 2~ bath each unH. Frplcs, all built-ins. deck• & patios. Park· \Ike landsc aping. SELLER WlU.. HELP FINANCE! $295,000! .... lay,,. ...... •671-7060• lalboeTrWex 2·2 & 1 Br, liO,'boo down and we think the sell is half cuclloo-be wanu Private beach, pnv.ie 'llSS-4385 alip. Fee land. $3.850.000 ---- Linda Tagllanetti. ex ~-Vr*y I 034 elusive a ent. ••• ••• • • ••••••••••••• •• IHVESTIH LOCATIOH Sharp 2 Bdrm condo in Mesa Verde. Priced lo sell now at 1118.SOO. Call Anne McCaa land S31·121M. R&'M~ II ~ \I I"!'' KIDS 0. 3 Bdrm, 2~ bath. front unit. JdeaJly localed for cblldren t550 mo. 1901 Alabama •nl. North of Adami. Immediate oc- cupancy . Broker , 983-8182. low interest peymenta! ....._ ________ , FOU .. -Ev AAk ln& DIC>.000 .., ..,..1o5A JACOBS Dr llJY IUl.DlaSI All uni ta are 2 Br. 2 Ba. lll.N. IMVISTC»aSI good renta, no v1cancy ' 7JL 1.1.70 y1 ryl ft410 Do-(actor. Prtce Sl85,000. -A rod'my a'bcirm i"ba Loan la auumable. ---------home ln great E'llde A,..~ ..•. ,. . .,,.... Sharp 3 Br on larae lot wttb lot.t of trees. plant for a 1reenbouM. COV· ered paUo. $185,000. 122,000 ASSUMILAAGI ''Ii% l.M. area with com~l•ted 631·1266 plant for 1700 t /f 2nd un· It. $147,SOO. 644-7211 /Jn Nl(,f L n/\lllY & I\ 5SULI I\ I l 'j R&'M* JI ~ ' I I • ol(' R&'M~ I< I· 1\1 ( 111( .... tr eomeone told you that yo u w o uld s a ve thOWlands or DOLL A RS when buying or telling your pro~rty & still have the total and qua II t y 1erv1ce of a pro fe11lonal realtor. would yo" take the time to call ..... 141·14418 S 8drm1 .z ba home + oool. Pnae d ownenbJp home. Tab advantaae. Ooly flOS,tOO . Call f7t.N'70now. _ ......... --• A MOVllM LLSTATE tmm~c~ 2 HuntlftllOn .. llClh ••a•-· batb, N.., ... Ptlnt. fountain Y.etey ___ "_-_ ... _·'-"'"---' 8prtakltrt front and ep.ct•l•ta back. Covered patio. , ________ _ e-H/\NCH IH/\LTY !J~ 1 2000 HIGH .AssuMAau ~Walker 8 l.ae 48r home w/spa. xlnt PROIA 11 SALE I '7 38tta5trfft 2 Bdrm beach house Great S/W rental area. Steps to beach. S180.000. Eves 67J.8M6. cond. Sl69,000. MZ-6940. REAL ESTATE UNDER MARKET LOCJ19ta HMh l 050 College Park Syracuse •••••• ••••••••••••••••• Plan fe atures 3 Bdrm + ~ IRAM>MEW Res idential & com · mercial on l lot Old Newp<>rt. 3 bdrm, 2 bath upper apt. 500 + sq. ft. on ground Ooor for office or shop. 4 car parking. ~.000. 675-4m eves. den. 2 Ba. large family kitchen Asking IOOO's ~~~~~~~~~ under markets. Call for details --~ RANCH ~REALTY w 551 2000 W.ATERRlOMT Woodbridge p r ime lakefronl location Views forever JBr. 2 1-aba. pvt spa. fle 11 fman Spectacular' Qf. tered at $354 ,900 Call 552 1800 & ask for Lynn Noah Town & Countr} Rltrs WOOllRIDGE DECoaATC>aS DBJGKT Upg r ades lhruoul Beautiful back yard with spa. 2 Bdrm + den. 21,, baths, double garage, l'h years new Aasumable financin g a vailable. Offered at Sl48,000. For an appoint· ment lo see this lovely condo, call540-US1 -. t:· HERITAGE REALTORS A SMART START Owning you own home still maket more sense than renting. Start with this well kept 1 bdrm, 1 ba. Plan A1 The Laha In Northwooa. Aaaurnable lou. 1103,900. ... SELLER WlLL ASSIST BUYER IN OB TAINING i'1NANCING' This 4 bedroom, 21 , bath home on a corner lot reatures 3 CU!tlOm pool and spa ~low main' tenance yard 1n a n1te neighborhood will de light lucky buyers S250. 000 495 1720 eb!Q.go Mewportt.och 106' ••••••••••••••••••••••• PARTY IH HARBOR VIEW Smaahln& family room with wet bar. Unbelieva· ble beautiful e nter· talner'a paUo. S Bdrm Sommerset on fee land. Absolutely immaculate m ove -In condition . Crea tive tlnancln1 available. • REC CARPET 754-1202 associated bROKEllS AEAl 'OAS l <Jl '. ~ fs o.t.1,u , '~ J66 r OCLUROMT By owner 3br. 4car park· mg Combo llv " din frplc. room for 2nd sty owe 6408 Oceanfronl W NB Open daily 11·5 1598.000 642·3215 LIDO ISLE IYOw.8 Luxurious 6 bdrm. s ba. s tud y, fam ily rm . Separate laundry & service room. On 2 lots. Swimmmg pool. View of the bay Large assuma· ble loan & owner will carry aome p•per. S895,000. Call675'702'7 IA YFIOKT HOME Glorious 4 Bdrm 4 ba. w /pvt dock for your yacht right al your front door Excel Peninsula P oi nt location $1 ,295,000. Owner / Builder Charles McKin· non 615·2763 HI HGTS UOUCIO Bright and s u nn y Newport Heighta home on spacious oonmer lot. Recently redecorated in eartbtonea. with panel· Ing aod greenhouse wln· dow. Ftreplace flanked by bookcases. Family ready lo move. 642-5200 A PETE BARRETI ··· REALTY •LIDOISLI• Lovely 2Br, 38a home. S-J- Beautiful\y remodeled C••"-t 071 2yrs af o. $484,000 with •• ••• •••••••••••••••••• xlnt t nanctna. Open 3 MIM,.. ~ Houae~ S.l. Sun. 1·5. 119 MlfTH oc••M vtlW Via Vella. '" _... n Owner /Alen\: 173-0887 l..cllo S.. .._ ....... Newport Bay Condo. Over 3,000 1q.ft. or S.le, leaae, or lease op-ele1aoce. &lchaive new Uon to purchase. Securi· homet, froro 9515,000. ty bid&. 2Br, 2Ba 14i,.,%financinaaYail. w /marina fl Catalina Charter Rlty' (llvest. view. Boat dock avail•· 491-1122 131-88U bl•. By owuer. 17~~70 da)'I, Ul-toN ev... • 4bdrm. 2ba, U1ume ---------1 apro11. •i.ooo at uv.~. Z bQuMI OD larl• lot. All F r p I c , d l 1 • T • ...,.. ... ,. aorta of p otebtlal. bwuber,1prlnklen. 0. ... a..d $140,000. Actl'1·0'181. clean. $U9,to0. Bltr 2 1tory 4 bdtm, dln!no (TH)"' .. L-rm, added den w/wet 8LUF1SBAl\GA1N -.,...,_... bar, 1tep1 to park. a Bdrlll twnbm• ._..._ IMO "" Near 1cbooll. Alklnl on-'1 '125.000. CillM0-1151 • HFRITAGE comm . PGOl It tenn.ll. AA· '15Sl000. Walk to ever· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSUMl IO~""-LM eumab{e loan. Owner )'tb DI pool, tennl1, 5 Bdrm, 1 ba, near will 111Lst in financlna. acboola, park • 1bop- bHtb, DHl to Iara• ·21~00. Fee. Agt, pin;. A1t. f'75 ·6130, park. 2IOO Ml R. Ntw 1 _'* ___ . -----_..o. __ llAI ________ , Ht /\I HlHS 41ptt. A1kld Stl',IOO. LI....... 1041 I"-.. -•MC-. OWD•r wm wr nn.n. ··············~······· ~ ~ -~tt ":!:ii ll8tr1 • THI IHMIS r.~~·,!.~ ~= 1 Wea t.b tred ctd a r llt: a lud. -a..Uw IMl&te, &bat 11. ~ LniU1.clll1 Mllped I bdl"IQ, fPt -~~-::::~~~u(""."'I nn , 2 b.U.. Estalvt H.V.H . .__, be1 . DH of Wood 1Lau ...... bori. bMll& ....... ceramic tOe. ~ct&&.: lleeut. .,... ..._,Iba, lac. fnlc..... 4ee , lor•ul di a. •111...._RNJty Owner /eat UH • tTM.....-m.. ....... ..._1119. -· .. ---· ··--· A'n ···· • ••. t f ,-, 1\ 1 I ' /. • f Eash in on 7or11 "" ..... ~.Ok ____ :_N There ere two weY;~~ ~n with• Delly Piiot High Boller Ad ~ · . Run 7 days tor $7. n 11 days for $11.11-.3 llnea .. 1.·1, Ill • Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 II!) .... Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. -No canceUatlon Rebat OllMrlHI.... ........ Olt.erlMI... ....... ........... d H ..... u ........... d Ha.nu.......... .................... ....... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• J-421 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ................... . Meltle ......_ lllcoa1 P1 •1•rty ZOO< OW....... te MeM ll24 ln1-J244 an-. 1244 ....................... "9~ .._. J76f Cotta M"9 JI 4 for S. I t 00 ...... ................. PrepertlL .260 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••4•••• ••••••••• •••• ••• ••••• •• •••••••••••••••• •2Br . z Ba. l 1tory. pool, •••• • ••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••.............. APPUVAWY ..................... 3bdnn zt>a rtPk renie patio, S.C.Plaza area. Lux ury Oceanfront 3 Br. 2 Ba. Valeacl•. TraUer a t bc:b $1',900. Near ne w 4-Plu, 2 40A 1cenlcOreion Cout. aar, yrd, avail5it. iat.;. D CbUd OK .... MJ-1(112, ~e::)y,l~~l~er,~:i::· townhouse. 2 cblld$n Ter m1, OWCortrade bdrm, 2 bath each unit Electriclty, fenced, out-aec. '815.6G--0835. MACNAB-~ REAlJ"Y m-1&H. 64C).•'1M · OK. No pet.I. t52S. Sie~n 49&-all with nreplaN encloeed 1tandin1 view. access\. "•~°""--CiNAiHr · M1mt.Co.MHJ24. • PALM SPD""GS AREA. patio, double aaraae. ble,owner 482-2dl Out~ at.ate ntJred cou-3br, 2,ba, frplc, l&e ~Uoo, Fanta1Ucally fW"Dhhed 2 Br 2 Ba Laundry~' c "'4', $165,000. Blll Grundy, Pie m 50'1, oo filled ln· poo /rec room .e O townbouae, with ocean · · · 2Br2ba.•ynold.Compl Rltr ,&75...,'". ~ come would like nice 2 "lst/laat + S200 aec. Ne• paanl '475. , 11 furn. On 9 bole exec 1011 ~-· BR hou1e w/yard or 645·'1555 view. Tennia court, pool. '3l·M37 ' •••• •••••••••••••••••• ~Imo. 7804117 coune l.n adlt park. u,...." •• • .._, patio in E /Slde, CM, COVIMGTON OM THI Lilll For C lbd VI S J I t OCIAM VIEW ~--'" • -Newport r eat rm, ·-en~ -~._01 a c n °· .......... .,., ........... H1ta. 9r bch. Can pay summer rental June through August 2~ba, ocean vtew, over· ._ huwllh ____ .......,_ .... __ or_v_tr_g_in_la_. DWLIX eo.teM... )124 $t00mo. Huabandcando (flexible) -Beautiful 2BR & 2 bath looks tennla court •,~ ... t••• 1400aq ft home, 5• Pit Draa tic reduction on ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ardenln1 + if over home right on the lake. Completely frplc, cla.e to beacb. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br,2Be,aunpocch,le brand ne'll( Balboa 4Br , furn. or unfurn. !!1°.~32· 3Xlnt rela. 8/1. furnished. Cleaning services provided. 9950/mo.642-1272. G&Mr.il 3102 r d d adl'-.,... ...... duplex. 1st o'*hers 2003 w /pool. -1mo. 138 ...... nc er n, .. ......,..i.,_ depreclaUoo.Grealren· Preaidl~t CM ----------1 $750/mo. Young ParkSSl-8700. (E-82). 2Br,2Ba,d1nnn,Crt>lc.2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mobile home, 2IOX3Z. dou· tal area. 100 feet from 548-3170· e31·73'70, · twd. Occ.,atcy. car ear. Nr College. AnMTS FOi IEHT beach. Large 3 bdrm, 3 • Immac. 3Bdmi2ba, dbl FOil LIASI OI LEASE °"10H~S ic and "'25/mo . .a. .... 7eo.9333 H.B .. N.B.,Coata.Mesa b I e w Ide. $35' 500. bath plus 2 ~· ~ bat!t. * 2br, 2'1\ba, Twnha. '700. fireplace, lee walnut "4t• Somet llina for Everyone N e"' Port Be a c h . Owner wilt au 1st in Frplc, pool, spa, aara1e. paneled family nn, aep Span 2BR and a den detac home Woodbridge condo, 2 BR, Bach. to 4 Br. Unlurn. 631-7331. fin ln k25 000 laundry rt:ll. l&e fncd on lovely street. This home wiJJ ,.1 ....... e to pool, lge b-'ck Afu. Certain loOitions anc e. ' · ·54g.3232, yard Like new dis· and be · bl """" " ctean,modem2br,2ba, H 1,._._ .. ~140 hwa.shr, dn»/cpts and feature new carpet ava1la e patio, l800 mo 833-9UMI o f e r : Pool. spa , dbl wide. Nr So. Coast 9!WI --.·--., no wax ltitcbeo nn. No April 20th for lease or lease option. attsPM fireplace. lawi room. IMSTAMTIH! 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt., cari>$a. drapes, laundry room. Adults onl,y, no pet.a. ()n. ly $3.\S mo. • TSL MGMT 6'2·lf03 Westside 2 Br, l'h .a. cpts, drps, bullli,1. deck, gar, Yr lse. $4'7S 760-0409 & 760-0689 , Lr1 3bdrm, 2ba, crprt: nr O.C C. No pets. $(75 751·3696. Plaza, ln attractive par k ••••••••••••••••••••••• Includes air-conditioning. Covered beamed c ei 11 ng 5 • Walk to beach. 1rm cot· Pets. 169S/lse. Owner Spectacular view over· garages, all bullt·ins. w /all fac. ~low $40,000. taee. yrd. S295/mo. 421 644·4227 patio and 2-car garage. $72.5/mo. Toni lookina lake rrom this Garden & Townhouse IMSTAH'T IM Call eves, Mon-Thurs,~~~~~~~~~~ M · 5518700 (E 83) b I 1 Lake960-3989 4Br . furn. or unfurn. orris · · · · 2000 sq ft JM Peters design. E-111de. 2br 1 a, poo . :>S&-7985. Townhome, 2 master TSL MGMT 642-1603 laundry nn, sm. cl\1ld A fw.r....a.... 1200 20 UMITSC M Mewportleodl 3t6t w /pool. S800/mo. 836 11 CEDAIGLEM -B6autiful 3 BR bd d 2~b f I OK.TSLMgmt.642·1"3 creoge _. BeauUCul 1 ye~r ~Id ........................ Presl~lo Dr, C M . rms, ~· a , rpc, lalM>GP1Mi1tlla 3107 ----___ ,,,_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Townhouse Units . LIDO ISLE charoung 3 546-3170,631·1310 ''Elm'' model in Woodbridge located formal dining, vaulted ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdrm. tba. yard, P.r, lS beaut. acres, wooded, Frplcs. Nice area. bdrm, 2 bath, playroom. within walking distance to pool , park ceilln1s. a/c, teruus, no S350 Util pd. lBR Duplex S450 mo t 630·0360. overlooking lake" city, TSL JNVSTMTSM.2·1603 Just remodeled. $1650 Child welcome, E·side. & shopping. Beautiful neutral decor, pell $ll.50 m4n52-S3S() 417 E. Bay Ave. Balboa 960 ~3. · Coeur D'Alene, Idaho. mo to mo. BUI Grundy, 3br. laun, frsh paint, wood-decked patio & lots of trees. or7S1-S813 Nopeta.547-1155 ----$35,000. (714 )673-4060, 67~6161. carpets, yrd, gar. ~ Adults only, no pets Two 75J.9990. NEWPORT BEACH Wtr pd. 2659 Orange $650 /mo Jamie Wilkinson 551 -8700. Apclfila_..,_. .... d COf"ONditM.r 3122 1 Br apts. 1 upper. 1 1S% down and assume Beautiful 2 Br. Condo 960-3989 ( E-84). •••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••• down $310 & 1325 mo '311 I ........ _ ,., · · Home in Big Canyon, 1-----1-1-..11 1706 Spacious l Br w/garage, w. Wilson. 631 2177 oans ...-uee a~ou11ng Nr nulwnhae3BR3Ba I Irvine --d f ii TRIPLEXES tn CdM On golf course view, pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••• laun ry ac . S575. Ask -__ _.__ Pvt yard. 2 carelec gar. I Cam .,_,, "-w...,..,..., An VU1"" ,.._ '" f F "-""9900 1100 , •..•.••...•...•....... IMVESTC>aAUILOY Jus t llat ed'! R·2 lot, Eutside. Good for 6 con· dos. Has 4 rent.al income I units. 12'-'i% assumable financing. Move fast! 752-1499 ocean11deofPCH fulJyCum.Leauormon· pusv..,_.ey......,nt.er uvuvMuoe ...,evcn...,.r Charmmglcpnvate.lBr. or aye . ....,. -.aaaa...IB1aU· . lhly. Call Bill Wedmore $695/mo. ls\, lut, Sec. 752-1414 651·8700 lBa. High qlly. Lndry. ~vu. ,.. PlUS 644-7021> 759·1065, agl 7S9·1.234 S 5 7 5 /mo Yr I y . SOUTH Of HWY two duplexes and 1 Lrg 4 Bdrm 2 v. Ba, triplexinarowonl9th '' o .. roW 3226 (714)675-9984 eves •PARTMEMTS Beautiful landscaped garden apt.s Patios or decks Pool & spa Heat paid. covered parking Adult.S. no pets l or 2 persons OK St. Balboa Peninsula Hoen.. U ............ d ....................... Woocllridae COftC1o Mewport leech J26t _<_2_13_>_4_50-_1~_1 _____ 1 ~:e~s~ldfor si~~r'f1~ Only l lol from sand and ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Close lo marina 3bdrm, 3 bdrm . "\Vi b a l h ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corotita del Mw 1722 Paah. 6ll·l266 Plan Ill Realty ..... , '9optrty I 400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEWPottT 9 Office building $425,000. Hurry · won't last! 8111 Grundy, 675·6161 Ca• ••r"CW Pro,.rfr 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMVESTOl'S OBJ~ Prime commercial loca· lion Va bile from ferry landing on the Balboa Peninsula. 3 Iota · fee land. Owner Onancing. Lease option . Call Carlene for details. '75-1771 surf Absolutely prime Corotte cr.t Mw 3222 1 Vz b a . frplc . Ya rd , Villager in prime loca· 3 Br 2ba. tree lined st In properties. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1600/mo. Townhouse. lion close to tennis & Westcliff, nice for CUSTOM BA YFRONT. 495--"86. • pools Highly up1raded, cpl/sml fam Jn5. incl Avail furn if desired. H-_.-.,.--.-.. -._.--11-3-2-4-0-i earthlones. ·Association grdnr Nopeu.~2389 Slip for 2 lge boats. 3 _,. dues paid by owner. $595 Bdrm. 4ba, 3 Crt>lcs, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. No pell 1 year Santiago Dr-Exec: house, FOURPLEX/FfltValey kitchens,patio&dec:kon 3Br.2 BaonqwetC~-de· lease Macnab Irvine 4br, fabulous master Bay. Security system sac.CloutoBch&'Sctu. Realty, Sandy Fix, suite. 3ba, lge fam nn, DUPLEX wftt: Dodi for 30' boat. $3200/mo Encl. yr d, boat access, 644·6200oreves644·0227. full llv rm, formal din MANY MANY MORE' Waterfront Homes covered patio, frplc. rm. coiy lulcheo. lndry C /2 I Hewport C..tr Realtors. lnc.631-1400 S690/mo. mcl Gardner Litg •• 1.-dt 3241 rm a. many many ex _6_4_0-_5_l_5_7 __ 7_6_0._6_7_6_7_ 4 Br, pool, beach, view or _963-__ 8600 __ . _~_3833 __ e_x_t _l22--i ~~~·::f~~~;·::~=~··;;; tras. $1800/mo 7S9-8974 ocean Cameo Shores. * • * mo & up. Adlu only. 2 br, den, 2 ba Walk to HOME + IHCOME Duplex tn pnme rental area of the Santa Ana River 2 Bdrm unit. Owners unit with fireplace Take over FHA loan plus owner financing. $12:5,000_ don osen ro·alt11r., S l 9 0 0 I mo Ko 9 p D~~-Dome "99-3818 beach Tennis & pool 63J.l~. Aat. 317 ~ Ave.h Cb a r m 3 bdr m, 2 ba priv. $750 l$e 640-52'72. if Newport Bue no ans. 1-723-0601 4 Br + maid's quarters You are the winner of bouse. Privacy. Nr pool, Beaut decor. super 2 free tldafs tennis. bcb. Gale guard. NW PT BCH 2Br 2Ba Con· view, lop of Spyglass ($12Vahae), to Adlll. $800 mo. Avail do, beautifully lodscpd, $2 0 0 0 Imo. Koo P 1 C..... May 15. Owner 498-3638 $575 mo. (714) 498-7972 631-1266. Aat. A cepru2Nt\l':S L .... -. 3250 aft 8:30/wlmds a !II•• n-. ---------2bdrm lba f.....Jc beam AnaheimConvention ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ' • ... ' Center WESTCUPf ill.A ceiling, patio. 9650. Sl50 Tickets mu1t be ex· Attractive 3 Br . 2 Ba. in lbdrm Condo w /pool. dep.Avail Mayl.App't changed for reserved LagunaVWaae.Nopets. Very private ! On lTTH AT PROSPECT only· 7Si-9C"IOO. seal.I al the convention 1595 mo. f111..fl112. Rutland Rd. Adult.a only ....................... -- Cozy, small furn. Studio 2 Br, 2 Ba duplex w/sun No kitchen. Employed deck 411 Po1nsetta Female. Non-smoker. $700 /mo. l y r lse Ref's.~. 67S·Ol2A Jackie . Cott. M... 1724 2 Bdrm apt over stores ••••••••••••••••••••••• on highway Very SUS CASl'nlS spacious. 9650/1700 mo. Furn l br apt S3'2S &cup. 673-1&00 Encl gar. Adults, no Costa M... 3114 peta 2110 Newport 81. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-4908 btwn 8 & SPM CASADIC>aO ALL UTfUTIES PAID Wcat:fleld FAMH.Y Al'TS. Brand new beaatiful lrg apt, for families with 1 or 2 children Near park Heat paid No pets. 2Br, 1 Ba. 5'7~$475 2Br, 2 Ba. $490 398 W. Wilaoo, 83l·SS83 2 BR, 1 Ba $470 2 BR, 1 Ba $480 $48S 398 W Wilson, 631 5583 l BR 1405 161 E . 18th. 642·08.S6 3BR.2Ba ~ 2 BR. 2 Ba iSoo 151 E 21st, 548-2408 Bachelor S360 l BR MIO 2250 Vanguard Way !>40-96216 or 548-2408 All uhl paid Lge 1 bdrm, stove. rerrig, crpts. drps. Pallo Adults, no pets . $280 Avail 548 15 l 7 or 645-8579 Compare before you rent Custom design features: Pool. BBQ. cov 'rd garage, new furniture, surrounded with plush landscaping Adult Hvm. at .tts best. No.r.~~-fumlahed S370 i-B-a_c_h_w_i_t.h_loft_,-re_f_n-.1-e-. E side lrg 2bdrm in tr1· 2 Bdrm fumiabed ssoo stove. c /d, pool. S370 up plex, patio, lndry rm. 36S w. Wilaon. 642· 197 l 283 Avocado ~ adults_._1485_ fil_J._3600 __ • _ TUSTJN. 731 3111 Cost. w... 1224 center ahead of Ume. Mewpori IMdt J26t $500 call 575·116-48 or hldlls~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 142·5678, ext .. 272 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• _8J3.. __ 3822 _______ Ba"h .. lor Apt. E·•id .. 1 Br relri&e, stove, c /d, Child Welcome, E-11de .. ~.~ ............ ~!~~ E-s~l~Sl'?J~m~S42S clalmyo';;°~c!ets . Nr.~r::t1~~:1~r:~ Exc,~v~~~rity, ~.Stv~~!1.!1·no~ts .. 1::c::o~~ 240 ~~r~I~~~·~' F1~t~: "ara1e. Leaae 900/mo ...,.., mo . .....,......., · 645 2708 ~~~~~~~ril~ 8062 Sq. f\. concrete till· W /Garage. 642·2510, CAL 1 F L 1v 1 NG ! • beautiful 3 Br 3 Ba ~ up.NNNleasedattopof ~4&48 Spacious 38r . 288 lst,last&dep.1167-9303 Privateyatd,wetbar& HwlM9f• leoctt 3740 Shari> Bach Unit. Stove & • •••••••••••••••••••••• refrige. Adults, no pets . S375 /up 1·2 bdrm, pool. P>O. s.48-l.3'17. L9. lach $3l5/mo. market. Xlnt S A. loca-I•--------• fireplace, many other Leaseoption,2bdrm,2ba lion. $403,500 P a ul 3 BR, 2 sty, Back Bay wljac Boatdoor.Nrbch V1LLABALBOA2Bdrm amen1t1es Including W lfrplc & Patio condo, (Monticello) Franklin, 752.5111. condo. Pool & jacuu1 S8SO mo. Bobbe 64&-8133 Maids room. Sl4SO mo. 2421 Minuteman, C.M $85-0 631-6995, ask for or631·436l l~ ba. Ocean view Call Anthony wkdys $9 500 w bb R It r... ...__--A ---------Avail on short term jac, adlt, 18992 Florida. H.B. 842-2834or842-3J72 $450. 2 BR. patio, pool Adlt.a, no pet.a. 32S J, 17th 2br, 2bo S5l5/mo. W 1gar, cathedral ce1I. Crplc. dshwhr, balcony Adults only, no pets 549 2447 1, e ea Y Mo.to-__......., Rulh or Steve lmmac JBr. 2Ba, cul-de· S8SO/mo. 642·5757 eves & wknds 831·2170. Resort 2400 sac. frplc, patio, 1690 H V H 3 644·8889. -----••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex 1 bdrm. l bath . omes custom 59,4~ sq.ft lot · potenbal 25% int. in Moonridge plus living area. Private mo 841·'52Saft3PM. Bdrm, 5 ba wilh pool S-J._ office s~te and close to cabin. $35,000, 10% dn. entrance & palto area. S.tcS 4bd 2400 fl Pror. d.ec. CompJ. ocean Caphtr.o 3271 J W Airport 645-1103 Gar forced air dis· Stove & mrig. incl. S3SO rmls/d' sq...,.• /bay view. $2SOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A ., ' P f 1 adult 787 1 new, cp rapes, s.,.,.· UDO ISLE 2 Bdrm 1"' ~ ___ hwa~her. washer/dryer, mo. re er · -'J less Super loc. Muat · ..,.. 2 Br 2 Ba fam rm, fenced CoRdOlldal-.jTowR· fum1ture, lV:a ba, custom Joann Sl. ~8182. Im See• $895/mo 962 6139 ba home. Yearly Sl.200 ba~k yrd, enclosed 2 car L.--••...___....a.;.. 1700 Crplc,lgelot.Nrforest& mediateoccupancy 968.4602 · · ' mo. gar Vehicle storaae _. ~ -Goldmine ski area 2 Bdrm 2 bat.h LUXURY 54751 1 t I t •· ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Jerry, n.rc: ........, Cond. o, 3Br 2~ ba, .end HOME FOR RENT mo s . as .,. .,_.,,,_., condo $850/mo security deposit req Townhouse 2Br, H'lha. patio, frplc, blln k1tch, 3 Bdrm. '600. Fenced 7511.2545 ~.900. $10,000 dwn. At· IY OWHEA dbl gar w/opnr. '750. yard & garage. Kids & Waterfront Homes. Inc. sum $60,000 loan at Brand new 2bdrm con Ron Say 97~S370 nots welcome. 964•2566 Realton 631·1400 5-t• Aaa 3210 IOV..% Owner wlll carry do, Cully furn. Behind "" ---------•·•••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd 536·4664 dys &ales of J)l'e!lig)()us ln 4 Br. 2 Ba. Redwood Spa, or 973-2971. Aat.' no fee ~aut 3 br, 2 ba, frt>lc. all INVESTORSDELJGHT dian Wells Racquet nearBear&Paularino.2 5Bdrm,2 bahorne,locat-H..tlorVJ.w new decor. Drive by. 16.00000WN Club $159,000 Xlnt children olt. ~-Sierr1 ed in nice neighborhood GracioUB family home 2 2317 S. Lowell. '600/mo terms . Ca 11 Ro 11 e Mgmt Co 641-1324. 1775 /mo. Call Century s t o r y 4 b d r m l.sl. last + $150. 644-5069 E x e c l B r C 0 n d 0 ( 7 1 4 ) 3 4 5 · 4 7 6 2 o r Furnilbing avail al no w /water view. Step· {213)343-2630. Charming duplell, newly 2 l I S UR F Re a I l Y extra. $13)0/mo lse. No Soelttt L.,... 1216 down Uving rm w /frpk. decorated. 2 Br 1 Ba, 1st 536· 7542 for appt. to see pell. 2015 Port Bristol ••••••••••••••••••••••• formal din, ktn1 sz o.tofCCMlty & last, SSZS. 311 E 21st T · 1 I b b Cr. Call Elaine 644-5997 OCEANFRONTHOME H.l.'sRMEST Spanish FAtat.e Living 1 Beautiful park-like sur r oundin gs Terr aced pool Sunken gas bbq, aparkling fountains Spacious rooms Separate dining area. Wa l k -In closets, homelike kitchen & cablneta. Walk to Hunt· ingt.on Cent.er. 1 Bedroom-furn, $440 2 Bedroom-furn, $510 Adulta, no pets. UUliUes Free! LA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 Parkside Ln.1 blk W. of Beach, 3blks S of Edinger. 847-5441 master w /walk -1n rro,.rty 2550 St,lfA.63l·S06'7 . n -eve 2 r,21/z aeon· or640-53S7 O'lookacftvtbeach,2br. "iosel E ntertainers ••••••••••••••••••••••• do, ~rplc, atrium. pool, 2' ... b din I La!I• a 1-a.. 1741 .. · M V de ...... b 2 tenn11 racquet ball 2~ ....., a. en, rm, ge t -pallo views, sparkline OCEAN VllW eaa er • .,.,aut. 3 r, . ' ' 3 Br. 2 Ba. Home, 2 car deck, $1200/mo 499-2253, ••••••••••••••••••••••• waterways. Lowdown & Movine to San Dieao? ba, fam. rm, frpl~. ml. beach. Adults garage, frplc, kilchen 499·5021 Waterfront, private assume existing financ· ·See ocean & Mt. Helix ~aulted beamed c~il· '675/mo. S36-l!JSl2 w/d1w1r , disposal & gas beach, security, pool 2 Ing -no qualif yin a . from hUJalde, ~acre m11,fencedyd&pa~1os, Hwal.... range, dining area.• Small c~y cottage, Br. fully furn. Luxury 857-0211 home. Privacy. Fruit nr schools. Water incl. H..t.iw 1242 B e a u l . Patio ~ lbdrm, lba, stone frplc , Mobile Home. l8SO mo. ltffl. Separa~ 1arafie. '750/mo. 566-3809 ••••••••••••••••••••••• backyard. Avail 4-20. cloee to ocean. '700/mo 6'2-1802 or97S«545 DESPBATE! Sundeck. Perfect or BeauUfuJ new rondoe for 3 Br. 2·Ba. Family room, $100 /mo: let, /laal.' '95·"86. • Mewpot"t leeda l76t Newpo r t Be a ch profe11lonal couple ~r ren t s65o Dbl gar dining room. '975/mo. security, cleaning dep. •ffll J2t0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VersalUea 2br, 2ba, invest o r . $125,00 · -Jo · e · 1 •e lo Ca l l Lind a Aeen l Cal1213/285-4.332. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti rrplc l j c ~ .. pen r, c o .. &~~r " Oc!': 'v1!w: ocean. 831-4361 aat. _N&-__ 13'7_1 ______ 1 Harbor View Homes·JBr, ADULTS COURTYARD quick aale. By Owner New Mobile Home 3er, Townbo~ Eaataide 2Br . .,..... 3244 den, fam nn, grdnr, xtra =~E~~i!~:i~· $13 2 ,000 fir m . 2Ba, frplc, red wood l'LBa 2 St 3 -old ••••••••••••••••••••••• clea n . 1800 P o r t ~l. ll 1'1, nr 's.A'. 82 -... deck cedar abake aid· n · >'· Y• •· • N" bd ..._ .......,_ (213) 1··-1 • lalt 6 kil ear. No pett. M65/mo. tee 4 nn, z~..,,. ...,...e, Renwick, corner lot. r wy. '550/mo. Call 01, nr e 1 ne 87~8133 2 frplc, nr 1hoppln1 comm pool, '975 mo. RZ-427t. VILLAIAUOA 9'1,900. Tenm or trade center , pool. Jae, tennia. 975-0040 dy1, 640-58Je1---------1 Lux .• Condo, completely 499-3816 Nice clean 2 Br . l Ba. $725. 551_.,, after6PM. eve. West.Ii tee $/.f.~dr~i :,;:,u;:i o.t.,Shth ::ii.: :=1 ~·i::4 WoodbrtdpNlce4Br 3ba q uallfyinf, 1241,00 ,,.,,..., 2600 Oranae "E".541-Jr.. · super family home. t otal. W ll a ccept .... ••••••••••••••••••• "50/mo. Poracbe or Mercedea, 2Br, l ~Ba twoble, 1 mo. Wat.rfrantHomes, Inc. part doW'D. Pool, Jae free rent quall.fted, nr Realton 131-1400 Security.~7Q6 hrya, 1 bopplo1 • boepltal, i.ooo eq ft. azs !br 1~~~ALS '550 ..... , ..... ,., zooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMCOMIP'IOfae111 Looktnt (°'•income. UD• U.ft We have ~ P91tl• in C.M. r•1bt at \Ha tba n UXGro11. No bank nfta6da' required, In· •• _m_o_._A_it_._145-_tl50 ____ 1 Jbt2ba "7~'715 Jbr 2ba SlZIO hm ----------i······················· ve.d-ROUND FUN; Social Ac11 ... 1ties 01 reel"'' Free Sunday Brunell• BBC's• Par· !••• • Pl1" mu oh more OMAT MCMATION: Tennis• Free LNaons (pro I. pro al'lop) • 2 ~•ltl'I Clubs • Saun1 • ~lftlSMQe•Swm­ m•no • Ornt1n9 Range llAUTIM A,ART • MfNfl: $1"1Jl•t I I 2 Bedrooms • F•r n11hed a. Unlurn11htO .. Mlult Ll~•ng •No Pttl ·• Mode•• Oe>el'I dally 9 to 6 Oakwood Qardeft .,,.ttmen .. New,.t ltedVlo. 1700 tt!h St <Oovtr .r 1Sth1 1714) .... .,,~ Mewt*t ..._,Mo. 880 ~Hie 111 1&1111 1m1 141-1104 Pl Off Santa Ana Ave . 648-5137 alt 11.AM 2 BR, l~ ba twnhouse Ait, gar . fncd. patio. Adlls. no pets. $435 645-4837 2 Br. 1 Ba. Maple St Adult, refrig, no pet.s. Quiet $375. Sierra Mgmt. Co 641·!.124 Custom 3 br, 2"'2 ba con· do, frt>lc, jacuzzi. Avail May 1. Adult.a only. t6SO mo. 642-5312 2 Br. + Cini.ahed loft over· looklng living room Child OK, no pets. S57S/mo. CAii Hilda at 914·2521 or673-4961 aft 5. D.aPoW U26 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 or 2 br. balcony. 0 W . dean, coin laundry & wshr. gar. OT ocean. 661·0252 HmflMJI• leoctt 1140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~o. ADULT ...lL. LI VING • t & 2 BA P11to Apt\ • Oo\nwHhf'' & 880' • Poo• & At< II ~ • Ga orl\ '"0' •;; ,,.. ~ • Jog 10 Buen & Snops S I G t SEA ENVIRONM ENT QbllHAMll rON HR %2 4'>00 Spacious 3 Br Duplex SUS. Pool •tlaundry fac. 548--11556 ----------12 & 3 Bed r oom s * * * ~$450. Kids OK, no lobwm.. pete please. Wa ter/ 21Ml Btookhurst Trash Paid. Carport. Huntinlton Buch 914-2564 or97).2971. Agt , Youaretbewinnerof no fee. 2frwNcUh (.12va1 ) to 2 Bdrm. 2 ba. cpts, drpa, ue • d/w, eocl gar, &ach • 5 Ice C .... 1 Poiot1 area. $430/mo. April%1\hn~ 842 8032 Anaheim ConvenUon · Center Larae 3 BR 2~ ba, with Ticke t• mu1l be ex· 1ara1e . IUdl ar pell chant ed for reaerved welcome . l mile to seats at tbe oonventlon -center ahead of Ume. ocean . ._,.,mo. 9"·:1m Call 642-5178, at. 272 to Larae 1 Br w 11araie, 4 clalmyourUcbU. blka rrom b e a c h . * * * USO/mo. lit mo+S200 dt p. req. cal1538-75'2 2 B r , 2 Ba t> e w e r Ceislur)' n JSlJRP townbome, adlt1, no pets. '415 mo. sn.-., Av.U. DOW 2 Br. 2 Ba. UP. G l-1713 s tilra, fr,lc, d1bwr, N-•r 2 a... 2 Ba. Sun-baltony • ·1ara1e. ... -W att r /traah pald. l d.ek, dtlwrr. "2$. Avail child, no P.ta. '415. approx. $-1. 160-1411 tM-2586ortTWl'll. Alt .• evtll Ol' wtnda, 541Me75 no fee. .S.11. -------..------t lbdnn, 2bti., diabw•her , USITHI DAIL:lP.tLOT ....,, . ~ SllYICI DlllCTOIY For Result Servl~C1n 641·'1671 MIU 1tove, 1ar. • + S300 uc. '111 Cyprua -...u. IEA8PRAY. IBr, tba, frplc. R.e. • NCUl'tly. Nr a.th. ..,0, 111.- at\. I I i I .......... --~ .... ., ..... .., .. , Al-..... ,.,.,.,._ .,..,._ ..... to Slllrw 000 <>Mu...... 4400 Offtce • ...., 4400 111-.trW....... 4IOO ... ,.~ .... Trwt ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Deicli 5031 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"... J.144 WnhcaMeli lit •Slawedu.t.G• H.B. Garden Type Sutte 1 FULL SERVICE SUITE · PACIFIC ·w··,d•··~·· .•••••••••••f•· 1--------1 Found · Cocker puppy IJOOLMt&Pomd 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• eoun.elora to-pera&l&Jly to5 aq. ft. at '°' /aq fl. 0 a A NG E C 0 AST 0 ... money or · · ORANG ETREE 1 BR 1 Bdrm , U85 /mo . aelect your ~paUble a /c • ba • 5H· IOO, FINANCIAL CENTER BLUFF 2ND .O. 1 any •lie fOIJll lM Co.ta M:::;:.;• condo, A/C, pool, N25 cpt/drapa, atove, or rmmte to ault your --1782 2145 Meaa Verde Or. E. ~bo= ·~~OOO. ~: c~~t NN mo.A1t.~1Sl park 6 ahppe, call for llfeatyJe.Shand·Uvin1. nJLLSERVlCESUlTE · tt, C:O.lj MeH. Share INDUSTRIAL c~l l ~G~ ~73 ~73~ ARE flEE Found· M Gc!rm Shep, LI.-• l..tt ,.41 appt. 147·m>eveaonJy 1133 Dover Dr~Sl N'B 0 RANGE C 0 A 8 T 350 aq ft office with PARK anytime approx. 1 yr old, Bay St, ....................... .,. ...... ,_ ..... d Ul· FINANCIAL CENTER another R.ealtoror comp .. ..._ C M. 759·4047,631-0121 Luxury 2bdnn, 2ba, view, or Uwfwm.:d JtOO Roommate, 2 br, 2 ba 2145 Meaa Verde Dr. E. oth•~ •mall bualneaa. I Ill~ An. Modlerel ..... Mf9-~ Loil Ce malt German open beama, frplc, "75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• view apt Park Newport #6, Co.ta Ill••· 1375 per '2:50 per mo. + aec:urlty, C .... ~ C& SINCE lilll 64~1671 Shepherd. vie Collece lncl utll. May ducount S E _. W I .._. D l300/mo '&U-2'005 ' mo. + aecurlty depoelt. •includes ulila. Ii phone 1al.&.2nd TDs, tl!i'>K·SlM + ~~~~~~~~I p 8 rk, c M In heat. loraervicN.~·0086. A f""ll · Includes a1J ut.U .. uae of ana 1 werin& 1 . Other •Two·llOO aq t unlla Owner/Non Owne r -= 7/mo Dys· 832.1400 , VILI •GE Mormon to ahr lunda!Md library ;conference Ii aerv ces avall. 957-0101. av all. for occupancy SFRa6Coodoe Loll: female Doberman Studloa 2, cpta, drpa, ~ Newpt res. Priv ba, 1ar, telephone anawerin&. ll-5 dally. May lat. •31• per aq rt. CommerclaUdndUjtrial pup, 5/mo. Choe. Ii tan evea : s.5·111111. refri1, at.ove, •;, blk lo New l~ bdrm luxury -Call 642·71M or 6'2·4463 PETER DOBBS Ch oke c: ha In . N r n-beach, aec bldg l290 lo adult apta in 14 plana + extraa . Jeremy Secret1tlal area avail. BAYFRONTOffice1pace M-88·4,Satl0.2. 840-60l6 673-90'3 Lost. Fwhtahany°"'n l350lnclutil.41M·2797or from S440,2 bdrmfrom 8"45·3994 at$11&permo.JamesE. forleaae. S.C.Plua. REWARD. Jt·lype dog, eray ears.• 491.3077 ~5 + poola, tennia, M/F lo abare beaut H.B. Dun I er A tt o r n e Y 846--441i 5tor• 4110 Want Investor for Npt 557·4236. --H B. 494·2000, 498-~ ---- --waterlalla, ponda! Gu h p I DI 1 957-1414. ----.,.--...-------••••••••••••••••••••••• bay front home. Give Loll: 12 mo. old arey & $500 uw••o 0 I I l f __ ... in ome. oo , v n& ---------i y0 r • -.... Al'lftl"ft 2000 Stora1e Warebou.es In well aec .......... , .. or 2nd -cean view, I qu e or cuua a • heatin1 Board, A/C, Sllylllhl, ~ ...... a .... : rr--•· us_, .... white F Schnauzer, Loll 4rs · M Yorllahlre studio, 1375 mo. utU Ind paid. From San Die10 F 1 r e p 1 a c e , Sq Ft Prime OHlce f.:'~!tt~:~;~I.' ~ T.D. A&t. 87~161. hom·e-cut like Benji, red pup. blk & t&n w/sllver. utlilaat~119 Frwy drive North on Waaber/Oryer +Prof IXICU11VISUfTIS Space. Ground Floor. •2900,q.ft.3"per aq collar&nu collarwhen vie Hunt Harbor ,...,__..._.. 1169 Beacb lo McFadden furn. Cal1Gary~2313 "There la adllference." Fa• h ion la I and • a ft. Call 842·4483 Mon W_. % 1·22"o YJttd7 locl In La1una SlOO rt· I 7 1 4 ) 8 4 6 s 7 6 l • r--• then West on McFadden Corporate Plua Area. .... ..ri Sa 2 On your T.D.'1 Notes ward. 499-3296. Mi-7681 1 2 l 3 ) c. a 2 . s 9 7 1 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• to Se a wind VI Hase _,,,,. Per u •.• 4 Year UJN · M . t lO. · SSRal•e,...lnv-tora•• " • Flo 1br 2 br, l ba' on N _.., ..., ...... -<an.a nrvice) (213183H218 (714)891-Slill. Bayfront, Bal. la. Yrly, 71u.'?l~J4 Leue Pl• Opt.loo. Call Approa. IOOOaq ft In CallOenniaooAaaoc -------ao... 4000 1225.176-Ml& 20l2 lche 121.2 751-9100. Broker. Fountaln Valley or San 871-7314 LOST. La Oran&e cat . LOST Small Parrot 2021 BualneuCntrl2L3 Oleio Fwy. Sl.320/mo altered male, WA S <Green/Yellow w/grey ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,.n minded fem wanted ---------rFuUy furn. (Udo Penin.> Purchase ol 2ND TD '• l bl II h d n -1n .. PAii NEWPORT COUHTIYCWI LMMG Sln1lea, l~ bedroom a pt.I, • lownhouaes. L.a1una Beach Motor Inn, "....., 1617 Weatdllf. N.B. Want Call Jobn 556-9310 or arran1ed. For dttal ar n1 ue co ar ea > ",... J>llnla nr 985 No Paclflc Coaal lo ahr apt 2br, 2ba financial lnat 7000..f. by hwtaa&.er. WPerfPectX for 548-7533 call "Gu1 ... R EWARD Harbor H S. 548-4982 Hw(. Lacuna Beach Newport. 549·9311 call Y•c man. · ·• erox 1---------546 8437 4114 Daly, Weekly, Kitchen Franzaft6:30 lat.ICflooOUr AC•=5032· ::r:avc:.~~me· ~~~ ••• !~~! __ 960-__ lll5_ 7 _B_rok_e_r_ ~ Penlan lon&halred l Found Dutch Bunny, Oceanfront for Winter available. Low winter 2 Br apt ln H.8 to ahr. 2 _..,_ Youni prol couple look IHVISTMINT Cal, whlte•any, loct in vie. Harbor Vu Nature From ~10 644-1900 Rental• Fumlahed • rat.et 4i4-525M. blka from beach. Non· HIWPOltT Clean, new I otnce •uit, lnl tor boUae wttb ocea~ O''Oln'\M1"Y CdM . REWARD Sl OO Pk . NB~ unfum. Broker 875-.eU Lake Forest, ullla pd, amoker SZ20 mo~7582 Ele&ant executive auites OC airport Joe. '500. view to rent for weddinc. 203 retum on your in· 759.0994 --------kl pri In prHU1e location. Reception otnce avall. In Sept. approx the ath vealed capltal secured F ound Benj 1 type NO FEE! Apt. Ii Condo t/lndry v. rec Cac, Man 30 will ahr 2 Br C.M. With complete aupport for Aiu. aerv. • U1ht thru the L3th Call Dr. by a T.D. oo Cali/. R.E. LOST : Af&han , 6 moa, aha&IY dog, off white rentala. VIUa R.enlala. _l250_._58&-__ 4038_· ___ --I houae, qWA!t atreet t:200 aervlcea. aecty work. "6·°'44; WoU at (213)~5064 or lnveat e mos to 5 yrs. vie. Harbor/Wll.aon, CM. with mark!np. Vic S.C __ 6_1s_._.v_u_Br_c*_e_r __ 1. AKE Fo~l , a 11 lo l300. 631-0'120 . 714~1--0681 78()..010 • Ive. me11. ISOOO· 1500,000. Prln· Reward. 548-2733 Plaza.~. ..., rt 11 lla pd clpala only. Call Ro&er, llSTVALUI P v eses. ·WANTED l cple " 1 HIW,OltTCINTB .............. 4410 Female lookln1 for <714)523·2840. Auoc. Found· Doxie (?) Pup-Found : youn1 tan Shep. Veraallles corner pen· S280.l1Udut.SM-4038 1in1le or 2 aln&la all FullServiceSultes ••••••••••••••••••••••• Studio or I Bdrm Mt1 Co .. Downey,8kr. pie, black It brown, y)!) mix. N. Costa Me11 thouae2Br2Ba,comm Slupln1 room only. overM>to1hrrenU1utU S~UTCOSTSS Foratore•otnceapace Newportlkh.Daya call Mes a Verde.C M . area.979·6717 pool , Jae .. wet room. !verythlnl furnlahed. for beaut 4 bdrm 2\.\ ba Allyoun.eecHorone atreuonabierata. 957-8'47 LOW,,el.AR 557-41.al. f700/mo.t'7~1717 S41/wll.83Hl54 nuly coutruct.ed me ln moothlyfee! IOOteJ700S.r"'. ---------z.ctTrwtDtedt FOUND; fem. Cocker ------------------~Ad /Dela 8tl>-70 EbrT Lo ul 1 Found: Black Lab Pup, Spaniel blond, very fat. OCIAMNOMT Heteh.~ 4100 u.:~~12od:'!r::.~ 54 MESA~E R '"JC:~"'/ av~l.c~O:t.olfu:>~C::. vie Brookbu~Chap· Vic. D\ana It Mariners, Yum. 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• d /w , f /p, et. Dottle •Dll.UXIOMCIS• ...... u-aV--'· E c .. 1& yr. loan. Aaaumable. man, G.G. tr7l· · NB. '42·5102 car iaraae wtth otflce, Balboa Inn oceanfront. tf0.2145. 1 to 3 room otnces. No .-... •t4Mtzl ' .... i:i:;;;• .............. Owner occupied. F ND: Blk male Lab, '~ 1310 wuher ii dryer incld Low wlnt.er ratea. Dally ---------1 leue required. 2172 Du· ---------os,i.I •• 1001 IAMICBSMAT"L H bor 6 McFadden, ••••••••••••••••••••••• A v a I I N 0 w or weekly. K.ttchenet.te. Fem. roommate wanted Pont Dr. Ad.I. Airporter ,_,___ 1. .... ,. MOIT6"M CO Wltly /Mntbly. ••up. l'Js.«740. to ahr a Br houae. KB. 21 Hotel. ua.3221. t-12 mo ~:ic~ach ...... W••1•:=•:•••••• <n 4>m·!!M4 • S.A. e73-l.218 FIRST LADY Escort. Models ,...,o.c.... TSL MGMT. 642-1803 y--... -..;..u-.... -.... A--Room---' or over. Avail. now. Cd .. 0 1 Sui•-AC Boulevant.ffunt1n1ton ,_,.. An eatabll1bed O.C. Found : Blk puppy, about ---------eany, ....._. pt. • Eveel46-1244 '"' e uxe ..,., • B b Jde J f 1 WMOllS418 .............. n. a-hool E. BluHa Condo, 4Br, k itchenette 6 bath. UUla ---------t am pl pk1, utll pd. 2W .:t!~ · otnc!. ,r:,,.:e:r In the fa~I elec· :.~r:-•ae Baokinl Com· ~~.,...~7;;; ,....y <ft: • I Ba, aund.k, pool, ~s paid l2IO mo. + aecurl· Bualneaa Woman to ahr E. Cal Hwy. 875-teoo other a&dtable bwlnesa. lronlc HC\lrity buaineea. mo. U5-J474, (2U> ly depoalt. 2306 W. Condo w /a c l l v • 2 Private b.U., avaJla· Thia ii a NeeNk>n proof noo.ooo note at 203 re· Found : Huaky-Shep mix, 541-44e0 Oceanfront, Newport employed penon. GOO+ MWPT f'IMMSULA bl• Immediately. 10 bu.lnet1. 10 X 10 1pace tum. Call broker. Due In bill /wh\ Fem. Auatr • 972-1 ]45 * MC 6 VISA Accepted Beach. 87Ml.54. YI utU. 546-4370 daya, Exec otncea In e&e1ant Year ie .... Attractively requtred. We have a de· 10 yra. Mark Conley Shep I Lab, b lk /w ht Nr beach, 1n1I condo -----------1 548-4-401 ev•/wtmdl 1urroundln1a. Acroaa prtNCI aler aaalated pro1ram Fem. Ln1 haired blk wtpartltloned bdrm. v .......... 42101---------1 from Clly Hall. All aup-· that can't be beat! In· Brk.fU.GT7 Adulta, no pet.a. Pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rmrnte 3br, 2ba, yrly, port Hrvices available. 642·w4~clant216 YUtment required ~:~1n1 !~_t1 • .Cr.•.L . .!~ * ISOXYLADY * apa 6 nm. 1425 By Stepe lo bch, lbr, home, Balboa laland. QZ5/mo. From 225 to 4750 IQ.ft. Y1 1211.820.00 aecured by ln· +•1•C1m t1/ tu•m• "'""""" ,.... -OUTCAU..ONLY app't call atn. Genhon: 11-ep114, reuwtcly. 673·1127 evea, 551-1421 873-3002 co-•~• vento;rc. Eamlnl poten· ,~ VlSA MC 97$-103 d ,,,,..__ I I o fl •-.a• REWARD, !Dal female •97•11 .. •• ( 2 l 3 > U 7 · 5 &4 O o r _•..;;.y_s ______ --1 t 7ftl ITIBT Sholpln' cent.er at.ore on t • C ~ + rat .:::::.'":............... black Enallah Cocker, ___ .. ________ _ .. <_2_13_>_87_......, ______ MAUI CONDO. 41»5/U, F non1mc*er 1br a br Coal• Meaa. I rm auile, 17t St. 4,NO aq. ft. yei:1a:o~a~41 ._••CIR 1111 II 00 vlc of So. Cat Pl.ua Aprll ** 9tep11 to bch, Jbr, 2ba, '50/day, 1lp11 5, Call VI, N.8 . condo, nt beach, A/C. Plenty ol parkln1. (714)842-11511. / ' •g-••••••••••••••••••••••• 12lh, 133-3301 dya , SPJ.RrnJAL cpt.t/drapes/frpk yrly 646-1119,7»1.509 amenlti.e.,1125.&46-111'1 Mhq.n .M50permo. C••••rcW ,.. ,._ 675·7765ev•/wknda. READINGS lae. '750/mo.842-34.u Hawatlan condo, pool, Female roommate wan\. Realonomtcs l7H700 ..... 4471 Ml. WOODS •UMDOPM• Found: Pair ol pnacrip-l~.i:;'Je0p;1·Jt1J..U~~ Quiet 2 Br. aara,., pool. babyalt, 1lp11 2·4, May ed, 25-a& to ahr beaut. 500 aq ft ln Downtown ....................... -~=I TH lz;i.~u~ J\ Y Uon 11a ... at 22nd • s. Camino Real, San Adulta, nopeta.1801 "D" ~23. 9&00 ... aooa C.M. apt.CalJMt-DMor La1una Bch, •treat Store Space for lea•:· 500 W. Cout Hwy Ocean, N.B.~4338. Clem 15'h . s•. Newport •NWPT oco .... FRO~ -.19llO. Jevel,akyllt.el,752-0628 1500aq.tt.•ueoaq.... IYITIM A f B lb ~ ~ &WV" "• In Hunllncton Beach. 31111 Villaaecent.r Rd . ( croaa ro~ a oa Helaht.. "'10. !Oz7J40 ii Lido hi• bay front, IUlp employed ,.emaJe Lux u.. y 1200 a q. fl . r I e x I bl e t • r m a . WfftlaM Vllla1at1J11 Bay Club) Open eAM· Nwpt H&bWl>upa.x. 2 Br. W /aml boata. Wkly. nud1 apt to 1hr. La1una Bucb oc .. n 211/116-'7212. llw ..... 3PM . Breaklaat·Lunch 1 Ba. Adultt, 001*9. 617 97J.81JRr •tum•. N.8 . area. ;!:~fl,OOO/mo/leaae. 8bop1, 1t.onl, etc. 112 .:-""' IOZOl~Ope~n~T~d~a~)'l~·~!'!!!!'!!!~1ll Boin. Daya Hl·3520, ........... 4JOO 1'71-0IOI • · sq.It., 12'·bl w/laa dr. • ....................... 1 ~ Ev .. • Wlmdl Nl-aotl. •••••••-•••••••••••••h Irvin• ar... a.apon., 525' Office. Crpt, paneled 21 O a q . I l. w / 1 l.D k. PrlvatAI party needa SIOK OcHn view, 1.,.c. lm 2 ~tna10!,.~ depoettt1 4ulet, aeal, 1lnt1bt wall.I, 1u • wtr tum. Ml-7149 for 2'/mo. WW lb.an ~ aa z Ba, Varulllaa. • cut ..... upeaaae male to 1ht 2bdrm apt. Ground fir. .,,.,. 3052 .. • ......_. • ....-.... 4100 equity in llnale falJllly IJJO. SIM_, r!o 1 te .. lonally 1lnce IMO/mo .. + \&lJ as dep. Newport Blvd C Iii Dbt-*•-rfflcfence. <luarantMd .. , unit (1050llq. ft.) ~~or ••••••••••••• .. •••:•••• alnt return. a.cured. lbr 1rly, pr panlD1. HOUl8iUTIS Ml-•O•U·tpm. olc. MMlticwM6-ml. ~~'i.il:f ~/g: CaUDoo (TJ.4)14'J.e61. Mpe to bNdl. No'*' llMlM Would Uh Jloolomat. to "P".Huotti.NJ.2Ut ~teL.e. 1021 UOO/mo . ..,l·IHI : 1bar• I Br. C..SO near Ollf!ICITOIMAll 144 •• lmmt. wa.t to abr ll• Baell Bay. Temdl, pool. I Corolla de! Kar. <r.u .................... .. condo ar 8.C. Piasa. •mo.-.mi .:..MN ar. MESA llON&Y AVA.ll.. I• any cutt llev•, ... Cla1, I IHH, pool, Jacuui. . rtuon. U0,000 to :.:. !.:.•.,=. oo ,.... ~;*t.~~v~:~ ':!.: .r,..~ ~~ ~~~~SS. INDUSTRIAL f:rf. :" ..!:":ru ~~ ... a& lk ·-~ t ,...., can., . ., or tobeacb . ..ue lieet +rcpt., ••. On PARK.. ~!~C.=}'~ ' '• -· ' '7ll-OOIO p--6 • _._ to Dovt. • yn afall lttUO -.. t,_ F"l11 ,,,~1-a"'lt t.lk baactL #II. ul&a, .-. ,, -· II ~ • I 711 W.1,-1t. 'I• .. •-., .-,.., .... .,..,aide• allrtu.,pa lWJM1,up-r.!.:alhw•-* C.. .... C:..°"f ;::•:. ~0:: Co • .r..... 1radtd a •r, I ba .............. 1 , ~....,•+ ao 14 n.omo.• _.....,.. ",..1 Mk for ';td~m~1 ::".~·,8,; ~llllAll . ..-. OC&AHVJn ('14)~-,:,mto;;: o"rat.or, frple, beam ColU ... Gl-1'710 ftdeeti~. olllaf, HU 1rly. ....... .,..... .... ....................... .... , ......... . .... llAl ......... . ~ .. lt. From "11. ....... J SCUMUTS AJISWEIS P1ycM-Topu-Hoi.t~t - Wheo three W101Den .... tailllnl, )'°'f baVt a COG• veraaUOG -when OM Jeave1, you have GOSSIP . ~!!r7.~ ••••••• ~!~! I ' Use ,,,,.,.,, M. service when ~lacing your ad . , . a Delly Piiot ad number·w111 appe4r In your classlfled ad • .. we take your mess"" 24' hours a day • . . you can In et your convenience durl~ office hours and oet the responses to your ad ..• this strvlce Is onlv S7.SO week. For more lmorme· tlon and to piece ~r ed c•tl '42·5678. · I 'I I I • j ( IOOP•• N .. __ • Mr cllart• li 09.ralo 6 npervla K .I). P . aceountln Bu)&l61 . •r•ttm tor 1m&ll bu nua 1towlb• nnn m 1nine1 El ~ El Torq uea. Xblt 1wt· &~~ e. 1$1.1;fl&l'7 • btuftb. m.uu l•Muslfsst ea..t ., 71 .. latll,..ee AC:Ca.J ... , •• bit opmla~ Cuatomer 8tnk9 . toMrVIC.•~le • turanct a~d1. M ult have ad. oral. writta cowom...it!Aldom t*IUI. Esper. 4-lratM. 9lari. tn1 ,.._,, comm. "10; per. A abMlly. ~lL DRIVZB waat-4, fun-,,.. ..._ :-,,~=t·~ ea::,-::: Umt, DlUlt have Calli _... ~ appt., • ,_ ... Driven Uc•--' driv· A ~ or S:..IJi' : ._..a, ID& !'!COf'd.... Sat /Suo~\AJli.JPM or 1 ~11A!!· !!!!!!!I!!!'!!!!!!!!!!! _.__...,..;.;. _ _..;i,;..;... __ 1 '2PM·'f PM, Tuea/Pr1, I · 1 DJUVER8 •PM-tPM. Sal ... re. lewetryatorein&o.eo..t Dellverbabty product.a 1ttvatloN j, ...capt.loo Plan oetda brl1ht .t *** .... , ..... 18'700 S.yb.-1.n. Hunttnatoo.,•cb E.O.E. M/F/V /B A/P knowfectlt beloful. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ a to ' days per wk. lln. 1---•---.i t ·5. apply at : lHO Super Market, early dutiet. penon fOC' olftc• dutMllt. rnoraln1 \o mld · ~ION afternoon. Call 77H750. u~• ~ &•H ..a --I _. I a• KITCHEN HELP You areU. Winer ol f.tt'~t! I C.-AUTO LOT At A~tuiCA rWI uaae. mUlt .,. 11. AD1.,.lm Convention llU11ioo Viejo. W,una 1--.......;.___ __ ..:..:..;...:..:..:..:..:..1 c... Hllll aru. ... 2212 uk 1111111 ... ------1 Tlcketa mlllt be ... ,_for__;C;...a;...r.;...l _____ -J BANKING !.":t:':.d .::,r :V!n~ AUTO t llCtwec Tll''" c:N~~ ex°l ~r~ ~ffer~~= '1m:!s~·~•P. ct.lmyourt.lckell. Tui.1 aA)Ueatiom for •plicanu with n · 2 j o a r n e y m e n perience. XJnt beneflU * * * mechanic•. Excellent and Plea• ant a\· Dlacreet lady to meet 1alary 1uarant••· mospbere. Call Sylvia .in I M\ al\ S medical lmuranee e~ Waten. $52.tlOO. I• man ......,, weet· aram 6 otW benefJU. IAMk OP •YI .. ly • Gen Del. L11una ~ S. El Camino ~ Equal Opp Emp)yr Bcb. San Clemente. «·~~~~~~~~~! RATED 'X' •ESCORTS •752-6071• Your'cbotce, aeea 18-40 Servin1 all of O.C. 24 hrs Now Hiring MC VISA ..,. .. ,. ..... ... ,.. ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• tWpW..W 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Acc...,.,.,_.. a.rt for bo1pl. corp. ofc. Famlllar w/collecllon p~edure. (1111 com· l'HY • aeU-p.1y acCU) Contact : Ma. Irene Ruu &4o.8950 • AC~TG.ct.al lruur1nce A4Y. Apply in penoo: 333 N. Newport Bl., N.B. (t-5 Mon.·Fri.) ....... we~v0e'!'}~~~m-Xlnt ~~J.'!'!'Jin at· ml111on aalel openioc ln tractive Sid. poelliooa lhe Automotive Center avail. immediately In for a qualified aelling Anahelm. "Colt. Mea1 spec la lilt. W• offer lhe oCficea. Call Kathleen 1t beat benefltl pro1rim o1 754-1801. Orange Coul any retail co. Apply in _~_L_._E_O_E ____ _ person: J.C.~ 24 FutUon llland E O.E. M/F AUTOll011VE SALIS PIOftl Join a beautiful Oataun dealersbJp in Newport Beach. Stnu&ht aalea pro. needed. Excellent benertl1. B1nkin1 New Aa:••ts c ..... E•perlence Preferred A1ao part time poelti()Cl.ll available in our South Coast Plua office. Call Kathy Amburgey S40-4086 ..1wrORT DATSUN N~~Ri-S:-Erctt CAUFOllllA (No Ph. Calli Please) frnrDAL AUTO RO\fl'ES lUlA. .. _ So•"9&Lom .....,glster newap.1per has 895 Town Center Dr. afte~oon auto routes Cost• Mesa, ca 92626 available In Laguna EqualOpportunity Beach. Laguna Niguel & Employer Dana Pt. Applicants~~~~~~~~~ must be over 18 years ol 1_..::. ________ •I BANKING ...... See our 114 ln today'• cl•••lfied under ··Secretary'' c....-... Banklnl . LOAN ClfllS Placenlla Ave .. Coeta Mee a IOOQW-• FULLCHA&M OUtatandbla opport&U\ity for experlenced con- aiructlon development, rfal eat.ate full cbarje S.C=adflc ... bookkeeper, for r•P'dlY It ,_.,.,.to espandln1 mllll\· a.twf'Y 4 IM corpoute NB firm. eppUcllllh for two ~.~~l~Y !~!:i: o,. ..... • Hewport benefit.a. proftt aharin&. letlClt • &.o.. C....._ major medical Ir op-e e•dldatH tllo•ld portuntty for advance. ment. Send resume lncl II••• ••• J••r of Salary Hilt & dates to ......... w ........ PatParkinlclaVP.Quail e.,.n•1ca. Goodtyp. Place Company 1400 I• t 1 k111 1 er• Quall St. Suite 135, NB 92660 or call MCH.-Y· (714)752-lZ!IO We offtr •Hut.I I~~~ lteMfit p n :h• ...& Full time, • . helpful I I LI L but not nee. any com •a or H W• c. •r• pany benefits. Apply at. co••••nrate wltltl 1660 Placentia Ave., ro-' eap11 l•c•. For! Cost.a Mesa -l!f!f Dl ..... c .. --.-0-00EIPB ____ _ 17 I 4) 75M124 TO $20,000 a OFFICE - MANAGER Tustin. growing mf&. co. offers excepliooal future ?'® for take claarge lndiv ""' whith proven mgmt. SECURITY ability. Noo·1mkr. Prior broad exper. wilh A/P, ~FIC AIR . invoking, P IT. a&MK Mall resume to: P 0 . ~ Box ~. Jrvlne. Ca. An Equal Opportunity _m_i_3 ______ _ Employer Bllalne11man seeks p /t associate in whol-.ale ADMIN. SEC'Y Expandln1 research firm needs versatile career-minded In· dividual to provide secretarial 1upport for director of new product development. Xlnt typ- inl. a/h 4k abWty t.o or· ganlle & malnt.&in Illes a must Call for app't, Newport Pharm1ceuticall. 8'7 W 16th St. N.B. M2-7Sll. eX\47. a I e & h a v e a n 1• economical vehicle. Ex· per. not necessary but helpful Call 9Sl-7113 wkdy1 after noon. TB.1.EI 1-m--------1 supply. 754-1142 Apt Mcr·uall\.ant. Older mature person to work days off for Manacer (714 )962"'500 AaHmblers/Electromc1 lmmed. opening for ' final assembly position. E•P with air screwdriver desirable Small frLendly Co. nr ocean &IS-3532 uk for Wea. , Asse..as AUTO SALES Muat have At1 o.t1tmdiltc) o,. knowledce Ii exper . in r:•_,... nhh for• high dollar eiultic can. "' Npt area. 21J.3'76-694.5 •dhldMI wlta. 1ia Ste\!e ....._r.•At T...,. ti _..:..;;._ ... U_T_o_•~ ... ,----1 •a,.,. ••c•. At • • -INd«illtt.ftrl•cW areer oppor1Wlity for lty __. 11lea~ple who want to co•.-• .. ,..... ... succeed financially and .... c• otfw ••· peraonally. Join Orange cen .. t ........ - County's fmat Uncoln· blMfHI. ...... Iola• enjoy s ubstantial In· .. .., •wllnll Mercury aales at.an and ~ ._ & come and company Cot• M9H efflce. beneflt1. Work with Ce•hct SHllLIY pride and dignity at GJLllltT to a; a g• John.son at Son Lmcoln· Mercury In Costa Mesa. • ~lew llflPD .... Call Bill Harold for 1 dill· IMftt. cuasion of this unique op. portunity. (714> S40-S630 IMPERIAL BANK BANKING WELLS FARGO IS CLOSE TO 'WHERE YO.JUVE! Tellen Full & Part Time If you are a career minded Individual. Wells Far10 Bank can offer you a full or part· time poaitloo ln one ol our Orange County branc,he• SI• months previous banking ex· perlence required. For more Information please call: Jessica (714) 973-3'724 WELLS FARGO BANK Equal Opp Empl mtr /h CAn"AIH llleeded Weekends. st.ron& food·wine Mrvlce backaround 1end re· sume to: BU> Brown's Restaurant 31106 Cout Hwy. So. Lacuna warn Car Wash Help, full & PIT. apply in person, Mrlro Car Wash, 29SO Harbor Blvd. C.M. CASHIER Car wash. Will train. Santa Ana area. Call Leticia, 6'4-44Ql. DllYllS 8AM·2P • Mon thru to team food prepan· Wanted for Pu.mJture ~!lisu!:30AM·t2Noon , Uon sa.15/br. to ala.rt llovln1 Co. "5/tO it.a.rt, Worklnc hours: SAM~· lncreaae with ex· W•=• ............... , tPM. M·P'. Lori '• pertence.-.MU ~ Kitchen, 'Jl1rT S. Harbor -----------• 1 year ~exp H nltea, 5P-M·l1PM Blvd., SA. Call· 919-<Y141_,. Com put.er laatr.Auoc.a.. N.lC '•r~I t :45 am Co I : 15 rm Saturd1y1. Ellp. ln data proce11tn11. proaram- minc. debu&cinl pros. languacea. JCL tor IBM /360/J70 & diak IBM 370/W . Apply in writing to Cout Community Colleges. 13'10 Adami Ave. Costa Mesa, 92626. S56-5947 by 5 pm 4/'Z7 EOE/MF . * DIVEi * Part ume'T:l:Uo 12:30or Pleue c1ll for 1ppt iz:ao to 5:30 Monday 645 ·73.SS. Mon Fr• . t.bru Fri. F tnme a to .s, 111t~:~30-~5~P~M~~~~~I Moo tbna Fri. Starla at i.:. ~i~2':" hr. Call Mart GROUP REP for fore11n ---------• exchange program in 'l)mya O.C. <'1t1ea. 3.4 weeks P /T driver 2PM-6PM this siunmer. Should Mon· Fri. Newport know community well Beach 631,mJ Joanie Find host families, or ---------1 ga~iie projram. take DIU.ctalt student.s on toun Xlnt Full time, Mon·Fri., &-6. salary for the energetic Profetaiooal pharmacy. & enthuelutlc.-Please exper. Call: 'terry Grant send letter or reaume to for interview. 642·1S80 I n t e rs tu d y 4 8 2 2 Electro·mechanical Barkwood. Irvine. Ca Technician/Sr. Unusual -927-1-4-· -- opportunity for mature person. Reaume lo: Dept OCP/Z26B. P .O. GUARDS Full & part time All areas. Uniforms furn 'd Ages 21 or over, retired Box 763fr7, L.A., Ca 90076 ---------I welcome Noexper nee Apply . Unive r sal EH~~H. Protection Service. 1226 T T W S\h St • Santa Ana E I e c t r o n i c Interview hrs 9 12 & I 4. engineertt«bniclan for Mon-Fri debugalng/tesling of ---new MU spec. circuit de-HA1RDR&5SER velopmt. Mual be u · & MAN'ICURIST per'd.indellcnofswitch w 1cllentele, highest mode power supplies & comm. pd. great loc analog circwta. RF ex· The Haar Handlers per desirable. 3 m06 642·8484 job with growing laser co. lndepeodentcontrac· Help wanted f /t , p •\ COOK tor status (consultant) sandwich mA.n & counter Dinner Cook. s nltes 1 acceptable. Potential for help Pina de care . week, up a must. Apply perm anent employ Gary'• Dell 152-MOl In h ment. Call: 493·6624 pe raon, np p one Hru p w ... t.n"E0.I c a I h . J o 11 y \ Ro g er EOE s:• "'"• Restaurant, 400~. Coaat l~~~~~~~~~~I Telephone solicitor No H y L B 1 uper . nee. Excell t•o w • · · benefits Commission COOi $1 ftftft program & profit !.lhar Day • eve 1 . Xlnt ,uuu ing. Apply in person · salar y• ta. Jolly Mlirwtn.. Pennysaver . 1660 Roce r . 2287'3 Lake Expandlnl co. needs Placentia Ave . Cosla HOMEMAKER Oppty for homemakers to d•evelop m'ktinK career We train t'or appt 962 0010 Fore1t Dr El Toro bard workers . Co Mesa 768·49" beneftta. Rapid advan· FUUTIMISAUS C-• cement. Car needed 18 ~ 4rovet 6 mos. exper Apply CALL lOAMTO 3PM btwn 9AM & Noon. Charlie's Chill, 3001 7 '4-847-2422 Redhill, Bids. 12. Ste I~!!!!!!!!~!!!! • 2218. c )I • 1'11128 HOST ft10STESS Full & part ttme ava1Ja ble Apply an person 3-SPM. Jolly Roger, 400 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach ------- for appt. U..Tecll Exper lab tech for Newport Beach Rheum atologista Ofc 644-1881 ·•! LEG.Al. •• Growing Santa Ana law • office requires 1 le1al' J l r a 1 n e e & 1 I e & a I, secretary Good bulc skills a must. 841·1358 (Jean) --------LEG~LSECRETARY La11 una Hills recent Ca lif Probate exper necessary Xlnt typing & SIH skills req Call Mrs .. ' Wanslow ror appt . 831 1060 LEGAL SECRET ARY or peraleqal wita. """Y expw. in Htete plo1111h1CJ. Airport ' area, Mpt. lch. Cal: · Jackie oft. I :lOPM, · lll-9913. LEGAL SEC'Y Law orfice exp . 85 wpm typing. d1ctaphone. Wall train on Lenier word processor Real estate, busine ss law $1 300 $1 100 t mo S k ypa rk . Ir v in e. !179 9610 LEGAL TRAINEE Unique Npt Beach Law Ofnce seeks amh1liOU$. legal trainee /recep· tion\s\ to start approx· imately 6/t. Your op· portunity t.o grow & ad· vance Xlnt typll\i & communication skills a must' Experience helfful-but not required. Sa ary open phone Barbara 64&4466 COUNTER PERSON for print 1hop, from 9AM· 3PM. APlllY In penon. 1795 N•wpor\ Blvd., C.M. Women'• Swimwear· 1pply in penon. ~ystic Har bour 2811 ·c· Newport Blvd. N.B. Fri/Sat. 4/17,./18. lOam· Spm or call 673-3034 eves m.2004 LEGAL ntAJMH Small Newport Beach law Clrm seeks legal trainee Successful can· d1date shouJd have cood general office skills & be eal!er to learn Will train Starting salary SlSO S900 ~1-9434 Housecleaning. lad y -------- COUllB/CUU Full time needed for Npt. Bcb. medical lab. Perm. poi .. hrs. 9·6 Prefer mat~ peraon. Phone : Dr Notrlca, 64().0140 Dato IWrY a.tr. needed for 3 hours per Liquor Clerlt. Pff. nites week $6 50 per HR Ask for Steve FURNITURE Store nda. part •time helper for de· 6'5~1 -64.2-6.537 II v e ries • v 1 rlous Housekeeper/Companion duties. Approx. 3o.4o Live in or out hns . per wk. $4 hr. Pref. 833-2000 non·smkr. Inquire in HOUSBCEIPER penon. Tues. lhru Sat. d · L' · at 1931 N.-mnrt Bl.. CM. ao comparoon. ave in ~~,,., Must be able to drive. No LIQUOR CLERK Exper prererred, 5 rughts. good pay. good future Apply in person. 293'1 E Cst Hwy, CdM. Loe. Mt.salon Vl.ejo co. neada Aaaemblens w /2 yra. exp. Candidates muat have ed. m1nual dexterity. ad. eyesl11ht. neat in appearance & de· pendable. Work ii in Ute support medical elec- tronka. Gd. benefits O n ly r eaponslble penOM aeeklnc pemll neot emp&yml. need ap ply. Call: Mra. Parelll. 581·3830 BABYSITTER· Woman needed to h e lp w /children 3Yn & 3mo In my home, refs . 912·~10 • 6'5TowwC.....Dr. 1-------• Bank in I Cashiers. FIT position avail . Salary com menaurate with e"Xp. Ap- ply in penoo. Metro Car Wash. 2950 Harbor Blvd, C.M. Growln-C swimwear manufacturer ha1 Im· mediate openlna fo-r person with z.ayn. data entry experience. Call Julie: 49&-1291. G EN E RA L Of tic e , smoking. N.B. 640..0099 swimwear mfgr. has im· from lOam to 3Pm. med. opening tor well or· H k 1an hed person. Will ouse eepers wanted, Loa11C~ lnJ.erviewa with ~r?wing company spec1ali2mg m large real estate loans tst & 2nd T D 's R E llc.-ense req Houston Hartford ~9111 t4llD HB.P? Help youneU to a Heapinc aelection of Quallfled Hopefuls m the DAILY PlLCYJ' HELP WANTED ADS CothMeM. CAt2'26 7 I 4-64 I ·2200 bt.2'2 Equal Opp Employer WANT ACTION~ Clauifed Ads M2·~8 Newkc.U Full Time Tellers Full Time & Sat. Only Poaihon1 available in our new Laguna Ni1uel office E•per preferred. Pleasec1U: DonFylpu 714-770-6441 CAUFORllA FEllWL Equal Opportunity Employer Bank In& CASHIER H0USEW ARE SALF.S Apply in peraon · Crown Hardware, 1024 Irvine. (West<'lltrP\au) NB CASllEIS UTDTEM MAllKETS For 2nd 6 3rd Shlf\1 We prornoU to manage- ment Ir supervision from within. WANT A CAREER? C06ta Mesa 111Del Mar 631·9Ul Laauna Beach 49'-9233 Huntinclon Beach 116'b9116 Deliver L.A. TimH to homea ln C.M. la H.B. 3-eAM. s:JTS."50 mo. + bonus. Dependable car S46· 4-481 or 9&4-4982.. DIUYBY Full Ume for local de- Uverie1, x.lnt drivin& re- cord required. 551-9212 Mr. West. Newport Sta· \loners Inc DENTAL~ANT Re&. cbalnidedental a11't. M$-tt75 D ...... AlllJf-' Chair tide ln N.B. Endo. omce. 2~ day /week. Must be exp'd, able It enthu1la1tlc. Top pay 631.3380 llCB'l'IOHIST Newwrt Beach SliL baa tmmed. opeoin& tor a Receptloniat. M1.11t have had previous Recep· Uonlll'• uper .. must be Dental Autatant / Chalrslde, for Fl't'• fc 1o~e Sat'1. Newport 1eneral praetlce. A•k for Judy 1fl0:~. personable It enJ01 •--------m eetl n & the pub II c. CKILD Monit«. ttll1 per 1 .. -------.i Salary comm . .rltb e•· month. Must bave'Smo.. 1• per. Full lnsurance thh expertence. Diii••• beneflt.a It pe.ld career Complaucareof20moe. 11••1 apparel. P\eaM call: old baby, prepare food• Mf1. co. ln Mluk>o VleJo Ma. D«my Parilla teed the bor. cban1• area needa uper. in 71~ · dlap•n• toilet train, electrical connecton. MIWPOl'r ..... OA la\lllder clo&hes It bat.be b e r en e t l c a e a I 1 • SAVMSALOAM the baby, coastant trantdueer dealp, com· E.O.fl!. Jupervltlon netded, ponenll materlal1 6 »nvate roam • board. ~f:d'inc11• dalp, BAUD/ 'r a k e ad to Stat t draftl.al m.ataiall c.t. HAJl\Sl'YLIST isoiplo)'ftMdt Office Ill IDI It W .J'fOJtctt. Full cllfllltla1 '70~ ~-:fO. ~~ -:,1.: MtcbanlcaJ Ea•InHt· comm. 1'Mb 1 n pe1d -, lnl de1re• prtf'd . vacation. !fe~ lnn ~~emii"ii';ier;iiiiiiiiiii~I Qualtlled candldattt Kalr o..•-tM-2UO Mad rttwne to: Mn. ... ~. · I a " t • I II t l V I a ia-tw ,.,,.C~_!!i_ SuJte IOI, train for various duties. The Sea Cliff Motel. 1661 Call JuUe,491H291 South Co1St Hwy. LB 494-4892. GE .. IERAL Off'CE I M P O RT I E X P 0 RT E•cell. typing skills. Director wanted to over some bltpg & computer IH lmportaUon of lime uper. desirable. Send pieces from Hone Kong resume to: Cushman & ------LOT PER.SON M~t ~ reliable & have xlnt drlvmg rerord. Detail- ing exp a m~t Npl. area 213-:J7&6SM5 St.eve ------W a k e f I e t d . 4 0 4 1 mto the U.S. To perform MicArtbur Bl , #ISO. marketing & feaslblbty 1--------- Newport Beach, Ca studies and monitor MACHINE 92860_ Attn: Elaine sales trends. Mll.'lt have SHOP BS In busineM or 4 years GIHIAAL OfACI ex per In lnlernational 1 m m e d o P e.n in g . Appliance service com-trade· Fluency in Can m a c h 1 n e ope r a to r pany. Heavy phones. toneae & English re tr11nee. All girl dept U•ht typinl, bookkeep-quired. S1950per mo . 40 Costa Mesa plan\. Ex tnc experience. Ask for hr• week. like 1d to cell. company benefit.I Oennl1,64.2.-0'UO. nearest Employment Apply Deltronlc . __ ___;. ______ , Development Depart MS·OU3 •tHIAAL OFACI men t om ce. DOT ~~~~~~~~ F /t dar•· accounting, #163.117·014. This ad -:: aenera office duUea. p1td for by employer. xlnt benefits call Bob 770-1675 L.H. insurance --------INSURANCE RECEPT. •tHIAAL OfftCI Genral offlc:e dutlea ln· Law Office needs eludin g typln11. Self me11en1er to do general starter. mature. Work offtce duties. al&O must l11Ve a iood car! Saliry varied & Interesting. · 11 c u c--.a 9800. O.C. Airport area. + m ea1e. a ., ... y Call Pat (714)752·2975. 95l·OIS3 MAINTIMAMCE For mot.el. Exper'd. 642·3030 MAttAGllt ,...., ..... Woman with ellp. In 1 a I ea & personnel supervision to mana1e party rent.al store. Able to work Sat.a. Apply : ms Newport Bl.. C.M . MAN AG ERS·part·Ume for whale outlet. Sortie c o 11 • I e I ell p . pT pf . 831·3138 MANICURIST needed wttb exper. at Ttle Beehlve, CdM87U'720 MECHANIC for 1erv. at.a· Uon. E•P· forellJl • doln..Uc. APlll1; 1J$l ri- Cout Rwy, l.q. Bch . N~" 1111 MlltioD VIQCJ, Ca. f81 fl1i8 ~wa :.;~~ l~~!!!!!!!~~I ,,., ............ ,.., I I NllaW ..... ~ 11 ~.W·u IHI llitz ... • ION ~~................. . ............................................ . Pr!~C=."~rra •• WAMTmTOIUY-i!""~-tm SECRnlMI monl• .. 'hr. day. ~u1·••d ........ "'""' OardtD 01'0¥• ar... . ·~t.J•. BUDk b•d Hl. Hu Accountlnl department ol naUonal 171.UU CotJec ...... ~·cau (114) urqe, ......... IAMr· b '"i fl d --------rn..-6-.kwDaoe. 1prtaf milltJ .... Sl75. mort&aJe ana DI rm nee 1 T E L E p R o N E 162-.., Ill.• wkcJ11, or 1eeretarY for controller. 1bil entry Swttcbboud()per.Som• AAUq .. ,....,,-R\Jlch allday•lmda. le v e I Po• it 1 on Perfect tor t~1. s cla.1 wts. Apply , 'a~.-Dbl. Rm ... 9YaJ \able MIDICAL nwnbert·orlented penoo with .Lood to Hotel lAl\m. ~~· ~ell. fpM. w llHf • • cane· back TlAMSCm• typiDJ 1kllla. No short band req ed. CoBalatu•·H·~~.1!5~h · "-•1-..... p•-•6-~"•r. arm cbatra, uso. W«k al bome. top,._,. Call Terri (71•) 975-1(8). ' T~ ; 1 1 5 ·=:_ · 5 ':;':a"'~.-:iu. ~2'1CMaft.5orwkncta. &equlre1 mbdnuqn Syn COLDWlll aa .. m VT---A'•"-oft 54f.9IO &c:llU bOjplt,11 U · muwlU' '75DAV,PAJbf>AlLY. QCle.,.Uo•-• Dtnlot table, bv1 IOlid perinH in all pbue. ol letJ•lllW M:l1M; Sin.... No exp. w .... 2513 Af•••c• IOI maple, drop IUf, teat.a medJul dk:tatlon. lfOI).· _... ,...., -------------l••••••••••••••••••••••• 14, folds 1mall, Incl l'rL e.1. T-..00. AR.,.-'" Cl ,_, TlUCKDllYll HARBOltAREA Uneu '500. 10llU area With aood Dtetup, Prr APPLIAHCltSERVICE "" CUit.om made. WUd MOOBJMG, SAWfla'IG•& deUvery.fTS.5Ml. We b.,q~Wet clrclH 6 1quare1 "' Colh111 'I~&.. films, U · for ~ ...tau ~-------•I ··We.ell , IU&J'. 1old/oraqe/bei1e/wttt. t.ra1 ... SCl\l) neecta new fAM;JPM •t ore: Odl7 career-Secrfia.r)' Typln1 lnvolc•. Office appllanc•. Mt-am te/brown Sl.50. Seeto ap-fa ..... all •I• 95T-OZll2 ~. llllwa womeJl SECRETARY. ..__ t work. So. Santa Ana. pr•c ..... -.... wke_ .. _ or ...... · · or need apl8. ~Utt be ex· General contractor bH. :wur• J Sml office. 540-5850. I IUY ~IS ., · ---uua Need lmrnedl•hly 4,.._9PM per'd . -a.tarJ p l u• 1~ekln1 1ec'y w/1ood Ter.uUut La 1157-1133 _e_v_.,_. __ .._1 ----- couplea for jan~rlal coma.. ~ apply ln 11lUll, accurate typl.lt, Fl 0 . Svc es . fl r co, T Y P l S T I W 0 R D Floor tample .. 1e. Nor• route own tram/'phone .Join the Lot An1ele1 penon or call; Apropo. con1t ructlon back · Fuhloollland.nda.top-PROCESSOR La reblt Fri&"ldalre uqoable one-refuaed. aood pay, reliable peo-Tlm• Cb'c!\datton Team M4..Jl&2 or: ta Faahk>n 1round preferred. Call notcb exec:. aec'y. for Lanier word proceuor. ~frtcerator$125. Save POO'• ot dollar•. ple'511'%7tl>. • adapt yo1Jr wor k lal.tn.d,Npt.Bcb. EOE M1·8305.Clark. very busy, cball'&. poa. WUI lraln. Laaun• Hilla N4-9071 6-pc bdrm Ht• from 1cbedule to )our St r on I exp • LawFlrm-typtn1willaar Apt she Kel\ll\ore 111 S199, swivel rocllera Need Xtra I? Fort.be xtra Ules\yle. Work 5hn/day Sain SICllTAIY type /sbrthd. 11tl111 a truata. Mutt have strona oodcond ..,Cl'I from $19. We gua(antee tb.lnp you want out of ln a Tlmel QnulaUon Permanent part time mu1t. Non-1mkrs . typlna Is 1rammar itove,1 ,....,... loweat prices or double Ule Call 982-1308. aalet olftce oear yow-llMrA&. from 1 to 5pm. Gen of· p I e a s e . JI! x c e I . skllll. Call Mn. Winslow 8•°"957 aft. Spm. the difference back . home• ha,.. more Ume COMSULTAMTS nee, 1mall lab, typina dent/med. benes. Call : tor appt. 111·1080 20 cu. rt J .C. Penney Bristol Furniture, 2112 OfftCIMAMAGa foryou.rtamUy,atudiet, 8re1iner'1 R ent• reporta.~lCSS 114-660-01.ZS freeier.veryeood cood. South Bri1tol, S .A. A youn1 CIOOluJUn& firm or letaW'eb' pepocu. We Furnltun Showroom in TYPtST $350. 58l-40:ll 966.0•73. ( Nnt to ln Newport Och la look· Receptionist/General Of. P•Y bour)y wa1e1 Is Wutmlnater nelu SICllTAIT~ ~-------•I Peraonal Lines Dept. BuJJders Emporium). in& for an exper office Oce. Growinl Newport commlukloa. c&tfff oriemed Pft1iOO Experience ln Uti&ltion Jruunnce Agy. Apply in llehiaerat.or. eood run· manaaer. Thia person Beach R.E. develop-tor entry ~el poa. in ~ collectlon. Non-SECIETAllfS penoo: m N. Newport nine condition, SJ~ Must sell butd)tr blk tbl, will band.le all acct1 Is ment firm bu immed. LOSANGELESTIMF.S bome h1rnllbln11. 1 ok er. Runtln1ton Bl.,N.8 . &31·1311da)'9 4 chrs, 1225. 2 dreslers. finance loci stale Is need for recep-1375 Sunflower Ave. 8rewier'9 l1Califomla'1 acb.Ml-1400 Sffn111111Mft nitestandarmlrrorl225 federal tu.et. Some ex· tloniatl&eneral offlce. C.M. lar1e1t furn. rental co.• -J,,;;:.. Ulll"""" TYPIST, must take S/H 21" Frl&ldaire, like new Is more. Wl~ ecu\lve secretarial H hooet · " ~l needa qaallfled aales" Secretarial Ol llCTA or 1peed·writin1. 4/hn, withice·maker. duties also required. P:~1r: !at.ct.'7~::.. ' mamt.: •t= expand· SALIS SEC"Y 2 . 3 day a week . 132·1~atler5pm. Big red ·s· shape cbaiT: Competitive salary In· Equal Opportunity ln& mat. exp. pr• With a ~dynamic Profenlonal positions (714 )844..(1883. l lcyca.s 1020 3'x6', xlnt cood. SISO. 8 cludlna benefit paclta1e. R• .. •ptio· -•·t "te typing Employer I'd. Will traJ.n. $6. hr., de· c"'"'"Ut'"'r bl lin& 1ale1 av a ti able in Airport wine sofa. $150, plush. Call Bobbi 159-8972 & •ft 1i\1~1. -;-~w':r phone'. ...,,...c:~--------pendin& 00 exper. Full o;pnlz;Uoo. Muat have area Jone or abort term. TYPtST ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-Mll7 6pm SSl-5184. Airport area. Non-c: SA&.15 or p /time. Mon.Sat., xlnt. verbal 11tilh, Provldln& job variety & 3·• days per week. Vaca· Red lO s pd bor•' Schwinn --------amokerpref.50-2-600. lntelligent penooforad &-5·:30 6: Sun. 12 Noon· clerical or secretarial flexibility. On Line In· lion reh ef. Apply at : Callente,31',1979,SlOO. Garis' BR: nightstand. u Ordert h 0.-d heilrtd It sMa•~azaa·nt e~ntent ~~·. 8~1~~~~oilndy experience. Call Unda v1tes you to join our 1M6~• Placentia, Costa _4_97_·_35_1_7_____ ddere,:•.·~~t~. cba'1/, t;:~ iuu.9 aveg · an wr · llCB'TIOMIST • Devorkln at Safeguard leam!CallCorapJ)t. __ .... ________ 1Ralelgh Grand Prix inf· ans. phones, some Pleasant otffce In N.B., --~-;5~.:;,.-;1;;5:-:.---il~~~~~~~~~I Healt h Care Systems. l"-~A ""'"f •1.... canopy bed (comp!.>. fi ina Call 8 to 5, .___ -557-0045 Veterinary kennel asa'l , va.,..,.,v l'ame, • ..... Boya' BR· chest bed, .. heavy p.__.. 5'&9-7971. ed u SCTRY~KKPR 714--7-1121. . 642-VTS 549-11 57, Pic kw ick Imm . part me open----------reliable, bardworltmg, twin matt. desk, hutch, Paper 1---------i in1 for Reader Ad Leading vine com-I ________ r-r\•Lfr\':._ penionneeded.661·1658 a.lldlltgMtlhriebl02S c hest. good cond . REC m ~ERK representative for lnalde merciat /industrial real SICllT All'Y, IT '-' ' I ' YETIAI ........ •v1· .. -sl-t ........................ 963-5108 Ortho Receptionist, Ptr sales poett.ion. Gd. com-estate company baa E"'cellent-unlhy ln ·~·--.......... f sf-•"t• ~ ~ m ....... WOOO 2X6 for fun om ce. Flex. hn. P.+ pany benefits. Apply ln 0 pen 1n 111 f 0 r a nfw, mode~leaolfice Tl~· .... .....,..N l n .... • Full or p/time. 12 noon "inr , 1 Waterbed Kine with aide Xlnl wage. 552-7801. Jacoby Is Meyeri, ooe of person : Pennyaaver. 1 e c re tar y I b It It pr . in Irvine. Good pay ar l7Zl llrd9 StNet to 8pm . Mon t.hru Fri Xlnt decltmg 8-20 long cushion. heater will help PARKlNG UYr BOOTH ATTENDANT & DOCK ATTENDANT Apply Mon tbr u Fri, btwn 9am &5pm .~ America's largest law 1660 Placentia Ave., Sbortbandreq. Exper. u working cooditlona, Re· M .ori.._. Dover Shn Veterinary New load just m from assemble $150964·5553 firms. is seekin& a C.M.Mon·Fri.,l ·SPM euentlal.Salaryiacom· quires food typlni" ewti:.O.E. lic»pltal.S40-7000 mill 55</ft 6469885 Receptionist/Clerk for h ,·..1 ~~~~~~~~~1 ---------• anytime Must s ell most of our Mission VJe.jooffice. SALIS menaurate wit expr. uilephone skills. Mom· r: ESSJWAfTE:R •--'--------furniture Immediately Y \ ha • pr·v•-·· .. ,_ fl c a 11 G e 0 r I i a a t lnc boun.111156-2782. WAIT• . I n c ... er ... OU mus . v.. .. ....... M1jor publlswu& nn Corporate Realty Inc. j EJ ----secuam CMIAIDS Matur~. Pnvate Club. L-1--A 1030 Call SS2·77a7bet. 7~m. exnarience with ~ood or-.. _s op•nin&• In O.C • _-vn• "-· 11 for qn•lif'-.. lnterv1ews Thursda1 ......-r--..---• kl li" ... '" Wl~ I """'•al Oppty Empt. M /F v.,...nin .... ·~ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• G .r........ IOSS Part·llme, lo auist prod mgr .. garment mfg ianiiati ....... s • .e area for sales reps. ...,.... individuals. Good surt-ll·4PM 1801 Bayai e Nikltormat FTJ w/2.0 aroge _. todealwithJ:btic.work Protectedterritory.h.lgh Seamstresa needed. ang pay. Refundable un-Dr.CdM. SOmm lena, flash, zoom ••••••••••••••••••••••• 13.75 /hr 631-TnO efficiently or approx-comm., oo travel, com· Prefer expenence aew-Secretary/Receptionist tform depmlta. 978-7243 I " othe Waterbed Sl.30, Color TV imately 2a>.rll per weet. plete training . In-in& aaala. Santa Ana. want•d for manufac-' _&_638_·_81.._9_1 _____ Wanted L & v e . In ens._, manE Y "°"'lnr a,r U30. many other misc . l Typing· ~. If you tervlews will be held "' ,_ howiekeeper $100 /wk. cesaonea ver.., .... g n items. cheap! AU week Management Marketing meet the qualifications, Thurs & Fri only Call 5'7·134•. turer of top quahty SELLAVOH English Speak ing brand new cond S.2.S long! 17092 "A" St, HD. ----- Spa re t ime income. & are interested in the forapp'l 549-40t0. Seamatreu wanted, ex:p saUboats, edotfice skills 77o..UJJ2 _~ __ 57_1_9____ &42·2863 Beach/Warner from you r home position, please caU for helpful but not nee. req. luurance & other FULL TIMI 5 p It c Unlimited potential for an appt. btwr1thehou.rs Salee benefits.751·13U. Eam taormoreanhr Wanted p it delivery ·~raph~~:"~4e~ 0;~~ FRI SAT BA M·2PM people·oriented self of 9AM ls4PM. Now hiring Auastant ~'7950. SECRETARY Call~ person 11·5 ca r pro-135m m lens si 25 Everything goes, tools. starters.851·93.".>2 71MfS.1031 Mana1erTrainees Min. SECRETARY/Law ofc I"•urance o{fice, Capo SEWING u '"CHINE vaded. call Susan at Polaroid adapter. film clothes, hshld ap - -JACOIY Ir MEYERS 6mo. uper. Call for in· Excell. skills for l man B~h. Office and promot· OPERATOR 631-7240 holden at good pnces. kl11caanr~~~· F1~07~b~!~ Part Tine 618 So. Sprini St. t.erview: 642-1231. ofc. Salary neg. 613-9201 in 11 s k il Is • must Sail loft exp. 631-1M2 • • • Rolle1nex TI.R F3.5 too Brookhurst & Euclld > C __ ......_ y-..t.t.. L.A. Calllomia, 900H s ...... •ETAJlY 493-2021 Wo:&:'"~.....11.--IW6 7909 -------- _.__.., """"' ~~· W'nJ"I'~ Furn., antiques. clothes. ccrn.n * *SALES•* Answering phones, typ-S ...... UTARY sH-to..l.ft.... 1 Morongo Ccrh .. 8035 small appliances, misc Ad I · h lst d ReceptionlSt with gd typ-1 n g & ii e n e r a I ~ ffTl'._ Fontain Valley ....................... S S 207 ut.s wit ou an mg ing & spelling skills. sec r etarial work Fulltime R .E . IECE:IV'GCLak Youare\hewinnerof H imalayan 9 /wk ~old at/ un. 8·Zpm 11 attractive personalities . S I p f I I I Newport Beach Call knowledge helpful, but Position eid1t1 lo our Chaucer Ln., H.B. to spendl!i hrsperweek N.B location. aary ro euona s a es Sam.(2131376-6945. notreq.Newport Center Shipping-Receiv ing 2frfttkkets maleSealPoint,l l25 ----rounselin~ youth ages ope n Ask f or Pat p e r s on or not ex · ---------1 developer 833·8300 "-partm-t ......... ,_CC:,'·. <Sl2Value),to M2Z7Z7 Yard Sale F u rn . •. wk days 615-6300 per\enced. We can show .,.., .... , • •'"' h h 1 d •. 10· 15 venings "' · you the most successful SECRETARY/Creative <Susan). Uon would Involve ght lceCcmadH DOCJI 8040 o use 0 "' more Weekends Available $75 RECEl'T'IOHIST method of earnings design firm seeking ,.._ ________ packing " receivine April21'hru25 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fr1 1Sat, Sam 155 Oak Pe r wk Ca 1 1 Part/(ull Receptionist beyond your income secretary w /slrong •• Ability to work with de-Anaheim Convention KEESHOND Pups. AKC St <Oceanfront> L.B. 2 ~30-5 JOpm Mon thru T lin"'t .....,...k goals. skills. knowledge of ••SICIETAllllS**' 1dlines.10ltey lslyping Center Cbamps1re. M/F Pet& Fn 642 4321 ext 343 yping, ., • ....,.,. eep-~L/Super/2yr$12,600 35 ~wpm an ....,uired Tickets must be ex p O .K. YOU WIH!! Ask for Lon ing & other clerical Harbor Lawn-Mt Olive bkpe & shrthd. a must Accountant/DeiSU 000 ·-.. changed for reserved sh o VI v t PI Y One more time. another O Coad work Hasson & Assoc Memonal Parll \a start· c a I I \ M a r y o r LegalmO/dkUlS,Ooo Applicant with ahlpp\ng. seat.s at the convention 213 /697 l:MS aft 6 pm huge garage r , by ~Not &sl 1651 ------• ~Jff~ before-need •ales Joanne-7t4-7S2-8746 Exec/shl00/corp$18000 ~n~7t':~::i;:!~ea: center abead of time DOG TRAINING IN popuflarhdemhand Start1 lJO W. day Street RECEPTIONIST, gen We are looking for ---------1 Expd. CooluhlntOurs ply lD person. Call 642-5678, ext Z72 to YOUR HOME inoodg rea witoodsome rea Costa Mesa. Ca of r dut ies. F /time. mature men and women SECRET AllY / ~R8e~ ~ ·io'k PLESSEY claim your tickets Obedlence ~ea;~~ica:r \s RJ>;!~eb E q u a I 0 pp or t Tues Sat, pvt country to ~row with us Earn L09ProcnMr Newportf'm.8l90/Free SE.MICOHDUCTOllS * * * f~~b~;~I~ nne. sporter mod. w x __ _!=mployer club Call.644-~ whieyoulearn. Only dedicated . 1641KailerAv,Irvine WELDERS MacGregor TRAINING 63119265 tras S75 Rolle1nexTLR REC~OHIST mo\lvated. ~ consistent ~~~~~~~~~ Yachts, 1631 Placentia, ramera '90 Drafting Part Time STUO&rTS ....-• • Call for 1ppolnlment applicant.a need apply ....,.UT ... •y r: Cosu Mesa Free to good home blk mach S35 Siu boots $25 Full time Mon-Fri Must 540-8096 Exper. In real estate re· s~ -S H 0 E S A L E S Lab, year old, very lova Bed spreads. Jewelry. HOMEMAJCBS Earn extra money. working plume I.fl your own home. Ultroducing the New Daily Pilot to The Orange Coast Area' Set your own hours! Call Weekdays between •pm & 6pm, 960-1.SZ7 be personable & well lated field helpful. but ~EM.OFC.P/T ch1lda/leens, F·PtT,elt WORDNOCESSOtt bleS48·~ c lothes. light bulbs. groomed, & eruoy meet-!~~~~~~~~~ not necesury-4!xcell 20-25 hni. per wk. (or one p'd person, hrly, 111cen Mag II for law office m ----much much more at. 32.S ing the public Requires r: growth oppty. with ex· w o m a n ( 3 m a n > t i v e s , be n e f 1 t s Huntington Beach Non-Easter Puppies. Cham Esther St , C M (2 blks good spelling & pen-pand1ng &: dynamic or· engineerincO(c inCosta Ch ildren's Bootery smolter.IMS-lfOO pion line, AKC reg So of 2illh. Just east of manship. No typing. To Place your ganiiation, located in Mesa. Excell. salary. 644 2464 Mr. Milter y II Lab d Rt Santa Ana St.) Fri-Sat Phone experience. pre-"Fast Result" F 0 u n ta in v a 11 e y Please call Tom, after ---------Mere--.. -.-.. -.. -----•, 5;,_~ ra or vr IW&-7909 ferred. Full company Service Directory 9649090 3 :30PM. Mon-F r i , STATioteY ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------benefits. Apply: Pen-· 645-28•2. Thompson StoreinCdM need.uales •~ IOOS B eautiful Golde n Jewelry 1070 ny1averMl.64iO Placentia ad Call Now Floatation Co., EOE d -·....--• R · 81 k ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• penion f /time, 5 ays. ••••••••••••••••••••••• etraever pups. w s Ave., C. · 642·56 78 SICltlTAlY .__ _______ -t Xlnt working conds old, AKC 661·1996. Genuine RUBIES 20 pts •.t. JU Wanted for General Con·,. Especially rllle clienlele. * * * each. Marquise cut your J person offi ce, gd on phones & with people. l or 2 days week & cover for vacalaons. Depend•· ble ar flex. Hn 9-5pm 646·7417 between 10..pm. lnt~~~=~irm " tractors. 831-2CXM. SECRET ARY Phone 675-lOlOforappt. 2650 ~!':'J~~ Hills ~~~~:i b1~~etoo/ ~~:.:~: ~~~~~~~~ 135 per n e e d II R e c e P . I ' 1•1y P1•111"' Bonk.bperience ST E N 0 G RA pH E R , Rd your parents or your ----tionlst/Typiat for frool ........ P /tlme for preparing a CoronadelMar kllldwsk.as.~.'!!·~ puppies. Diamond, l 17 carats, desk. Handle phone•. 1" We have an immediate book. For Interviews, Youarethewinnerof .. -.-.. USGA appraisal greet visitors. 4.Swpm re· • • opening for a Secretary contact Leo, at 548-9793 2 frM fldlets $16,000. Must sell, need Cl'd Accuracy a mus\. • General Assa"m1n1B1nt • with a minimum of two <Sl2VaJue). to G7o/lwdltean oRld~-'ethveT"pa'!!~· cash. $7500 or offer Non·smltn. only. Call: .. years platform ex STOCK Clerk part 'lime Ice C.....,.. .. , ,....~ 613-6231 Max, eves. PYSOHRUDAY Mrs. Coplan, 559-6901. e S ta tD • perience. for marine hardware AprlJ21lhru2s S185.648-238S.67S..8S21 Mlau......,_ 1010 needed for office an IMS Equipment, 2805 • 8Cf8 ry • R........,.nai'-'"•'-Include store. Call: Balboa Anaheim Convention GOLDEN RETRIEVER ••••••••••••••••••••••• (rvlne . Must ha ve Barranca Rd .. Irvine. £x . Office --.,........, M · ... a."""l EOE r-•-EOE • ecutive • I .a~ t anne, _..,..., · · · ~ PUPPIES L 1• transportation for er-----------i heavy oan ...,.,wnen a· M/F IH Ticket• must be e x· o•e DDlll d .__l .... lb • ••on customer ,,,,..•·ct d AK C. s hots, ch am "-nd someone you love a ran 11 .. '"' P ,,.., some • Immediate openln& for veraatlle individual .. • wuWll ---------! changed for reserve .,.., office duues. Minimum RENT AL AeiBff • Muat be capable of handUna fast-paced.. and notary services. 1---------i aeall al the coovention plonshlp line. 833-1418 bouquet of~ multi col· -J2 hrs per week. Call for Laauna's leading varied and inlereatin1 duUee for newspaper Muat poueu strone STOCOOOM center aheld of time. llovma to condo ~aul l ored balloons Heavenly l>t VI n 8 . ~O-S , Kerl R.E I omce._,Full lime .• executive " personnel adrniniltrator Call:. aecretarlal sit~ Exper'd. Stockroom Call 842-5878, ext. Z72 to yr oid Irish Setter . For Easler & your own 979-27_24 _______ R_._E_ic_r_eq...;.... . ...,_,._54_11 __ -f • 642-4321 , Est. 271 for appt • Shorthand is pref CT~ Clerk needed for our claim yourticke\a. pa,...r1 Is shoU, loves person a I message but not neeesaary. marklnf line. Full time, * * • ... Perfect for every oc PYSOMAUDAY R.E. SAL&5PERSONfor • r.&Ua ' S ta • exce l . ichedule iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• kida,'50 642-0862 c a s1on We deliver Over the COWtltt salet. sale1, exchanges, lnvesl· • UllWf S 8Cre ry • We offer an outatandin& Benefits Include , in· Golden Retriever Pup 613·4_4_19 ______ _ Boal store. 831-2810 menta. Hlgb comm. New . • benefit.a packaae which surance, company di•· f AllBIB p1ea for easter Ch.am PHARMACY Tech ., ; ~f{TRo:·s:.:i;:ort .Achallenalnio~J'ortunltyl.a bet.nlofferedby includes• complete count pd. vacations & AM119UI pionsbip Sun1old line Choice ANGEL Tickets F /Time. Will train. _a_c __ c _._. ___ ·--1 ·~du~:~1:e. ,!..~ta!~r .:::be~~thtot~· ;':~':t~ ~~~ hpeo~!~Y•· Apply I D SHOW91dSALI shoh.dwonned, AKC, 7 :::~~%.ri~:t;;.rx Mus \ type 40wpm . llSTAURAMT ~ e secretuy to the editor. It'• ao lntereati.na• •PMforappolntmeot. _w_k_a_o_l....;,_833-_l_4_1.8 __ _ Moulton Plaza ~~';t~~~Mi/okne.~lr~~ .poaltionrequh1n&thetools0(lhetr•de -80e 0 J~~d ATTHEIDGHSCHOOL Cairn Terriers, •Toto' Pharmacy. Laguna .wpm dictation, 70wpm tyJlin&,dlctapbone -. EOE M/F So Minion Ir Stage puppies, AKC, champ Hills. Mr. Dreyfus, 646-8883,callanytlme andtheablUtyto1hlftmt!nt.al1eanon1hort Coach ltnes ,$25Qup.6Sf-42'74 768-87M Restaurant • notice. The beneflll are aeoerowa, the pay. CITIZ~ B:1Nl ADril 16, 11, ta JOHMMY'S • reuonable. AppllcaUona beinl accepted only e 2970 r v · p 1 ho need 1 NOONTOl:OOPM.. Free to Y• 1045 p (f SALES REPS lhroulh appointment by calllnl ... 642-4321 . Suite 208 Coeu Mesa sheoouplde walways c .. ~cltpthee Take l-5toHwyTt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Needed to aell snack RISTAUIAMT e exim. Equal Opp Empl yr ServiceDirecto;.';lnthe atOceanatde Free to aood home, ~~~e:$:~i~~~ ~~f.~·:~?l~;r; ~~! : Accounts P-: l~~~~m~t~f/b~~~~-~0-A_,i.._L_Y_P_IL_._OT__ /l2i~t ~1.r;:!i:°i~: •-t' 1 ""'"7320 penon bet 3 Ii s, Mon· e 11~;;;;;;~~~~~~ ;.:;y·~~:,: · Fri 2250 E. nth St .• san· : Bookkee• • •••••••••••••••••• ~~~! Manufacturer of electro-_ta_An_a_. ------i A full·Ume pcMltlon 1a n~able for accunte . USI THI -------i. penoo with at leut two years ~rleace ln D •tLY PILOT * * I BUY * * mecha.nical equip. nffd1 Sale• • proceulna acCO\lllll payable for computer . ,.. Is entry level quality con· • ... -c-lopul, c11b reportln• and dl1bur1ement .. PAST ~=.!~:!--O"':fwt"r tell trol l.nlpector. Some pre-~" -'"~ e 1cbedulln1, aod roreca1llnf. WIU prepare• RISULT" or SELL for You vlous up helpful but SALISOf'PTY. bank depo1lu Mu•t po1W1 tood ofnce e wtll train indlvlchaahrith. We a re enter ln& a • tkllll. Perman~t J>O'IUon with tood nlUl'. SllVICI MAS1WlSAUC1\0tt ect mechanical back· tremendoul new fteld al I and company paid benefit.I. Call: 642...UZl, DIRICTOIY 64M616, 13).9'21 1rouod. Salary com· eotert•lnment that ll E'lrt.. ZT1 for appt. • men1urate with exp. 1wee~u!:' nation. We • For Result Early Am. Solid wood Located In SJC. Call :rented ~,:.,:a~: •-Classified Outside Sales e AC, Service Call : ! ! :'c::: nbl J ~ ~ d : Tem JobolaD roe app't. a desire foT a bove ~ -642 1671 <714>93l-8NO. :,v~af,: =-.,:0: •.i~~~~:f·~~~~ !~c:uan~:·~n:·:~lo~it~!! •. A~ .i. UI ~~~· desk • cont\denl rn J'CIUI' abill\J ae=•· Mull hue at leaat J yean ...... v Er.~8J~nr:t~:: an to comm"8.leate with •:!ve HTc•mB:~~'i p~f~~ i::':m:::; •. ~'V ••• J.M.T_.,.. ,. 605 N. Bayfront Balboa Jaland You are the winner of 2m.tkbh U12Value), to lceC~s April21 2S An1bei.m Convention Cam TAcket1 mu1t be ex- cbanted for reserved .... ta at the coovmtioo center ahead of time. C•H tu.-S, ext. 272 to clalrd your ticket.I. *** Stn1I• maple bed , bookcate bdbrd $50. Dbl 1Uver bookcase bdbrd, l ootbrd·dtaaer .-tmlr· rw. '75. KltcM> tbkbrs sas. New 'o Cbannel PacecBm.~ needed to wort wtth ex. otftebl " • ~ ... ~a· e beDenta. For apPOtntment tor lnttrvlew, caJJ C, ec ul)ve level clients. wt4D ':;.~,;~ e ta-18'11, •~t. 21'f. • e Mutl havt proven lrack L...o.-.-Aa. • • You can be a reco rd. Yo'-will be Excell. lrbtlt .,._...... Pit Tint (yelllan ~l~~~~~~~~ ~'We:~~-=. C1a11•1Y ... c;;i;. • Olftctofttr1: W. lftb St., Newport •Adult.I wltb Oulliodlnt 1tlracllvt • •Bfft "'@locatloo leaell e Pfr•ontlftl• who eoJoy worlilnl wllh 10.16 • • •UberatcooUnlu• e year old )'outhl. Start at _..0011\eur. 2:IO PM e hOlfatP. i----------.. nd'6:JO PM, "2·'321, exl a.I. • •Nat'lnallrnlpropam Otl CM£t • Calhil*fclr•Pilt. • D , .. WaltllenjND,17>'?.0 • • 380 W. ay Str.et ~· e · CO.ta Meta, CA · • e ._ F.qual ()pportunJly Ei'Qpk)yer e :--··············~ Work after achoo I and ·on Saturday g et t i ng new cu1tom•r• for the area'• )ledlng ntw9paper. Big I Plue J)flal, trlpa 1nd bOhu.._ I 1 WINNER iuat by Mtadlnl 11• 1our name and· addnu and by watchlDg for your name In the cle11tned ad• of the Daily Pilot. • ~•~$' OI' ~-~~~l~cut; ~~~ '8\uc:i~r. COUJ*l m1mi rolay ~: I. • '62 Inter. Scout 1reat cond. 4s4. Leavln1 1-----------1 Country mllll Sacrifice. $295. f 070 Fender Telecaster elec v g uitar w /ca.e, $30-0. BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT 844-S259 NPT BCH. 25'-35'. OffkeF••m& 842-4844 lqlll,_. 1015 SOft. MOORING •••• • • •• ••••••••••••• • • & or boat. Call 873-;U.21 Smith -Co rona typewriter, Model 300. SLIPS Foa llMT Good condition. $2(,(). 64M41t Call Dalebout BaJ & i----------1 Need 11Jpor mooring, Bett offer by 4·21>·81 S46-(M.5() '560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P=! LowM11e91'l 19104~,_.,.,.. D..._flt!u,.·s Tr......_ s ..... m M .... ... ...... ,..., ,.,.. ... BARWICK DATSUN """ Ju on COP•''' <Jl'lO 8 3 1-3 3 11 Beach. Aak for Janet Smltb, 631·7:.>0. 36' sailboat * c ..... MU 'IO Sec· y des ks S17 5 I ea . __ c_a_ll_Bob __ . 833-__ l36_l __ 1 LUV 1;,.._ SWte desks $80 $1 00. File Pvt dock, limited access. with duaJ run! Ideal cabinet ~1678 avail. approx. May lit for landscapers, etc l. B.M. E1tecutive om ce ror lge pwr bcMit, Balboa CSer. 6056). typwrrter netldJi minor Co v e , Io b r Id g e • OHL Y SSttl serv1crngSl.9S~5783 $250 /mo. Call Mrs. HOWAIDct.•ro6et Loo&. 873-ll90. Dove & Quall St.s Peta 1017 NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••·1~· Spted& •010 IJJ.0555 2 1ahr~ebtrdcagesh.beaut ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,76 El Cimino New !":" lit.9 wroug t Iron '76 Kona, l.8' with 115 hp ....,. Evinrude. Very clean paint, wheels & tires Pl..01 & Or..-IOtO with 250 /hrs. 548-4713 Ps/PB/AC. SlOOO stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• after 5pm. systm. Xlnt cond $3800 PIANO, New, HENRY F 1_536-_4_1_42 _____ _ MJLLER.$1200/0BO ,,_gort..._ '74 Chevy LUV P .U., 760-1568 •••••;:;••••••••••••••• needs engine repair __ G_R_A_ND_P-IANO--Cr.in. s.#ta/ makeoffer~3643 _ Beautiful tone, music ••••~••••••••••••!L~~ '80 Datsun Long bed. mir· teacher sells. Reasona-'CAMPER&paclt,stove ror 5 spd, like oew, ble. 963·8840. & lee box. '55()0. Joe (7141 ~ S.wlRg MocW...a 10t2 842-3480 '77 Chevy Luv. chrome ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8' CABOVER CAMPER wbls, stereo, xlnt tires, Necchi Dial a-Stllch. all SMO or best offer. $2850 /besl ofr 64().0010 wood fold.out cablllet w. ~56al '64 DODG"" UTILITY brass handles & pull up c. s pool rack, all attach, pd Mofot.!!C'/ TRUCK 1495 best orr S850. sell S450 631 4870 Sc t l 50 _646_-5602 _____ _ __.,. 1911 PIUMOT '1*()1 WANTED: '80.et V'f cansper, .UJ "1 e.aL Pvt Pty. "2·0Slt or ...,11 •••·c ..... oltis ''It RabbJt Delux•, ~ "'9001080 P.P. Moru: 1411 ... c#Calid,llO,ODOml, N~P~QRTSt-*LB""..a.rv .,.._"59; Dya: 151·1171 SllOO 080. Xlnt lnt.. .... --v•• ullfor Bob t*eo,W..UaAS 7u.otOO r-,7-9_R_a-bb_t_t _Dl-~-~-. 4dr-,-i c.at · 9717 PoncM t7IO 1nrf. lo ml. xtnt cood, e.1"; ••••••••••••••••••• ··················-···· 645-7521 71 Dodie Colt, 1ood POISCMI lf7f i-.68--VW--B-ua-.-,-root--e-o-d 1 WANTED COQd •• ~-.. 928. ru•,t~~~ "'reclled, entloe traJtt -----------• orta. m ., .._..,, .... J t / fl IUS-.. 118 Allo the J>i*tQllh, DtlMlt · 9720 lid• • Bl11e book 11 ne. • or IA w ~ ~ ..,.,.chu'1 ••••••••••••'•••••••••• wboleaale ll taS,tl5; our ,_N0-4"4 ___ . _____ _ .., cooa er _. e ule price 11 $28,775. · 6 7 Bu G am I f m , or trade·ln ol your. clean C2003ll8). A.sit for Duke mecbanlcal/body /tires Poracbe. Cheek Wlth Ua or Mike. &ood, ""ca Today! ~-•ws THEODORf -95 '78Camaro ROSINS Arr. automatic. power s teenng, 27,961 miles, '71 VW Sql&U'eback radio. (882VEI) Top Dllat ...:.. FORD 10h0 HAJI BOii Bl 110 (Q)ll\ ME '>/\ t.JJ 0010 '74 PORS'CHE914 ----------• 2.2 new eaclne. low m1. Call ure,.n~ new clutclt, eood work-# $4911 ing cood. $1.995 55&7986 Barwick lmpo~ eves 131-331 l '59 BUG, SunrooC, good $650. 84S-&485 runs '69CAMARO r., CtfEA¥!! For Your Car! Sli&bUy ustid turbo kit loya 9756 '72 v~ BUG xlnt cond. ••••~•••••••••••••••••• Re~~~~l461 1 owner, clean. auto, mags, 307 eng 2 barrel carburator, dqptal l'lock , am/fm $1 700 FIRM ! 996-8989 JOHMSOM & SON '70.. '74 Da.tlta1 Z cars U.Ca Uercury 768-5837. 2624Jfarbc>r Blvd'. '78 280Z, bronze/brown, Costa Mesa 54().5630 am/fm , a te, upd, xlnt •t DEALER IN U.S.A. '68 Camaro. new paint & tires, mags, stereo et<: MUST SELL 545-9227 after 6p m_. _ 1981 FOii> FAIRMONT Th11 nearly new car bu only 8000 miles, and sells for JUBI ~ The lie .• IS ( BIG959) You'll eq;c>y automatic transmission • 6 l'yl economy and power s teering. Of course. a pn1e "Go6clen Toul'h'' car found only at Johnson & Son LinC'OOt M ercu r y 1n Costa Mesa one mile south ol S an Diego F'reeway on Harbor Call 540-5630 '79 Ranger 4.X4, PS. PB aulo t rans, till whl. AM 1FM stereo rass, 17 .000 m1 , like new f7SOO Contarl Johnny 642 7671 or aft srM 979.7324 '76 Ford LTD, 2dr, \' II, clean. loaded $2100 1239NTC J b'73 1550 We Prit cond. 46,000 ml~ muat O.VER s,ll. $6950. Mi chael . ~7-1.322, 5.52-6298. ROY CARVER aGUS·ROVCE 1•.um'°' .. ....,.,. ... ," 80 VW l>aaber Diesel Sta. Wgn. Am/Fm s tereo cus, air, xtra tank. lugg. rack, 20,000 mi. xlnt cond, 40mpg, $8500. (714l540-2S21 Greg. '68 Camaro Convertible. '75 Tormo4 dr . auto. P1S. ntieds work, S95() as 1s P B. /\ l'. \In) l roof, le.loclll· '78 610 WGN, am /Im For Your Good cass. roof rack. aa)llng \"----....... VW . Ponche or Audi ~ CLOSED SUNDAYS :wmF• 49'-l~ '61 Cloud II, RHO. a /c. ---------leather seats, recently ·74 260Z loactld. xlnt ! 'h I d .. _ VW-PORSCHE·.AUDl Must sell ~080 o au e , SlB,000 or .,.,st 445 E Co;ut Hi~ay I 64>8171 orrer. 645 8375 at Bayside Drive 1 Saab 9760 Newport Beach 673-0900 ·72 SIO Station Wagoo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Premium prices paid for any used car (foreign or domestic I In good cond.lt ion. See Ua First! .!888 II ud>OI Bl\ d l'ni.l.i .\h ·i. .. ~o 03:JO •CAIS WANTED RUMMIMCi OI MOT $25-$300 CASH FREE TOWING OPEN WEEKENDS CALLED 714/89}.(~17 ruoninc oo 3 cylinders M AKE OFFER ' 492-1405 '78 DATSUN PICK-UP w/camperabell, am/fm, new tires, xlnt cond URGENT, MUST SELL $3800 0 BO. 559-9299 after 6orSM-13S9 '80 King Cab Truck, Sspd. buc k et s eats. step bumper, side mirrors. lo LEASE DIRECT! 1981 SAAB TUUOs IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEW PORT BEACH 752-0900 mi, SSS-008.1Hl5S4 oyota 97'5 Rot 9725 •••.•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75 TOYOTA'5a5 ·79 BRAVA FIAT 18.000 SPORTCOUPE mi only. Xln'L cond 5 s peed Dynamite! MUST SELL 548-0905 an. (829M f'V) 6pm $2495 tto.c1e 9727 JIM MARJHO ••••••••••--'••••••• VOLKSWACiEH '64 Bue. all orig. eng, 851-9226askforSteve clean, SIS!l5 5512889. -- trans. xlnl Never lwnolet 9920 M•rcury 9950 ked $1400 631 "'>IC.~0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~T~ -· ---· _..:.'::"'°_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• OR/\NCECOL'NT%"S '68 Bus. semi camper gd I SEE US FIRST! FfMEST cond $2 ,000i O B O Wehave a goodselecllon LINC:O LNMEHCURY 540-6800 I 0 f N E w & u s E 0 u f-:1\LEJC>lll p -Chevrolets' '57 VW BUG looks and runs great, completely stock Phone 892-2402 Vol'to 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO SALES. SBVIC E AND LEASING OVERSEASDELIVERY EXPERTS EAJlLE IKE VOLVO 1966 HArbor Blvd. COSfA M~A COHN Ell CHEVROLET ~1 1.irhor Al\11 ' u.;-r" ~n:s ·' S46-l 200 '78 Malibu. sih•er. lo mileage, good cond MS 3636 M .. tSel! CL EAN '73 M ONTE C ARLO Silver w t burgundy mter1or Air cond , AM /FM t•assettc. power bral<es. steerrnK $1500 768 5831 646-9303 54~9467 * *. 13 VOLVO 164 I R. fof'C)1191'Cln 6 cylinder, automatit' 31525 BTulf Dr . · · d South Laguna steering, &Jr, crwse. an You are the wmner or many more extras. Xtra 2 "---&.1-&...A.. clean' (321GSS) ....._ nui.......,. $3Z9S (Sl2 Value I, to l.INCOL"" Ml':HCL'HV 16 Ill Auto l "l'nll·r Ur Sil Fw-. Lakt> Fore~t ('"tit IH\ INE 83G-7000 1980MYCURY Ze»HYR SporflftCJGooda 10•4 ...................... : v.. t570 .... a.ported ••••••••••••••••••••••• All tndoor ~otorcycl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• VI.SIT YOUR ORANGE COAST 18711 Beach Blvd. 142-2000 JIM ....... ••Mo Ice CGDOdH _. April 21 lhru 25 VOLICSW AGEH Anaheim (;oovent1on 18711 Beach Blvd. I Call A pride and JC•\ fur us to :.ell and for )i•u lo 1Jwn So man) nice· feature~ ml'iudm~ a low JlrlC'(> Of $47!17 it's uni:-hcen driven I 1,000 milt•'. ha~ n1rty AM FM ~lerco t·a:.~ett e a~k ror LH number 1601Zl':E 1 Of l'OUr!te, 1t 'i-a PrlH' "Golden TouC'h" cac found onh at J ohnson & Son L1nl'ciln Men·uq in Co.,ta Mt"ia one milt' :.oulh of San l>1t:RO f'reew J\ on llarl>0 r l' a II 540 563!1 6 hshmg poles for surf. Swep Meel, bi.kesF~ru. ·71 Dodge Van auto, p is, Alfa lo.MO 9705 deer, sea. like new , " ac,cesson6 es.1 "oayC, nfb rea 0as $1750/080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apn 17. pm·l pm. . ,. · ·.. • 115· 18 54S-9832 Fairgrounds . C M &46--l678 LEASE Underwater N1konos II ~~nlo lnterahows ·ss Ford window van, 8-DIRECT! camera. Nasluba nash. cyl, $500/080. SJSO. Aluminum lank ,79 HONDA 750 CBK xlnt 4~5889 SlOO ~5-M28 __ cond. w /xtra's low mi A.tot Wc.hd t590 Remington ISOOX TR $2500 Call day only ••••••••••••••••••••••• shotgun New cond $210 ~1-2068 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Incl a cce ssor1e11 MOPE D : MTBC good for t op used car s 979 7300 bfr 6pm . cond,$375 foreign, domestics or 966-0550 aft 6, Dawson 844-42168 classics . If your car 1s extra cle an. see u s Prof model hvy duty FIRST! elec. bicycle exerl'L'ler, $300. 67 3-31126 TV, locHo, Hlfl, St.no 1091 1761%400 Xtraa, nutira/batt. Beat offer or trade S4Ml9Z ·······················~~~~~~~~~ SQR 8750 Quad Rec. & ~ #I h1 o,..wp C-.ty 6300 Tumtable w /s pkrs. 1.973 Honda 3SOCL, xlnt 2925 Harbcir Blvd $.'SOO /OBO 673-2244 eves. cond , 130000 orig mi. COSTA MF.SA 1981 AU-A SPIDERS IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 75,2-.0900 '707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71.A.UOI Dynamite Fox 2 door sunroof. Automatic &. air. It's slick! (S35XDFl S47t5 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEH HONDA HEAD(i)UARTERS TODAY!!! UMIVERSITT SALES&SERVICE OLDSMOllLE HOMO.A. CiMCnUCICS 2850 Harbor Blvd COSTA MF.SA 54~9640 '77 hatc hback. 5·s pd, AM /FM stereo, 38K mi. dot cond. P.P. 839-5871 '79 Prelude. red, 5 spd, a /c, am/fm. reg. gas. ~. 953-1620dys '77 Hooda Accord, AC, 5 spd trans. xlnl cond. 673-7578 '71 CORONA Yellow w t blk int , 411pd , Sll7 5 10BO da ys <213ti637 22 13, 01tes ~8198 '71TOYOTA COROLLA SU S s peed hflback ' Fae· tory air. s ter eo . Dynamite! (8S8UQH> • $3495 JIMMAIJMO VOLkSW4G~ 18711 Beach Blvd. 842·2000 '74 CO ROILA 4apd, a /c, am 1rm , $1500/080 ~0275 ·72 Toyota Corona Mark II Sta. BWn. Xlnt eng, gr eat running cond $\100. 557 ·_2337_. --- to.h&M.fM '80 Honda ATCllO, 673-3320 Muat see to apprec. '700 979-2500 firm 540-571.9 18711 Beach Blvd . .-'76 Honda Civil', mint, re ·18 Corona Wgn, lo m1 , 142-2000 Tickets mu:~ be ex '78 Ma rqu1!> "'agon. '' pas!> loaded :-<c"' M1chelins Xlnt t·ond S4000 Owne.I). 675 6161 ----.. -... -#!!..-1-. -c-ou--~--c hanged for reser ved ~"'",... "' ' seats at I.he convention VOLVO center ahead of lime Lariest Volvo Dealer Cell 642·5678, ext 272 to in Orange County! claim your IJcket.s BUY orLEASE * * * 7H Menur) 7..t•phyr Wgn, 27 ,000 m 1, StOlt> bt'st of· fer 644 1210 DIRECT 10 I 20 Garden Grove Bl Garden Grove 530.9190 7SVOLVO Dynamite 242DL 4 speed with air. Original & sharp (oo:.l23) $3995 JIMMAAJMO VOLISWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd . 842-2000 '78 Chevette, 4 spd. A C. Muste919 9952 AM tFM cass. xlnl cond ••••••• •••••••••••••••• $3200 -631 2106 or '73 Blue Mustang l'onvt 213/442·0123ext •391 Xlnt 1·ond I owner $3,SOO 493 69~. '64 Malibu Wagon 6 cyl ... g o o d r u n n 1 n g '80 M u~tan~. 6 l'yl ;zdr transportation $J7S JUlO P !> it I' f Ill ~lereo S48·S981 lo m 1 $600(1 t>:IHSS2 '78 lmpda St.a. Wgn Xlnt cond. Air, ps, pb. $2,9SO 548-6131. --- '72NOVA '65 Mu~t Fustbat·k 2..+ 2 w rallv park Lo mi $4500 lJavC' 5511 Si~O. C\e!> & wkndss.1111!124 S49Sorbestoffer '65 Mustang :.rl C"ngua· :1 ~5e02 ~pd. ma~~. ~unroor ------$2200 ( 213 1 ()JO 496>1 Cowta...td 9930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oldsmobile 9955 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Ect-IPR '"' Buuni pipe, Cooler ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gt•r.. tO 10 rack, ridden 3 limes, like WANTED!! 142-2000 liable. new paint, cass. air. auto. ps, etc, 1tlnt. am/Im. $3000. Must sell ~'>N\ 673--'77 Volvo Wgn. Auto, air, ca.-·79 sooo. x.mt cond. cuJty ...... vv. ~..;."°"";__----1 T 9fS3.·61>33. Kathy. l'ass, ps, pb, new tires. l979UMCOLM MAIKVI Haven't you wanted the good feeling you gt>t when you drive around in a prestigious MARK Luxurious gas :.a\ mg '78 Old<; Delta 811 Diesel. orig owner, loaded with xtras Call Sue 673 7~J or 851 0611 ••••••••••••••••••••••• new , S7SO Da ve Have Your bcMit delivered 893-8059; aft. 5• M2·6971J. back from Ensenada Motor H--. S./ after the race. Call ll...t/Sto.C¥ f 160 Clark 87$-7Hl8or fS31·'300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ext it Ive ms&. WiCAHSEU YOUIR.V. SSi-UOI RENT : 22' lull. mtr home. Slpe 8, self.cont. $275 /wk. + 8• mi. 640-8585. op equiped 070TZW) PP '69CORONA brks. batt., great cond. Paid!! 831-9387 '72 Honda 600. Motor bad, Good paint, good int, 340-1590. Call JU. HOC)Cllt or IMW 9712 otherwise fr.ne. whole or runs great. Must sell im ·-------1 Mike L• ••••••••••••••••••••••• parts. ~7884 med $1100. 61J.l210 Cr..,w Moton For The Best J_,..,. t7JO Votbw..-977 I JS.JI 7 I Buy Or Lease Deal ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• In Orange County... '87 Jaguar 3.8 MK US aU 74 VW IUS ComeSeeU1Today!. orlk. very well malll· Dynamite 7 pusenaer 4 If\. tamed Must Sacrifice apeed. OriOn&J blue & ~ 84&-11570 while. Ru111 A looks •74JAGXJexL great! COOOLWB) SAD• FRACK Sl~:~':.'9~=· JIM =MO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9901 VOUSWACHH BMW "-cl• t7J6 18711 Beach Blvd. VI...well. at t6997 you '80 Ome2a. 2 dr. 6 C) I shouldn't deny yourself a l'. pb ps. 20.000 mi any Longer. Luxury com ~95 M8·8897 fort a everywhere and 11pa rkll1)1 with the Pontioc 9965 "Golden Touch" that 1s ••••••••••••••••••••••• dlllinctJy .Tohnaon & ~n '75 Pontioe Asttt Ltncoln Mercury in $990 oo 960~2 Costa Mesa. Just one ...__ · --- --- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14•zooo 28402 Marl'Uerlte Pkwy· '7M.ancla-Z.1ato Coupe, r------------i.A.MC • MilsfOn Viejo $12,500 mi. Owner mov· mlle south of San Diego '78 Bonneville 4dr Sedan. Freeway on Harbor. gd cond . Must sell Cell 540·5630 ... ask for Sacrifice dys · 964·6468 . Llc,No. <587WWG). eves .~-~---__ 9905 '77 Mark V, lo ml, Kint '79 Trans Am. gold. xlnt cond. $6195. A,YeryPkW)'.eidt lng)~rice reduced. (off5 Freeway) 7 ......., lll-2040 4tS.4t4t ( 1' ··- CIOHCISunday• Mmde 9731 1--.....,...~--=------••••••••••••••••••••••• :::::;;:==:::;;;;;=;;::;:::==1 '79 Maid, RX7GS, 5epd. enrf, oew tirell all H · tru._8185/080 06-1711 aft tr.II CREVIER m1 r. tc le rn, 1 zd .. 1 : ......... ~ ... 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ___ ....;;;~...;;...;.-;.... ___ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Movio&, must sell. '73 9J>el Rallye. Gd cood. 11200 or best offer. 1J'T1 Fletlwood arpn, Btown /white top, #bit• •-lit .• moon roql, ... rad.lala,. win •bla· _. mllea. l'OU ba" to ... it to be!Mve U. care &hil cu laaa ..... .,-a. ...... cond, all xtras, $S900. 973-0144; eves 640-1340 831·8012 '69 FIREBIRD good cond. lots of xtras , $1200/080 or trade for P.U.846·1446 '14 Fireblrd, gray tc re- d /Int. 1 owner, very gd cond. NewUnstiun•up SS\.8628 . '18 Trana Aro. 28.ooO mi, Imm•& cood. &Jany xtras. Noeds IDl.nor ~Y work 4' Urea. $.'5800. Villi ne1otlate. 4'n-1182 ,yes L.B. n-•rMrct '970 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '11 T·Bltd, ~lnt ab~. ioadect. •.ooo mi, n -.m$ - .... 9t74 ....................... .,, Vc1• GT, euto, a/c. '1000/l'.>BO IS''f.1821 '• • .. ~. The spirit of Marlboro in a low Jar cigarette. n Marl BY DAVID IW'l'ZMANN ott•Oelty .......... Convicted child klller Rodney James Alcala -on San Quen- tin's Death Row awaiUna the outcome ol Orange County bear- ings that could lead to a new trial -bad WU'elated murder charges agalnat btm dropped in a Burbank court Wednesday. Because of the unreliability of a key prosecuUon wit.Deas, lbe Los Angeles County Di.strict At· torney'1 Offlce aa~ed Municipal Court Judge Marton Gubler to dismiss charges a1alnlt Alcala, 37. The murder count bad been m~ against tbe Monterey Park m~Jast summer ln connect.Ion wt the stranculat.lon death of a 21-ear-old Burbank woman. Only several weeks earlier, Alcala was sentenced to die in tbe California gas chamber for the 1979 kidnap-murder of 12-• year-old Robin Samsoe of Hunt- ington Beach. THE DISMISSAL of the murder charge against Alcala coincides with an Oran1e County Superior Court h~arlng on whether t,vo Oran•e County Jail informanta commJtted perjury in t.esUtytnc against the amateur photosrapher during the Samaoe trial last year The hearin1\ were ordered by ................... Sen. S. J. Hayakawa make• potnls while oddresring the World Affairs Council at Cotta Me1a's South Coast Plaza Hotel Wednesday night. .U.S. business def ended Hayakawa says firms boon to S. African blacks .By JODI CADENHEAD °' * _.., ........ Sen1 S.1. Harakawa lubed out Wednesday at black liberals who criticize the presence of American oompanies in segregated South Africa. ln a speech at the World Al· ·f jlrs CoUncil meetin& In ec.ta Mesa the 74-year--0ld aeP\lbltdn senator said that dissoluti.oft Of American businesses in South Africa would cost blacks needed jobs. "WHAT DOESN'T seem to OC· .~ cur to a lot of these people is if trade is cut off . blacks at the bottom or the ladder will be hurt. and wonder if the war hasn't started.'' be told tbe Qrowd of about 350 al the South -OOast Plaia Hotel. Ca lling South Korea "e conomi ca lly powerful" Hayakawa said that the co\.dllry ranks seventh in trade with \.be United Slates, with $10 ~ tr_.ded last year. . Speaking with Daily Pilot representatives earli er, Hayakawa touched on a number of topics, including: -His recently introduced Guest Worker Act bill that would allow Mexican nationals to post a refundable S500 bond with the American government in order to work here six months. -Introduction __ qf hi• coo· tron.rs~ Sen8'e bW that would eatabllah English • tlit! oftlCfal U.S. Language. There lsn't an of. flclal U.S. language, he said. -IDS SUPPORT OF training future gun ownen by members of the National Rifle As· soclaUon. In support of the cuest worller bill. Hayakawa said the $500 bond is not an excessive amount because, he said, aliens now are payi n g that much to be smuggled across the border. Hayakawa said that he favors granting amnesty to aliens who have lived in the U.S. tor at least <See AFRICA, Page A2) t " • I\ N, i1 · 0 u N 1 '!' ~ _ A L 1 hJ H N 1 A 2 ~' cl N rs the California Supreme Court. In the Burbank case, char1es were drQpped because yet another jallbouae informant against Alcala bad shown himself to be unreliable. Loa Aqeln ~eputy Diltrict Attorney David Ohco uJd a ma- jor element of the cue aealnat 'J\lcala was statementa be aJ. leledly made to fellow Oranee County Jail inmate John Mul· queen. . . HOWEVER; DISCO said, Mul· queen admitted committing per· jury in an unrelated Orange County drug smu11llng case in July. ruining whatever crediblll· ty he may have had. "In view ol this, the people can't proceed," prosecutors t-0ld Judge Gubler Wednesday. Alcala had been charged with ltilllnc Jill Marie Parentea\l in June, 1979, only days before rap Mias Samaoe disappeared trom the seashore in Huntinaton Beach. Miss Parenteau was strangled after an Intruder broke into her second-story aipartment, accord· ing to Burbank police in· vestigators. ALCALA BECAME a suspect in the slaying in August, 1979. Al the lime, it was reported that <See ALCALA, Page A%) BB could lose 50% of rentals By PATRICK K ENNEDY Ofllle Delly ...... tuft More than half the rental units in Huntington Beach could be eliminated by a proposed or· dinance that would open the door to wide-scale conversion of apartmeats to condominiums The only rentaJ units protected by the proposed ordina nce are those in complexes or fewer than five apartments, and those units subsidized by federal. state or local renter assistance pro· gram~. A slirvey by the city's planning department identifies more than 8,600 apartments that could be up- graded and converted into con· dominiums under the proposed guidelines. ACCORDING TO the proposal, apartmell) tenants uprooted by a condomtntum con vertlon .-ould be glven up to one year to move ancf would receive financiel and transportation asst.stance from the c1eveloper. The proposed ordinance. drafted by City Councll ad hoc com~ formed Int 'lummer, ia beil$ avlewed by the dty al· torney's office. It tentatively is scheduled for a Planning Co mmission public hearing next month and probably would be considered by the City Council in June. according to d · ty officials. Presently, there are no re· gulalions -concerning con - dominiums 'conversions in Hunt· ingtonBeach. According to city officials, re· gulations for ' n e wly built condominiums make it practical ly impossible at present for apartments to be converted because, m large part, too much open space is required. But the ad hO<' committee's stated "intent and purpose" is to "provide a variety of housmg, .. and to "encourage the use of newly proven concepts m hous- ing construction.'• THUS, UNLIKE some or- dinances in other Orange County dties, the proposed regulations would relax open s pace re- quirements and make it easy for many large apartment complexes in Huntington Beach lo beconvcrt· ed to condominiums. according to Grace Win chell . the planning commission's liaison to the com· mittee Rescuers seeking 15 trapped miners WYOMING Denver • COLORADO Miners Trapped •---Ap- SCENE OF BL.AST 15 miners trapped R~DSTONE. Co lo. CAP) - Rest:ue crews inched their way along a 7 ,200-Coot sloping mine 1s haCt today. trying lo reach 15 miners trapped by an explosion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek No. 1 coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope. Seven men came out of the mine in two groups aft~r the blas t Wednesday. Four were un- injured. but three were admitted lo Valley View Hos pital in Glenw&od Springs for treatment of bums, bruises and shock. of. ficiels said "So even if you hale South Africa and love blacks you should hop~ South Africa pros· pers. ··he added. T h e firs t -term California senator said that most American companies are willing to pro· mote black workers despite the financial penalties imposed by the South African government for doing so. State dump site selection feared One of those who escaped un· hurt, David Chiarello. said that when the explosion occurred, "Air came at me sort of like a hurricane. ll didn't knock me over but there was so much'1lust J turned around and tucked my head in." Hayakawa contended that the presence or American firms in South Afri ca helps bl ac ks because or the jobs that are created. As chairman of the Senate .subcommittee on East Asian Pacific Aff-airs, Hayakawa re- cently travetM to South Korea where he said he was alarmed by the bwldup of North Korean troops. "FIVE MINUTES after you _ave the DMZ you look back Ii# ........ < llCOND CHOICE -Teswa Carpenter of New York'• VUls1e Volce celebrates after wlnnhal the Pullt.r.er Prize for feature wrlttn1. She w.a honOred after the ortJina! wlnner, Janet Cooke of the WaabJ.ntton Poet, ad~ mltted her 1tory wa1 fabricated (ltory, P•I• Cl.2). . Committee pushes for local choice on hazardous waste disposal COMPANY RESCUE teams making their way toward the 15 men, estimated to be as far as Wednesday's executive commit-\ 7 ,~ feel into the m~ne , were Sites for hazardous waste dumps should be selected by local governments and not the state. the Southern California Association of Governments' Executive Committee has de· cided. · SCAG committee members, in the first of a two-day meeting at the Registry Hotel in Irvine. said Wednesday their biggest fear is that a s tate or regional agency will be created to dictate Saudi prince suspect in FV dope c&se Fountain Valley police had a bnash with royalty when a man a;rested on chargea oC possession oC narcotics turned out to be a 29·year-old Saudi Arabian prince. . His Royal Highness Maahour Ben Saud, who listed his address as 2110 Yacht Mischief, Newport Beach, was pulled over on fl rou.tine traffic stop at Mapolla Street and Warner Avenue eady Monday, police said. Besides a small amount of quaaludes allegedly found lD the prince's car, police .dlleovered be also had a year-ol4t traffic warrant for bl.I .nest. After calla to t.be U.S. State Depat tmeot offlee l n Lot An1ele1 and the Protocol Duty Office ln Wasftintt.on D.C., police dlacovered Saud bad no diplomatic lmrnulty H• wu booked lnto Oru1e County Jall and released oo •1,000 baJI lortbe narcotcl chara• and $145 ball for tbe traltic warrant, poUceaald. Ro7al KaltW, a epedal ..-t fort.be U.S. SW. Departmeilf. bi LM An1eJe1, aald tbertiHllA'e "quite a few" prbtc• Jn 'Sauidl Arabia. sites for the unpopular dumps. THE LOCAL officials - mayors. city council members. county s upervisors -warned that a state-mandated agency could rob them of local decision- m aking powers just as they said the stale Coastal Commission has done But committee members aJso seemed aware that if local gov· ernments don't draft their own plan~ to dispose of hazardous materials, the state will do it for them. SCAG attorney David Fine ex· prained that officials · in private industry who need more dump sites are petitioning the state legislature for help. In Southern California, for in· stance. the onl y li°censed hazardowi waste site is in West Covina. T hus, seeking to preserve local authority. executive com- mittee members approved Wednesday proposed legislation to glve each county rights to pre- pare its own plan for disposing hazardous wastes. EACH COUNTY would not need its own dump 54te, Fine cautioned. but would at least need written agreements with neighboring jurisdictions to transport a nd dispose or the waste tee meeting was no exception as having to ~lop o~cas1onally to • , members. after much debate, test the mine s air r~r deadlyA backed a state senate bill to gases. a spokesman said. raise gasoline lax. Mining officials said they wer .. unable lo predict when the trapped miners would be Irvine mother ~T.~~~ed or whethe r they are t<escuers were less than 1,000 feet from where the men were believed to be, but progress was s low According to the proposal. a countywide plan would need ap· proval of the Board of Supervisors and cities r epresenting a majority of the county population. Orange County officials have been reminded of the need for hazardous waste disposal plans since residents in Huntington Beach and Fullerton have com· plained of toxic fumes from said 'victi~ of emotions' The Irvine woman who police say .shot and killed her son while he was doing his homework and then committed suicide by firing a .22-caliber rifle at her own head was an administrator wilh the Fountain Valley School District. d u m P s i t e s l n t b e i r NellS. Greene, 48, was assigned neighborhoods. When recent discussion among ~ to the curriculum development local officials hasn't centered on division at the 4'hool district hazardous waste, it often has headquarters, said1cbool district spokeswoman Trish Torgerson. been on wars to iocreaae fund· The asstcrunent came this year ing for transportation projects. after she took a medical leave ol absenoe from her previous u · Arter keeping vigil near the mine for more than 17 hours, most of the miners' families went home at daybreak. But a crowd or miners and reporters stood at the entrance of the road that winds 10 miles up to the mouth of the mine. The public was barred from the immediate area around the Jlline. "We're praying that there will be 15 men coming out tod(y ,'' one miner who declined lo ~ his name said. IRlllil CDllT WUIHll 1 Valley rec pi:ogram debated by panel sianmeot as principal of Fountain Valley Elementary School> Ms. Toreenoo sald, adding she didn't know what the medical problem was. Irvine police Lt. Bob Leqert aald tbat lln. Greene bad ~­ tory ol emotional probl,em• that culminated Saturday •Ith the alaylni ot ti. eon, Brent D., and ber tufckle lnaide Iler home ln the Woodbrt.dle ~reaof lrvlne. Nlgbt and momina low clouds, with only partial clearint alon1 beaches Friday afternoon. Lows tonisht !iO alcmg the coast, 56 Inland. Hilhs Friday mid eos to near 70. Tbe COit o( Fount.U. Valley'• recreation procrama w• debated Wedneeclay by resident& attend· inl the fourth public nieetlnt o( tbe cltlnna committee 1t\ldyln9 the city'• bud•et.Pl'Ot>lema. ''It'• only &.• percent of tb• City'* budaet; but the rtcreat.lca proframa seem to be th• molt eontrov.cslaJ tbiJll• tbat bave come up at tbe m..Una1." 1ald IUery Deaton, a member ot the live·member ClO• Council· ap~lnted commttt". •People who don't ban c blldr• are ••aloat. UM ~ irame, while people wbo do hne ebUdren want tbe pro-: Ira JM to bie ftee," lbe Hki. ~ Jllta. ~toft Hid IOID9 ~ tbl l(Orrta L. Greene teturud boe•tl'Gm wort.at t :ao p.m. and fou.a4 tbe bod1e1 ·of blt wife and ion. · Ntltbbon aald Brent w~ tf '1 freahmml at lrvfne ff1P Sc~ a.nd acU.-tn the dram• d•· parttnmtthire. , . . • llemorlal service• illlDITliAY , Dnmork, of aU place•, u crltlcol of the hit. telnWon Hrj.a "Dollaa." See Page cu. 11111 ........ '17.ZS'i!.~ ICllO&~aa; Eah1ronmentaJ documentatScia • to rnnlt tnlroducUoa of tM new an qulet.r llCDoMeU·DoucJ• rDC·t .. _..., at Joba Wayne Airport h.. bffn a~pro~td b; the Oran11 County PJannJn1 Comm.luk>n. 1 Over the obJecUon1 of 1Newport U,aeb, Ute commlNion decided unanlmou1Jy Wednet· 'day that tfle adverse lmpacll that lntrodqf!tiGn ot the airplane would cre,te would be out· 'weltbed by Ill abtllty to reduce Jnoite Impacts on people Uvln1 under jet departure routes. From Page A1 ALCALA. • • evidence included blood atalna left at the scene that matched Alcala's to a dearee that would eliminate 90 percent of au other humans. Alcala allegedly met the woman at a bar and danced with her, but she rejected hla effort.fl to date her. • Disco said Burbank police In· vestigators did a thorough job on the case, but "came up dry" with regard to material evid ence. He said. charges could be re· filed against Alcala If new evidence should turn up SANTA ANA LAWYER Keith Monroe. who is representing Al cala lll the California Supreme Court appeal of his Orange .County conviction, said the likelihood of refiling charges in the Parenteau case "is remot~." Meanwhile, the hearing on al- legations that perjury was com· mitted during the Samsoe case continues Friday in Orange County Superior Court Judge Pt:ihp Schwab's courtroom in Santa Ana. One of the informants against Alcala. Robert Frank Dove, ad· m1tted last week he lied to a Jury when he said Alcala told him he slapped the youngster unconscious after abducting her on June 20, 1979. Worker killed ~in robbery LOS ANGELES <AP) A liq- uor store employee apparenUy • mistaken for a bandit by a depu· • ty county marshal was fatally ~wounded m a hail of gunfire that followed a robbery outside a bank Wednesday. police said. The deputy marshal fired two shots into the man, Fidel V Nuno. 37, of Los Angeles. after Nuno turned and faced him with a gun in his hand, said police Lt. Tom Shepherd. But Nuno appeared to have been shot by three bullets and investigators were trying to de· termine whether he also was ; shot by one of the fleeing rob- ~ be rs . Shepherd said. ?. ~Pet poster ~ ~contest set "I s Your Dog a Good Neighbor?" 1s the theme of a student poster contest being con- ducted in Huntington Beach by the animal license division of the city treasurer's_ofiice. Local students in kindergarten through grade six are being ;·asked to prepare posters ii- ~ lustraling pet manners. with 'special emphasis on encourag-~ ing owners lo pick up after their ~pets . t Posters are being collected at ~local schools and must be sub· f milled by May 4. Winners will receive awards from the mayor May 18. Posters will be on dil· play at City Hall through May 25. Addres8 corrected The address where 19-month· t old Soeha Allen drowned ln her I~ family pool early Saturday was Incorrectly reported in the news account ot the tra1edy. Correct· ly, the address la 1'736 Bayport Way in Newport Beach. The Daily P\lot re1reta the error. ORANGE COAIT c,V1lt)' .plaanu1 uld l•· prtmuy adverM Impact ~ relete tO llWrtaMd trllfk ~ JHUon around the atl'port beCaUH the ~r IO bat I N-t· ln• CIPed~ about 50 Ptl'ffDt Jar1~r than t.be til.Di 't11 and OC·f.JOt D01V iopereteCI by the tour comm1l'clal alrUnea Hrv· ln1 Oran1e County. Enviroiuqene11 1n1ly1t Mark Goodman 11Jd nolH /rodu.ced by the Su"r-tO wouJ N 1ub- 1tanUally leM than that of tM Boetn1 aircraft and the. oider DC·fl. THE CONTENTION drew critlcitm from Eric Goldman, 1 Lot Aatel• tuoroiy ~ bf . NtwPort f.leacb to u,.te .uryort,.._tecl mau... "I Goldman oterted tbai there Wal "DO ACtllll e•tfof!mance dat1" to lboW that U.. h9tr-IO lJ quieter thlD other J•ta \iow ln UH at tM airport. Ht 1aJd the C0'1\ml11lon thould delay approval' of envlropmentaJ document. on tht luPtr·IO unW 1uch ptrlorm1nce data It av1Uable. Pacific Southwell AlrUnn l• the only carrier In the country that has taken delivery of lh• Supfr·IOI. The alrllne it now oper1tln1 the airplane at .Burbank Airport and Lo• An11JM JQtAT11atl1aal.;AJrport. NolM monltorint pel'IOft.Hl '1&t Burbuk have ref""4 te dl•· clOM DioUe data on the Super-IO. GOLDJIAN MID that If the COmmi.qlon WU ateadfut ln lta detlre to support introduction of the Super 80 -that it tbould do 10 on a 90-day trial b11i1. The commlu,alo.o rejected that 1u1- 1eat1on. AirCaJ , which operatH 25 fll1bta per day •at the county airport, eXPecta to take delivery of the Super-80 by mid-year and hat plan• l-0 be1in operating ,.,..,..._ Thu photo of four alleged temm.t• arTelttd m Ti;uano 1.00l found with captured guna and Marmt pr<>- paganda. From left are Miguel Martina and Cfl"lhia Green of San Diego and brothera JelW and Raul Naranjo. Border terrorists held Mexican police find guns, proyaganda in Tijuana TIJUANA, Mexico <AP > -An alleged terrorist group arrested here with Marxist propaganda and guns operated in neighbor· ing U.S. cities for five years. poli'ce say. The two men and t.,..o women were identifi e d by their literature as "the Che Guevara Brigade" and described by police as part of a Southern California-based group planning to kill U.S . Border Patrol agents. After U .S Consulate representatives visited them ln Jail, Vice Consul Jerry Baker said the confiscated literature "was very general and 1t was nothing directed against Mexico or the United States " 'BAKER QUOTED consular of- f1 c1al Scott Danaher in Tijuana as denying there were any notes on the attempted assassination of President Reagan, as Mex- ican n ews reports indicated Reagan was to have been in TI- Juana on April 28 to visit Mex - Reagan 'was inch away from death' WASHINGTON (AP) -Con· trary to initial dentals, the bullet that struck President Reagan stopped only an inch from his heart. says the surgeon who r~­ moved it. Dr. Benjamin Aaron said he almost left the explosive bullet where it was because or difficulty in getting it out. The president. Aaron said, "was right on the margin" when he arrived at the emergency room March30. ''If the president had been taken to the White House after he was shot instead of to George Washington University l:lospltal, or taken to a more distant or lesser hospital, I think he would have been in big trouble," Aaron said in an interview published in today's Washln&ton Poat. "He could have been another Dr. Mich'aelHalberstam." H a I be r s t a m , a n-o t e d cardiologist, died on the operat· Ing table after being shot by a burglar at his Waahineton home in December. The account by Aaron, director or chest and cardJovucular 1ur- 1ery at the hospital, 1enerally confirmed grim deacriptlont by others Involved and contradicted the flnt reassurint atatemema by the hoepilll's otcicial 1pokaman, Pt'. Dennis O'Leary O 'Leary has admitted he was trying to be as optJm1st1c as he could and sometimes was work- ing with less-than-complete in· formation. O'Leary said Mar~h 30 the bullet lodged "several inches" from Reagan'sheart. Aaron said be twice almost gave up efforts to find the bullet in Reagan's lung but "had a strong feeling" that it shoul not be left there. OnJy later did physicians learn that the .22-caliber projec- tile was explosive. "I think there's no question but that we would have had to go back into his chest again and take it out," the surgeon said, "because it might have ruptured and start- ed leaking." Valley school board weighs pact on gym ican President Jose Lopez Portillo but postponed It because of h is wounds A police official said the foursome intended to disrupt an outdoor gathering Sunday for Gov Roberto de la Madrid and assasinate police security guards. But Ricardo Gibert, Tijuana commander o f the Baja California Judicial police. has re· fused to Jet reporters talk to them since the arrests Saturday night. The four were identified by Gibert as Miguel Anthony Martinez. Z7, a native of Cpula Vista, just inside the t,;t;ited States, and a former resident of Compton near south-central Los Angeles; Cynthia Green, 33, of San Diego, and Jesus Garcia Naranjo and his brother Raul Garcia Naranjo, both in their 20s and of Tijuana. IN THEIR CAR and the brothers' home were found an M-1 rifle, a sawed-off shotgun, several pistols and a bomb det· onator. Gibert sald there also were photographs showing the four standing with weapons, Mexican-American children carrying submachine guns. notebooks with U.S. police radio codes and maps of terrorist locations throuahout the world. Coubty plannera bid con· chacled wt year lbat aQ en.troo- aiental Impact report on in· troducUoa of the aircraft would be needed because or the ex- treme concern over airport matten and the Super-80'• 1ub- 1tantial dlfferentea from the alrerlft now flown at Oran1e County. Accordin1 to the Impact re- port, the Super-80 produces less noise, fewer air pollutants and la more fuel-efficient In terms of pound• of fuel expended per pa11euaer. ONE Q\JE8TlON that remains 11 the effect the Jntroductloa of tbe Saper-90 will bave on tbe llle of the 5,'700-foot-loni main runway at the airport. Jt la )mown that the Super 80, with a wei1ht of 12$,000 pounds, wllJ shorten the anticipated llle of the runway. A etudy to de- termine by exactly how lone ll still being conducted by the co unty EnvJronmental Manage ment A1ency and airport officials. Currently, a 95,000 wet1bt limit is in effect at lbe airport. $900,000 awarded in OC birth case A 3-year-old Orange County girl has been awarded damages of nearly $900,000 by a superior court Jury because of brain damage and other injuries she suffered during her delivery at Huntington youth injiµ-ed insmaslwp A Huntington Beach teen-ager remained in critical condition to· day in a northern California hospital as Ca!Yornia Highway Patrol investigators continued their probe in the crash or a pickup truck i.rl which he was riding. In the accident. which oc- curred late Tuesday on Highway 101 in Arcata, one teen-ager was killed and nine others were in· ju red when the truck slid off the r o ad and down a 20 -foot embankment. Myron Sipp, 18, of Huntington Beach remained in critical con· dition today, along with Joe Carrion, 19, of Azusa. Both are at Eureka General Hospital The driver of the pickup, Carl J . Carranza. 18, also of Hunt ington Beach, told investigators he was attempting to pass another ve hi cle. when he thought he was too close to the center divider and swerved to the right, running off the road Carranza. a Humboldt State Un iversity student, was driving to the beach with one passenger in the cab and eight passengers riding in the truck bed. Killed in the crash was Debbie Kroeber, 19, o( Lemoore. which is near f'resno. • Carranza was treated for minor injuries but was not hos pitaJlzed. CHP Sgt. Cliff Williams said no speeding or drinking ap- parently was involved in the ac· cident. "It was just app1Jrently one of those things where the machlne goes out or control," he said. Crisis avoided P IERRE, S.D. CAP> -A law that, in effect. canceled a state debt of up to $50 million in sales tax overcharges to utility ·customers has been upheld by the state Supreme Court. saving South Dakota from a financial crisis. The ruling was made Wednesday. Chapman General Hospital. The decision was reached late Tuesday af(er only one day of de- 11 berations. : Awarded $895,000 in general damages was Stacy lgram, whoia blind. suffers from mentaJ re- tardation and has cerebral palsy. Santa Ana lawyer Neill Bahan. who represented the child, con· tended that Stacy was deprived of oxygen for more than two iaours while her mother was in labor at the Orange hospital on Dec. 7, 1977 Bahan claimed fetal monitor· ing equipment showed the unborn child was suffering from oxygeo deprivation and that hospital personnel untrained in reading the mach.mes did nothing to cor- rect the problem. He also had claimed that rec· ords were altered by hospital of· f1c1als to cover up the incident. The family asked for a $1 5 milhonJudgment in the case I Script writers, producers talk BURBANK (AP> The first negollataons since the start of the five·day strike of television and movie script writers were held Wednesday . involving representatives of independent producers Earlier an the day . more than 500 stnking writers picketed out· side the gates o( NBC -the network that has already been • forced to close down two of its shows because of the strike. Johnny Carson 's "Tonight Show," which 1s taped here, and "Saturday Night Live," which originates in New York. have gone into repeats for the dura· lion of the strike From Page A1 AFRICA. • • seven years without a criminal reco·rd or a history of welfare support. Queried about his age, which will be 76 when he seeks a second term next year. he said, ·'They forget about the spirit of 76 My mother is 97 and she Just returned to Japan after a two· year visit here," he added. ~ Speaking on the possible ~ntranhceSeof Gov. Jerry tBrown • into t e nate race nex year. Hayakawa said. "He'd be tough. But it wouldn't keep me awake at night." c Fountain Valley School Dis- trict trustees will consider enter- i n i . into a 2S· year lease a1reement wt th the city of Hunt-· initon Beach tonight few a com- m unity nmnaslum slated for construction u.11 year. Prime time from Rolex. .. ... Daily Piiat The city proposes to bulld U.e aym with $250,000 In federal HoualnJ and Community Developme11t f\mda . Superb Rolex watches for men and women. In 18 karat r,e1tow gold with hidden-clasp bracelets: A. Oyster Quartz Oatejust for men In stainless steel, St,350. B. Lady's Datejust, SS,750. C. Man·s ~P.Haley AoOerl N. WMd ,.,....,. L Thomu KNYll ~Murptlln• ~or.. •!::::' ~Ull'ttln Clltt ear.Mn .. n ~ ........ t:=::.~ .. ~ ;j(, MAIN°"'1CI Ut W11t -.Y M., C..ta IMtll, CA. Mall...._: ... t.0, C.C. M9M, CA. t»1' The am would be built on •cbool diltrict lan4 immediately aoutb of Bua'1ard School, 19889 Education Lane. The truateea m,et at 1:80 p.m. at the dlatrlct headquartenl, 1 Llfbthouae Lane. I . Tfl• propo1t<t um would be m anaaed by the Hunt101ton B~ch BoJI ~ub. • Steve Kpebler, the clty'1 tom· maustty de\'1Jop~•nt c:oor4lnator, taid th• ~ ol tbe l,4C)O.lqU&N•fo0t nm b.U bMn approved by 1tm OfftcU1ll end thet ccmtnacUOn coild bqtn byUaatadotJune. • Day-Date, S7,950. SLA¥1€K'S t j 'l l . ArW Albert Finney, who will portray Daddy Warbucks in t1;e Columbia Pictures production of ''Annie,·· reacts calmly to various stages of shearing in New York. Filming is scheduled to begin late this month. DmUsmoked 'likeac~' Bette Davis, whose das· tinctive smoking style is an acting trademark. says she ''learned to s wear and s moke'" when she first went to Hollywood so "'they would think I was an actress." Miss Davis, in an interview published in the May edition of the Ladies' Home Journal, said she arrived in California as a non.s moking , non· drinking, .. s i I ly ·looking person." "I thought. 'What can I do?· .. said the Academy Award -winning actress So she started smokin~. ··I discovered that I could do a lot with a cigarette in a drama." she said. "'I don't just take two puffs and put at down. I s moke 1 never m· hal,ed, wtuch gave It a very peculiar look.·· '"I was on a set only once with a girl playing a part in a film of mine stark naked. I was in a state of absolute horror.·· Form« Ylpple lead..-A'9 Me llllf•~aentenc!ed kt tbr•• '1••n tnaon lilt wffk far coee.i.e 1n 19Ta, H1I the 19809 are oo lhelr wQ ~ matcbin• tM tvrbuhmt UIOI. "We're at the 1tate we were ln UM and USS," ...,. lhi ~year-o1d radlcaJ. ..lt'1 not to be compared wt~ uee or 1'70, with Cbicaao and Kent .State. But that will ~oQle 'wben 'Commodore Half' and the 'Jleatanoldl' have sent about 10,000 Marines ln&o El Salvador." Hoffman, lntenlewed 1n Ro-.ye, Mua., dtamuaea the 1970. 11 lrrelevaot. But he aay1 E1 Se.lvador could t>rtng back the 19808 all over •Jain: . "The Vietnam War ta becomlna unknown very rapidly. It's a war tha~ waa quickly foraotten and a sort of revialoniam has se~ ~. But with El Salvador it miaa.t get a second look." W aahlngton repor*ers, beware: there's a f1~gling newshO\llld anlffl".11 aJtound your town. and be w~ta to know bow you mad~ de· claions on some of the bil · aest stories of the last. four years. The new boy on the bus is former White House Press Secretary Jody Powell, who's writing a book on the news media and the pres· idency. P owell has signed a con· tract, said to be worth six figures, '+'ith William ~or~ row & Co.Un New York City. He said his book would describe what officials and reporters were thinkinc md doing during five or six im· portant events of Jim my Carter's presidency. includ- ing the Camp David summit. Although his list of topics iS tentative, Powell has said he may include the Iranian hostage crisis and the early Kennedy-Carter r ace. But reporters need not fear retri bulion "I'm not going to come out and say 'So and so is an unworthy reporter''," said Powell. C•rl S•1aa , the s pa ce sc ientist who enjoys s peculating about intelligent non-human life from beyond, has been named "Humanist of the Year." The down-to-earth .award from The American Humanist Association will be presented Saturday night at the group's a nnual con· Cerence in San Diego. Miss Davis. 73. s aid she pities modern young ac· tresses who have to strip 10 movies She said she never would have agreed lo that. .. Never' Never'·· she saad Muppet femme fatale Miss Piggy advises readers of her diet and exercise guide to "Never eat anything at one sit· ting that you can't lift." The guide appears in May issue of Ladies Home Journal. "' The association said the award ls being conferred on Sagan "for bis influential work in educating the public about science. and for his pioneering e ff orts in astronomy and space ex- ploration .. Rain heavy in Texas Sections of Rio Grande V, alley get 6 inches wmtal ~ather, ~hal\t al\CI mo<""'9 -<t.o.leb, oncy partlel CIMrlno FrHley eft.,.,_, el b .. cl'llH L.owl lonlQlll 50 alOftO lhe coetl, 56 Int..., Hltfl• Frloey mid '°' •• _ ,o w.,.,. tt EIMwi.r•. M>U"'-l•rly •lt\ct\ 10 lo 16 i.l\Ob..., Friday allar,_., with I 10 l fOOI wind wa"" WHl•rly t••ll 1 tolftel V.S. summary l.oc•llY hee¥V r.i" '°"11n....i w .... nesd•Y aver we1t•rn T•••• •"d •nlerft New Me•lco. e110 '''°"II Wll\Cll KOUl'ed P9f'll tfl ltw l\Or111erll PlalM So"'• parta ot ,,,. u11tr•I Rio Grande Vall.., -_ .. rn Teu1 901 up lo II• Inc-of r.M11 II\ .,.. 2• lloun el\Oln9 ~Y eft•r-. with other ar-91111"11 !Mt--et1d ·-11\CMt. Very •tl'llnO. 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CM.1l'Ottlll114 ............. 14 S6 Bly\M '7 " •vralla 5t 46 ,,_ ., 50 ~HWf Ii S1 Mery111Mle 71 • /IMMlr.f SI 4S llleedlet ts m 04tlllellll Um ,,_...... .. JI "" tlvff 72 " ltedwoM City .. • "-71 "' .-----------------------.-.--.-. ........... .-... ____________________ __, a.er.,,....., n a ~'t:tl li~tt1n.l119 The Dally Pilot wants to hear oblervatlona from lt. readen -particularly oommenta about ·u.. paper itself. lt'1 eu1 to tell ua your views. Juat call \he number bQ>w ud your me11a1e. will be recorded. Me11a1es will be tnuertbed .... ., .. tlme11 dally llMl delivered to t.be desk 'Of tM ~ editor. No clrculatlon calla, p&eue. TeU m •hat'• on your mind The .... .,.,. II ID iervlc. M 1 boun a day, ~ven d•19 a ~· 842•8088 .... _ . " . ·---,, "' • TIMr!rl•I '4 '7 ~ Ulli.11 IS 44 ......... "5' , ..... ., • '7Jt , .. ...., " . I • CNlllNI I " M I •1 Cefitr9 t1 S1 L .. BMOt 1t M ~a. IO SI •ents .P~Fcloneil Top former EBI officials given Reagan clemency in break-in case WASHINGTON (AP> -Preal· dent Reap.n bu aranted uneon· dltJonal pardons to l"o f"'1!ler FBI· offlclal1 co •lct•d of authorlzln1 llle~aJ break-Ina .durtna the aaency • probe ol an· tl·war radicals durins the Nlxon administration. W. Mark Felt and Edward S. Miller acted "Mt wttb criminal Intent, but in th~ belief that they bad trants of authority reaclllq, to the hlehest levela of aoveru· ment," Reagan said in a written statement. ••America w_. 1enerous to those who refused to serve their country in the Vietnam war," the president said. "We can be no less generous to two men whQ acted on high principle to bring ab ead ~ tM terrorl1m that wu threatenina our nation." FaED Fieldin•1 the preti· dent .. • COUQle~r aaid the declalon to look into tne case came on Rea1an's own intUaUve. Fleld· . lna aald Ru1an ~1i1ned the pardon March 26, ut "event. Jury acquits man in shooting case overtQOk it" and de •Yee! P\lbUc announcement. Rea an waa ahot in an assassination attempt March 30. Brian Gettlne•. a lawyer for Felt, said the pardon erases tbe stigma of cooviction. "It's a vindication," be salct. ·'They believed at every sinale moment that they were actine in the best interests of the country and they were doing nothing wrong. It has been recognized by no less than the president ol the United States. It means everything to them.'' A »year-old man accused ol attempted murder baa been ac· quitted by an Orange County Superior Court jury even though his victim idenillled him as the gunman at a preliminary hear· ing. However, because the man who had beeq shot disappeared before the trial of Thanh Minh Vu began, the jury bad to rely on the reading of transcripts from the earlier court hearing. On Tuesday, ·the panel re· turned with its verdict or inno· cent. Prosecutor Michael Pear, who decided to continue with the case without his most important witness, said he doesn't know Jwhat became oC Thiet Van N-M board OKs list of layoffs A list containing the 128 names of teachers and related person· nel scheduled for possible layoff in June was approved Tuesday night by the Newport-Mesa School District board. At the top of the list and first to go according lo seniority is an elementary school teacher. The last is an instrumental music in· structor. • ,'fbe list was compiled by ad· mlinstrators who considered both seniority and when seniority dates are identical special teactung skills required an the distract Final layoff nottces are to be mailed before May 15 t o teachers m the distncl hit by lagging income and declines in student enrollment The school board plans to eliminate what al calls about 85 "fullttme equivalencaes" in June. Several positions to be eliminated are part-time duties. so more than 85 teachers wall be cut, an administrator noted. The reductions still must' be ruled upon by an administrative law jQdge, according to state law , and hi s hearings are scheduled at Harper Community Center in Costa Mesa on April 22 and 23 Teacher cuts includine two administrators with teaching c r edentials. psychologists. nurses and hbrarians -will re· suit from closing two schools and trimming such programs as instrumental music. middle school shop classes. language classes in high schools. driver education, counseling services and health care. In a similar move last year . the board cut about 90 pos itions . Hi, 21, who suffered a bullet wo to the bead. ~ sbootin1 incident oc- curr in Santa Ana last No- ve r. Huynh was shot as he stood in a telephone booth in a furniture store. Several weeks earlier. the vie tim and Vu were involved in a physical confrontation In Ahaheim. Though it was never proved, Pear said Huynh may have been a member of one Viet· n a m ese gang and Vu the member of another. Vu was taken into custody in January and at his preliminary hearing, Huynh identified him as the man who s hot him in the bead. However, Pear said Huynh disappeared in late February or early March. Further complicating his case, he said, was another witness re canting damaging testimony against Vu at the trial. GETTINGS said he had not re· quested the pardon, but was generally aware it was being considered. He located Felt in his doctor's office to inform him. Felt's response was: "l don't thmk I need to see the doctor." Later, Felt declared "I am ex· tremely g"t"aleful , just more grateful than I can possibly say, and 1 thank him (Reagan).'' Miller a l s o expressed g r atitude. Felt and Maller were appeal· ing their U.S. District Court con· viclions of violating the civil rights of friends and relatives or members of the Weather Under· g round, a radical anti·war group .,, ....... OUTING -Former Iran hostage Richard Morefield, his son Steven, and wile Dorothea take a carriage ride dur· ing break in group sessions being held for the ex-hostages· in White Sulphur Springs, W. V. Experts are evaluating'·· the former captives' re·adjustment to freedom. J, ~"' •U: W ASHJNGTON <AP> -'Ibe ni"eagan admintatratton hu de- cided to sell Saudi Arabia .,1.round radar 1titlon1 and 10,000 more anU·t~k mlNllea ln a con· d certed effort to build the oll-rtch · 1 3in1dom lQto an anU-Sovtet t>6ulwark, IOUrcea say. vJ That'• enou1h ml11Uea "to ' Ttnock out every lank In the ,J.tuaaiao araenal, certainly aJJ iftae tanlu urael hu," a hl1bty t.»l•ced IOUl'ce aald with some ex- anerat.lon. Actually. the Pen- ta ion estimates the Soviets have about 45,0PO tanks and the Israeli• a~t 3,000. The siie of the up-t o-now secret mlasUe deal and another secret plan to provide Saudi Arabia with a dozen hlehly sensitive ground radar stations for controlling interceptor planes surprised diplomatic and 1.«her iseasoned observers. I . ' PHOENIX, Arb. (AP> -A perjury in - dictm e n t against former U.S. Attorney General Richard G. K lel ndiens t ste mmed from an in- vestigation by • na11to1a1t11 h i s ( e 11 ow ,'lawyers, an assistant Arizona at· jorney general said Wednesday. ·'The Bar Association referred It to u&," said Phil Mac Donnell. ''They did an awful lot of work." Kleindienst, who was the na- tion's top lawyer during the early part of the Watergate scan· da I thatended with President Nlx- on 's resignation, was Indicted Tuesday by a Maricopa County grand jury on 14 counts of perjury in connection with his testimony mwrnrrrn • ' to atar bar a11oel1Uon panela about bit role tn an alle1ed 1cbeme to milk a union pension fund. Hinckley, CarWr in Ohio same time DAYTON, Ohio <AP> -John W. Hinckley Jr., char1ed In the aaaualnation attempt on Preti· dent Rea1an, was In this touthweat Ohio town lut year the same time u former Prest· dent Jimmy Carter, accordin1 to the Dayton Dally News. The 25·year-old Hine«\ey, from Evercreeo, Colo .• ~ ac- cused ~ (uing sbota at a1an on March 30 in Waahlnc , in· jurin1 the president and three others. Pair sUIVive cmah on ML St. Heknt VANCOUVER, Waah. <AP> - Six scientists and a pilot were bealthy and "in good spirits" after a powerful gust of wind on Mount St. llelens overturned their helicopter, forcin1 them to walk three miles through anow to rescuers, officials said. The wind was the 1tron1est force on the volcanic mountain Wednesday. Earthquake activi· ty dropped and the U .S . Geological Survey and the University of Washington an- nounced that the latest eruption of the volcano "appears to be over." C.Onrail aida let WASHINGTON (AP> -The Reagan administration took a new step Wednesday in its effort to break up Conrail, appointing rive new directors to the finan · clally troubled railroad's board. sources said ~Purge of Poland's ~Politburo pressed ' WARSAW, Poland <AP) -An unofficial grass-roots congress of the Polish Communist Party .has called on party leaders to • purge the ruling Politburo and ~the..garty's central commlttee of •hard·llners and pay more at· 2tention lo the voice of the people. I The extraordinary all-day meeting of delegates from local party organitatlona lhrouahout the country was held Wednesday 1ln Torun. 160 miles northwest of Warsaw. ' ~London blacla nix ~ rally, fight probe • : LONDON CAP > -Althou1h ~blac k leaders in the violence- ;torn Brixton area have called off la scheduled weekend protest ral· I J , they continue to urae a boycott of a government probe ,into the clashes between black 1youths and police. J Both declsions were an· l nounced Wednesday followtn1 a ~-minute meeUn1 of 300 blacks ~sponsored by the Brlxlon !Defense Committee, White and ,reporters were excluded. I ,. Pope renera vom VATICAN CITY (AP) -Near- ly 1,600 priests, bishops and U YOU ,. YI• TOo MUCH POI YCUI HIALTH IMIU&tJCl1 •1 .000.000 GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL ,. t-lt c.11....,. A "•UU4tttt 89tfM11 • 111..... • ... _..,. ..... .. ... ONltr Cl9ftl ,. ~--,..,.~ ........................ --. ............. ,.,...u•••nu•IMfY wa.-u ,.._,,. ~··. ....,..w ... i o.,.,.... .. . DAI&. Y Pf&.Of t ,,.,.,,..., ...• z • ..... ...,.,..,,... Ml-4m ....... . cardinals renewed their vows of celibacy together with Pope John Paul II today as the pontiff opened four days of Easter celebrations with a Maas ln St . Peter's Basilica. Sinking regrett.ed TOKYO (AP) -Adm. Robert Long expressed regrets to Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki lo· day over the sinking of a Japanese frei&hter after a col· lislon with a nuclear-powered U.S. submarine. Riot in Bel/mt BELFAST, Northern Ireland <AP> -More than 100 youths hurled bricks and gasoline bombs at Londonderry pollce Wednesday after a peaceful pro· test march by 2,000 supporters of jailed IRA guerrilla Bobby Sands. authorities said. Dollar, gold up LONOOif <AP> -The dollar moved higher on world money markets again today, strengtbene~y news of Im· proved U.S. trial produc- tion in March. GO prtc .. alao increued. BEIRUT, Lebanoa (AP> - llrMU ,... bluted Paltlttmu 1uerrilla tt.rontbeldl ln aOuthem Lebanoll t.Oday. laraeli tNCmea blew UP I cat•O 1bJp lb t.ht ~ ot Sldoa, and t,,vo Palettinlan l guer:rillas sett>aclii •u•r,rill.. .-ere lqUe4 f17inf to balloon into IatHl to take boatacea, offlclal• and radio btoack ... ta aatd. Lebane.e provincl•I otflcJata Hld ~ laraelt jetl bl! Cllerrtlla ~ltiom and 1upply routft ln tbt Au, tl·Alll _,.4 Tai bet at. Arab areu .aear ta. tQUthem ~rt city Of TYJ't, OQ mllfis'toutb ot Beirut and 12 Olflet tsc>rt:b ot tbe llraeU border. There wu no lm&ied..\att re- port of caaua1Uea or comment from Israel, either on tbe air at· tack or the ahlp slnktna. There Wl\S no Immediate re-• port of caaualtlea. J1rael con· flrmed it.a jet.a bit the 1uerrllla .baae at Ru el-Aln. 1t sald the attack was aimed at pre· emptlnj' tuerrilla raids on larael and tbat all jets returned safely. There was no lsraell comment on tbe ship sinkina. f LEBANON'S STATE radio said the frogmen paddled lato Sidon before dawn and set three explosive charaes tfiat ripped apart the hull of the 350-ton freighter and sank the vessel. The broadca$t said tbe cargo consisted of canned foodstuffs from the Cypriot port of Limassol. The radio quoted a spokesman for the governor's office in Sidon. 25 miles south of here, as sayin& tbeship's captain and crew were ashore when the explosions took place and there were J>O cacuattiel. The QirilUan-eontrolled Vbtce' ot LebM«i radio aald that jfter the bluu, tile tro1m.n were retrt.ved by an larMU =t w1ttln1 at the ed1e of IA '• terrltortal waten. In Tel Aviv, the rnWtary com· mand said Israeli anU·atrcrall 1unners shot down a ho~•lr balloon carryln1 two PaletUnien iuerrlllaa on a cro11-border raid. It aald the raiders survived a c rash from several hundred feet and landed inside Lebanon, but Israeli ground troops pursued them and killed them in a fire right. IN BEIRUT, the Paleswuan LI be ration Front, a small guerrilla noup 1n the radical wine of Vasser Ararat's Palestine Liberation Organization. claime d responsibility for the infiltration attempt Meanwhile, a nine·day-old cease-rtre between Syrian soldiers and Christian rightist forces continued in eff"ct. with occasionaJ sniper fire disturbing the calm in the Lebanese capital. I' APW ........ Killing of hnsband heard on telephone SUPPORT PROTESTED -Demonstrators pour blood on American money and pictures of people killed in El Salvador, protesti(lg U.S. support of the El Salvador gov- ernment. The protest occurred Wednesday in front of the federal building in Portland, Ore. ' VIRGINIA BEACH. Va IAP> Rita Durham listened over the telephone as someone burst into her husband's office and fatally shot him moments after he said he was coming home, she said Beach, and he's tn Newport News dying or maybe already dead." Newport News as 20 miles northwestofVirgiQia Beach. President blasts Congress on taxes "Honey, I love you . I'll see you later." said David Durham, 36, duringhls9 :30p~ ESTTuesday phone call from his office as sales director for O(een Lawn Cemetery in Newpo"News. Mrs Durham 1old her son, Dav1d , 17. to continue to listen to the telephone. "in case he was stall alive and could talk" find ask for help HER SON, SHE said, at one pomt heard someone pick up the phone and say hello in a · 'realJy disguised, slurred and real deep" male voice. "Then there was just dead silence." WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Reagan, beginning to re· emerge as chief fighter for his economic p,rogram, insists that congressional alternatives to his embattled three-year tax cut plan "are not the answer. they are the problem ... "Taxes are ruuch too high to deal in half-measures." a con· valescing pre~nt said in a written s~~ent issued Wednesday, the deadline for fil. ing personal iocome tax returns. Reagan sa1Cl Amencans "are victims or inflation which pushes them into higher tax brackets." "I ASK e1ll Amencans to join me m changing our tax system so that next April 15 we shall began to celebrate tax reductions instead or simply one more pre· dictable and painful tax in· crease." he said The one-page statement was issued as Reagan continued his QUITTING? -Frank E . Fitzsimmons is likely to step down soon as president of the Teamsters Unior, several union Qfficials have told the New Yo!k Times. Fitzsim- mons is expected to quit because of tailing health, the paper said. recupenttion in the Whale House living quarters from a bullet wound inflicted in an assassina· lion attempt March 30 SUDDENLY, Mn>. Durham s aid, she heard a door slam in has office and heard him cry out. "Hey, man.I ain'tgot~" After the gunshot, Mrs. WHITE HOUSE officials say Reaaan is the administration's most errective salesman for the economic program Then she heard a gunshot. and the telephone clattered and jangled. ·'I heard him moan and breathe a couple times. and that was it ," said Mrs. Durham. 3?<3.:..-: __ Durham went to a neighbor's home and telephoned Newport New s police , who found Ourham's body Newport News Police Capt. JI .A Memory said it was unl'lear whether a robbery took place after the shooting and said police had no sw.pects Durham died of at least three gunshot wounds to the neck and head. he said. And in the weeks before the shooting, the pr"esident spoke out frequently an defense of his plan for budget and tax cuts Her husband --Was dead wtien police arrived. .. What could I do?.. she said Wednesday. "I was in Virginia I SPRING IRE .$89 DE R CASPERtfft CHICAGO "1'19 COLORADO SPRINGS 999 OKLAHOMA CITY ttff DENVER'l9 GRAND JUNCTION *ff9 PEORIAtt99 - KANSAS CITY 9U9 WICHRA tU9 NEW IJ:NI FA.DES TO EVERYWHERE. Don't wait for summer to have fun. Take a spring break . Now you can fly to your favorite city at a price that won't break your budget. ... Continental's having a special spring sale to Denver and many other cities throughout the coulltry. Continental can take you to Denver or beyond from the airport nearest you. Burbank, Ontario. Or Los Angeles International. To take advantage of our spring break sale, just purchase your ticket within three days afttr making your reservations. Should you need to change or cancel your plans, there is a $10 charge. Seats are limited. Fares are effective April 18 and all travel must be completed by May 31. 1981 ~These discount~ arc o~way Coeoti on selected flights. Fares on other flights arc slightly higher. Spring for a bargain. And call your travel agent, company trave.1 depertment or Continental. 'l'loH!t fnllfl 11111!1ollll flld ()1111rio 11Wtf bt •ll&IHly dilkf1"1 Hu .. ,it1tl<H1 Uft tmoil rnll!I lo<Mtlk t U" ~ ~' N"' IA~~ i... A11uplr.11to114"tt "'" m;itkti<IM. t'!'f'4 ..... en Amucd t F.ff ... o .. 4/l6 RUNES - f l t 1 I s H • l Desert calm returns following hectic joy for Columbia EOWA.RD8 AIR rbacE .feny pl~ ~JD roJJ beneath lt. wavea ol t.eOH aoU~lpaUon that Dryden'• new• center, where BASE (AP) -The •P•ee fbutt]e Attached to br1cket1 on the Jum· 1ave way to Tuesday' a frantic aome 1,500 loumallsta focused Columbia, at Hit ln tbe &Nrt bo Jet'• back. the Columbia wt.U triumph u tbe Columbia allded lnternaUona attention onTut 1un &fttr ita tucceHful tlnt leave California ror the two-day to a .,ear-perfect landln• on blrren landin' strip, lea ntsbt. alt.I wtt.h IC. noe19 in a trip to the Kennedy Space Rosen Dry Lake, Jeavtn1 an rowa of empty tables. Tr h ,1ant bolat u t.eeh.niclana tc:drry Center. lmmenae cloud of brown dust. cans overflowed and the room over the craft. pre-parin111t f~a Officltls al NASA'a Dryden Crowds or spectators, now was Uttered with discarded news "MADERA (AP) -One of 10 esc11pea from the Madera Coun-t~ jall wu taken lnto cuatody here by police 2\.\ daya after tJielr Jallb'reak. pl11yback return t.o f'lort~. Flt1bt ReHarcb Ceqter here eatlma~ as hi1h u 450,000 at releases, coffee cups, ciearet,te Ground crews IJ•mlqed tbe said early report. auHest tbe tbe time of the landlna, quickly butts and scraps of notes 'in ablp'a 31 000 beat•tetlata_.t tiles, shuttle aurvlved lte 5'~·bour deserted the fiat base, leavin1 several lan1ua1es. 1 cleansed' ltl fuel llnea anCI ma4e maiden voyaae with only a few vlewln& sites empty except for One phone rang imiatently fbr "Jeffery Foater, 22, of Madera was the fint e&capee to be re-· turned to jail. He was awaiting trial Wednesday on several counts of bur1lary. Plea 1teanJ.,. VlSAlJA (AP) -A Tulart County man ha.a pleaded inno- cent to two counta of mutilaUnc corpses prepared for burial at a funeral chapel here. other prtparatlona, lneludlne minor problems. At the •r•ce directional slgna, trash and some lon1·1one reporter. 11 placement of the lOO·fQOt-hieh center in Florida, lt wil be scores of blue and green porta· Columbia's next space fiieht~ a Hoiat shaped like an ~vetted outfittedforanotberjourneyinto ble privvtes, some painted with four -day venture, wlll oe "'U.'1 space, poaaibly ln about six stars and stripes. manned by astronauts foe Theboist aredand1ray1teel months. "It wu aU just fantastic," Engle, 48, and Richard Trul,,y, skeleton, will lift tbe 1buttle 60 Meanwhile, lbe pace at said Air Force Lt. Phil Delaney 43. · · ~ne haU of a hacksaw blade like the kind used by prisoners to cut throueh two seu of bars was found on Foster at the time of arrest, said Chief Gordon Skeels. Anatanmenl for Roy Huabes White , 23 , of Goahen was scheduled in Vlaalla Munlclpal Court for AprU 28. Bail WU set at $65,000. feet ln five days ao that a 747 Dryden began to relax from the of Edwud.s. "Considerine the A bout four months. after th4t. size of the crowds we bad, I a seven-day flight is planned. think tbe _,o military security Both the test flights are to lad people did In outatanding Job." at Edwards· lake bed. · Officers staked out the 200-300 blocks of Central A venue and captured Foster when he was seen headlng for the nearby Fresno River bed Kill.er sentenced Hearing delayed FRESNO <AP> -A pre· liminary hearin1 for a convicted murderer a c cused of masterminding a triple slaytne for revenge at FTan's Market here has been delayed. Lovesick worker denied benefits BAKERSFIELD <AP> -A 21-year-old man convicted of murder and 15 other felonies has been sentenced to die in the gas chamber. Kern County Superior Cou'1 Judge Marvin Ferguson accept· ed the jury's recommendation tbat David Balderas be given the death penalty Execution set SAN DIEGO <A PI The ex eculion of Robert Alton Harris, convicted of murdering two boys, has been set Cor JuJy 7 amid predictions 1t may be many months away 8oth attorneys agreed they needed more lime to prepare their cases for Clarence Ray Al· len, 50, a Folsom Prison inmate. A new hearing date was set for May 18. Gangs target,ed LOS ANGELES tAP> A community o rganization has started an anti-gang campaign with an announcement that 60 billboards have been donat.cd for advertising in an effort to stem gang violence in Los Angeles County. ·~· ........... SAN FRANCISCO <API California's highest court has re· fused to consider a former state employee's bid for disability benefits because his attempts at romance with a co-worker turned sour. The Supreme Court denied without comment a hearing sought by Michael Muessig, 40, who said a one-s ided romance caused problems which left h.im unable to work. As the 28-year-old Visalia man listened without emolaon, the date was announced by Supenor Court Judge Donald W Smith But a deputy state attorney general, Michael D Wellington. said "this 1s not going to be it " The campaign, called "Pray for Peace in Our Barrios," begins next week with the first 115 blue and yellow billboards carrying the slogan and a pie 1ture of hands clasped in prayer, DROP IN BUCKET -About 2 million of the 10.9 million He had been a property clerk with the stat~ Department or Transportatiori in Eureka until September 1979, and claimed he suffered an industrial injury to his nervous system because of .. e xposure to stresses a nd strains in the course and scope of his employment." ) said Lily Cruz of the Community Service Organization. taxpayers in California and Hawaii mail their federal in· come tax returns precisely on deadline. This is one of three large trucks ferrying bundles of returns to IRS center in Fresno. The bulk will arrive\Friday. Muessig said there were no problems until a new employee, Stephanie Launer, started work ··a pzrfczct ~1f't fut-a.aet<z.r or any ~pi.cia 1 OCC8510D " .. 44 Fashion Island· Newport &och · 7141644-5070 1001 Westwood Blvd.· Westwood Village· 2131208-3273 ~ MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD Delaney's Famous Homemade Clam Chowder, Boston or Manhattan .... 89c pt. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and top rhnice beer aged at least 30 days lo the peak of i;erfection Fresh 1..-0cal Zacky, Farms Turkeys St11tred with.. Delaney's Famous Homemade DresslnJ. Oven ready or just plain ................................ Mc lb. ~ASTER SUNDAY IS JUST ONE WEEK AWAY Delaney's will feature Spring Lamb, Frtub Local Zacky Farm'• Turkeys and or course Deraney'& tamous Aged Prime Ribs of Beef with all excesa bone and fat removect for your easy table-side carvin1. All Prime RJbe of Beef are aged at leut 30 days to the peak of perfection. For lhal trad1Uonal Euler Sunday Ham we wlll have Bar M bollele11 hams or bone·ln harnt eiOI whole or a full tr.II. We wotdd appreciate your; 1peeial ,orders in advance ao we can aa•ure you the proper quality and wel'V'lce we at Delaney's are famous for. Th•nk You! Thia.ad ertecllve Wtd .. 4115 lh.ru Tun .• 4/21 DELAllR ~S MORNING FRESH PRODUCE Loul Ranch Fresh Spinach ...... 29C bncb. Sweet Green Onions or Radishes 19c bncb. So. American Bananas ...... 4 lbs. for Sl.00 FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE 1 sso minimum) delivered In our completely refr11erated trucks Your order is under refrigeration from our store \o your door DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Del1nl'y'1 Private LlllH!I Cbampape 1750 mil> • Z.75 ea. or :tut per nae Delaaey'1 Private Label CltebU or Vl-.Jloee (7S0 mill ... . l.4t ea. or 17.18 per caae Berblaer Qen1D Blue c 750 mll > •.••••.••. Ue ea. Scoresby fk«elt (750 mlll ................. US••· (One Uter)......... . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . l .b ei. Wente Broe. Le Blaac De Blanc <750 mil>-.. S ... ea. All liquor and wine plus tu l ALL OF VS AT DELANEY'S 00'1.MET MARKET WISH YOU THE FINF..8"1' PEOPLE, OUR CV8TO)f Ell8, H~,PY EASTER. &ore Boun •·•, ao.ec1 ~~ Zl20 Newpon Blvd., Newport aell 673-5520 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- 25% OFF . SILK FLOWERS ' -, 2·01. GllAT GLASS STAIN Assorted Colors Reg 1 39 New & Exc11!n g P1t1e1ns lor 1981 ggc rl. C A Reed & Paper Ari SOLID COLOR PARTY GOODS 20o/o OFF NEW ... SHORT ROLLS OF SATIN RIBBON 13·#9 50 yds rl 140 25yds rl "SPRINKLE TWINKLE" ... FUN & EASY MOD PODGE Gloss or Matte 4 oz . reg I 59 I oz . reg 2 59 18oz , reg 3 59 32 oz . reg 5 09 1.22 1.88 2.8t 3.88 8 oz . CRYSTAL GLITTER reg 2 •9 1.88 FREE INSTRUCTION SHEETS AVAILABLE BE SURE TO SEE OUR WEEKLY, MANAGEAS SPECIALS lOIANGllll c•n•HMH1 WllT COVtNA QA"OIN OMNI • (111 ....... ,, (71'. IM4tl0 t + I Her predecessor sent written requisitions for supplies, but Miss Launer made requests in person sometimes several limes a day and "insisted that Muessig personally file her or- ders " Meussig became attached to her, accordihg t6 his petition, and proposed marriage. Miss Launer complained to police because Muessig refused to st.op trying to contact her. The state denied a disability claim. saying the problem was personal and not work·related It said the Labor Code pro- vides that "voluntary part1cipa. t1on in any off duty recreatipnaJ. social or athletic activity not constituting part of the employee's work-related duties . shall not be considered in- dustrial " ~--/ ,_ ..... __ / / \ -, ; , . ' ' .......... _ _. ' , ' -,. \ SOLID COLOR STREAMERS 1 11a·. 2 A yds CREPE PAPER 20 .. J( 2 112 yd s 2 pkg./1°0 STREAMERS 500 2.19 SPRAY PAINT \ GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON EASTER MERCHANDISE 5' CELLOPHANE Auor1ed Colors 69°'rl. MAY 5 lS "CINCO DE MAYO" PINATAS 1.99. 3.99 SALE ENOS MON . APRtL 20 Ct.OSED EASTER ' • LOS ANGELES <AP) -ID a twlat lo cblld-cuatoid)' cue1, a 1tr1 bom out of wedlock 4"' years aco II •ulnc lft an attempt t.o force her f atber to vtatt her. But 1tat• Court of Appeal Ju1Uct Bobtrt Klnt•l•Y aald thle weet tbtt even ff the court i1tued .n ordef requlrtn1 Owen C. Olpb> tq vtllt bl1 daqbter, be was uocen.tn lt •ould be en· forceable. "11 the abertlf cotnc to co out and handeutt papa, drac hlm to maD>a'a house and aay, 'Sit there for two boun and I'll let you 10 home?"' Kin11ley asked. The suit wu bro'-'&ht aeatnat Olpin, a member of the pres· tiglous Loe An1.eles law ftrm of O'Melveny and Myers, on behalf of Kimberly Anne Olpin. Kim· "IF AN adult baa a rllht to 8D· force vllltatloo a1atnat child.ren, the ehlld has a rtabt t.o eaf~ee vt11tatlon aaalnat an adult," 1ald Iris. 'Louden, a Ucented attorney lo other states who ba• yet to pass the Calllomla bv exam. She said the vbltatJoo Jdea came about after the chlld began com.1D1 bome from school demandlne: "Wbere'a my daddy?" "She •tarted tellina people be was on Man, be lived bl a apace ship," Ma. Louden said. The Supertor Court ln which Workman realizes ighest ambition NEW YORK (AP) -Jim "You're just dolng tbia window. Cook enjoyc..>d his 10-year win· There's nothing else to worry dow-washing career In London, about." but always there was a yearning ' Even the sight of the "very for the Big Time -King Kon1's tiny people" below did not daunt stomping 1round.s, the Empire Cook. Contest organizers did State Building. take out a $2.2 million insurance This week , Cook's dream policy, just ln case, anCI they became reality And as a result pos tponed the culmination of a single pane on the 78th floor oi Cook's dream by one day the 102·story landmark may because of rain. never again shine so brilliantly. ftOOK SPENT about an hour "A-MY·zing, truly amyzlng," washing a single pane, as wave said Cook, a Cockney, as he upon wave of reporters went to dangled 1,000 feet above 33rd the window to interview him. Street, secured only by a har-·•He's in bis glory," said ness. Barbara Med.id , who works on Cook had won the chance to the floor for Diesse Shoes, but make h.is dream come true in a took time out to watch Cook 's distillery contest. Six others will exploits. have opportunities to JOin a In the end, the window was Parisian can-can team, run the clean. Actually, it had been m arathon at Mar at hon in cleaned earlier that morning by Greece, or live with elephants in A cnerican window was hers ri Lanka. before Cook arrived, according ANOTHE R MAN plans to to Bill Pilch, who has scrubbed ake the Pentecost Leap at a the Empire State Building's win· acific atoll leaping from a dows for three years and other ree, with a vine tied to his ankle Manhattan panes for 22 years. o break the fall. "A window is a window," said ln comparison, Cook doesn't Pilch. "What's the difference? If eel his dream is either bizarre he was here for a while, he'd r dange rous ·'I feel very feel the same way." ecure," he· said, though gusLS AFTERWARDS, Cook accept· &s high a s 50 mph were ed a golden scatue~te of the measured on the windward side building and an honorary mem· of the building bership and set of tools from the "It's not dangerous.~ s_aJ_.d_. __ Window Washers Union. • •••II J llEVHOl.OS TO&ACCOCOMPANY 20 FILTER CIOARETTt:S • tbe l&dt WU Of'tliDalJ.J. ,ftled N · • tected the suit, ..._.cb Uie moU.er Hid ~pl« Klmbu!1. 41 '180 CaJRI about It," the aaid. "Tbe court hu liven lta approval to emoUonaJiy aba· donlq a ,ehJJd." Tbe 2Dd District Court ot Ap. peal bu 90 daya to decJ4e after Tue1day'1 oral arguments. Olpin , wbo intUally aclmowledeed betna Kimberly's father and voluntarily coptribut· ed to her support, stopped the r.ayments a year after her birth n 1976. But Ma. Louden estab- lished patemJty in a S&q>ertor Court judplent a1atmt him ln 1979, which be did not contest. Durine Tuesday's hearin&, Klnf sley wondered if ,orcint Olp n to visit bJa dau1bter wouldn't simply result in frustration for the fat.Her and daughter because of the lack ot spontaneity or happiness. "WE CAN lead a horse to water but can't make him drink. Isn't that th1a case?" Kingsley asked. Attorney James Griffin, arguing on behalf of the girl and her mother, conceded that could be a problem but ln ... led aucb an order was a proper first step rather than simply allowing tu' to "take a walk" out of Jiii daughter's life. "It is one thine to order him to spend the time and anqther to pass judement on the quality of the time spent," Griffip said. ''The court can order !such a thing to happen. What ._appena is left up lo the human qualities of the parent." ·~-........ Kimberli/ Anne Olpin, 4~. holdl photo o/ her /other, Owen c. Olpin, a Loi An{lele1 latDl/ft'. The cldld, Umng with her mother, u ming for vUUotlon righU from her father. • C.AJlSON CITY <AP ~Nevada Hi1bwa1 Pa rol trooJ)el'I have been advlM;l to start wul.na 85 "en.rty ·-· Inc" Roes for drivers tr:n• between 55 mpb and 70 m , in line with a 6ew law 1l by Gov. Bob U1t. . Troopers were al.lo told not to view the eued 1paedin1 la't' u a sl1naJ to atop wrtUn1 tlckitl for drivers travellne up to 70 D)Pb ln 5~ mph zone.. But PatroJ Cot Pete Zadra conceded tber.•1 a "definite poeaibillty" of fewer tickets belnt iasued. Zadra also sald the t~ will have to plan ror 7·Ai"ID~ crease in deatha and seve,.. in· jury accident.a. There's no dOubt in our minds." But be also aaid the state Leglalature and Gov. Llst did what they bad to do. •'I feel the governor and the Le&islature repre~nted thf t>eo- ple of this state. They woulcf not have lntroduced a bill of this type and the governor certainly would not have signed It ii they didn't think this was what the people wanted," he added. List, who signed the biU this , week before a cheering crowd at a Hawthorne town meettn1, in· sisted that the change in the law was not a signal to drivert to violate the SS mph lirrlit. The law. which took effect lm· mediately once List signed iJ. makes Nevada the second state to ease penalties fo r exceeding the federally mandated SS mph speed limit Ms Louden added, "How many children would not have taken a road to crime, im· poverishment and jail had they had their rather's attention and love and not been shunned first by their fathers and then by society for having been born out of wedlock?·· Killings enrage village Pleading on behalf of the father, attorney Lesley A. An· drus argued that there was no legal authority for such a court order and that to lssue one would violate the 13th Amend- ment to the U.S. Constitution forbidding involuntary servitude. ·'While lhe goal of any society s hould be to foster and en- courage close parental·child re· lationshlps, such relationships cannot be legislated or judicially ordered," Ms. Andrus said KFAR YASSIF, Israel <APJ - Tension runs high in this Chris· tian village after two people were killed by a Moslem mob that rampaged through the town seeking vengeance for the kHI· ing of a youth at a soccer match. Police arrested rive men and searched all vehicles entering Kfar Yassif, eight miles east of the Med.iterranean. to prevent the villagers from stockpiling weapons for another round in the vendetta. Kfar Yass1f leaders com plained bitterly lhat Israeli ~--------------------------------- , I . 20 CIGARETTES LOW T"R ·CAM El. QUALITY ; f police failed to prevent the at· tack , and that many of the arms used against them were lsr aelJ army issue. They decreed a two· day general strike in the village More than 100 att~kers came by foot and car from the neighboring setUement of Julis this week and shot up Kfar Yassif with submachine·gun fire and threw grenades . Both viUages are lsraeli Arab, but Kfar Yassif is Christian, while Julis ls populated by Druse who follow an offshoot doctrine of Islam. A Kfar Yassif man, 33·year old Daoud Habib, was killed in his house as be and his wife were baking pastries for Easter. witnesses said. Later, an 18· year·old high school student. Tahsln Ivriq, died in a hospital Ten other Kfar Yassif people were wounded. S ixty o ne house s were damaged. three of them gutted by fire, and half a dozen cars we re torched. The windows of the ehurch were smashed and its rooftop cross hit by bullets. Klar Yassif residents said several stores were looted .. • 20 CIGARETTES 1 LOW TAR CAM EL QUALITY .: '1 \ • ' u Mead Dizon, board chairman at Hamsh'.1. point• to origfftal ttate lt4l of Caltfonda whkh he iall return thU .,ear. Seal to go h9me · Nevada to return California emblem RENO (AP ) -After an absence of a century and a quarter. California is getting back its original state seal. The hand·p~nted seal, which disappeared after a fire destroyed the state Capitol in 11&4, has been on display at Har- rah's Automobile Collection sihce 1962, viewed annually by thousands of Californians un- aware they were looking at a missing part of their state's his· tory. ''It is truly an historic object, and it's because of the im- portance of that object to the state of California that we at Harrah's have decided ... that we will return this seal to the state," Harrah's Chairman Mead Dixon announced Tues- day DIXON SAID the seal would , r&main at the automobile collec- • lion in nearby Sparks during the peak summer tourism months while the two states decide on "an appropriate time and method to tender that return so that its significance will not be lost Dixon said Harrah's offacials were surprised by the furor that broke out in the California Legislature Uus year when it was learned that the historic emblem was in Nevada hands. The Assembly backed a res- olution by William Leonard, ft. San Bernardino, calling for tbe return of the seal. used at the first meetlng of the Legi.slature in Satl'"lfose in 1850. Noting the resolution urged · "all. Californians to help in get- ting the seal back." Dixon said, "I expected lo have 20 million Californians coming over the border." HE SAID THAT once Harrah's learned of California's interest in getting the seal back, there never was a question of its re- turn. The seal hung in the state Capitol from 1852-1854, when a fire destroyed the building. The governor managed to rescue the seal, but it became lost in the confusion. It reappeated in a Sacramento bank vault in 1932 and became part of the coJl ection of W. Parker Lyon , a collector of memorabilia and a descendant of Caleb Lyon , who designed the seal The ·late William Harrah purchased the contents of the Lyon museum in Arcadia, Calif., in 1955 and moved the artifacts. including the seaJ. to Reno. 20 CIGARETfES Ore~~n billS U.S. /Or war SALEM, Ore. (AP> -Tbe 1tate o1 <>re1oa. niurtn• that 100 years la a Iona enoqb trace "rlod, is dunnint tbe United Statel ror payment ot ctvU War clalma totallnl Sl.J mUUon. State biltortan Cecil £dwardl aald Oreaon ran up the bW when lt musterfd local resident.a to man 1arnaona a1alnat lndian attacks after federaJ troops pulled out to help flcht the Confederacy. The state Senate hu vcMd unanimously for a memorial ur1Jn• Conaress to reimburse Ore1on for • 'sub1tantlal eicpemea lncWTed in fW"bllblnc troops and aidinl the United States lo maintatnin1 the common defense of the Oreton Trail, miners and setUen in the Civil War period." ) SEN. E.D. PO'ITS, D-Grant.a Pass, :said the money plus Interest comes to about $45 million, but tile state Is willing to setUe for $1.3 million, today's equivalent of its expenses during the Civil War. "We are offering Congress a bargain baseOlent type or settlement," Potts t<Hd the Senate. ·'Certainly mo~e than 100 years seems to me to be an excessive grace period." The state's efforts to make the federal government pay !Seemed headed for success when ln 1906 the case went to the U.S. Court of Claims. A headline in the Morning Oregonian of June 30, 1906, stated : "Oregon Claims Soon To Be Paid." IN 1108, THE court agreed that part of Oregon's claim should be reimbursed. But the court said the state's demands for repayment or bounties and \ extra wages used to entice men to replace U.S. soldiers should not be borne by the federal government. No payment was ever made for any or the claim, Edwards said. Congress never passed an appropriation bill authorizing payment. Oregon made stab:; over the years to get the money. but the claim lay forgotten until Edwards found old newspaper clippings referring to the Civil War expenses and renewed the effort. OrangeCoa1t DAILY PtLOT(Jhurad • Aprll 18, 1981 .. \ Watm 1Your. new_,,. Installed IW profeSSlonals, and ~II know ;my ~ · we can offer atelJ an . exceltentwa~ FFC9 SOtartan• avalabte onty at our Armstrong Floor Fashion center store. st, warranties =ucJ~ Services. we se11 the DeSt noon made bV ArmstronQ, Amerta'S leadlnO ftoortng manutacturer. and then Install them by Slcllled craftsmen. we baClc up vour new floor wtttl CIOUble warranty COYerage: • The QUalltV of material Is guar.lnteed bV Armstrong; • 1nsta1tatlon Is guaranteed bV our FIOor FashlOn cente,. store. we Invite YoU to come In to read our warranty. we think vou·u aoree It could come onrv from a company than confloent of the Qualltv Of Its products and proud Of Its services and people Mli'tlt'. 20 CIGARETTES 20 CIGARETTES G~M~4, LIGHTS LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE· Campaign ordinance proving ineffective Huntington Beach has a campaign ordinance that doesn't work.- The ordtbance seeks ·to restrict individual donations to candidates for city office to $200, but because it's poorly written it's unenforceable. In the opinion of City Al· torney Gail Hutton and the Orange County District At- torney's oHice, the ordinance penalizes the person making ex- cessive donations not the can- didate who accepts the money. The penalty for donating in excess of the $200 limit is a max- im um $100 fine . This hardly seems hars h enoug h to deter someone who's willing to break the law by giving money a way in the first place. Another loophole in the law allows the $200 res triction to be Ignored if the donation is given to a committee "working on behalf" of a candidate . When donating to such an "independent" committee the sky is the limit The S200 don a t ion limit originally was supported by city leaders to prevent elected can· didates from owing political favors to financiaJ backers. There also was a concern that without donation limits, elec· tions routinely would be won by the biggest spenders. The City CounciJ will con· sider the direction of a proposed campaign ordinance at next Mon· day's meeting. The fact is that the city attorney's office needs to write a new ordinance that clear- ly states the rules of running for city office. If donation restrictions are unenforceable, improved dis· closure rules should be instituted so voters know where the respec- tive candidates get their cam- paign money, which often is a good indicator of political philosophies. Next year, candidates will wage campaigns for four City Council seats and the City Al· torney's office. At present, there isn't an ef. f ective campaign ordinance to regulate the election. Sports fees valid In a n effort to keep its athletic program afloat, the Hun tington Beach Union Hi gh School District is considering charging students a $25 fee to play sports and increasing tickeC prices to a thletic competitions In view of the financially troubled district's $3.8 mil!Jon re· duction in next year 's budget. the fees and increased ti cket prices seem reasonable means to sup- ple ment the sports program. The $25 fee would be levied each season for each sport. with a m aximum charge of $50 The fee would be waived for students from lower economic back grounds whose parents couldn't a fford to pay A maximum fee for families with more than one student athlete also would be instituted by the board. according to the general proposal Ticket prices to sports events probably would be increa~ed by 50 cents. When t he distnct cut $3.8 million from its budget, teachers. counselors and librarians were laid off. The school day was re- duced for juniors and seniors and athletic programs were cut by $300,000 This included eliminating gymnastics, surfing, golf and girls' junior varsity field hockey, as well as closing the district swimming pools 5112 months of the year a nd restricting public u se of nighttime tennis and basketball courts to save money on lighting. A Superior Court in Santa Barbara upheld the sports fee re· cently and two local districts Capistrano Unified and Laguna Beach Unified both charge stu- dents a fee to participate in athletics. Undoubtedly. school s ports and associated programs are an important part of the high school learning experi ence. for both the competitor and spectator The fee and raised ticket prices seem good alternatives to reductions in the programs now available, and possibly may pro- vide a means to reinstate those recently eliminated. Job not popular Three of the seven appointed Huntington Beach planning com- missioners have left their posts before their terms of office ex- pired. This record doesn't speak well for the relatively new method of appointment. which call s for each City Council member to handpick a planning commissioner. The commissioner is supposed to serve as long as the appointing City Coun ci I member is in office. But two of the former com- missioners' terms were marred by poor attendance. One resigned shortly after being appointed. The other recently was fired by the councilman who appointed him. ,_ The third former planning commissioner recently resigned because his job was becoming too time-eonsuming. The argument against having • each council member picking a commissioner was that close friends and political allies would be chosen, but not necessarily the most qualified available can- didates. Prior to October 1979, the en- tire City Council voted on ~ach ap· pointment to the Planning Com· mission. The seve n -member commission considers new con- struction and iss ues of zoning law It usually meets twice a month and commissioners are paid $15 a meeting. The meetings often are long and the issues complex. lt is not a job to be taken Hghlly. City C.uncil members should fully realize this and carefully study potential appointees to in- s ure they can meet the job require· men ts for the full term of office. Opinions expressed in the space a bove are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- presi.ed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvit· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Me~. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd I Hold that tiger Mentioned lon~ ago that the tiger in that elderly piece ol music called ·~Ticer Rag'' alluded not to a big cat ~ul to the &owesl possible pokeT hand. Jazz musicians called such an un - fortunate hand of cards a Uger. ln a ipooey 1ame, it waa exceedingly d@Sel'OUI to bluff with a hand ltke that. ''Holct tbat User" became a card pl-.rer',1 ~unt. It 1hou1d be l\ot· ed, further, that tbe card 1ame'& ex- pression also POPUiarised the phr•ae: "To have a t11er by the tatJ ." The early "midwife" most usually was a man. The word doesn't tnean that the person 10 Identified is some sort of wife. It means the penon ls "with (the) wife." Am told you can now buy popcorn that tastes like chocol•te, oran1e or coffee, if you'd Ute. There wu a time on thlt earth, you know, when the beavers were 1oven feet tall. Socia~ Security goal fa ding A spedal panel appointed by Congress has recommended sweeping changes in the Social Security program. And while there can be no denying the need for changes to restore a measure of Lnlegrily lo it, some of the proposals would come o1!ar to d efeating the origmaJ intent and purpose of the pro- gram Commenced in 1937 as a retirement program to fill the void which existed both in private and public employment. at has come to its present disastrous financial condition through tampering by congressmen more interested in gaining re·election by playing Santa Claus than m the long·lerm success of the program. Thus the plan has been broadened to include a ra ft of unearned benefits which threaten its solvency. These "add-ons" include payments to students 18 lo 22, to disabled workers a l any age, and Med i-cli're. HAD THE PENSION program been fully fWlded and the money invested properly there would still be need for changes. One of the recommendations as to divorce Medicare from SS which, o( course. was never planned to carry that load President Reagan has taken the position that the time has come to remove all of the "add-ons" and revert SS to its basic r etirement role These are sound recommendations and essential if the program is lo fulfill 1b original purpose But many an Congress are reluctant to eliminate the "add-ons" and instead are leaning to the proposal to raise the eligibility age to 68 and that of early retirement to 65 as a means to save m oney by reducing payouts As a money-saving device 1t could on· Iv be improved by raising the eligibility llRl WlTIRS age even higher As 1t stands countless workers die before r eaching the present e li gibility age a nd, without survivors, the funds they have paid in remain with the governm ent tr the age is raised there will be even fewer around to col· lect the pensions for which they paid t heir money all their working years THE PROPONENTS of a higher age contend that the average age of hfe ex· pectancy has increased dramatically in the years s ince SS was established Ac cording to the U.S Natio nal Center for Health Statistics. an estjmated 68 per cent of all babies born m the U S. today will be alive at age 70 and more than 25 percent will stall be around at age 85 Thal may be so but insurance tables s how hfe expectancy presently to be an average age 70 for white males and 77 for wtute females a nd about six years less for non-caucasians . Those figures clt:arly show that a s ub- stantial percentagt: of male workers would bt-dead before reaching age 68 and another large percentage Just a couple of years av.ay from death Penswn program!) have been sold to the puhhc on the idea that workers \\OUld be provided with a fev. years in v. ha ch to rt'lax and enJO)' hfe after a l1fet1me of labor po the Congressmen now thank people ~hould have to work until they die? FURTHERMORE, the life expect<in cy tables do not rcfll'C't v. hat percenla~e of those v.ho do hv<.· beyond 65 are still physically or mentally able to continue work The fact as that many retire early for physical reasons and many e lder!} who may wunt to continue to work find their ages bar them from most en· dcavors Ont' changt• v.h1ch not only is long overdul' hut would (•laminate an ··add· on prov1~1on never contemplated originally 1s tht• hm1tat1on on earnings for thost• coll<.•rting SS No less an aulhorit} than Senator Barry Goldv.al<'r ha~ declart'd the SS money belongs to thc \\orker'>. not the govern- ment and lhe ceahngs on l'arnmgs dis- courages older p<>oplt• Crom remaining productive Tht> fact 1:. an assured in- come enable~ m,rny who have worked at menial JOb~ ..111 tht•1r 111,cs of necessi- ty. lo hnd fulfillml·nt 1n endeavors they enJ<>} Federal money policies tax savers To the Editor: A noted economift was quoted recent· ly as saying that if the government we r e put in charge of the Sahara Desert, in five years we would be out of sand. This may be true. For example. the m ysterious Federal Reserve Board pursues monetary policies like an old woman trying to cross Highway 5 on foot. First going in one direction. then another, nobody knows what to expect next Meanwhile, people are urged to cut down spending and save money and get it into savings accounts if possible. Right? And what happens to the tn· terest we get on these accounts. it is taxed as income, right? But that's wrong! This is double taxation, or worse those bard-held dolJars have already been taxed into morbidity. It is only one part of the Giant Snafu in Washington, but it does happen to ~ one that could easily be corrected : ~imply abolish income tax on savings interest and let us use that money to help squeak by the continually higher cost of staying alive. l MRS. L.W. HUNOSDOERFER Land val.ues acre /or adjacent l-0.nd in the ltate park and the /~ Company·• 500-acre lan4 gift for the park WCJ.! valtU?d at $12 milUon, or $24,000 an acre becawe of it& development poten tial. Ti~s have mdeed changed along the Orange Coo.st Editor Responsibility. To the Editor: Kudos to Jim Wood of Corona del Mar for has excellent article in the Sunday, April 5 paper titled "Acting MAILBOX Responsibility Worth Oscar . Too." Maybe ooe more person should come forward in the John Hinckley case and that's the judge from Charlotte, South Carolina who fined Hinckley $67 for try· ing to earry three guns on an airplane wtlen the federal penalty was $5,000 and 5 years ln jail -the judge trying to keep jt a municipal case rather than a federal case maybe did the country a disservice. People being responsible for their ac- tions is the key. JIM DEBOOM MU information To tbe Editor: l have been appalled at the lack of preci8enete among the media regarding the statemenu of Secretary of State Haig on devolution of presidential pow4'r. Secretary Haig was wronf in saying the Constitution authorized 'him to take charge, and so are you in saying the same thing, puttlng him further down the line, THE CONSTITUTION does not pro- vide for devolution of power to the Speaker of the Route of Repre1en· tatlves. the Pretldenl Pro Tem of the Senate, tbe Secretary of State, etc. Artl· cle U, SecUon I provtdea tor.devolution upon the Vice President and turther provldet that Coqrqa may by law pro- vide for l\&rtber devolutloo. Con1reu baa by law provlded lor •udl but thla may be:b 1ed by acl ot eon, ..... alone, rlnf no amendment to U.. C08'Utu 011. nor rallflcatlcm bJ the States The provision does not rise to cons titutaonal stature The XXV Amendment provides mter alia for the temporary abdication or power of the President or temporary as- s umption of power by the Vire Presi· dent You might l'ons1der apologizing to the school children among your readers and setting the rerord straight JAMES W BL'RTON Citizens Ollsted To the Editor You should be aware of the growing scandal an the community over pro· ressors from various local colleges as - s igning students lo attend the recent publi c hearing on the Bolsa Chica de- velopment plans Many people an the a udience over· heard teachers t aking roll just prior \o the Board of Supervisors hearing On April 1, in the Santa Ana City Council c hambers. CITIZENS WHO arrived on time tor the hearing a lso were unable to find seats and were forced to stand outside because many seats were beiiJ saved by s tudents who were assigned to arrive early. Dr. Peter Gr een. a teacher at Golden West College and one of the group of teachers who form the leadership of the Amigos de Bolsa Chka, thte•tened a grand Jua investigation because be dfd not like the recommendatlona ot ttae county planners on the Bolla Chica ls- 11.te. I think the .qrand Jury should In- vestigate possible misuse otJ>ub c funds among tbe taxpayer-support,ed teacbers who are using tbe school aa a base of operations lor their o1'n Political schemes. BILL HANSON DEAR PAT DUNN: The Appllince Doc· tor In Costa Mesa lnJtalled a new oven ln IPY kijcbeo lut !>«. 15. He took obe of my aolld oak ld\cl)en drawen ou\ to bd recut to flt the new opening, and bu never retun'led the drawer. I've called many times ooly to be told repeatedly, "I' U drop it oft tomorrow. " Can you help me cet my drawer back? J.C., Colsta Mesa It took A YS more dlaa a moa&ll ol repea&· eel pbolle ca.lb too, ba& finally &lie IUU"epaired drawer WH retuned &o yoe. A reUabJe source fer wood cattiDg Jobe ol au klada .... been given to you, and tbla repair yoa report can be 1ccompU11bed wltboat fart.Iler delay. Plams get border~ DEAR PAT DUNN: We will be movin1 to another state this summer and plan to take our house plants in the car with us. Will we bave any trouble taking these planU across the Arit.ona border? D.R., Huntington Beach Ao inspector fer tbe a1rlealtaral comml11Bioner's omc:e says your pluta wlU be checked mal.dly for l.uec:ta at tbe Art--• border. If tbey pau the teat, you'll be allowed to bring Ulem into tbe a&ate. If not, tbey will be conllacated. Tbls appUes &o tbe usual house plan ... bat not lo d&ru treea el any slae, wblcla may aot legally be transported out of tbe atate. Tbe apicultaul eomllliuloeer'a office at 1010 S. Harbor, Anaheim will llllpect your plants, but should tbey attract any last-minute llllects before tbe border lnapec:Uoa, tbey will be eoa.Q,eated. A YS \saggeata plants be l1111pected I• Oran1e County and then bathed bt a mixture ot dtree tablespoons of hory Flakes tboroa1hly dJasohed ln a pUoe of water, or c:arefally sprayed wJtla a claemlcal Insecticide recommended by your nursery. Eltber method should kUJ off any new buga and allow yoor plants to pass Inspection. • "Cot a problem? Then wnte to Pat \..1 Dunn Pat will cut rl!Cl ta~. getting . • the an.noers and action you Med to • .t0lve i~qu1ties in government and n btuineu. Mall your questwn11 to Pat Dunn. At Your SeTVtce, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P 0 Bo:r 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As many lettera CJ3 poasible will be '17161«Ted. but phoned ·inquiriea or letter1 not mcludmg the n~'a /uLI name. addrua and business hours' phone number cannot be con.rideTed Th\3 column appears dady ez cepl Sundaya." / SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP) -A fauJ· tY ebalr lift that IJUµred 17 ak.ien lut week un· derwent teveral repali;a before a~ate l,i· vesU1ator1 arrived to in•peet it, lawyen for Heave1>1!_1Yalley Sid Reaort aduux. "We ah di•turbed that equipment bu b_e9n moved out or lta original location," Art Carter, chief of the state DJvialoo of Occupational Health and Safety, aald. ''Tbls may affect the tnveatlgatioo Insofar as determining the caustr. ·' THE ACCIDENT hap- pened April 5 when a lift cable slipPed its track and six chairs fell, three hilting the ll'QUDd. Six of the 17 injured persons were hospitalized; the most seriously injured was former San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto's aranddaughter, Michaela Alioto, who may be permanently paralyzed. t:Dl'f'Olt'S NO"t~ -Jo• Barbr' COHrtd CM qace JW09r'G"' froM. tfw firft ~ =Apollo lJ. Htr• he ..U <*I t 1tt1 oia tM °"""' of tlttr .-ccn• ul 1hMJtlf '"''*'··· ~~!.~U. The' Colwnbia baa land.cl. It was sniootber than O'Hare or JFK. One could not help but tbllik perba1>1 ll was too amooth. Sooner or not too much later, aucb craft u these will be aa common u scheduled airllnee, carting ordinary eartblln1s to n earby orbs for holiday amone ~he rocks and rills. There, we. will camp out where there can be no campfire, tell ghost stories where we are the only ehosta. And la~. but not much, en- trepreneurs wlU improve our ad· venturous yearnings. We will be offered wei&hlless roller coasters at some Disneyland among the atan, forgetting to ask what good la a roller coaster in weightlessness. SOMEWHERE, way above or below, watcbin~ over or under us as the cue may be, will be the Space Foret -slee k, short· winged, silver corsairs, laser guns at the ready, just lo case there is an enemy. nay alien, shadow in the galaxy, coming from heaven-knows-where. .............. Before state in · vestigators arrived the following day, a chair guard that was uaed to control swingine lift chairs had been bent back into shape, said Barry Bunsbart, a lawyer for Heavenly Valley. Meanwhile, back on Earth, in some parliament or congress, t~e will be h~arlngs on the re- currlng contatntnation of the tunar surface trom the deeass· ing of Hefty bags laden with pie· nic debris; the Space Park Service will be admonished to leave the moon just as we found it in 1969; and New York City will ·be forbidden to dump its sludge off the coast of Mars. The a~ end of Columbia's cargo bay and tail assembly are shown in photo taken from stiU camera aboard the space shuttle. HE SA.JD some other repairs were made un- der supervision of the U.S . Forest Service, And we will be miuing something. which leases the land to TB EBE IS no question: the resort. Columbia was as inevitable as · capable of orbital and inlra- orbilal acrobatics, and capable of breaking the four-minute mile. or whatever else record of achievement is. We will press on. We wiJl press on. And we will be missing something. The danger is letting it all become commonplace, of reduc- ing the adventure to agate type, of forgetting Gagarin and Glenn, or Ed White taking an un· believable step into the void, or the silver humanoid silhouettes doing a bunny hop on the moon, or the ache of mind and im· agination looking at Saturn and Jupiter and Mars. The unavoidable peril in sue· cess is taking it for Jranted "They (state officials) the DC-3, the Boeing 707, the are trying to imply that Boeing 747. Sooner or later these something sinister is fl at-tummied hybrids of space happening," Bunsbaft and air will be r ising and said. "I am not sure descending with al least the what their problem is." regularity of Concordes, p~cking Lawyers for one of the up the mute and tired satellites accident victims h ave of yesteryear and replacing gotten a San Francisco them with beeping offspring, Superior Court to pro--destined to serve earth for years hibit Heavenly Valley lo come. Bail set ·at $10 million from making further re· Nor will it stop there, because pairs or modifications to mankind doesn't stop anywhere. equipment involved in The Columbia will breed Ila own the accident. kin. maneuverable space ships SANTA BARBARA CAP> -A Texas man held on drug and assault charges had his bail boosted lo a hefty $10 million after the judge said he learned a jet was ··waiting to whisk you Rob1ns6n 's THE CHIPYARD OUR NEW SHOP IN NEWPORT BOASTS COOKIES SO FRESH, THE OLDEST IS ONLY 25 MINUTES OUT OF THE OVEN. out or the state ... Judge Joseph Lodge said he raised the bail from i1 s original $250,000 because he believed 40-year-old Michael Bickers or Dallas would flee if he was freed on bond. I 0 7t I T PASADENA (AP> - ''Youne people are 10-lna to apace. lt'a Just a question of economies and time for t1UI 1-.ra-tion:• a NASA educatlob officer predicts, Jim Poindexter, wbo atoppecj over here briel· ly on bis wa,y from Edwards Air Force Baae to Houston, saJd be believed the apace abut· tie had alven the coun· try a mu-ch -needed morale boost and will lo· spire more younasters to become astronautJ, making regular space travel just a matter of time. "Altbougb I am not a· prophet, I am a pilot and an educator," Poindex· ter said. ''The en · lhusiasm I have seen on the part of students and instructors is very positive. The young people's minds are made up. They are go· ing to go into space." Of lbe successful voyage of the shuttle, he added, "The country needed something positive, and the Colum· bia provided it." Frost toll #wavy in orchards MODESTO (AP> As the effects of a weekend frost became. more evi- dent, growers and farm officials in the northern San Joaquin Valley have issued worsening im· pressions of damage. Paul La Vine , Stanislaus County farm adviser , said the most se rious damage oc· c urred in a lm ond, walnut and apricot or- chards He s aid he expects growers to seek a dis- aster declaration from county s upervisors because some farmers sustained total losses ' ,• .. N~ TtU. (AP) -Crllty Lue WU H• WU IO lmpr•ed ... Nill ti&* of ber voice wa1~ cllibM 11 Y•an Mo in her ldtcben lo lut to radio atatlool and oPeed a aAOtclub ln But Peorta, W., wbeo 1be r be1an •lnilnl tbe Jlm Peoria In t• fOf' btt to displa1 her talent. Reeve-Jllt "Pout WaU.. •• lJU1e d1d •be know tbat thia 1POGtane1ty would lejd to a ~ cootract THE l'AlllLY •ovso to NubvUle three llftdpl1ceberamoqcountrymullc11top1fiiten. -years later, and 8tolkr beta a record company Her buaband, Lee Stbller, Who WU wateblnc for the main pu.rpote of eQOltu bl.I wife'• talent. the World Sertu on te~on at the Ume, beard She wu 1Jped to ~rty Recoida, a major label, her •inl an4 wu impressed. Tbroufb hll de· two years a10. termlnaUon, she bel•.9'.. linllnl ln ntcbtclubt, Ml11 Lane, who baa a seven-plece road band, moved to N.,bville lo 1~ and bu been releutn1 ll quick to credit bet plpe-1mokin1 huabaod for Top 10 record.I 1ioce lt'77. much other 1uceea1. 8£& IATESI' BIT la 0 1 Have a Dream." Lut Octo~, BWboard maa~. the trade pubUca· tion, plcll:ed ber aa the fOurtb top female art11l in country muaJc, ahead of 1upe.rstan like Barbara M•nd.rell, "Dolly Parton and Loretta L~. Tbe ma1allne cboee ber "One Day at a Time' u coun- try muaic'a aecond moe.t popular 11n1le recordin1 of the year. Her career la all the more remarkable for ill atmilarjty to Miu Lynn's. Both were encoura1ed by their husbands, and both began 1in1ln1 pro- fea1looally after starting families. Mila Lane, •1. baa fauehten •led 19 and 20 and• 17-year-old son. "I'm really Jl•d it happened DOW and. not when l,wu a teen-aier. I'm able to handle it now. 1 can ~oy llfe." PtJrliament aluuys a sobering forum LONDON (AP) -Britiab lelillaton.are never drunk on duty, and that's oalciaf. Tbe statement wu m~ by Speaker Geor1e Thomu, a lilelon1 teetotaller, after a member of the House of Lords accused lawmakers ln the lower chamber House of Commons of "almost perpetual drunkenness." JUST DUCKY -Fuziy one-day-old ducklings waddle over Pedro, a two-year-old tom cat at the Salinas duck ranch of John Metzer. Metzer sends mor~ than 20,000 ducks to market annually for Easter. "My kids sacrificed a lot," says Ml11 Lane, who was voted the top n~w female vocatiat by the Academy of Country Muatc in tm. "They turned ovt well.'' Stoller, a aaJesman, lhad never heard hJa wlfe sln1 during seven yean of marrlaee before hla baaeball-watchlnt wu interrupted by her sweet • but husky voice in 1986. '' AJI my predecessors have ruled that no member of th.la House la ever too much under the influence of drink," Thomas said. Amid laughter, lawmaker Arthur Lewis added, "You and I know there are a few members who do have a drink occaaionally, but never ii anyone drunk ln this place because it is against the rulea." Disabled get rides LOS ANGELES CAP> -Bus service for handJ- c a p ped riders , s us - pended Feb. 1, has re- sumed on 10 lines of the Southern Ca lifornia Ra pid Transit District. Despite heated protest from the handicapped, the se rvi ce f o r wheelchair riders was discontinued when cracks were found in the automated wheelchair lifts on most of the 200 buses equipped with them. 0 nly some of the buses have been re- paired, and the others a re expected lo be operational by May, a spokesman said . The service is sti ll not available on weekends, holidays , or after S p.m. on weekdays. Burke named SACRAMENTO <AP) -Fonner Rep Yvonne Burke 's hus b and , William, once a top offi cial or a scandal-ridden prepaid health plan, was named to the slate Fish and Game Commission by Gov. F.dmund Brown Jr. William Burke, 41 , is a lormer deput y c ity councilman in Los Angeles. PUBLIC NOTICE NAIWU PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUI aUllMUS MAMa ITATaMiMT r ... 1o1.-,,. ,...._. is c1o1n9 Don!· M ll 81. WAA L ·VANOVKI PROPEfHIES, LTD., A Limited Partnerl/llc>, llSI Dow Strwt, Siii .. ''°· N•-' lleeclt, c.tllloml• tllMO. STEPHEN CHASE. 2.S Ea1Uua, lr•lne, c:.llfoml• tt114 Tlu1 b<nlneu 11 condu<IH l>Y • llmlted ~nl\ltl. ~o..te. Gene<al P'""-' ,,. ... ..._ ... filed ......... Co...nly C .. rk of Or-C-ty on Aprll •, ltll ITI "HIM M. CNMll .... ATTO•MIV AT LAW '''' 0.... hrwt. Wte 17t .... ""a.di,~·-17141 ~1141 ~llMIS Pul>ll.,,.,, Or-Coast Dally Piiot, April t. It, n. JO,"" 11JO.t1 PUBLIC NOTICE N1l1• ~ICTITIOUI au1111us NAMI STATaMaMT The lo11ow1n9 perl0ft1 are doing Du1lnen•t . SPACE · TEK INDUSTRIES. 1m Pl•c e ntt• Av•nue, Coit• M•s•, Calllornla ml7. F RANK I . l'ARGO, 17 To...loft, Newport lle«lt, C..lltornla t2MO MARIE M. FAAGO, 11 T°"'°"• Hewpor1 llMclt, C..ltfornla t2MO. Tl\11 bull-11 Conducted l>y I~ dl•ldual• I-~ Wiie). Fr-8 Fervo Marie M. Fargo Tltl• s~t w-s llled •lltt 1 ... Covnly c .. r11 of Or-C:O..nty °" Aprll l , ltll ~ttMU Pul>hllted Or-CoH I 0.lly Piiot, Aprll t , 1', ll. JO,'"' ,,,._., PUBLIC NOTICE "I heard her and said, 'That's 1reat, "' be re- calls. "She blmhed and sang a little more." YOUR CHOICE ZlNOLYTE FORIC OR VINYL FABSPRAY 13 oz Astorfed colOfS. .... UI•. 2.28ea. lYNOLm 1000' F HI-TEMP SNAY PAINT 13 oz. Self priming. .... UI 2.48 lYNOLYTE EPOXY SPRAY PAINT 13 oz .... UI 1.98 lYNOL m EPOXY RUST-MATE 13 oz. spray .... UI 2.28 Ouart. ........ 3.88 lYNOLYTE SPEED-E-NAMEL 13 oz. IP'IY. Asst'd. colon . ........ 88c • • • • Daily Pilot classifieds work for you. call 642-5678 ~rolyte Speed· E·Namel o .. ~,"~"-.. ..... , .. .,...., ..... _ .. _\ I I "' >.. Oranae Cowlt1 s.,perv1aor Bruce· Nettande view• tt, aowth in South Oranae County la pro- ceedlq far JUOr• rapidly than cop1truct1on of Uae nece1Hry transportatlon facWtlea to serve it. The re-ault: overcrowded streeta and bllbwaya. Tm.slon behind the 1teerin• wheel. Nestande won backin& from fellow supervisors Wedneaday for a tJ-day study by 1everal ·Rule• kept on adult bll3inesses The Orabge County Board of Supervison1 haa extended for eight monUuJ an "ur1ency or- dinance" re1ulating studios featuring nude modeling or so- called "encounter" session.a. Under the ordinance, such studios are prohibited within SOO feet or residential areas and 1,000 feet of churches and schools. The ura;ency measure was ap- proved last December. primari- ly to· stop additional adult busi· nesses from openin& in Midway City , an unincorporated com· munity near Weatmlnster The law does not affect businesses that already are in operation. County olficiala are preparing a zoning ordinance that would permanently regulate such busi- nesses in unincorporated areu. That ordlnance is expected to be presented to the board prior to the Dec. 18 expiration of the urgency measure. Supervisor Roger Stanton, whose district includes Midway City. said he had observed strong public support for ex- tena ion of the urgency or· dinance. Stanton said he was "strongly in favor of regulating the type of adult. entertainment tJat motivated th1a ordinance." Stanton said he Intends to work closely with county of· flcials in preparation of the permanent ordinance before 1t is submitted to the county Plan· ning Commission and the Board of Supervisors for approval. County OKs $83,333 for NB bay work Orange County government will join Newport Beach and the Irvine Company in bearing the coat or an ··early action plan" to remove massive silt deposits from Upper Newport Bay The county Board of Su- pervisors Wednesday approved spending $83,333' t oward a s~.ooo matching fund that wiU permit the city to receive $4 million in state funds for the clean.up effort. Newport Beach and lhe Irvine Company previously aereed to pay the remaining two-thirds of the $250,000. THE EARLY action plan calla for dredging of the upper bay and construction of basins that would catch silt from San Diego Creek before It enters the bay. county agencies Into bow the 1ituatioo ~ be improved. THE STUDY will focua oo ex- lstlnl and potential methods - both in the public and private sectors -to finance new tnn.aportatioo proJecta. Of primary concern, Nestande said, is finding ways to pay for the proposed San Joaquin Hills and Foothill transportation cor- ridors. Tbe San Joaquin corridor would include a freeway and mass transit ftacWUes and would eatend from Newport Beach to San Juan Capistrano. The Foothill corridor, as described in concept, would be constructed inland of the Santa Ana Freeway, llnkinl the north and south sectors of the county. Both corridors have been viewed as necessary to relieve existing and future congestion on the San Oie10 and SA.Qta Ana freeway• and Paclflc Coaat H;iehway. . NESTANDE SAID that money , raised by the nate tax on . gasoline la ''tot.ally lnad,equate to fuod needed tran1portaUoo system e:xpa.naloa at both state and local levels." . The transportation money crunch, be aatd, baa become more acute 1lnce tbe pa11age ol Propoe!Uon 13, the property tax- DECORATORS EGGED ON -Irvine youngsters spent some of their vacation in preparation for East er . Under auspices of the city's Community Services Department, they o.lly ...... ,,....., .. , ~ • were encouraged to tap their imagination while dabbling, tearing paper trim, pasting and painting plastic eggs during workshops at University Community Park. The county's share of the cost would come from surplus funds• budgeted for storm-related re- pairs along the Santa Ana River channel. Supervisor Thomas Riley, wbose district includes the bay, noted that over lbe past three years the county has 1pent $1.13 mUllon for sediment removal from San Dte10 Creek, whJcb empties into the bay. fltley said the proposed early adloo plan would benefit the count)' by prevenlln& future se41mentatJon. "Thia Is an addi- tion to protecUn1 a valuable public resource," be satd ln a le"'r to other 1upervlsors. COLORFUL CREATIONa1:... Patricia Estrada ~above) helps Matt JohnlOn, 7, while Sue Cho (below. left> proves concentration works. Results of the workshop can be gathered lo the basket made by Christine Chen, 7. .. • • . 82. cuttlnt meuure approved by Office, Environmental Mana•• voters in 1978. ,. ment Acency, Counsel's Office "Flnancl.nl of botb local and and special counsel for bond 1'· re1lonal tramportation facUJties sues . can no Jooaer be accomplished The vote to support the study by 1overnment alone, and ln· w a s u n a n i m o u s . B o a r d novatlve approacbu are re-Chairman Ralph Clark. also a quired ii we are to implenient member ~f t be county l\eeded transportation "'Transportation Commission, facllitles," Nestande said. said Nestande's approach wu "right on" and "very ap- The study wiU be conduct-propriate." 1 ed by tbe county Administrative -FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Chiefs Cooled Firemen get air conditioned unitsi When battalion chJefs for tbe Oran1e County Fire Department direct fJrefigbting operations in the beat this summer, their six new four-wheel-drive vehicles will be air·condltioned. The air conditioning Is sup- posed to keep the chiefs cool and unfettered during long days on the fire lines. THE FIRE department almost didn't get the air condi- tioning, though. The $4,242 re· quest was denied by analysts in the County Administrative Of· fice as unnecessary and an ex· pensive precedent. None of the department's ta\ other vehicles has air condition- ing. Fire Chief Larry Hollns. however, persuaded the countf Board of Supervisors to pay $707 per vehicle to add air condition· ing. SuperVlsors said it would be installed only in command vehicles. "CIUEF OFFICERS maintajn a high degree of public and in· leragency contact while operat· ing in hostile environments as· soc1ated with 10cidents occur· ring m Wlldland areas," Holms wrote to the supervisors. "This exposure to dust. smoke a nd extreme temperatures in- troduces a s ignificant fatigue factor that can be alleviated, fO( the most part, by allowing the personnel the option of sealing their vehicles and using air con· ditioning" It's trashy job, but he's dedicated Trash is Tim Newman's bu.si· ness. The young Newport Beach policeman deals with snapabou or messy yards and overturned trash cam rather than crime re- ports. He walks a beat, on the lookout for litterbugs . He handles individual cases and complaints. At least 30 each month. Newman is Newport's official Utter control coordinator. His buddies at the police station call him the •'trash cop.'' He calls himself the "resident trash specialist." AL THOUGH HE gets some ribbing from fellow officers, he takes the job seriously. Litter is re~arded as a serious problem In Newport, ranked by residents in the top three crimes category right after illegally parked cars and stray dogs, be says. The litter post was created by the City Council last September at the urging of Councilwoman Evelyn Hart. Newman. al.so on the depart- ment's SWAT team, says his duties include coordinatlng the activity of the city's Litter Con· trol Committee, talking with b'bmeownen groups and pulling together cleanup drives. Much of his effort, he says, has gone into making sense or stale and federal litter laws which fall under myriad head- ings includlnt health and safety codes, agriculture laws, vehicle codes and civil laws. WITH MORE THAN' six months of trash control under his belt, Newman believes it's both .possible and impossible to get a r~al handle on litter. · "People always want to know why Newport can't look like Dts- nvland," says Newman, "and the answer la that Disneyland spends more than $4 mlWoo a year picking up trash.•' Newport, oo the other hand, spends leu tban $1 mlllloo and much of that la directed toward Delly ll't ... ,..,, ...... LITTER PATROL Tim Newman routing trash collections and beach JObs, which yield 16,000 tons of debris annually. Newman says it's hard to do in six months what the "Keep America Beautiful" campaign has been trying to do for years. For instance, be explains, to nab a litterbug at the beach he is required to observe Utter in UM culprit's possession, watch that person toss the trash on the sand and then see that person walk away. "THAT COULD TA.KE all day," Newman .suggest&-, •'especially lflhe guy's going to be lying on hJs towel all day right next to the trash.·· But some headway bas ~ made, he says. Trash pickups; Newport's "litter impact area" are. to be increased summer from once t ~ weekly. And a maul clt"J cleanup, coordinated wl ~ Newport Harbor Area Cb of Commerce, is set for June. ,l r.: .f ~ Corigressmen set f fl16 refugee hearing · Five C!GblnMm• -lncludlnc t.b• ehalrmu OI • House com· mlu.e that o,.,.... lndochlnele ~ rnsram.a -wW vtatt Oran&• CoQt1 Frid•J for a ftnt-Mnd _. at tbe ~·· NfqM reMttlemat ttfOrta. lnYlted bJ ~Ram.ti Wied« ... ~ MUloll, Do .K•ntuekJ. eb&lrmn of tbt HOUM O-mlttee.Aa lmml,,.•· uoa. -.... • tatenaatlaDlll Law,_. eOaUDIU. membln Hamlltoi Fleb, R·N•• \'on· Sam Hall.L. D·T•&H; Blll •cCullam n-nOrtu, Ud Dan Lunitm, i\.Loq Beacb. , ,. HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> aly1l1 of tbou1and1 of !•lllUd• lftdlcatel there la a eater riA ol cJ'lb cleat.b amon• nf Ht. Wboltt motben auftered •ev•rt anelDla or were be•vy amok en dbrlna prepancy, a PledJcal reeeareher says . • The theory wa• developed by . ~• Ric:!,lard Naeye, chairman of e patbolo y department at the nnaylva~a State Unlvenlty Medlca.I School, located at Hershey MedJcaJ Center. N aeye 111d the research wu based on studies of 60,000 pre1nanciea over a six-year Oiertod. '"TBBOUGB st.aliatics, we've found these factors are independent of other factors that ~an cause SIDS (sudden lnlant death syndrome)," Naeye said a telephone interview. '·Smoking and anemia, Mwever, won't explain all the '1DS death. We don't know the test of the reuons." Naeye snid smoking reduces tbe oxygen flow in the blood vessels feeding the unborn infant. He said one cigarette can constrict blood vessels· for rtve to 15 minutes. HE SAID research has determined the control centers in the brain stem, responsible for such basic functions as breathing and heart action, have a higher requirement for oxygen before birth. · 'Tbe mechanisms controlling breathing and heart action are only a primary control within the first few months after birth," Naeye said. ........... LAGGARDS BEWARE -Big Dane Boris loves to go for waJks. But woe to him (or her, in this case) who can't keep pace. As little Julia Koenig discovers on her stroll down a street in Vienna, Austria, Boris uses a few whacks from his muscular tail as a reminder to speed up. Special services set Area churches planning Good Friday observances Several churches along the Orange Coast are planning Good Friday observances. Church or Resurrection al 7:30 p.m. for a tradi- tional Tenebrae Service. ' Many congregations will gather in a single location for the traditional afternoon services while others will worship Friday evening. Among the churches and congregations an· nouncing services are the following: A Tenebrae Service will be held at 7:30 p.m. at Mlsaloa Latbeua Cburcb, 24380 Yosemite Road, Laguna Niguel for the veiling of the cross. A service will be held at 12:30 p.m . at the Lutheran Cbarch of the Master, 2900 Pacific View Dr., Corona del Mar. Associate Pastor Don Thies will lead an in- form al scripture readlne at noon for the Commlllll- ty Presbyterian Cba.rcb, US Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. · A dramatic rendering of the las t words of Christ will be sponsored by the Community Church, Congregational of Corona del Mar ; The Newport Center Methodist of Corona del Mar; St. Marie's Presbyterian of Corona del Mar and the Lutheran Church of the Master. Newport Harbor Lutheran Cllarcb will have a Tenebrae Service at 7:30 p.m. at 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach Good Sbepud Lutheran Church. 4800 Irvine Center Drive, Irvine, w.ill join with the Lutheran St. Edward'• Ca&JaoUc Cbarcll. 33926 Calle Primaver, Dana Point, will have Stations, Passion and Commuruon at 2 and 7:30 p.m. The same service will be held in Spanish at 7:30 p .m. in Capistrano Beach at Domingo and Sepulveda. I Reagan invitation off Harvard ~ites protocol to discourage his. appearance BOSTON (AP) Harvard University pro tocol has disrupted a plan by graduate students to invite President Reagan to speak at their commencement. Because Reagan would not be attending the full university graduation ceremonies -or getting an honorary degree - the office of U n ive r sity Prestdent D e r e k Bok discouraged Lhe graduating class at the John F. Kennedy School of Government from inviting the president. The studenta agreed to change their plans. The Boston Globe reported that student leaders at the Kennedy School approached the White House last w~k to ask if Reagan would adClreas their separate ceremony. which follows morning commencement eJJercises for the entire univenity. The stude nts contacted a White House official, who encouraged them to send an invitation to the president t hro ugh White House aide Michael Deaver , the newspaper said, but when the invitation came to Bok's attention. he discouraged it. NORMAN SMITH, an assistant dean at the Kennedy School, said"' he checked last week with the univerailll administration on the protocol of the invitation. • Smith said he was told there was great concern about having a sitting president appear on commencement day without appearing at the full university commencement ceremony. "We would never want to suggest that we would snub the president," Smith said. Another problem , ad · ministrators said, was tbe un- Engineers top· pay list for graduates BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) - En&ineel"ll top the 1alary list f« tbia year's coUe1e 1raduat~1 the CoUe1e Plaocement Councu H)'I. Accordtn1 to the \ CouocU'a March 1981 ••saJary Survey," nearly a1I, of the 14 apeclalty cate1orlea i urvered 1t the bacbelor•a l•v• repo?ted tncreua in starttn1 aalartea over tboM ln a JW, ~ r.,rt. Students maJorln1 In petroleum eoclt*rtai 4tft top off en of an avera1e m,nt annually, a 10.1 percent lacrea1e. Second·ranked cMmlcal ~ •• at tat.Jlt, •bowed. 12.a eereent ._atn. Tbt - 11 enlineerinl field• bad at leut , 8 per~ Jaina over lut July. AltbOuCJt en~ iqjon m ab up only 7 percent of the projected bachelor'• ~••r~ 1raduatea in 1110·111_ t~"Y received 83 pere= of Ule ~b otters reported in 1urve7. Three J>uainesa dt.dpllnet, with 28 percent of tbt bachelor'• offers, reported lncreuea of 9 to 11 perC!ebt, with the hllhHt avera1e offer, $11,958, tolnt to accounttnc dlajora. Computer 1cleace 1radu1Se1 'repo~ an annual avera1• of $11,-. wbU« ot!ler l'b11Jca1 and eartll ectene. r.col'ded an 18 pft~IDt ,_.,at 111,tu. lveraity policy of not granting hQnorary degrees to presidents whlle tbey are in office. The only exception this century was Theodore Roosevelt, a Harvard alumnus. Bok's office said it would be rude to h~ve thgJ>resldent speak without t"atwa?ding him an honorary degree. The graduate students now are coruiidering other speakers, including journalist Oriana Fallaci, Sen. Howard Balter, R-Tenn .. and White House aide Elizabeth Dole. 19 years • • given m assault case from DAVIS-BROWN 25" -·....-COLOR TV • VIA II • Qu.,U Electronic • Pr09rem Remote Control Tunl119 :~~~ S 50 from DAVIS-BROWN R;"VIRll COWTIOUI• COL TV w.11 ~ 2HMlf60C Performance Sound Color TY • 11·....... • 4• ...-w t-4 • YN1 " • ~ ttyt.d C•i-t S 100 from DAVIS-BROWN 11:.....v11 B 1r11•c11t~ Clltrt111• ClllP TV • AK Au!omohe ff'eQuencv Control • E.neiov ConsclOus • Solld Stole ChoUis • ln-llle Block Morn~ -...... __ --- I Plciute Tube _ I F • Modular Chassis Design . .,.._ ...... ~11•~1 • Custom Pic:IUre Control •Automatic Colof Control !!tc~ ccx0t rv l' f '< C I • NOW ONLY s349 95 \II) 11 ':"'.ftfl Perla -C1l1r TV PLUS SAVE $50 rws NII MOR MAL R9'\ACIM8f'f IHST Al.LATIOM ~~ MT14 AMlnAAI Q.AUIHllWU . • ~ s..; Swffc .. ~~-· .. ..,.... ~··"'•• ..... c .. ...-r .... c ... r-• U4 ca. ft.*'--~ .......... ,.,....~ -............ ...,,_ .. ••l•hr•-I••••• .......... • Ceel '• Fre,., lewer~4'1ty , •• ._...,._.._.,... PLUS SAVE $50 S1vh You PIOGRAMMID WAHR and um..c AU10MATK • ,;DRYIR --~· .j L _ '.... • J Cydtt Nornu( Ptrm Prn\ 1n4 Poly"''" 1<1111 • J '/hill/ R1n\I r tmp Stltehon1 ""'" '""'fY ,..,,.,cold •lltt unw 1 So•k '""' f "'" R1n\t • Aurom•hc 81uch 01111n1e V1lu.Olt Counlfl Sp1e1' Eva luel co"'roh to 1tltct '"'"or hmptrtlurt wo~"'• •~d po-r '"''" OHL y with 1u11•11mptt 11t11n•' With th• Sp1um1hr llil1cr-10 s4"95 Oven and vou1 n""' •t1111t. you llavt 1 complttt cookont '-'"-''-''---------- _Fr.1 , ·r.ti, 11111-11 PltlCPIMlli 1: nt..11~-' llllWAllEI • 6 Cydt WKll Seltebett 111 du•rnt ,.,,.,., Suwlt"' fOf ••G tflll p•n • E-tv s .. " Ory Cydt • z lfffl •ei11lttt , Actrell ., .... w • s ..... ·-~-........ '''" Avoid Mideast, poll indicates NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe Middle Eut is the region American tourists should avoid most, while England is the "most friendly" and France the "least friendly" country in the world to American travelers, accordlnt to a poll conducted by North American travel writers. Mexico le.ads thf' list of "best vacation spots" for the averllge American tourist, followed by Portugal, New Zealand, Alaska and Haw ail. The poll, released this week by the Society of American Travel Writers, excluded Egypt and Israel from countries Americans ought to avoid in the Mideast. ACCORDING TO SOCIETY President Myra Waldo, 11~ member writers and editors from the United States and Canada submitted their choices of the top five countries in each category: most friendly to American travelers, least friendly, best foreign destination. best U.S. destination, and the region which Americans should be cautioned against visiting. The poll results, concluded Feb. 25, with the percentage or times the destination appeared on the top-five lists, are as follows · The countries where Americans "are most likely to get a fri endly reception": England (57 percent), Canada (52). Australia (34), Japan (28) and Mexico (26). THE COUNTRIES "least friendly" to Americans: Fraoce (38). the Soviet Union (28), Iran (23). East Germany ( 15) and Jamaica (12). The "most favored" destinations outside the United States: Mexico (40), Canada (32), Carib· bean (26). England (20) and Portugal (18). "Best vacation" cities in the United States: San Francisco (33), New York (32.S), Waabi.neton, D.C. (31.6), New Orleans (16.7) and San Diego ( 14 ). Besides the Middle East, receiving votes from 31 percent of the writers. unspecified areas of Cen· tral America, the Caribbean and Africa were cited as places the travel writers warned "travelers away from, at least tempordnly." Violence, political Instability and hostility toward Americans were given as the main reasons. DEATHS ELSEWHERE WILLIAMSTOWN. Mass t AP l William Henry V uderblll, who served as governor or Rhode Island lwo years before lo::.ing a re-election bid in 1940. died Tuesday of lung cancer Vanderbilt. 79. Y.as a great gre al·grandson of railroad tycoo n Cor n e l i u s Vanderbilt NE W ORLEANS 1AP1 Paul Barnes. 80. whose diary supplied much of the information noY. known about the world of j au mus ic during the 1930s. died Mo nday Barnes played the saxophone and clarinet with several Jazz bands including those headed bv Lout., Armstron~ and KmgOlh•er RIDGECREST <AP1 Wllll•m A. Enns Jr., 43, or La Jolla. director or the San Diego Aerospace Museum a nd a fo rme r a ide to Ronald Reagan when he "'as governor or Calirorma. died with his teen·age son in the ~rash or lheir small plane in the high desert PASADENA <APJ Corona rancher Edwlo -----------, Earl, 76, llOn of the founder HA.UOll UW"6--MT. OLIVI Mortuary •Cemetery Cre~torv 1625 Gisler Ave Co!la Mesa 540-55~ PIHCI UOTHllS 11u.aoADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Brold.,av Costa Mesa 642·9150 IALT'l&IH•HON SMITM & TVJHIU. WHTCU#CHA ... 427 E 17th SJ Costa Me.a ~&-0371 of Los Angeles Tribune. has died here. Edwin served as a lieutenant commander In World War II and was • well-known citrus rancher ln Riverside county. He was born \n Los Angeles on April 4, 1905. CAMBRIDGE, Mass <APl -Homes Hlakley Welch, 59. a former State Department official, author arul lecturer has died at his home In t h e town or Harvard. He was a na- tJonall~ recotnhed scholar o( 1'aolim and Buddhism. . ... • I V ANCOUV&R, Wub. (AP) -Molteo tock ap. parently baa stopped OOliQI lato tM crater ot Mouat St. Helens and the volcano'• enaptk>o alert bu bt!en e..S, actenU•tl aaid. ' Favorable w .. ther a,Uowed U.S. Oeplos1cal Survey aotentlttl to bellcopter Into the crater tb1a week to meuure lbe mound of hard~ lava on -the noor Of the' crater. ' It appeared u lf lbere wu little. 'lf any, growth fn the dome, aaid 'nlom Corcoraa. Forest Service spokesman. EABTBQUA&E ACTIVITY ON the volcano has conllnued a little above normal but the level of seismic activity wu uncbanted liJlc. Sunday, ac· cording to A.B. Adams, l])Okeaman tor the University of Wuhiniton i~yslcs Ct?lter in Seattle. Corcoran said the latest dome 1rowth, aa- sociated with the cloud-shrouded eruption Jut Fri- day, waa similar to earlier non-explosive eruptions in which the eruption danger eued after lbe volcano squeezed more molten rock into tbe crater. Though a minor steam Md uh eruption oc- curred, 1eoloeists were not sore when the addition to the lava dome began. said Susan llusaell· Robinson, USGS geologiat. "WE BELIEVE THE LAVA dome atarted growing before last Friday," she said. The eruption alert was downgraded by USGS and University of Washington scientists, and aome access was provided to the mountain for loggers and others with permits But the Forest M.rvlce kept the red zone -within 12 miles or the volcano -closed to all but scientists, Corcoran said. Dome's height reflects added lava squeezed in- !ide, an action that relievea prenurea threaten- ing eruption. The U.S. Geological Survey and ...... , p University of WC13hington scientiata have doum· graded an eruption alert and Limited access to the mountain has been permitted. Roger's Special/\ Easter Baskets ' Delight that special someone with a Roger's Easter Basket. Spring is in full bloom at Roger's Gardens and that means the best selection ever of our bright and colorful hanging baskets and pots. An easter basket from Roger's will be a lasting gift throughout the spring. (.1 . '· FOR YOUR PATIO §..7f, .ff~ Roger's Gallery otters a variety of the finest patio and garden furniture: Tropitone, Brown 1. Jordan, Tricon fort, Allibert and more are on display now and are available for immediate delivery. Roger's features a unique assortment of candles, umbrellas and Easter gifts. That special gift is right here at Roger's. IN YOUR HOME Enjoy colorful Ranunculus, Oafft>dlls, Tulips and Roses. Fresh-cut flowers from Roger's will brighten an}t room. Miniature African Violet. With. Oxygen-Plus care, this perennial will produce color year-rovhd. Special ~ Reiger ~gonla, a•. This hybrid perennial Is a 11vlng boUquet In a beautiful selection of colors. Special '12.95 ' A living centerpiece or a unique gift, a 1 O' Roger's color pot d~igned for that someone -special. 'i11.95 .. PLANT PROFESSOR GORDON BAKER LLOYD, noted garden expert, will be.at Roger's Gardens every Friday, beginning April 3rd, from 10:30 -2:30 to answer all plant questions. He will also be presenting special seminars: April 9th, 11 :00 A.M. "How to Water''. April 23rd, 11 :00 A.M. "Pest Control". FOR YOUR GARDEN MARTHA WASHINGTON GERANIUMS, 1 gal. In a sunny spot ihis beautiful plant provid~s consistent color. reg. S3.75 Special '2.75 Hibiscus, 5 gal. This showy star of the flower world, alive with color, Indoor or out. reg. 111.00 Special sagg The·Eaater Bunny WILL be at Roger'• Gardena ... Ea1ter Sunday, 2-4 P.M.I Ptk:e• effective thru April 22, '&1 and aubject to QUlll\lltlea on t\and. '· .. Lady Diana's family ' • • tounst attraction LONDON (AP> -Americans are lining up for Britain's latest towUt attraction -lunch with the Earl of Spencer, father of Prince Charles' fiancee Lady Diana, and tea with her itep-grandmother, best·aelllng romantic novelist B:irbar. Cartland. Miss Cartla nd, 79, whose more than 300 romantic novels have sold 100 million copies around the world, aays she devised the toun with a New York travel firm before Charles, 32, heir to the British throne, and Lady Diana, 19, an· nounced their enaa1ement Feb. 24. "So Mrs. Oz -fancy that really be· ing her name -says. I Just hope lt isn't going to be a crashing faJJure." The tour includes vislta to William Shakespeare's birthplace in Strat- ford-on Avon; Stonehen1e. atte of Stone Age culture relics ; and Longleat mansion, as well as tea with Miss Cartland and lunch with the Spencers at their stately home. Althorp Hall. The Earl of Spencer, 5', opened the family's Elizabethan mamion to the paying P'lt>llc in 1979 to help meet ita $110,000 annual maintenance costs. "WE'RE GF7M'ING A LOT ol stick • about it now, but the idea was first mooted two years a.go,·' Mi ss Cartland said in a telephone in· terview from her 400-acre home at Potters Bar, 15 miles north of Lon· don. * * * Royalty ban on T-shirts 'upsetting' "I wasn't very interested at first as •m very bwi y. But I agreed because the tourist.a are coming by state· owned British Airways, and I'm very patriotic. "I 'll just be having the Americans to tea, so that won't be so bad," said Miss Cartland, whose daughter, Raine, is the second wife of the Earl of Spencer and Lady Diana's step- mother. "My daughter and son-in· law have a much bigger place, and the tourists will lunch there." THE FIRST G RO UP of 12 Americans. reportedly paying Sl,540 each for a seven-day tour. arrive April 27. Fu~er tours of 25 people are scheduled through the summer by the travel firm. World of 0% "Business is terrific When we worked out the deal the couple weren't engaged We've just been in- credibly lucky." World of Oz presi- dent Wynne Oz was quoted as saying. "It's not every day you get to sit down with the future father-in-law of the future king." CHARLES ANO DIANA are due to marry at London 's St. Paul's OathedraJonJuly 29. Asked whether she thought the royal wedding connection would boost tour sales, Mi88 Cartland said: J LONDON <A P ) -Br l llah manufacturers expecting to capitalize on Prince Charles' wed· ding this summer say they'U suffer financially because of a palace edict forbidding them from printin1 royal faces on T-shirts. They say foreien manufacturers will ignore the ban, issued by Buck· ingham Paiace, and make a bundJe on T-shirts adorned with the beaming faces of Charles and his bride-to-be, Lady Diana Spencer. Said Colin Purvis, assistant direc· tor of the British Textile Confedera· lion: "It would be an intolerable situation if T -shirts with pictures of the royal couple were being im· ported.'' He said the industry would "noS lightly ignore" the royal family's wishes, but he said no decision had been made yet about whether to com· ply with the order. A palace spokesman conceded the ban has no l egal force , but ''manufacturers have alway1 com· plied with our wishes in the put," although "foreigners don't always abide by the rules." PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI •u•o•au "AMa IT A TUll&NT TIM loll-"'I --....... Ml· ......... Pl.ANT ""0DVCTIONI, J4M2 Owrlaka, II T-. Callfenlle f2'll MMV J-Ter•. 241C~. 11r-.c..1....,..,.. TlllJ i.u.i-11 ceMu<ted .., a ..-.. ,..,,.. ....... ,_,.,Teytw Tllla....,.,.. •• .... wllll tfl8 C-ly Clet'tl f//f Or .. ~y • •----------"---·• Allt'll 14, lte1. PUBLIC NOTICE PtcTITlout •U1tNea NAMa ITAT ... "1' T ... IM ....... __ 11 ..... -· Ml4NI •e ACH OllAflHICI. tot lltll ltrHt •10, Hu11tl1t1t•11 •Helt, C.llf•mle,.. .,......,_ ._ 0'9rlM, -11111 Stnat •It, H1111t1111te11 aeecll, Celllwllle.... · Tltlt ....,_ It ceMIKtM lty M ,,.. •w...i . ...,......_O'~- Tllle ....,.._. -,. ... wllfl tM C9itftty ~ flt Or .... CMIM\' M ..,.1 ....... ·-.......... 0r ... c ••Deltt .,_ ,.., "· n. •. ...., '·"" ,.., '----.. -ICTl-.,..,.---9411--,.-.-.. ----------------- UMt ITA~NT P\1BUC NOTICE Tiie .......... Hrtelle ere -.1119 ______ ..;_. _____ _ ., AO• ""0••11r1e1, •ot• =--c...:=·=-· DrtN w. °' """"'· ... ~ --~g..,, ~ IPWVle V ....... ....... v.-. fllleJMlt .... o., .. llNdltlwll ..,..., .............. ~ .... Tlllt ........ 11 ~I .. ty • .................. o.w.~....,.,_ Tllll ................ wllfl"" c-tr CMR ., Or-c.e..r "' ~''·""· "' PICTITIOUI au11NaU fllCTITIOUI aUllNHI NAM•ITATaMaNT MAMCITATaMaNT Tiit IOl_."9 --11 eo1nt -· Tiit let-I~ ,., .... art d01119 -·I .....,M»• AllA AHTIOUIS, Sllllt Cl, »OJ CI> CHll..D"EHS ME DICAi.. Har-11..-•• C..i. Me.a, CA fli» TEACHING AIDS (2) PAGl..IAIUHI ,,.,. Mk-W.., Apt 417, MOI IK$ llM '"'"'"''"II oi.111011 ol War,,... Aw., H1111ltnQto11 la«ll, CA c.-... T.A.I, 1' SWfaldt Court, HtWllO,, tu.t7 '""'· c.i ......... tlWO. Tiii& llWIMM 11 tOfldo;<ltO l>y ., 111· Maruoa ~. It s..rt1i. Cellrl. fllwlOual Nt•-1 IM<JI. c.tllwllla t1MO M. W-Mery Vlaa.11, tem Chfflllre A-. Tiii& llat-1 W8l 111.0 Wiii\ 1118 Woln11Nlar,CMllOrflittMJ. Co""'' Cler11 IJf 0<.,ga '°""'Y 1111 TMl !MIMllOll ll COllCllltlH l»J t Marc11 2•, ltll .,..,.,.,.,,_.,.Ill ,.,..... Mercettac.tt100 P,,.11.,..., o..,,.. C..11 Oalty Pllo(, ,.,......., Marc II h , April 2, '· ... ,,.. ,_., '"" ···-· ••• Ill ... Willi llW PUBUC NOTICE Co""'' Clark of Or.,.oe C...11ty Oii ¥erc112•. M• ,., .. ,. P"l>llllWO Or-Coul a.fly PljO\, March U, Aprt1 l, t, 1'. 1te1 1 .. Nll PVBUC NOTICE ·PUBLIC NOTICE ,.ICTITtOU• •U•llHU NAllH ITATIMINT Tiie fetlowl~ __ , a re dOl119 builMUOI 111 IEHEl'IT .. LAH AOMIHISTltATORS, U) 8 P A, 2021 £. 4111 Stt'wt. 5'Mte 10., SM .. AN, Cati ....... t'17QS 11-lcl Wtyiw Mnltrl, 2' Whltll •ng Swan, INIM, Calllornla '1714 Harold H Oa11lel•, IMU Ac.eta Drive, c.,.,...,, C.lllornla '06.JG Tllh O..•IMU I• COl\d"<lod Oy t 8tMral~lp. 11-tflW Ma•ler• Tllta ~1 WH lllecl wllll UM Cou111r Clark of Orange c.o .. nly on M•rcll JI. ltl l ,.u .... P"l>lllJltcl Or-C-11 Dell' Polot, Aprll 1, t, 16, 1l, ltll . I S12·1 I P\JBLI(; NOTICE ...,_ ,.ICTITIOUI •USl•IH lolAMa ITATIMl•T Tllo 1011-1119 perto11• are do1n9 0..ilMU al WA~VT JOINT VENTVllE, 2070 lwt _,.,,, C1nt•r Orlve • .,.,lne Calllorma t211S D•••• Howte Corpor•tlon of Celllornle, a C.lllor111a corporallon. 1070 lllilllHI C-ler Drive. lrwl11e. C.ttlornl• mu Toda AtnarlCa Ill< d/l>/e Toda Con•lr..ctlofl ol Amtrlu , a New York corperatlorl. 1010 e .. 11nou Center Orio , trvlM, Ca lllomla t711S Tllh 0..illl .. 1 h COlld..Cltd by a ..... ,.1~p Oalwt HouM Corp. °'"'11'-1• ,...._,. ...... .,,,,... PrMIOeftl T Mii Coll•lruc !kin °'~IUI WOIHMats..mllt't , Vl<t~ldlfnl Tiii• .UC-I ••• lllecl w1111 the Co""'' CIW!l of Or.,,99 Co11nly on Marcll J, ltll ,., ..... ""011.-0r*'911 Coall Dell~ fllot. April 2. t, 16, lJ, ltlt fllMt PUBLIC NOTICE < BA78x 13 . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 4100 OR78x14 .....•........ 47.00 ER78x14 ................ 49.'5 FR78x14 ................ 51.95 GR78x14 .... ~ ........... 53.'5 HA78x14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55.95 FA78x15 ................ 52.95 GA78x15 ................ s•.H HR78x 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51. f5 LA78x 15 .. . . .. . .. . . . . . . . 63. f5 175flOR13 .............. $39.51 185fl0R13 .............. $45.80 185flOR14 .............. $47.50 205/10114 .............. $57.76 GUAAAMTllD Ci)UALITY RETREADS s21•s PRESSUR REGULATOR $8.69 .......,_ .,.,.. ... "" ........ ..... Fiii -u.a· ..... 63,64116 PUBLIC NOTICE O&lll.N'D •r•M H.-lll,lf 11 t t ¥ut1*y.cf J I t I• ••-lf\e.111 J 0 I 0 JDllllMll, lb 1 0 0 0 Orou.a Io o t H"ltt'.Oll I 101 M<Ko..» o o o o rm.a.rt 4 I 1 J ..... ,.... '0. 0 Keall\,c 4 O 0 O Doyle.JD o o o o 9ebltt,• 4 1 I 0 ~kclole,u Io o o SIOftley,M 0 0 0 0 ~ .......... •r•M e-,tlt •O t 1 •urt--.' •. \.WNl.<I It t I ........ ,. • 0 •• l"orf,n 4 o 1 o Dow"lne,c • 0 0 • •Nlltky," 4 I I 0 Ofkll.A 11 It " ....... l 010 ~· .... ou.-. 1000 ....... ~ 0 0 0 0 Totelt U > t t Totell :U 2 10 I k_.,,....., Oe•loM OOD oot 041-6 Celltorftlo 001 Ml lto-4 E -J~ I. Hoblon. LOe-O.•l•M 1, Colllornl• I. SB-flutltMlfl. 10,_rme1 W . S Car ..... Otlcl\. SF Lynft. o...... ,,. " ••• ••to l..OftOfotd IW,1.0) t 10 J J 2 & Coll,_.. Jetter WWI Hauler IL. 1·1) ..... , T J ~ A-17,111 1 l 2 2 , , 1 0 0 WW..M.a1,ar-t• 1 0 1 Ml••........ 010 111 Oll0-4 I • Clllc-OU OIO 011-S 10 0 HH S, ~I ... I", l't .... 11 (11 ONI ~ mon1, lk#'na, Hoyt (71 -Fllll. w HOY' 11·0) L -FlnQer~ 10-11 HA-Miiwaukee. Hltlt 121 A-ll,212 llMS.•7.0.-...1 B•lllmott Oil 000 000-2 t 2 B.,.I..., .00 100 IOl-7 12 I Mer11 .. 1, Stewon (4) ONI o....,..,, T.,.. rtl, Ston .. y Ul encl Al-. W-Slonlev (l·ll L---rtJ.,.t CO.II. HR-&o.lon, ,..,.., (II A_.,ru, Tletft4, •9Y•l1t Otlroll llO 000 010-.. 1 0 l(OnlOtCllY 000 000 ~ • 0 llottme -Perrlsll, Dyor Ill. 0.W• -we11111n. W-Aozeme CHU; 1.-G11r• 10.21. A 21.419 ................. Clt voleftd 000 000 ~ • I hut 100 llf n._. 12 t 8arlltr. l..llCIY 17) -HlllOY, 04&&; MtdlCll, J-tOn Ill encl s-d0ff9-W-r Mtdlcll (1.0). 1.-Bllrker 10.11 HA-Te..u, Oliver 111. A-10.-.U ,, Y--•.lftotJe,.J Hew YOO 001 "• __. • 1 T0tonl0 000 001 020-J J I A Moy, Cit.Dewit II), T. U-.ood Ill. OOIUI• "' •ltd Cerone ; Todd. J . Mcl.ell(Jlllln (Al, O.,..ln 111. 8•rl0w (I ), Wllllt I•) --Ill W-R Mlly U.01 L-T odd (0.11 ~(I). HR-Hew v-. Geml>I• 121 A 1',290 --. •• T .... , Minne.ow JOO 001 020-1 1 2 SUllll 0CM :ZOO 001-t II 0 Arroyo, 0 C-r 141, O'Connor (ti Otld A Smllll; Glteton, Perrott (ti, Cieri< It). w -G1t•1Dnl1.0I L Arroro 10.11 S-00r1l 111 HR-Mkww\OU, s.n.11ty UI, R Slnl1I\ (I) A _.,l05. NATIONAL ~EAGUE 0od9er• 4, Glant• 2 LO' AHGeLllS SAN l'•AllfCllCO urll.,. L-\.211 • 0 0 0 Lenelr•.cl • 0 1 0 lak.,,11 2 0 I 0 Ge rvey,11> 4 ~I 1 O Cey,30 l 0 Gu•rrer•.rl • I 0 CullllO,p 0 O 0 0 SclOKI•.< 4 I 2 1 Ruuell,H l 0 O I HOOIOn,p l 0 2 1 Mondey.rf I 0 0 0 Hor111,cl Mor9en,2'11 Cl•rll,r1 Evon1,Jb Htm60n,H lvlt,111 Moy,c LeMNr.11 Smllll,u Wllllson,p Molflll,p Oevl1,pfl lrelnlnt.P Mertln,pll Totals k-.ll'JI ..... ....... t 1 I 0 4 0 2 0 4000 )000 4 ' 2 1 J 0 0 I 4 0 2 0 JOOO 2 0 0 0 J 0 I 0 0000 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 '0 0 0 ,. 2 . 2 LOI Af\9919 020 :ZOO ~ Sen Fren<l9co 010 000 011-l E -0 Ev..,s, At11Mll, lhltor. OP-la Angelu 1, Sen l'r•ftclsco I. LOI-Los Aneeles J. S.. l'rOMIKO 1. 28-GMwy, Scloocla, H-Ofl, Morlll'I. 18-Herndoft. SI-a-. ~-II Sl'-lvle. Lff....... '" H • 1a 88IO Hoolon (W,l.O) ,~ • 2 J I J CHllllo 15,21 l~J 2 0 0 0 1 """r-'-Wllltson lt.>11 S I 4 ) I J Moflltl 1 0 0 0 0 2 Brelnlno 2 o o o 2 2 ••111---... r-2., A-10.ns. ·-•.C:-.4 Clll<egO 000 2'0 000-. 1 J Montreal OIO GOO Ob-S 1 ) Re,,1<11e1, C•udlll UI, Tldrow Ill - Bla<llwell, Ro09"-._It> -~. w Bellnun (1 ·01. l -Tldrew 11·1). A JO,G01 I Metll,~J SI. Loult oot 000 Olo-J J J New Von o4D 001 oo.-s s t Martinea, Otllft 111 efl4 l'of'tff; Z.OC"8ty. Ha111me<1 l'l, Alie<\ 111 8"ll TAvlno. W- Zocllery (2.0) 1.-Mertl ... , CO.II s-1 .... (2) A 1J,»4 ................... , Pllttl>Urgll 011 Otl M ..... U 1 Pl\lladelpl\la 000 100 002 01.-.. 10 1 Bibby, T•lll" 191, JllClllon (ti, ·-1101 aftd Hl<o•I•, euttom, I.YI• ttl, ¥c0rew 1111. w..-or-11.01. 1.-R- 10.11 Hll-Pllllodelpllla, ""-t1h1w1 111 A-27,00. ...,..,,er_• Atlante 000 000 000-.0 4 1 H~11on 000 000 20a-2 2 0 B0911 Mid BeMdkt, RY9", ~Ill ~Ml Athll'(. W-ltv"' 11 .. 1. L-eows 1•11. ~-l.ac...te (I). A-22,*. ............ 1 Cincinnati IOO 004 --IO II 2 "'" 0.... 000 001 OCIO-1 ) • Soto eftd Nolefl; Mui'•, l.ltlleflold C.l. 1.llC .. II), W.ltll Ill encl T. IC__... W- Soto IHI. L--.,• 10.H. Ha-Cfft<lllNU, Otle ..... CJ), FMttf IJ). A-tt•t .. ~ecote• UClLAt YIClllll'Nli(o (.el ,..:, ............. c.t ..... o.m ...... HlllU ea1 Plllr ,.._ 11, LMlt ... " "*" left ~ SC.-.11. UC._. DM9I a Htatl ~track ..... n.f1t. .......... 100 -I. Hort IS>. I0.2: 2. -·IMO), 10.4: > Wllll-IMO>, 10.4. 211 -I, Hltelnt IMOI, U.J, 2. Wllll..,.. IMO), JM: a. C.-. ISi, ZU. 4'0 -1. Al-• IMOI, SU; 2. C-IS). S>.1, 2 A. /li/JIAtr• (MU), SU. 9'0 -1. Br-1 IMO), t .112.2, 2. Oalllven IMO), 2:11.7; l .Md)OllOld 15). l ; •. 7. Mlle -I . £..., (MDI, 4:1U; 2. Ne- IMOI, 4:&t; J. Mettl.,.1IMO),4:40.0. 2""'11e -1. E.ddY 1¥0), 10:01.t ; I. Ne- IMOI. lt:OU; I.~ IMO), 10. 1'.7. llOHH -I. H8'1 ISi, IU; J "9lo lMOI, U.•. I. LA9tfr ISi, tU. lJOLH -I. HlecliM (111101, 40 1; I. ~ ISi. 40.•; J. Oemnlft ISi, 40.t. 4'0 reley -1. MAtet Del. 45.4. Ml .. ret.y -t. Mo .... Del, 2:41.t. HJ -I • ...,,, Ill, ._2; t. Vuc:11revk ~I •. ... ..... WtNn IMOI, $-If. I• U -I. ---ISi, 10-), J. Wlll'-IMOI, IN; J. vuc ... ovlc ($), , .. , Pl/ -1. T ... ~ (SJ, 12>.o; 2. Ryon IMO>. IH; J. ICldt IMO), 11.0. S,. -I. Uronkll IMOl, ... >; 2. Aneelkl (SI, •S.11; J. LclpllOf' IMO), .._S. NBA playDff• ~ ........... .. I ...... _) ••n••• CON"•••Nc• .......... ac.. l<WI A_. tOI, "-Ion 9' lMrle• Ilea i.J) l'-nl• IOI, IC-1 City" (K-City IMdlMr ... ~21 ......... ._ H..,1.., llC SM AlllOftlo P-nl• al K-Clly •A&TlaN CCHt"•a•IK• ....... .,.."'~ P"lledelpllla 116, Mllwa111aee tt ( Pl\11•0.lllNll INdl ....... ).2) ....... .,..o- PllllOdelllN• •I Mii•°'* .. Women QQMMUIUTV C:OU.IOa 1' ....... 0tYC.-...T__. ............. OP ... c-tt .. , ......... '1 OaANOe COAST -l(,...,.r If, •-11 20. O.yden •.-Iner •. Torre 4, Maril to, CM· roll • ll'A5ADa•A -,,.,.,IOW 14, ""-lloy 10, M<Claln 14, G ....... 4, °'*"'9 II. l(MN 4. HalHllN. OCC, J>.J2. Tot.at '-' 09'81'91 C:..-It, ..__ 11,CMllHM: OOY*fl (0CC). 1(().1 I((» IC0.2 ~ ll().2 1(().4 W.lt 1(()4 1(().2 1(().1 1(().1 1(()4 W·\O 1(().10 1(().2 I((» W·tO I(().) 1(().2 l(Q-4 1(().2 I((» l(Q-4 1(().1 ICCM 1(().4 1(().1 L·IC0.12 I((» KO.S KC» 1(().1 ICO.t W·lO ICCM 1(().1 W·IJ l((M K<M 1(().1 1(().1 KO.I ~ 1(().11 W-tJ tr.04 KIM -"°' Pro bowllna l'U. TOYaMAMIHT (al Wl-1.KIU, C-.) l'lnt ,._. \.Nll9n 1 $1tv• -1Jn 1.110 2 Merk Aotl\ 1,m J. Oon S'l'lavlo 1,141 • a111y~ 1.1t• S. Pe1e ~ 1,7- Monte Certo O~n (et M.-c.. ....... ,._._._".._... Jimmy c.onnon dOf Conrr-&erauutu, ._., 1 .. ; s.tnmy Glernmolve OOf Cl!rl•IOtlfW Ce.-• ._l, , ... '"4, c:a..111ermo VIias OOf. Ille H•ll•U. M . •·O; GlllH Morellon 0.1 Slll-GllCu ..... M, H.'"4 lecMlll .......... Adrl-~--dltf. Vl<lor Pttcl, ~l. ... 2. Yennlell ~def. Oobrlel Vrpl, 1·S. S.1, 1-t; B•Nll Tarot &Y d•f. Cilrl•toper •oeer11..i1"·"'· .. '· ~adl Kremer Open latLM ....... ) .. .,... ..... ....... Brion Te«-OOf. Reul rtomlre1, 2 ... '-2. , .. , .. 2. "°"" McEnr• Off. l'ordl Te.,..... ...... , .. . .._ ..... ~ W•lle< R-* ,,., Roll ~l"L ~J. ... ,; NIO ~ dltf Teny Moor, .... w . Sandy ,,_..,., de1. "'111 Dint, 1 .. , 1 ... Slan Smith cMC. Rkk MeYlr. •~. U , •-4 High echool tennl• C., .. klNOS 4-A 1. GorDM ,,.1111¥, 2 Mlraleste. J ... w,. ly Hiiis; •. s.nte a.,ure; s EdlMr>. • University, 7, Hu"ll"oton Beocll; I TllOllSll!ld Oolis, t . S.-y Hiiis; 10. ll Toro. ).A 1. wn Merll'O, L L»9l#IO 81ocll; J. I.II Olllnte; ._ P•lm Sc>rtnos; s. Heme!; 6. I.II C.,,.da; 1. Temple City;•· Rl...,.rll,,. Poly; '· Olen4ote, It. WalNA. ••• 1. Clll-1, t. I.II Hebra, J '4onflloff. 4 Cenlr81, S Le hrna, • Sct111rr; 7, Wnllolle, I. lndlo, t . Cllllfornla , 10. u Pvente. ' l·A I H•rverd, J Loyol•; l Crupi; 4. Cerplnterla , I Tl\elcl\er, • Wtl>I>; 1. Montclelr, I Torrano, t. Cllto, 10 81,,.,. Diego Women c:ou.•o• llC Imm 7, Cal 5.-.... ...._ J ~ Mana Myers (II def. Chrltllen, W . M , SMlll\e-r (I') #. l( .. llng, M , I .. , W ; Mollftd• ,.,..,, (I) dltf. ~. w ... I; Mllltory Ill def. 8111919"1, ._,, M ; llleclll Ill def.·-· 1-J, W ; ltol•llM IFI def. ktrano,1•,1 ... 1.1. .,..... llllU"·MY•U (I) Ml. $1\tllhOmmor- Cl\rltllall. W , M , Mallory-HI_,. m dlf. ~eu.,.111<1. w. '"''; 1t .. 11~•1 ...... Ill def. 11--K•l-.,W,H.H. Misc. Sizer• JuUu& Erving rile• to flip ball into ba.lket QI MilwaaUcee'• Mickey JOMI defend.a. ~ Trout season nears start, outlook ·appears on the up By JIM NIEMIEC Dellyl',...~Wrtw With the opening of Califom1a's general trout season less than two wP.eks away. the attention of many Southland anglers is centered on the High Sierras Even though most all of Southern California's trout waters are open on a reduced limit basis throughout the year. thousands of fresh water fishermen journey to the high country to challenge the streams and lakes for rainbow, brown and brook trout. Stream and roadside lake conditions are prime for a very good opening weekend. There is not a great deal of s nowpack in the higher mountains and most all reachable waters should be fishab)e with lower than normal water levels preva1hng Lakes below 8,000 feet are fairly ice free. although there might be a light crust on some lakes early in the morning CROWLEY LAKE should produce good to ex cellent rainbow trout fishing for the thousands of anglers who trad1tlonally flock to this popular lake on opening weekend . The average r ainbow caught out of this lake is in the 12 to 14'Tnch class. but lhe bigger fish are browns that can run to 10 pounds and more. It doesn't seem lo matter what kind of bait is used in this large lake. as limits are the rule rather than the exception for both shore and boat anglers June Lake Lopp will produce some nice trophy trout helped by last fall's brood stocking program by the Department of Fish and Game. Bridgeport Lake and the Twin Lakes above Robinson Creek will most likely reward an angler with a giant trophy brown trout in the 15 pound class. Every year the biggest trout of the opening week comes from these brown trout waters. ALL ROADSIDE STREAMS will be heavily stocked prior to the opening an<t should kick out plenty of pan sized r ainbows. Usually early in the year bait works better than flies but those tossing lures seem to catch their fair share of trout Anyone who plans on heading to the Sierras should carry chains and make sure that their anti· freeze is up to protection It as impossible to predict OUTDOORS the weather in this country and heavy snow storms have caught many anglers un-prepared in years' past. Closer .to home, Orange county County lakes are providing anglers with some very good trout. bass and crappie fishing. Irvine Lake is very good for lunker trout to seven pounds while some good bass fishing is also on tap for those who like lo toss surface plugs into the brush Irvine is rising daily and heavy stockings of trout s hould continue through July. Also look to this popuf8r lake to produce some very good catches of crappie. catfish and bluegill as the lake's water temperature continues to increase. ANAHEIM LAKE is also good for stocked rainbows, both for shore and boat anglers. Those who are coming off these two lak~a with the earliest limits are currenUy using very light mono to fool the fish in clear water. Almost all the lakes in Southern California now are giving up good catches of a variety of fish . The San Diego City lakes are high on the list of bass fisherman as out.standing catches continue to be made. Lake Hodges. El Cap and Lower Otay are all red hot for good quantities of bass. • Three races end at Neuport Beach Gauchos roll to 20-3 win Ben Amaya, Rick Irwin and Rusty Evans belted home runs Wednesday lo spark Saddleback .., College to an easy 20·3 victory~ over Los Angeles CC in non·. conference baseball acUoo on ·. the Gauchos' field. , Islands to Newport race. Newport Beach will be the terminal point or three offshore races this weekend as yacht clubs from the north and south send racers here for the start of the Newport to Ensenada race the following weekend. Coronado Yacht Club will host the race from San Diego to N~port with the PHRF yachts ...IJll!'e.ki.Dg the Henderson Trophy and IOR ratings sailing for the All of the arrivals will be part B0.4TING ~. of the r~ entry list of 885 boat.I sianed for thi1 year'• 1Ude down the coast tn the 34th an- nual Ensepada race. Main event for the races to Newport will be California Yach.t Club's Mayor's Trophy > Rfce, the second of tbe Overton Serles -whieh will brtn1 a host of y acbt.a from the Marina del Rey area. Also comtnr from the north will be • neet of laternatlooal Offshore Rule and Performance Hand.leap Racln1 Fleet.ya~btl in Anacapa Yacht Club'• Cbandel Surf.ing duel set £«>.-ltB ; The l!fational Scbollltlc Surf- 1n1 A1t0elatlQn wUl bolt the 1881 lnteroaUoaal Team CbaUen1e AJril 18 ~ 18 at the Pier .ln Hun~Bekh. Tbe U;J.A. team wlll lace '41Nldl ~ AUittalla, S~ taata.M ilDd llilllt Mrt«a. The bl ......... elMd by,,.... T-o---. Ackerman Trophy. r A .fleet of 16 IOR yachts start, ed competition today in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's defense of the 78-Yelll' old Lipton Challen'e Trophy. Southern California Yachting Association calendar: Loa AJ111eJet-Loo1 Beach (No regattas scheduled) Amaya went 2·for·4 &Jld col· lected three RBI, while Ehna was 2-for-5 and Irwin 2-for-2 as the Gauchos evened their over- all record at 12· 12. Coach Dick Stuetz, who haa announced he will step dowta u the Saddleback ..coach after ijl1a season, used four pitchers, and freahman Rich Rooney. from Mater Del H(ah, collec~ the victory with three lnf)inp of perfect ball. ln all, the Getichos pot.qlded out 15 bits and toot adv ant$ of nine Los An1eles CC flefdln1 mlacues. Monarchs win Angelus title I ~ I I ' -' Orange Cout O~LY PIL.OT/ThufSday, Apr111&. 1981 HI fl PlasUc suf1ery bas 1pread acrou all barrlert ol income, education, sex and a1e. It is reacbtn• mau market proportiona that defy credulity. Nearly one of five Americana who uoder1oea aealhetic or re- construction surgery bas an income of SU,000 or lea1. And, for a form of surgery sUll believed by moat people to be the. virtually exclusive domain of Hollywood-type celebrities and the wealthy, other ftn· dings emerging from a study by the Ch ica go -~ b a s e d American Society o f .:~ .... ~, Pl astic and Reconstructive SYlVIA PDRJfR Surgeo n s CASPRS> are: -A FULL 35 PERCENT of patients undergoing the surgery are men, and 43 percent are 35 years or younger. -MORE THAN 1 MILLION of the patients un d ergo the surger y in the hospital and tens of thousands more in the surgeon's office The surgery is rising al a rate of s percent lo 10 percent a year. -OF ALL THE OPERATIONS, 40 percent are for rhytldoplasty tface lift), rhinoplasty (nose sur· ger y >. breast augmentation and other cosmetic sur· gery The other 60 percent involve post-mastectomy construction, craniofadal reconstruction (skull) and other forms of sur gery concentrating on such areas as bums, cancer. etc. While plastic surgery is one or the fastest grow- ing s pedaJties tn U.S. medicine, it is not inexpensive. A face lift can range from $2,000 to $5,000; nose re· construction. from $1,000 to $3,000 : chin implant around $750 and breast building. $1,000·$2,000. In addition to the 18 percent or the patients wUh incomes of SlS.000 or less who have these operations, 34 percent come from the $15.000-$25.000 income group, 29 percent, from the $25,000 to $50,000 category. and 19 percent from $50,000·plus groups. In the ASJ>RS. there are 2.200 board-certified plastic surgeons and the supply of qualiCied surgeons is plentiful, says Dr. J erome E. Adamson. ASPRS president. But you still must protect yourseU against non·quaJified doctors trnd your own unreal expecla· lions BE REALISTIC ABOUT what plastic surgery can achieve. Eyelid surgery can remove bags under the lower li<Js and loose skan from upper ones -but it does not refhove crow's feet at corners. BE REALISTIC ABOUT your motives. You may benefit in terms of increasing self-satisfaction and confidence but the physical improvement will not solve many or your problems DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE the seriousness ot the procedures. even though they may be performed in a doctor's office. RECOGNIZE THAT YOUR age, health, skin lex· lure and bone structure are variables affecting the oper ation, and don't expect miracles from the sur- geon. During the pre-operative interview. a good plastic surgeon will explain possible complications and the periods healing may lake. IF YOU DEClDE TO go ahead with surgery, con· suit your family J)hysician for the names or plastic surgeons. If he doesn't know, call your local county medical association or contact ASPRS (Suite 800, 29 East Madison St.. Chicago, Ill. 60602. Ph~ne t312> 641·0935 ). The society has a nationwide paUenl refer· ral service which will provide you with the names of three active members of the ASPRS in your area. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YO~ltlAl'l Flrwl Oow·J-•"'II'-' AMERICAN LEADERS 'rtoc 'tt' · ""' u : Own Hlllh LOw ClclM )0 Ind t .. UJ 1Q0.(41•1.Ql100171+12., lO Trn .:17.20 Ml.47 415.01 .... ff+ I. IS VII IOS ID IOLtl 104.'M !Ol.12+ O. U Siil .. U Jtl.16 ... SI 1111S+ S. lf\OUS. 4,m , Tren •.II Ullll •1 U Slk •.l'ft WHAT STOCKS DID i HEW YO..I( IAl'J Apr U ...... ~ r~· """•need l 0.<lllWd JOI Un<llengod M Tole l 11-. Ital New lllQllS IH New low• 10 WkAl "MU D10 NEW YO~ll. IAI') Af>I U Adv•nced r-,z; Oe<ll....:t 23' Un<llenood 119 II Totel 1-,. 11 New hlllf'I " New •owt • METALS W~Y C......, f7._.,I ~•-"•U.S. deP..._. Ilona . ..... »-JI c.l'IU • '*""4. I* 416 Qft(s. poulld, .... ..., .... ,. ..... ,.. Meiell W.ll '1ompealt• ... ._,_,. 7•<.Mt••llOUl'd, U.$, liMf'CWY s.oo.oo...-11 ..... ~ .... ODlroyOJ.,H.Y. SILVER l- 111f I ever get to be on angel I'd rather ploy a guitar." · by Virgil Partc~ (VIP) • MARMJ\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum Q , •• .,...... ........ 5~• '"< 4.,(o "Must you always have the last bark?" Jl"DGE PARKER GARFIELD "Me an 'Ruff don't ent~any dog shows 'cause we don't like to get dressed up " by Harold Le Doux 1 •. I DON'T KNOW. !>AM!~ THA1'~ WHY THEf>f: f>IX' MONT~ HAVE ~EEN ~CH A NIOWMAAE: by Jim Davis IF 1"'ERE 15 SOCM A TMlt.1& A~ WHAT ~c;> vou LIKE. ro REINCARNATION, I't7 LIKE TO COMf 8ACK A5, GARFIELt7? COMi. MC.K A5 A MOVIE 5iAR . ···" GORDO f'l 'NK\' "INKERBEJ\N 'THl5 15 A VER£..r> IMPRES51VE P~C.T t.W HAVf HE.RE, <,.b(J~ /MN ! DR A BB LE Mi 'i. OfU&&l.£ ! (..OOt( d4~1' I '7crf I~~£ MAIL 1141-S ~to11tU:r! HAVE l...oLJ BEEN ABL..£ fO PlGK UP A~HIN& WI'fH t.()(JR HOME~DE RADI0- 1E.LE5COPE? . · .• .:r;,,,. __ by Tom K. Ryan MAY I RE!COMMeNV OUR HIE1H INTfKES1 SAVINGS CEiftf'I FICA'Tl:S? by Jeff MacNeOy by Gus Arriola ------..... MA~f;;E; ).T-1'ESZ>JC)(»J ""A~ AflZ>JIT A 6((!,fl.J OF'-a..o ~, ~-·· a!f ~T'TWa 10 ~ ~ .____..,..,-..._,,, -r~~ \S f . iiiiillii:irr..---..1 6r&IQ.~~ tAJEll , NOTHING DE.FINITE. I 51R .. by Tom Bat1uk BUT I'IY1 AWAl1JN(, CONFIRMA11CN ON 1LOO NEW PULSAR5 FROM lt4E MO~T WILSON 085€.RVATCRQ ! by Kevin Fagan (1 'f14f:ft 'fwA'f, ~ 1'11€-1' U i~"1i.l(y 1"0 'f~u.. '(Ol) • ----. SO~E:fHINb I .J) 1 I I ti I H "'' \ , ;......ftW ...... ... ,~WOMAN Wonds WOl'lllf\ •OI* tM .,..-lftWJI\.. .... Of • ~--· mlatMI gul-cs.'°9 ~ aallfl'IClllng ~ I TIO TAC DOUGH M•A•t •H Aller a tran.fualon """Cl • pint of Frenlt'• btoOd. Hawk~ 1U1P8C11t Mm of ha¥lng hapelllla. • G00011Mla TMCma't -~ etande to IOM Nit oon1ract end J.J. ,_ tha ... Of. ~to.ti thelit. (Pllr1 41 W TOMOMOW/ TODAY MIXED REACTIONS -A deaf hospital employee <D•vid Purdham) is uncertain of his feelings about the news of an operation which could restore his bearing on "Nurse" tonilbt at 10 on Channel2. A loc* at Iha lal•I In com- munlcat1011 ta1allll••. ...otll., ... ely In the alac- tN>nlcl lnduMry: • ltartllng ~~In INS.,,AIM. • &J!CTNC COW'AHV i== MO I lklU.le"u'I MlCOMI aACK. KOTT'S' Allet "*"II • flOlll. Epa1eln dlMPi>M<• t>ecauaa ,,. can't take tt>e ,,.,_, ,,,. 0111« s-•llOQA give him • 118#1'( HIU A r•uurn vllll It peld to Che HO«el Sordlda with 9enny In c:tlarQ9 of room ..-.nc. I l<CST NIWMEAT l'TUOec> au "Tubing .. Cowt:>Oy Danny s .... tnr t1dee ;., • wild mullang roundup. C•thy Sllwrlll lullee dOWll Farm- ~c::;: (R) Q) ~MIU.ER Whtie Wolo c••••n• CHANNEL LISTINGS llround New v orll In • ~cab, Iha ~ at .,. ptadflc1 ._ 10 cac>a wlU1 an unctareowt' 1n-11oatlon by lntetnel Afteirt ... EDfTONAl ,. I cm .we NeCNaWI HAWW' DAY8 AGAIN Marion Cranaforme LMthar T uacaoaro lrlto • I0\1lly young lady tor • miff cary baH I A8CNEWI JC>ka'I WILD • M"A"l"H Aller Cha mall c:o,._, Trapper mak• plan• to daMr1 and FraNi r--ranoaa,,.. atoca ~ • STNlfT'I cw -m+.HCl800 A wanted eller> without a gr..,. CllrO g.ta Into trov- t:>le t:>elore Stone •nd Keila< gain~ on Che raal lllller ID OYEAEA8V G.-11 Miich Millet C-- gr-an Ron Oelluma (R) 8 KN)(l 1CBS1 Los An.;i~tes D KNBC NBC1 Los Angeles • l(lLA tlna I Los A.N)Plec; Q K.ABC TV 1ABC1 Lo!> Angel!''> ()) "'fMB 1CBS1 Sdn D•<'qo fJ l(HJ TV (lnel I l c>s An l"'lf'~ 9 i<CST tABC ':>an Dwqn ... K T1\I 'Ind I lo~ J\nqPlt• ... • l<COP TV (Incl l Los Angelt>S SI l<CE r TV• PB St Loo; Anqt>IPo; 61!) KOCE TV1PBS1 Hunl r.q1on Bt• 1cn r I (fl MEW QMlllltt Guet1a: Nall Car1er. Brlwi l(etwln, Wll SMner, Sonny ~. f:IO 8 I ON n.TOWN Hoalt St~ Edwwde and MaloOy Roger• take a ioo. at llOw a,_..,~ a 1111, lrlcludlng llOw It male• Iha Chart and c:llmba Co the top; • 50 )'Ml' bMuty Mllut• I ,Aa&.YmJO IHAMANA Guett Krllty Mc:Nlcllol. 8 EVIWITNl8I L08 AW?"D Hoata 1,_ Peorou and PIUI Moyer IMI• a IOC* 11 Iha ~ quake, AM Marga- ret and 007 geog.II for ••ac:ut'-1 ,ACE ~MUM: AU IN TM fAMll Y Mika l>'ac>W• tor 1118 flnal a:a""8 And Ille family II 1 .. 1 ,_ the proaoect of hie college graduation. • MACNEIL I L.EHAEA AIEPORT Ci> ..wa ()) P .M. MAClA.ZIME A married couple wl\O co- au1f'or romance noll*la; • man wtlO acu+pca c:ley on akull1 Co re-cr••le Ille IH· lur" of murdet vlellm1. l:OO fJ Cl) CHECKING IN A rowdy toolball team. coecMd t:>y Ly1e'1 Old htgh ICl\OOI .....-11, checlta Into 11\e Sc Freoeric::k 0 eucKAOCKM A m ena cing warloro lhrutent Iha ahlp _, &Ide onara eanctu81)1 to • b9aulltul ''°'""-•Y D MOVIE * * 1h "Wlne'-ler 73" (19871 Torn Tryon. Jonn Suon A man'a ptUad rflla .. ••<Men. and he .... ,. tor It IO 00 tlwQll9ll """1 twldl ii~"":· a::·t,:. ··-It ·~.-... ,,,..,...,.,.... ...... e,t, ~ WMeiw. A ,......~ M 1t-,..... om. ...... ••Oftft11lly ,,.~, .. °"" "*'· L .. -. ,... .... ~ ...... ..... u.-~ ....... ~of .. the Cf!ri9tlut'• ~ -...... In tN 1taOI. IDout • f'OUIJ of ~· drll\lul119 "t•Y yo11n11 .,.,..... wtlOaa '*""- ptaNl la~by-•• . ..,. *** "TheM~" (1N1) ._.. L.ot911, ,...., ,....._ 9aead on tN p6a)' by Oeorge lemerd a.- A ~ m111o1-.. It fOroed by her ftdtler'' .... to "*TY • "'-' with • ~~ll'IM. W OMeTMe M1U:t4 YN«Nl.l..-r 88Ndl LIMMC llc;ca out "The ~ ... I lagand- 8') pe.y of 11 a11 1IC11• and uordlnl and .,...,..._, The Prltlkater," .... , ... dating bed! '° Iha 17111 C*'ltury. • AMII llCAN IHORT ITOfn' ''The"**'~·· by Ring LM~. A retired couple C-'-Wtillmor•. T.,._ Wrlghtl v~tlofllng In Florlde find ttieir mar-riage .,..,, ,,,._, en. ----"" Did beMI (!laptlan Elliot1). (R) l:IO W (I) PAM P\.f'« The t--oa dallghtar of e hlC>ola -ioie .... legal aid to be adopllld Into • r_epul• family • 0 llOeOM 9'.IDOa Kip flnelly get• a Chance to lake Sonny out on Iha town.CR) .._ 8 (I) MAOfUll, P.I. Magnum le hlf9d to find e -·· mlMlnQ llMoa. and part or th• job lnc:ludat entering • rnaratl'IOn 1Wlm-run·blka r-e MOYI! • • * "Ftmlty Ptol" ( 1978) Wiiiiam 0.\laM, 9ruca Darn A IOf'IUMC..... and ,,., ~ boyff1end -out to k>cet• • WM/thy widow'• mlaelng heir and COllac1 a Sf0.000 ,_.,d CR) •oe.w.v.......a A MW detactM acciu- 9arney and hi. aqued ot being on IM tlka. (R) • Rl.MIX'l1 Chari" Champlin end Garry E-1 ll09t tM1 ap.- c:lal l\lghllghUng cillM and rooteoa of upcoming f'llme. lnc:ludlng Mlc:f\MI Cimino' I "Heaven'• Gete" and Abal Oanca't 1921 4-hour lnMI~ ... ~ ... -~PMVllM Roger Ei-1 and 0... Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT/ThUrtd1Y1 Aprtl 1e. 1981 Cl K C 0 P • _::.a ; 0 0 -• ' T b e llllliooatreu." Sophia Loren and the late Ne1' Sellett star ID WI mone about a woman wbo mut marry a 'IOOCI bualneuman because of the terms ofjher father's will. KCET • 8:00 -"On Stqe: Barucb Y akov Lumet." Lu met ac:ta out ''The Dybbuk, .. a leaend of C'esmon and "Herthele the Pranks ~r:• about a jester in.the 17th century. NBC e 9:00 -"Family Plot!' A suspense movie about a couple's search fol' a mluinl man leadinJ to discoveries of crimes by an unknown person. Stan Karen Black, Bruce Dern, Barbara Harris and William Devane. Siik• hotC an lnformMNe ~ .. lllflat'• "-at rM mo-Me. e:aoeOTA» ~ trying to ....,..,_ • ,.. C4lb dl'l¥W. Louie cl"-• c:ab Into a llttlt old lady ~ off • curt> and II IOdled Wlfftl a mM-llon-dolllr ..,.., • TOUOMOWI TODAV A ~ on alrorllft of Ille 21• century; 1111 lllamlna- llon ot llMt Ind ti6actltdty ptoduoed by aoler ~: • look at the _,., lnjuf'y care unit at Valley Medlcel I c.nt.r; -.PNd'dlona tor revo!Utlonary Cf1anQ9t In Amatlc:llll wor1I habit• 1 d u• to advance• In t~Clont 10:00. Cl) ..,... A deal hoec>f1al amployM I •eect• In an unaJ1P9Cted -to Mary'1 ,_. tllet hie '-Ing Cati be r8'1otad. II •• Niwa to/20 -~ TMIATM • llYSTIRY ''The "**'II Gama: Hof. MMC>" A Oletraughl - Calla In Sid and °"°° Wllel\ hi• C•l•brlty reotllooaa II ttOlen attar malclng • htoNy purMlclnd ......,_ ti • Q'and 61. (Pllr1 3) m110 • Cl) 9 'NIWI NtTMIC The l!lltarptlea tlmoe1 col· lldaa ...,. • '''"""' tple»-Clllllll In owter .,__ I NIM.YWID~ M•A'l"H Reder le accl9Plad to UM "Famoua Laa Vagaa Writ· .,. Sdlool'. end begin• reo0tdlng hie ~ of ,,,. '6017111. • ....VHIU. 8aMy portr8)'9 Tax Crn- bal, Iha Ooldan Boy Of Pop • OOCCAWTT a-t ,...., 8Ntlar 11:30. Cl) THI AJ I !MOHi Blnlley ...... George'• advloe, ~ent uo It, Ind windt up In )ail tR) • TOHIQKT Hott Johnny Careon G.-11: Don Mel.Mn, Lor- na Patt.,_.. e a A8CNIW8 , NIGHTUHI'. I L.ET'I MAK.I A DEAL. HOGAN'S HIAOD Hogan 0........ an offlcar•' Club IOf Stalag 13 • llAllETTA An uncooparattva wtt,_ JOHN DARLING to a ,,_.,.., ...,.. Tony • ,,..... • IN lllUfder ...... u~-tl:tl. (I) IOM' MI .. An..-. ....... .,, "' ...... ~.......,. .. --~ dowrt Meo Mdllily'•~· • M0"9 ••It ........ ,_ A le6- _ .. (1 ... ) Alda ..... pn,,, Der,..,. MclOIMn. A bandit -to"" ""' -.... _..... ........... ··~ ....... Whllll at1erldlnv I ~ ~ Clwtle'• ,,.:tit. ltle Atqlla dllcOWr "'9oll8 Ill ... IMlllofl hidden Nlow ..... decfl,(A) eu•1oa A -~ reepected ~.and.~ of Matt'•. 11 now a N100n bum, and Matt d9ddae to MlpNrn. ...... ..cJll•ll Tiie IMF Mt• out to ~ the oorrvp1 car-ot two P'~ fund r ..... tor cllaltty 11:tOGT~ Guatlf' t lngar Tad Nugent: Sen. Jer«nlah e>.nton (A-All.) • ONa _,.. MYONO "EncounC., .. An alf'pl- pllot le myttarloutly abducted out at the liky, and IUd09flly ·~ thOuland• of mltaa away 1:009 NVCHIC Pl•POtlB&A "Seneltlvity And CrMIM· ty" Hoat: Damien Slmp- aon Gu••«•· D•nnlt W•aver. l ynd1 Day· G •orge. Cllrlt topher 0-ge. • M0\111 • • • "Anatomy 01 A Murdet" ( 19Sll) Jam•• st-art. e.n Guare " 1malf.1own tllorna y Oefande an !<lmy lleutan· enc ..no le eccu.ea or kHI· Ing a man ...apec:tad of attK*lnO hi• wffa . • IC>ll'ECll!NT NITWON( NIWIS 1:t0• MOYt! ••'A "Trapped aa.-tn Tiie S.." (1974) L .. J Coob. Ma111n 8alaam Foor ,.,.,, 11re trapped In an underwat., room ~­ .,,, UOon raac:ue 1 .. m• to ,..... .,.,. ~....., ~f'IN­-=-..· ....... .,,. ..... .....,...~ ...... ...ilrd. ., .... ---••"41 .. ,.,,.,, Ill ......,. •• ,, .. n JoM c .......... ~.,, • *""-••• ,..., GaNn"' (tttf) l'o-.Mi7 ~ .... Ceraon. =1=· .. ~ .... .. MOY9 ..... "The Oun Art4 The Nun" (lt71) ~ °""· ... ~. -·MOY9 * * "Horror ,._ Frorn The Tllf'ftb" 11•70) PU Naachy. Emma Cohan. .. , .... •t0 MOYla •• ''Aoeting~·· ' ( 1956) OWlllOf WIWI. Sid- My Talllr. l:M. MOVm • ... "The 0'8n1 Ciew" ( 1957) Jett Mol'row. Mar• ~day ........ •:as MOVll * • "Ghoat Ship" ( 195it D•rmot Wallh. Hual Court Frlda11'• Dafll l•r Mori~• l-MORllNG- 11:00 e • "Oaeen Tra1r· (11135) John Wayne, M81)1 Korn- man A rOOeo arat N\1 OU1 10 trtp a ~ of bank tObl>et• t 1=*> 8 * * * "The Flbuloul I Wor1d Ot JulM v.,na·· tlMI) Louie T~. ErMtC Never a -AFTERHOOH- 12:00 81 * * * "CM 0t TIM PUI" ( 1947) Kl,.. e>ou0iaa. J-G•-• * * "BM1 L.aRue'a Tt>e Ark Of Noah'' 11978) Oocu· mantery S:aG 8 * * '" "Vanlal\tng Alrt- ca' t 1977) Oocumen11ry by Armstrong & Batiuk I I SOMETHING ROTTEN IN DENMARK Controversial 'Dallas' a mixed r'eview abroad By WILUAMC. MANN ..__,. ... ...._ .... COPENHAGEN. Denmark As if the unhappy Ewing family doesn't have troubles enougb in Dallas, CBS' hit series Is being derided in Denmark as a plastic, perverted mess unworthy of Danish TV. A leftist parliamentarian even i.s advocating indirect censorship, a dirty word in free· thinking Denmark. to get the s how off the air. Denmark was late in joining the worldwide bandwagon for "Dallas," the phenomenally popular night-time soap opera that details the tribulations of the oil-rich Ewing family. But "Dallas'' has been among Danish television's most popular series since iu first screening last De<:. 26. Joergen Ifversen, entertainment director for the country's lone, publicly owned. TV station, said audience sur- veys in February showed more than half the 5 million Danes watch every Friday night episode. Carsten Kyhn of tbe Left• Socialist party was not im· pressed, however, and be called Ifversen before the Radio Coun· ell not long ago to express bis displeasure. The council i.9 the advlaory body established by parliament for the channel. At the meeting, it developed that other council members were not overwhelmed with the caliber of "Dallas," either It was criticized for poor artistic quality and simplistic charac· terization. "Perverted charac· terizations," .. a perverse mess" and "TV's answer to sob-sister magazines" were some of the epithets. Once council member joked that she was surprised the U.S. Embassy had not filed a diplomatic protest over the pro· Jim Daw, patriarch <j the infamous Ewing family i n "Dalku." gram for portraying American society in such an unfavorable light. The summons to Ifversen was lo discuss his reasons for buying tbe ser ies' rirst 18 episodes. which he recently gave on a show called "TV on TT": 300 million people in the Western world watch the show, be rea- soned, so Danes should gel a chance to pass judgment. Jn addition, Ifversen said, sta· tions in West Germany. which reach 40 percent of the Danish audience. and in Sweden, which reach 50 percent. were to air the program . Jf Danish TV de· 'J/alley' updale in production HOLLYWOOD CAP> -An updated version of "Valley of the Dolls" is now in production for CBS, starring Catherine Hicks, Lisa Hart.man, Veronica Hamel, David Birney, Jean Simmons and James Coburn. Renee Valente ia producing the four-hour miniseries al 20tb Century-Fox, bued on the ooveJ by Jacqueline Susann. It was made Into a movie in 1967. The mlni5eries alao features Gary Collins, Bert Convy, Carol' Lawrence and St.eve Inwood. ,!!~~~ .,.. ..... -w.., .. u..,... ..... We ofler the r9qulred 2 hour COU'1lt llfld permit 'o carry t...-ou. All ct..... taught by Polloe officers. c1 ..... Mid at our offia. or at yours for SHS.20 Onelud4' cl-Md peMill • ClesHa Ml p.m. ~. . 1 . 1~12 Noon s.turdaya. c1-. held at ~ otta e>y tor 15' or more -no 9ddltlonej ooet. 545-572f1 murred, he said, that would have cheated 10 percent of the country out or one or the most popular television shows in his- tory. ··So what if 300 million Americans and Europeam have got themselves involved in the upa and downs o.f the pluUc family Ewing?" Kyhn retorted. "What about those 900 million Chinese who haven't seen it? •·I think Radio Denmark s hould stick its antenna into Danish soil." Kyhn still fumed the next day. ''There are 2.8 million Danes who look at this s tupid thing," be said. He said informal rules for en· tertalnment programs on Danis h television call for preservation or "some kind of quality. This series has no quality at all." Ifversen, who said he counts himself among the fans of "Dallas." disagreed with Kybo's opinion and said hundreds Of thous ands of Danes do, loo. He said he was deluged with letters a few weeks ago when newspapers speculated tbat the series would not live past m episodes. The Radio Council has nb authority to order a program off the air. but Kyhn said he wants bis colJeagues to make it clear~ Hversen that. "OK, we've had J;8 numbers of "Dallas." and we don't want any more." Checking out 'Checking In' 81 PETER J . BOYE& A T• ....... W.-W LOS ANGELES -You know what they s ay about inbreeding? It's true. Meet "Checking In," the idiot grandchUd of "All in the Family." This unfortunate CBS homozy1ote comea to prime time out of "The Jefferaoos," which came to prime time out of "All in the Family." "Cbeckinc lo" is at least the fltth 1bow with roots in "All tn the Family." "Maude," "The Jeflerson1," "Good Timea" and "llr. Dooly" were ""tAe othen. •· AJI ln the Family'' wu drawn from the Brltlah comedy, "Tll Death Do Us Part." . The bad genes had {;surface eventually. The spinning off here is much the same as it was for "The Jef- fersons," who moved uptown to a better life and lesser gaga when they left Archie's Howse!' Street for their own s how. A sassy maid came with the Jeffersons' new life, and it turned out that Marla Glbbe' Florence was the best thing about "The Jeffersons." which continues to be a ratings hit for CBS after seven years. Thus , "C h ecking Jn," Florence's move to a better Ule and lesser gags. She bu found a job u maid supervisor in a ritsy hotel. Instead of tradinc insults with Geor1e Jeffenon, who at leut had the routine down, sbe goes at it with Larry. Linville, the "M·A·S-H" drip who's now a m ean hotel manager. Some samples of their clever word- duels: Florence: "You'd love it ii I quit, wouldn't you?" Linville : "I'd love it so much I thlnk I'd die!" Florence: "Ooob, that sounds so lemptin'I'' One ~ Fiorence's maids, Bet- ty, I think her name is, offers a special treat for viewers who k>ng for minstrel sbowa. Wben Plorenqe itells the f rlgbtened maid there la no such lhin1 u ebosts, the offensive thing rolls her eyes and replies, "Well, no, ah ain' aaytn• they is. and ab ain • saytn •\bey •in'." Lawdlr, :Whens'• SteplntetchltT r· GENERAL NEWS JVashiiigton Post r(!l?Qrter admits 'falfrtcation'; new winner selecte(:l -· • ! W ABHINGTON (AP> -The Wu~ POlt, 11tatemeut in a front·pa1e story la &oday'a POil. C&rpen1er of tbe Vlllate Voice for her story about calUn1 ltHU "the vicUm ol a bou.' pubUcl1 Poat executive editor Benjamin Bradlee a man who killed bll wlle while on leave froD) a apololiled today 'for prlnt.lnl a ·fabricated •tor>' advised the Pu.Utier board Wednesday that' Mill mental lnltltut.lon. abo\ll an I -year-old beroia eddict that ~on a Cooke )VOU!d oqt accept the award, which wu The Post bu won 14 otber P\lUturt, lnclu41n1 .. PuUtur Prize, JournallJm '• b.llbeet boDOr. batowed two d9>'1 earlier. one for merltorlout public servlce In lt'11, when lu Hll•"" Reporter Jane Cooke rellnqulabed her $1,000 'J.'he epllode tri11ered concerm about newa reporttna was lnatrumental ln unraveUn1 the Pulitzer Prize for feature writln1 and retlped media credibility and the way' Pulitzer Prize W ater1ate coveruj> that later d.rQve Pretldent from ~ t>•wspaper Wednesday after admltUn1 to wlnnen are"elected. Richard M. Nlxoo from office. her editor& th•l ber story wu a compoelte and the "The credibility of a newspaper ls Its moat The quesUOM that led to Wedneeday'1 di•· chlld addict ahe described and quoted did not ex· precious uset, and it depend.I almost enUrely on closure bepn with inquiries about 11Jl11 Cooke'• lat. the lntearity of l~ ceportera," BradJee _,aid. academic backaround by a Pulltier committee. "The article wu a serious rollr,prese,itatlon Col um bl a University, which lsauea the They lound dlacrepancies ~ her blo1rapblcal whlct) I deeply regret. I a'polo1lse to my Puutz~rs. accepted the Post's decision to 1ur-sketch. A Poat editor said lbe newspaper was VOICES REGDIC'T newspaper, my profession, the PUlltzer board and render the award and, after a telephone poll of alerted to a possible problem when the AP ln· n..c. all Jee.ken of the truth," Miss Coote said ln a board members, gave it instead to Teresa quired Tuesday about the apparent discrepancies. Editor BradUe MIWPOIT ~wa11BOR CRUISE a SUteAY •11CM AT THI CAll•Y 714 '71-71U ;, LONG TERM TO 15 YRS SHORT TERM TO 5 YRS> ~! *LOANS* E ti VERY COMPETITIVE RATES ~ ·~ ON REAi. ESTATE lnd &. 3rd TD S g: • .al~ (714) 851·1840 DAYS ..J a WEEKENDS 759.9553 ;.ilGHTS ~ ~ 0 c ORANGE COAST EQUITY F UNDS ::Q 9MIN SIO.OOOTO Sl.000,000 SECURED BYREAL& ~ MERCURY SAVINGS · and loan auoc\ation Ei~utlv• 011/~s: 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, CA 92647 Soutfl•m C•llfom/1 l#glon•I OtllcH ~7'f E. La Palma Ave., Anaheim, CA ll2807 81155 Vall~ View St, Buenaf>atlt. CA 90820 1&58 Arnell! Rd., C.matlllo, CA 03010 23021 Ila Center Or. (Lake Foraat). El Toro, CA 92630 20715~Avalon Bl'ld . Canion CA 9074& 1001 mparlal Hwy , La Habra. CA 90831 G) 4140 Beach Blvd , Long Beach, CA 90807 • 22939 Ha home Blvd , Torrance. CA~ 1095 Irvin• Blvd .. Tustin, (;.,t. 92880 lOUAl G 235 N Cllru1 Ava. WHI C°oYlna, CA '91793 ~~~:. "Mercury Room" 1y1//eb/a on 1 r•Hrw<I be1/1 ,, FORGIVE THEM FATHER • • • Come hear the meaning THIS Hoty week at Newport , Hart>or Lutheran Church Maundy Thursday Service - Thuraday, April 16 Good Friday Friday. April 17 ··Meal In the Upper Room 6 00 and 7 30 p m • Tenebrae Service 730pm EASTll 5'H»AY Festival ~rvlces Euter Sunday aU:OO and 10·30 a.rn. A Pancake Feast will be hetd before bOth aetVices. Bring the whole neighborhood! For reaervationa. please call the church office Friday morning. If you're 6 yeara old (or younger). there will be an EASTER EGG HUNT at 1000 a.m to stay In hot water 30-gallon water heater \'W ith energy saving temperature 1hut·off 11415 ~ ...... 124.95 ~ ........ 184.95 make It a hobby to do It right prolesslonal touch and cut 1•1," circular saw from Skll Gives extra cutting capacity combined with super comton and handling abllity. w. h.p. motor #574 STANLEY powertocll~ PL425 for safe stepping Derby 4' wooden step led· der tea1ure1 paint/utility shelf \'With popular slde • Newport H•rbor Luther•n Church 798 Dover Or., Newport Beac.h 548-3631 or ~·-&OCM Babysitter available for all &ef'VIC88. Dramel Moto Toot• with over 30 acceuorles 11 34•• your complete hobby kit #261 Reg 57.95. Excluelve 25'x1" wide blade stays rigid up 10 7'. 911 Power return. Bell clip Reg. 15 49. spreader locking device. Sturdy construction, wob· 13•• ble resistant. #390 Reg 19.95. CALL TOM MARSTON FORA FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN- ~~~=:.·!,~ D INTEAEST ON~Y Q . 714 7 8060 - HOLY WEEK 1981 GOOD FRIDAY 12 noon through 2 p.m. • Welk the W•y of the Cross with us,· Communion and special musfc. EASTER EVE (8aturd•y)7:30p.m. · Walt In expectation with us The Great C.ndellght VlgU, Baptt1m and First t:uct..rlstof E••t•r double hibachi Cut Iron double hibachi With adjusting twin grlll". 10"x17". #13S.. Reg. e.~. boolee canvas beach chair More comfort then ever on the beach or pool deck. Blue canva1 on a folding aluminum frame Quick-drying style. . 14.95. I b1m up ......... Mclan• 2 h.p. edger/ trimmer gtwa you profM- ~~=~':~~ 15911 dining comfort gets amund Quality 42" diameter gla11-top table With 1turdy aluminum frame. Outdoor dtnln~ made elegant! #142. Reg. 110.95. .. . hey, vlgoro get growing Vlgoro tawn fertlll;iier wttti control!~ time telH .. fofmuta fOr he&Hhy. grMn 1 II • lawn•. 25 lb. bllg. --Reg. 10.99. cool 'n comfy Open weave vtnyl atrap chalra to complement your new patio table. eoo1 4911 and eomforUlble ... ting. #900. Reg. 80.95. support rour locll tallllto • Galvanliect Wire tomato 9911 IUPPor1 to lnaure heatthY• ¥ large fruits. .• 11111• lllll NIU , f LA-County drops 1Alc~a Dlurder· rap By DAVID KUTZMANN .. ... Deilly PtlM --- Convicted child killer Rodney .T•mes Alcala -on San Quen· Un'J Death Row awaltlng the outcome ol Oranse County hear· ms• that could lead to a new ttlal -bad unrela~ murder charges against him dropped in a:Burbank court Wednesday. Because of the unreliability of a key prosecution witness, the Los Angeles County District At· tomey's Office aaked· Municipal Court Judge Marion Gubler to dismiss charges 81ainat Alcala, 3'1 . The murder count bad been filed against the Monterey Park man last summer In connecUoo with the strangulation death of a 21-year-old Burbank woman. Only several weeks earlier, A.lcala was stmtenced to die lo the California gas chamber for the l!n9 kidnap-murder of 12- year-old Robin Sameoe of Hunt- ington Beach. THE DISlllSSAL of the m4rder charge against Alcala coincides with an Oraqe1 County Superior Court bearing on whether two Orante County Jail informants committed perjury in testlf)'inJ aaainat the •mateur pbotoarapber during the Samaoe trial last year. The hearints were order.t by _Dlill'f ............ Sm. s. I. Hayakawa rnalu• po;nu while addrening tM World Affaira Council al Co.ta Mew'• South Coast Plaza Hotel Wednesday night. U.S. business def ended flayakawa says firms boon to S. African blp.cks ~IODI CAl>&Nll ... 1 ' -der if -.,. ~ ~· ucl ~ ..... ;M•"MiY...._....,-· · · s a~" he told the cl'OM! (If trove al Senate bilrthatWOUld t:.Sen. SJ. H•yakawa lubed out about 3so at the' South Coast establltb En1U..b u th-t ottlclal ~nesday at block liberals who Plaza Hotel. U.S. language. There lsd't. an of- cr i tic i :z e the presence of Calling Sout h Korea ficialU.S.languaee,hesatd. ~mer i can com P. an i ea lo "economically power.tu I" !l!iregated South Afnca. " ii•t&kawa said that the~ ::~1n a aJ)eech at the i'cr ranks seventh in trade wltb the Jilrs Council meetln& ln United States, with S10 l>\llion ~sa the 7~-year-old Repu~Ucan traded last year. •tnat<?r satd that dlssolutloo of Speaking with Daily -Pilot ~mencan buslnesses ln ~th repr esentatives earlier. ~trica would cost blacks needed Hayakawa touched on a number lobs . of topics, lncludin11: ~ -.'WHAT DOESN'T seem to oc--His recently introduced tur to a lot of these people Is lf Guest Wor~er Act ~HI that would tr-a de is cul off, blacks at the allow Mexican nalionals to post bottom of the ladder will be a refundable SSoo bond with the t>art. American go~ernmenl in order :: "So even if you hate South to work here six months. """'-~VPPO&T OF traiJdnl (utu~ t\in owners bJ memben of 'the National B..lfle As· soctatlon. In support of the guest worker bill, Hayakawa said the $500 bond ls not an excessive amount because. he said, aliens now are paying that much to be smuggled across the border. Hayakawa said that he favors granting amnesty to aliens who have lived in the U.S. for at least (See AFRICA, Page A2) " the Callfomla Supreme Court. In the Burbank case, charaea were dropped because yet another jallbouae informant against Alcala had shown blmsell to be unreliable. Loa Angel~ Deputy District Attorney David Disco Hjd a ma- jor element of the case aaainat Alcala was statements he al· legedly made to fellow Orange County Jail inmate John Mul- queen. HOWEVER, DISCO said, Mul· . queen admitted commitUni per· jury ln an unrelated Orange County drui smuggling case in July, ruining whatever credibill· ty be may have bad. "In view of U\is, "the people can't proceed," proeecuton told , Judfe Gubler Wednesday. Alcala had been charged with killint Jill Marie Parenteau in June, 1979, only days before Miss Samsoe disappeared from the seashore In Huntincton Beach. Miss Parenteau was strangled after an intruder broke into her second-story apartmept, accord· ing to Burbank police In· vestigators. ALCALA BECAME a suspect in the slaying in Au1ust, 1979. At the lime, It wu reported that <See ALCALA, Page A%) Laguna schools get blUeprillt on -funds A 32-page report that could serve as a blueprint for future fund-raising for Laguna Beach schools, suggests school trustees be remov e d from the Educational Foundation and ex· panding the foundation board from nine to 20 members The document. prepared by Development Mana11?ement As· sociates of Newport Beacb, rec- o m menda the Educational Foundation board be a separate entity from the school board in order to · · atrract other qualified fund-raising leadership from the com munily." T H E EDUCAT IO NAL foundation was formed in 1979 in aP.,. 1ttempt. to rais~ money from p.t'~•t• 'tturces tC> matnt•i'n quality e"ucation lo Laguna Beach. School board members and administrators envision a pro- 11raJ}l thal will bring money into t.U'MJ..,.ered d1.uict that. bu been bit with lnflatlon, Pr01>05ltlon 13, state supreme court decision~ and decllnlog student enrollment. The small Lacuna Beach school district was the first lo Orange County to form an educationaJ foundation. The study prepared by the Newport Beach consultants out· line the fund-raising potential in the small community. and rec· ommends the foundation's first year goal be between $100,000 and $125,000. THE REPORT, which bases most of its information on in· terviews with nearly three dozen community leaders, parents and school officials. states most of the financial support will most likely come from parents And , it cont inu es. the foundation should not rely on in· dependent business and industry to provide any s ignificant supp0rt. J But the success/ or failure of the foundation will depend on the leadership capabilities of its board. the report says, suggest- ing that !!o high -p owered members be named to the panel. O the r fa ctors required <Stt FUNDS, Paie A2> Rescuers seeking 15 trapped miners , WYOMING •Denver eR9dstone COLORADO Miners Trapped SCENE OF BLAST 15 miners trapped REDSTONE, Colo. <AP> - Rescue crews inched their way along a 1.20CJ.foot sloping mine 'sha ft today. trying to reach 15 miners trapped by an explosion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek No. l coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope. Seven men came out of the mine in two groups after the blast Wednesday. Four were un- injured, but three were admitted to Valley Vi ew Hospital in Glenwood Springs for treatment of bums, bruises and shock, of- fi cials said. t\frica and love blacks you aliould hope South Africa pros· j>ers,"headded. The firs t -term CaJifornia &enator said thal most American companies are willing to pro· }note black workers despite the financial penalties imposed by the South African government for doing so. State dump site selection feared One of those who escaped un· hurt, David Chiarello, said that when the explosion occurred, •·Air came at me sort of like a hurricane. It didn't knock me over but there was so much dust I turned around and tucked my head in " Hayakawa contended that the presence of American firms in ~outh Africa helps blacks because of the jobs that are C?realed. • As chairman of the Senate .oubcommittee on East Asian Pacific Affairs. Hayakawa re- cently traveled to South Korea where he said he was alarmed by the buildup of North Korean troops. "Five minutes after you leave the DMZ you look back Committee pushes for local choice on hazardous waste disposal Sites for hazardous waste dumps should be selected by local governments and not the s tate, the Southern California Association of Governments' Executive Committee has de· cided. SCAG committee members, in the first of a two-day meeting at the Registry Hotel in Irvine, said Wednesday their biggest fear is that a slate or regional agency will be created to dictate sites for the unpopular dumps. ·The local officials County girl wins damages of $900,000 mayors, city council members, county supervisors -warned that a state-mandated agency could rob them of local decision. making powers just as they said the state Coastal Com mission has done. BUT COMMITTEE members also seemed aware that if local governments don't draft their ooAn plan s to dispose of hazardous materials, the state wi 11 do it for them. SCAG attorney David Fine ex- plained that officials in private industry who need more dump sites are petitioning the state legislature for help. In Southern CJlifornia, for in- stance the only licensed hazardo~ waste site is in West Covina. Thus seeking to preserve local a~thority, executive com-m l ttee members approved Wednesday proposed legislation to &Ive each county rights to pre- pare its own plan for disposing hatardous wastes. Each county would not need its own dump site, Fine cautioned. but would at least need_ written agreements with neighboring jurisdictions to transport and dispose of the waste. ACCORDI NG TO the proposal. a countywide plan would need approval of the Board of Supervi sors and cities representing a majority of the county population. Orange County officials have been remioded of the need for hazardous waste disposal plans since residents in Huntlneton Beach and Fullerton hllve com· plained of tolllc fumes from dump sites In their neighborhoods. When recent discussion among local officials hasn't centered on hazardous waste, it often bas been oo ways to increase fund· ina for transportation projects. Wednesday's execufive commit· tee meeting was no exception as members, after much debate, backed a state senate bill to raise gasoUne tax. SEN. JOHN Foran's SB21S would raise the tax from seven to nine cents per gallon, in- crease driver's license and truck weight fees and allow local gov- ernments to hold elections to ask voters to approve even higher taxes for local projects. The so-called local option tax was included by Foran, D-San Francisco, at Orange County's request, and Orange County Supervisor Bruce Nestande was on hand Wednesday to defend it. "To me, the bill is not worth a thing without that local option," be said. COMPANY RESCUE teams making their way toward the 15 men, estimated to be as far as 7 .000 feet into the mine, were having to stop occasionally to tes t the mine's air for deadly gases. a spokesman said. Mining officials said they were unable to predict whe~ the trapped mine r s would be reached or whethe r they are ~live. Kescuers were less than 1,000 feet from where the men were believed to be, but progress was slow. After keeping vigil near the mine for more than 17 hours, most of the miners' families went home at daybreak. But a crowd of miners and reporten stood at the entrance of the road that winds 10 miles up ' to the mouth of the mtne. The public was barred from the immediate area around the mine. "We're praying that there wUJ be 15 men comin1 out today," one miner who declined to give bis name said. A 3-year-old Orange County girl has been awarded damages of nearly $900,000 by a suptrlor court Jury because of brain damage and other Injuries abe suffered during ber delivery· at Chapman General Hospital. Tbe decision was reached late Tuesday after only one day of de- liberations. Awarded $895,000 in 1eneral damageswasSt.acylaralil, wbols blind, sullen from mental re- tardation and bu c,rebral pally. Reagan was inch away from. death Moves lauded by Fed chief WASHINGTON CAP > Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Vol~er .aaid Wednesday that the Reacan admlnt•traUon ts on the ritbt track in . lta fltht agalut ballaUoo, and be predict· ed that "wtthln the next year, we should belln to IM aom• tan1ible ~eea." DRllCI l:UIT 1111111 . Night and momin1 low cloud.a, with only partial ciearlne alone beac~es Friday afternoon. Lows toniebt 50 alon1 the cout, 56 inland. Hi1hs Friday mid 808 to near 70. San::~:rer Hetu Bahan, who tbe chlld, COO· tended that staeJ wu deprived of oxr ''° for more tbaa two boun wbtl~ her motbei wu In labor at th& Oranse bOlpttal on fiec. 7, 1911. Baban claimed fetal monitor· lnl equipmenUboWed the unborn child ,,u 1uffertn1 from ott•m deprl.aUon and tba.t bolpltal penoanel untrained ln readln1 the ma.cblnes did not.bin& to eor· rect the problem. Ke 11.to bad claimed that·,_. ord.I wee altered b1 botDM.AI o1t;o ficJ1lltocoverupthe lndd..,,_... The family uked for a $1.1 mlllloaJudcmentlntbecu•. WASIDNGTON (AP) -Con· trary to lnillal denial.I, the bullet that struck Prelident Reaean stopped only an lnch from bit heart, aays the 1ur1IOll who re- movedlt. Dr. ~amln A.aroq aald he almost left the exploe~\te bullet where lt wu becauH of ltlfnculty In 1ettinlllout. 1 The president, Aa~n said, "WH fttht on the m•r•m" when he 1rrl~ed at tbeemeraency room l.UrchlO. "If Ute president ~ad beta t•n to tlM Wblw Houee after be WU abot UiltNd OI tO 0.CWC• w .. 111...,.. Ualftnlty HOls*al, ·or t.a. to a mon cllltem • ...... ~. t tlllM ... Would bave bMo 1n bl1 trOUblf," AarGb 18ld bl ID mt.mew PQbll.ebed ln tod11'1 Wuhln~ Poet. "ffe ~ could have been another Dr. Michael Halberst.a.m. '' Halberstam , a noted cardloloatat, died on lb• opel'at· iDI table after belna 1bot J>y a bilr'1lar at h1a Wuhln1too taome tn Decembtr. Tbe acceunt bt Aaroea, dlnetor of eb .. t ID4 eafdionteul• 1111'' 1•rf at ~ bolpltal, 1en.eraUy conflnned frlJD dtiRrlpdou b)' oUMn blvol•ecl and eoelndleted thetitllNMIUl't.Dl•tatem..,..by .the b01pltal'1 olftdal •Pok•._, Dr. 0-UO'Learr O'Leary bu admJtted h4t w.aa· \IYlDJ to be U opUm\IUC U M coald llnd 10G1etlm• ., .. ...-tr· lDI with a.ll·tban.comi>l.W kl· fomiatlOa. O'Le= aald lluc:b IO tlte bulltt td "Mveral UidHm" from R aa•ab .. rt. Ht conceded that there are plenty cA doubten Yfh9 H)' loft•· lion II no& likely to be reduced 1u'11tllld1lt1100G. ·' B\ll I can S)Olnt out that more than at . •111 time ln , my tX· perlence, tbe nece11ar1 •It· meatt ot public poUey a?e in place1 or are belna put In place, ' be 1ald . llllDE TllAY benmarlr, of all plac••. ti crtttcal of Uw 1dt t.~ ,.,..., "Dolloa ... Se• l'otl• cu. 11111 iA County drOps ·1'.lcOla ni1irder .rap lb DAVID KVTZMANN ...................... ·Convicted cbild killer Rodney .Tames Alcala -on San Quen- ttn 's Death Row awaltln1 the outcome ol Oran1e County hear- iQIS that eould lead to a new trial -bad unrelated murder cb:ar1es again.st hlm dropped in •::Burbank court Wednesday. . Because of the unreliability of a key prosecution witness, the Los An1eles County District At- torney's Office asked. Municipal Court Judie Marion Gubler to dismiss cbarcea .. al.nat Alcala, 37. The murder count bad been rued a,ainat the Monterey Part man tut summff in connectioa with the •tr81\1Ulation death of a 21-year-<>ld Burbank woman. Only several weeks earlier, .,_1,cala was sentenced to dle in the California gas chamber for the 1979 ltidnap-murder or 12· year-old Robin Samsoe of Hunt· ineton Beach. THE DISMISSAL of the murder charge againat Alcala colnddea with an Oranae County Superior Court bearln1 on whether two Onnte County Jail informant.I committed perjury in testlfyiq aeatn.st the amateur photo,:rapher dµring the Samsoe trial last year. The hearing-a wer.e orde,.d by _o., .......... "9111 Sm. S. I . Hayakawa malus point• while oddreuing the World Affaira Council at Co.to. Me.a'• Smith C0<at Pf.az.a Hotel Wedne3day night U.S. business def ended Hayakawa says firms boon to S. African blacks . !"' • ..I ; Rt 'ODI CADIWB 1 · der if 4Qe ... 'i uct It j(•~fllethiii.. r s arted.'' he told the croWd or lraven al Senate b that. woul4 t::Sen. SJ. Hayalcawa lashed out about 350 at the South C&ast establilb En,USb u th• otftclal ~nesday at black liberals who Plaza Hotel. U.S. tansuage. There l.sd't an of-c:r i li ci ze the prese~ce of Calling South Korea flcialU.S.language,beaaid. A.merican companies ln "economically poweJ'ful " !lf.Bregated South AfriC!-:f i' lfayakawa said that Ui& (GIQlitry ::.1n a speech at the WCI ran'ks seventh ih trade wltb the ~rs Council meeting lo United States, wttb SlO blllion ~sa the 74-year-old Repub can traded last year. •e;nator said that dissoluti.OQ of Speaking with Daily Pilot ~merican businesses in South rep resent at iv es ear ll er. ~rica wouJd cost blacks needed Hayakawa touched on a number lobs. "of topics, includina: ·: ... WHAT DOESN'T seem to oc--His recently introduced tur to a lot of these people Is if Guest Wor~er Act ~ill that wouJd ttade is cut off, blacks al the allow Mexican nationals to po6t b.ottom of the ladder will be a refundable SSOO bond with the bart. American government In order :: ·'So even if you hate South to work here six months. ..... liUPPO&T Of' tr.umil ruttl~ ~ owners bJ. members of tile National Blflt As· soclatlon. In support of the guest worker bill, Hayakawa said the $500 bond ia not an excessive amount because, he said, aliens now are paying that much to be smuggled across the border. Hayakawa said that be favors granting amnesty to aliens who have lived in the U.S. for at least (See AFRICA, Pase A2) the Callfomla Supreme Court. In the Burbank cue, charaes were dropped because yet another Jallbouae informant against Alcala had shown himself to be unreliable. Loa Anael~ Deputy District Attorney David Dllc9 aald a ma· Jor . element of the use a1alnst Alcala wu statements be al· le&edly made to fellow Orange County Jail inmate John Mul· queen. HOWEVER, DISCO said, Mul· queen admitted commltti.Q..1 per- jury in an unrelated Ol'ange County drug smu111lng case ln July, ruinin& whatever CTedibill· ty he may have had. ''In vie• or tJ\ls, the people can't.proceed," prosecutors told , Judie Gubler Wednesday. Alcala had been charged with killlnc JUI Marie Parenteau ln June, 1979, only days before Miss Sarnsoe diaappeared rrom the seaabore in Huntln1ton Beach. Miss Parenteau wa• strantled after an intruder broke Into her second-story apartment, accord· ing to Burbank police In- vestigators. ALCALA BECAME a suspect in the slaying in August, 1979. At the time. it wu reported that <See ALCALA, Paie A%) Laguna ,schoo/$ get blUeprint on .funds A 32-page report that could serve as a blueprint for future fund-raising for Laguna Beach schools, suggests school trustees be r emoved from the Educational Foundation and ex- panding the foundation board from nine to 20 members. The document, prepared by Development Mana~ement As· sociates of Newport Beacb, rec- ommend• the Educational Foundation board be a separate el)tity from the school board in order to ''atrrad other qualified fund-raising leadership from the community.'' THE EDUCATIONAL foundation was formed ln 1979 in ap.L tt\em~to rals\m ey ~ pm.ate urces ff aln~•f-n quallty e ucation in Lasuna Bea cit. School board members and administrators envision a pro· 1rarp that will brin1 money into ur..:Mltadered diitmt,that bu been bh with Inflation, Proposition 13, state supreme court cleclsions and declining student enrollment. The small La1una Beach school diatrlct was the rtrst in Orange County to form an educational foundation. The study · prepared by the Newport Beach consultants out· line the fund-raising potential in the small community, and rec- ommends the foundation's first year goal be between $100,000 and $125,000. THE REPORT, which bases most of its information on in· terviews with nearly three dozen community leaders, parents and school officials, slates most of the financial support will most likely come rrom parents. And, it continues , the foundation should not rely on in- dependent business and industry to provide any significant support. But the success or failure of the foundation will depend on the leadership capabilities of its board, the report says, suggest- ing that 20 high-powered members be named lo the panel. Other factors required <See FUNDS, Page A2) Rescuers seeking 15 trapped miners 'lo. ~ .,.., WYOMING Denver • COLORADO Miners Trapped ---- SCENE OF BLAST 15 miners trapped REDSTONE, Colo. (AP> - Rescue crews inched their way along a l .200-foot sloping mine shaft today. trying to reach 15 miners trapped by an explosion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek No. 1 coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope. Seven men came out of the mine in two groups after the blast Wednesday. Four were un· injured. but three were admitted to Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs for treatment of bums. bruises and shock, of- ficials said. l\frica and love blacks you 11.hould hope South Africa Pro6· 9ers," he added. The first-term California senator said tbal most American companies are willing to pro- mote black workers despite the financial penalties imposed by Uie South African government for doing so. State dump site selection feared One of those who escaped un- hurt, David Chiarello, said that when the explosion occurred, "Air came at me sort of like a hurricane. It didn't knock me over but there was so much dust I turned around and tucked my head in." Hayakawa contended that the presence of American firms In $outh Africa helps blacks because of the jobs that are ereated. , As chairman of the Senate subcommittee on East Asian Pacific Affairs. Hayakawa re· .cently traveled to South Korea where he said he was alarmed by the buildup of North Korean troops. ··Five minutes after you leave the DMZ you look back .,; . ~;HCOND CHOlce -Teresa Carpenter of New. Yor~'e : Vllla1e Voice c-elebratea '! after winnin1 the Pulitzer ~Prize for feature wrtt1n1. i-.e WM honored after the "'Ori&itaal Wtimer, Janet eoote • Of UM Wi.lblDltGD Poe4 M· ,:oltted her atory was fabricated (1toty, Page Cut. i, Committee pushes for local choice on hazardous waste disposal COMPANY RESCUE ~ams making their way toward the 15 men. estimated to be as far as 7 ,000 feel into the mine, were having to stop occasionally to test the mine's air for deadly gases. a spokesman said. Sites for hazardoQls waste dumps should be selected by local government.a and not the state, the Southern California Association of Governments' Executive Committee has de- cided SCAG committee members, in the first of a two-day meeting at the Registry Hotel in Irvine, said Wednesday their biggest fear is that a state or regional agency will be created to dictate sites for the unpopular dumps. The local officials County girl wins damages of $900,000 A 3-year-old Orange County girl bas been awarded dama1ea of nearly $900,QOO by a su~rior court jury '6ecauae of brain damage and other injuries she suffered durlna her delivery· at Chapman General Hospital. The decision was reached lat~ Tuesday aft.er only one day of db- UberaUons. Awarded '895.000 in 1eneral damages was Stacy Iiram, wbol.s blind, suffers from mental re- tardation and bueerebralpaby. Santa Ana lawyer Neill Bahan, wbo represented the eblld. COO· tendtd that StacJ wu dQrlved of oq1en for more ttwa two bcMcn wlltle her mot.Mr wu ln labor at the Orante botpltal on Dee. 7, 1971 • Baban claimed fetal monitor· Ina equipmentabow41d tM unbom child waa auffertng from OSJJeD dei>rinllon and that bolpltal pel'IOCIM.I untraln" lD Nadine the Qlacblneil d.ld nolbtnt to COi'· reeUheproblem. Ht allo bad claimed tha\ NC· ordl were altered by bOIP't:AI • ftclals to cover up the incident. Tho tam11y uked for • t:t.S mllllonJud1mentlnthecue. mayors, city council members, county s upervisors -warned that a state-mandated agency could rob them of local decision- m aking power~ just as they said the stale Coastal Commission has done. BUT COMMITfEE members also seemed aware that U local governments don't draft their own plans to dispose of hazardous materials. the state will do it for them. SCAG attorney David Fine ex· plained that officials in private industry who need more dwnp sites are petitioning the state legislature for help. In Southern c.-lifomia, for in- stance, the only licensed hazardous waste site is in West Covina. Thus, seekina to preserve local authority. executive com· mittee members approved Wednesday proposed leatslation lo give each county rights to pre- pare its own plan for disposing hazardous wastes. Each county would not need its own dump site, Fine cautioned, but would at least need written agreements with neighboring jurisdictions to transport and dispose of the waste. ACCORDING TO the proposal, a countywide plan would need approval of the Board or Supervisors and cities representing a majority of the county population. Orange County officials have been reminded of the need for hazardous waste disposal plans since residents in Huntlneton Beach and Fullerton have com· plained O( tOJliC fumes from d u m p s i t e'"s i n t b e l r neighborhoods. When recent discussion among local officials hasn't centered on hazardous waste, it often bas been on ways to Increase fund· in" for tTansportation prOjecta. neagan was inch away from. death W ASfUNGTON (AP> -Con· trary to initial denial•, tbe bullet that struck Preaident Reatan stopped only an loch from bis tleart, aaya the SW'ltoQ •ho re· moved it. Dr. Betljamln Aa~ said be almost left the exploe~ve· bullet where ft wu becauae of k!ltnculty In aetUDlltout. The president, Aai!on said, "WH ftebt oa the marctn" wbtD he arrMtd at the emera-•c>' room MarcblO. '·u tbe prealdent bad beiP t .... tot.be White HouM ~bt ••• tbot tntteed Of to Geal1t Wu ....... UnJYrity HOIPM.il. or tUtiD to a more awat or lt11er llOIPltal, I UdU M woUW bave been in bll t.oubl•, '' Aaron Hld 1n an lnte.rvtew pubUlbed Iii today's Waablnston Pott. "Ha could have been another Dr. MichaelHalbent.am. '' Halberstam. a noted cardtolo8lat.:.. cl.led on tb• operat· ~JW" table aner betJll •bot b)' a J>Urllar at hit Wublnstoo bome lD~. :!'be aceotmt by Aarota, cllrector of eb•t enf caHIOvauulat 1ur1 l•f'Y at tbe tioipltal, , ..... .u, CGDftnned rOfin detertpdoaj by otaa.n blvof•ect and coetradlctld tb•ftnt,.........•ta~b)' .tbe boQ&t.al'• offtClal 1pok•mu, Dr. n-110'1Aarj O'l.Mlr1 bu adml&bid ·be ,,_.. tma1 to .,. .. f)jtlinaaue u .. e.ld ... ~ ...... work· ............. thaft-compa.t.it .. form.uoft. O'IAt=•ld Marcil ao tM bullet "a.viral tac•" from ll pn'1 heart. Wednesday's executive commit- tee meeting was no except!& as members, after m1i1ch debate, backed a state senate bill to raise gasoline tax. SEN. JOHN Foran's SB215 would raise the tax from seven to nine cents per gallon, in- crease driver's license and truck weight fees and allow local gov- ernments to hold elections to ask voters to approve even higher laxes ror local projects. The so-called local option tax was included by Foran, D-San Francisco, at Orange County's request, and Orange County Supervisor Bruce Nestande was on hand Wednesday lo defend it. "To me, the bill ls not worth a thing without that local option," he said. Moves lauded "r·Fed chief WASHINGTON <AP) Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Mining ofticials said they wer~ unable to predict whe"'.\, lhe trapped miners would be reached or whether they are ~live. Kescuers were less than 1,000 feet from where the men were believed to be, but progre.ss was slow. After keeping vigil near the mine for more than 17 hours, most of the miners' ramlllea went home at daybreak. But a crowd of miners and reporten stood at the entrance or the road that wind.a 10 miles up' to the mouth of the mine. The public was barred from the immediate area around the mine.· "We're praying that there will be 15 men comitlg out today," one mlner who declined to clve bis name said. 111111 CUil IUTlll. A. Volcter .aald Wednesday that Lbe Reacan administration Ls oo the rtabt track in . its fight •lalut lafl.UOU, abd be predict· ed that "wttbln the next year, • we 1bould belln to see some tanstble ~-'' Night and morning low clouds, with only partl•I clearlnt alon1 beacJiea Frida)t afternoon. Lowa tonight 50 alona the coast, 56 inland. H11hs Friday mid 80I to near TO. illlDI TllAY He eoneeded that there are plea~ ot doubters • .,, •81 loll•· tloa la aot llkel)' ~ be recluced IUMt..eiallJ IOOO. "B\Jt J can J)Otnt 1>Ut that more tban at aft1 tlm1 lb m1 ex· perlence, the neceHary eJe- menta ol public policy an la place, or are bein1 Jnat ln place," be aatd. bnmarlc, o/ aU placea, u critical of U.. Ida tl'""'°'9 ,,,..., "Dallal." ~· ,,. cu. l '11.!~~~ SCllOEMEHL Eavtroo.meDtal documeohltlOG to permit introduction of the new and quieter McDonnel Douitu DC·t Suoer-ao at John Wa.rne Alrpon baa been yproved by the Oranie County Plannln1 Commiuion. 0 ver the obhctlons of Newport Beach, tbe commlaaion decided UA•nlmously Wednes- day that the adverse impacta that introduction of the airplane wo uld create would be out- weiihed by its ability to reduce noise impacts on people living under jet departure routes. Suicide • • VICtinl teacher The Irvine woman who police say shot and killed her son while he was doing his homework and then committed suicide by firing a .22·caliber rifle at' her own bead was an administrator with the Fountain Valley School District. Ne llS. Greene,48, was assigned to the curriculum development division at the school dislrlct headquarters, said school district spokeswoman Trish Torgerson. The assignment came this year after she took a medical leave of absence from her previous as- signment as principal of Fountain Valley Elementary School. Ms. Torgerson said, adding she didn't know what the medical problem was. Irvine police Lt. Bob Lennert said that Mrs. Greene had a his· tory of emotional problems that culminated Saturday with the slaying of her son. Brent D., and her suicide inside her home m Ute Woodbridge area of Irvine. Morris L Gr eene returned home from work at 1:30 p.m. and found the bodies of his wife and son. Neighbors said Brent was a freshman at Irvine Hi gh School and active in the drama de· partment there. Memoria l St!rvices for the mother and son were held today in Yucca Va lley and memorial services for Brent will be held at 10 a m. Saturday at Irvine High School. 4321 Walnut Ave Dana youth to Annapolis John 0 Edwards or Dana Point has received an ap· pointmenl lo the U.S Naval Academy al Annapolis, Md .. for the school year beginning this summer. Edwards 1s the son of Mr. and Mrs. Newton G. Edwards of Christine Drive in Dana Point. He was nominated for admission by Rep. Robert E. Badham, ft. Newport Beach. in January. Edwards has been attending the U.S Naval Academy Preparatory School in Mound. Minn ., fo r the past year. Edwards is a graduate of Dana Hills High School where he was a member of the track and cross country teams. Reiner, Ronka set for runoff LOS ANGELES (AP> -Fac· ing a runo(f election for city ~t­ torney June 2. the two remam- i ng contenders promised to clean up their campaigns and concentrate on relevant matters. The candidates. Bob Ronka and lra Reiner, admitted Wednesday they did not want a re- peat of the mudslinging tactics employed primarily by the 37· year:-old Ronka. "This is the beginning of a new campaip," said a subdued Ronka al his campaignheadquarters . Addre88 corrected The address where 19'-mooth- old Soeha Allen drowned in her family pool early Saturday was incorrectly reix>rted in the news account of the tragedy. Correct- ly, the address i.a 1'136 Bayport Way In Newport Beach. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. iii1ylia1 County plannen 'd tht primary advene lmpa~ would1 relate to inereued tr.ale cop. Jettloa around tbe airport because the Supel' 80 bH a teat- lnj t:apaclb' about 50 perceat 1ar1•r tbu tbe BoelQC m and DC·9·30I now operated by the four commercial alrUnea serv- tni Ormiae County. Environmental analyst Mark Goodman aald noise /rodueed by tbe SUper·80 woul be 1ub- 1lanUally less than ttiat of the Boeing aircraft and the older DC-9a. THE CONTENTION drew. crlticism from Eric Goldman, a I.-Aagl• attorney rttalDed bf N~ B"cb to UU.ate . fll'PO".ftl•t*l matten. Goldman aumed lh•t there was "no actual perfo~mance C:ata" to thow that the Super-ID 11 quieter than other Jeta bow tn use at_ the airport. He said the commission should delay approval of environJnental documenu on the Super·80 unW auch performance data la available. Pacltlc Southwest Airlines is the only carrier in the country that baa taken delivery of the Super-80s. The airline is now operating the airplane at Burbank Alrport and Loi Antel11 loterGaUooaJ Alr'JJorS. Nobe monltortnc .,.nonnel at Bul'bank have refmed to dla- clote no!H data on the Super-80. GOLDMAN WD t.bat lt the commluloo wu ateadf ut In its deslre to support introduction of lhe Super 80 -that lt should do 10 oo a 90--day trial baala. The comrotss1ion rejected that SlllJ cestton. AlrCal, which operates 25 fUghtl per day at the county airport, expects to take delivery· of the Super-80 by mid-year and bas plans to begin operating .,.~ Thu photo of /our alleged tn-rorim arrttted in Tijuana um found with captured guni and Marxist pro- paganda. From left are Miguel Martinez and CJ!ftlma Grun of San DleQO and brothers Je~ and Raul Naranjo. . Border terrorists held Mexican police find guns, propaganda in Tijuana TIJUANA. Mexico (AP ) -An alleged terrorist group arrested here with Marxist propaganda and guns operated in neighbor· ing U.S. cities for five years, police say. The two men and two women we r e id en t i fied by tberr literature as "the Cbe Guevara Brigade .. and described by police as part of a Soutb~m California-based group planning t o kill U.S. Border Patrol agents. Afte r U .S . Co n su l ate representatives visited them in 1a il. Vice Consul Jerry Baker From Page A1 AFRICA. • • seven years without a criminal record or a history of welfare support. Queried about his age, which will be 76 when he seeks a seconct term next year. he said, "They forget about t.he spirit of 76. My mother is 97 and she just r eturned to Japan alter a two- year vi.sit here." he added. said the confiscated literature "was very general and it was nothing directed against Mexico or the United States.·· BAKER QUOTED consular of- ficial Scott Danaher in Tijuana as denying there were any notes on the attempted assassination of President Reagan. as Mex· ican news r eports indicated Reagan was to have been in Ti· juana on Apnl 28 to visit Mex- ican P r esident Jose Lopez Portillo but postponed it because of his wounds. A police official said the foursome intended to disrupt an outdoor gathering Sunday for Gov Roberto de la Madrid and a ss asinate police securit y l(uards. Radioactive vials stolen? But Ricardo Gibert. Ti1uana commande r o f the Baja California judlcial police, has re- fused to let reporters talk to tbem since the arrests Saturday night. The four were identified by Gibert as Mi guel Anthony Martinez, 27. a native of Chula Vista, JUSt inside the United St ates. and a former resident of Compton near south central Los Angeles; Cynthia Green, 33, of San Diego, and J esus Garcia Naranjo and hi s brother Raul Garcia Naranjo, both in their 20s and of Tijuana. IN THEIR CAR a nd the brothers' home wer e found an M-1 rifle, a sawed-off shotgun, several pistols and a bomb det- onator. Gibert said there also were photographs showing the four standing with weapons. Mexican-American childreq c arrying submachine guns. notebooks with U.S. police radio codes and maps of terrorist locations throughout the world. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A city disaster readiness official says tests will begin today to de· t ermine whethe r radioactive PCB spilled materials allegedly bought at a swap meet were stolen. FREMONT <AP > -Four peo- Sgt. Bill Wolf, San Diego dis· pie were splattered with toxic aster readiness coordinator, PCB when their car rammed a said Wednesday that lnforma-utility pole in Fremont. accord- th•m at JobD Wayne Airport by tM end OI May. County planners bad con-~lt1ded lut year that an environ· mental Jmpact reporl on In- troduction of the aircraft would be needed becauae of the ex- treme concern over airport matters and the Su~r-80's aub- atanlial differences from 1be aircraft now flown al Oranae County. According to the impact re· port, the Super-80 produces Jess noise, fewer air pollutants and is more fuel-efficient in terms of i . ' po\l'Ddt of fuel expended ~ pau_,.... ONB QUESTION that remains la tbe effect the introduction of the Super-IQ will bav• on the We of the 5, 700-foot-loni ma6' runw~ at lbe airport. · It ii known that the Super ap, with a weltht of 128,000 poun~ will shorten the anlldpat.ed of the runway. A study to · tcrmlne by exactly how Jon• • still being conducted .by the co unty Environment-I Manag em e nt Agency J'l\d airport officials. : Currently. a 95 ,000 weig~t limit is in effed at the airport. ; Guard troops aske~ in fire men's strike YONKERS, N. Y. (AP> Mayor Gerald Loehr said today be bas asked the governor to send the National Guard to help beleaguered city officials alter public works employees joined firefighters and fire officers on strike in the state's fourth largest city. ''The important thing for the citizens of Yonkers is to stay calm and realize this is an illegal strike," Loehr sairJ. "We are im- ple menting steps lo continue pro- tection." Loehr also said the city was tax· ing legaJ action to hall the walkout called in violation of the state's Taylor Law, which forbids strikes by public employees. A SPOKESMAN FOB Gov Hugh L. Carey said he had not re- ceived the request. City lawyers went to State Supreme Court today in nearby White Plains to seek an injunction forcing the workers back on the job. ··The injunction has been signed and in the process of being served." Loehrs aid later. As striking firefighters looked on. the mayor. the fire com- missioner and a few "tivilians fought suspicious overnight fires that destroyed at least four build· From Page A1 ALCALA. • • evidence included blood stains left al the scene that matched Alcala's to a degree tnat would eliminate 90 percent of all other humans A I cal a allegedl y met the woman at a bar and danced with her. but she rejected his efforts to date her. Disco said Burbank police in- vestigators did a thorough JOb on the case, but "came up dry" with regard to m ateria l evidence. He said charges could be re- filed against Alcala if new evidence should turn up. SANTA ANA LAWYER Keith Monroe, who is representing Alcala in the <Alifornia Supreme Court appeal of his Orange County conviction , said the likelihood o( refiling charges in the Parenteau case "is remote." Meanwhile, the hearing on al· legations tnat perjury 1was com· milted during the Samsoe case continues Friday i n Orange County Superior Co urt Judge Philip Schwab's courtroom in Santa Ana. ... I ings and five cars. Scores of people fled lbe bunt· ing buildings during the chilfy night, and many stood crying ~ their homes went up in smoke. THE FlllES WER. out by mid- morning, and no serlous injuri~ were reported, authoritiessaid. Meanwhile, the city's 420 sanitation workers walked out to- day In a dispute over fringt! benefi ts, the same reason the city's 300 firefighters and 127 uniformed fire offi cers went on strike Wednesday. Loehr said contingency plans lb handle garbage collection, \45UaJ.. ly performed by members ol Teamsters· Local 4S6, would be put into effect in this city of 204,000. Yonkers Fire Commissioner Richard Smith said firefighters came from the neighborin& Westchester County comm unities of Ardsley, Dobbs Ferry, Green- ville. Hasllngs. Mount VernOll and Tarrytown to help, but were d ism 1ssed after the strikers start- ed harassing them. "I didn't want any bloodshed.':' Smith said. There we re numerous false alar ms. Smith said. with more than 35 separate a larms for reaJ and non·existent fires since the strike began Wednesday untH 3 30 a.m. today. NO NEGOTIATIONS were scheduled although leaders and rank-and-h ie members of th' firefighters· union, the Unite{! Firefighters Association Loe~ 628, planned meetings today. ; The law penalizes strikers two days' pay for each day on strikt and provides for large fines for unions The fire unions. the Teamsters and the Captams. L1eutenanu and Sergeants Association - representing ranking police of. ficers have been bargairung with the city over fringe benefits to be included in contracts retroactive to July. A tentative agreement on a wage package was reached last September. but failure to agree pn the fringe benefits prevented the contracts from being ratified. $1,500 teapot stolen in Laguna Operators of an antique shop in Laguna Beach told police Wednesday someone entered the store during operating bours and look a silver teapot. The teapot. taken from Joan Upton Antiques, 448 South Coast Highway, was valued al SJ,500. Speaking on the possible entrance of Gov. J erry Brown into the Senate race next year , Hayakawa said, "He'd be tough. But it wouldn't keep me awake at night." tion concerning the five vials of ing to officials. radioactive material was ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ handed over to the FBI and the I city attorney's office for in- vestigation of possible legal From Page A1 FUNDS. • • for success, the report states, in- clude: -Penuad.ing the community that funds are needed to maintain quality education. -Outlining school programs that could benefit from fund- raising efforts. - -Designing a public relations pro1ram to point out the prob- lems andneedstothecommunity. -F0J1Dulat:ln& a list of in- d iv id u ala, corporations and foundations that could be potential donon. Formal acceptance of the re- 4 port is expected at the Education Foundation's meetint April 27. violations. Robert Lacy, operations of- ficer for the San Diego County Office of Disaster Preparedness. says tests will be conducted by a radiological systems team at General Atomic Co., operated by the Nuclear Regulatory Com · mission. Artist8 work8hoP8 set for Laguna A series of workshops for aspiring artists is under way in Latuna Ueach, produced by the Laauna Methodist Art As- aodation. Students work ln oil. water color or acrylic painlJI durinl the f our·hour workshops at the Boys Club of Laguna B«tacb, 108. La•una Canyon Road. J'or more lnfortnatton, call Doris Winkle I at 49'-G88, s,ring rec claues &till available ' • 1'0LSll Prime time from Rolex. Superb Rolex watches tor men and women. In 18 karat yellow gqld with hid.den-clasp bracelets: A Oyster Quartz Datejust for men In stainless steel, Sl,350. B. Lady's Datejust, SS,750. C. Man's Day~Date, S7,950. ... c ., ~Removal • ;of Wa,tt ;sought, SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - 'Several major environmental l1Jroups plan to announce a · lnatlonal petition drive today !aimed at removtn1 from office :interior Secretary James Watt. The campaign a1ainst Watt will portray hilll as a person committed to "the rape, ravage •and ruin of the natural resources <tf this nation," said Charles 'Warren, a chairman of former .president Jimmy Carter's 1Council on Environmental QuaJi· •ty and now a consultant in Sacramento. I Bua suit filed . LOS ANGELES <AP> The 'fight to maintain mandatory school busing is not over yet. Despite the state Supreme Court's refusal to review an ap- p ea Is court decision, the National Association for the Advancement or Colored People has taken its attempt to uphold mandato ry busing to federal court. A federal suit alleging that in tentional racial segregation has a long history in the school dis lrict was riled Wednesday on behalf of more than 200,000 black c hildren in the Los Angeles dis trict A hearing was scheduled for Fr1day Gun bill urged SACRAMENTO <A P l Political activist Tom H ayden says his Campaign for Economic Democracy m 1 g ht t ry. to get a statewide gun co ntrol in · 1llat1ve on the ,,..,..... ballot. Hayden, 41. a former Chicago Seven defe nd a nt , told a Sacramento Press Cl ub tuncheon Wednesday that the meas ure would "l ay the r esponsibility for the massive violence in our cities at the door where it partly belongs and that is Senator H L Richardson -and the gun lobby ·' ' Design backed LOS ANGELES 1AP> The final design for a new $124 million terminal that will ac· commodate 1984 Olympic traffic arriving a t Los Angeles International Airport has been approved by the city's Board of Airport Commissioners. Construction o f the West Terminal will complete the airport's master plan developed in the 1950s The board acted Wednesday Office closed SACRAMENTO <APl The sta~e Fuel Allocation Office, restionsible for assigning fuel during shortages. has quietly c losed its doors arter only two years in operation The office. created in 1979 In the wake of the second ma1or nationwide fuel shortage, went out of existence on March 31 with Pr~ident Reagan's order to decontrol petroleum, s tate of- ficials said Wednesday Orange Cout_OAILY Ptl.OTIT'hur9d9y, Aprll 18, 1981 IL .~ ...... HouSing ~ear winecy nixed RIVERSIDE (AP) -On a claim that vineyard• and bouaina projects are not compatible neighbors, the county Board of Supervisors has aareed. The board has voted to reject a developer's request to build homes next to the famed CalJaway Viney~ds and Winery. As part of case. winery owner Ely Ca laway told the blow onto their property, and the combines the atmosphere or a r ac- tory and a noxious dump. He said residents would com- plain about the shrill, piercing noisemakers used to scare birds from the grapes, the insecticides used in the vineyard that could blow oqto their proeprty. and the "extremely annoying, s1cfcen· ing" odor s from the effluent ponds. peatedly told the story of Queen Elizabeth, on a U.S. visit, re· portedlr, asking for more of the 1974 white riesling. TO CONVINCE tbe supervisors that all is not wine an(l roses at a winery, Callaway took two jars, containing a red liquid, from a cardboard box and passed them amonathelive lawmakers. "I've invited all of you to come out to the s ite to show why the ef· fluent.pond is an vanoyance. You haven't been able ft! getoul." He identified the red liquid as sludge washed from the barrels and the winery tanks . "I 'm bring- ing the pond to you," he said , "Spill it and you 'll be sorry Nobody's going to be happy with this aroma." UNWELCOME VISITOR -A semi-trailer rig sits on the other side of a home alter it left U .$. 99, between Sacramento and Elk Grove, sideswiped a parked car and cut the house in two. Injured were the driver, James Thomas of Fresno; Manuel Garcia of Gall in the parked vehicle; and Juanita Stanley. 70. who was sittin~ on the front porch of damaged home. Witnesses said the driver was unable to miss the house. AFTER HEARING the argu- ments. the board voted 4·1 Tues- day against approving a «-home development proposed by KAcor Realty next to the winery, located about 80 miles east or Los Angeles 1 Callaway, owner or the winery in Temecula and the former cha irman of Burlington fn . dustries, has opposed the nearby housing since it was proposed. People and wine don't mix. he argued The winery owner s aid ap· prov al or the housing project would lead to the destruction of his vineyard and winery "The residents will be unhappy living there," he said. "It's incompati ble with a vineyard We're going to be unhappy because the neighbors will be unhappy " SU PER VISOR KAY Ceniceros, representing the area, made the motion against the pro1ect She said, "It's a basic question of compatibility." aDd said the own er's cont ention t h at the proJect WOIJld for<.>e him out or business was a "legitimate con cern." Crime laws 'too soft' Meese pledges change in judicial system under Reagan Callaway's attorney, Dallas Holmes of Riverside, also pre· sented the supervisors a m.enu from The Four Season s restaurant in New York. The ex elusive restaurant offers one of Callaway's premier white wines The winery. which made its first product in 1974, has achieved wides pread publicity for the quality of its wines. particularly 1ls whiles Callawav has re- She also said the slope of the property · ·was not su1tablt> for the proposed development.'' SAN RAFAEL IAP> -The <.'OUntry's system of JUStice IS too easy on those accused or crimes and loo tough on policemen, and the Reagan ad m 1 ni str a lion hopes to change that,\ one of Pres ident Reagan's top a'dvasors says Edwin Meese III. presidential counselor. told the California Sheriff's Association Wednesday that lawyers are too concerned with helping criminal defend· ants "to escape JUstace . .to out- wit lhesystem " He said a criminal trial should be a "search for truth." MEESE MADE the remarks in reference to a story in a San Francisco news paper earlier this week that gave the views of four promine nt lawyers on the strategies they would use to de· fend John W Hinckley Jr .. charged with shooting Reagan on March 30 Hinckley has not yet e ntered a plea. Meese. considered one of the most powerful men in the ad· ministration, added that he thinks insanity defenses should JUSTICE 'TOO SOFT' Reagan au1e Meeae be outlawed. The suggestion by the former Alameda County u - sis tant district attorney drew approval from the sheriffs. The public, he contended, would be better served if the mental condition of a defendant were considered after conviction because a defendant's mental condition at the lime of a crime does not matter. When in~anity is used as a de· fense, he said, "a good portion or the trial is taken up with hot- and-cold-running psychiatrists for both sades telling all the things wrong with the accused." ·'The way psychiatrists are now pushed and tugged and in effect compromiJled with their medical standards in order lo provide testimony for one eide or the other -this is a disgrace for their profession.•' IN RESPONSE to a question from the audience. Meese said the president planned to "con- sult" with local law-enforcement official$ before making federal judicial appointments, including to the appellate courts. Reagan, said Meese, Is in· terested in appointing federal judges "who apply the law, not make the law ... Suoervisor Waller Abraham voted in favor or the housing pro1ect The county Planning Co mmission and the county Plan ning Department had rl:'com ~ended approval of the project Huge award upheld • • • • 1n v1rg1111ty case LANSING. Mich. <API A bride who s aid her husband "broke down m y honor" by ac· cusing her or not being a virgin on their wedding night is entitled to a $250,000 award from him for slander , the stale Court of Ap peals has ruled An appeals panel Wednesday upheld the June 1979 award of a Ma comb County Circuit Court jury to Anna Biundo, who said her husband's false claims were only an excuse to end their mar- riage · Southfield. 'She now knows there is not going to be any set back." Ruffino's attorney, Wesley Roberts, called the award "un conscionable." "It was m ore punitive, IT\()re a matter of principl e. than in relit t1on to any damage to her, Roberts said . The Ruffino and B1undo families hved an ne1ghborin~ Sicilian v1Jlages before em1grat ing to Michigan and California respectively in the mid·l960s. Hooker knew attackers THE NUPT IALS were an· nulled a few months after the jury's verdict and Miss Biundo has lived in seclusion since with her family in Santa Clara, Calif. Wunty man shot to death Su s pects identified in acid-throwin g d eath "" " The Sicilian Immigrant "has no friends, no social life and watches televis ion," according to the record of'lhe trial in the unusual case. LOS ANGELES (AP > -A Las Vegas prostitute testified that a Burbank law student hired two men to throw a caustic chemkal into the race or his former fiancee , previously sealed testimony has revealed. The assault Aug. 14 blinded and disfigured Patricia Worrell, 34, of Sylmar, president of the Student Bar Association at San Fernando Valley College of Law. She died 10 days later from in- ternal bleeding. Richard M. Gilman. 46. the v ictim's former fiance. is charged with murder along with Ricardo Robinson, 23. and Bob· by Ray Savage, 24, both of Las Vegas. Gilman was also a Jaw student at San Fernando. In the lesti mony revealed Wednes day. the pros titute, whose identity was withheld at the request of Deputy Dist. Atty. Stanley M. Weisberg, claimed that Gilman approached her at the Dunes Hotel bar in Las Vegas in July. She said he dis- cussed hiring a .. hit man lo do some work for him:· including have a "girl beaten up." The witness said s he put Gilman in contact with Savage, with whom s he lived, and the ne xt day Savage showed her "ha1C)Q1 deys" anamz.1.5 .. mada in bileton, <i.Dglerd ·· e pz.rfu.ct ~if't fbi-aae>kr or eny ep:zciel occasion.'' $750, which he allegedly told her was partial payment "for doing the job for Mr. Gilman." The prostitute said she later met Robinson and overheard him and Savage discussing their plans for the assault on Worrell. She claimed to have seen the caustic substance ~ed in the at· tack. The Las Vegas woman said she saw Robinson place the chemical container in the trunk of a rented car shortly before he and Savage drove to Sylmar. where Gilman was with the vie· tim the night of the attack. Theappealscourtsaid Macomb County Circuit Judge Raymond Cashe n correctly allowed the jury to hear the testimony of a Wayne State Univers ity pro· Cessor about Sicilian customs, and s aid the damage award was not large enough to "shock the judicial conscience" into reduc- ing it TH E GROOM, Salvatore Ruf· fino. now in his m1d-30s. con· linues to live in Mount Clemens. Mich .. working as a carpenter "Anna is very pleased," said her attorney, Richard Wolk or A 31 -year-old Placentia hairdresser was found shot to death Tuesday in lhe front seat of a car parked in a Santa Ana industrial complex parking lot. police said Officers said an e mployee on the way lo work found the body of Carl Lawson slumped m the front seat of a I 978 Pontiac F'arebird Tuesday A police s pokesman said Lawson had been shot at least twice in the chest He a lso had been beaten . No motive 1s known for the slaying and no suspects are in custody. GOURMET MARKET D ELANEV,S BROS. SEAFOOD De-laney's Famous Home made Clam Claowder, Boston or Manhattan . . . . nc pt. MORNING FR ESH PRODUCE Loeal llaneb Ji)"eeb Spinach ...... 29c bocb. Sweet Green Onions or Radishes 19e bncb. MEAT DE P ARTMENT So. American Bana nas ...... 4 lbs. for $1.00 Prime and lop chmce beef aged at least 30 days to the peak ol ~tfeclion. Fresh Local Zacky Farpt1 Turkey• St uUe d with De hne1'1 F amou1 Hememade Dreulnl. Oven r eady or Jut plain ................................ tee lb. FREE HOME DEU VERY SERVICE 1550 minimum> delivered In our completely rt!frleerated (tucks. Your order is under refrigeration from our store to your door DELANE Y'S WINE CELLAR Delan.-y'• Prlva~ Label Cllampafne 1750 mll > .. %. 75 ea. or 33.M per use Delaney'• Prl\'a~ Label Cllabll or VCn ~ <7:!0 mill ... , .. l.41ea.or17.M per case Berlq er o.la lllaae <750 mlll ......... UO t1. Seormy ~ f75Q mil l . . .. . . . . . . . us ea. cone Uw>....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .•. IS ea. We•te ....,., .. ..._ De Blanr < 750 mu 1 • a.st ea. All Uquor and wine plus tax> ALL Or tJI ~T DELANEY'$ GOUa MET MAAKJ:r WISll \'.OV TR£ 11NE8T PEOPLE, ou• ~•El.S, llt\PPY EAnEa . LOS ANGELES (AP) -1n a twlat ln eblld·cuatody eaHe. a 1lrl bom out of wedloc:lt 4~ yean a10 lt 1uln1 in an attempt to force her father to vlalt her. But ai.te Court of Appeal JuaUce Robert lClne•l•Y aald tbl• week that even If the court tuued an order requJrtn1 Owen C. Olpin to vtalt ht• dau1bter, be wu uncertain lt would be en· force able. berly'• mother, Vlr1lnla M. Louden. saya 1be rued the 1ult deaptte a court order that t.be mother not aid the child 1n ccm- tacunc the father. 1111' AN adult baa a n1ht to en- force vbltatioo aeaimt children, the cbiJd baa a rtabt to enforce vlsitaUon against an adult," aald Ma. ~en, a licensed attorney ln other states wbo bas yet to paaa the California bar exam. "Is the aherlfr 1oio1 to 10 out and handcuff papa, dra1 him to mama's house and aay, 'Sit there for two houn and I'll let~ I you go home?"' 1C1n1atey asked. The suit was brou,bt against Olpin, a member o the pres· tl1ious Los Angeles law fll'm of .. l O'Meiveny and Myera, on behalf J. of Kimberly Anne Olpin. Kim· ' She said t.be vlaitaUon idea came about after the child began coming home from achool demanding : "Where'• my daddy?" "She started tellinl people he was on Mars, he lived in a space ship," Ms. Louden said. 1 ' The Superior Court in wblcb Workman real~zes highest ambition NEW YORK (AP) -Jim "You'rejustdoingthiswindow. Cook enjoyed hls 10-year win-There's notblng else to worry dow-washing carerr in London, about. .. but always there vfls a yearning Even the sight of the "very for the Big Time -King Kong's tiny people" below did not daunt stomping grounds, the Empire Cook. Contest organizers did State Building. take out a $2.2 million insurance -: This week. Cook's drearn policy, just in case, and they became reality. And as a result. postponed the culmination of a single pane on the 78th floor of Cook 's dream by one day the 102-stor y landmark may because of rain. never again shine so brilliantly. COOK SPENT about an hour "A·MY·zing, truly amyiing," washiJ(g a single pane, as wave said Cook, a Cockney, as he upon wave of reporters went to dangled 1,000 feel above 33rd the window to interview him Street. secured only by a har-'·He's in bis glory.'' said ness. Barbara Medid, who works on Cook had won the chance to the floor for Diesse Shoes, but make his dream come true in a took time out to watch Cook's distillery contest Six others will exploits. have opportunities lo Join a In the end, the window was Parisian can-can team. run the clean. Actually. it had been marathon at Marathon in cleaned earlier that morning by Greece, or live with elephants in American window wasbeu Sri Lanka. before Cook arrived, according ANOTHER MAN plans to to Bill Pilch, who has scrubbed make the Pentecost Leap at 8 the Empire State Building's win· Pacific atoll leaping from a dows for three years and other tree, with a vine lied to his ankle Manhattan panes for 22 years. to break the fall "A window is a window," said In comparison, Cook doesn't Pilch. "What's the difference? ff feel his dream is either bizarre he was here for a while, he'd or dangerous ·'I reel very feel the same way." secure," he said, though gusLS AFTERWARDS, Cook accept· as high a s 50 mph were ed a golden s tatuette of the measured on the windward side building and an honorary mem of the building bers hip and set or tools from the "It's not dangerous.'~sa1d_. _Window Washers Union. 1811 R J A[TN0l0S 108ACG0C0MPAN> 20 FILTER CtGAREnEs LOW TAR CA-MEL QUALITY Waruing: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to.. Your Health. • .. the 1\llt wd orillaally flied N· • jeded the auit. wlttcb the mother eaict upeet Kimberly. usu CUES about it,'' abe aald. "'lbe court bu aiven ita approval to emotionally aban· dooln1 a chlld." The 2nd Dtatrict Court of Ap- peal hu IO days to declcte after Tuesday's oral araumettll. Olpin. who initially acknowleqed being Kimberly's father and voluntarily contribut- ed to her aupport, atopped the payments a year after her birth in 1976. But Ms. Louden estat>- Uabed paternity in a Superior Court judgment againat him in 1979, which be did not co~teat. · Durin1 Tueaday'a bearing, Kingsley wondered if forcing Olpin to visit his daughter wouldn't simply result in frustration for the father and daughter because of the lack of spontaneity or happiness. "WE CAN lead a horse to water but can't make him drink. Isn't that this case?" Kingsley asked. Attorney James Griffm, arguing on behalf of the girl and her mother, conceded that could be a problem but insisted such an order was a proper first step rather than simply allowing him to "lake a walk" out of his daughter's life. ''It Is one thing to order him to spend the time and another to pass judgment on the quality of the l ime spent,·' Griffin said. "The court can order such a thing to happen. What happens is left up to the human qualities of the parent." \ Ms. Louden added, "How many children would not have taken a road to crime, im- poverishment and jail bad they had their father's attention anc1 love and not been shunned first by their fathers and then by society for having been born out of wedlock?" Pleading on behalf of the father, attorney Lesley A. An· drus argued that there was no legal authority for such a court order and that to issue one would violate the 13th Amend· ment to .the U.S. Constitution forbidding i nv o luntary servitude. "While the goal of any society s hould be to foster and en- courage close parental-child re- lationships, such relationships cannot be legislated or judicially ordered." Ms Andrus said • ·~·~ Kimberly Anne Olpin, 4~, holda photo of her father, Owen C. Olpin, a Loa Angele1 latDJln. The child, living with her mother, i8 niing /or Witotion right1 from her father. pee• law eased inNeva(fu CARSON CITY (AP> - Nevada Hlebway Patrol troopers have been adviMd to atart taautni ~ "ener11 wast· 101" fines for driven travelln• between 55 mph and 70 mpl>, in line wlth a new law alped by Gov. Bob Ult. Troopers were alao told oot tb view the eued apeedlna law as a si1nal to stop writinl tickets for driven traveling up to 70 mph in 55 mph zones. But Patrol Col. Pete Zadra conceded there's a "definite possibility" of fewer tickets being issued. Zadra also said the troopers wlll have to plan for "an .in- crease in deaths and severe in- jury accidents. There's no doubt in our minds." But he also said the state Legislature and Gov. List did wbat they had to do. ·'I reel the governor and the Legislature represented the peo- ple of this stale. They woutd· not have introduced a bill of this type and the governor certainly would not have signed it if they didn't think this was what the people wanted," he added. List, who signed the bill this week before a cheering crowd at a Hawthorne town meeting, in- sisted that the change in the law was not a signal .to drivers to violate the 55 mph limit. The law. which took effect im- mediately once List signed it, makes Nevada the second state to ease penalties for exceeding the federally mandated 55 mph speed limit. Killings enrage village KFAR YASSIF, Israel (AP> - Tension runs Mgh in this Chris- tian village after two people were killed by a Moslem mob that rampaged through the town seeking vengeance for the kill- ing of a youth at a soccer match. Police arrested five men and searched all vehicles entering Kfar Yassif, eight miles east of the Mediterranean, to prevent the villagers from. stockpiling weapons for another round in the vendetta. Krar Yassif leaders com plained bitterly that Israeli police failed to prevent the al· tack. and that many of the arms used against them were Israeli army issue. They decreed a two· day general strike in the village. More than 100 attackers came by foot and car from the neighboring settlement of Julis this week and shot up Kfar Y ass if with submachine-gun fire and threw grenades. Both villages are Israeli Arab, but Kfar Yassif is Christian, while Julis is populated by Druse who follow an offshoot doctrine of Islam. A Klar Yassif man, 33-year- old Daoud Habib, was killed in his house as he and his wife were baking pastries for Easter, witnesses said. Later, an 18· year-old high school student, Tahsin lvriq, died in a hospital. Ten other Kfar Yassif people were wounped S ixly ·o n e houses were damaged, three of them gutted by fire, and half a dozen cars were torched. The windows of the church were smashed and its rooftop cross hit by bullets. Kfar Yassif residents s aid eeveral stores were looted 20 CIGARETTES ... _. @~M®4 LIGHTS LOW TAR · CAM EL QUALITY -., I 8 fn9. ,... • 0.8 m~ nicotine "· per c1Qmtt1 by FTC lftlthod. , ____ .,.. I" u-..... Mead Dixon, board chaicman at Harrah'•, points to originol 1tate ' ,. seal of California which he will rdum this year. : .. Seal to go home · Nevada to return California emblem RENO (AP > -After an absence of a century and a quarter, California is getting back its original state seal. The hand-painted seal, which di sappeared after a fire destroyed the state Capitol in 18S4, has been on display at Har- r ah' s Automobile Collectloa since 1962, viewed annually by thousands of Californians un- aware they were looking at a missing part of their state's his· tory. ··It is truly an historic object, and it's because of the im· portance of that object to the state of California that we at Harrah's have decided ... that we will return this seal to the state," Harrah's Chairman Mead Dixon announced Tues- day. - DIXON SAID the seal would remain at the automobile collec· . , tion in nearby Sparks during the peak summer tourism months while the two states decide on '·an appropriate time and method to tender that return so that its significance will not be lost. Dixon said Harrah's officials were surprised by the furor that broke out in the California Legislature this year when it - was learned that the historic emblem was in Nevada hands. The Assembly backed a res- olution by William Leonard, R· San Bernardino, calling for the return of the seal, used at the first meeting of the Legislature in San Jose in 1850. Noting the resolution urged "all Californians to help in get· ting the seal back," Dixon said, "I expected to have 20 million Californians coming over the border'' HE SAID THAT once Harrah's learned of California's interest in getting the seal back, there never was a question of its re· turn. The seal hung in the state Capitol from 1852·18S4 , when a fire destroyed the building. The governor managed to rescue the seal, but it became lost in the confusion. It reappeared in a Sacramento bank vault in 1932 and became part of the collection of W. Parker Lyon, a collector of memorabilia and a descendant of Caleb Lyon, who designed the seal. The ·late William Harrah purchased the contents of the Lyon museum in Arcadia, Calif., in 1955 and moved the artifacts, including the seal, to Reno. 20 CIGARETTES G~lMfe~ LIGHTS~ LOW TAR · CAM EL OUALIT.lf ' ( ........ -.-.,,..,.... ..... -..... -~ __ ......,. ........... ...-., ...... -, . ., ......... -... .__ ~ -. -..... -----....... ..-.... .....,..,~...,,,,...,,. ................ .... Uregon bills U.S. for war " SALEM, Ore. (AP) -Tbe 1tate ol Ore1on, fl1urtn1 that 100 . years ia a tone enoulb vace period, ia dwuitn1 the United States for payment of CtvU War claims tota11n1 $1.3 mUUon. State hllltorian Cecil Edwarda 1ald Oregoc ran up the bill when lt mustered local raldtnts to man garri1ona agalnst lncilan attacks after federal troops pulled out to help ficbt the Confederacy. The state Senate bu voted unanimously for a melt)orial ur1ln1 Congress to reimburse Oreaon for · 'subatantlal expenses incurred in fu.mishlng troops and aiding the United Stetes in maintalnll)I the common defense of the Oregon Trail, miners and settlers in the Civil War period." SEN. l;.D. POTl'S, D-GtllDta Pass, said the money plus interest comes to about $45 million, but the state is willln1 to settle for $1.3 million, today's equivalent or its expenses during the Civil War. "We are offering Congress a bargain basement type of settlement," Potts told the Senate. "Certainly more than 100 years seems to me tp be an excessive grace::-1rrlod." The state's efforts to make the federal government pay seemed headed for success when in 1906 the case went to the U.S. Court of Claims. A headline in the Morning Oregonian of June 30, 1906, stated: "Oregon Claims Soon To Be Paid." IN 1908, THE court agreed that part of Oregon's claim s hould be reimbursed. But the court said the state's demands for repayment of bounties and extra wages used to entice men to replace U.S. soldiers should not be borne by the federal government. No payment was ever made for any of the claim, Edwards said. Congress never passed an appropriation bill authorizing payment. Oregon made stabs over the years to get the money, but the c laim lay forgotten until Edwards found old newspaper clippings referring to the Civil War expenses and renewed the effort. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Aptll 1&, 1981 FFC• 5otat1anot avallabte only at our Armstrong FIOOr Fashion center store. 20 CIGARETTES .J I s200 ' Save ~'yd Strong warrandes go wttt'I superior products and servtces. we sell ttie best noors made by Armstrono. · Amertca'S leadlnQ ftOOrlnQ manutacturer, and then Install ttiem by slcllled craftsmen. we back up YoUr new noor With dOUOle warranty coi,ierage • Ttle Qualtty of mater1al Is guaranteed by ArmstronQ; • Installation Is • ouaranteed by our FIOOr Fashion center store. we lnvtte you to come In to read our warranty. we think vou·n agree It could come ontv from a company that'S confident of the Qualttv Of Its products and proud of Its services and people '"'Mr* • 20 CIGARETTES @~~®:4, LIGHTS LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE L Orange Cout DAl\.Y PtLOT/ThY •• ~prll HS, 1981 • City neeJs updated storm drainage plan Laguna Beach is going to pay $30,00Q for • master drainage plan that should help city of· ficials determine where storm drain facilities are needed before disasters point out problem areas. The city's drainage plan has not been updated since 1963 and a new assessment of the amount of storm runoff that courses through Laguna Beach is needed. With an updated plan, the city can schedule repairs and new storm drain facilities in a logical sequence, depending on severity of need, rather than making just spot repairs and installations. But the big question is, how will the city pay for improve- ments called for in the master plan? City officials are exploring several options, including a special tax on all Laguna Beach property owners. a mounting to $70 per year for homeowners, $50 for vacant lots and $80 for com- mercial properties. The city figures it can raise nearly $500.000 a year by this method. Another means of funding the projects would be ·assessment d1strict.s th~ would see property owners who would benefit the most paying the bill. The problem with that method is proving that all prop· erty owners in a specific area would benefit. On the other hand it can be argued that char.ging au property owners in town might not be fair to those who can expect to ex- perience no flooding or erosion problems. City Council members were correct ih ordering the master plan update now -even if it comes before a means of funding impro~emenls has been establish.a:- That determination should come soon. however. or the city will have a $30,000 plan gathering dustonashelf. Water grant a first One south county water dis- trict has been the Cirst to receive state conservation bond funds to create a wate r reclamation system to utilize sewage water now being pumped out to sea Officials at the South Coast County Water District, which serves South Laguna and parts of Laguna Niguel and Dana Point. were told about the grant ap proval last week The district will receive $2 million , to co mbin e with matching funds from developers and other sources, to create reclamation faciltt1es. The innovative plan will see developers. Like Avco, and county agencies and school districts con- tribute funds for tertiary treat- ment facilities, booster pump sta- tions and a storage reservoir for reclaimed water Wh y would priv at e de velopers, county officials and other agencies want to kick in for a $4 million reclamation project? Because the reclaimed water can be used for landscape irriga- tion on golf courses, county me- dians and playgrounds for about 20 percent less than drinkable water. The matching funds from those groups will be in the form of advance user fees . In the case of Avco, the user fee would be depleted over an estimated 25 years. Currently users receive im· ported water for landscape watering, and in the event of a drought or water shortage, that use probably would be the first to be cut. But with a reclaimed water system, greenbelts, golf courses and parks within the district will remain green at a reduced cost War o_n ugliness Most everyone in Laguna Niguel is in agreement. The new post office building on Niguel Road is ugly. Its mismatched gray shingle rooftop is only s urpassed in tacki· ness by the building's dark brown paint job. And landscaping surrounding the barn-like structure is un· inspiring and almost non - existent. So what's to be done? Rep. Robert Badham, R· Newport Beach, says the building should be re-roofed -a solution that postal service officials say would cost too much And they're probably right. • As a solution, the federal of- ficials say they'll look into a special paint for the roof tiles, along with possibly extending the eaves. They should make sure the paint won't later chip, thus ex- posing once again the three shades of gray that currently adorn the structure. The building itself could be repainted a tan color, to match other structures in the area. Perhaps the cheapest solu- tion is landscaping. Placement of fast-growing trees and shrubs around the 19,050-square-foot building is the best way to shjeld its ugliness from passersby. Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1n11it· ed. AdcJress The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7 14) 642·4321 . L.M. Boyd / Hold that 'tiger Mentioned long ago that the tiger in that elderly piece of music called ·'Tiger Rag'· alluded not to a big cat but to the lowest possible poker hand. Jazz musicians called such an un- fortunate hand of cards a tiger. In a money ·game, it was exceedingly dangerous to bluff with a hand like that. "Hold that tiger" became a card player's taunt. It should be not· ed , rurther. that the card game's ex- pression also popularized the phrase: "To have a tiger by the tail." Many a love and war expert bu compiled a list of places where slngle women ln search of masculine companionship can go to find same. Sucb as saltwater risbtn1 crulNS. Plumblnl supply atorea. And diesel mechanic•' 1cboo1'. But rare la the roster ot spot.a where men $n search of unattac6ed women can 10. Kindly exclude dlsco•r taverns, loun&H, 1lncle1 ban, ana tbe Uke. Ndthtt th• men nor \ll'01Den who visit t.bete Jolntl tend to act themaelve• when therein. EvtJl the 1enUest one of lbefe fellows lffm• l"' turn Into a comic JtallloD once inside And each or the women. no matter how unaffected elsewhere, s uddenly conveys the quaint notion that she thinks she's Cleopatra. The early "midwife" most usuaUy was a man. The word doesn't mean that the person so Identified is some sort of wile. It means the person is "with <the) wife." Q. What's the "ring gauge" of a cigar? A. The diameter of that cl1ar and of its liWe paper ring. Measured to 1/64th of an inch. Common rtne sizes are 34, 38, 40, 42, 46 and 50. Few realile that Dr. Franken· stein'• ori11J1a1 montter had a name -Adam. to tbe colleiei. one out (JI every 20 cbe~rl•.clert le a 10Ull• man. 1n tM bitti scboola, tt'I only one out ol •vcr,y 2S. There waa a time on tbiJ earth, YoU koow1 when the·beaver• were NVen le6t ttil Thomas P. Haley Pub II sher ThOrNI K .. vll edrtor Barbara Kr9f blch Edltorlal Paoe Editor Social -Security goal fadingr_ A s pecial panel appointed by Congress has recommended sweeping changes in the Social Security program. And while there can be no denying the need for changes to restore a measure of integrity to it, some of the proposals would come near to defeating the original intent and purpose of the pro- gram. Commenced in 1937 as a retirement program to fill the void which existed both in private and public employment, 1t bas come to its present disastrous financiaJ condition through tampering by congressmen mo.re interested in gaining re-election by playing Santa Claus than in the long-term success of the program. Thus the plan has been broadened to include a raft of unearned benefits which threaten its solvency. These "add -ons" include payments to students 18 to 22, to disabled workers at any age, and Medi·care HAD THE PENSION program been fully funded and the money inve~led properly there wouJd still be need for changes. One of the recommendationa is to divorce Medicare from SS which, of coune, was never planned to carry that load. President Reagan has taken the position that the time has come lo remove all of the "add-ons" and revert SS to its basic retirement role. These are sound recommendations and essential if the program is to fullill its original purpose. But many in Congress are reluctant lo eliminate the . .,,, "add-ons·' and instead are leaning lo the proposal to raise the eligibility age to 68 and that of early retirement to 65 as a means to save money by reducing payouts. As a money-saving device it could on- ly be improved by raising the eligibility llRL WITIRS age even higher. As it stands countless workers die before reaching the present eligibility age and, without survivors, the funds they have paid in remain with the government. If the age 1s raised there will be even fewer around to col· lect the pensions for which they paid their money all their working years THE PROPONENTS of a higher age contend that the average age of life ex- pectancy has increased dramabcally in the years since SS was established. Ac · cording to the U.S National Center for Health Statistics. an estimated 68 per- cent of aU babies born in the U.S. today will be alive at age 70 and more than 25 percent will still be around at age S5. That may be so but insurance tables s how life expectancy presently to be an average age 70 for white males and 77 for white females and about six years Jess for non-caucasians. Those figures clearly show that a sub- stantial percentage of male workers would be dead before reaching age 68 and another large percentage JUSl a couple of years away from death. Pension programs have been sold to the public on the idea that workers would be provided with a few years in which to relax and enJOY !He after a lifetime olrlabor. Do the Congressmen now think people should have lo work I until they die? FURTHERMORE, the life expectan cy tables do not reflect what percentage of those who do live beyond 65 are still; physically or mentally able to continue work The fact is that many retire early for physical reasons and many elderly ! who may want to continue to work fmd their ages bar th~m from most en· i deavors \ : One change which not only 1s long : overdue but would ehmmate an "add·: on " prov1s1on never contemplated i originally is the limitation on eao)ings: for those collecting SS No less an j authorit y than Senat or Barry Goldwater has declared the SS money t belongs to the workers, not the govern ment and the ceilings on earnings dis courages older people from remaining productive The fact 1s an assured in· come enables many. who have worked at menial Jobs all therr lives of necessi·, ty, to find. fulfillment m endeavors they: enjoy. Federal money policies tax savers To the Editor: A noted economist was quoted recent- ly as saying that if the government were put in charge of th«r Sahara Desert. in five years we would be out of sand. This may be true. For example, the mysterious Federal Reserve Board pursues monetary policies like an old woman trying to cross Highway 5 on foot First going m one direction, then another. nobody knows what to expect next. Meanwhile, people are urged to cul down spending and save money and get it into savings accounts if possible. Right? And what happens to the in- terest we get on these accounts: It ls taxed as income. right? But that's wrong• This is double taxation. or worse -those hard-held dollars have already been taxed into morbidity. It is only one part of the Giant Snafu in Washington, but it does happen to be one that could easily be corrected: simply abolish income tax on savings interest and let us use that money to help squeak by the continually higher cost of staying alive. MRS. L.W. HUNDSDOERFER Land values To the Editor: \ I didn't realize bow far behind the limes in regard to land values I had become until I read your Sunday, April s editorial entitled, "State voters beat park funding costs." In 19J..8.23 at the Unlversi,ty of California at Davia, we were tauebt that It w aa almost flnancialJy unprofitable lo farm land cOltin1 more than $1,<JPO an acre. In thel article, ln re1ard to the state buytn1 land adjacent to preaeatly owned 1 le land, "t.biJ meana the 1tate will be le to proeeed with some much needed art d-.elopment, in spite of the ta tba\ oew Interior S.Cretary Jemet . Wltu ts convinced tbe H · tlonaJ p k 1y1t.m lJ already too tar•• antt 't wut to spend "17 mon money it." M OP th1I land eooceni9d ii uo- devel land WJ.tulted for acrtcultun. but eel in th• article to be ~ more SU,?M per acre. CSl,.I00,000 dJvtded 297 acl'tl). Pl• tell mo th.Jt l bav•'t sou.en to far ~ thne, t.bat pelltbb •· needed UCD laad II toda.J wortll moro thu elHen dm• wlult· aOed •fricUltur&l lud ., .. wortJa .. ., OOlllf• daya. GUil. OSMON Thi GMWr w Uwd UIU ii~ GI,...,... tfo' luiwf r•ddntial, "°' ~. land. T1w lllcdc ,_, •_,.,.of 111,/ll/ll Olll I acre for adjacent land in the 1tate park and the lt"'OiM Company'• 500-<Jcre land gift for t~ pork wo.s ool1Ud at $12 million, or iu.ooo on .acre becaaue of ita <kv~I point· tial. Time& have indud chang«l along the Orange Coaat . Editor. Resj,omibility To the Editor: Kudos to Jim Wood of Corona del Mar for his excellent article in the Sunday. April S paper titled "Ac ting MAILBOX Responsibility Worth Oscar. Too." Maybe one more person should come forward in the John Hinckley case and that's the judge from Charlotte, South Carolina who fined Hinckley S67 for try· ing lo carry three guns on an airplane when the federal penally was $6,000 and 5 years in jail -the judge trying to keep it a municipal case rather than a federal case maybe did the country a disservice. People being responsible for thelr ac- tions ls the key. JIM DEBOOM Public opinion To the Editor: UnW I read in the local newspapers of the heroic Judge Paul Egly's decision to withdraw from the bus case, I had for1otten a famous Harvard law achool professor'• lecture wherein he told us that court decition.s are bated mainly on public opinion; ud Uaat over the yean eourta chanse. wttb UM public whim. You see, Judi• E1b bad lndeed 1one t.bo extra Jillie to eDfOl'ce the Ja,w In the face ol artoCUt, MJftab, inlol8*'t blloted behavior of t.be i... Anfelea Sebool Board -represenUDa pubUc opinion -one of whom Ud callouly clawed over the backl of helplHs bllnorttJ cblldrtn to 1na1 a con· 1re11blal seat. What reminded m• of th• prot•sor'• le.;tun wu Juflse SC11'1 nmuk, "Tb• antw .. r to tlM9e prob&ema .... not ln th• comti. I Uaed to thlU they were." He hdut..s lbe uawen Ue in tbe ballot box . Like Judge Egly, I used to think answers lay in the courts Now. I doo't either. BECAUSE IN Laguna Beach today we have a screeching echo or the pro fessor 's thesis and of Judge Egly's re· mark. A little group here paid its lawyers $60,000 to stop the Aliso Viejo 1 development company from cramming· 100.000 people into a s pace near Laguna · Beach that can accommodate 25,000 at most. The project w as illegaJ, the group said . Never mind its destruction of eagles' nests. never mind the proJect's loosening tons of Oood waters into the surrounding villages. never mind th~ constipation of highways the thousands of additional autos the Aliso Viejo project would bring The County of Orange, the group charged, had violated the California Environmental Quality Act in permitting the development com- pany to double its housing quota. But the courts said. "No." You're ju.st beini picky. The county was right. You see. the supervisors are the public opinion. So now this brave little group. bleSJ their hearts. is grubbing and snulfilnJ . around for another packet or money to pay another set of lawyers to appeal. In my opinion Aliso Viejo wilJ win a1ain. Oh, so regretfully.' But you see, the group has the right target but the wrong gun. I was a lead penon In the first suit. I'm not participatin1 in the appeal. But If I were, I'd be havinJ second thoughts. Because rememberinf the professor and Judee Egly, I'd be asking if it wouldn 'l be belt.er -in the lone run -to spend the money electin1 officlal11 who want to protect the land? ror if the courts listen to pubUc opinion. and beiJ\I human perhaps abve lht same b6u we aJl do. aren't the city counclh. county 1upervisora,. lealslators, etc. public opinion i• cryatallizalion? TOM ALEXA.NOE~ .. .. Study says expansion to have little airport impact ~ atudy J ol acUYlty at John . But In reaching lta eoaclualon, seven Umes u lD;DY pleuure Wayne Airpott, eommi11iOlled tbe report by CODJultlnc firm trlpa and 1lx Umea u many b)' the lntu Company, COD· Peat, Marwick and llltcbell allo business tripe out of John Wayne eludes that the flrm'1 plan to shows that Newport Beach rest-Airport each year as other coun- bulld a new hotel and two hilh· dents are the heaviest airport ty residents. me offtce towen will have only users in the county. a sli1bt impact on airport wsa,e. The Irvine ComJany it bopinf the 27-p.,e study will silence crttic1'Who maintain lt1 plan fO opand Newport Center wtU in· crease demand for m1hts at the Oranae Co\mty airport. IT HAS generally been established that Newport citizens also are the moat vocal critics of airport expansion. Specifically, the study says that Newport residents take Anthony could lose office in 60 days ON A daily buia, the report abows, Newport travelers make 85 pleasure trips and 210 buat- neas trips out of the airport. On an annual basis, the coesuJting firm computes that Newport residents make nearly 20 percent of the total airport busineas trips and 22 percent of tbe vacation ,trips. The consultants say that con- struction of the proposed 400· room hotel and office towers should increase the figures only sligbUy. The new hotel, envisioned as a Irvine City Councilman Art Anthony will Je»e bis omce if be baa a 80-day unexcused absence from council meeUois. accord- in1 to munlclpaJ law. That's the uaesament Irvine City Attorney Roser Grable 1ave the Irvine City Council Tuesday. He al.so explained that if An- tbon y, who la (acing felony charges, realen1 or la removed from office, the seat could be tilled 1n one of two ways. First. if 7 percent of the clty'i voters sign peUUon11, a special election must be held. Those slanaturea must be eathered within 30 days after the council seat becomes vacant. Second, lf the 1l1naturea are in1ufftcient, the City CeuncU can decide to either appoint a new counclJ member, or call a special election. Any council appointment would need a majority vote of the coW>Cil members. Ant.bony'• clty council term expires ln June of 1982. Storm drain work seen 3-monthjob A $500,000 project to install a storm drain beneath Iris Avenue and Bayside Drive in Corona del Mar will begin Just before the summer rush and could take three months to complete. The project ls intend~ to re- lieve nei&hborhoods north of the Paclflc Coast H11hway of flood- ln&, but that may aeem to be lit- tle consolation to the folks south of the hl&hway, where const~­ tlon will take place. IUT U.OYD Dalton, deairn en1lneer for Newport Beach, said the project it badly needed. "We're upiradinl the size of tbe drain to lncnaae the capaci- ty and I think it's 1otn1 to solve all our problems in this area," he said. Dalton said public works crew• have been frustrated dur- in• put storma because the only drlJn ~h the retlon Wal ln- 1talled privately under exlstine homes and businesses. The clty bat no easement, 10 crews can't m•lntain the inadequate line, he 1ald. A tecond pbue of the project extendln1 to Flftb Street la plUMd ln the future to com- plete t.bedralft, 4e 1aid. Anthony is under1oing psychiatric treatment. He was released on his own re - cognizance from sheriff's custody. With Anthony gone from the council meetings, the council has a 2-2 philosophical split with Larry Agran and Mary Ann Galdo on the liberal side and Bill Vardoulis and David Sills on the conservative side. Anthony has not been reached for comment to disclose his plans. OPEN HOUSE SKF 'luxury establishment where guests would put in longer stays than at conventional hotels. would generate 34 new air passeng~rs at John Wayne Airport daily. The proposed office towers, consultants figure, would bring seven new passengers to the airport each dayll" On an annual basis, con- aultants estimate the new con- struction would generate 14,539 new passengers or 1.2 percent of last year's paasenger figures at the airport. CM High keeps 'em down on the farm Pa rents who show up for Costa Mesa High School's open house next Tuesday will have fint shot at purchasing flowering plants at below retail prices. The school"s nursery opera- tions and management class kicks off its new sales program that day in conjunction with the formal open house. On sale near the gymnasium area, said agriculture instructor Roy Center, will be fuchsias . begonias, zinnias, impatients dianthus and a host of other potted plants. THE PROJECT partly is a re- sult of two new greenhouses purchased for the school's airicultural area -known as "the farm .. -by the Newport- Meaa School District board of trustees. Those earthquake-proof struc- tures boast controlled hot and cold air. plexiglass sun p811e&, warm-water soil heaters and ~her features that cost the dis- trlct a tot.al $30,000. Structural steel already la in place for two new livestock barns to house project animals including beef cattle, sheep and pigs, said Center. The barns, complete with, elaborate livestock sewa1e facilities and washroom•, are expected to cut down a bit on odors and rues thU summer. be said. ··That should make our neighbors happy, .. he said, gesturing toward a row o( houses to the north of the school. THE BARNS, also recently approved by the school board, will cost about $340,000 when completed. Other improvements include sidewalks, laid by student.S, new fences and ne w electrical circuits throughout the area. In addition to crops on the farm, agriculture students are working in conjunction with the Future Farmers of America or- ganization on a number of animal projects, Center added. Raised by individual students are 15 hogs, 11 steers. nine I am bs and one horse. WHILE THE crop programs and animal projects are old hat al Mesa's farm. the nursery projects are just blossoming into a full-scale business. Nursery management stu- dents, Ceoter said, will be seU- i n g plants to Costa Mesans every Friday afternoon at the school, he said. ,. "We hope to get enough com- munity support to make this a worthwhile program." said stu· dent nursery manager Bill McKenzJe. Orange Coast DAIL y PtLOT/Thuf'8day, Aprll 18, 1981 L smaller tb1n today'• •UmllUI. Deal)lt• tbe ero_bltma, thla year•• t.entatlvt b\lqet predicts • allpt tncomt lncrea11 - about $1,000 -O'H1' tut year. Teutatively propoted la a total of $1,5031000. which lncludea an operat.lq catefory of N ,014,000 aod a capita lmprovemeut1 ( coutructloa) uctlon of St,489,000, Fulk Mid. Expected to make up ror declines 1n racin1 tbia year are the expandlna falr1round1 equestrian operaUon and • new contract that 1ncreues the fair board'• percentqea of income from privately operated weekend swap meet.a ln a parll- lns lot. Net income from tbe equestrian operatlon, which. can board up to 250 privately owned horses u the result ol recent ex-panalon, 11 expected to be about ~.ooo th1I year. Swap meet income ls expected to increue nearly •190,000 thi• year under a new contract ex· tension signed witb Tel-Phil of Arti8t Marco Sa3sone stand& by concrete kiosk that will direct toumts and residents to cultural events m Laguna Bevh. -Colorful posters to cover LB kiosk When it's completed In about two weeks. the concrete kiosk at the comer of Forest A venue and Glenneyre Street will inform strollers of upcoming cultural events in Laguna Beach. ColorfuJ posters will cover the 9·foot pillar, directing tourists and residents alike to art festivals, the museum and theater productions. And the whole thing was con- structed at no cost to Laguna's taxpayers The concept of a centrally located kiosk was that of Italian· born artist Mar,:o Sassone, who says he's been trying to get such a kiosk in town for the past three years. Sassone. a founding member of the city's cultural committee and later, the city's Arts Com· mission. says brightly colored kiosks are a common site in Europe. He thinks that in an art colony lik<T Laguna Beach. the concrete st{'fuctures should be at key points throughout the town THE ARTS Commission budgeted $2,500 for the project. but Sassone and a handful of volunteers found they could complete the job For nothing · · Everythin~ was donated." Sassone said. There was the architectural renderings, provided free by Paul Johansson. labor and a few supplies from local builders Glenn and Mark Hinchcliffe. forms and materials from Laguna Lumber Company, and concrete from Transite Mix of El Toro. PAINTER Jacques Garnier will be adding color to the con- crete kiosk with paint provided by Rick Wells of Boat Canyon paint. A problem facing the Arts Commissioners is making sure that only art posters appear on the kiosk. Organizations who want their production or event appearing on the pillar must apply at the city's recreation department. The posters will be applied and removed by arts com - missioners on a regular baaia. SWAT team's ' victim wants anew door A Newport Beach woman, who uys a police SWAT teem kicked Its way into her Cwt Drive home .uapectlna a bur1Jar was wide, la aald.fll tbe city to buy bet a new front door. Patricia McKeM~1 vacation· in1 at the Umt of uie incident laat month, contend• poltc' de1troy~ the door and ripped out varloua loclc1. Sb• eat11Catel dam.,. at flSOO. foUc. •.r they wer. called to the actne wtJ•n a nel1bbor apotted a UCht In tbe Uvln1 room of the boule. Bel.l••lnl a prowler •H lnllde, police av \bey ftnt tried to cou out the .. buratar" wltb a bullhorn and then rushed th• door. ,Once lnltde1• potitt H)' they dl1covered a 11vt.nc room lamp booked to an autom1Uc WftlJii device. 1 Newport Beach thl.I month. Dul the operaUona budtet cov- enns the Oranse County July talr la always a bll ne1atlve- caah \tem. ti coven fair operations u well as year·lonc personnel salary schedules and aeneral bulldina and erounds main· tenance. LAST year, the fair and renu from its buUdlnp and trQ\Q\da · throughout the rest of ,the year ; (except for the swap meet and : equestrian operations> 1roa1ed a bout $2.17 million. Expenses were $2.37 million. Th ls year, Fulk estimates, the fair and building rentals will gross about $2.2 million and in- flation-riddled expenses will rise to nearly $2.8 million. Included in the rising ex- penses 1s a proposed fair securi- ty tab that will nearly double, Fulk believes The sharp increase is the re- sult of recent state legislation which 1s depleting the ranJ<s of the Orange County Sheriff's re- ser ve force. THAT law requires reserve officers who serve mostly without pay to receive as much law- enforcement schooling as reg- ular deputies. Orange County Sheriff's of- ficials have lndjcated deputies' pay would move the total July fair security expense to about $80,000. Last year, the cost. including a handful of regular fairgrounds security personnel and tem- porary help. was closer to $25.000, fair officials say Fulk contends that by hiring private secunty force members for the two week period instead of using sheriff's deputies the cost can ht' lowered to about SS0.000 -JERRY CLAUSEN $36. 9 milli.on budget for NB told Newport. Beach city df'ficials have unveiled the city's 1981-82 preliminary budget of $36.lt million, which calls for a spend- ing increase of 4.2 percent over last year's figures. The preliminary budget , which project!> total city rev· enues for the coming year to be · $37 6 million, recommends add· ing four new employees, all in the poli ce department THE 402·PAGE budget also shows a year end balance or $12 9 m1ll1on . money which would likely be dipped into when city offtc1ab complete negotia- tions with cit:r employee as- soc1attons As u.sual . c1ly public safety services ~uch a~ police. fire and lifeguard operations make up, nearly 50 percent of the budget The proposed four n ew employees in the police depart-· menl would work in parking con· trol and 1 he detective bureau. THE BIGGt.:ST in the pre- liminary budget is in new rev· enues expected to be generated through oil royalties and re- negotiated lenses Predicting a successful finale to its struggle to obtain control of 16 otl wells. city budget ex· perts project that oil profits s hould increase from $50.000 to well more than SI m1lhon A new lease with homeowners in Beacon Bay. located on city-~ controlled tidelands. Is expect.ed- to bring in $531,000. compared to just overS7 ,000 this year AND THE BALBOA Yacht Basin, an opera lion that the city Is planningtotakeover. is anticipat- ed to earn $116,000. Not included in the budget is City Attorney Hugh Coffin's re- quest for a $25,000-a·}'ear deputy city attor-ney post. City Manarer Robert Wynn has recommended · against increasing that depart- ment! which now has two full-lime awyers. Also missing ls $18,635 of the city•s Arts Commission requat for a $25,625 operatine bud1et. Wynn hu recommended livin& the commission $6,990 with half of the money earmarked for funding the annual clty art festival. · City Council members ate scheduled to review the pre- liminary document durtna the ,comtn1 weeks . Benefit due in Laguna I . ' By MAIW l.\NE SCABCELLO Of ttlt Olllly "-' ..... THE NEWPORT Auxiliary of the Children's Home Society provided an evenlna of art for children's sake with lta 12th "Soiree d'Art." Gueata enjoyed champape and hors d'oeuvra while viewing artwork auctioned after an HAPPENINGS international dinner provided by Park Avenue Caterers. Flais from many natiom added to theworldly fl avor of the dinner, held al the Plaza de Cales ln Irvine. Cooked-while-you-wail tempura and tostadas, roast beef sandwiches, fresh fruit and a dessert table preceded a spirited art auction conducted by Robert Guggenheim. President Mrs . Hugh Sutherland welcomed him back (he's served as auctioneer at five previous sol rees) and reminded guests Ufit proceeds from the evening would go toward the Children's Home Society's expanded child wellare services. ·Buyers of the 42 paintings showed a strong preference for traditional styles and local scenes. One Newport Beach artist, Jo Ann Mix, offered to paint a portrait: of the bu~r·s choice rather than put a completed portrait up for 4ale. ~t price of the evenlnt went to "Laauna at Sea ' by Ray Friess, and total art •al• were $28,200, a new Solree record · Mrs. Rudy Baron was lo cbarae of the $35-a-peraon party, and abe was ualatect by Mn. Charles Paakerlan, Mrs. Don Ruuell, Mrs. Gordon Marshall, Mn. Robert Rude, Mrs. James deBoom, Mr1. James Rountree, Mra. Richard Lockman, Mrs. Richard Carrinaton, Mrs. Raymond De Mott, Mrs. Robert Beechner, Rae Jun Ryan and Mrs. Gared Smith. Amone the art fans were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Schrader, Mr. and Mra. Loren Dab, Mr. and Mrs .. Per Trebler, Barbara Aune and Mr. and Mn. Jack Buzzard. HARP MUSIC was t~e appropriate backgrdund to a president's tea held for offlcers of the guilds and chapters support.inc the Oraqe County Mualc Center. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Se1entrom openeid their Santa Ana home to the almost 200 who carft,e from all over the county to sip champacne or coffee and enjoy the hors d'oeuvres catered by the South Coast Plaza Hotel. John Rau, president of the Oranee County Music Center, welcomed the group, as did Elaine ResJfield, chairman of the board of directors. She beean the tea tradition last year during Mrs. Charles Paskerian f le/ t J and Mrs. Rudy Baron admfre one of · the paintings auctioned at the Childr~·s Home Society's ''Soiree d'Art." Genius kids overwhelming Stort<.'S about children who are geniuses absolutely intrigue me I read about a little girl re- cently who, at the age of 7 months, was reading off the diap<'r box Al age 3, she read an instruction booklet out loud covering the 1040 tax forms, and one night when she was 2, she met her daddy al the door by reciting Shakespeare with a childish lisp, "ls thy name Robert a fair name? I'll have nt father if you be not him." That's puttmg it on the line. l read of another child who was 21~ years old, spoke five languages. played the guitar and built his own computer out of the telephone in bis mother 's kitchen Yacht meet slated A panel of experts will provide tips and answer questions for skippers and crews planning to enter the 1981 Ensenada Race at Balboa Yacht Cl)lb's Ensenada Send-Off Luncheon onThursday. April 23 FesllVlties will begin with social hour at 11 a m. and luncheon will be served at 12: 15 at Balboa Yacht Club, 1801 Bayside Drive.Corona del Mar This combined men's and women's luncheon , is open to all interested in the Ensenada Race. Make reservations by calling 673·3515. •M w~· Everything handm9de or handcrafted right here In thia ...i ~ ..... ..._.. CUSTOM 1451B MSUTS COMSIGM DISfGH 204a 'Wellallfl °'· .... IOI. ............... RUFFELL'S I think 1 got a Christmas newsletter from them last year In fact. there are 2 :; million youngsters in this country who are certifiably gifted. Thirty-five or them Jived on our block It was very intimidating and I played the game as long as I could. Whenever a ll the mothers got together. the first li ar didn't stand a chance. If I said my child had "slept dry" for three nights, another mother said her child had not only stayed dry, but had sat up with two bedwetters who needed help to get through the night. If my child played "Theme From Dr. Zhivago" on his nose, the next mother informed the group that her toddler was guest conductor for the Cincinnati Symphony next season. After awhile, I just couldn't keep up. They dis· covered my child couldn't s peed.read when he was busily tracing his finger back and forth across six or seven books a minute -and the bdoks were up- side down. They discovered he had indeett mixed his own formula for his bottle ~ but he was 7 years old at the time. J Things realJy came lo a head one day when I was in the supermarket and asked my child to put a loar of bread in my basket. He said he couldn't remember which one was mine and a mother of a genius said, "You can 't miss it. It's the one with your brother in it." Did you know that Einstein failed his entrance exams at Polytechnic Institute in Zurich? At times like that, it's nice to think about. OPEN HOIJSE ROSE CRAVEN PAT CULMER PEARL f'IERSTEIN UPHOLSTllY ln•fr .......... 1'12HAUOl8'.V •• COSTA MISA -~11'6 .. THE GOOD LIFE TRAVEL'' 4510 CAMPUS DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH. CA. 92660 714-5,7-6052 .,.,,, ......... " ........ John M. Rau (left). Margot Quon, Mr1. Harold Segerdrom, Sandra Segentrom and Lindo Kidder at thl! Orange Coioaty MUlic Center'• pre~· a tea. her term as president and was delighted that Rau is continuing it. . "It's valuable to meet and compare notes," she said. Support for the Music Center, organized with the help of Georgia Spooner, is divided into nine guilds in different areas of the county. Each guild is divided into chapters, which now number 43. "We limit each chapter to a membership of 100, and when it goes above that. they split into new chapters," Mrs. Redfield said. Money raised by the groupit will go toward construction of a performihg center near South Coast Plaza HARRY BABBITI will be honored by the Newport-Balboa Rotary ·Club at its annual c harity benefit April 25 at the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach. After retiring from a show business career, Babbitt moved to Newport Beach, where he has donated his talents at more than 200 community charity events. Reservations are $50 per person and include cocktails with a silent auction, dinner and a live auction as well as dancing to "The Society for the Preservation of Big Bands." Ticket information is available from James Lyons at 759-1515 or 64-0·9104 L OCAL WOMEN'S clubs winners when the. Orange District Federation of Women's Clubs held annual convention in Buena Park. were big California their 25th Among small clubs. the Ebell Club of Irvine won first place in nine areas, and Irene Iverson won the General-Junior C90rdinalor award. For medium clubs, Fountain VaJJey Women's Club won first in Gerontology, and the Women 's Club of Huntington Beach won hrst in Consumer Concern. Legislation and Literature and Creative Writing. Among Intermediate clubs, Ebell of Newport Beach won a first in Citizenship and Costa Mesa Women's Club won first in Publicity. With large clubs, Women's Club of San Clemente took a first in BuJletin and Epsilon Sigma Omicron. Local scholarship winners include Laura Crain and Julian McGrath, sponsored by the Women's~ Club of Huntington Beach, who took first and second places in art. Cheryl Martlneg won a !econd place in conservation and was sponsored by the Ebell Club of Irvine TuE BIG Canyon Committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society plans to open a few doors for a home tour on April 24. Featured homes belong to Mr and Mrs Frank O'Bryan, Mr. and Mrs . William Hughes. Mr. and Mrs Maury DeWald and Mr and Mrs Steven Toth The tour will include s uch features as noral stained glass windows patterned after chintz fabric and an antique East Indian temple corbel Tickets are S8 and include tea a nd light refreshment · Anyone interested m attending should call Mrs Stuart Moore al 64-0·4926 or Mrs James Herrell at 759-0378. Taurus: Focus on moderation FRIDAY, APRIL l7, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARJES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Exchange ideas with tndividuals whose views &f4>ear to be opposite your own . You're in position to learn, to gain access to vital information. Focus on public responses, legal affairs and the overcoming of obstacles. TAURUS <Apr. 20 -May 20 >: Focus on moderation, diplomacy reconciliation with family member. Libra, Scorpio and another Taurus rieure in scenario. Accent on employment, health , dependents and promotion of basic interests. Money is "on the way." GEMINI <May 21 -June 20): Creative and romantic Interests are hi&blfghted. Significant change occurs -you'll obtain definition of terms and will streamline techniques. You also aaln glimpse of operations that occur behind scenes. CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Older Individual aids in closing transaction. Let go of losing proposition. You have "paid your dues." Pisces, Scorpio and another Cancer fiRure prominently. Rebuilding process is under way. You'll be beneficiary. LEO (July 23-Aui. 22): Recognize numerous options. Unusual opportunity exists to enhance popularity and insure security. One you respect seeks your opinion. Telephone call enables you to gain needed information. Aries is in picture. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): New approach brings profit. Accent on payments, collections and locating of missing material. Stress independence, originality and ploneerin& spirit. What you require will be handed you on proverbial silver platter. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Sense of direction • NOW ENROLLING GUITAR CLASSES comes mto sharp, clear focus You 'll be al proper place al right lime Gain indicated through personal appearances Appeals bring favorable res ponses SCORPIO Wet 23-Nov. 21) You 'll be participant in special group or club actJvlty You might be asked to appear before the media. Give full play to intellectual curiosity. Gemini. Libr a, Aquarius persons figure in scenario Dream' SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ! · Revise. review, correct past mistakes and start building on a more solid structure. Business investment HOROSCOPE will pay dividends.. Some of your fondest aspirations are close to becoming realities. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You have more "working room .. , Gain indicated through written word. Express feelings, communicate with superior and get views on paper. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons fil'ure pronilnently. AQUARJVS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Good Moon aspect coincides now with distance, a bility to articulate views, travel and recognition of where you stand with loved one. Don't force issues. Diplomacy is your ally. Financial reward is forthcoming. PISCES <Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Delve beneath surface indications. Emphasis on investments financial status of close associate, partner or mate. Define terms, avoid self·deception. Intuitive flash brings answers long sought. Romantic interests are heightened. I Wr8RiN9 ... I ' • Prlmaiy eou,... . . . . .. .. . .. .. .. . . . . . -oe 4 to e ~ Fundam•ntals .......... age 7 to 11 Electone organ, Guitar ......•........• All egea Contpc»itlon . ! .................. Under I04t 1 & av STEVE llAaBLE JjJftlie D9lll' ........ f Offlclalt at Burbaank AifP.0!1., trbere tbe acclaimed ••qwtt" DC·8 Super-SJ Jet hu been operat· ln1 for three monthJ, 1re keeping data on the Jel'• performance a well-pardechecret. Despite requests, various of. ficiala ln Oranae County eay they've been denied noise reports on just how quiet the new Mc DoMell Douelaa aircraft Is. Thenoisedatalsconslderedlm· I portut because the Super-80 la viewed as UJe key to reduetnC noJae at Jobn W aylle AlrPoJt. AlrCal, wblcb operatet 35 dalty ntchta out ot Job Wayne, 1t n · pectins to take deUveey ~ ltl ftm Super-81)cn May 14andupeett.to be1ln oepraUn1 the craft by tbe end of neJCt mouth. RtJGB COPPIN, Newport Beach's clty attome)', said.be has been lryinJ lQi' get Information from Burbank on the performance of the "q~t" Jtt butbautructoutre.War . ''It teem Uke ft a u1d be public IDfonnatJon but • can't 1eem toteUt," be com., . ted. Bill Ma.Hlb. wbo ha.t John Wayne's ootae abatemep center, HY• be buo't received ate on the Super-80 from Burbank either. r He apecuJatas, ''Tbey ~llht be hesitant to releue It bec~~thia la a new craft th•'-bu oqly beerl operaUn.c ubort time. .................... Sen. S. /. HayakatDC make• point.I while acldrearing t~ World A/fair• Council al Col'ta Meia'a South CO<Ut Plaza Hotel Wedne&day rdght . • U.S. business def ended Hayakawa says firms boon to S. African blacks I!/. l~CAD • l~n. s .r..·ayiliw• lubed out Wed4esday at black Uberah who critici~e the pretence of J\merlcan comp~nie• lo ugre.ated South Afri~;_·~ I · 1n • 1peech at the .._.., M r.ira Council meetlnt-lt:Coeta 8esa the 74-year-old Republican "°"at.or said that d111oluUon of ~erican bualneues ln South ica would cost bla .. a needed s. ·; .. WHAT DOESN'T seem to OC· cur to a lot of these people 11 lf tt"ade is cut off. blacks at the bottom of the ladder will be hurt. . ---..~der if t WU!~ 1tari.cf,'' be told lhe erowd ol aboUt 85o at the Soutft Cout Plan ffcltef. Ca ll ing South K orea ·'economically powerful" Ha)'aka'4!Va sald that the ~OQDU')' ranks .eventh in trade wtth the Udlt~ States, .ith '10 bllllon traded Jut year. Spe11kin1 with Daily Pilot representatives ea tller , Hayakawa touched on a number of topics. including: -His recently introdueed Guest Worker Act bill that would allow Mexican nationals to post a refundable S500 bond with the American government in order to work here six months. 't1~~s!~1.~f.~,:t eaUbu.r. Enlll•b .. the1 otftda.t U.S. lanst.taae. There isn't an of· ficial U.S. languaae, be aaid. -IP8 IUPPOaT OJ' J,rabJJ.nl future! ~ owners bf tdembert of tbt National Rtfle A•· soclatlon. In support of the 1ueat worker bill. Hayakawa said the $500 bond is not an excessive amount becaUJe, he said. aliens now are paying that much to be smu1gled across the border. Hayakaw·a said that he favors granting amnesty to aliens who have lived In the U.S. for al least <See AFRICA, Page AZ> Martln (tUUOl)I that resulti of dally nolae monltorln-at Burbank miaht not be appllcablt tt Oranae County becau•• tunway cbaracterlatlu are dllferent. SAii JONES, an airport director at Burbank, imbta tbe Super-IOllqutetertbuotberjeta, pa.rtJcularly the Boelna 137, but refutes to release ftcures. He 1ay1 a total nol.Je profUe 1hould be releued ln \he airport'• * * l )* \ I . secret quarterly statement next month. Sam Lane, a Costa Meu acou.atlcal enslneer who serves u a comultant to Newport Beach, claims to have nieaa~red nolAe 1enerated by Super-801 at Burbank and concludes that the new jet la louder than reported by its manufacturer. The Super-80 waB demonstrat· ed last summer at John Wayne Airport and noise monitoring station r eadings revealed the craft to be several decibels * * * quieter than the 737, a plane now ln operation at the county alrpart. BUT NOISE consultant Jerry Rollin•, whose firm pnpared environmental report.I for All(;aJ on the Super-80, says the dem· onatration fll1ht was "hi&hly structured.'' "That night," he commented, "wu flown by a McDonnell Douglaa pUol who kC}eW exacUy what he was dotn1 a11ii was hi&hlY <See SECRET, Pale A2) * * * County .approves ·DC-9 'quiet jet' BY FREDERICK SCHOEMBHL of .... Olltr "-..... Environmental documentation to permit Introduction of the new and quieter McDoMell Douglas DC·9 Super-80 at John Wayne Airport has been approved by the Orange County Planning Commiaalon. Over the objection s of Newport Beach, the commiuion decided unanimously Wednes· day that the adverse impacts that introduction of -ltle airplane would create would be out] weiehed by its abilily to reduct:i noise impacts on people living under jet departure routes. County planners said the primary adverse Impact would r elate to increased traffic con- 1 ea tlon around the airport ~·~ t# Super 80 h .. ',..i. las capadty about ~ ~rcentl t1r1er than the Boeinl '717 and DC-9-309 DOW orrated by lbe j four commercla alrllnes serv. lDI Oran1e County. 14 'BnvtrooJnental anab1tod.Mark uoodman uld nolte /r uced by t.be SUl>er-80 wouJ be 1ub- 1t1ntially less than that of the Boeing aircraft and the olderl DC-911. THE CONTENTION dre~ criticism from Eric Goldman. al Loa Angeles attorney retained by Newport Beach to litigate1 airport-related matters. · Goldman asserted that there was "no actual performance C:da" to show 'that the Super-80 Is quieter than other Jets now in use at the airport. . He said the commission should delay approval or environmentaJ documents on the Super-80 until s uch performance d a t a is available Pacific Southwest Airlines is the only carrier in the country that has taken delivery of the Super-80s The airline is now operating the airplane at Burbank Airport and Los Angeles International Airport. Noise monitoring personnel at Burbank have refused to dis· close noise data on the Super-80. GOLDMAN SAID Lhat if the commission was steadfast in its desire to support introducti<>RJl! the Super 80 that it should di <See QUI ET, Page AZ) Rescuers seeking 15 trapped miners .. WYOMING Denv<.-r • COLORADO Miners Trapped ___ _.... sciNE OF' BLAST 15 miners trapped REDSTONE, Colo. <~P > - Rescue crews inched their way a long a i ,20CHoot aloplna mine shaft today, trying to reach 15 miners trapped by an expl~ion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek No. 1 coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope. Seven men came out or the mine in two groups after the blast Wednesday. Four were un- injured, but three were admitted to Valley View Hos pital in Glenwood Springs for treatment of burns, bruises and shock, of. ficials said . "So even if you hat.e South Afric a and love blacks you ibould hope South Africa pr06· a>e rs." he added. The first-term California senator said that most American companies are willing to pro- mote black workers despite the financial penalties imposed by the South African government for doing so. State dump site selection feared One of those who escaped un- hurt, David Chiarello, said that whe n the explosion occurred, ·'Air came at me sort of like a hurricane. It didn't knock me over but there was so much dust J turned around and tucked my head in." Hayakawa contended that the presence of American firms in South Africa helps blacks because of the jobs that are created As chairman of the Senate subcommittee on East Asian Pacific Affairs, Hayakawa re- cently traveled to South Korea where he said he was alarmed by the buildup of North Korean troops "f'ive m inutes after you leave the DMZ you look back Committee pushes for local choice on hazardous waste disposal COMPANY R ESCUE teams making their way toward the LS men. estimated to be as far u i .000 feet into the mine, were having to stop occasionally t.o test the mine's air for deadly gases, a spokesman said. Siles for hazardous waste dumps should be selected by local governments and not the s tate, the Southern California Association of Governments ' Executive Committee has de- cided SCAG committee memben, in the first of a two-day meeting al the Registry Hotel in Irvine. said Wedne•day their bl11e11t fear la that a state or regional agency will be created to dictate sites for the unpopular dumpa. The l ocal officia ls - Refurbishing at troubled hospital due· The laat four patient• at Esperanza lntercommuaUy Hospital in Yorba Linda ~ere to check out by noon today u new• manaeement of the troubled boaplta.I begina refurblabina the 106-bedfacllity. St. Jude Hospital of FullertQn l• 1n the proce11 of buyln1 Eaperanza, and althouab the ••reement lm't ttnal, St. Jude adminiltratora have .,reed to take over lu adrnlnittraUoa. I TIJE ~G&IJEMSNT w., made ln e mer•enc1 mMtl~ between 1drninl1traton o tb• two b01J>u.1t aft.et tbl1 &eamtd that the State Deoartmeat ol ffealtb Servtce1 had ft.le4 a Ult ot ~· CUHUON asalnst z..,.rima al· le'1ni lmpro~t' patient ca .... ~t~ranu IJ .ccUMd ol allow .. In• pbyatctana to perform un· nect1Hr)' 1urterle1, tt1ptn1 Inaccurate recordt and toleraUn1 lncompM4!0t medical puttlctt. A 1poke1We>man for th; ltat. 11ency aald U..n,xt •tep QOflllal· ty wol.lld be to 1eek aua~ ot the bo1pltal'J UctnH U lm· provtmenu arentt mad•. But that ~ appar..-uy wu made wmettHUJ1by St. Jude! ( ... llOI AL. .... AJ) mayors. city councll members, county supervison -warned that a state·mandated a1ency could rob them of local decision· making powers j~t as they said the stale Coastal Commission has done. BUT COMMITfEE members also seemed aware that If local 1overnmenu don't draft their ow n plans to dispose o f hazardous materials, the state will do It for them. SCAG attorney David Fine ex· plained that orficials in private industry who need more dump sites are petf Uonlng the state legislature for help. In Southern Califomla, for ln· stance, the only licensed bazar'doul waste site la In West Covina. Thu1. seekln1 to preaerve local authority, executive com· mH.tee members approved Wednesday propbaed leil•laUon to 1tve each county right. to pre- pare its own plan for disposing hazardo~ wastes . Each county lould not need Its own dump site, Fine cautioned, but would at leut need written a1reements with neighboring jurisdictions to transport and dispose of the waste. ACCORDING TO the proposal, a countywide plan would need approval of the Board of Superviso rs a nd cities represenUng a majority of the county population. Oranae County ofliclalA bne been reminded of the need for hazardous waate dispoaal plant since re•ldenta In Huntington Beach and Fullerton have com· plained of toxic fumes from dump altea in their nel1bborhooda. When recent dlAcuaalon amon& local officials hasn't centered on hazardoUI wute, It often bas been ori ways to increase Cund- ln" for transportation projects. LA County drops Alcala death rap 'tJ.!aJLfl.!JPMANN Convtc¥ child tillu RodAey J1m11 Alcala -on Sb Quen· tift'I t>eath Row aw•""" the outcome ol Orua• Coubt1-t)tar· inp u.,t could 1-ed IP I new trfal -had unrelatecl murder char1e1 aplnlt blm diopped in a Bur.,_ cOdl't Wed:neldaJ. B•ca• ot the. unniJ blllty ot I kty Pl'QM<!UCJon wt t tbt Lot Anatl• Covntr trtc:t At· torney'• Offtc• 11lled wUcipial Court Jude• JI.non abler to dllmta cw1t1 asaJD.tt Akala, 87. Tli• mUidei' ~ount ,._ bela fit.cl ac&taR &be Moll~ Park man lMt ewnmer ill ~ Wllb \ht •tranaW1tJoll dMth ol I 11-1ffr.old ~ womaa. • Only Hveral WMltt ear»er, Alcala wu 1ent.enc-" to di• in \he CalifomJa 1u chamber for tbe tm ktdnap-murcler ot 12· year-old Robin Sall')i" of Hpnt. ln1ton Beecb. Wednesday's executive commit- tee meeting was no exception as m e mbers , after much debate, backed a state senate bill to raise gasoline tax SEN. JOHN Foran's SB215 would raise the tax from seven to nine cents per aallon, 19· crease driver's license and truck weight fees and allow local gov· ernmenta to hold elections to ask voters to approve even higher taxes for tocal projects . Boys seized after school vandalism Jrvine police said today two youn1stera were arrested Wednesday on felony vandallsm ctaarees In connection with caua· In• $5,000 in dam11ge to Bonita C~nyon Elementary School, 1 S"!ndance Drive. · · Mining oflicials said they were unable to predict when the trapped mine r s would be reached or whether they are Plive. t<escuers were less than 1,000 feel from where the men were believed to be, but progress was slow. After keeping vigil near the mine for more than 17 houn, most o( the miners' families went home at daybreak. But a crowd of miners and reporters •tood at the entrance of the road that wtn"' 10 miles up t.o the mouth of the mine. The public was barred from the Immediate area around the mine. "We're prayln1 that there will be 15 men coming out today," one miner who declined to clve hl1 name said. , . DRlllil ClllT 1111111 , Nl1ht and momin8 low clouda, with only partial clearin1 alone beaches Friday afternoon. Lowa tonicbt 50 alona the cout, 56 lnlud. Hi8h• Friday mld eoa to near '70. ••A cuatodlafl, while cleaninl the school durtn1 Easter vacation, dl.Jcovered lhe break· ln and majorpropert)'.damap," 1aid police 8ft. &on Flat.hen. ''Studelt ~ and l.._, matertala wtH bloftn ruia ana , fu.rnlture wen eut aDd lnk wu -.,_•la' pouud over m.'-cb of tbe tllllf 1..,.J prtnctpat•a ~·" • , D.-.rnarlf, o/ caU ploaa, ., II• Hid tVldenH and ta· crUicol o/ the '* Ct~ f a-....11 lfrlfl "DalJaa." ••• 0..Aa f9rm1Uon rom tb• cnawwu ow.-.-...,.. l.cl Police to two boys, ••• 9 CJJ. and 10' ' 11111 After tJMlr arr.,t, th• bo11 were turned over to their parenta and are to appear ln Oranc• Counl1 luvenU• Court. Addltlonal harbor arH and •outb otanc• cout coveraf• . cao be found on..(••• BS. TIJUANA. MexJco (~P) -Ao alle1ed t.errorlll 1rou9 arrcwled here with Marxist propa1and1 and •~ operaled ln nelC)lbor· ine U.S. c1Ues tor five ye.,.., police 11.)'. The two men and1two M>tneo were identified by their literature as "the Che Guevara Brl1ade" and described by police as part of a Southern Califomia·bued 1roup ptanntnc to kilt U.S. Border Patrol aeent.a. After U .S . Consulate IRVINE HFARJNG 8AUA QUOTED conauJar of. tlclal Scott Danaher in Tijuana as denytna there were any notes on the attempted uaaaal.naUoo of President Reagan, •• Mex· lean news repe>rts indicated Re11an wu to have been l.n Tf. j11ana on April 28 to visit Mex· Gifts 'standard,' contractors claim A lengthy personnel hearing in- volving two building inspectors fired for allegedly accepting gratuities is continuing in Irvine City HaJI with administrative law judge William Byrnes warning the defense attorney that the testimony was becoming re· petit1ve. The inspector s -Bruce From Page Al SECRET. • • familiar with the plane.'' Rollins said his firm, CH2M Hill of Newport Beach, hopes to obtain data from Burbank on the Super-fl> .. that is, if they'll give illo us " Mickey McPike, a McDonnell spokesman, suggested that noise readings at Burbank might not tel I the fuJJ story on the new jet. HE POINTED OUT that Pacific Southwest Airlines. the only carrier in the country now flying Super-sos. has likely not had time to familiarize all its pi lots with the new craft. ·'But we're fully confident that we have completely defined the noise characteristics of the Super 80," he said McPlke pointed out that when the new 1et was certified by the FA A, )t was put through a battery of 159rtighttests. However, officials in Newport Beach express worry that the Super-fl> will be approved for use -at John Wayne based only on that FAA data and the single dem· onstralion at the airport. ··Because we can't get that in· formation <from Burbank l ," sug. gests Newport City Attorney Coffin, "it just makes you a little s uspicious " * * • From Page A1 QUIET. • • so on a 90-day tnal basis The com misssion rejected that sug- gestion. A1rCal , which operates 25 flights per day al the county airport. expects to lake delivery of the Super-80 by mid-year and has plans to beRin operalinll them at John Wayne Airport by the end of May County planners had con· eluded last year that an environ· mental impact report on in· troduction or the aircraft would be needed because of the ex· treme concern over airport matters and the Super·fl>'s sub· stant1al differences from the aircraft now flown at Orange County According to the impact re· port, the Super-BO produces less noise, fewer air pollutants and is more fuel-efficient in terms of pounds of fuel expended per passenger. ONE QUESTION that remains ls the effect the introduction of the Super-8CI will have on the life of the 5,700-foot-long main runway al the airport. ll ts known that the Super 80, with a weight of 128,000 pounds, will shorten the anticipated life of the runway A study lo de- termine by exactly how tong ts • still being conducted by tbe county Environmental Managem~nl Agency and airport officiaJs. <.:urrently, a 95,000 welgbt limit is In effect at the air'port. ORANG& COAST Dally Pilat ThomM P. J.i.v ........... Rob9c1 N. Weed ............ M. Thomat K_.,11 ._ ThomM A Murpnln• ............ CMIWH.Loo• , ~ ............ ~~u•rnan 'r ~~ ~J'.,.!ocfderd Jt. I Bullard, 50, of C~ta Mesa, and Arthur Peck, 51, of Anaheim - are appealing a city decision to fire them late last year. The deferuJe attorney has said that aU that can be proved is tbat Bullard and Peck each re- ceived a botUe of UquQr and a lunch from a contractor. ln testimony Wednesday, severaJ private contractors said that such gifts are common in the building industry. The bearing centers on whether the men pressured contractors for the gifts or whether uiey promised anything in return. A tape recording was made through the use of a wireless microphone of a Dec. 11 meeting between Bullard and Peck and a building contractor who allegedly gave liquor to the men. But many portions of the tape are inaudible. Attorneys in the hearing say that the proceeding should con- clude Friday. Final rites conducted for Dorothy Ogle Church funeral services were conducted today for Dorothy Ogle, a 54-year-old Orange Coast resident who died Tuesday Rites for Mrs. Ogle, who would have been 79 next Monday, were held in the First Christian Church of Huntington Beach, with the Rev. Thomas Overton presiding. Interment was lo follow at Mel rose Abbey in Orange, alongside others in the Ogle fami· ly who were among Costa Mesa's early settlers. She and her late husband James T Ogle Jr .. who died five years ago, moved to the community in 1927 and settled at 1526 Orange Ave Their home was the only one on the block, but that was soon to change, said Mrs. E.A. "Bett.Y" Laurin, her daughter-in-law Shortly after. impressed with reports of opportunity in California, the Rev. James T. 01le Sr., an evangelist, pulled up his Kansas roots and came west. . He purchased the entire parcel· of several lots where his son-in· law and daughter lived and promptly named the cross street bisecting Orange A venue Ogle Street. The elder Ogle built his own house on one corner and soon other Ogles built on the opposite corners , creating a family enclave around the intersection, Mrs. Laurin said. For years, the late Mrs. OgJe's hus band owned and operated the Harbor Laundry and Cleaners and she divided her time a.a a housewife and bookkeeper for the family firm. Mrs. Ogle leaves a son, Robert of Palm Desert; daughters Doris Levell of Redding, and Mrs. Laurin of Costa Mesa, eight grandchildren and eicbt great- grandchildren. Address corrected The address where 19-montb· old Sosha Allen drowned in her Camily pool early Saturday was incorrectly reported in the ne\fl account of the tragedy. Correct- ly, the address Is 1736 Bayport Way in Newport Beach. The Datly Pilot regr~t.a the error. le•• P.f .. ldent JOH topoa POrUUO but postponed It 1*aaae Of bla wouads, I - A police offtctal •~Id tbe foursome intended to dilrupt an outdoor S•lberln1 Sun~y for Gov. Roberto de la Ila d and auasinate poJice s curity auards. But Ricardo Gibert, Tijuana commander of the Baj• CaWomia judicial poltc~. bas l'\'· fused to let reporter• talk lo them since the arrests Saturday nifbt. The .,our were at.lned bf Gl~trt •• 1ll1uet Aa&boGy Mt'tUnea. ~, a native of Chula Vlt&a, Just lnalde tbe l111lted States, and a f onner rnldent ol Cornpton our south·cent.ra.I Loi Abgeles; Cyn~a G,reen, 33, ol San Diego, and Jeau1 Garcia Naranjo and bis brother Raw Garcla Naranjo, bot.b in their 208 and of T\juana. IN TIJElll CA a and the bro.OlenJ' bome were found an' M·l rifle a. sawed-off sbotcun. aeveral pistol.a and a bomb det· on ~· Gibert 1a.ld l.bere abo ..... anpht 1bowtn1 the four andhla with weapona, Ktxl n·Amerlcan childf•n carry Df 1ubroachlne tuba, noteboolu with U.S. police r.sto codea and maps of terrori1t locations t.b.rouehout the world. MartinH waa arrested ln 1W79 in Compton on a charge of il- legal poes~sJQn ot. firearms but there was no r~cord there ot lerrori-.t activities, Compton pollcti Lt. D.W. Elvi» said. No charge was riled agairut the f0\$1' by Wednesday night. . .,..,, ............... SACRED MUSIC -Diriectcr1)eborah Wheeler Doiron leads cbambet singers of Maler Dei High School at Eastettime prayer breakfast at the Sheraton Newport. Event. soonsored by the Robert Bein. William Frost and As· sociates land planning firm, was attended by 350 employees, churchmen and dignitaries. I Girl awarded $900,000 Orange hospital blamed in brain damage , blindness A 3-year-old Orange CoQDty girl has been awarded damages of nearly $900,000 by a superior court 1ury because of brain damage and other lnj~es she suffered during her delivery at Chapman General Hospital. Tbe decision was reached late Tuesday after only one day of de· Ii berations. A *arded $895,000 in general d~mageswasStacy I gram, who is blind. suffers from mental re· tardation and has cerebral palsy Santa Ana lawyer Neill Bahan, who represented the child, con· tended that Stacy was deprived of From Page Al ALCALA. • • another Jailhouse anformant against Alcala had shown himself to be unreliable. , Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney David Disco said a ma· JOr element of the case against Alcala was statements he al· legedly made to fellow Orange County Jail inmate John Mui· queen. HOWEVER, DISCO said, Mui· queen admitted committing per- jury in an unrelated Orange County drug smuggling case in July. ruining whatever credibili· ty he may have bad. "Jn view of this, the people can't proceed," prosecutors told Judge Gubler Wednesday. Alcala had been charged with kiJling Jill Marie Parenteau in Ju{le, 1979, only days before Miss Samsoe disappeared from the seashore in Huntington Beach. Miss Parenteau was strangled after an intruder broke into her second·story apartment. · ALCALA BECAME a suspeet in the slaying in August, 1W79. At the time. it was reported that evidence included blood stains left at the scene that matched Alcala's to a degree that would eliminate 90 percent of all other humans. Newport Beach I • • appo1nt1ve posts open Applications are available for posts on various Newport Beach city boards and commissions, including two seats on the city planning commission. In all, seven appointive positions will become vacant June 30. Sel~tions are made by tbe City Council. The upcoming vacancies include a seat on the Board of Library Trustees, one t seat Oil the City Arla Commlaaion, twt> seats on the Parks, Beachel and . " oxygen for more than two hours while her mother was in labor at the Orange hospital on Dec. 7, 1977. Bahan claimed fetal monHor· ing equipment showed the unborn child wu suffering from oxygen deprivation and that hospital personnel untrained in reading the machines did nothing to cor· reel the problem. He also had claimed that rec- ords were altered by hospital of· ficials to cover up the incident. The family asked for a $1 5 milhonjudgmentin the case Coast panel backs marsh in Upper Bay Plans by Orange County sanitation officials to restore seven acres of Jand along the Up· per Newport Bay as a fresh water From Page A1 AFRICA. • • seven years without a criminal record or a history of welfare s upport. Queried about his age, which will be 76 when he seeks a second term next year, he sald, "They forget about the spirit or 76 . My mother is 97 and she just returned to Japan after a two· year visit here." be added. Mesa gas station robbed of 8200 A man who approached an at· tendant at a Costa Mesa gas station Wednesday in pretense of seeking employment ap- plication blanks escaped with about $'200 after indicatine he had a gun in his pocket. The attendant told officers the man, described as white and in his 30s, fled north from tbe Lerner Oil Co .. Inc. 2360 Newport Blvd. and then ran east on Wilson St. • t ll01..SJC marsh have been approved by state coastal com missioners Commissioners, meeting in Marina del Rey, unanimously agreed Wednesday that the restoration pro1ect should be environmentally safe. The .sapitation district is un- dertaking the $200,000 restoration ' job as a cond1t1on to construction of a new sewer hne that is to serve res idents east of the Upper NewPQrt Bay The sewer line project original- ly was denied by coastal com- mis sio n ers as being environmentally risky for wildlife and plant life in the bay. The line is lo run along the banks of the bay. Jn a move designed to sway com missioners, the sanitation district agreed to restore seven acres of land as a fresh water marsh. The proposed marsh is envisioned as a likely habit;it for various types of waterfowl. The land in question is located in the mouth of Big Canyon and currently contains a pile of dredg- ing spoils placed there more than 10 ye at$ ago. According to its plans. the sanitation district will remove the .. drectgings. Prime time from Rolex. ' Gibert aaid they appatenUy I operated rnoatly in tbe Saa.c Dle10 area tralnln1 •chool chUdren wtth \Veapona the put five years. A Due wu eata61iabed ID n. jUlna recenUy and "~lr mainf targets again were blCb uhool ~ and preparatory school bc>ys," l Gibert said Wednesday. I But the FBI aod San 'Otego~ police said they were unaware ot1 the "Guevara brigade," named for the late Cuban 1uerrit1al leader Ernesto "Che" Guevara. Suicide victim teacher The Irvine woman who police say shot and killed her !'JG)> while; he was doing his homework and· then committed suicide by firing a .22·caliber rifle at her own head· was an administrator with the Fountain Valley School District. : Nell S. Greene, 48, was assigned! to the curriculum development: division at the school district. headquarters, said school district: s pokeswon:ian Trish Torgerson. : The assignment came tltis year : after she took a medical leave of ' absence from her previous as- signment as principal of Fountain Valley Elementary School, Ms. Torgerson said, adding she didn't know what the medical problem was. : Irvine pohce Lt Bob Lennert · s aid that Mrs. Greene had a bis·: tory of emotional problems that : culminated Saturday with the. slaying of her son, Brent D .• and· her s uicide ins ide her home in the , Woodbridge area oflrvine . Morris L Greene returned• home from work at 1 :30 pm. and· found the bodies of his wife and son Neighbors said Brent was a freshman at Irvine High School and acti ve 1n the drama de·: partment there M e monal ser vices for the mother and son wer e held today in Yucca Vall ey and memorial services for Brent wilJ be held at 10 a m Saturday al Irvine High School. 4321 Walnut Ave From Page Al HOSPITAL .. decision to take over the operation immediately ESPERANZA'S nine-year track record was not a financial s uccess Ac cording to records or the California Health Facilities Commission. the hospital lost $447 .000 in 1979 It lost significant s ums the four years before that. loo Occupancy rates, meanwhile, were the lowest for any Orange County hospital, with a 1979 ra~ of 1S.5percent There we re 11 patients in the facility on Wednesday when the decision was made to close it. Twenty-five-year-old St Jude, on the other hand. has been one of the county's busieslfacilil1es. Ex- ecutive Vice Preside nt Ron Harper said it had a 92.2 percent occupancy rate last year for its m edical-surgical beds. HARPER SAID hospital of. ficials eager to find more room had been negotiating witb Es peranza owner, American Management Corp., for a month before the state agency's list of accusations wits filed . c , RecreaUon Commiaslon, a Clvil I Semce Board post and the two plannm, ·seat.a. PlannJ.nc Comml141onen Tlm Haldlnger and Geor1e Cobs have not indicated wbetber j.bey intend to reapply for tbelr po.ta. Superb Rolex watchts for men and women. ffl 18 kar'at yellow goip with hiddtn·clasp bractlets: A Oyster Quartz Datejust for men In stainl~s.s stttt, S1,3SO. B. Lady's Oatejust, SS,750. C. Man's .. AppUcant.a must be J.~dent.a of Newport Beacb. F can • be picked up at the Cttr. Clerk'• office 1D Clty Hall. 83001Newport I Bl•d. . PCB•pilled Day-Oat~, S7,950. Seal to ·go home Nevada to return California emblem RENO <AP> -After an absence of a century and a quarter, California ia fetlinl back ita oriainal atate sea . The hand-painted seal, which diaa~eared after a fire destroyed the state Capitol in 1854, has been on display at Har· rah 's Automobile Collection alnce 1962, viewed annuaUy by thouaanda of Callfornlans un· aware they were looldna at a missing part of their slate's his· tory. "It is truly an historic object. and it's because of the im· portance of that object to the state of California that we at Harrah's have decided ... that we will return this seal to the atate," Harrah's Chairman Mead Dixon announced Tues· day. DIXON SAID the seal would remain at the automobile collec· lion in nearby Sparks during the peak summer tourism monthl while the two states decide on 11 an appropriate time and method to tender that return so that its significance will not be lost. Dixon said Harrah's officials were surprised by the furor that broke out in the California Legislature this year when it •I w aa teamed that the historic emblem waa ln Nevada hand.a. The Assembly backed a res· olullon by William Leonard, R· San Bernardino. caMina for the return of tbe seal, uaed at the first meeting of the Legialature In San Jose in 1850. Noting the resolution urged "all Californians to help in aet· ting the seal back," Dixon aald, "I expected to have 20 million CalifomiaM comtne over the border." .. HE SAID THAT once Harrah's learned of California 'a Interest In getting the seaJ back. there never was a question of iu re· turn. The seal hung in the at.le Capitol from 1852·1854, when a fire destroyed the building. The governor managed to rescue the seal. but It became lost in the confusion. It reappeared in a Sacramento bank vault in 1932 and became part of the collection oV W. Parker Lyon, a collector of memorabilia and a descendant of Caleb Lyon, who desiened the seal. The ·late William Harrah purchased the contenta of the Lyon museum in Arcadia. Calif .. in 1955 and moved the artifacts, Including the seal, to Reno. ') 20 CIGARETTES <0l4!Me1t LIGHTS~ , Oregon bills u~s. for war 8ALl:ll, Ore. (AP> -Tb• 1tate of <>rep, ftrwiDI that 100 yean 11 a klD1 eoouth arue 99rlod, lJ du.nnilll the United !Ut• for payment of CivU War claim• tGtalln1 fl.I mUUoa. State blltortan Cecil Edwardl aatd ON1oa ran up tbe bij.I when tt muatered local reald.._t. to man 1an110DS a1a.ta1t lndlu attack• after federal troops pulled out to help flCht the Confederacy. Tbe 1tate ,.,ate ba1 -voted uoanlmou.al>" for .. memorial ur•ha1 Conireu to relmbune Ore1on for • • 1ub1tanttal ezpeDH9 incurred in tum1lb1na troop• and aidlnl the Unit.ea States la maintainia1 tbt common defeme of the Orecoa Trail, miDen and 1ett1erl in the ClvU War period." SEN. E.D. POTl'S, D·Granta P u1, aaid tbe money plus interest comes to about $45 snlllloo, but the atat.e l.J wt1llni to .1etUe for Sl.3 mlllion, today's equivalent of ita expenses during the Civil War. "We are offering Congress a bargain basement type of settlement," Pott• tqld the Senate. "Certainly mo~e than 100 yean seems to me ~ be an excessive arace period." The state'• effort.a to make the federal government pay •eemed headed for success when ln 1906 the cue went to the U.S. Court of ClaJma. A headline in the Morning Oregonian of June 30, 1906, stated: "Ore1on Claims Soon To Be Paid." IN lt08, THE court agreed that part of Oregon's claim should be reimbursed. But the court said the at.le'• demand.a for repayment of bounties and extra wa1es uaed to entice men to replace U.S. soldiers should not be borne by the federal government. No payment was ever made for any of the claim, Edwards said. Congress never passed an appropriation blll authoridng payment. Oregon made stabs over the years to get the money, but the claim lay forgotten until Edward.a found old newspaper clipping.a referring to the Civil War expenses and renewed the effort. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Apr~ 1e. 1981 FR-SC*rlan* avalWM onty at our ArmstronG Roor FllNon c.nter store. 20 CIGARETTES Strong warrantleS go with supertor products and servtces. we sell the best floors maoe by Armstrono. Americas teac11no floorlng manutacturer, and then Install them by Skilled craftsmen we baek up vour new floor With dOubte warranty coverage • The quality Of material ts guaranteed bV Armstrong, · • tnstAlllatlon Is guaranteed by our Ftoor FaShton center• store we Invite you to come In to read our warranty. We think you'll aoree It coµtd come onty from a company that'> confident of the ouatttv of Its proourn and proud Of Its ser111ces and peop1e LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE \ ·A minor aspect of the 'conflict' issue Irvine city officlab filed their annual conflict of interest state· ments last week. They don't ·re- veal any significant impropriety, but they do shed some interesting light on the way government is conducted l.n Irvine and elsewhere. The Irvine Company, primary landownet in Irvine, bought meals for Planning Com· missioners Lyndon T . CaJerdine and Mary Ellen Hadley. Certainly, there is no law against governmental offlciaJs breaking bread with business leaders. But it's important for citizens to know that personal re· lationships developed in social contexts can have a bearing on the decision-making processes of governmental officials. No one is sugges~ that a city official can be "bo t" by a dinner, but at the very east the person buying the dinner bas the undivided attention of the city of· fi cial for a time. And that person bas a slight advantage when he appears before the city official in a pubUc meeting. These are the ·facts of life in government on the local county, state and at national level. It isQ't unique to the city. It isn't unique to the Irvine Com· pany. But it's one aspect of gov· ernmertr that the citizen should be aware of when he brings his personal plea to the city. Curfew needs teeth In less than two weeks, resi· dehts living below jet departure paths at John Wayne Airport will get an additional hour of quiet on Sunday mornings. As part of its recent approval of the airport master plan, the county Board of Supervisors or· dered a rollback in the Sunday morning curfew from 7 a.m. to 8 a .m. The change becomes effec· live April 26. But how 1s it. one might ask, that Jets still are heard ta.king off after the curfew begins at 10 pm. each night? The reason is that many private jets those that are considered quiet -are ex· empted from the curfew pro- visions Other curfew violators are subject to losing permission to use the airport. That's probably not enough punishment and the county airport staff seems to realize this. What's needed are some stiff fines. Thus, violators would feeJ it where it hurts. And, at the same time, the county would be generating some badly needed revenue for airport projects. It is understood that a penal· lY. fee program of som~sort is be· mg developed by airportofficials. One should be implemented as soon as possible. Youth Mlping youth There is an organization in Irvine that offers the kind of help that seems to be of the highest value to young people facing problems. Called Crossroads , the non- profit organization teaches peer· counseling skills to those who are most in need of them -young people. In weekend seminars, youths are taught some basic techniques in helping their friends through troubling periods. These methods also a r e of va lu e to the counselors in helping themselves. Crossroads is operated out of • SELF High School in Irvine, a high school that offers a n alternative. and by all accounts effective. approach to educating young people. The Crossroads program seems to derive its effectiveness through the fact that a young person will often sooner listen to a friend than to an older person. While Crossroads-trained representatives have special abilities to he lp their peers, parents might also remember that other clear-thinking youths also can be enlisted to help a troubled young person. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is inv1t· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <71•> 642·4321. ·- LM. Boyd I Hold that tiger M enlloned long ago that the tiger in that elderly piece of music called "Tiger Rag" alluded not to a big cat but to the lowest possible poker hand. Jazz musicians called such an un- fortunate hand of cards a tiger. In a money game. it was exceedingly dangerous to bluff with a hand like that "Hold that tiger" became a card player's taunt. It should be not· ed. further, that the card game's ex· pression also popularized the phrase: "To have'a tiger by the tail." Remember, you need a special permit to lake photographs in New York City"s subway system. In fact. you can't legally use any sort of photograph equipment therein without such a perr,JUt. In the colleges, one out of every 20 cheerleaders Is a young man. In the ' high schools, It's only one out of every 25. Few realize that Dr. Franken· stein's original monster had a name -Adam. Many a love and war expert bu compiled a list of places where sin1le women ID search of masculine compAlonahJp can 10 to fiDd tame. Such u saltwater flibJnc cru!Ma. Plumblq tupply 1toret. And diesel mechanJct' ecbools. But rare la P\t rotter ol 1pota where ns~ in aearcb ot un1ttadi..t #Omft CIUI CO• ltlDdly exclude cUlcoa, tav•raa, louPtea, 1l~lef ban, and tbe llke. Neither the men nor women wbo vtalt thes&jolnta tend to act themselves when therein. Even the gentlest one of these fellows seems to turn into a comic stallion once inside. And each of the women. no matter how unaffected elsewhere, suddenly conveys the quaint notion that she th.inks she 's Cleopatra. Q Where's the longest paved road m the world? A. The Trans-Canada Highway, a S.000-mile stretch Please note, it has a supervised camp ground every 100 miles, a picnic site eve~}' SO miles. The early "midwife" most usually was a man. The word doesn't mean that the person so identified is some sort of wire. lt means the person is "with (the> wife." Q. What's the "ring gauge" of a cigar? A .. The diameter of that ct1ar and of its little paper rtng. Measured to 1/64th of an inch. C'ommon ring sltea are 34, 38. 40. 42, 46 and 50. Am told you can now buy popcorn that tastes like chocolate, oran1e or coffee, ii you'd like. Q. otd the N.UOO't heaviest Prest· dent, William Boward Taft. loH • weicht wblle la tut demudln1 Job? A. On the coatra17. H• picked up 22 pounds. Putd.IJI btm up to 332 l>OWJdJ total. ' Tbere •u a time on tblt Ml'tb. ~ know, when tbe beaven were MYa ffft \all. Social Security goal fa ding A special panel appointed by Congress )las recommended sweeping changes irl the Social Security program. And while there can be no denying the need for changes to restore a meuure of integrity to it, some of the proposals would come near to defeatin1 the original intent and purpose or the pro· gram. Commenced in 1937 as a relitement program to fill the void wruch existed both in private and public employment. it has come to its present disastrous financial condition through tampering by congressmen more interested in gaining re-election by playing Santa Claus than in the long-term success of the program. Thus the plan bas been broadened to include a raft of unearned benefits which threaten its solvency. These "add-ons" include payments lo students 18 to 22. to disabled workers at any age, and Medi-care. HAD THE PENSION proiram been fully funded and the money Lnvested properly there would still be need for changes. One of the r ecommendations is to divorce Medicare from SS WhJch, of course, was never planned to carry that load. President Reaian has taken the position that the time bu come to remove all of lhe "add-ons" and revert SS to its basic retirement role. These are so~recommendations and essential i! e, p ram is to fulfill Its original pu pose. But many in Congress are reluctant to eliminate the "add-ons" and instead are leaning to the proposal to raise the eligibility age lo 68 and that of early retirement to 65 as a means to save money by reducing payouts. As a money-saving device it could on· Iv be improved by raising the eligibility ;'" IAll IATllS age even higher. As it stands countless workers die before reaching the present eligibility aae and, without survivon. the fu.nds they have paid In remain with the government. If the age is raised there will be even rewer around to col· Ject the pensions for which they paid their money all their working years. THIE PROPONENTS of a higher age contend that the average age of life ex· peclancy bas increued dramatically in the years since SS was established. Ac· cording to the CJ.:&. National Center for Health Stati1tica, an estimated 68 per- cent of all babies born in the U.S. today will be alive at age 70 aad more Ulan 25 percent will still be around at age SS. That may be so but insurance tables s how life exi>ectancy presently to be an average age 70 for white males and 77 for white females and about six years less fornon-caucasians. Those figures clearly show that a sub- stantial percentage of male workers would be dead before reaching age 68 and another large percentage just a couple of years away from death Pension programs have beeo sold l<> the public on the idea that workers would be provided with a few years in which lo relax and enJOY life after a lifetime of labor Do the Congress men now thmk people s hould have to work'. until they die'? FURTHERMORE, the life expectan~ cy tables do not reflect what percentage of those who do live beyond 65 are still physicaJly or mentally able to continue: work The fact 1s that many retire ear ly for physical reasons and many elderly who may want lo continue to work find. their ages bar them from most en· deavors One change which not only 1s long' overdue but would eliminate an •·add, on" provis ion never contemplated originally is the limitation on earnings for those collecting SS No less an; authority th a n Senator Barry' Goldwater has declared the SS money, belongs to the workers, not the govern. ment and the ceilings on earnings dis,. courages older pe<>ple from remaining productive. The fact is an assured in~ come enables many, who have worked at menial jobs all their lives of necessi- ty, to find fulfillment in enlleavors they enjoy Federal money policies tax savers ' To the Editor: A noted economist was quoted recent· ly as saying that if the government were put in charge of the Sahara Desert, in five years we would be out of sand. This may be true. For example. the mysterious Federal Reserve Board pursues monetary policies like an old woman trying to cross Highway ~ on foot. First going in one direction, then another, nobody knows what to expect next. Meanwhile, people are urged to cut down spending and save money, and get it into savings accounts if possible. Right? And what happens to the in · terest we get on these accounts: it is taxed as income, right? But t hat's wrong! This js double taxation, or worse -those hard-held dollars have already been taxed into morbidity. ll is only one part or the Giant Snafu in Washington, but It does happen to be one that could easily be corrected· simply abolish income tax on savln1s interest and let us use that money to help squeak by the continually higher cost of staying alive. MRS. L.W. HUNDSOOERFER To the F.dltor: I didn't reallle bow far behind the times in re1ard to land values I had become unW J read your Sunday, April 5 editortal entitled, "State voten beat park fundin1 costs." Jo 1919-23 at the UDivenity of California at Da'VU, we were taupt thatlt was almo.tllnanclaUy unprofli.bJe to f ann land COltiq more than $1,000 an acre. ID the article, to re1ard to tbe It.ate buyin1~land adjacent to presently owned 1 te land, ''thls means the at.at• wlll be le to proceed wtth eome mucb needed ark development, in aptte ol the falthat new lnterior Secretary Jame• . Watta a. C()'DVlnctd the N · Uonal It Q'IWm ta alre~ too lata• abd 't want to .,,. UJ more moeey lt.'' M deveJ but more divided PJ• far UM U1Pe. tbat ..-.., •· Deeded Uoia !Md la 6ad&J"ftrtll more Uiu el .. en tlm• wbt_,·lood acrtcult.ur'al lad WU Woitallll-Oli.kc• day1. · • OUll.OEUON ,,.. ..., .. dMd ...... ~.-,.... ''°' ,...,. ,,........,, .,, ~ . ..... TM_,,..,• ... ,. of.11'111111"' acre for adjacent land In the atat• park and the Irvine Company'a 500-<JcTe land gift for the park was uolued at 112 million, or 124.000 on acre ~co1.&1e of ita deve~ pot~· tlol TirMa hafH! indeed changtd along the Orange Coaat. EdUor. Responsibility To the Editor: Kudos to Jim Wood of Corona del Mar for his excellent article ln the Sunday. A p r i I '5 p a p e r t i t I e d · • A c t i n g MAILBOX Responsibility Worth Oscar, Too." Maybe one more person should come forward in the John Hinckley case and that's the judge from Charlotte, South Carolina who fined Hinckley $67 for try. ing to carry three guns on an airplane when the federal penalty was $5,000 and s years in jail -the judge trytn1 to keep lt a municipal case rather than a · federal caH maybe did Ute country a disaervice. People belng responsible for their ac- tions is the key. JIM DEBOOM MUinfoimalion To the F.ditor: I have been appalled at the lack ot preclsene11 amOftg the media reaarding the atatemenu of Secretary of State Hall on.. devolution of preaidential power. Secretary Hai& WU wronc in uytna tbe ConaU\utlon autboriled him to take cbar1e. and ao an you in aaying the saate thing,.. putUa1 bl• further down the line. States. The provision does not rise to constitutional stature. The XXV Amendment provides inter alia for the temporary abdication of power of the President or temporary as· sumption of power by the Vice Presi- dent. You might consider apologizing to the school children among your readers and setting the record straigRt. JAMES W. BURTON Citizens owled To the Editor: You should be aware of the growing scandal in the community over pro- fessors from various local colleges as· signing students to attend the recent public hearing on the Bolsa Chica de· velopment plans Many people in the audience over · heard teachers taking roll just prior to the Board or Supervisors hearing on April 1, in the Santa Ana City Council chambers. CITIZENS WHO arrived on Ume for the hearing also were unable to find seals and were forced to stand outside because many seats were being saved by students who were assigned to arrive early. Dr. Peter Green, a teacher at Goldeo West CoUege and one of the croup of teachers who form the leadersbJp'of the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, threamaed • 1rand jury \nveJtigaUon because lie did not like the recommendatiClftS of the county planners on the Bolsa ChJca ts. sue. I think the Grand Jury tbouJd iD- vest11ate possible mlauae of pubJlc funds amon1 the taxpayer .. upporteCI teachen who are u.sln1 the sebooJ u a hue of operatlo'ft• fot-, thelr ow" polltical scMmes. BILL HANSON Seal to go home N eooda to .. return California emblem RENO (AP) -After an ab,,1ence of a century and a quarter, California is gettina back its oriJinal state sea). The hand-painted seal, which disappeare d a(ter a fire destroyed the slate Capitol in 1854, has been on display at Har- r ah 's AutomobiJe Collection since 1962, viewed annually by thousands of Californians un- aware they were looking at a missing part of their state's his- tory. "It is truly an historic object, and it's because of the im- portance of that object to the state of California that we at Harrah's have decided ... that we will return this seal to the state," Harrah's Chairman Mead Dixon announced Tues- day. DIXON SAID the seal would remain at the automobile collec- t.ion in nearby Sparks during the peak summer tourism months while the two states decide on ''an appropriate time and method to tender that return so that Its significance will not be Jost. Dixon said Harrah's officials were surprised by the furor that broke out in the California Legislature this year when it was learned that the historic emblem was in Nevada bands. The Assembly backed a res- olution by William Leonard, R· San Bernardino, calling for the return of the seal, used at the first meeting of the Legislature in San Jose in 1850. Noting the resolution uraed "all Californians to help in get- ting the seal back," Dixon said, "I expected to have 20 million Californians coming over the border." HE SAID THAT once Harrah's learned of California's interest in getting the seaJ back, there never was a question of its re- turn. The seal bung in the state Capitol from 1852-1854, when a fire destroyed the building. The governor managed to rescue the seal, but it became lost in the confusion. It reappeared in a Sacramento bank vault in 1932 and became part of the collection of W. Parker Lyon, a collector of memorabilia and a descendant of Caleb Lyon, who designed the seal. The ·late William Harrah purchased the contents of the Lyon museum in Arcadia, Calif., in 1955 and moved the artifacts, including the seat, to Reno. I 20 CIGARETTES Oregon billS U.S. for war SALEM, Ore. (AP) -Tbe 1tate ol OrelOG, ftiurint that 100 yean ... loal ~ crace period. it dun.nlnl tbe Unlted Statet for P•TJDent ol Civil War claim• tot•"n• St.I mUµon . State biltortan Cecil Edwarda 1aJ4 Ore1on ran up tbe bU1 When lt musW'ed local resld.._tl to m '-n 1arrito0• a1atmt IDdlan at(~ck• after federal troo]>t pulled out to belp fl•bt tbe Confedetac)'. Tbe 1tate Senate bu voted unaalmoualy for • memorial ur1ln1 Coasres1 to relmbune O?'elOil for '' aub1tanUal Hpemfl lncurred ln turaiab1q troop• and aidlnc the United Statea in malntallliql tbe commOl'l defeme el tbe OrelOll Trail, mlnen and aettlen in tbe Civil War period." SJ!!N. E.D. POTl'8. D-Granta Pua, said the mone)' ~plus interest comes to about $45 million, but the state is willing to aetUe for $1.3 million, today's equivalent of lUI expenses during the Civil War. "We are offering Congress a barf ain basement type of sett ement,'' Potts tQld ·the Senate. "Certainly mo~e than 100 years seems to me tb be an excessive grace period." The state's efforts to rQake the federal government pay seemed headed for succesa when in 1906 the cue went to the U.S. Court of Claims. A headline in the Morning Oregonian of June 30, 1906, stated: "Oregon Claims Soon To Be Paid." IN 1108, THE court agreed that part of Oregon's claim should be reimbursed. But the court said the state's demands for repayment of bounties and ex tr a wages used to entice men t<>"-<eplace U.S. soldiers should not be borne by the federal government. No payment was ever made for any of the claim, Edwards said. Congress never passed an appropriation bill authorizing payment. Oregon made stabs over the years to get the money, but the claim lay forgotten until Edwards found old newspaper clippings referring to the Civil War expenses and renewed the effort. Orange Coa1t OAtl Y PfLOf/Thul"lday, Aprll 16, 1981 FFC9 SOllrtan" avaftabte onty at our Armstrong Roor FaShlon center store. 20 CIGARETTES Is, Strong warranttes go with supertor products and services. we sell t:he best floors made bV ArmstronQ. Amertca s leadlng floorlng manufacturer. and tnen Install them bV skllled craftsmen we t>acl< up your new floor w1th oouble warrantv coverage • The auallty of material Is guaranteed bv Armstrong, • Installation Is guaranteed bV our Floor Fashion center· store we Invite you to come In to read our warranty. We think you 11,a9ree It coulO come onrv from a company thats confident Of the oualltv Of Its prooucts and proud Of Its services and people +@§'Ml" VISA • 20 CtGAHr l Tl::> ©~~@:~ LIGHTS LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE .. Va~nt school can fill comnumitj need The City of Costa Mesa has proposed leasing Rea Middle _School at 601 Hamilton St. to pro- 'iide recreational and social pro- gr ams ror west side residents. The proposal takes into con- sideration recent reports that the school lies in the heart of an area populated by low-and moderate· income families, ethnic minorities and f amllies with women as beads of households. The pJan appears sound. It would provide city- sponsored recreation on some eight acres of schoolgrounds whi~ providing quarters for non-prom social-help organizations offering a hand to those who can use it. City administrators envision a number of organizalions such as the Boys Club, TLC, SOSandother groups using the 24 school rooms in a joint effort to off er aid outside the tax -swppe>rted systems. Newport-Mesa School District is closm, Rea ln June because of continuing decllnea in student enrollment and ba) appolnted a citizens committee to detenniM disposltionofUiealte. The only other major con- t.ender for the property ii a lfOUP looking for a Christian bilh acbool camp\.t.1. Nobody will discuss just bow much money the cliatricl"would re- quire for leasing the junior hJa.b school, but district Superin~ John Nicoll says it will be con- siderably mo~ than the $1 a year the city pays for the former Balearic Elementary School u.Nd as a neighborhood center. Perhaps the Christian scboot can pay more than the city. The once-rich school district certainly couJd use money tbeee days. But when it comes to meeting community needs, the city bu pre- sented a pretty good tentative plan r or using tax· pure hased r acillties. Job pen4,u1um swings Once it seemed that anyone who landed a job as a public employee pretty well had a job for life and a decent pension, although pay in earlier days seemed lower than comparable jobs in free en- terprise. ft appears the pendulum has s wung. Newport·Mesa Unified School Dis trict administrators are get- ting ready to lay off 90 more teachers and administrators with teaching credentials in July because of continued declining stu- dent enrollment and cuts in tax in- come sources Many of those teachers have been working in the district for nearly 11 year s, hiring on back in 1970 Although there are fewer teachers as time goes by about 90 others were laid off last year - the pay keeps getting better. Administrators calculate that the average teacher salary in the district for 10 months of work now stands at $26,457 -plus fringe benefits. The teachers' union is seeking raises this next year that would boos t that salary to about $30,000 for the same amount of work. Pay has gotten so good in jobs throughout the district that more than 90 percent or next year's budget is expected to go toward salaries and fringe benefits. Now the job pays well -but the security seems to be disap- pearing. Curfew needs teeth Jn less than two weeks, resi- dents living_below jet departure paths at John Wayne Airport will get an additional hour of quiet on Sunday mornings. As part of its recent approval of the airport master plan, the county Board of Supervisors or- dered a rollback in the Sunday morning curfew from 7 a . m. to 8 a.m. The change becomes effec- tive April 26. But how is it, one might ask, that jets stiU are heard ta.king off after the curfew begins at 10 p.m. each night? The reason is that many private jets -those that are considered quiet are ex- e mpted from the curfew pro- vis ions. • Other curfew violators are s ubject to losing permission to use the airport. • That's probably not enough punis hment and the county airport staff seems to realize th.is. What's needed are some stiff fines. Thus, violators would feel it where it hurts. And, at the same time, the county would be generating some badly needed revenue for airport projects. It is understood that a peoaJ- ty fee program of some sort is be· Ing developed by airport officials. One should be implemented as soon as possible. Opinions expressed m the space abOve are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box t560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phooe (7 14 ) 642·4321 L.M. Boyd I Hol,d that tiger Mentioned long ago that the tiger in that elderly piece of music called "Tiger Rag" alluded not to a big cat but to the lowest possible poker hand Jazz musicians called such an un- fortunate hand of cards a tiger. In a money game. it was exceedingly dangerous to bluff with a hand like that. ''Hold that tiger" became a card player's taunt. ll should be not- ed , further. that the card game's ex- pression also popularized the phrase: "To have a tiger by the tail." Re mem ber . you need a special pe rmit to take photographs in New York City's sub-6.tay system . In fact, you can't legally use any sort of photograph equipment thereto without s uch a permit. In the colleges, one out of every 20 cheerleaders Is a youn1 man. In the high schoola. lt'a only one out ol every 25. Fe..-reallae that Dr. Franken· 1teln'1 original monster had a name -Adam. M aoy a love a6d war expert bu compiled a Utt ol placea wbtr• 1tn1re women Ln search ol mucuUn• companionship can go to find same. Such as saltwater fishing cruises. Plumbing supply stores. And diesel mechanics' schools. But rare Is the roster of s pots where men in search of unattached women can go. KindJy exclude discos, taverns. lounges, singles bars. and the Hke. Neither the men nor women who visit these joints tend lo act Utemselves when therein. Even the genlleat one of tjylle fellows seems to turn into a comic at.allion once inside. And each of the women, no matter how unaffected elsewhere, suddenly conveys the quaint ootlon that she thinks she's Cleopall'a. Am told you can now buy popcorn that tastes like chocolate, Ol'lnl• or coffee. if you'd like. ' Q. Did the NaUon'a heaviest Preti· dent, William Howard Taft, loee wetcbt while in that demaodlnl job? A. On the contrary. He plcbd up 23 poundl. Putt1n1 him up to m ...... total. There.,., a Um• oo thl1 ~JC* know, when the beavers were .... feet tall. I ·j • •• . :. "" • r So~ial Security goal fa ding A spe~ia l panel appointed by Congress bas recommended sweepLne changes in the SoclaJ Security prolJ'am And while there can be no denying the need for cflanges to restore a measure of inteartty t.o it, some of the proposals would come near to defeatlna the ori1inaJ intent and purpose of the pro- gram Commenced in l937 as a retirement program to rm the void which existed both ln private and public employment, it has co01e to it.B present disastrous financial condition throucb tampering by congressmen more interested In gainin& re·elecbon by playine Santa Claus tha11 in the long·term success of the proeram. Thua the plan has been broadened t.o Lncl.,de a raft ol unearned benefits which threaten its sol•ency. These "a~d-ons" include payments lo students 18 lo 22, to disabled workers at any age. and Medi-care. HAD 1'8£ PENSION program been fuJly funded and the money inveated properly tbere wou.ld stiU be need for cb.anga. One or tbe reeommeodatiou is to divorce Medicare from ~ wblcb, of cow-se. wu never plaaned to caJTy t,ll1t ~. President Jlea&MJ baa taken the poslUoo that tbe time bu come to remove 111 of the "add-ona" and revert SS to it.B basic retirement role. These are sound recommendations and essentiaJ if the program it lo fulfill its original purpose. But many in Congress are reluctant lo eliminate tM "add-On.I" and instead are leanina to the proposal lo raise the eligibiUty age to 68 and that of early retirement to 6S as a means to save money by reducing payouts. As a money.saving device It could on· ly be improved by raising the eligibility llll llTlll age even higher. As It stands countless workers die before reaching lbe present eli1ibWty age and, without survivors. the fund! they have paid in remaJn wltb tbe 1over1unent. lf tbe •I" ii ra.iaed tlliet'e -'II be f!'lftt fewer aroultd le o.1- 1 ec t the pensions for which they paid their money all their working years. THE PROPONENTS of a higher age contend that the average age of life ex pectancy bas increaffd dramatkaJly in lbe yean since SS wu established. Ac· cordiq w the U.S. N1Uoaal Center for Healtll Statlstics. an Htimated 18 per· HDl o( 1111 beMell born ia Ute U.S. today will be alive at ace 70 and more than 25 perce.nt will still be around at age 85. Thal may be so but insurance tables show life expectancy presently to be an average age 70 for white males and 77 . for white females and about six years lesa for non·caucasians. Those figures clearly show that a sub stantlal percentage of male workers would be dead before reaching age 68 and another large percentage just a couple of years away from death Pension programs have been sold to the public on the idea that workers would be 'provided with a few years In which to relax and enjoy life after a lifetime of labor Oo the Congressmen now lhjnk people should have to worf( until they die? · FUllTHERMORE, the lire expeetar$. cy tables do not refl ect what percentage or those who do live beyond 65 are stall physically or mentall y able to continue work. The fact 1s ti.et many retire early for physical reasons and many elderly who may want to continue to work fmd their ages bar them from most en· deavors One change which not only is Ions overdue but would eli minate an .. add. on ·· prov1s1on never contemplated originally 1s the limitation on earnings for those collecting SS. No less an authorit y than Se nator Barq· Goldwater has declared the SS mone~ belongs to the workers. not the govern ment and the celllngs on earnings dis courages old er people from remaining productive The fact is an assured in· come enables many. who have workej:I at meni al Jobs all their lives of necessl· ty, to find fulfillm ent m endeavors they enjoy. Federal money policies tax sa_vers To the Edit.or: A noted economist was quoted recent· ly as saying that if the 1ovemment were put in charge of the Sahara Desert, tn five yea.rs we woa.ld be out of sand. Thia may be true. For example, the mysterious Federal l\eserve Board purs ues monetary policies like an old woman lr')'inl to cross Highway S on foot. Fl.nt golng in one direction, then another, nobody knows what to expect next. Meanwhile, people are uraed to cut down spending and save money and get it into savings accounts if possible. Right? And what happens to the Ln - terest we get on tbese accounts: it is taxed as income, right? But that'• wrong! This is double la.xation , or worse -those hard-held doUarw have already been taxed Lnto morbidity. It is only one part of the Giant Snafu in Washiniton. but it doe• happen to be one that could easily be corrected: simply abolish income tax on savlngs interest and let us use that money to help, squeak by tbe contLnualJy hi1ber cost of stayine alive. MRS. L.W. HUNDSOOERFER acrt for adjac~t land in tM .tale park and 1M lrotne CompcmJfl ~t lawf gfft for tM parlc v:IDt voNed ol 112 mWbl, "'124,000 an acre ~ of It• ~~ potrn· t6al TirMa ~ lfkUed c~ along tht OTongt 9ocut. E<fitqr Resporuibility To the Editor: Kudos to Jim Wood of Corona del Mar for his excellent article In the Sunday, April s paper tilled "Aeling MAILBOX Respoftllibality Worth Oscar, Too." Maybe oae mot'e peraoo shou.ld come forward Ln the John Hinckley cue and Ulat'a the j~8e from Charlotte. South Carolina who fined Hinckley '8'1 for try- ing to clrt')' three guns on ao airplane when t.be federll penalty wu $5,000 and 5 years 1n jail -the judce tryinl to keep It a mun.lclpal cue rather than a federal caae maybe did the coutry a disservice. • People being responsible roe their ac- tions~ the key. JIMDEBOOM MUinfomtation To the Edit.or: I have been appaUed at the lack of preclaeness among the med.la regardin1 the atat.ementa of Secretary of State Raia oa deyoluUon of presidential power. lecnftaJ'J Hlli1 WM W"*I lo saytnc tlJe Ccmt1tutlon au&boltied hlm te t1ke ...... and IO prw YGU bl saytq ~· ..-. tatna. put...._ hlm ,furtber down tM line. States. The provision does not rise to constitutional stature The XXV Amendment provides inter alia for the temporary abdkat1on cl power of the President or temporary as sumptwn of power by the Vice Presi- dent. You might consider apologizing to the school children among your readers and setting lhe record straight J JAMES W BURTON Citizem1 ousted To the Editor . You should be aware of the growing scandal in the community over pro· ressors from various local colleges as· signing students to attend the recent public hearing on the Bolsa Chica de· velopmenl plans Many people in the audience over· heard teachers taking roll just prior to the Board of Supervisors hearing on April 1. in the Santa Ana City Council chambers CITIZENS WHO arrived on time for the hearing also were unable to flnd seals and were forced to stand outalde because many seats were being saved by students who were assigned to arrive early. Dr. Peter Green, a teacher •t Golden West College and one of Ute eroup of teachers who form the leadership of t.be Amigos de Bolaa Chica, threatened a 1rand jury inve1U1atlon because he d.Jd not like ~e recommendaUom of tbe county planners on the Bolla Chica ll- 1ue. J think the Gnod Jury 1hould lD· Vfftl1ate po11ible misuse of public fun"• amona the taxpayer·1upported ' teacllen who are ualn• t.b8 acbool 11 a bate ·of operaUona for tbeh· owl\ poJltical ac.,mN. BILL HANSON Seal to go honie Nevada to return California emblem ' RENO CAP) -After an absence of a century and a ,Quarter, CalUornla la gettin1 J>ack ita original state seal. . The hand·painted seal, which d ls appeared afte·r a fl re destroyed the state Capitol ln 1854, hu been on display at Har· rab's Automobile Collection :.alnce 1982, viewed annua\!)' by -thousands of Californians-un. 11ware they were looting at a missing part of their state's bia· tory. · '•It if truly an historic object, and it's because of the lm· portance of that object to the 1tate ~ California that we at Harrah's have decided ... that we will return this seal to the 1tate," Harrah 's Chairman Mead Dixon announced Tues· day. : DIXON SAID the seal would remain at the automobile coUec· Lion in nearby Sparka during the peak summer tourism months wblle the two states decide on .,•'an appropriate time and 1method to tender that return so that it.a significance will not be ·lost. . Dixon said Harrah's officials ·{Were surprised by the furor that :broke out ia the Calllornta Legislature this year wbeo it was learned that the historic emblem was in Nevada banda. The Assembly backed a res- olution by William Leonard, R· San Bemardloo, calling for the return of the seal, used at the first meeting of the Legislature in San Jose in 1850. Noting the resolution ur1ed ''all Callforniana to help in get· ting the seal back," Dixon said, "I expected to have 20 millloo Californians coming over the border." HE SAID THAT once Harrah's learned of California's interest in eetting the seal back, there never was a question of ita re· turn. The seal buni in the state Capitol from 1852·1854, when a fire destroyed the building. The governor managed to rescue the seal, but it became lost in the confusion. It reappeared in a Sacramento bank vault in 1932 and became part of the collection of W. Parker Lyon, a collector of memorabilia and a descendant of Caleb Lyon, who designed the seal. The ·Jate William Harrah purchased the contents of the Lyon museum in Arcadia, Calif., in 1955 and moved the artifacts, including the seal, to Reno. 20 CIGARETTES ( ------~~~~------\ Orange Cout DAILY PfLOT/Thuf'ldaY, Aprll 18, 1981 SALEM, Ore. (AP) -Tbe. atate ot ~' ftcurtAa tbat 100 yean It a .loGa eaou•b P"Me period. la d\IDDlDa the United State. for pa,JIJl• of Civil War elah111 t0tilbi1 '1.1 mll.U~. State blltorian CeeU Edwards aald Oreaoa ran up tbe bW when it mUltered local raid._ to man 1arrtaou a1alnlt lDdiaD attaekt after federal troops pulled out to help flibt the Coafederaey. . Tb• state Sell&.. bu voted unaalmoUAlY for a memorial urctni Cooerea to reimburse Ore•on for • '1ub1tanUal expeues incurred in furDlablna troope and aldlnl tbe uatt.a States ln malntalnl~I tbe common defense of the ()rep TraUt...~n and aeW•n ln the Civil war period." SEN. E.D. POTTS, D-Granta Pau, aatd the money plus Interest comet to about $t5 mlllloo, but the state is willing to settle for $1.3 million, today's equlvalent ol lt. expenses durinl the Civil War. ~ "We are offering Con1resa a barsain basement type of settlement,'' Potts t qld the Senate. "Certainly mo~e than 100 years seems to me to be an excessive grace period." The state's efforts to °'ake the federal government pay seemed headed for success wbeQ in 1906 the cue went to the U.S. Court of Claims. A headline in the Morning Oregonian of June 30, 1906, slated: ·'Oregon Claims Soon To Be Paid." IN 1..,, THE court agreed that part of Oregon's claim should be reimbursed. But the court said the state's demands for repayment of bounties and extra wages used to entice men to replace U.S. soldiers should not be borne by the federal government. No payment was ever made for any of the claim, Edwards said. Congress never passed an appropriation bill authorizing payment. Oregon made stabs over the years to get the money, but the claim lay forgotten until Edwards found old newspaper clippings referring to the Civil War expenses and renewed the effort. FFC9 SOQrtan• avallabte only at our Armstrong F10or Fashk>n center store. 20 CIGARETTES GfiM@:. -LIGHTS 'Jt s200 Save ~yo strong warranties go with supertor products and servtces. we seM the beSt floOrS made by Armstrong, Amertca'S leading floOrlng manufacturer. and then 1nsa11 tnem DV Skilled craftsmen. we baek up 'f'OUr new floOr Wltt'I Oe>uble warrantv coverage· • 'The QualftV of matenal Is guaranteed Dy Armstrono, • Installation ls guaranteed bV our Floor Fashion center-store. we Invite you to come In to read our warranty. we ttilntc .,.ou 11 agree It could come only from a company that'S 1 confldent of ttie Quallty ortts products and proua Of Its services ana people ''11f'* • ~, . 20 CIGARETTES <C~M~4 LIGHTS LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE I Goo'd intentions have a peculiar way at Umes, of comlna out pretty silly. There's a prime example at a 23-unit Eastbluff apartment complex in Newport Beach. The apartment buildin&, due to an out-Of-court settlement, 11 to be converted into dwelling unlb tor lowJncome wage earners who qualify for federal housing sub- sidies. Tenants, unless 60 yean of ase, can remain only if they meet the federal standards. The settlement is a result of a suit filed by the Orange Cowity Leg al Aid SOciety and others who alleged hous ing policies in Newport Beach are unfair. (n particular, the suit was aimed at the city's approval of a 100-acre housing project east of the bay where', the suit claimed, lowJ cost housing would not be pro- vided. Rathel' titan flg_bt o<at a lencthJ 1 court battle, the developer, wlrio was ln the process of seWDI the bulldiq site anyway, ao-d to turn one of hla apartment bulJd. in as into houlinl for low·ineome waa~earnen. The le1al aid ~P aceepled Ulla oner aad now bave tl•en apartment rent.en up to 18 months tomoveout. The renten, meanwbtle, claim they're ln.,the unuual p:m. Uon of beint too 1"-1ttl1 to llve tn the apalimenb rtt too,-to tNi. housing in Newport. v • · ft appun th8' hew a ..alW' · po•at. One wonders Jtlii ~ been accornptltbed ln tMI ~ meat. One t.h.m, u certatll ~no 11ew housing for low-income ~ has been provided and a group ol apartment renters will soon be on the streets looking for their own "affordable" houaing. Job pentlnl1t.m swings Once it seemed that anyone who landed a job as a public employee pretty well had a job for life and a decent pension, although pay in earlier days seemed lower than comparable jobs in free en- terprise. It appears the pendulum has swung. Newport-Mesa Unified School District administrators are get· ting ready to lay off 90 more teachers and administrators with teaching credentials in July because of continued declining stu- dent enrollment and cuts in tax in- come sources. Many of those teachers have been working in the district for nearly 11 years. hiring on back in 1970. Although there are fewer teachers as time goes·by -about 90 others were laid off last year - the pay keeps getting better. Administrators calculate that the average teacher salary in the district for 10 months of work now stands at $26,457 -plus fringe benefits. The teachers· union is seeking raises this nut year that would boost that salary to about $30,000 tor the same amo\Sntol work. Pay has got.tell so iood in Jobs throughout the district that more than 90 percent of next year's budget ls expected to go toward salaries and fringe benefits. Now the job pays weU -but the security seems to be disap- pearing. Curfew needs teeth In less than two weeks, resi- dents living below jet departure paths at John Wayne Airport will get an additional hour of quiet on Sunday mornings. As part of its recent approval of the airport master plan, the county Board of Supervisors or· dered a rollback in the Sunday morning curfew from 7 a.m. to 8 a .m. The change becomes effec· live April 26. But how is it, one might ask, that jets still are heard taking off after the curfew begins at 10 p.m. each night? The reason is that many private jets -those that are considered quiet -are ex· empted from the curfew pro- visions. • Other curfew violators are subject to losing permission to use the airport. That's probably not enough punishment and the county airport staff seems to realize this. What's needed are some stiff fines. Thus, violators would feel it where it hurts. And, at the same time, the county would be generating some badly needed revenue for airport projects. It is understood tbat a penal· ty fee program of some sort~ be- ing developed by airport officials. One should be implemented as soon as possible. Opinions expressed in the spac.e abOve are tl'lose of the Dally Pilot. Other views U · pressed on this page are those of their authors and anists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (7 141 642·4321. LM. Boyd I Hohl, that tiger Mentioned long ago that the tiger in that elderly piece of music caJled "Tiger Rag" alluded not to a big cat but to lhe lowest possible poker hand. Jazz musicians cslled such an un - fortunate hand of cards a tiger. In a money game, it was exceedingly dangerous to bluff with a band like that. "Hold that tiger" became a card player's taunt. It should be not· ed. further. that the card game's ex- pression also popularlzed the pbrue: "To have a tiger by the tall." Remember, you need a special permit to take photographs In New York City's subway system. In fact, you can't legally use any sort of photograph equipment tbereki without such a permit. In the colleiea. one out of every 20 cheerleaders is a youn1 man. In UM hi&h schools, it'• only one out ot every 25. Fe., realise tbat Dr. Frauen· lldn'• ortlinal monater ~a name ~ -Adam. ' Na111 a love and war expert bu comJ>Ued a Utt of plac11 wbere 1tn11• WOll\en ln aeuch qi Dluc:Wlne companionship can go to find same. Sucb as saltwater rishiog cruises. Plumbing supply stores. And diesel mechanics' schools. But rare ls Ule roster of spots where men in search of unattached women can 10. Kindly exclude discos, taverns, lounges, sin1les bars, and the like. Neither the men nor women who visit these joints tend to act themselves when therein. Even the genUesl one of these fellows seems to tum into a comic stallion once inside. And each of the women, no matter how unaUected elsewhere, suddenly conveys tbe quaint notion that she thinks she's Cleopatra. Am told you can now buy popcorn that taatel like cbocolate, orante or coffee, 11 you'd llle. Q. Did the N.UOO'a beavt• Pl'•l· dent1 WUllam Ho9iard Tait, loae wel1nt wblle in tba& demaodl#a Job? A. On tbe eontrUJ. He picked up 22 Pounds. PuW.Da him up to 112 paad9 total. b .. -•• ls 1 ' • I Social Security goal fa ding A special panel appointed by Coogreu bu recommended sweepln1 ahanaes in the Social Security pt<>eram. And white there can be no denying the need for changes to restore a measure of integrity to it, some of the proposal• would come near to defeating tile original intent and purpose of the pro- gr am. Commenced in 1937 u a retirement program to fill the void which nbted both in private and public employment, it has come to IU present diautroUJ nnanclal coodllion through tampertn1 by concressmen mor~ lnler$ted in sainln1 re-~lecti.on b~ ptaytni Santa Claus than in tbe lollJ·term sutcest ol the program. ftlU lb• plan bal been broadened to irtclud• a rt« of WMUfted benefitt "Mell th.teaten ~ f(>lvent)'." these "add-ons'' include payments to students 18 to 22. to disabled work.-ers at any age, and Medi-care. BAD THE PENSION program been fully funded and tbe money lnveated properly there would sUll be need for cbanaes. One of the rtt0mmaatioba ls to divorce Medicare from SS wb.lcb, of coune, wu never planned to carry that load. President Reagan bas tuen the pOltUon that the time bu come to remove a1l of the "add-om" and revert SS to its bulc retirement role. These are sound recommendations and essential l! the program is to fuJIUI its original purpose. But many ln Congress are reluctant to elimlruile the "add-oos" and Instead att leaning to the proposal to raise the eUglbUity age lo 81 and that of early retirement to 65 a.s a means to save money by reducing payouts. As a money-saving device it could on· ly be improved by raising the elltlbility llll llTlll aae even higher. A• It stand.a countless wortets die ~tore reaching ~ present •lltibWI)' •ie and, wtt.boul .uhtvon, the f"6ds tMy, ISa~ pltcl lb remaJ~ wlt!a \bl &0'9ft11rt\~iit. tr l1't age Ji ralaed lH•n wOI Df •~en fefltr around to col· lect the penslon.s for whlch they paid their money all their working years. THE PROPONENTS of a higher aae cobtend that the avera1e age o( life ex· pecU!lcy bu increased dramatlcaJly in tht Yttrl since 8S was e•tablisbed. Ac· cotd.lbg to lb• lJ.S. National' Center foe H.,ltb Statistics, an estimated 611 per- cent of all babln botn lD the U.S. today will be alive at a1e 70 and more than 25 percent wUl sWI be around al a1e 85. Tbal may be so but lneurance tables sbow life expectancy preaenUy to be an avera1e aae 70 !or white males and 77 for wblte females and about six years less fornon-caucaalan.a. Those r1gures clearly show that a sub· stantial percentage of male workers would be dead before reaching age 68 and another large percentage just a couple of years away from death. ' Pension programs have been sold td the public on the idea that workers would be provided with a rew years it! which lo relax and enJOY life after a lifetime of labor Do the Congr~smen now Uunk people should have to work. until they die? · FURTHERMORE, the life expectan~ cy tables do not reflect what percentacei of those who do live beyond 65 are stUI physicall y or mentally able to cooUnuei work. The fact is that many retire ea.r1J! for pbyaicaJ reasons and many elderly who may want to continue to wort fl..8d their ages bar them rrom most en·-~ • deavors i One change which not only is lone overdue but would eliminate an "addj on " provis ion never contemplateq orlgmaJly is the hmitat1on on earning~ for those collecting SS No less art author i t y th an Senator BarrM Goldwater has declared the SS mone)I! belongs to the workers, not the govern~' ment and the ceilings on earnings dis courages older people Crom remainln productive The fact is an usured in! come enables many. who have work~ at menial JOb~ all their hves of necessq ty. lo find rutrillment in endeavors the~ enjoy :federal. money policies tax savers To the Editor: A noted economist wu quoted recent- ly as saying that if the government were put in cberge of the Sahara Desert, ln five years we would be out of sand. This may be true. For example, the mysterious Federal Reserve Board pursues monetary policies like an okl woman trying to cr0t1 Highway 5 on foot. Ftrst aolng in one directioG, tben another, nobody knows what to expect next. Meanwhile, people are urged to cut down spending and save money and eet It into savin1s accounts ll poe.sible. Right? And what happena to the in· tereal we aet on these accounts: it •• taxed as income, right? But t~at'a wrong! This Is double taxation, or worse those hard-held dollars have already been taxed Into morbidity. It la only ooe part of tbe Giant Snafu in W aahinaton. but it does happen to be one that could easily be corrected: simply abolish income tax on savinp interest and let us me that money to help squeak by Ule continually hl1ber cost of atayinf alive. MRS. L.W. HUNDSOOER'FER acre /or odjocC111 land fn the ttau park and t~ 11'TllM Compa1111'• 51Kkcrf land gtft /or t~ ptJrk 1D01 oalMaf at Jl2 mtufon, or iu.ooo an oc~ ritcaua, of th d.velopm.m potn· UaJ. Tfnw• ~ fadeH chanflied along tfle Oronge Coast. EdUor. Rapomibility To the Editor: Kudos to Jim Wood or Corona del Mar for bb excellent article in the Sunday. April 5 paper" titled "Actln1 MAILBOX Respoo'siblUty Worth Oscar. Too " Maybe one mort_ person should come forward ln the Jmtn Hinckley cue and tb1t'1 tbe Judie from Charlotte, South Carolina wbo fined Hlnckley W1 for try- ln1 to carry thtee guns on an airplane wben4lbe federal penalty wu $5,000 and 5 years in jail -the Judie tryinl to keep it a municipal case rather than a fed•ral cue maybe did tbe country • dl11ervt~. People bein• r~pooaible for their ac· Uon1 ii the key. JIMDEBOOM MUUifonnation To the Editor: I have been appalled at the lack or preelaenesa amon1 tbe med.la re1ardln1 lb• atatemeau ot Secretary of Slate Halt on ••votutlon of prHldentlal l>o'(tf'. !flllUl' Mall w,.. WroG1 tn 1tayU1• CGeilituUon •uthori1ecl )Im to take ra•, and 10 are yQ\I tn aayiq tbt Ntda tbb11, putUn1 him further do•naibellM. States. The provision does not rise to constitutional stature. : The XXV Amendment provides inter. alia for the temporary abdication oi: power of the President or temporary as ~ aumptton of power by the Vice Prest~ dent. You might consider apologizing to thtf school children among your readers and setting lhe record straight : JAMES W. BURTON" To the Editor You should be aware of the growing scandal In the community over pro- fessors from various local colleges as· signing students to attend the recent public heariqg on the Bol!!a Chica de· velopment plihs. Many people in the audience over· heard teachers taking roll just prior lo the Board of Super visors hearing on April 1, in the Santa Ana City Council chambers. CITIZENS WHO arrived on Ume for the hearing a1&o were unable to find seats and. were forced to sland outside because many seats were beinf saved by students who were assigned to arr1v' early. Dr. Peter Green, a teacher at Gol"- West College and ooe of the iroup ol teachers who form the leadership ol the Amigos de Bolsa C~ica, threatened • 1rand Jury invesU1aHon becauu be did not like the recommendat!oM ol UM county planners on tbe BGlta Cbiea a. sue. • I think the Grand Jury tbould W. vesU1ate possible mi1uae of ~ubllt fund• among the taxpayer-1uppo?tet teachen who are uslna the 1chooa u • base of operations for their ow• polltical 1cbemea. ., BILL HANSOIJ ' CLOSING 1,005.58 .,., .~ .. .... Plastic surgery· breaks barriers Plastic surgery bas spread across aJl barriers or income, education, sex and age. It is reaching mass market proportions that defy credulity. Ne8:rly one of Clve Americans who undergoes aesthetic or re· construction surgery has an income of $1S,OOO or less. And, for a form of surgery still believed by most people to be tbe virtually exclusive domain of· Hollywood-type celebrities and the wealthy, other fin · dings emerging from a study by the Chicago -~ b a s e d American Society of ----------~: Pla s tic and Reconstructive SYlVIA ..PORTER ~~, Surgeons _ <ASPRS) are: -A FULL 3S PERCENT or patients undergoing the surgery are men, and 43 percent are 35 years or younger. -MORE THAN l Miu.JON of the patients un· dergo the s urgery in the hospital and tens or thousands more in the surgeon's office. The surgery is rising at a rate or 5 perceot to 10 percent a year -OF ALL THE OPERATIONS, 40 percent are for rhytidoplasty (face lift), rhinoplasty <nose sur· gery ). breast augmentation and other cosmetic sur- gery. The other 60 percent involve post-mastectomy construction, craniofacial reconstruction <skull) and other forms of surgery concentrating on such areas as burns. cancer, etc. While plastic surgery is one of the fastest grow· ing specialties in U.S. medicine, it is not inexpensive. A race Lift can range from S2.000 to $5,000; nose re- construction, from $1 ,000 lo $3,000; chin implant around $750 and breast building, $1,000.$2,000. In addition to the 18 perceQt of the patients with incomes or $15,000 or less who have these operations, 34 percent come from the $15,000·$25,000 income group; 29 percent, from the $25,000 lo $50,000 category, and 19 percent from $50,000-plus groups. In the ASPRS. there are 2,200 board-certified plastic surgeons and the supply or qualified surgeons is plentiful, says Dr. Jerome E. Adamson, ASPRS president. But you still must protect yourself againat non-qualified doctors and your own unreal expects· lions. BE REALISTIC ABOUT what plastic surgery can achieve. Eyelid surgery can remove bags under the lower lids and loose skin from upper ones -but it does not remove crow's feet at comers. BE REALISTIC ABOUT your motives. You may benefit in terms of increasing self-satisfaction and confidence but the physicaJ improvement witt not solve many of your problems. DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE the seriousness of the procedures, even though they may be perforr:ned in a doctor's oHice. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS Am Alr1lt1 ~-Svc• ~~~mb ll U I &J1r. .'41 8re:Stt 1111 ,.., Am AllRl<llfld l~;~M .. i4 . "'' -..,, METALS ~r.1 .... AmtrT&.T 54d0110fl " -"" • Ill Ce'"' ••"·11 cenh • ,ownd, U S . UPS AND DOWNS dfttl ... u.... U.. .a centa • flO'#ICI. lillc 411t c..,u • POUncl, ditllwrw Tltt $6.7144 Metals w .. " '°"""°'"•lb • ... ..._,.c.,tta~,H.V. MMcwy M».00 -flesll. ~ .... .00 ll"O'l'Ol., H.V. SILVER ( I I "If I ever get to be on angel I'd rather ploy a guitar." .....__._ "4-41. 1ff "My pott In I 1tonn, I 1tw1ya Ny." i I • J , by Tom K. 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