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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-23 - Orange Coast Pilotl \ Statues ski"(ting statutes BY JERRY CLAUSEN or ... Dlill't,.... ,..,. "They're begging the Judge to put me in jail," claims Ali Roushan of Costa Mesa. He has been ordered by Orange CQunty Superior Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald to show why he shouldn't be held in con- tempt for erecting a third tower- ing metal sculpture in his weld· ing shop's parking lot at 1550 Superior Avenue. The hearing on the contempt issue is scheduled for June 2. ASSISTANT CITV Attorney Mark Huebsch said the city is seeking both civil and criminal contempt ci tations <1gainst the fiery Iranian immigrant, who could fa ce a $500 fine and five days 4n jail 1f found guilty But Roushan could spend even more time in jail. according to Meir Westreich, Amencan Civil Liberties Union lawyer who has taken up Roushan 's battle with city officials ·'The judge could issue an or der to take down the "Volcano" <the latest Roushan sculpture> and keep ham 1n jail until he does at, .. Westreac h explained "It could be indefinitely .. But Westrc1ch 1s confident that the June 2 h<.'artng never will be held H EARINGS ARE scheduled May 19 on Westreich 's motions challenging both the contempt orde r and ordinances which brought about Roushan 's prob· le ms in erecting "Waterfall," the first sculpture "It could all be resolved in A I' s favor on that date,·· Westrelch said. Officials contend that Roushan is erecting the metal structures without proper zoning permits. Roushan and Westreich con- tend the works are sculptures, not structures. and that the city has no nght to regulate their erection A CITY LAWSUIT ts s ttll pending on that matter, which Roushan contends has First Amendment ramifications. The lawsuit filed last Sep- tcm ber claims Roush an must comply with ordinances govern· ing height and safety regulations afte r submitting plans to City Hall. At that time, Judge Fitzgerald issued a temporary injunction prohibiting Roushan from erect· ing additional works until the case is heard Roushan erected the 5 foot tall "Butterfly Wings." during the framing of the tnjunction. Last wee k he raised the 45-fool "Volcano .. THE CITV MOVED Tuesday for the citation holding Roushan in contempt of the temporary in- junction City Plan ning Directo r Charles Roberts noted that Roushan 's "contemptuous acts and attitude have made it more difficult lo hold other citizens . . . to the standards of the Costa Mesa Municipal Code." Westreich admits the city can regulate construction. But city ordinances make "no difference between a piece or art and a bjJth house, aml there sure in hell is." he ~aid. Even as the attorneys jockey for position, Roushan plans an 80-foot-tall "Tornado" and a fifth . taller sculpture to com- plete the sequence. 111111 CUii 1111111 Nllht and momint low clouds. IU1y 1unsblne Fri· day afternoon. Lows toniiht 52 along the coast. eo inland. Hlehs Friday M to 74. Ali Rowhan welds and rides crane positicning 45-foot "Volcano" alongside his previoua works, the winged ''Butterfly" and meditation tower "Waterfall" in front of his Superior Avenue welding 1hop in Co.ta Meta. Dentist put 'radiQ' in woman's mouth 1 AUBURN (A"P) -A woman who says her denllat inad- vertently left a radio in her mouth has asked a rock-and~roU station to turn down· it• transmitter or play soft musk. But station KAHi'• news director and chief operator, Al Buck, said Wednesday be reJM· ed the woman's request. Her dentist wu due back Jn town today anyway, and could solve the problem, Buck laid. THE WOMAN TOLD Buck late WedDesday that for 'wo daya the bu been subjected to rock and roll -which she bate. -vlbratlne tn htr dental won:. She said her dentist llad put ln some temporary metal work where it touched a gold crown. Buck said that obvtoualy re- sulted in two di111itnilar metals in presence of an electrolyte - saliva -formfn1 a primitive crystal rad.lo 1et that oscillates on the frtequency of KARi's 5,000-watt tran1mjtter. The phenomena 11 well known in radio but rarely observed. "She telephoned here almost in tears, ~Ult to make 1ure that'• what the trouble WH 10 1he could tell her husband befoft he had her committed," B~k 1a1d. .. f.· .,. I I · '~el1orl Cop slliper target? ~1 ·~.; I ' " A 25-year-old Fullerton man was being held for questioning today in connection with the ear· ly morning shooting attack on a police officer who was writing a parking ticket, Fullerton police said. The officer was not injured. The s hooting incident oc- curred along the 3000 block of North Associated Road, near Cal State Fullerton campus. OFFICERS said patrolman Jerry Teplansky was writing the ticket al 4:16 a.m . when he saw a muzzle flash and heard a shot from a corner about 60 yards away. He immediately radioed for assistance and officers from Anaheim , Brea, Fullerton. Placentia . the Ca l iforni a Highway Patrol and Los Angeles Sheriff's Office converged on the area. Additionally. the Los Angeles sheriffs helicopter was called in. ··House-to-house·· contacts were made in the area, police said, leading to the 6.22 a.m de Merchant purchases Town Talk The short but colorful Ure of the Talk of the Town adult bookstore in Newport Beach ap· pears to be near an end. The white stucco 1ex em· porium, which opened briefly last October and again for severaJ days In February. is ln the process of being sold to a Corona del Mar rug merchant. Rug shop owner Said Shokrian is asking Newport Beach of· ficials for permission to build a three-story office building on the 2930 Pacific Coast Highway site as well as an adjoining lot. which he already owns. The office building request comes before city planning com· missioners tonight. F. Earl Mellott. Shokrian's architect. says escrow on the bookstore property should close once building permits are co m· pleted. The architect says Shokrian and Jack Gordon. owner of the bookstore property. worked out a deal earlier this year. "I'm not at liberty to tell you what the price is but it's a lot," commented Mellott. "Just make a guess and then double it " Shokrlan, the architect says. wants to build a 25,000-square- foot office building on the site. which is near Mariner's Mile. The Beverly Hills attorney, Josh Kaplan who has been representing owners of the sex shop, was not available to com- ment on the reported real t)state transaction. ../ Owners have been fighting a lega J battle to reopen the bookstore, originally closed after an arsonist set it on fire. The shop reopened for two days in February when attorneys got a favorable ruling from the California Supreme Court. But the court reversed It's ruling a short time later. 2oilfinru show~cline • • rnea:nungs j tentioo ol Kent D. Leitch at his home for questioning. A POLICE spokesman said Leitch is being held on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. A .357 magnum handgun was confiscated al Leitch's home on the 3000 block of north Associat· ed road. Officers declined this morning to say what evidence led them to detain the suspect. They said he offered no resi.stance when laken anto custody. Though no bullet casing was found at the scene. officers said Lhey were certain a shot was~ fired at the officer. An anvestigation is continuing in the area Barbara replaces JuJ,y,Judy,Judy NEW YORK CAP> -Cary Grant, making his fifth tnp to the altar at age 77 , has married former publicist Barbara Harris, who is said to be in her 30s. the New York Daily News reported today . The secret wedding is thought to have taken place last week in either Palm Springs or Las Vegas. "Yes, we are married. I cannot tell you where or when. That's a secret. But we've been married for a while," Ms. Harris told the News from the couple's Beverly Hills home Wednesday night. Grant, who has shrugged off questions about a possible marriage. and Ms. Harris have been constant companions several years. Grant's former marriages were lo Virginia Cherrill in 1934, Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton in 1942, actress Betsy Drake in 1949 and actress Dyan Cannon in 1965. All four marriages ended in divorce. Future's gloomy, Qayden predicts Dell, ...... ..__ STUDENTS GET WARNING Tom Hayden at UCI Excavation of wastes uneventful By PATRICK KENNEDY 00.. o.ltf l'tMCSllaft An environmental consultant says the chemical dump In Hwit· lngton Beach isn't as dangerous to excavate as once suspected and workers wearing protective suJta with air filters are overdressed. "The air quality bas been very good during the excavation and we haven't had one complaint about odors," said Jim Crisp, con- sultant who authored a report on potential health hazards posed by the abandoned landfill. Tom Hayden has told a crowd of UC Irvine s tudents theit generation "has the •orst p~ spects or any generation ever tG emerge in history.,.. : The leader of the statewide Campaign for Economic; Democracy told the students in a Wednesday speech that unless they fight to protect the environ- ment. they will have to contend with enormous ecological prob· lems by the year2000. Speaking before about 300 peq. pie at UCI 's Earthday celebra· lion, Hayden said according to a report commissioned by the Carter administration. the world's environmental outlook iJ bleak unless decisive action is taken. "IN THE year 2000. the report said the world will be more crowded, more polluted. les5 stab I e and p e op I e w i II be poorer, .. Hayden said. "This will all happen when you are in your 40's." "See this white s hirt I'm wearing." the former radical a~­ ti vi st said. "They use optical whitening chemicals to make it so white. We don't need tho!te c h e micals. We don 't need astroturf." Hayden had some promisin,g things to say in his speech. "THE OIL companies can drlll offshore only so far unwl they start drilling into the n~· tlonal consciousness," he aaiO. ''Environmentalism h~s permeated this county. ; "People .are starting to re a life you can't have ·a healtqy agriculture with acid rain qct air pollution. • "You can't have a healtliy economy with people goln1 broke from environmentally caused cancer. We are finally startin1 to realize we no loncer <See HAYDEN. Paae AZ> 'No privacy' brings suit .,..,........ RODENTS WIN RACE -Sister Julia Clare Fontaine holds Bobby aloft after rat won Spalding College of Louisville. Ky., annual "Run of the Rodents," a spoof of the Ken- tucky Derby. Bobby earned a golden crown and a loving cup full of cereal. ' ·Secretaries to strike? San Jose female office workers demanding equal pay B,y The Associated PreH Secretaries, who keep chaos .·rom overrunning offices. had their day in the limelight. But not all were happy. Female San Jose office workers threatened to strike Wednesday if they don't get parity with men do· Ing comparable work, and a Los Angeles organization issued an "Office Workers Bill of Rights." There were bright moments during National Secretaries Day, too. Hundreds of office workers re· cei ved bouq~etsfrom their bosses, and Richard Voge l. director of Hollywood Community Hospital. drove six of his secretaries in a limousine to lunch at a fast-foot restaurant VOGEL, WHO ARRANGED for candelabra. music and other entertaininenl for the occasion, served the women in a red waiter's uniform. In San Jose. the fourth largest city in the state with more th•n 600.000 residents. some aoo femaJe office workers held a lunchtime rally outside city hall tQ reaffirm .lheir decision to stnke May 5 if they don't get pay parity with men .doing similar work ·"This is significant because 1t is the first lime women have said : they are ready to go on strike over this issue alone," said Karen Friedman of the American Federation or State, County and Municipal Employees AFSCME Local 101 represents the city's 2,000 workers, half of whom are women. The union's contract does not expire wttil July, Ms Friedman said, but members voted 9·1 this month to stage an unfair labor practices strike unless their de mand for parity is met. SAN JOSE IS considered "the feminist capital of the country" because the mayor and the ma· jority of the 11 -member City Council are women. "You would think that with all these women at the top, the city would be sympathetic to the de· sires of female workers," Ms Friedman said. ''But that isn't the case." She said the city agreed during last contract to fund a $500.000 study to see if women were indeed paid less than men for compara- ble jobs. The study, by a San Fran· cisco consuJtJng firm, was re· leaaed in December and showed men earned about 15 percent more than women . But she said the city is offering to boest wages only by 3.5 percent a year for two years in 27 of 288job ·~--­RIOT WEAPON -Masked youth in Londondel'l')', Northern Ireland, uses high-powered alinpbot during rioting Wednes· day night. The dilturbances followed tbe funerals of two teens ldlled by an Army Land Rover on Sunday. · MAINOWICI ...... -. ... c.-. .... c-. Mell ...... ; ... t•,c.1e MtM, CA, .... categories. About 450 workers would be affected. Currently wages for women range from $10,200 for a typist- clerk to $31,500 for a systems analyst. with most workers clustered m the $13,000 to $14,000 range, she said. · IN SOUTHERN California an activist ~rganization called 'Los Angeles Working Women an· nounced a 12-point "Office Workers1Bill of Rights" during a rally attended by Gov. Edmund G. BrownJr. lnclud~ in the list were rights to receive benefits, pay and pensions comparable to those paid to men and to refuse to do personal errands for employers. as well as an end to discrimina- tion based on race. age, sex or marital status. Other rights in the list included m~dical care, maternity benefits, grievance procedures. periodic written salary reviews and equal access to promotions. Since moel offi ce workers are not unionized, they generally lack the bulk of the "rights"" listed by the Los Angeles group. From Page A1 HAYDEN • • • have a frontier to exploit; we have to be stewards instead of exploiters of our environment." HAYDEN SA ID some forward-thinking local govern· ments have adopted these kind of attitudes -but not in Orange County. ''Rolls Royce sales are at an all-time high in Orange Coun· ty.' • he said. ·'Some people want to ride out this storm at 10· miles-per-gallon." Hayden says he likes to repeat the phrase of economist Hazel Henderson: Think globally but work locally. ''THE TRANSITION begins with the individual," he said. ·'Most of these college campuses were designed on the old energy assumptions. "Al Orange Coast College and Sacramento State, students are developing new energy savings programs on their own cam- puses." Hayden concluded his speech wlth the observation "the en- vironmental state of the world Is like the guy falling out of the window. He's halfway down when someone asks 'How's it go- ing?' The guy says 'Fine so far.' Well he hasn't hit bottom yet and neither have we in an environmental sense. And we have to work hard to make sure we don't h.it bottom." TV schedule a day ahead Sometlme1. we 1et a little ahead of ourselves. Like Wed· nesday, when we publl1bed Tburaday's televialon Uatlnp. Thursday's schedule waa publl1bed under Wedne1day•1 date. We apoloaiae for the error. We've taken ateps 'to lnaure that It doean't happen a1aln. Advice given w ASHJNGTON <laP> -Notln1 that a naUonal war on crime 11 . declared almott evenr deeade, forma Attorney General In R. CtvillUI la W'l1na bll Republican • IUCCIUOt, .'lrllll•m ~ "l'readl Smlth', to avotcl attractive or popular ~all that an .. ,.... 11 TUl·l4Ylia4 aad lllUlauided tbrowti9dll t.e U.. .,.. 'Ill \tie ·aoe UMttM'•·"' WASHINGTON <AP) - Sur1eou cloMd • bole in th• bullet·plerced braln of Wblte House press secretary James S. Brady today after a bulld\.lp ol aJr bad caused potentially d•ll1eroua preaaure Inside hJ1 skull, Brady was reported "very stable" throul(h the s~-bour operation and lD no danger. Hll deputy. Larri Speakes. told reporters at midmomin1 that Brady had been returned to bis room from the recovery room. Rlchard Ellis, a spoke1man at Georee Washington University Hospital, said doctors report to- day that Brady's vital sisna. in- cl udlng temperature .. are normal and that he remains in satisfactory condition. "BE HAS SLEPT intermit- tently through the night as the usual effects of anesthesia wear From Page A1 DUMP • • • amidst homes, condominiums and apartments . . STATE, COUNTY and city of- ficials have ordered strict safety precautions for the excavation, including preparation of an emergency evacuation plan in . case toxic fumes are released by the digging which health officials say ls Wllikely. Officials or the state Depart· ment of Health Services oversee the excavation. which is expected to take three months. Crisp said, '"We want to move slowly to In· sure there's no odor problems.'· Before the trucks leave the site the contaminated soil is covered with a root of clean earth and a tarp. Workers also bruah loose earth off the tires and sides of the truck, Crisp said. "They <the trucks> leave here clean as a whistle," he said. ·'There are no odor problems when they reach West Covina.·· WEST COVINA residents, however, are clamoring for city officials there to close the harardous waste site and have criticized the Huntington Beach excavation as an example of one city dumpina its problems in their laps. "That's out of our control,"' Crisp said. "But we've talked with West Covina otficials and U · sured them that the best possible safety meaaurn are being taken. "The Highway Patrol and state health officials have inspected the trucks and everything is going very smoothly," he said No action on embargo WASHINGTON (AP) -A White House spokesman today stood firm by his <!ontentlon that President Reagan• 'really haa not made a decision" on phasing out the grain embargo against the Soviet Union. The president bas been talking with advisers about "what kind of signal we'd be sending" by such action, deputy press sectttary Larry Speakessaid. · He said Reagan received a na· ti on al security brteftna thla mom· ing from adviser Richard Allen, but "I wouldn't read into it thatit was on the arainembargo." off, but be is readily awakened and respoods normally to ques. tJon1," aatd the report relayed by Ellis. The o~nUon. which began late WedMsday and lasted past mld.nlaht, was described official· ly •• "nbfl-urgent." It followed the Insertion of needles into Brady's brain to drain off air in fiuid canals. Qr. Dennis O'Leary, spdkeaman for George W ashlngtcn Univecsity Hospital, said the «>·year-old Brady wai awake and "wigeling his toes" on his w•Y to the recovery room. O'Leary added, however. that doctors are "guarded" about the s-access of tbe repair. saying that would not be known for a few days. THE AIR LEAK and the re· sulting surgery represented a . "setback ln terms of the totality of BraclY't recovery" trom the aertoua &ead wound Ile •uttered in a March 30 auaaslnation at- tempt on President Reagan, O'Leary said. But O'Leary 1tre11ed tt wu not a setbacJc in Brady'• "neurologic recovery," that is, U\e recovery of his brain func· lions, previously described aa remarkable. Sur1eons noted Wednesday night that the "pre- vious injury to the brain was ob- served to be healln1 well," ac· cording to a White House state· ment. It was the second complication in Brady's recovery from the wound he suffered in the eunfire that struck him, Reagan and two law officers. Over the weekend, anti-convulsant drugs caused a fever arid rash. which disap- peared when different medica· tion was used, officials said. Birchers assessed $400,000 inf ines CHICAGO <AP> -A federal jury has awarded $400,000 damages to civil liberties lawyer Elmer Gertz in his successful libel suit against a John Birch Society magazine that brought a landmark Supreme Co•Jrt rulin~. Gertz 11ought $1.5 million for damages be claimed to have suf. fered when a 1969 article in Af!l erican Opinion magazine said he was part of a communist conspiracy. The six-member jury awarded Gertz $100,000 in compensatory damages and $300,000 in punitive damages. COMMENT ING ON the award, which came Wednesday in the U.S. District courtroom of Judge Joel Flaum. Gerti said the decision vindicated him and "struck a blow for responsible JOurnalism." ·'I think the John Birch Socie· ty now wilt be less likely to call everyone a communist from the president on down ," Gertz said. Lawyers (or the magazine, cit· ing U.S. Supreme Court de· ciaions, claimed Gertz could not collect libel damages unless be proved the magazine acted with "actual malice." But in 19'14 , the bieh court broke new ground and ruled Gertz was not a public figure and therefore did not have to prove actual malice. The ruling gave judges and juries broader discretion on de· ciding when actual malice must be proven. IN SUBSEQUENT decisions. the U.S. Supreme Court further narrowed the range of people who could be considered public figures in libel cases and receive less libel protection. Named as defendant In the suit was Robert Welch Inc .. which publishes the mJtgazlne. Gerald Hedlrich, attorney for the firm, said his client will ap· peal the award. The article discussed Gertz's role u attorney for the ramily of a teen-ager, Ronald Nelson, who was shot and killed by a policeman after a distrubance at a Chicago bot-dog stand. The -policeman. Richard Nuc- cio, was convicted of murder. and Gertz represented the Nelson family in three civil lawsuits. IN AN ARTICLE entitled "Frame up Richard Nuccio a nd the War on Police,·· tile magazine linked Ge.rtz to what it term~d a communist conspiracy to d1scred1t Nuccio and the Chicago Pohce Department. Gertz denied any link with communism and said the article \\as full of "untruths" and "de- liberate hes ·· "I was obsessed with the arti- cle. deeply upset knowing how people react lo the charge of communism." Gertz testified at the tnal. Marine unit in 100-mile desert hike WARNER SPRINGS <A.Pl In full battle dress. a Marine battalion is marching across 100 hot. dusty miles in cadeoce. The five-day encb.Jrance hike by 531 office rs and men was stepped off Monday by Lt. Col. Jay V Sullivan. commander of the 3rd Battalion. 5th Regiment. tst Marine Division After their start at the Salton Sea, the troops -all men - h ave moved through hills, across highways and both low and high desert under 90-degree heat Sullivan said they will reach their home base of Camp Pendleton "in a combat-ready status.·· A cheering crowd that in- cluded the elementary school band met them Tuesday after- noon in Borrego Springs. That night, they ca mped outside town. Medics treated several Marines for leg cramps. A logistics and supply base set up west of Borrego Springs. The march ends in Camp P e ndleton , where the men trained by marching 243 miles through hills and valleys of the sprawling infantry base. .1 ' . ------------------- Al'W~ British pianist Dudley Moore, left. jokingly mj!kes~ point to Ernest Fleischmann. general directdr of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. during'a___, luncheon to announce the orchestra's 60th an-. . ( • muersary season at Hollywood Bowl. Moore wtll make his first appearance with the Philharmonic William Buckley. editor of National Review and host of TV's" F1nng Line ... was hit m the head with a cream pie dunng a reception at the L'niversz ty of A nzona. He was not in- jured. Clauning "crime 1s a lmost zilch" at the Cabrini-Green housing project, Ch icago Mayor Jane Byrne said she will no longer live there full · time. but will keep her apart· ment. "My stay has not ended." she told a City Hall news con- fer ence . "But I'm not going to announce to the gangs when I'm there and when I'm not ·· Prime Minister Margaret Tbakber, who never seems to be annoyed by the Criuies or the greasies. is a "million- d olla r advertisement for British hairdressing." So says Don Cossins. presi· dent of the National Hairdressers' Federation. "She never seems to have a single hair displaced hy wind or temper," he said in praising her locks. The prime minister's oHl ce said Mrs. Thatcher has a regular hairdresser but his name is kept secret. for everyone Internationally known heart 1uraeoo Dr. Mle~ael DeB•b)' 11y1 suctt esercla- inl u Jot&inl wm not. pre- vent heart attackl. DeBa.key, 72, aaya reasona- ble exercise is healthy, "but lt 's not 1otna to prevent you from havlna a heart attack." Speaklng before a 1roup of businessmen, DeBakey said, "I don't have any strong ob- Jection to jogging for people who are relatively young." "I do have some objections to joggers who get out in the middle of the street, especially at dusk or dawn when I've nearly run into them." he said. ''I think that 's dangerous." The Rev. Bailey Smith, who once said God doesn't hear the prarers of J ews, has "almost a1ngle handedly moved the Southern Baptist Con vention to work in greater cooperation with the Ant i -Defamation League," says the AOL's Dallas direc- tor. Smith, president of the Baptist group, participated tn a Passover Seder al the home of AOL director Mark Brlakman in Dallas and told J ewish leaders he wanted to work with them to eliminate bigotry. Briskman said he didn't believe Smith meant to insult Jews: "He re is a guy who lit erally put his foot in his mouth . I think he has l e a r n e d a n 1 n c r e.d i b l e lesson.·· Pre:Rdent Reagan pon- ders question while be- ing interviewed by re- porters in the Treaty Room at the White House Wednesday . It was the first interview he has granted since be- ing shot. • East due more ram Warm readings forecast for most Western areas Uxutal, tooalher LIOhl v1rl•IM• wlndl C>«omlno we1t to _, I lo IS -nolS with 1 10 11001 wind •• ..., In 1111<,_. 1 '° l 1001 w1111111 •-II througn lonJ9fll NIQlll .-.d .-nll'O '°"' Clo..ol .. 1111 "'°'"' "'"'' .,..,......,,, 1• SJ SI lO 10 '° •1 ~ 52 "° .. lJ 6' S7 St u .. " S1 l2 .. ,, S7 J2 7J '17 1l " ,. '° .. u tl '° 60 Ct 11 ... to •2 ., " jS 71 0 lot Sl lO Orange Coatt DAH."Y PILOTl.Thutlday, Aprll 23, 1981 s BalloOn, yacht rac-es, Supe-r Walk, water polo, Grand Prix all set this weekend If you're a raclna fan, you'll run younel! ra.aed trylna to keep up with events scheduled thls weekend ln Southern Callfomla. For lf)ltance, there'• a balloon race in Fountain Valley, a Grand Prix ln Riverside and the start. ot t.he Enaenada boat .race ln Newport Beach. If you like your competition a bit slower. there's the Super Walk America in Newport Beach and lrvine. THERE ARE also a series of five and 10 kilometer races at UC Irvine. which ls holding ill a nnual festival for the communi- ty. And the II Fina World Water Polo Cup pitting the U.S. team against Bulgana and the USSR gets under way in Long Beach Saturday and Sunday. When you get through with all that. you might need to take ad· vantage of the free medical tests at three health fairs scheduled for the weekend. Oh. yes. There's one thing you should keep in mind while rac· ing from event to event. You have an hour less ln which to 1pectate or partlcJpate thl1 weekend. Daylight Savings Time beciM at 2 a .m. Sunday.. Here's the rundown on weekend happenings: -The Ensenada yacht race beg'lns at noon Saturday, with a record 689 boats scheduled t.o make the l~mile international run. THE BEST spectator seats are on the bluffs in Corona del Mar for this colorful event, but eet there early. Boats will start at IO minute Intervals from the noon hour. -The Gordon Bennett Balloon Ra\e, pitting world· class aeronauts and their col- orful balloons, gets under way Saturday at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valtey. At least 12 aeronauts will lift off Saturday, seeking the trophy for longest distance traveled from the starting point before settling to earth. Admission is $5 for adults. Do building's doors confuse motorists? You couldn't blame Anaheim warehouseman John J Mapes 1f he doesn't pause long in the lob by of his apartment complex anymore It was almost a year ago that Mapes was talking to a fnend at the Club Continental apartments on Ma llul Drive when a car smashed through the glass front doors and hit him Mapes, 51, got a shower or glass and assorted bruises. but he wasn't hurt serious ly. said his lawyer, Thomas Weaver of San ta Ana. Nevertheless. Mapes filed suit this week against the apartment house and driver Jacqueline Gilbertson seeking payment for about $1 ,400 in medical bills and lost wages. He claims m the suit that the apartment complex is poorly de signed and drivers are apt to think that an1 approach lo the front doors is J'eally a contlnua- tion of the street. "It looks like the street keeps go ing." s aid We aH:r ·or course. it doesn 't but sht' did .. Ms . Gilbe rtso n . 3 1. o f Anaheim. was arrested at lhl· scene on suspicion of drunken driving on pnvate property She didn 't have au t omo bile• 1n surance. Weaver s aid Marine jet test,s slated A Marine tactica l r e con naissance squadron will be con· ducting training flights at the El Toro air station from April 27 to May 14, causing increased jet noise for people who live near the military facility. a Marine spokesman said. Daytime flights will be from l to 3 :30 p.m. Night flighu will be rrom 7 to 10 p.m. on April 28 and 29 and May 1, 6, 8 and 13. If you've put aside your decorating dreams fOf' a lovelier living room until you find a real value ... here's the answer to thoM dreamt. alt the finer quality features usually found In eofu regularly selling fOf' $800.00 to $900.00 ... now only •599.001 s2.so for children and gal.et •n at 7 a.m. both days. -THE LOS Angel~s Times/Toyota Grand Prb of · durance Is also a two-day aff r this year, with 120 vlnta1e r · lng machines duelln1 in tile Warner Hodgdon HJstoric Qar Race Saturday at 1 :30 p.m. Sunday action be,ins at ,10 a.m . with the 75-mlle ChampiOn Spark Plug c ha llenge for racing sedans, followed by the Toyota Father/son race at 11 a m. and the six-hour enduro at noon. Races take place at Riverside International R aceway b6\h days, and gates open at 7 a .m. Nearly 9,000 walkers aod Joggers are expected to t~e part in activities at the March;of Dimes Super Wa lk SundlY be ginning at 9 a m at tJie Orange Count y H a r b ~r M unic1pal Court, 4601 J ambofllee Road. Newport Beach THE ORANGE County Dimes chapter expects to raise more than $300.000 lh1s year, with runs and walks ranging from one to 20 miles The U S. Water Polo team competes against Bulgaria at 8 30 p m Saturday at Cal StJlc Long Beach. and against the OS SR Sunday. also at 8 30 pm UC Irvi ne w1 II be host t9 <. \a r 1c t v o f :.i c·t1\1t1 es thi s weekl·n·d. 1nl'lud1ng lecture:;. camplll> tours. a ml'd1eval fah· mus1<' l oot rac·es. a carnival food <.ind ~aml' booths IT'S ALL pa rt of Celebr ... ll' l'CI s Open llouSl'. under "ay ..,inc:e Tues<fa} on thl' In .1.rw cam pus A var1t•t) of free medic;il l est!. and he alth 1nformati.on booths will bl' offered at three Orange Coas t locations this "ct•kend during the Fourth An - nual Health Fair Expo , The American R ed Cross sponsored event will take pl~e at the !:ieadiff Vi llage Shopp,u:ig Center in Huntington Beacp: Laguna H ills Mall. LaguJJa Hills , and the South Coi~t Med1<•al C e nte r 1n So~th Laguna In Huntington Beach. the health fair will run from 10 a~­ to 4 pm Friday, and from )O a m to 5 p m Saturdav In Lag una Hills tests "ill t~<' place from noon to 4 p m Sun day and 10 a.m lo 4 p.m Man· day South Laguna act1vit~s lake place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.#J Sunday tlHIPt>I Valley. R1edl119S Ill the 901 were exP9(Md O'Wr ,,. Souttiwnlern 119,.n• #WI In the IOt o,..r the Gulf Coa1t end .-m of ..._,.Ml•. Arlaone end c.111om1a. tonl9fl I Ill the Jot. Mountelftt can ••P•" ou1ty nor11'9Hterly •Inch IS to 2S mptl et time• locMry. Owrl\lgllt loWt 4) to ,,, Hight t--, Md l'rldly .. to 12. " 11 111••••1i~a '° '° .. 10 NOr1"9rft -..r1I wlll NW hf91\I f2 IO t2 lllrcM.1111 l'rldel', -.. to J6. Soutllern deMrtl CM 1111*1 Melle t2 to 100 t""°"91' ,.rldll'f, lowt SS to U . Hor1herl\ Mel C.ntral CalllOfllle wlll l>t ,,_Uy fair 8lld warm llW9'1911 toflltht .... ..,. ,_..,..... "'"" and maml119 , .. or to• c;te11CJ1. Cleull1 lw~ IN---... latotMltlftC'llld •l1fl•c"41M• Of relft •tar IOIMI • Santa lllo,a. ~--Tr ...... "ATIOff NI La .. 17 ,. a ,. 12 •• '° IO '° SJ )4 ., .., ., " '* '2 70 ,. 12 .. II 1' S2 ., J7 .. 70 .. t4 " ,. ,, .. ,, 11 ., ., w . ., ta • f2 " '2 ,, S2 IA .... .. . , 7S • 71 • '2 ,, 71 .. IS •1 .. . n .. 70 ... a• .. . . .. 11 ., :: : .. " ..... .. ,. .. . :: : . ., " " •• J1 •• . ,. " . n • .. . .. . n• .. . " .. 80" sofas in choice of styles and covers in a \\1de selection of colors, 2 weeks -only. 5 .... - NATION Gun law wouldn't have prevented shooting, pre'siaent declares . ............. FIGHTS PAMPHLET -Phyllis Schlafly, militant oppo- nent of Equal Rights Amendment, displays at Senate com- mittee heartng in Washington. D.C. a booklet on women in combat which she calls sexual discrimination. WASHINGTON (AP> -J>Ntl· dent Reqan Hy• be'• •Ull 1\11· lntn1 paln from bl• cumbot wound March 30, and while the ept1ode seems unreal to tbia day, he wonders. too, why he wasn't attacked "27 Umea before." In an lntervtew Wednesday, bl• flnt wtth reporters slnce the assassination attempt outside a Wa1blngtoo hotel, Rea1an d.ll· closed that hi• first tbou1ht when be heard the 1unllre wu "to take a look" around. But the nearest Secret Service agent, he noted "had a different Idea." When he flnaily realized he had ~n wounded. he said, ll was "the most paralyzing pain, as i( someone bit me with a hammer." THAT SENSATION did not OC· cur until he was in his Umousine and speeding away Crom the scene, the president said "It still seems unreal, .. he said Reagan said he continued to suffer from what doctors told him was "one of the longest· enduring discomforts" because Oil firm's profits dip Higher production, lower sales· blamed by Mobil NEW YORK (AP> -With Americans buying less oil and worldwide production far higher than de mand. the profits of one m ajor oil company ha ve declined, and that may be the beginning of a trend. analysts say Mobil Corp .. the second larges t oi l compa n y·, has become the first to report its earnings to r the 11rst three months of 1981 They were down 24.3 percent lo $640 million. or SJ 01 a share. from $846 million, or SJ 98 a share. in the same pe riod of 1980 Analyst s expect most o il companies to report lower earn 1ngs for the quarter, reflecting both the worldwide glut or 011 and the fact last year was a very profitable one for the oil com pan1es 011 onces are up substantially fro m iast year. largely due to in· creases in prices charged by oi l exporting countries That has boosted profits made by oil com· panies on exploration and pro· duction. because they too can sell crude oil at the high prices But lower demand has led. to sharply reduced profits -and losses in some cases on refin · ing and marketing operations Mobil said that decline more than offset the increase in ex· ploration and production opera· tions Worldwide production of oil is now about 2 million barrels a day above use, leading to in c reased stockpiles and more com petition Mobil said that its .;eyenues m the quarter rose to $17 billion fro m $15 billion, but that its wo rldwide sales of 011 products fell 5 percent to 2.29 milbon bar rels a day. Most of that drop came in the United States, whe re sales were down 11 per· cent lo 764,000 barrels a day. Eag les fail to r e produce MILLVILLE. NJ <API - New Jersey's last pair of bald eagles has failed to produce of· fspring for the fifth year in a row and state offi cials say they now suspect the two eagles will never reproduce. Naturalis ts had hoped the state's last nesting bald eagles. an endangered species. would fin a lly produce youn g this spr · ing. Officials say they may replace the eagles' eggs next year with chicks born in captivity. GOING OUT BUSINESS SALE! OUR LOSS-YOUR GAIN! MO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED ! SELLING TO THE BARE WALLS! Once In A Lifetime Opp ortunity! Some Items Below Cost! NEW & USED PIANOS & ORGANS Choose From Kawai, Kimball, Hammond, Wurlitzer, Currier, Thomas-Vox. MEW HAWAI GRANDS 40111J PRICES SLASHED! MEW SPINETS FIOM 5799" of~· type of lnjU17. ·•n ctoean•t 10 away, .. he 1ald. ·'There ta that palrt." Weuin1 a blue-tray •ult, ~tan walked with a 1teactY alihou,b sU,tiUy 1Ulf tall u he entered the K•p Roorp lD the Whlte Rouse for the 19-mlnute interview. Hla cheeks were rud· dy and bis voice showed no ef· feet of the 1un1 injury he re· celved. In response to a quick question about how he was doing, be declared: "I'm feeling fine." But later be spoke of the continu· ing pain and said he was not ready ••to hurdle any tables for awhile." Nonethele11, he sald his recovery ·'is astonishing to me" and that his soreness was diminishing. THE CHIEF executive said that in watching televised re· views of his first 100 days in of- fice -the 100th day will not occur until next week -he aaw pie· tures of himself milling in crowds and wondered why the shooting had not happened "'n limes before." When he once again leaves lbe White House for public events. "I have a hunch I'll be more alert." he said. H e said that a s h e re - cuperates. he hopes his assailant will "get well. too." John W Hinckley Jr .. a 25-year-old drift· er from Colorado, was accused in the shooting, in which press secretary James S. Brady, a Secret Service agent and a Washington policeman also were hit. Brady Is the only one who remains hospitalized. He was struck in the brain. ASKED WHETHER he would keep Brady's job open. the presi dent said, "Oh, you bet." He said Brady's recovery was "a daily prayer." Asked bow he felt about bis as· sailant, the president said: "The feeling 15, indeed I pray, that he can find an answer to his problem. He seems to be a very disturbed young man." "l hope he'll get well. loo," Reagan said of his alleged at· tacker. adding that Hinckley 's family "must be devastated by this." Asked what he would tell the young man's parents. the presi- dent said, '"I'd tell them I un- derstand and hope for a llood outcome there, lo thelr p~ tem.• R•8'an aa1d M remal.DI op. posed to tun control, but ~u not beln' "cloled-minded and 1tub- bom ' about lt. "I don't know of any place wbere ft ii not a1aln.lt the law to carry a concealed weapon," but that did not atop. ht• aaaallant. the president said. "The man wu carryina a con· cealed weapon. I don't see th.It addlna anot1'er law" wblcb would be unenforceable "la 10· int to make a difference," be said. Reaaan did not say when be expected to return to the Oval Office but he said that wlth Con'reu ln recess bh schedule, now that be haa returned to the White House, bu hardly bees> alt•red by the 1hootini. "Adually, I don't think I'd be dotn1 anythln1 different," he said. H E SAID H£ believed he wu "far ahead'' of hla recuperative pace when he loat 17 pound.a ln a bout with pneumonia M years aao. Reacan said that worklna ln bll quarters was convenient becau.e ln making telephone ca11J to memben of Confretl he can set about. bla bUJlnest "without botberln1 to set dr•11ed." Asked when he expected to 1et back up oo a hone, he said, "I think that will come along pretty soon." Ailing tot found after abduction· DALLAS (AP> -His di5ap· pearance has not been explained but Rafael Delgado's return lo a hospital was an occasion for re· jolclng to his doctors.. his family and the police. ·'I was so happy.·' said the baby's mother, Mary Delgado, 20. "It's just tremendous," said Dr. Heinz Eichenwald, chief of staff at the Children's Medical Center. The month-old child, who Sul· fers from seizures that result from a brain infection, was ab· ducted from his hospital bed Tuesday morning, 10 minutes after a nurse had checked his crib. He was missing most of the day. and police and doctors ls· sued warnings that 24 hours without medication could kill the infant. They emphasized that the seizures would appear to be merely drowsiness but that anyone lryjng to feed him during those convulsions could kill him because he might inhale the milk. Finally an anonymous tipster told police there was an aban· doned child inside a soft drink crate behind a store eight miles from the hospital. Police spokesman Bob Shaw said the offi cers who retrieved the baby Tuesday evening "don't think he had been there very long." The infant was taken back to the hospital where pediatrician Dr. Ron Perkin ex~mined him. verified his identity and re· turned him to the intensive care unit .. The baby is in good shape, .. Eichenwald said. and "a great load has been lifted" with his re· turn. TV channel spurs suit PITTSBURGH CAPI -The American Civil Liberties Union is suing the city in an effort to kill a new full -{ime cable television channel given to a re· ligious group. The Pittsburgh chapter of the ACLU said in court papers filed Tuesday that a cit y contract with Warner Cable Corp. is un· constitutional because it violates the separation of church and state. The contract grants Christian Associates of Southwestern Pen· nsylvania a channel and more than $60.000 for equipment to produce local religion·oriented programming Notice to Telephone Customers WEARE PROPOSING CHANGES IN THE RATES FOR The American Thlephone and Thie· graph Company, consistent with action by the Federal C'.ommunications Commission (FCC). has filed a new schedule of rates which increases charges for all Long Dis- tance calls made out-0f-state within the C.ontinental U.S., and for all calls between the U.S. and Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and for certain calls between the U.S. Mainland and Hawaii and Alaska. Rates for the foUowinr lntentat.e Ser- vicet will be increued by the eame percentage: • All lnt.entate Long Dietance Calls -Within the Continental U.S. -Between the U.S. and Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virsin Islande • Most Privat.e Une Service• • Facilities for Other Common Carrien ~ IJa.Ol'lct ~ Riies Examples F\t Ritt SlbcOllll QOllCOIO v.dly &wing • •• ~ ~on'° Ollclgo PrtMnC"" 53t 34C 211 NlwAllt 81• 3111 24' Nlw ~'°Loi~ PlllClnt ""' 51C 37• 22C .... ,. • 42' • SERVICES. The new schedule provides for a uni· form increase of 16 percent for most inter· state services in accordance with the FCC decision authorizing a 12. 75 percent rate of return. AT&T has requested permission to implement the new schedule five days after the effective date of the FCC's elect· sion. This increase is needed because of higher costs resulting from inflation and is only the second general rate increase in the last five years. • Interstate Wide Area Tulecommunica- tione Service (WATS) -Within the Continental U.S. -Between the U.S. and Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Island.9 • All VHF Maritime, Coutal Harbor, High Speed 'lrain, and Air-Ground Service&. In certain C88el rat.ea for Lona Dis- tance Service and WATS between the U.S. Mainland an~ Hawaii and Aluka will also be lncreUed. . " iUr1tatl ~-Asslslld Tint-Miootl Rites ~ $titian-to-Station At All Tinn f'Wson.CIH'wlon NAllTlmll Wlllf*lgton to~ """"rife 1115 Q MlwAltt $2.SO 13.15 .... '*1' tDLM Me* Plteenttlll 1135 SUS ....... 12.75 M.31 • ID LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Superior Co urt jury bas awarded the big&est settlement r!t -nearly $2.3 million -to . w e family of a Modesto man killed in a 1979 DC-10 crash in Chicago. The latest judgment brinp to more than $8.3 milllon the total settlements reached in seven s uits during the past month in the nation's worst air disaster. The May 25, 1979 crash. which occ~red after an engine fell off Bus drivers learn roles them by verdicts and one by out· of -court agl'ffment -unW all cases were resolved to avoid A TTOllNEY BRUCE Walkup publicity that could prejudice of San Francisco, who handled jurors. slxofthesults,saidajury voted An out·of·co urt settle· 11·1 T\Jesda_y to award $2.287 m ent for $1.3S million wu milUon to the family of la-year · reached Monday on behalf of the old Jack Donahue, a te0.000-a· wife and two sons of 36·year-old year mana1er at GallO Wlne Co. James Pint of Newport B~acb, an ln Modesto. Insurance annuity salesman who The s uit c laimed loss of nettedbetweenS40.000and$50.000 financial support, love and af. a year. Walkup said. fection on behalf of DQnahuf s wife, Yvonne. 35, and his two Last week, a jury awarded c h i ldre n , Ca rrie, 9, and $1 ,229,300 to the wlfe and three Danielle, 14. sons of Richard Keely, Sl, of San Among witnesses in the case Francisco, a $SO.OOO ·a ·year was Joseph Gallo, vice preJident nuclear engineer with liechtel of the world 's lar gest Corp. winemaker, who testified that Orange Coast DAILY PfLDT/Thul"lday, Aprll 23, 1881 ... ~ THREE-WAY TRAFFIC -It' was two-way traffic on this San Pedro street until Jerry Clari( Oeft) and John Collver came ~long with a third directioo -down. They were on a training flight out of Long Beach when their engine failed, forcing a landing. Variable rate backed SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Donahue was a highly valued ex· IN THI; FIV E cases settled by Role playing a nd othe r con-ecutive with abrlghtfuture jur y. the awards totaled $1.8 SACRAMENTO <AP > A AB6SO by Assemblyman Tom sciousness raising techniques million more than the plaintiffs homeowner could be paying 73 Bane. D-Van Nuys, goes lo the perhaps 12 to 14 percent over the entire 30-year hteot a toan are being 4sed to teach transit LISTED AS defendants were had been offered in out·of-court percent interest on his mortgage Ways and Means Committee drivers he~ how to cope with tbe McDonnell Douglas Corp.. settlements. Walkup said. after JO years and owe more It is the latest attempt by sav· Savings <1nd loans. ~ h1ch han- dle most of the mortgages in the Sl<1te, say they can no lon ger oC- f e r such loans because they mus t obtain money al high ralet ltke 18 percent while holding long-term mortgages that are being paid batk at 7 percent or 9 percent. drunks. lost tourists, smoking maker of the jetliner, a nd In a case handled by attorney tha n he did at the start. under a ings and loan associations to ob· passengers&ndfreeloaders. AmericanAirlines. Larry R. Feldman, a Superior bill approved by an Assembly tain permission t o adJust Municipal Railway ofCicials The case was the last of six Court Jury on April 7 awarded committee mortgageinte restrates brought in a M adn County handled by Walkup to be settled. $1.8 million to Sharon Lent. 40, The 11 -0 vote of lhe Finance. hum an re I at 1 o n s firm to the lawyer said Tuesday. He ex· of Wood I and Hills, whose Insurance .and Commerce Com· Most mortgages currently administer the training with plained he had withheld word of hus band and two sons died in the mil.tee followed only the briefest have fixed interest r ates Thal hopesofincreasing efficiency. the other settlements -Cour of crash. discussion Tuesday The ball. means a homeowner pays ~~~~~----';......_~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----'~--~~~- ,,. \~·, \ ~\. ,.,., Dllal lww, wla•llllc ........_ .... 46 I •ct•are l•cll coollf•t ••rf,ece, 40,000 ITU. 19240 1459value SFA5 Starewide Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions and access ones: Fashion Jewelry Swiss Watches Cultured Pearls • Belts Scarves • Handbags • Blouses • Designer and Better Sportswear Separates • Active Sportswear Sportshirts • Rainwear • Sportdresses •Designer Dresses ening Apparel • Suits Better Dresses • Robes Sleepwear and Loungewear Blouse Collections Women 's Shoes Fashions for Juniors ifj Right On! Maternity Collections From 'SFAbulous and 'S FA ntastic: Rainwear, Suits, Blazers, Sportswear, Dresses The Men's Store: 25% to 40% off original prices on Men's Collection Sportswea~ University Place and Men's Furnishings \ .. • ' .. ., •, :-I . : ~ .. •, :· .. .. .. :· :· ':. •, ~ =· " . ~ .. -: • I " I -..,_ • Qr:ange COut OAll. Y PICOT/Thui'ada~: Aprll 23, 1981 Excessive secrecx can create concern, . AtthesameUmelrvineMayor Art Anthony was being arrested on 11\l!plcion of assault with a deadly weapon on April 11, police were in· vesti1ating a murder-suicide. in the Woodbridge area of the city. The arrest and the murder· suicide had one &hiring similarity: The Irvine Police Department keptquieton both incidents. In the Anthony case, the tight- lipped attitude of the police depart· ment and the City Manager's of· f ice led to a situation in which some fellow City Council members were kept in the dark until three days after he allegedly assaulted his wife. Four days after the alleged in· cident in which Mrs. Anthony suf· fered a superficial gunshot wound, the police department finally notified the public by releasing a three-sentence written statement. In. the murder-s uicide case, police for 48 hours would say only that a mother and son were found shot to death, Officers wouldn't say whether it appeared to be a m \U"der·suiclde or whether they thought the killer was roaD1ing the streets .• By not referring to the prob· ability of a murder·suiclde, the extreme likelihood of which was known from the start, the police department unnecessarily evoked community fear of an at-large murderer. Granted, the Irvine Police Department doesn 't h ave metropolitan sophistication in dealing with major cases. But this is no excuse for not letting the public know what's happen- ing when these cases do occur. It's not surprising that ques- tions have arisen in the communi- ty about the police department's handling. A confident, effective police department needn't fear com- munication with the public. Long wait will pay A $165 million hotel and res- ide n li a l project overlookin g Dana Harbor has received re· gional Coastal Commission ap- p roval. more than a decade after it was first proposed. The Smyth Bros. Construction Co. intends to creat e two hotels, 112 condominiums, two restaurants, and 46 single family homes on a 76·acre parcel between Coast Highway and Del Obispo Street. The company has battled for 13 years for project approval, and has had the backing of the com- munity. the county, and the re- gional Coastal Commission on three previous occasions. The latest proposal. endorsed by the regional panel last week, in- cludes 23 acres of open space. A 6.5 acre park area will be de- signed anci developed by the com- pany whi<:h surpasses the project's parks requirement. In addition, the company is currently negotiating a deal with the county for purchase of another 16 acres on the property for open space. ff accepted, the company would design and develop the larger parcel, and put up the money to maintain it, leavinf it up to the county to make a one-time purchase. And while massive grading is proposed for the t\lufflop project, the majority is going to fill in a canyon in order to provide for the extension or Del Prado and the realignment of Street of the Golden Lantern. Such a project is needed in Dana Point. and will provide public visiting areas overlooking the marina, as well as parks and restaurants. Woperative effort A commendable example of cooper ation involving a city, a school district and a private youth organization soon will pro- duce a neighborhood gymnasium adjacent to Bushard School in Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley School Dis· trict trustees have approved a 25-year lease for the project, pro- viding land next to the school as the gymnasium site. The 5,400-square-foot gym itself Will be built under the sup'ervision of the city of Hunt- ington Beach, which has pro- vided some $250,000 in construc- tion funds out of federal Housing and Community Development money given to the city. Construction is expected to begin in late June, with comple- tion due in October. • Once built, the gym will be managed by the Boys' Club of Huntington Beach, which already leases a portion of Bushard School for its programs. Under the lease terms, the gym will be available for school · district activities, Boys' Club pro- grams and for general public use. The Boys· Club already has been credited with he lping to re- duce vandalism in the Bushard community. The new gym should allow the organization to provide even more recreational activities for area youngsters. .. Al a time when finances are tight and each school district, city and youth group is guarding its own best interests, it is refreshing to see the three work· together on a project that will benefit the entire community. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Inv it· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd/ Pick her color Every woman has a secret color that does something special for her looks, she thinks. Whether it's the tint itself or just the feeling of con- fidence it gives her doesn't matter. It works when she wears it. Item No. 833C in our Love and War man's file is a recommendation to you, the man eager to please in matters romantic.· Find out what your girlfriend's secret color is, and match it with s mall girts. Scarves. Flowers. Costume Jewelry. If she tells you her fav o rite color is green . as currency, you know s he's onto you, and you can put this Item back into the me. In a discussion of nuclear bombs, Bertrand Russell said, "We have found that Ule men who know most are the most gloomy.'· Thia item ls in our Love and War man's file, sur· pri1inaly. It l!J precisely the con· cluslon of the matrtmonial re· 1earcben after an extensive study of husband.a and wives who do and do not underatand each other. Counselors 1enerally a1ree that coupl• need to be able to talk to ORANGE COAST Daly Pilat each other. But some deny that thorough understanding is all that dandy. In many cases. they say, it's better not to know. Q. Do TV anchormen like Walter Cronkite. John Cha ncellor and Frank Reynolds get to say anything they want to on their nightly news shows? A. At least once, yes. Cronkite was authorized about seven minutes of his own air time, Chancellor four maybe five, and Reynolds three to four. They're so disciplined In ex· perience you can't always guess whether their editorial jud1meot.a are personal or corporate. Oddballa cou ldn't l ast long with such authority. Most prleona ban not just hair tonic that contain alcohol, but hair oU of any kind, I'm told. Q. Why are hemlock an4 1pnace said to be more etrectlve than other trees ln screenin1 off hlcbway notJe? A. Their foliage la a paced ln such a manner so aa beat to baffle ~ sound wave lenitm. Reteal'clMn aay that. ""-,-- Land policy hears watching W ASHJNGTON The Sierra Club is Crowell is apparently ready to let the suing the federal government in an at· companies cut down on public lands. tempt to prevent mining in a wilderness Crowell is Reagan's nominee as as- area in northwest Montana. The sistant secretary of agriculture for plaintiffs, according to papers riled in natural resources and environment, the U.S . District Court here, include 12 un· official in charge of the U.S. Ft>rest named grizzly bears. Service. ~unds like more damned snail-darter THE FOREST SER VICE now allows foolishness to me. But then so do a lot of . . things being said these days around p~1~ate compa"!e~ to lake between 10 Washington by the new guardians of our , b1lhon and L2 b1lhon board·feet a year natural resources. the appointees of Ronald Reagan The same Mr. Reagan who once said if you've seen one redwood tree you've seen 'em all --~ TAKE JAMES WATT, the new RICHARD RIEVES c'i • secretary of the interior He spoke last __ month to an enthusiastic conference of from public lands and has projected the companies that run concessions in that in 5-0 years perhaps 16 billion national parks The subJect, at that board.feet could be reasonably taken moment. was horse trails, but out per year. During his confirmation Secretary Watt expanded the discussion hearings, Crowell said he thought 35 to include his own opinion of the mis· billion board.feel could be taken out take God made in putting together the each year great outdoors. . . There is going to be a tremendous "You f~lks will quickly understand battle over the national parks and other why 1 bnng so much controversy and . public lands during the Reagan years. flak," W~tt ~aid. "I doJ?:t like to paddle ' These are very tough, development- and I don t hke to walk. oriented people who have spent years Well. Mr Secretary. we could build a talking up the "Sagebrush Rebellion" freeway through Yosemite National the Western movement to return Park. It would make it more convenient millions of square miles in federal lands for the lumber company trucks to state control But there has always Whal trucks? The ones they are going been a dark side to that revolt · It's the to need to ~et out a ll the trees that John oil companies. the mining companies. the lumber companies and the de- velopers who want the use of that land. Reagan has always sided with the developers or. depending on your viewpoint, the exploiters against responsible conservationis ts or. again depending on your viewpoint. crazed environmentalists. Now the administration and its friends in Congress, particularly Senators Jesse Helms. chairman of the Agriculture Committee, and James McClure. chairman of the Energy Committee. are pushing ahead on all fronts to open public lands, waters and parks to Saws and drills and trucks · MAYBE SOME OF that is right and necessary But how can we tell whether Reagan and his merry men are sensibly opening public lands to reasonable ex· ploration and development. or are JUSI turning millions and millions of acres over to greedy environmental rapists., Well. one way is to pay attention to or ganizations like the Sierra Club and the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund. "We won't s top them," said Tim Mahoney, the club's Washtngton repre$entative. "But we will be there. and if we think that they are overstep· ping the law, we'll see them in court." I decided not lo laugh about the grizzlies in Montana and I sent another $25 to the Sierra Club Watch those guys for me. will you? Feds already have airport authority To the l!.:d1tor: Western Airlines' recent s tatements about its loss or two flights per day from John Wayne Airport and its will- ingness to fight the county over the is· s ue has important implications for citizens living under the flight path of the airport. Western officials charged that the county Board of Supervisors had made "anti-competitive efforts over the years to keep Western out of. Orange County" and that the county's plans "would compound ... dis- crimination" against Western. 'The aware individual will recogniie that Western officials are using precise- ly the language found in the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, which re· quires that all recipients of federal (AOAP) funds must foster competition among the airlines and discourage dis· crimination against any firm. Such competition was thought by federal legislators to benefit the traveling public. SINCE THE John Wayne Airport re· celved ADAP funds through the auspices of Mr. Robert Badham as late as the fall of 1980, of course, Westem's present posturing makes sense because their exclusion from the airport is ii· legal. Past federal expenditures at the airport effectively remove any county control over it in such matters. County officials have acknowledged that the FAA has regulatory authority in these areas of dispute. Therefore, any ex· panaion ol the airport, regardless of wbo P"11 for it, will be ruinous for Newport. Beach. Tustin, Santa Ana and Costa Mesa because the federal gov· emment already bas sufficient aulhori· ty at the airport. to enforce usage cor· respondin1 to airport. size. HENRY BRACTON To the F.ditor: J Just had to dash down to 18th and Superior bl Costa Me11 to Me what It was that All RouthH bad created. I waa P1eued and au.rprtaed by what J touncf and for thole who are not sure or haven't 1een the work'" rest usu.red, It lt artt Do 1.ounett a favor and'" ll. lf you haven l already. Standing under "Volcano" la 1 poaltlvely dluylnc experience, any 1culpture tbat h11 such a 1tron1 pbyalcal etted ca It.I riewen lbould not be lllhtlY diailillMd u a "atnlcture, •• P&ESIDENT aEAGAN bu •UUttt· id that Prt•• oti ... 1hoWd be u.e ... that ~ tbt artl. ,,.. '*' Of Cella .._. can Ito mtath to...,,...~ 9"' bY .. llatlftl ~ ... 'ten ~· I lmqtnt the City ~ ea. suiting his rule book and simply decid· ing that these things have got lo go. What I wish he would do is g.o see the MAILBOX work and then consult his rule book and see if he can find a way of making these works exempt from whatever laws they may be in violation of. TONY POWELL uvic nmarormd To the Editor: Recently we entered escrow to buy 2.65 acres of land from Mr. Adams located at San Juan Hill Creek Road and the Santa Ana Freeway in San J uan Capistrano. He had completed all necessary hearings and had altered the master plan to allow an office building on his site though the underlying zoning was recreational. We then began. our trip through the city bureaucracy. We were informed by {h e stafr that what seemed like permission to build a professional office building on the site was just an Illusion. ·The staff would relentlessly recommend against It and our investigation within the city indicated that there wasn't a ghost of a chance. We couldn't believe it but the preponderance of evidence final· ly convinced us tliat the long, tedious, and expensive path that would have had to be followed with ~o unlikely a chance to succeed just wasn't viable. We witlldrew the application and the city lost a first clus . office condominium bulldinl that could have provided l~al bualnessmeo a tbance to become their own landlord. WE '11EN1 began the proce11 of l.P· plyln1 to build a recreational coln- operat.ed public racquetball factUty on the land -lhla wa1 completely within the ICllliq. But more bureaucratic ob- stacles !1!! ahead. Ftrat a meeUnt wtth the 1Kllll to view • pnllmtnary tit• plan. 'Ibil would be followed by a more fln11bed 1lte plan. Then a wait for a meetiq tritb an arcblteetural com.· mlttee "'10 had ' p_reeonceived pre1- udlces u to wt.at t.My liked. W• own lt but "&hey" tell ua IM:nJ to deslsn It, paJnt ' . it, landscape it, etc .. etc. This whole process would take about six months before we could possibly ob· lain a building permit. We created a de· sign for two buildings lo contain 42 rac· quetball courts; 30 to be built at this time allowing an added 12 for future de· mend. One look by the city and the bureaucracy had more demands. Next we were told that of 2.65 acres we could only use 1.07 acres for our building, parking. driveways and sidewalks : 1.58 acres would be open. Ye Gods ! This is already a public recreation center. Such ridiculous demands and time made the project totally unfeasible. In fact the city is committing confiscation of Mr. Adams· land without any payment to him E .O. RODEFFER Disaster is now TotheEditor: The reaction of SPON against the ex- tension of University Drive is certainly typical. They seem to be against any change and to believe worms and snails are more important than people. Js there anything they would approve that 99 percent of our residents want? The Upper Newport Bay is NOW a dis· aster, and every winter the mud comial under the Bay Bridge makes thewaterlbe color of the Mississippi River. The dls· aster area annually moves south. ALSO, every resident who usea the Pacific Coast Highway from MacArthur to the Arches should get behind the ex· tension. All tr'1fic studies incUcate com· pleUng tJr\lveralty Drive would eiue this problem and will 1Wl be needed even with the new bridge aJ\d the event.ualextenalon of the Corona del Mar. Freeway, which ls probably years away. The poelUon of SPON and th• ~al Commission ls arbitrary and UJoCtcaJ. I Let's support. tbe EIR lf that la what we I need to tel 1ome action. IRVIN C. CHAPMAN l • •' Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Thursday, April 23. 1981 WASHING TON -LeCltlatlon that woult.r.Tlp the federal covemment col· leet ona in bad debts ha p'-tt the Reapn administration in a Catcb·22 a!twatlon. waa supposed to appear earlier thlt month, but ca-.ted at the lut minute, to lh• dlama,y of t~e 1•1l•laUon'1 backen, Sem. CbarMI Perey, R·Ill., and Jamee Sasser, D·Ten.n. delinquent debtors to commercial crecltt·ratini bureaus. Thus a borrower who reneted, HY, on a student loan ~uld na • ~d credit ratin1. termined to pu1b the tefis1atlon, which personnel to about 60. The employtet he estimates would bring in $1 billion to involved weN! tranJferred to the over- $2 bUlion ln tho llrat year alone. worked Freedom or Information section. On \be one band, if the White Roule s upports the debt-collection bill vl1oroutly, it faces the certainty that Democrat.a in Congress will demand that the "windfall" collected froCP Uncle Sam's delinquent debtors "ap· plied to progranu that have bad tbelr b'-tdletl s lashed. On Ute other hand, lf the. White House doesn't support the debt-collection bill, it will be in the position of betraying ita own loudly trumpeted determination to cut waste and fraud in government. Democrats will be able to argue that if the administration won't support such an obvious way to reduce the gov- ernment's expenses, it must not be serious about the budget cuta. HOW THE administration will wriggle out of its dilemma may be re- vealed when Budget Director David Stockman is scheduled to testify at a Senate hearing on the bill. Stockman ·n The mooey at atalte Isn't peanut.I. Of more th~ $175 billion la U.S. 1ov· ernmeot loans to lndl•lduata and foreien 1ovemmenta about '25.3 blmon are delinquent. Bllllona of dollars' G -JAC_l_Al_l_lll-11-~~4' worth of such debt.a have been written off as "uncolleclable" in recent years. A study by the Office of Mana1ement and Budget, 1pelling out the dismal debt situation, was suppressed. The Percy-Sasser legislation, however, i• designed to give the government tools to make its collection efforts more pro- ductive. One provision of the bill would allow the government to report the names or GOURMET MARKET . ANOTBSa PBOVISION would permit the 1bvemment to pm11hee up to ball the wa1• ol federal employffa wbo fell terloUlly behind in mortca,e, education or other govemme~t Joan payments. According to Department of Education fl1urea, there are 18,000 federal employe~ who have defaulted on their student loaAa; the Veterans Administration reported that thousands of federal workers are also delinquent on VA loans. Indeed, a Capitol Hill source told my associate Lucelle Lagnado that top gov· ~mment officials are on Uncle Sam's deadbeat lilt. Not only has the gov- em ment been handcuffed in its efforts to coll~ the bad debts, but the delln· quent debtors ' careers in the bureaucracy have not suffered a bit. -· The White House has advised its budget experts to downplay the debt collection issue , but Per cy is de· DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD FRESH FUet of Seabass ............ 2.98 lb. MORNING FRESH PRODUCE · FRESH l'ilet of Sole ............... .4.19 lb. Fresh Salmon Available Soon We also have a large selection of man) other St'a food delicacies of vour choice MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and top choice beef aged al least 30 days to lht.' peak of i;erlectton F r esh Zacky Farms Stuffed Turkey Breasts. Oven ready or plain . . . . . . 1.98 lb. Fresh Lean Ground Beef 1ground hourh 1t.49 lb. Genuine American Fresh Spring Legs of Lamb ...................... 2.49 lb. All meat 1tt'mS purchased at Oelane' ·s are Freezer Wrapµed and propcrh markt.>d for ) our ea!>\ freewr 1dent1f1cat1on Local Ranch Fresh Spinach .................... 4 bacb. for 1.00 Solid Green Cabbage ................ lOe lb. S weet Navel Eating Oranges 3..fbs. for 1.00 Carrots '1 lb pk((. 1 .................. 25C ea. So. American Bananas ...... 4 lbs. for 1.00 For your comµlctl' catering servi~c . Crom a complt'te sit do"n dinner party to party trays dell\ en•d to your home For 1nformatton call Uel ant'\'·~ CATERING Department. ask for Tom ~arttn DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delanf'y's Private Label Cbampa«ae <750 mil t II EN D ING• THE CLOAK - CounterlntelllJeoce ls an important part of the •i>y·versu1.1py 1ame between the United States and the So•· let Union. But un-der t.be Ford and Carter admlnlstration1, thlt vital function .of the CIA and FBI wes •1· lowed to all but wither away. Now President Rea1an ii trying to give counterintellieence a boost its advocates an ia overdue. Indeed, the CIA has long known about a secret con· rerence of top KGB officials in 1959 that set the KGB 's maln mission as penetration of the United States gov· ernment. The ravages suffered by our counterintelligence force over the past few years are outlined in some recent secret CIA documenta. Under J immy Carter . the Justice Department's Office of Internal Securi· ty was cut from about 300 staff FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE 1 50 00 mm please 1 Your order 1s under complete refngeratton from our store to your door ta< our refrigerated trucks. Call 1n the morning and your order "tit be deli' ered to vour home the same afetmoon · 2. 75 ea. or 33.00 ~r case Bolla ·Soavf' !750 m1l 1 3.H ea. Sea grams \'O <One hter 1 '·"ea. Canadian Club 1 One liter 1 '·" u . Scoresby Scotcn 1750 mtl t .. • .. • • • • • • ••• 5.55 ea. Save•100 Tht~ ad effeclt\'e Wed . 4 22 thru Tues. 4 28 DELAllEY'S tOneLl•eri . I .SS ea. W~nte Bros. IA' Blanc De Blanc <750 mill 3.st ea. All ltquor and wine plus tax 1 Store Hours 9·6, Oosed Sunday 2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-5520 95 Only&" Deep! Each • Reg. 149.95 Each Buy now for Incredible savings on this great sounding speaker! Unique enclosure design assures superb musical detail. 1" wide- dispersion tweeter gives crisp, clear highs and the 6'h'' low-frequency driver is coupled to a 8" passive radiator tor deep. well-defined bass to below 60 Hz. Genuine walnut veneer finish. not vinyl or plastic! 27o/.'' high. #40-2033 CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) Recently, however. the director or the FB{'a WuhJngton office lncreaaed by 15 'perceat lbe number or a1ents as- sl1l\e<i to monitor the activities of some 2•0 Soviet bloc officials believed to be involved"' espionage activities. 1 AT THE CIA, the decline of the Office or Security be1an with the firing of coun· terintelllgence chief James An1leton ip December 1974 . Then-C lA Di rector William Colby had decided that Angleton's Byzantine suspicions had crippled the CIA 's operations. Much of the data Angleton had compiled was destroyed , and n~w laws curtailed some of the agency's counte rintelligence ef· forts. The counterspy staff was i:educed drastically. Now, CIA sources say, the Reagan administration intends to reverse the trend. in hopes of putting the kibosh on the KGB's freewheeling espionage acti vit1es in this country. Personal Protection Alann at Less Than Lido Marina Village and Orange Coast Daily Pilot present a unique cycling event you won't WCl1t to miss The ride combines the excitement of a bicycle race with the plea.sure of a _25, 50 and 100 mile tour. And it's your choice. You can compete for times or simply enjoy a ride through the rural areas along the Pacific Coast Hwy. So com e on out to Lido Marina Village, located on Newport Harbor, 'I• block off New-port Boulevard, just South of Pacific Coast Highway on Via U _do_. From t~e San Diego Freeway, take the Newpo~ Freeway <Hwy. 55) south til it turns mto Newport Bouleva rd. Follow to Via Lido and tum left. The ride starts at 7 a .m ., Sunday, May 31st. ENTRY DETAILS . Team entnes will be accepted (minimum of 15 partlclpanlll per team1 but Individuals are af110 encouraged to compete. . I Please fill in all Information on the alta'Ched official entry form . and enclose a check for thf' fut amount including the purchase of any T·Shirts or \'i~rs. Nou: Please make the check payable to Lido Marti)& Villa1e and mall t.o Lido Marina Village. 3420 Vla Oporto. Suite 4. Newport 'Beuch. CA 92663. T-SffiRTS • Ofllclal l:.ldo Marina Village Fun Bicycle Ride T-Shirts are available for pl.ltctlase by mall. at the co!lt of $6.00 each <tax Included!. T·Shlru y,•Ul be ttvallable for pick-up the d-.y of the ride at either tht• atartins line or th• finish ltne. . AWARDS Awards will be presented at UdO Marina vura1e at 4:30 p.m the same day of the race. ---~-~---~-----~~~--~~~---~--~--~-----~~~ Ple11e rru In all information . .Print or type clearly. Detach and mall wtlh check or money order to: Lido Marina Vlllaae. 3420 Vla Oporto. Suite 4. Newport Beach. CA t:!t63. Reg. 29.95 You won't be caught napping with this great buy! Easy-to-read 0 .6" digits show hours/ minutes/month/date. plus AM and PM. 24-hour alarm with snooze control. #63-817 LCD Micro Calculator ii ii Ii ii iii ••••• ... ~ -••••• ••••• . . .... ••••• ---. EC-2e5 by Radio Shack Cut 149s 250/o Reg. 19.95 Convenient 4-key memory lets you store end recall numbers. Percent and square roo\keys. WlthC\ese and long-llfe batteries. #65-672 Half Price*! c~ee\a\ ' i"1T' k 8se· yut<i'' . 7sa *Clalrol'1 1980 Dealer Pr1c. Was $18.6' Battery Included T~e ~ANIC BUTTON sounds a P•.ercing alarm when activated. Carry It with you while walking, shopping. Even hang It on the door for pro- tection while traveling. #49--465 ,11 'i' ,• I •1 .. ·. '•I~ ... ·. . .. ., I 'J .·· ., . '· ,• 'I.I ... I' 2300 HARBOR• COSTA MESA . HARBOR at WILSON "THE CENTER OF THE HARBOR AREA 11 ·wE HAVE STORES TO SERVE YOU Artistry in Y cm Babe's Chill Dogs Cal· Tex. Inc. Cobbler's Bench Col....,ia Savings Crown Book Store Costa Mesa~ SewillCJ Center Crocker Bank Dr. Kleln, Opt01Ml1 ist Edwards TWin Cinemas Enterprise Rent a Car Executive World Travel Gene's Smart Shop Glendale Federal SavlllCJS . Harbor Cleaners H~or Stylish Holiday Health Spa It's A Dilly J.C. Penney Jolly Roger • K & B Sportswecr K.C. •s Hallmark Shop Kirk's Jewelers Miller's Outpost Mon Ami Bridals Naturally Yours Nick's Pina . =tt!M~~· Richard's Beauty CollecJe Security. Pacific Bank Shoe Hut ' Tailor Shop The Key Hut The Male Man Thinker Shop Thrifty Drug Store Wallpapers to Go Windsor Sports Shop Winter Beauty Supply , ::: "i: ~i : I . . • . . • "Don't penic-juat enjoyinl a .._th ol IJll"lnl." ~ HARBOR CRUISE a SUMOAY-..ctt AT THI CAMMmY 714 671-7122 vi LONG TERM T IS YRS. SHORT TERM TO S YRS r *LOANS* S ~ w S VERY COMPETITIVE RATES ~ > O!"J REAL ESTATE 2nd & 3rd TD S a: z ~ !lifr,. (714) 851-1840 DA \·s ..J d ... WF:F.KENOS 759.9553 :-.IGHTS ~ ~ORANGE CO AST EQUITY FUNDS ~ MI N SIO.OOOTO Sl.000,000 SECURED BY REAL & W Change Is On The Horizon AMXIETY CONCENTRATION RB.AXATIOM SELF-IMPIOVEMEHT CHILDREN'S MEEDS HYPNOSIS GOLD, ·~ 964-3553 FOUMTAIM SILVA VALLEY & ASSOCIATES -• A Superb Adventure In Dining I T A LIAN CUI S I N E •Courtesy Boat Slips • Banque/ and Pri vate Party •Fa cilities with Bay View 642-7UO 3131 W•• Coe1t IUPway Newport leacli, c..lllonW CALL LINDA BLUE FORA FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN - INTEREST ONLY. ~.~=:!,r:' t'.I (71 4 78<HS080 e SATURDAY, APRIL 25 -1 to 4 P.M. COMMUNITY CHURCH BY THE BAY 148 E. 22nd St., Coeta Mesa 92627 Telephone: Church -645-7650 or Shirley Leitch -875-3088 •1 500 Donation .... Orange Cout OAf~ Y PtlOTIThu~. April 23, 1981 The admhllatratioa decided to eo ahead with the sale despite opposition from conereaslonal supporters of Israel. Leaden of the J ewlah state say the sale threatens lsrael's security in anyfuturewarwlthArabatates. Remodeling? Mew Cablnehy • Refinishing • RefachlCJ • Profe1._ IOtdlell & .... Detlpen • 1741 WftldfffDr .. M. ........ sli 631-7032 INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT SUPERIOR COURT Of CALIFORNIA, COUNTY Of LOS ANGELES CASE •284340 FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION Te_ ....... _,_,_ HANDMADE ORIENTAL ROOS ,,,.._ ...... -... --...... --•wilt• --.... _ ... _,_ A• -.. lft .,.._ ....... -. A c-twio.e ef A- •lclty •111 M ---~ FOR YOUR CONVE NI ENCE, THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE : SATURDAY, APRIL 25 AT 2 P.M. HOLIDAY INN 25205 LA PAZ RD. LAGUNA HILLS (1-5..A LA "AZ RD.) RUGS MAY BE VIEWED ONE ti<)UR H UOR TO AUCTION '"-'~ INFORMATION: (213) 7"-0029 A.A• A'--L..-...a With MEAL SENSOR tempeqture probe os309•s • Automatic d1g1tal MEALTIMER control • COOKPOWERvariablepowercontrol • 1.3cu.ft. capacity oven • Balanced Wave cooldng system • Defrost oycle • Plus much more ,..,.. ~ Automatic \\nirlpool Dryer • 9 Cycles/Options with 4 Automatic Cycles • HITemp Washing Option • Energy-Saving Air Ory Option • Exclusive ln·The-Ooor Sllverwa,. Baaket • Plus Morel ~ . Automatic \\b1rlpool Washer Model LHI 78()1 6Automatk: WuhCyc:les S•nce then, UJe Sludil ban been •pendlnc freely on arms because ot their huaeollrevenues. Up until now, the Saudi a have bouthl almo1t SSS billi(m worth of arm•. equipment and m.llUary construction from tbe United States. Accordln1 to a rtport S"ttenlly Milt to Conatesa. the Saudi• are expected to buy an addl· tlonal "·' billion tn milltary aear thil • year and another'4 billion next year, Thi• will brina the overall total of Saud{ arma purehasea, mott of them alnce 1973, toabout $43 billlon. The Saudi total dwarfs the more than $20 blUlon that Iran bought from the United States before Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was deposed. Much of the Iranian purcbuea were canceled aftertberevolutionin 1979. These are the main features of the enormous Saudi military development which began in~ Ni~on administra· lion and has continued unabated: -For the Navy, the Saudi• purchased 21 shlpa and coosttucted deep-water pons on the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, ship repair yarU. trainlnl faciUttes. a naval bead- quartetaandanavalacademy. -In addition to the 82 l'-1&1 and the ftve AWACS for the Air Force, 114 F·5 flshter pluea were purchased. The Saudla alao expanded and constructed facllltles at three major air basea. ac-quired a wide array of air combatand- air-to-sround missiles, cluster bombs. laser-guided bombs and other muni- tions. -For the Army, the Saudis convert- ed two light infantry tirieades to a mechanized force equipped with modem U.S. vehicles and weapons. in· eluding M·60 tanks, constructed a Saudi Arabian army infantry center and school and a signal school and sup· ply depots. ff iclcor1 f.arms OF OHIO ~ BEEF STICK OFF per lb. any cut piece .... 4.39 lb. II I qualifies DEAR PAT DUNN: My husband wlll be age 55 on May 13, and we would like to take ad- vantage of the Sl00,000 exclusion on the sale of our home. We sold it April 1, but escrow won't close until June 1. Which date determines the actualsaleofthe bou.se? W.R., Fountain Valley You made it under the wire. Tbe Internal Revenue Service aaya the date oa wlalcla tlte escrow closes determlaes I.be date of aale. I• your case, you couJd be ell1lble. Safe food storage DEAR PAT DUNN: How long can dried food be stored safely? I've had some for more than a year and wonderifit is still edible. J .E.,CoronadelMar In general, dried foods cu be stored In· definitely and stlll be safe as long aa moisture doean't get into them. However, navor ud nutrients are lost as time goes by -and tbe higher the storace temperature the raster tbl• occurs. Non-fat dry milk, forexample, developa an old or "cooked" flavor after about t ill montb.s storage at room temperature. Try to store these foods in the coolest, driest place ln the house. A closet or cupboard on an inside wall ls probably the best location. Shelves close lo the floor are preferred since they are cooler than upper levt-1 shelves. Pet owners aided DEAR PAT DUNN : Soon our animal population will soar as it always does during spring and summer Most or these puppies and kittens will not live out their first year. As an incentive to stop this needless death, United Humanitarians of Orange County wilJ pay for distemper shots for au cats and dogs spayed or neutered by participating veterinarians. We also will pay $5 toward the price of spaying any cat or dog. Female cats from 5112 months old can be spayed and receive a vaccination for as little as $7 .50. Dogs aged 6 months, depending on weight, can be spayed plus receive a vaccina- tion for $15. Dogs and cats can be spayed if in heat and we hope pet owners with pregnant pets will s pay them now and prevent more unwanl· ed litters. Pue to our limited funds. we hope your re- aders whe can afford the regular low·cost prices wi II not t Hke a~v antage of this special or. fer. H.M .. Garden Grove United Humanitarians of Orange County volunteers also can advise readers where to ob· lain low·cost puppy and kitten plans and low· cost vaccination ror all pets. Phone the follow- ing numbers from 10 a.m. lo 4 p.m.: 823-1283, S34·3228, 539· 198S and 894·4016. Investors advised DEAR READERS: When short-term In· teresl rates decline, investors In money· •• ,.. ,... ••1 hii:i.::r.. dll· ~~-r:1... ,.,.._Ttil a;r:ni;·,reepee ........... -... fea&•l'el Mer fNm, or aN lililllar &o, tM JlllOlll'f·••rll:et huNI. !Jome lneston li•H beapt IUret ...... by lavettmea& compaillet rildt dley U.O.kb• were moaey·matte& fuad1. but wett aot. MHf a.vHlme•l co1J1;aa1et ofter mi.Ill of ••mvett• meat trwta" wllleh coaailt ot a portfolio of loager term boedt. n.1e ,_.. ohaa pay re· &ana1 wb.lclt are based OD bJ,i. ratet ol lll&erest received oa the portfoUo teeurt&les, Hd tJae Hfety ol lnveatmeat In tbeee falldl may not be 111alftcutly dllfernt from tJaat of a moaey. marketfund.dle8EC1ay1. However, becaue of ttie imlger matu.rtty of the deb& securltle• held In this &ype of portfoUo, the risk of market fluctua.Uoa la much greater, aad I.be Uquldatlnl price coald vary greatly from tbe purchase price. The SEC cautleftll inve1ton that wblle both of these types of lavealment company securities are tiased on the late rest ea med on a portfolio or debt •«arltles, there are dlf· fereoces. Tbe Uqaldating value of money- market funds changes very Uttle, while their rate of return varies from.day today. If you have an lnquJry regarding money· market f~dl, contaet Robert WoU, Director, Office of Consu~er A!faln and Information Services, Securltlea and Exchangt Com- ml11loo, 500 N. Capitol St., Washington, D.C. 20549. Trlles for kUb ·DEAR READE,RS : Would you plow through page after page of a bad book Just so yoa couJd congratulate yourseU on tbe fact that you were reading? Of course you wouJdn'l, but parents often expect their children to do just that. . A more sensible approach lo gettlog them lo read ls to have books around the house that they 'U Uke. But bow can you tell what's a good children'• book! Find oat from the experts in cbJldren's literature: The IJbrary of Congress has complle_4a dJredory or more tb1111 ,000 re· commended tltles, for prepcboolers right up th roug.h hip school students. For each book lilted in tbe directory, yo u'll find a paragraph descrlbins, its contents, the price, pubUaber, lntenaatioaal Standard Book Number and a suggested a1e lenl. ln-addltloo to fictloa,. adence and folklore, the directory devotes sections to poetry, plays and songs; arts and hobbles; biography; history, peoplt and places; and psychology and sociology. You can order "The Best or Children's books" by sending $3. 75 to Consumer Information Ctnler, Dept. 107J, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. • ··Got a problem? Then wnte 10 Pat """'I Dunn Pat will cuJ red tape. getting • .J. the answers and aclwn you need to solve mequittes in government and n business Mall your questions to Pat Dunn, Al Your ~rvu:e, Orange CO<Ut Dally Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, Co1ta Mesa. CA 92626 As many letters°' posnble will be an.swered. but phoned mqu1rlft or letter• not includmg the reader's /ull name, addrtss and business hours' phone number cannot be conndered This column appeari dally ez· cept SUndays " ROCK fllLL, S.C. (AP> -Gerald Morton, college E~fllsh lnatruc~r. says aort)eday he would Uke to be Gerald Monon~ prcr f e 1 s lo n a l wrestler. Morton, who teach.et here al WinlhropCollege, has made a study of the sport and would like to appear in the a rena, bt1t would perform only with professional, pro · fessorial restraint. "I WOULD wear a mask,'' he said, "so as not to embarrass the peo- ple I work with. That would be my scam.·' Morton. 27, who has written and lectured on the s ubject, says wrestl- ing is a "ritual fu.sln1 Nh ality and fantaty'' that has literary parallels. "In professional wrestling,·· he says, "the characters, the conClicts, the symbols are exactly the same as you can find in a Shakespearean play. •· ... It appeals to our emotions, not our in- tellect. It lakes a good show lo make our emo- tions believe what our mind 1s telhng us not to I 've seen people react with bloodthirsty eyes " 11 I J J i· I, c ~ 11 n r ARTISTS AT WORK -Harvey Clemans, art instructor at Golden West' MORTON, WHO ex-College, shows student Debbie Dilger of Huntington Beach some peels to get his doctorate techniques in water color painting. Clemans will serve as juror for' nextfall, says his interest the fine arts competition at Orange County Fair, July 10-19. ., In being a wrestler began ---------------------------~· in his childhood when he thought "that was exact· ly what I wanted to do" for a career ··it was the excitement of it," he said. "I WHS con- vinced this was a very g lamorous life-style When. I found out 1t was all prearranged. 1t was like distovering the truth aboutSantaClaus " Pot ruling SACRAMENTO <AP l A state prison inmate who possesses martJuana can get a lengthened prison sentence. even though the same crime would bring only a fine outside prison. s ays a stale appeals court UPS to raise rates SAN FRANCISCO <AP t United Parcel Service was given permission lo raise rates Hnd charges for service within California by 4.8 percent, orS9 8 millton annually, effective May t. The state Public Utilities Com mission said this will cover increases in laborcostsand fuel costs It noted UPS operates under a na· t1onwide labor agreement and is ob- ligated to increase wage levels a nd provide a semi annual cost of ltving adJustment. Tht' combined impact of these two items amounts to a 77·cent an hour wage boost effective May I. Added lo this increase will be hikes an fringe benefits and payroll costs The PUC said increases in the package and poundage rates and I charges will produce aboutS7 8 million more in revenues within the state and a c l percent increase in a rue! surcharge wi ll yield anotherS2 million annually The rate per packag·e will go up 4 cents. while per-pound rates will in· crease from four·tenths of a cent to one cent dep<.•nding upon the zone involved .~ ·' Re novation funded ·:·1 DOS PALOS <AP 1 This Merced County community will receive a $1.8 million federal grant lo rehabilitate ii homes and to replace sewer andl water Imes. said Cit} Manager Tony Dias The Daily Pilot supports and encourages your. participation in Orange County 's 11th Annual "Superwalk of Love '' JOIN SUPERWALK SUNDAY, APRIL 26 W A L K A 1\1 E R I C A S l. P E R S C '.'\ D A Y fundraiser for the battle against birth defects is the March of Dimes· largest single fundraising event . COME WALK WITH L·s ~ ... Join in the fight against birth defects by participating in the 32 kilomete r ( 20-mile) Super\\'alk. t he second annual Team\Valk. the five and ten kilometer runs or the $500 donation one-mile Executive Walk. Ray Malavasi. SuperWalk +.lonorary Chairman. will walk ·wi th the Executive Walk from H arbor Municipal Court in :\' e \\.po rt B e a c h to t h e C h a n t e c l a i r restaurant in Ir\·ine for brunch. then tour the 32 km route to cheer on those ,,.a lking in the long run. All of this h appens Sunday morning. April 26 at the Orange County Harbor Municipal Court faci lities. 4601 Jamboree Road. Registration is from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Runners pay a $3 entry fee or $8 with T -shirt. and distance wa lkers wi ll earn pledge m_oney. For more information . call (714 ) 979-2270. REMEMBER. BIRTH DEFECTS CAN BE PREVENTED . • .; RSNO (AP> -Nort.,.ra Nevada ud California ateam tralla bufta ~people wbo laave never aeen one of the old· faabtoned 1moke·belchin1 locomotives -will bave a chance to look at one next week. Two Union Pacific •team tralna will leave 01den, Utah, on Sun· day on a tbousand-mUe trip to ibelr destination at a new railroad · tnuaeum in Sacramento scheduled to open May 1. The trains will apend Sunday night in Carlin, Nev., then pua through Winnemucca on the way to an ovemight stop in Sparka on Tuesday. The trains will lay over in Roseville, Call!., Wednesday before completing the trip to Sacramento on Thursday in time for Friday's opening· of the museum. Tunnel backed LONDON (AP> -A British parliamentary committee bas backed construction of an Enallab Channel tunnel, or '!Chwmel" between Britain and aace. II YOU 'AYIMeTOO MUCH FOi YOUI HIALTH IMSUIAMCl7 •1 .000.000 GROUP OR INOMOUN.. ,_ ~ C4ll: '4M071 B~ "' I ~TINO ... ._ ...... SI ltC 211'167 ..,_ no.,.''-11 Yo... Door ICMI SW. -YOUt "'-•I Co.Tu•u841-1289 1-11._i- ..._ ¥1U1495-0401 -• i.ac:....~ lhto oi..,. -,. • ,._, ""°' I ......... Weds. tlvuSatli • Hut-SultMeton Ir•• ........ ••••••• announces a new program ·No~/AMU1_.. •F..i lunOtnv • 30 .,.., Amott1x.cl Up IO I& yrs A-.. .. • 1..-.. 10.~M00.000 • o...., ~on°""* ·s-.. i.-~.._,, Call today lor quote • No obhgahon (714) 975-1128 MERCURY SAVINGS · and loan aaaociatio11 Executlv• OlflcH : 7812 Edinger Ave., -Huntington Beach, CA 92847 SoutMrn Cellfornl• Region•/ 0111<»1.· sen E. La Palma A¥e., Anaheim, CA t2I07 89!5& Valley VI-St., Buena P~ CA 90820 18151 Anwlll Rd., C.marlllo, CA 03010 20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Canon.& CA 90748 23021 t...ke Center OJ., (Lalla "°'"I). El TOfO, CA t2l30 1001 £. lmpenal Hwy., l.a Habra. CA 909317 Gt 4140 Long Buch Blvd., Long a..cti. CA 90llO 22938 Haw1home Blvd., T«rance, CA 90e05 1095 lrvlne Blvd., Tuatln, CA 92980 ~· 235 N. CMrua A\09., Wfft Covina, CA 91793 llllMI "Mercury Room" na//ebl• on •,.~ be1/1 -· f\esa Verde ~.wine and f)iqoor FETZER WINE SALE!! ftrtc" •ffecH" ._ S.... 4 fl.6 .. Reg. $4.50 FETZER 1980 CHENIN BLANC little bit of sweetness. Great for sipping fish or fowl. Ob, tbere are also t ullpa, hyacintl» and crocus 1ro·11vtng in hit fielda, but from mid-March until the blossoms wilt, It 'a the daffodila that have Mc LatJ ghlin 's heart. THIS YEA&, THE cl:affodils didn't stay as long as Mc I. a ughlln or the t.o\lriltl would ha•i e liked. Recent unusually warm ~iNeather bad so dimmed the glovv of the yellow fields that there was no reason to keep the bill op~~n to the public beyond thla week. But it Ull.s year's colnrs have faded, McLaughlin's lo•v e for the daffodil bun 't. "It kind of got Into the blood," ~aid McLaughUbn ~ho ad· mltted that he inherited hia motber'1 lovefottheflower. Every year, tbe family plant.a more bulbs. One .year, the new plantln1s nuplbered 6,000; at leUt500areaddedeveO' autumn. The larce-scale plantin1 be1an about 40 years aao and now the daffodils number la more than 200,000. "It's easier to buy and plant more than dig up and plant,'' he saya. Towertna Ponderosa pines en· circle the daffodil beds . Bright orange-red clay st8ins the finery as families pose for snapshots against a backdrop of yellow and orange and white petals. MANY VISITORS make their appearance every spring. For years, the family charged no ad· mission. But at the urging or ftiends, they've placed crude con. tainers near the entrance to col· le ct donations, McLaughlin said. · ·'It tielps ," he said, saying he has no idea of how much the fami· ly has spent on planting and gardening. Maintenance comes fairly c heap, though , McLaughlin added. OAK "We let the •beep 10 ttil'oqh the beds" after the blouoma have aone, he explalns. '"Tbey tramp,, down the 1ru1 ln between. Tbat'a al.lo the only fertilizer the daf. fodlls 1et-sheep droppJn11." McLaughlin wavet h1' cue when asked which variety of daf· fodll ls his favorite. He's not even s ure how many klnda are represented. "ABOVT .. YEAll8 aeo. a Sacramento woman came wbo was an expert. She was gone for hours and hours countint the kinds. Every now and then I looked out and saw her wallowing in the dalfodHs," he said. She tallied about250 varieties. Arter the petals drop and the tourists stop coming for another season, McLaughlin admits life is "ki nd of blah." This autumn will be even sad· der for McLaughlin. His wife, California Miller McLaughlin, died in January. From Sacramento. talu CalifomW 16 eaat to Route 49 aouth to Sutter Creek. Then go on Shalu Ridge Rood. That goea right into Daffodil Hill. TOILET SEAT Model ITRtHOA ....... OAK Tl&IUE IOX Model ITR0-58 . .... 11.• 12.88 1981 T010TA 'TERC£l SEDAM ludes 4 speed E q u i p m .e n t. i n c b u ck et s e a ts . tr ans.m's s 10 ~ · side moldings & pinstrtpes11• bo~di~gs. (238747). i '4799 1981 TOYOTA COROLLA ' 2E ~p!:n~~~~~ s~d transm1!s1on . bucf ke~ ts power assisted . ron ~=c •brakes. pi.n stripes. wheel well molding~ ~~ 1981 TOYOTA COROUA SRS LIFTBACK 1 des 5 speed trans .. Equipment me u ower steering. b~cket se&at!r,te1 well moldings. rS62&1 KIK FM SUHDAY I TO l P.M. .. -'.... UVI COUMTlY WESTBH •OADCAST ... -· --... 1981 VOLVO DL 2 Door Sedan . Automatic transmission, power_steering, power brakea, pinstripes, wheet well moldings and morel (193741~ 1981 VOL"fO DL 4 Door Sedan . Auton,atlc transmission and fully factory equipped! (6182S.). 1981 VOLVO DL· 2 Door Sedan . Automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, wheel well moldings, pinstrepes and morel (197825). J9¥,f N TOYOTA c!,Pmen1 •ncl PICKUP transmission 0 Udes 4 speed ~~rome rear 'bu,:;' Bar mirrors a.il~ate Pane/ Per, one touch equipped. (0261 ~f fully factory ssaoe 1981 VOLVO DL 5 Door Station Wagon. Automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes. pinstripes, wheel well moldings & morel (338338~ flt PSTS&A&NB'l'T ~'b~:r®;ni;, Ark. -The ln1a•• wbo huddle under blanket.I are csedated Jut they cut their wrilta to 1et attention. Homoeexuala swish alon1 dusty streets in dra1. And single youna women bear children con· ceived in the American resettle· ment camp. These are the unwanted Cubans of Fort Chaffee. SUU un- settled after a year In the United States. they are caught in a dilemma an otflcial calls "the be•'1tI and the traaedy of our American 1ntem." T'1e CUbam -1Z1 ,000 of them -befan arriving a year ago tbll week. They were not Invited. Now no one seems willing or able to accept final responsibili- ty for the last of these "boat peo- ple." THE THORNY PROBLEMS posed by the 2,700 refugees still being held behind barbed wire at this military training camp have stymied autborlUes. Deadlines for closlnl the facility an con- tinually put back. .. The tendency la to'aay, 'Let's talk about tt tomorrow,'" said camp director Barbara Lawson. "I don't ~ the full implica- tions of the'problem are realized by W uhin«ton or the country.·· Social workers and others close to the Cubans expressed fear that continued delays could lead to a repeat of the violent outbursts that shook the resettle- Some of the Cubam who fled to south Florida are shown on two ships that were used to tranaport the refugees. About 121,000 arrived via the "boallift." Cuban ,_,.e,, who came to the United State• m lolC Jlftlr'• "Freedom FlotUla," work in art• and croft• clau at Fort Chafu, Ark. ment camps shortly after the refuaeea arrived. And last weekend, after a federal officer shot a Cuban who alleeedJy turned on him with a gun, about 120 refugees went on a rock-throwing. car-burning rampaee. MEANWHILE, COSTS are mounting -about saoo.ooo a day -and anxious local residents grow increasingly concerned that Fort Chalfee mi&ht become a permanent detention center. Public defenders are challeng- ing the continued incarceration of the Cubans in Fort Chaffee and 1,800 confessed criminals, including 31 convicted of murder and attempted murder. in U.S. penitentiaries. "Can you hold a man for a crime committed in Cuba? .. asked Miss Lawson, a State Department official. "And what about the known hardened criminals we have amongst our problem population here? And if we can't hold them. where do they go" It is so dif- ficult and frightening,·· she said. Public defenders a lso are challenging the government's right to hold indefinitely at Fort Chaffee the m entally ill who number about 600, including old people. children and young mothers. They range from the depressed sitting quietly in cor- ners. to the suicidal who swallow light bulbs and bed springs, and cut their wrists to get a nurse·s attention. "I MIGHT DETERMINE the right placement for these peo- ple. to make sure we are social- ly responsible. Then legalistic maneuvers will charge you are violating their rights." said Miss Lawson. "That's the beauty and the tragedy of our American system." Still, absent any definitive court rulings, there are no rules for the impatient Cubans. some of whom have been detained more than 10 months, to uaess their chances for quick resettle- ment. "Ri&ht now, It's a matter of playing God. deciding who goes and who stays," said Mike Sweeney, spokesman for the Fort Chaffee command. Official reluctance to settle the problems is rooted in the "Freedom Flotilla" saga itself. ·'The fact that the Cubans are he re at all incenses the average American." explained David Le wis, coordinator of the biggest resettlement agency at the camp. the U.S. Catholic Con- ference. "They are here 10 de- fiance or our laws. They are. in the eyes of most Americans. a repudiation or every legal stan· dard or the law ... THE CUBANS SAILED to the United State• after Fidel Castro opened the gates of his country -and his prisons last April. Immigration authorities ad· milted it was known that many were criminals or mentally ill, categories that normally forbid entry to America. The vast ma· jority were quickly released in southern Florida. The remaining "problem population" has been regrouped in the Atlanta Federal Peniten- tiary and at Fort Chaffee near Fort Smith, Ar~.. where neat rows· of white wooden -barracks now house a third wave of foreigners. The first here were German prisoners during World War II, the second Vietnamese refugees in 1975. I ... B7 Juan Lw Paneque stares at floor of tom-up trailer in Miami won- dering how to appecue his hunger. 1 Camilo Ojeda R.eye1, 19, i8 one of more than 250 homo1eruall among the 2,700 Cuban refugees being held by authorities. He ii sh.own at Fort Chaffee. · I " YOU CAN'T GET 'lllE•B no• BE&E - Caltrana, our wonderful atate htati,.ay people, bave apparently · 1truck again, trapplnc the baple11 mC)loting citizenry with the detour 1ip1 up. This Ume it wu out seen.le Laguna Canyon Road, What bappe~ed was that apparently sometime Monday or Tuetday, Caltrana work cren decided · ' ~ they'd abut down -nonh-bomid lane of Laf una Canyoa ROad ~\ be ween El Toro ~~ Road and the San Tll lllPlllll WtlV / 01e'X1~.:trfc· thu• ' was diverted down El Toro Road, out in the vicinity of Leisure World., Thia Just happens to be a cooslderable detour ii you're late to work and trying to reach Santa Ana or Los Angeles. So what? So they only shut down a northbound ~· lane, you might suggest. TROUBLE IS, you see, on Laguna Canyon R-0ad, there is only one northbound lane. Shut it and you •hut off the inland-bound traffic. Also, an additional vexation is that the Caltrans people apparently decided to keep all this lane- 1butUng and detouring a deep, dark setret. .So you motor out Canyon Road in the morning and 1brprise! Goodbye timetable. Apparently the word did leak out around the Laguna Beach City Council table Tuesday· night. But the word didn't hit the public prints until Wednesday afternoon. . According to the Caltrans spokesmen, the north· bound lane will be slammified shut on weekdays "We'll 1u.st tak~ out thi! iection of road for awh1~" between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. for the next 45 days. It's going to be a $700,000 improvement project. NEW POSITION -Edmund Muskie, former U.S. senator from Maine and secretary of state, is joining a Washington think tank on part·time basis. He will be consuttAnt l'lt Johns Hopkins' Foreign Policy Institute, working with prof es so rs and students. 2 guilty of aiding suicide NEW LONDON, Conn. <AP> - Two men accused of helpini a crippled friend commit suicide face up to 10 years in prison alter cbangingtheirpleaa and pleading guilty to a charge of second· degree manslaughter. Brian W. Taylor, 25, of North Stonington, and William R. King, 26, of Ledyard, said they were changing their pleas because they were convinced prosecutors bad enough evidence lo win a convic- tion. The two also said through their attorneys that they hoped to re· ceive lenient sentences in return for the pleas. ACCORDING TO prosecutors. the two aided the Sept. 27 suicide or Kenneth B. Wright, 24, of Ledyard. who didn 't want to live with the paralysis he suffered in an informal wrestling match in 1979. ..... --• Of course you would. of blood. In 1979, we used 70,000. Now let us rephrase the ques· By 1987, we project a need in tion. \Xk:>uld you pay $5 to help com-excess of 100,000 units. Where do plete one of the most badly needed we collect it all, process it all, facilities in Orange County? store it all ? liieyte really the same question. Consider also, the fact that The Orange County Red Cross 1 in 25 people in Oange County will needs your dollars for a facility to need that blcx:>d this year. Desperately keep pace with Orange County's One ·in twenty-five. growing needs. . And some of your family and Its a new 32,000 square foot friends wi II be among them . complex designed to meet blood So please open up your hearts requirements for years and wallets. And give to come. I' • • • • • II generously. How desperate I ar...,.eounty11ecto.. I Because what little are we? Consider this. 1u11c1ns Fund you donate today, just In 1969, we went I ~0 r::~~~cre 0r I may be someone elses through . I' • • • 5"rm1 Ana. u.. wn1 • • • 'I life savings 23 600 units tomorrow. ' I Pttase accept my pied~ for s.________ I I Nome I Ad~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I C•ty ., I I Stat"'--_____ __._1p_______ I 11.... ···" Please find er)Closed my I tax deductible donation lo< I the foll0W1ng amount I o ss o s10 o s2s o s_ I ........ NO DOUBT THE WORK will be welcomed over this dangerous seven·mile stretch of pavement. It really would have been super·nice, however, if the state highway brass had given motoring folks just a little bit of advance wamina. State's Attorney C. Robert Sat ti said Wright once had told Taylor ~----------------------------------- r • You suppose that by not starting work until 9 a .m .. the Caltrans planners figure that most every- body has already fled the scene to their work place. MAYBE SO. On the other hand, the shutdown could be a considerable irritant to some professional parties who don't have to roll out at the crack of dawn and can meander into labor at 9:30 or maybe 10 a .m. Rumor has it some bankers, medics and dentists operate like that. My dentist always seemed to keep those kind of hours when I was su!f ering with a throbbing molar or other ill of the choppers. Anyway, the word's out now so nobody will ex· peel to get from Laguna Canyon to anywhere for the next month and a half or so. THE CANYON AREA, however, isn't the only locale where this kind of frustration has been heaped on our coastal motorists. Just a while back, workers on the Upper Newport Bay span selected a couple of morning rush hours as the precise time ~ shut down one lane on the old Coast Highway Bridge. Traffic abruptly backed up to Five Crowns in Corona del Mar. So let's face it; there's just something about highway construction projects, no matter where the location. No matter what hour it is that you don't want a detour, that's when you're going to get tt. "he'd rather be dead than live in the conditton in which he was liv· ing." Taylor and King pushed and carried Wright, who was in - capacitated and bound to a wheelchair, into a wood where they left him with a sawed-off 12·gaugeshotgun, Satli said. The men had helped cut eight inches off the shotgun's barrel so Wright could point it at his stomach and still pull the trigger, the prosecutor said. THE VICTIM 'S mother. Phyllis Wright, told the pro· secutor she did not want Taylor and Kin( sent to prison, Satti said. He said the mother told him if she had her way the two men, who were her son's close friends, never would have been pro- secuted. "He couldn't cope He waa an athlete," Wright's ~bther said last fall after her son's death. In return for the guilty pleas, Satti said he would not recom- mend that Taylor and King serve any specific sentences. When the men return to court May 18, their lawyers are expect· ed to uk Judge Seymour Hendel to suspend their sentences. The maximum sentence for second· degree manslaughteria lOyeara. White ltl(_)m wins custody Judge rules mother, not black father, should raise girl . tlve~ Mrs. Farmer , food maoager for a Locust Valley hilb school, found the child in San Franclaco in October and bad her brought back to New York. During divorce proceedlnp, Farmer ar1ued that b.ll former wlf e could Mt raise Bethany to "undentand her roo\I" and that the chlld woulcl have "deep p1ycbolo0cal problems unless she has a black parent." After the dedsion, Farmer's lawyer. George Naser. said the judge ignored Farmer's concern about his child's need to be aware of her background. Nager sald the judge did not give enough weight to the "special circumstances affect· ing the child of a mixed mar- riage that are unique to that child." Training shifts urged "Several of the fll1ht schools that I dl.acu.s•ed thil subject With indicated that thttlr bualneu la down by u much aa 40 percent. In addition, there have been two ruaht schools that have tone out of buaineH in the past 18 months," Cable said In the report. WEST CLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY"S SHCE SERVG BANK cr-·AN8¥:.A CHARLES BARA £WaERS CROWN HAAOWARE OICI< VERllCN SPOlTSWEAR ~. LOUB..OER optometrist HAIRHANOLERS SALQl.I HAWOA Y'S MEN'S a.OTHt-G HICK~Y FARMS ~foodit9m1 HUMPTY DUMPTY childr'"'' dot+wiq JEANOAH.. de~ ond better 'f)Oltswear LA GAU.ERIA •'-9onc• :n fashion MARKET BASKET MES AMIES TEENS NANCY OUll.N ANTlOJE$ NEWPORT BALBOA SA\1tlGS PAPER UNLIMITED Qifts ond skJlioner\ SAV -ON DRUGS ,,.j~=.ar VET A'S INTIMATE APPAAEL WESTCUff a.EANERS WESTCLIFF Cattes ~ '°"°'9 and c~ WESTCUFf StaS ... ............... NEW ORLEANS CHOSEN -Louisiana'Gov. Dave Treen s miles during a speaker-phone hook-up with Paris in which he learned that New Orleans will be the s ite of the 1984 World's Fair. Listening in the background is aide James Fitzmorris. Judge fixes feather fuss MALIBl' t AP > A c harge or Illegally possessing non -game bird parts against a non. Indian who rla1med she used eagle. hawk . owl, raven and seagull feathers in practicmg native American rellg1on was dismissed But the feathers that were seized ciunng her a rrest were ordered turned over Wednesday to Los Angeles County's Museum or Natural History JILL FAIRCHILD, 32, HAD BEEN arrested March 11 after a state Department· of Fish and Game warden spotted the feathers hanging from the rea r view mirror or Ms. Fairchild's station wagon as she drove along the Pacific Coast Hig hway She said the feathers plus a sweat bundle - also used in native American religious ceremonies -had been given to her by Kole Lotah. the ceremonial leader of the Chumash Indians Ms. Fairchiltl and a number or Indian friends said after the court hearing that the law clearly dlscriminates against tbe right or white people to follow the Indian religion. She said she would pursue the matter in a higher court and try to gel the law overturned DEPUTY LOS ANGEL~Y District Attorney J oe Oor moved that the charges in Municipal Court be dismissed "in the interest or j ustice" with the confiscated feathers turned over to an om1tholog1st at the county museum Municipa l Judge John J Mernck granted the motion. But he also declared that the only excep lion to the law was for native Amencans on a reservation DEATH NOTICES JACOBSON JEAN V .JACORSOI". re l'hun·h. :lltH 1 l.J '\Jo\ a San .Juan l'.1p1:.trJno or PO B o x r.:19 . S,1n J ua n ('ap1strano Mcl'orm1c k Mort u:1r~ dirl'l·tors sidl'.nt or l.Jguna Bt'arh. Ca 'lOORE Pa ~sed a"JY on Apnl 20 LESSIE A ~IOOR E. rt'!>I· 1981 Sun 1n•d h~ h e r dc•ntorS;intaAnaareasint•e hushand H1r h;ird or Lagunu 1942 Passed J"a' on April Beach. Ca daui:htt•r \'alent• 19 19111 She \\JS a ml'mlwr Cr J mer or GlendJlt• Cu or t ht• Broad" a ~ Ra pt 1'it mother Ph~ lhs lfrn1kl" or Churt·h for 5 H'ars Sht• IS s ll n 0 I l' I! I) • c: a . 2 sun 1\l'<I h~ I children Burl. grandr hilnren Bilh a nd J ;\tonn· of S;rnta Ana Ca Brt·nda Cramer nr Cilt•nduh.• Ot·rn•ll A Moore of Costa Ca Sen1n•s "'" tll' held on :\lcsa. ('a. Arnold L . .Moore April 22. 1981 at 11 OOAM at of Lallubra. Ca Daphne M the McCorm1r k !:-Ian Juan Morno, o r Garden GroH'. Chapel "'th pn,ate inter Ca. 3 brothers Luther Black m t•nl In hl'U of rlo"ers. thr of Arkansas. Dand Blark o family requests conlnbu Texas and LIMd Bleck o lio n s be mad<' t n SI YurcJ Valley · Ca . s1stc M argart'l!I E1us co pal Luella Peck of Richmond. .... CIUOTHUS l&L 110.ADWAY MOITU.AIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa ~2-9150 l .UnlHGHON SMfTH & TUTMIU WISTCUff CH.AHL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 .... Cl.-OntaS SMITHS' MOllTU.AaY 627 Main S1 ...,nhngton Beach 53&-6538 Ca .. 12 grandchildren and gre at grandt•hildren . Services "111 be held tudav Wednesday. Apnl 22. 1981 atl 2:00PM in the llarbor Lawn Mem onal Chapel "Ith Rev. Go r don A Jones o f th Broad" a~ Baptis t Churc ofnclatmg lntermt'nt "ill b at Harbor Luwn Me morial Park Services under lh dlrectlon of H11rbor Lawn· M<>unt Olive Mortuar)' o Cosln Mesa . S40·55:>4. NEWKIRK • JAMES ALVI N NEWKIRK. resident of South Coast Area Cor 11 years , Passed away on April 20. 1981 He was a member of the Searanqr Masonic Lo dge #70& F&AM. He ls l'Urvived by his wife Alla V Newkirk and 900 James A. Newkirk . Jr. both of Newp0rt Beach, Ca.. a daughter Patricia Ann Wlllcut or Ukiah. Ca .. 6 crandchlldren and 2 a•eat· grandchildren, a brother Harold Newkirk of Las Vecaa. Nevaat. MatdDlt memorial Servfces wete held on Wednetd&)'. April 22. 1181 at 11 :OOAM at the Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel With the Wonbtpful Maawr and Ch•Pl•ln Orma Crank of tb• surarlnr Lodi• t'70I P'&AM otflclat· ln&.~ CmnaUon with Kal· tel'tll& ot aahtt 1t sea The family requf'itt contrtbu· ttoaa M m•d• to Ho• 1 M •na-H}• l Ho• pl h I . H.ewpor\ le•ch , Ca_ lenlcw undtf lht dlrtt· U. of ...... WWD :Mount =::.--.~ ., COfi ------------- Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Thul'ld1Y, Aprll 23, 1981 OAKLAND (AP) -It once carried presidents and kln11, actors and rock atara. But the yacht Potomac. de· cayecl and busted tor dope, baa fallen on bard ~es. Tb• Pott of Oakland on Tuesday purchased the 185·foot boat for $15,000 from U.S. Customs, which selied it in September after ~cover· iDI 21 tonS' of marijuana on board ' 1l1ter vessel. The Port said it plans to uae the boat as a tourist attraction. WREN NO OTHER bidders came up with the minimum $20,000 offer requested by U.S. Customs, the eov· emment to\vtred lt.s price and the Port offered $15,000. Inspections showed the boat bas serious hull damage. "The kindest thing the Navy could have done was to use her for bomb- ing practice," said Sandy Kupper of San Jose, who had come to the auc- tion with thoughts of buying the boat. The Potomac was built for $1.2 million in 1934 as a Coast Guard cul· ter. President Franklin D. Roosevelt hosted Sir Winston Churchill a nd King George VI of England aboard the boat and used it for fishing trips. President Harry Truman . however, sold the yacht in 1945. IN THE YEARS since, it has been owned by Elvis Presley and Danny Thomas and was used as a research ahlp and a Vlreln Ialandl freipter. A recent owner ripped up her teakwood deck planks and laid · . crete for a disco dance noot. The ship had rotted iro badly that lt tank in 35 feet of water off Treuure Island lo San Francisco Bay lut month, and had to be raised at a cost of $60,000. Eatlrnatea for repair of the ship have nm as bJih as $1 million. The Coast Guard says two pumps are needed to keep it afloat. "There's nothing on her worth buy- in1." said marine dismantler Joe Roberts. "You can't eat prestige." WAGES 'WAR' - Nature photographer Rah• Ansel Adams has 1es cases started a personal . U S war against U.S. ln-808r ID • • te rior Secretary ATLANTA cAPJ -Researchers James G. Watt, vow- say they a re uncertain why the in-ing to write a letter a cidence of animal rabies Is soaring In day to ¢int out the the United States, but reported cases threat he perceives jumped to 6,405 last year the most Watt rep res e n ts s ince 1954. toward conservation. The national Centers for Disease ---------- Control said skunks. bats, cattle. raccoons, dogs, cats and foxes ac- count for 97 percent of the reported cases. There were no reported cases among humans The increase was due mostly to a rise in reported cases among skunks, the CDC said, but researchers were unable to pinpoint why Drawing OK SACRAMENTO CAP> A state appeals court has decided that a draw ing to d ecide which landowners at South La ke Tahoe could de· veloptheir lots was legal. lUVERStDE <AP) -A four-day trip to New York by a 1roup or student.I from UC Rlvenlde turned Into an exercl.ae ln urban eurvtval, the youths reported upon their return. The 26 out-of-townen had a fin ln their hotel that forced lhem to evacuate. One viJltor wu muued and another had her purse stolen. Three had a front-row seat for a tramc collision between their taxicab and a delivery truck. "It was an experience," said 21-year-old Mi chael Adams, a junior. "What else can I say? I want to go back some day, but I'm in no hurry.'' ADAMS AND HIS CLASSMATES arrived In New York last week for the National Model United Nations Conference. Because of the fire at the Statler Hilton, the Model United Nations ,,eon- rerence was moved from Madi5<>n Square Garden uptown to the New York Hilton, the students said. David Bayles. a 22-year-old senior, remem· bers the trip as "enjoyable except for a cout>le of incidents." like the collision between the cab and the truck. Bayles said he and the other two stu· dents were in the cab when the collision occurred as the cab driver was dropping them off. STEVEN MALVNN, Zl, RECALLS walkmg hom~ after a date early Saturday when a "scuzz y. l<?okang guy" approached him, asking for a cigarette. Just as Malynn said he did not s moke, another man approached from behind. "He pressed something in my back and said it was a gun," the student said. "The guy in front or me pulled out a switchblade. I was too stupid to be scared." Re~nquishing his wallet and $78, Malynn tried j t<_> convince. the muggers that they did not want his I rmg. an heirloom that his mother had given him The muggers took it anyway. ' l TELL YOUR MOM! I This Mother's Day, tell that certain someone how special she really Is with an outstan- ding gift from Roger's. There is a great variety of hanging baskets and color pots. Their lasting beauty will be a constant delight and a reminder of your love. If she enjoys her plants and her garden, you will find everything at Roger's to make it all easier and more beautiful. Roger's Gallery is also full of special and unusual gifts for the occasion. Say "I love you" In lf~autiful way from Roger's. 8?:-~~ MOTHERS LI'ITLE HELPERS The Giimour alr-o-matlc sprayers are the easy way to spray fertlllzers and Insecticides. They are self-mixing which means no fuss and no waste. reg. s12.98 NOW '10.98 Help keep mold, mlldew and fungus out of your roses and the rest of your garden with Ortho Funginex. 16 oz. reg. 17.49 NOW '6.49 FROM THE NURSERY WITHIN THE GARDEN Marguerite Daisies are the light-hearted favorites everywhere. At this special price, you can surround mom with year around color. 5 gal. reg. 112.00 NOW 7 .99 Agapanthus (dwarf blue llllles of the nlle) Is a good peren- nial landscape plant that loves surprises; from time to time it shoots up clusters of blue fireworks. One of our favorites, you11 find Ir planted at Roger's. 2 gal. reg. '8.50 NOW '6.99 . , Hydrangea produces bonus-sized clusters of flowers. The long-lasting blossoms are available In several pastel colors. 5 gal. reg. '13.00 NOW '8.99 Azaleas offer handsome foliage and spectacular flowers 'In a choice of colors. · • 1 gal. reg. *3.25 NOW 1.99 I Prlcet eftec1l¥9 tl'lru M•y t. 1981 •ncl tubjeot to quantlllH ~hand. DEAR TO HER HEART A Roger's English garden basket Is a special treat. A com- plete miniature Indoor garden with a rich blend of colors and foliage. This livlng centerpiece keeps on delivering pleasure day after day. ,29 95 NOW • PIANT PROFFSSOR You can hear GORDON BAKER LLOYD, noted garden ex- pert, on KMPC and KABC radio. You can also find him In person at Roger's Gardens every Friday from 1 ~ tll ~ to answer all of your gardening questions. He will also be presenting these special seminars: April 23, 11 A.M., "Pest Control" May 11, 11 A.M., "All About Tomatoes" May 25, 11 A.M., "Planting for Summer" Give a 10' Roger's Color Pot, the unique gift that keeps giving. NOW '9.95 PATIO FURNITURE FOR MOM Through Aprtl ~.you can save up to 35% on fine quality patio furniture In Roger's Gallery. A great way to surprise mom and add to summer enjoy{T'8nt. A BOUQUET FOR MOM Delight her with a special fresh-cut bouquet of roses. car· nations, Iris, mums and daisies. 1 reg. s29,95 · SPECIAL 24.95' I' ,. = • \ napPV Dav. lde're natchlng Farmers 2651 IRVINE AVE., COSTA MESA 631-4404 " .. . . 'lo . . . \ • .. . . r °"''' "" ..... ,.... ICOUT HONOftS -Scott Al~. i.tt, and ar.nt GC>OCU recently rec.-oed thftr £ogle Seoul awards. Thell are mniC»err of Troop U2, ~ by the Church of Jenu Chri1t of Latt'1-da1/ Sainta in Huntington Beach, ScoU ii a MriM at Ocean Vtew Rfgh School and Brent ia o aenfQT ct Marina High School. Marathon crtize has the irorld on the run NEW YORK (AP> -A decade ago, before the "Me ~neration" forced its fixation with body beautiful on society, there were only 20 marathons in the UnitQd Slates and perhaps as many in the rest orthe world. ToditY. there are 300 marathons in the United States, and many other nations have at least two or three races each. · The granddaddy of them all is the annual Boston Marathon. Some 6,800 rwmers competed Monday in the 85th race through the suburbs and streets of the historic New England city. RUNNING HAS GROWN DRAMATICALLY in the United States over the past decade, as Americans try to trim down and tone up. Accord- ing to a 1980 poll by the Gallup Organization. 12 percent of all Americans about 25 million people -run or jog daily Americans spent an estimated $750 million on running gear last year. "But what·s new in running 1s not the Boston. New York or Chicago m arathons.·· said Fred Lebow of the New York Road Runners' Club and president of the New York Marathon "What's new is that every ma1or city capital in the world is go- ing through a marathon fever." Madrid will have one in three weeks, the Paris marathon Is In four weeks and Oslo's is eight weeks away, he said. Shanghai held a m arathon April 1, and 8,000 runners beat the streets of Lon· don at the end or March in its first such race. And. said Lebow. "For the first ti me this year. there was a marathon in Moscow for women." WOMEN ALSO WILL RUN AN Olympic marathon for the first time in the 1984 Summer Olympics Jn Los Angeles For decades. oHicials of the Games thought the 26-mile. 385-yard race was loo grueling for women. Then runners like Grete Waitz of Norway and Patty Lyons Catala no of Boston showed that some women could beat most men in a marathon. Miss Walu has been the first woman to cross the finish line ln New York's marathon three years straight, eacb time settlng a world's record for women. There were 674 women and 6,171 men who ran in the Boston Marathon The winner was Toshihiko Seko of Japan As a sign of the growing sophistication of marathons, Boston this year had digital clocks at the five. 10. 15 and 20-mile marks. Last year , the clocks were battery-operated and hand-held. "We have traditional checkpoints that go back years and years ago But with the influx of more and more out-of-stale runners who care not about the traditional checkpoints. we had to m ake changes," said Scott McFetridge, chief or officials who scan all entries. SURVEILLANCE OF RUNNERS WAS tighter this year. Last year. an unknown entry. Rosie Ruiz, crossed the finish line first. Embarrassed of- ficials later withdrew her prize. saying she ap· parenUy had run only the final leg of the race. The race. sponsored by the Boston Athletic As· sociation with assistance from The Prudential Insurance Co .. attracted runners from about 21 foreign countries, including Kenya, Saudi A,rabia and Wales. Boston may be the most revered marathon. but New York's, with 16.000 runners. seems to grab the most attention "Boston has done a lot to develop marathons." said ~bow. "But it hasn't aparked the world. New York bas captured the imagination of the world - it sets international coverage ... More than 2,000 foreign runners from 40 coun- tri~s participated in last autumn's marathon in New York. Lebow said runners in more than 50 countries have asked to take part this year . ~ Over-the-fence I gripes resolv~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An experitnental Pf"Olr am aimed at endin1 back.yard beefs through mtdlaUoo will be expanded. The four-year-old pro1ram encourages net1bbon to air their problems before • communi· ty bo8J'd so· that arlUJDenta over barking" dogs and parked can don't barn lilto violent confrontations. "'lbele dilputes are very important to the nel1hbon," 11ald prograni board member Terry Aaa1ler. "But the police afteo cannot do mucb, and U.. people involved dol1't want to bite a lawyer." Sinent hundred caHI already have been lltard and plana are to expud the pro11am. ' NO DEALER SALES , I I I ' I 1 I ,, ... SALE STARTS THURS. PANELING ~~~~~!r 49EA7. Chestnut finiah. DIPLOMAT . Choice of Sound Cedar or American A.ah finiahea. 5!? All panel. are full 4a8 f .. t . (And you thought I'd aay aornething cornrnercial ). r S/a" CD PLYWOOD .. SHEATHING !~-~ .. <--=_\ 9!~ ThOM new wa,,. carpent.n (cut-off levia, bea.rda, Cat hat.a, etc. ) tell 11'\e thia price ia good. IEBR PLUS 10 OIL LATEI STAii ~; 8?! In aolld or •tni • tranaparent colors. Won't peel like pail\t. (So will it peel ua. stain? ) EVEREADY .. ENERGIZER FLASHLIGHT 3!!wm1 2 BA'M"ERIES ~ And you get the two batteri• with the flaahUght. An extra might be amart. CASTROL GTX 20/50 WT. MOTOR OIL ··~-Th. Brooklyn Kid livN ln .fear of the day he can't get oil for you at a price. ( lle'll ha,,. to turn in hi.a abe 12 nonbeima.) CHAMOIS 2Yi SO. FT ...••.• 3.C.C , sYi so. rr ...... 4~ •~ so. rr ... • .. " 6 !6 v- i. tMN a• ch.amoi.a in ~ houeef Real chamois? Nothing 9qU&1a it. I Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/TIH.ll''lday, AprU 23, 1981 Funeral services were held !or Theodore G. Hiltunen of Huntington Beach, who died Sunday at Hoag Memorial Hospital. He was 48. A veteran of the Marine Corps, he received the N ationai Defense Service Ribbon. He was a resident of Huntington Beach 15 years. Survivors include his widow. Wandalyn A. Hiltunen and his daughter Pamela liiltunen, both of Huntington Beach, and a sister, Eleanore Johnson of Detroit. The family has requested that donations be made to the American Cancer Society. "' Johns-Manville JOHNS. MANVILLE FOIL. BACK !JfT.I' INSULATION AND 510 ~ MERCHANDISE CHECK OFFER! ..... ·. ~ · ... ·. Here'• the deal. Buy 5 baga of R-19 betwMn now and May 2 and Johna-Manville will mail you a $10 rnerchandu.e check good at any National Lum.her. Pick up the coupon at the store. (Jack Nicklau.a told u.a thia.) 4 roll. to a bag. 6 1/z " SUPER TBIK R -19 9?.!Jr?.~ ( 38.3 so. M'. ) SllL SUPER DUTY 7 1/4 II BllSB ~,_.__._,~--THE CUTTER'S EDGE WORM DRIVE SAW 119~? High to,que worm dri" gean. •ari-torqlM clutch. \>urnout protected motor. '11\ia i.a the all-day and all-night aaw. 6'xl5' llSIDE Pm IAMIOO FENCE w;pm~~ •• 3•• Ah the eupple inside peel, flwhle, strong. nice looking. (Sound. li.ke a banana that w .. lifting weight.. ) ~ FLUIDMASTER \ BALLCOCK 1 , 397 •400A I .~ r 1' End noi.M in the water cloeet ( w.e the john down at the gu station ) . ~' Thia ia a poeitive ahut-off, ~ adju.t&ble water lev.l. 1197 Preciaion ripping and cuttiq guide for bi.g etuff. ~to 09eJ' 8 feet. (W&a'\•t Elroy Hinch ca1W ''Cra.syl.ega''?) IUllEIJWD CEUJllC: DDIGI :: PUITDS I-, 6" ... , .. 1.33 'Look gnat an.cl don't ., 2 33 .hatter or crack ...Uy 8 · · · · · · • ~ 9Cm\e r ..... n . 10" ...... 3.66 ( Y e&h, narne one. ) . .. 4 77 12 . . . . . . • SUllEAM ELECTRIC LAWN MOWERS 20'' SINGLE BLADE ar.3009B 18'' 1WIN BLADE WITH FLIP OVER HANDLE I 1~~129A Ouieter, no (um•, no gu to run out, and hu plenty of power to etack up again.st gu model.. IP PORTABLE TIAllFER PUMP .99 SVllWI . CAllmLI SDfQLE 99•7 . BURNER . . . . . . '9031 :a: ... 129-J,., DELUXE I ~ .... ISP~i ... . . .. Joe Cordio, left , stara in the SVCT production of "A View from the Bridge." Rounding out the cast are, from leff, Rae Weeki, Lindo MacAJUtaire, Dick Vara and Peter Stone. (!range Coast slat.es three loctd rock baruU Three Oraoee County bands, the Rounders, the Crowd and Jimmy and the Mustangs will perform in concert in the Orange Coast College Drama Lab Friday at 3 p.m. The Rounders play surf rock music, the Crowd is a new wave band and Jimmy and the Mustangs ~rform rockabilly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--"'.r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t • I I I :m• UnttMlltlm ! -NOW PlAYING---- 1 ..... CISTI •sa IM 1111& AN/lf1m Omt In a.-~ Woodbrid&' C1Mdolae l t1 U 187998~ C7t•>_,.,..,. <7U1SSI 06~5 17tt 1&342!1SJ ! llU [l ,.. l.tUIA mtmml • UA Mo .. t\ ~ddlet1cl South Coi11 H1 Wair 39 l>f•tt-ln 1 17141990 •on 111•1 !141 suo 11•1•9• 1s1• 111•1891 3693 ! IUTimmlUA T•1" 11141893 IJOS WUT COASJ ... (Ml(lt[ (NGAG£MENT N<M' SH°"'1NG • Orono9 C1NIDOMI • Co11o Meta. HARIOI lWIN .U.HU 6JJ.Sto1 The only thing greater than their passion for America_. was their passion for each other. -n-• ''CAVEMAN .. (PG) II•• I ••t :a•t a •l ·tl· '9:t1 •llfOO ITI••• tlf "CAVEMAN" (POI u •·1.•·•:•·•:41·•:•· tt:• -·--·· 'Ull "_,..., THE HOWLING 1•1 ·-=-.... ·=--. , ... ..,. • 1':11 1n......,n.....-• "NIGHTHAWKS .. (Al t•• t•• I•• r H• t U • 11:11 'THIU'" IAI -.... U# • -• tl:tt _._ l<t "1'1Ni1. CONFucr (ftl . u.t .,, .. ._._.n-1•·W· 1nuca1 ITAA WAAS~ .,...,.... , .... ... ....... , ..... .... ... ,,.,.. , ... ·--. ,. .... -n-• "CAVEMAN .. lfJGl ......... --·-·•·'-·-_._?_•_ -.-n ...... • .. NIGHTHAWKS (A) -.. 90Ul.EVARO ~"(Al "~HA1.WAYI 1,:,:._.. ::Li RINGS~ 1111 . '°' 1111 • .,,_ WA .. AIOQM I He AM CM R.-0 Wltllllflllkfl AcCM-y lrl119 Y-Owfl A#I .... ~ .... ,.. ••CHr*"' c;,.. .. ,, ..... ... . ., ----"MAMA SOUTA" CON .. MEXICO N01'~ .. .. ,._,.,,_,. "MOtNO IULL" "" l'\.ut ~ • "i\.lPHANT MAN" ,_Ml•-... , .. _. .... WOMAN Wondllr *-.. pttl..t ..,.WC • bms Almy co6ollll wtlo .... turned ~ 80!l'"t ~ wwitl to ~ • MW Ak Fcwoe .... p611\a. I TIC TAC DOUGH 111•4•1•H ..,..~toO.W· el Bwil• Mien Hewie• II tlPC)Ointed Ctll9I Surgeon alltle4077tll. • GOOD.,._ A Mll..ptOClelmed • ..,... I hwd of .. lord" -· ,,_ to become -of hleherdaman WORKING PRIEStDIENT -President Reagan ii the subject of "Reagan: Tbe First Hundred Days," an t'lBC White Paper examining the early months of the Reagan administration tonight at 9 on Channel 4. CBs also presents a special at 11 : 30 on Channel 2 . • TOMOMOWJ TODAY I A report on how crimln ... are ua1ng computwa; • ~ llOty •bout the r-'table ~of tlle Horthefn Elephant Seel; I looll II how aclen- tlSta -PtolllnO I« lhe .,,, ..... penlcle of fqlt•: e commentety by Nobel ~e L"-Peuling • lllCTNC OOUPIJIY ;c=-..- 9 MCNEWI a:ao I JC)QR'8 WILD W£LOOM« a/I.CK, l(CJTT8' When Horlhedc la pro- moted to • hlgllw Clas. everyone •• Including Arnold -wenll lllm lo say wtlll the s-111og9 • IEHNYHIU. Benny pleys • llOneymoof\· 1 ., spending the night on All'leriun I Ruuien di ... pute temtc>ty CHANNEL LISTINGS • 9CmT ..wa.AT •moo-"Cop Show" EllplOrer Seoul•~ the Glendale, Artzona Polloa Dapt; New Yott! City klda meke A'a In di8co danc:lng (R) ()) NIW9 0 IMNIYMLLB Samay puta hll lte on the line wtMn II ~ to a c:lloice of OUlllng • QfOUP of t.,,enll trcwn a ne.bag llotel Of fedng departman. 181 ct\Wgea. (Pat11) ... EDfTONAL 7•8<=-..wt DNec..wa 0 HAPPY DAY9 AGAIN Fonne. RMph end Potlle Me tripped In • flre thal datr0)'9 Al'I ~In. 8 MCNEWS ·~ A 1trong windtlorm enect1 111e "*"*' of 111e 40n1t1 In varying weya • 8TMET8 CW SAN FR+.NCl8CO • KNXT tCBS) Los Angeteo; D KNBC 1NBC1 Los Angeles D KTLA 11no l Los Angt'les D KABC TV 1ABC1 Los Angetes (J) -.F'M81CBS1 San Ooego G KHJ TV (lrtO I LO'> AmielPS 9J KCST tABC1 San O•Pqo • KTTV 11no I LO'> Anqele'> • KCOP TV tlnd I Los Ange•PS C) KCET TV 1P8S1 Los Angetes 8i) KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunl•ng1on Bec1ch WNn .,.. ~ed .... ~.the~ points to her hulbend, known lo becolne llklMnt wNf\dNnk. • OV.IAIY ~: BMt1ot Steber (R) • lllAQB.. / L.EHMA ~ ()) TIC TAC DOUGH 0 .-.v QNfflN GUMt1: 81-Kanety, Mimi Ket!Mdy, Malaelll Martin. 7:IO 8 I ON THE TOWN Holla: s-EO'#w01 end Melody Aogerl. T eke • IOOk el eltwnatlvea to ~aoers and how they dilt« from other major publicallon1, ..._,,_ and Ennie. cable TV eupar- slen. D TMI vtAI AMtENCA "Growing Up'" Clllldhood In the country eno In the city al IN turn Of lhe cen- hwy II deC>leled 8 IHANANA Gueat~luec HeyM -~L08 AMOllll Hoat• .,_ Pedrou •nO Peut Moyer IOOk et jeans. 1uper 1lnglng group "O.VO" and ~right 8 FACE TME ~ • AU.INTHEF/l.Mk.Y Arc:Ne'1 plagued by hla economic plight ...... he can'I go lo worti lllmMlf end he can'I atend the lecl that Edllll 11 WOfklng CPar1 • MACNBL. I LEHMA NPORT UNEWS ................... A ¥1111 _. .,..,. Aotilre. ._.,......,.__ . battle ...,_ a6coholleln with the help of ··~ .,, 17·~-old 0.1 ...,en. Mttan wtlo mall• ~ c.19: 0... T .. on~ made "°'" goat'• mill; Judi MllMCI .... •onwct> Md ""' jllu.o6w; Joyoe ~ ._ llulkMtlem- your..n anUQYe kite. e MOVIE •• * "8-Hled" ( 1872) L410t\1Wd Hlmoy. Suun H ........ A race ca< driver melt• .... _ .. "'*' covwy !Mt he hM the uncanny eblllty to IOfetell future diautWI. -~AA ~ WfTl4 NA.IA ft NmSTTB> "LTDa<St Jazz in.tnimenlallet I ciom- poe.-Plltnckw pwtonna In 11111 ptogram dedicated to 111owc11lng young American 1t1i.ta. ID AM1NCAN ettORT STOfft' "Peuf1 C..." by Willa Cetllw A wontlng-claa boy (Eric Robwtl) In tum- ol-t~lut)' Plltaburgh lultllla hll lentuy of .,,,.,. Ing New YOt1c'a lllgh aod· aty -et a treglc coet CR) t:30 • f'AN( "-ACE A ~ lt11P9 David and hll 1tan overnight wOh e rOOfnlul ol unueuel cie.nta. DO UON<AHO r.tlNOY Mono la ~ 10 • lhOol-OUI by one ol Illa Cl\argea lrom the Oey-care Cet11W wno.e 11wo 1s 81Hy the Kid. (Al • OAAOl. IUMETT ANOf'M'HDI Skits "Mother Of The Bride, · "Tiie Perfect Crime, .. "StrllOiveriva ' ..ac>ll MAGNUMP.I. D Nee WHfTE PANA "RMgan The Flrat Hun· drllO ()eye" Roger Mudd ·~ ttle llra1 mon111e of lhe AMoetl edmlniltr• tlon and 111 lmoecl on 1M orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thur'ldey, ~rtl 23, 1981 KNBC B 9:00 -NBC White Paper. 11Rea1an: 'n>e Fint Hundred Daya:• Ro1er Mudd examinet the impact ot the Rea1an admlntstraUon on the nation. <Photo at left.) KOCE II 9: 30 -''Tomorrow /To· day." A stucfy of the many ways lasers are being utilized; a report on public aaf ety and the electronics industry. . ' K.NXT e 11: 30 -Dan Rather anchors a CBS special on President Reagan's first three months in office. nation, foreign policy. tfll ~.~andtfll polttcel partlea. • 0 a.w.y Ml.Lift Alglll alter Dietrich eonb"11a on 1 ~ cenipejgn to avoid all women,the~rocwn ~ llll9d wtt11 oor· ii Cell gttte CA) ~ ....... -~ "9WVIEWI "The U'9 And Oeeth Of Blecll FlloM00 Roger Ebwl and Gene SWlel leke • looll 81 why Ille.,. of lllme by, '°' and •bout bl.at ~ llM erw:led e:aoeo TAXI ,.._end Jim llllle fOf Tony'a divorced aletw and the 1wO become lnVOlwd In e ~ etfelr (R) • HOU VWOOD WlllJ( INMYllW A dleculelorl on the WOftl. ll'09 of the lllm and TV inOuetry hOeted end pro- duced by Emmy A-d- winnlng wrltw Pl4'tre Sau· vege, IMlurlng thrM Holl)o- WOOO report• .,.,......., end • IMdlng lndualry fig- ure ID TOMOMOW / TOOAY A lludy of the many w1ya '-S we being utlllzeO; • vWt to Uck OC..V•tcwy atop Mount Hamltton, • report on pubtlc w.ty end IN "9ctronil» lndullty. one ...,_ llcllon wrtt•'• .....,.. on hOw ~lonl I tfl8P9 our future. 10:00. ()) NUMI I Mary tee. tM treuma of turning 40 end • ,_ r-with • 'fOU"get man 1 1 IUZ::- THIATM "T'*-A.quln" TllWMe end laut.,,1". weckllng nlgilll ~ • macabt• _, .. ltleir ~ guilt conjure• up lh• ~ling epi<'ll ol Camille CP"1 2) 1C>al~ NETWOM..wa llD M't'ITEIW '"Swgeenl C1lbb Wu- WOl'k" S.geanl COOb ,, celled In to Ile up the looM enell alter • women oont-to the murdw ol II« ptiotograpl\W hu1- o.nd'1 ...-.,,t. (Pat1 11 1 0:001••())9 .... 8TMTIWJ< I Capulin Klrti playt • oame of dMtll will) • rnanlaCal JOHN DARLING __,;_~- 1t:00e()) 1'HIJZOW•ON9 • MOVll * * "The Viking ~" C1N 7) Don Murrey, Aon. .,,,,. Corri e9 CHAILIE'I AHQE..I • GUNIMOQ MllelOH: IMfl'CIH•Li 12'.iO 11 ()) MCMIU>N & WR D TOMOMOW G..-11. Britllh puo11 rOCk· .... AdM'I end the Anll • ONE STEP IEYOHO 1:00 • fl'IYCMC ~THI WOM.DMYOHD Hot11 Damien Slmpeon and Stacy Hunt dlsalN brMktllrOUgh to ~ .. tivtly wttll gueett. Or Sheflca K¥egulta. M 0 and Or Viola Neal Ph.0 • MOVIE * * "'Spy In Your Eye" P 9M) Bren HelMy p,., Anoell e INOUENOEHT NETWON< NEWI 1:108 MOVIE * * * "T•rOf In Thi Sky"' ( 197 ti Leil Erlci<IOf'I, Oouo eon. a:ooe MOVll * * ~ "The De\111'1 Hand" CINI) Robwt Alda, Und• Ctvlallan .... tmw8 4:00 M0\'11 I I * * "The Proud AnO T"- Dllrnned" ( 1872) Clluck Connor•. Joee Greco ,11 4:10• MOVIE ·' • • "0001111•" (1958f : ReymonO 8uf"r. Tak~ Slllmur• 4:aGat NEWS Frida11'• , . Da11ti•r .ftoel~ -~-·· 11:00., * * "'The SIM PllCllw" ( 1934) Jof\n Wayne, Vw • Hiiiie ; 11:80 G • • • • "How Green , • Wea My \/alley'" (Part 2)' = (18'1) Waltw P~. :.: Maureen o·~· • -AFTERNOON-l 12:00 81 * * "Blowing Wild" • io :" (1-e's31 Gery Coopw, 88/JI ~ bet a St 9nW)'dc ;': II) * *. 00Rlch81d Ill" ; (19551 Laurence Oii-. : John o..iouo 8aMd Ott ~ Slllk~• 1 play t• • 3=*1 a ••. ,., "AgaiMI A e C1ookll0 Sky" C 1975) Ak:h-: ard Boone. St-•r1 Pet9'1 :; ~ r l • • • .. • . ' . . ~ • • • .. Brinkley program changes day By TOM JORY At-1ta.."'-W"'9~ NEW YORK After struggling since the first of November to build an audience opposite CBS' phenomenally successful "Dallas." David Brinkley's "NBC Magazine" gets a new home tonight at 8 on Channel 4, and some long ·awaited el bow room . "NBC Magazine," broadcast head- to-head with "Dallas" 15 limes. was watched in an average of 6.1 million homes. compared with 27.3 million for "Dallas," the season's top-rated show. In the 15weeks, "NBC Maga~ine" was the least·watched 'Prime -time pro· gram on lloccasions. . . "This show was buned agamst the most popular program in television. overwhelmingly," says Leslie Midgley, NBC News' vice president for special programs. "I have to believe its quality, and variety, will at· tract a larger audience in a different kind or atmosphere. "When we learned we were going to be against this blockbuster," Midgley says. ''we decided, 'Let's do this show as well as we cnn, satisfy our own de· sire rorquality. • ·•we don't have the problem with 'Dallas' anymore," beaays, referring to the pro1ram'1 oew 1·9 p.m . Thursday timeslot. ••As Brinldey says. •Now let's produce.·'' The first night for "NBC Magazine" in the new timeslot ls notable for another'reason. NBC News wm COO· sum e the remaindel'Of primetimethat evening with a "White Paper" special. "Reagan: The First Hundred Days." The "While Paper," 9·11 p.m .. was to have included an interview with President Reagan by Ro'ger Mudd, NBC's primary Washington cor· respondent. The attempt on Reagan's life March 30 dictated a change tn plans. The program will include Interviews with k~y administration and other gov· ernment officials -and perhaps the president himself as well as a dis· cuss ion by Mudd of Reagan's style, im· age and leadership ability. ··From the start of his term," Mudd says In his commentary, "there was a disarming candor written all over Ronald Reagan. He has made no pre- THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS of the FESTIVAL OF LEARNING AND PERFORMING cordially invitn you to att~nd A PREYUE GALA Monday Evening, April 17, 1981 Honoring NADINE CONNER MONA PAULE£ MARTIAL SING HER Artists of Mttropolltan fame Pr~s~ntlng CHARLt:s ROE llittoet, Ntw Yon CltJ 0,.. Wifh JAMES MASSENGALE • HENRllTTA nLTA neo.., p611i:lltl and /taturln.i tense at beiq a deep thinker. He bu never written mucti and be doesn't read books, be reads magazines. But he loved the comedian's line about his recogn.iJ.1.ng Red China if someone would only show him a picture-Of it.'· dlence, •• be aayt. "That's their bat· nesa. Butwewould,too." Mld&ley says "NBC Magazine," produced by Paul Friedman with Brinkley as chief co1TeSpoodent and Betsy Aaron, Doualu Riker, Jack Perkins and Garrick Utley as the prin· cipal reporters, will not change materially in the new slot. "We probably will reason that at 8 Despite its dismal start -"NBC Magazine" inherited very little in the way o( au'1ence from its predecessor, "Prime Time Friday" -Midgley says the network has remained firm in its support of the program. o'clock our audience will be younger --------------------- •'The network has provided us with all the facilities we need -the money -we can't complain about the re· sources." he says. than 1t was at 10," he s-ays, "and we may do certain things to adapt to that. But the show has been getting better. steadily. and in my opinion it's become a very good . general interest, ~ . I, I "They would like more or an au-magazine show." THE BLACK HOLE ,.,......,.,_. SLHPING BEAUTY ....... 11 MA•MU Brea 529-5339 AMC OtWl8l MALL Orange 637·0340 MA• IOUTll COAIT CostJ Mesa 546·2711 EIWUll'WUTUOOI Garden GrM 530·4401 llWUll' SADIU IACK El Toro 5&"5880 UA CfTl c.Jll Orange 8a4-3911 "ACINC'I ............ Al\Wlm 879-9850 .,.... .... YU ,_lWIWIL i "'NGO STAR" ''CAVEMAN" '"' "NIGHTHAWK" (A) ''THI POeTllAH ALWAY9 RINGI TWICa" ("~ ''STMWARI .. (PG) STADIUm [1 SCt.ren Drtvcz I . coll 639 7860 "ITARWAU" A.,.,'ftll• h I A ... tlf 1j I •· ,. DAYTOrt KA'rtt MAM" Jtnstn tmriM\4r1t LOUtS LA llUSSO II t11t J'" CAMMTSOS • -• 1111-"TIKOYO A"D HIS SMM'' • Cll"l!"T fUClt£1l -t• •-•rMnctSIAI w.•ll."fAULADCIAUllEftTllS --rMftll c. ClAAll ---·-·-----_ ......... • Select from the largest display of quality sofas, chairs and loveseats at spectacular savings. If you don't find just the right prices on our floor, special order in your own style and fabric selection at a price reduction. Such well-known manufacturers as Woodmark, Stanton Cooper, Vanguard, Classic Leather, Marge Carson , Drexel, Heritage, Henredon and more. Don 't delay -this spring upholstery sale Is our . biggest and best ever. Stop in soon! Quality features Include * 8-way hand tied * Kiln-dried hardwood frames * Scotchguarding •·Arm covers * Interlined cushions * Lined skirts * 5-quarter ply sttlect hardwood frames * Impeccable tailoring . - STOCKS FEATURES COMICS C7 ca C10 $11 million project goes up in Newport Center ... C5 1 o.11y ,.. ... ......,. .., alcMftl ll.-.. SHOT BLOCKING -Fountain Valley's Kirk Harty goes high in the air to block a shot by Newport Harbor Wed- nesday night in Sunset League volleyball action. The Barons upset the Tars after 40 straight victories. See story on page C3. Will real Angels please stand up? lh EDZINTEL 04"111• oa11y ,.. ... '"'" Perhaps what the Angels have here 1s a failure in knowing JUSl who they are Arc they the feeble kittens who rolled over and played dead for Floyd Bannister Tuesday or are they the cats with bag ap· petites who pounced on three Seattle pitchers for 14 hits in Wednesday night ·s 7 3 win over the Manners? NO ONE REA LL V knows Not the manager. not the playe~. not the media, not the fans. But as the season moves on, the answer will soon become clear. Everyone knows that. "I think our eon fadence as geared up for this road trip after tonight," right fi e lder Dan Ford said. "People have looked at this club and expected explosive· ness. They've wondered what's wrong with all of us. Well, I don 't think there ·s anything wrong. The hitters have just been pressing like it's Sep- tember or something. I think things are getting better." Prior to Wednesday's game. things couldn't have been much worse. The Angels (6·7) came into the final game of the season-opening homestand hitting a bewildering .210. But with Ford and second baseman Bobby Grich both lashing out three hits, including solo home runs, the Angels' left Wednesday's 21,984 fans with something good lo gnaw on. AND NOW, WITH a travel date today, the Angels will get some much needed rest before opening a aeven-day. seven· game road trip in Minnesota Friday. "Going on the road wlll take aome pretaure off the euys, eapeclally (Don> Ba)lor," Ma.s11er Jim Fre1osi said . . Baylor, the Angels' designated hitter who quit the team Jaat Thursday, then rejoined il two hours later, conUoued his hilting slump Wednesday, going ().for· five. He's currently O·for-27 in his last at bats and is hitting 051 .. Maybe in Minnesota. they won't care that he's 2-for-40 (ac- tually he's 2-for-39 this season>." Fregosi added Ford, hitting only .206 entering the game. singled home Rod Carew Crom second in the first inning and led off the fifth with his third homer of the season. Grich, hitting .184 coming in, doubled in the middle of a two· run fourth off Seattle starter Ken Clay 0 -1 J, led off the sixth with his second homer of the year and drove in a game-high third run with a single in the seventh "I was talking to Ri ck Burleson before the game and he said l should try to keep the ball an the ballpark and just try to make contact," Grich said. "SO I JUST went back to my old style hitting stroke and bingo, l ltit a home run. I'm just going for contact and I hit a home nm. Whal a crazy game." Grich was also involved in two Angel double plays behind winner Ken Forsch (2·0). The Angels have now executed 11 double plays in the last five games. F.or Forsch, who pitched ade· quately but not near as well as last Saturday when he shut out Minnesota on two hits, he needed a little help. He eave up three runs on seven hits, walked two and struck out three before givin1 way to Dan Aase in the eighth. Aase worked the final lwq in· nings, allowing just two bits. (See ANGELS, P11e C2> nellvmg· the Jnar~thon Arauz recalls the good and bad of Boston. ByJOBNSEVANO °' .. .,.., ......... To me. all distance runners look alike. They're thin, lanky, rubber-legged and durable. They give the Im· pression they can run forever. Georae Arauz, a Dally Pilot employee, is one of these individuals. He's 5·7, 127 pounds and has been running marathons as long as he can re· member. Arauz, 44. participated in the Boston Marathon Mon· day. It was his first appearance in the granddaddy or all running events. There doesn't seem to be much argument about the uniqueness of the Boston Marathon. Its program, beauty, course, start and finish -there's nothing like it. Just ask anyone who has been fortunate. or unfortunate enough, to partake in the event. . For Arauz, the experiences he encoun- tered will be embedded in his memory forever. This is his story . . . Jt'a S o'clock m the morning, Eoalem Standard Time It's Monday, bght ia 1wt atort- mg to cha3e the dorkneu and the atart of the Boat on Marathon ia aeven hours away. The hotel operator calla George Arauz'a room aa scheduU?d • The first thing I wanted to do was check the weather l was hoping it would be clear and warm. Instead, I got overcast and cold. I decided I would wear my black run- ning suit because it retained heat better and my tight-fitting running shoes because in cold weather my feet need the snugness I showered and shaved -all the time avoiding thoughts about the race -and then set out in search of my pre-race meal George Arauz which consisted or poached eggs, two pieces of french toast and some bacon. One of my breakfast buddies questioned my choice of bacon but, for me. it's a necessity Why? Because 1t helps me burp l know that sounds funny but when I burp it helps clear the air out of m) stomach. which helps me relax. Jl 's a false sense of securi ty, but it works for me . The busses departed at 7:15 a.m. and the ride seemed like it lasted forever. When I boarded the bus was the first time J felt any nervousness. As we were driving I couldn't help being fascinated with the terrain and the rolling hills I knew I'd be facing later. The bus arrived at 8 :30 and as I got off I beean to shiver with cold. I also began to panic and lighten. All my preparation had been done under the sunny skies of California and l was hoping it would be the same in .Boston. It wasn't l immediately threw on a long s leeve shirt under my jersey in search of warmth. Then a friend told me it was starting to rain "Oh. damn," I thought. Now what? It's .the first and only time l felt l had to make a decision. Should I run or should r back away? l decided to run after hearing fellow runners from Texas. Canada and Anzona say they've come too far to back out now. I felt if they could do it, so can I. That doesn't mean m) bladder agreed with the decision. though, as I ran to the bathroom five times prior to the start Minutes before the gun l began rub bing Vaseline and oily cold cream all over my body This served two purposes· a > it shielded me from the weather; b> 1t gave me some flexibility Wouldn't you know 1t. though Just before the race was to commence I had to go to the bathroom again l looked around for relief and all I saw were people and a church l decided the race was more im port ant • There was no gun. JUSt a loud roar from the front as the race began I started my watch with the hope of running the 26-mile course in two hours. 45 minutes That plan was shot down early. however, when it took two minutes to reach the starting line and 10 minutes to reach the first mile mark The amount of people was incredible You tned to run but you couldn't. Walking would have served the same (See ARAUZ, Page C2> ......... \ -I 1~, .//~ .. ~ 't· ~-~ DA y l'llet 'Y Gar'J A-- E z · F OOthill High star John Gansel wzll be in goal for the l' S at the 11 Fma World Water PoLo Cup at Long Beach State Bulgaria first test for wate~ polo team Nitzkowski hopes U.S. won't be Looking ahead to Sunday's game with Russia By ROGER CARLSON · Of ... Dlltt ,..... l&eff LONG BEACH -The last three entries of the eigbt·naUon II Fina World Water Polo Cup invitational -Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Cuba -arrived today with competition scheduled to begin Saturday at Long Beach State. Action begins at 3 p.m. Satur· day with the Russians colliding with Australia, followed by Spain and Cuba. The' evening sesaions feature Communist powers Yu"oalavia and Hungary al 7, followed at 8:30 by the Bulgarians and host Americans, under the direction of Coach Monte Nitzkowski. a Hunlingtori Beach resident. "We don't know a thing about Bulgaria," says Nitzkowski. "Whal we do-know is that every game ls of equal importance. The scoring is two points for a victory, one for a tie and nothing for a Joss. Any etentual lie is de- cided by goal difference. "It's true. there i• a possibility of looking past Bulgaria (the Russians are the foe for the U.S. Sunday evening). but if we do that, we're courting disaster. "(l's difCicult for anyone in this tournament to go un· defeated." Tbe tournament features the gold , si lver and bronze medalists of the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow (Russia, Yugoslavia and Hungary). Spain. led by Manuel Estiarte's 21 goals, was fourth and Cuba. with Jorge Riio's 20 goals, was filth. It's the first appearance by a Soviet water polo team in Do'dgers' amazing Vaknzuefu, wins own·game . i I , I "• Fan over rail ch&sing a foul ' From AP dhlpatcbea CINCINNATI -An 18-year.old foot- ball player gave fans at the Atlanta Braves·Cincinnati Reds same a scare Wednesday when he fell over the rail of the second deck chasing a foul ball and dangled by one hand from a rail 30 feet above the lower deck. "I just wanted a ball. That was it. I almost landed in the blue seats," said Randy Kobman of West Chester after other fans puJled him back into the up. per deck at Riverfront Stadium. Kobman, a linebacker at Lakota High School, said he has won a football scholarship lo Indiana University. Kobman, seated in the second deck behind home plate. took off running after a George Foster foul ball in the bottom or the eighth inning. Kobman hit the thigh-high concrete wall and rolled head-first over the rail. However, he managed lo grab the rail with one hand. Fans sealed nearby rushed to his aid and pulled him back up. Quote of the day Bob Stanley, Red Sox pitcher, whose children are named Kyle and Kristin: "We've got two K's. One more and we'll have the inning over on strikeouts." That's softball? 56-39 ·NORWICH. Conn. -In the words of Coach Dante Fede Ii . 1t was not a classic debut for the women's softball team at the Stamford branch of the University or Connecticut. Fedeli's team defeated Mohegan Com mun1ty College Tuesday 56-39 in a game that was called on account of darkness. The game featured 95 runs, 48 hits. 50 walks and 17 errors in six in· nings F'edeli 's team was losing 34-26 when it rallied for 29 runs in the fifth inning. Fedeli. noting that the game was sup- posed lo be the first part or a double- header. said . "I've never seen anything like 1t And I hope I don't again." Baseball today On this date in baseball in 1964: Ken Johnson of Houston became the fu'St patcher in modem major league history lo lose a nine-inning no-hatter. as the Cincinnati Reds beat him 1·0 The game's lone run came m the ninth inning Pete Rose led orr with a bunt. but Johnson threw the ball away, allowing Rose to reach second base Chico Ruiz 's line r caromed oH Johnson and was fielded by third baseman Bob Aspromonte, who threw Ruiz out as Rose reached third. Vada Pinson followed with a grounder to the right side that was booted by second baseman Nellie Fox, allowing Rose lo score. Onthisdatein 1954: Milwaukee rookie Hank Aaron' crashed his first major league home run. a blast off Vic Raschi. as the Braves beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7·Sin t4innings. Today's Birthday: Hall of Fame pitcher Warren Spahnis60 From Page C1 • Hornjr hoM1r ald•Allarita , • ... ~ uammed a bollie rwa Ud drove lD .., ..... for a MelOlid eoa· lttutive ..... u Attala Cl'\lllbed Cbl· eluati '1'!r""l1 to ,...., a two-1ame Na Leqwi HM. AUQ.ta •tarter Ga,._. PeijJ limW UM Rec11 to 1bt blta • he NeOnMd tu. f1rit Vic· tory ln three ttarta . . . &IMWIM,. lo the leaaue. WWle ........... two-out 1lnale in the 11th 1Min1 1eorec1 Gary Caner with tbe wtnnJn1 nm u MOD· treal defeated Philadelphia, 44. Carter ~ad s!naled with two out and advanced on • wild pitch by loter Tq MeGraw and an error ... Tommy Herr slammed hls third triple tn aa many days, driving In a pair of runs in the second inning and he1plng St. Louis to a 3·0 victory over the Chicago Cube. Herr leads the leafue in RBI wlth 11 . . . .luaa Elcbelber1er and Gary Lucas combined tor a five-hitter while Mike Pldlllpe tripled and scored on a Ge~e IUcbarda single to start Sao Die10 on 1ts way to a 4.0 win over Sao Fran- cisco . . . The Pittaburgb Pirates and New York Meta battled for 81t'a lnnlngs before rain caused cancellation of their game with the score tied, 2-2. The eame will be replayed in its entirety, but all batting statistics will stand. No date was set for the replay. Brewers win on Molitor slam P.ul MoU&or hit the lint grand slam homer of his major league career, the lone bit in the Brewen' five-run filth in- ning, and he also singled home a run in the seventh to lead Milwault'ee tQ an 8-1 victory over Toronto Wednesday night in Am e rican League baseball action ... Jn other games : Brlaa Kingman scattered six hits through eight in - nings before reliev- ers Crate Ml · aetto and Jeff Jones n a i I e d do w n 0 a k I a n d · s Molitor 2 -1 victory over Minnesota for the A's 14th triumph in 15 games this season . Lea Barker pitched a seven-hitter and M.lke Har· grove blasted a two-run double as Cleveland defeated Kansas City. 4·0, for a sweep of their three-game series . Newcomer Steve Balbolnl'• first ma1or league at-bat produced a triple and his bases-loaded walk an the seventh inning _ triggered a five·run rally as the New York Yankees defeated Detroit. 7·2. The win gave the Yankees a sweep of their three-game series. Recgle Jacksoa belt- ed his 412th lifetime homer in the fourth inning ... Pat Putnam drove in four runs and Billy Sample three as Texas built an ll·O lead in the fir!it two innings en route to a 16·8 victory over Boston. Buddy Bell capped the Texas barrage with a three-run homer, his first or the season, against reliever Mark Clear .. Rain washed out the Baltimore at Chicago White Sox game which was rescheduled as part of a double-header today. Kansas City, Boston romp Power forward Re111ie IDal poW'ed in 31 pointa and nu li'onl, in on..ly bi.a second game since Feb. 22, coatributed key basket.a to lead Kanau City to an 88· 79 romp over Houston Wednesday nigtrt that squared their National Basketball Association playoff series at one game apiece. Trailing by one point at halftime, despite 21 pointa from King, Kamas City bolted to~ Sl-5' ad- vantage early in the third period . . . L81'ry Blrd scored 7.3 of bi.a team· high 34 pointa ln the tint half u the Boston Celtics took command early and breezed to a 118-99 triumph over Philadelphia, tying their series at one victory each. The Celtics led all the way, scoring the game's lint el1ht points and never looking back. Bird and Nate Archibald scored 10 points apiece in the first quarter. which ended with Boston in front 30-22 .... Chicago Bulls forward David GrffDwood will undergo surgery to repair tom car· tilage in the right knee. nae EdmoalOCl Olien. ~Ced by. the Plv~ maf1c of w..,_ G...ukJ, lta•ed. off National Hockey IAa•u• playoff ellmlnaUon wtth a .. 3 victory over t.M' New York Ialanden Wedn•- ' day nt1bt. Thoq.b Gretlky waa the moet dominant play.r on the Ice, Ed· monton's tle.breaklnc 1oal came without bi.I help • • . Rookie fOaltender Ooa Beaupre 1tymled the Buffalo Sabres and forward KHt·£rlk A•· dentoa tcored the •o-ahead 1011 and got an ua.ilt .. tbe No~Stan beat the Sabret, 4·3, to wtn their stanley Cup qunterfinal series ... Left •Ina .'orfea Pettenaoa .scored a power play goa with 13:51 left, climaxlna a three- goal rally that kept St. Louis alive with a ~·3 triumph over the New York Rangers . . . Bria.a Propp scored three goals ln eight minutea durlnt the open· ing period as Philadelphia routed Calgar y, 9·4, to stay alive In the playoffs. The game was delayed almost a haU-hour in the second period when a free-tor-all broke out after a fleht between Calgary's .llm Pepllukl and the Flyen' Glen Cocbraae. When it was all over. referee Roa Wku handed out 111 minutes in penalties, 62 to the Flames and 49 lo the Flyen. Beer bottle cuts Oriole hurler CHICAGO -Baltimore Oriole pitcher Dennis Martinez was reported in ex - cellent condition with four stitches in his forehead after being struck by a bot· tie allegedly thrown by a spectator prior to cancellation or Wednesday night's scheduled game with Chicago. Police said Perry M. Galanos, 22, of Chicago, was charged with aggravated battery in connection with the inci· dent. Authorities said Galanos was de· lained by security guards before being turned over to police. Martinez, a right-hander, was treated by a staff physician at Illinois Masonic Medical Center, a spokesman said. She said Martinez was cut on the left side or the forehead at the hairline. Dave Wanda, a spokesman for the Comiskey Park Security Department, said a member of the security force re ported seeing a bottle thrown Martinez was inside the White Sox dugout when struck. "In the past there have been darts thrown." said Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver. "There've been bolls thrown. I understand they threw bullets at Dave Parker in Pittsburgh. When you can catch someone, at least you can have him locked up for a night. Wilkins turns Pistons down University of Georgia forward Dominique WIUdu says a $1.28 million contract offer from the Detroit Pistons isn't enough to make him cut his college basketball career short But he said he wouldn't be surprised if the Pistons cam e back with another offer. He has until Saturday lo make a decision The 1981 U.S. dec athlon national championshlp, scheduled June 27·28. has been awarded to Santa Barbara ... Veteran linebacker Brad Duek underwent suraery without complica- tions for a ruptured disc . th e Was hington Redskins a nnounced ... Mike Garllter fired a wrist shot past goalie Vlacl1alav Tretlak midway through the third period to give Canada a 4·4 tie with the Soviet Union in pool A of the World Hockey championships in Goteborg, Sweden . . . Veteran Biii Shoemaker has been na med lo replace Jacinto Vasquez on Cure the Blues for the May 2 Kentucky Derby . . Buck Belue, quarterback of Georgia's na. tional champion football team and a s tandout on the Bulldogs' baseball squad, says be faces a "tough decision" aa the June baseball draft approaches Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball -San Diego at Dodgers. 7 :30 p.m .. KABC {790>. FRIDAY RADIO Baseball -Angels at Minnesota. 11 :15 a.m .. KMPC (710). SPORTS BREAK I BOATrNG ByAUIONLOCK.A8EY .,. .. , .............. rlW Newport Harbor will be flUed wJth 1allboata Friday and Sahu .. day momtna ueeo wln4Jammen boardine more thao 4,000 aaUon make fut minute pJieparatlona for the 3'th annual Newport to Ensenacla yacht race. And at noon Saturday all 880 or them -barring a few latt·mlnute no-shows -will be on the dual sta rtin1 lines just outside the jetty awaiting the &tarting signals for their respective classes. The record 680 entries -down from the original posting of 685 - makes the Ensenada derby far and away the biggest interna- tional yacht race in the world. AS IN YEARS past, the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet {PHRF> will be the largest contingent with 558 e ntries divided into 10 classes. They will be competing for the President of the U.S. Trophy for the best cor· reeled time, along with other ma· jor prizes. Next largest division will be the International Offshore Rule rat· ings with 95 boats in three classes seeking the President of Mexico Trophy. Add 20 catama.rans and trimarans sailing under the Ocean Racing Catamaran As · sociation handicap rule. 12 wooden hulls sailing an the An· cient Mariner Class and 39 boats sailing under the Southern Ocean Racing Divison <SO RO > hand· icap rule, and you have an armada that will blanket the From Page C1 ANGELS • • • The right-handed Aase. who has apparently established himself as the Angels' stopper in the bullpen, has now appeared in six games without yielding a run an 10innings. "I would hope to see a more relaxed club in Minnesota and in the next homes land <which begins next Thurs da y)." Fregosi said. "Ma ybe we sho~ld go somewhere where hitters' averages aren't posted on the scoreboard. I've been getting tired of seeing some of ours up there myself." Maybe Fregosa wall feel daf ferently by the time the Angels ·return to Anaheim Stadium Center fielder Fred Lynn also had three hits. all singles. whale Butch Hobson and Carew each had two. One of Hobson's hats was a triple in the fourth inrung to drive in Grich who had doubled Carew. who after a poor hat· ling four games against Oaklnad last week . has moved his average up near where it usual ly is c .294) said that he too. has made some adjustments at the plate. ·'I 've taken extra batting practice and it seems to be help- ing. I've stopped pulling the ball and tried hitting everything to left. I'm glad we won this game. We have to beat teams like Seat- tle to have a chance." ANO al. NOT•t -Tlw Antle" we,., :Man thlt "-HIMd -,....,.INd ffVeft IM\~ _,.., dl ¥1.-1-r ~I-. Tlw llNI ol 1-9M"ft In Min-. wlll ... ,.. em Tnt_.. 10·1) pilclllftg ~•Inst !fie TwlM' •11 ........ . T,,. .,...., collec-• --""" 14 hits to rel• U. -.... ,eve It POlnts to 226 • CN,.,,.1 s w111 191••1M S.Cun:i.ty"a dey -· ,,,. llral oame of• 00..e.1 .. ,,._.. °" 5wftday ,rwJ -.y n1r1·1 ,...,. from o.i..-. ocean Crom Newport to the Mu- ican border from about 1 p.m. to nl1htt.U. BY SUNDAY NIGHT Jl:nsenada will be Jarnmed gunwale-to-gunwale wltb anchored aaUboah whlle thouaanda of race tollowera Join the 4,000 aaJlora ln wboopln1 lt up on the street.a and In the biltroe of the once sleepy little fishing re- sort. Depending on the direction and velocity of the wind, the first yachts should start arrl vint at the finish line off the Ensenada breakwater before noon Sunday and will continue to stream in the rest or the day and evening. Yachts that do norfinish by the 11 a m . Monday deadline will have BOATING just been along for the ride and will be recorded as DNF (did not finishl. What is the Ensenada race? fn the jar gon of most Southern California sailors it is a "crap shoot," with the most unlikely boat with an inexperienced crew able to pick up one or more of the dozens or top trophies if condi · lions are right IN ntE PHRF division alone. the top rated yacht, Merlin. has to gave more than 12 hours to the lowest rated, N1ghtwatch. In the lOR division there is a time spreadofmore than 14 hours. The race for elapsed time honors <first lo finish l is usually among one or more of the big catamarans or trimarans and the highest rated monohulls in IOR and PHRF Best bet for first to finish is Make Kane's SS-foot trimaran Crusader if wind condi· lions are right Among the monohulls the race will be among Christine at the top of PHRF·A. Merlin, Ragtime and News Boy an PHRF·A. F'or the residents and business people of Ensenada the race is a two day windfall of pesos and dollars for hotels. restaurants. gafl shops and saloons -not to mention a week-long clean up after the "crazy gringos" have departed for their home prots. Gone hopefull y forever -are the days or t'herry bombs explod- tn g 1 n crowds. horses being ridden through Husson g's Cantina, street brawls among sailors and landlubbers .... ho used to nock to Ensenada for the Cinco de Mayo celehration THE POST-RACE shenanigans tamed down a number of years ago when NOSA and Mexican of· ftcials agreed to remove the race from the Cint'o de Mayo weekend and start in on Saturday so that the yachts would finish on Sunday after the non-sailing crowd had headed for the border. Mexican oHicials also laid down the law to boisterous c rewmen , and NOSA warned s kippers that any crewmen who created trouble would be barred from future races. The race -known facetiously as the "tequila derby," the "enchilada derby" and the "race to Hussong's" -admits boats ranging in size from 24 to 100 feet many of which have never sailed any farther than from the maanlandtoCatalina Island. ARAUZ RELIVES MARATHON • • • Baseball standings pu~e. Fmally, the pack broke and so did I. There was a lot of lime to make up. I kept zig-zagging, In and.out of runners and the public was applauding ev~ry inchortheway. The weather had warmed up and I was hot and sweating - which was a good sign. At the 10-mile mark a girl went down a nd four runners 9-'ere right there to help pick her up. It was the first casualty of the race I saw. I was amazed at how easy it 'bad been up to now. "A piece of cake," I thought. Then lt dawned P1l me later -there were still four Nila to come. I hlt my first hill at the 15-mlle mark and I felt strong. A little further, howenr, and my legs started to fee l tlretl. my breathing was erratic and 1 •Jopped 1weaUng. I made It over the second hill but there wu a con1tant lnclin.a· .tton to the third. By the end ol :the third I waa beglnnln1 to panlr again. I was uncomfortable; there was a 1maU bllater deveJ.opln1 on the aide of my foot; and I besao lollns my eobcentrat.ion. ·Plus, Reutbreak Htll, the cnaratbon killer, wu ahead of -;me. the uree lo go to the bathroom again. It was at this stage I began questioning my sanity. "Why am I here? Why would I want lo put myself through this? I could be at home working, instead. This is not what run is all about, and I still have to take a leak." . 1 began feeling sorry for myself. The crowd spurred me on, though, and I got mad when peo. pie started to pass me so I passed them back. Finally I reached the top and one of the spectators yelled, "You're here. You made it to the top .'' I thouebt, "What do you mean, I'm here. Hell. l still have six moremilestogo." It was also at this point -the 20·mile martc -that I heard tTosbihiko> Seko had won the race. I wu tired, my arm• w.re flopping and my bocl)' wa1 looee. People were trylnl to help coach me but all I could t.b1nk was, "You co t.brouC)l th1a and aee how euy lt II. I'm not a machine.'' Aqd, oh ya, I 1Ull bad the urse to 10 to UM bathroom. Wtth ftve mll• left 1 couldn't take lt anf more. I broke tbroup the crowd and went to the 1lde of an office buUdlnt. J dldn 't care lf the whole world aaw me at thit polnt. I h.d to 101 Once I ..,.. back on.. the coune 1 Ht mJ'~lllOtl on a woman J bid beiti blidlnc.tbe lut few mllil. I caUllll aQd puNd her aftcl lbat mMe me r..1 better. Wltli 11ne·ai&liil naaaWnl I ... u. PrWllaUal ..... ~ marked the end of the race. Instantly I thought maybe this was worth it after all. Spoke too soon. A c hilling wind and the cold made condi- tions miserable again. I thought. "Why now?" I was start.in& to tie-up and I wondered I( I would finish. Just then a friend put his arm on my shoulder and said we'd go in together; that the finish wasn't much further. All I can remember of the end was that 'it was dark. cold and a chilUnt mist was falling. The faces on the street were all a blurr, but they were screamillg, tryln1 lo help. Somebody shouted, " One and a half miles to 10." Another yelled, "Two miles to 10. ·• "I wi•h someone would make up their mind," ii what I thou1ht. · Finally, there lt was -the end ln all Ill splendid beauty. There was only one problem, a 1mall incline to tbe finllb which looked AMERICAN LEAGUE West DIYllloa W L Pct. GB Oakland 14 1 .933 - Chicago s 3 .625 51h Angell 6 7 .462 7 Texas 5 6 .455 7 Seattle 4 9 .308 9 Kansas City 2 7 .222 9 Minnesota 2 9 .182 10 Eaat Dlvl1loa Cleveland 6 3 .667 - New York 7 4 .636 - Boston 6 4 .600 ~ Detroit 7 5 .583 ~ Milwaukee 5 4 .556 1 Baltimore 3 4 .429 2 Toronto 3 9 .~ •~ ••• , •• tr'•k--......, ..... U.J TuHi., ...... I 0....,..1. Mt--. 1 Mtlw..,.._e.Ttr .... 1 N_V..._7,~l.l .. Ill'""• .t Qiluet, -.. taHI c ........ '-"-CJtr 0 T_,..._.. .. It._.. (Mc°"'99r ... Md MefM ,.., ., Cll~CO.U.O•l ... 8arr1MH). T ....... tei..'f l•U et .... Ylrtl UtNI M).11 Oftly--~ like Mt. Eve~st to me. ----:::;;;--..;....._ J clolted my eyes and 11ve tt all J could to the wire. 1 wu almost crylnf, I waa h•Pl>Y and 1 was cuninc. I tor1ot about evetythlnc. It wu llke I wu oo a cloud. I never tell the lHt pert of lba race. 1 cl"OIMd OM liri• m a:ot: .. , 20 mltlutel behlftd 1dleduJ•, J wu bletk·and·blue aDd I wa1 lblver-ma It wu to cold. nen "re bOdl• l1lna ill over UM place ud all I eOUld WOllder was boW r ftallbed. • J did It, bUt It-~, jmt.JM -&.H piopli ~ BOICaii btl#d. NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division Dodgers Atlanta ., Cincinnati San Diego San Francisco Houston W L Pct. GB 10 J .833 - 6 ., .545 3~ 5 6 .455 4~ 5 8 .385 5'h 5 8 .385 5'h 3 9 .250 7 East Division Montreal 8 2 .800 - St. Louis 7 2 . 778 'ti Philadelphia 7 5 .583 2 New York 4 4 .500 3 Pittsburgh 4 4 .500 3 Chkago 1 10 .091 7'h II . , . ., .... _ ~, .......... AllMl.9 7, CM<IMMI I Moftt ..... it ...... liMlltlpN• J 111 IMlftp) St. ~ '-OllcetO 0 S... 0449t4. SM ~leco 0 New Yn 1.,.......,..,. 2 re~,,,.,.,.,,,...,,, T•Y"•9-IM Cl'-Cwttt •t1 _. ~ IMclllfo 1 .. 1. ..... Yer11 C"-•11 •I Plttll1t1 ..... CC:--... ., ... II AllMt• (MMWllKe .. ,, at S.11 P'•-••• uU1•er•o ti..c""*' CINilw t-U .......... CIWIM0.11, Orange Coaet OASL V ~LOT/Thuraday. Api11 23, 1981 PVBUC NOTlCB PC81JC NO'ftCB fltCnnout ..,_..... PKTITIOUI IWSINIP ..... tl'ATaMUff' .... tTATe*ln ,ICTITIOllt _,.. ... ..... 11'Af1MlllMT PVBUC NOTICE Fountain Valley '1 Chrla Wycinowsld and Edlloa'• Shan· non Meyera were nahJed to th Hcond team All·Cl F atrlt basketbaU t•am today wlth two others picked for the third team by the Citizeqa Savina• Athletic FoWldaUon. WycJnowski, a 1enlor, av1ra1eid lt.9 pointa per same ,.hlle Meyers, allo • nior. Jilt &t I 17 .0 clip. ltanbra avtl'ated 11.0 and Belaert 10.2 ror the season. Both are senlon. M UJer avera1M at.• potnta 1 aame. For Miller, It marked her third at.raithl year u an All·ClF tint team 1election. In her first three years Poly bas compiled an 81..C record Tiie...................... flle ...... lflt ---...... -··· ~-· OCl4M lfl'OAT•, HM .. W.t\ PlllltlO..Ht "~llllTIES, 1• ~ ,,_._ N.....-t .. llCll. GA Vie Weal•rt, Nawll•l't •••ell, ..... C.J\~nMO lle\llU. Wt111-Hell~. \W w1111e1111 •••Ir Arnn\r9'1e. 11 IMN<lfff ..... car-.. llWw. (A .................. ,.,, ••• , .. . "'2S ClllllWlllo... .\ TMs ._ 11 ~-.. ._\' 911 Ut• fiwm. M. L.IMtft. at0 """"""· Tlle ............ lt .......... -··· ••11 INTlltMATl~Al. lllllTA'- COlllll'ANY1 tt•1 ~ A"•" ,,_....v.~.CA""'-• ,. °"" v--. ,.., ~ ""•. fl--..6-VelN¥,CAft1'1 Tiii• ....._ .. _...,.., .. 1 ... .. "*" TeO...Y- On the UU~ team were Mater Del's Mary Stanbu and Fou.n· taln Valley's Marianne Belien. No area players were picked for the fint team. Cheryl Miller, a Junior. led Rlvenlde Poly to the t-A cham- pionship for the second atraiabt year after capturina the 3·A title two years ago and was named most valuable player. Riverside Poly was 29-0 durin1 the season after a 28-1 mark the year before tn addition to Miller , Riverside Poly also placed Sara Lewis on the first teain and two others including another junior, Renee Overton, on the second team. All averaged in doable figures. •l•i.wtl. ............. Glllltw.le f*2 l'lltHOlll.,,_ l•wl!I A. Muar"'· Ut v .. Tiiis ...,..._. -fl ... Wiit! Ille Wellen, .....,_. 9HCll, Calltot"ftle COUftlY Clef1I .. Or .... C-CY -.,.... Atltll 1, 1"1, 1111t ..... 1 ... •t II CIOft~tff DY • P'IMM llmll .. IN~. .. U~l.,_ Orenet C.eH\ Delly Pli.t, ldwtft A. MHtfw AP'll '• 16, p , ». '"' Tf\I\ .U'"-'l w• Ill• wlUI ttM 1121 .. t Cau11ly Clerk ol 0r .... c-fy on a,111 i. 1'tl. PUBUC NOTICE MAI.COM a DALY .... M.ec-..-e1..-., Mew,_.,._., CA ftMt Tlllt ... .._ -111• wllll Ille Ctllf'\Y ti.tlll ol °'-C6ufl\y tfl Maftll JI, 1"1. ,.,..., Putl'lllNd Or-()MA 0.Uy Pleet, •o t,t,16,U,1•1 I~ PUBLIC NOTICE Sea Kings~ Barons batter foes • ~11* ~t..., ""'ll•IOllCOUaTMCAL.f~llllA Pu1111.-0r.,.. C .... Delly Piiot, CO\INTY Of' Loe AHOit.ai A11r. 16, U. ao, May 1, 1•1 112.Mt In IN MMw Of lltlNDA ISAllL OAltCIA,.W- CAMI NI.UM•• A·t- PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI 8UllN•U MAMC ITAT•MalllT Tiie tollOWl"I .,.,_ are dolllf 4>ualneuH: PUBLIC NOTICE OlllANGE COAST NVIUIHO SERVICES. nm Luau UM, Hurtl· 1119tan 8aocll, tallton.la ,..._ fllCTITIOUI eUMM•U NANCY CAllO\. YN LOWE. HUI NAMa STATIMa'IT Laguna Beach, Estancia drop league outings L.v•11 Lane, Hunll119lon •••ell, Tll• follO#l"t .,..._It do'"9 bvtl· C.elllornte.,... MU H JAMES EDWARD LOWE, 221'1 ) STAR GENERAL C.ONTRAC L.v a11 Lelle, Hunllnglon aaacll, TOllS. 11!0 Whittie<" A-, U, Col CITATIOM fllCTITIOUI 8UMlllllU ,.,......_ "-lllAM• ITATaMalllT ""_. ~ ... c..'"4 T,_ loll-lnQ _..., I.I ttolfl9 bl.Ill· IAaANOOHMENTI -H ; Corona del Mar continued lo set a torrid pace in the Sea View League baseball pennant scramble while Fountain Valley kept playoff hopes aUve with a win over Huntington Beach in Sunset League play Wednesday. Laguna Beach lost to Mission Viejo, 6·0. whiJe Rstancia was dropping an 8 3 decision to El Toro in other area action. Here's how it went· CdM 9, Unlvel'9tty 0 Jeff Pries improved his lel\gue pitching record to 4·0 and drove in the rirst run of the game as well. Pries, a right hander, gave up six scattered hits while striking out four. He also was 3-for-4 at the plate including his RBI single in the third frame when the Sea Kings scored five runs. In the big inning, a walk and stolen base set up Pries' big hit. Mario Ybarra. Clay Tucker and Brent Melbon each had a 2-for-1 day at the plate with Ybarra and Tucker each getting doubles. The victory improved CdM's league record to 9·1 and gives the Sea Kings a 2'f.r-game lead Barons upset Tars in volleyball play Fountain Valley's Barons did it the hard way, coming back after losing the first two games to de- feat Newport Harbor in Sunset League volleyball action Wednesday night. 3·2 for the biggest upset of the current campaign Manna's Vikings handed Huntington Beach a 3·-0 defeat and on the community college level. Golden West stopped East Los Angeles, 3·0. The Barons stopped a streak of 40 straight vie· tories in league play that dated back to 1977 with the 9·15. 13-15. 15-6. 15·11. 15·5 victory. fl was Foun· lain Valley that turned the trick in 1977. Outside hitter Dave Thomas had 15 kills and Todd Story 14 for the victorious Barons. Rey Gubernick was the leading setter and Kirk Harty along with Ken Harder s hut off Newport's Mark Barrett with consistent play at the net. Chris Fisher had a good night in setting for Coach Tim Reed's Manna squad in a 15-8, 15·1. 15-6 triumph Tom Plane was the leading hitter while Andy Klussmann played well all around. For Golden West. Dave Devick and Gary Nakamura played well on'offense with Kelly Gar· rison the back court defensive standout. The Rustlers are now 12-7 for the season and are second to Santa Momca in Southern California Conference play They host Santa Barbara Friday night to conclude regular-season action Artists top Inglewood field TORRANCE South Coast League power Laguna Beach High. the No. 1 r anked prep volleyball team in Orange County and the CI F Southern Section. enters the Inglewood High In· Ftn. Valley 7, Hunt. Bch. 1 The Oile"' were in the game until the seventh inning when the Barons scored !our runs to put the decision out of reach. Fountain Valley, however, held the lead throughout the afternoon. Dean Roberts had two RBI and belted a solo home run in the fifth inning. He was 2·for-3 for the game at the plate. Steve Jongewaard had a triple for the winning team and Mike Wagner tripled io the seventh after PREP B4SEB4U two walks and an error loaded the bases. His was the key blow of the big inning. Roger Muscente was 2-for·4 while Howard Noack had a pair of singles in four trips to the plate for the Barons. El Toro 8, Estancia 3 Sean S\ngh was the big hitter for the winning Chargers. He was 3-for·3 including a single. triple and home run Jeff Gardner belted a homer in the top of the fifth inning to put Estancia in the lead. 3·2 but the margin was reversed in the bottom or the inning. Gardner was 2-for-4 for the game with Mike Deutsch going 2·for·3 Greg Forge pitched for Estancia and did well for four innings before the roof caved in in the fifth when the Chargers scored five times. He is now 6-4 for the year and 4·3 in league play. MIHlon Vl~lo 6, Lag. Beech 0 The Oiablos scored five times in the first in· nmg and added a s ixth tally in the second to put the decision out of reach early. Two walks, an error and a hit batter helped the Mission VieJo cause in the opening frame. GWC hosts tourney (II•: AOOPTIONI HAMILTON ANO AS$0CIAT'ES, To: PEOllO OAltCIA ella PIEOlt lttll CN llM SVWL. ~ ...... ANTONIO GAltCIA (prnvmaCI CalllOtnla'26S1 lalll•rJ Wll•r••bo11u u"llnowll llllcllerd o Hamlllon. "'° AURORA GONZALES CASTILLO elUI C.etallft• Str•el, 1.eouna •••<II. AUROltA GOHZALES au AUltOllA Callloralamsl GONZALES GAltCIA (molllerl Tllls~ls conca.<ttdbYanln· •11•,.a-lt 11n•nown, •M lo all dlvkNel "'"°"' tl .. ml119 Ill llt9 llW I-0 Rl<llen:t 0. HamlllOA mot11•r Of said mlnot .,.....,,, Abo¥• Tiiis ,......,_. Wti fll..S wit/I \IW namact. Covtlly Cler11 ol Oranoie County on By oreler ol lhls Courl yo11 era Aptll "· "" ,.,.by cltao and required to ._., ,,,_ .. f«a VIA JVCllgl Pfftldlnt '" ~rl publl-()trM91 Coa1I Dally P flOI. rnenl 2)6, lt_,.1·l11 Of !he MoV• -AO<' ,., ",JO, May 1, ltll ll»tl Ullecl court, localao at CRIMINAL -------- COURT llUILOING, 210 W Temple, I." A._1411, Callffon1la 'IOOU. Ofl JUM PUBLIC NOTICE u, 1'11, al •.oo a.m of lflOt c»y, •~ ------ and ...... IO -<-•· II *'Y you P'ICTITIOUS 8USINf.SS .......... y ..id panon 1*1ovld !IOI CM NllME STATEllll&HT llKlerod free from Ille conerol OI "°' Tiit followlnq persona ••• doing parents ec:cordlnQ lo Illa petlllon on bu•lnau as Ill• llaratn. I II BENEFIT PLAN For lellu,. 10 .... no. you may be AOMINISTRATORS, 111 B p A, 2021 •0Hmec1ou11tyof1<on~101<ovn. E . •111 s1-1. S..tt• '°'· Sanl• Ana. Yov .,. ........., notlllao Of the Pf'• Calllornla f210j •ltlCH11 ol 0•11 Code UJI .S wlll<ll 1>1'0. Ronald W•yne Masltrs. H Wn1Sll· vldo Illa judge -II actvlM Ille minor ing Swan 1ry1ne C.alllornle '111• Aftd ,,. peranu, 11 ,.,..,...,,of Ille rlolll H•ro'td H O•nleis, 1•11 Aca<1• lo llava '°"""' IH'•Mlftt Tiie coun Orlv•, Cy.,,_u, ca11rorn1a to.JO mo •~nl ~• to r-awnt the Tiiis bu\lnau I\ condu<l•O Oy • m inor -tl'lttf or -Ula 1111lnot Is •ble o•n•••I _-1nerSll•P lo alle><O coumel, -II U..y are-· Ronald w Ma11Ars bl• lo afford COUMAI, s/\all -'"' Tiii\ ..... ,.._, ••• I/It(! ... , ... "'" <°""WI lo,_._,,,,,. l>A"'""· County Cl.,k ol Oran~ Counly on 1 lltl petlUon lllecl 11e<ei11 I• lor IM March 31, ,,.., Pll•PoM OI 1,..1,. Ille sllbjacl tlllld lor platemant '°'~Ion Oa1e0· -'llfil t , '"' J~J Corcoran. County Clerk ly It KvnlPo, DeP\lly JONN N. l.AltSON, c-1,c-MA1tT1N E. WEEKas. De"'y C-y c-.al Ctt1111 ... c-wa•i.1 .. 111 W. T .... a Street l•Ja> LalA ........ CA•tl Toi: "'-'"1 Publht-Or-Coa•I Cally Pllol, AP< I•,"· :J:>, Nt.oy 1, 1te1 lt2'-tl PUBLIC NOTICE l'U-. PuDhsnecl Or.,.ge c.,.,, Dally Ptlol, Aprll l t, 1', 1l. '"' •~11·11 PUBLIC NOTICE N·lnM fltTITlOUS 8USlHEU MAME STATEMENT fl\1 lollowm g per)Ons •r• cJotng bu\1ne\\ Ai COTO RESEARCH CENTER, 12000" Pl-Tr•DU<O Ro.cl Tr•but Cenyon, CaMDfnt• 92111 Colo oe C•1• D•w1topmen1 Corporauon. • C••ltornl• corPoratlon, 11000 PIM10 Tratauco R~, Tr•Dt..t< C•nyon, C•llle><nl• '1•1' Comp\ilt•r;110 Olomtch•ntC•I Analy'*'· lfX. • New H•mpshlr1 cor fllCTlTIOUS 8USINllU por•lion, nooo Pl-Trabuto Road, NAMa ITATllMaNT Trabuto Canyon, Calllornla '2671 Tlla foltowlfte .,... .... 11 dolnil b<isl· Thh buSlneo 1\ ~onducttd by a M'Mo ••: ~n•r•I pertn.nhtP CAL. EltltOR$, 1120 0.laware • 4, Colo ci. C•.•• Huntin91Afl e..11, CA t'JM. o.wt_.,.,.1 Corpor•hon It-Id I(, "-'"-2UO Oelawar• • 4, fl cam0<n1e~ Mosa.Calltonolan.27 T11I• bu&IMU 11 t-v<la<I by a ltOIEltT EOWAltO STEIN e-a1~p IRONElt, 11'11 -t11or A...,.,., I) Hant:YC. L-CtKlfMoMl,.Colltor..i.n.21 Tiiis ~I was 111..s wllll ,,. Tiiis _,_ ,, conouctad by an in c-nly Ci.rll of Oran1119 County °" Ol•ldual Aprll 7 1•1 lt--1 E SlatntwD<Wr • fllfftl2 111•1 Ma-\ -~ lllt<I wUll I PubllllMCI Qr-Coetl Oally PllOI, County Cler-of OranQt Counly Aprll t, 16. U, JO,'"' 1....a1, APlll 7, '"' flt -Publlw.d Or-Coasl Dally Ptlol PUBLIC NOTICE AP"''·••. ll. :m "" im • P'ICTITIOUI 8UllN&IS ltAME ITATl.MINT T II• ro11-1no P*' sons ar• do1no l>\islneuaa. SYSTEMS HOUSE. U41 Ml RI ploy Ori.,., Cypress, Callfornla to.JO La rry Wallor Dl"911•, 12' E 11\11 Slreel, • &JOl, Cosl• Mll\A, Ca111orn1a .,.,, Carofy" S11annon Jenllln•, ~ Ml Rlptty Drive, (yprtn, Callfornla to.JO Tiiis bu•lnau Is conauclad by a 11enare1 partnenlllP urry W•ll•r 01119'1' This •tot•"*'' was 111.0 wlln ,,,. Cov111y Clerk ol OranQt County on April 7, '"' PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUl> 8USllf~SS NAMf. STATIEMUIT Tll• loOowlnQ ~rson h dolno bu•I neu •• THE MEDIA CO .. JOOS Wo Balboa Bl•d . Nowporl Beach, CA tl..i Wllll•m H Morris, 119 AQal A•en .... k-porl &aacll, CA t166Z Tll•• busintt• •• conclu< •a by an 1n d1vldual Wllli•m H Mo"•~ l h1l \lal•"""I wa• lllOCI '"'" l Covnly Clark ol Oran90 County o April J, 19'1 l"IS'41 Publ,.,_ Or-Coasl Dally Piiot , U ... l April t 1', 1), 30 '"' PubllSlltd Oranoe (.oasl D•llY Pllol, ···~· Al>fil' ", ll, :m. 1•1 166"41 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTJCE I STATEMENT 01" A8ANOONMf.NT I FICTITIOUS 8USINEU OP' USE CW J NAME STATEMENT 'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME I TM lotlOWtflQ penon IS OOlnQ bull TM lotlowlnQ ,_,,.,.. lies •ba-~1 nus as IM uw ot Ille ll<llll0<1' ...,...,.u .,..,.. MANUAL FABRICATION, ~1'1 EVERGREEN l.1 M tTE1 Ca 11enlt Orl•t, Huntir101on 8eac11, PA Al NERSHIP lltl Nol<• 0 .,,, Ca11torn1a~ Road, (Olla llNw, (Alttorn•• '1•26 Att'-d A L.1ncotn, Sl'1 C•ll•nl• Th• FtttJllous Bu\lneu Namo ,.. Or1v1. H&#'ltlnrg\On IM«f'. C•llfOfnl• f1rr1d lo •b0'¥• ••' 111.a In Ofan!'1 •i.o cou"'y °" s.o1 u . '"' FILE NO I This"""""'" c-..cled by an •n F•n•U , dt¥1dual RICHARD VAN EVIC. 1»1 Nolr Ric Nini A 1.1ncotn O•mt COlt• ..._. ... C•l1l0<n•• 92616 TnlS ''--' ...... lllecl Wllll Ille Ri< .... d Van Eyk • C.ounly Clerk 01 Orange Counly on Thi• s1a1...-1 w•• 1119d ••Ill '"" Aprll 1. '"' Cou"'' Cltr~ ol O<Aft~ Counly l"UH~ Ap<ll 7, '"' Publl-Otano-Co.tst Dally Piiot, Publhhllcl 0.-c.oasi Dally P1lol Apr II'· l•, 1l. :m. ''" 1 .. 7-&l Apr II t, la, U. 30, '"' 166).I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE H~~I.~; ~.;.i by ... '" P11bll.-Or-coasl Oa11y Piiot. f'ICTITIOUS 8\lllNf.U AIH'll 2, t , ••. ll, "" l6'•·tl P'lCTITIOUI 8USINIU NAME ST ATllMf.NT dl•lduel·-K. FeNI NllME ITATU1\l.MT TM lollow\"9 ~non I\ do-.a t>oal· Thia....,_,,•• 111.S wit.II Ow PUBLIC NOTICE ...,:::,~.~o~owlnQ P.,....,, are doing neu;~E ELECTRIC WINO, l tl Golden West College will host its annual Counly C.1-of Or-C-nly ,,,. ---------THE GOOD L.tFE TltAVEl. 070 Plaunua. Cosl• Mna, C••Uornl women's softball tournament Friday through Sun-Mar<11ft.t'91 flt,... l"1CT1T1ousa11s1Nus c a mpus o.1w . Newport &ea<11. CA nu1 day with opening action Friday afternoon at l Puot•-~ eo.n °"''Y Pl.... NAME STATEMl:NT •1660 Sl•pllef\ uthrop Humpl\r•Y. ,.> Tll• 1o11-1,.. ~r"°"' are do1n11 Ro .. Cr•,,..., u C.ape COd, lrvl,,., Sanu Ana A•enue. Coll• Mts• O'Clock. "-'111• '· "'-u. "'' '~' Dusi""".. CA n11• Ca111ornl• '1•17 The host Rustlers (25·9) will battle Los Angeles -AOG PROPERTIES, •ooo Pa1nc .. c111mer ot>s.1 .... Ro..o. T111>Dusinei.>1S conc1u<•dbyan111 Valley and Chabot w1·11 face Cem•~ in openina PtJBUC NOTICE -A"'-a1wc1.. s..11a JOGO, ~ 1 •• , .... u. n1u d •v1d11.i ...,,. I> 8..Cll, c..i1twn1a '1IMO Tllll Dualneu 11 cOftducteO by • S._.... L. HtHnON•Y games Oil the tWO campUS diamonds. fl',..ITIOU"all""N••• Oa•ldW. Dt Plarto, »S. Por10la, 1-ra 1_.y-1p Tllll --wn II-Wit/I t Full •-· u -· • ... .,. Sou111~(.alllonlia"'17 lt-C••-Counly Clar-ol O<-County Al 3 o'clock, it wi l be el'ton aga,UJ.ltt ~esa. NAMASTATllM•NT An_,, AllNn, ll701 "'• Vlenlo. Polrl< .. Culmer A1>rlll.1'1l Arizona and West Valley against Pasadena. ...2.~.lollOW!ftt __, 11 .., .... buM Mlsdon Viejo. (.alllCHnl• '267S '"" IUlorNnl ••• llled wllll IN P'Ufft W. f th f " 'll turn t CtiO ·~-• Stan a.le, 2f07 lllacklllof'n Strul, County Cler11 of ()<-on Ap<ll 1, Publlst.o Or-(.oasl Daily Piiot inners 0 e our g .. mes WI re 0 a n SUHIL COMPANY, Lot A._ ... H••por18Md\, C..lllO<nl•n.60 , .. , AP'll ..... u . :m. '"' 1nw at 7 that night in Second rowid action with the Bronch ..... , Ele<ltl< Street, (fllfMS, Tiiis buslneu is condU<leO •Y a losers meeting al s ·30 The 1 o'clock roes meet in Calllorn4a~ ..... ,.,,..-.p N•1Til&~1a .... 1 •. Hyu .. cll11i Kim, U•I IEteclrlc 0 W 0. Pierro .S1t Ca-0.-lw, We. t one game and the 3 o'clock winners and losers sir"'· Cypnw, c.atlf ... nt• *10 T111s 111a1...-1 ... ,,,.., w1111 ""' N"'"" .._,CA tu.t meet in the Other. Tiiis -lneu It tondu<led by an In· County Cl•fll ol Orange County on P11bll....., Or-CoaSI Dally P iiot, dlYldval. ,,_arCll JI. 1•1 April t, 1•.1l, JO, ltll t•ll-61 The tournament continues on Saturday with the HY'I'<""' K•m ,,11_1 _ championship games on Sunday at 10 and noon This >Yt_, ... 111.., ••111 ,.,. Publl•'*' Otano-c oast o.11y P1101 Counl y Clerk ol Or-Co11n1, °" Aprll 1 • •• u 1•1 1sas.1i with a 3 o'clock go me, if necessary. Marc1111, '"1 • • · • PUBLIC NOTICE "''"* PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINIESS NAME STATEMENT The foflowinQ "''°"' •rt do1ru1• ORCHID CLEANERS," IS• Ad•m• Av1nu•, Coil• M t••. l'U_, PubllSIMd Oranve Coail Dally PUOI, April z.• .... 11. "" 1~11 SHELTERS bullnon a• j c:~=~~.'c~~ .... ~~~" Call!!o"~• ~3'..G LEE, ~l Mer./1ew PUBLIC NOTICE TAX OltANGE Ori••. La Palma, Calllornta 'IOl.13 OADllll TO lflOW CAllSE H EA YOU ... G LEE. 1 ... 1 M., ..... vitational Saturday with the No 1 seeding in the o.t & Go\ • Real b1a1e • M PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS8USINIESS l"Olt CHANOIE OP' NAMll On wt, le Palm.\, Caltle><nl• 'IOl.13 NAMI. STATEMENT Palltl-, J-R01.wr S.an, lln Tiii\ bu\11\fl\" t ond..cled by •<1 In 40 l t a t <;1omp\ • Equprr«i• Leosonq · earn ourn men T .. S YIAl P'1CT1T1ousau11N11u Action gets under way at 8:30 a m with pool DIDUCTIOHS "' llO"!'a NAMUTAnMENT Tiie fo11owl1111 pertons •r• d<llno llled a 119tlllon In 11111 u>url ror an or 01¥tdual buJlnH•as· def allowlnQ 119tllloner lo tha"9* lier WON YOUNG LEE S H 0 RE I. I N f. 0 RAPE R Y nam• from J•n• Ro .. er SU f\ to Tiiis \IAl-nt was llled wllh llM play slated for lhe balance of the day and most of GUAl.D L IO'IAI ~IAL SBYICH Tll• 1011ow11>9 .,.,_, 11 001no busl ~~h~e~e~v~~~~~g~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~7~1~4~~~~1=~~7~~~~~~~~~~~n·"~~ p v I. (JI PERSONAL. ~78x13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. OA78x14 , ............... ER78x14 ................ FR78x14 ................ GR78x14 • I> ................ HR78x14 .................. FA78x15 ........... ' .... GR78x15 ................ HR78x15 ................ U:V8x15 ................ 41.00 47.00 49.95 51.95 Sl.95 55.95 52.95 5'.95 51.95 61.95 11sno113 .............. $39.50 185nOR13 .............. $45.80 185nOR14 .............. $47.50 205fl0R14 .............. $57.76 GUARAMTEID QUALITY RETREADS VOLUME INTERNATIONAL, lS01 ----------Woocll•nd Pl.c.•. ~··An•. C•lifOl'l"ll• PUBLIC NOTICE mo1 CM ri.s S CIWlmberlaln, S Peb- su .... uort COURT 0,. CAU"°"NIA. COUNTY OP' oaANOa CAI& MO. AMIGI OtANOI. Of' MAMI. In \,. INtw of .,. ~k•Uon of OANG, THI XIEM F¥ Cha.._. ol N~. OltOElt TO IHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE O F NAME DANG, THI XIEM -Iii.cl. ~tlllOn In 11\h court lor en ordltr all-lnQ petlllO,.r to cllanQA "'"-"°-lrom OANG, THI Xl(~toOANG,ANHTltAM. II I\ .......... orde<ed INl ell perMlftS 1n1.., .. tao In h mettar .roresalo ·~ peer bolor• 1111s court In o.per1menl No. l at 100 Cl•k <:efttll' O<IW W•st, $Ania Ana. Colllomla, Oft J->. ltll, al 10 JO o'clocll e.m • --n ano tlMr• ·-CMIM, II enY U..y ....... wllt Ml• ,..1111 .. lor c.fWIOa ol name ·-kl not ............ 11 ls turn.,. W~fed lllM • 'Clt>Y ot 1111.-order 10 tltoW c-.. publlslled In OltAHGE COAST OAIL.Y PILOT, a n•••P•Pt• of .. ,.,., c.lrculallon, pulllllllH In llllt ~ly llt'lfflt once• wMtl for IOIW (GflM<u•"" ~ prior lO uw de\' ............. o a1ao. Aprt1 1i. 1•1 ~NO, TMt • laM meM1..-0r. c-.. """6. c.. --(714) f"'48M PubllllWCI Or .... C.011 o.lly Piiot Aprll 16.2J.JO,May7, l .. 1 lm..t. P\JBUC NOTJCE btt#ood O<lw, lrvlne, Callfe><nla U7U Tnt\ builneu Is c-.cttd by an In dlvldual, C-lo\ S Chamberlain Tiits si..1...-1 wH 111..S wltll llM County Clttfk ol Or.,~ Co11n1y on Marcll ll, '"' l'IS*' Publh-Or-Coast Cally P1101 Aprll 1, t, 1•n. "" '~' PUBLIC NOTICE SERVICE, IW Wllllller • O·ll, C.oat.o Oorollly J-R-r Co11nly Clerk ot Or.,,90 Counly on ~';'.;.;~~~~.1'1 .. Jua,.no 1n:!,':,::::Y.:~9;!~~:•,::~~~~ April 1, 1•1 FU,., Or • Mlulon Viejo, C..llfornla tlttl. pear bafort lllh <""'1 11'1 ~rlmanl Publl~ Or-Coast Oa1ly Pt101. Laurie Elltabelll Jolln>on, HlU No Jal 700 Clvl< CanlH Orin Wesl, Apr11 •, ll, 2l. :J:>, 1'111 11l4-ll Juaneno !)(., Mhalon Viejo, CAlll0<nla S•nla Ane, (.alitornla, on May 11, 1 .. l. n•tt al 111::1:> 0«100 a m . and """ •ncl Tiiis buWneu is conducted by an Ill· ,,..,. IMw caVM, 11 any llley ,...,., PUBLIC NOTICE "•ldval WllY aakl pellllon for CM-ot nome \.allfi• E J-sflOUld-llt9 or.,,.., ~ICTlflOUS 8USINESS Tllll ltllla<TMnl ..... llled with It.. II " lwtller oroereO lllal • <oPY of .. _E STATEMENT County Clerk of Or-Counly °" 1111, ...-dot to V-c-.,. pv1141-.i Tllo lolle>wtnQ ~"°" I\ doing t>V\1 Mortll ll, ltel In Dally fl'llol, a ....._.,.. o4 ~rat MU as j "'""' Clr<ulallon, publls/led In ..... <"""'Y at c u s T 0 M 0 E s I G .. Pul>tl-Or-Coasl Delly PllOI, laaal OftCO o -· 10< four conio<uUye SANOBLA$TING, 1011 Sanla Apr II 2,' "· U, '"' 1~1 "'""'"'tor ID IN Clay of said llee<l"9 Annue, C.opbl•-!Mach, Calll0<nia OATED:t;r0\.'tt:'~uMNER, tlU4 'J Brian J.,.,.. Bur<-. ll .. 7 Loll JudQ19ollheSup0r10rCour1 Rio\, San J,..n C..C..slr-. C..lll0<nl1 OANIE~J.CC)CWElll,llSQ •UIS PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS 8USINl:U HUNTlla A VOii Tiiis bu\lnen Is «>•IClu<lod by at11n NAME STATl.MUT ... 0 .... ietn dlwlduel • 1 Tll• foll_,"9 119rsol. II doln<I bust lnrloM, c;Mltttnllla t27U Brian Jam .. Burcornbe • ,,.11 as 11141 ~lttl Tiiis •lal.....,,l was 111.0 wllll U)o CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION, 1.01 P11blit1Md Ora19 CoaSI Dally Pllol, Counly Clerk ol Oran~ Co..nty ... Klntl RMCI, Ne-1 BHCll, CA. '2"3 Aprll t. la, U, JO, 1•t 17J2-&1 Ap<ll 1, '"' Aotlllrt J , Cecila, lfOl KlnQs ROOd, --0 l"UtlW N1wpor1 llff<ll CA .,.., Publt\hllcl Orange Coa\I Dally Plltff, Tllll bUllnes; I\ corwlucttd by an In· PUBLIC NOTICE APrll t, ... ll. JO.'"' 11U.1 dlvldval -_ _ __ ,_.. T1111 ,':_t~~.u 111ec1 w1111 ,,,. '~~~~!:~:..1:::s j PUBLIC NOTICE 1<1 Cov11ly Cltrk of Orange County on Tll• fott-lno per110na .,. doln ----lit Aprll 1. ,... buslnau n : l"ICTITIOUS aus•Nf;U P'Utt• LINOA'5 FL.YING CREATIONS, NAM& STATIMIENT Publlllled o.anoie Co.tst Oalfy Piiot, ,,. •• ISltl '"'"'· Hurtllnoton .. ec... Tll• follOWlllQ "'""" I\ 601no M6I APf"ll •, 16, Jl. lll, 1•1 Calllor111e ~ noH H . . v 1.....a1 L.INDAICAYWARllEN,114-IU TEK lOOL CO , Sil\ Mld•aV ------------SlrMI, Hunll"IJlon 8eech, CalllOrnt Orlva HunllnQlon -II, Cellfe><nla PUBLIC NOTICE ,,... ,,... .w . TOOO T. WAIUUiN, 11 .. 8 U F,.d 1.. H•lltr, Siil MICl"l'-Y ------------SlrMI, Hunllno-INKll, Callloml• Ori"•· Hunllneton BH<ll, Calllot111'a flt Pulllltl!M Or .... eoe.c Delly l'llet. ~II'· It. n, •. "'' 1'1Nt P\JBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 11 •,),_ ' I I ,. ~ t I . ' ., " AMlltlCAN L!AGUl An .... • 7, Mt~n•,. S ..... CAI~ .. r•-' Mrlllll Crut.,. s I 1 I C•r-. 10 , , 2 0 SllftptOfl, d 4 1 I 1 JurltMI, u 4 O o O ~"':I, Ct 4 0 I 1 .,ord, rl S 1 > l G:ci.,. c : : ~ : '°'""·cl s o J O Peclore._11 4 1 Jo terlO<. dll so o O R&ncllt, lb J 0 0 0 ~~~l,Qul. II ~ : ~ : Nuref\ pt! I O 0 0 -• Eller. lb I 0 0 0 Grid•. 10 • , , l HncllOll, t1 2 0 I 0 HoOMlll, lO 4 0 t I IUldWI, U 3 0 1 0 ~~~jr l : i ~ Tol•I> » , I• • Sc# •• , ... _ Staltle 000 010 '°° -l C.llfornoe 100 Jn 10• -1 E J -'°"· J CrUI OP -C.llfornla l LOI S..tlle 1. C.lllOf'nla 10 18 - Simpton, G<lcll J8 --HA -Den Ford CJ>, Grt<ll U> S8 -IMlllQ.,.I, 0 Ht,,. "*non s Be111out1 HA TTL.I II" H a E• ea 50 • eter IL, 0-21 s"' * Cltrk 10,, 11 • • l 1 1 I I 1 I Ancleraon 1 ~ CAl.IPOIUOA ~ Foric" (W, 2~1 1 l 3 2 J 1 0 0 0 1 '11 .u.-1 2 0 0 0 0 ~ HBP Fon<ll 0 Hendtrwn. T _, n. A r JI,"' ,. n-... •--"·•"s .. e • Tuat 740 JOO JOO-I• 18 0 •• 8otlon 0.IO IOJ 000-t 10 2 • Darwin, 8abc0<k ">, Kt rn (I ) and S..nc111tro, Eckenlty, R•lney ( 11 C>..,r Ill, ''"'"°'II (ti -AlltntOn W-Otrwtn. 1·1. 't··. l.-Eekenley, 1·1 HA Tues, 8'11 Ill. A U,/02 ,. A., J, Twtna 1 • Ml,,netola 000 100 000 I I 1 Otkltl>d 100 000 OOa-J S 0 Wltlltm1 t nd llulert, Smit" 111. 1(1119men, twnetlO ltl. J-ltl -HHlll W -1C1119....., 1 o l -Wllllam1 o J A ll ,S7J .. ~ ..... J.,., M11w ... 11et 000 OSO lOO--t t 0 TorOlllO 000 100 000-1 8 I Ca1a-11 ..o S•mmons. "'''· Mel.t1•of10n ISi, Garwin (11 encl Wlllll W C.ldWtll. :I-I L Lu i 1 J HA MllW ... kff MolllOf' (1) A 11,1'1 .... YtRll•1 7, Tl..,.. 1 0.troll 000 000 100 1 1 O Ne• Yor-001 100 SO• 1 t 0 8toln, S<lltU-t (11, L-1 Ill tnd Ptr· ''"'· Gu•O<Y. LtRocr.. (1), 0•••• 18) -Wtrlll W -l.•Rocht, 1 0 l Batley, 1·2 HA New York, Jae-ton (J) A 12,llS llWI•"• 4, 1toyal1 o Ctenlono 000 000 400 IJ I 1Canw1 CJIY 000 000 000-0 1 1 8orktr tr>d Dtu , Leonard, WrlO"t Ill tnd Watlla". Grott Ctl W Btrktr, I t l Ll'Ontrd, I ) A 19,11• NATIONAL LEAGUE Dodg.re 1, A1troe O '-•• ........ H_... Mrll .. Tnomt >, 1b • o t o LnOrOU• Cl 4 0 0 0 Bt .. er II 4 0 1 0 Garvey 10 • 0 0 O ,,, )0 • 0 0 0 Gu.trero t1 J t 1 0 X•OICot . < ] 0 0 0 Au•wll, n J 0 0 0 Vt lnt I• Pl 0 1 I lOIOll )7 I • I Pu111 rt Reynldl, u Ctdtno. <I Crut. If IVlt , lb H-t ll> T,_, Jb AOOerll.P'I Alllt>y < SuHon. p WOOdl pll !>aml»IQ. p Tolttl\ sco ... •y '"""'•• .. ...... • 0 t 0 • 0 I 0 • 0 l 0 • 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 1000 '0 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 JI 0 1 0 lo• An~lt\ 000 010 000 I HOUiton 000 000 000 0 E J ""'·A Howe OP lo• Ano .... ' Houlton I L08 LO• Aft0911$ •• HOUiton I 18 Pvhl Gwrrero SB -Atynolell, T non, C.-.0 S 11\l'lly l.OS ANGELES IP H II Elt 88 SO Vtte.,, ... lo W, 4 0) t 1 0 0 l II HOU ST OH S..tlOn Cl, 0-JI !>amolto • 0 ) 24 A 27,IJO "''""'·•oe11J I 0 l 0 0 I Allonlt 112 010 000 I I] 0 Con< tnnt h 010 110 000-l • 1 Ptrry ond aenea1". uCou, Price CJ>, Mo"'•u I•>, H"me ft) tnd Noltn W Perry, I 1 l L•Co\I. 0-) HR\ Hlh-AUtnl•, Horner 1)1 Clnclnntll Orlt1Hn Ill A IS,l]J E.,_.4, l"lllllluJ PlllladtlP'll• 000 000 003 00-3 10 l Monlrtal 000 000 710 01~ 1 I Cllrl•t..-.. Pl'o4y ell, M<Grtw flOl tnd 8_,e, G<JlllcklGn. Frymtn (ti. Sow (11) tl>d Ce,_ w Sow, 1.0 l -M<Gr-, 1·1 HA1-Plll._..,.., S<M'lkll Ul MolltrMI. Vtitntlne 0 1. Cer10< (J) A-14,016 c:.w.tNb >. c-. Chl<f90 000 000 000-0 • o SI L°"IS 120 000 00•-l t 0 1t.t11•-. c:-111 <». S...1111 Ul. Cac><lla lt). Tldrow ltl end 81tek-ll , Sann•., ..o Porter W-SoAn•n, U L Kruk-. 0-1 11-10,set ...., ••• 0 1 ... ut Sen Fr tr>< lt(A) 000 000 000-0 S 1 Sen 019911 000 010 Oh~ 1 1 w1111son, HOii-I'>, LAwll• Ill, Moffitt 181, are1n1ne ltl tnc1 May, Etchelbt<'Q.,., LUCM Ill tnd IC~. W-Elcr..tborger, 1·1 l W"llJOll, 0-J A-'l, .. J _,,, ... r .... l Hew Vorlt 000 001 100 2 I 0 Plltaburgll 110 000 00•-1 4 1 G•m• c.lltd for rain alter I V. lnnlnos. S.coll, FolC-UI, ANrdOfl 111, Alltn (ti tnd Trtvlno; A-. Romo (11, Tekulw Ill and Nlc.otla HR-PlllSburOll. Tllo,,_ W . A-7,SJO. Top 10 c ...... ,.., .... , AMalUCAN llACWa G Al a H "'°'l 1.aMIOl'd. ..... 10 • I 11 .02 Hurfte, IC-City S U 2 1 .41 ..,,,_...., $Nttl• • ft J 10 . .w l(oftlta, Dttnllt IJ 41 4 11 .4 U VWy9r, Clll"°'lllld • a I 11 .Jn (VOii$, .. tori 10 • 10 14 ... Zlall. ,...,.. u .. • " .• l«N~ Qlkee6 • )I • 11 .JP DI•, Gltwllnd t it 2 11 .as '--'._.· Ol(a99 J II 4 I .ltl .._._ ..,...,, OOIO!ld, •· ,,,.., Ollt ... , 4, ~~ • ...._...., •; ··-· ......... J; Nettlat.. New Yttll, S, o..Ttb!e, -y.,._ J; .,.....,, ....... 11.,... ~. ~ a. . _ ..... ,. ''' Arffte .. OMi...-. It, Fllll, Olluet, 12; t I l.fM, ........ M; 1M81....,, Ml,_..., 10; oth•ff, T--., 10. ................ , Mar,,.._ YWll, H I KfWlll, 0.-NM, N J M<Clttty, 0.1-, M ; .._,.,., 0.11'-'d, M : W~ Gltw!Md, M; flWMll, ....... M ; ~ CN~. M ; IC!fle-. 0. .... • H . Hklt\ tct\ool c.-• .,,., '· Ulll-Wtr. Uni._.,.,,, 000 00t t-.o t 4 Cot-OM •I MM 00S >0t lt-t 10 I tootll, lherllert 10, te<eft UI 011<11 Miiier; Pl'i.t -/WlrM W-.... ltt. l - Boolll. 29-Yllltro, TYCktr CCdMl. .... Vlejet, L..-. 8Nc•I L .... 110 .._,. 000 000 t-8 J J Mlu lon Vie.lo S•O 000 x.-. S 1 Melnyk. Clarll m. v......_ U>. o-161 tnd Berrylllll, "°"'Ion ISi, CM,..,•n. W-Oflclg9 t" Md S...ter, °'""Y (t> W-Cllt-. L--lnyt< 1:1 T .... t, IEll&Kla J e.1anc1e 000 110 0-.J 7 J El Toro 101 OSI ._. t 2 Foroe. Mitroff UI. Mtl1ltl m tnd Oletey, LOmtll, Gi_,,,lu:rl (1) -GonlolOL W- lomtlt. L-F·oroe l8-Sl"9fl CEI Toro> HA -SinOfl IE.I Toro), Ger-r (Ell l ,._...,, v.i1.., 1, ",.,, 9ooc• 1 Founloln Volley 001 110 _, t I Hunllnoton BHcll 000 100 0-1 7 4 Aytr• •nd Btu, Scl'lmlll Ill; Marti\, Buckel1 (7) tnd Slllrley. W-Aye,., L- MUSI\. J8-Mu1Cenl• (FV). J8-Wt0Mf, Jonotw .. nl CFV>. HR-Roberts CFV> SunMILe•gue Wontm 1nster Edison W '-08 10 0 - 1 a 3 MarlM l'OUftt&ln Vellay HunUnoton llM<ll Ht•-1 Hertlot • • • • • • ] 1 1 J I t • J ... .,....s.c •• FOW!laln VelltY 1, H""UftOlon 8tach 1 P'riMr'• ........ Ntwport H•rtlor al EdiMJn (] Ul MarlM ..s. Fountain Valley •I Mii• SQuan P•n (71 ~r•o.m. WontmtMter at Hunlif>Vlon Bet<" (noGft) South C081t LHgue Caolstr-Vall~r S-Cl- Mluion Vte)O L•ount a..c11 O•nt Hlll1 L•oune HllK W L G8 t I 1 l 1 1 J 1 l ' • l , I t W-y'1k- Mlu10I'\ Vlero •• l.a9UNI llttcll 0 Son C-t , O.na Hllll 1 C•p111r-Valley 10. 1.touna ""'' s ""*,. ......... San Clemente•• Uo0\11\f llttcll Ot no Hlll.l •I Lall""' Hiii\ Capistr-V•ll•Y at MIUIOll V••lo Sea View league Corona dol Mer Cosio Ma .. Elloncla W L 08 9 I Et Toro Ir vine UnlWNlly ....... ., .• k .... Cwona deC MM t, u111ver11ty o El Torot . Es~la 3 ......y'•Ga-Eltanclt et c:o.-dol Mar Hwln• •t Unhef"'Mty '"''' Mowol El Toro NHL pleyotft QUA•Tl:aPINAl. ao..tNO (8"1 .. S.-) •-r'•k- • 1 ,"" • • J s s • > • s"" 0 10 • Ed~ 4, -YOf'k 1•1..-n l CHY l•ltndert lead wr>H ).7) MlnntlOU •• Bufl•lo J CMlnnotOta Wini ttrln •·II Pllllade!Pfll• t , Cal~ry 4 IC.l.,..ry l..cll IMIH).2) SI Louil '· New York At"9'1rl l (NY AanQtn I-Wfln >-JI ,,...., .• a.- St. Louil ti -V0<k R•"9'1n New York hl-n ti Edmonlon P1111tdo4C1Nt at CalOMY ~·o.-C•l~ry • Pllll-Cptllt (II ntouaryl Edmonion ti Hew Yori\ 111ander\ (II l>KttWry) Hew York Ranoe,. ol St Louil Ill M<tU&ry) High echool ewlmmlng -Velley117,l•it.M 200 rnedlty relay -l. F-i.in Vt41ey, ' ...... 200 Ir" -1. '°""lloy lEI, I St.40, 1 Twymtn (FV). 1 SS SJ. l Peterson IEI, l SSIJ. 200 ,_ -1. s.n11" IE>. 2.os.11. 2 Elder CFVI, 2:0Ut; J. Wen (FV), J Ol.U SO Ir• -1. ~_. CFVI, 21.50; 2. MuchO (E ), U.SJ; l. Demon (,..V), 23.M. Ohrlno -I. Armour IFV), l.,.U , J. GoldSteln IE>, "° polnl•; J H91-1 (FV), no pol11l1. 100 fly -1, .JohnlOn (FV), SS~; 1. MucllO (£), Jt.!O; >. Sov'9' lf<Yl, 1:00.62. IDO fr"-I. "'°'91111 (FY), n.n; 2. Eldllr lf'V). SJ.Al7; J. Sutton (E), SJ.62. JOO ''" -1. 8enltey IFVI, S:ot.H ; J. hwymo11 CFVI, S:09.U ; J . Ford IFVI, s·11.•. 100 _. -I. -lloy (E), st.•; 2. w .. (FY), 1:02.07; 3. 0emon (FV), 1:~.12. 100 or..t -I, $1111111 (El, 1:0147; 2. Huono IPVl. 1:0..40; J. Nomura l"V>. l:O..!O. <tOO Ir• relay -I. Fo~nleln VolltY. »n.w. .. ._ .. ID, UAIVfflll't JI JOO llMdWt reley -I. E11Ancle, l.4t.O. 200 fr• -1. Soutllron CE>. LSU . 2. lfeltnd IEl, 2:01.1; >.Or-(El, 1.01.J. 200 IM -1. "'*(I), 2 1•.0; ,, •urv Cl). 2: 1'.S; J. CMIHy CEI, 2:20 ••. SO ''" -1. aeldlne CEl, 22.I; 1. Oartl (El, 2J.S; J. Hlflle IUl,24.1. 100 fl• -I. Well.tier IEI. 1:90.7; 2. Eelt,_ IE), l:OS.t ; llOttllrd. 100 Ir• -1 . ..,_I'll CE), ~1; 1 H- CUt, SU; l. OHM (El, SU. 500 ,,.. -1. w-. .. , 1•1. J:la.1, t. °""9rmen <El, k 4t; a. Wkll.l 11:1, t•'4.4. 100 ._. -I. $OUt11t011 (I), l:OU; t. I! .. CE), 1:0U; a. Cttaiey 181, 1;1~1 I•., .... -1. IUtts (I), 1 :11 A; I. Slllll U!l. l:Ol.O; a. HeM II!>. lltLt. ... ,,.. r .. .., -'· .,._ .. , •.!..• ... • 1•-1. $Mltllt IMJ, J;U.M,: t ........ IWt.1;a ... a ~IMJ,t·CU7. • '"" -I. Wllll-. CM>, M.Aa; t. V• Al_. IWl. tMI; ~ ...,._ CWI. .. ,._ ~fly-t, ..._ IWl, 9U; t. It lllllU, .a. ....... c.1.1:• , .. ,.. -1 .......... IMJ SUS; t ... CM~ •• ...,,.., YMNtt(WJ, U.JI • ...... ~~. -1. o.-, <Ml. •~u: •· ..__ -···•M: a. -.W CMl, t.:•.&. I .. '-'l -I , o.etee IWI, l:AN; I. .. If.Ht Utt>, 1 04,"; J Wllll-t (Ml.' ..• , ... IOI W.,.. -1, H~ IWI, 1:1UI; 1. L~ <Ml, 1·1a.-; a. 0.-'I' (MJ, 1,lf .. n. -,,._ t..., _ • Mef'IM, M time. Women ...... tcHOCM. .............................. * """""' r•w -'· ~ ... r11w. a:oe.11;a1tM-1 • ._... CNHI, 2;os.u ; • 1,... -I . .,._..., CNH), l:•t.li; JO me -1. -.Ckty CH), 171»; 100 fly ~ I. SI._..., (NH), 1:07,1'J 100ftff-1, 8. "9rllM (NH), 1;01.0J; JOO I,... -1. L*'9 (NH), S: •• ff; 100 NO -1 • ...._tr IHI, t11Ut: 100~- 1. Oullftl .. (NHl, 1:U..»1JllOffff reloy-1. Newpon "-""'· •ios,o.- •--• ........... V•Je¥ u 290 flMllley ,....., -I. ~MM Velle'I', t ·OU2; IQO lrte-1. Ker1leMlll Ill, 2:0$..14; '"' ,,,.. -' Stile .. ( •>. J:».14; • ff'9e - 1. •uu (""'· 2' .AJ; Olvlflt -1. A'-<1 (l'V), I"•; 100 lly -I. Mec~lo (l!il, l :M.4'; 100 Ir" -1. Stllelett IE), n.-; '°° ,,... -1. ArMIVeftl ('VJ, S: ... •; 100 Melt -1. K~f CEI. l ;OI, 1; tOOweMt -1. a.n <"V), t:IO.JJ; .0 ..... ret•'I' -I. l!llllOn, •:01.1'. UM"'111ty ... a1t1Mle U JOO ......... , ... .,_,, blM<le, 2.04.0; - frM -1, Cll-IEl, 1.01.Sl; JOO IM -J. '°t""' IUI, 2:U..; 50 fl"ff -I. ScftullJ IUJ, U ot, 100 lly -1. CMt IU), l :llUI; 100 ''" -1. Sc.hula (Ul. SU; JOO 1,... -I. Crl- CU, S.JJ..tS; 100 bock -1. A...,111 (E), 10611. IOOIN'-• -1. kr-1u 1. 1:1s.n . Olvlnt -I Millet' (U), 1S7 .. s; 400 ,,.. r-.Y -I llnl-Mty, J UM II T-9' C:.-"4 MM 71 JOO_....., reley -I El Toro, 2.00.S; _, frM -I ......... IEI, J:OU; JOO IM -1. Wlllltml (El, J:tt,t, .10 free -1. *Gr- (EI. U.t. Olvtno -I. 5'1411110-(Cl, -.O; 100 lly -1 Wllll-1 IEI, l:OS.1; 100 lree - I. M. Bini CCI, 5'.I. 500 frtt -I. Wllllaml IEI. S 11.t; 100 l>t<lt -I. aerne1 (El, 1 °'-'· 100 .,,_, -1. Mc;Gtew (El. 1:12.J; 400 fr .. rtlty-1. El Toro, J:St-'. Britleh Hard Cour1 Cat._._......, l ..... l Plnt•-si .. ... 8•1•u Tarauy dei Anoel Glmlnei. •t, 1•, '°""'Smid .. , Cllrlneopne FreyU, •1. •1. Victor "-cc• def A1cordo c-, 1·S, 1·S: 8 u•ler Mollrtm Clolf GvslaYO Guerrero, •1. Ml, Marlo Mar11ne1 -Alellerd LAwt., 1-S, • 1, ROO.r1 Atl,,.noer del John FH•O<, •\. ... Alen King ClaHIC ltt 1.alv .... 1 '°'"'•-SI•'" l••n Londl def Senay Ma.,.r, •J, •1; H•roto Solornorl .. 1 Roll c;.fltlnt. •2 ... 1; VII at Gtrulal1J1.,., FrtlJ 8-lnt. , ... 1·S, l rla" TN<lltr dtl 1111 Scan-. •·1, t -J; Tom G .. UlkJOn def Marty 0.wll, 1•. •..J. *-•-11 ..... 8 rlt n GcMtfrlH def Boo LUU. U , 6·2. 1•. Man Smlllldel Jor.nAluono.r, t-4, •·1, 1•. Women'• loumemenl , .. .-... ~ ...... ) ._ ........ M .. ... C"rh Ew rt l.loyd Clolf IWbtlle Vlllfgtr, • t, •·•. H..,.. ~lllova def. Mory u.i Plettl, W , ••: Pern SNlwr dof. •-• Tom•nov•, .. ,. t·I; Sylvia Honlu dot. '-'&la Aomenov. •·2, 6-2; Vlrolnl• Autl<I cMI. Ywonne vermot•. 1·S. •·•; Hen• Slrac-a def ~ Frtmflolta, M , 1•; Bonnie ~ dootf .I..-Ru-II, •>. • 1, AeolN Menlleovt .... ,H.,,... 0..Vell, •1 ... 2. Mtr1• Pinier-Clef. l(eltly .Jc1n11M. , .. , • I, 1 S, Anne .._. dof. ,.,._, I.Au•, .... • J, Vlroiftla W-.... Sllffry A<br, ... ····---.. ,.,,.,,... ....... 1.s •.. J. Mime~ dof, 1t1 ... ~..a. •~. l(a lfly Rtnaldl dof _...,., '#!Ille, •2. •1. AftdrM Jaaf/lff dot. ic."1'1'--_ ,._ t-1, I S, M9rtJN Hevrtt-• -0.... -LH ,H ,•1 Co"-99 u .. -wt, of S.O. 01oete •.UC,,..,... J Si ..... Herrm""' (USO) def $ftydotr, •2. 1·S: Ward (USOI def ~ ... >. •->; Emery IUCll del -. l·S, >-4. 1·S, _,,__, (UCI I .,., Jocllum, ... J, M . RoJt IUSOJ -. Nelton, 1 S, • 4, Slelnor-IUSOl clef. Atm0\,4-4.•.0.•·2 ~ s1euo111 Sftyll*r CUCI > dt l. HerrmMn- w-. 14, 6-4, rellred (-1e>rtlned N• an• I• I, Wtrd StelnOroner I USO! del. Em•ry M<Pt>w-., l ·S, W , Aotl..Joc"..n IUSOl .. ,. TllllfnM.A-. M , ._.. Lot Alemlto• WUNIHOAY'S ••SUL TS Ulltel .............. -... , P'lrtt rtee -Ro.N .. H-~ CV•lll- lllQllt m ), n 40, • .o, t.tO; Pano•• .. , 1w1111ems), •.40, 4.Jll; c.flyl 0.. (KwtlMr), 7.20. U t.UCla IMI polO lft.lO. 5«-rKe -UI 0.-..... Annie (Gnoft. Oyl, Jto, UO, 2.0. Latin Stor (~ .... ). tAO, S.00. Ftt0t-MlchOle 1.....,..1, •.211. '"Ir• roe• -HeJlw Tl--(Oennil). 11 40, t 211, • 40, TwOlt's Lady l"-l. t.00. S JO, A M't Cllldy ..... (Cnntl, U .10. IJ e•· telo <M l pel0t112.00 Fovrtll race -..,_ H.-, (LlgMf\Mll, 7 40, >.to,~. Bi.ti. A°"" lc:Ntrllonl, 4,00, J .O, lr llll ,,_ {°"""'•). uo. Fllltl tact -llucktu (Altc"le), S.JD, 4.a, 2.80; Worllly Hert (~->. l . .O, JM; OlotOI Entlne (Wlll~I), J.aO. u eucta (2·11 .... dS».• Sl•I" rece -.... rt Ster CG.-yl, •.AD, 2.IO, 2.211; Silver"s Sterlet (Yell~,..._), ).40, JM; SOlldy (Aledft09rl 2a. 5o¥tnllt tee:• -htfltlO tor l-"-'IOlll, S.20, J.00, UO; 'ColloboreO <R-), •.411, S.20; Ow Jeff 11(-er), UO. $1 e-.cto ( .. SJ FelO t)4.00. P ll'k ll St• U·W-M•l pekl '7,215 wltll lllree WIMlng lkltoll (II• hOr-). SI Pkll SI• control ...... paid ta.60 •llll f1 wlMIAO llellell Ulve llor-). Elo"tll rec• -Oenclng Storm CAn· der10111, 1 . .0, J.60, 1.60; H-• CMnco IK ... l>l•r>, 3.«I, 1.211; Moody tll• ICl-1. '··· Nl11tll toce -A l. Weelll !Ito-), 41.211, 11.20, •.oo; ~tu1 Spell <O.M11Wr>. uo. J .40; ~ SQr (T11llerl, ••· $1 ••· K ia 12-Jl polcUll2.00. r ... 111 r.,e -kY1'• Prine• caewie.1 • "''°· a.AO. UO; l.uc:kw CMd CK ...... ), I.GI, 2.40; l"ertlng IA..-..il, J.DO. U •U<ta CWI paid $100. AneMMce -4,441. &ant• Amt• WaDMUOAY'l •HUl Tl {PIAel_.,el ... 'I ..... ;e' -.--I '°''"race -Oowl Yow SU (Y~I • lt.40, I.GO, JM; klnt M'LA" (Cndl, 17.GI, 1 to; coun1ry w-. ll'llK•w 1, ue. Sec°"' r--... ter 1'l-. (VeleftlWle), uo, uo, Ull; a.c• AMle (C:-'**191 I 40, UO; Ofot\JO 0.-Cll'Mrcel, J.Aol. U CUlty4IOl*tC+'tl pelcl .... A , Tlllfd rete -.... ,.. 00\* IMcC-,...1, n ........ sa; Pl'lnc .. 111 c1t•-•>. , ... , S 001 Yeune ,.. .. (Hnflly), •AO, 'OW1" , .. -........ Orey (ll'!May), •.oo, UO, LID; ...., .,_.., ,...,,.....,, UO, J.41; ltNI MUI (.._tcty), IM. "'ftll , .. -Fr•i.:.:-" , ..... ,...). •·•· Uo. aa; ...._ • .< .. "->• e.a, ··•1· ow•rll (Mtitllflnl), J.41 ....... cs.a ,.... .. ., ... Sl•UI ,_. -111~1 VI•'-1.......,1, UO, t.OO,e•; ..., .. Mr (MC'ke,,,_I, SA, 4.JOJ C-lilwl (Wc:..rrM), J.tl, 1ne11111 nu -Netti• 1'u•u1e11 fOll111rttl, 11.40, 4,eo, fMJ lnlellftart (~Hlf9lltl, 4.40, a..; ,..._. ~· (l'ift. ut'I'), Ull. U otMtM CM) Pl9ll •11t..-. u :=::-c»1-...w1.:: u..-..•• t•. '" .. £11• '·\a "<ll 1111 , ................ tllJ .• Wl9' .. ....... II<~ (,.,,. --1. • ..-11 tlw W9'tll "'*' ........ .,,. .... flS ....... tkHt• (-----•rtklll. 111111111 recie -CIWfMll CCIII.--> • ._., .._., UI; Nee C,.,_..), , ... 1.9; WIWll\fllll{ ... 1..,1,Ut. ",..,.._ ...... ..., ............. .... ... ..... ....,, CIMll ·~,..., .. ... 6At;~~-~ ... .... ..... _ ...... ... , ...... _,,_ HM•rott• ,,_ ...... . ..... ._, e.AITH .. Cll*'91111 .. Ca •• 2 Y'•k4N ... .... '"' ,....,..... ... ,_... , .. Ml COMMUNITY COLL.EGE WOMEN Golden Wfft 117, Lot Ange .. • 51 OOLD8N wan -GUt> 1. Gil '· ltrltlOf'IM •• Krlne 4, ... ,,., • .., •• Sclltwltf' It, l"llJ• tS, ~ 10, Hell 0. LOS ANO•L.•I c:c: -•eleforCI 26, JOll.llMWI '· McKlfllltry 20, ltMcler •• Roj-o, Lee o. Hallo. c-0. Htlttlme: Goldtll W..I, lJ.22 Totel fwb: Goldoft Wffl 12. l.01 A"'°'" CC It; ,...,,e• oul: •eedor ILACCI. Tecllnlc•I 1 ... 1 •• A•l•loro J (LACCI, $chleuter (Golditn WM11 Orange Coatt 7~, Cerrftoe M OaAMOS CIOAIT -Htu 1, Kr~r 12, A-•11 11, De_,.... 11, Wojner>. dtAtallel t, Torrtt J, IMrtl I, Corroll t, IC._cty •· Claat'l'OI -Scotl 2, Wll•y 7, "-J, WoolOrldtt M, R-ge '· Kennell '· v-c1e.._1 14, T-vlllt 4. Holftl-: Cerrltot. )4.U Tol•I '°"''' Orange C.0.11 n. CortlMK 10; l'ouled ou1· ltrour , Oeyde n (Ora11~ C.0.11). Htah echool women A(L.clP >A OIVISION Pl~T•- Slleloa Arc1netu11 CAtte 1..0"''· •·I. Soj)ll.); AtW1 0... (Foottllll, S-IO, Jr >; Toni Eldrlelge lo.fir, SA. Jr.I; Sl>e-Stur(llllOll CEljleretWO, S-11, Jr I, C.e ,, .. , , ...... ci., M, Ir.); ....... Gr•l>M (LOI ...... Ml, Sr.I; MICIWllt MCCoy IGel'lr, )..S, Jt I; 1Clrstt11 Smllll IAlent<lny, W , Sr I, VIC~ 51-I~. W • .,,); ReOln Holmet IEI Toro. SA. Jt I S«oMT•-Tt mmy T-(Alla Lorna ••. ,, J r I. LIM Grendm&llOn CFool,.111, .. ,, Sr >. Julie B•ker IAlw rlloe 8un -llt, S 11, St I, AoOlll Bumi (Cypreu . s 11, Sr ). Ternl Perker IG¥doM\ Gro¥t, •~. Sr I. Teny• Mollle,_ (5onll090, M , St I, a-. Weyer IWtlnul, )..1, St I. A119le SIO•t ll (lYndOOd. SA, Jr.). 8r-• T..cker ISoUQwt. w. Sr.I; v .. encl• Mtrlln 10orn1,...,_ W, St.> Tll .... Te- Mlclleli. ~. (Alla LANnt, •.o. Jr.I; ICtlhl l.O<lte 11..00fe, )..t, Sr.I, Gayo Wllhefl IEI Oorado, J·t . Jr I. ar•••Y• Ht .. IE•1-lal, .. 1, .,,);Mery G.,.nellt (INllo, •.O, Sr.I, ""910 Clwltll.,. (Ly11w-... ,, Sopll.l; ,.,.. .. ltock ll!t Toro. M . Sr.I, Stecy M-,.., (I.a Quinta, M , Jr ) : J-Her¥ty (I.a HWt, W , Sr.), PtnJly Miiier 10....ney, SA. Sr.>. Mo•I vo1.-. Pl•Y•n -Mlc.r..llt M<Coy IGollr I and Ttftl Eklr._. CCallr) Voh!baM 0 •fr~ a..4ell Wild .. a.tt La .... lot. ls-4, 15'-4, 1$-t. " ... SC.... F-tel11 Volley def. Ne•port He.-, .. u. 1)..U, IH, 1)..11, IH. -rlM .... -lfltll9ft -..C,., IW , IS.I, I~. Hiatt echool vol6-yb•ll INOT.PfOODTov••AMaNT , .... ~~) ....,. "'°'-s.lllrWr,t : ••·"'· • Pool I -......... 8Ncll. Sowlrl Po-. l.A Unl•.nllr Ptlol Vtrdn. ¥1rtletl•. Pool 2 -twro Coel.a, ,._.... v....,, Wonlc-r,Soutl\Torrantt,1,,.-Ho.J Pool J -Cllplltr-Volley, LOI Allo., •no•••-.Arcodle,lAPoly Pool • -P•ll-s, A•l•lloll, Torr...u, M•"11 ..... 8Nc"-VOftk.e Pool S -h\Mclo, .. w rly Hllll. S.. Pedro,•~. LA Unlwrllty No. 2 Pool • -S..I• Monica, ... ~ H-. OtnaHlllt,Tett.A-.clo POOi 1-l.oyOlt, Well TON.nt•, C.-... Mar, P •ll-No.J,&onlll119 t. Stn Clementa. Senle hrt1ar•, ~ Mew, VtnlYOO Hiib, lt9111"9 Hllll Toumament of Cttemploftt CM Alnll, Olliel .......... ""*" I. Mer1t Aotll Ull 1 Len"'!' l..ollll Ult J. ¥Illa °"'11111 a,514 4. Eer1 MU-y a,e1 S. P9'e c:..twe -..-S ~ ., " Co~ oo ..... toftbell .......... t,IMUMetlkel SMiie M9Mc& ' 000 100 ~1 J J O.lclen Wiii 000 JG0 •-t S I M-erld 9rt<-~; Del• eM Mclltla. J8-tlrd (Gclldltn -1. .................. ~c;.,...· Ml. 5e11 AMM1e 000 000 000 02-1 S a 0renee t.Mll ooo '°' ooo .._. • a Etotttfl-' .C-; Cll4' _. (;Na, W- Eretetll. ~ FOR il'HE REcOAD I COMMUNITY COLLEGES No northern entries in tourney By Cl18T SEEDEN Ottlleo.My ...... ...., Thanks to Proposition 13, the community colleae volleyball player is becomlne-a vanaabing breed, particularly in Northern California . Tbat fact becomes quite evi· dent by taking a glance at the teams which will converae on Orange Coast College May 1,2 for lhe Community College State Volleyball Tournament. Just three years ago, there were enough teams in the northern ball or the state lo cons stitute two conferences. Now there are none, and the state to urnament is strictly a Southern California affair . "WE NEED TO develop up there again and get them start· ed," says OCC volleyball coach Bob Wetzel, wbos Pirates figure to be one of the favorites in the tournament. And Wetzel admits there is no wall which separates the two halves or the stale which would keep the problem from spreading. "I think throughout most ot the athletic department here the coaches are aware of the situa- tion. And the coaches have enough .Pride that they get out there and try to raise funds on their own," Wetzel continues. B e ginning May 1. area volleyball fans can see some class competition at OCC as the two-day state tournament kicks orr. Since the volleyball season doesn't conclude until Friday. the exact seedings haven't been made, but Wetzel says there's a good idea of who'll be on hand. T~ top three finishers from t he South Coast Conference. namely OCC, Santa Ana and Grossmont, figure to be in there, along with Southern Cat Con· ference powers G<>lden West, San· ta MonicaandSanta Barbara. Metropolitan Cor\.(e re nce m embers Long Beach CC and El Camino also figure to qualify for the tournament. WETZEL 'S PIRATES, meanwhile, still need a victory Friday night when they host Santa Ana in the South Coast finale. OCC is 6·1, while Santa Ana and Grossmont were both 4·2 going into Wednesday night's match. The Bucs can finish no worse UCI blasted second time by Broncos POMONA -A heavy·hitting Ca l Poly (Pomona> baseball team blasted UC Irvine, 9·4 with 16 base hits Wednesday after · noon to capture a non · conference outing here. The Broncos had 28 hits the day before in winning a 19-16 marathon battle, giving them 28 runs and 44 hits for the two games. Jim Carmichael was 4,for-4, all singles. in the Wednesday battle. John Hotchkiss doubled home two runs in the sixth in, ning and improved his two·day total to three doubles, two home runs and seven RBI. 'For UCI, Dave Glick was 2· for,5 including a double and an RBI while Mark Morrison was 2,for-4. Kenneth Proctor belled a home run to lead off the Bronco sixth inning to break a 4-4 tie and put Pomona in front to stay. The loss brings UCJ 's record to 23,16 for the year with a double-header at noon Friday at home agaiMt USI U of San Diego as their next outings. From Page C1 than Ued for firtt J>lace. but by beattn1 the Dons Friday nlCbt (7:30), they'll eam a higher seed in the tournament. ·'I think Santa Monica and o urselves a r e the top two teams." Wetzel says. "Whether or not we'll meet in the finai.. well, we'll Juat have to wait and see. You know. Santa Batbara has beaten us up there. Any team is capable or winning it if they put things together at the right time." A leading candidate for the role of the dark horse is Coach Lou Ann Terheggen 's Golden West College squad. "Golden West is playing quite well right now," Wetzel admits. "We watched them play at El Camino the other night and they won in five. They're start, ing to do thing1 well right now ... they're starting to believe In themselves." Action gets under way on Fri, day with first round matches scheduled for 9:30, 11 :30, 1:30, 3:30, 5:30 and 7 :30. The final two ga mes of the evening will be the se mifinals or t he winners ' bracket. Saturday's 9 :30 a nd 11 :30 matches will be a battle of semifinalists in the losers' bracket. At 2:30, the consolation finale is sch e duled , to be followed by the third-place bat· tie at 4:30. The championship match will be held at 7 p.m. Price of admission is $1 for ' students with their ID cards. $3 for an all·day ticket and $5 for a l wo-day tourney ticket. Tickets go on sale next week at OCC's bookstore and will also be sold a t the door. • • • COACH LAIRD Hayes and his OCC surfing team returned from a trip in Hawaii which Hayes labe ls successful both on the wave level and culturaJ level. The Pirate surfers met two Hawaiian amateur teams during their stay, and OCC surfer John Gothard collected a first place and a second. Pua Rochlen. whose family lives in Hawaii, also enjoyed som e success with a first place and a fourth place showing "We had the times of our lives." Hayes says. "You know. it's very easy to think surf. surf. surf when you're over there. J asked the kids to critique the trip and aJl said they appreciat· ed bemg forced to do a few other things." Those "other things" included a personal tour of the governor's m ansion. conducted by Mrs Jean Ariyoshi. the governor's wife. Also on the agenda was Easter Sunrise services al the Punch Bo wl. th e national cemetery in Hawaii. a visit to the Arizona Memorial a nd Pearl Harbor and a look at the state house of representatives in session. Boes, Rustlers post victories Orange Coast College-cinched a spot in the Southern Califomia women's community college basketball playoffs with a 71~ victory over host Cerritos while ~Golden West was blasting-host Los AnJelea CC, 117,58 Wednes- day . Timi Pitzer scored a career- high 45 points for Golden West, hitting 21 or 31 attempts from the floor. The Rustlers play East Los Angeles Friday at home with the winner going to the playoffs. Kris Kroyer hit 12 points as Orange Cout cinched a playoff berth with one game remaiilina at Fullerton Friday night. U.S. WATER POLO • • • elH la taken care of -there are no other responsibllltles and they train u a unit, intact. and with consistency. Tbe American team iJ com- posed of college and ex,coUege playen -some with an educa· lion to WWTY about, tome wttb the flnanc:lal obl11at1on1 that everyone else baa. And there ii the problem ol Aocllt1ca -half of lb• team ntlche ln Soutaern ' Calltomta. the other half ln ~ ,San J'taneilco •"•· Prange Cout DAILY ptL0T/Thur9day, Aprll 23, 1981 Newport Center project to be ready by ·December The $11 mitllon terraced office complex· known as Civic . Plaza is starti,ng to take shape on the western side ot The Irvine Com.-pany 's massive Newport Center. Workmen construcURg the five-building, 230,000-square-foot complex· predict work will be fm.ished by December. The plaza project is expected to attract nearly 1,000 new employees to the one-and two-story office buildings. The Irvine Com- pany, though, has not said wtucb firms will be moving in. THE COMPLEX IS SITUATED north of the city's NeWJ>Ort Center branch library and adjacent to the Newport Harbor Art Museum. The general contractor is Dinwiddie Construction, a firm with offices in Los Angeles and San Francisco. When city officials approved the office project in early 1980, the Irvine Company's top brass agreed to pay for a number of street improvements around the plaza before buildings are occupied. Those street improvements are expected t.o be completed this summer at a cost of more than $100,000. And the plaza is not the development firm's only expansion project at the center. A restaurant ia to be built near the plaza at the inte~section of San Clemente and Santa Barbara drives. A CONDOMINIUM COMPLEX ALSO is to be built although precise plans have not been approved. The Irvine Company officials say the condos likely will be constructed on a 10-acre site near the Pacific Mutual building and could include up to 245 units. To hear the Irvine Company officials tell it, the final build-out of Newport Center will come in the next decade if city officials ap- prove a plan that calls for a 400-room hotel and two high-rise office towers. This project would expand Newport Center by nearly 25 percent. The Irvine Company:s Civic Plaza project wiU incl'"1e five new office building1, ranging from one to two stones. Workman Mark Mit cheU hammers at fTU$S Joint in new Civic Plaza office complex on western edge of Newport Center. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION Consolidated RePort of Condition of "The BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY" of Fountain Valley, Orange County. and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business on March 31, 1981. State Bank No. 1275 Dollar Amounts in Thousands ASSETS Cash and due from banks ..................... 2,517 U.S. Treasury securities ......................... 86 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell in domestic offices ................. 2,500 a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) . . . . . . ...... l7 ,357 b. Less : Reserve tor possible loan losses ................ 125 Loans, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 ,232 Bank premises, FF. & E ......................... 545 Other assets . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 307 TOT AL ASSETS .............................. 23, 187 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of indiv iduals, partnerships, and corPorat1ons .............. 8,606 Time and savings dePosit s of individuals, partnerships, and corPorations .. 10.373 Deposits of States and political subdivisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 200 Ce rtified and officers' checks .................... 298 TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OF FI CES ........... 19,477 Total demand dePoslts .......... 8,904 Total time and savings deposits .10.573 T O TAL DEPO S I TS IN D O ME STI C ANO FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 19,477 Other liabilities ................................. 205 TOTAL LIABILITI ES ........................ 19,682 SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY Common stock a. No. shares authorized 1.c.~000 b . No shares outstand1n~ 9.M,w5 Amount 3, 113 TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ............ 3,113 Retained earnings and other capital reserves .............................. 392 TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .......... 3,SOS TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .................. 23,187 MEMORANDA (amounts outstHd..,. •• Of report at•> Stand.by letten of credit outstanding ......•....• 414 a. l'lme certificates of deposit In denominations of $100,000 or more ............ S,841 Market value of , Investment securities .•••.•••.•..••.•••......•• 91 Th• undersigned, Lawrence R. Holmes, Presl· dent a. C.E.O. and Edward H. eown.r, senior Vice President and C.&hler of the abOv.named benk, each declares, for himself ~1°"41 and not for the other: I have personal knowltdlae '!I the matters con- tained In this r.,ort, and I befleve that nch stat .. ment In wld report Is t,..,.. Each of the underslgnet;S, for hlmteff atone Md not fot the oth«, ctrtltle$ un• der penalty of perjury that tt)e t"9gotno ts true •nd corrtct. executed on April 21 , 1911, et Fountain Valley CallfOS'nla. l •I Lawrtoce R. Hotmn /I/ ~ard H. Downer Pubflshed Oranoe Coast Delly Pltot, APtU 22, 1911 1~ PUBUC NOTICE Meu. PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNISS NAMI! STATIMINT Tn. 1-lno __, la 00"'9 ~· net1 •'; CHIC AUTO 900 Y AHO CU:r.TOM PAI NT ......... ·--Circle. H .... 1. ln9ton ~II. C.lltornia OM7 Alll M. Faltanlen, 1..0. Het· tlewoed Clrc1e. Hwntln9ton 8eee11. Celltomla nM6 T 1111 bulll'IHI I\ condUCle(I by An In· dlvldUel ALll M. Feltalllan Thll .Ui.ment "*' lllec! with U.. Co11nty Clerk of Oren90t County on M•rchll6, '"' l'ltnll Published 0r*'9'1 (OHi 0.lly Piiot. Apr n . JG, May 7, 14, '"' 1912 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE ---------- .. ICITITIOUS IUSIMESS NAME STATEM•NT T "• tollowlng P••M>n• ••• OOlng t>vtlneuet AOUA·SOL, UOI W . Moore Av•-. s.nta An•. C•llfornl• t1704 Franf& S.renllno, 1'1J S. Rene Orin , S..ta Ana, Calllornl• '12704 This bl.Ill~• Is cond&Kled by an 1n dlvldllAI. Frenfl s.r..,llno This stat..,....! wa lllecl wllh u.. County Clel"k of Oren91 County on Aprll 21. 1 .. 1. ,.,"5. Publlstwd Or-Coeat O•lly Piiot, Apr. 2J, JO, llMO . 14, 1•1 1152 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUltMISS MAM• STATIM911fT Th• tollowlng _..,., are 001111 .... 11 .. -... OAl(INE WOOOWOIUCS, JU6 Orchid Hiii Pl.Ka, s.nte Ana H ... llta, PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ------- ITATllJllmNT 01' WITitD•AWAL l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU ... OM l'AllT11tl•SHll'O,.l•ATINO NAMI! STATIMl!MT llltOlllt "ICTITIOUS 8UMMIU NAMI The lollo••"9 penon• ••• 001n9 Tiie lollOwlftl ,.._ 1>M wit-~ bulll••55 •• aa a t•ner el par tner trem Ill• SUNSET PACIFIC, LTO , 17701 lllM\M~ -•ling -tM fk •Mllchell A venue NO•lh, lrvlne , Utlous bi.111,.u name of L a 1 COM< C•lllornla '7714 . MUN ICATIOHS E OU IPMEHTI S11n1f1 Paclllc Homeoullde,., INSTALLATION el lt4l £ Wll~lornMrlr "°'4Jlllu Pacific Corpon- Streel •Sa..,. C.tllornlan.67 llon, ....-..i ....,,.,_ 1no1 Mllcttell Tiie 11c'1111-bu.ineu ........ -....., AV•-Nortn, IN IM , Calllornl• 92714 ,,...,, '°' u.. ~llllp ,.., 11._. ~ Thia buMnH I 11 conducted by • Jlllr ti 1'90 In u. eountv of 0. 11m11ec1 ...,,_..,,.P F1111' N1me and Addreu ~J ~ Pacllk, Lid ~,..,. Wl"'°' ..... "11 ~to!~clfk IRA J. 8RANN£R, lt4l E•• ~al P•-~~';'n Str•I • l. <><-.. C.llfornla 8y CW -hltierver lra J 8r111WWr ~ Tl,.. ~::,:,.n;"':!~'~:~·~un 11>e "ILE NO. "' County Cllrk of Or Mlge County on Publl"'9cl Or-Coast 011ly Piiot April ,. , .. , -'1>'11'·16, "· •. "" 17JI .. LAYMAN, HANSON, JONES. VOSS ----Law Offkn IC~etel'l•u ..... ~ 8Mdl, c.1..-...... PUBLIC NOTICE ,., .. as "CTITIOUS 1u:r.1NESS PubllSIWd o.-. Coell O•llr Piiot, NAME :r.TATEM£NT Apr ll, lO. -y 7 14, l'ltl '""' Tl•• lol-1119 o-r aon1 ••• doing bu&lnnsn. RE PPAC, !SOii Perey Orlve . WUlm1"6ler. CahlOn\l• t a&J O•vid L.ont F•--. 1200 P1r• Newport , 41', Newport 8eacll. Calllornl• t2JWO PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUI 8USIMl!SS NAME STATEMENT Tiit lollow1n9 penons are doln9 PUBLIC NOTICE H·12"t l'ICTITIOU:r. IUSIHIH NAME UATIMllNT th• fouowtn9 persons •r• doling t>v"neu ti WALNUT JOINT VENTURE, 2070 •u1ln•'' C•nter Drive 1rv•ne, Cehtomt• '27U O•tw• Hot.oe Corpor•lton o' ce 111..,..1a, • C..hlO<nl• corporation, 2070 8U\INU Center Orh<e. lrvlM Celllornte tl71S TOO• America Inc dlb • Tocl• Construct'-' Of Anwrtc• • New Yortl. c.or por•Uon, 1070 8"''.,'~'' Center Orive. 1rv1ne, Cellloml• 9271S Ttui C>Yi•n•st 1\ conducted by • 9<1nera 11Nrlne<•l1tp 0.1"• HOU\ot CO<P ol Cetlfornla Twtomu FulluoNm•. l>rl'Sldenl T DCM Col'l1truc llon °'""'*''ca SalosN Malsum11ra, \lice Prttlclent Tlh\ •t•t•mt<U w•• llllld wlln t,,. Co;inly Cl•f11. or OrMI~ Co11nt~ on Merell 2. 1'111 ,.,,.... PuDlllhlld Or11>99 CoH t O~lly Piiot, Aprll 2, •. I•, 13 l'ltl .. 13.91 PUBLIC NOTICE NICOi• Allx er ..... 11• •••• Percy Drive, Wfflmlntter, Callfornla 9MJ This buslnen Is condu<le(I by • 9ener•I pertnerlhlp bU\1MU es "CTITIOUS 8UllMISS SCS IN TER NA TIONAL, a MAMllTATaMINT Nkole A Brunelle Thll ............. wa& llled wllh the Counly Clerk of Oren91 County on April 21, '"'-,., .. ,,, Publlllled 0r*'9'1 Coall Dally Pllol, AP• U, m, May 7, 14, '"' 191H I PUBLIC NOTICE ---~--~~ ~---- Olvl1lon of Oerltron•• Sy"em', In<• Hie followlng peraon1 are doing UH Croooy W•y. San11 Ana , b~nlnenn Calltornla 9l704 WATER ANO SEWER UTILITY Oenlronl• Sy11em1, Inc , • COMPANY, t60S2 Be.ch 8 1vd .. S..lte C•llforn1a COO'_..tllon, 2'.ll CroOdY JU Hunllt19I01t 1••<11 C.tlltorn l• Way, !.anl• Ana, C.lltomta •t104 '1 .. 7 • Thi• bu!li"""• '' <onduc .. d bY •co•· P•rll Servkn. In<., a Delaware p0ralion cCM"p0rat1on, 160S2 a-11 8 1vd .. 5'111• Dentroni• Sy1t.,,,s, Inc J IS. Hunll119ton lea<h, Calltorn la Pe\er Knoll, m.1 PrHldenl Tllll ~ It conducted by .,. UI\• C11llfornla '2101 PICTITIOUS aUllM•H Tltl> 11.i.,,_t wet flllld w111t Ille ln<orPOt'a&ed 11ssoc1Mlon -r in-• Counly Cler~ of Or.,.ge County on part,,.Nl\lp. Aprll 21, '"' Peril S..vlcft, Inc. "''"'2 S.-.J Sfl«wood Publllhlld Or-CANll 01lly Piiot, OlrKtor Apr 2l, l0. May 7, 14, 1'11 1'7)..tl Th is , .. ....,_, wn tllecl wl\I\ ttM Cwnty Cieri< of or.,._ Gollflty on Alllf'll 14, ..... R...-t ~ ID OrcllN Hiii MAMI ITATHMNT Plllce, ....... IWwl Hellflta, Cellforftla Tiie folio.Ing --Is do"'9 ~ '2107 MUH: Weynt ,_.,...., 141 a. 16 .. SlrMt, PLANT l'ROOUCTIOHS, 2460 C-te MeM, c:.llfornle '2627 Ov41'1ella, El Tfro. C.lltornla fllUO THE UGHT TOUCH What lh1!> c·o1mln m•cch 1s " !>oap pm .. ctc•r ihat \\di pr<.'\'enl H lt•ll•phot;w rtn~ 1n lhl' balhluh ••• A pol1l1can ha:. lo Ul' <1bh• lo see holh '>1dt•!> of .in 1:. SUt' UO\~ l'ls1• <•an hP Kl'I <1r,..und 11., ••• M nl>t of hale tn s1•1• .1 poor lnsl'r or J nt·h "inn1·r ••• If II \\f'rl'n I fo1 "" llm1sL<; IH!SSlllllSl!> \\OUld nl'ver knov. ho\\ unh,1pp\ the\ .i rt• ••• Don 'l pul off for tumor rov. v.hal \OU can cln lo day' bec<1U 0 SC' If you t.'OJO~ 1l Loda~ \OU l'an d11 11 al'lain lomorro\\ ••• Com e inlo Tire City, 1950 Newport Blvd .. Cost a Mesa where you'll find the best values in lir es and wheels. ,., ... , .......... . Publl"'9cl OrW\91 CoHI D•llY Piiot, • Tiiis ,,.,,,,,. .. I• ,_ucttd by • llUrf J-Taylor, 24602 o..., .. ,.., oe-•• ,..,.,.,..,., a1 Toro, c.tllomle '26111 .....,_.,...... Tlllt ~neu It ctlftChleteCI by PUBLIC NOTICE This IU...-t -Iii.cl wltll t .. ....,.,.I ...,._INP. Cowntr Clark Of OrM .. CAM.lnty on MM'r Toy!OO' ...,II 14, !tit. Tiiis ~ woa 111-9 wllll Ille ,.,._ (owntr Cle<ll Of o..,... ceuntr P..elllMCI Or..._. GoNt Delly l'lleit, APfll 14, 1"1. A~.1',tt,JID,Mey7,ttll USHI PUBUC NOTICE "-1. 16, U,».~y7, ltll lllMI PUBUC NOTICE 0o .. e1 Savl•I• It Lo•• AleoelaUH, beadqu.artered ln Costa Meaa. eulfered a net lots of ... 3 million, or t3 ~ntJ • •bare, for the flnt quarter of 1981. Lut year, the company enjoyed a net ••to ot S795,000, or 17 centJ, in the flnl quarte-l'. ••• Citing recessionary pressures on domestic sales of some of it.a minicomputer productJ, Irvine-based Compa&er AN••Uoa lu. reported lower tbird-qu~rter eamlnc• of $'13,000, or 20 cents a share, and revenues of $18.3 million for the period ended March 31. This compared with figures of $1.5 million, or 76 cents a share, and revenues of $20.8 milUon for the last year's third quarter. For the Orst nine months of fiscal 1981, Computer Automation had net income of $1.2 million, or 60 cents a share on revenues of $56.6 million. compared with net income of SS million, or tl.51 a share. on revenues of 158.8 CALL TOM MARSTON FORA FULLYASSUMABLELOAN- INTEREST ONLY !a Newpor~,~~!~!.~~1·!~c ~·.~ll!IV 714 760-6060 (!! -DO YOU NEED HELP? Anawer Network can help Increase your profit• by lowering overhead. With Anawer Network'• ahared-overhead concept, you wlll have avallable every office service you need, Including your own phone numb9r and anawerlng aervlce .. all at a fraction of the coat of expensive facllltlea and ataff. COMPUTlR COMMUNICATIONS IUWICES AYAILABU: 0 Anawerlng Mrvlce 0 Quote ptlcn 0 Make appointment• 0 Lette<I and typing 0 Word processing 0 24 hour dictation Specl1llztn9 In: 0 Conference room1 0 Payroll 0 Mallt11ta 0 Tel11 0 Fecslmlle 0 Paging Certlfl9d aerv1c1 call dispatching, Ofder ta.king and cr9dlt checking. Answer Networtt h .. a Solutlon, CAii: ll'9JJER NE1WDRK 714-953-1234 lat. 714 Jack Ander~on ·oai·ly Pl.IOI .. reveals in the mlW0tt for the flnt thNe quarters ol the pre· . vioue year. ••• Natloaal ~d•ca&loa Corp. of Newport Beach enjoyed record finl.quarUr results. Net earnlnls for the thtee months ended March 91 reached $1 inUUoa, up 17 percent from the $882,000 the prior year. Revenues for the period Jumped to $23 million com· pared with last year's $20.8 mlWon. Primary eamln1s per share were &O cents ln 1981 compared with 45 cent.a in 1980. Fully diluted eaminas per share were 41 cenlll In 1981 compared wtth 45 cents last year. * *. STANDARD·PACIJ'IC CORP., a Costa Mesa-based homebuilding finn, reported net income for the three months ended March 31 of $900,962, or 23 cents a share. compared with $1.8 million, or 46 cents, in the like 1980 period. EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or.:Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714-631-3651 WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD Jewels by Joseph purchaHs diamonds. gemeJones, gold and silver lrom priva'9 lndM- QJals and esta• Careful ex.amiNltlon and evaluation by our experts Highest pncee paid. 10-9 daily, Sal ICM;. CloMd Sunday. Phone today Ask for Betty Grace Of Erle Zalaskus. " fMDITlOt' °' ~' '°" OlltJ. 60 YtMS J[W[LS tiy JOS[PH Soufl.Couf Plaa, Costa Meu • ~90ee $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERT\' SECONDS • l•t•r••I only ... v--1 ••.e-•Coe..rdal •Jl-W-t&.I 6-12 MOMTH nlMS ALL SECUIEO T.D. $5,000 MIH., S.C.P.M. 17141 640.799J Cunldll our ·-· laf--tk>• -ntk• I ,, \:our f1nan<1n':I n .. ed\ (714) 75SM515 AMUltCAN HOME~ 230 Newpon C•nte• Onve D•aign Plue Newpon S.acll Ce1tl0<n.a 92MO C<>U.ECTORS CORNER Rere Coln• & Stainpa GOLD & SILVER Prices for 4-22 .. 1 0.U C-$4'tM SllYW Cl. $11.M l(r~..,. Maple lHfl 100Cor-MIPe1ot ..,,su-...._ .. , .... ....... ~11.• ..., .. '*·" MM.ZS .-.u ...... $611.M "7.J11. tv.J~ .------(;tCICltllVCI ~ 1iiiiiifln.VlG.VIQI ____ ___,, ,,_.___ ... c.e1w.-..-. (714) 5541 1150 South Coalt Ptau Ylll•ge -...... (Ac_.,_.__ ,...HI In Business To Make Business Happen At Creative we have the money you need. Loans from $25.000.00• for any business or investment purpose Where you deal directly with the Lender and not a loan broker. HOW MANY MILES 00 YOU WALK ByT;CHD\}Y Cirmtt, • • R. Ph. , The Dr 'st>holl Walk -Meters have recorded housewives do •All loans secured by a combme11on of about 8 12 m 11 es . real and personal property polit>emen 14 mtles. 18·hole goiters 8• 2 miles. 4425JAM80RfE ROAD. SUITE, 80. NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 92660 (714) 752·7G23 and lady shoppers at -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, Chr~tmas as mut'h as 18 miles. ~ ~RS BO" ~lf · tf .ii 1!fJ > OMP.:.TERS tat In Features, Performance, Price! TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER •Spectacular Co&or Graphic• ind Excttlno Sound • Ptug·ln Progrem PMI for • Entertainment, '9nonal u .. • • Wrtt. Your OWn 'f00t1"'9 · And S.ft Them on quaette• • Eety for leglnnen to U•. Eapendebte for bpert8 H your reet ache. and you have no problem requiring a podiatrist or medical attention. try bathing your feet each night with lukewarm water and a good antiseptic root so11p to overcome the accumulated persfira· tlon . Then . a ter rlnslna your reet In cold water t o Increase circulation. dry them and rub in a Sood medicated Foot baln\. . YOUR oocroa CAN PHONE US •h-'n you need a med.lclfte. Pick up your prucrlptlon If lbOppi.nJ nearby, or w• wtt• ctallver promptb wltboul ext.re charse. A, 1reat many p'ople Htrutt u1 wUh tbelr prucrlpUoJ11. May wt ~youn? P ... UIOl'IUW•CT -~;9i1t c ............ ~ By JOHN CVNNJFF .......... ...,,. NEW YORK -Nobody can say when It wll1 take pl~ce or exactly what lt will look like, but there'• a notion clrculatlJ'g that aomewhere down the road there'l' emerae a homogenized market for financial services. v1Uey1." And, be said, securlUes "I.a a 1taanUc user of capital." lnatead of goina to the bank for cash, to )'Our Insurance ~ent for annulUes{ to your broker r In the early 1970s, In ract, many broken 1uc· cum bed to tiaht money problem.1. "If we ce.n ao to Prudential with ideas that would pro<l_uce 1 satiatactory return or capJtal they m&1bt 9be ln· terested, .. said Jacob.!. ''The ~urance industry has vut amounts of money to put to work.•• Bache can orfer PrudenUal SS different prod· ucts, Including money fW'lda , atockt, mutual funds, commodities and rold, some of which mi1ht be candidates for eventual inte1ration Into the in· s urance p~uct. . stocks and to tile local co n dealer for gold, )'OU might deal with one outfit that will service all your need.a. They'll know a lot about you, from information you pro· vide and from studying your ac· tivity file. They'll be able, as they say, to exercise client con· trol or asset control -the terms are essentially the same. T hat day Is still rar off, said Jacobs. For the immediate future "the insurance agent and the broker will be distinct, but the cutting edees alone the sides will change," tie said. Gradually, he feels, the ''crisp tine" may blur. perhaps leadine toa hybrid "financial planner." , CUNNll'I' CONTROL, FOR ONE thing, would mean an end to the frustration of having a customer depart because he wanted stocks and you could only sell him insurance. The financial services company could satisfy him either way. They might have mutually synergistic in- fluences. With inflation and volatile interest rates. insurers today find their traditional fixed-return policies less attractive to customers. But when face values are based on the return of successful stock funds , which brokers have, the insurers might be able to offer security -and an inflation hedge Ford calls for easing 'shackles' LOS ANGELES <AP) -Ford Motor Co. Presi· dent Donald E. Petersen says he doesn't want a government "bail out" of the ailing auto industry but calls for removal or "the competitive shackles that have been applied over the years." The possibilities are numerous, as Harry Jacobs, chairman of Bache Group Inc .. said last week when Prudential Insurance Co. gained 51 percent of his company It was a day for celebrat- ing. "We can fight our own battles in the market if the rules are the same for all competitors." he said at a meeting of the World Affairs Council of Los Angeles. "Flexibility, stability, opportunity," Jacobs said several times. That. he said, is what P ruden· tial means to Bache, whose operatine arm. Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, is one of the biggest securities firms. Petersen also called on the United Auto Workers Union to help the auto industry "come to grips with the labor cost problem." and suggested that profit shanng or other kinds of earning com- pensation programs could be set up for the employees. IT ALSO MEANT one more lhing to Bache er.· ecutives: Safety from another investor they frowned upon and feared, and had been trying to ward qff for two years. But, said Jacobs. the positive reasons were stronger. "FORD DOES NOT want to pull out of the U.S. market and does not intend to,.. Petersen said. "But if we can 't manufacture competitively in the United States -then we will be forced to manufacture more and more products off.shore where costs are lower, and perhaps ultimately to produce cQmplete automobiles." ·'The first thing we discussed with Prudential was the entrepreneurial nature of our business," he said. "We fluctuate between peaks a nd He traced the economic problems of the na· lion's auto industry to the imposition of govern· ment reguJations in the late 19605. OVER THE COUNTER NASO USTINCS N:S~~J0!!.-~e:.!1g:;~~· ~~ ~1~=~~"Fsc, 2~ ~~~~~:~·p ll~ ll;lrs~~c::.m,·1· l,..~ u~ NASDAQ SUMMARY $1\0wl119 "'-'"' -~IUUlll ~ 1' ... HOIObm ,?..".'. 12 Oog~vyMS --··-• ~·· •nd •-oHen 11'1 ciartiJl ~ >o111o Hoe..-.... 11-ca o ""' Sii-~ 11'• tnarlle~ maMrJ Hof CIOwCp 11/o Horii Rt I IV. Oii Ferro 12 121'> Sllwmt ~ 27 Wed. rl<a1 do /Wit ColrTle 17\lo 17 Haettlnl ?..-.. :II OllerTP I~ 17\li SC.IWlr I~ 11'~ 1nc:1..oe.-.talltnarllup ColG··~ ~ -I s '"' ,.~ 21~1 PC· lnl ·s·~ 16" s 11.0o _..,. -•• .. -~ • ~ -wEISv 1S IS1/t NEW YC>tot IAl'I -,,,. following '"' mer -or comm-ComCIH ~ J9 lnlrelno IV. I PebltB ,.~ 1••.i. SwnEnr ~ »14 .,._, llW 0-r IM Coun•r Inion IOt w.d.. CmlSllr 16 11 lnt•I 1 '°"" ~ PcG•R 2,,'"' 261~ Stendyn JtYI 40 slo<k• end • .,,., .. lhel r..ve -·-Sto<k 1114 Mk CmwTel ,.lot 11 lnlrcEnr 10 10\\ P~r.. I .,,. S M 1 ~ _.--AEl Ind 1~ ll\to ConPeCI , ~ J10,., lnlmlGs ~ 1M P•yltO 1tVJ 19~ to ocro 1 IJ IM mKt -Gown "'-.-U beWO on AFAPrOI I t \lt C0<dil l0\11 21 lnllkW'11 ,,,,_I PHrMI 11:..._ •,t:'.! ·~:::~, ~~ ~llt r:;c..,~.:. ,,._. t-ClleSI ol Volumo AVM CCI ~ S\'a Cro1Tre 1 ~UV. lw•SoUI It~ Pen.En.I .,... #TO St ISi J'-Accurey 12'4 12~ CullrFO s 21<. > Jan11oy ~ JI P•ntalr 21-. 21f't er 4 No M<1.rltltt tr.Olng Oelow U are Incl· AOOlanW 1lV. 1JVJ Cycltron " ""'Jerico s J•V. ~ Pelrll ' " 44'11. ~·S~-":~I 17 2t ,,_ M•I --cenf-c11.,,9es •••the AOvRou ~ ·~ OenlyM J> U JlffyF4 ~" ._ PetU_, 1114 IR :-=rEI ~ ~ ~IH•••~• •-the previous clo~nv AHl8'11 l7"' ..... Ota0.1. 17\lt llV. JoslynNI Jl\lo nv.jPllll•H•I 11~ 11V. .;;.-·. ~. IO'h ·-Olclprlc•--.• , .. 1l>IOP<lc•. Alelncp ~ 2• o ar1M.t1 1w. 21 k ellSI pf '"'' 111~ Plercess ~ 101A rl<oPd JI\), JI' AleaAI.. l7\to J1V. OllHr t ).16 I t->2 Kelvar J'-1 l:J.I• Pltllo.rtn ~I'> ltllt 1hSOflFO I~ IS Allc.olnc '1 0"' OOIOA' Jol'h U Katnan u•.i. Ullt PIOflH18 Jt"-40 UnMcGil lt'h :ZO•t• Allynll 7\'J 1~ 0.tC.n 11 ""' KmpAm IS UYI PIHlln• ,,, I ~s Enr Ul'o I).\;, Alie• SV. Sh Dewey El J Jl4 Ke rwm ,,. Siio Poul1 .~ .~~ ~i ~~k • ~~ t:;:'.! I 1 :~::• 1;:; 3: g::;~~ :\o't ~~ ~=!!l;~~ ' : ~ ~~~~-:n o~ O UValltl 12'• lJ 1 AGrHI I,__ 1~ Oocull 1 Dl't ~ KlmOall Ith It~ Progrp 1'-lh UpPenP IO'tt llYI ! AlnlGp 11\lo 11V. OollrGn 1714 17'• Klnglnl Jh , POSvNC !~'-.k !~!': ~·.•,a•Rk •r ~J7~ '•J ' s AMlcroo 21 .. 21h OoylOa 1 1614 16\'J l(IOOfG M Jo!VJ Purt89'> .,,, ~ • ~ • ~ • ANellnt "~ 14"4 OunJl.lnO ~ 14 l(napeV IS'l't 1' PwlOCec> IS IS'I> V•nDut It 19V. 1 7 AOuav ' ~ Uh DYrlrn 1 1• ••Y> l(ra•s 10 JOVJ 0.-.krCll ISO,., •• 'V•rco ~ JI I AAeaMg ~ JI ~OrlOI -1' KYlkke U U\lol Reven Pr 11•.-, 11'-Velcro g IO'n 1-1, .tlWeldftg 70\lt 12 ~·trtVnc:e l enc:eln 2S U\lt Reycnm 71 71'> Viclt•Sf t •llo IO Al\Mll• .. 10 11\lt 11\lo L•ndRes •l'e 7 ... Reymno lO'> )1 'VIOeoCp ""' ""' II AngSA 14\lo 14\lt EconLeb n-. n~ l•MCo Joi"' lS RHveCm ~'V•NBsll 11\lt ll:W. l2 ""ngACGO '!.... u ... EIPUEI • • .... lllnvs ~.-',,2~ RepNll• ........ .,, "'10E1nr •:w., ".~ ll nta\..p ·~ I Ela.re. ......... llOStOt .... 21'tt 2t • rn .,, " AplOMll U"1 U'6. E leNwcl 16 11"-Llnllol »'4 ~Ro.OE• .. "'• ellGe l4'1't JI. U Ar-Gp ~ lto EIModul 1'V. lO Logetrn ltlC. I~ ROOOMy .. 41 tndy I 1.-.. ""' AMICol• •14 ~ EnrO.v 17 11V. MCIC 11~ 111'e RoMlon 111o J.,_ ~l!Oref IOl<o ~ l~ AllGtll 1~ "~ EnrMtlhO ~ W• MGF O, l)Vt ISl'e Rowse 1tl4 1~ Oeep •714 41V. II All•nRt 20'Ao :ZO\lt EnAtv U IS~ M410sGE ll'Vt U RutSlov IS-14 16 Hold I• 1~ 1' B8•1lrdpCP 14~ ,.,,., Entwl•ll 7V. lllo Me991P1 ''-10 S.oller ~ .!-::::Ill 2; u'~ 2 101 • ly F'I> 11¥e IJ°" EqYISl 11 11\lo M•r:mP ~ u S.leco .... ~ ...,. C ~ ._ .. E 10 I~ EqlOll l•IC. ,.. ... M• rRI ~. l·llt SIH•IGO .:it~ •,.t> ~ .. \: 1~: ~~ n llukR1 g 711t 1'-FSC 2._. J AU lkrt '7\lt •7-SIPeul ,,, •n II" u Beul Fr 'l2 n11o Fa1><lfk 1~ M Merloft 'l t~ 10 ScenO 11 16 2 t-11t Zlon\Jle lt\lt l' 1' lleyl•Mk 11\.'t lift FarmGp 1114 11 aullP ,..,., • Scrlppti Ml'h 6.S ·•·· Not ~lc•Ole u a .. llM "'° .... FIOICOt '"'° 1~ MeyPt I :II 29\lo =:~t ~ 2 j.~ l'llkSYI UV. '4\ii M•rnOll "\\ u~ ll•ltlaO SO.., -Ftlaostn JOY> 1114,McCorm JU11 21\'J UPS AND DOWNS levMgl UV. U-14 l'IEmpS 1• 1•111 c Far1 ..... IS 111r»eo " 11\ii ~iwt..1: 2~ ,n: .'t:.·1 1'""' ~;.... • • lllrOSon 1•v. 17 Fl~gr II 11.., lduW 11\lo 11\lo 2 Blr1cllr ~ 7 FloalPnl ..... 31\'J IOC. Ill'> 114 l =~;, ' :w. :tE ~:~~::' ~ n... :::::: i,:-~·~~ HEW YU"" , .... , Most ecllv• o ..... ; llU<kbee 10\o't 10\ii l'or ... 10 ~ »-.. Mlll:t'; ,. )4"' IN-<_,,., ltOCU "1f.:led by NASO. • Buff••• .. ~ 014 ~~~~~~ I~.;~--·~·'°.. ~ ~:"" r:::.:. ~~":':o, .~.)2 ~~;~ Chg. ~ BurnupS 11~ II'°' Fran1<£i' 17\ii 11 onlCOI S ... •l'l MCIC ... s.7,700 11\ii lltlt t CNl Fin ?~ J\lo l'rwSG S21'> U YCP IN 20 AmSurQY MJ.lllO 2\ii J • S-1• 10 CPT Cp S4 541'> Fremet s 20 20\li •"" ~ JDVJ .Swift . . . lS1,AOO IS°"' 15\lo · .. · II C•IWISv 12\'J J>vt FYllrHll 22\ii U rgR" ' ._ MoM'-Y :io. 200 4~ 4'-' + ... 12 C•nreOH Pio •Yo Ge1uyO 1~ 101tt Monnin ,,..._ 1~ Ollffr . . 'llJ:b.fiij I >-1• • t-12 • l·JJ IJ CCepSEwng 2f"' ~~ GnAufm 1SV. 11\tt olCIYb JVio J\lo Oetnn """,JOO • ·~ • \l'J " ep C GnOevu •• ,. ..._ ueller 11 12 EnRsv • lt4,2IOO IS IS.,. • \lo IS CplnAlr 214 2'-GnRIEal n uv. err1Cp s 11•n 1' EngSol 1t0,100 J 1·1• J" • "" •• CereCp " 17, vEFn 7"1 1 01• ' 2'14 ~ TomlOll 111.400 I.,, I~ -\lo II C•Vf111hC 1 2 4 ,_M 111'1 Ill'> JMC..s 1~ 16 It CnV~S U """ reyAOv U\l'J .. IOOG 1 JD 20Y> illdvanc:eo ,. It CllrmSll 1~ Uh lllnlt1 16 Ill'> lcolel 11~ 21~ OecllneO M.J 20 CllarttiO • •v.. 1rody11 .... .._ ••••n A 01<. •SV. Uncl\et!QeO ... ll CllmlH UV. II tiemlPI JI 21"' •••an • .&l\lo 4JVJ Tot•• I~• J,OS7 u ClwtUll 11 llY> Hard"•• I ~ OCerO. 12"-U New hlgfls llll U ClllNwTr nv. It !HrpR-l?v. 11"1 oEu¥0 1 -11\l'J Hew .._ '°' H ~r,~t':, 4r" '!11tl~erpGp ,...., »Vt wtNGt 11-.. n-. Tolel t.ie. •.OJ7,IOO U HertlHI ~ U wstPS I~ UY> MUTUAL FUND N•me CU1Cwrl GenetEn wt SpecSy wt Spec.Sy "" Am Pac. 1(1/ PIW ~=~~ 0.MtEn un PecR•• s Camllex AEICOR Pl Mier l wf S-VI PecRH Pl WrdTm un Vi:~w· .... SunO wt llacom II Blol<llR :l~':!"r MoOCll MkrZ un N-SoetlExp GolOMecl Sl\enOll N•~ HROMng t HenOPwt haon l/IWIEI NEnvCll Kalv• AICMln COlll'f PralrePG ICurnyN llloRtP wt OllCOfl'WI Encere ~s::i.i"" J•ytu ~~cl!' WelllrOr PyrM'IOll Twm UPS YSI Chg Pel 7 t 1 Up «1.0 2• • '6o Up 31 S IO • • Up U.l 21'h 1 Up 11A 21~ 'h Up :I0.1 17 t • Vp lO I '''• • 1 Up J7A 7 • l'h Up JI l ,,,, • 1 Up ,. , IS'·> • l Up 1•.0 414 + 'le Up 21.t 9\li • 114 Up 21 • 31'> " Up JI I IVo • 1'-Up :ZO 1 2S •11o Up 20 S l 'It Up :ZO 0 11'h 1~ Up 17.t S ~ Up 17 • ~ I'> Up 17 • SI.. t \Ii Up •• 7 D li> • l '" Up .. J Wiit • 1 Up 11t.O S'h • V. Up IS.I 1111 • .. Up UO JSSO •HO Up U S DOWN' 1 .. u: si. 10'h l 2'11 _,.,. •v. -I 12~ -1\ii •V. -" 6 ~ ) -~ J ... -.. 2" -~·· ,,,_ -... '"' -I'> 11 -114 UV. -1"4 •v. -VJ HVI -JI'> •Yr -\l'J 2'• -"" 64 "' sv. -" IS -I" 2~ -\lo --llt '"' -\ii 22 -, .... Pel. Off 11.t Ott t•.O Ott ... ) Oft n.• ()fl 11.t Oft 11.6 Off 11.1 Off 11.1 Off 10 I Off 10 .. Off 10.S Ott 10.S ()fl 10.2 Off IO.I Ott 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Olf 10.0 Off 10.0 Off t.I Off ... Off t.S Oii • s Oii •.• Off • > ~fu,-; 1,::l Eq Inc IU7 En.II JS.It MeQel JO.ft Mun 8d •.» l'IOel tt.12 Gvt Se< 1 ... Hllnco 1.12 HI YIO 1037 lt Mun 1.56 Purltn 11.IJ Selem 1.1' Nll IDS NO 10 22 II.II MIO AM •SI ) 11 N Ere 21.J9 Nl Com SI •.1• • 1' =NtL r~~h in Ii~ ~:~~ l°,,.~·UNAll ~Ta,::.,.Fo:l ltlM~ ::...NlL $1~f;~ 1i:~ iN~ NL SIO<k 21 '1 D.4' ~r :::. 11.1; 11.lt Pro s.f.;1c .. : StFrm •• 12.66 Nl Nl e~~c~ ,a~ 1U~ IF FundS MeOT 11A' NL Ststreel Inv. HNLL Inv Re-~ •.ti •.•• FYn<I "" ... , Funo •.• Nl Each 70.71 Nl ~ ' • Grwtll •.ot 6.51 ln<om 1 '1 Nl Fe~ '$ '4 Hl Nl ·.~··1Fd 1210.2J,1 NNll Hetao I.SI t .20 Pru SIP 1145 <•.10 Tu 1).J7 .... I NL .ty uh1el of OtnMe. Pytnam Funds. mpl I l.llS I to Nl J p Grtll It ti 1'.0J Amer t.12 Nl Conv IJ.11 IS.16 Tmpl W lt.12 2D.to Nl JP lnco 1.111 t.01 Grwtll S.JD S.I• Int IEq 1l.1l 11,70 Trn1 CeCI 10.JI 11.21 NL lenus 10.:M Nl tncom LO. I.It Georu ll.O. 1'.t7 Trn1 Inv 1.01 1.71 Nl IOlln Hancock Tx Fr• ... 10A G••tll 11.0S ll,11 Trev Eq 17.M ... Nl 9oM 12-" IJ.JJ ut $fw 0 lS Nl HI Yid 1UJ IS.at heir Fd 12.JS Nl HL f ff-i. 1t~ 1!i =:rs:! .• T.~11 Hl :::~ ·~ 1M: i~~ r. l~ Et ~t Kallfmn t °.2D Nl =:: ~ur1~':' Nl V!~"Ea h.67 ::::USA.ti h•c UJ Nl ...... 10.A4 11 M VIiie 17.J2 ... ., ~nnf11"J~ U7 Nl 90l\ll Ut J'.Js Voyeg 1..e:I 11.• v ...... 10.!S NL Oh1l4 SA 1.19 Re lf!M J.lt Nl United '"-· Grwtll tti t.11 ltevere 1.+I NL ,\((m l'refd .ii •.a Seftco !Kw: lncom 6.•• t.64 •qwh 1u2 NL Stock 10.27 1 .o1 9rwtll 17.AI Nl tea Ila 7.71 1.1111 lllC.e 11.SS NL Ellie ~: $tPeul 'It' Equh 21.lJ 22.'1 e ft U.17 Grwtll !US»~ rwlll ... 14.11 •ncom t.41 lo.JD kft ·NL . . • i ., .... s • -"' ,,. llo •1& "' • "" '" , ~. • :\<, 1 1, 7 ... s .,.. ~ '• ·~ ... .... ,,,. ~ , .. )9 44 11 ' "' ·~ . ., Unileyff.'on.eqfthe la,.,ett companlet in the world welshed lil recmtly wltb 1880 resulta: ulet reached sz4 bllllon,profitaaf\ertaxescamet.o~mllllon. T~ blockb~ter fitutet would ra~ Unilever u follows tn the UnlWld Statft corporate Wleup: 13th in sales (Just ahead of Allanllc Rich.field a.od rtatrt below General lJlectric>, 28\h in pl'Ofita {&bead of Unton OU and below ProcterlcGamblo). But no~ that you know that. who is UnlJever? And what does it do to raak so highly? Unilever belongs to that modem breed of companies known as m'lllina· \lonals. lt's an AnllO·Dutc h ~ combine (there are dual head· ~~ 0 quarters in Lon· \ don and Rot· ---------.-r ~' terdarn) that re-111111 1111nnz • 1ulted from the _.-it 1930 merger of the world's largest soap company (Lever Bros.) with the. world's largest margarine company (Maraarine Unae > ~ODAY~ UNILEVER operates in 75 count.ries, making a. wade range of foods, soaps and detergents, fats and olls .. starches, chemicals, toiletries, paper pro· ducts and animal feeds. Its three U.S. outposts-Lever Bros .. Thomas J . Lipton and National Starch &: Chemlca~ -do more than $2 billion a year You're get-tln~ a Unilever product when you buy any of the follow mg ite ms . All. Bre~ze, Dr1H~. Wisk. Lux. Rmso, Dove.Caress . L~fe~uoy, fina.1 Touch, A~m . Close-Up, Pepsodent. Signal. lmpen;.il margarine. Promise. Mrs But· terworth's s.yrup, Lipton's teas and soups. W1sh·Bone salad. dressings. Pennsylvania Dutch noodles, Kriox gelatin and Good Humor ice cream An~ those a re just the A mencan brands Marganne brands outside the US. include Rama, Blue Band. Becel and Flora. In Brilam. Unilever markets t~e detergents Omo and Persil, Walls ice c ream and Bards Eye frozen foods On the European contine nt it St'lls the Skip detergent. l.'nox soups . Calvt! salad dress in gs and Zwan mt-a ts COM~ANI ES LIKE UNILEVER increasingly call the s hots in our et:ono m1c laves They're huge They ~arkct h~ndreds of products They're at home anywhere in the world And more and more of them tend lo~ hascd outside thl' l 'nikd States. A report re leased this month by the Conferen<'t> Board showed this p1ctun• In 1963, U.S. hrms at•counted for63ofthe world's 100 lurgest anduslnal corpornt1ons In 1971, l.i .S. farms m<1de up58ofthe top 100 • lnl979,theU S s harewas 47 TH.EM ESSAG EIS clear: companies based outside the United States are growing faster than American r1rms Getting 1nformat1on about these multinational mo':'sters has never been easy.bu.tit ·s definitely getting easier. For example, if you're interested in this cast of characte rs. you should tell your local library about the existence or a new r eference work. "The World Oirec- l~ry of Multinational Enterprises " 1This two.volume directory, published by Facts on File. New York, is not fore \'Cry horn~ Ii bra ry bee a use at costs $195. 1 STOCKS JN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES MEW YOIUCIAPI Flt1el Oo,. J~ evg• NEW YOlll( IAPl -$aln, Wed.pfl<• lor Wtd . ""' ». M'd net ci..noe oJ tlW llllffn ....,.t ..:tlve STOCKI H... Y-StlK& E.cN-IMUes. 0119" Hlgn LOw CIOM Cl>Q tract~ Mt'-lly at ..-e t,..,, SI JO Ind 1002 10 ICtl) '6 -IJ 100r 171 • I OI Am Afrtln , .. 10.100 ""• • "" JO Tm 4" 2' ... M ~2J ...., 20+ • II AlnlltPrtH l,.'61,700 U 'IO. + • 1S Ull 107 17 101 fJ 101 IS 106 'i<I 0 SS Citicorp '42,,00 2••· , ,..,. 6S Stk 1'011 J'IS o. :1111• >tt ''• 1.21 Telf.ce '"' m .100 ls •. ll'du• •.tn,ooo laM 717 200 ~ v. Tren ),1/S,IOO SMll' Cbrp ..,'.100 11'' Vt111 '146,600 llrun1wk 114,'IOO tt•• , "" ., Slk 'o.M.- 0.n Motor1 .. s.aoo ss"" • '"" Al'oOtl S71,600 60' 1 ...,,llAmt r SSJ.600 2S'. UAL Inc "'4 XIO 11 • C:O.chmn "'4,000 '"" ~•rLoeDR •1','IOO 'i<I Cil~~i:,•~ =·~ :~ .. AMERICAN LEADERS He,,,. I LOWl"lln 2 Cook Unfl l AmAlrln WI 4 Sl>ellr I 4Gpl S $Miier Glob 6 H•t ChPtm 1 Sl>eerL.OtbR I HvflyCP 'H•~I AID 10 OICC Corp 40c 11 ChlMlh~ Cl> 1l Hunonil' ll AmE•p<•u 14 ModMtrtll IS THelllll I 16 Am Alrlln 17 WlltrR .. GOLD COINS P<t UP \1 0 Up 16.1 Up IS.7 VP IS.7 Up IS.I VP 11.9 VP I I.I 8: 1a UP 10 ~ UP 10.2 Up 10 I VP U ~: B Vtt '-1 Uo t.4 ori'~'lu §a IU 10.J 10.0 §ff .... ••• u Off 1.1 g;: ?:: IOfl :~ t:t ••• u NaW YORK CA" -"IC.et lelt T__., ti teld <tlllt, COll\llMtd •1111 ~,., "1wt. ............... 11,..y.a., uu.oo. • auo . .......... 1 tnlf• •• UllAlf. • aa. ... ...... .. ..... l.J lft\' •t .... ., ...... UM . ......... ,-. .. ,,., ............. ...... WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YU""' '""' Apr 11 AO••"ced 0.<llntd Un<h•nl>C'd Tot•I IUuH Ntw lll;fl• N•w tow• W"Af "MfKOIO T~J. , .. JIS •'10 117 JS NEW YORI( IAP1 AO• 11 SILVER 1oOav lOS ll• "' m JJ • p,,.v d:r, ,,, l.S t'l)J 1.U " Pr•v o~f, m ,,, ,,. •• tl H.,,.,, I. H•mMI, \1 I SIG~· troy ounce SYMBOLS . I ' ~-~ ~ .. , ' • . • . f , ' ~ • • f • • . ,. • " ; f • c > . ,. . . • • • . .. • -· . • ' 0 .. I I I I j Orange County Secretary of the Day Trudy Miyakawa and her bo11, Coata Mesa Fire Chief John Petruzziello Member of the Year Barbara Suraes Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Kelly and his secretary, Suzanne Long By SANDIE JOY Of ... p.llY ~Staff E xplaining that a career' as an actor isn't far from a career as a secretary "because we have to go in and lie about background," ex· TV star-turned-politician Jack Kelly addressed 300 secretaries and their bosses Wednesday at South Coast Plaza Hotel. The occasion was the 12th annual Orange County Secretaries Day Program, an $8.50-per- HAPPENINGS person breakfast at which. Kelly, who was billed as guest speaker, quipped. "I can satisfy at least half of that billing. I am one hell of a guest." Kelly's talk was filled with quips about his career and about his secretary, Suzanne Long, who was seated next lo him al the head table. Secretaries have a day Guest speaker Kelly entertains KelJy, who began his acting career as an in· fant in Ivory Soap advertisements and went on to fame as Bart Maverick in the now·defunct "Maverick" TV series, is a Huntington Beach councilman and real estate investor. He got the Maverick part, Kelly said, after movie mogul Jack Warner saw him in film· clips with a camel hovering over his head L eveling a joke at the bosses in the au· dience, Kelly gave his description of a camel. "They spit, smell bad and have the breath of a septic tank,'' he said. "Sounds like an old boss." The rest of his jests were directed at the secretaries. "I learned early in my career," the coun- cilman said, "lhal secretaries were fantastic dates." la another jest, Kelly explained he couldn't get his own coffee because when he did, he usually got the sugar and cream wrong. He added, "ln my operation. 1 have a lot of meetings in the office and I don't know what those chauvinist males would think if I would get up and get my own coffee." The counc ilman also explained his secretary had the duty of getting his car filled with gas because the service station attendants enjoyed seeing her more than him. As a final jab at secretaries. Kelly said he needed a new typewriter in his office but was holding out until his secretary teamed how to type with all IO fingers Among highlights or the morning program was naming of Trudy Miyakawa as Orange County's Secretary of the Day. Ms Mi yakawa, who works for Costa Mesa Fire Chief John Petruzziello, was presented with a dozen red roses. a two-day tnp for two to San Francisco and a typewriter donated by Silver-Reed America in addition to various other pnzes Barbara Surges. who works for Will Williams of the City of Costa Mesa's Facilities and Equipment Division, was honored by the Bahia Chapter of the Professional Secretaries Association as Member of the Year. )i Nursing home aides very special ange/,s DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please write a few pose a problem. My fiance's father is a hypocrite Perhaps the word should be "U POSSLQ" fo .. f words. in praise of nurse's aides everywhere. but and a snob. I dlsl~ke hl11_1 intensely. The feeling is "Unmarried Person of the Opposite Sex Sharing'" especially those who work In homes for the mutual I sensed 1t the ~arst time we met. I would Living Quarters " Or. how about "SPOSSLQ" ror • elderly. 1111 llJlllflS not want any of our children to carry this scoun-single persons" POUGHKEEPSIE POSSLQ These people perform tasks that would be JUI drel's name. Dear Keepsle: You missed the point. The abhorrent lo most of us, and they are almost Shouldn't the naming of children be a mutual Census Bureau does use "husband" and "wife" for always at. the ~tt?m of the _Pay scale. . . decision? The thought of the hassle ahead is those legally wed . The "POSSLQ" is a My sister 1s 1~ a nursmg home. S~rulity has enough to make me dread pregnancy. Please euphemistic bit of gobbledygook to cover otherf~ taken over her mtnd, and age has cnppled her Dear Aunt Jennie: As a board member of the answer my letter Ann I need your help _ It ti •1 body. She is totally helpless and cannot speak. Rehabilitation Institute in Ch icago, I know WHAT'S IN A NAME IN WESTCHESTER? 8 ua ons. ;• Anyone who has visited one of these places. no sometblog about the dedication and caring of doc· "Persons of the Opposite Sex Sharing Livln~f matter how expensive, has seen the human tors, nurses and aides who cater to the need.a of the Dear Cheater: Naming a child should be a Quarters" could be either swinging singles or even~ wreckage of what were once capable, productive handicapped. Theae people are about as close to joint decision. Slnce you dhlike your future father-roommates married to someone elff In aaothe~! people. Many are forgotten by their families. It is saints as anyone on earth. I agree that a special ln-law lntemely, your hubaiad should a1ree to a household. Your "UPOSSLQ" and "SPOSSLQ" l the aides who do th~ "caring." day of appreciation shouJd be set aside to honor compromise. If It'• a boy, bls father's name can be are both covered. Th~ Censm Bureau couldn't' I wish a special day could be set aside to honor them. the cblld'a middle name. Ills nnt aame could be care less whether people are legally married or all the nurses and their aides who devote DEAR ANN LANDERS: For the past four your husband's, bis brother'• or a favorite uncle's. living ln slo. And It's really none of their busloess. · themselves to the care of the elderly and helpless. years I have been going with a man I love a ereat Someone should let them know their efforts are deal. Recently the topic of children's names came appreciated. And thank you, Ann Landers. up. He informed me that he reels the first son whether or not you publish my letter. I feel better should be named after the husband's father. for having written it. -AUNT JENNIE IN CIN-I am a conservative person who believes CINNATI strongly in family tradition, but this one is going to RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTllY s.. • ...._ ........ lt22 HAllOI IL VD. COSTA MISA-14a.l IH .~~~ .. ' SCULPTURED PORTRAITS That v-111 last for centuries W~y Buy Someone Else, By Somebody.~!~1 . _ When you can have YOURSB.f Today! A 20 MINUTE SITTING Will PRODUCE AMASTERN<I THAT WILL LAST FOREVER By Hendrik DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was amused by Charlie Osgood's poem about the "POSSLQ.'' which is the Census Bureau's name for "Person of the Opposite Sex Sharing Living Quarters." I have one and I call him "husband." TllE MARY JANE How to -and how much? Find out with Ann Lan· ders· new bookut. "How. What. and When to TeU Your Child About Sex ... For your copy send 50 cent& along I with a long, &tamped, aelf-oddrf!ned envelcpe to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995. Chicago. /U 60611. Orange CoHt OAJLY Ptl,;.OT/Thureday, April 2.31 1881 !uld cooll in Lt, 'but does anyone care? ant a few aeranluma In the aide yard the carbaae can and people 10 cruy. My whole house is fiash and show. ou walk ldlo it and the fint thJn1 that t11tl you ls the immaculate order of thin••· All the drawers are closed. 1bere ls a feelin1 of neatness. You tlnow without aaldna that the people tlve .... d "1 attentJoD ~ non·villblea. Pertaape a alp by tbe front door that • reida1 '"lbil boule hu Just had 1 ter~ mite tupec:tlon and ti11 ~ declared cleall!' Or. ''Tbe pad under th.ii c:rum· my carpet la waffled for comfort with Uttle alr poc!ketl and it's the top of the Une." I lea.med a loa1 time •10 not to waste my Ume on thinp tbat could not be seen. I never sewed up a ·pocket in 1 winter coat, never hemmed a slip you could tum over at the waiatband. never bou1ht a wtter heater ubtil the base- ment flooded, never replaced the tiles behind the stove, never threw away the SciHOn with hall the tip broken off. All you people out there who paint the inside of closets -and you all know who )'Ou are -listen to me. It's like having your ll1ht burn out in the refrigerator. Who knows when the door is shut? (;emini: ~IDAY,APRJLZA, 1981 Get ready for a change r SYDNEY OMARR ARIF.S <Mar. 21 -Apr. 19>· Good news mes in Corm of promotfon, funding or • proof" of added popularity. Expand rizons. Look beyond the immediate. 'f ou could receiv~ assignment which !fCessitates travel. One in authority ' pullS"strings" for your benefit. I TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20 >: Bring long-range view into focus. Emphasis on dist ance tr ave I. I an g u age. p hilosophical concepts and possible publishing projects. Aquarius. Scorpio and another Taurus figure prominently. 'J;emporary delay or restriction works t~ your ultimate advantage. GEMINI <May 21 -June 20): Be ready Cor change, travel. variety and in· tfnsified relationship. Questions con· d?rning financial status of •special person" will be answered. You could be ievolved in "occult experience." Delve beneath surface indications CANCE R 1June 21 -July 22>. Circumstances tend to dictate actions - you'll be concerned with residence, lifestyle and feelings of one close to you. Lie low, play waitlng game. Legal de· cision ls due and you won't be disap· pointed. Be diplom atic! LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Obtain hint from Cancer message. Go slow. main· tain low profile, attend to basic chores. Define meanings, avoid self-deception. Check legal agreements -be aware of s mall print. read between lines. Conserve assets! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Money and love dominate your personal scenario. Focus on production, past efforts which pay dividends and willingness to accept added r esponsibility . Ca n cer, Capricorn. Libra persons play promi· nent roles. LIBRA <Sept: 23·0ct. 22): Business or property transaction can now be com· pleted. Emphasis on structure. design, model and ability to reach beyond cur· rent expectations. One you admire will seek your counsel Aries. Leo, Sagit· tarius natives figure prominently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21l : Eyewit· ness reports favor your efforts. You gain added independence. confidence and have chance to erase past mis· takes Short trip could be on agenda. You meet dynamic. creative individual who lends spice to your life. SAGJT'l'ARJVS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21l : In- tuitive intellect is sharply honed. You'll be at ri&ht place at right time. Em· phasis on income potential. valuables, personal possessions and ability to ob· lain needed material. Cancer. Capricorn, Aquarius persons play im· portant roles. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-J an 19 1: Popularity increases, burdens are re · moved and financial prospects are brighter than in recent past. Optimism replaces worry. travel opportunities ap· pear and you are asked to join social group. Get out among them! AQUARIUS <J an. 20-Feb. 18>: Much that occurs is secretive. behind scenes and involves policy-m aking organiza· tions. You gain access to confidential material. You're on brink of major dis- covery. What appeared a "lost cause" will be revived and you could profit as result. PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 201 : Pleasure principle is emphasized. Aura of celebration dominates your personal scenario Important change occurs; member of opposite sex plays an impor· tant role Gemini. Virgo, Sagittarius natives figure prominently. Depression needs quick treatment Slip into the ultimate in comfort and casual good looks Our handsome Con.tinertols combine genuine hondsewn moccasin construction. soft leather lining and a cushiony sole to make every step a step in the right direction If you toke your comfort os seriously as you toke your fashion. toke o look ot Clarks Continentals Introducing the Contlnenta1·· ~ 'fl""/>~ Place Setting, 5 pc. Oval Vegetable Bowl Platter, 16" Covered Butter Dish ~lar Baker, 2 qt. Gnvy Boat & Tray Save up to 0% MFG. SHACJ( PRICE PRICE '1550 •925 IOU 825 1500 1199 9" 7" 14• 1150 1150 UlttAAM-TUtn• C.....,...TY...,.t~ ; ....,.,, Mr, .... tllrt. Dee ._..,,.., C.'8 ,... .... ..,. . ......... Mr. t ...i Mn .. Merli Chldtle-r, Hutltlllftiln hecll, tlrl, MercJIU ~ ..... ,,.,.... .-.w....,.., ~ v .... .,,...,, ~" Mr. •"• Mrt. Mtrll Lt wrence, lrvlM,Mr. flMllielltl Mr. •1111 Mn. Honnen Ke Q, HeWP9'1 -..Cll,lloy Merdltt Mr. ellf Mi's. Wlllleln .,,,.,., 1 rvllle, ..... ......... Mr. •ml "*•· lltfftell Wllllema, C..te .... ,t .... 11111-... .,. MMo&ila Mr, •IWI Mn. W•YM Lendr\I, lrvU... ...,, MwetilM 11i1r. encl Mrs. J-• Clil'-0. Hunt· 1..-.lltkll,bo\I MerCll 21 Mr . .,Id Mn. Thomes Ewlno, 1r111,... 1lrl. Mlrdllt Mr. •lld """· Wiiiiam Stelnrltde. 0-P.wt4,boy Mr. •M Mn. Olaon INOOCIDury, CCl6te -... My. Metttl• Mr. end Mrl. SI...,. So~ C.lt MeN,9lrt. Mr. ••Mn O.le Tautlftt, c.t. MeM,tlfl. HOAG MIMOltlAL HOSPITAL PltaUYT•tUAN MArct1• Mr. and Mrs. si..w. Coslt -... 9Jrl. Mr. eM Mn. BoudrMu, Collt MtM, 9lrl. Maftll Jt Mr. •~ Mrs. Step11an ci..m1>1on. lrvlN ,glrl. Mr. •no """· Kelly Smlttl, Hunt· lnQIOft 8aad\, gor1 MMcll• Mr. al'IO Mri 0...IJIOQl>er W•lerman Huntington 9eecll, girl Merell JI Mr •nd Mrl. Cr•lg Klein. Ir.In• glri. Mr. -Mr•. l(ennetll Goooo, Hunt Int• 8Hcll, 91r1 Mr. aftd Mrs. Doutt••• Fr111e11, COJl• -.... lrl. Mr. •M Mn Marc 8-nl. H""t lnoton 9Mcll, 11or1 Mr. •nd Mri. Rooerl 81M\Oil, Co.t• MeU,bOy ......, Mr. end Mr\. 0.•ld Smllll, C0<one dtl M•r. boy Mr. and Mn Mer-x uooer. Lagune 9••<11. glrl Mr. tnd Mrs. ~tenley Riley, Hunt 1ne1on 8eecll, Doy Mr . and Mn. Julius IC Ian. Leoune BH<ll.Oir1 Mr •no Mo Marl•n ftdu<I•. Hunt inoton Beacll, glrl "OUNTAl#VAUAY COMMUNIT'fMOl"tTAL ~ Mr enoMn......,T .... ,,.~ Vello.bo\I Mr •no Mn l.A'f'ftftCt Gr!Mt', l"- U.111 v •lley,glrl . Marc•U Mr enoMn.S.....,.O.v~.H­ lnotOf'I BM<11,119r Mef<aU Mr •M Mn. ~ C.11. Coate Mtr.e,gtrl ~-. Mr. eno Mn. ~ Pe!l!'lllf, C.lA Mesa, boy J•mes FlcQWlte -~ Hurtel, Coste Mer.a, girl Mr •l'IO Mn. Wendell ~r. Hunl lr>eton 8eecll,Doy Ma.UU Mr •n<I Mn .. D••ld A'11, Huntlnolon Bucn.111r1 M t •nd M n. JAIT'llH FI«•\. Fouftt•fn V•lley.Olrl M t •ncJ Ml\ Mtc,..,..I 8"''"'· .,.wnt inoton 8H<l\.oir1 MarcllH Mr ano """ ~ l(IAmll. 1 .. 1ne. g irl Merdt21 Mr •l'IO Mn Mt~-• 8•rtm•n. Hllf\t· •no ton 8eec11, Doy -2' Mr end M<l MIC-I JohftlOn, Hunt· 1ng1on 8eec1>,911'1 Mr •ndMrs. Fr-kllCMuon. H11nt 1ng1on Beecll,Doy Mardi• Mr end Mrs P..,1 Kn>ger. S.... J ... n Ceplltr-.boy Mr •M Mn. Wiiham Montgomery, HunllnQtonBM<ll DOY M.tn:llJI Mr and Mrl. J•me• O"Connor. Hunt• 1noton8M<h,DOy PVIWC NO'l'ICE ••1•t1 D•"A9'.TM••t O fl TllMllf'Qa TA Tl°" NOTIC910 ClO'fHAC?Oat a.•IH ,...,... .. .i11 lie rtQIW. M 1111 O._.,._ ..... Tr.,.~rlet.t.ft, ' 11lt N _,..._ ,._,, Jlf, SKr-W, Cellfon\le ••t4. lllltU 2 o'cllkl P-"I· .,. IUy 4, 1•1, et wllkll II-tlW\I wlff M publlcly .......... ·-... the ... 1 ~Dly It-.. Mid eddreta, few<- alru<ll ... .,, Stele ,......,,Y lft K· <•rd•n<• wllll Ill• .,.ulfl<•tl•tH uwreft', 14 wllkll -lel r9*enc:• It ...... ........... Sen ...,, .. C-ty, In tnll -S.n J-lew!IU. end Holll1 .. r. from I U°"'lle __. Of .,.....,... St.-, "' Sen JUMI a.ut111e, to Ille s.n .. nl1o j ,.Iver Brl do• 1Pertton11 I01-SBM~U/t II, ulstlnt llltft•HY 10 .......... by o<e0"'9 •nd IUf'fe<-J Int wlUI ........ COftCrete Oft ...,,....te ..... o.,., eeor~t•-.. •rMI °" ultuno ""1.:lno. Tiii• F-111 Aid project llel • 9M1 f er t per<•M m•nM1t" bt.l••ne11 •rt· terprlst pertl(l.,.Uon. Ho pr..old "'""no ·• 1<....,11led IO< 1111• protect Bid• •r• r-lre<I !or tlle enlir• •on d•Krlbed herein Pl•n•. -•ll<•horu, and pr-411 ~ forms for IMO<Nno ftlll Pf'OJe<I <an only be oblelned •I 111• O•partment of 1 Tren._-te11on, Pl--9•d Ooc11· ment1, A_,, 1', rr .. SPOf"tellon &u•ld• Ing. 1 IJO H SlrM\, I' 0 Boa t-. Se<r•rn.nlO. C•llfCH'nl• tSIOI ,,,_,. 1 91•·ttl-Jl15), ..,., m.y De .. .., •I lllt •OO•• office -al Ille 01110• of the Ol•lrlct Olrectc.u ol lrenle>CH'Ulion at L..o• Aftlll91 ... s-Fran<lKO, -.... dlltrlCt In wftt<ll llle _,_ ll Slt ... 1.0 TM ...CCffJl111 Dlddff ll\all lurnlth • peyment Dond el\d • performence -Tiie ~"*'' of Trenll>Or1•11on llereby nohflel •II blddn\ tl\el It w•ll efflrm•ll,,.ly 1n..,r• 11\at In eny <on· lr•<I entered Into r>unuent to tr11• •d· verUsem•nt. m1nor1tyi C>uttM\\ en- teror•H• will De •ftordt'O full op .. port unity to >ubml~b<di "' ••\OOfl•• to ttlll ln•ll•t•on end will not De d i•· <r•mlnaled eg.tlMt on Ille Q<ound• ol ~-----------------------'!rec•. cotor, Of n.ttl~I Ot'tOI" tn con· •ldtrallon ICH' an ••••O PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE M•n•mum •aQJt r•te'\ for "'" pro1ect •• 1><eoe1enn1r..o Dy tlle S.cretuy ol L•bo< ert .. 1 f-only 1n tl'le~<lal flrcTtTIOUS •USINESS "'CTITIOUS BUM Nau pro• .. •on• o4 .,,. ....... , ~re(I NAME STATIMIHT NAME ITATIMINT booh ,.,,,.., lor blOOono ""'-· •n<I Tll• 104IOW1"9 ""'""' ,, OOlnQ buOI Tiie lollowlnQ ~I• doing bull enlJllOHI 5'>KIOI P•o•1Mons Hollo lo ""' •• nn• H Conlre<ton, ..,._ .. ,,•no Contract SUH INVESTMENT AHO STREET TOYS AUTO 800 •ndln co~ofWI0-11\elm•ybe CONSULTING, d ROOy Knoll. Irvine, AHO P AINT, MOWHl 1111• Str .. 1 .. ,. eumlfted •t .,.. umo olli<U .. c.111orn1an115 Co.I• MAM. C:.llloml• ~7 deatrlbed ,..,.,no.lore ,.,..,. IM V•CW 91t·Sh1no S.,,,, d Rocky J effery Alleft n -... 411 C°'te plan.. \pe<1llcat10M. and prCJPOUI Knoll, lrvlne, Celllorn1a tV1S Mes. St,...I. Coile Motv. C:.lllornl form1 may be_,, ,._nae to modify Tiii• """""' •• Conclllleled by .,, In t2'f7 '-·· ,.,..,.,,,....,, ..... reie. will be d•••dU•I. Tiii• bull.-..• •• c-.c1ea Dy .,, In IHU•d only lo .... _, ol ow •DO•• r•· Vl(ICH' 8, s.,,, dl•l•ual lerenc...i -• II It.re ••• d1llereftu Tiii• "9..,,._I ••• ltll<I wllll llw Jeffery Allen TibOeb Mlw"ft Ille mlftirno;fn weet r•e• pre• County Clerk ol Orenoe County on TM• llale,,._t ••• hleO wlttl I CHlermlnecl Dy Ille Secretary or Lebor April II.'"'· County Clerk of Oten911 C.0..ftty •no ,,.. prev•l•l"9 ••et rete• de· "'•U11 Aprll 14, Itel. term1,..41 11Y '"" Stele lor 1lmtlar P11bll"*I Oranoo c.0 .. 1 Delly Pilot. " <IHllfle•t-•' ,..,..r, Ille <:.ontr~tor Apr Jl JO May I ,. .... 1"71 .. 1 Publl•-°'"""' COHI 0 .11., Piiot and ,.,, Wb<ontre<tor• .,,. .. pay not __ ._. _ • _:_ __ _ AP' "· 23. JO. May 1. t .. I llSHll ltts tllan t1w n'91Wr w-rete PUBUC NOT.Cr A. Pur..,ent to Section 117J or Ille L•-.,. PUDLIC NOTICIE c-. Ille oe,....•I prevelll<19 rel• or PUBLIC NOTICE NA 7UIJ DaPAlt T MaHT 0" TltANSPOttTATIOtt NOTtC• TO CC»ITllAnoit• S.•led ~11 wlll be recehr..:I •t Ille O.pet1ment of Trans.porte1lon, t:IO Soulll Spring SlrMt. R_.,, 1000, Lo. An9e1es. Cetllornle t0012, until 2 o'<IOCk p m on Aorll JO .... t, ., WlllCll llme tlWy wilt be l)Ublklr _..... e nd re..:t In A_,, 2 •t s.ld edclrn1, lor consrru<uon on SlAt• lllgllw•f In ec · cord•nce wlltl Ille speclllc•llon• lher•fOf', lo wt'W<.h 14)1<••1 rer.,tf\ce '' mede.ulollo.n Los Anoeles and Orenoe COU111iu , •• v•rlou1l0<el1on1 107 LA, Ot• >t,60S, I, S, >t, SS, 12, 90, 133, 41»-Var), tr•llk •Ion•• conlloll•• to be r..,iece11. Bid• •re requlr..:t for Ille entire •orii described,..,.,,,, Plans, "'9<illutlorll, •ncl pr-I f«mt ,.,.. b141dino 11111 pro Jee 1 t en only I>• oDt•lned a r Ill• D•Ptrtment of Tret\~llon. PlatK -91d Doc.,. menh, It_,, 1', Tr_..tlOft 8ulld· 1"9, 1120 H Street, P 0 . Boa Utt. S«r•-· Cellfomi• ,,., (pllone ttMU.m51, and may be -•I UW ebeve OfflU and •t UW offl<H of Ille Olllrlcl Olre<IOn Of Tr-tetlon •I LOI A ....... 5-1 Fr-beo, ...ct .... 111.strlc I In Wfllc:ll Ille wot11 l1 altualff. TM succesa#11l 111ddef slWlll furnlsll 1 tl.ymenl llofMI •ftd • 119rferm•nce illond. Tito ~I Of Tr_.-tatl .. __ ..... In llw <-y In wtoletl tlla work 11 to be -lie• 0.... Oltarmlnotd Cly &tCITITIOUS aUSIHaH Ille Olrec• Of Illa Oet»f'lrnent of "" -"'AMAISTATll ... Nf •11,.1111 l!MetloftL T-•-,. .... Tiie ""O•lnt i>erlOft• ere doln tppear In tll• D•P•rlment of buslneu.. Tr•nsPOrtatlen IWOllutl.., ... 1111ec1 THit•E 0 BED & IMTH, Y Ga,_.af ........ e111,. W-lt ... s ... ,.., Sllotlt>lnt Can&ef, UIO Senla AM April, 1't1. Ful11re effective .. .. """' lloM, A,,.,..lm. CelllonW• tJI07 rates wl\lcll -_, Pt9*1ffml-TllrH 0 l>epartmenll, lftC.. end an., Ille wllll llle a..an,,,.... Of 0.l•••rw cor-etlon, I01 Slf.,.r LAM 1n<1u1trla1 Relellon• •r• referenced EH i Hartford, C:-tk ul0.111 !Mil not printed In uld IMlllC•tlofl T-0 o..er1~. '"' ~Of Tran~·-"~ Sllutllly. G. L. A11Mell r ... _r ~y Director Ttl16 ..... ,_, W8 Iii .. wllll Ille Project 0. ... 1--1 COUl\ty C .. rll Of Oranve Counly Oft *"' C-lrllCllati Apr II 11. tMI. Dated Aprll t. ltlt "'Mta PultlllMd Orenve Cout Delly Piiot. PUOl"llecl <>anoo Coast Delly Piiot. April U , •• '"' lltMI Apr. U. JO. May I, u . '"' 1t20•1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Mt'HY netlflea all ltlclden IN\ ll wlll 1~-------­efflrmatl ... ly lnaure _, In .,,, ,.,. tro<I efttered lnlO ,..,,_t M 1111• No verllHl!Wnt, mlftOrltf llvMMSI en• terprl ... wlll M •fforfM f11ll op. ,.nunlty i. IMllll!llt blclr In ,.....,.. lo 1111• l11vlteti.n enf will not M dll· trlmlnMM e(lelfttt., Ille~· of reu, ., • nMlonel •!tin"'<-11dtr•tllll• eft IWtrd. Mini-.... rete1 ft' tllla prefe<I •• ,.,,." .... .., ... Setr..-, .. LHef --..,. only In ... *<!ti tt#evllltM .. U. _...,, _..,.. ......... fOr.......,. ""'.,,... .... tfltltlH "1"9tlel ,,...,.....,., NOiin W CM~.......,, tflf CMtl'MI," w111a.i.••.._.._._, ... tuml'"4t II tlle '"'" tlllct1 H .. 1crl1Mf llff•I*'"' "':': .:1 c-=~=-~--=-~ •~weee.-.wm • ...... Mlf ................. ,.... ....... 11l!WfItt411~t ltiilW-.. ---...i ..... , ......... . l t { I r 11Ck>ser, Mommy. I can't reod tht bumper sticker." "1 ·1J w "Can't we h1Y• 1 llttlt qul•t around here?" Mi\RMJ\Dt:KE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENJ\CE Hank Ketchum , ... n . "He likes to be part of the conversation." Whats holding up my colorin book' I sent in the box-tops TOO WHOLE DAYS ago' .. .ll'D(;E PARKER ACROSS 1 Sweettietn ev ...... 11 MIUI 14 ~ NIN 15 E•plof« John - NoT WUE, MAMIE. I ALWAYS GUfT WHEN THE l.l~HTS ~TART BUNKIN~ ... UHITEO '-t1H Syndicate Wtdntldl'('I Puzzte SOIWd by Ferd & Tom Johnson THEN I KNOW !T's ClOSIN<q TIME F~ ~ITH~R THfE IAVERN OR MY EYES ... ~~J ! ~v ~-~ ~ SHOE :\.\~C\' OW··· THESE NEW SHOES ARE KILLING ME GORDO 'IC)P. LOPE t, .,, .. I CAN'T WALK ANOTHER STEP· MAYBE I CAN GET A LIFT HOME JTNK \' "INKERBEAN BRABBLE '100 (NOIA>, L~M£, 1"11£ Ott!." ~£.A~ I CCME. IM'fO Kl6 SAl'(K SC Of'fiN I~ (5E.cMJ~6 I .•• U ... WE. 5PPl.,E INVA~ MACHIN£~ C.ERfAtN&..<,1 ARE ~POLAR! 'X)(J CA~ HARDW (::£) ANl)(JJHERE tAJmwi BOMPIN& l~lO ONE Of Ub! C) ••'"""90'••v• ~,.... .... --- APCb. l, by Jeff MacNelly 1 • • t by Ernre Bushmrller ' by Gus Amola ! Tl+E WAAJIA/~ SWAIAI CJCAWJ.b MA.JAIL'{ wm-1 #1s CANE ·· by Tom Bat1uk ~-----~ ______ _... Wlll:ll.---_.:;:::;_....,' by George Lemont : -rHeRe's NO W A Y . YOU 'R~ 60NN-t-_ se-r PO I "f'O COl'V't!! ~~OU6H A NIPP(...E!.' e .e .9 e . e e . e e Ill E e ('I TEl.EYIS• ·e ~ • .. AllD I APPLIANCES .9 · 6 ~'WE SERVICE llHAT WE SELL'' .. EUL ELEORIC •ME AP'PLIANCES • perFormance ~ ' e "fELEVISION .n II J...MGAM•~=J e AUDIO SYSTEM VIDEO SCAN SYSTEM VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDER MGA COLOR TELEVISION ·e SONY: 1 THE ONE .AJ\JD ONLY . • llFrigidaire e e "MMf.JENN·AIR e CRill-RANGE I .• • I .-•1 . LIT~ON Microwave Oven ' . NEW YORK (AP) -fe. wu an unuaually frail ear·old. He wel1bed only 18 pcnapd.a and had 1uf. 28 flareups of a stubborn ear lnleetJoo when he 1 admitted to the pediatric ward of a metroPolitan lng hoe pita I. K. wu malqourtshed , so doctors theorized that lmmunedefemee were down. But the cause of the ectiona remained unknown. K. 's young mother admitted s"e bad sometimes 1lected to feed the boy. Other times, she said. K . used food and she had to stuff bi1 mouth with a n and hold it shut until he swallowed. IN THE INTENSIVE CARE unit, the child's dition stabilized. but he ate sparingly. Repeated ts still failed to establish a diagnosis. Doctors were considering even more exotic tests en one young intern noticed the child could , etimes be coaxed to eat if he was made to feel edandcaredfor. The intern thought the tests. which involved jab· g K. with needles and tubes, might be frightening infant. He had K . moved to a psychiatric ward ere his problem could be addressed as partly emo· l nal. . Then a new infection drove K. back to the ICU. 1 ·'Over the next nine weeks K. underwent the fq}lowing procedures: CAT scan ; barium swallow; uoper GI; abdominal ultrasound; gastric biopsy; small· bowel biopsy; esophagoscopy; a bone marrow bt>psy; numerous cultures of blood, urine. stool and t•oat; six lumbar punctures" and many more, the former intern writes in a new book. THE CHILD STOPPED EATING altogether and was put on intravenous feeding. The diagnosis remained a mystery when he died. The intern. Ha rold Bursztajn. went on to become a psychiatrist at the MassachWJett.s Mental Health Center in Boston. But he remained deeply affected by the incident involving K . i&. The book Bursztajn wrote with three colleagues, '~edical Choices, Medical Chances ... criticizes what the authors call the unrealistic and potentially tfangerous quest for medical certainty that prompt· eel the tests K. endured. • "'The people who 'attacked' K. with needles were bot sadistic." the authors say. . . Theyweretryingtosaveh1slife. · ' Yet "many of the tests performed were, in fact. d•signed to identify diseases for which there was no IO)own treatment ... the autho~ say "What then was the purpose of the testing? Was it to treat K. more ef· tlktively or lo give the clinicians the reassurance of c~ rt am knowledge? .. THE BOOK GOES FURTHER than Just labeling !,lledicine an inexact science. Bursztajn, Richard Yfinbloom. Robert Hamm and Archie Brodsky as- Sfrt there 1s no such th mg as an "exact" science. "The problem is. how do you cope with uncer- tainty when among the outcomes 1s the possibility or death?" said Bursztajn. 30, who doubles as a primary care physician at Massachusetts General Hospital "When you go to a doctor with a chest pain. you want to know for certain whether it is a heart attack But in many cases you can't know for certain. The U11 Certainty seems ·unscientific' and that leads to feelings of helplessness. hopelessness. worthless- ness and aloneness." he said · Doctors worry that 1f they can't be certain about ~i agnosis, they a re practicing outside the scientific °lethod, he s aid. Frustrated patients. on the other hand. metimes claim malpractice and sue. or may turn .. alternate·· therapies. like Laetrile . which omise cures. IN K. 'S CASE. BURSZTAJN wanted to risk ating an undiagnosed illness in return for stop· g the invasive tests he believed were frightening e infant into a hunger strike. But prevailing edical wisdom demanded an exact diagnosis. The four authors trace this conflict to a deeper uggle between two philosophies or medicine they II the "mechanistic paradigm," and t he robatrtllstic paradigm .. The ''mechanistic paradigm.·· they say. views edicine as exact and predictable: every disease s a cause. tests can reveal the cause. and chance plies only when the cause is incompletely known. In the "probabilistic paradigm," cause and ance are Inextricably linked. Physicians may ow that a certain food additive causes cancer. But ay happen in only a small percentage of cases. Or may happen only with £actors like stress or a con- tutional susceptibility. THE PROBABILISTIC MODEL VIEWS tests ore critically since every one runs the risk or rsening the illness. Bursztajn said, adding that babilistic thinking abo demands that the pa· nt's and doctor's wishes and emotion• play a role decisions. • Bursztajn and Feinbloom. who is director of rvard's Family Health Care Program, say they ve tried to apply these principles in their practice. ey encourage patients to think of their treatment a series of choices. each carrying the potential for nefit or harm. which they and the doctor must ake together, Bursztajn said. "When you go to the race track, there's a good y to gamble and a foolish way to eamble. We teach r patients to gamble well as a way of malntalnlne me control in the face of uncertainty," he said. rban cowboys ust· 'bottle' REDMOND, Wash. (AP) -Mechanical bull1 too tame for the urban cowboys of tllh SeatUe berb: Tbey'rebutUn1abucldoibe«bottle. Lately nobody much wanted to ride the chanlcal bull at the New Towne Crier Tavern re, 10 proprleton John Dalzell and Jack rmuellen converted the critter to a bronco bot· H ONOR I -Gene Roden· berry, writer who created "Star Trek," will be awarded an ho11orary de1ree at Clarkson College, Potsdam. N. Y., May 17. lffUCKiN Author Wllltam Saroyan, 72, fa med for such work• as •'The Human Com· edy," WU liated In serious condJ - tion at a Fresno bospltal after suffering a stroke. spreadable color Spred house paint goes on fllHlly, dries 1ulckly to a durable flat finish thlt realatr peeling Water ~n·up Reg 16.59 spread ,some Glidden Gloss Exterior latex gloaa House and Trim paint from Giid· den goea on with eese Quick drying, chalk reSta· tant finish Reg 18 59 Homosexuals see k year f!f the. gays TORRE PELICE. Italy CAP) -Homosexual.a 1 attending an International conference have called for the United Nationa to declare a special year for homosexuals. The United N ationt earlier deatanated ye an for children and for women and hu declared 1981 at a year for the handicapped. More than 300 homose~uals rrom 30 countries at· tended the conference in this northern Italian town outside Turin. It was the third conference organized by the International Gay Association. ("' ... ~ Ai'ilUER!\ON) Da1·1y P1.lof REVEALS In the ~ 99 ~ lleeps you "' hot water 301111100 water heater with energy HVlng tempefeture anut-olf a ·screen ~ . ~~ 1-:~· .7 ~1~J tor all seasons~~ KIDDE fire away! When fire threatens. you have a powerful safe· guard with a Kidde "Fire Away·· close at hand Emergency protection lor home. boat. auto or recreauonal vehicle fires caused by gasoline, oil. grease and other flam· mable llqutd1 #10BC Reg. 11.95 11411 41 "'· ..... 124.95 Stfll ...... 184.IS A feeder designed to 1l<MP your yard humming. Hummln11blrd1 are drawn to eight ounces of nectar at 3•• three fHdlng 1tatlon1 ""'d bright red pens #208. Reg ' EKI I _.,.... ........ ,. X·14 Mltdewc~• Pelnt Acfdlttve to protect your new flntn.h from 111 rnlldew. '°' tat•• or oll·h\t4nl for· m\1619. Aeo. 1.19. Screens for your doors and screens for your windows. We build new screens, re-bulld old screens or help you build your own screens with the largest selection of parts in Orange County for the do-It-yourself screen builder. ltacl& them up high Ctauy Alumont atecklng chairs. High. quality eon· 1truct1on and 01it1tandlng good looks. #500 Reg.51.95. lfl I glou to Ille ftnllllf A hard·lhell flnleh tllat la. A new ruat fight« rormUla ttlat prottcta 1 •• your car with • weethef r..ietant thine. t2-oz. Reg. 2..4t A kettle on whHll with a giant dome smoker hood. Heavy gauge •IHI with I a•• porcelain enamel flnlah. #71000 ... armycnnelf with a •ult of ...... lac*• Sturdy maHbo• tock altowe you to r..We matt. but onty you ea1149·0 get " out! lng9nloua mec:haNtm le ... y to lnttalt. lt19. Aeg. W 7•• It's high time for tea time Revere Ware aluminum 15•• whistling tea kettle 2-1/3 capacity Reg 15.95 country roads tlke my mall Add a touch of rurat atyte to your home. Sturdy weather realatant 5•• mell box wl1h flag. Large ea.. #1. Reg. 7.89. I ......... ,, .... ,, II» "--•• "''"' 11 ... , ... " CLASSIFIED Mlt'liiton \ttt,to ••at. Ht•I •.lltritl .. •.,~h•nu ~r-=~~·~; .. u ... .. .... tAltlf' ~ •10t"tf :no .. IOi• 1£MJALS IUSOIESS, IMYlST· ~JtiMtAC •IH"tr• .. • '"" INDEX 'WftloAu ,_ tkN~hnft\~ Jll .. MOil, nMAMC£ l!tolllr ... ~ 1:: s.uth 1_...u"" ......... l•llo""""" -'Ain,m.1n"t•• ,,..., ""'"~ hrn "'I M l.'" t:::""""l~I T1 Place Y1tr A~. C1U · \l•-ht•r flofhl""' '•I• lfUf I oMomuu-.im' t•vrn '"'" "''IW!l' ... '"" l uftdrum1nuo1nti. t Af ""' l••~t,.,.,nl l!7>1"M'l • &42·5678 REAL UTAH ,~ ............. t .. ,. ,j.'Jj .. '"'"""'""' ll •M..d f.,.Nw.M-~' l "' l\l) )IYlfM'\ "' 1,._,_.n "' ,, .... ,,,,. ,., .. ,.,., ~,~t·urn Wit "'"""' ".,.. .... 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""'"'' , ... llflw.11""•' U••• u ......... "" lt\IN' 11'41 f'r•ft~t' ( U J'tUf> ''-" "'-'~rw111 .. krnli•l 4.tJll ""'"""'"''"' 1 .. 1111• lk·oth ·-(""11(C1""nh f.'tlfft '~~. tndu,trutl Ht'f\lttl ..,,,, ~.r11tl t luty.. ............. 11. 11• •NI of ......... ~'f'i~ ""'' :-.ltlf .... •WJ ,., .. ".' -....,., 111•6 ..... 0 11111\ ...,.. ""' 11101 """' , .... ~I.Ill """ UIJ "UI• ........ "'~' SlMES ,.,,, .. , ... , ...... ,) £MPLOJMOIJ & PllPUATIOM M'hei. .. , J ft'll rt.Wt KM\ fi .. ~ .. "'"'' i.lwlh"4NI '.116 t MlitffANDISE Ar'lltMtU." A~tti11H.• .. AVthun kUHW1ti Kwtklmtc. l•tt"t1•I"' t •fht, _..,, t.•fYl.,fHt nt l •h ...... , .) .... to\•~ ... _.,., .. ,"'., •• ., .... 'wa... ·-tkMt.M.-hi.W ........ J ...... ,, U\nlu~• BOATS & MAllNE £QUIPMEMT AUTOMOllU .._........... . Aat..ttt"'-• \. '""""''• ~ th-,,_.., .. .,.\' hu •~ .. lfllltt ~~~ •• ~,~:: •. ~ ... t . !Ill'*"• I 1"' '"' ..... ; \41/1• ..... \11101 ..... ,,. 6 t \"'H•'4 .. M\f'tl .,,.., l"Jih .. .,. \ " ... ..... #I.Ill .,," .... ,u trtUIU '"' .. \W\ ... th .. f•, . .... ~ ~t" u.. ....... •·.,,r•n ....... .. ... , ... ~·· ........ , .~ .... , .. J,...u,.1 J\10 .. t'h lif.t11 lll_,flHC1h1.t ..... ,., .. "''''•jf~ """ "'· iu;u I~ 111 ''"" f 1•·•" P .. oh 1 .. ~ .. ,., ....... ,, .. .... I'•""' t,.. k,, ... uu kuh .. t('"''" u ..... ....... 1, ..... 1.,... AUTOS. IMPORTED "•11 .. 1 u lo,•Kof I 1tlJi0.ol1 \.tt·tl\11<11 1fll•t \llJ H•1Ulil•I \ lt4 .. •• ....... \11hl• :;~.; AUTOS, NEW Yil.: 1.111u .. t ~;:: AUJOS. USED ... ...)· •. ,t .. , ... f.J.t \lih J·~ ~,~ 'll;J. I .u1111 .. , V1.ttt \ "'""'" •ilr.. 't\.11 \•·•it' •·... • .. , ... h. 'if ff. \ uftt•l _..... . .................. . lot \ Hlti .... 1 • \ lrlol, JI 1 • ... l>i •I~. t •1,1, t111 I 1' ti\ ltn"" ,,. '·· •·11 .... I • \tot HI•~ ·i;-~i ttlO '•" \lu"'"" 1)\,l.t11ul11h ti•;.! l'u~tu ....... 1·1 .. ,. .. ''" • ··' 4 ) ,tt l•I of.,\• I h!I ~ 1, ,,: \' I ..... ,, ... : .. ., ... ~-~~ •••••••.•••. ~:.":":'.~ ....•.. ; •••••••• ~~ •••••••• ~!:':".~ •.•..• ~~-~.~ ........ ~:.~~·····~· ~-~~ ........ ~!.~~~ ........ !~.~-~ ...... .. . G....,.at I 002 ........ I 002 G......e I 002 G........ I 002 G....,._. I 001" ChMr• I 002 GeMt"at I 002 ~....... t 002 .........•...•.........•..••.••••.••.•..•.•..•.•........•.................•........•.........•.....•..•.....•..••.• ······················· .......................•..••...•...••••.••..• , EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Pllba11Mr'1Hoffu: All real estat e ad · verti s ed in thi s newspaper ls subject to the Federal Fair Hous· ing Act of 1968 which makes It illegal to ad· vertlse "any preference, limitation. or d is· crimination based on race, color. religion. sex, or national or1gm. or an intention to make any s uch preference. lim1tat1on, or dis· crimmation " UDO ISU Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional 3 bdrm, 3 bath home, newly decorated. Priced lo sell quickly at $475,000. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings . $420,000. PEMIHSULA POINT llACHFROMT Panoramic view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq . ft. featuring marine room . entry, living room, dining room. built-ins. etc. $1,385,000. IAYFRONT We have several fine homes with pier & slip, s tarting at $1 .500,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR Ttus newspaper wi ll not knowingly accept any I advertising for real f. estate which is In viola· lion or the law 341 Bciy~·d·· Q,.,, .. NB bl~ blbl 0 UNBEATABLE BARG AIM 3 Bdrm Costa Mesa re- m ode I e d beauty~ Complete with huge cov· ered patio plus fantastic hot tub. Priced to sell quick at $110,000 Call to see, 646-7171 HomnforSde ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeHral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 45• LOT owe • •• 3 Bdr. 2 Bdr duple•, s pa, 3 blks rrom water Call Tim Rhone631·1266 R&'M~ lff ·\I TORS MO DOWN PAYMENT Pay closing costs only' Buy your own home ' Must qualify for mon· thly payments Exciting new concept Call today for full deu1ls. 673-SSSO THE REAL ESTATERS COSTAMISA 5 IR-SI 25,500 OWNER SAYS SEU Not an add-on or con· version A real 5 Bdrm family home in one of Costa Mesa's nicest areas. Handymans de· light. Call~ and save! @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714·63 J.6990 . . ~AMEO .. (iHl.ANDS OCIAHYIEW OHL Y I 00/o DOWN Now reduced thousands! Spacious living room. feature• rlowlng nreplace, 3 large bdrms + den. Great assumable b l and owner wlll help finance. Call 67).8550 THE l<E AL ESTATE~S THE REAL ESTATE RS VIEW Owner wil csry 3 Bdrm Cliff Haven beauty. Owner will con· sider all reasonable of· ters 2 SPAS. one indoor. one o utdo o r . 2 t1re places, used brick entertainers peol area. Cabana, fire ring, view Saddleback Mountains. Fashion Island. lights Newly remodeled, new kitchen. Call today for appointment. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 J 4·631-6990 A LK T 0 BEACH Giant 4 Bdrm priced right ! Spacious hviog room features wood burning firepla ce. Owner assisted financ· mg Hurry, call 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS rlJME LOCATION 5 IDRM JIATH THE REAL ESTATERS DWUX 3 bdrm, 2batbeach unit. Fireplace, bWh-ins. E•· celleot rental area. Near beach ll bay. ~.000. "'2·2253 eves. associated 8 P 1) tii [ A "> Pt /\ ,. r, U ... l l 'J 'IA b 1 r i ' ' .., , NEWrOltT HGHTS Deluxe townhouse duplex. 3 bdrm + fami· ly, 2"'2 bath each unit. f'rplcs. all built ins. decks & patios. Park· like landsca ping . SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE! $295,000! lalboo lay Prop. Redton •675-7060• L~Aas.,aMe Take over ~.000 loan and owner will carr y a 2nd on this great 4 bdrm beauty. Only $129.500. C.lll now 979-5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS Spacious twc>-5lory on quiet street shaded by huge trees. Many quali· r--------• ty features. An excellent G•chMr't On.. buy at lllrl,500. Sharp 3 Br on large lot with loll ol trees. plans for a greenbouae, cov· ered patio. $195,000, '22,000 down. 751.Jltl c::.•.111 ( . ~~·~..,,~·t ,, .• '• 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment! Two CASAlll.10 2 Bdrm unlta, one with flreplace! Current ln· _ come-$740 mo. Flnanc· lna I One year bom• P'1> tection plan lncld . Huny, tblt woo 't Jail I .-nn ............. c ••••• Xlnt~1"' ....... rar a , .... um Ed· THE .REAL ESTATERS ba~ ... to lkrbor 81Yd. OPSJf 1fSl:IQ:NDS 10-S IU·Uft; llMm, •ll· rllMO IN HTHS P.,lUCRl5T. Beautifully maintained 4 Bdrm home with 3 baths. formal dinin~. family room and greenbelt view. Great flow and perfect for any family, larJe or small. Only $225,000. Creative !mane· ing available. JOANNE PHKINS. AGENT 645-4616 67WOOO n MACNAB-AVWE REALTY ll:iil . .._., .. _.._. CHOICE srYGLUS RIDGE CORONA DB. MAI Electric driveway gate opens to mountain & ocean views. Approx one third a cre, 3 BRS. l~ baths plus f a mily rm o r den . Co mputer controlled security system plus many s uperb amenities. 3 car garage w /opener, beautifullf landscape(I. Great terms! Owner will carry AJTD. Call for details. $519,000. Includes land. Bea Arnold 644-6200. ....... -..ch 901 Dover Drive H.artlorVlew Center 642-8236 6'4·6200 WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE ~. R•ntAI• PrOJ»tt~ M_..,.n1 315 Manne Ave Balboa laland 673-6900 CE llDllB ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE SUPER U.STILUff COM>O Former Model With View Of Big Canyon. Three Bedrooms Plus Convertible Den, 21h Baths. Wet Bar . Int erco m . Lovely Appoin tment s Throughout. Community Pool. Best Value In Afea. Listed Under $200,000. A "Joy Of Newport'' Listing. NEWPORT HARIOR VIEW HOME Outstanding Montego On Fee Land. Corner Location. Seeluded Yard W it h Spa . Beautiful Lu s h Landscaping. Night LiSht View Of Fashion Island & Big Canyon. Owner Motivate<\. $295.000. \\.' L s I. J: 'l "'i TAY LOR CO. Hl<A l.TOHS ~1111·1· l!J•l() IRVINE TERRAC'-MIHI EST A Tl FANTASTIC WATER vu-ROMT ROW New exclusive listing. Great view of the bays, ocean, bright lights & Catalina! One of largest lots in Irvine Terrace (almost 112 acre). Traditional 4 bedroom home with huge family · room. Lovely pool in front courtyard . Separate spa, darling new gazebo on lower terr. Call for ap~. $1 .095.000 including fee land. WESLEY. N. TAYLOR CO •• REALTORS 21 11 S• Joa ... tat Road NEWPORT CEHTER. H.1. 644-4910 WONDHFUL FAMILY HOME! We ll located in family oriented Harbor View Homes, clos~ to community pool and school. N1c~ly landscaped, 4 bedroom home with private rear yard . ~real for entertaining. This home ts also the lowest priced Montego liste d at $241,800. U,_.IVU~ ti()MI:' REALTORS, 675-6000 244S EMt Co-1 H&thway. Coron• d~I M., WI HA YI 47 O' THI llST A•9«5 IH TOWH EASTSIDE 3 houaea on a lot. Owner will help finance Only $179,900. 645-9161 OPEN HOUSE REAL TY / LET'S TAU Con11 .. l11'°9t SPfh Jack H lAtch. Mey. 67'91771 IRVINE LOW ASSUMAILE Gracious bright home in University Park. Large corner lot near pool & tennis. Custom wood s hutters & paneling. Private covered patio with spa. Take over subject to 1st TD at 1014%. Only $190,000. NEWPORT Outstanding 4 bdrm end unit in model condition. Located in most desirable area of The Bluffs -$225,000. 2744 L COAST HWY. COIOHA DEL MAR 7SS.161& , ......... . o/ newporl REALTORS 67S.SS I I LOVELY "E" PLAN. Most populcr mod.I •nr built in the lluff1. Sltuat•d on .-ctaculor CJf°ffftb•ff ""'"' mountain vlew. l ldr, F.R. IHt buy in th• area at S252,900. COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 2 5 IS E. Coast Hwy., Corona .. Mer 675-5511 SEE AND BELIEVE The very finest buy in the Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft. condos. 5 minutes to beaches. One h a If blo c k to major shopping centers . Cement drives, air conditioning, microwave oven. tras h compactor. large walk -in closets. Garage with opener. Pool and 2 jacuzzis. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS llOW.Wf,._ Cotta Met0, CA 714/611-5055 From $116,000 EDGEWATER BAYFIONT-VU $995 ODO fee Qui•t N•wport location away froM troffic & DCl"'OSI from lay fskncl OWMf" has plans & permits a~•.cl IO Y°" CCIII build tOfftOrrow. Existinc) l bed. hotM wf"' HUflMtt financhtcj DYaiJable. Slip for I~ yacht. VU of ...-1cry. WEST NEWPORT--50ft. to beach S675,000 hautfful custom dupl•x -8 pen okl wfth huge OWMr'I Uftft with 4 bed. & VU of oc•-. LGnJ• 3 bed. rewtal. &celettt financhtcj. LIDO ISLE CORNER-VU $&75,000 OH.ring tM HCltefMft't & couleat•ftt of Lido lifHtyle -........ cW»'9otlM, bicydiftQ & frl-..dly pieopM .tto etlfoy ~ -.... Isle. 2-••of-t j bed. 4 baf\i, ~ fonltal din. """· al ........ .. CLIFFHAVEN TRAllTIONAL WATERFRONT HbMES, 1NC REAL ESTATE s.,i... R~n•.il• Pt'""'"~ M.,_.,..nt 2436 W Coast Hwy Newp0rt BMCh j • .. ' H111"ForS. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ,.. 1002 ....... 100 ....................... ....••..............•. DOVER SHORES Vnsurpaued views of 6cean, mtns, & nite llghta. Courtyard pool. 1.ocated on oversized lot, thb custom 4 Br home is perfect for entertaining. RC11ylorCo . : ,, k. CITIHOMI 3 Bdm 21.; Ba, den, 1 year old condo, No. C.M., 1740 1q (t, de- corator's delight, as- sume lat, owe 2nd. Sl77,500 EA.STSIDE C.M. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, vaulted ceilings, .frplc, comer lot, owe w/20% dwn . I $149,500 ----'--------• IEA.CH DUPLU I S..taAM~. B Bd 2 B · t 2 r 1 Ba & 1 Br 1 Ba, 3 rm a ami Y Fee land, walk to beach, ,room,2400sqft.,vu,pool owe at 12~% int. •spa. 30% dwn, AJTD or w /30'7c dwn. $220,000 owe 2nd. S220.ooo C.M. TRIPLEX 3 Bdrm 2'h Ba. vu. pool, assume tst. owe carry 2nd. $189.000 3 Bdrm 2"2 Ba, vu, as· sume lst, owe 2nd SllW,000 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, zoned fo horses. remodeled . ow e . s1ss,900 . traditional rlty logo 3 Bdrm l Ba, vu assume Lst, owe 2nd S179,ooo Three 2 Brdm 1 Ba units. garaees, patios, good location & income, owe w /15 w /SS0,000 dwn. $185,000. EA.STSIDEVA 3 Bdrm l "'2 Ba, family rm, alley access, 2 frpk, needs TLC. $136,000 Daily Pilat Private Parties only -no commercial bus!nesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. .. ... .... .... ...... ... s. Home. Fors. ~Fors. ........ Fors. Hones Fors-. ~.~~ ....... . . ...................................................................................................... ·•········•···•·····••• Cost. W... I 024 0.. ,_. I 02• .._....,_.._. 1040 nS.. I 044 In._ I 0441,..... I 044 wpori .._. I 06' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• IMVESTIM ~ IMTEITAJMB"S * •G•EOUS•. *•ESTATES•. DILUXl41l HEIGHTS CONDO D-ut.HT M g lflcent ~ Bdrm 3 Quiet Npt H&ts /Cllf-L0CATI0M 21ty Cal~• Classic. If you are adllc('iminat-Sln1le 1tory attached b:thn home .. In lovely rhaven condo w/pool & Sharp2Bdrmcondoin 2000sq.ft,4br,2ba,"20X Ing buyer th-tap-bomeinfabulowWood-Northwood area . 1ara1e. G.reat usum~- Meta Verde. Priced to 24' family rm W/Wet bar preciates the very best-bridle Estates. Huge Gorgeous y"rd with ble finanClD&. No quab- aell now M '911.500. Call refrigerator & pool ta: Ulla maenificent home i1 backyard, all the Wood-c u s t 0 m 5 p a a n d f yin I : Gr e I Ast i e ,Anoe Mccas l and CH ARM AND ble . Try 10% down! for you. Custom Oak brldgeamalltiesandas-waterfall. Spacious 759-1221. A1·126e. SECLUSION $144,500. bannlaten, Pecan floor-aume a hlib loan. Owner rooms, and beautifully SurJ'~oded by trees and Ing , celling moldings, will consider help on ecorated thruout. R&'Mf'X deC:..rated with stained T AMAAACIC etc. etc. 3 car &•rage secondar) financing. Great financing availa- ilasa • skylights, this VILL"'GI C"" .... DO and so much more. Call SlSS,000. ble ..,.,~ 500 charm in& 2 bedroom ~ "" for details. · -"""• Dana Point home has all 3br, l \.'J ba, enclosed $242,500 l1~\111tH' ****** llMTALHOMI $11110.. ·LOW NEGATIVE 54t-7HI SUCCESSUALTY of the warmth of a garage. Try s;?:SK down. mounta in cabin. OWC $104,900. High iJ ll.29,900. 493-8812 comp. Sl06,900. \\bodbrldge -Special Cons1deralloo Realty ~ btr.mo T• ~~:-.... ~H• ·:.i~~ ... I \ Fo.tahl Valey I 034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1< . r *STARTER HOME Flexible financing on lhi1 2 Bdrm Greentree GOLDEN TOUCH ST AIMED GLASS ------• fixer. Owner will help CHATEAU wilh cost. Call for de- CONDftUltlUMS Sensational 3 Br, 21,ii Ba ASSUMAILI LOA" tails. Ullll condo, new carpet, Super sharp 3 BR. Mint Large private decks & ceramic tile and loads of condltioo. New roof & patios. Only 3 left. Xlnl stained glass. $112,000 paint. Owner extremely terms . 13% i.nterest for 2 Anne M c Ca s 1 and anxious . Call for info. Y~·MEYERPLACE 631-1286 lfmW@J;l\?Ull.j!llm OPEN DAJLY 10.5 962·4471(:'::•) T....._,.odl ..... 641-1991; 631-43111, agt. 011 '-L...t MESA VERDE I PR01··1E s•LE 2 story, 4 bdrm. dinine ~ ~ rm, added den w/wet Cute3brpoolhome .10%J _________ i Popular Hunt. Vlg 3 8d bar, steps to '1ark, dn, very lge 10% assum. SAl.EIYOWHU l ~ Ba home w /new comm. pool&tenn11 As- The larsest model In Woodbridee Estates·2300 sq ft or IUX· urious living space and don osen r•··' lt ,,,-~ your own pool and spa. LAGUNA BEACH Priced to sell at $194,900 497·4848 Almost $100,000 rn as-•--------- sumable financing. o leoclt I 048 \\bodbrldge ·····;;;~;.~~····· Realty W e a t here d c e d a r 551 3000 shakea. th.at IS. Custom · designed 3 bdrm, fam tmBarranra Pti ... ,.1nlnf' rm, 2 baths Extensive . use of wood glass & Univ Prk Village II ceramic tile. Beam ce1I Beaut 3 Bd, bonus rm, mg, frplc. $165,000. Julliard , grnblt loc Missibn Realty Good financing & terms (7 14)494-0731 $159,000. Agt. Mary •LIDOISU• Lovely 2Br. 3Ba home. Beautifully remodeled 2yra ago. $484,000 with xlnt financln&. Open House: Sat Sun 1·5. 119 Via Yella. Owner I Agent 873-0697 IACklAY 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home plus ideal mOlher·m-law quarters Compl w /bath. fl.20.000 Roy McC..., lltr. 541-7729 857-2040 13"< rinancing Rushe 4 --------• WOO_D_B_R_l_D_G_E __ br 1247 Starlit Laguna llVIH!TallACE Bch J 1m Mc Broo m POOLlr VIEW Must sell brand new 499-2395. A cozy 3 bdrm home Peters #2 Plan. 4 Br, with formal dining rm 3Ba, close to lake. LCICJU"O NkJ-f I 052 O""n Sat/Sun 12.5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• and pool. Highly ex pan-..-dable view of harbor and #3 • #6 Warminspnn& Spac 3Br 2' 'l ba 1.500 fl ocean A great hstrng at 1 o • n Pr in · on I Y · WESTMONT HOME beige carpet. Also add· sum able loan. Owner to-ro _A_gt_lo_w_n_e_r_, ~ __ n_ts_. __ 1 3 Bdrm + bonus room, 2 on 800 sq ft room & total-will assist in financing. ASSUMAdlLE Fo•• _ EY Ba. Priced for quick sale ly remodeled kitchen s210 ,ooo. Fee Agt, $242,500Agt. condo View. a /c. frpl, only S330.000 64$-9850 dys. 675-9857 close to shops 9v.o/c ln 644-72 t I A sharp 3 Bdrm, comer _.a.AA $117,000. 847-72'4 w /bit-in mic rowave 640-5560. _e_v_ea_. _____ _ •""".-.-.-• ....;:.::;:•=•'-•.-•_•.;;;•=•'-•-•_•_•_!,lot in El Toro. New BYOWNER 1~~~~~~~~~1 oven., Special alarm --1-E-R-9-.._-C-E---i carpets and paint. New Xlnt Financing! 1-system. newly painted """ DON'T MISS ASSUMAILES One of Irvine's most beautiful Deerfield homes . Lavishly de- corated lhru-out. 4 Br 2"'2ba, frml dmmg rm + s tudy . Sec system. Comm. pool and tennis. Attracqye f1nanc1ng. $232,500 .. Cewtwy 21 /Swi Col 55'-6800 FOR DETAILS '~. ASSUME LARGE 9"o/o LOAM. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba home + pool. Pride of ownershJp home. Take advantage. Onl y $105.900 Call 979-5370 now central air conditioning. $310,000 EXECUTIVE HOME for exterior & new hot water Outstanding Card Hf Large shaded yard. Ask-_6_75_-_-007_3._(_71_4_)345-__ 4_123_1 the naturabsl. Quiet Cul-tank. Sl.20,950 OWC lit mode I in Uni vers 1ty rng $94,400. VA and FHA de-sac, wooded lot 10 TD w /25<'k dwn al 13'7c Park Terrace. 2 Bdrm 2 terms available. For an EASTSIDE, 1 Br. R-2 lot, Fountain Vally's finest amortized over 30 yrs. Oa + loft hide-away appointment to see. caU S8S,OOO. By owner · family community. 4Br Call Miaril 559-9400. Great location, pool. 540-1151 Owner w/help finance 2"'2Ba, form din, lrg kit. Iii--~-~-greenbelts, r1n1shed --~:»-HERITAGE . • REALTORS 646-6793. ram rm. Walls or glass • . garage. A must t11 see. ------1 F Call for deu.ils. MESA VSlDE bring the outdoors in. or. HORTH fered at $2:11.500 Open j i • BRAND NEW LJSTING Fri-Sun 12-4 18135 SAN· IY OWNER 4br. atrium model. TA LAURETTA CIR Sl'"'.500 ........ Beth Dun· Agt 963-1804 4 br, 2 ba. Assumable. ..., ._. Approx. $75,000 at com be 957-6507 ; 963-9101 H..tingtoft 1eocJ1 I 040 107 /8%. Frplc. new paint --------•••••••••••••••••••••••• & crpl. Sl.22.500. 962-8636. 5 IDIM 2 STY LAHDMARJC HI ti-t 4 Br. 21,ii ba. 3 car gar 4m ~-POOL HOME HwbOw 1042 Terr Ir i c ri nan c Ing Newly pamted" carpet available. Large 2 story ed. S103K asswnable In family home with lovely Asking $159,900 Fas t ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, enclosed courtyard1_es_c_ro_w_._B_k_r_963-..,-8377 __ _ and separate master FOURPLEX suite downstairs. All this for only $145,000. Call All units are 2 Br, 2 Ba. 540-1151 for more in-good rents, no vacancy formation. factor. Price $185.000 Loan is assumable. THIS OPPORTUNITY lo buy a perfect starter home 1 bdrm, 1 ba. upper unit The Lakes, Northwood Commur.ity pool and tennis Assumable loan $103.900. Perfect for singles or newlyweds $110,000. Own /Agt 631-7048 Hewport lhoch 106' ••••••••••••••••••••••• PARTY , .. HARBOR VIEW /Jn Nlfifl 131\llf y & l\SSlJ( 11\ f[S BA.YFtlOMT IALIOA ISLAMD 1 of the harbor's most beaut. homes-Medit. style wilh pier & slip. Sl.600.000 By app't only 673-1633, 644-9000 or con· tact your realtor UDO ISLE ALLSTATE REALTORS , ~ ~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS Anne McCcnlmtd 631-1266 R&'M~ ....................... -To Mother With Love .... DOVHSHORES PRESTIGE Corotta d9I Mer I 022 We are proud to present ••••••••••••••••••••••• one . of the finest pro-I IO oc-=• .._.VIEW perhes of Dover Shores. ~" Th.is prestigious estate Sunsets, Catalina, 3 pvt sized home offers the beaches. Fee land under finest of amenities. $400,000. Call T\m Rhone reatures withln this 4800 631· 1266. sq (t residence include 4 Bdrms, 3 Baths, billiard room , form al dining, marble entry, swim- min& pool, spa and a panoramic view or lhe .,_ _______ _ city li&hts and the DUPLEX CDM )>ackbay. Valued at Below the Hwy, comp!. '699.000 remodeled. owe 2nd un- lalboa I.a-ct R.lty der $300,000. Call Tlin 67).1700 Rhone 631·1266 IAYCUST Spectacular 4 bdrm. home on quiet street. 1.==:;;;;======= Pool. formal dining rm.. Jumioe Creek decotator lar ge paneled game home, pl~ 1 on green· room with pool table and belt Im mac. ~.500 pro re a1 Ion a I b a r . 64().8145 0 Perfut home for an ac· live ramily. 1649.SOO. ~IMIE TERliCE 17141 '7M406 . 'RUI , • IZl>l 621-HZI 4 Br, bonus room & HARBOR 11parkling pool. Superior location. Won't last. Prin. only. Greg Astle 759-1221 R&'M~ 1n \I 1111f', llACHDUPUX Xlnt shape, privacy • parking. Owner will finance. $80,000 dwn. Good 'rate of return. Broker Chrla 957-1568 2 unlta on la !Qt, 3 bdr 2 ba, 2 bdrm 1 b•, 4 garaae•. Broker . 875-0563. MESA.DB.MAR 10-.\(.1 n!ls HIGH ASSUMAILE 4Br home w/spa. xlnt. cond. $169,000. ~-6940. Beautiful ranch style 4br, 2ba, 2000 sq. fl .. '-B_Y_O_W_N_E_R_-3_B_r_1~-B-a There's an euy way for nice l y dee .. xln · • • n eighborhood, n $107,900. 968·2644 or you to sell that bicycle drapes/carpet, hous 957-2677 you no longer use. Just advertise it In th e ~Ill sell itse!f. $137 • In• I 044 ClaaJlfled ! Call 642-5678. •rerms. Prin. Only. ~7091. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ................ Open Sat/SUn 12·5 ; 3213Dakota 3Br. 2Ba Mesa Verde area. Solid financlng, by owner. $139.SOO. 556-7174 EA.STSIDE 3 br, 1 ba lge lot. $933 /mo. S9500 dn. $12:5,000. Trade? Owner, 131·5476. MESAVBDI 4br, 2+ baths, xlnt loca- tion w /many extras. Lge profe ssio n ally landscaped backyard w /auto sprinklers & room for a veg garden. House includes 2 frplcs, oak bar, built-in book shelves, french doors. priv patio w/ spa off master suite. Built-in dbl oven, micro It ice maker. Must see to ap- preciate. Open House Sat/Sun 1-5 3182 Country C l ub Dr. $235 ,000 Owner/Agt. , owte LIA YIHCi ARIA Clean Eastaide 3 Bdrm -1th cov'd patio, BBQ ind 3 garages .. Don't Will, call 8&fhl 548-4204 MESA VERDE 4 Br. 2 Ba • .nth P>Ol. beautlfw· ly l•ncl1caped Is eaay care rard. Owner will CODJlder V.A. S129,llOO. D. Bourke Realtor. ~"50. .~~REALTY SIR llHSl.-TOMI Best ever on the market -oak flooring throughout lower level. Air-conditioning, tinted windows, built-in bookshelves and cabinets, terrific landscaping with ft.re pit. View of the hills. $264,500. TURnE lOCIC0 VIUA! 3 BR 3 bath Plaza ~I W/peaceful pastoral view -don't wait to see this one. Priced at ~.900. llAUTIFUL CAMDUWOODI 3BR Deane University Park home w /room for pool on extra large lot. Near community pool and tennis and park. $239,000. Call for app.. LOW IMTIRIST Pl._AMCI.,_ AVAJLAILI! New 80% loan availa~le at 12~% Interest (13% annual percentage rate} to qualified buyer. '30 yrs ftxed rate, 20% down, balance payable monthly. Price $234,500 tor this Turtle Rock Vista 2 BR+ den Condow/view. TUITLI ROCI -OMI TNID 4Cllt ..SR one-story w /f amlly· rm, formal dining rm and Jarae private yard. Many custom featUfe& incl. spa ln atrium and remodeled kitchen. $232,500. l.ove "-•a way ol relurmnc to 11~ sourre On thl' •p<"t1JI ltJ\ lhe love you h•ve c1ven II relum~ w1lh a Sp('('l•I ml"'Jl!r of warmth Talte a looll Se-e how much }OU ar1• "" N1 I • J . , .. . . . newporl /J.ac~ dbl tar w/opnr . $750. WT· Ron Say ~S370 BeauUruJ DflW coodoe for TWO Month rent. $850. Dbl gar Oc•an :J.l'Onl Rl'd I 11 ! I~~ t{t ·.dt\· I , 1,; ·, .' ;1 11 w/opener, 400 sq. rt. utro \\arl deck/ Ml-1991; · e:n.4311 agt. Nice clean 2 Br. 1 Ba. encb4 aarage. $450, ist • last + stJCurity dep. 2544 family in&. L•i - L•• ••••••• This 5000 Sq. Ft ; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded CommWlity in th.e heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55 '-70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. DUPl.IX. M.1. Near beach. two 3Br un· Its, 2 car gar, nr park. TSL INVSTMT 642-1603 4 PLEX-SI 92,500 All 2Br. ~ sq rt. each Separate meters, lndry hook·ups in ea. unit, communi t y pool Westminster. Good as- sumable long term financing. Prine only. Agt. 536-0123 Orange "E" $48-2778. Sbdrm, 2ba, frplc, range, car, yrd, avall 5/1. tst + sec. $875. 64.2·083S. • 2br, 2"'2ba, Twnbs. $700. Atlr•cli La gun $695m lo9-• ••••••• 4bdrm. We are developers so submit land or other Rea\ Estate to owner Jim Thompson. frplc. pool, spa, 1arage. 549-3232. Nr nu twnhse 3 BR 3 Ba Pvt yard, 2 car elec gar. 91695 /mo. l.!lt, lasl, Sec. lovely 1735 le no pels New 2 frplc, courts 759-lo&, agt 759-1234 days, 3 Bd 2 Ba Laurel Point -17141121-1210 UIJJ 591-IJ6J llOOJ 352-3710 EASTSIDE C.M. townhome. $750/mo . Hew po 14 prime uruu, all 2 Bdr, lot size 132x300 Prin on- ly F'or appt call John Avail. 5 /1 Diana. 631-1266 Agt --- ••••••• H orborVlew Gracio IA YfROHT HOME HARIOR VIEW HOME Cox, agt. 631-12166 Gloriow; 4 Bdrm 4 ba. "Montego"4br "ba Fee ------ Secluded 2Br, lBa patio s l o r home. pool. adlts. no Furn1s us family home 2 y 4 bdrm bing iav&JI at no $1.200tmo lse No Orange Ave, see Mgrl pets 201.5 Port Bristol • 2br condo, or S C Plaza, SA SSOO. no pets 549.3232 Beaut 3 br, 2 ba, frplc 1 blk beach 9675. Adults. no pets Savage W 1lde & Co 675-6806 w pvt dock ror >our Land Joan ·; s 'u lft-.e1hln D.UCJht yacht nght al )'Our front 675 2139 · 5 m 2 new condo6 on lot Live pets. $525 mo 2453 extra Lux, 3Br <.'Ondo, 1 ',ba, patio. elel'l 2car gar, close to So Coa:.l Plaza & park $595 lse 54'1 0259 Peninsula. steps to sand WESTCLIFF2 Br, 11-, '*' townhouse. Adults onlj, no pets $550/mo. 17311 Bedford Lane 548-7533. door Excel Peninsuh1 m one, rent or sell the p 0 I n l I 0 c a l I 0 n other Seller Will rinance Apt B Cr. Call Elaine 644 5991 ' or 640·5357 2 br furn Lge pauo $400 2br f.-s1de Adults. $400/mo or $150 wkly lo no pets En Gar 548-9441 . June 20. Summer wkl). S51·4171 Sl .2 95 .000 o .... ner I br Veri.a1lles penthse at $13'. for 3 y~an. Builder Charle. Mc Km imported l1le throughout 641 1991, 631-4361. ajlt 3 br. 212 ba. condo. 2 car gar , deck, patio. pool, Newport Crest 3bdrm. 1700 540-4083 21 2ba. ocean \'1e~. O\er $400-$450 673-4243 W DBG condo Lease ----Lge 1 br, nr bearh. bit non. 675 2763 I $122.000. TSL Properties ---- -642-1603 6 U LA $140,000 nr l'SC - - -Gr $17,000, try 25', do or 4bdnn, 2ba. looks tennis courti.. fr pie, close lo beach S8SO mo 642-1272 $695/mo 2 Br, 2 Ba <.:all Sublet Oakwood. lge tbr. ms. gas & water pd, $385 pool. J&C, tennis courts. +sec 642 4014 VILLA IAUOA i Adult Only lBr lBa • JuClft submit Bkr~ 0608 S6.'iO S4jl,. 7879 after6pm _s.s1 2181, agl health club. $480mo incl 2Br. 2Ba. CaiH1tr-c.lo I 071 - - Southern Cal1forn1a '!> ••••••••••••••••••••••• IH PHOENIX 601 UDO E-s 1de. charming 2bdrm. lba. yrd. nu crws. drps, stove 324 Costa Mesa St. $595 /mo. Ulil pd 760·0759 or 645-2223. 3 Br 2ba. lrtt lined st in Wes tcJirf. ni ce for cpl 1sml Cam $775 incl grdnr. No pets, &$6-2389 From $6()0 /mo . JRL PROPERTIES TownhOUM uul. Sec, ref. 646-6787 2 br twnhse, 11 2 ba, --------carport. no pets. $400 •• ~~~1~ •••• ?~.~~ •OClAHFttOMT mo 559.722219-6only> premier high rise con 3 Miies Ft-Marina Get away today. watcn --64S·<l566 64~ dominlum Spectacular WITH OCEAN VIEW view or Newport Ba) 10 units. perfectly main tained & owner will help finance 3br, 2'2ba , fam rm, Jge thewaves&whales! Dix 3 br dplx, Nwpt ll1o:ti.. master bdnn w /deck, 2 2.4br, compl. furn. Xlnt $500/mo, lsl & last Drive by 509 f'emleaf. 4 Bd. 2111 Ba. nu bldg. 4 car gar . Sl350fmo Avai\. 511. Ask for DarreH Pash 631 -12166 Total 24 hr security Rancho S.. Juan Highly up11.raded w1lh &totft --------- WESTCUFf AREA lbdrm Condo w /pool. Very private ! On Rutland Rd. Adults only. $500 call 675-6646 or ~:~~o~ /~~~~Ir. d ~~:;a, loc. 673-SURF; 673-7677. _ + dep 557-9186 _ $160,000 all amenities You've Over 3.000 s q .ft. or got to see 1t to believe 1l' elegance Exclusive new Newport Hts. duplex, 2 + $700.000 with 125(),000 of homes. from $515.000 Great rentaJ area pear bdrms. jar, huge yard. stairs. (rplc. gar , Condo 2br 2ba & dbl Newport Rgls area. A~enh garage. no pets $525 mo. assumable financing at 14 1 .,•; financing avail Civic Center. SSSO/mo. ~7814. 12 75r1, ml Princi pals Charter Rily& Invest 551>-2660 2 Br, 1 ba, small child _833-__ 3622 ______ _ av a i I 5 I I. 1800 Imo. UftfwNllwd 846·2501or536-5066 548 .. 3365 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1---- GeMrd 1102 2 BR twnhouse Living only. 496-8122 831-8811 welcome.1556. llG CANYON ••Villa&e Walk 2Br •••••••••••••••••••••••rm . Dining area. llhBa,dblGar,2patlos, AnMTSFOttRENT kitchen. fpl(', gas & '*Cote Realty 973-3814 EJtclusive, full security, & Investment MAGNIRCENf o ... P'oW 3226 beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba. VIEW" HOME Private ya_. wet bar & LAftS111 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ... _... 2,794 sq ft ol Palatial i----------i tireplace, many other Ocean " bills view 3 BR Eitcellence. This lux-TAX Stm.TH d amenitiea including air, pool, apa. Nr So H 8 N ,.._ M water, attacned garage, C l Pl _,.,.1 • .. .e ........... ta eaa oas au. _.,mo. Something for Everyone pool. Ja('UZZI, laundry $400 S /D. Fairview I Bach. to 4 Br. unrum fac on property Adults. Secerstrom8'8-US4 Apta. Certain locations no pets. Avail 1mmed. I bUc to O<'ean/bay, year- ly, $750 /mo incl ut1l. bit· Ins. 3 Bd . Avail Sil . 835·284-4 u r i o us home h as 4 UNITS con °· fpk. W ID. tennis, Maida room. $1450 mo. BLUFFS BARGAJN 6bdrms. or 4bdrms with pool. 9600. Alt-~~ Call Anthony wlldys 3 bdrm twnhme Walk to 1 b d SAH CLEMENTE H .__ 642·5757 eves Ii: wlmds 1 ury muter b rm Upstairs units with 1WCtMgfaa.._.. 1240 otfer : Pool , spa. SSOO + $275 security ..,_ 1 .. ..t1 Pwwl•d fireplace. laun. room. 631-4984 ••••••••••••-••••••••• beamed ceilings. 1 Br Veraalllea pen· lhouse, ~/mo, Jeue or lease optjon. 968-51&1 AM. everythmg pool. tennis. retreat Cahfom1a Liv-Ocean View: S.1.9$.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _644_·_1889 __ . _____ _ schools. park, shoppina ing at its best 1 $262.000 ROlaTS RLTY. lmmac 38r, 2Ba. cul-de-On GoU Crse 3 bdrm 3 ba ~ l.a.d 1706 1araaea. all built-i ns Quiel 1 Br I Ba New •••••••••••••••••••-•• Garden 4' Townhouse c rpls & drps Good Charming & private. !Br, detian. eastS1de Loe Mature ~-s~.64081~,. ROIEllTSRLTY. sac. rrpk. patio, •90 + den & bar StlO<I TERMS TYMS ~c7;.;1;.4 l~4;98~·;1040~~~4~9J..~0202;;;r-~<7~1~4~)4~9~J..~0202~~~4~98-~104~01 mo 847 ·~all 3PM. 645-7605 or 646-1713 lBa High qlly. Lndry TSL MGMT. 642·1603 Adults only S32S 147 E I 5 7 5 I m o y r I y lll»oo ,........ 3107 18th St. 14, C.M -- ~~1~ 4 ~1~~984 eves · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 1 ba, yard, gerage. 3br. 2i,.,ba, Ideal for 3 singles, 2 frplcs. atrium W/WalerfaJL dbl car. 283 Knox St. $850 /mo . 675-1458 for appt. Condo ~ cas h lo the r HOME FOR RENT ex1st1ng Isl & 2nd antoAna 1010 FIX&SAVE! 4 Bdrm..,,,.._ Fenced HARBOR RIDGE ) ---$3SO Util pd. lBR Duplex. $450/mo. 960-5043 and T S ~ OONOO D . • . 2br. 2ba. al •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 & 4 units priced to yard & garage Kids & "Versailles" 983-3677 UBMlT: 3 bedroom con-move now! Sellers want pets welcome. 964·2566 3 br, 3 ba. Sl.500 mo lol»oe P'W1f1• .. D 3707 417 E. Bay Ave. Balboa 631·2177 HARBOR VIEW HOMES do m McArthur Village quick escrow 97 297 f Steve , 640-9345 or or 3 I Agt , no ee 752· l920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• No pels. 547·ll55 r Int •sr•c10US• -ana 0 3826 2bdrm . l ~ba. adults, no "' LG CLEAN·lBr bch ••••••••••••••••••••••• t3eau\iful guarded com· - munity Gorge-ous parklike grounds. Lots of recreational facilities Close to South Coast Plaza All offers heard. $99,500 TARBELL. BK R. 540-1720 ,J,_. NEISSER C'1f I JJ .lll l)J I I k:. 714 641·0763 2787 Bristol St Costa Mesa. CA 4bdrm. 212ba, frplc, wet· Harbor V&.w ttom.s Prof en.tonal decor. !br, adlts. 00 pets, s:J9s mo: l or 2 br. balcony, D.W.. pets, $395. bar, l block beach. No Super exec. 2 s tory 2ba. spiral stal_rs. frplc, yrly 67a-0072, 673-5706 I clean. ('oin laundry & 548-21882 pets S725/mo 964·2283· 4bdrm, fam rm. on park, sky lights, &.atio, spa, .2 -wshr. gar. or ocean Ocean View. spac. lux· 2br, l'iba.Condo,adulls. vu. gardenermcl. $1.200. ~argar. lb t.ob~h.ul1l ap41tr..oleachl8l8 661-0252 urlous 2 BR 2 Ba 494 2023 incl. $800/mo. until 6/15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ wJfrplt, $SOU+ util. . . -Al s o downst airS 38r 2Ba blt.ns frplc ocn Bachelorw/refr,$200 Versailles All 968 557~6554 work_ BLUFFS Plaza condo. 4 ~achelor, patio, spa, util view, s5oo m~. 832:6520 2 br with view, S'S() amenities $750. s.s7-1991 KIDS OK br. 212 ba No pets 1825 m('I. $400/mo. until 8/15. dys. 861·1730evs 493-0467 Steps to bch 2 BR 1 Ba, Portofino mdl w/48r 2'~ Ba in tne main nouse, bonus rm w /loft & full Ba adjoin the gara11e Perfect arrangement for in·laws. kids. omce or studio. Lrg yrd accented by an inviting spa Ask· r Real Estate • .6 f c.--.... 760 1573 645·6406 aft6pm. , .. o _,,, 3 Bdrm, 2'2 bath 1700 mo · _ --Cor'Oftca.detMcr 1822 Bachelorap(.allutils pd , fplc.dblgar.palio S630 Property · 2550 sq rt .Triplex Formerly Bluf(s.Jbr,2,,ba.ver y Co1taMHC1 1724••••••••••••••••••••·~· 3 blks fr o m P C H . mo yrly.968-8263 mg $342,900 $150,000 as· •••••••-•••••••••••••• sumable . loan Owner Mobli. HOlllH will consider 2nd Call for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner's un1l. Ideally pvt end unit, upgraded, •••••••••••••••••••••••Brand new elegant $300/mo.831·1873 Tom Baron s.s&-9400. R~MtalC Hfo"\l l •11<:-. Great 4 Bdrm on comer lot with room for RV, boat, etc. $279,000. owner financed. 645-1 l<i3 VILLAl~dA .. Outstanding View 1 Corner lop Coor unit. Lease option. $5,000 op· lion money, $8$0 mo Xlnt terms. Agt. 76().86~7 LIDOISLI Low down, low pay· ments. Clean 4 Bdrm fam)ly home, ready to move lnt.o today. Great crutlve terms. Call 673-3002, agent. DOV•SHOIU Vacant-a l1alr for en- tertalnlnl or family hax· ury4-round ln Ulla pam· pered ~ Bdrm hqme. Formal Dvtni rqon> al\d aU the other aJJlenlUea. Cholc• flnanc•na op. port&anlty. S318,500. 64.2-5200 A P£TE BARRlTT RU\LTY BA YSHORES 16r1• J bJl home tn Jdol. ~ On~ paa ,ooo. Prine. only ple1M. MM411: M.i.1511 I I 00 OFFICE ILOG. located for children l650 lease$lOOO 759-0415 CASA DE ORO 2bdrm. 2ba. w ts tone •OCEA.H RtOMT• 17 .ooo s t f I+ ac or mo I mme d1ate oc ALL UTILITIES PAID frplc, sundeck & gar gtoltleoch 1140 Frplc, panelled, patio. railer al bch Sl4,900 Terms. OWCortrade 499-3816 ------- PALM SPlUNGS AREA. 2Br 2ba "yrs old. Comp! rum On 9 hole exec golr .course 1Q adll park. ground Just off hw) 5 cupancy 963-8182 HorborVlew~ s850 Avail Ma y 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbr. SS75/mo. 642·0045 Oceanside $250.000 will lrvifte 3244 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. family Compare bdore you 675·9431 . eves han_d_le_l ·4_33-_ 17!-J ~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• room. ne>A carpet. Will rent Custom design C t M 3824 E Bluffs Condo, 4Br. Woodb 'd N 8 b consider pets. SlOOO /mo features Pool. BBQ. 01 a "° 3Ba. sundk, pool ssso a.autiful S.. DiecJo '.8 •Sc.Md. GJ. 48 Units 3 br. 2 ba 4 )rs young Sl.200,000 assum. 9:i.••r ml. l-433-1723 Bkr. n ge ice 4 r 3 8 Agent. 644-9990 surrounded w1lh plush ••••••••••••••••••••••• m o 6 4 5 . 3 4 ; 4 super Camily home landscapmg Adult )J v. • r & 1811 P1tt0 A!Ms $950/mo. ingat1tsbesl Nope.ts ~lfleld • D·~"'•Hnt•>&880' <213154 1-44_60 ___ _ Waterfront Homes. Jnc. IAYSIDE COVE Bach funu1bed $:r70 '1 • Pooi & Ate 1100"' HOUSE'~ blk lo bch 2be. Raaltors 631-1400 C 0 H D 0 W ff h 365 W Wilson, 642'·19'11 FAMILY Al'TS. • r..,0tn l 1nomo1nq Iba, fnced yrd, frplc 2 WOODBRIDGE B f b I t f Brand new beautiful lrg • Jo0 10 8e1e11' Sno~ New Mobile Home 3Br 3 r. 1"• a • 0 •• •••• 0 '325 Mo Deluxe Mobile apt, for families with 1 • S•t 1 GllH car gar. SBOO/mo yrly. Adllll400sqft.2Br,2Ba 2Ba. frplc, redwood Ba. Condo. ss75 t mo. w•r Clftd lcJllh. Ex· Home.Malureadults.no or2 chtldren.Nearpark. Corner of Ri ve r sunporchfncd grdn CM deck. cedar shake sld-W r k < 714 > 8 33 · 60 2 9 celle11t waterfroftt pets . Quiet, secure. 1991 · Heal paid. No pets. Ave/4Slh Sl. VI e vt S a n J a c tn to 638-9300 ask for V\r&inia. ocn air, 5 •Pll645-1862 ing, or lake & skiing R a m 8 H 0 m e ..&.. ....w.. -...a_.... N rt Bl d 646-8379 2B 1 B -..70 ~· 12131498-6090 com,.....x wnn,........ -ewpo v · 1 r. a. ... E. Bluff 3br, 2ba, encJ. Mobile Home at the bch $41.900. Terms or trade -.1 .....a ... ~ .. • -_... 2Br 2 Ba $490 / 1 2b 2"'2 b ,.. ·•-I •~~•-rd• .._.IMjtolt leech 114~ 396 W. Wilson. 631·5583 gar a so r ' If. In Nwpt. Quiet young 499-3816 3br. 21/tba Ill Woodbridge. spoc out 6 __,,.. mt ••••••••••••••••••••••., 2 " 3 e c,d r 0 0 ms . encl. aar. Each 9650/mo. peopltP.'$ pk'. $10,500. Real hhlte Incl all amenities. 2car doft. Dlftlftg ""«Md ag. S375/up 1·2 bdrm, pool,1$450. 2 BR. patio, pool. $400-$450. Kids OK, no ~ 'i~_or953-l220 ' 548-2080 heh.. 2100 gar . fncd bk yrd . be1lco11y/deck. Sec. jac,'adlt,189112Florfda. Adlts,nopets.325J,17th pets please. Water/ Bach. unllon water. New Mobile· Home, ....................... SBSO/mo.56&-8997. iyite11t. Refa. req. H.B.842-2834or842·31'72 j Pl.646-5137aftllAM Trash Paid. Carport. S300 /mo. Own /Agt. or~anview· El Morro Large house wanted, will Woodbrldge4 Bdrm. 3ba, $2000 P"' ,_, Y..-ty H.l!'i FINEST :'r!~or9'1J..29'7l. Agl., 833-2650or67M849 I Beach Park, ap 70. 2Br. trade prime real estatef fam rm, frplc. ~Imo. l•e. loot •tip for Spanish ;c,.,A Llvlng.• Spacious 3 Br Duplex ._._ ••r spacerertl$175mo.20yr acreage equity 0 Waterfront Homes , • • rA~"" $425.Pool&laundryfac. ~AIHI • 1t 159 900 45-3Sl& 9600,000. (714> 751-4828, Realtrs Inc 631_1400 lO'bo ... tlptw.Jlfna. Beautiful park-Uke sur· 548-95S6 2 Bdrm, 2 ba, cpta, drp1, ••••••••••••••••••••• • e. · · 7J6.)059er483-ll53 · · Wot.rfraftt Ho.wff roundinas. 1'erraced d /w, encl aar. Beach & 5 Edra lg 2Br 2ba c:ond . hP...,,...ty 1150 ..... . Woodbtldge4br,3ba,air . lellwl.IK. pool. Sunken 181 ~bq. 3 Sr. 2 Ba. Valencia, Points area. 1430/mo. Patio , 1ar. poo • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail June 1.5. •tmo. 611 1400 sparkling rounta1n1. townhouse 2 children M.2·8032 wuhrtd'Ci. prof paint· SPECIAL••"""'"'"'E ...... 21269 • Spacious room s . · eel new :fl: AduJ~ ~·"''""""' HcMlsel fwwlWcl ~ · S•parate dlnloi atea. OK, No pets. $525. Sierra Larse 3 BR·zv, ba, with • • · Oceanvlew lots, Morro ... M1mt Co 6'1 llU Kid .... Cloae to i Sq Pr . Bay area. 15990 E-z•••••••••••••••••••••••woodbrld&e. 5Br. 3Ba. Walk d n closet•. · · · · aara1e. ••pets 775-0629,C31·108I .. terma, beaut. views of .. roW 3126 Preacotl Model. Fm nn homelike kitchen 4' welcome. l mlle to \he Pacific Ocean,••••••••••••••••••••••• dlnrm.a/c,2frplc,3car cabinet.a. Walk l.o Hwil· Westside 2 Br, l~ ba, ocean.'8QOmo.984·2937 ,..... 3190 Ellerd Bay " Cayucot. Ne~ 3 br. 2 ba ho!"e· car, aun d--..ardnr, no lntton Center. cpts, drpa, bulltlna, Luge 1 Br w/•ar•1e. 4 ••••••••• .. ••• .. •••• .. • !1~7239 for appt to see. 11 m 000 1cro 1 ,m 0 very .• ...._ allracuve, pets. •t095. ~$41-5032. 1 Bedroocn-fum, $440 deck. aar, Yr lse. 14'1$. b I k 1 from b 81 c b . Seeurlty .,U. lbdrm fl nl\ ._.OW7 2 Bedroom·fU.rn. IMO 71J0.0489~780-(M08 2bdrm, uW ... 14Yl ... · $750 Woodbridl• Villap, Adwta.nopeU. l380/mo. lat mo+s:zot no peta. FTom $$7S. ..lllMn• ,...,.~ t 400 •rrt IMdf 316' 13 Woodarove. J...i. 2Br Utrut.la Free! IMSTAN'f •M dep. req. CaU 581-1542 Uf.NOe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••• .. •••••••••••• h dj t to la.k E-alde, 2bt lba. pool, Ceoturyn/SURF ___ ......, ____ _ wianwwn LIDO tSLE charmln& 3 .. 'c',· ba ... ~~d, "-, kTt LAQUll'fl'AKER.MOSA laW'ld-nn. am. child WelMW• lift ""' 'r""' bdrm 2 bath playroom " ... , .._..,. WU P rklkMLn l bllc ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• t 0 rt Ice bu I Id In 8 Just 'remockrtd SlesO bltai, 1~ pool, tennit W. or s!ach. 3blkt S. of OK. T8L MoK,Mt-lllS lbdnn, lba a&lt. t:lfO/mo. '42$,000. Hlltf)' · won't mo to ..._ 1111 cjnwty m•. (211) UJ«m l!:dlnatr. $ o /yr"-or old, t : lutt Bill Grundy, STMlll ~ · 147·Mtl 1325/mo.CaU&lt«lpm: 17M1'l . llt«M.S m..oeas, ...,_, Bealltlf"l I Br'. too.do 2 b'f H\ba Home ID Bii Cufon, 2br.2bt. IDH COUl911ew, .POOl • lb~. Sba. fully tuna. J.aue or mon-a br. 2~ ba ~. Call Bill Weclmore 3br.al>ti.1\u'n .... ,., 4spltalt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parking lot Pool decks , patios. r epair s. sealcoating. masonry, sport court, S&S Asphalt. 646·•871 tennis courts . Lie . I..ic'd 374067. 85H966. 847-7078 laby11HWJ THOMPSON'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONCRETECONSTR. Granny will babysit, any age. wkdys, my home, Lie, 393383. 642-3'82 nr Victoria & Pl•cenlla, ... hild C C.M. 548-2674 ... _.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carpent... • $3 I. 90 /WK ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hot lunch CM. Chris· DOORS & WINDOWS t1an Preschool 646-5423 Repaired or Replaced Free est. 635-3720 "JI Types Remodeling & Repairs, top quality, 17 YTS m area Uc'd Mr Palombo; 962-831• T L C Child Care Anytime, exp'd, refs. 979-6646, 631-3563 :h1ld Care, my home.in- fants thru 4 yrs, C M xlnt refs 64.S-6846 Drywall S~lalisl Qual. " prod. New & re· mod. 11388M4. 532-5549 rap ing, Texture & Acoustic Cei~gs. Free est. Kevin, 675·9088, 673-1$03 Electrical ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELECTRICIAN-priced right, free estimate on large or small jobs. Lie. #396621 673·0359 ~orwdca ,rm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Formica Counterwps Custom built & Installed, latest colors & designs. Free est. 646-4871 :iwdenlftCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •VERY LOW PRICES• Landscape m8lllt·clnups George, 549-20U Ex pertile Housekeepln( Supplies furniahed Personalized. 64H970 ... ct,.., •••••••••··~·•••••••••• Hard working Mexican HOME IMPROVEMENT cleanln1 woman u ail Remodellng-Oddjoba Tues, Wed, Fri. 644-8126 211 or 499-2337 yn exper. 97&-2285 ::a.rpentry, cabinetr, roof repairs, plumbin1. Free est. Call Answer Ad 11411. 642·'30Q, 24. ~n REPAIRS Call anytime, 67S-JOH ~woOdPloon ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARDWOOD FLOORS Cleaned & Waxed Anytime. 832-48111 S.A. -t.U..g • •••••••••••••••••••••• Haul, cleanup, concrete removal. Dump truck. Quick serv. 642·7638 DUMPloes Small Movmg Jobs Call MIKE646-1391 Hauling & Dump Jobs. Ask for Randy. 641·84.2'7 ----rr ee /shrub trim, garage -~-------NEED YOUR HOME CLEANED! Evelyn, &f.2-cn28 •ft. 5 ...... l"'-J ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSESITTING at BABYSITI'ING 979-9064 ..-dKapMg ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE OOITALL! We do it belt! We do it cheapest! Russell Landscaping. 6"·7062 DIG -IT does aJI! Trees. landscape, sprinklers, main t e nan ce, Lie. • 646·7070 •••••••••••••••••••••• '81 Cad Stretch Limo Orient rugs-tv-stereo· bar -phone. $30/hr + 203. 496.8364, 831·3046 & yard clean-ups Free • ~CllOtlry •••••••••••••••••••••• eat 557·8271 3RICKWORK: Small Jobs. Newport, Costa --yg responsible men hav ~.T 4 WO t k d Mesa, Irvine, Refs e rue • Y 675-3175 tree main eqwp. Can do 1--------- CLEAN-UPS/LA WN anything. 960--0895 J imall jobs wanted. Brick Maintenance..Lndacp ..1----~ and Block. Low hourly Free est. 642-9907 .._..__ ... __., ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rate . 499-l226 aft. 6pm ~II .\round Carpenter Finish & Rou1h. Free Est John 979·•529 or 775·8082 In my home, ages 1·4, TREES Nant a REALLY CLEAN All Types Masonry full/parttime, llc. #BHC Topped/removed, clean HOUSE? Call Gingham Very reas. U c, bonded. 18231 642-4036 ups. lawn renov 751·3476 Girl Free est ~5123 Bob 548·Z753. 536-9906 P'RPLCS bulJt • maced, brick /at.oat venee". 30 yrs exp. •314' BRICK ARTISTRY Pool • t pa coplnu. brick pavin.p, block " 1tucco wallt. eeo.7421 :!oncrete, patio covers, MHonry. M.Ute s.sf..5487 Sl• te lie contractor #'400741 -.. I ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "lni·blinda" woods, win· dow tl0Un1, vertlclea. Phone eat. 54t-0538 ••"'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ov Ing? The Starving CoUe&e Student.J Moving Co. has arown. Insured same 11ood service lfT1H ·436 License . 641·8427 \BC MOVING, Ex per prof, low rat~. quick careful service.SS?-0410 THE "MOVJN-MAN " is Careful , courteous & •Cheap. Please call 642·1329 •n.tfng/P' ... fftg ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY PAJNTERS BARGAJN RATES Free est. 848-~ --- Inter I Ext er /Refinishing ceilings /wallpaper. Lie. Cain &Sons 898-5105 DAVE'SPAJ.NTING Serving area 9 years Reas. ins. Ile 760-7301 -PAT~IAN CUSTOM PAINTING Int /ext. Material-labor guar Free est. 953-9810 --- W ALLPAPBJMG Prof installed, lst roll hung free 0 on. 1-639-14.29 ror free est • • PAIN'l1NG-Ooe 't CaU tJGlme YClll Care I U..91Di <Zthn> NEWPORT PAIN'l'INO Comm./lndm. /relJd. I -- • •••••••••••••••••••••• Free est. Low rates. '7~r7 P E 'l W A T c H : Portable Steam Clean1n1 ------~--Proreaslona! (n·House Englnes, maclllnery- fl'trst Cl au ln&/ext paint· pet sit Una -.ervl~ Lie No crptl. 963-9925 Ina. wa"paper, refinish bonded 842--0UIO .... _ cabinet.I, ec.c. IJD.52SN • -•ooa s.r.lce, ~ ••••••• ······-········ RALPH 'S1'AJN'l'ING ••••••••••••••••••••••• rn~E INSTALLATION Lie. Int/Ext. Low rates. t7 yrs exper. workin& Fle><>rs. Kitchen, Bath Freeest. 984-5566 W/111 muea of equip. Reliable Craftsmen State cootractor's Uc." Roaers Tile Phone Fine pain&.inl by Richard ins. Porch Construction 831-04.58 Sinor. Lie, Im. lJ yrs of Co. 673-3318 ---------happy N.8 . cuatqmera. ;uatom tile 1.nstallallon, Thank you.«n_..lb •roperty ti•111•-"' fln. kit, baths & related 1---'-------••••••••••••••••••••••• r emodehng, free est lnt/Ext. Reuooable Prof. service to save you Ro1er Irving IJ7Ml60 rat.el it refs. time " money. Newport Mib . .wJ--.. Pacific R.E. 845-3683 ff"ff 59"iu ••••••••••••••••••••••• ride lo decoratins. ~Ed• ~kn pai.iit lna. wallpaper ••••••••••••••••••••••• h•nahf-1 It rtinoval 'iewport Real Estate 960-'7Slt J •gent will consider ttad· ing services. Wh•t have :olle&• Stud'ent, exp'd, you got to trade? Bruce 'int/ex, '1lnYc job for less! Blom1ren, RE/MAX Alex 851·9371, 552·0231 Re a I to r s, 7 59-1221 , 76().0297 aterfront Painting , Special Spring-Time ~ooflftcJ rates -qua!. work . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Int/Ext. MarkMS-4290 QUALITY ROOFING All types, free est. 1Ht Control Visa, MC. 541·5930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LLOYD'S NURSERY & LANDSCAPE CO, INC Expert pest control for trees, shrubs & turf service. Lie. 9457. Free est. 646-7443. '1cnt..-j1l .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neat patches & textures FrH est. 891-1439 ED'S PLASTERING All Types Int/Ext 645·82S8 FREE EST. HARBOR ROOFING Leak Repair -res/comm lst qual. mat'f & labor Beat any bid. 631 9193 ROOFIMG All t y pes, r epairs. decks. Free estimates Call Bob 548-0769 BALBOA ROOFING CO Take advantage of $100 gas or food give away Realtors welcome 673-6743 ~•-HncJ • •••••••••••••••••••••• LOCAL SANDBLASTER Lie. ins. reas No Job too Call 64.2-S678 big ts mall 840-7909 Plaster Patclung, mt-ext. 30 yrs exp Neat work 545 2977 <Paul) ----- 'ilOW IS THE TIME to prune your lf'ffS. Call "The Experts.. 20yrs local. Georee 548-3239 rypa.ci Senke • •••••••••••••••••••••• Prof. Qlty typing Cass. tr•nscriptions. phGne dlct , letters, reports , forms, resumes. term papers, e n velopes, labels, disc volume. Work guar. Mariah 636-0756 #•ldht9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Indus /Comm. /Res1d Atlas Mobile Metal 548-9507 #MdowC~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let The Sunshine In ·· Call Sunshine Window Cleaning, Ud 548-8853 To place your message before the ~admg Rubhc. phone Daily Pilot Classified. 642. 5678 ROCN1t1 4000 ...tols to sa--. 4300 iu Rental 4400 Office R...tal 4400 Industrial Rental 4500 hsU..11 Lost & fomd 5300 Lost & FOWMI 5300 Penonah 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C>ppotllwlty 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Beach Motor Inn. Roommate to shr Lag. FULL SERVICE SUITE Office Space m counsel· $575 Approx. 2000' In· •••••••••••••••••••••••i---------• 985 No Pac1f1l' Coast Ni guel apt 2 Br 2 ba ORANGE COAST ing & psycho therapy dus'l t Oflice 18101 ABA require s 3 FOUND Male Show Hwy, Laguna Beac h $245 + ,2 util Mt F FINANCIAL CENTER gr oup New medical Redondo Cr. "Q". Hunt manager., ~75.000/yr Quality Sealpo1nt Daily, Weekly, Kitchen 24 132. Blk to bch. Pool & 2845 Mesa Verde Dr. E complex Clse to Hoag Bch. 842·2834 potential Co car upon FOUND ADS S i a m e s e v ' c available Low winter Jae. Rers req. Call Louis ~6. Costa Mesa. $375 per H ospital 5200 /mo. quallfymg.543-0902 Westminster 898-5991 rates 494.5294 661 3984 mo + secunty depos it. (2131284.3263 8700 s q rt office + IRE FREE Includes all util . u~e of warehouse, Irvine In· M---y to• --5025 " Found on 4 ll5. nr Slater Room with kitchen I b f ........ ..._. . Fem lo !>hr w /s ame. 1 rary icon erenre & Newport Beat·h location, dus trial. Call 646·1044 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cal~· & Beach. white pupp). privleges. Adults only t I h 962.7520 Ho use on Balboa Is l e ep one ans wering Mac Arthur at Jam inquire Marosi Co 16753 2ndTDLoani Au s t Shep type $275 675-6998 eves & Secretarial area avail boree, 1256 sq ft, Sl 25 l't Noyes, 957-9266. Bkrs. $100,000 to $250,000 l8r{ 642-5678 960-2494 wknds g~1;~i:~m1~\~~~seEy per mo Ullls & main· Coop Invited. + points Call. Bkr , ~~~~~~~~~~Found Vic 23rd / 957 .1414_ tenance incl. 851·1711 963-5788 COVER GIRL * OUTCAU• 953-0778 MC /VISA •FOXY LADY• OUTCALL ONLY VISA MC • 97Z.. I I 38 .. Penins ula Point $140 mo Private entrance, no cooking ismokmg T V 673-4419 NEAR AIRPORT __ __ PACIFIC LOST: Lg Orange cat. NewJ>-Orl , reddish brn Prof F shr 2br, 2ba lux 1617 WestcliH. N 8 Want Suite off Pacific Coast Low rate homeowner a lte r ed male, WAS med sz dog, Fem, nurs EXOTIC ESCORTS t\l>nhse. C M area financial inst 70008 r llwy, nr Chart House. BLUFF loans, $10,000 & up Any wearing blue collar mg 548-50481 5 •55._1946* Rack Bay area 2 sep rms for rent m lge hou:.r M or F, S22S mo ea rm + 14 Utll 642 1986 675 J638 557 5484 NB 3-40 sq n S400 per purpose, short or long ''Gu s'' REWARD · ___ 1st floor Agent 541-5032 mo Call John549-2117 INDUSTRIAL :)46.8437 FOUND Male Cocker Serv1neallof0 C Fl•m n o n s mkr s hr ------term 7141898-7_532___ Spaniel Gold Color Vic --------- \!> same. nice 2Br I Ba KOLL CENTER Dix Nwpt Bch Airport or. PARK rtgOCJH. Trwt Lost 4 /8. Fred Dobie pup, Gretchen Lane 4 3/81 dplx m CM. gar SlSO m o HEW'PORT hce. 1500 sq ft $1 per sq DHdl 5035 Reward For info or re 775·0109 &nplo~ & 646.8662 Elegant exeeutne suite~ ft 646 4419 1115 WWtffer A••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• turn 557-4236 p ah 5 Prepon.Hon ltoom and bath m 2 BR apt . NB Pool & pvt beach $300 Dottie J NB lux t\l>nhse, pool. in prestige location C ta~-C S .......... -~ C ------~Oft 350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• With complete support NEWPORT IUCH os _._ a. -......-..... .,. o. Found Fem mixed Ter· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobi W..t.d, 7075 760-1966 , 675-6000 mature M F. $21!>mo sernces Convenient Penins ula •Two-1600 sq fl units All types of real estate rier, yng, wht . Spr· FIRST LADY 7141851·0681 location across from Ca· a vail for occupancy inveslmentssmce l!M9 ingf1eld, CM 549-4748 640-4305 Hotels, Mohk 4100 - -NEWPORT CENTER Full Service Suites ty Hall. Executive style May lst. "31' per sq ft SfMdalhiltght --------Escort. Models offices w/full services -Call642·7604°r 642·«63 2ftdTDs Lost . Male Golden ••••••••••••••••••••••• Female to shr 3Br furn, Balboa Inn oceanfront $175 + util Non-smoker avail From 2~ sq.ft M-5 8·4.Sat lG-2 642-2171 545-0611 Retriever, "Rusty" No PartyD.cen. and up. No lease r e-tor~ 4550 . -collar. Vic Costa Mesa * 972-1345 * Low winter rates. Daily 642-3738 _____ _ or weekly. Kitchenette S80 & up. 675-87.0. $CUTCOSTS S A II you need for one quired. Call 673-3002 ror •••••••••••••••••••••• Widow has money for area. &46-21613. MC it VISA Accepted Young roommate wanted monthly fee! lo share 3 bdrm house 640-5470 information. torage Warehouses in 2ND T D. 's any site Costa Mesa avail. for above $10,000. No credit Found: wrute kitten, ap· I near OCC. 1175 /mo + •---------hliM11 ltefttd 4450 util. 631-7395 •DELUXEOFACES• ••••••••••••••••••••••• immed. occupancy. 2000 "• no pnlty. For action prox. 4 mos old, Harbor & 2800 sq. ft. 3.'f' per sq. c a 11 AG T 67 3 · 7 311 View hi Hills. 644-6689 •• SPIJUTUAL READINGS lOam·lOpm. Fully Lic'd. 492-7296 or 492·9034 1815 S Camino Real, San Clem Yearly, Hot.el Apt. Room, kitchenette & bath Ut1ls paid. S280 mo + securi· t1 deposit 2306 W Oceanfront, Newporl Beach. 67J..41M. SEA LARK MOTEL •Weekly rentals now avail •Mand up. .Color TV. •Phones 1n rooms 2274 Newport Blvd C M 646-744.5 ~VE IN NEWPORT BEACH FOR $100 PER WEEK ~0440 S•11HrR...tah 4200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Furn. 2bdnn Mesa condo. avail. 6/27 lhru 8 /22 1525/mo. Call Answer Ad 114-46, 24.hrs, 642·4300. ---Vecatlotl t.wt• 4250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •NWPT OCEANFRONT & Lido Isle bayfront. ~/sml boats Wkly. 6'73-SURF ...... tosa... 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Movln1? Avoid deposits • cut livinl expenaa! Ptofeulonally since l.Wll . HOUSIMATIS 13'l-4134 --------1 1 room. from 1235/mo. For store & omce space Male 33 wants fem rm· No lease required. 2172 al reasonable rates. mte full priv. $275/mo. DuPont Dr . Adj . 500 to 2700 Sa Ft. ft. Call 642·4463 Mon anytime Found : Balboa ocean· thru Fri. S.•. Sat lG-2. •---------r r on t. b I k r ram e d Mack.,.., Rah MfcJ. incl ulll. ~l2i00ext 34 A 1 r po rte r H o t e I MESA VERDE bR -----1 833-3223. 9-12 PLAZA Approx. 8000sq ft. in SINCE198l eyeglasses Wkdys Fountain Valley nr San lst&c.2nd TDs, S50K-11M + 7S2· 1665 Diego Fwy. $1,320/mo. 0 w n er I N on 0 w n er Fnd. Sm lght-tan M dog. Call John 556·9360 or SFRs & Condos SPACIOUS furn home 1525MesaVerdeE,C.M. with refined MATURE CdM Deluxe Suites. AC, 545-4123 adult, non·amoker Lov· ampl pkg, utaJ pd 285S ely area-Dana Pt. E .CstHwy.675-6900 548·7533 Commercial&lndustnal Mixed. W/choke collar. PrilMLocGHo. PETER DOBBS Magnolia It Garfie ld. 493-3115. 17th STREET Costa Mesa. 3 rm suite, A !C. Plenty of parking. 545 sq. ft. S400 ~r mo 1Z10 Sq n on busy Beach ..tab WCIRhd 4600 &40.6016 673-9043 HB. 4 /191163-XM aft 5. 3br Nwpl Bch bae. S200 mo. 1st " last, \-ll ulll, non.smoker, avail. May 1 645-9634 Boulevard-Huntington ••••••••••••••••••••••• . • --M'. I s Beach. Ideal for real Want room with bath Want investor for Npt ~t : 2 a e, able/wht estate office. store or Beach area, Dottie bayfront home Give Collies, HB area . other suitable business 673-4.204 I well secured lst or 2nd 968-392? aft l2pm Realonomics 675-6700 2 Private balha, .vaila· T.D Agt, 675-6161 Los B •--•.... · ble Immediately. 10 1 8d.r house or apt, CM · t: rn .... w-.case,tm· Rmmte wanted to shr w /fem 2br , 2ba, CM $200 /mo + 1150 sec if in· terested 631-4948 eves MEWPORT IUCH 1 or 2 Offices w /recep & storage Prime loc. Furn. or unfum. 752·65SO Year lease. Attractively area, 1 mo. S2SO or less. W..t 2 l·Zz.r'o Yletd? portant pa.pen of dis· priced 631~749 On your T .D.'s Notes ab I ed veteran . N r 642-432 I, •xt 216 SSRalsen-lnvestorsSS Ga rfl e Id I Adams on Weekdays Needed: aplacetolive.2 CallDennisonAssoc Brookhutst. Help ! Fem to shr w /same 2bd 525' Office Crpt, paneled COST• MIS .a. adults, 2 dogs. S3SO/mo. 673-731• Reward. 847·7394, 646-1252 964-3172 Irv Condo many ittraa walls. gas & wtr furn. ----•----------p h f 2ND T D · Shopping center store on urc ase o · · s $275857·0795or 857·0794 Ground nr Prkg. 2052 17th S 860 f American family of• arranged For details Newport Blvd, C.M. Dbl t. •. sq. t. from Brus,els looking call M /F nonsmkr, 3br NB unit (1050sq. fl.) st.ore or <714>542·8519· for house In Laguna, 960-19157 Broker condo, nr beach, S325. ofc.556·4181or644·2228. WOODIRIDl.!..E CdM or Newport nr bch 1---------1 548·7267,549-475.'iX«. ----------WID to rent or trade for 3.4 35°/o SOUD . FULL SERVlCE SUITE. Profe11ional exec.utive Adult, nonsmoker. likes 0 R A N G E C 0 AST suites w /complete sup-week s in August . 3 YR. YIELD dogs. Nice 3 b~ condo nr FINANCIAL CENTER p ort ser vices. For Airmail-Haskin, Avenue Terms .. 250,000Jyr 19% beach. Vlctona & Ca· 2845 Mesa Verde Dr. E. further Information H •knotr 17 'A ' 1180 TD behind SBl,000 5 yr. nyon, S2SO + SlOO sec. #6, Costa Mesa. Share 552.3030, Agt. Bruss e Is 8 e I g u i m 8% lat TD on 24.S •ere Fem. pref. 631·5898 350 s q rt office with 32·2·374-1223 avocado parcel adjoin· ing development. Shr Backbay, employed another Realtor or comp 4475 $$50,000 new •ppr•iHI. Fem over 30. Call dys othe r small business. ••••••••••••••••••••••• strong buyer w /$212,000 873-8302 S250 per mo.+ security, Store Space for lease. ••••••••••••••••••••••• equity. Ut SU0,000 ----------1 includes utlls. & phone 1500 1q. ft. It 1280 sq. ft. 1 Takff It. (714) 751·'4828, M/F 2 BR 2 Ba apt to answering. O ther in Huntlnaton Beach. Op,o.l='lr SOOS 738-3059or493-1153. sh.re, NB. Pool & pvt services avail 9157-0701. Fl e x l b I e term s . -beach. $350. Dottie J . 9-5daily. 213 /591-7202. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl00.000 note •l 20% re· 7I0-11188or675-f000 1--___;------1---------WIMllDA tum. Call broker1 Mark Sho~. 1tora, bobby, S12 WHOUSALH 1-Co_nl_e..;;y...;..• _ _.....__ ___ 1 Placin& your Classified ad is so simple ... just give us a call on the phone and we'll help you word your ad for fast re· suits. 64.2-5678. •5 ..... UYl.t• Cow'ltelonlopel"IOJ'ally F.m. Rmmte w.nted, Mlect you.r com~lble 1hr • Bd house. $270 rmmle lo •ulLyour +util. Af\8,675-3045 1q.ft., 12' ht w/11e dr. • In the fut irvwfna elec· 2 1 O • q ft w I s In It . \ronlc security ~lnesa. IAl!llOmc· :.•ts/ =-~~~~s-:~ :l~& ,_F_e_m--..,,-.-pt...:...-~-~-n_l_S_IM-1 t31-ll01 + utll. ref req Aft 8:80pm w.n40 LOST : Gold Bar Bracelet, en1raved. REWARDI Sentimental v•I~. N.8 ., C.M. area. M2·890'7 Naocy, ST~U.t~ ev••· 1 _548-_1_2_•t ______ 1 Thu is a reeessioo proof Pen1nlllt/ .......... ._... 4100 business. 10 X 10 spice Lest a,.... required. We bave • de· ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• aler asslst.ed prosram 1100 MESA lb.al can't be beatl In· •••••••••• .. •••••••••• veatmen~ulred _________ , INDUSTRIAL ~~1~z.m1ns ~: •u .. Of9••• P.~RI( Ual "o1~.oo + nrat T H E C 0 0 K E R ':'i 711 W.179'.lt. CMNMIM.CIM. 642-446) year. Caucollect: RESTAUR.AHI' '(.00' ~ .. 1 ... ~ .. 1 500 W . Cou\ Hwy • _,. _.., (Acrou from B11boa All fOI Bay Ch.lb) Ooerl tAM-MI. WOODS aPM. ,.,.ak(Hl·~nch •U_...AN Opu 1 da:ra. &IC'ftOMICI IYSTIM SllM VlU. c.Dter ad. WffllaMVW.,.ltm ATLAMT'IS MASSAGE SPA Be pampered by 18 Beaut. Girls Open lOA M·•AM 7 days Phone 64.S-3433 THE GirHriends •ESCORTS• HotH /Offlu jHot.t * 759-1216 * * 529-1883 * 24.Hrs. Now Hirin& MC VISA Want Ads CRll 64.2-5678 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exp'd cleaning lady look· mg for a few good steady jobs . Reas. ref 's 498.s.8() Nurse /companion seeks part time employment In priv home or hosp. Specialited in T.L.C. of the elderly. 545-1425 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCTG CLSU< The J olly Roger Inc. has a position open for an ac· ctg clerk with 1 yr ex- perience. Duties include A /R analysis, auditing ules reports " ieneral acct& dut ies. Xlnt benefila • working con· di. with a arowmg corn. P90Y. Apply in person: The Jolly Roger Inc 17042 Gillette Ave Irvine (7 H )546-0331 Accb lecef•._ c..... for hospt . corp ore. Familiar w /collectlon procedures (ins. com· pany at self-pay accts). Contact: Ms. Irene Ruii. 640·8950 ADMIN. CLERK Read, view, correlate Australian donar letters & m•lntain records. Cot· relate Ci liaison with Australian Hour of Power . General clerical Ar ueretart•I duties. Handle ovenea phone calla a conapoodence, II month de8k exp. for U'atn.tn1. Full t.ime. SlOOO per month. Tue ad to nearest Slate Emplo)'• m et\t Office. DOT 219.112-010. Ad paid Cot by employer. ~!'r.~-.?!!! A~~ llliiiiiiliiiiiiii ....... Dlmao. ,, ....... corp. hu la•td ... ooitalaa t« a q11aatn.c1 lllidf vtctU.l to a .. \1t accounllnl C.r.JAIM maoa1er lo tb• •d N .. d•d Wuhocla, ntlalalratJon cl •IT lune· 1t.ron1 food-wtne service tlop. Requires ••· back1round •end rt· penenc:e In related ac· •um• lo~ Ben Brown'• CO\IDUnf runcUon1 R•tnrant 3110S Coast btdudln1 computertsed Hwy. So. Lacuna am a tr ayaterna. Pttvloua DIMfALASST ·Cl1lrtlde. Prldllly & •dnu Sa.turdays Nfwport 1eaeraJ prao· tk•. 110 "r hour + bonu.a. ~Jc tor Judy,1--,.;.______ HOUsamtll~ L•1•l 8.cty, Bx · 1'0-t351 General om~ perteaced, Xlnt 1klllt, Personable • outaolna We have Im med. . aalarr nq .• oat~ wawr DIHT4L/AM .... crtcllt &o eoUectloo •tor CAU~A CAI WASH aupetvllory experteoce nnu• C a 1 b I t r w I n t e d . dealreable. Com,any fmmlllf Cuhtort wanted. f'ull or We offer a good startlo1 No expr. nee . Cosu lifeuaru.~ Person for dental hi n ll I Io r Io u r in Newport Beach ousekeepcrs. Full time m4 Hr75-9S90 Nurse /Rtceptlonbt poeltlon1. tPM t• SAM · Ult MG Non-smoker. Exp. pref shift. i::xcell. frlnJe. . LEa .a.a SCftY 1.!' •• !!r.n MI Jocl\ed clOM U> Garden '8UU"' part tltne. Newpn1. San· Grove Frwy otf of s.y11gaaa.o-ta Ana, FountaJn Valley, but will train a quick benellla package. For W"'-.,.....~·· D..ttlC••.. leuner. Req. Ute typln1 interview call: LU SJot· Experienced · for amall 3-' dy1 a week. Country Hlary, excellent cotn· i·--------· pany paid benefits ln Knott'• Ave. for furt~r 89S1ownCedterOr. Cost• Men . Call Information contact Costa Mesa,Ca92UIS &d·4480. ch)(!ln1 attractive wort apparel and'a pleasant worktna atmosphere. Apply in ptnon between & bookkcepin& as well aJ ten, 714·6'1·1816 or apply N.B law firm. Word pro-C (u b Con v . ttos p . IACK OMCI ad torn mun I cat Ion in person a~: Advaoc~ ceasinf expl'. desirable. 5'9-3081 ~ Cal'-y al (2U)l3.H51:l E J I belween MM·llAM. qua Oppottun t)' Car Wash help. full or We are looking for a k'll N 8 Kealth Cenler, uoo Call64H4T7 -------1""=:....---brl1ht. energetic In· 1 t '· · .644-08ll. Brl I St "1 h s · Nurslne divlduaJ ,. a self-starter ~E._.E .. u ~r. ato . ,~ort ' u1te Licensed Real E1tate MUISIS AIDIS Employer PIT, apply in person, ASSlt• RS Metro Car Wash, 29SO ELEC'J'RONIC 1~~~~ ... ----.. ~~H~ar~bo~r~Bl~vd~.~C~.M~.:..._~ who en,·oys wo(king in a "' "'" _. ~" lOO. Newport Beach. salesperson to alt new frl-nd ~ atmosphere. Leading local pest con· EOE M /F "ondom'-'"-*. 831-4361 7: 30.3: 30pm ~ part·Ume ., trot d r 11 1~~~~~~~~~!!1 " ",.,..... 3·30·1:30pm. Coun\ry 9AM and4Ptd 0 Mechanlcal assembly. 1-Banltln& Immediate openlnas. TB.La CASHIER ; CITIZENS BANK Chalrs de experience company n 5 u I · Club Conval Hoap. and X·ray licence, essen· lime omce persqnnel HSEKPR·live Ill. 5 days. Liquor Clerk. mature. S49·3061. Work near the beach. Ex perlence required. Car wash. Will train. Good benefit.a. MS-3832 I I CLA YS IA Santa Ana area. Call tial. ROA preferred but Entry level position. eves Full or part·tlme not necessary, if you're Typinf and ~fc expr ~~~lke~pe;k:~~dl~~~-Also Stock Clerk. part· Ordwl>etlaGlrt sharp! 4 day week in belpfu .Call Tim 9 to 3, Anaheim Hills Refs. time Call Tom 979-9744 Must have gd. handwrll· 2970 Harbor Blvd. Suite 206 Cotta Mesa for appt. co:.acl Cathy Ant~n~z Leticia, &44-4460. Newport Center general ~ 979·6021 • Mon AP!11 !!_ req. 974•5410 days an&. ans. phones, some practice. Interested" GENERALOFC f1hng Call 8 to 5, '11079-4200 Equal Opp Em ply m If /h 631-1511 C b' I rk f d ""Sl8•l$8$ E 0 E M/F/V/H as 1er-c e . pre er e • ---· · · pendable older person, Call Margit at 760-6024 lmmed rt position, de-INSURAHCE L1quor Clerk. full Ir part 549 1157, P1ckwl(k Mon· Thurs. pendable ind1V1dual lo c• -w~·y tam e Costa MPS a Paper. Loe. Mlukln Vi.to co Wed-Sun U.:»-4:JOsh1ft CLaK ~ s.49-1422 nffds Adetnblers w/2 l•--------•I Apply gift shop, John yrs. exp. Candidate!> Bankln" Wayne Airport, Tues must have gd manual " 7 Eleven. all shtns, gd. pay F tr or Ptr W1U tram. 1920 Balboa. NB 673 6910 Dental R~ptionist See ad under General Office fashion Island 644-0611 as:.1st markttrng & Property Casually -----p A 1 N T 1 N G / general office, Rood typ Peri.onaJ lines agency l.Jve-ln babysitter & hte INTEN NCE ang & variety of OfftC'e exper. Salary open. Est housekeeping on Balboa MA A dexterity, 1d eyesight, LOAH SECIET ARY Sat AM only 546-3097 neat in apptvance&de· Local Newport Beach CASHIER l>kalls required in agencyCdM67J.86SO. Island separatt hving Experience req Apt d)lnam1c v.orlt en\lron quarters provided call paintmgc, MrepaiNrsB& llibt peibdable. Work 1s 1n bfe savings & loan has Im· support medical elec med operungforaLoan SF t1T position avail lronlcs. Gd. benefits Secretary Real estate a ary commensurate Only responsible loan exper preferred. with exp Apply In persons seeking perma· Packaging for FHLMC. person. Metro Car nent emplymt. need ap Salary commensurate ~ash. 2950 Harbor Blvd. CLERJC TYPIST Work an beautiful sur· roundings at the harbor 32 40 hrs/week. Pay commensurate with exp Requires good typing skills. bookkeeping & general office exp Please apply Tues thru Sat. Dana Pt. Marina Co., 24701 Uana Or Dana Pt. ment Newport Marient' ---------1 maint. area. Engineering MS 3632 INSURANCE _G_a_y_s75•2545__ _ TSL MANA GEMENT DEn.CLERk 642 1603 G EMERAL OFFICE MACHINE PARTTIME , " ply. Call : Mrs. Parelh, with exper f'ull in· _c M. 581·3830 suranee benefits & paid Position exists in our S h 1 pping· Rece1v1 ng Department This cleric a I position would involve light pat'king & r eceiving Ability to work with deadlines 10-key & typing 35.45 wpm are required. Ple(lse apply in person · F l day!>. anountang, genera I office dut1e:-.. xlnl benefit:; (•all Hob 770 1675 LU UNDERWRITING ASSISTANT SHOP Need six key pe<>ple to" fill positions. Will train Call !n9·9368 ~~~~~~---•! career apparel. Please -= call: CASHl ER HOU SEWARESALES Apply in person . Crown Hardware, l024 Irvine. <Westclilf Plaza) NB G EtolER.Al. OFftCE Law orC1t•c needi. me:.seni:er to do ~enerul offil't' <lulle!> abo. must have " J.:O(XI l'ar' Satar) t m1lea11e Call C"and~ 851 0633 lmm ed opening . Th h h m a c h 1 n e o p e r a t o r ii. position, w ic sup trainee All girl dept 1>0rts the efforts or our Costa Mesa plant Ex PT-TIME AUTO BODY & paint helper. 638 W 17th St., Costa Mesa Ms Denny Parisia 714·645·6505 MEWPORT IAUOA under" ri~ers. requir•:. r 2·3 days /week In design showroom. Some typing. Costa Mesa 631 1050 AUTO MlCHAMIC SA VIHGS & LOAN Experienced! Prefer ---~E'!'.o •.• E ... ~~~ CASHIERS UTDTEM CLERK/fYPIST 45WPM. small co. very good benefits. call Anne 642 !1363 PW SEY SEMIC OHOUCTORS 1641 Kaiser Ave. Irv ~'t"cssful experience in cell company bene 1ls 1011 l'Ommercaal in~ Apply Deltrona c, 545·0413 · rant'e poh r1el> • ---------1 PAHT·TIME general of· flee . vaned duties m law e e r t 1 f 1 e d S a I a r ) 1-Qual1f1ed c·andadates mu!tt po ss esl> ana lyt it al 1numer1ra I ab1hty and must be able to function effett1Yely with m1n1mal ... upef\ u.1on Ability to C'ommuniratc effective· I). both wrball)' and in "r1ting. 1:. a mu:.l Rt'spons1b1hlles include rating and l!tl>U1ng pohl It.''> and endori.e ment-. MAIDS ofc 640·8900 Roanna + comm Guar S350wk ._ _______ _ GEtolERAL O FFICE E1<p 'd apply to Ani1e San Clemente Inn .i9'.!·6103 Apply an person Union 76, 3928 E Coa~t Hwy , CdM AUTOMCYTIV£ Dealer Trader lmen tor} Control Desk Auto expenence nece'il>U r )' Top salar) Call (.'ind) Springer Cormier DeL1llo Chevrolet 18211 Beach Blvd Hunltngton Beach 847 6087 549 33.11 Banking TB.lER Newport Beach ofhce seeks exper'd full time Teller Typing & 10 key add For further 1n· formation & inten 1ew 1·a II Brian Taggart 1>44.7255 WESTERN FEDERAL SAVING S 114 Corporate Plaza Newport Beach. Ca f:OF.MF Companion to live in with elderlv woman . housework Mui.I have MARKETS car ~8-3366 For 2nd & 3rd Shifts We promote lo managl' COMPANION. female. I ment & superv1:.10n Crom lave m 2 day'> wk. Sat & within Sun preferred. care for 1 WANT ACAREEH" 71 Hold lady on walker C<lbta Mesa U"n l·ar 833-0379 111 Del Mar 631·9421 Lagwia Beach 49-t-923.1 C OMPUTER PA YROU CLERK Will train Bkp!>! knowledge helpful Ref':. nee Hrs 9 5 Call 642 9955 btwn Dept manager. retail i.tore Gilbert SLore'I l57 E 17th St, CM DESIGN fHGINEER Look1ni? for a \t'n 111 ll'rc\lllll( part time Joh 1 n p I c a s :in t of f 11 l' ., <. IPrn al rur maturl· per.,on IA·auon I' C II . Npl L\ch E>.per a mu .. t 1\c·(·urate I) pin~. nu ... northand 20 hr \\Ct'k 111clude:, Sat & Sun Call t>IS 7.:\31 Mfg ro. m M1ss1on \'U?JO area, needs exper 1n elet"trical lOnnet·tors hermeti c seal' transducer design. rom I ~e~~~: material!. & GENERAL Duties mdude de:.11(n. QfACE drafting, material!. 1ei.r Contact DF.UBIE FOWLER 714.558-1414 MAIDS . llEAD HO t:SEKEEPE R Enghsh spealung, M or F 645·7700 Manager with experit'Ol'e for Lad•~ Bouuqut' 1n Newport Beach Good ~alan Send resume to Ad ii693. Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1!'>60 Co~ta Mesa, Cahf 9262t MANAGER/ASST P ART-TIME Must be people oriented & amb1t1ow., O\'er 18 Call Rirhard675 5895 Part Time C ounMinq Y outt. Cani«-1 Babysitter . lite housekeeping, perma nent, wkdays. 7•JOam 6pm. Newport Bea,·h Mr. Hood · 644·6141 Hunlmgton 8earh 962.9116 9AM lOPM . Bar Help. Full & P 7 , top SS for sharp Port 17. 1--·---•-·------• L..---------in it & R&D proJel·t<; I MinimYm of ' year U • Mechanaral F:ngmct>r I I ,_ al f ing degre<' 11ref 'd per •nc•rngtftff o . IMA lri:.urance Compan~( North America 500south Main For fabric store Fah ellp pref C11ll Geri 646·4040 Adults with outstanding attral'ln e personahlles to spend 15 hrs per week rounseling youth ages 10 15 F:ven1ngs & Weekends Available $75 per wk Call 2.30 5 30pm Mon thru F'n 642 4321 ext. 343 Ask for Lon. BABYSITTER needed, vie Tewmkle Sehl, CM 2 girls. 2:30-5 JO. lransp needed 556-0636 aft 6PM Babysitter. mature person for 2 sons. ages 10 & 11. flex hours June 1-Aue. 15. My home or yours. Balboa Pen1n area. 673-&285. 645·4991 ask for Gail Banking TEUSl 1f you are a mature 1n dividual seeking a fu ll time Teller pos1t1on, Irvine Savings 1s in· terested an you Pleasant working cond1t1ons, good salary & benefit pa ckage F.xper1en1·c preferred. Apply 1n person between the hours of lOAM to l2Noon. at· IRVINE S&.L ASSN 18552 MacArthur Blvd Irvine. Ca 92715 7S2·2600 EOE IF Banking r fT TB.LEIS Xlnt opportunity to work m attractive S&L. Po:>t lions avail 1mm~ m Anaheim & Costa Mesa offices Call Katheleen C M 646-3666 "" COM PUT ER Systems F.ng1neer. $3.5,000 a year. Mu:.t have MS~E Degree plus 5 yrs f:let' trical En.:aneering ex· per Determant' com · puter requ1rementl. for expani;1on program Challenging pos1l1on 1n BAR PF.RSON full & progressive NB Dental part lime dys. l'Ollege , Offll·e awa1l!o en OK C M 646-5544 thusiastic. exp'd Front OCflce Manager Good starling salary Call 644·9211 Ask for Betty I ARTEHDER CHILD Monat.or. 1 per Des ign hardware & mo Must have 3 mos software system for gas Apply 1n per.son El Camino 20111 Brookhurst H. B i------.. -- BEAlITY dispensers Develop ex per Provide compk!te computer· based technl care of 31'2 yr old boy ques for auto service & Prepare meals. keep repair Direct invention -----clothes & room clean. prOJeCl Cor me.asunng B k k A t bathe rum. supervise & now from oil wells Tak• A -;st to Hairdresser Traanmg program N B. area Robert & Taylor Hairdressers, 646-7197. oo eeper ssis monitor behavior & ~ Perm P T Mon Fn manner of child. occupy ad lo nearest State Exp req Lite t)ping, him with games & Employmenl Service, 10.key Pleasant work· supervise hl.S play. Free Orange County DOT Ing cond 111 N.B. ad room & hoard Take lid 003. 167·062. Ad paid for I agenq• Non.smok er to nearest State J::mploy ..,.b•y•em_p.lo•y•ec•. ___ _ pref 833-8435 ment Service Ofc 1n"" I OOKKHPHl Orange County DOT COPY Clerk f/llme. Mon- Qualified candidates • flee wortl. Good ty~ send resume to: Mrs NUJ ond fitiftoc) wills ,. Jan s. 23891 Via qulr•d Excelle nt 'fo'~bricante. S~1te 603. ola~ ~ employ•• M1ss1on V1eJo. Ca 92691 ~-'t __ __ _ i ucne 1 '· DESK CLERK-for mold. c• w11l tra1n. hrs flexible Allcla C herin ----~7445 71 4-546-7360 Donut shop. Earl} AM shift. no exper nee· App ly : 01pp1ly Donuts. 111!>4 Newport Blvd.C.M. -------- Drapery Wor\roofft Nee<Js tabler. hemmer Experienced Mon Thur~ .. 7.5 30 l' M 642·1843. --- NATIONAL EDUCATION 4 4ooc...-.Dr. H•wport l e«h. Co. Equal Opportunity Emplo)er M F DRIYf:llS Wanted for Cu rn ll u re •G•e•n•e•r•a•I -----•I Moving Co $5 hr to start. Increase with ex The Balboa lay Club penence 848-3444. call Is now hirinCJ; unt117pm Wanted for lge Manne 301. 677·010 Ad paid for fn. 8·5 $3.75 hr Must be Hardware Store JtOOd by employer friendly, resp. & able to benefits. 1mmed open 1~~~~~!"!11--!~•I comm u n 1 cat e w 1th r: DRUG CLERK mg . Call645-17ll CLr.nlC""L C'u stomers 1n a pro Security Guard I yr exp. Craveyard g\ "' fess1onal manner Orii Full time. Mon· Fri., !Hi BOOK KEE p ER ru 11 Authorization operators r 0 a Ir port are 8 Professional pharma1·y. Walt•r JWaitttss charge for horse ranch p ll all hours. flex 9570648 exper.Call:Tern•r:rant tyear dmnerhouseexp operation Computer ex· schedules. minimum 20 ·,.....~ for interview. 642 1580 40.s nltt>i., SPM llPM per desired Satary hrs. S4.0l to start 'CO MSB.OR -----Time Share open Nwpt Bch loc Transartion Day ca p. J30une 29-~~g ENGIMEY/TECH. Plcasl' rall for appl Rel>pond lo (213 1 S . 1 28. 10am3: pm w Y TEM•~•RY 645 7358. Mon f''r1 873 1338 ervices, nc Previous expenen~e de r VftA 9·30 5PM lookkHDina Cleril AtP knowredge helpful 3 lo 4 days per wk Hrs 9 5, apply at 1660 Placentia A'·e . Costa Mesa 2462 Dupont Or. Irv !>i red $4.25 $4 75 /hr E l e c l r o n 1 t' ---------i EO~-_ Mt F NiJtuel Shores Com enganeerllechnic1an fnr --------• mun1ty Assoc1at1on. debugging testing or G UARDS 493 0122 new Mil spec c1rcu11 de full & part tame All velopmt. Must be ex· areas Uniforms rurn'!I COUtorfER HELP per'd in design or :.w1tt"h Ages 21 or over. retired Mon fr 1 Super mode power supplies & welcome No ex per nel· Sandwich. C~ta Mesa. analog c1rcwts Rf ex App J \ l ' n 1 v er~ a I 400 Central Tower Orange. Ca Equal Opportunit y Employer M, F Insurance WANTED! Immediate career op- portunity is available for EX PERI ENC ED Life. Property and Casualty Agent in the Newport and Cosla Mesa area Dual ucense preferred but not neces:.ary l.A!ads pro· v1ded. group insurance provided Ext-client op portunity for aggressive 1nd1v1dual. For appointment contact . RONALD ULSETH 21 3-701 -2300 GW GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS Affirmative Action Equal Opportunity t::mpfoyer --,.. Or~Cocnt MARKETIHG Dallv Pilot MAHAGE:R 330 W. !Jay Street New. small l'Ompany, Costa Mesa. Ca new recreational pro-E q u a I 0 p po r l duel. 18K. Send resume Employe_r __ _ to PO Box 973. Tu:.t m.1·--------• CA 92680 Part-Time STUDENTS HOMEMAKERS MATERIAL HAHOUHG lmmed opening for Earn extra money, parts clerk. rubber hose working p/time in your products. must pass t•o own home. lntroduclne physical uicludm11 back the New D811y Pilot to X-ray Taking apphca· The Orange Coast Area! t1ons btwn 8 & IOAM Oh· Set your own hours! Call ly Stratoflex. 17871 Weekdays betw~n 4pm Armstrong Ave , Irv & 6pm. 96G-1527. EOE A Kendavil> Ind . ~~~~~~~~~ Co __ __ P B X 0 P E R AT 0 R • MEDICAL telephone ans service. Full & p1t1me front ore day & relief graveyard Busy G P in F V Peg shift. will train. 542-6747. board & ms 979-9ll 1 1 Medical. full lime front omce position Mission Viejo Execut1 ve & medical. secretarial ex per. including insurance billing. 495-1000 MEDJCAL Full or part t i me. front office Transcribing ex per pre C'd 645·9400 MEDICAL ASST For front & back office Laguna Beach 494-1181 MEDICAL TRANSCRIBER PERS09't FRIDAY needed fo r of(ice in Irvine Mu st ha ve transportation for er· rands . help with some office dultes. Minimum 32 hrs per week Call btwn 8 30 5. Keri 979.2724 PER SOM FRIDAY Over the cowiter sales Boal s tore. 631 2810 s.s 4867 per desirable 3 moi. Protl'rllon Service. 1226 ---------Job with growmg la3er w !'Ith St . Santa Ana Insurance at 754 1801 Orange l•--------ac>OKKHPSl F /C Work at home, lop pay Requires m1111mum 5yrs a cute hos pital ex perience m all phases of medical diet.lion Moo. Fn. 9-5 768-iOOO. Picture frame manurac· lurer looking for exp . mature person In volves mat cuttmg, glass cul· ting & assembly of custom framing C.M area Call today-good starting pay 646·4863 wkdays 642 ·5818 wkends Coast S&L E 0 E Banlung LAGUMA FEDERAL SAVIMGS has openings for : INSURANCE CLERK, experience preferred, fire & homeowners LOAN SERV. CLERK. good typing required TELLERS. will train. Excel l ent frin ge benef\ta. Call Mn. Pit tUlo, 494-7Ml. ext. 2S3. Equal Oppty Employer BANKING TWER Fashion Island invest- ment firm Excell op· porlunity Exper & maturity req'd Call· 714·640.0123 COUtorrER HELP co Independent contral· lnten 1ew tin; !112 & 1 4. AC COUMT REP. Bnghl. energetic per!'on tor slatus tconsultantl Mon f"r1 FGS has openings in needed for busy deh & acceptable. Potential for Customer Service Dept ham sbop Poas1b1hty permanent emplo) Hang Ghder.. mrr needs toserv1ceautomobilein· for advancement for the ment Call . 493·6,24 gnl lahorers s urance accls Must right person. Contact EOE !'>47 1344 have gd. oral & written Stan at 673-9000 communications skills HEAD 1-:xper desirable. Start- Counter Help, FIT ESC ROWSCTRY G ROUHDSKEEPER mg salary comm. wtex· Kuster'sCleaners needed for Irvine office. Head g roundskeeper per. & ability. Excell. 548-4243 Must be experienced, needed by Hunllngton co. benefits & career ad· MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST BU!>Y Newport Center of ri ce. responsible. en lhusias\ic. typing p rr . F rr . 640·2al3. CLERICAL COU~ HELP pref. tract escrow. Hrs 8 Bear h City School Dist , vancement potential rullift lo 5, Mon lltru Friday, F pt II L' d Joi .... THE 12 mo. pogitlon. Ex per or ap .. ca : in a. MEDICAL ASSIST. " Sandwich shop. Costa call for appt. 552·4050 pref'd. $1,23.'I to St.533 714 ·S49·8161 Front/Back·office. CdM Meso area.846-1004 (9-3) Toni ·~~~~~~~~~ # I TEAM AT ~ --depending on ex per. Ap· area. 6'13-8200 OSHMA.,....,S Delivery men over 18 for EXTRA Income, over 21. ~~ .. ~~ t4th St· H.B. lNTERIOR DESIGN EDI 1 _a. Ofc 1""'111 L.A. Times to homes in p/t, you are the boss. Sales, nex. hrs. no exper M C AL -.. • SPORTING CeconMom. y3caarmr~ualrmed.. sales & admin. We train HELPWAMTEDl nee, willtrain,499-1461 ~~ulf:e~.~iior'rmlts ~.. ..;;y_o_u_.5_36_·2403 _______ 1 Telephone soUdtor. No ---------•! GOODS no colleding '400/450 FACTORYWOll( exper. nee. Excell. co. J"" ..... OI MISSEHGER Immediate full lime and mo + bonu.'I 64&-0637 or Pleasant, local pick-up benehts Commission """"'' 6 mornings a week, part lime openings exU!t 646·5844. &r dellvery also mside progr•m It profit sbar· 1!11mecl. ope.ol.ng. Part 7AM·9AM. Excell. drlv al our dlviaional oC!ices. ---------worlt·s\.art ·SJ."O + ing. Apply 1n pers011: time, wei:kend poSltion 'Ina rec. req'd. A.ppli . Theselectedindlviduals Delivery Driver,aiddrlv· benefita.CaUSS7~ Pennysaver. 16&0 2·11 shift. Salar.Y Pennysaver, 1810 ror these entry level log record. valid Callf. PlacenU1 Ave., Coala negotiable. Call: Lii Placentia Ave CM drinn Uc. F/f. Must , .. ••••••••llf Mesa Slotten. 714-Ml·l&UI or ·• · · ~~1:3' .;::1~~e ~~~~ know Oran1e Co. Coa\a 1• --------• apply in persol\: Ad· MODIUMG, cler\cal uperlence. Me1a Blueptlnt, HOME WORKE RS · vance Health Center, Comm'l!a..rilms, ex· Hours are neaJble. 548-5571 Edltorlal work in your 1300 Bristol St. Norttl. lra• ... SCNJ needs new Suite 100, Newpori faces,allagee.957·0282. Pleau •wlY In person Beach, EOE M /F to: D&JVBY Dependable pen.on, part Ume, Tus., 'n\ul"I. for plan!'llna ~ ln Irvine. Conl•e\ e.v. -.1.aao MOTEL NIGHT AUDITOI '42-3030 Preschool Teacher C hr istian Early childhood educ. courses or exper req'd P /time 642-9181 Production, rull time persqn for Prod. Dept. Packing & handling hosiery. Crystal Crea· lions Apparel63l·S414 PROO MGR TRAINEE Great oppty for a lake charge lndiv w /tnech skills. Work well w/peo. pie. Salary open. 540-8882 PllODUCTIOM TIWMll Rubber 00.. produrt!I, aiutt pau to. ph.y1lul lncludlna back X·r•)'. Tak ln • a pplltatlon\ btwn I • lOAM only. Stratart•1.· 17111 Armaironf 'Ava.. 1,... EO~. A Kmdavla [pd,, Co. P tr Hone Dept. Cle~ tP worll for Pt'roO Aolmtl Supply Supenoart9". Apply acm an.tot, C.I&. M$-2m. •«IC~CLlll rulltlmt . RttaH i M a1 •tort. X· luce preferrecl. ,. a :ao-5:30 Mpn.· Rutaurant., CallMUO?O, ual for Meyerbof •. primary 1 ie. 1upplltr rA Jood rood lo SALIS P /f . lb• lrvJqe corporat• Mornln11 necef1ary forl~--------Secy-Bkkpr (ex"""r.> Aft, llCB'TIOMST / community needl people fabric •tore C'aJI Gerl· Secretary r-,. '11'' SICUT"'IY for undwich makin". ,_&M._'°49_;...• __ • ____ •1 lbK. a--. prox 20 hn/Wk. •.OO hT. ~ • , -· __,,...._., A.•iat. olc mir ln 1mall. Lahn• ad aaency nm. simple food prep. Mon· SAi.iS p /T To f'retl d1nt busy _prop. mgmt-con- nonable Individual Fri, 1-3pcn. No ex We need 3 ahai'p people Fin Svc ea. rirm . str ofc Costa Meu. Ad· ront olc. Divenlfitd perlence nee. Starts with fashion back&round Faabson ltland, nfeds va.nceme.ot oppty No1,1 es, accurate lypl.n,. mlolinum. Call Suaie to work Ua ou.r Qltfl'I ac top-n_otch exec. 1ecty. smoker. A l'HUD\e list· Y + benefiu. Cal : S57·'232. wcnnen'• dept. Salart + ror ftry busy, challeog-in& exper & hr$. avail. to 4N·U.57 R"'STAURANT Frr p comml11lon, call for Ing pos.! Stron1nper. & Ad No. 743, Dally Pilot. c. • tr typ/1h 11k1lls a must. ~ptlonllt wanted P/T, sandwich man& counter appt. Non-s mkrs. please. PO Box 1560, Coat a 1P-12 noon. Mon-Fri. Lite help. Plasa de Cafe. THILOOIC Xlnt. dentaltmedtcal Men, CA921127 !n1. phones. Great Gary's OeU. 752-5401 644.fSOO benrt.1. CaJI. 714-64()..0123 SEC'Y .,.,/TIME etlu. Call 841·0280 I~~~~~~~~~ _.. • lor Jamie. llTAIL SALIWlllSOH Mfgr's rep needs P rr A11t. Manapr women P rr sales exp'd approx nonsmoker m Corona del •ICErnOMST specialty store clothing 20 hr wfflr. muat be able SECRET ARY Mar omce. Hn open. 8·2 'r'efephonee. light typ. exp. neces. NANCY to work Sat. Good at· We have an immed. pref. Pleasant phone In&. Call Robin 752-6211 CRAlG S56-1495 titude needed. Apply in openin" for a full lime personality. Light lyp person Bidwell!! Bouti secret:ry in o ur cor ing & f~ng. 61~5090. Jt~eptionlat for erowm1 l lT AJL CURI< · que 3467 Via Lido. pqrale headquarter!! to 'iales M e w p 0 r t 8 e 8 c h Costa Mesa1 Stationers, h 0 r r . rn6urance Agency. Must 270 E 1'7 h s M SALES f'BSOMNEL a s 8 Is t l e I l' e Self Green World is look- hjiVe xlnt secretarial/ Fulltimet. A~·pl;· i~ for contemporary retail Manager with various ing for aggressive. tt'tephone skills Top person 1~12onJy. store. Only career duties. lyPlng <60+wpm motivated individuals 11 a'I a r y •· be n e f It '-------=-~--• minded, mature women acc~ratel)'.). supply ~r-for interior plant 11&les • ed I M denng & mventory, f1l · 8 · package. Call Pat, RN ne appy uslbeex· lng,etc.Excell.ulary & ase fee .and com · TEACHER'a AJde want· ed. Exp. 6 morninp. t · 12, afternoons 4-1 . S~an,646-8820 TEACHERS ASSISTANT Special clua• for han- dicapped adult.. 2 yrs colleae exper. req'd. Ex· c ell v acallon & 10· s uran c e bene fit s Wkdy.1 8.30 to 4PM United Cerebral Palsy Assoc • Santa Ana , 546·576-0 TECHMICIAM Wa11ted for service & m stallation or photo pro r e s sor S o m e mechanical & ele('tncal exp. required. (7l4 1 898·0290 Bl& red •s· ahape chair, 3'x6', xlnl c.ond, Sl.50. 8' wine sofa, SlSO, plush 960-6487 AppleK• 1010 -••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sell butcher blk tbl, HARBORAREA 4 chrs. S225. 2 dre~sers, APPLIANCESERVICE nste stand & nurror $225 We bu.y used appliance:, & more 975-0253 aft ··We aell rerond, guar. 6PM appllancea 549-3077 I IUY ArftJAHCES Les 967-8133 Fr1g1dare w /bottom freezer. 69"x32". Oli ve Green tis. 540-3811 , a rt 6 556-1139 G·E dbl oven range, 1 o ve n s elf-cle aning. harves t g old, $1 50 851·5814 or 975--0311 Dining Tbl un1que Maple ean be used 6 ~•Ze'l incl pad s 1l1nens $400 646 2652 Ba!>i.ett d in r m tablf.' w leaf. 3 1>1de cbarr:.. I arm chair. xlnt ('Ond. $200 646· 7358 6'Sof·A Lake new. green p<1Ucrn. $100 645 ~ Chnslian woman ss needs lu.m. accept aifl• or will pay small pay· menta-June75l~ ~~!~ •••.• ~P.~~ OJANT GARAOESAJ..&• S•t, Apr 25 & Sun Apr 26 lO 3 . Sm appl .• IUtchenware. plclu.res, decor Items. lampt. clothing, ETC., ETC .. ETC.,Most thiOga nearly new . Nr O.C. Fair· grounds 557-9978 ---------MOVING refrig, bkcase. bed, More Wed-Fn 8·3 381 E 16th Pl CM 631·136t GIANT RUMMAGE SALE &SWAP MEET _ Sat 9-2 Food, games, book fa ir. bake s ale Gisle r & Ca lsfor nsa: C M Two Family Garaiie Sale 1979 Cad Se\slle. ftlrn, dothsng, l'hildren 's to) 11. moving, 10 )'rs of a<" ('Um ulat1on Fri. 9-Jpm. Sat 9·3Pm 1821 Port Slanho~ N n. Telephone Sales Portable dishwasher. 10· SECT. Yellow tonl''· To~!>, k1td1el1 Items, WORICATHOME XlntCond maleh 'g ('off ti.ii $375 dothes: re('ords 216 Call Garden Grove 548-9992 536-8531 Marl(ut.>n lt'. CdM Sat ~·6JOO ASSISTANT p~r'd . Salary plus benefits with future mlsslo!1 paid. Xlnt op· DIRECTOR comm. Please apply in portumty to k good OF NURSES person or call · Apropo, growth potential Must ma e '"llCEPTIOHIST P•rttFull Receptiomst. 'l'tl>ing, light bookkeep· Ing & other clerical work. Hasson & Assoc 644-2SS2 or 1129 Fashion be non-smoker & have money, have run and be 530-5220 Atnana RefricJerotor Octagonal Spa111s h d1r11ni: \l 2 T E L E fl H. 0 H E $300 673-9344 room table. 1 r hil1r:. Garage Sale It's a Big SOUCrTERS llc yca.s 8020 Xlnt cond $895() 675 8172 g11i 50' to ;. 325 Esthet Wt. ···ucEl'TIOHIST ~~ .. UcJM~ a~, in John Wayne Allport for l person ore N ed take -charge p«!f.son. 648-2203 Da)I hrs . f lexible tsland.N"'.Bch.EOE car For Jmmed tn· on your own . C all schedule. ,A.Bk for Mrs. .,. t e r v 1 e w cal I car y ~ 898-0300 Wong Grand Avenue SALES Whalen at 714-540-6959 Conv. llosp., 1730Grand REPRESENTATIVE MCS J..._.C Ave., O>ng Beach. (213) p t 1 , f"'ll • 597·8817 ar Y Pan program, 2960S. Da.1mler Ave work own hrs & eam top Santa Ana. Ca. 92705 Sailing Instructor needed money, wall train E l""-in Npl Bch. zs,.27 • cruis· Everything s upplied qua ......,.. Emplyr In& sailboats. Wknds Merchandise 644·5198 now, full time summer. ------645.7100 Seamstress needed Cor lite & hvy sail work, e-xp or will train Good work· S.uetcry To $15,000 SERVICE STATION A'M'ENDENT Partllme evening:. Ex persence nee Apply 1n person Union 76. 3928 E Coast Hwy. CdM SEWlNG MACHJNE OPERATOR Sllil loft exp 631-1.842 SALIS 1ng en v iro nm e nt 714 /547·1344 New sales ofc sn lrv Work out of L.A. for 6 •SHIPPING DErT. wks w /carpool Sh. nee Order filler COMMIACIAL '!Ared of sellin& houses 7 SC TRY J\.eoaal days a week'? We need needed with P r. busi one licensee to leam the ness litigation for busy skills to Dl&NI&• broker Newport 84!ach law firm commeretaJ real eatale. with congenial Jllorney Income from mjmt 7141759-0700 Irvine Personnel Agy 4 day wit, Co. ben 488 E 17th. Costa Mesa __ _ !1~2660 Sul~2~ _ ~-1410 SH 0 E SAL ES IECEPTIOHIST ~t. attrarUve, good #f.aonality Phone ex· pr.ie"'·e. Interviews 1 -4pm. Tues day · Friday, full-time. Salary commensurate with ex· perlence. Harlequin Din· ner; Playhouse, 3503 S tl&rbor Blvd , S A 979-5511. while you learn. Su-per · ----- __ __ _ _ benefits: life insurance ; SECRETARY /lffal RECEPTlONlST Fo r health lnsuraoce & den-Experience sn 1itlgalion --. . .n~ .... UA?.::?~ childs /teens, F·P ff. ex· SECURITY OFftCER p'd person. hrly, sncen· 0 .C.C. Campus. te m -t i v es. b e n e fit s porary, par\ time, on Children's Boote r y call, swing/graveyard 644-2464 Mr. Milter S6.S5·S7.06/hr. Contact ------ tal plan. Contact Ken. or c ollect1 0 11 Non doc tor's ofc , exper 6756700 helpful-not nee. must be 1-.---··-----• s m oke r Hunting t on efC1 c1ent, lk working w /people, type well. Gd ~a11ary . rnnge benerits lt4i-4532 1• Beach 848-1400 5--.--Secretary ales & delivery dnvers LEGAL SEC'Y needed lmmed open 1ngs ror motivated peo-lmm~d opening tn our pie Can easily eam over g~ow 1ng Irvine office 110/hr Call Cr ·g ft Csvsl pracl1 ('e wit h 81 3 er m inimum 2·5 years exp Co a s t <..:o m m u n i t y SHOf' TRAINEE Colleges. 1370 Adams Learn engraving Ii other Ave, Coi.la Mesa. 92626. machines Company 556 5947 benefits & good potential E 0.E . M IF for right person 3121 SEC URITY GUARDS Red ~11.:._ C M _ Openings for qualified Sml oil company has P 1T 1nd1\/1duab Good start· (2 d ys) opening for good mg pay. Refundable un-typmg skills. good with St. CM \2 blks So or H1rlng now for summer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eo11 l1sh oak. eoHee tlJ I. Work 3·9 Mon Fri No Boys European I Os pd. glas!! top. 24x56 $275 20lh. JU"l E of Santa exp nee No selling Call YeUow. very good rnnd 640·9139 Ana SU Sat onl) 9-.t. 966-0151 an lpm 1 _!75957·0:..~·~9076 _ Large 0 11 Paintings. -, Selling entlrt' hOU'it' full Telephone 3 WHEEL BICYCLE r r rt'fr 1g French Seonc·e o urmture for h vin1t ·Ho .... E •asou 26 ... like new, $175 Pin\.. l>e pr~:.10n gla:.:.. r-,,. f" ,... rm. bdrm & din ing rm r P 'T Shone P'"'rson 645-3865 E h Co ft.>e tbl. \\~hr dr~t>r . ... ve r > t 1ng near nc•w. l n'"'ede lo call & cat ------O l !> o C !>luff .>I~ '" "'" s h · bo · must sell 1mmed Offer' app'ts for busy Solar c w1nns-Y!> 10 :.pd Marguerite. Cd M. Fri V ·t Dl 8•· 560 ran help w dl'll\ en Energy Co $4 50 hr + a rs1 Y x l • 11 J . Sat !1-4 bonus Ask for Al Girls· Lil Chi ck Sttn 549 90 l0 Ll9UIDYHE gray, S2S. Offer. 642·0268 Earl~ Amem :an ma pit.> EHHGYSYSTEMS l1dkUnCJMoterioh 802 bd r m !let. d hl ht'd, ~~-6'793, '1M·OS~ •••••••••••••••••••••. bookcase hdbrd, mirror T •l•phoM SciNs \ Exciting vacation club. promoting for r esort c·ondos, needs 3 to 6 bright. respons ible. am· b1t1ous people . Gd . phone voice nee Guar against comm Wkly paycheck 3 p l :.h1fts av! Call 9 5, Mon· Fri , 543· 7957 or MJ-8137 Travel EXCLUSIVE Nwpt Beh travel agency M1n1mum 2yr s e xp w travel agency. Saber agt~ ONLY Contac t REDWOOD 2X6's Xlnt decking 8-20' long New load just in from m ill. SS• /ft. 646 988$ anytime. DUTCH DOORS 12 > 36" and Jl" S50each 6'15-6371 USED Bricks wh ite glazed race . i.tampcd LAPBCo. 60o ea Plant:. 1n 15 to 35 gal c·ontatnt'r!> 536-7397 ----C amwos & Equi,......t 803 •••••••••••••••••••••• & d re1>1>t'r . de:.k & mate hint( i.w1\ cl d1air M8 99!Yl 8 PC BDHM SET T win heds "' hdbr di.. drei.ser, lamp t lil. dc,.k. cabinet. wh1\t• form1ca t o 1>::.. 3\0('a do gold base.,, 2 matthrn~ :.w1vcl !'hrs, J.:ood cond. SJOO M u s t H II IJ .' ·I i! fi "40 7028 N B 6' Ma rble top 1·11trc ... tlJI Sl OO Hrn nauJ.(atn d t' loun~e <·hr $711 c'; ru \ e I vt.>t "1n11 t·hr $50 960 9095 Garage Sale Sora. 1:hr:. bed!>. lo ad!> Of m lS(" :.ome a ntiques 2300 Port Aherdeen Pl N B Sat April 25th 11 4 SUPER SALE C a m p er <;h e I l 11· !!' ~k ale~ ... urf board'.'>. 1·111 or T V. l'lothc~ Sat & Sun !! 3. 2:J38 ColgJtt· Ur CM J~welry 8070 ...•....•........•••... Ii e 11 u t 1 f u I d 1 t1 m o 11 d hur~e.,hot• brocJl'h. J.l " 'l<h lll' gold 642 4067 Ml1~ellaM<MK 8080 ..............•.....•.. IECEPT.{TYf'IST Newport Beach law of flee. Pay commensurate Wlth ability 644-6400 lpm 951 ·~-___ Salary open call Fran 1form deposits 978 7243 numbers. some exp re 833·36Z2 Gaylene 64S-7TI7 Movie ramera "' proJet' <:ook ~a re. 20 pc s\ainles~ steel watcrles~. new . won in l'Ol'llet.l . re-g... ~.· '.'>aa1ftt·e !179 9368 &638·8191 q'd 640-8500 SALlS~/T tor , $225. Also. 35M.M Burle1I W1tlnut Un•s,er & Make a new s(art. at-SECRETAJtY Just start1ng up in a bus1 T V P I S T W 0 R D w lenses , $200 Alsu \tirrur & l\1en,.. Chl'"t tract1vt>newbed&bath ness or your own ? A Peoplewhoneedpeople PROCESSOR dark room :.et up. 550 11!130 1 makt• ulfl'• REOW000 2X6'i. IEC El'TIOHIST Hair salon work Tues Sat lrvine752 6141 store now taking ap-Legislative office needs good way lo tell people should always check the Lamer word processor SS9 0260 evs wknd !K-2 6082 Xlnt dt•< king K 20' lonll n l f f II & t efficient secretary 60 a bout st IS with a low· Service Directory In the w JI t La H II :\t•\\ load JU.'>I In rrom ~al~~ 1posons1llonsor u1n mapr~-~pm a cc urate I .>. cost C lass ifie d a d DAlLYPILOT La1wFr1ar1mn typg1nu.!1aw1lls1 &s DOCJI 804 !-.c1fa.6J' Colft•t•Thl end mill 55 ft 64b·llllK!\ tlECEPTIOHIST " pleas ant tele ph o n e -------" an'llm" Orange Co airport area 1ng receiving pos1t1on trusts M• .. t have strong •••••••••••••••••••••• lbl. all ~ct t·ond ~o ea ~ ~ voi ce Sll40 'm o ..... KEESHO law firm seeks recpl exp helpful must be en· Resumes PO Box 3151, I •1 p•1 ""' _!ypsng & arammar ND Pups AK<: 55 1 2Jil0 M t s 11 p 1 T b} Ltte typing pref'd , tmhoutlsva1atedst.1c & s elf-........ II y I DI l"'ftllls Call Mn Winslow Champ sire. M f Pel & 1 1 u~ · e 00 pbones & front ofc Newpo rt Bea ch, CA .,. s how p v t Pt) Corm•r l·oul·h ),f.'t lNeen "' lt~ht & ace-es .~ 14 8 30·5 30, M-F Ask Cor STllOUOSUMEH 9266_3___ • • forappt 8.1'7-1060 213/697·1345aft 6 pm I hide a bed & love ~eat rhrome rims w ttres S50 pat l y 0 r Lauren ' w AUHOUSE SECRfT ARY • General Assimment • TYPIST j DOG TMJNING IN Lk nu $300 549-0259 646 0859 ~1·1005 F o r a PP l c a l I Small ofhce. T yping, 6'' Personal Lines Dept YOUR HOME 14 Pc "1940" Hattan <.:ouch WINE BAG 0 Cam pe r RECEPTIOHIST (714)594·7241 b 0 0 k keep in & an d •• Secretary to • lnaurance Agy. Apply '" Obedience & chair $200 Amer Oak Shell xtra lge w t:OU('h phones. lrvlne.556-2323 • person: 333 N. Newport ProblemSolvmg I Sctry S200 Amer Oak that makes into hed TYPIST sALEs Fu11 time . • Executi"ve Office e1..N.B. S2S01oeo646-l883 lmmed opening exists responsible female toi.---------•I • ---AAA HOME DOG dresser wtm1rror l200 ,fo~ rlaht person in our wor'k In women's ••SECRITAlllES •• • lmmedlate openlng for versatile individual.. 1---------.i TRAJNING.6311-9265 En g Oak dresi.er Swap ram1ly tenn11> club btrl Nwpt Center ore. beachwear I hop . Sh80/RE/Fun$18,000 • Musrledt be capable of bandllnJ fast-paced.. Typists SA MOY ED PUPP-IE-S-.1 wlib/rmariyrrd~k.$o7a5k ~ mfore~obre~p833in·84~~vlne 644-2507 960-6'755 S&L;Super/2yt$12,600 \'a and interesting duties for newspa~r s•"'t Ty . ts '~ -vv ., ..,.,., ... Accountant/DegS19,200 • necutlve & personnel administrator. Call:. Ml piS AKC 4 wks old. Avail at 6j Sofa & loveseat. wht - ---- ••• &ICEP'TIOHIST Sale11 Exec/1blOO/rorpSl8000 • 8'2"'321, ~xt. 277 for appt. • o· ta Sec wks, Pvt ply. Holly,, Tahitian cotton $400, like Rug 10' X 12· Brn\\n ,FwlUmeMon-Frl. Must GRIAT HOURS Expd.ConsullantOurs IC tyS 760·6006lvemsg. new Misc 642-47.SS border, squares td rtlei. be personable • well Liz RelndersAgy, Inc. •• Eda.tor's Secretary •• r .. ec. Se~s Do l d k ho In bright autumn rotor~ ''°°med. & enjoy meet· 'AM-2PM 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE U gg e uo see me . Waterbed. kmg sz. i.olid Sl50 646·~2 inl the public. Requires N port/833-81.90/F brothers. age 2, Shellie-pine w /sloprng uphol good spelling • pen· or ew ree • A challen1tn1 opportunity iJI bel.nl offered by. Wanlin& to wor with Basinjl, seldom bark. sides. Sl25 ~.43'15 Lo•e l alooft1 manship. No t yping 4PM-,,.M • the Dally Pilot for someone with thee profeulonal people" watchdogs, 1st yr food Helium Bouquets de- "'one uperlenre pre SECRETARIES lnteW1eore, wit and s\W. required to be Working temporary as· Linda,640--4580.~·6186 5 pc sohd wood wate r liver ed . Perfect for fened. Full company Join the Los Angeles e aecretary lo the editor. It'• an lnt.etatin1• sign men~ allow.I you . --1 bdrm set. xlnt cond . every 0('l'8SIOn. 673-4419. benefits. Apply Pen· Times CU'culallon Team Work part time or • l)OllUoo requiring the toola of the trade-'°• job variety & Oexlb1lily. Casm Terner"ll mos old, $1000 0 8 0 Call An~wer --- ny1aver. 1680 Placentia & adapt your work temporary.Call. • wpmd.ktatlon, 70 'b.fimtypi.ng.d.ictaphone -. Yoursltlllsarevaluable male-looking for run Ad •46S.642·4:.>0.24 hrs A uthentll· p 1nba l f Jtcve., c .M. Slife he du le to your IVJCKI Ul'STON.I • ~ tbeThabUJty_ ton•·-Ct mental 1eara on abort jOnolnLosunre wiinnVJn.tlnes0 ~oeuamt~ family. $100842·2635 -machine. late 6Cfs, ~ood Htyle. Work Shrs/day ¥ uuuce. e .,..,ne .., are &eoet'OUI, lbe pay. "' " · , Bdrm set. blonde wood. cond $250 645-3865 llECEPTlOHIST/ in a Times Circulation - -•• reuonable.Appllcationsbeingacceptedonly. Call for appointment Male AKC ln1b Setter, tpl d r e<,i,er, 2 ni l e SEClfTAIY sales orrlce near your & A .. cl•s throu&h appointment by calll.ng ... 842·4321 Never a fee loves kida. S:SO 14 mo s tand i., hdbrd. plw te Square game table, eonsulllna firm is loolt· borne• have more lime 54M400 · e ext 277 e cr\·Lfin:._ old 642·0862 glass mirmr . S65 c.'Ompl Sl45, lni for sharp, enertetic for your CMl\i\y, studl9'. ::.;.;;.;;;;;;.;;;;;.;.;. e e ---toy-. 1 045 642-4919 675-8172 or lei.surely periods. We,.. Accounts , ... e ,,,._ -•positlvepersonto an· pay hourly wages & SECl.ETARY/ • ~-• fl~l'USOHNll SllMCU ........................ 1Anl1que Oak Dining Tbl GF:NUJNERURIF.S 9l'P~us~1~·w~::~ commissions Lo•f'tocessor • B k"a e l723 llrch5treet M Mml Schnauzer. also w 6 chrs, $500 Antique Only $20perstone 1 U-917 0 n I y de d I c a t e d . • 00 ueper • H•wDOft '"9ch M Shi Tzu. All shots To 1 Pump Organ f7SO. ( 11 640-8688 · 4 LOS ANGELES TlM ES motivated, & con1\sten1 A full-lime position ia ava1lablt! for accurate t .o. E. good home. 642·Sl02 Llhr sofa l500 573-4424 1375 Sunflower Ave. applicants need apply. • pen1<>n with at least two y~ experlen~ in• I~~~~~~~~~~ PENSIONED. Mature Detector Compass Coin "Rlceptlonilt C.M. Ex per. in real estate re· • proce111ln1 account.a payable for computer. Sptt' g S d 8' Print Green & White M_a gnum cost $400 asl<~ •• • HOSTISS 4 54()..0301 lated field helpful, bul Input, c8'h repottin& and diaburaement TYPIST n er. ec. guar Davenport Sl3S Ing S300 536-3375 nol necessary excell. e 1chedulln1 and forecastin1. Will prep•~• 3-4 days per week. Vaca· Seeks retiree's to pro-S48-8!Y.>.'i --------- WOOOIRINI Equal Opportunity growth oppty. with ex· • bank deposits. Must possess good office. tlon relief. Apply at : tect & love. 64().1177 Panasonic Stereo Multi· ~~ely ~~terior Dealan Employer pandlng & dynamic or-I skills. Permanent position with Jood salary. 1660 Placentia. Costa To iood home Fem. blk 3 PC Drexel Bdrm set, plex system w tsharp ..,...ter o era public con· •-----"--"----ganlzation, located In and comfoany paid benefits. Call: 642-4321. Mesa Lab mix, spayed, 11 hdbrd, nlte std. bureau s pkrs. S7S. 10 spd bike ::;.~,~: S:t~:~~o:l:: s;t~~ would like lo sell ~~aln V-11ey . Ext. 277 or appt. •• WORD f'ttOCISSOI shots 1 yr.842-7378 u $500. 551-6389aftSPM ~pa~~~sn~.2 ~':8~~~ 1"-&PM · the mOtt romphu nutri· ~!'!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ e ClaSSl"f"led Outside ~""-e Mas 11 for law office in Free puppie•. -Wrought Iron table & e before aAM art 6PM . tlonal wei&bt proaram. MA Huntlnaton Beaoh. Non· 7 wits old chairs. formal dining rm -------- 'L Pleueapply: ,.,),l·ne Personnel Dept. t:J 1HEW fDllWI( 'alO NewllOl't c.nter OJ, ..... S...350 n .. twpor1 Beach, atA ,1 , 7UtH ~ !<ll Sq\laa Opp Em.NT Hiah eaminga. SSS·9579 \hntAdl Ca.UMZ.$6111 e sal .. peraon to handle Real Estate . smoker.8'8-1400 646-l252 table , 8 c hr11 . c all POOLSUDE • Development accounts and automotive . evs 1wknds 496-0772 8 ' Queen c u r v e acc~unt1. Must have at least 2 years YARDMAN Yr, old dog to good home AquaaHde. $2SOtOBO. e expenence. Salary plus oonunlaalon. Muat . For loot rental firm. Shepherd/Golden mix. Hardwood China Cabinet 545-0327 • have car. mllea1e paid. Exoelletll company . Neat ap~arahce, good 541-Ull evef. Xlnl r ond $75 Vinyl bent!Ua. For appointment ror lnt«view, call llandwr1itng, benefits. couch S20 MS-5402 aft Sofa, chair. wall unit. • 6G·5f'78. ext. 277. e Wiii train. Apply: 1130 e· carrot wood tree &pm . Buy •• aet or each. C-•11 • • ~rt Blv4: C.M. or JN POT ---897·1632 • ,.. .,..... Time Even:!." . • Lambert-l.203 El $41M923. MUST SEU Swina set. slx 1-s. Nff<h r-• l Toro. 5 piece Madlt. bdrm I v•bo e Ca• ••1 Y_... C e 1---------1 Fem Alrdale mlx appro 1 u t l e . 11 k e n • w • pa nt, you un It SlS . • Ad11lhn"lth outatandln,& 1ttractlv1 e a yrs. Please identlly! u criflo. Beat offer. 968-6507 ~· ti. who enjoy ~ with lCJ..15 131·1030 Oya; 842·4773 ; Eves: •)'tar old youths, Start at M.00 hoUr, 2pm thru • M2 NH .~;80pm. 142-4321, ext SU. Alt ror Lori, e Fem Whippet 9 mot old. --·--·----~ ti.tween a.5:30pm. WAMTl!D TO IUY Bfaut dot. IOvu evtr· J«av• aom.thlnt to sell? • Motor ._.._ • I b u )' 0 I d • ,,,,. r)'Oft::::•=· =Annt~·~!3Js;::lOIO=· :;-;:;:£:Cl=u::&l::"=td=ada~1do=it::::w::••='-:L::;:J==~~::;~ : UUID e diamonds. Ivory, Jade 6 ~ N..,..rt a--a. I colJettt-la. eau tno .".W'!P• WAii t7).U216 .ak for Dane. • ~ O'aily Pilat Ii•• a motor ~ avalltble elQ. tb• Park Newport; Bll Canyon area cl e e:CSwrhortlr~i~ r~:°o!~":~ :.i:t:~. .boun to do. Hours: J :80 to a:a> PM Ma...1 1--~...;._~...:.;;.......__-1 •~b Fri. aD4 6:80 lo 7:00 AM a.L.111ADd I an. Ear11tn 11 approalmatel1 Nao:o. • .....,. ror tittaU. coatact lr)'u ffoUaad e .It ICJ.Oll b«WMft the houn 10:00 and 12:00. •*d•lly. ~ • o'-="~ I • 330 W. Bay Streit t. 1 • CO.i. M .. a. CA 1;_f ~~~~~~----.-...~_.-....1,~ f.Qual ~rtumur Employer 'jT I • • ••••••••••• II . . • ••• c ... . :~ . . . . CAI\ PHONE. •Int cond. S3IOOO value, only .S compl. 7f0.'102 IOIJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONN Director trombone t-..:...;._;......:....__;;...;.......:.:..::.:.:..:..{ wllh CHf. Excellent condition, SlOO. 17~2 aftertPM. TRUMPET Once in Wetime Oppty 34' diesel sloop, w. moor- ing in Nwpt Bay, loaded. Wooden desks. SlOO, Shock sailing sabit on secretary chairs, s.so. davits, complete. + on· TRS 80 basic II with pro-shore mooring w. 13'6" gram. S750&manyother Boston Whaler, pre· items . 851-1711. (erred loc. TotaJ $40,000. 67S·13S8 2 desks-1 w/typewriter r---------..1 return, 3 office chrs. l lo.ts, Sipe/ sec'y chr, 1 hlghback Docks 9070 swivel chr all in good ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAR WI CK DATSUN Son Ju01• ( Jp•d• ,_.,,, 8 ) f. J 3 11 cond. will take best offer must be sold & picked up by April 29. 540-1708 BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT _______ ___;:.. NPT BCH. 2S' as· 642-4644 •Cl9n.NU'IO 9 Walnut desks, 9 swivel LUV 1/>foa Stt*e chairs, lS side chairs SOft. MOORING with dual rears! Ideal 640-9421> &or boat Call67~3121 for landscapers, etc <Ser.~). ~... 1017 30· Dock Power Boal or OMLY $5"1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tabernacle Mast No HOWAID~roltt 3SNAKES;2Pythons&l overnighters Sl60 /mo Dove&QuallSt.s. Boa All nice Also 7S2·2534, 644-4767 NEWPORT BEACH large snake cage $325 -a~~ "5 5 CONNHI. r HE~ROU r -..._ ., I ,. \, t ~4t. 1100 H14HtlUYH Top dollars fOt' Sport• Can, Bup. Campen, 914's, Audi's AsltforU/CMGR JIMMA.aJHO VOLISWAGEH 1J7U Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 84!.2000 TOPDOLLAI PAID FOR GOOD&CLIAH USED CARS! H.w•c&. c.... Mete 645-1700 WANTED! Late model Toyotas and Volvos . Call us TODAY!!! liarle Ike TOYOTA-~OlYO •US•IMW1• '711.meA CS4U 73 VOLllWA ... ..,. .. (TllO) .,.mlA,IR<,.> 1'THINCJ11 'eatlAIUDl'f. (OOU) YtlJow rib a b!Uk t.c>p, '11 DOIA (011.5~ air ~d., roll c=s IDll Ca..Mln•d1p1 wbeela•talA ~ diUoo1 ... Cll' beat of. 2600KMJorlllK1 "115~ rer . Call eu-.u10 cr~-540-9100 Alloy wbeel1, •t•reo ----------' wHkde11 ; Ht·OOlll.!~-!!!!!!~~~U cauette, .power win· 7~ KondA, Cuatom ...,. evenba,. • ,.......,..., If -dow1, u .eoo o~ltlnal _., no ao1wer, PLtASE 75 Cpe DeVllle, white red IDllH, «tXCeptlonaU1 kit, many extra.a .... to keeptrytnc! . leelber, l'UN sreat. New nict ! PRICED TO apprec. ~ I • _ SE •, 1 __;,...:_ ______ ...J 74VW........,. t rH, trana. a..veded. C~~~ '79 Prelude, am /fm All·FK C'IH.U. at.ereo. Pirtt S2.000 take1 It . i.tlrBroadway radio, 51p. moon roof, SZZOOotbelt.oUer. _m_, __ a.._1_1 ____ _ Santa AH SSS.3171 _X_ln_t _co_nd_. UM __ l.25'7 ___ ~----1153-~..:17;..:!1::.._ ___ ( '71 Serille, llbrt cond, ful· J191• t7l M•ll HOW•RD tytoaded, awoo. 1\e Mo.e &&IHltg ••• •••• • ••• •••••• •••• • "' "" 951 ·9500 dya 4~374.S eva ,.,. Of Yow '17 Jaguar a.a MK US ell YOLOWA ... IMW "8 'p 1 Or oric. very weU main-Lar&• ulectlon of LeeM ,.~le talned .Muat Sacrifice Volklwalldl wttb com- '78 Cad Dl•el, 1lvr on slvr, all extras. xlnt cond, SOK ml. $9000. -.... •"'70 petltive -ices. McL.,...IMW!I _..... .... ·hyOrt...e ·11;:~0:.::0~12 ~~~= 87~8827 E.-..1 M~· --· rvt'V ''""' a,ow,....,._t ___ 642-_Zllll ___ , ~ DM100 '79 Seville Spec. Ed . ••••••••••••••••••••(•• w /only 6000 ma , has '7STorino4Dr.aut.o.PlS. everything., black / P /B , A /C, nu ticp!S. silver . pp Sl 3 .~00 . c l ean , pp S16 H . _(7_14_1_5_2_;_2-...;..5_3..::...33..::...._1 9734 l3731 Hart>M 1975 IMW •••••• ••••••••••••••••• Garden Grove 97S·031 l _M_l_·288_9 _____ ........,. 2002 C""'•I '73, xlnt oood .. radials, ---------1 A u t 0 m--; t I c cllDl wbh, $4900. '6().'85 VW left & right '71 BLACK CAD tranamluioo, air cond. 847-9598 aft5PM. door, '73 left door. ~ Loaded, as is,~ and LO w mi Je s ! ---------.!.each. Wettem style whJ ~ (990NCA). '74 Ghia ad cond. nu eng. rims (or Super Beetle --------....,..._.LY $5995 +mote. $3200/0BO S20ea.S48-97'4 'i7Seville,Xlntcond.rut-v.... 847·9731 or (213)871·9118 ---------1 ly loaded w /sun roof lo MIUCUMAZDA '79 VW Convt. 13K mi, mlg n 200 646-4203 , 21.50 Harbor Blvd. Mffcede...... f7 4 BlaupunJrt am /fm ca.ss. 646·0566 COSTA MESA •••••••• .. •••••••••••• Bight Yellow tan int. 645-5700 Truly exceptional cond. SELLING YOUR S97SO. S7J..873S. ORANGE COUM'TY"S MERCEDES? WIPAY '76 RABBIT, reblt eng, OU>EST TOP DOU.AA SS air, AM /FM. auto. xlnt . · ~ ' Call Jaclt Bacon cond. $2700. 751-8771 ~ JIM SUMOHS '79 vw Westphalia I IMPOlt'TS Xlnt cond. lo mi, sips 5. 1 Sales-Service-Leasing 1970Harbor Blvd s t ereo, am /fm tape Roy Carver,lnc. COSTA MESA deck, ice box ; sink, elec. Rolls 'koyce BMW 63l-l276 833-9300 hook-up • more. l9800. 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• V ..... ltahd Usectc ... 11 '71 CMYl'Oltt c .. .-o 121 T-Top Stereo. mag wheels . power wlndows 4c door locks, 33,000 mlles llSlVQE) '80 LTD WAGON · "Fpt~ Factory Driven". q>Qf rack. air cond .. stere.o. Lie 6S4ZGZ · $8997, ., Johnson & Son Llnc:oln Mercury · C-Osta Meo 540·S630 ------ '81 FAIRMONTwith8,ooO miles. 6 cyl., pwr. st1er- 1ng, auto trans . Ir>'· BIG959 $5950 · Joh~ & Son Ltnl·oln Mercury · Costa Mesa S40-S630 ~ . U.Coi; 9f 4! .....•............. , ... s.ul-4967 Boat Slap WANTED 24' ----~-__ s __ _ ---------I With parking ror local re· Young Amazon redhd sident 642-~aft SPM 1977 CHIVROLET .............. , C..t.M9M "'46-UOJ w 140.9467 l540Jamboree j~~~~~~~~~ Call Bill or Claire, 1 Newport Beach 640-6444 '73 280C Xlnt cond Must _63 __ 1._s_3SO_. -----~995 '78 TOWN SEDAN f11\J Y loaded, ind power ~Ip· dows & seats L1i1is· uraous' Lie 233UKH · ~950 Johnson & Son L.mcoln Mercury -Cosl4 Mes a 540-5630 __ ......__ parrot complete with lg 1/z T()ti PICl(UP cage $3SO. 646-1869 ,....,....,._ Widesi de sbortbed 642-38SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• model with automatic --Aircraft 9110 trans., pwr. steering, Pl-.01 & °'"Jmtt 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fiberglass shell . mag •••••• ••••••••••••••••• type wheels & wade tires KAWAI CO N SOLE 'IOCESSHAll2 & a black beauty! PIANO. Walnut, 10 mos IFR. Nr ne~ S47,000. OF96443). old. P erf. cond. Must <lse-back avail) 549-2203 OHL Y $4799 sell. 11700/0BO. 846-2001 c ... ~,.... S./ MIRACLE MAZDA WURLITZER, spinelle model 4410, two 44-note keyboards , 13 pedal notes, auto tone control. earphone jack, solid ma- .Pie w/matching bench. 1400 cash or 1450 de· livered. S47·1MS Reftt 9120 2150 Harbor Blvd ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA CA MPER SHELL-Fits 6 R 70 Dodge Step-side truck ____ 4_-_s __ o __ _ $200. 493-7309 alt SPM. '74 Chevy Blazer. runs 6 pack campershell great, many extras . S200 bard Ir soft top 13750. 631-3929. _63_1-_03_1_1 _____ _ SporthHJGoodt 8094 Motorhed.... 9140 '78 Ford 2SO, service ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• body. manual lift gate. Prof. model bvy d uty elec. bicycle exerclSer. $300. 67 Hl1216 •MOPED• $5450 /0BO. Davia Brown Co. 64tr 1884. '80 Puch Sport MKll. 1--------- xlnt cond. t!lOO/best of-'79 Ford lSO, 17K m i. TY, Radio, fer 548-3917 <Tina> Service body, byd. gate. Hlff, St.no 1091 $62SO /OBO. Davis · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mot5or<n.tft/ t · Brown Co. 64trl684. Beautiful Color TV 2 yr coofen 15 wrnty Free de ti very •••••••••••••••••••••• $148. 646-1786. '761<%400 69 Ford 16' flatbed. 1 •.AJ ton' good rood : $3800. 552-~ Panasonic VHS Model Xlras, nu Ures/baU. 1600 2 hours old perfect As ls, M50firm. '71 Dat~un louti or xtrlasl, cond. '650631-1S32 5 ... •ttz new r1ma, res. pan . -OB0536-4630 PO RSC HES WANTED Allow us the opportunjty to consider the purchase or trade·in of your clean Porsche. Check with Us Today! Top Dlllar Paid ForYourCar! JOHHSOH & SOH ~~ Costa Mesa S40-S630 Wel'ay OVER ..... For Your Good VW, Porsche or Audi • 4" \ ,. . . . New '80 BMW 733i, white w /black int. BBS whls, alpine suspension, snrf, air, stick shift. 8,500 mi. take over Buy or lea.se Please call Eves: 7S1·7153 ask for Antonio. '79 320i Topaz, well cared for please call. 494·0518 for appt to see. '78 BMW 633, xlnt cond, 4 spd, anthracite gray- belge, 34,000 mi, $21,000. PP, 842·3433. '78 BMW 3201. Full eqpt Nu tires It clutch. Full malnt. rent Mint cond Ba t ofr. Wknd /eve 714/Sll-401.S c.,n t715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sell $75001080 7S2·2-404 Super Beetle, '72, new dys: 552-S4n eves re bit eng., good int., s un· '79 300D, Sunroof, rf. Sl800.173-1210 am trm Sl8,300/Will '76 vw Bug. Gold mint trade 4SOSL842·7866 40,000. Time-up, brakes. Optf ,746 AM /FM $4100/0BO. • •••••••••••••••••••••• _842_·_9_11_6 _____ _ '74 Opel Manla, burgun· '79 VW Weetlalla Cmpm- dy, vinyl top,SZ.000. ble. Stave, telr, am/fm 955-1698 can. 1leepa 5. 21mpg, lo PMCJeOf t74i ml1. $8500/080 nghts •• •• ••••••••••••••••••• 175--4580. LEASE DIRECT! ---~-----.,,~I ckedl Sl.20010 • 751.0.34 '81 VW, reblt 1800, dual carba, custom ln ~ ouL Sacrifice l3000. 968-9110 '78Camaro Air, automatic. power steering, 27,961 miles, (882VE1 > $4tU Barwick Imports 131·1ll I '76. VB, a /c , am/fm radio, .ltlnt cond, many xtras. S2875.96U087 198 I l'EUGEOT TUUO. 1970 VW Camper Van, '78 CAMARO Xlnl. cond IE•CH •~s newen& .• IDOO. Muttaee .......... llOAM&~~~· tteuto,Jlm ~ lf76CANJ NEWPORTBEACH '17BUG-XLNT Thia c oupe has an 7SJ..OtOO Lota Ulltsell !T1 Camaro with T-top automatic tram.. pwr ':i~ · II.lat cond. l O'*Der. s teerlnJ. air cond., roncw t710 544-2JI08 c1.111tona interior. 4 cyl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• V•o t17J _. ... _ engine Ir runs great! POISCHI 1979 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•roW ft20 (315MYO>. #I VOL VO-•• -••••••••••••••••••••••• O .... LY $3595 9'2:8. Fully loaded. 15'400 ~ SEE US FllST! '"" ortg. ml., xlnt cond. ln· JN ORANGE COUNTY! MIRACLE MAZDA akte Ir out. Blue book We bsve a 1ood selection 2150 Harbor Blvd. wholesale is Gll.375; our SALIS. SBYICI or N E W It US E D COSTAMESA sale price Is S2S.775. AHDUASIHG Chevroleul Mercvy 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY~ RHIST , LINCOLN·MERCUIJ.Y DEALERSHlP ~671.~ LlNCOLN-MERCUR i 16· 18 Auto Cent.er Dr.t : SD Fwy-Lit Forest eM!l IRVINE 130.7000 j. '79 MA RQUIS 4 door ~i.lf> factory air, AM t f M stereo Uc 627YBO · ~ John&oo & Bon Lincoln Mu cury -Cosu Mesa 540-5630 '71 Montego MX, auto. radio, a tc, new bat&ery h300 540-493.'5 , I I '78 MONARCH with AM /FM 1tereo, ~r windows. factory .atr cond. Lie. 008UNQ• ~ $3997 . Johnson " Sob Lincoln Mercury · Ceeta Mesa S40-5630 23" Color TV Excel. I~~~~~~~~~---------• Cons o 1 e w a 1 nu t .78 Honda Hawk. xlnt Blue Bench seat for Mini Cabinet. Sl.SO, 962-1523 cond., SOOO ml, best or. Truck. New $45. 83&-9060 645-5700 (200368). Ask for Duke OVERSEASDELIVERY VW-PORSCHE·AUDl r-----·----1 or Milte. EXPERTS 445 E . Coast Hiway '73 Good Cond, 73K mi, COHHEll C HEVROLET '80 ZEPHYR with only 11 ,000 m iles, 4 cyl.. bucket seat s, stefeo. Lie. 601ZEE · $4197 Johnson & Son Linco&h Mercury · Cost Meitla IOGh & MariM fer. 675·3972 _a_f_te_r_5.:..p_m_. ____ ~ at Bayside Drive $2000/0BO Newport Beach 673-0900 S4S.9697 eves THEODORE ROBINS IAILllKI VOLVO 1916 lbrbor Blvd. Eqell,...... '7 8 6 so y A. M AR A Chevy Luv '80, longbed, ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECIAL low mileage. AM /F~ cass. stereo, CiretMf'al 90 IO SlOOO OBO 87s-1852 at'ler 16K m1, camper shell. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 • sssoo. 631-0844 all s. 18' Whitewater canoe Like new M50. Motor H---. Sdtl I 548-'967 lewt /SIGI ep f 16 '61 Dodge ~T . work truck, 4-spd. 6-cyl. util boxes. runs xlnt S650 499-5754 Premium prices paid for any used car C foreicn or domestic> an good condJtlon. . See Us First! ---------..................... . '°$!!:.~:""' ••cVc,20 WE CAN SELL YOURR.V • 2 ton \ruck. 1 owner, no bed. gd brakes " motor SBOO. 548-6800. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marine Electrician Design /lnslall/repalr Qual. work. 549-2520 eve. loah,M ... Eqlll,.... tOJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• so bp elec. start Smu.ld o. B. enc. ~-Boat & trailer free w /sale of eng . DaveM2-4853. ...... ,oww t040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 SIOPJACK. 24' w /tralle'r. Xlnt financing. Call Gery or Don63H400. 16 ' Fishing Boat with trailer 6 SO hp Evenrude. Ocean ready $500 '11 Tri HUI.I, 13Cllp Volvo, n w, all brand oew lul, tnel treller. $4300. 8*3410. u· " .. "*' boet1 tr1r ..,......_ ..... "1oat, Jo~••o• oJ~.Jlb.p. '11t/OIO.._ 55&-1304 RENT : 22· lux. mtr •70 Dal!IWl 1600 PU, Nu home. Slps 6, se~·con~. brakes, radiato r , & ~8 llJ rbm Hl\d ~~ k · + 8 m 1 valve job. Runs great, l c!.!lh ~h·'J ~ 0330 · Xlnt mpg. SHOO.PP AMot l•pa ted 72' DISCOVERER 25', (42178Y) 4116-3916 ..... .'••••••••••••••••• flber1las, streamline .. 71 ~T Font PU S8M AH. Romeo 9705 beau.t. Sipe. s. Just re-di ' b 2' ••••••••••••••••••••••• (·· ..... lahed , -·t b camper spec, x ca , ouu · a.AD c ance, batt, R&H, 360 VB, 4 bbl LEASE moving. 830-l4l2 · carb. 2 gas tanJt!, air ._..'-"lce,rwts shocks. pb. pe. all nu DIRECT! & Acc....-9400 tires + xtra wide in re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ar. Bargain at $1800. ,.,. .. DatscmZ motor + ...... .-.. 761-5il7 67S·lm v •• '570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Dodae Van auto, p /s, p/b, reg. gas, $1695/0BO 646-1678 1981 ALFA SPIDEllS llACHIMPORTS Ml Dove 5'rNt • NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 t707 Cl_..._. .... ,.. ... ...,. -·· "' l!J!'!!· Dats.t 9710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19720.ATSUM FORD 10fJ0 llARROU lllllfl CO'>IA Ml ~A 6·11 OOIO 240ZCOUrE 1970 Porsche 914. runs 4 speed trans., AM·FM ood $3100 radio. mag wheels & ex· g · · tra sharp! <278GMX). , ____ 83_l_--03_i_7 __ ~ OHL Y $4595 '79 911 SC Targa, mlnt MIUCLI MAZDA cond. Fully equipped COSTA MESA 646-f JOJ 540..9467 OlAMCH COUNTY VOL.VO Largest Volvo Dealer ln OraqeCcMmty! BUYorLEASE DIRECJ' 2150 Harbor Blvd. w I m an Y o P ti o n s . COSTAMESA Custom paint Best of· r.:"t~-.:r.m---~ , ___ 6_4_s._s_1_0_0 ___ -1. :;~;,~.'t:il.:"·•m ., ~-· '77 Data1,1n 8210, $3100 oc best oiler. 57 3S6A. Clean nms well.~ • ..,._J..._._4 ... ~ .... ~._._'J,,;.._...., .... ~. Cla ulc $4300 /0 8 0 10 120 Garde9 Grove Bl ~9531 Garden Gr~ 530-9190 loll loyce '71 • ••••••••••••••••••••• •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ~ 1~~v~. ~~ :i:t IOY cond. se,ooo. 646-7596 CAIVll ~llS~~Cl ~-~~ .......... . l'-----' ~'"tti GtMnll ttOI 548-9102 CLOHD SUNDAYS '80 Dataun 280ZX, aut.o, S.- w/all optiool. sunroof, ••••••••••••••••••••••• cuatom chrome, black LI!!. A.SE w /red Inter. Priced to ~ ~.~~y. w ,500. DIRECT! ''M DATSUN 2srl 2+2. 1911SAAI TUllOI .'\. '\io I I .11 I 11 •I fi ! ••1'11 \!~-\ So41>-I 200 MMWr CLEAN '71 MONTE C ARLO. Stiver W / burgundy interior. Air cond., AM/FM cassette, power brakes, steering. nsoo 768-5837 540-~30 ' • ~~~ .......... !r.~~ '85 Mustang, xlnt c~: '.it new radials, new '72 aetz eng, a /c, ps, am-Im c au. 12800 /0 so 962.3433 .. 'ill Chevelte, lo mi. a /c, '78 M\&ltan& II Gh1a 11dk auto, tilt, very clean blue, a /c, ps, wire wbb. 961-1285 '4400. 7~105(} I' '71 Chevette, 4 dr. 4 spd, '79 Wuatanc. 4 cyl, 4 spd. a /c , AM /FM. 17 ,000 a /c,lomi,loaded.$4995 771·10!M 1 ml· 1 . 93900. 96:M583. ''79 Z28 T-Top. a /c am/fm cassette, meg.s, sharp, 146-8838 '70 Caprice, air, pa, pb, am /fm radio, SSOO or beat offer.~ 'fllMALIBU Am /Fm Casa $llOO/OBO. 875-MI» ________ __. '86, orig owner, It b,1,1,ac. bdtap, 6 cyl, iood c~. SZIMS. 96M067 1 >. 'I Mualang, '79, 3 door. tl~t cond., best offer. ~~t pty. 645·26S2: 644·952!'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 DELTA ROYAL. runs ~xcellent $1000. 545-540'lafttt6pm.0 1 '78 Impala St W1n. AC, P111to tt87 PS/PB, Xlnt cond. SZ850. •••••••••••• .. •••••-• _c_a_l_l 541-67 __ 37 ____ __. '90 PINTO with ecoooey 4 cyl ., pwr 1teerln1. "Ford Fae\or)' Driven", udio. Lie. lHZEP · "m . Jotwon •'Son Llncoln )lercury -~ Mtta54o.511» W 9921 ,...._ tMI ....................... '71 Bonnerille 4dr Wan. td cood. )tut tell. SacrUtc• d)'ll: -....: ~: ... .-. I ... , .. ... ... . • • .. :. I • .. . :; .. ;: I ... --... .. .. .. • -. ~I -I The spirit of Marlboro in a low tar cigarette. ., " . ... 'f '· .-. ') ... Statues skirting statutes? By JERRY CLAUSEN OfUleo.My~lteff ~ . "They're beggin1 the judge to put me in jail," claims Ali Roushan of Costa Mesa. He has been order ed by Orange CoW\ty Supenor Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald to show why he shouldn't be held in con- tempt for erecting a third tower- ing metal sculpture in his weld- ing shop's parking lot at 1550 Superior Avenue. The hearing on the contempt issue is scheduled for June 2. ASSISTANT CITY Attorney Mark Huebsch said the city is seeking both civil and criminal contempt citations against the fiery Iranian immigrant, who could face a $500 fine and five days in jail if found guilty. But Roushan could spend even more time in Jail. according to Meir Westreich, American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who has taken up Roushan's battle with city officials ·'The Judge could issue an or· der to take down the "Volcano" llhe latest Roushan sculpture 1 and keep him in Jail until he does it." Westre1ch explained. "It could be indefinitely " But Westreich . 1s confident that the June 2 hearing never will be held. 0 HEARINGS ARE scheduled May 19 on Weslreich's motions challenging both the contempt order and ordinances which brought about Roushan ·s prob- lems in erecting "Waterfall." the finit sculpture. "It could all be resolved in At :·s favor on that date," Westreich said. Officials contend that Roushan is erecting the metal structures without proper zoning permits Roushan and Westreich con- tend the works are sculptures, not s\ructures. and that \he city has no right to regulate their erection. A CITY LAWSUIT is s till pending on that matter. which Ro us han contends has First Amendment ramifi('at1ons The lawsuit filed last Sep tern ber d a1ms Roush an must comply with ordinances govern- ing height and safety regulations after submitting plans to City Hall. At that time. Judge Fitzgerald issued a temporary injunction prohibiting Roushan rrom erect- in g additional works until the case is heard Roushan erected the 5 foot-tall "Butterfly Wings." during the framing of the injunction Last week he raised the 45 foot "Volcano " THE CITY MOVED Tuesday for the citation hold10g Roushan in contempt of the temporary in· 1unction C ity Planning Director Charles Roberts noted that Roushan's "contemptuous acts and attitude have made it more difficult to hold other citizens . . to the standards of the Costa Mesa Municipal Code." Westreich admits the city can regulate construction. But city ordinances make "no difference between a piece of art and a bath house, and there sure in hell i$," he said. Even 1 u the attorneys jockey for posltJon, 'Rouahan plans an •80-foot-talJ "Tomado" and a fifth, taller sculpture to com- plete the sequence. 111111 c• 1111111 Nl&ht and momtna low ~loucls. Hazy aunabln Fri-d a y afternoon. Lowa toftltbt 52 alon1 the coaat. eo fnland. H.lgha Frida)' .. to '74. l•llllllY Ali Rowhan welds and rides crane politioning 45-foot "Volcano" alonglide hi• prevfott,& workl, the winged "Butterfly" and meditation tower "Waterfall'' m front of his Superior Avenue weldi.np shop in eo.ta Me1a. Dentist put 'radi":' in womd1''S mouth AUBURN (AP> -A W0'1an who saya her dent11t l~ad­ vertently left a radio in 1h•r mouth has asked a rook·and~roU sta tlon to turn down ~itt transmitter or pla7 aoft~ .. 1 • But atatlon KAHi 1 n wa director and chief operator, Al Buck, aaid Wedneaday he reJ~­ ed the woman's request. · Her dentist waa due bac~ In town today anyway, and cOWd solve the problem, Buell aaid where It touched a 1old crown. Buck aald that obvlou.sly re- sulted ln two dilslmllar metals in presenct ot an electrolyte - saliva -form1n1 a primitive crystal radio aet that oteillates on the frequency of KAHJ's 5,000·watt transmitter. The phenoJ:Qena 11 well known In radlo but rarely observed. •'She telephoned here a1mott lii tean, Nit to make aure Uuit's what the trouble waa 10 lhe could tell ber husband before lie ti1d. ber coaunlt~." Buck 111d. \'t<A N(,£ C.OU NfY C ALlfOHNIA 25 ClNT5 ·western to lose OC air routes? By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ... Delly,_. ..... Under a proposal now bein1 advanced by Oran1e County of- ficials, Western Airlines would lose , and Pacific Southwest Airlines would gain, permission to serve John Wayne Airport. Officials familiar with the plan -a. synthesis of two pre- vious proposals say Western would be in an unfavorable posi- tion because it has no plans to purchase new and quieter jet aircraft, namely the McDonnell Douglas DC·9 Super 80. PSA, on the other hand, has purchased four of the Super 80s. It has said it would use only those planes at John Wayne Airport if the county permits it to begin service. THE PROPOSAL would favor the three other air carriers now serving the county Air Cal, Republic Airlines and Frontier Airlines because they, loo, have plans to purchase Super 80s Wngress to hear President WASHINGTON <API -Presi· dent Reagan will address a joint session of Congress Tuesday night on his economic program. The president, who bas not been seen in public since be wu shot in an assassination attempt March 30. will 10 before the House and Senate at 6 p.m . PST, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said to- day. • His address will come one day after Congress returns from a two.week Easter recess. Speakes said Reagan's economic recovery program was "a subJect the president believes is of the utmost im- portance to the nation and one on which he believes he should communicate in person with members o f the House and Senate at this time. "He reels it is particularly im· portant that he outline his views as his program moves forward in the legis lative process ... Speakes said at a White House briefing for reporters. "He is eagerly looking forward to the opportunity lo be back on Capitol Hill. .. The president ·s last major s peech was also in the Capitol He addressed a Joint session Feb. 18, giving his views on the state of the nation's economy and his recommendations for improving it Since he was shot. he has been visited by political leaders and several others. including two re porters, but he has avoided large crowds and has not left the White House since he returned there April 11 from his hospital stay. Marine unit in 100-mile desert hike WARNER SPRINGS lAPJ In full battle dress, a Marine battalion Is marching across 100 hot, dusty miles in cadence. The five-day endurance hike by 531 officers and men was stepped off Monday by Lt. Col. Jay V. Sullivan, commander Qf the 3rd Battalion, Sth Re1lment, lat Marine Dlvlllon. After their start at the Salton Sea, the troops -all men - have moved throu1h hills, acroa1 hi1hway1 and both low and hip desert under 90-de&ree heat. Sullivan said they wlll reach their home baH of Camp Pendleton "In a combat-ready status." A cbeerln1 crowd that IP· eluded the elementary acbool band met t.hem • TuesdaJ after, noon ln Born10 Sprifll•· That niJht, they camped outald• to.a. Medlea treated aever l Marlnet for le1 eramp1. A lo1i1tJC1 and IUPJ>l1 .,. .. Mt up west ot Bom10 Sprtnp. Tb• march end• In Camp Pendleton. where the men trained b)' 1narchln1 113 liiUll Ulroqh'ldlll UJd valle~ of tM 1pra~~· 1"'8dbj bue. The proposal will be con- sidered May S by the county Board ol Supervisors. A key provision of the plan is thaL.all commercial carriers would be required within 60 days after the plan is adopted to com mil themselves to purchase of so-called stage 3 aircraft, the Federal Aviation Administra lion's name for the new and quieter jets. Because Western has no plans to purchase stage 3 aircraft, officials said. it would be denied access to the airport after Oct. l , the date the plan would take effect. WESTERN now operates two flights daily between Orange County and Salt Lake City. It began service last October un- der an interim access plan. <See WESTERN, Page AZ> Barbara replaces Judy, Judy, Judy ' NEW YORK CAP) -Cary Grant, making his firth tnp to the altar at age 77, has married former publicist Barbara Harris, who is said to be in her 30s, the New York Daily News reported today. The secret wedding is thought to have taken place last week in either Palm Springs or Las Vegas. "Yes, we are married. I cannot tell you where or when. That's a secret. But we've been married for a while," Ms . Harris told the News from the couple's Beverly Hills l'\ome Wednesday night. Grant, who has shrugged off questions about a possible marriage, and Ms. Harris have been constant compahions several years. Grant's former marriages were to Virginia Cherrill in . 1934 , Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton in 1942. actress Betsy Drake in 1949 and actress Dyan Cannon in 1965. All four marriages ended in divorce. Box~ng fatality ' . cause uncertain An Orange County Coroner 's autopsy on an 18-year·old man who died after an Irvine boxlne match falJed to determine his cause of death. police said to-day. Authorities won 't know what killed him until the results of toxicological tests are known in six to eight weeks, said Irvine police Sgt. Ron Flathers. He said, however. the cor- oner's office has determined that there were no indications that Adolfo Escobar or Santa Ana suffered great bodily harm in the boxing match that took place Tuesday outside an Irvine industrial firm. SGT. FLATHERS said there was some i ndication that Escobar had a problem with his heart. A spokeswoma'h for the cor· oner's office said Escobar com· plained immediately after the start of the match and collapsed when he tned to take his boxing- gloves off. Police said Escobar, an employee of M.P .C. Industries, 2150 McGaw Ave. Ca metal polishing company), was with a group of men from the firm who decided ·'to put on the gloves and spar around" on their din- ner break Tuesday. IRVJNE POLICE Lt. Bob Len- nert said that so far there is no indication that there was any criminal behavior involved in the incident. M P .C. Co ntroller John Spencer said this morning that he's not sure whether the com· pany will try to adopt any new policies to discourage men from boxing on their dinner hour. He said the company "en· courages the men to stay fit" but doesn't supply the men with any athletic equipment and doesn't organize any sporting events. Escobar had worked for the company since July of 1979. Shot-at-officer brings arrest A 25-year-old Fullerton man was being held for questioning today in connection with the ear- ly morning shooting attack on a police officer who waa writing a parking ticket, Fullerton police said. The officer was not Injured. The shooting incident oc- curred along the 3000 block of North Associated Road, near Cal State Fullerton campus. OFFICERS said patrolman Jerry Teplansky was writing the ticket at 4:16 a.m. when he saw a muule flash and heard a ahot from a comer about eo yards away. He immediately radioed for assistance and officers from Anaheim, Brea, Fullerton, Placentia, the California Hi1hway Patrol and Loa An1elea Sberifrs Office oonveraed on the area. Add1t1onally, the Lot Ansel• sheriff's helicopter was c•lled In. "Houae·to-houae" contact• were made tn the area, police said, leadina to the &:22 a.m. •· tenUon of Kent D. Lettct> at hit home !orqueatlonln1. " POUCE ll)C)lce1man Hid Liltch I• betn1 held on auaplcion of .... ult Wltb tptent to eommlt mu•r. A ,., mapum bandlun wu confllcattd llt IAl&cb'•"bome on the IOOO blOek of DOrUl Alioclat· ta r084; .. omcers declined this morning to say what evidence led them to detain the suspect. They said he offered no resistance when taken into custody. Though no bullet casing was found at the scene, officers said they were certain a shot was fired at the officer. An Investigation is continuing In the area. Ruruwr sa,-s marathon's • not alljoy The Boston Marathon la aenerally considered the 1rand· daddy of all recet. For all Ill be•ulY. preatl•• and splendor, there ll nooe bett.er. For a runner, partlclpatlnc In the .Bolton M1tathon ta com- parable to a Wor•d Seajn or Super Bowl. Georae Araua, an employee ~ the Dally Pllot, ••• able to ,.... •Use hla dna1n Mon.day wlMlt be experltnced hit rtnt Boato• Marathon. . .•c.._.•. . ... - Al'..,..... RODENTS WIN RACE -Sister Julia Clare Fontaine holds Bobby aloft after rat won Spalding College of Louisville, Ky., annual "Rwt of the Rodents," a spoof of the Ken· tucky Derby. Bobby earned a golden crown and a loving cup tull of cereal. Secretaries to strike? San Jose female office workers demanding equal pay By The Assoclaled Press Secretaries. who keep chaos ~rom overrunning offices, had .heir day in the limelight. But . not all were happy Female San Joseofhce workers threlitened to strike Wednesday if they don't get parity with men do· ing comparable work, and a Los Angeles organization issued an "OCCice Workers Bill of RI ghts." There were bright moments during National Secretaries Day. too Hundreds of office workers re- ce1 ved bouquets from the1 r bosses. and Richard Vogel. director of Hollywood Community Hospital. drove six of his secretaries in a limousine to lunch at a fast-foot restaurant. VOGEL, WHO ARllANGED for candelabra. music and other entertainment for the occasion. served the women in a red waiter's uniform . In San Jose. the fourth largest city in the state with more than 6()0,000 residents. some 200 female office workers held a lunchtime rally outside city hall to reaffirm their ~ecision to strike May 5 if they don'tgetpay parity with men doing similar work ''This is significant because it 1s the first time women have said thev are ready to go on strike over this issue alone." said Karen Friedman of the American Federation of State, County and M unicipaJ Employees. A FSCME Local 101 represents the city's 2,000 workers. half of whom are women. The union's contract does not expire Wltil July, Ms . Friedman said, but members vote<l 9·1 this month to stage an unfai'r labor practices strike unless their de· mandforparityis met . SAN JOSE IS considered "the feminist capital of the country" because the mayor and the ma· jority of the 11-member City Council are women. "You would think that with all these women at the top, the city would be sympathetic to the de· sires of female workers," Ms. Friedman said. "Butthatisn 't the case." She said the city agreed during last contract to fund a $500,000 study to see if women were indeed paid less than men for compara- ble jobs. The study. by a San Fran· cisco consut'ting firm, was re- leased in December and showed men earned about 15 percent more than women. But she said the city is offering to boost wages only by 3.5 percent a year for two years in 27 of 288job ............... RIOT WEAPON -Masked youth in Londonderry, Northern :Ireland, uses higb-p0wered slingshot during rioting Wednes- .day ni~t. The disturbances followed the funerals of two tteens kill~ by an Army Land Rover on Sunday. ORA ... COAST l1UyPllat categ.ories. About 450 workers would be affected. Currently wages for women range from $10.200 for a typist- c lerk to $31,500 for a systems a nalyst, with most workers clustered in the $13.000 to $14,000 range. she said. IN SOUTHERN California, an activist organization called Los Angeles Working Women an- nounced· a 12-point "Office Workers Bill of Rights" during a rally attended by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Jncluded in the list were rights to receive benefits, pay and pensions comparable to those paid to men and to refuse to do personal errands for employers. as well as an end to discrimina- tion based on race. age, sex or marital status. • Other rights in the list included medical care, maternity benefits, grievance procedures, periodic written salary reviews and equal access to promotions. Since most office workers are not unionized, they generally lack the bulk of the "rights" listed by the Los Angeles group. From Page A1 WESTERN • • As officials familiar with the proposal see it, Westem's flights would be turned over to PSA. WHILE PS.A officials have said they want more than two flights, "They'll take what they can get,•· one county official commented. PSA holds yet unused route authority from the Civil Aeronautics Boa rd to fly bet ween Orange Co unty and San Jose and Sacramento. Introduction of PSA into the Orange County market could touch off a competitive battle with AirCal, which also flies to Sacramento and San Jose. THE NEW proposal uses a so· called "noise budget" approach to granting permission for car· riers to serve the airport. Under this concept, annual noise reductions goals would be eslabti.lhed, both for the total noise generated and the amounts of noise by each air carrier. Carriers who could not meet the noise reduction goals would lose flights. AlrCal is now permitted 25 fliebts per day. Republic 12 and Frontier and Western two each, for a permitted daily maximum of 41 departures. ,,.., THE FIGURE would be in· creased to 55 within the next five years, but only if noise reduc- tions art achieved. The 14 new tu1hta could be allocated to ne• carritn or the incumbents, or both. It i. the intent of the county's current airport policies to r'e· duce the alie of the hi&h nolae impact zone around the airport by 86 percent. State cpmmission expected to approve $4.4-million to aid county transportation The California Tranaportation Com million ls eicpected Friday to approve a '°"'million plan to build or improve bua-raU 1ta· tlons ln Santa Ana, Anaheim and Oceanside. Tbe comml11ion, the state aiency that selects all major transportation project&, la meet· inc toda)' ln Sacramento ln the second or a three-day aesaton. A aubcommlttee chaired by Ivan Hinderaker of Newport Beach reviewed the so-called ''intermodal'' plan Wednesday and recommended its adoption, said C'l'C aide Huah Fitzpatricli. He said the proposal, which has Caltrans' endorsement, should be approved Friday. "IT WOULD TAKE a major catastrophe now for it not to be approved on a consenaws basis," he said. The proposal is to use state funda budgeted this fiscal ,year to spend $1.9 million to improve the existing Santa Ana train sta· lion on Fourth Street, $2.2 million to improve the Oceanside station and $291,000 for a new facility near the stadium in Anaheim. The Anaheim bus-rall station is estimated to cost $853,000. The stations are intended to make commuting between buses and trains more convenient. The station p(ana also fit into an Oranie County proposal to make $2 billion worth of improvements along the Santa Ana Freeway corridor. HOWEVER, PLANNEBS1Ull have to wait r.or new federal policies before they proceed. The Reagan Administration hu proposed severe cutbacks in 2oilfirms show decline • • meanungs NEW YORK CAP> Two of the nation's lariest oil com- panie9, Exxon Cfrp. and Gulf OU Corp .. today reported sharp declines lo their lint-quartet earnings, citing a worldwide oversopply of oil and alackenin& demand for their product.a. Industry-leader Exxon said earnings fror th~ firat three months of the year fell 16.9 per· cent to $1 .6 billion, or $3.70 a share, from $1.9 billion, or $4.40 a share, in last year 's first quarter. Revenues rose 9.6 per· cent to $30.32 billion from $27 .65 billion a year ago, the oil pro- ducer reported. Gulf, ranked fifth -largest among the natidn's oil com· panies. reported its net income fell 22 percent to $303 million, or $1.55 a share, from $389 million. or $1.99 a share, In the compara- ble period a year ago. Revenues rose l .S percent to $7.81 billion from $7.75 billion, Gull said. On Wednesday. Standard Oil Co . <Indiana), the nation sixth· largest oil company, reported first-quarter profits fell 34.8 per- cent to $376. 7 million, or $1.29 a share, from $576 million, 01' $1.95 a share, a year earlier. But Standard OU Co. of Ohio reported a 15.5 percent rl5e la profits and Getty Oil Co. said earnings rose 1.9 percent. fundlne local transportation projects. Coft-areslJ. on the other hand, baa appeared more wlllins to contiQue federal mass transpoJ't4liion subsidies, said Nancy Coss-Fitzwater, an aide to the Oranae County Transportation Commission. Even if some cutbackJ occur. she aald Southern CalifomJa of- rl cl a 1 s hope tbat the Los Angelea-to-S•n Diego Amtrak passenger train service will be spared because it is one of the busiest runs lo the West. Seven trains a day run in each direction. All three of the in· termodal facilities are planned along the route. The three bus·train stations are part of a larger plan to build several oUler simllar facilities along coastal passenger train routes. other stations are pro· posed ln communities such a5 Irvine, Mission Viejo. Laguna Hills, San Oleeo .. Del Mar and Oxnard. The larger plan has not met with as much acceptance in the state Senate, and Its future is considered shaky. Birchers assessed $400,000 in fines CHICAGO <AP> -A federal jury has awarded $400,000 damages to tivil liberties lawyer Elmer Gertz in his successful libel suit against a John Birch Society magazine that brought a landmark Supreme Court rulin~. Gertz sought $1 .5 million for damages he claimed to have suf- fered when a 1969 article in American Opinion magazine said he was part of a communist conspiracy. The six-member jury awardtt<f Gertz $100,000 in compensatory damages and S300.000 in punitive damages. COMMENTING ON the award, which came Wednesday in the U.S. District courtroom of Judge Joel Flaum, Gerti said the decision vindicated him and ·'struck a blow for responsible Journalism.'' · 'l think the John Birch Socie· ty now will be less likely to call everyone a communist from the president on down," Gerti said Lawyers for the magazine, cit· ing U .S. Supreme Court de· cisions, claimed Gertz could not collect libel damages unless he proved the magazine acted with "actual malice ... But in ur74, the high court broke new ground and ruled Gertz was not a public figure and therefore did not have to prove actual mahce. Tbe ruling gave judges and juries broader discretion on de- ciding when actual malice must be proven. IN SU~EQUENT decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court further narrowed the range of people who could be considered public figures in libel cases and receive less libel protection. Named as defendant in the suit was Robert Welch Inc .. which publishes the magazine. Gerald Hedlrlch, attorney for the finp, said his client will BP· peal the award. The article discussed Gertz's role as attorney for the family of a teen-aeer, Ronald Nelson, who was shot and killed by a policepian after a distrubance at a Chic(lBO hot-dog stand. The policeman, Richard Nuc· cio. was convicted of murder. and Gerh represented the Nelson family in three civil lawsuits. IN AN ARTICLE entitled "Frame-up -Richard Nuccio and the War on Police." the magazin e linked Gertz to what it termed a communist conspiracy to discredit Nuccio and the Chicago Police Department. Gertz denied any link with communism and said the article was full of "untruths" and "de- liberate lies •· .. J was obsessed with the a rti· cle. deeply upset knowing how people react to the charge of communism," Gertz testified at the trial "It knocked me out emotionally for a very long period oi lime " Hole closed in Brady's brain wound WASHINGTON (AP l Surgeons closed a hole in the bullet pierced brain of White House press secretary James S. Brady today after a buildup of air had caused potentially dangerous press ure inside his skull Brady was reported ··very stable" through the 5 11•·hour operation and in i:io da_ng~r. Hi s deputy. Larry Speakes: told reporters at midmorning that Brady had been returned to his room from the recovery room Richard Ellis. a spokesman at George Washington University Hospital. said doctors report to· day that Brady's vital signs. m· e luding te mperature, are normal and that he remains m satisfactory condition "HE HAS SLEPT intermit· tently through the night as the usual effects of anesthesia wear off. but he is readily awakened and responds normally to ques- tions," said the report relayed by Ellis. The operation. which began late Wednesday and lasted past midnight, was described official- ly as "non-urgent." It followed the insertion of needles into Brady's brain to drain off air in fluid canals. Dr Dennis O 'Leary, spokes man for George Washington University Hospital, said the 40-year-old Brady was awake and "wiggling his toes" on his way to the recovery room. .............. Internationally knowo hurt 1urseon Dr. •teltaei De9ake1 aay• such exerc11· lne as Jo1atna wtll oot pre- vent heart attaclc:I. De Bakey. 72, 11y1 reaaona- ble exerclae ta healthy, "but lt 's not 1otnai to prevent you from havtna a heart attack.•· Speaktn1 before a croup of buatnessmen, DeBakey said, "I don't have any strong ob- Jectton to Jo11ing tor people who are relatively youna." "I do have some objection.a to joggers who eet out ln the mlddle o/ the street, especially at dusk or dawn when l've nearly run Into them," he said. "I think that's daogerolll ... The Rev. Balley Smith, who once said God doesn't hear the prarera or Jews, has ·'almost s1nalehandedly moved the Southern Baptist Co nvention to work in greater cooperation with the Anti-Defamation League," says the AOL's Dallas direc- tor. Smith, president or the Baptist group, parti<:tJ>ated in a Passover Seder al the home of ADL director Mark Brl11lmaa in Dallas and told Jewish leaders he wanted lo 'fork with them to.eliminate bigotry. Brzt1sh pianzst Dudley Moore. left . 1okmgly makes his poznt to Ernest F'leischmarm. general director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. during a luncheon to announce the orchestra's 60th an· niversary season at Hollywood Bowl. Moore u.•1ll make his /1rst appearance w1 th the Philharmomc Claiming ··cnme 1s almost zilch" al the Cabnn1-Green housing project. Chicago Mayor Jane Byme said she wi ll no longer live thf.'rc fu ll · time. but "'Ill keep hl.'r apart· ment "My stay has not ended." she told a City Hall news con· rerence "But J'm not going to a nnounce to the gangs when I'm there and when I'm not " Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who never seems to be annoyed by the frizzies or the greasies. is a "million· dolla r adve rtisem e nt for British hairdressing." Wilham Buckley. editor of National Review and host of TV's" F'iring Lme ... UXIS hlf m the fiend unth a cream p1e durmg a receptzon at lht> L'nwers1ty of A rzzona. lie u:as rwt m- 1zaed. So says Don Cossins. presi· d e nt o f the Natlona( Hairdressers• Federation "She never seems lo have a single hair displaced by wind or temper." he said in praising her locks. The prime minister 's orrice said Mrs Thatcher has a regular hairdresser but his name is kept secret. President Reagan porl· ders question while be- ing interviewed by re- porters m the Treaty Room at the White House Wednesday. It was the fzrst interview he has granted sznce be- ing shot. Twisters rake Southwest Three die as storms lash Missouri Temperatures H1ghl •ftd rnorn•"9 low clouds H••r ,...,.,,,.,. 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Wned e wries of 4tva1111Cl119 t~ In ,..,_, ~ ..,.., &oMy '""" MVlllwnl Taus ac:rou Ar...,,ws In to Illa""....., Otlle Volley. A twister that toucllecl _,, 111 DeSoto, Mo., We.OMlday klll.O a )l·YHr-Gld,...,, Ir~ when • M Y ln91 a"o loan ouo<lollon wo1 cleltfOY'ed. An 110.rtr 1Ntt WN Wft llOI lcl.nUfied died ol e lleert attac:• ofter 111t Malden, Mo , ,,_. .., .. de ........ ., _,., 111rnado, ""' ., lklalt dtcllntd to tllome 1111 OHtll on ,.,~·r.~i Pretr1e. Mo., • ,~., ..... Id flrl ""•' •Hied end lier .,..... ...e -----------. pare1111 Injured wllan a lorMdo wreo..i lllelr llome. Ille HlllMO Pettet NiO. DeSoto offk i.lt ttU...-damage •I U mllllon, and 111• Ml11011rl Hl9llway Petrol u ld property o .... _ "In tlW mlllleN Of dollwl'' had occurred •I-re. Sh-..-t -tl'IUnderttormt were 1<e1t•recl owr n«tlledl M-*•l<o a..O Iha TtllH PMf\and .. OIMI ac:r•I 11\e GrHl La'" Into tlle cenlral ,,.._ palac:hl-. Lltf'lt rain alto '*" .,,., !tie Pactfk ~. ................ ....._ ... __ . o•!IKIM • rMCll ..._., frMI '*'trel ,... aftllenti .,.. ti• Gtrollf\llS ,net C..Wel Qeel911 e110 ac:r-IN OtHl i...u. le ... o.itf C..M ftofll 1M Fl0tlda ".-.ell• to eout_,t THAii SMwen OllO-. HP9Cted from the wnlern D•kotas ecrou Ille northern llocl<IH to Ill• ...,,,.,n Peclflc Goett. ............ 1" ..... Olt I ·1 = I : Cotumboil Dal·l'IWlh NATION HI Le ,.c .. S9 ll ,. ., ,. '1 10 $1 ., ., n '° .. n ., .. fl 26 ... , J7 41 " I• SI 44 11 IJ '4 IJ • U JI ., .. 1.5 .. •1 1.11 » n •• '° S1 .11 11 s1 1.os '° 40 ., 41 .21 SS 4J .72 4S rl 1.Jlt •t M '° 40 .. 12 ,. 11 02 U SI 1.U '° •2 '1 4S .01 " .. ., ,. .tJ 11 6J 10 ..... • •s '·• 11 S2 ., .~ SI •. 01 70 ., •• .. ... " . .. .. " ., " 41 ••• . ., u " tJ ., SJ 41 .M J2 • " . ,, ~ t: : ,. . • St nu .d . .. " " ..... 1• ,, "' ,. .. If you're a raclna fan, you'll run youraeU raa1ed tryln& to keep up with eventl scheduled this weekend ln Southern Calilomia. For inltance, there'• a balloon race in Fountain Valley, a Grand Prtx In Rlvenlde and the start of the Enseoada boat race in Newport Beach. If you like your f.Ompetltlon a bit slower,• there s the Super Walk America ln Newport Beach and Irvine. THEllE ARE also a series of five and 10 kilometer races al UC Irvine, which is holding lls annual festival for the communl· ty. And the II Fina World Water Polo Cup pitting the U.S. team against Bulgaria and the USSR gets under way in Long Beach Saturday and Sunday. When you get through with all that, you might need lo take ad· vantage of the free medical tests al three health fairs scheduled for the weekend. Oh, yes. There's one thing you should keep in mind while rac- ing from event to event You have an hour le11 ln which to 1pectate or partlctpate this weekend. Daylieht Savings Time begins at 2 a.m. Sunday. · Here's the rundo wn on weekend happenings: -The Ensenada yacht race begins at noon Saturday, with a record 689 boau scheduled to make the L2S-mlle international rµn. THE BEST spectator seats are on the bluffs In Corona de! Mar tor this colorful event, but gel there early. Boats will start at 10 minute intervals Crom the noon hour. -The do rdo n Bennett Balloon Hace. pittin g world· class aerona\jls and their col· orful balloon~. gels under way Saturday at l'f1ile Square Park in Fountain Valley. At least. 12 aeronauts will Lift off Saturday. seeking the trophy fo r longest distance t r aveled from the starting point before settling to earth Admission 1s $5 for adults, Do building's doors confuse motorists? You couldn 't blamt' Anaheim warehotL'leman John J Mapes if he doesn't pause long rn the lob· by of his apartment complex anymore It wa~ almost a year ago that Mapes was talking to a friend at the Club Continental apartments on Ma llul Drn·e when a car s mashed through the glass front doors and hit him. Mapes. 51 , got a shower or glass and assorted bruises. but he wasn't hurt senously, said his lawyer. Thomas Weaver of San ta An a. Nevertheless. Mapes filed suit this week against the apartment house and driver Jacqueline Gilberts(,\ll seekine p.-yment fOT about •t~ in medical bills and lost wages. He claims in the suit that the apartment complex is poorly de- signed and drivers are Qpt to lhiqk i,n,t an approach tQ the front doOrs Is really a continua. lion of the street. "It looks like the street keepe go ing , .. sa id Weavl'r "Of course. 1t dot•sn 't but she did .. Ms Gilber t so n . 31 of Anaheim. "'as arrested at tht• scene on suspicion of drunken dri ving on pnnitc property She didn 't ha\'l' automobile 1n s ur01nce. WeaH•r said Marine jet tests slated A Ma rine tac tical recon · na issance squadron will be con· ducting training flights at the El I9ro lJ.ir st:ation. ffQP'l ARril ~ ~ May 14, causing increased Jet noise for people who live near the military facility. a Marine s pokesman said Daytime fhghls will bt.> from I to 3i30 p.m. , · . Night flights wiU be··ftom 1 to 10 p.m . on April 28 and 29 and May l, 6, 8 and 13. • I If you:ve P!Jf . aside your decorating dreams for a lovelier l1v1ng room until you find a real value ... here'a the answer to thole drMma all the finer QUaJity features uaualty found In sofu r9gularty selling for $800.00 to S900.00 ... now only S590.00I 80" sofas in choice of styles and covers in a wide selection of colors. 2 weeks <>nly. $2.50 (or children and eates open at 7 a.m. both days. -THE LOS Ao1eles Times/Toyota Grand Prix o( En· durance is also a two·day affai~ this year. with 120 vipta1e rac- ing machines due lio1 ln the Warner Hodgdon Historic Car Race Saturday al 1 ;30 p.m. Sunday action begins at 10 a.m . with the 75-mile Champion Spark Plug challenge for racing sedans, followed by the Toyota Father/son race at 11 a m and the six-hour enduro at noon. Races take place at Riverside Inte rnation al Raceway both days. and gates open at 7 a m. Nearly 9.000 walkers and joggers are expected to take part in activities at the Ma rch of Di m es Supe r Wa lk S unday beginning at 9 a m a t the Ora n ge County H arbo r Mun1c1pal Court, 4601 Jamboree Road, Newport Beal'h TllE ORANGE County Dimes chapter expects to r aise more than $300,000 this year . ~1th runs and walks ranging from one lo 20 miles. The U S Water Polo tearA competes against Bulgaria a't K 30 p m Saturday at C<1I State Long Bea<.'h , and against the L'S sn Sunday. also :it 8 :mp m UC Irvine wi ll be host to <. v a r 1 e t y o f a r t i ,. 1 t 1 t• s t h 1 s \\eek end 1ndud1n~ le(·turrs.. t•ampus tours. a ml'd1t:\ iJ I fair mu~1c, loot rucl's. a carni val. food and gamC' hooths I IT'S A I.I, pa rt of ('" ld>rat !' l 'Cl's Open llous(• undn "'a~ s1n('f.' Tuesd:i) on tht• I rv1nt' campus A \'iJrH.'l\ of frt>t• medical tt•sts and ht;alth informat ion booths will ht· offen•d ut thret· Orange C'oai.t loratwns this wel'kend dunn~ the 1-'ourth An: nual llcalth Fair Expo The Am't.'riean Red Cross sponsored l'VCnt "'ill take pl act• at the Scad1ff V1 II age Shoppin~ Center in lluntington Reach , Laguna l11ll s Mall. Laguna Hills. and th l' South Coast M edic al CC'nt er 1n South Laguna ,Jn Huqtrn ~ton .Beech. the health fair will run from 10 a.m" to 4 p. m Friday , and from 10' a m to 5 pm Saturda\ In Laguna ll11ls tests "'111 takt" place fro01 noon lo 4 p m Sun c!qy and \0 a m. to 4 p .m Mori· drl y. Soulh Laguna aC'lJvitie~ take place from 10 a .m to 4 p.m • Sunday ATLANTA <AP> -Police say they expect tA> evaluate quickly ,ipformation from a civil ri&hll 1Kroup which says it found a 'r psychopath" responsible fo1 .,.!lome of the 2.5 alaylngs of youna · blacks since June 1979. t;. ··I don't consider the nature ol the information something that will take a long time" to 'evaluate, said Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown. B-1 bomber urged · by Air Force WASHJNGTON (API -The Air Force is expected to recom· mend to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger this week lhat an updated variation of the B· 1 bomber rejected by Presi· dent Carter be developed as a WOOUJ[ITJ replacement· fe>r the nation'• •I· ins B-~. olficlall aaid. · \ The selection of a multi· purpose, long-ran1e B·l variant comes as no surprise since it la known tA> have been favored by senior AJr Force officials and some key civilian Pentagon re- sear c h and development authorities now influential with the new Reagan administration. NEW YORK (AP> -Nabisco Inc .. the nation's largest maker of cookies, and Standard Brands Inc.. another large producer of food, are asking stockholders to approve their merger Into a new company to be called Nabisco Brands Inc. Riots hit Bel/ ast, Sands near death BELFAST. Northern Ireland <AP 1 -Sporadic rioting broke out in Roman Catholic West Belfast today. with a number of vehicles hijacked and security forces stoned by groups of youths. Details were sketchy and there was no immediate re· port of casualties. Meanwhile. IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands sank closer to death . and Pope John Paul 11 's ambassador lo Ireland in di cated the pont1H might try to get ham to call orf has fast Former U.S Attorney General Ramsey Clark and the new Dan 1el Berr igan arrived at Shannon Airport today en route to Belfast. hoping to see Sands and gel him to call off the Cast. Poland discussed MOSCOW CAP> -The Soviet Union's chief ideologist Mikhail A. Suslov led a Soviet delegation lo Warsaw today on an unex· peeled visit apparently to dis· cuss P oland ·s increasing libe ralization. 13 die in CTWJh CULIACAN. Mexico CAP> At least 13 were killed and 200 were injured when a passenger express train jumped the tracks near Culiacan, in northwest Me xico, railway officials re- ported. 0. l ptl"ftftt. Thif bUNau aald the alowdon la ... ,_,prices resulted la the 1mal'fett l n creaa•• In tran1portation and boualq COit.a lft aeven months. Tbe Colllumer Price Index 1howed that tn«IY prices-contlQU•d to riae ln March but not by nearly the mar1ln ~f the previous two months. ,,. Fuel oll prices,,,., 2.7 percent ln March, followtnl lncreue. of 7.~ percent in January and 8.5 percent in February, depart- ment offtcJall eald. Charaes for natural 1u and electricity rote o.t perttnt, cosnpared with In· creaaes ol 1 peTCent and 1.4 per· eent earlier ln tJ)e ~ear. &EAGAN administration of- fl cl a 11 and aome private economiltl had been predlctlnl that ener1y pricea would moderate as 1prtn1 arrived. Prices bad ahOt up In January and February because of the lift. ing of controls on domestic crude oil prices and the hJgh toat of foret10 oll. But the Marcb ftcUNI wen lower than man1 ~ expeet,fd . . · ~Deoa.tm...t olftcJai. •a14t the ~ PriC9 IDda ... to •.1 lo March. whleb meam that 10Gdl llMI aervlcet eo1tln1 $10 In March 1181 catt aae.82 lalt montt\. The figures releHed today also showed that the lndea ln· creased by 11.2 percent from the first quarter of last year to the end of UliJ )'ear'l..(irat quarter. THIS MEANS some lie million Social Security reclplenta will set an 11.2 percent coat-of-living increase ln July. At that time, the average re- tired worker living alone will aee his·or her monthly check in· crease by $37, from $337 tA> $374. A typical couple's beneflta will 10 from ~71 tA> '640 a month, and the maximum benefit will rise from $677 to S752.90 a month. The minimum monthly Social Security check will in· crease from $135.10 to $170.30 $3.3~ million hei st record bank job? AP ....... COURT SPECTATOR -The first-known baby to be born in the United States of a contract surrogate mother sits next to stuffed rabbit during court proceedings in which child was made adoptive son of his father's wife. The name of the child has not been released because ol sensation sur- rounding birth six months ago. The court ruling was made Wednesday in Louisville, Ky. TUCSON <AP> -Four masked gunmen who knew their victims by nicknames over· powered a janitor and bank manager and drove off with $3.3 million, apparently the largest cash haul from a bank heist in the nation's history. • 0 These guys did their homework. These guys are pros,·· said police spokesman Mike Walsh after the Wednes· day morning robbery of a First National Bank of Arizona branch by the gunmen -two in Halloween masks and two with stocking hoods. Israeli frogmen blow up enemy boat Chuck Hemann. First Na· BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> - Syrian ·Chrislian fighting tapered off in Beirut today but picked up in east Lebanon·s Roman Catholic city of Zable. Israeli frogmen reportedly blew up a Palestinian guerrilla boat an the southern port of Tyre The lsraeli military command in Tel Aviv said ilJI forces sank a Palestinian vessel in an over- night raid. but gave no details of tional spokesman in Phoenix, the operation. Lebanese provin· said today that an audit re· cial authorities said Israeli vealed that $3.3 million was frogmen paddled into the Tyre taken by the robbers. Bank of· harbor and dynamited a yacht flcials at first had declined com- the guerrillas had converted intA> ment on the amount taken, a military vessel. although sources close to the in· Ty re, the guerrilla 's main vestigatlon had estimated $2 5 Mediterranean port, came under million was involved renewed shelling al d~wn today A uthori lies sa id janitor from •. pro· Israeli Ch~?slians in J> Charles Virgil. 30, was sitting in the Free Lebano.n enclavr his pickup truck in the bank along the lsrae~1 ·Lebanese parking lot before 7 a.m waiting border, the authorities said. for the manager to arrive when cs white van painted to look like a t elephone company truck pulled up alongside him. According to a copyright story in the Tucson Citizen. Virgil said two masked men jumped into his truck, one on each side, and grabbed him. He said he kicked one in the chest before they each put a handgun to his temples. ··The next thing I know these two guys snatched me out of my truck still pointing the guns at my head and threw me into their van... he said He said be · was Ued and gagged. He said one gunman kept call· ing him .. Charlie." and they re- f erred to the bank manager. J ohn H ... Bud" Grainger Jr .. as .. old bald·headed Bud." He said the robbers threatened to kill them and their wives unless Virgil and Grainer cooperated. Virgil said the men stuffed the money into a long black laundry bag, three knit fisherman-type bags. a travel bag and several bank sacks an less than 20 minutes. They loaded the van and then fled . GOING OUT BUSINESS SALE Notice to Telephone Customers WE ARE PROPOSING CHANGES OUR LOSS-YOUR GAIN! NO REASONABLE .OFFER REFUSED ! SELLING TO THE BARE WALLS! Once In A Lifetime Opportunity! Some Items Below Cost! NEW & USED PIANOS & ORGANS Choose From Kawai. Kimball, Hammond, Wurlitzer, Currier. Thomas-Vox. - NEW HAWAI GRANDS 4 Ollly PRICES SLASHED! NEWTHOMAS-VOX ORGANS 5399~ • IN THE RATES FOR The American Telephone and Tele- graph CoOlpany, consistent with action by the Federal Communications Comm~n (FCC), has filed a new schedule of rates which increases charges for all Long Dis- tance calls made out-Of-state within the Continental U.S .. and for all calls between the U.S. and Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. and for certain calls between the U.S. Mainland and Hawaii and Alaska. SERVICES. llle new schedule provides for a uni· form increase of 16 percent for most inter· state services in accordance with the FCC decision authorizing a 12. 75 percent rate of · return. AT&T has requested permission to implement the new schedule five days after the effective date of the FCC's deci· sion. This increase is needed because of higher costs resulting from inflation and is only the second general rate increase in the last five years. Rates for the following lntentate Ser-• Interstate Wide Area Thlecommunica- vices will be increuecl by the same tiom Service (WATS) percentaee: -Within the Continental U.S. • All Intent.ate Long Distance Calle -Within the Continental U.S. -Between the U.S. and Puert.o Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands • Most Private line Servicee • .Facilitiee for Other Common Carriers -Between the U.S. and Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands • All VHF Maritime, Coaatal Harbor. High Speed '!rain, and Air-Ground Services. In certain cuee rates for Long Dis- tance Service and WATS between the U.S. Mainland and Hawaii and Aluka will alao be increued. 12.15 $2.50 Ga> I S.\15 LOS ANGELES <AP> -A l\41pub1tcan Party tund·ralslfll dliiner tonitbl featurinJ Vice President Geor1e Bush 11 the main speaker has netted.. more than $1 million. The revenue will be used to try to capture control or the state Le1islature ,next year, said industriali•t David H. M urdoc~, the dinner chairman. Tickets for the dinner at the Century Plaza 1-Jotel are $1,000. Rme bill moved SACRAMENTO <AP> -A measure to repeal an interest ceiling on variiable-rate home mortgages has sailed through a Senate committee. The proposal would also allow lenders to raise monthly morteaee payments by as much -s 7V. percentaee points annually when interest rates rise. Sex bill ~ad SACRAMENTO <AP> -A proposed state screening of sex education textbooks and teachers· manuals for standards of morality Jnd other criteria was rejected Wecmelday by 'the Senate Edueatl()ft Comintttee. Sever'l n,emben profe1Md confusion about the btft'• mean· lng, and a six-member majority voted to refer tt to interim ltudy, klllint it for the year. , Van Houten Mnied . (AP> -Leslie Van Houten, a one\ime homecon\ing princess who wentOQa~l· Ing spree for Charles Manson, was refused parole Wed· nesday after v~ • a prosecutor said th~,pubhc would not accept her freedom. Miduif e jaikd VENTURA CAP I -D.elea Burns, an unlicensed midwife. has been sentenced to 30 days in Ventura County Jail and three years on probation for practic· ing without a license. .~ ........ Sen. S.1. HauaJt,awa, R~alif. fll!/t) ma wUfi..ambcu1ador nomiMf John A. Govin cJt hearing. Gavin testifies WASHINGTON <AP> -Actor John Gavin, nominated to be U.S. ambassador to Mexico. dis- puted a sugaestion Wednesday that the country is endangered by Soviet-Cuban Marxism. "The Marxist ideology is in· deed espoused by a certain sec· tor," Gavln said. '•But I believe on1 balance we need not fear for the security or the &t exican Republit:." The disagreement developed at Gavin's confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Rela· tions Committee Gavin said he gained ex· perience in Latin American af· fairs as a special adviser to the Organlzatton of American States' secretary general from 1961 to 1965. Gavin said he believes Presi· dent Reagan nominated him because he agrees with the pres· ident th,at "it's time we cleared up the misconceptions and mis· understandlngs ·t hat exist behyeen the United States and Mexico." LOS ANGELES <AP> -Al· neH Underwor!, a colorful newapaperwom whose eaner aa city edl~ of t e Los An1eles Herald Exam,1ner 1panned 17 yean, hu filed a SUO million detamadon •ult over a book that Hid sbe ))elped the Jate &angater Mlckey Co,ben,steal Sl million. Defendants i.nc:lude The New York Times Sook Co., which published "The J,.ast Mafioso." a book by Ovid Demaris about former mobster Jimmy .Fratian· no. Also named were OBS' "60 Mlnutea, •• which reported on material in the book. and Loa Angeles radio station KMPC. which ran an interview with Demaris. THE SUIT, filed Welinesday, claims the book and subsequent interviews falsely stated that Ms. Underwood aided Cohen b} printing a fabricated story in the Los Angeles Herald-Express <the forerunner or the Herald Examiner) in UM8 stating that a .ship loaded with arms for Israel had sunk. The story. the book claimed, was a coverup to allow Cohen to pocket Sl million in donations he had raised to pay for the arms. Ms . Underwood. 78. said no such article was published and that she didn't even know Cohen in 1948. According to the book and .. tnnacnpU of lntervl 1 , F'Pa· tlan1M> dldn "\ tl'!Jst Cohen to tip hi• hands oet the $1 mllfl09, whlcb be purportHl}' coll•t«ll at the ur1ln1 of Menacblm Be1ln, et-the time head ot *Jt un. deraround movement and pres· ently Isner a prime miQisler. The book quotes FNtianno as saylnlJ, "See, he's 'got this broad at The Hera ld, Aggie Un· detwood. She's a big editor there, and this broad would walk on hql toals tor Mickey. Pri~t any he elves her . The way 1 see it, Mickey calJed her and made up a story about buyin) 1uns and ammunition for the Jews with the million raised at the benefits and then told her the boat sank. A few unknown peo- ple died, some were saved. and she prints il on his say-so. I says, ·Mi ckey . congratulations. You 've just pulled off the big· gest. cleanest score I've ever seen made · ~· CARYL WARNER, Ms Uri· derwood's lawyer, said the only story about a ship full of arms that could be located in lhe old Herald-Express or any other newspaper li brary was one stat· ing lhat a ship laden with arms and destined for Begin's I rgun Zvai Leumi underground was blown up on a Tel Aviv beach by the Israeli army. Begin's group liad been opposed by lhe fledg· ling Israeli government because it resorted to terrorist tactics. SFA's Slorewide Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions and accessones: 1Fashion Jewelry Swiss Watches Cultured Pearls• Belts Scarve5t • Handbags• Blouses• Designer and Better Sportswear Separates • Active Sportswear Sportshirts • Rainwear • Sportdresses •Designer Dresses ening Apparel • Su its Better Dresses • Robes Sleepwear and Loungewear Blouse Collections Womens Shoes , Fashions for Juniors in Right On! Maternity Collections From 'SFAbulous and '5 FA ntastic: Rainwea~ Suits, Blazers, Sportswea~ Dresses The. Men's Store: 25% to 40% off original,prices on Men's Collectio'n Sportswea~ ' University.Place and Men's Furnishings '- Huntington Beact~ planners want to preserve several two· acre parcel• of open space dow.ntown \o allow secondaey re· eovery techniques to drill for large oil reserves. • Ws estimated that 25 million barrels of oil remain underneath the mostly re:stdential downtown area. At today's prices the ~e -estimated at a gross vaJue of nearly $1 billion -is profitable to recover. While recovery of such a large oil reserve should be en· couraged, the city should insure that the proposed two~acre drill· ing sites are enclosed, attractive· ly landscaped and soundproofed. so the s urrounding residents aren't bothered by the oil opera· tions. A major oil company from Tex as currently ls leasing mineral rights in the a rea in prep· aration for a long.term recovery project that could take 20 yean and require several two·acre \ sites. • There could be many benefit. to the city in a large.scale oil nt· covery. / Fundl could be obtained by taxing the oll and possibly by leas~ city.owned land to the oil company for drilling (!peration.s. The consolidation of mineral rights downtown also would allow elimination of the many in· dividual stripper wells that are considered eyesores and ob· stacles to redevelopment in the downtown coastal area. Buf tbe benefits of oil re- covery can't be weighed against inconvenience to residents living near the proposed drilling rigs. Property values and tran- q uality must be protected. The city should closely regulate the aesthetics of the proposed drilling sites ;m.d insure they aren't a nuisance to downtown residents. An encouraging start For the first time in recent years, the Huntington Beach City Council unanimously selected a mayor and mayor pro tempore on the first ballot. Councilwoman Ruth Finley is the new mayor a nd Councilman Ron Pattinson is the new mayor pro tempore. In past years. the annual selection of mayor has led to political infighting. repeated ballots and bitter feelings among the elected officials. This year's quick agreement could be a good sign of future cooperation among the city's seven council members. Former Mayor Ruth Bailey held the office for the past year and did a commendable job. Mayors actua lly have no more authority than the other council members, but are more visible because they run the meetings and represent the city at public functions . . Former Mayor Bailey was accessible to the public and ran no-nonsense yet informal public sessions that seemed to engender a spirit of cooperation. The newly selected mayor and mayor pro tempore both are experienced city officials who aren't running for re-election next year. Mayor Finley has shown an ability to work well with the other council members and the spirit of cooperation in which she was appointed could very well continue throughout her term in office. Cooperative effort A commendable example of cooperation involving a city, a school district and a private youth organization soon will pro· duce a neighborhood gymnasium adjacent to Bushard School in Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley School Dis- trict trustees have approved a 25· year lease for the project, pro- viding land next to the school as the gymnasium site. The 5,400-square-foot gym itself will be built under the supervision of the ~ity of Hunt- ington Beach, which has pro· vided some $250,000 in construc- tion ftmds out of federal Housing and Community Development money given to the city. Construction is expected to begin in late June. with comple· lion due in October. • Once built, the gym will be managed by the Boys' Club of Huntington Beach, which already leases a portion of Bushard School for its progrems. Under the lease terms, the gym will be available for school district activities, Boys· Club pro· grams and for general public use. The Boys' Club already has . been credited with helping to re· duce vandalism in the Bushard community. The new gym should allow the organization to provide even more recreational a,itviUe1 for area youngsters. At a time when finances are tight and each school district, city and youth group is euarding its own best interests, it is ref resfung to see the three work together on a project that wtU benefit the entire community. Opinions expressed in th• space above are those of tht Dally Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page .re thott of their authors and artrsts. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 926211. Phone (714) 642-4321. I L.M. Boyd/ Pick her color Every woman has a secret color that does somethini special for her looks, she thinks . Whether it's the tlnl itself or just the reeling or con- fidence lf sives her doesn't matter. It works when she wears it. ft-em No. 833C 1n our Love and War man's file is a recommendation to yo\l, the man easer to please 1n mat~rt romantic. Find out what your 1lrlfrlend's secret color ii, and match It with amall 1Uta. Scarves. Fl~wers, Costume Jewelry. U abe tells you her la vortte color ls 1reen, as currency. yo\l know abe's onto you, and you can put thi• Item qck lnto the rue. ID a diJcusalon of nuclear bombs, Bertrand Ru11ell tt.ld, ··we have found that the men who know most are tM moll 1loomy." Tbi• l~ ta in O\ll' IA¥• a.a War man'• ftle, tur· prl1ln•ly. It It preclHI)' th• COil· elu1lon of the matrlmoolal re· Marcben alt.er an exwulve atudy of butbandl and wivet who do and do not understand each other. Coa1elor1 1enenlly a1t•• that eoupl• oMd to be able to talk to uch other. But tome deny 'tba' thorough understandini la all tbat dandy. In many cases, they Hy, lt'e better not to know. Q. Do TV anchormen like Walter Cronldte,.John Chancellor and Frank Reynolds ~get to eay anything they want ·to on their oi&hlly newt sbowa? A. At least once, yes. Cronkite waa authorized about seven minutes of his own air time, Chancellor four maybe five, and Reynolds three to four. They're ao diulplined ln e•· perlence you can't always gue11 • wheth'r their ecUionaJ Jud•menta are personal or corporate. Oddballs couldn't last Ions with 1ucb authority. Moll prisons ban not Just hair tonic that contaln alcohol, but hair on of any klnd, Jim told. .,. I u •a fl I I ~ I .1 h .. Land policy· hears watching W ASHlNGTON -The Sierra Club is suing the federal government in an al· tempt to prevent mining in a wilderness area in northwest Montana . The plaint.Ula, according to papers filed in U.S. District Court here, include l2 un. named grizzly bears. SOunda like more damped snail-darter foolistmess to me. But tKen so do ii lot of things ·being said these days around Washington by the new guardians or our natural resource.s. the appointees of Ronald Reagan. The same Mr. Reagan who once said if you 've seen one r edwood tree you'9e seen ·em all. TAKE JAMES WATT. the new secretary of the interior. He spoke last month to an enthusiastic conference of the companies that run concessions in national parks. The subject. at that moment, was h orse trails , but Secretary Watt expanded the discussion to include his own opinion of the mis· take God made in putting together the great outdoors. "You folks will quickly understand why I bring so much controversy and flak," Watt said. "I don't like to paddle and I don't like to walk.·· Well. Mr. Secretary, we could build a freeway through Yosem ite National Park. It would make it more convenient for the lumber company trucks. What trucks? The ones they are going to need to iet out all the trees that J ohn Crowell is apparently ready lo let the the lumber companies and the de · companies cut down on public lands. velopers who want the use of that land. Crowell is Re agan's nominee as as-1 Reagan has always sided with the sistant secretary of agriculture for' developers or , depending on your natural resources and environment, the viewpoint, the exploiters -against official in charge of the U.S. Forest responsible conservationists -or. Service. again depending on your viewpoint, THE FOREST SEllVlCE now aJlows cr azed environmentalists. Now the private companies to take between 10 administration and its friends in billion and 12 billion board·feet a year Congress, particularly Senators Jesse Helms, chairman or the Agriculture Committee, and J ames McClure , chairman of the Energy Committee, are pushing ahead on all fronts to open public: lands, waters and parks to saws and drills and trucks from public lands and has projected that In 5-0 years pe rhaps 16 billion board-feet could be r easonably taken out per year. During his confirmation hearings, Crowell said he thought 35 billion board·feet could be taken out each year. There is going to be a tremendous battle over the national parks and other public lands during the Reagan years. These are very tough , development· oriented people who have spent years talking up the "Sagebrush Rebellion" the Western movement to return millions of square miles in federal lands to state control. But there has always been a dark side to that revolt: It's the oil companies, the mining companies. MAYBE SOME OF that is right and necessary. But how can we tell whether Reagan and his merry men are sensibly opening public lands to reasonable ex- ploration and development. or are just turning millions and millions of acres over to greedy environmental rapists? Well. one way is to pay attention to or- ganizations like the Sierra Club and the Sierra Club Ugal Defense f'und. "W e won 't stop them." said Tim Mahoney. the c lub's Washi ngto n representative .. But we will be there. and if we trunk that they are overstep· ping the law, we'll see them in court:· I decided not to laugh about the grhzlies in Montana and I sent another $25 to the Sierra Club Watch those guys for me. will you" Feds already have airport authority To the ~itor : WesLern Airlines' recent statements about its loss of two nights per day from John Wayne Airport and its will· ln1ness to fight the county over the is· •ue has important impltcalions for citizens living under the nJght path or the airport. Western officials charged that the coµnty Board or Supentison had ma.de "anti-competlllve efforts over the years to keep Western out or. Oranee County" and that the county's plans "would compound ... di•· crimlnation" against Western. The aware individual will recognbe that Western officials are using precise· ly the language found in the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978. which re· quires t"8t all recipients of federal <ADAPl funds mu.st foster competition amonc the airlla~ and discourage dis· crimination against any firm. Such competition was thought by federal leclslatore to benefit the traveling publlc. SINCE THE John Wayne Airport re· ceived ADAP funds through the auspices of Mr. Robert Badham as late as lhe fall of 1980, of course, Western's present posturing m akes sense because their exclusion from the airport ls ll· le1aJ. Past federal expenditure·s at the airport!effedively remove any county control bvet It In such matters. County officials have acknowledged that ~ FAA has regu.latory ·authority ln these areu of diJpllte. Therefore, any ex· panalon 'Of the airport, re1ardleaa of •bo pays for It, will be ruinous for Nfwport Beach, TwsUn, Santa Ana and Ca,ta Mesa because the fedenl eov· ernqient already hu sufficient aut.bott· ty a\ ~ alrpo.rt to enforce usace cor· retpondine to airport 1\se. HENRY BRACTON To tbe Editor: I JuA. W to dash down to 18th and Su,.....,.,. Cot~ Meta to tee what It wu tJiM: All Rouaban bad created. l wu ~»lei.Md _. surprtaed b)' what I f~ncf' and for tbOll\ who are not •UM or haven't Mell the won, reet auured, l\ • ll art~ Do )'OW'Mlf a favor ud tee tt, lf · 1ou bavfD'\ already. • Staodln• under "Volceno" la a dluylaa suiting his rule book and simply decld· ing that these things have got to go. What I wish he would do is go see the MAILBOX work and then consult his rule book and see if he can find a way or making these works exempt from whatever laws they may be in violation of. TONY POWELL To the Editor· Recently we entered escrow to buy 2.6S acres of land from Mr. Adtams loc ated at San Juan Hiii Creek Road and the Santa Ana Freeway in San Juan Capistrano. He had completed all necessary hearings and had altered the master plan to allow an office building on bis site though the underlying zoning was recreational. We then beean our trip through the city bureaucracy. We were informed by (he staff that what seemed lilt~ permission to build a professlonal oWct buildlni on the site was just an illusion. The stair would relentlessly n!C!Ommend against it and our £nvestigation wtthin the city indica(ed that there wasn't a shost of a chance. We couldn't beUeve It but the preponderance of evidence final· ly convinced us that the h>ng, tedious, and expensive path that would have bad to be foU<>Wed with so unlikely a chance to succeed Just wasn't viable. We withdrew the application and,, the city lo4t a flnt class of/ice coodominh.np buUdlna that could bave provided local bwllneumen a chance to became tbeJr own landlord. it, landJlcape it. etc .. etc. This whole process would take about s ix months before we could possibly ob· Lain a building permit. We created a de· sign for two bulldlngs to contain 42 rac· quetball courts; 30 to be bulll at this lime allowing an added 12 for future d~­ mand. One look by the city and the bureaucracy had more demands . Next we were told that of 2.65 acres we could only use 1.07 acres for our buildlng, parking, driveways and sidewalks; 1.58 acres would be open. Ye Gods! This is already a public recreation cent.er. Such ridiculous demands and lime made the project totally unfeasible. In fact the city is committing confiscation of Mr. Adams' land without any payment to bim. E.O. RODEFFER Diuulter ia now To the Editor: The reaction of SPON against the ex· tension of University Drive ls certainly typical. They seem to be against any chanse and to believe worms and snails are more Important than people. la there , anything they would approve that 99 percent ol our residents waht? The Upper Newport Bay ls NOW a dia· aster, and every winter the mud comlna under the !Jay Bridge makes the water the color of tbe Mi,.lsllppi River. The dis- aster area annually movet south. . ALSO, every resident who a the Paclflc Cout Hi1hway rrom MacArthur to the ArchM abould 1et behind tbe ex- tenalon. All traffic 1tudles indicate com· pleUna Unl~ty Drive would eape tJm problem and wUl etttrbe needede:tb the newbriqe and the e"awalex ioa of t~e Corona del Mar Freeway, ch ii prob•bb' Yffl'I away. The poalUoo o1 SPON aod the Coutal Cominlliloa ls arbitrary and Ulollcal. Let'a IUppor\ the SIR U that le what .,;e need to et 10me •CtJon. .. ' JRVIN C. CHAPMAN .. When Hunttn,ion Beach of- flctala put a temporary bar· . rlcade at the comer of Taylor Drive and Pammy Lane to div•rt traffk fro m Beach Boulevard, motorists betan tak- lng a thortcut the Clty Council hadn 'l considered. They drove over Bette Ben- dorf' a lawn. Nol just small imports, but trucks, vans. Cadillacs, 18-wheel const ruction vehicles and motorcycles, she ·~·· , • 'Seem.s like every 30 minutes someone drives over my lawn," said Mrs. Bendorf. who's lived in the house 14 years. "My sprinklilll system'• been crU!hed, my lawn la tom up, the bay window's beeb cracked. Everything is comine apart from the vibrations. "LOOK HERE," she said, pointing to black tire tracks on the aldewalk. "Someone b\111\ed a llttle nabber here for fun.'· The temporary barricade was put at the comer alx weekl ago as a she-month experiment .. Some local r esidenu wanted to atop heavy traffic frol1) Beach and from two car dealerahipa located on the comer. City officials also wanted to test restricting traffic from Taylo r to bus y Beach Boulevard, which they said needs a tr(lific signal. The pro· posed signal la tied up in Caltrans red tape. accordins to city officials. After paying a bill or S8SO to repair her crushed water sprinklers. Mrs. Bendorf asked the City Council for ?elp Mon- day. "I CAN'T GET HELP from anybody," she says "I used to call tbe police every day and NBC' s 'secret' · news magaiine finds new home ... B7 give them the license numbers, but they say they can't come out here all the time and chase peo- ple who drive over my lawn." Councilman John Thomas was sympathetic. "I've driven down there," Thomas said. "And when you see that barricade Lhe first thing that crosses your mind is to drive across their lawn But I didn 't do it. "I figured, I'm a councilman I so 1 'd better not do that.·· I The City Council unanimo~y decided that no one elae aho either, and ordered that the " ricade be moved east to the 4nd of Mrs. Bendorl's. property line and be put across the sidewlillt, too CITY ENGI NEER Geor ge Tindall said the barricade would be relocated in "two or three weeks " Danger minimized in waste excavation Contamination slight. official says B:Y PATRICK KENNEDY on11e o.11, ..iiecs .. ,. An environmental consultant says the chemical dump in Hunt ington Beach isn't as dangerous to excavate as once suspected and workers wearing protective suits with air filters a re overdressed. ·'The air quality has been very good dunng the excavation and we haven't had one complaint .1boutodors." said Jim Crisp. con- :mltant who authored a report on potential health hazards posed by the abandoned landfill "IT ISN'T AS dangerous as some people hav<' built 1t up to Channel Island lecture topic "T h ~ea so n s of Santa Barbara Island" will be the lecture subj ect at tonight 's meeting of the American Ceta cean Society of Orange County A slide show and lecture on the smallest of the Channel Island chain 1s set for 7 · 30 p m io room 167. Steinhaus Hall on the UC Irvine campus be." he said Wednesday. three days into the excavation of the three-acre site which was used for oil refinery wastes in the 1940s. Formerly Boucher Landfill. the site initially was estimated to con· lain 72,000 cubic yards of con- taminated soil. but Crisp said dig- ging has revealed some of it is not contaminated. He estimated 25.000 cubic yards to 50.000 cubic yards or con- taminatedsoil will be trucked to a hazardous waste landfill in West Covina. Mola Development Co. 1s financing the excavation and plans lo build 224 condominiums on a 12.5-acre site that includes the chemical dump. The site is southeast of Warner Avenue and Bolsa Chica Street amidst homes . condominiums and apartments. STATE, COUNTY and city of ficials·have ordered strict safety precautions for the excavation, in cluding prepar~tion of an em ergency t;vacuation plan in case toxic fumes are released by the digging which bealth officials say is unlikely. BOUQUET UPLIFTING -Teachers at Meadow View School in Huntington Beach opted to avoid tradition when they sent a tribute to Olga Doria on National Secretaries' Day Wednes· day. The school secretary's spirits seem heightened by her un- usual bouquet. P.h}rsici~ facing • • • swt over spo~ge A ttO.m!Won medical malprac- tlce 1wt bu been fUed uainlt Huntlnston Harbour physlclan WiJUam Waddill by a woman wbo clalms a in&rcical apon•~ • ., left "'-ide ti.rdurlnl an operation. Su.an J . llarila, a1'o mown u Susan Millar 1h, and her busba.Dd, JOHph, nted the suit W edn~d•>' In Oran1e C@uoty SU"'1ol'Court. Other defflMlenll named lD tbi 1ult aN Weltmtnster Commwalty Roi,._. pbfsidana Myrqa Relft, 1.a;-.1•w11ts1M..,.,...nn, d rute C1llfonl1 Wom .. ·1 . Officials of the state Depart- ment of Health Services oversee the excavation. which is expected to take three months. Crisp said. "We want to move s lowly to in· sure there's no odor problems." Before the trucks leave the site the contaminated soil is covered with a foot of clean earth and a tarp. Workers also brush loose earth off the tires and sides of the truck. Crisp said ·'They <the trucks 1 leave here clean as a whistle,·· he said "There are no odor problems when they reach West Covina_" W EST COVINA residents. however. are clamoring for city officials there to close the hazardous waste site and have criticized the Huntington Beach excavation as an example of one city dumping its problems in their laps. "That's out of our control." Crisp said. "But we've talked with West Covina officials and as. sured them that the best possible safety measures are being taken. ·'The Highway Patrol and state health officials have inspected the trucks and everything is going very smoothly." he said. Porn meeting subject ( Ray Sugars. a representative of Stronger Legislation Against Child Molesters <SLAMl. will speak tonight at a public meet- ing of the a nti-pornography group being organized by Foun- tain Valley City Councilwoman Barbara Brown. The meeting will begin at 7: 30 p .m i n the Greenbrook Clubhouse. 18222 Santa Joanana St. Sugars is expected to discuss a possible link between pornog- raphy and child molesting. Mrs. Brown says s he is or- ganizing the group as a private citizen, not as a city orficial, because the city is unable legal- ly to remove objectionable magazines from local stores. Housing woes • • meeting topic Housing problems in Hunt- ing ton Beach and Fountain Valley will be the subject of a free program tonight. featuring city and county officials. plus representatives of the real estate industry. . The meeting will begin at 7:30 in the council cha mbe rs at Huntington Beach City Hall, 2000 Main St. Participatin& will be Oranse County supervisors Roger Stan- ton and Harriett Wieder, mortaage banker Kevin Budde, HuntiQcton Beach community development specialist Stephen Koehler; and James E . Logan, president of the Huntington Beach·Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. Libraey unit 8et• book •ale_ The Friends of the Huntin~ Beach Library will hold a used book aale Frlda.y and Saturd~ · d the Maln Street Annex Library, a5 Main St. On Frldayi the tale ia for members on y from 4·t p.wn. 1 il'boH interMted can take OUt m1mbenhl"9 at the door. On Satura.1 the sale will be open to the publlc from 9:30 a.• •. • tolp.m. Or1anhera la)' novel1. eacyclop1dl11, textboot1, cllllclnll'• boob U4 maar • ..WOlcltliullsiWWbea1Dllll9 tte .. '° ... told. Pnc··· Wiii IL te tbe Jl_.uUqMNI Beailli _., ...... 16c:pceit't0 I . ........ . Df'e1wd in protective ndt with air filtering mask, drioer prepares to remove a contaminated aofl from abandoned cMmlcol dump in Huntingtqn Beach. FV traffic devices OK'd Council backs light, raised street discs in split vote Jn a split vote. the Fountain Valley City Council has decided to spend $15,400 to install flashing yellow hghts and raised street discs at a hazardous local school crossing. despite warn- ings from city staff members that these measures may have Drug usage focus of talk Drug usage trends at west Orange County schools will be focus of a free program Friday at Golden West College In Hunt· ington Beach The session will take place from 7 to 10 p m in Health Science Room 11 7 Mi chael McCord . a psychotherapist with the South Coast Counseling Center, will discuss the availability of drugs. psychological effects and the legal ramifications of possessing or dealing drugs. little effect on traffic speeds. The safety measures will be placed on Warne r A ven ue at Greenleaf Street. where children who reside south of Warner cross to attend Plavan Elemen- tary School. The city currently employs two crossing guards at the site. but school parents asked for ad dilional precautions because of the s peed limit on Warner (45 miles per hour ) and because a child was almost struck at the c rossing last summer. Public Works Director Wayne Osborne said he could find no evidence that flashing yellow lights r educe accidents al pedestrian crossings. Concerned about the cost and unproved effectiveness of the flashing lights. Councilman Eugene Van Dask suggested a trial period with only the street discs. His proposal was defeatea 3-2 Van Dask then joined council member Al Hollinden. Ben Nielsen and Barbara Brown In approving funds for both the lights and the street discs. Councilman Ma rvin Adler v.ot- ed against installation of the lights. arguing that children would become too trusting at the cross m g FV offices get backing Pacific Mutual Life lnsurculce Company's plans for a largeofijce complex in downtown Fountain Valley have been approved un· an1 mously bytheCityCouocil.*t- mg in its role as the Agency for Community Development. T he complex. to be built onte southeast comer of Brookh t Street and La Alameda Aven e will include three three-story pf· flee buildings and a two-level parking garage. I Construction costs for the li'o· Jecttotal $23.4 million. When c 1 • pleted and occupied, the com ex is expected to have an asses ed value of $33 million. .,_ __. .. - I . t. .. I ' " I ''· I ' Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Aprll 23, 1981 • • YOO CAN'T GET THERE F&OM HERB - Caltrans, our wonderful state hi&hway people, bave apparently struck again, trapping the haple11 motoring citizenry with the detour signs up. Thll time it was out scenic La&UDa Canyon Road. What happened was that apparently sometime Monday or Tuesday~an1 wort crews decided they'd shut down a north-bound lane of • P. Laf una Canyon Road , be ween El Toro ~I-Road and the San TIM IURPHINI ,kti' ' Dieg~.~~~fc thus was diverted down El Toro Road, out in the vicinity of Leisure World. This just happens to be a considerable detour if you're late to work and trying to reach Santa Ana or Los Angeles . So what? So they only shut down a northbound lane, you might suggest. TROUBLE JS, you see, on Laguna Canyon Road, there is only one northbound lane. Shut it and you shut off the inland-bound traffic. Also, an additional vexation is that the Caltrans people apparently decided to keep all this lane- shutting and detouring a deep, dark secret. So you motor out Canyon Road in the morning and surprise! Goodbye timetable. Apparently the word did leak out around the Laguna Beach City Council table Tuesday night. But the word didn't hit the public prints until Wednesday aftemO()n. According to the Caltrans spokesmen, the north- bound lane will be slammified shut on weekdays "We'll 1ust take out thu section of road for awhi~" between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. for the next 45 days. It's going to be a $700,000 improvement project. NO DOUBT THE WORK will be welcomed over Utis dangerous seven·mile stretch of pavement. It really would have been super-nice, however, if the state highway brass had given motoring folks just a little bit or advance waf'Jling. You suppose that by -Obt starting work tUttil 9 a.m .. the Caltrans planners figure that most every- body has already fled the scene to their work place. MAYBE SO. On the other hand, the shutdown could be a considerable irritant to some professional parties who don 't have to roll out at the crack of dawn and can meander into labor at 9 :30 or maybe 10 a.m. Rumor has it some bankers, medics and dentists operate lik e that. My dentist always seemed to keep those kind of hours when I was suffering with a throbbing molar or other ill of the choppers. Anyway, the word's out now so nobody will ex· pect to get from Laguna Canyon to anywhere for the next month and a half or so. THE CANYON AREA, however, isn't the only locale where this kind of frustration has been heaped on our coastal motorists. Just a while back. workers on the Upper Newport Bay span selected a couple of morning rush hours as the precise time to shut down one lane on the old Coast Highway Bridge. Traffic abruptly backed up to Five Crowns in Corona del M~r. So let's face it; there's just something about highway construction projects, no matter where the location. No matter what hour it is that you don't want a detour, that's when you're going to get It. NEW POSITION -Edmund Muskie, former U.S. senator from Maine and secretary or state, i s joining a Washington think tank on part-time basis. He will be consult:int at Johns Hopkins' Foreign Policy Ins titute. working with professors and students. 2 guilty of a iding su icide NEW LONDON , Conn. <AP> - Two men accused or helping a crippled friend commit suicide race up to 10 years in prison alter changing their pleas and pleading guilty to a charge of second- degree manslaughter. Brian W. Taylor, 25, of North Stonington, and William R. King, 26, or Ledyard. said they were changin&thelrpleas because they were convinced prosecutors bad enough evidence to win a convic- tion. The two also said through their attorneys that Chey hoped to re· cei ve lenient sentences in return for the pleas. ACCORDING TO prosecutors, the two aided the Sept. 27 suicide of Kenneth 8. Wright, 24, or Ledyard. who didn't want to live with the paralysis he suffered in an informal wrestling match an 1979. State's Attorney C. Robert Satti Of course you would. of blood. In 1979, we used 70,000. Now let us rephrase the ques-By 1987, we project a need in tion. \Yvbuld you pay $5 to help com· excess of 100,000 units. Where do plete one of the most badly needed we collect it all, process itpll, facilities in Orange County? store it all? Theyte really the same question. Consider also, the fact that The Orange County Red Cross 1 in 25 people in Orange County VVlll needs yow dollars for a facility to need that blood this year. Desperately keep pace with Orange Countys One in twenty-five. growing needs. And some of your family and Its a new 32,000 square foot friends will be among them . complex designed to meet blood So please open up your hearts requirements for years and wallets . And give to come. I' • • • • • • generously. How desperate I e>r..,,. County kd c:ro.. I Because what I 1ttle are we? Consider this. 1unc1ns Fund you donate today, JUSt In 1969, we went I ~C::~~~cteC>r I may be someone elses through • • •. Sa~Arta.CA92111 • ••I life savings 23,600 units .-tomorrow. I pt~ accePt my pledge for S I Nam~-------------~ I M~~ I I . .,_________ I Ci!Y---------------1 Stat.._ ______ ....._1p_______ I "··· ••• .11 Please find enclosed my I tax deductible doriat1on for I the following amount I o 's o s10 o s2s os_ I ••••••• said Wright once had told Taylor 1-------------------------------------- ''he'd rather be dead than Uve in !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the condition in which he was liv- ing ... Taylor and King pushed and carried Wright. who was in· capacitated and bound to a wheelchair, into a wood where they left him with a sawed-off 12 gauge shotgun, Salli said. The men had helped cut eight inches off the shotgun's barrel so Wright could point 1t at his stomach and still pull the trigger, the prosecutor said. THE VICTIM 'S mother. Phyllis Wright, told the pro· secutor she did not want Taylor and King sent to prison, Salli said. He s aid the mother told him if she had her way the t.wo men. who were her son's close friends, never would have been pro· secuted. "He couldn't cope. He was an athlete,'' Wright's mother said last fallafterherson'sdeath. In return for the guilty pleas. Salli said he would not recom· mend that Taylor and King serve any specific sentences. When the men return to court May 18, their lawyers are expect- ed to ask Judge Seymour Hendel to suspend their sentences. The maximum sentence for second· degree manslaughter is lO years. WEST CLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S ~ SEftVICE BANI< Of-. f.H8XA CHARLES BAAR .£Wa.ERS CROWN HAAOWARE DICK VER~ ~TSWCAA Oft LOU ELDER optomefritt HAJRHANDIBS SAl..Q.J HALllDA y·s MEN'S ClOTHNG HICK~Y FAAMS spec:ichy food itemi White mom wins custody HUMPTY OOMPTY childtefl's ~ JEAN DA>-t. ~signer ond better 5P0"1....ar LA GALLf:RJA eleQC>ne• in JOlhion Judge rules mother, not black father, should raise girl live', Mrs . Fprmer. food manager for a --Locust Valley high school, found the child in Sao Francisco In October and had her brought back to New York. During divorce proceedings, Farmer ar1ued that his former wife could not raise Bethany to "understand her roots" and that the child wouJd have "deep psychological problems unless she has a black parent." After the decision, Farmer's lawyer, Geor1e Nager. uid the judge ignored Farmer's concern about his child's need to be aware of her back1round. Na1er :said the judge did not gl ve enou1h weight to the "special circumstances affect- ing the child of a mixed mar· rlage that are unique to that child." Training slU/ts urged ''Several of the flj&ht IChooil that l discuued tJ1l5 subject with indicated that their buslneu 11 down by u much as 40 percent. In addition, there have been two nJtht Hbooll that hive IOM out of bu1lneu ln tbe past 18. montb11" Cable said ln the report. "AS YOO can well lmaatAe, th• fU1ht acboolt wblcb currently operate at the 'airport 1 re extremety concem .cl that any mandatory reducttoil In their touch and 10 tralalaa operatiGDI 'M>Uld wonen thillr ' 1Jrnd1 d!mlalahed econom ic •Mil• " c.1111 wrote. Cabi. Mlit M hu deflMd peak MARl<ET BASKET MES AMIES TEENS NAt<_Y 0\>""4 ANTlOJES NEWPORT SN.BOA SAVlflGS PAPER Ul\ll.JMITED qiftt and 'l<lllioNrl SAV-ON ORUGS 11..Ji~=.ar VET A'S INTIMATE !V'f'AAS.. WEST\UFf Q..EANERS WESTQ.lFf C~ ~t war• ond colectiilM WESTCUFf SHCS Um• Ill llll a~ u bltq ftolll 7 '6 ••.•. led ' to', .... ""'~··-··-----~----··-------.. ·---· 11rw1,._.. NEW ORLEANS CHOSEN -Louisiana Gov. Dave Treen smiles during a speaker-phone hook-up with Paris in which he learned that New Orleans will be the sit e or the 1984 World's Fair. Listening in the background is aide James Fitzmorris. llATHS . ELSEWHERE \\ 11.~11 :--:<; ro' lh·I • "r• l>r \lfrt'd R. Shand11 Jr 112 .in 11rth1·1x•1l11· -.ur.1tc·11n d 1 .. <I \111 n cl.1 ' S II .1 n ch h1•l1wct found th1• i\llrt·rl I du 1'11nl ln ... 1111111· .incl lil'r\ 1•!1 ..... tli. ll11'tl11-.d cit rt•( tor ror .'9 \ ('Jrp., "I ll<H"~v\'IJ (I/\"~ 11\('1 l.ouh1 (;.H'bPI. II l mm 11· an 1 m ,iJ tr .11n1·r .incl l•1und1•r of .Jun.1tll'l,1nrl d1t·!I \l11nd.J1 ult1•r u h.11111" 111l h lw,1rl dilit•.11>1• 1!0~11-: 11\1'1 l.ldla Bran l, f\5 "tit> of lt.1llJn m 11 1 11• J 1· I 11 r IC ":. ll J n 11 Hra111 rur II 11•Jr' <lwcl In J lot•JI d1n11 l'I I I' BA\ Oh111 \I' '"rman \. 11 .. 1n .. man. l fl n·ttrN1 thtril i:1·n1·r,1t111n "" n1•r 111 lh1· lt.·1 n1·m.1n \\ 1n1•r1 1111 S11uth f!J,., l1>l.1n1l 1l11·1t \111n1l.11 ES«ll'l>l1H1 \I" \ I o n lo! I 1 Ill t' II 11 1 I. " 1· I I l nt1·rn.11111n.il 11tr11 1.ol 11 h11 v.11rk1•1I 1111 lh1· I n1l1·tl SlJt1·, '"'' m111111 'huh C"llnton 1-:. I mphrt'"· ill d11·rl \p11I 17 1"11 \l'EI. 1111.1. 'l' (A,. I(. • 1•11111 i('.JI "11·1111 .. 1 f"r a n k J . ''""""'· r1 1 d1n•c·1111 11r th1• ln,111u11· lnr Rt'''"'rt·h 111 S.ic·wl S1·11•nc·1· al lht· I rtl\t'l''!ll 11( \;orlh Ca1 olm.i d1c·cl s1;111l,J1 :'\EW Ylllll\ •\I'• hrn f'o x Samu1•I,, HI !I benl'fJ('lor •ti l.1n1 •1111 DEATH NOTICES f'tUCIHOTHHS NUHOADWAY MOHUA&Y I 10 ijroadway Cosla Mna 642·9150 IAU'%1HGlaOM SMITH & TVTHtu J WHTCU# CHArtl •27E 17th S l Costa Mesa M&-9371 ... ClllOTMIH INITMI' MOllTUMT 827 Main St ~nt~ach l''·1111·r for lh1· P1·ri11rm1111: \rh .11lll ol lht• \;1•" \'ork ( 1 l I <>tH' r ·' ". ,.,, h l' re lhur,fla' llH \ '-"FOHi> Conn •AP • llarpt'r "oochurd, 71 ,J n a <I 1 1 ' t• r 1 ,, t h 1• Huc·k1·fl'll!·r lam11\ Jnd .i d I I l' (' l 0 1 o I }: .J ' I I' ,. n ,\1rhn1·.., 1111'<1 Wl•clm·Mla) ul (',tnt'l'I l.Cl'\:IXI'\: t \I" G"~" Thomalj, fi7. J 11ntt'r \\ho "II\ l' lht• 11rd111ur~ pt>oplt• or hr" nul11c· South Wult'" into hnlllunt ..ind nflen hrlur111us ,.111rw11 . nm t'I" und plu~·s. clt«d Tut•'d°' al ht., home in ("Jrdrff IJl,IX>' \I' Prg~~ l>uU, ii ,111 111cll'l.1ll)(ahle or j,\unu:vr Cor 1,•r1 "1nR c·,1u'>t'' JOCI lhe Bun lhe ll11mh t·.1mpd111n for 'u• 11-.11 1>1 ... crm.imt'nt tn th1• IJtt• l'l~I' Jlltl l!lfilh ill t·tl I hur"l.11 ..., \' FR "t'IS\O • \ P \lbt•rt <. \\ollt'nb.-r". HI 11 ho 'l'I I 1•11 J' J t S 111,lrul I uurt 1u1li:t' fr om t'l5H to !!lilt dlt'd SundJ' "ullt·nt..-r 1: "('fl 1·tl 111 th•• l.l'Jti,l.Jllll ,. ,ind \\ ,., •• dll"' ,, 11 \ 111 \,m E.1 rl \.\' ,11T1•n l.ll"XI'\ 1J\P1 hor '''" llJn, 81\ a p1an1'l \I ho for :111 ,11•an, .1l'c·nmpa1111·d '"'"h .1r11,b ,,,. '111l1nt'>l Y1·h11d1 \11·1111h1n 11•111-.t p.il1lo < •• ,,,i:-, Jnrl Mnt.:c•r M ,, ,..,, c.o11,,~ 111 1·11nceru ,1r1111nd 1111' ""rlcl. d1l•d WHEN NO OTHE& bJdden eame up with the minimum '20.000 offer requested by U.S. Custom•. the 1ov- emment lowered it.a price and the Port offered Sl5.000. ln1pectlon1 showed the boat ha. serious hull damage. "The kindest thing the Navy could have done was to use her for bomb- ing practice," uid Sandy Kupper of San Jose. who had come to the auc· tion wjth thoughts ol buying the boat. Rabies cases soar in U.S. ATLANTA <AP> Rnearchera say they are uncertain why the in· cidence of animal rables is aoarina In the Unjted State~. but reported caaea j umped lo 6,405 last year the most since 1954. WAGE9 'WAR' - Nature photographer An sel Adams bas started a personal war against U.S. In· terior Secretary James G. Watt, vow- ing to write a letter a day to point out the threat he perceives Watt represents toward conservation. The Potomac was built for $1.2 miHion in 1934 as a Coast Guard cut· ter. President Franklin D. Roosevelt hosted Sir Winston Churchill and Kin,g George VI of Enrland aboard the boat and used it for fishing trips. The national Centers for Disease ---------- President H arry Truman . however. sold the yacht in 1945. JN THE YEARS since, it has been owned by Elvis Presley and Danny Thomas und was used as a research Control said skunks. bats. cattle. raccoons, dogs, cats and foxes ac count for 97 percent of the reported cases. There were no reported cases among humans. The increase was due mostly to a rise in reported cases among skunks, the CDC said. but researchers were unable to pinpoint why. Drawing OK SACRAMENTO !AP > A stale appeals court has decided that a draw. Ing to decide whi ch landowners at South Lake Tahoe could de- velop their lots was legal. TELL YOUR MOM! This Mother's Day, tell that certain someone how special she really Is with an outstan- ding gift from Rogers. There is a great variety of hanging baskets and color pots. Their lasting beauty will be a constant delight and a reminder of your love. If she enjoys her plants and her garden, you will find everything at Roger's to make It all easier and more beautiful. Roger's Gallery Is also full of special and unusual gifts for the occasion. Say 111 love you" In a beautiful way from Roger's. 4?1~ i.. 1*._~;~ ~\ MOTHERS LrrrLE HELPERS The Giimour alr-o-matlc sprayers are the easy way to spray fertlllzers and Insecticides. They are self-mixing Which means no fuss and no waste. reg . '12.96 NOW 110.98 Help keep mold, mildew and fungus out of your roses and the rest of your garden with Ortho Funglnex. 16 oz. reg. s?.49 NOW '6.49 FROM THE NURSERY WITIIlN THE GARDEN Marguerite Daisies are the light-hearted favorites everywhere. At this special price, you can surround mom with year around color. 00 Now'7.99 5 gal. reg. 112. Agapanthus (dwarf blue llllles of the nlle) Is a good peren- nial 14m,1scape plant that loves surprises; from time to tlm6 rt shoots up clusters of blue fireworks. One of our favorites, youil find It planted at Roger's. 1 2 galJ reg. 18.60 NOW 8.99 Hydrangea produces bonus-sized clusters of flowers. The long.lasting blossoms are avallable In several pastel colors. 5 gal. reg. •13.00 'NOW'a.99 Azaleas offer handsome foliage and spectacular flowers In a choice of colors. 1 gal. reg. •3.25 I Pf'IM• 1Uecll~ thtu M•v 9, 1811 encl 111bject to Qu•"'"'" on ~nd DEAR TO HER HEART A Roger's English garden basket Is a special treat. A com- plete miniature Indoor garden with a rich blend of colors and follage. This llvlng centerpiece keeps on delivering pleasure day after day. NOW '2S.eS PIANT PROFESSOR You can hear GORDON BAKER LLOYD, noted garden ex- pert, on KMPC and KABC radio. You can also find him In person at Roger's Gardens every Friday from 12:00 tll 2:30, to answer all of your gardening questions. He wlll also be presenting these special seminars: April 23, 11 A.M., .. Pest Control" May 11, 11 A.M., .. All About Tomatoes" May 25, 11 A.M., "Plantlng for Summer" Give a 10' Roger's Color Pot, the unique gift that keeps giving. NOW '9.85 PATIO FURNITURE FOR MOM Through Aprll nh, you can save up to 350/o on fine quatltY patio furniture In Roger's Gallery. A great way to surprise mom and add to summer enjoyment. I .. . llappv Dav. lde're Hatching Farmers . 2651 IRVINE AVE., COSTA MESA 631-.4404 . ; . . . . .. t. • Newport Center project to be ready by December l The $11 million terraced office complex known as Civic• Plaza ts startmg to take shape on the western side of The Irvine Com- pany's massive Newport Center. Workmen con'structing the five-building, 230,000-sq~are-foot comp•ex· predict worlt wilt be finished bf December. The pla•a project is expected to attract nearly ·1,000 new employees to the· one-and two-tJtory olfile b"11dtngs. The Irvine Com- pany, though, has not said wh1cn firms will be moving in. THE COMPLEX IS SITUATED north of the city's Newport Center branch library and adjacent to the Newport Harbor Art Museum. The genera l contractor ls Dinwiddie Construction, a firm with offices in Los Angeles and San Francisco. When city officials af'proved the office project in early 1980, the Irvine Comp.;tnts top brass agreed to pay for a number of street improvements around the plaza b;efore buildings are occupied. Tl)oSe street improvements are expected to be completed this summer at a cost of more than $100,000. , I And the plaza is not the development ' .firm's only expansion project at the center . .A res\aur,ant iB tQ ~ built aieat Uie plua at U]f• intersection of San Clemebte and Santa Barbara.drives. A CONDOMINIUM COMPLEX ALSO is to be built although precise plans have not been approved. The Irvine Company officials say the condos likely will be constructed on a 10-acre site near the Pacific Mutual building and could include up to 245 units. To hear the Irvine Company officials tell it, the final build-out o{ Newport Center will 'come in the next decade if clty officials ap- prove a plan that calls for a 400-room hotel and two hi~h-rise office towers. Ttus project would expand Newport Center by nearly 25 percent. The Irvine Company's Civic Pl.aza project wiU include five new office buildings, ranging from one to two stories. PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS .UllM&SI ...... STATUMNT Workman Mark Mitchell hammers at truss joint in new Civic Plaza office complex on we1tmi edge of Newport Center. PtJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE THE LIGHT TOUCH M.129f6 aTAT ... llT cw WITitORAWM. PICTITlOUS •ust•.U l'KTITIOUS au""·" ,.llOM ,....,,. ..... ,,. Of'9aATllfO MaMa ITATaMaMT MAM• S1'AT•M&MT I I f CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION Consolidated Report of Condition of "The BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY" of Fountain Valley, O<ange County, and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business on March 31, 1981. The f~ ..,_ Is dolftt ....,. non e•. CHIC AUTO BOOV ANO OJSTOM PAINT, 1191 .. 1 lltCIOftdO Ci(cle, Hllf\l· 1noton hat!\, Gallloml• '16-47 . i Ull091t PtC'TITIOUS The fOllO•lnt per-s ar• 6oint The lollowlnt perM>ft' er• 6olnt WM ..... NAM9 llVsl--. """neu • T"9 ~ ,.._ ... ""t--SUNSET PACIFIC, 1.10 .• 1no1 WALNUT JOINT VENTURE. 2070 •• • t•n•r•I perlntr Ir•"' lhel M ite hell Avtn11t Hortll, Ir v Int , a1ulntu Ctnur Orovt , lrvlllt, ~ -lllint -lM lk~C.lllornle'211'. • C.lllornl•'17U ' State Bank No. 127S ASSETS Dollar Amounts inThouwnds cash and due from banks ...................... 2,517 U.S. Treasury securities .......................... 86 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell in domestic offices .................. 2,SOO a. Loans, Total (excludlno unearned income) .............. 17 ,3S7 b. Less: Reserve for possible loan losses ................ 125 Loans, net .................................. 17 ,232 Bank premises, F.F. & E ......................... 545 Other assets .................................... 307 TOT AL ASSETS .............................. 23, 187 LIABILITIES Demand deposits ot individuals, partnershiPSi and corporatioos .............. 8,606 Time and savinos deposits of 1nd1viduals, partnerships, and corporations .. 10,373 Deposits of States and political subdivisions ......................... 200 Certified and officers' checks .................... 298 TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOM ESTIC OFFICES ............ \9,477 Total demand deposits .......... 8,904 Total time and savlnos deposits .10,573 TOTAL DEPOS I TS IN DO ME STIC ANO FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 19,477 Other ll3bllitlM .................................. 205 TOTAL LIABILITIES ........................ 19,682 SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY Common stock a. NO. shares authorized 1 ,~000 b. No shares out stand in~ 9:s4,w 5 Amount 3, 113 TOTAL dONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ............ 3,113 Retained earnlnos and other capital reserves .....•..............•..•...... 392 TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .......... 3,505 TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO SHAREHOLDE RS EQUITY .................. 23,187 MEMORANDA (amounts outstanding u of • report ate) St11ndby letters of credit outsWnctihg .• , ......... 414 a. Time certificates of deposit In denominations of sfoo,ooo or more .•....••.... S,84t Marke~ value of Investment securities .................. : ....... 91 The uocterslQMd, Lawrence R. Holmos, 'Pres~­ dent & c.e.o. and Edward H. Downer, Senior Vic• President and cashier of the above-4\amed bank. 1 each dKlares, tor himself alone •nd not tor the other: 1 hav. personal knowledge~ the mattera Q>f'I· talned In this report, and I belleve that Heh Uat• men-if" said rep0rl 1$ true. Each Of the under9'gn9d1 for hl~lf alone and not for the otMf', certifies un· der penalty of pert\lry lh•t tM foregohtg Is uw and correct. E~'*° on April 2t, 19'1, at Fountain V•ll.Y C.llfornla. Ill L•wrence R. Holmes /S/ £dw•rd H: ~r Pwbllshed C)renge Co.st ~llY .P110t, APrll 23, 1981 . 1fl0Ut Meae, A.tlr M. Foll•hle11. INOt Ntt· tlawoOO Clrcte, Hunllnoton a.tt". C•llfornl<t f»4' Tiii' -'nt" I• t -.Ct..S by an In· divldual. Ariz Mo. f'at\alllan TPll1 1ta""*1t was filed •1111 1"9 County Cltrk ol Or.enve County on March 2t, "'1. · fllWll Published Oranoe CMSI D•llY Piiot, Apr ZJ. ~.May 7, 14, 19'1 19124 1 PUBUC NOTICE l'ICITITloUS eU$41tllH N.UH STATEMaNT The follow1no perso111 art 001111 bu1Jt1•HH! AQUA·SOI.. >701 Yi. Moore Aw ...... s.nt.a An•. c.llfOf'"fli• 91™ Frenll Sorrt111lno, 19ti S. Re,,. Ori.,., Sar11-"na. Celllornl• tVOC Tiiis ~s II c-.ctff by Ml ln- 6l>tld1<al. fir-Sofrentltoo Thi\ ~'*"-l WIK flied •iii. IM Co11nty c i.rk of Oran99 C:..nty on Aprll ll, 1tl1 PublllMd O.anoe eo..c Delly Pilot. AP< 2l. l0, May'), 14. "" 11$2 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE tiu-.....,.... -ol L .. I GOM-SYnfft Padllc Homebul16•n . O•••• HOYU corpor•l1on of M\IMICAT IONS &QUIPMaMl}formfflr OougYu P«llk Corpcwe· Callfor11I•: • Cahl0<nl• cors-r•llol\, INSTALLATION el If'> A. WlllOl'( llotl 91Mrel ..,.,.... 11701 Mltc"91f 2070 Bu"ntts COllltr Orlvt, lrvlnt, st ... t • >.Or-..C•lllornl•,..., A ... ;,.,.""""'· lrviM, Callfornl• t2714 Callfornl• 9271S Tllo fklllllM IMI ... " -·~ Thll bUilllOH .. condUCltd by • TOd• America Inc dl b•• TOd• mtftt tor UW ~P •• llltd llmiltCI P9r1llOOhiP. construction ot Amerlt•. • New York Jiii\' 11, 1• In UW County of Or..... 5unMt Pacific:, Ltd. corporation, 2070 Bullntu Ct11ltr f'ull H•m• •nd Adelr"s ot Br : SUllMt'P~lfk Orlve. Irvine, C•llfornle tpli Pen.,. Wllftdr-tne:. H-lldor' Tiiis 11<1slntss 1s condt'iled by • I RA J . BRANNER, IMJ EH Gen .... I Partn« e-neral 119rtMrtl!iP WilMlll Siren •l, 0r .. ve. Cellfornl• av c w. Menlbllr9fr Oelw• Hou;e C0<p. t2W7 Chi., FlnatKlel Officer Of CaOlornle Ira J. Br-r Tl\I\ .ietement w• filed with the Twlo.nu Fuku\hlm•. I'll.• NO. fll counly Clllftl of Orange C.unty on ~ldtnl Pu•llv.d Or ... CMSI Oally ,.llOC AProl 1', , .. , T-C.01utruc:11on AP<ll t, 16, 23, J0, 1 .. 1 1731 .. LAYMAN, NANSON,JOHES & YOSS of Amtrlet I.Ow Ottk~ Saloslll Matwmura, I Cw ........ Plau Yi<t PrHICIOnl .... pen-. CellttnllatlMI This stalolNnl wes !lied wllh !he 1'160m5 Covn•• Clerk ol Oren9t Counly on PUBUC NOTICE IJICTITIOUS aUSIN•IS Published Or-CO.st Delly Piiot, Merell 2. 1•1 MAME STAT•M•NT Apr 21. JO. -y 1, 14, 1 .. 1 ltlMI T"• followlr19 .,.r sons ert doing builne\f U REPPAC, 1SOel Ptrt Y Orlve, Westmln.IM, Cehfoml• tau David Lol1Q Fu-n, UOO Perk Newport, Ot, Ntwport Beech. Celllom.fiMO Nie ... Alla .,..._.._, 1111t1 Ptrcy PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSIHEU HAMii STATEMENT .. , ..... Publlll\MI Oranoe CMSI Delly PllOI Aprtl 2, t, 1', JJ, 1911 1'1) ti PUBUC NOTICE Tl'I• 1011ow1n9 Ptr""'' •rt dolno 1------------- Or Ive, w~. Celllornl• ~ bu"ness • l'~ITIOUI aUMM•U Thh IM>SlnHt 11 t ondU<-11Y a SCS I NTERNATIONAL , • NAM9'1AT .. ••MT goMral ~. 01v111on of o.n1ron1• Sys1em1, Inc;., Tiit folfowlnt -IOll• •rt dolno Hlt ... A.Br-lle 2US Croddy Wey. Sall!• Ane , llluS1nffS .. : Tl\h ..U.,,.,.I wes filed wll" IM C.Ollfornl•t7104 WATER ANO SEWER UTILITY County Clefll of Orenoe CouMv on Otnlron1 a Systems, In t ., .. COMPANY, WOU Bae<" 8h1d , 5ul'lt Aprll 21, 1•1. c a111orn1• corporallon, l6lS Crodcly J 1S, f4untlntton eoACh, C.llfornl• fl16M77 W•'f. Santa An•. Callfomoa •~ 92647 fllC'TITIOUIBUSIMEM Publltfltd Oranoe c;o.,1 Oally Piiot, T"ll buSlnou Is tonduelad by a CO<· Park Sentket, Inc., A Oola•are w .... a .. T• .... •NT Apr. 2',JO,IMy 7, 14, 1'11 1tlW 1 p0retlon. corpof'atlOfl, l..S:Z 8Hch alvd., 5ullt ,...., • ~··-Oentronlx System,, In< 21J. Huntlntton Beach, Callfornl• Th• foltow1llO .. ,..,., •r• 4ol1'0 PUBUC NOTICE Poler KllOll, t2M7 11<1sl11essaa: Pr"ldent n11a busl<WU I• ,onouc11d by .,, un· OAll,lltA WC>00WORK$, l~ 1----------Thll 11 .. _, •• flltCI •1111 the IMO<pOf'eted .. IOCIMkln Olhor lhMI a Orclllct Mlf~, 5Wlt.t ~ Helthh, Pl~rTIOUSaUMM&ts county Cltrk of Orenve County on "rtMf'lhlp. 011:::. ~oend. U. Orchid Hiii ft>e NAM8 ITATIMllMf AP<ll 21 , 1 .. 1. '1 .. SU PMll S-0.k.", Inc:. Pt.ce, Miile AN ,....,_, Celllomte MH •• ~l-""O --Is ...... llnl• P\lbllshod Of-CoHI Oally Piiot, ::n.;· SM<'WOOO t2'0~.,_ ·'*""· t•l l!i. IMfl Strwt, PLANT PRODUCT IOttS, 1460 e-pr · U, :Ill, May l , 14• 1"1 tl7Hl This aw'9mlllt was filed ...... tfMI Costii IMM, Gallfwnla 92627 Overlekt, •• Ttf'o, Cellfoml• ttuD County Clef'k of Oranos Gollntr .,. What this <·ountr~ nerds 1s a soap p<l\\drr llrnt "111 prl'\'Cnl a tl'l<•phonl' rinJ{ in th~ bathtuh ••• A poht1can has to b<' able I lO SCl' both Sides Of an IS ,• Siil' llo" els1• ran he get .1r•>und 11 " ••• ~lost of halt• lo see .i J)<IOr lo:.er or a nch "innt'r • •• If 1t \\t;"ren I for op tim1sts. pcss1m1sts \\ould ne\ er \<no\\ ho\\ unha pp~ the~ 11r<' ••• Don I !JUI orr for tomor· rO\\ "hat you can do to. day. because 1f you cnJOY j it toda~. ~nu can do 1t aaam tomor f'O\\ ~ ••• dsme into Tire City. \950 Ne~port Bl-vd., Cost a Mesa where you'll find the best values in tires and wheels. ' I This llVtiMSS It conctuct9d by a Mary J.w T.,.lor, 2M02 0-leu, Aprll 14, \"1. 1 ~ ••Toro, c.llforonl.,.Jt.JO PUBLIC NOTICE .. , ... , .(111!!111!!!9'111!1!1'!1!" oenera R..,.~ji.nct Thll INllNH Is CotHllKlecl by Publlllwd Ot'Mtlt CAies\ Dally ,.llet, Tiiis ... .......,.t •• flied with ............ ~.. M·12lla AP<. lt,U,.IO,#My7, ,., 11\MI c-tv Clerk..of °'8fltllt C-"Y on MetvTerlol' -c• o•sAl.A Tlllt flM..-,C -flltd wltft Ille """" '" "" PUBUC NOTICI! Allfll l4. "''· '1-covntv °""' of or11199 c4Mltr .,, Ott 11•~ ,.,.o,.a11n ..,_.. ~ .... , ....... Or-GMst IUl!ly Pli.t, APfll 14, 1911. AT .... Vo1'Ta SAL.a !------------,..._, -..-~ P1 NO. A.·""'S ""'' t•, n_ .. May 7, t•t 17 I PllllllthM Orelltl c..tl Delly ,..... In Ille .... rklr c-1 ti IN SWU of •• t• µ_J0.May7 Hit Ill.Ml C.llfornle,f•INC_,.yofOr .... PtJBUC NOftCE • ' I 11 Ille Mauer tf ,.,. Eat•t• of "puauc NOTICE CYNTHIA BARROS, OKNwcf. Notk • IS "9f'fty ·-tllal IN -l'ICTITIOUI BUSIM.. RfMtMd wlll ..U • t'rlotatt Mle, ID MAMll ITA TtlllMNT M~tetl TOCCMtTaACTOttl tilt 11~ Md 1101tt .. -, @jkl '°' Tiie ......... ...,..._ ,.....,.._,. Tiii• .-Ice It,_....,.~' !ti <tfll.lrftletlOll ol Mid ,_.klr c-t. --.·~ .. ("' 0 .... ,. .. ftS, tt• Httl 8(ttf•MU Wlttl _,...,ltllM tf tM ... if 8"8f tt114ltl..., Of Mty, 1'11 .. .... " .... • a.11,.11118 t[Mallelf c:... 'S«lfefl Ula offlc. of J-A • .,,...., ,,.. Stf .. t •\I, Mw11tt._.t•" at11cll, ...... S.., ttNel astr\c• • ._.., .. 111l11htr...,, ~a.~ A-, Cell'""'*... t• trwMat If,,,. llr\llNR UNll'llO ~lfe ll, 0.. ... c.unty .. or--. ~ Miit <)'.,._, m t\tll SC:HOOI. Dll'TllllCT Tl!lt 111i.\)c Sleto .. Ctlllonlla. tll IN rltM. Utte Str1et •••• M1111tlt1tl81! 9HCll, IC!lwl-..n<IMaJ-.ICDfltr«•l 11M lfttwell of Mid_....._ at ... Cal...,__. __,_.,.._IMn..,.... r -tknt '-'...,. lllCI ~ tM '-• .. Tlllt ....... It~.., 1111 l!I· .,..... c..-act1 fM't • ano IAWett tMt tM ...._., lli4I • lltf..._.. M1" .,. c""'811t <......., ~ c...-'* ~'" .., ~--.._..NIMO'.,_ • lfMttl.....,._'"9.......,_~ llW~~,..._.._., ....... Tlllt ~ ~ tu.e~ ': a114 _.,...,, s.,.Clellr <Mt~t•r •1t11 to ~ fl aeMI ~. • .. C:.vMr Cfer1I"" ..,11191 __,, Mf\ltcM..,..,.,....MMflB, 'ltM .................. ~ AtWll t4. "''· .,._ 1.~ t..-ac..,,, .._...,. ,,.1 ,,,_..,., ., ...... i._ t111 c:•tr ",_.....,......, ____ _ ,. _.,._... ... ,....... ......... tf leflll AM, CMfltJ .. Of ... --.......... or.tit C--DfMJ= recalwl119 Mtt<llM19M let 111t.n111 ""• •f Callfot11le, "rt1c11tar1, ,.. ,., ... .,,..,,, t"1 1 ...._ "' _. .._ ._ """" •ecrt• •.......,...,..,.,.•fl ....., .,. .....,_. .. ~ • Trad Ne. »GI, ~.,..,.... P"8UC NOTICS , ' ••• ClllJ'g receulonary pre11ares on domettle sales of some of its minicomputer produets, Irvine-based Comptder .u&ematloa lac. reported lower third-qu~rter eamlnes of $41!,0001 or 20 centa a share, and revenues of Sl8.I million for the period ended March 31. Thlt compared with figures of $1.S million, or 76 cents a share, and revenues of $20.8 milllon (or the last year's third quarter. For the first nine months of fiscal 1981, Computer Automation had net income of $1.2 million. or 60 cents a share on revenues of $56.6 million, compared with net income ot S3 million. or $1.Sl a share, on revenues of S58.8 DO YOU NEED HELP? An1wer Network can help Increase your profit• by lowering overhead. With An1wer Network'• •h•red-overhead conc•P1. you wlll h•v• avallabl• every office aervlce you need, Including your own phone number and an1wertng service · ... all at a fraction of the cost of expensive tacllltlea and atatt. COM .. UTUI COMMUNICATIONS IUllC£S AVAILABLE: 0 Aneweftr.g Mrvlce 0 Ouot• prtc•• 0 MMe 9')polnlmen11 0 Letters end typing 0 Word proceulng 0 24 hoor dictation lpec:J1ltztn9 In: 0 Conference room1 0 Payroll 0 Mtll 11111 0 TelH 0 Facelmlle 0 Paglr.g C.t11tled aervlce call dlepatchlng, order taking and credit checi.1ng. Anaww Netwont hat 1 Solution, Call: IHPJJB\ NETWCJAK 714-953-1234 lat.714 Jackfrnderson D ·1 p·1 ' reveals in the II J I DI NaUoul Bdaeatl• eor,. of Newport Beach enjoyed record flnt.quarter ,..ulta. Net eamln" for tbe three months en~ March 31 reached Sl million, up 17 percent from the $882,000 lbe prior yen. Revenues for the period Jumped to S23 rnUUon 1com· pared with last year's $20.8 mlllion1 Primary eaminas per abare were 50 cents in 1981 compared With 45 centa lp 1980. Fully diluted eamln11 per ehare were 41 cents in 1981 compared with 45 cents last year. ••• STANDARD-PACIFIC COBP., a Costa Mesa·based homebuilding firm. reported net income for the three months ended March 31 of $S00,962, or 23 centa a share, compared with $1.8 million, or 46 cents, tn the like 1980 period. EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 Jewels by Joteph purchat .. dlemondt, ~onet. gold and II'* from pr"'-JndM. ~818 and estei.. Cateful examination and evakJltlon by OUf ~ Highest price9 paid. 10.S dilly, Sit 10-6. Cloeed SUndly. Phone biay. Allltt. for Betty Grace Of Eri<! Zalaekl,le. A ~ OI ~· r~ Oll'O. eo Y(M) J[W[LS by dOS~PH &c.11\ Coal ptm, CO.U Meu •WWW '$50~000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • lnlereet otlly .. ,,_.,_ ··-. c--erct.al •Jl-W-del . 6-~L ~~"J:.::.~.S SS.000 MIM. S.C.P.M. 17141 64~7993 •W-ldy~ ..... daly ........ • 6-tll9a.S~ • 8-dMnl CaUIMllk C•1n1.sc1 our '-• ... _tloa .....tee lrn VC>Ur ftn.sn{1ng nef'ds (714) 75SM515 . AlllVltCAH HOME~ 230 Hewpot1 Center Drive Design Plue Newpot1 e..cto. Caltforr"8 926e0 CORNER A•r• CcMe & ••mp• GOU> & Sil VER Prices for 4·22..fl eeNC.._ ..... ....,_Cl.SU.• a.or. sa .. ... ... ,, .. ...,,.. ...... --.u .-.u .... .. "'" .. M7 .S11. "1.S ... ··-~-· Celllor.-..... .-----4CftlCltlV• ~ fln~ .. Wll .... Wl4fl9..-----. (714) 55MllO South Coelt Plue VIit.,. ............. i--.... c:-...... 1 In Business To Make Business Happen At Creative we have the money you need. Loans from $25.000.00• for any business or investment purpose. Where you deal directly with the Lender and ·not a loan broker. •All loans secured by a combination ol rear and personal property. «25 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 (71 41 752·7923 <fiu.lt.ji&fj~~'U?e~~ 1st In Features, Perfo11t1~ Price! tRS-80 COLOR COMPUT.EA . 81 IORN CUNNIFF ............... Nt:W YORK -Nobody can HY wben lt will take olace or exactly what. lt will look like, but there'• a notion eircul1tJng thal somewhett down. the road there'll emer•e a ho~ogeniled m1tket for financial servlce1. valleys." And, he Hlct, •eeurtUet "i• a 1l1a.alic Uffr ol CaJ)lt&J." Instead of golna to the bank for cub, to your tnaurance acent for annullk!s1 to your broker for ln ttae earl,y lt'TOI, lo fact, many broken sue· cumbe4 to tiaht money problenu. "If we can co to PrudeoUal wltb lde11 that would produce 1 ••ll•faetory retum of c•1:t•I they mlibt be ln· tefe1ted," said Jacobs. ·the lnaurance industry has vut amoimts of money to put to work." Bache can offer Prudential 65 different prod- ucts. inclu4lng money funds, 1tock1, mutual (unds, commodities and gold, some of which mlgbt be candidates for eventual integration into the in· sunnce product. 1tockl and to the local coin dealer for gold, you might deal with one outfit that will service all your needs. They'll know • lot about you, from lnformatJoo you pro- vide and from studying your ac· tlvlty file. They'll be able, as · they say, to exercise client CQD· trol or asset control --the terms are essentially the same. That day is sWl far off, said Jacobs. For the immediate future ''the insurance aeent and the broker will be distinct, but the cutting edges along the sides will change,'· he said. Grad1J&lly be feels , the "crisp line" may blur, perhaps leading to a hybrid "financial planner." , Cl#NNll'I" CONTROL, FOR ONE thing. would mean an end to the' frustration of having a customer depart because be wanted stocks and you could only seU him insurance. The financial services company could satisfy him either way. They might have mutually synergistic in· fluences. With infialion and volatile lnterest rates. insurers today find their traditional fixed-return policies Jess attractive to cuatomers. But when face values are based on the retUJ11 of successful stock funds , which brokers have, the insurers might be able to offer security -and an inflation hedge. Ford calls for easing 'shackles' LOS ANGELES CAP> -Ford Motor Co. Presi· dent Donald E . Petersen says he doesn't want a government "bail out" of the ailing auto industry but calls for removal of "the competitive shackles that have been applied over the years." The possibilities are numerous, as Harry Jacobs, c}lairman of Bache qroup Inc .. said last week when Prudential Insurance Co. gained SI percent of his company. It was a day for celebral· ing. ··we can right our own battles in the market if the rules are the same for ·all competitors." he said at a meeting of the World Affairs Council of Los Angeles. "Flex:ibility, stability, opportunity," Jacobs said several times. That. he said. is what Pruden· tlal means lo Bache, whose operating arm. Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, is one of the biggest securities firms. Petersen also called on the United Auto Workers Union to help the auto industry "come to grips with the labor cost problem." and suggested that profit sharing or other kinds of earning com· pensation programs could be set up for the employees. IT A.I.$) MEANT one more thing t.o Sache ex· ecutivesi Safety from another investor they frowned upon and reared, and had been trying to ward off for two years. But, said Jacobs, the positive reasons were stronger. "FORD DOES NOT want t.o pull out of the U.S. market and does not intend to." Petersen said. "But if we can't manufacture ·competitively in the United States -then we will be forced to manufacture more and more products ofr·shore where costs are lower. and perhaps ultimately to produce complete automobiles ... "The first thing we discussed 'With Prudential was the entrepreneurial nature of our business ... he said. "We fluctuate between peaks and He traced the economic problems of the na· lion's auto industry to the imposition or govern· ment regulations in the late 1960s. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NASOAO quoul CIUUIA 1214 12~ HenrdF • ........ UV. Nu'°'p 21\1> 11"' 1 s.~:!r ~ 1H~ NASDAQ SUMMARY '1!0wl1>9 h19Mtt bids CIUUlll -2tllo Hotollm 214 2 OollvyM 2t.\Ot 2tV. Svcmsl 1' Jt\I> NEW YORK IA~I CIUSoGe t l4 ~ Helmlhc .~ ~Noull JI .... Jl~I S. JJ'/, 31V end I-ott.~ by ClerilJL DtJ. Miii HM,,., ,,_ I OflloCes •t 41\lo SllMd D"' 12h -"'•i.r'="lc.H 0t ClowCp Ill. Horl1Ra I 11'1 Oii Ferro 12 12\lt Sllwml ~ 27 :C9:'.to.rec.a11,,.,.,. ... ~col .. ,~~ 17~ 17.._ ~'·s~n'n,• !,~ ~,~l Op!.!~,TnPI 1'~ ',.1:-;i SC•IWtr ·~ 11\lo mertidel.-C ..,_ .,. ,... llA • ""' • .,. ...,. ,..,. ,. SwEISv IS UI/) NEW YOHO( IA.,1 -Ille foll-Int lltl IK COflll'I.. CIH -~ 1' lnlralnd 71/J • PebSIB ,. ....... ,,. SwnE11• ~ 3'\w -· Ille °""' llM c_ .. , IHlon '°' Wed. CmlSlv 1' 17 Intel s 411"'1 ~ PcGell 211., U"' Sl•110Y11 1''n .ci ~kt -w~r-1s t•·1 ,.._ -·~ Stock llid ASA CmwTtl '""' II lnlrcE11r 10 10'4 PMll..,.., •• YJ s ;c ---· ·-·• ..---AaL ln4 IM 13'4 ConP-.i 1 »4 ., 1111mtGt 9"" '°"' PeylaCt 19\lt 1~ ldM ro-11~ 12 Ille most --n tl\t ,,_, b•,..0 on AFAProt I t\lt Cordia 20\1> 11 lnBICWSI\ 1M 1~ PterMI 11~.,. ',!~ 1 U~~~ r,~ ~\I> l'!or'u"w' ~ .. cNngie r~oi.u 01 volume AVM qi '"' S~ CrolTrt s ~is-.-lweSoUt I~ 20 PtneEnl ...., .,.. < "" Accwrey IW. I,_ CutlrFd a aw. 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'• ' Unllever. ontotlt>. l1r1e1t companJet ln the world, welshed tn rec«ntly with 1980 res'ulta: • alel reached 124 bllllon,profillaftertauscam to'85Saillhon. Thole blockbuitn fifUttt would rank UnUever u follows ln th~ Urute'd Stat.et corporate Un~\IP~ l.Sth ln sates (just ab~d of AtJanttc Richfield and rilhl below General EJcctrlcu. 2$..h In profits Cahead of Unioo OJI and below Procter&Oamble.>. But now th1&t you ki\o" that, who l'-.fJoilever? An<I what does it dO to rank so hJ1hJy? Unllever beloncs to that modem breed or companies known as muJtina• tlonals. It's an Anglo -Dutc h ·combine <there are dual head--quarters in Lon· dor) and Rot f,:, ------------' ", 1111111n;cii terdam) that re. lllTll s ulte'd from the l~O merger or the world's largest soap company <Lever Bros.> with the world's largest margarine company (Margarine Unie> TODAV, UNILEVER operates in 75 countries making a wide range of foods, soaps and detergents'. fats and oils. starches . chemlcals, toiletries. paper pro- ducts and animal feeds: Its three U.S. outposts -Lever Bros.. Thomas J Lipton and National Starch & Chemical do more than S2 billion a year. You're gel ting a Unilever product when you buy any of the folio" ingitems: All, Breezt', Drive. Wisk. Lux. Rmso, Dove. Caress, Lifebuoy, Final Touch. Ai m . Close·Up. Pepsodent. Signal. Imperial margarine, Promise, Mrs . But terworth's syrup. Lipton 's teas and soups, Wish·Bone salad dressings. Pennsylvania Dutch noodles. Kn ox gelatin and Good Humor ice cream And thost.' are just the American bre1nds Margarine brands outside the US include Rama. Blue Band, Becel und Flora. In Bnlatn. Unilever markets the detergents Omo and Persil. Walls ice cream and Birds Eye frozen foods . On the European continent it sells the Skip detergent. Unox soups. Calve salad drt"ss in gs and Z"' an meats. COMPANIES LIKE UN ILEVER tncreastngly call the shots in our economic ltH!> They're huge They market hundreds of products They're at home anywhere in th(• world And more <1nd more of them tend to be based outside the lJnited States. A report rt.' leased this month by the Conkrl'nte Board showed this picture· fn 1963. lJ S firms accounted for6Jofthl' \\Orld 's 100 largest industrial corporations In 1971. l: S firms made up58ofthetop 100 ln 1979. the L' S share"' as 47 THE MESSAGE IS clear . companies based outside lhe United Stutes are growing faster than American firms Getting information about these multinational monsters has never been easy. but 1t 'sdefinitely getting easjer. For example. if you're interested in this cast of characters. you s hould tell your local library about the existence or a new reference work. "The World D1rec tory of Multinational Enterprises ... <This two·volume directory, published by Facts on File. New York, 1s not for every home li brarv because it costs $195 > Edited by three academics t J ohn M Stopford. J ohn H. Dunning and Klaus 0 . Habench >. this directory brings together information about 430 international gtants-216 are American companies. 53areJapaneae. 51 are British and 30 are German Beginning with Chicago's Abbott Laboratorin (they make Murine eyedrops) and ending with Japan 's Yamaha Motor (the world's second largest make r of motorcycles), the directory tells you how big these companies are, what they make. where they operate. and how they came to be what they are Included in the directory are21 companies in which there is a s ignificant government ownership. rangmg from Renault. the French car maker <owned JOO per- cent by the French government>. to Daimler Benz. maker of the Mercedes·Benz < 14 percent owned by the govemmentof Kuwait ). STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES N EW YORICIAPI Fln•I Oow Jone\ ••Cl~ AMERICAN LEADERS 1or Wed Aqt 21 STOCKS Open High L.ow Clo,,. Cf'\9 IO 11\0 100110 IOI) ...... ll 1007 01 •I OI 10 Trn tl'l 2' 4" 5' 410 n ~~J 10 • 4 II IS Ull 107 27 101 93 IOS I~ IOI> \4 0 S~ U Slit J'IO 11 J9S 04 •7 l • 1'1 ti • 1 11 lndU• •.01.000 T r•n l, 11S,IOO U\111 '44.000 6S S" 9 .04•.+00 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YVW ... 1•U'I Apr 11 Prev Aova,,oo ToO•y 7'9 o:r. 0.CllMd 796 '" uncll•noeci l7S JtS Tot•I lu u .. '"° 1'0) New hlOllt ,,, IU Ntw lows JS \q WHAT AMEX OIO n' HEW YORK ("Pl Apr P-fe" Toelty du. -"""•n<ecl JOS Oecllned m 3'l Uncl\tn99(1 "' 117 Tot•I luu.1 l2t 121 New 1119111 :13 .. New lows • 1) METALS c:.,_. ~\MO C~ll a pownd, U,S. O•tl- llOfl._ Y M ..atMtupound, tlM 4""<Ma• -"'· .,,.,,..,.., Tltl tU"4 ~· W•k <.,...lie Ill ...... ._.,.~·~·" '(, MettwYtGl.00,., 11aa11. ,~~M'J.._,,.,'t SILV(R ' . • . -~ . " . . t . .. • • . .. t .. :,. • I ! I I ' j ' Orange Count11 Secretary of the Da11 Trudy MiJlakawa and her bo11, Colttl Me10 Fire Chief John Pe1ruzztell.o Member of the Year Barbara Surgea Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Kelly and hil secretary, Suzanne Long ... By SANDIE .JOY Of ... Dellly ~ ..... . -" E xplaining that a career aa an actor lsn 't far from a career as a secretary "because we have to go in and lie about background," ex- TV star-tutned-polltlcian Jack Kelly addressed 300 secretaries and their bosses Wednesday at South Coast Plaza Hotel. The occasion was the 12th annual Orange County Secretaries Day Program, an $8.50-per- HAPPENINGS person breakfast at which Kelly, who was billed as guest speaker, quipped, "I can satisfy at least half of that billing. I am one hell of a guest." Kelly's talk was filled with quips about his career and about his secretary, Suzanne Long, who was seated next to him at the head table. Secretaries have a day Guest speaker Kelly entertains Kelly, who began his acting career as an in· fant ln Ivory Soap advertisements and went on to fame u Bart Maverick in the now-defunct "Maverick" TV <Series, is a Huntington Beach councilman and real estate investor. He got the Maverick part, Kelly said, after movie mogul Jack Warner saw him In film clips with a camel hovering over his head. L eveling a joke at the bosses in the au- dience, Kelly gave his description of a camel. "They spit, smell bad and have the breath or a septic tank." he said. "Sounds like an old boas." The rest of his jests were directed at the secretaries. "1 learned early in my career," the coun- cilman said, "that secretaries were fantastic dates." IA another j~st, Kelly explained he couldn't get his own coffee because when he did. he usually got the sugar and cream wrong. He added, "In my operation, I have a lot of meetings ln the office and I don't know what those chauvinist males wouJd think il I would get up and get my own coffee." The councilman also explained his secretary had the duty of getting his car filled with gas because the service station attendants enjoyed seeing her more than him. As a final Jab at secretaries, Kelly said he 1° needed a new typewriter an his office but was holding out until his secretary learned how to type with all 10 fingers Among highlights of the morning program was naming of Trudy Miyakawa as Orange Countv's Secretary of the Dav. Ms. Miyakawa, who works for Costa Mesa Fire Chief John Petruzziello, was presented with a dozen red roses. a two-day trip for two to San Francisco and a typewriter donated by Silver· Reed America in addition to various other pnzes. Barbara Surges. who works for Will Williams of the City of Costa Mesa's Facilities and Equipment Division, was honored by the Bahia Chapter of the Professional Secretaries Associati9n as Member of the Year. Nursing home aides very special ange/,s DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please write a few words in praise of nurse's aides everywhere, but especially those who work in homes for the elderly. These people perform tasks that would be abhorrent to most of us, and they are almost always at the bottom of the pay scale. My sister is in a nursing home. Senility has taken over her mind, and age has crippled her body. She 1s totally helpless and cannot speak. Anyone who has visited one of these places, no matter how expensive, has seen the human wreckage of what were once capable. productive people. Many are forgotten by their families. It Is the aides who do the "caring." I wish.a special day could be set aside to honor all the nurses and their aides who devote themselves to the care of the elderly and helpless. Som eone should let them know their efforta are appreciated. And thank you, Ann Landers, whelher or not you publish my letter. I feel better for having written it. -AUNT JENNIE IN CIN- CINNATI 1111 lllBlll pose a problem. My fiance 's father is a hypocrite Perhaps the word should be "UPOSSLQ " ror,J and a snob I dislike him Intensely. The feeling is "Unmarried Person of the Opposite Sex Sharing_:' mutual. I sensed it the finst time we met. I would Living Quarters " Or. how about "SPOSSLQ" for not want any of our children to carry thJs scoun· s ingle persons? POUGHKEEPSIE POSSLQ drel 's name. Dear Keepsle: You ml11ed the polnl. Tbe Shouldn't the naming of children be a mutual Census Bureau does use "husband" and "wife" for decision? The thought/of the hassle ahead is those legally wed. The • • POSSLQ • • la a-.-; Dear Aunt .Jennie: As a board member of the enough to make me dread pregnancy Please eupbemlstlc bit of gobbledygook to cover otber'1; Rehabllltallon lnstltute In Chicago, I know answer my letter, Ann. I need your help -situations. ~ WHAT'S IN A NAME IN WESTCHESTER., aomethlnc about t•e dedlutloa and caring of d~-"Persons of the Opposite Sex Sharing Living tors, nurses and aides who cater to the needs of the Dear Chet&er: Naming a child should be a Quarters" could be eUher swinging slnglea or eveln handicapped. Tbeae people are about H close to joint dedsloa. Since you dlsUke your future father· room mat.es married to tomeone else In ano&her saints as anyone on earth. I agree that a special ln·law Intensely, your bu.abaad should agrH to a household. Vour "UPOSSLQ" and "SPOSSLQ'' day of appreciation should be set aalde to honor compromise. If It'• a boy, hJJ fatber'a name can be are both covered. The Cenaua Bureau couldn' them. the eblld'a middle name. Hlt ftl"R name couJd be care. less whe&her people are legally married or DEAR ANN LANDERS: For the past four your husband'•, bl• bro&Jler'• or a favorite u.ncle'a. Jiving In sin. And It's really none of their baulness. l years 1 have been going with a man I love a great J deal. Recently the topic of children's names came DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 was amused by How to -and how much'! Find out with Ann Lan· j up. He Informed me that he fe els the flr5t son Charlie Osgood's poem about the "POSSLQ... der1' new booklet. ''How. What , and When to Tell Your -should be named after the husband's father. which ls the Oenaua Bureau's name for "Person of Child About Sez." For your COf'll 1end 50 cmt• along I am a conservative person who believes the Opposl.te Sex Sharing UviD& Quarters ... I have with a long. •tamped. 1elf-addre11ed envelope to Ann strongly ln family tradition, but this one is 1oing to one a~ I call him "husband." Landeri. P.O. Boz 11995, Chicago. Ill 60611 • ,--~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ THE RUFFELL'S SCULPTURED PORTRAITS UPHOLSTllY s...~ ....... I tZ2 HAHOI ll.VD. COSTA MIU.-14 .. 1 lM That w II last for centuries MARY . NEW 8UllNESSMEN W~_y Buy Someone Else, By Somebody_ ~!~L -When you con hove YOURSBf T odoyl By Hendrik A 20 MINUTE Sii liNG WILL PRODUCE A MASTEIPllCI THAT Will LAST FOREVER JANE '5'~ I LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Republican Party fund·ra.lsln& dinner ton,ghl fe•turlne Vlce Pre1ident Georee Bush as the main speaker haa netted more than $1 a\illlon. The revenue wW be \.lied to lry to capture contl'01 of the state Leeislature next year. said ~uatrialist David H. Murdo<!k, the dinner cbairouin. Tickets for tbe dinner at Uae Century Plaza Hotel are $1,000. Rme bill moved SACRAtdENTO <AP> -A measure to repeal an interest ceiling on variab•e·rate home mortgages has sailed through a Senate committee. The proposal would also allow lenders to raise monthly mortgage payments by as much as 71.A, percentaae points annually when interest rates rise. Sex bill dead SACRAPdENTO <AP> -A proposed s(ate screening of sex e ducation t ex tbooks and teachers' manuals for standards of morality ond other criteria J'an Houten deilUJd. FRONTERA (AP) -Lalle Van Houten, a onetime J • . . . homecoming princess who went on a kill· Ing spree for Charles Manson, was retus'd parole Wed- nesday after VAMHOUTI" a prosecutor said the public would not accept her freedom. MUluif e jailed VENTURA CAP > -Delea Bums. an unlicensed midwife. has been sentenced to 30 days in Ventura County Jail and three years on probation for practic- ing without a license. •459 value a# ....... Sen. S.1. Ha114kawa, It.Calif. <left) lit• wUh amba$sador nommt;e John A. Gavm at hearttig. Gavin testifies W ASIDNGTON (AP> -Actor Jol\n Gavin, noll'linated to be U.S. ambassador to Mexico, diJ. puled a suggestion. Wednetetay that the country ls endangered by Soviet-Cuban Marxism. "The Marxist ideology is in- deed espoused by a certain sec· tor,·· Gavin said. '·But I bell eve on balance we need not fear for the security of the Mexican Republic." The disagreement developed at Gavin's confirmation bearing before the Senate Foreign Rela- lions Committee. Gavin said he ~ained ex· perience in Latin American af. fairs as a special adviser to the Organization of American States' secretary general from 1961 to 1965. Gavln said he believes Presl· dent Reagan nominated him because he agrees with the pres· ident that "it's time we cleared up the misconceptions and mis· unders tandings that exist between the United States and Mexico." ~~NGELES <AP) -Al· neaa Dader.•ood, a colorful new1paperwom• whole~ aa clty dtol' ot the Lai Aaatlea RerJld Ex&IJ\l .. r lp•nn~ l7 yeart, tiu fl*' a tilt mlWoa defamatlba sult Oftr a11oc* that said she belped the late 11n1st•r Mickey Cohen steal $1 m1JU0n. Defendant.a inelu~ Tbe New Yofk Times Bpok Co .• which pub~shecJ ''The Last Mafioso.'' a boolt b¥ Ovid Demaria •bout former moblter Jimmy Frat.ian· no. Also named were CBS' "60 Mtnuiea,'' which reported on material ii) the bOok, and Los An&eles radio statiort KMPC. which ran an interview with Demaria. THE 08VIT, filed Wednesday. claims the book and subsequent interviews falsely stated that Ms. Underwood aided Cohen by printing a fabricated story in the Los Angeles Herald-Express (the forerunner of the Herald Examiner> in 1948 staling that a ship ·loaded with arms fo r Israel had sunk. The story , the book claimed, was a coverup to allow Cohen to pocket SI mil!Jon in donations he had raised to pay for the arms. Ms. Underwood, 78, said no such article was published and that she didn't even know Cohen in 1948. According to the book and l traftacrlptti qf lritervlews, Fra· UJnDO cUdn 't trua~ Cohen to eep ' lt· hud.t off th' fl mUUoaA wlllcb he ~edly coJlecteir l at the ur1ln1 of Menacbim • Btcln, at t.he time bead of1.. b un- der1round 01ovement ana pres· eotlyl1rael'11primemlni1ter. The book quotes Fratlanno a~' s-ylng, "See. he's sot this broad at The Herald, Atule Un· derwood. She's ~ big editor, there, and this broad would walk op hot coals for Mickey. Print1 any -he gives her . The way I see it, Mickey called her and made up a story about buying' guns and ammunition for the Jews with the million raised at the benefits and then told her the boat sank. A few unknown peo pie died. some were saved, and she prints it on his say-so. I says, 'Mickey, congratulations. You've just pulled off the big- gest. cleanest score I've ever 1 seen made.'" CARYL WARNER, Ms. Un· derwood's lawyer. said the only I story about. a ship full of arms that could be located in the old Herald-Express or any other newspaper library was one stat- ing that a ship laden with arms and destined Cor Begin's lrgun Zvai Le umi underground was blown up on a Tel Avi v beach by t he Israeli army. Begin ·s group had been opposed by the nedg· Ling Israeli government because it resorted to te rrorist tactics SFA's Storewide Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions and accessories: f a$hion Jew(flr,-r !' Swiss 'Watch~ Cultured Pearls• Belts Scarves • Handbags • Blouses • Designer and Better Sportswear Separates • Active Sportswear Sportshirts • Rainwear ~ .. ' Sportdresses • Designer Dresses ening Apparel • Su its Better Dresses • Robes Sleepwear and Loungewear Blouse Collections Womens Shoes Fashions for Juniors in Right On! Maternity Collections · From 'SFAbulous and 'S FA ntastic: Rainw~r, Suits, Blazers, Sportswear, Dresses The Men's Store: , 25% to 40% off original prices on Mens Collection Sportswea' University Place and Men's Furnishings .. \ I ' The Laguna Beac'h {lnlfied Sch<>Ol District is facing an ex· pected budget deficit of nearly '580,000 for the next school year, ln addltion to declining enroll- ments in the elemeJ1tary grades. The s~hool board has agreed that one of the district's three elementary schools or its ib- termediate school probably will have to be closed when t.1te cur· rent school year ends this June. A nine-member committee has been appointed by the board to study the alternatives that are open to the district. including which school should be closed and what should be done with the building when, and if, it is. The school board doesn't want to sell any property in the event it might be needed in the future, however unlikely that might be. The. cloeure committee mem- bers are looking ~to leuin1 the vacant school building to generate income for the school district llowever, all the schools are located in &refill toned for res- idential use only, precluding co~mercial use of the bui!ding. Clearly the Laguna Beach Unified School District board and the closure committee members are faced with a difficult task; that of closing a neighborhood school which many parents and school children feel is an integral part of their community. The closure committee is scheduled to make its recommen- dation to the board May 7. Board members will then have final say on which school is closed. We don't envy the formidable task they have been charged with. Long wait will pay A $165 million hotel and res· idential project overlooking Dana Harbor has received re- gional Coastal Commission ap· prov al, more than a decade after it was first proposed. The Smyth Bros. Construction Co. intendstocreatetwohotels, 112 condominiums. two restaurants, and 46 single f amity homes on a 76-acre parcel between Coast Highway and Del Obispo Street. The company has battled for 13 years for project approval, and has had the backing of the com· munity, the county, and the re- gional Coastal Commission on three previous occasions. The latest proposal, endorsed by the regional panel last week, in· c 1udes23 acres of open space. A 6.5 acre park area will be de· signed and developed by the com- pany which surpasses the project's parks requirement. In addition, the company is currently negotiating a deal with the COWlty for purchase of another 16 acres on the property for open space. If accepted, the company would design and develop the larger parcel, and put up the money to maintain it, leaving it up to the county to make a one-time purchase. And while massive grading is proposed for the blufctop project, the majority is going to fill in a canyon in order to provide for the extension of Del Prado and the realignment of Street of the Golden Lantern. Such a project is needed in Dana Point, and will provide public visiting areas overlooking the marina, as well as parks and restaurants. Continenlal touch Talk about a community get- ting behind a project. In Laguna Beach, community members have planned, con- structed, and paid for a nine-foot kiosk at no expense to the town's taxpayers. Who are these community members? They're architects, artists. painters, contractors and merchants. And what they've created is a concrete kiosk that will display art posters telling strollers on Forest A venue of . upcoming cultural events. The city's Arts Commission set aside $2.500 for the project, but thaf money will now ~o to other art • projects in Laguna Beach -it wasn'tneeded. Italian-born artist and long- time Lagunan Marco Sassone has been pushing for a kiosk in Laguna Beach for years. But even he did not envision a project that would be supported and constructed by the com- munity. And he's not stopping at just one kiosk. He'd like to see the colorful structures at several ather key points in town , aRd he wouldn't mind if volunteer efforts made those projects become a reality. too. Opinions e)(pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invlt· ·ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo)( 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PhOtle 01.-) '"2·-4321. L.M. Boyd/ Pick her color Every woman has a secret color that does something special for her looks. she thinks. Whether it's the tint itsell or just the feeling of con- fidence it gives her doesn't matter. It works when she wears it. It.em No 833C in our Love and War man's file is a recommehdation (o you. t11~ man eager to please in matters romantic. Find out what your girlfriend's secret color is. and match il with s m all gifts. Scarves. Flowers, Costume jewelry. If she tells you her favorite color is green. as currency, you know she's onto you, and you can put this item back into the file. AD'l advised the word "bumo~ous" first showed up ln print ln a University of Denver atudent newspaper in, 1973. But ap- parently it bas stuck. Merriam- Webster editors expect it to appep in ~ forthcoming dictionaries. Q. Do TV anchormen like Walter 1 Cronkite, John Chan~ellor and Frank Reynolds aet to say an)'thJna they want to on their n11bt.b' news sbo~? A, At least once, yea. Cronk\te waa authorized about seven minutes ol bit own air Ume. Chancellor four maybe five, and Reynolds three to four. 'lbe)r're so dlaciplined ln ex- perience you can't always gue11 whether their edltorial J\kli111ents are penonel '?r corporate. Oddbalh couldn 't last lon g with s uch authority. In a discussion of nuclear bombs, Bertrand Russell said, "We have found that tbe men who know most are the most gloomy." This item is in our Love and War man's file, sur· prlsingly. ll is precisely the con- clusion of the matrimonial re· searchers after an extensive atudy of husbands and wives who do and do not understand each other. Counselors generally agree that couples need to be able to talk to each other. But some deny that thorough ~derstaoding is all tbal dandy. In many cases, they aay. ll'a better not lo know. Q. Uthe Irish ballad "Danny Boy" isn't a love son11 what It it? A. The lament Of a dying fat.her for a aon gone off to a war that had already killed two of his other IOftS. Most prison1 ban not Ju.st halr tonic that contain alcohol, but hair oU of any kind, l 'm told. Q. Why .~ ·bemloel ud spruce said to be mon effectlve lha.n otber trees ln tcneniQf off highway nolHt A. Tbdr foll .. • It spaced lo suob a maMer ~'° u belt to bd1e molt aouncl •ave lenctba. ~eteareben ~ that. . \. • Land policy bears watching W ASHJNGTON The Sierra Club is suing the federal government in an at· tempt to prevent mining in a wilderness area in northwest Montana. The plaintiffs, according to papers filed in U.S. District Court here. include 12 un- named grizzly bears. Sounds like more damned snail-darter foolishness to me. But then so do a lot of things being said these days around Washington by the new guardians of our natural resources. the appointees of Ronald Reagan. The same Mr. Reagan who once said if you've seen one redwood tree you've seen 'em all TAKE JAMES WATT, the new secretary of the interior He spoke last month to an enthusiastic conference of the companies that run concessions in national parks. The subject. at that moment. was horse trails . but Secretary Watt expanded the discussion to include his own opinion of the mis· take GOO made in putting together the great outdoors. "You folks will quickly understand why I bring so much controversy and rtak ... Watt said "I don"t hke to paddle and I don't like to walk · · Well, Mr Secretary. we could build a freeway through Yosemite National Park. It would make it more convenient for the lumber company trucks Whal trucks? The ones they are going to need to iet out all the trees that John Crowell is apparently ready to let the the lumber companies aod the de· companies cut down on public lands velopers who want the use of that land. c.rowell is Reagan·s noffi:inee as as· 1 Reagan has always sided with the s1stant secreiar y of ag~1culture for developers or. depending on your natural resoulces and environment. the viewpoint, the exploiters against official in charge of the US Forest responsible conservationis ts -or . Service. again depending on your viewpoint. THE FOREST SERVICE now allows private companies to take between 10 billion and 12 billion board-feet a year RICHARD RllVIS from public lands and has projected that in 50 years perhaps 16 biOion board-feet could be reasonably taken out per year. During his confirmation hearings. Cr9well said he thought 35 billion board-feet could be taken out ~ach year. There is going to be a tremendous battle over the national parks and other publtc lands during the Reagan years These are very tough. development· oriented people who have spent years talking up the "Sagebrush Rebellion .. -the We stern movement to return millions or square miles in federal lands to state control But there has always been a dark side to that revolt. It's the oil companies. the mining companies. cr azed environmentalists. Now the administration and its fri ends in Congress. particularly Senators Jesse Helms. chairman of the Agriculture Committee. and James McClure. chairman of the Energy Committee, are pushing ahead on all fronts to open public lands. waters and parks to saws and drills and trucks · MAYBE SOME OF that is right and necessary. But how can we tell whether Reagan and his merry men are sensibly opening public lands to reasonable ex· ploration and development, or are JUSl turning millions and millions of acres over to greedy environmental rapists? Well. one way ts to pay attention to or gan1zat1ons like the Sierra Club and the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund. .. We won ·t stop them," said Tim Mahoney. the c lu b 's Washington representative "But we will be there. and if we think that they are overstep· ping the law. we·11 see them in court " I decided not to la ugh about the grizzlies 1n Montana and I sent another $25 to the Sierra Club Watch those guys for me, will you"! Feds already have airport authority To the t:d1tor: Westem\Airlines' recent statements about ils loss or two flights per day from John Wayne Airport and Its will· ingness to fight the county over the is sue has important implications for citizens living under the flight path of the a\rJ>Ort . Western officials charged that the county Board of Supervisors had made "anti-competitive efforts over the years to keep Western out of. Orange County" and that the county's plans "would compound ... dis· crlmlnation" against Western. The aware individual will recognize that Western officials are using precise· ly ·the language found in the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978. which re· quires that all recipients of federal <ADAP> funds must foster competition among the airlines and discourage dis· crimination against any firm. Such competition was thought by federal legislators to benefit the traveling public. SINCE THE John Wayne Airport re· cei ved ADAP funds tfirough the auspices of Mr. Robert Badham as late as the fall or 1980, or course, Western's present posturing makes sense because their exclusion from the airport is ii· legal. Past federal expenditures at the airport effectively remove any county control over tt in such matters. County officials have acknowledged that fhe FAA bas reiulatory authority in these areas of disP,Ute. Therefore, any ex· panalon of the airport. regardless of who ~· for it, will be ruinous for Newport Beach, Tustin. Santa Ana and Costa Mesa becauae the federal gov- ernment already has sufficient autbori· ty at the airport to enforce usage cor· re11pondin1 to airport size. HENRY BRACTON . An and the law To the Edit.or. l JUlt hild to duh down to 16th and Superior lD Costa M,eu to see what lt waa that AU Rouab•n bad created. I was plea.Md and 1urprl1ed by what I found, ahd for those who are not sure or haven't Htb Ute work, re1l.usured, it lt arU Del )'ouraelt a favor and see It, lf you have11'\ already. Standlaf under "Volcano" ts a po1itlv•l1 dl1t¥ln1 experience, alty sculpture that baa 1ucb a strong pbyalcal ~ on St.a viewers abou.ld not be ll&btly cllimlUed •• a "•t:nlcture." suiting his rule book and simply decid· ing that these things have got to go What I wish he would do is go see the MAILBOX work and then consult his rule book and see if he can find a way of making these works exempt from whatever laws they may be in violation of. TONY POWELL To the Editor· Recently we entered escrow to buy 2.65 acres of land from Mr. Adams located at Saf\ Juan Hill Cteek Road and the Santa Ana Freeway in Saa Juan Capistrano. He had completed all necessary hearings and had altered the master plan to allow an office building on his site though the underlying zoning was recreational We then began our trip through the ~ity bureaucracy. We were informed by the staff that what seemed like permission to build a professional office building on the site was just an illusion. The staff would relentlessly recommend against it and our investigation within the city indicated that there wasn't a ghost of a chance. We couldn't believe it but the preponderance of evidence final· ly convinced us 'that the long, tedious, and expensive path that would have had to be followed with so unlikely a c.hance to succeed just wasn't viable. We withdrew the application and the city lost a first class office condominium building that could have provided local bustnessmen a chance lo become their own landlord. t . it. landscape it, etc .. etc This whole process would take about six months before we could possibly ob· lain a building permit We created a de· sign for two buildings to contain 42 rac- quetball courts; 30 to be built at this time allowing an added 12 for future de· mand. One look by the city and the bureaucracy had more demands. Next we were told that of 2.65 acres we could only use 1.07 acres for our building. parking, driveways and sidewalks; 1.58 a cres would be open. Ye Gods! This is already a public recreation center. Such ridiculous demands and time made the project totally unfeasible. In fact the city is committing confiscation of Mr Adams· land without any payment to him. E 0 RODEFFER Disaster is now 'to the Editor: The reaction of SPON against the ex· tension of University Drive is certainly typical. They seem to be against any change and to believe worms and snails are more important than people. Is there anything they would approve that 99 percent of our residents want? The Upper Newport Bay is NOW a dis- aster. and every winte11 the mud co mint under the Bay Bridgemakesthewaterlhe color of the Mississippi River. The dis- aster area annually moves south. WE THEN be11n lhe procaa of ap- pl)'lna to build a . recreatiOllal coJn- operated public racquetball f acUU.y on the land -t.hia wu· completely within the &onina. But more bureaucratic ob· staclea were ahead. PIJ'lt a .,.UOa with tbe staff to vtew a pNllmloary atu plan. 'lb1a would be followed bJ a more fintabed site plan. Then a wait for ~ • rneetlni wlt.b 1n arclalteetwal eom · • mlttee wbo bid • plftOlleelv9'1 preJ~ ucJleea u to wut u.., nt ... Wt own lt but "lMY' • tetl .., bOw to deitp lt, paint [ ALSO, every resident who uses the Pacific Cout Highway from MacArthur to the Arches should gel behind the H• tension. All traffic studies indicate com· pletlng Uqiverslt.)' Drive would ease thla problem and will sUU be n~ even wlt:b the new bridge and the nentual extenalon of the Cor~ del Mar Freeway, Wblch II probably years away. The position ot SPON and the Coaatal Commiuton 11 arbitrary and lU01lcal. Let's support the Eta 11 that la what" need to get some action. IRVIN C. CHAPMAN A lawtult file4 on bebalt of South Cc>Uaty civic aroups op. . pot~ ~ development plana in South L .. ..,., '• Hobo Canyon hH been knocked down ln Orariee COunty Superlot Court oo • teclmleallt)J. . Judge Edward J. Wallin -ln dJsmissing the suit Wednesday -said lawyers representin1 various organizations challeng· ing the development railed to abide by new state regulations Wronado job nixed by Purcell Aeling Laguna Beach Police Chief Neil Purcell says he has turned down a Job offer an Coronado and will be staying in Laguna. Purcell had been the top choice for the police chief's job in Coronado, but said he called that town's City Manager Wednesday to tell him of his decision. Purcell has made it no secret he would like to be police chief 1n Laguna Beach, and he was tom between the JOb offer in Coronado and staying an Laguna He has been acting police chief for the past two months while Police Chief Jon Sparks remains on disability leave Sparks has been undergoing daily therapy at South Coast Medical Center as a result of back injuries he suffered in a 1978 automobile accident Council members said they would continue to support Sparks as chief until evaluations of his future effectiveness are complet ed by three physicians Meanwhile. City Manager Ken Frank has been instructed to keep the City Council up to date on Sparks' health Teachers battle to keep Laguna posts Lawyers representing seven Laguna Beach Unified School District teachers are trying to day to prove the district doesn't have to fire the teachers in or der lo balance the budget. Appearing before state ad manistrative law JUdge Robert A Neher at school district head quarters. attorneys John Odell and Dan Sahng questioned dis- tract Business Manager Clyde Lovelady about district income for next year The seven teachers received layoff notices in Marc h. To make up for an expec ted $543,000 budget deficit next year. district administrators say cuts in teacher personnel a r e necessary However. the teachers. who requested the hearing. say cuts can be made in other areas They suggested laying off ad ministrators to save money. Teachers involved in today's bearing include Dec Namba, Robin Tench, Penny Siavehs. Ursula Wallace, Janet Rogers. Barbara Harding and Richard Kelly. An eighth teacher. Nancy Morgan, a part-time instructor, also received a layoff notice. but was not involved in today's hear- ing. Lovelady said that in order to balance the budget, the district m ult reduce spending by $500,000. In his testimony the district business manager said the average cost to the district for teacher salaries and fringe benefits ls about $27 ,000 per teacher per year. Clinic plans benefit in LB The Laguna Beach Free Cllnlc wlll hold -tta ninth annual Q>ttqe Beneftt Dinner Nay 12 from 5:30 p.m. to t p.tn. at the Cottaee Re$taurant, 308 North Co11t Hl_..way. Laicupa hacb. Offered will be entreee, fresh breads, saladl, wine 1n4 home- made deueN. n..re ·•Ul aleo be door prlsea and entertainment. requbiDC a '*lit he .. a wttNa 90 days of the flll.Dg of tlie ault. The leeal acijab by the South La1unil Civic· Assodatloo ud three Pther 1roups waa filed in February, 1seo. Tbre• m.oathl later, the new le1t118Uon wu enacted requiring the bearint on development-related lawsuits. THE AIM was to expedite handling of suits on development proposals to prevent unwarrant- ed de1-Yt, lawyers Hid. Prior to Wednesday, oo J:Ourt heannp had been 'beld on the Hobo Canyon lawsuit. Clvlc ~laUon attomey El- len Winterbottom aald she kneJf that the new law bad taken el- fect last May. But she said that pre-trial negotiations had resulted in the project belne reduced in scope by 20 percent and lawyers hoped furtber talkl would settle the matter. · THE HOBO CANYON pf'Qjed now calls for the construction of 541 homesiles. Originally, plans called for 700 homes in the northern sector of South Lagwta. east of Pacific Coast Highway. Wednesday 's hearing was sought by lawyers for the county IMllT ..... ,.... ..., "•'"'' "_.., TAKING CARE -Dressed in protective suit originally believed and driver may be over- with air filtering mask. driver prepares to re-dressed. About 25,000 cubic yards of soil are move contaminated soil from abandoned being excavated for transfer to a landfill site chemical dump in Huntington Beach. Of-in West Covina. ficials say the dump isn't as hazardous as County,· builder settle Colinas de Ca]Jistrano development guidelines settled A settlement has been reached in a long-standing legal battle bet ween San Juan Capistrano and Orange County government over t h e p r o po s e d C o I i n' as d f Capistrano development along a three mile stretch or south count) ridge lines. According to a statement issuec J01ntly by county Supervisor Thomas Riley and city Mayor Phillip Schwartze, the settlement prov ides that no development will occur on hillside slopes facing the cit.> and a controversial artenal highway will be re located to minimize grading impacts. THE SETTLEMENT also pro- vides thal measures be taken to "hide" structures within other areas of the development, that ex· tens ive landscaping will be plant· ed and that building material will be used to keep the development "in harmony" with the city's General Plan The 2,fMX>-unit Colm as project will be constructed in unin· corporated county territory north of the city. The city, contending the projed called for too much alteration of scenic hillsides. sued the county after the project was approved by the board or supervisors The development is a venture of Campeau Corp. and Shea Homes. "IT APPEARS to me that each side has achieved its goals. and the residents of the county will profit by what promises to be a very fine development," Riley said The supervisor and Peter Herman, an aide for land-use llf· fairs. were pivotal in bringtns parties together to negotiate an out·of-court settlement on the lawsuit. "The city has succeeded in greatly reducing the adverse im- LAGUNA NIGUEL SITE pacts on the ridgelines." said Mayor Schwartze. noting that all slopes facing the city will be ded· icated to the county as perma- nent open space in which no de- velopment may occur. THE SETTLEMENT also in- cludes agreement by developers and the county to relocate a pro- posed road that would have ex- tended from Street of the Golden Lantern to the San Diego Freeway. · The road will be moved to the north, thereby reducing grading impacts, Schwartze said. As part of the settlement. de- velopers have agreed lo drop a re- quest to the county Local Agency Formation Commission to re- move the property from the city's sphere of influence This wtll allow for the city to be consulted on development mat· ters in the area Art ex.Jribit, auction Saturday The Laguna Niguel Lions Club wall sponsor Its annual art ex· hibition and'luclion Saturday at Allen Cadillac, 28332 Camino Capistrano in Laguna Niguel. Paintings will be on display from 7 to 8 p.m .. when bidding will begin. Door prizes will be given as well as complimentary wine and champagne . Admission is free. Art works offered include paintings. lithoaraphs and prints by Norman Rockwell, Salvador Dali , Rosenthal and Kelly. Proceeds from the auction will benefit various Lions Club charities. For information call Dave F1oumo)' at-495-4693. Utilit"1 rate cut ordered The PUC grants three rate ad- justments annually to utility companies based on the cost tb produce power. Dana lans book sale The Friends of the Dana Niguel Library will bold a used book sale May 2 al the library, al 33841 Niguel Road, Lagwta Niguel. Hardcover book.a, aperback.11 magaiines and records will be on sale from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m. All proceeds will_ benefit lhe library. Persons wi1hing to donate books may brtna them to the Ubrary either bef6re C>r on t"- 11le day. For illf ormation call the library at 496-5Sl7. will be able to purchase tear gas canisters. Seniors interested in the course may call Bob Porter at 497-2441. The council chambe~ are located at the City Hall al 505 Forest Ave. Laguna panel meets Friday The annual membership meet- ing of the North Lagunf Com- munity ~ociation·will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m . at Unitarian Hall. 429 Cypress Drive, Laguna Beach. New members of lhe board of trustees will be elected. The volunteer organlzatlon represents Laauna Beach home owners from Broadway north to the ell)' Jlmitt. All homeowners, bualneaa owners and renters in Ul• Mel ire lavlted to att~. For more lnforma\ton call '9C:sG~. Board ot Supervison and the owners of the propert.y, Paul and Marte Easllnger. fort to block Board of Superv' r approval in November, 1'79, of zone reclwllicatlon or 38 acr from opeu space to mediu density residential -a prel to construction of 174 dwelli dwelling Wljts. The developer is Mahboudi Fardl. a Beverly Hills busi- nesaman and a co-defendant with the county. Jn their lawsuit. the civ(c Development plans for the groups claimed the county fail4'd area are presently at the zone to comply with stale laws r~­ change level. • garding preparation of enviro•· The suit was filed in an ef-mental studies for the project. * * * * * * South Laguna annex proposal studied By STEVE MITCHELL Of, ... o.ilf "''"Slaff Laguna Beach City Manager Ken Frank says he'll do a fast feasibility study on a requestto in- corporate a portion of South Laguna into the city, and have the study ready for council review by Mays. That report will include how Laguna Beach might provide services to the area and what that serv 1 ce wouJd cost. A group of South Lagunans ap· proached the City Council 'Pues day, saying they want the. city tc annex a portion of their unin corporated town into Laguna Beach. LED BY TREASURE Island Trailer Park resident Roger Der- ryberry, the group says it has ga th e red more than 200 signatures from South Laguna re sadents interest ed an becoming Lagunans. The area described by Der- r y berry would include the Treasure Island trailer park. Hobo Canyon. Lagunita and Blue Lagoon -virtually all the land between Laguna's southern border and Aliso Creek. The spokesman said South Lagunans "are tired of decisions made by county officials that ad- versery affect" their commwtity. Specifically, he said, residents oppose plans for two high-riae lime share condominiums that would replace the 266 mobile Seniors slate dance classes The Laguna Beach Senior Citizens will sponsor a ballroom and disco dance class beginning in May t a ught by Thomas Murray. Those interested in taking the class may enroll by calling Bob Porter al th<.' senior center at 497-2441. homes on the 27-acre Treasure Island Trailer Park. THEY ALSO oppose a 700-unlt development planned for Hobo Canyon. above the Alpha Beta shopping center in South Laguna They say county supervisors have no concern about traffic im- pact. storm runoff. congestion. qr ecological effects or such cob· st ruction on the seaside town "The county ignores our input <on plannjng decisions>." Der· ryberry said. "IF WE WERE part of Laguna Beac h, our concerns would be heard," he said, adding South Lagunans admire Laguna's building height ordinance. which prohibits new structures of more than 36feet. That ordinance would virtually eliminate plans for the high rise condominiums in Tre asure Island. he said Lifeguards recycling for service The LagWta Beach Lifeguard Association has established newspaper recycling pickup stations at two locations to s upport the group's programs. Collection bins are localed at the Union 76 station. 1369 North Coast Highway, and Laguna Porsche and VW. 1890 South Coast Highway Lifeguards also will acce~t aluminum cans in a bin behi d the m ain lifeguard tower at Man Beach Park Proceeds from the sale of t~e recycled newspapers and ca"s will go to support the lifegua~d a s s o c 1 a ti on · s co m m u n i ~Y service. youth programs a~d high school scholarships. Physician facing • suit over sponge A $10-rnillion medJcal malprac- tice suit has been filed against Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill by a woman who claims a surgical sponge was left inside her during an operation. Susan J . Martin, also known as Susan Millaresrs, and her husband, Joseph, filed the suit Wednesday in Orange County Superior Court. Other defendents named in the suit are Westminster Commwtity Hospital pbysici.ans Myron Reiff. J .L. Schwartz and Kay Erdmann, and the California Women's Health and Medical Group. The couple claim in the suit t Waddill, an obstetrician, treat Ms. Martin during her pregn cy. They allege the sponce not removed last April 28 durin deli very operation. Waddill was prosecuted lwi e in Orange County on char~es that he killed an unwed mothet's ·newborn baby after it survived a saline abortion. Charges were dismissed lut year after both trials ended with jurorsWtableto reach verdicts. Whale dog-gone [ I I I . 'IOV CAN'T GET nmaE FBOll HB&S - CaJtrana, our wonderful et.ate b!Mhway people, have apparently struck a1aln, trapptna the;;baple• motortne cillunry with the detour sips up. Tbil time lt wu out acenJc Lquna Canyon ROad. . What happened was that appaftnUy sometime Monday or Tuesday, Calt.ra.m wort crewa decided they'd shut down a north-bound lane of Laguna Can)'on Ro~ \ bet ween El Toro -------~~'r. Road and the San Jll lllNllf kf9' / Dieg~if7:.:ff~ thus was diverted down El Toro Road, out In the vicinity of Leisure World. This just happens to be a considerable detour lf you're late to work and tryine to reach Santa Ana or Los Angeles. ~ So what? So they only shut down a northbound ,r lane, you might suggest. ~ TROUBLE IS, you see, on Laguna Canyon Road, there ia only one northbo~d lane. Shut it and you shut off the inland-bound trdfOc. Also, an additional vexation is that the Caltrans people apparently decided to keep all this lane- sbutting and detouring a deep, dark secret. So you motor out Canyon Road in the morning and surprise! Goo4bye timetable. Apparently the word did leak out around the Laguna Beach City Council table Tuesday night. But the word didn't hit the public prints until Wednesday afternoon. · According to the Caltrans spokesmen, the north· bound lane will be s lammified shut on weekdays .. "We'll 1wit take oul thu section of road for awh1~" between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. for the next 45 days. It's going to be a $700,000 improvement project. NEW POSITION -Edmund Muskie, former U.S. senator from Maine and secretary of state, is joining a Washington think tank on part-time basis. He will be consultant at Johns Hopkins' Foreign Policy Institute, working with professors and students. 2 guilty of aiding suicide NEW LONDON , Conn. <~Pl - Two men accU!led of helplng a crippled friend commit suicide face up tA>l() years in prison after cbanglnltheirpleas and pA,adlng guilty to a-charge of second- degree manslaughter. Brian W. Taylor. 25, of North Stonington, and William R. King, 26, of Ledyard, s,aid they were changing theJr pleas because they were convinced prosecutors had enough evidence lo win a convic- tion. The two also said through their attorneys that they hoped to re· ceive lenient sentences in return for the pleas. ACCORDING TO prosecutors. the two aided the Sept. 27 suicide of Kenneth B. Wright, 24 , of Ledyard. who didn 't want to live with the paralysis he suffered in an informal wrestling m atch in 1979 Of course you would. of blood. In 1979, we used 70,000. Now let us rephrase the q1Jes-By 1987, we project a need in tion. ~Id you pay $5 to help com-excess of 100,000 units. Where do plete one of the most badly needed we collect it all, process it all, facilities in O range County? store it all? Theyte really the same question. Consider also, the fact that The Orange County Red Cros? 1 in 25 people 1n Orange County will needs your dollars for a facility to need that blood this year. Desperately keep pace with Orange Countys One in twenty-five. growing needs. And some of your family and Its a new 32,000 square foot friends will be among them. complex designed to meet blood So please open up your hearts requirements for years and wallets. A nd give to come. I' • • • • • 'I generously. How desperate I er.ngceoumy1tec1c.ou I Because what little are we? Consider this. Mklns Fund you donate toda~ Just In 1969, we went I ~o ~~~~cie Dr I may be someone elses through • • •. SafuAN.CA92111 • • • • life savings 23r600 units .-'11 tomorrow I PleaKoccep( my pledge f()( '·--------I I Name I AddrQ:..------------~ Ill City I I Stat . ...__ _____ ~1p,_______ I -.... . .. .- Please find enclosed my I tax deductible donation fey I the tallowing amount I o ss OS10 o s2s o s_ I ••••••• NO DOUBT THE WORK will be welcomed over this dangerous seven-mile stretch of pavement. It really would have been super-nice, however, if the state highway brass had given motoring folks just a little bit of advance warning. State's Attorney<.: Robert Satti said Wnght once had told Taylor 1------------------------------------ "he'd rather be dead than live in !•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. the condition in which he was liv· , . • You suppose that by not •tarting work until 9 a.m., the Caltrans planners figure that most every- body has already fled the scene to their work place. MAYBE SO. On the other hand, the shutdown could be a considerable irritant to some professional parties who don't have to roll out at the crack or dawn and can meander into labor at 9:30 or maybe 10 a.m. Rumor has it some bankers, medics and dentists ope rate like that. My dentist always seemed to keep those kind of hours when I was suffering with a throbbing molar or other ill of the choppers. Anyway, the word's out now so nobody will ex- pect to get from Laguna Canyon to anywhere for the next month and a half or so. THE CANYON AREA, however, isn't the only locale where this kind of frustration has been heaped on our coastal motorists .~ Just a while back, workers on the Upper Newport Bay span selected a couple of morning rush hours as the precise time to shut down one lane on the old Coast Highway Bridge. Traffic abruptly backed up to Five Crowns in Corona del Mar. So let's face it; there's just something about highway construction projects. no ma tter where the location. No matter what hour it is that you don't want a detour, that's when you're going to get it. mg .. Taylor and King pushed and carried Wright, who was in· ca pacitated and bound to a wheelchair. into a wood where they left him with a sawed-off 12-gaugeshotgun. Salli said. The men had helped cut eight inches off the shotgun's barrel so Wright could point it at his s tomach and still pull the trigger. the prosecutors aid THE VICTIM 'S mother. P hyllis Wright. told the pro- secutor she did not want Taylor and Kin~sent to prison, Satti said. He said the mother told him if she had her way the two men, who were her son 's close friends, never would have been pro· secuted. "He couldn't cope. He was an athl ete," Wright's mother said last fall after her son 'a death. In return for the guHty pleas, Salli said he would not recom- mend that Taylor and King serve any specific sentences. When the men return to court May 18, their lawyers are ex~t· ed to ask Judge Seymour Hendel to suspend their sentences. The maximum sentence for second· degree mans laughter is 10 years. White mom wins custody Judge rules mother, not black father, should raise girl MINEOLA. N. Y. <AP) -Say· lna race was only one factor in a custody battle over a 7-year-old girl, a judge has ruled that lhe child should live with her white mother, not her black father. State Supreme Court Justice Eli Wager rejected 39-year-old BUiie Farmer's conteattioo that hl1 ex-wife would deny lhe child her black berlta1e. Wager found that Linda Parmer, 30, of Locuat Valley, could beat raise the child, Bethany, because of her economic and emotional •tab1Uty. "More than one crl1l1 wlll eon· front. Ul1I cbUd .. tlHt rnatures," be wrote. '"?here t. no doubt that the lDOdMtr l1 belt equipped to 1uide Betbany and to provl~ lMr 1ritb ttM oPportuatty to irow ln ~ ud.•Phit .•. to deal ap. , proDdatel1 With the 1peclal dlf· flculUH th1t wlll J!reaent tb•tnlel\W to btr ... live·. Mrs. Farmer , f ood manager for a Locust Valley hi&h school, found the child in San Francisco In October and had her brought back to New York. During divorce proceedinaa. Farmer arsued that bis former wlte could not raise Bethany to "understand her roots" and lhat the child would ha\le "deep psychological problems unless she has a black parent." After the decision, Farmes's lawyer. George Nager, said the judge ignored Farmer's concem about his child's need to be aware of her background. N~ger said the judge did nol gl ve en ough weight to the "special circumstances affect- ing the child of a mixed mar· rlage that are unique \o that child." Training shifts urged Operaton of fi11ht lnatrucUon l(boo» at John Wayne Airport at• wll~ on a voluntary •ii to ablft Uielr tratntnc fU'1tta to other than peak .,.rtoda. That'• the ftndint of a report &lven th.Lt week to the Or1111• County Board ot SupervtlOf'I by Airport Mana1•r Murry Cable. Raebedullnc of ••touch and 110• m1llt1 lavolvt.nc prlvate • .. ,,,._. fl"Oln oeher u..n buly perlo4a at the airport wu recomaiiidid la ta.. ~ •P•rov«l at~rt muter pt.a. ··several or the fll&J~chooll that I diacuaaed tbl1 1u ct wtth Indicated that their but di II down by aa much u 40 percent. In addlUon, there bave been two fll1bt schools that lu&ve cone out of bu1lneH In the past 18 month•,'' Cable uld tn the r~port. WEST CLIFF • PLAZA ANTHONY'S 9-a SEftVICE BANK CY-!IM~· CHARLES BAAR ..EWB.ERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VE:R"°" ~TSWEAA OR. LOU 8.DER optometrist HAIRHANDlE:RS SALO'J HALUOA Y'S MEN"S ClOTHNG HICKORY FARMS 1P9Ciolty food i1em1 HUMPTY DUMPTY clw:h n'1 do~ JEAN'OAH.. detiQnet ond better 'fX>"S-...c7 LA GAUERJA •l•QOnC• in fathol MARKET BASICET MES AMIES TEENS NANCY DUt-.N ANTIOJES NEWPpRT BALBOA SAVlllGS PAPER UNLIMITED <jfh ond stotic>neri SAV·ON ~UGS STOREKEEJ9 trocStionai lf>Off1weor . VET A'S INTIMATE ~AAA WESTCUFf o...E»8S WESTCUFfC~ ~WCJteond c~ WESTCUFF~ ) NEW YORK (AP> -A decade aco1 before the "Me Generation" forted it.I \fixation wltb body .beautiful on society. there weri only 20 marathons in tbe United States and perhaps as many in the rest of the world. Today, there are 300 marathons In the United States, and many other nations have at least two or three races each. -The granddaddy of them all is the annual Boston Marathon. Some 6,8()0 runners competed Monday In the 8Sth race through the suburbs and streets of the historic New England city. a UNNING HAS GROWN DRAMATICALLY 1n· the United States over the past decade. as Americans try to trim down and tone up. Accord- ing to a 1980 poll by the Gallup Organizat.ion. 12 percent or all Americans -about~ m.illloo people -run or jog daily. Americans ~pent an estimated $750 million on running gear last year. "l\ut what's new in running is not the Boston. New York or Chicago m arathons," said Fred Lebow of the New York Road Runners' Club and president of the New York Marathon. "What's new is that every major city capital in the world is go- ing through a marathon fever." Madrid will have one in three weeks, t~e Paris marathon is in four weekit and Oslo's is eight weeks away, he said. Shanghai held a marathon April 1, and 8,000 runners beat the streets of Lon- don at the end of March in its first such race. And, said Lebow. "For the first time this year. there was a marathon in Moscow for women." WOMEN ALSO WILL RUN AN Olympic marathon for the first lime in the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles For decades. officials of the Games thought the 26-mile. 385-yard race was too grueling for women. Then runners like Grete Waitz of Norway and Patty Lyons Catalano or Boston showed that some women could beat most men in a marathon Miss Waitz has been the first woman to cross the finish line in New York's marathon three years straight, each time setting a world's record for women. There were 674 women and 6,171 men who ran in the Boston Marathon. The winner was Toshihiko Seko of Japan t As a sign of the growing sophistication of marathons. Boston this year had digital clocks at the fiv e, 10. 15 and 20-mile marks. Last year. the clocks were battery-operated and hand·held. "We have traditional checkpoints that go back years and years ago. But with the influx ·of more and more out-of-state runners who care not about the traditional checkpoints, we had to make changes," said Scott Mc Fetridge. chief of officials who scan all entries. SURVEILLANCE OF RUNNERS WAS tighter this year. Last ~ea r. an unknown entry. Rosie Ruiz, crossed the finish hne first. Embarrassed of- ficials later withdrew her prize, saying she ap- parently had run only the fmal leg of the race. The race. sponsored by the Boston Athletic As- sociation with assistance from The Prudential Insurance Co., attracted runners from about 21 foreign countries. including Kenya. Saudi Arabia and Wales. Boston may be the most revered marathon, but New York's. with 16.000 runners. seems to grab the most attention "Boston has done a lot to develop marathon? ... said Lebow. "But it hasn't sparked the world. r-Tew York has captured the imagination of the world - it ~els international coverage." More than 2,000 foreign runners from 40 coun· tries participated in last autumn's marathon in New York. Lebow said runners in more than 50 countries have as~ed to take part this year. Agnew keeping 'low profile' RANCHO MIRAGE <AP> Spiro T Agnew. who resigned as Richard Nixon's vice president in 1973 and pleaded no conles.t to mcome tax evasion. keeps lo himself nowadays in a walled develop· ment of this well-to-do desert community. "He likes to pla y goU and tennis,·· spokeswoman Sharlie Brown of The Springs Coun- try Club said. · -· She declined to say more about Agnew, ex- plaihing, "We respect the privacy of our homeowners.·· HOWEVER. AN EDITOR at the Palm Springs Desert Sun said Agnew "is very inactive publ~cly. ·unlike other local residents such as former President Ford and his wife, Betty. He keeps a very low profile." , .. • The Springs develbpment is a virtually self- contained community oJ 800 ~ndominiums built on 378•acres ofr desen and sur- rounded b¥, a block wall for privacy. n has Its ow n 18-hole chaflplonshlp aolf course and 10 ter,mb courts. ! ~ Sprin_l$.I is considered ( one of tJil lblJfe exclusive in the area, with condominiums rang- ing In price from $245,000 to $325,000. said Ms. Brown. Work on the development began in ~·· 1973. Last year, a New York publisher, William Morrow & Co., put out a non·fiction book by Aenew enUtled "Go Quietly or Else." Details of Apew's a1reenient wltb the publisher were never re· vea&ad, an'd a spokeswoman for the company declinedtoaay Monday bowtbebookbadfared. . THE BOOK 18 ABOUT AGNEW'S days ha the White ROUie and ftl& aubseq\lent re1l1natlon. Apew 11 not expected to be present tn a BaJtiPM>,re tOUrt. u a l-.w1Uit ion to trt1l aeeldna to~ him to pay Maryland #7,ooet be 1Qe1edly rec.aved ln brt ~ while coverno~ of that state. NOSE . . • • ... ,,.,...,. ~ NOSE ~ Bntain s Prince Charles gets a Maori style kiss from_ Diane Green m Hobart, A~tralia . She .has given this greeting of rubbm~ noses.t~ other royalty m the past, including Earl Mountbat- ten, Pnnce Philip and Queen Elizabeth II. *GUARANTEED LOCAL WINNER* Fill Out Coupon and Register for a F-r-e-e REGULAR S 130.00 VALUE CUISINART FOGO PROCESSOR LOS ANGELES <AP> -In an ef· fort to thwart a takeover by Texas lntem atlonal Airlines, employees of Continental Airlines have ·announced they overwhelmingly agreed to buy controlling interest in Continental by fo~going $185 million in future pay raises. The vote was 8.982 in favor of an Employee Stock Ownership Plan and 359 agains~. said Paul Eckel, chairman of the recently formed Continental Employees Association The airline has about 11.000 workers. "We intend to avail ourselves of the sweat equity we have in this com- pany." Eckel s aid. adding that Con- tinental received the financial com- mitments necessary to purchase the stock Contine ntal Presid e nt A L Feldman praised the workers' de· c1s10n and said their plan appeared more bene(1c1al to Continental than T l 's proposed takeover Both plans will be put before Con- tinental's board of directors for a de c1s1on. he said ·'The employees of Continental have .. swken," Feldman said. "l will pre· sent the employee plan to Continental board along with the T l proposal. The CEA announced two weeks ago that it would try to block a $93 mUlion takeover bid from Houaton- based Tl , which acquired 48.5 per· cent of Continental's 15.345 million s hares of common stock. Continental has no preferred s tock Under the CEA plan, Continental would issue 15.4 mllhon new shares of stock, which would be purchased by the Employee Stock Ownership Plan. It would cost about $185 million to buv the new stock Eckel said the employees stepped forth because 1t appe<1red Tl ·s takeover bid would prevail ··we had left this to the company. and the <.'ompany failed." Eckel said ··w e realized the employees had to rise u p and take t·ontrol ·· At a nt•ws confl'rent•e Wednesdav E<'kt'I accused Tl President Fran: c1sco Lorenzo of makmi.( false state- ments 1n a n •cenl suit filed by the Ho uston C'a rrit·r in an attempt to block the Pmployce stock plan SEE THE ClASINART DEMONSTRATED SAT., APRIL 25th 12 TIL 2PM! lUBbB1' 1 COLONY SATINTONE FLAT LATEX WALL PAINT A rich flat finish that's scrub-brush tough High fashion beauty in 100 s ol grea~colors Goe s on eaay. dries in minutes Tools wash 1n water. REG. $14.99 -SAVE $6.00 99 GALLON HAMILTON BEACH MINI-DRIP A compact aulomat1c coll.ie make• 101 b111w1n9 1 4 cups On off 5w11ch s~~~1 1599 Weber 18 '/," Kettle Grill cou OECORATIV[ OtRA8lf 'POP' ...... ,,, REG $64 99 4999 SAVE $1 5 00 charcoal cooker with Porcel11n hn1sh and alummum i.9s. Black REG Sl 99 'Hydro-Thrust' Force Cup Massive capacity ~ funnel sh4ped ' cup acts as a { supercharger Provides c snug flt,fr~lr~ sMpp1ng ahd .... of h•r1!1.ng I even In odd111t'e.ped bowls REG. 14.69 3s9 PORC~LAIN HOUSE NUMBERS Rivetool Kit (I f'A ,,.._ ,,_ v. • '.li"r f"1 u_.. ,.. _,.t·•t • ,.,. n "'~ ,.. flt' ,. 169 Sets I J8 5 '32 and 311 6 POP rovets lor professional do 1t ~ou1<sell 1esutts Fast ens all mate•1a•~· REG S9 5q MOD Kl 10 7 99 HOOVER. ~t?lebrity™ .. w, 2-ape'd ~ecuum dellvera d••P· / cleantig f ult power 11g1tahon '?' tenell~d.t>y high perlormattt• can1s~r tuchon l he most popular and unique whirhng sprinkler ever made Ad1usts to any square areahom 5 • 5 up to 45 • 45 REG S10.99 929 ARROW JT-21( ~::.:~s~;. ~v~~. A I gun and get Screenfwue // Comoo 11ttachemenl FREE REG S\1 99 rt ,~!. 899 :'!~o~ 203 Thennogrip · • faf in1tant cMilkin9 and hofne repairs. ~mt-fllly bondl In 90 HCondl. No c:f•mc>• naeclff. 799 The syatem "M\llP•·· lo- gelfwf u•"'9 • handHw and e ecre••lver Oo-ll·yOUf' Mtt tl\d uve. Com• In end we·11 show yov how' 10' LENGTH REG. 399 15.99 Dolt with wtMO ll(ll)• •tlctt• or ~-· Of\ houH, tftOtl Of e.r. '">tact• •GtlMt rM'. 9"tfte and lubflc.tH. .. . ( ·. ' ·' ' .... ·! .. .. ' . ~ .. 1 "A VllW l'•OM TH• ••IDO•" A'orema '¥Alu-Miiier, 4lr.ctect by Mlci-t IMeUU. prodllc~ by Ufl. clf Lewli, we ... ~ Ninette •••lltz. '9c!Wul dll'edOn 9rien entt i .,, U14Mif\. 1'9llllnel by ..... Sout"-1tl. ... dl<Ormlloll by .. ts, tlt-111, prewfllect ll'rlOlyl el\CI S.tur~ •I• p.m. ltw0119b ~Y l •1 I S.dllflMC' V•ll•y Cotntnvfllly T .... ter. U7•1< Obrero, Mlalon v ... 14. lte .. rwtloM '9s.4Uf end 710-1*. TH• CAIT liOdl• c-. . . . . . . . . . .. . ... Joe COrdlP .. .irlu CenioM .. .. • . .. .. ... • ..... R .. W..llS ~flerl .... ., •• ., .... , • • .. . .. • • • . .. . • .. .. .. . • • ......... AllM .... IMrlne .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. .... • ... . Llnoe lllUcAlllUlfe Ill~•.......... . , .. . ...................... 01<1< VW• ~pflo • ..... • • • ...................... Poters-U>u~\/lf'l\mlorlllloll ottker . . .. • . .. .. .. .. • • Mlcl\MI 8 1etlU , ..... ..._-~-NOW P~YING ------ctSTa•sa ....... - A11111t1m Or•wt fn c-c..... W·~odb<•OVt C1nedo111t 11141879 98~0 11 .. 1-1444 c114, ~~I 00~~ 7141 63' 2.5Sl Ill& (l ,.. ~ ftnmstll UA Mo.,t• ~ddlmd South Coast H1 W~y 39 Dn-t In 17141990 4012 dl41 SSL !>880 14 494 l~i. d U18'1I 3693 IUT*ml UA I w•n 114 893 130S .. -.......... ~ . ··- • vJoleAl cllmactJC scene 11 almo.t deUvered Jmo the laps ol .-la11oeri Hd there la a noUeeable relulq o( mOscles both on stage and in the au· .c:lience atlti~lintl c11rt1tn. " • MUl r'a ha\lnted enti.ftero };dale c.:arl>Oae ll one of· the true traalc.~ n1~ ol tbe modern stage -tife1s1~0 as QP(>()!ed to an Othello or a Lear ln the claaalcal mold. llia interpretation demands enormous dlmenston, and lt receives just that in the oµt,t.-ndina performance of Joe Cord lo. Cordio, in a chilling; depiction of a good and honest man br<>ugtlt to griet by hls own forbid· den desire and fanatical jealousy. delivers a ful· ly fleshed Eddie Cflrbone onto th& Saddleback stage. The actor's gestures and nuances are at one with his role to an extent merely glimpsed in the non·professlonal theater. • His SlU>J>Qrtlne cast Js equally strong, with Pet~r Stone as the fragile young immigrant whose romantic interest in hls niece <beautllul- ly played by Linda MacAlistaire) triggers the conflict perhaps the most memorable. ' Rae. Weeks is highly natural and sym- pathetic as Cordio's emotionally frustrated wife who is powerless to d~vert her h~band's course. Allan Stone tends a note of ethnic authenticity as an immigrant allorney Two more weekends remain for this out· st andin& show, one of SVCT's finest to date. Curtain time is 8 (>.m at the Mission Viejo theater, 23741 -C Obrero. for the play that ushered i~ the '•Arthur Miller era" on the American stage wrst COAST ParM1r11r lNGAGfMlNr NO\N SHO\NING •O.onoe CINEDOME •Colto Mesa HARIOR TWIN 6M-21H 6Jl-J501 ......... , ... ., ..... ··~''"' f}Oru o-Ut.l '"u1u't':U0~,' I~~:!,'~.•:_• •• ~uuo•••111cu • ...._..,.,,,.,. (X]IOCLBYsn.At:~· ~ lllO•U'4t .... c1,..1o•oe,..,1_.Mi0tvt""1 The only thing greater than their passion for America ... was their passion for each othet: Joe Cordfo, left , stara in the SVC't productWtl o/ "A View from the Bridge.' 8ocmcfino out the cast are, from left, Rae Wuk•. Linda MacAlistaire, Dick Vara and Pd:er Stone. Orange Coast slmes three local rock bands Three Orange County bands. the Rounders. the Crowd and Jimmy and the Mustangs will perform in concert in the Orange Coast College Drama Lab Friday at 3 p.m The Rounders play surf rock music. the Crowd is a new wave band and Jimmy and the Mustangs perform rocka billy. Fecul\y ••Cendl•-1ll/Sll· .. F•c11lly •I Cendln•ood 11JJSll·•• _ .. ,.,, .... "CAVEMAN" (PG) 1J •• , ....... ,. ........ ; .. AINOO ITA•• IN "CAVEMAN" IPGI u • • 1 ••••• ' 4J. t •• 1t •• MMOt• 't<>Uft WOAIT 'I.A.Ill A MAUn' THE HOWLING 1•1 ,, ... t ...... , ..... ,. • ,,.,. I Y\..ftlTl.1' l fAU.OMI ... "NIGHTHAWKS" (R) 'THIU' IRI Fe<uUy ,. M f ........ .._. • U:11 ._..n.. 1t1 •I ~-'FINAL CONFUCT" IRI llltSll tSIO •• ""' >U·--n-••·lA"• ti MMD• ,.,_, ,_ , .. r • ~ M a.At ...,_ UL ... inuoo STAR WARS IN! ..,.. f'NtJlltt , ....... ,. .... , •... tAf1iUlt I••••• r M• t':a ' .. _ ......... "CAVEMAN" IPGI ... U f .... L••t•·Hl0 6-0 1._. ... n., .... "CAVIMAN" (PG) ---..;.;.,,;.• _______ .. ,.J,.-r Of' TME DtNOSAUM -~~--­THI HOWllNO .,.. -THa CNILOIUH 1111 t ... ilii • .. LOS ANGELES (AP> ,_ A Republican Party fun4-raltinl dinner toni1ht featurin& Vice President Geor1e BUib u the main speaker has netted more Ulan '1 miUlon. The revenue will be uteCt to try to capture control of the state Letisltture next year, said indu.stHaUst David JI. Murdock. the dlnner chairman. Tickets for the dinner at t.be Century Plaza Hotel are $1,000. Ral.e bill moved SACRAMENTO <AP J A measure to repeal an interest ceiling on variable·rate home mortgages has sailed through a Senate committee. The propoul would also allow lenders to raise monthly mortga1e payments by as much as 7~ percentage points annually when interest rates rise. Sex bill Jeaa SAC}lAMENTO <AP> -A proposed state screening of sex educaUon textbooks and teachers' manuals for standards of morality and other criteria Van Houten denied (AP) -Leslie Van Houten, a onetime homecoming princess wbo went on a klll· inc spree for Ch1trles Manson, was refused parole Wed· nesday after " NOUTl• a prose<:utor said the pubbc would not accept her freedom. - Midmf e jailed VENTURA CAP> -Delea Bums, an· unlicensed midwffe, bas been sentenced to 30 days in Ventura County Jail and three years on probation for practic· ing without a license. •459 value • A ....... Sen. S.I. HOll(lkawa. R-COUJ. O~(tJ ftts WUll ambaa1ador no1"We John A. Govin at Marift(I. Gavin testifies WASHINGTON (AP) -Actor John Gavin, nominated to be U.S. ambastador to Mexico, dis· puted a suggestion Wednesday that the country ls endangerefi by Soviet.C~ Marxism. · ·'The Ma ideolon is in· deed espous by a certain sec· tor,'' Gav1n said. "But I believe on balance we need not fear for the security or the Mexican Republic." The disagreement developed at Gavin's confirmation hearing · befQre the Senate ForeliD Rela· .... lions Committet!. Gavin said he gained ex· perience in Latin American af· fairs as a special adviser to the Organization of Ame rican States' a;ecretary general from 1961 to 1965. Gavin said he believes Presi· dent Reagan nominated him because he agrees with the pres· ident that "it's lime we cleared up the misconceptions and mis- understandings that exist between the United States and Mexico." LOS ANGEL~ <AP) -A&· ne41 Underwood, a colo,rf ut newspaPt"f'WOm•n whose career . .. city editor or the Los An1eles Hera'd Examiner 1panned 17 years, has filed a $110 million defamaUon suit over a book tbat eaid she helped th, ltte 1anpter l(}ckey Cohen steal St million. Oefecl<ianta Include The New Yotlt Times Book Co., which published "The Last Mafioso," a book by Ovid Demaris about former mobster Jimmy Fratlan· no. Alto named were CBS' "fJO Minutes," which uported on material ~ the book, and Los Angeles radio station KMPC. which ran an interview with Demarlt. THE SUIT, filed Wednesday, claims the book and subsequent interviews falsely stated that Ms. Underwood aided Cohen by printing a fabricated story in the Los Angeles Herald-Express lthe forerunner or the Herald Examiner) in 1948 slating that a ship loaded with arms for Israel had sunk. The story, the book claimed, was a coverup to allow Cohen to pocket Sl million in donations he had raised to pay for the arms Ms. Underwood, 78, said no such article was published and that she didn 'l even know Cohen in 1948. According to the book and transcriDb of interviews, Fril· t.fanno dJdD•t tr\.llt Cohen to 7i hla haridl •ff the St mllllor which he purportedly collec at the urf(PI of Menachlm Berit, at the lime head of an Wl· derground movement and pres· en tty Inael'• prim~ JDinis\er. 11 The book quotes Frath1nno aa sayinJ, "See. he's got this broad at Th~ Herald, Atele Un~ derwood. S}Je's a big edilo'1 there. and this broad would walk on hot coals tor Mickey. Pri~ any -he gives her. The way I see it, Mickey caned her and made up a story about buying guns and ammunition for the Jews with the million raised at the benefits and then told her the boat sank. A few unknown peo· pie died, some were saved. and she prints it on his say·so. I says. •Mickey, congratulations. You've JUSt pulled off the big· gest. cleanest score I've ever seen made.··· CARYL WARNER, Ms. Un· derwood's lawyer. said the only story about a ship full of arms that could be located in the old Herald·Express or any other newspaper library was one stat· • ing that a ship laden with arms and destined for Begin's I rgun Zva1 Le umi underground was blown up on a Tel Aviv beach by the Isr aeli army. Begin's group liad been opposed by the fledg· ling Israeli government because it resorted to terrorist tactics -, SFA's Storewide Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions and accessones: Fashion Jewelry • • t Swiss Watches Cultured Pearls • Belts Scarves • Handbags • Blouses • Designer and Better Sportswear Separates • Active Sportswear Spoitshirts • Rainwear • Sportdresses • Designer Dresses ening Apparel • Suits Better Dresses • Robes Sleepwear and Loungewear Blouse Collections Women's Shoes Fashions for Juniors in Right On! Maternity Collections From 'SFAbulous and 'SFA ntastic: Rainwear, Suits, Blazers, Sportswear, Dresses The Men's Store: 25% to 40% off original prices on Men's Collection Sportswear, University Place and Men's Furnishings I . f I : I I ' I i I I At the same time lrvlrie Mayor Art Ant.bony was beinf arrested on smplclon of assault.with a deadly weapon on April u. police were tn- vestigaUng a murder-suici~-in the Woodbridge areaofthecity. The arrest and the murder· suicide had one glaring similarity: The Irvine Police Department keptquietonbothincldents. · In the Anthony case, the tight· Upped attitude ofthe police depart· ment and the City Manager's of- fice led to a.situation in which some fellow City Council members were kept in the dark until three days after he allegedly assaulted his wife. Four days after the alleged in· cident in which Mrs. Anthony suf- fered a superficial gunshot wound. the police departm ent finally notified the public by releasing a three-sentence written statement. In the murder-suicide case. police for 48 hours would say only that a mother and son were found shot ,to death. Officers wou1dn 't say whether lt appeared to be a murder-suicide or whether they thought the killer was roamlil' the streets. By not ref erring to tJ)e prob- a bllity of a murder-auidde. the extreme likelihood of which was known from the start, the police department wtnecessarily evoked community fear of an at-large murderer. Granted, the Irvine Police Department do es n 't have metropolitan sophistication in dealing with major cases. But this is no excuse for not letting the public know what's happen- ing when these cases do occur. It's not surprising that ques- tions have arisen in the communi- ty about the police department's handling. A confident, effective police department needn't fear com - munication with the public. Time for harmony Irvine Mayor Art Anthony's absence from the Ci ty Council !las the potential of creating a philosophical deadlock on that governmental body. While the City Council mem- b~rs can't be expected to change their philosophies . a little creative compromising could go a long way in keeping the cit y on an even keel until Anthony comes back or is replaced. Anthony remains in the Men- tal Health Unit of Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, awaiting his May l arraignment in Harbor Municipal Court. He usually allies himself with council members Bill Vardoulis and David Sills. The three are traditionally called tbe con- servative or pro-growth ma- jor ity. On the liberal or slow-growth side are council members Mary Ann Gaido and Larry Agran. Despite the City Council's Build in steps Irvine's animal population is outgrowing the dog and cat shelter the city now uses on Laguna Canyon Road. The muncipal oHicial~ in charge of keeping track of s\Jch things say that the a nswer to Irvine's problems is a brand new. multi-million -dollar animal shelter. And Irvine City Council members are correctly asking so me questions about the elaborate proposal. · At last week's council meet- ing, it was decided unanimously that if the city is to build a new animal shelter, it should be done in a phased manner so that the specter of a costly, under-utilized facility is avoided. The council's approach seems justified. There's little question that it would be financially advisable • present 2-2 division. the situation presents a unique opportunity for the four council me mbers to work together. , They seem to have little choice. l\gran and Mrs. Gaido have been accused in the past of voting against needed projects merely to gain public favor. Their critics say they are a ble to do this because they know their opposi- tion will be overridden by the council majority. On the other hand, Sills. Vardoulis and Anthony have been accused of voting against alJ of the ideas of Agran and Gaido no matter how worthy they might be. Now that the traditional 3·2 split has been erased for the time being, the council members will have to vole their conscience and put petty disputes behind them. The alternative is to have the city stagnate. for the city to build its own facilities rather than pay escalat· ing lease costs -as is the case with the present animal shelter. But there is also little ques- tion that it's financial nonsense to build large, costly municipal facilities before they are needed. The goal of the Irvine City Council s hould be to find a way to strike a balance between the leasing of facilities and the build· ing of new ones for the growing city. If done properly, the c1ty should be aple to adequately pro· vide municipal services for the increasing population without ex- aggerated expense. The council seems to be on the right track in calling for the city staff to think in terms of building new facilities in a phased rather than an all-at-once manner. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are tho5e of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone C71 4) 642-4321 . LM. Boyd/ Pick her color Every woman has a secret color that does something special for her looks, she thinks. Whether it's the tint itself or just the feeling of con- fidence it gives her doesn't matter. It works when she wears it. Item No. 833C in our Love and War man's Ole ii a recommendatlo.n to you, the man eaatr to please in matters romantic. Find out what your girifrteod's aecrel color ls, and match it with amall 'lfts. Scarves. Flowers, • Costume jewelry. Jf she tells you ber favorite color is ereen , as currency, you know she's onto you, and _>.'OU Cllfl put this item back into • the Jlle. Arn advlaed the word "humonJOUI" first showed up lo print ln a University of Denver atudent newspaper in 1'73. But •P- pa rently it b11 stuck. Mtrrlam· Webster editors expe¢t It to appear In forthcomiq dlctioneries. · • Q. Do TV anchormen like Waller Cronkite, John Chancellor and Frank Reynolds get to say anytbin& they want to on their nightly news shows! A. At least once, yea. Cronkite was authorized about seven minutes or hit own air time. Chancellor four maybe five. and Reynolds thtee to four. They'te so d11clpllned ln ex- perience you can't alwaya ll\.tetl whether their editorial jud1rnenta are persocial or corporate. Oddball.t couldn't last lon1 wttb aucb authority. Q. Why are hemlock and spruce said to be more elfectlvt! tban other trees ln screenint ofl bt1bwa1 nof.ae? A. Their folia1e i• spaced ln such a manner so u belt to bafftt ll*t sound wave len,ibt. RetearclMn MY i,hat. Land policy hears watching W ASHJNGTON -The Sierra Club is suing the federal government in an ~at · tempt to prevent mining in a wilderness area in northwest Montana The plaintiffs, according to papers filed ln U.S. District Court here. include 12 un· named grizzly bears Sounds Uke more damned snail·darter foolishness to me. But then so do a lot of things being said these days around Washington by the new guardians of our natural resources. the appointees of Ronald Reagan. The same Mr. Reagan who once said if you· ve seen one redwood tree you·ve seen 'em all TAKE JAMES WATT, the new secretary of the interior. He spoke last month to an enthusiastic conference of the companies that run concessions in national parks The subject, at that moment. wa s horse trails. but Secretary Watt expanded the d1 scuss1on lo include his own opinion of the mis take God made in putting together the great outdoors "You folks will quickly understand why I bring so much controversy and fl ak." Watt said ··1 don't like lo paddle and I don't like to walk ·· Well. Mr. Secretary. \o\e could build a freeway through Yosemite National Park It would make it more convenient for the lumber company trucks What trucks? The ones they are going to need to get out all the trees that John Crowell is apparently ready to let the the lumber compani es and the de companies cut down on public lands. velopers who want the use of that land. Crowell \s Reagan's nominee as as-, Reagan has always sided with the sistant secretary of agriculture for developers or. depending on your natural ~esources and env1ronment. the viewpoint. the exploiters -against offlc~al m charge of the U.S. Forest responsible conservationists or, Service. again depending on your viewpoint. THE FOREST SERVICE now allows private companies to take between 10 billion and 12 billion board feet a year ~ ~----------------------~~i' RICHARD JHEVfl 1i • from public lands and has pro1ected that in 50 years perhaps 16 billion board.feet could be reasonably taken out per year During his confirmation hearings, Crowell said he thought 35 bi llion board-feet could be taken out each year There is going to be a tremendous battle over the national parks and other pubhc lands during the Reagan years These are very tough. development· oriented people who have spent years talking up the .. Sagebrush Rebellion" the Western movement to return milhons of square miles in federal lands lo state control But there has always been a dark side to that revolt . ll"s th e oil companies. the mining companies, crazed environmentalists. Now the administration and its friends in Congress, particularly Senators Jesse Helms, chairman of the Agriculture Committee. and James McClure, chairman or the Energy Committee. are pushing ahead on all fro$ to open public lands. waters and parl s to saws and drills and trucks MAYBE SOME OF that is right and necessary But how can we tell whether Reagan and his mer ry men are sensibl y opening public lands to reasonable ex· ploralion and development. or are 1ust turning millions and m1lhons or acre!> over to greedy environmental rapists? Well, one way is to pay attention to or- ganizations like the Sierra Club and the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund .. We ~on·t stop them , .. said Tim Mahoney. the club 's Was hington r epresentati\e ·But we will I><' there. and if we think that they are overstep ping the law, we'll see them in court.·· I decided not to laugh about the grizzlies in Montana and I sent another $25 to the Sierra Club. Watch those guys Cor me. will you" Feds already have airport authority To the J:;d1tor · Western Afrhnes' recent statements about its loss of two flights per day from John Wayne Airport and its will- ingness to fight the county over the is· sue has important implications for cltitens living under the flight path of the airport. Western officials charged that (he county Board of Supervisors had made "anti-competitive efforts over the years to keep Westen) out of. Orange County" and that the county's plans "would compound . dis crlmination" against Western. The aware individual will recognize that Western officials are using precise- ly the language found in the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, which re- quires that all recipients of federal <ADAP> funds must foster competition among the ajrlines and discourage dis- cri mlnatlon against any firm. Such cornpetltlon was thought by federal legislators to benefit the traveling public. SINCE THE John Wayne Airport re· cei ved A DA P funds through the auspices of Mr. Robert Badbam as late as the fall of 1980, of course, Westem's present posturing makes sense because their exclusion from the airport is ii· leaal. . Past federal expenditures at the airport effectively remove any county control over It In such matters. County o!Cicials have acknowledged that the FAA baa regulatory authority ln these areas of dilpute. Therefore, any ex- pansion ol the airport, regardless of who pa:ys for It, will be ruinous for Newport Beach, Tustlrt, Santa Ana and Costa Mesa because the federal *ov· ernment already has sufficient authori- ty at the alrport to enforce usage cor- responding to·alrport size. HENRY BRACTON To the F.ditor: 1 Juat hid to dash down \o 16th and Su~riof l9 Cotta Mesa to see what it .was ..._ All Rouaban bad created. I was pleue4 and 1yrprtaed by what I found and for thoae who are not 1uH or hav~n·t seen the work, rett auured, It Is art! Do you.rself a favor and see It, tf you ~Hen 't already, Standtq1 under "Volcano" l1 a po1lt1veJ1' dluyln1 experience, any aculpturt that b•• auch a 1tron1 physical lffeet on lta vlewert sbouJd )'ot be UthUy &mWW. u 1 ••1tnact\Q'e. suiting his rule book and :iimply decld· ing that these things have got to go Wh at I wish he would do is go see the MAILBOX work and then consult hi s rule book and see 1f he can find a way of making these works exempt from whatever laws they may be in violation of. TONY POWELL Ci.vie nm.around To the Editor RecenUy we entered escrow to buy 2.65 acres of land from Mr. Adams located al San Juan Hill Creek Road and the Santa Ana Freeway in San Juan Capistrano. He had completed all neeessary hearings and had altered the master plan to allow an office building on his site though the underlying zoning was recreational. We then began our trip through the city bureaucracy. We were informed by the staff that what seemed like permission to build a professional omce building on the siLe was just an illusion. The staff would relentlessly recommend against it and our lnvestigation within the city indicated that there wasn't a ghost of a chance. We couldn't believe il but the preponderance of evidence final· ly convinced us that the long, tedious, and expensive path that would have had to be followed with so unlikely a chance to succeed just wasn't viable. We withdrew the application and the city lost a rtrst class offke condpmtniu_m buUdlnt-that could have provided l~al buaJneomen a chance to become their OWD landlord. 1t, landscape it. etc .. etc. This whole process would take about six months before we could possibly ob lain a building permit. We created a de sign for two buildings to contain 42 rac· quetball courts, JO to be built at this lime allowing an added 12 for future de- mand. One look by the city and the bureaucracy had more demands. Next we were told that of 2.65 acres we could only use l.07 acres for our building. parking, driveways and sidewalks ; 1.58 acres would be open. Ve Gods' This is already a public recreation center Such ridiculous demands and time made the project totally unfeasible. In fact the city is committing confiscation of Mr Adams land without any payment to him. E.0 ROOEF'FER Disaster is now To the Editor: The reaction of SPON against the ex- tension of University Drive ia certainly typical. They seem to be against any change and lO believe worms and snaUs are rnore important than people. Is there anything they would approve that 99 percent of our residents want? The Upper Newport Bay is NOW a dis- aster, and every winter the mud comlng under the Bay Bridge makes the water the color ol the Mississippi River. The dis- aster area annually moves south. ALSO, every resident whO uses the Pacific Coast Highway from MacArthur to the Arches should get behind the ex- tension. All traffic studies indicate com- pleting University Drive would ease t.bls problem and will still be needed even with the new brldee and the eventual extension of the Corona del Mar Freeway, 9'hicb is probably years away. The PQSitlon oJ SPON and UJe Coutal Commlsslon is arbitrary and lllo1ical. Let's S\lQport the EIR ii that LI what we need to 1et some acUon. ; lf\VIN C. CHAPMAN A lawsuit flied on behalf of requlrinc a court he•rtD• 'dtblii South County olvtc 1roups op. . 90 days of the filing of Ule suit. posed to development plana in The legal acUon by lhe South South L11wia '• How Canyon La.tuna Civic Asso~lation and hu been knocked 4own in 1three other iroupe WU flied in Oran1e County Superior Court February, 1980. Thl'ff mot)tba on a technicality. later, the new le,Ulatlon wu Judge Edward J. Wallin -in enacted requlrint the f\earing on dismissing the suit Wednesday development-related lawauita. -said lawyers representing various organizations challeng- ing the development failed to abide by new slate regulations C.Oronado ' job nixed by Purcell Acting Laguna Beach Police Chief Neil Purcell says he has turned down a job offer in Coronado and will be staylng in Laguna. Purcell had been the top choice for the police chief's job tn Coronado, but said he called that town's City Manager Wednesday to tell him of hi s decision. Purcell has made it no secret he would like to be poltce chief in Laguna Beach. and he was tom between the job offer in Coronado and staying in Laguna He has been acting police chief for the past two months while Pohce Chief Jon Sparks remains on disability leave. Sparks has been undergoing daily therapy al South Coast Medical Center as a result of back injuries he suffered in a 1978 automobile accident THE AIM was lo expedite handling of suits on development proposals to prevent unwal't"ant- ed dela)'I, lawyers aal~. Prior to W~esday, no COIU't hearino had been heJd on the Hobo C'anyon lawsult. Civic MJOClatlon attorney El· ten Winterbottom said 1he knew that the new law bad taken ef· fect last May. But she said that pre-trial negotiations had resulted in the project being reduced in scope by 20 percent and lawyers hoped further ttJlkl would setUe the matter. THE HOBO CANYON project now calls for the construction of Ml bomesites. Originally, plans called for 700 homes In the northern sector of South Laguna, east of Pacific Coast Highway. Wednesday ·s hearing was sought by lawyers for the county Council members said· they would continue to support Sparks as chief until evaluations of his future effectiveness are complet ed by three physicians Meanwhile. City Manager Ken Frank has been instructed to keep the City Council up to date on Sparks· health TAKING CARE -Dressed in protective suit with air filtering mask, driver prepares to re· move contaminated soil from abandoned c hemical dump in Huntington Beach. Of· ficials say the dump isn 't as hazardous as o.11y ...... -~ P•tno IC-4'1 originally believed and driver may be over- dressed. About 25.000 cubic yards of soil are being excavated for transfer to a landfill site in West Covina. Teachers battle to keep Laguna posts Lawyers representing se\'en Laguna Beach Unified School District teachers are trying to day to prove t~e distnct doesn't have to fire the teachers in or· der to balance the budget. Appearing before state ad ministrative law Judge Robert A. Neher at school district head· quarters. attorneys John Odell and Dan Saling questioned dis· trict Business Man ager Clyde Lovelady about distncl income for next year. The seven teachers received layoff notices in March. To make up for an expected $543,000 budget deficit next year, district administrators say cuts in teacher personnel are necessary However. the teachers. who requested the hearing, say cuts can be made in other areas. 'll>ey suggested laying off ad· '1inlstrators to save money. Teachers involved in today's bearing include Dee Namba. Robin Tench, Penny Siavelis. Ursula Wallace. Janet Rogers. Barbara Harding and Richard Kelly An eighth teacher. Nancy Morgan, a part·time instructor, also r eceived a layoff notice. but was not involved in today's hear· Ing. Lovelady said that in order to balance the budget, the district must reduce spendlni by $500,000. In his testimony the district business manager said the average cost to the district for teacher salaries ana fringe benefits is about $27 .000 per teacher per year. County, builder settle Colinas de Capistrano deve lopment guidelines settled A settlement has been reached in a long-standing legal battle between San Juan Capistrano and Orange County government over the proposed Coli n as de Capistrano development along a three-mile stretch of south count} ndgelines. According to a statement issuec jointly by county Supervisor Thomas Riley and city Mayor Phillip Schwartze. the settlement provides that no development will occur on hillside slopes facing the c1t\ and a controversial arterial highway will be relocated to minimize grading impacts. THE SETTLEMENT also pro· vides that measures be taken to "hide" structures within other a re as of the development. that ex tensive landscaping will be plant ed and that building material will be used to keep the development "in harmony" with the city's General Plan The 2,800·un1t Colinas project will be constructed in unin· corporated county tern tory north of the city. The city. contending the project called for too much alteration of scenic hillsides. sued the county after the project was app-f'oved by the board or supervisors. The development is a venture of Campeau Corp. and Shea Homes. "IT APPEARS to me that each side has achieved its goals, and the residents of the county will profit by what promises to be a very fine development," Riiey said The supervisor a nd Peter Herm~ aide for land·use af· fairs. were pivotal in bringing parties together to negotiate an out-of ·court settlement on the lawsuit. "The city has succeeded in greatly reducing the adverse im· LAGUNA NIGUEL SITE pacts on the ridgelines," said Mayor Schwartze, noting that all slopes facing the city will be ded· icated to the county as perma· nent open space in which no de· velopment may occur THE SETTLEMENT also in· eludes agreement by developers and the county to relocate a pro· posed road that would have ex- tended from Street of the Golden Lantern to the San Diego Freeway. The road will be moved to the north, thereby reducing grading impacts. Schwartze said. As part of the settlement. de velopers have agreed to drop a re· quest to the county Local Agency Formation Commission to re· move the property from the city's sphere of influence This will allow for the city to be consulted on development mat ters in the area. Art exhibit, auction Saturday The Laguna Niguel Lions Club will sponsor its annual art ex- hibition and auction Saturday at Allen Cadillac, 28332 Camino Capistrano in Laguna Niguel. Paintings will be on display from 7 to 8 p.m., when bidding will begin. Door prizes will be given as well as complimentary wine a n d champagne . Admission is free. Art works offered include paintings, lithographs and prints by Norman .Rockwell, Salvador Dall, Rosenthal and Kelly. Proceeds from the auction will benefit various Lions Club chariUes. For lnlormatlon call Dave Flournoy at 495-4893. The PUC grants three rate ad· justments annually to utility companies based on the cost to produce power. Dana plans book sale T he Friends of the Dana Niguel Library will hold a used book aale May 2 at the library, al 33841 Ntauel Road, Laguna Niguel. Hardcover books, paperbackl, magadnea and records will be on sale from •o a.m. to 3 p.m. All proceeds will benefit lbe library. Persons wishing to don•t• booka may bring them to the library either before or on Ult aale day, For ln!ormatlon call Ult library at '96-5517. will be able to purchase tear gas canisters. Seniors interested in the course may call Bob Porter at 497 ·2441. The council chambers are located at the City Hall at 505 Forest Ave. Laguna panel meets Friday Board of Supervisors and the owners of the property. Paul and Marte Esslinger. The developer is MahboudJ Fardl, a Beverly Hilla busi· nesaman and a co·defendant with the county. Development plans for the area are presently at the zone chaneelevel. The suit was filed in an ef. * * * fort to block Board of Supervisor approval in November, 1'71, o1,_ zone reclassification of 38 acres from open space to mediu01 density residentlit -a prelude to construction or 174 dwelling dwelling units. 1 In their lawsuit. the civ~ groups claimed the county fail~ to comply with state laws ri· garding preparation of enviroT· mental studies for tbe project. .• * * South Laguna annex proposal studied By STEVE MITCHELL 0tu .. o.11yl"t1o«Sta11 Laguna Beach City Manager Ken Frank says he'll do a fast feasib1lily study on a request to in, corporate a portion of South Laguna into the city. and have the study ready for council review by May5. That report will include how Laguna Beach might provide services to the area and what that service would cost. A group of South Lagunans ap· ~oached the City Council Tues· C!Y. saying they want the city tc annex a portion of their unin corporated town into Laguna Beach LED BY TREASURE Island Trailer Park resident Roger Der- ryberry, the group says it has gathered more than 200 signatures from South Laguna re sidents mterested in becoming Lagunans. The area described by Der· ryberry would include the Treasure Island trailer park. Hobo Canyon. Lagunita and Blue Lagoon -virtually all the land between Laguna 's southern border and Aliso Creek. The spokesman said South Lagunans "are tired of decisions made by county officials that ad· versely affect·· their community Specifically. he said. residents Qppose plans for two high-rile time share condominiums that would replace the 266 mobile Seniors slate dance classes The Laguna Beach Senior Citizens will sponsor a ballroom and disco dance class begiMing in May taught b y Thom as Murray. Those interested in taking the class may !Droll by calling Bob Porter at the senior center at 497 2441 homes on the 27-acre T reasuPe ls land Trailer Park THEY ALSO oppose a 700.unit development planned for Hobo Canyon, above the Alpha Beta shopping center in South Laguna. They say county supervisors have no concern about trarfic im· pact, storm runoCf, congestion. Qr ecological effects of such coh- struction on the seaside town ·'The county ignores our mput (on planning decisions>.·' Der· ryberry said. "IF WE WERE part of Laguna Beach, our concerns would be heard," he said, adding South Lagunans admire Laguna's building height ordinance. wh1ci\ prohibits new structures of more than 36feet. That ordinance would virtually eliminate plans for the high rise condominiums in Treasure Island, he said. Lifeguards recycling for service • The Laguna Beach Lifeguard Association has esta blished newspaper recycling pickup stations at two locations to support the group's programs. Collection bins are located at the Union 76 station, 1369 North Coast Highway, and Laguna Porsche and VW. 1890 South Coast Highway. Lifeguards also will accept aluminum cans in a bin behind the main lifeguard tower at Main Beach Park. Proceeds from the sale of the recycled newspapers and cans will go to support the ureguard a ssociation's community ser vice. youth programs and high school scholarships. Physician facing • smt over sponge A $10·million medical malprac- tice suit has been filed against Huntington Harbour physician William Waddill by a woman who claims a surgical sponge was left tnside her during an operation. Susan J. Martin. also known as Susan Mlllaresis. a nd her husband, Joseph, filed the suit Wednesday in Orange County SuperiorCourt. Other defendents named in the suit are Westminster Community Hospital physicians Myron Reiff, J .L. Schwartz and Kay Erdmann, and the California Women's Health and Medical Group. The couple claim in the suit l Waddill, an obstetrician, trea Ms. Martin during her pregn cy. They allege the sponie w s not removed last April 28 durin a delivery operation. Waddill was prosecuted twi e in Orange County on char~es that he killed an unwed mothet's newborn baby after it survived a saline abortion. Charges were dismissed tJt year after both trials ended wt(h j urors unabletoreacb verdicts. f I Whale dog-gOne \ YOU CAN!T GET THERE ROii BE&B - Caltram, our wonderful stiite hl1bw8f people, uve apparently struck aaatn, trapptn1 the baple11 motoring citizenry with the detour sigm up. 'nall tlme it waa out scenic ~~ Canyqn Road. What happened WI!• that aplfa~UY sometime Monday or Tuesday, Caltrana work crews decided they'd shut down a north-bound lane of Laf una Canyon Road , be ween El Toro --------~Ar Road and the San TOI llRPHlll ~ ' DiegAt~:f~[c· thus was diverted down El Toro Road, out in the vicinity of Leisure World. Thia just happens to be a considerable detour if you're late to work and trying to reach Santa Ana or Los Angeles. So what? So they only shut down a nort bound lane, you might suggest. TROUBLE JS, you see, on Laguna Canyon Road, there is only one northbound lane. Shut it and you shut off the inland-bound traffic. Also, an additional vexation is that the Caltrans people apparently decided to keep all this lane· shutting and detouring a deep, d~rk secret. So you motor out Canyon Road in the morning and surprise! Goodbye timetable. · Apparently the word clid leak out around the Laguna Beach City Council table Tuesday night. But the word clidn't hit the public prints until Wednesday afternoon. According to the Caltrans spokesmen, the north- bound lane will . be slammified shut on weekdays "We'll 1uat toke out lhis sectwn of road for awhile" between 9 a .m. and 6 p.m. for the next 45 days. It's going to be a $700,000 improvement project. NEW POSITION -Edmund Muskie, former U.S. senator from Maine and secretary of state, is joining a Washington think tank on part-time basis. He will be consult :mt At Johns Hopkins ' Foreign Policy Institute, working with professors and students. 2 guilty of aiding· suicide NEW LONDON, Conn. <AP> - Two men accused oJ helping a crippled friend commit suicide face up to 10 years in prison after changing their pleas and pleading 1uUty to a charge of second- degree manslaughter. Brian W. Taylor, 25, qr North Stonington, and William R. King, 26, of Ledyard, said they were changiftithelr pleas because they were convinced prosecutors had enough evidence to win a convic- tion. The two also said through their attorneys that they hoped to re· cei ve lenient sentences in return for the pleas ACCORDING TO prosecutors, the two aided the Sept. 27 suicide of Kenneth B. Wright, 24. of Ledyard, who didn't want to live with the paralys is he suffered in a n informal wrestling match in 1979 Of course you would. of blood. In 1979, we used 70,000. Now let us rephrase the ques-By 1987, we project a need in tion. '>lculd you pay $5 to help com-excess of 100,000 units. Where do plete one of the most badly needed we collect it all, process rt all, facilities in Orange County? · store it all? The'yte really the same question. Consider also, the fact that The Orange County Red Cross 1 1n 25 people in Orange County will needs your dollars for a facility to need that blood this year. Desperately keep pace with Orange Countys One in twenty-five. growing needs. And some of your family and Its a new 32,000 square foot friends will be among them. complex designed to meet blood So please open up your hearts requirements for years and wallets. And give to come. • • • • • • • generously. How desperate I 0rengc eouner Red erou I Because what I ittle are we? Consider this. tuUdlnsFund you donate today, JUSt In 1969, we went I ~C:~~~cieC>r I may be someone elses through • • • • Sant.1AN.CA92111 • • • • lrfe savings 23,600 units .--. tomorrow. I Pl~ accept my pled9e; fOI' s.________ I I NafTl' I AddrQ:..------------ 1 cirv I I S~t.~------...LIP•-------I 11.... • .. .- Please find enclosed my I tax deductible donation f0t I the following amount I o ss os10 os2s os_ I ••••••• NO DOUBT THE WORK will be welcomed over this dangerous seven-mile stretch of pavement. It really would have been super-nice, however, if the state highway brass bad given motoring folks just a little bit of advance warning. State's Attorney C Robert Satti said Wright once had told Taylor 1------------------------------- '"he'd rather be dead than live in !••••••-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• the cond1t1on in which he was liv- ,· You suppose that by not starting work until 9 a.m ., the Caltrans planners figure that most every- body has already fled the scene to their work place. MAYBE SO. On the other hand, the shutdown could be a considerable irritant to some proiessional parties who don 't have to roll out at the crack of dawn and can meander into labor at 9:30 or maybe 10 a.m. Rumor has it some bankers, medics and dentists operate like that. My dentist always seemed to keep those kind of hours when I was suffering with a throbbing molar or other ill of the choppers. Anyway , the word's out now so nobody will ex· peel to get from Laguna Canyon to anywhere for the next month and a half or so. . THE CANYON AREA, however, isn't the only locale where this kind of frustration has been heaped on our coastal motorists. Just a while back, workers on the Upper Newport ~ay span selected a couple of morning rush hours as the precise 1.ime to shut down one lane on the old Coast Highway Bridge. Traffic abruptly backed up to Five Crowns in Corona del Mar. So let's face it; there's just something about highway construction projects, no matter where the location. No matter what hour it is that you don't want a detour, that's when you're going to get it. ing .. Taylor and King pushed and carried Wnghl. who was in· capacllated and bound to a wheelchair. into a wood where they left him with a sawed-off 12.gaugeshotgun. Satl1 said. The men had helped cut eight inches off the shotgun's barrel so Wri~ht co~d point 1t at his s.tomach and still pull the tngger. the prosecutor said THE VICTIM 'S mother, Phyllis Wright, told the pro· secutor she did not want Taylor and Kini{ sent to prison. Salli said. He said the mother told him if she had her way the two men. who_ were her son's close friends. never would have been pro- secuted. "He couldn't cope He was an athlete," Wright's mother said last fall after her son 's death. In return for the guilty pleas, Salli said he would not recom- mend that Taylor and King serve any specific sentences. When the men return to court May 18. their lawyers are expect- ed to ask Judge Seymour Hendel to suspend their sentences. The maximum sentence for second· 4egree manslaughter is 10 years.' White mom wins custody Judge rules mother, ·not black father, should raise girl MINEOLA, N. Y. <AP> -Say· ing race was only one fact.or in a custody battle over a 7-year~ld girl, a judge has ruled that the child shouJd live with her white mother, flOt her blaclc rather. State Supreme Court Justice Eli Wager J"e)ected 39-year·old Billle Farmer's contention that his ex-wife would deny the child her black herita1e. Wager found that Linda Farmer 30. or Locust Valley, could beat raise the child, Bethany, because of her ec9nomlc and emotional 1tabllity. "More than one crisi• wtU con- front th.ls chUd u •h• maturest": he •rote. "There lt no doUDl that the mother la best equJpped to 1ulde Beth.any ud to provlct. her wtth tbe opportunity to crow in boclY and 1plrl&. . to deal ap- fi?OJ)riately w\th the Jpec:Jal dlf· 1cuOlea that wlJl pr•1tnt hecoaelves to btr." live , Mrs. Farmer, food manager for a Locust Valley high school, found the child In San Francisco in October and had her brought back to New York. During divorce proceedings, Farmer argued that his former wife could not raise BethadJ to "understand her roots" and that the child would have "deep psychological problems unless she has a black parent." After the decision, Farmer's lawyer, George Nager, said the judge Ignored Farmer's concern about his child's need to be aware of her background. Nager said the judge did not give enough weight to the "special circumstances affect- ln1 the child of a mixed mar- riage that are unique to that child." Training shifts urged ·'Several of the filfht 1choola that J discussed this subject with lndlcated that thelr bualneu l1 down by u much u 40 percent. In ,addition, there have been two ntgbt schoola that have gone out of bu1lne11 in the past 18 month.I," Cable aaid in the report.. WEST CLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S sra ~VICE 8'.NIC Of /IM~A. CHARLES MRR JEWELERS CROWN H.AAOWARE DICK VER1'°4 SPOHSWEAA OR. LOJ ELDER OP'OIT'e'"'I HA.IRHANOLfltS SAlQ.I HALLIOA Y S MEN'S CLOTHNG HICKORY FARMS specialty food item• HUMPTY DUMPTY children'' clo!Mq JEAN DAl-t.. d.JiQI* ond beft• 'fX)rtJ.....cr LA GAU.ERIA eleqol\Ce ;, fcnhon MARKET BASKET MES A.MIES TEENS NANCY DUNN ANTIOJES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNUMITE:O gift, ond stotionetl SAVON DRUGS ,,J.~BC~eor VETA'S INTIMATE IV'f'/VlS.. WESTCLIFf CLEANERS WESTCLIFf Caue5 QCM!'Mf wore ond ~ WESTCUFF~ XAVIER'S R.()ijsT LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Republican Party fund·raflln1 dinner tonicbt featurlo• Vlce Prealdent Georae Built u the' main speaker baa netted more than fl mUUon. The revenue wm be used to try to c-.pture control of the •tale Lealalature ntxt year, aald induatriallat David H. Murdock, the dlnner cbalrman. Tic\eta for the dinner at the Century J'>laza Hotel ar~ $1.000. Rat.e bill moved SACRAMENTO CAP > -A measure to repeal an interest ceiling on variable-rate home mortgages has sailed thrc>USh a Senate committee. The proposal would also"allow lenders to raiae monthly mort1aae paymenta by as much as 7~ percentage points annually when Interest rates rise. Sex bill IUJad SACRAMENTO <AP> -A propos~ state screening of sex education textbooks and teachers' manuals for standards of morality and other criteria (AP> -~ \'tin Houteti,. • onetime homecoming prtnceu wbo Weill OD I kill· lo1 tpree for Charles llan10n, was refuaed parole Wed- nesday after VANMOVTIN a prosecutor satd the pubbt would' not accept her freedom. Miduif e jail,ed VENTURA <AP) -Pelea. Bums, an unlicensed midwife, has been sentenced to 30 days in Ventura County Jail and three years on probation for practic· ing 'tfilhout a license. G&vili testifies WASHINGTON (AP) -Actor John Gavin, nomlnatetl to be U.S. ambassador to Mexico, flli· put~ a suggestion Wednesday that the cb\drtey la endangered by Soviet-Cuban Marxism. ''The Marxist ideoloJy is in· deed espoµsed by a· certain sec· tor," Gavin tald. "But 1 believe on balance we need not fear for. the security ol the M-exican Republic.'' The disagreement devel~ped at Gavin's confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Rela· · lions Committee. Gavin said he gained ex· perience in Latin American af· fairs as a special adviser to the Organization of Amerlcap States' secretary general from 1961 to 1965. Gavin said he believes Presi· dent Reagan nominated him beoauae he agrees with the pres· ident that "it's lime we cleared up the misconceptions and mis· understandings that exist between the United States and Mexico.·· LOS ANGELES {AP> -AS· neaa Underwood, • colorful newapaperwoman whole ureer 11 city editor of the Loa Anrelee Henld Examiner 1paone4 11 years, bu ftled a suo mtllion defamation awt over a book that ~aid 1he belpe4 the late ganpter Mickey Coheft steal $1 tniWon. Defendants include The New York Ttmes Book Co., which pu_bU..hed "Tl\e Last lilafw.c>." 1 • book b)' Ovld Demaris about former moblter JllJlmY Fratlan· no. Also D&Uled were CBS' ''60 Minutes," whicb reported on material Jo the book, and Loa Anseles radio station KMPC. which ran an interview with Demaria. TB!: stJIT, filed Wednesday, claims the book and subsequent interviews falsely stated that Ms. Underwood aided Cohen by printing a fabricated story in the Los Angeles Herald·Expreu <the forerunner of the Herald Examiner> tn 1948 stat,ing that a ship loaded with arms for Israel had sunk. The story, the book claimed, was a coverup to allow Cohen to pocket Sl million in donaliofts he had raised to pay for the arms. Ms. Underwood, 78, said no such article was published and that she didn't even know Cohen in 1948. According to the book and tranacripta ot lntervlew1, Pia• tJanno didn't tnast Cotten to keep Jit1 handa oft the $1 milllon1 which he purporte4ly conect• at tht ur1ina of Menachlm Bealn, at lhe Ume head or an un· deraJOund movement and Pfd· ently Jsrael '• prlme l'Jllnister. J The book quotet Fratianbo .,. aaylng, "See, he'• 1ot'thia brQ~ ai The Herald. Aa1le Un· derwoc>d. She's a big editor there, and this broad would walk on hot coals for Mickey. Print any -he aives her, Tb~ way .J see it, Miclrey called her and made up a •tory about buyin1 guns and ammunition for the Jews with the milllon raised at the benefita and then told her the boat sank. A few unknown peo- ple died, some were saved, and she prints it on his say-so. I says. 'Mickey, congratulations. You've just pulJed off the big- gest, cleanest score I've ever seen made.··· CARYL WARNER, Ms. Un· derwood's lawyer, said the only story about a ship full of arms tnat could be located in the old Herald·Express or any "'other newspaper library was one stat· ing that a ship laden with arfllS and destined for Begin's Irgun Zvai Leumi underground was blown up on a Tel Aviv beach by the Israeli .army. Begin's group had been opposed by the Oedg· ling Israeli government because it resorted to terrorist tactics. SFA's Storewide Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions and accessones: • Fashion Jewelr y Swiss Watches Cultured Pearls• Belts Scarves• Handbags• Blouses• Designer and Better Sportswear Separates • Active Sportswear Spottshirts • Rainwear • SPe>rtdresses •Designer Dresses ening Apparel• Suits Better Dresses • Robes Sleepwear and Loungewear B1ouse Collections Women's Shoes Fashions for Juniors in Right On! Maternity Collections From 'Sf Abu lous and 'SFAntastic: ~ainwear; Suits, Blazers, Sportswear; Dresses The· Men's Store: 25% to 40% off original prices on Men's Collection Sportswear; University Place and Men's Furnishings .. pPlitical, lii>t p(Jtato : Cotta Meaa City ftlJanager The prol>Jem, satd Sorsabali. :Fred Son.bat warned City Coa.m· ls that many of the clty'a 'Qld ell memben laat week that the parkway trees will have to be up- •econd m01t controversial subject ,rooted to clear the way for con· to face them this year will ' be crete . .aldewalkl and eurbs. When it co~es to trees, be It's not to roucb that Meaana suggested, political atorms brew doti't want concrete walkways or ·quickly. , those that are disiJltegratloi to But lf the trees don t go, the be replaced. s~dewalks will be crooked u they Trees will be the problem, he weave in and out of the root opined. structures, he suggested. Roots of many trees planted T~at cou.l(\ result in in parkways near sidewalks in ped-:stnan, cycling and skating 'm. uch of the city are snaking acc1d~nts and accompanying their way through sidewal~ and laws~ts. . . under curbs, especially in the City off1c1als are studying Mesa Verde and College Park ways to replant trees with areas. smaller root structures or to re-- The city's Capital Improve-align sidewalb next to curbs so ment Task Force, studying ways that trees can be planted farther to spend nearly $4 million in back from the walks. federal revenue sharing funds Perhaps the oitY'• tree lovers over the next three years, la will hold their fire if a feasible recommending that $200,000 be replanting program can be spent on sidewalks. adopted. Include cuts at top Newport-Mesa District's school board is ref using to off er cost-of-living salary increases to teachers and non -teaching employees this year until at learns how much money the state Legislature is allocating for operations. And, trustees say, if the dis- trict doesn't get at least as much money as it did last year, employees won't get one dime in increases. As a matter or fact, they con· tend, the employees will be asked to give up some of the tax-paid fringe benefits they won in past · years if income falls short next fiscal year . That's a hard pill to swallow for the teachers' union which seeks raises of between t2 and 24 percent next school year and the non-teaching employees who are asking about 21 percent in salary adjustments. In negotiations employees usually ask for the moon and the school district usually counters with an offer that's about half of what it finally agrees to. But doubling a "nothing" raise still comes out to zero. If the board stands pat, it wUl be a big surprise. And if it does, administrators had better look toward giving up some of their own fringe benefits. A good starting place might be the generous car a llowances that top administrators receive to drive some pretty big automobiles around the district in the face of teacher chagrin. Cooling City Hall Advert1s10g verbiage that once described the city as "Cool, Clear Costa Mesa" must be out dated. There are those who would argue the "clear" part on a smoggy day. And now city officials are toying with the idea of spending up to $80,000 to improve an air conditioning system that isn't working up to snuff. City Council members will be asked to spend that amount from federal revenue sharing grants over the next few years to up- grade the current system in the five-story City Hall structure and nearby Police Department corp· plex. The council, which balked at spendin~ federal funds on air • conditioning units for the Wallace Avenue subsidized rent housing program. could decide to dump most of the air c'onditioning system at City Hall. Some students of City Hall hot air suggest that by putting louvered windows on the build· lng's north and south sides, employees could live with the natural sea breezes more than 90 percent of the summer. That would leave only the City CoWlcil Chambers, the Police Department and the computer facilities , where cool tem- peratures ilre a me~hanical re- quirement, to be served by the pr6i sent overworked system. Perhaps the council should look closely at that air condition- ing expenditure. Opinions expressed In 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 lnvil· ed. Address The Oa11v Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 926211. Phone (71.t) M2·,321. · LM. Boyd/ Pick her color ·- Every woman has a secret color that does something special for her looks, she thinks. Whether it's the lint Itself or just the feeling of con- fidence It gives her doesn't matter. It works when she wears it. Item No. 833C In our Love and War man's file is a recommendation to you, the man eager to please In matters romantic. Find out what your 1irlfrieh<rs secret color Is, and match It with s mall lifts. Scarves. Flowers, Costume jewelry. If she tells you her favorite color 11 1reen, a• currency. you know 1be'1 onto you, and you can put tlU. item back Into the me. Am advfsed the word "humon1ou1" rlrst showed up In prlnt ln a Unlveratty of D'enver 1tudent neWJpaper In 1973. But ap- parently lt baa t\uck. Merriam· Webater edlton expect It to appear In forthcoming dlctJonart ... ' Q: Do TV anchormen Uke WaJter Cronkite, John Chancellor a(Wt FJ'ank ReyBbldt 1et to 11y anyt1Un1 they wan\ to on their nl1ht1y newa ehowa? A. At leut once, ye1. Cronkite >NU authortzecl about •even mtnut.a Of 9'11 own alr Ume. CbanceUat tour maybe five, and Reynolds three to' four. They're so disciplined In ex- perience you can't always iuess whether their editorial jud1ment1 are personal or corporate. Oddballs couldn 't last long with such autho~ty. Q. Why are hemlock and spruce said to be more effective than other treei in screening off bl1hw1y noise? A. Thelr foliage ii spaced ln such a manner so as best to bafOe most sound wave lenllha. Researchers HY that. I 'I 1 1 I Land policy hears watching W ASHJNGTON -Th·e Sierra Club is suing the federal government in an at· tempt to prevent mining in a wilderness area in northwest Montana. The plaintiffs. according to papers nted in U.S. District Court here. include 12 un named grizzly bears. Sounds like more damned snail-darter foolishneas to me. But then so do a lot or things being said these days around Washington by the new guardians or our natural resources. the appointees of Ronald Reagan. The same Mr. Reagan who once said if you· ve seen one redwood tree you've seen 'em all TAKE JAMES WATT, the new secretary or the interior He spoke last month to an enthusiastic conference of the companies that run concessions in national parks. The subjest. at that moment , was horse trails. but Secretary Watt expanded the discussion to include his own opinion of the mis· take God made in putting together the great outdoors. "You folks will quickly understand why I bring so much controversy and flak," Watt said. "I don't like lo paddle and I don 't like to walk ... Well. Mr. Secretary, we could build a freeway through Yosemite National Park It would make it more convenient for the lumber company trucks Whal trucks? The ones they are going to need to ~et out all the trees that John Crowell is apparently ready to let the the lumber companies and the de· companies cut down on public lands. velopers who want the use of that land. Crowell is Reagan's nominee as as-1 Reagan has always sided with the sistant secretary of agriculture for ' developers or. depending on your natural resources and environment. the viewpoint, the exploiters -against official in charge of the U.S. Forest responsible conservationists -or. Service. again depending on your viewpoint. THE FOREST SERVICE now allows private companies to take between 10 bilhon and 12.bllllon board·•e ~ RICHARD RllVll 1i "9 from public lands and has projected that In 5() years perhaps 16 billion board-feet could be reasonably taken out per year. During his confirmation hearings. Crowell said he thought 35 bi)lion board-feet could be taken out each year There ls going to be a tremendous battle over the national parks and other public lands during the Reagan years. The~e are very tough , development· oriented people who have spent years talking up the "Sagebrush Rebellion'' the Western movement to return millions of square miles m federal lands to state control But there has always been a dark side to that revolt: lt's the 011 companies. the mining companies, crazed enyironmentalis ts . Now the administration and Its (riends in Congress. particularly Senators Jesse Helms, chairman or the Agriculture Com m1ttee. and James McClure, chairman of the Energy Committee. are pushing ahead on all front& to open public lands, waters and parks to saws and drills and trucks MAYBE SOME OF that is right and ' necessary. But how can we tell whether , Reagan and his merry men are sensibly opening public lands to reasonable ex - ploration and development, or are just turning millions and millions or acres over to greedy env\ronmeJ.ltal rapists? Well, one way is to pay attention to or· ganizations like the Sierra Club and the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund. "We won 't stop them." said Tim Mahoney, the c lub's Washington representative '"But we will be there. and if we think that they are overstep· ping the law, we'll see them ln dOurt." 1 I decided not to laugh about the grizzlies in Montana and I sent another $25 to the Sierra Club Watch those guys for me. will you? ~ Feds already have airport authority To the l!.:dltor: Western Airlines' recent statements about lta loss of two flights per day from John Wayne Airport and its will· ingness to fight the county over the is· sue has important implications for citizens living under the flight path of the airport. Western officials ch8T'ged that the county Board of Supervlson had made "anti-competitive efforts over the years to keep Western out of. Orange County" and that the county's plans "would compound ... dls- crlmination" against Western. The aware individual will recoenlze that Western officials are using precise· ly the language found In the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978. which re- quires that all recipients or federal <ADAP) funds Q'lUSt foster competition among the airlines And discourage dis· crimination a1ainst any firm. Such competition was thought by federal leglalators to benefit the traveling public. ' SINCE THE John Wayne Airport re· ceived ADAP funds through the auspices of Mr. Robert Badham as late as the fall of 198Q, of col!rse, Westem's present posturing makes sense because their exclusion from the ,.1rport is ii· le1al. Past federal expenditures at the airport effectively remove any county control over it 1n such matters. County officials have acknowledged that the FAA hu re1Ulatory authority ln these ar~as ot dlapute. Therefore, any ex· panalon of the airport, regardless of who pays for it, wUJ be ruinous for N~wport Beach, Tustin, Santa Ana and Costa Mesa because tbe federal gov- ernment already h11 sufficient authort· ty at the airport '° enforce uaa1e cor· reapond1n1 to airport slie. HENRY BRACTON perhaps lending credence to their er- roneous idea they were representing the majority of the citizenry. They should know that the real maJority keeps quiet MAILBOX and goes Its own way, afraid to speak out or Ignoring such bureaucratic foolishness. Now Costa Mesa's "Mother" Mayor &OeS further with an ''emergency" Or· dinance proscribing any businesses in her fair community that have to do with that unmentionable three-letter word S· E·X, circumscribing the practice or even thinking about it to the family and home. even though an average 40 percent of our citizens are single! The ratiopaliiatlon is that such businesses "ar~ recognized as having ob· Jectlonable operational characteristics'' by and to whom and why are not s pelled out! IS THIS THE local version of Moral M ajor\ty and the Citizens for Decency through Law campaigns? The statistical citizen majority are not part of these gToups ! , Our free enterprise system only works on laws of SUP-ply and demand - if there ls no demand, there would be no bualneu; and lt b better leaaJ and con· trolled, than llle1al and thus subject to underworld control with its unwritten lawa, which truly have "objectionable operational characteristics.•' IRENE SHANNON Pride can help I believe many or us are aware that as far as Newport·Mesa ts con· cerned. from the superintendent on down to the principals, teachers and aides, everyone at all levels is trying re· ally hard to do a good job in the face of overwhelming problems. I s uspect it would be extremely pro- ductl ve if we could cut down on some of the criticism and Instead take pride in our district and our schools. Fortunate-• ly in our area many citizens are in· volved in education whether they have children in school or not. They realize that education is everybody's business. that in the near future these kids will be making our laws. building our bridges, solving our problems and keeping the peace. ANN MO UND To the Editor. J just had to dash down to 18th and Superior in Costa Mesa to see what lt was that AU Roushan had created. ) I 1 was pleased and surprised by what I round and for those who are not SJ.U'e or haven't seen the work, rest assured, lt is art! Do yourself a favor and see it, lf you haven't already. Standing under "Volcano" Is a positively. dlziylng experience, any 1 sculpture that has su ch a 1tron1 • physical effect. on lta viewers should not. • be lightly disml.ud au1 "structure." 1 I 1 PRESIDENT REA.GAN haa 1u11eat· j ed that private citizens should be Ute ones that support the arU. The City of 1 Costa Mesa can do much to support tbe , artJ by not havina these woru torn , down. t imaalne \he city attorne)' COil· ~ aultln1 h1a rU.l.i book and limptt decid· int that these lhlna• have lot to 10. What I wtab be would do ii co tiff tbe work and then consult bl• rule bbot end ) lee lf be ~81\ find a WA)' of mu'"-UMlile work• exempt rrom whatever laws ~ nray be bl vt011Uon of. l 'l'ONY POW&LL STRINGS ATTACHED -Julie Schlosser, 6, (left), and Kim Rusher 9, work to finish string art work to be exhibited ir;l~ldren 's Creative Art Workshop open hou.S turday from 10.a.m. to 4 p.m. Event will be at Mesa Verde United Methodist Church, Costa Mesa. Workshop is co-op art group for children. Compose a jingle and win $50 prize Sung to the tune "Deep in the Heart of Texas," it might go something like this: "The stage at night. is big and bright, down at the County Fairgrounds. Hardly. you say? NO, BUT THAT'S THE idea generated by Orange Coun- ty Fair officials this week in announcing the fair's first an- nual lyric and jingle writing contest. County residents of all ages are asked to s ubmit a jingle or verse expressing what they li~e best about the fair. Each of three winning jingles earns $50 and a shot at radio time. The entries, 25 words or less, must be original but can be sung to a popular song's tune. INITIAL JUDGMENT WILL be on content and originality. Semi-finalists will sing their lyrics in a June 6 sing-off. f Personality, enthusiasm and lyrics will det ermine which three winners will s ing their jingles on the fair's "touch of country" radio commercials. ''A good singing voice isn 't required, and musical ac- companiment will not be permitted," said an official Entries are due at the fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, on or before May 22. Musicians and professional songwriters aren't eligible. . . Arts center gets $50,000 donation Costa Mesa's performing arts center has ·received a $50,000 donation from the Ahmanson Foundation to help defray costs of three feasibility studies, it has been announced. More than $100,000 has been raiaed to cover the costs of the three studies, which will pave the way for construction of the $4.0 -million Or ange County Music Center, according to John Rau. president of the Music. Cehter. .. It is very gratifying to us to have received this s1gnaf1cant gift from the foundation, in ad· dit1on to a previous gait of over $22,000 from Ho.ward Ahmanson Jr.," said Rau. About $125.000 was spent on studies las t year by the Luckman Partnership, Harrison Price Company and Gary W. Phillips & Associates. Groundbreaking for the 3,200-seat theater is expected in 1982 and completion is scheduled in 1984. accordjng to officia1s. Mesa rebuts attacks by -pet owners A pair of pet owners have criticized Costa Mesa's animal control policy. complaining that a "lack of compassion" had been shown in the handling of several recent cases. Judy Stricker, a dog owner and Costa Mesa resident, cited a recent case where an animal control officer shot and killed a dog that was running in a vacant lot near South Coast Plaza. "IT'S A SORRY thing when we show so little compassion," she said. Peter Similuk, also a Costa Mesa resident, said he was upset because an injured dog he dis· covered near his house this month was put to sleep. ·'The dog had a' broken leg and internal injuries.;· said Similuk, ··and It wu put lb sleep because it looked scroungy." But police Sitt Gary Barwig defended both incidents and said the city's policy calls for officers "to do everything possible to save an animal." lo the shooting episode, he 'aid, i1 was determined to "take down·· the dog when an animal control offi cer r~ported that the animal was beading for a freeway. "Shooting an animal," said Barwig, "1s a last resort. It's the last thing we want to do " HE POINTED out that several years ago a dog got on a freeway in Costa Mesa and caused a traffic accident that injured four persons. Barwig said that Costa Mesa, animal control officers have no say whether an animal is put to sleep. He said veterinarians at a local animal clinic with which the city contracts. make that de· cision. ·'The cit y probably spends anywhere from S200 to $300 a month taking care of animals there," said Barwig. "It would be nice lf we could save every animal that gels hurt but re· alistically. that's not always possible." Hard ecooom1et ll mo,. lmpor· tant to t.be d~rni.I• of nuclear-powe~ 1enerat1n1 planta thari all the demon.a\ratiODJ over the Three Mile laland tnctdent, Oran1e Coast Colleee atudenta were told. . Attorney L. Hunter Lovlna called the shot 11 co-keynote apeakerwtth her husband, Amory Bloch Lovins, at OCC'a week-Iona Outlook '81 Environmental Falr kickoff. . ••Economics is with us.·• ahead· vised. "It's a surprise to tbOH of us coming out of the civil ri1ht.a movement and the anti-war pro- tests ... " The husband-wife energy con· sulting team spent nearly 90 minutes selling "soft energy" as opposed to increased use of ineffi· ciently produced electricity and the gasoline absored by gas. guzzling automobiles. The nuclear lag, she aaid, ''U! a marketing problem . not the di re ct result of protests.'· J Lovlna declared, .. Tb• Depart· war.111nt. ~ent of Ener1y b.. oever • Sucb cott ranktn1 by the followed • leatt•COlt enern Harvard BU11net1 School enero atratel)': suppl)'in• the amount, , 1\udy found that 1enerally the type and source of enerty needed beat buy1 are efficiency lmprov. to provide each enern service In menta; next, appropriate ,.. the cheapest way. n e w a b I e 1 o u r c e 1 < 1 e>t.,t ·'A coet-cuttinl approach would technolo1lea >; next, aynfuell: llat on one piece of paper the · and lut, coetllest of all, central various ways to provide comfort poweratationa. or H1ht, run trucks or televiJlom, "DOE hu taken these optlom make, steel or bake bread, and in revene order, worst buys then reccommend the cheapest first." OCC speech team misses third title Orange Coast College's speech team miased winning its third successive national title by the narrowest of margins. Dave Riek of Huntington Beach won the Bell-Scroggins Award in Lincoln-Douglas de· bate. .· . . ' Her husband pointed out that since 1974, SO more nuclear power generating plant orders have been cancelled than ordered. ··wall Street," they said, does not find nuclear energy a marketable product. The Pirales, coached by Peg Taylor and Mi chael Leigh, finished second in the 1981 tournament, just l 'A points behind DuPage College of II· linois. The t ourney was he ld in Sacramento. OCC's Reader's Theater team, whi c h present e d "Sky· Creatures," received the Huffer- G o Id man •aeade r 's Theater ~ Award. Silver medalB went to " OCC's two• Reader's Theater productions, "Sky Creatures" and "Elephant Man." "And the most obvious special interest group fighting soft energy are nudear businesses," Ms . Lovins charged. The two Friends of the Earth, Inc. representatives listed soft energy as solar and hydro power, wood fuels, wind and thermal energy. They claim e d So uthern California Edison Co. would r ather not bwld any type of power generating plant. The move as too costly. they claimed. But.company officials fear that current ene rgy·sa ving moves won't be sufficient to keep needs within c urrent production capacities. Lovins, who lists severa I United Nations agencies, the Science Council of Canada and the U.S. Department of Energy among c lients, c laimed that by weatherizing buildings, the Unit· ed States" could have saved two- firths of lts oil imports this c1e<:· ade. "We could have saved the other three-flflhs," he said, "by scrap· ping gas guzzlers faster.·' The next four years under the Reagan administration are the most critical, said Ms. Lovl.na. It's a question of whether nuclear and fossil-fueled power plants are subsidized through ''corporate socialism ·· by govern· ment or the economic• of soft energy are allowed to compete in the marketplace, said Lovins. In an earlier statement. the "It was tough losing the cham· pionship by such a close score, but our speak~rs did a super job," Taylor said. Leigh earned the national "Coach of the Year" honors, voted by peers. MARTY CRONIN OF Irvine won four gold medals and was named "Speaker of the Touma· ment." Car wash set Saturday for 'Olympics' A car wash to raise money to send mentally retarded resi- dents of Fairview State Hospltal to the Special Olympics will be held Saturday in Newport Beach, a spokesman for the Baha'i Youth of Newport Beach announced. Paulette Pappas said the group will t>e operating at the Union 78 Station at Vista del Oro and Vista del Sol from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Cost for wash and vacuum will be $2, she said. Special Olympics ts an athletic event held annually for develop- mentally disabled youngsters at UCLA. The "Sky Creatures" cast in· eluded Tony Cuomo of Newport Beach, Mark' Gauthi er of Costa Mesa and Alice Reich or Orange. The "Elephf!!l Man" team in· eluded Alice Ensor and Richard Riley o f Costa Mesa, and Ri chard Rieth and Mike Roth of Newport Beach.,. ALICE., 6'eoR QI' Costa Mesa woo a gold medal la oral interpretation of lilera .... and picked up a s al ver TO" com- munication analysis Riley of Costa Mesa won a gold medal in d~·ng and a bronze in inform ieth of Newport Beach e gold in duel acting and a ze in in· formative. Riek of Huntington Beach won s i wr m e dals in Lincoln- Dou'glas debate and advocacy debate, and earned a bronze in impromptu. Gauthier of Costa Mesa picked up a silver in ex· temporaneous. and Miss Reich ot orange receav~cl a silver in poetry. "' ftt:;:i. Sioux Kirwan o~ sinta Ana won a pair of bronze awards in poetry and speech to entertain, and Karen Miller of Costa Mesa captureq bronze medals in in· formative speaking and speech to entertain. Sandie Turley of Orange won a bronze award in speech to enter- tain. 16 ways Iha Daily Pilol can help toclay5 homemaker I Clip dollar-saving coupons. 2 Organize your coupon savings with The Supermarket Shopper, ap- pearing Wednesday and Sunday in the Daily Pilot. S Save money shopping values ad- vertised in the Daily Pilot 4 Read how other Orange Coast res- idents use. make and spend their money in the Featuring pages. I Follow advice on domestic affairs by Ann Landers. 6 Keep up with area business trenC:s affecting local retail prices in Sun- day's You /Your Money section. '7Flnd mone¥·'s~vi~C fYet tasty • rtcipes in ~ed~day's f~ pages. · I 8 Keep yo'tar garden ln shape by ~ r~ading Friday's ,1ardenin1 page. 1 \ I ~ \ t :• Bus~ /ou~ chitdren wH.h 1 Saturday's Childreh's page. .. .. 10 Humor yourself with Erma Bom- beck 's column. II Address consumer problems con· fronting you and other Orange Coast residents in Al You r Service column D Rely on financial advice by Sylvia Porter one of the world's most read fin ancial advisers who reveals understandable. interesting and to·the·point information IS Keep up with news of city and county government and their spend- ing ptans for your tax dollars 14 Form your own opinions on mat· ters of local, state and national in· terest by reading the thoughtful col· Ul!!.QS an<L~torials in the Daily Pilot. ' IS Check the Weekender section for low-~ort fami'y eotertainment ideas. 16 Use th4t handy nightly TV log and · Snnday TV Week to guide your viewing schedule. -----------------, Help me organize my home better. I Send my Daily Pilot subscription today. Enclose cheek or money order for 14.00 for a I one month aublcription. Mail to Daily Pilot, I 330 W. Bay St., Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 926216 I I , ·. :: .. '• .. '• ·. .. ·. ~ violtiDt cllmac:Uc tteoe It umott de11ve..-1Jito tbe~pe ol Uj ~1oer.. Md~ ii a DOUoeable ~elaxiftl or mu.de. tiOtft on ata1e and ln UM au . .c11ence a~ theflp~ ~~lil. Miller .. t.aunted ent1·hero ~dle Carbone ti one of the .~e ttaste fi&llfft of the rpodern •t•1e -Ufe·nte-'•• oppoled to an OthellO or a Lear 1n tt;e clas•tc•t ntoJd. Kia lnterpretaUOb demanda enormous dtmen.1lon, and it reeef\lea just that In the out1tandl.n1 performance of /oe .Cordto. ' Cofdfo. 11n a• chi1Un1 depletion of a 1ood and honest blab bl'()uiht to lrief by his own forbid· den desire and fanatical julouay, dellver1 a hal· ly fleshed Eddie Carbone onto the Sa~dleback sta1e. Tbe actor's 1esturet. and nuances are at one with his role to an 41xtt1ot D)erely gUmpsed ln the non-prof~aslonal tbeater. Hia supporting cast ts equally strone. with Peter Stone-u the fragile youne imm1erant whose ~m•ntic interest in hh niece (beautiful- ly p~e4 by Llnda MacAllstaire> triggers the conflict perhaps t~ most memorable. · Rae Weeb i1 highly natural and sym. • ... v11w ,..OM TM• H1Ma" pathetic a. Cordio's emotionally frustrated wife A)ir•,,..llr~MJYer,.i~•vMld\Ml"9i1~:=c-'llf.U. who ls powerless to divert her husband's course. ~-ia • .U: _,..., ~ ~"':. .. ~"'-' 9::~ Allan Stone lends a llOte of ethnic authenticity Joe Cordio, le/I, ltar• fn tta. SVCT productUni of "A View from the Bridge." Roultdinf out th& cast are, from left, Rae Wiekl, L1ndo MacAli.ftaire, Dick Vara and Peter Stone. Orange WC18t slmes three local rock bamhi ..,..,;::.ri,._~..,,tJ.n_,s .. wo.yuu,.,...~M.vht as an immi•rant attorney. tip ....-Ck v .. i.y C-lty TIIMtw, mn< °'"""' ~ v• e Th 0 C • b ...1. th R d ~ ,..__..,.~_."'""'°· two more weekends remain for this out-ree range oun~y anua, e oun ers. !E• .. c.r.-.............. ~~-~.~~ .................... .-~ standing show, one of SVCT's finest to date. the Crowd and Jimmy and the Mustangs will rtuCM'llOlw ..................................... , ...... w~~ Curtain ·ttme ls 8 p.m. al the Mission Viejo perform in concert In the Orange Coast College .. ,, ...................................................... 4u111..,_,_ h 0 .., t Drama Lab Friday al 3 p.m. ~=-·~::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~.·~~=·· t eater, 23'Nl·C "rero, or the play that The Rounders play surf rock music, the ~ .................................................. ,....,~~ ushered In fhe "Arthur Miller era" on the Crowd is a new wave band and Jimmy and the :Lf"+='"""9r==.t:1on:!:°":1u='=":":":":':":":":":":":":' :":":' M=lc!IMl:::•:•~ll'.I, :.._ __ A_m_e_n_· ca_n_s_t_a_::g:._e_. ______________ _:M~ustangs perform rock a billy. :m : NOW PIAYIN<i----: ... cma •u .,. .... : Anallt1m Duve In c-c...-Woodbr•dRt C111e4ome I 17141879-98SO 111•1.,._,.,.. t7141S'>I 0655 f7141 634-2~3 : ma n r• lMml llstmml : UA llJlov1u Saddletec-Soulh C~st H1 W1J 39 D11tt In : 171 41990 •012 1rn1 ~I 5880 t714t494 151• 171'>891 36'3 • : • • • • l(S1*111UA lw1n 1 7r-t1 19.l-t3~ WIST COAST '91EMIH( lNCiACl"MENT NOW SHOWING • Ofonoe CINIDOMI ·Cotto tMao. HARIOR TWIN 6U-211J 6Jl·H0l ....... ....,..em ....... , eMCIFIC'8~'DOME · ::'9.._..,_v,... --·I /..._MOI Dall' 1:uo. lA6 . 100 . IC>HI PM • ..... ,. .... CXJI OOl.SYSTUWO I"' ~,,...,.,~u ' '" IUU '-'t tit W..1U.-1t The only thing greater than their passion for America ... was their passion for each other. _ ........ "CAVEMAN" (PG) "··J •.• , ........... , .. •oNOOITA•• tll "CAVEMAN" (POI IJ •·J·•·• •.• U •I ...... ...ot• TOUlll WOfllT ..... A MM.IT'f THE HOWLING t•I tl'.a •Ji.a• •M • , .. • •11 • U•1t rn.w...., n...u.o. • • "NIQH1'HAWKS" (A) l'M MC&I ITAA WAAS !"I .... f'MUIM , ... ... ,... .•. , ... . ... , ... , ..... , .. ... ...,., ...... 'CAVEMAN" IPGJ ... ... , ................... 1 .. _.._, .. _ ~ 1:11, ... luft • ......,. 1:00 .,_ -. 1:46 IMPORTANT llOTICl! CHILOlllll UllOlll 12 fllU! "*"---........ ltla if"i~·) ::~:£:': If Mo AM CM AM!o Wllll Ignition AcCftMrY llf'lno y-Own AM Po ,,_..,.. ,-.. ·-~ .. ·--\ ~ ~;;.M~ CtlO:::;.:::~ - I No.uri CM 11.-. Wllll IOf'llloro Ae«a&Gry .. ,,.. y..,,, Own AM Pon. 811 tr"i· 1.~~·=~~i:~ ... f Ho ltM CM A ... Wllll lgiNtloro Ac~-' .. ,,."''" Own AM JA .. ICAAll ''THIEF"'"' .., ... '""". '*· ... ........ -~·RAGING IUU" 11t1 ~ ~ • "ILEPHANTMAN" LOS-ANGELES (AP) -A R•P'1bllc4n P•rtY fwad-ralslns dinner tonl1ht featurln1 Vlce President Georae Bu1b aa the main speaker h111 netted more than $1 million. The-revenue will be usectto try to capture-control of the state Le1t1lature next year, seid lnduatriallst David JI. Murdock, the dinner chalrmu. Tickets ror the dinner at thO Century Plaza Hotel are Sl.000. &l.e bill moved SACRAMENTO CAPl -A measure to repeal an lntereat ceiling on variable-rate home mortgages has sailed through a Senate committee. The proposal would also allow lenders to ralse monthly mort1aae payments by as mucb as 7~ percenta1e points annually when interest rates ri se. Yan Houten denied (AP) -Leslie Yan Houten. a onetime bo~ecomlng princess who went on a kill· ing spree for Cbarles Manson. was r e r u s e d parole Wed- nesday after ".,.lfOUni• a pre>1ecutor sald the public would not accept her freedom. Sen. S.I. Hal/Gk41D0, ft-Calif. /kftJ Jil1 ~h ambaaaador -:o= John ~. Gavin at lwarlng. · , . Gavitt leStBies WASIDNGTON (AP) -Actor dt>ns Committee. John Gavin, oomina~ed to ~ G&vln said he gained ex- U.S. ambassador to Mexleo. cft&. • perience in Latin American af· puted a su,uesUon WeditWQV f4lj'n as $ special adviser to the that the country ts endlnge~. 'OYg•hiution of American by Soviet-C'uban Ma'txBth: States· secretary general from •'The Marxist ideology ls lJ). t~toJ.ets: • deed espoused by a tettaln seC~ . · ~ Hid. he believes Presi· Sex b ·u dead tor " Gavin s4!d. "B\tt I believe ·o ·Reagan nominated him 1 VENTURA (AP, -Delea on 1 balance w~ neM tlot fht f9r · ~q(li~ he agrees with the pres· Midui/e jailed - SAC..t AMENTO <A p 1 _ A Burns, an unlicensed midwife, the security of the M4lxicatt :'tife~1 !bat ·~It's time we cleared ~ · r has been sentenced to 30 days in Republic... · Jlp · e tnlscot1cepUons and mis· proposed state screening 0 sex The disagreement devel=' ·;~· erst:tndin~s that exist education textbooks and Ventura County Jail and three :1 .. S d teachers' manuals for standards years on probation for practlc· at Gavin's confil'maUoh he n w~~ the Un led t ales an d h rlt · Ing without a license. before the Senate Fort!lgn h .' ~ct." of morality an ot er c ena ·~ ~~~---"------, LOS ANGELES <AP> -Ac· transcripts of lnlervlews, Fra-neo Underwood, a colorful ll•nno clJdn't trust Cohen to keep newspa~rwoman whoM CUMr hll hand• off the $1 mUUoa u city editor of U.. Loa An1eles which be purportedly oollecle11 Heral<t Examiner 1panned 17 at the ur1ln1 ot Menachim years, hu filed a S.110 mlWon Be1in, at the tlme head of an un- defamatJon suit over a book that derground move ment and pr~J 11ld she helped the late aanpter ently Israel's prime minister. .; Mtcke)' Cohen steal $1 mUUon. Tl)e book quotes Fratianno .II.I Defendants include Tile New aaytna. "See, he's got this bfd'a8 York Timeo Book Co., which at The He rald , Aggie Uq.t published "The L&1t Mafioso," a derwood. She's ~ big edito,1 book by Ovid Demaris about there. and this broad would wali former mobster Jimmy Fratian-on hot coals for Mickey. Pri"' no. Abo named were CBS' "60 any -he gives her. The way J Minutes," which reported on see It, Mickey called her ancJ material ii) the book, and Los made up a story about buyinl Angeles radio station KMPC. guns and ammunition for the which ran •n interview with Jews with the million raised at Demarl.a. the benefits and then told her the boat sank. A few unknown peo- THE SUIT, filed Wednesday. pie died, some were saved. and claims the book and subsequent she prints it on his say-so. l Interviews falsely stated that says. 'Mickey. congratulations. Ms . Underwood aided Cohen by You've just pulled off the big- printing a fabricated story in the gest, cleanest score I've ever Los Angeles Herald-Express seen made.' .. (the forerunner of the Herald CARYL WARNER, Ms. U~ Examiner) in 1948 stating that a derwood's lawyer. said the onlf ship loaded with arms for Israel story about a ship full of arm• had sunk. The story. the book that could be located in the old claimed. was a coverup to allow Herald-Express or any other Cohen to pocket SI million in newspaper li brary was one stat; donations he had raised to pa y ing that a ship laden wilt\ arm~ for the arms. and destined for Begin 's lrgun Ms. Underwood. 78, said no Zvai Leumi underground was blown up on a Tei Aviv beach by s uch article was published and the Israeli army Begin ·s group that she didn't even know Cohen had been opposed bv the fledg-in 1948. J ling Israeli government becanse According to the book and it resorted to terrori st tactics. ---- Sf A's Storewide Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions and accessories: Fashion Jewelry Swiss Watches Cultured Pearls • Belts Scarves • Handbags • Blouses • Designer and Better Sportswear Separates • Active Sportswear Sportshirts • Rainwear • Sportdresses •Designer Dresses ening Apparel • Suits Better Dresses • Robes Sleepwear and Loungewear Blouse Collections Womens Shoes Fashions for Juniors in Right On! Maternity Collections From 'SFAbulous and 'SFAntastic: Rainwea~ Suits, Blazers, Sportswea~ Dresses The Men's Store: 25% to 40% ·off original prices on Men's ·collection Spartswea~ University Place and , Men's Furnishings . . ·' ~ I t I : 1' ~ ~ ' , ! l ' ti brought howls three years ago but Orange County Sanitation orneiala again are talking about eew sewer fees -at least ln NeWJ)OrtBeach. · It may be remembered that sanitation leaders proposed a Oat $5 a month charge per household shortly after passage of Proposi- tion 13. The idea was abandoned after hundreds of county residents let loose with the protests at a public.hearing. Sanitation officials still claim the tax-cutting proposi\ion lopped oU 60 percent of their income. And they contend Newport presents even more serious problems because major sewer lines are in need of repair. · Using as the ir proof the recent line break under Pacific Coast Highway that poured millions of .gallons of sewage Into the harbor, officials estimate nearly SS million in repairs ls needed. But if they move forward wftb the repairs, they'll run out of money by 1983 and will be seriously in debt by 1985, the official! say. The suggested cure for this is a $5-a-month sewer fee. There are several problems with that idea. Would homeowners pay the same amount as business owners? What a bout large families compared with couples? The list of unanswered questions goes on. lf sanitation officials expect citizens to go along with a new charge, they'll first have to show they've exhausted every means of finding money and, finally, that the charge is equitable. Include cuts at top Newport· Mesa District's school board is refusing to off er cost-of-living salary increases to teachers and non -teaching employees this year until it learns how much money the state Legislature is allocating for operations. And. trustees say, ~f the dis· trict doesn't get at least as much money as it did l ast year . employees won't get one dime in increases. As a matter of fact. they con- tend. the employees will be asked , to give up some of the tax-paid fringe benefits they won in past years if income rails short next fiscal year. That's a hard pill to swallow for the teachers· un ion which seeks raises of between 12 and 24 pe rcent next school year and the non-teaching employees who are asking about 21 pe rcent in salary adjustments In negotiations employees usually ask for the moon and the school district usually counters with an offer that's about half of what it finally agrees to. But doubling a "nothing" raise still comes out to zero. If the board stands pat. it will be a big s urprise. And if it does, administrators had better look toward giving up some o f their own fringe benefits. A good starting place might be the generous car allowances that top administrators receive to drive some pretty big a uto mobiles around the district in the face of teacher chagrin. Bridge snafu costly Traffic snarls are practically a way of life in Newport Beach but the partial closure of the Balboa Island bridge just before Easte r was 'more than some locals could take. Work crews have been re- pairing the island's only bridge since last year and regularly have been reducing traffic on the bridge to only one lane. Merchants on the island let out a howl just before Christmas when this happened. Many shop owners said the traffic jam creat- ed by the partial closure ruined their Christmas business. At the time . Newport engineers hoped the bridge work would be completed by Easter and promised. if it wasn't, that both lanes on the structure would be open to accommodate Eastertime shoppers. • Merchants were surprised and irate when the week before Easter arri ved and bridge traffic was still being held to one lane The shop owners re minded city officials that Easter Week, long known as "Bal Week" on the island, is a key business period for them. Council members correctly ordered the bridge workers to s hut down work on the surf ace of the structure and to open it back up to two-way traffic. Even though the work order could cost the city as much as $25.000, it seems the move was the least it could do for the merchants. It's hard to understand after all the confusion during the Christmas season that the mis· take could be repeated. Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is inv1t· ed. Address The Oaily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone !714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd/ Pick her cowr Every woman has a secrel color that does something special for her looks. she thinks. Whether it's the tint itself or just the feeling of con- fidence it gives her doesn't matter. It works when she wears it. Item No. 833C In our Love and War man's file is a recommendation to you. the man eager to please in matters romantic. Find out what your girlfriend's secret color Is. and match it with small gifts. Scarves. Flower s, Costume jewelry. IC she tells you her favorite color is green, aa currency, you know she's onto you, and you can put this Item back into the me. Arn advised the word "humongous" flrat showed up in print ln a University of Denver •tudent newapaper in 1973. But ap· parenlly lt haa stuck. Merrlam- Webster edit.or$ expect It to appear In forthcoming dJcUonariet. Q. Do TV anchormen like Walter Croaklte, John Chancellor and Frank R•ynoldt &et to aay anyt.hin1 they want to on their olptly news 1h&n? A . At least once, yes. Cronkite WU authorised about seven minutes of bit own alt time. Chancellor four maybe rive. and Reynolds three to rour They're so disciplined in ex- perience you can't always auess whether their editorial judgments are personal or corporate. Oddballs couldn't last long with s uch authority. Q. Why are hemlock and spruce said to be more effective than other trees In screening off highway noise? A. Their foliage ls spaced in auch a manner so as best to barne most sound wave lengths. Researchers say that. In a discussion of nuclear bombs, Bertrand Russell did, "We have found that lhe men who know most are the most gloomy." This ltem la in our Love and War man's me. sur- prfslnely. It la preclaely the con· clu1lon of the matrimonial re- searchen afte1o an esten1lv1 1t\ldy of husbands and wives wbo do and do not undeutand each other. Counselors •enerally aaree that couples need to be able to talk to ucb other. B~t aome deny that thorouch Uftdentandln1 tt all that dandf. In many cuea, th•Y MJ, It'•· better not to know. 1 Land policy hears watching WASHING TON The Sierra Club 1s sumg the Cederal government in an at· tern pt to prevent mining in a wilderness area in northwest Montana The plaintiffs, according to papers filed in U.S. District Court here. include 12 un· named grizzly bears Sounds like more damned snail-darter foolishness to me. But then so do a lot or things being said these days around Was hington by the new guardians of our natural resources. the appointees of Ronald Reagan. The same Mr Reagan who once said 1f vou've seen one redwood tree you've seen 'em all TAKE JAMES WATT, the new secretary of the interior. He spoke last month to an enthus iastic conference of the companies that run concessions in national parks The subject. at that moment . was h o r se trails . but Secretary Watt expanded the d1scuss1on to mclude his own opinion of the mis - take God made in putting together the great outdoors. ·'You folks will qu1ckl~ understand why I bring so much controversy and flak ." Wall said · · r don 't hke lo paddle and I dQn 't like to ~alk .. Well. Mr Secretary, we could build a freeway through Yosemite National Park. It would make il more convenient for the lumber company trucks What trucks? The ones they are going to need to ~et out all the trees that John Crowell is apparent!~ ready to let the the lumber companies and the de· companies cut down on public lands velopers who want the use of that land. Crowell is Reagan's nominee as as 1 Reagan has always sided with the s1stant secretary of agriculture for developers or, depending on your natural resources and environment. the viewpoint. the exploiters -againsl offi cial in charge or the US Forest respons ible conservationists or. Service. again depending on your viewpoint, THE FOREST SERVICE now allows private companies to take between 10 billion and 12 billion board-feet a year RICHARD REIVES from public lands and has pro1ected that in 50 yea rs perhaps 16 billion board feet could be reasonably taken out per year During his confirmation hearings. Crowell said he thought 35 billion board fe~l could be taken out each vear . There is going t o be a tremendous battle over the national parks and other public lands during the Reagan years These are very tough. development oriented people who have spent years talking up the "Sagebrush Rebel Lion .. the Western movement to return millions or square miles in federal lands to s tate control. But there has always been a dark side to that revolt It's the oil companies. the m ining companies. crazed e nvironmentalis ts . Now t he administration and its friends m Congress. part1cularly Senators Jesse Helms. chairman of the Agriculture Committee, and James McClure. chairman of the Energy Commiuee. are pushing ahead on all fronts to open public lands. waters and parks to saws and drills and trucks· MAYBE SOME OF that is right and necessary. But how can we tell whether Reagan and his merry men are sensibly opening public lands to reasonable ex· plor ation and developm~nt, or are JUSt turmng millions and millions of acres over to greedy environmental rapists? Well. one way is to pay attention lo or· ganizations like the Sierra Club a nd the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund "We won 't stop them." said Tim Mahoney , the c lub 's Was hington representative .. But we will be there, and if we think that they are overstep· ping the law. we'll see them in court .. I decided not to laugh about the g rizzlies in Montana and I sent another $25 to the Sierra Club Watch those guys for me. will you·) Feds already have airport authority To the l!;d1tor : Western Airlines' recent statements about its loss of two flights per day from John Wayne Airport and its will· ingness lo fight the county over the is- sue has important implications for citizens living under the Oighl path of the airport. Western officials charged that the county Board of Supervisors had made "anti-competitive efforts over the years to keep Western out of. Orange County" and that the county's plans "would compound .. dis· crimination" against Wes tern. The aware individual will recognize that Western officials are using precise· ly the language found in the Airline De regulation Act of 1978, which re quires that all recipients of federal ( ADAP> funds must foster competition among the airlines and discourage dis· c riminalion against any firm. Such competition was thought by federal legislators to benefit the traveling public. SINCE THE John Wayne Airport re· cehed ADAP runds through the auspices ol Mr. Robert Badham as late as the fall of 1980. of course, Western's present posturing makes sense because their exclusion from the airport is ii· legal. Past federal expenditures at the airl>ort effectively remove any county control over It in such matters. County olflc'ials have acknowledged that the FAA has regulatory authority Ln these areas of dispute. Therefore, any ex· panslon of the airport, regardlets of who pays for lt, wUI be ruinous for Newport Beach, Tustin, Santa Ana and Costa Mesa because the federal gov- ernment already has sufficient autbori· \y at the airport to enforce usage cor- responding to airport aiu. HENRY BRACTON Protection oven.lone To Ute F.d.ltor: l am lncreeeln11r appalled -and a•hamed of the actions of the current •lected leaders of my two home towna of the put 20 year•! The t..dy Mayon ol Newport Beach and Cost. Mesa act •• lf elected to be the "Mother.. of all the taxpaytna •1chll~" ln their constltutnclet, pre- •~rlbint by otdlnance 1t1ndardl of con-duct, dteu codel, and now even wh•t bualne1aea abould be non·avallable to non-cwortQert! Wb.n t.be M•yor atld a CouncUwom10 of Newport 8Hch Ul•C•ll.1 took to buUborm to tafOurac• alde••lk protest demanatt.._ In troot of • new adult bOOkatore, .on&y a h•adful OI ,_,. pubUt'I)' Ge»~ to Utt olMi\19 fMI Utat ~..,. oveni.pp..-, tbelf Olftft. perhaps lending c redence to their er roneous idea they were representing the majority of the citizenry. They should know that the real majority keeps quiet MAILBOX and goes its own way, afraid lo speak out or ignoring s uch bureaucratic foolishness. Now Costa Mesa's .. Mother " Mayor goes further with an "emergency" or dinance proscribing any businesses in her fair community that have to do with that unmentionable three-letter word S·E·X. circumscribing the practice or even th.in.long about 1t to the family and home. even though an average 40 percent of our citizens are single! The rationalization is that such businesses "a r e r ecog nized as having ob· jectionable operational characteristics" by and to whom and why are not spelled out' lS THIS THE local ve rsion of Moral M ajorily and the Citizens for Decency through Law ca mpaigns? The statistical citizen majority are not part Of these grOUpS I Our free enterprise syste m only works on laws of sopply and demand - if there is no demand, there would be no buslnesa; and lt ia better le1al and COD· trolled, than illegal and lhua subject to underworld control with its unwritten laws, which truly have "objectionable operational characleriallca." IRENE SHANNON Pride con help To the Editor; I want to put ln my word ol praise for Scott Pauben and the 1\aff at TeWlnkle Middle School. Thia 1roup of pro· fesaionals really does work barst to help students learn, be reaponaible citlzena, be creative and feel 1ood about themselves in the ptoc"9. As a parent of two Jun1or blah tchool atudenta 1 am truly pleaffd that my children have the opportunl~ to ati.nd such a fine achool. With refard to the N•wport-M•• dll· trtct, I keep bearln8 tM nttatlva - about ~ cutbac~s. ti.at we're cl~tna •chool•j and tbat the dl1trlct b to dltftcuJt ahape ft.nancJ1Uy. There are problems, but no 1chool dlatrtct 11 perfect, e~t hat tnou1h money, or caa plelff~--· I believe many of us a re aware that as far as Newport-Mesa is con- cerned. from the superintendent on down to the principals, teachers and aides. everyone at all levels is trying re· ally hard lo do a good job in the face of overwhelming problems. r s uspe<'l it would be extremely pro· ductive if we could cut down on some of the criticism and instead lake pride in our district and our schools. Fortunate· ly in our area many citizens are in· volved in education whether they have children in school or not They realize that education is everybody's business. that in the near future these kids will be making our laws, building our bridges, solving our problems and keeping the peace. ANN MOUND Disaster is now TotheEditor: The reaction of SPON against the ex- tension of University Drive is certainly · typical. They seem to be against any change and to believe worms and snails are more important than people. Is there anything they would approve that 99 percent of our residents want? The Upper Newport Bay ls NOW a dia- aster. and every winter the mud comin1 under the Bay Bridle makes lhewaterlhe color of the Mlasiasippl River. The dis- aster area annually moves south. ALSO, every resk:lent wbo una the Pacific Cout Hifbway from MacArthur to the Arches should set behind the ex- tension. All traffic atudlea Indicate cont· pletlng University Drive would eue thla problem and wtU stltl be needed ev•n wit.b the new bridge and U'le eventualextentlon QI the Corona del Mar Freeway, which ta probably years away. The position of SPON and the COut.aJ Commhsk>n II arbitrary and Ulotlcal. Let's support the EIR ll tbat ls wlult •• need to ,.t some action. • IRVJN C. CHAPMAN ~ :r.~~i:.~ • rc~·1 · I~ ·i~ 11! :·~ i :.., c-:u ... ~ .• 1!~! lt u .m "mi =~·v; tit~ I~.: ·1'! •• -m. ;~:.~ HJ:::·u AA dOf .'1 " It 6 ..... Ala pf t .. 1100 " -1"-AIA pf t.4' .. dlO .. .. ••• ,. pf l .U . dOO SS,,.._ Vl •1t0 J t I~'°' I .tel 4 * 22~ -. y 1.20 ' ., ,._ ._ Alberto • .0 J SO U\4 • V. Albbn ... t )I 2~ ..... Alun uo S .., ,. -~ Al~Std 2 t 1' ~+ \i• Aleaclf • • M 1n.-Vt All~ 1.0I I U1 3'VH "' f'\ Al9'1:p lllf1... J 20 AljL.Uct UO 10 JOS SO\• • A~~pf J . M H • A pf2.lt . J 1'V. + ''° Al t 1 ... 6 132 W.4-,,. All•nGp I 10 2tO 21V. .. AlldCll 2.20 6 1313 50\lt + \j, All<IMllt n t 41 22'1•-"" AlldPd 20 12 I~ '• Alld$tr 1.70 t 1102 "2tVl + 1-AllllCh J IO tu 31 AllrA;i '411 t• ID UV.-" A pfl~ t2 1J.\io-lit Ale .. I 1.IO • no ""' ~ ~~~ 2.!a J,~~ ~~l~ Amrce I n 7 20 ~ Vt AmHHI I 10 S31 .. ~ l4I ~~f: " 20 ."! ::~ ~ AAlr wt 10t7 7V. , ... M lrpl 2.11 . 30 u i,. •• Aa.-r .. llll 20 30 17 '4 Atl'fld1 6.10 6 1U ,.,,. . . . Aird pf PS lS 21V. Aird pf 2.67 20 J'l''9 • "-Aladnt 1.60 4'1 :M'At--•'J AtldM .. l1 21 '• A81nPd 41 1 SS u•.-I Ame.., 2.eo 10 11u 4211•• '• AC•n pf 2.IO 1 ""' AO!try .10. 1 141' 1011+ + ACyen 1.60 • 2105 J3V. AOT 1.40 11 233 37,.._ AEIPw 2 2' 1 s.11 16~ !7'.~r. Ji ~ ·~L ~t: : :&:ia 2 a.! s ~ ~~· AGllCv 1 10e 1l lt"> AHer1tL .0 l 11~ AHolll 1 12 I IM 23''• A~me 1.IO n lttS lS' ... AHme pf 2 I 1~ AHotp I OI IS 1'2 AMI ._.It •SJ AmMo1r ,,.. ANetA l .. I Jft ASl.Fle IO 21 SA ASho l .IO 10 SM AmSto 2.20 1 II• AStt rll .34 10 //111 AmStr IO 7 U AStr pf s SI n ATT S.40 7 2'31 ATT pl • .UT pf J '4 ATTr: ).U AWa r 1 0t AWl l pf I U AWe Spf US Ameron 1 ~ Ame!O ... 12 2 S2 • 2.0. 7 • 9.U '"' 160 1.0 • 1 30 ' 11 • 1'1 21' 21 ,,. .. ..• .. • ... ,., 6 . .. ,,.. ... ... • lo ... ... '. .,. ''• r. \e ... .... ... '" .. 2 : I.to • ,, 36 eo . ~ 27lo ''• . ,. ,,, .... ... .,. ,, ... . .... 'I .,. .... " 'h ·~ .- .... '· ,,. ... .... ''• ,.. .... ' 21 -· 11\1. + v .. ·~ ... 13V.-·~· .. " .. ~ ' S"-+1 ~ ,.,... 10'" 1' •• 10'11• • Unilever. one of the largest comp1nJes in the world. weighed in recently with 1980 results: sales reached $24 billion. profits a ftertaxescamet.oS656milllon. • 'fh06e blockbij.Ster figures would rank Unilever as follows in the United States corporate lineup: 13th in aales <just ahead or Atla ntic Richfield and right be low General Electric>. 28th in proms <ahead of Union Oil a nd below Procter& Gamble). But now that you know Lhat, who is Unilever? And what docs 1l do to rank so highJy? Unilever belongs to that modem breed 'of companies known as multina· tionals. It's an Anglo· Dutc h combine <there are d~ilead· quarters in Lon don and Rot· terdam ) that re· suited from the 1930 merger of ~· MllTOI MDSIDllU ~· the world's largest soap com!Jany I Lever Bros. I with the world's largest marganne company c Margarine L'nie 1 TODAY. l'NILEVl:R operates in 75 countries . making a wide ra nge of foods . soaps and detergents . fats and oils. starches. chemicals. toiletries. paper pro ducts an<! animal fet•ds Its three US outposts Lever Bros . Thomas J Lipton and National Starch & Chemtcal do mon• than $2 billion a year You're get ting a l.Jnilcver produd "'hen you bu) any of the folio"' mg item!> All. Hree1e. Ori\ t·. Wisk. Lux. Rmso. Dove, Caress. I • • • • ' ' I Lifebuoy, Final 'foud1. Aim. Close-Up. Pepsodent. Signal, Imperial margarine. Promise. Mrs But· terworth's syrup. Lipton's teas and soups. Wish-Bone salad dressings. Pennsylvania Dutch noodles. Knox gelatin and Good Humor 1cecream And those <trt' Just the Americ<tn brands Margar1nl'brnndsouts1de theU S include Rama. Blue Rand. Becel and F'lora ln Bnta1n. Untlever markets the detergents Omo and Pers1l. Walls ice cream and Bards Eye frozen foods On the European continent it sells the Skip dcterg<'nl, L'nox soups. Calve salad dress ings and ZIA an meats l ' COMPANIF}S LIKK l 'SILEVER increasingly call the shots an our c('onnmic la ves They're huge They market hundreds of products. They're at home anywhere in the world. And more and m ore of them tend to be based outside the United States. A report re· leasedJhis month by the Conference Board showed this picture In 1963. U.S firms accounted for63 of the world's 100 largest industrial corporations. In 1971, U.S firms madeup58ofthetop 100 -In 1979. the L'S sharewas47 THE MESSAGE IS clear· companies based outside the United States are g rowing faster than American firms. Getting information about these multinational monsters has never been easy. but it's definitely getting easier STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT 0.11 Molon 17•, IOO )/ ·-+7 Norlnd P~ 439,~ 11. AMERICAN LEADERS l«W fOAIC CN'I -SalM _, ""-_, ""' ....... OI h len mMI .Cl .... .,,_...., -~ -lreOonO n11_.11y 11 """ ,._ 0Ur9' Air •t.t,JOO 1011-t '1> GullCan o lJ1,.00 21.., \9 lnU 811kno1 131,200 '" I J , ,. IBM SSl,000 "°" ... ColQ Palm souoo 11~ BowV1lley 111 ,900 U t. + '• tto..OllM 1•7.'<IO O•• •I'• ' Petrol..,. 1~.SOO ti'• • '• 1 • Sear&Rotl> m ,600 ''"' .... Civlf 011 •SJ.200 JP1 ... Tu.co Inc •••.300 ,. , .. Am~r,ren •25.000 .o•,> + I J SIOO I nd •17,100 60 1.-. LIL C.0 OJ,600 u • • •Citicorp ~oe.100 2•~ .~ Merrill Lyn 402,100 .,-.. •'"" Solly Corp 401,<IOO ··~ . '• >teroa Cp Jlll,.00 ol~ .111) Eu on *·* .. ~ .. '• UPS AND DOWNS lllW ~ lo'lrl -Tr.. -"O "'' .,_ "'° -"°"' "°""' (ACNn09 .-.. -----.,,.. wp h mMI MCI_,, ltw ,_ "':"~:J!o-=.., 'T!':""~ ~;;·~·~cn:r~.:· .!.~ """",.,... Ul"S Name L8'1 .c"Y, Pel I LLCCorp s~ Up 19. 2 AmWatr re 10'• .. .-~ VP IU > Gerber$< ,.,,. • 2'At Up ,, , • Rtc~nEq 16' J + 1~ UP "·' S Serv p 1'11 11 ..... . "" Up tl,S t ~1111 PH u .. '"" ~ 11 1 , ~HWrA so • s 11.1 I A tTrsl 10V'J • I 10,S t 6AyFlnc;I -• " Up ••• 10 MClnoe Incl ., .. + • 8C 9.1 11 Union~ 1'-" • " '1 12 CIWllU Wrt ~ • )\lo Up l.1 1) ~~ka h~ • 1 Up u 14 ' ,,,,. 2'\\ + :~ Up l .J U oldwl l 'lkr ""'. UP '·' " lllMllw pf ~ + 4"' UP a 0 WullNet pl .. \It +JV. Ult ~· ~,,., _c::;i, ,~,.$ -1Vt . t ,. -I.I 1S .... -1 §ff 1,1 :IA~ -"" ••• ,, __ -\It §!! ••• • -2~ 65 r =~I ••• "' -3 H A -2 "' "' -t ' S.6 m -~ ~1 lo~= 1,W.= I! I J.• u Penn•v Eno 10..'<IO J'• '" Hous1ono11 "" io.,JOO """ , 1•• Ttchcl Ta.-106,000 .,,. • ''• ~ .T•rracn 1n1 "·'°° 10 METALS C-U.,._'IO c•nh a pounO, U S dt>11na lloru Lead lit JI cen1• a pouno ZIM .,.,, cents• _.11c1. dell~r.a T '" '6.1 ... Mottai> WHk compcKil• IO ~hlrn'-1 7'cenh • pouno, N Y Mercvry ~10 00 per llHk "'"""""' '4f'I 00 troy or • H Y SILVER Handy~ Herm ... l 1 I 220 per 1toy ounce GOLD QUOTATIONS '-•-• momne flal no "'°.so· ott 'to.JO. , LIHM. Alternoo11 tllflft9 '411.SO, off $1UO. ,.,,..,et-11.11,. '5t•. u. 011 .o..ss I l'r......_.: IW"9 SMt,ot, oH UM. J4rktl: Ith .. ..._ ll•lnt. W7 .00, otl r $11,00.MtO.OO•••· ""''' & N•,.IMI•: only n fly 1111•1• 1 ,.... JO, ofl 'It jO. j .......... , .... , O.llJ .,.. .......... .,, $It JO • .......... only Miit ...... l•lln~ .... uoe.o.. on 411.00. - 'I Orange County Secretary of tM Day frud11 Miyakawo and Mr bou, Co1ta Mesa Fire Chief John PetruzzieUo Member of the Vear Barbar~ Surge1 Huntington Beach Councilma!' Jack KtUy and hil secretary, Suzanne Long ;J ,1 B)' SANDIE JOY Of U. Olllfy ~Stell E "plaining that a career as an actor isn't rar frOJn a career u a secretary "because we.have toto in and lie about background," ex- TV star-turned-politician Jack Kelly addreased 300 secretaries and their ~ses Wednesday at South Coast Plaza Hotel. The occasion was the 12th annual Orange County Secretaries Day Program, an $8.50-per- HAPPENINGS person breakfast at which Ke Uy, who was billed as guest speaker, quipped, "I can satisfy at least half or that billing. I am one hell or a guest." secretaries have a day Guest speaker Kelly entertaimJ Kelly , who began his acting career as an in- fant in Ivory Soap advertisements and went on to fame as Bart Maverick in the now-defunct "Maverick" TV series. is a Huntington Beach councilman and real estate investor. He got the Maverick part, Kelly said, after movie mogul Jack Warner saw him in film clips with a camel hovering over hi6 head. L eveling a joke at lhe bosses in the au- dience, Kelly gave his description of a camel. of a septic tank," he said. "Sounds like an old boss.'' The rest of his jests were directed at the secretaries. "I learned early in my career," the coun· cilman said. "that secretaries were fantastic dates." In another jest, Kelly explained he couldn't get his own coffee because when he did, he usually got the sugar and cream wrong. get up and get my own coffee." The councilman also explained his secretary had the duty or getting his car filled with gas because the service station attendants enjoyed seeing her more than him. ·' As a final jab at secretaries, feelly said he needed a new typewriter in his office but was 1·1 holding out until bis secretary learned how to I type with all 10 fingers. Among highlights of the morning program was naming of Trudy Miyakawa as Orange Countv's Secretary of the Day. Ms. Miyakawa, who works for Costa Mesa Fire Chief John Petruzzie llo, was presented with a dozen red roses, a two-day trip for two to San Francisco and ~ trpewr:i~er dona~ed by Silver-Reed Amenca m addition to vanous other prtzes. Barbara Surges, who works for Will Williams of the City or Costa Mesa's Facilities -) Kelly's talk was filled with quips about his career and about his secretary, Suzanne Long, who was sealed next to bim aUhe bead table. "They spit, smell bad and have the breath 11 .......................................................................................................................... ~ He added, "In my operation, I have a lot of meetings in the office and I don't know what ·those chauvinist tnales would think if I would and Equipment Division. was honored by the Bahia Chapter of the Professional Secretaries Association as Member of the Year. Nursing hOme aides very special angels DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please write a fe"1 words in praiae of nurse's aides everywhere, but especially those who work in homes for the elderly. These people perform tasks that would be abhorrent to most of us, and they are almost always at the bottom of the pay scale. My sister is In a nursing home. Senility has taken over her mind, and age has crippled her body. She is totally helpless and cannot speak. Anyone who has visited one or these places, no matter how expensive, has seen the human wreckage of what were once capable, productive people. Many are forgotten by their families. It is the aides who do the "caring." I wish a special day could be set aside to honor all the nurses and their aides who devote themselves to the care of the elderly and helpless. Someone should let them know their efforts are appreciated. And thank you, Attn Landers. whe{her or not you publish my letter. I reel better for having written it. -AUNT JENNIE IN CIN- CINNATI AllUlllll Dear Aunt Jennie: As a board member of the Rebabllltatlon Institute In Chicago, I know somethlng about the dedlutloo and caring of doc- tors, nunes and aides who cater to the neech of tbe handJcapped. The~ people are about as close to saints aa anyone on earth. I agree that a special day of appreciation should be set aside t.o honor them. DEAR ANN LANDERS: For the past four years I have been going with a man I love a great deal. Recently the topic of children's names came up. He ipformed me that he feels the first son should be named after the husband's father. I am a conservative person who believes strongly in family tradition. but this one is going to RUFFELL1S UP MOL may ..... ..._ .......... tt2i HAllOI AYD. SCULPTURED PORTRAITS . CO$JA NISA-14f.l IM That w II last for centuries / Wh_y e·uy Someone Else, · I 13y SoinebodyE!~,_ - When you can'have YOURSBf T odayl By Hendrik ., A 20 MINUTE SITTING WILLPRC>Otn A MAS1'aPICI THAT Will LAST FOREVER pose a problem. My fiance's father is a hypocrite and a mob. I dislike him intensely. The feeling is mutual. I sensed It the first Ume we met. I would not want any of our children to carry this scoun- drel's name. Shouldn't the naming of children be a mutual decision? The thought of the hassle ahead is enough to make me dread pregnancy. Please answer my letter, Ann. l need your help - WHAT'S IN A NAME IN WESTCHESTER? Dear Chester: Namln1 a cblld should be a Joint decl.lloa. Since you di.alike your fatare father- In-law lnteruely, your buabud should airee t.o a compromise. If ll's a boy, bb father's name can be lhe child's middle name. lllt nnt name could be your husband's, bis brother'• or a favorite uncle's. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was amused by .Charlie Osgood's poem about the "POSSLQ," which is the Census Bureau's name for "Person or the Opposite Sex Sharing Living Quarters." I have one and I call him "husband." THE MARY JANE • 4j Perhaps the word should be "UPOSSLQ" for \: "Unmarried Person of the Opposite Sex Sharing --Living Quarters." Or, how about "SPOSSLQ" for single persons? -POUGHKEEPSIE POSSLQ Dear Keepsle: You missed the point. Tbe Census Bureau does use "husband" and "wife" for tboae legally wed. The "POSSLQ" la a I euphemistic bll of gobbledygook to cover other situations. "Personi of the Opposite Su Sharing Living Quarters" "COuJd be ellher swinging singles or even 1 roommates married t.o someone else ln another household. Your "UPOSSLQ" and "SPOSSLQ" are both covered. The Censua Bureau couldn't care less whether people are legally married or living in sin. And It's really none of their business. How to -and how much? Find oUl wtth Ann Lan- der!' new booklet, "How, What, and When to Tell Your Child About Sex." For 11our copy 1end SQ cenla along with a long, 1tamped, sel/-<Jddreued envelope to Ann Landen. P.O. Box 11995. Chicago, Ill 60611